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                  <text>Page B8 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Boilerntakers finally get·down .to busin~s .Vick tests positive for;
~=:~
~~l:c~Y:t~~~~yhi:.~~;~~·marijuana;
• tiODS
IDlposes rest nc

·

The faces changed. The
topic didn't':
. As Purdue coach Joe
Tiller went from reporter to
·reporter at the Big Ten football media day this sum mer, everyone wanted to
.
k now t he same th mg.
" It seemed like every
·
we moved, Ihe fiu st
time
question was, 'How are you
· "going to handle that fourgame stretch?"' Tiller said
this week.
Purdue _is one of the 23
unbeaten teams in the
Football Bowl Subdivision.
Yet no one takes the
Boilermakers
serio'usly
because the wins have
come over Toledo, Eastern
Illtnois. Central Michigan
and Minnesota.
That perception will
change soon, for good or
bad.
The Boilermakers ope;n a
four-game stretch that will
determine whether they
deserve to be taken seriousJy. After playing Notre
Dame, 0-4 for the first
time, they host No. 8 Ohio
State before hitting the road
to play a revived Michigan
in the Big· House. After that
comes a home date with
Iowa.
By then there will be a
better answer than Tiller
was able to give i!l.
Chicago.
"My response was, it's
ce~nly a challenge but if
you're going to do it you
want to do it with an experienced team- and we've
got a fairly experienced
team," Tiller said.
Those veterans·· incLude
Curtis Painter, who has
been intercepted once in his
first 166 · passes while
throwing for 16 TDs, and
Dorien Bryant, who leads
the Big Ten and is I Oth
nationally with eight catches a game.
. The jury's still out on the

oN GUARD: Michij!an
was forced to use a thudstring guard, Tim McAvoy,
for the second half in last
week's win against Penn
defense, which is givin g up State.
Starter Alex Mitchell
374 yards and 2 1 points a
game and is last in the Big went down with an injury,
then his backup, Jeremy
Ten in stopping the run c· II
I
b
d
tu a, a so was ange up
147
(
yards a game).
·
and sidelined.
Tiller, the head man in
"'
·
no1vermes
coach Lloy d
West Lafayette for the last Carr always stresses to
17 years, knows that all every player that he needs
those numbers mean noth- to practice like he is going
ing
because.
the to play.
Boilermakers haven't faced
"I can take McAvoy as an
very good teams. And example of a guy who
despite Notre Dame 's probably deep down , he
much-discussed problems, certainly did not expect to
Tiller is taking nothing for play as much as he did,"
granted.
Carr said. "But because he
. '"You walk out t.here mak- has developed, he's been in
mg the .assumption based , practice situations where
on records or what have he's in there with the first
you tha,t, hey, there's no team - that's exactly what
way were not gomg to be you ' re trying to prepare
successful today and you for."
end up ~ettin~ emb~assed
Carr said Mitchell will
very qUickly, he sa1d.
not play this week against
Purdue is favored by Northwestern and he does
three touchdowns against not know if Ciulla will be
the Fighting Irish.
healthy enough to play.
Michigan listed McAvoy as
LOSING
. CLOSE: its starting RG for its first
Dating back to last season, road game of the season.
Iowa has lost its last five
games d!:cided by four or
HANG ONTO THE
fewer
points.
The BALL!: Minnesota is off to
Hawkeyes have dropped
h t 1 b t th
a roug
s ar • u
e
their last two. to Iowa State Gophers haven't helped
and Wisconsin, by a total of themselves with a ras~ of
six points.
turnovers. One was JUSt
Coach Kirk ferentz says plain bad luck, an enduring
his team's record in close image so·far of the difficult
games is one statistic he start
to
coach
Tim
monitors closely, and he Brewster's tenure.
believes ihat detailed exeCB Jamal Harris scooped
cution throughout the game up a blocked field goal last
is the key to turning things ·week against Purdue near
around.
·
the end of the first half and
"I don't think it wears .on was on his way for an easy
you, but ii's certainly some- touchdown when he inexthing we are aware of," plicably dropped the ball
Ferentz said. "There's usu- inside the Boilermakers 20ally I 0 or 15 things that you yard line.
It · was
a stunning
can go back to in close
games. And that's the chal- sequence. He said he,
lenge for the football team noticed a Purdue player
is to get over the hump on gaining on him and while
those."
he put the ball in his other

.....

0

judge

out.
"I j ust dropped it. I don't
know how else to put it,"
Harris said.
Not only does Minnesota
still rank last out of the
NCAA's 119 first-divi.sion
teams in passing defense bh
II . 407
d th
a owmg
yar s roug
the air per game, but the
Gop h ers are t'1ed .or
" 1as t
with 16 turnovers.

4

Fall Car Care Guide

:

inside today's Sentinel

•

.

RICHMOND, Va, (AP)
- A feder;U jud~e placed
tighter restrictiOns on
Michael
V.ick
on
"'ednesd?a
after
the
TY'
Atlanta alcons 9uarterback tested positive for
marijuana.
Because of the result,
U.S. District Judge Henry
QUICK-HITTERS: Hudson placed spec'ial conSaturday's schedule also ditions on Vick's release,
includes No. 21 Penn State including restricting him to
at ' Illinois, Indiana at Iowa, his home between 10 p.m.
Michigan State' at No. 9 and 6 a.m. with electronic
Wisconsin and No.. 8 Qhio monitoring and ordering
State at Minnesota: ·... '1\e him to ·submit to random
first Bowl Chap~pionship drug testing;
Series rankings are releas~
The urine sample was
Oct. 14 and some conf~- submitted Sept. 13, accordence insiders are already ing to a document by' a fedfretting that the Big Ten is eral probation officer that
gettmg so little respect th!lt was filed in U.S. District
teanis suQh as Ohio Suite Court on Wednesday.
.and Wisconsin will take
Vick, who has admitted
some hits in the ratings. ... bankrolling a dogfighting
Reigning players of the operation on property he
week: -on offense, Illinois owns in Surry County in
RB Rashard Mendenhall, his written federal plea, is
on defense Illinois DE Will scheduled for sentencing
Davis and Michigan
Dec. I 0. He faces up to five
Jamar Adams, and on .spe-, years in prison.
cial teams Wisconsin p Ken·
On Tuesday, Vick also
DeBauche .... Iowa's Joss at was indicted on state
Wisconsin put a severe . charges of beating or
crimp in the Hawkeyes' killing or causing dogs to
.
S, h d
fight other dogs and engagtitle· plans. II11• t ey o not ing in or promoting do$play Michigan ?r Ohio fighting. Each felony ts
State .... Meanwhile, Penn ·. punishable by up to five
~tate has to play every team years in prison.
.
m the conference except ·.'· The 27-year-old former
pe~haps ,the two weakest m . Virginia Tech star was
Mmnesota
. · and . ·placed
under . pretrial
Northwestern ... : Iov.:a WR release supervision by U.S.
Andy Brodell will miS.s the Magistrate Dennis Dohnal
rest of, the. s~ason w1th a in July. The restrictions·
hamstnng IDJU~ an~ TE included refraining froin
Tony Mo~ak1 wli! m1ss a use or unlawful possession
month wuh a dislocated .of narcotic drugs or other
elbow and broken hand.
controlled substances.
The random drug testing
AP writers Larry Lage in oruered Wednesday could
Detroit, Luke Meredith in include urine testing, the
Des Moines, Iowa, and wearing of a sweat patch, a
Dave ·· Campbell
in remote alcohol testmg sysMinneapolis contributed tO' \em or any form of prohibthis report.
ited substance screening or

s

·

·

testing.
Hudson's order also
·requires Vick to participate
in inpatient or outpatient
substance therapy and men-,
tal health counseling, if th(j
·pretrial ·services officer o~
supervising officer deem it·
appropriate. Vick must pay
for the treatment.
Vick 's attorney, Bill~
Martin, did not immediatec
Jy respond to an e-ma.il
seeking comment.
:
In .January, Vick wa&amp;
cleared by pqlice of anY,
wrongdoing after his wate(
bottle was seized by securi"
ty at Miami International
Airport. Police said it
smelted of marijuana and
had a hidden compartment
that contained a "smalf
amount of dark partfcu~
late."
.
Lab tests found no evideuce of drugs , and Vic~
explained that he used the
secret compartment tq
carry jewelry.
.:
The federal dogfighting
case began in late April
when authorities conduct~
ing a drug investi~ation o(
Vick's cousin rmded the
property and seized dozen~
of dogs, 111ost of them pit
bulls, and e uipment com,
9
monly associated
with dogfighting.
Six weeks later, when the
local investigation seemed
to be dragging and a local
search warrant wa~ allowe4
to ·expire, feoeral agents
arrived with their own war.
rants and started digging up
dog carca~ses buried days
before the first raid.
Vick has admitted help- ·
ing kill six to eight .;Jogs,
among other things. His
three co-defendants alsq
have pleaded l!uilty. One of
them, Quams . Phillips;
failed a drug test 11nd was
ordered jailed after.'' ·bj~
plea.
·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:; o l 1.!\: I~·\ ol. :;-. !\:o. ~ -

SPORTS

BY BRIAN

POMEROY Meigs
County 's new FederallyQualified Health Center is
expected to open sometime
in November m space to be
shared with O'Bleness
Health Systems.
Mark Bridenbaugh, executive director of Family
Health Care, based in
Chillicothe, said the new

""" "'"1."1"' "'''" . ,

health clinic has hired a vide . family-practice mednurse practitioner, and is ical servi~es to all residents
hiring other staff and in the county, regardless of
preparing office space for a income or insurance, allowmid'- November opening. ing access to health care to
The new clinic will operate .the county's poorest resiin county-owned office dents who must now pay at
. space ·now occupied by least $100 cash in order to
physicians from O'Bleness. · see a physician.
Earlier this month, the
The FQHC designation
federal government award- will allow the facility to bill
ed a $592,500 $fant for a at a higher reimbursement
new FQHC m Meigs rate through Medicare.
County. The.center will pro- Patients on Medicaid and

private insurance will also
be served. A sliding scale
fee schedule will apply to
patients paying cash.
Family Health Care operates five other FQHC clinics in Ross , Vinton,
Hocking, Perry and Athens
counties. According to
Bridenbaugh, the practice
saw 15,500 individual
patients in 62,000 office
visit~ last year.
Family Health Care was

. b811181ol
. ....
...

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16 PAGES

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A6

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B8

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A6

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Bs-6

Comics

B7

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A4

Faith • Values

A2-3

Movies

As

NASCAR
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B3

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B Section

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A6

Weather
'

RACINE - By a slim
POMEROY
The
margin
the SQuthern Local
Indiana Department of
Education
Association ratiN'atural Resources believes
fied
an
agreement
with the
a body they recovered from
Southern
Local
School
the Ohio River Wednesday
Board which requires
morning is that of Josh
members to now pay two
Harris of Syracuse.
percent of their medical
Officials were notified
msurance
benefits.
Tuesday that Harris, 20, had
Teachers
approved the offer
fallen mto the river from
by a recent 22 to 21 vote.
one of 15 empty barges
''We're not overly satisfied
being pushed down river ~.Y
·as a group," SLEA President
the tugboat L;atry ··Ti~~~ ,
Ann Ohlmger said about the
owned by Southern Towmg
tight vote, admitting she herof Memphis, Tenn.
self was not happy with the
Harris was the son of
offer. "I• reallr, thought it
Sherry Harris of Syracuse Headliner Andy Francis PlaYS everything from classical to ]au but he enjoys ,Chrlsltan rock might not pass. '
·
and the late Gene Harris. He which he will play at tomorrow'.s free concert at God's NET.
"We realize as long as the
was. a 2005 graduate of
financial commission is here
Southern High SchooL .,.
they pretty much say we
The Indiana Department
have to eay for any rai'se we
of Natural Resources used a
can get, Ohlinger added.
new sonar technology to
Last year the SLEA won a
one
percent raise during a
Pluie see Recovind, AS
process that eventually went
to mediation but according
to Ohlinger paying an extra
one percent on medical
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
insurance benefits cancels
out that raise. SLEA members previously paid one
POMEROY - "Saturday
percent of their medical
Night Liove" a free concert
msurance benefits.
beginning at 6 p.m. tomorBy contrast, teachers in
row at God's NET is
the
Eastern Local School
.
take
well
promising
to
BY MICHELLE MILLER
District
pay $10 a pay durknown praise songs and
MMILLEROMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
ing 26 pays a year accordcontemporary
Christian
ing to treasurer Lisa Ritchie.
them
up'
music
and
'rock
GALLIPOLIS - Judge
Teachers at Meigs Local
according
to
Chris
Deemer
D. Dean Evans handed down
pay
six percent of their
the maximum sentence to a of praise band Dunamis.
health
insurance benefits,
Dunamis is the opening
Columbus man founil guilty
up from five percent last
of kidnapping last week.
. act for headliner Andy
year
according to treasurer
an
evening
Francis
during
Octic Pace, 32, was senMark
Rhonemus who along
tenced to 10 years in prison of free music with a positive
. Superintendent
with
following a short hearing message that Deemer hopes
William
Buckley pay 10
SUbmitted pllotol
will continue each month.
on Thursday.
. Pace's attorney, John God's NET will also pro- The Dunamis Praise Band, pictured here, will open for head- percent of their medical
Lentes, asked the court to vide free drinks and pop- liner Andy Francis at tomorrow's 'Saturday Night live" free msurance benefits.
"That's
reality,"
concert at God's NET.
consider a Jesser sentence com for the show.
Rhonemus
said
about
the
"It'_~~~ about God, the
based on several factors,
00
percent
of
days
when
I
Kuhn, from Ripley, W.Va.,
"Jesus Christ receives all
including a previous plea whole thing," Deemer said
rising medical insurance
offer and Pace's actions fol- about ~lhe event. "We the glory for my music, no has been involved in benefits were covered by an
(Dunamis) took praise matter what the genre or Christian music for 18 years
lowin~ the accident.
and 'rocked'em ' UP, place setting," Francis said. and believes God has led employer. Rhonemus said
songs
Dunng the trial. both witThis November, Francis him to be a praise and wor- it's only been in the last two
nesses said Pace had freed with a Matchbox. 20 sound. '
Although the concert is as a performer will be ship leader through the years that Meigs Local
James Derrick Armstrong
employees paid anything on
from the trunk while Pace's for people of alL ages, it released internationally on a music of Dunamis. Deemer, therr medical insurance benaccomplice,
William focuses on the youth much CD entitled "Music for from Syracuse, has been efits. Meigs is the largest of
Newcomb, allegedly want- like programs at God's Strings and Percussion" playing guitar for 16 years the three districts with 255
ed to burn the vehicle with NET. l]1e concert gives which contains three classi- and is a member of Bethel full-time employees.
young people a place to go cal pieces performed by the Worship Center where he
Armstrong inside, .
Meigs' most recent negoNewcomb, who pleaded and something positive to Ohio University Percussion runs the sound. He is also the tiated agreement with its
guilty to a reduced charge of do on a .'Saturday night to Ensemble. Next May he sound man for local praise teachers gives them a four
abduction in July with a two- create a. "spiritual buzz" will venture on a six-day band Crashing Jericho.
Smith, also from Ripley, percent pay increase while
tour
with
the
Ohio
year prison sentence, failed according to Deemer.
also increasing employees'
Headliner Francis is University Ensemble which has been in two Christian share of insurance costs by
to show for his sentencing
described as an "avid musi- will include stops in rock bands and has served in
and is currently at large.
one percent, from that five
Lentes told the court that cian" that'is active in classi- Canton, Youngstown, and praise and worship music at to six percent. Meigs also
Newcomb was clearly the cal, jazz, and Christian the Kennedy Center in Harvest Church m Mason, eliminated contract wording
person in charge during the music. He is currently Washington, Q.C. He is cur- W. Va, Walker, who attends permitting dru~ prescripincident and that his client, undergoing his third year as rently working on his first church in Belpre has played tions with genenc instead of
Pace, should not be punished a student of the Ohio symphony and his second drums for 19 years, includ- brand name drugs when
ing in two church praise and
for executing his constitu- University School of Music, CD of solo piano music.
worship bands and has a available.
in
As
for
Dunamis,
it
is
pursuing
a
double
major
tional right of trial by jury.
Unique from other county
Assistant
Prosecuting percussion performance and made up of Mark Kuhn, strong desire to "be used of school districts, Southern is
lead si nger, guitar; Deemer, God and wants to do his part still in the category of fiscal
Altorney Eric Mulford music composition.
At
Ohio
University,
lead
guitar, backup vocals; to·see souls won for Christ." emergency which means all
informed the court of Pace's
Rod
Smith. bass guitar, Also, Dunamis often per- financial decisions/contract
Francis
regularly
performs
· previous convictions and
with
the
wind
ensemble,
the
backup
vocals; Jay Walker, forms for free and can be negotiations are overseen
charges in other, counties
drums.
Dunamis
is a Greek reached at their website
and said Pace has shown no symphony orchestra, the perand approved by a statecussion ensemble, the jazz word found in ACTS that dunamispraiseband.com.
remorse for his actions. ·
appointed commission,
"ex.plosi ve" or
Deemer said helping to
Lentes countered, saying percussion ensemble, and means
"I'm not satisfied as the
"dynamic"
and
what
band
communicate
God's word
as
pianist
in
the
jazz
serves
that whether or not Pace has
SLEA president but I know
shown remorse for his ensemble. His newest CD members felt best describes through music is a goal at right now that was all we
actions could not be judged "Take Two" features I 0 con- their band of praise and tomorrow's concert which could get," Ohlinger said.
worship mu sic with a rock .will also feature special
Pluse see Senten't&lt; AS
speaker Jason Simpkins.
and roll edgC:,;t
....... see Southem. AS

Live from Pomeroy,
ifs Saturday Night'

1

INDEX

© •'10? Ohio Valley Publlshin3 Co.

Pluse IH Clink. AS

BY BETH SERGENT

STAFF REPORT ,

OBITUARIES

the applicant agency for the
county's last FQHC application, which was approved
through a special Poor
County Initiative. The county had applied four other
times using the sanie model,
but had been denied for var- ·
ious reasons. Annual funding for the operation is
expected to continue.
In addition to providing

Southern
teachers to
·pay more for
•
msurance

R8CMf811

WEATIIER

l'at:lt•••l

J. REED

BREECOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
• Local Briefs.
See Page A5
• Family Medicine:
'Back to school fatigue'
may be cause of mom's
tiredness. See Page A5
• Buyers keep Fenton
Art Glass going a bH
longer. .See Page A6
• TOPS recognizes
weight losers.
See Page AS

811y rlllt:IIIIDII

I IU ll \\ . ~I I' I'F:\11\I : R :.o H. :! no -

,

FQHC clinic to open by year's end

• Meigs outlasts
Nelsonville-York in
five. See Page 81

INSIDE

8

•

'

Page AS
• Joshua Harris, 20
• Patsy O, Thompson, 57

t'o Will A

Gallipolis Career College
graduation held, AS

Judge hands
.down maximum
sentence in
Gallia County

�'

. •I
I'

cast

ears,

a spark that was caught in the
locket that Gloria's (ather had
given her. The light which had
for so long been dimmed and
nearly gone out, sputtered and
then burst into a new flame.
The fire in the heart-shaped
locket grew and seemed to
catch fire to Gloria's dress and
even to Gloria herself. At first
it burned and she cried, but it
merely burned away the cal!uses that had covered her
heart and the sleeping spell
which had smothered her
devotion to her father and
motheranddrownedhercompassion for others: She wps set
free with all the fonner ugli·
. ness burned away. She and the
young man joyfully ran before
her father and mother. She
cast .herself at his feet, begging
forgtveness. Her father stood
up and, taking her hand, raised
her to her feet ''Daughter, this
was all that I desired." And
truly the fellowship that
Gloria, her father and mother,
and the brave young man who
had risked his own life, was
sweet and victorious. The bitter old hag, however, was banished from the land, but still
hoped one day to lure the
young princess back into the
slumber of complacency.
Christians today can fall
under the spell of complacency, dreaming dreams of pride
and selfishness. ~ you have
fallen asleep to His love, and
a th9friy hedge of indifference
~ you frol!l reaching out
with .compassiOn to otherS,
ask GoQ to revive the fite of
His love in your heart to(lay.
. "To the angel of the clwrch
in Sardis write: ' ... I mow
your deeds; YOU have a rePlJia•
tion for being alive, but you
are dead. Wake up! Strenglhtm
what remains and is about to
die, for I have not found your
deeds complete in the sight of
My (Jod. Remember, therefore, what you have seen and
heard; obey it, and repenl But
if you do not w~ up, I will
come like a thief, and1you will
not know at what tiinC I will
come to you. You have.a few
people in Sardis who have ll(lt
soiled their clothes. They will
walk with Me, dressed in
white, for they are worthy. He
who overcomes will, like
thell), be dressed in white"
(Revelation3:105a NIV).

(Tiwm MoUolum and his
family hav• ministertd In
southern Ohio the past 12
yean. He is the pastor of
Pathway
Community
Church which mtets on
Sunday mornings at 455
Third Ave. He may be
reoehed for comments or
questions by email at ptn·
torthom@pathwaygaUipolis. com).

4SSOCIATED PRESS

Qua of .1-. Orlolo\fOIIOIIt
VaiiZaod1 iad Wu&lt;l Rd., Putor. Juneo
Miller, Sunday Scbool - 10:~ a.m.,
EvminJ • 7:l0 p.m .

International
~ Ballet
Competition, which is held
in Jackson every four years.
Her performance to the
contemporary
Christian
classic, "We Shall Behold
Him" was "sort of the seed
that started out as Ballet
Magnificat!," said . ~eith
Thibodeaux, Kathy's husband and executive director
of the business. "We are
un iqu~ in that . w,e af e a
Chnsuan company. . ~~
make no bones about that:
Keith Thibodeaux is no
stranger to ~e rform i ng .
Though not tramed in ballet, he plays the drums, a
talent that earned .him a gig
as Little Ricky, the TV son
of Lucille Ball and Desi
Arnaz on the "I Love
Lucy" shovy.
.
Kathy Thibodeaux said
most of the company's per·
formances . are stories that
are· biblically based and just
put to dance, with contem ·
porary Christian and classi·
cal music.
"We use the same dance
vocabulary ~hat we ,were
brought up in . We just &amp;ell a
different message," Kathy
Thibodeaux.said.
,
·What started as a fourperson ballet company has
now f rown
two professiona touriqg companies .
- · Alph!j . al)~ . Omega and · 31 tramees . They
attend ·classes five days a
week. in 'preparation,..f9r
ministries in the . touring
companies. as well as work
with other mission organi·
zations.
"Our desire is that it will
magnify the Lord in all that
we do. Dancing is just a gift
that the Lord gave us,"
Kathy Thibodeaux said.

BY KATHY HANRAHAN
~ITER

Rl"r v...,

JACKSON, Miss.
Instead of heading off to
college after high sch9ol
graduation, Elizabeth Kraft
left her northern Virginia
home for a small dance studio in Mississippi.
She had lon~ aspired to
dance professtonally. But
after enrolling in various
programs, Kraft said she
found the competitive world
of dance to be "cutthroat."
She even considered giving
it up altogether.
"The Lord showed me
that without dance in my
life," the 19-year-old said,
"it would be kind of empty."
She and other dancers
from a,round the world were
drawn to Ballet Maj!nificat! ,
a
non-denommational
Christian ballet company
that combines classical
dance instruction, familyfriendly material .and a mission to share the Christian
faith . The company is part
of a trend incorporating
dance and other creative
arts into religious expression, scholars say.
Kraft is a member of the
Jackson-based company's
trainee program, a one· to
four-year
program.
Dancers a're schooled in
classical ballet and get to
particd· ate in Christiantheme performances.
· A fellow trainee, Hanna
Nagel, 22, traveled from
Germany to join the program after dancing in secular companies in her native
country. Nagel said she
found her religious beliefs
interfered with some of the
provocative subject matter
portrayed on stage. She
knew there had to be a place
where her spiritual side
could exist with her passion
for dancing. An Internet
search led her to Ballet
Magnificat!
Located next to a doggrooming business, Ballet ·
Magnificat!'s building is
unassuming from the outside with some front win·
dows giving a view of ·
loDREOJMIM"
trainee classes.
With four dance studios
and a school of arts that
teaches about 400, the narrow, winding hallways are
abuzz with activity. Music
echoes through the swelter·
ing studios during class
hours, the warm temperatures suiting the dancers'
need for warm muscles.
The company was founded in 1986 by Kathy
Thibodeaux, a silver medal·
ist at the II USA

River Valley Apostolic Wonhip Center,
873 S. lnl Ave., Middlepon, Rev.
Michael Brodfonl, Puwr, Sundoy, 10:30
a.m. Tuta. 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm Bible
Sl\ldy
-ueiApo~Wk'I'IHnucltlllc.

Loop Rd oft New Lima Rd. Rutland ,
Servicea: Sun 10:00 a.m. t. 7:30 p.m.,
Thun . 7:00p.m., Pastor Marty R. Huttoo

Assembly of God
Ubeny "-mbly ol God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane, Muon,
W.Va., Pastor: Neil Tenlllllt, Suoday
Service~- 10:00 a.m..and 7 p.m.

B~ptist
P...,ute FroewW Bopllll Cluudo
""""' Mike Hannon, Sundly S.:llool
9:30 to 10:30 am, Wonhip ten'ice 10:30
to II :00 am. Wed. pruchina 6 pm

c..,..,., llldepe.,...t Blpllot clniru
S-y S&lt;lloot - 9:30am, Pmclling

5ervice

!0:30am, Evening

Service
7'00pm, Wednesday Bible Study NIO pm,
Pastor: Whitt Aken .

c-...llapCIII Cburdl
Pastor: Steve Little, Sunday School: 9:30
10:30 ""·
Wodneolay Bible Study 6'30pm; choir
practict: 7;30; youth and Bible Buddies
6:30p.m. Thul'l. I pm book 1tw:ly

lm, Momiq Wollhtp:

Hope Boptlot C.,..b (Saotllon)
510 Ol'lllt St., Middleport, Suaday scbool
· 9:30am., Wonhip - 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service - 7 p'.m. Pa.tor: Gary

to

Ellil

Ruillllcll'lniBaplllt Cbaldl
Sunday S.:llool - ~30 a.m.. Wonhip .
10:4.5
.........yl'lnlllopllot
Pastor Jon Brockert, ~t Main St. ,
Sllllday Sch. 9:30am , Worship 10:30 am

a.m.

f1nt Soolllera .......
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Pastor: E. Lamar
0'8ryant, Sunday School • 9:30
WOI'Ihip • 8:15a.m., 9:4.5 am &amp; 7:00pm.,
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

a."m.,

Flnl Bopdlt Cllllr&lt;b

Paotof: Billy ZuBplll6th ud Palmer St.,
Middleport , Sunday S~ool - 9:1!1 a.m.,
Worahip • 10:1.5 a.m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Servicc- 7:00 p.m.
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SUm Rttn llopdol

Pastor: John Swanson, Suadly School IOa.m .• Worship - I ta.m., 7:00 p.m.
,Wedl...ct.y Serviceo· 7:00p.m.

MI. Unloallopdol
Pastor: Denai1 Weaver Sunday Scbool9:4.5 a.m.• Evenina - 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

--llopJbl Cbantt
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH,
Putor: F.d Carter, Sunday School • 9 :30
a.m., Sunday Worship • 10:30 a.m..
WedDOiday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.

OkllloiMI FroeWIIIIIoptiRCboreb
28601 St . Rt . 7, Middleport, Sunday
Service - 10 a.m., 6 :00 p.m., 'I\Je5day
Senic:ea -6:(1)

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

Vlctor7 Bapdii:Jadepe•~e•t
52.5 N. lnd St. Midd.leport, Pas1or: James
E. Keesee, Wonhip - IOa.m., 7 p.m. ,
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

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Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

The Jesus Prayer
Some years ago I came upoo a very beautiful and powerful prayer. I had picked up

J.D. Salinger's I96l novel, Franny and Zooey, in a used bookstore, and in the"""""'
of reading this shon novel, discovered what is.sometim&lt;;s called 'The Jesus Prayer."
The prayer is doctptively simple, tonsiSting
of just twelve words in its longest
versions. The long version of the prayer
is as follows: "Lord Jesus Christ, son of ·
God, have mercy on me,1 a sinner.''
It can be shonened 10 "Lord Jesus,
have metcy oo me" or !0 anything to be prayed
silently and repeated ove~ and over without
ceasing, until it becomes an almost unconSI;ious
pan of our being, lirerally in mythm 10 the
beal,ing of our bearts and our breathing. This
prayer has a long histOI)', going back to
Easrem Orthodox monasticism. and is the .1f
!IUbject of the anonymous 19th century
T
Russian work, The Way of a Pilgrim. Bu~ the
. prayer itself actually has its roots in the New
Tcstarncn~ where we are told "Truly, truly. ! say to you,
if yoo ask anything of the Father, He will give ilto yw
my name. Hitheno yw have asked nothing in my name:
and you win receive, !hat your joy may be fulL " (Jolm.Jo:.&lt;N.4J
And, in I Thessalonians 5:17, we are told to "prny without ceasing.
Jesus
prayer is a wonderfully simple way 10 fulfill this injuoction: I urge you 10 try it.
But the 1~ collector, standing far oil would not even lift up his eyes
toheaven, but beat his breast, saying. "God he merciful to me a
sinner!"
-R.S.V. Luke 18 :13

Cit-

Foltb Blplllt
Railroad St., MISOII, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - II a.m., 6 p .m.
WedDesday.Services- 7 p.m.

Michelle Kennedy
1,Direct,or of Marketing and Admissions

F....albut Baplllt· Pumoroy
Rev. Joseph Woods . Sunday School - 10
a.m .. Wonhip · II:30 a.m.

Mt-llopdol

Warm Friendly
A rmosphe ~

Fourth &amp;: Main S.., M iddleport , Suncby
,Schoo1 - 9:30 am., Worship · 10:4S am .

Hours
6am ·8 pm

AJtllqulty llopllot
Suntlay Scbool - 9:30 a.m., Worship ·
10:45 a.m., Sunday E\'eniriJ - 6:00 p.m.,
Pulor: Don Walker

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Home People"
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29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217

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If ye abide in Me, and My
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ask what ye wil~ and it shall
be done unto you.
Jolm/5:7

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740.985-3561
992-1550
Sales o Service o Parts
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Ken and Adam Youn

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

Middleport, OH

7411-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
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507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 4$769

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P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769·068:),

(lndq&gt;oOOent llapli•J

SR 652 and Ander&amp;on St. Putor: Robert
Cindy, Sunday school 10 am . Morning
church It un, Sunday eveniDg 6 pm, Wed.
Bible Study 7 pm
'

Catholic
- - CaiWie Cb.tJ.

161 Mulberry Ave .• Pomeroy, 992-3898,
Pu tor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz , Sat. Cod.
4 : 4S- ~ : 1 5p .m .; Mu 's- 3:30 p.m., Su o.
Con . -8:45-9:1.5 a.m., Su n. Mass · 9:30
a.m .. Daily Mus - 8:30a.m.

Church of Christ
Cbordt oiCbrtttt
332260ildren'a Home Rd•.Pomeroy, OH
Contact 740-44 1-1296 Sunday mornin g
10:00, Sun morn ing Bi blt study ;
followi111 worship, Sun . ne 6:00 pm.
Wed bible study 7 prn

Hemlock Gro"e Cluiltlan Cburcb
Minister: Larry Brown, Worsh ip • 9:30
a.m. Sunday School • 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study - 7 p.m.
........y Churdt oiChrtll
1: 12 W. Main St., Sunday Schoo l - 9:30
a.m ., Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Ser\'ices - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Wataldt.Clwldl orCbrilt
33226 Qlildten'a Home Rd .. Sunday
School - 11 a.m., WorslUp - lOa.m., 6 p.m,
Wednesday Senices - 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of Cllrllt
!ith and Main, PastC¥: AI Hartson,
Childrens Director; s\lron Sayre , Teen
Directcr. Dodger Vaughan, Sunday Schoql
·9:30 a.m., Worship- ·8:15, 10:30 am .• 7
p.m., Wednesday Services 7 p.m.
M

Keno &lt;.burtb of Cbrilt
Worship - 9:30 a.m.. Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, 1st sild
3rd Sunday
Burwdlow Ridge Churdl of O.rist
Putor:Bruce Terry. Sunday School -9:30
a.m .
Wonhip - LO:JO a .m., 6:30 p.m,
We&lt;hle&amp;day Services · 6:30pm.
Zion Cburtb or Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RI.I43),
Pastor: Ro1er Watso n. Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Ser\'ice&amp; - 7 p.m.

Thppen Plain Chur&lt;. ofChrlol
IJistrumental, Worship Ser\'ice ·· 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 a.m·.. Sunday School LO:l!l a.m., Youlh- .5:J() pm Sunday, Bible
Study W!dnesday 1 pm
Bradbury Cb ..... of Christ
Minister: Tom Runyon, 395~ 8 Bradbury
Road, Middleport , Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
R•llaDd Cb ..... &lt;I Cltrlll
Sunday School · 9:30a.m., Wou hlp and
Communion · IJ):JO a.m., Bob J. Werry• .
Minister

Bradlonl Cburdt ol Cbrbt
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
Minis1er. Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
Bill AmbeiJC', Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worstlip • 8:00 a.m •• 10:30 a.m .• 7:00
p.m .•Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

Thppm Plains, Pastor Mike Moore, Bible
clus, 9 a.m. Sunday; worship 10 a.m.
Swtday: worship 6:30 pm Sunday ; Bible
clan 7 pm Wed.

-Churdt oiCbrtll
Pastor: Pllilip Stunn, Sunday School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Service:: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study, WedDelday, 6:30p.m.
llata'Cbur&lt;bofCbrtll
Sunday school 9:30 a.m ., Sunday worship
~ 10:30 a.m.
The O.orcll
lntenec:tion 7 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis SIIIJent, Sunday Bible Study •
9:30 a.m., Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

"Chrisl ..........,

Christian Union
Hartford Cbun:h ol Cltrist In
Clulallan U.U..
Hartford , W.Va .• Pastor:David Grc"er,
Sunday Scltool - 9:30 a.m.• , Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p .m., Wednesday
Services- 7:00 p.m. :

Church of God

S~HCU~&lt;I'int Cltvclt

oiGod
Apple and Second Srs:, Pastor. Rev. Da\'id
Ru ne~ . Sunday Schoo! and Wonhip- 10
a.m. Evening Ser vices - 6:30 p.m.,
Wedntlday Services - 6:30p.m.
' ' Cbllft!l ol God or Prvpbecy
OJ . White Rd. off St. Rt. LCiO , Pastor: PJ.
Otapman, Sunday School - LO a.m.,
Worshi p - l('aln., Wednesday Services. 7
p.m.

Congregational
Trtnii}Cburdl

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy, Pastur: Rev.
Jonathlll'! Noble , Worship 10:25 a.m.,
Sunday School 9:1!i a.m .

,Episcopal
G""" Epboopol Ck""'h
326 E. M!lin St., Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Holy Eucharist 11 :00 a.m. Rev.
Edward Payne

Holiness
Communley Church
Pas!Dr: Steve Tomek, Main Street,
Rutland , Sunday Wonhip-10:00 a.m.,
Sunday Smrico-7 p.m.
O..vllle lloUn"' Cbtudl ·
31 057 State Route 32S, Umssvlle, Pastor:
Benjamin Crawford, SWld.ay scllool - 9:30
a.m.. Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp;: 1
p.m., Wednesday prayer sel'\'ice- 7 p.m.
Cll•ory Ptlptm Cbopel
HarrisonviUe Road , Pastor: Charles

McKenrie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship · II a.m.. 7:00p.m. , Wednesday
Service · 7:00 p.m.

Rose of Sharon Hollnea Ch1U'Ch
Leading Creel Rd., Rutland, Pastor: Rev .
Dewey King, Sunday ~hool - 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship -7 p.m., Wednesday
·prayer meeting- 7 p.m.
Pine Grove Bible Holiness Cbun:b
1/2 mile off Rt. 325, P11stor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday SchooJ • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Jllblt Hollnm Cburcla
75 Pearl St., Middleport. Pastor: Rick
Bourne, Sunday School - 10 a.m . Worship
- 10:45 p.m .. Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service -7:30 p.m.
HyRII Run Community Church
P~tor: Rev. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
-9:30a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 ~. m .,
Thullday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

Laurd CUI! Fret Melbodbi Cborcb
Pastor: GleM Rowe , Sunday Schoolr'-'
9:30a.m., Wors hip- 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.,Wednesday Service · 7:00·j..m.

Latter-Day Saints
Tbt Church of Jmu
Chrill of Latler-Diy SabaD
St . Rt . 160, 446-624 7 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10:20- ll a. m., Relief
Society/Priesthood II :05- 12:00 noon ,
Sacrament Service 9-1 0:1 5 a.m.•
Homemakinl! mc:etina. 1st Thurs .- 7 p.m.
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Lutheran
Sl. John Lutbtnn Cbun:b

Pine Grove, Worship· 9:00 a.m., Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m. Pastor:

Our Savtour Lulbtnm Ch.m•
Walnu.1 and Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va., Pastor: David Ru n ell. Sund ay
School - 10:00 a.IJl ., Worship · II a.m.
St. Pllll Latben.n Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St .. Pomeroy,
Sun. School - 9:4.5 a.m., Worship - II a.m .

United Methodist
Gnll.-n United Methodist
Worship - I I a.m. Pastor: Richard Nease
Btdltei UalltdMelbodbl
New Haven , Richard Nease, Pastor,
Sunday wo rs hip 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
pr11y~r !llld Bible Stu~.
Mt. lHin United Mdhodilt
Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Pasior: Re\'.

Ralph Spires, Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
Worstlip - 10:30 a.m., 7. p.m., Thursday
Serv iL"ei - 7 p.m.
Melp Cooperadve hrlsb ·
Northeast Cluster, Alfred , Pu tor: Jim
Corbitt . Sunday School -'9:30 a.m.,
Worship - II a.m.• 6:30 p.m.
Chester
Jim Corbin , Worship - 9 a.m.,
Sund ay Schoo l • !0 a .m ~ , Thursday
Serr iL"es - 7 p.m.
Pa~tor :

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I'M&gt;.

(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-583·2433

llt'4DftXX!, WV, Sunday Sebool 10 am, M~ni wonhi p I I am Evening - 7 pm,
Wednetday 1 p.m.
Flnl llopllol Chord&gt; &lt;1 ~ . WV

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A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

Seoood Bapllot Cbllft!l

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Mile Hill Rd., Racine, Putor: Jame s
Saru:rfield, SundaY School · 9:45 a.m.,
Evening - 6 p.m., Wednesday Services· 7
p.m.
RullaDd Cburdloi God
Putor: Ron Heath , Sunday Wonhip - 10
a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesday Services ~ 7
p.m.

Cartdon l•~a.rdl
Kiagsbllry Road . PaSior: R*rt Vuce,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worah.ip
Service 10:30 a.m., Evening Service 6

Wednesday Serv1ccs- 7 p.m.

J-

Loot-

,_., c.um oiGo N Pastor: Jan Lavender, Sunday School 9:.30 1.m., Worthip - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.lrl ., Wedne5day Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m.

Cbester Church of tbt Nuarent

Pastor: Denzil Null , Worship - 9:30 a.m .
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

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.w.

Worship • 9:30 a.m .. Sunday School 10:30 a.m.• Fust Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. (ICT\Iicc

Tllppen Plaint St. Paul
Pas tor: Jim Corbin, Sunday Schoo! - 9

a.m., Wonhip • 10 a.m., Tuesday Sel'\'ices
• 7:30p.m .
Central Cluter
Asbury (Syracuse), Pastor: Bob Robinson.
Su nday Sc~ · 9:4.5 a.m., Wors hip - I I
~.m .• Wednestiay Servil.:es- 7:30 p.m.
EDterprbt
Paslor: Arland King, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 33 10.5 Hiland
Rd, Pomeroy

Pastor: Keith Rader, Sunday School - I 0
a.m., Worship - I I a.m.
Fomt Ru.a
Pastor: Bub Rubinsun, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship- 9 a.m.
Beaib !Middkporl)
Pastor: Brian Dunham, Sunday Sc hool 9:30a .m.. Wonhip - li :OO a.m.

MlnertYIIIe
Pastor: Bob Robinson . Su nday School - 9
a.m.;Worsh ip - 10 a.m.
l'&lt;orl Cbopel
Sunday School - 9 a. m., Worship - 10 11 .m .

Pomeroy
Pastor: Bri an Dunham. Worship - 9:30
a.m., Su nday School- 10:35 a. m.
Rock Sprlnp
Pastor: Keith Rader, Sunday School- 9:15
a.m.. Worship - 10 •a. m.. Youth
Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

pm.

Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31. Pastor: Rev .
Roger Willford, Sunday Scbool · 9:30
a.m. Worshi p- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Cun is Randolph, Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m .,
6p.m.,
Rutland C han:b Of the Nuare¥
Pastor: Isaac Shupe. Sunday Sc hool - 9:30
a.m., Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Wblte'1 ChApel WAyan
Coolville Road , Pastor: Rn. Chariel
Martindal e. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.•
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., Wcdneiday Sel"'ice
-7 p.m

Other Churches

Folnt.w Bible t;burdl "
Letart, W.Va. Rt. I . Pastor: Brian May ,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship - 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday- Bible Stud y- 7:00p.m.
Faith Fellowship CI'Uiide for Cluilt
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens, Service:
Friday. 7 p.m.

S~

Community Chllrt'b
2480 Second St, Syrac use, OH
Sun . Sc hool 10 am, Sundy night 6:30pm
Pastor: Joe Gwinn
A New BeaimUnl
(FuD Golptl Cbureh) Harrisonville ,

Pas1or1: Bob and Kay Mmitall,
Sunday Service , 2 p.m.

Col.ary Bib~ Cburdl
Pome roy Pi ke , Co. Rd ., Pastor: Rev .
Blacko-A·ood , Sunday School · 9:30 a:m.,
Worship !0 :30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Anw.Jna Grace Community Cburtb
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap,StaEI Rt . 68 1,
Tuppers Plain5, Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm, Wed . Bible Study 7:00p .m

Sth ersvme Community Churtb
Sunday School 10:00 am, Sunday Worship
I I :00 am, Wed n~sday 7:00 pm PaJt()f:
Bryan &amp; Miuy Dai ley

Oasis CbrUUan FtllowsiUp
(Non-denominational fellowsh ip)
Meeting in the Meigs Midd le Schoo l
Cafeteria Pastor: Chris Stewart
'10:00 am - Noon Sunday ; Informal
Worship. Chi l ~n 's mirlistry
Community of Christ
Portland-Racine Rd.. Pastor: Jim Proffitt.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Wo r ~hi p 10:30 a.m., Wed nesday Services • 7:00
p.m
Btthel Worship Center
39782 S.R. 7, Reedsv ille, OH 45772, 1/2
mile north of Eastern Schools on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church, PBSior Rob Barber,
Associate Pastor Karyn Davis, Youtll
Pastor Suzie Fra ncis, Sund ay services
10:00 am worship, 6:00 pm FIUflil y Life
Classc:1, Wed. Home Ce ll Group! 7:00
p.m., Outer Limits Cell Gro up at !he
church 6:30pm to 8:30pm

Aah Slrttt Cburdt
398 Ash St., Middleport -Pastor Jeff Smilh
Sunday Sc hool - 9:30 a.m., Morning
Worship • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7:00 · pm ,
Wednes day Se rvice - 7:00 p.m., Youth
Strvice- 7:00p.m.
AKapt Life Center
"Fuii -Qo&lt;;pel Church", Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Sec ond Ave . Mason, 77 35017 , ServiL"e time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wedne~day 7 pm

Bethany
Pastor: John GiiiTIQre, Sunday School · 10
a.m., Worsh ip - 9 a.m ., Wed nesday
Services · 10 a.m.

Abundaat Gnct R.F. I.
923 S. Third St. , Middleport , Pas1or leresa
Davi s, Sunday servi ce, 10 a. m.,
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Cormel-&amp;dlt&gt;o
C!lJ'Iru!l &amp; Bashan Rds. Racine , Oh io ,
Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunday School •
9:45a .m., Wor1hip • 11 :00 a.m. , Bible
Study. Wed. 7:30p.m.

Faith Full CrO!!Ipel Cbardl
Long Bottom. Pastor: Steve Reed. Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednesday- 7 p.m., Friday fellowship sel'\'ice 7 p.m .

Mornln&amp; Stor
Pastor: John Gilmore , Sunday School - I I
a.m., Worship- 10 a.m.

IJ•rrllllllvlllt Community C~rth
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.. Wednesday · 7 p.m.

. Eut Letart
Pastor: Bill Marshall Sunday School 9a.m.. Worship - 10 a.m .• 1st Sunda y
t\'ery monlh evening service 7:00 p.m.;
wednesday . 7 pro .

· Middleport Commanlty Chun:h
575 Pearl St. , Middlepon , Pastor: Sam
Anderson , Sunday School 10 a.m..
Even ing -7 :30p.m., Wednc!Kiay Sel'\'ice 7:30p.m.

Rodn&lt;.
Putor: Keny Wood . Sunday School • 10
a.m.. Worship - II a.m .Wed nesday
Services 6 pm; Thur Bible St ud~ 7 pm

Faith Valley Tabern.cle c•un:b
Bailey Run Road . Pastor: Rev. Emmell
Rawson , Sunday Evening 7 p.m.,
ThurMI.ay Service· 7 p.m.

CoolQUe Unkcd Mttbodla Parbh
Pastor: Helen Kline, Coo lville Chu rch.
Main &amp; Fifth Sr., Sun . School · 10 a. m.,
Worship · 9 u n., 1\leJ. Services · 7 p.m.

Sc hool - 10 11 .m, Evening · 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Serv ice- 7 p.m.

Bedlel Cban:b
Township Rd., 468C, Sunday School - 9
a.m, Wo n iUp - 10 a.m., Wednesday
Services · 10 a.m.

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt. 124, Pa stor: Edsel Han, Sunday
School - 9:30a.m.• Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.,
7:30 p.m.

Hodtlagport Cbur&lt;b
Grand Street. Sunday School -9:30 a.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Pastor Phill ip Bell

Dyavlle Community Cbun:h
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
MDrst Chapel c•urch
Sunday sc hoo l • 10 a.m., Worship - 11
a.m ., Wednesday ~ ice · 1 p.m.

Syracuee Mlss6on
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse, Sunday

Nazarene

Faith GMpd Cburth
Lon&amp;: Bottom. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,

M&amp;ddltport Church of the Nazareoe
Pastor: Allen Midcap , Sund ay School 9 :30 a.m.,Worship • 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.•
Wedne5day Services · 7 p .m .• Paslor:
Allen Midcap

Worship - 10:4.5 a.m., 7:30 p.m .•
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
MI. Ollw Community Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday School 9:30a.m.. E\·ening · 6:30p .m.. Wedneday
Service· 7 p.m.·
Full Gospel Ll&amp;hlhoUM
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday School - 10 a.rn., Eve~~ in g
7:30 p.m., Tuesday &amp; llm ~ . ·7:30 p.m.

Rteds\ille Fellowlblp
Omrch of the Nazarene, P11s10r: Russell

Canon . Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a .m..
Wor~hi p - 10:45 a.m.. 1 p.m.. Wed nesday
Services · 7 p.m.
Syracue ChurCh of the NJWU"tae
Pastor Mike Adkins. Sunday S.:hool · 9:30
am .. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m ..

Clifton 'hbti'IIICit Cburtb
Clifton, W.Va., Sund ay Schoo l - 10 a.m .:
Wor!lhip · 7 p.m., Wednesday Service - 7
p .m .

New Ure VIctory CrntH'
3773 GeorJes,Crec:k Rood. Gallipolis,OH
Pastor: Bil! Staten. Sunday Smices - 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wednesday - 7 p.m. It
Youlh 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Churclt

or the Uvln1 Stwlor

Rutl1111d
Pastor: Rick Bourne. Sunday Sc hool 9:30 a.m.• Won hip • 10:30 a.m., Thumlay
Services - 7 p.m.
Salem Ccnttr
Pastor: William K. Marshall, Sunday
School- 10: 15 a.m., Worship - 9:l.5 a.m. ,
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
Snowville
Sunday School - 10 am .. Worship - 9 a.m.

'lbn:;h Church
Co. Rd . 63. Sunday SchooJ · 9:30 a.m..
Worship · 10:30 a.'!l.

Rejolclng Life Churtb
300 N. 2nd Ave ., Middl eport, Pas1or:
Mike Foreman, Pastor Emeri tus Lawrence
Foreman, Wonhip- 10:00 ilit1 •
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Rt.338, Antiquity, Pas tor: Jesse. Morris ,
Service§: Saturday 2:00p.m.

Salem Community Churd&amp;
Beck of West Columbia, W.Va.om Lieving

Road.'Pastor: Charles Roush (304) 67.52288, Sunday School 9:30 am, Sunday
eve ning service 7:00 pm , Bibly Stud y
Wed ne'iday serv ice 7:00pm
Hobson Chrlltlaa Fellowship Churtb
Pa stor: Herschel White, Sunday SChool10 am , Sunday Chun:h service- 6:30 pm
Wodne!iday 7 pm
RtstoralJon Christian t'ellowshlp
9365 Hoop er Rood . Ath ens. Pastor:
Lonnie Coau . Sunday Worship 10:00 am .
Wednesday: 7 pm
Hotut ot Heallq Mlnlatrln
St. Rl. ll4 Lu&amp;nlle, OH
Full Gospel, Cl Pastors Robert &amp; Roberta
Mu5ser, Sund ay School 9:30 am, ,
Worship 10:30 am - 7:00 p~ . Wed.
~rv-ice 7:00 pm
'Itlm Jesll!l Mlnlllfrla
Mec:ting in the Mulberry Communil~
Center Gymnasium. P11s1or Eddie Baer,
Service every TUesday 6:30 pm

Pentecostal
PtnlMeltal A.utmbly
Pastor: St. Rt. 124 , Racine . Tornado Rd.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.• Evenina - 7
p.m., Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Presbyterian
H•rbonvlllr Prftbyttri•n Chun:h
Pa11or: Robert Crow, Worship . 9 a.ra.

Pastor: Jame s Snyder, S unda~ School 10
a.m., worship service II am.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Stvenlh·DIJ Ad n nlbt
Mu lberry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy. Sa turday
S e rvi ce~ : Sabbath School - 2 p.m.,
Worship- 3 p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Jltrmon United Brethren
In Christ Cbutdl ,
Texas Community 364 11 Wic kham Rd .
Pastor: Peter Martindale , Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m., Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Services · 7:00 p.m.
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7 p.m
Eden United Brethren In Christ
State Rome 124, be1 we~ n Reeds ville &amp;
Hod .ingpon . Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.,
Sunday Wors hip · 1t:OO a.m. Wednesday
Se:rvices · 7:00 p.m., Pastor- M. Adam
Will

Soudl Btlbtl Community Churth
Silver Ridge- Pastor Linda Damewood ,
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worship Sel'\'ice
10 a.m . 200. and 4th Sunday

••
,.

'•

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC

ServiW~ 7 p.m.

- 7 p.m., Wednesday

11ktorJ IIIIIs Churdl &lt;1 Cbrbt

BapllltCiludl
51. Rt 143 just
R1. 7, Pastor: Rev.
Jamea R. Acree , Sr., Sunday Uuified
Service. Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m. ,
Wednesday Service1 •7 p.m.
·

I ·.,

a.m; • .Rvenina

Flnt .......

Pastor: Ry~ Eaton, plllo.r , Sunday
Sdlool - 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:40 a.m.,
7:00 p.m., Wednesday Sen-icc• • 7:00
p.m.

on

~ '

~

I :~- ...... WIU 8apllot
¥-:,rn t.if·· Pastor: , Sunday School · 10

Religion
takes
center
stage·
with
--------A Hunger For·More -~- Mississippi ballet company
into contact with the Icing's been burning within him
In a land where dreams and
daughter found their heaits
also pierced by the magic
that had claimed her. Their
hearts also swooned into a
1
Pastor
deep sleep of complacency
Thom
and selfishness, fillmg thetr
Mollohan minds with dreams that were
totally contrary to their duties
""' and gifts. The sleep of the
jealous crone soon spread
from the princess to the
of the old woman and king's subjects far and wide.
approached her. The crone
After a time, the king,
smiled encouragingly and, as knowing that he would be
Gloria reached out to touch forced to pronounce judg·
the loom in wonder, took hold ment on even his own \iaugh·
of her hands and moved her ter lest his kingdom-be overflngers to touch the fabric that 'thrown by the sickness in
had been woven. Instantly, their souls, resolved to find
into the mind of Gloria leapt healing one last time. He and
images of palaces and the queen sent word far and
pageants greater than she had wide for any rruln who wbuld
ever known. As she stood · be bold .enough to, try to
there, she stroked the cloth reach thetr daughter s heart.
spellbound by the magic that "~o shall I send? And who
was being worked and failed will go for usT' the royal
to notice that the smile of the proclamation read.
old woman had changed ever"I will go," answered one
so-slightly to that of amused young man, who entered
malice. The hag had woven their presence. He was
into her fabric two needles, the lowly in appearance, yet
points of which were laced withm him glowed the light
with sorcerous spells that of devotion to the king.
would sedate and paralyze the
"Do you realize the dan·
heart of those whose flesh was ger?" the king asked
pierced by them.ln one solemnly. "I do," the man
moment her wickedness replied. '"'l)en go with my
achieved its en.,. Gloria's blessing," the king said, "for
hands, trailing along the edge in you dci I see that there is a
of the fine weaving, were each fire by which you may . xet
pricked by the poison barbs kindle hei' .sleeping heart..'
hidden in the cloth. Gloria's
lie'. parted from the king
eyes glazed over and her heart and foUnd.the princess gawk·
was rendered .immovable, .ing,at)~et reflection in a large
asleep to thgsc; things that.ha!l nu,qor m another pl!1t of tlie
once made her beautiful. She palace. . At first, he was
quickly turned from the loam · reptiJsed by the appeaiance of
ariiJ.tl~ old,woman 88, if ~ the girl •.i:overed as she was by
CQtlld'ilo longer see them.and filtli and a thorny growth that
sfi'lx!e·from the dint chambei.;, e!J!aDated from the Spell that
Sl!e quickly ~tunied .~ ~m · had~ her heart an~ now
pnvale .mom and be8llll· -.to .. seemed like asecond skin. He
gaze at litrself inJ)O'.mirror. remembered the danger that
She walked and talked. as he too could be lost to the evil
though she were a)ive ,and magic, but he remembered
awake, b\Jt her spirjt was cold how beautiful she once was
arid her eyes closed · to the and a desire to see her beauty
lives of ot11ers around her. She restored moved him to act.
began to plaiJ l!iJd prepare for She was lost in the ongoing
herself new goWlls and parties daydream in which she was
at which- she· would be cele- • all that was beautiful and worbrated. While she .had once .thy of praise. So she 4;lid not
been known f¢ her kindness see him until he was scarcely
and regard for the poor, she inches from her. She vaguely
became harsh and selfish. Her tried to push him away for he
once beautiful countenance, obstructed her view of hercelebrated and loved by all self, but she could not ''Wake
those ·whose lives had been uf.!" he said softly but firmly.
blessed by hers, was replaced " 've been sent by your father
with vul~ar vanity and ugly to awaken you." Arage seized
presumption. The king and her and she struck at him. Her
queen were grieved and it blows hurt and doubt for a
seemed to them that their moment stirred within him.
daughter had died. Often they But as despair reached out for
attemp!!ld to awaken her heart him, he saw needles in
to thetr love and open her eyes Gloria's sleeve imd avoided
to the people she.' had once th~ir tou~h. ,','Wake up," '!e
helped. But-her heart seemed S81d agam. Yollr . father IS
surrounded ·by a gird)~ · of calling you. Do you not hear?
thol:nY pride and enVIo!Jsness. Do you not CareT' '
Worse still, all who ,came
And then the fire which had

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

WORSfllP GOD THIS WEEK

Friday, September 28, 2007
, r

nighunares walk and make
war with one another, there
once was a kingdom ruled by
a wise king and beautiful
queen. It so happened that
after many, many years of
longing, waiting, and suffering that a child was born to
them. The child was without
equal in beauty and people
from miles around marveled
at her grace. Upon her rested
her DHJther's queenly counte·
nance and her father's majestic bearing. As tokens of their
royal blessing upon her, the
queen gave their daughter tier
royal earrings. The father of
the j!irl, whose name was
Glona, gave her a locket that
housed within its golden
shell, a fire that he himself
• placed there,Some people, I
may happily report, rejoiced
ll!ld celebrated her birth, recognizing Gloria's arrival into
the world as a divinely
ordained event. Others, not so
happy about it, gnashed their
teeth and muttered curses
under their breath and into
one another's
for while
only some actually had delu.
sions of usurping her place as
the royal favored one, many
simply hated her fur jealousy's sake and plotted her
ruin.
One particularly evil and
bitter woman, who of old had
chosen to hate the royal fam·
ily and all that it stood for,
had learned the arts Of
"dreaving" (the weaving of
dreams of others according to
her purposes and designs).
The foul practices of dreav·
ing had been banned from the
land for the king wished his
people to live in contentment
with their blessings and avoid
the snares of covetousness
and envy. Nor did he desire
for them in jealousy to harm
one another and thus disrupt
the peace of his kingdom.
Nevertheless, when Gloria
had grown to adulthood, her
father and mother pennitted
her to venture at will through·
out their palace. Although
they longed for her fellow·
shi~ and the joy of setting
!herr eyes upon her face, they
knew that she was to journey
through a time of testinR.
After trial, trouble and travail,
she would again be restored
to them, their fellowship
sweetened all the more in
spite of the harm that evil
would contrive against her.
·. As she walked throughout
the castle, the crone of bitterness was prepared. Sitting in a
comer of the palace as far
from the presence of the king
as could be, she sat on a small
stool weaving her webs on a
loom. Gloria was transfixed
by the artfully moving fingers

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Friday, Sepfember 21, 2007

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•

�'

. •I
I'

cast

ears,

a spark that was caught in the
locket that Gloria's (ather had
given her. The light which had
for so long been dimmed and
nearly gone out, sputtered and
then burst into a new flame.
The fire in the heart-shaped
locket grew and seemed to
catch fire to Gloria's dress and
even to Gloria herself. At first
it burned and she cried, but it
merely burned away the cal!uses that had covered her
heart and the sleeping spell
which had smothered her
devotion to her father and
motheranddrownedhercompassion for others: She wps set
free with all the fonner ugli·
. ness burned away. She and the
young man joyfully ran before
her father and mother. She
cast .herself at his feet, begging
forgtveness. Her father stood
up and, taking her hand, raised
her to her feet ''Daughter, this
was all that I desired." And
truly the fellowship that
Gloria, her father and mother,
and the brave young man who
had risked his own life, was
sweet and victorious. The bitter old hag, however, was banished from the land, but still
hoped one day to lure the
young princess back into the
slumber of complacency.
Christians today can fall
under the spell of complacency, dreaming dreams of pride
and selfishness. ~ you have
fallen asleep to His love, and
a th9friy hedge of indifference
~ you frol!l reaching out
with .compassiOn to otherS,
ask GoQ to revive the fite of
His love in your heart to(lay.
. "To the angel of the clwrch
in Sardis write: ' ... I mow
your deeds; YOU have a rePlJia•
tion for being alive, but you
are dead. Wake up! Strenglhtm
what remains and is about to
die, for I have not found your
deeds complete in the sight of
My (Jod. Remember, therefore, what you have seen and
heard; obey it, and repenl But
if you do not w~ up, I will
come like a thief, and1you will
not know at what tiinC I will
come to you. You have.a few
people in Sardis who have ll(lt
soiled their clothes. They will
walk with Me, dressed in
white, for they are worthy. He
who overcomes will, like
thell), be dressed in white"
(Revelation3:105a NIV).

(Tiwm MoUolum and his
family hav• ministertd In
southern Ohio the past 12
yean. He is the pastor of
Pathway
Community
Church which mtets on
Sunday mornings at 455
Third Ave. He may be
reoehed for comments or
questions by email at ptn·
torthom@pathwaygaUipolis. com).

4SSOCIATED PRESS

Qua of .1-. Orlolo\fOIIOIIt
VaiiZaod1 iad Wu&lt;l Rd., Putor. Juneo
Miller, Sunday Scbool - 10:~ a.m.,
EvminJ • 7:l0 p.m .

International
~ Ballet
Competition, which is held
in Jackson every four years.
Her performance to the
contemporary
Christian
classic, "We Shall Behold
Him" was "sort of the seed
that started out as Ballet
Magnificat!," said . ~eith
Thibodeaux, Kathy's husband and executive director
of the business. "We are
un iqu~ in that . w,e af e a
Chnsuan company. . ~~
make no bones about that:
Keith Thibodeaux is no
stranger to ~e rform i ng .
Though not tramed in ballet, he plays the drums, a
talent that earned .him a gig
as Little Ricky, the TV son
of Lucille Ball and Desi
Arnaz on the "I Love
Lucy" shovy.
.
Kathy Thibodeaux said
most of the company's per·
formances . are stories that
are· biblically based and just
put to dance, with contem ·
porary Christian and classi·
cal music.
"We use the same dance
vocabulary ~hat we ,were
brought up in . We just &amp;ell a
different message," Kathy
Thibodeaux.said.
,
·What started as a fourperson ballet company has
now f rown
two professiona touriqg companies .
- · Alph!j . al)~ . Omega and · 31 tramees . They
attend ·classes five days a
week. in 'preparation,..f9r
ministries in the . touring
companies. as well as work
with other mission organi·
zations.
"Our desire is that it will
magnify the Lord in all that
we do. Dancing is just a gift
that the Lord gave us,"
Kathy Thibodeaux said.

BY KATHY HANRAHAN
~ITER

Rl"r v...,

JACKSON, Miss.
Instead of heading off to
college after high sch9ol
graduation, Elizabeth Kraft
left her northern Virginia
home for a small dance studio in Mississippi.
She had lon~ aspired to
dance professtonally. But
after enrolling in various
programs, Kraft said she
found the competitive world
of dance to be "cutthroat."
She even considered giving
it up altogether.
"The Lord showed me
that without dance in my
life," the 19-year-old said,
"it would be kind of empty."
She and other dancers
from a,round the world were
drawn to Ballet Maj!nificat! ,
a
non-denommational
Christian ballet company
that combines classical
dance instruction, familyfriendly material .and a mission to share the Christian
faith . The company is part
of a trend incorporating
dance and other creative
arts into religious expression, scholars say.
Kraft is a member of the
Jackson-based company's
trainee program, a one· to
four-year
program.
Dancers a're schooled in
classical ballet and get to
particd· ate in Christiantheme performances.
· A fellow trainee, Hanna
Nagel, 22, traveled from
Germany to join the program after dancing in secular companies in her native
country. Nagel said she
found her religious beliefs
interfered with some of the
provocative subject matter
portrayed on stage. She
knew there had to be a place
where her spiritual side
could exist with her passion
for dancing. An Internet
search led her to Ballet
Magnificat!
Located next to a doggrooming business, Ballet ·
Magnificat!'s building is
unassuming from the outside with some front win·
dows giving a view of ·
loDREOJMIM"
trainee classes.
With four dance studios
and a school of arts that
teaches about 400, the narrow, winding hallways are
abuzz with activity. Music
echoes through the swelter·
ing studios during class
hours, the warm temperatures suiting the dancers'
need for warm muscles.
The company was founded in 1986 by Kathy
Thibodeaux, a silver medal·
ist at the II USA

River Valley Apostolic Wonhip Center,
873 S. lnl Ave., Middlepon, Rev.
Michael Brodfonl, Puwr, Sundoy, 10:30
a.m. Tuta. 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm Bible
Sl\ldy
-ueiApo~Wk'I'IHnucltlllc.

Loop Rd oft New Lima Rd. Rutland ,
Servicea: Sun 10:00 a.m. t. 7:30 p.m.,
Thun . 7:00p.m., Pastor Marty R. Huttoo

Assembly of God
Ubeny "-mbly ol God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane, Muon,
W.Va., Pastor: Neil Tenlllllt, Suoday
Service~- 10:00 a.m..and 7 p.m.

B~ptist
P...,ute FroewW Bopllll Cluudo
""""' Mike Hannon, Sundly S.:llool
9:30 to 10:30 am, Wonhip ten'ice 10:30
to II :00 am. Wed. pruchina 6 pm

c..,..,., llldepe.,...t Blpllot clniru
S-y S&lt;lloot - 9:30am, Pmclling

5ervice

!0:30am, Evening

Service
7'00pm, Wednesday Bible Study NIO pm,
Pastor: Whitt Aken .

c-...llapCIII Cburdl
Pastor: Steve Little, Sunday School: 9:30
10:30 ""·
Wodneolay Bible Study 6'30pm; choir
practict: 7;30; youth and Bible Buddies
6:30p.m. Thul'l. I pm book 1tw:ly

lm, Momiq Wollhtp:

Hope Boptlot C.,..b (Saotllon)
510 Ol'lllt St., Middleport, Suaday scbool
· 9:30am., Wonhip - 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service - 7 p'.m. Pa.tor: Gary

to

Ellil

Ruillllcll'lniBaplllt Cbaldl
Sunday S.:llool - ~30 a.m.. Wonhip .
10:4.5
.........yl'lnlllopllot
Pastor Jon Brockert, ~t Main St. ,
Sllllday Sch. 9:30am , Worship 10:30 am

a.m.

f1nt Soolllera .......
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Pastor: E. Lamar
0'8ryant, Sunday School • 9:30
WOI'Ihip • 8:15a.m., 9:4.5 am &amp; 7:00pm.,
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

a."m.,

Flnl Bopdlt Cllllr&lt;b

Paotof: Billy ZuBplll6th ud Palmer St.,
Middleport , Sunday S~ool - 9:1!1 a.m.,
Worahip • 10:1.5 a.m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Servicc- 7:00 p.m.
-

SUm Rttn llopdol

Pastor: John Swanson, Suadly School IOa.m .• Worship - I ta.m., 7:00 p.m.
,Wedl...ct.y Serviceo· 7:00p.m.

MI. Unloallopdol
Pastor: Denai1 Weaver Sunday Scbool9:4.5 a.m.• Evenina - 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

--llopJbl Cbantt
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH,
Putor: F.d Carter, Sunday School • 9 :30
a.m., Sunday Worship • 10:30 a.m..
WedDOiday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.

OkllloiMI FroeWIIIIIoptiRCboreb
28601 St . Rt . 7, Middleport, Sunday
Service - 10 a.m., 6 :00 p.m., 'I\Je5day
Senic:ea -6:(1)

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

Vlctor7 Bapdii:Jadepe•~e•t
52.5 N. lnd St. Midd.leport, Pas1or: James
E. Keesee, Wonhip - IOa.m., 7 p.m. ,
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

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Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

The Jesus Prayer
Some years ago I came upoo a very beautiful and powerful prayer. I had picked up

J.D. Salinger's I96l novel, Franny and Zooey, in a used bookstore, and in the"""""'
of reading this shon novel, discovered what is.sometim&lt;;s called 'The Jesus Prayer."
The prayer is doctptively simple, tonsiSting
of just twelve words in its longest
versions. The long version of the prayer
is as follows: "Lord Jesus Christ, son of ·
God, have mercy on me,1 a sinner.''
It can be shonened 10 "Lord Jesus,
have metcy oo me" or !0 anything to be prayed
silently and repeated ove~ and over without
ceasing, until it becomes an almost unconSI;ious
pan of our being, lirerally in mythm 10 the
beal,ing of our bearts and our breathing. This
prayer has a long histOI)', going back to
Easrem Orthodox monasticism. and is the .1f
!IUbject of the anonymous 19th century
T
Russian work, The Way of a Pilgrim. Bu~ the
. prayer itself actually has its roots in the New
Tcstarncn~ where we are told "Truly, truly. ! say to you,
if yoo ask anything of the Father, He will give ilto yw
my name. Hitheno yw have asked nothing in my name:
and you win receive, !hat your joy may be fulL " (Jolm.Jo:.&lt;N.4J
And, in I Thessalonians 5:17, we are told to "prny without ceasing.
Jesus
prayer is a wonderfully simple way 10 fulfill this injuoction: I urge you 10 try it.
But the 1~ collector, standing far oil would not even lift up his eyes
toheaven, but beat his breast, saying. "God he merciful to me a
sinner!"
-R.S.V. Luke 18 :13

Cit-

Foltb Blplllt
Railroad St., MISOII, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - II a.m., 6 p .m.
WedDesday.Services- 7 p.m.

Michelle Kennedy
1,Direct,or of Marketing and Admissions

F....albut Baplllt· Pumoroy
Rev. Joseph Woods . Sunday School - 10
a.m .. Wonhip · II:30 a.m.

Mt-llopdol

Warm Friendly
A rmosphe ~

Fourth &amp;: Main S.., M iddleport , Suncby
,Schoo1 - 9:30 am., Worship · 10:4S am .

Hours
6am ·8 pm

AJtllqulty llopllot
Suntlay Scbool - 9:30 a.m., Worship ·
10:45 a.m., Sunday E\'eniriJ - 6:00 p.m.,
Pulor: Don Walker

:Mi[{ie's 'f?.!staurant

74D-949·221 0
"A Home Bank fot

Home People"
We Sell Homes at

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Members oJ the MLS and REALTOR"
Pick up a color Brochure!

216 East Second St. • Pomeroy

740..992-3325
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Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Hom• Cwud Meals &amp; D411:tS,tcillls
Open 7 days a wrek
740-992·n13

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye wil~ and it shall
be done unto you.
Jolm/5:7

Sizes available 5K10 to 10 x 20

The ftppUance man
740.985-3561
992-1550
Sales o Service o Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

Middleport, OH

7411-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !·shirts and more

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 4$769

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P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769·068:),

(lndq&gt;oOOent llapli•J

SR 652 and Ander&amp;on St. Putor: Robert
Cindy, Sunday school 10 am . Morning
church It un, Sunday eveniDg 6 pm, Wed.
Bible Study 7 pm
'

Catholic
- - CaiWie Cb.tJ.

