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

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

Meigs Intermediate
School sc·ence fair
winners,A2

EHSdinner
theater, AS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

ODNR
Former Eastern teacher AMP,
partner for
=·Benja=minR.Ca=s~ ~ sentenced on drug charges carbon offset
project
OBITUARIES
Page A3

I

SPORTS

Bv BRIAN

J.

1

REED

BREEDCMYDAILYSENT NE COM

PO~IbROY

A

Bid\\ ell \\oman \\as sentenced to three years in
pnson on charges she
arranged to hu) mariJuana
and pills from students
while she "as a teacher in
a local high school.
Cannan Mitchell. a former English teacher at
Eastern High School. \\as

sentenced Monday on
charges .of corrupting
another with drug~. complicny to commit obstructing justice, and permitting
drug abuse. Meigs County
Common
Pleas
Court
Judge Fred W. Crow III
sentenced Mttchell, 40, to
18 months in prbon on
each of the charges.
At the time of ~1itchell's
indictment.
Pr-osecuting
Attorne) Colleen Williams .

said the former teacher had
arranged to purchase marijuana nnd hydrocodone pain
medication from a number
of students at the school.
In August, Mitchell filed a
petition to enter a plea of
guilty to comtpting another
with drugs. complictty to
commit obstructing JUStice,
and penmtting drug ahuse.
The petition outlined the
terms of a plea agreement
she reached with the state.

While Mitchell faces a
three-year sentence, she
may petition the court for
judicial release after sening a por1 ion of the sentence, Colleen Williams
said Thursday.
According to the petition
Mitchell filed in midOctober,
which
she.
Wilhams. and Defense
Attorne) Herman Carson

h
p 1ease see C arges, Al

April groundbreaking set for 'Emi ~ Place'
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@ MYDA.LYSENTINELCOM

INSIDE
• Big Bend Basketball
League winners.
See Page A3
• For the Record.
See Page A3
• Free moVIe night at
Bethel Worship Center.
See Page PRJ
high's the water?
Page A7
• Legislatrve tntern
program announced.
See Page AS
• Ohroans get to vote
on new statue for U.S.
Capitol. See Page AS

WEATHER-

High: Upper 60s.
Low: Lower 40s.

INDEX
2 SH.'TJO:O.:S -

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Faith
NASCAR

Sports

16 p AGI!S

A2

PO~IEROY - t\ barren
lot along the fence line at
the Pornero) Ball Fields ts
about to be resurrectedlrein\ented as "Emi's Place."
"Emi's Place.'' "ill sene
a-. u communit) park to promote fellowshtp among
friends and famtl). It y,i(J
prm tde a safe and fun em 1
ronment for pia} and an
atmosphere to reflect. fhe
1dea for the park \\as
sparked by the memory of
the late Emily Grace Deem
and implemented by parents
Da\e and Jamie Deem of
Pomeroy. along with other
famtly
members
and
friends.
April I0 has been set as
the groundbreaking for the
park \\ ith hopes of having at
least some of the playground equipment up h)
April 24, openmg day for
the Pomerov Youth League.
Jnm1c said rwo major pieces
of playground equipment
are in storage and read) for
1 assembl)'· The major centerpiece ot playground equipment, which "ill be called
.. Skittle
Land.''
cost
$24.000.
In just under a year.
$30,000 has been rmsed for
the remembrance park 'ia
fundraisers such a ... the one
going on now at Meigs
Primar)
School called
"Pennies for the Park." This
entire school year. kindergartners at i\teigs Primary
School have been participating in a ..Giving Tree
Project.'' These projects arc
gea-red to help the students'
communitv and m return.
learn about responsibility
and helping others.

A4

As-7
B3
B Section

r :uno Ohio \'alley Publishing Co.

~ )JIJ ,I !1!1,!1,11

Bv BETH SERGENT
RUTLA~D
Grants
recently awarded to the
Leading Creek Watcr::.hcd
arc meant to benefit the restdents who li\e in it, iQcluding the hettcr part of
Western Meigs County.
So, what is a watershed'?
The
United
States
Environmental Protection

COLUMBUS

American Municipal Power.
Inc. (A~IP) and the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources
(ODNR)
Division of Forestry recently announced a cooperative
effort to reforest approximatch· 25 acre:- within the
Shawnee State Forest in
1 southern 0}1io.
I ''This project represents
another step along the path
toward a sustainable economv.'' said 00.:--:R Director
Sean Logan. "Development
and conservation can be
done cooperatively. and in
ways that benefit both."
The erowth and survival
of 17.500 seedlings planted
in destgnated plots within
Shawnee State Forest will
be tracked and verified in
order for Al\1P to obtain carbon offsets for the project.
This is the fir-..t activit) in
what is being described by
offkiab as an ongoing joint
effort to develop similar
carbon offset projecb.
"We
are
extremely
pleased to be able to move
forward on this •win-win'
opportunity for both AMP
1 and the 00:\R Division of
Forest["):· "~-lid ~·I arc. S.
Gerken, presrdent and CEO
of A~lP. "The development
• of cost-effective carbon offset projects such a~ this will
be e-..sential to keeping
do\\ n the costs of mitigating

Budget crunch
postpones
anycourthouse
expansion plans

~--------~----~----~------~~~Su~bm-i~-d-p~ho~to
Kindergartners at Meigs Primary School, along with staff and members of the OH-KAN
Coin Club are participating in "Pennies for the Park," a project consisting of collecting pennies for the Emily Grace Deem Remembrance Park at the Pomeroy Ball Fields. Pictured
front row, (from left) are Owen McClure, Adam Roberts, Jenna Gilmore; second row (from
left) Jamie Deem, Shannon Williams, Bob Graham, Jennifer Riffle, John Bentley.
April's "Gh ing Tree
Project" is "Penmes for the
Park" where kindergartners
arc collecting pennies for
donation to the remembrance park. Emily \\Us
hersdf a Meigs Marauder
and is dl.!scribed as having a
"great love and compassion
for life.''
Therefore, the kinderg.trl-

ners are a~sisting in the
Deem's dream to keep
Emily's memory alive b)
collecting pennies for the
park. Bob Graham.\\ ho is a
member of the OH-KAK
Coin Club has alread)
donated 35.000 pennies on
beh&lt;tlf of the club. These
pcnnie:-. "ill be added to the
ones collected throughout

the community from jars
plac-ed at local businesses.
Kindergarten students are
also taking home bags to
collect pennies and organizers are a~kim! am loeal
indi\idual wh'l)'d 'tike to
wntribute their pennil.!s- to
the fund to call .Meic:s
Primarv School at 7423000 .•

Grants to benefit watershed communities
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

1

Please see AMP, A3

ss-6
B7

SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWSCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Agencv defines it as " that
area c)f land. a bounded
hydrologic s)stcm, within
which all living things arc
inextricabl) linked by their
common water course and
where, as humans settled.
simple log1c demanded
that they become part of a
communit) .''
The
Lead1ng
Creek
Watershed is defined as 150
square mtlcs of dh·crsel)

\Hn en land~capes. including rolling hills and rich histOr) found in Meig-.. and
Gallia Counties. Fh·e of the
seven to\\ nships the "mershed is located in are found
in Meigs \\ hich stands to
henefit from these rec-ent
grant awards.
Karla
Sanders.
AmcriCorps volunteer" 1th
the
Leadinu
Cre~k
Watershed, saitl one of the

• 2009 CHEVY COBALT LT

grants recently appro' ed_
"n' n $1 .500 grant from
the
Oh10
Humanitil.!s
CouncJI which \\ill partially fund a book on the
\\ atershed', histt)l'\.
·•we can at least "get started.'' Sanders said, e;..plammg \ oluntcers still ha\ e to
find another $500 to CO\ er
projected e\.pcnscs for the

Please see Grants, Al

'179

FWD.EPArated33MPG
$12,995
• 2007 BUICK LACROSSE CXL
FWD,EPArated30MPG
$15,495
• 2005 PONTIAC G6 GT
,,.
FWD. EPA rated 27 '-lPG
$12,995
'I
• 2008 FORD ESCAPE XLT
4WD.EPAmled24MPG
$19,995
2006 SUBAAU TAIBECA
AWD. EPA rated 21 MPG
•
$16.950
,....

121 9

79

$289
S2•A7

•

1

B Y BRIAN

J . REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL COM

P0~1EROY County
Commissioner
Mick
Dawnport said financial
concenh haYe placed any
immediate plans to address
a shomge of space in the
count\ courthouse on hold.
Da\ en port agreed \\ ith
Judge L. Scott PowelL who
said earlier this year an)
:-.tud) into ho'' space needs
1111eht be addre-,sed. either
through ne\\ construction or
n'-a-.~ignment t)f -..pace.\\ ill
be delaved until funds are
a' ailabie to con~ult an
architect for plans.
Last war. Powell met
\\ tth COil1missioners to recommend some I) pe of study
to detcm1ine if an addition
to the courthouse '' ould be
possible or practical in
addressing a gro'' ing lack
of usable space. Powell discussed requirements for
court facilnies -..et forth b\
the Ohio Supreme Couri.
and ho\\ the historic

•
Please see Courthouse, Al

2008 FORO MUSTANG
115698, Balance of factory
5 year160,000 mile warranty,
4 0 V6. auto, atr. lilt, crUise,
PW. PL, alloy wheels
AMIFM CO ant.. tock brakes,
EPA rated 24 MPG

$16,995

5

249

�·~--~--- ·

-

-

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-

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~

..

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

1;-riday, M arch 19, 2010

ASK DR.. BROT H ERS

. Can one be too green?
BY OR. JQYCE BROTHERS

.

.

.

-

.

~

Dear Dr. Brothers: Mv
wife and J recently \\atched
a film in \\hich a man trie&lt;o
to do all he can to pre.,ent
his faiili ly from havmg any
1mpact on the environment
for one )Car. They !-ihut off
thc1r electricity. didn't usc
elevators and even "ent ~o
far as nut using toilet paper.
To my horror. when the
fi lm was over my w1fe said
she would hke to trv the
exact ~ame experiment! I
don't think I could live a
d.t) without elcctricJt),
ne\er mind TP. How nuts is
th1s?- F.W.
Dear F.\\'.: I guc&lt;o:. It l&lt;.n't
too nuts if it got a thoughtprmoking film produced and
possibl) a book as \\ell!
__. 1 But there i!. no \\a) thnt
Submitted photo most people could take on
Picture d are the top winners at the re cent fifth grade science fair held at Meigs Intermediate School, including, from left, ~tu~~r~~gc;~~~~~e;:a~~~i~s~
Abby Watson, Elena Musser, Cody Bartrum and Aaron Dunham.
of us are far too dependent
on the ba~ic mcetie&lt;; of ci\ ilization to C\en think of giving up entirel) thing:. like
electricity and tmlct paper.
A Science Fair "as Situation'' was the third Savannah Smith, Catelynn John
Keener
from In a \\ay. there's a t\\0-\\3)
recent!) . held at ~ le igs priLe winner by Abby Aker, and Jessie Donohue. O'Blene~s Hospital.
march going on here: There
Intermediate School for the Watson. These students Mrs. Simmons' winner:-.
Also judging were Jenny are those people \\ ho arc
fifth grade students with will be mO\ ing on to the were Layne Acree. Amanda Ridenour of Mei~s Soil and struggling ju:.t to have the
Cole, and Dillion Mahr. The Water Conseivat1on. Meigs resources to afford air con
133 students participating. next level of competition.
O vera ll trophies were preMedals were presented to wmners in Mrs. Lowery and County Engineer, Gene d1tioning and heat and all
sented with the Grand classroom winners. Those Mrs. Welker's class were ,Triplett, Ktm Allen and the con&lt;;umer goods to
Bnigg,
Eddie Michal Bamett of the Athens- make life a little easier.
Champion going to Aaron receivmg mcdab in Mrs. Megan
Dunham. His project enti- Gibbs class were Parker Rhodes, and Kaylee Werry. Meigs ESC. and John They may work just as hard
Judges for the event were Costanzo. Superintendent of as the others. the comforttled "What's 111 Your Haggy. Rainey Fitchpatrick,
Omelet?" compared store and Makya Milhoan. The Larry Marshall of the Meig:-. t~e. !\thens-~l eigs ESC 1 able ones who take all these
bought eggs to eggs that winners in Mr~. Roush's County Health Department, hllishmg out the panel of thinos for !!ranted and \\ant
were raised by Dunham room were Raeline Reeves. Tonya Darnell from AEP- judges wa~ Meigs Local to do\\ nslie to help the
and his family. First pritc Nicole Folmer, and Dianne Gavin, Matt Williamson, emP.loyees Tamm) Chapman, planet ar.d make themseh c&lt;;
winner was Cody Bartrum Willard. Mn.: Stanley and Dennis Eichinger of The Hetke Perko, Mary Hawk, feel better.
You m1ght talk to your
with a project e ntitled Mrs. Fogle's winners were Universitv of Rio Grande, and Rusty Book~an. Ron
Tandi Logan of the i\1e•.gs Local wife about takmg a less
"Super Smellers." Second Karlee Norton. Brady Meigs -Branch.
prize went to Elena Mu&lt;;ser Andrew,
and
All i) ah ~f oore, Greg Atkins, and Board of Education. and drastic middle course. She
with ''The Science of Pullins. Those winning in Mark Simpson of Kyger retired teachers Gary Walker probably wa:-. drn\\ n to the
Mustc."
"A
St1cky Mrs. Jenkins room were Creek Power Plant. and and John Bentley.
tdea of the farnil) working
together tO\\ ard a goal, as
much as an) thmg to do with
.1 life-changing expenment
in green II\ ing. So perhap-.;
) au (. n stt do\\ n together
nd
lll"torm - tf) to
vest
had
tour
of
dut)
in
the
M1ddle
RICHFIELD (AP) - A supportmg combat opernp "ith !oiOille ideas
Gllbert • t
East and his secood in
U.S. Marine-from Ohio has tion in Badghis provmce.
th t u both can Ji,e with.
GJlbert was &lt;C&gt;Si!!ned to Afghanhtan. said family Tall ban "as atter m
died from injunes suffered
fherap1sts are reportmg
hJ"
nay&lt;,
\\ere
numbered
friend
Anthony
Maroon.
2nd
~1arine
-Special
the
in combat in Afghanistan,
man)'
conflicts between
.Maroon said Gilbert\ Maroon said .
Battalion,
the Department of Defense Operations
ed
couples regarding
Gilbe \Va'&gt; a 2000 gradu
t\larine Special Operations platoon was ambushed and
announced Thursday.
'iubject
of gomg green.
'ere High School
Gunnery Sgt. Robert Regiment at the U.S . Marine his helmet was pierced b) a at , C"
tte best thing ) ou can do
Forces
Spec1al shot from a high-po\\ ered MMu "&gt; ud Gilbert jomed ' t.tlk It out until ) ou can
Gilbert II of Richfield died Corps
Operations Command in rifle. He said Gilbert had the Manne~ \\hen he was IS agree to be on the same
Tuesday. his 28th birthday.
been shot a couple weeks and that he ah\ a\ s wanted page about this. There ha&lt;.
Offictals said he was [amp LeJeune, =-:.c.
earlier.
but a bullet-proof to fight for hts co~ntf).
Gilbert was on his fifth
wounded March 8 while
to be some c--ommon ground
li:sten
you can work from
to and respect each other·.,
point of' icw.

_

Meigs Intermediate School science fair winners

Marine from Ohio dies after Afghanistan ambush

worst was over. my son has
been refusing to eat
thing I cook for him.
complaint IS that "it's
like Morn'&lt;,'' nncl he
in,tead to go for the cereal
box What does a single dad
do? - l ...C.
Dear L.C.: It sound-; as
though your ex-wife was a
hetter mom than a wife, or
at least a better cook. Or are
you the one who was "better." and was therefore able
to gam sole custody of your
son? It puZLles me a to why
half of a former couple
today would want to gain
&lt;;Ole custody of his child if
the former spouse has had a
role in nurturing the child
- wh) take that away from
your son because you
couldn't get along? In an),
case, e'en though you have.
custod), ) ou probabl) will
have occasion to talk to
\our wife about visits, your
~on's education and other
1ssues through the )Cars. '&gt;O
you should try to turn this
messy divorce into a grov.
up divorced relationship
your -.on's sake.
There probabl) will be
man) adjustments he has to
make, and one of the wav~
he can let you know that- it '
was not OK with him that
vou divorced 1s to complain.
lk can compare )OU to hb
mother unfa, ornbly, and he
C\en may begin to • '&gt;how
some anger to you. Don't
make it a rnes:sy relationship
by reacting angril) or v.. ith
hurt - m to understand
"hat he is going through ..
and ask vour ex for the
recipe or \vork \\ith your son
on &lt;&gt;ome new dbhes vou can
cook together. \l.'i th ·you a.;
sole custodian, your son ha..,
to trv vanous strate!!ies to
keep-his mom in his life and
heart. By dissmg you, he i~
honorin!! her. Cut him some
slack at this diflicult time .
(c) 2010 b) King Feature.\
!lyndicme

I

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, March 22

RACINE
Southern
Loca l Board of Education,
regular meeting, 8 p.m.,
high school media room.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Library Board, regular meeting, 3:30 p.m.,
Pome roy Library.
Tuesday, March 23

POMEROY -

Regular

meeting
of
Local
Planning
Eme rgency
Committee, 11 .30 a.m.,
senior center. 2010 required
e xercise. water resource
survey problems to be discussed.·
Thursday, March 25

POMEROY - The Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation District Boa rd
of Supervisors, 11:30 a.m.
at district office, 33 101
Hiland Road, Pomeroy.

•••

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, March 22

HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
will meet at 11 a.m. at the
Presbyterian Church. Blood
pressures will be taken followed by a potluck dinner.
Tuesday, March 23

CHESTER
Councilors
of

Past
Cheste r

Dear Dr. Brothers: After
.
a very messy di\ orce. I'\ e
Counctl, Daughters of linalh been •'ranted sole
America, will meet 7 p.m. at 1 cu;tod) of m) 7-year-old
~on. 1 1-.nO\\ that father~
the hall.
often are not as luck) as I,
Church events and I'm \'Cf\ ~rateful. But
• just \\hen 1 thought the

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Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
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THE SCIPIO TWP VOLUNTEER 'f&lt;lRE DEPARTMENT
IS SPONSORING A FUND RAISING PROGRAM TO
RAISE MONEY FOR NEEDED EQUIPMENT.

104.84

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Von age·

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ftAiiltJ,. I11..""4 A.eet4IO Siflct 119'

•

Monday...Cloudy with a Wednesdav...Partlv doud\.
Lows in the mid 40s.
Southwest winds around 5 50 percent chance of show- Lows in the mid J(h. Highs
mph
in
the er~. Much cooler with highs in the mid 60s.
Wednesda) night... Partly
evening ...Becoming light around 50.
cloudy
in the evcning ...Then
Monday
night
...
Mostly
and variable. Chance of rain
cloudy. A chance of rain becoming most I) cloud).
20 percent.
Sunday...Yiostly cloudy. showers in the evening. Cold Lows in the lower 40s.
Thursday...Partly sunn)
Showers likely...Mainly in with lows in the lower 30s.
in the mornim.!, ...Then
the afternoon. Highs in the Chance of rain 30 percent.
1\tesday...Partly sunny. becoming most!) cloud~. A
mid 60s. Chance of rain 70
40 percent chance of shO\\Highs
in the mid 50s.
i&gt;ercent.
Thesday
night and crs . Highs in the kmer 60~.
Sundav night...A chance
of thunderstormg in the
eve ning. Showers li ke ly.
SUPPORT THE SCIPIO
VOLUNTEER
Lows around 40. Chance of
rain 70 percent.
FIRE DEPARTMENT

Local Stocks

t«olNef.

Thursday, March 25

POMEROY - Rev. Brian
Dunham to speak at Grace
Church, 7 p.m., as part of
Me1gs
Ministerial
Association's community
Lenten program continues.

Meigs County Forecast
Friday...Sunny. Highs in
the upper 60s. West winds
around 5 mph .
Friday night ...\-iostly
clear. Lows in the lower
40s. Sou thwest
v.·ind-.
around 5 mph ... Becoming
southeast after midnight.
Saturday...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s.
South winds around 5
mph ...Becoming southwest
in the afternoon.
Saturday night ...Mostly
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers after midnight.

-

DEPARTMENT REPRESENTATIVES WILL RH
CONTACfiNG ALL HOMES IN THE ARF.A OVER
THE COMING WEEKS ASKING FOR A DONATION
OF $20.00. DEPARTMENT REPRESENTATIVES WILL
BE GOING DOOR TO DOOR AND WILL CARRY
IDENTIHCATION OR AN ID BAOGH.
THE SCIPIO TWP VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENT
WISHES TO THANK EVERYONE FOR THEIR
DONATION BY GIVING A COMPLIMENTARY
CERTifiCATE FOR AN 8X10 COLOR PORTRAIT TO
RETAKEN ATTHESTATION.
THIS HJND RAISING PROGRAM IS LEGITIMATE
AND YOUR FIRE DEPARTMENT ASKS FOR YOUR
.
SUPPORT.
CJJIEF ANDY WHITE

..

�Fr iday, .Mard1 19, 2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www. m yd ailysentinel.com

.

Big Bend Basketball League winners

Deaths
Benjamin R. Casto
Ben j,unin "Ren'''R. Castn. H6.nf Mason died Wednesday.
l\1nreh 17. at Plea-..ant Valley Hospital.
H~ is sun hed h) hi:-, w1fc t\1ar)!arct Casto of Mason.
f·ncnds n1.1y call at the Foglesnng-Tucker Funeral Home
9 p.m. on Saturday. Services ''ill he held at the funeral 2 p.m. Sunday. Pastor Charlie Cundiff will offiM II it an 1;rm cside sen icc:-.. will be conducted hy
VI \\ Post lJ426 and Amt:rican Legion. Post 140. Email
condolences ma) be sent to fogksongtuckcr@' eriz&lt;~n.net.

Local Briefs
Easter celebration
RL Tl. \ND - Rutland Free\\ ill Baptist Church has
announced 1ts Ea-..ter sunrise service at h a.m., with an
[·aster play. b) church members at 7 p.m.

Revival
RUTLA~D - Rutland Freewill Baptist Church ''ill
hold a re\ ivai '' ith Tim Simp:-.on Apnl 12 and 13, Ronnie
W.trrcns on April 14. and Chric; Rus-..ell April 15 17. There
''ill be spectal singers c:ach evening.
'

Fundraiser for Relay
tUPPJ;.RS PLAI:-\S - Bethel Wor-..hip Center will host
.a family portrait day Saturday to benefit the Meigs
ll) Relay for l.ife annual funurabcr for the American
..:er Societ\.
ror I0 fan1ihes will be given a choice of a I 0" \ 13"
color family port1~ait or an 8" x 10" vintage children's
portr&lt;~it Appomtments arc to be made with Karen
Loci'' 1ck at 416-3007.
All portrmt -;ales proceeds will go to suppo11 the Meigs
Count) Rcla) for Life team and the American Cancer
Soc1ct). I or more information 'i ...it '' ww.bethelwc.org, or
call the church at h67-6793.

~emetery

Immunization clinic
Th

H
h )
·"' •
a - • e " 1e~gs
o~nt,x ca1t . l epartment
v. 1!1 conduct a ch1ldhood 11~1mum.zat10n. cl!mc from 9-11
.t.m ~d 1-3 p.m. on Tuesda). Bnng ~h1ld. s shot records,
med•~al .. ard tf apphc.1ble. SIO donatiOn apprecmted but
not rcqu1red
l\

For the Record

cleanup

LETART FALLS - Anyone wishing to sa\'e tlnwers or
decoration:-. from Leta11 Tm' nsh1p Cemeteries should do so
before Murch 31 .

P() ""ERO'"'

Submitted photo

The Big Bend Basketball League held its sixth grade boys basketball tournament last week at the Me1gs Junior High
School. The Eastern Eagles team won first place. Front, Chase Curtis, Matthew Harris, Noah Cox, Wesley Reitmire, and
Noah Miller, team manager. Second Row, Dillon Swatzel, Kaileb Sheets. Dustin Gibson, Nick Combs. Philip Hoffman. Also
pictured are coaches, Jeff Cox and John Sheets.

C

Divorces
POMEROY - A complaint for divorce was filed
10 ~1dgs County Common
Plea~ Court b) J immy
Deem. Jr., Racitle. again~!
Kennie Ray Brown Deem.
1 Gallipolis.
A divorce was granted to
Ste\en Vance from Tiffan)
Lynn Vance.

Lenten services

Foreclosure

\H ROY - Re\ Bnan Dunham v. ill speak at 7 p.m.
PO~ lEROY
1\ f ·~·I
3) at Grace Church as the ~1eigs Mmisterial
,.. ,
- . ~zcc_oiation 's communit) Lenten program continues.
sure "'~s granted m · 1et~~
Rev. \\alter Heinz and member ministers wtlllead in the • Count) Common Pleas
dc,ouon. Stations of the Cro..,~. at noon on Good Friday. 1 CoUt1 to G~1AC Mortgage.
Apnl 2 to conclude the season's \\Orship program.
LLC, agamst Dame! J.
James and others

AMP from Page AI
the possible effects of chmah.: change regulation."
C.1rbon offset(; are tradable commodities, which can be
created v. hen entitie~ undertake actions that reduce or ··off&lt;.et'' carbon dioxtde (C02) and other greenhouse gas emissJOn&lt;;. AMP\\ ill u~c scJentificnll) based protocob. such as
tho~e e-.tabh ... hed b) the Chicago Climate Exchange, of
'" hich A\1P is a member. to track. measure and verify the
project's performance.
··working in partnership \vith A:YIP provides the necessal') ... upport to retum those 25 acres of field back to forest,''
said David Lytle. state forester and chief of the ODNR
Di' io;ton of Forestry. "Without their support we \\ould not
be able to do this project. This also makes for a great learning experience for members of the Ohio Woodlands Job
Corpc; who will as . . ist in planting these trees ."
Under the agreement, A~1P will purchase the seedlings
and '' ork v. ith Division of Forestry staff to prepare the site
for planting The: trees \\ill he planted in lie Ids located
Forest Road I near Pond Lick Lake and Forest Road
Odell Creek.

