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Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

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\vww.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, March 13, 2008
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rest of Purdue's overachieving freshmen.
Moore's final high school
game was in the downtown
Indianapolis arena last
spring. when his East
Chicago team won Indiana's
Class 4A championship. He
and
three
of
his
·Boilermakers
teammates
were on the state's All-Star
team that completed a twogame swee() of Kentucky
there last summer.
And their frrsttime back to
Consec~ in college ~as. in
Purdue s -upset of Lomsville
in the Wooden Tradition in
December.
Now the stakes are a lot
higher · as tlte surprising
Boilennakers and everyone
else take aim at regular-season champion Wisconsin in
the Big Ten tournament this
week.
"We all played in Conseco
Fieldhouse, so we are a little

7). "I'm sure there will be a Now, our goal is to play betgreat atmosphere down there ter basket6all. ... If we could
with all the different teams win the title, that'd be great,
in town. We're really look- but this team has already
ing forward to it."
made some history."
Moore, Hummel and
See:ded second behind
freshmen Scott Martin and Wisconsin, Purdue will play
JaJuan Johnson played a big Friday against the winner of
part in Purdue s climb to Thursday's
first-round
second in the Big Ten after a matchup between Illinois
preseason projection for the (13-18) and Penn State (15bottom half of the confer- 15). Wisconsin (26-4) will
ence.
The - . No .
17· pla_y in the quarterfinals
Boilennakers finished one · agamst either Michigan (9game
behind
No.
8 21) or Iowa (13-18).
Wisconsin in .the conference
Another frrst-round game
race, and they were respon- Thursday
matches
sible for the Badgers' only Northwestern (8-21) against
two Big Ten losses.
Minnesota (18-12), with that
And Purdue's Matt Painter winner advancing_ to face
;was named Big Ten coach of No. 22 Indiana (25-6), the
the year, two years after the third seed. No. 19 Michigan
Boilennakers finished last in State (24-7), .the fourth seed,
the conference.
will play defending confer"Since we've been down a ence tourney champion Ohio
couple years ago. we have State (19-12) in another
·guys that want to prove that quarterfinal Friday.
we belong," Painter s~id.
Indiana's Eric Gordon -

'

,I

! ( lf I lie

OHSAABO'YS Big Ten tournament in familiar surroundings for Purdue freslul)~n
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)- used to the building," said "It's been a tough climb, but whose North Central team Lions. 'Til say w~ ~#~
'BAslamWL Conseco
Fieldhouse has Robbie Hummel, a first- we didn't achieve our goal lost to Moore and East not playing well, but I"aon't
been
almost
a second home team All-Big Ten selection of winning the Big Ten-(reg- Cbicago in the high school think there is any issu,e with
FINAL FOUR to E'Twaun Moore
and the as a freshman at Purdue (24- ular-season) championship. championship game last anybody's ineni'il~.~te. I

QOI 11. . . ~-P

'

Emergency Guide
inside today's Sentinel

year - was named Big Ten thought it was bette!::Jban lt
freshman of the year. He and has been all year, to tell you
IU teammate D.J. White, the the truth."
Big Ten player of the year,
Iowa's T~d Lickliter also
were joined on the media's will be returning to his
all-conference team by hometown for the Big Ten
Hummel, Wisconsin's .Brian tournament in ' his &amp;nit .~a­
Butch and Ohio State's son as the Hawkeyes 'colic!).
Jamar. Butler. Michigan Also returning is Ohio
State's Drew Neitzel was an State's Thad Matta, who like
Ali-Bi~ Ten pick by the Lickliter coached• a,t Butler
leagues coaches instead of before moving to jplc Big
Butler.
Ten.
· ' · ··'
,
The Hoosiers 'are coming
The Bu~keyes reached the
into the tournament off a NCAA cllampif&gt;Aihi ; · ·
loss last ~ee~ at Penn State, last year b\lt..los~-~il
a lapse mtenm coach Dan two players - Ind1anapo s
Dakich says was not a result products Greg Oden and
of the tunnoil from the aile" Mike Conley- to the NBA.
gations of NCAA violations
"They have to understand
that led to Kelvin S31llpson's the urgency of what's at
resignation last month.
stake, from the standpoint of
"I watch the film for what. you win, you advance, you
it is and I saw more effort lose, you go home,, " Matta
out of our guys on the defen- 'said of the tournament.
sive end dian I have seen all "They've got to :Understand
year," Dakich . said of that in a lot of re¥ards this is
Indiana's loss to the Nittany postseason play.'.
·

•

Middleport-•.Pomen1y,-ohio
;;o ('I VIS • \ ol. ;;-. :'1/o. thh

.

""" ·nw.ta i\0" · ntinl'l.&lt;·nm

1"1{111" , 'I \R( II 1-l , :!OoH

Rutland mayor wants police back on streets·

SPORTs
,• Chillicothe, Libbey
:advance to D-11·final.
SeePage 81

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT&lt;I!&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'

RUTLAND · -Rutland
Mayor Lowell Vance said
he is at a "crossroads" at
this tiine in determining
how ·to get local police protection back on the streets in
light of an investigation into
the
village's
Law
Enforcement Trust Fund.
The Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Identification and
Investigation is currently

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!
PLAY COVERALL BINGO
•

investigating three checks .
cashed from the LETF.
Rutland Police Chief Jeff
Miller remains on unpaid
leave . from the department
after the three checks,
payable to. cash, totaling
$550, were cashed at a local
business. Miller's signature
and the name of former
Mayor
April
Burke
appeared on two of the
checks , but Burke has
denied signing eit_her check
which Miller said was used

Boards ·
studying
proposal -

Wrigley: No
decision made on
whether to bid .
for Wrigley Field
naming rights

for attempted drug buys.
Miller has· told council
Burke gave him permission
to sign her name which
Burke denies.
The signa,ture of another
officer, Steve Williams,
appeared with that of Miller
on the third check, cashed in
January. Miller has told
Rutland Council Williams
gave him permission to sign
his name on the check
which he said was atso used
in attempted drug buys. At

l~ast $350 has already been
repaid to the LETF for cases
that Miller told council did
not pan out.
With Miller on unpaid
leave and the village without a solicitor, Vance and
council have been unsure
what to do in terms of
putting local police back
on the streets during an
ongoing
investigation .
Vance said in speaking
with a BCI agent, he and
an agent initially agreed it

Spring story time

may be better that neither
Miller -or Williams report
to work before the investigation lias concluded.
Vance said now that a few
months have passed ,. he
would check with BCI for a
definite answer · about
bringing Williams back.
stating Williams was not
suspended and . Vance personally had no pro blem
with him coming back .

Please see Rutland, A:s

Demo hoped
to inspire
village-wide

cleanup

• •
reVISIOns

CHICAGO (AP) - The
chainnan of Chicago-based
Wrigley says the· ~urn
maker hasn't
dectded
whether to make a bid for
the Jiaminj!: rights of
Wrigley Fteld if they
become available.
The historic ballpark got
its name while owned by
the Wrigley family, which
sold the Cubs decades ago.
Bill Wrigley Junior is
chainnan of the confectioner. ·During a morning share"
holder meeting, he said his
family has "great passion"
for the Cubs and baseball . .
But Wrigley says . the
company promotes its individual brands, not the
Wrigley name. And he says
Wrigley would "evaluate it
like we would any other
opportunity" if naming
rights become available.
Tribune Compil!ly is selling the team, and chainnan
Sam Zell says he'd consider
selling the stadium's naming rights.

BY BRIAN

J." REED

BREEIJ@MYDA1LYSENT1NEL.COM

BY KEVIN KEUY

MIDDLEPORT
Village officials and proRIO
GRANDE
moters of downtown revitalRevisions to a proposal from
ization hope the demolition
Ohio Board of Regents
of a condemned building in
Chancellor Eric Fingerhut to
downtown Middleport will
resolve an instructional serinspire others in town to
vices contract dispute
improve the appearance of
between the University of
their properties.
Rio Grande and Rio Grande
Both residentia~ homeCommunity College will
owners and business owners ·
apparently need approval by
' ar.e being encouraged to
the boards. of trustees o{
participate in an unofficial
both institutions.
"cleanup" in town, and
After meeting late into
Mayor Michael Gerlach
Wednesday ni$hl, t_he uni·
said Wednesday he hopes .
versity board dtd not make a
residents will notice the
deciston on accepting
improvement to the down·
Fingerhut's proposal, but
town lot where Alan Ervin's
did submit rev1sions that
condemned building came
were being studied as of
down, -and improve the
.Thursday.
.
appearance of their own
Mike Chaney, director of
properties.
media relations for the
· The village used $8,000
regents, said the revisions
in private donations to pay
were worked on by the uni·
for the demolition of
versity board in a special
Ervin' s building on North
meeting
on
campus
Second Avenue between
Wednesday.
Questions
Race and Mill Streets. The
about the meeting were
funds were solicited from
referred by the trustees to
private donors by the
the chancellor.
Middleport Development
It is likely both boards
Group
as part of the vilBeth SerJOnt/pholo .
will need to meet to discuss OK, so spring doesn't officially arrive until March 20 but spring story time at the Meigs lage's loca match for state
the revisions before the path County District Public Library is in full swing. Story time Is free. includes a .story read to revitalization funds. They
to a new instructional ser- small visitors and a craft that follows. Story time Is held at 2 p.m., Mondays, at the Racine were earmarked for the
vices agreement is clear. Library; ~:30 p.m .. Tuesdays at the Eastern Library; 2 p.m., Wednesdays at the Pomeroy demolition project , and
Those meetings are yet to
although the grant appli·
be scheduled, although the Library; 2 p.m .. Thursdays at the Middleport Library. Here, MCDPL Children's Services cation was denied, the
Coordinator Emily Sanders reads to Brady Collins of Syracuse who arrived at story time with
Plean see ~o. A:S
grandmother Diana Ash.
Ple•se - Cleanup. AJ
KKELLY@MVDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

.

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·.

.

• Answered prayers
can save a lffe.
See Page A5
• Bethel schedules
:special Easter services.
·See Page A&amp;

Shaw 'Carpet IU1d Floor Center

Residential • Commerdal •
Wholesale • Retail

INSIDE
, :• Po~t 39 to observe
.Legion birthday.
:.. See Page A2
:: • A Hunger For More.
Set Page A2 .:~
• GCC participating
In scholarship program. See Page A3

IIAFFELT'S
At••

.

- An Independent A11ency
Repreeenllll&amp; Erie lnslll'llnce

WEATIIER~

All-TVC
from PageBl
most selections in the conference. Federal Hocking
and Waterford, who won the
boys and girls l~agues,
respectively. tied with seven
total selections each.
Federal Hocking seniors
Cory Vales, Kory Williams;
Cory McCune, and Jared _,
Gandee were selecied for
the boys team. Vales was
also chosen Most Valuable
Player. Seniors ErniiY.
· Dunfee and Chelsea Bat!
and sophomore Iris Butcher
rounded out the choices on
the girls side.
·
For Waterford, five of the
seven selections were repeat
choices from last season.
On the All· TVC girls team
are senior Ashleigh Tomes,
juniors Brittany Brown and
Jessi Drayer, and sophomore Sina King, who was
named MVP. On the boys
team are seniors Derek
Hoie and Alex Lang and
jumor D.J. Cunningham.
All but Brown and Lang are
second-time selections.
Other boys selections
. included Miller senior
Dustin Householder for the
second consecutive season
and Trimble senior Isaac
Standley.
Bob Vales of Federal
Hocking was selected boys,
Coach of the Year.
, For the girls, junior
Schuyler Shaner and freshman Jessie Spears of
Trimble we.re ·chosen. as
was Miller senior Randi
Toth.
Jerry Close of Waterford
was g1rls Coach of the Year.
All selections were decided upon by the coaches of
the TVC Hocking.

Super Bowl
Genius,Aa ,

TODAY'S
NUMBER I$:
·'•

DetalleonP.,.~

I t\ Just

Around The
Comer

Barge blun\JS

INDEX
2 SEC110NS- 16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A2

Calend~rs

A2

Classifieds

Bs-6

Comics
· Editorials ·

B7

A4

Faith • Values
Movies

NASCAR

•

Rebecca
Bl'lllhMI'II,
Au.D.,CCC.A

435'/,

A One Stop Shop For
All Your Medical
Equipment Needs!

Sports
Weather

As-7
A3
BB

B Section
A2

© aoo8 Ohio Valley PubU.hlna !="·

Ohio River bn~ge

Electric
Power,River
.Transportation Division.
· The Associated Press
NEWPORT -The Hi reported the Raike was towCarpenter Memorial Bridge ing 15 loaded coal barges
that connects Newport with when it bumped against the
St. Mary's, W.Va. was bridge's pier. None of the
bumped by a coal barge barges broke loose and no
attached to a tow boat late injuries were reported. The
Wednesday night, according bridge was later reopened
to the United States Coast on Thursday.
Guard.
·
Lumpp added although
The barge was attached to the barge which hit the pier
the M1V Jeffrey A. Raike was damaged, the tow and
and caused officials to tem- barges were able to-continue
porarily close the bridge, down river.
according to Coast Guard Lt.
The cause of the accident
Herbert Lumpp. The Raike is not clear though Lumpp
is listed on the roster of vessels owned by American
Ple•se - Bumps, A:S
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT&lt;II&gt;MYDIIILYSENnNEL.COM

(740) -'46-7619

ATHENS
275 West Union Street
(740) 594-3571

. Jollfrn 80D-231·711 W

utility bills.'' It allows lowincome residentS additional
titne to apply for emerPOMEROY
The gency HEi\P funds from
Public Utilities Commission the recent federal governof Ohio (PUCO) has extend· ment allocation of an addied its winter reconnect order tiona! $25.7 million awardthrough April 30. This ed to Ohio. The distribution
extension provides th.e Ohio of those funds are being .
Department of Development handled at the state level.
The PUCO winter reconwith more ti'Ve to distribute
winter crisis Emergency nect order coincides with the
Home Energy A:ssistance , time extension granted earliProgram (E-HEAP) funds to er to Meigs and Gallia resiat-risk families.
dents by the Gallia-Meigs
The winter reconneCt Community Action Agency
order requires electric and which allows them to apply
natural gas utilities to through the local CCA
"reconnect or maintain ser· office for HEAP assistance.
·vice to customers, regard- However, too clarify some
less of income, who have misunderstandings, Sandy
di'sconnected
or Edwards of the GMCAA
been
program
said
threatened wjth disconnec· HEAP
lion due to nonpayment of Thursday that the extension
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH&lt;II&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

of HEAP "does not mean
second time assistance
through. the local progr!IJil,
just more time to apply.''
While the Pl:JCO has
e11:tended .the winter recon·
nect order on residential
electric and natural gas · ser·
vices the action is not to be
construed as a "forgiveness
of the utility bill ." Customers
are ultimately responsible for
payment of the entire a moun!
owed on the natural gas or
electric bill.
The request for the extension of the winter reconnect
order which came from the
Ohio·
Department
of
Development (ODOD) was
made to bring the time frame
in line with the E-HEAP
Please see PUCO, AJ

S..,I•
• s.. o.r
s...,...'!

,,.,

Avenue

· PUCO extends winter reconnect order

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The Daily Sentinel

Dear AnDie: I am the father
of five children, four of whom
are adults. My two oldest
. sons, "Jason" and "Jared." are
. married, but their Wives hate
each other and refuse to
attend family functions where
the other may be present.
My wife and I have refused
to involve ourselves in the
fight between our daughtqsin-law. We invite both to family functions and they decide
whether they wiU attend.
. Recently, however, Jason's
wife told us that she and my
son wiU not speak to us or
yjsit if we_have any contact
with Jared and his wife. She
says it is disrespectful to her
when we speak to Jared or
his wife. This is especially
· difficult now because Jason
and his wife are expecting
our first grandchild.
My wife and I have refused
to give in to our daughter-inlaw's blackmail, but we don't
want to give up contact with
Jason or our future grandchild. Any advice? -Squeezed in Kentucky ·
Dear . Squeezed: For
shame. The only disrespectful person here is your dau~­
ter-m-law, who is behavmg
like a spoiled brat. For her to
punish you because she can't

Club.S and ·
OrganizatiOnS

deal with her sister-in-law is a We recommend you spend percent of people with hearsign of immaturity and self- your time with people who mg loss can be helped with
ishness. The fact that your appreciate your company.
hearing aids. Modern hearFriday, March 14
son won't speak up indicates
~r Annie: I am writing ing aids are sleek and often
SALEM CENTER he lacks backbone and inde- to urge you to call your cannot be easily seen.
Meigs County Pomona
If your readers find them- . Grange 46 will meet at 7:30
pendent thought. She. also readers' attention to a health
may be an abuser who is try- condition that is frequently selves asking people to repeat p.m. at the Star Gmnge hall
ing to isolate her husband . ignored but affects more themselves, think others are located three miles north of
from his family. Talk to your than one in four American mumbling, have trouble hear- Salem Center on County road
son and tell him you are so families. It silently erodes ing children and women or 1. Inspection wiU be held
sorry his wife feels she has the sufferer's quality of life, have ringing in their ears, I
Saturday, March 15
the right to dictate your rela- undermines family relation- encourage them to have their
POMEROY _ Christian
tionships with others. Explain ships and fuels depression. hearing checked by a profes- Motorcycle Association,
that if she doesn't wish to see I'm talking about hearing sional. - Se~Jei Kochkin, "Delivered" chapter, regular
you or the rest of the family, loss. It affects more than Ph.D., Executive Director, meeting, 5 p.m., Common
Grounds.
that is her choice, but you 31.5 million Americans, and · Better Hearing Institute
SALEM CENTER
hope he will have the decen- surprisingly, most are below . Dear Dr. Kochkin:
cy to keep in touch on his retirement age. ·
Thank you for the excellent Star Grange 778 and Star
own. A supportive wife
Many of today's baby information. Readers can Junior Grange 878 will hold
would insist on it.
boomers suffer hearing loss get a copy of "Your Guide a fun night and potluck sup_peaunnie: _FQL.!!&lt;SOI,!!m~e_lfi!!!ro~m~li!!!'st~e!J,m!!!·n'lU'!!to~lo!!!u~dc!m~ul!ls~ic;_-l'to!!._!;B~e!.ltt~er~H[&lt;ean!)!'JJ·n:!!l!!~'"db!?_.l'V~ca~IJ:l-:_j_Kpe~•cJ
..,-Ix_~
...·m;mg at. 6·30--p._mtime now, I've felt that one or living in noisy environ-· ing 1-800-EAR-WELL (I- vegree teams Will practice
of my friends is avoiding ments. lt .can cause irritabil- &amp;00-327-9355) or visiting following the supper.
me. "Kenny" never answers ity, negatiyism, anger, the Better Hearing Institute
HARRISONVILLE _
when I call, and he doesn't . fatigue, tension, stress and · at betterhearint~.org.
Harrisonville
Masonic
return my messages. Also, if depression, and can lead to
Annie's Ma1lbox is writ- Lodge will meet at 7:30
I go over to his ·apartment social withdrawal, rejection ten. by Kathy Mitchell and . p.m. for annual inspection:
(when I know he's supposed and loneliness. A recent Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- Dinner at 6:30 p.m.
to be home), his roommate study found that Americans tors of the Ann lAnders
Monday, March 17
with hearing loss milke sig- column. Please e-mail your
ATHENS _ Southeast
tells me he's not there.
Is he avoiding me, am I niflcantly less money than questions to anniesmail- Ohio Woodland Interest
paranoid, or am I just being people with normal hearing box@comcast.net, or write Group, 7 p.m. at the Athens
a nuisance? Feeling - but that use of a hearing to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. County Extension office.
Neglected
aid on the job reduces Box 11R190, Chicago, IL Speaker, Scott Bagley with
Dear Neglected: Well, income loss by 50 percent. 606ll. To find out more National Network of Forest
you're not paranoid, Stop Unfortunately, too many about Annie's Mailbox, Practioners. His program
calling lmd dropping by people wait years befor_e and read features by other "What's Hot and What's
Kenny's apartment. It gettmg treatment, becoming Creators SyndicaJe writers Not" includes overview of
makes you seem .desperate. more and more disconnect· and cartoonists, visit the forest practices.
If Kenny wants to talk, he ed. With modem advances Creators Syndicate Web
knows· how to reach you. in technology, more than 90 page at www.creators.com.

Church events

-----------------Friday, March 14
LONG BOTI'OM
Faith Full Gospel Church,
gospel sing, · 7 p.m., . fol· cloudy. Lows in the upper20s. lowed by fellowship.
·
Monday ... Suuny. Highs
MIDDLEPORT - "The
. in the upper 50s.
.Drama of Good Friday" will
Monday night...Partly be presented at the 7 p.m.
cloudy·in the evening ...Then service on Good Friday at
becoming mostly cloudy. A the Middleport Presbyterian
30 percent chance tlf show- Church.
ers. Lows in the lower 40s.
Saturday, March 15 ··
1\Jesday... Mostly cloudy
MIDDLEPORT - The
with a 40 percent chance of drama "Worthy · is the
showers. Highs in the lower Lamb". will be presented· at
'60s.
7 p.m. at the Mi~dleport
Thesday night and Church of the Nazarene. For
,Wednesday ... Cloudy with a more information call Len
50 percent chance of show- Powell, pastor, 992~3191.
· ers. Lows in the mid 40s.
Sunday, March 16
Highs in the upper 50s.
SYRACUSE Forest
Wednesday night...Mostly Run, Minersville, and Asbury
climdy with a 40 percent United Methodist Churches
chance of showers. Lows in unified worship, at Asbury
the upper 30s.
Church, Sunday. Guest,
Thursday... Mostly cloudy George Howard, director of
in
the
morning ... Then Connectin~ Ministries of the
becoming partly sunny. West . Ohio . Conference.
. Hizhs in the lower 50s. ___ - dinner\Yorshipolllolwa,:mn.;_.· Fellowship

-A Hunger For More- Local Weather
There are times in many
people's lives when something is said or done that sets
for them a course of pain and
regret. Perhaps looking back
on your life, you see that you
have somehow lost your way
and are now somewhere in a
valley of heartache, a million
miles away from where yop
always dreamed you'd be.
Maybe you wonder how you
got into the place you are
and have sadly resigned
yourself to a fate of hopelessness. It could be that
there111'e images engraved in
your memory with etchings
of sorrow so deep that you
shy from remembering,
becoming numb to life and
the world around you.
If so, Y?u're &amp;:finitely not
alone. M1stakes m the _past
often reap a _harvest of b1tterness. and pam. Materially m_p~ys1cally or even soc1ally,
thingsmaybesoutterlyou~of
~doraresora~1dly_heading

m lhl: wrong direc!ion that
despan: has crept mto. our
hearts like a slow, cold polson.
It sometunes appears on the
s~ace that things seem all
n~ht, but whe? one ~sesses
his or her hean s condiuon, he
or s~e can discern that things
aren t really so o~y after all
and a sense of _bemg trap~
takes hold, making one a pnsoner ?f re~t, shame or pnde.
Relauonsh1ps have been
somehow spoilt and aren't
what they should be and JOY
stubbornly eludes one's grasp.
. What is one to do ~en when
11 ~ms that ~ 1sn't any
gomg. back?. CII'Cumstanllally
speaking, 11 IS true. that w~en
once we set m mollon a ~nes
of even~ .!fat we must 'face
the ~us1c so to speak, harvesl!ng the conseq~ences of
· past dec1s1ons, atlltudes, or
actions. But it is not true that
while we have breath on earth
that we can so destroy ~
bndge of relai!Onship With
God .that ~e ~t get back
to Him' Frrst cons1der that no
one at all can approach holy
God deservedly. The result of
our sin and _th_e price to~ paid
was the giVmg of a Ji!e ...
:-vh1ch our Go? accomplished
m the crucifixiOn of His Son,
Jesus Chnst.
. .
Therefore, t~mkmg that
you have ongomg access to
· the Father because of YOUR
faithfulness is falling short of
the full effect of sal~ation by
fruth m Jesus Christ. Your
fruthfulness does not bridge
your relationship with God. It
IS the fruthfulness of God that
opened the bridge in the first
place and keeps it open for
you. Your faithfulness simply
produces the happy fruit of
allowing your heart and life
to be filled with the good
things of God: joy, peace,
purpose, victory, courage and
love. It is bec'ause of grace
that you can return in repentance and sweet . fellowship
over and over again with the
LonJ of glory 1

•

Today ... Showers likely in
the moming...Then showers
in the afternoon. Highs in
the upper 50s. South winds
·Pastor
around 5 mph. Chance of
Thom
. rain 90 percent.
Tonigbt...Mostly cloudy.
Mollohan
A chance of showers in the
evening. Lows in the lower
.40s. Northwest winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
Consider how God's peo- rain 50 percent. · ·
.
thro h th
Saturday ... Showers likeP1e,
ug
e ages, wrestled with this time and time ly. l:lighs in the lower 50s.
· H
- of
agam. ear a pr~yer 3 ser- North winds 5 to 10 mph.
vant of God mterceding for Chance of rain 70 percent.
God's peor.Ie: "You disciSaturday night ... Mostly
plined me like an unruly calf, cloudy with a 50 percent
and I have been disciplined. chance of rain showers.
Restore me, and I will return, Cooler with lows around 30.
because You are the LORD . North winds I0 to 15 .mph
my God. After I strayed, I with gusts up to 25 mph.
repented; after I came to
Sunday ... Partly sunny.
understand, I beat my breast. Highs
in the upper ~Os.
1 was ashamed and humiliatSunday
night... Partly
ed-because-1- bore the-dis
~ ---· S!'&amp;Ce of my youth"
(Jeremiah 31:18b-19 NN).
And listen to the Lord's
reply to this prayer: "Is not
Ephraim My dear son, the
child in whom I delight? AEP (NYSE) - 40.82
Though I often speak Akzo (NASDAQ) - 82
against him, I still remem- Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 47.11
her him. Therefore My heart Bl&amp; Lot. (NYSE) - 21.02
yearns for Him; I have great Bob Evens (NASDAQ) - 27.65
compassion
for
him" Bor&amp;Wamer (NYSE) - 42.82
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
(Jeremiah 31:20 NIV).
So if you feel like you've - 6!1·50
wandered far awa~ from God, Champion (NASDAQ) - 5.14
Shops (NASDAQ) remember that 1t is grace Charmln&amp;
&amp;.36
through faith only by which City Holding (NASDAQ) you were saved. Recall to 36.56
your mind that the way is still ·cotHna (NYSE)- 56.47
open to you even if you've DuPont (NYSE) - 47.31
departed from the path of US Bank (NYSE) - 32.!17
walking daily with Hmt "Set ·Gannett (NYSE) - 29.97
up f9ad signs; put up guide- General Electric (NYSE) 34.25
posts. Take note of the high- Harley-DIWideon
( NYSE). way, the road that you take. 36.80
Return ... return.... How long JP Mor&amp;an (NYSE) - 38.11
will you wander?" (from Krocar (NYSE) - 25
Umlted Branda ( NYSE) Jerel'Olah 31 :21-22b NN).
18.90
When we are called to
walk with God He calls us in
spite of all our' imperfections
and waywardness in order to
demonstrate His perfection:
His perfect salvation and His
perfectly enduring grace that
"keeps us" in His love.
Know that He knew what He
was getting into when He
called you to be His child. So
if your feet have wandered
away, the way back isn't
closed to you after all. You'll
enjoy, like the Prodigal Son a
reuniting that, while you
don't deserve it, awaits you
nonetheless (see Luke 15: li31 ): To be once again
"caught up" in the arms of
your loving· heavenly Father,
you simply have to tum your
feet back towards home.
·
(Thom Mollohan and his

-

Local·Stocks

0

family have ministered in
southern Ohio tire past 11112 yean and is the author of
"The Fairy Tale Parables."
He is the pastor of PaJhway
Community Church, which
muts on Sutu!JJy mornings
aJ 455 Third Ave; He may be
reached for comments or
questions by e-mail aJ pastorthdm @pathwaygallipolis.com).
·
,

Norfolk Southem (NYSE) -

53.99
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. ( NAS.
DAQ)-25
BBT (NYSE) - 31.94
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 22.47
Pepsico (NYSE) - 89.24 ·
Premier (NASDAQ) -11.80
Rockwell (NYSE) - 53.74
Rocky Boote (NASDAQ) - 8.45
Royal Dutch Shell - 70.74
Sears Holdlnl (NASDAQ) -

.
Will-Mart (NYSE) - 50.80
Wendy'e ( NYSE) - 24.07
Worthln&amp;ton (NYSE) - 17.01
Dally stock reporta are the 4 ·
p.m. ET clollln&amp; quotee of transaction• fur March 13, 2008,

-

-f&lt;

.,. - -

MIDDLEPORT
Revival with Rev. William
Woo, evangelist, at the Hope
Baptist Church, Grant
Street,
March
16-19.
Services, Sunday, II a.m.
and 6 p.m.; Monday through

Saturday, March 15
TUPPERS PLAINS Free clothing giveaway, 9
a.m. to noon, Bethel Worship
Center, Route 7. Clothing for
newborns to children's size
14, baby furniture. Contact
church at 667-6793.
Sunday, March 23 .
. TUPPERS PLAINS Easter egg hunt, noon,
Tuppers Plains Firehouse.
Five age groups, babies-IS
years old. 7,500 eggs. Food.
Prizes to be awarded.

Birthdays
Wednesday, Marcb--26
RACINE - Eileen Buck,
retired Southern Local
School District teacher, will
observe her 90th birthday
on March 26. Cards may be
· sent to her at P.O. Box 96,
Tombstone, Ariz. &amp;56&amp;3

To celebrate birthday
REEDSVILLE - The 70th birthday of Ferra Barringer
will be observed with an open house from I to 4 p.m.
Sunday at her home. Cards may be sent to her at 69240 S.R.
124, Reedsville, Ohio 45771.

94.58

provided by Edward Jones financial advlaont Jaaac Mille In
Gallipolis at ( 740) 441·9441
and Lesley Marrero In Point
PI-nt at (304) 6744174.
Member SIPC.

Post 39 to observe Legion birthday
POMEROY- The annual observance of the birthday 'of
the American Legion will be celebrated by Drew Webster
·
Post 39 of Pomeroy at the post home Tuesday.
All legionnaires, spouses and friends are invited to join in
the festivities which will begin with a 7 p.m. dinner. There
will recognition of longtime !Jlembers and the awarding &lt;1f
a trophy to the legionnaire of the year. All legionnaires are
encouraged to at!end the birthday party.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

GCC participating in
scholarship program

POMEROY - Civil suits alleging personal injury have
,:been filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by
James M. Sprouse, Jr. , Long Bottom, against R.
. Stephame Hartley, Rutland, and others; and by Melissa
.. ~~yoc, Long Bottom , and others, against Alicia R.
ooulford, Long Bottom.
. ' Foreclosure actions were lil~d by_Vanderbilt Mortgage
.,and F1~ance, Marysville, Tenn., agamst Harold W. Smith,
Reedsville, and others; Home National . Bank Racine
, again~! Kathleen M. Smith, Middleport, and others; and
· Amencan General Finance Services, Inc., Columbus,
. against Je_rom'&lt; ~- Howard, Pomeroy, and others:
Other ely! I suits have been filed by Trane US, Nashville,
Tenn .•. agamst Mark E. Smith, Reedsville, dema,nding judgment m the amount of $37,440.95; Steve F. York, Shade,
against Gary R. York, Shade, and others; and Green Tree
'Servicing, Rapid City, S.D., against Danny J. Dalton,
:Rutland, and others, alleging default on a consumer credit
contract m the amount of $23,133.91.

·Divorces
. · POMEROY - Actions for divorce were fJled in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Becky L. Wood
·:Pomeroy, ·against Joseph S. Wood, Pomeroy; and by
· Susan Lecates, Pomeroy, against Rodney H. Lecates,
. Pomeroy.

.

Other events ·

www.mydailysentinel.com

Civil suits

Wednesday, 7 p.m. Rev.
Gary Ellis, pastor. For mbre
information call 992-5334. .
MIDDLEPORT - Tbe
Keith Reynolds Family will
be singing 6:30 p.m. at the
Hobson
Christian
Fellowship Church pastored
by Hershel White.
MIQDLEPORT - An
overview of AI Hartson's
trip to Israel in February
under sponsorship of the
Ohio Valley Council 24,
Knights Templar, will be
•
presented at 6:30 · p.m.
Sunday at th.e Middleport
Church of Christ. The publie is invited to attend.
Monday, March l7
RUTLAND - Reviv~
serv1ces at Rutland Freew!ll
.
•
p.m.
.
evemng. Dave Shugg _will
speak Monday, Tuesday and
Thursday; Theron Dur~am.
. Wed~es~ay. and Fnday.
SpecmJ smgmg.
SYRA~USE - Syracuse
Comm~ty Ch~h, Second
St, reVIval semces, 7 P·!"through_ March 23; 7 w~th
e~angehst . Maco
Pri~.
Sm~rs. M~e Short, _De~
Dodrill, Vmce of Fa1th, S1d
and Carol Hayman, The
Blackwell S1sters,. Sandra
Wise, P~tor Joe Gwmn.
Fnday, March 2~
POMEROY - Statlorts
of the Cmss, noon, at
Sacred Heart Church. Last
of
Meigs
C:ounty
Ministerial
Association
community Lenten services.
Sunday, March 23
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains St. Paul U.M.
'Church Easter program,
"Rise Again;" 6:30 a.m.,
with breakfast to follow;

2008

::For the Record

Friday, March 14, aoo8

CommunitY Calendar

Don't give in to family members blackmail
BY KlntY MIICHEU.
AND MAlleY It lUll

.PageA2

BvmEBEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX ,

·- Friday, March. 14,

'

Elizabeth Rigel/photo

From left, Gallipolis Tribune Advertising Manager Matt Rodgers
presents Dane Brooks with a $50 gift card to Courtside Bar and
Grill for winning the Super Bowl Genius contest held in February.
Dane accepted the award on the behalf of his father, David
Brooks,' who was unavailable due to his work schedule.·
'

Rutland

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Career College is
now partlC!patmg 1n the Ohio Association of
Career Colleges and School!. legislative ~cholarships program.
·
The association is offering 42 on'e-half tuition, 13
full tu1110n, and 61 specific amoun1 scholarships
throu~h Ohio's career coll~ges and ,~hools.
Rec1p1ents of these scholar,hips mus1 be nominated
by a current member of the Ohio Legi,lature , an
Ohio Senator, or a member of 1hc Hou se of
Representatives.
· Guidance counselors have complete details and
application forms. Thi s is an excellent opportunity to obtam post secondary trade or business training. The deadline for application submi;sion is
March 30.
Locally, GCC is offering o.ne-half tuition scholar- '
ships 1n accounting, business administration , executive office administration, computer applications technology, medical administrative· assistant, junior
accounting, and software applications.
For injimnation, contact GCC at 446-4367 or 800214-0452. Spring quarter begins April 7. 2008.

hours he is wi·lling to commit to and stressed Rutland
needs a local police presence.
Vance said he 'd like to
bave officers patrolling at
least 20 hours a week if the
personnel and funds are
there. He added he's also
had a handful of other offi-

cers inquire about working tion a few years ago. At the
in Rutland if Williams can't time the levy passed, it was
or if another part-time per- estimated to bring in
son is needed.
around $6,000 a year to
Another reason Vance help pay salaries for offisaid police protection cers.
needs to be on the street is
For now RJJtland is
the fact Rutland residents dependent on the Meigs
passed a two-mill, five County .Sheriff's Office for
year levy for police protec- police protection.

demolition,
but Ervin
to
do
so-.
refused
POMEROY -The following were sentenced in Meigs
The development group
. County Common Pleas Court:
from
PageA1
has
pointed to the Ervin
. · • Jeffrey A. Coon, 18 months each, passing bad checks,
building
as a major obsta· theft. Credit for 45 days served. $2,156.07 restitution to
· Dettwiller Lumber Co.
donations were still avail- cle in kick-starting · the
cleanup and improvement
. • Johnny Ratliff, Qne year, permitting drug abuse, 1g able for the project.
The village has waited of downtown buildings ,
. months, .attempted illegal assembly of chemicals for the
two
years to tear down .the and has acknowledged that
manufacture of drugs. Six month operator's license suspensiOn.
building, which was con- its presence in the downcondemned in early 2006, town district because village funds were demned, unsafe, and missnot available. The owners of ing a fourth exterior wall
three buildin~s on the same · - created a credibility
POMEROY - A civil action filed in Meigs County block,
demolished last year,
Common Pleas Court by Billie J. Cunningham against paid the bills for their issue with the public when
revitalization is discussed.
Misty K. Porter was dismissed.

Cleanup

In informal public surveys, ization application process
local residents · identified on behalf of the village, has
the building's demolition encouraged local business
as the top priority for owners in the downtown
improving the downtown shopping ..district to make
business climate.
cosmetic repairs to their
Gerlach said Ervin will storefronts while awaiting
still be responsible for the the fate of another revitalcost of tearing his building ization grant application.
down, and cannot sell the
Middleport
Village
pr()perty without reimburs.- Council has also begun to
ing Middleport for the cost address unsightly condiof tearing the building . tions of some residential
down.
properties, issuing fines and
The Development Group, writing warning letters to
which oversees the revital- property owners.

PUCO

this option one time during HEAP
Web
site
at
the winter heating season www.energyhelp.ohio.gov .
to maintain or restore ser- The hearing impaired can
vice. The customer is reach HEAP at (&amp;00) 686required to pay $175 plus a 1557 for assistance.
reconnection fee of no
• Contacting the local
more than $20 to maintain community action agency
or restore their electric or for information about other
natural gas service.
avai !able assistance pro• Applying for the Home grams.
Energy Assistance Program
(HEAP) or E-HEAP. E·t"-~NCtp
.
HEAP funding is available
April
30.
through ·
"'
~
.. ·. ). 1-~
Customers may contact the
-.:'('
7: '
;..:
"'
:
.
.
k.
:-;
toll-free HEAP hotline at
':t
..,-: ..:,. . ,~· ""''•' J;i
(800) 282-0880 or visit the
'

from Page A1 .

Dissolution
POMEROY- An action for dissolution of marriage was
.fJI~d in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Carla
:M1lhoan, Pomeroy, and Rhett Milhoan, Pomeroy.
A dissolution was granted to Carl Webster and Mary S.
: Webster.
·

Sentenced

Vance went on to say at
this point, unless he's told
not to, he planned on asking Williams about returning, seeing how many

Dismissed

Arraigned
· POMEROY -The following were arraigned in Meigs
· County Common Pleas Court:
,: • Helen Maxin~ McClintock, grand theft. April29 trial.
: . • Thomas M. B1shop, two counts of aggravated vehicular
·'homicide. March 20 trial. ·
• Cedric A. Ward, possession of crack cocaine. March 20
tri~
.
.
· · • John R. Hamilton, two counts of non~support of depen-·
··dents. March 27 trial. ·
.
. · • Danny J. Lantz, possession of morphine.
·: • James Hicks, breaking and entering.
.
- • Matthew J. ImbOden, breaking and entering, theft, criminal damagint~.
• Lacey Ch!ldress, burglary, March II trial date.
• Richard A. Ward, Jr., burglary. April 8 trial.
• Linda ·L. Kelly, deception to obtain dangerous drug.
~pril 18 trial.
.
·
. .. ~Isaiah Todd, burglary. April LO trial. .
. : • Richard Andy Kauff, breaking and entering, criritinal
: ljamaging, April 10 trial.
.

••
.

..

.