161 Mulberry Ave .• Pomeroy, 992-3898,
Pu tor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz , Sat. Cod.
4 : 4S- ~ : 1 5p .m .; Mu 's- 3:30 p.m., Su o.
Con . -8:45-9:1.5 a.m., Su n. Mass · 9:30
a.m .. Daily Mus - 8:30a.m.

Church of Christ
Cbordt oiCbrtttt
332260ildren'a Home Rd•.Pomeroy, OH
Contact 740-44 1-1296 Sunday mornin g
10:00, Sun morn ing Bi blt study ;
followi111 worship, Sun . ne 6:00 pm.
Wed bible study 7 prn

Hemlock Gro"e Cluiltlan Cburcb
Minister: Larry Brown, Worsh ip • 9:30
a.m. Sunday School • 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study - 7 p.m.
........y Churdt oiChrtll
1: 12 W. Main St., Sunday Schoo l - 9:30
a.m ., Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Ser\'ices - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Wataldt.Clwldl orCbrilt
33226 Qlildten'a Home Rd .. Sunday
School - 11 a.m., WorslUp - lOa.m., 6 p.m,
Wednesday Senices - 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of Cllrllt
!ith and Main, PastC¥: AI Hartson,
Childrens Director; s\lron Sayre , Teen
Directcr. Dodger Vaughan, Sunday Schoql
·9:30 a.m., Worship- ·8:15, 10:30 am .• 7
p.m., Wednesday Services 7 p.m.
M

Keno &lt;.burtb of Cbrilt
Worship - 9:30 a.m.. Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, 1st sild
3rd Sunday
Burwdlow Ridge Churdl of O.rist
Putor:Bruce Terry. Sunday School -9:30
a.m .
Wonhip - LO:JO a .m., 6:30 p.m,
We&lt;hle&amp;day Services · 6:30pm.
Zion Cburtb or Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RI.I43),
Pastor: Ro1er Watso n. Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Ser\'ice&amp; - 7 p.m.

Thppen Plain Chur&lt;. ofChrlol
IJistrumental, Worship Ser\'ice ·· 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 a.m·.. Sunday School LO:l!l a.m., Youlh- .5:J() pm Sunday, Bible
Study W!dnesday 1 pm
Bradbury Cb ..... of Christ
Minister: Tom Runyon, 395~ 8 Bradbury
Road, Middleport , Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
R•llaDd Cb ..... &lt;I Cltrlll
Sunday School · 9:30a.m., Wou hlp and
Communion · IJ):JO a.m., Bob J. Werry• .
Minister

Bradlonl Cburdt ol Cbrbt
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
Minis1er. Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
Bill AmbeiJC', Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worstlip • 8:00 a.m •• 10:30 a.m .• 7:00
p.m .•Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

Thppm Plains, Pastor Mike Moore, Bible
clus, 9 a.m. Sunday; worship 10 a.m.
Swtday: worship 6:30 pm Sunday ; Bible
clan 7 pm Wed.

-Churdt oiCbrtll
Pastor: Pllilip Stunn, Sunday School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Service:: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study, WedDelday, 6:30p.m.
llata'Cbur&lt;bofCbrtll
Sunday school 9:30 a.m ., Sunday worship
~ 10:30 a.m.
The O.orcll
lntenec:tion 7 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis SIIIJent, Sunday Bible Study •
9:30 a.m., Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

"Chrisl ..........,

Christian Union
Hartford Cbun:h ol Cltrist In
Clulallan U.U..
Hartford , W.Va .• Pastor:David Grc"er,
Sunday Scltool - 9:30 a.m.• , Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p .m., Wednesday
Services- 7:00 p.m. :

Church of God

S~HCU~&lt;I'int Cltvclt

oiGod
Apple and Second Srs:, Pastor. Rev. Da\'id
Ru ne~ . Sunday Schoo! and Wonhip- 10
a.m. Evening Ser vices - 6:30 p.m.,
Wedntlday Services - 6:30p.m.
' ' Cbllft!l ol God or Prvpbecy
OJ . White Rd. off St. Rt. LCiO , Pastor: PJ.
Otapman, Sunday School - LO a.m.,
Worshi p - l('aln., Wednesday Services. 7
p.m.

Congregational
Trtnii}Cburdl

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy, Pastur: Rev.
Jonathlll'! Noble , Worship 10:25 a.m.,
Sunday School 9:1!i a.m .

,Episcopal
G""" Epboopol Ck""'h
326 E. M!lin St., Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Holy Eucharist 11 :00 a.m. Rev.
Edward Payne

Holiness
Communley Church
Pas!Dr: Steve Tomek, Main Street,
Rutland , Sunday Wonhip-10:00 a.m.,
Sunday Smrico-7 p.m.
O..vllle lloUn"' Cbtudl ·
31 057 State Route 32S, Umssvlle, Pastor:
Benjamin Crawford, SWld.ay scllool - 9:30
a.m.. Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp;: 1
p.m., Wednesday prayer sel'\'ice- 7 p.m.
Cll•ory Ptlptm Cbopel
HarrisonviUe Road , Pastor: Charles

McKenrie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship · II a.m.. 7:00p.m. , Wednesday
Service · 7:00 p.m.

Rose of Sharon Hollnea Ch1U'Ch
Leading Creel Rd., Rutland, Pastor: Rev .
Dewey King, Sunday ~hool - 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship -7 p.m., Wednesday
·prayer meeting- 7 p.m.
Pine Grove Bible Holiness Cbun:b
1/2 mile off Rt. 325, P11stor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday SchooJ • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Jllblt Hollnm Cburcla
75 Pearl St., Middleport. Pastor: Rick
Bourne, Sunday School - 10 a.m . Worship
- 10:45 p.m .. Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service -7:30 p.m.
HyRII Run Community Church
P~tor: Rev. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
-9:30a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 ~. m .,
Thullday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

Laurd CUI! Fret Melbodbi Cborcb
Pastor: GleM Rowe , Sunday Schoolr'-'
9:30a.m., Wors hip- 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.,Wednesday Service · 7:00·j..m.

Latter-Day Saints
Tbt Church of Jmu
Chrill of Latler-Diy SabaD
St . Rt . 160, 446-624 7 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10:20- ll a. m., Relief
Society/Priesthood II :05- 12:00 noon ,
Sacrament Service 9-1 0:1 5 a.m.•
Homemakinl! mc:etina. 1st Thurs .- 7 p.m.
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Lutheran
Sl. John Lutbtnn Cbun:b

Pine Grove, Worship· 9:00 a.m., Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m. Pastor:

Our Savtour Lulbtnm Ch.m•
Walnu.1 and Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va., Pastor: David Ru n ell. Sund ay
School - 10:00 a.IJl ., Worship · II a.m.
St. Pllll Latben.n Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St .. Pomeroy,
Sun. School - 9:4.5 a.m., Worship - II a.m .

United Methodist
Gnll.-n United Methodist
Worship - I I a.m. Pastor: Richard Nease
Btdltei UalltdMelbodbl
New Haven , Richard Nease, Pastor,
Sunday wo rs hip 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
pr11y~r !llld Bible Stu~.
Mt. lHin United Mdhodilt
Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Pasior: Re\'.

Ralph Spires, Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
Worstlip - 10:30 a.m., 7. p.m., Thursday
Serv iL"ei - 7 p.m.
Melp Cooperadve hrlsb ·
Northeast Cluster, Alfred , Pu tor: Jim
Corbitt . Sunday School -'9:30 a.m.,
Worship - II a.m.• 6:30 p.m.
Chester
Jim Corbin , Worship - 9 a.m.,
Sund ay Schoo l • !0 a .m ~ , Thursday
Serr iL"es - 7 p.m.
Pa~tor :

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I'M&gt;.

(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-583·2433

llt'4DftXX!, WV, Sunday Sebool 10 am, M~ni wonhi p I I am Evening - 7 pm,
Wednetday 1 p.m.
Flnl llopllol Chord&gt; &lt;1 ~ . WV

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A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

Seoood Bapllot Cbllft!l

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Mile Hill Rd., Racine, Putor: Jame s
Saru:rfield, SundaY School · 9:45 a.m.,
Evening - 6 p.m., Wednesday Services· 7
p.m.
RullaDd Cburdloi God
Putor: Ron Heath , Sunday Wonhip - 10
a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesday Services ~ 7
p.m.

Cartdon l•~a.rdl
Kiagsbllry Road . PaSior: R*rt Vuce,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worah.ip
Service 10:30 a.m., Evening Service 6

Wednesday Serv1ccs- 7 p.m.

J-

Loot-

,_., c.um oiGo N Pastor: Jan Lavender, Sunday School 9:.30 1.m., Worthip - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.lrl ., Wedne5day Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m.

Cbester Church of tbt Nuarent

Pastor: Denzil Null , Worship - 9:30 a.m .
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

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.w.

Worship • 9:30 a.m .. Sunday School 10:30 a.m.• Fust Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. (ICT\Iicc

Tllppen Plaint St. Paul
Pas tor: Jim Corbin, Sunday Schoo! - 9

a.m., Wonhip • 10 a.m., Tuesday Sel'\'ices
• 7:30p.m .
Central Cluter
Asbury (Syracuse), Pastor: Bob Robinson.
Su nday Sc~ · 9:4.5 a.m., Wors hip - I I
~.m .• Wednestiay Servil.:es- 7:30 p.m.
EDterprbt
Paslor: Arland King, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 33 10.5 Hiland
Rd, Pomeroy

Pastor: Keith Rader, Sunday School - I 0
a.m., Worship - I I a.m.
Fomt Ru.a
Pastor: Bub Rubinsun, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship- 9 a.m.
Beaib !Middkporl)
Pastor: Brian Dunham, Sunday Sc hool 9:30a .m.. Wonhip - li :OO a.m.

MlnertYIIIe
Pastor: Bob Robinson . Su nday School - 9
a.m.;Worsh ip - 10 a.m.
l'&lt;orl Cbopel
Sunday School - 9 a. m., Worship - 10 11 .m .

Pomeroy
Pastor: Bri an Dunham. Worship - 9:30
a.m., Su nday School- 10:35 a. m.
Rock Sprlnp
Pastor: Keith Rader, Sunday School- 9:15
a.m.. Worship - 10 •a. m.. Youth
Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

pm.

Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31. Pastor: Rev .
Roger Willford, Sunday Scbool · 9:30
a.m. Worshi p- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Cun is Randolph, Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m .,
6p.m.,
Rutland C han:b Of the Nuare¥
Pastor: Isaac Shupe. Sunday Sc hool - 9:30
a.m., Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Wblte'1 ChApel WAyan
Coolville Road , Pastor: Rn. Chariel
Martindal e. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.•
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., Wcdneiday Sel"'ice
-7 p.m

Other Churches

Folnt.w Bible t;burdl "
Letart, W.Va. Rt. I . Pastor: Brian May ,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship - 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday- Bible Stud y- 7:00p.m.
Faith Fellowship CI'Uiide for Cluilt
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens, Service:
Friday. 7 p.m.

S~

Community Chllrt'b
2480 Second St, Syrac use, OH
Sun . Sc hool 10 am, Sundy night 6:30pm
Pastor: Joe Gwinn
A New BeaimUnl
(FuD Golptl Cbureh) Harrisonville ,

Pas1or1: Bob and Kay Mmitall,
Sunday Service , 2 p.m.

Col.ary Bib~ Cburdl
Pome roy Pi ke , Co. Rd ., Pastor: Rev .
Blacko-A·ood , Sunday School · 9:30 a:m.,
Worship !0 :30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Anw.Jna Grace Community Cburtb
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap,StaEI Rt . 68 1,
Tuppers Plain5, Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm, Wed . Bible Study 7:00p .m

Sth ersvme Community Churtb
Sunday School 10:00 am, Sunday Worship
I I :00 am, Wed n~sday 7:00 pm PaJt()f:
Bryan &amp; Miuy Dai ley

Oasis CbrUUan FtllowsiUp
(Non-denominational fellowsh ip)
Meeting in the Meigs Midd le Schoo l
Cafeteria Pastor: Chris Stewart
'10:00 am - Noon Sunday ; Informal
Worship. Chi l ~n 's mirlistry
Community of Christ
Portland-Racine Rd.. Pastor: Jim Proffitt.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Wo r ~hi p 10:30 a.m., Wed nesday Services • 7:00
p.m
Btthel Worship Center
39782 S.R. 7, Reedsv ille, OH 45772, 1/2
mile north of Eastern Schools on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church, PBSior Rob Barber,
Associate Pastor Karyn Davis, Youtll
Pastor Suzie Fra ncis, Sund ay services
10:00 am worship, 6:00 pm FIUflil y Life
Classc:1, Wed. Home Ce ll Group! 7:00
p.m., Outer Limits Cell Gro up at !he
church 6:30pm to 8:30pm

Aah Slrttt Cburdt
398 Ash St., Middleport -Pastor Jeff Smilh
Sunday Sc hool - 9:30 a.m., Morning
Worship • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7:00 · pm ,
Wednes day Se rvice - 7:00 p.m., Youth
Strvice- 7:00p.m.
AKapt Life Center
"Fuii -Qo&lt;;pel Church", Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Sec ond Ave . Mason, 77 35017 , ServiL"e time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wedne~day 7 pm

Bethany
Pastor: John GiiiTIQre, Sunday School · 10
a.m., Worsh ip - 9 a.m ., Wed nesday
Services · 10 a.m.

Abundaat Gnct R.F. I.
923 S. Third St. , Middleport , Pas1or leresa
Davi s, Sunday servi ce, 10 a. m.,
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Cormel-&amp;dlt&gt;o
C!lJ'Iru!l &amp; Bashan Rds. Racine , Oh io ,
Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunday School •
9:45a .m., Wor1hip • 11 :00 a.m. , Bible
Study. Wed. 7:30p.m.

Faith Full CrO!!Ipel Cbardl
Long Bottom. Pastor: Steve Reed. Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednesday- 7 p.m., Friday fellowship sel'\'ice 7 p.m .

Mornln&amp; Stor
Pastor: John Gilmore , Sunday School - I I
a.m., Worship- 10 a.m.

IJ•rrllllllvlllt Community C~rth
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.. Wednesday · 7 p.m.

. Eut Letart
Pastor: Bill Marshall Sunday School 9a.m.. Worship - 10 a.m .• 1st Sunda y
t\'ery monlh evening service 7:00 p.m.;
wednesday . 7 pro .

· Middleport Commanlty Chun:h
575 Pearl St. , Middlepon , Pastor: Sam
Anderson , Sunday School 10 a.m..
Even ing -7 :30p.m., Wednc!Kiay Sel'\'ice 7:30p.m.

Rodn&lt;.
Putor: Keny Wood . Sunday School • 10
a.m.. Worship - II a.m .Wed nesday
Services 6 pm; Thur Bible St ud~ 7 pm

Faith Valley Tabern.cle c•un:b
Bailey Run Road . Pastor: Rev. Emmell
Rawson , Sunday Evening 7 p.m.,
ThurMI.ay Service· 7 p.m.

CoolQUe Unkcd Mttbodla Parbh
Pastor: Helen Kline, Coo lville Chu rch.
Main &amp; Fifth Sr., Sun . School · 10 a. m.,
Worship · 9 u n., 1\leJ. Services · 7 p.m.

Sc hool - 10 11 .m, Evening · 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Serv ice- 7 p.m.

Bedlel Cban:b
Township Rd., 468C, Sunday School - 9
a.m, Wo n iUp - 10 a.m., Wednesday
Services · 10 a.m.

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt. 124, Pa stor: Edsel Han, Sunday
School - 9:30a.m.• Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.,
7:30 p.m.

Hodtlagport Cbur&lt;b
Grand Street. Sunday School -9:30 a.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Pastor Phill ip Bell

Dyavlle Community Cbun:h
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
MDrst Chapel c•urch
Sunday sc hoo l • 10 a.m., Worship - 11
a.m ., Wednesday ~ ice · 1 p.m.

Syracuee Mlss6on
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse, Sunday

Nazarene

Faith GMpd Cburth
Lon&amp;: Bottom. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,

M&amp;ddltport Church of the Nazareoe
Pastor: Allen Midcap , Sund ay School 9 :30 a.m.,Worship • 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.•
Wedne5day Services · 7 p .m .• Paslor:
Allen Midcap

Worship - 10:4.5 a.m., 7:30 p.m .•
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
MI. Ollw Community Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday School 9:30a.m.. E\·ening · 6:30p .m.. Wedneday
Service· 7 p.m.·
Full Gospel Ll&amp;hlhoUM
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday School - 10 a.rn., Eve~~ in g
7:30 p.m., Tuesday &amp; llm ~ . ·7:30 p.m.

Rteds\ille Fellowlblp
Omrch of the Nazarene, P11s10r: Russell

Canon . Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a .m..
Wor~hi p - 10:45 a.m.. 1 p.m.. Wed nesday
Services · 7 p.m.
Syracue ChurCh of the NJWU"tae
Pastor Mike Adkins. Sunday S.:hool · 9:30
am .. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m ..

Clifton 'hbti'IIICit Cburtb
Clifton, W.Va., Sund ay Schoo l - 10 a.m .:
Wor!lhip · 7 p.m., Wednesday Service - 7
p .m .

New Ure VIctory CrntH'
3773 GeorJes,Crec:k Rood. Gallipolis,OH
Pastor: Bil! Staten. Sunday Smices - 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wednesday - 7 p.m. It
Youlh 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Churclt

or the Uvln1 Stwlor

Rutl1111d
Pastor: Rick Bourne. Sunday Sc hool 9:30 a.m.• Won hip • 10:30 a.m., Thumlay
Services - 7 p.m.
Salem Ccnttr
Pastor: William K. Marshall, Sunday
School- 10: 15 a.m., Worship - 9:l.5 a.m. ,
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
Snowville
Sunday School - 10 am .. Worship - 9 a.m.

'lbn:;h Church
Co. Rd . 63. Sunday SchooJ · 9:30 a.m..
Worship · 10:30 a.'!l.

Rejolclng Life Churtb
300 N. 2nd Ave ., Middl eport, Pas1or:
Mike Foreman, Pastor Emeri tus Lawrence
Foreman, Wonhip- 10:00 ilit1 •
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Rt.338, Antiquity, Pas tor: Jesse. Morris ,
Service§: Saturday 2:00p.m.

Salem Community Churd&amp;
Beck of West Columbia, W.Va.om Lieving

Road.'Pastor: Charles Roush (304) 67.52288, Sunday School 9:30 am, Sunday
eve ning service 7:00 pm , Bibly Stud y
Wed ne'iday serv ice 7:00pm
Hobson Chrlltlaa Fellowship Churtb
Pa stor: Herschel White, Sunday SChool10 am , Sunday Chun:h service- 6:30 pm
Wodne!iday 7 pm
RtstoralJon Christian t'ellowshlp
9365 Hoop er Rood . Ath ens. Pastor:
Lonnie Coau . Sunday Worship 10:00 am .
Wednesday: 7 pm
Hotut ot Heallq Mlnlatrln
St. Rl. ll4 Lu&amp;nlle, OH
Full Gospel, Cl Pastors Robert &amp; Roberta
Mu5ser, Sund ay School 9:30 am, ,
Worship 10:30 am - 7:00 p~ . Wed.
~rv-ice 7:00 pm
'Itlm Jesll!l Mlnlllfrla
Mec:ting in the Mulberry Communil~
Center Gymnasium. P11s1or Eddie Baer,
Service every TUesday 6:30 pm

Pentecostal
PtnlMeltal A.utmbly
Pastor: St. Rt. 124 , Racine . Tornado Rd.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.• Evenina - 7
p.m., Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Presbyterian
H•rbonvlllr Prftbyttri•n Chun:h
Pa11or: Robert Crow, Worship . 9 a.ra.

Pastor: Jame s Snyder, S unda~ School 10
a.m., worship service II am.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Stvenlh·DIJ Ad n nlbt
Mu lberry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy. Sa turday
S e rvi ce~ : Sabbath School - 2 p.m.,
Worship- 3 p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Jltrmon United Brethren
In Christ Cbutdl ,
Texas Community 364 11 Wic kham Rd .
Pastor: Peter Martindale , Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m., Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Services · 7:00 p.m.
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7 p.m
Eden United Brethren In Christ
State Rome 124, be1 we~ n Reeds ville &amp;
Hod .ingpon . Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.,
Sunday Wors hip · 1t:OO a.m. Wednesday
Se:rvices · 7:00 p.m., Pastor- M. Adam
Will

Soudl Btlbtl Community Churth
Silver Ridge- Pastor Linda Damewood ,
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worship Sel'\'ice
10 a.m . 200. and 4th Sunday

••
,.

'•

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC

ServiW~ 7 p.m.

- 7 p.m., Wednesday

11ktorJ IIIIIs Churdl &lt;1 Cbrbt

BapllltCiludl
51. Rt 143 just
R1. 7, Pastor: Rev.
Jamea R. Acree , Sr., Sunday Uuified
Service. Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m. ,
Wednesday Service1 •7 p.m.
·

I ·.,

a.m; • .Rvenina

Flnt .......

Pastor: Ry~ Eaton, plllo.r , Sunday
Sdlool - 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:40 a.m.,
7:00 p.m., Wednesday Sen-icc• • 7:00
p.m.

on

~ '

~

I :~- ...... WIU 8apllot
¥-:,rn t.if·· Pastor: , Sunday School · 10

Religion
takes
center
stage·
with
--------A Hunger For·More -~- Mississippi ballet company
into contact with the Icing's been burning within him
In a land where dreams and
daughter found their heaits
also pierced by the magic
that had claimed her. Their
hearts also swooned into a
1
Pastor
deep sleep of complacency
Thom
and selfishness, fillmg thetr
Mollohan minds with dreams that were
totally contrary to their duties
""' and gifts. The sleep of the
jealous crone soon spread
from the princess to the
of the old woman and king's subjects far and wide.
approached her. The crone
After a time, the king,
smiled encouragingly and, as knowing that he would be
Gloria reached out to touch forced to pronounce judg·
the loom in wonder, took hold ment on even his own \iaugh·
of her hands and moved her ter lest his kingdom-be overflngers to touch the fabric that 'thrown by the sickness in
had been woven. Instantly, their souls, resolved to find
into the mind of Gloria leapt healing one last time. He and
images of palaces and the queen sent word far and
pageants greater than she had wide for any rruln who wbuld
ever known. As she stood · be bold .enough to, try to
there, she stroked the cloth reach thetr daughter s heart.
spellbound by the magic that "~o shall I send? And who
was being worked and failed will go for usT' the royal
to notice that the smile of the proclamation read.
old woman had changed ever"I will go," answered one
so-slightly to that of amused young man, who entered
malice. The hag had woven their presence. He was
into her fabric two needles, the lowly in appearance, yet
points of which were laced withm him glowed the light
with sorcerous spells that of devotion to the king.
would sedate and paralyze the
"Do you realize the dan·
heart of those whose flesh was ger?" the king asked
pierced by them.ln one solemnly. "I do," the man
moment her wickedness replied. '"'l)en go with my
achieved its en.,. Gloria's blessing," the king said, "for
hands, trailing along the edge in you dci I see that there is a
of the fine weaving, were each fire by which you may . xet
pricked by the poison barbs kindle hei' .sleeping heart..'
hidden in the cloth. Gloria's
lie'. parted from the king
eyes glazed over and her heart and foUnd.the princess gawk·
was rendered .immovable, .ing,at)~et reflection in a large
asleep to thgsc; things that.ha!l nu,qor m another pl!1t of tlie
once made her beautiful. She palace. . At first, he was
quickly turned from the loam · reptiJsed by the appeaiance of
ariiJ.tl~ old,woman 88, if ~ the girl •.i:overed as she was by
CQtlld'ilo longer see them.and filtli and a thorny growth that
sfi'lx!e·from the dint chambei.;, e!J!aDated from the Spell that
Sl!e quickly ~tunied .~ ~m · had~ her heart an~ now
pnvale .mom and be8llll· -.to .. seemed like asecond skin. He
gaze at litrself inJ)O'.mirror. remembered the danger that
She walked and talked. as he too could be lost to the evil
though she were a)ive ,and magic, but he remembered
awake, b\Jt her spirjt was cold how beautiful she once was
arid her eyes closed · to the and a desire to see her beauty
lives of ot11ers around her. She restored moved him to act.
began to plaiJ l!iJd prepare for She was lost in the ongoing
herself new goWlls and parties daydream in which she was
at which- she· would be cele- • all that was beautiful and worbrated. While she .had once .thy of praise. So she 4;lid not
been known f¢ her kindness see him until he was scarcely
and regard for the poor, she inches from her. She vaguely
became harsh and selfish. Her tried to push him away for he
once beautiful countenance, obstructed her view of hercelebrated and loved by all self, but she could not ''Wake
those ·whose lives had been uf.!" he said softly but firmly.
blessed by hers, was replaced " 've been sent by your father
with vul~ar vanity and ugly to awaken you." Arage seized
presumption. The king and her and she struck at him. Her
queen were grieved and it blows hurt and doubt for a
seemed to them that their moment stirred within him.
daughter had died. Often they But as despair reached out for
attemp!!ld to awaken her heart him, he saw needles in
to thetr love and open her eyes Gloria's sleeve imd avoided
to the people she.' had once th~ir tou~h. ,','Wake up," '!e
helped. But-her heart seemed S81d agam. Yollr . father IS
surrounded ·by a gird)~ · of calling you. Do you not hear?
thol:nY pride and enVIo!Jsness. Do you not CareT' '
Worse still, all who ,came
And then the fire which had

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

WORSfllP GOD THIS WEEK

Friday, September 28, 2007
, r

nighunares walk and make
war with one another, there
once was a kingdom ruled by
a wise king and beautiful
queen. It so happened that
after many, many years of
longing, waiting, and suffering that a child was born to
them. The child was without
equal in beauty and people
from miles around marveled
at her grace. Upon her rested
her DHJther's queenly counte·
nance and her father's majestic bearing. As tokens of their
royal blessing upon her, the
queen gave their daughter tier
royal earrings. The father of
the j!irl, whose name was
Glona, gave her a locket that
housed within its golden
shell, a fire that he himself
• placed there,Some people, I
may happily report, rejoiced
ll!ld celebrated her birth, recognizing Gloria's arrival into
the world as a divinely
ordained event. Others, not so
happy about it, gnashed their
teeth and muttered curses
under their breath and into
one another's
for while
only some actually had delu.
sions of usurping her place as
the royal favored one, many
simply hated her fur jealousy's sake and plotted her
ruin.
One particularly evil and
bitter woman, who of old had
chosen to hate the royal fam·
ily and all that it stood for,
had learned the arts Of
"dreaving" (the weaving of
dreams of others according to
her purposes and designs).
The foul practices of dreav·
ing had been banned from the
land for the king wished his
people to live in contentment
with their blessings and avoid
the snares of covetousness
and envy. Nor did he desire
for them in jealousy to harm
one another and thus disrupt
the peace of his kingdom.
Nevertheless, when Gloria
had grown to adulthood, her
father and mother pennitted
her to venture at will through·
out their palace. Although
they longed for her fellow·
shi~ and the joy of setting
!herr eyes upon her face, they
knew that she was to journey
through a time of testinR.
After trial, trouble and travail,
she would again be restored
to them, their fellowship
sweetened all the more in
spite of the harm that evil
would contrive against her.
·. As she walked throughout
the castle, the crone of bitterness was prepared. Sitting in a
comer of the palace as far
from the presence of the king
as could be, she sat on a small
stool weaving her webs on a
loom. Gloria was transfixed
by the artfully moving fingers

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Friday, Sepfember 21, 2007

Page.A2

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�OPINION
The Daily Sentinel
111 CourtS.

'•~Ohio

(740) 112-2156 • FAX (740) 192-2157
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• • com

.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co,
Den Goodllch
Publisher
Clwtene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Ecltor

Ctmgrus sludl rrudu'"' law mp«ting an
utablishrnmt of rdigitm, M pt'(Jirilliting the
fru eurc:ist tJuruf; M alnUiging tlu.frwltnn
of spud~, M -.f tlu prw; M the right of the
ptOpk ~ ID autmhh, arultD petition
tht GMwnfiUflt fM a mlrus ofgrinanas,
- The Flrwt Amendment 10 the u.s, Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today il Friday. Sept. 28, the Vlst day of 20Cf7. 'IlleR are
94 days left in the year.
Today's Hi~igbt in ~:
On Sept.
, 1066, William the Conqueror mvaded
En2laod to claim the English throne.
On this date·
In 1.542, ~ 'navigator Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo
arrived at present-day San Diego.
In 1781, Amaican forces in the Revolutiorwy War,
backed by a French fleet, began their siege ofYorttown. Va
In 1787, Coogxess voted to ICIId the jUSl-rompleted
Constitution of the United States to state legillatures for
their approval.
In 18SO, flogging was abolished as a form of punishment
in the U.S. Navy.
· In 1924, two U.S. Army planeslandffl in Seattle, Wash.,
having compLeted the fint round-the-world night in 175
days.
,
In 1939, during World War 0. Germany and the Soviet
Union 3lUeed on a plan to partition Poland.
In 1967, Walter E. Washington was sworn in as the fllSI
mayor-commissioner of the District of CQiumbia (be'd been
appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson).
-In 1974, fllSIIady Betty Ford underwent a mastectomy at
Bethesda Naval Medical Cmter in Maryland, foUowing discovery of a cancerous lump in her breast.
In 1991, jazz great Miles Davis died in Santa Monica, ·
Calif., at age 6.5.
·
Five years ago: Iraq defumtly rejected a U.S.-British plan
for the United Nations to force President Saddam Hussem to
disarm aod open his palaces for weapons searches. FillliiiCe
leaders meeting in Washington directed the International
Monetary Fund to ~orlt on new ~h to resolving glo\&gt;al debt crises. U.S. Rep, Patsy Mink. a 12-tmn Democratic
congresswoman from liawaiJ, died in Honolulu at age 74.
One year ago: AI-Qaida in Iraq's leader, in a chilling
audiotape, called for nuclear scientists to join his gro~~p's
holy war and urged insurgents to kidnap Westerners so they
could be traded for a blind Egyptian sbeik who is serving a
life sentence in a U.S. prison.
Today's Birthdays: Actor William Wmdom is 84. Actor
Arnold Stang is 82. Blues singer Koko Taylor is 79. Actress
Brigitte Bardo! il 73. Singer Ben E. King is 69. Actor Joel
Higgins is 64. Singer Helen Shapiro is 61. Actor Jeffrey
Jones is 61. Movie writer:director-actor John Sayles is 57.
Actress S = Kristel is 5.5. Rock musician George Lynch
is 53. Zy
singer-musician C.J. Chenier is 50. Actress,
comedian Janeane Garofalo is 43. Country singer Matt King
is 4l!Actress Mira Sorvino is 40. TV personality Moon
Zappa is 40. Rhythm-and-blues singer Sean Levert (Levert)
is J9. Actress-model Carre Otis is 39. Actress Naomi Watts
js 39. Country musician Chuck Crawford is 34. Country
singer Mandy Barnett is 32. Rapper Young Jeezy is 30.
Actress Hilary Duff is 20. Actress Skye McCole Bartusial!;
is 15.
: Thought for Today: ''Tune cools, time clarifies; no mood
can be maintained quite unaltered through the· course of
hours."- Thtimas Mann, German writer (1875,1955).

PageA4

Friday, September 28, 2007

Friday, September 28, 2007

Deaths

Food that fteds the soul
It's Yom KippuL Will your
Jewish grandmother serve
shrimp-and-bacon appetiz-

en wbeo the family breaks
the fast?
It's Ramadan Will your
devout Muslim paRnts
smile if you serve dinner
several hours before sun-

Terry
Mattingly

down?
It's Good friday. Will the

Catholic college cafeteria
serve hamburgtm?
It 's Thanksgiving. (a!)
you predict the foods that
will be on your mother's
table? Will the German
grandmothers
bake
Christmas cookies at the
Lutheran church? Is the tuna
casserole served at potluck
dinners at rural Minnesota
churches ttuly a sacrament?
When it comes to the
rhythms and symbols of
faith, it's easy to see the role
that food plays, especiaUy in
the intense and emotional
fmal months of the religious
Calendar.
"Fuod is aU about the stories that define our lives,"
said Daniel Sack of the
University of Chicago
Divinity School author of
the book "Whitebread
Protestants: · Food and
Religion
in American
Culture."
"I'm not just talking about
religious rituals that involve
food. For many church people, what happens in the
social haU week after week
is more important than what
happens in the sanctuary.
They come for Communion,

but also for community."

Sack said food traditions
- with a big 1"' as weU as
with a small "C - demonstrate why it's almost impossible to draw a line showing
where religion ends and cui·
tore begins. Food is one of
the basic building blocks of
life and, thus, iii one of the
"passions" that religious
believers have always Slnlggled 10 keep under control.
Change what people eat
and you change their lives.
However, there are times
when the religious significance of food is obvious and
there are times when it is
not. While studying this
subject, Sack said he began
sorting the different kinds of
food traditions inlo four
groups.
• Sometime ~. the food
becomes a holy object in
and of itself. One example is ·
when a Buddhist takes a
food offering to a temple_ In
other cases, ordinary food
becomes sacred as pan of an
intricate ritual that is defmed
by prayers and scripture such as the bread and wine
in a Catholic Mass.
"What is crucial is that

Lock of hair may solve mammoth questions
Joshua Harris

this sacramental understanding of food seeps into otber
pans of life," said Sack..
" And we' re not jw.t talking

rituals linked to meals,
because: meals are such symbolic timei of fellowship.
And when the times change,
about Christianity. If you so do the meals.
start talkiog about bread and
Consider the food served
wine, it's hard to take that at youth-group meetings.
symbolism out of there."
Once, parents organired
• MOSI religious uaditions, these meetings and prepared
to varying degrees, claim the food, helping to main·
some right 10 control the tain a sense of watch-care
role that food plays in daily .and protection from the outlife. This is most obvious in side world. Today, most
faiths such as Judaism, with churches hire professional
its "lmsher" traditions, and youth pastors who plan mulin Islamic laws to establish timedia programs and what is and what is not naturally - send out for
"balal." In other faiths,
·
believers refrain from eating p~hen we assimilate at
e;ertam foods at dtfferent the level of the table, we
umes of the week or year.
have truly assimiJ:ited to the
• In many cases, ~se · world around us," said Sack.
sacred ~ws and tr11diuons "When you take this view of
then begm to s~ the fesu- . Jife, those parents are not
~als and the cutsme of~ Pll!- just sending out for pizzalicular cul~re . or e~tc they are sending a symbolic
group. At this pomt, the lme ·gna1 0 f accepumce of the
between Greek cooking and st
.
Greek Onhodox cooking surroundmg youth culture.
starts to blur. What role does
"You. see the same thing
faith play in the menus of · ~a~perung wben people stan
Ethiopian, Italian, Lebanese, hmng up those fast-f~
Indian or Swedish restau- bo,;es at church potluck dillrants?
ners. Some megachurches
• Food also reflects what even have food cou~. these
people believe about family days. Who has th~ t~ to
and community life. It prepare those spectal dtshes
would be strange to see con- that people used to take to
servative Evangelical lead- church"''
ers serve the same food at a
(Terry Mattingly is direcmen 's dinner that they serve tor of the Washington
a luncheon for the women's Journalism Center at the
group. Foods reflect social Council for Christian
roles, too.
,
Colleges and Universities
Sack said that every com- and
leads
the
munity, every family, cannot GetReligion.org project to
help but develop informal study religion and the news.)

SYRACUSE - Joshua Heath Harris, 20, Syracuse, died
Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2007, as a result of a drowning accident
jn the Ohio River near EvansviUe, Ind.
Funeral arrangements are pending at the Cremeens
Funeral Home, Racine.
'

Patsr Dallene thompson

•·
• GROVE CITY - Patsy Darlene Thompson, 57, Grove
City, died Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2007, in Ohio State University
Hospitals, Columbus.
· • She is survived by her husband, WiUiam Thompson III.
: Services will be II a.m. Saturday in the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton. Burial will be in the Morgan Center
Cemetery, near Vinton. Friends may call at the funeral
home on Saturday from 10 to II a.m.·
•
•

J,.ocal Briefs
'Friend Sunday'

'

: RACINE - .The Racine First Baptist Church will host
~Friend Sunday" this Sunday with a special fellowship dinper at noon. Sunday school begins at 9:30 a.m., morning
worship is at I 0:40 a.m., afternoon worship is at 1 p.m.
• Searchers with .-----------.-':"'!'---,
'
the Indiana
.. Department of
Natural
Resources and
volunteers
,-.
searched the
bhio River for the
,.
body of Josh
Harris of
Syracuse. His
body was recovered from the
river near Troy,
Ind. yesterday
morning, after he
' fell from a barge
on Tuesday afternoon.
Photo courteoy VInce
Luecke/Perry
County, Ind. Ne-

'Recovered

DoN'T

from PageA1

ASK.

DON'T

TELL.

•

search for Harris's 'body,
which was found downstream from the primary
search area identified
Tuesday. The "side sonar"
equipment uses digital pic-

Clinic
from PageA1
family practice medical services, the new clinic will
il.lso serve as an access point
for mental health services
and dental care, which
Bridenbaugh said will be
provided through the . local
llealth
department's
Appalachian Dental Clinic.
Some basic laboratory services will also be provided

;southern.

.

.. from PageA1

Hillary nudges ahead of her rivals

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

There was a time, not so
long ago, when political
conventions were decided at
the conventions themselves.
Large blocs of delegates
would arrive "uncommitted," which was to say in the
pockets of state and local
leaders, and the bargaining
would go on long into the
night. Eventually, somebody
.
would put together an ..
Rea der Services
(USPS 213:1110)
unbeatable combination and
eor-tlon Polley
Ohio Yalley Publlehlng Co.
take the nomination.
Our main cMc.m 1n Ill II 1o ~ IYifY ............. _ ,
Today, however, the con.,. -·~- R you know o1 an _
thrOUGh Friday, 111 Coun Street.
-·~·
... ~ Pomeroy Ohio Socon&lt;kluapootage "Ventions are ~imply coronaIn • f(ooy, ca.IIIM .-room at (7&lt;10) po111 11 ~.
tions - the formal nomina992·2t58.
-·The Allociated Preu and tion of candidates who have
already assembled the neeOur 11111n number 11
tiOna
to The Dolly Sentinel, 111 eoon
essary
votes by winning the
(740) 11112:211141.
Street, Pomeroy. 0111o 46789.
major state primaries. No
~ extenllone ere:
doubt it's much more demoSubecrlpllon RltM
cratic this way, since most
By
carrier or motor route
News
delegates have been chosen
One month .. .. .. .... .'10.27
l!dltor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
in those primaries and have
One year ........... .'115.114
llepolteo. Bl1on Read, E&gt;ct. 14
Dtllly .. ................110'
promised to vote for a spellet&gt;or*: Beth Sergent, Ext 13
tlenlor Cltlun ,...,
cific candidate. But it's
One IYICHIIh ...........'10.27
taken a lot of the fun out of
One year ............'103.80
Advertising
the
process and virtually
.... llhcUd 11 ..,.,..,.
OUiolde - : DIVa Harris, Ext. 15 -lobOoly-.Noouoacrlpeliminated the proverbial
~ ....., Blenda oav1e. Ext 16 tlon by mal poo11- 11 IJ881 whel8
"smoke-filled room."
Cle• o./Circ.: Judy Clark, E&gt;ct. 10
In any case, it is almost
homo Clr11ef - · · -·
certain that we will know
Mall Subec:rlptlon
General Manager
lnolde Melp County
the
identity
of the
13 Weeka . ... . . .. .. ...'32.26
Charlene H -. Ext. 12
Republican and Democratic
26 Weeka .. . ..........'64.20
presidential
candidates
52 Weeks .. .. . ....... '127.1t
E:fltiH:
when the smoke has blown
neweOmydallyHrldnel.com
011181111 Mel(ll CoWity
away on Feb. 5. By that
13 Weeka .... . .... . ... 153.55
the important early pridate,
Will:
26 Weeka .. . ..... . ... 't07.t0
maries - notably those in
52 Weeka .. . •........'214.21
www.mydallyeentlnel.com
Iowa, New Hampshire and

' utters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
~han 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, m11.1t be
'signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. utters should be in
$00d ta.rte, addressing issues, not personalities. utters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

• 1
The Da1•1y sentfie

==-=-:: :"".;, . .

William
Rusher

South Carolina will
already have been held, and
on Feb. 5, ahout20 additional states will proclaim their
choices. In both parties, the
ultimate winners will almost
certainly be obvious by
then.
Curiously enough, the
Republican race is still wide
open, with four or five candidates still in serious contention. But the Democratic
battle has narrowed down to
just three major contenders
- Sens. Hillary Cli nton and
Barack Obama, and fonner
Sen. John Edwards- and it
is becoming apparent thai
Clinton is edging ahead.
Of the three, Edwards
seems to be slipping most
visibly. Only II percent of
likely Democratic voters
name him as their choice.
He is certainly an attractive
candidate, with a wife who
is a distinct plus, but he has
nevJ!r generated much panywide appeal. Accordingly,

he is putting his hopes and most of his money - in
Iowa, whose caucuses will
Ieick off the season. Not surprisingly, polls show him
doing well there, and he calculates that victory in Iowa
will give him the boost
needed for victory in New
Hampshire (where he is not
doing so well), and then lead
on to victories elsewhere.
But that strategy involves a
lot of "ifs."
Obama's entry into the
presidential race surprised
just about everybody, and
initially thrilled a great
many people who had gotten a little tired of regarding
Clinton as tfie inevitable
·
A fi
h.
nommee. t trst, ts po11
numbers actually began to
equal hers. But doubts seem
to have set in among many
voters _ perhaps fueled by
the thought that three not
very distinguished years in
the U.S. Senate are a less·
than-stellar qualification for
the presidency. In any case,
more recent polls show him
backed by only 25 percent
of likely Democratic voters.
Meanwhile, Clinton's support in that same group
stands at an impressive 47
percent. That's not overwhelming, to be sure, and it
is balanced, and to some
degree diminished, by her

negative rating among many
voters, which is the highest
of any candidate in eithet
party. But she doesn't need
her party's unanimous support to win its nomination,
and right now she is clearly
the front-runner.
Moreover, in recent TV
appearances, she has come
across as composed and sure
of herself, and centrally
positioned on many of the
key issues. I happen to be
one of those who susPe&lt;:t
she has a tin ear for political
nuances, but, if so, this is
balanced by the fact that her
husband (and chief adviser)
probably has the best ear in
American politics.
Whether she could win the
.
.
~restdency 1s another queslion. But bemg a woman 1s
· not likely to be a maJOr dtsadvantage and may even be
an asset (Margaret Thatcher
ID Bntam, and now Angela
Merkel in Germany, h~ve
paved the way.) Amenca
wtll certamly have a woman
president sooner or later,
a.nd Clinton has earned the
nght to make a senous bid
for the job.
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont lnsritute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

•

. '

·-

·-·

· - - - --

- ----

c

'
\"We
open for a whole new
contract this spring and I
hope the commission is out
by then and we can negotiate like normal districts."
: The Southern Local
School Board did raise its
~tarting teacher's salary
from $21,016 to $21,436,
er.actly two percent, a raise
contingent on the SLEA
contributing two percent of
the medical insurance benefits. Ohlinger said despite
the raise, Southern teachers
at step 0 remain the lowest
paid in the state.
A health insurance committee has also been formed
by the SLEA with up to

,Sentence
from PageA1
by the state, because Pace
did not take the stand during the trial:
In the end, Evans sentenced Pace to 10 years, citing his previous convictions
and the impact the incident
had on the victim as reasons.
Pace was also ordered to
have no contact with the
victim; was credited time
already served and placed
on a $500,000 ten percent
appeal bond.
.·
Lentes was reappomted as
Pace' s attorney for appeal.
Pace was arrested and

-·- - - - -- - , ___ ------·

The Daily Sentinel • Pqe As

www.mydallysentinel.com

tures of the bottom of the
river to allow emergency
crews to know where to
search for the victim.
An autopsy will be performed before the body is
released to the Harris famiJy, an Indiana television
station reported. Cremeens
Funeral Home, Racine, is
in charge of arr!lngements.
through the FQHC.
County Commissioners
hope the FQHC will be the
first step in securing 24-hour
emergency room services,
and inpatient care through a
new hospital facility.
Bridenbaugh said the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission and other feder·
al funding sources are expected 10 provide some medical
equipment for the new facility, wllich will also be
equipped with items from the
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
three representatives to
serve on the committee
while the board will appoint
up to two representatives
which will be joined by representati ves from the Ohio
Association of Public
School
Employees.
Committee members will
participate in joint Ohk
Education Association I
OAPSE training to hopefully improve the quality of
health care and lower the
cost of health insurance for
all enrollees of the health
insurance plan.
Ohlinger said she is
pleased with the insurance
committee and feels it will
benefit the district and said
"everybody (from all sides
of the table) i,~ supposed to
ego and learn" from the
upcoming training.
charged with the Dec. 10,
2006
kidnapping
of
Armstrong at his Bidwell
residence.
Pace and Newcomb ducttaped Armstrong's arms and
legs and put him in the
trunk. Shortly after leaving
the residence, the car
wrecked and overturned on
Pyles Road in Walnut
Township
and
Pace,
Newcomb, Armstrong and
'Erica Darst, the owner of
the vehicle; walked through
the woods 'until Armstrong
eventually
collapsed,
reportedly from his injuries.
Armstrong was able to
make it to a nearby . residence and the owners called
for help.

·- -·---- - - - - --- ...-

Bv~DOLPH

E, SCHMID
N&gt; SCIENCE \\!liTER

WASHINGTON
Attacking several tons of
woolly mammoth with
stone-tipped spears must
have taken extraordinary
courage - and ancient people left paintings to prove
they did 11.
Now,
scientists are
approaching mammoths in a
d1fferent way, extracting
DNA from their dense coats
in an effort to learn more
about them. ·
Mammoths are extinct, of
course. No one knows if the
cause was climate change,
hungry Neanderthals or
something else - but they
left behind remains, often
frozen in fhe tundra.
Attempts have been
made to sequence their
DNA from frozen animals,
but that can be complicated
by contamination.
Researchers report in
Friday's edition of the journal Science, however, that
mammoth hair seems to be
an excellent source of wellpreserved DNA.
"It is important to understand the genetic makeup of
an organism before it went
extinct," explained lead
researcher Stephan C.
Schuster of Penn State
University.
They try to understand the
relationship between different groups of animals, especially ones that are highly
endaQgered,
to . learn
whether those might face a
similar fate, said Schuster,
an associate professor of
biochemi·stry and molecular
biology.
"We want to use this to
sequence (the DNA from)
museum specimens and
therefore help to understand
the .evolution of species by
using museum collections

,.,. pllalo

After'his find, Siberian explorer Bernard Bulgues, views the tusks he arranged to stick out
of the snow of what Is believed to be &amp; 23,000 year old woolly mammoth, whose body Is
preserved In the ice In the Taimyr Peninsula, Siberia, Russia, 200 miles (320 kms) from
the Siberian city of Khatanga In this October 1999, file photo. Researchers report In the
Friday edition of the journal Science, that mammoth hair seems to be an excellent source
of well-preserved DNA.
that date back several hundred years," Schuster said.
Indeed, the technique
could be used to measure
the DNA from specimens
coUected by such naturalists
as
Charles
Darwin,
Alexander von Humboldt
and Carl Linnaeus.
The DNA collected from
the hair is much cleaner and
much less damaged than that
from other parts of the mammoths, he said, so it is more
economic to sequence it.
Schuster explained that
keratin, the hard covering of
hair, could protect the DNA.
Hair also can more e~~Sily be
cleaned of contamin!lnts
such as bacteri11.
"When people thought
of sequencing DNA from
hair, the usual assumptiop
was that the material must

come from the hair root, ·
which contains recognizable cells, because the hair
shaft appears to be dead,"
co-author Webb Miller,
also at Penn State, said in a
statement.
"However, we now know
that a hair shaft consists
essentially of DNA encased
in a kind of biological plastic," said biology professor
Miller.
Several of the hair sampies investigated were up to
50,000 years old. One of the
samples came from the first
specimen ever recorded, the
so-called Adams mammoth,
found in 1799 and dug out
of the permafrost between
1804 and 1806.
"We plan to use hair and
other keratin-containing
body parts, such as nail and

hom, to untangle the secrets
of populations that lived
long ago, so these populalions can send a message
from the past about what it
might have taken for them
to survive," Schuster said.
'"This discovery is good
news for anyone interested
in learning more about how
species of lar*e mammals
can go extinct. '
Learning
the
DNA
sequence does not mean
that the ancient animal can
be cloned or somehow resurrected, Schuster said,
adding "this is science fietion."
Main funding for the
research
was
from
Pennsylvania
State
University, Roche Applied
Sciences and a pnvate
sponsor.

FAMILY MEDICI·NE

'Back to_schoolfatigue'maybe cause of moms tiredness
Question: Since my kids .
went back to school a coupie of weeks ago, I have
been really tired. I am worried that something is
wrong with me, but I have
noticed many of the other
women at work are complaining of being tired as
well. Do we all have a virus
or something? What can be
going on?
Answer: Fatigue is a
common complaint seen in
the family physician's
office, and usually, it is not
caused by an underlying
serious medical problem.
One of the first thmgs your
doctor needs to do when
you tell him or her that you
feel fatigued is to ask questions about your actual
symptoms. This is because
people often use the term
fatigue when they really
mean that they just feel
sleepy or drowsy.
Fatigue and drowsiness
are not synonymous, thou$h
they do ovei'lap a btl:
Drowsiness can be defined
as the feeling we experience
when we need to sleep,
while fatigue is a lack of
energy and motivation. The
overlap occurs because
fatigue-related lack of energy and motivation can lead
to drowsiness. People with
fatigue also sometimes
experience apathy- a feeling of indifference or not
caring about what happens.
Over 80 percent of all
cases of fatigue are due to
lifestyle or emotional
issues. When the children
go back to school it causes
an abrupt change in the
household routine for most
people. You have to wake

.up earlier, get the kids off
to school, make sure homework is done in the evening
and plan for numerous after
school · activities. This can
all be very difficult to juggle and can cause a caregiver, like a mom, to not
sleep well.
Chances are that you and
most of the other women at
work are dealing with these
same issues. You may have
what could be termed "back
to school fatigue."
About 20 percen! of
fatigue cases, however, are
due to an underlying medical problem. Some of these
disorders are simple, easyto-treat conditions, but oth~rs are v!-l~ serious. For
mstance, 11 ts not unusual
for people who have mild
allergies to feel fatigued.
Fatigue can also be a symptom of pain, sleep disorders,
low thyroid and alcohol use.
Some medications, particularly antihistamines, blood
pressure meds and sleeping
pills can cause fatigue.
On the other hand, serious
medical conditions like diabetes, some types of cancer,
heart failure and major
infection can have fatigue
as an early sympto~.
Here are a few ups that
can help alleviate fatigue
that'~ n~t the re.sult of an
underlymg medical problem:
.
.
• Eat a balanced dtet. It IS
easy to skip meals and eat
poorly when ¥OU are
stressed by life's demands.
• Try to get some regular
exercise. This will actually
perk you up.
• Set a regular bedtime for
yourself so that you get

enough sleep.
• Learn to relax through
meditation or yoga.
• Try to eliminate as
much stress in your life as
possible.
• Take a multi-vitamin pill.
• Avoid alcohol, nicotine
and drug use.
If these simple measures
don't help, and your fatigue
persists, you should see
your doctor. He or she will
take a thorough history and
do a physical. Lab tests may
also be ordered to rule out
anemia. diabetes, infection
and thyroid disease.

Family Mtdkint® is a
wee/ell column. 7b submit ·
questions, wriU to Martlrll
A, Simpson, D,O,, M.B.A.,
Ohio Univenily College of

for any mtdieal

·condilWns. Past columns

art availablt online at
w w w.fam ilym edici ne·
news.~rg.

t-"t&lt;N C-i,f

~'A%

&lt;
"'
"'

$

0,..

p

"i
·-~''"' ~

Robin Hood
Saturday, Sept. 29th
3:00 ll 7:00 pm

The Ohio Valley
Symphony
Broadway Star u..k McVey

sat,, Oct. 6th 8:00 pm
Box Olllce: 4212nd Av..
Gllllpolll, Ott (740) 441-ARTS

NOTICE TO LOW TO MODERATE
HOUSEHOLDS
Applications for Owner Occupied Housing
Rehabilitation and Homeownership Assistance will
be available at the County Annex Building, CHIP
Office, 117 East Memorial Drive, Suite 6, Pomeroy,
Ohio on Tuesday Oct. 2, and Wednesday, Oct.
3,2007, between the hours of 9:00A.M.
and 3:00P.M.
The Rehabilitation t&gt;rogram will offer a grant for
full rehabilitation on owner occupied.homes and
the Homeownership program will provide grant
assistance for downpayment, closing costs and
rehab on home purchases.
This is a first come, first come serve program so
applicants may wish to come very early and wait in
loboy at the front of the building until doors open at
9:00A.M.
Parking is available only at the rear of the annex.

Grand Opening
Tuesday, Octob.-r 2nd
. , at3 p.m.
99 Beech Street, Middleport, OH

(740) 992-1030- (740) 992-6068
jTum al Speedway &amp; Follow Beech Sl. toward the Ohio River)
Roger Manley- Owner James Moore • Certified Mechanic

- --··· --

dillpo!l and.. recommtrul
trelllmertt

IWillliiNG.• mLtNTn

AUTO

---- --- - - ---- ·-

Osteopillhie Medicine, P.O,
Box 110, Athens, Ohio
45701, · or via e-mail to
readerquestions@/amily·
medieimmews.ori, Medical
iri.fo1'11111lion in this column
is provided as an edru:a·
dorull ~ervice only. It does
not replace the Judgment of
your personal physieion,
who should be relied on to

Jean Trussell
CHIP Administrator
•

�OPINION
The Daily Sentinel
111 CourtS.

'•~Ohio

(740) 112-2156 • FAX (740) 192-2157
-..lllf"' "'

• • com

.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co,
Den Goodllch
Publisher
Clwtene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Ecltor

Ctmgrus sludl rrudu'"' law mp«ting an
utablishrnmt of rdigitm, M pt'(Jirilliting the
fru eurc:ist tJuruf; M alnUiging tlu.frwltnn
of spud~, M -.f tlu prw; M the right of the
ptOpk ~ ID autmhh, arultD petition
tht GMwnfiUflt fM a mlrus ofgrinanas,
- The Flrwt Amendment 10 the u.s, Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today il Friday. Sept. 28, the Vlst day of 20Cf7. 'IlleR are
94 days left in the year.
Today's Hi~igbt in ~:
On Sept.
, 1066, William the Conqueror mvaded
En2laod to claim the English throne.
On this date·
In 1.542, ~ 'navigator Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo
arrived at present-day San Diego.
In 1781, Amaican forces in the Revolutiorwy War,
backed by a French fleet, began their siege ofYorttown. Va
In 1787, Coogxess voted to ICIId the jUSl-rompleted
Constitution of the United States to state legillatures for
their approval.
In 18SO, flogging was abolished as a form of punishment
in the U.S. Navy.
· In 1924, two U.S. Army planeslandffl in Seattle, Wash.,
having compLeted the fint round-the-world night in 175
days.
,
In 1939, during World War 0. Germany and the Soviet
Union 3lUeed on a plan to partition Poland.
In 1967, Walter E. Washington was sworn in as the fllSI
mayor-commissioner of the District of CQiumbia (be'd been
appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson).
-In 1974, fllSIIady Betty Ford underwent a mastectomy at
Bethesda Naval Medical Cmter in Maryland, foUowing discovery of a cancerous lump in her breast.
In 1991, jazz great Miles Davis died in Santa Monica, ·
Calif., at age 6.5.
·
Five years ago: Iraq defumtly rejected a U.S.-British plan
for the United Nations to force President Saddam Hussem to
disarm aod open his palaces for weapons searches. FillliiiCe
leaders meeting in Washington directed the International
Monetary Fund to ~orlt on new ~h to resolving glo\&gt;al debt crises. U.S. Rep, Patsy Mink. a 12-tmn Democratic
congresswoman from liawaiJ, died in Honolulu at age 74.
One year ago: AI-Qaida in Iraq's leader, in a chilling
audiotape, called for nuclear scientists to join his gro~~p's
holy war and urged insurgents to kidnap Westerners so they
could be traded for a blind Egyptian sbeik who is serving a
life sentence in a U.S. prison.
Today's Birthdays: Actor William Wmdom is 84. Actor
Arnold Stang is 82. Blues singer Koko Taylor is 79. Actress
Brigitte Bardo! il 73. Singer Ben E. King is 69. Actor Joel
Higgins is 64. Singer Helen Shapiro is 61. Actor Jeffrey
Jones is 61. Movie writer:director-actor John Sayles is 57.
Actress S = Kristel is 5.5. Rock musician George Lynch
is 53. Zy
singer-musician C.J. Chenier is 50. Actress,
comedian Janeane Garofalo is 43. Country singer Matt King
is 4l!Actress Mira Sorvino is 40. TV personality Moon
Zappa is 40. Rhythm-and-blues singer Sean Levert (Levert)
is J9. Actress-model Carre Otis is 39. Actress Naomi Watts
js 39. Country musician Chuck Crawford is 34. Country
singer Mandy Barnett is 32. Rapper Young Jeezy is 30.
Actress Hilary Duff is 20. Actress Skye McCole Bartusial!;
is 15.
: Thought for Today: ''Tune cools, time clarifies; no mood
can be maintained quite unaltered through the· course of
hours."- Thtimas Mann, German writer (1875,1955).

PageA4

Friday, September 28, 2007

Friday, September 28, 2007

Deaths

Food that fteds the soul
It's Yom KippuL Will your
Jewish grandmother serve
shrimp-and-bacon appetiz-

en wbeo the family breaks
the fast?
It's Ramadan Will your
devout Muslim paRnts
smile if you serve dinner
several hours before sun-

Terry
Mattingly

down?
It's Good friday. Will the

Catholic college cafeteria
serve hamburgtm?
It 's Thanksgiving. (a!)
you predict the foods that
will be on your mother's
table? Will the German
grandmothers
bake
Christmas cookies at the
Lutheran church? Is the tuna
casserole served at potluck
dinners at rural Minnesota
churches ttuly a sacrament?
When it comes to the
rhythms and symbols of
faith, it's easy to see the role
that food plays, especiaUy in
the intense and emotional
fmal months of the religious
Calendar.
"Fuod is aU about the stories that define our lives,"
said Daniel Sack of the
University of Chicago
Divinity School author of
the book "Whitebread
Protestants: · Food and
Religion
in American
Culture."
"I'm not just talking about
religious rituals that involve
food. For many church people, what happens in the
social haU week after week
is more important than what
happens in the sanctuary.
They come for Communion,

but also for community."

Sack said food traditions
- with a big 1"' as weU as
with a small "C - demonstrate why it's almost impossible to draw a line showing
where religion ends and cui·
tore begins. Food is one of
the basic building blocks of
life and, thus, iii one of the
"passions" that religious
believers have always Slnlggled 10 keep under control.
Change what people eat
and you change their lives.
However, there are times
when the religious significance of food is obvious and
there are times when it is
not. While studying this
subject, Sack said he began
sorting the different kinds of
food traditions inlo four
groups.
• Sometime ~. the food
becomes a holy object in
and of itself. One example is ·
when a Buddhist takes a
food offering to a temple_ In
other cases, ordinary food
becomes sacred as pan of an
intricate ritual that is defmed
by prayers and scripture such as the bread and wine
in a Catholic Mass.
"What is crucial is that

Lock of hair may solve mammoth questions
Joshua Harris

this sacramental understanding of food seeps into otber
pans of life," said Sack..
" And we' re not jw.t talking

rituals linked to meals,
because: meals are such symbolic timei of fellowship.
And when the times change,
about Christianity. If you so do the meals.
start talkiog about bread and
Consider the food served
wine, it's hard to take that at youth-group meetings.
symbolism out of there."
Once, parents organired
• MOSI religious uaditions, these meetings and prepared
to varying degrees, claim the food, helping to main·
some right 10 control the tain a sense of watch-care
role that food plays in daily .and protection from the outlife. This is most obvious in side world. Today, most
faiths such as Judaism, with churches hire professional
its "lmsher" traditions, and youth pastors who plan mulin Islamic laws to establish timedia programs and what is and what is not naturally - send out for
"balal." In other faiths,
·
believers refrain from eating p~hen we assimilate at
e;ertam foods at dtfferent the level of the table, we
umes of the week or year.
have truly assimiJ:ited to the
• In many cases, ~se · world around us," said Sack.
sacred ~ws and tr11diuons "When you take this view of
then begm to s~ the fesu- . Jife, those parents are not
~als and the cutsme of~ Pll!- just sending out for pizzalicular cul~re . or e~tc they are sending a symbolic
group. At this pomt, the lme ·gna1 0 f accepumce of the
between Greek cooking and st
.
Greek Onhodox cooking surroundmg youth culture.
starts to blur. What role does
"You. see the same thing
faith play in the menus of · ~a~perung wben people stan
Ethiopian, Italian, Lebanese, hmng up those fast-f~
Indian or Swedish restau- bo,;es at church potluck dillrants?
ners. Some megachurches
• Food also reflects what even have food cou~. these
people believe about family days. Who has th~ t~ to
and community life. It prepare those spectal dtshes
would be strange to see con- that people used to take to
servative Evangelical lead- church"''
ers serve the same food at a
(Terry Mattingly is direcmen 's dinner that they serve tor of the Washington
a luncheon for the women's Journalism Center at the
group. Foods reflect social Council for Christian
roles, too.
,
Colleges and Universities
Sack said that every com- and
leads
the
munity, every family, cannot GetReligion.org project to
help but develop informal study religion and the news.)

SYRACUSE - Joshua Heath Harris, 20, Syracuse, died
Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2007, as a result of a drowning accident
jn the Ohio River near EvansviUe, Ind.
Funeral arrangements are pending at the Cremeens
Funeral Home, Racine.
'

Patsr Dallene thompson

•·
• GROVE CITY - Patsy Darlene Thompson, 57, Grove
City, died Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2007, in Ohio State University
Hospitals, Columbus.
· • She is survived by her husband, WiUiam Thompson III.
: Services will be II a.m. Saturday in the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton. Burial will be in the Morgan Center
Cemetery, near Vinton. Friends may call at the funeral
home on Saturday from 10 to II a.m.·
•
•

J,.ocal Briefs
'Friend Sunday'

'

: RACINE - .The Racine First Baptist Church will host
~Friend Sunday" this Sunday with a special fellowship dinper at noon. Sunday school begins at 9:30 a.m., morning
worship is at I 0:40 a.m., afternoon worship is at 1 p.m.
• Searchers with .-----------.-':"'!'---,
'
the Indiana
.. Department of
Natural
Resources and
volunteers
,-.
searched the
bhio River for the
,.
body of Josh
Harris of
Syracuse. His
body was recovered from the
river near Troy,
Ind. yesterday
morning, after he
' fell from a barge
on Tuesday afternoon.
Photo courteoy VInce
Luecke/Perry
County, Ind. Ne-

'Recovered

DoN'T

from PageA1

ASK.

DON'T

TELL.

•

search for Harris's 'body,
which was found downstream from the primary
search area identified
Tuesday. The "side sonar"
equipment uses digital pic-

Clinic
from PageA1
family practice medical services, the new clinic will
il.lso serve as an access point
for mental health services
and dental care, which
Bridenbaugh said will be
provided through the . local
llealth
department's
Appalachian Dental Clinic.
Some basic laboratory services will also be provided

;southern.

.

.. from PageA1

Hillary nudges ahead of her rivals

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

There was a time, not so
long ago, when political
conventions were decided at
the conventions themselves.
Large blocs of delegates
would arrive "uncommitted," which was to say in the
pockets of state and local
leaders, and the bargaining
would go on long into the
night. Eventually, somebody
.
would put together an ..
Rea der Services
(USPS 213:1110)
unbeatable combination and
eor-tlon Polley
Ohio Yalley Publlehlng Co.
take the nomination.
Our main cMc.m 1n Ill II 1o ~ IYifY ............. _ ,
Today, however, the con.,. -·~- R you know o1 an _
thrOUGh Friday, 111 Coun Street.
-·~·
... ~ Pomeroy Ohio Socon&lt;kluapootage "Ventions are ~imply coronaIn • f(ooy, ca.IIIM .-room at (7&lt;10) po111 11 ~.
tions - the formal nomina992·2t58.
-·The Allociated Preu and tion of candidates who have
already assembled the neeOur 11111n number 11
tiOna
to The Dolly Sentinel, 111 eoon
essary
votes by winning the
(740) 11112:211141.
Street, Pomeroy. 0111o 46789.
major state primaries. No
~ extenllone ere:
doubt it's much more demoSubecrlpllon RltM
cratic this way, since most
By
carrier or motor route
News
delegates have been chosen
One month .. .. .. .... .'10.27
l!dltor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
in those primaries and have
One year ........... .'115.114
llepolteo. Bl1on Read, E&gt;ct. 14
Dtllly .. ................110'
promised to vote for a spellet&gt;or*: Beth Sergent, Ext 13
tlenlor Cltlun ,...,
cific candidate. But it's
One IYICHIIh ...........'10.27
taken a lot of the fun out of
One year ............'103.80
Advertising
the
process and virtually
.... llhcUd 11 ..,.,..,.
OUiolde - : DIVa Harris, Ext. 15 -lobOoly-.Noouoacrlpeliminated the proverbial
~ ....., Blenda oav1e. Ext 16 tlon by mal poo11- 11 IJ881 whel8
"smoke-filled room."
Cle• o./Circ.: Judy Clark, E&gt;ct. 10
In any case, it is almost
homo Clr11ef - · · -·
certain that we will know
Mall Subec:rlptlon
General Manager
lnolde Melp County
the
identity
of the
13 Weeka . ... . . .. .. ...'32.26
Charlene H -. Ext. 12
Republican and Democratic
26 Weeka .. . ..........'64.20
presidential
candidates
52 Weeks .. .. . ....... '127.1t
E:fltiH:
when the smoke has blown
neweOmydallyHrldnel.com
011181111 Mel(ll CoWity
away on Feb. 5. By that
13 Weeka .... . .... . ... 153.55
the important early pridate,
Will:
26 Weeka .. . ..... . ... 't07.t0
maries - notably those in
52 Weeka .. . •........'214.21
www.mydallyeentlnel.com
Iowa, New Hampshire and

' utters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
~han 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, m11.1t be
'signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. utters should be in
$00d ta.rte, addressing issues, not personalities. utters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

• 1
The Da1•1y sentfie

==-=-:: :"".;, . .

William
Rusher

South Carolina will
already have been held, and
on Feb. 5, ahout20 additional states will proclaim their
choices. In both parties, the
ultimate winners will almost
certainly be obvious by
then.
Curiously enough, the
Republican race is still wide
open, with four or five candidates still in serious contention. But the Democratic
battle has narrowed down to
just three major contenders
- Sens. Hillary Cli nton and
Barack Obama, and fonner
Sen. John Edwards- and it
is becoming apparent thai
Clinton is edging ahead.
Of the three, Edwards
seems to be slipping most
visibly. Only II percent of
likely Democratic voters
name him as their choice.
He is certainly an attractive
candidate, with a wife who
is a distinct plus, but he has
nevJ!r generated much panywide appeal. Accordingly,

he is putting his hopes and most of his money - in
Iowa, whose caucuses will
Ieick off the season. Not surprisingly, polls show him
doing well there, and he calculates that victory in Iowa
will give him the boost
needed for victory in New
Hampshire (where he is not
doing so well), and then lead
on to victories elsewhere.
But that strategy involves a
lot of "ifs."
Obama's entry into the
presidential race surprised
just about everybody, and
initially thrilled a great
many people who had gotten a little tired of regarding
Clinton as tfie inevitable
·
A fi
h.
nommee. t trst, ts po11
numbers actually began to
equal hers. But doubts seem
to have set in among many
voters _ perhaps fueled by
the thought that three not
very distinguished years in
the U.S. Senate are a less·
than-stellar qualification for
the presidency. In any case,
more recent polls show him
backed by only 25 percent
of likely Democratic voters.
Meanwhile, Clinton's support in that same group
stands at an impressive 47
percent. That's not overwhelming, to be sure, and it
is balanced, and to some
degree diminished, by her

negative rating among many
voters, which is the highest
of any candidate in eithet
party. But she doesn't need
her party's unanimous support to win its nomination,
and right now she is clearly
the front-runner.
Moreover, in recent TV
appearances, she has come
across as composed and sure
of herself, and centrally
positioned on many of the
key issues. I happen to be
one of those who susPe&lt;:t
she has a tin ear for political
nuances, but, if so, this is
balanced by the fact that her
husband (and chief adviser)
probably has the best ear in
American politics.
Whether she could win the
.
.
~restdency 1s another queslion. But bemg a woman 1s
· not likely to be a maJOr dtsadvantage and may even be
an asset (Margaret Thatcher
ID Bntam, and now Angela
Merkel in Germany, h~ve
paved the way.) Amenca
wtll certamly have a woman
president sooner or later,
a.nd Clinton has earned the
nght to make a senous bid
for the job.
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont lnsritute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

•

. '

·-

·-·

· - - - --

- ----

c

'
\"We
open for a whole new
contract this spring and I
hope the commission is out
by then and we can negotiate like normal districts."
: The Southern Local
School Board did raise its
~tarting teacher's salary
from $21,016 to $21,436,
er.actly two percent, a raise
contingent on the SLEA
contributing two percent of
the medical insurance benefits. Ohlinger said despite
the raise, Southern teachers
at step 0 remain the lowest
paid in the state.
A health insurance committee has also been formed
by the SLEA with up to

,Sentence
from PageA1
by the state, because Pace
did not take the stand during the trial:
In the end, Evans sentenced Pace to 10 years, citing his previous convictions
and the impact the incident
had on the victim as reasons.
Pace was also ordered to
have no contact with the
victim; was credited time
already served and placed
on a $500,000 ten percent
appeal bond.
.·
Lentes was reappomted as
Pace' s attorney for appeal.
Pace was arrested and

-·- - - - -- - , ___ ------·

The Daily Sentinel • Pqe As

www.mydallysentinel.com

tures of the bottom of the
river to allow emergency
crews to know where to
search for the victim.
An autopsy will be performed before the body is
released to the Harris famiJy, an Indiana television
station reported. Cremeens
Funeral Home, Racine, is
in charge of arr!lngements.
through the FQHC.
County Commissioners
hope the FQHC will be the
first step in securing 24-hour
emergency room services,
and inpatient care through a
new hospital facility.
Bridenbaugh said the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission and other feder·
al funding sources are expected 10 provide some medical
equipment for the new facility, wllich will also be
equipped with items from the
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
three representatives to
serve on the committee
while the board will appoint
up to two representatives
which will be joined by representati ves from the Ohio
Association of Public
School
Employees.
Committee members will
participate in joint Ohk
Education Association I
OAPSE training to hopefully improve the quality of
health care and lower the
cost of health insurance for
all enrollees of the health
insurance plan.
Ohlinger said she is
pleased with the insurance
committee and feels it will
benefit the district and said
"everybody (from all sides
of the table) i,~ supposed to
ego and learn" from the
upcoming training.
charged with the Dec. 10,
2006
kidnapping
of
Armstrong at his Bidwell
residence.
Pace and Newcomb ducttaped Armstrong's arms and
legs and put him in the
trunk. Shortly after leaving
the residence, the car
wrecked and overturned on
Pyles Road in Walnut
Township
and
Pace,
Newcomb, Armstrong and
'Erica Darst, the owner of
the vehicle; walked through
the woods 'until Armstrong
eventually
collapsed,
reportedly from his injuries.
Armstrong was able to
make it to a nearby . residence and the owners called
for help.

