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•
· Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 15, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

.

Williams is an easy call for reinstatement, Defense argues that kidnapping,
but Pacman will be tougher
robbery charges against OJ.
'
DAHLBERG

team to make a decisio n,
beginning wit h an appear.
- - - - - - - - - - . ance Thursday in a Las
Ricky Williams is getti ng Vegas courtroom where he
another chance to play in is expected to plead guilty
the NFL, which presum - to tho odd charge of conably means he hasn't been spiracy to commit disorder·
lighting up lately. Pacman ly conduct. The charge is a
Jones hopes for another gross misdemeanor, but
chance, which means any Jon.es will stay out of jail
'community service he 's under terms of a plea barplanning. in Las Vegas gai n.
.
won 't be done in an outAssuming that happens
reach program at one of the - and Jones clears up his
local topless clubs.
legal issues in other JUri sWilliams got fn trouble dictions - it will be up to
because he liked to hit the commissioner
Roger
bong instead of the line. Goodell to decide if he has
Jone s' playing privileges earned the right to play in
were suspended partly the NFL agai n, With one set
because he liked to cover of charges out of the way,
strippers with dollar bills as Jones will have a better
much as he enjoyed cover- case for reinstatement than
the one rejected by Goodell
ing wide recei vers.
You can't lump them earlier this month.
together as NFL bad boy s
It probably won't happen
because their offenses were until next year, but at some
strikingly
different. point Goodell might be
Williams hurt no one but backed into a corner and
himself. while Jones, at allow Jones back in . Then it
best, was an integral part of becomes a question of
a scene that ended with a whether the Titans - or
man being forced to live any other team in the NFL
the rest of his life in a - still. want him.
When the Titans weigh
wheelchair.
The one thing they do that decision, they might
have in common is that think
about
Tommy
both bn.·ng a lot of bag~age Urbanski, the club manager
II
f
to any team that wants t em an d ormer pro wrest er
back.
·
who is paralyzed from the
The Dolphins likely will waist d'own . He was shot in
end up with Williams again the melee that followed
because they're 0-9, in des- Jones' ejection from the
.
G 1
• Cl b ·
perate need of someone Mmxx ent emen s u m
who might be able to make February a_nd l~d to the
a play, and don't have. any- charges aga!nst him.
•
thlil~ to lose by gmng · Jones cla1ms he doesn t
Willtams a uniform. The know what happened that
worst that can happen is the night, doesn't know - who
drug rehab doesn't stick, he shot Urbanski. And unless
tests positive again, and a police accidentally stumble
lousy team remains lousy. upon the shooter, there's
, Jones is another stmy. not much chance Jones will
He's got issues that go far have to testify against him.
beyond those that trouble
That, says Urbanski 's
Williams , and he's got no wife, is not fair.
"If he 's not going to
guarantee either the NFL or
th~ Tennessee Titans will implicate
anyone, I'm
welcome his return.
going to be absolutely furi. ~ones is doing his best to ous. I really am sick of it,"
force the league and the Kathy Urbanski said. "I just
BY TIM

·

AP SPORTS coLUMNIST

hope the victims have
rights in this situation.
Obviously, the criminals
do."
No one is saying Jones
sbot. Urbanski. And Las
Vegas police obviously didn't have much of a case
against him or prosecutors
wouldn't have made him
such a sweetheart deal.
It seems clear the reason
they charged Jones was to
try to squeeze the name of
the gunman out of him , an
effort that seems to have
come up short.
There is, however, a dif· ference between behavior
that convicts in court and
behavior that convict' in
the NFL. Unlike prosecutors. Goodell and the Titans
-don't have to prove anything beyond a re&amp;sonable
doubt. ·
To Goodell 's credit, his
get-tough policy seems to
be working around the
league. Players have gotten
the message through suspensions and warnings that
playing in the NFL is a
privilege and they've pretty
much straightened out their
act this year.
The way the Cincinnati
Bengals are playing may be
a crime, but unlike last year
they're not being arrested
by the handful. Meanwhile,
·Chris Henry is back in uni. form, and Tank Johnson is
quietly trying to wor){llfs
way into shape in Dallas.
Goodell is ··now giving
Williams what likely will
be his last chance, and there
shouldn't be much of an
outcry:
Letting Williams back
into the league wasn't a
tough decision.
Figuring out what to do
with Jones will be.
Tim Dahlberg is a national sports ·columnist for The
As.sociated Press. Write to
him at tdahlbergap.org

Partner's in Care group
has Halloween party,.A7

Goodwin Tire

Center ope_ns, AS

Simpson should be droppe~
LAS VEGAS (AP) Kidn apping and robbery
OJ.
charge s
against
Simpson
should
be
dropped. his lawyer argued
Wednesday at the close of a
preliminary heari ng to
determine whether he
should stand trial in an
alleged armed robbery ·of
sports memorabilia dealers.
The lawyer, Gabriel
Grasso, told a Las Vegas
justice of the peace it wa~
unclear if prosecutors considered the act of luring the
two dealers to a hotel room
the alleged act of kidnapping - or whether the
charge was based on a confrontation that followed .
"This is clearly overcharging," he said.
Justice of the Peace Joe
M. Bonaventure was to
decide later Wednesday
whether the former football
Clarence
"C.J."
star,
Stewart
and
Charles
"Charlie" Ehrlich should
~o to trial on 12 charges,
mcluding kidnapping and
armed robbery. A. conviction on the kidnapping
count could result in a sentencc of life in prison with
the possibility of parole. An
armed robbery conviction
could mean mandatory
prison time.
·
.
Simpson, 60, has maintained that no guns were
displayed during the confrontation, that he never
asked anyone to bring guns
and that he did not know
anyone had guns. He has
said .he intended only to
retrieve items that had been
stolen from him by !I former agent, including the
suit he wore the day he was
acquitted of murder in 1995
in the slayings of his wife,
Nicole Brown Simpson,
and her friend , Ronald
Goldman. Simpson and the other

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
ill (IN I~ • \ ul. .)~. N ... H'-'

AP photo
0 .J. Simpson appears in a courtroom for his preliminary
hearing In Las Vegas on Wednesday.
defendants did not testify in
their own defense at the
hearing.
In their closing arguments,
attorne.Ys
for
Stewart and Ehrlich questioned the credibility of the
prosecution's witnesses.
But
prosecutor Chris
Owens said the witnesses
corroborated each other's
stories and recordings,
video and photographs supported the case.
Bonaventure said he
would take his time to consider the attorneys • arguments, the; exhibit's and his
own notes, but. planned to
announce his decision at 4
p.m. PST.
Earlier, sports memorabilia
dealer
Alfred
Beardsley. 45, testified that
he tried to make clear to an
"irritated" Simpson during
the Sept. 13 confrontation
that he had not stolen items
from him .
.
When the men came in
the room, "so.mebody
yelled out , 'Police,"'
Beardsley testified. "I was
ordered to stanq up. I was
searched for weapons."

Beardsley testified that
he did not steal any of the
items and that he told
Simpson the memorabilia
came from a former partner
of dealer Bruce Fromong.
Simpson "felt violated and
gave me a lecture,"
Beardsley said.
Beardsley said he was
ordered to pack up the
memorabilia , which had
been laid out on a bed, and
that the group left. He then .
called 911.
Michael
"Spencer"
McClinton
testified
Tuesday that Simpson
asked him to bring guns
and told him to use them to
intimidate Beardsley and
Fromong.
Simpson's ~olfing buddy,
Walter "Goldte" Alexander,
testified Tue sday that
Simpson
instructed
McClinton to draw his
weapon before the group
entered the room at the
Palace Station hotel-casino.
McClinton. Alexander
and Charle s Cashmore
struck deals with prosecutors and agreed to testified
against Simpson.

• Bonds indicted on
pe~ury, obstruction
charges. See Page 81

INSIDE

$1815

s1i.ii5

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED&lt;iiMYDAILYSE NTI NEl .(:OM

POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Commissioners
opened two bids for new
equipment and repairs to
existing equipment at the
Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District.
·KAL Electric,
Inc. ,
Athens, submitted a bid of
$60,250 for new electrical
work and a generator, and
LAS International, Ltd.,
Bismar~ . N.D., submitted a
bid of $10,852 for reconditioning work on aerator
pumps at · the . system's

lagoon on Ohio 681.
Action on the bids was
tabled pending review. The
work will be completed
using funds from the
Community Development
Block Grant
program
sec ured through Buckeye
Hills/Hocking
Valley
Regional
Development
District.
When the grant was
awarded in January, Board
President Loretta Murphy
said the planned improvements will allow the system
to operate at fuU capaci ty.
The board has maintained
that the system was inade-

quately equipped when it said two new gas boi lers
The project also incl uded
began operat·ing I0 years ha ve been installed at the repair' to the sandstone
ago.
courthouse, and th at the blocks along the street level
Motors on two lift stations new heating system is now of the &lt;:o urth ouse. work
nave
repeatedly
been operating. Commis sioners which was completed earlirepaired or replaced, at a cost used funds •from a capital er this fall.
of $6.000 each time. A wind- improvement loan from
Commi ss ioners also:
driven aeraior installed at Farmers Bank and Sav ings
• Took actio n to correct
one of the di strict's two Co. to replace two electric $100.000 in fu nd s transfers
lagoons
is inoperab le , boilers with the new, small- within the budget of the
Murphy saidcarlicr this year. er "Munchkin" boilers.
county sheri ff.
because it was installed in a
It cost commissioners
• Changed next week 's
location where there is not $36',700 to remove the old meeting to II a.m. on
enough wind to run it. 1\vo boilers and replace them Wednesday due to the
lagoons are operational , with the new ones. Lane's Thanksgiving Day holiday.
Murphy said. but one is oper- Boiler Repair of Marietta
Present
were
ating at less than capacity.
performed the work, which Commissioners Sheets and
In
ot her
bu siness, also included new gas lines Mick Davenport and Clerk
Commiss ioner Jim Sheets and a new pump.
Gloria Kloes.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVDAILYSENTINELCOM

with wide, vacuum

63,081 Miles, Sunroof

\\WW.nt)lluily'""tind.mm

753 customers
affected by
power outage

• Dinosaur discovered

2Hal. . 11111lE

I· lUll ,\\ , N0\'1-:1\IIIER tb, :!1111 7

Commissioners open bids for TP sewer improvements

SPORTS
·

.

ROCK SPRINGS - Acc·ording to
American Electric Power, 753 residents in the Rocksprings Road area
were affected by a power outage
Wednesday night.
Jeff Rennie, spokesperson for AEP,
said the power went out at approximately 6: 10 p.m. and was restored at
II :50 p.m. The cause of the outage is
attributed to a broken cross-arm on a
utility pole in the area.
A cross-arm is a wooden beam that
~oes across the utility pole, Often holdu!g a transformer. Rennie said
although what caused the failure of the
cross-arm is undetermined, they typically fail due to stresses caused by
weather and when they fail they take
electrical lines with them.
The largest facility affected by the
outage was Rocksprings RehabilitatiQn
Center which actually wasn't affected
at all with the facility having a backup
generator for its 91 residents.

cleaner-shaped mouth.
See Page 'A8
.• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
• Students complete
Cannel-Sutton Methodist Church
canned food drive.
See Page AS
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• Opening of bridge
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
d91ayed until spring.
HOEFLICH@MVDAILY SENTINELCO M
8v CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYOAILYSEN
TIN EL.COM
Page AS
· POMEROY "Let's Have a
·• FDA adds potential
Cowboy Christmas" is the theme of the
POMEROY - When the brisk feel of autumn sets in and
heart attack risk to label annual holiday flower show of the the apples begin to fall , you cari expect several churches in
of diabetes drug Avandia. .Meigs Colmty . Garden Clubs the county to get out the old copper kettles, gather in some
Association to be staged .this weekend firewood, and cook up some apple butter.
.
· See Page AS

Christmas flower show
coming this weekep.d

.

Making applebutter
The old fashioned way

.see

$11.195

at Carleton School in Syracuse.
As always there will be plenty of
Chrisimasy things to see - lots of
bells, baubles, ribbon and glitter to
enhance beautiful traditional and creative flower arrangements, indoor and
outdoor wreaths, gift wrappings and
table settings.
Also included will be a wide variety of
specimens like spruce and holly, along
with other berried bmnches and blooming and foliage houseplants traditional to

WEATHER

'

Please see Show, AS

$17,115

2illllnllltr ll111t11

O.ty ll,llll MO..

Coawrtlblo

$11.195

$13,995

•

INDEX
Annie's Mailbox

A7

Buckeye edition

BB

Calendars

A7

Classifieds

Bs-6

~mics

· B7

A4

Editorials
Faith • Values

NASCAR
Sports
Weather

A2-3

.As
B3
B Section

AS

© 0007 Ohio Valley Pu~ll8hlnA Co.
. ·-

-

-

--'-

•·

Rock Springs Methodist Church

LEGION HONORS

BY BETH SERGENT

2 SllCllONS- 16 PAGI'.S

Mo~es

•

Limo to
the stars

Dellolio on Pace A8

IHIIIICIII.IIrtlll

Just as their ancestors did, the famili es make apple butter
the old fashioned way - cooked over an open fire in the
same old kettles used by generations before.
For the members of church congregations it's not only a
great way to make money for special improvement projects, but creates a time for personally reconnecting with
each other. The closeness of working side by side for' the
common good in a productive but social way at an apple·
butter-making ses~i o n far surpasses anything gained at a
church supper.
Ask anyone taking on the task of making open-fire, kettlecooked applebutter and you 're sure to gel the answer- .. It
was a lot of hard work, bur it was a lot fun ."

BSERGENT@MYOAILY,~ ENTINEL. COM

POMEROY - It' s a
long way from Nashville to
our area but for one local
businessman , Nashville
came to him.
Jim BoyeP, owner of Pure
Elegance
Li!nou sine
Service of Gallipolis,
recently received a phone
call from the concert promoter for the Taylor Swift
concert at Marietta College.
After that phone call Boyer
ended up driving Swift, her
band and tour manager
around before the concert. .
This month Swift won the
Country
Mu sic
Hori zon
Association 's
Award which recognizes
'
Please see Limo, AS

·.

Brian J. Reed/ photo
Submitted photo

Local businessman Jim Boyef (left) of Pure Elegance
Limousine Service of Gallipolis recently provided limousine
service for country music s inger Taylor Swift' pictured here
before her recent concert in Marietta:

Jack Coughenour, left . was honored as Legionnaire of the
Year by Feeney-Bennett Post 129. American Legion.
Middleport . and Russel l Mozingo. _right, w~s recognized as
Legionnaire of the Decade. Post Adjutant Roscoe Wise made
the presentations at We(lnesday·s Thanksgivrng Dinner at
the post. Both honorees are a lso forme r post commanders.
:1

�.

Pagei\2

FAITH • VALUES
.Religion News Briefs
A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel

Imagine for a moment
smooth, placid waters perfectly mirroring sapphire
blue skies. Cottony white
tufts of cloud emanate a
faint golden glow 'as the sun
shines down in full autumn
glory. Sounds like a calen. dar picture, doesn't it'&gt; But
then, is it possible that the
serene scene before us holds
either dangerous poisons or
other terrors beneath the
glass-like surface of the
waters? Hollywood has, of
coUrse, found the question
to be very pro11table, telling
tales of giant alligators,
schools of scientifically
modified piranha, or strange
chemicals that alter the
genetic makeup of wildlife
thus producing terrifying
monsters that prey on hapless campers, ecologists,
and forest rangers.
But in spite of such fanciful storytelling , our
hearts seem still drawn to
the peaceful setting of still
waters, glad indeed thar
our God will lead us to the
water 's edge so that our
soul s may be refreshed.
How we .hate it then when
folk s come along and
throw stones into our
waters! Just when we feel
that we 've reached a
peaceful spot and purpose
in our hearts to linge r
there, a stone is thrown,
plunking into our live s,
disturbing us with ripples
of confusion and upsetting
our delicate sense of security. Those of us who have
had our "boats rocked" and
the waters of bur lives disturbed by unexpected circumstances have an obvi,
ous distaste for the experience and can be very reluctant to disturb the waters of
other people's lives·. We
. can all agree that throwing
stones, so to speak, of condemnation, malice, anger
and selfishness is to contribute to. the poisons and
problems from which people need safe haven.
But there are other
"stones," however, that are
really treasures which we
should on! y be too glad to
share with others. If you
are a man or woman who
has placed his or her faith
in Jesus Christ as Savior,
then you have acknowledged that He is "the Way,
the Truth, and the Life"
(see John 14:6) . If He is
then all those things, you
have a treasure house with
which you may richly bless
the lives of others. What
stones do you have that
others are blessed when
you "toss them into the
lives of others"? Three

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ent children, do not conform
to the evil desires you had
when you lived in ignorance . But just as He Who
called
you is holy, so be
Pastor
hoi y in all you po" (I Peter
Thorn
1:13-15 NIV) .
Mollohan
The third stone of gold is
truth. ln an age of innovation, l 've little complaint in
regard to applying such
innovation to serving others
come readily to my mi1\d . in love, t.o styles of music,
The first is the golden stone and even to modes of worof love. It is the stone that ship (as long as there i~n't
helps to prepare the waters any compromise on Godly
for other golden stones and, principles). Where I would
without which, the other have GREAT complaint,
stones could not be however, is in the matter of
received. It· paves the way a correct understanding of
for others to hear and God's truth. Innovation is
receive the news that God all right (and even benefigave His Son for them. It cial as God steers us on to
opens minds· and pierces . deeper understandings of
hearts that have grown cold Himself and Hi s purposes),
and calloused. As we allow but one cannot be "innovalove to motivate our hands tive" with truth.- Man's creand feet to the speedy aid ativity is not acceptable in
of those who are in need, or any way, shape or form
to support those who suffer, when it encroaches God's
we have lobbed a rock into sovereignty. If, for example,
the sea of complacency, "another way to heaven" is
causi ng waves to break introduced to a congregaagainst walls of indiffer- tion, a lurking menace is
ence, eroding them so that stirring beneath the surface
as God comes near, }le may of .what appears to be a
find a heart that can receive , pleasing scene of universal- .
His promised salvation. Jty.
No, it is good for God's
"Th is is how we know what
people
to throw the golden
love is: Jesus Christ laid
down His life for us. And stolle of truth at such botwe ougbt to lay down our tom feeding lies. "Dear
lives · for our brothers. If friends, although I was very ·
anyone has material pos- eager to write to you about
sessions and sees his broth- the salvation we share, I felt
er in need but has no pity I had to write and urge you
· on him, how can the ·love of to contend for the faith that
God be in him? Dear chil- was once for all entrusted to
dren, let us not love with the saints" (Jude 3 · NIV).
words or tongue but with People don't like their calm
actions and in truth" (I waters disturbed, it is true.
But when people realize
John 3: 16-18 NIV) .
The second stone is holi- that what they're being
. ness. Called to be a people given are the "gold
who "have come out from nuggets" of love, holiness,
the world," we think differ- and truth that sets us free
ently, act differently, and from the bondage of sin and
live life differently than do death, silver ripples are
those who do not yet know unleashed that emanate outJesus as Lord. One of the ward creating a current that
great · fundamental princi- draws people to the only
pies on which we build Our hope that the world can ever
lives as Christians is that know: God's Son.
God's people must leave . "To the only God our
behind the selfish and sinful Savior be glory, majesty,
compulsions that mice power
and
authority,
enslaved us and move ahead through Jesus Christ our
towards pure and holy lives Lord, before all ages, now
that may be offered up to and forevermore! Amen"
our God throughJesus' for- (Jude 25 NIV):
giveness without condem(Thom Mollohan and his
nation. We therefore strive family have ministered in
to not compromise our call, southern Ohio the past 12
ings by "dabbling" in things years. He is the pastor of
that we know clearly are Pathway
Community
offensive to our God and Church, which meets on
Savior. "Therefore, prepare Sunday mornings at 455
your minds for action; be Third Ave. He may be
self-controlled; set your reached for comments or
hope fully on the grace to be questions by email at pas·
given you when Jesus torthom@pathwaygallipoChristis revealed. As obedi- lis.com).
-

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Lutheran program
assists military
chaplains, vets
ST. LOUIS (AP) - The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod has launched a new program
to help chaplains and soldiers adjust to
returning home after military deployments.
The early focus of the program, called
Operation Barnabus. is to provide support
for pastors called to active duty as Reserve
and National Guard chaplains. From there,
the St. Louis-based denomil)ation plans to
place liaisons in its 35 districts to work with
congregations and offer support to soldiers
and their families by next summer or falL
The program is named for the companion to St. Paul who assisted him on his
first missionary journey, according to bib·
lical accounts.
"Everyone changes in a deployment - to
deny that is to deny reality," said Rev.
Alexander Knowles, a chaplain and pastor
from Lockport, N.Y., who is taking part in
the program and preparing for deployment
to Afghanistan. "We all need help in learning how to deal with some of the issues that
come up when people come back."
The 2.5 million-member church estimates
it has 10,000 to 20,000 members who are
active or reserve in the military, including
about 100 of its pastors.
Delegates to last summer's Lutheran
Church-Missouri Synod asked the church to
address the needs of military chaplains and
other military personnel.
The denomination has not taken a position
on the Iraq War. . While other Christian
denominations condemned plans to invade
Iraq in 2003, church president the Rev. Gerald
Kieschnick issued the statement: "We hold up
the biblical principles of just war for our peo- ·
pie's consideration. But our people have the
freedom to form their own conclusions."

United Methodist
bishops elect new leader,
call for Iraq withdrawal
LAKE JUNALUSKA, N.C. (AP) Bishops of the United Methodi.st Church,
gathered here for a semiannual meeting,
elected an Iowa bishop to lead them and
called on the United States and its allies to
begin an immediate withdrawal from Iraq.
Iowa Bishop Gregory Vaughn Palmer, 53,
was elected to lead the worldwide Council of
Bishops of the II million-member church,
the nation 's second largest Protestant
denomination: A Philadelphia native, Palmer
wa~ ordamed m 1981 and served stx churches in Ohio before being elected bishop and
appointed to the c~urch's Iowa conference.
Palmer wtll begm a two-year term as the
council's president in May, replacing Janice
Riggle Huie of Houston.
"(Palmer) is widely respected across the
council," said Stephen . Drachler, a church
spokesman. "He is bright and articulate and
an all-around good guy. He will play a role in
the direction of the work the council does and
will be the voice of the council of bishops." ·
The resolution calling for an immediate
troop withdrawal from Iraq also urges no
permanent military bases in Iraq, increased
support for military veterans and support
for a reconstruction plan: President Bush is
a member of the United Methodist Church,

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Friday, November 16,

Friday, November 16, 2007

Church ot JnU! Cbrilt Apo~tolk

VanZalldt and WIUd Rd ., Pastor: James
Miller. Sunday School · 10:30 a.m .•
EYening - 7:30 p.m.
• Rhtr Valley
River Valley Apostolic Wonhip Center,
873 S. 3rd

Emmanuel Apostolic: Taberll&amp;cle Inc:.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rutlllfld,
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m..
Thun;. 7:00 p.m.. Postor MartyR. Hutton

Assembly of God
Llber1y Assembly ot Gnd
P.O. Box 4b7 , Dudding lane, Mason,

WASHINGTON (AP) - A Roman
Catholic activist who has helped provide
education to thousands of African refugees
displaced by ethnic bloodshed has been
awarded a $1 million prize recognizing
unsung humanitarians.
·
The Opus Prize, which honors someone
who "combines a driving entrepreneurial
spirit with an abiding faith to combat poverty, illiteracy, hunger, disease and injustice,"
was given to Brother Constant Goetschalckx.
A member of the Congregation of the
Brothers of Charity, a Belgium-based religious order, Goetschalckx runs Ahadi, an
education program based in refugee camps
in Tanzania. He founded Ahadi, which
translates roughly to "promise" in Swahili,
a decade ago when refugees fleeing violence in neighboring Rwanda, Con~o and
Burundi began flooding into Tanzama . .
Goetschalckx "is a man who is absolutely
and totally committed to the poor of the
world," said the Very Rev. David M.
O'Connell, president of Catholic University,
which administered this year's Opus Prize.
The money for the award, now. in its fourth
year, comes from the Opus Group, a
Minnesota real estate firm . The Opus Prize
Foundation partners with a different Catholic
university each year to administer the award.
Known as "Brother Stan," Goetschalckx ·
recruited educated ·volunteers from the
camps to start high school classes and
arranged for distallce-lear.ning classes for
those working toward college degrees.

W.Va ., Pastor. Neil TeMant. Sunday
Senices- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m

Baptist
10:30 am, Worship service 10:30 (0 11:00
am. Wed . preitehing 6 pm

Cat - , ter ladepmdent Baptist C hurch
Sun~...... Sc hool · 9:30am, Preaching
Service IO:JOam, Evening Service
7:00pm. Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm.
Pastor: Whitt Aker:s

Cheshlrt Baptist Cburcb
Pastor: Steve Little. Sunday School: 9:30
am. Morning Worship: 10:30 am,
Wednesday Bible S!Udy 6:30pm: choir
practice 7;30; youth and Bible Buddies
11:30 pJll . Thurs. I pm book study

- 9:30a.m.. WoiShip . 11 a.m . and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m. Pll!ltor: Gat)'

Ellis
Rull11ad Flnt Baptist Chun::h
Suhday School • 9:30 a.m., Wonhip •
10:45 a.m.
'
Pomeroy Finl Baptist
Pastor Jon Brockert, East Main St.,
Sunday Sch . 9:30am. Worship 10:30 am
First Southern Blpd!il
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: E. Lamar
O ' Bryan t, Sunday School · IJ:JO a.m .,
Worship · 8: IS a.m., 9:45am &amp; 7:00 p.m.·,
Wednesday Serv ices-7:00 p.m.
Fint Baptlst Chun:h
Pasior: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St..
Middleport , Sunday School · 9:15a.m. ,
Worship · 10 :15 a.m ., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Scrvic'e- 7:00p.m.

~ne First Baptlst
Pa stor: Ryan Eaton , pastor , Sunday
School · 9:30a.m ... Worship · 10 :40 a.m.,
6:00 p.m .. Wednesday Serv ices - 7:00
p.m.
Silver RUII S.ptJst
Pa stor: John Swanson, Su nday Sc hool !Oa.m .. Worship · IIR .m., 7:00 p.m. ·
.Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

MI. Union Bapll!t
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday ScOOol9 :4~ s .m ., Evening - 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.
Bdblebem Baptist Church
Great Beild , Ro ute 124, Racine, OH,
Pastor: Ed Carter. Sunday School • 9:30
a. m., Sunday Worship · 10:30 a.m .,
Wedne sday Bible St udy - 7:00 p.m.

Old Btthtl FrM Will Baptist c•urch
28601 St. Rt . 7. Middleport, Sunday
Service · 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m., Thesday
Services -6:00
Hillside Haptl8t Church
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt . 7, Pastor: Rev .'
James R. Acree. Sr.. Sunday Unified
Servict, Worsh ip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m. ,
Wednesday ~~ice s -7 p.m.

r

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

We Cannot Hide
From CUr Sins

We often think that if we do
something alone in the dark, no
one will know of our bad actions,
and that we can effectively hide
this from others. But what we are
neglecting to see is that we cannot
hide our sins from ourselves. If we
steal from others, we are a thief
whether anyone else knows about
it or not; and
you and
God both
it. Even
gets away
with the

We Sell Homes at
TEAFORD REAL ESTATE

209 Third
Racine, OH

Members of the MLS and REALTOR"

Pick up a color Brochure!
216 East Second St. • Pomeroy

74()..992·3325
www.teafordrealestate. net

740·949·221 0
1\ Home Bank for
Home People"

Hills Self Storage
ecorrtes a
who lies has
does, one

murderer, and
become a liar.
becomes.
And try
we
cannot hide
ourselves.
Behavior,
or bad, is
like a mirror,
it reflects the
.true nature of person.
However, the good news is that
God
will forgive us, and we can
If we say we have no sin, we deceive
make
the commillnent to become a
ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If we
confess our sins, He is faithful and just to better person. In the end, like a
forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from shadow. both our good and our bad
deeds follow us wherever we go.
all unrighteousness.
And, the burden of a good life is
much easier to carry around than
- Ne• K.J.V.l John 1:8-9
that of a sinful one.

1--------------

Victory Baptht lodtptadeot
525 N. 2nd St . Middlepon, Pas tor: James
E. Keesee . Worship - IOa.m., 1 j,.m.,
Wednesday Scrvkes · 7 p.m.

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949·2217

Fallb Baplllt Churc:h
Railroad St., MilSon. Sunday Sc hool · 10
a .m., Worship • II a.m., 6 p.m,
Wednesd&amp;y Services· 7 p.m.

Michelle Kennedy
Director of Marketing and Admissions

Fore* Run Baplltl- Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods, Sunday School • 10
a.m., Worship - 11:30a.m.

333 Page Street
(740) 992·6472
Middleoort OH Fax (740) 992-7406
·' Wann Friendf)'

Atmosphere

Mt. Moriah Captlst
Fourth &amp; Main Sl.. Midd lepon. Sunday
School · 9:30 a.m., Worship· 10: 4~ a.m.

Hours
6am -8 pm

An~qulty Baptist
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .• Wor~ hip 10:45 a.m., Sunday Evening • 6:00 p.m.,
Pa~tor: Don Walker

9vfi[[ie's !J(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked Meals &amp; Dally .Special.&lt;
Open 7 days a week

740·985-3561
992-1550

If ye abide in Me, and My
words a.bide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

~EIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC

Wf:SlsHle C bYrth of Christ
33226 Chi ldren '.o; Home' Rd.
~H
Contact 740·44 1-1296 Sunday morni ng
tO:OO, Sun morning 'Bible slud y;
following worship. Sun. eve 6:00 pm.
Wed bible study 7 pm

Mini ster: Larry Brown, Worship · 9:30
a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study · 7 p.m.
•

Pomeroy C hurch or Christ
212 W. Main St., Sunday School · 9:30
a.m., Worship- 10 :30 a.m .. 6 p.m .,
Wednesday Serv ices - 7 p.m.
Pomtroy Westside Chun:h of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd .. Sunda y
School · II a.m., Worship. IOa .m.. 6 p.m.
Wedntsday ServiCC!l. 7 p.m.
Mlddleporl Church of Christ
5th and Main, Pastor: Al Hanson,
Childrens Qirector: Sharon Sayre. Teen
Director: Dodger Vaughan , Sunday School
· 9:30a.m., Worshi p- 8: 15, 10:30 a.m .. 7
p.m .. Wednesdo.y Services· 7 p.m.
Keno Chun:b ol Christ
Worship · 9:30 a.m .. Sunday School ·
10:30 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Walla~ . 1st and
3rd Sunday
Btarwallow Ridge Church of Christ
Pastor:Bruce Terry, ·Sund a~· Sc hool -9:30
a.m.
Worshij:i - 10:30 a. m., 6:30 P·1'1:1 ·
Wednesday Sen•ices · 6:30p.m.
Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy. Harrisonvill e Rd . (Rt. l43) .
Pastor: Roger Watson , Sunday Sc hoo! ·
9:3.0 a.m .. Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Tuppen Plain Cbun:h of Cbrlsl
Instrumental. Worship Service • 9 a.m..
Communi on · 10 a.m., Sunday Sc hool 10:15 a.m ., Youth- ~:30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesday 7~m
Bradbury Chu.n:b ot Ch.rlst
Min ister. Tom Runyon, 39558 Bradbu ry
Rosd. Middlepon, Sunday School · 9:30
a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Cllurth of Christ
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m .. Worship and
Communi on· 10:30 a.m .. Bob J. Werry,
Minister
Bradford Chan:h ofCbrbit
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp;. Bradbury Rd .,
Minisler: Doog Shamblin , You1~ Minisler:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m .. 10:30 a.m.: 7:lHJ
p.m.,Wednesday Servicii:'S . 7:00 p.m.
Hickory Hill!! Church of ChriAI
. 'l\Jppers Plai ns . Pastor Mike Moore, Bi ble
clas5 , 9 a.m. Sundny: worsh'ip 10 a.m.
Sunday: worship 6:]0 pm Sund ay; Bible
dass 7 pm Wed.
Reedsville Churcll of Chri!t
Pas1or: Ph.lliP Stunn, Sunday School: 9:~
a.ni., Worship Servi9C: 10:30 a.m.. Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
~•wrCh~horc•rid

Sunday sc hool 9:30 a.m., Sunday worship
- 10:30 a.m.
Tbe Cburcll of Christ of Pomeroy
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Evangeli st:
Dennis Sllrgent, Sunda)' Bi ble Study .
9:30a.m .. Worship: i0:30 11.m.nnd 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

Christian Union
HartfoQI Chun:h of Christ in
Cbrlstlaa Ualon
Hartford , W.Va .. Pastnr:Da"id Greer.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ., Worship ·
10:30 a.m.. 7:00 p.m., WednesdAy
Services - HlO p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Church of God
Mil e Hill Rd., Raci ne, Pastor: lames
Satterfield, Sunday Schoo l · 9:45 a.m.•

Long Bottom
Sunday School · 1:1 .30 a.m .. Wurstlip 10:30 a.m
Ret4svlllr
Worsh rp · l:l :]fl a_m. Sunday School .
10:30 a.m .. First Sunday of Momh - 7:00
p.m. serv ice

Syrwu.w Flnlf Cbun:h ol' God
Apple and Sa:ond Sts., Pastor: Rev. Davkl
Russell , Sunday Sclwol and Worship- 10
a.m. Evening Servicu- 6:30 p. m.,
Wednesday Servit.:es- 6:30p.m.
Churt:h or God or Prophecy

p.m.

Congregational

Episcopal
GrllCe Eplscupal Cburch
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Holy Eucharisl 11:00 a.m . Re v.
Edward Payne

Forest Run
Pastor: Bob Rob in ron .Su nd &lt;~ySchool - 10
~.rn ., Worship - 9 a.m.

Holiness

Ueat h (Middleport)
Pa stur: Brian Dun ham. Sunday School .
9:30a.m., Worship - 11:00 a.m. '

. Community Chun:h
Pastor: Ste.,·e Tomek, Main Street,
Rlltland. Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m..
Sunda}' Servil:e- 7 p.m.

Pearl C ha~l
Sunday School · 9 a.m .. Worship · 10 a.m.

Pa ~l or·

Rock Sprh•Ms
Pa~tor: K~ith Rader. Sunday School 9:15
a.m., Wo rship · 10 &lt;~.. m .. Youth
Fellowship. Sunday. 6 p.!Jl .

RO!ie of Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Creek Rd., Rudat1d, Paster: Rev.
Dewey King. Sunday school·· 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday worship -7 p.m .. Wed~~t:sday
prayer ir.:eting- 7 p.m.
Pine Grove Bible Holln m; Church
112 mile off Rt. 325 . Pastor. Rev. O'Del l ·
M!iJ!Iey. Sunday Sc.hool · 9:311 a.m..
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.
WtsJeyan Bible Holine!i!l Church
75 Pearl 'St., Middlepon. Pastor: Ri ck
Bourne. Sunday School - 10 a.m. Worship
-10:45 p.m., Sunday E\·e. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Rutland
Pastor: Ri ck Bourne , Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship- 10:30 a.m .. Thursday
Services· 7 p.m.
Salrm Centel'
Pastor: William K. Marshal l, Sunday
School- 10:15 a.m., Worship . 9:15a.m ..
Bible Study: Munday 7:00pm
Snowville
Sunday Schoo l · 10 a .m ., Worship- 9 a.m.

H}'~ll Run Communit~· Chun:h
Pastor. Rev. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
· 9:30a.m., Worship · 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m..
Thurliday Bible Study and Yout h. 7 p.m

C11rmei-Sutton
Carme l &amp; Bashan Rds. Ruci ne. Ohio.
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday Sehoul •
9:45 a.m .. Worship - I I :00 a.m. , Bibl e
Study Wed . 7:30 p.m.

Laurel Cllrl' t'ree Methodist Church
Pastor.; Glenn Rowe, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m. , Worship · 10:30 a.m. and rl
p.m ..Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
The Chun:b of Jeso1
Christ of Lllller·Day Saint&lt;;
St. Rt . 160 . 446-6247 or 446-7486, ,
Sunday School 10:20-1 1 a.m.. Relief '
Society/Pr iesth ood II :05- 12:00 noon.
Sacrament Se rvice Y- 10 : 15 &lt;Lm .,
Homemaling mttting. I sl Thurs .. 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. Jolin ~uthe111n Cburth
Pine Grove. Worshi p - 9:00 a.m., Sunday
Scllool - 10:00 a.m. Pastor:

East Letart
Pastor: Bi ll Mafshall Sunday S(.;t uol ~
9a.m .. Worship : 10 a.m .. 1st Su nday
C\'ery month e\·ening service 7:00 p.m ;
Wednesday- 7 p.m.
Racine
Pastor: Kerry Wood , Sunday School · 10
a.m.. Worsh ip · · I I a.m.Wednesday
Services 6 pm: Thur Bible St.udy 7 pm

Middleport Community Churth
575 Pearl St., Mi ddlepon . Pastor: Sam
A.rtdcrson , Sunday School 10 a.m ,
Evening · 7:30p.m. , Wednesday Service7:30p.m.

Faith Valley TabemiK'Ie Ch•n:h
Bailey Run Road. Pa stor: Rev . Em mell
Raw ~o n , Sunday Ev~ ning 7 p.m.,
ThLJrsday Sl:.rvice. 7 p.m.
Syracuse Mission
l4 ll Bridge man St., Syracus'e, Sunday
Schoo l - 10 a.m. Even in g . 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Street, Sunday School . 9:30a.m ..
Worshi p- 10:30 a.m .. Pastor Phil!ip Bel!

United Methodist
Graham.Unittd M•thodl!t
Wof!lhip - II a.m. Pastor: Richard Nease
Bechtel Unltfd Melhodlst
New Haven, Richar..l Nease, P11stor.
Sundily worship 9:30 a.m . Tues: 6:30 •
prayer and Bib le Study.

Hazel Community Churth
PastOr: Edsel Hart, Sunday
Schoo l · 9:30a.m., Wordiip · 10:30 a.m ..
7:30p .m.

on· RL 124.

Ton:h Church
. to . Rd . 63, Su nday Schoni ·_ 9:]0 a.m..
Worship · 10:30 a.m .
·

Dyesville Communlt)' Chun:h
Sunday Sc hool · 9:30 a.m .. Worship ·
HJ:311 a. m.. 7 p.m
Morse Chapel Church
Sunday school - 10 a.m .. Worship · II
B.m. : Wednc~day Service- 7'p.m

Nazarene

Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off li4 behind Wilke~~· illc, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires, Sunday School · 9:30a.m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m .. Thursday
Seivices. 7 p.m.

Point KMk Chun'h of the Nazarene
Route 689, Albany. R~v . Lloyd Grimm, ·
pastor. Sunday Schoo l 10 am: worhsip
~rvi ce II am , evenin g ~e rvice ~ ~11 . Wed .
prayer meeting 7 pm

Meigs Cooperadve Parish
Northe1ut Clu ~l e r . Alfred , Pastor 'Jim
Corbin , Sunda y School • 9:30 a.m.,
Wof!lh ip · IIBJR .. 6:30p.m.

Middleport Church oftht: .\llllll"tne
Pas1or: Leonard Powell, Sunday Schoo l 9:30.a.m.,Wflr'ihip · lU:Jn a.m .• 6:30p.m.,
Wednesday Service~ - 7 p.m ..

Chester
Pastor: Jim Co rbitt Worshi p - 9 a.m..
Su nday School • 10 a.m. , Thursday
Services· 7 p.m.

Reed!llville Frllnwship
Chun;h of the N~Uiue nc, Pa~ tor : Russell
Carson , Sunday School .- 9:30 a.m .. ,
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. n p.m . Wed n e.~d 11y
Serv ices· 7 p.m.

Pa.~tor :

Joppa
Den zil Null , Worsllip - 9:30 a.m .

Fahh Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Sunday School· 9:30a.m..
Worship • 10 :45 a.m .. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
MI. Olive Communit}' Chun:h
Pil.slor: Lllwrence Bush, Sunday School ·
9:30 ~.m .. Evening-6:30P.m.. We&lt;lneday
Service· 7 p.m.
Full GO!ipel Lighthouse
3~045 Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday School- 10 a.m., Even ing
7:30p.m .. Tuesday &amp; Thurs_ .- 7:30p.m.

Syracuse Church of the Naza rtne

•

Rejoicing Lire Churth
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Midd leport , Paslor:
Mike Foreman. P11stor Emeritus Lawrence
Foreman, Worship- 10:00 am
Wed nesday Services· 7 p.m.
Clifton Tabernacle Cbun:ll
Sunday School - 10 a.m., .
Worship · 7 p.m., Wednesday Servke- 7
p.m. .
New Lifl' Victory Crnter
3773 Geor!j;es Creek Road, Gallipolis. OH
Pastor: Bill Staten . Sunday Ser\'ices- 10
a.m . &amp; 7 p.m. W~dnesday - 7 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

Cli~on.

w.«..

Full Gospel Chun:h
ol the Llvln&amp; Savior
Rt.338, Antiqu ity, Pas tor: Jesse Morris.
Serv i ~s: Saturday 2:00 p.m.
Salem Community Churrh
l:lacl: of West Columbia, W.Va.om Lieving
Rmid, P~tor: Charles Roush (304) 67522S8, Sunday School 9:30 a·m. Sunday
e\·~n in g service 7:00 pm , Bibly Study
Wednesday service 7:00pm
Hobson ChrittiUJ Fellowship Churcll
P11stor: Herschel White, Sunday School- .
10 am. Sunday Church scl'\lice- 6:30pm
W~dne sda'y 7 pm
Rrstora llon Christian Frllowship
9365 Hooper Road . Athens, Pastor:
Lonnie Coats, Sun&lt;lay Worship 10:00 am.
Wednesday: 7 prn
j

HouSe of Healing Ministries
St. Rt. 114 Langs"llle, OH
Full Gospel. CI Pastors Robert &amp; Roberta
M~sser , Sunday Sc ho ol 9:30 am, .
Worship 10:30 am - 7:011 pm . Wed .
Service 7:00 pm
Team Jrsus Ministries
Meeting in the Mulberry Community
Center Gymn asium . P..tstor Eddie Baer,
Service every Tuesday 6:30 pm '

Pentecostal
Pentf:CO!ital Assembly
Pastor: St . R1. 124. Racine , Tornado Rd
Sunday School . 10 a.m .. Evening . 7
p.m .. Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harrisonville Prrsbytrrian Chun:h
Pastor: Roben Crow. Worship. 9 a.m.
Middleport PresbyCerlan
Pastor: James Snyder, Sunday School 10
a.m.. worship service II am .

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh-Day Adventist
Mu lberry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy. Saturday
Services: Sabbath School · 2 p .m.,
Worship · 3 p.m.
'

United Brethren
Mt. Htrmon United BreD.ren
In Christ Church
Texa.~ Community 364 1I Wi ckham Rd .
Past~r : Peter Martindale, Sund11y School ·
"9:30 a.m.. Worsh ip - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m ., Wedne~day Serv ices · 1:00 p.m.
Yooth group meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7p.m.
Eden Uniteil H~hrtn in Chri~
State Route \24, be,lween Rell:'ds ville &amp;
Hockingpon, Sunday School - lO a.m ..
Sunday Worship · 11 :00 a.m. Wednesday
Service~ • 7:00 p.m .. Pastor- M. Adam
Will

Q/ttemt SAulwA

South Betlael Community Cburcla

'

Le,

740-594-6333

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

•
.'
.'

..

190 N. Second St.

~ Davia-Quickel Agency Inc. l'fye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
·

.

P.O. Box683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

F Ill"

1

tn~u::c~

Products +
ENCIES Inc.

Financial
Services

992-6677

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

(740) 992-645 1

••

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens. Pomel'!ly or Parkersburg
l-740-667-3156

:1-----------------~--~~~~~~!-~--------~--------~~~7;4~;;99~2;~:60~6~~~----------~----~~·~~~m~l~sm~a~U~~~~~o~cM~e·~·~

Middleport, OH

740-992·6128
'
Local source for trophies, '
Ia · ues t-shirts and m re ·

.1tsber jfuneral ~orne
IM... IIIallllli.•IIIIIJII\11
41111
,._...1t1

740-667·3110

S.WISHER &amp; LOHSE

words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
bed
one unto you.
John 15:7

INSURANCE
SERVICES ~
214 E. Main
-

·m

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

I!. .l
1\NOI-RSON
ftrNt:RAL HOM E

174 Laynt Strooto PO Box 270
New
15265
DlmtiH'

992·5130

..

Pomeroy

PHARMACY

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
pomeroy
99 2-2955

or God so loved the world
he gave his only
lbe'ROt'ten son ...
John 3:16

~

li1

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

Suppression • EKtingui$hers • Sprink lers

Acts 24:16

• Security
172 N. 2nd Ave. M1ddleport . OH

'L&lt;t '"' f'""iiY !dp
prottct !JOUr Jarrtify•

353-0837 Fax:

.

I

Stl"emillf: Community Churth
Sunday School 10:00 am. ·Sunday Worship ·
I I :00 am. Wedn esday 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp; Missy Dailey

·Harrlsonvilk CommunitY. Churth
Pastor: Thero11 Durham , Sunday • 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m .. Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Bethel Church
Townshi p Rd .. 4fiRC. Sunday School . Y
a.m. Worship . 10 a. m., Wednesday
Services- 10 a.m.

Sl. Paul Lutheran Churth
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St .. Pomeroy,
Sun. School - 9:45a.m., Worship· II a.m.

Calvary Bible Cburcb
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd ., Pastor: Rev.
Blackwood. Su nday School - 9:30 a.m:.
Wcmhip 10 :30 a .m., 7:30 p .m ,
Wed~~e~y Service-7:30p.m

Failh Full G~pel Churth
Long Bottom, Pastor: Stev~ Reed, Sunday
School - 9:30a.m, Worship -9:30a.m.
and 7 p.m .. Wednesday- 7 p.m .. Friday .
fe llowship service 7 p.m

Coolville Unikd Methodist Parish
Pastor: tJ elen Kli ne. Coolville Church,
Main &amp; Fifth St., Sun . School - 10 a.m..
Worship 9 a.m .. Tues. Service~ · 7 p.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Churc:h
Wal nut and Henry Sts., Ra venswood,
W.Va., Pastor: David Ru ssell. Sunday
School· 10:00 a.m .. Wo~ hip · II a.m.

Ama:dna Grace Community Chun:h
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap. State Rt. 681.
Tlippers Plains. Sun . Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm., Wed. Bible Study 7:00p.m .

Ahundaat Grace R.F.I.
923 S. Thinl St., Mi&lt;ldlepon, Pastor Teresa
Davi s. •Sunday service. 10 a.m..
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

MorningStar
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday School · 11
a.m., Worshi p - \0 i.m

White's Cbapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road, Pastor: Re v. Charles
Martindale. Sunday School . 9:)0 a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a.m ., Wednesday Service
. 7 p.m.
Falrvlr,.· Bible Church
Utan. W.Vh . Rt . I, Pastor: Brian May,
Sunday School -9:30a.m., Worship · 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00p.m.
Faltb Fellowship Crusade ror Chrtst
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dicke.~~- Serv ice:
Friday, 7 p.m.

Ash Streel Cbun:h
398 A~ h St., Middleport-Pastor Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Morning
Worsh ip · 10:30 a. m. &amp; 7:00 pm ,
Wednesday Se r v i ~e · 7:00 p.m., Youth
Service· 7:00p.m.
Agape Life Center
"Full -Gospel Church", Pasto rs John &amp;
Pauy Wade. 603 Second Ave. Muson. 7735017, s~rvice lime· Sund ay 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday 7 pm

Bethany
Pastor: Jnhn Gilmore. Sunday School - 10
a.m .. Worsh ip - 9 a.m.. Wednesday
Services- 10 u.m.

Freedom GO&amp;pel Ml~

Bi!.ld Knob . ort Co. Rd . 31, Pastor: Rev.
Roger Willford, Su nday School · 9:30
a.m. Worship- 7 p.m.

Syracuse Conununity Church
2480 Secon&lt;l St. Syracuse. OH
Sun. School , 10 am. Sundy night6:30 pm
Pa ~t o r : Joe Gwinn
, A New Btginning
(Full Gospel Churcb) llarrisonville ,
P11s10rs: Bob and Kay Marshall .
Sunday Service. 2 p.m.

Community of Chrls1
Portland-Rac ine Rd .. Pastor: Jim Proffitt .
Sunday Sc hool · 9:30 a.m .• Worship 10:30 a.m., Wednesday Service s . 7;00
p.m.
Bethel Worship Ce nter
]9782 St Rt_ 7, 2 miles south of Tupper.;
Plain ~. 0 11 . Non -denomin atio nal ....\ith
Contemporary Prai ~c &amp; Worship Pastor
Rob Barber; A.osoc. Pastor Karyn Davis.
Youth Director Betty Fulks . Suliday
ser\'ice~: 10 am Worship &amp; 6 pm Family
Life Classes, Wed &amp; Thut night Life
Groups at 7 pm. Thurs f!IOrning lad ies'
Life Group at 10. Ou ter Li mits. Youth life
Group on Wed . ev~n i ng fion'I6:JO to 8:30.
Visit us online at ww'W.bethelwc .o~.

Pomeroy
llrian Dunham , Worship · Y:30
a.m., Sunda)' School- 10:35 a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harri sonville Rmul, Pastor: •Charles
McKel)z ie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m. ,
Wonhip · II a.m.. 7:00p.m .. Wednesday
Servi ~'t ·7:00p.m.

Carleton lnterdenomlnatJonal Cbun:b
King sbury Road , Pastor: Roben Vance .
Sunday School • 9:30 am .• Wonhip
Service '10:30 a.m., Even ing Service 6
p.m.

Oa~ l s Chri8tian Fellowship
(Non-denominational fell owshi p)
Meeting in the Meigs Middle School
Cafeteria Pastor. Chris Stewart
10:00 am . Noon Sunday: lnfonnal
Worship. Children's ministry

Miners\·llle
Pastor: Bob Robinson. Sunday School . 9
a.m. , Worship · 10 a.m.

Danville Hnllnus Churth
31057 State Route 325, langnlle, Pastor:
Benjamin Crawford. Su11day school · 9:30
a.m .. Sunday wonhip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7
p.m., Wednesday pr.tyer service· 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Churc:h of the Nazal'tfle
Pastor: Jan Lavender. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.. Wo rship · 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wednesday Services- 7 p.m

Other Churches

Enterprise
i'astor: Arland King , Sunday School. 9:311
a.m .. Wo rsh ip · 10:30 a.m 33 105 H il~ud
Rd . Pomeroy
Flatwoods
Pas10r: Ke ilh Rader. Sunday School . 10
a.m., Wonhi p- II a.m .

Trinity Church
Second &amp;. lynn, Pomeroy. Pnstor: Rev.
Jonathan Noble. Worship 10:25 a.m ..
Sunday School9: 15 a.m.

Silver Ridge· Pa stor Linda Damewood .
Sund11y St·lwol · 9 a.m., W~rship Service
10 a.m . 200 and 4th Sunday

C hester Church of the Nuarene
Pastor: Rev. Cunis -Randolph. Sunday
School · Y:JU a.m.. Worship· 10:30 a.m.,
Sunday evenin.:6 pm
Rutland Chun: h of the Nazarene
Pa$\or: l5aac Shupe. Sunday School - 9:30
;un .. Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m .,
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Thppen: Pbilns St. Paul
"'
Pa s10r: Jim Corbitt, Sunday School . 9
a.m .. Worship · tO a.m .. Tuesd~)' Smices
·LID p.m.
Central Cluster
AsbUI)' (Syracme). Pastor: Bob RobinMJn,
Sund ay School . 9AS a.m .. Worshi p - I I
a.m., Wednesda)' Services-7:30p.m.

OJ . While Rd. of~ St. Rt. l60, Pastor: PJ .
Chapman. Sunday School - 10 a.m..
Worship - 11 a.m .. Wednes..tay Services · 7

Pasior Mih Adkins, Sunqay School- 9:30
a.m.. . Worsh ip - 10:30 a.m ., 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Services ·1 p.m.

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your lighr so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER me11 , that they may see your
The care you desene, close to home good works alld glorify your
36759 Rocksprt·ngs Rd.
IIIICil . . . . . _ _
---Father i11heaven."
lllllltllll .... •'-'1.1145lltl
Pomeroy, OH 45769
1-800-451·9806
1U-112-5U4
Mallhew 5:/6

your light so shine beJI&lt;m~J
ilmten , that they may see
works and glorify
:IF'atller in heaven."
.4'19 Richland A•enue, Athens
Matthew·5: 1
.•

A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 l'ii:'.
(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-58~·2433

Church of Christ'

-·
..

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Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Voun

161 Mulbe rry Ave .. Pomeroy. 992 -5898 .
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. H~inz. Sat. Con .
4:45-.S:l !ip.m.; Ma ss- 5:30 p.m., Sun .
Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m ... Sun. Mass . 9:30
a.m., Daily Mass· 8:30a.m.

Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Evening - 6 p.m., Wednesday ServiCeli · 7
p.m.
Rutland Churc:h ot God
Pastor: Ron Heath , Sunday Worship · 10
a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesday Services - 7
p.m.

740-992-7713

Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

The Hppliance man

Satred Heaart Catbolk Chun:h

Hope IJapUst Churth (Southern)

510 Gramt St., Middleport , SUilday school

.

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
MaUhew5:8

Catholic

Hemlock Gro,·e Chrlstlan .Cbun:h

HOUSTON (AP)- The Museum of Fine
Arts, Houston has raised more than $3.6
million for a project to establish the first collection of Islamic art in Texas and the South.
Museum director Peter C. Marzio said the
goal is to raise $35 million in five years for
a curator, exhibitions and acquisitions.
Most of the money rai~d during a recent
gala at the museum was donated l&gt;y Hushang
Ansary, a former Iranian ambassador to the
United States, and his wife, ShaWa.
The Ansarys' gift of $2.8 million allowed
the purchase of a Quran from Morocco dating
back to 1318; a Persian ceramic bowl from
the II th or 12th century; and a 13th-century
bronze incense burner shaped like a lion.
Major U.S. collections of Islamic art
include Harvard University's . Sackler
Museum, which holds more than 2,500
objects, and the Los Angeles County
Museum of Art, with approximately I ,700
Islamic works. Other collections are in New
York's Metropolitan Museum of Art and the
Cleveland and Brooklyn museums,

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R•tlud Frtt WIIIBaptiJt
Salem St ., Pastor: • Sundar School · 10
a.m .. Evening . 7 p.m .. Wednesday
Services· 7 p.m.
Second Baptist Cburt..
Ravenswood, WV, Sunday School 10 am ' Morning worship II am Evening· 7 pm,
Wednesdily 7 p.m.
Ftnt Baptist Cburth of Mason, WV
_(l nde.pe~ent Baptist)
SR 652 and Anderson St. Pasror: Roben
Grady. Sunday sc hoo.l 10 am, Morning
church I I am. Sunday ev~ning 6 pm. Wed .
Bi ble Study 1 pm

Pomeror.

Plcnllle Freewill Baptist Chun:h
Pastor: Floyd Ross , Sunday School9:30 to

Houston museum
raises millions for
Islamic art collection

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Ave ., Midcllepon, Rev!·

Michael Hr.td.ford, Pastor, Sullday, 10:30
a.m. Tues. 6:30 prayer, Wed . 7 pm Bible
Study

Catholic activist wins
$1 million prize for
work educating
African refugees ·

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The Dally Sentinel ·Page A3

WORSIHP GOD THIS WEEK

200'7

and two years ago the bi shops called for a
timeline for, the withdrawal of troops.
About 125 active and retired bishops
attended the meeting. Although best known
as an American denomination, the church
has expanded its global reach in recent
years with a growing presence in Africa,
Europe and the Philippines.

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www.mydallysentlnet.com

'

M)l 2race is sufficient

for thee: for mY
strenath is made
Perfect in weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9

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

�.

Pagei\2

FAITH • VALUES
.Religion News Briefs
A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel

Imagine for a moment
smooth, placid waters perfectly mirroring sapphire
blue skies. Cottony white
tufts of cloud emanate a
faint golden glow 'as the sun
shines down in full autumn
glory. Sounds like a calen. dar picture, doesn't it'&gt; But
then, is it possible that the
serene scene before us holds
either dangerous poisons or
other terrors beneath the
glass-like surface of the
waters? Hollywood has, of
coUrse, found the question
to be very pro11table, telling
tales of giant alligators,
schools of scientifically
modified piranha, or strange
chemicals that alter the
genetic makeup of wildlife
thus producing terrifying
monsters that prey on hapless campers, ecologists,
and forest rangers.
But in spite of such fanciful storytelling , our
hearts seem still drawn to
the peaceful setting of still
waters, glad indeed thar
our God will lead us to the
water 's edge so that our
soul s may be refreshed.
How we .hate it then when
folk s come along and
throw stones into our
waters! Just when we feel
that we 've reached a
peaceful spot and purpose
in our hearts to linge r
there, a stone is thrown,
plunking into our live s,
disturbing us with ripples
of confusion and upsetting
our delicate sense of security. Those of us who have
had our "boats rocked" and
the waters of bur lives disturbed by unexpected circumstances have an obvi,
ous distaste for the experience and can be very reluctant to disturb the waters of
other people's lives·. We
. can all agree that throwing
stones, so to speak, of condemnation, malice, anger
and selfishness is to contribute to. the poisons and
problems from which people need safe haven.
But there are other
"stones," however, that are
really treasures which we
should on! y be too glad to
share with others. If you
are a man or woman who
has placed his or her faith
in Jesus Christ as Savior,
then you have acknowledged that He is "the Way,
the Truth, and the Life"
(see John 14:6) . If He is
then all those things, you
have a treasure house with
which you may richly bless
the lives of others. What
stones do you have that
others are blessed when
you "toss them into the
lives of others"? Three

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ent children, do not conform
to the evil desires you had
when you lived in ignorance . But just as He Who
called
you is holy, so be
Pastor
hoi y in all you po" (I Peter
Thorn
1:13-15 NIV) .
Mollohan
The third stone of gold is
truth. ln an age of innovation, l 've little complaint in
regard to applying such
innovation to serving others
come readily to my mi1\d . in love, t.o styles of music,
The first is the golden stone and even to modes of worof love. It is the stone that ship (as long as there i~n't
helps to prepare the waters any compromise on Godly
for other golden stones and, principles). Where I would
without which, the other have GREAT complaint,
stones could not be however, is in the matter of
received. It· paves the way a correct understanding of
for others to hear and God's truth. Innovation is
receive the news that God all right (and even benefigave His Son for them. It cial as God steers us on to
opens minds· and pierces . deeper understandings of
hearts that have grown cold Himself and Hi s purposes),
and calloused. As we allow but one cannot be "innovalove to motivate our hands tive" with truth.- Man's creand feet to the speedy aid ativity is not acceptable in
of those who are in need, or any way, shape or form
to support those who suffer, when it encroaches God's
we have lobbed a rock into sovereignty. If, for example,
the sea of complacency, "another way to heaven" is
causi ng waves to break introduced to a congregaagainst walls of indiffer- tion, a lurking menace is
ence, eroding them so that stirring beneath the surface
as God comes near, }le may of .what appears to be a
find a heart that can receive , pleasing scene of universal- .
His promised salvation. Jty.
No, it is good for God's
"Th is is how we know what
people
to throw the golden
love is: Jesus Christ laid
down His life for us. And stolle of truth at such botwe ougbt to lay down our tom feeding lies. "Dear
lives · for our brothers. If friends, although I was very ·
anyone has material pos- eager to write to you about
sessions and sees his broth- the salvation we share, I felt
er in need but has no pity I had to write and urge you
· on him, how can the ·love of to contend for the faith that
God be in him? Dear chil- was once for all entrusted to
dren, let us not love with the saints" (Jude 3 · NIV).
words or tongue but with People don't like their calm
actions and in truth" (I waters disturbed, it is true.
But when people realize
John 3: 16-18 NIV) .
The second stone is holi- that what they're being
. ness. Called to be a people given are the "gold
who "have come out from nuggets" of love, holiness,
the world," we think differ- and truth that sets us free
ently, act differently, and from the bondage of sin and
live life differently than do death, silver ripples are
those who do not yet know unleashed that emanate outJesus as Lord. One of the ward creating a current that
great · fundamental princi- draws people to the only
pies on which we build Our hope that the world can ever
lives as Christians is that know: God's Son.
God's people must leave . "To the only God our
behind the selfish and sinful Savior be glory, majesty,
compulsions that mice power
and
authority,
enslaved us and move ahead through Jesus Christ our
towards pure and holy lives Lord, before all ages, now
that may be offered up to and forevermore! Amen"
our God throughJesus' for- (Jude 25 NIV):
giveness without condem(Thom Mollohan and his
nation. We therefore strive family have ministered in
to not compromise our call, southern Ohio the past 12
ings by "dabbling" in things years. He is the pastor of
that we know clearly are Pathway
Community
offensive to our God and Church, which meets on
Savior. "Therefore, prepare Sunday mornings at 455
your minds for action; be Third Ave. He may be
self-controlled; set your reached for comments or
hope fully on the grace to be questions by email at pas·
given you when Jesus torthom@pathwaygallipoChristis revealed. As obedi- lis.com).
-

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Lutheran program
assists military
chaplains, vets
ST. LOUIS (AP) - The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod has launched a new program
to help chaplains and soldiers adjust to
returning home after military deployments.
The early focus of the program, called
Operation Barnabus. is to provide support
for pastors called to active duty as Reserve
and National Guard chaplains. From there,
the St. Louis-based denomil)ation plans to
place liaisons in its 35 districts to work with
congregations and offer support to soldiers
and their families by next summer or falL
The program is named for the companion to St. Paul who assisted him on his
first missionary journey, according to bib·
lical accounts.
"Everyone changes in a deployment - to
deny that is to deny reality," said Rev.
Alexander Knowles, a chaplain and pastor
from Lockport, N.Y., who is taking part in
the program and preparing for deployment
to Afghanistan. "We all need help in learning how to deal with some of the issues that
come up when people come back."
The 2.5 million-member church estimates
it has 10,000 to 20,000 members who are
active or reserve in the military, including
about 100 of its pastors.
Delegates to last summer's Lutheran
Church-Missouri Synod asked the church to
address the needs of military chaplains and
other military personnel.
The denomination has not taken a position
on the Iraq War. . While other Christian
denominations condemned plans to invade
Iraq in 2003, church president the Rev. Gerald
Kieschnick issued the statement: "We hold up
the biblical principles of just war for our peo- ·
pie's consideration. But our people have the
freedom to form their own conclusions."

United Methodist
bishops elect new leader,
call for Iraq withdrawal
LAKE JUNALUSKA, N.C. (AP) Bishops of the United Methodi.st Church,
gathered here for a semiannual meeting,
elected an Iowa bishop to lead them and
called on the United States and its allies to
begin an immediate withdrawal from Iraq.
Iowa Bishop Gregory Vaughn Palmer, 53,
was elected to lead the worldwide Council of
Bishops of the II million-member church,
the nation 's second largest Protestant
denomination: A Philadelphia native, Palmer
wa~ ordamed m 1981 and served stx churches in Ohio before being elected bishop and
appointed to the c~urch's Iowa conference.
Palmer wtll begm a two-year term as the
council's president in May, replacing Janice
Riggle Huie of Houston.
"(Palmer) is widely respected across the
council," said Stephen . Drachler, a church
spokesman. "He is bright and articulate and
an all-around good guy. He will play a role in
the direction of the work the council does and
will be the voice of the council of bishops." ·
The resolution calling for an immediate
troop withdrawal from Iraq also urges no
permanent military bases in Iraq, increased
support for military veterans and support
for a reconstruction plan: President Bush is
a member of the United Methodist Church,

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Friday, November 16,

Friday, November 16, 2007

Church ot JnU! Cbrilt Apo~tolk

VanZalldt and WIUd Rd ., Pastor: James
Miller. Sunday School · 10:30 a.m .•
EYening - 7:30 p.m.
• Rhtr Valley
River Valley Apostolic Wonhip Center,
873 S. 3rd

Emmanuel Apostolic: Taberll&amp;cle Inc:.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rutlllfld,
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m..
Thun;. 7:00 p.m.. Postor MartyR. Hutton

Assembly of God
Llber1y Assembly ot Gnd
P.O. Box 4b7 , Dudding lane, Mason,

WASHINGTON (AP) - A Roman
Catholic activist who has helped provide
education to thousands of African refugees
displaced by ethnic bloodshed has been
awarded a $1 million prize recognizing
unsung humanitarians.
·
The Opus Prize, which honors someone
who "combines a driving entrepreneurial
spirit with an abiding faith to combat poverty, illiteracy, hunger, disease and injustice,"
was given to Brother Constant Goetschalckx.
A member of the Congregation of the
Brothers of Charity, a Belgium-based religious order, Goetschalckx runs Ahadi, an
education program based in refugee camps
in Tanzania. He founded Ahadi, which
translates roughly to "promise" in Swahili,
a decade ago when refugees fleeing violence in neighboring Rwanda, Con~o and
Burundi began flooding into Tanzama . .
Goetschalckx "is a man who is absolutely
and totally committed to the poor of the
world," said the Very Rev. David M.
O'Connell, president of Catholic University,
which administered this year's Opus Prize.
The money for the award, now. in its fourth
year, comes from the Opus Group, a
Minnesota real estate firm . The Opus Prize
Foundation partners with a different Catholic
university each year to administer the award.
Known as "Brother Stan," Goetschalckx ·
recruited educated ·volunteers from the
camps to start high school classes and
arranged for distallce-lear.ning classes for
those working toward college degrees.