Grants from Page Al
project '' hich can begin immediate!). hopefully wrapping
.
. .
A ~cholar from the OHC ''til also be trammg volunteers
oc how to inten icw those who li\e in the water'&gt;hcd who
w:io;h to share their o;tories of the life and history of the area.
The OHC is a state affiliate of the National Endowment for
·
the Humanities.
Sander&lt;. also said the n-1ain noal of the book is to educate
pifople about the history and culture of the watcrsh~d,
including places that no longer exist such as the Me1gs
County Infirmary a~ .,., ell a; homes and stories in the
snHlller towns of Western Meigs County. Photos ~md ~rt
wnrk will abo be used. Sanders is currently lookmg for
people who w1sh to share their storie' with the local group
of volunteers collectino the information. Call her at her
o{ficc at the Meigs SoiT and Water Conservation District
at 992-4282.
•Another grant which was received by t.he W!ltcrshe~ ~s
the $4.930 Ohio Ell\ 1ronmcntal EducatiOn Fund mintgrant to fund the new Leading Volunteers Mo.nitoring
Program. a volunteer monitoring program to Improve
conditions in the Leading Creek Watershed and strength' ironmcnt&lt;tl education in the area. Th1s grant will
equipment for volunteers to do c~cm.ical testing of
sample" from streams. assist 1n litter clean up
events. etc.
'In addition a grant awarded from the Ohio Department of
~atural Re:-,ources the 2010 Litter Clean Up Grant. will
support spring ev~nts such as An nual _Stream Sv.·eep. a
l'niversal nlectronic!\ Waste Colkctwn Day. and a
Composting Workshop. The stream sw~ep &lt;md ~lectronic~
clean up day 1s set f&lt;1r 9 a.m .-noon. Apnl. 17 at Jnn Yetman
P~rk in Rutland. Supplies will be prov1d~d to. volunteers
p&lt;~rtlcipating in the sv.el.'p and old electn?'!IC" will he taken
and recycled - no televisions accepted. I he frc~ composting \'&gt;orkshop will be held 6-H:30 p.m. on Apnl 22 at the
OSU Extension Ofticc
For more 11{/rJI'IIWiion on the ll'tlter.,Jzec/, 80 to

UJ? in the fall.

\VII

ll'.meig\SII'cd.com.

Fined
!\tiDDLEPORT - The
follov. ing ''ere fined in
~tayor's
Court
b)
~liddlcport Mayor Michael
Gerlach: Brandon Batey.
$195. di-..orderly conduct:
An!!el Brid:les. $345. criminal trespa-..sing. S100. posse...sion of drul!s.
lan Carpe~nter. $195.
excessive
noise;
Jill

Carpenter, $170. failure to
control: Earl Craddock.
$195. disorderh conduct:
Jeanette Crane. Sl95. disorderly conduct; Keith Dav.
$195. disorderly conduc"t.
S 195, fai lure to comply.
Vincent Demarco, $395.
no operator's license. $75.
expired plates: Ra)'mond
Klein. S195, disorderly conduct; Denms Little. dri\lng
under FRA suspensiOn
$395, exce ~he v. md ' \
tint, $75. Geonze R~~
$170. unsafe \ eh1c1e. Jul t:
Roush. $100, possess1on ot
drugs. $200, pos ession of
drugs, $200. possession of
drug paraphernalia, 805.
OMVI, $~00, drh:ing under
court suspensiOn.
Timothy Shane, S395. dnving under court suspension. $30, seat belt 'iolation; Monica Staats, $195,
possession of drugs. S450,
wrongful
entru tmcnt:
Anthon) Stcv.art, $170.
stop sign violation: Robert
Stone. S 170. assured clear
distance. $300. drh ing
under court suspension.
Scott Williamson. $195.
pos~ession of drug-..: Kevin
Lemle). S 195, expired
tags: Jesse Mullins. S 195.

of a minor.
T\\o ju\enilcs are aho to
be charged. S'" ith said.

fatlure to appear. $805.
OMVI; Euva Stumbo.
$595, pctt) theft. $195.
failure to control: Stacv
Freeman. S195, failure to
compl)
(2);
~fichad
Freeman. $195. fatlure to
comply (2): Adam Carter.
:::; 195. failure to comply.

Theft
MIDDLEPORT

Tarnow Gilmore.

~orth

Third ·Avenue. reported to
police t\\ o bicycles were
taken from her carport.
Officer:-. reco,·ered one,
Chief Bruce s,, ift "aid. and
charge!-&gt; are pending

Charged

MlDDl EPORT - Zack
.Mtddleport ha:-,
n
rged tn :\1eiP'
( ount), (
for (\\ 0 theit ...
there, Police Chief Bruce
Swift ...ard
~11DDLEPORT
~1
red Duncan. Pearl Middleport Police Chief
reported that her Bruce S\\ ift reported the
hatl been taken from followin~ arrests:
• Joshua Ed,,ard.., was
her c.arport and returned.
dtrt) and ransacked. Items jailed on a charge of domes''ere remm ed. Penn\ tic violence. His v. ife
Smith. Broad'' av Street. reported to police that he
n:ported .her car \vas ran- had been at her residence
sacked. During the investi- and had assaulted her. When
!!ation. items from Smith's officers arri\'ed. he had tled
~ ehicte .,., ere found in the scene. He \\a::. later
Duncan·.., car and Custer incarcerated.
• Da' id Eakins i... charccd
was charged.
He appeared and ''a ... '' ith domestic \ iolei1ce.
released on bond on a count after a lie t!ed l' a~sault inc
of receiving stolen property his sister on C(ile Street.
and two counts of con- too. had left the scene ''hen
tributing to the delinquenc) officers arri\ ed.

urt

Arrests

He.

Charges from Page At
signed,
Mitchell
will
request and the state will
not oppose a judicial release
from prison after 60 days on
the condition Mitchell complete an alternative sentencing program in Da)ton.
Mitchell was originally

indicted on six felony
counts. including
t\\O
counts of corrupting another
with drugs. possession of
drugs, complicity. contributing to the delinquenc)
of a child and permitting
drug abuse.

Reformator) for Women.
In addition to sen ing
time in prison, ~1 itchell will
lose her operatm's licen-.t:
for si\ months. and her
tca~hing credentials must be
surremlered to the Ohto
Depa11ment of Education.

Mitchell resigned her
position as an Engli"h
teacher and club advisor in
February. 2009. Until she
''as sentenced ~fonda\'. she
had spent no time in jail on
the charges. She will :-.ern~
her tin1e in the Ohio

Courthouse from Page At .
Pomeroy courthouse 1s meet minimum state stanunable to accomodate some dards. Powell told commissiOners.
of those requirements.
Powell also hears cases in
Two judges, in particular.
have a true need for addi- his chambers. and he told
tional space. Judge StcYcn commissioners la-.t ) ear
Story's County Court opera- both j1is nod Story's office
tion consists of two rooms. areas arc considered inadean office for clerks and quate by both state-set and
files. and a courtroom practical standards. In
which also serves as his Septemb~r. Powell met "ith
chambers. Judge Fred W. commissioner-.. after he and
Crow Ill allows usc of his story met infqnnally v. ith a
larger Common Pleas court- Gallipolis architect to look
room as a holding area for over the courthouse and
litigants and defendants on land around it.
A very informal proposal
Story's busy court days. to
relieve congestiOn in the was even discussed. that of
l\\.'O-ston
structure
Countv cou~troom and the 'a
bl't\...-eoen thl' c~)Urthnuse and
corridor outsidl! it.
Crow's court facilities historic sheriff's office.

'' hich mi~ht aJdrc-..-, -,ecuri1) probleii1s in the building.
All offices in the courthouse ... h..re a common
problem :-..one of them have
adequate space for records
storal!e. and fiks and filing
cabi,i"cts arc in cvet) a\'aif:
able nook anJ crann; of the
19th-centun cou11house and
in other buildings. indudin\!
Anderson· ... Ftli·niture an~l
the old \'ell.'rans ~ l emorial
H&lt;1spital.
The county's general fund
budget i:-. tighter than C\ cr.
and some department-.. sa\\
budget &lt;.:ut-.. in their 2010
appropriations. which commis-..ioncrs appro\ ed in
Januar). 0~1\ en port said

\ estcrda\ the need for fiscal
,.c...tra•nt ·has placed an) real
plans for addressing the
space needs of count) go'ernment on hold for the
forseeabk future.

Get Ready For· 1\'leJnorial Day
..

~

"

.-"k

..:::.'~~ ..

..,-:--

~~,_ ..

t ..l

~C!:)Y~")_)f(c..-, ~.,)~-:_~

Acree Monument

Compan~y

H 'c Spedalizc in custom stont•s n itll

lazt•r or ct&lt;:hing ~nailablt•
with n wide v••ric.•tl· of stonc.o; &amp;
l'~Jst~.. to clwost' fron•
39724 SR 1-IJ (just off of SR 7 ) l'omcroy. OH
7-10-992-9922. 740--116-3115

�PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March

19, 2010

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager.:News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
COIIJ!rcss shall make 110 law rt•spt•ctilll! an
establislmwrt l!{ rcl(l!io11, or proltihitill.!.t 'rlrc free
o:ercise thereof; or abricf.giu.l! tlrcfret•dom ofspaclr,
or of tire press: or tire ri.l!lrt of tlr'c people pcace.111f)•
W asscmiJic, mrd to JJCtition tire Got•crtmtetrt
for a redress ofJ!rirr•anccs.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Comtitution

TC)J)AY IN lliSTC)lZY
Today is Friday, March 19, the 78th day of 201 0 There
are 287 days left in the year.
Today s H1grlight in l;iistory.
On fv1arch 19 1860, lawyer, congressma11, three-time
Democrdtlc pres1de11tlal nominee and U.S Secretary of
State William Jennings Bryan was born m Salem, Ill
On th s date:
1'1 1859 the opera uFaust" by Charles Gounod premiered m Pans
In 1917, the Supreme Court in Wilson v. New, upheld
the eight-hour work day for ra1lroad workers.
1'1 1918, Congress approved Daylight-Saving Time
1'1 1920. the Senate rejected, for a second t1me, the
Tre.aty of Versailles by a vote of 49 1n favor, 35 against,
tal mg short of the two-thirds majority needed for
approva.
In 1931, Nevada Governor Fred B. Balzar s1gned a
measure legaliz1rg casino gambling.
1'1 1945, during World War II, 724 people were k1lled
whe'l a Japanese dive bomber attacked the carrier USS
Frankhn off Japan; the ship, however, was saved Adolf
H tier ISSued his so-called "£\lero Decree," ordering the
destruct on of German facilities that could fall mto Allied
hands.
1'1 1953 t'le Academy Awards ceremony was televised
for the f1rst t1me, 'The Greatest Show on Earth" was
named best picture of 1952.
In 1979 the U.S. House of Representatives began
telev1smg 1ts day-to day busmess.
In 1987 televangel.st J1m Bakker resigned as chairman of h1s PTL mmistry organization amid a sex and
money scandal mvolving Jessica Hahn, a forMer church
secretary.
•
In 2003, Pres dent George W. Bush ordered the start
oJ war aga1nst Iraq (Because of the tiiT'e d1flerence, 1t
was early March 20th in Iraq.)
Ten years ago. Pres1dent B1ll C inton arnved outside
New Delh1 on the f rst pres dential v1sit to 1'1dia m 22
yedr.., as he opened a s1x-day tnp through troubled South
As1a.
f1ve years ago: Pollee m Citrus County. Fla. found the
body of 9-year-old Jessica Lunsford, more than three
weeks after she'a disappeared from her bedroom.
(Convicted sex offender John Evander Couey was later
sentenced to death for kidnapping, rapmg and burying
Jess1ca alive: he d1ed of natural causes in Sept. 2009.)
Irma S 1utskaya won the gold medal for the second time
at the World F1gure Skating Championships, held m
Moscow; Sasha Cohen of the United States won the silver medal for the second stra1ght year Automaker John
Z D Lorean died in Summit, N.J at age 80.
One year ago. An Austrian jury sentenced Josef Fntzl.
73 to I fe in a psychiatric ward for locking h1s daughter in
a dungeo11 for 24 years, fathering her seven children and
lett.ng one d1e in captivity as a newborn. Pope Bened ct
XVI, vis1t.ng Cameroon, told Muslim leaders that true
relig O'l reJected violence· the pontiff also held up peaceful coexistence between Ct1ristianity and Islam in the
cou'ltry as "a beacon to other African nations:·
Thought for Today: "No one is such a liar as the
indignant man." - Friedrich Nietzsche, German
philosopher (1844-1900).

Economy: No inflation, little hiring
BY

CHRISTOPHER

S.

RUGABER

AS&lt; !lCIATE.D PRE.SS

The picture ot an economy gro.... ing
mude'&gt;tl) \1. ithout producing inflation
yet &lt;;truggling to create jobs emerged
from go\ernment repot1S Thur:-day.
The number of newh laid-off
\~·orke!·s requestmg JOble~s benetits
tell ~light!) last week for the third
str,tig.ht time. But initial clo:ums
remam abme Je,els that would signal
net job gain&lt;;
, Ne\\ dmms for unemployment aid
tell 5,000 to .t -,easonally adjusted
457,000, the Ltbor Department said,
·1 hat nearly matched analysts· estim.ltc~ of 455.000, accordin!! to
Thomson Reuter~.
~
The four-week a\erage of jobless
c1,1ims. which smooths out volatilitv.
dropped to 4/1,250. StilL the m-eragc
has risen b) 30,000 since !he ~tart of
this year. That '5 raised concern:-.
among cconomi'it~ that persi~tcnt
unemplo) ment could weaken the
reco\ Cl').
The ~nernge number ol weekly job)e&lt;;s claim., remains above the
400.000-to-425,000 level that mum
ccononm.ts s,t) it must fall helm\
before \\ idespread new hiring is likel).
Initial jobless cluims are considered
a gauge of the pace of layoffs and an
mdicatton of companies' wilhngnt:ss
t? htre. High unemployment has perslstci e\ en though the econom) gre''
111 the -.econd half of la~t year.
Pres;dcnt Barack Obama on
fhursday "tgned into law a package
of tax breaks and spending designed
to encourage companies to start hiring
In a separate report, the Labor
Department smcl consumer prices
"ere tlat in rebru,tr). J\ rise in food
prices v. as oft\et by a drop in gasoline and other energ) costs.
E.\cluding the' olatile food and energy categories. the core Consumer
Price Index edged up just 0.1 percent
la-.t month. matching economi~ts ·
estimates.
~
The report adds to C\ ide nee that the
weak economy has all but erased
lllfl,ttlon. That a!IO\\ s the Federal
Reserve to continue its efforts to

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
L IE'r , t e editor should be :rn1ted to 300 woras. All letters are
sL Je':l • ed1t1rg 'T!ust be s1gred and mclude' address and telepho!le
..umber No t.:1s1gred letters wtl' be published. Letters should be In
!jOOcl •a t arldPss 19 1ssue~ not person~lttu:s. "Thank You" letters
w rot be ccepted for publication.

revi\ e the economy by keep in!! the strategist &lt;tt Miller Tabak. wrote in a
short term interest rate it controls at a note to clients. "We believe it Will
moderate through the spring. but the
record lm\ near Lero .
In ,mother report. a pri' ate research larger story. that people arc simply
group said its gauge of future ceo- not finding jobs. remain!'&gt; in place.''
nomic acti\ ity rose just 0 .1 percent in
The nation ':s gross pomest1c prodF~bruary. suggesting slow growth
uct, the broade!-&gt;t measure of output.
th1s summer. The !!ain in the ro!'&gt;e 5.9 percent in the fourth quarter.
Conference Board's index of lcadin!! the fastc:st pace in six years. But
economic indicators.was the smalleSt much of that growth reflected a onern II month~.
·
time gain fron1 companies restocking
The index is intended to forecast their inventories. :-..1any economists
.economic activitv in the n~.:xt three to expect the growth rate to drop to
six months based on a 'ariety of eco- about 3 percent in the current
January-to-March quarter.
nomic data.
The unemployment rate was 9.7
Abo. the current account trade
deficit widened in the foutth quarter. percent in February. the same as the
the Commerce Department smd, previous month. down from a peak of
reflecting an 1mproving econom). 10 .I percent last October. Still. the
Import!'. of oil. auto~ and other prod- Federal Re~erve and most private
ucts .outpaced gam' in L~ .S export... . economist' expect it to remain well
But the trade gap for all of 2009 fell abo' e 9 percent throughout this
The Fed said Tuesdav that
to it!-. lo\\ est point in eight years.
Economists say they think the labor market is stabilizine.'· That
deficit will \\iden during 2010. impro,·ement from its previous diagthough not to the record hci!!hts seen nosi" in Januarv. when it said its detebefore the rece:-.sion. A we~tker dollar rioration "is abatin~ ...
1s expected to boost U.S. export:-.·. A
At least one company. FedEx. says
weaker dollar make-. U.S. good~ the dobal economic recovcn· is
cheaper owrscas and foreign good::. broadening. Fred Smith. CEO of the
CO!-.tlier for U.S. con:-.umers.
world's second-largest package deli'The current account is t~e broade~t er) company. on Thursda) predicted
gauge of trade because it includes not a relatively strong first half and
onlv trade in goods and "en·ices but steadv !!rowth in the last s1x months
also investmei1t flows between coun- of the \:-ear.
tries. It measures how much the counFedEx expects t.; .S. !!rowth of
trv must borrow from forei!!ners.
about 3 percent this year. led b\· man'In the Labor Department rep01t. the ufactunng. in line with economists'
number of people continuing to claim expectations. Still. Smith wamed that
unemployment benefits ro~e slight!) the housing market "could remain a
to 4.58 million. That wa~ similar to problem ,"
Among states. North Carolina had
\\hat economists expected. Bt!t it
doesn't include mill ions of people the largest increase in jobless claims
"ho are recei\'ing extended benefits last week.'' ith 5.100. It attributed the
for up to 73 extra week~. on top of the i~crease to layoffs in the construc26 \\eeks customnnly pro' ided b) tion. apparel and industrial machinery indu~tries.
thl! states.
More than 6 million people were on
Illinois. Oregon. Ohio and Alabama
the extended benefit roll~ for the had the next-large!'&gt;t increases. The
week that ended Feb. 27 . the latest ~tate data lags one \\eek behind the
data &lt;tYailuble. That b about 300.000 mitial claims- figure~.
more than in the pn?\ ious week. The
Ne'' York h&lt;~d the lar~est droA
total number of people receiving ben- claim~. with 10.929. It ~cited f~
layoffs m transportation and services.
efih now tops II .2 million.
Over the past two months. "thb California. Connecttcut. Kentuckv
measure ha:-. gone 110\\ here but up." and West Virginia also reported
Dan Greenhaus, clnef ·economic declines.

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�Page AS • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Fellowshi p
Apostolfc

'0.4~

am , Sun&lt;lJ\ lhcrung • b;(l(J l' m
IJ..m \\aU.e;

Rhrr \ullt)

8 J S lnl
\1e , ;\lul&lt;llepon Re1
\ltc':tael Bradford Pa .tor, Sunda), HHO
l.m rues to '10 praFr. \\ed 7 pm Hollie
Stud1

Enunanucl \pthtulk llohun:odt• lnt·.
Loop KJ oil Ne" 1 tc a Rd Rutlauu,
Senoce' Sun 10.00 • m &amp; 7.30 p.m
fhurs 7 00 p m . l'a:;tur \lartl R !Iutton

Assembly of God
llbtrt) \sstmhl) uf (,od
P 0 Bo' 467 Duddmg 1nne. Ma"Km
W \a. Pastor '\;e1 Tennam, Sunda)
\en1ccs O·()(t a m an~ 7 p '11

Rutland ~l'ff \\Ill Uaptl't
Salem St., P stor Ld H.orney Sun~a)
Sctwol
10 a.m. L1ening 7 p.m.,
\\cdnesday Sem,~s • 7 p m
Second llapli•l Church
Klvenswood, W\, ~~nda) School 10 nm·
, \tomtng wurshtp II am ~.vcnuog 7 pm,
Wcdncsda) 7 pJn.
t lrst Rapti•t Church or \ Ia"'"· \\ \'
tfndcpenJentBapllst)
SR 652 and Anderson St Pastor. Robcn
Grad) Suolday ~chool 10 am, Morntng
chur,·~ It am, 'Iunday e1cnong 6 pm, \\ed
llt le StUd) 1 pm

Catholic
Sacred lltart Catholk Chun:h
lbl \tu, '!ern AYe Pomeroy, 9'12·5898,
Pa&gt;tor Re• Waller I· lleonl, Sat Con.
4 4~ ~ .~p !n · ~1ass S ~0 p m Sun
ton R4~-9,5aJn,Sun \Ia" 9·lo
ar.,Dati) Mass 8·30am

Church of Christ

Baptist
l'ngnille I rtt·,.illllapli'l ( 'hurd1
Pa;tur flu) R~ss, Suuda) School9.10 to
H' '10 am \\.&gt;r.hop sen1ce 10,.10 10 I 00
am \\ed. prca,hm~ ti pm
Curptulrr lndrprn'dtnl ll~pti•l Church
9 lOan! l'rta,hm~
Sunda) School
~e 11cc
IC 10ant
bemng ~cn.ce
7 'lOpm, \\c&lt;.:~esday B :,1c Stud\ 7'(1() pm.
Pa~1o

( ht'&gt;hire llbpli" C hun·h
Pasto~ Stele lottie, 740-31'&gt;7 7801. H.
V40 992 7~2 C 740·64~ 2527, Sunda)
Schoc•l ,..'l!l ;n, \lo&gt;mtng \\oNhop llll(l
:n, Youth &amp; B. 'le Bu&lt;.dtes 6 10 pm,
'huor pr~&lt;t•ce 7 10. Spccoal da)s ot m&lt;lnlh
l lruhes of Gra,e 7 piT' lnd \looov. ~
~kl s I c "'"~ p 7 pm lrd Tu.-.
llupe Bapthl Church l"uuthnn I
S70 Grant 'it ~hddler&lt;•tt. sun61 !\l:Lool
&lt;llO m \\orshop II a r.: and 6 pJn
\\ednnda) 'icnocc 7 p.:n Pa&lt;tor Gary
I bts
Rutland h..,t llapll•t ('hurch
San' ' School 'I 30 1 re \\or.hop
104.5 •m
Pornem) hr-1 ll•plist
I' st r Jon Bnxkert, l:a\1 \lam St
:.unda1 s,h ':1 lOam.,,.,,.. hlp 10.30 w.
hl"'l "uulhrrn llaptht
4IS72 Pumero) Ptke. SundD) Schoo•
.; lO m \\vrshop &lt;145 am &amp; 7 00 p r:; :
\\ odn ,da} Senoces 7'110 p m Pa\tor
Da• J B:-:unard
hrst Bapti&lt;l ( hun:h
B II} Zuspan flth 1111&lt;.. l'nlmer St
9 IS m
S
\)() r rn

\\ estslde Church or&lt; 'hrist
~lU6 Choldren's Horne Rd. Pomeroy. 011
Contact 740 'ln-3847 '&gt;unday ruomong
0 00, Sun mornmg Btble &gt;ludv
follo•.,ng \\Or&gt;hop, Sun eve li:Oo p~:
\\ ed bible stu&lt;.l) 7 pm

\tt Uni11n Baptist
P
lk 1 \\C3\er Sunda} 'ichooi
9 4~ am E en ng
6 \0 pIll
\\ dn&lt; 'ldav ~' rv ,es
&gt;Op m
Bethlehem Baptist Church
C.~
B nc.. Route 1.!4, R •me. OH,
I' stcr
~u day Schoo
9 lO a m
Son&lt;.::~ Worshop
30 am \\::31esday
::1

Old Bctbrl Free\\ til Baplht Chur•·b
:86()1 St Rt 7, M1ddlepon, Sunda)
Ser&gt; •
I( am • (&gt;I){) p m Tuesday
&lt;; n 'f&gt;OO
llilh•dc·llaptht ( 'hurch
'It Rt 141 ,u off R• 7 Pa,tor Re1
J me• R A"ee ~r., Su:tday Umhed
'iervtte \\orshop 10.30 d m , 6 p m..
Wedne..:~y Se"' C(") 7 p
\ •ch&gt;ry Bapti't Jndc)X'ndenl
5'&lt; N 2nd Sl \l•ddlepon Pastor James
E 1\ec•ee \\orshtp lOa r::: , 7 p m •
\\edne&gt;day s~mcc&lt;. 7 p.m.
I alth llapli't Church
R •o.1d St \lason. )unday School 10
a m \\c •h•p
,1 a ::1 , 1\ p "'·
\\edne da) Sen•ces. 7 p m
I urc•t Run llapli't• Pmm·rn1'
Rev Joseph \\oods, Sun&lt;!.ly School
...m , W&lt;Jrshop • II :lO u.m

10

\II. \loriah llapli•l
Founh &amp; \film St., \ftddlepon, SunQ)
School • 9 30 an , \\onlnp 10.45 m.
!'a&lt;tor .Rev Moeh.el A Thompsor. '&gt;r
Antiquit~

Sunday School

Jlapli•t
9 30 am .. Wor,hop

llol Ru Rac-roe, P&lt;!Sior Jur.1es
Sau,rfteld Sunday School 9.4~ am ,
l •emng f&gt; p m, Wednesday Servoccs • 7
pm
Ruthmd ('hurdo uf &lt;:od
l'a~ror. Shane. M
llo\\ ,on g. ~u1day
Worsh•p IIJ ~ 111, () p.IT" \\ednesday
Se1\lotes 7 p.m.
S)rhtu"' Htlot Church of &lt;:od
and Second Sts. Pastor· Rev Davoel
Ru&lt;&gt;ell, Sunday School and \\or.lup· Ill
am. E'enong ~ervices· l&gt;.lO p m
Wcdncsda) Serv.-e&gt; 6·30 p m.
Appl~

( 'hun·h or (,od or l'ropht&lt;)
OJ \\hote Rd nfi ..,, Rl 160. Pastor PJ
Chapman !iunda) School • 10 a.m.,
Worsh•r ' I " m Wednesda~ Ser~ oces • 7
P~l

Congregational
l rin I) Church
!'astor· Kcv Tom John;on, Second &amp;
Lynn, PomeTu) Pa'lor \\onlup 10 25
am

t on-.tRun
I'astor !lob ol.obonscn. Suooay School
m \\or•hop • 9

af'.

Episcopal

('mnmunh~

Hcmlfx·k c:ro•e Christian Church
\lmtster l..nrf) Bro\\ n \\or.hop 9.10
d r1 SLnday School • to '30 am , Roble
Stu&lt;ly • 7 pJOt
l'nmero) Church or Chri't
21 ~ W \I n St Sunday School . 9 30
am , \\o:shtp 10·30 d rn .. 6 p m.,
WednC&gt;da) Ser. oces 7 p m

llam ille lllllin&lt;·s.~ &lt; hurch
11057 State Routt 125, Langs•lle.l'astor
Bcoan llaoley. Su!Xlay SlhOOl 9 30 am
Sunda) \\Orshop 10·10 • m. &amp; 7 p.m ..
Wednesday pra) er serv•ce 7 r 11'!

Pomtro) \I r•tsid&lt;·l"hurch or Chrht
n226 l h·ldren's Home Rd , Sunda\
School , I am , \\oNhtp lOam • (&gt; p~.
\\ edncsd&lt;l) Servtces 7 p m
\liddlt-port Church of l'hrht
5th and :\lam, Pastor AI Hanson,
Ch d~ns Dorector, Sharon Saue, Teen
Dorector Dodger Vaughan Sund~) Sch&lt;IOI
30 am Worshtp 8 15 10:30 am 7
p m , \\ednesc..y Se.'N ccs 7 p.:t.