Rio ·

nity college purchases use
of faculty, staff and facilities from the . university
from Page A1,
expires June 30.
At Monday's meeting,
Fingerhut's
original proposcommunity colle~e board
' hils a regular bimonthly al was approved by the
meeting set for 2 p.m. community college board,
Tuesday, March 19 at Bob pending review by its attorneys. Representatives of the
Evans Farms Hall.,
board who
Fingerhut, whose office. university
attended
believe
the extent
oversees Ohio's colleges
of
the
proposal
was
beyond
and universities, met with
- representatives of both their authority to approve,
boards in Columbus on so Fingerhut gave universiMonday and presented a ty trustees until Wednesday
. proposal . to break tjle to accept or reject.
An instructional services
1mpasse over governance
contract
has
existed
_and aff9rdability issues that
·are blocking &lt;!CCOrd On the between the university ·and
the community college
new contract.
The current 3-year agree- since RGCG's creation in
ment in which the commu- 1974.

Bumps
from PageA1
· said it appears a steersman
driving under ins true. tion from a master steers. man when the bridge pier
0

was

was bumped.
Barges broke free from a
tow and liit a railroad
bridge and · the US 50
bridge
that
com)ects
Parkersburg, W.Va. to
Belpre last week. No damaged was reported to either
structure.
Need a great Auto
insurance rate? ·
Stay loeal and call an
Agent you already
know and trust!
Ohio Mutual
Insurance Group

tomers to ensure their ser. vice is not interrupted.
These include:
• Contacting the local
from PageA1
electric or natural gas utility
funding. "The extension of company to discuss paythe winter reconnect order ment arrangements for the
and E-HEAP funding will amount due. If a customer
provide low-income house- was not previously on a
holds that have been discon- paym!'lnt plan, there may be
plans available to
nected or received a discon- payment
the customer. To avoid disnection notice with addition- connection upon expiration
al time to take advantage of of the moratorium, the custhe benefits of both pro- tomer must contact their
grams," PUCO Chairman local electric or naturiil gas
Alan R. Schriber stated. company directly to discuss
''This is especially important their account. If a customer
given that .Ohio's winter was on a payment plan prior
heating disconnection mora- to the moratorium and did
torium ends next week."
not continue payments on
The PUCO reminds elec- that plan during the moratotric and natural !las cus- rium period, the customer
tomers who participated in will be required to pay the
the winter heating discon- amount in default to the
nection moratotil.\m to take utility company to maintain
steps now tr&gt; ensure their service. Once the default
service is not disconnected amount is paid, the. cuswhen the moratorium tomer may be eligible to reexpires on March 18. Once enroll in a payment plan
the moratorium expires, with the utility company.
regulated electric and natur• Utilizing ·the PUCO's
al gas companies will pro- winter reconnect order
ceed with billing and dis- through April 30, 2008.
connection · procedures as Customers who have not
outlined in PUCO rules.
· yet utilized this program
There are a number of during the 2007-2008 winoptions available to cus- ter heating season may use

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175 North 2nd Avenue
Middleport, OH • 992-7028

�'

The Daily Sentinel

Dear AnDie: I am the father
of five children, four of whom
are adults. My two oldest
. sons, "Jason" and "Jared." are
. married, but their Wives hate
each other and refuse to
attend family functions where
the other may be present.
My wife and I have refused
to involve ourselves in the
fight between our daughtqsin-law. We invite both to family functions and they decide
whether they wiU attend.
. Recently, however, Jason's
wife told us that she and my
son wiU not speak to us or
yjsit if we_have any contact
with Jared and his wife. She
says it is disrespectful to her
when we speak to Jared or
his wife. This is especially
· difficult now because Jason
and his wife are expecting
our first grandchild.
My wife and I have refused
to give in to our daughter-inlaw's blackmail, but we don't
want to give up contact with
Jason or our future grandchild. Any advice? -Squeezed in Kentucky ·
Dear . Squeezed: For
shame. The only disrespectful person here is your dau~­
ter-m-law, who is behavmg
like a spoiled brat. For her to
punish you because she can't

Club.S and ·
OrganizatiOnS

deal with her sister-in-law is a We recommend you spend percent of people with hearsign of immaturity and self- your time with people who mg loss can be helped with
ishness. The fact that your appreciate your company.
hearing aids. Modern hearFriday, March 14
son won't speak up indicates
~r Annie: I am writing ing aids are sleek and often
SALEM CENTER he lacks backbone and inde- to urge you to call your cannot be easily seen.
Meigs County Pomona
If your readers find them- . Grange 46 will meet at 7:30
pendent thought. She. also readers' attention to a health
may be an abuser who is try- condition that is frequently selves asking people to repeat p.m. at the Star Gmnge hall
ing to isolate her husband . ignored but affects more themselves, think others are located three miles north of
from his family. Talk to your than one in four American mumbling, have trouble hear- Salem Center on County road
son and tell him you are so families. It silently erodes ing children and women or 1. Inspection wiU be held
sorry his wife feels she has the sufferer's quality of life, have ringing in their ears, I
Saturday, March 15
the right to dictate your rela- undermines family relation- encourage them to have their
POMEROY _ Christian
tionships with others. Explain ships and fuels depression. hearing checked by a profes- Motorcycle Association,
that if she doesn't wish to see I'm talking about hearing sional. - Se~Jei Kochkin, "Delivered" chapter, regular
you or the rest of the family, loss. It affects more than Ph.D., Executive Director, meeting, 5 p.m., Common
Grounds.
that is her choice, but you 31.5 million Americans, and · Better Hearing Institute
SALEM CENTER
hope he will have the decen- surprisingly, most are below . Dear Dr. Kochkin:
cy to keep in touch on his retirement age. ·
Thank you for the excellent Star Grange 778 and Star
own. A supportive wife
Many of today's baby information. Readers can Junior Grange 878 will hold
would insist on it.
boomers suffer hearing loss get a copy of "Your Guide a fun night and potluck sup_peaunnie: _FQL.!!&lt;SOI,!!m~e_lfi!!!ro~m~li!!!'st~e!J,m!!!·n'lU'!!to~lo!!!u~dc!m~ul!ls~ic;_-l'to!!._!;B~e!.ltt~er~H[&lt;ean!)!'JJ·n:!!l!!~'"db!?_.l'V~ca~IJ:l-:_j_Kpe~•cJ
..,-Ix_~
...·m;mg at. 6·30--p._mtime now, I've felt that one or living in noisy environ-· ing 1-800-EAR-WELL (I- vegree teams Will practice
of my friends is avoiding ments. lt .can cause irritabil- &amp;00-327-9355) or visiting following the supper.
me. "Kenny" never answers ity, negatiyism, anger, the Better Hearing Institute
HARRISONVILLE _
when I call, and he doesn't . fatigue, tension, stress and · at betterhearint~.org.
Harrisonville
Masonic
return my messages. Also, if depression, and can lead to
Annie's Ma1lbox is writ- Lodge will meet at 7:30
I go over to his ·apartment social withdrawal, rejection ten. by Kathy Mitchell and . p.m. for annual inspection:
(when I know he's supposed and loneliness. A recent Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- Dinner at 6:30 p.m.
to be home), his roommate study found that Americans tors of the Ann lAnders
Monday, March 17
with hearing loss milke sig- column. Please e-mail your
ATHENS _ Southeast
tells me he's not there.
Is he avoiding me, am I niflcantly less money than questions to anniesmail- Ohio Woodland Interest
paranoid, or am I just being people with normal hearing box@comcast.net, or write Group, 7 p.m. at the Athens
a nuisance? Feeling - but that use of a hearing to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. County Extension office.
Neglected
aid on the job reduces Box 11R190, Chicago, IL Speaker, Scott Bagley with
Dear Neglected: Well, income loss by 50 percent. 606ll. To find out more National Network of Forest
you're not paranoid, Stop Unfortunately, too many about Annie's Mailbox, Practioners. His program
calling lmd dropping by people wait years befor_e and read features by other "What's Hot and What's
Kenny's apartment. It gettmg treatment, becoming Creators SyndicaJe writers Not" includes overview of
makes you seem .desperate. more and more disconnect· and cartoonists, visit the forest practices.
If Kenny wants to talk, he ed. With modem advances Creators Syndicate Web
knows· how to reach you. in technology, more than 90 page at www.creators.com.

Church events

-----------------Friday, March 14
LONG BOTI'OM
Faith Full Gospel Church,
gospel sing, · 7 p.m., . fol· cloudy. Lows in the upper20s. lowed by fellowship.
·
Monday ... Suuny. Highs
MIDDLEPORT - "The
. in the upper 50s.
.Drama of Good Friday" will
Monday night...Partly be presented at the 7 p.m.
cloudy·in the evening ...Then service on Good Friday at
becoming mostly cloudy. A the Middleport Presbyterian
30 percent chance tlf show- Church.
ers. Lows in the lower 40s.
Saturday, March 15 ··
1\Jesday... Mostly cloudy
MIDDLEPORT - The
with a 40 percent chance of drama "Worthy · is the
showers. Highs in the lower Lamb". will be presented· at
'60s.
7 p.m. at the Mi~dleport
Thesday night and Church of the Nazarene. For
,Wednesday ... Cloudy with a more information call Len
50 percent chance of show- Powell, pastor, 992~3191.
· ers. Lows in the mid 40s.
Sunday, March 16
Highs in the upper 50s.
SYRACUSE Forest
Wednesday night...Mostly Run, Minersville, and Asbury
climdy with a 40 percent United Methodist Churches
chance of showers. Lows in unified worship, at Asbury
the upper 30s.
Church, Sunday. Guest,
Thursday... Mostly cloudy George Howard, director of
in
the
morning ... Then Connectin~ Ministries of the
becoming partly sunny. West . Ohio . Conference.
. Hizhs in the lower 50s. ___ - dinner\Yorshipolllolwa,:mn.;_.· Fellowship

-A Hunger For More- Local Weather
There are times in many
people's lives when something is said or done that sets
for them a course of pain and
regret. Perhaps looking back
on your life, you see that you
have somehow lost your way
and are now somewhere in a
valley of heartache, a million
miles away from where yop
always dreamed you'd be.
Maybe you wonder how you
got into the place you are
and have sadly resigned
yourself to a fate of hopelessness. It could be that
there111'e images engraved in
your memory with etchings
of sorrow so deep that you
shy from remembering,
becoming numb to life and
the world around you.
If so, Y?u're &amp;:finitely not
alone. M1stakes m the _past
often reap a _harvest of b1tterness. and pam. Materially m_p~ys1cally or even soc1ally,
thingsmaybesoutterlyou~of
~doraresora~1dly_heading

m lhl: wrong direc!ion that
despan: has crept mto. our
hearts like a slow, cold polson.
It sometunes appears on the
s~ace that things seem all
n~ht, but whe? one ~sesses
his or her hean s condiuon, he
or s~e can discern that things
aren t really so o~y after all
and a sense of _bemg trap~
takes hold, making one a pnsoner ?f re~t, shame or pnde.
Relauonsh1ps have been
somehow spoilt and aren't
what they should be and JOY
stubbornly eludes one's grasp.
. What is one to do ~en when
11 ~ms that ~ 1sn't any
gomg. back?. CII'Cumstanllally
speaking, 11 IS true. that w~en
once we set m mollon a ~nes
of even~ .!fat we must 'face
the ~us1c so to speak, harvesl!ng the conseq~ences of
· past dec1s1ons, atlltudes, or
actions. But it is not true that
while we have breath on earth
that we can so destroy ~
bndge of relai!Onship With
God .that ~e ~t get back
to Him' Frrst cons1der that no
one at all can approach holy
God deservedly. The result of
our sin and _th_e price to~ paid
was the giVmg of a Ji!e ...
:-vh1ch our Go? accomplished
m the crucifixiOn of His Son,
Jesus Chnst.
. .
Therefore, t~mkmg that
you have ongomg access to
· the Father because of YOUR
faithfulness is falling short of
the full effect of sal~ation by
fruth m Jesus Christ. Your
fruthfulness does not bridge
your relationship with God. It
IS the fruthfulness of God that
opened the bridge in the first
place and keeps it open for
you. Your faithfulness simply
produces the happy fruit of
allowing your heart and life
to be filled with the good
things of God: joy, peace,
purpose, victory, courage and
love. It is bec'ause of grace
that you can return in repentance and sweet . fellowship
over and over again with the
LonJ of glory 1

•

Today ... Showers likely in
the moming...Then showers
in the afternoon. Highs in
the upper 50s. South winds
·Pastor
around 5 mph. Chance of
Thom
. rain 90 percent.
Tonigbt...Mostly cloudy.
Mollohan
A chance of showers in the
evening. Lows in the lower
.40s. Northwest winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
Consider how God's peo- rain 50 percent. · ·
.
thro h th
Saturday ... Showers likeP1e,
ug
e ages, wrestled with this time and time ly. l:lighs in the lower 50s.
· H
- of
agam. ear a pr~yer 3 ser- North winds 5 to 10 mph.
vant of God mterceding for Chance of rain 70 percent.
God's peor.Ie: "You disciSaturday night ... Mostly
plined me like an unruly calf, cloudy with a 50 percent
and I have been disciplined. chance of rain showers.
Restore me, and I will return, Cooler with lows around 30.
because You are the LORD . North winds I0 to 15 .mph
my God. After I strayed, I with gusts up to 25 mph.
repented; after I came to
Sunday ... Partly sunny.
understand, I beat my breast. Highs
in the upper ~Os.
1 was ashamed and humiliatSunday
night... Partly
ed-because-1- bore the-dis
~ ---· S!'&amp;Ce of my youth"
(Jeremiah 31:18b-19 NN).
And listen to the Lord's
reply to this prayer: "Is not
Ephraim My dear son, the
child in whom I delight? AEP (NYSE) - 40.82
Though I often speak Akzo (NASDAQ) - 82
against him, I still remem- Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 47.11
her him. Therefore My heart Bl&amp; Lot. (NYSE) - 21.02
yearns for Him; I have great Bob Evens (NASDAQ) - 27.65
compassion
for
him" Bor&amp;Wamer (NYSE) - 42.82
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
(Jeremiah 31:20 NIV).
So if you feel like you've - 6!1·50
wandered far awa~ from God, Champion (NASDAQ) - 5.14
Shops (NASDAQ) remember that 1t is grace Charmln&amp;
&amp;.36
through faith only by which City Holding (NASDAQ) you were saved. Recall to 36.56
your mind that the way is still ·cotHna (NYSE)- 56.47
open to you even if you've DuPont (NYSE) - 47.31
departed from the path of US Bank (NYSE) - 32.!17
walking daily with Hmt "Set ·Gannett (NYSE) - 29.97
up f9ad signs; put up guide- General Electric (NYSE) 34.25
posts. Take note of the high- Harley-DIWideon
( NYSE). way, the road that you take. 36.80
Return ... return.... How long JP Mor&amp;an (NYSE) - 38.11
will you wander?" (from Krocar (NYSE) - 25
Umlted Branda ( NYSE) Jerel'Olah 31 :21-22b NN).
18.90
When we are called to
walk with God He calls us in
spite of all our' imperfections
and waywardness in order to
demonstrate His perfection:
His perfect salvation and His
perfectly enduring grace that
"keeps us" in His love.
Know that He knew what He
was getting into when He
called you to be His child. So
if your feet have wandered
away, the way back isn't
closed to you after all. You'll
enjoy, like the Prodigal Son a
reuniting that, while you
don't deserve it, awaits you
nonetheless (see Luke 15: li31 ): To be once again
"caught up" in the arms of
your loving· heavenly Father,
you simply have to tum your
feet back towards home.
·
(Thom Mollohan and his

-

Local·Stocks

0

family have ministered in
southern Ohio tire past 11112 yean and is the author of
"The Fairy Tale Parables."
He is the pastor of PaJhway
Community Church, which
muts on Sutu!JJy mornings
aJ 455 Third Ave; He may be
reached for comments or
questions by e-mail aJ pastorthdm @pathwaygallipolis.com).
·
,

Norfolk Southem (NYSE) -

53.99
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. ( NAS.
DAQ)-25
BBT (NYSE) - 31.94
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 22.47
Pepsico (NYSE) - 89.24 ·
Premier (NASDAQ) -11.80
Rockwell (NYSE) - 53.74
Rocky Boote (NASDAQ) - 8.45
Royal Dutch Shell - 70.74
Sears Holdlnl (NASDAQ) -

.
Will-Mart (NYSE) - 50.80
Wendy'e ( NYSE) - 24.07
Worthln&amp;ton (NYSE) - 17.01
Dally stock reporta are the 4 ·
p.m. ET clollln&amp; quotee of transaction• fur March 13, 2008,

-

-f&lt;

.,. - -

MIDDLEPORT
Revival with Rev. William
Woo, evangelist, at the Hope
Baptist Church, Grant
Street,
March
16-19.
Services, Sunday, II a.m.
and 6 p.m.; Monday through

Saturday, March 15
TUPPERS PLAINS Free clothing giveaway, 9
a.m. to noon, Bethel Worship
Center, Route 7. Clothing for
newborns to children's size
14, baby furniture. Contact
church at 667-6793.
Sunday, March 23 .
. TUPPERS PLAINS Easter egg hunt, noon,
Tuppers Plains Firehouse.
Five age groups, babies-IS
years old. 7,500 eggs. Food.
Prizes to be awarded.

Birthdays
Wednesday, Marcb--26
RACINE - Eileen Buck,
retired Southern Local
School District teacher, will
observe her 90th birthday
on March 26. Cards may be
· sent to her at P.O. Box 96,
Tombstone, Ariz. &amp;56&amp;3

To celebrate birthday
REEDSVILLE - The 70th birthday of Ferra Barringer
will be observed with an open house from I to 4 p.m.
Sunday at her home. Cards may be sent to her at 69240 S.R.
124, Reedsville, Ohio 45771.

94.58

provided by Edward Jones financial advlaont Jaaac Mille In
Gallipolis at ( 740) 441·9441
and Lesley Marrero In Point
PI-nt at (304) 6744174.
Member SIPC.

Post 39 to observe Legion birthday
POMEROY- The annual observance of the birthday 'of
the American Legion will be celebrated by Drew Webster
·
Post 39 of Pomeroy at the post home Tuesday.
All legionnaires, spouses and friends are invited to join in
the festivities which will begin with a 7 p.m. dinner. There
will recognition of longtime !Jlembers and the awarding &lt;1f
a trophy to the legionnaire of the year. All legionnaires are
encouraged to at!end the birthday party.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

GCC participating in
scholarship program

POMEROY - Civil suits alleging personal injury have
,:been filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by
James M. Sprouse, Jr. , Long Bottom, against R.
. Stephame Hartley, Rutland, and others; and by Melissa
.. ~~yoc, Long Bottom , and others, against Alicia R.
ooulford, Long Bottom.
. ' Foreclosure actions were lil~d by_Vanderbilt Mortgage
.,and F1~ance, Marysville, Tenn., agamst Harold W. Smith,
Reedsville, and others; Home National . Bank Racine
, again~! Kathleen M. Smith, Middleport, and others; and
· Amencan General Finance Services, Inc., Columbus,
. against Je_rom'&lt; ~- Howard, Pomeroy, and others:
Other ely! I suits have been filed by Trane US, Nashville,
Tenn .•. agamst Mark E. Smith, Reedsville, dema,nding judgment m the amount of $37,440.95; Steve F. York, Shade,
against Gary R. York, Shade, and others; and Green Tree
'Servicing, Rapid City, S.D., against Danny J. Dalton,
:Rutland, and others, alleging default on a consumer credit
contract m the amount of $23,133.91.

·Divorces
. · POMEROY - Actions for divorce were fJled in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Becky L. Wood
·:Pomeroy, ·against Joseph S. Wood, Pomeroy; and by
· Susan Lecates, Pomeroy, against Rodney H. Lecates,
. Pomeroy.

.

Other events ·

www.mydailysentinel.com

Civil suits

Wednesday, 7 p.m. Rev.
Gary Ellis, pastor. For mbre
information call 992-5334. .
MIDDLEPORT - Tbe
Keith Reynolds Family will
be singing 6:30 p.m. at the
Hobson
Christian
Fellowship Church pastored
by Hershel White.
MIQDLEPORT - An
overview of AI Hartson's
trip to Israel in February
under sponsorship of the
Ohio Valley Council 24,
Knights Templar, will be
•
presented at 6:30 · p.m.
Sunday at th.e Middleport
Church of Christ. The publie is invited to attend.
Monday, March l7
RUTLAND - Reviv~
serv1ces at Rutland Freew!ll
.
•
p.m.
.
evemng. Dave Shugg _will
speak Monday, Tuesday and
Thursday; Theron Dur~am.
. Wed~es~ay. and Fnday.
SpecmJ smgmg.
SYRA~USE - Syracuse
Comm~ty Ch~h, Second
St, reVIval semces, 7 P·!"through_ March 23; 7 w~th
e~angehst . Maco
Pri~.
Sm~rs. M~e Short, _De~
Dodrill, Vmce of Fa1th, S1d
and Carol Hayman, The
Blackwell S1sters,. Sandra
Wise, P~tor Joe Gwmn.
Fnday, March 2~
POMEROY - Statlorts
of the Cmss, noon, at
Sacred Heart Church. Last
of
Meigs
C:ounty
Ministerial
Association
community Lenten services.
Sunday, March 23
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains St. Paul U.M.
'Church Easter program,
"Rise Again;" 6:30 a.m.,
with breakfast to follow;

2008

::For the Record

Friday, March 14, aoo8

CommunitY Calendar

Don't give in to family members blackmail
BY KlntY MIICHEU.
AND MAlleY It lUll

.PageA2

BvmEBEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX ,

·- Friday, March. 14,

'

Elizabeth Rigel/photo

From left, Gallipolis Tribune Advertising Manager Matt Rodgers
presents Dane Brooks with a $50 gift card to Courtside Bar and
Grill for winning the Super Bowl Genius contest held in February.
Dane accepted the award on the behalf of his father, David
Brooks,' who was unavailable due to his work schedule.·
'

Rutland

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Career College is
now partlC!patmg 1n the Ohio Association of
Career Colleges and School!. legislative ~cholarships program.
·
The association is offering 42 on'e-half tuition, 13
full tu1110n, and 61 specific amoun1 scholarships
throu~h Ohio's career coll~ges and ,~hools.
Rec1p1ents of these scholar,hips mus1 be nominated
by a current member of the Ohio Legi,lature , an
Ohio Senator, or a member of 1hc Hou se of
Representatives.
· Guidance counselors have complete details and
application forms. Thi s is an excellent opportunity to obtam post secondary trade or business training. The deadline for application submi;sion is
March 30.
Locally, GCC is offering o.ne-half tuition scholar- '
ships 1n accounting, business administration , executive office administration, computer applications technology, medical administrative· assistant, junior
accounting, and software applications.
For injimnation, contact GCC at 446-4367 or 800214-0452. Spring quarter begins April 7. 2008.

hours he is wi·lling to commit to and stressed Rutland
needs a local police presence.
Vance said he 'd like to
bave officers patrolling at
least 20 hours a week if the
personnel and funds are
there. He added he's also
had a handful of other offi-

cers inquire about working tion a few years ago. At the
in Rutland if Williams can't time the levy passed, it was
or if another part-time per- estimated to bring in
son is needed.
around $6,000 a year to
Another reason Vance help pay salaries for offisaid police protection cers.
needs to be on the street is
For now RJJtland is
the fact Rutland residents dependent on the Meigs
passed a two-mill, five County .Sheriff's Office for
year levy for police protec- police protection.

demolition,
but Ervin
to
do
so-.
refused
POMEROY -The following were sentenced in Meigs
The development group
. County Common Pleas Court:
from
PageA1
has
pointed to the Ervin
. · • Jeffrey A. Coon, 18 months each, passing bad checks,
building
as a major obsta· theft. Credit for 45 days served. $2,156.07 restitution to
· Dettwiller Lumber Co.
donations were still avail- cle in kick-starting · the
cleanup and improvement
. • Johnny Ratliff, Qne year, permitting drug abuse, 1g able for the project.
The village has waited of downtown buildings ,
. months, .attempted illegal assembly of chemicals for the
two
years to tear down .the and has acknowledged that
manufacture of drugs. Six month operator's license suspensiOn.
building, which was con- its presence in the downcondemned in early 2006, town district because village funds were demned, unsafe, and missnot available. The owners of ing a fourth exterior wall
three buildin~s on the same · - created a credibility
POMEROY - A civil action filed in Meigs County block,
demolished last year,
Common Pleas Court by Billie J. Cunningham against paid the bills for their issue with the public when
revitalization is discussed.
Misty K. Porter was dismissed.

Cleanup

In informal public surveys, ization application process
local residents · identified on behalf of the village, has
the building's demolition encouraged local business
as the top priority for owners in the downtown
improving the downtown shopping ..district to make
business climate.
cosmetic repairs to their
Gerlach said Ervin will storefronts while awaiting
still be responsible for the the fate of another revitalcost of tearing his building ization grant application.
down, and cannot sell the
Middleport
Village
pr()perty without reimburs.- Council has also begun to
ing Middleport for the cost address unsightly condiof tearing the building . tions of some residential
down.
properties, issuing fines and
The Development Group, writing warning letters to
which oversees the revital- property owners.

PUCO

this option one time during HEAP
Web
site
at
the winter heating season www.energyhelp.ohio.gov .
to maintain or restore ser- The hearing impaired can
vice. The customer is reach HEAP at (&amp;00) 686required to pay $175 plus a 1557 for assistance.
reconnection fee of no
• Contacting the local
more than $20 to maintain community action agency
or restore their electric or for information about other
natural gas service.
avai !able assistance pro• Applying for the Home grams.
Energy Assistance Program
(HEAP) or E-HEAP. E·t"-~NCtp
.
HEAP funding is available
April
30.
through ·
"'
~
.. ·. ). 1-~
Customers may contact the
-.:'('
7: '
;..:
"'
:
.
.
k.
:-;
toll-free HEAP hotline at
':t
..,-: ..:,. . ,~· ""''•' J;i
(800) 282-0880 or visit the
'

from Page A1 .

Dissolution
POMEROY- An action for dissolution of marriage was
.fJI~d in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Carla
:M1lhoan, Pomeroy, and Rhett Milhoan, Pomeroy.
A dissolution was granted to Carl Webster and Mary S.
: Webster.
·

Sentenced

Vance went on to say at
this point, unless he's told
not to, he planned on asking Williams about returning, seeing how many

Dismissed

Arraigned
· POMEROY -The following were arraigned in Meigs
· County Common Pleas Court:
,: • Helen Maxin~ McClintock, grand theft. April29 trial.
: . • Thomas M. B1shop, two counts of aggravated vehicular
·'homicide. March 20 trial. ·
• Cedric A. Ward, possession of crack cocaine. March 20
tri~
.
.
· · • John R. Hamilton, two counts of non~support of depen-·
··dents. March 27 trial. ·
.
. · • Danny J. Lantz, possession of morphine.
·: • James Hicks, breaking and entering.
.
- • Matthew J. ImbOden, breaking and entering, theft, criminal damagint~.
• Lacey Ch!ldress, burglary, March II trial date.
• Richard A. Ward, Jr., burglary. April 8 trial.
• Linda ·L. Kelly, deception to obtain dangerous drug.
~pril 18 trial.
.
·
. .. ~Isaiah Todd, burglary. April LO trial. .
. : • Richard Andy Kauff, breaking and entering, criritinal
: ljamaging, April 10 trial.
.

••
.

..

.

Rio ·

nity college purchases use
of faculty, staff and facilities from the . university
from Page A1,
expires June 30.
At Monday's meeting,
Fingerhut's
original proposcommunity colle~e board
' hils a regular bimonthly al was approved by the
meeting set for 2 p.m. community college board,
Tuesday, March 19 at Bob pending review by its attorneys. Representatives of the
Evans Farms Hall.,
board who
Fingerhut, whose office. university
attended
believe
the extent
oversees Ohio's colleges
of
the
proposal
was
beyond
and universities, met with
- representatives of both their authority to approve,
boards in Columbus on so Fingerhut gave universiMonday and presented a ty trustees until Wednesday
. proposal . to break tjle to accept or reject.
An instructional services
1mpasse over governance
contract
has
existed
_and aff9rdability issues that
·are blocking &lt;!CCOrd On the between the university ·and
the community college
new contract.
The current 3-year agree- since RGCG's creation in
ment in which the commu- 1974.

Bumps
from PageA1
· said it appears a steersman
driving under ins true. tion from a master steers. man when the bridge pier
0

was

was bumped.
Barges broke free from a
tow and liit a railroad
bridge and · the US 50
bridge
that
com)ects
Parkersburg, W.Va. to
Belpre last week. No damaged was reported to either
structure.
Need a great Auto
insurance rate? ·
Stay loeal and call an
Agent you already
know and trust!
Ohio Mutual
Insurance Group

tomers to ensure their ser. vice is not interrupted.
These include:
• Contacting the local
from PageA1
electric or natural gas utility
funding. "The extension of company to discuss paythe winter reconnect order ment arrangements for the
and E-HEAP funding will amount due. If a customer
provide low-income house- was not previously on a
holds that have been discon- paym!'lnt plan, there may be
plans available to
nected or received a discon- payment
the customer. To avoid disnection notice with addition- connection upon expiration
al time to take advantage of of the moratorium, the custhe benefits of both pro- tomer must contact their
grams," PUCO Chairman local electric or naturiil gas
Alan R. Schriber stated. company directly to discuss
''This is especially important their account. If a customer
given that .Ohio's winter was on a payment plan prior
heating disconnection mora- to the moratorium and did
torium ends next week."
not continue payments on
The PUCO reminds elec- that plan during the moratotric and natural !las cus- rium period, the customer
tomers who participated in will be required to pay the
the winter heating discon- amount in default to the
nection moratotil.\m to take utility company to maintain
steps now tr&gt; ensure their service. Once the default
service is not disconnected amount is paid, the. cuswhen the moratorium tomer may be eligible to reexpires on March 18. Once enroll in a payment plan
the moratorium expires, with the utility company.
regulated electric and natur• Utilizing ·the PUCO's
al gas companies will pro- winter reconnect order
ceed with billing and dis- through April 30, 2008.
connection · procedures as Customers who have not
outlined in PUCO rules.
· yet utilized this program
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�'

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court

Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

'
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'·

Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amend!ll4mt to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, March 14, the 74th day of 2008. There
are 292 days left in the year. · Today's Hi~hlight in History: On March 14, 1794, Eli
Whitney received ·a patent for ~is cotton gin, an invention
that revolutionized America's cotton industry.
On-this·date: In 1883, German political philosopher Karl
Marx died·in London.
In 1900, Congress ratified the Gold Standard Act.
In 1907, President Theodore. Roosevelt signed an executiv&lt;; order designed to prevent Japanese laborers from
immigrating to the United States as part of a "gentlemen's
agreement" with Japan.
In 1923, President Harding became the fust chief executive to file an income tax return.
In 1939, the republic of Czechoslovakia was dissolved,
opening the way for Nazi occupation of Czech areas and
the separation of Slovakia.
In 1951, during the Korean War, United Nations forces
recaptured Seoul.
In 1964, a jury in Dallas found Jack Ruby guilty of mur•
dering Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of
President Kennedy.
In 1967, the body of President Kennedy was moved from
a · temporary grave to a permanent memorial site at
Arlington National Cemetery.
··
In 1980, a Polish airliner crashed while making an emer- .
gency landing near Warsaw, killing all 87 people aboard,
including 22 members of a U.S. amateur boxing team.
In 1991, a British court overturned the convictions of the
"Birmingham Six," who had spent. 16 years in prison for an
. Irish Republican Army bombing, and ordered them released.
· . Ten years ago: India's Congress party picked Sonia Gandhi,
· _the Italian-born widow of assassinated prime minister Rajiv
Gandhi, as its new president. An earthquake killed at least five
people and left some 10,000 homeless in 50utheastem Iran.
F1 ve years ago: Actor Robert Blake was released from
jail on $1.5 million bail, II months after he was arrested on
charges of murdering his wife, Bonny Lee Bakley. (Blake
was later acquitted at trial.) Christopher Boyce, whose Cold
War spying was immortalized on film in "The Falcon and ·
the Snowman," was released from a halfway house in San
Francisco after a quarter-century in prison.
One year ago: The Pentagon released the transcript of a
military hearing in which Khalid Sheikh Mohammed said
he "was responsible for the 9111 operation from· A to Z."
President Bush, speaking from Mexico, said he was troubled by the Justice Department's misleading explanations
to Congress of why _it fired eight U.S. attornen, hut said
the fmngs were "entirely appropriate."
Today's Birthdays: Actor Michael Caine is 75. Composerconductor Quincy Jones is 75. Comedian Billy Cr.ystal is 60.
Prince Albert ll, the ruler of Monaco, is 50. Actress Megan
Follows is 40. Actor Chris Klein is 29. Singer-musician
Taylor Hanson (Hanson) is 25. Actor Jamie Bell is 22.
Thought for Today: ''The worst sin toward our fellow
creatures is not to hate them, but to be indifferent to them;
that's the essence of inhumanity." - George Bernard
Shaw, Irish playwright (1856-1950).
.

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
~igned, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
gopd taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
ed for publication.

\'

:t:~-- ~r!
' '·~.. ~
-

..

Christian music scene evolves and changes ·
The first time Jay
Swartzendruber held a com·
pact disc, he wondered if
music fans would miss the
artwork, readable lyrics and ·
other goodies that came
Terry inside old-fashioned album
Mattingly
covers.
Years later, industry. insiders started talking about
selling music online, and it
was deja vu all over again. meant pop tunes that youth
_The voice in his head said, choirs could sing in church.
'"Fans will forego CD art But over time, some artists
and packaging ·altogether? ventured into heavy metal
You seriously believe that?" and alternative rock, while
Swartzendruber
also others dug back into counlikes reading magazines he try and rhythm and blues.
can hold in his hands, espe·During one identity crisis
cially when it's the one that a decade ago, the Gospel
he runs. But that's chang- Music Association ing, too.
· focusing on lyric s - strugAfter 30 years of defining gled to establish criteria for
a subculture it helped cre- its Dove Awards.
ate, CCM Magazine is fac'·Gospel music," it proing its last press run. After claimed, "is music in any
April, it will appear online style whose ' lyric is: sub-period.
stantially based upon his tore
"On one level, this is just ically orthodox Christian
part of what is happening . truth contained in or derived
everywhere," said the 40- from the Holy Bible; and/or
year-old editor. "Lots 'of an expression of worship of
magazines are moving : God or praise for His
online. But thete:s more to works; anQ/or testimony of
it this time and everybody relationship with God
knows it. This is part of th(ough Christ; and/or obvi~
.even bigger changes in the ously
prompted
and
whole Christian music informei1 by a Christian
business. "
.
world view."
For decades, CCM stood
Industry leaders predicted
for
"conlemporary a bright future. They cited
Christian music,". while huge Soundscan sales numexecutives debated precise- bers in 2001, but that
ly what that meant. It helps included
mainstream
to know thai Nashville is a records - such as the ··o
place where judgments Brother Where Art Thou"
about the state of an artist's soundtrack - that sold in
career can be based on the- Christian as well as mainstream stories.
ology as well as sales·.
Those numbers looked
In the beginning, CCM

great, but a revolution was
taking place backstage.
P.O.D.,
Bands
like
Sixpence None the Richer,
MercyMe,
Chevelle,
Switchfoot, The Fray,
MXPX, Mute Math and others were jumping into the
main'stream. Some artists ·
ignored the CCM scene
altogether or fought for
their legal right to escape.
Realists could see several
trends by 2003. The first
was that sales were falling
for the "adu ll· contempbrary" artists - such as
Michael W. Smith, Amy
Grant and Steven Curtis
Chapman - whose success
had defined the CCM industry. Meanwhile. sales were
rising for Christians who
reached the mainstream.
And finally, Christian stores
were selling truckloads of
"modern · worship" CDs
containing the explicitly
religious "praise mu s_ic"
that -bands play Sunday after
Sunday in megachurches
across America.
When CCM asked its subscribers what they wanted
·to read, they requested more
coverage of "artists in the
mainstream" and "modem .
artists."
So
worship
-Swartzendruber and his
:team redesigned their magazine last year, focusing on a
wider spectrum of music
and artists.
In a letter to readers, the
editor stressed: "W.e're
going to start mixing indie
and
general
market
Christians . in with those
who have Christian label
affiliation on a more regular

basis. In other words, we're
going to stop perpetuating
the myth that what is and
what is not 'Christian
music' is based on where
the music is sold. (If 1-ou
tbink that last sentence
sounded . confessional,
you're righ\-)"
,
The bottom line was that
the old CCM label had
become "out of date and
marginalized." So the editors changed the name ' to
"Christ.
Community.
Music."
But it was too late to save
the magazine, in its old form.
The work of redefining the
familiar CCM label will continue
online,
said
Swartzendruber, at an expanded CCMMagazine.com website that will include daily coverage, blogs, podcasts, digital
music .and other signs of the
times.
."What we learned is that
contemporary . Christian
music was perceived - by
people in our subculture and
people in the mainstream as
music
made
by
Christians, for Christians,"
he said. But what readers
are saying now is, "We want
to hear more about the
artists of faith who are having an impact on our culture, not just artists who are
preaching to the choir."
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Cellter at the
Council for Christian
Colleges and Universities
and
leads
the
GetReligion.org project to
study religion and the
news.)

Page As

· FAri'H • FAMILY

Friday, March 14,2008

The·'Secular Sabbath,' a day to unwire and unwind On giving
.
,and getting
BY HILLARY RHODES

.'

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Bv

Listen children, you can hear
·
God calling
You to Him, as in a dream.
Saying, "Come unto Me.
All who are weary.
I'll give you rest beside My
stream.''
Softly He calls. His voice is gentle.
His love encompasses all you
can see.
Do not ignore Him.
Bow down before Him.
That encompassing love will set
you free,
- Marilyn Weaver

••

My rock

Answered prayers can save a life

•

and she said no. I told her I was slowed down enough so that l;he any hard feelings toward ' ei or
going to kill the guy she moved in Lord could work on me,
the other guy.
:~ : In January 2005, we moved on with, and she told me I was crazy.
The next morning I was at Ora's
I went to church almost every
:~a tract of timber that belonged to I told her this was no threat, that church for Sullday school and night and requested prayer for her
:·Ora Holbert's mother in Roane this was a promise.
stay~d ·around for him to be salvation and for both of them to
: ::County off the Clendenin Exit of
I came back up 'the road and ordained that afternoon. I· asked be saved. In early February 2008,
:::Interstate 79. I became good stopped at John and Vickie the church to pray for me. That she called her sister Lucy and said
&lt; friends with Ora.
Flora's, my nephew and niece. I night, I got down on my knees and they both got saved.
:: : On May 19, I came home from told him I was goin¥, to kill this asked the Lord to send her back,
I thank the Lord for answered
: • work and found a note on the guy but didn't know If I could kill !hen said that wasn't right, but for prayers and for putting forgive· ~ ,!Gtchen counter from my wife my5elf afterward. Of course they Him to do whatever He saw fit. ness in my heart, I don't want
: i Maxine· saying she was going .to were worried to death. I came But I had to have some relief.
anyone to think I ever ran Maxine
: ·~eave. We talked that night when home and got my pistol out and
On Monday evenin~, I called down. I know she's a fine woman.
::~he got in from work and I loaded both clips.
· her at work and asked 1f we could I know a lot of the problems, if
~~ begged her to stay.
On Saturday morning, I went to sit down and talk. She said yes. I not most, are my fault. I wrote
::·:The next mornmg, she told me Fetty's Barbershop. I told Henry went down and when I left, she this not to show what I did, but to
:~she would stay. All summer what I was going to do. Vickie said she wasn't coming back. show what the Lord can do if you
; •.things just weren't right. Ora told was supposed to use my truck that When I got into the car, there was will let Him work.
~ :llle we needed to get in church. I day to help her mom move.
a calmness over me that I knew I
If that is what it took to get me
. •:'!laid I knew that, but I didn't go.
Henry called Vickie and told her could deal with.
saved, it will all be worth it in the
:.: On Aug. 31, we had our 31st to somehow talk me into going · On Tuesday, Nov. I, she' called end. I can never thank or praise
:.: anniversary. On Oct. 28, I came with her. I was with her a)l day. me at work crying. She came Him enough for what he's done in
.: liome from work and found she That ev.ening, John called Ora to home·that night. On Wednesday, my life. If th,is helps one person, it
::J:rad packed her clothes and left. I call me and try to talk to me. Ora Nov. 16, I gave my life to the is worth it all. I thank Him for the
: • went to see her at work and called, and I don't know how Lord. On the 18th, she left people He put in my life to help
:)egged her to come back home, long we talked, but he got me again. This time, I didn't have me through this.
·~

t ..