W.Va ., Pastor. Neil TeMant. Sunday
Senices- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m

Baptist
10:30 am, Worship service 10:30 (0 11:00
am. Wed . preitehing 6 pm

Cat - , ter ladepmdent Baptist C hurch
Sun~...... Sc hool · 9:30am, Preaching
Service IO:JOam, Evening Service
7:00pm. Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm.
Pastor: Whitt Aker:s

Cheshlrt Baptist Cburcb
Pastor: Steve Little. Sunday School: 9:30
am. Morning Worship: 10:30 am,
Wednesday Bible S!Udy 6:30pm: choir
practice 7;30; youth and Bible Buddies
11:30 pJll . Thurs. I pm book study

- 9:30a.m.. WoiShip . 11 a.m . and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m. Pll!ltor: Gat)'

Ellis
Rull11ad Flnt Baptist Chun::h
Suhday School • 9:30 a.m., Wonhip •
10:45 a.m.
'
Pomeroy Finl Baptist
Pastor Jon Brockert, East Main St.,
Sunday Sch . 9:30am. Worship 10:30 am
First Southern Blpd!il
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: E. Lamar
O ' Bryan t, Sunday School · IJ:JO a.m .,
Worship · 8: IS a.m., 9:45am &amp; 7:00 p.m.·,
Wednesday Serv ices-7:00 p.m.
Fint Baptlst Chun:h
Pasior: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St..
Middleport , Sunday School · 9:15a.m. ,
Worship · 10 :15 a.m ., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Scrvic'e- 7:00p.m.

~ne First Baptlst
Pa stor: Ryan Eaton , pastor , Sunday
School · 9:30a.m ... Worship · 10 :40 a.m.,
6:00 p.m .. Wednesday Serv ices - 7:00
p.m.
Silver RUII S.ptJst
Pa stor: John Swanson, Su nday Sc hool !Oa.m .. Worship · IIR .m., 7:00 p.m. ·
.Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

MI. Union Bapll!t
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday ScOOol9 :4~ s .m ., Evening - 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.
Bdblebem Baptist Church
Great Beild , Ro ute 124, Racine, OH,
Pastor: Ed Carter. Sunday School • 9:30
a. m., Sunday Worship · 10:30 a.m .,
Wedne sday Bible St udy - 7:00 p.m.

Old Btthtl FrM Will Baptist c•urch
28601 St. Rt . 7. Middleport, Sunday
Service · 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m., Thesday
Services -6:00
Hillside Haptl8t Church
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt . 7, Pastor: Rev .'
James R. Acree. Sr.. Sunday Unified
Servict, Worsh ip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m. ,
Wednesday ~~ice s -7 p.m.

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

We Cannot Hide
From CUr Sins

We often think that if we do
something alone in the dark, no
one will know of our bad actions,
and that we can effectively hide
this from others. But what we are
neglecting to see is that we cannot
hide our sins from ourselves. If we
steal from others, we are a thief
whether anyone else knows about
it or not; and
you and
God both
it. Even
gets away
with the

We Sell Homes at
TEAFORD REAL ESTATE

209 Third
Racine, OH

Members of the MLS and REALTOR"

Pick up a color Brochure!
216 East Second St. • Pomeroy

74()..992·3325
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740·949·221 0
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Home People"

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ecorrtes a
who lies has
does, one

murderer, and
become a liar.
becomes.
And try
we
cannot hide
ourselves.
Behavior,
or bad, is
like a mirror,
it reflects the
.true nature of person.
However, the good news is that
God
will forgive us, and we can
If we say we have no sin, we deceive
make
the commillnent to become a
ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If we
confess our sins, He is faithful and just to better person. In the end, like a
forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from shadow. both our good and our bad
deeds follow us wherever we go.
all unrighteousness.
And, the burden of a good life is
much easier to carry around than
- Ne• K.J.V.l John 1:8-9
that of a sinful one.

1--------------

Victory Baptht lodtptadeot
525 N. 2nd St . Middlepon, Pas tor: James
E. Keesee . Worship - IOa.m., 1 j,.m.,
Wednesday Scrvkes · 7 p.m.

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949·2217

Fallb Baplllt Churc:h
Railroad St., MilSon. Sunday Sc hool · 10
a .m., Worship • II a.m., 6 p.m,
Wednesd&amp;y Services· 7 p.m.

Michelle Kennedy
Director of Marketing and Admissions

Fore* Run Baplltl- Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods, Sunday School • 10
a.m., Worship - 11:30a.m.

333 Page Street
(740) 992·6472
Middleoort OH Fax (740) 992-7406
·' Wann Friendf)'

Atmosphere

Mt. Moriah Captlst
Fourth &amp; Main Sl.. Midd lepon. Sunday
School · 9:30 a.m., Worship· 10: 4~ a.m.

Hours
6am -8 pm

An~qulty Baptist
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .• Wor~ hip 10:45 a.m., Sunday Evening • 6:00 p.m.,
Pa~tor: Don Walker

9vfi[[ie's !J(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked Meals &amp; Dally .Special.&lt;
Open 7 days a week

740·985-3561
992-1550

If ye abide in Me, and My
words a.bide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

~EIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC

Wf:SlsHle C bYrth of Christ
33226 Chi ldren '.o; Home' Rd.
~H
Contact 740·44 1-1296 Sunday morni ng
tO:OO, Sun morning 'Bible slud y;
following worship. Sun. eve 6:00 pm.
Wed bible study 7 pm

Mini ster: Larry Brown, Worship · 9:30
a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study · 7 p.m.
•

Pomeroy C hurch or Christ
212 W. Main St., Sunday School · 9:30
a.m., Worship- 10 :30 a.m .. 6 p.m .,
Wednesday Serv ices - 7 p.m.
Pomtroy Westside Chun:h of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd .. Sunda y
School · II a.m., Worship. IOa .m.. 6 p.m.
Wedntsday ServiCC!l. 7 p.m.
Mlddleporl Church of Christ
5th and Main, Pastor: Al Hanson,
Childrens Qirector: Sharon Sayre. Teen
Director: Dodger Vaughan , Sunday School
· 9:30a.m., Worshi p- 8: 15, 10:30 a.m .. 7
p.m .. Wednesdo.y Services· 7 p.m.
Keno Chun:b ol Christ
Worship · 9:30 a.m .. Sunday School ·
10:30 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Walla~ . 1st and
3rd Sunday
Btarwallow Ridge Church of Christ
Pastor:Bruce Terry, ·Sund a~· Sc hool -9:30
a.m.
Worshij:i - 10:30 a. m., 6:30 P·1'1:1 ·
Wednesday Sen•ices · 6:30p.m.
Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy. Harrisonvill e Rd . (Rt. l43) .
Pastor: Roger Watson , Sunday Sc hoo! ·
9:3.0 a.m .. Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Tuppen Plain Cbun:h of Cbrlsl
Instrumental. Worship Service • 9 a.m..
Communi on · 10 a.m., Sunday Sc hool 10:15 a.m ., Youth- ~:30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesday 7~m
Bradbury Chu.n:b ot Ch.rlst
Min ister. Tom Runyon, 39558 Bradbu ry
Rosd. Middlepon, Sunday School · 9:30
a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Cllurth of Christ
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m .. Worship and
Communi on· 10:30 a.m .. Bob J. Werry,
Minister
Bradford Chan:h ofCbrbit
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp;. Bradbury Rd .,
Minisler: Doog Shamblin , You1~ Minisler:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m .. 10:30 a.m.: 7:lHJ
p.m.,Wednesday Servicii:'S . 7:00 p.m.
Hickory Hill!! Church of ChriAI
. 'l\Jppers Plai ns . Pastor Mike Moore, Bi ble
clas5 , 9 a.m. Sundny: worsh'ip 10 a.m.
Sunday: worship 6:]0 pm Sund ay; Bible
dass 7 pm Wed.
Reedsville Churcll of Chri!t
Pas1or: Ph.lliP Stunn, Sunday School: 9:~
a.ni., Worship Servi9C: 10:30 a.m.. Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
~•wrCh~horc•rid

Sunday sc hool 9:30 a.m., Sunday worship
- 10:30 a.m.
Tbe Cburcll of Christ of Pomeroy
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Evangeli st:
Dennis Sllrgent, Sunda)' Bi ble Study .
9:30a.m .. Worship: i0:30 11.m.nnd 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

Christian Union
HartfoQI Chun:h of Christ in
Cbrlstlaa Ualon
Hartford , W.Va .. Pastnr:Da"id Greer.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ., Worship ·
10:30 a.m.. 7:00 p.m., WednesdAy
Services - HlO p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Church of God
Mil e Hill Rd., Raci ne, Pastor: lames
Satterfield, Sunday Schoo l · 9:45 a.m.•

Long Bottom
Sunday School · 1:1 .30 a.m .. Wurstlip 10:30 a.m
Ret4svlllr
Worsh rp · l:l :]fl a_m. Sunday School .
10:30 a.m .. First Sunday of Momh - 7:00
p.m. serv ice

Syrwu.w Flnlf Cbun:h ol' God
Apple and Sa:ond Sts., Pastor: Rev. Davkl
Russell , Sunday Sclwol and Worship- 10
a.m. Evening Servicu- 6:30 p. m.,
Wednesday Servit.:es- 6:30p.m.
Churt:h or God or Prophecy

p.m.

Congregational

Episcopal
GrllCe Eplscupal Cburch
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Holy Eucharisl 11:00 a.m . Re v.
Edward Payne

Forest Run
Pastor: Bob Rob in ron .Su nd &lt;~ySchool - 10
~.rn ., Worship - 9 a.m.

Holiness

Ueat h (Middleport)
Pa stur: Brian Dun ham. Sunday School .
9:30a.m., Worship - 11:00 a.m. '

. Community Chun:h
Pastor: Ste.,·e Tomek, Main Street,
Rlltland. Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m..
Sunda}' Servil:e- 7 p.m.

Pearl C ha~l
Sunday School · 9 a.m .. Worship · 10 a.m.

Pa ~l or·

Rock Sprh•Ms
Pa~tor: K~ith Rader. Sunday School 9:15
a.m., Wo rship · 10 &lt;~.. m .. Youth
Fellowship. Sunday. 6 p.!Jl .

RO!ie of Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Creek Rd., Rudat1d, Paster: Rev.
Dewey King. Sunday school·· 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday worship -7 p.m .. Wed~~t:sday
prayer ir.:eting- 7 p.m.
Pine Grove Bible Holln m; Church
112 mile off Rt. 325 . Pastor. Rev. O'Del l ·
M!iJ!Iey. Sunday Sc.hool · 9:311 a.m..
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.
WtsJeyan Bible Holine!i!l Church
75 Pearl 'St., Middlepon. Pastor: Ri ck
Bourne. Sunday School - 10 a.m. Worship
-10:45 p.m., Sunday E\·e. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Rutland
Pastor: Ri ck Bourne , Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship- 10:30 a.m .. Thursday
Services· 7 p.m.
Salrm Centel'
Pastor: William K. Marshal l, Sunday
School- 10:15 a.m., Worship . 9:15a.m ..
Bible Study: Munday 7:00pm
Snowville
Sunday Schoo l · 10 a .m ., Worship- 9 a.m.

H}'~ll Run Communit~· Chun:h
Pastor. Rev. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
· 9:30a.m., Worship · 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m..
Thurliday Bible Study and Yout h. 7 p.m

C11rmei-Sutton
Carme l &amp; Bashan Rds. Ruci ne. Ohio.
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday Sehoul •
9:45 a.m .. Worship - I I :00 a.m. , Bibl e
Study Wed . 7:30 p.m.

Laurel Cllrl' t'ree Methodist Church
Pastor.; Glenn Rowe, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m. , Worship · 10:30 a.m. and rl
p.m ..Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
The Chun:b of Jeso1
Christ of Lllller·Day Saint&lt;;
St. Rt . 160 . 446-6247 or 446-7486, ,
Sunday School 10:20-1 1 a.m.. Relief '
Society/Pr iesth ood II :05- 12:00 noon.
Sacrament Se rvice Y- 10 : 15 &lt;Lm .,
Homemaling mttting. I sl Thurs .. 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. Jolin ~uthe111n Cburth
Pine Grove. Worshi p - 9:00 a.m., Sunday
Scllool - 10:00 a.m. Pastor:

East Letart
Pastor: Bi ll Mafshall Sunday S(.;t uol ~
9a.m .. Worship : 10 a.m .. 1st Su nday
C\'ery month e\·ening service 7:00 p.m ;
Wednesday- 7 p.m.
Racine
Pastor: Kerry Wood , Sunday School · 10
a.m.. Worsh ip · · I I a.m.Wednesday
Services 6 pm: Thur Bible St.udy 7 pm

Middleport Community Churth
575 Pearl St., Mi ddlepon . Pastor: Sam
A.rtdcrson , Sunday School 10 a.m ,
Evening · 7:30p.m. , Wednesday Service7:30p.m.

Faith Valley TabemiK'Ie Ch•n:h
Bailey Run Road. Pa stor: Rev . Em mell
Raw ~o n , Sunday Ev~ ning 7 p.m.,
ThLJrsday Sl:.rvice. 7 p.m.
Syracuse Mission
l4 ll Bridge man St., Syracus'e, Sunday
Schoo l - 10 a.m. Even in g . 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Street, Sunday School . 9:30a.m ..
Worshi p- 10:30 a.m .. Pastor Phil!ip Bel!

United Methodist
Graham.Unittd M•thodl!t
Wof!lhip - II a.m. Pastor: Richard Nease
Bechtel Unltfd Melhodlst
New Haven, Richar..l Nease, P11stor.
Sundily worship 9:30 a.m . Tues: 6:30 •
prayer and Bib le Study.

Hazel Community Churth
PastOr: Edsel Hart, Sunday
Schoo l · 9:30a.m., Wordiip · 10:30 a.m ..
7:30p .m.

on· RL 124.

Ton:h Church
. to . Rd . 63, Su nday Schoni ·_ 9:]0 a.m..
Worship · 10:30 a.m .
·

Dyesville Communlt)' Chun:h
Sunday Sc hool · 9:30 a.m .. Worship ·
HJ:311 a. m.. 7 p.m
Morse Chapel Church
Sunday school - 10 a.m .. Worship · II
B.m. : Wednc~day Service- 7'p.m

Nazarene

Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off li4 behind Wilke~~· illc, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires, Sunday School · 9:30a.m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m .. Thursday
Seivices. 7 p.m.

Point KMk Chun'h of the Nazarene
Route 689, Albany. R~v . Lloyd Grimm, ·
pastor. Sunday Schoo l 10 am: worhsip
~rvi ce II am , evenin g ~e rvice ~ ~11 . Wed .
prayer meeting 7 pm

Meigs Cooperadve Parish
Northe1ut Clu ~l e r . Alfred , Pastor 'Jim
Corbin , Sunda y School • 9:30 a.m.,
Wof!lh ip · IIBJR .. 6:30p.m.

Middleport Church oftht: .\llllll"tne
Pas1or: Leonard Powell, Sunday Schoo l 9:30.a.m.,Wflr'ihip · lU:Jn a.m .• 6:30p.m.,
Wednesday Service~ - 7 p.m ..

Chester
Pastor: Jim Co rbitt Worshi p - 9 a.m..
Su nday School • 10 a.m. , Thursday
Services· 7 p.m.

Reed!llville Frllnwship
Chun;h of the N~Uiue nc, Pa~ tor : Russell
Carson , Sunday School .- 9:30 a.m .. ,
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. n p.m . Wed n e.~d 11y
Serv ices· 7 p.m.

Pa.~tor :

Joppa
Den zil Null , Worsllip - 9:30 a.m .

Fahh Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Sunday School· 9:30a.m..
Worship • 10 :45 a.m .. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
MI. Olive Communit}' Chun:h
Pil.slor: Lllwrence Bush, Sunday School ·
9:30 ~.m .. Evening-6:30P.m.. We&lt;lneday
Service· 7 p.m.
Full GO!ipel Lighthouse
3~045 Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday School- 10 a.m., Even ing
7:30p.m .. Tuesday &amp; Thurs_ .- 7:30p.m.

Syracuse Church of the Naza rtne

•

Rejoicing Lire Churth
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Midd leport , Paslor:
Mike Foreman. P11stor Emeritus Lawrence
Foreman, Worship- 10:00 am
Wed nesday Services· 7 p.m.
Clifton Tabernacle Cbun:ll
Sunday School - 10 a.m., .
Worship · 7 p.m., Wednesday Servke- 7
p.m. .
New Lifl' Victory Crnter
3773 Geor!j;es Creek Road, Gallipolis. OH
Pastor: Bill Staten . Sunday Ser\'ices- 10
a.m . &amp; 7 p.m. W~dnesday - 7 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

Cli~on.

w.«..

Full Gospel Chun:h
ol the Llvln&amp; Savior
Rt.338, Antiqu ity, Pas tor: Jesse Morris.
Serv i ~s: Saturday 2:00 p.m.
Salem Community Churrh
l:lacl: of West Columbia, W.Va.om Lieving
Rmid, P~tor: Charles Roush (304) 67522S8, Sunday School 9:30 a·m. Sunday
e\·~n in g service 7:00 pm , Bibly Study
Wednesday service 7:00pm
Hobson ChrittiUJ Fellowship Churcll
P11stor: Herschel White, Sunday School- .
10 am. Sunday Church scl'\lice- 6:30pm
W~dne sda'y 7 pm
Rrstora llon Christian Frllowship
9365 Hooper Road . Athens, Pastor:
Lonnie Coats, Sun&lt;lay Worship 10:00 am.
Wednesday: 7 prn
j

HouSe of Healing Ministries
St. Rt. 114 Langs"llle, OH
Full Gospel. CI Pastors Robert &amp; Roberta
M~sser , Sunday Sc ho ol 9:30 am, .
Worship 10:30 am - 7:011 pm . Wed .
Service 7:00 pm
Team Jrsus Ministries
Meeting in the Mulberry Community
Center Gymn asium . P..tstor Eddie Baer,
Service every Tuesday 6:30 pm '

Pentecostal
Pentf:CO!ital Assembly
Pastor: St . R1. 124. Racine , Tornado Rd
Sunday School . 10 a.m .. Evening . 7
p.m .. Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harrisonville Prrsbytrrian Chun:h
Pastor: Roben Crow. Worship. 9 a.m.
Middleport PresbyCerlan
Pastor: James Snyder, Sunday School 10
a.m.. worship service II am .

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh-Day Adventist
Mu lberry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy. Saturday
Services: Sabbath School · 2 p .m.,
Worship · 3 p.m.
'

United Brethren
Mt. Htrmon United BreD.ren
In Christ Church
Texa.~ Community 364 1I Wi ckham Rd .
Past~r : Peter Martindale, Sund11y School ·
"9:30 a.m.. Worsh ip - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m ., Wedne~day Serv ices · 1:00 p.m.
Yooth group meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7p.m.
Eden Uniteil H~hrtn in Chri~
State Route \24, be,lween Rell:'ds ville &amp;
Hockingpon, Sunday School - lO a.m ..
Sunday Worship · 11 :00 a.m. Wednesday
Service~ • 7:00 p.m .. Pastor- M. Adam
Will

Q/ttemt SAulwA

South Betlael Community Cburcla

'

Le,

740-594-6333

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

•
.'
.'

..

190 N. Second St.

~ Davia-Quickel Agency Inc. l'fye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
·

.

P.O. Box683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

F Ill"

1

tn~u::c~

Products +
ENCIES Inc.

Financial
Services

992-6677

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

(740) 992-645 1

••

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens. Pomel'!ly or Parkersburg
l-740-667-3156

:1-----------------~--~~~~~~!-~--------~--------~~~7;4~;;99~2;~:60~6~~~----------~----~~·~~~m~l~sm~a~U~~~~~o~cM~e·~·~

Middleport, OH

740-992·6128
'
Local source for trophies, '
Ia · ues t-shirts and m re ·

.1tsber jfuneral ~orne
IM... IIIallllli.•IIIIIJII\11
41111
,._...1t1

740-667·3110

S.WISHER &amp; LOHSE

words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
bed
one unto you.
John 15:7

INSURANCE
SERVICES ~
214 E. Main
-

·m

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

I!. .l
1\NOI-RSON
ftrNt:RAL HOM E

174 Laynt Strooto PO Box 270
New
15265
DlmtiH'

992·5130

..

Pomeroy

PHARMACY

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
pomeroy
99 2-2955

or God so loved the world
he gave his only
lbe'ROt'ten son ...
John 3:16

~

li1

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

Suppression • EKtingui$hers • Sprink lers

Acts 24:16

• Security
172 N. 2nd Ave. M1ddleport . OH

'L&lt;t '"' f'""iiY !dp
prottct !JOUr Jarrtify•

353-0837 Fax:

.

I

Stl"emillf: Community Churth
Sunday School 10:00 am. ·Sunday Worship ·
I I :00 am. Wedn esday 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp; Missy Dailey

·Harrlsonvilk CommunitY. Churth
Pastor: Thero11 Durham , Sunday • 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m .. Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Bethel Church
Townshi p Rd .. 4fiRC. Sunday School . Y
a.m. Worship . 10 a. m., Wednesday
Services- 10 a.m.

Sl. Paul Lutheran Churth
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St .. Pomeroy,
Sun. School - 9:45a.m., Worship· II a.m.

Calvary Bible Cburcb
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd ., Pastor: Rev.
Blackwood. Su nday School - 9:30 a.m:.
Wcmhip 10 :30 a .m., 7:30 p .m ,
Wed~~e~y Service-7:30p.m

Failh Full G~pel Churth
Long Bottom, Pastor: Stev~ Reed, Sunday
School - 9:30a.m, Worship -9:30a.m.
and 7 p.m .. Wednesday- 7 p.m .. Friday .
fe llowship service 7 p.m

Coolville Unikd Methodist Parish
Pastor: tJ elen Kli ne. Coolville Church,
Main &amp; Fifth St., Sun . School - 10 a.m..
Worship 9 a.m .. Tues. Service~ · 7 p.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Churc:h
Wal nut and Henry Sts., Ra venswood,
W.Va., Pastor: David Ru ssell. Sunday
School· 10:00 a.m .. Wo~ hip · II a.m.

Ama:dna Grace Community Chun:h
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap. State Rt. 681.
Tlippers Plains. Sun . Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm., Wed. Bible Study 7:00p.m .

Ahundaat Grace R.F.I.
923 S. Thinl St., Mi&lt;ldlepon, Pastor Teresa
Davi s. •Sunday service. 10 a.m..
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

MorningStar
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday School · 11
a.m., Worshi p - \0 i.m

White's Cbapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road, Pastor: Re v. Charles
Martindale. Sunday School . 9:)0 a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a.m ., Wednesday Service
. 7 p.m.
Falrvlr,.· Bible Church
Utan. W.Vh . Rt . I, Pastor: Brian May,
Sunday School -9:30a.m., Worship · 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00p.m.
Faltb Fellowship Crusade ror Chrtst
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dicke.~~- Serv ice:
Friday, 7 p.m.

Ash Streel Cbun:h
398 A~ h St., Middleport-Pastor Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Morning
Worsh ip · 10:30 a. m. &amp; 7:00 pm ,
Wednesday Se r v i ~e · 7:00 p.m., Youth
Service· 7:00p.m.
Agape Life Center
"Full -Gospel Church", Pasto rs John &amp;
Pauy Wade. 603 Second Ave. Muson. 7735017, s~rvice lime· Sund ay 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday 7 pm

Bethany
Pastor: Jnhn Gilmore. Sunday School - 10
a.m .. Worsh ip - 9 a.m.. Wednesday
Services- 10 u.m.

Freedom GO&amp;pel Ml~

Bi!.ld Knob . ort Co. Rd . 31, Pastor: Rev.
Roger Willford, Su nday School · 9:30
a.m. Worship- 7 p.m.

Syracuse Conununity Church
2480 Secon&lt;l St. Syracuse. OH
Sun. School , 10 am. Sundy night6:30 pm
Pa ~t o r : Joe Gwinn
, A New Btginning
(Full Gospel Churcb) llarrisonville ,
P11s10rs: Bob and Kay Marshall .
Sunday Service. 2 p.m.

Community of Chrls1
Portland-Rac ine Rd .. Pastor: Jim Proffitt .
Sunday Sc hool · 9:30 a.m .• Worship 10:30 a.m., Wednesday Service s . 7;00
p.m.
Bethel Worship Ce nter
]9782 St Rt_ 7, 2 miles south of Tupper.;
Plain ~. 0 11 . Non -denomin atio nal ....\ith
Contemporary Prai ~c &amp; Worship Pastor
Rob Barber; A.osoc. Pastor Karyn Davis.
Youth Director Betty Fulks . Suliday
ser\'ice~: 10 am Worship &amp; 6 pm Family
Life Classes, Wed &amp; Thut night Life
Groups at 7 pm. Thurs f!IOrning lad ies'
Life Group at 10. Ou ter Li mits. Youth life
Group on Wed . ev~n i ng fion'I6:JO to 8:30.
Visit us online at ww'W.bethelwc .o~.

Pomeroy
llrian Dunham , Worship · Y:30
a.m., Sunda)' School- 10:35 a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harri sonville Rmul, Pastor: •Charles
McKel)z ie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m. ,
Wonhip · II a.m.. 7:00p.m .. Wednesday
Servi ~'t ·7:00p.m.

Carleton lnterdenomlnatJonal Cbun:b
King sbury Road , Pastor: Roben Vance .
Sunday School • 9:30 am .• Wonhip
Service '10:30 a.m., Even ing Service 6
p.m.

Oa~ l s Chri8tian Fellowship
(Non-denominational fell owshi p)
Meeting in the Meigs Middle School
Cafeteria Pastor. Chris Stewart
10:00 am . Noon Sunday: lnfonnal
Worship. Children's ministry

Miners\·llle
Pastor: Bob Robinson. Sunday School . 9
a.m. , Worship · 10 a.m.

Danville Hnllnus Churth
31057 State Route 325, langnlle, Pastor:
Benjamin Crawford. Su11day school · 9:30
a.m .. Sunday wonhip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7
p.m., Wednesday pr.tyer service· 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Churc:h of the Nazal'tfle
Pastor: Jan Lavender. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.. Wo rship · 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wednesday Services- 7 p.m

Other Churches

Enterprise
i'astor: Arland King , Sunday School. 9:311
a.m .. Wo rsh ip · 10:30 a.m 33 105 H il~ud
Rd . Pomeroy
Flatwoods
Pas10r: Ke ilh Rader. Sunday School . 10
a.m., Wonhi p- II a.m .

Trinity Church
Second &amp;. lynn, Pomeroy. Pnstor: Rev.
Jonathan Noble. Worship 10:25 a.m ..
Sunday School9: 15 a.m.

Silver Ridge· Pa stor Linda Damewood .
Sund11y St·lwol · 9 a.m., W~rship Service
10 a.m . 200 and 4th Sunday

C hester Church of the Nuarene
Pastor: Rev. Cunis -Randolph. Sunday
School · Y:JU a.m.. Worship· 10:30 a.m.,
Sunday evenin.:6 pm
Rutland Chun: h of the Nazarene
Pa$\or: l5aac Shupe. Sunday School - 9:30
;un .. Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m .,
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Thppen: Pbilns St. Paul
"'
Pa s10r: Jim Corbitt, Sunday School . 9
a.m .. Worship · tO a.m .. Tuesd~)' Smices
·LID p.m.
Central Cluster
AsbUI)' (Syracme). Pastor: Bob RobinMJn,
Sund ay School . 9AS a.m .. Worshi p - I I
a.m., Wednesda)' Services-7:30p.m.

OJ . While Rd. of~ St. Rt. l60, Pastor: PJ .
Chapman. Sunday School - 10 a.m..
Worship - 11 a.m .. Wednes..tay Services · 7

Pasior Mih Adkins, Sunqay School- 9:30
a.m.. . Worsh ip - 10:30 a.m ., 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Services ·1 p.m.

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your lighr so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER me11 , that they may see your
The care you desene, close to home good works alld glorify your
36759 Rocksprt·ngs Rd.
IIIICil . . . . . _ _
---Father i11heaven."
lllllltllll .... •'-'1.1145lltl
Pomeroy, OH 45769
1-800-451·9806
1U-112-5U4
Mallhew 5:/6

your light so shine beJI&lt;m~J
ilmten , that they may see
works and glorify
:IF'atller in heaven."
.4'19 Richland A•enue, Athens
Matthew·5: 1
.•

A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 l'ii:'.
(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-58~·2433

Church of Christ'

-·
..

'

Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Voun

161 Mulbe rry Ave .. Pomeroy. 992 -5898 .
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. H~inz. Sat. Con .
4:45-.S:l !ip.m.; Ma ss- 5:30 p.m., Sun .
Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m ... Sun. Mass . 9:30
a.m., Daily Mass· 8:30a.m.

Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Evening - 6 p.m., Wednesday ServiCeli · 7
p.m.
Rutland Churc:h ot God
Pastor: Ron Heath , Sunday Worship · 10
a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesday Services - 7
p.m.

740-992-7713

Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

The Hppliance man

Satred Heaart Catbolk Chun:h

Hope IJapUst Churth (Southern)

510 Gramt St., Middleport , SUilday school

.

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
MaUhew5:8

Catholic

Hemlock Gro,·e Chrlstlan .Cbun:h

HOUSTON (AP)- The Museum of Fine
Arts, Houston has raised more than $3.6
million for a project to establish the first collection of Islamic art in Texas and the South.
Museum director Peter C. Marzio said the
goal is to raise $35 million in five years for
a curator, exhibitions and acquisitions.
Most of the money rai~d during a recent
gala at the museum was donated l&gt;y Hushang
Ansary, a former Iranian ambassador to the
United States, and his wife, ShaWa.
The Ansarys' gift of $2.8 million allowed
the purchase of a Quran from Morocco dating
back to 1318; a Persian ceramic bowl from
the II th or 12th century; and a 13th-century
bronze incense burner shaped like a lion.
Major U.S. collections of Islamic art
include Harvard University's . Sackler
Museum, which holds more than 2,500
objects, and the Los Angeles County
Museum of Art, with approximately I ,700
Islamic works. Other collections are in New
York's Metropolitan Museum of Art and the
Cleveland and Brooklyn museums,

r

R•tlud Frtt WIIIBaptiJt
Salem St ., Pastor: • Sundar School · 10
a.m .. Evening . 7 p.m .. Wednesday
Services· 7 p.m.
Second Baptist Cburt..
Ravenswood, WV, Sunday School 10 am ' Morning worship II am Evening· 7 pm,
Wednesdily 7 p.m.
Ftnt Baptist Cburth of Mason, WV
_(l nde.pe~ent Baptist)
SR 652 and Anderson St. Pasror: Roben
Grady. Sunday sc hoo.l 10 am, Morning
church I I am. Sunday ev~ning 6 pm. Wed .
Bi ble Study 1 pm

Pomeror.

Plcnllle Freewill Baptist Chun:h
Pastor: Floyd Ross , Sunday School9:30 to

Houston museum
raises millions for
Islamic art collection

·r

Ave ., Midcllepon, Rev!·

Michael Hr.td.ford, Pastor, Sullday, 10:30
a.m. Tues. 6:30 prayer, Wed . 7 pm Bible
Study

Catholic activist wins
$1 million prize for
work educating
African refugees ·

r

The Dally Sentinel ·Page A3

WORSIHP GOD THIS WEEK

200'7

and two years ago the bi shops called for a
timeline for, the withdrawal of troops.
About 125 active and retired bishops
attended the meeting. Although best known
as an American denomination, the church
has expanded its global reach in recent
years with a growing presence in Africa,
Europe and the Philippines.

r

www.mydallysentlnet.com

'

M)l 2race is sufficient

for thee: for mY
strenath is made
Perfect in weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp;Supply
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www.mydallysentlnel.com .

Ohio Valley Publishihg Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Nov. 16, the 320th day of 2007. There
are 45 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlightin History:
One hundred years ago, on Nov. 16, 1907, Oklahoma
became the 46th state of the union ..
On this date:
In 1776, British troops captured Fort Washington in New
York during the American Revolution. ·
In 1885, Canadian rebel leader Louis Riel was executed
for high treason .
In 1917, Georges Clemenceau again became prime minister of France.
In 1933, the United States and the Soviet Union estab.
lished diplomatic relations. ·
In 1959, the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical "The
·
Sound of Music" opened on. Broadway.
In 1961, Sam Rayburn died in Bonham, Texas, having
served as Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives
since 1940 except for two terms.
.
In 1966, Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard was acquitted in his
second trial of charges he'd murdered his pregnant wife,
Marilyn, in 1954.
In I 973, President Nixon signed the Trans· Alaska
Pipeline Authorization Act
In 1982, an agreement was announced in the 57th day of
a strike by National Football League players.
Ten years ago: China's most prominent pro-democracy
campai~ner, Wei Jingsheng, arrived in the United States
after bemg released from a prison where he'd spent nearly
18 years.
One year ago: Democrats embraced Nancy Pelosi as the
first woman House speaker in history, but then selected
Steny Hoyer as majority leader against her wishes. African,
Arab, European and U.N. leaders agreed in principle to a
joint African Union-United Nations peacekeeping force for
Sudan's Darfur region. Gunmen abducted a private security team of four Americans and an Austrian in southern Iraq.
Minnesota 1\vins ace Johan Santana won the AL Cy Young
Award. Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman
died in San Francisco at age 94.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Clu Gulager is 79. Blues musician Hubert Sumlin is 76. Journalist Elizabeth Drew is 72.
Blues musician W.C. Clark is 68. Actor Steve Railsback is
62. Actor David Leisure is 57. Actress Marg Helgenberger
is 49. Rock musician Mani is 45. Country singer-musician
Keith Bums (Trick Pony) is 44. Former tennis player Zina
Garrison is 44: Former baseball player Dwight Gooden is
43. Jazz singer Diana Krall is 43. Actor Harry Lennix is 43.
Actress Lisa Bonet is 40. Actress Tammy Lauren is 39.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Bryan Abrams (Color Me Badd)
is 38. Actress Martha Plimpton is 37. Olympic gold medal
tigure skater Oksana Baiul is 30. Actress Maggie
Gyllenhaal is 30. Pop singer Trevor Penick is 28. Actress
Kimberly J. Brown ts 23. Actor Noah Gray-Cabey ("My
Wife and Kids") is II.
·,
Thought for Today: "An American who can make money,
invoke God, and be no better than his neighbor, has nothing to fear but truth itself." - Marya Mannes, American
critic ( 1904-1990).

LETTERS TO ·THE
EDITOR
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thanks to organizations and inilividuals will nat be accept·ed for publication.
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PageA4

OPINION

Friday, November t6, 2007

Friday, November 16, 2007

Local Briefs

Baptists embarrassed by Topeka church
Perseve(ance of the Saints. would Baptists agree they
Although these doctrines are "reformed" churches or .
are almost universally hated "Reformed," as in rooted in
today, they were once loved Calvinist teachings? Do
and believed."
Baptists today share a comThe church does·· not, mon understanding of the
however, a~pear to be -~art "separation of church and
of the Natmnal Pnmtttve state"? Of course nm.
.
All Baptists would, how:
Baptist Convenli?n _of_ th.e
U.S.A. Then agam, 11 tsn t · ever, stress a congregational
linked to the ~outhern approach to church governBaptist ConventiOn, the_ men! and the autonomy of
Amencan Bapttst Church~s, each local congregation.
the
National
Baptist This means that it's all but
Convenwm U.S.A., t~e impossible for any Baptist
Conservallve
Bapttst flock to tell another flock
Assoc tatwn of Amenca, the
,
American
.
Baptist what to do- unless they _re
Association
(Landmark part M ~ larger volu~tanly
Baptists), the Regular as~octauon or conventmn.
Churches.
Just about anyone can
Baptist
Reformed
Baptist get themselves ordamed and
Churches, Free Will Baptist then say t?,at they've started
Churches, the Progre.ssive a church. satd Wtll _Hall,
National
Baptist head of the 16.4-mtl\mn·
Convention, the National member Southern Baptist
Baptist Evangelical Life Convention's
official
and Soul Saving Assembly Baptist Press news agency.
of the
U.S.A.,
the
But in the case of
Independent, Fundamental 'westboro Baptist, he said, it
Baptist Churches or any isn't even enough "to call
other ~own B_aptist group. them
an
independent
Obvwusly, II s hard for Baptist church, because
Bapllsts to agree on a com- they're not · typical of the
Ton d~rmtllon of what many independent Baptist
B~pttst .. means.
~?e churches and missionary
onhne deftmtton states:. A Baptist churches out there
member of an evangehcal across America. This is a
Protestant church of congre- tiny church that's out there
r:~IOr~~~r~~~~tytr:~~~i~:l~~ all by itself and ,that's the
worship and believing in way they want ,tt. . .
(Terry Mattmgly ts _dtrecindividual freedom, in the
separatioo of church -and tor of the Washmgton
state, and in baptism of vol· Journaftsm Center af the
untary, conscious believ- Cowtctl fo~ C:hrts~IGn
ers."
·
Colleges and Umverslltes
However, various streams and ·
leads
the
of Baptist life predate the GetReligion.org project to
birth of the modern '.'evan- st11dy religion and the
gelical" movement. And news.)

The Rev. Billy Graham is
a Baptist and so is Bill
Clinton.
The Rev. Rick "Purpose
Driven Life" Warren is a
Baptist and so is the Rev.
Terry
Jesse Jackson. The Rev.
Mattingly
Bob Jones III of Greenville,
S.C., is a Baptist and so is
the Rev. AI Sharpton. of
New York. The Rev. Bill
Moyers is a Baptist, or used - such as "God Hates
to be, and that's also true for Fags" and "Thank God f6r
Dead Soldiers." The church
the Rev. Pat Robertson.
There are all kinds :,f has aboui 60 members .. most
Baptists, so saying people of them related to Phelps,
are ~Baptists" may do little and teaches that God is punto clarify what they actually ishing America because of
this culture's growing
believe.
Bur two things ·are clear. acceptance of homosexualiThe tirst is that the Rev. ty. A jury in Baltimore
Fred Phelps of Westboro recently handed down a
Baptist ' Church in Topeka, $10.9
million
verdict
Kan .. is a Baptist. The sec- against Westboro because of
ond is that millions of other its ugly protests at the
Baptists wish Phelps and his March 2006 funeral Qf
infamous flock would stop Lance Cpl. Matthew A.
calling
themselves Snyder, who died in Iraq.
At its Web site "Baptists."
"It does make you cringe GodhatesAmerica.com when you read about Phelps the church offers this histo·
and Westboro , because you ry: "Established in 1955 by
rarely see anyone stress that Pastor Fred Phelps, the
these people have no con- Westboro Baptist Church of
nections
to
Southern Topeka, Kansas still exists
Baptists or to American today as an Old School (or,
Baptists or to anybody Primitive) Baptist Church.
else," said Greg Warner, ... We adhere to the teacheditor of the Associated ings of the Bible, preach
Baptist Press .. one of two against all form of sin (e.g.,
adultery,
news agencies that cover fornication,
and
insist
that the
sodomy),
Baptist life.
"This is just some of the doctrines of grace be taught
baggage that comes with publicly to all men . These
being Baptist. It goes with doctrines of grace were well
the territory."
.
summed up by John Calvin
Phelps and his followers in hi s 5 points of Calvinism:
Depravity;
keep making headlines Total
Election,
because of their protests at Unconditional
military funerals, featuring Limited
Atonement,
signs with shocking slogans Irresistible Grace, and

I &amp;UlLT N\Y HOUSE

OF STRAW...

CREDIT.

U!hat's wrong -with aflag pin in your lapel?
William
Rusher

carrying a signboard. And of
course, there are plenty of
people who are thoroughly
patriotic but have reservations about the Iraq War,
which they feel ·might be
disregarded if they wore a
pin that could be misinterpreted ·as endorsing it unreservedly. ·
So there are legitimate differences of opinion .and
behavior on this subject.
People who decline to wear
flag lapel pins are certainly
entitled to be free of criticism for their refusal. And I
and'the other pin-we~rs, in
turn, are assuredly not going
to be scared out of wearing
them because somebody
else chooses to read into the ·
gesture some implication
that just Isn't there.
Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill.
jumped into this controversy
recent! y when a reporter

noted that he was im longer
wearing a flag pin - and
asked why. He replied that
he felt it had become "a substitute" for "true patriotism," so he "decided I
won't wear that pin on my
chest; instead I'm gonna try
to tell the American people
·what I believe will make this
country great, and hopefully
that will be a testimony to
my patriotism."
That alternative will no
doubt work for-Obama, who
is running for president and
has loads of opportunities to
tell us what he believes will
make this country great·. But
it would hardly do for those
of us who don't have the
senator's platform .or his
megaphone. If we nonetheless want to proclaim our
loyalty to the country's policies and goals, a discreet
lapel pin seems a good way
to do it. For one thing, it
spares others from having to
listen to us telling the
American people viva voce
what policies we think they
.should endorse.
For my part, I promise to
·wear my flag pin without
intending any implicit con·
clusibns about the patriotism of those who don't. ·I

'
--~

· POMEROY - Leading Creek Conservancy District has
lifted a boil advisory for customers on Laurel Cliff Road
fro!)! Hiland Road to the ·Meigs Motel, Naylor's Run,
Starcher Road, Pleasant Ridge, .Burdette Road, Willow
Creek, Fox Hill and Fox Hill Circle.

For·the Record
Accident reported
. J'OMEROY- A two-vehicle accident was reported yesterday evening near The Beacon at the intersection of Ohio
833 and Ohio 7 A. At lea~t two people were transported to
Pleasant Valley Hospital by emergency petsonnel from
Meigs EMS for treatment of their injuries. Also on the scene
'Y"efe the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department and Pomeroy
Police Department whi,h is investigating the accident. The
accident report was not available at press ti.me.

Birth announced .
TUPPERS PLAINS Bob and Amy White of New
Richmond, Ohio announce
-the birth of their second
daughter, Mazlyn Reese,
born July 12. She was wei·
corned into the family by a
· sister, Rowan Ferris. '
Matern;~! grandparents are
Bob and Sina Murphy of
Tuppers Plains. ·and greatgrand parents are Rex and
P.nn
Surnmertield
of
Chester and the late Mavin
.and Hazel Murphy of
Tuppers Plains. Paternal
grandparents are Jerry and
Liz
White of Warren, Ohio.
,.

-- - --· --:- - ~- - - -- ~----,

...

---- ~

will admit that I have occasionally wondered whether
objections to a flag pin indicated a sort of general hos·
tility to various American
policies. When I was on the
"Advocates" television pro·
gram during the Vietnam
War, and was wearing a flag ·
pin, furious viewers would
write to the producers
denouncing me for this
alleged "superpatriotism."
· ("Does he wear it" - this
was their favorite question
- "on his underwear?") But
such oddballs were few and
far between, and I certainly
didn't regard them as representative.
For their part, I hope that
people who choose not to
wear a flag pin will do me
the reciprocal kindness of
not assuming that I suspect
their patriotism, let alone
suppose that I consider it
necessarily open to question. The decorative object
that is really causing . the
trouble here is not my lapdl
pin. It's the chip on their
·
shoulder.

Submitted photo

The Meigs Middle School Fellowship of Christian Students recently completed a successful canned food drive to help supply the Rejoicing Life Food Pantry during the holidays. Over 100 students participated in the food drive. Hometown Market
provided shopping carts for-the drive. F.C.S. meets at 8:30 a.m. every Wednesday in the Meigs Middle School Gym for
devotions and prayer, and is open to all students. Information is available by calli,ng 992-2914 or 992-5844.

FDA adds potential heart attack risk
to label of diabetes drug Avandia
Glaxo also agreed to
FDA's demand for a major
study directly comparing
WASHINGTON ·- The Avandia . and its coriipeti·
Mazly11 Ree$e White
government slapped a tors' heart effects. The study
prominent, though confus- will
begin by next
ing, warning on the popular November and won't end
diabetes drug Avandia on until2014, but the FDA will
Wednesday
telling order interim checks to see
patients that it may, or may how patients are faring and
cure a latex overlay.
not,
increase the risk of if it's possible to settle the
The arch cables also need
heart
attacks.
issue any sooner. ·
to be adjusted, and signs
The
move
is
less
stringent
"It isn't as if we're going
and lighting installed. ·
Construction began. in than steps Canada took last to be clueless until 20 14,"
spring 2005, and the. state week to restrict· the drug 's said Dr. Janet Woodcock,
had planned a November use to hard-to-treat diabetics. FDA's chief medical officer.
But the U.S. Food am!
For now, Type 2 diabetics
opening for the bridge. The
Drug
Administration
con:
who
also have heart disease
bridge will complete the
eluded
that
studies
are
too
or
are
at especially high risk
four-lane upgrade of U.S.
to
tell
if
for
it
should
talk with their
contradictory
.
50 from Clarksburg to the
·Avandia really is riskier · doctor about Avandia's
Ohio line.
than other treatments for potential heart effects as
Type 2 diabetes.
they decide among 'treatSo the FDA described thj: ment options, FDA advised.
with a congratulations card controversy in a black box
In contrast, Canada's dmg
on her New Horizon award on Avandia's label - the regulators last week .withwhich she thanked him for.
most severe type of warning drew approval of Avandia as
Swift and crew were dri- the agency can require a stand-alone therapy
ven around in Boyer's 2007 pending further research. except for patients who
super stretch limousine com- Unlike most black-box can't tolerate oldercompetiplete with three televisions, a warnings that urge strong tors .
Health
Canada
CD and DVD player, a bar, caution, Avandia's says, announced that Avandia
satellite radio, a stainless "The available data on the should be used only in comsteel mirrored ceiling and risk ... are inconclusive." - bination with certain other
and interior with hundreds of
"It's still an open ques- drugs for hard-to-control
fiber optic lights.
lion," said Dr. John Jenkins, . blood sugar.
Swift's Marietta concert · FDA's drug chief. Still, he
Dr. Steven Nissen of the
was a sold out event but said, "We want to make sure Cleveland Clinic, who first
luckily for Boyer driving health care providers and brought the heart attack
the star around has its perks patients are aware this signal issue to public attention,
and he received an all of risk has been identified." said he preferred Canada's
access backstage pass and . Patients may need a med- approach but that
was invited to a private din- ical dictionary to interpret Wednesday's warning is
ner with S~ift, the band and the new warning. It says important, if imprecise.
tour manager.
Avandia may be associated
"It is a black-box warnAfter· the concert Boyer · with "myocardial ischemic ing, and no matter what the
received another surprise events such as angina or language says, it's telling
which inc Iuded a contract myocardial infarction."
you something," Nissen
with the promoter to proIn layman 's terms, that's said. "A black-box warning
vide limousine service· for chest pain or a heart i~ telling you there's enough
future concerts. .
attack.
Manufacturer evidence here that physiPictures and an account of . GiaxoSmithKline PLC is cians and patients ought to
the. trip to Marietta can be to develop a pamphlet that be concerned."
found on Boyer's website at will come with each bottle
What . should Avandia
www.alimocompany.com. putting the warning in eas- users do?
Jan"The easy answer is talk
Boyer lives in Gallipolis and ier-to-understand
to your doctor, but that
is a native of Meigs County. guage.
Bv LAURAN NEERGAARI)

doesn't help much b~cause
the doctors are just as much
in the. dark as the patient,"
said Dr. Thomas Pickering,
a cardiovascular disease
expert
at
Columbia
University Medical Center
and an FDA adviser. While
he isn't convinced of the
heart attack risk, he advises
trying other drugs t1rst, ~nd
adding Avandia if they're
not enough.
lt is not the first warning
about ' Avandia's heart
effects. In August, the FDA
ordered a black-box warning for both Avandia and a
competitor, Actos, th~t they
may cause or worsen heart
failure, a different cardiac
problem.
About
I
million
Americans with Type 2 diabetes use Avandia. It helps
control blood sugar by
increasing the body's sensitivity to insulin.
Diabetics already are at
increased risk of heart disease. Type 2 diabetes, the
most common form, is
Iinked to obesity, which in
turn harms the heart. Plus,
high blood sugar over time
damages blood vessels.
Lowering glucose prevents
many diabetes complicalions, such as blindness and
kidney failure .
The hope is that intensive
treatment also will lower
the risk of a heart attack.
. Bul on Wednesday. the
'FDA also said Avandia' s
competitors must change
their ·own labels ~ to say

AP MEDICAL WRITER

·Opening of bridge delayed until spring
.. PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
(AP)- The opening of the
$135 million Blennerhassett
Bridge over the Ohio River
has been delayed until midApril.
State highway engineer
Marvin Murphy says the
4,000·foot-long bridge is 97
perc~nt complete, but workers need about seven weeks
of 50-degree days to lay and

from• PageA1

.. ;POOR

I am an American who
wears a small American-flag
pin in my lapel. Few people ·
haye ever mentioned it to
me, favorably or otherwise,
but I am aware that some
individual s are quietly
offended by the practice.
They seem to feel that. since
they don't wear one, I am
implicitly opening them to
the accusation that they are
somehow not as "patriotic"
as I am.
· Nothing could be further
from the truth. Since the
days of the Vietnam War, I
have made it a practice to
wear such a pin whenever
my country is at war. It
seems the least I can do. It
proclaims my loyalty to the
country's cause, and my
support for its soldiers in
their battle. It is an aS&gt;ertion
of my own sentiments, and
certainly not a renection on
anybody else:s.
There are any number of
reasons why .a thoroughgoing patriot might choose. not
to wear such a 'pin. He or she
may just oppose such ~Iut ­
ter, or prefer some other pin .
Many people simply dislike
walking arou nd wiih their
political opinions in full
view, almost as if they Were

AdvisQry -lifted

Limo

... STICKS.

The Daily Sentinel •Page As

www.mydaiiysentinel.com

"the artist who has for the
first time demonstrated in
the field of country music
the most signiticant creative
growth and development in
overall chart and sales
activity, live performance,
professionalism and critical
media recognition." Swift
was presented the award by
last year's winner Carrie
Underwood. Swift, 17, joins
I .eAnn Rimes as the
youngest-ever winners of
the award. Swift is known
for her hit single "Tim
McGraw."
Boyer said Swift was no.t
some elusive star and
instead casually stepped off
her tour bus with her hand
extended to personally welcome him to the show.
"She was the most pleasant person and very down to
earth," Boyer said, adding
they carried on a conversation before he pre~nted her

Show
from PageA1
the season and widely used
in home decorating.
As the title implies. this
show gives exhibitors ·a
chance ·to display their creativity through classes
depicting the cowboy
lifestyle like life in a
bunkhouse. along happy
trails, taking part in a rodeo,
$hopping at the general
-store, as well as participation in the last roundup.
Ofl'ering something for
6veryone this show is bound
to boost the holiday spirit of
.viewers. Visitors are wel.come to attend either

Saturday or Sunday after- the Rodeo, incorporating
noon, I to 4 p.m. There of lights in to the design; Happy
course is no charge to see the Trails at Christmas, showing
array of artistic creations by motion; and Cowboy's
the garden club members.
Church at Christmas, with a
Judging by an accredited religious feeling.
judge of the
Ohio
There are also special
Association of Garden classes for exhibition table
Clubs will take place at I pictures called Christmas at
p.m. Saturday to select the the Chuckwagon, and
best from the rest for ribbon another for gift wrappings
awards. The judge will also suitable for an adult and
select from the creative another for children. 1\vo
arrangements for special classes accept exhibits from
ribbons, a best of show, an other than garden club
award of distinction, and a . members.
They
are
Christmas Lasso, which
creativity award.
The classes in the artistic incorporates rope into the
arrangement adult division design, and Christmas at the
are: Christmas on the· Bunkhouse, a class from
Ponderosa, including pine; outdoor and indoor wreaths,·
Christmas in the Corral, a an'd wall hangings .
creative mass; Christmas at
The classes for junior

· Citizens of Middleport
Thank you for supporting me
and the tax levy.

(William

Rusher is a
Di,&lt;tinguis~ed Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

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

Mike Gerlach
Pd pol ad

arrangements are The
Christmas horse Show,
showing motion; and Bits
and Spurs, a favorite design.
The Meigs county Master
Gardeners will be there with
a special class called
Brighten up the Tack Shop,
and Ed Durst will have a
poinsettia display.
The specimen .classes
include evergreens, berried
branche_s, potted cacti or
succulent, blooming and
foliage houseplants for.
adults, and dried decorative
grass, dish gardens, and terrariums for juniors. · The
entryway will be decorated
by Chester Garden .Club.
The Rutland Garden Club
members have charge of
this year's flower show.

none has been proven to
reduce 'diabetics' risk of
heart disease. That includes
the treatment mainstay metformin, a family of medicines called sulfonylureas,
. and Actos.
The Avandia question,
however, is whether it
might actually increase
heart attacks.
Last May, Nissen and colleagues published an analysis that found Avandia users
had a 43 percent higher risk
of heart attack than other
diabetics. The analysis
added 42 different studies
that
included
14,000
pattents , most that compared Avandia users with
diabetics given a dummy
pill and tracked them for six
months.
But three other studies
together tracked the same
number of patients for a few
years - and neither confirmed nor refuted the heart
allack risk, · FDA found .
Those studies mostly compared Avandia to other. diabetes medications, and
some suggested Avandia
might even help diabetics
live longer, Jenkins said.
Last summer, FDA's independent scientific advisers
ruled the heart risk probably
was real but that Avandia
should stay on the market
with warnings. In further
debate, FDA's own employees sharply split on how to
address Avandia, although
Woodcock said a majority
wanted it kept on the market.

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.\RTSt ENfRE

Fre11ch Colony Chorus .
"Fit as a Fiddle"
Sat., Nov. 17, 2007 .

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�The Daily Sentinel ·

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992~~156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com .

Ohio Valley Publishihg Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Nov. 16, the 320th day of 2007. There
are 45 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlightin History:
One hundred years ago, on Nov. 16, 1907, Oklahoma
became the 46th state of the union ..
On this date:
In 1776, British troops captured Fort Washington in New
York during the American Revolution. ·
In 1885, Canadian rebel leader Louis Riel was executed
for high treason .
In 1917, Georges Clemenceau again became prime minister of France.
In 1933, the United States and the Soviet Union estab.
lished diplomatic relations. ·
In 1959, the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical "The
·
Sound of Music" opened on. Broadway.
In 1961, Sam Rayburn died in Bonham, Texas, having
served as Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives
since 1940 except for two terms.
.
In 1966, Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard was acquitted in his
second trial of charges he'd murdered his pregnant wife,
Marilyn, in 1954.
In I 973, President Nixon signed the Trans· Alaska
Pipeline Authorization Act
In 1982, an agreement was announced in the 57th day of
a strike by National Football League players.
Ten years ago: China's most prominent pro-democracy
campai~ner, Wei Jingsheng, arrived in the United States
after bemg released from a prison where he'd spent nearly
18 years.
One year ago: Democrats embraced Nancy Pelosi as the
first woman House speaker in history, but then selected
Steny Hoyer as majority leader against her wishes. African,
Arab, European and U.N. leaders agreed in principle to a
joint African Union-United Nations peacekeeping force for
Sudan's Darfur region. Gunmen abducted a private security team of four Americans and an Austrian in southern Iraq.
Minnesota 1\vins ace Johan Santana won the AL Cy Young
Award. Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman
died in San Francisco at age 94.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Clu Gulager is 79. Blues musician Hubert Sumlin is 76. Journalist Elizabeth Drew is 72.
Blues musician W.C. Clark is 68. Actor Steve Railsback is
62. Actor David Leisure is 57. Actress Marg Helgenberger
is 49. Rock musician Mani is 45. Country singer-musician
Keith Bums (Trick Pony) is 44. Former tennis player Zina
Garrison is 44: Former baseball player Dwight Gooden is
43. Jazz singer Diana Krall is 43. Actor Harry Lennix is 43.
Actress Lisa Bonet is 40. Actress Tammy Lauren is 39.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Bryan Abrams (Color Me Badd)
is 38. Actress Martha Plimpton is 37. Olympic gold medal
tigure skater Oksana Baiul is 30. Actress Maggie
Gyllenhaal is 30. Pop singer Trevor Penick is 28. Actress
Kimberly J. Brown ts 23. Actor Noah Gray-Cabey ("My
Wife and Kids") is II.
·,
Thought for Today: "An American who can make money,
invoke God, and be no better than his neighbor, has nothing to fear but truth itself." - Marya Mannes, American
critic ( 1904-1990).

LETTERS TO ·THE
EDITOR
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unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issui!S, not personalitie.&lt;. Letters of
thanks to organizations and inilividuals will nat be accept·ed for publication.
;
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PageA4

OPINION

Friday, November t6, 2007

Friday, November 16, 2007

Local Briefs

Baptists embarrassed by Topeka church
Perseve(ance of the Saints. would Baptists agree they
Although these doctrines are "reformed" churches or .
are almost universally hated "Reformed," as in rooted in
today, they were once loved Calvinist teachings? Do
and believed."
Baptists today share a comThe church does·· not, mon understanding of the
however, a~pear to be -~art "separation of church and
of the Natmnal Pnmtttve state"? Of course nm.
.
All Baptists would, how:
Baptist Convenli?n _of_ th.e
U.S.A. Then agam, 11 tsn t · ever, stress a congregational
linked to the ~outhern approach to church governBaptist ConventiOn, the_ men! and the autonomy of
Amencan Bapttst Church~s, each local congregation.
the
National
Baptist This means that it's all but
Convenwm U.S.A., t~e impossible for any Baptist
Conservallve
Bapttst flock to tell another flock
Assoc tatwn of Amenca, the
,
American
.
Baptist what to do- unless they _re
Association
(Landmark part M ~ larger volu~tanly
Baptists), the Regular as~octauon or conventmn.
Churches.
Just about anyone can
Baptist
Reformed
Baptist get themselves ordamed and
Churches, Free Will Baptist then say t?,at they've started
Churches, the Progre.ssive a church. satd Wtll _Hall,
National
Baptist head of the 16.4-mtl\mn·
Convention, the National member Southern Baptist
Baptist Evangelical Life Convention's
official
and Soul Saving Assembly Baptist Press news agency.
of the
U.S.A.,
the
But in the case of
Independent, Fundamental 'westboro Baptist, he said, it
Baptist Churches or any isn't even enough "to call
other ~own B_aptist group. them
an
independent
Obvwusly, II s hard for Baptist church, because
Bapllsts to agree on a com- they're not · typical of the
Ton d~rmtllon of what many independent Baptist
B~pttst .. means.
~?e churches and missionary
onhne deftmtton states:. A Baptist churches out there
member of an evangehcal across America. This is a
Protestant church of congre- tiny church that's out there
r:~IOr~~~r~~~~tytr:~~~i~:l~~ all by itself and ,that's the
worship and believing in way they want ,tt. . .
(Terry Mattmgly ts _dtrecindividual freedom, in the
separatioo of church -and tor of the Washmgton
state, and in baptism of vol· Journaftsm Center af the
untary, conscious believ- Cowtctl fo~ C:hrts~IGn
ers."
·
Colleges and Umverslltes
However, various streams and ·
leads
the
of Baptist life predate the GetReligion.org project to
birth of the modern '.'evan- st11dy religion and the
gelical" movement. And news.)

The Rev. Billy Graham is
a Baptist and so is Bill
Clinton.
The Rev. Rick "Purpose
Driven Life" Warren is a
Baptist and so is the Rev.
Terry
Jesse Jackson. The Rev.
Mattingly
Bob Jones III of Greenville,
S.C., is a Baptist and so is
the Rev. AI Sharpton. of
New York. The Rev. Bill
Moyers is a Baptist, or used - such as "God Hates
to be, and that's also true for Fags" and "Thank God f6r
Dead Soldiers." The church
the Rev. Pat Robertson.
There are all kinds :,f has aboui 60 members .. most
Baptists, so saying people of them related to Phelps,
are ~Baptists" may do little and teaches that God is punto clarify what they actually ishing America because of
this culture's growing
believe.
Bur two things ·are clear. acceptance of homosexualiThe tirst is that the Rev. ty. A jury in Baltimore
Fred Phelps of Westboro recently handed down a
Baptist ' Church in Topeka, $10.9
million
verdict
Kan .. is a Baptist. The sec- against Westboro because of
ond is that millions of other its ugly protests at the
Baptists wish Phelps and his March 2006 funeral Qf
infamous flock would stop Lance Cpl. Matthew A.
calling
themselves Snyder, who died in Iraq.
At its Web site "Baptists."
"It does make you cringe GodhatesAmerica.com when you read about Phelps the church offers this histo·
and Westboro , because you ry: "Established in 1955 by
rarely see anyone stress that Pastor Fred Phelps, the
these people have no con- Westboro Baptist Church of
nections
to
Southern Topeka, Kansas still exists
Baptists or to American today as an Old School (or,
Baptists or to anybody Primitive) Baptist Church.
else," said Greg Warner, ... We adhere to the teacheditor of the Associated ings of the Bible, preach
Baptist Press .. one of two against all form of sin (e.g.,
adultery,
news agencies that cover fornication,
and
insist
that the
sodomy),
Baptist life.
"This is just some of the doctrines of grace be taught
baggage that comes with publicly to all men . These
being Baptist. It goes with doctrines of grace were well
the territory."
.
summed up by John Calvin
Phelps and his followers in hi s 5 points of Calvinism:
Depravity;
keep making headlines Total
Election,
because of their protests at Unconditional
military funerals, featuring Limited
Atonement,
signs with shocking slogans Irresistible Grace, and

I &amp;UlLT N\Y HOUSE

OF STRAW...

CREDIT.

U!hat's wrong -with aflag pin in your lapel?
William
Rusher

carrying a signboard. And of
course, there are plenty of
people who are thoroughly
patriotic but have reservations about the Iraq War,
which they feel ·might be
disregarded if they wore a
pin that could be misinterpreted ·as endorsing it unreservedly. ·
So there are legitimate differences of opinion .and
behavior on this subject.
People who decline to wear
flag lapel pins are certainly
entitled to be free of criticism for their refusal. And I
and'the other pin-we~rs, in
turn, are assuredly not going
to be scared out of wearing
them because somebody
else chooses to read into the ·
gesture some implication
that just Isn't there.
Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill.
jumped into this controversy
recent! y when a reporter

noted that he was im longer
wearing a flag pin - and
asked why. He replied that
he felt it had become "a substitute" for "true patriotism," so he "decided I
won't wear that pin on my
chest; instead I'm gonna try
to tell the American people
·what I believe will make this
country great, and hopefully
that will be a testimony to
my patriotism."
That alternative will no
doubt work for-Obama, who
is running for president and
has loads of opportunities to
tell us what he believes will
make this country great·. But
it would hardly do for those
of us who don't have the
senator's platform .or his
megaphone. If we nonetheless want to proclaim our
loyalty to the country's policies and goals, a discreet
lapel pin seems a good way
to do it. For one thing, it
spares others from having to
listen to us telling the
American people viva voce
what policies we think they
.should endorse.
For my part, I promise to
·wear my flag pin without
intending any implicit con·
clusibns about the patriotism of those who don't. ·I

'
--~

· POMEROY - Leading Creek Conservancy District has
lifted a boil advisory for customers on Laurel Cliff Road
fro!)! Hiland Road to the ·Meigs Motel, Naylor's Run,
Starcher Road, Pleasant Ridge, .Burdette Road, Willow
Creek, Fox Hill and Fox Hill Circle.