1\cno l hurch nf ('hri't
\\'otshtp 9 !0 am. Sunday School
10 10 u.::~ .. Pa&lt;to&gt;r Jeftre• \\allaee, bt nod
~rd SUlday
Jlear.. allfl" Ridl(e Church of Christ
Pastc.r Bruce Tem,. Sunday S,hool ·9·'!0

Rutl:lnd Church or Christ
Sundal S,hool 9 30 an: Worshop ~ad
Commcr.oon
10 !0 am
Davtd
Wiseman Montstcr
llradfnrd Church of Chri't
Comer of St Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
MomSitr Doug Shambl~, )outh Mtn"tcr
B, Ambcq;er Sunda} School • 9:'30 un,
Worsh1p • 8 00 am , 10 30 am 7.00
p m \\edtte,d&lt;lv Semces 7·00 p m.
lliclo.or) llilh Church or Chri't
Tuppo:"'S Plaons.P.istor Mokc Moore, Bobte
da,s 9 m. Sundat. "'orshtp 10 am.
~un' y, \\:.&gt;rshop 6 30 pm Sunday, Boble
cla.&lt;s 7 piT! \\ed
Rrtd\\illr Church or Chri•t
l'asto1 Jack Colgrove, Sunda) Sch()('l'
9 !() urn \\.:orshop Sen tee· 10:~0 am ,
Btble Study \\canesda) 6:30p.m
l&gt;rxltr Church of Chrbt
Sunda) &lt;l"'Jtl('l 9 '10 d.m., Sunda) """htp
'!) 30 am
1 he l'burch of Chrht of l'omcro)
Inter ect•on 7 and I 0 4 \\ Llangeh''
Denms Sarg~nt, Sunday Bible Study •
9 30 am Worshop: 10:10 "m .md 6.30
p m, \\ednesda) Boble Study · 1 p.m

Christhin Union
llartrord Church or Chrut in
( hri,tian t nion
I!Jnf;.ord. \\ \a, Pa-tor Mtke Pu,·Lcn
Sunday School 9.30 a rn .• \\vrshtp •
10 10 an: • 7 on I'm.. \\ednesd.o)·
Servoce:. • 7 00 p.m.

I ram .l~u1
Pa\tor l:.ddtt• Baer, !.un Worshtp 11 am
333 r.lechamc St Pomeroy
llit·w II"JX' ('hurrh
Old Amencan Legion Hall,
Founh Ave , Mtddlepo~ Sunda) ~pre
S) racu.e Communi!) ( hurch
24&amp;0 Second St, S)racuse. Oil
Sun. SchooiiO am Sund) mght !'r31J pm
l'astor Joe G\\ mn
\ '\e" Beginning
(I ull G&lt;~JX'I Church 1HamsonVI e,
Pastor\. Bob and Kay Marshall
fhurs 7 p.m.

:o

Rock Springs
Pastor l&gt;e\\~)ne Stutler. Sunday School
9 00 a.m , Worshtp
It am , )out:
1-ello\\shlp, &gt;Unday (&gt; p m Earl) Sunday
1\orsh1p 8 am l.tnora IA'ollten

('ahar) f.'ilgrim Chafl&lt;'l
Harr &gt;OnVL...e Road, Pastor Charles
\k Kcnzte, ~unday Sc~ool 9 W a m ,
\\o&gt;rsh1p II um. 7 00 p m, Wedne:.da~
Sen.ce 7 tl() p ~

Rutland
Pastt'r John Chapman, Sunday School •
9·30 am. \\onhtp o:;o d m . Thursdav
Serv1ces • 7 p.m
Snlem (.'enter
Pastor Wolham K Marshall, Sunda)
S,hool • 10 IS ant , \\orsh1p '1·15 am.,
B·ble Stud) \londay 7:00 pm
Snmnille
0 m \\ orshtp 9 am.

Ro"' of Sharon llolinL~' Church
Leadmg Creek Rll. Rutland, l'n•tor Re1
DeHy Kong, Sunda) school 9:10 am •
Sunday \\Ol'$htp ·7 pn: \\ednesda~
pra)er meeung 7 p.m
Piue C:rme Bihle Holiness Church
I Z m1.e oft Rt 325, Pa&lt; or Re' 0 Dell
\lanle) :.unda) School
9.30 u.n,
Worshop • 10:)() are, 6.00 p.m.
Wedne•da) :ierloce • 7 00 p.m
\IL-sl~)an Riblelloline~• Church
Pearl St , Moddlep&lt; n Pastor Dnul!
Cox Sunda) School • t!l am WoNhop
11.45 p :;t 'iur;da) E•e 6.00 p m
Wedne&gt;day Servocc 00 p m

Curmtl.,.i\utton

l"armel &amp; B han Rds Rae :1e Ohio
Pastor Juhn Roze" t.z ')unda) S&lt;hool
., 45 a.m V. hop
I 00 m B1b e
'ilOCl \\ed
p

Sti\er.-ille Communi!) Church
Sunday School 10:00 am. Sunday Wor&gt;hip
I' 00 am Wedne-da) 7 OQ pm Pastor
Bryan &amp; Mtssy D:ulc)

Q.,,;_ ('hri,tian t'tiiO\\•hip
(:-ion-den('mmauonal feiiO\\ShtpJ
Mreong m the Meog&lt; Middle Sd1ool
Cafetena Pastor: Chrts Ste\\ an
10:00 am ~oon Sunday; ~.~formal
Worship. Clnldren's mtmstrv

Rejoicing Lift Church
:".: 2od Ave , Moddlepon. P.astor.
M1ke 1-orem.n, Pastorfmeritus Lawrence
Foreman \\crshtp- 10.00 am
\\ednesday Sefl'tCC\ 7 p ::1
~00

Communi!) of Chri't
Pon nd·Racme Rd .. Pastor Jom Proffitt.
Sunday School IJ 30 d m Worshlp
10.30 "m \\edne&lt;day Scfl ces 7 00
pm
Bethel \\'or-hip Center
!'1782 St Rt 7, 2 rules o;outh of Tuppers
Plaons, OH ~"&gt;n·denommauonal ",·!1
Con:eroporary Praise &amp; \\orsh I' Pastor
Rob Barber A&lt;soc Pa-tur Kar~n Davos
Youth Dt·ector Betty Fulks Sunddy
sci"\ tee~. 10 dm \\nr&lt;hop &amp; 6 pm l'amol)
Ltfe Clas,es. \\ed &amp; Thur mght J.. fe
Group~ at 7 pm. Thurs mommg ladoes'
Ltfe (;roup at 10 Outer l.Jnuts )outh Lofe
Group on Wed e1enong from ~.l() to 8·'30
V.sot us onhne at """·bethe we org
A•h Slt'ffl Church
Ash S1 , Moddlepon-Pastors' MJrk
Mornw &amp; Rodne) Walker Sunday
School 9 )() am Mommg \\orshop •
1r 3Q a &amp; b.30 pm, Wedne,day sen oce
6· \0 p '11., Youth Service 7 00 p.m.
\RaP&lt;' Life Center
Full Go&gt;pcl Church". PO'tors lohn &amp;
Pany \\~ 603 Second Ave. Mason, 773·
S v ce ume Sunday 10 JO J
7pm
19~

Abumbot Grace
'it M dd e)X'Il, P~tor r eresa
10 8 r.

l'.nst l ctart

Luurcl Cliff f rcc M~thndlsl Church
Pastor C en McCiun • Sunday School
9 30 ~ m, \\orshop 10 30 a no and f)
p.m ,\\ednesday Sem,e 00 p.m

Latter-Dav Saints

Tht· Churrh ~~ Jesu.'
Christ or 1.-.tter·lla' Saint'
St Rt lfO 446-t' &gt;4 or 446 74R6
Sund v S&lt; ool J(; 20 II am Relief
Souety PnesthClOd I 05-12 00 "oon
Sac ame,t Se • ~e 'l 10 IS a m ,
Homemalong mecung 1st Thun • 7 p m

\\

\' :&gt;hall, Ul
Scbool
I0 o1
\\ rshop
II
a.m \\ednes&lt;!:ly SeC'\tCc 6 pm ~ur Soble
Stud)., iJm

( '"'" ille t nited \lttbodi'l Pari\h
or Helen Khne C-&lt;&gt;Ql\llle Chun:h,
\lam &amp; F ftl) St , Sun School I0 a.m ,
1\or,ftop 9 m. Tue' Sen ces 7 pm.

Pa~

St. Jnhn Lutltrran Church
Pine GrO\c \\on.lup 9:00 4 m, Sunday
s, hool • I0.00 "no Pastor

Bethel Church
Townsh•l' Rd 468C. Sunda) S.:hool 9
am. \\ucshop
'0 am., \\edne'da)
Senoc-es • IO«m

Our Sa,iour Lutheran Church
\\alnul and Henry Sts. Ra\en•wood.
\\ \u .• Pastor D.l\1.1 Ru"c! • Sunda)
S,hool· iO:OO a.m., \\'or,hop. II" '11

llt&lt;J..ing[&gt;Orl Church
Kathr) o \\ t ey SunJa) ".:hool • 9 ~0
am. \\or,hop 0·30 am. Pa,tor Phtllip
Bell

Sl. r&gt;autl.atheran Church
Comer S)c:orrore &amp; Second St Pomeroy.
Sun s, hoot 9.45 am , Worshop. II «.m

rorch Church
Co. Rd 6l, Sunda) S~houl
\\Of$hlp 1CUO a 1r

United l\lethodist
Gntham l nited \Jcthodi•t
\\'or.hip • I ~ m f'astN' R.chard '\;ea...:
B..:hld lmitcd :\lethodi•l
"'"" Haven, Rt:hard '\;ease, Pa.,tor.
Sunday "&lt;&gt;Orsh p 9·1u a :;t Tue&lt; 6:3!l
prn)er and Soble ~rudy

9 30 a.m.

Nazarene
Point Ro.:K Church \'r thr :\a7arene
Route 6R9. 1\lban~. Re1 Llo)d Gnmm,
pa,tor, Sunda) School 10 am, \\orhs p
'&lt;"VK&lt; II .uu, evemng S.."n rce 7 pm. \\cd,
pra)er meeuog 7 pm

\tt. Olhc l nitcd ~lethodist
Oft 24 behL~d \\'olkesvolle P~lor Rei
Ralph Sp1res. Sunda) School . 9 \0 am ,
\\or,hop 10:30 am .. 7 p m Thur,dal
Scrvoo:t, • 7 p m.

:'lliddlcport Church ufthe :\a1urene
f'a,lor Leonard Powe' , Sunda) S.:hool •
Q·~O a n• ,\\ci'Shop IO:W am. 6.30 p.m
\\edll&lt;'sda~ Sen .ce' 7 p m.,

\tdg' Cnoptrathe Pari'h
1\onh.e&lt;O&gt;t C'' "ter, Alfred, Paswr Gene
Good" 1. Sunda) Sdl&lt;,ol 'I JO a m
\\nr&gt;hop. II am , b 10 pm

Ret'&lt;l" itle Fello11 'hip
Church of the :Saza~ne. Pa,n&gt;r Ru~'ell
Car•on • Sunda) S.:hool 9 30 am ,
\\urshop tC 4~ a r., 7 p m. Wednesd3)
Sen ice, 7 r m

q am,

S)racu,,•(hurch of the :\at.llrrnr
Sunda1 Scbool 9:30 am . \\01,h1p •
IU.lO am ,6p.m., \\ed sen.,e&gt; 7 pm

OlU&lt;-ila)

Church of God

flarrisou• ille Communi!) Church
Pa&gt;tor Tberon Durham Sunday • 9 30
a r::: nod 1 p m. \\edne'iia) 7 p
'liddleporl Communi!) Chur&lt;h
575 Pearl St Moddlepon Pa&lt;tor. Sam
Anderson, Sunda) Sc'lool 10 a.r.: ,
F1emn.s 7 30 p "'~ , \\cdnesda) Scrvtcc
7.30p.m
Faith \aile) Tabernacle Church
Baole) Run Road l'a-ror Rtl Fmmeu
Ra"son. Sunc!J) henmg 7 p m.
Thur'da) Sen Ke 7 p.n
:.)ncu-e \fi,,ion
,4 I Bndgemllll St .. Syracu,e, Paqor.
Re\ Roy Thompson. Sunda) S,hool 10
d.nt Evemng. (&gt; p m. \\edncsda) Ser.t,'e
• 7 p.m.
lla1el ( 'ontntunit) Church
Off Rt 124 Pa,tor· Ed,eJ Hart Sunda)
s, "t0&lt;1l · 9·30 am, \\orsh1p • 10.30 a.m,
7:30 p.ro
ll)t&gt;•illt Communi!) Church
Sunda) s,·hool 9 30 a.m , \\or,htp •
10:30a r:::. 7 p.m
:\lol'\l' Chapd Church
Sunda) ,,hool • Ill a.m .. \\or'hlp ·
am \\edne'da) Senocc 7 p.m
hith Go,pel ('burch
Long llouon· Sundav School • &lt;1.30 am.,
\\or,hop
10·45 a.w. , 7 10 p m..
\\edtot,day 7 3(1 p.m.
Full Go,Jl('ll. ij!hthou't
3.3045 H 1and Roo~. Pomem). PNor· Ro1
Hunter Sunda) School • '0 am , &amp; 7:.~0
\\~dnr,Jay l:i1enmg 7:30p.m.

Clifton t abernacle Church
Chfton. \\ Va. S'unda) S,hoo • 10 am
Worshop • 7 pm , WedneSda) Serv1ce 7
ptr
fhe Ark Cbur&lt;h
377l Georges Creek Rood, Galhpohs, OH
Pastor. Jamie \\ treman, Sunday Servtces1():30 am. Wednesda) • 7 p.m. Thursday
Praye· &amp; Praise at 6 pm. Cfas,es for all
ages every Sunda) &amp; \\e&lt;Jne,day.
""" .thearkchun:h.nel
full Go,pel Church
or the Lh ing Sa• ior
Rt.338, Anuquotv, Pastor· Jes'e \lorn•
sen tees. Saturday 2:00 p.m.
Salem Communi!) Church
BJCk of \\'est Columb1a, \\'.\a.om l1evmg
Road, Pastor Charles Roush (~J 675·
2288 Sunday School 9·30 .ll1l, Sunda)
e•emng 'ervoce 'i 00 pm. Bobl) Stud)
\\ednesda) servtce 7 00 pm
Hoh,on Chri\tian f ellow,hip Church
Pa,tor. Herschel \\ hlle, Sund&lt;l) School·
10
Sanda) Chur~h &gt;el"oce 6;30 pm
\\ednesda) 7 pm

=

R~toration Christian hUo~&gt;&lt;hip
9165 Hooper Road. Athen&gt;, Pastor
u.-nnoe Coats Sunday \\orshtp 10:00 am,
\\ednesday· 7 pm

hlth tull Gosfl&lt;'l Church
Bon m, !'astor: Steve Reed , Sunday
~ 10 am, Worshop Y·JO am
, \\cdnes.:;,) • 7 pm , l'rodn) •
hpsen ce7pm

Racine
Past

Lutheran

Oll'\ltr
Pastor· Jim C&lt;•rh n. WM,hop
Sunday School
10 a ~· ,
Scr.ICes • 7 p 1':'

Calvar} Bible Church
Pomero} Ptke Co Rd Pastor. Re1
Blackwood, Sunda} School 9 30 am
\\onhtp 10 30 am , 7 10 p m ,
\\ednesda) Service 7 30 p m

lkthan~

P stor John RoLewo.l Sunday School
10 am \\orshop 'I am . \\cdnesda)
Sen.ces !Cam

l'•rleton lnterden&lt;&gt;minational Church
Kmgsbury Road, Pastor. Robcn Vance,
SJnda~ Scbool
9·'0 a m Wol'$htp
Scm•e 10.30 am . Ever. 1g Servtce 6
pm
fretdom G&lt;"pel \1i&lt;~ion
llald Knob, on Co. Rd 31 , Pastor Rev
Roger Wollford, S~:,'lda) School • 9 30
am. \\o.,hop· 7 p m

falnitw Bible Churcli
Letart, W\'a Rt I, Putor. Bnan \Ia),
Sunday School 9 30 a.m. Worshtp 7.00
p m.. We&lt;tnesda) Btble Study· 7 00 p m
1- aith Ftllo•Hhip Cru•ade for Christ
Pa.,lor Re\ Frankl.n Dockens. Servtee
f.i\day. 7 p w..

\ma1ing Grace Cunununily Church
Paster· \\ayne Dunlap, State Rt 681.
Thppcrs Plams, Sun \\'orshtp 10 am •"
6.3&lt;J pm .. Wed Boble Srudy 7 00 p.m

Pomtro)

SJnday School 9 &lt;~.m , W&lt;Jrsh1p '\ervoc~
10 am. 2nd and 4th Sunday

\\ hlte's Chapt'l We&lt;olt~•n
Coc.v111e Road , Pastor. Rev Charte~
Man.~dale, Sun Sch&lt;&gt;e1
!i 30 am
\\ontup-10·30 a.m .• \\ed. Sent&lt;:e• 7 p m

Other Churches

Pastor. JlrtJn f&gt;unham, \\.&gt;rsh.;&gt; • 9.25
a.m , Sunda) School 10.4~ am

Zion Chui"C'h or Christ
H
Rt I 3

Drodhur) Church of Cbrl&lt;t
._1 ~s1er Jumn Roush, H~S8 Bradbury
Road ~toddlepon. Sunda' School 9 '30
am
\\orsh1p ' !0 m

&lt; hl·•ltr Church or !he ~a1&lt;trene
/'astN Rev \\arren Luker.s 'iouoC: y
S&gt;hool 9 JO a.m \\orshop 10 '30 a'" ,
Sunday e&gt;enong 6 pm
Rutland Churrh of the 1\a,arent·
Pastor George Stadler. Sunda) School
'l lO am, Wcrshop
10 30 am, 6·:lO
p.m Weunesda) Servu:es lp re

'\e" Bt't(innings lhurch

7~

\\c &lt;h p
10 10 a
, 6 10 p m
\\ednesda) Serv1ces 6 '!0 pm

Pumtrl&gt;) Church of the ~a1artne
Pastor· Jan Lavend~r. Sunday School
9 ~u am • Wor1h1p 10·30 d n: and II
p.m, Wednesday Servtces 7 p.m

Heath l'liddleport)
Pa-.tor Broan D~.nltam Sunda) School
IO;()(Jdm,Worslt,p I,OOu.m
\finers•ille
P3&gt;tor; Bob Rnbm.&lt;On, Sundav S,hool 9
a.ll' , Wor.hop • 10 a m
Pearl Chapel
Sunday Sdtt•&gt;l 'I a.m. Worshop . 10 a.m.

&lt;:race t:pi.copul Church
326 E. M.1111 St., f', meroy,
II'''&gt;
I ucharost I 30 a.m SullliJY &amp; ~ 10 pm
Wed Re• Le\1 c Flemm1ng

Church
Pa_;tor Steve '!'ont·k. Mam Street.
RJtland. Sunaay \\oNhop 10·00 a r.l,
SUndJ) Ser.1&lt;e-? p.m

•

tlat,..ooch
l'ot\lor Dc\\ayne ~!ultler, Sunday School
10 am \\orsh1j" i I 1m

Holiness

I upJX't' Plain Church or Chri&gt;t
l"strumental. \\orshop 'icfllCC • 9 a m
Commumon 10 am, Sunday School
Ju·l &lt; a.m , Youth· ~ 30 pm Sund&lt;l), Btble
Stud) \\ednesd:o1 7 pm

•

Joppa
Pa&lt;eor. l&gt;enn Null, Wor~lllp Y·~O l m
Sunday School· 10 ~0 a rn
IA•ng llollum
Sunda) Sd ol 9·'\1) am, Worsl11p
10.30 am
Retd"itlt•
\\o"h•p 9: lO " m , Sunda~ School
,0: )() am , F.m Sunday of Month • 7:00
p.m. servtce Pastor Gene Good"'"
Tupper. l'lains St.l'aul
Pastor· Jmo Corb1tt Sunda) Sch&lt;IOI 9
8 m • Wol'$htp Ill• m fuesday Servtce\
7 3Upm
( rnlrnl Clu\ltr
Asbury tS~ u&lt;e), Pasto~ Bob Robtnson
Sunday School 9 45 am , Worship • II
a m , Wcdne.sda) Sel"\oces 7.30 p m.

~Ill&lt;

R"'' \aile) Apostolic \\t•"hop Cent~r. •

I SUJd) 7 00 p

:\II, \loriah C'hurdool God

l'd\IOJ.

( hurch or .lt"U' Chri•l \pn•h&gt;lk
\ anl ndt onJ \\ mt RJ , Pa;tor !aut~'
Moller Suodal s,hool
Ill 3ll u '11.
f1enmg 7 &lt;!1 p m

s,

Friday, March 19, 2010

Houw of Healing \llni,lrie&gt;
St. Rt. 12.1 lan~"ille. O H
ru Go,pe', Cl Pastol" Rober&lt; &amp; Roberta
~tu"er Sunday School 9 10 am. •
\\or,htp 10.30 am • 7 00 pm, Wed
Sen1ce 7:00 pm
Team J"'u' \lini&gt;lrie-.
Pastor. Eddie Baer Meeung 113
Mechanoc Street, Pumero). OH . Ser.&gt;ee
elef) Sunda) ll 00 a.D' Hoi) SmoKe
Senoce6 pm

Pentecostal
Penttco,tal \ "~mbl)
Pa,tor St Rt 124, Racme. Tornado Rd
Sunday S..-hool • 10 d c&gt; E\ening • 7
p m • \\'cdne'd&lt;l) Sen tee' - p.m.

Presbyterian
Harri-on• illt Prc'b~ tcrian Chui"C'b
Pa;tor R~v Dav1d Faulkner, Wor,htp
9:00am. Sunda~
\liddleport i&gt;re-h• terian
P"'tor. Jame, Sn) der, Sunday School 10
a.m~ \\or-hlp -en tee II am

Seventh-Day Ad,·entist
Se1entb·Da) Ad&gt;enlbt
l\lulberr) H". Rd .. Pome."'), Saturda)
Ser• oce': SabJ:.ath Sch.ool
2 pm
Wol':'ohlp 3pm.

I;nited Brethren
\It, Her mon l nlted Brtthren

in Chri&lt;t Church
fe\.1' Comlt'unil) 36411 \\ ockham Rd.
Pa&gt;tor Peter Manutdale, Sunda) School·
9·10 am .• Wot,lup • 10·30 am .. 7:00
p.n&gt; Wedne,Ja) ~er&gt;1Ce' 7:00 p.m
Youth group mectong 2nd .l.. 4th Sunda)'
7pm
Eden l nited Brtthrcn in Chrht
State Route 1-'.1, bcl"een Reed'" te '"
Ho.:kongpon, Sunda) School • &amp;0 am ,
Sunday \\&lt;•l'btp • II 00 a.n. Wedne.da)
Sen,,., • 7;00 p.m . Pastor \I Adam
\\oil

South Rethd Commupit) Church
Soller Rod~e· Pa-t&lt;lr LonJa Dame\HX&gt;J,

Church announcements sponsored by these area merchants
"Let your light so shine hefore
men, that they may :&gt;ce your
good worb. and glorify your
Father in heaven,"
M:ttthcw 5:16

lthr!:

~

499 Richland Avenue, Athens
1-800·451·9806
740·594-6333

s-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My
Full line of
words abide in you, ye shall
Insurance
Products+- ask what ye will, and it shall
Ftnancial
be done unto you.
Services
} ohn/5:7

URA:'\Cl~

Bill Quickel

992-6677

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

"For God so loved the
world that he gave his one
and only Son .. :·
John 3:16

J•

tsf)rr, ~nbrrson, ;!tlcDamd
jf llllCl'JI J!}OIIIC
\liddleport, OH

SWISHER

For God :-,o lm·ed the 11
that he gave hi~· only
begotten son ...
John 3:16

-.-..