·- -·---- - - - - --- ...-

Bv~DOLPH

E, SCHMID
N&gt; SCIENCE \\!liTER

WASHINGTON
Attacking several tons of
woolly mammoth with
stone-tipped spears must
have taken extraordinary
courage - and ancient people left paintings to prove
they did 11.
Now,
scientists are
approaching mammoths in a
d1fferent way, extracting
DNA from their dense coats
in an effort to learn more
about them. ·
Mammoths are extinct, of
course. No one knows if the
cause was climate change,
hungry Neanderthals or
something else - but they
left behind remains, often
frozen in fhe tundra.
Attempts have been
made to sequence their
DNA from frozen animals,
but that can be complicated
by contamination.
Researchers report in
Friday's edition of the journal Science, however, that
mammoth hair seems to be
an excellent source of wellpreserved DNA.
"It is important to understand the genetic makeup of
an organism before it went
extinct," explained lead
researcher Stephan C.
Schuster of Penn State
University.
They try to understand the
relationship between different groups of animals, especially ones that are highly
endaQgered,
to . learn
whether those might face a
similar fate, said Schuster,
an associate professor of
biochemi·stry and molecular
biology.
"We want to use this to
sequence (the DNA from)
museum specimens and
therefore help to understand
the .evolution of species by
using museum collections

,.,. pllalo

After'his find, Siberian explorer Bernard Bulgues, views the tusks he arranged to stick out
of the snow of what Is believed to be &amp; 23,000 year old woolly mammoth, whose body Is
preserved In the ice In the Taimyr Peninsula, Siberia, Russia, 200 miles (320 kms) from
the Siberian city of Khatanga In this October 1999, file photo. Researchers report In the
Friday edition of the journal Science, that mammoth hair seems to be an excellent source
of well-preserved DNA.
that date back several hundred years," Schuster said.
Indeed, the technique
could be used to measure
the DNA from specimens
coUected by such naturalists
as
Charles
Darwin,
Alexander von Humboldt
and Carl Linnaeus.
The DNA collected from
the hair is much cleaner and
much less damaged than that
from other parts of the mammoths, he said, so it is more
economic to sequence it.
Schuster explained that
keratin, the hard covering of
hair, could protect the DNA.
Hair also can more e~~Sily be
cleaned of contamin!lnts
such as bacteri11.
"When people thought
of sequencing DNA from
hair, the usual assumptiop
was that the material must

come from the hair root, ·
which contains recognizable cells, because the hair
shaft appears to be dead,"
co-author Webb Miller,
also at Penn State, said in a
statement.
"However, we now know
that a hair shaft consists
essentially of DNA encased
in a kind of biological plastic," said biology professor
Miller.
Several of the hair sampies investigated were up to
50,000 years old. One of the
samples came from the first
specimen ever recorded, the
so-called Adams mammoth,
found in 1799 and dug out
of the permafrost between
1804 and 1806.
"We plan to use hair and
other keratin-containing
body parts, such as nail and

hom, to untangle the secrets
of populations that lived
long ago, so these populalions can send a message
from the past about what it
might have taken for them
to survive," Schuster said.
'"This discovery is good
news for anyone interested
in learning more about how
species of lar*e mammals
can go extinct. '
Learning
the
DNA
sequence does not mean
that the ancient animal can
be cloned or somehow resurrected, Schuster said,
adding "this is science fietion."
Main funding for the
research
was
from
Pennsylvania
State
University, Roche Applied
Sciences and a pnvate
sponsor.

FAMILY MEDICI·NE

'Back to_schoolfatigue'maybe cause of moms tiredness
Question: Since my kids .
went back to school a coupie of weeks ago, I have
been really tired. I am worried that something is
wrong with me, but I have
noticed many of the other
women at work are complaining of being tired as
well. Do we all have a virus
or something? What can be
going on?
Answer: Fatigue is a
common complaint seen in
the family physician's
office, and usually, it is not
caused by an underlying
serious medical problem.
One of the first thmgs your
doctor needs to do when
you tell him or her that you
feel fatigued is to ask questions about your actual
symptoms. This is because
people often use the term
fatigue when they really
mean that they just feel
sleepy or drowsy.
Fatigue and drowsiness
are not synonymous, thou$h
they do ovei'lap a btl:
Drowsiness can be defined
as the feeling we experience
when we need to sleep,
while fatigue is a lack of
energy and motivation. The
overlap occurs because
fatigue-related lack of energy and motivation can lead
to drowsiness. People with
fatigue also sometimes
experience apathy- a feeling of indifference or not
caring about what happens.
Over 80 percent of all
cases of fatigue are due to
lifestyle or emotional
issues. When the children
go back to school it causes
an abrupt change in the
household routine for most
people. You have to wake

.up earlier, get the kids off
to school, make sure homework is done in the evening
and plan for numerous after
school · activities. This can
all be very difficult to juggle and can cause a caregiver, like a mom, to not
sleep well.
Chances are that you and
most of the other women at
work are dealing with these
same issues. You may have
what could be termed "back
to school fatigue."
About 20 percen! of
fatigue cases, however, are
due to an underlying medical problem. Some of these
disorders are simple, easyto-treat conditions, but oth~rs are v!-l~ serious. For
mstance, 11 ts not unusual
for people who have mild
allergies to feel fatigued.
Fatigue can also be a symptom of pain, sleep disorders,
low thyroid and alcohol use.
Some medications, particularly antihistamines, blood
pressure meds and sleeping
pills can cause fatigue.
On the other hand, serious
medical conditions like diabetes, some types of cancer,
heart failure and major
infection can have fatigue
as an early sympto~.
Here are a few ups that
can help alleviate fatigue
that'~ n~t the re.sult of an
underlymg medical problem:
.
.
• Eat a balanced dtet. It IS
easy to skip meals and eat
poorly when ¥OU are
stressed by life's demands.
• Try to get some regular
exercise. This will actually
perk you up.
• Set a regular bedtime for
yourself so that you get

enough sleep.
• Learn to relax through
meditation or yoga.
• Try to eliminate as
much stress in your life as
possible.
• Take a multi-vitamin pill.
• Avoid alcohol, nicotine
and drug use.
If these simple measures
don't help, and your fatigue
persists, you should see
your doctor. He or she will
take a thorough history and
do a physical. Lab tests may
also be ordered to rule out
anemia. diabetes, infection
and thyroid disease.

Family Mtdkint® is a
wee/ell column. 7b submit ·
questions, wriU to Martlrll
A, Simpson, D,O,, M.B.A.,
Ohio Univenily College of

for any mtdieal

·condilWns. Past columns

art availablt online at
w w w.fam ilym edici ne·
news.~rg.

t-"t&lt;N C-i,f

~'A%

&lt;
"'
"'

$

0,..

p

"i
·-~''"' ~

Robin Hood
Saturday, Sept. 29th
3:00 ll 7:00 pm

The Ohio Valley
Symphony
Broadway Star u..k McVey

sat,, Oct. 6th 8:00 pm
Box Olllce: 4212nd Av..
Gllllpolll, Ott (740) 441-ARTS

NOTICE TO LOW TO MODERATE
HOUSEHOLDS
Applications for Owner Occupied Housing
Rehabilitation and Homeownership Assistance will
be available at the County Annex Building, CHIP
Office, 117 East Memorial Drive, Suite 6, Pomeroy,
Ohio on Tuesday Oct. 2, and Wednesday, Oct.
3,2007, between the hours of 9:00A.M.
and 3:00P.M.
The Rehabilitation t&gt;rogram will offer a grant for
full rehabilitation on owner occupied.homes and
the Homeownership program will provide grant
assistance for downpayment, closing costs and
rehab on home purchases.
This is a first come, first come serve program so
applicants may wish to come very early and wait in
loboy at the front of the building until doors open at
9:00A.M.
Parking is available only at the rear of the annex.

Grand Opening
Tuesday, Octob.-r 2nd
. , at3 p.m.
99 Beech Street, Middleport, OH

(740) 992-1030- (740) 992-6068
jTum al Speedway &amp; Follow Beech Sl. toward the Ohio River)
Roger Manley- Owner James Moore • Certified Mechanic

- --··· --

dillpo!l and.. recommtrul
trelllmertt

IWillliiNG.• mLtNTn

AUTO

---- --- - - ---- ·-

Osteopillhie Medicine, P.O,
Box 110, Athens, Ohio
45701, · or via e-mail to
readerquestions@/amily·
medieimmews.ori, Medical
iri.fo1'11111lion in this column
is provided as an edru:a·
dorull ~ervice only. It does
not replace the Judgment of
your personal physieion,
who should be relied on to

Jean Trussell
CHIP Administrator
•

�!fie Daily Sentinel

BY THE, BEND

Friday,

septe!:~~~ ~~

•

~------------------------~----------------------~--~--------------------------------------~~~~~~--------~--~!'

Buyers keep Fenton ~rt Glass going a bit longer Local Weather
Wlll1AMS1DWN, W.Va. factory along the Ohio
(AP) - Strong support from River, and Fenton said the~
dealers and a surge of last- is no specific closing date.
minute orders are keeping one The gift shop remail)s open,
of West Vuginia's last hand- and factory tours will he
_hlolYI! glassmakers in busi- conducted through October.
· ness for at least a month
Fenton, known for. maklonger than anticipated.
in~
handcrafted, handAfter announcing in pamted art glass, was able
August that it would soon to survive three waves ·Of
close, Fenton Art Glass economic troubles that
received what President wiped out what was once a
George Fenton called "a flourishing glass industry in
very strong response" from the state. In August, howevits network of 4,000 dealers. er, it said it would surrender
Production, which had been to growing competition, tisexpected to cease this ing natural ~as . prices and
month, will now likely con- consumers wtth less dispostinue until early November. able income.
"We' re actually working
Fenton, Blenko Glass Co.
overtime this week," Fenton in Milton and Boyd's
said Thursday.
· Crystal Art Glass in
About · 125
workers Cambricge, Ohio, are
remain at the 102-year-old among the fe~ remaining

collectible art glas~ producers in the region.
Fenton's
grandfather
started the plan\ in 1905,
and nine family members
still work there. The family
is doing everything . it .can
to keep the company alive,
he said.
·
Last year, it started
imJ?ort division, bringing
mamly ceramics and some
glass to its product mi~ .
"We are looking at all
kinds of options," Fenton
said. "But there have been
no decisions made, and s0
far, no feasible go-forward
solution. We hope we'll be
able to find a way to continue to make glass here."
The Fentons aie famous
for developing carnival
glass, a distinctive look that

an

marries iridescence with a
patterned surface. Some
companies had been doing
patterns and others had been
doing
iridescence , but
Fenton was the first to combine them in the 1970s.
The company also is
famous for hobnail milk
glass, the opaque white,
bubble-covered product that
helped the company survive
the Depression. It was produced .mto the 1980s.
Fenton mainly
sells
through its dealers, but TV
and Internet also help the
company thrive. The finn
was one of the earliest participants in QVC, when the
shopping channel was barely more than a concept.
Fenton's uncle, Bill, was t)le
first guest host in 1988.

Today's Forecast

people asking, "Was it on
purpose?" or "Have you
been trying a long time?"
It's nobody's business if we
were trying for a single day
or 20 years. Can you please
tell people to stop bemg so
nosy? I would never ask
someone, "How long did it
take you to get pre~nant?"
What are people thmking?
Waiting Until Our
Little One Arrives
Dear Waiting: Obviously,
they aren't thinking at all, or
they would never ask such
personal questions. The best
response is stony silence and
a change of subject.
Dear Annie: My husband
and I strongly disagree with
your advice to "Old Enough
tQ Know Better." While she
may feel guilt because her
parents seem to be in need,
she has no obligation to ·
physically or financially
care for them in any way. It
is OUR responsibility to
take care of ourselves. ·
We have already taken the
time to plan for our aging
years by choosing a retirement center that we can
afford, and that includes
every service we may need
from independent living to
nursing home without moving to another facility. We
even have an account for

funeral expenses.
Our children love us dearly, but planning for our
future is our job. Our children's responsibility is to
care for their children and
enjoy their own lives, and
our children know this. We
have chosen to foster a loving relations~ip with them,
and their caring for us is not
a part of the plan. Thmking Ahead . ,
Dear Thinking: Your
solution is wise, but not
common. A lot of readers
thought those parents should
be left to fend for themselves, but we disagree.
Unless there was abuse, we
think children have an obligation to see that their paren.ts
have at least the minimum
care necessary.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Ka1hy Mitchell ar1d
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and retul features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Monday, Oct. 1
REEDSVILLE -Olive
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., township garage.
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees, reg\[lar
meeting, 7 p.m., Syracuse
Village Hall.
ALI1RED
- Orange
Township Trustees regular
meeting, 7:30 p.m., at home
. of Fiscal Officer Osie Follrod.
Tuesday, Oct. 2
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., Pageville Town Hall.
Wednesday, Oct. 3
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Healih, 5
p.m., Meigs County Health
Department, second public
hearing Meigs County
General Health District
Sewage Treatment System
rules.
Tuesday, Oct. 9
POMEROY - .Bedford
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, at town hall.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Oct. 1
POMEROY
- Mei gs
County Cancer Initiative,
noon, conference room of
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center. New members welcome.
Bring
lunch.
Courtney Sim, 992-6626 for
information.
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Band Boosters, 6
p.m., high school band room.
RACINE
Racine
Chapter 134, O.E.S. 7:30
p.m. with initiation of new
member. Wear chapter
attire. Refreshments.
POMEROY - The Meigs
High School band Boosters
will meet at 6 p.m. in the
bandroom. All band parents
are encouraged to get

involved as the Boosters plan
events and fundraisers to
support and enhance the
band experience for students.
Tuesday, Oct. 2
MIDDLEPORT
Regular monthly meeting of
Middleport Masonic Lodge
#363, F&amp;AM, 7:30 ~.m. All
Master Masons mvited.
Re.freshments.
CHESTER Chester
Council 323, D of A, will
meet 6 p.m. for a potluck
supper. Friendship meeting
of District 13 to be observed.
Members to wear white and
take a covered dish. Lodge
meeting starts ar7 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 4
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Eastern Star
Past Matrons, I p.m. luncheon at the Wild Horse in
Pomeroy. ·
Friday, Oct. S
POMEROY
PERI
Chapter 74 of Meigs County
will meet at I p.m at the
Meigs Multipurpose Center
(God's N.E.T.) Mulberry
Avenue.
Representatives
from insurance companies
wi II be guest speakers.
Available te answer questions
concerning insurance plan.

Nazarene. Sunday service,
11 a.m.; evening services at 7
p.m. Rev. and Mrs. William
Hill, speakers. Located on
Route 689, Albany. Re'v.
Lloyd Grimm, pastor.
·
POMEROY - Forest Run
United Methodist Church will
host a songfest for the church
co-op, 7:3 0 p.m. Sunday.
Special music and fellowship.
Rev. Bob Robinson, pastor.
RACINE -Racine First
Baptist Church, "Friend
Sunday," 9:30 a.m., Sunday
school, 10:40 a:m., morning
worship, noon, fellowship
dinner, I p.m., afternoon
worship.
Sunday, Oct. 7
POMEROY
Community observance of
World Communion Sunday,
9:30 a.m. at Trinity

Congregational church with
Pastor Jon Brockert of
Pomeroy First Baptist
Church as speaker.

City/Region
High I Low temps

BY JENNY BARCHRELD

Man1llllkl•

7o• tso·

Dayton •
13° 149°

~

Ck&gt;udy

..J"J..

~

*Columbua
73° 151 °

~ • Thunder·~

Flurries

~

leo

::

~

Snow

~

.;:

~ ~~ ~~~~~ ;
Cloudy

Showers

~

Rain

-·...

----------------~--------~~~~--~
~
Weather Undefground • AP&gt;..~tt

Friday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s.
Northwest winds 5 to I 0
mph.
Friday
night.'~ .Clear.
Cooler with lows in the mid
40s. Northwest winds 5 to
10
mph
in
the
eve ning ... Becoming light
and variable.
Saturday... Sunny. Highs
in the mid 70s. North winds
around 5 mph.
Saturday night ...Clear:

L?WS in the mid 40s. East-~-::
wmds around 5 mph.
Sunday and Sunday
nlght ...Cieai. Highs in the · :
lower 80s. Lows in the ··
lower 50s.
~onday
through
Wednesday... Mostly clear.
Highs around 80. Lows in
the mid 50s.
•
Wednesday night and ~
Thursday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s. Highs
in the upper 70s.

'"

• New AppHances
• Pre-ownad Appliances

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,,

• Washers/Dryers

• Refrigerators
• Stoves

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• 3().120 Day Warranties
• Service Work &amp; Parts

• Wholesale

Henderson, West Virginia • 675-7999 .
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Other events
Friday, Sept. 28
MIDDLEPORT - Free
community dinner, 4:30 to
6: IS p .m. at the Middleport
Church of Christ Family
Life Center, comer of Fifth
and Main, Middleport. Hot
dogs, scalloped potatoes,
baked beans, and dessert.
Everyone welcome.
Sunday, Sept. 30
SYRACUSE
Dedication of Ernie Sisson
Memorial Shelter House, 2
p.m., Syracuse Community
Center, refreshments served.

Friday, September 28, 2007

French and Italian scientist map
genome of pinot noir grape

Community Calendar
Public meetings

WoRLD

71° 151°

Start documenting these infractions·
with them. And she is taking·
another
vacation day.
AND MARCY SUGAR
I am finding it harder to
Dear Annie: I have a won- look past the little white
derful job and love coming to lies. Please help.
work every day. My concern Frustrated at Work
Dear Frustrated: Sally
is my ·manager. "Sally" is a
great gal, and we get along may be a great gal and fun
wonderfully, but she abuses to be around, but she is taking advantage not only of
the company horribly.
We are pan of a lat¥er the company, but also of
company, and our outstde you . Appropriating the petty
supervision is minimal. cash is outright theft.
Sally constantly takes vaca- Taking vacation days to
tion days and does not report which she is not entitled is
them to ouf corporate ofhce. also theft - of company
She gets paid if she is in the time and resources. Start
office or not, but when no documenting these infracone knows she is gone, there tions, just in case you need
is no replacement and I have the back-up. If the new
to pick up the slack. She has management doesn't solve
taken over 13 days of vaca- the problem, tell Sally that
tion and is only allowed 12. you're so sorry, but you will
She also takes whatever is in have to report her absences
·our monthly petty cash and in order to get the extra help
deposits it into her personal you need in the office. She
account.
may become angry, but
I think I should notify that's not because you've
someone in our corporate hurt her. It's because you
office, but I like Sally and are holding her responsible.
Dear Annie: I'm 25, mardon't want there to be hostility in our office or for her to ried four years and work full
lose her job. We were recent- time. Since our wedding day,
ly bought .out by another we 've constantly been asked
company that is more when we are going to have a
"hands-on,'! so I'm hoping baby. After waiting until it
Sally will change her ways. was economically feasible,
Today, two of our clients we now have one.on the way.
screamed at me because
We are both very excited,
Sally didn't follow through but now I get these same

NATION .•

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
BY KATHY MITCHELL

The Daily Sentinel

PageA7

'

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Auto •Home· Business· Ufe
,,

Hometown
.
Insurance Center

.,

695 Second St. ·
"
Mason, V'N 25260
Hometownlnsurani:ecenter.com ·'

1111

APplloto

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice speaks at the Major Economies Meeting on Energy Security and Climate Change at
the State Department in Washington, Thursday.

Rice says nations must fmd ways to reduce
global warming without starving their economies
81' JOHN HEILPRIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
President Bush's climate
meeting opened Thursday
with its main problem on
full display: The big~est
polluters - industriahzed
and developing nations
alike - say their economies
are more important than
global warming.
Not for the richest
nations, retort Europeans,
the United Nations and
some developing nations.
Treasury Secretary Henry ·
Paulson, anticipating such
divisions, urged all sides to
wolk together to "accelerate
the prospects" of a U.N .-led
solution later this year at
talks ill Bali, Indonesia.
"Pi~ting the developed
and the developing coun·
tries against each other will
not lead to economic
development and environmental sustainability," he
said in remarks prepared
for Thursday night. "We
must tear down artificial
barriers that impede the
spread of today's clean
technologies. There is no
moral or economic reason
for tariffs or non-tariff barriers on environmental
goods or services."
The 0 .S. talks, following
m1 the heels of the United
Nations' climate gathering
Monday, is an attempt to
influence what happens
after 2012, when the U.N.brokered Kyoto Protocol
mandating greenhouse gas'
cuts b;- industrial nations
expires. The emphasis, as
with much of Bush's climate approach, is on the
sharing of green technology.
Se~;retary
of
State
Condoleezza Rice called for
a solution "that does not
starve economies of the
energy they need to grow
and that does not widen the
already significant income

gap between developed and
developing nations.'
But she left it to nations to
set thei( own g9als and pri-·
orities.
·
"Let me emphasize that
this is not a one-size-fits-all
effort,H Rice said at the start
of a two-day climate meeting · called by Bush.
"Though united by common
goals an4 collective responsibilities, all nations should
tackle climate change in the
ways that they deem best."
Rice also called for
nations to "cut the Gordian
Knot of fossil fuels, carbon
emissions, and economic
activity."
Though the White Houseled
meeting
includes
Britain, France, Germany
and other · nations in the
Kyoto
accord,
many
European
officials
expressed concern that
Bush's meeting would sidetrack the U.N. negotiations
that have been the main
forum for addressing global
warming.
On Thursday, German
Envirenment
Minister
~igmaf Gabriel said .that he
did not think that the Bush
administration would be an
impediment. to global talks.
"We all know that they
will he out of office in a few
months," he said on NOR
Info radio. Bush leaves
office in January, 2009 ..
Later,
Gabriel
told
reporters the conference
was a sign that the Bush
administration was engaging in the issue.
"The good news is that we
are negotiating," he said. He
said Europeans would be
watching closely a speech
by Bush at the conference
Friday to gauge the U.S.
commitment.
. The U.S. talks proposed
new "processes" and work
teams for negotiating solutions. Despite the emphasis
on bureaucr&lt;tcy, James

Connau~hton,

chairman of
the White House Council
on Environmental Quality,
told participants: "This has
to be about more than presentations."
Yvo de Boer, the top
U.N. climate official, told
the 16 nations participating
in the White House-led
meeting that "this relativeIy small group of countries
holds a key to tackling a
big part of the problem"
but that their response can
succeed only by "going
well
beyond
present
efforts," especially among
rich, industrialized nations.
While the U.N. supports
mandatory cuts in greenhouse gases by rich nations,
Bush's rejection of the
treaty stands: The U.S .
won't do more than slow its
growth rate of emissions,
and whatever requirements
the worl4 agrees upon
should extend equally to
fast-developin~ nations like
China and India.
Developing nations such
as China, Mexico and
Indonesia say reducing
poverty must be their main
priority, but that they also
can reduce emissions carbon dioxide and other
warming gases, for exampie by tar~eting some
parts cif thetr economies
for cuts or by planting
trees and cutting down
fewer forest lands.
They argue that rich
nations should make greater
use of Kyoto's Clean
Development Mechanism,
which lets them meet their
carbon cuts by paying for
projects in poorer countries.
"Poverty is still No. 1,"
Emil Salim, an economist
and
member of the
Indonesian
president's
council of advisers, told The
Associated Press.
"It is correct that for the
developed countries, eli'mate change is more

important," said Salim, a
former Indonesian minister
for population and environment. "But for the developitJg nations, the key notion
is how to get poverty
reduction and search for a
pattern of development that
is different than the developed nations."
As they consider ways to
curb greenhouse gases,
developing
nations
expressed a preference for
U .N .-sponsored talks to
decide on a post-2012
strategy and said they do
not want to give up ground
toward industriahzing and meeting basic human
needs.
Bush's meeting has competed for attention with the
clilnate change summit held
Monday in New York City,
at which U.N. SecretaryGeneral Ban Ki-moon
warned 80 world leaders
that "the time for doubt has
passed'' and urged fast
action to save future generations from
potenthilly
ruinous effects of global
warming.
About 70 demonstrators
from Greenpeace and other
· environmental groups gathered Thursday outside the
State Department, where
dozens were arrested for
refusing to leave the
premise after two hours of
protest.
The
activists
labeled the conference a
fraud for not encouraging
mandatory cuts in greenhouse gases.
"I'm here to protest the
fact that we are having a elimate conference when we
should have been signing
the Kyoto agreement," said
Lauren Siegel, 23, from
New 'York, N.Y., as she was
loaded into a police van.
"This is a diversion," she
said of the conference.
Associated Press writer
Desmond Butler contributed to this report.

PARIS - Critics who
praise the "complexity" of
red
Burgundy
and
Champagne are on target.
A team of French and
Italian researchers has
mapped the genome of the
pi not noir grape, used to
make bubbly and many red
wines
from
France's
Burgundy
region
and
around the world - and it
has about 30,000 genes in
its DNA. That's more than
the human genome, which
contains some · 20,000 to
25,000 genes. .
The team published its
findings in Thursday's issue
of the journal Nature, saying it identified the nearly
half a billion chemical
building blocks of the
grape's DNA. Certain
sequences of these building
blocks form genes, like letters spellin~ words.
These dtscoveries won't
make any immediate difference to wine drinkers
worldwide. The pinot nair is
the first grape - and first
fruit - ever genetically
mapped, and it would take
years to apply this new
knowledge to today's vines.
But down the line, it could
possibly lead to hardier
grape varieties, more ·resistant to bugs and disease.
The team said its research
had confirmed that the
grape has an unusually high
number of ·genes wh9se job
it is to create flavor. More
than ioo of its ·genes are
dedicated to producing tannins and terpenes - compared to about 5(:) for other
plants, said researcher
Patrick Wincker.
He said the mapping of
those flavor-producmg genes
could be a fli'St step toward
developing new flavors . in
wine by allowing scientists
to breed different varieties to
create precise new tastes.
But flavor also depends
on external factors such as
weather,
microclimate,
soil, size of the crop, age of
the vines and the winem~er's art.
With so many flavor compounds potentially at play,
these other factors become
even more important, said
Allen
Meadows
of
burghound.com, a leading
Bur~undy critic who did not
parllcipate in the study.
Meadows
said
the
research helps expiain why
wines .made from pi not noir
grapes have a huge variety
of aromas and flavors .

"The research is genetic
of what
confirmation
Burgundy and pinot noir ,
lovers have known for cen- ·
turies, which is that pinot ...
noir is exquisitely sensitive·,
to where and how it is '
grown," Meadows said. :.
"Pinot-based wines pro- ;
. du~ed _in . say Bur11un~y• .
whtle sumlar, are still dis- , ,
tinctly different from those ·.
produced in California, .,
Oregon or New :l.ealand." ..
In any case, Wincker said 1
new flavors derived from
genetic manipulation are .
years away and would like- .'
Iy be so subtle it would take '"
a sophisticated palate to be :
able to appreciate them.
But he did not rule out the
possibility that distinctive
- and highly noticeable new tlavors might yet
emerge.
" Anything can happen,"
Wincker said. "B10logy
doesn't always work out in
the way you'd expect."
Identifying the genes
grape plants use to defend
themselves from mildew
and insects would also
allow researchers to breed
new, more resistant vaneties, Wincker said.
France's
Agriculture
Ministry, which helped fund
the multimillion dollar pro- ·
ject, hailed the team's find- ,
in~s. Agriculture Minister
Mtchel Barnier said he
hoped the findings would
help in developing more ,
environmentally friendly .
grape varieties.
Andre Barlier, assistant
director of Viniflhor, a. government-funde~ agency to
supp&lt;irt French wine, said it
was laudable that the team's
findings were made public
so that researchers around
the world can continue to
work on them. But he said '
he doubted the genome map
would cliange the way
French vintners make wine.
"In France we are very .
conservative and we "work . ·
according to traditional .;
ways," Barlier said. "I don't ,
think it will have an impact ·
in the short term."
The pinot noir is also used •
to make wine in Oregon, ,
California, New Zealand, .
France's Loire valley and :
other
But in Burgundy, ·
the wine takes on the name
of the vineyard or sunound- .
ing village - Cliambolle- .~
Musigny, for example.
Champagne
and
other ·
sparkling wines are tradition· ,
ally made from chardonnay •
. or pinot noir, or a mixture of
the two along with smaller
amounts of other grapes.

areas:

OW OPEN

~~~DWIN

TIRE ·.

Mars rover reaches.first destination inside huge
Martian Crater, prepares to begin.experiments
Bv ALICIA CHANG
AP SCIENCE WRITER

Church events
. Sunday,Sept.30
REEDSVILLE
"Delivered" to sing at
Reed sv ille
United
Methodist Church, 7 p.m .
RACINE - Eagle Ridge
Church Homecoming, morning services, 10 a.m., carry in
dinn er at noon, afternoon
singing at 1 p.m. and preaching by Jerry Frederick.
HOBSON ·
Homeco ming at Hobson
Christian
Fellowship
Church. with lunch at noon .
Randall Farley to preach .
"Mercy" to si ng.
POINT ROCK - Revival,
Sept. 30-0ct. 3, at Point
Rock Church of the

'

LOS
ANGELES
NASA's rover Opportunity
has reached its first stop.
inside a huge Martian crater
and was poi sed Thursday to
carry out the first science
experiments.
Ground
controllers
planned to send commands
late in the day to the six wheel robot to examine
bright rock layers arranged
like a bathtub ring within
Victoria Crater. Results on
how· the rover fared were
expected Friday, said John
Callas, the rover project
manager at NASA's Jet
Propul sion Laboratory in
Pasadena.
Mission managers wanted
to delay the science operations because of a power
outage at ope of the intemation.U network of antennas

that communicates with
interplanetary spacecraft.
But they changed their
minds after they secured
another antenna.
Opportunity rollt;d to the
crater lip last month and
began a calculated descent
down the inner wall toward
a shiny band of bedrock that
scientists believe may be
part of an ancient ~artian
surface. After a series of
three drives, the tover
parked itself 40 feet below
the rim at a 25-degree tilt the steepest angle it has
encountered since landing
on the planet.
Opportunity's first task
will be to use the tools on its
robotic arm to touch and
drill into the rock slab:
Mission scientists expect it
·to stay in place for at least a
week before scaling farther
down the crater to sample
other rocks.

"We're going to take our
time collecting the data,"
princip~ investigator Steve
Squyres
of
Cornell
University said in an e-mail.
"We invested way too much
effort in getting here to
blow it by being hasty." "
Opportunity and its twin
Spirit have outlasted their
original, three-month mission since .parachuting to
opposite sides of Mars in
2004. The solar-powered
rovers recently survived a
raging dust storm that
forced them to go into
sleep mode to conserve
energy,
Spirit is currently exploring a plateau called Home
Plate for evidence of volcanism. Though Martian
winter is still seven months
away, mission managers
have started looking for a
~afe spot for Spirit to
retreat to.

EJ
Brothers Of The Wheel

.

Poker Run &amp; Party
September 29
1st Bike Out At Noon
Food
50/50

·AMIX - 9p.m.
CR 7A • POMEROY, OH
740-992-7986
M90diV· S()r Oraft

IM!IIlCtU· kar~ wJRon c.,~
$1 .oo

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W'adiMtldU:· Mens N'!Jhl -POOIIOumament
$5 ,00 entry 8pm . 60f; Wff all drink•
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•

..

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�!fie Daily Sentinel

BY THE, BEND

Friday,

septe!:~~~ ~~

•

~------------------------~----------------------~--~--------------------------------------~~~~~~--------~--~!'

Buyers keep Fenton ~rt Glass going a bit longer Local Weather
Wlll1AMS1DWN, W.Va. factory along the Ohio
(AP) - Strong support from River, and Fenton said the~
dealers and a surge of last- is no specific closing date.
minute orders are keeping one The gift shop remail)s open,
of West Vuginia's last hand- and factory tours will he
_hlolYI! glassmakers in busi- conducted through October.
· ness for at least a month
Fenton, known for. maklonger than anticipated.
in~
handcrafted, handAfter announcing in pamted art glass, was able
August that it would soon to survive three waves ·Of
close, Fenton Art Glass economic troubles that
received what President wiped out what was once a
George Fenton called "a flourishing glass industry in
very strong response" from the state. In August, howevits network of 4,000 dealers. er, it said it would surrender
Production, which had been to growing competition, tisexpected to cease this ing natural ~as . prices and
month, will now likely con- consumers wtth less dispostinue until early November. able income.
"We' re actually working
Fenton, Blenko Glass Co.
overtime this week," Fenton in Milton and Boyd's
said Thursday.
· Crystal Art Glass in
About · 125
workers Cambricge, Ohio, are
remain at the 102-year-old among the fe~ remaining

collectible art glas~ producers in the region.
Fenton's
grandfather
started the plan\ in 1905,
and nine family members
still work there. The family
is doing everything . it .can
to keep the company alive,
he said.
·
Last year, it started
imJ?ort division, bringing
mamly ceramics and some
glass to its product mi~ .
"We are looking at all
kinds of options," Fenton
said. "But there have been
no decisions made, and s0
far, no feasible go-forward
solution. We hope we'll be
able to find a way to continue to make glass here."
The Fentons aie famous
for developing carnival
glass, a distinctive look that

an

marries iridescence with a
patterned surface. Some
companies had been doing
patterns and others had been
doing
iridescence , but
Fenton was the first to combine them in the 1970s.
The company also is
famous for hobnail milk
glass, the opaque white,
bubble-covered product that
helped the company survive
the Depression. It was produced .mto the 1980s.
Fenton mainly
sells
through its dealers, but TV
and Internet also help the
company thrive. The finn
was one of the earliest participants in QVC, when the
shopping channel was barely more than a concept.
Fenton's uncle, Bill, was t)le
first guest host in 1988.

Today's Forecast

people asking, "Was it on
purpose?" or "Have you
been trying a long time?"
It's nobody's business if we
were trying for a single day
or 20 years. Can you please
tell people to stop bemg so
nosy? I would never ask
someone, "How long did it
take you to get pre~nant?"
What are people thmking?
Waiting Until Our
Little One Arrives
Dear Waiting: Obviously,
they aren't thinking at all, or
they would never ask such
personal questions. The best
response is stony silence and
a change of subject.
Dear Annie: My husband
and I strongly disagree with
your advice to "Old Enough
tQ Know Better." While she
may feel guilt because her
parents seem to be in need,
she has no obligation to ·
physically or financially
care for them in any way. It
is OUR responsibility to
take care of ourselves. ·
We have already taken the
time to plan for our aging
years by choosing a retirement center that we can
afford, and that includes
every service we may need
from independent living to
nursing home without moving to another facility. We
even have an account for

funeral expenses.
Our children love us dearly, but planning for our
future is our job. Our children's responsibility is to
care for their children and
enjoy their own lives, and
our children know this. We
have chosen to foster a loving relations~ip with them,
and their caring for us is not
a part of the plan. Thmking Ahead . ,
Dear Thinking: Your
solution is wise, but not
common. A lot of readers
thought those parents should
be left to fend for themselves, but we disagree.
Unless there was abuse, we
think children have an obligation to see that their paren.ts
have at least the minimum
care necessary.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Ka1hy Mitchell ar1d
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and retul features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Monday, Oct. 1
REEDSVILLE -Olive
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., township garage.
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees, reg\[lar
meeting, 7 p.m., Syracuse
Village Hall.
ALI1RED
- Orange
Township Trustees regular
meeting, 7:30 p.m., at home
. of Fiscal Officer Osie Follrod.
Tuesday, Oct. 2
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., Pageville Town Hall.
Wednesday, Oct. 3
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Healih, 5
p.m., Meigs County Health
Department, second public
hearing Meigs County
General Health District
Sewage Treatment System
rules.
Tuesday, Oct. 9
POMEROY - .Bedford
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, at town hall.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Oct. 1
POMEROY
- Mei gs
County Cancer Initiative,
noon, conference room of
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center. New members welcome.
Bring
lunch.
Courtney Sim, 992-6626 for
information.
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Band Boosters, 6
p.m., high school band room.
RACINE
Racine
Chapter 134, O.E.S. 7:30
p.m. with initiation of new
member. Wear chapter
attire. Refreshments.
POMEROY - The Meigs
High School band Boosters
will meet at 6 p.m. in the
bandroom. All band parents
are encouraged to get

involved as the Boosters plan
events and fundraisers to
support and enhance the
band experience for students.
Tuesday, Oct. 2
MIDDLEPORT
Regular monthly meeting of
Middleport Masonic Lodge
#363, F&amp;AM, 7:30 ~.m. All
Master Masons mvited.
Re.freshments.
CHESTER Chester
Council 323, D of A, will
meet 6 p.m. for a potluck
supper. Friendship meeting
of District 13 to be observed.
Members to wear white and
take a covered dish. Lodge
meeting starts ar7 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 4
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Eastern Star
Past Matrons, I p.m. luncheon at the Wild Horse in
Pomeroy. ·
Friday, Oct. S
POMEROY
PERI
Chapter 74 of Meigs County
will meet at I p.m at the
Meigs Multipurpose Center
(God's N.E.T.) Mulberry
Avenue.
Representatives
from insurance companies
wi II be guest speakers.
Available te answer questions
concerning insurance plan.

Nazarene. Sunday service,
11 a.m.; evening services at 7
p.m. Rev. and Mrs. William
Hill, speakers. Located on
Route 689, Albany. Re'v.
Lloyd Grimm, pastor.
·
POMEROY - Forest Run
United Methodist Church will
host a songfest for the church
co-op, 7:3 0 p.m. Sunday.
Special music and fellowship.
Rev. Bob Robinson, pastor.
RACINE -Racine First
Baptist Church, "Friend
Sunday," 9:30 a.m., Sunday
school, 10:40 a:m., morning
worship, noon, fellowship
dinner, I p.m., afternoon
worship.
Sunday, Oct. 7
POMEROY
Community observance of
World Communion Sunday,
9:30 a.m. at Trinity

Congregational church with
Pastor Jon Brockert of
Pomeroy First Baptist
Church as speaker.

City/Region
High I Low temps

BY JENNY BARCHRELD

Man1llllkl•

7o• tso·

Dayton •
13° 149°

~

Ck&gt;udy

..J"J..

~

*Columbua
73° 151 °

~ • Thunder·~

Flurries

~

leo

::

~

Snow

~

.;:

~ ~~ ~~~~~ ;
Cloudy

Showers

~

Rain

-·...

----------------~--------~~~~--~
~
Weather Undefground • AP&gt;..~tt

Friday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s.
Northwest winds 5 to I 0
mph.
Friday
night.'~ .Clear.
Cooler with lows in the mid
40s. Northwest winds 5 to
10
mph
in
the
eve ning ... Becoming light
and variable.
Saturday... Sunny. Highs
in the mid 70s. North winds
around 5 mph.
Saturday night ...Clear:

L?WS in the mid 40s. East-~-::
wmds around 5 mph.
Sunday and Sunday
nlght ...Cieai. Highs in the · :
lower 80s. Lows in the ··
lower 50s.
~onday
through
Wednesday... Mostly clear.
Highs around 80. Lows in
the mid 50s.
•
Wednesday night and ~
Thursday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s. Highs
in the upper 70s.

'"

• New AppHances
• Pre-ownad Appliances

..

,,

• Washers/Dryers

• Refrigerators
• Stoves

.'"'

• 3().120 Day Warranties
• Service Work &amp; Parts

• Wholesale

Henderson, West Virginia • 675-7999 .
''

Other events
Friday, Sept. 28
MIDDLEPORT - Free
community dinner, 4:30 to
6: IS p .m. at the Middleport
Church of Christ Family
Life Center, comer of Fifth
and Main, Middleport. Hot
dogs, scalloped potatoes,
baked beans, and dessert.
Everyone welcome.
Sunday, Sept. 30
SYRACUSE
Dedication of Ernie Sisson
Memorial Shelter House, 2
p.m., Syracuse Community
Center, refreshments served.

Friday, September 28, 2007

French and Italian scientist map
genome of pinot noir grape

Community Calendar
Public meetings

WoRLD

71° 151°

Start documenting these infractions·
with them. And she is taking·
another
vacation day.
AND MARCY SUGAR
I am finding it harder to
Dear Annie: I have a won- look past the little white
derful job and love coming to lies. Please help.
work every day. My concern Frustrated at Work
Dear Frustrated: Sally
is my ·manager. "Sally" is a
great gal, and we get along may be a great gal and fun
wonderfully, but she abuses to be around, but she is taking advantage not only of
the company horribly.
We are pan of a lat¥er the company, but also of
company, and our outstde you . Appropriating the petty
supervision is minimal. cash is outright theft.
Sally constantly takes vaca- Taking vacation days to
tion days and does not report which she is not entitled is
them to ouf corporate ofhce. also theft - of company
She gets paid if she is in the time and resources. Start
office or not, but when no documenting these infracone knows she is gone, there tions, just in case you need
is no replacement and I have the back-up. If the new
to pick up the slack. She has management doesn't solve
taken over 13 days of vaca- the problem, tell Sally that
tion and is only allowed 12. you're so sorry, but you will
She also takes whatever is in have to report her absences
·our monthly petty cash and in order to get the extra help
deposits it into her personal you need in the office. She
account.
may become angry, but
I think I should notify that's not because you've
someone in our corporate hurt her. It's because you
office, but I like Sally and are holding her responsible.
Dear Annie: I'm 25, mardon't want there to be hostility in our office or for her to ried four years and work full
lose her job. We were recent- time. Since our wedding day,
ly bought .out by another we 've constantly been asked
company that is more when we are going to have a
"hands-on,'! so I'm hoping baby. After waiting until it
Sally will change her ways. was economically feasible,
Today, two of our clients we now have one.on the way.
screamed at me because
We are both very excited,
Sally didn't follow through but now I get these same

NATION .•

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
BY KATHY MITCHELL

The Daily Sentinel

PageA7

'

'

Auto •Home· Business· Ufe
,,

Hometown
.
Insurance Center

.,

695 Second St. ·
"
Mason, V'N 25260
Hometownlnsurani:ecenter.com ·'

1111

APplloto

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice speaks at the Major Economies Meeting on Energy Security and Climate Change at
the State Department in Washington, Thursday.

Rice says nations must fmd ways to reduce
global warming without starving their economies
81' JOHN HEILPRIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
President Bush's climate
meeting opened Thursday
with its main problem on
full display: The big~est
polluters - industriahzed
and developing nations
alike - say their economies
are more important than
global warming.
Not for the richest
nations, retort Europeans,
the United Nations and
some developing nations.
Treasury Secretary Henry ·
Paulson, anticipating such
divisions, urged all sides to
wolk together to "accelerate
the prospects" of a U.N .-led
solution later this year at
talks ill Bali, Indonesia.
"Pi~ting the developed
and the developing coun·
tries against each other will
not lead to economic
development and environmental sustainability," he
said in remarks prepared
for Thursday night. "We
must tear down artificial
barriers that impede the
spread of today's clean
technologies. There is no
moral or economic reason
for tariffs or non-tariff barriers on environmental
goods or services."
The 0 .S. talks, following
m1 the heels of the United
Nations' climate gathering
Monday, is an attempt to
influence what happens
after 2012, when the U.N.brokered Kyoto Protocol
mandating greenhouse gas'
cuts b;- industrial nations
expires. The emphasis, as
with much of Bush's climate approach, is on the
sharing of green technology.
Se~;retary
of
State
Condoleezza Rice called for
a solution "that does not
starve economies of the
energy they need to grow
and that does not widen the
already significant income

gap between developed and
developing nations.'
But she left it to nations to
set thei( own g9als and pri-·
orities.
·
"Let me emphasize that
this is not a one-size-fits-all
effort,H Rice said at the start
of a two-day climate meeting · called by Bush.
"Though united by common
goals an4 collective responsibilities, all nations should
tackle climate change in the
ways that they deem best."
Rice also called for
nations to "cut the Gordian
Knot of fossil fuels, carbon
emissions, and economic
activity."
Though the White Houseled
meeting
includes
Britain, France, Germany
and other · nations in the
Kyoto
accord,
many
European
officials
expressed concern that
Bush's meeting would sidetrack the U.N. negotiations
that have been the main
forum for addressing global
warming.
On Thursday, German
Envirenment
Minister
~igmaf Gabriel said .that he
did not think that the Bush
administration would be an
impediment. to global talks.
"We all know that they
will he out of office in a few
months," he said on NOR
Info radio. Bush leaves
office in January, 2009 ..
Later,
Gabriel
told
reporters the conference
was a sign that the Bush
administration was engaging in the issue.
"The good news is that we
are negotiating," he said. He
said Europeans would be
watching closely a speech
by Bush at the conference
Friday to gauge the U.S.
commitment.
. The U.S. talks proposed
new "processes" and work
teams for negotiating solutions. Despite the emphasis
on bureaucr&lt;tcy, James

Connau~hton,

chairman of
the White House Council
on Environmental Quality,
told participants: "This has
to be about more than presentations."
Yvo de Boer, the top
U.N. climate official, told
the 16 nations participating
in the White House-led
meeting that "this relativeIy small group of countries
holds a key to tackling a
big part of the problem"
but that their response can
succeed only by "going
well
beyond
present
efforts," especially among
rich, industrialized nations.
While the U.N. supports
mandatory cuts in greenhouse gases by rich nations,
Bush's rejection of the
treaty stands: The U.S .
won't do more than slow its
growth rate of emissions,
and whatever requirements
the worl4 agrees upon
should extend equally to
fast-developin~ nations like
China and India.
Developing nations such
as China, Mexico and
Indonesia say reducing
poverty must be their main
priority, but that they also
can reduce emissions carbon dioxide and other
warming gases, for exampie by tar~eting some
parts cif thetr economies
for cuts or by planting
trees and cutting down
fewer forest lands.
They argue that rich
nations should make greater
use of Kyoto's Clean
Development Mechanism,
which lets them meet their
carbon cuts by paying for
projects in poorer countries.
"Poverty is still No. 1,"
Emil Salim, an economist
and
member of the
Indonesian
president's
council of advisers, told The
Associated Press.
"It is correct that for the
developed countries, eli'mate change is more

important," said Salim, a
former Indonesian minister
for population and environment. "But for the developitJg nations, the key notion
is how to get poverty
reduction and search for a
pattern of development that
is different than the developed nations."
As they consider ways to
curb greenhouse gases,
developing
nations
expressed a preference for
U .N .-sponsored talks to
decide on a post-2012
strategy and said they do
not want to give up ground
toward industriahzing and meeting basic human
needs.
Bush's meeting has competed for attention with the
clilnate change summit held
Monday in New York City,
at which U.N. SecretaryGeneral Ban Ki-moon
warned 80 world leaders
that "the time for doubt has
passed'' and urged fast
action to save future generations from
potenthilly
ruinous effects of global
warming.
About 70 demonstrators
from Greenpeace and other
· environmental groups gathered Thursday outside the
State Department, where
dozens were arrested for
refusing to leave the
premise after two hours of
protest.
The
activists
labeled the conference a
fraud for not encouraging
mandatory cuts in greenhouse gases.
"I'm here to protest the
fact that we are having a elimate conference when we
should have been signing
the Kyoto agreement," said
Lauren Siegel, 23, from
New 'York, N.Y., as she was
loaded into a police van.
"This is a diversion," she
said of the conference.
Associated Press writer
Desmond Butler contributed to this report.

PARIS - Critics who
praise the "complexity" of
red
Burgundy
and
Champagne are on target.
A team of French and
Italian researchers has
mapped the genome of the
pi not noir grape, used to
make bubbly and many red
wines
from
France's
Burgundy
region
and
around the world - and it
has about 30,000 genes in
its DNA. That's more than
the human genome, which
contains some · 20,000 to
25,000 genes. .
The team published its
findings in Thursday's issue
of the journal Nature, saying it identified the nearly
half a billion chemical
building blocks of the
grape's DNA. Certain
sequences of these building
blocks form genes, like letters spellin~ words.
These dtscoveries won't
make any immediate difference to wine drinkers
worldwide. The pinot nair is
the first grape - and first
fruit - ever genetically
mapped, and it would take
years to apply this new
knowledge to today's vines.
But down the line, it could
possibly lead to hardier
grape varieties, more ·resistant to bugs and disease.
The team said its research
had confirmed that the
grape has an unusually high
number of ·genes wh9se job
it is to create flavor. More
than ioo of its ·genes are
dedicated to producing tannins and terpenes - compared to about 5(:) for other
plants, said researcher
Patrick Wincker.
He said the mapping of
those flavor-producmg genes
could be a fli'St step toward
developing new flavors . in
wine by allowing scientists
to breed different varieties to
create precise new tastes.
But flavor also depends
on external factors such as
weather,
microclimate,
soil, size of the crop, age of
the vines and the winem~er's art.
With so many flavor compounds potentially at play,
these other factors become
even more important, said
Allen
Meadows
of
burghound.com, a leading
Bur~undy critic who did not
parllcipate in the study.
Meadows
said
the
research helps expiain why
wines .made from pi not noir
grapes have a huge variety
of aromas and flavors .

"The research is genetic
of what
confirmation
Burgundy and pinot noir ,
lovers have known for cen- ·
turies, which is that pinot ...
noir is exquisitely sensitive·,
to where and how it is '
grown," Meadows said. :.
"Pinot-based wines pro- ;
. du~ed _in . say Bur11un~y• .
whtle sumlar, are still dis- , ,
tinctly different from those ·.
produced in California, .,
Oregon or New :l.ealand." ..
In any case, Wincker said 1
new flavors derived from
genetic manipulation are .
years away and would like- .'
Iy be so subtle it would take '"
a sophisticated palate to be :
able to appreciate them.
But he did not rule out the
possibility that distinctive
- and highly noticeable new tlavors might yet
emerge.
" Anything can happen,"
Wincker said. "B10logy
doesn't always work out in
the way you'd expect."
Identifying the genes
grape plants use to defend
themselves from mildew
and insects would also
allow researchers to breed
new, more resistant vaneties, Wincker said.
France's
Agriculture
Ministry, which helped fund
the multimillion dollar pro- ·
ject, hailed the team's find- ,
in~s. Agriculture Minister
Mtchel Barnier said he
hoped the findings would
help in developing more ,
environmentally friendly .
grape varieties.
Andre Barlier, assistant
director of Viniflhor, a. government-funde~ agency to
supp&lt;irt French wine, said it
was laudable that the team's
findings were made public
so that researchers around
the world can continue to
work on them. But he said '
he doubted the genome map
would cliange the way
French vintners make wine.
"In France we are very .
conservative and we "work . ·
according to traditional .;
ways," Barlier said. "I don't ,
think it will have an impact ·
in the short term."
The pinot noir is also used •
to make wine in Oregon, ,
California, New Zealand, .
France's Loire valley and :
other
But in Burgundy, ·
the wine takes on the name
of the vineyard or sunound- .
ing village - Cliambolle- .~
Musigny, for example.
Champagne
and
other ·
sparkling wines are tradition· ,
ally made from chardonnay •
. or pinot noir, or a mixture of
the two along with smaller
amounts of other grapes.

areas:

OW OPEN

~~~DWIN

TIRE ·.

Mars rover reaches.first destination inside huge
Martian Crater, prepares to begin.experiments
Bv ALICIA CHANG
AP SCIENCE WRITER

Church events
. Sunday,Sept.30
REEDSVILLE
"Delivered" to sing at
Reed sv ille
United
Methodist Church, 7 p.m .
RACINE - Eagle Ridge
Church Homecoming, morning services, 10 a.m., carry in
dinn er at noon, afternoon
singing at 1 p.m. and preaching by Jerry Frederick.
HOBSON ·
Homeco ming at Hobson
Christian
Fellowship
Church. with lunch at noon .
Randall Farley to preach .
"Mercy" to si ng.
POINT ROCK - Revival,
Sept. 30-0ct. 3, at Point
Rock Church of the

'

LOS
ANGELES
NASA's rover Opportunity
has reached its first stop.
inside a huge Martian crater
and was poi sed Thursday to
carry out the first science
experiments.
Ground
controllers
planned to send commands
late in the day to the six wheel robot to examine
bright rock layers arranged
like a bathtub ring within
Victoria Crater. Results on
how· the rover fared were
expected Friday, said John
Callas, the rover project
manager at NASA's Jet
Propul sion Laboratory in
Pasadena.
Mission managers wanted
to delay the science operations because of a power
outage at ope of the intemation.U network of antennas

that communicates with
interplanetary spacecraft.
But they changed their
minds after they secured
another antenna.
Opportunity rollt;d to the
crater lip last month and
began a calculated descent
down the inner wall toward
a shiny band of bedrock that
scientists believe may be
part of an ancient ~artian
surface. After a series of
three drives, the tover
parked itself 40 feet below
the rim at a 25-degree tilt the steepest angle it has
encountered since landing
on the planet.
Opportunity's first task
will be to use the tools on its
robotic arm to touch and
drill into the rock slab:
Mission scientists expect it
·to stay in place for at least a
week before scaling farther
down the crater to sample
other rocks.

"We're going to take our
time collecting the data,"
princip~ investigator Steve
Squyres
of
Cornell
University said in an e-mail.
"We invested way too much
effort in getting here to
blow it by being hasty." "
Opportunity and its twin
Spirit have outlasted their
original, three-month mission since .parachuting to
opposite sides of Mars in
2004. The solar-powered
rovers recently survived a
raging dust storm that
forced them to go into
sleep mode to conserve
energy,
Spirit is currently exploring a plateau called Home
Plate for evidence of volcanism. Though Martian
winter is still seven months
away, mission managers
have started looking for a
~afe spot for Spirit to
retreat to.

EJ
Brothers Of The Wheel

.

Poker Run &amp; Party
September 29
1st Bike Out At Noon
Food
50/50

·AMIX - 9p.m.
CR 7A • POMEROY, OH
740-992-7986
M90diV· S()r Oraft

IM!IIlCtU· kar~ wJRon c.,~
$1 .oo

CoWH' fitrJlm· tam
W'adiMtldU:· Mens N'!Jhl -POOIIOumament
$5 ,00 entry 8pm . 60f; Wff all drink•
lf'Pt'n · 2*'1

•

..

j'

•'"

�Page A~

COMMUNI1'Y

Friday, September 28, 2oo7

Gallipolis Career College graduation held

TOPS recognizes weight losers

The Daily Sentinel

."
·

·
·
. ·.
COOLVILLE - Debbie Moodispaugh was named
GALLIPOLIS - &lt;!alhpohs weekly best weight-loss winner at the Sept. 25 meeting of
Car~r College graduation cere- TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) Chapter #OH 2013
momes were held Saturday, Sept. Coolville. There were 19 members present.
22, fo~ all students who co.mpletKOPS (Keep Off Pounds Sensibly) members Mary
ed therr course of study dunng the Cleland and Patricia Richmond were in leeway. Plans we~
2006-07 school .Year.
made for members to march in the parades at Tuppers
The ceremo'}tes took place at Plains on Saturday, Sept. 29 and at Coolville on Oct. J.-3.,
th~ J:'aith Baptist Church Fam)ty · and also for an open house to be held on Oct. 23.
Mmtstry . Ce~ter located . on
Leader Pat Snedden presented a program on diabetes.
Jack~on Ptke m Rodn~y. School .The group meets every Tuesday at Torch Baptist Church.
Prestdent Robert Shuey wei- Weigh-in is from 5:15 to 6:15 p.m. with a meeting from
com~ the gra~uates and gue.s~s 6:30 to 7:30. For infonnation, call Pat Snedden at 662-2633
attendi.ng. Wilham Plants, pohll- or atiend a free meeting.
cal sctence mstructor at · GCC, ·
led in the pledge, and Shirey· -----------------~
introduced 'the speaker, Senator
John Carey. In his address, (:arey·
congratulated the stud~ilts on
. their accomplishment,. ctescribed
the day as "their payday,"· and .
talked about ~rowing., up in
ATHENS - Expectant mothers and their birth coaches
southeastern Ohto.
1 ,
or companions are encouraged to attend .O'Bieness
.Carey conCluded his add{CSS by Memorial Hospital's c~ildbirth class Sunday, October I~
stating "success is when purpose from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. The location of the class will be in
collides with opportunity. This is lower level rooms 008 and 010. First-time parents, a$
something that no one. can take well as experienced pare.nts; will learn what's new il)
away from you and ~ives·~:rpose maternity care. Expectant parents will also learn th~
in your life." Gallipolis, : reer stages of labor and delivery and what to expect liefo~
College director of ed ation and after the baby is born.
John Danicki introduced the--gradThe class focuses on breathing and relaxation .techniques
. uates, listed their accoD)plish- as well as other pain-relief options. The clas&amp; also proVIdes
. · ments, and presented asSociate infomJation about hospital procedures and variations of .
degrees to Brenda Alicie, Medina labor. An introduction to the maternity services at
Angel, Sarah Brydie, 'J&gt;aul O'Bieness will include a tour of the O'Bleness Birth Center.
Castaneda, Angela Collins, · The class is free of c)large and will be held six times ol)
Tiffany Culpepper, Jessica Davis, alternating months this year. For more information or tQ
Heather Day, Tamara Drummond, register, call the 0' Bleness Birth Center at (740) 592-9275:.
M31)' Ezeonu, Wendy Gatewood,
)esstca Gibbs, Nyoka Haiiston,
Christy
Harrison,
Angela
Hatcher, Cathy Hesson; Charity
Howell, Kimbei'ly Jones, Brandy
Kasee, Teresa · Kidd, Amanda
.King, Charla Little, Misty AEP (NYSE) - 48.50
31.75
Murphy, Chatel Myers, Keshia Akzo (NASDAQ)- 82
Ohio Valle~ Bane Corp. (NASDAQ~
Oldaker, Shelonda Petty, Copnie Alhland Inc. (NYSE) - 80.81
-211
BBT (NYSE) - 40.99
Potts, Shaumber Reed, Brietta IIIC Lots (NYSE)- 31.10 . ,.
Bob EYans (NASDAQ)'-:": 31&lt;17
Peopleo (NASDAQ)- 27.53
Seagraves, Alicia Simpkins, Bor&amp;Wamer (NYSE) - 91:92
Papaleo (NYSE) - 72.82
Jennifer Small wood,
Tina Century Alumklum (NASDAQ)Premier (NMJIAQ) - :1.4.88
Spencer, Tina Tompkins, Regina 53.72.
Rockwell (NYSE) - 70.30
Rocky Boola (NASDAQ) - 10.87:
Walls, llo Walton, and Judy Champion (NASDAQ) - 8.04
Ch.lnniiiC Shopa (NASDAQ) Royal Dutch Sh.lll - 82.81
'
Wtlcoxon.
8.50
.
s
..
ra HoldiiiC (NASDAQ) :
He awarded diplomas to Jessica City HoldiiiC (NASDAQ)- 37.66 128.97
•
Gibbs, Christy Harrison, Glenna Collklo (NYSE) - 73.29
W-art (NYSE) - 43.81
:
Wendy'o (NYSE)- 34.72
Johnson, Connie Potts, Amanda DuPont (NYSE) - 50
US .Benk (NYSE)- ~. 72
Worthlneton (NYSE) - 23.10
Searles, Alicia Simpkins, and Gannett
(NYSE) - 44.88
Dally otocli ro~~C~rla are tht 4 p.m.
Je11nifer Smallwood. Danicki O-ral Elect~c
(NYSE) -'- 41.39
ET closing quoteo at tranuctl..,.
th~n closed the ceremony witllif!!e Harle)'l)...dlon (NYSE) - 4t.44
for Sept. 27, 2007, proYided 11y
benediction.
·'" · JP Morpn (NYSE) - 48.21
Edward Joneo nn.,.lll acMtors
,
laaac Mills In oa11pa11a at (740)
Following the ~eremony, gradu- K....er (NYSE) - 28.88
BrarMit (NYSE)- 22.Q
441-9441 Letley Marrero In
ates and guests enjoyed a recep- ..Umltod
Norfulk Southern (NYSE) - 12
Point Pleaoant at (304) 874.
afth¢ center,,
,., .·.· ..· ;.
Oak Hill FlnliiiOiaf'( NASIMQ) .:.. ·
0174. Mtmbor SIPC.

,

o. 'Blenes,s Memorial Hospital.
·tO offier childbirth class .

Graduates of the 2006-07 graduating class at Gallipolis Career Colleee

Local StOCkS

Senator
John
Carey, ,,.,,, '"''
speaker
at the •.,..,, ..
Gallipolis
Career
Center
graduation, was
Introduced ,by
GCC
president Bob
Shirey.
SUbmitted
pilot..

Inside

Bl

·The Daily Sentinel

OSU-Mlnnesota preview, Page B2
Bulls re1i$ game with WVU, PI!Jll! 84

Gal1la Co. volleyball roundup, Page 84

Friday, September 28, 2007

""""-- -

LocAL ScHEDULE
,POMEROY - A - a1

._mg

Meigs outlasts Lady
Buckeyes in 5 games

111g1

--Colny. ........ .....
Todly'agamu
FOOiboll

~

Meigs at Wellston

Southam at Federal Hocking
Eastern at Trimble
Alexander at Belpre
Vinton County at Nejsonvllie-Yo&lt;1&lt;
Miller at watertord

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAI.TERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Gallla Academy at Portsmouth
River Valley at Rock Hill
Hannan (WV) at Wlrt County f.W'/) ·
Clay County (WV) at Wahama (WV)
Wayne (WV) at Point Pleasant (WV)

_ ROCK SPRINGS - It
wasn' t pretty, but style
points alone don't decide the
final outcome of games.
Meigs volleyball, at
times, struggled with visiting Nelsonville-York on
Thursday at Larry R.
,Morrison Gymnasium, but
the Lady Marauders came
up with the big plays when
they needed them en route
to a suspenseful 25-10, 2125, 25-23, 21-25, 17-15
five-game victory in TriValley Conference Ohio
Division action.
The Maroon and 'Gold led
1-0 and 2-1 durin~ the
match, but the hosts faded to
put away the Lady Buckeyes
(3-3 TVC Ohio) in either of
the even games. Meiss (I 04) needed extra pomts to
overcome a 14-12 deficit in
the fifth and decisive game,

lltunlly. Set 28
Foolbllll
South Qallla at Notre Dame
Crooa Country
Southem, Meigs, Eaatem at Rio Grande

Invite, noon

Dm*v Oet.z

Volleyblll
Meigs at Alexander, 6 p.m.
Eaatern at Southern, 8 p.m..
Golf
Divl&amp;'on Ill district meet at Marietta
Country Club, 9 a.m.

.Wtclc:Ti!r'tolr

3
Trimble at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.
Southam at South Gallla, 6 p.m.
CrMaCountry
Southem, Meigs, Easter" at Alexander
Invite, TBA

GoH

Division II dl&amp;trlct meet at Cook's Creek,

9a.m.

Harris

advances
.
to district
tourney
.

•'Does, Eastern
both £ail to ····
advance as teams
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BY JOE MIUCIA
ASSOCI~TED

PRESS WRITER

Cavaliers All-Star forward LeBron James is treating his appearance on the
season · premiere
of
'Saturday Night Live'like a
fast break.
: "I'm going to just wing
it," James said Thursday
iluring a break in rehearsals.
' James is practicing this
week with his new teammates at 'SNL' where he'll
become the latest in a long
line of superstar athletes to
host the show.
The 22-year-old's display
of humor m Nike ads where
he plays four versions of
himself and his performance co-hosting the
ESPYs
made
Lome
Michaels, creator and executive producer of 'Saturday
Night Live,' believe James
would do well on the show.
"You can tell when somePlease see James. 84

•

SPORTS BRIEFS

ASA softball
tourney coming
to Huntington

Bry1n W1ltera/photo

Members of the Eastern volleyball team applaud during pregame lntroduc!ions dn Thursday during the lady Eagles' TVC
Hocking contest against Waterford In Tuppers Plains. EHS wore pink t-shirts to help promote the Volley For A Cure campaign, which helps raise money for breast cancer research. Eastern also won the m!'ltch in str~ight games.

Lady Eagles soar past Waterford in three
8Y

BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSOMVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern volleyball- No. 16
in the Division IV state
coaches poll - had little
with
visiting
trouble
Waterford on · Thursday,
posting a 25-7,25-15,25-14
straight-game victory during
Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking Division action.
The Lady Eagles (15-2)
remained unblemished in
TVC Hocking play this year,
improving to 6-0 overall
with the victory.
The Green and White
recorded 30 kills, 28 assists
and a block in the triumph,

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
- There will be a men's
ASA class D and E slow
pitch softball tournament
held on Saturday, Oct. 20,
Bv SCOTT WoLFE
lind possibly Sunday, Oct.
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
21, at the St. Clouds complex in H~ntington, W.Va.
GLOUSTER
The
For more infomJation on Trimble Lady Tomcats
the tournament, contact Don clawed their way to a three-set
win over the Southern
Wilson at 304-544-4188.
Tornadoes Thursday night in
girls' Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Diviston volleyball
CoNTAcrUs
action. Trimble won the three
sets 25-22, 25-20, and 25-20.
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
· Southern was 55-63 serving
and 45-57 spiking. Emma
Fax - 1 ~740-446-3008
Hunter was 13-13 serving,
Eal'l\llll- sportsOmydallysentinel.com
I 0-12 passing, and 20-24 on
Soorts Staff
assists; Whitney Wolfe-Riffle
Bryan Waltera, Sports Writer was 9-11 serving, 20-24 pass(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
ing, and 8-13 spiking; and
bwallers@mydailytribune.oom
Kasey Turley was 7-8 serving,
9-14 spiking and had
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
eight
blocks. Sarah Eddy was
(740~·2342. ext. 33
I
2-19
passing, and C:.lftelsea
Ierum 0 mydaityregister.com

leading stjlrt to fin!sh along
the way. EHS also tmproved
its season game record to
43-11 overall while posting
a sweep of the Lady
Wildcats. Eastern won the
frrst matchup in Waterford
by a 25-11, 25-11 , 25-10
score.
Senior Katie Hayman led
the Lady Eagles with I 0
kills and had the lone block,
while juniors Katie Wilfong
and Tresa S watzel contributed respective kills of
seven and six . Senior
Kelsey Holter added four
kills to the winning cause,
with junior Morgan Burt
roundmg out the team total
with three kills.

WI Hone

Broderick

Senior .Megan Broderick
led the passing attack with
all 28 assists. Classmates
Morgan Werry and Amanda
Eason were a combined 13of-19 passing. Werry, the
team's libero, was 8-of-9
overall, while Eason fin-

ished the night 5-of-10 pass-·
ing.
Waterford salvaged a split
in the junior varsity tilt, caf:turing a 25-20; 12-25, 25- 2
victory.
"
Thursday night also took
on significant meaning for
both clubs as they participated in the 2007 Volley For
A Cure, promoting fundraising for breast cancer
research. Schools throughout Ohio have sold pink tshirts this week to help raise
money for the cause, and
both teams wore their pink
!-shirts during wann-ups.
Eastern coach Howie
. PINH- Saar, 82

"

Lady Tomcats tame Southern in straight games

·1;,.. "1!'• !q,~,.,·,,\...,,~1• '·'iti"i-:'1~ •-··fl:fl•t-

.,.,...,,, . • n,.l,,~

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1,

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·
,.-

then retained sole possession of second place in the
TVC Ohio with the triumph.
MHS is now 5-1 in the TVC
Ohio Division, trailing
unbeaten Alexander by one
game.
The Lady Marauders were
I03-of-1 06 from the serviee
line, recording seven aces in
the victory. The hosts also
recorded 34 kills, 32 assists
and four blocks.
Sophomore Tricia Smith
PIIUI ... Melp.82

Southern's

'Saturday Night
Live' team for
season premiere

•,

Vlnll!ll

Division Ill Golf

~eBron join~

'&lt;

Smith

Pape was 9-11.
Other contributors were
Stephanie Cundiff, Ashley
Robie, Samantha Patterson,
Rashell Boso, and Breanna
Taylor. Southern was only 919 blocking, which led to several Trimble scoring opportunities.
Southern took the upperhand early in the frrst game 30 before Trimble tied it 6-6,
then the hosts went up on
Southern 8-6 after a pair of
Kristen Angle serves. Katlyn
Walton put Trimble up 15-9,
but after a .couple volleys
Kasey Turley brought it back
to 15-16 then tied .the game at
16-16. '
Angle gave Trimble some
breathing room at 22-17, then
Paige Limo put the game

Hunter

Eddy

. '
away at 25-22 after fo~r
· pmnts from Southern s
Ashle&gt;: Rob1e made 1t close at
the firush.
In the second game,
Trimble took the upper hand
at 5-2 behind Mc~gan Fouts
serving. Waltl,l.ll made it 15-6
with four stnii~ht serves, and

. Trimble slowly J?Ulled away.
Then Southern s Stephame
Cundiff pumped some life
back into Southern, as the visitors made it 18-16. The teams
battled hard with some $ood
floor play from Hunter, R1ffie,
and Turley in Purple, but
Trimble's Harper, Hooper,
and Lenigar put away the 2520 Trimble win.
Nine points late in the game
from Trimble 's Lauren
Downs erased a big lead
established by Southern's
Robie who scored eight points
in giving Southern an 18-15
advantage. Trimble rolled on
for the win 25-20.
Southern fell in the reserve
game 12-25 and 17-25.
Southern hosts TVC Hocking
leader Eastern on Thesday.