For·the Record
Accident reported
. J'OMEROY- A two-vehicle accident was reported yesterday evening near The Beacon at the intersection of Ohio
833 and Ohio 7 A. At lea~t two people were transported to
Pleasant Valley Hospital by emergency petsonnel from
Meigs EMS for treatment of their injuries. Also on the scene
'Y"efe the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department and Pomeroy
Police Department whi,h is investigating the accident. The
accident report was not available at press ti.me.

Birth announced .
TUPPERS PLAINS Bob and Amy White of New
Richmond, Ohio announce
-the birth of their second
daughter, Mazlyn Reese,
born July 12. She was wei·
corned into the family by a
· sister, Rowan Ferris. '
Matern;~! grandparents are
Bob and Sina Murphy of
Tuppers Plains. ·and greatgrand parents are Rex and
P.nn
Surnmertield
of
Chester and the late Mavin
.and Hazel Murphy of
Tuppers Plains. Paternal
grandparents are Jerry and
Liz
White of Warren, Ohio.
,.

-- - --· --:- - ~- - - -- ~----,

...

---- ~

will admit that I have occasionally wondered whether
objections to a flag pin indicated a sort of general hos·
tility to various American
policies. When I was on the
"Advocates" television pro·
gram during the Vietnam
War, and was wearing a flag ·
pin, furious viewers would
write to the producers
denouncing me for this
alleged "superpatriotism."
· ("Does he wear it" - this
was their favorite question
- "on his underwear?") But
such oddballs were few and
far between, and I certainly
didn't regard them as representative.
For their part, I hope that
people who choose not to
wear a flag pin will do me
the reciprocal kindness of
not assuming that I suspect
their patriotism, let alone
suppose that I consider it
necessarily open to question. The decorative object
that is really causing . the
trouble here is not my lapdl
pin. It's the chip on their
·
shoulder.

Submitted photo

The Meigs Middle School Fellowship of Christian Students recently completed a successful canned food drive to help supply the Rejoicing Life Food Pantry during the holidays. Over 100 students participated in the food drive. Hometown Market
provided shopping carts for-the drive. F.C.S. meets at 8:30 a.m. every Wednesday in the Meigs Middle School Gym for
devotions and prayer, and is open to all students. Information is available by calli,ng 992-2914 or 992-5844.

FDA adds potential heart attack risk
to label of diabetes drug Avandia
Glaxo also agreed to
FDA's demand for a major
study directly comparing
WASHINGTON ·- The Avandia . and its coriipeti·
Mazly11 Ree$e White
government slapped a tors' heart effects. The study
prominent, though confus- will
begin by next
ing, warning on the popular November and won't end
diabetes drug Avandia on until2014, but the FDA will
Wednesday
telling order interim checks to see
patients that it may, or may how patients are faring and
cure a latex overlay.
not,
increase the risk of if it's possible to settle the
The arch cables also need
heart
attacks.
issue any sooner. ·
to be adjusted, and signs
The
move
is
less
stringent
"It isn't as if we're going
and lighting installed. ·
Construction began. in than steps Canada took last to be clueless until 20 14,"
spring 2005, and the. state week to restrict· the drug 's said Dr. Janet Woodcock,
had planned a November use to hard-to-treat diabetics. FDA's chief medical officer.
But the U.S. Food am!
For now, Type 2 diabetics
opening for the bridge. The
Drug
Administration
con:
who
also have heart disease
bridge will complete the
eluded
that
studies
are
too
or
are
at especially high risk
four-lane upgrade of U.S.
to
tell
if
for
it
should
talk with their
contradictory
.
50 from Clarksburg to the
·Avandia really is riskier · doctor about Avandia's
Ohio line.
than other treatments for potential heart effects as
Type 2 diabetes.
they decide among 'treatSo the FDA described thj: ment options, FDA advised.
with a congratulations card controversy in a black box
In contrast, Canada's dmg
on her New Horizon award on Avandia's label - the regulators last week .withwhich she thanked him for.
most severe type of warning drew approval of Avandia as
Swift and crew were dri- the agency can require a stand-alone therapy
ven around in Boyer's 2007 pending further research. except for patients who
super stretch limousine com- Unlike most black-box can't tolerate oldercompetiplete with three televisions, a warnings that urge strong tors .
Health
Canada
CD and DVD player, a bar, caution, Avandia's says, announced that Avandia
satellite radio, a stainless "The available data on the should be used only in comsteel mirrored ceiling and risk ... are inconclusive." - bination with certain other
and interior with hundreds of
"It's still an open ques- drugs for hard-to-control
fiber optic lights.
lion," said Dr. John Jenkins, . blood sugar.
Swift's Marietta concert · FDA's drug chief. Still, he
Dr. Steven Nissen of the
was a sold out event but said, "We want to make sure Cleveland Clinic, who first
luckily for Boyer driving health care providers and brought the heart attack
the star around has its perks patients are aware this signal issue to public attention,
and he received an all of risk has been identified." said he preferred Canada's
access backstage pass and . Patients may need a med- approach but that
was invited to a private din- ical dictionary to interpret Wednesday's warning is
ner with S~ift, the band and the new warning. It says important, if imprecise.
tour manager.
Avandia may be associated
"It is a black-box warnAfter· the concert Boyer · with "myocardial ischemic ing, and no matter what the
received another surprise events such as angina or language says, it's telling
which inc Iuded a contract myocardial infarction."
you something," Nissen
with the promoter to proIn layman 's terms, that's said. "A black-box warning
vide limousine service· for chest pain or a heart i~ telling you there's enough
future concerts. .
attack.
Manufacturer evidence here that physiPictures and an account of . GiaxoSmithKline PLC is cians and patients ought to
the. trip to Marietta can be to develop a pamphlet that be concerned."
found on Boyer's website at will come with each bottle
What . should Avandia
www.alimocompany.com. putting the warning in eas- users do?
Jan"The easy answer is talk
Boyer lives in Gallipolis and ier-to-understand
to your doctor, but that
is a native of Meigs County. guage.
Bv LAURAN NEERGAARI)

doesn't help much b~cause
the doctors are just as much
in the. dark as the patient,"
said Dr. Thomas Pickering,
a cardiovascular disease
expert
at
Columbia
University Medical Center
and an FDA adviser. While
he isn't convinced of the
heart attack risk, he advises
trying other drugs t1rst, ~nd
adding Avandia if they're
not enough.
lt is not the first warning
about ' Avandia's heart
effects. In August, the FDA
ordered a black-box warning for both Avandia and a
competitor, Actos, th~t they
may cause or worsen heart
failure, a different cardiac
problem.
About
I
million
Americans with Type 2 diabetes use Avandia. It helps
control blood sugar by
increasing the body's sensitivity to insulin.
Diabetics already are at
increased risk of heart disease. Type 2 diabetes, the
most common form, is
Iinked to obesity, which in
turn harms the heart. Plus,
high blood sugar over time
damages blood vessels.
Lowering glucose prevents
many diabetes complicalions, such as blindness and
kidney failure .
The hope is that intensive
treatment also will lower
the risk of a heart attack.
. Bul on Wednesday. the
'FDA also said Avandia' s
competitors must change
their ·own labels ~ to say

AP MEDICAL WRITER

·Opening of bridge delayed until spring
.. PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
(AP)- The opening of the
$135 million Blennerhassett
Bridge over the Ohio River
has been delayed until midApril.
State highway engineer
Marvin Murphy says the
4,000·foot-long bridge is 97
perc~nt complete, but workers need about seven weeks
of 50-degree days to lay and

from• PageA1

.. ;POOR

I am an American who
wears a small American-flag
pin in my lapel. Few people ·
haye ever mentioned it to
me, favorably or otherwise,
but I am aware that some
individual s are quietly
offended by the practice.
They seem to feel that. since
they don't wear one, I am
implicitly opening them to
the accusation that they are
somehow not as "patriotic"
as I am.
· Nothing could be further
from the truth. Since the
days of the Vietnam War, I
have made it a practice to
wear such a pin whenever
my country is at war. It
seems the least I can do. It
proclaims my loyalty to the
country's cause, and my
support for its soldiers in
their battle. It is an aS&gt;ertion
of my own sentiments, and
certainly not a renection on
anybody else:s.
There are any number of
reasons why .a thoroughgoing patriot might choose. not
to wear such a 'pin. He or she
may just oppose such ~Iut ­
ter, or prefer some other pin .
Many people simply dislike
walking arou nd wiih their
political opinions in full
view, almost as if they Were

AdvisQry -lifted

Limo

... STICKS.

The Daily Sentinel •Page As

www.mydaiiysentinel.com

"the artist who has for the
first time demonstrated in
the field of country music
the most signiticant creative
growth and development in
overall chart and sales
activity, live performance,
professionalism and critical
media recognition." Swift
was presented the award by
last year's winner Carrie
Underwood. Swift, 17, joins
I .eAnn Rimes as the
youngest-ever winners of
the award. Swift is known
for her hit single "Tim
McGraw."
Boyer said Swift was no.t
some elusive star and
instead casually stepped off
her tour bus with her hand
extended to personally welcome him to the show.
"She was the most pleasant person and very down to
earth," Boyer said, adding
they carried on a conversation before he pre~nted her

Show
from PageA1
the season and widely used
in home decorating.
As the title implies. this
show gives exhibitors ·a
chance ·to display their creativity through classes
depicting the cowboy
lifestyle like life in a
bunkhouse. along happy
trails, taking part in a rodeo,
$hopping at the general
-store, as well as participation in the last roundup.
Ofl'ering something for
6veryone this show is bound
to boost the holiday spirit of
.viewers. Visitors are wel.come to attend either

Saturday or Sunday after- the Rodeo, incorporating
noon, I to 4 p.m. There of lights in to the design; Happy
course is no charge to see the Trails at Christmas, showing
array of artistic creations by motion; and Cowboy's
the garden club members.
Church at Christmas, with a
Judging by an accredited religious feeling.
judge of the
Ohio
There are also special
Association of Garden classes for exhibition table
Clubs will take place at I pictures called Christmas at
p.m. Saturday to select the the Chuckwagon, and
best from the rest for ribbon another for gift wrappings
awards. The judge will also suitable for an adult and
select from the creative another for children. 1\vo
arrangements for special classes accept exhibits from
ribbons, a best of show, an other than garden club
award of distinction, and a . members.
They
are
Christmas Lasso, which
creativity award.
The classes in the artistic incorporates rope into the
arrangement adult division design, and Christmas at the
are: Christmas on the· Bunkhouse, a class from
Ponderosa, including pine; outdoor and indoor wreaths,·
Christmas in the Corral, a an'd wall hangings .
creative mass; Christmas at
The classes for junior

· Citizens of Middleport
Thank you for supporting me
and the tax levy.

(William

Rusher is a
Di,&lt;tinguis~ed Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

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

Mike Gerlach
Pd pol ad

arrangements are The
Christmas horse Show,
showing motion; and Bits
and Spurs, a favorite design.
The Meigs county Master
Gardeners will be there with
a special class called
Brighten up the Tack Shop,
and Ed Durst will have a
poinsettia display.
The specimen .classes
include evergreens, berried
branche_s, potted cacti or
succulent, blooming and
foliage houseplants for.
adults, and dried decorative
grass, dish gardens, and terrariums for juniors. · The
entryway will be decorated
by Chester Garden .Club.
The Rutland Garden Club
members have charge of
this year's flower show.

none has been proven to
reduce 'diabetics' risk of
heart disease. That includes
the treatment mainstay metformin, a family of medicines called sulfonylureas,
. and Actos.
The Avandia question,
however, is whether it
might actually increase
heart attacks.
Last May, Nissen and colleagues published an analysis that found Avandia users
had a 43 percent higher risk
of heart attack than other
diabetics. The analysis
added 42 different studies
that
included
14,000
pattents , most that compared Avandia users with
diabetics given a dummy
pill and tracked them for six
months.
But three other studies
together tracked the same
number of patients for a few
years - and neither confirmed nor refuted the heart
allack risk, · FDA found .
Those studies mostly compared Avandia to other. diabetes medications, and
some suggested Avandia
might even help diabetics
live longer, Jenkins said.
Last summer, FDA's independent scientific advisers
ruled the heart risk probably
was real but that Avandia
should stay on the market
with warnings. In further
debate, FDA's own employees sharply split on how to
address Avandia, although
Woodcock said a majority
wanted it kept on the market.

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Fre11ch Colony Chorus .
"Fit as a Fiddle"
Sat., Nov. 17, 2007 .

WWW.SPRINGVALLEYCINEMA.COM
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East Letart, OH
Sunday, November 18, Monday, Nov. 19,
Tuesday Nov. 20 • 7:00pm
.·
Special Singing
Everyone invited.

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www.reedbaur.com

Providing Insurance Solutipns
Home Auto Farm Business
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�The Daily Sentinel

NATION. WORLD

.

'

PageA6
Friday, November t6,

2007

AAA expects record ·
38.7 million Americans to
travel·this Thanksgiving
despite high gas prices
reconnecting with their
loved ODes." .
Some
31.2 · million
WASHINGTON - Gas motorists will hit the road
prices near record highs at a for Thanksgiving, a I J pertime of year when they typ- cent increase from last year.
ically decline will not deter . Another 4.7 million will
drivers from hitting the road travel by · air, and the
this Thanksgiving. AAA remainder will go by train,
said Thursday.
bus or other transportation.
The travel agency expects
While travelers will be
a record 38.7 million paying more at the pump,
Americans will travel 50 hotels, airfares and car
miles or more from home rental prices are mostly
over the five days beginning declining this year, accordN&lt;'v. 21. That is a 1.6 per- ing to AAA. Holiday hotel
cent increase over last year. rates are down 3 percent for
Roughly 80 petcem of those AAA-Rated Three Diamond
trips will be by car, ami hotels and up a modest I
motorists will pay about 90 percent ar Two Diamond
cents a gallon more for gas hotels. The average decrease
than they did last year.
in re ntal car prices is 12 per. Guy Caruso, chief of the cent , and airline tickets are
Energy Department's stat is-' down about 7 percent.
tic'al divisiOn, the Energy
Cheaper airfare or not, the
Information Administration, airline industry this week
predicted Wednesday that urged holiday travelers to
gasoline prices, now aver- get to the airport extra early
aging $3.11 a gallon nation- due to ao expected 4 percent
wide, will rise another I0 jump in passenger traffic.
Dome stic carriers are
cents by December.
Ajumpofl5centsagallon expected to fly roughly 27
from current levels, already million passengers worldwell above last year's aver- wide over 12 days beginage of $2.23, also would sur- ning Nov. 16, with planes
pass May's all-time record of about 90 percent full,
$3.23 a gallon.
according to the Air
Gas prices traditionally · Transpoit Association,
fall in the winter months as
The expected increase
demand ebbs from summer comes in a year of recordhighs, but oil prices .!lining low punctuality for the
with $100 a barrel and low industry.
Through
have September, more than 24
fuel
stockpiles
reversed that trend this year. percent of !lights arrived
Still, demand for gasoline late, according to the
over the four weeks ending Transportation Department.
Nov. 9 ·was 0.6 percent That's the industry's worst
h_igher than a year earlier, on-time perfprmance since
averaging more than 9.3 comparable data began
million barrels a day, the being collected in 1995.
Ahead of the holiday trav 7
Energy Department said
Thursday.
el crunch, President Bush
"This is the first rime that ordered steps Thursday to
we have seen gas prices tip- reduce air traffic congestion
·ping over $3 a gallon m and long del an tf!at have
November," Robert L. left passengers stranded.
The most significant
Darbelnet, president and
chief executive of AAA, · change is that the Pentagon
said in a statement. "But' will open unused military
Thanksgiving is traditional- airspace from Florida to
ly a time for family gather- Maine
to create "a
ings, and higher gas will not Thanksgiving express lane"
discourage Americans from for commercial airliners.

NELSONVILLE - A
small fire has prompted the
Wayne National Forest to
announce the closure of five
. '
acres Io ensure pu bl IC sa.ety
in Hocking County, approximately l mile south of the
community of Gore.
The closed area is identifl.ed as SEI/4NEI/4 of
Section 6, "'ownshl'p
13
••
North, Range 16 West ,
Green Township, Hocking
Coun~, OhHi?. hThe area is
near ate Ig way 595 to
County
19 North or
595 NorthRoad
10 FS 3209 and 1-s
depicted on a map located
on the Wayne National
Forest website or by visiting
a local· Forest Service
office.
The Coal Dale Fire, a one
acre fire is burning underground and could create
unstable holes which could
cave in. Orange snow fence
has been installed and closure signs have been posted

loP BUSINESS WRITER

BY SHEIKH
DIDARUL ALAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

KHULNA, Bangladesh
- A powerful cyclone
packing 150 mph winds
slammed into Bangladesh
on Thursday night, flattening homes, toppling trees
and power poles, and forcing hundreds of thousands
of people to flee for shelters
in this low-lying nation.
Tropical Cyclone Sidr
swept in from the Bay of
Bengal, buffeting the southwestern coastal areas within
a !55-mile radius of its eye
with heavy rain and storm
surges predicted to r~ach 20
feet high.
. No casualties \Vere imme- ·
d1ately reported, but rescue
ieams were on standby.
: Sidr' s eye crossed the
Khulna-Barisal coast near
the Sundarbans mangrove
forests, the Bangladesh
Meteorological Department
said:
At lea~t 650,000 people
fled to evacuation centers
and· 3.2 million people were

expected to be evacuated in
all, said Ali Imam Majumder,
a senior government official
in Dhaka, the capital.
"We have taken all precautions," Majumder said.
Authorities dispatched food,
medicines; tents and blankets to the affected areas and
·suspended operations at the
country's. two main seaports
- · Chinagong and Mongla
- while ferry services and
flights were halted across
the coastal region. Ships
were warned to return to
shore,
In the coastal districts of
Bagerhat, Barisal and
Bhola, residents said the
storm flattened thousands of
flimsy straw and mud huts,
flooded low-lying areas and
uprooted trees and electric
poles.
"We sittil)g out the storm
by candlelight," Bagerhat
resident Bishnu .· Prashad
said by phone.
In the capital, incessant
rain flooded some streets,
stranding vehicles, while
strong winds senl billboards
flying.

.

.invited people to build .a
new burger, choosing from
a list of 54 possible ingred~
ents. Van Camp's burger
beat out burgers that ranged
from the Texas Ranch to the
Teriyaki Blast.
The winner was chosen
through an online vote, at
ThislsMyBurger.com.
Van Camp, of Moorpark,
Calif.,
gets
$25,000.
Wendy's International Int.,
based in this Columbus sub'urb, plans to add the burger
to its menu at6,000 Wendy' s
lpcations nationwide.

2007

· to remind the public to keep
out· of the unsafe area. The
safety of firefighters and the
public will continue to be
the main emphasis.
Firefighters have contained the surface fire, but
continue. to closely monitor
the subsurface fire . The
Forest has hired a contractor
to assess what it'll take to
extinguish the subsurface
fire. Work is ex-hcted to
begin right away. ere will
likely be more smoke in the
area ~. the
coal
b smoldering
h
waste IS roug t to the surface and extinguished.
The fire was first suspected in early October when. a
local landowner reported
smelling smoke, but no
actual fire was found. On·
Oct, 29, a Wayne National
Forest firefighter located a
fire burning in a remnant
coal pile. The fire was seen
burning both on the surface
and underground.

Monday, Nov. 19
LETART FALLS ·Letart Township Trustees
meet at 5 p m t the 0 ffi
· ·a
Ice
building.
·
Church events
Sunday, Nov. 18
SYRACUSE Jerry
Frederick will be preaching
at the Syracuse Community
Church, 6:30 p.m.
POMEROY .
- The
Me1gs
· county M.1mstena
· ·1
and God 's NET ministries

gym of the Mulberry
G:ommunit y Center, Pastor
Brent Watson .
MIDDLEPORT - Dr.
Terry Davis of Newness of
Life Ministries, Monessen,
Pa., to speak at Abundant
G
M' . .
10
race
Imstnes,
a.m.
and
6
p.m.
services.
Oft' ·
·t k
p t
ermg
Teresa
Davis..a en. , as or
• EAST
LETART
Revival services will be
held at the East Letart
United Methodist Church,
sunday, Monday, Tuesday,
7 pm
h
·
· · eac
evemng.

ALBANY -Carpenter girl s ages 3 through grade 6
Baptist Church will host a in Meigs , Eastern and
wild ~arne dinner and con- Southern districts. Contact
.D
.
8
cert Y ' ayspnn~," 6Danny Davi s at 742-2372.
p.m.
Public
mvited .
Questions to Pastor Whitt
Akers, 591-1236.
Other events
School
and Youth
Monday, Nov. 19
POMEROY - Signups
for Meigs youth wrestling
team will be held 6-8 p.m.
Monday and Tuesday at

Saturday, Nov. 17
PORTLAND - End of
season awards dinner for
those
partii:ipating
in
Portland Horse Show
Series, 6 p.m., Portland
Community Center, bring
covered dish, meat and door
prizes provided.

Partner's in Care group has Halloween partY

AP photo

National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence and paleontologist Paul Sereno, gestures during a news conference at the
National Ge'ographic Society in Washington, Thursday, where he unveiled a new djnosaur, an elephant-sized animal named
Nigersaurus taqueti.

Dinosaur discovered with wide,
vacut11n cleaner-shaped ntouth
Bv RANDOLPH
E. SCHMID

dreds of tiny, sharp teeth to of canals in ·the organ that journal fro m the Public
grind up its food. ·
helps keep balance dis" Library of Science, and·in the
AP SCIENCE WAITER
The
30-foot-long closed the habitual low pose December issue of National
Nigersaurus had a feather- of the head, they reported.
Geographic magazine.
WASHINGTON A light skull held close to the
Nigersaurus also had a
The first bones of
dinosaur with a strange jaw ground to graze like an backbone consisting of Nigersaurus were picked up
designed to hoover-up food ancient
cow.
Sereno more air than bone.
in Niger in the 1950s by
grazed in what is now the described it as a younger
"The vert ebrae are so French paleontologists led
Sahara Desert 110 mill ion cousin of the North American paper-thin that it is difficult by Philippe Taquet, but the
years ago.
dinosaur Diplodicus.
to imagine them coping species was not named at
Remains of the creature . lt,s broad muzzle con- with the stresses of every- that tinie. Sereno and his
that "flabbergasted" paleon- tained more than 50 day use - but we know team honored this early
tologist .Paul Sereno went on columns of teeth lined up they did it, and they did it work
by
naming
display Thursday at the head- tightly along the front edge well," Jeffrey Wilson, assis- · Nigersaurus taqueti after the
quarters of the National of it 's jaw. Behind each tant professor at the nation where it was found
Geographic Society, where tooth more were lined up as University of Michigan and and the French scientist.
they will remain until March. replacements when one an expedition team member,
The research was partly
broke
off.
said
in
a
statement.
, Sereno and colleagues
National
funded . by
Using CT scans the
The dinosaur's anatomy Geographic where, Sereno
recovered, assembled and
researchers were able s'tudy and lifestyle were to be said, "you can see the
named the creature · Nigersaurus taqueti - that the inside of the animal's detailed in the Nov. 21 issue hideous jaw elements in
he said seems to break all skull where the orientation of PLoS ONE, the online person."
the rules, yet still existed.
"The biggest eureka
moment was when I was sitting . at the desk with this
jaw," he said. "I was sitting
down just looking at it and
saw a groove and ... realized
that all the teeth were up
front."
It's not normally a good
idea to have all the teeth in
the front of the jaw - hundreds in this case.
Sure, "it's great for nipping," Sereno said, "but
that's not where you want
do your food processing."
"That was an amazing
moment, we knew we had
something no one had ever
seen before," Sereno recalled.
Sereno,
a
National
Geographic explorer-in-resi;
CR 7 A • Pomeroy, OH • 740·992·7986
dence and paleontologist at
the University of Chicago,
No Pool tournament Nov . 21 &amp; Dec 26
said the first evidence- of
Nigersaurus was found in the
Mon . -Sat Happy Hour 4:30 -7:30
Thursday lo~:Jir", r'JHdr' ,', 1:.1 tjr·r! ~-j( ,. -i
1 1[11 ' 1 11
1990s and now researchers
Al l Dnnks .25 Cents Off'
)rl(' r&gt;lt , rll r lr · rr ~
'll[;ttr , .ril!
Monday .r r, I rii
have been able to reconstruct
Friday f) .J Hr rt&gt; NrH I 1: 11n 1 r·rt
its skull and skeleton.
Tu esday ~"rrr ·kr· A' lit Krp 1Jprr l,w r
Saturd&lt;Jy
·~,;•· f,.~rrri ·While
Nigersaurus'
Wedn esday r·/r·rr~-; N1ijh1 - ~J r:JoJI tutr llr.ntrr· .t
Sunday _~,[ {'lrJ hr•r•r ~, 1 ", ( .,), 111.·
mouth is shaped like the
'/1 IH• ·rrll·y ~'. ~"1 ! &gt;"-'1c ·~11 all ;Jnrrk·
Shows sta rt at 9:00 1.0. Requrred
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Good Trrnc s Bm 33821 St AI 7 Pornrro~· OH
um, it has something lack(740) 992-79R6
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LIVE BANDS SCHEDULED FOR DECEMBER
Bart &amp; The Chasers-Dec. 1st
Swamp Juece-Dec. 8th
Flint-Dec. 15th

i

1

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1

1

Hoagie burger wins
Wendy's contest
DUBLIN (AP) A
California
screenwriter
inspired by the high school
years when he used to order
a salami burger at a New
York deli is the winner of
Wendy's new burger contest.
The Philly-Style Hoagie
Burger that Ian Van Camp
came up with features two
beef patties, ham, salami,
onion rings and creamy
Italian dress ing.
Van Camp's burger was
picked from among I0
finalists in which the thirdlarg e~! hamburger chai n"

Friday, November 16,

.Wayne National ForeSt Community Calendar
. acreage closed by fire -P-:U_b_l_i_C_m_e-:e-t-in_g_s_e_.:o-urm-s:-i~-ic-~e-1r-v1-:e_a_n-k7-sg-~v--~-~-S-pe-c-ia-~-~in-n3-~~-:--N-ov-.-2-5 --~-i~-!3,.~-.ou_se_H_iF-g~-r-b-oy-s~-han-·oo.J. ,

BY DAN CATERINICCHIA

Powerful cyclone.strikes
Bangladesh, tearing down trees,
power poles; thousands flee

PageA7

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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~unbap

'

'"'f"

\!rimes ~enttnel
~

ANNIE'S MAILE OX

Keeping up with kids
doesn't always work.
BY KATHY MITCHEU
AND MARCY SUGAR •

Dear Annie: I work in a
large high school. Our dress
. code is fairly relaxed, but
we are expected to show
good taste nothing
skimpy, no short skirts, no
underwear showing, etc.
This unwritten code is
followed by most of the
employees, with the glaring
exception of one co-worker. ''Rita" is in her late 40s
and extremely buxom.
Although she is fairly
attractive, she wears everything very tight, short and
skimpy. You can tell she
spends time putting her
outfits together, but I often
fear she's going to "pop"
·right out of them. Rita is a
lovely person, very helpful
and fun to be around, but
her style is an embarrassment. I think she's attempting to hold on to her youth
by dressing like the young
girls in our school . .
: My opinion has been
echoed by several others. I
hate to hear others mocking
her because of her clothing.
I am friendly with Rita, but
haven't the slightest idea
how to broach the subject
with her. I don't believe the
school
principal · has
addressed it with her,
although I know there have
been others whose style was
not so extreme and who
were told to dress- more
modestly. Should I do anything? Puzzled and
Concerned
Dear Puzzled: If your
school has a dress codll,
relaxed or not, it should be
specific enough so teachers.
don't have to guess what is
proper attire, and so those
who do opt comply can be
notified by the administrjl· .
tion. Either the school considers Rita's clothes to be
acceptable or no one in
authority is willin"g to
address it. If you think her
outfits are unflattering or
inappropriate, you can
approach her as a friend
and suggest she'd loot&gt; better in a different style, but
it's up to you.
Dear Annie: I have a
wonderful circle of friends,
and we get together once a
month. However, every ~o
often, one of the women
hosts a ladies party. When I
say
party,
l
mean
Tupperware,
jewelry,
stoneware, housewares, etc.
We ate all in our late
50s, and I am trying to ~et
rid of stuff, not acqulfe
more. I have run out of
excuses for not going. Is
·there any way to let these
women know enough is
enough? - ARYC
Dear ARYC: You can
attend these parties and not
buy anythin~ (in which
case, they Will eventually
stop inviting you). Or, you
can simply respond to such
invitations by saying,
"Sorry. I am not in the market for any more things, no .
matter how lovely."
Dear Annie: A recent let-

'

ter about the husband
afflicted with Asperger's
was the first time I had ever
seen a ref~rence to it in
print, and· I believe someone I know has this disorder. He is extremely intelligent, but clueless as to others' perceptions about him,
and he becomes defensive
if anyone says anything
about his inappropriate
communication.
Could you pmvide additional information so those
with Asperger's might recognize themselves? - No
Name, No City
Dear
No
Name:
According to the Mayo
Clinic (mayoclinic.com),
signs of Asperger's include
engaging in one-sided,
long-winded conversations,
without noticing if the listener is listening; displaying
unusual nonverbal communication, such as lack of eye
contact or awkward body
postures and gestures;
showing an intense obsession with one or two specific, narrow subjects,.such as
baseball statistics or train
schedules; appearing not to
understand or be sensitive
to others' feelings; speaking
in a voice that is monotonous, rigid or unusujllly
fast; moying clumsily, with
poor coordination.
Treatment often involves
cognitive behavior therapy
and social skills training. For
support and information,
contact the Autism Society
of America (autism-society.org) at I-800-3AUTISM
(l -800-328-8476); MAAP
Services for Autism and
Asperger
Syndrome
(maapservices.org), P.O.
Box 524, Crown Point, IN
46308; or Families of Adults
Affected by· Asperger's
Syndrome (www.fi!33S.org), .
P.O.. Box 514, Centerville,
MA02632.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors 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 read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, ,visit the
Creators . Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

SubmHted photo

The Partner's in Care Alzheimer's respite group had a Halloween party wh11re they enjoyed games and crafts. Displaying
the crafts they made here are left to right, front, Louise Harrison. Liz Rice, Don Sayre, Frank Hudnall, and Julia Campbell,
and back, Jean Thomas and Barb Gheen, volunteers, Tana Kennedy, Meigs County Council on Aging staff member, Mildred
Hudson and Marilyn Powell, volunteers, Richard Fetty, Margaret Cremeens; and Kathy McDaniel, program coordinator.

.

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•••
'I

••...
••

.

,

••

Kathleen Elise McKelvey

McKelveys
announce birth
UPPER ARLINGTON Michael
and
Krista
McKelvey
of
Upper
Arlington, formerly of
Syracuse, announce the birth
of their ftrst child, a daughter,
Kathleen Elise McKelvey.
She was born on Sept. 12 at
Riverside
Methodist
Hospital in Columbus.
The infant weighed 7
pounds. Maternal grandparents are Dick and Jancie
Ahms of Minster. Paternal
grandparents are. Marvin
and Eleanor McKelvey of
Syracuse. Paternal greatgrandmother is Hazel
McKelvey of Portland and
the late William McKelvey.
Maternal great-grandpar.ents are the late George and
Genevieve Schneider.

•

••••
•

...
••
••

•

Sargent is recuperating at ·
home after being ill for the
past six weeks. She received
ov~r 300 birthday and getwell cards during her illness.

Paid for by the CVFD , Charles Radford , treasurer

•
••••

••••

•
••
•
t· ............................................... .

•

•••

Deadline for entries is: December 14, 2007

This Unique Calendar will be inserted in the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant u
Register and The Daily Sentinel Friday, December 28, 2007

The winning pets will be featured in this
···~
uniqu~ calendar.
The winner will be highlighted on the cover. •

Recuperaring ••
CHESTER - Barbara

The Chester Volunteer
_Fire Department
would like to thank
the voters for having
supported the Fire
Levy in the ·recent
eledion.
"

...••

••

Name of pet: .
• : Your Name:

.

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·

·

~.

'
I

.: Address:

'"

I

I

I

'•: Phone:____

.....c__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I

I

.j

Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to

~ ~allipoli~ llailp
I I
I

,,••

~oint ~leasant

m:ribune

•
I

Daily: Sentinel

l\egister

"Pet calendar"
"Pet calendar"
"Pet Calendar" I
.~ · 825 Third Avenue
200 Main St.
111 Court St. - ~·
CGallipolis, OH 45611 Pt Pleasant, WV 25550 Pomeroy, OH_45769
1

www.mvdai1V1ribune.com

www_.mvdailyrenister.com

www.mydallysenttnel.com

• . :.- ·.: .,, . :. ~ :._ . ·•.. ·.:•. . ·.: . ·,·:. ~: .... -,1,: ..~I:·

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�The Daily Sentinel

NATION. WORLD

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PageA6
Friday, November t6,

2007

AAA expects record ·
38.7 million Americans to
travel·this Thanksgiving
despite high gas prices
reconnecting with their
loved ODes." .
Some
31.2 · million
WASHINGTON - Gas motorists will hit the road
prices near record highs at a for Thanksgiving, a I J pertime of year when they typ- cent increase from last year.
ically decline will not deter . Another 4.7 million will
drivers from hitting the road travel by · air, and the
this Thanksgiving. AAA remainder will go by train,
said Thursday.
bus or other transportation.
The travel agency expects
While travelers will be
a record 38.7 million paying more at the pump,
Americans will travel 50 hotels, airfares and car
miles or more from home rental prices are mostly
over the five days beginning declining this year, accordN&lt;'v. 21. That is a 1.6 per- ing to AAA. Holiday hotel
cent increase over last year. rates are down 3 percent for
Roughly 80 petcem of those AAA-Rated Three Diamond
trips will be by car, ami hotels and up a modest I
motorists will pay about 90 percent ar Two Diamond
cents a gallon more for gas hotels. The average decrease
than they did last year.
in re ntal car prices is 12 per. Guy Caruso, chief of the cent , and airline tickets are
Energy Department's stat is-' down about 7 percent.
tic'al divisiOn, the Energy
Cheaper airfare or not, the
Information Administration, airline industry this week
predicted Wednesday that urged holiday travelers to
gasoline prices, now aver- get to the airport extra early
aging $3.11 a gallon nation- due to ao expected 4 percent
wide, will rise another I0 jump in passenger traffic.
Dome stic carriers are
cents by December.
Ajumpofl5centsagallon expected to fly roughly 27
from current levels, already million passengers worldwell above last year's aver- wide over 12 days beginage of $2.23, also would sur- ning Nov. 16, with planes
pass May's all-time record of about 90 percent full,
$3.23 a gallon.
according to the Air
Gas prices traditionally · Transpoit Association,
fall in the winter months as
The expected increase
demand ebbs from summer comes in a year of recordhighs, but oil prices .!lining low punctuality for the
with $100 a barrel and low industry.
Through
have September, more than 24
fuel
stockpiles
reversed that trend this year. percent of !lights arrived
Still, demand for gasoline late, according to the
over the four weeks ending Transportation Department.
Nov. 9 ·was 0.6 percent That's the industry's worst
h_igher than a year earlier, on-time perfprmance since
averaging more than 9.3 comparable data began
million barrels a day, the being collected in 1995.
Ahead of the holiday trav 7
Energy Department said
Thursday.
el crunch, President Bush
"This is the first rime that ordered steps Thursday to
we have seen gas prices tip- reduce air traffic congestion
·ping over $3 a gallon m and long del an tf!at have
November," Robert L. left passengers stranded.
The most significant
Darbelnet, president and
chief executive of AAA, · change is that the Pentagon
said in a statement. "But' will open unused military
Thanksgiving is traditional- airspace from Florida to
ly a time for family gather- Maine
to create "a
ings, and higher gas will not Thanksgiving express lane"
discourage Americans from for commercial airliners.

NELSONVILLE - A
small fire has prompted the
Wayne National Forest to
announce the closure of five
. '
acres Io ensure pu bl IC sa.ety
in Hocking County, approximately l mile south of the
community of Gore.
The closed area is identifl.ed as SEI/4NEI/4 of
Section 6, "'ownshl'p
13
••
North, Range 16 West ,
Green Township, Hocking
Coun~, OhHi?. hThe area is
near ate Ig way 595 to
County
19 North or
595 NorthRoad
10 FS 3209 and 1-s
depicted on a map located
on the Wayne National
Forest website or by visiting
a local· Forest Service
office.
The Coal Dale Fire, a one
acre fire is burning underground and could create
unstable holes which could
cave in. Orange snow fence
has been installed and closure signs have been posted

loP BUSINESS WRITER

BY SHEIKH
DIDARUL ALAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

KHULNA, Bangladesh
- A powerful cyclone
packing 150 mph winds
slammed into Bangladesh
on Thursday night, flattening homes, toppling trees
and power poles, and forcing hundreds of thousands
of people to flee for shelters
in this low-lying nation.
Tropical Cyclone Sidr
swept in from the Bay of
Bengal, buffeting the southwestern coastal areas within
a !55-mile radius of its eye
with heavy rain and storm
surges predicted to r~ach 20
feet high.
. No casualties \Vere imme- ·
d1ately reported, but rescue
ieams were on standby.
: Sidr' s eye crossed the
Khulna-Barisal coast near
the Sundarbans mangrove
forests, the Bangladesh
Meteorological Department
said:
At lea~t 650,000 people
fled to evacuation centers
and· 3.2 million people were

expected to be evacuated in
all, said Ali Imam Majumder,
a senior government official
in Dhaka, the capital.
"We have taken all precautions," Majumder said.
Authorities dispatched food,
medicines; tents and blankets to the affected areas and
·suspended operations at the
country's. two main seaports
- · Chinagong and Mongla
- while ferry services and
flights were halted across
the coastal region. Ships
were warned to return to
shore,
In the coastal districts of
Bagerhat, Barisal and
Bhola, residents said the
storm flattened thousands of
flimsy straw and mud huts,
flooded low-lying areas and
uprooted trees and electric
poles.
"We sittil)g out the storm
by candlelight," Bagerhat
resident Bishnu .· Prashad
said by phone.
In the capital, incessant
rain flooded some streets,
stranding vehicles, while
strong winds senl billboards
flying.

.

.invited people to build .a
new burger, choosing from
a list of 54 possible ingred~
ents. Van Camp's burger
beat out burgers that ranged
from the Texas Ranch to the
Teriyaki Blast.
The winner was chosen
through an online vote, at
ThislsMyBurger.com.
Van Camp, of Moorpark,
Calif.,
gets
$25,000.
Wendy's International Int.,
based in this Columbus sub'urb, plans to add the burger
to its menu at6,000 Wendy' s
lpcations nationwide.

2007

· to remind the public to keep
out· of the unsafe area. The
safety of firefighters and the
public will continue to be
the main emphasis.
Firefighters have contained the surface fire, but
continue. to closely monitor
the subsurface fire . The
Forest has hired a contractor
to assess what it'll take to
extinguish the subsurface
fire. Work is ex-hcted to
begin right away. ere will
likely be more smoke in the
area ~. the
coal
b smoldering
h
waste IS roug t to the surface and extinguished.
The fire was first suspected in early October when. a
local landowner reported
smelling smoke, but no
actual fire was found. On·
Oct, 29, a Wayne National
Forest firefighter located a
fire burning in a remnant
coal pile. The fire was seen
burning both on the surface
and underground.

Monday, Nov. 19
LETART FALLS ·Letart Township Trustees
meet at 5 p m t the 0 ffi
· ·a
Ice
building.
·
Church events
Sunday, Nov. 18
SYRACUSE Jerry
Frederick will be preaching
at the Syracuse Community
Church, 6:30 p.m.
POMEROY .
- The
Me1gs
· county M.1mstena
· ·1
and God 's NET ministries

gym of the Mulberry
G:ommunit y Center, Pastor
Brent Watson .
MIDDLEPORT - Dr.
Terry Davis of Newness of
Life Ministries, Monessen,
Pa., to speak at Abundant
G
M' . .
10
race
Imstnes,
a.m.
and
6
p.m.
services.
Oft' ·
·t k
p t
ermg
Teresa
Davis..a en. , as or
• EAST
LETART
Revival services will be
held at the East Letart
United Methodist Church,
sunday, Monday, Tuesday,
7 pm
h
·
· · eac
evemng.

ALBANY -Carpenter girl s ages 3 through grade 6
Baptist Church will host a in Meigs , Eastern and
wild ~arne dinner and con- Southern districts. Contact
.D
.
8
cert Y ' ayspnn~," 6Danny Davi s at 742-2372.
p.m.
Public
mvited .
Questions to Pastor Whitt
Akers, 591-1236.
Other events
School
and Youth
Monday, Nov. 19
POMEROY - Signups
for Meigs youth wrestling
team will be held 6-8 p.m.
Monday and Tuesday at

Saturday, Nov. 17
PORTLAND - End of
season awards dinner for
those
partii:ipating
in
Portland Horse Show
Series, 6 p.m., Portland
Community Center, bring
covered dish, meat and door
prizes provided.

Partner's in Care group has Halloween partY

AP photo

National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence and paleontologist Paul Sereno, gestures during a news conference at the
National Ge'ographic Society in Washington, Thursday, where he unveiled a new djnosaur, an elephant-sized animal named
Nigersaurus taqueti.

Dinosaur discovered with wide,
vacut11n cleaner-shaped ntouth
Bv RANDOLPH
E. SCHMID

dreds of tiny, sharp teeth to of canals in ·the organ that journal fro m the Public
grind up its food. ·
helps keep balance dis" Library of Science, and·in the
AP SCIENCE WAITER
The
30-foot-long closed the habitual low pose December issue of National
Nigersaurus had a feather- of the head, they reported.
Geographic magazine.
WASHINGTON A light skull held close to the
Nigersaurus also had a
The first bones of
dinosaur with a strange jaw ground to graze like an backbone consisting of Nigersaurus were picked up
designed to hoover-up food ancient
cow.
Sereno more air than bone.
in Niger in the 1950s by
grazed in what is now the described it as a younger
"The vert ebrae are so French paleontologists led
Sahara Desert 110 mill ion cousin of the North American paper-thin that it is difficult by Philippe Taquet, but the
years ago.
dinosaur Diplodicus.
to imagine them coping species was not named at
Remains of the creature . lt,s broad muzzle con- with the stresses of every- that tinie. Sereno and his
that "flabbergasted" paleon- tained more than 50 day use - but we know team honored this early
tologist .Paul Sereno went on columns of teeth lined up they did it, and they did it work
by
naming
display Thursday at the head- tightly along the front edge well," Jeffrey Wilson, assis- · Nigersaurus taqueti after the
quarters of the National of it 's jaw. Behind each tant professor at the nation where it was found
Geographic Society, where tooth more were lined up as University of Michigan and and the French scientist.
they will remain until March. replacements when one an expedition team member,
The research was partly
broke
off.
said
in
a
statement.
, Sereno and colleagues
National
funded . by
Using CT scans the
The dinosaur's anatomy Geographic where, Sereno
recovered, assembled and
researchers were able s'tudy and lifestyle were to be said, "you can see the
named the creature · Nigersaurus taqueti - that the inside of the animal's detailed in the Nov. 21 issue hideous jaw elements in
he said seems to break all skull where the orientation of PLoS ONE, the online person."
the rules, yet still existed.
"The biggest eureka
moment was when I was sitting . at the desk with this
jaw," he said. "I was sitting
down just looking at it and
saw a groove and ... realized
that all the teeth were up
front."
It's not normally a good
idea to have all the teeth in
the front of the jaw - hundreds in this case.
Sure, "it's great for nipping," Sereno said, "but
that's not where you want
do your food processing."
"That was an amazing
moment, we knew we had
something no one had ever
seen before," Sereno recalled.
Sereno,
a
National
Geographic explorer-in-resi;
CR 7 A • Pomeroy, OH • 740·992·7986
dence and paleontologist at
the University of Chicago,
No Pool tournament Nov . 21 &amp; Dec 26
said the first evidence- of
Nigersaurus was found in the
Mon . -Sat Happy Hour 4:30 -7:30
Thursday lo~:Jir", r'JHdr' ,', 1:.1 tjr·r! ~-j( ,. -i
1 1[11 ' 1 11
1990s and now researchers
Al l Dnnks .25 Cents Off'
)rl(' r&gt;lt , rll r lr · rr ~
'll[;ttr , .ril!
Monday .r r, I rii
have been able to reconstruct
Friday f) .J Hr rt&gt; NrH I 1: 11n 1 r·rt
its skull and skeleton.
Tu esday ~"rrr ·kr· A' lit Krp 1Jprr l,w r
Saturd&lt;Jy
·~,;•· f,.~rrri ·While
Nigersaurus'
Wedn esday r·/r·rr~-; N1ijh1 - ~J r:JoJI tutr llr.ntrr· .t
Sunday _~,[ {'lrJ hr•r•r ~, 1 ", ( .,), 111.·
mouth is shaped like the
'/1 IH• ·rrll·y ~'. ~"1 ! &gt;"-'1c ·~11 all ;Jnrrk·
Shows sta rt at 9:00 1.0. Requrred
' wide intake slot of a vacu11 l[ I' , rr·;
Good Trrnc s Bm 33821 St AI 7 Pornrro~· OH
um, it has something lack(740) 992-79R6
ing in most cleaners - hunGood Trrnc s reminds everyone to dcsr~Jrwte a tlttW't '

LIVE BANDS SCHEDULED FOR DECEMBER
Bart &amp; The Chasers-Dec. 1st
Swamp Juece-Dec. 8th
Flint-Dec. 15th

i

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Hoagie burger wins
Wendy's contest
DUBLIN (AP) A
California
screenwriter
inspired by the high school
years when he used to order
a salami burger at a New
York deli is the winner of
Wendy's new burger contest.
The Philly-Style Hoagie
Burger that Ian Van Camp
came up with features two
beef patties, ham, salami,
onion rings and creamy
Italian dress ing.
Van Camp's burger was
picked from among I0
finalists in which the thirdlarg e~! hamburger chai n"

Friday, November 16,

.Wayne National ForeSt Community Calendar
. acreage closed by fire -P-:U_b_l_i_C_m_e-:e-t-in_g_s_e_.:o-urm-s:-i~-ic-~e-1r-v1-:e_a_n-k7-sg-~v--~-~-S-pe-c-ia-~-~in-n3-~~-:--N-ov-.-2-5 --~-i~-!3,.~-.ou_se_H_iF-g~-r-b-oy-s~-han-·oo.J. ,

BY DAN CATERINICCHIA

Powerful cyclone.strikes
Bangladesh, tearing down trees,
power poles; thousands flee

PageA7

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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~unbap

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'"'f"

\!rimes ~enttnel
~

ANNIE'S MAILE OX

Keeping up with kids
doesn't always work.
BY KATHY MITCHEU
AND MARCY SUGAR •

Dear Annie: I work in a
large high school. Our dress
. code is fairly relaxed, but
we are expected to show
good taste nothing
skimpy, no short skirts, no
underwear showing, etc.
This unwritten code is
followed by most of the
employees, with the glaring
exception of one co-worker. ''Rita" is in her late 40s
and extremely buxom.
Although she is fairly
attractive, she wears everything very tight, short and
skimpy. You can tell she
spends time putting her
outfits together, but I often
fear she's going to "pop"
·right out of them. Rita is a
lovely person, very helpful
and fun to be around, but
her style is an embarrassment. I think she's attempting to hold on to her youth
by dressing like the young
girls in our school . .
: My opinion has been
echoed by several others. I
hate to hear others mocking
her because of her clothing.
I am friendly with Rita, but
haven't the slightest idea
how to broach the subject
with her. I don't believe the
school
principal · has
addressed it with her,
although I know there have
been others whose style was
not so extreme and who
were told to dress- more
modestly. Should I do anything? Puzzled and
Concerned
Dear Puzzled: If your
school has a dress codll,
relaxed or not, it should be
specific enough so teachers.
don't have to guess what is
proper attire, and so those
who do opt comply can be
notified by the administrjl· .
tion. Either the school considers Rita's clothes to be
acceptable or no one in
authority is willin"g to
address it. If you think her
outfits are unflattering or
inappropriate, you can
approach her as a friend
and suggest she'd loot&gt; better in a different style, but
it's up to you.
Dear Annie: I have a
wonderful circle of friends,
and we get together once a
month. However, every ~o
often, one of the women
hosts a ladies party. When I
say
party,
l
mean
Tupperware,
jewelry,
stoneware, housewares, etc.
We ate all in our late
50s, and I am trying to ~et
rid of stuff, not acqulfe
more. I have run out of
excuses for not going. Is
·there any way to let these
women know enough is
enough? - ARYC
Dear ARYC: You can
attend these parties and not
buy anythin~ (in which
case, they Will eventually
stop inviting you). Or, you
can simply respond to such
invitations by saying,
"Sorry. I am not in the market for any more things, no .
matter how lovely."
Dear Annie: A recent let-

'

ter about the husband
afflicted with Asperger's
was the first time I had ever
seen a ref~rence to it in
print, and· I believe someone I know has this disorder. He is extremely intelligent, but clueless as to others' perceptions about him,
and he becomes defensive
if anyone says anything
about his inappropriate
communication.
Could you pmvide additional information so those
with Asperger's might recognize themselves? - No
Name, No City
Dear
No
Name:
According to the Mayo
Clinic (mayoclinic.com),
signs of Asperger's include
engaging in one-sided,
long-winded conversations,
without noticing if the listener is listening; displaying
unusual nonverbal communication, such as lack of eye
contact or awkward body
postures and gestures;
showing an intense obsession with one or two specific, narrow subjects,.such as
baseball statistics or train
schedules; appearing not to
understand or be sensitive
to others' feelings; speaking
in a voice that is monotonous, rigid or unusujllly
fast; moying clumsily, with
poor coordination.
Treatment often involves
cognitive behavior therapy
and social skills training. For
support and information,
contact the Autism Society
of America (autism-society.org) at I-800-3AUTISM
(l -800-328-8476); MAAP
Services for Autism and
Asperger
Syndrome
(maapservices.org), P.O.
Box 524, Crown Point, IN
46308; or Families of Adults
Affected by· Asperger's
Syndrome (www.fi!33S.org), .
P.O.. Box 514, Centerville,
MA02632.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors 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 read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, ,visit the
Creators . Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

SubmHted photo

The Partner's in Care Alzheimer's respite group had a Halloween party wh11re they enjoyed games and crafts. Displaying
the crafts they made here are left to right, front, Louise Harrison. Liz Rice, Don Sayre, Frank Hudnall, and Julia Campbell,
and back, Jean Thomas and Barb Gheen, volunteers, Tana Kennedy, Meigs County Council on Aging staff member, Mildred
Hudson and Marilyn Powell, volunteers, Richard Fetty, Margaret Cremeens; and Kathy McDaniel, program coordinator.

.

_

·~

...

-··
•••
'I

••...
••

.

,

••

Kathleen Elise McKelvey

McKelveys
announce birth
UPPER ARLINGTON Michael
and
Krista
McKelvey
of
Upper
Arlington, formerly of
Syracuse, announce the birth
of their ftrst child, a daughter,
Kathleen Elise McKelvey.
She was born on Sept. 12 at
Riverside
Methodist
Hospital in Columbus.
The infant weighed 7
pounds. Maternal grandparents are Dick and Jancie
Ahms of Minster. Paternal
grandparents are. Marvin
and Eleanor McKelvey of
Syracuse. Paternal greatgrandmother is Hazel
McKelvey of Portland and
the late William McKelvey.
Maternal great-grandpar.ents are the late George and
Genevieve Schneider.

•

••••
•

...
••
••

•

Sargent is recuperating at ·
home after being ill for the
past six weeks. She received
ov~r 300 birthday and getwell cards during her illness.

Paid for by the CVFD , Charles Radford , treasurer

•
••••

••••

•
••
•
t· ............................................... .

•

•••

Deadline for entries is: December 14, 2007

This Unique Calendar will be inserted in the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant u
Register and The Daily Sentinel Friday, December 28, 2007

The winning pets will be featured in this
···~
uniqu~ calendar.
The winner will be highlighted on the cover. •

Recuperaring ••
CHESTER - Barbara

The Chester Volunteer
_Fire Department
would like to thank
the voters for having
supported the Fire
Levy in the ·recent
eledion.
"

...••

••

Name of pet: .
• : Your Name:

.

1

·

·

~.

'
I

.: Address:

'"

I

I

I

'•: Phone:____

.....c__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I

I

.j

Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to

~ ~allipoli~ llailp
I I
I

,,••

~oint ~leasant

m:ribune

•
I

Daily: Sentinel

l\egister

"Pet calendar"
"Pet calendar"
"Pet Calendar" I
.~ · 825 Third Avenue
200 Main St.
111 Court St. - ~·
CGallipolis, OH 45611 Pt Pleasant, WV 25550 Pomeroy, OH_45769
1

www.mvdai1V1ribune.com

www_.mvdailyrenister.com

www.mydallysenttnel.com

• . :.- ·.: .,, . :. ~ :._ . ·•.. ·.:•. . ·.: . ·,·:. ~: .... -,1,: ..~I:·

'----......:.••

••

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••

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�•

Page AS .

.COMMUNI1'Y

The Daily Sentinel

nre

Friday, November 16, 2007

Inside
Peavy wins NL Cy Young, Page ~

Today's Forecast
Forecast for Friday, Nov. 18

city/Region
i'tigh I Low temps

MICH. ·

Friday, November 16, 2007
locAL. SCHEDULE
POMEROY -A schedule of upcoming higf'l
ac;:hool varsity sponlng events lnvolv1ng
tea:ma from Matga County.

Toledo•
41 " 129"

Today'agomn

39" I 26"

Glrll Basketball
South Gallla at Coal Grove, 6 p.m.
Southern at Wellston, 6 p.m.

~

t:.__)

Slturdey'a P'Dlll

foalboll
Wahama at Williamstown, 1:30 p.m.

··"

Glrte Baekelball

Meigs at River Valley, 6 p.m.

, ' Dayton •

44" I 27"

J"Y,....
t:.__)

*Columbus
42" 128"

Cincinnati

••
~
P.rtly
Cloudy

Cloudy

~
"(__)

~ ~-~

Flurries

~

Ice

,,,,, ~~ ~ ..... ~
~-- _)
~
Showers · 1 1 1
Rain
•T *
Snow
• • • ••

Goodwin Tire Center is now open at 1555 Nye Avenue just past The Beacon in Pomeroy. Owner Gene Goodwin said the busi, ness carries a variety. of tires and if he doesn't have it in stock he can generally get tires overnight from one of his six suppliers. In addition to selling and repairing tires, Goodwin Tire Center offers minor automotive repair such as bil and filter
changes, shocks, struts, etc. Hours of operation are 8 a.m. - 5 p.m., Monday-Friday, 8 a.m, to noon .. Saturdays. The phone
number is 992-3500. Goodwin previously operated a used car lot near the. tire center which he plans to reopen soon.
'

Local Stocks
AEP.INYSE)- 48.24
Atczo (NASDAQ)- 77.00
Alhland Inc. (NYSE) - 51.11
Bll Lob (NYSE)- 20.42
Bob EY- (NASDAQ) -

Collins (NYSE)- 72.50 "
DuPont (NYSE) - 45.37
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.60
Gannett (NYSE)- 39.73
General Electric (NYSE) -

29.83

36.31

Bor&amp;Warner (NYSE) - 99.98
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

48.67

Hartey.Oavldson ( NYSE) -

-52.11

Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)

-28.88
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. ( NASDAQ)- 25.86
BBT (NYSE) - 34.26
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 23.44
Pepsico ( NYSE) - 73.58
Premier (NASDAQ) -13.60
Rockwell (NYSE) - 68.22
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -

Champion (NASDAQ)- 5.74
ChanniiiC Shope (NASDAQ) -

JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.53
Kroger (NYSEJ - 27.69
Limited Brands (NYSE) -

6.90

19.08

City Holdlnl( NASDAQ) -

Nqrfolk Southern (NYSE) -

Royal Dutch Shell - 79.52
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)-

36.19

50.11

118.59

6.99

Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 46.20
Wendy's (NYSE)- 30.20
Worthln&amp;ton (NYSE) -

21..06
Dally atock report• are the 4
p.m. ET cloelnl quotes of
tranuctlona lor Nov. 15,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Galllpolla at
( 740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(3o4) 674-0174. Member
StPC.

Friday... Partly sunny. Highs in the lower 50s.
Monday night... Partl y
Highs ir the mid 40s. West
cloudy.
Lows in the lower
winds around I 0 mph.
Friday
night ... Partly 30s.
Tuesday... Mostly sunny
cloudy. Lows in the lower
30s. Southwest winds in the morning .. .Then
becoming mostly cloudy.
around 5 mph.
Saturday...Mostly cloudy Not as cool with ·highs in
with a 30 percent chance of the lower 60s.
Tuesday night... Mostly
rain showers. Highs around
50. Southwest winds 5 to 10 cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Lows in ·
mph.
Saturday night ...Cloudy the upper 30s.
with a chance of rain and
Wednesday ... Cloudy
snow showers. Cold with with a 40 percent chance of
lows around 30. Northwest showers. Highs in the lower
winds around 5 mph. Chance 60s.
Wednesday
night ...
of precipitation 30 percent.
Sunday... Mostly cloudy Mostly cloudy with a 40
in the morning ... Then percent chance of showers.
becoming mostly sunny. Lows around 40.
Highs in the mid 40s.
Thanksgiving
Day...
Sunday
night
and Cloudy with a 50 percent
Monday... Mostly
clear. chance of showers, Highs in
Lows in the upper 20s. 'the mid 50s.

Riley and Douthitt to be inducted in Rio Hall of Fame
Bv

MARK WIUIAMS

• SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - As a
·part of the Bevo Francis
Weekend at the University
of Rio Grande, the Athletics
Hall of ·Fame will swell by
two members as Pam
Douthitt and Stacy Riley
Gosnell will be inducted this
weekend into the Rio
Grande Athletics Hall of
Fame.
Douthitt and Gosnell will
make the 81 st and 82nd
members of the hall of fame.
Gosnell is the second

member of the women 's basketball pro!lram to be
inducted. Lon Hat· 'i on was
inducted last year '' . the first
nlember. Riley is the alHime
leading scorer in women's
basketball history with
2,288 points and was one the
most lethal long range
shooters to ever wear the
Red and White.
She also ranks 8th all-time
in rebounds with 735 , 4th in
assists with 417 and second
in steals with 329.
As a senior ( 1996-97),
Riley made 2nd Team NAIA
All-American, I st Team All-

Great Lakes
Region, AllMid -Ohio
Conference
and was the

M 0

C

Player of
the
Year.
She
was
also named
K o d a k
Douthitt
Honorable
Mention
All -American. She posted
averages of 19.9 points per
game, 7.1 rebounds, 3.8
assists and 2.7 steals.
Her junior season she gar-

nered honorable mention
NAIA All-American (199596) while averaging 16.2
ppg and 5.7 rpg. ). She was
I st Team AII -MOC , I st
Team i\11-Great Lakes
Region that season.
Riley scored 602 points
during her sophomore campaign ( 19.4 ppg.) and 505
points as a freshman (15 .3
ppg.).
She also captured the
Female Athlete of the Year
Award at Rio Grande in both
1995 and 1996.
"Stacy is one of Rio
Grande s top student-ath-

Wahama
heads to
Williamstown

Wealher Underground • AP

Beth Sercent/photo

·B l

. Legacies on line fpr Michigan trio, Page B2
•

Local Weather

Mansfield •

The Daily Sentinel

MASON, W.Va.
Following ~n extremely
physical and emotionally
draining first round triumph
over
I Oth
ranked
Pocahontas County last
week the Wahama White
Falcon football team has its
sights set on second rated
BY RusTY MILLER
AP SPORTS WRITER
Williamstown in quarterfinal round action Saturday
COLUMBUS
afternoon.
Something
was missing ,
The White Falcons will be
Ohio State cornerback
making its seventh visit to
Donald Washington said.
the Class A football quarterAnd it's something that has
finals where the Bend Area
to
be found, and soon.
team has compiled a 2-4
As Illinois continued to
record in second round outrun
the ball, making just
ings. WHS lost its first three
enough
yardage on third
quarterfinal round contests
down
time
after time to conto ·Tyler County (21-0) in
tinue piling up first downs,
1986, Gilbert (29-12) in
the Buckeyes grew more
19.96 and Valley Wetzel (I 2and
more dispirited.
6} in 1998 before winning
How
was this possible,
two of the last three second
for Illinois to pile up 260
round dates with triUJ il!'hs · ·
rushing yards against a team
bver Van (40-16) in 2001
that
was only giving up 65 a
and Matewan (34-20) in
game? How did Juice
2003 before losing to
AP photo
Wheeling Central (31-6) in San Francisco Giants' Barry Bonds gets ready to bat during their baseball game against the Washington Nationals in San Williams, previously known
as a guy defenses loved to
2004.
Francisco, in this Aug. 7, file photo. Bonds was charged Thursday with perjury and obstruction of justice, the culmination force into passing situaThe Yellow Jackets, like of a four-year federal probe into whether he lied under oath to a grand jury investigating steroid use by elite athletes.
tions; pass for four touchWahama, enter Saturday's
downs in what would be the
game with a 9-2 record.
top-ranked Buckeyes' 2&amp;-21
Williamstown's two lone
undoing last . Saturday?
defeats were to a pair of
,
.
.
.
Against
a team that had
Ohio based playoff teams in
BY PAUL ELIAS
released after spending most rently a free agent. In 200 I,
"However, it goes without
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Belpre
( 14-7)
ani!
of the past year in prison for he set the season record with saying that we look forward given up only five passing
Shadyside (47-13). Their
refusing to testify against his 73 home runs.
to rebuning these unsupport- TDs in its first 10 games?
" It was something . we
SAN FRANCISCO
longtime friend.
nine victories came over
Late in the season. the San ed charges in court," Rains
lacked
from the . beginning
"During the criminal Francisco Giants told the said. "We will no doubt have
Class AA playoff partici- Barry Bonds, baseball's
pants Magnolia (30-20) and home run king, was indicted investigation, evidence was seven-time National League more specific comments in of the game," Washington
Tolsia (21-14) in addition to for perjury and obstruction obtained including positive MVP they didn 't want him the very near future once we said. "I don 'I really know
Class A post-season contes- of JUstice Thursday and tests for the presence o( ana- back next year.
have had the opponunity to exactly what it is but we
Bonds could not immedi- actually see this indictment weren't ourselves."
tallls Calhoun Count;v (33- could face prison instead of bolic ·steroids and other perNow the seventh-ranked
8) and .St. Marys (22-0). the Hall of Fame for telling a 'formance enhancing sub- ately be reached for com- that took so long to generBuckeyes ( 10-1. 6- I ·Big
Their remaining four wins federal grand jury he did not stances for Bonds and other ment. One of his attorneys, ate."
South knowingly use performance- athl etes," the indictment John Burris, didn't know of
came
,against
Bonds is scheduled to Ten) have the opportunity to
said.
the indictment before being appear 'in U.S. District Court redeem themselves or add
Harrison (26-6), Doddridge enhancing drugs. ·
The indictment, culmina!In August, when the 43- alerted by The Associated in San Francisco on Dec. 7. to their miseries when thev
County (42-0),.. Ritchie
County
(32-7),
and ing a four-year investigation year-old Bonds passed Hank Press and said he would call · Bonds has never been travel to archrival Michigan
Parkersburg Catholic (30- into steroid use by elite ath- Aaron to become baseball 's Bonds to notify him.
identified by Major League (8-3, 6-1) on Saturday. The
''I'm surprised," Burris Baseball as testing positive Big House will be a big
0). In its 2007 playoff letes, 'charged Bonds with career home run leader, he
opener the Yellow Jackets four counts of perjury and flatly rejected any sugges- said, "but there's been an for steroids.
stage.
defeated
15th ranked one of obstruction of justice. tion that this milestone was effort to get Barry for a long
After Todd Boeckman
"I have yet to ·see the
If
convicted,
he
could
be
stained
by
steroids.
time.
I'm
curious
what
evi"
Midland Trail by a 34-14
details of this indictment and threw his third interception
sentenced to a maximum of
'This record is not tainted dence they have now they while everyone in America with just more than 8 mincount.
at all. At all. Period," Bonds didn't have before ."
Only three of the Wood 30 years in prison.
is considered innocent until utes remaining, Illinois ran
Bonds'
defense
anomey,
Shortly
after
the
indictsaid.
proven guilty, I take this out the clock. Ohio State
County teams' opponents
ment
was
handed
up,
Bonds'
Bonds
finished
the
year
Mike
Rains,
declined
commdictment very seriously blitzed, it gang-tackled, it
this season concluded .the
y.ear with a losing record personal trainer, Greg . with 762 homers, seven ment because he hadn't seen
Please see Bonds, Bl
Please see Defense. B:Z
with the overall slate of the Anderson, was ordered more than Aaron, and is cur- a copy of the indictment.
'
II previous encounters
being an impressive 73-46.
Coach Terry Smith is in
the midst of his fourth term
at the helm of the
..
·Williamstown football program with the Yellow
BY MIKE HARRIS
established as a top star in
AP AUTO RACING WRITER
Jackets compiling a 55-6
NASCAR, who raised
record under Smith's watch.
Johnson's name with Rick
Despite these lofty credenHOMESTEAD, Fla.
Hendrick when .the car
tials Williamstown is still Rusty· Wallace has a lot of owner became serious about
seeking its · first Class A respect for Jeff Gordon and starting a fourth Cup team ~n
footbal~ championship. The Jimmie Johnson. But this 2001.
Yellow Jackets posted a 13- whole friendship thing
"The reason why I sug1 mark last year and have between the title contending gested Jimmie to Rick
gone to the state finals in teammates baffles the Hendrick is because he
three of the past four years. retired NASCAR champion. impressed me before he was
·in a Cup," explained
The sixth largest Class A
"I think that's one thing to ever
tij:hool saw its sate record,
Gordon, the co-owQer of
how they respect each other, Johnson's No. 48 car with
~7-game regular season
but I personally think that Hendrick. "I really thought
this
year's been preny darn if you put him in the kind of
:PIHMIHW•haBia,B•
trying to both of them," quality equipment I'd been
Wallace said. "How do you in for all the years that he
treat your teammate nice could have the same type of
and with respect, because success that l'd .had.
CoNTACfUS
you're wanting to kick his
"It's pretty awesome to
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33·
butt?"
see ·it come from way back
then to where it is now and
Somehow,
four-time
Fu- 1-740-446-3008
see how he's matured."
champion
Gordon
and
E-mail- sportsOmydallysentlnel.com ·
The other h;llf of this
reigning champion .Johnson
Soortt Steff
have been able to draw the mutual admiration society
ESryan Walters, Sports Writer line between their on-track said, "I've alway s, throughAP pholo
rivalry and the friendship out my career, had someone ·
(740) «6·2342. exl. .33
byt"alters 0 myclailytribune.com
that helped put Johnson in to look up to and to learn Teammates Jimmie Johnson , left, and Jeff Gordon pose with the NASCAR Nextel Cup tro'
At
Hendrick phy during a news conference Thursday in Doral. Fla. Johnson goes into Sunday's
an
elite ride at powerful from .
~ Crum, Sports Writer
NASCAR's Chase for the Nextel Cup championship auto race at the Homesteaq-Miam1
Hendrick Motorsports.
ttio) «6·2342, ext. 33
Please
SC~e
Friends;
••
Speedway in Homestead, Fla., with an 86-point lea~ over Gordon.
It was Gordon, already
)~umOmydallyreglster.com

Johnson, Gordon competing
furiously on track; still friends

1u&lt;P•,

t;p-,.,

HIA

Or1 ~~; n,v~d crerl1t

fw~~ ~rtm

Rehdf8

o(lf')ll d 41.1 !Jl ~(lit•

rw·o

(If

r'tew y.-.l·p, It• il•. fr&gt;&lt;f Whf'H lf'l'i

On s~lw,ted rnodd ~ S•·e df•.J!f::t f01 dr-w!ls No1 W'•P'1nS1hl" for 'Yr 1\Y,lf · ''· ,1'
. , ...
Pn(.f"3 r;nod thr•JIJl)h 1-!r~vRmbcr f9th

~

"-"

.'