740-992·5 141

James Anderson, .\dam '\[d);micl·
Din-clors

PomcrO). OH 740-992-5444

Commit thy works
unto the Lord, and thy
thoughts shall be
established.
Proverbs 16:3

II

shine before
men. that they may see your
good 1rorks and glorij)• row·
Father in hem·en."
Matthew 5:16

&amp; LOHSE
www. ThePhclrmacy4U.com

Prescription Ph. 992- 2955

l.et your li~hr

10

•
I

Coolville. Ohio

Located less than 30 minutes from
A then,, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1-740-667-3156
"Still small

112

Blessed are the pure "So I strive always to kl·cp
in heart; for they my conscience clear before
God and man:·
shall see God.
Acts 24: 16
Matthew 5:8

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

-

'1.tt our {onnily kiD
prot tel your {llm '· '·

Suppr''"ion • f \lingui'h''" • SpnnJ..Icr&gt;

•

• Sc,·uril•

172 N. 2nd A1c. :O. Ill.IJit:port. OH
(l\00) 353-0!\37 hl\ (740}

to care"

MY i!race is sufficient
for thee: for my
streni!th is made ·
Perfect in weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9
Tht l..ord doe.\ nor look ar tht thing~
ma11 looks at, man looks at the
mthmrd appeara11ct, the Lord looks
at the heart.
l Samuell6·7b

�----- - ----...--,--.--~-~-------------------------------------·

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March

A Hunger for
Of the ~trugglcs th.1t he5et
Chri~tians in this da) .tnd
.tge. the ilm Mel battle rag1ng
\\ Hhm our hc.n1-; and minds
is the mo~t insidious. ·we
~lla) VCI') ''ell he cxpencnclllg stiife bet\\ een oursel\ e~
and other..,, fel.!ling oppresston trom those '' ho stmply
do not understund the higher hfc to \\ hich '' e ha' e
been calleJ. and C\ en !.en5lllg .mimo5tty from ~omc
tLl\\ard~ our walk" ith liim.
But the greatest con,fhct ol
.111 '" fought wi-thin ourseh e-;. the result of the
ctash of His ne'' ly e5.tab
hshed pre&lt;&gt;ence '' ithm us
and the habJh and atutude-;
of ''hat \\ e were bel ore we
came to kno\\ Him.
"I or \\C kno\\ that the
La" •s ~p1ritu.11. hut I &lt;~m of
flesh. sold into bondctgc to
sm. for \\hat I am doing. I
do not understand: tor I am
not practicm!! "h.1t I would
like to do. hut I am doing
the \er) thing I hate. But
I tlo the 'ery thmg I do not
\HUll to do. I agree \\ ith the
Um. confessing that the
1 •1\\ is gooJ. So no\\, no
longer um I the one domg 11.
but sin \\hich d\\ells in me.
J or I kno\\ that nothing
good J\\elb in me. that 1s.
II'\ Ill) flesh: for the w11ling
'" present in me. but the
doing of the good 1s not. For
the !!OOd th.1t I want. I do
not do. but I practice the
'er) e\ il that I do not \\ant"
(Romans 7:15-19 NAS).
Sound lamlltar'1 The
\\'orld ~o often rants and
rmes at the antics of
Christians (some '' ho are
perhaps so in name onl) J.
Christian&lt;; "ho refer to the
hoi) standard of the
R1p.hteou' God. yet ~o often
imperfection.
exemplify
f~ulure and exhibit the 'Cf)
things that they condemn.
DQe.., tlut mean that we
Chri-;tians are hypou ites a-.

rr

Mor~

:-.ins arc forgiven. you are
not a weak and ucreatc&lt;..l
sinH~ to :-.in,\\ ith the tattered
and filthy rag~ or all your
failures. O\'CI1 rebellions allU
the refuse of a fallen hem1.
Thom
When you ha\ e truly
Mollohan h~come I lis by placing your
fa1th 111 Hun. vou ha\'e been
clothed with ihc rightenusne"s of .lc5us and the mantle
of 1-1 is presence has been
'' c admomsh the "orld to l:ud upon your shoulder-;.
repent from o.;in and .seck
•· ... anJ lthc f·ather] will
God's face! Docs our failgi'e
you another llclper.
ure m being perfect demonthat
lie
may be w1th you
strate that \\e Christians nrc
sci f-nghtcou ... bigots who fort.•ver: that j-; the Spirit of
like tossmg around com Truth, Whom the world canmandments just to ma~e not recel\e. bccau~c Jt docs
not see Him or know I lim .
other folk'&gt; mic;,eruhlc?
you knO\\ llun because
hut
'\lo. not at aiL .lu'&gt;t think for
He ahidc-.. w1th \nu and \\ill
u moment un \\hat it is that
God i&lt;; actuall) doing in you. be in you ... rhc Helper. the
Fir'&gt;t. He recei,es )OU as vou Holy Spirit. Who the Father
come to I lim through faitf1 in "ill senJ in t-.1\ name, He
Jesu&lt;. Chri-;t, aiiO\\ ing His \\ill teach you· all things.
perfect sacrifice to pa) for and bring to your remem
)OUr -,in. "fhcrefore, ha' ing brance all that I said to you"
been justified by faith, we (John 14:16-17,26NAS).
The Holy Spirit io; the manha\ e peace \\ ith God through
ifc~tatwn
of God at \\ork in
our Lord JcSLh Christ.
through Whom also \\e have the world and li\'c.., in the
obt,uned our introduction by hearts of God\ chtldrcn.
faith into thi~ grace in \\ hich Through the work of the
Holy Spint in our li'e" toda).
\\C stand: and we exult in the
hope ot the glor) of God" the might of God is made
a\ ailablc to us and we may
(Romans 5:1-2 NAS).
"econdl). He marks you count on His ... trcngth and
resolve to delh er us from the
Ill\ isibly '' ith Hi s own Hoi)
Spmt .so that His claim on chains of our old neshly
) ou Is seclll ed and your nature \\ ith all its baggage
As we read 1115 Word. the
confidence in Hie; sa\ ing
grace for )OU i~"&gt; anchored Bible. we can req as~ured
adamant!) in Him. "In Him. that He will mdced "teach us
you ,\lo.;o. after Ji.,tening to all things and bring to our
the message of truth, the remembrance Hl 5 \\ill for
our Jives'' (from John 14: 17).
Gospel of) our salvation h,ning also beheved, )OU hn1hermore, as we pray. we
\\ere scaled in Him with the may .dso count upon Hi s
Holy Spnit of promise, help. struggle as we might to
Who is given a-; a pledge of find ju&lt;a the right "ords. "In
uur mhl!ritance. with a' ic\\ the same wa) the Spirit also
to the redemption of God's helps our weakness; for '' e
O\\ n posse'i.Sil)n, to the do not kno\\ ho\\ to pra) as
prai!&gt;e of His glory" we should, but thl.! Spirit
(E_ehe..,ians I: 13-14 Nt\S).
Himself intercede-. for us
fake a look at the real with groanings too deep for
you. As a Chri ... uan whose words; and He Who searches

Cole111an to conduct
revival 111eetings

the hearts knows whnt the
mind of the Spirjt is, because
Clifford B. Coleman will
He intercedes for the saints cunduct revival meeting-;
according to the \\ill of at the .\It llermon Church
God" (Romano.; ~:26 27 March 28 nt 10:30 a.m·.
NASJ.
,md 7 p.m. and through
All ol thi., is to snnply o;ay. March 31 at 7 p.m. each
that our huher has not intend- even inc.
eJ for us to fight our war with
'I he1nc of the scrv1ccs
sin on only our leeble ~trength will be "The Spirit and the
of will. He invites us and even Bride ~ay. Come .. :· The
implores us to turn to H1111 church is located at 364 11
and invite fh~ "wonder-work- Wickham Road. whtch 1.s
ing power'' in the arena of our west of Ohio 7 on Te.xas
hca.1s.
I Road . ror more informaWhcn we reaJ Romans tion call 985-4220 or 74012: 1-2. "e find that if we 416-7338.
sl'Ck: every day to offer our 1----------------------..,..
bodies as " living sacrifices"
tn Him. He mo,es through
our trust and obedience and
doc-. the\\ ork of tran-..formntion nf our hearts, our pas~ions. and our minds. A saturatiOn of ll is presence trains
MIDDLEPORT - The Re\. Gat') Bowlin. cvangeli5t.
our minds to think in differ- will be speaker at the Hope Baptist Church . .570 Grant St.,
ent channeb than has been i'&gt;liddleport pastored by the Re\ . Gary Ellis.
our habit and allows us to
Service., will be held .\larch 28-31. On Sunda\, March •
"s\\ in\ up the ..,trcam'' of the 28, the ...ervices will be at II a.m. and 6 p.m. and ·the other
COil\ entional Wisdom of the
nigh~'. of the revival 'ien ices will be at 7 p.m. A nursery \
~orld and :-.IO\\IV but surelv
"ill be provided. For more mformation. ~all 99::!-5334.
has the effect t1f looscnin~
our llesh .... \ icc grip on our
minds and habits. He starts
cutting the chams of our old 1
nature "" ay and scb Lh free
to Jive the liberated life that
TUPPERS PLAI:t'\S - Bethel Worsh1p Center i~ giying .
Je-;uo.; h&lt;1s prom1sed us.
Je&lt;,us ans\\ered and ~aid to U\\ m free smoke detectors and nine-\ olt batteries to those
him. "If anyone lmes ;\lie, \\ h&lt;; need them through :\1arch 28.
Anyone needing one to use in their home 1s lllVitcd to
he will keep My wnrLI; and
My Father wtlllove him and stop by the church. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. weekday.,, (call for
We will come to him and be..,t time). or on Sunda)~. 9 .un . to noon.
There arc no income qualification.., and the items \\ill be
make 'our abode '' ith him··
given &lt;may as long as suprilies Ja.st. Church members will
(John 14:23 !'AS).
(f1tom Mollohan and his also be gmng out 1nto the communi!) mer the next t\\0
jmmly lza\'(~ ministered in \\ eeks to distribute free detectors and batterie' to those in
southern 0/uo the pa.\f I-I need. and to reminLI people to check their smoke detector
1!2 r&lt;'ars and t.\ the author batteries and install ne\\ ones.
For more information please vi.,it W\\\\,bethel\\c.org. or
of flte f&lt;ctirv Tale Parables.
call
the church at 740-667-67()3 .
lie i.\ the pastor of Pathll'ay
Cvmmunttv Church and
may be reached for commenH or que\liOill by email
at pa~tortlwm@ pathwayCHESHIRE - The Re'. Ryan Eaton will be the guest
Railipoli.\ .com).
speaker during rcvh al sen ice., March 24-26 at Cheshire
Copyright :© 2010.
Baptist Church. Sen ICC:&gt; begin at 7 p.m. each day. Sped a I
Thom Mollohan.
music \\ill be featured. Rev. Ste\ e Little invites the public.

Church Notebook

Revival services announced

"L.T.:
The
Extra
Terrestrial." and is featured
m the current Hollywood
hit. "Dear John."
The movie, "hich 1s an
adaptatiOn of the nO\el by
best-5ellmg
Chrbttan
author. Fruncme Rivcr.... is
set in 1850s Appalachia and
center-; on I 0-year-old Cadi
F-orbes. played by Texan
ne\\comer Liana Liberato.
Cadi. '' ho i., \HackeLI
'' 1th guilt o\ er the death of
her sister. feels respon::.ible
for the loss and ~ets out to
find the only man. klllm n a..,

the mvsterious Sin Eater.
\\ ho can take a\\ a\ her
gtiilt
But whtlc seeking
redemption. Cadi learns a
devastatinc. secret that has
the potenllal to tear apart
her family and communlt)
The 2007 film , directed b\
1\.tichael Landon , Jr.. son
famed actor M ichacl Landon
("Little Joe'' of the '60s hit
BonanLa TV .series). is rated
PG- 13 for thematic elements
and some inten...e '&gt;equences
of' iolcnce.
Bethel \\orship Center
im ite" the public to come

of

•

Church giving away
smoke detectors

I

I

Cheshire Baptist revival

Free movie night at Bethel Worship Center
TLPPbRS PLAINS Bethel Worship Center wtll
host a free 'public showing
of the recent mo\ ie, "The
L1st Sin Eater." 6 p.m.
Sunday. March 21.
1 he famll) film stars
Award-wmncr
Academy
Louio.;c F-letcher. who won
the Oscar for her iconic role
as Nurse Ratchcd in 1975's
"One flew \)\ er the
Cuckoo's
Nest.''
and
Golden Globe Nominee
Henry Thomas. \\ho rocket..-d to child actor f.1me as
f"'.lltott m 1982's blockhuster

19, 2010 .

oUt'\\ hen doors open at 5:30
p.m. Sunda) to enJO) the
free mm ie. "hich will
include
complimentary
snacks and refreshments.
food
Non-pcri.,hable
donations for those in need
\\ill be accepted at the door.
but are not necessarv for
admi~.sion. For more Information on the C\ent, please
c.lll the church at 740-6676793, or VIsit ''''".bethel\\ c .org. Flll1her information
on the film is a\ailablc at
W\\\\.foxfatth.com
and
"" w.be Iic,·e-pictures .L·om.

Freemans in concert
GALLIPOLJS - Southern gospel artist The Free
"ill be in concert at 7 p.m., Frida). March 19 at 1'\c\\ Life
Church of God. 576 Ohio 7 nm1h. Gallipolis. Soloist ;\1i~ty
Freeman \\ill also be featured. Admi-..sion 1s free. A lme
offerin!:! \\ill be taken. Refreshments \\ill be served after
the concert. For information. contact Rev. Rick Towe at
(304) 675-3538.

Benefit gospel sing
~1ERCERVILLE - A benefit gospel sing for cancer
patient Lon Rose is -..chedulcd from 1-6 p.m .. Saturda).
;\larch 20 at South Gallw High St.·hool in :\1eran illc.
Groups scheduled to perforn1 include the Forgi,en 4.
~ew Southern Harmon~. Am) Our.... The Concord.... .:-\o
End. Karen Pole) nand Victor) River Quartet. F(,)r mformation, contact Rachel at c740) -+-+ 1-03 U or Cathy at
(740) 446-l\5~3.

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

Moral Brave
B

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

ro~t-v 1s know 19 the

'IS t• ng to
jo a d do g • w mg yr1 me lace
of cops df:ab r s,; ana even fear.
wtth the fL I k.'lowledge of the r sk It s
not tear essness beu~g fe.arl ss 1 th

'1ce o~ dung , reck
and a M&lt;l

FDIC

o• foolhardy
ho does w~Jot IJe Kro ..s to
~s

De 11~ r ght 11mg desp •e r s tea s
unaoub~wdly b·aver lila I e on who
feels no tea Mary a brav old t:
fi efir1ter l"os laced a lmtl of tJIIe's or
gore ':&gt; o bL. nmg bJ1Id g WJII' great
fear m ~Js or he h •art bu• k ow ng 1!
was lr r tr g to ao -1: t.. 1; lht
c bravery as 'lVO v g ys a r k s;ch
as 1ur, o deotr hJI 1 er 1s also me al
b uvery whc e Yte 1stc llu~ ho'1or or tl'"
r"ga ve JUdge!"en• f ur fr ends lo 1ly
c.· co wogues For exomp e t &gt;eak rg on
L.lplcosant bu• necessary trutt&gt; sJch as

I have fought
the good tight,
1have tintshed the race,
1have kept the faith.

209 Third St.

•

f) 'Rda:;;;:;;:eu~

Short &amp;: Lon~ Term &amp;:
Respite Care • Rehah Senicl'~

,\\ ailahle
' ' " 11.01 rrbruol-rchahilitalicm,cntcr.tnm

333 Page Street
Middleoort OH '

( )
_
740 992 6472

llim11 Frt •ul'l

\tmosp/1

!A{i[fie's tj(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
/lome Cooked \leal• &amp;: Oaily S[H'ctal•
Open 7 da)' a \\ cck

•
1

740-992·7713

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

If ye abide in He , aud \ly
words abide in you, ye !iha/1
a'ik what ye will. audit shall
be done uuto you.

7 40-949-2217

te 19 o;omcQnE. that w!Ja• trey ore do g
IS w ong as tn blow 19 the w • e on
11 enol p oct ces t e workiJ oce De '1Q
It' r .JI'' tr 'lg 1 quentlv reqUires
cot.. oge, becOL se w or rot a ways
reworded and 'llOy t.\len b pum 1ed o
ostrac zed to Jomg so St Tho11as
AqJ1ro~ constd£ ed brov 'Y to be crLc a
for lrle virtuous ltfe prec1sely be :~use a
k ld of norol o psycho og cc coL. ag is
o!fen r cessary 'o cony out e ott· f
v1ues The good t '' reqL. ·es tort•ude
ard erdurancE' becaJS'l tt ~ orne• es
a ong anct he-a lOUr ey a, d o:1e brave
oct does rat make one brave

Johu 15:..,

Sizes available 5x10 to 10 x 20

"l ct your light

~o

'hinc before

men. that tht') may 'ee )Ollr

good "orb and glon f) ) our

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

Father 111 he,l\en ·•
~I an he\\

5:16

Middleport, OH

740-992-6128
Local source for trophies.
plaaues t-shirts and more

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

5117 ~lulherr)

New KJV. 2 T1mothy 4:7

-

Hei~hts

Pomero), Ohio "5769 ~
(741)) 992-J279
'-!!Y
Tot Fn•e 1-N77-58J-24JJ

P.O. Box 683
Pomerov. Ohio 45769-0683

,

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Page A7

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, 1\farch

Under the shadow of
the wings of the eagle
I was convicted to the
core of Ill) soul that lie
was trul) the ~1cssHth.
How '' rong I had been to
thmk I alrcad) hnd ctcrnalltfe. being thut I \!.as a
sen be of the La"' of God,
you kno''. All of us
scribe-, f1gured that since
\\c imestigated the Lm.,
contmuousl) and thor
oughl) ''c \\ere rather
entitled to eternal ltfe.
It began ''hen I hud
been a part ot the group
of Je'' s \\ ho coot ron ted
Hun at the Pool of
Bethesda. \\h1ch 1s located clo"&gt;e to the Sheep
Market. It '' dS reported
on that da)' that a cert,un
crippled
mun
had
received some son of
nuraculous healing, after
which he wns cnught cnling hio; bed on the
bbath Day. We qu1ckly
' caught up with hi'&gt;
• accused healer in the
Temple. But, before \\e
could
condemn
Hi.,
actions '' ith the finer
scribal interpretations of
the LJ\1.. the Me~ tah
began to o;peak Ill some
rather profound terms.
Actuall). I did not pa)
too much attention to the
first parts until He s,ud,
"Search the Scriptures.
for in them 'ou think vou
ha\e eternal !Jfc But,
the)
actuall)
tcstif)

1

19 , 2010

The Government
of H~aven, Part 1

Ch er the centuries the
hornficd
me.
The
knO\\
1view
of Christianity has
'I hey were forcing Hun
tow,ml Golg,tlha for cru- edge that ,\1ount Moriah bcl!n drastically changed by
citixJOn. lie was going to had long been the divine- 1 the religious system. tllU:-.
hang to de.tth. The ly appointed place for His making Christianity a rclithought of the anguish of intercessory wounding gion when the truth is that
Alex
crucifixion
unncned me. and bruismg for our iniq- Chnstianity is not a religion
Colon
Ron
but rather a relationship
1 he) hnd already beaten uities amazed me.
Branch
After
sitting
sometime
\l.ith
lhe King of all kings
Him so badly that the
and The Lord of all lords.
sight made me sick to my in the heat of the sun, I
Both history and the Bible
stomach
came to notice that a tell us the account where
Ha' mg no compulsion sh,tde now covered me John the Baptist was tion the word "repent" and
folio\\. I left the city from above. Routinely preachmg in the wilderness the tenn "kingdom of heavto
about me." I knO\\ the
en' now you're talking a dif~
l a"' of God inside and through the Golden Gate looking up expecting a to preparing the way for the ferent lingo that they were
out. but that statement to\\ard Jericho Drmned see a cloud. I sa\\ instead Messtah.
In Matthew 3:1-2, we find familiar with but where
lrom Him got me to b) the hours of tension an eagle at the top of the
very far from it. To top it
thinking. Bn.,ed on thing&lt;&gt; ill\ohing Him. I had to tree. Its wings \\ere that "In tho e da)s came off, this statement made by
I heard Him say and rest. I walked off the. stretched out, '"'hich John the Baptist. preaching John totall)' challenged their
\\Orks I sa\\ H1m do da) s road a liHie w.t) s and sat made me understand the in the wilderness of Judaea, religious position as well as
and \\Ceks follo\\ing, I do'" n under an old dead reason for the shade. I did and saymg, Repent ye: for the Roman Empire.
Chrbtianity l'i not a relibegan to sec H1m clear!&gt; tree The dull thudding not move for concern that the kmgdom of heaven is at
gious position or a simple
in Scripture that He sounds of hnmmers-on- the engle might ny away 1 hand."
Of course the religious "believe"
system.
andecd was the Suffering o;pikes echoed from the - the shade felt so commen
of that dn) (Pharisees Christianity is a way of life
forting
to
my
soul.
The
Skull.
There
I
\\Cpt
bitSen ant
Mes~iah
ot
terly for so many reasons shade was more than cov- and Sadducees) were rather which provides freedom as
Isaiah.
erage from the ~un. It was confused. and challenged a child of God and makes a
'I he Passover v. as so concerning what I knew
a mes age from the Word Juhn"s message and po:.ition person a free moral agent in
clo'&gt;e as J hurried along from the Scril&gt;lures about of God.
as a called out one. to do the the earth not to be ruled,
Him
.
v. ath the Sanhednn lead"The
Sun
of
job
he was qualified to do. manipulated or controlled
In those moments also I
ership as they ushered
Righteousne:-.s
shall
arise
The
reason for this was b) man in any way, shape of
Him to Pilate at Gabatha. ''as O\ ercomc with a ter.
.
.
because the) could not form yet totally submitted
111
The) needed Pll.tte ·., con- rible consctousncss of With healtng
His understand this message.
to the ruler~hip of Christ.
sent to put Him to death hO\\ sinful I was I had wings."
John's mission was to
Christianity is God's
There \\as a sense of imp!) prepare the wa) of
before the da) ended. presumed to po~scss adeof people influencing
group
righteousness soul-heahng that O\er- Je us as Messiah. because and colonizing,
E'Yer)thing the Sunhednn quate
if you will,
dad conccrmng Him late because ol my kno\\ ledge came me m that moment. the people of his da) \\ere the earth. Like it or not. this
the pre\ soul&gt; C\ ening ,md of the La\\. But. I v.as far and I mwardly knew that living under the Roman is what God is all about.
from being right with it was because of" hat He ruler hip. All they kne\\ God is not looking for peocarl) that morm ng wa
God. and that thought was going through on the \\US the Ia\\ of Rome. and ple to be religious for He
expltcitl)' illegal.
I had not been allow caused m) soul to sink to Hill b) H1s own out- the law of the Pharisees.
hates that. Whv does God
The rehgtous crowd hate relig1on? Because reliinstde but v. as m position the point of utter frustra- stretched arms.
It \\as close to the sixth \\Ould ha\e accepted thts gion pro\ ides bondage and
to see sometime later tiOn. The thought that I
"hen the Roman soldiers had. misled seekers of hour. The eagle lifted bold tatement b) John 1f it eventuatlv death, while
elf-sen ing from the tree, and soared \\Ould ha\c been something Christianity provides a way
emerged with Ham out- God with
like th1s "Be OIT) for your of life, freedom, peace and
interpretations of the Law Heavenv.ard.
~idc of the common hall.
sms. for the law of hea\ en is joy in every day life. ...
at hand.'' ro be som is to we'll pick it up next week.
feel guilty or bad· about But for no\v ...
something wrong that has
"Repent (change your
been done. The law of heav- thinking) for the kingdom
en, to the Phansees "as all of heaven (heaven's gavethe) knew and they would mental system) is at hand.''
Make it a great week!
h \e run '' ith that statement
(Rel. Alex Co/On is pastor
n
uld
have
tned
to
a-.
ailabtilt)
·
a a111
"No thanks.
t e n J hn up to look hke a of Li~hthouse Assembly of.
I gueo;;s 1t"s fe to
God \\til ~J."e me ··
God in Gallipolis. On the
Well. as l&gt;Omc of ) ou there ha.., al\\ U) s been a relt 1ou man.
Internet at W'l\'wlagohio.org.f
Howe
..
er.
\\hen
)OU
menmay kno\\. C\ entuall) shortage of those "tllthe man dro\\ ned and mg to do God' \\Ork.
then
found
htm elf L\enJe uswasa,,areof
Tom
standtng
face to face thts a he noted tn
Johnson \\ 1th the Lord There he Matthc\\ 9:37 8. Once
,,a heard to a), "I aga1n. 1t's not \\hat ''e
B Y R EV. DAVID S CHMITT
don t under .. tand tt. "brmg" to the table:
SACRED HEART CHURCH
Lord.
I pra}Cd and first. at's God's table,
pr yed tor )OU to sa'e not ours; second. God
A human life IS full of contra~ts and choice::.. Perhaps this
reJ.dmg th1&lt;&gt;. I made tt!) me: \\h} didn't )Ou?" w til eqUJp us for the ts Ob\IOU during the spnng of the )Car. during the church
season of Lent. more than an) other time of the )Car.
"Ho'"
high's
the To \\ h1ch the Lord work.
v. ater. momma?" Not at replied. "I don't undcrNow. tn th1s on for Winter goes into springtime. The cold \\Cather become
all .ts h1gh as )Csterday. st.1nd 1t, either. I sent a· size: "1 lo-oked for God. \\anncr. Winter's long dark day::. become lighter. Trees.
s1nce it is nO\\ Tuesday: canoe. then a motorboat so I climbed the h1ghest flowers and grass change into their springtime dress.
In Dcutcronnm). God tells his people to choose life
the River has cre~ted. and, finall). a helicopter steeple. God said
rather
than death - "e are to choo...e grace rather than evil,
and is gmng down. Still, to save )OU!''
'Get down, for .I d\\ ell
Do you suppo:-.e it's among my people!'" good wthcr than sin. This is our choice. our human choice.
I'm reminded of a ~tory
told about a man caught possible l&gt;Ome of u are We're in the world to It is al\1. a) sour choice. ~o exceptions.
The season of Lent strengthens us so that we can make
up 10 a flood some time like that! That perhaps serve the Lord. and that
moral cho1ces. Every Wednesday during Lent (at
good
\\C
arc
too
bus)
looking
back. w1th the water so
can t~ke many forms. Trinity United Methodb.t Church m Point Pleasant) and·
high he had to climb out at the tree&lt;&gt; so \\e don't While Divine interven- every Thurc;day (at !\1n on United Methodist Church)
on the roof to of Ius see the forest? Or, con- tion is a)\\ ays a possa- there is a Lenten Luncheon follo\\ed by a brief prayer serhouse to avoid being ' erscl), thnt we are all bilit). God forbid we \ tce. The meal IS excellent and the prayer sen ice anq
drO\\ ned.
There
he too aware ot the forest should fatl to accept or preaching - rotated among 'ariou-.. churches of our com·
prrt)Cd God to sa\C him. but are agnorant of the extend a helping hand munitie
i~ just ''hat I need to remmd me of God's love
Lo and behold. two 'arious trees '' ithout "hen the opportunit) and His sn' ing plan.
men came b) in a c,moe "luch there \\ ould be no arise .... Tho e ~itting on
E\CI') Fnda) dunng Lent our church (and many other.
and offered to take him forest? (The human the roof of their hou e denornmations) ask u to ab tain from meat. We al o
to safet). "No thank"i." mind betng "hat it is might find the 'iew to ob en e the Stations of the Cro::.:- on Friday e' ening:-. a devo-the man sa1d. "God will and the "a) tt IS, some be impre~si' e. but God tion that reflect upon the journe) that Jesu ... took from His
save me.'' The tv. o men of us nrc the one ""a), isn't impressed by thelf condemnation to Hi death and burial. lt b a \Cry mO\ing
paddled a\\ ay. and some and the rest of us the being there!
pm)cr and ne,er fails to remind me of the countless tcp
ume later an-other man other.)
We need to a. void nnct hrcaths and chokes Our Lord made for IO\ e of us. Since
A It hough the precedcomes b) in a motorboat
being ~o heavenly mind- Our Lord willed to share our humanity "He ''as like us in
to render his assistance ing stor) is entirely fab- ed we end up being of e\el)' \\3)' except sin." He also had to turn to His Father m
and rescue the nu1n. ricated, 1t underscores no earthly good. Rather. tru&lt;;t and lme and resignation man) times during the hours
Again the man on the the fac:t God u es ordt- let's get our act(~) of His passiOn. to v. ill huu...elf to keep going ami to for&amp;ivc.
We made. us did Jesu-.. choices constantly. Somet1mes
roof
replies,
"~o nary people 111 nccomtogethe-r and, in the the) arc mude "lowly and carefull). At other times they are
thanks. God will save pllsh some ordinnr) and.
then again. some not-so- "ords of the great made quick!). St)metimes we choose wisely - in accord
me."
missional'). "ith God'~ grace - and at other times we choose foolish·.
After a while, as the ordin~uy and e\ en cxlra- Baptist
William
Care)
I) and selfish!) ami shamcfull). E' ery human choce ha~ .
ordmary
things.
One
of
\\ aters continued to rise.
a he! icopter appeared m) aunts uc;ed to have a "expect great things c;ornething in it that •~ dc:-ireable. but all too often the
O\ erhead. ,md the pi lot plaque on her wall, on from from God and "good" that \\ e choo e i fieetmg or partial or 'elfish and
,md his crew lowered a "hich \\,\ \HJttcn the attempt great things for foolish. "The \\orld. the fle,h and the de\ il" tempt u... tQ
rope ladder for the n1.m folio" ing: "God isn't God.'' Mn) you do the choose Ic.,ser. partial good' Je~us alv. ay.., chose the g'reater
good, e\Cn though at times that \\as a \cry difficult choice
to ascend and be saved. concerned about ) our same.
to make. Pra)er and fasting and alms£hinc 'trcngthen u to
(
Re\.
Tom
Johnson
is
pa~­
l•or the th1rd time the ability. or your capabilichao
e the greater good e\en though 'ometimes \\ith all:
tor
of
Trinin
Church
in
ty.
The
only
thing
wh1ch
man reJected the offer
heart
it's a choice \\C don't want to make.
•
our
Pomero).)
matters
to
God
1&lt;;
your
ot sah.ttion. sa)ing yet