CHILLICOTHE
Southern junior Bryan
Harris carne one step closer
to competing in a thrrd-consecutive OHSAA Division
UI Golf Championship on
Wednesday, qualifying for
the district tournament as an
individual at the 2007 D-lii
southeast
sectional
golf meet at
Jaycees
G o I f
Course.
Harris,
the · top
individual
advancee
not with a
Hant1
team, posted a tOover par round of 82 becomine; the only player
from Metgs County to move
on throughout the threetiered postseason.
The Purple and Gold finished seventh overall as a
team, posting a collective
score of 399. Eastern, which
finished ninth at the 13tearn event, shot 423 as a
group.
Huntington Ross, behind
a powerful 1-2 punch, captured the team title with a
27 -stroke victory over the
rest of the field- frring a
collective 330. Medalist
Craig Magill led the
Huntsmen with a 4-over par
round of 76, followed by
runner-up Zach Thompson
with a 77.
Belpre, the lone Tri-Valley
Conference school to
advance as a team, finished
runner-up with a 357. Adena
and Ross Southeastern fired
matching rounds of 359 to
also advance to districts.
Adena won the team .tiebreaker for third.
Trimble, the top TVC
Hocking finisher, just
missed qualifying as a
squad, placing fifth with a
362.
League-champion
Waterford was sixth with
370, with ,Crookville sandwiched between SHS and
EHS for eighth with a 400.
Paint Valley (436), Miller
(445), Nelsonville-York
(449) and Federal Hocking
(477) rounded out the final
l!lleue see Hants. 82

�Page A~

COMMUNI1'Y

Friday, September 28, 2oo7

Gallipolis Career College graduation held

TOPS recognizes weight losers

The Daily Sentinel

."
·

·
·
. ·.
COOLVILLE - Debbie Moodispaugh was named
GALLIPOLIS - &lt;!alhpohs weekly best weight-loss winner at the Sept. 25 meeting of
Car~r College graduation cere- TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) Chapter #OH 2013
momes were held Saturday, Sept. Coolville. There were 19 members present.
22, fo~ all students who co.mpletKOPS (Keep Off Pounds Sensibly) members Mary
ed therr course of study dunng the Cleland and Patricia Richmond were in leeway. Plans we~
2006-07 school .Year.
made for members to march in the parades at Tuppers
The ceremo'}tes took place at Plains on Saturday, Sept. 29 and at Coolville on Oct. J.-3.,
th~ J:'aith Baptist Church Fam)ty · and also for an open house to be held on Oct. 23.
Mmtstry . Ce~ter located . on
Leader Pat Snedden presented a program on diabetes.
Jack~on Ptke m Rodn~y. School .The group meets every Tuesday at Torch Baptist Church.
Prestdent Robert Shuey wei- Weigh-in is from 5:15 to 6:15 p.m. with a meeting from
com~ the gra~uates and gue.s~s 6:30 to 7:30. For infonnation, call Pat Snedden at 662-2633
attendi.ng. Wilham Plants, pohll- or atiend a free meeting.
cal sctence mstructor at · GCC, ·
led in the pledge, and Shirey· -----------------~
introduced 'the speaker, Senator
John Carey. In his address, (:arey·
congratulated the stud~ilts on
. their accomplishment,. ctescribed
the day as "their payday,"· and .
talked about ~rowing., up in
ATHENS - Expectant mothers and their birth coaches
southeastern Ohto.
1 ,
or companions are encouraged to attend .O'Bieness
.Carey conCluded his add{CSS by Memorial Hospital's c~ildbirth class Sunday, October I~
stating "success is when purpose from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. The location of the class will be in
collides with opportunity. This is lower level rooms 008 and 010. First-time parents, a$
something that no one. can take well as experienced pare.nts; will learn what's new il)
away from you and ~ives·~:rpose maternity care. Expectant parents will also learn th~
in your life." Gallipolis, : reer stages of labor and delivery and what to expect liefo~
College director of ed ation and after the baby is born.
John Danicki introduced the--gradThe class focuses on breathing and relaxation .techniques
. uates, listed their accoD)plish- as well as other pain-relief options. The clas&amp; also proVIdes
. · ments, and presented asSociate infomJation about hospital procedures and variations of .
degrees to Brenda Alicie, Medina labor. An introduction to the maternity services at
Angel, Sarah Brydie, 'J&gt;aul O'Bieness will include a tour of the O'Bleness Birth Center.
Castaneda, Angela Collins, · The class is free of c)large and will be held six times ol)
Tiffany Culpepper, Jessica Davis, alternating months this year. For more information or tQ
Heather Day, Tamara Drummond, register, call the 0' Bleness Birth Center at (740) 592-9275:.
M31)' Ezeonu, Wendy Gatewood,
)esstca Gibbs, Nyoka Haiiston,
Christy
Harrison,
Angela
Hatcher, Cathy Hesson; Charity
Howell, Kimbei'ly Jones, Brandy
Kasee, Teresa · Kidd, Amanda
.King, Charla Little, Misty AEP (NYSE) - 48.50
31.75
Murphy, Chatel Myers, Keshia Akzo (NASDAQ)- 82
Ohio Valle~ Bane Corp. (NASDAQ~
Oldaker, Shelonda Petty, Copnie Alhland Inc. (NYSE) - 80.81
-211
BBT (NYSE) - 40.99
Potts, Shaumber Reed, Brietta IIIC Lots (NYSE)- 31.10 . ,.
Bob EYans (NASDAQ)'-:": 31&lt;17
Peopleo (NASDAQ)- 27.53
Seagraves, Alicia Simpkins, Bor&amp;Wamer (NYSE) - 91:92
Papaleo (NYSE) - 72.82
Jennifer Small wood,
Tina Century Alumklum (NASDAQ)Premier (NMJIAQ) - :1.4.88
Spencer, Tina Tompkins, Regina 53.72.
Rockwell (NYSE) - 70.30
Rocky Boola (NASDAQ) - 10.87:
Walls, llo Walton, and Judy Champion (NASDAQ) - 8.04
Ch.lnniiiC Shopa (NASDAQ) Royal Dutch Sh.lll - 82.81
'
Wtlcoxon.
8.50
.
s
..
ra HoldiiiC (NASDAQ) :
He awarded diplomas to Jessica City HoldiiiC (NASDAQ)- 37.66 128.97
•
Gibbs, Christy Harrison, Glenna Collklo (NYSE) - 73.29
W-art (NYSE) - 43.81
:
Wendy'o (NYSE)- 34.72
Johnson, Connie Potts, Amanda DuPont (NYSE) - 50
US .Benk (NYSE)- ~. 72
Worthlneton (NYSE) - 23.10
Searles, Alicia Simpkins, and Gannett
(NYSE) - 44.88
Dally otocli ro~~C~rla are tht 4 p.m.
Je11nifer Smallwood. Danicki O-ral Elect~c
(NYSE) -'- 41.39
ET closing quoteo at tranuctl..,.
th~n closed the ceremony witllif!!e Harle)'l)...dlon (NYSE) - 4t.44
for Sept. 27, 2007, proYided 11y
benediction.
·'" · JP Morpn (NYSE) - 48.21
Edward Joneo nn.,.lll acMtors
,
laaac Mills In oa11pa11a at (740)
Following the ~eremony, gradu- K....er (NYSE) - 28.88
BrarMit (NYSE)- 22.Q
441-9441 Letley Marrero In
ates and guests enjoyed a recep- ..Umltod
Norfulk Southern (NYSE) - 12
Point Pleaoant at (304) 874.
afth¢ center,,
,., .·.· ..· ;.
Oak Hill FlnliiiOiaf'( NASIMQ) .:.. ·
0174. Mtmbor SIPC.

,

o. 'Blenes,s Memorial Hospital.
·tO offier childbirth class .

Graduates of the 2006-07 graduating class at Gallipolis Career Colleee

Local StOCkS

Senator
John
Carey, ,,.,,, '"''
speaker
at the •.,..,, ..
Gallipolis
Career
Center
graduation, was
Introduced ,by
GCC
president Bob
Shirey.
SUbmitted
pilot..

Inside

Bl

·The Daily Sentinel

OSU-Mlnnesota preview, Page B2
Bulls re1i$ game with WVU, PI!Jll! 84

Gal1la Co. volleyball roundup, Page 84

Friday, September 28, 2007

""""-- -

LocAL ScHEDULE
,POMEROY - A - a1

._mg

Meigs outlasts Lady
Buckeyes in 5 games

111g1

--Colny. ........ .....
Todly'agamu
FOOiboll

~

Meigs at Wellston

Southam at Federal Hocking
Eastern at Trimble
Alexander at Belpre
Vinton County at Nejsonvllie-Yo&lt;1&lt;
Miller at watertord

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAI.TERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Gallla Academy at Portsmouth
River Valley at Rock Hill
Hannan (WV) at Wlrt County f.W'/) ·
Clay County (WV) at Wahama (WV)
Wayne (WV) at Point Pleasant (WV)

_ ROCK SPRINGS - It
wasn' t pretty, but style
points alone don't decide the
final outcome of games.
Meigs volleyball, at
times, struggled with visiting Nelsonville-York on
Thursday at Larry R.
,Morrison Gymnasium, but
the Lady Marauders came
up with the big plays when
they needed them en route
to a suspenseful 25-10, 2125, 25-23, 21-25, 17-15
five-game victory in TriValley Conference Ohio
Division action.
The Maroon and 'Gold led
1-0 and 2-1 durin~ the
match, but the hosts faded to
put away the Lady Buckeyes
(3-3 TVC Ohio) in either of
the even games. Meiss (I 04) needed extra pomts to
overcome a 14-12 deficit in
the fifth and decisive game,

lltunlly. Set 28
Foolbllll
South Qallla at Notre Dame
Crooa Country
Southem, Meigs, Eaatem at Rio Grande

Invite, noon

Dm*v Oet.z

Volleyblll
Meigs at Alexander, 6 p.m.
Eaatern at Southern, 8 p.m..
Golf
Divl&amp;'on Ill district meet at Marietta
Country Club, 9 a.m.

.Wtclc:Ti!r'tolr

3
Trimble at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.
Southam at South Gallla, 6 p.m.
CrMaCountry
Southem, Meigs, Easter" at Alexander
Invite, TBA

GoH

Division II dl&amp;trlct meet at Cook's Creek,

9a.m.

Harris

advances
.
to district
tourney
.

•'Does, Eastern
both £ail to ····
advance as teams
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BY JOE MIUCIA
ASSOCI~TED

PRESS WRITER

Cavaliers All-Star forward LeBron James is treating his appearance on the
season · premiere
of
'Saturday Night Live'like a
fast break.
: "I'm going to just wing
it," James said Thursday
iluring a break in rehearsals.
' James is practicing this
week with his new teammates at 'SNL' where he'll
become the latest in a long
line of superstar athletes to
host the show.
The 22-year-old's display
of humor m Nike ads where
he plays four versions of
himself and his performance co-hosting the
ESPYs
made
Lome
Michaels, creator and executive producer of 'Saturday
Night Live,' believe James
would do well on the show.
"You can tell when somePlease see James. 84

•

SPORTS BRIEFS

ASA softball
tourney coming
to Huntington

Bry1n W1ltera/photo

Members of the Eastern volleyball team applaud during pregame lntroduc!ions dn Thursday during the lady Eagles' TVC
Hocking contest against Waterford In Tuppers Plains. EHS wore pink t-shirts to help promote the Volley For A Cure campaign, which helps raise money for breast cancer research. Eastern also won the m!'ltch in str~ight games.

Lady Eagles soar past Waterford in three
8Y

BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSOMVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern volleyball- No. 16
in the Division IV state
coaches poll - had little
with
visiting
trouble
Waterford on · Thursday,
posting a 25-7,25-15,25-14
straight-game victory during
Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking Division action.
The Lady Eagles (15-2)
remained unblemished in
TVC Hocking play this year,
improving to 6-0 overall
with the victory.
The Green and White
recorded 30 kills, 28 assists
and a block in the triumph,

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
- There will be a men's
ASA class D and E slow
pitch softball tournament
held on Saturday, Oct. 20,
Bv SCOTT WoLFE
lind possibly Sunday, Oct.
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
21, at the St. Clouds complex in H~ntington, W.Va.
GLOUSTER
The
For more infomJation on Trimble Lady Tomcats
the tournament, contact Don clawed their way to a three-set
win over the Southern
Wilson at 304-544-4188.
Tornadoes Thursday night in
girls' Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Diviston volleyball
CoNTAcrUs
action. Trimble won the three
sets 25-22, 25-20, and 25-20.
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
· Southern was 55-63 serving
and 45-57 spiking. Emma
Fax - 1 ~740-446-3008
Hunter was 13-13 serving,
Eal'l\llll- sportsOmydallysentinel.com
I 0-12 passing, and 20-24 on
Soorts Staff
assists; Whitney Wolfe-Riffle
Bryan Waltera, Sports Writer was 9-11 serving, 20-24 pass(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
ing, and 8-13 spiking; and
bwallers@mydailytribune.oom
Kasey Turley was 7-8 serving,
9-14 spiking and had
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
eight
blocks. Sarah Eddy was
(740~·2342. ext. 33
I
2-19
passing, and C:.lftelsea
Ierum 0 mydaityregister.com

leading stjlrt to fin!sh along
the way. EHS also tmproved
its season game record to
43-11 overall while posting
a sweep of the Lady
Wildcats. Eastern won the
frrst matchup in Waterford
by a 25-11, 25-11 , 25-10
score.
Senior Katie Hayman led
the Lady Eagles with I 0
kills and had the lone block,
while juniors Katie Wilfong
and Tresa S watzel contributed respective kills of
seven and six . Senior
Kelsey Holter added four
kills to the winning cause,
with junior Morgan Burt
roundmg out the team total
with three kills.

WI Hone

Broderick

Senior .Megan Broderick
led the passing attack with
all 28 assists. Classmates
Morgan Werry and Amanda
Eason were a combined 13of-19 passing. Werry, the
team's libero, was 8-of-9
overall, while Eason fin-

ished the night 5-of-10 pass-·
ing.
Waterford salvaged a split
in the junior varsity tilt, caf:turing a 25-20; 12-25, 25- 2
victory.
"
Thursday night also took
on significant meaning for
both clubs as they participated in the 2007 Volley For
A Cure, promoting fundraising for breast cancer
research. Schools throughout Ohio have sold pink tshirts this week to help raise
money for the cause, and
both teams wore their pink
!-shirts during wann-ups.
Eastern coach Howie
. PINH- Saar, 82

"

Lady Tomcats tame Southern in straight games

·1;,.. "1!'• !q,~,.,·,,\...,,~1• '·'iti"i-:'1~ •-··fl:fl•t-

.,.,...,,, . • n,.l,,~

,l

"•' ..

( ~ ':

•''

"""~'";;~,.t•t-',1",,

"

1

I

,1

&gt;J'

"0

~

,

\,'11•

~iT•,·r~·
&lt;1

'

1'""

1&gt; 1 1,

[,,,·r· 1 ~-

•;'•

1,

J.

·
,.-

then retained sole possession of second place in the
TVC Ohio with the triumph.
MHS is now 5-1 in the TVC
Ohio Division, trailing
unbeaten Alexander by one
game.
The Lady Marauders were
I03-of-1 06 from the serviee
line, recording seven aces in
the victory. The hosts also
recorded 34 kills, 32 assists
and four blocks.
Sophomore Tricia Smith
PIIUI ... Melp.82

Southern's

'Saturday Night
Live' team for
season premiere

•,

Vlnll!ll

Division Ill Golf

~eBron join~

'&lt;

Smith

Pape was 9-11.
Other contributors were
Stephanie Cundiff, Ashley
Robie, Samantha Patterson,
Rashell Boso, and Breanna
Taylor. Southern was only 919 blocking, which led to several Trimble scoring opportunities.
Southern took the upperhand early in the frrst game 30 before Trimble tied it 6-6,
then the hosts went up on
Southern 8-6 after a pair of
Kristen Angle serves. Katlyn
Walton put Trimble up 15-9,
but after a .couple volleys
Kasey Turley brought it back
to 15-16 then tied .the game at
16-16. '
Angle gave Trimble some
breathing room at 22-17, then
Paige Limo put the game

Hunter

Eddy

. '
away at 25-22 after fo~r
· pmnts from Southern s
Ashle&gt;: Rob1e made 1t close at
the firush.
In the second game,
Trimble took the upper hand
at 5-2 behind Mc~gan Fouts
serving. Waltl,l.ll made it 15-6
with four stnii~ht serves, and

. Trimble slowly J?Ulled away.
Then Southern s Stephame
Cundiff pumped some life
back into Southern, as the visitors made it 18-16. The teams
battled hard with some $ood
floor play from Hunter, R1ffie,
and Turley in Purple, but
Trimble's Harper, Hooper,
and Lenigar put away the 2520 Trimble win.
Nine points late in the game
from Trimble 's Lauren
Downs erased a big lead
established by Southern's
Robie who scored eight points
in giving Southern an 18-15
advantage. Trimble rolled on
for the win 25-20.
Southern fell in the reserve
game 12-25 and 17-25.
Southern hosts TVC Hocking
leader Eastern on Thesday.

CHILLICOTHE
Southern junior Bryan
Harris carne one step closer
to competing in a thrrd-consecutive OHSAA Division
UI Golf Championship on
Wednesday, qualifying for
the district tournament as an
individual at the 2007 D-lii
southeast
sectional
golf meet at
Jaycees
G o I f
Course.
Harris,
the · top
individual
advancee
not with a
Hant1
team, posted a tOover par round of 82 becomine; the only player
from Metgs County to move
on throughout the threetiered postseason.
The Purple and Gold finished seventh overall as a
team, posting a collective
score of 399. Eastern, which
finished ninth at the 13tearn event, shot 423 as a
group.
Huntington Ross, behind
a powerful 1-2 punch, captured the team title with a
27 -stroke victory over the
rest of the field- frring a
collective 330. Medalist
Craig Magill led the
Huntsmen with a 4-over par
round of 76, followed by
runner-up Zach Thompson
with a 77.
Belpre, the lone Tri-Valley
Conference school to
advance as a team, finished
runner-up with a 357. Adena
and Ross Southeastern fired
matching rounds of 359 to
also advance to districts.
Adena won the team .tiebreaker for third.
Trimble, the top TVC
Hocking finisher, just
missed qualifying as a
squad, placing fifth with a
362.
League-champion
Waterford was sixth with
370, with ,Crookville sandwiched between SHS and
EHS for eighth with a 400.
Paint Valley (436), Miller
(445), Nelsonville-York
(449) and Federal Hocking
(477) rounded out the final
l!lleue see Hants. 82

�'

.

Friday, September 28,1007

Page Bz • 'The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

friday, september 28, 2007

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.Buckeyes aware of Gophers' awful ~efe~e .

Harris

Schultz ( 117) finished the
team scoring, as well as
stellar careers.
Harris and the rest of the
fromPageBl
BY RUSTY Mtua
Golden Gophers are really
D-Ill
qualifiers from
,., SPORTs WRITER
much better than their sorry
Chillicothe
advance
to
national rankings indicate.
four spots.
Tuesday
's
district
competiCOLUMBUS
The
The. rest of the Buckeyes
Harris, who individually
tion
at
Marietta
Country
numbers
are
jarring:
(
4-0,
1-0 Big Ten) followed
placed third at the event, Club. Tee-times are schedMinnesota
is
surrendering
in
lockstep.
will also be joined at the uled for 9 a.m.
39 points, 544 total yards
"They have a lot of solid
district level by fe llow TVC
and 408 passing yards per (defensive) guys over
Hocking golfers Brad
DM$IbN Ill
game. On top of that, no there," quarterback Todd
Miller, Taylor Russell and
T()j.IIINAMENJ'
Bowl Subdivtsion team in Boeckman said. "Some of
Joel Barrett.
~lljE JlVC(ES G.Q.
Ainerica bas turned the ball their Starl\lrs from last year
Miller. from Waterford,
. FAA '1'2 (!e-311(
more than the Golden are not even starting this
over
trailed·Harris by one stroke,
1, ~
Gophers (16): .
year, so they must have
fini shing fourth overall with
Yet in the·days leading up some depth on defense."
an 83. Trimble, which finto their game at 'Minnesota, . ·Backup tailback Maurice
ished tied for third (6-4) in
5.
the eighth-ranked Ohio State Wells added, "Minnesota's a
the Hocking D.ivision this
8.
Buckeyes were careful to great defense. I watched
fall, had two players
avoid any negative com- film on them and they kind
advance with Russell (87)
ments about the Gophers.
of let up on a couple of ·big
and Barrett (88).
"Early on, they just got hit plays but ·overall they can
Southern, which finished
with some blitz €Uts that play pretty well."
tied for third (6-4) in the
really affected 'them.'' coach . Minnesota (1-3, o, I) i~
league, also received ·scores
Jim· Tressel said cautiously. clearly struggling under
of 101 and 103 from Alex
'IYou can See their evolution ftrSt-year head . coach Tun
Hawley and Taylor Deem,
is . growing from· those Brewster, hired to replace
respectively. Chris H.olter
thmBs."
the fu·eq Glen Mason after
rounded out the t~ tally
with a 113, and Zach Ash
W1th the Buckeyes aver- pl;tying it) a bowl game a
aging· 37 points and 414 year ago. Through four
also posted a 117.
Eastern,
the
TVC
yards a game, Tressel was games (an overtime win
asked if it was reasonable to against Miami of Ohio. an
Hocking runner-up at 7-3,
were led by Tyler Carroll
expect his offense to have a overtime loss to B()wling
huge
game
against Green and defeats tQ Florida
with a 96. Seniors Kyle
Minnesota.
Edwards (102}, Nathan
Atlf!ntic and Purdu!l) the
Carroll (108) and Nick
' "I thillk if all you did was Golden Gophers have surlook at the slats, that might rendered mne touchdowns
be the case," he said, before · of 20 yards or longer,
ar~uing .that the numbers are including passes of 53; 46
mtsleading and that the and 43 yards, a 95-yard

--..·,.

•~·=·
. ·

kickoff return and a 43-yard dead last of the 119 iJ the •
interception return.
Bowl Subdivision in total .
Boeckman conceded he defense.
had noticed those big plays
Still, the Golden Gophers
on the stat sheet.
don't sound overly con"Hopefully we can do the cerned about getting s!iced
same as these past teams and and diced by the Buclteyes
put a few yards on them," he offense.
said.
"If they want to pass, .they
Ohio State's offense got can pass. If they want to run,
off to a · slow start in the they can ·run. I think we' .II be
opening half of its frrst three fine," defensive tackle Eric
ga!Jles yet has shown a Small said. "We're not going
quick-strike capability that to change anything . We're
has to worry Minnesota'~ just going to keep doing
coaching
staff.
The what we're doing, and even)Juckeyes have eight scoring tually things are going to fall
.drives in their last two iri our favor and we're going
games that required three or to get the breaks that we
fewer plays.
should be getting."
· Dick Tressel, Jim's older
Brewster, a former tight
brother attd the Buckeyes' . ends coach for the Denver
runnihg backs coach, said ~e Broncos and San Diego
has not sensed that the play- Chargers, recognizes that it
ers are eager to start lighting won't be easy to turn. things
up the scoreboard at &gt;:the around.
.
Metrodorne.
"I've been in the National
"I think our guys have a Football League for ilie past
lot
of
respect
for five years, and what . I'm
Minnesota," he said. "I don't looking at (in Ohio · State)
think it's different from looks like an AFC ·West
week to week - guys visu- team," he said.
.'
But he added, "If we .take
alize makin~ a big play,
whether they re playing the care of the things wcf can
No. l defense in the nation control and play· as hard as
or No. 50."
we can play, we· can, beat
Or, in the case of Ohio · State on Saturday
Minnesota, the unit ranked night."

IIJoo

II you have a qUHtlon or a comment, write: NASCAR This

Week, qo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia; NC 28053

N E: X TEL CUP S EBIES

• Rllqe: Ufelock400
· • ~: Kansas (City. Kan.J
SpeedWay (1.5 miles), 267
. ) . laps/400.5 nilles.
111 • Wilen: SU~ Sept. 30
• Laot _., - r: Tony
~

Stewart

~·~~ : Matt

:'1

Kanseth, Ford, 180.856 mph,
OCt. 8, 2005.
• R- ,_.., Mark Martin,
Ford, 137.774 mph , OCt. 9,
2005.
• Laot : For an hour or so.
Carl EdWardS and hiS No. 99
Ford stood out like a beacon
rNer the ravaged grounds of
Dover International spe-.y.
For one bright, shining moment,
~ wes Camelot But EdWards,
whose third win of the season

will undoubtedlystand, left the
scene blissfully unaware of the
fact that his winning car had
flunked post&lt;Bce inspection.
According to NASCAR officials,
the right rear corner of his car

was a half Inch too low. It was
a "ttlng end to the most flawed
and blemished of Nextel Cup
races. Following the estal&gt;
llshed pattern, NASCAR will a~
most certainlydo something to
EdWards and owner Jat.:k

Roush, but not much. Edwards

won the race comfortably, fin-

Ishing .671 of a second ahead
of Roush Fenway Racing teammate Greg Biffle and covering
the field so thoroughly that only

• R-: Yellow Transports·

lion 300

• R..o: Mounta in Dew 250
• Where: Talladega (Ala.)

Superspeedway (2.66
Kansas (City,
Kan.) Speedway (1.5 mileo), miles), 94 laps/250.4
200 laps/ 300 miles.
miles.
• Wilen: Saturday, Sept 29 • Wilen : Saturday, Oct. 6
• 1.-t yur'o winner: Kevin ol.-t year's winner: Mark

• -re:

Harvlck

• Quallfytrc record: Martin

Truex Jr., ChO\Irolet,
178.938 mph, Oct. B.
2005.
.

• Race record: Jeff Green,
Ford, 129.125 mph, Sept.

29,2001.

Martin
• Quallfytrc record : Mark

Martin, Ford, 182.320
mph, Oct. 6, 2006.
• R..a ,_.., Mark Martin; Ford, 138.207 mph,
Oct 7. 2006.
• Lut WMk: Travis Kvapll

• l.alt - k: Denny

Hamlin drove a Ford to victory at
fought off flu symptoms
Las Vegas Motor Speedand won the race at Dover
way.
International Speedway.

five other cars even finished on

the lead lap.

c
GREG BIFFLE

NEXTEL CuP SERIES

No.

16

NINTENDO W11 FORD

release him from his schol- · fit with Cincinnati's widearship as long as he trans- · open offense, Kelly said.
ferred to a school that is not
"He's the perfect profile
on its schedule.
.
for what we want to do
Cincinnati coach Brian offensively~". 'Kelly ·said.
Kelly recruited Jones out. of "He's athlet).c, got gre~t ,size
high school when he wa5.:the and vision. ·He just. Meds
be!'d. coach · l!t · Central expefiertce ·rigb~ now.~~·· 1 .
M1ch1gan. Jones attended a
At 4-0, tbe BellfCabi are
Bearcats
practice . ·on off to their' best start since
Wednesday and decided to 1954 and have moved into
enroll a day later.
. the national rankings for the
"When he got here, it was frrst time since 1967, Kelly
a very comfortable situation came to the school · from
for him," Kelly said, in a Central Michigan · last
phone interview Thursday December, led the ~earcats
night "He knew a lot about to a wi.n in the International
me. I really think that Bowl, then installed his new
helped him make a quick offense.
decision."
'
Kelly's offense attracted
Jones is known for his quarterbac~ Ben Mauk from
niobility and will be a nice Wake Forest. Mauk started

the opener there last season,
but dislocated his passing
shoulder and broke his arm
while trying to recover a
fumble.
Mauk is completing his
graduate work while leading
the Bearcats to prominence.
The arm has bothete~ ~im
the last two weeks, forcmg
Kelly to turn to junior
Dustin Grutza as a fill-in.
Mauk's arm problems are
expected to last for the rest
of the season.
·
The Bearcats won't have
an open scholarship tintil
several players graduate in
December. Jones will · pay
his way until then, .and is
scheduled to start classes on
Monday.

s
u
hniiJ' .._.lin
vo. Kyle tt.tty

'f!1e second-year,sensatlon and
the veteran clashed on the track and
in the garage, as Petty was so infuriated at Haml in that he interspersed
his lecture with a forceful tag of ·
Hamlin's helmet visor. "Iwatched the

caution. thanks

~cession of crashes.

was even more
Ill' .crashes.

because he ran all over

T11e

me .~

Retort·

ed Hamlin, "I kqow Kyle (Petty) gets
run over a lot, and a lot of the rea-

son Is that he's so far off the pace.'

tie ·The u)psy.turvy resultS of the

NASCAR Thto Week's Monte
Dutton &amp;1YM 111a tiki : ·sometimes

· Dodae Dealets 400 tightened

the Nextel Cup points standings

. aulie'top. Pendl~ any action

Cllnst EdWards' wlnnil'l8
team, the top four were separat,lld Ill' tOur points.
~

JOhn Clar1V'NASCAR This week

Gill Blflle 11J1 tlllt NASCAR II becomfnl more like Formula One - len emphlall Ofl driving 11141 1110n1 on technoloo.

it's hard to come up with a weekly
feud. Sometimes it's hard to come
up with just one.•

·.

·to llMi Overall

range from first to
· 12tfllhcreased from 102 points
10.158, howevt!r. Eighteen
pc)ints separated the·top six
Kltlljetqulteedeel.t
..Unsvllle this ••••

cin baoil, the Chase morphed

Into ~game Of catch-up.
to The chli!IIPionshlp can be won
Ill' conslstancy, as Tony Stewart
.~ In 2005 when he
· da!frilod the IItie even thOugh he
dldn'trtfln any of the flnal10
~:-

.. The.'llkellhood, ' - r , Is that ·
12 Chjlse pank:~

:•::
leastvisitS
one vlo."·:,~:~
.
driVeratwtio

seiefwl Umtl can
··~~=:aflord~ oouple .¢ bad

•_

Manlns.;Jte Speedway Is offering
a kids' ticket deal for the Oct. 21
Subway 500. When an adult purcha"
es a regularly priced ticket on the

Veteran says NASCAR technology is spinning out of control fast
By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week
DOVER, Del. -As a driver, Gre~
Biffle fi~ the racer's fliche "up on the
wheel," but times are changing, and
Biffle is concerned that stock-car racing is losing its identity in a way that
isn't being widely perceived.
Biffle frets about technology spinning out of control.
· "This sport ... is changing really
fast," he said. "I'll be interested to
see, over the next 10 years, how it
changes. I think it will change even
more.
''We've entered a whole new era out
here. That's going to change the way a
car drives and the way a guy drives it
It's going to change where dominant,
successful drivers come from in tbe
Cup Series. We're experiencing a his·
toric departure."
·
Biffle isn't worried about Formula
One drivers in NASCAR. He's worried
about Fl technology.
Until recent years, a key factor in

success was the ability of a driver to
communicate to his mechanics the
proper feel of a car. Now it's flipflopped. Highly detailed computer
models determine the fastest way
around the track, and finding a driver
who can adapt to what is essentially
predetermined is now crucial.
"Some people deny that fact," said
Biffle, "and say, yeah, it might help .
No. We were at Loudon (N.H.) last
week, and the engineer, who has all
the simulation stuff in Michigan,
could determine what it was going to
do to change the front sway bar better
than what we could determine at the
track.
"Everything I can tell from the seat
of my pants -and I tell them to do to
the car- is totally wrong. If you want
Fl technology in the United States, in
NASCAR, you have it now. The sevenpost s~aker rigs and the simulation
stuff that we have now is better than
us coming to the race track."
Biffle thinks NASCAR doesn't realize
the implications of what's happening.

"NASGAR doesn't know it's that drastic of a swing right now, but that's the
whole stock-car deal," he said. "I think,
over the next year, they're going to be
disappointed with how much engineering and data is driving these cars.
"They need to get their arms around
the data-acquisition stuff. I'm not saying we don't need to have data at tests,
but it's gotten out of hand quickly, and
I don't know what the solution is. I
think there's a tidal wave coming. Until three weeks ago, I didn't realize itt·
I've come to the conclusion that this is
no longer what people think it is."
Two years ago, Biffle was runner-up
for the Nextel Cup championship. The
Vancouver, Wash., native has been
rookie of the year and champion in
two of NASCAR's three major series.
He is the only driver to win championships in both the Craftsman Truck
(2000) and Busch (2002) series.
Want to read more from Monte
Dutton? Check out http://www.gas·
tongazette.com!sectionslsportslnascar

back straight, kids 12 and under get

in free . The chlld's ticket must be

picked up at the ticket office when
the adult ticket is purchased. All ch"
dren .need reserved tickets to get Into

the backstretch grandstands, so
·when buying adult tickets, please

make the ticket agent aware of the
number of children's tickets needed.

Adult tickets on the back straight are
$47 and $42 and may be purchased
by calling 1-877-RACETIX or online at
www.racetickets.com.

Not exactly • ..., fen
of Dele 11 ccltadt Jr.

(we 1don 'I know why Hendrick let
Kyle Busch go and hired Dale (Earn·
herdt) Jr. Busch is a much bener

driver. Not everyone likes Earnhardt.
(We)

hope Busch does a super job

for someone else, and Earnhardt
goes down the crapper like the last

year and so far this year.

Mr. ond Mro. WHilom Klddor Jr.

Paisley, Fla.

You certainly have the right to
your opinion. and you 're r/ghrabout
Kyle Busch being a very talented
driver.

Drivers change, ·but the beers remain the same
By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week

2417·

~·

Top
............. '
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4. Mve.CIIIftfNuN,M(IS

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.. ..........,........

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•

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...

Num
itors

Soar

VIsitors
A l.)ayl
a break
to c;:heck out
the news!
• •.

p-. .-

-

c J JD-J~ ).SJ J.u .s 0tJ~

"The kids do so much better
when it's their decisions, when
they have to tough through it,"
Not the prevailing view - he said. "It's ju~t hard to pass
Jimmie Johnson, who has two the wisdom. It's hard to pass on
teammates in the Chase, said he anything to your kids, but J;Joug
doesn't believe it's an advantage. Yates is pretty close on my
"I've been through some dif- heels to help build this the last
ferent scenarios," he said, "and · 20 or so years.
"He's not like a normal secI feel like, when you're the only
end-generation
, silver-spoon
guy in the Chase (from one
team), there's a little bit more kid, but he's learning. He wants
of an advantage because it's to .to do this, and the best thing
the company's best interest for me to do is let him make
that you win the Chase. Grant- these decisions, whether it be
ed, the engines are all the the number or how he runs or
same, but you get the engine what he does. It's up to Doug."
with a couple more horsepow·
er. You get all the focus.
"There are some small deci·
sions that can be made to give Survivor - Jeff Gordon
that one teammate just a little summed up Sunday's slugfest
bit of an advantage, not a lot, this way: "It wasn't pretty, but
not something that you can it was effective because we
probably measure, but it does survived and a lot of people
didn't. What this race is about
make a small difference."
is survival. We certainly didn't
have the car we hoped to."
I
J

DOVER, DeL ...: Kurt Busch
succeeded Rusty Wallace in
2006 as Miller Lite's representative in NASCAR, and he was
asked about the prospect of
Kasey Kahne succeeding Dale
Earnhardt Jr. as driver of "the
Budweiser car."
"Things develop over time,"
said Busch, "and I think people
are receptive to change when
things take time to develop ....
No one guy is going to replace
Rusty (Wallace) with the same
impact Rusty had developed
with the Miller Brewing Com·
pany over the years.
"The same thing falls into
place with Dale Jr. leading that
other beer company as long as
he did, ... so it's going to take
Kasey (Kahne) some time to
develop into that guy and the
fans to look at him as that guy.
In time it will balance out He
definitely is one of those quiet,
It's time - Robert Yates
shy guys, with probably the
talked about his decision to reloudest sponsor there is."
tire and turn his team over to Copycats - Jeff Burton
passed up an opportunity to
son Doug.
I

•

"

Bryan Waltlrllphoto

Eastern junior Morgan Burt (2) attempts to block a spike
during Thursday's TVC Hocking volleyball matchup against
Waterford at Tuppers Plains.
National Bank of Racine
and Dick Owen of Locker
219 in Middleport for their
support in providing the tfromPageBt
shirts.
The Lady Eagles return to
Caldwell was a big fan of action Tuesday when they
this promotional fundraiser, travel to Racine for a TVC
stating that it was for a very Hocking matchup with
noble cause. Caldwell also Southern. The JV contest
wanted to · thank Hotne will start at 6 p.m.

Busch race (which Hamlin won), and
I know Denny (Hamlin) wes
slck,"said Petty. "I just didn't know
he was hallucinating and needed
three lanes to get up off the comer,

Nextelftnal
Cup41race
:.:'~~~~~~the

EPt
Your ad will be seen

.

s

Hamlin

''·~&lt;bUt· fro!" .-nth piece

Mel•gs

E

R

Irish QB Jones transfers to No. 24 Cincinnati
CINCINNATI (AP)
Former- Notre Dame quarterback Demetrius Jones
enrolled Thursday at No. 24
Cincinnati, wbere he'll be
eligible to run their no-huddle, spread offense next season.
Jones . started
Notre
. Dame's season opener
against Georgia Tech and
fumbled twice in the 33-3
defeat - the worst opening
loss in Irish history. He was
one of three quarterbacks
who failed to get their
foundering offense moving.
· The sophomore from
Chicago didn't make the trip
to Michigan for Notre
Dame's latest loss. Last
to.
Bryan WellarliphDtD week, Nptre Dame
Meigs junior Catie Wolfe bumps a ball during Thursday's
TYC Ohio volleyball contest against .Nelsonville-York at Larry
R. Morrison Gymnasium in Rock Springs. Senior Hannah
Pratt is standing in the background.
Bailey led the net attack
with 14 kills, followed by
Wolfe with a dozen and
from Page Bl
freshman Morgan Howard
with five. Sophomore Holly
Jeffers
three kills and
led the serving attack with Howardhad
added
a team-high
22 points, followed by
three
blocks
for
victors.
seniors Amy Barr and Jeffers also had athe
block.
Hanna11 Pratt with 12 and
Barr led the passing
II, respectively. Senior
with all 32 assists,
attack
Patti Vining was next with
Vining,
Beha and sophoeight points, with .classmate
more
Meri
.VanMeter also
Talisha Beha and freshman
Shellie Bailey chipping in had .great efforts on the
three apiece. Junior Catie back row defensively.
Meigs returns to action
Wolfe also had two service
Tuesday when it travels to
points.
Beha and Pratt each had Albany for a pivotal TVC
two aces in the win, while Ohio
matchup . with
Vining, Wolfe and Bailey Alexander.,The j_\.mior V(ITSity
all had one apiece.
contest will begin at 6 ·p.m.

v

~TRUCK SIRia

1.

Mike Skinner

a. Ron Homa~ Jr.
a. Tnwls Kv!!2!1

...

Todd Bodine
· I. .Johnnv· Benson

3,064
·3

· 181
-314
. 398

•
'i

praise the impending arrival of
more internationally known
drivers - for instance, Jacques
Villeneuve, Dario Franchitti
and Scott Speed - in NASCAR.
"This sport has been a menkey-see, monkey-do sport for a
long time," he said , calling
Nextel Cup "a copycat series."
While Burton conceded that
having drivers of international
renown compete in NASCAR is
a compliment to NASCAR's
growth, Burton said, "There's
not much innovation in that
driver search."

•

A dynamic world - Kyle
Busch said the year has made
him a better man. Busch is
moving to Joe Gibbs Racing
next year after being shoved
out the Hendrick door to make
room for Dale Earnhardt Jr.
"It's been a learning experience," he said. "It's been some·
thing different I'm still building on trying to make sure .we
finish out the year strong and
that we're able to compete for
the championship.

"The biggest thing is that you
grow as a person. I'm 22 years
old, so I've got plenty of room to
grow as a person and understand the dynamics of this work,
I guess. That's just part of it"

•
Smokey Yunick Award Roger Fenske, a champion as
both a driver and car owner,
will receive LMS' Smokey Yu·
nick Award in ceremonies be·
fore the Bank of America SOO.
Fenske's teams have won 20
national championships in vari·
ous series, NASCAR being a
notable exception. Penske Raeing fields the Dodges of Kurt
Busch and Ryan Newman.
"Roger Penske has been raeing since 1958," said LMS president Humpy Wheeler, "and his
businesslike approach to the
sport established the template
from which today's race teams
operate.
"Roger's leadership has had
a far-reaching impact on the industry, and he's played a major
role in elevating motorsports
to the status it enjoys today."

�'

.

Friday, September 28,1007

Page Bz • 'The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

friday, september 28, 2007

www.mydallysentinel.com

.Buckeyes aware of Gophers' awful ~efe~e .

Harris

Schultz ( 117) finished the
team scoring, as well as
stellar careers.
Harris and the rest of the
fromPageBl
BY RUSTY Mtua
Golden Gophers are really
D-Ill
qualifiers from
,., SPORTs WRITER
much better than their sorry
Chillicothe
advance
to
national rankings indicate.
four spots.
Tuesday
's
district
competiCOLUMBUS
The
The. rest of the Buckeyes
Harris, who individually
tion
at
Marietta
Country
numbers
are
jarring:
(
4-0,
1-0 Big Ten) followed
placed third at the event, Club. Tee-times are schedMinnesota
is
surrendering
in
lockstep.
will also be joined at the uled for 9 a.m.
39 points, 544 total yards
"They have a lot of solid
district level by fe llow TVC
and 408 passing yards per (defensive) guys over
Hocking golfers Brad
DM$IbN Ill
game. On top of that, no there," quarterback Todd
Miller, Taylor Russell and
T()j.IIINAMENJ'
Bowl Subdivtsion team in Boeckman said. "Some of
Joel Barrett.
~lljE JlVC(ES G.Q.
Ainerica bas turned the ball their Starl\lrs from last year
Miller. from Waterford,
. FAA '1'2 (!e-311(
more than the Golden are not even starting this
over
trailed·Harris by one stroke,
1, ~
Gophers (16): .
year, so they must have
fini shing fourth overall with
Yet in the·days leading up some depth on defense."
an 83. Trimble, which finto their game at 'Minnesota, . ·Backup tailback Maurice
ished tied for third (6-4) in
5.
the eighth-ranked Ohio State Wells added, "Minnesota's a
the Hocking D.ivision this
8.
Buckeyes were careful to great defense. I watched
fall, had two players
avoid any negative com- film on them and they kind
advance with Russell (87)
ments about the Gophers.
of let up on a couple of ·big
and Barrett (88).
"Early on, they just got hit plays but ·overall they can
Southern, which finished
with some blitz €Uts that play pretty well."
tied for third (6-4) in the
really affected 'them.'' coach . Minnesota (1-3, o, I) i~
league, also received ·scores
Jim· Tressel said cautiously. clearly struggling under
of 101 and 103 from Alex
'IYou can See their evolution ftrSt-year head . coach Tun
Hawley and Taylor Deem,
is . growing from· those Brewster, hired to replace
respectively. Chris H.olter
thmBs."
the fu·eq Glen Mason after
rounded out the t~ tally
with a 113, and Zach Ash
W1th the Buckeyes aver- pl;tying it) a bowl game a
aging· 37 points and 414 year ago. Through four
also posted a 117.
Eastern,
the
TVC
yards a game, Tressel was games (an overtime win
asked if it was reasonable to against Miami of Ohio. an
Hocking runner-up at 7-3,
were led by Tyler Carroll
expect his offense to have a overtime loss to B()wling
huge
game
against Green and defeats tQ Florida
with a 96. Seniors Kyle
Minnesota.
Edwards (102}, Nathan
Atlf!ntic and Purdu!l) the
Carroll (108) and Nick
' "I thillk if all you did was Golden Gophers have surlook at the slats, that might rendered mne touchdowns
be the case," he said, before · of 20 yards or longer,
ar~uing .that the numbers are including passes of 53; 46
mtsleading and that the and 43 yards, a 95-yard

--..·,.

•~·=·
. ·

kickoff return and a 43-yard dead last of the 119 iJ the •
interception return.
Bowl Subdivision in total .
Boeckman conceded he defense.
had noticed those big plays
Still, the Golden Gophers
on the stat sheet.
don't sound overly con"Hopefully we can do the cerned about getting s!iced
same as these past teams and and diced by the Buclteyes
put a few yards on them," he offense.
said.
"If they want to pass, .they
Ohio State's offense got can pass. If they want to run,
off to a · slow start in the they can ·run. I think we' .II be
opening half of its frrst three fine," defensive tackle Eric
ga!Jles yet has shown a Small said. "We're not going
quick-strike capability that to change anything . We're
has to worry Minnesota'~ just going to keep doing
coaching
staff.
The what we're doing, and even)Juckeyes have eight scoring tually things are going to fall
.drives in their last two iri our favor and we're going
games that required three or to get the breaks that we
fewer plays.
should be getting."
· Dick Tressel, Jim's older
Brewster, a former tight
brother attd the Buckeyes' . ends coach for the Denver
runnihg backs coach, said ~e Broncos and San Diego
has not sensed that the play- Chargers, recognizes that it
ers are eager to start lighting won't be easy to turn. things
up the scoreboard at &gt;:the around.
.
Metrodorne.
"I've been in the National
"I think our guys have a Football League for ilie past
lot
of
respect
for five years, and what . I'm
Minnesota," he said. "I don't looking at (in Ohio · State)
think it's different from looks like an AFC ·West
week to week - guys visu- team," he said.
.'
But he added, "If we .take
alize makin~ a big play,
whether they re playing the care of the things wcf can
No. l defense in the nation control and play· as hard as
or No. 50."
we can play, we· can, beat
Or, in the case of Ohio · State on Saturday
Minnesota, the unit ranked night."

IIJoo

II you have a qUHtlon or a comment, write: NASCAR This

Week, qo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia; NC 28053

N E: X TEL CUP S EBIES

• Rllqe: Ufelock400
· • ~: Kansas (City. Kan.J
SpeedWay (1.5 miles), 267
. ) . laps/400.5 nilles.
111 • Wilen: SU~ Sept. 30
• Laot _., - r: Tony
~

Stewart

~·~~ : Matt

:'1

Kanseth, Ford, 180.856 mph,
OCt. 8, 2005.
• R- ,_.., Mark Martin,
Ford, 137.774 mph , OCt. 9,
2005.
• Laot : For an hour or so.
Carl EdWardS and hiS No. 99
Ford stood out like a beacon
rNer the ravaged grounds of
Dover International spe-.y.
For one bright, shining moment,
~ wes Camelot But EdWards,
whose third win of the season

will undoubtedlystand, left the
scene blissfully unaware of the
fact that his winning car had
flunked post&lt;Bce inspection.
According to NASCAR officials,
the right rear corner of his car

was a half Inch too low. It was
a "ttlng end to the most flawed
and blemished of Nextel Cup
races. Following the estal&gt;
llshed pattern, NASCAR will a~
most certainlydo something to
EdWards and owner Jat.:k

Roush, but not much. Edwards

won the race comfortably, fin-

Ishing .671 of a second ahead
of Roush Fenway Racing teammate Greg Biffle and covering
the field so thoroughly that only

• R-: Yellow Transports·

lion 300

• R..o: Mounta in Dew 250
• Where: Talladega (Ala.)

Superspeedway (2.66
Kansas (City,
Kan.) Speedway (1.5 mileo), miles), 94 laps/250.4
200 laps/ 300 miles.
miles.
• Wilen: Saturday, Sept 29 • Wilen : Saturday, Oct. 6
• 1.-t yur'o winner: Kevin ol.-t year's winner: Mark

• -re:

Harvlck

• Quallfytrc record: Martin

Truex Jr., ChO\Irolet,
178.938 mph, Oct. B.
2005.
.

• Race record: Jeff Green,
Ford, 129.125 mph, Sept.

29,2001.

Martin
• Quallfytrc record : Mark

Martin, Ford, 182.320
mph, Oct. 6, 2006.
• R..a ,_.., Mark Martin; Ford, 138.207 mph,
Oct 7. 2006.
• Lut WMk: Travis Kvapll

• l.alt - k: Denny

Hamlin drove a Ford to victory at
fought off flu symptoms
Las Vegas Motor Speedand won the race at Dover
way.
International Speedway.

five other cars even finished on

the lead lap.

c
GREG BIFFLE

NEXTEL CuP SERIES

No.

16

NINTENDO W11 FORD

release him from his schol- · fit with Cincinnati's widearship as long as he trans- · open offense, Kelly said.
ferred to a school that is not
"He's the perfect profile
on its schedule.
.
for what we want to do
Cincinnati coach Brian offensively~". 'Kelly ·said.
Kelly recruited Jones out. of "He's athlet).c, got gre~t ,size
high school when he wa5.:the and vision. ·He just. Meds
be!'d. coach · l!t · Central expefiertce ·rigb~ now.~~·· 1 .
M1ch1gan. Jones attended a
At 4-0, tbe BellfCabi are
Bearcats
practice . ·on off to their' best start since
Wednesday and decided to 1954 and have moved into
enroll a day later.
. the national rankings for the
"When he got here, it was frrst time since 1967, Kelly
a very comfortable situation came to the school · from
for him," Kelly said, in a Central Michigan · last
phone interview Thursday December, led the ~earcats
night "He knew a lot about to a wi.n in the International
me. I really think that Bowl, then installed his new
helped him make a quick offense.
decision."
'
Kelly's offense attracted
Jones is known for his quarterbac~ Ben Mauk from
niobility and will be a nice Wake Forest. Mauk started

the opener there last season,
but dislocated his passing
shoulder and broke his arm
while trying to recover a
fumble.
Mauk is completing his
graduate work while leading
the Bearcats to prominence.
The arm has bothete~ ~im
the last two weeks, forcmg
Kelly to turn to junior
Dustin Grutza as a fill-in.
Mauk's arm problems are
expected to last for the rest
of the season.
·
The Bearcats won't have
an open scholarship tintil
several players graduate in
December. Jones will · pay
his way until then, .and is
scheduled to start classes on
Monday.

s
u
hniiJ' .._.lin
vo. Kyle tt.tty

'f!1e second-year,sensatlon and
the veteran clashed on the track and
in the garage, as Petty was so infuriated at Haml in that he interspersed
his lecture with a forceful tag of ·
Hamlin's helmet visor. "Iwatched the

caution. thanks

~cession of crashes.

was even more
Ill' .crashes.

because he ran all over

T11e

me .~

Retort·

ed Hamlin, "I kqow Kyle (Petty) gets
run over a lot, and a lot of the rea-

son Is that he's so far off the pace.'

tie ·The u)psy.turvy resultS of the

NASCAR Thto Week's Monte
Dutton &amp;1YM 111a tiki : ·sometimes

· Dodae Dealets 400 tightened

the Nextel Cup points standings

. aulie'top. Pendl~ any action

Cllnst EdWards' wlnnil'l8
team, the top four were separat,lld Ill' tOur points.
~

JOhn Clar1V'NASCAR This week

Gill Blflle 11J1 tlllt NASCAR II becomfnl more like Formula One - len emphlall Ofl driving 11141 1110n1 on technoloo.

it's hard to come up with a weekly
feud. Sometimes it's hard to come
up with just one.•

·.

·to llMi Overall

range from first to
· 12tfllhcreased from 102 points
10.158, howevt!r. Eighteen
pc)ints separated the·top six
Kltlljetqulteedeel.t
..Unsvllle this ••••

cin baoil, the Chase morphed

Into ~game Of catch-up.
to The chli!IIPionshlp can be won
Ill' conslstancy, as Tony Stewart
.~ In 2005 when he
· da!frilod the IItie even thOugh he
dldn'trtfln any of the flnal10
~:-

.. The.'llkellhood, ' - r , Is that ·
12 Chjlse pank:~

:•::
leastvisitS
one vlo."·:,~:~
.
driVeratwtio

seiefwl Umtl can
··~~=:aflord~ oouple .¢ bad

•_

Manlns.;Jte Speedway Is offering
a kids' ticket deal for the Oct. 21
Subway 500. When an adult purcha"
es a regularly priced ticket on the

Veteran says NASCAR technology is spinning out of control fast
By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week
DOVER, Del. -As a driver, Gre~
Biffle fi~ the racer's fliche "up on the
wheel," but times are changing, and
Biffle is concerned that stock-car racing is losing its identity in a way that
isn't being widely perceived.
Biffle frets about technology spinning out of control.
· "This sport ... is changing really
fast," he said. "I'll be interested to
see, over the next 10 years, how it
changes. I think it will change even
more.
''We've entered a whole new era out
here. That's going to change the way a
car drives and the way a guy drives it
It's going to change where dominant,
successful drivers come from in tbe
Cup Series. We're experiencing a his·
toric departure."
·
Biffle isn't worried about Formula
One drivers in NASCAR. He's worried
about Fl technology.
Until recent years, a key factor in

success was the ability of a driver to
communicate to his mechanics the
proper feel of a car. Now it's flipflopped. Highly detailed computer
models determine the fastest way
around the track, and finding a driver
who can adapt to what is essentially
predetermined is now crucial.
"Some people deny that fact," said
Biffle, "and say, yeah, it might help .
No. We were at Loudon (N.H.) last
week, and the engineer, who has all
the simulation stuff in Michigan,
could determine what it was going to
do to change the front sway bar better
than what we could determine at the
track.
"Everything I can tell from the seat
of my pants -and I tell them to do to
the car- is totally wrong. If you want
Fl technology in the United States, in
NASCAR, you have it now. The sevenpost s~aker rigs and the simulation
stuff that we have now is better than
us coming to the race track."
Biffle thinks NASCAR doesn't realize
the implications of what's happening.

"NASGAR doesn't know it's that drastic of a swing right now, but that's the
whole stock-car deal," he said. "I think,
over the next year, they're going to be
disappointed with how much engineering and data is driving these cars.
"They need to get their arms around
the data-acquisition stuff. I'm not saying we don't need to have data at tests,
but it's gotten out of hand quickly, and
I don't know what the solution is. I
think there's a tidal wave coming. Until three weeks ago, I didn't realize itt·
I've come to the conclusion that this is
no longer what people think it is."
Two years ago, Biffle was runner-up
for the Nextel Cup championship. The
Vancouver, Wash., native has been
rookie of the year and champion in
two of NASCAR's three major series.
He is the only driver to win championships in both the Craftsman Truck
(2000) and Busch (2002) series.
Want to read more from Monte
Dutton? Check out http://www.gas·
tongazette.com!sectionslsportslnascar

back straight, kids 12 and under get

in free . The chlld's ticket must be

picked up at the ticket office when
the adult ticket is purchased. All ch"
dren .need reserved tickets to get Into

the backstretch grandstands, so
·when buying adult tickets, please

make the ticket agent aware of the
number of children's tickets needed.

Adult tickets on the back straight are
$47 and $42 and may be purchased
by calling 1-877-RACETIX or online at
www.racetickets.com.

Not exactly • ..., fen
of Dele 11 ccltadt Jr.

(we 1don 'I know why Hendrick let
Kyle Busch go and hired Dale (Earn·
herdt) Jr. Busch is a much bener

driver. Not everyone likes Earnhardt.
(We)

hope Busch does a super job

for someone else, and Earnhardt
goes down the crapper like the last

year and so far this year.

Mr. ond Mro. WHilom Klddor Jr.

Paisley, Fla.

You certainly have the right to
your opinion. and you 're r/ghrabout
Kyle Busch being a very talented
driver.

Drivers change, ·but the beers remain the same
By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week

2417·

~·

Top
............. '
........
...

..
4. Mve.CIIIftfNuN,M(IS

s.ee':
.. ..........,........

~ ..

iiwdir&amp;ljif .

?, ;al!;ljla§a~......,

•

.... .....
... . ....
...

Num
itors

Soar

VIsitors
A l.)ayl
a break
to c;:heck out
the news!
• •.

p-. .-

-

c J JD-J~ ).SJ J.u .s 0tJ~

"The kids do so much better
when it's their decisions, when
they have to tough through it,"
Not the prevailing view - he said. "It's ju~t hard to pass
Jimmie Johnson, who has two the wisdom. It's hard to pass on
teammates in the Chase, said he anything to your kids, but J;Joug
doesn't believe it's an advantage. Yates is pretty close on my
"I've been through some dif- heels to help build this the last
ferent scenarios," he said, "and · 20 or so years.
"He's not like a normal secI feel like, when you're the only
end-generation
, silver-spoon
guy in the Chase (from one
team), there's a little bit more kid, but he's learning. He wants
of an advantage because it's to .to do this, and the best thing
the company's best interest for me to do is let him make
that you win the Chase. Grant- these decisions, whether it be
ed, the engines are all the the number or how he runs or
same, but you get the engine what he does. It's up to Doug."
with a couple more horsepow·
er. You get all the focus.
"There are some small deci·
sions that can be made to give Survivor - Jeff Gordon
that one teammate just a little summed up Sunday's slugfest
bit of an advantage, not a lot, this way: "It wasn't pretty, but
not something that you can it was effective because we
probably measure, but it does survived and a lot of people
didn't. What this race is about
make a small difference."
is survival. We certainly didn't
have the car we hoped to."
I
J

DOVER, DeL ...: Kurt Busch
succeeded Rusty Wallace in
2006 as Miller Lite's representative in NASCAR, and he was
asked about the prospect of
Kasey Kahne succeeding Dale
Earnhardt Jr. as driver of "the
Budweiser car."
"Things develop over time,"
said Busch, "and I think people
are receptive to change when
things take time to develop ....
No one guy is going to replace
Rusty (Wallace) with the same
impact Rusty had developed
with the Miller Brewing Com·
pany over the years.
"The same thing falls into
place with Dale Jr. leading that
other beer company as long as
he did, ... so it's going to take
Kasey (Kahne) some time to
develop into that guy and the
fans to look at him as that guy.
In time it will balance out He
definitely is one of those quiet,
It's time - Robert Yates
shy guys, with probably the
talked about his decision to reloudest sponsor there is."
tire and turn his team over to Copycats - Jeff Burton
passed up an opportunity to
son Doug.
I

•

"

Bryan Waltlrllphoto

Eastern junior Morgan Burt (2) attempts to block a spike
during Thursday's TVC Hocking volleyball matchup against
Waterford at Tuppers Plains.
National Bank of Racine
and Dick Owen of Locker
219 in Middleport for their
support in providing the tfromPageBt
shirts.
The Lady Eagles return to
Caldwell was a big fan of action Tuesday when they
this promotional fundraiser, travel to Racine for a TVC
stating that it was for a very Hocking matchup with
noble cause. Caldwell also Southern. The JV contest
wanted to · thank Hotne will start at 6 p.m.

Busch race (which Hamlin won), and
I know Denny (Hamlin) wes
slck,"said Petty. "I just didn't know
he was hallucinating and needed
three lanes to get up off the comer,

Nextelftnal
Cup41race
:.:'~~~~~~the

EPt
Your ad will be seen

.

s

Hamlin

''·~&lt;bUt· fro!" .-nth piece

Mel•gs

E

R

Irish QB Jones transfers to No. 24 Cincinnati
CINCINNATI (AP)
Former- Notre Dame quarterback Demetrius Jones
enrolled Thursday at No. 24
Cincinnati, wbere he'll be
eligible to run their no-huddle, spread offense next season.
Jones . started
Notre
. Dame's season opener
against Georgia Tech and
fumbled twice in the 33-3
defeat - the worst opening
loss in Irish history. He was
one of three quarterbacks
who failed to get their
foundering offense moving.
· The sophomore from
Chicago didn't make the trip
to Michigan for Notre
Dame's latest loss. Last
to.
Bryan WellarliphDtD week, Nptre Dame
Meigs junior Catie Wolfe bumps a ball during Thursday's
TYC Ohio volleyball contest against .Nelsonville-York at Larry
R. Morrison Gymnasium in Rock Springs. Senior Hannah
Pratt is standing in the background.
Bailey led the net attack
with 14 kills, followed by
Wolfe with a dozen and
from Page Bl
freshman Morgan Howard
with five. Sophomore Holly
Jeffers
three kills and
led the serving attack with Howardhad
added
a team-high
22 points, followed by
three
blocks
for
victors.
seniors Amy Barr and Jeffers also had athe
block.
Hanna11 Pratt with 12 and
Barr led the passing
II, respectively. Senior
with all 32 assists,
attack
Patti Vining was next with
Vining,
Beha and sophoeight points, with .classmate
more
Meri
.VanMeter also
Talisha Beha and freshman
Shellie Bailey chipping in had .great efforts on the
three apiece. Junior Catie back row defensively.
Meigs returns to action
Wolfe also had two service
Tuesday when it travels to
points.
Beha and Pratt each had Albany for a pivotal TVC
two aces in the win, while Ohio
matchup . with
Vining, Wolfe and Bailey Alexander.,The j_\.mior V(ITSity
all had one apiece.
contest will begin at 6 ·p.m.

v

~TRUCK SIRia

1.

Mike Skinner

a. Ron Homa~ Jr.
a. Tnwls Kv!!2!1

...

Todd Bodine
· I. .Johnnv· Benson

3,064
·3

· 181
-314
. 398

•
'i

praise the impending arrival of
more internationally known
drivers - for instance, Jacques
Villeneuve, Dario Franchitti
and Scott Speed - in NASCAR.
"This sport has been a menkey-see, monkey-do sport for a
long time," he said , calling
Nextel Cup "a copycat series."
While Burton conceded that
having drivers of international
renown compete in NASCAR is
a compliment to NASCAR's
growth, Burton said, "There's
not much innovation in that
driver search."

•

A dynamic world - Kyle
Busch said the year has made
him a better man. Busch is
moving to Joe Gibbs Racing
next year after being shoved
out the Hendrick door to make
room for Dale Earnhardt Jr.
"It's been a learning experience," he said. "It's been some·
thing different I'm still building on trying to make sure .we
finish out the year strong and
that we're able to compete for
the championship.

"The biggest thing is that you
grow as a person. I'm 22 years
old, so I've got plenty of room to
grow as a person and understand the dynamics of this work,
I guess. That's just part of it"

•
Smokey Yunick Award Roger Fenske, a champion as
both a driver and car owner,
will receive LMS' Smokey Yu·
nick Award in ceremonies be·
fore the Bank of America SOO.
Fenske's teams have won 20
national championships in vari·
ous series, NASCAR being a
notable exception. Penske Raeing fields the Dodges of Kurt
Busch and Ryan Newman.
"Roger Penske has been raeing since 1958," said LMS president Humpy Wheeler, "and his
businesslike approach to the
sport established the template
from which today's race teams
operate.
"Roger's leadership has had
a far-reaching impact on the industry, and he's played a major
role in elevating motorsports
to the status it enjoys today."

�Friday,.September 28, 2007

www.my4ailysentinel.com

Friday, September 28, 2007

www.mydallyMtrtlnel.com

With a~ gesture from-Jack, the.Americans steal the show

'

'1

I

·'

MONTREAL- The Americans
got off to a near-perfect start
Thursday in the Presidents Cup,
gening superb play from veterans
and rookies aiilte in winning S I 12
points out of the six alternate-shot
matches at Royal Montreal.
And if not for· U.S. captain Jack
Nicklaus, it might have been
worse.
Despite a leaderboard covered
with American red numbers, perhaps the most poignant momenfof
a gray afternoon was Nicklaus
instructing Phil Mickelson and
Woody Austin to concede a 3 1/2foot par putt. on the 18th hole that
assured Mike Weir of Canada and.
his International team its only
point of the opening session.
In a tense battle with only six
holes halved, the match was all
square going to the 18th·when both
sides missed the green. Mickelson
blasted out to 12 feet, while Weir
chipped to 3 · 112 feet above the
hole. Austin made the par putt, and
before V~ay Singh could spot his
ball, the match was conceded.
''Captain Nicklaus was right. It
was the ri~ht thing to do,"
Mickelson s81d.
It was typical of Nicklaus, who
famously conceded a putt about
the same ~istance to Tony Jacklin
in tbe 1969 Ryder Cup that

allowed those matches to end in a chances. .
porate chalets. Lucas Glover and
draw.' That gesture became a symSabbatini and lmmelman, who Scott Verplank made a par from
bol of sportsmanship in match play lost an early 2-up lead, were all the bunker for a 2-up win.
between countries and continents. square ~layi ng the 18th when
Woods and Howell had a few
. ''That didn't sUJVI:ise me at all Sabbatiru hooked his tee shot into nervous moments, even though
with Jack," Weir S81d. Kl guess I'm the water, leading to a bogey. Zach they never trailed after the sixth
a little old fashioned that way. It's Johnson played his tee shot well to hole. They were I up on the 16th
a gentlemen's game."
the right, Stewart Cink found a hole when Choi hit his tee shot into
Then again, this was only greenside bunker, and Johnson the water, and it looked as though
Thursday - and it was clear the secured the match with a bunker ·the Americans had controL Howell·
Americans were in charge.
shot so close it was conceded to followed him into the water with a
The matches began 30 minutes par.
fairway metal to lose the advanlate because of a downpour on th~
Els and Cabrera were run over tage, but he redeemed himself with
lie Bizard, and once they began, by Jim Furyk and David Toms, a 15-foot par putt from the fringe.
the Americans wasted no time tak- who raced out to a 3-up lead with
"I did not want to miss that putt.
ing control. Steve Stricker, return- five holes remaining. But the I was not going ·to miss the putt,"
ing to the Presidents Cup after an International team won two Howell said. "I can't let him
11-year absence, joined with rook- straight holes, and Els kept them in down."
ie Hunter Mahan for a 3-and-2 vic- the match with a 15-foot par/utt
They slapped hands w;tlking off
tory over the Australian pair of on the 16th. And it looke as the green, and Woods closed out
A~ Scott and Geoff Ogilvy.
though they would at least earn a the match with a tee shot into 3
Tiger Woods and . Charles halve when · Furyk pulled his tee feet on the par-3 17th.
Howell m were in the final match shot on the 18th into the water.
Still, no match was more comand picked up a 3-and-1 victory
Els played a fadeaway from the pelling than Mickelson-Austin
over K.J. Choi and Nick O'Hem, lip of a fairway bunker to the front · against Weir-Singh, and it certainwith Woods doing most of the of the green, and Cabrera's putt Iy was the loudest given the wild
heav:y lifting and Howell coming stopped 4 feet short of the hole. changes in momentum and a
up wtth big putts on the back nine. Thts ~utt was not conceded, and !lallery that cheered at the sight of
It was the big~est blowout in the Els mtssed it to halve the hole and 1ts Canadian star walking up to the
green.
opening sess1on since the lose the match.
Americans pitched a 5-0 shutoufin · Then there was Retief Goosen
Down early, Weir and Sin~h won
2000.
and StU'art Appleby, also tried to five out of seven holes to butld a 3But there were traces of 2005, squeeze out a half-point with a win up lead and appeared to be in conwhen the International side failed on the 18th hole. Appleby, howev- trol until Mickelson and Austin ran
to win any of the 12 matches that er, pulled his approach so badly off three straight birdies to square
went the distance. Whether it was that it took 15 mmutes to get a rul- the match. That set the stage for a
Ernie Els and Angel Cabrera, or ing, and Goosen's best option was drantatic finish.
Rory Sabbatini and Trevor to take a penalty stroke and hit
- Singh · holed out from a
lmmelrnan, · they. sure had their their third shot over a row of cor- bunker for birdie to win the 15th.

- Austin holed a 7-foot par putt
to halve 1he 16th, then Mickelson
poured in a .15-foot birdie putt to
win the 17th and square the matc.h.
Austin blinked ftrSt on the 18th,
missing badly to the left into a
bunker, and MickelSon did well to
blast out to 12 feet. Singh went to
the right, although Weir had a good
lie in the rough and chipped to Y
1/2 feet.
Austin made yet another clutch
putt, getting his Presi!}ents Cup
debut off to a rousing start, and
that's when Nicklaus stepped in.
Mickelson and Singh have a
strained relationship dating to their
argument over spikes at the 2005
Masters, but Lefty had no trouble
following the captain's instructions.
''There shouldn't have been a
winner orloser," Mickelson said.
But he jokingly got in Nicklaus'
way as Els stood over a par putt
from just a little longer, and perhaps it was fitting the Big Easy
missed.
It gave the Americans a fivepoint lead, their largest since 2000,
when they went on to a record
margin of victory.
"We've seen this board the last
two Ryder Cups," Woods said of•
the margin, before sarcastically
noting that the lead belonged to
Europe. "We're still a long way
away from this thing."