«•

I ¥o&lt;•

.,.

.

,h!l·

,..
·

Please see Rio, B:Z

Buckeyes
look to get
defensive
edge back ·

BY GARY ClARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Bonds indicted.on perjury, ·obstruction charges

•

letes to ever wear the Ri o
Red and White," &gt;aid Ri o
Grande head coach Da vid
Smalley. "A leader on the
basketball court and a cmlscicntious student of the
classroom and she is most
deserving and worthy (&gt;f
entering the University of
Rio
Grande
Alumni
Association 's Athletic Hall
of Fame." ·
Riley came -1o Rio Grande
from Mechanicsburg.
Douthitt ( 1972-76) flayed
basketball and softbal while

'&gt;

.,

,.

!

�•

Page AS .

.COMMUNI1'Y

The Daily Sentinel

nre

Friday, November 16, 2007

Inside
Peavy wins NL Cy Young, Page ~

Today's Forecast
Forecast for Friday, Nov. 18

city/Region
i'tigh I Low temps

MICH. ·

Friday, November 16, 2007
locAL. SCHEDULE
POMEROY -A schedule of upcoming higf'l
ac;:hool varsity sponlng events lnvolv1ng
tea:ma from Matga County.

Toledo•
41 " 129"

Today'agomn

39" I 26"

Glrll Basketball
South Gallla at Coal Grove, 6 p.m.
Southern at Wellston, 6 p.m.

~

t:.__)

Slturdey'a P'Dlll

foalboll
Wahama at Williamstown, 1:30 p.m.

··"

Glrte Baekelball

Meigs at River Valley, 6 p.m.

, ' Dayton •

44" I 27"

J"Y,....
t:.__)

*Columbus
42" 128"

Cincinnati

••
~
P.rtly
Cloudy

Cloudy

~
"(__)

~ ~-~

Flurries

~

Ice

,,,,, ~~ ~ ..... ~
~-- _)
~
Showers · 1 1 1
Rain
•T *
Snow
• • • ••

Goodwin Tire Center is now open at 1555 Nye Avenue just past The Beacon in Pomeroy. Owner Gene Goodwin said the busi, ness carries a variety. of tires and if he doesn't have it in stock he can generally get tires overnight from one of his six suppliers. In addition to selling and repairing tires, Goodwin Tire Center offers minor automotive repair such as bil and filter
changes, shocks, struts, etc. Hours of operation are 8 a.m. - 5 p.m., Monday-Friday, 8 a.m, to noon .. Saturdays. The phone
number is 992-3500. Goodwin previously operated a used car lot near the. tire center which he plans to reopen soon.
'

Local Stocks
AEP.INYSE)- 48.24
Atczo (NASDAQ)- 77.00
Alhland Inc. (NYSE) - 51.11
Bll Lob (NYSE)- 20.42
Bob EY- (NASDAQ) -

Collins (NYSE)- 72.50 "
DuPont (NYSE) - 45.37
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.60
Gannett (NYSE)- 39.73
General Electric (NYSE) -

29.83

36.31

Bor&amp;Warner (NYSE) - 99.98
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

48.67

Hartey.Oavldson ( NYSE) -

-52.11

Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)

-28.88
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. ( NASDAQ)- 25.86
BBT (NYSE) - 34.26
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 23.44
Pepsico ( NYSE) - 73.58
Premier (NASDAQ) -13.60
Rockwell (NYSE) - 68.22
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -

Champion (NASDAQ)- 5.74
ChanniiiC Shope (NASDAQ) -

JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.53
Kroger (NYSEJ - 27.69
Limited Brands (NYSE) -

6.90

19.08

City Holdlnl( NASDAQ) -

Nqrfolk Southern (NYSE) -

Royal Dutch Shell - 79.52
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)-

36.19

50.11

118.59

6.99

Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 46.20
Wendy's (NYSE)- 30.20
Worthln&amp;ton (NYSE) -

21..06
Dally atock report• are the 4
p.m. ET cloelnl quotes of
tranuctlona lor Nov. 15,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Galllpolla at
( 740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(3o4) 674-0174. Member
StPC.

Friday... Partly sunny. Highs in the lower 50s.
Monday night... Partl y
Highs ir the mid 40s. West
cloudy.
Lows in the lower
winds around I 0 mph.
Friday
night ... Partly 30s.
Tuesday... Mostly sunny
cloudy. Lows in the lower
30s. Southwest winds in the morning .. .Then
becoming mostly cloudy.
around 5 mph.
Saturday...Mostly cloudy Not as cool with ·highs in
with a 30 percent chance of the lower 60s.
Tuesday night... Mostly
rain showers. Highs around
50. Southwest winds 5 to 10 cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Lows in ·
mph.
Saturday night ...Cloudy the upper 30s.
with a chance of rain and
Wednesday ... Cloudy
snow showers. Cold with with a 40 percent chance of
lows around 30. Northwest showers. Highs in the lower
winds around 5 mph. Chance 60s.
Wednesday
night ...
of precipitation 30 percent.
Sunday... Mostly cloudy Mostly cloudy with a 40
in the morning ... Then percent chance of showers.
becoming mostly sunny. Lows around 40.
Highs in the mid 40s.
Thanksgiving
Day...
Sunday
night
and Cloudy with a 50 percent
Monday... Mostly
clear. chance of showers, Highs in
Lows in the upper 20s. 'the mid 50s.

Riley and Douthitt to be inducted in Rio Hall of Fame
Bv

MARK WIUIAMS

• SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - As a
·part of the Bevo Francis
Weekend at the University
of Rio Grande, the Athletics
Hall of ·Fame will swell by
two members as Pam
Douthitt and Stacy Riley
Gosnell will be inducted this
weekend into the Rio
Grande Athletics Hall of
Fame.
Douthitt and Gosnell will
make the 81 st and 82nd
members of the hall of fame.
Gosnell is the second

member of the women 's basketball pro!lram to be
inducted. Lon Hat· 'i on was
inducted last year '' . the first
nlember. Riley is the alHime
leading scorer in women's
basketball history with
2,288 points and was one the
most lethal long range
shooters to ever wear the
Red and White.
She also ranks 8th all-time
in rebounds with 735 , 4th in
assists with 417 and second
in steals with 329.
As a senior ( 1996-97),
Riley made 2nd Team NAIA
All-American, I st Team All-

Great Lakes
Region, AllMid -Ohio
Conference
and was the

M 0

C

Player of
the
Year.
She
was
also named
K o d a k
Douthitt
Honorable
Mention
All -American. She posted
averages of 19.9 points per
game, 7.1 rebounds, 3.8
assists and 2.7 steals.
Her junior season she gar-

nered honorable mention
NAIA All-American (199596) while averaging 16.2
ppg and 5.7 rpg. ). She was
I st Team AII -MOC , I st
Team i\11-Great Lakes
Region that season.
Riley scored 602 points
during her sophomore campaign ( 19.4 ppg.) and 505
points as a freshman (15 .3
ppg.).
She also captured the
Female Athlete of the Year
Award at Rio Grande in both
1995 and 1996.
"Stacy is one of Rio
Grande s top student-ath-

Wahama
heads to
Williamstown

Wealher Underground • AP

Beth Sercent/photo

·B l

. Legacies on line fpr Michigan trio, Page B2
•

Local Weather

Mansfield •

The Daily Sentinel

MASON, W.Va.
Following ~n extremely
physical and emotionally
draining first round triumph
over
I Oth
ranked
Pocahontas County last
week the Wahama White
Falcon football team has its
sights set on second rated
BY RusTY MILLER
AP SPORTS WRITER
Williamstown in quarterfinal round action Saturday
COLUMBUS
afternoon.
Something
was missing ,
The White Falcons will be
Ohio State cornerback
making its seventh visit to
Donald Washington said.
the Class A football quarterAnd it's something that has
finals where the Bend Area
to
be found, and soon.
team has compiled a 2-4
As Illinois continued to
record in second round outrun
the ball, making just
ings. WHS lost its first three
enough
yardage on third
quarterfinal round contests
down
time
after time to conto ·Tyler County (21-0) in
tinue piling up first downs,
1986, Gilbert (29-12) in
the Buckeyes grew more
19.96 and Valley Wetzel (I 2and
more dispirited.
6} in 1998 before winning
How
was this possible,
two of the last three second
for Illinois to pile up 260
round dates with triUJ il!'hs · ·
rushing yards against a team
bver Van (40-16) in 2001
that
was only giving up 65 a
and Matewan (34-20) in
game? How did Juice
2003 before losing to
AP photo
Wheeling Central (31-6) in San Francisco Giants' Barry Bonds gets ready to bat during their baseball game against the Washington Nationals in San Williams, previously known
as a guy defenses loved to
2004.
Francisco, in this Aug. 7, file photo. Bonds was charged Thursday with perjury and obstruction of justice, the culmination force into passing situaThe Yellow Jackets, like of a four-year federal probe into whether he lied under oath to a grand jury investigating steroid use by elite athletes.
tions; pass for four touchWahama, enter Saturday's
downs in what would be the
game with a 9-2 record.
top-ranked Buckeyes' 2&amp;-21
Williamstown's two lone
undoing last . Saturday?
defeats were to a pair of
,
.
.
.
Against
a team that had
Ohio based playoff teams in
BY PAUL ELIAS
released after spending most rently a free agent. In 200 I,
"However, it goes without
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Belpre
( 14-7)
ani!
of the past year in prison for he set the season record with saying that we look forward given up only five passing
Shadyside (47-13). Their
refusing to testify against his 73 home runs.
to rebuning these unsupport- TDs in its first 10 games?
" It was something . we
SAN FRANCISCO
longtime friend.
nine victories came over
Late in the season. the San ed charges in court," Rains
lacked
from the . beginning
"During the criminal Francisco Giants told the said. "We will no doubt have
Class AA playoff partici- Barry Bonds, baseball's
pants Magnolia (30-20) and home run king, was indicted investigation, evidence was seven-time National League more specific comments in of the game," Washington
Tolsia (21-14) in addition to for perjury and obstruction obtained including positive MVP they didn 't want him the very near future once we said. "I don 'I really know
Class A post-season contes- of JUstice Thursday and tests for the presence o( ana- back next year.
have had the opponunity to exactly what it is but we
Bonds could not immedi- actually see this indictment weren't ourselves."
tallls Calhoun Count;v (33- could face prison instead of bolic ·steroids and other perNow the seventh-ranked
8) and .St. Marys (22-0). the Hall of Fame for telling a 'formance enhancing sub- ately be reached for com- that took so long to generBuckeyes ( 10-1. 6- I ·Big
Their remaining four wins federal grand jury he did not stances for Bonds and other ment. One of his attorneys, ate."
South knowingly use performance- athl etes," the indictment John Burris, didn't know of
came
,against
Bonds is scheduled to Ten) have the opportunity to
said.
the indictment before being appear 'in U.S. District Court redeem themselves or add
Harrison (26-6), Doddridge enhancing drugs. ·
The indictment, culmina!In August, when the 43- alerted by The Associated in San Francisco on Dec. 7. to their miseries when thev
County (42-0),.. Ritchie
County
(32-7),
and ing a four-year investigation year-old Bonds passed Hank Press and said he would call · Bonds has never been travel to archrival Michigan
Parkersburg Catholic (30- into steroid use by elite ath- Aaron to become baseball 's Bonds to notify him.
identified by Major League (8-3, 6-1) on Saturday. The
''I'm surprised," Burris Baseball as testing positive Big House will be a big
0). In its 2007 playoff letes, 'charged Bonds with career home run leader, he
opener the Yellow Jackets four counts of perjury and flatly rejected any sugges- said, "but there's been an for steroids.
stage.
defeated
15th ranked one of obstruction of justice. tion that this milestone was effort to get Barry for a long
After Todd Boeckman
"I have yet to ·see the
If
convicted,
he
could
be
stained
by
steroids.
time.
I'm
curious
what
evi"
Midland Trail by a 34-14
details of this indictment and threw his third interception
sentenced to a maximum of
'This record is not tainted dence they have now they while everyone in America with just more than 8 mincount.
at all. At all. Period," Bonds didn't have before ."
Only three of the Wood 30 years in prison.
is considered innocent until utes remaining, Illinois ran
Bonds'
defense
anomey,
Shortly
after
the
indictsaid.
proven guilty, I take this out the clock. Ohio State
County teams' opponents
ment
was
handed
up,
Bonds'
Bonds
finished
the
year
Mike
Rains,
declined
commdictment very seriously blitzed, it gang-tackled, it
this season concluded .the
y.ear with a losing record personal trainer, Greg . with 762 homers, seven ment because he hadn't seen
Please see Bonds, Bl
Please see Defense. B:Z
with the overall slate of the Anderson, was ordered more than Aaron, and is cur- a copy of the indictment.
'
II previous encounters
being an impressive 73-46.
Coach Terry Smith is in
the midst of his fourth term
at the helm of the
..
·Williamstown football program with the Yellow
BY MIKE HARRIS
established as a top star in
AP AUTO RACING WRITER
Jackets compiling a 55-6
NASCAR, who raised
record under Smith's watch.
Johnson's name with Rick
Despite these lofty credenHOMESTEAD, Fla.
Hendrick when .the car
tials Williamstown is still Rusty· Wallace has a lot of owner became serious about
seeking its · first Class A respect for Jeff Gordon and starting a fourth Cup team ~n
footbal~ championship. The Jimmie Johnson. But this 2001.
Yellow Jackets posted a 13- whole friendship thing
"The reason why I sug1 mark last year and have between the title contending gested Jimmie to Rick
gone to the state finals in teammates baffles the Hendrick is because he
three of the past four years. retired NASCAR champion. impressed me before he was
·in a Cup," explained
The sixth largest Class A
"I think that's one thing to ever
tij:hool saw its sate record,
Gordon, the co-owQer of
how they respect each other, Johnson's No. 48 car with
~7-game regular season
but I personally think that Hendrick. "I really thought
this
year's been preny darn if you put him in the kind of
:PIHMIHW•haBia,B•
trying to both of them," quality equipment I'd been
Wallace said. "How do you in for all the years that he
treat your teammate nice could have the same type of
and with respect, because success that l'd .had.
CoNTACfUS
you're wanting to kick his
"It's pretty awesome to
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33·
butt?"
see ·it come from way back
then to where it is now and
Somehow,
four-time
Fu- 1-740-446-3008
see how he's matured."
champion
Gordon
and
E-mail- sportsOmydallysentlnel.com ·
The other h;llf of this
reigning champion .Johnson
Soortt Steff
have been able to draw the mutual admiration society
ESryan Walters, Sports Writer line between their on-track said, "I've alway s, throughAP pholo
rivalry and the friendship out my career, had someone ·
(740) «6·2342. exl. .33
byt"alters 0 myclailytribune.com
that helped put Johnson in to look up to and to learn Teammates Jimmie Johnson , left, and Jeff Gordon pose with the NASCAR Nextel Cup tro'
At
Hendrick phy during a news conference Thursday in Doral. Fla. Johnson goes into Sunday's
an
elite ride at powerful from .
~ Crum, Sports Writer
NASCAR's Chase for the Nextel Cup championship auto race at the Homesteaq-Miam1
Hendrick Motorsports.
ttio) «6·2342, ext. 33
Please
SC~e
Friends;
••
Speedway in Homestead, Fla., with an 86-point lea~ over Gordon.
It was Gordon, already
)~umOmydallyreglster.com

Johnson, Gordon competing
furiously on track; still friends

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·

Please see Rio, B:Z

Buckeyes
look to get
defensive
edge back ·

BY GARY ClARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Bonds indicted.on perjury, ·obstruction charges

•

letes to ever wear the Ri o
Red and White," &gt;aid Ri o
Grande head coach Da vid
Smalley. "A leader on the
basketball court and a cmlscicntious student of the
classroom and she is most
deserving and worthy (&gt;f
entering the University of
Rio
Grande
Alumni
Association 's Athletic Hall
of Fame." ·
Riley came -1o Rio Grande
from Mechanicsburg.
Douthitt ( 1972-76) flayed
basketball and softbal while

'&gt;

.,

,.

!

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 16,2007

Friday, November 16,2007

www.mydailysentinel.com.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

On largest campus, exec prowls Hart, Henne and Long put 'egades on line against OSU
streets to keep parties safe
BY LARRY LAGE

counts yards surrounded
.O.SSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
with orange plastic fencing, a sign of an upcoming
COLUMBUS - Willie party.
.
Young can name almost Saturdays around 10
any high school mascot in p.m. Young parks the van
Ohio.
near the Ohio State law
Big Walnut in central school and observes what
Ohio?
The
Eagles. he calls the migration: stuCenterville near Dayton? dents living in dormitorie s
The Elks. Strongsville. heading toward the land of
southwest of Cleveland? the off-campus parties.
. The Mustangs.·
He opens a notebook,
It's a nifty habit Young begins writing down patuses as an ieebreaker with terns. How many male stuOhio State University stu- dents. How many female.
dents. But it 's not a trivial Who's black. who's white .
pursuit.
"What party are you
Young ' s job is 'to keep going to?" he asks a young
post-football game beer man on a recent October
blasts in the neighbor- night.
hoods around Ohio State.
"Not a clue," the man
the country's largest cam- replies.
Young dissects partying
pus at 52,568 students,
from tripping the switch like a seasoned wildlife
from parties to riots.
biologisi.
Students migrate 111
The director of off-camPus student services , packs,
he
explains,
Young was on the scene because it's easier to enter
the day after a party that the large, more preferable
started on Sept. 15 got out parties in the anonymity of
of hand early the next
.
lk'
ff a group.
m.ormng, ta tng to o - One gauge of the party
campus residents to pre- scene is the number of
vent a repeat performance.
At the party dubbed .. 15 young men carrying cases
on the 15th" - that's 15 as of Natural Light beer in kegs of beer, 165 12- $S.49 for a 12 -pack.
Another gauge: the
ounce cups to a keg _ ·
police faced a crowd of "hoochie" index, Young's
more than 300 "yelling, name for the count of
screaming,
throwing young women dressing
objects , . and fighting ," provocatively in hopes of
according to a Columbus crashing closed parties.
police description of the
Young's pet peeve? Beer
event.
in bottles, because bottles
Students "want to have a have a habit of turning into
good time, and they don ' t projectiles.
His bigger pet peeve?
set out as a rule to get in
trouble , but sometimes Beer served from kegs,
they just find that they which makes it harder to
cannot control the number track your. drinking.
of people · that come to
"Kegs are just irrespontheir parties," Youn,g says. sible," Young says.
Where an outsider sees· Young grew up in
students succumbing to Cleveland and went to
their own worst behavior, Bowling Green State
Young sees opportunity.
University. He's an Ohio
"Every flower doesn't State fan who · hasn't
bloom the first day of missed a homecoming
spring," he likes to say.
game at his own alma
Another saying: There mater in 40 years.
Signed footballs crowd
are three P's in life.
"Where you have people his
cluttered
office.
you' re going to haveprob- Heisman trophy winners.
!ems but you have poten- O.J. Simpson. Franco
· tial, and so we're looking Harris. A prized possesfor the potential," Young sion: the autograph of
says.
Muhammad Ali, earned
On most fall Friday and when Young spied the
Saturday nights, when a fighter at a Chi&lt;;ago res taulot of people his age might rant in 1974.
be hitting the couch or
Young stays optimistic
heading to bed. Young, 58, · despite the chaos he has to
climbs into hi$ white OSU control.
van and starts his rounds.
"I'm out there just to
First he cruises the hopefully help them enjoy
streets east of campus, the college life," he says.
checking out the beer pong "These are . probably four
tournaments on porc,hes - . of the best years you' II
teams try to land ping have but hopefully you
pong balls in cups of beer do11't establish bad patwhich their opponents then terns that will continue till
drink. Or he carefully later years .."
BY ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS

AP SPORTS WRITER ·

ANN ARBOR, Mich . ·Mike Hart did not guarantee a win over Ohio State,
a Ia Jim Harbaugh a couple
decades ago.
Michigan coach Lloyd
Carr chose not to give him
a chance to open his mouth
when the week of hype
kicked off.
The star running back
with shifty moves and
loose Iips was not among
the players Carr made
a'vailable for interviews,
living up to a prediction
Hart heard from a reporter.
"He better let me come
next Monday. It's the last
one," Hart said last week.
"He might not let me
because I might say something stupid."
Sucl! as?
Guaranteeing a win over
Notre Dame or referring to
Michigan State as a little
brother, as Hart did this
year?
Proclaiming
things
would be "different" if the
Wolverines had a rematch
with Ohio State, as Hart
did last season, adding its
defense wasn't "as good as
people thought," after losing last year?
Yeah, something like
that.
Hart, Chad Henne and
Jake Long turned down a
chance to make money in
the NFL this year, returning for their senior seasons
in part for another shot at
the Buckeyes.
The trio's wait is almost
over.
No. 7 Ohio State (10-1,
6-1 Big Ten) will match up
with No. 23 Michigan (8-3,
6-1) Saturday in Ann Arbor
with the outright Big Ten
tille ·at stake.
For Hart, Hen!)e and
Long, their legacies will be
on the line, too.
They· are arguably the
best running back, qu&lt;j.rlerback and offensive tackle
the Wolverines have ever
had, quite an accomplishment at college football'.s
·
winningest program.
But if they go 0-4 against
the Buckeyes, it will add a
permanent blemish on
what is otherwise a flawless resume on and off the

Defense
. from Page 81

Douthitt currently resides
in Meigs County and is the
Athletic Director at Eastern
High School.
A banquet will take place
Saturday evening and both
will introduced, along with
other members of the hall of
fame in attendance, prior to
the stan of the. men's game
at approximately 8 p.m.

smothered the line - noth.ing seemed to work.
The lllini went from their
own 24 to the Ohio State 34
in the march; running 16
plays that covered the 42
yards. They converted a
founh-and-1 on a Williams
sneak, and on third-and-7,
third-and-! 0 and third-and2, picking up first downs
when Williams went right
up the middle on quarter:
back draws.
All-American linebacker
James Laurinaitis said it
was one of the most frustrating segments of ·, his
career.
'
"We just weren't in position and just didn't make
the play," he said. "They
made the plays, that's all
that matters. They made
more plays than we did.
Obviously, it does frustrate
you, but as long as we have
the effon and guys are trying and doi"ng their job,
we' lltake that every day."
Asked what the Ohio

"The president is verr,
disappointed to hear this,'
Bush spokesman Tony
Fratto said. "As this case is
from PageBl
now in the criminal justice
system,
we will refrain from
and will follow its progress any funher
comclosely,'" commissioner Bud ments about specific
it.
But
clearly
Selig said.
is a sad day for baseUnion head Donald Fehr this
ball."
said he was "saddened" to
Bush, who once owned
learn of Bomls' indictment. the Texas Rangers, called
"However, we must Bonds to congratulate him
remember, as the U.S. in August when the Giants'
Attorney stated in his press outfielder broke the home
release today, that an indict- run mark. "You've always
ment contains only allega- been a great hitter and you
tions, -and in this country broke a great record," Bush
every defendant, including said at tl;)e time.
Barry Bonds, is entitled to
Former Senate Majority
the presumption of inno- Leader George Mitchell,
cence unless and until such who is· investigating' drug
time as he is proven guilty use in basebafl, declined
beyond
a
reasonable comment. So· did Hall of
doubt."
Fame vice president Jeff
The
White
House ldelson.
Bonds was charged in the
weighed in, too. ,

indictment with lying when
he said he didn't knowingly
take steroids given to him
by Anderson. Bonds is also
charged with lying that
Anderson never injected
him with steroids.
"Greg wouldn't do that,"
Bonds
testified
in
December 2003 when asked
if Anderson ever gave him
an,Y drugs that needed to be
injected. "He knows .1' m
against that stuff."
Anderson's
attorney,
Mark Geragos, said the
trainer didn't cooperate
with the grand ju,ry that
indicted Bonds.
"This indictment came
out of left field," Geragos
said. "Fral)kly I'm aghast. It
looks like the government
' misled me and Greg as well,
,saying this case couldn't go
forward without him."
Prosecutors
promised

Rio
from PageBl
at Rio Grande. As a sophomore she was voted Most
Valuable Player while averaging 8.0 points per &amp;arne.
She was also the team s top
rebounder and play maker.
In 1974 she helped lead
the softball to a 9-4 record
as she earned team MVP
honors.
Douthitt's coach Diane
Lewis said "Pam absolutely
amazed me at shonstop on
the softball field. I told
someone one time that if'
spon were a poem, it would

Bonds

Pam turning a double play
at second (base)."
Douthitt was regarded as
tremendous leader and
worked elltremely hard at
. both sports. Lewis said that
"Pam set the slal)dard for
practice am] game ethics for
the rest of the team to tolJow."

... If
·

~

you have a question or a comment, write:

NEXTEt.. CUP SEfltES-

11 llllce: Ford 400
• Whe,.: Homestead-Miami
(Fla.) Speedway (1.5 mi. ), 267
laps/400.5 miles.
• - n: Sunday, Nov. 18
•LMI,_'I - : Greg Biffle
• Qullfyllll record: Jamie McMurray, Dodge, 181.111 mph.
N011. 14, 2003 .
•RKo record: Tony Stewart,
Pontiac. 140.335 mph, Nov.
14,1999.

• Lut week: Jimmie Johilson
is the king of the N'ASCAR
wOf'ld, and the coronation came
a week earljer than expected.
Johnson's victory in the Check:"\ er 500, at Phoenix International Raceway, was more than im-

photo
University of Michigan offensive lineman Jake Long (77), left, quarterback Chad Henne,
center, and running back Mike Hart (20), right, pose for a portrait at Michigan's Media Day,
Monday, Aug. 6, in Ann Arbor, Mich. Michigan's terrific trio of seniors have done just about
everything during their stay in Ann Arbor. Except beat Ohio State that is.
AP

field. The trio is also 0-3 in
bowl games.
'
Long made the biggest
gamble financially when
he chose to come back
because he likely would've
been a top-five pick.
The offensive tackle
insisted a win wouldn't
validate his decision.
"That's not what this
game is about," he bristled.
"This game is about this
team, about this championship. It's not about me.
I'm not even worried l)bout
that."
In the preseason, however, Long agreed that it was
fair to say the trio's legacy
would be diminished without a win against Ohio
State or a bowl opponent.
"No matter what type of
season we have, people are
going to lbOk at what we
do against Ohio State and
our bowl opponent," Long
said in August. ·
While the trio's mark
against the Buckeyes will
always be remembered,
each player has · also
accomplished a lot of
things that can't be taken
away.
Hart is Michigan 's career
rushing leader with 4,867
yards, ranking fifth in Big

Ten history, and has run for sentative of this program
at least 100 yards in the on and off the field," he
eight games he has been said. "When you look at
healthy enough to start this three guys, all of whom
season.
A high -ankle could have left early to go
sprain has sidelined him on to the draft, and they all
for about 3 112 games .
came back. To me, that
Henne holds school speaks for the fact that
records with 9,274 yards they love their experience
passing and 84 touchdown here.
passes. He added to his
"They're all going to
lore la.st month by playing graduate. And . they're all
with a separated shou lder going to be very, very sucat Illinois, helping the · cessful when t]1ey leave
Wolverines rally for a 27- Michigan."
17 win. The injury kept
Before Hart cut off any
Henne off the field for Ohio State-related quesmuch of last week's loss at lions last week, he did proWisconsin and out of a vide hint about how imporgame three weeks ago.
tant it is to him to finally
, Long w:is the first of five beat the Buckeyes. .
players .The Assoc.iated
"Everyone
knows
Press listed · earlier this already how bad I want to
year as players worthy of win that game," he said.
Heisman Trophy consider- "''m going to give everyation, but with no shot to thing I've got that game."
win it. The 6-foot-7; 315.
Ohio State cornerback
pound tackle has routinely Malcolm Jenkins sounded
punished defensive line- like he was ready to quiet
men and linebackers to Hart once and for all wben
pave the way for Hart, and asked about the running
it's difficult to recall a sack back's comments after the
being his fault.
top-ranked Buckeyes beat
Carr is quick to rave the
second-ran~ed
about the· trio as players Wolverines last season.·
and people.
"Hopefully at the end of
"They've been every- this year's game, he won 't
thing a coach could want have too much to · say,"
in a player and as a repre- Jenkins said.

State defenders learned then were torched for 41
about themselves against points in a 41-14 loss to
Illinois,
cornerback Florida in the national
Malcolm Jenkins, victim- championship game. ·
ized on at least twu of the
Some say this year's
touchdown passes, said' the defense is tired and is bound
lesson was clear.
to give up points, just like
"That we're not invinci- last year.
ble. We knew that coming
"When you look at it, you
in but it was an eye-opener could easily say that, but
as far as if we don't play our we don't want to fall into
best every week we can'r that category and fall off at
even get away with it play- the end of the year," lineing our 'A' game or we can backer Marcus Freeman
fall short of what we want said. "We're gonna have to
to accomplish:" he said.
step it up this weekend and
Jenkins said there' s no play our best ball that we
moaning and groaning. The · have all year."
past is passed.
The Michigan team
"We've already let it go. they'll be facing is dramatiWe're focused. We know cally different from Illinois.
dwelling on the past isn 't
The swift and elusive
going to get us a win this Williams is as good a runweek," he said. "We're ning quarterback as there is
going to take what we can in the country and tailbacks
from the last game and learn_ Rashard Mendenhall and
and try to improve on those Daniel Dufrene make for a
things this week."
powerful 1-2 punch.
The failure to hold the
The Wolverines counter
line down the · stretch with Chad Henne, who has
allowed many to again . a sore right (throwing)
question Ohio State's shoulder, or true freshman
defense. A year ago, in a Ryan Mallett at quarterperfect regular season. they back. Neither is a runner of
gave up 39 points while Williams' stature, but both
holding off Michigan in the have strong arms.
regular-season finale and
Mike Han, if he recovers
Bpnds they wouldn't charge
htm with any drug-related
counts if he testified truthfully. But according to the
indictment, Bonds repeatedly denied taking any
steroids or performanceenhancing drugs despite
evidence to the contrary.
For instance,' investigators seized a so-called "doping calendar" labeled "BB"
during a raid of Anderson's'
house.
"He could know other
BBs," Bonds replied when
shown the calendar during
his testimony.
Asked
directly
if
Anderson supplied him with
steroids, Bonds answered:
"Not that! know of." Bonds
even denied taking steroids
when he was shown docu~
ments ·revealing a positive
steroids test for a player
named Barry B.

Bonds said at the end of
the 2003 season, Anderson
rubbed some cream on his
arm that the trainer said
would help him recover.
Anderson also gave him
something ·he called "flax
seed oil," Bonds said.
Bonds then testified that
prior to the 2003 season, he
never took anything supplied by Anderson - which
the indictment alleges was a
lie because the doping calendars
seized
from
Anderson's house were
dated 2001.
Bonds became the high~st-profile figure caught u_p
m the government mvesiJgation, launched in 2002,
with the raid of the Bay
Area Laboratory CoOperative (BALCO) - the
Burlingame-based supplements lab that was the center of a steroids distribution

from a high ankle sprain, is
among the elite tailbacks in
the land. If he remains hobbled or even less than I 00
percent, the Wolverines'
running· game isn't the
same even with quality
backup Brandon Minor.
It is out wide where
Michigan has many more
weapons than Illinois, led
by native Ohioan Mario
Manningham, along with
Adrian Arrington and Greg
Mathews.
The
Buckeyes
say
they've tightened things up
this week. that they ' re
ready to overcome any mistakes from last week and to
make up for shortcomings
· at the end of last year and
this.
"We have a huge chip on
our shoulders because of
what happened last week
and because we didn't play
go(/d at all against
Michigan
last · year,"
Jenkins said. "We have a lot
of things to prove and not
oqly to ourselves but to a
lot of other people."
He added, "I'm pretty ·
sure everybody will be
locked and loaded and we'll
be ready."
rmg.
Bonds has long been
shadowed by allegations
that he used performanceenhancing drugs. The son of
former big league star
Bobby Bonds, Barry broke
into the majors with the
Pittsburgh Pirates in 1986
as a lithe. base-stealing outfielder.
By the late 1990s, he'd
bulked up to more than 240
po\Jnds - his head, in particular, becoming noticeably bigger. His physical
growth was accompanied
by a remarkable power
surge.
·
Speculation
of
his
impending indictment had
mounted for more than a
year.

• 1&gt; Phoeni• Is the best p!ace on
· · ' the circuit for a boring mce. The

·

scenery~.

pressive . In only his sixth season , he reached double figures·

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

·

his second straight Nextel Cup
championship and made a
mockery of NASCAR cha irman

Brian France's carefully constructed Chase. ·rm just doing
my job,Msaid Johnson . Four
races ago, Johnson trailed his
Hendrick Motorsports teammate, Jeff Gordon. by 68
points . Johnson has won every
race since. Gordon has finished In the top 10 in al! four.
Johnson's net gain is 154
points. "It's over,• said a shaken Gordon after fin ishing lOth.
What Johnson has done - winning 10 races. in a season, and
four straight at a time when it
ought to be mosf difficult has thrown almost every other
driver in this sport for a loop.

• Race: Ford 300
• Where: HomesteadMiami (Fla.) Speedway (1.5
miles), 200 iaps/ 300
miles
• When: Saturday. Nov. 17
• Laat yoar'o winner: Matt
Kenseth
• QuatlfylfC roconl: Casey
Mears. Dodge, 177.936
mph, N.,.. 18,2004.
• Race record: Joe Nemechek, Che\lrolet,
132.191 mph, Nov. U ,
2001.
'
• Laot we¥: Kyle Busch
drove a Chevrolet to victory
in the Arizona Travel 200 at
Phoenix International Raceway.

HOMESTEAD DATA.

• Race: Ford 200
• Where: HomesteadMiami (Fla.) Speedway (1.5
miles). 134 laps/201

Nov.:ll

IT' 1'es .

• When: Friday, Nov. 16 ·
• Last year'• winner: Mark
Martin
• QuallfylnC reconl: David
Reutimann, Toyota,
173.116 mph, Nov. 18,
2005.
• Race record: Ron Hornaday, Chevrolet. 133.260
mph, Nov. 15, 2002 .
• ~t week: Kyle Busch
drove a Chevrolet to victory
in the Casino Arizona 150
at Pt1oenix International
Racewa)'.

in·victories. all but wrapped up

very P&lt;eltY.

' ~&gt;Barring water in the gas t.aflk,
or some other unforeseen dis. aster. Jimmie Johnson is going
to win his second straight championship.

(

)

ARIC ALMIROLA

NEXTEL CuP SERIES

No.

8

- :S _lj~

r

;s . p: J_ .

j ;s:s:;

).

v

U.S. ARMY CHEVROLET

_ • No other driver has won four
straight races since Jeff Gordon
· ln 1998, No one's won five
· straight since Bobby Allison and
· Richard Petty, both of whom did ·
-so In 1971.

E
R

s
u
Gordon

1&gt; Of the season's 16 COT races,
Chevrolets won 13, Hendrick
Motorsparts won nine and Johnson won five.

s

Harvtck

JeHGordon
v•. Kevin Harvlck
As if Gordon's problems chasing
Jimmie Jot1nson weren't enough, he
had to trade licks with Harvick en
route to a lOth-place finish in the
Checker 500. ~vou can't touch Kevin
Harvick, because, if you touch him,
he's got a short fuse. He gets pretty
upset,~ said Gordon. Harvick's retort? ~He's going to get what he has
got coming back, and I gave it back
to him, so I guess we're even.~

1&gt; Johnson, with 33 career victories, moved past Tony Stewart
for 20th place al,time. ·
'I&gt; The al&gt;tlme record for consec·

utive victories in NASCAR's premier 5eries is 10. 5et by
. Richard Petty In 1967. a season
In .which Petty won a record 27
races overall.

NASCAR This Week's Monte
hlo take: "Harvick ·
Dutton
wound up fini shing sixth, so I guess
he made his point."

Ill•••

. 1&gt; Gordon led by 53 points three
· races ago, meaning that he has
lost 139 points In three races
without once finishing outside
the top 10.
~ Greg Biffle is going for four
· straight wins at HomesteadMiami Speedway In the season
· finale.

... ._ Before this year, neither John-

, son·nor Gordon had ever won at
' Phoenix, where both won this
year.

U.S. Army Racing

Artc Almlrola, 23, made the sixth start of his Nextel Cup career at Phoenix International Raceway, wllere he Hnlshed 26th.

• Johnson will clinch the champl·
onship, e\'en If Gordon wins the
, final race, by flnishing 18th at
.Homestead.
1&gt; Oh, by the way, Gordon has
6,486 points, which would al.
ready be enough to win the
Chase last Y&lt;~ar. And If there
weren't a Chase, this Y&lt;!ar's
champion would be Gordon .
That's the second time It's happened •

.I" Who'lhat
~Jimmie

·· · ,. Johnson has
: • won four
races. in a
row,
first

me

,:· su¢1
·

streak

since Jeff
Gordon
• pulled It off
, . In 1998: ...
Gordon has an active streak
i·· of $8-&lt;en straight toP,iO fln·
·.lshes.
.

.

,.

.;',"'WIIO'Inat - Juan Pablo

, • Montoya. sam H~mish Jr.,
Jacques Villeneuve. and
Patrick Carpentier all made
the field, but none of the four

,.fl'

..,

•A ~·

'&gt;I'

~-

j&gt;:

.'~-/f!U'

better
tl1in Hth.
y,. . ··- ,.

--~"' ~

;,'

.,..

f

.

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

AVONDALE, Ariz.- Aric Almirola,
once the st~r of Joe Gibbs Racing's diversity program, is now employed at
Dale Earnhardt Inc., where next year
he will split time with Mark Martin in
the team's No.8 Chevrolet.
. Almirola, 23, made the sixth start of
his Nextel Cup career at Phoenix International Raceway, where he finished a career-best 26th. Earlier this
year, he was credited with a Busch Series victory at the Milwaukee Mile,
though it was Denny Hamlin who took
the checkered flag. Almirola won the
pole but turned the car over to the
late-arriving Hamlin.
"It's been a big adjustment," said
Almirola, who is from Tampa, Fla.
"One of the bigger things has been adjusting to making my car fast for a

long period of time. I came from Late
Model racing, where the goal was to
make the car fast for 100 laps. The
length of the races has been a big adjustment for me. I've finally gotten to
where -I can run a whole Busch race.
I've had some good runs and been
competitive. Now I've got to learn to
double that (in Cup)."
.
. "All these guys know each and
· every race track, and they know,
when they get done with the final
practice session on Saturday, what it
takes to be good on Sunday. They have
that in their memory banks, and that's
a big advantage."
Complicating Almirola's apprenticeship is NASCAR's move to the Car of
Tomorrow.
"The COT doesn't remind me of
anything I've driven before," he said.
"It's still a race car. It's still got four
tires and a &amp;leering wheel, but man,

it's definitely different."
Almirola said racing at NASCAR's
top level isn't as much a matter of aggressiveness as it is a matter of controlling aggressiveness.
"You've got to control ?our aggressiveness and try to figure out how to
finish these 500-mile races," he said.
"We'll take it to the next level and try
to get good finishes, then eventually
take it to another level and try to win
races.
"I've been fortunate enough to race
on the same track with these guys a
few times now. Not only are they fast.
They're extremely fast and know how
to put themselves in position to win
races."
·
Want to read more from Monte
Dutton? Check out http:llwww.gastongazette.com/sectionslsportslnascar

Home.tNd lut• alw~~P
been • work In progren
Homestead-Miami Speedway
opened as Homestead Motorsports
Complex with a Busch Series race,
won -by Dale Jarrett, in 1995. The
track has twice been reconfigured.
Origilially, it was a scaled-down repli·
ca of Indianapolis Motor Speedway,
with four distinct turns. Later the '
turns on each end of the track were
rounded . The second reconfiguration
created graduated banking to faciti·
tate multiple grooves and more passing. Tony Stewart won the first two
Cup races at the 1.5-mile track in
1999-2000.

Maybe the COT .,oiler
lhould be ........-oug~~
Having just finished watching the
Talladega ra ce and hearing drivers
complain about riot being able to
see the drivers in front of them, I
was just curious. Has anyone ever
thought about using clear plastic or
bulletproof glass for the rear spoiler? One does not have to be a rock·
et scientist to figure that out, and
believe me, I am not. Just a fan.
Ronald E. Denk
Concordia, Kan •
It's an Interesting idea. We sus·
pect, given the contours of tfle wings,
if would be difficult to come up with
such a wing that would not distorr.

any view through it. The roughness of
materials -alsq could be an obstacle.

.•

--~ ....

l

.'

Rising star Almirola a product of Gibbs Racing's diversity program

..

Labonte on COT: As long as it's going straight ...
&lt; J JD·f~ ;.\J lr:.. .sr:..l:f~

) team since it. was founded in turns out."
Rudd finished 35th, three
NASCAR This Week
1949. The Level Cross home
laps
down.
the obvious.
p-roduced 268 victories, 10
AVONDALE, Ariz. -Enter"Thrning the car in the cor- championships and nine DayI
ing its final appearance of the ner has been the biggest fac- tona 500 triumphs.
season, Bobby Labonte ·gave a . tor," he said. "All the cars, are '
,
Mismatch made in heaven- ·
mostly positive review of the fine going straight."
I
Much
has been made, almost
Car of Thmorrow.
"I've always felt pretty good
I
One more time - Ricky from the outset, of the extraorabout the Car of .Tomorrow
Rudd made his final appear- dinary rapport' between Jimraces,'' said Labonte, the 2000
After all this time - Petty . ance at Phoenix, 12 years after mie Johnson and crew chief
Chad Knaus.
Winston Cup champion. "We Enterprises will relocated his only win here.
had a good jump on it (at the from its longtime complex in
Honest to gosh, Rudd is retir- The relationship has oft been
outset), and that helped. It's a Level Cross, N.C., to the ing at the end of the season. compared to the 1990s success
boxier car, it's top-heavy and Mooresville shops formerly Though he doesn't care to ~d ­ of Jeff Gordon and Ray Everneveryone has had that struggle used by Robert Yates Racing. mit it, he all but retired at the ham.
Now that Johnson and Gorof making it turn. It's just not The leased space will house the end of 2005 before reconsiderdesigned to do what the others Nos. 43 and 45 Dodges of Bob- ing this year. Once again, don are the line finalists in the
.cars do. That was probably the by Labonte and Kyle Petty, re- though, Rudd said he would Chase for the Nextel Cup, it
purpose.
spectively.
miss the annual trips to this begs the question: How .would
Gordon have fared if Knaus
"It's tough because there's · The move will begin in De- . desert mile.
such a small box to work in, es- cember and is intended to be
"The Phoenix area is a part was his crew chief?
"I don't think Jeff could
pecially when you're trying to completed by year's end. The of the country that's so beautiturn on a track like Phoenix. shop is 85,000 square feet, with ful to visit, and I'll miss racing work with Chad," said Johnson.
It's tough on the mechanics and 30,000 additional square feet here," he said. "Phoenix is also "He'd drive him cra~y.
"I think Jeff prefers an easy-··
crew chiefs. The drivers are for fabrication. The current a track where speeds are fast
going
type like Robbie Loomis
screaming tQ make it turn, but Petty fab shop is in and aerodynamics come i~to
or
(current
crew chief) Steve
there's only so much you can Thomasville, N.C. Every facet play when you look at sett mg
.adjust. You just have to learn of the team will move to up a car to race here, so it will Letarte. Maybe when Ray
to race with it."
Mooresville.
be interesting to see how my (Evernham) left, Jeff said nevLabonte then accentuated
It's the' first move for the last race weekend in Phoenix er again."
By Monte Dutton

.. c . - TRUCK SERIU
'- Mike Skinner

2: Ron HornadaY Jr.

· . ' 3. TraVIS Kvapll
4. Todd Bodine
I. Johnny Benson

3,865
• 29
· 454
· 461
· 498

Associated Press Writer
Chris Weber in Los Angeles
. contributed to this report.

•

-

NASCAR This

..

I

Predictably - Though it was
virtually a foregone conclusion,
Hall of Fame Racing is officially switching from Chevrolet to
Toyota. HOF'is almost a satellite of Joe Gibbs Racing, from
whom it is getting J.J. Yeley
next year. Veley's departure
makes room for i{yle Busch to
become new team'mate to Tony
Stewart and Denny Hamlin.
I

Abetter buy - Best Buy will
move from Haas CNC Racing
- and lame-duck driver Jeff
Green - to Gillett Evernham
Motorsports and Elliott Sadler
next. year. Haas CNC, meanwhile, has two drivers, Scott
Riggs and Jeremy Mayfield
signed, Johnny Sauter officially
in limbo and no sponsors. Apparently, Sauter's only hope of
remaining with the team would
be in a tliird team. The flight of
Best Buy would appear to make
that prospect dimmer.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 16,2007

Friday, November 16,2007

www.mydailysentinel.com.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

On largest campus, exec prowls Hart, Henne and Long put 'egades on line against OSU
streets to keep parties safe
BY LARRY LAGE

counts yards surrounded
.O.SSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
with orange plastic fencing, a sign of an upcoming
COLUMBUS - Willie party.
.
Young can name almost Saturdays around 10
any high school mascot in p.m. Young parks the van
Ohio.
near the Ohio State law
Big Walnut in central school and observes what
Ohio?
The
Eagles. he calls the migration: stuCenterville near Dayton? dents living in dormitorie s
The Elks. Strongsville. heading toward the land of
southwest of Cleveland? the off-campus parties.
. The Mustangs.·
He opens a notebook,
It's a nifty habit Young begins writing down patuses as an ieebreaker with terns. How many male stuOhio State University stu- dents. How many female.
dents. But it 's not a trivial Who's black. who's white .
pursuit.
"What party are you
Young ' s job is 'to keep going to?" he asks a young
post-football game beer man on a recent October
blasts in the neighbor- night.
hoods around Ohio State.
"Not a clue," the man
the country's largest cam- replies.
Young dissects partying
pus at 52,568 students,
from tripping the switch like a seasoned wildlife
from parties to riots.
biologisi.
Students migrate 111
The director of off-camPus student services , packs,
he
explains,
Young was on the scene because it's easier to enter
the day after a party that the large, more preferable
started on Sept. 15 got out parties in the anonymity of
of hand early the next
.
lk'
ff a group.
m.ormng, ta tng to o - One gauge of the party
campus residents to pre- scene is the number of
vent a repeat performance.
At the party dubbed .. 15 young men carrying cases
on the 15th" - that's 15 as of Natural Light beer in kegs of beer, 165 12- $S.49 for a 12 -pack.
Another gauge: the
ounce cups to a keg _ ·
police faced a crowd of "hoochie" index, Young's
more than 300 "yelling, name for the count of
screaming,
throwing young women dressing
objects , . and fighting ," provocatively in hopes of
according to a Columbus crashing closed parties.
police description of the
Young's pet peeve? Beer
event.
in bottles, because bottles
Students "want to have a have a habit of turning into
good time, and they don ' t projectiles.
His bigger pet peeve?
set out as a rule to get in
trouble , but sometimes Beer served from kegs,
they just find that they which makes it harder to
cannot control the number track your. drinking.
of people · that come to
"Kegs are just irrespontheir parties," Youn,g says. sible," Young says.
Where an outsider sees· Young grew up in
students succumbing to Cleveland and went to
their own worst behavior, Bowling Green State
Young sees opportunity.
University. He's an Ohio
"Every flower doesn't State fan who · hasn't
bloom the first day of missed a homecoming
spring," he likes to say.
game at his own alma
Another saying: There mater in 40 years.
Signed footballs crowd
are three P's in life.
"Where you have people his
cluttered
office.
you' re going to haveprob- Heisman trophy winners.
!ems but you have poten- O.J. Simpson. Franco
· tial, and so we're looking Harris. A prized possesfor the potential," Young sion: the autograph of
says.
Muhammad Ali, earned
On most fall Friday and when Young spied the
Saturday nights, when a fighter at a Chi&lt;;ago res taulot of people his age might rant in 1974.
be hitting the couch or
Young stays optimistic
heading to bed. Young, 58, · despite the chaos he has to
climbs into hi$ white OSU control.
van and starts his rounds.
"I'm out there just to
First he cruises the hopefully help them enjoy
streets east of campus, the college life," he says.
checking out the beer pong "These are . probably four
tournaments on porc,hes - . of the best years you' II
teams try to land ping have but hopefully you
pong balls in cups of beer do11't establish bad patwhich their opponents then terns that will continue till
drink. Or he carefully later years .."
BY ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS

AP SPORTS WRITER ·

ANN ARBOR, Mich . ·Mike Hart did not guarantee a win over Ohio State,
a Ia Jim Harbaugh a couple
decades ago.
Michigan coach Lloyd
Carr chose not to give him
a chance to open his mouth
when the week of hype
kicked off.
The star running back
with shifty moves and
loose Iips was not among
the players Carr made
a'vailable for interviews,
living up to a prediction
Hart heard from a reporter.
"He better let me come
next Monday. It's the last
one," Hart said last week.
"He might not let me
because I might say something stupid."
Sucl! as?
Guaranteeing a win over
Notre Dame or referring to
Michigan State as a little
brother, as Hart did this
year?
Proclaiming
things
would be "different" if the
Wolverines had a rematch
with Ohio State, as Hart
did last season, adding its
defense wasn't "as good as
people thought," after losing last year?
Yeah, something like
that.
Hart, Chad Henne and
Jake Long turned down a
chance to make money in
the NFL this year, returning for their senior seasons
in part for another shot at
the Buckeyes.
The trio's wait is almost
over.
No. 7 Ohio State (10-1,
6-1 Big Ten) will match up
with No. 23 Michigan (8-3,
6-1) Saturday in Ann Arbor
with the outright Big Ten
tille ·at stake.
For Hart, Hen!)e and
Long, their legacies will be
on the line, too.
They· are arguably the
best running back, qu&lt;j.rlerback and offensive tackle
the Wolverines have ever
had, quite an accomplishment at college football'.s
·
winningest program.
But if they go 0-4 against
the Buckeyes, it will add a
permanent blemish on
what is otherwise a flawless resume on and off the

Defense
. from Page 81

Douthitt currently resides
in Meigs County and is the
Athletic Director at Eastern
High School.
A banquet will take place
Saturday evening and both
will introduced, along with
other members of the hall of
fame in attendance, prior to
the stan of the. men's game
at approximately 8 p.m.

smothered the line - noth.ing seemed to work.
The lllini went from their
own 24 to the Ohio State 34
in the march; running 16
plays that covered the 42
yards. They converted a
founh-and-1 on a Williams
sneak, and on third-and-7,
third-and-! 0 and third-and2, picking up first downs
when Williams went right
up the middle on quarter:
back draws.
All-American linebacker
James Laurinaitis said it
was one of the most frustrating segments of ·, his
career.
'
"We just weren't in position and just didn't make
the play," he said. "They
made the plays, that's all
that matters. They made
more plays than we did.
Obviously, it does frustrate
you, but as long as we have
the effon and guys are trying and doi"ng their job,
we' lltake that every day."
Asked what the Ohio

"The president is verr,
disappointed to hear this,'
Bush spokesman Tony
Fratto said. "As this case is
from PageBl
now in the criminal justice
system,
we will refrain from
and will follow its progress any funher
comclosely,'" commissioner Bud ments about specific
it.
But
clearly
Selig said.
is a sad day for baseUnion head Donald Fehr this
ball."
said he was "saddened" to
Bush, who once owned
learn of Bomls' indictment. the Texas Rangers, called
"However, we must Bonds to congratulate him
remember, as the U.S. in August when the Giants'
Attorney stated in his press outfielder broke the home
release today, that an indict- run mark. "You've always
ment contains only allega- been a great hitter and you
tions, -and in this country broke a great record," Bush
every defendant, including said at tl;)e time.
Barry Bonds, is entitled to
Former Senate Majority
the presumption of inno- Leader George Mitchell,
cence unless and until such who is· investigating' drug
time as he is proven guilty use in basebafl, declined
beyond
a
reasonable comment. So· did Hall of
doubt."
Fame vice president Jeff
The
White
House ldelson.
Bonds was charged in the
weighed in, too. ,

indictment with lying when
he said he didn't knowingly
take steroids given to him
by Anderson. Bonds is also
charged with lying that
Anderson never injected
him with steroids.
"Greg wouldn't do that,"
Bonds
testified
in
December 2003 when asked
if Anderson ever gave him
an,Y drugs that needed to be
injected. "He knows .1' m
against that stuff."
Anderson's
attorney,
Mark Geragos, said the
trainer didn't cooperate
with the grand ju,ry that
indicted Bonds.
"This indictment came
out of left field," Geragos
said. "Fral)kly I'm aghast. It
looks like the government
' misled me and Greg as well,
,saying this case couldn't go
forward without him."
Prosecutors
promised

Rio
from PageBl
at Rio Grande. As a sophomore she was voted Most
Valuable Player while averaging 8.0 points per &amp;arne.
She was also the team s top
rebounder and play maker.
In 1974 she helped lead
the softball to a 9-4 record
as she earned team MVP
honors.
Douthitt's coach Diane
Lewis said "Pam absolutely
amazed me at shonstop on
the softball field. I told
someone one time that if'
spon were a poem, it would

Bonds

Pam turning a double play
at second (base)."
Douthitt was regarded as
tremendous leader and
worked elltremely hard at
. both sports. Lewis said that
"Pam set the slal)dard for
practice am] game ethics for
the rest of the team to tolJow."

... If
·

~

you have a question or a comment, write:

NEXTEt.. CUP SEfltES-

11 llllce: Ford 400
• Whe,.: Homestead-Miami
(Fla.) Speedway (1.5 mi. ), 267
laps/400.5 miles.
• - n: Sunday, Nov. 18
•LMI,_'I - : Greg Biffle
• Qullfyllll record: Jamie McMurray, Dodge, 181.111 mph.
N011. 14, 2003 .
•RKo record: Tony Stewart,
Pontiac. 140.335 mph, Nov.
14,1999.

• Lut week: Jimmie Johilson
is the king of the N'ASCAR
wOf'ld, and the coronation came
a week earljer than expected.
Johnson's victory in the Check:"\ er 500, at Phoenix International Raceway, was more than im-

photo
University of Michigan offensive lineman Jake Long (77), left, quarterback Chad Henne,
center, and running back Mike Hart (20), right, pose for a portrait at Michigan's Media Day,
Monday, Aug. 6, in Ann Arbor, Mich. Michigan's terrific trio of seniors have done just about
everything during their stay in Ann Arbor. Except beat Ohio State that is.
AP

field. The trio is also 0-3 in
bowl games.
'
Long made the biggest
gamble financially when
he chose to come back
because he likely would've
been a top-five pick.
The offensive tackle
insisted a win wouldn't
validate his decision.
"That's not what this
game is about," he bristled.
"This game is about this
team, about this championship. It's not about me.
I'm not even worried l)bout
that."
In the preseason, however, Long agreed that it was
fair to say the trio's legacy
would be diminished without a win against Ohio
State or a bowl opponent.
"No matter what type of
season we have, people are
going to lbOk at what we
do against Ohio State and
our bowl opponent," Long
said in August. ·
While the trio's mark
against the Buckeyes will
always be remembered,
each player has · also
accomplished a lot of
things that can't be taken
away.
Hart is Michigan 's career
rushing leader with 4,867
yards, ranking fifth in Big

Ten history, and has run for sentative of this program
at least 100 yards in the on and off the field," he
eight games he has been said. "When you look at
healthy enough to start this three guys, all of whom
season.
A high -ankle could have left early to go
sprain has sidelined him on to the draft, and they all
for about 3 112 games .
came back. To me, that
Henne holds school speaks for the fact that
records with 9,274 yards they love their experience
passing and 84 touchdown here.
passes. He added to his
"They're all going to
lore la.st month by playing graduate. And . they're all
with a separated shou lder going to be very, very sucat Illinois, helping the · cessful when t]1ey leave
Wolverines rally for a 27- Michigan."
17 win. The injury kept
Before Hart cut off any
Henne off the field for Ohio State-related quesmuch of last week's loss at lions last week, he did proWisconsin and out of a vide hint about how imporgame three weeks ago.
tant it is to him to finally
, Long w:is the first of five beat the Buckeyes. .
players .The Assoc.iated
"Everyone
knows
Press listed · earlier this already how bad I want to
year as players worthy of win that game," he said.
Heisman Trophy consider- "''m going to give everyation, but with no shot to thing I've got that game."
win it. The 6-foot-7; 315.
Ohio State cornerback
pound tackle has routinely Malcolm Jenkins sounded
punished defensive line- like he was ready to quiet
men and linebackers to Hart once and for all wben
pave the way for Hart, and asked about the running
it's difficult to recall a sack back's comments after the
being his fault.
top-ranked Buckeyes beat
Carr is quick to rave the
second-ran~ed
about the· trio as players Wolverines last season.·
and people.
"Hopefully at the end of
"They've been every- this year's game, he won 't
thing a coach could want have too much to · say,"
in a player and as a repre- Jenkins said.

State defenders learned then were torched for 41
about themselves against points in a 41-14 loss to
Illinois,
cornerback Florida in the national
Malcolm Jenkins, victim- championship game. ·
ized on at least twu of the
Some say this year's
touchdown passes, said' the defense is tired and is bound
lesson was clear.
to give up points, just like
"That we're not invinci- last year.
ble. We knew that coming
"When you look at it, you
in but it was an eye-opener could easily say that, but
as far as if we don't play our we don't want to fall into
best every week we can'r that category and fall off at
even get away with it play- the end of the year," lineing our 'A' game or we can backer Marcus Freeman
fall short of what we want said. "We're gonna have to
to accomplish:" he said.
step it up this weekend and
Jenkins said there' s no play our best ball that we
moaning and groaning. The · have all year."
past is passed.
The Michigan team
"We've already let it go. they'll be facing is dramatiWe're focused. We know cally different from Illinois.
dwelling on the past isn 't
The swift and elusive
going to get us a win this Williams is as good a runweek," he said. "We're ning quarterback as there is
going to take what we can in the country and tailbacks
from the last game and learn_ Rashard Mendenhall and
and try to improve on those Daniel Dufrene make for a
things this week."
powerful 1-2 punch.
The failure to hold the
The Wolverines counter
line down the · stretch with Chad Henne, who has
allowed many to again . a sore right (throwing)
question Ohio State's shoulder, or true freshman
defense. A year ago, in a Ryan Mallett at quarterperfect regular season. they back. Neither is a runner of
gave up 39 points while Williams' stature, but both
holding off Michigan in the have strong arms.
regular-season finale and
Mike Han, if he recovers
Bpnds they wouldn't charge
htm with any drug-related
counts if he testified truthfully. But according to the
indictment, Bonds repeatedly denied taking any
steroids or performanceenhancing drugs despite
evidence to the contrary.
For instance,' investigators seized a so-called "doping calendar" labeled "BB"
during a raid of Anderson's'
house.
"He could know other
BBs," Bonds replied when
shown the calendar during
his testimony.
Asked
directly
if
Anderson supplied him with
steroids, Bonds answered:
"Not that! know of." Bonds
even denied taking steroids
when he was shown docu~
ments ·revealing a positive
steroids test for a player
named Barry B.

Bonds said at the end of
the 2003 season, Anderson
rubbed some cream on his
arm that the trainer said
would help him recover.
Anderson also gave him
something ·he called "flax
seed oil," Bonds said.
Bonds then testified that
prior to the 2003 season, he
never took anything supplied by Anderson - which
the indictment alleges was a
lie because the doping calendars
seized
from
Anderson's house were
dated 2001.
Bonds became the high~st-profile figure caught u_p
m the government mvesiJgation, launched in 2002,
with the raid of the Bay
Area Laboratory CoOperative (BALCO) - the
Burlingame-based supplements lab that was the center of a steroids distribution

from a high ankle sprain, is
among the elite tailbacks in
the land. If he remains hobbled or even less than I 00
percent, the Wolverines'
running· game isn't the
same even with quality
backup Brandon Minor.
It is out wide where
Michigan has many more
weapons than Illinois, led
by native Ohioan Mario
Manningham, along with
Adrian Arrington and Greg
Mathews.
The
Buckeyes
say
they've tightened things up
this week. that they ' re
ready to overcome any mistakes from last week and to
make up for shortcomings
· at the end of last year and
this.
"We have a huge chip on
our shoulders because of
what happened last week
and because we didn't play
go(/d at all against
Michigan
last · year,"
Jenkins said. "We have a lot
of things to prove and not
oqly to ourselves but to a
lot of other people."
He added, "I'm pretty ·
sure everybody will be
locked and loaded and we'll
be ready."
rmg.
Bonds has long been
shadowed by allegations
that he used performanceenhancing drugs. The son of
former big league star
Bobby Bonds, Barry broke
into the majors with the
Pittsburgh Pirates in 1986
as a lithe. base-stealing outfielder.
By the late 1990s, he'd
bulked up to more than 240
po\Jnds - his head, in particular, becoming noticeably bigger. His physical
growth was accompanied
by a remarkable power
surge.
·
Speculation
of
his
impending indictment had
mounted for more than a
year.