How high's the water?
G '
the "e,uher
ret.: ntl) (no the hi her
n usual rJ\er. I'm
mded of the song b)
1 te Johnny (a h
"Ho\\ hagh 's the "ater
rnomn ,..
Here
tn
Porn ro\ th1 \1ond }
n
t lt
!J htl) ht1!h
er th n 44 fe t. but m )
et
bit h1gher
} et
before the rt\ c:r ~resh
Those of 'ou "ho re
"veteran~.;" ·of floodtn'
10 the past seem to be
qu1te sto1t .tbout the
current lc\el of the
water.
Recause thil&gt;
church has hnd problems related to that in
the past, some here arc
read)' to do what is necessar) should an) problem(&lt;;) yet arise. (The)
prom1se me tt \\ill be an
expenence I' II not soon
forget!)
Mean\\hlle.
dO\\ntov.n. tt' ''bustnec;s a&lt;&gt; u ual , ..
Thts is as it should be!
u are. after .~11. men
v. omen of great
,uth in the Lord. and I
knO\\ you not onl) "talk
the \\ alk" but also "walk
the talk.'' You kno\\
come what llHl) God
\\ill provide. you are
bond fide "over-comers." Ye.th, boy - 1t
does me good to be
around you!
r·or many of you. thts
1" no big deal. The way I
f1gure it. it and ""hen
you start getting n little
"edgy" about the high
v. ater thnt will be mv
cue to do the snmc.
Otherwtsc. I'm gomg to
concentrate on mectmg
my deadline fo'r this
here .trttcle. (If )Ou'1e

H uman beings and choices

•

�Page AS

.,The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 19,

Legislative intern
program announced

2 010

EHS dinner theater

SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@ MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

COLUMBUS - State Senator .limm) Stewar1. R-Aibany,
recently announce~ the Oh1o l..cgisl,lth ,, Service Ct)mmi:;sion
"'S :_un·e~tly acceptmg aJ?pli~ation~ ror lls 13~month legislative
mtcmsh1p progmm. wh1ch Is dcstgned to 111\C collci.'C nradut
•
e
'i' o
il e~ an opportumty to get hands-on cxpelicncc workmg in the
Ph to l...cg1~lature and prepare them for careers in politics. gm:emrnent, law and many other related !it'lc!&lt;..
~
L.."iC, a ~nnpa11isan agency that provides legislative service~
to the &lt;?h1o Geneml As5ocmbly, sponsors 24, full-time, paid
mtemsh1ps en~~· ye~~. for graduates of a fmn·-year college
.degree program. l'radltlonally, 20 interns arc as-.i¥ned to \Vork
lor one of the four party caucus s-House Rcpubhcans, House
t&gt;cmocrats, Senate Republicans and Senate Democrat-... These
'n.tem:-. work. djrectly \\ ith legislator:- and staff to perform con"M1tu7nt services, resea~l'h (Xllicy issu~. re}X&gt;rt on committee
heanngs .a~d floor s~ss1ons and attend meetings.
In. adchtJon, ~wo mtems.are assig1.1cd ~o work directly for
LSC a:ststmg '.n tl~e draft1_ng of le&amp;Islution, legal and fiscal
..resean:h, momtonng votmg set-.::.Jon~ of the Hou~e and
\Senate or at.tending committee hearings. There are abo tv. o
mtern~ de~•gnated to work as production assistants for
Ohio G~ver!1ment ·r?Jecommunications, hclpmg to broadcast le~tslat1ve sc.sstons and prodLH.'c other governmental.
-educut•onal and.lllstorical programming .
. Intern are patd $25.400 to S27 ,400 annuall\ and are eli-gi~lc for benefits like _other state employees. •
T~e LSC mternsh1p -..erves as a valuable professional
~teppmg ~tone ~?t only for young Ohioans who arc looking
~or JObs 111 p~l!tt~~ and government, but also for students
\vho are cons1dcnng graduate school or are still unsure what
career path. t? go down:· explained Ste\\·art. ''The program
tallows part1c1pants to get a fir::.t hand look at how laws arc
;made in C?hio, \\.hile providmg an oppm1unit) to work oneton-one \\ !th a dtvcrsc group of legislator:- and staff. learn
-a!J?ut Ohto history and develop important career and life
~k1lls. 1 encourage college graduate~ in southeast Ohio who
:arc inter~sted in public -..ervice to apply.",
. LSC IS currently .acc~pting application.&lt;&gt; for the 20 II
~ntem class. !'II apphcatwns must be postmarked by April
I to be considered for the program. The application deadJine for the telecommunications internship is ~1ay 31. To
~ualify. applicants. muM ~av~ earned a bachelor's degree
~efore the mtemshtp begms Ill December 20 I0. 1'\o political experience is required.

For more information about the LSC imemship please
'\'isit Hww.lsc.state.oh.uslimemship or call (61-1) 466f-!61 ~. Applicatic!n materiC!ls. should be !nmled to Ohio
iJ..egtslallve Serwce Commtsstml, lnterll.\lup Coordinators.
'\ft&gt;m Riffe Cemer, 77 South Hi~:h Street. Ninth Flu01~
Columbus, Ohio 43215.

Ohioans get to vote on
flew statue for U.S. Capitol

,
,

~

•

1

Submitted ph.

Members of the ~enior _class at Eastern ~igh School will present "Who Poisoned His Meatball," at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. T
d1nner theater w1ll begtn at 6:30 p.m., w1th the play performance at 7:30 p.m. Shown in their respective roles are Sam '
Rucker, Breea Buckley, Mandy Roush, Hannah West, Darci Bissell and Chelsi Kearns, and back, Haley Perdas, Andrew
B~nedum, Samuel Evans, Cody Ridgway, Amanda Wolfe, Andrea Buckley. Dakota Collins, Titus Pierce, Jake Lynch,
1 M1key Johnson and Sam1 Cummins.

!

1- - - - - - - - - -

OHIO BR I EFS
1

Park to reopen without
troubled coaster
MASO~ (AP) - An Ohio amusement park says a popular but troubled
wooden roller coaster \\ill remain
closed for the upcoming season.
Kingo; Island vice president and general manager Greg Scheid says he·~
not pleased \\ ith how 1he Son of Beast
is perfonning, nine months after it was
shut down when a rider reported she
burst a blood 'esseI in her brain.
Park spokesman Don Helbig says
the coa:-.ter is structurallv safe but officials want to improve the !o,moothnes:-.

TOLEDO (AP) -The people of Ohio will get a chance
-to tell their lawmakers whose graven image should repre.sent their state in the U.s·. Capitol's Statuary Hall.
After )ears of talking about which notable Ohioan\ statue should replace the one of William Allen - a 19th cent ury congressman and governor who supported Southern
lave owners and portrayed blacks as savages - officials
~re putting the question to an infom1al plebi~cite. The vot:ing begins Saturday.
With the help of some advisers. a bipartisan legislative
committee has sorted through about 90 possibilities and
ettled on a few finalists.
Among them: im entorThomas Edison, athlete Jcs~c Owens
.and writer Harriet Beecher Stowe. Others are .lame~ Ashley.
lJlysses S. Grant. William ~JcCulloch, Judith Resnik, Albert
~abin, Harriet Taylor Upton and Wilbur and Orville Wiight.
Voting runs through June 12 at the Statehouse and 35 other
ites affiliated with the Ohio Hbtorical Society, the
Cincinnati Museum Center and the Cleveland-based Western
~eserve Historical Society. The vote is open to Ohioans of
tftll ages. Ballots also may be downloaded at W\\ \\ .JegacyTorohio.org and mailed ore-mailed for tabulating. All voters
.must sign their ballots and write-in~ \\on't be counted.
The committee will not be bound b\ the vote when it
!makes a recommendation to the full House and Senate. but
Jhe chairman. state Sen. Mark Wagoner, said he expects it
will be the most important factor.
"We wanted to get input from Ohioans from across the
·tate on who should represent us in Statuary Hall." he said.
,.'We also wanted to drive traffic to Ohio historical ~ites. We
:know that for the last couple of year:-, they've had difficult
)budgets, and an increase in traffic will help."
Ohio Historical Society spokesman Kim Schuette said the
ote is a way to gauge attitudes. not an "official pnxess.''
''We want to engage people of all ages:' :-he said.
The chosen statue will join one of President James
~arfield. an O hio native. already in Statuary Hall, where
each state has two pieces.
Among those w~o helped the commi~tcc identify. the
)finalists were Washmgton Court House H1gh School IHstorv teacher Paul LaRue and his students. They have been
,Pulling for Ashley. an abolitioni&lt;;t who lh-ed in P01tsmouth
':lnd was the fi rst U.S. representative to call for a
Constitutional amendment to out Ia\\ slaven.
• LaRue said the students arc also researching the other
.candidates.

Ohio patrol: Guard points
gun at BWC meeting
PORTSMOUTH (AP) - The State
Highway Patrol says a man working as
a securit) guard at a ~tate office
entered an workers· compensation
bureau meeting and pointed a gun at

partkipanb before leaving.
Sixtv-three-vear-old
Robert
Montgomery of Beaver wa~ arraigned
at Portsmouth Municipal Court on
Thursday on one count of misdemeanor inducing panic.
He was released from the Scioto
Countv Jail after posting a $1.000
bond follov. ing his Wednesday arrest.
The
High\\ ay
Patrol
says
Montgomery is a guard at the Ohio
Industrial Commi!)sion office in
Port~mouth in southern Ohio. He's
accu~ed of entering the meeting at the
oftice at about 2:50 p.m. Wednesda\
and lea\ in!! after a short exchan!!e of
\\ords. :\o ~one wa~ hurt.
~

Holzer Clinic is pleased to announce the addition of
accomplished Nephrologist, Gopi K. Gundur:nalla, MD.
Dr. Gopi is certified in Nephrology by the American
Board of Internal Medicine. Dr. Gopi's specialties
include:
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t
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•
I

of the ride.
The Son of Beast was closed for
nearly a year of reconstruction in 2006
and 2007 after a ~tructural failure
re:-.ulted in injunes to more than tv.o
doten people:•
The park"-.. opening day is April 17.

"'•

HOLZER

I

JIOlllR
('IJWC'

C LINIC

�·---- - ----·-

Inside

-··---·-,---~:-----~--

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Resdtorm split "ith Madonna, J&gt;agc B2

Quinn: foot is fine, Page 84

ORTS

Friday, March 19,2010

OSU's Turner eyes NCAA run, s arting with UCSB.
f.d~~Ay. MArch. tll

Girls Tennis
Spring Valley at Point Pleasant, 4 15
pm
Boys Tennis
Sprng Va ey at Pont Pleasant 4 15

MILWAUKI!E (AP)
c\ hack
lllJUt y to become perhaps
the nation's best player, and
hts late game long shot to
beat Michigan in the Big
Ten tournament has been
pla)ed 0\er and O\er on TV
sports htghlight shows.
WiUt the NBA player
compansons ulread) flying
around. Turner kno\\ s that a
long run in the NCAA tournament is JUst about the on!)'
thmg that's mi-.sing from his
re ume.
•
"I defimtel) do." Turner
satd "We definite!)' \Vant to
make a long run. and \\e're
in it to win 11."
Turner and No. 2-seeded
1 Ohio State hope that tourn&lt;~­
ment run begin~ on Friday,
'' nh a first-round game
agamst No. 15 seed UC
Santa Barbara.
After blo\\ ing a comfort·
able lead in last year's opening round loss to Siena.
Ohio State coach Thad

1 lie returned from

pnt

SDluniAY.ll1u.rcll20
Baseball
Bu:ch at Haf'nan (DH) 2 p m
Softball
Chapm8J1V1 e at Po4rt Pleasant 2 p m
Hunt ngton St .roe at Wahama (OH) l'

am

Track
F •st Ca Invite at Point Pleasant Noon

Mon&lt;lay, .March 22
Baseball
Ca noun County at WahnrT'a 4 30 p 1'1
Softball
Calhoun County at Wat&gt;ama 4 JO p m
Girls Tennla
Pont Pleasant at Poca 4 30 p rn
BoyeTennls
Pont Pleasant at Poca. 4 30 p m
1\icGay. Mu.rch.23
Baseball
to at Po1n1 Pleasant, 5 30 p m
Softball
•
P'casant at SJSSonvi le 6 p m
Wayne at Wahama 5 30 p.m
Track
Hannan, Pomt PI sant at Polnt
Pleas::nt Quad

PROVIDENCE,
R.I.
(AP)
Who kne\\ that all
this time Ohio u~ed the
regular season as a "armup act?
The Bobcats' time to
shine is
March
T h e
!VI A C
&lt; '.. '.,•• •
tour n a..
m e n t
....
champton
.~B o beat~,
who had a
I o ~ 1n g
record m
c on ference play,
Bassett
h a \ e
f o u n d
their\\ 3) in the on I) month
that matter and no\\ boast
an NCAA tournament win
for the first time in 27

I

PPHShosting 1st
track meet at
newfacility
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va
J·or the first time
since 1981 , Point Pleasant
will be hosting a track and
field meet this Saturday
when the inaugural Hol1..er
Medical Center First Call
Invitattonal takes place at the
new Ohio Valley Bank Track
at PPHS
The F1rst Call in\ ite \\ hich '' ill be the fin.t trnck
and field meet held 111 the
state of West Virginia this
spring - will ha\ e eight
teams competing 111 the n~n
e\ent.
Bestdes
Pomt
others schools
til be Scott. Logan,
Wirt. Midland Trail
and Wa)'ne.
There will be a ribbon-cutting ceremony pnor to the
slurt of the meet to chri ten
Point Pleasant's new track
and field complex.

Mason Rec
Summer signups
MASON. W.Va. - The
Mason
Recreation
C&gt;epartment \\ill holding
summer baseball and softball signups evel) Monday
and Saturday in March at the
Hair Shop in Mason.
Monday signups will run
from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. nnd
Saturday signups from 10
a.m. until noon.
For more infonnation.
contact James Pauley at
(304) 773-9107 or Rick
Keams at (304) 882-2312.

Longaberger
Basket Giveaway
POINT
PLEASAr...'T,
W.Va.- Th~ Point Pleasant
High School solthall l}ooslers are having n Longaherger
Basket Giveaway in the
month of April. A new basket will be drawn on each
working duy of the month.
Tickets are now on snle at
the Mason Jar in Point
Pleasant.
v

Please see Buckeyes. 8 4

Neal C. Lauron/Columbus Dlspatch/MCT

Ohio States head coach Thad Matta celebrates w1th a piece of the net after the Buckeyes
beat Minnesota, 90-61. and won the Big Ten championship tournament at Conseco
Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana, Sunday.

Ohio stuns Georgetown in tournament opener RedStorm

District 13 all-star
games Monday
atGAHS
CENTENARY, Ohio
After numerou year at the
Unnersit) of Rio Grande,
the District 13 Coache
Association will be holding
tts annual all-stctr game at the
new g)mnasium of Gallia
Academ) High School
The D1strict 13 All-Star
gumes both bO) s and gtrb
\\til take place Monday.
M reb 22 nd wtll feature
em r p J\er; sel~ted to the
D I 1 t ms tht pa t basketball cason
The gtrls game wtll c;tart at
. and the boy \\ill pia)
around 8 p.m. There
be n lam dunk and
three-pomt
hootout m
bemeen contest . Admisston
i S'

Matta smd his team will be
more tocuscd thl'&gt; tirne
around. "llte G,tUchos, wiilncrs of the lltg West tournament, ha\e a c;trong scoring
111
guard
combination
Orlando Johnson and for" ard James Nunnalh.
"We know \\hat ~they're
capable of." Gauchos guard
Jame&lt;&gt; Powell said. "But (if)
we come in scared or intimIdated. then \\e prett) much
lost the game before we
even started."
UC Sunta Barbara promises to play tough perimeter
defenc;e, then w1ll keep its
fingers crossed that its best
outside !&gt;hooter:-. all get hot
at the same time.
Still, UCSB coach Boh
WJIIinms kno\\s \\hut his
team ic; lacing 111 Turner,
de..cribing film study of the
Bucke\es' versatile ,md athletic tar as "a little bit like
going to watch a horror

.

'{~J
~·

~ears

Georgetown might \\ant
to sktp the tourne) next
time tt's in Pro\ idencc
Armon Bassett scored 32
point:, to lead the 14thseeded Bobcats to a convincing 97-83 win over the
Hoyas 111 the .\li'dwest
Regwnal.
How ahout a standing 0
for Ohio!
"We ma) not be better
team,Just got to be a better
team on a given night,''
Bassett :,aid.
In earl) March, no one
expected Ohio (22-14) to
be in this position. The
team had JUSt finished n 7 ·
9 season in Mid-American
Conference
pia)
and
entered the conference

a

tournament as the ninth
seed.
Four\\ ins later. Ohio was
in the 65-tcam field.
Forty minutes later, the
Bobcats arc in the second
round.
Coach
John
Groce
\\Ouldn't call it the biggest
win m tc,un htstory.
"I certain!) think tt's one
of them," he satd. "What it
does more th,m anything i .
I thmk 1t ''' es trcmendou
belief \\tth our guy m
\\hat we 're domg, m our
!\)stem··
Ohio seiLed the lead
early on its 3-pomt hoot·
ing and ne\Cf had a erious
letdov. n the re t of the ''a).
The Ho)' as (23-11) made a
&lt;;mall run m the econd half
that cut a JQ-point lead
dO\'&lt;n to e\en.
No \\Orrie . D.J. Cooper,
who scored 23 points.
made a 3 to the delight of
all those green-clad fans
"ho made the trip and
cheered them on the \\hole
'' ay. The Bobcat-. cruised
from there and have won
six ::.trnight games.
Ohio joined f\turray
State, which knocked off
Vanderbilt 66-65 ut the
buzzer, as the I\\ 0 big upset
\\inners Thursday.
"There \\Crc some times
where the onl) people that
reall) believed in \\hat we
''ere doing and ''here we
\\ere he,tded \\ere the gu)S
in our locker room and our
administration.''
Groce
said.
Chris •Wnght led the

(23~11)

hi~

third-seeded Hoyas
returning for
junior seawith
28
points. on.
Georgetown coach John
''I'm ready to go back
Thompson m said a da) and ee how J can help m)
earlier his team \\aS pia)- team next )Car,·· he aid.
The B1g East took a beating thetr best basketball of
the season. It certain!) did- ing on Thursda) \\ ith the
n't extend into the touma- Ho)as and sixth-seeded
ment opener.
Marquette bofh losing.
The Jloya5&gt; looked sense~: Notre D.tme also lost to
tiona! in \\inning the first Old Dominion. Secondthree games of the Big East seeded Villo,nova needed
tournament before losm O\ erume to eek past Robert
to \\ e.-.t \ irgmw m lt e \1o n
I er in the dav in
champlon-.htp
- the ·Big
appeared to h \ e
4u. rter .
uoned them&lt;&gt;c:h e~
e MAC tournnlegtttmate Fmal four
M\ P, made 11 look
threat.
After a 3-pomter
It wa.-.n t to be.
t 39-26, he ju~t
"\\ e re ~ thought \\ e
to\\ ard the crO\\ d
could m k some nm e m
.,hrug and smiled.
tht
tournament."
led b) 12 at halfGeorgeto\\n guard Au tm ttme and kept on rolhng.
Freeman satd. "\\e rcall) Cooper
picked
didn't imagine we \\OUid 1 Georgeto\\n's Jason Clark
be one-and-done."
cle,m, spnnted IO\\ard the
The Hoyas had a rough basket and tossed the ball
time in Pro\ idence back in backward high over his
1989. too. \\hen they nar- head \\here a streakmg
rO\\)) beat No. 16 seed DeVaughn
Washington
Princeton 50-49. At le.tst slammed home the aile)they \\On in '89.
oop in the play of the
This time the Hoyas were game.
flustered and frustrated
The Bobcats have somethroughout. \\'hen Greg thmg to shO\\ for a turbuMonroe was on his back lent ca\ion. The) opened
after being \\ histled for an conference pin) \\ tth four
offense foul. he pounded straight lo~sc\i, lost one
the court in disbelief and pin) er for the sea~;on \\ ith a
anger.
broken
hand
and
Monroe had 19 points \\.tshmgton ''a suspended
and 13. rebound . and fi\e game lor team 'iotaHollis Thomp on scored 16 tions. Groce C\en kicked a
points.
pla)er off the team.
Monroe, the 6-foot II
''I'm excited for our gu) s
center with i'\BA pro pects. \\ ith e\ Cf) thing the)·,. e
appeared to lean tO\\ ard been through," Groce said.

Hafner powers Indians oVer Cincinnati
GOODYEAR. Ariz. (APl
- Jeremy Sowers had a better dav than his beloved
alma n1ater.
Sowers, whose spnng
debut \\as deluyed by a sore
shoulder, ga\e up a t\\o-run
homer to Cincinnati's Jonny
Gomes in the second mning
but Travis Hafner hit a tapemeasure shot in the fifth as
Cleveland rallied for a 6-2
"in O\ er the Reds on
Thursda), the Indians'
fourth straight O\ er their
ne\\ Arizona housemates.
So\\ ers pitched t\\ o painfree innmgs. The left-hander's only discomfort came
nften\ ard when he was
informed ttiat Vanderbilt
was knocked out of the
NCAA tournament on a
l buzzer-heating shot
by
1 i\tu1Tay State.
"Was it a real shot'!"
Sowers us ked. ''] had thl.!m
in the S\\eCt 16. I thought
they could at least do thai. I
liked the match up '' ith
Butler. I hat stink::.."
Hafner's blast in the fifth
off Enerio Del Rosario
broke a 2-all ue, and
Cle,eland's We Hodges hit
a \\ tnd-aided homer off
Cmcmnati starter Homer
J

Baile~
in
the fourth
us
th~
Indians
impro\Cd
to
4-0
against the
Red~. \\ ho
hegan sharing Goodyear
Ballpark with their northern
Ohio neighbors this spring.
Like one of the NC AAs
lower-seeded team . Sowers
is tl) ing to fight off elimination \\ith the Indian
The 26-)Cctr-old's career
has been a serie of highs.
lows and m-betwecns. He
spent lnst season bouncing
back and forth bct\\cen
Clc\eland and Triple-t\
Columbus. He even had his
first trip to the bullpen.
This )ll&lt;lr. he's not sure
\\hat the Indians have 111
:-.tore for him.
lkcau-.c of the inllammation in his 'lwuldcl, Sowers
has been dropped 1rom the
race for one Of I\HI openings
in Cle\ eland's starting rotation. He could mnkc the
opemng-d.t) roster as a
rei ic\ cr, hut thaJ 's ns,uming
he'!) able to thro\\ stnkes.
get batters out and that his
shoulder holds up.

Sower:-. b out of option .
'' hich mean:-. the lndian5.
ma) have to put him on
\\ahcrs.lt's also pos:-.ible he
c..:ould begin the season on
the disabled list.
At this point. SO\\ers. '' ho
"a, :selected in the ftrst
round b) both the Reds
(2001 &gt; and lndtans (2004)
just wants to pitch.
"Ultimately, it"s just about
being health)," he ,aid. "If
m) place isn't here and it's
somewhere ebe. that' fine.
Whatever they decide is
fine. I'\ e been treated
exceptionally \\ell in this
orgamz~tion.lf I \\alked out
that door nnd the) said.
'goodbye,' th.tt \\ould be
fine."
Indians manager ~ lnnn)
Ac..:ta \\a:-. impres:-.ed with
Sowers' debut.
"He was abk to cnmp~te
und throw the ball \\ ith
some pop considerillg \\hat
he has gone through the last
couple Jlll)flths." Acta said.
"He made t\\ o mistakes, a
single and a homer. but
other than that. it's a ~;tep m
the right direction for hmt."
Hafner's bla-.t to center
\\Cnt an estimated 440 feet.

smacking off the giant green
screen behind the outfield
wall. It" ns another positi,·c
sign for the Indians and
Hafner. "ho hit ju-.t 16
homers la"t season. that he
nm) finall) be back after
undergoing surgef) in 2008.
"He'f&gt; feeling good." Acta
satd of his DH "He's getting all the extra \\Ork that
he's asked for. and rm ,ure
th&lt;~t if the gu) is heahh) that
he' gomg to help us out."
Gomc ts tr) ing to\\ in the
Reds' regular Job mleft and
·
he st~engthenetl hts. t;ase
\\ tth hts homer and a dt\ mg.
backh,mded. catch to rob
~1ark GrudLtelanek of extra
b~~c:"
,
I m tr)'mg. to get the
".hole sand\\ tch together.
hll l~tl-l~ander-,, nght-ha~ders. sa1d C.on~e..,, who ts
ct~mpct1ng , \\ 1th
Chr!s
DtckNson lor the ... pot tn
ll'ft. "I'm tr) ing ll1 "htm
them I could pia) defense·
I'm out there .goms. I 00 percent all the tune. I \\ant to
:,hm\ them I haH~ range I
made the pin) tad~)· I got
one m the center-lleld gap
the other da). J'm tl)ing to
make the non heliC\('r".
behc\er .''

close out
spr1 ng tr1 p
•

•

B Y MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL ro THE SENTINEL

ORMOND BEACH, Aa.
- The Univer,ity of Rio
Grande RedStorm baseball
t~am closed out a :-.uccessful
spring trip with a doubleheader sweep of Ashford
Unhersity on Wednesday.
Rio \\On the first game in
six inning~. 11-1 and held
on for an 8-7 ''in in game
(\\ o .