BY TEDDY FLORA

'

1

'

• •
.· ·:· ·~-------------------------------------------------~~--~------------------------------------------'

True humility points to a singer
Bv DoUG STOCKTON

lines .. He highlights differences of opinion within the .
movement, and devotes
whole chapters to important aspects of policy. One
entire chapter concentrates
simply on Reagan - as an .
anti-Communist, a movemerit conservative, a governor, a teacher, a politician,
a president, a Cold Warrior,
a supply-sider, and a revolutionary.
It is, I repeat, an asionishing story. Where are the lib- .
erals today.? When did they
last have a truly creative
idea? Why is the very word
so often avoided today, in
favor of some substitute
such as "progressive"?
In titling · his book
"Upstream,"
Regnery
makes the point that the
success of the American'
conservative movement has
been a battle every step· of
the way. There have been
no easy victories. The daminant liberals of 1950 did
not - · as Trilling's observation makes clear - even
regard them as a threat.
That was their first, and
biggest, mistake.
(William Rusher is an
accomplished author, former publisher- of the
National Review and former
vice chairman of the
American
Conservative
Union.)

BOTHE

·Listen

··-.

late William F. Buckley Jr.
assembled a varied group of
conservative intellectuals
under the banner of · his
magazine Nation'al Review
and launched a full-scale
counterattm:k ·on the liberals
denouncing
their
appetite
for
Big
Government, calling for a
return to the values of the
Western Christian tradition,
and demanding staunch
resistance to world communism. Later in the decade,
Russell Kirk launched his
quarterly, Modern Age, on
much the same principles,
and by 1960 a whole new ·
intellectual movement was
under way.
It quickly moved into
politics, and in 1964 cap- ·
tured the Re,publican Part;y,
nominating
·
Barry
Goldwater for president.
Goldwater's subsequent
defeat, far from dispiriting
the movement, actually
energized it. . Within two
years Ronald Reagan, its
new spokesman, .won the
governorship of California
by a million votes, and in
1980 and 1984 he was
elected and re-elected president of the United States.
In 199l,the Cold War ended
in victory for the West.
This is the story that
Regnery tells, but he goes
well beyond its basic out-

C.

I had come to New Life Lutheran
Church on Feb. 29 to donate
clothes for their clothing giveaway
and decided to look around. Others
were already "shopping" for what
they needed.
Tables were piled high all around
the room and long racks held dresses
and coats. A steady flow of people
· were filling bags, .getting help from
volunteers, as where to find sizes·. I
saw smiles, heard "hank yous," children being looked after and lots of
kindness being shown.
A volunteer gold me everything
here had come from donations
around the area and a Lutheran
Church in Columbus- all giving to
those who need a lift up. She said.
"We do what is possible -God does
the impossible.'
I was really touched to see God's
"giving" in action, by His children,
for His children that day. What I left
with wasn't in a bag, I carried it in my heart, I have enough clothes.
Bless you who give - Bless you
who.got.
.
(C. Bothe resides near Henderson.
W.Va.)

·'

•'•
•'

Modern political history
offers no more astonishing
story than the account of
how the American conservillive movement emerged,
seemingly out of nowhere,
William
in the· early 1950s, trounced
Rusher
the regnant liberals, and
established itself as the
dominant political force in
the
United
States.
Professional historians have would otherwise never have
Reader Services
· (USPs 213-9601
been. slow to take up tqe seen the light of day, and is
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
task, no doubt because so himself the publisher of
Our matn concern in all stories is to Pub!lshed every afternoon. Monday
many of them are liberals The American Spectator, a
be accurate. If You know of an error through Friday, 111 Court Street,
themselves
and find the . well-regarded journal of
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In a story, call the newsro6m at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
story .positively painful to conservative opinion. He
992·2t56.
, , Member. The· A980Ciatad Press and
recount.
gives us a clear chronologi- .
·the Ohio Newopaper·Aitoclotlon.
But in recent years the cal account of the birth and
Poatmaater: Send address correc·
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tiona to The Da.ll~ Sentinel, 111 Court
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filling wit~ accounts written movement, and then supStreet, Pomeroy, Ohto 45769.
Department extenalona are:
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Subacrlptlon Rilles
By Cllrrler or motor route
movement. And one that has interface between the
News
One mt)llth .......•••.'10.27
just
bc;en
published movement and such i;nporEditor: Ch&gt;Mene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year ............'115.84
·deserves
the
attention
not tant aspects of our culture
Reporter: Bnan Reed, Ext. 14
Dally ••••••••••••••••.. solloportor: Beth Sergent, Ext 13
only
of
conservatives
eager
Senior Clttun ratee
a' the law, the economy and
One month ...........'10.27
to learn the origins and his- rei igion, among others.
Advertising
one year ............'103.90
tory of their cause, but of
It was in the early 1950s
S t - . . ahruld """~ In ac:tva""'
liberals
genuinely
interested
that
Lionel Trilling made
Outolde Sileo: Dave Hams, Ext. 15 dirl!ol.,thoDellys.riht.No subscrip·
to
know
how
it
all
_
came
his
famous
observation that
Outoldo SIIH: Brenda Davis, Ext16 lion by moH permitted in areas wl&gt;o"'
about. The book is " "In the United States at this
ClaaoJCirc.: Judy Clark, E&gt;rt. 10
· ~~-~~ · -·
Upstream: The Ascendance time liberali sm is not only
· •Of American Conservatism" the dominant but even the
General Mana.., :·~~
· ·1.
il •I
? '· ' by Alfred S. Regnery sole intellectual tradition .
ChMene Hoeflich, EKI. 12 ':~ · _
ks . . . . . . . . . . • . . 2.26
(Threshold Editions), and it For it is the plain fact that
Weeks ... .......... '64.20
can
be recommended unre- · there are no conservmive or
52 Weeks . . . .. ...... '127.11
E-mail:
servedly.
reactionary ideas in general ·
newsOmydailysentinel.com
Outolde Melgo Counly
, Regnery is the son of lhe circulation ." The obscrva- .
13 Weeks . ..... .. .....'53.55
late Henry Regnery, who tion was accurate. but on the
Web: .
26 W-s . ... ·.... ....' 107.10
made a career of publishing ragged edge of obsoles'
52 Weeks .... ... . . .. '21'\.21
www.mydaily$entinel.com
conservative books that ceilce. In the mid-1950s, the

The Daily Sentinel

:·.The Daily Sentin'el

. Friday, March 14,2008

Telling _the great story

LETTERS . TO THE
. EDITOR

,
·

OPINION.

PageA4

· Following the tragic events of
· Sept. 11, 200 I, the church I was
· . serving as pastor at that time, like
· . most churches, struggled with
-· trying to ~address the ne~ds of our·
_·congregation . and increasing
numbers of ~uests during ·our
worship services. There were
. · many people flocking to churoh
· seeking real answers to questions
that seemed unanswerable. How
. could our own church help these
· people to cope with the tragedy
and sadness of 9/ II ?
That fall, on Veterans Day, we
experienced some success in this
important effort. And it wasn't
. because the preacher was particu.. larly eloquent that day. And it
·. wasn't because our gifted choir
belted out a heart-stirring rendition of "God Bless America." It

was because of the willingness of
a humble, little, 6-year old boy
named Alex.
Alex had volunteered on his
own initiati\.:e to sing the "Star
Spangled Banner" for the morning
worship service that day.However,
being somewhat nervous, he wanted to stand in the back of the sanetuary while everyone stood facing
the American flag in' the front.
This was quite unusual in our
church since everyone else who
had ever sung a special musical
SQlO always stood up front. But,
Alex insisted this was the only
way he would sing. When the time
came for his song, I called all the
military veterans down front and
-told them we had special gift for
them. I told them. and the.congregalion to stand and face Old Glory.
Standing at the back of the
sanctuary with microphone in

hand, Alex began singing. He
didn't even get past "the twilight's last gleaming" before tears
began to stream down the faces of
many men and women. It was so
touching! Everyone present that
morning was moved and inspired
by Alex's humble performance.
The instant Alex finished singing,
he rushed into the hall and down
to the Junior Church Department
before anyone could turn and see
him. When I caught up to' Alex
following the worship service
that morning, I thanked him for
singin¥ and told him that God had
used h1m to bless so many people
that morning. I also askecl him
. why he hadn't wanted anyone to
see him sing. I'll never forget his
response.
.
He replied, "I was just the
singer, not the song."
.
Out of the mouth of babes! In

that instant, God taught me an
important lesson about true
humility. The Bible tells us that
God has given a new song to each
of us who are believers in Christ.
We are merely the Lord's singers.
We are not the son~. The Lord is
the song! The song 1s what is real.ly important. We are just instruments to be used in the hands of
God. Instead of this understanding ofbumility:, many of us today
all too easily identify ..vith the
arrogant man who once described
himself 'by declaring,
"My humility is the thing that I
am most proud of." For the
Christian; true humility points not
at the one who sings, but rather at
the One who has placed a song of
joy within our hearts .
(The Rev. Doug Stockton is the
pastor of Grace United Methodist
Chun:h in Gallfpo/is.)

I will never leave you nor
forsake you
Is what the Master said.
That is why I am at peace
What at night I lie in bed.
Each morning when I waken
And start a brand new day,
No matter what I'm facing
He'll help me find my way.
All through the day, with each
new trial ,
I go to Him in prayer.
No matter what the circumstance
I know I'll find Him there.
He's my rock in times of trouble.
He calms my storm sea.
And though there are times I fail
· Him,
He will never, never fail me.
- Marilyn Weaver ·

Special friend
I'd like to introduce to this
special friend of mine.
His line is never busy and if you
have a problem,
He answers just in time.
You can call Him in the morning,
You can call Him noon or night,
And He'll make everything
·
.
alright.
He does not have call waiting, But He's waiting on your call.
He wants to be your savior
So give him your all.
He's always on the line
And the line is never busy,
And best of all the call is free
To all folks like you and me.
It doesn't matter what you look
like
How short or fat or tall
He answers all His calls
Just tell him that you're sorry.
And you want to live for Him
He 'II pick you up, dust you off
And take you back again.
Remember to get reconnected,
You must call 1-800 Jesus today
For He is the truth,
the light and the only way.
- Nancy Manley,'
Middleport

Come.on over to Bob's•• ~
Two Convenient Locations
2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446-1711

•

.

1/4 mile north of
.Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
. Mason, West
(304) 77&lt;:a.l;7')1

�'

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court

Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

'
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'·

Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amend!ll4mt to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, March 14, the 74th day of 2008. There
are 292 days left in the year. · Today's Hi~hlight in History: On March 14, 1794, Eli
Whitney received ·a patent for ~is cotton gin, an invention
that revolutionized America's cotton industry.
On-this·date: In 1883, German political philosopher Karl
Marx died·in London.
In 1900, Congress ratified the Gold Standard Act.
In 1907, President Theodore. Roosevelt signed an executiv&lt;; order designed to prevent Japanese laborers from
immigrating to the United States as part of a "gentlemen's
agreement" with Japan.
In 1923, President Harding became the fust chief executive to file an income tax return.
In 1939, the republic of Czechoslovakia was dissolved,
opening the way for Nazi occupation of Czech areas and
the separation of Slovakia.
In 1951, during the Korean War, United Nations forces
recaptured Seoul.
In 1964, a jury in Dallas found Jack Ruby guilty of mur•
dering Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of
President Kennedy.
In 1967, the body of President Kennedy was moved from
a · temporary grave to a permanent memorial site at
Arlington National Cemetery.
··
In 1980, a Polish airliner crashed while making an emer- .
gency landing near Warsaw, killing all 87 people aboard,
including 22 members of a U.S. amateur boxing team.
In 1991, a British court overturned the convictions of the
"Birmingham Six," who had spent. 16 years in prison for an
. Irish Republican Army bombing, and ordered them released.
· . Ten years ago: India's Congress party picked Sonia Gandhi,
· _the Italian-born widow of assassinated prime minister Rajiv
Gandhi, as its new president. An earthquake killed at least five
people and left some 10,000 homeless in 50utheastem Iran.
F1 ve years ago: Actor Robert Blake was released from
jail on $1.5 million bail, II months after he was arrested on
charges of murdering his wife, Bonny Lee Bakley. (Blake
was later acquitted at trial.) Christopher Boyce, whose Cold
War spying was immortalized on film in "The Falcon and ·
the Snowman," was released from a halfway house in San
Francisco after a quarter-century in prison.
One year ago: The Pentagon released the transcript of a
military hearing in which Khalid Sheikh Mohammed said
he "was responsible for the 9111 operation from· A to Z."
President Bush, speaking from Mexico, said he was troubled by the Justice Department's misleading explanations
to Congress of why _it fired eight U.S. attornen, hut said
the fmngs were "entirely appropriate."
Today's Birthdays: Actor Michael Caine is 75. Composerconductor Quincy Jones is 75. Comedian Billy Cr.ystal is 60.
Prince Albert ll, the ruler of Monaco, is 50. Actress Megan
Follows is 40. Actor Chris Klein is 29. Singer-musician
Taylor Hanson (Hanson) is 25. Actor Jamie Bell is 22.
Thought for Today: ''The worst sin toward our fellow
creatures is not to hate them, but to be indifferent to them;
that's the essence of inhumanity." - George Bernard
Shaw, Irish playwright (1856-1950).
.

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
~igned, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
gopd taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
ed for publication.

\'

:t:~-- ~r!
' '·~.. ~
-

..

Christian music scene evolves and changes ·
The first time Jay
Swartzendruber held a com·
pact disc, he wondered if
music fans would miss the
artwork, readable lyrics and ·
other goodies that came
Terry inside old-fashioned album
Mattingly
covers.
Years later, industry. insiders started talking about
selling music online, and it
was deja vu all over again. meant pop tunes that youth
_The voice in his head said, choirs could sing in church.
'"Fans will forego CD art But over time, some artists
and packaging ·altogether? ventured into heavy metal
You seriously believe that?" and alternative rock, while
Swartzendruber
also others dug back into counlikes reading magazines he try and rhythm and blues.
can hold in his hands, espe·During one identity crisis
cially when it's the one that a decade ago, the Gospel
he runs. But that's chang- Music Association ing, too.
· focusing on lyric s - strugAfter 30 years of defining gled to establish criteria for
a subculture it helped cre- its Dove Awards.
ate, CCM Magazine is fac'·Gospel music," it proing its last press run. After claimed, "is music in any
April, it will appear online style whose ' lyric is: sub-period.
stantially based upon his tore
"On one level, this is just ically orthodox Christian
part of what is happening . truth contained in or derived
everywhere," said the 40- from the Holy Bible; and/or
year-old editor. "Lots 'of an expression of worship of
magazines are moving : God or praise for His
online. But thete:s more to works; anQ/or testimony of
it this time and everybody relationship with God
knows it. This is part of th(ough Christ; and/or obvi~
.even bigger changes in the ously
prompted
and
whole Christian music informei1 by a Christian
business. "
.
world view."
For decades, CCM stood
Industry leaders predicted
for
"conlemporary a bright future. They cited
Christian music,". while huge Soundscan sales numexecutives debated precise- bers in 2001, but that
ly what that meant. It helps included
mainstream
to know thai Nashville is a records - such as the ··o
place where judgments Brother Where Art Thou"
about the state of an artist's soundtrack - that sold in
career can be based on the- Christian as well as mainstream stories.
ology as well as sales·.
Those numbers looked
In the beginning, CCM

great, but a revolution was
taking place backstage.
P.O.D.,
Bands
like
Sixpence None the Richer,
MercyMe,
Chevelle,
Switchfoot, The Fray,
MXPX, Mute Math and others were jumping into the
main'stream. Some artists ·
ignored the CCM scene
altogether or fought for
their legal right to escape.
Realists could see several
trends by 2003. The first
was that sales were falling
for the "adu ll· contempbrary" artists - such as
Michael W. Smith, Amy
Grant and Steven Curtis
Chapman - whose success
had defined the CCM industry. Meanwhile. sales were
rising for Christians who
reached the mainstream.
And finally, Christian stores
were selling truckloads of
"modern · worship" CDs
containing the explicitly
religious "praise mu s_ic"
that -bands play Sunday after
Sunday in megachurches
across America.
When CCM asked its subscribers what they wanted
·to read, they requested more
coverage of "artists in the
mainstream" and "modem .
artists."
So
worship
-Swartzendruber and his
:team redesigned their magazine last year, focusing on a
wider spectrum of music
and artists.
In a letter to readers, the
editor stressed: "W.e're
going to start mixing indie
and
general
market
Christians . in with those
who have Christian label
affiliation on a more regular

basis. In other words, we're
going to stop perpetuating
the myth that what is and
what is not 'Christian
music' is based on where
the music is sold. (If 1-ou
tbink that last sentence
sounded . confessional,
you're righ\-)"
,
The bottom line was that
the old CCM label had
become "out of date and
marginalized." So the editors changed the name ' to
"Christ.
Community.
Music."
But it was too late to save
the magazine, in its old form.
The work of redefining the
familiar CCM label will continue
online,
said
Swartzendruber, at an expanded CCMMagazine.com website that will include daily coverage, blogs, podcasts, digital
music .and other signs of the
times.
."What we learned is that
contemporary . Christian
music was perceived - by
people in our subculture and
people in the mainstream as
music
made
by
Christians, for Christians,"
he said. But what readers
are saying now is, "We want
to hear more about the
artists of faith who are having an impact on our culture, not just artists who are
preaching to the choir."
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Cellter at the
Council for Christian
Colleges and Universities
and
leads
the
GetReligion.org project to
study religion and the
news.)

Page As

· FAri'H • FAMILY

Friday, March 14,2008

The·'Secular Sabbath,' a day to unwire and unwind On giving
.
,and getting
BY HILLARY RHODES

.'

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Bv

Listen children, you can hear
·
God calling
You to Him, as in a dream.
Saying, "Come unto Me.
All who are weary.
I'll give you rest beside My
stream.''
Softly He calls. His voice is gentle.
His love encompasses all you
can see.
Do not ignore Him.
Bow down before Him.
That encompassing love will set
you free,
- Marilyn Weaver

••

My rock

Answered prayers can save a life

•

and she said no. I told her I was slowed down enough so that l;he any hard feelings toward ' ei or
going to kill the guy she moved in Lord could work on me,
the other guy.
:~ : In January 2005, we moved on with, and she told me I was crazy.
The next morning I was at Ora's
I went to church almost every
:~a tract of timber that belonged to I told her this was no threat, that church for Sullday school and night and requested prayer for her
:·Ora Holbert's mother in Roane this was a promise.
stay~d ·around for him to be salvation and for both of them to
: ::County off the Clendenin Exit of
I came back up 'the road and ordained that afternoon. I· asked be saved. In early February 2008,
:::Interstate 79. I became good stopped at John and Vickie the church to pray for me. That she called her sister Lucy and said
&lt; friends with Ora.
Flora's, my nephew and niece. I night, I got down on my knees and they both got saved.
:: : On May 19, I came home from told him I was goin¥, to kill this asked the Lord to send her back,
I thank the Lord for answered
: • work and found a note on the guy but didn't know If I could kill !hen said that wasn't right, but for prayers and for putting forgive· ~ ,!Gtchen counter from my wife my5elf afterward. Of course they Him to do whatever He saw fit. ness in my heart, I don't want
: i Maxine· saying she was going .to were worried to death. I came But I had to have some relief.
anyone to think I ever ran Maxine
: ·~eave. We talked that night when home and got my pistol out and
On Monday evenin~, I called down. I know she's a fine woman.
::~he got in from work and I loaded both clips.
· her at work and asked 1f we could I know a lot of the problems, if
~~ begged her to stay.
On Saturday morning, I went to sit down and talk. She said yes. I not most, are my fault. I wrote
::·:The next mornmg, she told me Fetty's Barbershop. I told Henry went down and when I left, she this not to show what I did, but to
:~she would stay. All summer what I was going to do. Vickie said she wasn't coming back. show what the Lord can do if you
; •.things just weren't right. Ora told was supposed to use my truck that When I got into the car, there was will let Him work.
~ :llle we needed to get in church. I day to help her mom move.
a calmness over me that I knew I
If that is what it took to get me
. •:'!laid I knew that, but I didn't go.
Henry called Vickie and told her could deal with.
saved, it will all be worth it in the
:.: On Aug. 31, we had our 31st to somehow talk me into going · On Tuesday, Nov. I, she' called end. I can never thank or praise
:.: anniversary. On Oct. 28, I came with her. I was with her a)l day. me at work crying. She came Him enough for what he's done in
.: liome from work and found she That ev.ening, John called Ora to home·that night. On Wednesday, my life. If th,is helps one person, it
::J:rad packed her clothes and left. I call me and try to talk to me. Ora Nov. 16, I gave my life to the is worth it all. I thank Him for the
: • went to see her at work and called, and I don't know how Lord. On the 18th, she left people He put in my life to help
:)egged her to come back home, long we talked, but he got me again. This time, I didn't have me through this.
·~

t ..

BY TEDDY FLORA

'

1

'

• •
.· ·:· ·~-------------------------------------------------~~--~------------------------------------------'

True humility points to a singer
Bv DoUG STOCKTON

lines .. He highlights differences of opinion within the .
movement, and devotes
whole chapters to important aspects of policy. One
entire chapter concentrates
simply on Reagan - as an .
anti-Communist, a movemerit conservative, a governor, a teacher, a politician,
a president, a Cold Warrior,
a supply-sider, and a revolutionary.
It is, I repeat, an asionishing story. Where are the lib- .
erals today.? When did they
last have a truly creative
idea? Why is the very word
so often avoided today, in
favor of some substitute
such as "progressive"?
In titling · his book
"Upstream,"
Regnery
makes the point that the
success of the American'
conservative movement has
been a battle every step· of
the way. There have been
no easy victories. The daminant liberals of 1950 did
not - · as Trilling's observation makes clear - even
regard them as a threat.
That was their first, and
biggest, mistake.
(William Rusher is an
accomplished author, former publisher- of the
National Review and former
vice chairman of the
American
Conservative
Union.)

BOTHE

·Listen

··-.

late William F. Buckley Jr.
assembled a varied group of
conservative intellectuals
under the banner of · his
magazine Nation'al Review
and launched a full-scale
counterattm:k ·on the liberals
denouncing
their
appetite
for
Big
Government, calling for a
return to the values of the
Western Christian tradition,
and demanding staunch
resistance to world communism. Later in the decade,
Russell Kirk launched his
quarterly, Modern Age, on
much the same principles,
and by 1960 a whole new ·
intellectual movement was
under way.
It quickly moved into
politics, and in 1964 cap- ·
tured the Re,publican Part;y,
nominating
·
Barry
Goldwater for president.
Goldwater's subsequent
defeat, far from dispiriting
the movement, actually
energized it. . Within two
years Ronald Reagan, its
new spokesman, .won the
governorship of California
by a million votes, and in
1980 and 1984 he was
elected and re-elected president of the United States.
In 199l,the Cold War ended
in victory for the West.
This is the story that
Regnery tells, but he goes
well beyond its basic out-

C.

I had come to New Life Lutheran
Church on Feb. 29 to donate
clothes for their clothing giveaway
and decided to look around. Others
were already "shopping" for what
they needed.
Tables were piled high all around
the room and long racks held dresses
and coats. A steady flow of people
· were filling bags, .getting help from
volunteers, as where to find sizes·. I
saw smiles, heard "hank yous," children being looked after and lots of
kindness being shown.
A volunteer gold me everything
here had come from donations
around the area and a Lutheran
Church in Columbus- all giving to
those who need a lift up. She said.
"We do what is possible -God does
the impossible.'
I was really touched to see God's
"giving" in action, by His children,
for His children that day. What I left
with wasn't in a bag, I carried it in my heart, I have enough clothes.
Bless you who give - Bless you
who.got.
.
(C. Bothe resides near Henderson.
W.Va.)

·'

•'•
•'

Modern political history
offers no more astonishing
story than the account of
how the American conservillive movement emerged,
seemingly out of nowhere,
William
in the· early 1950s, trounced
Rusher
the regnant liberals, and
established itself as the
dominant political force in
the
United
States.
Professional historians have would otherwise never have
Reader Services
· (USPs 213-9601
been. slow to take up tqe seen the light of day, and is
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
task, no doubt because so himself the publisher of
Our matn concern in all stories is to Pub!lshed every afternoon. Monday
many of them are liberals The American Spectator, a
be accurate. If You know of an error through Friday, 111 Court Street,
themselves
and find the . well-regarded journal of
Pomeroy, Ohio, Second-class postage
In a story, call the newsro6m at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
story .positively painful to conservative opinion. He
992·2t56.
, , Member. The· A980Ciatad Press and
recount.
gives us a clear chronologi- .
·the Ohio Newopaper·Aitoclotlon.
But in recent years the cal account of the birth and
Poatmaater: Send address correc·
Our main number Ia
bookshelves have begun growth of the conservalive ,
tiona to The Da.ll~ Sentinel, 111 Court
(740) 992-2156.
filling wit~ accounts written movement, and then supStreet, Pomeroy, Ohto 45769.
Department extenalona are:
by people who were them- plements this with extenselves participants in the sive descriptions of the
Subacrlptlon Rilles
By Cllrrler or motor route
movement. And one that has interface between the
News
One mt)llth .......•••.'10.27
just
bc;en
published movement and such i;nporEditor: Ch&gt;Mene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year ............'115.84
·deserves
the
attention
not tant aspects of our culture
Reporter: Bnan Reed, Ext. 14
Dally ••••••••••••••••.. solloportor: Beth Sergent, Ext 13
only
of
conservatives
eager
Senior Clttun ratee
a' the law, the economy and
One month ...........'10.27
to learn the origins and his- rei igion, among others.
Advertising
one year ............'103.90
tory of their cause, but of
It was in the early 1950s
S t - . . ahruld """~ In ac:tva""'
liberals
genuinely
interested
that
Lionel Trilling made
Outolde Sileo: Dave Hams, Ext. 15 dirl!ol.,thoDellys.riht.No subscrip·
to
know
how
it
all
_
came
his
famous
observation that
Outoldo SIIH: Brenda Davis, Ext16 lion by moH permitted in areas wl&gt;o"'
about. The book is " "In the United States at this
ClaaoJCirc.: Judy Clark, E&gt;rt. 10
· ~~-~~ · -·
Upstream: The Ascendance time liberali sm is not only
· •Of American Conservatism" the dominant but even the
General Mana.., :·~~
· ·1.
il •I
? '· ' by Alfred S. Regnery sole intellectual tradition .
ChMene Hoeflich, EKI. 12 ':~ · _
ks . . . . . . . . . . • . . 2.26
(Threshold Editions), and it For it is the plain fact that
Weeks ... .......... '64.20
can
be recommended unre- · there are no conservmive or
52 Weeks . . . .. ...... '127.11
E-mail:
servedly.
reactionary ideas in general ·
newsOmydailysentinel.com
Outolde Melgo Counly
, Regnery is the son of lhe circulation ." The obscrva- .
13 Weeks . ..... .. .....'53.55
late Henry Regnery, who tion was accurate. but on the
Web: .
26 W-s . ... ·.... ....' 107.10
made a career of publishing ragged edge of obsoles'
52 Weeks .... ... . . .. '21'\.21
www.mydaily$entinel.com
conservative books that ceilce. In the mid-1950s, the

The Daily Sentinel

:·.The Daily Sentin'el

. Friday, March 14,2008

Telling _the great story

LETTERS . TO THE
. EDITOR

,
·

OPINION.

PageA4

· Following the tragic events of
· Sept. 11, 200 I, the church I was
· . serving as pastor at that time, like
· . most churches, struggled with
-· trying to ~address the ne~ds of our·
_·congregation . and increasing
numbers of ~uests during ·our
worship services. There were
. · many people flocking to churoh
· seeking real answers to questions
that seemed unanswerable. How
. could our own church help these
· people to cope with the tragedy
and sadness of 9/ II ?
That fall, on Veterans Day, we
experienced some success in this
important effort. And it wasn't
. because the preacher was particu.. larly eloquent that day. And it
·. wasn't because our gifted choir
belted out a heart-stirring rendition of "God Bless America." It

was because of the willingness of
a humble, little, 6-year old boy
named Alex.
Alex had volunteered on his
own initiati\.:e to sing the "Star
Spangled Banner" for the morning
worship service that day.However,
being somewhat nervous, he wanted to stand in the back of the sanetuary while everyone stood facing
the American flag in' the front.
This was quite unusual in our
church since everyone else who
had ever sung a special musical
SQlO always stood up front. But,
Alex insisted this was the only
way he would sing. When the time
came for his song, I called all the
military veterans down front and
-told them we had special gift for
them. I told them. and the.congregalion to stand and face Old Glory.
Standing at the back of the
sanctuary with microphone in

hand, Alex began singing. He
didn't even get past "the twilight's last gleaming" before tears
began to stream down the faces of
many men and women. It was so
touching! Everyone present that
morning was moved and inspired
by Alex's humble performance.
The instant Alex finished singing,
he rushed into the hall and down
to the Junior Church Department
before anyone could turn and see
him. When I caught up to' Alex
following the worship service
that morning, I thanked him for
singin¥ and told him that God had
used h1m to bless so many people
that morning. I also askecl him
. why he hadn't wanted anyone to
see him sing. I'll never forget his
response.
.
He replied, "I was just the
singer, not the song."
.
Out of the mouth of babes! In

that instant, God taught me an
important lesson about true
humility. The Bible tells us that
God has given a new song to each
of us who are believers in Christ.
We are merely the Lord's singers.
We are not the son~. The Lord is
the song! The song 1s what is real.ly important. We are just instruments to be used in the hands of
God. Instead of this understanding ofbumility:, many of us today
all too easily identify ..vith the
arrogant man who once described
himself 'by declaring,
"My humility is the thing that I
am most proud of." For the
Christian; true humility points not
at the one who sings, but rather at
the One who has placed a song of
joy within our hearts .
(The Rev. Doug Stockton is the
pastor of Grace United Methodist
Chun:h in Gallfpo/is.)

I will never leave you nor
forsake you
Is what the Master said.
That is why I am at peace
What at night I lie in bed.
Each morning when I waken
And start a brand new day,
No matter what I'm facing
He'll help me find my way.
All through the day, with each
new trial ,
I go to Him in prayer.
No matter what the circumstance
I know I'll find Him there.
He's my rock in times of trouble.
He calms my storm sea.
And though there are times I fail
· Him,
He will never, never fail me.
- Marilyn Weaver ·

Special friend
I'd like to introduce to this
special friend of mine.
His line is never busy and if you
have a problem,
He answers just in time.
You can call Him in the morning,
You can call Him noon or night,
And He'll make everything
·
.
alright.
He does not have call waiting, But He's waiting on your call.
He wants to be your savior
So give him your all.
He's always on the line
And the line is never busy,
And best of all the call is free
To all folks like you and me.
It doesn't matter what you look
like
How short or fat or tall
He answers all His calls
Just tell him that you're sorry.
And you want to live for Him
He 'II pick you up, dust you off
And take you back again.
Remember to get reconnected,
You must call 1-800 Jesus today
For He is the truth,
the light and the only way.
- Nancy Manley,'
Middleport

Come.on over to Bob's•• ~
Two Convenient Locations
2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446-1711

•

.

1/4 mile north of
.Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
. Mason, West
(304) 77&lt;:a.l;7')1

�PageA6

FAti'H • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel
'

Friday, March 14,2008

What's the big deal about an early Easter?

•

Just in case you 'have been
visiting your family off-planet somewhere, I'd like to officially inform you that Easter
is only nine days from now'
Pastor
That's right. this Sunday is
Kerry
Palm Sunday in the western
Wood
Christian calendar, and the
following Sunday - March
23 - is Easter!
I rece ived several emails
- actually the same email
from several different people preferred to schedule Easter
with the Jewi.· h Passover.
- highlighting the unique- All four gospel accounts _
ness of this year's Easter Matthew, Mark, Luke, and
timing. The email breath-· John _ agree that Jesus
lessly announces that "this is was arrested, convicted and
the earliest Easter any of us crucified during the week of
will ever see the rest of our Passover. In fact , John's
lives!" Furthermore, "the gospel make s deliberate.
next time Easter will be this parallels between the sacriearly (March 23) will be the fice of the Passover Lamb
year 22Z8 (220 years from with Jesus' sacrifice on the
now ). The last time it was cross. Western Roman leadthis early was 1913 (so if ers, however; were more
you're 95 or older, you are concerned with eradicating
the only ones that were pagan festivals than retainaround for that')."
ing ties to Judaism. Tying
Now I am willing to join the Resurrection celebration
the hoopla of the earliest to the arrival of Spring
Easter I will ever see, but all seemed the best way to stop
this made me wonder how the pagan celebrations..
setting the date for Easter
The only thing on which
works in the first place. To the two sides could agree was
find out, I had to go back to that Easter should be celebratsome of the earliest history ed on a Sunday. So for the
of the Christian ·church . next 200 or so years,
Back in 325 AD, church Christians celebrated Easter
leaders gathered in a place · based on local preference called Nicea. They were there were MANY Easters
there io hammer out agree- every year! In the meantime,
ments on quite a number of tensions between the East and
issues, including the process the West accelerated, both
for determining when to eel- politically within the Roman
ebrate the most important Empire itself, and in
event in Christianity - the Chnstianity. The Empire split
resurrection of Jesus Christ. into two, and from that point
Leaders from the eastern on, Christian practices
side of the Roman Empire diverged along the same lines.

Finally, in 7th century,
Western Christians adopted
a uniform method for determining when to c~lebrate
Easter. And you guessed it
- it was based on the arrival
of Spring. Easter was to be
celebrated on the FIRST
Sunday after the FIRST full
moon AFTER the spnng
Equinox. Got that??
If you ·thought that was
confusing,J· ust wait - it gets
better! The calendar in use
for centuries was the Julian
calendar, and it was too long.
Each year, the · cal~ndar
moved ahead of the sun by
II minutes, 17 and _ seconds. That adds up to a full
three days over 400 years.
Easter had to be adJusted
accordingly. In 1582, Pope
Gregory Xlii approved a
reform of the calendar that
took. away TEN ENTIRE
DAYS to correct the error.
The day after October 4 was
declared to be October 15!
Flashing forward to modem times, we still use the
combination
solar/lunar
timetable for determining
Easter. So, the Sunday of
Easter will vary by as much
as five weeks - that's 35
days . The odds of Easter
landing on any ONE partieular day in those five weeks
is pretty low - hence the
tremendous passage of time
between one March 23rd
Easter and the next March
23rd Easter. But when you
think about it, that's true for
ANY day within the range
of possible days for Easter.
It's no more remarkable to
cel~brate Easter on March

·22 as it ·is on April 22. We
just ma,k.e a bigger deal out
of the early ·date .because it
is on the edge rather than in
'the middle of the range.
And when I stop to think
about Easter more deeply, I
realize that the REALLY
ear!y Easter is' 'IJ)t 'on (or
whtch we don 't QliVe 11 date
- that FIRST Easter moming when a group of womeo
went to a tomb, hoping to
care for the body Of the person they loved, admired, and
even · daied to worship.
Imagine the breathlessness
. m whtch Mary Magdelene
told John and Peter that the
grave was open and she
couldn't find Jesus' body!
Imagine the fear and dread
they felt as they went back to
the tomb to investigate the
strangeness of the situation.
What a surprise to discover
no on there - then suddenly
someone WAS there! Mary
was so upset that she failed to
recognize Jesus at first. But
then, she realized Jesus was
ALIVE!! Now that's a big
deal! Huge!! World-changing, even!!! And ever since,
Christians have celebrated'
that day-. the day that death
was conquered, si11 overturned, and fear turned into
joy. If you want to get excited about an Early Easter,
then go ahead! I' II join y.ou,
no matter what the date!!!
· (Kerry Wood is the pastor

•

'

'been
Satan's
inn~
thoughts as he schemed to
ki II ou( Lord and Savior on
the cross," noted Pastor
Rob Barber.
·
"The idea is a bit like C.S.
Lewis' famous work, The
Screwtape Letters, where he
. writes from the viewpoint
of Satan. It's an unusual
perspective on the story of
the Cross, and how Jesus'
Resurrection foiled Satan's
evil plan."
On Sunday, March 23, an

early SONrise celebrationwill be held at 8 a.m. to
include special music by the
Bethel adult choir, followed
by a light breakfast served
free of charge.
A second Resurrection
Celebration Service at 10
a.m. will showcase special
Easter music by the adult
and· children's choirs, and
an innovative and sensitive
"Stik'n With Jesus" interpretive dance number performed by the children of

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Assembly of God

C~ue

Liberty Alllmbly of God
P.O. Box 467 , Duddinj Lane, Muon,
W.Va .• Pastor: Neil Tennant, Sundly
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m.

For Friday

March 14th

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Baptist

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The

th

·

·

Wmd leads
e way to the

o:1·

..
· PLEASE REMEMBER:
- Egg Is not at a place of business .

- Egg· Is not at a private residence
- Egg Is not Inside a man-made object
- You will riot need digging tools ·
- You will not need to climb or the use of a ladder

The·Daily Sentinel
~rought to you by:

SWISHER &amp;
, LOHSE .
POMEROY.

Spring is the favorite season for
many people, perhaps because the
world seems to come back to life
after its long winter dormancy. In
••
some parts of the country, winter is
so long and cold that we really are
''
left to wonder how anything living
•
•
,
outside could survive such drastic
conditions. But then, every spring
the robins return , the trees burst
forth with greenery, and flowers
bloom, seemingly overnight. From
the first tender buds to the newest
hatchlings, the new 'life of spring is
truly a vestige of c(eation and
should remind us that creation is an
ongoing process and the unfolding
of God's beneficent plan. And
although none of us fully
understand God's plan, each spring
as we witness the renewal of life o
. our planet, and simultimeously feel
The earth brought forth vegetation. plants yielding the life flow back into our veins,
· seed according to their own kind.s, and trees
we know intuitively that it is good.
bearing fruit in which is the ir'~eed,'each according At thi s time of year, we should
to it1kind. And'God saw that it was good.
remember to thank God for the
R.S.V. Genesis 1. 12
return of spring and abundant life
which it bJjngs.

.

• .

DOWNING (HnDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE

Ingels Ell ... tronics
Jewelry &amp; Pictuff Gallery

106 N. 2nd Ave. '
Ohio

992-3381
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209Thlrd
Racine, OH

TEAFORD RE;AL ESTATE
Members of the MLS and REALTOR'

Pick up a color -Brochure!
216 East Second St. • Pomeroy
1.40~992·3325

740-949-2210

.

"A Home Bankfor

www.teafordrealestate. net

Home People"

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217
.

, :. '

r

Michelle Kennedy

Z1or1 Cbwdl at Cbrlot
Pomeroy, Hacrisooville Rd. (Rt.l.3),
Putor: Roger WatJoD, Suncby School ~
9:30 a.m., Wcmbip • l0:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wedul:sday Sen-ices~ 7 p.m.

·'

Flllth Boptilt Charch
Railroad St., M~son , Sunday School • 10
a.m., Worship • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednelday Sen-ices· 7 p.m.
Forat Run Baptist· Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods , SWJday School - 10
a.m.,Wonhip-11:30a.m.

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

. . . ' The flppllance man
··r

Atmmphe~e

Mi(fie's !l{_estaurant
Homemade Desserts Mad~ Daily
Home CfJnk.ed Meals &amp;. Daily Specials

Open 7 days a week

740·985·3561
992-1550

I.
' \

'.I ' "

· · :;

r

.