• 1&gt; Phoeni• Is the best p!ace on
· · ' the circuit for a boring mce. The

·

scenery~.

pressive . In only his sixth season , he reached double figures·

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

·

his second straight Nextel Cup
championship and made a
mockery of NASCAR cha irman

Brian France's carefully constructed Chase. ·rm just doing
my job,Msaid Johnson . Four
races ago, Johnson trailed his
Hendrick Motorsports teammate, Jeff Gordon. by 68
points . Johnson has won every
race since. Gordon has finished In the top 10 in al! four.
Johnson's net gain is 154
points. "It's over,• said a shaken Gordon after fin ishing lOth.
What Johnson has done - winning 10 races. in a season, and
four straight at a time when it
ought to be mosf difficult has thrown almost every other
driver in this sport for a loop.

• Race: Ford 300
• Where: HomesteadMiami (Fla.) Speedway (1.5
miles), 200 iaps/ 300
miles
• When: Saturday. Nov. 17
• Laat yoar'o winner: Matt
Kenseth
• QuatlfylfC roconl: Casey
Mears. Dodge, 177.936
mph, N.,.. 18,2004.
• Race record: Joe Nemechek, Che\lrolet,
132.191 mph, Nov. U ,
2001.
'
• Laot we¥: Kyle Busch
drove a Chevrolet to victory
in the Arizona Travel 200 at
Phoenix International Raceway.

HOMESTEAD DATA.

• Race: Ford 200
• Where: HomesteadMiami (Fla.) Speedway (1.5
miles). 134 laps/201

Nov.:ll

IT' 1'es .

• When: Friday, Nov. 16 ·
• Last year'• winner: Mark
Martin
• QuallfylnC reconl: David
Reutimann, Toyota,
173.116 mph, Nov. 18,
2005.
• Race record: Ron Hornaday, Chevrolet. 133.260
mph, Nov. 15, 2002 .
• ~t week: Kyle Busch
drove a Chevrolet to victory
in the Casino Arizona 150
at Pt1oenix International
Racewa)'.

in·victories. all but wrapped up

very P&lt;eltY.

' ~&gt;Barring water in the gas t.aflk,
or some other unforeseen dis. aster. Jimmie Johnson is going
to win his second straight championship.

(

)

ARIC ALMIROLA

NEXTEL CuP SERIES

No.

8

- :S _lj~

r

;s . p: J_ .

j ;s:s:;

).

v

U.S. ARMY CHEVROLET

_ • No other driver has won four
straight races since Jeff Gordon
· ln 1998, No one's won five
· straight since Bobby Allison and
· Richard Petty, both of whom did ·
-so In 1971.

E
R

s
u
Gordon

1&gt; Of the season's 16 COT races,
Chevrolets won 13, Hendrick
Motorsparts won nine and Johnson won five.

s

Harvtck

JeHGordon
v•. Kevin Harvlck
As if Gordon's problems chasing
Jimmie Jot1nson weren't enough, he
had to trade licks with Harvick en
route to a lOth-place finish in the
Checker 500. ~vou can't touch Kevin
Harvick, because, if you touch him,
he's got a short fuse. He gets pretty
upset,~ said Gordon. Harvick's retort? ~He's going to get what he has
got coming back, and I gave it back
to him, so I guess we're even.~

1&gt; Johnson, with 33 career victories, moved past Tony Stewart
for 20th place al,time. ·
'I&gt; The al&gt;tlme record for consec·

utive victories in NASCAR's premier 5eries is 10. 5et by
. Richard Petty In 1967. a season
In .which Petty won a record 27
races overall.

NASCAR This Week's Monte
hlo take: "Harvick ·
Dutton
wound up fini shing sixth, so I guess
he made his point."

Ill•••

. 1&gt; Gordon led by 53 points three
· races ago, meaning that he has
lost 139 points In three races
without once finishing outside
the top 10.
~ Greg Biffle is going for four
· straight wins at HomesteadMiami Speedway In the season
· finale.

... ._ Before this year, neither John-

, son·nor Gordon had ever won at
' Phoenix, where both won this
year.

U.S. Army Racing

Artc Almlrola, 23, made the sixth start of his Nextel Cup career at Phoenix International Raceway, wllere he Hnlshed 26th.

• Johnson will clinch the champl·
onship, e\'en If Gordon wins the
, final race, by flnishing 18th at
.Homestead.
1&gt; Oh, by the way, Gordon has
6,486 points, which would al.
ready be enough to win the
Chase last Y&lt;~ar. And If there
weren't a Chase, this Y&lt;!ar's
champion would be Gordon .
That's the second time It's happened •

.I" Who'lhat
~Jimmie

·· · ,. Johnson has
: • won four
races. in a
row,
first

me

,:· su¢1
·

streak

since Jeff
Gordon
• pulled It off
, . In 1998: ...
Gordon has an active streak
i·· of $8-&lt;en straight toP,iO fln·
·.lshes.
.

.

,.

.;',"'WIIO'Inat - Juan Pablo

, • Montoya. sam H~mish Jr.,
Jacques Villeneuve. and
Patrick Carpentier all made
the field, but none of the four

,.fl'

..,

•A ~·

'&gt;I'

~-

j&gt;:

.'~-/f!U'

better
tl1in Hth.
y,. . ··- ,.

--~"' ~

;,'

.,..

f

.

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

AVONDALE, Ariz.- Aric Almirola,
once the st~r of Joe Gibbs Racing's diversity program, is now employed at
Dale Earnhardt Inc., where next year
he will split time with Mark Martin in
the team's No.8 Chevrolet.
. Almirola, 23, made the sixth start of
his Nextel Cup career at Phoenix International Raceway, where he finished a career-best 26th. Earlier this
year, he was credited with a Busch Series victory at the Milwaukee Mile,
though it was Denny Hamlin who took
the checkered flag. Almirola won the
pole but turned the car over to the
late-arriving Hamlin.
"It's been a big adjustment," said
Almirola, who is from Tampa, Fla.
"One of the bigger things has been adjusting to making my car fast for a

long period of time. I came from Late
Model racing, where the goal was to
make the car fast for 100 laps. The
length of the races has been a big adjustment for me. I've finally gotten to
where -I can run a whole Busch race.
I've had some good runs and been
competitive. Now I've got to learn to
double that (in Cup)."
.
. "All these guys know each and
· every race track, and they know,
when they get done with the final
practice session on Saturday, what it
takes to be good on Sunday. They have
that in their memory banks, and that's
a big advantage."
Complicating Almirola's apprenticeship is NASCAR's move to the Car of
Tomorrow.
"The COT doesn't remind me of
anything I've driven before," he said.
"It's still a race car. It's still got four
tires and a &amp;leering wheel, but man,

it's definitely different."
Almirola said racing at NASCAR's
top level isn't as much a matter of aggressiveness as it is a matter of controlling aggressiveness.
"You've got to control ?our aggressiveness and try to figure out how to
finish these 500-mile races," he said.
"We'll take it to the next level and try
to get good finishes, then eventually
take it to another level and try to win
races.
"I've been fortunate enough to race
on the same track with these guys a
few times now. Not only are they fast.
They're extremely fast and know how
to put themselves in position to win
races."
·
Want to read more from Monte
Dutton? Check out http:llwww.gastongazette.com/sectionslsportslnascar

Home.tNd lut• alw~~P
been • work In progren
Homestead-Miami Speedway
opened as Homestead Motorsports
Complex with a Busch Series race,
won -by Dale Jarrett, in 1995. The
track has twice been reconfigured.
Origilially, it was a scaled-down repli·
ca of Indianapolis Motor Speedway,
with four distinct turns. Later the '
turns on each end of the track were
rounded . The second reconfiguration
created graduated banking to faciti·
tate multiple grooves and more passing. Tony Stewart won the first two
Cup races at the 1.5-mile track in
1999-2000.

Maybe the COT .,oiler
lhould be ........-oug~~
Having just finished watching the
Talladega ra ce and hearing drivers
complain about riot being able to
see the drivers in front of them, I
was just curious. Has anyone ever
thought about using clear plastic or
bulletproof glass for the rear spoiler? One does not have to be a rock·
et scientist to figure that out, and
believe me, I am not. Just a fan.
Ronald E. Denk
Concordia, Kan •
It's an Interesting idea. We sus·
pect, given the contours of tfle wings,
if would be difficult to come up with
such a wing that would not distorr.

any view through it. The roughness of
materials -alsq could be an obstacle.

.•

--~ ....

l

.'

Rising star Almirola a product of Gibbs Racing's diversity program

..

Labonte on COT: As long as it's going straight ...
&lt; J JD·f~ ;.\J lr:.. .sr:..l:f~

) team since it. was founded in turns out."
Rudd finished 35th, three
NASCAR This Week
1949. The Level Cross home
laps
down.
the obvious.
p-roduced 268 victories, 10
AVONDALE, Ariz. -Enter"Thrning the car in the cor- championships and nine DayI
ing its final appearance of the ner has been the biggest fac- tona 500 triumphs.
season, Bobby Labonte ·gave a . tor," he said. "All the cars, are '
,
Mismatch made in heaven- ·
mostly positive review of the fine going straight."
I
Much
has been made, almost
Car of Thmorrow.
"I've always felt pretty good
I
One more time - Ricky from the outset, of the extraorabout the Car of .Tomorrow
Rudd made his final appear- dinary rapport' between Jimraces,'' said Labonte, the 2000
After all this time - Petty . ance at Phoenix, 12 years after mie Johnson and crew chief
Chad Knaus.
Winston Cup champion. "We Enterprises will relocated his only win here.
had a good jump on it (at the from its longtime complex in
Honest to gosh, Rudd is retir- The relationship has oft been
outset), and that helped. It's a Level Cross, N.C., to the ing at the end of the season. compared to the 1990s success
boxier car, it's top-heavy and Mooresville shops formerly Though he doesn't care to ~d ­ of Jeff Gordon and Ray Everneveryone has had that struggle used by Robert Yates Racing. mit it, he all but retired at the ham.
Now that Johnson and Gorof making it turn. It's just not The leased space will house the end of 2005 before reconsiderdesigned to do what the others Nos. 43 and 45 Dodges of Bob- ing this year. Once again, don are the line finalists in the
.cars do. That was probably the by Labonte and Kyle Petty, re- though, Rudd said he would Chase for the Nextel Cup, it
purpose.
spectively.
miss the annual trips to this begs the question: How .would
Gordon have fared if Knaus
"It's tough because there's · The move will begin in De- . desert mile.
such a small box to work in, es- cember and is intended to be
"The Phoenix area is a part was his crew chief?
"I don't think Jeff could
pecially when you're trying to completed by year's end. The of the country that's so beautiturn on a track like Phoenix. shop is 85,000 square feet, with ful to visit, and I'll miss racing work with Chad," said Johnson.
It's tough on the mechanics and 30,000 additional square feet here," he said. "Phoenix is also "He'd drive him cra~y.
"I think Jeff prefers an easy-··
crew chiefs. The drivers are for fabrication. The current a track where speeds are fast
going
type like Robbie Loomis
screaming tQ make it turn, but Petty fab shop is in and aerodynamics come i~to
or
(current
crew chief) Steve
there's only so much you can Thomasville, N.C. Every facet play when you look at sett mg
.adjust. You just have to learn of the team will move to up a car to race here, so it will Letarte. Maybe when Ray
to race with it."
Mooresville.
be interesting to see how my (Evernham) left, Jeff said nevLabonte then accentuated
It's the' first move for the last race weekend in Phoenix er again."
By Monte Dutton

.. c . - TRUCK SERIU
'- Mike Skinner

2: Ron HornadaY Jr.

· . ' 3. TraVIS Kvapll
4. Todd Bodine
I. Johnny Benson

3,865
• 29
· 454
· 461
· 498

Associated Press Writer
Chris Weber in Los Angeles
. contributed to this report.

•

-

NASCAR This

..

I

Predictably - Though it was
virtually a foregone conclusion,
Hall of Fame Racing is officially switching from Chevrolet to
Toyota. HOF'is almost a satellite of Joe Gibbs Racing, from
whom it is getting J.J. Yeley
next year. Veley's departure
makes room for i{yle Busch to
become new team'mate to Tony
Stewart and Denny Hamlin.
I

Abetter buy - Best Buy will
move from Haas CNC Racing
- and lame-duck driver Jeff
Green - to Gillett Evernham
Motorsports and Elliott Sadler
next. year. Haas CNC, meanwhile, has two drivers, Scott
Riggs and Jeremy Mayfield
signed, Johnny Sauter officially
in limbo and no sponsors. Apparently, Sauter's only hope of
remaining with the team would
be in a tliird team. The flight of
Best Buy would appear to make
that prospect dimmer.

�Page

B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 16, 2007'

www .mydailysentinel.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

\!rrtbune - Sentinel - l\e tilter

San Diego Padres ace Jake Peavy wins Investigators never took
NL Cy Young Award in unanimoUs vote their eyes cff the ball :
Bv

MIKE FITZPATRICK

AP BASEBAll WRITER

NEW YORK Jake
Peavy has been one of the
best pitchers in the
National League for years.
Thi s season, he pulled
away from the pack.
The San Diego Padres
ace was an unanimous winner of the NL Cy Young
Award on Thursday after
leading the league in wins,
ERA and strikeouts pitching's version of a
Triple Crown .
"It was just one of those
seasons where kind of
everything came together,"
he said on a conference
call.
Peavy received all 32
first-place votes and finished with 160 points in
ballotin~ by the Baseball
Writers Association of
America. Arizona sinkerballer Brandon ·Webb, last
year's winner, was a distant
runner-ul' with 94 points.
He was hstc;d second on 31
ballots and third on one.
"Obviously, I was elated.
This is as btg as it gets as
far as individual awards,"
Peavy said. "Truly amaz. ing. A very humbling day
when you think about all
my peers that take the
mound every fifth day."
Peavy went 19•6 while
topping the majors in ERA
(2.54) and strikeouts (240)
for the Padres, "who came
within one win of their
third consecutive playoff
berth . He joined Roger
Clemens as the only starting pitchers to win a Cy
Young Award without tossing a complete game.
Clemens did it once in
each league : 2001 with the
New York Yankees (AL)
and 2004 with Houston
(NL).
"I can definitely get better. Our bullpen's been so
stinkin' good around here
it's. hard to get deep in
these games," Peavy said.
"I've got a long way to ·go
to be who I want to be."
It was the 12th time an
NL pitcher has been an
unammous choice for' the
honor, the first since
Arizona's Randy Johnson
in 2002. Peavy became the
fourth San Di_ego pitcher to

Johnson won four straight
limes from 1999-2002.
; Webb was 18-10 with a
3.01 ERA and 194 strikeouts , pitching an NL-best
236 1-3 innings. His streak
of 42 scoreless innings
helped
the
surprising
Diamondbacks finish with
the best record in the
league (90-72).
Atlanta' s Tom Glavine in
1992 was the only other
NL pitcher to finish second .
. one year after winning the
award .
·A two-time All -Star,
Peavy also won an ERA
title in 2004 and a strikeout
crown in 2005. His nasty
stuff has made him one of
baseball's toughest assignments for years, but this
season
.
. was his most
ImpreSSIVe.
"I don't really feel that I
did anything different in
'04 or '05, other than just
had better luck to help win
some games and obviously
get some recognition for
that," he said.
Peavy earned a $100,000
bonus for winning the
award, and the price of San
Diego's 2009 club option
increased by $3 million to
$11 mil lion.
AP photo
He knows the kind of
San Diego Padres hurler Jake Peavy throws a pitch against money he could command
Arizona Diamondbacks batter Jeff Cirillo in the first inning of on the open market. Still,
a baseball game in phoenix, in this Sept. 5 file photo. he said he 'd like to work
out a contract extension
Peavy was voted the NL Cy Young award winner Thursday.
and stay with the Padres,
win the award, joining long," Peavy said. "I reall y though he doesn 't want t\)
reliever
Mark
Davis thought that this year 's negotiate during the sea( 1989), Hall of Farner team, if we got in the play- son.
Gaylord Perry (1978) and offs, could really make
" I think it can be distractsome noi se~"
lefty Randy Jones (1976).
ing," Peavy said. "We're
Brad Penny of the Los either going to do it this
Peavy had a chance to
put the Padres in the post- Angeles Dodgers finished offseason or we'll address
season - and earn his 20th third in the voting. the issue next offseason.
win - when he started the Cincinnati's Aaron Harang
"I'm really · not worried
wild-card
tiebreaker was fourth and Chicago's about it," he added. 'The
against Colorado. Bui the Carlos Zambrano came in team has given me finan26-year-old right-hander fifth.
cial security for the rest of
was ineffective at Coors
Peavy, the · National this old Alabama boy's life .
Field, giving up six runs League's starter in the All- ... I just want to be fair to
and 10 hits in 6 1-3 Star game, was the front- the rest of my peers when I
runner nearly all season. sign something."
innings.
The · Rockies rallied for He consistently stymied
The American League
three runs against career opponents, allowing only MVP will be announced
with Alex
saves
leader
Trevor 13 home runs in 34 starts. Monday
Hoffman in the 13th and He gave up 169 hits and 68 Rodriguez considered a
lock - followed Tuesday
won 9-8, then charged all walks in 223 1-3 innings.
Selected by San Diego in by NL MVP, which could
the way to the World
the 15th round of the 1999 be a close race.
Series.
Cleveland lefty C.C.
"That was a tough way to draft, Peavy became the
go. We were so close and fifth different NL pitcher to Sabathia won the AL Cy
had grinded it out for so take the prize since Young Award on _Tuesday.

Friends

wins and an 86-foint lead
over Gordon . I Johnson
finishes 18th or better, he
wins ·the title, regardless. If
fromPageBl
Gordon finishes 15th or
worse, he cedes his friend
Motorsports, Jeff is certain- the trophy.
ly that for me, and I feel that
The two met with the
it's been good for me ... for media
Thur~day
as
the last five years, I've been NASCAR tried to build a
studying Jeff and his dri- little more hype for a finish
ving styles at different that may not be as scintillattracks and, obviously, you ing as it would like.
can learn a lot from that."
Johnson pointed out that the
The culmination of all friends drove. to the press
this happy talk will come conference together, chat· Sunday at Homestead- ting about how well they get
Miami Speedway when one along despite tl!e · obvious
of the two buddies will walk pressures each faces.
"We are human," Johnson
away witl! the Nextel Cup.
Johnson goes into the sea- said. "We go through emoson-ending Ford 400 with a tions and we are frustrated.
big edge - four straight We have moments where ·

Wahama

in the air."
Six seniors, five juniors
and a sophomore comprise
the Yellow Jackets starting
fromPageBl
offensive eleven while on
winning streak come to a defense Williamstown is
conclusion earlier this year_ expected to go witl! a lineup
following a stunning 14-7 consisting of five seniors,
six juniors' and a sophoupset loss to Belpre.
Earlier this week Smith more. Six players go both
stated that he "didn't know ways with four of those
to much about Wahama" , being linemen. Senior
but did relate that - he Justin Wajda (5-foot-11 235.
pounds), junior Robbie
thought the White Falcons Wigal (5-9 185), junior
had a "super offense with Ryan Zide (5-10 238) . and
good skill people". "l'.m sophomore Cody Matheny
impressed
with
their (6-0 230) are two-way
[Wahama] quickness and starters on the line with
they have several good ath- fllmker/linebacker Owen
letes and their defense is Dagostine (5-10 145) and
similar to what we run."
tailba9k/s.afety Cameron
Smith was reluc tant to · Powell (6-0 165) also startrelay any information con- ing both offensively and
cerning how the Yellow defensively.
The remaining regulars
Jackets plan to attack
Wahama other than to give a on offense include senior
generic answer of "we hope quarterback
Drew
to ·stay out of second ·and Townsend (6-4 185), senior
third down long yardage sit- fullback Greg Davis (5-1 0
uations. We hope to estab- 205), senior wide receiver
Iish the run and throw ,!h~ Key in Board · (6-4 170),
football when we wlllltli'n!l:-':;;· senior offensive lineman
not when we have to. We ·· Pat Smith (6-7 315) and
would like to put the White junior tight end Matt Kiger
Falcons in second and long (6-6 .215).
and third and long positions
The rem aining starters
and force them to throw defensively are expected to
when w,e have our defense be senior lineman Corey
ready when they put tl!e ball Hart (6-2 216), senior cor-

-

we didn't agree with what
was going on out on the
track, but we've always
been able to talk through it,
have tl!at respect."
Wallace, the , 1989 Cup
champion, said it isn 't really surprising how well the
two native Californians get
along, considering their
similarities.
"They're both close to the
same age," said Wallace,
now an analyst for the
ABC/ESPN
NASCAR
races. "They hang out
together all the time, they
have fun together, they
vacation . together. And
they've got a great, great
calming influence in their
car owner that's with them
all the time. This guy's at

~

..

~

-·--.---... -·--·---·-

CLASSIFIED

BY JIM LITKE

PP

sPORTS coLUMNIST

trrllates me," he said, on for a narrow victory.
the shop all the time.
That kind of a duel isn't
"I think they really, really shrugging. " It is complirespect Rick . And the things. cated and it is tough a likely Sunday on the conthey like are almost identi- times. But having someone siderably faster !.S-mile
cal."
and
oval
you know so well and have Homestead
So, do the two champions so much respect for, I think Gordon has mixed emoever get annoyed with one has made it easier in our tions about tryin$ to take
the championship away
another?
situations.
·"We both have shown from Johnson.
"The only thing he's irri"We want to end the seatated rne with is that four that we're willing to race
son
on a positive note,"
(wins) in i\ row here late- hard and a~gressive with
ly," Gordon said, laughing. one another. '
. Gordon said. "But the only
That was most apparent way we're going to have a
" I mean, I've got a 5.2 (finishing) average (in the . in the spring race on the real chance is if Jimmie
oval
at has a problem. We doii 't
Chase for the champi- half-mile
where wish that upon anybody,
onship) and I'm 86 points Martinsville,
down going into the final John son and
Gordon and certainly not our teamrace. That irritates me."
. waged a battle for the top mate.
Johnson looked a little spot over the final 53 laps,
''I'm just proud of
sheepish when asked to with Gordon slamming Hendrick Motorsports and
reply to the same question. · hard into Johnson 's rear the fact that the champi"I really can't think of numerous times trying to onship is going to come
anything about Jeff that · pass before hi s friend held home to Rick Hendrick."

nerback Ben Williamson (5- Klingensmith (6-1 295).
10 140), junior linebacker Senior James Gray (6-0
Nate .Radabaugh (6-0 170), 165), junior Colby Davis
junior corner Micah Wood (5- 10 150), junior Kasey
(6-4 170) and junior line- White (5-10 180), sophobacker Joshua Radabaugh more Kevin .Laudermilt (6-0
(6-0 175). The placekicker 280), sophomore Colin
is sophomorP- Joe Palm (6-0 Pierce (5-11 175), sopho160) while the punter will more Matt Dangerfield (5-7
145) and freshman Scott
be senior Corey Hart.
Roush
(5-I 0 260) are also
Williamstown averages
over 235 pounds across its expected to see lots of
front line with the backfield action on Saturday for the
being led by a speedy Bend Area grid tea.m.
Powell while Davis is a
Wahama averages 28.7
bowl-you-over type full- points per game offensively
back . The Yellow Jackets while the White Falcon
average. 23.2 points per defense is giving up just 12
game offensively while the points to · the. opposition .
defense is allowing I 0.5 The Mason County gridders
points per contest.
trai I in the overall series
Wahama is expected to go with Williamstown by a 4-8
with sophomore William · margin · with the Yellow
Zuspan (5-9 145) at quarter- Jackets· owning wins in the
back with senior Derek last six games. The last two
Veazey (5-8 170), junior ·encounters were closely
Kyle Zerkle (5-8 1'45) and fought
affairs
before
sophomore Micaiah Branch ·Williamstown prevai led hy
(5-8 160) in the backfield. a three point (24-21) margin
Junior Garrett Underwood and a seven point (24-17)
(5- I0 160) will be at wide spread.
receiver and senior Gabe
Kick-off time for the
Roush (6-1 170) is the tight quarterfinal round contest at
end. The interior line will Williamstown High School
likely con sist of seniors is I :30 p.m. wi th the winner
Brent Jones (5-10 190) and earning the opportunity to
Caleb Roach (5-7 220) , host a third round contest
junior Trey Anderson (6-0 against "!o. II St. Marys 'or
165) and sophomores Luke No. 14 Buffalo in the siate
Ingels (5 X 190) anJ Kevin semifinals.
·

--- -------:--..,.-----------'----

while everyone in America is
considered innocent until
proven guilty, I take this
Federal . prosecutors finally mdictment very seriously
stuck a pin in Barry Bonds.
and will follow its progre~s
Satisfying aS it might have closely," he said ..
been to see all that hot air
How much would you
leak out of tl!e slugger before have paid to climb inside
he carried off the most cher- Selig's head and follow tl!e
ished record in baseball. tl!ought processes while he
there's at least this consola- composed even that brief
tion: Late is still better than statement? Especially since
never.
he endured a lifellme of
The perjury and obstruc- aggravation to say even that
tion of · justice charges much .
announced Thursday were
Ten years ago, Bonds was
four y~ars and two grand only a blip on Bud's radar
juries in the making. Maybe screen. Back 'then, Selig was
tt shouldn't have taken that too busy celebrating ·the
long to shred Bonds' flimsy game's recovery from the
"flax seed oil" defense. But canceled 1994 season, about
investigators couldn't get his to bask in a renaissance
longtime flunky, convicted launched· by the home-run
BALCO bag man Greg derby
between ' Mark
Anderson, to cooperdte. And McGwire and Sammy Sosa
for all the help baseball kept four years later.
promising on tl!e drug-test- . Then, just as people started
mg front, it never could lay a asking tough questions,
glove on Bonds.
along came Bonds in 2001
So in a nice bit of serendip- with an inflated frame and an
ity, even with Anderso l)-..,_ ego that lgJew no bounds. It
clammed up in a jail cell, dtdn't matter how often or
they indicted Bonds by doing how many different ways·
the same thing that made him Selig tried to explain away
the toughest out in the game. all those baseballs flying out
They never took their eye off of all those ballparks; Bonds
the ball.
made a mockery of every
"I'm curious what evi- excuse.
dence they have now, they
Every one of his predecesdidn't have before," sa1d sors lost muscle and power
John Burris, one of Bonds' as they aged? Not Barry.
attorneys.
Pitche.rs wouldn't throw
the
answer: him anything to hit? Bonds
Here's
Enough.
was relentless and patient to
Take as much time as you . a fault.
·
need at the end of this senBaseball made it tougher to
tence to unload all those sus- cheat? Bonds passed every
test they gave him with flypicions and all that anger.
Done?
ing colors.
As his pursuit of Henry
Thought so.
Most of us made up our Aaron dragged out, Selig
minds about Bonds Ion~ was forced to buy the book,
before the word "defendant "Game of Shadows" to find
was fonnally attached to his oilt what was missing. Even
name . Now Bonds' faithful more galling than the extra
fans and even those who con- homework was the way
gratulated
him
with Bonds flouted not just baseti,~::htlipped smiles can begin ball's rules, but tl!e law of tl!e
chmbmg off the fence .
·land.
President George Bush, a
Called before a federal
former owner of the Texas grand jury investigating tl!e
Rangers, felt compelled to Bay Area Laboratory Coweigh in quickly, albeit cau- Operative ;Bonds testified on
tiously. Even while warning Dec. 4, 200J, that he tl!ought
to let justice run its course, a substance given to him by
his spokesman called it "a Anderson was "flax seed
sad day for baseball." No oil." When prosecutors
kidding.
showed him a doping caJenCommissioner Bud Selig dar labeled with tl!e initials
echoed those remarks.
"BB," Bonds smoothly
"I have yet 10 see the replied, "He could know · ·
details of this indictment and otl!er BBs ."
.
·

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

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ANNouN&lt;:EMENTS

1

Firewood.2yrs.air-&lt;lried. cui
and split,98%oak,2"1o hicko·
ry, you haul,or I haul
OH.HEAP.Vender 949·2038
Home Oecoraling Open
House. Sal. Nov. 17, Bam·
Spm, Gloria Oiler, 31645 St.
At. 325, Langsville, Oh
45741' (740)742-2076
Patent Pending status has
been awarded Io Chares
I F
ScoH (So.Ohio Monilor Sys)·
Gallipolis, Ohio by the U.S.
Patent Of1ice on a con·
sumer-operated HVAC effi·
ciency monitoring device.

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Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thu,..day for Sundays

POLICIES: OhiO Ylll-r Publllhlnll reserves the right to ldlt, rejtct.-Or canealany ad alany time. Errors mual be reported on 1"-lirtt day ol
Trlbu,..s.ntln.ti-Aeglat., will be rnponalble tor no .nor. thlln ttM colt of tlw •PIIce occupied b"t the error and only the tlratlnaertlon. We
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.any loll 01/tiPif'H that resultl from the pyblleltlon or oml11lon of an advertlaemtnt. CorrectiQn wil l be mttde in the flrstavalltlble edition. •
are alwa~a conlldlnllal . • Currant rata Clird appllaa. • All real a'atata adverl:lsamama a.. aubjKI to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968. • This
acupta only help wanted ads
standards. Wa will not knowingly accept any advertising In violation .of the law.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

0

Free r. 1ttens · Fluffy gray
tiger striped. 7 wks old. litter
traloed. Call740·379-9392
Free kittens, call between
430 &amp; 73:;;:·3406

t

pa
Cle'l'!!,n
ervice, Home, OHic
uildings &amp; more, now tak
g New Clients lor pack
e info Please Call 30
12·4455

I

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

No Fee Unless We Win I
1·686·56&lt;·3345
HI \I I "I \I I

YARI&gt; SALt:-

FOR SALE

0

367-7129 .

MOBJU: HoMES
HJRSALE

1994 Oakwood 14x70,
2BR, new carpet through·
out, all appliances, well kept,
under pinning· &amp; porches.
$10,000 080.' 740- 388·
0436
All real estate adYertlslng
In this newspaper Ia
200014,70. 3BR. 2BA.lots
aubject to .the Federal
of up grades , on rented lot.
Fair Housing Act of 1968
34 · Kraus· Beck Rd
which makes It illegal to
Gallipolis. 3 m1les hom
advarUse "any
Gallipolis off SR 588. 446·
preference, limiteUon or
8935 Price reduced.
discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex
New 3Bedroom homes from
lamlllal status or national
$214.36
per month.lncluQes
orlgln , or any Intention to
many
upgrades.
delivery &amp;
make any suet\
sel·up. (740)385-2434
preference, limitation or

r

This newepaper will not

knowingly
1semen1accept
1 1
vert
• or rea
eatata which Ia In
violation or th•law, Our
readers are hertlby

VA-

www.comics.com

.

fiELp WANTF..D

newspaptu are
available on an equal
this

'·
·

3BR. 2BA. 1800 sq.lt
remodeled Ranchon 1 acre
m/1 In city. New kit w/ pantry
u.,.r n "'•~ e ll·l·iii--w-ANfEI)_:,;._.,J &amp; laundry rm. Huge master
•u.u- "I'Ll.,
suite w/ FP &amp; private
To Do
entran~e. DR, LAw/ gas FP/
NEA Inc

11110

li!U

PoMt:ROY/Mmm.E AVON! AU Areas! To Buy or Ohio Valley Home Heahh: George's Ponallle Sawmill.
Gcirage sale, tradition· Sell. Sh1rley Spears ..304· 1 h' . STNA CNA don't haul your Logs to the
111
17
2male/lemate
·californiaRabbits.white al blue Longaberger pottery, 675·1429·
nc. mng
' and· M~ljustcall304-675~1957 .
Home
Health1 Aides
1 b good
1o h
.
d
k
blacK &amp; white 304·937·3192 · aby bedd.s, toys,1 I s.,c t . Christian Comnany
seeking Personal Ca e Aides. Full , Would like to care lorelderly.
""' from home Part Time and Per Diem 740·441·031 1
·or 304·937·2705
1ng,
1ng,
m
1
e
on
Manager
to
work
·ne
.,.
·lable. Ap p.,
. ,.,
B..han · Aacl
.._,;:;;:;::.;
~;;;;;;;,-___, $2,000·$6,000 per month, poSIIOOS ava1
p
9 wk old Sheagl es . 1/2 a
YARilS·LEexc., Benefits FT/PT call G
al -1480
Jackson Ike, =iij;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Sheltie &amp; 112 Beale
3
"
11!pO1-IS, phone 44 1·1 393 lllr10
g
.
PI:
Pu:.AsANr
888·434·6256
a
u..................
males, 1 tamale. Call 740- .._
tor Skillad Office or apply at
om•f'llr.o'S)
: ~~~~~~~~~4:46~-6~5~67:____--, · Big GaraQe Sale Tools and seeking
CourtsidelineBarcook8 and
Grill dishnow 1456. Jackson Pike, phone
for, ~==OI'I'o;;KilJNTIY;~:~
441 9263
lots more t26 English Ad washer. M,ust be highly mali· Passport/Private
Care
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Sat 171h 6·?
valed and hard working. Call Ollice.Compelilive Wages
•NOTICE•
4x4's For Sate .............................................. 725
fLEAAUCflMARKEI:ON
AND . 1441 ·9371to set up an inter· and Benefits including OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Announcement ............................................
·
030
t bYat 308 2nd health insurance and lNG co · recommends
v1·ew or sop
Antlquea..................:....................................530
Ave to fill out an application. mileage
that you dO business with
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
G II'1 N:. d H' S
- - - - - - - - people you know. and
Auction and Flea Uarket.............................OBO Cross Creek Auction Buffalo a a a emy IQh chool
NOT lo send money
· &amp; Acceaaorlea ·.......................... 760 Aucfton s aturday 6p m Th'IS currentl Y has the poslTton of PAIS is seeking ·
through the mall until you
, Auto Parta
. Auto.Rapalr..................................................770 weeks Dealer D&amp;N from Varsity Assistant Girls LPN: PT administer/monitor have investigated' the
. Autot for Sale....................... :......................]10 Virginia. Building is full . Basketball Coach open. patient medication prepara· :o:ff~er:in:g·::;;::==~
Boata &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750 Starting to sell high quality Applicant must have up to lion for Individuals wilh
. Building Supplle,a........................................!JSO knives such as Case, Buck dale CPA certification, BCI developmentaldisabilities in
BuelnetlandBulldlngs ............. ,,,,, ........... 340 &amp;Mossy Oak. Visa and clearance and State Mason County and sur·
MoNEY
'itUIInell Opportunlty .................................210' Master Card (304) 550· Department of Education rounding areas. $13·$15 per ~=:;;ro;l.o::A:N::~
Bualnna Tralnlng ....................................... 140 16,6 StephenReedy 1639 Pupil Activity Validation hour based on experience.
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Certi!icalion Interested Please call (304) 373·1011
Camping Equipment ...................................780 Riverside Auction Barn Sal. applicants should contact or toll free al 1·877·373· ••NOTICIE•*
. Carda of Thanks .. ~ ....................................... 010 Night @6pm on At 7 South. Bill Wamsley, Athletic 101 1.
Child/Elderly care ..................:·.................... 190 5 miles below the Dam. Like Director at 740·446-3212. - - - - - - - - Borrow Smarl. Contact
Electrlcai/RefrlftAratlon
...............................840 new Winchester Model 1200 Home Health Care of SED is POST OFFICE NOW
the Ohio Division of
... .....................................
EqulpmentforRent
480 12 Gauge, new in Abox currently accepting applicaHIRING
Financial Institution's
Excavallng .................................. ~................ 830 Mossberg model 500 12 f 1 LPN' F 11 .
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
Office of consumer
Farm Equlpment..........................................610 gauge w/2 barrels, 410 IOns or s. u lime part
$57K annuallY
Affairs BEFORE you refl·
Competitive 1nc lud'1ng Federa1Bene1·1ts nance your home or
Farml for Rent............................................ 430 gauge BoII acl1.on 5ears &amp; lime per diem.
Farms for Sala .....................................:....... 330 Roebuck J.C Higgins, H&amp;A ;~g~~!e. 1·866·368-1100 and OT.Paid Training,
obtain a loan. BEWARE
For Lllae ..................................................... 490 9 shot 22 pistol Model 929,
Vacations-FT/PT
of requests for art/ large
For S.le..............'..........................................585 22 bOll action Model 80, 4
1·866·542·1531
advance payments of
For Sale or Trade......................................... 590 new bath-tubs by KOhler, 3
USWA
fees or insurance. Cat! lhe
Frutte 1 v.getablea ..................................... 580 holpoint fridges, Kenmore
Office of Consumer
Fumlahed Rooma......................................... 450 dryer, gas stove. Li!Ue Tyke
Teen/Genealogist to take Affairs toll free at 1·866·
General Haullng........................_...................850 Phone 256·6989.
Digital Photo's of Cemetery 278·0003 to learn if the
Glveaway ...................................................... 040
WAI'n'FJ)
&amp; Family Headstones in mortgage
broker or
Happy Ada...............-.....................................050
Hartford. Neg by Pay Pal. lender is properly
Hey I Graln ..................................................640 ___
TO BUY
done4013Cyahoo.com or licensed. (This is a public
Help Wantect ..........................;...................... 110
321·725·5818
service announcement
Home lmprovementa................................... 810 Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. L.unch room Vending anen· - - - - -- - - from the Ohio Valley
Homes for Sakt............................................ ~~~ Silver and. Gold Coins, dant. part time. M·F. earn . Trainer Position
Publishing Company)
Hounhold Goods .......................................
Proolsets. Gold Rings, Pre· 1pm, product delivered to Are you interested In a
. HouHa for Rent ........................................... 410 1935 U.S. Currency, you. Paid training,·holidays, rewarding position? PAIS is
In Memorlam ................................................ 020 Solitaire Diamonds· M.T.S. . vacation, 401k. Pre·employ· currently seeking a part time
· lnaurance ..................................................... 130 Coin Shop, 151 Second menl drug testing. EOE Call staff for Mason, WV provid·
: Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ GGO Avenue. Gallipolis, 740·446· 304·485-5421
ing residential/community
· Llv81t~k...................................................... SOS300 2842.
--'-------- skill training with individuals
' Loat and Found...........................................
Machinist and Welders. with MA/DD. SeeKing staff
· Lots &amp; Acreage......................... ................ 350 Like to buy 5·10 acres in Loss than 4 :yrs experience
3:30dpml ·
· Mltcellaneous .............................................. 170 Eastern School district. With- need. hot Apply. Ambrosia 6:30pm
for MondHay·Friday
igh
school
1p O·
540 or without house.740-992· Machine Inc. 304-675·1722
Mere1handl sa....................... 860
R
ma
or
GED
required.
No
·· Mlacellaneous
Mobile Home epa r....................................
.5393· .. 740·416·4649'
Mon-Fri 7:30-4:00
·
Mobile Hames1or Rent ............................... 420
experience necessary.
: Mobile Homea1or 5ale................................ 320
Want to buy Junk Cars, call Manpower is now hiring for Criminal badlground check
oney to Loan ............................................. 220 740·388·0884 ·
I he following positions required. Must have relia!&gt;fe
'Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ........................ ,,740
Automobile
Prodution transportationand valid auto
· Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Workers iri the Buffalo. wv insurance. Paid training.
Personals ..................................................... DOS
Area Benefits available Call Hourly rate starting at $7·
Pats for Sale ................................................ 560 11
Today 304,..57-3338
$8.00/hour. Please call 1
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
HFlJ' WA~llll
1or. lolllree a1
Need someone totake care 304·373-101
1·877·373·1011
f'rofo11ional Se rvIcas................................ .230
'"'-~
CB Repa 1r............................... 160
ot
your inloved·ane
n.~kl, TV &amp;
home
Gallipolis1n I'their
Pl. 1150
Smoots·
~I Ellale Wanted ..................................... 360
An E"ellenl way lo earn
IN.'ITRUCOON
hool•lnatruc::tlon................,.................... 150 money.The New AIIOn.
Pleasant Call me (740)446· ~------_.,1
Seed, Plant &amp; Feri111Hr .............. :...............650
Call Marilyn 304·662·2645 71 65
Sltuallona Wlnted ....................................... 120
Oh1o Valley Home Health, Gallipolis Career COllege
·Spece for Rent. ...........................................;460 APARTMENT MANAGER Inc. hiring FT lPN Aide (Careers Close To Home)
:sporting Goodl ........................................... 520 Hartford, WV. Managet Supervisor
lor Call :tbdayl 740·446·4367,
8UV'I for S.le .............................................. 720 needed to work up to 30 Passport/Private Care Dept.
t -~()().214-0452
l"ruckl for 81118 ............................................ 715 hours per week. Some Competitive Wages and W\OI'W. g&amp;H•~scar&amp;ercollege.com
•. Upholetery ................................... ................. 870
evenillQ.Sor weekend hours bene ,.1ts .me Iud'109 hea llh Council
Accreditedlor lrtdependenl
Member ACCiedltirog
Coller,}l!s
Van1 For Sale................................................730 may be necessary. must be insuraoce. Apply at 1480 and Schools 12T4B.
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090 organized. dependable, Jackson Pike. Gallipolis, II76
I
)'hinted to Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620 trustworthy and have good Ohio or phOne toll tree B66MLiiiCFUANEOUS
Wanted To Do .............................................. 1BO· people skills. a back· 441 ·1393 for mOre intorma. t..------.,J
Wlnted to Rent ............................................ 470 ground/credit check is han
..,
Ylfd Sale- Gllllpolfi.....................................072 requ~ed . To arrange tor an - - - - - - -- Seasoned firewood . Oak &amp;
Yard Slle-Pomeroy/Mlddle ......................... 074 Interview ·call the business Sell Avon. make 50%. Call Ash. Call 446·9204 after
Yard Sele-PI. Pleeunt .....................,.......... 07,6 office al 304·232·4603.
446-3358
6pm.

r

r.

j

t

dwellings advertised in

~

~!'::e~ P~~~~~nc! ~:.'

Lars&amp;
ACRIAGE

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
- - - - - - - ' - - RENT. t031 Georges Creek
Cozy home close to new Ad , 441 .1111
I{ 1 \ 1 \I "
Meigs Elementary! 3 BR, 1
bath, utility rooni. Jarge ;;:::=;:===~
kitchen/dining
room. r.l

a1rr~~~~or o~i:~ eo .!~ ·I

Jg

'

1,~------_.J

1BR S475fmo, $475 dep.
343 41h Ave. Gas heal, no
pets, furnished kitchen. 740·
446.4959
- - - - - -- 2br. l bath. new carpet. new
kitchen appliances, lg. base·
ment.
1638 Chatham
Ave
.(740)446·4234
or 740·
208-7961
'--------2BR in town (Gallip~lis) .
$550/mon,
No pets. Call
441·0110or992·5174
3 bd house, qlose to
Ordr'nance elem $495 plus
deposit and ·references.
Available Dec 1_755_8744
or 675 _6757
-------3bdrm., 1bth., Lr.,Dr.,kit.&amp; 2
car garage, city school dis·
tricl, water mcluded.'
$6 50 oo a mttl ref + dep.
(7401446.0969
3 Bedroom House in
Syracuse $500/month . .
deposit No, Pets_(304)6755332 weekends 740-591 ·
0265
3 bedroom house. Pomeroy.
$550 a monlh, $500 deposit.
no pels. (740)992-6909
3 BR house in Gal!ipolis.
WID connection,. $450/mo,
$250/dep.You pay all utilities
404·456·3602
3BA, 1 bath in- Bidwell,
$57S/mo + sec. dep. 446·
3644
-----'--3BR, 1BA, laundry room , 65
Mill Creek. No pels. 740·
446·9523

Rakt! in th~
~aving~

•

you'll find

Larry Crum/pllolo

Wahama head coach Ed Cromley and the rest of the White
Falcon staff watch as the1r team try to convert a fourth
down attempt during the first quarter of a Class A high
school football playoff game against Pocahontas County'
Saturday, November 10 in Mason, W.Va ..

--- '
----;-

-

.... ._........

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

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

__

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

~~

in th~

Claggifi~dg!

. -:-----. -----·. ---------------.--.;__-

~--rt-------------

~ . ,~-

1

opportunity baaea.

;;;;;:;::n
gas. Heat pump &amp; C/A. Exc. patio off of dining room. 2
Concl. Ready to move in. out buildings plus extra cui·
$9e 500
· neg. 740·645 ·6751 side storage
attached to
Ashion Area. Mini Farm. 14 home.,All on a level lot on
acres of rolling lanced land. Happy Hollow Rd.near New
2barns. pond, 'near Hannan Li ma Ad in Hutchinson
HS. 3br, 2 bath, Brick. Subdivision_ (Not 1n flood'
Rancher, Family Room, zone) Great view ot open
w/tireplace
2 car
1i~ld and
deer. 11Ask1'ng
Garage
canand
be used
for 69,500.
Call 74~·10
horses or cattle or your - - - - -- - place In lhe counlryl Call For sale by owner. 3BA
Paul Tri County Realty 304· Ranch, 1 bath, Family
633·1622 or 304·733·9000 .Room,d dStove/Fridge.
Ak' $ WID
AttanHonl
Inc1u 9 · s lng 70000
· ·
70_9_·6_33_9___
Local company.offl;lring "NO _c_•11_7...,40_-_
p
T
::D0WN f AYMEN
t b" pro- · For Sal!1 or rent. nice 2 bed·
~rams . o; ~uof a t~Y your room house. Pomeroy, $450
•om
ea . ren 1ng. plus utilities, no pets, refer·
100eo~n1~mancmg
ences &amp; deposit. make offer
~ess lhan perfect credit for sale. (740)992-5502 .
accepted
- - - - - -- Payment could be the New home in Gallipolis
same as rent.
2BR. 2BA, 3 acres MIL
Mortgage
Locators. REDUCED! $80.000. Call
'-17_4D-'-):l6_7·_0o-'____
po
740·446·7029
House for sale in RaCine - - - -- - - area. Appro&gt;:. 4 acres, all Nice 3BA, newly remodeled
New WH &amp; • Fum. CIA
professionally landscaped. Appliance
Across
Ranch slyleliving
house
withdin-4 from, Vintonin.;:luded_
Elem. $65,000.
bedrooms.
room.
ing room. kitchen. large fam· 740-245·5555 or 441 -5105
ily room, central air, ·gas heat - - - - - - -and 1fireplace. Addition of a Racine/ranch home 1500
large Flo'iida room com· sq. ft, 3/2, seller assisted
plelely cedar opens onto financing, (740)416·3977.
patio &amp; pool area. Heated in 740-222-5570
ground pool enclosed by pri· IWI:""'!''!'""-~--~
vacy fencing and · land·
MOBILEHO!\U~
scapea. Finished 2· car '--.,;,FOiiRiiiiiSiiAliii.E;...,.l
garage a"ached to house •
and finished &amp; heated 3 car l2x65 Kirkwood, Expando,.
garage
unattached. Porch updated with extras
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�Page

B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 16, 2007'

www .mydailysentinel.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

\!rrtbune - Sentinel - l\e tilter

San Diego Padres ace Jake Peavy wins Investigators never took
NL Cy Young Award in unanimoUs vote their eyes cff the ball :
Bv

MIKE FITZPATRICK

AP BASEBAll WRITER

NEW YORK Jake
Peavy has been one of the
best pitchers in the
National League for years.
Thi s season, he pulled
away from the pack.
The San Diego Padres
ace was an unanimous winner of the NL Cy Young
Award on Thursday after
leading the league in wins,
ERA and strikeouts pitching's version of a
Triple Crown .
"It was just one of those
seasons where kind of
everything came together,"
he said on a conference
call.
Peavy received all 32
first-place votes and finished with 160 points in
ballotin~ by the Baseball
Writers Association of
America. Arizona sinkerballer Brandon ·Webb, last
year's winner, was a distant
runner-ul' with 94 points.
He was hstc;d second on 31
ballots and third on one.
"Obviously, I was elated.
This is as btg as it gets as
far as individual awards,"
Peavy said. "Truly amaz. ing. A very humbling day
when you think about all
my peers that take the
mound every fifth day."
Peavy went 19•6 while
topping the majors in ERA
(2.54) and strikeouts (240)
for the Padres, "who came
within one win of their
third consecutive playoff
berth . He joined Roger
Clemens as the only starting pitchers to win a Cy
Young Award without tossing a complete game.
Clemens did it once in
each league : 2001 with the
New York Yankees (AL)
and 2004 with Houston
(NL).
"I can definitely get better. Our bullpen's been so
stinkin' good around here
it's. hard to get deep in
these games," Peavy said.
"I've got a long way to ·go
to be who I want to be."
It was the 12th time an
NL pitcher has been an
unammous choice for' the
honor, the first since
Arizona's Randy Johnson
in 2002. Peavy became the
fourth San Di_ego pitcher to

Johnson won four straight
limes from 1999-2002.
; Webb was 18-10 with a
3.01 ERA and 194 strikeouts , pitching an NL-best
236 1-3 innings. His streak
of 42 scoreless innings
helped
the
surprising
Diamondbacks finish with
the best record in the
league (90-72).
Atlanta' s Tom Glavine in
1992 was the only other
NL pitcher to finish second .
. one year after winning the
award .
·A two-time All -Star,
Peavy also won an ERA
title in 2004 and a strikeout
crown in 2005. His nasty
stuff has made him one of
baseball's toughest assignments for years, but this
season
.
. was his most
ImpreSSIVe.
"I don't really feel that I
did anything different in
'04 or '05, other than just
had better luck to help win
some games and obviously
get some recognition for
that," he said.
Peavy earned a $100,000
bonus for winning the
award, and the price of San
Diego's 2009 club option
increased by $3 million to
$11 mil lion.
AP photo
He knows the kind of
San Diego Padres hurler Jake Peavy throws a pitch against money he could command
Arizona Diamondbacks batter Jeff Cirillo in the first inning of on the open market. Still,
a baseball game in phoenix, in this Sept. 5 file photo. he said he 'd like to work
out a contract extension
Peavy was voted the NL Cy Young award winner Thursday.
and stay with the Padres,
win the award, joining long," Peavy said. "I reall y though he doesn 't want t\)
reliever
Mark
Davis thought that this year 's negotiate during the sea( 1989), Hall of Farner team, if we got in the play- son.
Gaylord Perry (1978) and offs, could really make
" I think it can be distractsome noi se~"
lefty Randy Jones (1976).
ing," Peavy said. "We're
Brad Penny of the Los either going to do it this
Peavy had a chance to
put the Padres in the post- Angeles Dodgers finished offseason or we'll address
season - and earn his 20th third in the voting. the issue next offseason.
win - when he started the Cincinnati's Aaron Harang
"I'm really · not worried
wild-card
tiebreaker was fourth and Chicago's about it," he added. 'The
against Colorado. Bui the Carlos Zambrano came in team has given me finan26-year-old right-hander fifth.
cial security for the rest of
was ineffective at Coors
Peavy, the · National this old Alabama boy's life .
Field, giving up six runs League's starter in the All- ... I just want to be fair to
and 10 hits in 6 1-3 Star game, was the front- the rest of my peers when I
runner nearly all season. sign something."
innings.
The · Rockies rallied for He consistently stymied
The American League
three runs against career opponents, allowing only MVP will be announced
with Alex
saves
leader
Trevor 13 home runs in 34 starts. Monday
Hoffman in the 13th and He gave up 169 hits and 68 Rodriguez considered a
lock - followed Tuesday
won 9-8, then charged all walks in 223 1-3 innings.
Selected by San Diego in by NL MVP, which could
the way to the World
the 15th round of the 1999 be a close race.
Series.
Cleveland lefty C.C.
"That was a tough way to draft, Peavy became the
go. We were so close and fifth different NL pitcher to Sabathia won the AL Cy
had grinded it out for so take the prize since Young Award on _Tuesday.

Friends

wins and an 86-foint lead
over Gordon . I Johnson
finishes 18th or better, he
wins ·the title, regardless. If
fromPageBl
Gordon finishes 15th or
worse, he cedes his friend
Motorsports, Jeff is certain- the trophy.
ly that for me, and I feel that
The two met with the
it's been good for me ... for media
Thur~day
as
the last five years, I've been NASCAR tried to build a
studying Jeff and his dri- little more hype for a finish
ving styles at different that may not be as scintillattracks and, obviously, you ing as it would like.
can learn a lot from that."
Johnson pointed out that the
The culmination of all friends drove. to the press
this happy talk will come conference together, chat· Sunday at Homestead- ting about how well they get
Miami Speedway when one along despite tl!e · obvious
of the two buddies will walk pressures each faces.
"We are human," Johnson
away witl! the Nextel Cup.
Johnson goes into the sea- said. "We go through emoson-ending Ford 400 with a tions and we are frustrated.
big edge - four straight We have moments where ·

Wahama

in the air."
Six seniors, five juniors
and a sophomore comprise
the Yellow Jackets starting
fromPageBl
offensive eleven while on
winning streak come to a defense Williamstown is
conclusion earlier this year_ expected to go witl! a lineup
following a stunning 14-7 consisting of five seniors,
six juniors' and a sophoupset loss to Belpre.
Earlier this week Smith more. Six players go both
stated that he "didn't know ways with four of those
to much about Wahama" , being linemen. Senior
but did relate that - he Justin Wajda (5-foot-11 235.
pounds), junior Robbie
thought the White Falcons Wigal (5-9 185), junior
had a "super offense with Ryan Zide (5-10 238) . and
good skill people". "l'.m sophomore Cody Matheny
impressed
with
their (6-0 230) are two-way
[Wahama] quickness and starters on the line with
they have several good ath- fllmker/linebacker Owen
letes and their defense is Dagostine (5-10 145) and
similar to what we run."
tailba9k/s.afety Cameron
Smith was reluc tant to · Powell (6-0 165) also startrelay any information con- ing both offensively and
cerning how the Yellow defensively.
The remaining regulars
Jackets plan to attack
Wahama other than to give a on offense include senior
generic answer of "we hope quarterback
Drew
to ·stay out of second ·and Townsend (6-4 185), senior
third down long yardage sit- fullback Greg Davis (5-1 0
uations. We hope to estab- 205), senior wide receiver
Iish the run and throw ,!h~ Key in Board · (6-4 170),
football when we wlllltli'n!l:-':;;· senior offensive lineman
not when we have to. We ·· Pat Smith (6-7 315) and
would like to put the White junior tight end Matt Kiger
Falcons in second and long (6-6 .215).
and third and long positions
The rem aining starters
and force them to throw defensively are expected to
when w,e have our defense be senior lineman Corey
ready when they put tl!e ball Hart (6-2 216), senior cor-

-

we didn't agree with what
was going on out on the
track, but we've always
been able to talk through it,
have tl!at respect."
Wallace, the , 1989 Cup
champion, said it isn 't really surprising how well the
two native Californians get
along, considering their
similarities.
"They're both close to the
same age," said Wallace,
now an analyst for the
ABC/ESPN
NASCAR
races. "They hang out
together all the time, they
have fun together, they
vacation . together. And
they've got a great, great
calming influence in their
car owner that's with them
all the time. This guy's at

~

..

~

-·--.---... -·--·---·-

CLASSIFIED

BY JIM LITKE

PP

sPORTS coLUMNIST

trrllates me," he said, on for a narrow victory.
the shop all the time.
That kind of a duel isn't
"I think they really, really shrugging. " It is complirespect Rick . And the things. cated and it is tough a likely Sunday on the conthey like are almost identi- times. But having someone siderably faster !.S-mile
cal."
and
oval
you know so well and have Homestead
So, do the two champions so much respect for, I think Gordon has mixed emoever get annoyed with one has made it easier in our tions about tryin$ to take
the championship away
another?
situations.
·"We both have shown from Johnson.
"The only thing he's irri"We want to end the seatated rne with is that four that we're willing to race
son
on a positive note,"
(wins) in i\ row here late- hard and a~gressive with
ly," Gordon said, laughing. one another. '
. Gordon said. "But the only
That was most apparent way we're going to have a
" I mean, I've got a 5.2 (finishing) average (in the . in the spring race on the real chance is if Jimmie
oval
at has a problem. We doii 't
Chase for the champi- half-mile
where wish that upon anybody,
onship) and I'm 86 points Martinsville,
down going into the final John son and
Gordon and certainly not our teamrace. That irritates me."
. waged a battle for the top mate.
Johnson looked a little spot over the final 53 laps,
''I'm just proud of
sheepish when asked to with Gordon slamming Hendrick Motorsports and
reply to the same question. · hard into Johnson 's rear the fact that the champi"I really can't think of numerous times trying to onship is going to come
anything about Jeff that · pass before hi s friend held home to Rick Hendrick."

nerback Ben Williamson (5- Klingensmith (6-1 295).
10 140), junior linebacker Senior James Gray (6-0
Nate .Radabaugh (6-0 170), 165), junior Colby Davis
junior corner Micah Wood (5- 10 150), junior Kasey
(6-4 170) and junior line- White (5-10 180), sophobacker Joshua Radabaugh more Kevin .Laudermilt (6-0
(6-0 175). The placekicker 280), sophomore Colin
is sophomorP- Joe Palm (6-0 Pierce (5-11 175), sopho160) while the punter will more Matt Dangerfield (5-7
145) and freshman Scott
be senior Corey Hart.
Roush
(5-I 0 260) are also
Williamstown averages
over 235 pounds across its expected to see lots of
front line with the backfield action on Saturday for the
being led by a speedy Bend Area grid tea.m.
Powell while Davis is a
Wahama averages 28.7
bowl-you-over type full- points per game offensively
back . The Yellow Jackets while the White Falcon
average. 23.2 points per defense is giving up just 12
game offensively while the points to · the. opposition .
defense is allowing I 0.5 The Mason County gridders
points per contest.
trai I in the overall series
Wahama is expected to go with Williamstown by a 4-8
with sophomore William · margin · with the Yellow
Zuspan (5-9 145) at quarter- Jackets· owning wins in the
back with senior Derek last six games. The last two
Veazey (5-8 170), junior ·encounters were closely
Kyle Zerkle (5-8 1'45) and fought
affairs
before
sophomore Micaiah Branch ·Williamstown prevai led hy
(5-8 160) in the backfield. a three point (24-21) margin
Junior Garrett Underwood and a seven point (24-17)
(5- I0 160) will be at wide spread.
receiver and senior Gabe
Kick-off time for the
Roush (6-1 170) is the tight quarterfinal round contest at
end. The interior line will Williamstown High School
likely con sist of seniors is I :30 p.m. wi th the winner
Brent Jones (5-10 190) and earning the opportunity to
Caleb Roach (5-7 220) , host a third round contest
junior Trey Anderson (6-0 against "!o. II St. Marys 'or
165) and sophomores Luke No. 14 Buffalo in the siate
Ingels (5 X 190) anJ Kevin semifinals.
·

--- -------:--..,.-----------'----

while everyone in America is
considered innocent until
proven guilty, I take this
Federal . prosecutors finally mdictment very seriously
stuck a pin in Barry Bonds.
and will follow its progre~s
Satisfying aS it might have closely," he said ..
been to see all that hot air
How much would you
leak out of tl!e slugger before have paid to climb inside
he carried off the most cher- Selig's head and follow tl!e
ished record in baseball. tl!ought processes while he
there's at least this consola- composed even that brief
tion: Late is still better than statement? Especially since
never.
he endured a lifellme of
The perjury and obstruc- aggravation to say even that
tion of · justice charges much .
announced Thursday were
Ten years ago, Bonds was
four y~ars and two grand only a blip on Bud's radar
juries in the making. Maybe screen. Back 'then, Selig was
tt shouldn't have taken that too busy celebrating ·the
long to shred Bonds' flimsy game's recovery from the
"flax seed oil" defense. But canceled 1994 season, about
investigators couldn't get his to bask in a renaissance
longtime flunky, convicted launched· by the home-run
BALCO bag man Greg derby
between ' Mark
Anderson, to cooperdte. And McGwire and Sammy Sosa
for all the help baseball kept four years later.
promising on tl!e drug-test- . Then, just as people started
mg front, it never could lay a asking tough questions,
glove on Bonds.
along came Bonds in 2001
So in a nice bit of serendip- with an inflated frame and an
ity, even with Anderso l)-..,_ ego that lgJew no bounds. It
clammed up in a jail cell, dtdn't matter how often or
they indicted Bonds by doing how many different ways·
the same thing that made him Selig tried to explain away
the toughest out in the game. all those baseballs flying out
They never took their eye off of all those ballparks; Bonds
the ball.
made a mockery of every
"I'm curious what evi- excuse.
dence they have now, they
Every one of his predecesdidn't have before," sa1d sors lost muscle and power
John Burris, one of Bonds' as they aged? Not Barry.
attorneys.
Pitche.rs wouldn't throw
the
answer: him anything to hit? Bonds
Here's
Enough.
was relentless and patient to
Take as much time as you . a fault.
·
need at the end of this senBaseball made it tougher to
tence to unload all those sus- cheat? Bonds passed every
test they gave him with flypicions and all that anger.
Done?
ing colors.
As his pursuit of Henry
Thought so.
Most of us made up our Aaron dragged out, Selig
minds about Bonds Ion~ was forced to buy the book,
before the word "defendant "Game of Shadows" to find
was fonnally attached to his oilt what was missing. Even
name . Now Bonds' faithful more galling than the extra
fans and even those who con- homework was the way
gratulated
him
with Bonds flouted not just baseti,~::htlipped smiles can begin ball's rules, but tl!e law of tl!e
chmbmg off the fence .
·land.
President George Bush, a
Called before a federal
former owner of the Texas grand jury investigating tl!e
Rangers, felt compelled to Bay Area Laboratory Coweigh in quickly, albeit cau- Operative ;Bonds testified on
tiously. Even while warning Dec. 4, 200J, that he tl!ought
to let justice run its course, a substance given to him by
his spokesman called it "a Anderson was "flax seed
sad day for baseball." No oil." When prosecutors
kidding.
showed him a doping caJenCommissioner Bud Selig dar labeled with tl!e initials
echoed those remarks.
"BB," Bonds smoothly
"I have yet 10 see the replied, "He could know · ·
details of this indictment and otl!er BBs ."
.
·

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

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200014,70. 3BR. 2BA.lots
aubject to .the Federal
of up grades , on rented lot.
Fair Housing Act of 1968
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which makes It illegal to
Gallipolis. 3 m1les hom
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Auction and Flea Uarket.............................OBO Cross Creek Auction Buffalo a a a emy IQh chool
NOT lo send money
· &amp; Acceaaorlea ·.......................... 760 Aucfton s aturday 6p m Th'IS currentl Y has the poslTton of PAIS is seeking ·
through the mall until you
, Auto Parta
. Auto.Rapalr..................................................770 weeks Dealer D&amp;N from Varsity Assistant Girls LPN: PT administer/monitor have investigated' the
. Autot for Sale....................... :......................]10 Virginia. Building is full . Basketball Coach open. patient medication prepara· :o:ff~er:in:g·::;;::==~
Boata &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750 Starting to sell high quality Applicant must have up to lion for Individuals wilh
. Building Supplle,a........................................!JSO knives such as Case, Buck dale CPA certification, BCI developmentaldisabilities in
BuelnetlandBulldlngs ............. ,,,,, ........... 340 &amp;Mossy Oak. Visa and clearance and State Mason County and sur·
MoNEY
'itUIInell Opportunlty .................................210' Master Card (304) 550· Department of Education rounding areas. $13·$15 per ~=:;;ro;l.o::A:N::~
Bualnna Tralnlng ....................................... 140 16,6 StephenReedy 1639 Pupil Activity Validation hour based on experience.
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Certi!icalion Interested Please call (304) 373·1011
Camping Equipment ...................................780 Riverside Auction Barn Sal. applicants should contact or toll free al 1·877·373· ••NOTICIE•*
. Carda of Thanks .. ~ ....................................... 010 Night @6pm on At 7 South. Bill Wamsley, Athletic 101 1.
Child/Elderly care ..................:·.................... 190 5 miles below the Dam. Like Director at 740·446-3212. - - - - - - - - Borrow Smarl. Contact
Electrlcai/RefrlftAratlon
...............................840 new Winchester Model 1200 Home Health Care of SED is POST OFFICE NOW
the Ohio Division of
... .....................................
EqulpmentforRent
480 12 Gauge, new in Abox currently accepting applicaHIRING
Financial Institution's
Excavallng .................................. ~................ 830 Mossberg model 500 12 f 1 LPN' F 11 .
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
Office of consumer
Farm Equlpment..........................................610 gauge w/2 barrels, 410 IOns or s. u lime part
$57K annuallY
Affairs BEFORE you refl·
Competitive 1nc lud'1ng Federa1Bene1·1ts nance your home or
Farml for Rent............................................ 430 gauge BoII acl1.on 5ears &amp; lime per diem.
Farms for Sala .....................................:....... 330 Roebuck J.C Higgins, H&amp;A ;~g~~!e. 1·866·368-1100 and OT.Paid Training,
obtain a loan. BEWARE
For Lllae ..................................................... 490 9 shot 22 pistol Model 929,
Vacations-FT/PT
of requests for art/ large
For S.le..............'..........................................585 22 bOll action Model 80, 4
1·866·542·1531
advance payments of
For Sale or Trade......................................... 590 new bath-tubs by KOhler, 3
USWA
fees or insurance. Cat! lhe
Frutte 1 v.getablea ..................................... 580 holpoint fridges, Kenmore
Office of Consumer
Fumlahed Rooma......................................... 450 dryer, gas stove. Li!Ue Tyke
Teen/Genealogist to take Affairs toll free at 1·866·
General Haullng........................_...................850 Phone 256·6989.
Digital Photo's of Cemetery 278·0003 to learn if the
Glveaway ...................................................... 040
WAI'n'FJ)
&amp; Family Headstones in mortgage
broker or
Happy Ada...............-.....................................050
Hartford. Neg by Pay Pal. lender is properly
Hey I Graln ..................................................640 ___
TO BUY
done4013Cyahoo.com or licensed. (This is a public
Help Wantect ..........................;...................... 110
321·725·5818
service announcement
Home lmprovementa................................... 810 Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. L.unch room Vending anen· - - - - -- - - from the Ohio Valley
Homes for Sakt............................................ ~~~ Silver and. Gold Coins, dant. part time. M·F. earn . Trainer Position
Publishing Company)
Hounhold Goods .......................................
Proolsets. Gold Rings, Pre· 1pm, product delivered to Are you interested In a
. HouHa for Rent ........................................... 410 1935 U.S. Currency, you. Paid training,·holidays, rewarding position? PAIS is
In Memorlam ................................................ 020 Solitaire Diamonds· M.T.S. . vacation, 401k. Pre·employ· currently seeking a part time
· lnaurance ..................................................... 130 Coin Shop, 151 Second menl drug testing. EOE Call staff for Mason, WV provid·
: Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ GGO Avenue. Gallipolis, 740·446· 304·485-5421
ing residential/community
· Llv81t~k...................................................... SOS300 2842.
--'-------- skill training with individuals
' Loat and Found...........................................
Machinist and Welders. with MA/DD. SeeKing staff
· Lots &amp; Acreage......................... ................ 350 Like to buy 5·10 acres in Loss than 4 :yrs experience
3:30dpml ·
· Mltcellaneous .............................................. 170 Eastern School district. With- need. hot Apply. Ambrosia 6:30pm
for MondHay·Friday
igh
school
1p O·
540 or without house.740-992· Machine Inc. 304-675·1722
Mere1handl sa....................... 860
R
ma
or
GED
required.
No
·· Mlacellaneous
Mobile Home epa r....................................
.5393· .. 740·416·4649'
Mon-Fri 7:30-4:00
·
Mobile Hames1or Rent ............................... 420
experience necessary.
: Mobile Homea1or 5ale................................ 320
Want to buy Junk Cars, call Manpower is now hiring for Criminal badlground check
oney to Loan ............................................. 220 740·388·0884 ·
I he following positions required. Must have relia!&gt;fe
'Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ........................ ,,740
Automobile
Prodution transportationand valid auto
· Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Workers iri the Buffalo. wv insurance. Paid training.
Personals ..................................................... DOS
Area Benefits available Call Hourly rate starting at $7·
Pats for Sale ................................................ 560 11
Today 304,..57-3338
$8.00/hour. Please call 1
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
HFlJ' WA~llll
1or. lolllree a1
Need someone totake care 304·373-101
1·877·373·1011
f'rofo11ional Se rvIcas................................ .230
'"'-~
CB Repa 1r............................... 160
ot
your inloved·ane
n.~kl, TV &amp;
home
Gallipolis1n I'their
Pl. 1150
Smoots·
~I Ellale Wanted ..................................... 360
An E"ellenl way lo earn
IN.'ITRUCOON
hool•lnatruc::tlon................,.................... 150 money.The New AIIOn.
Pleasant Call me (740)446· ~------_.,1
Seed, Plant &amp; Feri111Hr .............. :...............650
Call Marilyn 304·662·2645 71 65
Sltuallona Wlnted ....................................... 120
Oh1o Valley Home Health, Gallipolis Career COllege
·Spece for Rent. ...........................................;460 APARTMENT MANAGER Inc. hiring FT lPN Aide (Careers Close To Home)
:sporting Goodl ........................................... 520 Hartford, WV. Managet Supervisor
lor Call :tbdayl 740·446·4367,
8UV'I for S.le .............................................. 720 needed to work up to 30 Passport/Private Care Dept.
t -~()().214-0452
l"ruckl for 81118 ............................................ 715 hours per week. Some Competitive Wages and W\OI'W. g&amp;H•~scar&amp;ercollege.com
•. Upholetery ................................... ................. 870
evenillQ.Sor weekend hours bene ,.1ts .me Iud'109 hea llh Council
Accreditedlor lrtdependenl
Member ACCiedltirog
Coller,}l!s
Van1 For Sale................................................730 may be necessary. must be insuraoce. Apply at 1480 and Schools 12T4B.
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090 organized. dependable, Jackson Pike. Gallipolis, II76
I
)'hinted to Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620 trustworthy and have good Ohio or phOne toll tree B66MLiiiCFUANEOUS
Wanted To Do .............................................. 1BO· people skills. a back· 441 ·1393 for mOre intorma. t..------.,J
Wlnted to Rent ............................................ 470 ground/credit check is han
..,
Ylfd Sale- Gllllpolfi.....................................072 requ~ed . To arrange tor an - - - - - - -- Seasoned firewood . Oak &amp;
Yard Slle-Pomeroy/Mlddle ......................... 074 Interview ·call the business Sell Avon. make 50%. Call Ash. Call 446·9204 after
Yard Sele-PI. Pleeunt .....................,.......... 07,6 office al 304·232·4603.
446-3358
6pm.

r

r.

j

t

dwellings advertised in

~

~!'::e~ P~~~~~nc! ~:.'