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4

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..,

BY FRED GOODALL
AP SPORTS WRITER

TAMPA, Fla. Jim
Leavitt was in his office,
watching film and making
plans for the biggest game
m South Florida's relatively brief football history
when he decided to take a
little night stroll.
Barefoot and wearing
shorts and a T-shin, the
only coach the school has
had mingled among thousands of studerits camping
out in hopes of getting
tickets.
Oh my, how things have
changed for the 18thranked Bulls.
Raymond
James
Stadium, the immaculate
65,657 -seat home of the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
and bi~gest stadium used
by a B1g East school, will
be packed for a USF home
game for the first time
when fifth-ranked West
Virginia visits Friday
night.
The mayor of Tampa has
proclaimed it "Green and
Gold Day," and one of the
tallest buildin!ls downtown
will be illummated in the ·
school colors.
The neatest thing for
Bulls fans, though, is
Leavitt and his players
have given them reasons to
believe they can·win -not
just put on a good show.
USF (3-0) knocked off
Louisville, then ranked in
the Top 10, two years ago,
and the Bulls shocked
then-No. 7 West Virginia
24-19 at Morgantown to
knock the Mountaineers
out of contention for a
BCS bowl. game last season.
.
Three weeks ago, they
won at Auburn to move to
the brink of the first Top 25
ranking in the program's
11-year history. .
"For them, I am assuming they will come down
here looking for revenge,"
·quarterback Matt Grothe
said of West Virginia (4-0).
"For us, we already know
we can beat them and that
~ives us confidence. Now
It is just a matter of playing
and having fun."
West Virginia coach Rich
Rodriguez
discounts
redemption as motivation
for
his
team.
The
Mountaineers haven't forgotten how the Bulls stifled offensive stars Steve
Slaton and Pat White, but
simply are focused on
playing better this time.
"It's not so
much
revenge as I guess it is
respect," West Virginia
linebacker Reed Williams
said .
"It's frustrating to watch
the film because we know
we can play better. But at
the same time, they made

IRONTON -While most
us play worse," Rodriguez teams only dream of being
said.
"Our . problems perfect; the Gallia Academy
against South Florif\la were volleyball team is getting a ·
·
that they had some guys chance to live it.
Iionton
tried
•
to
min
that
simply make play.s." ·
fact
Thursday
night
when
it
White ran for 177 yards
the
took
game
one
from
and two touchdowns, while Lady Angels 25-19, but
Slaton rushed for 89 yards GAHS quickly turned
and one TD to pace West · around and fired off three
Virginia's 28-14 victory in straight wins 25-22, 25-17
Tampa tl!VO years ago.
and '25-13 to improve to 14:
The Bulls did a better job 0 on the season and clinch
against both in last the Southeastern ·Ohio
November's
win
at Athletic · League South
Morgantown, holding the Division title and a spot in
duo to 60 yard~ rushing the Day of Champions
and forcing three turnovers championship game.
Larry Crum/pholo
by
White,
the
Gallia Academy also ·finds
South
Gallia's
Christina
Tirpak
hits
the
ball
during a high
Mountaineers'
quarter- itself ranked 18th in
school
volleybal.l
game
against
Ohio
Valley
Christian
· Division 2 behind its perfet:t
back.
Thursday night in Mercerville. South Gallia won in four sets.
USF nose tackle Richard record.
Katie Taylor, Alexis
Clebert said the keys to
After easy wins· of 25-14 had eight points apiece and
slowing Slaton, White and Geiger and Ryann Leslie and 25-10 to start · the Allie West had seven points.
another
talented helped keep their record evening, visiting Ohio
Rounding out the scoring
Mountaineer, Noel Devine, uttblemished Thursday night Valley Christian finally hit was Natasha Adkins with
will be discipline and good with Taylor posting 14 its stride in game three with three points and Rachel
points, two aces and 15 kills, a 25-22 win and almost took Merry and Ali sa Johnson
tackling.
had 13 points, five it to a frfth game until South posting two points each.
Geiger
"The thing is just about
OVCS saw Carman leadnot being nosey. As soon as aces, eight kills and three Gallia rebounded and edged
blocks and Leslie came up the Blue and Gold 25-22 in in~ her team with 16 points,
you get nosey, that's when with
I0 points, II kills, two the final game to take three wtth Christy Saunders postthey will break (a play) for blocks and an ace.
of four in high school vol- ing 12 potnts and Andrea
80 yards," Clebert said.
Kaci Shoemaker had four leyball action Thursday VanMeter coming up with
"We have to stay focused. points and an ace, Hannah
11 points. Lindsey Miller
. .. You have to. play your Cunningham had two points, night.
Nikki Fulks, Laura Gwinn had nine · points, Hali
guy and play your assign- nine assists and an ace and
and
Megan Sheets led the Burleson and Lindsay Carr
ment. That's it."
Courtney Shriver and Alex Lady Rebels in the first two had eight points.
Meanwhile,
West Swisher had a point apiece. games of the evening as
out the scoring
Virginia has to find a way Shriver also added six SGHS made quick work of forRounding
the Defenders was
to contend with Grothe.
assists and two kills and their guests. But thanks to Melissa Stump, Amanda
USF's sophomore quar- Swisher had seven kills and 12 points from Annee Jarvis
and
Samantha
terback threw for 279 three blocks.
Carman and six more points Westfall with two points
yards
Rounding out the contrib- from Christy Sanders the each and Allie Hamilton
· against
the
Mountaineers last year, utors was Brittany Miller Lady Defenders battled who chipped in a single
and is a threat to hurt them and Dana Dotson who had back, taking a commanding point.
running the ball, too. He's four kills and two blocks early lead and holding ·On for
Burleson also led her team
attempted _127 pas~es with- apiece and Amy Noe witli the 25-22 victory and with eight aces and seven
out throwmg an mtercep- two kills and a pair of evening the game 2-1 on the kills while Sanders posted
night.
·
six kills. Carr and Sanders
tion, a streak that began blocks.
Gallia Academy now preBut in the fourth and final had three digs ·each and
after he threw two picks at
pares for a visit from game Sheets and Gwinn Miller led the Defenders
Morgantown.
Chillicothe
Monday with the again came up big in holding with 13 assists.
"You get in his face and
freshmen
contest
beginning off the hard charging
OVCS also fell in a game
he has the ability to make
at
5:15p.m.
Defenders
to
win
in
four
earlier
this week against Elk
some room for himself,"
sets.
Valley
in
three of four games
Williatp.s, West Virginia's
South
Gallia
fights
off
Sheets
led
her
team
with
and 2525-15,
25-16,21-25
leading !!Ickier, said. "He
OVCS
tough
27
points
on
the
evening,
16.
.
looks downfield well, and
with
Fulks
posting
15
points
The
Lady
Defenders
were
he'll throw a strike to
MERCERVILLE
-What
and
Gwinn
coming
up
with
led
by
Sanders
with
16
them. We've got to 'get to looked like an easy night for
14 points for the home points, Andrea VanMeter
him and try to get him on the South Gallia Lady squad. Katie Lawrence with 13 points and Miller
the 2round as much as we Rebels quickly turned into a added II points, Ashley and Burleson with 10 points
can.r.
roller coaster ride.
Clary and Glenna Wright each. Carman added seven
The sellout crowd will
eclipse the 49,212 USF
drew to old Tampa Stadium
back Peyton Manning said.
for its inaugural game
appeared on the show last
When James co-hosted
against
Kentucky
season and other stars like the ESPY s along with
Joe Montana and Wayne comedian/talk show host
Wesleyan in 1997. The prefromPageBl
Gretzky have had memo- Jimmy
vious high for a game at
he
Kimmel,
Raymond James is 45,274 one has a sense of humor or rable performances.
appeared in several skits
Michaels believes the and danced and sang a veragainst West Virginia in a least enough perspective
show has had success with
2005.
on themselves to able to athletes over the last 32 sea- sion of Bobby Brown's
Rodriguez doesn't expect la~;~gh at stuff," Michaels
"My Prerogative" with
sons because by nature rewritten lyrics about his
the atmosphere to affect sa1d.
they ' re fearless.
the Mountaineers.
own fame .
James , got his lines
"They' re used to being in
He wouldn't say whether
"Our guys have to under- Wednesday and did a read
of a large group of he has another song and
stand it's going to be a hos- through of the material front
people and not knowin~
tile environment," the Thursday, leading Michaels how it's going to turn out, ' dance routine planned for
this weekend's show, which
coach said. "You'd rather to believe "The Chosen Michaels said.
also
features hip-hop icon
go into an environment · One" may have another natJames, who says he doesKanye
West.
like that than ge some- ural gift.
n't get nervous for big
"I
want
to make an
where there's nobody there
"He's really good at this games, is treating the show
and nobody cares."
stuff," Michaels said.
no differently and said col- impression," James said.
Leavitt would love to get
James follows in 'the fo()t- laborating with the writers "Just go out there and be
used to wading through all- steps of his boyhood idol, and actors has made him ori ginal and have some
night student campouts.
NBA legend • Michael ·feel comfortable with the fun. "
Last season, James led
"That was pretty neat," Jordan, who hosted the sea- sketches.
Cleveland
to its first NBA
"They make you feel like
he said. "They were a lot of son premiere in 1991 .
finals.
The
Cavaliers were
Indianapolis Colts quarter- you're one of them," James
fun."

and Gold in that contest.
Burleson also had 17 kills,
· eight digs and two blocks in
the loss, while Sanders had
12 kills and six aces, Miller
had 28 assists and four kills
· and Carr had eight digs. ·
South Gallia will return to
·action Monday when it travels to Fairland while OVCS
returns home for a game
against St: Joseph also on
Monday.

Monday thru Friday
HOW I0. WRJTE Aft AD
Succe11fut Ads
Should ln~tude These Items
To Help Get Response ...

James ·

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kHncarlyleocomcaal.net

Tiainer Pco1tk&gt;n
A-1
Aro you lntO&lt;ootod in a Local cor1l&gt;I"Y olforlng "NO
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ounonlty -.g a pari- ~ for you to buy your
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lng .-nllaVcommunlty • tOO% flnonclng

FACTORY SPECIAL. Brand
now 2007 32,&gt;152, (1,378
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beth with llrgo foml1y raom,
dining room and fully
equipped kltcllon Including
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with MR/00. Seofdng 81111 acx:opled
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We .. looking for pooplt
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Oct.Sth. American Legion Reward for return. call

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446,9618
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· - - - - - · REWARD! Losl Doberman,
Female, 4 month old puppy. 4yrs old, Male. Lasl seen

Call740-446-1689
Poplar Rklge area. Family
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Free kitten, black &amp; while, 6
weeks old, (740)742·2486
YARD SAu

FREE Mod-size male dog
mh(, 2yrs old loves kids,
good watch dog 304-675·
1780
------Free to good home, t4 wk
old F English P&lt;&gt;ntet" pup.
Full blooded. Lemon &amp;
White. Call740-441.0405

new•opo1 po~ll

mootl~ll

r
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i.a~uND

FOUND

y 1\Rl) SAlE-

G.\IJJI'IJLil
Family Yarn Sale at 6647 St
At 588, Friday 9/28 and
Saturday 9129 from Bam •

------Moving Sale 750 181: A"'
R..r. Sept 27, 26, 29.

www.comlco.com

1 mile below dam.
Home interior. furniture,

e 2007 by NEA, Inc.

Oct. 14,

j

rul

rmacy,

meroy.

4x4's For Sa le..............................................725
Announceman1 ..............:............................. 030
Antlquee ....................................................... 530
Apartments Ior Rant................................... 440
Auction Ind Fl • Mark81.............................'080
~- &amp; AcceaaorIea..........................760
AUlo 'p•·~
Ajllo Repair ..................................................no
AUioelor Sele.............................................. 7t0
Boats 6 Motors lor Sale ............'.................750
Building Suppllea ........................................550
Buslnesnnd Bultdlngs ............................. 340
Bualneal Opportunlty.................................210
·Buolnen Training ....................................... t40
Campere 1 Motor Homes ........................... 790
Cemplng Equipment ................................... 780
CerdoofThenko .......................................... OtO
ChlldiEiderly Cere....................................... 190
•~tcai/Relrt-rallon
Eu
•·
...............................840
Equipment lor Rent .................................... 480
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm E;::'l~ment .......................................... ~
Fermi r ent.............................................330
Farmolor Sale.............................................
For Leaae ..................................................... 490
For Salli ........................................................ S85
For.Sale or Trlde .........................................590
Fruita 6 Vagalables..................................... 580
Fumlahed Rooms........................................450
General Haullng ...........................................850
GtVIMIWIIY...................................................... 040
Happy Ade....................................................050
Hay 1 Oraln ..................................................840
Help Wenled ................................................. 110
Home lmprovemenle ................................... 810
Homeolor Sele ............................................ 310
Houaehotd
....................................... 510
Houl881or Ooods
Rent ..........................................
410
tn Memorlam ................................................ 020
lnaurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn Ia Garden Equlpmant ........................ 660
Lost end Found ........................................... 060
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170

········h···
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MiscellaneousR··M
ere an..·d···1.........................
860
1
Mobile Home epar....................................
Mobile Homes for Rent ................... :........... 420
Moblle Homes f or Sale................................320
Money to Loan ..................,.......................... 220
MOtorcyclea &amp; 4 Whoalars .......................... 740
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Personals..................................................... 005
Pets for Sale ................................................560
Plumblng&amp;Heatlng .... ................................ 820
Professlonal Servlce&amp; ................ ...... ........... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr .................... ...... ..... 160

Reel Estate Wamted ..................................... 360

SChoolslnatructlon ............... ...................... 150
~-" p•- II F rllll
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Shuatlons Wanted ....................................... 120
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SponlngGooda ........................................... 520
SUV'alor Sale ..................... ,........................ 720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholslarv ............................................ .'...... 870
Vans For Sa le............................... ................ 730
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Wanted to Buy- Farm upp ea ..................
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Yard Sai•PI. Pleasan1 ................................ 076

I

abletopaasabactground

W-

In_,

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llaP WANIID

Attic, Clara Burris residence

I

122 Garage St, New Haven •

304·862·2530
100WORKERS NEEDED
Ceoi&gt;ort Sale 32 BurdeHe .Assemble
crafts, WOOd
.
Addition Sat 9129
•lems.• $480/wk "atena1
provided Free informations
Estate
Sale Saturday
·
Seplembor 291h 2303 MI. pkg. 24Hr. 801-428-4649
10

Vemon Ave. Pt. Pleasant

M

.ADVOCATE for Non·profit

Yard Sale Sept 29th, 8·??' CSexuat Asgaudlt .A~urce
locate m M&amp;son
Rooseve..• Elem. SchOOl At Center F
I . Deg .
2N to be held in the school
~n~. u_t·ti~rld ree •n
parking lot renting table SOCIB service e or .com·
space 01.11 for $20 call 675· =~~~~~ w:~~~e~~n:
8862 if interested. All sons
to devel
of things Come See USit Alt ~S::.OOs e r d op:n1
Proceeded Go to Six Grade . e p~ram an wo ng
t np..
. 11 ,1
w1th v1ct1ms of sexual
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should send resume to
AUCilnN AND
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r

F'LtAMARKEr

I Cenler, PO

Cross Creek Auction Buffalo
Au ction Saturday 6pm
Amish bakad Banana Bread
&amp; loal white Bread. Building

is lull. Slarting 10 sell high
quality knives such as Case,

Buck &amp; MossyOak. Visa
and Mesler Card 1304)550·
1616StaphenReedy t639

From$1,800payment
GOry (740) 828-2750

...............,

lntormallon.

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t.mlllll 8lllu. or nltlonll
origin, .. ..., I - I I I

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dtoortmi-."

ance Is available. Lakin lor Interview 3Q4.8?s.ao76
Hospital ls an EEO/AA
.

,...... . . ._.,

OHIOVALl.EYPUBliSH·
IN!l 00
nd
· ~·-•
reeommawith8
do
1 you
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peop
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NOT 8 toyou nd
rough tho'!.,.1
have lnwaallgatod tho
olforfng
·

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Restrlcled to proi:!Ct

your

Utilities

lf1YII1ment. OUtdoonman
~--. Slzoo 2 • - to 6

010

'i22:soo.

·~.=...,_....

=~·priced from

............ _. ...,.

oNOTICb

$35,000 cal Paul Smlfh 300·

810.5978
For .Sale by owner, Nloe,
38R. -•,
o~
·~ a~
·~ &amp; · • MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
Ranch with unattached RENT, 1031 Goorvo• Creek
- - . .. 10.5 -·-- -. 24' Rd, 44t-1111
ground pool wl~
1.: I ' 1 \ I '
localod just minutes rom · ~;::::;;:::;;::::,
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Neighborhood
Rd,
Jloul8
$127.500. Call fOr Appt.
FOR RENT
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,

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House tor saki In Radn8 3

••NOTIC::I!**
Smart. Contar:1
fhe Ohio Oivlalon of
Rnancili
lnatttution'a
Office of Comaumtr
Alfllrs BEFORE you raftnonce your homl or
a loin. BEWARE
of requeoto for any large
advance paymenta of
fool 01 1nour1nco CWI tho
Offlca of c.;,...mer
Affolra toi fiee\at ·1 .27 &amp;0003 to 1r1om tt tilt
morlgage broker or
lender 11 propeny
llclnlod. (This 11 1 public
service announcement
hom lhe Ohio Valley
~Publ;:lsh;lng;Comp;a~ny~);:~
Borrow

j

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TURNED DOWN ON

126

Knowledge 01 Cunent
Maintenance man for rental Computer Programs. 1Wo
property, send r86ume ~o Weekends Per Month
Sen"ntl PO 0 _ 729 33
" •
uv.o.
•
• Required .
Interested
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
Persons Uay Appty Dally,
Medical assistant needed lor Mon.·Sun..
9-4
P.m.
busypl'rjSicien'sofflcelntho lntorvlsws Will
Ba
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ol tho low. Our

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contad BtcQJ!I
CltrWO!ftca sciciAL SECURITY /SSI?
Kim Billups, AN DON, at ee''"'nt
Applications No Fee Unless We Win!
LB~n Ho~nal, t.al&lt;in. wv at ~-· Being .........,. ~ A
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- 5

Fuii·Time
Record
from
Clerk/Oflice Aallatant With
8·00
· AM . 4·00
· PM r191td· Receptlonlot
Dulles.
lng the postllons.
Applicants Muat Interact
L 1H Ha1 h A
Well With Families &amp;
oca h.~e PCeA'I .. ~HA"?''s Visttora Be Detail Oriented
now Iring
" , Posaeu,
CNA's and STNA's,o. Ftexibfa
Self-Starting,
scheduling. Appl)' In person ADitltias, Capatlkt of Muttlor call 7:to. 441 • 13n . 2 Talking With A,ecuracy &amp;
Commerce Or.
Computer Literate With

Sardllll Rd. Utilities fetdy,
Flat lot, S25,000/0BO 300·
67!1-4.411 L08YO Mooaage
Gorgeous Ro&amp;klenllal loti
located on Muon 1 ~
County Nne, Underg~ound

lfwell-ectvlf?'
that off'In

E?'ployer. Please

304 -s75.oe60 · ext
Monday thru Friday

-

-

Lars&amp;:
ACREAGE

2.12 acres walnut Creek

Thll oww P 0 wMI nat
knoMugty .,wpt

atH fuU·ti'ne and part-time

WANIUI
~
·~od
che&lt;JI.
caseo.
a dollra
Cd 404-328-6758
1o
won.,H you
as haWI
a reap._,
--·10iii8uviii-_.l - - - - - - - TEAM member coli
at Alklrs·s ...
A'IONI All Arlllf To Buy or (740)4411-3808 for lmmed·
HerrisonvYie. 9:~5:00.
••1 SOli Shirley Spears 3fJ.t.. 1 int rv1ew
20• acres o1 reason~
Y ·
'
a• e ·
Estate Sale. 84 Olds,Ref priced land for residential 875- 1429 ·
side ...... ~de, gas range. building site. Gallipolis area Bob Evans In Mason now Ohio Vofloy Homo HAith,
..1·5171
bed .,room set, TV, on 1y. Ca11740-....
hiring experienced Grill Inc. hiring AN's, STNA'I,
stero,kitchen items, 209 .,.,.-..,--:::..,---..,--::: Cook&amp;, Satwro &amp; Kitchen CNA'a, CHHA's, pc•·
~I.
••••, te ~.op Dollar: us
·- Ing app.cat~.
• ··- ~S.5th,Midd. 9·27- 9-28.07 ~u
· · PfiiP. Apply In person NO -ept
·~·
Silver and Gold Colna, phone calls
LPN~. ~lflw
Large 6 family, Oct. I, 2, 3, Proofsets, Gold Rlnga, Pre- '----....c....--:::- and Benallta Including
good quality clothing. game t935
U.S. Currency, Health CM Sarvfcos Group haalth inturonce 8lld
tables, wall hutch, light fix· Soi!BIIO Diamonds· M.T.S. lba Nations loading mileage. Apply at 1480
t~ros, stereo, lavalory, relrig- Coin Shop, 151 Second provider of onvlromental Jacbon 1'11&lt;1, Qallpolfo or
orator. Barbie Jeep. Nortl~ Avenue. Gallipolis, 740-448- se.MCOS to lhe long term phone toll trae 1~1Track, lree&lt;lmill, mD 2642.
cars Industry Is -.g for 1393.
machine, exercise bike, old - - - - - - - house
keepertllaundry
cane chairs, cabinet, lots of Lookilg for land. priced rea- ald08lor iopallllllfng homo. PIT Admin. Alii. noedod.
mlsc,behindMssonlcLodge sonoblo.C&amp;II740-645-6299. Apply In peraon: 38759 Computer exp. a muat.
In Radne, (740)949·2671
Leave a message. 740-645- Rocklpnnga Road, l'tllnon&gt;y Flexible hrl. Apply
Ohio.
.at Alo Gr--~
UnlvefWity
Three lamlly yarn sale on 6299
m~
-143, lhrse mllss wast of Paw Paws, bfacl&lt; walnuts. Immediate fuH time opening C&amp;fltorfa or cai24H860
Harrisonvilleatjunction692, hickories, p1eue call first, for r8CfH)Uonlst In a buty
starling ooon Sept. 27, Fri. (740)698-6080
modiOli practice, appllca· Pan time to prepare"
28th, Sat. 29th, Sun :lOth.
lions maybe plcfrup at SuRa neodod for busy to office,
Property to buikf home in 112 Pteaaant Valley Hoepffal Pomeroy location. flOOd
Wyatt's 51148 51. At. 124 GaHia County. Proler s-10 muat be abletolypo &amp; expo- computer aldHo required, wll
near Apple Grove, Fri. &amp; Sal acres, high and dry. Call nonce hslpfui,
lraln. Send """'"" 10' Dally
28th &amp; 29thlwo families new Mrty colloc1 0 321 -453
Sentinel, PO Box 729-13,
to tho arsa hiMI just moved t:St nlnga
· lakin Hospltef currently hal POmtroy, Oh 4.1789
Into lhsir newly buiH home &amp;
eve
·
. posl11ons available for
do not have enough room want 10 buy Junk cars call Certified Nursing Alalatant
POST OFFICE NOW
lor all of lhelr stuff· 18' boat 740-3B8.Q884
'
(CNA'S) for full tlmo and
HIRING
w/mofor, household &amp; misc. ~~i!!~!'!!!'!!!!!... temporary (90day) work In a
Avg. Pay S20nv or
itam~ everything priced 10
WE BUY USED
t14 bed Long Torn C&amp;ro
$57K anlllalfy
. sell, rain cancels, 1740)590- MOBILE HOMES Facll~. Full·tlmt employ· Including Fadaral6567
Gary (740)828-2750
msnt oilers on exten~ve and OT,PaldTralnlng,
YARD SAlEbasnefit package,! lncludllng
vacationt·FTIPT
Pr.l'u:AsANr
tate
civil
asrv
co
ret
re---1·8fl6.--54-2·-153-t
~
.
mont, earn up to 15 day&amp;
USWA - vacation per YHr, 18 day&amp;
Antique Sale
by
~cl&lt; leave, and t2 plus paid Pracf810n Eleelrlc now ~iring
Appointment Only, Clara's 1110·
·
holidays; hea!tMite lnsur· Ucenled Btctt1ctans. Call

r

Nica312Bf~

-= . . . _. " " '

r

mow
. er,mlcrowave,rocker
'
chair.

..

fair lfoualntl Act

7-.

Plck,Up at Clothesdrver,sheets,

OWNER FINANCING

-..
oi11A

Ple11e call
at 877-11930300 IXI.1 and mentiOn tho
Galllpolfo otudy fo&lt; more

&amp; 9128.
()plnlont, Ud

4pm

_,...,.

ln ........ , 0

11125

~~~~~~~~F~·~~~=~~=~
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Sat.9-29.

.

All .... _

mat Pill $70 In Gallipolis on

I

MIScellaneous

Gl
...........
--·.....·

pottic:lpate In a f1M1 I1Udy

aduh .&amp; . children wintet"
AUCI10NAND 1.1116 Hl!u&gt;WMmD
. . ~~~10 Hl!u&gt;WMmD ,.
.....,, ....... ,...., .
OisapP.,ared Sspt. 1st, clothes, m•sc.
~ FtD. MARKEr • •
••
Clollpaflo c:.nor Collogo
Female Goldon Relrlevet", Sept 28&amp;29, flam • 1 2993
(C&amp;rtera Cloao To Home)
Jacf&lt;Bon Pika area. Rawardl State Routs 14 t. Bunk beds, RIVERSIDE Auction Barn
Aramarf&lt; Corrocflonlll : Declfcatod oxperl- Cll Todayl
446-4250 (Chip)
kids clothes, kilchen items
·5Miles Balow tho Dam
5etvlcal ~ ~
oncod tflAo. PCA'o, CNA'a
Hltl0-214-0452
and more.
Tools, Furniture. HOU&amp;Ihokt
.. ....&amp;.....tionl for Food
&amp; STNA't. Eltablllhed and ._., ire 11 w , Q .earn
FOUND .Album in Frulth
Items Something for
..........Pllarmacy p~. lot. "My r~ YARDSAu:Eve~ne. EVERYSat.
5erviceSuporvfiOIO. .... reapocte&lt;IIOCal home
School Memories "High
l'oiiiFROV/MIDIJU. Night 0 6pm. 740- 258- Corr1&gt;atltive wages and full hoalfh agency l.ocatod In
SChool" pictures and some
padcaga. Must be Galllpolla, Ohio 1181 lVIII6989
College·O.U.

-r.

r---=---"1

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POUaU' ----~~~••--·1'1111U\18
AIIIRI .. I wllllllr t l'Wtr.noiiOf'la.nlletolltftM..,.,.
. . . . MOUPIICIItyb...,IMCiftiY . .
lnY 10M .. tiPIMI
rrom ... ,.. r n ,., ........
CorrM~ton ...... Nell
•lloa
art 11wy1 Htlflllti!MI. • Ct.wtn rMt ............. • AI rM1 1Ctuli1111ct•• . .
10 the fedlrll M Meullng Act IIIII 1M. • 1Ne

childrens pet, no collar, has

after Spm
Free Kittens Call 74Q.4.469632

e-.

Borders$3.00/perad

Thunc:lay fDr Sundaya

ILosl male beagle,.beloved

Uveatock ............................ .......................... 630

swept in four games by the
San Antonio Spurs. A high
school phenom, he skipped
college to become the overall No. I pick in the 2003
draft, and in four seasons
has become one of the
league's marquee players.
James grew up in Akron,
just 25 miles away from
Cleveland, but he might
want to stay in New York a
while after the show is over.
A lifelong New York
Yankees fan, James took a
moment during a Thursday
conference call to graciously
congratulate
the
Cleveland Indians on winning the American League
Central Division title.
Then he predicted that the
Yankees would beat the
Indians when the two teams
meet in the playoffs.

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Sunny In-Column: 1:00 p.m. •und•y Dlaplay: l:OQ .p.m..

:00 a.m. tQ 5:00 p.m.

Raiders sting Hornets
CHESHIRE
- River
Valley improved to 8-0 in
the Ohio Valley Conference
with a commanding performance over visiting Coal
Grove Thursday night,
defeating the Hornets in
straight sets 25, 16, 25-12
and 28-26.
.
The Raiders were led by a
trio of' 13 point performances from Mackenzie
Cluxton, Kari McFann and
Kirsten Carter with Carter
also adding three assists for
the winners.
Brooke Taylor led the
team in hitting on 22-of-26
with nine kills. McFann was
14-of-15 with seven kills,
Carter was 14-of-20 for
eight kills and l)iana Corfius
was 16· of-19 with seven
kills. Jacqueline Jacobs
added four kills and Cluxton
had two kills in the victory.
With the win the Lady
Raiders improved to 10-5
overall and 8-0 in the OVC
as the Raiders close in on
their sixth straight title.
River Valley's junior varsity squad had similar
results, "lso keeping its perfect OVC record intact with
a straight set victory 25-15
and 25-16 over Coal Grove.
Kayla Smith led the attack
with 13 points and five
assists, with Jacobs posting
eight points and seven kills
and Elizabeth Hamilton had
seven kills.
Overall the Lady Raiders
junior varsity team improves
to 9-2 overall and 8-0 in
league play.
River Valley will return to
action Saturday startin~ .at
noon wheo Logan v1s1ts
Cheshire.

Sentinel

ca~f~::y... (7!~2ro446~42 (7!~2ro~!~~~~56
Oeatltirec Acl• ·

.

No. 18 South Florida
. Prep Volleyb~ll Roundup Gallia county
relishes chaJienge ·· BI~~~e1s remaJD perfect, win SE?,~~!~
.
t
N
5
wvu
·.
agmns . Oe
. ..

m:rtbune

To Place

Websijes:
www.mydaitytribune.com
www.mydailysentlnel.com
www.mydallyreglster.com

area. Approlt. 4 ocroo, II
proleaalonally landacaped.
111y1o wllh 4
bod&gt;ooma, IMng room, 11m
din·
lng roorn,ldtchon,largo ·
~~=::=,r:-~
Iorge Aorlda room complatoly cadtr opono onto
palfO pool area. Hoaledln
ground5 pool encfoood byprlvacy lenclng and land·
ocapod. Flnlohod 2 car
garage attaef&gt;od
~~
and flnlohed &amp;
car

-

r.::.•

,.,..:~='::;

__
• _'_ ·_ _ _ __

3 bedrOom. 2 bltto home In
Syracuse, call (740)94G·
2513
3 Bedroom. 2 Bath,
Fireplace, on 3 to 4 acres in

k1

garage,
amall back yard,
$835 (740)949-2303
--'-'--'----3 Bedroom House in
Syrocuoo. $500hnonth •
depOalt No Pall. (304)6755332 woekendl 74o-591 ·
0265
.
3 BR llouoo In Galipolls,
WID oonnec:tfOn, S4751mo.
$250/dep. Also t BA In
Gallipolis
$275/mo.

=

~~:- ~

~ lntl-:~·000.00, Calf: 3BR

near
Holzar,
Appliances, No Pets.
REDUCED! Brand new $1150/mo plus deposit
home in Golllpolle. 2BR, (740)245·9860, (740)6453636
2SA
w/3 acres mil. $82500. =--:---:--:-:C 740-446-7029
:Jl
3BR, 1 bath, 2·story oldor
Mo1ln.E lloMEs farm hOU8e on SA 554 ·

j

roR.SAu:

I

''eldweiiiRV

schools
•
S5751mo plus sec Oep. Pets
under 15 lbs wl$575 pet
~C::'::x:.v.;~~: depOSit . Avail- 10· 1~7.
u--...1 $ 3 000 Call ...S-3644 fat appllca-

bo - 5pm · 740
1 '••• · liOn
.
cMus1
1 afta
--'-----a1
r
.
- ~- 4.170or441 ·529&gt;1
3BR, 1.5 bam, 2-story on

1foMEs

=7~:chedgarage

house

_ 40_194
_ _1____

------c116x50
Fairmounl, 3BR, 28a
FOR SALE
Laminate floors, excellent
,
cond 1apptl
tor
hiM· wl
~ss,s19 500
age
0 down._;-····1\11\tmAnl 4 bad- '""'""'' arge ~.
, .
dCove ed 740-59&gt;1.0t35
rooms. rge ~r . . 7~ - -- -- - --

r1D

bedroom

l'tllnon&gt;y, llrgo &amp; vory clean,
t t/2 bath, ale. hardwood
-.. fulbuemont wl2 car

1998 14JC80 Fleetwood, aN
ekK:tric, w/central air, 3br, 2
full bath, master bath has
lg., oval garden tub.
La•........,/panlry room . Good
""'""'
condition Books $18,000
asking $13,700 304·593·
55911 or 30004·576-2999

Cedar St • $575/rent, $575

sec. dep. PelS

less man 20

lbs wf$575 per deposit. Call
446-3644for applicaiiOn.

59 Gertield • 2BR, 1BA
$4601monlh + sec. dep.
Youpayallutiitles. Caii446364
_ 4_ _ _ _ __
Allentlonl
Local company otfaring ~NO
DOWN PAYMENr programs for you to buy your
home instead ol renti'lg.
• 100% financing

Box 2963,
Rio Gande area on
.
• Lass man perfrl4;1 credit
Huntington wv 25728 . by GaHipolis area. Prefer pleas· COnducted Soon. App 1y Plauant Valley Rd.$89,900 2000 t4x70, 3BR, 2BA.Lota ~coap~od
October 1• 2007 ·
~ had Tod-1
Acrooo Ritch1e 17401709-11 116
cA o f t - , on ranted lot . • ...._nt could be me
ant, self mot1vat~;!\,!,
r
-,
s
d
Bridge TskAI Right 2 Milos
- .. ~.
working person.
en
'
'
'
S 34 Krou..Beck Rd. ·
-·~
·~ ..
An Excellent way to earn resu{nes CLA Bole 101J P.O. Last Buslnesa On Rl~1 38R, 2BA, Flanch tyle Gallipolis. 3 miles from Mortgage
Locators.
money.The New Avoo.
Box 469, Gallipolis, Ohio (Applicants Muot Live Wlll'!n houoe over 2,000 aq . ft, Grtllpofla ?" SR 588. - (740)367.0000
Call Marlyn 304-882·2645 45631
15 Mlloa For Sale!)' Hugokl1clton, lolsolcablnet 8935
·
Purposes)
Ravenswood space, LR, DR, Laundry - - - - - - - Nice clean. 2BA, 18A.
Carpenter to pul floor in liv· Part·lime position needed, ·care
Center.
1113 Room, on 1 acre of land, Great UHd 2005 3bedroom $500Jdep, Fridge &amp; Stow~,
ing room ol mobile home. billing experience profaned, Washington
St., Galio CO Sclloola, Asfdng 16x00 wlm vlnyVIthlngfe. W/Dhoof&lt;-up. Must aael Call
Only expeoienced need lo send reOJms to: ~0. Boot Ravenswood,
WV St 15,000 OBO (740)441· Mull soU, Only $25,995wlth daya-740-709-1285 or..,...
apply. (740)446-7039
388, Porner&lt;71, Oh 45769
Referencoo Requloed.
7842
daflvltry. Call (740)385-4387 740-446-3272
""Y . . -

• .., .....

�Friday,.September 28, 2007

www.my4ailysentinel.com

Friday, September 28, 2007

www.mydallyMtrtlnel.com

With a~ gesture from-Jack, the.Americans steal the show

'

'1

I

·'

MONTREAL- The Americans
got off to a near-perfect start
Thursday in the Presidents Cup,
gening superb play from veterans
and rookies aiilte in winning S I 12
points out of the six alternate-shot
matches at Royal Montreal.
And if not for· U.S. captain Jack
Nicklaus, it might have been
worse.
Despite a leaderboard covered
with American red numbers, perhaps the most poignant momenfof
a gray afternoon was Nicklaus
instructing Phil Mickelson and
Woody Austin to concede a 3 1/2foot par putt. on the 18th hole that
assured Mike Weir of Canada and.
his International team its only
point of the opening session.
In a tense battle with only six
holes halved, the match was all
square going to the 18th·when both
sides missed the green. Mickelson
blasted out to 12 feet, while Weir
chipped to 3 · 112 feet above the
hole. Austin made the par putt, and
before V~ay Singh could spot his
ball, the match was conceded.
''Captain Nicklaus was right. It
was the ri~ht thing to do,"
Mickelson s81d.
It was typical of Nicklaus, who
famously conceded a putt about
the same ~istance to Tony Jacklin
in tbe 1969 Ryder Cup that

allowed those matches to end in a chances. .
porate chalets. Lucas Glover and
draw.' That gesture became a symSabbatini and lmmelman, who Scott Verplank made a par from
bol of sportsmanship in match play lost an early 2-up lead, were all the bunker for a 2-up win.
between countries and continents. square ~layi ng the 18th when
Woods and Howell had a few
. ''That didn't sUJVI:ise me at all Sabbatiru hooked his tee shot into nervous moments, even though
with Jack," Weir S81d. Kl guess I'm the water, leading to a bogey. Zach they never trailed after the sixth
a little old fashioned that way. It's Johnson played his tee shot well to hole. They were I up on the 16th
a gentlemen's game."
the right, Stewart Cink found a hole when Choi hit his tee shot into
Then again, this was only greenside bunker, and Johnson the water, and it looked as though
Thursday - and it was clear the secured the match with a bunker ·the Americans had controL Howell·
Americans were in charge.
shot so close it was conceded to followed him into the water with a
The matches began 30 minutes par.
fairway metal to lose the advanlate because of a downpour on th~
Els and Cabrera were run over tage, but he redeemed himself with
lie Bizard, and once they began, by Jim Furyk and David Toms, a 15-foot par putt from the fringe.
the Americans wasted no time tak- who raced out to a 3-up lead with
"I did not want to miss that putt.
ing control. Steve Stricker, return- five holes remaining. But the I was not going ·to miss the putt,"
ing to the Presidents Cup after an International team won two Howell said. "I can't let him
11-year absence, joined with rook- straight holes, and Els kept them in down."
ie Hunter Mahan for a 3-and-2 vic- the match with a 15-foot par/utt
They slapped hands w;tlking off
tory over the Australian pair of on the 16th. And it looke as the green, and Woods closed out
A~ Scott and Geoff Ogilvy.
though they would at least earn a the match with a tee shot into 3
Tiger Woods and . Charles halve when · Furyk pulled his tee feet on the par-3 17th.
Howell m were in the final match shot on the 18th into the water.
Still, no match was more comand picked up a 3-and-1 victory
Els played a fadeaway from the pelling than Mickelson-Austin
over K.J. Choi and Nick O'Hem, lip of a fairway bunker to the front · against Weir-Singh, and it certainwith Woods doing most of the of the green, and Cabrera's putt Iy was the loudest given the wild
heav:y lifting and Howell coming stopped 4 feet short of the hole. changes in momentum and a
up wtth big putts on the back nine. Thts ~utt was not conceded, and !lallery that cheered at the sight of
It was the big~est blowout in the Els mtssed it to halve the hole and 1ts Canadian star walking up to the
green.
opening sess1on since the lose the match.
Americans pitched a 5-0 shutoufin · Then there was Retief Goosen
Down early, Weir and Sin~h won
2000.
and StU'art Appleby, also tried to five out of seven holes to butld a 3But there were traces of 2005, squeeze out a half-point with a win up lead and appeared to be in conwhen the International side failed on the 18th hole. Appleby, howev- trol until Mickelson and Austin ran
to win any of the 12 matches that er, pulled his approach so badly off three straight birdies to square
went the distance. Whether it was that it took 15 mmutes to get a rul- the match. That set the stage for a
Ernie Els and Angel Cabrera, or ing, and Goosen's best option was drantatic finish.
Rory Sabbatini and Trevor to take a penalty stroke and hit
- Singh · holed out from a
lmmelrnan, · they. sure had their their third shot over a row of cor- bunker for birdie to win the 15th.

- Austin holed a 7-foot par putt
to halve 1he 16th, then Mickelson
poured in a .15-foot birdie putt to
win the 17th and square the matc.h.
Austin blinked ftrSt on the 18th,
missing badly to the left into a
bunker, and MickelSon did well to
blast out to 12 feet. Singh went to
the right, although Weir had a good
lie in the rough and chipped to Y
1/2 feet.
Austin made yet another clutch
putt, getting his Presi!}ents Cup
debut off to a rousing start, and
that's when Nicklaus stepped in.
Mickelson and Singh have a
strained relationship dating to their
argument over spikes at the 2005
Masters, but Lefty had no trouble
following the captain's instructions.
''There shouldn't have been a
winner orloser," Mickelson said.
But he jokingly got in Nicklaus'
way as Els stood over a par putt
from just a little longer, and perhaps it was fitting the Big Easy
missed.
It gave the Americans a fivepoint lead, their largest since 2000,
when they went on to a record
margin of victory.
"We've seen this board the last
two Ryder Cups," Woods said of•
the margin, before sarcastically
noting that the lead belonged to
Europe. "We're still a long way
away from this thing."

m:rtbune- Sentinel-l\e
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classified@!;a~:~~ibune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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)

LCRUMeMYDAILYREGISTER.OOM

!

'·

4

''

..,

BY FRED GOODALL
AP SPORTS WRITER

TAMPA, Fla. Jim
Leavitt was in his office,
watching film and making
plans for the biggest game
m South Florida's relatively brief football history
when he decided to take a
little night stroll.
Barefoot and wearing
shorts and a T-shin, the
only coach the school has
had mingled among thousands of studerits camping
out in hopes of getting
tickets.
Oh my, how things have
changed for the 18thranked Bulls.
Raymond
James
Stadium, the immaculate
65,657 -seat home of the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
and bi~gest stadium used
by a B1g East school, will
be packed for a USF home
game for the first time
when fifth-ranked West
Virginia visits Friday
night.
The mayor of Tampa has
proclaimed it "Green and
Gold Day," and one of the
tallest buildin!ls downtown
will be illummated in the ·
school colors.
The neatest thing for
Bulls fans, though, is
Leavitt and his players
have given them reasons to
believe they can·win -not
just put on a good show.
USF (3-0) knocked off
Louisville, then ranked in
the Top 10, two years ago,
and the Bulls shocked
then-No. 7 West Virginia
24-19 at Morgantown to
knock the Mountaineers
out of contention for a
BCS bowl. game last season.
.
Three weeks ago, they
won at Auburn to move to
the brink of the first Top 25
ranking in the program's
11-year history. .
"For them, I am assuming they will come down
here looking for revenge,"
·quarterback Matt Grothe
said of West Virginia (4-0).
"For us, we already know
we can beat them and that
~ives us confidence. Now
It is just a matter of playing
and having fun."
West Virginia coach Rich
Rodriguez
discounts
redemption as motivation
for
his
team.
The
Mountaineers haven't forgotten how the Bulls stifled offensive stars Steve
Slaton and Pat White, but
simply are focused on
playing better this time.
"It's not so
much
revenge as I guess it is
respect," West Virginia
linebacker Reed Williams
said .
"It's frustrating to watch
the film because we know
we can play better. But at
the same time, they made

IRONTON -While most
us play worse," Rodriguez teams only dream of being
said.
"Our . problems perfect; the Gallia Academy
against South Florif\la were volleyball team is getting a ·
·
that they had some guys chance to live it.
Iionton
tried
•
to
min
that
simply make play.s." ·
fact
Thursday
night
when
it
White ran for 177 yards
the
took
game
one
from
and two touchdowns, while Lady Angels 25-19, but
Slaton rushed for 89 yards GAHS quickly turned
and one TD to pace West · around and fired off three
Virginia's 28-14 victory in straight wins 25-22, 25-17
Tampa tl!VO years ago.
and '25-13 to improve to 14:
The Bulls did a better job 0 on the season and clinch
against both in last the Southeastern ·Ohio
November's
win
at Athletic · League South
Morgantown, holding the Division title and a spot in
duo to 60 yard~ rushing the Day of Champions
and forcing three turnovers championship game.
Larry Crum/pholo
by
White,
the
Gallia Academy also ·finds
South
Gallia's
Christina
Tirpak
hits
the
ball
during a high
Mountaineers'
quarter- itself ranked 18th in
school
volleybal.l
game
against
Ohio
Valley
Christian
· Division 2 behind its perfet:t
back.
Thursday night in Mercerville. South Gallia won in four sets.
USF nose tackle Richard record.
Katie Taylor, Alexis
Clebert said the keys to
After easy wins· of 25-14 had eight points apiece and
slowing Slaton, White and Geiger and Ryann Leslie and 25-10 to start · the Allie West had seven points.
another
talented helped keep their record evening, visiting Ohio
Rounding out the scoring
Mountaineer, Noel Devine, uttblemished Thursday night Valley Christian finally hit was Natasha Adkins with
will be discipline and good with Taylor posting 14 its stride in game three with three points and Rachel
points, two aces and 15 kills, a 25-22 win and almost took Merry and Ali sa Johnson
tackling.
had 13 points, five it to a frfth game until South posting two points each.
Geiger
"The thing is just about
OVCS saw Carman leadnot being nosey. As soon as aces, eight kills and three Gallia rebounded and edged
blocks and Leslie came up the Blue and Gold 25-22 in in~ her team with 16 points,
you get nosey, that's when with
I0 points, II kills, two the final game to take three wtth Christy Saunders postthey will break (a play) for blocks and an ace.
of four in high school vol- ing 12 potnts and Andrea
80 yards," Clebert said.
Kaci Shoemaker had four leyball action Thursday VanMeter coming up with
"We have to stay focused. points and an ace, Hannah
11 points. Lindsey Miller
. .. You have to. play your Cunningham had two points, night.
Nikki Fulks, Laura Gwinn had nine · points, Hali
guy and play your assign- nine assists and an ace and
and
Megan Sheets led the Burleson and Lindsay Carr
ment. That's it."
Courtney Shriver and Alex Lady Rebels in the first two had eight points.
Meanwhile,
West Swisher had a point apiece. games of the evening as
out the scoring
Virginia has to find a way Shriver also added six SGHS made quick work of forRounding
the Defenders was
to contend with Grothe.
assists and two kills and their guests. But thanks to Melissa Stump, Amanda
USF's sophomore quar- Swisher had seven kills and 12 points from Annee Jarvis
and
Samantha
terback threw for 279 three blocks.
Carman and six more points Westfall with two points
yards
Rounding out the contrib- from Christy Sanders the each and Allie Hamilton
· against
the
Mountaineers last year, utors was Brittany Miller Lady Defenders battled who chipped in a single
and is a threat to hurt them and Dana Dotson who had back, taking a commanding point.
running the ball, too. He's four kills and two blocks early lead and holding ·On for
Burleson also led her team
attempted _127 pas~es with- apiece and Amy Noe witli the 25-22 victory and with eight aces and seven
out throwmg an mtercep- two kills and a pair of evening the game 2-1 on the kills while Sanders posted
night.
·
six kills. Carr and Sanders
tion, a streak that began blocks.
Gallia Academy now preBut in the fourth and final had three digs ·each and
after he threw two picks at
pares for a visit from game Sheets and Gwinn Miller led the Defenders
Morgantown.
Chillicothe
Monday with the again came up big in holding with 13 assists.
"You get in his face and
freshmen
contest
beginning off the hard charging
OVCS also fell in a game
he has the ability to make
at
5:15p.m.
Defenders
to
win
in
four
earlier
this week against Elk
some room for himself,"
sets.
Valley
in
three of four games
Williatp.s, West Virginia's
South
Gallia
fights
off
Sheets
led
her
team
with
and 2525-15,
25-16,21-25
leading !!Ickier, said. "He
OVCS
tough
27
points
on
the
evening,
16.
.
looks downfield well, and
with
Fulks
posting
15
points
The
Lady
Defenders
were
he'll throw a strike to
MERCERVILLE
-What
and
Gwinn
coming
up
with
led
by
Sanders
with
16
them. We've got to 'get to looked like an easy night for
14 points for the home points, Andrea VanMeter
him and try to get him on the South Gallia Lady squad. Katie Lawrence with 13 points and Miller
the 2round as much as we Rebels quickly turned into a added II points, Ashley and Burleson with 10 points
can.r.
roller coaster ride.
Clary and Glenna Wright each. Carman added seven
The sellout crowd will
eclipse the 49,212 USF
drew to old Tampa Stadium
back Peyton Manning said.
for its inaugural game
appeared on the show last
When James co-hosted
against
Kentucky
season and other stars like the ESPY s along with
Joe Montana and Wayne comedian/talk show host
Wesleyan in 1997. The prefromPageBl
Gretzky have had memo- Jimmy
vious high for a game at
he
Kimmel,
Raymond James is 45,274 one has a sense of humor or rable performances.
appeared in several skits
Michaels believes the and danced and sang a veragainst West Virginia in a least enough perspective
show has had success with
2005.
on themselves to able to athletes over the last 32 sea- sion of Bobby Brown's
Rodriguez doesn't expect la~;~gh at stuff," Michaels
"My Prerogative" with
sons because by nature rewritten lyrics about his
the atmosphere to affect sa1d.
they ' re fearless.
the Mountaineers.
own fame .
James , got his lines
"They' re used to being in
He wouldn't say whether
"Our guys have to under- Wednesday and did a read
of a large group of he has another song and
stand it's going to be a hos- through of the material front
people and not knowin~
tile environment," the Thursday, leading Michaels how it's going to turn out, ' dance routine planned for
this weekend's show, which
coach said. "You'd rather to believe "The Chosen Michaels said.
also
features hip-hop icon
go into an environment · One" may have another natJames, who says he doesKanye
West.
like that than ge some- ural gift.
n't get nervous for big
"I
want
to make an
where there's nobody there
"He's really good at this games, is treating the show
and nobody cares."
stuff," Michaels said.
no differently and said col- impression," James said.
Leavitt would love to get
James follows in 'the fo()t- laborating with the writers "Just go out there and be
used to wading through all- steps of his boyhood idol, and actors has made him ori ginal and have some
night student campouts.
NBA legend • Michael ·feel comfortable with the fun. "
Last season, James led
"That was pretty neat," Jordan, who hosted the sea- sketches.
Cleveland
to its first NBA
"They make you feel like
he said. "They were a lot of son premiere in 1991 .
finals.
The
Cavaliers were
Indianapolis Colts quarter- you're one of them," James
fun."

and Gold in that contest.
Burleson also had 17 kills,
· eight digs and two blocks in
the loss, while Sanders had
12 kills and six aces, Miller
had 28 assists and four kills
· and Carr had eight digs. ·
South Gallia will return to
·action Monday when it travels to Fairland while OVCS
returns home for a game
against St: Joseph also on
Monday.

Monday thru Friday
HOW I0. WRJTE Aft AD
Succe11fut Ads
Should ln~tude These Items
To Help Get Response ...

James ·

•

. . .. . .

· ·-·- -

r

.. ..........- ...

-·------ ---I

tr~

t

ANNoo;mmos

Dally In-column: l:OG p.m. ·
MDIIday-Prfday far lnMrtlon

All Dlaphty: 12 Noon 2
•ualn-. .,.Y• •rtor To

(304) 675-1333
Now you con have borders and Qrophlcs
~Uo
oddedtoyourdasslftedads
(.~

For Sund•v• Paper

""'

Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for lartJe

• All ad1 mull be.pnpald'

I

___ .......

_...,.,._ ...

"1n .... •••IC.

'*,......

It~~~

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
kHncarlyleocomcaal.net

Tiainer Pco1tk&gt;n
A-1
Aro you lntO&lt;ootod in a Local cor1l&gt;I"Y olforlng "NO
rewarding pooition? IWS Ia DOWN PAYMENl' prO·
ounonlty -.g a pari- ~ for you to buy your
Ola11for Muon, WV pmvld- home inateld of -"9·
lng .-nllaVcommunlty • tOO% flnonclng

FACTORY SPECIAL. Brand
now 2007 32,&gt;152, (1,378
S.F.) Clayton, 3 bodn&gt;om, 2
beth with llrgo foml1y raom,
dining room and fully
equipped kltcllon Including
aldll training with • LOll lhln ptrlocl crec11
UmHod offer
with MR/00. Seofdng 81111 acx:opled
price of ~9, 999 1for Monctay-Frldly 3:30pm- • Payment could be tho doflvory, 1181, 2.5 ton oontral
8:30pm. High ICilool dlploo aomo u rent.
AC and vinyl oklnlng.
me or GED required. No Mongage
Locato... Cua1omizlng available:
experience
neceuary. (740)387-&lt;1000
Model on dl&amp;play only 01 The
Crimilll background dwd&lt;
Homo Show-Dormllo. C&amp;ll
required. haWI Bride Homo Approlt. 2000 Today: Tol-l""' Hl88-389l!an8portatfon and valid auto oq.ft, CIA, 2 112 aaM, 2 br, 5002
lneuranco. Paid training. 2t&gt;a, 2 car .garage. Go 10 - - - - - - Hourly 111e atart1ng 111 $7· oM&gt;.com ooc1o 7137 p&lt;loe -3 Bedt1&gt;om homos from
$8.00/hoUI'. P1eaoo calf 1 nag. 304-1175-1235
$214.38 per montll, lncluclos
304-373-1011 or toll trae at
many uwa&lt;foo, delhlery &amp;'
HITT-373-101 t.
881-&lt;Jp. (740)386-l!434
Nloe Ul8d 3.,.._ homo
We .. looking for pooplt
vlnjNlingle. Will help with
aged 12·14, 111-24 and Unlv.
dollvory. 740-385-4367 . •
oiRioGrondeS1udontl1o

Concealed &amp; Carry Class, pink spots on his nose,
NAA Certified Instructor, 12 answers to little buddy, Lost

Hour Class, $100. Bam, on Debbie Or off 141 ,
Oct.Sth. American Legion Reward for return. call

(old building) Middleport. (740)208.0376
Ohio. 740.256-6514 Email, - - ' - - - - - LOST:Mala All Whhe Cot on
O.J. Whne Ad · REWARD.
446,9618
GIVEAWAY

· - - - - - · REWARD! Losl Doberman,
Female, 4 month old puppy. 4yrs old, Male. Lasl seen

Call740-446-1689
Poplar Rklge area. Family
- - - - - - - pet. 367-7873 or 645-4084
Free kitten, black &amp; while, 6
weeks old, (740)742·2486
YARD SAu

FREE Mod-size male dog
mh(, 2yrs old loves kids,
good watch dog 304-675·
1780
------Free to good home, t4 wk
old F English P&lt;&gt;ntet" pup.
Full blooded. Lemon &amp;
White. Call740-441.0405

new•opo1 po~ll

mootl~ll

r
~~;::;:~~
r

i.a~uND

FOUND

y 1\Rl) SAlE-

G.\IJJI'IJLil
Family Yarn Sale at 6647 St
At 588, Friday 9/28 and
Saturday 9129 from Bam •

------Moving Sale 750 181: A"'
R..r. Sept 27, 26, 29.

www.comlco.com

1 mile below dam.
Home interior. furniture,

e 2007 by NEA, Inc.

Oct. 14,

j

rul

rmacy,

meroy.

4x4's For Sa le..............................................725
Announceman1 ..............:............................. 030
Antlquee ....................................................... 530
Apartments Ior Rant................................... 440
Auction Ind Fl • Mark81.............................'080
~- &amp; AcceaaorIea..........................760
AUlo 'p•·~
Ajllo Repair ..................................................no
AUioelor Sele.............................................. 7t0
Boats 6 Motors lor Sale ............'.................750
Building Suppllea ........................................550
Buslnesnnd Bultdlngs ............................. 340
Bualneal Opportunlty.................................210
·Buolnen Training ....................................... t40
Campere 1 Motor Homes ........................... 790
Cemplng Equipment ................................... 780
CerdoofThenko .......................................... OtO
ChlldiEiderly Cere....................................... 190
•~tcai/Relrt-rallon
Eu
•·
...............................840
Equipment lor Rent .................................... 480
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm E;::'l~ment .......................................... ~
Fermi r ent.............................................330
Farmolor Sale.............................................
For Leaae ..................................................... 490
For Salli ........................................................ S85
For.Sale or Trlde .........................................590
Fruita 6 Vagalables..................................... 580
Fumlahed Rooms........................................450
General Haullng ...........................................850
GtVIMIWIIY...................................................... 040
Happy Ade....................................................050
Hay 1 Oraln ..................................................840
Help Wenled ................................................. 110
Home lmprovemenle ................................... 810
Homeolor Sele ............................................ 310
Houaehotd
....................................... 510
Houl881or Ooods
Rent ..........................................
410
tn Memorlam ................................................ 020
lnaurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn Ia Garden Equlpmant ........................ 660
Lost end Found ........................................... 060
LOIS &amp; Acraege ............................................350

170

········h···
·· .. ·················"·"·540
MiscellaneousR··M
ere an..·d···1.........................
860
1
Mobile Home epar....................................
Mobile Homes for Rent ................... :........... 420
Moblle Homes f or Sale................................320
Money to Loan ..................,.......................... 220
MOtorcyclea &amp; 4 Whoalars .......................... 740
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Personals..................................................... 005
Pets for Sale ................................................560
Plumblng&amp;Heatlng .... ................................ 820
Professlonal Servlce&amp; ................ ...... ........... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr .................... ...... ..... 160

Reel Estate Wamted ..................................... 360

SChoolslnatructlon ............... ...................... 150
~-" p•- II F rllll
·~, ..n
e
zer............ ...... ............ 650
Shuatlons Wanted ....................................... 120
Space for Rent .............................................460

SponlngGooda ........................................... 520
SUV'alor Sale ..................... ,........................ 720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholslarv ............................................ .'...... 870
Vans For Sa le............................... ................ 730
Wanlad lo Buy ............s····--···,·1·······················090620
Wanted to Buy- Farm upp ea ..................
Wanted To 00 ............... .......................... ..... 180
Wanted to Rent. ........................................... 470
Yard Sal• Galllpolle...:................................072
Yard Sei•Pomeroy/Middle .........................074
Yard Sai•PI. Pleasan1 ................................ 076

I

abletopaasabactground

W-

In_,

I

llaP WANIID

Attic, Clara Burris residence

I

122 Garage St, New Haven •

304·862·2530
100WORKERS NEEDED
Ceoi&gt;ort Sale 32 BurdeHe .Assemble
crafts, WOOd
.
Addition Sat 9129
•lems.• $480/wk "atena1
provided Free informations
Estate
Sale Saturday
·
Seplembor 291h 2303 MI. pkg. 24Hr. 801-428-4649
10

Vemon Ave. Pt. Pleasant

M

.ADVOCATE for Non·profit

Yard Sale Sept 29th, 8·??' CSexuat Asgaudlt .A~urce
locate m M&amp;son
Rooseve..• Elem. SchOOl At Center F
I . Deg .
2N to be held in the school
~n~. u_t·ti~rld ree •n
parking lot renting table SOCIB service e or .com·
space 01.11 for $20 call 675· =~~~~~ w:~~~e~~n:
8862 if interested. All sons
to devel
of things Come See USit Alt ~S::.OOs e r d op:n1
Proceeded Go to Six Grade . e p~ram an wo ng
t np..
. 11 ,1
w1th v1ct1ms of sexual
assault. Qualified applicants
should send resume to
AUCilnN AND
CONTACT Rape Crisis

ib!

r

F'LtAMARKEr

I Cenler, PO

Cross Creek Auction Buffalo
Au ction Saturday 6pm
Amish bakad Banana Bread
&amp; loal white Bread. Building

is lull. Slarting 10 sell high
quality knives such as Case,

Buck &amp; MossyOak. Visa
and Mesler Card 1304)550·
1616StaphenReedy t639

From$1,800payment
GOry (740) 828-2750

...............,

lntormallon.

,....... w, Mmltatlon or

111--~----i,.
leu
. .~.

r

dlaartmtl . .on bMicl on

- · ootor,I'IUgloft. ...
t.mlllll 8lllu. or nltlonll
origin, .. ..., I - I I I

.......,.-

,. ......... llmtlatlon or
dtoortmi-."

ance Is available. Lakin lor Interview 3Q4.8?s.ao76
Hospital ls an EEO/AA
.

,...... . . ._.,

OHIOVALl.EYPUBliSH·
IN!l 00
nd
· ~·-•
reeommawith8
do
1 you
•·-·· --•
1 -n...
peop
~~. UN
NOT 8 toyou nd
rough tho'!.,.1
have lnwaallgatod tho
olforfng
·

Covenan1

&amp;

Restrlcled to proi:!Ct

your

Utilities

lf1YII1ment. OUtdoonman
~--. Slzoo 2 • - to 6

010

'i22:soo.

·~.=...,_....

=~·priced from

............ _. ...,.

oNOTICb

$35,000 cal Paul Smlfh 300·

810.5978
For .Sale by owner, Nloe,
38R. -•,
o~
·~ a~
·~ &amp; · • MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
Ranch with unattached RENT, 1031 Goorvo• Creek
- - . .. 10.5 -·-- -. 24' Rd, 44t-1111
ground pool wl~
1.: I ' 1 \ I '
localod just minutes rom · ~;::::;;:::;;::::,
Gallipolis city, 110\Jm off D'
Neighborhood
Rd,
Jloul8
$127.500. Call fOr Appt.
FOR RENT
(740)441.()448
,

.:....:..c..:..:_==--=

U::': -

r

l'tfotcY

roi..&lt;MN

House tor saki In Radn8 3

••NOTIC::I!**
Smart. Contar:1
fhe Ohio Oivlalon of
Rnancili
lnatttution'a
Office of Comaumtr
Alfllrs BEFORE you raftnonce your homl or
a loin. BEWARE
of requeoto for any large
advance paymenta of
fool 01 1nour1nco CWI tho
Offlca of c.;,...mer
Affolra toi fiee\at ·1 .27 &amp;0003 to 1r1om tt tilt
morlgage broker or
lender 11 propeny
llclnlod. (This 11 1 public
service announcement
hom lhe Ohio Valley
~Publ;:lsh;lng;Comp;a~ny~);:~
Borrow

j

rio

I

I'Roml!iloNAL

StllvKD

1

TURNED DOWN ON

126

Knowledge 01 Cunent
Maintenance man for rental Computer Programs. 1Wo
property, send r86ume ~o Weekends Per Month
Sen"ntl PO 0 _ 729 33
" •
uv.o.
•
• Required .
Interested
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
Persons Uay Appty Dally,
Medical assistant needed lor Mon.·Sun..
9-4
P.m.
busypl'rjSicien'sofflcelntho lntorvlsws Will
Ba
.

- I a In
ol tho low. Our

1
•._t11ia now I I 1

contad BtcQJ!I
CltrWO!ftca sciciAL SECURITY /SSI?
Kim Billups, AN DON, at ee''"'nt
Applications No Fee Unless We Win!
LB~n Ho~nal, t.al&lt;in. wv at ~-· Being .........,. ~ A
•••_582_•••
1~
~
·.......,._ ~
- 5

Fuii·Time
Record
from
Clerk/Oflice Aallatant With
8·00
· AM . 4·00
· PM r191td· Receptlonlot
Dulles.
lng the postllons.
Applicants Muat Interact
L 1H Ha1 h A
Well With Families &amp;
oca h.~e PCeA'I .. ~HA"?''s Visttora Be Detail Oriented
now Iring
" , Posaeu,
CNA's and STNA's,o. Ftexibfa
Self-Starting,
scheduling. Appl)' In person ADitltias, Capatlkt of Muttlor call 7:to. 441 • 13n . 2 Talking With A,ecuracy &amp;
Commerce Or.
Computer Literate With

Sardllll Rd. Utilities fetdy,
Flat lot, S25,000/0BO 300·
67!1-4.411 L08YO Mooaage
Gorgeous Ro&amp;klenllal loti
located on Muon 1 ~
County Nne, Underg~ound

lfwell-ectvlf?'
that off'In

E?'ployer. Please

304 -s75.oe60 · ext
Monday thru Friday

-

-

Lars&amp;:
ACREAGE

2.12 acres walnut Creek

Thll oww P 0 wMI nat
knoMugty .,wpt

atH fuU·ti'ne and part-time

WANIUI
~
·~od
che&lt;JI.
caseo.
a dollra
Cd 404-328-6758
1o
won.,H you
as haWI
a reap._,
--·10iii8uviii-_.l - - - - - - - TEAM member coli
at Alklrs·s ...
A'IONI All Arlllf To Buy or (740)4411-3808 for lmmed·
HerrisonvYie. 9:~5:00.
••1 SOli Shirley Spears 3fJ.t.. 1 int rv1ew
20• acres o1 reason~
Y ·
'
a• e ·
Estate Sale. 84 Olds,Ref priced land for residential 875- 1429 ·
side ...... ~de, gas range. building site. Gallipolis area Bob Evans In Mason now Ohio Vofloy Homo HAith,
..1·5171
bed .,room set, TV, on 1y. Ca11740-....
hiring experienced Grill Inc. hiring AN's, STNA'I,
stero,kitchen items, 209 .,.,.-..,--:::..,---..,--::: Cook&amp;, Satwro &amp; Kitchen CNA'a, CHHA's, pc•·
~I.
••••, te ~.op Dollar: us
·- Ing app.cat~.
• ··- ~S.5th,Midd. 9·27- 9-28.07 ~u
· · PfiiP. Apply In person NO -ept
·~·
Silver and Gold Colna, phone calls
LPN~. ~lflw
Large 6 family, Oct. I, 2, 3, Proofsets, Gold Rlnga, Pre- '----....c....--:::- and Benallta Including
good quality clothing. game t935
U.S. Currency, Health CM Sarvfcos Group haalth inturonce 8lld
tables, wall hutch, light fix· Soi!BIIO Diamonds· M.T.S. lba Nations loading mileage. Apply at 1480
t~ros, stereo, lavalory, relrig- Coin Shop, 151 Second provider of onvlromental Jacbon 1'11&lt;1, Qallpolfo or
orator. Barbie Jeep. Nortl~ Avenue. Gallipolis, 740-448- se.MCOS to lhe long term phone toll trae 1~1Track, lree&lt;lmill, mD 2642.
cars Industry Is -.g for 1393.
machine, exercise bike, old - - - - - - - house
keepertllaundry
cane chairs, cabinet, lots of Lookilg for land. priced rea- ald08lor iopallllllfng homo. PIT Admin. Alii. noedod.
mlsc,behindMssonlcLodge sonoblo.C&amp;II740-645-6299. Apply In peraon: 38759 Computer exp. a muat.
In Radne, (740)949·2671
Leave a message. 740-645- Rocklpnnga Road, l'tllnon&gt;y Flexible hrl. Apply
Ohio.
.at Alo Gr--~
UnlvefWity
Three lamlly yarn sale on 6299
m~
-143, lhrse mllss wast of Paw Paws, bfacl&lt; walnuts. Immediate fuH time opening C&amp;fltorfa or cai24H860
Harrisonvilleatjunction692, hickories, p1eue call first, for r8CfH)Uonlst In a buty
starling ooon Sept. 27, Fri. (740)698-6080
modiOli practice, appllca· Pan time to prepare"
28th, Sat. 29th, Sun :lOth.
lions maybe plcfrup at SuRa neodod for busy to office,
Property to buikf home in 112 Pteaaant Valley Hoepffal Pomeroy location. flOOd
Wyatt's 51148 51. At. 124 GaHia County. Proler s-10 muat be abletolypo &amp; expo- computer aldHo required, wll
near Apple Grove, Fri. &amp; Sal acres, high and dry. Call nonce hslpfui,
lraln. Send """'"" 10' Dally
28th &amp; 29thlwo families new Mrty colloc1 0 321 -453
Sentinel, PO Box 729-13,
to tho arsa hiMI just moved t:St nlnga
· lakin Hospltef currently hal POmtroy, Oh 4.1789
Into lhsir newly buiH home &amp;
eve
·
. posl11ons available for
do not have enough room want 10 buy Junk cars call Certified Nursing Alalatant
POST OFFICE NOW
lor all of lhelr stuff· 18' boat 740-3B8.Q884
'
(CNA'S) for full tlmo and
HIRING
w/mofor, household &amp; misc. ~~i!!~!'!!!'!!!!!... temporary (90day) work In a
Avg. Pay S20nv or
itam~ everything priced 10
WE BUY USED
t14 bed Long Torn C&amp;ro
$57K anlllalfy
. sell, rain cancels, 1740)590- MOBILE HOMES Facll~. Full·tlmt employ· Including Fadaral6567
Gary (740)828-2750
msnt oilers on exten~ve and OT,PaldTralnlng,
YARD SAlEbasnefit package,! lncludllng
vacationt·FTIPT
Pr.l'u:AsANr
tate
civil
asrv
co
ret
re---1·8fl6.--54-2·-153-t
~
.
mont, earn up to 15 day&amp;
USWA - vacation per YHr, 18 day&amp;
Antique Sale
by
~cl&lt; leave, and t2 plus paid Pracf810n Eleelrlc now ~iring
Appointment Only, Clara's 1110·
·
holidays; hea!tMite lnsur· Ucenled Btctt1ctans. Call

r

Nica312Bf~

-= . . . _. " " '

r

mow
. er,mlcrowave,rocker
'
chair.

..

fair lfoualntl Act

7-.

Plck,Up at Clothesdrver,sheets,

OWNER FINANCING

-..
oi11A

Ple11e call
at 877-11930300 IXI.1 and mentiOn tho
Galllpolfo otudy fo&lt; more

&amp; 9128.
()plnlont, Ud

4pm

_,...,.

ln ........ , 0

11125

~~~~~~~~F~·~~~=~~=~
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Sat.9-29.

.

All .... _

mat Pill $70 In Gallipolis on

I

MIScellaneous

Gl
...........
--·.....·

pottic:lpate In a f1M1 I1Udy

aduh .&amp; . children wintet"
AUCI10NAND 1.1116 Hl!u&gt;WMmD
. . ~~~10 Hl!u&gt;WMmD ,.
.....,, ....... ,...., .
OisapP.,ared Sspt. 1st, clothes, m•sc.
~ FtD. MARKEr • •
••
Clollpaflo c:.nor Collogo
Female Goldon Relrlevet", Sept 28&amp;29, flam • 1 2993
(C&amp;rtera Cloao To Home)
Jacf&lt;Bon Pika area. Rawardl State Routs 14 t. Bunk beds, RIVERSIDE Auction Barn
Aramarf&lt; Corrocflonlll : Declfcatod oxperl- Cll Todayl
446-4250 (Chip)
kids clothes, kilchen items
·5Miles Balow tho Dam
5etvlcal ~ ~
oncod tflAo. PCA'o, CNA'a
Hltl0-214-0452
and more.
Tools, Furniture. HOU&amp;Ihokt
.. ....&amp;.....tionl for Food
&amp; STNA't. Eltablllhed and ._., ire 11 w , Q .earn
FOUND .Album in Frulth
Items Something for
..........Pllarmacy p~. lot. "My r~ YARDSAu:Eve~ne. EVERYSat.
5erviceSuporvfiOIO. .... reapocte&lt;IIOCal home
School Memories "High
l'oiiiFROV/MIDIJU. Night 0 6pm. 740- 258- Corr1&gt;atltive wages and full hoalfh agency l.ocatod In
SChool" pictures and some
padcaga. Must be Galllpolla, Ohio 1181 lVIII6989
College·O.U.