Sales • Service • Parts
• All Makes
Ken and Adam Voun

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

____________

,

, Pounh &amp;: Main St., Mlddlepon, Sunday
School -9:30a.m., Worship · 10:&lt;45 1.m.
Pastor: Rev. Michael L Thompson, Jr.

740-992-7713

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

190 N. Second St.

(740) 992'6451

P.O. Box 683
•
l?omero Ohio 45769-0683

c-

lrodbury Cbrrch of Cbr1o1
Mlnitur: Tom Runyoa, 39'l8 Brlllboey
ROIId. Middlepor1, lunda)' Scbaol· 9:30
IJD•
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Lutheran

lll•.ltfaa ~ Cloordo
Plao Cln&gt;vo, Wonblp • 9:00 1.111., Sundly
Schoot- 10:00 ..... -

BndfGniOrrch .. ~
Comer or sa. Rt. ll4 &amp; Brldbw)' Rd,
Min- Doua Shomblla, Y - - : .
Bill Ambetp.r, SIIDday Scbool - 9::JO a.m.,
Worship ~ 8 :00 1.11., l0:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.,Wednctdly Suvices ·.. 7:00p.m.

o...-....-Clttudt
Walnut mci Henry SUI., RaVIIIWood,
W.Va., Pu&amp;or: .David Ru11ell, Suaday
Scboot • 10~ o.m .. Wonblp • II o.m.

lllekorf Htlo CMorclt ol Cllrlot

St ,..,,.,. rr• Clavcl

TaPI"i1 l'Wm, Pulir Mike Moon~, Bible
clua, 9 a.m. Sunda~; wonhlp 10 a.m.
Sunday; wonhip 6:30 pm Sunday; Bit;Je
clus7 pm Wed.

Bo-y .
Pu&lt;or:'Joba Gilmo&lt;e, Sundly School· 10
a.m., Worsbip - 9 a.m•• WedDesday
Services . 10 a.m.

Pu&lt;or:· Joba Oilmo!e, Suadey School • ll
a.m., Worah.ip -1~ a.m.
·

Tbo Church al J CBW ot.:-llo)' Solafl
S1. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446·1486,
Sunday School 10:20·11 a.m., Re~llef
SocietyfPriestbood 11:0,·12:00 ooon,
SacrameDt Sehice 9-IO:U a.m .,
HIXIIO!Dikiq mootin&amp;. bt Tb!UI. • 7 pm.

RutluiiCbortb ofCU!at
Sunday School • 9:l0 a.m., Wonhip and
Communion ~ 10:30 a.m., Bob J. Weny,
Millilter

Sundly Scbool · 10 o.m .. Wonhip • 9 o.m.

-c-

Launt CllrFroo

Putor: Ole.Jln Rowe, Sunday Scbool •
9:30 a.m., Wonhip • 10:3o a.m. and 6
pm.,Wedneoday Service • 7:00 pm.

Comet SyclllllliO A Sccoad St .. l'llmotoy,
Sua. Sclaoot • 9:4lo.m .. Wanbip • It am.

-v.llltl-

-.,sw

-Lowt
Putor: Bill Muaball Sunday School •
9a.m:, Wonhip • 10 a.m., lit Suaclay
e!ery month e\'enin1 lm'ice 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday-lpm.

-

Pu&lt;ar: Korr)o Woad, Suodoy School • tO
IJD., · Worlbip - II a.m.Wednaday
Servicu 6 pm; Tbur Bible SDIIiy 7 pm

Wonbip • 11a.m. Putor: Jticbud·Neue
Bdlel UIIIIIIIMift tiS
New Haven, Ricbud Neaae, Paator,
SuiHII)' wonbiP 9:30 a.m. Thel. 6:30
pnycr""' Bible itlld)l.

Dexter Cbuldlr1Ciu1ot
Sunday school 9:30a.m., ·sunday wonb.lp
~ 10:30 a.m.
11oeCburdt aiCltalot o f , _ ,
.Intersection 1 and 124 W, Bnnae1is1:

Mt.OINUDitodOff 124 behind Wilkesville , Putor: Re\'.
Ralpb Spirea, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Won,hip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m., Thunday
Servtcea • 1 pm.

-y

DeDnis SUJeDt, S1odly Bible Sludy 9:30 a.m .. Wonllip: t0:30 a.m. ..t 6:30
pm.,
Bible Sllldy • 7 pm.

~u-

Molp C I otln hrtola
Nortbellt Clu1ter, Alfred , Paator: Jim
Carbin, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonltip • I I LID ., 6:30pm.

Harttord , W.Va., Putor:David Orecr,
Sunday School • 9:30 a .m ., Worlhip ..
10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m ., Wedneadly
Services· 7:00-pm.

Cbootor
P11tor: Jim Corbin, Wonhip • 9 a.m.,
S1aday School • 10 a.m. ., nunday

Cbristillll Union
c- riCllrlolll

Pentecostal

CoololloUIIItldM,._hrllb
. Pu1or: Helen Kline, CooMUe Cb\ll&lt;:h,
Milia A Fifth St, Suo. School • tO o.m.,
Wonbip ~ 9 o.ni., Tuea. Ser.J,. . 7 p.m.

Presbyterian

lotiMIClttudt
Towaabip Rd .. 468C, Sundly Scbool • 9
.a .m. WorShip • 10 a.m .• Wedne&amp;day
Sen'ictl · 10 a.m.

United MethocUst

ReedmllcC...... ofCbrlrt
Pu10r: Philip s..,., Suadoy School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Service: 10:3p a.m., Bible
SIUIIy, Wedneoday, 6:30p.m.

~~~~~~nlln•on, •cllaniel

your light so shine bef,ore I
1m1en, that they may see
works and glorify
IFath1er in heaven."
499 RkbJaDd Avtau,, .Atlleu
Matthew 5:
Davia-Quickel Agency Inc.
Full line of
Insurance

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

~~~

H

•

SJTKue Milldoa

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracu~e, Sunday
School - 10 a.m, Evening • 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

Dl1 CMtrdl

Orand Sueet. Sunday Scbool : 9:30a.m ..
Wonbip • t0:30 am .. Pu10r Pllillip Belt

lluol Community Church

TordiCblftb
Co. Rd. 63. Sunday Sebool • 9:30 a.m., .
Wonbip • !0:30a.m.

Nazarene

ye abide in Me, and My

words abide in you, ye 11uJll
be dont uniD you.

Brogan-W8rner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Mlln ~.

812-5130

Jolat~lS:'T

Pomeroy

10

"

1'"1

-\ N Ill H.._O..,.
HJI.JIR\IH0"'11

'e"

Bltssed·at:e the purt
in heart; for they
shall see God.
MatthewS:&amp;

Off Rt . 124, Putor: Edsel Han, Sunday
School· ~: 30 a.m., Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.,
7:30p.m.
Dy....W. Communlly Cbarch
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m.; 7 p.m.
MGneCbepol Ctnudl
Sunday school - 10 a.m., Worship · 11
am., Wednelday Service · 7 P.l!l·

.

Polilt- «;lomb eltbo N........ .
Roule 689, Albany, lt(v. Lloyd Grimm,
pastor. Sunday School 10 am; worhsip
Jenlice II am, cvenina service 7 pm. Wed .
Jll'll'tr mootin&amp; 7 pm

Flltb Coopol Chmh
Lone Boaom. Sunday School · 9:30a.m .•

MW' 1 l ~.-dl fJltllt N....-.e
Putor: Leonard Powell, Sunday Scbpol •
9:30 a.m.,Wonhip • 10:10 a.m., 6:30 p.m.,
~sday ServiCC!I ·7 p.m.,

Wonhip • 10 : 4~ a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday 7:3Q p.m. '

FuU Goopd LJ&amp;bllloue
3304.5 Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Pastor: Ro~
Hunter, Sunday School· 10 a.m., Evening
· 7:30 p_.m... Thesday &amp; Thun. ·7:30p.m.

Roodovltlo Fotlowthlp
Church of lbe Nuareoe, Pastor: Runell

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, that they IIUIY see your
Tlw . - Y"" tksrrn, close to lwiM good works and glorify your

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

7411-992-6606

Bill Quickel

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

t•

l.-...sl·9106

P.roductB + ask what ye will, and iJ sluJll

Financial
ENCIES Inc. Services.

.......

:funnalJionir

.
~-

SalomC..tor
Putor: William K. Manbali, Sunday
School : tO:llom., Wonhip • 9: ll a.m.,
Biblo SDIIiy: Moodaj 7:00pm
Sao!ntlle

'

Mkldleport, OH

740.992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !-shirts and more

Rotllad

Putor: .Rick Bourne, Sunday School •
9:30a.m., Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., Thursday
Services . 7 p.m.

carm.t-Suaoo
Carmel .t. Bubar~ Rds: bc:in.e, Ohio,
Pucor: John Gilmore, Sunday School 9:4.5 a.m., Worship • II :00 a.m. , Bible
Stlld)l Wed. 7:.30 p.m.

1\!Jpe........ ctnada ofCIIrlot

740-594-6333

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

Roc:.l! Spr!ap
Pastor: De~ayne Stuller, Sunday School ·
9:00 a.m.., Worship • 10 a.m., Youth
Fellowship, Sunday· l'i p.m. Early Sunday
worship 8 am Jenni Dunham

ll S1., Mlddlepon. Pu&lt;or: Dou;
Col, Suadey School • tO am. Wonbip - ·
l0:4l p.m .. S-y EYe. 7~ p.m.,
Wedrieodoy s.r;ico . 7:30p.m.

a,.IRua&lt;:..-,

Rejolclne ure Church
N. 2nd Ave ., Middlepo rt . Pastor:
Mike.Foremllrl, Pastor Emerirus Lawrence
Foreman, Worship- 10:00 11m
Wednesday services. 7 p.m .
~00

Cemmwlity of Chrll!lt
Portland-Racine Rd., Putor: Jim Proffitt ,
Sunday School • 9:30 a:m., Worship - ·
CUfton 'hbernacle Church
Clifton. W.Va .• Sunday School • 10 a.m.,
10:30 a.m., Wednesday Services • 7:00
p.m.
Worship • 7 p.m .. Wednesday Service - 7
p.m.
llttllel Wonhlp Cmter
39'782 St. Rt. 7. 2 miles south- of Tuppers
The Art Cbun:h
Plains, OH . Non·denominational with
3773 Geoq:es CIN:k Road, Gallipolis, OH
Contemporary Praise cl. Wonhip. Pa5tor
PB!Itor: Jamie Wirr:man, Sunday Services •
Rob Barber, Assoc. Putor Karyn Davis.
10:30 a.m. Wednesday· 7 p.m. ThuNlay
Youlh Director Bett)l Fulb. Sunday
Prayer &amp;. Pra i~ at 6 pm. Classes for all
services: 10 am Worship &amp;: 6 pm Family
ages every Sunday &amp; Wednesday.
Life Clas~es, Wed It Thur nigbl Life
.www.theartchurch.net
Group• at 7 pm, Thun morning ladies'
Life Group at 10. Outer Limits Youth Life
FuU Goopel Chur&lt;h
Group on Wed. t\'enina from6:l0 lo 8:30.
Visit us online ac WW"ff.bethelwc,org.
of the LMna Savior
RtJ38, Antiquity, Pastor: Je sse Morris ,
Sel"\o·ices: Saturday 2:00 p"m.
Alb Stroot Cbm:h
398 Ash St., Middleport-Pallors Mark
Morrow &amp; Rodney Walker Sunday
Salem Commu•lty Church
School • 9:30 a.m., Morning Wonhip Back. of West Columbia, W.Va.om Lieving
10:30 am . .t: 7:00pm, Wednesday Service
Road , PaSior: Charles Roush (304) 67~ • 7:00p.m., Youth Service- 7i00 p.m.
2288, Sunday School 9:30 am, Sunday
Ap.pe Ufe Cea1tr
evening service 7:00 pm, Bibly Study
'"Fuli-Goapel Church", PaStors John &amp;:
Wednesday service 7:00 pm
Patty Wade, 603 Sooond Ave. Mason. 773·
S017, Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Hobson Christian FellowshlJ? Churtb
Woclneaday7pm
Pastor: Herschel White. ~unday School·
10 am, Sunday Church service- 6:30 pm
A......_.l Grace R.F. I.
Wednesday 7 pm
923 S.Third St., Middleport, Pastor Teresa
Davis, Sunda)'" service, 10 a.m.,
Reatoratlon Cbrlstlan Fellowship
~y !ICI'\'ice, 7 p.m.
9365 Hooper Road, Athens, Pastor:
Looni~ Coats, Sunday Worship 10:00 am,
Wednesday: 7 pm
Flltb FuD Goopol Church
LonJ Bottom, Pu~ Steve.Reed, Sunday
School • 9:30a.m, Worahip • 9:30 a.m.
Holllt of Heallna Ministries
and 1 p.m., Wcdoeaday. 7 p,m., Friday •
St Rt.ll4 Lmgnllle, OH
fellowship eervice 1 p.m.
Full Gospel, Cl Pastors Robert &amp; Roberta
Muner, Sunday School ·9:30 am, ,
Worship 10:30 am - 7:00 pm , WCd.
- . u t o Community Chur&lt;h .
Service 7:00 pm
P11tor: Theron Durham, Sunday • 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednesday ·1 p.m.
Twa J - MlDirtrloo
Meeting in the Mulbeny CommuDity
. Center G~nmuiuin. Pastor Eddie Baer,
Middleport Community Cbun:h
575 Peari ·St., Middleport , Pastor: Sam
Service t\'ery Tuesday 6:30 pm
ADdetlon, Sunday .School 10 a.m .,
Evenin&amp;· 7:30p.m., Wednesday Service·
7:30p.m.
PootocootolAiaombly
Pas1or: St. Rt. 124. Raci~e, Tornado Rd ,
Sunday School · 10 a.m ., Evening • 7
Foith Voloy Tobornodo Church
p.m., Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Bailey Run Road, Paator: Rev. Emmett
Rawson, Sunda~ Evening 1 p.m.,
'lbunday Service· 1 p.m.
Harrtson.-Oie Pmbyttrlan Church
Pastor: Robert ~row , Worship · 9 a.m.

Pon..y
Pastor: Brian Dunham. Worship • 9:30
a.m., Sunday Scbool- 10:35 a.m.

.... Gnm Blbla -Cborcb
112 mile olf Rt. l2l, PU10r: ROY. O'Dell
Mmley, Suadoy Scl!ool • 9:30 ,.,.,,
Wonbip • 10:30 am., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Servico • 7:30pm.

lrujcrumeaW, Wonhlp SerVIce • 9 a.m .,
Commuaioo • 10 1.m .. Sundly SChool IO:lla.m., Youlb·l:lOpm S-y.Bible
Srudy Wedneaday 7pm

llutfard

Alldqolty Baplht
Sunday School • 9:30 a,m., Worship ·
10:45 a.m., Sunday Eveninc · 6:00p.m.•
Putor: Don Walker

Pear! Cbopot

R-ai--Cbarch

Putar: RcY, Lar!y L&lt;mley; Sundly School
• 9:30 a.m., Worahip • 10:4.5. a.m.,·7 p.m.,
Thunday Bible SWdy lhd Youth- 7 p.m..

Stlvenvllle Community Chun:b
Sunday School 10:00 am, Sunday Worsbip
I! :00 am, WeOnesda}' 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp;. Missy Dailey

SUnday Scbool • 9 a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.

,ladirll Creek Rd., Rutland, Putor: Rev.
Dewey Kina. Sunday ~ehool- 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday wonllip ·1 pm., Wodneoday
pnyer.-m,- 7 pm.

WllloJ•- -Cborcb

Calvary Bible Chun:h
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd., Pas10r: Rev.
Bla~kwood, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship 10 :30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesduy Serv ice - 7:30 p.m:

Ouls Cbristllll Followshlp
(Non-denominational fellowship)
Meeting in the Meigs Middk School
Cafeteria Pastor: Chris Stewan ·
10:00 am· Noon Sunday: Informal
Worship, Children's mini stry

MiaoiiYlllo
Putor: Bob Robinson, Sunday School . 9
a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m.

• Calvuy ...... Cltapel
Harriaonvillc Rold, PuiOr: ctwlcs
M&lt;Kenzic, Suadey School 9:30 a.m..
Wonbip · II a.m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Service • 1:00 p.m.

RldpCbardlaiCbrllt

Rodno llnt Bapdst
Pasl&lt;':r: Ryan Eaton, pastor , Sunday
School · 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:40 a.m .•
6:00 p.m., Wednesdtl.y Sen-ices • 7:00
p.m.

Director of ~ ark.eting and Admissions

Hours
6am-8pm

. ....... _

Pastor:Brucc Terry, Sunday School -9:30
a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .• 6:10 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30 pm.

Old Bethel Froo WW Boptlrt Chord~
28601 St. Rt. 7, Mlddl~pon, Sundoy
Service - 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m,, Tuelday
Services ·6:00

llootb (Middloport)

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Sunda~ Schoo1 ·
9:30am.,Wonhip _. !1 :00am .

l!O" Stile Roule lll, LlnJIYlle , Putor:
8enj~ Cnwford, Sunday school • 9:30
a:m., Sunday worship • 10:30 a.m. It 1
p.m., Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

.,Ctuilt

First Baptist Chun:h
Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
Middleport, Sunday School ·!US B:.m.,
Worship - ID-:IS a.m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Hltloldo Boptllt C~urch
St. Rt. 143 juat off Rl. 7. Putor: Rev.
Jamea R. Acree, Sr., Sunday Unified
Sei-vice, Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m..
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

· Silas available 5x 10 to 10 x 20

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~.
(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

_,_

•
•
.'

CommuiQCIIorda
Steve Thmek, Ma'i.a Sueet,
Rud.m:l, SulKily W~IO:OO a.m.,
Sw.day Servi~7 p.m.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Dociors'
Prucrlptlons

Father in heaven."
Matlhew 5:16

· God so loved the world
he gave his only
lb~'ROJ!ten son ...

John 3:16

992·2955
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man."

Acts 24:

Wbite'o Cbopel Weoloyon
Coolville Road, Pastor: Rev. Charles
Martindak. Sunday School · 9:30 a.m .,
Worship · 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday ServiCe
. 7 p.m.

..

Amuing G.-.ct Community Churtb
Paslor: Wayne Dunlap. State Rt. 681,
TuppeB Plains, Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm, Wed. Bible Study 7:00 p.m.

..

Puror:

Wonhlp - 9:30 a.m., Sunday Sehool !0:30am.. Pos!Ot'-ki!Jey WoliiCO,I•IIId
:lrdSaDilly

41872 Pomeroy Pike , Sunday School •
. 9:30 a.m.,_Wonihip · 9:45am&amp;. 7:00p.m.,
Wednesdli.~ Services· 7:00pm . .

\'lotory BoptlR lodopoadonl
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor: James
E. Keese~, Wouhip • l~a .m ., 7 p,. m.,
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Wam1 Friendly

•

______

•

. Pbtor: Bob Robin1011 , Sunday School · 10
a.m., Worship- 9 a.m.

. Keao Cbllldl ol Cltrtlt

First Soulbem Bapdd

Mt. Mooiololllplht

We Sell Homes at

••

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··

Bothlobom 8optlot Cborch
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine , OH,
, Pastor: Ed Cuter, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Sunday Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.,&amp;: 7
pm; We&lt;lncl;day Bible Study· 7:00p.m .

Forat Run

Holiness ·

Sth and Main, P111or: AI Hll'IIOD,
Cbildre111 Dim:tor; Sharoo SayRI, Teen
OU.CIOt: Dodpr VsusJ!an, Sanday School
·9:30a.m., Worship-8:13 , !0:30a.m., 7
p.m., Wednesd•y Sen'ice• . 1 p.m . .
ChrislmU Hve Cllldle W&amp;ht Savioc 6:30
pm We invite yw tu celebnlte tbe 001b of
our Savior everyday.
wwwJiliddleponchun:h"''!

Mt. Un!oa Baplht
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday School· .
9:4.5 a.m., Even ina . - 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Holzer
Cll.ni'c 112 E. MAIN ST.

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

•

326 E. Mlin St., Pomeroy, Sundly School

n.... _CIIIII'do

Sliver Run Baptld
Pastor: John Swanson, Sunday School •
IOa.m ., Wonhip · I !a.m., 7:00 p.m.
,Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

· ·.

PuiOr: DewlyM: StuUier. Sunday School •
10 a.m., Wonh.ip • II a.m.

.and Holy Euchariat 11 :00 a.m. Rev.
Bdward Pa)'lle

......,..Y w-Cbuaalartot
33226 Children's Home Rd ., Sunday
Stbool · II a.m., Wcnhip - JO..m ~, 6 p.m,
Wednetday Services -7 p.m..

Rudand First Baptlll Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship .
10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy 11nt Baptist
Pastor Jon Bnx:kert, East Main St.,
Sunday Sch. 9:30 un, Worship 10:30 am

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

In Praise ·of Spring

Episcopal

212 W. Main St, ·Sullllay School · 9:30
a.m., Worsbip· 10:30 a.m ., 6 p.m.,
Wedntsday Servi.ca -7 p.m.

Ml'd' por"tC-urcb

Sync!* Cclmnumlty Cbm:b
2480 Second Si., S)'JIC)I.it, OH
Sun. SchooiiO am, Sundy niih:l6:30 pm
Pastor: J~ Gwinn
ANtwllqlnal..
(Ful Golpd Onuda) HarriwD\·ille,
Paston: Bob and Kay Marshall ,
Sunday Service, 2 p.m.

Rd. Pomeroy

c.te&amp;M blerde .....,... c...m.
KiD&amp;Ibuty Rold . Putor: R.obert V.-.ce,
Swtdty School • 9:30 a.m., Wmbip
Service 10:30 a.m.. Evening Service 6
pm.
Freoclom Goopot Milolon
Bald KDob. on Co . Rd. 31. Puror: Rev.
Roaer Yflll!ord. Sunday School . 9:30
a.m. Worship- 7 pm.

t'aln~w Bible Chun:h
Letart. W.Va. Rt . I. Pastor: Brian Ma~ .
Sunda~ Sc:lxloi ·9:30a.m., Wor.~h i p - 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Biblt: Study· 7:()0 p.m.
Faith FeUowship Cruude for Christ
Pasror: Re v. Franklin Dickens, Service:
Friday, 1 p.m

Other Churches

Putor: AtJaad King, Suaday Sdiool • 9:30
a.m., Wonbip · 10:30 a.m .. 33103 Hiland

Gnce F'plrrvpd CIHlrda

Pomeroy Chllldo ~ Cllritt

Hopr Daptiai Chun:h (Soalhero)
570 Grant St., Middleport, Sunday achool
· 9:30am., Worship · II a.m. and 6 p.m.,
WtdneMiay Sen-ice • 7 p.m. Pastor: Oary
Ellis

CootnlCtoller
Asbuly (Syncwe), Pastor: Bob Robinson ,
Suaday School • 9:4' a.m.. Worship • II
a.m., Wednesday Scrvica ·7:30 p.m.

Socond. A L)'IUI. l'omrloy. """"' RcY.
Bob winnoutb, Wonbip I0:2S a.m.,

Study· 1 pm.

Cbablrt: Baptl!t Churdl
Pastor: Steve Little ,.Sunda~ School: 9:30
am. Morning Wonhip: 10:30 am.
Wednesday Bible Study 6:30pm; choir
pmcti~ 7;30; youth and Bible BuddJes
b:30 p.m. Thllrl'i . I pm book !itudy

CbrolorChur&lt;b oltho N....oo
Putor: Rev. Curtis Randolph, Sund11y
Stltool· 9:30a.m., Worship.· 10:30 a.m.,
Sundly evening 6 pn\
:
Ruilud Churtb of tbt NIZ.Iftot
Pu10r: lwc Shupe, Sunday Sclxool· 9:30
a.m., Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m., •
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m .

P1110r: Jim Corbitt. Sunday School • 9
a.m., Wonhip · 10 a.m., Tuclldly Services
• 7:30 p.m.

1'riiiiJ Cllml!

Minister: Larry Brown, Wonhlp · 9:30
·a.m. Sunday School · 10:30 1.11., Bible

Cllf'IJ'•ter lndtpendent BaPdst Church
Sunday School - 9:30am, Preaching
Service !0:30am, Evening Senice .
7:00pm, Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 pm,
Pastor: Whin Akers

golden e_g 1
.Exodus l
9

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Congregational

Uomlodt GrotoC~- C.....b

Bethel Worship Center. All
services wiU incorporate the
observance of communion.The public is encouraged to participate.
The church IS located two
miles south of Tuppers
Plains on State Route 7 and
regular worship services are
held Sunday mornings. at 10
a.m., with ·Family Life
classes at 6 p .m. Sundays,
and several home Bible
study Life Groups on weekday .evenings.: ,
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Churcb of Cbrist
Pm.

Pastor: Ployd,Ross, Sunday ~hoo19:30 10
10:30 am, Worship ~ice 10:30 10 11 :00
am. Wed. preaching 6 pm

of Racine UniJ.ed Methodi~t
Church, 818 Elm Street in
Racine. Sunday worship is at
11 a.m. Pastor Kerry can be
reaclu!d at racineumc@suddenlink.net-)

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. CllarU at God of Protobool
OJ. White Rd. orr St. R1. t60, Puror: P.l.
."a.-, Suadoy School • 10 IJD ..
Wonltip · tl am., Woclneaday Services • 7
p.m.

W-CH!dl ~eMir~
3322ti Cbildn:o's Hoo1c Rd , Pomeroy, OH
Conoo: 740-441-1296 Sunday 11~na
10:00, Sun moraiaa Bible atudy;
followina wonhip," Sun. eve 6:00
. Wed bible study 7 pm

P..,.t!Lo Froowltl Boptllt Chu.U

.

'I'll.- Plolao St. Po~

a.m. Blleuina Servicll- 6:30 p.m.,
Wednelday Servicee · 6:30p.m.

Pas10r: Rev. Walter E. Hein:~, Sat. "eon.
4:4.5-1:1.5p.m .; Mill· !k30 p.m., Sun .
Con. ·8:4.5-9: 1.5 a.m.,. Sun. Mu1. 9:30
a.m., Daily Mu• · l:30a.m.

l'omoroyCbardlatthoN,_
Putor: Jan Lavender, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m ., Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. 2nd 6
p.ll)., Wednetday Services -7 p.m.

Worship • 9:30 a.m., Sunda~ school ~
10:30 a.m., Firlt Sunday of Month • 7:00
p.m.IIIYiCe

Afplo IIIIIs-.! 311., "'-:a.., Dovld

SomdHartColboii&lt;Cbur&lt;b
!6! MulbeiT}' A.,., Pumeruy, 992·l898,

N-

a.m., Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednelday Service~ • 7 p.m.

Luoq[lottom
Suaday School - 9:30 a.m., Wonbip •
10:30 a.m..

a-u. Suadoy School ODd Wmhtp- to

CathoDe

EmiDIDII&lt;I Apootollc Toberruodo Inc.
Loop Rd. off New Lima Rd. Rutland,
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thurs. 7:00p.m .. Pastor MartyR. Hutton

nieces and great-nephews of College says it needs the
Cardinal
William body removed.
The church is 'caught in
O'Connell for a second
the middle, trying to keep it
time.
The family members want promise to the college and
O'Connell's remains left · honor the. memory of one of
untouched, but Boston its former leaders.

r

chwclll!om , SW!dlyevcaiaat~pm, Wed .

IMIIIIIIIWC
''ta.rdl
Silver Ridae· Putor LiDda Damewood,
Swaday School -'9 a.m., Wonb.ip Service
IOa.m.lnd and 4tb Swlday

PaltDr Mi.U: Adkins, SWid.a~ Scbool • 9:30

a , - flnt Cllurch al God

Bible Study 7 pm

s,_ o.rdlattlao

Sunday Scbool· 10:30 a.m.

" - : ltoa lletlb, Suadoy Wonhip . 10
am., 6 .. p.m., Wcd!Jesday Strvicea • 7
p.lll.

, SR M2 and Aldcnon St. Putor: Robert
Grady, Sunday acllool tO am , Momlna

.

JPucoc Denz.il Null, Wonhip · 9:30 a.m.

pJD.

(ltldepa~rt Bopcilt)

W«ab.ip Center,
873 S. 3rd Ave., MiddJCport, Rev.
Michael Bradrord, Paslor, Sunday, 10:30
am. l'ue's. 6:30 praYer, Wed. 7 pm Bible
Study

•

ML Cloordo atW
Mile Hill Rd., llacinc, Putor: James
Sottaliold, Suadey School • 9:4l o.m.,
Eveniul· 6 p.m., Wednesday Seniccs • 1

-tllfllriC!oludl

• Canon , SuDday School • 9:30 un.,
Wonbip - 10:4.5 a.m ., 6 p.m.., W«iaeeday
Servicca . 7 p.m.

Service• - 7 p.m.

Church of God

Rave111wood, WV, SWKI.ay SebooiiO am' Mon!Ja&amp; wonbip II am Hveoln1· 7 pm,
W-.toy7pm.
nnt llopllotC- r1 - , WV

River v.ue,

Sale of church land requires removal of cardinal's tomb
BOSTON (AP) - When cardinal entombed on the
Boston College bought land land.
Four years later the
from
Bostons
Roman
Catholic archdiocese, the · church is still trying to meet
college had one request that request.
the church would have to
Church leaders are planremove the body of a dead ning to meet with the great-

Cb..... atJ-CllrloiA.......
VanZandt and Ward Rd., PuiOr: J1me1
Miller, Sunday School - 10:30 1.m.,
Eveniog- 7:30p.m.

River~ Vlllley Apostolic

Bethel schedules special Easter services
TUPPERS PLAINS Bethel Worship Center will
celebrate Easter weekend
with several special services, beginning with a
Good Friday Service at 7
p.m.
That service will feature
special music and an original multimedia dramatic
reading based on Satan's
viewpoint in the Biblical
account of Jesus' crucifixion. "This dramatization
reveals what might have

l l l l _ ..... Wll .......
Sllem St., Pallor: Bd Baney , Suodly
School · 10 un ., Evenina • 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Servic.eJ-7 p.m.

~,_,
'£«"",-...w_y :wlp II
!1"",-...w_y·
Suppression • Elltinguishers • Sprinklers
,

• SecUrilX

172 N. 2nd Ave , MtUdleport, OH
353.0837 Fax:

Mljldloport l'reshyterlon
Pastor: James Snyder, Sunday School 10
a.m., worship sen&lt;ice 11 un.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventt.-Day Adventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd ., Pomeroy, Saturday
Services: Sabbath School
2 p.m .,
Worship - 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon United Brethren ·
Ia Chrlsl Church
Tuas Community 364 11 Wickham \d,
Pastor: Peter Martindale, Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m . 7:00
P.m .. Wednesday Services - 7:01J p.m.
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7P.m.
Eden Unlltd Brtihren in Chrlst
State Rou1e 124, between Reedsville&amp;.
Hockingpon . Sundt)" School • 10 a.m..
Sunday Wor!hip • II :00 a.m. Wednesday
Sen-ice!i • 7:00 p.m.. Pastor· M. Adam

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
1-740-667-3156
to care"

MY arace is sufficient
for thee: for my
stren~h is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Se~ice &amp;Supply
137·C N. 2nd Ave.
Midd.leport, OH

992-6376

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�PageA6

FAti'H • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel
'

Friday, March 14,2008

What's the big deal about an early Easter?

•

Just in case you 'have been
visiting your family off-planet somewhere, I'd like to officially inform you that Easter
is only nine days from now'
Pastor
That's right. this Sunday is
Kerry
Palm Sunday in the western
Wood
Christian calendar, and the
following Sunday - March
23 - is Easter!
I rece ived several emails
- actually the same email
from several different people preferred to schedule Easter
with the Jewi.· h Passover.
- highlighting the unique- All four gospel accounts _
ness of this year's Easter Matthew, Mark, Luke, and
timing. The email breath-· John _ agree that Jesus
lessly announces that "this is was arrested, convicted and
the earliest Easter any of us crucified during the week of
will ever see the rest of our Passover. In fact , John's
lives!" Furthermore, "the gospel make s deliberate.
next time Easter will be this parallels between the sacriearly (March 23) will be the fice of the Passover Lamb
year 22Z8 (220 years from with Jesus' sacrifice on the
now ). The last time it was cross. Western Roman leadthis early was 1913 (so if ers, however; were more
you're 95 or older, you are concerned with eradicating
the only ones that were pagan festivals than retainaround for that')."
ing ties to Judaism. Tying
Now I am willing to join the Resurrection celebration
the hoopla of the earliest to the arrival of Spring
Easter I will ever see, but all seemed the best way to stop
this made me wonder how the pagan celebrations..
setting the date for Easter
The only thing on which
works in the first place. To the two sides could agree was
find out, I had to go back to that Easter should be celebratsome of the earliest history ed on a Sunday. So for the
of the Christian ·church . next 200 or so years,
Back in 325 AD, church Christians celebrated Easter
leaders gathered in a place · based on local preference called Nicea. They were there were MANY Easters
there io hammer out agree- every year! In the meantime,
ments on quite a number of tensions between the East and
issues, including the process the West accelerated, both
for determining when to eel- politically within the Roman
ebrate the most important Empire itself, and in
event in Christianity - the Chnstianity. The Empire split
resurrection of Jesus Christ. into two, and from that point
Leaders from the eastern on, Christian practices
side of the Roman Empire diverged along the same lines.

Finally, in 7th century,
Western Christians adopted
a uniform method for determining when to c~lebrate
Easter. And you guessed it
- it was based on the arrival
of Spring. Easter was to be
celebrated on the FIRST
Sunday after the FIRST full
moon AFTER the spnng
Equinox. Got that??
If you ·thought that was
confusing,J· ust wait - it gets
better! The calendar in use
for centuries was the Julian
calendar, and it was too long.
Each year, the · cal~ndar
moved ahead of the sun by
II minutes, 17 and _ seconds. That adds up to a full
three days over 400 years.
Easter had to be adJusted
accordingly. In 1582, Pope
Gregory Xlii approved a
reform of the calendar that
took. away TEN ENTIRE
DAYS to correct the error.
The day after October 4 was
declared to be October 15!
Flashing forward to modem times, we still use the
combination
solar/lunar
timetable for determining
Easter. So, the Sunday of
Easter will vary by as much
as five weeks - that's 35
days . The odds of Easter
landing on any ONE partieular day in those five weeks
is pretty low - hence the
tremendous passage of time
between one March 23rd
Easter and the next March
23rd Easter. But when you
think about it, that's true for
ANY day within the range
of possible days for Easter.
It's no more remarkable to
cel~brate Easter on March

·22 as it ·is on April 22. We
just ma,k.e a bigger deal out
of the early ·date .because it
is on the edge rather than in
'the middle of the range.
And when I stop to think
about Easter more deeply, I
realize that the REALLY
ear!y Easter is' 'IJ)t 'on (or
whtch we don 't QliVe 11 date
- that FIRST Easter moming when a group of womeo
went to a tomb, hoping to
care for the body Of the person they loved, admired, and
even · daied to worship.
Imagine the breathlessness
. m whtch Mary Magdelene
told John and Peter that the
grave was open and she
couldn't find Jesus' body!
Imagine the fear and dread
they felt as they went back to
the tomb to investigate the
strangeness of the situation.
What a surprise to discover
no on there - then suddenly
someone WAS there! Mary
was so upset that she failed to
recognize Jesus at first. But
then, she realized Jesus was
ALIVE!! Now that's a big
deal! Huge!! World-changing, even!!! And ever since,
Christians have celebrated'
that day-. the day that death
was conquered, si11 overturned, and fear turned into
joy. If you want to get excited about an Early Easter,
then go ahead! I' II join y.ou,
no matter what the date!!!
· (Kerry Wood is the pastor

•

'

'been
Satan's
inn~
thoughts as he schemed to
ki II ou( Lord and Savior on
the cross," noted Pastor
Rob Barber.
·
"The idea is a bit like C.S.
Lewis' famous work, The
Screwtape Letters, where he
. writes from the viewpoint
of Satan. It's an unusual
perspective on the story of
the Cross, and how Jesus'
Resurrection foiled Satan's
evil plan."
On Sunday, March 23, an

early SONrise celebrationwill be held at 8 a.m. to
include special music by the
Bethel adult choir, followed
by a light breakfast served
free of charge.
A second Resurrection
Celebration Service at 10
a.m. will showcase special
Easter music by the adult
and· children's choirs, and
an innovative and sensitive
"Stik'n With Jesus" interpretive dance number performed by the children of

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Assembly of God

C~ue

Liberty Alllmbly of God
P.O. Box 467 , Duddinj Lane, Muon,
W.Va .• Pastor: Neil Tennant, Sundly
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m.

For Friday

March 14th

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Baptist

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The

th

·

·

Wmd leads
e way to the

o:1·

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· PLEASE REMEMBER:
- Egg Is not at a place of business .

- Egg· Is not at a private residence
- Egg Is not Inside a man-made object
- You will riot need digging tools ·
- You will not need to climb or the use of a ladder

The·Daily Sentinel
~rought to you by:

SWISHER &amp;
, LOHSE .
POMEROY.

Spring is the favorite season for
many people, perhaps because the
world seems to come back to life
after its long winter dormancy. In
••
some parts of the country, winter is
so long and cold that we really are
''
left to wonder how anything living
•
•
,
outside could survive such drastic
conditions. But then, every spring
the robins return , the trees burst
forth with greenery, and flowers
bloom, seemingly overnight. From
the first tender buds to the newest
hatchlings, the new 'life of spring is
truly a vestige of c(eation and
should remind us that creation is an
ongoing process and the unfolding
of God's beneficent plan. And
although none of us fully
understand God's plan, each spring
as we witness the renewal of life o
. our planet, and simultimeously feel
The earth brought forth vegetation. plants yielding the life flow back into our veins,
· seed according to their own kind.s, and trees
we know intuitively that it is good.
bearing fruit in which is the ir'~eed,'each according At thi s time of year, we should
to it1kind. And'God saw that it was good.
remember to thank God for the
R.S.V. Genesis 1. 12
return of spring and abundant life
which it bJjngs.

.

• .

DOWNING (HnDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE

Ingels Ell ... tronics
Jewelry &amp; Pictuff Gallery

106 N. 2nd Ave. '
Ohio

992-3381
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209Thlrd
Racine, OH

TEAFORD RE;AL ESTATE
Members of the MLS and REALTOR'

Pick up a color -Brochure!
216 East Second St. • Pomeroy
1.40~992·3325

740-949-2210

.

"A Home Bankfor

www.teafordrealestate. net

Home People"

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217
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, :. '

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Michelle Kennedy

Z1or1 Cbwdl at Cbrlot
Pomeroy, Hacrisooville Rd. (Rt.l.3),
Putor: Roger WatJoD, Suncby School ~
9:30 a.m., Wcmbip • l0:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wedul:sday Sen-ices~ 7 p.m.

·'

Flllth Boptilt Charch
Railroad St., M~son , Sunday School • 10
a.m., Worship • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednelday Sen-ices· 7 p.m.
Forat Run Baptist· Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods , SWJday School - 10
a.m.,Wonhip-11:30a.m.

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

. . . ' The flppllance man
··r

Atmmphe~e

Mi(fie's !l{_estaurant
Homemade Desserts Mad~ Daily
Home CfJnk.ed Meals &amp;. Daily Specials

Open 7 days a week

740·985·3561
992-1550

I.
' \

'.I ' "

· · :;

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Sales • Service • Parts
• All Makes
Ken and Adam Voun

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

____________

,

, Pounh &amp;: Main St., Mlddlepon, Sunday
School -9:30a.m., Worship · 10:&lt;45 1.m.
Pastor: Rev. Michael L Thompson, Jr.