Lars&amp;
ACRIAGE

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
- - - - - - - ' - - RENT. t031 Georges Creek
Cozy home close to new Ad , 441 .1111
I{ 1 \ 1 \I "
Meigs Elementary! 3 BR, 1
bath, utility rooni. Jarge ;;:::=;:===~
kitchen/dining
room. r.l

a1rr~~~~or o~i:~ eo .!~ ·I

Jg

'

1,~------_.J

1BR S475fmo, $475 dep.
343 41h Ave. Gas heal, no
pets, furnished kitchen. 740·
446.4959
- - - - - -- 2br. l bath. new carpet. new
kitchen appliances, lg. base·
ment.
1638 Chatham
Ave
.(740)446·4234
or 740·
208-7961
'--------2BR in town (Gallip~lis) .
$550/mon,
No pets. Call
441·0110or992·5174
3 bd house, qlose to
Ordr'nance elem $495 plus
deposit and ·references.
Available Dec 1_755_8744
or 675 _6757
-------3bdrm., 1bth., Lr.,Dr.,kit.&amp; 2
car garage, city school dis·
tricl, water mcluded.'
$6 50 oo a mttl ref + dep.
(7401446.0969
3 Bedroom House in
Syracuse $500/month . .
deposit No, Pets_(304)6755332 weekends 740-591 ·
0265
3 bedroom house. Pomeroy.
$550 a monlh, $500 deposit.
no pels. (740)992-6909
3 BR house in Gal!ipolis.
WID connection,. $450/mo,
$250/dep.You pay all utilities
404·456·3602
3BA, 1 bath in- Bidwell,
$57S/mo + sec. dep. 446·
3644
-----'--3BR, 1BA, laundry room , 65
Mill Creek. No pels. 740·
446·9523

Rakt! in th~
~aving~

•

you'll find

Larry Crum/pllolo

Wahama head coach Ed Cromley and the rest of the White
Falcon staff watch as the1r team try to convert a fourth
down attempt during the first quarter of a Class A high
school football playoff game against Pocahontas County'
Saturday, November 10 in Mason, W.Va ..

--- '
----;-

-

.... ._........

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

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

__

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

~~

in th~

Claggifi~dg!

. -:-----. -----·. ---------------.--.;__-

~--rt-------------

~ . ,~-

1

opportunity baaea.

;;;;;:;::n
gas. Heat pump &amp; C/A. Exc. patio off of dining room. 2
Concl. Ready to move in. out buildings plus extra cui·
$9e 500
· neg. 740·645 ·6751 side storage
attached to
Ashion Area. Mini Farm. 14 home.,All on a level lot on
acres of rolling lanced land. Happy Hollow Rd.near New
2barns. pond, 'near Hannan Li ma Ad in Hutchinson
HS. 3br, 2 bath, Brick. Subdivision_ (Not 1n flood'
Rancher, Family Room, zone) Great view ot open
w/tireplace
2 car
1i~ld and
deer. 11Ask1'ng
Garage
canand
be used
for 69,500.
Call 74~·10
horses or cattle or your - - - - -- - place In lhe counlryl Call For sale by owner. 3BA
Paul Tri County Realty 304· Ranch, 1 bath, Family
633·1622 or 304·733·9000 .Room,d dStove/Fridge.
Ak' $ WID
AttanHonl
Inc1u 9 · s lng 70000
· ·
70_9_·6_33_9___
Local company.offl;lring "NO _c_•11_7...,40_-_
p
T
::D0WN f AYMEN
t b" pro- · For Sal!1 or rent. nice 2 bed·
~rams . o; ~uof a t~Y your room house. Pomeroy, $450
•om
ea . ren 1ng. plus utilities, no pets, refer·
100eo~n1~mancmg
ences &amp; deposit. make offer
~ess lhan perfect credit for sale. (740)992-5502 .
accepted
- - - - - -- Payment could be the New home in Gallipolis
same as rent.
2BR. 2BA, 3 acres MIL
Mortgage
Locators. REDUCED! $80.000. Call
'-17_4D-'-):l6_7·_0o-'____
po
740·446·7029
House for sale in RaCine - - - -- - - area. Appro&gt;:. 4 acres, all Nice 3BA, newly remodeled
New WH &amp; • Fum. CIA
professionally landscaped. Appliance
Across
Ranch slyleliving
house
withdin-4 from, Vintonin.;:luded_
Elem. $65,000.
bedrooms.
room.
ing room. kitchen. large fam· 740-245·5555 or 441 -5105
ily room, central air, ·gas heat - - - - - - -and 1fireplace. Addition of a Racine/ranch home 1500
large Flo'iida room com· sq. ft, 3/2, seller assisted
plelely cedar opens onto financing, (740)416·3977.
patio &amp; pool area. Heated in 740-222-5570
ground pool enclosed by pri· IWI:""'!''!'""-~--~
vacy fencing and · land·
MOBILEHO!\U~
scapea. Finished 2· car '--.,;,FOiiRiiiiiSiiAliii.E;...,.l
garage a"ached to house •
and finished &amp; heated 3 car l2x65 Kirkwood, Expando,.
garage
unattached. Porch updated with extras
E~tceHent condition ready to $3000;· Full size truck
· $255 000 oo c 11 camper. $650. · (740)388·
~~;g'2g.221i · ' a : 9906

·

BUSI!&gt;~

AND 8Uil.ll!NGS

Two story App~rtment
Building For Sale, in New
Haven. WV $27,000 304·
682-2793 01 304-682-2326

ad

Informed that all

t•-''-

&amp;

r

HOIIIFS
FOR SAtl:

dlacrlminatlon."

0 down payment. 4 bed·
rooms. Large yard. Covered
deck. Attached garage. 740·

r

approlC. 6wks old, litter 074

HOMFS

0

-------1110
2 Beautiful Fuzzy Kittens, """~------~

~~:ed3~~~5~:~.rme

Now you can hqve borders and graphics
"-'
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Gtvt-IWAY

FOUND
FOUND· Sm811 black and
tan dog on Chattin Lane·
across· from' Potter Crk.
Road. 675·0061 or alter
S:OO 675 .1907
-------Losl· near Pagevitle, male
dog, 8.bout SO*, wearing collar, white wilg. brown spots,
_17_40-'-)7_4_2·_27_2_7____
Losl: Black Min. Schnauzer
in· Bidwell area. Family pel.
Reward if found. Please call
245·5981 or 339-3716
LOST: Very small F red &amp;
while Beagle w/ heckled
GlVEAWAY
·I legs. lost In Bidwell area.
__
, Veryshy pet. Call740·44114!!4,;. 0______,
1 Golden Reteiver/Choc. ,.
Lab
&amp; 1 German Shepherd
"•Ril
mix 304·675·2940
•,... S•II'
,,. , .

r

(304) 675-1333

• All ads must be prepaid'

• tnc:lude Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ad1 Should Run 1 Days

r

p.m.

Monday-Friday for lnsertlorl
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday ln-Colu~nn : 1:00 p.m.
~r Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ada With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviiltlona

\\\Cil \(I \II '\II.,

l\egtilter

Dl!i!play Ads .

Dally In-Column :

Items

www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

Oeatl~irw

Word Ads

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

~bsites:

----

---~--------'--,-~
·

I

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 16, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 16, 2007
ALLEY OOP

CI .ASSIFIEDS

3BR, 2.5ba, CIA, w/ stlgar
on
Raccoon
Crk ,$800
+1st+last+dep. Serious only.
Mu&amp;t see! 245-5808

www.mydallysentl.nel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

EMPLOYMENT

Phillip
Alder

43 Type
of perro1
1 Molal con- 44 Downpours
111ner whh e 46 Clanged
spigot
50 Sofa end
4 Partially
51 PC
open

ROBERT
BISSELl

North
• 10 6 52
• J 74 3
• 6 4
• Q J 2

ce1m1C1111
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

IH&amp;-QI

West
• K Q 9
• 9 2

East

t Qt0873

• J 9

•

• J 8

• Qt066S

South
• A 7 4 3

• AK

Stop &amp;Compare

f

A K 52

+K

7 4

Dealer: South
Vulnerable : Both
OH SA

141 . 3BR , 2BA,
appliances, basement 1 car
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
garage, $500/mo
plus
•Central heat &amp; AJC
depos¢. 1614)226-0859

• Washer/dryer hookup
Split level house wl3bobath ,
• Tenant pays electric

furnishe(;t kitchen, large cov·
ered porch, big level yard.
nice house, no inside pets,
no smoking, $625 month .

I.

S300 deposit, Racine area ,
(740)949·30 19

i~

MOBFORILEn~-o~m;

"""'

til..

(304 )882·3017

Office/Warel'louse/Storage

South

West

Nortb

Great location in Gallipolis!

%NT

3•

Space

3 ..

Pass
Pass

46

starling

at

$150.00/month for 700 sqft.
call 404-456-3802.
\II IH II\ \II hi

HOUSEIIOIJJ

26 Years Experience

GoollS

David Lewis
740-992-6971

II

2 BR trailer in Mercerville .

Guttering

X C.AN'T

Seamless G utters
Roofi ng, Siding , G utters

~er

A l&gt;ATe IUT TtiAT 61JY

Goe5 OUT AL/, Tti~ TIM~ JUST
/
recAu5e tifS ~tiCM!

Insured &amp; Bonded

Free

N

~~~~~~~

.

740-653-9657

MAK~
~AM~ Of

MONeY W-ON'T

YOU
WIN IN Tt4e
j.OVE···
ruT IT S'lllle PlJTS, YOU IN

Ellm View
Apartments

$325/Month includes water.
Ca11740-256-8132

GOOl&gt; fleLl&gt; POSIT ION!
•

Hardwood Cabln~ti'y And FurnHUre

BARNEY

"'-'"''•
J&amp;L
Construction
1982 Ford Granada. good
work car. $500. 388-0436
1987 Oldsmobile 98 for
more
mformalion
call
1740)41 6-6967
1999 Dodge Durango, runs

and looKs Great! 4x4. autoClub Caves- Heat wave, matic. power seats. power
bleed in purple, direct hit,
Sin Cit~ &amp; Broadband; Reg.
Angus Bulls- Prime cut, 878
lead on, foresight , In tocus ,
new level &amp; band 0699.;

wi ndowS. cruise control, 3rd

row seating, rear air, towing
package
NADA
value
$7025.00 make an offer,

(740)992·2335
Austra lian Sheph erd Pups. ~~r,:.;;;;.;;;;;;;_

Cocker Spani&amp;ls $300, Gi:;nt 1740)245-598 4. 1740)645- F1S
~
Schnauzers $500, Scottish 4833

740-767-4875

In Memory

1937)718-1471

Memory
Nov. 81951-

Reg . ChihUahua pups. Black
&amp; white. Have shots and
Swim Spas Arrived! Save wormed . $200. Ca n 30 4$$$Tiki Tubs Hot TubOu11et. 674-5857 ·
Closeouts
available. ~~;;.;,~~---.,

We will take boarders. For
more inlormation call 740245-9549, ask .fOf Linda.

Ashland, KY 606- 929-5655

oome in after work
each night it quiet as
a mouse. I know
things are ne,·er ·
going to be the same.
I even sometimes still
call your name....
I shed many tears
nery morning, noon
and night just
wishing you were
here to hOld me
,.uy tight. Your
place at the table is
empty, and your big
chair too, lots of
thinp art different
around here without
you.
Always in my heart,
Wife•Nancy Manley

In Memory

In Memory

In Memory of

j{efen

Jeffers
On Her Birthday

11-16-1923
4-7-1997
We don't need a special day to bring
you to our mi11ds, because the tl1ings
you taught u., are ~ith us
all the time...
Bob &amp; girls

TRUCKS
FOR SALE

A1JillS

•uR SALE

Vinyl Records 304·882·2688

r

7U

M•rtNL
~ ~

IN.'ITRIJI.ft:NTS

auto, 61 K miles , $14,000

i"--~~::.;i:O.::;._.I
FoR SALE

1740)379-9381

01 Dodge Caravan , auto, air,

02

Cama•o

Z28

ln

V8,

-------~ good

clean van . 64,000
05 Ch rysle r 300 l imited miles. $3000 OBO. 740 _256 _
36000 mi. AJC, leather heat- 1233 or 256 _1652
ed seats, 1 owner, garage ...~~~:::;::;..._ __,

r4

WM~~?n:us'

40

I

kept ,. loaded. 92 Lumi na,
~
•
Wurlitzer piano $300 . Celli AJC, Cruise, tilt , all power, ..,
Ward's 3 Whee l Bicycle 740:446-7029
125.000 m1. 245-5017 ·
$80/cash 304-882·2436
02 HD Electra Glide Classic
Stage 3 motor. $25,000
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Would !he lady that called
invesled.
sacrifice
for
me concern ing the ball
$ 14,SOO. 1740)446-7S27
green 1/2 pi rlt jars, please
call me back I didn't clearly
1984 Honda Go ld Wing
gel your message; Call after
1200, we ll maintai ned, lots
7:00p.m. 740·533·3870
of ch rome, award winner,

r

2 male Yorkie puppies . 7
we eks old, very small. Call
740-446·3398
3 male long haired chi·
huah ua·~ ready to go. No
papers.
$200
each

1304)773-5180

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a.n Emergency
Room Nurse · Practitioner.' Applicant
should have a minimum of one year
experience in a clinic, urgent care or
family practice setting. Bachelor's degree
from a four year college or university.
Successfully completed a Bachelor's
degree in Nursing. Ce rtified as a Family
Nurse Pr~ctitioner or speciality as defined.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Re~ources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
Or fax:
304·675·6975
Or apply online at:
www.pvalley.org
AA/EOE

$3500. 1740)949-2449

29670 Bashan Road
Racine . Ohio

45771
74().949·2217

Cherokee, North Carolina
• Chartered Coach
Transportation
Friday, November 30, 2007 lo
Sunday, December 2 , 2007
$195/person (double occupancy)
$250/person (single occupancy)
Staying al Hampton Inn
Gladly accept cash, check,
cre.dit cards and money orders
Please make all checks
payable to PVH Foundation
LIMITED SPACES!
To make reservations please
call PYH Community
Relations, (304) 675-4340,
. Ext. 1492

Help Wanted

Music at the
Eagles

'0

OkeyDokey
Karaoke
Saturday
November 17th
7:00 pm · 11 :00 pm
Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, November 18th
680/Siug Match
12 Noon

..,

Help Wanted

LICENSED PRACTICAl
NURSE

.

Pleasant Valley Hos pital is cu rrently
accepting appli ca 1i ons fo r a full t ime
Licensed Pra ctical Nurse at Dr. Pack's
Office in Leon, WV. Applicon1s must have
a c u rrent W es l Virgin ia ·license. One-year
experien ce 1n a phy wi an offi ce or
hos!'ital related area, wor king with direct
patient care.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
Orlax:
l04·675·6975
Or apply on line at:
-.
www.pvalley.org
AA/EOE

THE BORN LOSER

~OU KNOW, 1\LL If\\ I&gt;J...L, we:~(' '(&amp;\E.oo, YOU AAI/E.TO~
60T r~ PF!.TTY &lt;:.OOtl, 6Liol&gt;'6,1

,..-WAAT E~,~ OU~~t&gt;&lt;:.tt1

1-Jt. ~f&gt;.-1/( r... t&gt;l.IC.E,QUitT Uft

To&lt;£Tl\CR!

T~E

I'LL JUST

PEP-FEc.T CMI&gt;

· H-.PP'Y

740 -985 -3831

'

Please leave

'

...

PEANUTS

qg._) 62 11}
Pull PrO)&gt; 01\ lu
_,)

'

f

~pt 111

1

WELL, ~E'S SITTING IN
TI4ERE f.IOLDIN6 A !lOOK--

t'M SORR'f .. SNOOP'I
CAN'T 60 OUT TO
PLA'f RIGflT NOW ...

f.IE'S

READING ..

2006 Honda Gold Wing
$4,o00 in accessories. Paid
$24,000 new--$19 ,600 . Call

740-367-7129.
96 Honda 400 Fore men
4WD exc. cond. 1985 250
Honda Fo'urtrax. $5001080

304-S76-2843
0685

304-593-

98 Polaris Sport sman 500 4
wheeler, warn winch , 803

miles. $ 1900. 740-645-6857
or 379-9515

·

7 1 Class C Ford Motor
Home, 28', Runs Good ,
evervthing works, great
huntingfl ish lng
vehicle .
$2500 or trade lor boal ol

I

COW and BOY

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Remodeling, Room
·
Additions
Local Contractor

AFTER TH INKING
IT OVER, I DID SOME
HEA.VY EDITING.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondilional lifetime guaran1ee. Local references furnished. Established 1975 .
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870 , Rogers Basement
Waterprooling.
Wanlad·

740.367· 0536

Wise Concrete

PTIFT

$ 1.SO O.OO

www.Homelncome4-U.com

MY MEMOIR MAY
8E THINNER, BUT I CAN
FINA.LLY SAY MY STORY
IS ONE HUNDI&lt;ED
PERCENT TRU£.

)

of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

WHY DO I HAVE TO
00 TH IS WITH HAl~
GLUED TO ME? )
PLAUSIBLE
,.__._ DENIABILITY.

740-992-5929
740-416-1698
1~

y r ~.

Exp. Free t::stimates

Manley' a
Racycllng
li03. , St.• lllltllllltlll. • 45180
JotD-812-3894

II• lll•lltMin9:181111-6:111M
1111111111 I:H •12:08 Ill

PAYIIIG TOP PRICES FOI

29 Serious People to Work
!rom home u s1ng a tomput·
er.
'up 1o $500.00 to

)

A li lypcs

740.367·0544

HOMI:
IMPHOVF.MEN"1S

You sho uld see live: two spades (if
spades are 4-1' you have no chance) , .
two diamonds and one club.
What winners do you have? Oulside
spades, six: two in· each side suit. You
must get lour trump tri cks. With two dia mond winners in your own h8nd, you
must "swallow" your two low diamonds
by rutting them on the board . But if East
is short in both spades and diarrionds,
you need to be careful.
After winning the second trick, duck a

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

lllmlltlmCIII•IIIIIilltuWIIIIII
C•IIIUC IIIIMrlws•CIIIW
ICIIII« CIINII ft'ICell

GARFIELD

I

I'M .JUST tiOINCir "fi-llS UNTIL
I SELL M~ 5C.RE'ENPLAY

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CelebritY Cipher CryptO!JamS are crea!OO !rom QUOtallons by famouspeople oa&amp; and presenr
Each lette~ 1n the c!J*l~ stands lor another

TOOay'sclue: TeqtJals S

"VJV
VBE

GKEWGO
THYCJBT

PGL

EPCT

YHKGFHL

GEECEBLH .

H X H Y M V J L M K; J X H L P C W . C R G 0 E H L
PCW

EJ

GLJNE

WH ."

• TEHXH

VBTAHWC

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - " Mu~c was my refuge. I coold crawl into the spaoe
belween 1he notes and cu~ my back to loneliness." - Maya Angelou ·

Astro-

WOlD .
IAMI ,

Graph

'lllur'lllrthdojl:

ARIES (March 2 1-Aplil 19) -

Roofing, Siding,
Soffir, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

DryWall,

game, he might be taking his side too
high, but the game bonus·is so huge that

By Bernice Bed• O•ol

.

V.C. YOUNG Ill
~~ Yo',H

the right ope ning bid.

North knows !hal when he heads fo•

Friends and acquaintances who have
been helpful to you In the past are likely
to continue to be the very ones Who offer
lt1e greatest·support to your eHorts in the
year ahead. Do all that you can to protect
and nurture these relationships.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-N ov. 22) ~ Be realistic about how many objectives you take
on so tha1 you don't fi nd yoursell running
in circles . Your possibil ities for a successful day are good if you d_on 't take on too
much.
SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 23-Dec. 2 1) Under n o circumstances .should you discuss delicate career maners with an ind ividual who has historically been unsuppor1ille of your efforts. This person Is apt
to carry ta les of it to the wrong people.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Be
helpful in as many ways as you can to
friends who need your assistance. bu1
thiok hard and k&gt;tig before making any
financial loans. Suppt~ construclive sup·
port instead of greenbacks.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb,. 19) - Teaming
up with others could offer you bolt1 prob- '
lem s and promises. The person who contribu tes th~ mo st propor11onate ly will
determine the degree of sUccess or failure.
PI SCES (Feb. 20- March 20) - Although
this cou ld basica ll ~ be a p leasant day,
you may ·have to contend with some
complicated reSponsibilities not of your
own making. Avoid others who are born
manipulators.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

*In sured
*Experienced
References Avai lable!
Call Gary S1anlcy @
740-742-2293

CR.OS~ OUT

~IP-THP"Y"

YOUNG'S

.

ed word.
In this deal, decJare r must play salely or
he will fall to defeat. Take his chair and
plan th e play in lour spades. West leads
the cl ub 10, East taki ng his ace and
returning the suit.
South's w~alth of aces and ki ngs is a big
plus, but having seven po ints in a doubleton is a negative, so two no-trump is

Saturdly. Nov. 17, 2007

AND IIP.tTE "T+i"'-NK
'(ou• INSTEAD!

FoP-. I'IR,s . &lt;;oDFil.EY!

Pom eroy. OH

'

English author and der·
gyman, wrote, ~I f is always sale to learn ,
even from our en emi es: seldom safe to
venture to instruct, even our friends." But
if someone is learning, someone else is
instructing, even il only th rough the p'rint-

G

FINAI.L'(! I FOUND

Shade River Ag. Service

* R easo nable Rates

17 lslmportan1
19 Topmos1
1 Wrist bone
21 Casserole .2 Mon1h1y excover
pense
22 .~azzc• 3 Snuggle
· 23 High
4 Confer hon26 Lyrical
O&lt;S upon
5 Crane
28 Spleen
29 Heallphones
booms
31 Ice-fishing 6 Stein 1111er
need
7 Lose some
33 Muscle
8 Humane
spasms
s~·.:Joal
35 Peek
9no
37 Zero
10 Colleague
38 Cer
11 Kipling
pro1ectors
classic
40 -sans
18 Colleen's
que nee
42 Dazzles
home
41 Beepers

CauHoand•
effect taw
Tells on
Field
- ·Luc
Picard
Milk,
1o Yves
See a1 a
dillance
Scottish
river
Worthless
coin

C.C. Colton, an

~ump , playing 1ow spades from bolh
your hand and the dummy. Win the next
trick, cash the spade ace, and taKe

BIG NATE

Why drive anywhere ebe

*Prompl and Quality
Work

Take time to get
their number down

those diamond ruffs. Even if East can
overrutf, it costs the second trump trick
that you are always going to lose.

$10.50/100

Free Estimates

.Harrah's Cherokee
Casino
&amp; Tanger Outlet Mall
for Christmas
Shopping

Pass

All pass

20 S1olm track 43
22 Okay bU1
not grea1 44
(hyph.)
45
23 ln1elligence 46
24 Ubretto
feature
47
25 Pon1ifica1ed
26 Old hands 48
27 Muse of
his1ory
49
30 Mendicant's
shout
52
32 Nightmare
s1ree1
34 Cut, as wood
36 Razor·
sharp
39 Conse-

DOWN

hand?

Feed

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

symbol
55. Good dirt
56 Ready lor
harves11ng
57 Long-faced
58 Ocean fish
59 Hog's
abode

to uncover the 4·4 spade lit
How many losers do you have in you r

Hill's Self
Storage

35537 51. Rt. 7 North

snake
11 MOMA artlll
12 Ploy
13 Mother
rabbit
14 Bad·and- .
breakfas1s
15 No1 ye1
arisen
16 Flamenco

npays 10 gamble. North uses Smyman

12% All Stock ,

"---:;:::~:::,;:~.,1

VANS

SO I'VE REDRAWN ALL
OUR FAV'RtT ESCAPE
ROUTES ACCORDIN'L'( !!

WHAT A DEAl!!

94 Chevy Silverado PU.
LWB PW, Locks, AC, Auto.

10,000 m~es on eng. overhaul. $4500 neg. 740·446·
9315
01
Hyundai
Accent -------~
AKC Reg. 1740)696-1085
Hatch back. 5 speed · trans. Bro nco II, 1986. Eddie
Min Pin pups. 1 blkltan F 14 65,310 miles, good condi· Bauer Limited Edition . 1
wks. 1 blk/tan M&amp;F, 1 red F lion. needs catalytic con11ert- Owner. $1 ,000. (7 40)446·
ready 11/24 $300/each . Call • • Asking $3200. Call 740- _3,;;16;;8------..
I!
740·388·8124.N_o re lay calls 709-6339. .

Collie pups mlf, $350:
30x50x10 Golden Ret. pups, m $300;
Delivery Toy Poodle pups. m. $300:

Bob Manley

Our
DOW
a house. When

r

10

Pole
Barns
$6 ,495
Free

__....,

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

I I{\ '"1'111~ I \110\

Terrier Male $400. All AKC .

In Loving

East

Opening lead: ofo 10

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

53 Naturalnees
54 Road sign

shou1

10 9 8

740-992-1611

Ellm View
Apartments

enthuala11

8 Deadly

11 simply

may be one of those davs when , even
lt1ough you 'll try your best to keep things
running smoothly in a socia l situation,
whateve r you do may s1111 not be fully
apprec iated . Grin and bear II.
TAURUS {Ap ril 20 -May 20) - Add the
figures up first before you get into a situation whOre the goals you establ ish may
rlOI be wo rth the cost to achieve them.
Don't put yourself In a n o-win position .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - If your
viewpoin1s seriously con111ct with someone whose supporl you need, you'd be
wise to keep them to yourself. Don't let
. your feeijngs bec6me so strong lt1atthey '
are unmanageable.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)- You need
to be both practical and methOdical in
your commercial affairs, because if you
become Indifferent to reality, your mls- '
takes could eat up all yoqr profits for no
good pu rpose .
LEO {July 23-Aug . 22) - The hard facts
might be thai vou won 't get everything
you want when negotiating something
importan1. but In reality, you'll actually do
better in the end if you're not rigid and
unyielding .
~ VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept 22) Th ere
could be two sides 10 you: 1) you coul d
make more demands on others tha n
usual: or 2) you'll go out of your way to be
helplul to Bt'lyone who ha ppens to need
assistance .
'
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0i::t. 23) Just
because a friend with a facu lty for creatIng problems comr,nlts you to somethin g
upoh which you h adn '1 agreed , It doesn'1
mean you have to comply. II ll's not In
your Interest. say Nno.~

ORearrang111

leners of the

lour ICIVmbltd WOrOJ below to lorm four simple wordt.

I
I

BINGOB

I I I I' I
NYLAM

I I' I 1 I
4

I

T Y PNA R

•

I

Sign posted in travel
118t!Dcy: "The World is a
Book and Those Who Do
No1 Travel Read··-- a-··."

1-.,.,-,..,,7...,,-....,.,....,,,.,8:-l O Completa the chuckle quotod
by filling in 1he miuing wo~
L....I.'--.I--.1--.1--.L......J you develop
ltom step No. 3 below.

8 PlETTERS
RINT NUMI!ERE!!
II
IN SQUARES
8 ANSWER
UNSCRAMBlE FORI
I

I I Ia I I I I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 1 1 ~ 1 s ~ 0 7
Aspect- Nomad - Shawl - B1ting - BLINDNESS

"You should never seek revenge,'' the mother told her
irate son. "An eye for an eye only leads to more
BLINDNESS."

ARLO&amp;JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ
A li&amp;IIR OF SIAMESE
1\NINS W~ 5efl!!1!1l!D..

Shop
Classlfleds!

I

I WONDER If lHa~

llleN seNT lb 111e1r

W~

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 16, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 16, 2007
ALLEY OOP

CI .ASSIFIEDS

3BR, 2.5ba, CIA, w/ stlgar
on
Raccoon
Crk ,$800
+1st+last+dep. Serious only.
Mu&amp;t see! 245-5808

www.mydallysentl.nel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

EMPLOYMENT

Phillip
Alder

43 Type
of perro1
1 Molal con- 44 Downpours
111ner whh e 46 Clanged
spigot
50 Sofa end
4 Partially
51 PC
open

ROBERT
BISSELl

North
• 10 6 52
• J 74 3
• 6 4
• Q J 2

ce1m1C1111
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

IH&amp;-QI

West
• K Q 9
• 9 2

East

t Qt0873

• J 9

•

• J 8

• Qt066S

South
• A 7 4 3

• AK

Stop &amp;Compare

f

A K 52

+K

7 4

Dealer: South
Vulnerable : Both
OH SA

141 . 3BR , 2BA,
appliances, basement 1 car
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
garage, $500/mo
plus
•Central heat &amp; AJC
depos¢. 1614)226-0859

• Washer/dryer hookup
Split level house wl3bobath ,
• Tenant pays electric

furnishe(;t kitchen, large cov·
ered porch, big level yard.
nice house, no inside pets,
no smoking, $625 month .

I.

S300 deposit, Racine area ,
(740)949·30 19

i~

MOBFORILEn~-o~m;

"""'

til..

(304 )882·3017

Office/Warel'louse/Storage

South

West

Nortb

Great location in Gallipolis!

%NT

3•

Space

3 ..

Pass
Pass

46

starling

at

$150.00/month for 700 sqft.
call 404-456-3802.
\II IH II\ \II hi

HOUSEIIOIJJ

26 Years Experience

GoollS

David Lewis
740-992-6971

II

2 BR trailer in Mercerville .

Guttering

X C.AN'T

Seamless G utters
Roofi ng, Siding , G utters

~er

A l&gt;ATe IUT TtiAT 61JY

Goe5 OUT AL/, Tti~ TIM~ JUST
/
recAu5e tifS ~tiCM!

Insured &amp; Bonded

Free

N

~~~~~~~

.

740-653-9657

MAK~
~AM~ Of

MONeY W-ON'T

YOU
WIN IN Tt4e
j.OVE···
ruT IT S'lllle PlJTS, YOU IN

Ellm View
Apartments

$325/Month includes water.
Ca11740-256-8132

GOOl&gt; fleLl&gt; POSIT ION!
•

Hardwood Cabln~ti'y And FurnHUre

BARNEY

"'-'"''•
J&amp;L
Construction
1982 Ford Granada. good
work car. $500. 388-0436
1987 Oldsmobile 98 for
more
mformalion
call
1740)41 6-6967
1999 Dodge Durango, runs

and looKs Great! 4x4. autoClub Caves- Heat wave, matic. power seats. power
bleed in purple, direct hit,
Sin Cit~ &amp; Broadband; Reg.
Angus Bulls- Prime cut, 878
lead on, foresight , In tocus ,
new level &amp; band 0699.;

wi ndowS. cruise control, 3rd

row seating, rear air, towing
package
NADA
value
$7025.00 make an offer,

(740)992·2335
Austra lian Sheph erd Pups. ~~r,:.;;;;.;;;;;;;_

Cocker Spani&amp;ls $300, Gi:;nt 1740)245-598 4. 1740)645- F1S
~
Schnauzers $500, Scottish 4833

740-767-4875

In Memory

1937)718-1471

Memory
Nov. 81951-

Reg . ChihUahua pups. Black
&amp; white. Have shots and
Swim Spas Arrived! Save wormed . $200. Ca n 30 4$$$Tiki Tubs Hot TubOu11et. 674-5857 ·
Closeouts
available. ~~;;.;,~~---.,

We will take boarders. For
more inlormation call 740245-9549, ask .fOf Linda.

Ashland, KY 606- 929-5655

oome in after work
each night it quiet as
a mouse. I know
things are ne,·er ·
going to be the same.
I even sometimes still
call your name....
I shed many tears
nery morning, noon
and night just
wishing you were
here to hOld me
,.uy tight. Your
place at the table is
empty, and your big
chair too, lots of
thinp art different
around here without
you.
Always in my heart,
Wife•Nancy Manley

In Memory

In Memory

In Memory of

j{efen

Jeffers
On Her Birthday

11-16-1923
4-7-1997
We don't need a special day to bring
you to our mi11ds, because the tl1ings
you taught u., are ~ith us
all the time...
Bob &amp; girls

TRUCKS
FOR SALE

A1JillS

•uR SALE

Vinyl Records 304·882·2688

r

7U

M•rtNL
~ ~

IN.'ITRIJI.ft:NTS

auto, 61 K miles , $14,000

i"--~~::.;i:O.::;._.I
FoR SALE

1740)379-9381

01 Dodge Caravan , auto, air,

02

Cama•o

Z28

ln

V8,

-------~ good

clean van . 64,000
05 Ch rysle r 300 l imited miles. $3000 OBO. 740 _256 _
36000 mi. AJC, leather heat- 1233 or 256 _1652
ed seats, 1 owner, garage ...~~~:::;::;..._ __,

r4

WM~~?n:us'

40

I

kept ,. loaded. 92 Lumi na,
~
•
Wurlitzer piano $300 . Celli AJC, Cruise, tilt , all power, ..,
Ward's 3 Whee l Bicycle 740:446-7029
125.000 m1. 245-5017 ·
$80/cash 304-882·2436
02 HD Electra Glide Classic
Stage 3 motor. $25,000
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Would !he lady that called
invesled.
sacrifice
for
me concern ing the ball
$ 14,SOO. 1740)446-7S27
green 1/2 pi rlt jars, please
call me back I didn't clearly
1984 Honda Go ld Wing
gel your message; Call after
1200, we ll maintai ned, lots
7:00p.m. 740·533·3870
of ch rome, award winner,

r

2 male Yorkie puppies . 7
we eks old, very small. Call
740-446·3398
3 male long haired chi·
huah ua·~ ready to go. No
papers.
$200
each

1304)773-5180

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a.n Emergency
Room Nurse · Practitioner.' Applicant
should have a minimum of one year
experience in a clinic, urgent care or
family practice setting. Bachelor's degree
from a four year college or university.
Successfully completed a Bachelor's
degree in Nursing. Ce rtified as a Family
Nurse Pr~ctitioner or speciality as defined.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Re~ources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
Or fax:
304·675·6975
Or apply online at:
www.pvalley.org
AA/EOE

$3500. 1740)949-2449

29670 Bashan Road
Racine . Ohio

45771
74().949·2217

Cherokee, North Carolina
• Chartered Coach
Transportation
Friday, November 30, 2007 lo
Sunday, December 2 , 2007
$195/person (double occupancy)
$250/person (single occupancy)
Staying al Hampton Inn
Gladly accept cash, check,
cre.dit cards and money orders
Please make all checks
payable to PVH Foundation
LIMITED SPACES!
To make reservations please
call PYH Community
Relations, (304) 675-4340,
. Ext. 1492

Help Wanted

Music at the
Eagles

'0

OkeyDokey
Karaoke
Saturday
November 17th
7:00 pm · 11 :00 pm
Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, November 18th
680/Siug Match
12 Noon

..,

Help Wanted

LICENSED PRACTICAl
NURSE

.

Pleasant Valley Hos pital is cu rrently
accepting appli ca 1i ons fo r a full t ime
Licensed Pra ctical Nurse at Dr. Pack's
Office in Leon, WV. Applicon1s must have
a c u rrent W es l Virgin ia ·license. One-year
experien ce 1n a phy wi an offi ce or
hos!'ital related area, wor king with direct
patient care.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
Orlax:
l04·675·6975
Or apply on line at:
-.
www.pvalley.org
AA/EOE

THE BORN LOSER

~OU KNOW, 1\LL If\\ I&gt;J...L, we:~(' '(&amp;\E.oo, YOU AAI/E.TO~
60T r~ PF!.TTY &lt;:.OOtl, 6Liol&gt;'6,1

,..-WAAT E~,~ OU~~t&gt;&lt;:.tt1

1-Jt. ~f&gt;.-1/( r... t&gt;l.IC.E,QUitT Uft

To&lt;£Tl\CR!

T~E

I'LL JUST

PEP-FEc.T CMI&gt;

· H-.PP'Y

740 -985 -3831

'

Please leave

'

...

PEANUTS

qg._) 62 11}
Pull PrO)&gt; 01\ lu
_,)

'

f

~pt 111

1

WELL, ~E'S SITTING IN
TI4ERE f.IOLDIN6 A !lOOK--

t'M SORR'f .. SNOOP'I
CAN'T 60 OUT TO
PLA'f RIGflT NOW ...

f.IE'S

READING ..

2006 Honda Gold Wing
$4,o00 in accessories. Paid
$24,000 new--$19 ,600 . Call

740-367-7129.
96 Honda 400 Fore men
4WD exc. cond. 1985 250
Honda Fo'urtrax. $5001080

304-S76-2843
0685

304-593-

98 Polaris Sport sman 500 4
wheeler, warn winch , 803

miles. $ 1900. 740-645-6857
or 379-9515

·

7 1 Class C Ford Motor
Home, 28', Runs Good ,
evervthing works, great
huntingfl ish lng
vehicle .
$2500 or trade lor boal ol

I

COW and BOY

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Remodeling, Room
·
Additions
Local Contractor

AFTER TH INKING
IT OVER, I DID SOME
HEA.VY EDITING.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondilional lifetime guaran1ee. Local references furnished. Established 1975 .
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870 , Rogers Basement
Waterprooling.
Wanlad·

740.367· 0536

Wise Concrete

PTIFT

$ 1.SO O.OO

www.Homelncome4-U.com

MY MEMOIR MAY
8E THINNER, BUT I CAN
FINA.LLY SAY MY STORY
IS ONE HUNDI&lt;ED
PERCENT TRU£.

)

of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

WHY DO I HAVE TO
00 TH IS WITH HAl~
GLUED TO ME? )
PLAUSIBLE
,.__._ DENIABILITY.

740-992-5929
740-416-1698
1~

y r ~.

Exp. Free t::stimates

Manley' a
Racycllng
li03. , St.• lllltllllltlll. • 45180
JotD-812-3894

II• lll•lltMin9:181111-6:111M
1111111111 I:H •12:08 Ill

PAYIIIG TOP PRICES FOI

29 Serious People to Work
!rom home u s1ng a tomput·
er.
'up 1o $500.00 to

)

A li lypcs

740.367·0544

HOMI:
IMPHOVF.MEN"1S

You sho uld see live: two spades (if
spades are 4-1' you have no chance) , .
two diamonds and one club.
What winners do you have? Oulside
spades, six: two in· each side suit. You
must get lour trump tri cks. With two dia mond winners in your own h8nd, you
must "swallow" your two low diamonds
by rutting them on the board . But if East
is short in both spades and diarrionds,
you need to be careful.
After winning the second trick, duck a

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

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GARFIELD

I

I'M .JUST tiOINCir "fi-llS UNTIL
I SELL M~ 5C.RE'ENPLAY

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CelebritY Cipher CryptO!JamS are crea!OO !rom QUOtallons by famouspeople oa&amp; and presenr
Each lette~ 1n the c!J*l~ stands lor another

TOOay'sclue: TeqtJals S

"VJV
VBE

GKEWGO
THYCJBT

PGL

EPCT

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - " Mu~c was my refuge. I coold crawl into the spaoe
belween 1he notes and cu~ my back to loneliness." - Maya Angelou ·

Astro-

WOlD .
IAMI ,

Graph

'lllur'lllrthdojl:

ARIES (March 2 1-Aplil 19) -

Roofing, Siding,
Soffir, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

DryWall,

game, he might be taking his side too
high, but the game bonus·is so huge that

By Bernice Bed• O•ol

.

V.C. YOUNG Ill
~~ Yo',H

the right ope ning bid.

North knows !hal when he heads fo•

Friends and acquaintances who have
been helpful to you In the past are likely
to continue to be the very ones Who offer
lt1e greatest·support to your eHorts in the
year ahead. Do all that you can to protect
and nurture these relationships.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-N ov. 22) ~ Be realistic about how many objectives you take
on so tha1 you don't fi nd yoursell running
in circles . Your possibil ities for a successful day are good if you d_on 't take on too
much.
SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 23-Dec. 2 1) Under n o circumstances .should you discuss delicate career maners with an ind ividual who has historically been unsuppor1ille of your efforts. This person Is apt
to carry ta les of it to the wrong people.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Be
helpful in as many ways as you can to
friends who need your assistance. bu1
thiok hard and k&gt;tig before making any
financial loans. Suppt~ construclive sup·
port instead of greenbacks.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb,. 19) - Teaming
up with others could offer you bolt1 prob- '
lem s and promises. The person who contribu tes th~ mo st propor11onate ly will
determine the degree of sUccess or failure.
PI SCES (Feb. 20- March 20) - Although
this cou ld basica ll ~ be a p leasant day,
you may ·have to contend with some
complicated reSponsibilities not of your
own making. Avoid others who are born
manipulators.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

*In sured
*Experienced
References Avai lable!
Call Gary S1anlcy @
740-742-2293

CR.OS~ OUT

~IP-THP"Y"

YOUNG'S

.

ed word.
In this deal, decJare r must play salely or
he will fall to defeat. Take his chair and
plan th e play in lour spades. West leads
the cl ub 10, East taki ng his ace and
returning the suit.
South's w~alth of aces and ki ngs is a big
plus, but having seven po ints in a doubleton is a negative, so two no-trump is

Saturdly. Nov. 17, 2007

AND IIP.tTE "T+i"'-NK
'(ou• INSTEAD!

FoP-. I'IR,s . &lt;;oDFil.EY!

Pom eroy. OH

'

English author and der·
gyman, wrote, ~I f is always sale to learn ,
even from our en emi es: seldom safe to
venture to instruct, even our friends." But
if someone is learning, someone else is
instructing, even il only th rough the p'rint-

G

FINAI.L'(! I FOUND

Shade River Ag. Service

* R easo nable Rates

17 lslmportan1
19 Topmos1
1 Wrist bone
21 Casserole .2 Mon1h1y excover
pense
22 .~azzc• 3 Snuggle
· 23 High
4 Confer hon26 Lyrical
O&lt;S upon
5 Crane
28 Spleen
29 Heallphones
booms
31 Ice-fishing 6 Stein 1111er
need
7 Lose some
33 Muscle
8 Humane
spasms
s~·.:Joal
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9no
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classic
40 -sans
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que nee
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home
41 Beepers

CauHoand•
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Tells on
Field
- ·Luc
Picard
Milk,
1o Yves
See a1 a
dillance
Scottish
river
Worthless
coin

C.C. Colton, an

~ump , playing 1ow spades from bolh
your hand and the dummy. Win the next
trick, cash the spade ace, and taKe

BIG NATE

Why drive anywhere ebe

*Prompl and Quality
Work

Take time to get
their number down

those diamond ruffs. Even if East can
overrutf, it costs the second trump trick
that you are always going to lose.

$10.50/100

Free Estimates

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Casino
&amp; Tanger Outlet Mall
for Christmas
Shopping

Pass

All pass

20 S1olm track 43
22 Okay bU1
not grea1 44
(hyph.)
45
23 ln1elligence 46
24 Ubretto
feature
47
25 Pon1ifica1ed
26 Old hands 48
27 Muse of
his1ory
49
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shout
52
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s1ree1
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36 Razor·
sharp
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DOWN

hand?

Feed

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

symbol
55. Good dirt
56 Ready lor
harves11ng
57 Long-faced
58 Ocean fish
59 Hog's
abode

to uncover the 4·4 spade lit
How many losers do you have in you r

Hill's Self
Storage

35537 51. Rt. 7 North

snake
11 MOMA artlll
12 Ploy
13 Mother
rabbit
14 Bad·and- .
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npays 10 gamble. North uses Smyman

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SO I'VE REDRAWN ALL
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ROUTES ACCORDIN'L'( !!

WHAT A DEAl!!

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30x50x10 Golden Ret. pups, m $300;
Delivery Toy Poodle pups. m. $300:

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Our
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a house. When

r

10

Pole
Barns
$6 ,495
Free

__....,

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

I I{\ '"1'111~ I \110\

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In Loving

East

Opening lead: ofo 10

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

53 Naturalnees
54 Road sign

shou1

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740-992-1611

Ellm View
Apartments

enthuala11

8 Deadly

11 simply

may be one of those davs when , even
lt1ough you 'll try your best to keep things
running smoothly in a socia l situation,
whateve r you do may s1111 not be fully
apprec iated . Grin and bear II.
TAURUS {Ap ril 20 -May 20) - Add the
figures up first before you get into a situation whOre the goals you establ ish may
rlOI be wo rth the cost to achieve them.
Don't put yourself In a n o-win position .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - If your
viewpoin1s seriously con111ct with someone whose supporl you need, you'd be
wise to keep them to yourself. Don't let
. your feeijngs bec6me so strong lt1atthey '
are unmanageable.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)- You need
to be both practical and methOdical in
your commercial affairs, because if you
become Indifferent to reality, your mls- '
takes could eat up all yoqr profits for no
good pu rpose .
LEO {July 23-Aug . 22) - The hard facts
might be thai vou won 't get everything
you want when negotiating something
importan1. but In reality, you'll actually do
better in the end if you're not rigid and
unyielding .
~ VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept 22) Th ere
could be two sides 10 you: 1) you coul d
make more demands on others tha n
usual: or 2) you'll go out of your way to be
helplul to Bt'lyone who ha ppens to need
assistance .
'
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0i::t. 23) Just
because a friend with a facu lty for creatIng problems comr,nlts you to somethin g
upoh which you h adn '1 agreed , It doesn'1
mean you have to comply. II ll's not In
your Interest. say Nno.~

ORearrang111

leners of the

lour ICIVmbltd WOrOJ below to lorm four simple wordt.

I
I

BINGOB

I I I I' I
NYLAM

I I' I 1 I
4

I

T Y PNA R

•

I

Sign posted in travel
118t!Dcy: "The World is a
Book and Those Who Do
No1 Travel Read··-- a-··."

1-.,.,-,..,,7...,,-....,.,....,,,.,8:-l O Completa the chuckle quotod
by filling in 1he miuing wo~
L....I.'--.I--.1--.1--.L......J you develop
ltom step No. 3 below.

8 PlETTERS
RINT NUMI!ERE!!
II
IN SQUARES
8 ANSWER
UNSCRAMBlE FORI
I

I I Ia I I I I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 1 1 ~ 1 s ~ 0 7
Aspect- Nomad - Shawl - B1ting - BLINDNESS

"You should never seek revenge,'' the mother told her
irate son. "An eye for an eye only leads to more
BLINDNESS."

ARLO&amp;JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ
A li&amp;IIR OF SIAMESE
1\NINS W~ 5efl!!1!1l!D..

Shop
Classlfleds!

I

I WONDER If lHa~

llleN seNT lb 111e1r

W~

�..

,

Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 16, 2007

www.rr.ydailysentinel .com

,...
14001

* ' DILINQIJI!Hr LAND TAX NOI'ICE
(T.UYE.\1*'1
The Iondo. lou IIIII .... of lou doU- by,., C-, n.- of Me1p c-y, with !he
tMel, n•=·mc:ub, inlt:mt, . . pmikiea. dllqld dlenupoa ....... 10 law. . . COIIIiaed delaibed in the followhlt: lisu.

• 11ic: Uma

N""'pboloo
Big Ten

Pet.
Ohio State 6 1 .857
Michigan 6 1 .857
IllinOIS
52 .714
Wisconsin 4 3 .571
Penn State 4 3 .571
'Iowa
4 4 .500
Purdue
3 4 .429
N'westem 3 4 .429
Michigan St. 2 5 .286
lnd&lt;ana
2 5 .286
Mmnesota 0 7 .000
Teams

WL

Overall
Pet.
10 1 .909
8 3 .727
8 3 .727
8 3 .727
8 3 .727
6 5 .545
7 4 .636
6 5 .545
6 5 .545
6 5 .545
1 10 .091
W L

SATURDAY'S GAMES
Northwestern at No. 20 Illinois
Purdue at Indiana
West~m Mich&lt;gan at Iowa
No. 7 Olio stale at No. 23 Mid 'J
Penn State at Michigan State
No. 24 Wisconsin at Minnesota

I

TEAM LEADERS
Total Offense
Northwestern .... .................. 432.1
Purdue ............................... .429.2
Michigan State ....... ............ .426.4
lllinois .................................. 412.6
W&lt;Sconsin ........................... .411.3

Rushing Offense
lllinois ...... ............ ................ 261.2
MK:higan State ...... .............. 205.4
Ohio State .....:': ................... 198. 7
Wisconsin .............. ........... ... 190.3
Penn State .......................... 189.3

Hayes' clock was always set to Michigan game time

·

game against Colorado in September. And Colorado was
ranked No. 10 at the time.
Dave Cheney, a Lima attorney who was an all-Big
Ten offensive lineman at
OSU in 1970, remembers
the year- round Michigan

Jim
Naveau
The Lima News
jnaveau@limanews .com

419-993·2087

prep~ations.

who were there.
Last week former coach
Earle Bruce recalled how
when he was an OSU assistant in 1971, Hayes had the
team spend two days practicing for the Michigan game the
week before a non-conferen~

"If we were playing somebody that really wasn't very
good, say Northwestern or
Dlinois or Wisconsin back
then, we would practice
maybe one day for the team
we were going to play that
weekend and' block Michi-

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An inside look at this week's game
COLUMBUS - Beyond the
unwillingness to even say the
word Michigan, beyond the re- ·
fusal to buy gas north of the
Ohio border, maybe the most
enduring part of the legend of
Woody Hayes' obsession with
Ohio State's annual football
game against its biggest rival
is the story of how he would ,
have his teams practice for the
Michigan game all year long.
So, is it a myth? An urban
legend concocted over the
decades? Or is it true?
It's all true. Very true, according to some of the people

I\\ICO.

gan 's schemes the other hard
work day," Cheney said.
"There is no doubt about it."
After Michigan's upset of
thecenturyofNo.1-ranked
Ohio State in 1969, it got
even more intense.
"That's all we did in spring
practice before my senior year
was work against them
(Michigan)," Cheney said.
If coach Jim Tressel has
his teams practice early for
Michigan, he is more subtle
about it.
Where Tressel tosses subtlety to the wind is when he

brings Bruce into a team
meeting every year for a
stream of consciousness,
freestyle rant the week of the
Michigan game.
When Bruce coached the
Buckeyes, he used to have
Hayes come in for a fiery talk.
Speaker s weren't a big
part of Hayes' motivational
repertoire, though. For obvious reasons.
"When he invited a speaker,
they had to go according to the
theme he wanted or he would
interrupt them," former fullback Jim Otis said.

SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: MICHIGAN (8·3, 6-1 BIG TEN)

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IWfOID rowNSIIIP . EASlUN lSD

Total Defense
OhiO State .......................... 237.5
Penn State ........... :.............. 295.8
Michigan ........... ...................335.1
Wisconsin ........ .......... .......... 336.7
Iowa ............................ ........ 338.6

Rush Defense
Ohio State ............................82. 7
Penn State ............................ 82.7
lllinois............... .................. .118.6
lowa ............................... ..... 122.0
Michigan Sl!lte .................... 131.1

Pass Defense
OhioState .......................... 154.7
Michigan ..............................191.5
Wisconsin ............................197.8
Penn State .......................... 213.1
Jowa ....................................216.6

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Rushing Yards
Rashard Mendenhall,lllinois .... 1,402
Javon Ringer, Michigan St. .... 1,298
CMs Wells, Ohio State .. ........ 1.241
PJ. Hill, WisconSin ....... .'........ 1,080
Rodney Kinlaw, Penn State.... l ,061

Passing Yards
C.J. Bacher, Northwestern ....3,346
Curtis Painter, Purdue .......... 3,019
~lien Lewis, Indiana ............ 2,623
Adam Weber, Minnesota ...... 2,543
Tyler Don011an, Wisconsin...... 2,338

entitle

rthe

Northwestern ...................... 307. 7
Purdue ................................287.8
Indiana ......... .. ... .................. 239.7
Minnesota ..........................236.1
MK:higan State/Wisconsin .... 221.0
A look at some of the key matchups in the
game between No.7 Ohio State (10·1, 6-1
Big Ten) and No. 23 MIChigan (8·3, 6-1 Big
Ten) in MiChigan Stadium On Saturday:

Quarterbacks
Ohio State quarterbad&lt; Todd Boeckman will
be try;ng to bounce back from adversity for the
first time this season after throwing three inter·
cepions and no touChdown passes in a 28-21
loss to ll~nois last week. Boeckman (2,121
yards, 23 touchdOM1s, 11 interceptions) is
maWng his first start in an OSU·Michigan game.
But the lifth-yearJUnior is more experienced
than most first-year starters. He is a )ll8l' older
than MK:higan's Chad Henne, Who will be mak·
ing his 45th career start If he is healthy.
Henne (1,497 yards, 14 touchdowns, 7 interceptions) has majored 1n battling adversity
this season. He played only briefly in a 37-21
loss to Wisconsin last week because of a
separated throwing shoulder that has both·
ered him since midseason. He also has bat·
Hed a knee problem and has mtssed three
starts. Freshman Ryan Mallett, who has com,
pleted only 43 percent of his 138 passes,
will start if Henne can't play.
Advantage: Even (If Henne plays)

Running backs
If it's November and you're a running back,
chances are good you have some aches and
patns or worse. All three of Ohio State's top
running backs came out of the Illinois game
with some sort of physical problem. Starter
Chris Wells 11;241 yards, '12 touchdowns)

was bothered by the cranky ankle he has had season over Wisconsin's Joe Thomas (No. 3
all season and had to have his wrist taped
overall pick in the NFL draft) and Pen~ State's
dunng the game. Backups Maurice Wells
Levi Brown (No. 5 overall), but chose to retum
(ankle) and Brandon Saine (possible concus- to school for his senior season. The Wolvennes
sion) also were injured. Tressel alluded to the have run behind him all season and he has
recuperative powers of playing Michtgan ear- not been called for a penalty in 11 games.
lier this week and said he expects all three to
Ohio State's offensive line lett some room
be ready to play on Saturday.
for improvement last week, when Chris Wells'
Michigan's Mtke Hart (1,188 yards, 12
streak of 100-yard games ended at three
touchdowns) has missed t1wee of the last four
and the passing game didn't produce any
games because of a bad~ spraned ankle.
touchdowns. The Buckeyes have allowed
Coach UOI'J Carr won~ say If he or quarterback only 14 sacks and Michigan has given up 21.
Chad Henne will play on Saturday. ff Hart can't
Oh1o State ranks third 1n the Big Ten in rush·
play, either Brandon Mira (387 yards) or Cal1c6 · &lt;ng and Michigan is sixth.
8ro'M1 1382 yards) will become the No. 1 back.
Advanta!le: Ohio Stale
Advantage: Even (If Hart plays)
Defensive line

Receiven

Michigan's Mane Mannin~am (62 catches,
1,062 yards, 11 touchdO'M'ls) has more ttlan
100 yards receiving 1n six stra1~t games and
set the sci"'OO record with a 97 -yard touchdown catch against Wisconsin. Adrian Arlington 156 catches, 716 yards, 6 TDs) and Greg
Mathews (31 catches, 3 touchdowns) f!ive the
Wolverines a triple threat at receMlr.
Brian Robiskie (48 catches, 864 yards, 10
touchdowns) and Bnan Hartline (45 catches,
610 yards, 5touchdowns) lead Ohio State's
receivers, who were kept out of the end zone
against Illinois.
Advantage: Michigan

Offensive line
Michigan offensive tackle Jake Lcng was
named the Big Ten's Uneman of the 'rear last

Laurinaitis? Last week, one of the snubbed,
lll&lt;nois' J Leman, had a great game against
them. This week they face another in Mithigan's Shawn Crable (a team-leading 74
tackles, 24.5 tackles for losses. 7.5 sacks).
Chris Graham has 73 tackles.
L.aurinaitis, OSU's leading tackler with 97,
says the Buckeyes were in position but just
didn't make plays l'lhen Illinois rushed for 260
yards and ga1ned 400 yams overall. Marcus
Freeman (86 tackles) has also mOiled into the
top 10 in that category in the Big Ten.
Advl!nl¥: E've!l

Defensive backs

Ohio State allowed four touchdown passes
by Illinois' lsiah "Juice" Williams and didn't in·
The defensive front four was a question
tercept a pass even thou~ he came into the
marl&lt; coming into the season and rt has seen game wrth one more pick than touchdown
more shifting of personnel than an)Where else passes this season and in his career. Eight d~- .
on Ohto State's defense. While the four de·
ferent Illinois players cau~t passes. The defensive backs and the three linebackers have fensive backfield needs to raise the 1M of rts
started all 11 games, no defensive lineman
play !&gt;~i!icanttt against Michigan's receM!rs.
has started every game. Detrort native Vemon
Safety Jamar Adams leads MK:higpn wrth
Gholston, the Buckeyes' sack leader with 10, three interceptions. Michigan has 12 intercep·
could have a little extra Incentive 1n the g;Jme. tions as a team, one more than Ohio State.
Michigan defensive end Brandon Graham
Advantage: Ohio state
has 8.5 sacks and the other end Tim Jam1-.
Special teams
son has 5.5. Ohio State ranks first in the Big
Michigan's K.C. Lopata is 8 of 8 on field
Ten in total defense and Michigan is third.
goals
and Ohio State's Ryan Pretorius is 17
Advanta!le: Michigan
of 21, but three of his misses came on
Unebllcken
blocked Wcks. OSU punter A.J. Trapasso IN·
Should Ohio State beware of Big Ten line- erages 42.0 yards per punt.and Michigan's
backers who weren 'I included on the list of Zoltan Mesko is averaging 39.9 yards.
Butl&lt;us Award finalists along with James
AIMlntale: Ohio state

ReceiVIng 'rinds
Devin Thomas, Michigan St. .. 1,087
Mario Manni~m. Michigan .. l,062
James Hardy, Indiana ..............988
Tfa\lls Beckum, Wisconstn ........ 871
.Brian Robisl&lt;ie, Ohio State ........864

CHrSIIII rowNSIIIP • EAS1UN LSD
Omwml C'"""" llmold P1!0&lt; Kel~ 0 Sect 12-3 (6401 Sepi or Nwll4 W orRH!OA
Foc 36, n, Rl2, 1.92.\ 0111 Of 104.19A
l.fflA
OJOO!ml Davis GretaL
Ollllilii!XI Dill Stmn R1JOr I~ do Slcvm Dill
Sect 11 164IIITI Rll Nc Pin orNciiU W~orNcii41JJA
Dill Sttven RIJOr .IOIJUle do Sle\tll Dill
S...l2 Rl216401TI Swore. Sell4 A 1·112A

Todd Boeckman ..................2,121
Rushing yards
·
_Cflris Wells .......................... 1,241
-Receiving yards
·Brian Robiskie ........................ 864
Touchdowns·
Chris Wells ..................... ...........12

Tackles
.James L.aunnartis ......... ............. 97

Interceptions
Malcolm Jenkins ....·...................... 3
Sacks
Vemon Gholston ........................ lO

200 7 OSU SCHEDULE
Sept. 1
_Sept. a
Elept. 15
Sept. 22
~pt. 29
Oct. 6
Oct. 13
Oct. 20
Oct.27
Nov. 3
Nc&gt;l. 10

Youngstown State W38·6
Akron
w20· 2
@Washington W33·14
Northwestern
W58·7
@Minnesota
W30-7
@Purdue
W23· 7
Kent State
W48·3
Michig;m State W24-17
@PennState W37-17
Wisconsin
W38-17
Illinois
L21-28

MlURDAY

@ Michigan

Noon

Content a&gt;mpied by JimNaveau and
desig1 by Jeff Braun • The Uma Nem

OiJ¥!1f11 ~ 2007 The Uma Ne\w. Repro·

duction of all a&lt; any portion of this matenal
·~ prohibltad without ""'JIJlSS consent. ·

, Q8cA with Jim Naveau

Say what?