Rio Grande ( 19-4) racked
up 14 hits in the game one
'ictof). Junior leftfielder
Michael L) nch (L) ndhurst,
OH) led the offen e as he
\\ ent 2-for-3 with n triple
and three RBI's. Jumor
short-.top Brad Konrad
(Maumee. OH) and senior
desi !!nated hitter Chris
Mahon (Hamilton, OHl
both went 2-for-3 and both
had one RBI in the game.
Senior centerfielder Ryan
Yakura (Pickering. ONT)
was 2- for-4 \dth t\\ o run::.
knocked in and :-&gt;enior
catcher T) ler Plumpton
(Peterborough. ONT) wa:-.
2-for-4 with a double and an
RBI.
Freshman outfielder Zach
Jordan (Proctorville. OH)
came through '' ith a big
t\\ o run single \\ hile senior
third baseman T\ ler Schunk
(Cincinnati. OH) \\ent lfor-3 \\ ith. a double and
junior
fir-.t
baseman
Franci-.co
Ramirez
(Columbus. OH) \\3 1-for3 and dro\ e in a run.
Junior second baseman
Christian Frias (Salinas.
PR) \\as 1-for-1 \\ ith a twoba...e hit to hi.., credit.
Freshman southpa\~ Ryan
Robertson (\Va\ erl). OH)
remained unbeaten a... he
improYed to 5-0 on the season. Robcrhon allo\\ ed
onh one hit and one run in
5 i/3 inning" on the hill.
He struck out six. \\alked
I\\O and plunked I\\O batter:-.
•.
Fre ... ~man Enc Ford
(Chagnn. Falb. OH) came
on an~ p~tched the final 2/3
of an mmng.
Game t\\ ~ ' ' 3 " much
clo-.er thank-. 111 large part !0
-.orne \en "hak) R10
Grande defense. Ashford
(l-l2) Jumped out 10 a 5-0
lead \\tth fi,e run in the
econd inning off Rio tarter
Je,sc BrO\\ n (Mt. Pleasant.
NC). Bro\\ n was a \ ictim
of the porou" defen ...e a:-.
tmh one of the runs that
1 t.'fO~scd the plate "as
c.tmed.
I Th~ jumor lefty lasted
I fi\C innings. He allt)\\ed
fi\ c hits and four \\ alk~ to
go nlonl! with three strike·
outs. ~
A,hford'.., lead \\Us shortJhed a" Rio Grande
stom1ed back \\ ith fi, e nut

I ..

Please see RedStorm. 84

..

�~--- . ,. -- ----~------------- ,- -

-

... ~

-

Page B2 • 1lle Daily Sentinel

...

-

www.m yd a iJysentincl.com

J~riday,

March

19, ~010

RedStorm splits with Mountaineers motivated entering NCAA tournament ·
No. 14 Madonna
Bv M ARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAl TO THE SENTINEl

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
The University of Rio
Grande RedStorm softball
team fncrd
.1
tough
challenge
0

11

Thutsdny
afternoon at
Stanley
Evan Field
when the)
played host
to
NAJA
14
No.
Mills
Madonna.
Madonna
came away with a 2-1 \\in m
extra innings in game one.
Rio responded \\ ith n 2-1
walk off \ ictory in the o;econd game.
Game one was a pitcher's
duel with both hurlers making key pitches when the)
had to, to stave off threats.
Rio's Anna Smith (Ross,
01:1) desened a better fate
as she took the loss. Smith
(6-3) scattered seven hits in
eight innings while allowing
only one earned nm. She
struck two and walked one.
Madonna's Jessica Irwin
(6-0) stmggled with her control, desp1te ca!T) mg a nohitter into fifth inning. She
fanned 12 batters in the
game. but v.alked nine. She
was not hurt by all the free
pas es as Rio stranded 12
runners on base.
The top of the order lor
Rio Grande produced four
of the fi,. e hit in the game
as both senior centerfielder
Leah Hamman (Lexmgton,
OH) and freshman third
baseman Jaymie Rector
(Heath, OH) went 2-for-4 at
the plate. Hamman cored
the lone mn and had a stolen
base.
Smith recorded the other
Rio hit. which tied the gam!
at 1-1 in the bottom ol the
fifth.
Bnttney Sc:ero v. ent 2-for4 to lead the Cru aders .
She cored a run and
knocked m the first run of
the game in the top of the
fifth. Amber Sha) had two
hits w1th a double and dro\e

home the game winner in
the top of the eighth
Game two wa&lt;; almost a
carbon copy of the first con
test as Rio's Allison Mills
(West Chester. OH) and
Madonna's Hallie M!nch j
beu~rcd what the two pu~hcr~ 111 game one had done.
Madonna. w~nt up 1-0 in
the second mmng on an RBI
d&lt;?uble from Eri~a Lan~less.
Rw ~nswered wtth a :"mgle
run tn the fifth to tte the
game at 1-1
llamman
scored after Madonna second sacker Bnttany Scero
dropped a pop up.
.
Hamman would wm the
game in ex.citing fa hion
when she h1t a home run
0\ er th.e left centt:rfield
fence \\ uh two outs m the
bottom of t~e e':enth.
Hamman v.as ~-for-4 111 the
game and scored both Rio
runs.
It was the first loss of the
season for the Crusaders
(10-~).

Mtlls (3-2) was m~sterful
as sh~ went the, dtstan.ce,
allowmg only t~n11 hJt~.
She stntck out SIX hatters
and ~alked only two.
.
. Mmch (4-1) allowed fout
htts ~nd. one eamed run 111 6
21~ mmngs. She had 10
st~~eouts.
,
Fortunate!) we get the
walk-off from Lea~ becau e
our of!~nse.wal&gt; ~little dead
today. ~md ~~o Gran~.e
hea~ coach Da\ld Pyles. I
don t know. I gue.ss you
ha\e thost: days~ v.e re glad
to get a wm agam~t the No.
I~ te.am Ill the natlo~ and to
~\ m 1t the '' ay we dtd there
m t~e second game \\asAramatte ,.and a vef) excnmg
game.
Pyles is hoping this \\ill
be a confidence booster for
his team. who i~ stmggling
offensi,•ely at present.
"We're not hitting. there are
no ifs ands and buts about it
and that's wh~ we're sta)in?,
aftcr to pract 1ce right nov..·
he a.d
Rto Grande v.1ll get back
mto Mid South Conference
play on Friday and Saturda)
at Georgetown Colleg!!·
Frida) 's doubleheader wtll
begin at 3 p.m.

Guy lifts Hathaway Brown
to win over Walsh Jesuit
COLt:MBUS. Oh1o (AP)
- Alanna Guy's threepointer from the right comer
with 39 seconds left lifted
defending champion Shaker
Heights Hathaway Brown to
a 53-48 victory over
Cuyaho~a Falls Walsh Jesuit
in a D1vision 11 semifinal
Thursday at the Ohio girls
basketball tournament
The score was tied at 48
when Guy came off a screen
and scored her only points of
the game. Walsh Jesuit's
Rachel Thenot mi sed a
three-point attempt on the
next possesston. Vanessa
Smith and Mylan \Voods
made one free throw ap1ece
in the waning seconds to
close out the scoring.
Woods. The Associated
Press Division II Player of
the Year, had 15 points, mtd
teammate Alex1s Dobbs
added 12.
Hathaway Brown (22-4)
plays
either Kettering
Archbishop
Alter
or
Washington Cou11 House
Miami Trace in Saturday':.
championship game.
Nneka Offodilc led Walsh
Jesuit (23-3) with 12 points.

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'

Jones and guard Darr) I
Bf) ant - are pla) ing more
consistent!) than last ) ear.
Jones is a\eraging 13.5
point!) and 7 .I rebounds,
'' hile Ebank is 3\eragin
11.8 point&lt;, and 8.2
rebounds.
Then there's Butler.
whose clutch shooting
helped the Mount.tinecr"
win their first Big bast tttle
and register 27 wms lor
only the third ume tn
school his tor) . He ha"&gt;
scored &lt;,tx gamc-w mmn
shots t!' e -.on mel
run1
-.econd
t
58 \\ m o\er (,
the B1g East toumam
final on Saturday.
\\Jth :!.016 pomts. he
rank.
d on the scho
t
d Rod Hund e
and
\\et.
"\\ h \,;atches m) C) e
Da'Senn Butler." Holmec:.
said. "When the game 1s on
the line, the) go to him for
tough ~hots, defen i' e
plays .... He ah\ ays put-. the
team on his back.''
In many wa)S. tt's a role
Holmes enjoys with the
Bear:..
He\ the ~lEAC pla)er of
the )Car whose 21.9 points

per game rank lOth 111 the
nat1on. and who has
accounted tor nearl} 30
percent of the Be.tr-.' offenSI' e productiOn.
Morgan State enters the
to~1rnament ha\ing won
se\ en stra1ght and 19 of 21.
The Bear-. feel better prepared entetml! this tournament after earning the
school's fit st ) ct bnet taste l.tst ye,tr following .tn
82 54 f1rst round lose; to
Oklahoma.
''The) 'rc not w1de-e)ed.
o I e\ ed and all that
· ~o. \.:h
Todd
n a1d ")ou can
the) are "alking
they talk That part
uf 11m ke t1 d1ffercnce."
h &lt;, fourth eao;on.
an ha" pia) ed a big
n leadmg the program
t ob cunt) after the
B r won 39 ames m the
fne )ears pnor to his
arri\ nl
For Bozeman. who has a
Q4 50 record at !\1org.ln
State. tt wLIS .1 long·.l\vatted
~econd chance ,1t \,;oaching
again. He W&lt;1s banned b)
the NCAA for eight years
after he udmittcd to pa) mg
a recruit \\ hile coaching at
Cal1forni.t. where he led

those Bears to three toum.lment appearances.
"This is an honor and a
prh Jlege ." Bozeman satd.
"You are allov.ed to dream
at the J&gt;egmnmg of the ) e.tr.
and you can dream agam
''hen you get here And
then 1t's all about gettmg
out on the floor and pla)ing."
There 's 'VCr) little histOr)
bet\\ een the t\\ o schools.
\\ ho have met only once
before in 1995. when We&lt;;t
V1rginin
\'.Oil
108-80
Morgan State dtd pia~ a
competitive schedule in
'' h1ch four of their nine
lo&lt;&gt;ses - including a 90-81
defeat at Louisville
No,ember
came aga1
school that qualified for
the tournament.
The
\1ountameers
endured a far tougher
schedule playing in the Big
East. The\ ' ve v. on ix
o;traig:ht and eight of mne
since lo mg consecuti' e
game-. to Villano' a and Pitt
in February.
"\Ve
are
tougher,"
Huggin::. said. "But )OU'\e
-.till got to make shots.
:-.:obody'::. ever \\'On noth..
mg-nothmg .''

Mallot leads Middletown Madison 50-43 over Ironton

Debt Problems

We're ~

Ralph/Freso/East Valley Trlbune/MCT

West Virgm1a head coach Bob Huggms is liVId, as he demands a foul call from the offtcials
late in the game during the West Reg1onal of an NCAA mens basketball tournament at US
Airways Center In Phoemx, Arizona, Thursday, March 27. 2008. The Musketeers defeated
•
the Mountaineers 79-75

Theriot, v. ho had 25 points
in a regional win over Rocky
River last week. did not
attempt a shot in the first half
and fi nished with seven
points.
Hathaway Brown fell
behind 7-6 with 4:14 left in
the fir~t quarter and did not
lead again until late in the
fourth. It trailed bv a~ manv
as se,en in third quarter but
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) eason, a~ded 12 points and
got within 36-34 before - Ally Mallot and Lindsay eight rebounds .
Theriot hit a three-pointer to Hoskin had 22 of their comThe Moha\\ k" (27-0) are
make it 41-35 going into the bined 30 points in the first in their ~tate tournament
fourth.
debut and will pia) 111 the
The Blazers finally tied half to lead Middleto\\ n champJOn-.hip
game
win
O\er
Madison
to
a
50-43
the score at 41 on two free
Saturday
against
Findla)
Ironton
on
Thursday
in
a
throws by Vane~sa Smith
with 5:44 left. Wabh scored Di'Wi ion III cmifinal at the Liberty-Benton.
i'\ikki El:.\\ick had 14
the next four points but Ohio girls basketball tournapoints and Lorna Cea er 11
Dobbs drove the lane for a ment.
layup and Woods hit two
Mallot. an Associated for Ironton 07-7).
free throws to make 11 4~-45. Press All-Ohio select ton, finMadi on led ~S-24 at the
Aerial Mc~air put Walsh ished with 18 point:. and half behind l\1allot's 12
Jesuit up 47-45 with a pair of seven rebound~ . Ho~kins. points and Hoskins' 10.
foul shots. but Dobbs nailed committed to Lehigh next
Ironton never .led but
a three-pointer from the right
arc with 2:50 to play for a
4H-47 Hathaway Brown
advantage.
Offodile then made the
second of two free throws
with 1: 12 left to draw even.

We~lve
•

BUI·FALO. N.Y. (AP)As 1f the bitter memories of
West Virgmia's abrupt cx1t
111 last year's NCAA tournament wcrcn 't mom .ttion
enourh for l);,t'Sean Butler.
There's suddenly added
incentive spun ing the
Mountaineers' star senior
guard, wlw feel:; slighted
after West Vit•giniH wno;
awarded u lower-thanexpected No. 2 seed entering this year's tournament.
That left Butler v. ondering
Thursday whether being the
Big f1ast Conlerencc champion carried much respect
any more.
"None," Butler said.
sqaking his head.
And that' fine with the
Mountameerc; (27-6), who
can start proving they
deser\ ed better on Friday
again t two-time MidE.t:.tt:tn
Athletic
Conference
champton
Morgan State (27-9).
"You've got to play the
cards you're dealt, so we'll
play." Butler said. "And
we're putting (the bullseye) on every team we're
plcrying against"
The
Bears arc • no
pu-.hovcr:.. They're led b)
senior
guard
Reg.gie
llolmes, whose 784 pomts
this season rank second in
the nation, and feature a
powerful inside presence in
Ke" in Thompson. whose
11.9 rebounds rank fourth
in the nation.
Mntchup aside. don't
expect the Mountaineers to
overlook anyone. They
leaqtcd that lesson the hard
wnv after opening last
year's tournament with a
68 _60 overtime loss to
Dayto'n.
"Pay attention to what's
·111 t'
f
d
ron~ 0 you as oppose ..
to lookmg. do".? th~ road.
Bu.tler satd. .we re not
g01!~g to take thts fo1 granted
.
,coach Bob Huggm~ has~l t brought up the loo;~, sa)mg he doesn l deal w1th the
past But Huggms f1gured
he d1dn't need to becau e
he can see a d1fference m
his pia) ers · approach th1s
p~st offse~son .
.
'The btgge t thmg to
happen to them is they're
all about 20 to 30 pounds
Mronger." Huggin .:,,ud
noting many of h1s player~
pent much of the summer
out
in
working
'Morgantown, W.V. "They
did that willingly. They
were e~cited about it. They
were excited about this
)Car, I think. from the
minute last vear ended."
West Virginia's trio of
o;ophomores ...... forwards
Devin Ebanks and Kevin

pulled to w1thm 37-36 on a
Elsw JCk rebound bucket'' ith
5:20 to play. Rachel Ble\ in
responded '' 11h a basket and
the Tigers ne\ er got clo er.
The Moha\\ ks had a 12point lead cut to three on
tv. icc in the th1rd quarter. the
Ia t bcmg 30-27 "uh 5:~5
left. but Hoskms fed Ble\ ins
for .1 la)up to regain a fhepomt lead.
Ironton put Itself in an
earl) 9 0 hole b) mi-.sing its
first three field go.1ls and t\\ o

free thro\\ s and comminmg
three tumO\ ers m the first 3
112 minute-..
Mad1son bmlt the lead to
:23-11 '' ith 5:56 left m the
second quarter but wenr
three minutes \\ 1thout.
point, allO\\ ing Ironton
core nine traight.
Els\\ 1ck made 11 23-20
'' ith a Ia) up after Brea
Tacken :.tole the ball at mid·
court. but Mallot ~topped the
mn b) making one of t\\Q
free thro,\s.

DON'TMI$$
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�Frid a), Mn1·ch

1&lt;), 20 10

www.m ydailyscntinel.com

'Jhe Daily Sentinel · Page B3

NASCARTHIS EEK
NASCAR's Martin still feeling the magic
BY

PETE IACOBELLI

ASSOCIATED PRESS

H ORE:\CE. S.C. - It
wa&lt;; about a year ago that

,.\1ark ,\la11in set off on a
NASC'AR ride like few others in his stellar career.
l•ne Spnnt Cup victories.
a mnner-up finish to champ
Jimmie Johnson in the
Chase. and, at 51 years old,
,t rene\\ed passion for his
life's \\Ork.
''It was a magical )Car,
lnst )Car, lor me,'' Martin
~aid Wednesday. "And I still
feel the magic each time I
strap into a race car."
Martin has yet to crack
Victory I ane thb year, but
stands se\ enth in the
poims a..., the circuit return~
I rom a wed: off at Rnstol
,\ lotot
Speedwa)
on
Sundav.
And· .\la11in bclieH:s he's
got a more polished. sa\'vy
team read) to \\in when it
matters most - do\\ n the
stretch.
Martin certainlv made
headlines wtth victories at
Phoenix
International
Race\\ay and Darhngton

Racc'"'n) last :-pring. Ill'
even heat chase master
Johnson to the punch early
with a victorv at New
llampshire
•
Motor
Speedway in the first of the
I 0 playoff 1ace~ that determme the champion.
However.
Johnson's
experience s!1one through
as the No. 48 team took an
unprecedented fourth consecuti\e NASCAR title.
"I hope (this year) that
we'll ha'c the hammer
when 1t'~ time to go,"
Martin 1.aid.
He spent lunchtime talkIll£ \\Jth about 200 or so
.fans who ~igned up for a
quc~tion-nnd-ansv. er session with the NASCAR
star. He t,tckled everything from his celebrated
workout
regimen
("Wednesday was leg
day," he offered) to how
he meshes with his equal1) famous fellow Hendnck
drivers (Very well, he
said. "Dale Jr. really
cracks us up.")
Most!), Martin spoke of
his joy for racmg.
"J'\e said se,cral times

already today. if there were
any beach in the world I'd
rather be on than at the
racetrack, that\ where I'd
be,'' said ~1artin, grinning
broad!).
It wasn't too long ago.
that beach cha1r might've
looked pretty good to
Martin.
He rose to NASCAR &lt;&gt;tardam with O\\ ncr Jack
Roush. winmng 35 races
O\er 19 season-.. HO\\ever.
much of that time. Martin
burned for a championship.
Anything les~ \\as a disappointment. no matter ho"
much ~ucce . . s he had
And Martin catt1e oh so
close - he had 12 top-five
senes finishes at Rou~h
Racing
but was ne'er
abll! to break through and
grew more frustrated about
his profession. Bothered by
a surgically repaired hack
that didn't feel ri!!ht.Martin
sought alternatives.
" I drO\e that (Roush No.)
6 car to v. in that championship and I think that left
me a little holiO\\ ," he said.
He became a part-time
Sprint Cup racer in 2007

and 2008, pl:11lni ng to case
gradually from the on ly profession he'd known.
Then something surpn sang happened. ~l.trtin
stopped worr) ing about
titles and focused on racing. He felt as fulfilled in
the car at 48 years old as
he did as a smallish. 15year-old feeling the dirt
under his wheels tor the
first time.
He reached a deal v. ith his
fnend,
owner
Rid:
Hendrick. to mn full time m
2009 and the results were
a~tounding.

Martin \loOn his first race
in four years at Phoenix,
then proved that wasn't a
fluke by outlasti ng the
lJCid at Darlington. winnlllg for the ~econd time at
the track "Too Tough To
Tame''
nfter breaking
through there in 1993.
He's on board with
Hendrick through 20 II and
can't imagine ada) v.ithout
racing.
Martin !..1) s it\ not fair to
compare hi Roush time
\\ ith last season v.llh
Hendrick, "but I' m by far

the happie.,t I've e"cr been
in my life right now."
Martin hoped he'd jinally
succeed at last month'o.;
Daytona 500 • .1 v.hitc v.hale
on his standout NASCAR
re&lt;&gt;ume. Things looked
good when he won the pole
for the first time. Ho\\e\er.
he finished 12th and left 0
for 50 at Sprint Cup\ most
famous la)OUt.
"Listen." he told the
fans, ''I v. as at Da\ ton a for
a \\eek and a half and I
didn't make one good
mo\-e the \\hole time. It
wa&lt;&gt; pitiful."
Thing.... have picked up
since then. Martin had topfive fini.,he'&gt; at California
and Las Vegas. He wa~ in
lme for another good ending
at Atlanta \Vhcn he gut
caught up in the chao" after
Carl Edwards sent l3rad
Kc-.elowski airborne in a
retaliatory bump and finished 33rd.
E'en tf \1artin can't
duplicate 2009. he\ exactl:y
where he '"ants to be.
''I know I can't do an)thm!! that make~ me feel
like ~racing doc ....." he said.

••
•

NATIONWIDE SERIES
'SCHEDULE AND STANDINGS
PO
r.
r1

l47

oey

Ti

Ra

11

CAMPING WORLD TRUCK
SCHEDULE AND STANDINGS
Feb
T

ergy 1'1

rces 250

Pit stop added to All-Star race
CONCORD. N.C. (t\P)
NASCAR ha..., added a
mandatory four-tire pit stop
to the fonnat of the Sprint
All-Star Race
The race v. ill once again
be decided b) a 10-lap
shootout to the fim h But,
tor the first time. teams \\ 111
be reqUired to enter pit road
for a full stop. The order
that cars exit pit road \\ill
determine hO\\ the) line up
for the &lt;..print to the $1 milhan payout.
"The pit ere\\ is going to
be under the gun and under
pre sure to get the JOb done
to get ) ou out first... K) le
Busch
said
after
\'.ednesda) ·.,
announcement.
The remainder of the format for the May 22 race at
Charlotte !vl otor Speedway
remmns unchanged. The
race begins with a 50-lap
segment. and there i:- a
mandatory
green-tlag.
four-tire pit stop after the
25th lap.
That is followed by tv.o
20-lap segment:&gt;, then a 10minute break before the
finn! sprint to the fi nish.
Under the ne\\ tweak.
drivers will lea\ e pit road
after the break in the order
the) finished the th1rd segment. There \\ill be one
pace lap, then the mandatory four-tire stop.
T here are currently 18
dJ'ivers eligible for th~
race. whkh series sponsor
Sprint consistent!) tweab
to add excitement to
NASCAR'~ \er:-.ion of an
nil-star event.
M arti n Truex Jr.. who
has not yet earned a spot in
the
field,
said
at
Wednesda\ ·..., announcement that .NASCAR's all-

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Cullipnlis • The Plnins • .Jackson
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star event 1s a better showcase than the ones held by
the four tradillonnl professional sports.
"We put a lot of effort
into 1t,'' Truex said "Not
to sa) that other sports
don't. But I thmk 1f )OU
v.atch. tor m tnnce. the
NFL All Star Game th1s
pa~t ~car. a lot of gu) s
couldn't e" en pia) because
the) were going to be m
the Super Bo" I. So thear
best of their be~t couldn't
even play.
"I ju t feelltke the) don't
put in the effort. It's not as
big of a deal a it is for us. It
could be the million dollars
that':&gt; up for stakes.''

Rvan
Truex to
"'
makeNASCAR
debut .
C HAR Urn E, N.C.
Waltrip Racing
plan..., to enter R) an Truex in
sax Nationwide Series race:.
thi..., season.
Truex 1s the younger
brother of ~1WR dri\er
Martin Truex Jr. He turn~
18 on Thur day. and that':.
the legal age to compete
on NASCAR 's national
level.
Ryan Truex i scheduled
to make his Nationwide
debut on July 17 at Gate\\ ay
lntcmauonal Race\\ ay. His
other race~ arc tcntati\ ely
scheduled
to
he
at
~1 ichigan.
Richmond.
Kansas, Charlotte and
ll omcstcad .
Truex ts al . . o going to
defend
his
title
in
NASCAR \ East Series thi..,
sca...,on wtth help from
.MWR.
~tichael

Keselowski
'Won't Back
Down' at Bristol
BRISTOL. Tenn.- Brad
Ke clov. kt cho e ''Won't
Back Dov.n b) Tom Pen
and The Hearti:Jre
h1s ong selection for drt\
introductions Sunday at
Bristol Motor Speed\\ u).
The ong choice is a clear
me'&gt; age
m Ke~elov. ki
\\ ho h
'0\\ed not to
change the aggre!! si \ e dri
'mg St) le that ha gotten
h1m to NASCAR 's top Je, el
but abo angered e\eral
\eterans. Sunday \\Jil be
Ke elowski'..., fir~t Sprint
Cup Series race since he
was mtentionally v. reeked
at Atlanta t\\'O weeks ago by
Carl Ed" ard~ as payback
for an earlier accident.
Edwards.
meanwhile.
:-elected "Black: Bettv" b\
Spidcrbait for his • song
~election.
•
Bristol started the practice
last summer of allO\\ in!!' dri' er..., to pick their introducton musac, and the idea \\a~
wiidly popular for the participant... and the fan ..... Man)
driver..., ha\e created opportuniues mer the past month
for fan..., to 'ote on their
song selection.

Spoiler change to
come next week

at Martinsville
CONCORD . ~~.c.
\oASC.\R will oi'Ciciall\
move from the wing to the
more traditional spoiler at
next weekend's race at
Martinsville Speed\\ ay.

Martms\ rlle had been t&lt;lrgeted for the transition. and
NASCAR \icc president of
competition
Robi n
Pemberton
con fi rmcd
Wednesda) that spoiler.;
ha\e been shipped to Spnnt
C'up terun ,md v. ill be u ed
th
tr&lt;&gt;t time at the
rt track.
oon n we could
be read). Pemberton aid
of :-.electmg Martins' ille for
the potler.
po1ler wa tested b)
25
p teams on Tuesda)
at
Talladega
Supers peed\\ a).
and
there's u t\\O-da) test
scheduled for next v.eek at
Charlotte Motor Speed\\ a).
NASCAR decided in
Januar) it would return
the spoiler to the race can~.
a decision based on
impro\'ing the racing and
plea . . ing fan ... '' ho did not
like the look of the \\in g.
Officials told teams the
...,poiler \\ill replicate the
downforce and balance
that i" being produced on
the current car.
i\ASCAR
111
2007
phased m a ncv. car that
replaced the spoiler '' ith a
'' ing. 1\lan) dri\crs \\ere
slov. to adapt to the ne\\
car. '' hach •"ent to fulltime use in 200u. and fans
had clmmed the car had
made the racing boring.
Through four races this
sea~on. the racing is much
improved. but the spoiler 1...,
expected to turn it up
,mother notch .
'' I thinJ.. the nll'ing is pr~t1\ good, hut I think (the
sj&gt;nilcr) 1s an oppnrtunit) to
changt.' things up a little
bit...
Pcmb~rton
. . aid.
''Q uite frank I). the wing
"asn 't accepted a~ \\ rdcl)

Mid-Atlantic
Construction, Inc.
General &amp; Mechanical Contractors
Robert W. McMillan

Rt. 1 Box 119, Old Town Road
Point Pleasant, WV

•

a~ v. e had hoped it \\Ould
ha\e been h) competitors
and the fans alike. After
much effort. we ...,tartcd
looking and decided to go
back to the -.poiler."