740-992-7713

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

190 N. Second St.

(740) 992'6451

P.O. Box 683
•
l?omero Ohio 45769-0683

c-

lrodbury Cbrrch of Cbr1o1
Mlnitur: Tom Runyoa, 39'l8 Brlllboey
ROIId. Middlepor1, lunda)' Scbaol· 9:30
IJD•
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Lutheran

lll•.ltfaa ~ Cloordo
Plao Cln&gt;vo, Wonblp • 9:00 1.111., Sundly
Schoot- 10:00 ..... -

BndfGniOrrch .. ~
Comer or sa. Rt. ll4 &amp; Brldbw)' Rd,
Min- Doua Shomblla, Y - - : .
Bill Ambetp.r, SIIDday Scbool - 9::JO a.m.,
Worship ~ 8 :00 1.11., l0:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.,Wednctdly Suvices ·.. 7:00p.m.

o...-....-Clttudt
Walnut mci Henry SUI., RaVIIIWood,
W.Va., Pu&amp;or: .David Ru11ell, Suaday
Scboot • 10~ o.m .. Wonblp • II o.m.

lllekorf Htlo CMorclt ol Cllrlot

St ,..,,.,. rr• Clavcl

TaPI"i1 l'Wm, Pulir Mike Moon~, Bible
clua, 9 a.m. Sunda~; wonhlp 10 a.m.
Sunday; wonhip 6:30 pm Sunday; Bit;Je
clus7 pm Wed.

Bo-y .
Pu&lt;or:'Joba Gilmo&lt;e, Sundly School· 10
a.m., Worsbip - 9 a.m•• WedDesday
Services . 10 a.m.

Pu&lt;or:· Joba Oilmo!e, Suadey School • ll
a.m., Worah.ip -1~ a.m.
·

Tbo Church al J CBW ot.:-llo)' Solafl
S1. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446·1486,
Sunday School 10:20·11 a.m., Re~llef
SocietyfPriestbood 11:0,·12:00 ooon,
SacrameDt Sehice 9-IO:U a.m .,
HIXIIO!Dikiq mootin&amp;. bt Tb!UI. • 7 pm.

RutluiiCbortb ofCU!at
Sunday School • 9:l0 a.m., Wonhip and
Communion ~ 10:30 a.m., Bob J. Weny,
Millilter

Sundly Scbool · 10 o.m .. Wonhip • 9 o.m.

-c-

Launt CllrFroo

Putor: Ole.Jln Rowe, Sunday Scbool •
9:30 a.m., Wonhip • 10:3o a.m. and 6
pm.,Wedneoday Service • 7:00 pm.

Comet SyclllllliO A Sccoad St .. l'llmotoy,
Sua. Sclaoot • 9:4lo.m .. Wanbip • It am.

-v.llltl-

-.,sw

-Lowt
Putor: Bill Muaball Sunday School •
9a.m:, Wonhip • 10 a.m., lit Suaclay
e!ery month e\'enin1 lm'ice 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday-lpm.

-

Pu&lt;ar: Korr)o Woad, Suodoy School • tO
IJD., · Worlbip - II a.m.Wednaday
Servicu 6 pm; Tbur Bible SDIIiy 7 pm

Wonbip • 11a.m. Putor: Jticbud·Neue
Bdlel UIIIIIIIMift tiS
New Haven, Ricbud Neaae, Paator,
SuiHII)' wonbiP 9:30 a.m. Thel. 6:30
pnycr""' Bible itlld)l.

Dexter Cbuldlr1Ciu1ot
Sunday school 9:30a.m., ·sunday wonb.lp
~ 10:30 a.m.
11oeCburdt aiCltalot o f , _ ,
.Intersection 1 and 124 W, Bnnae1is1:

Mt.OINUDitodOff 124 behind Wilkesville , Putor: Re\'.
Ralpb Spirea, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Won,hip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m., Thunday
Servtcea • 1 pm.

-y

DeDnis SUJeDt, S1odly Bible Sludy 9:30 a.m .. Wonllip: t0:30 a.m. ..t 6:30
pm.,
Bible Sllldy • 7 pm.

~u-

Molp C I otln hrtola
Nortbellt Clu1ter, Alfred , Paator: Jim
Carbin, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonltip • I I LID ., 6:30pm.

Harttord , W.Va., Putor:David Orecr,
Sunday School • 9:30 a .m ., Worlhip ..
10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m ., Wedneadly
Services· 7:00-pm.

Cbootor
P11tor: Jim Corbin, Wonhip • 9 a.m.,
S1aday School • 10 a.m. ., nunday

Cbristillll Union
c- riCllrlolll

Pentecostal

CoololloUIIItldM,._hrllb
. Pu1or: Helen Kline, CooMUe Cb\ll&lt;:h,
Milia A Fifth St, Suo. School • tO o.m.,
Wonbip ~ 9 o.ni., Tuea. Ser.J,. . 7 p.m.

Presbyterian

lotiMIClttudt
Towaabip Rd .. 468C, Sundly Scbool • 9
.a .m. WorShip • 10 a.m .• Wedne&amp;day
Sen'ictl · 10 a.m.

United MethocUst

ReedmllcC...... ofCbrlrt
Pu10r: Philip s..,., Suadoy School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Service: 10:3p a.m., Bible
SIUIIy, Wedneoday, 6:30p.m.

~~~~~~nlln•on, •cllaniel

your light so shine bef,ore I
1m1en, that they may see
works and glorify
IFath1er in heaven."
499 RkbJaDd Avtau,, .Atlleu
Matthew 5:
Davia-Quickel Agency Inc.
Full line of
Insurance

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

~~~

H

•

SJTKue Milldoa

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracu~e, Sunday
School - 10 a.m, Evening • 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

Dl1 CMtrdl

Orand Sueet. Sunday Scbool : 9:30a.m ..
Wonbip • t0:30 am .. Pu10r Pllillip Belt

lluol Community Church

TordiCblftb
Co. Rd. 63. Sunday Sebool • 9:30 a.m., .
Wonbip • !0:30a.m.

Nazarene

ye abide in Me, and My

words abide in you, ye 11uJll
be dont uniD you.

Brogan-W8rner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Mlln ~.

812-5130

Jolat~lS:'T

Pomeroy

10

"

1'"1

-\ N Ill H.._O..,.
HJI.JIR\IH0"'11

'e"

Bltssed·at:e the purt
in heart; for they
shall see God.
MatthewS:&amp;

Off Rt . 124, Putor: Edsel Han, Sunday
School· ~: 30 a.m., Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.,
7:30p.m.
Dy....W. Communlly Cbarch
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m.; 7 p.m.
MGneCbepol Ctnudl
Sunday school - 10 a.m., Worship · 11
am., Wednelday Service · 7 P.l!l·

.

Polilt- «;lomb eltbo N........ .
Roule 689, Albany, lt(v. Lloyd Grimm,
pastor. Sunday School 10 am; worhsip
Jenlice II am, cvenina service 7 pm. Wed .
Jll'll'tr mootin&amp; 7 pm

Flltb Coopol Chmh
Lone Boaom. Sunday School · 9:30a.m .•

MW' 1 l ~.-dl fJltllt N....-.e
Putor: Leonard Powell, Sunday Scbpol •
9:30 a.m.,Wonhip • 10:10 a.m., 6:30 p.m.,
~sday ServiCC!I ·7 p.m.,

Wonhip • 10 : 4~ a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday 7:3Q p.m. '

FuU Goopd LJ&amp;bllloue
3304.5 Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Pastor: Ro~
Hunter, Sunday School· 10 a.m., Evening
· 7:30 p_.m... Thesday &amp; Thun. ·7:30p.m.

Roodovltlo Fotlowthlp
Church of lbe Nuareoe, Pastor: Runell

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, that they IIUIY see your
Tlw . - Y"" tksrrn, close to lwiM good works and glorify your

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

7411-992-6606

Bill Quickel

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

t•

l.-...sl·9106

P.roductB + ask what ye will, and iJ sluJll

Financial
ENCIES Inc. Services.

.......

:funnalJionir

.
~-

SalomC..tor
Putor: William K. Manbali, Sunday
School : tO:llom., Wonhip • 9: ll a.m.,
Biblo SDIIiy: Moodaj 7:00pm
Sao!ntlle

'

Mkldleport, OH

740.992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !-shirts and more

Rotllad

Putor: .Rick Bourne, Sunday School •
9:30a.m., Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., Thursday
Services . 7 p.m.

carm.t-Suaoo
Carmel .t. Bubar~ Rds: bc:in.e, Ohio,
Pucor: John Gilmore, Sunday School 9:4.5 a.m., Worship • II :00 a.m. , Bible
Stlld)l Wed. 7:.30 p.m.

1\!Jpe........ ctnada ofCIIrlot

740-594-6333

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

Roc:.l! Spr!ap
Pastor: De~ayne Stuller, Sunday School ·
9:00 a.m.., Worship • 10 a.m., Youth
Fellowship, Sunday· l'i p.m. Early Sunday
worship 8 am Jenni Dunham

ll S1., Mlddlepon. Pu&lt;or: Dou;
Col, Suadey School • tO am. Wonbip - ·
l0:4l p.m .. S-y EYe. 7~ p.m.,
Wedrieodoy s.r;ico . 7:30p.m.

a,.IRua&lt;:..-,

Rejolclne ure Church
N. 2nd Ave ., Middlepo rt . Pastor:
Mike.Foremllrl, Pastor Emerirus Lawrence
Foreman, Worship- 10:00 11m
Wednesday services. 7 p.m .
~00

Cemmwlity of Chrll!lt
Portland-Racine Rd., Putor: Jim Proffitt ,
Sunday School • 9:30 a:m., Worship - ·
CUfton 'hbernacle Church
Clifton. W.Va .• Sunday School • 10 a.m.,
10:30 a.m., Wednesday Services • 7:00
p.m.
Worship • 7 p.m .. Wednesday Service - 7
p.m.
llttllel Wonhlp Cmter
39'782 St. Rt. 7. 2 miles south- of Tuppers
The Art Cbun:h
Plains, OH . Non·denominational with
3773 Geoq:es CIN:k Road, Gallipolis, OH
Contemporary Praise cl. Wonhip. Pa5tor
PB!Itor: Jamie Wirr:man, Sunday Services •
Rob Barber, Assoc. Putor Karyn Davis.
10:30 a.m. Wednesday· 7 p.m. ThuNlay
Youlh Director Bett)l Fulb. Sunday
Prayer &amp;. Pra i~ at 6 pm. Classes for all
services: 10 am Worship &amp;: 6 pm Family
ages every Sunday &amp; Wednesday.
Life Clas~es, Wed It Thur nigbl Life
.www.theartchurch.net
Group• at 7 pm, Thun morning ladies'
Life Group at 10. Outer Limits Youth Life
FuU Goopel Chur&lt;h
Group on Wed. t\'enina from6:l0 lo 8:30.
Visit us online ac WW"ff.bethelwc,org.
of the LMna Savior
RtJ38, Antiquity, Pastor: Je sse Morris ,
Sel"\o·ices: Saturday 2:00 p"m.
Alb Stroot Cbm:h
398 Ash St., Middleport-Pallors Mark
Morrow &amp; Rodney Walker Sunday
Salem Commu•lty Church
School • 9:30 a.m., Morning Wonhip Back. of West Columbia, W.Va.om Lieving
10:30 am . .t: 7:00pm, Wednesday Service
Road , PaSior: Charles Roush (304) 67~ • 7:00p.m., Youth Service- 7i00 p.m.
2288, Sunday School 9:30 am, Sunday
Ap.pe Ufe Cea1tr
evening service 7:00 pm, Bibly Study
'"Fuli-Goapel Church", PaStors John &amp;:
Wednesday service 7:00 pm
Patty Wade, 603 Sooond Ave. Mason. 773·
S017, Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Hobson Christian FellowshlJ? Churtb
Woclneaday7pm
Pastor: Herschel White. ~unday School·
10 am, Sunday Church service- 6:30 pm
A......_.l Grace R.F. I.
Wednesday 7 pm
923 S.Third St., Middleport, Pastor Teresa
Davis, Sunda)'" service, 10 a.m.,
Reatoratlon Cbrlstlan Fellowship
~y !ICI'\'ice, 7 p.m.
9365 Hooper Road, Athens, Pastor:
Looni~ Coats, Sunday Worship 10:00 am,
Wednesday: 7 pm
Flltb FuD Goopol Church
LonJ Bottom, Pu~ Steve.Reed, Sunday
School • 9:30a.m, Worahip • 9:30 a.m.
Holllt of Heallna Ministries
and 1 p.m., Wcdoeaday. 7 p,m., Friday •
St Rt.ll4 Lmgnllle, OH
fellowship eervice 1 p.m.
Full Gospel, Cl Pastors Robert &amp; Roberta
Muner, Sunday School ·9:30 am, ,
Worship 10:30 am - 7:00 pm , WCd.
- . u t o Community Chur&lt;h .
Service 7:00 pm
P11tor: Theron Durham, Sunday • 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednesday ·1 p.m.
Twa J - MlDirtrloo
Meeting in the Mulbeny CommuDity
. Center G~nmuiuin. Pastor Eddie Baer,
Middleport Community Cbun:h
575 Peari ·St., Middleport , Pastor: Sam
Service t\'ery Tuesday 6:30 pm
ADdetlon, Sunday .School 10 a.m .,
Evenin&amp;· 7:30p.m., Wednesday Service·
7:30p.m.
PootocootolAiaombly
Pas1or: St. Rt. 124. Raci~e, Tornado Rd ,
Sunday School · 10 a.m ., Evening • 7
Foith Voloy Tobornodo Church
p.m., Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Bailey Run Road, Paator: Rev. Emmett
Rawson, Sunda~ Evening 1 p.m.,
'lbunday Service· 1 p.m.
Harrtson.-Oie Pmbyttrlan Church
Pastor: Robert ~row , Worship · 9 a.m.

Pon..y
Pastor: Brian Dunham. Worship • 9:30
a.m., Sunday Scbool- 10:35 a.m.

.... Gnm Blbla -Cborcb
112 mile olf Rt. l2l, PU10r: ROY. O'Dell
Mmley, Suadoy Scl!ool • 9:30 ,.,.,,
Wonbip • 10:30 am., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Servico • 7:30pm.

lrujcrumeaW, Wonhlp SerVIce • 9 a.m .,
Commuaioo • 10 1.m .. Sundly SChool IO:lla.m., Youlb·l:lOpm S-y.Bible
Srudy Wedneaday 7pm

llutfard

Alldqolty Baplht
Sunday School • 9:30 a,m., Worship ·
10:45 a.m., Sunday Eveninc · 6:00p.m.•
Putor: Don Walker

Pear! Cbopot

R-ai--Cbarch

Putar: RcY, Lar!y L&lt;mley; Sundly School
• 9:30 a.m., Worahip • 10:4.5. a.m.,·7 p.m.,
Thunday Bible SWdy lhd Youth- 7 p.m..

Stlvenvllle Community Chun:b
Sunday School 10:00 am, Sunday Worsbip
I! :00 am, WeOnesda}' 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp;. Missy Dailey

SUnday Scbool • 9 a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.

,ladirll Creek Rd., Rutland, Putor: Rev.
Dewey Kina. Sunday ~ehool- 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday wonllip ·1 pm., Wodneoday
pnyer.-m,- 7 pm.

WllloJ•- -Cborcb

Calvary Bible Chun:h
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd., Pas10r: Rev.
Bla~kwood, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship 10 :30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesduy Serv ice - 7:30 p.m:

Ouls Cbristllll Followshlp
(Non-denominational fellowship)
Meeting in the Meigs Middk School
Cafeteria Pastor: Chris Stewan ·
10:00 am· Noon Sunday: Informal
Worship, Children's mini stry

MiaoiiYlllo
Putor: Bob Robinson, Sunday School . 9
a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m.

• Calvuy ...... Cltapel
Harriaonvillc Rold, PuiOr: ctwlcs
M&lt;Kenzic, Suadey School 9:30 a.m..
Wonbip · II a.m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Service • 1:00 p.m.

RldpCbardlaiCbrllt

Rodno llnt Bapdst
Pasl&lt;':r: Ryan Eaton, pastor , Sunday
School · 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:40 a.m .•
6:00 p.m., Wednesdtl.y Sen-ices • 7:00
p.m.

Director of ~ ark.eting and Admissions

Hours
6am-8pm

. ....... _

Pastor:Brucc Terry, Sunday School -9:30
a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .• 6:10 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30 pm.

Old Bethel Froo WW Boptlrt Chord~
28601 St. Rt. 7, Mlddl~pon, Sundoy
Service - 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m,, Tuelday
Services ·6:00

llootb (Middloport)

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Sunda~ Schoo1 ·
9:30am.,Wonhip _. !1 :00am .

l!O" Stile Roule lll, LlnJIYlle , Putor:
8enj~ Cnwford, Sunday school • 9:30
a:m., Sunday worship • 10:30 a.m. It 1
p.m., Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

.,Ctuilt

First Baptist Chun:h
Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
Middleport, Sunday School ·!US B:.m.,
Worship - ID-:IS a.m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Hltloldo Boptllt C~urch
St. Rt. 143 juat off Rl. 7. Putor: Rev.
Jamea R. Acree, Sr., Sunday Unified
Sei-vice, Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m..
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

· Silas available 5x 10 to 10 x 20

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~.
(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

_,_

•
•
.'

CommuiQCIIorda
Steve Thmek, Ma'i.a Sueet,
Rud.m:l, SulKily W~IO:OO a.m.,
Sw.day Servi~7 p.m.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Dociors'
Prucrlptlons

Father in heaven."
Matlhew 5:16

· God so loved the world
he gave his only
lb~'ROJ!ten son ...

John 3:16

992·2955
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man."

Acts 24:

Wbite'o Cbopel Weoloyon
Coolville Road, Pastor: Rev. Charles
Martindak. Sunday School · 9:30 a.m .,
Worship · 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday ServiCe
. 7 p.m.

..

Amuing G.-.ct Community Churtb
Paslor: Wayne Dunlap. State Rt. 681,
TuppeB Plains, Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm, Wed. Bible Study 7:00 p.m.

..

Puror:

Wonhlp - 9:30 a.m., Sunday Sehool !0:30am.. Pos!Ot'-ki!Jey WoliiCO,I•IIId
:lrdSaDilly

41872 Pomeroy Pike , Sunday School •
. 9:30 a.m.,_Wonihip · 9:45am&amp;. 7:00p.m.,
Wednesdli.~ Services· 7:00pm . .

\'lotory BoptlR lodopoadonl
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor: James
E. Keese~, Wouhip • l~a .m ., 7 p,. m.,
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Wam1 Friendly

•

______

•

. Pbtor: Bob Robin1011 , Sunday School · 10
a.m., Worship- 9 a.m.

. Keao Cbllldl ol Cltrtlt

First Soulbem Bapdd

Mt. Mooiololllplht

We Sell Homes at

••

---~~--------__,

··

Bothlobom 8optlot Cborch
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine , OH,
, Pastor: Ed Cuter, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Sunday Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.,&amp;: 7
pm; We&lt;lncl;day Bible Study· 7:00p.m .

Forat Run

Holiness ·

Sth and Main, P111or: AI Hll'IIOD,
Cbildre111 Dim:tor; Sharoo SayRI, Teen
OU.CIOt: Dodpr VsusJ!an, Sanday School
·9:30a.m., Worship-8:13 , !0:30a.m., 7
p.m., Wednesd•y Sen'ice• . 1 p.m . .
ChrislmU Hve Cllldle W&amp;ht Savioc 6:30
pm We invite yw tu celebnlte tbe 001b of
our Savior everyday.
wwwJiliddleponchun:h"''!

Mt. Un!oa Baplht
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday School· .
9:4.5 a.m., Even ina . - 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Holzer
Cll.ni'c 112 E. MAIN ST.

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

•

326 E. Mlin St., Pomeroy, Sundly School

n.... _CIIIII'do

Sliver Run Baptld
Pastor: John Swanson, Sunday School •
IOa.m ., Wonhip · I !a.m., 7:00 p.m.
,Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

· ·.

PuiOr: DewlyM: StuUier. Sunday School •
10 a.m., Wonh.ip • II a.m.

.and Holy Euchariat 11 :00 a.m. Rev.
Bdward Pa)'lle

......,..Y w-Cbuaalartot
33226 Children's Home Rd ., Sunday
Stbool · II a.m., Wcnhip - JO..m ~, 6 p.m,
Wednetday Services -7 p.m..

Rudand First Baptlll Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship .
10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy 11nt Baptist
Pastor Jon Bnx:kert, East Main St.,
Sunday Sch. 9:30 un, Worship 10:30 am

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

In Praise ·of Spring

Episcopal

212 W. Main St, ·Sullllay School · 9:30
a.m., Worsbip· 10:30 a.m ., 6 p.m.,
Wedntsday Servi.ca -7 p.m.

Ml'd' por"tC-urcb

Sync!* Cclmnumlty Cbm:b
2480 Second Si., S)'JIC)I.it, OH
Sun. SchooiiO am, Sundy niih:l6:30 pm
Pastor: J~ Gwinn
ANtwllqlnal..
(Ful Golpd Onuda) HarriwD\·ille,
Paston: Bob and Kay Marshall ,
Sunday Service, 2 p.m.

Rd. Pomeroy

c.te&amp;M blerde .....,... c...m.
KiD&amp;Ibuty Rold . Putor: R.obert V.-.ce,
Swtdty School • 9:30 a.m., Wmbip
Service 10:30 a.m.. Evening Service 6
pm.
Freoclom Goopot Milolon
Bald KDob. on Co . Rd. 31. Puror: Rev.
Roaer Yflll!ord. Sunday School . 9:30
a.m. Worship- 7 pm.

t'aln~w Bible Chun:h
Letart. W.Va. Rt . I. Pastor: Brian Ma~ .
Sunda~ Sc:lxloi ·9:30a.m., Wor.~h i p - 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Biblt: Study· 7:()0 p.m.
Faith FeUowship Cruude for Christ
Pasror: Re v. Franklin Dickens, Service:
Friday, 1 p.m

Other Churches

Putor: AtJaad King, Suaday Sdiool • 9:30
a.m., Wonbip · 10:30 a.m .. 33103 Hiland

Gnce F'plrrvpd CIHlrda

Pomeroy Chllldo ~ Cllritt

Hopr Daptiai Chun:h (Soalhero)
570 Grant St., Middleport, Sunday achool
· 9:30am., Worship · II a.m. and 6 p.m.,
WtdneMiay Sen-ice • 7 p.m. Pastor: Oary
Ellis

CootnlCtoller
Asbuly (Syncwe), Pastor: Bob Robinson ,
Suaday School • 9:4' a.m.. Worship • II
a.m., Wednesday Scrvica ·7:30 p.m.

Socond. A L)'IUI. l'omrloy. """"' RcY.
Bob winnoutb, Wonbip I0:2S a.m.,

Study· 1 pm.

Cbablrt: Baptl!t Churdl
Pastor: Steve Little ,.Sunda~ School: 9:30
am. Morning Wonhip: 10:30 am.
Wednesday Bible Study 6:30pm; choir
pmcti~ 7;30; youth and Bible BuddJes
b:30 p.m. Thllrl'i . I pm book !itudy

CbrolorChur&lt;b oltho N....oo
Putor: Rev. Curtis Randolph, Sund11y
Stltool· 9:30a.m., Worship.· 10:30 a.m.,
Sundly evening 6 pn\
:
Ruilud Churtb of tbt NIZ.Iftot
Pu10r: lwc Shupe, Sunday Sclxool· 9:30
a.m., Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m., •
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m .

P1110r: Jim Corbitt. Sunday School • 9
a.m., Wonhip · 10 a.m., Tuclldly Services
• 7:30 p.m.

1'riiiiJ Cllml!

Minister: Larry Brown, Wonhlp · 9:30
·a.m. Sunday School · 10:30 1.11., Bible

Cllf'IJ'•ter lndtpendent BaPdst Church
Sunday School - 9:30am, Preaching
Service !0:30am, Evening Senice .
7:00pm, Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 pm,
Pastor: Whin Akers

golden e_g 1
.Exodus l
9

r

r

Congregational

Uomlodt GrotoC~- C.....b

Bethel Worship Center. All
services wiU incorporate the
observance of communion.The public is encouraged to participate.
The church IS located two
miles south of Tuppers
Plains on State Route 7 and
regular worship services are
held Sunday mornings. at 10
a.m., with ·Family Life
classes at 6 p .m. Sundays,
and several home Bible
study Life Groups on weekday .evenings.: ,
·

r

Churcb of Cbrist
Pm.

Pastor: Ployd,Ross, Sunday ~hoo19:30 10
10:30 am, Worship ~ice 10:30 10 11 :00
am. Wed. preaching 6 pm

of Racine UniJ.ed Methodi~t
Church, 818 Elm Street in
Racine. Sunday worship is at
11 a.m. Pastor Kerry can be
reaclu!d at racineumc@suddenlink.net-)

r

. CllarU at God of Protobool
OJ. White Rd. orr St. R1. t60, Puror: P.l.
."a.-, Suadoy School • 10 IJD ..
Wonltip · tl am., Woclneaday Services • 7
p.m.

W-CH!dl ~eMir~
3322ti Cbildn:o's Hoo1c Rd , Pomeroy, OH
Conoo: 740-441-1296 Sunday 11~na
10:00, Sun moraiaa Bible atudy;
followina wonhip," Sun. eve 6:00
. Wed bible study 7 pm

P..,.t!Lo Froowltl Boptllt Chu.U

.

'I'll.- Plolao St. Po~

a.m. Blleuina Servicll- 6:30 p.m.,
Wednelday Servicee · 6:30p.m.

Pas10r: Rev. Walter E. Hein:~, Sat. "eon.
4:4.5-1:1.5p.m .; Mill· !k30 p.m., Sun .
Con. ·8:4.5-9: 1.5 a.m.,. Sun. Mu1. 9:30
a.m., Daily Mu• · l:30a.m.

l'omoroyCbardlatthoN,_
Putor: Jan Lavender, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m ., Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. 2nd 6
p.ll)., Wednetday Services -7 p.m.

Worship • 9:30 a.m., Sunda~ school ~
10:30 a.m., Firlt Sunday of Month • 7:00
p.m.IIIYiCe

Afplo IIIIIs-.! 311., "'-:a.., Dovld

SomdHartColboii&lt;Cbur&lt;b
!6! MulbeiT}' A.,., Pumeruy, 992·l898,

N-

a.m., Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednelday Service~ • 7 p.m.

Luoq[lottom
Suaday School - 9:30 a.m., Wonbip •
10:30 a.m..

a-u. Suadoy School ODd Wmhtp- to

CathoDe

EmiDIDII&lt;I Apootollc Toberruodo Inc.
Loop Rd. off New Lima Rd. Rutland,
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thurs. 7:00p.m .. Pastor MartyR. Hutton

nieces and great-nephews of College says it needs the
Cardinal
William body removed.
The church is 'caught in
O'Connell for a second
the middle, trying to keep it
time.
The family members want promise to the college and
O'Connell's remains left · honor the. memory of one of
untouched, but Boston its former leaders.

r

chwclll!om , SW!dlyevcaiaat~pm, Wed .

IMIIIIIIIWC
''ta.rdl
Silver Ridae· Putor LiDda Damewood,
Swaday School -'9 a.m., Wonb.ip Service
IOa.m.lnd and 4tb Swlday

PaltDr Mi.U: Adkins, SWid.a~ Scbool • 9:30

a , - flnt Cllurch al God

Bible Study 7 pm

s,_ o.rdlattlao

Sunday Scbool· 10:30 a.m.

" - : ltoa lletlb, Suadoy Wonhip . 10
am., 6 .. p.m., Wcd!Jesday Strvicea • 7
p.lll.

, SR M2 and Aldcnon St. Putor: Robert
Grady, Sunday acllool tO am , Momlna

.

JPucoc Denz.il Null, Wonhip · 9:30 a.m.

pJD.

(ltldepa~rt Bopcilt)

W«ab.ip Center,
873 S. 3rd Ave., MiddJCport, Rev.
Michael Bradrord, Paslor, Sunday, 10:30
am. l'ue's. 6:30 praYer, Wed. 7 pm Bible
Study

•

ML Cloordo atW
Mile Hill Rd., llacinc, Putor: James
Sottaliold, Suadey School • 9:4l o.m.,
Eveniul· 6 p.m., Wednesday Seniccs • 1

-tllfllriC!oludl

• Canon , SuDday School • 9:30 un.,
Wonbip - 10:4.5 a.m ., 6 p.m.., W«iaeeday
Servicca . 7 p.m.

Service• - 7 p.m.

Church of God

Rave111wood, WV, SWKI.ay SebooiiO am' Mon!Ja&amp; wonbip II am Hveoln1· 7 pm,
W-.toy7pm.
nnt llopllotC- r1 - , WV

River v.ue,

Sale of church land requires removal of cardinal's tomb
BOSTON (AP) - When cardinal entombed on the
Boston College bought land land.
Four years later the
from
Bostons
Roman
Catholic archdiocese, the · church is still trying to meet
college had one request that request.
the church would have to
Church leaders are planremove the body of a dead ning to meet with the great-

Cb..... atJ-CllrloiA.......
VanZandt and Ward Rd., PuiOr: J1me1
Miller, Sunday School - 10:30 1.m.,
Eveniog- 7:30p.m.

River~ Vlllley Apostolic

Bethel schedules special Easter services
TUPPERS PLAINS Bethel Worship Center will
celebrate Easter weekend
with several special services, beginning with a
Good Friday Service at 7
p.m.
That service will feature
special music and an original multimedia dramatic
reading based on Satan's
viewpoint in the Biblical
account of Jesus' crucifixion. "This dramatization
reveals what might have

l l l l _ ..... Wll .......
Sllem St., Pallor: Bd Baney , Suodly
School · 10 un ., Evenina • 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Servic.eJ-7 p.m.

~,_,
'£«"",-...w_y :wlp II
!1"",-...w_y·
Suppression • Elltinguishers • Sprinklers
,

• SecUrilX

172 N. 2nd Ave , MtUdleport, OH
353.0837 Fax:

Mljldloport l'reshyterlon
Pastor: James Snyder, Sunday School 10
a.m., worship sen&lt;ice 11 un.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventt.-Day Adventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd ., Pomeroy, Saturday
Services: Sabbath School
2 p.m .,
Worship - 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon United Brethren ·
Ia Chrlsl Church
Tuas Community 364 11 Wickham \d,
Pastor: Peter Martindale, Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m . 7:00
P.m .. Wednesday Services - 7:01J p.m.
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7P.m.
Eden Unlltd Brtihren in Chrlst
State Rou1e 124, between Reedsville&amp;.
Hockingpon . Sundt)" School • 10 a.m..
Sunday Wor!hip • II :00 a.m. Wednesday
Sen-ice!i • 7:00 p.m.. Pastor· M. Adam

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
1-740-667-3156
to care"

MY arace is sufficient
for thee: for my
stren~h is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Se~ice &amp;Supply
137·C N. 2nd Ave.
Midd.leport, OH

992-6376

'

..

�•

AS The Daily Sentinel

March 14, 2.008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Inside

The Daily Sentinel

Plilllies dump Reds, Page 82
Ohio loses to Miami in MAC tourney,
PageB4
Spring training roundup, Page B4

Friday, March 14,2008
. SPORTS BRIEFS

MYLholding
b~ball-softball

sign-ups Saturday
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Youth League
will be holding sign-ups for
baseball and softball for
' boys and girls ages five to
18 on Saturday from I 0
a.m. until 2 p.m. at the
Council Chambers.

HOTV's

Coma In And Chsck.
Out ~pll~g ~laotlon/
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-

PYLholding
baseball-softball
sign-ups Saturday

Appliance

i ll

•

'

j

J'

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Youth League will
.be holding sign-ups for
baseball and softball for
boys and girls ages four and
up Saturday from 10 a.m. to
2 p.m. at the Pomeroy Fire
Department.
· For more .information,
contact Ken at 992-5322 .'

.

SYLholding
baseball-softball
sign-ups Saturday ·

', fMfe

IIIII I

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

:~od }1~6
~OPJ6 . tUDl

Come

. •..... Ill .....

- 01• LIGIIY l.CN CAfl115.49
NAUAI. LIM I.CN CAll 510,99
IUSCllt.cN CAll sn.w

Open 7 Days a Week
M~n·Sat '•m·3am
Sun. Jpm·3am . ·

· •ac•,, ss.s9

CoJI'nlulgtnfSicoGI

• S can_rqll $13.49

• I() colt MU $26.99

"Lowest Prices In Town"
NEW LOW PRICE

Marlboro $30.99 CtufOII
Best Prices on Cold Beer!-'

403 6th Street
Pt. Plu1ant, WV
304·674·8101

..........

lltlll'lll• ...........

: SYRACUSE The
Syracuse Youth League ~ill
. be holding sign-ups for
baseball and softball for
boys and girls on the
Saturdays of March 15,
March 22 and March 29
from 9 a.m. until noon at the
Syracuse Fire Station.
For more information
contact · Eber Pickens at
992-5564,

Jbppers Plains
holding bas~ball­
softball sign-ups
TUPPERS PLAINS The Tuppers Plains baseball
and softball sign-ups will be
held Thursday, 5 to 8 p.m.
and Saturday, 9 a.m. to noon
at the ball fields in Tuppers
Plains. Cost is $30 per
child. Take copy of child's
birth certificate to signup.
This is the last sign-up
scheduled. ·

.

Schrock's Home Furnlslltngs

Rutland YL to .
hold baseballsoftball sign-ups ·

Save on expensive full!
Shop Locally!

RUTLAND
The
Rutland Youth League will
be holding baseball and
softball sign-ups for boys
and girls ages four to 16 on
Saturday, March 15 from 5
p.m. until 8 p.m. and
Thursday, March 27 from 6
p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Rutland
Fire Department.
For more information
contact ·either
Mindy
Brinker · at 992-7870 or
Angie Russell at 742-3116.

' ,..,. • ,.. ,. t..nn4t, Ott
140•Mf•OCM
March Sale

15.. Olr AU Stoell
Dullq , _ Tables,
~

lf•tdla l Butreu.

We ue mHi•l roo111 for
"" displays.
Step ill 1111' 1llowraom
loday llld 11n! .

Art PainlinBII

...... _.,,__,wllhOCWIIIIIIIM 1 •lrottor
~............. JI,-.

and Prints

SO% OFF

IncludinB our

*

Hours:
Mon-Tue 10..6
Wed·F.rll0-5

_ , !S:SSII

Sat 10..3 Closed Sullday

ST. PATRICKS DAYPARTYI
SATlltDAY MAR&lt;H 15TH

Cotwe.lde flew

,,

&amp; ,.,. . ~ ,-· ' '
•

a,,.,... ·,,;'

ff
i •) '
.8FIIM1!111Jifl, f;I'MJt'if&amp;• '" .r:;;._~
'ffP'ffJ'R:l'ff ~···. ,,.
.

.

"111'

and listen to ''
Blue z from

Come

. tOpm- 2am

• DRINK SPICIALS •

{/)/tlllllJilll/JiniiVItpl

1/Sct.~c!
181nch chain Jndudecl
St29
Ctab one before
they're sonetn

Chester to hold
baseball-softball
•
sign-ups
CHESTER
The
Chester Ball Association
will be holding baseball and
~oftball sign-ups at the
€hester Firehouse on March
22, and 29 from 11 a.m.
to I p.m. A copY. of the
child's birth certificate is
~uired at sign·ur.
: The CBA wil also be
liolding its first . annual
meeting at the frrehouse on
March 20 at 6 p.m.

ts,

.,' .

CbNfACI'US
.

.

.-

'

· 1·740·446·2342 ext. 33

E-m~H- sportsO~dallysenllnet.com

!jpona St1U

'
!ric Ra!ldolph, Sportil Writer
,(740) 44&amp;2342, ext. 33
-lphOmydallysenlinel.com

,Bryan Wahera, Sports Writer
i~40)44&amp;2342, ext .33
bwalllraOmydaliyttlbun"ll.com
'·

.

lal:rY -&lt;:rum, Sparta Writer
(1'40) 446·2342, ext. 33
~'"'\· ~ mydallyreglster.com

Butler returns to score 19 as Wizards beat Cavaliers 101-99
Bv JosEPH

WHITE

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON - Caron
Butler unleashed a month's
worth of pent-up energy on
his 28th birt~day, returning
to the W&amp;shmgton Wizards
lineup after a 16-game'
injury absence to score 19
points in a 101 -99 victory
over
the
Cleveland
Cavaliers on Thursday
night.
Butler, whose hip InJUry
sent the Wizards into a
February slump, scored the
game's opening basket, survived some rough contact
and made six of his first
eight shots. The players the
Wizards affectionally refer
to as "Tough Juice" finished .
8-for-18 from the field and
had five rebounds in 41

minutes.
Butler scored only one
point in the fourth quarter,
but at least he had a better
game than basketball-model
LeBron James, who marked
his appearance on the cover
of the April issue of Vogue
with a spotty performance.
He was called for an offensive foul in the linal20 seconds and his potential gamewinning 27-footer· hit the
front of the rim apd bounced
away as time expired.
James finished with 25
points, seven rebounds,
seven assists and seven
turnovers. ·
· He went 9-for- 22 from the
field, including 1-for-7 from
3-point range and 1-for-6 in
the fourth quarter. He was
driving with a chance to tie
- the Cavaliers trailed 96-

Wizards (32-32) back at
.500 for the first time since
they were 24-24 on Feb. 6.
Antawn Jamison had 17
points and l 0 rebounds, and
Darius Soilgaila scored 15
,
points on 7-for-8 shooting
94 - · when he lowered his for the Wizards, who nearly
left shoulder into DeShawn blew a nine-point lead in the
Stevenson for a foul with · final4 112 minutes.
19.4 seconds to play.
Sasha Pavlovic scored 19
The Wizards then went 4- of his season-high 24 points
for-5 from the line to take a in the first half for the
four-point lead, but Damon Cavaliers, but he sat out
Jones hit a 3-pointer with 8 much of the second half
seconds to play to make the becaus'e of foul trouble and
score 100-99. Antonio fouled out with I: 19 to play.
Daniels made I of 2 free
Butler was aggressive
throws with 7.2 seconds from the opening whistle.
remaining to restore a two- He made a 20-foot shot on
point lead . The Cavaliers the game's t;irst possession
called timeout and held the and soon added another 20·
ball for the last shot, but footer - this time a turn:
James came up short.
around, falling-backward
The victory .put the jumper. He crashed to the

floor belly-first while making a layup and draw ing a ·
blocking foul on Anderson
Varejao, then popped up
instantly and rai sed his arms
to a roaring crowd.
Butler
had
13 of
Washington's first
31
points.
Notes: Butler's .relurn
moved Songaila out of the
starting
lineup.
Cleveland's Ben Wallace
returned after m1ssmg
Wednesday's game with
back spasms. · Zydrunas ·
llgauskas (bulging disc in
back) missed his seventh
straight game. The injuries
prompted the Cavaliers to
sign C Lance Allred from
Idaho of the NBA's
Development League to a
10-day contract.

Prep Boys Basketball - OHSAA State Semifinals

llicothe, bev
to 0-1·1 1
Bv RUSTY

MIUE~

ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS -The onetwo punch of Anthony
Hitchens and Ray Chambers·
powered No. 2 Chillicothe
past top-ranked Polanc\
Seminary 78-70 Thursday in
a Division II state semifinal
at Ohio State's Value City
Arena.
The victory sends the
Cavaliers
(24-2)
into
Saturday morning 's title
game against No. 4 Toledo
Libbey, a 5.1-44 winner over
St. Paris Graham in the earlier semifinal.
Chambers, a 6-foot-7
senior who was listed as second·team .All-Ohio by The
Associated Press, had· 31
points and 17 rebounds. He
hit 13-of-18· shots from the
field.
Hitchens, a first-team allstater headed for. the
University of Akron, totaled
24 points, three assists and
si" rebounds.
The pair had ' outscored
Poland Seminary until the.
,
final 2 minutes.
Seth Dawes chipped in
with 14 points.
The Cavaliers, making
their first appearance at the
state tournament in 78 years,
will be going for their first
state title. They had lost in
the semifinals each of their
two previous trips ,
The 78-year gap is the
. longest ever for a team
between visits to the state
semifinals.
First-team
All-Ohioan
Ben Umbel had 28 points,
five assists and eight
for
Poland
rebounds
Seminary (25-1 ), which
came in averaging 88.8
points a game but suffered

WOrthington

Christian's
· Zach

Josapri,
Jen:, passes
the ball
·around
Bedford St.