-r.

r---=---"1

~;

I

1,------r'·
i

b-_.........

•onw-. """" _ .. _..,.,.
In"'..,. ...... ......,

POUaU' ----~~~••--·1'1111U\18
AIIIRI .. I wllllllr t l'Wtr.noiiOf'la.nlletolltftM..,.,.
. . . . MOUPIICIItyb...,IMCiftiY . .
lnY 10M .. tiPIMI
rrom ... ,.. r n ,., ........
CorrM~ton ...... Nell
•lloa
art 11wy1 Htlflllti!MI. • Ct.wtn rMt ............. • AI rM1 1Ctuli1111ct•• . .
10 the fedlrll M Meullng Act IIIII 1M. • 1Ne

childrens pet, no collar, has

after Spm
Free Kittens Call 74Q.4.469632

e-.

Borders$3.00/perad

Thunc:lay fDr Sundaya

ILosl male beagle,.beloved

Uveatock ............................ .......................... 630

swept in four games by the
San Antonio Spurs. A high
school phenom, he skipped
college to become the overall No. I pick in the 2003
draft, and in four seasons
has become one of the
league's marquee players.
James grew up in Akron,
just 25 miles away from
Cleveland, but he might
want to stay in New York a
while after the show is over.
A lifelong New York
Yankees fan, James took a
moment during a Thursday
conference call to graciously
congratulate
the
Cleveland Indians on winning the American League
Central Division title.
Then he predicted that the
Yankees would beat the
Indians when the two teams
meet in the playoffs.

Qlsplay

• Stllrt Your Adl With A Keyword • Jndue141 COmplete
~ptlon • lndudti A Prk:1l • Avoid Allbr•vldonl:
• lndude PhOne NurnMr And AcktrMI When PIMded
• Ad• Aoukl Run 7 DaYI ,

\\'\ UI \1 I \ II '\ I ..,

Ohio Volley
Publlahlng -rvn
tilt right to odft,
rwjtclorconcetany
ad 11 anyflmo.
Muat
on tho

Word Ads

l\egt~ter

In Next Day•a P•per
Publbtlon
Sunny In-Column: 1:00 p.m. •und•y Dlaplay: l:OQ .p.m..

:00 a.m. tQ 5:00 p.m.

Raiders sting Hornets
CHESHIRE
- River
Valley improved to 8-0 in
the Ohio Valley Conference
with a commanding performance over visiting Coal
Grove Thursday night,
defeating the Hornets in
straight sets 25, 16, 25-12
and 28-26.
.
The Raiders were led by a
trio of' 13 point performances from Mackenzie
Cluxton, Kari McFann and
Kirsten Carter with Carter
also adding three assists for
the winners.
Brooke Taylor led the
team in hitting on 22-of-26
with nine kills. McFann was
14-of-15 with seven kills,
Carter was 14-of-20 for
eight kills and l)iana Corfius
was 16· of-19 with seven
kills. Jacqueline Jacobs
added four kills and Cluxton
had two kills in the victory.
With the win the Lady
Raiders improved to 10-5
overall and 8-0 in the OVC
as the Raiders close in on
their sixth straight title.
River Valley's junior varsity squad had similar
results, "lso keeping its perfect OVC record intact with
a straight set victory 25-15
and 25-16 over Coal Grove.
Kayla Smith led the attack
with 13 points and five
assists, with Jacobs posting
eight points and seven kills
and Elizabeth Hamilton had
seven kills.
Overall the Lady Raiders
junior varsity team improves
to 9-2 overall and 8-0 in
league play.
River Valley will return to
action Saturday startin~ .at
noon wheo Logan v1s1ts
Cheshire.

Sentinel

ca~f~::y... (7!~2ro446~42 (7!~2ro~!~~~~56
Oeatltirec Acl• ·

.

No. 18 South Florida
. Prep Volleyb~ll Roundup Gallia county
relishes chaJienge ·· BI~~~e1s remaJD perfect, win SE?,~~!~
.
t
N
5
wvu
·.
agmns . Oe
. ..

m:rtbune

To Place

Websijes:
www.mydaitytribune.com
www.mydailysentlnel.com
www.mydallyreglster.com

area. Approlt. 4 ocroo, II
proleaalonally landacaped.
111y1o wllh 4
bod&gt;ooma, IMng room, 11m
din·
lng roorn,ldtchon,largo ·
~~=::=,r:-~
Iorge Aorlda room complatoly cadtr opono onto
palfO pool area. Hoaledln
ground5 pool encfoood byprlvacy lenclng and land·
ocapod. Flnlohod 2 car
garage attaef&gt;od
~~
and flnlohed &amp;
car

-

r.::.•

,.,..:~='::;

__
• _'_ ·_ _ _ __

3 bedrOom. 2 bltto home In
Syracuse, call (740)94G·
2513
3 Bedroom. 2 Bath,
Fireplace, on 3 to 4 acres in

k1

garage,
amall back yard,
$835 (740)949-2303
--'-'--'----3 Bedroom House in
Syrocuoo. $500hnonth •
depOalt No Pall. (304)6755332 woekendl 74o-591 ·
0265
.
3 BR llouoo In Galipolls,
WID oonnec:tfOn, S4751mo.
$250/dep. Also t BA In
Gallipolis
$275/mo.

=

~~:- ~

~ lntl-:~·000.00, Calf: 3BR

near
Holzar,
Appliances, No Pets.
REDUCED! Brand new $1150/mo plus deposit
home in Golllpolle. 2BR, (740)245·9860, (740)6453636
2SA
w/3 acres mil. $82500. =--:---:--:-:C 740-446-7029
:Jl
3BR, 1 bath, 2·story oldor
Mo1ln.E lloMEs farm hOU8e on SA 554 ·

j

roR.SAu:

I

''eldweiiiRV

schools
•
S5751mo plus sec Oep. Pets
under 15 lbs wl$575 pet
~C::'::x:.v.;~~: depOSit . Avail- 10· 1~7.
u--...1 $ 3 000 Call ...S-3644 fat appllca-

bo - 5pm · 740
1 '••• · liOn
.
cMus1
1 afta
--'-----a1
r
.
- ~- 4.170or441 ·529&gt;1
3BR, 1.5 bam, 2-story on

1foMEs

=7~:chedgarage

house

_ 40_194
_ _1____

------c116x50
Fairmounl, 3BR, 28a
FOR SALE
Laminate floors, excellent
,
cond 1apptl
tor
hiM· wl
~ss,s19 500
age
0 down._;-····1\11\tmAnl 4 bad- '""'""'' arge ~.
, .
dCove ed 740-59&gt;1.0t35
rooms. rge ~r . . 7~ - -- -- - --

r1D

bedroom

l'tllnon&gt;y, llrgo &amp; vory clean,
t t/2 bath, ale. hardwood
-.. fulbuemont wl2 car

1998 14JC80 Fleetwood, aN
ekK:tric, w/central air, 3br, 2
full bath, master bath has
lg., oval garden tub.
La•........,/panlry room . Good
""'""'
condition Books $18,000
asking $13,700 304·593·
55911 or 30004·576-2999

Cedar St • $575/rent, $575

sec. dep. PelS

less man 20

lbs wf$575 per deposit. Call
446-3644for applicaiiOn.

59 Gertield • 2BR, 1BA
$4601monlh + sec. dep.
Youpayallutiitles. Caii446364
_ 4_ _ _ _ __
Allentlonl
Local company otfaring ~NO
DOWN PAYMENr programs for you to buy your
home instead ol renti'lg.
• 100% financing

Box 2963,
Rio Gande area on
.
• Lass man perfrl4;1 credit
Huntington wv 25728 . by GaHipolis area. Prefer pleas· COnducted Soon. App 1y Plauant Valley Rd.$89,900 2000 t4x70, 3BR, 2BA.Lota ~coap~od
October 1• 2007 ·
~ had Tod-1
Acrooo Ritch1e 17401709-11 116
cA o f t - , on ranted lot . • ...._nt could be me
ant, self mot1vat~;!\,!,
r
-,
s
d
Bridge TskAI Right 2 Milos
- .. ~.
working person.
en
'
'
'
S 34 Krou..Beck Rd. ·
-·~
·~ ..
An Excellent way to earn resu{nes CLA Bole 101J P.O. Last Buslnesa On Rl~1 38R, 2BA, Flanch tyle Gallipolis. 3 miles from Mortgage
Locators.
money.The New Avoo.
Box 469, Gallipolis, Ohio (Applicants Muot Live Wlll'!n houoe over 2,000 aq . ft, Grtllpofla ?" SR 588. - (740)367.0000
Call Marlyn 304-882·2645 45631
15 Mlloa For Sale!)' Hugokl1clton, lolsolcablnet 8935
·
Purposes)
Ravenswood space, LR, DR, Laundry - - - - - - - Nice clean. 2BA, 18A.
Carpenter to pul floor in liv· Part·lime position needed, ·care
Center.
1113 Room, on 1 acre of land, Great UHd 2005 3bedroom $500Jdep, Fridge &amp; Stow~,
ing room ol mobile home. billing experience profaned, Washington
St., Galio CO Sclloola, Asfdng 16x00 wlm vlnyVIthlngfe. W/Dhoof&lt;-up. Must aael Call
Only expeoienced need lo send reOJms to: ~0. Boot Ravenswood,
WV St 15,000 OBO (740)441· Mull soU, Only $25,995wlth daya-740-709-1285 or..,...
apply. (740)446-7039
388, Porner&lt;71, Oh 45769
Referencoo Requloed.
7842
daflvltry. Call (740)385-4387 740-446-3272
""Y . . -

• .., .....

�Frldly, September 28, 2007
ALLEYOOP

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page 87

c.;.

'-MI•~hMMIIM

Preny, 3BR, 1 Beth.
Downtown Gallipolis. Very
clOSEt to Washington Elem.
and GAHS. $6 95.

7......1....,

CORNEll STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Bedroom, . Addavllle
School District References
&amp;
Deposit,
$350/mo, Apa rtment available now
.(740)3tl7-Q632
Riverbend Apts. New Haven
- . , - - - - ---.,.,.. 1/N Now accepting apptica2 bedrooms. no pets. Call tions for Hud-Subsidized,
446-7275
--'-- - - - - - ' - one Bedroom Apls. UtiiiUes
2 8r , NC, Very nice with included. Based on 30% of
pol'9tlln Gallipolis. No pets. a~usted Income.
Call
740-446-2003 or 446-1409 (304)682·3121 awila~a tor
SeniOI' aOO Disabled People.
2BR, tBA, CA. Dishwasher. Equal Housing Opportunity
162" Chatham Ave.
38R, 28A, CA, large deck. Apartment for rent, 1·2
3696 BulaviUe Pike. Both Bdrm., remodeled, new carhomes are extra nice. 740· pet, stove &amp; trig., water,
446-4234 home Of 740- 208- sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
_781!.:._1_ca_ll.~---- $425.00. No pels. Ref.
2BFI, heatpump, covered required. 740-843-5264
patio fenced 'baCkyard w/
b lid:
W/O I 'dg
d Beaulllul ~pt.. at Jockoon
u tng,
' n e an E1t1t11. 52 Westwood
stove. No pets. No Smoking. onve
· , from $365 to $560.
~~ Ferry $300 dapoait
and $350 a month FIFIM. 740-446-2568.
Equal
Utlll!lee not Included. 304 _ !'tousing Opponunity. ThiS
institution is an Equal
6
7_t4_9_ __ __ Opport"nr'ty
ProVl
" 'der and
_7_:5·.,.
..
93 t'4x80 MH In Gell""lls Employer.
Ferry, 3BR, t .5BA, 250fmo - - - - - - - + $80 lot rent and $100 CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
deposit. No cenfr&gt;l Air. Call ED I AFFORDABLI!t .
304-675-3129
TownhOuse ' apartments,
,..,....-.,---.,.-:::--=~ andJor small houses FOR
Mobile Home for Rent, 2 BA, RENT. Call (740)441 ·1111
AJC, HUD Approved. Total for application &amp; information.
Electric, Rentindudestrash, - - . , - - - - - - water &amp; sewer, $325/mo,
$325 dapo~t. Call (740)9925639 for sppt.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

2

EJJm VIew

Apartments

Mobile Homes for Aent •2&amp;3 bedroom apa~tments
located off Sandhill Road •Central heat &amp; AJC
call 304-675-3423
•Wssherldryer hookup
Small 2 bedroom mobile •Tenant pays electric
home In Racine, $225 a · (304)882·3017
month, $225 deposit, years
lease, no pets, no calls after
9pm, (740)992·5039

1i)·.

Trailer for rent, 3BA, 2 BA.
GaII 367 •7762 or 446•4060

r

--

APARIME'\ri'IS ·
~ Rmr

I

i

1 end 2 bedroom apartmenta, furnished and unfurnlshed end houses in
Pomer~y and Middleport,
security deposit required, no
pets, 740-992-2218.
'-------Modem 1 BR Apt. Call 4463736

Free EsUmatea

1110
Ii. .
, ___Aiiiurosilili--.,1 -

-,!"""'.,...____.,

ll&lt;r

1\lE,....,
!"CIIANDISELOOXJUiiANJil l i

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
C
t e,
Ang Ie.'
channei,onere
Flat Bar, Steel
Grating · For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
So rap "ot
I Opa n IYIOn
" day,
M
as
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Frklay, Be.m·4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday &amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

(Propane
or
Natural)
Aluminum Fiberated Paint
(Great tor Mobile Homas) 5gal. Bucket $31.95. StaKool WMe Elastomer~ Root
Coatlng 5·gal. Buck•t
$7e.59. BPS Barn &amp; Fence
Oil Base Paint ( Barn Red)
5-gll. Bucket $69.95. We
carry Pittsburgh Paints &amp;
Sikkens Finish lor all your
coating needs.
Paint Plua Hardware
304-675-4084

e 404 456·3802
WANTID

j

,_..,.____...,
~
4 WM~R~aB

FOR SAIL

COOK
MOTORS 328
Jackson Pike. Quality
• ks wt'lh warren1y.
cars11ruc
Our low prices are posted on
vehicle. Compare price and
quality to vehicles anywhere. Stop orca11 740 -44•·
..,...
0103

i

2004 Sportster 883 XL
w/shield, Engine Guard,
Forward IooI co ntroIs, pu II
back H Bar, Two Seater,
Foot pegs, sissy bar, $50PQ. ·
(740)245·5027

I

4x4
FOR SAlE
.

72,876 miles, AC, alec
brakes and windows, cloth
Interior, Reese hitch, some
rust. $5000.00, Riverview
Productions (740) 441-1150
7:00am · 3:30pm, ask for
Rodney Rankin.

2006 Honda Gold Wing
$4,000 in accessories. Paid
$24,000 new-·$19,600. Call
740-367-7t29.

r

CAMPERs &amp;
MOTOR HOM.S

I

76 Air Stream, 31FT, great
oond~ion 304·674·0006 or
304-593-3933 $5,800 OBO

Fleetwood Mallard, 28ft,
ExceNent Condition, Garage
.
,
kept, Reese Hitch, Sway
77 Jeep CJ5, 4&gt;4. V8. Cell bar. 446-1266
.
740
740 645
2
..., I 1\ \ I ( I o..,
·3BS-086 or
•
·
6996
118
• ~~~ a mesoage.
;;;~=======~

f4ii ' MoroRCY~

l~

4 Wum~

IriO

.

1

Wanted

WANTED: Buckeye Community Services is

opening a new home and has the following
positions available to assist two individuals
with mental retardation in Chester (Meigs
County):
1)40hrs- 2:30pm- 12:30 am SIS; 3 pm12:30 am M!ru
2) 35 hrs -3 pm - 12:30 am Wff)t/F; 9 am 2:30pm Su
3) 351irs: 12:30 - 9 am SIS/Mrfu
4) 32 brs 12:30- 9a.m. Wffh; 12:30 am- 2:30
pmF
Must have high school diploma or GED. valid
driver's license , three years good driving

Attention Antique DeaiMS,
AlverBend Antique Mall,
Ravenswood, West Virginia
has vendor booths for rent,
lnform&amp;Uon,
668-2088

P11ture, Pleaaer no till
dril $8,000 A/C 4 row No
Till com
$1,500

l-=ty
tO Years

5yr old Registered Black
Angus Bull 304·458-1083
Boar Hog • 2yr old Hamp·
Ouroc, Top GenetiC&amp;. 740.
339-0057

_ __:.:__ _ _ __

• Complete
Remodeling

141-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

WilDe
CIIICI'III Wart

Pure bred Black Angus Bul.
2 112 years old. 740·446·

BARNEY

'

Driv~ways,

Sidewalks, Patios,
Co11crete Footers

TH' WIND'S BLOWIN' PURN
FIERCE OUT THAR, KIDDO-·
BETTER HANG ON TO YORE

J&amp;L
Construction

•:

I

• VInyl Siding
Replacement
Windows
Roollng
Decks
Garages
Pole Buildings
Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

't
-

t

l

trOE~'T IT t(.I'Ef\T ~

I

TI\E. P\J~ Of'l'l~

MIX~&amp;.TI~~i

I

~IRE.IQI. l'AAT~ W~

1'\'l'SE.LI' IIJ'\OWI t\G t
.C/1..11\ I' IT 1\1\ Tf\E.

I

'

n.

121'1. $$65.00

16 rt $83.00

Why drive anywhere else

IIYflll Poll'i' 'OO:Ii\ I~

'

I

I

.."

BIG NATE
WOW T&gt;iAT
WE'RE A
BANI&gt;, WHAT

Work
*Reasonable Rates
• Insured
* Experij:nced
References Available'
Call Gary Stanley @
740-742-2293

!&gt;I-IOULD

WE PO

FIII.!.T?

;

"•

\

.,

t

CARPENTER ,,•
"
SERVICE

NtwGiriQII
Electrical &amp; Pklmblng
Roofing I Gutter~

Siding a Painting
Patio and Porch Decka
wv 036725

Vin~l

V.C. YOUN G Ill
C)lj(' fi;:'
'n1 H I 'l

.'

i1 1

"
.,
~

PEANUTS

0

I

1,

I

IF I

I

ill,ll&gt;

I

I " 1 I •1 , •

~AD

A
51-lEEP,
i'DI.IERD
IT:

'

·•'

Dennis Bryant
740-742-2377

I I\\ '\.., 1'111&lt; I \ I I( 1\

AUTOS

COW and BOY
...----------,
r---------., .----------, ...----------,

roRSAr..E

COW, IVE

DECVED TO TAKE
lJ' THE IWUJ.

)

1991 Neon, auto, 4dr,
$1700. 080. Call 740-2561652 or 256·1233

Pltysiti&lt;m

Offrct (ptdirJJrics). High school graduate or e&lt;jttivalent. Certification
as a Medical Assistant or completion of one year Mt'dical Assistant
Program. Knowlt'dge of medical office billing, coding procedures,
and clerical needs rmportant. Excellent typing s~ills re&lt;juired.
Regismtion Clrrk-Parl-lillll posilrons (mduding benejitJ). VarioU! sltifis.
Knowledge of medical terminology preferred. Proficiency in dot•
entry and typing required Clerical skill s also required. Prior hospital

experience preferred'.
Certified Nursing Assistant (includes

benelito)-Mtthcal/SwgicaL Frt/1-

limt positio~ Shifts moy vary. High school diploma and CPR
certification are required. Completion of nursing assi.stant training
and CAN certfication is preferred.

1999 Chevy Monte CMo,
$3000; 1994 Chell)' S·10 V6,
Auto, $2400; 1993 Ford
Escort. 1 owner, $1400;
I998 Jeep Grand Cherokee,
$3900:
1998
Dodge
Caravan, $2400; 1998
Kawasaki Vulcan 800,
Saddlebags,
windShield,
$3200: 1992 Chevy S-10,
V6, Auto, ·$1200; 1997.
Chevy Cavalier, $2500. Legal Notice
(740)446-8172
Sealed, Bids are being
2003 Dodge Slratus, 2 door, accepted for a 1977
dump
4 cy t, Auto, Air, Sunroof, International
Bedford
93,000 miles, $4500 080, truck,
Township
Trustees
1740)256· 1233
reserve the right to
2004 Saturn ion. Sspd std accept or reject any or
transmission, 50,000 miles, all bids. To view or
E)(C. Cond, Great gas inquiries call 740·9g2.
mileage, $9,000, (740)441 · 70t 5. Mall bids to
9865
Bedford
Township,
92 Ford E.:plorer, runs &amp; 42774 Helwig Ridge,
looks good, low mileage, Shade, OH 45776. Bids
$1200 or best offar, accepted until October
9th.
1740)992·3457

NOTICES

97 Camara FIS, wht w/blk
racing stripes/racing spoiler.
looks/runs good. Priced to
. sail $26001 304·634-8523

Publir Notim in Nc,t·spapcl!.m
Your Right lo Know, ll!livered R~hl (o Your

Manley's

Recycling

•.

"

been

filed

in

Eynon, guardian of the
person and estate of

James A. Casto, an
Incompetent person.
Unless exceptions are
flied
thereto, said
account will be set for
hearing before said
Court on the 29th day
of October, 2007, at
which
time
said
account will be consid-

GARFIELD

1*192. . .

e.•SlllniiV
..dltfrltiiVI:II..UI
••
8:01 •12:H ••

...............

PIYINBTOP PIIIES.
111111111m CIIS ·•IIIIIIIM . . . .
earatv~~cCUMrt........

..

ICIIII,_ lllrr• PrlciSl

ered and continued
trom day to day until
finally disposed ol.
Any person Interested
may file written excep.:.

GRIZZWELLS

ti on to said account or

'M\$J"1

to maners pertaining
to the execution of the

fA.'r'A?

trust, not less than five

days prior to the dele

the set for hearing.

Probate Court, -Meigs J.S. Powell
County,
Ohio
for Judge
The Syracuse Racine approval and settle- Common Pleas Court,
Probate Division
Regional
Sewer ment.
District will hold a pub- ESTATE NO. 27979 - Meigs County, Ohio
lic meeting on the pro· 14th Account of Ruby (9) 28

CANT BE UNHAPPY
WHEN 'IOO'RE

•,...---....

IUYING
THE BANJJ.

L...........:JW.~ ~.....1.1--....:ii!l

5ID lUI Sl• 1•11111. 1141118
posed
Tackervllle
Expansion on October
9, 2007 at 7:00 pm at
the American Legion.
(9) 25, 26, 27, 28, 30
(10)1,2, 3, 4, 5, 7,8, 9

- -- -- - - Public Notice
- - -- - - - IN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
BATE DIVISION MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
Barbara J. Grueser
COURT MEIGS COUNFiscal Oftlcer
740-696-1244
TY, OHIO
(9125, 26, 27,28 (10) 1, Accounts and vouch·
ers of the following
2,3,4,5
named fiduciary ha s
- - - - -- - -

99 Plymouth Villager, teal
green, runs good, 132,000
miles, $2800,(740)59Q.76S6 __P_u_b_l_ic_N_o_t_ic_e__

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

YES,IlJT TUNING
ABANlliS CliiTE
DEPilESSING.

THEY SAVYOU

04 Chrysler Sebring, Peari
White, . 38,000 miles, great
condition, power everything,
$6500 060, (740)256·6362

Medical Assistant (including benefiu)- Full-time position in

4•

eouaina

2 Sptakeaay
rlllr

3 Ee&lt;ly

Peruvian

food
Ea&amp;l
Pass
All pall&amp;

30 Cei

4 Willi' lank

bv
34 lrfl"er or

7 Goof-pioof
(hyph.)
8 teetlt'

~o~ru~

9~~

T\1\~,

19 Diamond

38 Family

26 Finn up
27 Machine
tHth
28 Skimmed

43 Opening

otat
cooolldlonl ·~
2t lily.....,.. 39 Obtain
24 Me. li-ven 41 Rex Slout
of ftlmto
clotectlft
25 Pine far
42 Dell eamilg
45 Way out
46 Rllld ntlly
47 TOfl aaed'e

char8etlt'
5 Slay
through
reward
31 l'ln*n buy 6 King,
29 Veer out of 49 Paa~
32 Juataorape
to monaleur
conbol
51 Kltttn 1

Blyttr

ol Venice

3t Hom hoeka,
a.g. (2

- ·1

ptu

33 Ban 1r Jtrry

n•

lnotrutnlt'lt 35 Pickle
10 lur)lr volley
cholea
11 NYC opet'tl 36 Hand

38 Oamoel
37 Brilliance
39Dizzy

AstroGraph
'1bur&lt;8111illlat':

Soiurday, Sept. 29, aoo7
By Bemtce- Coot
You could be quite fortunate with friends
or acquaintances willing to work on your
behalf in order to gain advente.gaous
arrangements for you . Doors could be
opened to you without having to make a

Brickwork

1000 lb round Bales of Hay
call 304-761-0030

Previous surgical experience required .•

••

t Uh'a

23 Earth•a 24 VIolet
lead-In
27 Provide•

football team at Pennsylvania State
Unl110rsity since 1966, said, "The willlo
win Is Important, but the WJII to prepare is
vital."
.
That is so true, especial~ at the bridge
table. And you must also try to prepare
lor the most unfavort!lrte &lt;lstribution of
the missing kay cards. In this deal you
are South, the declarer in four llearts.
West leads a low trump. What woold be
yourpten ?
North's second-round jump to four
hHrta shows lour-card hHrt support
and some 1B or 19 high-card points. It
also denies a singleton or void in spades
or diamonds, because he dtd not make a
splinter bid.
II you are unlucky, you could lose one
heart, two diamonds and one club. But
you hal/8 10 winners In three spedes.
four hserts, one diamond and two dubs.
'!l&gt;u muet just get your tricks in before
they can establish theirs.
SUppose you finesse at trtcf&lt; one, Here,
East Will Win w~h his haart ~ng and, In
mldsasson form, shift to a club. Then
your oontract rs unmakeble. East gets In
twice in diamonds and can establish and
cash a club trick.
You should build up your diamond trick
so that you can discard your club loser.
Win whh dummy's. heart ace and play a
low Q8111ond from lhe board Suppose
East wins with his CJ.l&amp;en and shifts to a
club. Toke h with your ace and play
another diamond to his ace. Win the next
club play on the board and discard.your
last dub on the diamond ~ng . Than play
a trump and cteim, mentally thanking
West for nol finding a ch.tr opening lead.

G

I

-'

Ponierof, OH
740·985·3831 .

Room Addttlona a
Remodeling

~i'W.Lt~ SllE!

l
I

15517 St Rt 7 North

* Prompt and Qualify

to,

1
II

Shade River Ag. Service
YOUNG'S

~-&amp;.CNX£ l FE£LI

I

Also
Block &amp;

IIAv&amp;
GRAIN

Per dirrn. Graduate of an occredited school
of nursing with current WV lie&lt;nsing. CPR, and A,US are required.

Pass

DOWN

wannere

houaa

•'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

n

;

Triumph 12% Horse Feed .......$5.99/50 lb.
Sportsmix Dog Food 21-~........... $9.99/50·
S-UREA ......................$199/ton Bulk Only
Prierert Powder Coated Gates
tort. $53.00
14 $75.00

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

'VA BETTER HANG ON
MORE'N TMAT I!

MAT!!

l

WHAT A DEAl!!

• New Homes
• Garages

Wise were to be married
October 6th at Rutland
Church of the Nazarene.
Due to a recent medical ·
diagnosis. the wedding is
being postponed.
Pray for them as they wait
for G'od's healing and
leading.

...-·-

H-Honest

ROBERT
BISSELl
DONST.CDON

8Ft dloc $400, 7 112 Tyo

www.-1Htaa..koali!Mb7-

MTD, Brlggs
&amp; Str111ton

Free

e"perience and. adequate automobi Je insurance.

Registered Nurse-Suf8'''Y·

t"

North

20 Lawauh

Joe Pslerno, ooach of the Nittany Lions

l

MrlmlJ,

CLASSIFIEDS

F:Qunz:tFN

Harmod caiiUiea, And FurniWre

Crqjbmt~n,

IMPROVEMENIS

~==~==~--,~44~10~~~~~

Equal Opponunity Employer.

304-nJ-5061
304-882-3194
Strvicing
Lawn Tmclors,
Mowers, TUitrs,

6,.....,....--,
l_ SHOP

MEROWIIISE

$7.50/hr; Send resume 10: P.O . Box 604,
Jackson, OH 45640. Deadline for applicants:
1015107. Pre-employmenl drug testing.

West

powder

cauM

J s
A 54

Seutb

onlmala

56 Recolor
57 Cook llowly

22 Prevloua to

10 7 3

The worst is
yet to come

''
'.
'
"!'

MOWER

n._....
c .M~

~
Couch &amp; Love: Seat $200,
Queen set Mattfess $75, Ph.
304-615·5015
-------JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1600-537-9528.

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

/

HoME

ijr;,;;;:;:;:.:;...___, jio

Help

16 Sequtl'a

Dealer: North
Vulnerable : Both

MASON

53 Klutz
54 Plealnl
55 AMcy

18 Went ateady

Wise Concrete

ANt&gt; Tt4t lfST P,41rT 16 vlf GET
Vfti~IMITfl&gt; flrfE Mlft/IJTf6!

52 Sturdy loci!

" K3
t A QB
• Q 10 s 3

~=::::;-

\

eymboi

50 Quiz

" 7s
t 9.7542
• J 98

•
· •

\

owlmmsr
47 Csrlel
48 Alhenl'a

aequtl
17 Taka a

740· 446-0007

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

port

44 Furry

East
• 8S 52

" Q J tO 5 2

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

1 Gultarllt
-C'-'4011
5 Pound
sound
8 Fish bll1
t2 Rljllh'l wtle
t3 Python or
.np
14 Oramro
IWinl
15 hdtol-

West
• J 94

•

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bondod
740-653-9657

2000 Kawasaki Prairie, runs
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
gOOd,
2
wheel
drive,
$1500,
roR SALE
Unconditional lifetime guar·
740 59 0 766
r(_ _ _ ,.
' ,..,.
antee. Local reterences tur·
1 yr. ok:l Yorkie, CKC regisnished. Established 1975.
tared, app.ll. 5M:, $150,
Call 24 Hrs. {140) 446(740)590-7666
.
0870, RoQers Basement
Waterproofing.
Cocker Spaniels, 6 wks old,
3 females, purebred, both
parents on premises, $125.
(740)367-7231
Mlniat,re Plncher Pup• 2

I

H

r-

New sofa &amp; love seat, 5400,
New Kitchen table/ 4 chelr
$179.95. Mollohan Carpet
202 Clark Chapel Ad,
Bidwell, OH (740)366.0173
Mon-Frl 9a·4p Sat 9a-3g
appll calions to r 1 and 2 BR
•
.
~
Apts. Located on Coloma!
SPolmNG
Blackfl'an females, $300
1
Drive across rrom ·Gallia __
Gool:li
. each. · 8 weeks old.
County H_ealth Dept: No
(740)388-81 24
rental austance avatlatHe Mathews Switchbali Bow,
1 \lnt ... l l' l'lll...,
at this time. Rents start at 701b. completely set up $650
,\ I I \ I .., I ( II "'
$310 and $340 . Equal 304-675-2219
Housing
Opportunity.
FARM
(740)446-3344
~
,ANriQUEs
• ~

Help Wanted

~~-------.

Save 10% oft regular price

TO RliNr

iO

K 10 3
K 7 2

Soutb

· Guttering

RF.Nr

Wanted to ront- Elderly ooupie looking for smaA house
or mobile home In Por1er, Rt
160 or Georges Creek
areas. 740 4-46.()446

EQUIPMENt I SUPPUES
• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
Free Delivery
• Stop By Our Showroom
• Many More Items
70 Pine Street • Galllpolle, OH

H&amp;H

Commercial building "For
Renr 1800 square feet, off
Slreot perking. Greet locatlonl 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Rent 5300/mo.
Ca W.

t
•

.,_....,.,

Opening lead: • 6

SPJ\o;

FOR

$pef;lall•li In: .
OXYGEN l RESPIRATORY

740.367-0536

Lt~--itiiiitiiil;.,. on all Vent Free Gas Heaters 1996.Dodge Ram 1500 4x4,

r

Middleport, lrom $327 to
$592 .. 740·992·5~ . ~qual
Housing Opportumty.
Honeysuckle
Hills
Apartments now acoeptlng

7 40·367·0544

Twin Atvers lOwer is accept.
I' .
fo . :.·
1ng
appHud·subslzed,
rcatrons r wao.rng
llet tor
1- br,
epartment,for
the
etdertyldisabled call 675Equal
Housing
6679
Opportunity
- - - - - -- Very nice apar1ment fof' rent
In Pomeroy, great neighbor·
hood, quiet. Newly remodeled. New app11 ancas, 2
Bedrooms, t bath. Central
Air &amp; Heat. Call992-9784 or
992-5094 tor more details.

Gracloul Uvlng 1 and 2
~
Bedroom Apts. at Village lw--tliuvuvoiiiliiiiil-_.1
• ManorandRiversideApts.in
.,

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
for Rent, Meigs County, In
town, No Pets, Deposit
Required. (740)992-5174 or
(740)441 ·0110.

Local Contractor

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Bath. Mlh Pool &amp; Baby
POO. Pstio, Start ~
No Pets, Lease Plus
Saourity Deposh Required,
(740)446-3461 .

Nonb
• AKQ
"A i84

&amp;MEOICALE

..

40 - ...tilled
41 Molll
42 lloolcc-

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Complllte Tree

NEA Croaawor·d Puzzle

BRIDGE

•

•

L--------...l

request.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - Betting on
"pie In the sky" will be toying with folly,
especially 11 the endeavor Is predicated
on something over· which vou nave no
control. You could lose It all .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - Clive
ekpllcit instructions to the one who is
anending an important matter. esJ&gt;!telally
It you can't do It yourself. Merely assum·
lng he or she should understand Mlat
you want is a big mistake.
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Even 'though the possibilities for material
gain look reasonably good , they aren't
apt to gratify your wants or expectations.
. Don't overestimAte what you think you
should make.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22..Jan . 19) Should you come acrose something you
strongly desire when shopping, a!l your
economic discipline co uld tty out the window. Don't lorget your other ltnanclal
responsibilities so quickly.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - Your
generosity wiU have limitations regarding
those persons for who'm you're responal·
ble. Yet wtlen it comes to your own
desires, you·n suddenly turn into being a
ttt&gt;eral spender.
PISCES tFeb. 2tl-Msrch 20) - Whet you
say Is apt to be rigorously scrutinized for
slights or innuendos by your companIons. Some remarks lt1at seem harmless
may be judged as contemptible
ARIES (March 21·April 19) - A close
friend who is always wasteful with
resources might took upon yours as his
or her personal staSh . Don't let this person pull a pity party In order to get a hold
or your cash.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Your inner
Sarah Bernhardt ma)' be vying tor attention and encourage you to do a bit ol
playacting. You won't win your audience's
attention by pretending to be wh8t you're
not.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Although
your Intuitive perceptions may be right on
target In some areas , your Insights
regarding human behavior In social situations will sadly be way ott track . Don't
rely on them.
CANCER (June 21-.July 22) - Be wary
ol acting on an impulsive action, espe·
clalty 11 It Involves ·a combination ol
money and friends . Conditions will be
much more conducive to loas when It
come• to gambling.
LEO (JUly 23-Aug. 22) - Oavote your
time and eHort to performing your duties
with responaiblllty and devotion where
your worlc or career Is concerned. Put
peraonel problem• behind you 10 that
you'ra not dlttracted.
VIRGO {Aug. 23-Sept, 22) - Thlrw II I
good chance you could 1pt1nd more ttmt
r•tlonatl.zlng on tt1e dlfllou~ of 1 proj1ct
than on trying to do your b1at. Ntgatlve
thinking will only make the Job more
tedious.

SOUP TO NUTZ

by Lilli Campos

Celeb'ily ~ CI'YI*lPM n Ned trom Ql.dlllOns b'y IMO.a Pllldt. pU Will PI8Wt
WI IIIIer in lhe ~ Dmlor ~

fllillly's due: W1!r!JB1s P

"ZFUDU

AP

VDUJZ AH
RLWJGUK

HC MJB ZC
ZFRP

OU ZDIOB

·,

MCDGK. MU JDU JGG

CH ZFU

EDCCA CS

ECHKRZRCHRHV. " • YJLUP KUJH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'No matter what cullure we'ra kom, e110ryone loves
roosic." -Billy Joel
'Mus~ is the soundtlaclt ol 'f'lX lite.' - Dicit Clark

'~~:t:~' e~~ot\1A-~£~s·

....
WOlD

lik1i ~r CIA! I . POllAN - - '·- ' - - -

0 Reorro"')a

!alton ol lllo
four r&lt;111mblad -d• b.
low ro form four 1lmplo word1.

MAl C I X
S0 PI E

l l

I~

I

SWM-lm ANSWERS ~~21~o1
bocor- Thumb- Newsy - l..epcy -CHANGES
JustwllfallhouJbt I bad a clear pitlure o! life,"die c:ulie siglled.
"the dwllll!l CHANGES."

.ARLO &amp; JANIS

�Frldly, September 28, 2007
ALLEYOOP

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page 87

c.;.

'-MI•~hMMIIM

Preny, 3BR, 1 Beth.
Downtown Gallipolis. Very
clOSEt to Washington Elem.
and GAHS. $6 95.

7......1....,

CORNEll STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Bedroom, . Addavllle
School District References
&amp;
Deposit,
$350/mo, Apa rtment available now
.(740)3tl7-Q632
Riverbend Apts. New Haven
- . , - - - - ---.,.,.. 1/N Now accepting apptica2 bedrooms. no pets. Call tions for Hud-Subsidized,
446-7275
--'-- - - - - - ' - one Bedroom Apls. UtiiiUes
2 8r , NC, Very nice with included. Based on 30% of
pol'9tlln Gallipolis. No pets. a~usted Income.
Call
740-446-2003 or 446-1409 (304)682·3121 awila~a tor
SeniOI' aOO Disabled People.
2BR, tBA, CA. Dishwasher. Equal Housing Opportunity
162" Chatham Ave.
38R, 28A, CA, large deck. Apartment for rent, 1·2
3696 BulaviUe Pike. Both Bdrm., remodeled, new carhomes are extra nice. 740· pet, stove &amp; trig., water,
446-4234 home Of 740- 208- sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
_781!.:._1_ca_ll.~---- $425.00. No pels. Ref.
2BFI, heatpump, covered required. 740-843-5264
patio fenced 'baCkyard w/
b lid:
W/O I 'dg
d Beaulllul ~pt.. at Jockoon
u tng,
' n e an E1t1t11. 52 Westwood
stove. No pets. No Smoking. onve
· , from $365 to $560.
~~ Ferry $300 dapoait
and $350 a month FIFIM. 740-446-2568.
Equal
Utlll!lee not Included. 304 _ !'tousing Opponunity. ThiS
institution is an Equal
6
7_t4_9_ __ __ Opport"nr'ty
ProVl
" 'der and
_7_:5·.,.
..
93 t'4x80 MH In Gell""lls Employer.
Ferry, 3BR, t .5BA, 250fmo - - - - - - - + $80 lot rent and $100 CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
deposit. No cenfr&gt;l Air. Call ED I AFFORDABLI!t .
304-675-3129
TownhOuse ' apartments,
,..,....-.,---.,.-:::--=~ andJor small houses FOR
Mobile Home for Rent, 2 BA, RENT. Call (740)441 ·1111
AJC, HUD Approved. Total for application &amp; information.
Electric, Rentindudestrash, - - . , - - - - - - water &amp; sewer, $325/mo,
$325 dapo~t. Call (740)9925639 for sppt.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

2

EJJm VIew

Apartments

Mobile Homes for Aent •2&amp;3 bedroom apa~tments
located off Sandhill Road •Central heat &amp; AJC
call 304-675-3423
•Wssherldryer hookup
Small 2 bedroom mobile •Tenant pays electric
home In Racine, $225 a · (304)882·3017
month, $225 deposit, years
lease, no pets, no calls after
9pm, (740)992·5039

1i)·.

Trailer for rent, 3BA, 2 BA.
GaII 367 •7762 or 446•4060

r

--

APARIME'\ri'IS ·
~ Rmr

I

i

1 end 2 bedroom apartmenta, furnished and unfurnlshed end houses in
Pomer~y and Middleport,
security deposit required, no
pets, 740-992-2218.
'-------Modem 1 BR Apt. Call 4463736

Free EsUmatea

1110
Ii. .
, ___Aiiiurosilili--.,1 -

-,!"""'.,...____.,

ll&lt;r

1\lE,....,
!"CIIANDISELOOXJUiiANJil l i

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
C
t e,
Ang Ie.'
channei,onere
Flat Bar, Steel
Grating · For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
So rap "ot
I Opa n IYIOn
" day,
M
as
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Frklay, Be.m·4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday &amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

(Propane
or
Natural)
Aluminum Fiberated Paint
(Great tor Mobile Homas) 5gal. Bucket $31.95. StaKool WMe Elastomer~ Root
Coatlng 5·gal. Buck•t
$7e.59. BPS Barn &amp; Fence
Oil Base Paint ( Barn Red)
5-gll. Bucket $69.95. We
carry Pittsburgh Paints &amp;
Sikkens Finish lor all your
coating needs.
Paint Plua Hardware
304-675-4084

e 404 456·3802
WANTID

j

,_..,.____...,
~
4 WM~R~aB

FOR SAIL

COOK
MOTORS 328
Jackson Pike. Quality
• ks wt'lh warren1y.
cars11ruc
Our low prices are posted on
vehicle. Compare price and
quality to vehicles anywhere. Stop orca11 740 -44•·
..,...
0103

i

2004 Sportster 883 XL
w/shield, Engine Guard,
Forward IooI co ntroIs, pu II
back H Bar, Two Seater,
Foot pegs, sissy bar, $50PQ. ·
(740)245·5027

I

4x4
FOR SAlE
.

72,876 miles, AC, alec
brakes and windows, cloth
Interior, Reese hitch, some
rust. $5000.00, Riverview
Productions (740) 441-1150
7:00am · 3:30pm, ask for
Rodney Rankin.

2006 Honda Gold Wing
$4,000 in accessories. Paid
$24,000 new-·$19,600. Call
740-367-7t29.

r

CAMPERs &amp;
MOTOR HOM.S

I

76 Air Stream, 31FT, great
oond~ion 304·674·0006 or
304-593-3933 $5,800 OBO

Fleetwood Mallard, 28ft,
ExceNent Condition, Garage
.
,
kept, Reese Hitch, Sway
77 Jeep CJ5, 4&gt;4. V8. Cell bar. 446-1266
.
740
740 645
2
..., I 1\ \ I ( I o..,
·3BS-086 or
•
·
6996
118
• ~~~ a mesoage.
;;;~=======~

f4ii ' MoroRCY~

l~

4 Wum~

IriO

.

1

Wanted

WANTED: Buckeye Community Services is

opening a new home and has the following
positions available to assist two individuals
with mental retardation in Chester (Meigs
County):
1)40hrs- 2:30pm- 12:30 am SIS; 3 pm12:30 am M!ru
2) 35 hrs -3 pm - 12:30 am Wff)t/F; 9 am 2:30pm Su
3) 351irs: 12:30 - 9 am SIS/Mrfu
4) 32 brs 12:30- 9a.m. Wffh; 12:30 am- 2:30
pmF
Must have high school diploma or GED. valid
driver's license , three years good driving

Attention Antique DeaiMS,
AlverBend Antique Mall,
Ravenswood, West Virginia
has vendor booths for rent,
lnform&amp;Uon,
668-2088

P11ture, Pleaaer no till
dril $8,000 A/C 4 row No
Till com
$1,500

l-=ty
tO Years

5yr old Registered Black
Angus Bull 304·458-1083
Boar Hog • 2yr old Hamp·
Ouroc, Top GenetiC&amp;. 740.
339-0057

_ __:.:__ _ _ __

• Complete
Remodeling

141-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

WilDe
CIIICI'III Wart

Pure bred Black Angus Bul.
2 112 years old. 740·446·

BARNEY

'

Driv~ways,

Sidewalks, Patios,
Co11crete Footers

TH' WIND'S BLOWIN' PURN
FIERCE OUT THAR, KIDDO-·
BETTER HANG ON TO YORE

J&amp;L
Construction

•:

I

• VInyl Siding
Replacement
Windows
Roollng
Decks
Garages
Pole Buildings
Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

't
-

t

l

trOE~'T IT t(.I'Ef\T ~

I

TI\E. P\J~ Of'l'l~

MIX~&amp;.TI~~i

I

~IRE.IQI. l'AAT~ W~

1'\'l'SE.LI' IIJ'\OWI t\G t
.C/1..11\ I' IT 1\1\ Tf\E.

I

'

n.

121'1. $$65.00

16 rt $83.00

Why drive anywhere else

IIYflll Poll'i' 'OO:Ii\ I~

'

I

I

.."

BIG NATE
WOW T&gt;iAT
WE'RE A
BANI&gt;, WHAT

Work
*Reasonable Rates
• Insured
* Experij:nced
References Available'
Call Gary Stanley @
740-742-2293

!&gt;I-IOULD

WE PO

FIII.!.T?

;

"•

\

.,

t

CARPENTER ,,•
"
SERVICE

NtwGiriQII
Electrical &amp; Pklmblng
Roofing I Gutter~

Siding a Painting
Patio and Porch Decka
wv 036725

Vin~l

V.C. YOUN G Ill
C)lj(' fi;:'
'n1 H I 'l

.'

i1 1

"
.,
~

PEANUTS

0

I

1,

I

IF I

I

ill,ll&gt;

I

I " 1 I •1 , •

~AD

A
51-lEEP,
i'DI.IERD
IT:

'

·•'

Dennis Bryant
740-742-2377

I I\\ '\.., 1'111&lt; I \ I I( 1\

AUTOS

COW and BOY
...----------,
r---------., .----------, ...----------,

roRSAr..E

COW, IVE

DECVED TO TAKE
lJ' THE IWUJ.

)

1991 Neon, auto, 4dr,
$1700. 080. Call 740-2561652 or 256·1233

Pltysiti&lt;m

Offrct (ptdirJJrics). High school graduate or e&lt;jttivalent. Certification
as a Medical Assistant or completion of one year Mt'dical Assistant
Program. Knowlt'dge of medical office billing, coding procedures,
and clerical needs rmportant. Excellent typing s~ills re&lt;juired.
Regismtion Clrrk-Parl-lillll posilrons (mduding benejitJ). VarioU! sltifis.
Knowledge of medical terminology preferred. Proficiency in dot•
entry and typing required Clerical skill s also required. Prior hospital

experience preferred'.
Certified Nursing Assistant (includes

benelito)-Mtthcal/SwgicaL Frt/1-

limt positio~ Shifts moy vary. High school diploma and CPR
certification are required. Completion of nursing assi.stant training
and CAN certfication is preferred.

1999 Chevy Monte CMo,
$3000; 1994 Chell)' S·10 V6,
Auto, $2400; 1993 Ford
Escort. 1 owner, $1400;
I998 Jeep Grand Cherokee,
$3900:
1998
Dodge
Caravan, $2400; 1998
Kawasaki Vulcan 800,
Saddlebags,
windShield,
$3200: 1992 Chevy S-10,
V6, Auto, ·$1200; 1997.
Chevy Cavalier, $2500. Legal Notice
(740)446-8172
Sealed, Bids are being
2003 Dodge Slratus, 2 door, accepted for a 1977
dump
4 cy t, Auto, Air, Sunroof, International
Bedford
93,000 miles, $4500 080, truck,
Township
Trustees
1740)256· 1233
reserve the right to
2004 Saturn ion. Sspd std accept or reject any or
transmission, 50,000 miles, all bids. To view or
E)(C. Cond, Great gas inquiries call 740·9g2.
mileage, $9,000, (740)441 · 70t 5. Mall bids to
9865
Bedford
Township,
92 Ford E.:plorer, runs &amp; 42774 Helwig Ridge,
looks good, low mileage, Shade, OH 45776. Bids
$1200 or best offar, accepted until October
9th.
1740)992·3457

NOTICES

97 Camara FIS, wht w/blk
racing stripes/racing spoiler.
looks/runs good. Priced to
. sail $26001 304·634-8523

Publir Notim in Nc,t·spapcl!.m
Your Right lo Know, ll!livered R~hl (o Your

Manley's

Recycling

•.

"

been

filed

in

Eynon, guardian of the
person and estate of

James A. Casto, an
Incompetent person.
Unless exceptions are
flied
thereto, said
account will be set for
hearing before said
Court on the 29th day
of October, 2007, at
which
time
said
account will be consid-

GARFIELD

1*192. . .

e.•SlllniiV
..dltfrltiiVI:II..UI
••
8:01 •12:H ••

...............

PIYINBTOP PIIIES.
111111111m CIIS ·•IIIIIIIM . . . .
earatv~~cCUMrt........

..

ICIIII,_ lllrr• PrlciSl

ered and continued
trom day to day until
finally disposed ol.
Any person Interested
may file written excep.:.

GRIZZWELLS

ti on to said account or

'M\$J"1

to maners pertaining
to the execution of the

fA.'r'A?

trust, not less than five

days prior to the dele

the set for hearing.

Probate Court, -Meigs J.S. Powell
County,
Ohio
for Judge
The Syracuse Racine approval and settle- Common Pleas Court,
Probate Division
Regional
Sewer ment.
District will hold a pub- ESTATE NO. 27979 - Meigs County, Ohio
lic meeting on the pro· 14th Account of Ruby (9) 28

CANT BE UNHAPPY
WHEN 'IOO'RE

•,...---....

IUYING
THE BANJJ.

L...........:JW.~ ~.....1.1--....:ii!l

5ID lUI Sl• 1•11111. 1141118
posed
Tackervllle
Expansion on October
9, 2007 at 7:00 pm at
the American Legion.
(9) 25, 26, 27, 28, 30
(10)1,2, 3, 4, 5, 7,8, 9

- -- -- - - Public Notice
- - -- - - - IN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
BATE DIVISION MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
Barbara J. Grueser
COURT MEIGS COUNFiscal Oftlcer
740-696-1244
TY, OHIO
(9125, 26, 27,28 (10) 1, Accounts and vouch·
ers of the following
2,3,4,5
named fiduciary ha s
- - - - -- - -

99 Plymouth Villager, teal
green, runs good, 132,000
miles, $2800,(740)59Q.76S6 __P_u_b_l_ic_N_o_t_ic_e__

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

YES,IlJT TUNING
ABANlliS CliiTE
DEPilESSING.

THEY SAVYOU

04 Chrysler Sebring, Peari
White, . 38,000 miles, great
condition, power everything,
$6500 060, (740)256·6362

Medical Assistant (including benefiu)- Full-time position in

4•

eouaina

2 Sptakeaay
rlllr

3 Ee&lt;ly

Peruvian

food
Ea&amp;l
Pass
All pall&amp;

30 Cei

4 Willi' lank

bv
34 lrfl"er or

7 Goof-pioof
(hyph.)
8 teetlt'

~o~ru~

9~~

T\1\~,

19 Diamond

38 Family

26 Finn up
27 Machine
tHth
28 Skimmed

43 Opening

otat
cooolldlonl ·~
2t lily.....,.. 39 Obtain
24 Me. li-ven 41 Rex Slout
of ftlmto
clotectlft
25 Pine far
42 Dell eamilg
45 Way out
46 Rllld ntlly
47 TOfl aaed'e

char8etlt'
5 Slay
through
reward
31 l'ln*n buy 6 King,
29 Veer out of 49 Paa~
32 Juataorape
to monaleur
conbol
51 Kltttn 1

Blyttr

ol Venice

3t Hom hoeka,
a.g. (2

- ·1

ptu

33 Ban 1r Jtrry

n•

lnotrutnlt'lt 35 Pickle
10 lur)lr volley
cholea
11 NYC opet'tl 36 Hand

38 Oamoel
37 Brilliance
39Dizzy

AstroGraph
'1bur&lt;8111illlat':

Soiurday, Sept. 29, aoo7
By Bemtce- Coot
You could be quite fortunate with friends
or acquaintances willing to work on your
behalf in order to gain advente.gaous
arrangements for you . Doors could be
opened to you without having to make a

Brickwork

1000 lb round Bales of Hay
call 304-761-0030

Previous surgical experience required .•

••

t Uh'a

23 Earth•a 24 VIolet
lead-In
27 Provide•

football team at Pennsylvania State
Unl110rsity since 1966, said, "The willlo
win Is Important, but the WJII to prepare is
vital."
.
That is so true, especial~ at the bridge
table. And you must also try to prepare
lor the most unfavort!lrte &lt;lstribution of
the missing kay cards. In this deal you
are South, the declarer in four llearts.
West leads a low trump. What woold be
yourpten ?
North's second-round jump to four
hHrta shows lour-card hHrt support
and some 1B or 19 high-card points. It
also denies a singleton or void in spades
or diamonds, because he dtd not make a
splinter bid.
II you are unlucky, you could lose one
heart, two diamonds and one club. But
you hal/8 10 winners In three spedes.
four hserts, one diamond and two dubs.
'!l&gt;u muet just get your tricks in before
they can establish theirs.
SUppose you finesse at trtcf&lt; one, Here,
East Will Win w~h his haart ~ng and, In
mldsasson form, shift to a club. Then
your oontract rs unmakeble. East gets In
twice in diamonds and can establish and
cash a club trick.
You should build up your diamond trick
so that you can discard your club loser.
Win whh dummy's. heart ace and play a
low Q8111ond from lhe board Suppose
East wins with his CJ.l&amp;en and shifts to a
club. Toke h with your ace and play
another diamond to his ace. Win the next
club play on the board and discard.your
last dub on the diamond ~ng . Than play
a trump and cteim, mentally thanking
West for nol finding a ch.tr opening lead.

G

I

-'

Ponierof, OH
740·985·3831 .

Room Addttlona a
Remodeling

~i'W.Lt~ SllE!

l
I

15517 St Rt 7 North

* Prompt and Qualify

to,

1
II

Shade River Ag. Service
YOUNG'S

~-&amp;.CNX£ l FE£LI

I

Also
Block &amp;

IIAv&amp;
GRAIN

Per dirrn. Graduate of an occredited school
of nursing with current WV lie&lt;nsing. CPR, and A,US are required.

Pass

DOWN

wannere

houaa

•'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

n

;

Triumph 12% Horse Feed .......$5.99/50 lb.
Sportsmix Dog Food 21-~........... $9.99/50·
S-UREA ......................$199/ton Bulk Only
Prierert Powder Coated Gates
tort. $53.00
14 $75.00

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

'VA BETTER HANG ON
MORE'N TMAT I!

MAT!!

l

WHAT A DEAl!!

• New Homes
• Garages

Wise were to be married
October 6th at Rutland
Church of the Nazarene.
Due to a recent medical ·
diagnosis. the wedding is
being postponed.
Pray for them as they wait
for G'od's healing and
leading.

...-·-

H-Honest

ROBERT
BISSELl
DONST.CDON

8Ft dloc $400, 7 112 Tyo

www.-1Htaa..koali!Mb7-

MTD, Brlggs
&amp; Str111ton

Free

e"perience and. adequate automobi Je insurance.

Registered Nurse-Suf8'''Y·

t"

North

20 Lawauh

Joe Pslerno, ooach of the Nittany Lions

l

MrlmlJ,

CLASSIFIEDS

F:Qunz:tFN

Harmod caiiUiea, And FurniWre

Crqjbmt~n,

IMPROVEMENIS

~==~==~--,~44~10~~~~~

Equal Opponunity Employer.

304-nJ-5061
304-882-3194
Strvicing
Lawn Tmclors,
Mowers, TUitrs,

6,.....,....--,
l_ SHOP

MEROWIIISE

$7.50/hr; Send resume 10: P.O . Box 604,
Jackson, OH 45640. Deadline for applicants:
1015107. Pre-employmenl drug testing.

West

powder

cauM

J s
A 54

Seutb

onlmala

56 Recolor
57 Cook llowly

22 Prevloua to

10 7 3

The worst is
yet to come

''
'.
'
"!'

MOWER

n._....
c .M~

~
Couch &amp; Love: Seat $200,
Queen set Mattfess $75, Ph.
304-615·5015
-------JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1600-537-9528.

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

/

HoME

ijr;,;;;:;:;:.:;...___, jio

Help

16 Sequtl'a

Dealer: North
Vulnerable : Both

MASON

53 Klutz
54 Plealnl
55 AMcy

18 Went ateady

Wise Concrete

ANt&gt; Tt4t lfST P,41rT 16 vlf GET
Vfti~IMITfl&gt; flrfE Mlft/IJTf6!

52 Sturdy loci!

" K3
t A QB
• Q 10 s 3

~=::::;-

\

eymboi

50 Quiz

" 7s
t 9.7542
• J 98

•
· •

\

owlmmsr
47 Csrlel
48 Alhenl'a

aequtl
17 Taka a

740· 446-0007

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

port

44 Furry

East
• 8S 52

" Q J tO 5 2

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

1 Gultarllt
-C'-'4011
5 Pound
sound
8 Fish bll1
t2 Rljllh'l wtle
t3 Python or
.np
14 Oramro
IWinl
15 hdtol-

West
• J 94

•

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bondod
740-653-9657

2000 Kawasaki Prairie, runs
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
gOOd,
2
wheel
drive,
$1500,
roR SALE
Unconditional lifetime guar·
740 59 0 766
r(_ _ _ ,.
' ,..,.
antee. Local reterences tur·
1 yr. ok:l Yorkie, CKC regisnished. Established 1975.
tared, app.ll. 5M:, $150,
Call 24 Hrs. {140) 446(740)590-7666
.
0870, RoQers Basement
Waterproofing.
Cocker Spaniels, 6 wks old,
3 females, purebred, both
parents on premises, $125.
(740)367-7231
Mlniat,re Plncher Pup• 2

I

H

r-

New sofa &amp; love seat, 5400,
New Kitchen table/ 4 chelr
$179.95. Mollohan Carpet
202 Clark Chapel Ad,
Bidwell, OH (740)366.0173
Mon-Frl 9a·4p Sat 9a-3g
appll calions to r 1 and 2 BR
•
.
~
Apts. Located on Coloma!
SPolmNG
Blackfl'an females, $300
1
Drive across rrom ·Gallia __
Gool:li
. each. · 8 weeks old.
County H_ealth Dept: No
(740)388-81 24
rental austance avatlatHe Mathews Switchbali Bow,
1 \lnt ... l l' l'lll...,
at this time. Rents start at 701b. completely set up $650
,\ I I \ I .., I ( II "'
$310 and $340 . Equal 304-675-2219
Housing
Opportunity.
FARM
(740)446-3344
~
,ANriQUEs
• ~

Help Wanted

~~-------.

Save 10% oft regular price

TO RliNr

iO

K 10 3
K 7 2

Soutb

· Guttering

RF.Nr

Wanted to ront- Elderly ooupie looking for smaA house
or mobile home In Por1er, Rt
160 or Georges Creek
areas. 740 4-46.()446

EQUIPMENt I SUPPUES
• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
Free Delivery
• Stop By Our Showroom
• Many More Items
70 Pine Street • Galllpolle, OH

H&amp;H

Commercial building "For
Renr 1800 square feet, off
Slreot perking. Greet locatlonl 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Rent 5300/mo.
Ca W.

t
•

.,_....,.,

Opening lead: • 6

SPJ\o;

FOR

$pef;lall•li In: .
OXYGEN l RESPIRATORY

740.367-0536

Lt~--itiiiitiiil;.,. on all Vent Free Gas Heaters 1996.Dodge Ram 1500 4x4,

r

Middleport, lrom $327 to
$592 .. 740·992·5~ . ~qual
Housing Opportumty.
Honeysuckle
Hills
Apartments now acoeptlng

7 40·367·0544

Twin Atvers lOwer is accept.
I' .
fo . :.·
1ng
appHud·subslzed,
rcatrons r wao.rng
llet tor
1- br,
epartment,for
the
etdertyldisabled call 675Equal
Housing
6679
Opportunity
- - - - - -- Very nice apar1ment fof' rent
In Pomeroy, great neighbor·
hood, quiet. Newly remodeled. New app11 ancas, 2
Bedrooms, t bath. Central
Air &amp; Heat. Call992-9784 or
992-5094 tor more details.

Gracloul Uvlng 1 and 2
~
Bedroom Apts. at Village lw--tliuvuvoiiiliiiiil-_.1
• ManorandRiversideApts.in
.,

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
for Rent, Meigs County, In
town, No Pets, Deposit
Required. (740)992-5174 or
(740)441 ·0110.

Local Contractor

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Bath. Mlh Pool &amp; Baby
POO. Pstio, Start ~
No Pets, Lease Plus
Saourity Deposh Required,
(740)446-3461 .

Nonb
• AKQ
"A i84

&amp;MEOICALE

..

40 - ...tilled
41 Molll
42 lloolcc-

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Complllte Tree

NEA Croaawor·d Puzzle

BRIDGE

•

•

L--------...l

request.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - Betting on
"pie In the sky" will be toying with folly,
especially 11 the endeavor Is predicated
on something over· which vou nave no
control. You could lose It all .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - Clive
ekpllcit instructions to the one who is
anending an important matter. esJ&gt;!telally
It you can't do It yourself. Merely assum·
lng he or she should understand Mlat
you want is a big mistake.
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Even 'though the possibilities for material
gain look reasonably good , they aren't
apt to gratify your wants or expectations.
. Don't overestimAte what you think you
should make.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22..Jan . 19) Should you come acrose something you
strongly desire when shopping, a!l your
economic discipline co uld tty out the window. Don't lorget your other ltnanclal
responsibilities so quickly.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - Your
generosity wiU have limitations regarding
those persons for who'm you're responal·
ble. Yet wtlen it comes to your own
desires, you·n suddenly turn into being a
ttt&gt;eral spender.
PISCES tFeb. 2tl-Msrch 20) - Whet you
say Is apt to be rigorously scrutinized for
slights or innuendos by your companIons. Some remarks lt1at seem harmless
may be judged as contemptible
ARIES (March 21·April 19) - A close
friend who is always wasteful with
resources might took upon yours as his
or her personal staSh . Don't let this person pull a pity party In order to get a hold
or your cash.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Your inner
Sarah Bernhardt ma)' be vying tor attention and encourage you to do a bit ol
playacting. You won't win your audience's
attention by pretending to be wh8t you're
not.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Although
your Intuitive perceptions may be right on
target In some areas , your Insights
regarding human behavior In social situations will sadly be way ott track . Don't
rely on them.
CANCER (June 21-.July 22) - Be wary
ol acting on an impulsive action, espe·
clalty 11 It Involves ·a combination ol
money and friends . Conditions will be
much more conducive to loas when It
come• to gambling.
LEO (JUly 23-Aug. 22) - Oavote your
time and eHort to performing your duties
with responaiblllty and devotion where
your worlc or career Is concerned. Put
peraonel problem• behind you 10 that
you'ra not dlttracted.
VIRGO {Aug. 23-Sept, 22) - Thlrw II I
good chance you could 1pt1nd more ttmt
r•tlonatl.zlng on tt1e dlfllou~ of 1 proj1ct
than on trying to do your b1at. Ntgatlve
thinking will only make the Job more
tedious.

SOUP TO NUTZ

by Lilli Campos

Celeb'ily ~ CI'YI*lPM n Ned trom Ql.dlllOns b'y IMO.a Pllldt. pU Will PI8Wt
WI IIIIer in lhe ~ Dmlor ~

fllillly's due: W1!r!JB1s P

"ZFUDU

AP

VDUJZ AH
RLWJGUK

HC MJB ZC
ZFRP

OU ZDIOB

·,

MCDGK. MU JDU JGG

CH ZFU

EDCCA CS

ECHKRZRCHRHV. " • YJLUP KUJH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'No matter what cullure we'ra kom, e110ryone loves
roosic." -Billy Joel
'Mus~ is the soundtlaclt ol 'f'lX lite.' - Dicit Clark

'~~:t:~' e~~ot\1A-~£~s·

....
WOlD

lik1i ~r CIA! I . POllAN - - '·- ' - - -

0 Reorro"')a

!alton ol lllo
four r&lt;111mblad -d• b.
low ro form four 1lmplo word1.

MAl C I X
S0 PI E

l l

I~

I

SWM-lm ANSWERS ~~21~o1
bocor- Thumb- Newsy - l..epcy -CHANGES
JustwllfallhouJbt I bad a clear pitlure o! life,"die c:ulie siglled.
"the dwllll!l CHANGES."

.ARLO &amp; JANIS

�•

I

·Friday, September 28, 2007

www .mydailysentinel.com .

Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Big Ten
ov-11
W L Pet. W L Pet.

Teems

Olllo Stlll8 1
Purdue
1
WisconSjn 1
lllilois
1
Michig;!n 1
Mich. St 0

0 1.000 4 0 1.000

0 1.000 4
0 1.000 4
0 1.000 3
0 1.000 2
0 .000 4
Indiana
0 1 .000 3
Penn State 0 1 .000 3
Iowa
0 1 .000 2
N'westem 0 1 .000 2
Minnesota 0 1 .000 1

0
0
1
2
0
1
1
2
2
3

1.000
1.000
.750
.500
1.000
.750
.750
.500
.500

.250

Penn State at Illinois
Indiana at Iowa
Michigan at Northwestern
Michigan State at WISCOOSin
Notre Dame at Puroue
Ohio State at Minnesota
TE.-\\~ LE.~DERS

Total Ol'leillle
· Puroue ................................ 527.0
Minnesota ....................... ... 487.5
Indiana ..............................,.457.5
Nlinois ................ ..................432.2
Michig&lt;ln State ....................416.5

. Rushing Onlot111e
Mlinois ..................................265.5
Minnesota ........ ..................229.8

An inside look at this week's game
COLUMBUS- Picking out
open receivers has looked easy
fur Ohlo Smre q~

.Todd lloockman in hiB first
seaaon as a starter.
Picking the best line the 23ye&amp;NJld, fifth-year junior has
heard about hiB age is s different story. He has heard them
all, but can't select just one.
"There are so many it's hard
to keep track," Boeckman said
earlier this week.
Through four games,
Boeckman has showed his
. maturity, not his age, after

Ohio State .......................... 120.2
lowa-............ ........................ 147.0
Mlchig,an State ....................170.0
Penn State .......................... 192.5
Michi!ll!n........................ ...... 193.5

INDI\ IDU-'L LEADERS
Rulhlng Yards
Mike Hart, Michi!ll!n ................655 ..
Rashard Mendenhall, Illinois ....536
PJ. Hill,' Wisconsin .................. 512
Amir ~nnix, Minnesota ............ 438
Chris·Wells, Ohio State ............ 424

Passing Yards
Curtis Painter, Puroue .......... 1,290
Adam Weber, Minnesota ...... 1,031
CJ. Bacher, Northwestern ........958
Kellen Lev.;s, Indiana ......... .....906
Anthony Morelli, Penn State .... 797
Rec:eMng Yards
Brian Robtskie, Ohio State ..... ... 431
:Eric Decker, Minnesota ......... ... 421
·Oevin Thomas, Michigan St. ....370
Dorien Bryant, Purdue .... ..........368
Luke Swan, Wisconsin ............359

.......

OHIO STATE LEADERS

Todd Boeckman ...................... 760
:.....,..yanls
'ChriS Wells .............................. 424
Rllulvinll yanls
Blian Robiskie ........................ 431
Touchdowns
.
Brian Robiskie ............................ 5
Tactdel
James laurinaitis ... ........... ........29
.it&amp;ioaptiOIII
:James laurinaitis ....................... .2
Sacks
laurinaitis &amp; \lemon Gholston ......3

2007 OSU SCHEDULE
Sept. 1
\bung;!OYm State w38-6
Sept. 8
AkrOn
w20-2
Sept. 15 @Washington W33-14
Sept. 22
Nonl1westem
w58· 7
SAlURDAY
Oct. 6
Oct. 13
Oct. 20
Oct. 27
Nov. 3
Nov. 10
Nov. 17

@Mil-

8p.m.
@ Puroue
8 p.m.
Kent Stale
' TBA
Mich"'" State 3:30 p.m
@ Penn State
8 p.m.
W~n
TBA
Illinois
TBA
@ Mlchi~n
TBA

Con1ent compled by Jm Naveau and

de5iW1 by Jeff Bla111 • The Uma NeY.s
~ C 2007 The Uma

New.;. Repro-

duction o1 all or arrt portion of this material
is prohibltf&gt;:j without e&gt;j)reSS coosent

Jim
Naveau
The Uma News

419-993-2087

waiting four years to get his
chance to start.
·The St Henry High School
graduare has oompleted 66
peri:ent of his passes for 760
yards and 10 touchdowns,
with three interceptioiiB.
His early-season perfor-

lllllllCE81ook even more impressive,when oompared to the
first four starts made by the
OSU quarterliacks who played
just before hirii. .
Boeckman's completion
percentage is better than
that of Troy Smith, Steve
Bellisari, Craig Kr'enzel,
Germaine, Stanley
and Bob Hoying in
first four starts.
is
the only other
over 60
Boeckman's 10
passes is the
group.