Gordon's wife
expecting a
baby boy
TALLADEGA. Ala.
Jeff Gordon announced
Tue ...da) that his wife •..,
expectmg a bah) bo).
though
the
four-time
i'\ASCAR champion \\On't
push h1..., son mto racing.
"Whatever is !!oim! to be
thdr pa-.. . ion in Jife.~l \\ant
to 'upport that ." Gordon
'&gt;aid during a break during
te...,ting
at
Talladega
Supers peed'' O). " If it's racing. I'll support that.".
The bab\. due in ,\ ugust,
'' ill be the second child for
Gordon and hi..., Belgian
\\ ife, Ingrid. Their d:J.ughter,
Ella." ill be 3 in June.
The couple learned the
bab\ 's !!endcr la... t \\ eek.
"For trs. the ultimate \\a~
ha\Jn!! a bO\ and a guJ."
Gordon . . aid,-"\\e \\antt\\0,
and \\C want both. \\ e \\ere
goin~ to be totalh content
and fine. and stop ·e, en if it
\\ &lt;ti a !!irl."
Gordon i part of a bab)
boom thb ... ea on
in
NASCAR. Elliott Sadler
and Carl Ed\\ ard..., became
first-time
father...,
last
month.
and
four-time
defending
champion
Jimmie Johrhon i" .npcctIIH! the birth of his fir:.t
child in Juh.
Juan Pa-blo Monto) a·..,
''if~ i~ cxp~cting their third
child in Jul~ .·

�-------------~---- --

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Page B4 • TI1e Dailv Sentinel

www.mydailyscntinel.com

Friday, March 19,

-

2010

QB Brady Quinn: foot is fine Xavier, Minnesota have Own go-to players
•
..,
,

~
..

:
;

..
•

:
~
•

•
•

Uf-:N\IR(\P)
Brad)
Qumn -;,1 s lu" !'.l'\crcly
spr.unt&gt;d let foot rs no
Inn t'r .m •" ue
Qurnn ''a&lt;. , .,k.ell .1bout
hr., foot 1 hur.,d&lt;~\ dunn!' hrs
tro;t n \\.., wnlcrcnc~ in
Dcmcr :-.uH.:c h1~ ,\cqulsltwn
Sund,t\ hom the C'lc\cland
Bro\\ ri'.... ,md sard "The foot
•~ good. I .tpprel:iatc )Oll
.tsking. •
Quinn p.t!'.!o.Cd h1s physrcal
luesdav. complcun•• the
deal th.tt sent fullhack
Pc) ton llrllrs ,mJ I\\O dr,tlt
pr~..:b to the Bro\\Jl'&gt; for the
lor mer rr!ot rounder '' ho
"it,med t 'lotre D.1mc.
Qumn \\ ho r.;t,trted nrnc
l..t'&gt;l \C. r fimshed the
.., son n II1Jured rcsel\ e
1 t r ,u..,tmnrn, ,1 ..,e,ere
lrsfr, m. ..,pr,11 n ,1 tear of the
h
1 nt that hold~ h 1., frrst
,,, 0 toes 111 pl.tcc, 111 hrs lett
foot 011 Dec ...,0 agam&lt;ot
Kan,,t., ( rt'r lie o;pent 1,., 0
month m ,1 \\, Jkmg boot
L 1sfranc.
!-.pr,tins c.tn
rcqmr\: &lt;.urger) ,111 d threaten
c.llt' r., but that' ... not th"
c.ts\: ,, ;th Qm 11;1 "ho lis~
t 11w . hed the 2008 seaso;l Ill
lR \\lth .t brol--ell fir;ger 011
hls l'l!•ht hand
'It ha!o. been hustlatlllg.''
he 5 ud "I hroughout collcg.c '1 took ..,omc hrt.., but 1
neh r h.td an mjur:r'. The
t)pc of lllJUrres J'\e had
hl\e o·cn more fr·tk.o;h
1
~d ,, r~J ~l) f1nge 'b' " 1k
'
~.:
h rh rei'
111 • 1 vt' ne\er 11 a e met
behue. 1 he \\d) I •ot tuck
les \\hen I IHt tn) toot It
\\a ... n .mk\\ard ,.,.•.,of

· RedStorm
from Page Bl
to tie rt m the top of the
th m.l f ramc
Scnwr Ryan
01\ lllJll·l \\'J\)
B \\ n to the
I \

Buckeyes
from Page BI

•

•

•

•
~

•

•

•

m Hr.:
·I J-oere·., re,JII) not ,,
\\\:akn ss rn hr!:&gt; g.une:,"
Wrllr. m., st~id
\\ 1th ,, o;trong pert or
m.mc 111 the tournt~ment,
Turn r could solidrf) hio;
~tatu.., "'the ame·.., top collegJ&lt;~h; plm er
fhc Bud.e)e" returned to
the "ii( \ \ tournt~ment It~ t
) e.1r anJ I urncr had •::!5
porn • •, rnst Stcna 111 the
fn t r 1 nd. But he \\US X for
18 f rr. th freld and the
BUl 1-- vcs blc\\ .1 comfort
able lc td, ev~:ntu.dly losmg
m double O\ ertrmc.
lurner sard the Bucke)e&lt;;
star1ed makrng uncharactcrt~llc mrstakcs 111 th.tt game
and endcJ up paying for il.
"I think \~e momcntanly
lost our mrnd.,," Tur ncr
,
s.tid.
But M,ltt.t knew ~o,ome
thrng \\a~ wrong n •ht :m ,ty
la&lt;.,t\e,r
"I thought \\C \\ere rc.1Jy
unttl tht b.111 got to-..,cJ up.
, nd I rc member turru n ' to
the b.:nch and sa)tng. '\\e
don't look the .,,llllC. •·
!Vtatta s,ud
Ohlll Stt!C ·~ D.t\ld I I ht)
said the team Jmght h,t\C
been " ltttk too loo...e rn that
g me. md as \ O\\ rng not to
let rt happen a •am tlus )Car.
"People ..,ere" lillie loo-;e
and lax I guc.,., you could
sa)." I rght)' .,,ti J : "But
th.tt's kmd of naturall) hnv.
\\ c \\ere Ia~! year. \nd I
dunk th1s )'Car "e \\ c1 c a IiI
tic more focused on the task
at h.tnd und commg rn .tnd
m. km' ,, o;t,ttement "
n1c Buckeyes al'&gt;ll drdn't
look. lrl--e thcm.,cl'c" earlier
thrs '&gt;eason, when l'urner
\\,1., ml'&gt;&lt;;ing bec.1u"c of•,tn
lllJUI y

He brok.t t\\O bone'&gt; an hr..,
.tg.un.,t
I astern

ba~.;k

l.mdm•. It \\.1&lt;; unfortu
n,u~: ··
No''· he ..,atd he can pl.mt
the foot and run just fine.
"Oh ) cah. E\ erything.
Jump
over
car~o;.
f,er)thrng,"hejol--cJ.
Qurnn has been partic 1
patm~ 111 the Broncos' off
sea... on \~orh:out proeram
since passing his phyo;rc.tl
''I he only tough adju&lt;;~rnent nght nov, has been the
:•ltitude Oomg up ,111 J do\\n
starrs has been a little
rough," he said.
Quinn said he senses
~ome
f,umh,mty
wrth
Dcmcr'r.; playbook. Qurnn
pla\ed tor Charltc \\cis at
Noire Dame and Bronws
coach Josh McDamels
\\Orkcd \\Jth \\ero; 111 Ne'"
[•n •l,md
Qumn .tid he hasn't been
111 touch \'with incumbent
quarterback K\ lc Orton.
, .. 1
10 ts the Broncos' unron
rcprc'&gt;entatrve and has been
111 Ha\\ari for the players
as!&gt;ociatJon ·s annu,d meeting..,,
~ 1 cD,miels ha~n 't pub
licly thrown open the quarterbac.k competitiOn d'&gt; he
did,, year ago. when Orton.
\\ho \'•"' .tcqulred from
Chic,tgo 111 the Ja) Cutler
tr&lt;~de last April. ,.,as o;clccted as the starter O\Cr Chns
Simms in June.
Quinn Is a veteran of
quarterback compchtrons,
ha\rng \led \Hth Derek
Ander~on since he ''as
drafted '' rth the 22nd O\ er
&lt;~llplckrn2007.

aha po&lt;,ted three hils m tour
nt bats with a double and
t\\0 RBJ's.
Other offenshe !'.talwarts
tor the RedStorm '"'ere
R.unireL. 2 for4 ....enror
rrghthelder John Storey
(\\ hcelershurg. OH). I for
2 \\ llh an RBI. Plumpton. I
for ~ wrth a double ,md
t)n~h.
for-3.
M hon \\Js 0 or-.! '' rth
RBI n f-r a ... \\ ..,
\ th
..,
trc fl)
bru ht a h me
n
fl\e run th1rd
Rw Grande limshed up
the spring tnp \\111mn fi\C
ot the s1x games pl&lt;~yed.
1 he RedStom1 are b.1ck
home tor a four arne MrdSouth (' mferem:e '&gt;et on
~ t rdav
and
Sundt~)
M rch 20 21 ) \ er us \\est
\11 om1, Tcl.h Saturda) \
trrst •ame rs set to begrn at
1 pIll
l\11~-;h1gan game on Dec. 5.
mrssinl:! nbout a month.
He h~ts been hard to guard
o;incc then. ct~pping a stellar
stretch of pl&lt;1~ \\ ith hi&lt;s 37foot ::.hot to bc.tt t-.lichigan.
I he Buckeyes \\ent on to
beat lllmoio; und 'V1inne&lt;;ota
to \\in the Big Ten tournament, and Turnei sard he
h.ts more or less put hi&lt;.. brg
moment behind hrm.
"I haven't reall) thought
too much about It, to tell
) ou the truth ... T umer s,ud
"\\e'\e pla)ed· t\\O gameo;
~mec then and all th.lt ts m
the past right no\\. It's pret
I) much like a ne\\ o;ea ... on.''
f•or all the talk about
1 urner. Matta sa) s the
Bucke)es are far from a
one man team. praasrng
Turner for knowmg that he
muo;t get hi~ teammateo;
involved for Ohro State to
pia) it'&gt; bc~t
"I've seen guys that h:l\e
become selfish or something along those lines."
Matt.l o;aid. "But E:.van
know., he neells e\erybody
on thrs te.tm to help u::. \\Ill."
But C\en if the Buckeye
are more than ju!o.t Tumer.
the) aren't particul.trl:r
deep. crther. four pla)er"
average more than 33 min
utes per game.
") mean. we're out there
pl&lt;~ymg

the game that \\e

Jo,e." Light) said. ''So )OU
re,tlly don't ha\ e time to get
trred."
But William.;, doesn't
want to \\ e.tr the Bucke) c.,
out: he'd rather force them
to shoot from outside and
hope they st.trt missing.
"II our matchup (zone)
can keep them on the
perimeter a little bit, \\e
keep them in I ront and
they've got to'hlt h, any
bod) can have a cold mght
lrom the 3 pomt hne
rtll\ bod)," \\ illiarm o;,lid
"And so ''e juo;t h,t\C to
hope tlldt the) .tre not !!Oing
to get rna track meet up and
do\\ n the floor."

•

I

Mil \\Al Kl I (AP)
Mmne-.nt,j \\at~hed a movie
·•bout I cBron J,une!\ for
rn..,prrat1on on the '' ay to
.Mllw,wk.ec for II!\ frr~t
round :'&gt;JCAA tournament
game.

Xc1\ 1cr "
Jordan
1
Cra\\ lord lie dunked on
James tlw, o;ummc1.
Wh n the Gophe.r~ .t~d
Mu":&gt;kctccrs mcc.:t l•r1d.ty 1n
the Wc.·st reg on,tl, the styles
,111d ddcn'&gt;l\~ ph1losophrcs
\\til be ver) sunrlar. but who
carr res c.tch 111 the clutch •~
qurte d1ffcrcnt
i'\o .• ll Mrnncsot.t (21 13)
dt e&lt;&gt;n t hu\c ,1 go to pla)er
'' tth thre st rter!'. t~veragmg
doubl h •ures. ( r,1\\ ford
.tvera •e&lt;; ll) 7 pornt~ per
game tor No.6!. ed Xm ter
(24 H) \\hll.: l rs lookrng to
..,ustam rts run ol ~C'AA
tournc~!nent Slll.CCss under
"':'t yc.tr.l.:O.c.~ Chrrs Mack.
I here" beer~ so m~n)
game \\here .~e" beep J~St
unbclrcht_blt:
X a\ aer
sophomoPc gu.trd Brad
Redtord "illd "He make~
the hrg shot lie .tl\\a)s
\\,lilts the ball 111 h1s lm~ld.s.
A"'' tcdm, \\C ~til want 11 rn
hls,har.lds.too." . .
.
Xa\ler IM'&gt; been rn nme of
the l.tst 10 NCAA tourn.t
mcnt.., .md \\On at least one
game rn each the last three
!'.ea-.ons. but C'ra\\lord
brou ht ,, d1tlerent dynam1c
\\hen he tran..,fened from

InJi.mt~.

"There\ no que!&gt;tron he's
~ur be&lt;.t player." Mack said.
We l~an on hrm a l~t on the
olfcnsr\e and defen&lt;&gt;rvc end
We're no! rel)ing o~ him.
but there !-i no question he
has the abrlit) to take 0\er a
game"
l·or Crawford's p.u1. he
v.a~ de~perat~ to get back ~~n
the co ur~ dunng h1s redshnt
year. Hr s chance to pht)
aga~n.,t James thi'&gt; summer
du.rrng a p1d..up game at a
skrlls academy run by the
superstar at the Cnh ersrty
of Ak.r~m ca!ne as a weicome drstracuon.
N?w· there's more than I
m11lron hrts on Googlc for
"Jordan Cra\\ford dunks on
LeBron James" online, but
C'.rawford do\\nplayo; the
"?.eo that \\ent \l~al.
It \\as great to J.ust b~ o~
the s~m~ court \\Jth_ hrm.
he sard. It ~··~s \er) rmportant.J was &lt;&gt;Jttrng out a )~ar.
I got to s.ee where 111) skrll~
\\Cre agamst the top pla)er.
.\1 innesot.t coach Tub b)
Sm1th coached Crawford's
older brother, , J.oe, ~tt
Kentuck) and Smrth sard
~·~·s k!l0\\11 of Jorda11 's abilrt1es stn~e he wa" young.
''You don't o;top great
pla)ers. Pla)Crs like Jordan.
Yt?U Jll"t ha\e to tr) to contamthemandhopethat)OU
can keep the ball off him as
much as possible. make it

tough to get hr., .,hot..,, make
hrm \\Ork both ends of the
cour1." Smrth -;aid. ··one of
the problems we have 1s
guardmg pcnmcter players
th~tare}on•and,tthletic."

fhe (Jopht:ls turned their
year around without three
expected
contnbuton..
Royce Wh1te nnd Trevor
~lbak\\e became Jnvolved
rn legal entanglements
before the sear.;on and point
guard AI \/olen was ruled
ucadell'ICally rneligible in
Janual).
"It looked bad for us for a
\\hilc," guard La\Hencc
\\e.,tbrook sa1d. "We got off
on the \\rong toot."
l11at ga"e opponuruties to
guard Devoe Joseph and
center Colton her'&gt;on. t\\O
soph~mores. For all the
publrc
problem&lt;; . the
Gophef' had, Sm1th Sdld the
lo~ker room \\a.., calm.
.
Usuall) the perception IS
that there ma) be somethmg
else '' rong .''hen somethmg
happen'i \\lth one or two
pia) ers," Smith smd. "We
really ha\en't had many
internal i&lt;;sues .. ,md that's
the beaut) of 11. hecause.
you kmm, \\e have good
people and good pla)ers
that ha\e done the things
we·~e .t&lt;&gt;ked .them to do.''
Mmne ..ot.t s l.ast tourna
ment\\li1Came1111997,but
Smrth has coached in 43
~C AA tourn.~ment games

For Mack, it"ll be his first
even though he doesn't feel
an) drffercnt after spending
&lt;&gt;e"_en )Cars at Xavrer as an
assrstant.
" I getoffthebusandl' \e
got my 4-year-old &lt;~nd 3·
year-old
and
th
screaming at me to get
camera and stuff hke
Mack said. "I wouldn't say
I'm the man."
At least the Muo;Retccrs'
trip was shorter. The
Gophers drove six houro;
because the team's travel
distance was under the 400
miles the NCAA requires to
be reimbursed for airfare .
The long trip started With
gu) s JOking and making up
rap songs. then the team
napped
and
watched
movies.
.
··~thought Mll\\aukee \\a~
a .httle clm.er than that •
Mmnesota fo~:ard Dam!an
John~on s~.'d . It \\as kmd
of pamful.
Ralph . Samp on
111.
Mmnc ota ~ 6-foot-11 centcr, ~ard he spent the maJority of the trip bent awkwarll!Y betwce~ two ~eat~, wakmg up at ttmes to adJUSt h1~
positi~n the best h~ could.
A wm over Xavter wo.
keep the Gophers frQm
long trip home at least
another day...
''Hopefully.
Sampson
said. "'\Ve can stay off that
bus."

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Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary .................................. 205
Happy Ads .................................................... 210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ......................................................... 225
Personals .............................- ...................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Servico ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materlals ....................................... 306
Business ...................................................... 308
Caterlng ........................................................ 310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors .................................................. 316
Domestlcs/Janltorlal ................................... 316
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Financlal....................................................... 322
Health ..... ..................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Music/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Services ............................................. 338
Plumblng/Eiectrical ..................................... 340
Professional Servlces................................. 342
Repairs ......................................................... 344
Roofing .........................................................346
Securlty ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
Travel/Entertainment .................................. 352
Flnanclal .......................................................400
Financial Servlces .......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend ............................................. 415
Educatlon ..................................................... soo
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Training ................................. 510
Lessons ........................................................515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Anlmal s ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses .......................................................... 610
Llvestock......................................................615
Pets...............................................................620
Want to buy .................................................. 625
Agriculture ...................................................700
Farm Equipment..........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
want to buy .................................................. 725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques .......................................................905
Appllance ..................................................... 910
Auctions ....................................................... 915
Bargain Basement ....................................... 920
Collectlbles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Supplles ....................................935
Flea Markete ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Kld"s Corner.................................................960
Miscellaneous ..............................................965
Want to buy ..................................................970
Yard Sale ............................................~ .......975

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ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blcycles ......................................................1 010
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1Q30
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentai/Lease ..................................... 2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
CommerclaVIndustrlal .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ..................................2025
Sports Utlllty .....................................- ....... 2030
Trucks.........................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commercial ................................................ 301 0
Condomlnlums ....................... ,.................. 3015
For Sale by Owner..................................... 3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy ................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commerclal ................................................3510
Condomlnlums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage .......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Houslng ............................. 4000
Lots .............................................................4005
Movers........................................................ 401 0
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ........................................................... 4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ...................... w ....................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent........................... 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accountlng/Financla1 ................................ 6002
Admlnlstratlve/Professlonal .....................6004
Cashier/Clerk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Construction ........................... ,.... ,............. 6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
Education ...................................................6016
Electrical Plumblng ...................................6018
Employment Agencles ..............................6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces ............................................ 6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs .................................................. 6036
Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
Part-Time·Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ........................................................... 6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

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Tox / Accounting

AMERICAN TAX
REUEE
Settle IRS Taxes for
a fraction of what
you owe. If you owe
over $15,000 in back
taxes call now for a
free consultation.
1·877·258·5142

600

Animals

Pets
Free-gray/white
cat,
declowed,
spay,
all
shots, to good home only
74(}-985-4252
.....
- - - tor
-Toy-Poodles
sale,
CKC, vet checked, tails
ox:ked. dewclaws removed.
shots
and
'Mlf'Tied. colors are chocholate and black. males
S300. females $350 and
uJ, 74G-992·7007
AKC

Minrature

Female Toy Poodle 'or
Sale $350 CKC papers.
Call
74(}-446-2455
or
645-1900

700
400

Schnau-

ze~s. 2 parta male whtle
ft"""'~la
1 .....
I
"'"""" te,
....ocaate
M 1 chocalate F, white
O!'l chest &amp; back feet,
parents
on
premtses,
takllng depostts. Gall to
sae 740-441-1657. Also.
~ud &amp; grooming serv·
tees.

Agncullure

Financial
Form Equipment
Money To Lend

EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS.
LOAD ,MAX
EQUIPMENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEAOER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
TRAILERS COM
740-446·3825

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohto DIVI·
ston of Ftnanctal lns!ltu·
lions OH1ce ol Consumer
Affa1rs BEFORE you reft·
nanco your home or ob·
ta•n a loan. BEWARE of
requests lor any large
advance
payments ol
fees or tnsuranco Call
the Offtce of Corsumer
AHiars
toll
free
at
1-866·278-0003 to learn
1! the mortgage broKer or
lender IS properly !l·
censed (This Is a public
Have you pnced a John
serviCe
announcement D~re lately? You'll be
from the Ohto Valley surpnsedl Check out our
Publishing Company)
usod
anventory
a~

www.CAREQ.com.
Car·
mtchael
Equ1pment
500
Educalion 740·446·2412
•......-~-~~~-:STIHL Sales &amp; ServiCe
Now Available at Carmi·
ct&gt;ael
Eq 01pment
Business &amp; Trade
?40·446·2412
School

Hoy, Feed, Seed, Groin
Galllpolla Careor
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Cllll Todayt140·446·4367
1·80G-2 I 4·0452
gal portscareercollege tlllu

Accroo too Member Accroon·
ng Councillor Independent
Colloges ond Schools 12748

Mtxed round bales lor
sale.
4x4 and 4x5.
740·446·2412

Apartments/
Townhouses

and 2 bedroom apls ,
futl'rshed
and
unlur·
ntshed, and houses 1n
Pomeroy and Mtddleport,
CaMllehael secunty depoSit required
no pets. 740-992·2218

2BR APT.Ciose to HoJ.
zer Hospttal ort SR 160
441 0194
94 Har1ey Oavtdson Soft· CIA. 1740)
.
Appliances
tall
446·9585
or CONVENIENTLY
LO·
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;==• 446-9595.
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
Sears Kenmore 30' Elec·
ABLE' Townhouse apart·
tnc Range whate wlblack
ments.
and/or
small
Iron! sell cleamng oven.
houses lor rert Call
Good Condition $50.00.
740·441·1111 for appliCall740·446-2361
cation &amp; inlormatton
Autos
Free Rent Special !!I
Equipment I Supplies 98 Sebring Convertible, 2&amp;3BR apts S395 and
87 MttsubtShl, 05 N1nja up, Central Atr WID
Now's the best ltme to 636.
hookup,
tenant
pays
buy a Rotor Tiller 4', 74().446·1768 tv msg.
electnc.
can between
5' 6·, &amp; 7 3 pt. hitch
the hours of 8A·8P
J1m's
Farm
Equ1pEHO
ment, 74G-446-9n7
Quality Cars &amp; Trucks
Ellm VIew Apts.
w/Warranty all pnced to
(304)882·3017
900

Mercha~drse

Fuel / Oil / Cool /
W d/ G
oo
as .

Motorcydes

sell, 15 yrs. '" bus ness.
Cook Motors. 328 Jack·
son p·ke,
Gallipolis,
OH
740-446-0103.
.;..;,;;...;..;~..;,;,;;;,;,..._ __
Re~l Estate
or 3000
Sales

=-==--;;;;i;;;;=:;;;;i;=
Seasoned firewood.
All Hardwood.
740 ' 853"2439
740
-446·9204
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Evens 1·800·537·9528

For Sole By Owner

106 Mabelhne Or. Galr·
polls. 2BR, 1BA. Full
Basement.
ReModeled
kllr.hAn 1 Car Garage
Cent. a~r All app. stay.
Carpet Sale Free Instal· '$95,500. 740-645·7965
lat10n on specaal orders.
Onve a httlo, save a lot
Mollohan Carpet 2212 12 Unit Apt. Complex.
Eastem Ava, Galhpol•s. 446_0390.
OH (740) 446·7444.
~~=====
Houses For Sole
Sale
Berber
Carpet
5 95yd • Specials on v•· 2006 3BR 2.5BA Greer\
nyl tn stock·drtve a little, Twp. LIVIng Room w!Firo
save a lot. Mollohan Car· Place
Family
Room,
pet 2212 Eastern Ave, Separate 01n1ng Room,
Gallipolis,
OH
(740) SpaciOus
Kilcllen
446·7444.
w Grantte Countertop &amp;
Island In the Mtddle &amp;
SwiMI"''tng pool. Above Hardwood
Gabinets.
ground. 4 yrs old. Very Laundry Room 72 x2.7 w
good cond. $750. Call 27'x50' Attached Garage
388·11221or more tnlo.
3 5 Cer. Beaultful V10w an
Country w/2.38 Acres.
Wont To Buy
to
sell
PH.
Pnced
or
Absolute Top Dollar • Slf· 74G-645-5H4
verJgold
co1ros,
any 74G-339·2780. Leave a
10K114K 18K gold JeW· message Must see to
olry, dental gold, pre appreCiate. $158.800. No
1935
US
currency, reallors and no land con·
Senous callers
proof, m1nt
sets,
dta· tracts
moncls. MTS Cotr Shop. only.
151 2nd Avenue Galli·
polls. 446·2842
3BR. 1BA 1 Car Ga·
rage. 167 Graham St.
Buying S!ihl Chatnsaws Rodney Village
(740)
any kind lor parts &amp; re- 446-4543 or 645·4834
pair
running or not
740·794·1188
3BR. 2BA, t700 sq.fl
Yard Sole
home with Appl 2 AC
All Appl. Lg Bath w/FireGarage &amp; Yard Sale, Fn place, TV, All only 3 yrs.
&amp; Sat 9-3 St. Rt. 588, old Make an offer. Call
Rto Grande. Sometlltng lor more info 388·0301
for everybody.