Peter
Chanei's
Jo'Vaughn
Brown, center, and
Jordan
Duke during
the first
quarter of a
Ohio boys
Division IV
state sem~
final basketball
game in
Columbus

on
Thursday.
AP photo

through a miserable shooting day. .
·
The Bulldogs shot just 21
percent in the first half while
falling behind and ended up
at 35 percent for the game,
hitting just 9-of-35 3-point
attempts.
David White added 12
points and Niko Fatimus had ·
11.
Chillicothe's lead never
dipped below eight points in
the second half.
A key play came late in
the third quarter when
Umbel hit a shot inside to
cut the lead ·to 48-40 and,
after a turnover, Fatimus
drove the lane and banked in
a shot. Insteail of a possible
three-point play that could
have cut the deficit to five,
Fatimus was called for a
charge and the basket was
waved off.
Hitchens then hit a 3pointer from · the left corner
with 2 seconds left in · the
quarter to put the Cavaliers
ahead 51·40.
.
The lead was double digits
until the final seconds.
The Cavaliers owned the
opening half. ·
Poland was able to hit just
7-of-34 shots from the field,
including only 1-of-14 3pointers.
The Bulldogs had no
answer for Chillicothe's Big
Two. Chambers, scoring on
follows or short jumpers
inside, had 18 points imd 12
rebounds by the break almost matching up with
Poland's totals of 22 and 19.
In addition, Hitchens had
lO points, three assists and a
steal,
·
.
·
' APphoto
The Cavaliers pulled away
early in the second quarter, Chillicothe's Ray Chambers, right, takes a shot over Poland Seminary's David Baker during
Pleese see D·ll, B4

the first quarter of the Ohio High School
ball game on Thursday i!l Columbus,

Athl~tic

Association Division II semifinal basket·

New.Knoxville to face Worthington
Christian in D-IV championship
BY RusTY MIUER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

come· up with a steal and Ohio boys
basketball
.
then bring the ball up court coaching history.
on the break.'
·
Ahead
8-6
midway
COLUMBUS - Sillty·
Austin Arnett added 11 through tHe first period, the
one years later, New points,
Rangers began to pull away.
Knoll ville is back in a state
The only previous time a
Austin Luck came off the
championship game.
New Knoxville team made bench and almost immediRyan VanderHorst scored it to the state tournament ately hit a 3 from the left
16 points to lead top-ranked was in 1947, when the wing before Piehl stole a
New
Knollville
past Rangers beat Phillipsburg pass, dribbled up court and
Haviland Wayne Trace 62- in the Class B semifinals assisted on VanderHorst's
41 Thursday in a Division before
losing
to layup . . Tony. Meyer then
IV state semifinal at Ohio Columbiana in the champi- closed the period wilh u 3
State's.Value City Arena .
onship game.
from the left corner ' for a
The Rangers (26-0)
Aaron Hockenberry, an · 16-6 lead .
· advance to play third- . honorable mention allWayne Trace got as close
ranked
· Worthington stater, had 14 points for tinY, . as five points in the second
Christian (26-1) for the Wayne Trace (21-5), whicll quarter at 19-14 on a buckel
state title at 2 p.m . has j1,1st 34 students in its by Tevin Hale at the 4: l
Saturday. The Warriors senior class. Alex LaBounty mark, but the Ra1ders dtdn t
knocked
off
Bedford chipped in with 10 point ~.
score again . They turned
Chane! 66-58 in the earlier
The Raiders were makmg the ball over on thm next
semifinal.
'
their fourth · and final three po;sessions and ended
Brad Piehl , a 6-foot-7 appearance at the state lour- up missing their final five
junior, had a sterling all- na1nent under their coach shots while New Knoxvtlle
around game, totaling 13 the last 33 years, AI Welch: ran off the final six points
points, seven rebounds. five He is retiring, leaving with for a 25-l ~ lead.
steals and two blocked a record of 540-211 -. the
Pleese see D·IV. 81
shots. He frefluently would 17th highest win total in

7

I

I

�•

AS The Daily Sentinel

March 14, 2.008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Inside

The Daily Sentinel

Plilllies dump Reds, Page 82
Ohio loses to Miami in MAC tourney,
PageB4
Spring training roundup, Page B4

Friday, March 14,2008
. SPORTS BRIEFS

MYLholding
b~ball-softball

sign-ups Saturday
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Youth League
will be holding sign-ups for
baseball and softball for
' boys and girls ages five to
18 on Saturday from I 0
a.m. until 2 p.m. at the
Council Chambers.

HOTV's

Coma In And Chsck.
Out ~pll~g ~laotlon/
. g~le On ·.
WintBt ltBmgf

·In Stock
Financing Available
• Free Delivery
Old Appliance Remo1val

I

We Meet or Beat All Prices

·---------·
5 25 off

.
"'llt1

'

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I

I

·--------: 10% off

• J·

~] : Any In-Stock

-

PYLholding
baseball-softball
sign-ups Saturday

Appliance

i ll

•

'

j

J'

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Youth League will
.be holding sign-ups for
baseball and softball for
boys and girls ages four and
up Saturday from 10 a.m. to
2 p.m. at the Pomeroy Fire
Department.
· For more .information,
contact Ken at 992-5322 .'

.

SYLholding
baseball-softball
sign-ups Saturday ·

', fMfe

IIIII I

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

:~od }1~6
~OPJ6 . tUDl

Come

. •..... Ill .....

- 01• LIGIIY l.CN CAfl115.49
NAUAI. LIM I.CN CAll 510,99
IUSCllt.cN CAll sn.w

Open 7 Days a Week
M~n·Sat '•m·3am
Sun. Jpm·3am . ·

· •ac•,, ss.s9

CoJI'nlulgtnfSicoGI

• S can_rqll $13.49

• I() colt MU $26.99

"Lowest Prices In Town"
NEW LOW PRICE

Marlboro $30.99 CtufOII
Best Prices on Cold Beer!-'

403 6th Street
Pt. Plu1ant, WV
304·674·8101

..........

lltlll'lll• ...........

: SYRACUSE The
Syracuse Youth League ~ill
. be holding sign-ups for
baseball and softball for
boys and girls on the
Saturdays of March 15,
March 22 and March 29
from 9 a.m. until noon at the
Syracuse Fire Station.
For more information
contact · Eber Pickens at
992-5564,

Jbppers Plains
holding bas~ball­
softball sign-ups
TUPPERS PLAINS The Tuppers Plains baseball
and softball sign-ups will be
held Thursday, 5 to 8 p.m.
and Saturday, 9 a.m. to noon
at the ball fields in Tuppers
Plains. Cost is $30 per
child. Take copy of child's
birth certificate to signup.
This is the last sign-up
scheduled. ·

.

Schrock's Home Furnlslltngs

Rutland YL to .
hold baseballsoftball sign-ups ·

Save on expensive full!
Shop Locally!

RUTLAND
The
Rutland Youth League will
be holding baseball and
softball sign-ups for boys
and girls ages four to 16 on
Saturday, March 15 from 5
p.m. until 8 p.m. and
Thursday, March 27 from 6
p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Rutland
Fire Department.
For more information
contact ·either
Mindy
Brinker · at 992-7870 or
Angie Russell at 742-3116.

' ,..,. • ,.. ,. t..nn4t, Ott
140•Mf•OCM
March Sale

15.. Olr AU Stoell
Dullq , _ Tables,
~

lf•tdla l Butreu.

We ue mHi•l roo111 for
"" displays.
Step ill 1111' 1llowraom
loday llld 11n! .

Art PainlinBII

...... _.,,__,wllhOCWIIIIIIIM 1 •lrottor
~............. JI,-.

and Prints

SO% OFF

IncludinB our

*

Hours:
Mon-Tue 10..6
Wed·F.rll0-5

_ , !S:SSII

Sat 10..3 Closed Sullday

ST. PATRICKS DAYPARTYI
SATlltDAY MAR&lt;H 15TH

Cotwe.lde flew

,,

&amp; ,.,. . ~ ,-· ' '
•

a,,.,... ·,,;'

ff
i •) '
.8FIIM1!111Jifl, f;I'MJt'if&amp;• '" .r:;;._~
'ffP'ffJ'R:l'ff ~···. ,,.
.

.

"111'

and listen to ''
Blue z from

Come

. tOpm- 2am

• DRINK SPICIALS •

{/)/tlllllJilll/JiniiVItpl

1/Sct.~c!
181nch chain Jndudecl
St29
Ctab one before
they're sonetn

Chester to hold
baseball-softball
•
sign-ups
CHESTER
The
Chester Ball Association
will be holding baseball and
~oftball sign-ups at the
€hester Firehouse on March
22, and 29 from 11 a.m.
to I p.m. A copY. of the
child's birth certificate is
~uired at sign·ur.
: The CBA wil also be
liolding its first . annual
meeting at the frrehouse on
March 20 at 6 p.m.

ts,

.,' .

CbNfACI'US
.

.

.-

'

· 1·740·446·2342 ext. 33

E-m~H- sportsO~dallysenllnet.com

!jpona St1U

'
!ric Ra!ldolph, Sportil Writer
,(740) 44&amp;2342, ext. 33
-lphOmydallysenlinel.com

,Bryan Wahera, Sports Writer
i~40)44&amp;2342, ext .33
bwalllraOmydaliyttlbun"ll.com
'·

.

lal:rY -&lt;:rum, Sparta Writer
(1'40) 446·2342, ext. 33
~'"'\· ~ mydallyreglster.com

Butler returns to score 19 as Wizards beat Cavaliers 101-99
Bv JosEPH

WHITE

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON - Caron
Butler unleashed a month's
worth of pent-up energy on
his 28th birt~day, returning
to the W&amp;shmgton Wizards
lineup after a 16-game'
injury absence to score 19
points in a 101 -99 victory
over
the
Cleveland
Cavaliers on Thursday
night.
Butler, whose hip InJUry
sent the Wizards into a
February slump, scored the
game's opening basket, survived some rough contact
and made six of his first
eight shots. The players the
Wizards affectionally refer
to as "Tough Juice" finished .
8-for-18 from the field and
had five rebounds in 41

minutes.
Butler scored only one
point in the fourth quarter,
but at least he had a better
game than basketball-model
LeBron James, who marked
his appearance on the cover
of the April issue of Vogue
with a spotty performance.
He was called for an offensive foul in the linal20 seconds and his potential gamewinning 27-footer· hit the
front of the rim apd bounced
away as time expired.
James finished with 25
points, seven rebounds,
seven assists and seven
turnovers. ·
· He went 9-for- 22 from the
field, including 1-for-7 from
3-point range and 1-for-6 in
the fourth quarter. He was
driving with a chance to tie
- the Cavaliers trailed 96-

Wizards (32-32) back at
.500 for the first time since
they were 24-24 on Feb. 6.
Antawn Jamison had 17
points and l 0 rebounds, and
Darius Soilgaila scored 15
,
points on 7-for-8 shooting
94 - · when he lowered his for the Wizards, who nearly
left shoulder into DeShawn blew a nine-point lead in the
Stevenson for a foul with · final4 112 minutes.
19.4 seconds to play.
Sasha Pavlovic scored 19
The Wizards then went 4- of his season-high 24 points
for-5 from the line to take a in the first half for the
four-point lead, but Damon Cavaliers, but he sat out
Jones hit a 3-pointer with 8 much of the second half
seconds to play to make the becaus'e of foul trouble and
score 100-99. Antonio fouled out with I: 19 to play.
Daniels made I of 2 free
Butler was aggressive
throws with 7.2 seconds from the opening whistle.
remaining to restore a two- He made a 20-foot shot on
point lead . The Cavaliers the game's t;irst possession
called timeout and held the and soon added another 20·
ball for the last shot, but footer - this time a turn:
James came up short.
around, falling-backward
The victory .put the jumper. He crashed to the

floor belly-first while making a layup and draw ing a ·
blocking foul on Anderson
Varejao, then popped up
instantly and rai sed his arms
to a roaring crowd.
Butler
had
13 of
Washington's first
31
points.
Notes: Butler's .relurn
moved Songaila out of the
starting
lineup.
Cleveland's Ben Wallace
returned after m1ssmg
Wednesday's game with
back spasms. · Zydrunas ·
llgauskas (bulging disc in
back) missed his seventh
straight game. The injuries
prompted the Cavaliers to
sign C Lance Allred from
Idaho of the NBA's
Development League to a
10-day contract.

Prep Boys Basketball - OHSAA State Semifinals

llicothe, bev
to 0-1·1 1
Bv RUSTY

MIUE~

ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS -The onetwo punch of Anthony
Hitchens and Ray Chambers·
powered No. 2 Chillicothe
past top-ranked Polanc\
Seminary 78-70 Thursday in
a Division II state semifinal
at Ohio State's Value City
Arena.
The victory sends the
Cavaliers
(24-2)
into
Saturday morning 's title
game against No. 4 Toledo
Libbey, a 5.1-44 winner over
St. Paris Graham in the earlier semifinal.
Chambers, a 6-foot-7
senior who was listed as second·team .All-Ohio by The
Associated Press, had· 31
points and 17 rebounds. He
hit 13-of-18· shots from the
field.
Hitchens, a first-team allstater headed for. the
University of Akron, totaled
24 points, three assists and
si" rebounds.
The pair had ' outscored
Poland Seminary until the.
,
final 2 minutes.
Seth Dawes chipped in
with 14 points.
The Cavaliers, making
their first appearance at the
state tournament in 78 years,
will be going for their first
state title. They had lost in
the semifinals each of their
two previous trips ,
The 78-year gap is the
. longest ever for a team
between visits to the state
semifinals.
First-team
All-Ohioan
Ben Umbel had 28 points,
five assists and eight
for
Poland
rebounds
Seminary (25-1 ), which
came in averaging 88.8
points a game but suffered

WOrthington

Christian's
· Zach

Josapri,
Jen:, passes
the ball
·around
Bedford St.

Peter
Chanei's
Jo'Vaughn
Brown, center, and
Jordan
Duke during
the first
quarter of a
Ohio boys
Division IV
state sem~
final basketball
game in
Columbus

on
Thursday.
AP photo

through a miserable shooting day. .
·
The Bulldogs shot just 21
percent in the first half while
falling behind and ended up
at 35 percent for the game,
hitting just 9-of-35 3-point
attempts.
David White added 12
points and Niko Fatimus had ·
11.
Chillicothe's lead never
dipped below eight points in
the second half.
A key play came late in
the third quarter when
Umbel hit a shot inside to
cut the lead ·to 48-40 and,
after a turnover, Fatimus
drove the lane and banked in
a shot. Insteail of a possible
three-point play that could
have cut the deficit to five,
Fatimus was called for a
charge and the basket was
waved off.
Hitchens then hit a 3pointer from · the left corner
with 2 seconds left in · the
quarter to put the Cavaliers
ahead 51·40.
.
The lead was double digits
until the final seconds.
The Cavaliers owned the
opening half. ·
Poland was able to hit just
7-of-34 shots from the field,
including only 1-of-14 3pointers.
The Bulldogs had no
answer for Chillicothe's Big
Two. Chambers, scoring on
follows or short jumpers
inside, had 18 points imd 12
rebounds by the break almost matching up with
Poland's totals of 22 and 19.
In addition, Hitchens had
lO points, three assists and a
steal,
·
.
·
' APphoto
The Cavaliers pulled away
early in the second quarter, Chillicothe's Ray Chambers, right, takes a shot over Poland Seminary's David Baker during
Pleese see D·ll, B4

the first quarter of the Ohio High School
ball game on Thursday i!l Columbus,

Athl~tic

Association Division II semifinal basket·

New.Knoxville to face Worthington
Christian in D-IV championship
BY RusTY MIUER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

come· up with a steal and Ohio boys
basketball
.
then bring the ball up court coaching history.
on the break.'
·
Ahead
8-6
midway
COLUMBUS - Sillty·
Austin Arnett added 11 through tHe first period, the
one years later, New points,
Rangers began to pull away.
Knoll ville is back in a state
The only previous time a
Austin Luck came off the
championship game.
New Knoxville team made bench and almost immediRyan VanderHorst scored it to the state tournament ately hit a 3 from the left
16 points to lead top-ranked was in 1947, when the wing before Piehl stole a
New
Knollville
past Rangers beat Phillipsburg pass, dribbled up court and
Haviland Wayne Trace 62- in the Class B semifinals assisted on VanderHorst's
41 Thursday in a Division before
losing
to layup . . Tony. Meyer then
IV state semifinal at Ohio Columbiana in the champi- closed the period wilh u 3
State's.Value City Arena .
onship game.
from the left corner ' for a
The Rangers (26-0)
Aaron Hockenberry, an · 16-6 lead .
· advance to play third- . honorable mention allWayne Trace got as close
ranked
· Worthington stater, had 14 points for tinY, . as five points in the second
Christian (26-1) for the Wayne Trace (21-5), whicll quarter at 19-14 on a buckel
state title at 2 p.m . has j1,1st 34 students in its by Tevin Hale at the 4: l
Saturday. The Warriors senior class. Alex LaBounty mark, but the Ra1ders dtdn t
knocked
off
Bedford chipped in with 10 point ~.
score again . They turned
Chane! 66-58 in the earlier
The Raiders were makmg the ball over on thm next
semifinal.
'
their fourth · and final three po;sessions and ended
Brad Piehl , a 6-foot-7 appearance at the state lour- up missing their final five
junior, had a sterling all- na1nent under their coach shots while New Knoxvtlle
around game, totaling 13 the last 33 years, AI Welch: ran off the final six points
points, seven rebounds. five He is retiring, leaving with for a 25-l ~ lead.
steals and two blocked a record of 540-211 -. the
Pleese see D·IV. 81
shots. He frefluently would 17th highest win total in

7

I

I

�.

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

·n-IV

OHSAABOYS

from Page Bl

BASKEI'BALL

The Rangers maintained
that lead before putting the
game out of reach late·in the
third quaner.
On top 33-25, they ran off
the quaner's final 13 points
- five by Arnett and four
apiece by Piehl and
VanderHorst.
That pushed the, lead to
46-25, far too big of a hill to
climb for a team averaging
under 50 points a game and
playing against the No. I
team in the state.
Wortl!ington Christian 66,
Bedford Chane! 58
COLUMBUS - Tyler
Joseph scored 17 points,
first-team
Ali-Ohioan
Brian Hecker added 15
and Worthington Christian
ble'nded its 3-point shooting with a solid inside
game to beat Bedford
Chane! 66-58 Thursday in
a Division IV state semifinal.
The
;bird -ranked
Warriors (26-1) will go for
their second state championship - they won the
title in 1999- when they
play in Saturday 's 2 p.m.
ch;unpionship
game ..
They're making their fifth
trip to the state tournament.
The stars were many for
the Warriors.
Tyler Joseph's brother
Zach added 14'points, five
assists and six rebounds,
Bobby Condon had 13
points and Brady Beals
only scored three. points
but had II rebounds.
Lamar McKnight, a
third-team all-stater, had
21 points and Arthur
Jordan chipped in with 13
points and 13 rebounds for
the Firebirds (17-9), .also .
Jllaking their fifth · trip to
the state tournament and
with a Division III state
title in 1999.
The Warriors live "and
die with their outside
- . - shooting. On this night,
they had a decided advantage behind the arc, hitting
9-of-23 3-pointers ta jtsst
5-of-20 for Chane!.
The Warriors led just
21,20 goinjl into .a media
timeout mtdway through
the second quarter. From
then on, they went on a
13-5 run to the halftime
hom.
Hecker drove the lane
and hit an 8-footer in the
lane, then turned a loose
ball into a 25-20 lead
when he sliced into the
paint for another basket.
After Chanel's Nate
Novak and Worthington
Christian's Zach Joseph
traded 3-pointers, the
Warr-iors tacked on six
mor'e points. First Josh
Sinclair hit a shot behind
the arc on the righr wing.
After Brown scored inside
and was fouled with 4 seconds left, he missed a free
throw. Hecker rebounded,
dribbled to just over midcourt and flipped up a 40footer that hit nothmg but ·
: net as the buzzer sounded
. · · for a 34-25 lead.
.
Down as many as 14,
- - · Chane! got as close as 5144 with a 13-3 run over
the end of the third quarter
and beginning of the
fourth .
But
Worthington
Christian still had some
gas left in the tank.
Zaoh Joseph, an 83-percent free-throw shooter,
hit two foul shots before
Hecker collected his
fourth foul with 6:03
remaining.
Working the ball around
the . perimeter - th,ey had
little choice because
Hecker was on the bench
- the Warriors made it
55-47 when Zach Joseph
fed Condon for a layup.
Hecker came back with
4 112 minutes remaining
and promptly made a big
play.
Beals fired a hard pass
at him in the high post that
Hecker almost redirected
- he barely · touched it
. while shoveling it forward
- ~ - to Condon for a bucket
at the 4:06 mark. Hecker
and Zach Joseph then
added fovl shots to swell
the lead to 59-49 with 3
minutes left.
. That was a big enough ·
• • · advantage to last the rest
of the way.

•

FINAL FOUR
COLUMBVS (AP) - Pairings for lhe
20011 boys high school baiketbofl
11818 tournament lhls week at Ohio
Slate's ValtJO C~ Arena:

DIYIIION I

lAloowoo&lt;l St. EdWard (21-4) 110. Cin.

St. xavier (23-2), Friday, 5:t5 p.m.;
Tol. Whilmor (20-5) vs. Newarlc (22-4),

P-m.

Friday, 8:30

Chalnplon$/1/p: S.turdoy, 8:30 p.fll.

DIVISION II

Tol. Libbey (24-2) vs. Chlll~e (24·
2)- Saturday: 10:45 a.m.

DIVISION Ill .

Cle¥9. VASJ (21-4) vo. SugarereQk

Garaway (23-3), Friday, 10:45&gt;a.m.;
Ottaw~ndort (21·5) ·VS. Anna (25·
1), Fflday, 2 p.m,
CIIMnpiomhlp: S.tutday, 5:15p.m.

DIVISION IV
Wortlllngton Christian (26-1) vs. New
Knol&lt;vllle (26-0) - Saturday, 2 p.m.

'liruBsDAv's SooRE'i
Dlvlalon H
Tol. LlbbOy 51 , St Paris Graham 44
~tl\8 78, Poland Semi'Jary 70

'

DIYitlon tv..

.

'

.

WQrtlllng10n Chtill!lan 66, Bedford
ChaM~ 58 .
New Kno101Rie 62, Wayne Trace 4~ .

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, Marth 14, 2008

Friday, March 14, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

•

Phillies score 7 runs off Reds' Affeldt in 10-7 win
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP)Reds staner Jeremy Affeldt
gave up seven runs in a 10-7
spring trai'ning loss lo the
Phillies on Thursday night.
Casey Smith drove in four
runs for the Phillies with his
second home run and a single as the No. 9 hitter. The
eighth hitter, Greg Golson,
had a single and a double
and droxe in two.
Affeldt, competing for a
job in the Reds ' starting
rotation after a year-and-ahalf of pitching in relief, had
his second straight · ineffective outing. He allowed six
runs to the Atlanta Braves in
hi s last outing. The left~
bander pitched 3 1-3
innings. Five of the nine hits
off him were for extra bases.
"Another rough one for
me," Affeldt said. "I basically set up a whole at-bat and I
don't execute the pitch I
need to execute and gave up
a knock on it. I'm trying to

go up and in on guys and
leaving it over the middle .
Basically, the main pitch
was the three-run homer
with two outs."
Cincinnati manager Dusty
Baker said the team will
eventually have to decide
whether to put Affeldt in the
bullpen or start him .
"He made some good
pitches," Baker said. "Then
· he would get one over the
. plate and up, and they didn't
miss."
For Philadelphia, Jamie
Moyer pitched two scoreless
innings, lost his control for
one, and threw two more
scoreless. The usually accurate Moyer walked three in

the Reds' four-run fourth.
Three singles and a t':"o-run
Brandon Phillips double
kept Cincinnati-in the game.
They were the first run s
Moyer (2-0) gave up this
spring. He pitched five
innings.
·
·
"Yeah, it was good to see
Moyer have a solid five
innings," Philadelphia manager Charlie Manuel said.
"They scored in one inning
·and outside of that he did
pretty good."
Cincinnati's Andy Green
hit his second home ·run off
Josh Outman in the sixth.
Tfle Phillies won for the
first time in six games.
"We . were aggress ive,
stole some bases and set our
runs up," Manuel said. "We
manufactured some runs and
got some big hits which is
something we haven't been
doing."
.
Notes: Bronson Arroyo
will pitch in a mii10r league

'

game to allow the sensation
of the Reds camp, Johnny
Cueto, to start against the
Detroit Ti gers on Monday ....
Phillies starting pitcher,
Cole Hamels gave up two
hits and struck out six in a
minor league game earlier. ·
'He was scheduled to pitch
was
Wednesday ' but
scratched with the flu. He
has lost four pounds since
becoming ill. ... Kris Benson
also. pitched in a mi11or
league garne on Thursday.
Benson had ~urgery on his
rotator cuff last March . His
'pitched four innings, threw
58 pitches and gave up two
runs .... "First of all, and this
is nothing against young
kids, some balls do get
caught in our games that
don' t get caught in their
games," said pitching coach
Rich Dubee of a defense that
did not include names like
Jimmy Rollins, Chase Utley
and Shane Victorino.

•

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HOLIDAY COWRING CONfEST
•

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FIRST PRIZE.; ................ Sf5.00
SECOND PRIZE............. SfO. 00
THIRD PRIZE................... s5. 00

CONTEST. RULES
1. Just color one or all of the drawings on these pages, fill in the blanks and take
your entry to t.he sponsoring store before 5 p.m. March 24th.
2. Entries will be judged in two different categories, ages 4-8 and 9-12.
· 3. Children may enter as many pictures as they like but can win only one prize.
4. Crayons only may be used to color pictures.

)

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!
PLAY c·o vERALL BINGO

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�.

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

·n-IV

OHSAABOYS

from Page Bl

BASKEI'BALL

The Rangers maintained
that lead before putting the
game out of reach late·in the
third quaner.
On top 33-25, they ran off
the quaner's final 13 points
- five by Arnett and four
apiece by Piehl and
VanderHorst.
That pushed the, lead to
46-25, far too big of a hill to
climb for a team averaging
under 50 points a game and
playing against the No. I
team in the state.
Wortl!ington Christian 66,
Bedford Chane! 58
COLUMBUS - Tyler
Joseph scored 17 points,
first-team
Ali-Ohioan
Brian Hecker added 15
and Worthington Christian
ble'nded its 3-point shooting with a solid inside
game to beat Bedford
Chane! 66-58 Thursday in
a Division IV state semifinal.
The
;bird -ranked
Warriors (26-1) will go for
their second state championship - they won the
title in 1999- when they
play in Saturday 's 2 p.m.
ch;unpionship
game ..
They're making their fifth
trip to the state tournament.
The stars were many for
the Warriors.
Tyler Joseph's brother
Zach added 14'points, five
assists and six rebounds,
Bobby Condon had 13
points and Brady Beals
only scored three. points
but had II rebounds.
Lamar McKnight, a
third-team all-stater, had
21 points and Arthur
Jordan chipped in with 13
points and 13 rebounds for
the Firebirds (17-9), .also .
Jllaking their fifth · trip to
the state tournament and
with a Division III state
title in 1999.
The Warriors live "and
die with their outside
- . - shooting. On this night,
they had a decided advantage behind the arc, hitting
9-of-23 3-pointers ta jtsst
5-of-20 for Chane!.
The Warriors led just
21,20 goinjl into .a media
timeout mtdway through
the second quarter. From
then on, they went on a
13-5 run to the halftime
hom.
Hecker drove the lane
and hit an 8-footer in the
lane, then turned a loose
ball into a 25-20 lead
when he sliced into the
paint for another basket.
After Chanel's Nate
Novak and Worthington
Christian's Zach Joseph
traded 3-pointers, the
Warr-iors tacked on six
mor'e points. First Josh
Sinclair hit a shot behind
the arc on the righr wing.
After Brown scored inside
and was fouled with 4 seconds left, he missed a free
throw. Hecker rebounded,
dribbled to just over midcourt and flipped up a 40footer that hit nothmg but ·
: net as the buzzer sounded
. · · for a 34-25 lead.
.
Down as many as 14,
- - · Chane! got as close as 5144 with a 13-3 run over
the end of the third quarter
and beginning of the
fourth .
But
Worthington
Christian still had some
gas left in the tank.
Zaoh Joseph, an 83-percent free-throw shooter,
hit two foul shots before
Hecker collected his
fourth foul with 6:03
remaining.
Working the ball around
the . perimeter - th,ey had
little choice because
Hecker was on the bench
- the Warriors made it
55-47 when Zach Joseph
fed Condon for a layup.
Hecker came back with
4 112 minutes remaining
and promptly made a big
play.
Beals fired a hard pass
at him in the high post that
Hecker almost redirected
- he barely · touched it
. while shoveling it forward
- ~ - to Condon for a bucket
at the 4:06 mark. Hecker
and Zach Joseph then
added fovl shots to swell
the lead to 59-49 with 3
minutes left.
. That was a big enough ·
• • · advantage to last the rest
of the way.

•

FINAL FOUR
COLUMBVS (AP) - Pairings for lhe
20011 boys high school baiketbofl
11818 tournament lhls week at Ohio
Slate's ValtJO C~ Arena:

DIYIIION I

lAloowoo&lt;l St. EdWard (21-4) 110. Cin.

St. xavier (23-2), Friday, 5:t5 p.m.;
Tol. Whilmor (20-5) vs. Newarlc (22-4),

P-m.

Friday, 8:30

Chalnplon$/1/p: S.turdoy, 8:30 p.fll.

DIVISION II

Tol. Libbey (24-2) vs. Chlll~e (24·
2)- Saturday: 10:45 a.m.

DIVISION Ill .

Cle¥9. VASJ (21-4) vo. SugarereQk

Garaway (23-3), Friday, 10:45&gt;a.m.;
Ottaw~ndort (21·5) ·VS. Anna (25·
1), Fflday, 2 p.m,
CIIMnpiomhlp: S.tutday, 5:15p.m.

DIVISION IV
Wortlllngton Christian (26-1) vs. New
Knol&lt;vllle (26-0) - Saturday, 2 p.m.

'liruBsDAv's SooRE'i
Dlvlalon H
Tol. LlbbOy 51 , St Paris Graham 44
~tl\8 78, Poland Semi'Jary 70

'

DIYitlon tv..

.

'

.

WQrtlllng10n Chtill!lan 66, Bedford
ChaM~ 58 .
New Kno101Rie 62, Wayne Trace 4~ .

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, Marth 14, 2008

Friday, March 14, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

•

Phillies score 7 runs off Reds' Affeldt in 10-7 win
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP)Reds staner Jeremy Affeldt
gave up seven runs in a 10-7
spring trai'ning loss lo the
Phillies on Thursday night.
Casey Smith drove in four
runs for the Phillies with his
second home run and a single as the No. 9 hitter. The
eighth hitter, Greg Golson,
had a single and a double
and droxe in two.
Affeldt, competing for a
job in the Reds ' starting
rotation after a year-and-ahalf of pitching in relief, had
his second straight · ineffective outing. He allowed six
runs to the Atlanta Braves in
hi s last outing. The left~
bander pitched 3 1-3
innings. Five of the nine hits
off him were for extra bases.
"Another rough one for
me," Affeldt said. "I basically set up a whole at-bat and I
don't execute the pitch I
need to execute and gave up
a knock on it. I'm trying to

go up and in on guys and
leaving it over the middle .
Basically, the main pitch
was the three-run homer
with two outs."
Cincinnati manager Dusty
Baker said the team will
eventually have to decide
whether to put Affeldt in the
bullpen or start him .
"He made some good
pitches," Baker said. "Then
· he would get one over the
. plate and up, and they didn't
miss."
For Philadelphia, Jamie
Moyer pitched two scoreless
innings, lost his control for
one, and threw two more
scoreless. The usually accurate Moyer walked three in

the Reds' four-run fourth.
Three singles and a t':"o-run
Brandon Phillips double
kept Cincinnati-in the game.
They were the first run s
Moyer (2-0) gave up this
spring. He pitched five
innings.
·
·
"Yeah, it was good to see
Moyer have a solid five
innings," Philadelphia manager Charlie Manuel said.
"They scored in one inning
·and outside of that he did
pretty good."
Cincinnati's Andy Green
hit his second home ·run off
Josh Outman in the sixth.
Tfle Phillies won for the
first time in six games.
"We . were aggress ive,
stole some bases and set our
runs up," Manuel said. "We
manufactured some runs and
got some big hits which is
something we haven't been
doing."
.
Notes: Bronson Arroyo
will pitch in a mii10r league

'

game to allow the sensation
of the Reds camp, Johnny
Cueto, to start against the
Detroit Ti gers on Monday ....
Phillies starting pitcher,
Cole Hamels gave up two
hits and struck out six in a
minor league game earlier. ·
'He was scheduled to pitch
was
Wednesday ' but
scratched with the flu. He
has lost four pounds since
becoming ill. ... Kris Benson
also. pitched in a mi11or
league garne on Thursday.
Benson had ~urgery on his
rotator cuff last March . His
'pitched four innings, threw
58 pitches and gave up two
runs .... "First of all, and this
is nothing against young
kids, some balls do get
caught in our games that
don' t get caught in their
games," said pitching coach
Rich Dubee of a defense that
did not include names like
Jimmy Rollins, Chase Utley
and Shane Victorino.

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�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

ToM

WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND
Michael Bramos scored 23
points and Miami of Ohio,
playing while coach Charlie
Coles remains hospitalized
following a heart procedure,
advanced to the semifinals
with a 74-61 win over Ohio
in
the
Mid-American
Conference tournament on
Thursday night.
The defending champion
RedHawks
moved
on
despite an off-night from
sentor forward Tim Pollitz,
their leading scorer averaging 16 points. Pollitz scored
a season-low 4 points, missing all six shots - some
fro1.1 point-blank range- in
the second half.
But with Miami leading
by just 63-59, Pollitz's twin
brother, Eric, came up big.
He dropped a floater m the
lane and then made a free
throw to give Miami a66-59
lead w\th I :20 remaining.
Kenny Hayes·made four free
throws and Bramos added
two more as Miami closed
with an 11-2 run.
Miami, the No. 5 seed,
will play top-seeded' Kent
State in Fr1day's second
semifinal. The Golden
Flashes atlvanced by blow-

inf out Toledo 77-57.
n the first semifinal,
Akron will face Western
Michigan.
Coles, Miami's gregarious
66-year-old coach, underwent an unspecified pr()5:edure on his heart earlier this
week. He had · bypass
surgery in 1986 and went
into cardiac arrest at the
MAC tournament in 1998.
Jerome Tillman 'Scored 17
po.ints and senior Leon
Wtlltams had 15 for the
Bobcats, who shot just 29
percent (9-of-31) in the second half.
Tyler Dierkers scored II
points with a career-high 13
rebounds for Miami.
· The longtime southern
Ohio rivals were meeting for
the fourth straight year in
the tournament and sixth
time in eight years.
Freshman Nick Winbush,
who started just once all sea- ·
son, came off the bench and
scored 10 points - match-.
ing his career-big~-. in the
. first half as Mtamt opened a
39-35 lead at the break.
The
RedHawks
fell
behind by nine points in the
first three minutes before
getting three straight 3pointers and scoring 13 consewtive points to take their
first lead.