Jackson was the runner-up
with seven TD throws in hiB
first four games and Gennaine
had f!ix. Gennaine, with 821
yards, is the only player in the
m'JUP to throw for more yanls ·
than Boeckman.
Boeckman ranks fourth behind Gennaine, Jackson and
Hoying in being picked oft;
with one interception every 29
passes. Gennaine was the best
of his immediate predecessors
in that category at one interception every 57 p&amp;8IIE!S Wld
Bellisari was the worst at one

every 14 passes.
If you want to take the

comparisons one step fur.
ther, a certain Super Bowlwinning, actress-dating for- ·
mer Michigan quarterback
didn't even start this well.
Tom BradY: s first four starts
at Michigan produced a 62 .
percent completion rate, 707
yards, three touchdowns and
three interceptions.
Numbers are just one way
to rate quarterbacks. But it's
hard to fmd much not to like.
in Boeckman's numbers.

SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: MINNESOTA (1·3, 0-1 BIG TEN)

indian8 ""'""""...................227.5

Pass Defense

.o- ·

Boeckman has been golden for Buckeyes•

Michif!an..............................211.2
Puf'due'Wisconsin ................202.8

Pass Onlot1Se
Purdue ...................... :......... 324.2
Minnesota ..........................257.8
Nort11westem ......................242.2
Michigan State .................... 230.0
Indiana ................................215.8
Total Defense
Ohio State .......................... 177.8
lowa ....................................235.5
l'enn State .......................... 247.2
MichigJn State ....................265.8
Wisconsin ............................ 309.8
Rush Defense
l'enn State ............................54.8
Ohio State ............................ 57.5
llllnols ....................................87.0
lowa .................... ..................88.5
Michi!ll!n State ......................95.8

• The IJma Neon

.

.

.

~

Bucks, Gophers square off'
Alook at SOil'e Of the key rnall:hups in
saturday's ~ bel'Mlen No.8 Ollo Slate
(«J,1.() BigTen) and Minnesota (1-3, 0-1
Big Ten) in the Hubert H. Humphrey
Metrodorre in Minneapolis;

...........
Todd Boeckman continued the impressive beginning to his career as Ohio
State's starter with four touchdown passes
in a 58-7 win aver Northwestern last
week. That tied him with seven other quarterbacks for the second-most TO passes
ever at OSU in a game. Only Bob Hoying
(twice) and John Borton (once), with five,
have thrrMT~ more in a game.
Minnesota's Adam Weber, a redshirt
freshman \\11o also is a first-year starter,
ranks second in the Big Ten in yards per
game (257.8) and touchclo&gt;Ml passes
(11), but has thrown eight interceptions,
twice as many as the next most frequently
intercepted Big Ten QB. Weber has six
tumovers (five interceptions and a fumble)
in his last two games and Minnesota has
16 turnovers in its first four games.
Advanla!la: ONo Stllll8

---~~bleb

Minnesota's lvni' Pinnix is ~ng 109
yards a !1iJme after rushing for 1,272 yards
last~. but has drll'M'I criticism b' losing
fumbles in losses to Purdue and Florida Atlantic the last tv.u weeks. He has been bot!lered l1f turf toe, so it is possil*l true freshman Duane Bennett,I'Alo ~ired 81 ~in
the second half in a 45-311oss to Purdue ·
last mall, oould be the starter.
Ohio State's Chris Wells suffered what
appeared to be a slight ankle sprain against
Northwestern. He and coach J1m Tressel
both said he st-oold be OK to play ag;linst
Minnesota. Freshman Brandon Sa1ne IS expeeled to be out again this week after hav·
1ng arthoscopic knee surgery.

he is ready to become the No. 3 re&lt;:eM!r
behind Robiskie and Brian Hartline.
Eric Oec.ker (30 catches, 421 yards, 4
touchdowns) is Minnesota's top receiver.
Ernie Wheelwri~t has 16 catches.
AdYaltalle: ONoStliiiB

OlfeiiiiM . .
OJ. Burrisstarted1hefirsttwo~mes
for1heGophe!sat ~rd. missed the
next tv.u because of a leg injJry, but
is expe¢ted to retum to the lineup
saturday night. Tac!OO Steve
Shidell, I'A1o started 12 !ll!mes last
season, is 1he oriy experienced offensive ineman. When it has
&lt;Mlided turnoYerS, Minnesota's of.
rense has been productive. It
ranks second in the l3ig Ten in
total offenSe (487 yards a ~) .
second in rushing offense and
second in passing offense.
Ohio State is sixth in the
Big Ten in total offense ·
(414 yards a game),
eighth in rushing and
sixth in passing. The
Buckeyes have ai-

sacks last season. Defensive tackle Todd

M~~~~~=·for Ohio Too years~. James Laurinaitis \laS a
State last 'Mlek aglinst Norlt'MI'Jstem with
~ \\11o recorded two.tackles v.11en Qhio.
tv.u sacks ;nJ a fi.m~ rero.ey for a touch- State pla')4ld in his hometDIIfl Minneapo- . :

~. Freshrnan~endcameron

of

~C::!~~\:'=:onU:~of-

HeyNard had 2 ~ tackles for
. touchdoMHiil season, other than a SjleCial
losses. NattTv~e;tem retted teams TO l1f Northwestern last 'M!ek.
Oyards in 33 rushing at- Sophoma-e Ross Homan is expected bad\
tempiS. Ollo Slate
this week after sitting out aglinst NolthY.estranks second nation- em with a toe inJury.
~r:n~~:· Minnesota has three experienced llnefense and~
backers. Steve Davis, Mike Sherels and
in rushing defense. John Shevlin have all started since the
~
2005season.
Adladage: Ohio State

oe;s;..--

DefetiSive backs

only one ;

'1

AdYaltalle:

Advanla!la: ONo State

Ohio Stllll8

Spedal teams,.

Daf111ilte h
Minnesota ranks

last aroong NCAA Division 1schools in

&lt;Mllall defense, ~. ing up 543 yards a
game. It is last in
passing defense
and is six spotS
from the bottom
Advanla!la: Ewn
in sacks, It is one
Recahers
of two BigTen
Brian Robiskie's three touchdown
teams, along
catches against Northwestern confirmed
with PuidJe, ~his stanis as one of the best receivers in
ing up rrore
the Big Ten. In addition to speed and pre- than four yards
cise route nunning. Robiskie (20 catches, per nunning play.
431 yards, 5 IDs) brings another imporErd Willie vantan! item to the table- dropped passes
DeSteeg \laS
are rare ...tlen the ball is throwri his way.
second-team
Ray Small's 48-yard touchdown catch
All-Big Ten
against Northwestern could have si!§laled and had 10

Ia It just my Imagination or does It seem Ike
Ohio State runs Its smallest tailback, 190-pound

Q

Mau(lce Wells, between t11e tackles a lot?
- Mark from BovAing {lreen

A

It's not yo.ur imagination. Unless, of course, you and a
lot of other people are imagining the same thing at
the same time.

·

roe

,.._ upon•· three

Q&amp;A with Jim Naveau

'

:
,

Minnesota's best defensive back, Dominic Jones, of Columbus Brool&lt;haven
HiiO'J Schooi, was
of four players
thrrM11 off the team in Jut; after he was arrested and charged with sexual assault. H~
half-brother Keith Massey, also a defen·
· sive back, was one of the other four who '
were dismissed from the team. Comer- •
back Jamal Harris has tv.u interceptions ~
this season, giving him six for his career,
Ohio Slate is tied for second in the~
" Ten in interceptions with iiole, but
of ttKx;e belong; to a Slartifll defensi.e
back (Malcolm Jenkins).

=-~~~has
...~'
sacks.

U.abacMn

Ohio State
l1llllliver

Bitan
Roblskle.

OSU's Ryan Pretofius is 6 of 8
on field @Ills. Minnesota's Jcel .
Monroe is 2 of 2 on field goalS,
with a long of 34 yards. Last ·
year's kicker, Jason Giannini,:
lost his job after missing .
three of his first four kicks ·
this season.
Ohio State 1!iMJ up a
99-yard kickJff reiJ.Jn :
fora~

against Northv.estem,'
but coach Jim Tressel
saystte~

· have done a IJXld
job on kick COielllge
CNeraiL Minnesota's ·
Monroe leads the Bi&lt;':
len v.;th six toudl- p
backs on his kickoffs.
Adli&amp;rW 8 :Ohio State

Say what?
"My job is to run over people.''
- Fullback 1\'ler Whaley,
whose main role is as a blocker

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

Buckeye Brain Busters

Ask your questions at:

1: Who is older,
2: Who is older, Ohio State 3: Who is older, Ohio
Ohio State qua~erback quarterback Todd Boeck- State quartertack Todd
Todd Boeckman or
man or San Francisco
Boeckman or Tennessee
Oevetand Browns
49ers QB Alex Smith, a
'Titans second-year QB
rookie QB Brady Quinn? tllree-year NA. veteran?
~nee Young?

Email Jim atjnavuau@llmanewa.com
Biog with him at www.llmasports.com

Answin: 1:.Boeckman by four months
2. Smith by one month 3. Young by 13 months

CHEVROLET • CADILLAC •
• B
208 East Main • 1-740-992-6614 Qr 1-800-837-1094 •
Houn: Mon.-Fri.
Sat. 9-4· Sun. 12-4 • www.

days until kickoff

�•

I

·Friday, September 28, 2007

www .mydailysentinel.com .

Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Big Ten
ov-11
W L Pet. W L Pet.

Teems

Olllo Stlll8 1
Purdue
1
WisconSjn 1
lllilois
1
Michig;!n 1
Mich. St 0

0 1.000 4 0 1.000

0 1.000 4
0 1.000 4
0 1.000 3
0 1.000 2
0 .000 4
Indiana
0 1 .000 3
Penn State 0 1 .000 3
Iowa
0 1 .000 2
N'westem 0 1 .000 2
Minnesota 0 1 .000 1

0
0
1
2
0
1
1
2
2
3

1.000
1.000
.750
.500
1.000
.750
.750
.500
.500

.250

Penn State at Illinois
Indiana at Iowa
Michigan at Northwestern
Michigan State at WISCOOSin
Notre Dame at Puroue
Ohio State at Minnesota
TE.-\\~ LE.~DERS

Total Ol'leillle
· Puroue ................................ 527.0
Minnesota ....................... ... 487.5
Indiana ..............................,.457.5
Nlinois ................ ..................432.2
Michig&lt;ln State ....................416.5

. Rushing Onlot111e
Mlinois ..................................265.5
Minnesota ........ ..................229.8

An inside look at this week's game
COLUMBUS- Picking out
open receivers has looked easy
fur Ohlo Smre q~

.Todd lloockman in hiB first
seaaon as a starter.
Picking the best line the 23ye&amp;NJld, fifth-year junior has
heard about hiB age is s different story. He has heard them
all, but can't select just one.
"There are so many it's hard
to keep track," Boeckman said
earlier this week.
Through four games,
Boeckman has showed his
. maturity, not his age, after

Ohio State .......................... 120.2
lowa-............ ........................ 147.0
Mlchig,an State ....................170.0
Penn State .......................... 192.5
Michi!ll!n........................ ...... 193.5

INDI\ IDU-'L LEADERS
Rulhlng Yards
Mike Hart, Michi!ll!n ................655 ..
Rashard Mendenhall, Illinois ....536
PJ. Hill,' Wisconsin .................. 512
Amir ~nnix, Minnesota ............ 438
Chris·Wells, Ohio State ............ 424

Passing Yards
Curtis Painter, Puroue .......... 1,290
Adam Weber, Minnesota ...... 1,031
CJ. Bacher, Northwestern ........958
Kellen Lev.;s, Indiana ......... .....906
Anthony Morelli, Penn State .... 797
Rec:eMng Yards
Brian Robtskie, Ohio State ..... ... 431
:Eric Decker, Minnesota ......... ... 421
·Oevin Thomas, Michigan St. ....370
Dorien Bryant, Purdue .... ..........368
Luke Swan, Wisconsin ............359

.......

OHIO STATE LEADERS

Todd Boeckman ...................... 760
:.....,..yanls
'ChriS Wells .............................. 424
Rllulvinll yanls
Blian Robiskie ........................ 431
Touchdowns
.
Brian Robiskie ............................ 5
Tactdel
James laurinaitis ... ........... ........29
.it&amp;ioaptiOIII
:James laurinaitis ....................... .2
Sacks
laurinaitis &amp; \lemon Gholston ......3

2007 OSU SCHEDULE
Sept. 1
\bung;!OYm State w38-6
Sept. 8
AkrOn
w20-2
Sept. 15 @Washington W33-14
Sept. 22
Nonl1westem
w58· 7
SAlURDAY
Oct. 6
Oct. 13
Oct. 20
Oct. 27
Nov. 3
Nov. 10
Nov. 17

@Mil-

8p.m.
@ Puroue
8 p.m.
Kent Stale
' TBA
Mich"'" State 3:30 p.m
@ Penn State
8 p.m.
W~n
TBA
Illinois
TBA
@ Mlchi~n
TBA

Con1ent compled by Jm Naveau and

de5iW1 by Jeff Bla111 • The Uma NeY.s
~ C 2007 The Uma

New.;. Repro-

duction o1 all or arrt portion of this material
is prohibltf&gt;:j without e&gt;j)reSS coosent

Jim
Naveau
The Uma News

419-993-2087

waiting four years to get his
chance to start.
·The St Henry High School
graduare has oompleted 66
peri:ent of his passes for 760
yards and 10 touchdowns,
with three interceptioiiB.
His early-season perfor-

lllllllCE81ook even more impressive,when oompared to the
first four starts made by the
OSU quarterliacks who played
just before hirii. .
Boeckman's completion
percentage is better than
that of Troy Smith, Steve
Bellisari, Craig Kr'enzel,
Germaine, Stanley
and Bob Hoying in
first four starts.
is
the only other
over 60
Boeckman's 10
passes is the
group.

Jackson was the runner-up
with seven TD throws in hiB
first four games and Gennaine
had f!ix. Gennaine, with 821
yards, is the only player in the
m'JUP to throw for more yanls ·
than Boeckman.
Boeckman ranks fourth behind Gennaine, Jackson and
Hoying in being picked oft;
with one interception every 29
passes. Gennaine was the best
of his immediate predecessors
in that category at one interception every 57 p&amp;8IIE!S Wld
Bellisari was the worst at one

every 14 passes.
If you want to take the

comparisons one step fur.
ther, a certain Super Bowlwinning, actress-dating for- ·
mer Michigan quarterback
didn't even start this well.
Tom BradY: s first four starts
at Michigan produced a 62 .
percent completion rate, 707
yards, three touchdowns and
three interceptions.
Numbers are just one way
to rate quarterbacks. But it's
hard to fmd much not to like.
in Boeckman's numbers.

SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: MINNESOTA (1·3, 0-1 BIG TEN)

indian8 ""'""""...................227.5

Pass Defense

.o- ·

Boeckman has been golden for Buckeyes•

Michif!an..............................211.2
Puf'due'Wisconsin ................202.8

Pass Onlot1Se
Purdue ...................... :......... 324.2
Minnesota ..........................257.8
Nort11westem ......................242.2
Michigan State .................... 230.0
Indiana ................................215.8
Total Defense
Ohio State .......................... 177.8
lowa ....................................235.5
l'enn State .......................... 247.2
MichigJn State ....................265.8
Wisconsin ............................ 309.8
Rush Defense
l'enn State ............................54.8
Ohio State ............................ 57.5
llllnols ....................................87.0
lowa .................... ..................88.5
Michi!ll!n State ......................95.8

• The IJma Neon

.

.

.

~

Bucks, Gophers square off'
Alook at SOil'e Of the key rnall:hups in
saturday's ~ bel'Mlen No.8 Ollo Slate
(«J,1.() BigTen) and Minnesota (1-3, 0-1
Big Ten) in the Hubert H. Humphrey
Metrodorre in Minneapolis;

...........
Todd Boeckman continued the impressive beginning to his career as Ohio
State's starter with four touchdown passes
in a 58-7 win aver Northwestern last
week. That tied him with seven other quarterbacks for the second-most TO passes
ever at OSU in a game. Only Bob Hoying
(twice) and John Borton (once), with five,
have thrrMT~ more in a game.
Minnesota's Adam Weber, a redshirt
freshman \\11o also is a first-year starter,
ranks second in the Big Ten in yards per
game (257.8) and touchclo&gt;Ml passes
(11), but has thrown eight interceptions,
twice as many as the next most frequently
intercepted Big Ten QB. Weber has six
tumovers (five interceptions and a fumble)
in his last two games and Minnesota has
16 turnovers in its first four games.
Advanla!la: ONo Stllll8

---~~bleb

Minnesota's lvni' Pinnix is ~ng 109
yards a !1iJme after rushing for 1,272 yards
last~. but has drll'M'I criticism b' losing
fumbles in losses to Purdue and Florida Atlantic the last tv.u weeks. He has been bot!lered l1f turf toe, so it is possil*l true freshman Duane Bennett,I'Alo ~ired 81 ~in
the second half in a 45-311oss to Purdue ·
last mall, oould be the starter.
Ohio State's Chris Wells suffered what
appeared to be a slight ankle sprain against
Northwestern. He and coach J1m Tressel
both said he st-oold be OK to play ag;linst
Minnesota. Freshman Brandon Sa1ne IS expeeled to be out again this week after hav·
1ng arthoscopic knee surgery.

he is ready to become the No. 3 re&lt;:eM!r
behind Robiskie and Brian Hartline.
Eric Oec.ker (30 catches, 421 yards, 4
touchdowns) is Minnesota's top receiver.
Ernie Wheelwri~t has 16 catches.
AdYaltalle: ONoStliiiB

OlfeiiiiM . .
OJ. Burrisstarted1hefirsttwo~mes
for1heGophe!sat ~rd. missed the
next tv.u because of a leg injJry, but
is expe¢ted to retum to the lineup
saturday night. Tac!OO Steve
Shidell, I'A1o started 12 !ll!mes last
season, is 1he oriy experienced offensive ineman. When it has
&lt;Mlided turnoYerS, Minnesota's of.
rense has been productive. It
ranks second in the l3ig Ten in
total offenSe (487 yards a ~) .
second in rushing offense and
second in passing offense.
Ohio State is sixth in the
Big Ten in total offense ·
(414 yards a game),
eighth in rushing and
sixth in passing. The
Buckeyes have ai-

sacks last season. Defensive tackle Todd

M~~~~~=·for Ohio Too years~. James Laurinaitis \laS a
State last 'Mlek aglinst Norlt'MI'Jstem with
~ \\11o recorded two.tackles v.11en Qhio.
tv.u sacks ;nJ a fi.m~ rero.ey for a touch- State pla')4ld in his hometDIIfl Minneapo- . :

~. Freshrnan~endcameron

of

~C::!~~\:'=:onU:~of-

HeyNard had 2 ~ tackles for
. touchdoMHiil season, other than a SjleCial
losses. NattTv~e;tem retted teams TO l1f Northwestern last 'M!ek.
Oyards in 33 rushing at- Sophoma-e Ross Homan is expected bad\
tempiS. Ollo Slate
this week after sitting out aglinst NolthY.estranks second nation- em with a toe inJury.
~r:n~~:· Minnesota has three experienced llnefense and~
backers. Steve Davis, Mike Sherels and
in rushing defense. John Shevlin have all started since the
~
2005season.
Adladage: Ohio State

oe;s;..--

DefetiSive backs

only one ;

'1

AdYaltalle:

Advanla!la: ONo State

Ohio Stllll8

Spedal teams,.

Daf111ilte h
Minnesota ranks

last aroong NCAA Division 1schools in

&lt;Mllall defense, ~. ing up 543 yards a
game. It is last in
passing defense
and is six spotS
from the bottom
Advanla!la: Ewn
in sacks, It is one
Recahers
of two BigTen
Brian Robiskie's three touchdown
teams, along
catches against Northwestern confirmed
with PuidJe, ~his stanis as one of the best receivers in
ing up rrore
the Big Ten. In addition to speed and pre- than four yards
cise route nunning. Robiskie (20 catches, per nunning play.
431 yards, 5 IDs) brings another imporErd Willie vantan! item to the table- dropped passes
DeSteeg \laS
are rare ...tlen the ball is throwri his way.
second-team
Ray Small's 48-yard touchdown catch
All-Big Ten
against Northwestern could have si!§laled and had 10

Ia It just my Imagination or does It seem Ike
Ohio State runs Its smallest tailback, 190-pound

Q

Mau(lce Wells, between t11e tackles a lot?
- Mark from BovAing {lreen

A

It's not yo.ur imagination. Unless, of course, you and a
lot of other people are imagining the same thing at
the same time.

·

roe

,.._ upon•· three

Q&amp;A with Jim Naveau

'

:
,

Minnesota's best defensive back, Dominic Jones, of Columbus Brool&lt;haven
HiiO'J Schooi, was
of four players
thrrM11 off the team in Jut; after he was arrested and charged with sexual assault. H~
half-brother Keith Massey, also a defen·
· sive back, was one of the other four who '
were dismissed from the team. Comer- •
back Jamal Harris has tv.u interceptions ~
this season, giving him six for his career,
Ohio Slate is tied for second in the~
" Ten in interceptions with iiole, but
of ttKx;e belong; to a Slartifll defensi.e
back (Malcolm Jenkins).

=-~~~has
...~'
sacks.

U.abacMn

Ohio State
l1llllliver

Bitan
Roblskle.

OSU's Ryan Pretofius is 6 of 8
on field @Ills. Minnesota's Jcel .
Monroe is 2 of 2 on field goalS,
with a long of 34 yards. Last ·
year's kicker, Jason Giannini,:
lost his job after missing .
three of his first four kicks ·
this season.
Ohio State 1!iMJ up a
99-yard kickJff reiJ.Jn :
fora~

against Northv.estem,'
but coach Jim Tressel
saystte~

· have done a IJXld
job on kick COielllge
CNeraiL Minnesota's ·
Monroe leads the Bi&lt;':
len v.;th six toudl- p
backs on his kickoffs.
Adli&amp;rW 8 :Ohio State

Say what?
"My job is to run over people.''
- Fullback 1\'ler Whaley,
whose main role is as a blocker

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

Buckeye Brain Busters

Ask your questions at:

1: Who is older,
2: Who is older, Ohio State 3: Who is older, Ohio
Ohio State qua~erback quarterback Todd Boeck- State quartertack Todd
Todd Boeckman or
man or San Francisco
Boeckman or Tennessee
Oevetand Browns
49ers QB Alex Smith, a
'Titans second-year QB
rookie QB Brady Quinn? tllree-year NA. veteran?
~nee Young?

Email Jim atjnavuau@llmanewa.com
Biog with him at www.llmasports.com

Answin: 1:.Boeckman by four months
2. Smith by one month 3. Young by 13 months

CHEVROLET • CADILLAC •
• B
208 East Main • 1-740-992-6614 Qr 1-800-837-1094 •
Houn: Mon.-Fri.
Sat. 9-4· Sun. 12-4 • www.

days until kickoff

�2007 Fall Car Care

Pagel•
,•

'

Fall car tare·Will help
"

frustration

(MS) - The cooler days of
fall are an excellent time to prepare your car for the potential
ravages of winter. Accor&lt;!ing to
the experts at the nonprofit
National
lnstitun:
·for
Automotive Service Excellence
(ASE), "Cold weather will only
make existing problems worse.".
That'~ why a few miriutes in the
garage .·,this- fall .could help prevent a much more time consuming and unpleasant experience
this winter.
Here are a few items that are
eaSy and simple to cheek before
. fall turns to winter. (Always read .
your owner's manual, and follow the manufacturer's recomtnellded service schedules. No
one knows yi:Jur
better than
the
that
ufactured Opgrading to a high-performance oil can make cold starts easier
.lt.) company
man
this winter and improve the overall performance of your car..
·
Motor oil - The easiest way hoses should be checked f~ ._ture baking soda and water,
to protect. and improve the per- cracks and leaks.
,
and put on ·a set of battery washformance · of your car is to
W'mdsli.., wipers - OJeCk- ~rs · to k~J&gt; corrosion from
upgrade to a high-performance the condition of your wiper · returning. Make sure the battery
synthetic motor oil, and chan~e blades, .and replace them if terminals and bold downs are
it regularly. Synthetic motor oils· ~. If your climate is harsh, tilbt. It's also good to clean and
have better low-temperature flu- purchase rubber-clad, winter lubricate hinges and the hOOd
idity and a lower coefficient of blades to fight ice build-up. , latch.
friction than mineral-based . Stock up on winter-formula
Fuel - It's important io keep
motor oils. This will help ensure windshield washer solvent. gas Jines from freezing in cold
easier start-ups on cold-w\)3ther You'll be surprised by bow much weather. No vehicle can run if it
days. Some motor oils, such liS - you use. If you don't have an.i~- can't get fuel. A full gas tanlc..will
Royal Purple®, offer continuous scrape2', ~y one and stash 1t m help prevent moisture and ice
engine prOtection. Additionally, your backseat or trunk. ·
from forming. ~cularly cold
Royal Purple motor oil has been
Battery - A dead battery can weather may warrant using a
proven in indepe~nt tests to make
cold winter morning fuel de-tcer or block beater to
improve fuel economy, reduce miserable. If your battery is ~ven~ fuel lines from freezing.
emissions, and increase horse- beyond its recommended ser- Property pre~g your car for
power and torque. Data about vice life, replace it. Top any low winter is sunple and doesn't
mdependent testing of their battery cells with distilled water. require a lot of time or technical
products is available at Clean and tighten ~ termi- expertise. The payback in
www.royalpurple.com.
nals to ensure electricity gets reduced risk of a preventable
Tires - Worn tires can be from the battery to the starter on breakdown and improv~ per. extremely dangerous on rainy, ~hilly fallf1¥&gt;rnin~s. ~ corrosi~n . formance is well worth the·min·Snowy,an&lt;J icy terrain and roads . ts present, clean It w1th a nux- imal effort.
Examine tires' tread life and
wear. Be sure to check the sidewalls for cuts and nicks as well .
All-season radials or winter tires
are a wise investment for those
who must drive in inclement
Quality Used Cars and Trucks
weather regularly. Check t~
pressure and rotate as recommended. Don't forget to check
your spare, and be sure the jack ·
functions properly.
.
· Cooling system - The level,
"Let us be YOUR First Choice."
condition, and concentration of
the coolant ·should be checked
periodically. It may be time for a
flush and refill if it's been more
St. Rl2
Gallipolis Feny, wv
than a couple of years since the
coolant has been changed . . A
50150 mix of antifreeze and
OWner~ Randy Powers
Water is USUally recommended.
A1ldiiiona1Iy. tho ·oOridiiion • M: •.,......._...,.......ilili...,_lllillilioioio......._ioioio_

ear

Of

a

Flnt Chllce used.Can

We do Collision Repair...
Spedalizing in Deer Hits

304-675-2761

.

. Frlday~ Septeder 28, 2007

..

,

.

Automake~.·eiPect growth
to continuein sales of

car-based crossover vehicles
BY TOM KRISHER

said.
Sundermann, a physician
and mother of ~wo in Ann
DETROIT - Cars were too ArbOr, Mich., felt :that her old
small, sport utility vehicles too vehicle, !l Volvo· station wagon,
inefficient and she couldn't see didn't ~veJ:nough room.
herself driving a minivan. So
''In driving.)be' kJds. aro~nd
Dr., Melissa Sundermann and iloing car pobling, I .Just
ended up with a type of vehicle cmildn 'dit eriough kids in my
that most automak,ers are bank-· car safely,!• She sajd. j
.
ing on for sales growth: a
Sundennann, 37 ;·. ··s•arted
crossover.
looking at large StJY:s such as
Built on car underpinnings ~he Eord ·• Exped~~ton , ·-and
but having many attributes of ChevrQlet Tahoe, btit ·wanted
. SUVs, crossover utility vehi- something,_~mall~r with better
cles ' have seen explosive glls mileage. She alsO. needed
growth since Toyota Motor three-rows of.~ts and enou,gh
Corp, started the category with space in the .b ack {or grocenes
the RAV4 back in 1995.
and.other1tems . .
hi 1996, the RAV4's first full
When·her husband suggested
year on sale, Toyota told looking ~the. SatumJ)utlook,
56,709 of the small crossovers a new crossover vehicle, she
when it had the market to thought it was Odd because her
itself, according to data col- image of ~e company .was of
lected by Ward's Automotive · one. that made economy cars.
Group. But sales rose quickly
"With all the options, the
as other automakers saw the price was . right. We were
growth potential, topping 2.4 unpressed that the gas mileage
million last year with more was fairly dC;cent for a bigger
than 50 models for sale. ·
. car,!' she said. "I can fit aJI my
And as automakers try to kids and their frie11ds and all
capture thousands of people my stuff and still feel like I'm
like Sundermann who want driving a luxury ear."
more space for kids and their
The crossovers, which range
junk, the array of models and · in size from smaller (our-passales is almost certain to grow. senger vehicles to nes seating
0
Last year. crossovers outsold up to eight, are key
products
truck-based SUVs for the first for the Detroit Three as they
time, said George Pipas, Ford try to regain market share lost
Motor Co.'s top sales analyst.
mainly to Japanese competi"Next year, most likely, the tors. Last month, Detroit's
cate~ory will climb over the 3
t:nilhon mark, barring a sharp
decline in total volume," Pipas
AP AUTO WRITER

Racine Service Center

TOWING
Complete Auto Repair
Mechanic on l)_u ty ·
Breaks, Tune Upa, Batteries
Englne Dlagnoala, Transmission Service
Moat Tire Sizes In Stock!

•

104 5th Street • Racine, Ohio

1-740-949-2700
. '. '

All major

.

~

2007 Fall Car Care

Friday, September 28, 2007

Vehicles
from Page2
share of the market dropped
below 50 percent for the first
time in history . .
· Ford, General Motors Corp.
and Chrysler LLC lost !! collective $15 billion last year as
they were caught unprepared
when high gaspline pnces sent
consumers away from trucks
and sport utility vehicles to
cars and crossovers.
A two-wheel-drive 2008
Ford Expedition large SUV, for
instance, gets an estimated 12
miles per gallon in the city and
18 on the highway. Ford's
Taurus X crossover, built on a
Volvo car platform with three
rows of seats, gets 16 mpg in
the .city and 24 on the highway.
Because they're built on car
platforms, crosspvers are more
maneuverable
and
have
smoother rides than the truckbased SUVs, said Lonnie
Miller, director of industry
analysis for R.L. Polk &amp; Co.
"It provides kind of like the
best of both worlds. It's a nice
alternative to a minivan and as
large in many cases as a gasguzzling SUV," he said .

• Page3

What you need to know about

the collision repair process

As crossovers have grown,
minivan sales have dropped,
(MS) - If your vel)icle has
off about 22 percent from the
first seven months of last year been damaged in a collision,
and down 12 percent in 2006 you've probably heard this
compared with 2005. Ford and common mi~conception: your
GM , seeing little growth vehicle will never be the same.
potential , got out of the busi- Chances are, it wasn't your
ness . But Chrysler, the mini- insurance company representavan inventor and leader, .sees tive or an employee of a colligrowth and is coming out with sion repair business who said
a new version of its people this. That's because every day
hauler featuring a seat that collision industry professionals
swivels so passengers can sit retum collision-damaged vehicles to their previous condition
on either side of a table .
·
For Sundermann, though, a - both s~cturally and cos)Detically.
minivan dido 't feel right.
So what does it take to repair
"It would just define me,"
she said. "I lead a sporty, your vehicle properly after an
adventuresome lifestyle. I'm a accident? Because of today's
mother and physician . But I complex vehicles and highwasn't ready to drive a mini- quality paint finishes, technivan," said Sundermann, who cians need to be properly
trained in the entire repair
competes in triathlons.
"Some people don't want to process to achieve complete
be seen as kmd of that tradi- and safe repairs.
The repair process begins
tional suburban mom.driving a
minivan," said Sarah Woolson; when a detailed estimate is pregeneral sales manager at pared, indicating all of the
Saturn of Ann Arbor, the deal- repairs needed to restore your
ership that sold Sundermann vehicle to proper function and
appearance. In some cases, this
her black Outlook in April.

damage ·assessment requires
removing damaged body panels or other parts. This results
in the most accurate·initial esti·
mate possible. The parts listed
on the estimate are then
ordered. The collision repair
business ani! your insurance
con,pany . should explain
whether the replacement · parts
are new parts ordered from the
manufacturer of your vehicle,
used parts ordered through an
automotive recycler, or new
parts manufactured by a company other than the manufac·
turer of your vehicle. Your col·
lision repair business and
insurer can explain the pros
and cons of using each of these
types of parts .
If your vehicle was hit hard
in the collision , the repair faci l·
ity should use a measuring sys·
tern that checks specific points
of your vehicle structure
against dimensions provided
by the vehicle or equipment
manufacturer. The repair facili·
ty will also need to measure

your vehicle several times during the repair process to make
s ure it is within the recommended tolerances. In most
cases, thi s tolerance is as strict
as three millimeters - the
thickness of three dimes . Some
vehicles today require a tolerance po g reater than one mil.
limcter.
Whenever appropriate , origi·
nal parts are repaired . Severely
damaged parts need to be
replaced. A properly trained
technician can repair sheet
metal and plastic so that it can
be difficult, if not impossible,
to find any indication of damage. In some cases, parts not
included on the estimate may
need to be ordered during the
repair process if "hidden" damage is found .
After repairs are complete.
the vehicle is ready to !&gt;e painted. The areas to be painted are
first prepared. Repaired areas
are finely sanded, primer and

Pluse see CoiUslon. Pllp 4

POINT PLEASANT FOODMtUlT
-· ~''''
1,~
~ STOPIN ~
AND Fill UP~

~~WITH US~

~~'''~
GASoLINE • SOFT DRINKS • SNACKS • COFFEE ·CHIPS
• HOT DOGS • COOKIES • PWS MUCH, MUCH MORE!

�2007 Fall Car Care

Pagel•
,•

'

Fall car tare·Will help
"

frustration

(MS) - The cooler days of
fall are an excellent time to prepare your car for the potential
ravages of winter. Accor&lt;!ing to
the experts at the nonprofit
National
lnstitun:
·for
Automotive Service Excellence
(ASE), "Cold weather will only
make existing problems worse.".
That'~ why a few miriutes in the
garage .·,this- fall .could help prevent a much more time consuming and unpleasant experience
this winter.
Here are a few items that are
eaSy and simple to cheek before
. fall turns to winter. (Always read .
your owner's manual, and follow the manufacturer's recomtnellded service schedules. No
one knows yi:Jur
better than
the
that
ufactured Opgrading to a high-performance oil can make cold starts easier
.lt.) company
man
this winter and improve the overall performance of your car..
·
Motor oil - The easiest way hoses should be checked f~ ._ture baking soda and water,
to protect. and improve the per- cracks and leaks.
,
and put on ·a set of battery washformance · of your car is to
W'mdsli.., wipers - OJeCk- ~rs · to k~J&gt; corrosion from
upgrade to a high-performance the condition of your wiper · returning. Make sure the battery
synthetic motor oil, and chan~e blades, .and replace them if terminals and bold downs are
it regularly. Synthetic motor oils· ~. If your climate is harsh, tilbt. It's also good to clean and
have better low-temperature flu- purchase rubber-clad, winter lubricate hinges and the hOOd
idity and a lower coefficient of blades to fight ice build-up. , latch.
friction than mineral-based . Stock up on winter-formula
Fuel - It's important io keep
motor oils. This will help ensure windshield washer solvent. gas Jines from freezing in cold
easier start-ups on cold-w\)3ther You'll be surprised by bow much weather. No vehicle can run if it
days. Some motor oils, such liS - you use. If you don't have an.i~- can't get fuel. A full gas tanlc..will
Royal Purple®, offer continuous scrape2', ~y one and stash 1t m help prevent moisture and ice
engine prOtection. Additionally, your backseat or trunk. ·
from forming. ~cularly cold
Royal Purple motor oil has been
Battery - A dead battery can weather may warrant using a
proven in indepe~nt tests to make
cold winter morning fuel de-tcer or block beater to
improve fuel economy, reduce miserable. If your battery is ~ven~ fuel lines from freezing.
emissions, and increase horse- beyond its recommended ser- Property pre~g your car for
power and torque. Data about vice life, replace it. Top any low winter is sunple and doesn't
mdependent testing of their battery cells with distilled water. require a lot of time or technical
products is available at Clean and tighten ~ termi- expertise. The payback in
www.royalpurple.com.
nals to ensure electricity gets reduced risk of a preventable
Tires - Worn tires can be from the battery to the starter on breakdown and improv~ per. extremely dangerous on rainy, ~hilly fallf1¥&gt;rnin~s. ~ corrosi~n . formance is well worth the·min·Snowy,an&lt;J icy terrain and roads . ts present, clean It w1th a nux- imal effort.
Examine tires' tread life and
wear. Be sure to check the sidewalls for cuts and nicks as well .
All-season radials or winter tires
are a wise investment for those
who must drive in inclement
Quality Used Cars and Trucks
weather regularly. Check t~
pressure and rotate as recommended. Don't forget to check
your spare, and be sure the jack ·
functions properly.
.
· Cooling system - The level,
"Let us be YOUR First Choice."
condition, and concentration of
the coolant ·should be checked
periodically. It may be time for a
flush and refill if it's been more
St. Rl2
Gallipolis Feny, wv
than a couple of years since the
coolant has been changed . . A
50150 mix of antifreeze and
OWner~ Randy Powers
Water is USUally recommended.
A1ldiiiona1Iy. tho ·oOridiiion • M: •.,......._...,.......ilili...,_lllillilioioio......._ioioio_

ear

Of

a

Flnt Chllce used.Can

We do Collision Repair...
Spedalizing in Deer Hits

304-675-2761

.

. Frlday~ Septeder 28, 2007

..

,

.

Automake~.·eiPect growth
to continuein sales of

car-based crossover vehicles
BY TOM KRISHER

said.
Sundermann, a physician
and mother of ~wo in Ann
DETROIT - Cars were too ArbOr, Mich., felt :that her old
small, sport utility vehicles too vehicle, !l Volvo· station wagon,
inefficient and she couldn't see didn't ~veJ:nough room.
herself driving a minivan. So
''In driving.)be' kJds. aro~nd
Dr., Melissa Sundermann and iloing car pobling, I .Just
ended up with a type of vehicle cmildn 'dit eriough kids in my
that most automak,ers are bank-· car safely,!• She sajd. j
.
ing on for sales growth: a
Sundennann, 37 ;·. ··s•arted
crossover.
looking at large StJY:s such as
Built on car underpinnings ~he Eord ·• Exped~~ton , ·-and
but having many attributes of ChevrQlet Tahoe, btit ·wanted
. SUVs, crossover utility vehi- something,_~mall~r with better
cles ' have seen explosive glls mileage. She alsO. needed
growth since Toyota Motor three-rows of.~ts and enou,gh
Corp, started the category with space in the .b ack {or grocenes
the RAV4 back in 1995.
and.other1tems . .
hi 1996, the RAV4's first full
When·her husband suggested
year on sale, Toyota told looking ~the. SatumJ)utlook,
56,709 of the small crossovers a new crossover vehicle, she
when it had the market to thought it was Odd because her
itself, according to data col- image of ~e company .was of
lected by Ward's Automotive · one. that made economy cars.
Group. But sales rose quickly
"With all the options, the
as other automakers saw the price was . right. We were
growth potential, topping 2.4 unpressed that the gas mileage
million last year with more was fairly dC;cent for a bigger
than 50 models for sale. ·
. car,!' she said. "I can fit aJI my
And as automakers try to kids and their frie11ds and all
capture thousands of people my stuff and still feel like I'm
like Sundermann who want driving a luxury ear."
more space for kids and their
The crossovers, which range
junk, the array of models and · in size from smaller (our-passales is almost certain to grow. senger vehicles to nes seating
0
Last year. crossovers outsold up to eight, are key
products
truck-based SUVs for the first for the Detroit Three as they
time, said George Pipas, Ford try to regain market share lost
Motor Co.'s top sales analyst.
mainly to Japanese competi"Next year, most likely, the tors. Last month, Detroit's
cate~ory will climb over the 3
t:nilhon mark, barring a sharp
decline in total volume," Pipas
AP AUTO WRITER

Racine Service Center

TOWING
Complete Auto Repair
Mechanic on l)_u ty ·
Breaks, Tune Upa, Batteries
Englne Dlagnoala, Transmission Service
Moat Tire Sizes In Stock!

•

104 5th Street • Racine, Ohio

1-740-949-2700
. '. '

All major

.

~

2007 Fall Car Care

Friday, September 28, 2007

Vehicles
from Page2
share of the market dropped
below 50 percent for the first
time in history . .
· Ford, General Motors Corp.
and Chrysler LLC lost !! collective $15 billion last year as
they were caught unprepared
when high gaspline pnces sent
consumers away from trucks
and sport utility vehicles to
cars and crossovers.
A two-wheel-drive 2008
Ford Expedition large SUV, for
instance, gets an estimated 12
miles per gallon in the city and
18 on the highway. Ford's
Taurus X crossover, built on a
Volvo car platform with three
rows of seats, gets 16 mpg in
the .city and 24 on the highway.
Because they're built on car
platforms, crosspvers are more
maneuverable
and
have
smoother rides than the truckbased SUVs, said Lonnie
Miller, director of industry
analysis for R.L. Polk &amp; Co.
"It provides kind of like the
best of both worlds. It's a nice
alternative to a minivan and as
large in many cases as a gasguzzling SUV," he said .

• Page3

What you need to know about

the collision repair process

As crossovers have grown,
minivan sales have dropped,
(MS) - If your vel)icle has
off about 22 percent from the
first seven months of last year been damaged in a collision,
and down 12 percent in 2006 you've probably heard this
compared with 2005. Ford and common mi~conception: your
GM , seeing little growth vehicle will never be the same.
potential , got out of the busi- Chances are, it wasn't your
ness . But Chrysler, the mini- insurance company representavan inventor and leader, .sees tive or an employee of a colligrowth and is coming out with sion repair business who said
a new version of its people this. That's because every day
hauler featuring a seat that collision industry professionals
swivels so passengers can sit retum collision-damaged vehicles to their previous condition
on either side of a table .
·
For Sundermann, though, a - both s~cturally and cos)Detically.
minivan dido 't feel right.
So what does it take to repair
"It would just define me,"
she said. "I lead a sporty, your vehicle properly after an
adventuresome lifestyle. I'm a accident? Because of today's
mother and physician . But I complex vehicles and highwasn't ready to drive a mini- quality paint finishes, technivan," said Sundermann, who cians need to be properly
trained in the entire repair
competes in triathlons.
"Some people don't want to process to achieve complete
be seen as kmd of that tradi- and safe repairs.
The repair process begins
tional suburban mom.driving a
minivan," said Sarah Woolson; when a detailed estimate is pregeneral sales manager at pared, indicating all of the
Saturn of Ann Arbor, the deal- repairs needed to restore your
ership that sold Sundermann vehicle to proper function and
appearance. In some cases, this
her black Outlook in April.

damage ·assessment requires
removing damaged body panels or other parts. This results
in the most accurate·initial esti·
mate possible. The parts listed
on the estimate are then
ordered. The collision repair
business ani! your insurance
con,pany . should explain
whether the replacement · parts
are new parts ordered from the
manufacturer of your vehicle,
used parts ordered through an
automotive recycler, or new
parts manufactured by a company other than the manufac·
turer of your vehicle. Your col·
lision repair business and
insurer can explain the pros
and cons of using each of these
types of parts .
If your vehicle was hit hard
in the collision , the repair faci l·
ity should use a measuring sys·
tern that checks specific points
of your vehicle structure
against dimensions provided
by the vehicle or equipment
manufacturer. The repair facili·
ty will also need to measure

your vehicle several times during the repair process to make
s ure it is within the recommended tolerances. In most
cases, thi s tolerance is as strict
as three millimeters - the
thickness of three dimes . Some
vehicles today require a tolerance po g reater than one mil.
limcter.
Whenever appropriate , origi·
nal parts are repaired . Severely
damaged parts need to be
replaced. A properly trained
technician can repair sheet
metal and plastic so that it can
be difficult, if not impossible,
to find any indication of damage. In some cases, parts not
included on the estimate may
need to be ordered during the
repair process if "hidden" damage is found .
After repairs are complete.
the vehicle is ready to !&gt;e painted. The areas to be painted are
first prepared. Repaired areas
are finely sanded, primer and

Pluse see CoiUslon. Pllp 4

POINT PLEASANT FOODMtUlT
-· ~''''
1,~
~ STOPIN ~
AND Fill UP~

~~WITH US~

~~'''~
GASoLINE • SOFT DRINKS • SNACKS • COFFEE ·CHIPS
• HOT DOGS • COOKIES • PWS MUCH, MUCH MORE!

�•

2007 Fall Car Care

Page4•

Some ideas·on cutting car .insurance costs
,

Depending on where
you live, car insurance can be
lL'Iironomical or entirely reasonable. Drivers in the Northeast
teod to pay the highest premiums,
while those in the South or .the
Midwest tend to enjoy more reasonable rates.
One thing all drivers have in
common, hOwever, is the desire
to lower their automobile insurance cosL~ . Regardless of how
expensive your insurance bill
might be, there's always room for
a bargain. Fortunately, there are
plenty of ways drivers can save a
few dollars.
• Before you buy a car, do your
research. Some vehicles raise red
flags for insurance companies
and have traditionally cost more
to insure than others in or outside
of their vehicle class, regarqless
of sticker price. For example, in
2005 and 2006, the relatively
inexpensive Honda Civic was the
fourth-costliest vehicle to insure.
But why would such a small car
with such a low sticker price cost
so much to insure? Insurance
providers take several things into
consideration, many of which
have nothing to do with you, the
driver. In the Civic's case, the size
(MS) -

Collision
from Page3
corrosion protection products
are applied and areas that won't
be pamted are "masked orr·
and protected . The painter then
uses a paint mixing system to
mix the paint that will match
your vehicle's finish. A paint
code on your vehicle provides
the starting point, but generally
requires a trained eye to match
the paint to your vehicle.
Often, paint will require
"blending ," a technique used to
facilitate matching the color of
your car. The paint is sprayed
mside a spray booth designed
to keep dust and other contaminants off the new finish.
Once the painting is complete, the vehicle is reassembled with all-trim pieces, decals
and stripes. If any new glass is
needed, it is usually installed at
this point. The wheel alignment
will also be checked if the collision damage was severe, if
the .~eJti!'(~. ~pu1h pr.if.&lt;j,tir~.

Because they're more likely to withstand an accident, SlNs are
often less costly to insure than some smaller cars.
of the vehicle likely plays a role.
Insurance companies look at how
well a vehicle will stand up
should it get into an accident. In
essence, insurance companies
don't want to pay for a new car.
With more and more SUV's on
the road, a Civic doesn't stand too
great a chance of survival if it gets
into an accident with an SUV.
Another consideration is a

vehicle's rare rl theft. Each year,
CCC Information Servico,
which provides technology 10 die
automotive claims and repair
industry, puts out a list of
America's most stolen vehicles.
While the Civic failed to crack
· CCCs top 10 list in 2005, Hondas
were the fourth most stolen make
of vehicle on CCCs list. So while
the Civic might be great on gas,

wheel, or suspension parts
were damaged in the collision.
This helps to catch any potential problems with the steering
and suspension parts. .
Finally, your vehicle is taken
to the detailing area for a thorough interior and exterior
cleaning. Any minor imperfections in the new paint surface
will be removed
polishing
and buffing. A fina inspection
checks that all work meets the
repair facility's standards and
the final paperwork is prepared
for the vehicle owner and
involved insurer.
Throughout this process, the

repair business will be in contact with the insurance company handling the claim. The
insurer may want to review the
estimate and inspect the vehicle before or during the repair
process. In some cases, the
repair facility may need to
obtain insurer and vehicle
owner approval before completing additional necessary
repairs not included on the initial estimate.
Locating a collision repair
business that will follow the
proper repair procedures is
Important for any vehicle
owner. Insurers and collision

br

Grand 0111er•ina
October 2nd at 3 p.m.

~ A-ON!, w~~g!!ant~~PAIR

"lJ'l'fVJ

Bumper to Bumper SeNice

99 Beech Street, Middleport, OH

(740) 992-1030
Roger Manley- Owner James Moore • Certified Mechanic

2007Fall Car Care

Friday, SePtember 28: 2007 ·

don't assume its small size will
help you with your insurance
company. Do your research first
and avoid being stuck holding the
bag.
• Ask for higher deductibles.
This is a big risk to take, particularly if you're accident prone or
live in a densely populated area,
but it will help you save a substantial amount of money each
month. By increasing your
dedllctible, you're increasing the
initial amount of money you'll
have to pay should you get iil an
accident. This simultaneously
decreases what your provider has
.to pay, hence lowering your
monthly rates.
• Consolidate, consolidate, con~idare. Most insunmce companD wana all of your business, not
just !iDIJie. If you need more than
one type rl insurance (i.e.; homeowner'&amp;, automobile), your
provider will likely give you a
ddc::ouna if you insure both your
home and your autos with them.
This also works in households
with more than one vehicle.
Newlyweds are often advised to
put· their vehicles on the same
auto insurance policy because it
can drastically reduce their

monthly premiums. If your current homeowners insurance company doesn't provide auto insurance or vice versa, shop around.
You might be surprised at how
much consolidation can save you
each month.
• Encourage good grades from
your kids. Young drivers are
among the most high-risk and
expensive to insure, as most parents of drivers are well aware.
However, you can reduce rates
even if insuring your driving
youngster. H a child has good
grades, that's often worth a -discount to most insurance compal)ies. Similarly; kids (and even
adults) who take courses in defensive driving often earn discounts
as well. Consult your insurance
provider about ways you can
lower the cost of adding your son
or daughter to your plan.
• Car pool to work Car pools
not only l)elp the environment,
they can help your wallet as well.
Whenever you begin a new poll~
cy, one of the first questions a
provider will ask is how much
you drive your vehicle each day.
In general, the less your drive, the

Costs·.

• Page 5

Itty
bitty
Smart
car
wows
Ma~hattan • but.:will 1.\IIlerica buy it?
.

from Page4

BY VERENA DOBNIK

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

lower your rates. That's because
it's hard to get your car into an
accident when it's sitting in
your garage or driveway. If you
car pool to work (or take public
transportation), mention that to
your provider.
.
• The older your car gets, the
less you should insure 'it.
Anytime . you buy .h new car,
you should always get full coverage. In .fact, ,i f you're leasing
or financmg a car, chapces are
the lending institution will
mandate you get full coverage
ori · the vehicle. But once you
· own your car outright and the
car is getting older, gradually
reduce the coverage. Collision
coverage is often dropped by
drivers of older cars because
the value of the car isn't worth
the cost to insure it. This doesn't mean you should discard
your vehicle; but a general rule
of thumb is that if your car is·
worth less than 10 times what it
costs to insure it, it's time to
reduce your coverage.

NEW YORK - At just 8
feet, 8 inches long and about
5 feet wide, the two-seat
Smart car turned heads as it
rolled through Manhattan one
recent evening. at rush hour.
Pedestrians in Times Square
.gawked. In front of Grand
Central Terminal, a cabbie
rolled down his window and
asked, ''What -is it? How
much?" Two nearby police
officers both gave it a thumbs
up.
The 1,800-pound "microcar" - more than 3 feet
, shorter than fellow European
pipsqueak the Mini Cooper 1s likely to be the smallest
thing on four wheels when it
hits the U.S. car market in
early · 2008. Produced in ·
France by the Mercedes Car
Group, the "Fortwo" model
has been on a 50-city U.S .
tour this summer, including
Detroit, Smart USA's corporate headquarters.

Its base price is $12,000,
and it's hard to beat the fuel
efficiency of about 40 miles
per gallon. If -any car can
squeeze into Manhattan parking spots, this is it. And Smart
is hip: The Museum of
Modern Art has displayed it
as an innovative, stylish solution to two practtcal probterns: urban crowding and
diminishing energy.
But the big question is:
How many Americans, used
to SUVs and other hefty vehicles, will take to this itty billy
car? Is it safe?
"Just how many urban fashionistas are there?" wrote
Juergen Zoellter in a review
this spring for Car and Driver
ma~azine, predicting only
Jim1ted U.S. sales. He said the
prospect of driving a Fortwo
m truck traffic on American
hip,hways was "scary."
'In the States, the vehicle's
size may work against it," he
wrote . .
The Smart car's U.S. crashtest results will be announced

said
David tested a previous model, the
this fall,
Schembri, preside~! of Smart Smart City Coupe, and gave it
· USA and a veteran auto mar- · a three-star rating out of a
keting executive, previously possible five. The U.S. model
with Mitsubishi. He said it's IS almost 8 inches longer than
expected to get four stars out the European one, with safey
improvements including a
of a possible five..
steel safety "cage" inside,
The European New Car
Assessment Program crashPluse ... Smllrt. hp I

LAYTON'S GARAGE
Over 50 Years in Business

OPEN MOND~Y TIIRU FRIDAY
7AM~6PM
"
~

Office

Home

675-4230

675-4853

I 112 mile out Jericho Road

A GOOD Car Loan

Please see Costs. Pap 5 . .

repair business owners alike complete repair. The simplest
say the key is looking for evi- way to locate a properly trained
dence of properly trained tech- business is by searching the 1nicians, such as the I-CAR CAR Gold Class Professionals
Gold Class Professional&amp;.® Online Business Directory at
designation . Gold
Class www.goldclass.com. An indusdesignated try-recognized benchmark of
Professionals®
businesses are dedicated to current and ongoing technical
training t~e~r employees on the · training, the Gold Class
latest &lt;;OliiSion repwr technolo- Professionals designation is the
gy to help achieve a safe and smart choice after a collision.

ISN'T hard to find,
IF •• ~
•••

you see us first!

OHIO VALLEY BANK
Main Office

Point Pleasant, WV
· 328 Viand Street ••••••••••••••••••••••675-8660

420 Third Avenue ............................ 446-2631

MiniBank

-

Pomeroy

437 Fourth Avenue ................:......... 446-2631

700 W . Main St ................................. 992-2357

Gallipolis Wai-Mart

Jackson Pike

3035 St. Rt. 160 ................................446-2050

Rio Grande

2145 Eastern Ave .......................: ..... 441-3575

'

416 W. College Ave .......................... 245-5373
' '

�•

2007 Fall Car Care

Page4•

Some ideas·on cutting car .insurance costs
,

Depending on where
you live, car insurance can be
lL'Iironomical or entirely reasonable. Drivers in the Northeast
teod to pay the highest premiums,
while those in the South or .the
Midwest tend to enjoy more reasonable rates.
One thing all drivers have in
common, hOwever, is the desire
to lower their automobile insurance cosL~ . Regardless of how
expensive your insurance bill
might be, there's always room for
a bargain. Fortunately, there are
plenty of ways drivers can save a
few dollars.
• Before you buy a car, do your
research. Some vehicles raise red
flags for insurance companies
and have traditionally cost more
to insure than others in or outside
of their vehicle class, regarqless
of sticker price. For example, in
2005 and 2006, the relatively
inexpensive Honda Civic was the
fourth-costliest vehicle to insure.
But why would such a small car
with such a low sticker price cost
so much to insure? Insurance
providers take several things into
consideration, many of which
have nothing to do with you, the
driver. In the Civic's case, the size
(MS) -

Collision
from Page3
corrosion protection products
are applied and areas that won't
be pamted are "masked orr·
and protected . The painter then
uses a paint mixing system to
mix the paint that will match
your vehicle's finish. A paint
code on your vehicle provides
the starting point, but generally
requires a trained eye to match
the paint to your vehicle.
Often, paint will require
"blending ," a technique used to
facilitate matching the color of
your car. The paint is sprayed
mside a spray booth designed
to keep dust and other contaminants off the new finish.
Once the painting is complete, the vehicle is reassembled with all-trim pieces, decals
and stripes. If any new glass is
needed, it is usually installed at
this point. The wheel alignment
will also be checked if the collision damage was severe, if
the .~eJti!'(~. ~pu1h pr.if.&lt;j,tir~.

Because they're more likely to withstand an accident, SlNs are
often less costly to insure than some smaller cars.
of the vehicle likely plays a role.
Insurance companies look at how
well a vehicle will stand up
should it get into an accident. In
essence, insurance companies
don't want to pay for a new car.
With more and more SUV's on
the road, a Civic doesn't stand too
great a chance of survival if it gets
into an accident with an SUV.
Another consideration is a

vehicle's rare rl theft. Each year,
CCC Information Servico,
which provides technology 10 die
automotive claims and repair
industry, puts out a list of
America's most stolen vehicles.
While the Civic failed to crack
· CCCs top 10 list in 2005, Hondas
were the fourth most stolen make
of vehicle on CCCs list. So while
the Civic might be great on gas,

wheel, or suspension parts
were damaged in the collision.
This helps to catch any potential problems with the steering
and suspension parts. .
Finally, your vehicle is taken
to the detailing area for a thorough interior and exterior
cleaning. Any minor imperfections in the new paint surface
will be removed
polishing
and buffing. A fina inspection
checks that all work meets the
repair facility's standards and
the final paperwork is prepared
for the vehicle owner and
involved insurer.
Throughout this process, the

repair business will be in contact with the insurance company handling the claim. The
insurer may want to review the
estimate and inspect the vehicle before or during the repair
process. In some cases, the
repair facility may need to
obtain insurer and vehicle
owner approval before completing additional necessary
repairs not included on the initial estimate.
Locating a collision repair
business that will follow the
proper repair procedures is
Important for any vehicle
owner. Insurers and collision

br

Grand 0111er•ina
October 2nd at 3 p.m.

~ A-ON!, w~~g!!ant~~PAIR

"lJ'l'fVJ

Bumper to Bumper SeNice

99 Beech Street, Middleport, OH

(740) 992-1030
Roger Manley- Owner James Moore • Certified Mechanic

2007Fall Car Care

Friday, SePtember 28: 2007 ·

don't assume its small size will
help you with your insurance
company. Do your research first
and avoid being stuck holding the
bag.
• Ask for higher deductibles.
This is a big risk to take, particularly if you're accident prone or
live in a densely populated area,
but it will help you save a substantial amount of money each
month. By increasing your
dedllctible, you're increasing the
initial amount of money you'll
have to pay should you get iil an
accident. This simultaneously
decreases what your provider has
.to pay, hence lowering your
monthly rates.
• Consolidate, consolidate, con~idare. Most insunmce companD wana all of your business, not
just !iDIJie. If you need more than
one type rl insurance (i.e.; homeowner'&amp;, automobile), your
provider will likely give you a
ddc::ouna if you insure both your
home and your autos with them.
This also works in households
with more than one vehicle.
Newlyweds are often advised to
put· their vehicles on the same
auto insurance policy because it
can drastically reduce their

monthly premiums. If your current homeowners insurance company doesn't provide auto insurance or vice versa, shop around.
You might be surprised at how
much consolidation can save you
each month.
• Encourage good grades from
your kids. Young drivers are
among the most high-risk and
expensive to insure, as most parents of drivers are well aware.
However, you can reduce rates
even if insuring your driving
youngster. H a child has good
grades, that's often worth a -discount to most insurance compal)ies. Similarly; kids (and even
adults) who take courses in defensive driving often earn discounts
as well. Consult your insurance
provider about ways you can
lower the cost of adding your son
or daughter to your plan.
• Car pool to work Car pools
not only l)elp the environment,
they can help your wallet as well.
Whenever you begin a new poll~
cy, one of the first questions a
provider will ask is how much
you drive your vehicle each day.
In general, the less your drive, the

Costs·.

• Page 5

Itty
bitty
Smart
car
wows
Ma~hattan • but.:will 1.\IIlerica buy it?
.

from Page4

BY VERENA DOBNIK

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

lower your rates. That's because
it's hard to get your car into an
accident when it's sitting in
your garage or driveway. If you
car pool to work (or take public
transportation), mention that to
your provider.
.
• The older your car gets, the
less you should insure 'it.
Anytime . you buy .h new car,
you should always get full coverage. In .fact, ,i f you're leasing
or financmg a car, chapces are
the lending institution will
mandate you get full coverage
ori · the vehicle. But once you
· own your car outright and the
car is getting older, gradually
reduce the coverage. Collision
coverage is often dropped by
drivers of older cars because
the value of the car isn't worth
the cost to insure it. This doesn't mean you should discard
your vehicle; but a general rule
of thumb is that if your car is·
worth less than 10 times what it
costs to insure it, it's time to
reduce your coverage.

NEW YORK - At just 8
feet, 8 inches long and about
5 feet wide, the two-seat
Smart car turned heads as it
rolled through Manhattan one
recent evening. at rush hour.
Pedestrians in Times Square
.gawked. In front of Grand
Central Terminal, a cabbie
rolled down his window and
asked, ''What -is it? How
much?" Two nearby police
officers both gave it a thumbs
up.
The 1,800-pound "microcar" - more than 3 feet
, shorter than fellow European
pipsqueak the Mini Cooper 1s likely to be the smallest
thing on four wheels when it
hits the U.S. car market in
early · 2008. Produced in ·
France by the Mercedes Car
Group, the "Fortwo" model
has been on a 50-city U.S .
tour this summer, including
Detroit, Smart USA's corporate headquarters.

Its base price is $12,000,
and it's hard to beat the fuel
efficiency of about 40 miles
per gallon. If -any car can
squeeze into Manhattan parking spots, this is it. And Smart
is hip: The Museum of
Modern Art has displayed it
as an innovative, stylish solution to two practtcal probterns: urban crowding and
diminishing energy.
But the big question is:
How many Americans, used
to SUVs and other hefty vehicles, will take to this itty billy
car? Is it safe?
"Just how many urban fashionistas are there?" wrote
Juergen Zoellter in a review
this spring for Car and Driver
ma~azine, predicting only
Jim1ted U.S. sales. He said the
prospect of driving a Fortwo
m truck traffic on American
hip,hways was "scary."
'In the States, the vehicle's
size may work against it," he
wrote . .
The Smart car's U.S. crashtest results will be announced

said
David tested a previous model, the
this fall,
Schembri, preside~! of Smart Smart City Coupe, and gave it
· USA and a veteran auto mar- · a three-star rating out of a
keting executive, previously possible five. The U.S. model
with Mitsubishi. He said it's IS almost 8 inches longer than
expected to get four stars out the European one, with safey
improvements including a
of a possible five..
steel safety "cage" inside,
The European New Car
Assessment Program crashPluse ... Smllrt. hp I

LAYTON'S GARAGE
Over 50 Years in Business

OPEN MOND~Y TIIRU FRIDAY
7AM~6PM
"
~

Office

Home

675-4230

675-4853

I 112 mile out Jericho Road

A GOOD Car Loan

Please see Costs. Pap 5 . .

repair business owners alike complete repair. The simplest
say the key is looking for evi- way to locate a properly trained
dence of properly trained tech- business is by searching the 1nicians, such as the I-CAR CAR Gold Class Professionals
Gold Class Professional&amp;.® Online Business Directory at
designation . Gold
Class www.goldclass.com. An indusdesignated try-recognized benchmark of
Professionals®
businesses are dedicated to current and ongoing technical
training t~e~r employees on the · training, the Gold Class
latest &lt;;OliiSion repwr technolo- Professionals designation is the
gy to help achieve a safe and smart choice after a collision.

ISN'T hard to find,
IF •• ~
•••

you see us first!

OHIO VALLEY BANK
Main Office

Point Pleasant, WV
· 328 Viand Street ••••••••••••••••••••••675-8660

420 Third Avenue ............................ 446-2631

MiniBank

-

Pomeroy

437 Fourth Avenue ................:......... 446-2631

700 W . Main St ................................. 992-2357

Gallipolis Wai-Mart

Jackson Pike

3035 St. Rt. 160 ................................446-2050

Rio Grande

2145 Eastern Ave .......................: ..... 441-3575

'

416 W. College Ave .......................... 245-5373
' '

�·-~*

..-·-~-~-~~·~·---·~

·-·~--

--~--·.

t.

. 2007 Fall _Car Care

Page 6 •

Fi"WaY:, September 28, 2007

•

Smart .

CAR CARE TIP:

Oil change is good investment

'1/tde

skinny," Schembri said he fits
comfortably behind the wheel.
The quick-handling vehicle,
with a more than 70-horsepower, 1-liter, three-cylinder
engine, is "so much . fun to
drive it's addictive," he said.
The Smart car began in the
early 1990s, when Nicolas
Hayek, inventor of the Swatch
watch, went to Mercedes-Benz
with his idea for an "ultra. urban" car with interchangeable body panels for style and
color - a feature similar to
the trendy Swiss watch. The
prototype of the Smart City
Coupe was .. introduced in
·
Germany in 1997.
. Swatch
is · no
longer
involved with the car, but tbe
"S" in Smart still stands for
Swatch, · the
"m"
for
-Mercedes, and the "art" for,
well, the artsy combos that are
options.
For instance, it can come as
a "cabriolet" (French for convertible), or if an owner gets
tired of the color, the body
panels - made of recycled
plastic - can be removed and

switched.
In addition, the same Smart
car can be driven either stick
shift or -automatic. Gears are
changed using either the traditional floor "stick," or by
squeezing levers under the
steering wheel - right to
shift up, left to· shift down.
One fancier version, starting
at $14,000, includes air conditioning, alloy . wheels and a
P.anoramic roof. The convertIble, starting at about $17,000,
features an upgraded sound
system with MP3 capability
and a six-disc CD changer.
The target U.S. market, said
· Schembri, includes first-time
car buyers, urban -sophisticates, baby boomers looking
for a second car, and "emptynest" parents.
The first U.S. Smart car
deaJerships will·be announced
later this year, with sales and
service handled by Smart
USA,. a division of the
Penske Automotive Group,
which is distributing the car
in North America and Puerto
Rico.

Oil

•ear

1~-----~--------------I

Good price.
Good neighbor agent.~Three good reasons to
insure your car with

TERRY L. PYLES

•I

State Fann.

808 VIand SbHt
PalntPieuant,WV

Good $1rvice.

See . . . Farm Agerlf:l

176-2202

%
OFF

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I

PARTS&amp;
ACCESSORIES
·ALL

Wi1h this ad. Otter&amp; ende October 3, . 2007

Lube, Oil/Alter Change,
nrei Rotated &amp; Wheels
Balanced
Lube,
Oil/Filter
Change&amp;
nres Rotated

: 1-800-446-0842
S111e Finn Mllllllll AUIOIIIOIXle Insurance ~y (not in NJ)
Suit f.m lndenlllily eoq,..y (NJ) • Home ~: Bloomington. Dliooi.&lt;

from P8ge6

malnte~ance, mostly for cost vehicles longer. Change of sea(MS) - With the deer population increasing
son equals a change of oil.
reasons.
across the country; and living space for wildlife on
Ironically,
ASE-certified Changmg your car's oi I and filthe decline, the number of incidents involving .a
Master
· Automobile ter every three months or 3,000
deer jumping into the path of a car has been steadiTechnicians overwhelming miles, whichever comes first,
ly on the rise. This is especially true from October
said - . at 97 percent ~ that will ensure that your car operthrough December when male deer activity dradelayed care will co~t an ates at peak efficiency.
matically increases, resulting in a significant rise in
Proper maintenance doesn't
owner much more in. the long
the number of vehicular collisions.
run, as problems leftunattend- start ami stop just at an oil
A deer can literally come out of nowhere, leaving
. ed can _multiply and lead to change. For those DJYers who
want to start getting to know
other. issues.
·
only seconds to react. Even worse, the collision~
result in significant property damage and even hfeowners can be passion- their engine compartment betate about their pride and joy," ter, check hoses and belts for'
·
.
threatening situations.
{~deled Dr. Lockwood. "They any visible cracks so you can
1b stay safe, consider the following:
often
have a· special attach- advise your mechanic that they
• Watch the clock. Deer are most active from
ment to their car or truck and need replacin~. When you take _
sunset to midnight, and during the hours just before
don't want to buy a new model; the car m for 1ts tune-up and/or
and after sunrise, which are feeding times.
they want to keep their favorite fluid changes, ask the mechan• Watcb your speed. It's not just the speed of the
cartpnrung as Ion~ as possible. ic to check the major systems,
animal that plays a factor - it's the speed of the
Cbaitging your ml is th.e per- such as the brakes, transmisvehicle. Think about it: if you are dtjving your
fect place in taking care of sion, and suspension. Chances
vehicle at a speed of over 60 miles per hour, you'll
are a competent serviCe pro
such
an investment."
cover the length of a football field in the same time
Whether it's your favorite will come up with a recomit takes to change a CD.
old-sc.bool classic, high-per- mendation on work that needs
• Keep your eyes open. Deer don't run alone. If
formance street rod or daily to be done as well as a timeline
you see one, .there are likely _others n~y.
commute
vehicle, treating your within which you C3ll function
• Don't swerv~. If a deer 1s· suddenly m front of
engine
with
the right motor oil safely.
·
Avoid
collisions
with
deer
by
driving
cautiously
you, sound your hom to frighten it away. Break
For
more
information,
log on
and
engine
detergent
helps
and keeping watch during peak deer movement
PleeH see Deer, Pllp 8
to
www.valvoline.com.
consumers
keep
and
drive
their
hours.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

7o.