V11rd Sale Stepp Storage
Timothy
Hay.
round Rt.2 N. Fri ·Sat. 9·?
bales, $35.00 ea.. Call cowboy lodge, ktds cloth·
740·339·3203
tng. wooden lum &amp; more

Twtn R1vers Tower 1s ac·
ceptlng applicatiOns lor
watttng list lor HUO sl.lbsldized. 1·BR apartment
lor the elderly/disabled.
ca I 675-6679

G)
Beautiful 1BR apanment
n the country !teshly
painted very clean WID
hook up nice country sel·
t1rg only 10 mtns. from
town Must see to appre·
CIC!te. water pd. $375/mO
814·595-m3
or
740·645-5953
1 BR and bath first
months rent &amp; deposit.
references requared. No
Pets
end
clean.
740-441·0245
Beech St , Mtddleport, 2
br. tum shed apt , util.
pd, No Pets, dep. &amp; rei ,
740·992·0165
N 4th Ave Middleport,
2 br lumtshed apt , dep.
&amp;
ref.,
No
pets,
74(}-992-0165
N. 3rd Ave , Mtddleport,
1 br lumiShed apt. No
Pets,
dep.
&amp;
ref ,
74(}-992-0165
New 2 bed·stove·rel, w d
hookup, clean &amp; Qutet
setttng
740·992-4119
ask tor Marge $435+ utn
SOep
Apartment available now
A1verbend
Aots
New
Haven WV. Now accept·
.ng
appilcat10ns
lor
HUO-subsidiZed,
one
Bedroom Apts Ut1httes
tncluded Based on 30%
of adjuSted ancome Call
304·882·3121,
avatlable
tor Sentor and D1sabled
people

House tor sale. 1t 3 4th New 2 BR apt wro
Rto/Jackson
Avo. Below $30.000. Jm· Hookup,
mediate possession. Ph area $525 mo ~ dep.
Cell740-645·1286
(740) 441·5165

__ ... _....__

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhouses

for

Last
Word

rert

E OCt &amp; gas NO slatrS
No pets 1 or 2 poopto
1624 Cratram Averuo
(rear) (740) 446·4234 or
(740) 208·7661

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts at V·llag
M nor
end
Rtverstdo
Apts tn Mtdlllcport, lrorr
SJ27
to
S592
740-992 5064
Fqua1
Hous ng Oppol'tuntty
Jordan Landing Apartments
3 br available atl elcc
toe no pets
Ask AboLI
Our Rent Spec1als
call
lor delatls 304 674·0023
.&gt;r 304·610..0776
Modem
446-3736

1BR

Ap•

Friday, March 19, 2010

Good
to the

Beautiful Apts. at Jackson Estates. 52 West·
wood Dr.. 1•om $365 to
$~6()
140-446-2566
Equal Houstng Opportu
'lily Thts 1r ..t1tut1on s 'f'
E' qual Opportt.ol'lty P•o
vlder are! Employer
E"ICicncy apt

www.mydailysentinel.com

J&amp;L

YOUNG'S

Construction

CARPENTER
SERVICE

·Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
• Decks
1
o Garages
·Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

That's the word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and so
much more!

SEALil'
{'0'1S1 Rl CliO:'\

Roofing- StdingNee 2BR corropletely fur-~~~~~~~~-======="""!::======~-=======
n shed S600 + elect =
$600 aep 446·9585 or
Sales
Electrical/ Plumbing
Help Wanted- Gen!"~ Help Wanted- General
446-9595
AA New 4 Bodr!lOrls
Waroted
Journeyrrar Labors lor road construe n this fu~ and rewartftng
Spcmg
Val ey
Green
Only _M4j!Zj)
Plus Eleclr'caan
110n. weekly travel re c::·eer lhor Cl"lBtl a reAp l'tments 1 BR
2010 Strg ewtde
s~.obmtt res;~r1es Masor qwed transportation pro Si.Jme
to p:"'eace@con·
$395+2 BR at $470
lncred ble $19 995
County F-atr PO Box 334
v•ded lor sorroe areas. notsseurmodta com
Se
Month 740 446 1599
myl"'ldwest.,oMes con
Pt !&gt;teasart wv 25550 Tractor
&amp;
lront·CI"d nous tnqUtr'os only Ex·
740 828 2750
deadltr!e
loader exp a plus Vahd penence IS preter•ed but
Houses For Rent
- - - - - - - - - 04/
"""!::1~5/~1~0==:=== DL required S!artirg pay not requ red Conno1s·
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===
"The ProctofYII r
S9 00 hr submtt apphca· seur Medta ts an equill
4 Rrrs + l\a Stove &amp;
D l'erence·
Food Services
!tons at www.slurrypav· opporta.nrty employer
I tdge 50 Ohve St 'llo
$1 and a deoo Is all you
ers.com or 'Tiail to Slurry
pets $450 mo + dep
lleed to own your dream Accepl.tng res~.orres for Pavers Inc. 1277 Moun·
Maintenance /
446·3945
home C I Now
exp F1 S~bway Mgr @ tatn Rd Rtehrrond VA
Domestic
F-reedorr Ho es
new locatton 1~ Galhpohs 23060 Slurry Pavers •
Brand new very sMatl
688 ;J6:&gt; 0167
Fell)'. WV
Salary &amp; INC IS fin equal opportu·
1 BR House All util pd
Berts @ ntervtew Scl"d rrty
employer Mmgs lndustles Inc. IS
$350/mo
+
dep Tmde tr your o t! s ngle· resume to t..1gr @ 24968 -800·966· 612
htnng part ttme c ewlead·
1
1
740.256-1664
wtde for a flew home 0 Lad·tey "ld ,Quaker Ctty
ers for JIIM tonal ard lawn
me nterarce
poslltors,
OH 43773 or apply or
House lor rent 4 br 2 "''oney dowr 446-3570
1
tn
I ne
C
www.parm::·- Looklrg or gel"oral con expenence
bath Ml Alto wv call
tractor must bo ttcenscd JanllonaVcustodtal
work
304 532 6059
6000
Employment storescom
ard
nsu~ed
contact preferred Metgs Indus·
Help Wanted- General Brerl Sarg at French tries provides serviCes
Ctty BUt dors or stop r for adults Wilt' develop·
Vetennary
Assistant for
appl catton menta dtsab1 1t1es Must
needed Expenence pre- 304·675·5888.
have a valid Ohto drivers
ferred
but w I tratn
he so and lltgll school
Manufactured
PT FT. some weekends
dJp oma or GED Send
4000
.
Housing
requ red Mtntmum wag€\
resume to Me gs lrdusSend •esc~me to F•encttrtes. ll"c • P 0. Box 307
~---~~-- Towrt Vetonnary C nc
Syract.:~e,Ohto 45779
360 SA 162 Ga pc s or
tax 740-446-4101

Painting-

Gutters ·

Deck'&gt;-

!~tc.

l·or F:tst Court..:ous

Sen ice force
Estimates &amp;
affordable Price~.
Call Dennis Ho)d
740-992-2029

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
·Now Garagea
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Rooting &amp; Gutlers
·VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-li2 1S 7-l0-!i9 J.fii'1S
Pomeroy, Ohco
30 Years Local Experience
- Winter S

lals-

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
o

New Homes

o

Garages

·Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

Replacement

SUNSET
(ONSTRUmON
Remodeling,
Roofs, Garages.
Pole Buildings, •
Siding, Decks,
Drywall, Additions
and New Homes.
Insured- free
Estimates

740-742-3411

\\'indow, and
\in) I Siding

Specinlish, 1:ro
(740) 742-2563

Fully insured
Free estimates- 25+ }Cars experience
1\ol affiliull·d "ilh \lck~ l\l"rrum RcK•tin~ &amp; Rt·moddinRI

Great coverage and
superior service
(that's easy on your wallet)
Hometown Insurance Center
t.te..oh-towntnsu...ncecentAtr.corn

304-773-1111
I.IIErie
~ Insurance·
~t

Total Construction

t-(~)-ne~C~a~l/-tr,-1_f)_o_l_tA---:1/---- ~
0\\ner

Pole Barns Metal Roof..,
f·tre &amp; Water Dama!!c
Dr)\\ all Repair
~

Arn) \eternn
Tom \\olfc
7~0-416-2575

• Siding • \in) I
\\indo\\' • \INa I
und Shingle Rout\
• Decks • Additions

•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

BAl\KS
CO:\S I'RliC'IIO~

co.

Owners:
Jon ·Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

POtnl·ro) . Ohio
(.ommerclal •

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

Residential

Clerical

Own a New .:aSR .: BA ~=~=;;;;;;;=~=

w • ac•e 5

1:tlgr

dowr S525 hp. Of'ice
0Utck
mo WAC 'llear Ho!Zer booKs exp req
"ltst -~---......,~~
74C 446-3570
llavE
t 1ave
comput ~ AVONI All .&amp;.roast To Buy
sk
Cal 740-441·1295 or Sell Ell ey Spe "S
0 645-7371
304·f75-142q

Card of Thanks

Thanks to all
ofyou who
made my
93rd birthday

so special with
all your cards
and l'isits.
Marie Hauck

Truck Dnver Wanted
Req 2 yrs exp
ClassA·CDL
ResuMe w/3 Work Ref
Send to
Drvc·
PO Box1145
Ga pols OH 4563'

FIND
BARGAINS
EVERY DAY
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

pay
week y t vel requued
Transportatlm
provtded
for SOfT'E' areas Submtl
appltcattons at www slur
rypavers corr o• rra to
Surry PaVE&gt;!S INC 1277
Mounta ,., Rd Richmond
VA 23060 Slurry Pavers
INc IS an cquJI opportu
ntty
erroployer
1 800-966 1812
Dowr Urder Restaurant,
Now rmng servers.
COOKS &amp; bouncers. apply
wtlh r 64 State St • Galltpolts OH
lnfoCislon wants YOU!!
Start Work l:nl"ledtatelyll
Only 15 Post!Ions Avatl·
able'
E'arn up to $12 25 an
rour JUSt a•ter 6 months'
Col"lplele Benef1ts Pack
age
Weekly Bonus lncenliVe
On Stto Phystcla,.,
Let t.~ show you what
rroakes lnfoCfston a
G.B.Ehi pace to wort&lt;ll
Call TODAY!
Interview TOMOR·
ROW!!
Work NEXT WEEK !I!
1·868·1MC·PAVU
REMEMBER EXT. 1921
l'tttpJ{Jobs 'lfOCtSion com

NA C~A HHA
Ga ta County Col
Ag ng t.s seek rg aides to
provtde Hol"'e Care and
Personal Care to Sen or
Ctlizens
Galta Courty Ortv
PB!d ~· eage
D f&lt;eren a We-ek nd
Pay-W ekend Wo'kers
"'leeded
Daysrtft
, Nortgn No
Pa d Holidays
V s orroertal Plan
RetiremEnt Plan
Apply Senter Reso rce
Center
1165 St At 160, Gall po-

s
Mon.·Fri ,8·4
740-446·7000 E'OE

---~~--STNAs
Arbors at Galhpohs, 170
Pmecrest Dnve Galhpo·
IS

Seektng canng and com·
passtonate P'OVlders of
great SerYICO
Currert STNA lteense reqUired
Apply at center or E'rrtatl
to
fV1an@ex1endtcare COr'
www.ex1end1care com
EOE
Unlimited Earning Po·
tentlalll!
101 5 Bob FM tS looktng
for t.,e right person to
JOin ot.r sales team. A
person that s mterosted
n a career thai affords
the opporturlly to gtve
yourself a ra se every
Month: a career wt ere
you're reqwed to actually gel out of the office
and tnto t.'lo pubhc. a ca·
reer In ttoo exctUng and
ntaresung held of red1o.
If you thtnk you have
what 11 takes •o succeed

Broad Run
Gun Club
Sunday, March 14
Factory/ Slug Match

"Raise to
Rebuild"
Lawrence Family
Benefit
(Robert and Julie Lawrence
and Family)

Saturday, March 20. 2010
5-11 :00 pm
Country Camp Ground
(Royal Oak)
Admission $1 0.00 I Adult
Hog Roast • OJ
50150 Drawing • Raffles

time customer service position.
Successful applicant must b~
p~oplc oriented. pleasant
telephone etiquette. professional
and dependable. [&lt;.lust ha\e
cxpcricnc~ in computers. and
enjoy working with numbers.
For employment consideration,
send resume to:
Pam Caldwell
c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

R.L. Hollon
Trucking
Dump Truck

Scnkl'
\h do drilcwa~s
Urn tone • GraHl
1 p oil • l'ill J)irt

740-985-4422
PhlebotOr"' Sl Part TIT'e
'Mr. mum 2 Years Ph!e·
botorny E:xptence
• Must be Cert1fled
• •Aust nave ow1 transportabon
_
3
"Part·! me posllton
l'ours per day
"Must De avatlable lor
5arro start
• Exper anee r a hospt·
tal o· laboratory preferred
Ematl
resune
to
janet@adllab net
Fax
267-525·2468 Job ts located '" West Columbta.
Mason County

740-856-2609

2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

Cell

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
*Prompt lind Quain)

:\ow Selling·
o

Ford &amp; Motorcmft
Pans • Engines,
Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmtsswn~

• \ftermarket

Replacement Sheet
:\let.tl &amp; Component~
I 11 \II \l.lk~s of \tlucl
Ral.'inl'. Ohio
7~0-9~9·1956

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

\\ork
*Re.asonable R.ue,
*Insured
*Experien,ei.l
Referenl'e~ :\\.Uiable'

Call Gal) Stanle) 0
740· )Q I ~044
Plea'e l..:a\ e me,,age

l\11CHAEL'S

LEWIS

SERVICE CE:\TER
1.555 N\'E AH•.

CONCRETE
C'ONSTRLJCTION

t•omerO\, Oil
• Otl &amp; ItIter chan"c
• Tunc Ups e
• Brake S..:n ICC

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

• \C Rech&lt;trgc
• ~ linor e\haust
rep.ur • Tire Rcp:ur
• fransmis\lon Filter
&amp; l·luid Ch.mgc
• General \ lechantl

Concrct&lt;' \\ ork
29 Y~:ar' E\pcrienc~:

All T)pl's Of

Da\·id Lewis
740-992-6971

\\Orl..
17~0 1 992-0910

PUBLIC
NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given that on Saturday,
March 20, at 10:00 a.m.,
a public sale will be
held at 860 Broadway
St., Middleport, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Company is
selling for cash in hand
or certified check the
following collateral:
2001 Clayton Moblte
Home CLA019059TN
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio. reserves the right to bid
at this sale, and to withdraw the above colla!·
eral prior to sale.
Further, the Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
right to reject any or all
bids submitted.
The above described
collateral will be sold
as is-where Is, with no
expressed or implied
warranty given.
For further information,
or for an appointment
to Inspect collateral,
prior to sale date con-

740446920

' our

Rl~ht

l'uhlu: 'ulin·., irt '''"'PfiJX·r'.
lo h.no\\,lk'lntn-d Rh:hl to \tlUr ()nor.

tact Cyndie or Ken at Banks at the Meigs
992-2236.
County Department of
Job &amp; Family Services
(3) 17.18, 19
(740) 992-2117 ext. 106.
- - - - - - - - Proposals shall be subPublic Notice
mitted to Jane .Banks,
Administratllle Assis·
LEGAL NOTICE
tant, Meigs County
The Meigs County De- DJFS. P.O. Box 191 ,
partment of Job and 175 Race Street, MidFamily
Services dleport, OH 45760 no
(DJFS), serving as the later than April 5, 2010
administrative agent at 12:00 noon. All subfor the Meigs County missions must be reFamily and Children ceived by mall or hand
First Council. is solicit- delivered by the above
ing proposals to Imple- date and time. No rna·
ment the county's Help terlals received after
Me Grow Program for that · date will be inthe period of July 1, cluded in previous sub2010 through June 30, missions
nor
be
2011 .
The program considered. The deserves children 0 to 3 partment reserves the
years and their fami- right to reject any or all
lies. Preference will be proposals. In accorgiven to the proposer dance with 29-CRFwhich presents the part 31, 32 Meigs
most Integrated and County DJFS Is prohib·
coordinated approach, lted from discriminaincluding the utilization tion on the basis of
of sub-contracts, to race, color, national ori·
serving this popula- gin, sex, age, religion,
tion. For a copy of the political belief or disRequest for Proposal ability.
(RFP), contact Jane (3)19. 26 (4)2

l

H&amp;H
Guttering

r~,h

'\urth Carolina
!-&gt;HRI\11'

tHO)

Seamless Gutters
Roofirg Std ng Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
74().653·9657

742-~56.3

Lafl'~.nt\tr rro:zen.lw:uh on

$10 per lb ca,h onl~
P1~t

ts l"e\Ur ..:d m .c~(h .l:Ilc~

Shtpments amh C\CI')
other Fnda'

....p.~~!~!~~~~~....
New Construction. Room Add.,
Roofing, Shingles, Metal, Rubber,
Concrete Work,
Any Type remodeling, Decks
Phone:74~7~16

Caii74G-447-3642
35 yrs exp. Free Est. FuUy Insured

Owaers:

,m Cremeans I loger Sellers

Hill's Self
Storage
29625 Bashc1~ Road
Ractne, OH 45771

740-949·2217

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00 am - 8:00 pm

m
il

R1l()ting. Stdtng.

Sofiu.

D~cb.

Doors.

\\indo"'· E:.le.:tn,·.

Plumhmg. Dl) ".til
RenKx.it&gt;hng, Room
\Jditi&lt;10\
Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Fn'l' E,(imatl·~
7 40-367-0536

Sew Con~truction and

CON;:~;;;;e:l~;·;;;;~~~~y
&amp; MANUFACTURING.UC
AND SIDING INSTAlLATION

\le Spe, t&lt;llt:( /11 R{p/,,, em(nt l\mdn11 ~
For OM1 r Hom 1 &amp; Trarlen
,\ (I n1••' 1 lwr~:r ro repltct meraljramr 11 mdt&gt;ll t

::=:=

Rkhartl S111ith
Ci'-01\na \ " e f're,t&lt;knt
( wh,' c OH

7-t0-6h7-0;I0b

Fa,:· 7~Cl-6117-tl329
lc1ll Fr~~; ll77·-l2S-XJ&lt;l(l

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room \dd!twn,. Rcm(xk 11· \kt,,l ,'\:

Shinl!le Rot'f,, :\('\\ Ht'lll'-''· ~td, !l!!, Deds.
B.:nhrt&gt;om R~o·modehng. I t&lt;.C'bt'\• ,~ ln,ured
Rirk Price- 17 ~ ~'' · F\peril•nn·
WVI040954 Cell 740-416-2960 740-992-0730

�Friday, March 19, 2010

www.mydailysentlnel.com

BLOND IE

The Daily Sentinel ·Page 87

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun
II oiOi..f.

C''ROSSWORJJ

M~S

801' DA!&gt;
POt~"'

•OlE
01= GOiNG -0 A

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Dispatch
6 F1rst fam1·
'Y of 1910
11 Needed a
massage
12 Some
messages
1 3 Taken
aback
14 Smger
Ronstadt
15 Course
needs
17 Plan part
1 8 D1llon or
Damon
20 Tmy
amount
22 Pub pints
23 As a
group
2 6 Sensational
2 8 Pastoral
poem
29 Famous
31 Descartes
conclusion
32 Rat1onal
33 Regard1ng
3 4 Relate
36 Bndge
cost
3 8 Use
40 Map hnes
43 Tubular
pasta
44 "Tomorrow''
warbler
45 Concluded

MV...r.I\.E,/. 'T'I,EA.-~
\DON- io.t'

BEETLE BAILEY

Mort Walker
I'M VERV IMPRESSED, Sl R. VOU1RE
MAl&lt; lNG THE SAME MISTAI&lt;EG
NAPOLEON MADE AT WATERLOO.'

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

·A ~OT OF P£C&gt;P/.£
;GAY Tt/,AT,.51R

Tom Batiuk

~

JOSEPH
46 P1geon's
perch

DOWN
1 Pos
sesses
2 Play
p1ece
3 Martm
Scorsese
film

4 Conviction 18 Buck o r
5 Keenness
bull
6 -AVIV
19 Home7 Sp1elberg
coming
film
guest
8 Aaron
21 Overlook
Spell1ng
23 Perfect
serres
place
9 Ocean
24 Louver
rnot1on
piece
10 Stnke
25 Sesame
16 Sermon
Street
tOpiC
youngster

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

" AH, THE FIRST SIGN OF SPRING ...
LEROY'S TAKING DOWN THE CHRISTMAS TREE."

ZITS

Bil Keane

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker

Patrick McDonnell

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

27 Stra1ght
30 Take in
33 Singularly
34 Race
f1msh
35 Tied
up
37 Uttered
39 Went
f1rst
41 Really
enJOY
42 Behold

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

. CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

6 8

4

6
4

" ...'cept Mommy's c ame with more
curves and t h ings.''

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum
Dlfhcult1 1~1el

****

L 9 8

p 8

~

8 9 8
9
G

~

t
~

L

B 9
L

fiND -mE CHANNEL 1 L.lKE, 'Tl"it.N I ~I'DE

~I:: ~\011;" FROM 1'.\'/ PARE.NIS.''

6

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Fnda\, March 19 2010
penod m which }OU
t' olve to a new le\ el and create much more of "hat
'uu de&lt;nre You ,iiscover JUst how tar reaching' our
mfluenn· might be nnd "ho can and wtD make a dif
lerence If \OU are smgle }ou'll d!SCO\er how attril~
tl\ e other; think \ ou are If you are 'attached, the two
of )OU ''til connect on a lt.\el that you h.nen't expen
~ m m.my ~ears fAt:Rt.:S always bnngs I &gt; to
a&lt;;Ituation
n· S r&lt;:S lhtl&lt;.t dofDav'r UH 5·
Dvnam . 4 P0$1/IVC: 3 A 1~c 2-So-~ I Dtfficull
ARIES (March 21 Apnll9)
* "*'** Your perspedl\e 1s in dem.md. How }OU
see hnances or a busmess .tm.mgement remmn~
umque to you. look for the nM"t p.llh for all those
"ho re mutuall) conO?med listen to someone '' ho
nuftht ha\ e different expertiSe Tontght: Indulge a Itt
tic It about time
TAURUS (Apni:ID Ma) 20)
* *'*'** You nught be on top of\ our game )our
"•'} of handling a situation could chaJlb&gt;e rad1calh
.liter a meeting or com ers.llton with more th.:m se1 er
o~l people. A dt'&lt;'1s1on made nO\\ rould be c;ound and
product!\ e \ \orry less Toru.ghl Out on the to\\1\
Gr~ma (Yia\ 21June 20)
*** *'lit Workmg to fal.'llit.ltt.• a sttuation coul.i'be
d1fficult tf others aren t \\Orking with vou KnQ,,
11hen to ''alk a\\ a\ from a s1tult1on and ca.lltt flthle
l:ndcn;tandmg \\nat L~ f;Otnj; on rouJd be more
unportant than) ou realu:e. Cons1der) our;elf hrsl
li mtght. Vanish tl \ ou c.m
CA~CER (June 21 Jul} 22)
* '*'tt'** Look at the end result Listen to otht rs m
a mt.'t'ting. The &lt;;o}utwn,. though e\ tdent to n\c111\
might not bet'\ ident to uthcrs Realtze when \'OU
ha1 gone too far S.tck ofi d plomattcalh "no11
''hen }ou no longer h.J, e control and "hat need to
happen lbrught: Say }es to an tn\ 1tallon
LEO lfuly 23 Aug. 22)
**'* * Others look tn you Your ad, tee pn•b.ilih
mc.ms much mon&gt; th.m \OU realize. Understandmg
{'\ohe-. beC.\USC )OU lrt' \\1lltng !O fbten IO em l!"'lf'Of
tan! pciT!nt.r. YoUt abthl\ to understrnd ~moone
eml'Tgi.'S Torught A'!.'&gt;\lme the lead
\ JI{GO (Aug 2J.&amp;.&gt;pt 22)
* '*'*'* 'rour ab hi\ to gr,\Sp what has h.lppent.&gt;d
nu~ Vt'M IS a H'T\ ~Q,\)

v 9 6

8
L G9 g 8
g 6 P L G
6 L BG ~
8 8 g 9 t
9 ~ L 8 6
8 8 Gt 9
~ g 8 6 L
Gt ~ B 9
~

•

11

comes out Reach out for others at a dlst!nce If you
•
11 ant to take off eo~rl} for the weekend, b) all mean-.
do. Lunch east!) could become an e' ent. Tonight:
Don'llet a child or IO\ ed one mar a happening.
•
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22)
***'** Team"ork alwa~s brings results, be they
negatt' e or po"1th e. As yom efforts co:ne 11ith postb\e thoughts and good ,,;u. you will drn" that type
of results) ou destre Know" hen you ha1 e had
enou~ Tonij:;ht Togetherness lS the theme
SCORPIO (Oct. 23- ·o,. 2Il
**'** Others demand control. It 11ould be be5t to •
be unusual!) cre.'llt\ e "hen puttmg m} our two
rents. An approa&lt; h other than the norm will most
like!) dr"" the de-&gt;1red resuJ•.., A bramstunrung ~­
~~roduces e.xcellent re.~ults. Tonight Just don"t be
SAGITfARIUS (1'\0\. 22·Doc 21)
'*'** An e\ t:n attilude. \\1th forus on gettmg a

p!Uject done oould make all the difterenre m what
OO.'"Urs 'rou could be hred and "antmg to complete
the 11eekt&gt;nd e.ul): l:nder.,tand what IS happening
,-;thin a relations~. T&lt;might· feeling tnVIgomted.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-}an. 19)
*"**** Keer a king questiOns, knmung full I\ ell
\OU .ue on top o )OUr ga.:ne. Remembe~ younHJrcb •
don't fall on deaf t'itr; and other; \\ill respond. 'lour .
tone can nuke or break a Situation let humor e' oh e Cre.tlt\ ttv flourishes m thh. atmosphere. Torught:
Hook up \\1th ~!Th" rohort ....
AQUAR I U~ Oan. 2Q-Feb.lb)
*** If \OU lt&gt;el the need to pull bxk some and
play the Tl.'&lt;'luse, t.1iq' oft edrl} or calltn E1 el) onE'
needs a l:&gt;re&lt;~k. e'en you Schedule some tune for
mdulgt-nC\! \\here }ou can and mlll'nJO\ }ourself.
Kno11 "hat "orks for you. forught In the thick of

things
PISCES (Feb 19 March 20)
*'*'*** 'rou SJ\ the nght 1\0rd&lt;: .md others
respond 'rou might ha\ e had,, problem (or a while,
but now you loOS&lt;'I\ up. Others "ant vour \ tew-..
Exrress the same t' pe of e\dtement t\bQut other.'
opiruono; Build up more mutuaht) 1brught Hangmg
out IS fu:1 to do

�.....-..-----....

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

--~-----~-,.---- ----------

• The Daily Sentinel

www.rnydailyscntmel .com

Friday, March 16,2010

ON A GREAT SEASO

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DIV
N IV
DISTRICT RUNNER- UP
Racine Optometric
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ROSES EXCAVATING
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I

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N Second Ave.

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_ 992-6333 • Synlcuse, OH ;;iii

w

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Racine~

Ohio

Racine, Ohio

740-949-2078

7 40-949-2493

Dr. lVIelanie \Veese~ O.D.

Racine Service
Center

HILLS SUNOCO

104 5th Street

7

Racine, Ohio

7 40-949-2700
·Mike Hill - Owner

da)''i n

Elm Street
•
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Ractne~ o 10

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740-949-3099

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