Selection Sunday to learn
Butler's next opponent, he
has time to contemplate this
week's Big Ten tourney in
Conseco Fieldhouse.
He isn''t picking a favorite
between Indiana or Purdu6,
though.
"I have no idea what the
seeds are," Stevens said
before the tournament. "I
know I'm rooting for ' Ohio
State and Iowa to do welL
That's about it."·
A native of Zionsville and
former team · captain at
DePauw, Stevens worked as
an assistant for Ohio State's
Thad Matta and Iowa's Todd
Lick! iter when each of them
was the coach at Butler.
Iowa lost to Michigan 5547 in the first round
Thursday; fifth-seeded Ohio
State had a first-round bye.
FOUL .
FLURRY:
Michigan picked up four
fouls in a span of 14 seconds
midway through the second
half of its win over Iowa.
DeShawn Sims was called
for the first foul. Thirteen
seconds later Zack Gibson
committed a foul , and before
the ball could be put back
into play Gibson was .called
for another. When the ball
was inbounded to Iowa after
that, Manny Harris went for
a steal but picked up a foul
with just I second off the
clock.

one of them a fastball
that Weber hit over the fence
For Bartolo Colon, it was -to the last six batters.
"More than anything, it''s
almost as if he'd been pitching all spring. Carlos great to be able to go out on
Beltran, however, felt as if the mound, even if it's for a
he hadn't played center field brief stint, have some suebefore.
cess," Colon said. "So thl!t's
And lchiro Suzuki wasn't very rewarding. It shows
sure he'd ever get another that the hard work is paying
hit.
off."
Colon pitched two solid
The perennial All-Star
innings Thursday in his first Suzuki got a gift in the first
time on the mound for the inning, when Giants reserve
Boston Red Sox, a 3-3 tie first baseman Justin ~ne
against the Tampa Bay Rays inexplicably ranged too far
at Fort Myers, Fla.
. away from the bag to try.for
At Peoria, Ariz., Suzuki a grounder to second. By the
broke an 0-for-21 skid with time starting pitcher Kevin
his first hit of the spring, an Correia realized he had to
infield single in the Seattle cover first base, the speedy
Mariners' 3-3 tie with the Suzuki was already at first
San Francisco Giants.
for his first hit of the SJ?rlng.
And at Jupiter, Fla.,
"We can all sleep tomght,"
Beltran played in center Mariners manager John
field for the first time since McLaren said, chuckling.
Suzuki's 0-for-21, one
having offseason arthro:
scopic surgery on both short of his career-long
knees, and felt like he was slump in the regular season
learni ng how t~ play the from 1995, had become an
position again.
international curiosity. The
"The first fly ball, I felt pack of Japanese media who
like I didn' t know what to chronicle Suzuki's every
do," the Mets' cleanup hitter move had been breathless
said after a 6-5, 10-inning over the drought. McLaren
d d ·1 · k
bo t 't
loss to the St. Louis
Cardinals. "It 's been a lot of ~~t s:~~kfo s:ld a it u w~~
work for me."
"fun" be,cause it gave him an
Beltran played his first unusual early season chalspring game at DH on lenge.
Monday. The Cardinals
"I'm not sure what my
game didn ' t offer that next challen~e is," he said
option. so he told manager through his mterpreter after
Willie Randolph he ' d g1ve his breakthrough. ''I'm sad
the.. outfield ad try.
. , - to say goodb. ye. "
1 want~ .t.o. test tt, . Mariners head trainer
Beltran sat d. , Rtght now, Rick Griffin stood at the :top
mne. mmngs, I m not r~ad,Y step of the dugout, motionto play m.ne m.mngs. Today s ing for Correia to throw out
gam!! wt.ll _gtve me m~re the ball ,_ part of Seattle's.
confidence tor next tu!le. . joke to Suzuki to commemHe went 1-for-2 wnh an orate the initial hit. Correia
RBI ~mgle ,and a ~al~ and and plate umpire M,ike
\Vas hfted atter battmg m the Everiti both looked · at
hfth. B.eltran satd t~at was 3 Gritlin like he was nuts.
go?d time to call It a day;
"He told me to get him the
he s not ready to play a full ball," Griffin said of Suzuki .
game yet.
"Th
. d'd ' h'nk I
"I'm not going to try to be
e umptr~. 1 n t t 1
a hero here," .Beltran said. was sen~ms. .
.
"I'm just going to try to be
Suzukt JOkmgly satd he
healthy for the season and was P!:ummg .to ke~p ·the
be in the. lineup as much as 1 ball
and send tt · to
can."
C,ooperstown. But w~ couldRed Sox general man&amp;ger . n t get the ball ~ack. . .
In ~ther spnng trammg
Theo Epstein was excited to
watch Colon hit 94 mph games.
with his fastball, after pitchCubs. 3, Padres (ss)_ 2
ing just 29 games the past
At Mesa, Anz., San Otego
two years Qecause of elbow starter Greg Ma~dux took a
and shoulder injuries.
lme dnve off hts thtgh and
" He had more arm had to leave the game after
strength than ~e expected," two t~mngs. He satd he has
Epstem smd. 'For his first a brUise and should be fine
time out, we were really for h1s. next start.
.
impressed."
Ptrates 5, Yankees ~
So was ihe 2005 AL Cy
At . Tampa, Fla., Mtke
Young award winner.
Mus.sma threw five perfect
· "The past few years have mmngs, but got overshadbeen tough," Colon said owed by B_tlly Crystal, who
through a translator. "It's ~truck out m hts lone at bat
that much more gratifying to tor N_ew York.
see the results finally start
Tigers 61 B~aves 6, tie,
10 !Rmngs
panning out."
At Lakeland, Fla., Todd
The burly right-bander
who once could throw 100 Jones pitched a perfect
mph allowed a solo homer inning against a major·
to Jon Weber, the next to last le~gue cl.ub for the ~rst ti~e
batter he faced in his two- thts sprmg, lowenng h1s
inning stint against the ERA from 24.55 to 19.29.
Indians 9, Blue Jays 5
Rays. who got 4 2-3 scoreAt Wmter Haven, Fla.,
less innings from Matt
Garza.
Travis Hafner hit his ftrst
Colon escaped a bases- home run of .the spring and
loaded, no-out jam. in the Fausto Carmona and Aaron
first and allowed two hits Laffey each pttched four
and a walk with one strike- innings for tht: Indians.
out.
·
Brewers 8,
"I feel very good and my
Diamondbacks 6
At
Tucson,
Ariz.,
control was good, kind of
what I was looking for," Milwaukee's Jeff Suppan
Colon said. "I felt really was hit by a line drive in the
fourth inning, ending a
strong out there."
He loaded the bases on a rough day in which he gave
single, an error and a walk, up s_ix runs and seven hits in
and then struck out' B.J. three-plus innings. Suppan
Upton on his 16th pitch. He said the injury wasn't serithrew just I0 more pitches ous.

defense before a crowd of
I 2,776 at Value City Arena.
.. Libbey started to assert
itself in the third quarter.
While their man-to-man
defense squelched the
attat:k,
the
Graham
Cowboys began to· look
more for the open.man.
Brad Sandridge scored,
pulling a loose ball otT his
arm for a bucket inside.
Grdham turnover,
After
Jones was fouled intentionally and hit both shots. On
the ensuing possession,
Sandridge scored off a follow for a 35-28 lead.
Graham turned it over
again, with Bradley Burton
hitting a bucket inside off'\
rebound.
The Cowboy:- took the
first 12 shots from the fi eld
in the quarter. with Graham
not ge tting off a shot until
Schuler's leaner at the 4:34
mark. The Falcons got the

With 6. 7 seconds left,
rebound and Schuler was
fouled, hitting both shots for Buford's assist to Sandridge
his first points of the game. led to a three-point play that
Schulergot on track in the closed the scoring.
fourth quarter, hitting a 3The Cowboys forced 19
pointer and another basket turnovers (they · had only
and assisting on a 3-pointer nine) but hit only half of
by Ethan Ward that cut what their 26 free throws. St.
was a I0-point lead with Paris Graham had not scored
under 3:45 left to just45-41. fewer than 45 points all seaIt narrowe.d even more son.
when Buford missed the
In the first half, Buford
front end of a bonus situa- scored 14 points, hitting six
tion and Travis 'Crooks of his 12 shois from the
scored off a long lob pass field, and had five rebounds,
from Ben Rosenberg\!r with
It was' his driving, baseline
45 seconds remaining.
drive with 4 ·seconds left that
. The Cowboys responded, gave the Cowboys a 22-20
however.
halftime lead - a lead they
Jones hit two free throws would never relinquish.
for a 47-43 lead with 36.5
The teams traded the lead
seconds lert.
througbout the half, with
. Libbey missed five of its Libbey building a fournext six foul shots but over point lead at one point in
that same time the Falcons the second quarter as the
missed a 3-pointer, had a Falcons had great difficulty
turnover and made one of with the Cowboys' matchup
zone.
1wo free throws.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo

Ohio's Jerome Tillman (33) shoots over Miami of Ohio' s Eric
Pollitz during the first half of a Mid-American Conference
tournament quarterfinal basketball game Thursday in
Cleveland .

Oden practices with Blazers for 1st time since surgery
•

· SACRAMENTO, Calif.
(AP) - Greg Qden practiced with the Portland Trail
Blazers for the first time
since right knee surgery
ended the No. I draft pick's
debut season before it started six months ago. •
Oden, the 7-foot center
from Ohio State taken with
the top selection in last
year's draft, surprised his
teammates Wednesday when
he participated in offensive
drills and even dunked during 45 minutes of half-speed

work. The Blazers were in
Sacramento for Thursday
night's game against the
Kings.
"Yeah, it was nice," Od&lt;:n
said after lifting weights
Thursday in Sacramento. "I
learned some of the plays
that I'm not going to use, but
it was good to be out there
with the guys and go
through some of the stuff
that they go through."
Only
coach
· /'late
McMillan and athletic trainer Jay Jensen knew Oden

would be m practice Western Conference.
Wednesday for the first time
Oden said he felt no dissince undergoing microfrac- comfort in his knee after the
ture surgery in September.
workout. The Blazers still
"They made some com- have no intention of allowments about it," McMillan ing him to play this season,
said of his players. "They · however.
laughed about it and said
"We just changed up his
'Hey, finally you'rt) here to workout," McMillan said .
work."'
"He's been doing a little
The Blazers have stayed in light running for about a
contention for a playoff week or so now, and that's
berth without their future all it was yesterday, some
franchise center. Led by All, light running. The only difStar Brandon Roy, Portland (erence (was that) he was
is iri IOth place in the with the team."

Commissioner thinks Big Ten could get 5 teams into tourney
BY

But this weekend's touma- the same way.as they played
ment could change that per- the other night against
Cleveland State. They play
ception.
INDIANAPOLIS - Big
Ohio State faces No. 19 one way there, and that's to
Ten Commissioner Jim Michigan State in Friday's win."
Delany will let the NCAA second quarterfinal game,
The Hawkeyes lost seven
tournament selection com- and a second straight win of their final nine games and
mittee do its work this week- over the Spartans would cer- are not headed to the postend.
tainly help last year'.s season after averaging just
That doesn't mean Delany national runne(llp earn a trip 56.4 points per game this
doesn't have his own opin- back to the NCAA tourna- season.
ion about which conference ment . under coach Thad . They looked even worse
teams will or should ·make Matta.
Thursday, g0ing more than
the 65-team field. Delany
"I would not go so far as to 16 minutes without a basket
told The Associated Press on say they're in, but I really in the second half.
It was all new to Lickliter,
Thursday he believes four want to see them up on the
teams - Indiana, Michigan board and see what they can who insisted his challenge
State, Purdue and Wisconsin accomplish against others," next season will be gettipg
- have already locked up Delany said. "Hopefully, those problems fixed. ·
bids and he thinks Ohio they will get that considera"I'm not satisfied," he
State has' a strong case to tion."
said. "It's painful, it hurts.
become the fifth Big Ten
NOT SO EASY: Iowa's I'm a guy who's not very
Todd Lickliter isn't accus- fond of losing f?ut some
team in the field.
Delany was making that tomed to finishing seasons at things are out of your concase himself during the first- 13-19. ·
trol. You can control effort
round games at the Big Ten
But this was no typical and attitude and we' ve got to
tournament.
season for the Hawkeyes' keep fighting. _I've been
"I think we have four in first-year coach. He had through some tough years,
and I think Ohio State has only two seniors, lost most it's not smooth sailing, but
done enough to get in," of last ~ear's' top players to staying the course is the
Delany said. ''I've compared graduatiOn and strug$led 'to key."
their credentials to others get Iowa in sync wtth tlie
BUTLER
LEGACY:·
and they've got the 18th best system .that worked so well ,Brad Stevens' loyalties to
strength
of. · schedule. · at Butler.
his Butler coaching predeThey've played the top four
There's a reason for that. cessors may trump his aile"It looks a lot easier on giance to the two Big Ten
teams in our league twice
and they ' ve played 20 TV, and it's not quite that teams from his home state.
The 12th-ranked Bulldogs
games against the top 50 and easy," Lickliter said after the
won nine. I think they've Hawkeyes' 55-47 loss to earned an automatic bid to
accomplished quite a bit."
Michigan. "The thing is if the NCAA tournament with
Yet even Delany acknowl- you go over to (Hinkle) the Horizon League tourney
edges the Buckeyes ( 19-12) Fieldhouse in the spring, championship on Tuesday.
are still on the bubble.
they'll be playing exactly Now, while Stevens awaits
MICHAEL MAROT
ASSOCIATED PRESS

D-11

tournament, is 0-4 in the
. semifinals. The Cavaliers
also lost· in the seiriifmals a
year ago.

Buford,
who
on
Wednesday was named the
200~
recipient of the
Press
Mr.
Associated
from PageBl
Basketball award, was 9for-24 from the field,
Tol. Llboo 51,
St. Paris Graham 44
including misses on all four
thanks in large part to the
of his 3-pointers. He was
Bulldogs' frigid shooting.
· During one span they
COLUMBUS
Mr. only 3-of-7 at the line, -but
missed seven shots from the Basketball William Buford · had I0 rebounds and three
off-day shooting but assists .
field in a row - while had
Chillicothe was running off still scored 21 points
Lance Jones added IQ
eight points in a row to take Thursday to help Toledo points for Libbey, whose
command.
Libbey hang on for a 51-44 point total was one under its
With the score tied at 16, win over St. Paris Graham previous season low.
Hitchens fed Chambers for in a Division II state semifi- · Ethan Ward led No. 4
a two-handed slam dunk. nal.
Graham (26-1 ), a perennial
,fourth-ranked state champ in wrestling
After both teams had ,;~ The
· missed shots, Chamberl ;·Ulwboyf'(*l~.llll ·
to! that was making its fir~t trip
dltlmpH to the boys state tournadunked again, this time off a . their i~rt~. .
pass' from Caleb Knipaa.
IIlii . ~eef i ment, with 14 points. Josh
Seth Dawes ·then added
~·
in the Schuler, averaging 20 points
game, didn ' t score in the
free throws and Knights
quarter of the 1966
tipped in a missed free title game, eventually losing opening half and fini shed
throw by Chambers, making to Dayton Chaminade, 55- with eight.
it 24-16.
52. That stunning failure
Both teams were ti ght on
Poland Seminary, making has haunted the school ever offense. In all fairn ess, both
its fourth trip to the state since.
also played, griuy, physical
I
1

an

F·

~-----------:---

a

.. --

a

j

•
The Daily Sentinel 1 Page 85

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Colon excels in debut for
Red Sox; Beltran struggles
in center field for Mets

Redhawks move into MAC
semifinals by beating Ohio
BY

Friday, March 14, 2008

Friday, March 14,2008

CLASSIFIED

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'

Galli a
County

OH

In One Week With Us
classified@~~:!:~ribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS .
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
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Sentinel

l\egt~ter

ca~f~::;... (7!~~ To446:!42 (7!~~ To992;~!~6

(304) .675-1333

Oeo.d'ljir~
Monday thru Friday
, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

..

HOW I0 WRITE AN

~

Ohto 'IIIley
PubUshlnu reearvea
the right to edR,
reject or cancel eny
ed atony umo.

ErrOI'I ltuat B
eported on 'the
ofpubllmtona
ho Trlbun ..s.ntlnll
ogloter
will
uponalbto !01 . n
ore than the colt

.. ,

he space occupla
the error and on
first lnoortlon.
hall not bo liable 1o

All Dlaplayt 12 Noon 2
Bualn"a Daya Prior To

In Next- Day'• Paper
Publlc.tlon
Sunday ln•Column: 1:00 p.m. · Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
For Sunday• Paper

Thuraclay tor sundaya·

* All ada must be prepaid'

POUCiia: Ohio V.U., Publa.hlng rnervM the right to tdl, ~ or oanotllnJ' ad Ill .ny liiN. Emn mu•t be reported on th• lltlt
Trlbul 1 8 atllaei-Ailglllll' will be l'elp(IM!ble for no men thin the ooel of the 8fM1Ce occupied by the """1nd only the first lnMrtlon.
...,. lan or elptlnM ttwt ~ults from lhl publl: Ilion Dr omlNk!n of M ld'ltnlument. Comctlon Will bl rftadt In thl first IVII'-ble edhlon. • Box
.,. ....,. confldentlll. • Cwrwrt m. a.rd
. • All re~l Ht8te ICMrtltemen~~ are
10 1M Feder~! Ftlr Houtlng Act ot 18H. • TtMt _.,.,.,.
11001Ptt only htlp wanted
WI
acoept tny
In Ylollllon of the h.

__

r. . r
GMAWAY

r ~ Ir~..•_a_
...:.~.S-ALE
~

r

Bro &amp; Sis Cats (4yrs) to a
gOQd hOme, Child allergic.
Callico. Tortoiseshell. Must
s1 1 th 304.£75-6161
a~ age er.
Free to good home. 2 male
Ronweller mix puppies. 6
weeks old. 367·0824
·
------Lob/Retriever puppies lo
good homes only. C8JI 4463511
•

ADN\11',
111.

a--

'

111) ...,.

~ "'~~

"'~ "

1f ND"r ~~ _,..

1'\'\~ ~Ill

('lAps

•

I

o

J

~

Z

nth Annual Pot of Gold
Antinue Show &amp; Sale, east
·•
Carter Middle School,
Gur~son, KY, March ~5·~6.
Sot 8-5, Sun. 10·4, Over 60
Dealers, $~.00 Adu~s. 12 &amp;
under Free, Free Appraisals
with admission (llmll 2
items)
.,.--.,..-----Cross Creek AuC1Ion Buffalo

•

0

area. Approx. 4 acres, all

Avg. Pay $20hlr or
$57Kiyr, Includes

No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582·3345

professionally landscaped.
Ranch style house with 4
bedrooms, living room, din-

TruCi&lt;

I&gt;
·•

"·t•.
"

.,

~

112001

Inc.

'-;=====::;~;=====~~~====~
116
116
u- ...,..
11
11

House for sale in Racine

SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

n;;;;;~~..;-;;.;.,
r•o
Ho~
Iily
FOR SALE·

·--iiiiiiiiiiiiao_.l

0 down payment 4 bed·
rooms. Large yard. Covered
deck. Attached garage. 740·
367"7129 ·
------1 Acre, Flat Lot. Spacious
3BA. 28 A. Lg. Kit &amp; LA. DR_ ,
Den w/ Fireplace, 2 car
attached Garage Rodney
511 , 000 (740124, 912 •0
Dri110rs COL Class A
"'
v·

-------

D

www.comlca.com

TURNED DOWN ON

HIRING

Federal Benefits. OT.
Offered by Exam Ser~ces,
not offered w/ USPS who
hires.
1-1!66-403·2582 .
--::-.,..--.,..-R8tJ81r Technician needed .
Abllily,to work wi1hOut direc!
Supervision a must. Self
starter and detail Oriented
·
TriMIIing lnvoliled Monday
thur Fri. Mall resume to:
p 0 Box 339 A
swood
· ·
·
aven
·
wv 26.t64

1 H,AYt: 10

rUA ITJAKM.I

I

LosfAND

., . . . . . .~

..._.

POST OFFICE NOW

YARD SAU-

1yr old mixed breed, blkflan
- Pr. Pu'AsANT
med. frame dog. would like
fenced yard In the country. Large indoor garage sale
Great watch dog. 446-7644 March 14·15 9am·7, corner
of 3rd St. &amp; Dogwood lane
4 ~Hens, loving and playful I Moaon.wv.
They ·need 0 good home, I - - - - , - - - - canl keep them . 740·853· Moving Sale ping pong
1253
table. wl accessories, go$
7 wk old 112 Beagle pups. grill, 2r &amp; 32' TV's ' cut
Will make mcct~lem pets or skiJboot~ poles , 5 pc. bed·
hunters. 446·7644 if no room suite, 2 couches black
TV stand, lawn mower, trunanswer, leave a messa
_ ge.
die spring bed, weight bench

r

· How you con have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads ·
(.~
lf1't
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
·
S1.00 for large

~..r ~_ARD_S_AU:
_ _.K
fiTkii,;&amp;:;;;;:CiYAi;RiLY;L;;;E;,;t,;;;t----------.., ~..lil_o_IIFu_W._ANim
_ _.l
~
1 ~~llr'"~~~-.....,

\\'\ Ill \l I \ 11 \ I \

y~rsell, 304·675·2217

...

D•lly In-column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for ln-rtlon

• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Adt Shoukl Run 7 Dtye

8ft x Sft Wood"frame Picture w/Weights 304·882·3108
WI ndow Wn"h awn1ng, hau1
AUCilON

' ';

Display Acl•

• Shirt Vour Ads With A hyword • Jncluft ~plete
Dncrlptlpn • Include A Price • Avoid AbbrPIMion•

Succeaful Ads
Should Include These Items
Ta Help Get Relponse ...

*POLICIES*.

Word Ads

Required, minimum of 2
years
driving
exp.
Experience .
on
Qverdelmenslonal loads.
Must have good driving
record. Earn up to_$2,000
wooldy. For application Coli
(304) 722 •2184
'M·F
8:30am·4pm

2000 Custom built Cape
4/58R, 2 battl, Fin
·Besoment, located outside
of Rio Grande in a beautiful
wooded location. $199,900.
Coli lor an oppt. 740·2450125

cod.

ing room, kitchen, large lam·
room, central air, gas heat
ond 1 fireplace. Addhton of a
large Florida room. com·
pietety ce~ar opens onto
potlo &amp; pool oroo. Heated In
ground pool enclosed by pr~
vacy fencing and land· scaped. Finished 2 car. ·
·
tta hed t h
gara~e. a c
o ouse .
and f1n1shed &amp; henated 3hcar
garage
u attac ed
..
·
Exceaent conditiOn ready to
moveln.$25S,OOO.OO,Call :
(740)949·2217

r

l!l!tl'"""""'-...,~--,
MOBilE HOMIN

FOR SALE

I

t...-----_.1

x

16 80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
VInyl Siding. Shingle Roof.
s ~ pe 0 lh 740,,.5.
&gt;AI
rm n ·
oXJ
3BR, 1 bath, LR. FR. DR. _9948.,..---.,..---.,..-iiir;;;.;~----, Kit., Full Basement. 1.5
~
~Jeres . Security System, 2000 16x70 2 bed 2 bath
INmtucnoN
Gallipolis. 740-64 5-4500
Fleotwood, 2002 16x80 3
t...-tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiii_.l - - - - - - bod 2 bath Oakwood, 1999
17 Hawthorne Ln., Pt. t6~e80 3 bed 2 bath Fortune.
GltllpollaCI- College Pleasant, 3br, lbo, 1015/SF Daytime 388.0000, Evening
(Careors Close To Home)
New fiOOf coverings, fresh 388-8017or245·9213
Call Todayl 740 -446-4367· point, now heat pump
1-8(10.214-0452
2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sec·
·lfi"Mtt.galllpOIIecareercollege.edu 579 ·000 304-674"3698
tional home S279 per month
Accredl!ed Member Accred1tin~:~ groom 2500 sq. h. ranch 740-385-7671.
Coi.lneil lof lnOeperwtant Colleges
•
'
,... ...... ,,.,.
Batley Run Rd., Pomeroy, 2008 sectional home 3
Ohio, $105,000, (740)992· 8 ·
,
8 h
• Mti&lt;EJ ANilOl5 . 0083, 304·722·3894
Attention!
385-9948.
2 Gas Furnances $100.00 localcompanyofferlng~No - - - - - - 3 bedroom,
2 both.
Owner
each, 50gal. Hot Water Tank DOWN p·•vMENr
1"1'
pro· finance.
$275
per month.
$50.00 17401446-4060
grams for you to buy your
home Instead of renting.
740·446-3570
1111
'100%financing
~ Do
3bedroom.2bath.Takeover
~o--•ii"'Oiitiiiao-r Less than parleC1 credit
·~opted
paymen1s. 7404463384
. -

.11:10

2

I

·

AuC11on Saturday Spm
Building· full of New &amp; Used lli"ID
Merchodlso.
New Semi
~
u--"''·~
u--"''•~
.
our n~ ·~
our nNu~
nur "N"~
Found-small · black Dog. load arricving this week.~.._ _ _ _ _ _,..~
Salley Run Rd. 740·992· Starling 10 sell high qualify '
Thlo
nowspape
3989.
knives such 88 C~, Buck E~etendlcare
Health Ma~power Is now hiring for
N--.
ccopt~ only hoi
F
M
p
&amp; Mouy Oek. Building Is Services, Inc., a leading the following Positions
W.WUIP.,foryow
anted ads meetln
ound: iniature· inscher lull. Visa and Master Card operator of skilled nursing Automobile
Produtlon IRIUfiiiCe during your 80OE otendal'llo.
on MI.Oii118 Rd. Pleose call &amp; Debit (304) 551J.1616 cantors, ossls1od living and Workers In the Buffalo, WV daylnlnlduclorypoolodl
740-388·9639
Stephen Reedy 1639 .
retirement communities In Area Benefltl available Call
Excltt,... Oppor'alntllll
We will nol knowing
Found:
near
Poplar
both tho us and Canada, Ia Today 304·757·3338
ariiiA
10 Mako I
accept •ny adver
Ridge/Reese Hollow area.
ro BuY
searching _for professional . , . . - - - - ' - - - Dlrf••ICW
lllment In vlotallo
Black(M)dOg Looks like&amp;...._
. Interested en a career. We Needed: Dedicated experl·
CtJringfototherwhOate
~lh~o~la~w~.~~~~:::~:'
740
645
·
:
:
4709
_
_
,
currantly
have
STNA
,
C
,
8
-~ DMI lo'
blacK lab.
" .
Absolute Top Dollar · sll· openings at our facility enced H~A'a, PCA.a, NA
otrtn un._tp
ld
,
.
ted
.
Po
&amp;
STNAs.
Establlohed
and
-~~an
/mporlonl
ver1go
...ou-,s,
any 1oca
m
meroy. well eapecl&amp;d local hom
job; one fhll rtqultN skills
14
1
10
Ki K/ BK gold i•we.lry, Openings Include tun and haa"hr .-~Located 1en
.,.--~
'·
de t 1 ld
1935 US
rtttmeopport 111
11
n
r-"-'
"'',_,.-!',.
4x4'sForS.te ....................: .........................725
no go • ~~ .
~ift· W off un eoonol Galllpolla, Ohio hoo avail·
noruro...
currency, pr
mmt sets, s s. e er an
81tC8 • able full·1'tme and· part 'lme -•· ,,.·.,.olaAhJOOw- and
Announ . . ment
030.
............................................
diamond$. MTS Coin Shop, lan1 aala'Y. and bonolil paclc·
•
·-·- .: I
w•~
NO
- -·
A"n tlque• ....................................................... 530
·
·
casas "you~~~~"' a ua!il re
compuslonlfll c.n tum
George's Portable SawrnUI, • Payment could be the 3 br., 1 1/2 bath, al electric.
Apartmenta for Aent ................................... 440
15t 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis. age and a great tuition to ~rk 16 a reepected
ordinary situations Into
don't haul your Logs to the same as rant.
$4,000, (740)247..0402
446·2842
assistance package for '
locators.
Auction and FIA Market .............................080
- - - - - - - thoae interosted In
con- TEAM
member
call rems,- ..j1/lwlments. Mill just call304.£75·1967. Mortgage
Auto Porto AcceaooriH .......................... 760
UnrestriC1ed land 1rom Iorge llnulng tholr education. (71401nt)«&amp;3808 lor lmmodt·
As aleaclng provider of
_(7_40_)36_7·0000
_ _._ _ _
N;,";~~i~g~de
Auto Repair ...................................................
lot to 1 acre, Apple Grove Interested
canc:ldates a e emew.
short-term subacute and
Handyman Service. In need
Autol for Sale ..............................................710
WV or SoUth on Rt 2,
- - - - - - - rel'\abMjlat:lv 18rviceS, as of repairs around the home?
~
.
Midwest 740·828-2750
Boatl Motors lor Sole ............................. 750
(304)576 _2000
ehould respond lo:
Regional, Pneumatic Trier
welloo long lerm
R e e s o n a b 1 e IIH:f For Sols or Trads_
mymidwesthOme.com
Building Supptlea ........................................ 550
'--.,..--.,..---,---:- Dobblo WBylond
&amp; OTR driving Positions:
haallhcare, Elllendlcore
rotes.20yrs.experlence.Ph.# 2·2 Story Homes 'side by - - - - - - Buolnwo .and Bulldlnga ............................. 340
Wonted to il!JY Junk Com,&amp; Staffing CQofdinalor
R&amp;J ·Truckiftg Company In Healfll Services 11-ng 741J.508.Q408
side' available for extended
NEW 2008 4 BR·2BA
7
Bualneaa Opportunlty .................................210. · Farm Machinery call 740· ~hone: 41J.992.flflll6
MorloUo, Ohio Is searching AN's and LPN's who want
faml~ or Rental property. Rt
1.700•: ft~ 9 · 989
Buatneaa Training ....................................... 140
388·0884 Can Coli ColloC1
"'· 740•992 •2678
for quollfled COL A Drivers to make o dltlorence caring
uuu:;~Y
62, HorUord, wv, beside
lrom 97 onlh
1
1
Campera Motor Homea ........................... 790
Or apply on person at : ·
to operate Somi-Dumps,
!Or others. We currently , _ _rtl""""'iiiiiiitat-,..1 Communi!)' Center, close to Midwest 740' 828 '2750
Camping Equipment.. ................................. 780
Wanting to Buy Junk Cora. 36759 Rocksprings Rd
PnoumoHc Bulk Tankoro lor ha118 oppor1111111oo avallobko ,
Mountalneor Plant &amp; Now
mymtdwesthome.com
304-675' 2176
Cardti of Thanks .......................................... OtO
· Pornoroy, OH 45769
bolh regional and OTR · lor carlhg lndiVIdulla a1
Child caro dono in my homo, Ho110n Coal Mine. Would bo New 3 Bedroom homes from
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Extendlcare .
Heellh opportunities.
Qualified Rocksprings Aehabl. .tlon infants welcome, meals Interested in trttding for $21 ...36 per month, Includes
ElectrlcaVRefrlgeratlon ...............................840
ServicEis, Inc., 18 an Equal applicants mUJt be at least Center located In Pomeroy. lnclilded, lots of activities for Farm acreage or for other many upgrades, delivery &amp;"
Equipment far Rent .....................................480
1'1'111...,_ _ _ _..., Opportunily Employer that 23 yra have a minimum ot 1
We are looldng lor
your child, days, nighl and Rentals 304.£75-2484 or sot-up. (740)385·2434
· Excavating ................................................... 830
1.118
enc~rages
workplace years 'of sale commerlcal profeseionale committed to weekends. $2.00 per hour. cell 304·593·1481
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 610
lfFu WANfED
diversity.
driving "'parlento, Hai. Mal
provlclng 0&gt;1ctlltnl posl
Can 256·1438 ask lor
USED HOME SALE
Farm• for Aent ............................................-'430
Farm
Help
needed, CertifiCation, Clean MVA
acute rehablllta1ion and
Nice 3BR Singlewides
Farrne,far Sole ......................" ..................... 330
WORKERS NEEDED Elq)erlence whh oporotlng and good job o!Bbllily. We
peel surgery BOMC8111o
from 12900 Down Pmt
100
For Leou ..................................................... 490
largo Farm ~uip .. would bo offer a full slata ol benoflla rosidentstranslllonlng back
·
Midwest 740-8211-2750
~-le
Assemble crafts, wood on
¥.., · Hourly plus 401 (k) and vacation
-.
For""
............. ;..;....................................... 585
advantago.
horns after being
B·~
a.le
1i
-~
•go
items.To
$480/wk
Materials
1r
the
.......,...:
Uinl~
l.oJs &amp;
For..., or r~..... .................................... .
wages. Send Resumoo to pay. For Information cootacl dfschaiVed om
,....,...
Ol'l'olmJNm
Fruita Vogellblea ..................................... 580
provided. Free information CLA·5 c/o Point Pleoaani Kont at 800·482·9365 or
tal as well as raaldents
ACRFACE
-~ R
450
pl&lt;g. 24Hr, 601-428-4649
•
All In
IIIli oatata advortl•l"11
~
F
II hau
Register 200 Main St, Pt. visit our web sne
at requlrlng iong term care.
thla ,...,~ 1,
5
8
1 acre lot on E. Bethel Ch.
An Excellent way - lo oarn Pleuant. wv 26650
· ...,..rUrydtilg oom E.O,E.
,H you
•NOTICE•
10 lhe Flderol
Qen....,l Houilng.....,.....................................
Ad. No Septic, Great ffat lot
GlvHway ..............................;....................... 040
money, The New Avon.
toitowlng quati!ICallono:
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Fair Houelng AC1 ol1968
with driveway, dose to town
Happy Ado ....................................................OSO
Coli Marilyn 304•882 •2645
FEDERAL
Owner
Operator
• Excellent Cllnlcalsklls
lNG CO. rocommen~s
.wllloh mak.. l1111ogolto
446-9383 Asking $13,000
Hay a Gra~.................................................640110
PO$TAL JOBS
Opportunities:
R&amp;J
• Comp&amp;llion and CUI!hot you do business wHh
advortiH "any
Help Want.....................................................
AVONI All Areosl To Buy or $17 89··$28 27 •
hi· Trucking • Marietta, Ohio
tomer services
""'
k
d
pralannco, tlnollaflon or
lllr now r
paUJI'e yau now. an
26 acres with timber, M8son
Home Improvements................................... 810
SeD. Shirley Spearo, 304·
·,
.,
!roe hOI opportunlllee available • The ablllly ond dlslre. to .
dlac~mlnotlon biHd on
Homel for Sale ................................... ~........ 310
675·1429.
lng. For application and
tor Owner Operators within
perfotrrl in a fast-paced
NOT 10 send money
race, c~or. religion, ...
Co. WV 10 minutes from
ttousehold Gooda ....................................... S10
~--=--=---- govemement }ob Info, call the region. We feature
environment
through the mail until you
fllmlllel11atua or nttlon~l bridge. 740·709-1 166
HouHI for Rent ''"'"""""'''"""'"'"""""""""'"""""'410
Bartenders Gallipolis area. American Assoc. of labor 1· weekly settlement&amp; and trail· • Strong laaderahlp Skills
have Investigated the
Mlgln, or •ny lntenUon to
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
tn Memorlam ..........:.........,........................... 020
Exp. prefarred. Honesly and 913-599·8226, 24111rs. emp. er rental. Operat0!81hould And you- looking lor
offarlng.
maka an1 auch
RENT. 1031 Georges Cre!t(
lnaurence ................................................. ~ ... 130
dependability required. 740· serv.
have newer equipment and
tht chance to lnlke,1
preft,.,ce, llmllltlon or
Rd, 441·1111
Lawn Garden Equlpment ..................:..... 660
44 1·7202, leave a meuage. FUll Tlms Receptionist need- frame type tralers. For more
dllfwlrtelln Nuralngi
MONEY
dlacrtmlnltlon."
Llvelltock..........................................:........... 630
Courtside Bar &amp; Grill now ed (n . busy Doctor's Office. Information • contact Demls n Wlnt to tllk to
I
l..oAN
This new.pa~per will not
Pnme residential building lot
Lo1t and Found ........................................... 060
taking applications tor expe· Pick up applications at Suits at 800-462·9365
Please contaa1:
knowingly Kcept
in Rio Grande on la~e Dr.
Lota I Acreage ............ ~ ................................ 350
rienced grill and fry cooks. 112,
Pleasant
Valley
DebtMe Wayland, Staffing
advertiHmentelor rul
$24,900 . Phone 260·495·
Mlecellaneoua ...............................................170
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�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

ToM

WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND
Michael Bramos scored 23
points and Miami of Ohio,
playing while coach Charlie
Coles remains hospitalized
following a heart procedure,
advanced to the semifinals
with a 74-61 win over Ohio
in
the
Mid-American
Conference tournament on
Thursday night.
The defending champion
RedHawks
moved
on
despite an off-night from
sentor forward Tim Pollitz,
their leading scorer averaging 16 points. Pollitz scored
a season-low 4 points, missing all six shots - some
fro1.1 point-blank range- in
the second half.
But with Miami leading
by just 63-59, Pollitz's twin
brother, Eric, came up big.
He dropped a floater m the
lane and then made a free
throw to give Miami a66-59
lead w\th I :20 remaining.
Kenny Hayes·made four free
throws and Bramos added
two more as Miami closed
with an 11-2 run.
Miami, the No. 5 seed,
will play top-seeded' Kent
State in Fr1day's second
semifinal. The Golden
Flashes atlvanced by blow-

inf out Toledo 77-57.
n the first semifinal,
Akron will face Western
Michigan.
Coles, Miami's gregarious
66-year-old coach, underwent an unspecified pr()5:edure on his heart earlier this
week. He had · bypass
surgery in 1986 and went
into cardiac arrest at the
MAC tournament in 1998.
Jerome Tillman 'Scored 17
po.ints and senior Leon
Wtlltams had 15 for the
Bobcats, who shot just 29
percent (9-of-31) in the second half.
Tyler Dierkers scored II
points with a career-high 13
rebounds for Miami.
· The longtime southern
Ohio rivals were meeting for
the fourth straight year in
the tournament and sixth
time in eight years.
Freshman Nick Winbush,
who started just once all sea- ·
son, came off the bench and
scored 10 points - match-.
ing his career-big~-. in the
. first half as Mtamt opened a
39-35 lead at the break.
The
RedHawks
fell
behind by nine points in the
first three minutes before
getting three straight 3pointers and scoring 13 consewtive points to take their
first lead.

Selection Sunday to learn
Butler's next opponent, he
has time to contemplate this
week's Big Ten tourney in
Conseco Fieldhouse.
He isn''t picking a favorite
between Indiana or Purdu6,
though.
"I have no idea what the
seeds are," Stevens said
before the tournament. "I
know I'm rooting for ' Ohio
State and Iowa to do welL
That's about it."·
A native of Zionsville and
former team · captain at
DePauw, Stevens worked as
an assistant for Ohio State's
Thad Matta and Iowa's Todd
Lick! iter when each of them
was the coach at Butler.
Iowa lost to Michigan 5547 in the first round
Thursday; fifth-seeded Ohio
State had a first-round bye.
FOUL .
FLURRY:
Michigan picked up four
fouls in a span of 14 seconds
midway through the second
half of its win over Iowa.
DeShawn Sims was called
for the first foul. Thirteen
seconds later Zack Gibson
committed a foul , and before
the ball could be put back
into play Gibson was .called
for another. When the ball
was inbounded to Iowa after
that, Manny Harris went for
a steal but picked up a foul
with just I second off the
clock.

one of them a fastball
that Weber hit over the fence
For Bartolo Colon, it was -to the last six batters.
"More than anything, it''s
almost as if he'd been pitching all spring. Carlos great to be able to go out on
Beltran, however, felt as if the mound, even if it's for a
he hadn't played center field brief stint, have some suebefore.
cess," Colon said. "So thl!t's
And lchiro Suzuki wasn't very rewarding. It shows
sure he'd ever get another that the hard work is paying
hit.
off."
Colon pitched two solid
The perennial All-Star
innings Thursday in his first Suzuki got a gift in the first
time on the mound for the inning, when Giants reserve
Boston Red Sox, a 3-3 tie first baseman Justin ~ne
against the Tampa Bay Rays inexplicably ranged too far
at Fort Myers, Fla.
. away from the bag to try.for
At Peoria, Ariz., Suzuki a grounder to second. By the
broke an 0-for-21 skid with time starting pitcher Kevin
his first hit of the spring, an Correia realized he had to
infield single in the Seattle cover first base, the speedy
Mariners' 3-3 tie with the Suzuki was already at first
San Francisco Giants.
for his first hit of the SJ?rlng.
And at Jupiter, Fla.,
"We can all sleep tomght,"
Beltran played in center Mariners manager John
field for the first time since McLaren said, chuckling.
Suzuki's 0-for-21, one
having offseason arthro:
scopic surgery on both short of his career-long
knees, and felt like he was slump in the regular season
learni ng how t~ play the from 1995, had become an
position again.
international curiosity. The
"The first fly ball, I felt pack of Japanese media who
like I didn' t know what to chronicle Suzuki's every
do," the Mets' cleanup hitter move had been breathless
said after a 6-5, 10-inning over the drought. McLaren
d d ·1 · k
bo t 't
loss to the St. Louis
Cardinals. "It 's been a lot of ~~t s:~~kfo s:ld a it u w~~
work for me."
"fun" be,cause it gave him an
Beltran played his first unusual early season chalspring game at DH on lenge.
Monday. The Cardinals
"I'm not sure what my
game didn ' t offer that next challen~e is," he said
option. so he told manager through his mterpreter after
Willie Randolph he ' d g1ve his breakthrough. ''I'm sad
the.. outfield ad try.
. , - to say goodb. ye. "
1 want~ .t.o. test tt, . Mariners head trainer
Beltran sat d. , Rtght now, Rick Griffin stood at the :top
mne. mmngs, I m not r~ad,Y step of the dugout, motionto play m.ne m.mngs. Today s ing for Correia to throw out
gam!! wt.ll _gtve me m~re the ball ,_ part of Seattle's.
confidence tor next tu!le. . joke to Suzuki to commemHe went 1-for-2 wnh an orate the initial hit. Correia
RBI ~mgle ,and a ~al~ and and plate umpire M,ike
\Vas hfted atter battmg m the Everiti both looked · at
hfth. B.eltran satd t~at was 3 Gritlin like he was nuts.
go?d time to call It a day;
"He told me to get him the
he s not ready to play a full ball," Griffin said of Suzuki .
game yet.
"Th
. d'd ' h'nk I
"I'm not going to try to be
e umptr~. 1 n t t 1
a hero here," .Beltran said. was sen~ms. .
.
"I'm just going to try to be
Suzukt JOkmgly satd he
healthy for the season and was P!:ummg .to ke~p ·the
be in the. lineup as much as 1 ball
and send tt · to
can."
C,ooperstown. But w~ couldRed Sox general man&amp;ger . n t get the ball ~ack. . .
In ~ther spnng trammg
Theo Epstein was excited to
watch Colon hit 94 mph games.
with his fastball, after pitchCubs. 3, Padres (ss)_ 2
ing just 29 games the past
At Mesa, Anz., San Otego
two years Qecause of elbow starter Greg Ma~dux took a
and shoulder injuries.
lme dnve off hts thtgh and
" He had more arm had to leave the game after
strength than ~e expected," two t~mngs. He satd he has
Epstem smd. 'For his first a brUise and should be fine
time out, we were really for h1s. next start.
.
impressed."
Ptrates 5, Yankees ~
So was ihe 2005 AL Cy
At . Tampa, Fla., Mtke
Young award winner.
Mus.sma threw five perfect
· "The past few years have mmngs, but got overshadbeen tough," Colon said owed by B_tlly Crystal, who
through a translator. "It's ~truck out m hts lone at bat
that much more gratifying to tor N_ew York.
see the results finally start
Tigers 61 B~aves 6, tie,
10 !Rmngs
panning out."
At Lakeland, Fla., Todd
The burly right-bander
who once could throw 100 Jones pitched a perfect
mph allowed a solo homer inning against a major·
to Jon Weber, the next to last le~gue cl.ub for the ~rst ti~e
batter he faced in his two- thts sprmg, lowenng h1s
inning stint against the ERA from 24.55 to 19.29.
Indians 9, Blue Jays 5
Rays. who got 4 2-3 scoreAt Wmter Haven, Fla.,
less innings from Matt
Garza.
Travis Hafner hit his ftrst
Colon escaped a bases- home run of .the spring and
loaded, no-out jam. in the Fausto Carmona and Aaron
first and allowed two hits Laffey each pttched four
and a walk with one strike- innings for tht: Indians.
out.
·
Brewers 8,
"I feel very good and my
Diamondbacks 6
At
Tucson,
Ariz.,
control was good, kind of
what I was looking for," Milwaukee's Jeff Suppan
Colon said. "I felt really was hit by a line drive in the
fourth inning, ending a
strong out there."
He loaded the bases on a rough day in which he gave
single, an error and a walk, up s_ix runs and seven hits in
and then struck out' B.J. three-plus innings. Suppan
Upton on his 16th pitch. He said the injury wasn't serithrew just I0 more pitches ous.

defense before a crowd of
I 2,776 at Value City Arena.
.. Libbey started to assert
itself in the third quarter.
While their man-to-man
defense squelched the
attat:k,
the
Graham
Cowboys began to· look
more for the open.man.
Brad Sandridge scored,
pulling a loose ball otT his
arm for a bucket inside.
Grdham turnover,
After
Jones was fouled intentionally and hit both shots. On
the ensuing possession,
Sandridge scored off a follow for a 35-28 lead.
Graham turned it over
again, with Bradley Burton
hitting a bucket inside off'\
rebound.
The Cowboy:- took the
first 12 shots from the fi eld
in the quarter. with Graham
not ge tting off a shot until
Schuler's leaner at the 4:34
mark. The Falcons got the

With 6. 7 seconds left,
rebound and Schuler was
fouled, hitting both shots for Buford's assist to Sandridge
his first points of the game. led to a three-point play that
Schulergot on track in the closed the scoring.
fourth quarter, hitting a 3The Cowboys forced 19
pointer and another basket turnovers (they · had only
and assisting on a 3-pointer nine) but hit only half of
by Ethan Ward that cut what their 26 free throws. St.
was a I0-point lead with Paris Graham had not scored
under 3:45 left to just45-41. fewer than 45 points all seaIt narrowe.d even more son.
when Buford missed the
In the first half, Buford
front end of a bonus situa- scored 14 points, hitting six
tion and Travis 'Crooks of his 12 shois from the
scored off a long lob pass field, and had five rebounds,
from Ben Rosenberg\!r with
It was' his driving, baseline
45 seconds remaining.
drive with 4 ·seconds left that
. The Cowboys responded, gave the Cowboys a 22-20
however.
halftime lead - a lead they
Jones hit two free throws would never relinquish.
for a 47-43 lead with 36.5
The teams traded the lead
seconds lert.
througbout the half, with
. Libbey missed five of its Libbey building a fournext six foul shots but over point lead at one point in
that same time the Falcons the second quarter as the
missed a 3-pointer, had a Falcons had great difficulty
turnover and made one of with the Cowboys' matchup
zone.
1wo free throws.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo

Ohio's Jerome Tillman (33) shoots over Miami of Ohio' s Eric
Pollitz during the first half of a Mid-American Conference
tournament quarterfinal basketball game Thursday in
Cleveland .