,Q
A

. ••1 haven't thought about that at all.
That's something that I'm not going to
think about during the season."

wtry didn't Jim Tressel challenge What looked like an
obvious fumble by Illinois 1n the first quarter last week?

The biggest reason probably was that he wasn't
aware how clearly the ABC replay showed the ball
appearing to coine out of the hands of Illinois'
Daniel Dufrene before he hit the ground. Olio
State's assistant coaches In the press boll aren't
allowed to have video of the game In their booth,
so they couldn't alert the coaches on the sideline.
And the play happenad all the way across the
field from him, so he didn't get a good look at IL

- Ohio Srme linebacker james lau1inairis, abou[ whether he will
return to Ohio Stale for hb st:n iur se-J.SOn

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

Buckeye Brain Busters
1: What does the Ein

Email Jim questions at ,lnaveeu@ll-.com. call him at
800 686 992411111 2087 or blog with himat -.llmllportt.com

Ohio State president
E. Gordon Gee's
name $nd for?
~

2: What Ohio town was 3: Ohio State has played in_
the hometown of Michl· one Rose Bol'l1 since 1985.
gan ooachtng legend
How many times has Michi·
Bo Schembechler?
gan played in ~since then?
1. Elwood 2.

Barbe~on

3. Nine times

day until kickoff
•

Sun. 12-4 •

JUS
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070016!1lll Dliley O.ojlllio R

16.42

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{ll{lOO I!Dl lhvis Marion &amp;JOr Candie
Lot J5 ){)'X \20' Of Devirutey Lot .15A

21).73

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11 1.6 1

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215.75
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186.67
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151.77
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!104.16'
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101.82
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116.08
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Vulmeter Jon R.Jchard
51 9.55
Sect. 11·100 (2(:{1) Mid. Of lot EOf Rd. 20.63A
\'ulmeter J011 Richard

Deltavalle Michael
Duni RLarry
Duni. Larry
HarttrRooald

0901SIOOll Allhooy Ste~~en A10r Deborah Sect 35 Mid or Sw Pan Of Swl/4 5.01 3..\ Ou1 Of .t5A 5.013A
090012800) Amoo Thomas A&amp; Carol A
Sect. JO NPan or Sw 114 10A
Sccl5 Frac27 T4N RliW NPn 1.15A
IJ:QXJ1700l Badlet l arrt~ Jr
09lml600J ButimuiHtrve}'ACarol
Scct. I/Sw lf20fSe i/4NOfRd 1.5M
090001oo:xl BanlmusH~tvey&amp;Carol
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OOIXWBIXM Bartimus Michr:llt
Sect 23 T4 Rll Sw ( (If 4.616A Qit Of 11.4MA 4.616A
090013300) BibllttGmld
Sect33Sw l'attEt22ASOf Rd\0.64AE-.5.49A 5. 151\
090036100) Bissell Roger A/Or Shcrri
Sect. 24Nt Put 2A
090015&amp;0Cl'l Bobmf D:lrrfiy MEta!
Sect. 12 WPan Of S 12M. Ex. 6A Sw 63.84A
OIJOI00700J Brittain Brilll GID Kim K Scct. II Wlf2 Of Scl/4 Of Sc 114 22A
0900078!XIJ B~~t:hi[JU) htriria A. &amp;.lOr Barbel Tmy L
Sect. II N1!2 Of Se l/4 OfSwlf4 E.\. 6A 14.-\
Sect 14 frocl 32 T4 Rll I.OOA &lt;M Of 25.25A I.OOA
0901266004 Bulcber F1ormct F
Sect II 23 Near t.lld OnE Lire Of
090134600) Clmpbe11 Sb11100 Elir.abclh
Nel/40fSei/4Ed38A 1. 113A
S
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Carter Jimmy l...ct
Lot I E or Sw !fil' .2.'iA
Cubdollu Dorothy Mae
Ux IS Arbau&amp;h'S 2Nd Subdi\ision IOO'XIoiO'
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0900229015 Dcjnlm Danle A
09003l0001 DeltcNZDomingo 0 &amp;/Or 1\11gela M
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SeclllTI Al l NwCoroer 16.82A t:M{IS I.BSA 16.82A
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Sc:tt ·liS !~iPutNOfSrlf2El3A 4.\
06001119001 l'lolliu Odelol B&amp;lOr- (Joq&lt; Otru&lt;l
Seci21Diti 16.LllA0u10fi8.11Jr\ 6.1JlA

424.33

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Sat.

291.&amp;8

D30JIMI)l Hemic)' Mltttft S !/Or Edn1 M Sec II T3N R12W HKlft, Out Of 41 .OOA S.OOA
OJOIIX£000 limil:}' M1ttn S liOrEdlllM SectS (MO) NwPrl OfNwl/4 40A.
OJOIIIl!llll lklllk!MIIihew S 1!0&lt; EdnaM SoellTIN RI2W S.CaEorShodo&amp;4.91A
ElO.liA 3S.12A
0301059(00 Hmil:}' MatthewS &amp;10r Edn1 M Sccll TIN R12W Nc lf4 OfNc 1/.t Ex:5.00
t;,,6.71A &amp;,,1.41A 21.81A
Sect 36 2.62A 0J1 (X 64.92A Nw Cor. 2.62.\
om5SOOJ Hyacll Dollald G
Fr 12 Tl R 12 EJnOfWJr29.9916AOul or54.9flA 9.9916A
0300478003 Jolroo&gt; a.rl&lt;1 F
030063100J Jordan Phillip Dale c/oRoo loolul
Sect. I 16401 T.4 R.I241'JW' EorRd S.l~ .08A
OJ0063ml Jodoo !'h;mp Dll&lt; do Roo Jontoo
Sect I TJ R.l 2 NwCam II!IIA&lt;lwdiU. Kem .llA
omnm Jooilll Phillip Dale do Roo Inn
Sect. 12·1 (6«1) Mill l..d: lA
Ol008100XI Macum Michel WIDCoollie J
Sccli8T.JN R.I2W Pan Of Tho Swl/4 2A 0\ll Of 41.39A 2A
OXI1322004 Marcum Micbel W!/Or Conait J
Socii I TIN RI2'112A Cot Of42.39A 2111A
OJOOi!llXII Men Gco1Je
Sec21 Fni&lt;3H3N Rl2'11 i .14AOut Of IU3lA 7.34A
OmJIIOO I McnGco!Je
Fncl!TINRI2'113!.07AO\l!OI'l9.nA l!ffiA
031101191ll1 McnGco!Je
U. FdJ T.JN~ I 2WI.OOlA
9'1&amp;01
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Fni&lt;13!TJNRI2'1119!6AO\lioriOJ3A l.961A
OJOIIJS71111 Putt.WirtLli IJO&lt;Owi~ R 5cct4(640)1'111 Mopl'aitt! l OlA or!I93A L&lt;M! BaJrS I.OIA
Ol012.S2COO Patter Lntr Lli !/Or Oluity R Secl4 (640) T2 RIJ l.S6A ()rt Of 17.66.\ ljf)A
OJOI4911!Xl Mor R"""' li'IIUr'lln
Sect. ! (1140) Sw Cam orsw 114 22A
Ol0149'!l» PlrttrRolatl.t.Par:UrTom
Sect3S(640)SwCorner &amp;\
OJ)lli!ID) l'odetlbli:J()Bmaie
Sull2·24(6«l)Hikt1 Wolf SISPI 1~Nw PI 6.74A .451A
03010!8001 Rid&gt;ol Ro,a-lli&amp;IO&lt; RoiM R Soei2TIN Rll'IIOJIA 0. or41.111A'QJIA
OJOI!lm3 Rid&gt;oiRoplliMl!RobioR Se&lt;IITINRI2W6.11AOut0141.1llA 6.11A
!OOIOI.IDXI RoleKmethOUlrl'lmelt Sect.1(6tO)EPIOfNwi/4EOfRd. Ex..JlA .17A
0301089000 ROIC Ke""" G 1!0&lt; Pomela 5cct.~6411rt'.3 R.l2 E~ Nw II&lt;H Of Rd JJA or .!OA J3A
lll0061fllll Smilh Ricblrd oi/Or(ie(qil
Sect 3TI Rl2 Nw C&lt;mo I!OA Our or 10.4\A 1.!11
Stt l2 TIHRI2W 0.48AO.t 0f69.40A 0.48A
O'.llMX'iJ!OOI S!CWifl Jean Looise
03013!XIOOO Stocky Mite
Sect. 39(64111
or Sect..lOA
5cct24TIRI2 lb11AO..Of!IIOA 1~1 1 A
030074200 I Swell Wancla Faye
Seer J.i (640) SOf Sect U. Ill !.IIOA &amp; 1.611A 3.329A
~4m:J Swta~ Wlllda Fl.yt
Sed. 17 (640) SPul Of li lA N&lt; Pul or Sol~ lOA
Ol012081100 WOileyCiillmiA
03012071!Xl WbilleyCii"oniA
Sect 16 1640&gt; Nc c""" 40A

O!IIIIJ48002 1bomp1oo k""l RoliO&lt; B&lt;lh A Sc&lt; lll'JN Rl!'ll IO.l93A&lt;M or61.111A IO.l'JlA
0500233001 TroutCn.t
Sec7WNR ISW II. 97A~t0fi .OOA 0.97A

Hours: Mo...-Fri.

1194~

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OSOO?XiXXi
O!llll!11011l
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·c HEVROLET • · CADILLAC •
• -B
288 East Main • 1-748-992-6614 or 1-800-837-1094 •

193-ll

ro110&lt; r.. u. tl9 Block12 'I?X99'
OJOIIIl8002 HciiSiey Mllihew S IJO&lt;fllllo M Secl2 TIN RI2W 4.91A o.tor41.00A4.91A

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041ll130000 Fritod Slirley I
O.OOIOIOOJ Vao ReetbGioriaJ

Paaelng yards

1331.70
43115.S7

0.40
OlXI717004 Dillard Marl Edward 4/0r Mal)' Socc 12 JX'HA 0.. Of 1.20A .009A
03007160011 l);llod M..t F.Jw.U A1tw MOJ Sect 6(640) NPin or !1A &amp; 9]1A e. II .MA e. &lt;&gt;JIA ln699A 110.!6
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OHIO STATE LEADERS

!li.OJ

Sec l Mid lYSe l/4 OfNc l/4 l3A Ex l.82A 11.18A

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Pass Offense

34! .~

(!321A.J0.13A.Ll2A.llOA IU ATool 1141lOA)
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1(0X)20015
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392.10
71162
253.74
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472.47
141.06
40.36

32181
124.38
27283
134.5 1
24120
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l.J:l(2)E1r1
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lot(! ) IWS5Xj lf.! iodiMid
174j7
1001~ Hi rzel Jeffrey ll CleMo Cbmlll'll Royalty lnl C.-t E$lMII Petro lnc floyd V11M l..O. Welt U9 PI !141.91
100J7lJWl Johmoo Bftllda S
Lit Sec! J4 H R\2 Npt Of Nt!/4 !1M3AOil Cf 6BIA 1.113A 641.64
JOO'X!S400) Joimsoo Bindl S
J.i:j Stet 34 NPI Of Pk 1/4 Ea 14.42A Nt
fu I.033A &amp;. 9.252.\ 5l248A
11.50.97
!OOJS\3002 Nutter Plllllclo PauliDe DICosta Sect 6 &amp; 12 I4.6M In Sect 6 a: 4.796A Sect 12 Fu TIUI IU46A 333i.l4
!OOJ746(0) Whitt Robert S &amp;lOr [loye
J.i:j St.c1 12· J~ Npl Of Nw Ccw EJ 32·11lA W20A
101.17
IOOJ7.t700} Whi1r Rubm S &amp;.lOr DIM:
l..ot ~ }6 W SidrOf Swl/444.2JA
331.1!

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IIOOJ5ml Bislql Rtkn Edwtrd &amp;Jar Sta:1 do Shirley Priddy
Sec I T6N Rl4WSr Corm 2.18AOut Of89.1'2A
11).1!
l.I&amp;A El OJ6A 1.62A
!HIJIIbXIXIJ Bo!y&amp;rdYtmdaJune
LrtSa1.. 1~Sw Ccr015~.7~ASe.lStl /4 2.91JA.
Jl.91
110! I~SOll B1il!l!~ Re~ H&amp;.101 Nclwn Mary E
Sect 26 Pan Of 53A .24A
792
! 101!5400) Brigp Ru H.lJOr NdiOil MIIC)' E
Scci 26 JIIA Of S2 18A Nw Pn E.t .12A Ell 10A .01.\
41 J6
11011S300.l Brigg~ Rel H&amp;lOr Nelson MllrY E
S«l 26 iZ loogS\'illr .21A
7S.22
111Jimtlll Briw Rex H&amp;JOrNclsonMaryE
Stc 26 T6N R14W Lanz1villt OJ4A U 0.07A 0.27A
19.53
llQIJ!SOC() BriU$ RCA HM:lr Nclsoo Mary E
S«t. 26 2' 0., W Side Of La. 13a Tri ..05.\
1636.68
IIOO IISIXXI Bultingtoo Phillip L
Sect l6 Nw Pan Of Nw 114 U. !flA Nw! 3A Ne .211.j)r\
3100.02
IIOOIIIXXXI Burchett BillltJOr Flomw:e
Sec! 33 (640) NOfSw Comer EJ: 14 Vtifl Coal J0A
71.43
I\00121XXKl Bun:beU Bill &amp;:.Qr fklrcoct
Set133 Ncar Mid Scm Ell MVein Coli 2A
114.15
ll{UJII!lll Call Cberyl A&amp;/(h Phillip D Stet ST6 R\4 Se Of Swl/4 Oul Of l l ~IA 1.03\ A
1593.97
IIOOS03COO Clll'!lpbeU RIKlnda
Lot Stet -Sin E P;wr OfNel/4 1.40A
32.11
llOOO.ICOO Carpe~tcr Marlene
Frac4 T6N R14W Sc Put EI·l.DIJ El:6S. IOA. 3.07A
943.40
I !1Jlll4~~ Citi7tns Bank Of l.og111 'l'hc: Elal Stet 9 Mutchler Add. f!i .42A.
21.34
110084roXI Citizens Bank Of l.opn Thr Etll sm.1.1 Mulchltr Add. 115 .42A
522.J6
1100ZX002 Cleland James W &amp;JOr StephaiDc G
Sectioo3T6NRI4W!.OOA&lt;Nt01'16.266A 2.00A
131 !.71
110072('00) DtUavalk Laura
lrt sm 27 Near Mid Of E112 Part (X 6.75AEx In Minml1 2.68A 22j1
1100725000 Dellavallt La~m~
Lot Sect 27 Nelli' Mid OfWII2 Pan Of 16A ~ 1.12 Millmj1 1.4SA 146.56
Ux Sa:t27 Near Mid Ex If.! Miaerals S,tiOA
156.29
1100727000 Dell~val le Lau&gt;a
11002311lll Dtllavalle Laura A c/o Laura A. De Win
!27.75
Sect 27 Mid 26.136A EA \ l.l&lt;ijA 14.988A
11003 IJOOJ Du st Lisa Ani &amp; Wanh Meli ssa Lynn
429.11
Scct i2ScCor. OfSw 114 21.7SA
llS.9)
II(Wl90CX) Fackler Derutis I &amp;/Or Ki11 M Sect. 12 St Pan llo\
lili.l3
IIOCXlltml Fackler Dennis J &amp;iOr Kim M Sect. 12 NPart Of Eln Of Sc IJ4 25A
! tll:Ol80.1J Fadler Dennis I &amp;JOr Kim Mdo Kim Fackle.
So: 12 Nt Comer IJH~A ExlO.OOA l27.00A
288H9
110098200'! · Gmlne Wesley &amp;/Or Dcmna
Sa.1 1 Nw 1'1 Ex 4.88A Nw Cu IlA Ell .lOA
13.71
Hw~ fJ. .816A Ell 3.896A .64
8!!.74
5«12
TON
R14W
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Of
IIA
1.\0A
IIOCI981 003 Gmlcne Wesley !/0" Donna
46.49
5«21T6 Rl4 2. 1 9A~t0f ll .l48A 2.19A
110023 1002 HawlWil~arnJ r
Sect ISNPan0f68.1M Mid Oil NUnc'70.nBA
110067.50C() Jacks Allen R&amp;/Or Henrietta
4&lt;1.49
£x 611.59 \A 2.!117A
110067f«X) l;w;h Alim R&amp;fOr HtrnitUJ
Sect9·15 On WLine WOf Rd 14.42SA Ex 11.44.\ 2.985.\
8&amp;413
110019800&gt; Kins Michael W4/0r Lisa R Sen 2 1.50A Of Nw (()(, Of ).85A Abo 12'Wd ltwi'WI}' l..SOA 1430.~8
110 1141004 KnappWa~e~
Froclion4TfJRI4 1.644A0.110f41J47A Ex .716A .921A
99S.37
110086t':rol Lee lina Lc/o Doo King
Lot Sec1 IS WPan or 4~A Ncar Mid 12.70A F..\ 2.004A !l696A )26j8
l]oozrox(l MusonRo11 &amp;/0rWmdi
Sect.20NCcn.PanOfJU;.:B 1.667A
4Sl91
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Fnd T6NRl4W lOAQ\t Of 28.02A IO.OOA
401.70
\10115ti00 Mocdi spaugh Roben WSr t\:JOr Julia A
Sect 1 Se or Gardner .42Ac
162.41
1101262001 Morris Victor J c/o William &amp; Gayle Morris
Stti33T6 R\4 2.651AOtuOfS6.4&amp;.\ 2.65 1.\
115.69
1100755000 Morris Victor J c/o William &amp; Gayle Morri&gt;
Lot Scct -33 ESide Of 43.64A Sw Of Nw 114 8.64.\
1146.29
IIOO?stro:l MMngo Htrr) Ruue ll M&amp;JOr flertina
Lot Scct 20 21 Mid or F~ Ell 4'l A
61t11l
Nw ~ 10.62 &amp; !.61S2A 61.9341A
1&lt;1.n
I Hml\003 Ntwdl Char loll~
Sect 3T6N RI4W l.lHA 0111Of 22.4~A 1.174A
11oo8390)) Pcdlingtoo Judith Kdo Judith K. Hunter
18n.61
Sect.9S ErniE&gt; ..10AO\liOf91.1lA 32A
c::::'
ll001!47fm · Price.L&lt;:oo A &amp; l-kmHI1 Bc/o Grqory J, Pri re
Sect 81n~1/4WOfRd. SOf5pim 3A
181.2!
10.10
1 1 010~9(XX) PriceT!xki M ,M)rS~llyA
lotSe!.t·9Sc:funer 1.75A
699.41
Lot Sect. -9 Ne Pan 33.25A
110\000lXI Price Todd M&amp;JOr Shelly A
1143.1!
111ml8001 RllWt ll ~
Sec 12ThN R14W IO.OOA OJI Of 137 .OOA IO.OOA
H8U4
1100ll31XXl Ru~yon lell}l LliOr Vanness. L Scrt. 14-S SPin or E In 120A
!.69
IIOOJ2«MXX Runyon Jerry LaJ0r Vanncssa. L S«t. SNc.- Mid. Of EUoe 1.OOA
2M
11001i5XXXJ Schwe1Chll George W
S«l. 26 .12A Out Of .l9ANw Pan .llA
l06.4l
110065100J Schweichrt (iroq:t W
Lot J-26 Ex.2'0n WSd &amp;: Tri 27 !fl'X271/l' PI Of .63A•.41.\
326.62
1100 15500) Smilh Rolland E &amp;/Or Kan:n [) S«t. 2E Part Of 2.{jgA Ex. Right orWa}' l.l2A
39.6!
5«1. 36 S~ C0r1cr 40A
110026SilXl Taulbee Lewis
Sec1.36NwOfSwl/4 ]9A
2!11.36
1100264(XXI Taul~ tr-A·is
117.71
Lol Srcl ·l4 .33 E &lt;YCr S Line Of Se l/4 12.24A
11009!ml Toy"" Larry L&amp;/Or I""'
Lot S«t ·H Known As B~Uiom SciooiW .?SA
1100932lXXl Taylor Larry L'&amp;/Or Joyce A
Wj2
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1100211][0) Taylor larry L&amp;lOr Joyct A
15.77
110093 100) iiy lorlm)·l&amp;JOrlD}UA
lot 5«1·33 N~a1 \lid ot: Nc 114 2.75A
l1.04
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143.18
LoiSec1.·331DStll4 0f NOI CT. 4.04A
11002&amp;4ml Taylor L.atl)' L.&amp;lOr Jnyce A
1570.46
110093CKXKI Taylor l.arty l &amp;101 J o~cc A l.o&lt;Std·HMidOf Sell4 50J5A
18l41
Sect 2T6 Rl4 SeCor 5JXIA tM Of 22.1SA 5.00A
1101 243001 Williams Dana
61011
Sl lfi On NLn Ex 20A Of EPn E:t 40A Ex .83A 79.916\A
1101 25tillJ Wollt M!Wiill L&amp;!Or Emily

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121mi ltm Coliln &gt;Ronald D&amp;!Or Joon
Ne Pt ll.18A JOOF.F.OIIRt. 124 .S8A
1200200001 Cundiff Randall Ju~ior &amp;/Or An gela R
Se.:t ~ T6NRl4 W(.IJ9A IZ.00201.00l &amp;. .961A
12-00206.001 TO!ali.IO
120027500) Davis Haroki&amp;/OrShtrry
Seci.K(MO)IiCIXHn'SflliOfSwl/4 .2.SA
12&lt;KDI700) Higgin~ Lawsm ID LiOOa ' Sect On S Li ne Of .9SA Pucci .ZJA
12&lt;W1600:1 Higgins Lnwsoo &amp;:!Or UOOI
Sect 14 (640) NPn Of Lot Nw Cor WOfRd J4A
120'.XII500J Higgins Lawsoo t\:JOr UOOI
Sect8 (640) TriOn NLint I~ Nw Cor .20A
1200188000 Pitru Ryln S &amp;10r1i!ley SamllflthaJo
,()! WLi neS Of NcCOOnid.u El/2 EJ. .14A .16A
12001!18001 Piertt RyanS &amp;lOr 111\ey SamwthaJo
()1 WLineS orNe Chri Lui Wl/2 Of l.ct .14.'\
OJt OfJOA .14A
120021800:1 Sorde~ hck Dan itl Jr c/o Stephen lur.li
La1 21 !5 1/2'S,:4 ln'Ndulllgth Of!..« Fallots Add l l
1200219000 Sorden JD D111iel Jrdu St~~ Lu~h
·l.ol 22 Fallom Add 22

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116416

1 500~

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l'n.91
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13001

1500!
1501~

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SALEM TOWNSHII' · IIEIGS 1.'!0

Sect. 31 Ce111tr PI Nel/4 U. 14 Vein Coal 24A
13004S600:1 Allman Charles S li
IS.M !3007081Xll A~h bum Icy Ann
Fr. l9 -20 .15.\ Out Of'Se Cor Of IO.WA .7SA
IS4.~
Sec4 nN R! 5W0.36A. Out Of 1.50A 0.36A
I:!On3001 Bass Joshua David
Sect\ I T!!N RI ~W 6.9662A Ex:UIA l4362A
I}00514003 Della\'alle Laun
119.15
t:mllJOll DickinsonSheila Kay &amp; ScnnCarolyn S~
lll9.1li
Sect 4 Nw or Nt l/H.t I.SOA. Along Co Rd 10 44. 1 ~A
1300299001 EbtnbachRantly B &amp;.JOrR ~thA Sccti217N RI 5WS.II33A0ul0f3~.234.o\ Lal7 l 0l3A
166. 71
! 300J~20Cll GobleSh1wn
Scct26S~~o·CmEli4Vei n CoaiJ~AOutOf4A J~A
653. 10
1300340002 GobleS ~a iYII
Sec25TSN R!H718AOut.Ofi8.19AEd05.\ U68A
ll0077&amp;00l Hayes1'hell!.lortP
Snt. 1SNwMid:Oill.intEI'INOI'RdCkiiDr91J.53A 5.41A
(;ilbridcRicllarrllki!O&lt;BorllnA
182. 18
1300~J60ll Hemphill Betty Lou
Sea 15-IOMidNOfRF.xM\IeinCoal 35.46A
Sec lO T4N RI I W9.().1gA Out Of ~ I J6A H»~A
1311J~3?1UJ 11emphi11 Ht:lty loo
Secll l Sl/2 EA Jt Vein Ct»l 63A
Gilbride Richard I Jr &amp;K1r Blltm A
402.'\.2ll
1300 1 ~ 7010 Jil(k!i Rynald L &amp; lklty Loo Tru!lt't:S l:lch FamilyTnw
~ ll T4N RIIW 6.054Al)n Of 22J(KiA 6.054
101.09
Scc5T8NRI5 2SIS.\0Jt&lt;Yl2282A lS I5A
Hawthorne lillllt\1)' Rylll
Lui til Arbaugh'S JRd S~bd i~. IOO'X200'
64UI
1~00311l1Kll Jolm.10n RockyC&amp;.!Or8ethA
Sa:l lO )AOutGr35AWEnd lA
Haymllll Patricia K
Sect .40T4 R!l S ParHYSwlf.l 1.54961\
1300001003 K'uhari£ JamesA
Sed i T8NRJSW5.461A0utOf41.93&amp;A 5.467A.
Hen~ley Ed~1 M&amp;lOr Mil!hew S Sa·t J5 l.$8.5' OfT Oflol 25 Wpt 14115' X 148.5'
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Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 16, 2007

www.rr.ydailysentinel .com

,...
14001

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• 11ic: Uma

N""'pboloo
Big Ten

Pet.
Ohio State 6 1 .857
Michigan 6 1 .857
IllinOIS
52 .714
Wisconsin 4 3 .571
Penn State 4 3 .571
'Iowa
4 4 .500
Purdue
3 4 .429
N'westem 3 4 .429
Michigan St. 2 5 .286
lnd&lt;ana
2 5 .286
Mmnesota 0 7 .000
Teams

WL

Overall
Pet.
10 1 .909
8 3 .727
8 3 .727
8 3 .727
8 3 .727
6 5 .545
7 4 .636
6 5 .545
6 5 .545
6 5 .545
1 10 .091
W L

SATURDAY'S GAMES
Northwestern at No. 20 Illinois
Purdue at Indiana
West~m Mich&lt;gan at Iowa
No. 7 Olio stale at No. 23 Mid 'J
Penn State at Michigan State
No. 24 Wisconsin at Minnesota

I

TEAM LEADERS
Total Offense
Northwestern .... .................. 432.1
Purdue ............................... .429.2
Michigan State ....... ............ .426.4
lllinois .................................. 412.6
W&lt;Sconsin ........................... .411.3

Rushing Offense
lllinois ...... ............ ................ 261.2
MK:higan State ...... .............. 205.4
Ohio State .....:': ................... 198. 7
Wisconsin .............. ........... ... 190.3
Penn State .......................... 189.3

Hayes' clock was always set to Michigan game time

·

game against Colorado in September. And Colorado was
ranked No. 10 at the time.
Dave Cheney, a Lima attorney who was an all-Big
Ten offensive lineman at
OSU in 1970, remembers
the year- round Michigan

Jim
Naveau
The Lima News
jnaveau@limanews .com

419-993·2087

prep~ations.

who were there.
Last week former coach
Earle Bruce recalled how
when he was an OSU assistant in 1971, Hayes had the
team spend two days practicing for the Michigan game the
week before a non-conferen~

"If we were playing somebody that really wasn't very
good, say Northwestern or
Dlinois or Wisconsin back
then, we would practice
maybe one day for the team
we were going to play that
weekend and' block Michi-

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An inside look at this week's game
COLUMBUS - Beyond the
unwillingness to even say the
word Michigan, beyond the re- ·
fusal to buy gas north of the
Ohio border, maybe the most
enduring part of the legend of
Woody Hayes' obsession with
Ohio State's annual football
game against its biggest rival
is the story of how he would ,
have his teams practice for the
Michigan game all year long.
So, is it a myth? An urban
legend concocted over the
decades? Or is it true?
It's all true. Very true, according to some of the people

I\\ICO.

gan 's schemes the other hard
work day," Cheney said.
"There is no doubt about it."
After Michigan's upset of
thecenturyofNo.1-ranked
Ohio State in 1969, it got
even more intense.
"That's all we did in spring
practice before my senior year
was work against them
(Michigan)," Cheney said.
If coach Jim Tressel has
his teams practice early for
Michigan, he is more subtle
about it.
Where Tressel tosses subtlety to the wind is when he

brings Bruce into a team
meeting every year for a
stream of consciousness,
freestyle rant the week of the
Michigan game.
When Bruce coached the
Buckeyes, he used to have
Hayes come in for a fiery talk.
Speaker s weren't a big
part of Hayes' motivational
repertoire, though. For obvious reasons.
"When he invited a speaker,
they had to go according to the
theme he wanted or he would
interrupt them," former fullback Jim Otis said.

SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: MICHIGAN (8·3, 6-1 BIG TEN)

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IWfOID rowNSIIIP . EASlUN lSD

Total Defense
OhiO State .......................... 237.5
Penn State ........... :.............. 295.8
Michigan ........... ...................335.1
Wisconsin ........ .......... .......... 336.7
Iowa ............................ ........ 338.6

Rush Defense
Ohio State ............................82. 7
Penn State ............................ 82.7
lllinois............... .................. .118.6
lowa ............................... ..... 122.0
Michigan Sl!lte .................... 131.1

Pass Defense
OhioState .......................... 154.7
Michigan ..............................191.5
Wisconsin ............................197.8
Penn State .......................... 213.1
Jowa ....................................216.6

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Rushing Yards
Rashard Mendenhall,lllinois .... 1,402
Javon Ringer, Michigan St. .... 1,298
CMs Wells, Ohio State .. ........ 1.241
PJ. Hill, WisconSin ....... .'........ 1,080
Rodney Kinlaw, Penn State.... l ,061

Passing Yards
C.J. Bacher, Northwestern ....3,346
Curtis Painter, Purdue .......... 3,019
~lien Lewis, Indiana ............ 2,623
Adam Weber, Minnesota ...... 2,543
Tyler Don011an, Wisconsin...... 2,338

entitle

rthe

Northwestern ...................... 307. 7
Purdue ................................287.8
Indiana ......... .. ... .................. 239.7
Minnesota ..........................236.1
MK:higan State/Wisconsin .... 221.0
A look at some of the key matchups in the
game between No.7 Ohio State (10·1, 6-1
Big Ten) and No. 23 MIChigan (8·3, 6-1 Big
Ten) in MiChigan Stadium On Saturday:

Quarterbacks
Ohio State quarterbad&lt; Todd Boeckman will
be try;ng to bounce back from adversity for the
first time this season after throwing three inter·
cepions and no touChdown passes in a 28-21
loss to ll~nois last week. Boeckman (2,121
yards, 23 touchdOM1s, 11 interceptions) is
maWng his first start in an OSU·Michigan game.
But the lifth-yearJUnior is more experienced
than most first-year starters. He is a )ll8l' older
than MK:higan's Chad Henne, Who will be mak·
ing his 45th career start If he is healthy.
Henne (1,497 yards, 14 touchdowns, 7 interceptions) has majored 1n battling adversity
this season. He played only briefly in a 37-21
loss to Wisconsin last week because of a
separated throwing shoulder that has both·
ered him since midseason. He also has bat·
Hed a knee problem and has mtssed three
starts. Freshman Ryan Mallett, who has com,
pleted only 43 percent of his 138 passes,
will start if Henne can't play.
Advantage: Even (If Henne plays)

Running backs
If it's November and you're a running back,
chances are good you have some aches and
patns or worse. All three of Ohio State's top
running backs came out of the Illinois game
with some sort of physical problem. Starter
Chris Wells 11;241 yards, '12 touchdowns)

was bothered by the cranky ankle he has had season over Wisconsin's Joe Thomas (No. 3
all season and had to have his wrist taped
overall pick in the NFL draft) and Pen~ State's
dunng the game. Backups Maurice Wells
Levi Brown (No. 5 overall), but chose to retum
(ankle) and Brandon Saine (possible concus- to school for his senior season. The Wolvennes
sion) also were injured. Tressel alluded to the have run behind him all season and he has
recuperative powers of playing Michtgan ear- not been called for a penalty in 11 games.
lier this week and said he expects all three to
Ohio State's offensive line lett some room
be ready to play on Saturday.
for improvement last week, when Chris Wells'
Michigan's Mtke Hart (1,188 yards, 12
streak of 100-yard games ended at three
touchdowns) has missed t1wee of the last four
and the passing game didn't produce any
games because of a bad~ spraned ankle.
touchdowns. The Buckeyes have allowed
Coach UOI'J Carr won~ say If he or quarterback only 14 sacks and Michigan has given up 21.
Chad Henne will play on Saturday. ff Hart can't
Oh1o State ranks third 1n the Big Ten in rush·
play, either Brandon Mira (387 yards) or Cal1c6 · &lt;ng and Michigan is sixth.
8ro'M1 1382 yards) will become the No. 1 back.
Advanta!le: Ohio Stale
Advantage: Even (If Hart plays)
Defensive line

Receiven

Michigan's Mane Mannin~am (62 catches,
1,062 yards, 11 touchdO'M'ls) has more ttlan
100 yards receiving 1n six stra1~t games and
set the sci"'OO record with a 97 -yard touchdown catch against Wisconsin. Adrian Arlington 156 catches, 716 yards, 6 TDs) and Greg
Mathews (31 catches, 3 touchdowns) f!ive the
Wolverines a triple threat at receMlr.
Brian Robiskie (48 catches, 864 yards, 10
touchdowns) and Bnan Hartline (45 catches,
610 yards, 5touchdowns) lead Ohio State's
receivers, who were kept out of the end zone
against Illinois.
Advantage: Michigan

Offensive line
Michigan offensive tackle Jake Lcng was
named the Big Ten's Uneman of the 'rear last

Laurinaitis? Last week, one of the snubbed,
lll&lt;nois' J Leman, had a great game against
them. This week they face another in Mithigan's Shawn Crable (a team-leading 74
tackles, 24.5 tackles for losses. 7.5 sacks).
Chris Graham has 73 tackles.
L.aurinaitis, OSU's leading tackler with 97,
says the Buckeyes were in position but just
didn't make plays l'lhen Illinois rushed for 260
yards and ga1ned 400 yams overall. Marcus
Freeman (86 tackles) has also mOiled into the
top 10 in that category in the Big Ten.
Advl!nl¥: E've!l

Defensive backs

Ohio State allowed four touchdown passes
by Illinois' lsiah "Juice" Williams and didn't in·
The defensive front four was a question
tercept a pass even thou~ he came into the
marl&lt; coming into the season and rt has seen game wrth one more pick than touchdown
more shifting of personnel than an)Where else passes this season and in his career. Eight d~- .
on Ohto State's defense. While the four de·
ferent Illinois players cau~t passes. The defensive backs and the three linebackers have fensive backfield needs to raise the 1M of rts
started all 11 games, no defensive lineman
play !&gt;~i!icanttt against Michigan's receM!rs.
has started every game. Detrort native Vemon
Safety Jamar Adams leads MK:higpn wrth
Gholston, the Buckeyes' sack leader with 10, three interceptions. Michigan has 12 intercep·
could have a little extra Incentive 1n the g;Jme. tions as a team, one more than Ohio State.
Michigan defensive end Brandon Graham
Advantage: Ohio state
has 8.5 sacks and the other end Tim Jam1-.
Special teams
son has 5.5. Ohio State ranks first in the Big
Michigan's K.C. Lopata is 8 of 8 on field
Ten in total defense and Michigan is third.
goals
and Ohio State's Ryan Pretorius is 17
Advanta!le: Michigan
of 21, but three of his misses came on
Unebllcken
blocked Wcks. OSU punter A.J. Trapasso IN·
Should Ohio State beware of Big Ten line- erages 42.0 yards per punt.and Michigan's
backers who weren 'I included on the list of Zoltan Mesko is averaging 39.9 yards.
Butl&lt;us Award finalists along with James
AIMlntale: Ohio state

ReceiVIng 'rinds
Devin Thomas, Michigan St. .. 1,087
Mario Manni~m. Michigan .. l,062
James Hardy, Indiana ..............988
Tfa\lls Beckum, Wisconstn ........ 871
.Brian Robisl&lt;ie, Ohio State ........864

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Todd Boeckman ..................2,121
Rushing yards
·
_Cflris Wells .......................... 1,241
-Receiving yards
·Brian Robiskie ........................ 864
Touchdowns·
Chris Wells ..................... ...........12

Tackles
.James L.aunnartis ......... ............. 97

Interceptions
Malcolm Jenkins ....·...................... 3
Sacks
Vemon Gholston ........................ lO

200 7 OSU SCHEDULE
Sept. 1
_Sept. a
Elept. 15
Sept. 22
~pt. 29
Oct. 6
Oct. 13
Oct. 20
Oct.27
Nov. 3
Nc&gt;l. 10

Youngstown State W38·6
Akron
w20· 2
@Washington W33·14
Northwestern
W58·7
@Minnesota
W30-7
@Purdue
W23· 7
Kent State
W48·3
Michig;m State W24-17
@PennState W37-17
Wisconsin
W38-17
Illinois
L21-28

MlURDAY

@ Michigan

Noon

Content a&gt;mpied by JimNaveau and
desig1 by Jeff Braun • The Uma Nem

OiJ¥!1f11 ~ 2007 The Uma Ne\w. Repro·

duction of all a&lt; any portion of this matenal
·~ prohibltad without ""'JIJlSS consent. ·

, Q8cA with Jim Naveau

Say what?

,Q
A

. ••1 haven't thought about that at all.
That's something that I'm not going to
think about during the season."

wtry didn't Jim Tressel challenge What looked like an
obvious fumble by Illinois 1n the first quarter last week?

The biggest reason probably was that he wasn't
aware how clearly the ABC replay showed the ball
appearing to coine out of the hands of Illinois'
Daniel Dufrene before he hit the ground. Olio
State's assistant coaches In the press boll aren't
allowed to have video of the game In their booth,
so they couldn't alert the coaches on the sideline.
And the play happenad all the way across the
field from him, so he didn't get a good look at IL

- Ohio Srme linebacker james lau1inairis, abou[ whether he will
return to Ohio Stale for hb st:n iur se-J.SOn

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

Buckeye Brain Busters
1: What does the Ein

Email Jim questions at ,lnaveeu@ll-.com. call him at
800 686 992411111 2087 or blog with himat -.llmllportt.com

Ohio State president
E. Gordon Gee's
name $nd for?
~

2: What Ohio town was 3: Ohio State has played in_
the hometown of Michl· one Rose Bol'l1 since 1985.
gan ooachtng legend
How many times has Michi·
Bo Schembechler?
gan played in ~since then?
1. Elwood 2.

Barbe~on

3. Nine times

day until kickoff
•

Sun. 12-4 •

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07010@40.ll Cooper(iu)o L&amp;JOr Marilyn R "'S&amp; 7""' !'MI..
Sect. 18l.66A OJtOf Nw ComtrOf 3BOA W/12 2.661\
070016!1lll Dliley O.ojlllio R

16.42

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Lot J5 ){)'X \20' Of Devirutey Lot .15A

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121.19
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178.27
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215.75
Sc&lt;I IZ - 16N~de0f 261nAI.oiS P!t .!JA
i.o114-16 (273) PanOf 3.1llA
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186.67
Hayc!PIIuiW.&amp;:KiiriliiM
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54.03
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HI)ICI PI~ I WA Katrina M
SKI 32 Nw EJ. Dailey NEll Coal \3.50..\ Ex 2. 7SI5A 10.14MA 162.15
Ha}'caPlulWAKa!rinaM
SeCt 320nE Line61'W112El.Coallg.25A
2049.91
lfobal:kl'myS
Sec! II (640)EPrtOfW 1120fSw 114 16.00A
96.71
JureiiJ_,eyLIDAshli C
S«I1 2·1·7MidOfRd fu Coai 26.5KA
151.77
Jarrell Joey L &amp;/Or Ashli C
Secll 2 ·I -7 On NLinc EOf Rd Ex Coal 4.90A
!104.16'
Johruon Jenni fer
Lot 17 (24l!J EOf Village Lot ShlrpOOCk &amp; Noll J4A
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7J~
Lot 14 SO'X 188' Joining Winters EA Coal J)A
101.82
Kirt JohnS .t.()r Connie G
IflO A1M 118&amp; T2N RIIW 1.468A C.t OfUJA 1.468A
h ~enon Wry ID Sanch
Lol l ~ On Road Joining Village .50A
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IOOA Lot 219 TIN RIIW WI 16 4.864A Out Of43.72&lt;1A 4.164A 8J.ll
17.10
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330.10
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Shul&lt;r Sieplleo B ollOr Wallda E
116.08
Sect 11-3 \ (lfil) Mid. OnE Line Ex. 3.6AE l40A
Vulmeter Jon R.Jchard
51 9.55
Sect. 11·100 (2(:{1) Mid. Of lot EOf Rd. 20.63A
\'ulmeter J011 Richard

Deltavalle Michael
Duni RLarry
Duni. Larry
HarttrRooald

0901SIOOll Allhooy Ste~~en A10r Deborah Sect 35 Mid or Sw Pan Of Swl/4 5.01 3..\ Ou1 Of .t5A 5.013A
090012800) Amoo Thomas A&amp; Carol A
Sect. JO NPan or Sw 114 10A
Sccl5 Frac27 T4N RliW NPn 1.15A
IJ:QXJ1700l Badlet l arrt~ Jr
09lml600J ButimuiHtrve}'ACarol
Scct. I/Sw lf20fSe i/4NOfRd 1.5M
090001oo:xl BanlmusH~tvey&amp;Carol
Sect. I7 Swl/40fNw l/4 44 .15.\
OOIXWBIXM Bartimus Michr:llt
Sect 23 T4 Rll Sw ( (If 4.616A Qit Of 11.4MA 4.616A
090013300) BibllttGmld
Sect33Sw l'attEt22ASOf Rd\0.64AE-.5.49A 5. 151\
090036100) Bissell Roger A/Or Shcrri
Sect. 24Nt Put 2A
090015&amp;0Cl'l Bobmf D:lrrfiy MEta!
Sect. 12 WPan Of S 12M. Ex. 6A Sw 63.84A
OIJOI00700J Brittain Brilll GID Kim K Scct. II Wlf2 Of Scl/4 Of Sc 114 22A
0900078!XIJ B~~t:hi[JU) htriria A. &amp;.lOr Barbel Tmy L
Sect. II N1!2 Of Se l/4 OfSwlf4 E.\. 6A 14.-\
Sect 14 frocl 32 T4 Rll I.OOA &lt;M Of 25.25A I.OOA
0901266004 Bulcber F1ormct F
Sect II 23 Near t.lld OnE Lire Of
090134600) Clmpbe11 Sb11100 Elir.abclh
Nel/40fSei/4Ed38A 1. 113A
S
\ 4- 1 ~ T4 Rll Ne Part Of J0.7SA Trtct EOf Rd I .50A
Carter Jimmy l...ct
Lot I E or Sw !fil' .2.'iA
Cubdollu Dorothy Mae
Ux IS Arbau&amp;h'S 2Nd Subdi\ision IOO'XIoiO'
Co~Gropy
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Fr 23T4N RIIW 14.357A Out OfJ.l.OOA 14 ..mA
Bucllty'S 2Nd Subdi~·i sion 30.\ Lot 120 J.i:j 11'1 l.O:lA
0900229015 Dcjnlm Danle A
09003l0001 DeltcNZDomingo 0 &amp;/Or 1\11gela M
Sttl. 23 Nw Cor. Of EPar1 Of 5SA lA
090148800) Dilloo 4rrY V&amp;IOrC)'llthia A Sc Part Ex 1!8A Oi~ MRc=td Esl. 87A.

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94.98
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59.56
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11)5.57
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lol l ~ Ntw Poltland
16.42
0700l141XKl twfenbergtt l ynda LEtal do Brtnda Gkasoo
l.oll1 ~~~~· Punland
16.&amp;4
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!0.93
l.ol 9 New Portland
070001200) Kafl'tobefF Lynda LElal do Brcndt Glrasoo
113.10
Lot 13 New Ponl&amp;nd
IOOA Lotsl&amp;-1&amp;1 &amp;5 H3 Out 38.51 I 4.034
OJ00S62001 Meltoo MM:IIIcl
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124S.41
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S«t.&amp;Mid.()tNL.iaeOrs 1120fNw 114 lOA
117.94
OJ00456001 Proffi~ Odeu. B&amp;lOr Wtddlc George Da~icl
Sect. 11 ·2ll SwCnr. Of IB UA Nlr! OfNe PI Nwi/4EdA E 2A ll.S I
IJ'1(M,WS4(MX) P'ruffiu Odcna 8 &amp;./Or Weddle GMge Da~t,ic l
Scct20SePlOfNw l/4 0fNw 114 12.50A
·71.86
070045300) Protfll.l Odesu BID Weddle Gcrrge Danirl
Sect. 20 N112 orNe PI Of Nwl/4 EA. 5A EEx. 'lA 10.50A
85.!:17
0700120000 Rizer Kmlleth HSf
Sect II -2S U!ld mOf 80A S 112 OfSc If~ 20.40A
190.58.
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1562.97
070012HDJ Rim Kalaeth HSt
Sect 2J 160A l.o! 1171 TI Rll 5.00A Out Of 44.84A 5.00A
351 .94
'0700770001 Sellen 01l'l(ll)' A
Sect.32Mid. PI. Of3ASwP:utOfNe l/4 IIA
166.4 1
0700J871XX! W15011 SIICit Marit
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Rri1 lolul G
Seer 20 Fr ll WPin 169.00A e. 43Dl!OA 12!.96!11A
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114.37
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1611,!1
Rolib Walled lii
Sect. 28 Fr.24 EEnd EJ; : 14 Vein Cflfll IIA
Rolib Woorl.... lii ID Manbi M.wie
1341.47
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Woodt!mJ Brian
Woodti&lt;nf BriOI
WOI'Idpl Brian
WMalblald Ktitb

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164.22

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143.77
IJliDI8lOOI Bailey~ 0 l Kmko twm A NU Bol&lt;y IUrhl
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01002DJOOJ Brewtt Terry Lclo Jim tl Angit DuncM
Sect 19 Nw Clll. 41.70AOf 12l10A Ne Pt .50A
IU.&amp;l
0700202COO BI'C'I\·trTerry LcJo Jim&amp;: Anfie Duoc111
si:rt. 19 R.l l TJ S Pt S1A b1 Sw Pt Sw!/4 1.522A 17A 1.522A ~.92
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loiSif20flkNtnOf iOO.A U.fl.'itJSectlz.tl!ll2N .ILIIA
11\.lll
07C01lm&gt; OiiBI PqJper Dln Cole Eta! c/o Pame la King
S«1 19 S P1r1 Of 83" In Sw Pn Of Sf II~ IO.#!BA fJ. 8.968A 1.50..-\89.94
ll1007311002 Cbildrtu Ptpper Dum Cok Ell Ido Pamela l.iag
Sm 19 T3 Rll 8.96&amp;A O..t or 10.463A. 8.968A
1U..l8
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Scct241100 IJOJ 6.7SA
11100194000 Cooper !Jory Wr Mllilyo
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128.lb
Scct 23 (100-1168) E EOO 0. N Linr b. 13A E IIA
1311.67
0700796IMX) Cooper Gill)' &amp;lOr Marilyn
Sect 23 W112 Of E75A 160-1168 Ex 135636A 26.4314A
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0711019!000 Cooper (My 1!0&lt; Marilyn
Sect 24 (100.1701 Und 516 Of Se 114 Of Sf 114 33A
1&amp;9.18
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160.\ Lot 1611 &amp; lffl TI Rll W112 Of E1HIJA.
0700195001 c~ Gil , ID Marilyn
220.16
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17.26
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. ,, 17.64
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CIIIISIEit rowNSIDP • MEIGS LSD
.s67.48
Sect II (640)S l'lrl orOO.IWA NPu1 or Nw 114 16.18A
Our Of""" 12 On Rrt331b Tile C&lt;ooror !mills Rdwy 14A 1!.48
99.27
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1201.62
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Lot 32
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Sctll3 He 114 El40A Sw f.J: Coii 110.00A
&amp; 1.9l04A 108.11796A
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Sect 19NPu1orN&lt;II4&amp;a.t OIA
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l'llc41'lNRilW~orU.2
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Frd T9N RISW 0.1097.\ On Of0.14A
OS(mUOOI Birchfield Dennis W
Fool 19N A1~ W Pt Lot 4 Carpenter Add
~ISOOI Bin.ilficld Dennis W
! SIll
OS0052Unl Birdlfield Dennis W
05005180CKJ Bin:bficld lkrllis w
Slrip 12' W'!de Nor1.m 2·3-4
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~ DJuelu Lindy
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0!1111381004 forley 1o1m
Sect 241'l RlS .8421A 0\li Of l.l!IIA .11428A
100)29200) Hlnli11an Winfield
S2l FrlO'N RIS Mid&amp;: W.EM 2.752A ru Of 61.376.4. l152A
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0300411(00 kll'en Rch'rt Lowell
StttJ .7&amp;A Of 63AEOf Ceii.Rd Nlf2 OfNwl /4 Ex.l7A W .71A
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Sect.! NPu1 Of!E 1n e... lOA 69.!0A
O!lllll411001 lonllnllotiDMJrlilcyL 5cct26NNRI!W 6.110AO\lior67.111A 6.110A
osoomcoo Mckni&amp;lf Goodwin 1.et1
Sttt. 1sPart or SA Mill lot In sw 114 1j()A
lll00!4ml Oxley Horo~ Cli•oo 7r
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SeclllTI Al l NwCoroer 16.82A t:M{IS I.BSA 16.82A
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ElO.liA 3S.12A
0301059(00 Hmil:}' MatthewS &amp;10r Edn1 M Sccll TIN R12W Nc lf4 OfNc 1/.t Ex:5.00
t;,,6.71A &amp;,,1.41A 21.81A
Sect 36 2.62A 0J1 (X 64.92A Nw Cor. 2.62.\
om5SOOJ Hyacll Dollald G
Fr 12 Tl R 12 EJnOfWJr29.9916AOul or54.9flA 9.9916A
0300478003 Jolroo&gt; a.rl&lt;1 F
030063100J Jordan Phillip Dale c/oRoo loolul
Sect. I 16401 T.4 R.I241'JW' EorRd S.l~ .08A
OJ0063ml Jodoo !'h;mp Dll&lt; do Roo Jontoo
Sect I TJ R.l 2 NwCam II!IIA&lt;lwdiU. Kem .llA
omnm Jooilll Phillip Dale do Roo Inn
Sect. 12·1 (6«1) Mill l..d: lA
Ol008100XI Macum Michel WIDCoollie J
Sccli8T.JN R.I2W Pan Of Tho Swl/4 2A 0\ll Of 41.39A 2A
OXI1322004 Marcum Micbel W!/Or Conait J
Socii I TIN RI2'112A Cot Of42.39A 2111A
OJOOi!llXII Men Gco1Je
Sec21 Fni&lt;3H3N Rl2'11 i .14AOut Of IU3lA 7.34A
OmJIIOO I McnGco!Je
Fncl!TINRI2'113!.07AO\l!OI'l9.nA l!ffiA
031101191ll1 McnGco!Je
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Ol012.S2COO Patter Lntr Lli !/Or Oluity R Secl4 (640) T2 RIJ l.S6A ()rt Of 17.66.\ ljf)A
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Sect. ! (1140) Sw Cam orsw 114 22A
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Sull2·24(6«l)Hikt1 Wolf SISPI 1~Nw PI 6.74A .451A
03010!8001 Rid&gt;ol Ro,a-lli&amp;IO&lt; RoiM R Soei2TIN Rll'IIOJIA 0. or41.111A'QJIA
OJOI!lm3 Rid&gt;oiRoplliMl!RobioR Se&lt;IITINRI2W6.11AOut0141.1llA 6.11A
!OOIOI.IDXI RoleKmethOUlrl'lmelt Sect.1(6tO)EPIOfNwi/4EOfRd. Ex..JlA .17A
0301089000 ROIC Ke""" G 1!0&lt; Pomela 5cct.~6411rt'.3 R.l2 E~ Nw II&lt;H Of Rd JJA or .!OA J3A
lll0061fllll Smilh Ricblrd oi/Or(ie(qil
Sect 3TI Rl2 Nw C&lt;mo I!OA Our or 10.4\A 1.!11
Stt l2 TIHRI2W 0.48AO.t 0f69.40A 0.48A
O'.llMX'iJ!OOI S!CWifl Jean Looise
03013!XIOOO Stocky Mite
Sect. 39(64111
or Sect..lOA
5cct24TIRI2 lb11AO..Of!IIOA 1~1 1 A
030074200 I Swell Wancla Faye
Seer J.i (640) SOf Sect U. Ill !.IIOA &amp; 1.611A 3.329A
~4m:J Swta~ Wlllda Fl.yt
Sed. 17 (640) SPul Of li lA N&lt; Pul or Sol~ lOA
Ol012081100 WOileyCiillmiA
03012071!Xl WbilleyCii"oniA
Sect 16 1640&gt; Nc c""" 40A

O!IIIIJ48002 1bomp1oo k""l RoliO&lt; B&lt;lh A Sc&lt; lll'JN Rl!'ll IO.l93A&lt;M or61.111A IO.l'JlA
0500233001 TroutCn.t
Sec7WNR ISW II. 97A~t0fi .OOA 0.97A

Hours: Mo...-Fri.

1194~

"""'"'"lhooy

OSOO?XiXXi
O!llll!11011l
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OJOOll7IXXI

·c HEVROLET • · CADILLAC •
• -B
288 East Main • 1-748-992-6614 or 1-800-837-1094 •

193-ll

ro110&lt; r.. u. tl9 Block12 'I?X99'
OJOIIIl8002 HciiSiey Mllihew S IJO&lt;fllllo M Secl2 TIN RI2W 4.91A o.tor41.00A4.91A

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041ll130000 Fritod Slirley I
O.OOIOIOOJ Vao ReetbGioriaJ

Paaelng yards

1331.70
43115.S7

0.40
OlXI717004 Dillard Marl Edward 4/0r Mal)' Socc 12 JX'HA 0.. Of 1.20A .009A
03007160011 l);llod M..t F.Jw.U A1tw MOJ Sect 6(640) NPin or !1A &amp; 9]1A e. II .MA e. &lt;&gt;JIA ln699A 110.!6
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5m.40
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19.24
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Sect3T3NRI2W 1.12SA.&lt;MOf13.63A l.llSA
2301
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OHIO STATE LEADERS

!li.OJ

Sec l Mid lYSe l/4 OfNc l/4 l3A Ex l.82A 11.18A

EorSwi~4!. 16A

Pass Offense

34! .~

(!321A.J0.13A.Ll2A.llOA IU ATool 1141lOA)
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ll!0049;!Dl !aprli-,IMlrKrilliDC Scclll~l.!OAO..ori02.04A l.!IIA

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1(0X)20015
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392.10
71162
253.74
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493.!1
472.47
141.06
40.36

32181
124.38
27283
134.5 1
24120
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Seet6T4NII12 1.0.AO.C:XI9JI)7.\ I.OtA
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l.J:l(2)E1r1
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lot(! ) IWS5Xj lf.! iodiMid
174j7
1001~ Hi rzel Jeffrey ll CleMo Cbmlll'll Royalty lnl C.-t E$lMII Petro lnc floyd V11M l..O. Welt U9 PI !141.91
100J7lJWl Johmoo Bftllda S
Lit Sec! J4 H R\2 Npt Of Nt!/4 !1M3AOil Cf 6BIA 1.113A 641.64
JOO'X!S400) Joimsoo Bindl S
J.i:j Stet 34 NPI Of Pk 1/4 Ea 14.42A Nt
fu I.033A &amp;. 9.252.\ 5l248A
11.50.97
!OOJS\3002 Nutter Plllllclo PauliDe DICosta Sect 6 &amp; 12 I4.6M In Sect 6 a: 4.796A Sect 12 Fu TIUI IU46A 333i.l4
!OOJ746(0) Whitt Robert S &amp;lOr [loye
J.i:j St.c1 12· J~ Npl Of Nw Ccw EJ 32·11lA W20A
101.17
IOOJ7.t700} Whi1r Rubm S &amp;.lOr DIM:
l..ot ~ }6 W SidrOf Swl/444.2JA
331.1!