740-446-8473 . illiZI•

•.Page 7

Caught in the headlights: Simple
tips to help avoid deer collisions.

from PageS
more air bags, and "intelligent" seatbelts that sense
motion changes.
Of course, once outside the
cage, there's not a whole lot
of car left.
"Even with modern safety
features like multiple air
bags, people in small, light
cars are always at a disadvantage in crashes," said Russ
Rader of the Arlington, Va.based Insurance Institute for
Highway Safety.
· The United States is way
behind the rest of the world in
Changing your oil regularly can be a cost-effective investment embracing small, · fuel-effipreventing high repair bills in the long run. _
cient cars. But even abroad,
the Smart car has not been
profitable. With about 750,000
cars sold in 36 countries, the
company reportedly has lost
billions of dollars. Last year,
sales fell to 102,700 vehicles
(MS) - With winter on the life, with a complete line of worldwide from 124,300 in
horizon, now is is the time to conventional, synthetic prod- 2005.
.
.
give. your car the attention it t...:ts specifically designed to
Still, more than 20,000
deserves.
extend engine life. In fact, wannabe Smart owners in the
Relyin~ on the innovation more ASE-certified Master United States have already
Technicians signed up.
and quality of the right prod- Automobile
choose
Valvoline
for use. in
. ucts means consumers can feel
Schembri calls it "the wow
safe in the preventative main- their own cars and trucks than factor."
tenance they provide for their any other brand.
The Smart car "challenges
The 2006 Valvo line/ ASE habits of personal mobility,"
vehicle. The first place to start
is under the hood making sure Poll of the American Mechanic said a MoMA tag for a 2002
your vehicle's engine is ready underscored recent Car Care display of the vehicle. In
findings
that August, the little car was taken
for the all-important upcoming Council
Americans
are
pushing
the for test drives at East
travel season.
The solution - provide your envelope on basic mainte- Hampton, N.Y., playground of
vehicle a well-deserved oil nance. The survey revealed the hungry-for-novelty rich.
change that will help prevent that the vast majority of Commercials for the Nintendo
mechanics - ·s7 percent '- Wii, meanwhile, a video game
performance blues . .
said
they believe American car sys~m, have featured a Smart
"It's important that conowners
are putting off routine . in white with sky blue accents,
sumers understand· the importance of regular service to the
mirroring the game's colors.
. Please see Oil, Pllp 7
engine of their vehicle," says
Even at 6-foot" I and "not
Dr. Fran Lockwood, senior
vice president of technology
for Valvoline. "Motor oil and
engine detergents are the
'lifeblood' of your vehicle. By
changing their vehicle's motor
Bridgestone/Firestone
oil regularly, consumers are
Mon-Fri
protecting a critical element of
Run Flat Certified
8am-5pm
their engine's performance and
Wide Selection
Sat.
Sam-Noon
investing in the longevity of
Most Maj"or Brands
the vehicle life."
Valvoline offers premium
7f/U. ~,_. 7flut ';ttectllf f!Mtte••• ~
products that makes engine
A.t4 A. ~•e•t A~~t4flttt. •..
care easy and economical for
7~
'!)~.11.-.. ;,. "
the do-it-yourselfer and 'real
--,
car guy' who understands the
1740 Eastern Avenue (Rt.7), Gallipolis, OH
importance of a healthy
d "I t"
engine . Today's premium
WWW. 81 ey 1re.com
motor oils provide superior
Owned By: John Dailey &amp; Sandy Dailey
performance enhancements,
cost savings and longef ~ng~n.e. , 1-----------------~-----'

.

2007. Fall Car Care

Frid8y, ~ptember 28, 2007

: 21i2 Upper River Rd. •
1 · www.nOI'I'ISIIOrlllupdodga.com
L

---------0

•

9

(WI'ide&amp; '*flirinQ-~._., ,. a•
&amp;UW• s ll)l1llf h"""'r)

OH 4&amp;831

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

95

�·-~*

..-·-~-~-~~·~·---·~

·-·~--

--~--·.

t.

. 2007 Fall _Car Care

Page 6 •

Fi"WaY:, September 28, 2007

•

Smart .

CAR CARE TIP:

Oil change is good investment

'1/tde

skinny," Schembri said he fits
comfortably behind the wheel.
The quick-handling vehicle,
with a more than 70-horsepower, 1-liter, three-cylinder
engine, is "so much . fun to
drive it's addictive," he said.
The Smart car began in the
early 1990s, when Nicolas
Hayek, inventor of the Swatch
watch, went to Mercedes-Benz
with his idea for an "ultra. urban" car with interchangeable body panels for style and
color - a feature similar to
the trendy Swiss watch. The
prototype of the Smart City
Coupe was .. introduced in
·
Germany in 1997.
. Swatch
is · no
longer
involved with the car, but tbe
"S" in Smart still stands for
Swatch, · the
"m"
for
-Mercedes, and the "art" for,
well, the artsy combos that are
options.
For instance, it can come as
a "cabriolet" (French for convertible), or if an owner gets
tired of the color, the body
panels - made of recycled
plastic - can be removed and

switched.
In addition, the same Smart
car can be driven either stick
shift or -automatic. Gears are
changed using either the traditional floor "stick," or by
squeezing levers under the
steering wheel - right to
shift up, left to· shift down.
One fancier version, starting
at $14,000, includes air conditioning, alloy . wheels and a
P.anoramic roof. The convertIble, starting at about $17,000,
features an upgraded sound
system with MP3 capability
and a six-disc CD changer.
The target U.S. market, said
· Schembri, includes first-time
car buyers, urban -sophisticates, baby boomers looking
for a second car, and "emptynest" parents.
The first U.S. Smart car
deaJerships will·be announced
later this year, with sales and
service handled by Smart
USA,. a division of the
Penske Automotive Group,
which is distributing the car
in North America and Puerto
Rico.

Oil

•ear

1~-----~--------------I

Good price.
Good neighbor agent.~Three good reasons to
insure your car with

TERRY L. PYLES

•I

State Fann.

808 VIand SbHt
PalntPieuant,WV

Good $1rvice.

See . . . Farm Agerlf:l

176-2202

%
OFF

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PARTS&amp;
ACCESSORIES
·ALL

Wi1h this ad. Otter&amp; ende October 3, . 2007

Lube, Oil/Alter Change,
nrei Rotated &amp; Wheels
Balanced
Lube,
Oil/Filter
Change&amp;
nres Rotated

: 1-800-446-0842
S111e Finn Mllllllll AUIOIIIOIXle Insurance ~y (not in NJ)
Suit f.m lndenlllily eoq,..y (NJ) • Home ~: Bloomington. Dliooi.&lt;

from P8ge6

malnte~ance, mostly for cost vehicles longer. Change of sea(MS) - With the deer population increasing
son equals a change of oil.
reasons.
across the country; and living space for wildlife on
Ironically,
ASE-certified Changmg your car's oi I and filthe decline, the number of incidents involving .a
Master
· Automobile ter every three months or 3,000
deer jumping into the path of a car has been steadiTechnicians overwhelming miles, whichever comes first,
ly on the rise. This is especially true from October
said - . at 97 percent ~ that will ensure that your car operthrough December when male deer activity dradelayed care will co~t an ates at peak efficiency.
matically increases, resulting in a significant rise in
Proper maintenance doesn't
owner much more in. the long
the number of vehicular collisions.
run, as problems leftunattend- start ami stop just at an oil
A deer can literally come out of nowhere, leaving
. ed can _multiply and lead to change. For those DJYers who
want to start getting to know
other. issues.
·
only seconds to react. Even worse, the collision~
result in significant property damage and even hfeowners can be passion- their engine compartment betate about their pride and joy," ter, check hoses and belts for'
·
.
threatening situations.
{~deled Dr. Lockwood. "They any visible cracks so you can
1b stay safe, consider the following:
often
have a· special attach- advise your mechanic that they
• Watch the clock. Deer are most active from
ment to their car or truck and need replacin~. When you take _
sunset to midnight, and during the hours just before
don't want to buy a new model; the car m for 1ts tune-up and/or
and after sunrise, which are feeding times.
they want to keep their favorite fluid changes, ask the mechan• Watcb your speed. It's not just the speed of the
cartpnrung as Ion~ as possible. ic to check the major systems,
animal that plays a factor - it's the speed of the
Cbaitging your ml is th.e per- such as the brakes, transmisvehicle. Think about it: if you are dtjving your
fect place in taking care of sion, and suspension. Chances
vehicle at a speed of over 60 miles per hour, you'll
are a competent serviCe pro
such
an investment."
cover the length of a football field in the same time
Whether it's your favorite will come up with a recomit takes to change a CD.
old-sc.bool classic, high-per- mendation on work that needs
• Keep your eyes open. Deer don't run alone. If
formance street rod or daily to be done as well as a timeline
you see one, .there are likely _others n~y.
commute
vehicle, treating your within which you C3ll function
• Don't swerv~. If a deer 1s· suddenly m front of
engine
with
the right motor oil safely.
·
Avoid
collisions
with
deer
by
driving
cautiously
you, sound your hom to frighten it away. Break
For
more
information,
log on
and
engine
detergent
helps
and keeping watch during peak deer movement
PleeH see Deer, Pllp 8
to
www.valvoline.com.
consumers
keep
and
drive
their
hours.

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7o.

740-446-8473 . illiZI•

•.Page 7

Caught in the headlights: Simple
tips to help avoid deer collisions.

from PageS
more air bags, and "intelligent" seatbelts that sense
motion changes.
Of course, once outside the
cage, there's not a whole lot
of car left.
"Even with modern safety
features like multiple air
bags, people in small, light
cars are always at a disadvantage in crashes," said Russ
Rader of the Arlington, Va.based Insurance Institute for
Highway Safety.
· The United States is way
behind the rest of the world in
Changing your oil regularly can be a cost-effective investment embracing small, · fuel-effipreventing high repair bills in the long run. _
cient cars. But even abroad,
the Smart car has not been
profitable. With about 750,000
cars sold in 36 countries, the
company reportedly has lost
billions of dollars. Last year,
sales fell to 102,700 vehicles
(MS) - With winter on the life, with a complete line of worldwide from 124,300 in
horizon, now is is the time to conventional, synthetic prod- 2005.
.
.
give. your car the attention it t...:ts specifically designed to
Still, more than 20,000
deserves.
extend engine life. In fact, wannabe Smart owners in the
Relyin~ on the innovation more ASE-certified Master United States have already
Technicians signed up.
and quality of the right prod- Automobile
choose
Valvoline
for use. in
. ucts means consumers can feel
Schembri calls it "the wow
safe in the preventative main- their own cars and trucks than factor."
tenance they provide for their any other brand.
The Smart car "challenges
The 2006 Valvo line/ ASE habits of personal mobility,"
vehicle. The first place to start
is under the hood making sure Poll of the American Mechanic said a MoMA tag for a 2002
your vehicle's engine is ready underscored recent Car Care display of the vehicle. In
findings
that August, the little car was taken
for the all-important upcoming Council
Americans
are
pushing
the for test drives at East
travel season.
The solution - provide your envelope on basic mainte- Hampton, N.Y., playground of
vehicle a well-deserved oil nance. The survey revealed the hungry-for-novelty rich.
change that will help prevent that the vast majority of Commercials for the Nintendo
mechanics - ·s7 percent '- Wii, meanwhile, a video game
performance blues . .
said
they believe American car sys~m, have featured a Smart
"It's important that conowners
are putting off routine . in white with sky blue accents,
sumers understand· the importance of regular service to the
mirroring the game's colors.
. Please see Oil, Pllp 7
engine of their vehicle," says
Even at 6-foot" I and "not
Dr. Fran Lockwood, senior
vice president of technology
for Valvoline. "Motor oil and
engine detergents are the
'lifeblood' of your vehicle. By
changing their vehicle's motor
Bridgestone/Firestone
oil regularly, consumers are
Mon-Fri
protecting a critical element of
Run Flat Certified
8am-5pm
their engine's performance and
Wide Selection
Sat.
Sam-Noon
investing in the longevity of
Most Maj"or Brands
the vehicle life."
Valvoline offers premium
7f/U. ~,_. 7flut ';ttectllf f!Mtte••• ~
products that makes engine
A.t4 A. ~•e•t A~~t4flttt. •..
care easy and economical for
7~
'!)~.11.-.. ;,. "
the do-it-yourselfer and 'real
--,
car guy' who understands the
1740 Eastern Avenue (Rt.7), Gallipolis, OH
importance of a healthy
d "I t"
engine . Today's premium
WWW. 81 ey 1re.com
motor oils provide superior
Owned By: John Dailey &amp; Sandy Dailey
performance enhancements,
cost savings and longef ~ng~n.e. , 1-----------------~-----'

.

2007. Fall Car Care

Frid8y, ~ptember 28, 2007

: 21i2 Upper River Rd. •
1 · www.nOI'I'ISIIOrlllupdodga.com
L

---------0

•

9

(WI'ide&amp; '*flirinQ-~._., ,. a•
&amp;UW• s ll)l1llf h"""'r)

OH 4&amp;831

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

95

�'

\

..

2007 Fall Car Care

Page 8 •

Friday, ~ptember 28,..2007

KEEP 'OL RELIABLE.GOING SmONG
I

.'

;

(MS) - Drivers tend to come
in all shapes ·and sizes. Some .
drivers .prefer putting the pedal
to the metal, while others prefer
strolling along on Sunday afternoons. Some drivers desire the
flashy sports car, while others
are content with the practical
pickup truck.
The differences between drivers extends beyond the type of
driver you are and the class of ·
vehicle you drive. Lots of dri- vers feel the need for a new car
every three or four years, w)lile
.many more grow a little more
proud with each passing mile on
the odometer. For the latter, caring for a vehicle as it approaches each mileage milestone doesn't take a master mechanic.
Instead, a little attention and
some minor maintenance can
keep your car running for miles
·
and miles.
• Stay alert: In many ways,
keeping your car running into
the 150,000-200,000 mile range
is no different than taking better
care of your body as you age. As
is the case with an aging body,
you need to start paying more
careful attention to your car with
each passing mile. If you pad
your car in the S3Jl!e spot each
- night, check underneath for any
signs of leaking fluids, and take
note of their color if there .are
any.
Another approach is .to cruise
with the windows up and the
radio or CD player off. Though
you might love cruising down
the highway blasting your
favorite tunes while your ·arm
hangs out the window, taking a

Deer
from Page7 .
.

L

firmly, but stay in your lane.
Serious crashes happen when
drivers swerve to avoid a deer,
only to hit other vehicles or lose
control of their cars.
• Wear your seatbelt. Most
people injured in deer/car crashes were unbuckled at the time.
"Deer are bigger and heavier
than people may think," said
Mike Convery~ vice presi~ent
and chief claim officer of
MetLife Auto &amp;
Home.
"Fortunately, by staying alert and
reacting appropriate))' ,_it'&amp; possi- .

Silver, .iridescence
are favorite car
colors - until
the next big thing
BY JOIH L DICKEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Drivers hoping to keep old ca!'ll running should check and change their vehicle's fluids regularly.
silent drive will let you hear any . Whereas vehicle manufacturers
noises that may or may not be now typically suggest new cars
coming trom under the hood; have their oil changed around
Like the human body, the earlier once every 5,000 to 7,500 miles,
you can catch a problem with the older a vehicle gets, the closyOW' car, the less problematic it . er a driver should return to the
could become.
more .traditional oil change
Taking a drive with the win- schedule of once every 3,000
dows up will also cue your sense miles.
of smell should your car be
But changing a car's oil isn't
emitting any odd odors. Certain the only thing a driver needs to
smells are indicative of prob- do to keep an older car running .
!ems, so take nOte of any odors Other fluids, such as brake fluid,
and report them to your mechan- automatic transmission fluid,
ic as accurately as possible.
power steering fluid, etc ., should
• Monitor tho8e fluids: The be changed as well. Drivers
older a car gets, the fll9re close- should have a professional do
ly you need to monitor its fluids. this for older cars because these

bJe.to avoid many collisions."
For additional information on
wildlife collisions, MetLife Auto
&amp; Home is offering to"the public
a . free new brochure, "Deer
Collisions: How to Avoid

fluids can become contaminated
and offer signs of a potentially
bigger problem to a trained eye.
.• Take i~ easy: Just as an older
athlete might need mote time to
warm up before a game than a
younger CQunierpart, an older
car needs more time to warm up
than a newer vehicle. If an older
car has been sitting overnight or
for a few days, give it a chance
to warm up, and drive slowlf at
first. This gives the vehicle's
lubricants and other fluid the
chance to spread OUt )lOder the
hood , while allowing the oil to
gain some temperature, making
for a smoother drive.

Tomorrow's cars will scrimp
on fuel, envelop us in safety,
guide us to our destinations,
impress us with intuitive features and comfort ·us with
ergonomics we can't believe
we ever lived without.
But for all that, these evolutions will never shield us from
~ne of the m~st importailt questions a dnvet faces when
choosing a car: Which color?
And more specifically, if current trends hold: Which shade
of silver?
In two separate surveys by
major auto paint suppliers, silver remains the most popular
color for new cars of all kinds
in North America, capturing 24
percent of the overall market in
2006 by PPG Industries' numbers; 19 percent in that' year
according to DuPont.
It's the seventh year running
for silver, an unusually long
term for a top hue.
But even the stateliest shade
of gray is going throu~h a trdnsformation that's indtcative of
future trendy car colors: shifting, iridescent hues, which subtly change as you walk around
the car or see it in different
light. .
Put another way, that new

Please see Colors. 9

Your'check
engiJ;le' light
is talking. Are
you listening?

Colors
from Page a·

Mercedes, resplendent as usual
in tried-and-true sjlver, may
flash a hint of radiant blue or
subtle green as it whizzes by:
"You're going to see a color,
and
you're going to do a douBY JOIH·L DICKEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
ble-take," says Karen Surcina,
color marketing technology
It's just a little amber lamp in · manager for DuPont.
the qashboard, a · tiny bulb
lt's what's known as "elabobehind a plastic pane the size of rate neutrals" - blacks, whites
a postage staiqp, inscribed with and silvers that are flecked with
a very big message.
"effect" pigments to produce
Depending on the car's make iridescence.
and model, it might say
lridescent colors are a prod"CHECK ENGINE," as if you uct of light diffraction, not pigposs~ssed the ability to pry open ment. This means that minute
the hood and· make a snap diag~ surfaces - flecks of aluminum,
nosis. Others say "SERVICE mica or synthetic materilds ENGINE SOON," worded just embedded in the paint split
vaguely enough to enable us light into its component parts,
procrastinators.
giving the illusion of depth or
No matter how it's communi- reflecting different colors .
cated, the effect can be unnerv- , Depending on the angle, the
ing. Who knows what evil lurks eye might see blue, green, silin the hearts of engines? Only ver or otherwise.
the computer knows.
The effect, in a word, is mesBut unraveling the mystery of menzmg.
the enigmatic little lamp is con"EsSentially it's because the
siderably easier - and usually human eye is fascinated by any
less painful - than most people color that seems to have an
think. While there's little reason undulating movement, someto shut the vehicle off and sprint thing that appears to change,"
for the nearest mechanic, the says color consultant Leatrice
light shouldn't be ignored for Eisman, speaker and author of
.
long.
several books on color, includ"It's your car's way of telling ing "Color: Messages &amp;
you, 'You might be meetinR Meanings" (Hand Books Press,
Larry the tow-truck guy soon," 2006).
says Bill Jaap, owner of Good
"There are some social
Carma VW and Audi Repair in anthropologists who have said
Minneapolis ~ "It's a warning, one of the reasons humans are
and it can be menacing. Even so fascinated by this is Jhat it
though the car still runs weU, I reminds us of water, which we
think it's a good idea to bring it can't live without," Eisman
in."
says. "It seems like quite a

-

1

2007 Fall Car Care

'

stretch, but we see it in other
areas too: a seashell, an oil slick
in the street - it can be the most
mundane thing, and yet if the
color seems to move, our eyes
go right for it."
As DuPont and PPS prepare
data from the 2007 model year
to present to carmakers this fall,
the prevailing wisdom is that
silver will hang on to the top
spot for a little while, anyway.
Eisman says silver's popularity is due largely to our obsession with technology and gadgets. It is a reflection, she says,
of the dawning of the digital
age.
"Silver was once in, most peopie's minds associated with the
word 'classic,' but people are
. now responding by saymg it's
'high-tech,"' Eisman says.
That said, there 's no market
· force more powerful than consumers' perceptions of something as oversaturated or past
its time. Eisman uses the exampie of the mid-'90s, when the
mtroduction of teal cars put that
odd color front-and-center, not
only in parking lots, bi.tt in fashion and design as well.
"That blue-green was really
like, pow," she says. "We hadn 't seen it since the early '80s,
but it had taken a rest, and
became the car du jour. But
then what hap~ns is, it gets so
identifiable w1th a certain time
period that people say, 'Oh, I
don't want that.' Obviously, red ·
sports cars are goin~ to be here
forever, but it's poss1ble that silver will soon start to look a littie tired."
Indeed, both Surcina and
Jane Harrington, PPG's manager of color styling for its automotive coatings, say new colors
are coming into vogue.

• Page 9

"Blues and browns, especial- want a sparkling, luminescent
ly," Harrington says. "Brown's red, today's consumer defmitea color family that hasn't really ly wants the option: Harrington
been in the marketplace since said a survey at last year's auto
the 1970s, and it lookS really show in Detroit showed that 68
· fresh right now."
percent of potential car buyers
Some colors sell well in cer- would be more likely to choose
tain types of vehicles, but not one vehicle over another if the
others: Blue is already a color manufacturer offered a greater
of importance, depending on range of color choices.
Surcina
says
the car. "For vans, it's some- Similarly,
thing like 21 percent of the DuPont's market surveys have
market share," Harrington says. shown that roughly 40 percent
"And on SUV's, it's more like 9 of consumers will change their
percent."
car choice if they can't get the
In both surveys, the second color they want.
most popular color was generWith so much at stake, it
ally white, which remains the ·behooves carmakers to put as
default for the chronically non- much thought into color options
as they do styling and drivetrain
descript, Eisman says.
"It's the same reason people features . So what's on the longpaint their walls white," term horiron? Both Surcina and
Eisman says . "It goes with Harrington say we can expect
everything. Most consumers an eye-popping level of vibransee 1t as not really making a cy in the next decade or so.
"We're going to see a lot of
statement."
Eisman figures that about I0 color coming ba&lt;;:k in,"'Surcina
percent of the population "want says, "and it will be more bold
h&lt;:ads to tum. .. . Btit that's not and bright, with this hue shift.
the majority of the population." You can already ~ee a lot of it
Even if the majority doesn 't on the -road now."

COMES AT YOU FAIT·

getting readJ to drive.

LET US HELP YOU GET READY.
Taldng to yoor lftll abouumart ddtrlng a111 ~ btNd..
Then why W't' crmmlnotionwirlftm!flfrirl&amp;com. Th~lf! 1f14J'II
fittd rlj:K tJIId f~ to~~~ molto!' your fHn a J'ltltJit«"diN« rmd
ht~ you tlmfiw#y commcmicllh' w.itll them. Sft:cu~tii,Yrf!
g«tJng f«&lt;dy. you should too.

. WHAT IT IS:
The lamp's formal name is the
malfunction indication· light, or

Becoming a Statistic." The
brochll.r e provides useful information, including other tips on
how to avoid a deer collision,
and is available by calling 1-800MET-LIFE ( 1-800-638-5433).

MIL.

YOUR CAR &amp; TRUCK SUPERSTORE
NEXT TO WAL - MART
NI.AJC&gt;R &amp;
NIINOR R E P A I R S
REASONABLE RATES
C::A.LL A.NVTII-E DA.V OFI NIQIHT

10'.J.1.28·, 2007
........1, Sent"'mber...

1900 Eastern Ave. • Gallipolis, OH
£oaf
foB 1teel.m.f4NUI

Today's cars are equipped
with dozens of sensors and a
computer that make on-thcr-fly
adjustments to maximize fuel
efficiency and minimize carbon
emissions. If a sensor detects
something amiss , it sends a
code to the computer, and voila:
"CHECK ENGINE."
That code is stored in the
computer - and the light stays
on- until it's retrieved . And that
part is surprisingly simple: It 's
just a matter of plugging a handheld gadget into a connector
P~$~ Jee En.-qfl, .P.IIIl'

JtJ.

;&lt;i#..:t.1 IDI Vlanll 5Cft!et
POint l't@trllld. VN 2SSSO
304-675-4132

Call me today fof a quote.

D

Nationwide•
On Your Side

'

�'

\

..

2007 Fall Car Care

Page 8 •

Friday, ~ptember 28,..2007

KEEP 'OL RELIABLE.GOING SmONG
I

.'

;

(MS) - Drivers tend to come
in all shapes ·and sizes. Some .
drivers .prefer putting the pedal
to the metal, while others prefer
strolling along on Sunday afternoons. Some drivers desire the
flashy sports car, while others
are content with the practical
pickup truck.
The differences between drivers extends beyond the type of
driver you are and the class of ·
vehicle you drive. Lots of dri- vers feel the need for a new car
every three or four years, w)lile
.many more grow a little more
proud with each passing mile on
the odometer. For the latter, caring for a vehicle as it approaches each mileage milestone doesn't take a master mechanic.
Instead, a little attention and
some minor maintenance can
keep your car running for miles
·
and miles.
• Stay alert: In many ways,
keeping your car running into
the 150,000-200,000 mile range
is no different than taking better
care of your body as you age. As
is the case with an aging body,
you need to start paying more
careful attention to your car with
each passing mile. If you pad
your car in the S3Jl!e spot each
- night, check underneath for any
signs of leaking fluids, and take
note of their color if there .are
any.
Another approach is .to cruise
with the windows up and the
radio or CD player off. Though
you might love cruising down
the highway blasting your
favorite tunes while your ·arm
hangs out the window, taking a

Deer
from Page7 .
.

L

firmly, but stay in your lane.
Serious crashes happen when
drivers swerve to avoid a deer,
only to hit other vehicles or lose
control of their cars.
• Wear your seatbelt. Most
people injured in deer/car crashes were unbuckled at the time.
"Deer are bigger and heavier
than people may think," said
Mike Convery~ vice presi~ent
and chief claim officer of
MetLife Auto &amp;
Home.
"Fortunately, by staying alert and
reacting appropriate))' ,_it'&amp; possi- .

Silver, .iridescence
are favorite car
colors - until
the next big thing
BY JOIH L DICKEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Drivers hoping to keep old ca!'ll running should check and change their vehicle's fluids regularly.
silent drive will let you hear any . Whereas vehicle manufacturers
noises that may or may not be now typically suggest new cars
coming trom under the hood; have their oil changed around
Like the human body, the earlier once every 5,000 to 7,500 miles,
you can catch a problem with the older a vehicle gets, the closyOW' car, the less problematic it . er a driver should return to the
could become.
more .traditional oil change
Taking a drive with the win- schedule of once every 3,000
dows up will also cue your sense miles.
of smell should your car be
But changing a car's oil isn't
emitting any odd odors. Certain the only thing a driver needs to
smells are indicative of prob- do to keep an older car running .
!ems, so take nOte of any odors Other fluids, such as brake fluid,
and report them to your mechan- automatic transmission fluid,
ic as accurately as possible.
power steering fluid, etc ., should
• Monitor tho8e fluids: The be changed as well. Drivers
older a car gets, the fll9re close- should have a professional do
ly you need to monitor its fluids. this for older cars because these

bJe.to avoid many collisions."
For additional information on
wildlife collisions, MetLife Auto
&amp; Home is offering to"the public
a . free new brochure, "Deer
Collisions: How to Avoid

fluids can become contaminated
and offer signs of a potentially
bigger problem to a trained eye.
.• Take i~ easy: Just as an older
athlete might need mote time to
warm up before a game than a
younger CQunierpart, an older
car needs more time to warm up
than a newer vehicle. If an older
car has been sitting overnight or
for a few days, give it a chance
to warm up, and drive slowlf at
first. This gives the vehicle's
lubricants and other fluid the
chance to spread OUt )lOder the
hood , while allowing the oil to
gain some temperature, making
for a smoother drive.

Tomorrow's cars will scrimp
on fuel, envelop us in safety,
guide us to our destinations,
impress us with intuitive features and comfort ·us with
ergonomics we can't believe
we ever lived without.
But for all that, these evolutions will never shield us from
~ne of the m~st importailt questions a dnvet faces when
choosing a car: Which color?
And more specifically, if current trends hold: Which shade
of silver?
In two separate surveys by
major auto paint suppliers, silver remains the most popular
color for new cars of all kinds
in North America, capturing 24
percent of the overall market in
2006 by PPG Industries' numbers; 19 percent in that' year
according to DuPont.
It's the seventh year running
for silver, an unusually long
term for a top hue.
But even the stateliest shade
of gray is going throu~h a trdnsformation that's indtcative of
future trendy car colors: shifting, iridescent hues, which subtly change as you walk around
the car or see it in different
light. .
Put another way, that new

Please see Colors. 9

Your'check
engiJ;le' light
is talking. Are
you listening?

Colors
from Page a·

Mercedes, resplendent as usual
in tried-and-true sjlver, may
flash a hint of radiant blue or
subtle green as it whizzes by:
"You're going to see a color,
and
you're going to do a douBY JOIH·L DICKEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
ble-take," says Karen Surcina,
color marketing technology
It's just a little amber lamp in · manager for DuPont.
the qashboard, a · tiny bulb
lt's what's known as "elabobehind a plastic pane the size of rate neutrals" - blacks, whites
a postage staiqp, inscribed with and silvers that are flecked with
a very big message.
"effect" pigments to produce
Depending on the car's make iridescence.
and model, it might say
lridescent colors are a prod"CHECK ENGINE," as if you uct of light diffraction, not pigposs~ssed the ability to pry open ment. This means that minute
the hood and· make a snap diag~ surfaces - flecks of aluminum,
nosis. Others say "SERVICE mica or synthetic materilds ENGINE SOON," worded just embedded in the paint split
vaguely enough to enable us light into its component parts,
procrastinators.
giving the illusion of depth or
No matter how it's communi- reflecting different colors .
cated, the effect can be unnerv- , Depending on the angle, the
ing. Who knows what evil lurks eye might see blue, green, silin the hearts of engines? Only ver or otherwise.
the computer knows.
The effect, in a word, is mesBut unraveling the mystery of menzmg.
the enigmatic little lamp is con"EsSentially it's because the
siderably easier - and usually human eye is fascinated by any
less painful - than most people color that seems to have an
think. While there's little reason undulating movement, someto shut the vehicle off and sprint thing that appears to change,"
for the nearest mechanic, the says color consultant Leatrice
light shouldn't be ignored for Eisman, speaker and author of
.
long.
several books on color, includ"It's your car's way of telling ing "Color: Messages &amp;
you, 'You might be meetinR Meanings" (Hand Books Press,
Larry the tow-truck guy soon," 2006).
says Bill Jaap, owner of Good
"There are some social
Carma VW and Audi Repair in anthropologists who have said
Minneapolis ~ "It's a warning, one of the reasons humans are
and it can be menacing. Even so fascinated by this is Jhat it
though the car still runs weU, I reminds us of water, which we
think it's a good idea to bring it can't live without," Eisman
in."
says. "It seems like quite a

-

1

2007 Fall Car Care

'

stretch, but we see it in other
areas too: a seashell, an oil slick
in the street - it can be the most
mundane thing, and yet if the
color seems to move, our eyes
go right for it."
As DuPont and PPS prepare
data from the 2007 model year
to present to carmakers this fall,
the prevailing wisdom is that
silver will hang on to the top
spot for a little while, anyway.
Eisman says silver's popularity is due largely to our obsession with technology and gadgets. It is a reflection, she says,
of the dawning of the digital
age.
"Silver was once in, most peopie's minds associated with the
word 'classic,' but people are
. now responding by saymg it's
'high-tech,"' Eisman says.
That said, there 's no market
· force more powerful than consumers' perceptions of something as oversaturated or past
its time. Eisman uses the exampie of the mid-'90s, when the
mtroduction of teal cars put that
odd color front-and-center, not
only in parking lots, bi.tt in fashion and design as well.
"That blue-green was really
like, pow," she says. "We hadn 't seen it since the early '80s,
but it had taken a rest, and
became the car du jour. But
then what hap~ns is, it gets so
identifiable w1th a certain time
period that people say, 'Oh, I
don't want that.' Obviously, red ·
sports cars are goin~ to be here
forever, but it's poss1ble that silver will soon start to look a littie tired."
Indeed, both Surcina and
Jane Harrington, PPG's manager of color styling for its automotive coatings, say new colors
are coming into vogue.

• Page 9

"Blues and browns, especial- want a sparkling, luminescent
ly," Harrington says. "Brown's red, today's consumer defmitea color family that hasn't really ly wants the option: Harrington
been in the marketplace since said a survey at last year's auto
the 1970s, and it lookS really show in Detroit showed that 68
· fresh right now."
percent of potential car buyers
Some colors sell well in cer- would be more likely to choose
tain types of vehicles, but not one vehicle over another if the
others: Blue is already a color manufacturer offered a greater
of importance, depending on range of color choices.
Surcina
says
the car. "For vans, it's some- Similarly,
thing like 21 percent of the DuPont's market surveys have
market share," Harrington says. shown that roughly 40 percent
"And on SUV's, it's more like 9 of consumers will change their
percent."
car choice if they can't get the
In both surveys, the second color they want.
most popular color was generWith so much at stake, it
ally white, which remains the ·behooves carmakers to put as
default for the chronically non- much thought into color options
as they do styling and drivetrain
descript, Eisman says.
"It's the same reason people features . So what's on the longpaint their walls white," term horiron? Both Surcina and
Eisman says . "It goes with Harrington say we can expect
everything. Most consumers an eye-popping level of vibransee 1t as not really making a cy in the next decade or so.
"We're going to see a lot of
statement."
Eisman figures that about I0 color coming ba&lt;;:k in,"'Surcina
percent of the population "want says, "and it will be more bold
h&lt;:ads to tum. .. . Btit that's not and bright, with this hue shift.
the majority of the population." You can already ~ee a lot of it
Even if the majority doesn 't on the -road now."

COMES AT YOU FAIT·

getting readJ to drive.

LET US HELP YOU GET READY.
Taldng to yoor lftll abouumart ddtrlng a111 ~ btNd..
Then why W't' crmmlnotionwirlftm!flfrirl&amp;com. Th~lf! 1f14J'II
fittd rlj:K tJIId f~ to~~~ molto!' your fHn a J'ltltJit«"diN« rmd
ht~ you tlmfiw#y commcmicllh' w.itll them. Sft:cu~tii,Yrf!
g«tJng f«&lt;dy. you should too.

. WHAT IT IS:
The lamp's formal name is the
malfunction indication· light, or

Becoming a Statistic." The
brochll.r e provides useful information, including other tips on
how to avoid a deer collision,
and is available by calling 1-800MET-LIFE ( 1-800-638-5433).

MIL.

YOUR CAR &amp; TRUCK SUPERSTORE
NEXT TO WAL - MART
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........1, Sent"'mber...

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foB 1teel.m.f4NUI

Today's cars are equipped
with dozens of sensors and a
computer that make on-thcr-fly
adjustments to maximize fuel
efficiency and minimize carbon
emissions. If a sensor detects
something amiss , it sends a
code to the computer, and voila:
"CHECK ENGINE."
That code is stored in the
computer - and the light stays
on- until it's retrieved . And that
part is surprisingly simple: It 's
just a matter of plugging a handheld gadget into a connector
P~$~ Jee En.-qfl, .P.IIIl'

JtJ.

;&lt;i#..:t.1 IDI Vlanll 5Cft!et
POint l't@trllld. VN 2SSSO
304-675-4132

Call me today fof a quote.

D

Nationwide•
On Your Side

'

�:

...

'

2007.Fall Car Care

Page 10 •

Engine
from Page9
'I

that's usually located beneath
the steering column .

•••

WHAT NOT TO DO:
Panic. Unless your car is
idling rough , starting hard , hes itating or smoking, it's OK to
keep driving when the lig ht
comes on . (In a few model s, the
light will tlash or turn red if the
problem is serious . If this happens, DO pull over asap .)
But it's unwise to ignore it.
For one thing·, the problem will
likely mean a failed emissions
inspection down the line. For
another,- many of these small ,
undetectable problems can
cause costly engine damage if
left untreated .
" It's kind of a fal se signal to
some people who maybe have
been drivin~ around with it on
for a year,' Jaap says. "Even
though the problem can be very
slight, my opinion is that you
shouldn't get desensitized to it.
It's on for a reason."
Tip ~ DOn't pay a mechanic to
read the code unless the shop
offers to credit the money back
in related repairs. The service is
easy enough to get for free .

...

WHATTODO:
Obviously, if the car is un&lt;,ter
warranty, take it to the dealer.
But with older cars, many
mechanics and auto-parts stores
will retrieve the code gratis.
Do-it-yourselfers can purchase code readers for $50 to
$200, and some software I?rograms will tum your laptop mto
a scan tool with a special co nnector. Some readers give a
number that needs to be crossreferenced; more ex pensive
scanners will display details.
But thi s is where a little
knowledge ,c an be a dangerous
thing, Jaap cautions. The readings are often vague, and won' t
necessaril y tell you what needs
doi ng.
" It can be even more ex pensive to try and guess what's
going to fix it, just ba~ed o n
what a scan at an auto-parts
sto re te lls you." Jaap says.
"That's kind of hearsay and
conjecture , and I'd go hrokc if I
d id that."
At the very least, the code ca n
help you (or your mechaniC)
decide whether it's something
'' ' thai· ~~tj ~ p,utoofffof'9

Friday9 September 28, 2007

repair?
WHY ALL THE RIGMABecause when it comes time
ROLE? CAN'T MY CAR to pass a state emissions inspecJUST TELL ME WHAT'S tion, forget it. If the exhaust
WRONG?
coming out of your tailpipe isn't
Said Deep, a spokesman for· just so, no license plate for you.
Ford Motor Co., says indicators
At its core, that's really what
on modem cars are getting more gave rise to the MIL in the first
sophisticated, telling drivers , for place.
instance, how close they are to
•••
needing an oil change, .or when
HOW IT GOT SO COMPLIa tire is getting low.
CATED:
" But there's a limited amount
Before the 1980s, the dashof real estate on the instrument board gave gearheads all the
panel," Deep says, "and there's vital signs they needed to keep
. a certain amount of information moving. down the road: fuel
overload that we want to level, oil pressur;e, temperature,
avoid."
RPMs and, in some cases, alterCarmakers are only adding nator voltage.
messages that drivers are comBut these dials revealed nothfortable dealing with - specific ing about the intricate balances
messages for a headlight out, of fuel mixture or carbon emissay, or low washer fluid.
sions. As smog became a politi"When we get into computer cal issue in the early 1980s, the
operations, like delicate air/gas federal government intervened
mixture issues or the way your with emissions control stan· transmission shifts, that's some- dards. Making a car perform up
thing we think is more suited for to snuff got a lot more complia trained mechanic with the cated.
proper equipment," Deep says.
There are endless ways our
•••
cars can run afoul of these stanSO WHAT'S THE LIGHT dards; without sensors to point
the way, mechanics would
SAYING?
The computer can detect spend more · time diagnos.ing
scores of ·possible problems, than fixing. And other than an
ranging from silly to sinister. As annqal emissions inspection,
often as not, the MIL comes on how would Earth-friendly driwhen the gas cap isn't screwed vers know their vehicle was an
·on tight enough or the oil dip- environmental menace?
stick isn't pushed in all the way.
In that vein, perhaps it's only
But let's say the computer fair to think of the MIL as your
indicates a malfunctioning oxy- friend - the automotive equivagen sensor, an often troublesome lent of a canary in the coal
doodad that measures the mine.
amount of oxygen in your
"Older cars were simpler, but
. exhaust. Without its feedback, we ' ve come a long way," Jaap
the engine will surely start, run says. "I have to say that it's
and seem to perform normally. really easier to diagnose the
Fuel economy may dip a bit, modern engine - if you have
though you ' II hardly notice. the right tools. Its an all-around
Why bothe r with a costl y better world ."

it take to keep
·an old one going
on and on?
,IY IEIH J. HARPAZ
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Nitrogen could make your tires safer
(MS) - While traffic and
congestion are some of the
biggest re~rcussions to road
travel, acc1dents n;lated to tire
blowouts are also common.
Despite being a preventative
·maintenimce measure that all
drivers should take , many people do not regularly monitor
tire pressure unless there is a
visible indication that it may be
compromised. In fact, The
National Highway Travel
Safety
Administration
(NHTSA) estimates that over
27 percent of cars on the road
are driving on underinflated
tires, contributing to record
numbers of blowouts and accidents.
Correct tire inflation is not
only important to preventing

accidents, it also ensures longer
life for tires. Additionally, it
can help reduce fuel consumption and make the vehicle work
more efficiently. In recent
years of soaring gas prices, this
could be all the inspiration drivers need to be more on top of
tire maintenance.
·
Correct tire inflation is not
only impOrtant to. preventing
accidents, it also ensures longer
life for tires . .Additionally, it
can hdp reduce fuel consump~
tion and make the vehicle work
more efficiently. In recent
years of soaring gas prices, this
could be all the inspiration drivers need to be more on top of
tire maintenance .

Please see nres, Page 11

Free Life Insurance Included up to J,U,rJflfJI

NEW YORK- Maybe you or
someone yo.JJ know has an old
. junk:heap of a car with 150,000
miles oil it. Maybe you think
that's-a lot. ·
·
It's not.
Meet Peter Gilbert, who drove
.a Saab more than a million miles
tluoqgh 17_Wisconsin winters.
And Clifton Lambreth, a wne
manager for 600 Ford and
Linroln Mercury dealers around
the SOuth, where he's seen plenty
of Ford pickup trucks with
800,000 'miles. He calls them
"ro&amp;d.waniors."
. And Michael Dennison, whose
B~arian Professionals auto shop
inl Berkeley, Calif., routinely
20-year-old BMWs including a 1987 with 784,000
miles and a 1982 with 550,000
iniles.
"In our disposable culture, a
car is one of the few products you
own that rewanls your attempts
to keep it going," said DenniSon.
'"Theie.is a J&gt;.Uritan satisfaction
that comes wtth ~ueezing all the
juice out of a car.'
· · Micbael Wright of Port
Angeles, Wash.,drove his Toyota
SR5 'pickup well past 300,000
~es bef&lt;:iJe. finally replacing it wtth a 1989 mOdel of the same
car that bad "only 150,000
miles."
" If it's got 150,000 miles or
less on it, it's just getting broken
in. There's still a lot of miles on
it," Wright said. "It was in good
shape. I feel like I'm driving a
new car!" New compared to his
old trUck, that is - which didn 't
have a radio or air conditioning
or working windshie ld washer.
What does it lake to keep an
old car running that long? Here
are some tips from folks who
know a thing or two about auto
longevity.
- You probably know that
changing the oil every 3,000
miles or so is critical , but so are
other small m aintenance tasks.
Don't forget to change the fLI-

work&amp; -on

from Page10
•
inflation pressure that vehicle ing fuel economy, and prolong- or months without a refill.
manufacturers provide reflects iJig the lift: of your tires. · Whether drivers will use
Checking for tire inflation is the . proper psi when a tire is lngersQII-Rand is one of a nitrogen is all up to availability.
not difficult and it should be cold. The term cold does not handful of manufacturers that The company .states that they
every relate to the outside tempera- now offer a system for extract- have an affordable system that
done frequently month - particularly when ture. Rather, a col&lt;t .tire is one ing pure nitrogen from com- uses state-of-the-art membrane ·technology to deliver
changes in weather tempera- that has not been driven on for pressed air.
This is not a new techQology. nitrogen so that service stature could affect the tires. The at least three hpurs.
• Locate the ·r ecommended Airlines, racecars and military tions need only hookup directair molecules trapped in the
·.vressure . on the vehicle's . vehicles all have tires . filled ly to their current compressed
tire
tires will expand or contract in •
relation to the outside tempera- tire mformation I?lacard, certi- with nitrogen because it is less air system.
ture and the temperature of the fication label, or m the owner's affected by extreme tempera•
tui'e changes than regular air.
tire from use. Plus, tires natu- manual. ·.
• Record the tire pressure of As offered by JngersoU-Rand,
rally lose air over time.
.
the benefits of nitrogen can be
The tire inflation pressurds all tires.
•
If
the
tire
pressure
is
too
learned
through basic chel}la number that indicates the
1
high
in
any
of
the
tires,
slowly
istry.
Rubber
tires are perlneamount of air pressure - mea~
sured in pounds per square inch release air by gently pressing able, so oxygen starts looking ·
(psi) - . a tire requires to be on the tire valve stem with the for a way out of the tire once
properly inflated. The recom- edge of your tife gauge until added. In the process, it oximended tire size, inflation level . you get to the correct pressure. dizes the steel belt structure in
and weight-bearing limit of ,the If the tire pressure is too low, the tire, so not only does the
• Preferr-rlek and
tires can 'usually be· found in note the difference between the tire become under-inflated, it
dr1venl
• eon-nlent
the owner's manual or printed measured tire pressure and the begins to deteriorate.
somewhere on a tag in the correct tire pressure. These · Regular compressed air also
automobile. Follow this num- "missing" pounds of pressure contains high levels of moisber, which is more accurate for are what you .will need to add. . W..fe. IIDd contaminants• .U.of
• At a se~ice Station, add the . whk,b can ~ ·a tire's life.
your make of .vehicle .over the
'missing
J?OUDd$ of.air press~ . Nitrogen, oo1be odler band, is ·
number printed on the tire
to
each
ttre
that is underinflal- a !Jry, clean, inert gas that,
itself. Because tires ani
ed.
unlike air, doesn't hold moisdesigned to be used on more
Wllllllm a. q-u
110 South 2nd Street
.
-Other
optiOns
tore.
Keeping moisture out of
than one type of vehicle, tire
~.wv
manufacturers list the "maxi- · Because checking tire infla- tires greaUy reduces the chance
773-.5942
mum permissible inflation tion is something that has to be of tread separation, belt failure,
pressure • on the tire sidewall. done monthly, many vehicle corrosion atound tbe valve
This number is the greatest owners are lax in this mainte- stems, and odler COIIIJIIO.II causamount of air pressure that nance effort. But what if there es of blowouts. Once a tire 'is
should ever be put in the tire was a wily to extend the infla- infla~ to the Jllupei pressure
under normal driving condi- tion rates of tires to make tire with nitrogen, at cin go weeks
tions, .according to the maintenance that much easier?
Accordirtg J9 Ingersoll-Rand,
NHTSA. The Administration
an industrial technologies comalso recommends these tips:
• Purchase a tire pressure pany, you can .fill a car's tires ·
gauge at any automotive retail- with nitrogen to help maintain
proper tire pres.s ure longer,
er.
• The recommended tire enhancing your safety, improv-

How to check
tire pressure

--perfec:l"""'y

,..

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7o- aa-,e 7k f)(t

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'

Pace 11
, ,

• Page 11

Tires

Cars that won't
quit: What does

Best Deal
on Wheels
As Low As 5.50%

lllallrlnM!'al
C-1114 Bill ap.t

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.

•••

2097 Fall Car Care

Friday, September 28,2007

•

••

• Qlange o1 (up to 5 q1B. 5W-30) Pennzoll

•Change oil . . .
• ChKk .. lluld ..,.,.
• t.ubl'k
3

'

' : ...
• . __ _

• • •

�:

...

'

2007.Fall Car Care

Page 10 •

Engine
from Page9
'I

that's usually located beneath
the steering column .

•••

WHAT NOT TO DO:
Panic. Unless your car is
idling rough , starting hard , hes itating or smoking, it's OK to
keep driving when the lig ht
comes on . (In a few model s, the
light will tlash or turn red if the
problem is serious . If this happens, DO pull over asap .)
But it's unwise to ignore it.
For one thing·, the problem will
likely mean a failed emissions
inspection down the line. For
another,- many of these small ,
undetectable problems can
cause costly engine damage if
left untreated .
" It's kind of a fal se signal to
some people who maybe have
been drivin~ around with it on
for a year,' Jaap says. "Even
though the problem can be very
slight, my opinion is that you
shouldn't get desensitized to it.
It's on for a reason."
Tip ~ DOn't pay a mechanic to
read the code unless the shop
offers to credit the money back
in related repairs. The service is
easy enough to get for free .

...

WHATTODO:
Obviously, if the car is un&lt;,ter
warranty, take it to the dealer.
But with older cars, many
mechanics and auto-parts stores
will retrieve the code gratis.
Do-it-yourselfers can purchase code readers for $50 to
$200, and some software I?rograms will tum your laptop mto
a scan tool with a special co nnector. Some readers give a
number that needs to be crossreferenced; more ex pensive
scanners will display details.
But thi s is where a little
knowledge ,c an be a dangerous
thing, Jaap cautions. The readings are often vague, and won' t
necessaril y tell you what needs
doi ng.
" It can be even more ex pensive to try and guess what's
going to fix it, just ba~ed o n
what a scan at an auto-parts
sto re te lls you." Jaap says.
"That's kind of hearsay and
conjecture , and I'd go hrokc if I
d id that."
At the very least, the code ca n
help you (or your mechaniC)
decide whether it's something
'' ' thai· ~~tj ~ p,utoofffof'9

Friday9 September 28, 2007

repair?
WHY ALL THE RIGMABecause when it comes time
ROLE? CAN'T MY CAR to pass a state emissions inspecJUST TELL ME WHAT'S tion, forget it. If the exhaust
WRONG?
coming out of your tailpipe isn't
Said Deep, a spokesman for· just so, no license plate for you.
Ford Motor Co., says indicators
At its core, that's really what
on modem cars are getting more gave rise to the MIL in the first
sophisticated, telling drivers , for place.
instance, how close they are to
•••
needing an oil change, .or when
HOW IT GOT SO COMPLIa tire is getting low.
CATED:
" But there's a limited amount
Before the 1980s, the dashof real estate on the instrument board gave gearheads all the
panel," Deep says, "and there's vital signs they needed to keep
. a certain amount of information moving. down the road: fuel
overload that we want to level, oil pressur;e, temperature,
avoid."
RPMs and, in some cases, alterCarmakers are only adding nator voltage.
messages that drivers are comBut these dials revealed nothfortable dealing with - specific ing about the intricate balances
messages for a headlight out, of fuel mixture or carbon emissay, or low washer fluid.
sions. As smog became a politi"When we get into computer cal issue in the early 1980s, the
operations, like delicate air/gas federal government intervened
mixture issues or the way your with emissions control stan· transmission shifts, that's some- dards. Making a car perform up
thing we think is more suited for to snuff got a lot more complia trained mechanic with the cated.
proper equipment," Deep says.
There are endless ways our
•••
cars can run afoul of these stanSO WHAT'S THE LIGHT dards; without sensors to point
the way, mechanics would
SAYING?
The computer can detect spend more · time diagnos.ing
scores of ·possible problems, than fixing. And other than an
ranging from silly to sinister. As annqal emissions inspection,
often as not, the MIL comes on how would Earth-friendly driwhen the gas cap isn't screwed vers know their vehicle was an
·on tight enough or the oil dip- environmental menace?
stick isn't pushed in all the way.
In that vein, perhaps it's only
But let's say the computer fair to think of the MIL as your
indicates a malfunctioning oxy- friend - the automotive equivagen sensor, an often troublesome lent of a canary in the coal
doodad that measures the mine.
amount of oxygen in your
"Older cars were simpler, but
. exhaust. Without its feedback, we ' ve come a long way," Jaap
the engine will surely start, run says. "I have to say that it's
and seem to perform normally. really easier to diagnose the
Fuel economy may dip a bit, modern engine - if you have
though you ' II hardly notice. the right tools. Its an all-around
Why bothe r with a costl y better world ."

it take to keep
·an old one going
on and on?
,IY IEIH J. HARPAZ
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Nitrogen could make your tires safer
(MS) - While traffic and
congestion are some of the
biggest re~rcussions to road
travel, acc1dents n;lated to tire
blowouts are also common.
Despite being a preventative
·maintenimce measure that all
drivers should take , many people do not regularly monitor
tire pressure unless there is a
visible indication that it may be
compromised. In fact, The
National Highway Travel
Safety
Administration
(NHTSA) estimates that over
27 percent of cars on the road
are driving on underinflated
tires, contributing to record
numbers of blowouts and accidents.
Correct tire inflation is not
only important to preventing

accidents, it also ensures longer
life for tires. Additionally, it
can help reduce fuel consumption and make the vehicle work
more efficiently. In recent
years of soaring gas prices, this
could be all the inspiration drivers need to be more on top of
tire maintenance.
·
Correct tire inflation is not
only impOrtant to. preventing
accidents, it also ensures longer
life for tires . .Additionally, it
can hdp reduce fuel consump~
tion and make the vehicle work
more efficiently. In recent
years of soaring gas prices, this
could be all the inspiration drivers need to be more on top of
tire maintenance .

Please see nres, Page 11

Free Life Insurance Included up to J,U,rJflfJI

NEW YORK- Maybe you or
someone yo.JJ know has an old
. junk:heap of a car with 150,000
miles oil it. Maybe you think
that's-a lot. ·
·
It's not.
Meet Peter Gilbert, who drove
.a Saab more than a million miles
tluoqgh 17_Wisconsin winters.
And Clifton Lambreth, a wne
manager for 600 Ford and
Linroln Mercury dealers around
the SOuth, where he's seen plenty
of Ford pickup trucks with
800,000 'miles. He calls them
"ro&amp;d.waniors."
. And Michael Dennison, whose
B~arian Professionals auto shop
inl Berkeley, Calif., routinely
20-year-old BMWs including a 1987 with 784,000
miles and a 1982 with 550,000
iniles.
"In our disposable culture, a
car is one of the few products you
own that rewanls your attempts
to keep it going," said DenniSon.
'"Theie.is a J&gt;.Uritan satisfaction
that comes wtth ~ueezing all the
juice out of a car.'
· · Micbael Wright of Port
Angeles, Wash.,drove his Toyota
SR5 'pickup well past 300,000
~es bef&lt;:iJe. finally replacing it wtth a 1989 mOdel of the same
car that bad "only 150,000
miles."
" If it's got 150,000 miles or
less on it, it's just getting broken
in. There's still a lot of miles on
it," Wright said. "It was in good
shape. I feel like I'm driving a
new car!" New compared to his
old trUck, that is - which didn 't
have a radio or air conditioning
or working windshie ld washer.
What does it lake to keep an
old car running that long? Here
are some tips from folks who
know a thing or two about auto
longevity.
- You probably know that
changing the oil every 3,000
miles or so is critical , but so are
other small m aintenance tasks.
Don't forget to change the fLI-

work&amp; -on

from Page10
•
inflation pressure that vehicle ing fuel economy, and prolong- or months without a refill.
manufacturers provide reflects iJig the lift: of your tires. · Whether drivers will use
Checking for tire inflation is the . proper psi when a tire is lngersQII-Rand is one of a nitrogen is all up to availability.
not difficult and it should be cold. The term cold does not handful of manufacturers that The company .states that they
every relate to the outside tempera- now offer a system for extract- have an affordable system that
done frequently month - particularly when ture. Rather, a col&lt;t .tire is one ing pure nitrogen from com- uses state-of-the-art membrane ·technology to deliver
changes in weather tempera- that has not been driven on for pressed air.
This is not a new techQology. nitrogen so that service stature could affect the tires. The at least three hpurs.
• Locate the ·r ecommended Airlines, racecars and military tions need only hookup directair molecules trapped in the
·.vressure . on the vehicle's . vehicles all have tires . filled ly to their current compressed
tire
tires will expand or contract in •
relation to the outside tempera- tire mformation I?lacard, certi- with nitrogen because it is less air system.
ture and the temperature of the fication label, or m the owner's affected by extreme tempera•
tui'e changes than regular air.
tire from use. Plus, tires natu- manual. ·.
• Record the tire pressure of As offered by JngersoU-Rand,
rally lose air over time.
.
the benefits of nitrogen can be
The tire inflation pressurds all tires.
•
If
the
tire
pressure
is
too
learned
through basic chel}la number that indicates the
1
high
in
any
of
the
tires,
slowly
istry.
Rubber
tires are perlneamount of air pressure - mea~
sured in pounds per square inch release air by gently pressing able, so oxygen starts looking ·
(psi) - . a tire requires to be on the tire valve stem with the for a way out of the tire once
properly inflated. The recom- edge of your tife gauge until added. In the process, it oximended tire size, inflation level . you get to the correct pressure. dizes the steel belt structure in
and weight-bearing limit of ,the If the tire pressure is too low, the tire, so not only does the
• Preferr-rlek and
tires can 'usually be· found in note the difference between the tire become under-inflated, it
dr1venl
• eon-nlent
the owner's manual or printed measured tire pressure and the begins to deteriorate.
somewhere on a tag in the correct tire pressure. These · Regular compressed air also
automobile. Follow this num- "missing" pounds of pressure contains high levels of moisber, which is more accurate for are what you .will need to add. . W..fe. IIDd contaminants• .U.of
• At a se~ice Station, add the . whk,b can ~ ·a tire's life.
your make of .vehicle .over the
'missing
J?OUDd$ of.air press~ . Nitrogen, oo1be odler band, is ·
number printed on the tire
to
each
ttre
that is underinflal- a !Jry, clean, inert gas that,
itself. Because tires ani
ed.
unlike air, doesn't hold moisdesigned to be used on more
Wllllllm a. q-u
110 South 2nd Street
.
-Other
optiOns
tore.
Keeping moisture out of
than one type of vehicle, tire
~.wv
manufacturers list the "maxi- · Because checking tire infla- tires greaUy reduces the chance
773-.5942
mum permissible inflation tion is something that has to be of tread separation, belt failure,
pressure • on the tire sidewall. done monthly, many vehicle corrosion atound tbe valve
This number is the greatest owners are lax in this mainte- stems, and odler COIIIJIIO.II causamount of air pressure that nance effort. But what if there es of blowouts. Once a tire 'is
should ever be put in the tire was a wily to extend the infla- infla~ to the Jllupei pressure
under normal driving condi- tion rates of tires to make tire with nitrogen, at cin go weeks
tions, .according to the maintenance that much easier?
Accordirtg J9 Ingersoll-Rand,
NHTSA. The Administration
an industrial technologies comalso recommends these tips:
• Purchase a tire pressure pany, you can .fill a car's tires ·
gauge at any automotive retail- with nitrogen to help maintain
proper tire pres.s ure longer,
er.
• The recommended tire enhancing your safety, improv-

How to check
tire pressure

--perfec:l"""'y

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• Page 11

Tires

Cars that won't
quit: What does

Best Deal
on Wheels
As Low As 5.50%

lllallrlnM!'al
C-1114 Bill ap.t

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.

•••

2097 Fall Car Care

Friday, September 28,2007

•

••

• Qlange o1 (up to 5 q1B. 5W-30) Pennzoll

•Change oil . . .
• ChKk .. lluld ..,.,.
• t.ubl'k
3

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• . __ _

• • •

�LMNG

ALONG THE RivER .
HaiVest time:

Gardening: \Nhen the leaves tum brown,
work on making your lawn green, Dl

•

Local farmers greet Nature's challenge, Cl

Hometown News for Gal1ia &amp; Meigs counties
·

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J'1Hll ' l'lo\ •

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BEnt SERGEHT
BSERGENTOM~OAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

~;High school football

BY

See Page 81

CHESTER - "It was a
nasty looking storm," Dan
Bartholf of the National
Weather
Service
in
Charleston, W.Va., said of
Wednesday's hail . storm in
Meigs County, adding at
this time there was no documentation of a funnel cloud
touching down.
Still, the storm left plenty
of damage to automobiles,
homes and other personal
property as it made its way
across Meigs County in a
direction.
aeih leiJienlfphoiO northeasterly
Bartholf
said
the
· storm
Diann~. left, and Darley Caldwell of Bunker Hill in the Wolf
developed
quickly
in
Gallia
Pel'\ area stand next to their shed, ~hlch was blown off 1ts
foundation while behind them 1s their barn mtsslng some of County, entered Southwest
Meigs County; moved north
its new roof after the recent hail storm.

of Pomeroy throullh Tuppers
Plains into Coolvtlle. It then
crossed the Ohio River into
Wood County, W.Va. and
moved as far as Tyler
County where it "fizzled."
"It basically mamtamed
its strength all the way
through," Bartholf said. .
Dianne and
Darley
Caldwell, who live at the
top of Bunker H_ill in the
Wolf Pen area, s3ld the sky
went from _white to brown
to black before the golf-ball
sized hail rained down,
forcing them into their basement. After the . stonp.
passed;. it left four wmdows
m therr home broke~, left
sizable dents on one stde of
their oak home, damaged
the home's roof and blew

Reedsville man
electrocuted
in accident at
Honda plant

OBITUARIES

~iji:]'i+

lt·

down tree limbs one of
wh1ch
went
though
Dianne's car windshield.
The Caldwells also lost _a
significant portion of !herr
barn roof which they'd_just
replaced and the wmd lifted
their shed off its foundation
and twisted it onto its side.
The hail literally beat the
leaves off of the Caldwells'
turnip and mustard greel\~·
leaving a garden of stems.•
Like the Caldwells,
Marilyn Spencer's back yard
on Long Hollow Road in the
Chester area looked like · a
snow storm blew through
Wednesday evening, with
piles of hail lingering from
around 6:30 p:m. that night

•.

,·':•ll&lt;.f•, ' .•, ~~

Page A5
RUSSELLS POINT (AP)
• Joey Edwin Clonch, 30 -A contractor was electrocuted Friday while installing
• Geraldine Gibson, 88
• Pauline Greathouse, 89 crash barncades at a test
track under construction at
• Joshua Harris, 20
Honda
Transmission
• Richard McCartney, 51 Manuf~~Cturing Company in
Russells Point.
• Wayne A. Shamp, 43
Forty- three-year-old
• Homer Vamff&gt;f Jr., 53
Wayne Shamp of Reedsville
··• David Wright, 46
was pronounced dead at
Page 12•
'.

'

:

2007 Fall Car Care

Cars

INSIDE
• Community Health
Fair at Cancer
Center on Oct. 6.
"See Page AS

Portion of road dedicated to troopers

Battle Days
takes trip
back in time

Details on Page A6

INDEX ,
t-round Town
Celebrations

' .

Classifieds

.

COmics
Editorials
:Movies
Obituaries
Regional
Sports
Weather

.

HROUSHill'MYOAILYREGISTEA.COM

A3
C Section
D Section
insert

A4
C3

As
A2
B Section
A6

:©
aOO? Ohio Valley Publlshlng Co.
. . ·.

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. ·- It's time to celebrate the Battle of Point
Pleasant with the annual
Battle Days Festival Oct. 5-7.
Battle Days was created
as a celebration of the Battle
of Point Pleasant, which is a
conflict that is considered
by many as the start of the
American Revolul!on. The
event is sponsored by the
Battle Days Committee and
the
Point
Pleasant
Daughters of tile American
Revolution and Sons of the
American Revolution.
The celebration kicks off
PleeH see Days, A1

ROCKSPRINGS
Brent Patterson of Pomeroy
is the director of the new
Rib- Grap~ Community·
College Me1gs Center.
.
Patterson comes to R10
Grande
from
Ohio
University, where he was
assistant director of staff education and
development.
He
brings
with him 15
years
of
experience in
two-year college
prolal...::.......J grams, manBrent
aging certifiPatterson c~te and associated degree
programs for adult learners.
He is a former director of
education at Gallipolis
Career College, and was an
academic advisor for freshmen students enrolled in the
University College at Ohio
University.
A Rio Grande undergraduate alumnus, Patterson is a
Racine native.
PleiH -

Director, A2

Breakfast, everyone?
· Pilot program begins

BY HoPE RousH

4 SE&lt;;TIONS - :14 PAGES

Ft..w..l.tz'
Center
director
named
BY BRIAN J. REED

and

WEAmER

,........ Da.ap. A2

BREEO.MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Mary Rutan Hospital. .
The accident occurred
around 10:45 a.m. when the
boom of a crane touched
overhead electrical wires.
Shamr, an employee of
the Pau Peterson Company
Michelle Miller/photO
in Columbus, was on the
ground guiding large · sand- Lt. Richard Grau, commander of the Gallla-Meigs Post of the Stat~ Highway Patrol, stands
bags into yellow barrel bar- before the · new.ly erected sign dedicating a portion of Jackson Ptke to the late Sgt. Dale
ricades under the w1res Holcomb' and lrooper Joshua .Risner.
when the boom touched the
power lines.
Investigators with the
Occupational Safety and
Health Administration are
investigating.
Russells Point is about 60
miles
northwest
of
BY MICHELLE MtLLER
Risner and Gallia County · said Assistant Director
George Maier of · the
Columbus.
MMILLERill'MYOAILYTRIBUNE.cot.t
, resident Lori Smith lost
Shamp's obituary appears
Governor's
Office of
their .lives in an accident
"Many of us
in today's paper.
GALLIPOLIS On during the early morning Appalachia.
bave been changed forever."
Friday morning, family and hours on Sept. 28, 2~.
Maier directed the crowds
friends of Sgt. Dale
They gathered to dedicate attention to the still covered
Holcomb and Trooper a portion of that road m sign, "The sign behi~d me
Joshua Risner gathered memofY of th(( lost troopers. represents a memory.
along Jackson Pike just
"This sin~le event att:ect.:
Please see Troapen. A2
west of where Holcomb, ed our enure commumty,

Frlday, September 28,2007

Wash and wax ~dy. . ·If you're fa;:ing a large repair, so there are safety considerations times - that. is, the ones with
Hose out wheel weDs to ffusli:·~q do the malh- ·
as well as fmanc1al ones.
odometers that still worlc 'I'hey
dirt. Vacuum inside to remove
Wbat would the monthly .pay-Don't worry about impressing are lovingly maintained by their
. grit that could corrode lbe upiJol'- iilent for a new car be over sever- your friends.
· ·
owners, and a majority are still
from Page 11
stery and c~~- And glll!lge ili.e . al years .;ompared to the cost of
Kri,~1en Bergevin's 1990 Lexus working vehicles, collectively
car or park in the shade when say, l_'qllacing a transmission? If has a few scmtches, scrapes and known as "rriaquinas" or
ters and rotate· the tires, said possible,
you think you can get a few more tiny dents. "It has about 250,000 niru:hines. They serve as peso
Lambreth.
Dennison said that rust due to yean; out of the old car; it might miles on it ,and still. runs great," . taxis for avemge Cubans who
Dennison advised changing the min; snow and salt on the roads be worth the investment, Wright said Bergevin, who does public · pile in and call out their stops
automatic transmission fluid "is not nearly the issue it once said.
relations for The Phelps Group. along the way.
. ·
every 50,000 miles; changing the was" due to .improvements in
"I would look at a Kelley Blue "I live and work in LA.,.wqere
The median age. of passenger
spark plugs every W,OOO miles; rustproofing. ''The sun, however, Book p~ide," Lambreth said. "If image is everything, but I love cars on the road in .the United
flushing the broke fluid every is elltremely han! on a car's paint a repwr exceeds 120 percent of my !(-year-old Lexus."
States was 91 year8 in 2006, a
two years. and putting a new bat- and interior," he said.
·
the value of the car; it's probably
If you need . inspiration for · record high, according to an
tery m preventively if the old one
Gilbert's "million-mile Clll', a not worth it - unless you ~r. keeping your workhorse going, annual survey by R. L. ,Po)k &amp;
has lasted five years. ·
1989 Saab 900 SPG, is now in love the vehicle and you don t · consider Cuba, where tens of .Co. "'Ibis is more evidence that
Dennison _said it's also impor- the Wisconsin Automotive want to give it up."
thousands of old American cars .v~hicle engineerinjl and durabiltnu;t to keep cars from overheat- Museum. But he said wasbiiig it
Ilenn\son said "it is almost built in the 1950s and even earli- ity continues to ·1rtfprove wit,h
ing. "If your car has a low · twice a week by hand was crucial always much less. expensive to ermakeupasmanya8athirdof each new model year," said
coolant indicator and it comes on, to keeping it going.
maintain a car than to buy a new the vehicles on the island's Dave Goebel, a ·consultant for
wait half an hour- to let the car
"Seventeen
winters
m one- unless very expensive items streets, S))ipped here before the . Pqlk's Aftermarket Solutions, in
cool off," Dennison said. ''Check Wisconsin is brutal," said fail,u:h as the ~t, lhllifirenoc, ~ 1959 revolution that brought a statement.
the lev~l - if it'sJow, get your car Gilbe':", who has become a and the engine.'
Fidel Castro to power, the
''The quality of cars today .is
towed. ' He ~ get- · celebrity among Saab devotees,
Youroldcarmay also save you Chevys and Fords were later incredible," agreed Lambreth.
ling the car (9wed if the tempera- ml!]l:ing appearances at auto money on insurance, because joined by Soviet vehicles such as "If you follow the manufacturlUre gauge goes beyond the two- shows and Saab conventions. He you probably won't bother with bolly Lada sedans and military- ers' maintenance, most of. those
thirds point, and draining and got· a brand-new Saab from lhe collision insurance. But before style four-wheel-drives.
.
cars will surprise and delight
refilling the cooling system every oompany for free, and a video on you decide that the old jalopy is
Many of the old American cars you."
two years to inhibit corrosion.
YouTube shows lhe odometer perfect for the teenage driver in are on their Second, third or even
Or, as Dennison put it, "they
-Keep your car clean, inside, turning from 999$99 back to tbe family, remember that' many fourth engines, and have turned · don't make cars like they used .
outside and un~.
zero.
older models don't have liiroogs, ·over their ooometers numerous to. They make them better."

'\11 .:\ h

Storm damage claims begin to multiply

SPORTS
~ction.

·
1
\Juldlt•pt,l"l • (,allljHII"

BY MICHELLE MILLER

. supervisor for Gallipolis City ,

MMILLERqj&gt;MYOAILYTRIBUNE.cOM

Schools, hopes the pilot program will be a success and
eventually expand to all the
schools.
"I wish,we could feed everybody lunch and breakfast (for
free)," said Haner.
So why Rio Grande
Elementary?
"Mr. Bowman has worked
so hard in getting test scores
up," said Haner. "We wanted
to see if we could help."
The pilot program is possible due to the number of free

RIO GRANDE - Starting
Monday, ·students at Rio
Grande Elementary will enjoy
breakfast free · of charge,
thanks to a new pilot program.
Rio Grande Principal Rick
Bowman is ex.cited about the
opportunity to offer universal
breakfast to his students.
'Bowman said that by making
sure all students have breakfast, they are making sure the
students are ready to start the
day off right.
Marsha Haner, cafeteria

Please see Breakfast. A1

Michelle Miller/photo

From left Rio Gr11nde Elementary students Hannah,
Kayla and Kaitlin enjoy breakfast before heading off to
class. Starting Monday, the will be eating breakfast 1n
their classrooms, along with all their school mates as
part of a new free universal breakfast pilot program .

Do you have headaches?
fi ·can make your headaches a thing of the pasr.

Call Back to Health Chiropractic today!

740.446.7460
'

- ·--·

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