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lllm.AND TOWNSfDP · MFJGS LSD
IIOOJ5ml Bislql Rtkn Edwtrd &amp;Jar Sta:1 do Shirley Priddy
Sec I T6N Rl4WSr Corm 2.18AOut Of89.1'2A
11).1!
l.I&amp;A El OJ6A 1.62A
!HIJIIbXIXIJ Bo!y&amp;rdYtmdaJune
LrtSa1.. 1~Sw Ccr015~.7~ASe.lStl /4 2.91JA.
Jl.91
110! I~SOll B1il!l!~ Re~ H&amp;.101 Nclwn Mary E
Sect 26 Pan Of 53A .24A
792
! 101!5400) Brigp Ru H.lJOr NdiOil MIIC)' E
Scci 26 JIIA Of S2 18A Nw Pn E.t .12A Ell 10A .01.\
41 J6
11011S300.l Brigg~ Rel H&amp;lOr Nelson MllrY E
S«l 26 iZ loogS\'illr .21A
7S.22
111Jimtlll Briw Rex H&amp;JOrNclsonMaryE
Stc 26 T6N R14W Lanz1villt OJ4A U 0.07A 0.27A
19.53
llQIJ!SOC() BriU$ RCA HM:lr Nclsoo Mary E
S«t. 26 2' 0., W Side Of La. 13a Tri ..05.\
1636.68
IIOO IISIXXI Bultingtoo Phillip L
Sect l6 Nw Pan Of Nw 114 U. !flA Nw! 3A Ne .211.j)r\
3100.02
IIOOIIIXXXI Burchett BillltJOr Flomw:e
Sec! 33 (640) NOfSw Comer EJ: 14 Vtifl Coal J0A
71.43
I\00121XXKl Bun:beU Bill &amp;:.Qr fklrcoct
Set133 Ncar Mid Scm Ell MVein Coli 2A
114.15
ll{UJII!lll Call Cberyl A&amp;/(h Phillip D Stet ST6 R\4 Se Of Swl/4 Oul Of l l ~IA 1.03\ A
1593.97
IIOOS03COO Clll'!lpbeU RIKlnda
Lot Stet -Sin E P;wr OfNel/4 1.40A
32.11
llOOO.ICOO Carpe~tcr Marlene
Frac4 T6N R14W Sc Put EI·l.DIJ El:6S. IOA. 3.07A
943.40
I !1Jlll4~~ Citi7tns Bank Of l.og111 'l'hc: Elal Stet 9 Mutchler Add. f!i .42A.
21.34
110084roXI Citizens Bank Of l.opn Thr Etll sm.1.1 Mulchltr Add. 115 .42A
522.J6
1100ZX002 Cleland James W &amp;JOr StephaiDc G
Sectioo3T6NRI4W!.OOA&lt;Nt01'16.266A 2.00A
131 !.71
110072('00) DtUavalk Laura
lrt sm 27 Near Mid Of E112 Part (X 6.75AEx In Minml1 2.68A 22j1
1100725000 Dellavallt La~m~
Lot Sect 27 Nelli' Mid OfWII2 Pan Of 16A ~ 1.12 Millmj1 1.4SA 146.56
Ux Sa:t27 Near Mid Ex If.! Miaerals S,tiOA
156.29
1100727000 Dell~val le Lau&gt;a
11002311lll Dtllavalle Laura A c/o Laura A. De Win
!27.75
Sect 27 Mid 26.136A EA \ l.l&lt;ijA 14.988A
11003 IJOOJ Du st Lisa Ani &amp; Wanh Meli ssa Lynn
429.11
Scct i2ScCor. OfSw 114 21.7SA
llS.9)
II(Wl90CX) Fackler Derutis I &amp;/Or Ki11 M Sect. 12 St Pan llo\
lili.l3
IIOCXlltml Fackler Dennis J &amp;iOr Kim M Sect. 12 NPart Of Eln Of Sc IJ4 25A
! tll:Ol80.1J Fadler Dennis I &amp;JOr Kim Mdo Kim Fackle.
So: 12 Nt Comer IJH~A ExlO.OOA l27.00A
288H9
110098200'! · Gmlne Wesley &amp;/Or Dcmna
Sa.1 1 Nw 1'1 Ex 4.88A Nw Cu IlA Ell .lOA
13.71
Hw~ fJ. .816A Ell 3.896A .64
8!!.74
5«12
TON
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IIA
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IIOCI981 003 Gmlcne Wesley !/0" Donna
46.49
5«21T6 Rl4 2. 1 9A~t0f ll .l48A 2.19A
110023 1002 HawlWil~arnJ r
Sect ISNPan0f68.1M Mid Oil NUnc'70.nBA
110067.50C() Jacks Allen R&amp;/Or Henrietta
4&lt;1.49
£x 611.59 \A 2.!117A
110067f«X) l;w;h Alim R&amp;fOr HtrnitUJ
Sect9·15 On WLine WOf Rd 14.42SA Ex 11.44.\ 2.985.\
8&amp;413
110019800&gt; Kins Michael W4/0r Lisa R Sen 2 1.50A Of Nw (()(, Of ).85A Abo 12'Wd ltwi'WI}' l..SOA 1430.~8
110 1141004 KnappWa~e~
Froclion4TfJRI4 1.644A0.110f41J47A Ex .716A .921A
99S.37
110086t':rol Lee lina Lc/o Doo King
Lot Sec1 IS WPan or 4~A Ncar Mid 12.70A F..\ 2.004A !l696A )26j8
l]oozrox(l MusonRo11 &amp;/0rWmdi
Sect.20NCcn.PanOfJU;.:B 1.667A
4Sl91
liOOfllffll Mcclelland ROJCI' 0
Fnd T6NRl4W lOAQ\t Of 28.02A IO.OOA
401.70
\10115ti00 Mocdi spaugh Roben WSr t\:JOr Julia A
Sect 1 Se or Gardner .42Ac
162.41
1101262001 Morris Victor J c/o William &amp; Gayle Morris
Stti33T6 R\4 2.651AOtuOfS6.4&amp;.\ 2.65 1.\
115.69
1100755000 Morris Victor J c/o William &amp; Gayle Morri&gt;
Lot Scct -33 ESide Of 43.64A Sw Of Nw 114 8.64.\
1146.29
IIOO?stro:l MMngo Htrr) Ruue ll M&amp;JOr flertina
Lot Scct 20 21 Mid or F~ Ell 4'l A
61t11l
Nw ~ 10.62 &amp; !.61S2A 61.9341A
1&lt;1.n
I Hml\003 Ntwdl Char loll~
Sect 3T6N RI4W l.lHA 0111Of 22.4~A 1.174A
11oo8390)) Pcdlingtoo Judith Kdo Judith K. Hunter
18n.61
Sect.9S ErniE&gt; ..10AO\liOf91.1lA 32A
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ll001!47fm · Price.L&lt;:oo A &amp; l-kmHI1 Bc/o Grqory J, Pri re
Sect 81n~1/4WOfRd. SOf5pim 3A
181.2!
10.10
1 1 010~9(XX) PriceT!xki M ,M)rS~llyA
lotSe!.t·9Sc:funer 1.75A
699.41
Lot Sect. -9 Ne Pan 33.25A
110\000lXI Price Todd M&amp;JOr Shelly A
1143.1!
111ml8001 RllWt ll ~
Sec 12ThN R14W IO.OOA OJI Of 137 .OOA IO.OOA
H8U4
1100ll31XXl Ru~yon lell}l LliOr Vanness. L Scrt. 14-S SPin or E In 120A
!.69
IIOOJ2«MXX Runyon Jerry LaJ0r Vanncssa. L S«t. SNc.- Mid. Of EUoe 1.OOA
2M
11001i5XXXJ Schwe1Chll George W
S«l. 26 .12A Out Of .l9ANw Pan .llA
l06.4l
110065100J Schweichrt (iroq:t W
Lot J-26 Ex.2'0n WSd &amp;: Tri 27 !fl'X271/l' PI Of .63A•.41.\
326.62
1100 15500) Smilh Rolland E &amp;/Or Kan:n [) S«t. 2E Part Of 2.{jgA Ex. Right orWa}' l.l2A
39.6!
5«1. 36 S~ C0r1cr 40A
110026SilXl Taulbee Lewis
Sec1.36NwOfSwl/4 ]9A
2!11.36
1100264(XXI Taul~ tr-A·is
117.71
Lol Srcl ·l4 .33 E &lt;YCr S Line Of Se l/4 12.24A
11009!ml Toy"" Larry L&amp;/Or I""'
Lot S«t ·H Known As B~Uiom SciooiW .?SA
1100932lXXl Taylor Larry L'&amp;/Or Joyce A
Wj2
Lo1: 5«1.·14-H S11· Pi Of a.ZOA I~ Sw l/4 Of Cr..SOA
1100211][0) Taylor larry L&amp;lOr Joyct A
15.77
110093 100) iiy lorlm)·l&amp;JOrlD}UA
lot 5«1·33 N~a1 \lid ot: Nc 114 2.75A
l1.04
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143.18
LoiSec1.·331DStll4 0f NOI CT. 4.04A
11002&amp;4ml Taylor L.atl)' L.&amp;lOr Jnyce A
1570.46
110093CKXKI Taylor l.arty l &amp;101 J o~cc A l.o&lt;Std·HMidOf Sell4 50J5A
18l41
Sect 2T6 Rl4 SeCor 5JXIA tM Of 22.1SA 5.00A
1101 243001 Williams Dana
61011
Sl lfi On NLn Ex 20A Of EPn E:t 40A Ex .83A 79.916\A
1101 25tillJ Wollt M!Wiill L&amp;!Or Emily

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121mi ltm Coliln &gt;Ronald D&amp;!Or Joon
Ne Pt ll.18A JOOF.F.OIIRt. 124 .S8A
1200200001 Cundiff Randall Ju~ior &amp;/Or An gela R
Se.:t ~ T6NRl4 W(.IJ9A IZ.00201.00l &amp;. .961A
12-00206.001 TO!ali.IO
120027500) Davis Haroki&amp;/OrShtrry
Seci.K(MO)IiCIXHn'SflliOfSwl/4 .2.SA
12&lt;KDI700) Higgin~ Lawsm ID LiOOa ' Sect On S Li ne Of .9SA Pucci .ZJA
12&lt;W1600:1 Higgins Lnwsoo &amp;:!Or UOOI
Sect 14 (640) NPn Of Lot Nw Cor WOfRd J4A
120'.XII500J Higgins Lawsoo t\:JOr UOOI
Sect8 (640) TriOn NLint I~ Nw Cor .20A
1200188000 Pitru Ryln S &amp;10r1i!ley SamllflthaJo
,()! WLi neS Of NcCOOnid.u El/2 EJ. .14A .16A
12001!18001 Piertt RyanS &amp;lOr 111\ey SamwthaJo
()1 WLineS orNe Chri Lui Wl/2 Of l.ct .14.'\
OJt OfJOA .14A
120021800:1 Sorde~ hck Dan itl Jr c/o Stephen lur.li
La1 21 !5 1/2'S,:4 ln'Ndulllgth Of!..« Fallots Add l l
1200219000 Sorden JD D111iel Jrdu St~~ Lu~h
·l.ol 22 Fallom Add 22

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116416

1 500~

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l'n.91
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llt41
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13001

1500!
1501~

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SALEM TOWNSHII' · IIEIGS 1.'!0

Sect. 31 Ce111tr PI Nel/4 U. 14 Vein Coal 24A
13004S600:1 Allman Charles S li
IS.M !3007081Xll A~h bum Icy Ann
Fr. l9 -20 .15.\ Out Of'Se Cor Of IO.WA .7SA
IS4.~
Sec4 nN R! 5W0.36A. Out Of 1.50A 0.36A
I:!On3001 Bass Joshua David
Sect\ I T!!N RI ~W 6.9662A Ex:UIA l4362A
I}00514003 Della\'alle Laun
119.15
t:mllJOll DickinsonSheila Kay &amp; ScnnCarolyn S~
lll9.1li
Sect 4 Nw or Nt l/H.t I.SOA. Along Co Rd 10 44. 1 ~A
1300299001 EbtnbachRantly B &amp;.JOrR ~thA Sccti217N RI 5WS.II33A0ul0f3~.234.o\ Lal7 l 0l3A
166. 71
! 300J~20Cll GobleSh1wn
Scct26S~~o·CmEli4Vei n CoaiJ~AOutOf4A J~A
653. 10
1300340002 GobleS ~a iYII
Sec25TSN R!H718AOut.Ofi8.19AEd05.\ U68A
ll0077&amp;00l Hayes1'hell!.lortP
Snt. 1SNwMid:Oill.intEI'INOI'RdCkiiDr91J.53A 5.41A
(;ilbridcRicllarrllki!O&lt;BorllnA
182. 18
1300~J60ll Hemphill Betty Lou
Sea 15-IOMidNOfRF.xM\IeinCoal 35.46A
Sec lO T4N RI I W9.().1gA Out Of ~ I J6A H»~A
1311J~3?1UJ 11emphi11 Ht:lty loo
Secll l Sl/2 EA Jt Vein Ct»l 63A
Gilbride Richard I Jr &amp;K1r Blltm A
402.'\.2ll
1300 1 ~ 7010 Jil(k!i Rynald L &amp; lklty Loo Tru!lt't:S l:lch FamilyTnw
~ ll T4N RIIW 6.054Al)n Of 22J(KiA 6.054
101.09
Scc5T8NRI5 2SIS.\0Jt&lt;Yl2282A lS I5A
Hawthorne lillllt\1)' Rylll
Lui til Arbaugh'S JRd S~bd i~. IOO'X200'
64UI
1~00311l1Kll Jolm.10n RockyC&amp;.!Or8ethA
Sa:l lO )AOutGr35AWEnd lA
Haymllll Patricia K
Sect .40T4 R!l S ParHYSwlf.l 1.54961\
1300001003 K'uhari£ JamesA
Sed i T8NRJSW5.461A0utOf41.93&amp;A 5.467A.
Hen~ley Ed~1 M&amp;lOr Mil!hew S Sa·t J5 l.$8.5' OfT Oflol 25 Wpt 14115' X 148.5'
4fi1.%
]300((11002 KuharicJames A
!1«131 T8N R I~W 5.1W2AOut Of 47.18.\ 5.1.!42A
JoiiCS Patricia Ann
Nlll' Cor Of 21.50A Tract Nw C01 OfSwll4 Of Sei:t 16S l.4 31SA 5ti1.9S
130.162.\001 Mcdaniel Fred
S«I2T8 RIS 8.3S91A0utOfSI.42A 8.3591A
'39.16
Ktbltr Dlls«in p &amp;/Of Alhlcy N Sect 36 Lot t l A!ba~'h'S 4Th Sub
124j1
IJ004.400Xi M(quilld La1111tm William
Stet 1H ·l2 Wor Cr. Rr El. 14 Vtin Coal l.\
Knqcl Jamel E
5«114·15 Nw Part OfEJn ~.25..\
339.1J
!3004391':o.l Mcqoaidl.awrtoce Y.'illiam
S«t. f2 Cen. Of Sect. 12 Nor Rd Ex. 1.70A .JOA
KnqelJ ~~mE
Secii 4- ISSwPinOfElnfu9.3)A 1189A
IYXI441!Xll Mcquaid law1toce William
Scct.\5-8-12 Mid.S Ctn.lJI Public Rd T.27 26.UA
Lanct Miclllcl WSr I./Or Dorod1)' A
134 1.61
1300317002 Morglll Frank &amp;:JOr And~t.a
Sec! IST8N R1 5W15.44.\ OJ 0 32.01A IS.44A
Sect ll ·l5 NPrtOfSe t/4 OOA
1158.(19
13005800)5 Multin.1liml'4hy L&amp; Karen D Sect l T8 Rl Tract t5 6.045.\ 0J1 !X 41 .54.\ 6.04SA.
LtonardRogcrW&amp;/OrBeu~J .S«t l! F2lt0120f26J21 5.012.\
, IJ0055SWO Peyton Rictmnl
Sec1SSw Pt Of'Swl/4 1.30A
Looz Shaun M&amp;lOr Jacq~lyn n M
1300S511«Xl Peyton Richard A
Soc1SOn WLine OfNel/4 l.50A
Sec 23 T4N RIIW 4.645 \AOJI 01\ S.OOA 4M51A
662 .~1
1
300209005
Pickens
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St.!: .\4 Fr 35 HN RIIW Part Of Loll 8.0J5A OJt Of 39.948A8.Q3 108.00
1300lJIXKli Sroufe Bill}' Lte Sr &amp;/Or Naomi R
Sccti5-5MidOnWUnc .7SA
I !5.27
Putman Donald &amp;K&gt;r MiWicne Secl. 16T4Rll i.B7AOJtOfiJ.HSA 1.87A
1164.01
130071900) Tumblin W~lter Gj, &amp;lOr Mary Sec120 FIBC 25 Til K.l5 .lilAOut Of 51Ac .87.\
Sec!. 24 Nw Comer SA
Putman Jim.tJOr Rwll
130024~00) Wise Willi 3m l
IJj IOU IS' X !OS' i:M.5' X lbS'
Rbodes Alrrtd do Carmdiltl Rho.-b
l.\0024400J Wi&gt;t WilliamJ
J.i:j660'X 150'S Pt
Royally 1ntt~Crst Cll'l E. Smilh Petroleum Inc PumiiiH442 Well t1 32.07
130024000:1
Wile
Willi~m
Junior
&amp;/Or
S
te]Nnie
L)'l1n
RbodrsCarmelilal
Sea. 29WPanOfSwi/4:24.60A
112.20
Se\:t 13 JoininR La. t!O .2SA
RoulhDooaldJcffery
Sect 24EJnOfSwi /4EllOANw.1~AOf9ANw0x9A .7SA 127.S8
IJ0024JIXIJ Wist Willi illll Jun ior &amp;/Or Step!IU'Iie Lynn
Rlll-tcrCluy Wayne &amp;./OrlbwlllaJ
Lor: 6 22.H 132 NPI
Scct 30 Mid OnE lJne Bel Cardon &amp; Wagner 1 0.1 ~A
159.49
130024 \OOJ Wioe William JuniDf &amp;lOr Slepililli~ Lynn
RuckerJcrryLIDEdltJ .
Scct. I4EEnd&amp;..I8.67A Ne Part 2U3A
Sect ll Ne Of t]Q Danville ,glA
9Si.08 '
Ruo;kcr Jtrl)' l &amp;!Or Edl1 J
S«t8 Near Mid.{)! WLine ! ! .~IIA·
123JI.
1300245001
Wise
William
Junior
..tJOr
Slepti1n~e
L)lln
Smith Riclllrd A/Or Looioe
Scct 1' Sw Oxner 4.45A
Pt
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173.111
Sllqir lamesC
SecL30TJR.II IA0liiOfSPutOf26A lA
3SII.l
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loll6
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WestBillyW&amp;JOrTereu
'Secll 7W l l20fN~l/4 22.00A
1300766002 Wootfn Dmie l G&amp;/Or There" M
ORANGE IOWNSHIP ·EASTERN l.'iD
Sec 11 TBN T1SW1S.76A Q\1 Of 37.43A lt76A
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31.1.6
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Lot Sect :n Nc Pan 28.B2A
!4.15
Coll i~s Ke111l ID Marjorie L Set! 3~ RllW T4N 6.s.t8A (hll Of 219.92~A Lot t\4 6.841.-\
-,
SALISBURY 1'0\\'NSHIP · MEIGS L\ll
CoUJns Keitb A&amp;lOr Milljorie L Sttt 3~ R1 2WT4N6.1Xl7A Out Of 2JIJ.923ALotfl2 6.067A

ISOOI

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49.0!
684.30
201.01
169!.!1
1173.62
4.!1
4!.74
41611.71

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!49.1l!
166.17
1101.71
41.89
167.73
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1.04 .
41.10
2!2.4&lt;1
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19!6.09
3341
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19.91

16.9312127
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104.62
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111.47

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1501t
1.5011
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"Shop Locally "

Sponsored by:
Sccuonl6 T2 Rl3 2.9223.' ~tOf SOID.\ 2.9213A
S«tionl6(6oi0).94AEJ. \629A .7niA
Brook.\ Sbarleoe Mae ID Troy Sect 27 l26lt Mld S Pan Of ~1A S Of 5112 EJ. IO.o\ IJ2A
Bruob Slmlne Mue !/Or Truy St l1 t262)T.2 R..l 3 F.3 WFJ'Jd .t0.68A S 1'1 10.08A
Brocis Sbarleoe M!IC W Troy Sl :n t262) MMH)f S 113 Of Rd F.A COil &amp; .88A I~A!A
Brooll Slwltnc Mat &amp;lOr ! roy S«t 2] [261) Mld Of S 1!3 Of Rd EA COil El i.!IOA 15 .4~A
Bllrl Lillian Etlll
Sect. IJ..l1[640J In SPlt1 01" Nt\14 2A
Coot.!. Maulk:¥. oliOr Amanda D Stet 9 t 100) Sw Pan Of 1-4 112A EOf R:d On S Li~~: 4.S2A
Dam Jo~ce .-\
Stet &amp;t640tln 15 Wli S F.nd lA
[)all' Joyce A &amp;JOr Oa11&gt;Helen M
SCct 8 \().101 W Pan Of lA Ne Part Of Sd /4 .46A
Da\t&gt; Joyce A &amp;JOr Oa1i1 Hckn M
Sect K(6101E Pm Of lA Nt Of Sel/-1 Of S" l/-1 .s.IA
[hroi, RKiwd Wil~am &amp;JOr K.Jm~rly Lynn
Srction 16 TI Rl 3 2.00.-\0ut Of IB.978A 2.00.\
Oi~.tm l tndaA
Stet &amp;\MCIIIWX218' S Of School Lot .7S A
SectJ6N'SideOfSA 140A
Ehlm Oenna
5«tJ6NSideOf5A .30A0utOfl .?OA ..llA
Ehlin Oenm1 1
t:blm Ronni~ W
S.:..·t J~ 11001 r-ku Sw Pan~\\' S1de Of !1 .4~ I ~. P.tl.&lt;\
Ebl1nRonmtW
lolSttl ·29l6AcLoi157Nw I/4SwPanOf i 1A~ 10.93A
Fnd~·~ Chls F.&amp; Gold!~ Mc/o Delbert Frtdky

1400J91001 Athey MMWw AID .ki!NG
I&lt;WXXl49COO AtheyMaJtbrw AID Julii'G
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1-40\~!IU:U

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1-100268(00
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1.100276!01
1-IIJ.Mtll
1-100~8~

1-100~~
IJOO~~I((II

1~75!!1.00

141»?bl00'.1
1 -+I~ .I'XkiJ

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151.63
7.29
5&amp;.1 9
64.2-*
36&amp;.2-*
12-1 1&amp;
441.2&amp;
1.62
10.12
203.40
173U8
22J.II3
76\1.88
fl. II
1&amp;4.10
401.88

57.06

l.W\580000 · G1l~lt C!arer~;:e W&amp;!Or Berni ~-e H
Sl 151162\ Lot I(XJ"X116' Of .15 AOn Naylon Run Rd 214A

404.42

IJOI :M:\0:1 Hamh.&gt;OOA&amp;/llf Htather
S.XtJIIMOISePttE~ l561!AE 11J7A
4-1.~ . 1~
1-1(0).11001 ll u\lb;ud kn)" R ID Kath ~lll SecrBTi ii:I 3 12AOui Of hliA IHMlA
2J21.3 l
l.roll9!ro.l H) -.til RrtOOa \I
Sect. Fmc. H T.Z R.\4 J7A Of 3250A S Pl .37A
&amp;47.18
I-+00700Xll J oc1~ Chiford Et.d do WanW Eblin
Se_i-1 IS 12621Nw Pal1 Of l l9~A Nw Cor 1.61 ..\ U. 1.099A .Sll A 21 .26

I.WI6.'i i!XII

Kaull Wilhani

'"'~ltl22ttl(l

K it~ik'n Charlt~

140~~79000

14011'! 7~1
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I#KXII7000
14013990ll
I.W1187()))
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1401 21 4001
1401221000
1-111\ J! \1)1~1

1401 42 1000
l.W1 4BIM.\1
1402-IIOOikl
1401421001
140049oUXXJ
1400493000
1400~1

14022330ll
1401662000
1401663!XXJ
141}16MOOO
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1401 363001
1401364001
1400551001
1401D«illJ
I.WilJ4SIXXJ
1401 51100J
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1401615002

14005J.tOO'J

Sect 32 !64(11 E Pan Of N I.WA U. ~A IA
Fra:t~on I ~ TI R l~ 4'} ~g2 1 AOut Of 51J.27A &amp; 13.4347A
CAJrOfiU 7A

76_61

m. 1s

Let &amp;lOr Sharon

39~j4
St\.1. 3S \lOO tE F.nd Ex. 2AEnd WOf Ct W.HA
Ruy~hy lot Hcrdld Encl}',y Co Noel Hcrrm~n~
Kitcllen Sha~oo
5.61
LO. 1'12~ 34 , 31 \9, 311~
I 11).~8
S«t.1 8tl~2) NII'Part E Of ll.d. IY.50A
~brtbes WiJ.liam J ~ph /r
Sect. J6(3 19· 3 ~ l l l n 100." Lot Se l l~ , 7.47.A
71fl.l9
M1 ~ht Randall Joe
Sed 36 ( 100.31 5~ &amp; 5.l?A Mid N II! W
Nccre Roy ~~ers
Of Stet 1.83A &amp; 3A .83A
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2ji
Norman Harold &amp;lOr Juanita
Sect.27 r262l.SOAOf 12A WEnd -ID.68A SPt JO'X IOO'X68' .SOA
76.97
Nunnan Hmll~ &amp;/Or 11Wlita
9iJ..\ Of II.SOANw Silk 50A Too li1 Nilrne Of C~rry .90A
?12.61
O~~in Hu~hl( W" Palsy
Se\.1. 3 ((1.1{) ) lniKJ Bradbury Surv.
Pe!lnmgtoo Charles &amp;lOr Fillth D Sec II t262 ) Near Mid InS l'rl Of S Of
RdE.t TlM. 0.9 107A{NrwSurl
&amp;~215
48.92
Sec8 WOfWilli&gt;Hi llln Sr Pr11.61A
Qu1il s Btrtit do Iris Pa)'llt
59$7
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Qllllll s Bertie c/o lri&gt;Payne
Stl.'l .ID U~d 213 &amp; 1/3 or IWA Sw lf.l EI 20A
Reure1 Maedclta J
3298.54
Nw E1 .25A &amp; ~.lilA 5S.
S(:{IJ9
RiJ gv.~y JdTtry L
SectS Rt -7 OlfW Side NOf Highway l.J5A
4.60
R&lt;'U &gt;h lbOOJa) l!&amp;iOrCoMiel S«24Lot3U5T\N I(I3W O.mAOutOfU.4M2A 0.2J5A
4.9H
Rou&gt;h Thcws E&amp;/OrConniel Sec24Llli30~Tractf3 0.48Ab 0 235A 0.247A
1100
Roush Thr•na! E&amp;JOt Connie L lnt 306 T IN R13W 0.6~7A {)Jt Of lMR.&lt;\ 0.637~
Rw&gt;h Tom E&amp;JOt Coonic l
lOOA LOI IDl &amp; 305 Tl RU .4.~6A.
29.11
Our Of l.oiJO.l &amp; .9&amp;3 OJt Of Lot 305
Secr24 Lol 1305 RIJW, TIN I.!lOAOu1 Of l.982A
933jJ
Roush Tom E&amp;!Or Corulit l
Runyon Jtrry &amp;:101 Vanrw:ssa
S«l 35 IMOl \\i Pan Of 43.56A EPar1 OfW IOOAOutOf14A 5A 148.1J5
Stet J5 (b44.HSw Part Of Wqt Rd 30.32A
1780.1
Runyo• Jt rry &amp;lOr Vanncssa
Stction 26 (640 ) ..1421 A &amp; .0255A
Stafle!i Howard &amp;Alr Mary
Cnmhi!led For A Toul Of .367M
IJI.62
ScdT2NR I3W7.40AE1:5.80A l.OOA
32.15
Sey·kr Mi ~ hlld M
Stctl3 !100.382) WOfRdSOfWillis .12A
3.45
Shoemlker Roge r D
Sl33r389J I52'N~72' WOn Rd .~bon Run
Shoemllkn Ruger D
h JAN &amp; .nA .25A
99.60
Stet B (3H9J Nw Pan Of lOOA Lot 2~9 JOA
125.Y5
Shocmillo;er Roger D
167.67
Shoemlktr Roger D
St:cr33tl~9t . l 5 .-'. Out Of 25ASe Part Our Of IOOA ISA
l.l-1
Shoem~kcr R ol~r Dale
S..·c B (100.389) C~lr Prt Of IOOA U. 38~ .OJA
ms.68
ShoemlkerRogcrDale
Set:t33TI Rl3l.ot3S9 1.559AO.n0f2.179A 1.~59A
Sttwan Judith Lyn~ c/o Jud~ Hall lOOA L01 JO~ Tl R13 Penll)' SL~rVey I.1739A
1040.82
Out0f1H3A 1.1739A
107.21
Ta~ l01 Mary ·
Sect. 8 (640) I ll Radford Surv. h . Coal HA '
BS.H8
Tayl01 Mal]·
Sect. H(MIJ) 112 Penny Surv. 1.50A
7390
V:n:oooey lra Eugelll'
Sct-tJ3 (640) NeOfSw l/4 J.OOA
74.30
WilliamsSart J
lol.lJ5TINRilW J.OOMOutOf l.22-IA 1.006,\
Wilson Ch risti~ a K &amp;lOr ROO:ru Jonathan Errol
-*2.50
Fraction 13 n RI J 2.1217A Our or 15.25 8A 2.1217A
7.77
Wines EariWSr
Set:t 33!100.389)Mid. PartWOfRd. .67A

MIDDLEPORT \IILLAGE ·MEIGS LSD

•

1Si.li58H)ll Baktr Susan
l.ct 2~ I' S Sirlt b I'X3T Off Rear
IS0\ 73 1000 Rater SuSJln l
L:t 25 10' S Side Ex . Strip ~"X!i(J NSidt
Lotl~hi ' S
15017.m xl Baker SuSlln L
1~16f!OOJ Cit Grou~ Consumer Finance
Lot t20J Sheme ld 20 18' NSide OfW lf2
1500167000 CitGroop Cunsumer Fin.IDL·( lr11.· Lut (191 Sl1effieiJ N1924'S SiUc or WIn
l50148600J Darst Jetfrey &amp;JOr Kill)'
Lot 110 1'. Jmt! JRd. Add.
1501485LW U3rsl Jeff~y &amp;iOJ Kit!)·
lol!OO P. JonesJRd. Add
~'fk)68(00) Darsr Jtff~y R&amp;!Or Kittic S
Loll-I) P. Jonc:d Rd. Add
150068200) flarstJeffreyR&amp;AlrKitt~S
Lot 143P. Jonts3RdAdd. Nwl l4
.150067m:l Darst Jeffrey R &amp;/Or Kinie S
Lol 142 P. Jones 3Rd Add. WIt1
150115400) Oa\'isJOOnM
Loi 49Coalflllt30'EEnd
· 1500367000 l&gt;d\isWod)'lleE(/Q[).'fUihyl.Davi&gt;
l.oi9 H&amp;RAdd
1500]6(ffl:l J);r;i ~ Wolyne Eclo Dcrothy J. Dal'is
lol. 8 H&amp;. RAdd
I~ I)Jnfrt Colleen
loi48J 1\im 460 51J'X IOO'
l~0202'XO'l Evcrcom Sy ~ rem ~ Inc
Publit Uriliry PeM11al
l5!XXJ8700J FinkWilli:l!Tl C &amp;JOt Paula S · lnt (43) Ml25 Fr Mid On Walnlll
15001l80000 H:Jynes Durio
Lot 59 Bellan 2Nd Add fu 18' N
150053~ H ~yne) Dorio
Lol1061k~an Add.Nlf.2
15!XUIXKXJ Hcrm ~n Rid C &amp;lOr VOnda S Lot 70 Coalport70 Sc Part h 50'X60' Sc
150003000 Holley Roonit &amp;iOr Elva
Lot (22) Behan 1St Add ·16' N
1500432001 Holley Roonit &amp;/OJ Elva
Lot (21) BehariiSI AddS 112
lilt 38'XM'X36' ~16' Ne PI El.16' N Behan'S ISrM:I.
IW!Ol(KI(] Holley Roonit &amp;fOr Eln
1~39!illl Jeffers C~rles D&lt;l'lid F.!al
Lot 103 Beh111 Add
J.D; 121khan 1St Add
Im21000 Kitd~en Charles &amp;JOr Sharon
1500822000 Kitchen Ow"les ID Sharon
Lot 131khan 1St Add fu 32' friJIII NSide Of Lot
l50196.'ifl00 Kitchen Owles lee &amp;!Or Sbaron Sect. 29 (640) Sw Cor. Of 141 .14A NOf LeadingCr 4.(J4?A
l~Sm l.ew'is J'tt!&amp;Y
W (47) S~ffield 47·S if2
ISCll)'(ffiJ l.ew'i&gt;Pt=~~~
Lot {33) Sheffttld H.S 112
1500879!WI MarsMII F.! len G
l.ol2 Palmer'SAdd 50' Off S Sidt:
15009i}t()00 Mcdaniel Thelma do Tlfllmy Ball &amp;.ItO}' McDaniel
l.ol69 CoaljXlfl .1St\ ESidt Prt Of 1 /~A
1S004S l!XXl t.l eadowollil'id lullv=r
lot (691 Behan 2Nd Add ·17' Off NSide
1)0045200J Meadow&gt; David Luilier
lol ~68~ Behan 2Nd Add l~' Off S Side
150.).191!00) Michael lknist
Lot 81 f'ltimer'S lSI Add W Elld 4H'XW
150.).1971))) Michael Iknise
Lot 81Palmer'S \Sr E End 4~X40'
IS00312!XXJ MidtllepmPenterosu1Chnrch Lor92BehanMd52 112' (111WEnd 50X5l.5!J:It
15009900Xl Mills Nichola!! D
Lor 373 Pomertl)'"S Add Wl/.2
15009tliOCKl Mills Nicholas D
Lot 372 Pomertl)·'S Add Wl/2
ISC0091000 Morrison Jimmy
Lot 66 Coalpon IOOA Lor 310 tli'X60' . 64'X75' SPan
15010S4000 PayncBOObyE&amp;JOrlrisA
Lut400Porncro:.·
I ~ I OW.l.Kl Pt.yneHOOb~fuscne&amp;lri&gt; A
W J98 Purncro}'
1501575())) Poll·tiiShelby M
loll16BoswoohAdd
15001 .\J(JM} Ren!al; lJnlimilf\J do Mikt Iones Lot 26 Elthan El6'X':Itl' E Pal1
1500532000 ¥yrMUr Lawrenct J~h
lol 309 Hortoo Add. Sl/2
1501266(00 Slack lenore S CJo Helen Slack . Lol 309 178.&lt;\ El J3AEt JSA I 21 A
1500386!XKJ Smith Kahleto M
Lo180 Bos11·orthAdd EJ. 20' Prt U.
I!IXJ5'XOOO Tipton William R
Lut 18
I~Y2!l1Ml Tyrto: Chlrleo AEtal
Lot 329 l.uwer Porn
I~!J40.Xl Tyr~ Charles A Bal
Lot m L:r.r.·er Porn
l~1 1 5tl~ United Pentecos1al Church Inc An OhiOCorp
Lot 72 Bthoo Add' b 18' Off S Side
1501554000 Whitle)' Gifford A
U~ .\ 38'X24' Front ins On Alley El ..001 AOur Of lDI 3. Jl20A
1 50 1 5~7!XMJ Whitl e~O i ffordA
lol 8 22' WEnd El 24' Ell ~' OtT E Side 7.0'XMJI'
150.1 55!XXIO Whit lC}' 01flord A
Lot 7 40'X40' Fmmins Off Mill St EA .OOIA .036.'\
lmJ541XN.l Wh1l le) t11!Jord .".
Lot PlA3.7.&amp;1 ShetfKid 40' Out Ux130708 J.W. Jores Al:kl.
1 ~.11mooo Wh11le)' &lt;.1tfford A
lol8 24' wEntl2-*'X60'
l 'iiJ1 ~71 !XN.l Ye ~u ger Oonn1 J
S«1 29 t6K\) 119.2 1A N Of ltadmg Cr Wor Mid .298A
POMEROY VIUAGE . MEIGS LSD
I«.002ml Arook! Grover &amp; Viole! L
Sob. 91 f2 .SOA .50A
INJ263JOOO Auli Kellda &amp; Braun Michatl clo Ken11Eth hn
Lo! 75' X 200' Fr2ST'2N RUW
lf001~7(XIO Auli Kelllla &amp; Braun Mi~hitd do ~1111elh Bmn
L111 7 lllrxns On w~ide Of (('( tl
l(f01 5(ffl() Aull Kcnda &amp; Braun Mi(h&lt;~el c/o Kenneth 8nun
· Lot g 200'X55' On WSide Of W M
l(ffl)32txKl BiiCI' Builders &amp; ·t~tve h~l'i Lid l:.bt m Suh. 1112·2 1!2
lfi:OOJ I(JIXJ Bill!r Builders &amp; Devei0].'( 1SLui Lot 432 Suh..11/2 40'X1 ~·
1001-WSOOO RiiCI' Builden; And Develllpel&gt; Lid Lot 252 ·18 IS' lAir Of Mid Lot 27 1/2
1001447(XXJ B ~~er Builders And Develllpm ltd Lui 27 Nii)IDrS Run An Strip 45' Of Lol27 1/2
1(0013700) Bill'llhart Wil ham &amp;lOr BrtnW S lol514 E~.l 0' Stnp Frontlgc &amp; Goin BilekTo Obrien Lol
IWJ707COO Bamhar1 Wil ham A&amp; Brtoda
Lot 18-262 70A b.. ~·S trip NSide l Smal l Tri. ?OA
IWI548COO BQI'lon loc~
lol426 S Side Of Lol42664'XlHX42.T .22A
· l.n!426 Strip 24'Xl&amp;J'X 2113' 01 NSide
lffi i47&amp;!XM"I B11r1on Joey 1
l ffi i ~790:Xl B11r1oo Joey 1
Lol426 Sub Lot t 3 Lol f.t 26 661'J Frontage X17S'
Lo! 426 '{16 U3X119' SwW 2
lffiH17ClXJ Banon Joe)' J
1(00)88('00 Ba\IIT Hrrnc:r &amp; Irene
LotH3
l(f)l92111l0 B~~rer Homer &amp;lOr Irene
W&lt;lll
I W17K4U ~ J lk!llrTimc4hy&amp;Pamela
Lollb720'X4() Sd :or.
ltil17[ 111JI Btn11 Timc4hy &amp; l'imla
Lol lllt&gt; w 25
l li.C)\7111 1~! Brolll'n Harold D.l'!J' Lynn S
U~ 189Suh. ll Nw0f 25M-211El. IO' E
lll'fll/5101 Hro11·n Harold [) &amp;lOr Lynn S LJ11 (ll9 Sub. D 11!2" X~54 " Nv. [rJr

n

6JO
/6.95
278.74
33.62

524.22
7&amp;.42
161.07
20.80
Jim
392.67
1 98.~&amp;
73.63
495.31
J4.1J
22.40
1104.64
294.81
107858

583.93
30.22
46.16
151.91
434.117 .

1Jl,76
1llli
24.26
365.34
40~7.00

396J5

16001 73«» "B""" lbrold 0 WILl" S • l.o II'H.oo&lt;li'l 1o """'OISoh 0 l.o 11'1
1600174all Browu Harold 0 IJOr l}llD S Lot 119 Sub. Ex. &lt;11X7'' Sw Ox. t !it Cot
1b0017600l Brown Hlrold D aJ0r lyan S Lot 119 Su~ 27-40' On Bullenllll Sl
lf001l100l BTtl1111'HamldDtlJOrlynnS Lot!B9Su~25·26-l&amp;LaodinJ .
l!'all710CXJ BrownHaroldDaJOrlyMS
lftl~91XXl
1~3171XXl

lf:ffl3 1600l 8f011111H&amp;rold0wll!Ut L)'ltllS l.oiii9Sub2~ 8l.u.ii fll!ISIIbC
Ictl262JClXl Burthamrr Cm.:l)· kKlr Rontt Euzenr
IOOA Lot .nl .IIA
lb002611XXl Cantr Pluhoe E&amp;/Or Caner John W
l.o 1" ' - HiU
16010lOIXXl Clc Wtd Michael AID Or anal ~ 2511 X CDr .22.-\
IWJI~ ?IXXI Crtnt Wilbam B ol MargmlJ
lot 100 ·](1MU5ASub31f2 IJ3A
16(]114400:1 Cr~r~t William BolMargartll Lot3076.llAE·PartEl.. 9n ~J13A
llrJII-Wrn Crane V.'l11iarn B.lMargmrJ Lot iOO ·lOil l.lSASubB/&lt;1 l.l5A
llrJII~ml Cr;meWilfiam l il MiiJiutrl
Lot308 1JOAE Pan 1.30A
Sm 20 Fr (7T2 R\3 SOfUmioo AI'C .u"X IOO' .0918A
1002215001 Crites l ind!
(),II Of 22A .091
1600lWOOJ Crite1 Lmd:t
Lot 262 ·17 75'X100' S OfUnioa Avt
16()XJI600J D••'idsoft Brenda
lot 300 Right Of \\iay S' Wtde Tbrougll Middle Of La: lOO
l(:ffi)I500J Davidslln Rrendll
Ull 1H S Par1 Of IJ3 b . ChlJit'h Parcel
Lot 262-~ lASe PI Of 1&lt;1.60A St 1'1 Of 46.54 !A
ltffil36IXII Dttlal'llle Mich.xl
16CKXHSOOJ Ol:lla1·aJJe Michael
l.o 4JO
160C()3900J Dl:ll~VJJ!e Midwd
lul431Suh 3-4-Hi &amp; Part Lot 7
l(ill)37(Kll Dtlla\"lik Michael
Lol 429
l(i(l"()4((U) Dtll•nJlt MJcb.ae l
lol431 Ex. Lou Sold
1001 28/0C(I Aora PaulL
lo4 407 112 Sc Col'.
llrJ246100J Hairy Vicki I ID Haley CMll'y L&amp;!Or Haley R Bt:njllffi
Lot (262·18JJ5APart Of 7.SOA JSA
1 ~181&lt;00 Hill Leonard&amp;: Con
Lot 12 .D3AlO'X113' Ber.SprinJ.l Fi'la St .03A
1(iK)I8200) Hill Leonanl &amp; Curd
lot 12 Nayloo Run S4'XII1XII4' NSi&lt;k,
l600J0.10Cll Hudson David W&amp;!OrCoo~er Opal Carol
lol50 Sllb 2.·25 Front
1600103(0) Hudltln David W&amp;!Or Conger Op.al Carol
lol SO SOO 50' WSide
16014950CXJ JOOnSOil Or.id Gary &amp;iOr Tammy fJiz.1Delh
Fr 2S T'2N R13W Loc 262 Ne&lt;A' S ~rw y l.06A
1601&amp;3400.1 Julm100 Terry L li &amp; Mtlissa clo Melis.sa Johnson
l.ol303 Ckat Of W 303 25' Wide X94' X IOJ'S" .M4A
16018331XJJ JOOnsoo Ttrry L11&amp; Melina do Melissa Johnson
lol 12
160156&amp;KII Klein WilliamL
PI Of lol t3CI7 40'XSO'
160126.500) Knopp Charles P
l.o l%
1601 \ISOXI Laatz Shirky
lot 72 1(1 E Side
1601 117000 Lanu Shirlc:y
Lul 74 20' WSide On Condor St
1601 \l{ill) Lantz Shirley
Lol73
1602 1lllXll Lt fflellilll')'let
Ft10 TINR13W 0.511AOuiOfi.OOA O.SIIA
1601 86200) Lthew Ottryl
loi~36SwCtT. Of l.lll 5J6 .lilA
16010.~t;ID) Lundy Jeffery H&amp;lOr Andrea D lol86 Nay I~ Rnn
160106)(XXJ Lundy Jeffery H&amp;lOr Amlrta D Lot ~5 Naylors R~n
16010600)) Lundy Jeffery H&amp;lOr Andrea D Lot U Naylor&gt;·Run
160105JltXX) Lu11dy Jell~ry H&amp;lOr Andrta D lor 10 274 C LoA Ne Part 9A Wf.Dd Ex CoalllOA
l6010731XXJ L}'ons Lind.ley L Eta\
lot 581TriNe PBfl Of Lol 581
l602 32W:U Meig! (kll(ral HMpilal loc do 'Lynn Brown
l.oiJ-ISIO'StripOfS,.·CIY.
16023230)) Mcigs Gentral Hospital I ~~: do Lyn~ Brown
lot 211 l 1!1 Off f.asl Side
1602J23(XXJ Meigs Gentral Hospital loc cia l ynn Brown
Lot 220 23112' OffS Si~
1602J220ll Mei g~ Genet a! Hospilaliil: do Ly1111 Brown

Lot220N28'0nUultMiutSt
160.2321(00 Mcig.o;Gc:neralHospitalloc clo LynnBrown
\.ill l&amp;4 S 1/2 &amp;. Tri
160232400J Meigs General Hospitalloc do lynn Brown
lot 221 50' Oa Buttemul
160232700) Ml!ig!i Gt!neral ~pitalloc clu lyfUI Bruwn
Lot 222
1602605001 Ntll'land Grant A Eta\
Part Of Lol2 WSidt Spring Avt. 2.29'X80' Out IX 1X81J
llillJnOCll Old Pamh U The
Lot 105 E In
160'l1-4YOOJ Purnty Michael
Loi 399 F.J 25'XSIJ WF.nd
1601 m(KJI) Quail ~ William0 Sr &amp;lOr Pa&gt;·ne Iris
Lot 100.257 S &amp;ld Of .II AN Pn OfS11b II lf2 .(ijA
160029J(KJI) Rental! Unlimited An Ohio Partni:11hip de Mib: Jooes
W. 199 NCor S Of Sub 17 8o.nap Add
l60WJ.'iOOJ Rtnlil s Unlimited An Ohio P'arlnenhipclo Mitt Jones
Part Of Lot 2 W. Side Sprin&amp; A\'tlluc 4.7 1' X*!'
160074200:! Rtnlals Unlimited An Ohio f"arttmhip do Mite Jooes
W. 42S Weht Add. 500. 16
\6002900ll Renlll s Unlimited An Ohio Parmeniip do Mike Jones
lot 17 Burnap Add Nr Cor
· l(iX)29!(XNJ Renlal~ Unlimited An OhiCI Pannc:rshipf;iu Mike lL11t5
Loll7 BumapAdd
16009~ Rhodes Robtrt Mid~ael &amp;lOr Shfll)fl Lynn do Anthony Wa
Loli60T.2R.13Und 1/80fSub&amp;Coal
16009R40Cll RhOOe~ Robert MicMrl &amp;lOr Sharon L)'llll doAntbooy Wa
Lol l61EJ:.Cotl
\60098500) Rhode~ Robert Michael &amp;lOr Shii!OO L)'llll c/o Anthony Wa
w.~•~

Ritchie Cltarles A &amp;JOr K.ltlly A Lol l224 .28A E Of Fti~r A Merrick: Ex. COil .28A
Roosh' Srepharut Pnce
Lol37 Naylors Run
Sboemlkt1Roger D
lot 325 MNhaiDc Sl
SismAnnM
Loi16NaylonRun
ltill6.~ Sttwart Carolyn A '
Lol 2S Unroln Ht:iglvs Add
160187900:1 Slim mel JllllltS R&amp;JOt Stimmel Jeffrey AdoJoyce Ward

160115300}
16018B100J .
16016830Cll
160091400)

1523.04
124.119
3787.75

""

151.47
7&amp;1.!19
6~54

74.47
109.32
169.13
123.82
401 .71
.~HI
s1 1 .n~

1537.59

VideWJrn 1JJC cJo l}'nn B1own
Videocorn Ill( do l)'DD B1o..n Loi i&amp;S 25'S Side
Videocom Inc do Lynn EiMll Lot IM ll' N Side
Videuom Inc c/o Lynn Br011'11
Lot 222 112 40' 2Nd Sr
Videocom Inc do Lynn Brown Lot3&lt;18 Ex. 10' S!ripCMOfSw Cor.
Wnltoo Scrnt &amp;JOr Geli
Llll498
l(iM)4()400) 'W'altoo Scott &amp;!'01 om
Lol 499 Tri. Lo!
1 ~800) Walton ~ott l &amp;/OrG:ri L
1.«496
ll'roS90lXl Waltoo Scott L &amp;lOr G:ri L
Lol491
IW I ~ Walton Scott L &amp;/OrG:ri L
lol l4l
1(:00138(0) Wall!lll Scott LID Gc:ri l
La: 4\0 8YX IOO' Sw Cor.
1(:002WOI WnnH~rrin A&amp;JOr Shtl ~· L La: 262 ·2S .2~A 011 S Une f.l Cotl .22A
IWI930COO Will Carl &amp;lwia &amp; MWI Jean Lot231 Suip M' W'llie ktOflotlS
1{(10(\9800) Wilson Josepil A &amp;lOr HeruJmy M~D Edo Maurt.en H
LoiSS6 Suh l
1~70.KXN.l Wilson J~pll AWr Hellfle§!YM~n Edo Maureen H
lfOO'i~

SCIPIO toWNSHIP • MEIGS IJIO
171XX&gt;75(MXI Beha Sle\!n E &amp;./Or Mary C
lol: Scct.24 2.432.-\
IJIXX&gt;74000 lkha S!e~~~:n E &amp;lOr Mary C
Lot Scct.-24 (6401WPar1 Of 50A SCtNw lf&lt;l 20A
170'R20001 Bishop lim A
5e(t 14-I S Frl RIIW TIN 1.114A [).(t Of IS.75A 1.114A
171XXJ81ro2 Carr Brian D
170'J75600l Carr BrianD

21).01

170026700]
1700269000
1700268(MX)
17002({:00)

29. 11

1700402{XNJ

l6.96

17004010Cll
170039IJOOJ
17lXI4fmlJ
170061ll!XKJ
17006tmXJ
1700648001
1700182®1

952.60

135.32
471.98
1011l.114
. )9.41

10.65

1?00~1160CU

58.~1

1700.14SOOI
17002S2002

8-13.57

1 7004 1 ~002

1#1.95
nfii.8Y

1700543!XXJ

16.40
411.68

17003-l.lOOI
"1700472(((1
1700473001
1700152001

8!6.07
m .'15
127.83
29.25

1700~1

17001 82002

1~ 1 .8&amp;

1673j7
\7).15
5l ll

17003400ll
170034\(J)j
17tl:t'WIIO

.14 ~Jl

1700~621100

~ 102JH

17006fl!nl

9.JO
12 .~5

l.o ll6
Wilson JMeph A&amp;lOr HenrKssy Mllllreen Edo Mauretn H

Llll262·1 7 S Side Nnt To Sub. 2 Of ~Sfl I. I~A
160163300) W{).X!AIIenC
l.ot439TriLot11
IW189(ID) Yonker ~dE ID RUS&gt;elllayme C Lot 3 Naylors R111
l601~931XXJ Yunl.t:rDrnd EID Rusoclllayme.C Lot 6 NayloiS R111 '
1001 ~81!IDJ Yooko- David EIDRussell !ayme C Lot I Naykn R111
l601881XXXJ YW!midEffiRuwllJaymtC l.ot2NaylonRt~~~
l(:4,)189(00J Yooi:O"l.laYidElliRuMCII!aymtC Lot4Nayi01SRoo
1Wf89200J Yonker Da\'id Elli ll.u!i!tll JaymtC Lor: SNaylors R11n

~ 9. 79

49.79

l.o!111llS ln'OffWffido
W&lt; l4l

160246300)
1602464!XX.I
16024661)))
16(]241\SllXl
161l18130CO
16IX»&gt;S(XX)

4Q43
46.81

Lot 119SuhD. &lt;I2'X75"SwC«.

BruwnHwldDJr
U.\19SubDXCor
Bruwn HwHJ Ow &amp;/0! Lynn S Lot 119 Sub 31111 FMl.

17((165500)

Sect .!3 l iN R14W .4221A t:Nt Of 140.00A .422JA
Sect 33 S&amp;W PartOfNwl/4 &amp; SOfWpOfNe l/4 lA
Out i42A lA
W (6J

Erwin Pili lip &amp;lOr Brtnda
Erwin Philip &amp;lOr Brenda
l.ot (8)
Erwin Pliilip &amp;/Or Bn:nda
lot (7)
J., I ' ) )
Erwin FMip &amp;lOr Brenda
F.rwin Philip L&amp;JOr llrenda F I "I r;
&amp;win lliilip L&amp;/Or Brenda F loll&lt;
Fswin Pl1ilip l &amp;1() Brenda .F W&lt; 12
&amp;win Pl1ilip L&amp;lOr B~end'a F Llll33
Fole)' Rel:«ca l!Or Bill
1640) 2.M2A Out Of 42.27A S Side Of 143 .46A
Foil!)· Rkca &amp;lOr Bill
St (640) SOf f'otnero)' l Harri50f1\o·ille 2.192A Of 2.M2A'' 2.192A
Fulayler Sherry
Sect 8TI Rl4 SrC~Y l.OOA Ou! Ofli.S23A I.OOA
Hall loftne
Fration 31 nN KJ~W Ulil A01.11 Of IB.!XIA I.(IJIA
llalf lo!t~~e
Sect 20-21 X Plt1 Ncan Forts Of Rd 1.08A
H anin~ l.ylc Bruce
Sect](ITIRI 4 t1165A, O!lt0f31 .42A ~. SMA
Hoff Jamu Uoyd ,tJ()I Barbara M
Fr36T7NRI4W 28.289A0ut 0f54.SIA 28.289A
H o~DavidAI Ien
Sed~ TINR I 4H9AOIAOfi2.&amp;15A l49A
HuwWCcr4ld \\' &amp;. BlrbaroA F.ul Stt l2nN R14W E End Of Nl/2 ~4.876A
bi.24AbiJ3A 62.!14M
llowud (J(rtJd W&amp;10' llarbata A Sttt12 TI R14 1.24A Oot Cf93.32A U~A
Kcn~~edyPe11JE
"l..o1Scct· l 4· 1~Nd'an0f31.50A 5.50A
KenntdyPmy E
lillStd· I4 ·15(262)NtPart .50A
KingJoon l
Fr lnR\ 4 1.9S6At&gt;.J.Of20.89A 1.9S6A
KykRobert W&amp;!OrTtrtsa l
Sec8TINRI4 .f.OOAOu!Of 27.014A 4.(X}A
CA!nne IGm!x:rly l ynu du Milrla Hall
Fooioo 31 TIN RI4W2.118.4. O.t Of IUXlA 2.\I&amp;A
f'rm1 We§ley 0 lQr Christina lot ~t·J E End Of sin Of NEin 1/4 Ell4 413 A IUiOA
Prra~I W!$\ey OIDChmti na .SC.:IHJ R.I4 3.-40A
363.61
Pntt Todd &amp; Shtlly
Sttil nN RI 4W H 20A Out Of 37.?64.-\ 5.120A
Qlllvey lrl§l' ph C lt Flal
fu:\ 2TIN RI 4WNOfRd F.d.80A F.dJII6A l6.496A
Retve&gt; EtMI N Era\ cJo Alice Ru~ ll
Lot Sect.-32 16401Mid. or Nw 114 8.14A
Recm'Eugene W&amp;lOr luam ll Mlot Seer. -10 Mid. On S Line lOA

1&amp;40
l6.ll
M.'lO
30126
l'9.1l
9!0.n
Jj3
116l U

ALONG THE RIVER

IJ!Xlll l(li) San-E WI WawrCarol)l
l.oS.. -I HA.OutOIIJ4,41.\ScCa M
lliXlll'llll -""'"'RW.Slon!R
S«IT7NR1~W U78AOIOf 3U'JA 1.178A

IJ0061J002 1lnoloolpi-W.C)oillioW
5«30T7114l.WACb:Of'6.651A 11MA
IJ001f&gt;ml WwdMoipm
l.o(II1701!NSido
IJOOloll(li) WwdMopoo
l.oii.Bcll.oflOANU.. 1.7!A. LO'l!OA .6li0A
IJ0076J(IX) WwdMoipm
l.o(l91

· 2.67

17002620C0 Ward ~aret

loi(:!O) 120 b Slrip Sold To lamn WU4

11.97

,..,

t10082((ll l WnerlerryJT

Set2T7NR1&lt;1 JOJXIAt)J10fWUllA IO.OOA

&lt;17.35

SimON 11lllMIIIP · IIOOIIIEIN LSD
lllll'll lOOl AnM Rd&gt;ot KliOr II 4oft
Se,ll'!TI R121JJ8A Out Oil. lOlA. ~IJA LlliA
I!Ill 29HDJ A1100 Romt EI:JOr Detn K Sect. 2&lt;1 S Part Of .llA Nt Pl Of 107 AN 3A

124.03
29122
,l,J&lt;i

EloiiC Maye~ ~110'

Diles
Hearing Center ()ttit;
Diane McV•y - M.A., CCC·A, Owner Audiologist

. 'Keep Your Fork':
SK race turns loss into
awareness, scholarships, Cl

l06.1'
I.S6J1:1
171.11

&amp;

•oo
7.10
1&amp;.19

2JJ2
11.'1
4&amp;12
81.14
281U7
11&lt;1.61

1ll71
11.97
56191

!IIXI62HXKI BeanM&amp;rYta!JOrRhea
l*X!n~ Bun Mamt 4JOr Rbel I
10172)00) Bean Marvi1 4JOr Rhetl
I!KXW!UlXI BWICt Dollald P
1mmn:l BIIIICt Dooald P

SS.&amp;8

!IDSS100l
1!11!084002
llll083002
I!IJI OI!8lXI

I!lXl((OlXl
l!DU3&lt;t!DI
111:0337(XKI

19.07
134.51

1100119000
110011ml
lllXJ516(J)l
I!1Xl70SIJXI

W\1.00
l!lll342!XKI
1.)4

924,1l
2...,
9ll00
11 .11

lllXlii2&lt;1(JXJ
1 !001~8llXl

Lot21SubA

141.12
932.79

1Al174 18'X14~' Sw Par1
1Al17&lt;1 Sub. F32'X I45'
B~~tmlaiD doLai Ritdlie
Sei.116T2Nki2W2AOuiOfiOJOA 1A
CamDoJamcsAW'Suh R Lot2112TIN R\2W U 31A ()tt0f 28.56A 4.4J lA
CamWo James AID Such R \.GI293 T2N Rl2W18.1!12A ()II Of 27.'~4A \S.S820A
Cwahan Jamt~ A~ Sum R lot 29411N RI2W Se Of 44A New SUI'Yty 9.4JA
Coltill! Thu.M
Sed 23 Ncrth N AOf 3A IA
Scet. )() Nw Comer El. COli 6A
DJ~ Jobn C
D.lrst John c
S... JON Eod Ex Coal IIA
Sm.IOOW &amp;d • . 61. A • . ~ l4A
lni.!JolmC
Sect. Xl SOf N&lt;fOA COlli 29A
1&gt;Jn1 Jolm C
Hlines N111blnJ1
T2 RI3100A Lot '"!1} 1.95.4. Out Of l5J!A 1.95A
JOOIIDI )eflJ Michlr:l Jr ID [)oo:jhy A
Sett. 22E PI Of 6.30A Nw Part l.25A
lawson Robenl.ce Jr &amp;lOr Detmh K
Sen J EEol.£cal • .liA • .lA El1JiA E&lt;l.i7JA Ul1A
sUti6Abw16'X49Rd&gt;. W&amp;d 2.\
I.Gt 61 Sub. B. bb'Xj()'.
Mmley Pw:la Jllltclo f'amel1 HyseU
Sect. a 111 Hect s.n. 1"

Sea 2UDd 1/2 Of 10.91A Nw l/4 Of 132 lied S!trv 5.47A

2l.S2

JmiSIJ(XKI Mutinezltlymond&amp;iorKimberlyS

~18.78

l!mSSOOll Malrit~M111JL
1ll'028&amp;0CO Mmril~ Many L!lOr Debbit
lllXJ956IlXJ Pickt:nsEberi&amp;AlrOelorl
llm98ml PowelllcrryF&amp;KlrMarp~et

304.61
347.13

1161.19
5.7~

6..S9

S..2(1J21112Hc&lt;IS"' lA

llltCMWOOI Rodenu lOICJ* P &amp;:lOr Alit.~' D
IIJXI48(ll)2 RoushllclnJ

S«t. 4AilE1. 20AEEod&amp;El.3.17A U60fl39.S1A l.~A
Lot J6().J223100'X100' .25A
St.ct 12UJOJtOf2l.50A UlA
Sttt3Wif.20fEifl .[)A
Sec! 16T2NRI2W .ll7A0ur0f29.7&amp;7A .01A
Scctiooi6T2NRI2W 1.466AOutOf29.787A J.466A
Sct.:tillll l ~ T2N R12W 1.98A Out Of 29.717A 1.98A
Seal6T2RI2 11.1 5A&lt;:N10f26.27 1A 11.15A
IOOA l.ol291 TIN RI2W H.2f»A
OJ!Ofl !.76AEl i.023A7.186A
IOOA Lol291 TlN R1 2W 9.719A Olll Of28..'i6A 9Jl 9A
Sect!OT2 RI2JJXIAOutOfUlA I.OOA

110042IIIXI Sa!"ClydoE I
1100-l ShoouT.,
111))38-f(XKI Shm5Terry

l.ol8Ein .~A
5«18TlNR1217j71AOut01&lt;6.597JA 17.l71A
5«18 TIN Rl2W NOfNJn OfNell.f

11l'4l\18fi/.XXl Smith Doolld E oliO! VicUe J
1111161JIJXI Sntilh 1m) L
l!m3411lXl Smilh Ten)' L

Sect 3WOfW\/2 El Call 40A
City Dump
Sect. 12 ·19 Sw Put OfSe 1/U. St Pin a Sw 1/4 34.811\

l!lllnilll Sptrur John H

Scet8Nw l/20fSwll4 40A

l!lll33S004 PylesRand~Kdostwon.HMWY
1!111335005 PyltsRandyKdoSharonHanty
!llli33S006 pYle~ Randy KcfuSharon HIIMy
1!11133S007 PylnRandyKdoSbaronHi!Oey
lll\100001 Rodctw IOICJ* P.tiOr Amber D

7.67
7140

ill!

&amp;.:.I S37A F.Jr:I7.571A 28.7~A

13ltl!

Jl7.6l
IH3S.SI

4.59
1027.95
649.10

3).)4
lS3

lJI
8Ll9
132.11

441.10
)4,.,

l LJI

• High school basketball
action. See Page 81

BY MICHELLE MILLER
MMILLER@M YOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Felipe
Beach is behind bars.
Beach, the 36-year-old
Bidwell man accused of the
attempted murder of his
gi rlfriend, is now in custody
after almost two months on
the run thanks to the cooperative efforts of local, state

m.Zti
&lt;12.17

312.78

237.22

Yoong~IP.ti(XAmyL

ccrnen C\arles wIii

·1'10047001

1900142000 lliddlca..JRW.Iq,!A
1900291001 EYIIll l"'Jlll AC- L

199J9
3S1.7 1

l!lOXI!IIIm ~Toot

l!iWIIKmJ JohnsootemaL

PanOfFra125TIR121.00AOutOfi~JXIA

1.64
11.50
42.37

111.16
179.19
1!6.89
751.63

J06,8l
1611.07

289.~9

74.11

100,08
18l.4l
937.82

1111.40
427.88

1983.01
12li.64
),7')

44.16

194.63
UXIA

Sect. 16 !Mil) In~ W•J/2 Oflteyloldl Let On S line J8A
l.o 8 HMl
5«1 9-ll TlN, R12W, 1.06A 0.. 01 4,«!.\
50&lt;1.16 16401WSi&lt;loOfiMl.olll.\
Secl.\2·16(640} In~ Win OfReyookls Lot On S L.llle J IA

INSIDE

87t47

97732
l.IIO
!84.2&amp;
13~125

l02111
1662,42
440,4)

.• Search warrant
:yields drug charges.
:SeePageA2
• Local Briefs.
.SeePage AS
:• Cyclone kills at least
·1,723 in Bangladesh.
SeePage AS
• Hocking College
trustee named in
Pharmacy Board
complaint. See Page A6
• State fair's at-the-gate
ticket prices to increase.
See PageA6

493.40

Wolf Add .3431A New Survey

2l'XX»&gt;IOOJ B.-nllart Thomas l.tJOr Debora 93A Lol299 TIN R13W WEnd II Buff EstEl .73A

464,64
Ml92
lll.64

N"' Ex.2'11A &amp;CI.04A .6
Lot 3HiJhllwn Slbdivi!ioo
20011 lllOOO B~&lt;tlcy Chooleo
lOOO iliiJXI Budl&lt;yCiwlo&lt;
Lot 2Hi&amp;hiM Sllbdivisioll
2{XIJJ2!100J Courts VanS IJOJ l'a•l• J do VICiorCooou

325.44
3~3,81

4S.2 l
74.93
Sl.S9
81.S9
81.511

81.59

13&lt;1.93

11 l!J4
284.19
8!&lt;1
91.01

l6Jl
l6.7l
llll
70062
5.61
lOJO
51.&amp;9

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from the Ohio area. The joint
fugitive investigation was
comprised of the U.S.
Murshals Service's Southern
District of Ohio. Southern
District of West Virginia and
District of Arizona. and the
Gallia County Sheriff's
Office and Gallipolis Police
Depanment.

Please see Beach. A1

WEATHER

J.

Development will determine the fate
of Middleport's application and rhose
of six. other communities on Dec 13.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport
This is Middleport's second attempt
Development Group expec ts· a deci - to secure funding for its downtown
sion on its application for downtown revitalization projec.:t. Approximately
revitalization funds sometime next 25 building owners have made comweek, but in the meantime , other mitments to participate in the project,
beautification efrorts. continue in the which will provide a one-to-one match
shopping district.
toward fa~ade improvements and
Downtown
Revitalization . other cosmetic work.
Coordinator and Mayor-elect Michael
In the meantime, Gerlach said , other
Gerlach said the Ohio Department of downtown beautification efforts are
BY BRIAN

REED

BREED®MYDAIL\ISENTI NEL. COM

Please see Decision. A1

711.37

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AudiiOr of Meigs County, 0100

l000l-

lll7i
lll lO-

I

Parents
charged
in death
of toddler
'

STAFF REPORT
NEWS® MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BIDWELL - Two parents i1re being charged with
felonies in the death of their
two-year-old son. ·
Jason C. Jones, 26 and
M.
Jones,
24.
Tina
Apartment
16,
381
Buckridge Road, Bidwell
were arrested by the Gallia
County Sheriffs Office
around 4:30 p.m. Friday on
felony
warrants · stemming
Brian J. Roed/photo
from grand jury indictments.
Jason Jones was arrested
for aggravated murder, murder and child endangerment.
Tina Jones was arrested for
child endangerment.
Their two-year-old son,
Trenton Jones. was transcontinuing as the holiday seaso n ported to Holzer Medical
approaches. On Friday, the public saw Center on October 4. where
the second in a series of postcard- he was then transferred by
style murals go up on the center air to Children 's Hospital.
He was pronounced dead
downtown block .
The series of murals was conceived on October 5.
Both parents were taken
by a comminee made up of Gerlach,
to
the Gallia County Jail to
Donna Hanson, Brenda Phalin and
Brian Reed, who secured $3,000 in await arraignment.
funding through the Appalachian
· Regional Commission's Appalachian

SYIIACU!E VILLAGE· SO!ITIIUN IJID

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knowledge, U.S. Marshals
tracked her which ended in
Beach's apprehension .
Beach is currently being
detained in Arizona while
awaiting extradition proceedings.
The Gallia County Sheriff's
Office requested the U.S.
Marshals Service's assistance
on Nov. I due to the belief
that Beach · had absconded

Brenda Phalin ,
Susan Well of
AEP, Donna
Hartson and
Middleport
Mayor-elect
Michael Gerlach
take a look at
the second in a
series of historical murals
installed in
downtown
Middleport. AEP
sponsored this
mural, which
depicts Mill
Street and
South Third
Avenue near the
turn of the 20th
century.

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Marshal s Service's Arizona
Fugitive Task Force, Beach
was arrested
by the
Mexican Federal Police in
Nogales, Mexico, at 10 p.m.
Thursday and turned over to
U.S. Marshals at the border.
The arrest reportedly
came about after authori ti es
received word that victim.
Heidi Peiller, was traveling
to Arizona. Without her

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and federal authorities.
Jame s Wahlrab, U.S.
Marshal for the So.uthern
District of Ohio, Gallia
·County Sheriff David L
Martin and Gallipolis Police
Chief Clinton Patterson
jointly announced Beach's
arrest on Friday.
Accordin g to the U.S.
Marshal's Service, in coop·
eration with the U.S.

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Beach awaits extradition from Mexico

SPORTS

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days til Ch•i~&gt;trn&lt;&gt;d

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

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ATHENS
l75 Wnt Union St.

1-800-237·7716

3.61
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IIIXm.t(D) Bw ltllllir I Pau do Jennie Cui~

95"'

GALLIPOLIS
43.5 '/, Sttond Awnue

AMP-Ohio
lines up
customers
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

Detallo on Poco A8

okay. Make a difference. I
challenge each one of you
to do that."
Evans cited the work of
all students and staff for
placing well on the state's
"report card" of school per-

COLUMBUS - "Of our
75 Ohio member-co mmunties, the vast majority
have approved legislation,"
Kent Carson, spokesperson
for American Municipal
Power-Ohio, said about
communities signing on to
purchase power from the
proposed coal-fired power
plant il) Letart Falls tentatively called the American
Power Generating Station.
AMP-Ohio provides electricity for municipalities
while a company such as
American Electric Power
sells to residential customers.
The legis lation Carson
referred to contains 50-year
purchase agreements with
AMP-Ohio which has slated
its AMPGS plans to provide
" power at cheaper than market rares" to municipaliries.
Environment groups such

Please see Awards, A1

Please see AMP·Ohlo, A1

INDEX
4

SEcnoNs- 24 PAGES

Around Town

A3

Celebrations

C4

Classifieds .

Comics

D3-5

insert

Editorials

A4

Movies

Cs

Regional

A2

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© a007 Ohlu Valley PubU.hlnx Co.

•

Kevin Kelly /photos

Tina Johnson. left. was named the high school teacher of the
year and Tracey Burnette won the elementary school teacher
of the year honor from the Galli a County Academic Excellence
Foundation at Its annual banquet. Johnson teac hes at South
Galija High School and Burnette at Hannan Trace Elementary.

Inducted into the Gallia County Academic Excellence
Foundation at its 23rd annual banquet were Dr. Denise
Shockley, left, superintendent of the Gallia-Vinton
Educational Service Center, and Steve Jagers, former mem·
ber of the Gallia County Local .Soard of Education.

Foundation awards local academic excellence
Superintendent Dr. Charla
KKELLY®MYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM
Evans ur~ed students and
parents ·ahke to keep up the
RIO GRANDE - It was good work that has made
a time to not only recog- Gallia County Local an
ni ze classroom achieve- "effective" school district in
ment in the Gallia County ' the eyes of the state in
Local Schools, but to chal- remarks at the 23rd annual
lenge it as well.
Academic
Excellence
BY KEVIN KELLY

.

Foundation
banquet
Thursday at Buckeye Hills
Career Center.
"Challenge yourself and
challenge your children to
do the best you can do,"
Evans said. "Of course,
everyene 's best will be a little bil different and that's

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