Oden practices with Blazers for 1st time since surgery
•

· SACRAMENTO, Calif.
(AP) - Greg Qden practiced with the Portland Trail
Blazers for the first time
since right knee surgery
ended the No. I draft pick's
debut season before it started six months ago. •
Oden, the 7-foot center
from Ohio State taken with
the top selection in last
year's draft, surprised his
teammates Wednesday when
he participated in offensive
drills and even dunked during 45 minutes of half-speed

work. The Blazers were in
Sacramento for Thursday
night's game against the
Kings.
"Yeah, it was nice," Od&lt;:n
said after lifting weights
Thursday in Sacramento. "I
learned some of the plays
that I'm not going to use, but
it was good to be out there
with the guys and go
through some of the stuff
that they go through."
Only
coach
· /'late
McMillan and athletic trainer Jay Jensen knew Oden

would be m practice Western Conference.
Wednesday for the first time
Oden said he felt no dissince undergoing microfrac- comfort in his knee after the
ture surgery in September.
workout. The Blazers still
"They made some com- have no intention of allowments about it," McMillan ing him to play this season,
said of his players. "They · however.
laughed about it and said
"We just changed up his
'Hey, finally you'rt) here to workout," McMillan said .
work."'
"He's been doing a little
The Blazers have stayed in light running for about a
contention for a playoff week or so now, and that's
berth without their future all it was yesterday, some
franchise center. Led by All, light running. The only difStar Brandon Roy, Portland (erence (was that) he was
is iri IOth place in the with the team."

Commissioner thinks Big Ten could get 5 teams into tourney
BY

But this weekend's touma- the same way.as they played
ment could change that per- the other night against
Cleveland State. They play
ception.
INDIANAPOLIS - Big
Ohio State faces No. 19 one way there, and that's to
Ten Commissioner Jim Michigan State in Friday's win."
Delany will let the NCAA second quarterfinal game,
The Hawkeyes lost seven
tournament selection com- and a second straight win of their final nine games and
mittee do its work this week- over the Spartans would cer- are not headed to the postend.
tainly help last year'.s season after averaging just
That doesn't mean Delany national runne(llp earn a trip 56.4 points per game this
doesn't have his own opin- back to the NCAA tourna- season.
ion about which conference ment . under coach Thad . They looked even worse
teams will or should ·make Matta.
Thursday, g0ing more than
the 65-team field. Delany
"I would not go so far as to 16 minutes without a basket
told The Associated Press on say they're in, but I really in the second half.
It was all new to Lickliter,
Thursday he believes four want to see them up on the
teams - Indiana, Michigan board and see what they can who insisted his challenge
State, Purdue and Wisconsin accomplish against others," next season will be gettipg
- have already locked up Delany said. "Hopefully, those problems fixed. ·
bids and he thinks Ohio they will get that considera"I'm not satisfied," he
State has' a strong case to tion."
said. "It's painful, it hurts.
become the fifth Big Ten
NOT SO EASY: Iowa's I'm a guy who's not very
Todd Lickliter isn't accus- fond of losing f?ut some
team in the field.
Delany was making that tomed to finishing seasons at things are out of your concase himself during the first- 13-19. ·
trol. You can control effort
round games at the Big Ten
But this was no typical and attitude and we' ve got to
tournament.
season for the Hawkeyes' keep fighting. _I've been
"I think we have four in first-year coach. He had through some tough years,
and I think Ohio State has only two seniors, lost most it's not smooth sailing, but
done enough to get in," of last ~ear's' top players to staying the course is the
Delany said. ''I've compared graduatiOn and strug$led 'to key."
their credentials to others get Iowa in sync wtth tlie
BUTLER
LEGACY:·
and they've got the 18th best system .that worked so well ,Brad Stevens' loyalties to
strength
of. · schedule. · at Butler.
his Butler coaching predeThey've played the top four
There's a reason for that. cessors may trump his aile"It looks a lot easier on giance to the two Big Ten
teams in our league twice
and they ' ve played 20 TV, and it's not quite that teams from his home state.
The 12th-ranked Bulldogs
games against the top 50 and easy," Lickliter said after the
won nine. I think they've Hawkeyes' 55-47 loss to earned an automatic bid to
accomplished quite a bit."
Michigan. "The thing is if the NCAA tournament with
Yet even Delany acknowl- you go over to (Hinkle) the Horizon League tourney
edges the Buckeyes ( 19-12) Fieldhouse in the spring, championship on Tuesday.
are still on the bubble.
they'll be playing exactly Now, while Stevens awaits
MICHAEL MAROT
ASSOCIATED PRESS

D-11

tournament, is 0-4 in the
. semifinals. The Cavaliers
also lost· in the seiriifmals a
year ago.

Buford,
who
on
Wednesday was named the
200~
recipient of the
Press
Mr.
Associated
from PageBl
Basketball award, was 9for-24 from the field,
Tol. Llboo 51,
St. Paris Graham 44
including misses on all four
thanks in large part to the
of his 3-pointers. He was
Bulldogs' frigid shooting.
· During one span they
COLUMBUS
Mr. only 3-of-7 at the line, -but
missed seven shots from the Basketball William Buford · had I0 rebounds and three
off-day shooting but assists .
field in a row - while had
Chillicothe was running off still scored 21 points
Lance Jones added IQ
eight points in a row to take Thursday to help Toledo points for Libbey, whose
command.
Libbey hang on for a 51-44 point total was one under its
With the score tied at 16, win over St. Paris Graham previous season low.
Hitchens fed Chambers for in a Division II state semifi- · Ethan Ward led No. 4
a two-handed slam dunk. nal.
Graham (26-1 ), a perennial
,fourth-ranked state champ in wrestling
After both teams had ,;~ The
· missed shots, Chamberl ;·Ulwboyf'(*l~.llll ·
to! that was making its fir~t trip
dltlmpH to the boys state tournadunked again, this time off a . their i~rt~. .
pass' from Caleb Knipaa.
IIlii . ~eef i ment, with 14 points. Josh
Seth Dawes ·then added
~·
in the Schuler, averaging 20 points
game, didn ' t score in the
free throws and Knights
quarter of the 1966
tipped in a missed free title game, eventually losing opening half and fini shed
throw by Chambers, making to Dayton Chaminade, 55- with eight.
it 24-16.
52. That stunning failure
Both teams were ti ght on
Poland Seminary, making has haunted the school ever offense. In all fairn ess, both
its fourth trip to the state since.
also played, griuy, physical
I
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The Daily Sentinel 1 Page 85

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Colon excels in debut for
Red Sox; Beltran struggles
in center field for Mets

Redhawks move into MAC
semifinals by beating Ohio
BY

Friday, March 14, 2008

Friday, March 14,2008

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Sentinel

l\egt~ter

ca~f~::;... (7!~~ To446:!42 (7!~~ To992;~!~6

(304) .675-1333

Oeo.d'ljir~
Monday thru Friday
, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

..

HOW I0 WRITE AN

~

Ohto 'IIIley
PubUshlnu reearvea
the right to edR,
reject or cancel eny
ed atony umo.

ErrOI'I ltuat B
eported on 'the
ofpubllmtona
ho Trlbun ..s.ntlnll
ogloter
will
uponalbto !01 . n
ore than the colt

.. ,

he space occupla
the error and on
first lnoortlon.
hall not bo liable 1o

All Dlaplayt 12 Noon 2
Bualn"a Daya Prior To

In Next- Day'• Paper
Publlc.tlon
Sunday ln•Column: 1:00 p.m. · Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
For Sunday• Paper

Thuraclay tor sundaya·

* All ada must be prepaid'

POUCiia: Ohio V.U., Publa.hlng rnervM the right to tdl, ~ or oanotllnJ' ad Ill .ny liiN. Emn mu•t be reported on th• lltlt
Trlbul 1 8 atllaei-Ailglllll' will be l'elp(IM!ble for no men thin the ooel of the 8fM1Ce occupied by the """1nd only the first lnMrtlon.
...,. lan or elptlnM ttwt ~ults from lhl publl: Ilion Dr omlNk!n of M ld'ltnlument. Comctlon Will bl rftadt In thl first IVII'-ble edhlon. • Box
.,. ....,. confldentlll. • Cwrwrt m. a.rd
. • All re~l Ht8te ICMrtltemen~~ are
10 1M Feder~! Ftlr Houtlng Act ot 18H. • TtMt _.,.,.,.
11001Ptt only htlp wanted
WI
acoept tny
In Ylollllon of the h.

__

r. . r
GMAWAY

r ~ Ir~..•_a_
...:.~.S-ALE
~

r

Bro &amp; Sis Cats (4yrs) to a
gOQd hOme, Child allergic.
Callico. Tortoiseshell. Must
s1 1 th 304.£75-6161
a~ age er.
Free to good home. 2 male
Ronweller mix puppies. 6
weeks old. 367·0824
·
------Lob/Retriever puppies lo
good homes only. C8JI 4463511
•

ADN\11',
111.

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nth Annual Pot of Gold
Antinue Show &amp; Sale, east
·•
Carter Middle School,
Gur~son, KY, March ~5·~6.
Sot 8-5, Sun. 10·4, Over 60
Dealers, $~.00 Adu~s. 12 &amp;
under Free, Free Appraisals
with admission (llmll 2
items)
.,.--.,..-----Cross Creek AuC1Ion Buffalo

•

0

area. Approx. 4 acres, all

Avg. Pay $20hlr or
$57Kiyr, Includes

No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582·3345

professionally landscaped.
Ranch style house with 4
bedrooms, living room, din-

TruCi&lt;

I&gt;
·•

"·t•.
"

.,

~

112001

Inc.

'-;=====::;~;=====~~~====~
116
116
u- ...,..
11
11

House for sale in Racine

SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

n;;;;;~~..;-;;.;.,
r•o
Ho~
Iily
FOR SALE·

·--iiiiiiiiiiiiao_.l

0 down payment 4 bed·
rooms. Large yard. Covered
deck. Attached garage. 740·
367"7129 ·
------1 Acre, Flat Lot. Spacious
3BA. 28 A. Lg. Kit &amp; LA. DR_ ,
Den w/ Fireplace, 2 car
attached Garage Rodney
511 , 000 (740124, 912 •0
Dri110rs COL Class A
"'
v·

-------

D

www.comlca.com

TURNED DOWN ON

HIRING

Federal Benefits. OT.
Offered by Exam Ser~ces,
not offered w/ USPS who
hires.
1-1!66-403·2582 .
--::-.,..--.,..-R8tJ81r Technician needed .
Abllily,to work wi1hOut direc!
Supervision a must. Self
starter and detail Oriented
·
TriMIIing lnvoliled Monday
thur Fri. Mall resume to:
p 0 Box 339 A
swood
· ·
·
aven
·
wv 26.t64

1 H,AYt: 10

rUA ITJAKM.I

I

LosfAND

., . . . . . .~

..._.

POST OFFICE NOW

YARD SAU-

1yr old mixed breed, blkflan
- Pr. Pu'AsANT
med. frame dog. would like
fenced yard In the country. Large indoor garage sale
Great watch dog. 446-7644 March 14·15 9am·7, corner
of 3rd St. &amp; Dogwood lane
4 ~Hens, loving and playful I Moaon.wv.
They ·need 0 good home, I - - - - , - - - - canl keep them . 740·853· Moving Sale ping pong
1253
table. wl accessories, go$
7 wk old 112 Beagle pups. grill, 2r &amp; 32' TV's ' cut
Will make mcct~lem pets or skiJboot~ poles , 5 pc. bed·
hunters. 446·7644 if no room suite, 2 couches black
TV stand, lawn mower, trunanswer, leave a messa
_ ge.
die spring bed, weight bench

r

· How you con have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads ·
(.~
lf1't
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
·
S1.00 for large

~..r ~_ARD_S_AU:
_ _.K
fiTkii,;&amp;:;;;;:CiYAi;RiLY;L;;;E;,;t,;;;t----------.., ~..lil_o_IIFu_W._ANim
_ _.l
~
1 ~~llr'"~~~-.....,

\\'\ Ill \l I \ 11 \ I \

y~rsell, 304·675·2217

...

D•lly In-column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for ln-rtlon

• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Adt Shoukl Run 7 Dtye

8ft x Sft Wood"frame Picture w/Weights 304·882·3108
WI ndow Wn"h awn1ng, hau1
AUCilON

' ';

Display Acl•

• Shirt Vour Ads With A hyword • Jncluft ~plete
Dncrlptlpn • Include A Price • Avoid AbbrPIMion•

Succeaful Ads
Should Include These Items
Ta Help Get Relponse ...

*POLICIES*.

Word Ads

Required, minimum of 2
years
driving
exp.
Experience .
on
Qverdelmenslonal loads.
Must have good driving
record. Earn up to_$2,000
wooldy. For application Coli
(304) 722 •2184
'M·F
8:30am·4pm

2000 Custom built Cape
4/58R, 2 battl, Fin
·Besoment, located outside
of Rio Grande in a beautiful
wooded location. $199,900.
Coli lor an oppt. 740·2450125

cod.

ing room, kitchen, large lam·
room, central air, gas heat
ond 1 fireplace. Addhton of a
large Florida room. com·
pietety ce~ar opens onto
potlo &amp; pool oroo. Heated In
ground pool enclosed by pr~
vacy fencing and land· scaped. Finished 2 car. ·
·
tta hed t h
gara~e. a c
o ouse .
and f1n1shed &amp; henated 3hcar
garage
u attac ed
..
·
Exceaent conditiOn ready to
moveln.$25S,OOO.OO,Call :
(740)949·2217

r

l!l!tl'"""""'-...,~--,
MOBilE HOMIN

FOR SALE

I

t...-----_.1

x

16 80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
VInyl Siding. Shingle Roof.
s ~ pe 0 lh 740,,.5.
&gt;AI
rm n ·
oXJ
3BR, 1 bath, LR. FR. DR. _9948.,..---.,..---.,..-iiir;;;.;~----, Kit., Full Basement. 1.5
~
~Jeres . Security System, 2000 16x70 2 bed 2 bath
INmtucnoN
Gallipolis. 740-64 5-4500
Fleotwood, 2002 16x80 3
t...-tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiii_.l - - - - - - bod 2 bath Oakwood, 1999
17 Hawthorne Ln., Pt. t6~e80 3 bed 2 bath Fortune.
GltllpollaCI- College Pleasant, 3br, lbo, 1015/SF Daytime 388.0000, Evening
(Careors Close To Home)
New fiOOf coverings, fresh 388-8017or245·9213
Call Todayl 740 -446-4367· point, now heat pump
1-8(10.214-0452
2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sec·
·lfi"Mtt.galllpOIIecareercollege.edu 579 ·000 304-674"3698
tional home S279 per month
Accredl!ed Member Accred1tin~:~ groom 2500 sq. h. ranch 740-385-7671.
Coi.lneil lof lnOeperwtant Colleges
•
'
,... ...... ,,.,.
Batley Run Rd., Pomeroy, 2008 sectional home 3
Ohio, $105,000, (740)992· 8 ·
,
8 h
• Mti&lt;EJ ANilOl5 . 0083, 304·722·3894
Attention!
385-9948.
2 Gas Furnances $100.00 localcompanyofferlng~No - - - - - - 3 bedroom,
2 both.
Owner
each, 50gal. Hot Water Tank DOWN p·•vMENr
1"1'
pro· finance.
$275
per month.
$50.00 17401446-4060
grams for you to buy your
home Instead of renting.
740·446-3570
1111
'100%financing
~ Do
3bedroom.2bath.Takeover
~o--•ii"'Oiitiiiao-r Less than parleC1 credit
·~opted
paymen1s. 7404463384
. -

.11:10

2

I

·

AuC11on Saturday Spm
Building· full of New &amp; Used lli"ID
Merchodlso.
New Semi
~
u--"''·~
u--"''•~
.
our n~ ·~
our nNu~
nur "N"~
Found-small · black Dog. load arricving this week.~.._ _ _ _ _ _,..~
Salley Run Rd. 740·992· Starling 10 sell high qualify '
Thlo
nowspape
3989.
knives such 88 C~, Buck E~etendlcare
Health Ma~power Is now hiring for
N--.
ccopt~ only hoi
F
M
p
&amp; Mouy Oek. Building Is Services, Inc., a leading the following Positions
W.WUIP.,foryow
anted ads meetln
ound: iniature· inscher lull. Visa and Master Card operator of skilled nursing Automobile
Produtlon IRIUfiiiCe during your 80OE otendal'llo.
on MI.Oii118 Rd. Pleose call &amp; Debit (304) 551J.1616 cantors, ossls1od living and Workers In the Buffalo, WV daylnlnlduclorypoolodl
740-388·9639
Stephen Reedy 1639 .
retirement communities In Area Benefltl available Call
Excltt,... Oppor'alntllll
We will nol knowing
Found:
near
Poplar
both tho us and Canada, Ia Today 304·757·3338
ariiiA
10 Mako I
accept •ny adver
Ridge/Reese Hollow area.
ro BuY
searching _for professional . , . . - - - - ' - - - Dlrf••ICW
lllment In vlotallo
Black(M)dOg Looks like&amp;...._
. Interested en a career. We Needed: Dedicated experl·
CtJringfototherwhOate
~lh~o~la~w~.~~~~:::~:'
740
645
·
:
:
4709
_
_
,
currantly
have
STNA
,
C
,
8
-~ DMI lo'
blacK lab.
" .
Absolute Top Dollar · sll· openings at our facility enced H~A'a, PCA.a, NA
otrtn un._tp
ld
,
.
ted
.
Po
&amp;
STNAs.
Establlohed
and
-~~an
/mporlonl
ver1go
...ou-,s,
any 1oca
m
meroy. well eapecl&amp;d local hom
job; one fhll rtqultN skills
14
1
10
Ki K/ BK gold i•we.lry, Openings Include tun and haa"hr .-~Located 1en
.,.--~
'·
de t 1 ld
1935 US
rtttmeopport 111
11
n
r-"-'
"'',_,.-!',.
4x4'sForS.te ....................: .........................725
no go • ~~ .
~ift· W off un eoonol Galllpolla, Ohio hoo avail·
noruro...
currency, pr
mmt sets, s s. e er an
81tC8 • able full·1'tme and· part 'lme -•· ,,.·.,.olaAhJOOw- and
Announ . . ment
030.
............................................
diamond$. MTS Coin Shop, lan1 aala'Y. and bonolil paclc·
•
·-·- .: I
w•~
NO
- -·
A"n tlque• ....................................................... 530
·
·
casas "you~~~~"' a ua!il re
compuslonlfll c.n tum
George's Portable SawrnUI, • Payment could be the 3 br., 1 1/2 bath, al electric.
Apartmenta for Aent ................................... 440
15t 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis. age and a great tuition to ~rk 16 a reepected
ordinary situations Into
don't haul your Logs to the same as rant.
$4,000, (740)247..0402
446·2842
assistance package for '
locators.
Auction and FIA Market .............................080
- - - - - - - thoae interosted In
con- TEAM
member
call rems,- ..j1/lwlments. Mill just call304.£75·1967. Mortgage
Auto Porto AcceaooriH .......................... 760
UnrestriC1ed land 1rom Iorge llnulng tholr education. (71401nt)«&amp;3808 lor lmmodt·
As aleaclng provider of
_(7_40_)36_7·0000
_ _._ _ _
N;,";~~i~g~de
Auto Repair ...................................................
lot to 1 acre, Apple Grove Interested
canc:ldates a e emew.
short-term subacute and
Handyman Service. In need
Autol for Sale ..............................................710
WV or SoUth on Rt 2,
- - - - - - - rel'\abMjlat:lv 18rviceS, as of repairs around the home?
~
.
Midwest 740·828-2750
Boatl Motors lor Sole ............................. 750
(304)576 _2000
ehould respond lo:
Regional, Pneumatic Trier
welloo long lerm
R e e s o n a b 1 e IIH:f For Sols or Trads_
mymidwesthOme.com
Building Supptlea ........................................ 550
'--.,..--.,..---,---:- Dobblo WBylond
&amp; OTR driving Positions:
haallhcare, Elllendlcore
rotes.20yrs.experlence.Ph.# 2·2 Story Homes 'side by - - - - - - Buolnwo .and Bulldlnga ............................. 340
Wonted to il!JY Junk Com,&amp; Staffing CQofdinalor
R&amp;J ·Truckiftg Company In Healfll Services 11-ng 741J.508.Q408
side' available for extended
NEW 2008 4 BR·2BA
7
Bualneaa Opportunlty .................................210. · Farm Machinery call 740· ~hone: 41J.992.flflll6
MorloUo, Ohio Is searching AN's and LPN's who want
faml~ or Rental property. Rt
1.700•: ft~ 9 · 989
Buatneaa Training ....................................... 140
388·0884 Can Coli ColloC1
"'· 740•992 •2678
for quollfled COL A Drivers to make o dltlorence caring
uuu:;~Y
62, HorUord, wv, beside
lrom 97 onlh
1
1
Campera Motor Homea ........................... 790
Or apply on person at : ·
to operate Somi-Dumps,
!Or others. We currently , _ _rtl""""'iiiiiiitat-,..1 Communi!)' Center, close to Midwest 740' 828 '2750
Camping Equipment.. ................................. 780
Wanting to Buy Junk Cora. 36759 Rocksprings Rd
PnoumoHc Bulk Tankoro lor ha118 oppor1111111oo avallobko ,
Mountalneor Plant &amp; Now
mymtdwesthome.com
304-675' 2176
Cardti of Thanks .......................................... OtO
· Pornoroy, OH 45769
bolh regional and OTR · lor carlhg lndiVIdulla a1
Child caro dono in my homo, Ho110n Coal Mine. Would bo New 3 Bedroom homes from
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Extendlcare .
Heellh opportunities.
Qualified Rocksprings Aehabl. .tlon infants welcome, meals Interested in trttding for $21 ...36 per month, Includes
ElectrlcaVRefrlgeratlon ...............................840
ServicEis, Inc., 18 an Equal applicants mUJt be at least Center located In Pomeroy. lnclilded, lots of activities for Farm acreage or for other many upgrades, delivery &amp;"
Equipment far Rent .....................................480
1'1'111...,_ _ _ _..., Opportunily Employer that 23 yra have a minimum ot 1
We are looldng lor
your child, days, nighl and Rentals 304.£75-2484 or sot-up. (740)385·2434
· Excavating ................................................... 830
1.118
enc~rages
workplace years 'of sale commerlcal profeseionale committed to weekends. $2.00 per hour. cell 304·593·1481
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 610
lfFu WANfED
diversity.
driving "'parlento, Hai. Mal
provlclng 0&gt;1ctlltnl posl
Can 256·1438 ask lor
USED HOME SALE
Farm• for Aent ............................................-'430
Farm
Help
needed, CertifiCation, Clean MVA
acute rehablllta1ion and
Nice 3BR Singlewides
Farrne,far Sole ......................" ..................... 330
WORKERS NEEDED Elq)erlence whh oporotlng and good job o!Bbllily. We
peel surgery BOMC8111o
from 12900 Down Pmt
100
For Leou ..................................................... 490
largo Farm ~uip .. would bo offer a full slata ol benoflla rosidentstranslllonlng back
·
Midwest 740-8211-2750
~-le
Assemble crafts, wood on
¥.., · Hourly plus 401 (k) and vacation
-.
For""
............. ;..;....................................... 585
advantago.
horns after being
B·~
a.le
1i
-~
•go
items.To
$480/wk
Materials
1r
the
.......,...:
Uinl~
l.oJs &amp;
For..., or r~..... .................................... .
wages. Send Resumoo to pay. For Information cootacl dfschaiVed om
,....,...
Ol'l'olmJNm
Fruita Vogellblea ..................................... 580
provided. Free information CLA·5 c/o Point Pleoaani Kont at 800·482·9365 or
tal as well as raaldents
ACRFACE
-~ R
450
pl&lt;g. 24Hr, 601-428-4649
•
All In
IIIli oatata advortl•l"11
~
F
II hau
Register 200 Main St, Pt. visit our web sne
at requlrlng iong term care.
thla ,...,~ 1,
5
8
1 acre lot on E. Bethel Ch.
An Excellent way - lo oarn Pleuant. wv 26650
· ...,..rUrydtilg oom E.O,E.
,H you
•NOTICE•
10 lhe Flderol
Qen....,l Houilng.....,.....................................
Ad. No Septic, Great ffat lot
GlvHway ..............................;....................... 040
money, The New Avon.
toitowlng quati!ICallono:
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Fair Houelng AC1 ol1968
with driveway, dose to town
Happy Ado ....................................................OSO
Coli Marilyn 304•882 •2645
FEDERAL
Owner
Operator
• Excellent Cllnlcalsklls
lNG CO. rocommen~s
.wllloh mak.. l1111ogolto
446-9383 Asking $13,000
Hay a Gra~.................................................640110
PO$TAL JOBS
Opportunities:
R&amp;J
• Comp&amp;llion and CUI!hot you do business wHh
advortiH "any
Help Want.....................................................
AVONI All Areosl To Buy or $17 89··$28 27 •
hi· Trucking • Marietta, Ohio
tomer services
""'
k
d
pralannco, tlnollaflon or
lllr now r
paUJI'e yau now. an
26 acres with timber, M8son
Home Improvements................................... 810
SeD. Shirley Spearo, 304·
·,
.,
!roe hOI opportunlllee available • The ablllly ond dlslre. to .
dlac~mlnotlon biHd on
Homel for Sale ................................... ~........ 310
675·1429.
lng. For application and
tor Owner Operators within
perfotrrl in a fast-paced
NOT 10 send money
race, c~or. religion, ...
Co. WV 10 minutes from
ttousehold Gooda ....................................... S10
~--=--=---- govemement }ob Info, call the region. We feature
environment
through the mail until you
fllmlllel11atua or nttlon~l bridge. 740·709-1 166
HouHI for Rent ''"'"""""'''"""'"'"""""""""'"""""'410
Bartenders Gallipolis area. American Assoc. of labor 1· weekly settlement&amp; and trail· • Strong laaderahlp Skills
have Investigated the
Mlgln, or •ny lntenUon to
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
tn Memorlam ..........:.........,........................... 020
Exp. prefarred. Honesly and 913-599·8226, 24111rs. emp. er rental. Operat0!81hould And you- looking lor
offarlng.
maka an1 auch
RENT. 1031 Georges Cre!t(
lnaurence ................................................. ~ ... 130
dependability required. 740· serv.
have newer equipment and
tht chance to lnlke,1
preft,.,ce, llmllltlon or
Rd, 441·1111
Lawn Garden Equlpment ..................:..... 660
44 1·7202, leave a meuage. FUll Tlms Receptionist need- frame type tralers. For more
dllfwlrtelln Nuralngi
MONEY
dlacrtmlnltlon."
Llvelltock..........................................:........... 630
Courtside Bar &amp; Grill now ed (n . busy Doctor's Office. Information • contact Demls n Wlnt to tllk to
I
l..oAN
This new.pa~per will not
Pnme residential building lot
Lo1t and Found ........................................... 060
taking applications tor expe· Pick up applications at Suits at 800-462·9365
Please contaa1:
knowingly Kcept
in Rio Grande on la~e Dr.
Lota I Acreage ............ ~ ................................ 350
rienced grill and fry cooks. 112,
Pleasant
Valley
DebtMe Wayland, Staffing
advertiHmentelor rul
$24,900 . Phone 260·495·
Mlecellaneoua ...............................................170
Apply in person or call Hospital. Resumes m&amp;y be Aasumeauappllcatlonator
Coofdlnator
**N"OTI(;E**
eelatewhlchisln
5114
MIICIIIIaneoua Merchlndlte.......................540
(740144 t_ 9371 to set up an attached to the application Manager and Lifeguards at · Phone: 740·992-6606
vlo..tlon of the lew. Our
Mobile Home Repalr .................... :...............B60
interview. 308 2nd Avo..
the Siracuse London , Pool
Fax: 740·992· 2678
Sm
C
roodera oro h11oby
Mobile Home• for Rent ...............................420
Gallipolis.
Gallipolis Career College Ia for the 2008 Season are
Or apply In pereon at:
Borrow
art. ontact
Informed tltlt 111
Mobile Homeo for Sale................................320
=='----~- seoklng psrt·tlme faculty being accepted. Reaumea
3575g Rocklprlngs Rd
the Ohio Oivislon ot
dwotllnaa aclva~laod In
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Do
enjoy decorating?
members iii the ,accounting, can be delivered to the office
Pomaroy, 0H 46769
Flnanelal
Institution's
this newtpaper are
r-.10
HtlUSI-l&gt;
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelere ..........................740
Become a Home Interior computer and medical office at the Clerk-Treasurer at
EJCI:endlcare Health
Office at Consumer
evela.ble on •n equel
tURRENT
Mualcallnetrumenta ................................... 570
Consultant and receive administration programs. A 2581 Third Street Of mailed
Services 1a an Equal
Att8irs BEFORE you refi.. ~.::•:PP:•:nu~n~lly~bl~..
=o.~~
Pe.-.onelt ..................................................... OOS
$500 in Merchandise fo.r minimum ol a Bachelors to P.O.Box 266, SyracuH,
Opportunity Employer
nlnce your home or ::Peta for Sale ................................................ 560
only $991 Make a profit ar Degree is required. E-mail OH 45779 on or before
encouraging~ peace
obtain a loan. BEWARE Duplex for Sale on Land ~~~~~~-. :.~~~e~~=
Plumbing Haatlng .................................... 820
decorate your· homo on a cover loUor ond reoumelo: March 31 , 2008.
diversity
ot requests for any large COntroC1. 740·992·5858.
M. plus dep.,Coll 740-6 96 •
adVance payments of
• · Profeaalonal Servtces ................................. 230
45 % dlscounll Offer end ldanlckiOgalllpollscarear·
Radio, TV
CB Repalr ............................... 180
lhls month.
con Robin colpge.odu or lax to 741J.
-~-=::-::---:-:-- foeo or Insurance. Call the Gallipolis walk to everything . 1106 or 591·0530
Real Eatate Wanted ........................, ............ 360
Martin 304·372·7080
or 446-4124
l........._dent Contractor
POST OFFICE NOW
Office of · Consumer Like new 4BR, 2 bath, den -----.,..---:C:- .
'"'"'l'""'
Affairs toll tree at 1 966
1 l nd
ct
2BA In Evans He1gt1t. 1tv
ISO
Schoola tnllrucllon.....................................
304·532·1272 ·
H 1 anted 11 Ders1 Homo
Canlsr Needed For
HIRING
· • no mont. a cqntra or Schools. Small pets con~d·
Soed ' Plant a Fertilizer .............................. 650
Ge p wH
741J.892 5023 New&amp;pii!IOr Dollwry At 35·
AYg. Pay $20/hr or
278.()(103 lo loorn W the teke over loan wlfll down ered. $450/monlh. Dap. Rot.
SHulllonoWanted .......................................120
Experienced COL drivers roup ome,
•
SlavoBranch·5&amp;20'MI, Rd·
$571&lt;/yr,lncludeO
mortgage broker or payment$1259month 740·
_
339 2494
1
Sp8Ce for Rent .............................................46Q
with tanker and hazmat cart. Hiring 1 part·time to full·tlme
Buftak&gt; Area Earn about
Fedlfal Bentfttl, QT.
lender
Is
properly 645·7889
needed. Local 1rlps, 740· employee . Would prefer
$1,800 mon
, .....1 beloro
Oflored by El1am Sorvlces, lconsed. (This Is a public
Sportlnn Goodo ........: .................................. 520
' · SUV'1 for
•
720
388 8547
""
aer·•ca
onnou tlcemont Small 2 Br. house,Racine 2br, in Pt. Pleasant. Deposl1
experience .
In 8JtP8flS811 Approximately
4
not oftertd wJ USPS whO
vi
~715
------rs1 , 1
1 1
lrdm tho Ohio Vallay areoi 2 oulbuildlngs,carport, required $450 month, 304Truckl for oale ............................................
ExpefienC::ed hair stylist, compute pnnt ng or Y ny
hours 1 day Deper.ldable
l'llrll.
on appro11. 1 acre.Asking 593·5363 or 304·593·0128
UphotFaterz~·t""'""''""'"""'""""': ................; : bring resumo to 'Modern ~longs. spColl 304.£75-3952 1/0hlcle a roost CALL I··
1·1!88·5-42·1531
~P:ubl=lsh:ln~g~Com~p~an:y:)::!..!5-4~5~,000. 740·949·25:1~3 BR, 1 bath, FR. Besement
ana or"" e...............................................
Rellsctlons In 1\Jppers
om- m
800·982-6397 Ext t709
,..
2 car garage, Rt t4t 2 m.
- • WllllllidtoBuy ............................................. 090
Plalns,Oh(740)667-6749
IT Technician. Must h a v e - - - - - - - - - - - - - tram town, $700 includes'
expenonC.. Fu resume 10 , Poet Offtco Now Hlrlngl
Welders noeded. 1yr. exparl• Wanted to Buy- Farm SuppHea ..........,....... 620
~...- 1 wtr/swrllra&amp;h S650 dep. 446. ' Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Oul~de SolesPos~ion.Musl 741).446•9104
Avg. pay $20/hr. 57Ktyr,
once.
&amp; bene·
4824
Wllllted to Rent ............................................ 47,0
have experionco wrtli oporIncl. Fed. bon., OT. Offorod 1111. Sond iuumn to: CLA
Yerd Sate- Galilpoila ...............:.., .................072
o1ing farm equipment and Midnight Clerk needed at A1 by Exam Services, not off. Box 103, c/o GoMipolll Dolly
4 Bedroom House tor Rent
· 1 Yard Sote-Pameroy/Midclle ......................... 074
computers. Fax Resume lo 35 VIdeo &amp; Bookslore 304·
w/IJSPS who hlroo.
Trlbuno, PO Box 489,
(740) 446-4060 Of 387-7762
Yard Sole-Pt. PIHHnt ...........................: .... 078
740-4-4&amp;9104
'
937-4900
H!86·506-9119
Golllpolll, Ott 45831

fOUND

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CLASSIFIED INDEX

a

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.~r=u~ ~.69~011~~~

•

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111 "'- _,., -··

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°

a

you

vou

a
a

Sale..............................................

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�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 14,2008

www.mydaily!Jentinel.com

e :r lrL,-•Ail,;,FORI I\RI1\i .RENTiOIENTS- ,.I~ r ~ H,.l•O-rioFORiiiAii~iiiii-.,.1 ;Are yc;&gt;u 65·
~ Bed;oom House in

Ellm View
Apartments·

Syracuse $500/month +
deposit Hud App. No Pets. • 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
(304)675-5332 - weekends • Central heat &amp; NC
740-591-0265
• Washer/dryer hookup
House tor Rent. 3 bedroom • All electric· averag1ng
house in Pomeroy $425 Mo. $50·$60/month
• Owner pays water. sewer,
plus deposit 740·742·1903
trash
'
House for Rent. 3 bedroom
(304)882·3017
house in Pomeroy $425 Mo.
plus deposit 740·742·1903.
House or Rent Racine Area.
No pels. Call 740·992-5858

420 MOBILE HOMES
FORR~T

04 Monte Carlo SS, k&gt;aded,
garage kepi, well maintained, leather, heated
seats. great cond. $13,600.

4. gift certificates. to
Timberline Four Seasons
Resort for 2 days. $1,000.00
value. will sell far SJOO.OO or
best offer. For more InformatiOn. call 740·742·2376

740-441-9059 or645- t 191

2001 Ford ZX2. 2 door, 130k

JET
miles, clean, runs great.
AERATION MOTORS
$3, 199, 304·674·5055 Greet
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In on Gas
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
800·537-9528.
86 Jeep CJ7, Make Oflor
441 -7514 or 256-6926
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Quality cars, trucks, 'vans
For
Concrete,
,Angle, starting at $1500 to $8300.
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel Financing ·available with
Grating
For
Drains. warranty.
COOK
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L MOTORS 328 Jackson Pike.
For Lease: 2nd floor. spa· Scrap Metals Open Monday, _740'11"'
·44·6··0 1~0~3- - - - ,
cious. 3 bedroom, unfu r· Tu esday, Wednesday &amp;
TRUCKS
nished apt. In Victorian Friday. sam-4:30pm. Closed
FOR SALE
hOuse on City Park. Thu rsday,
Saturday
&amp; "--.,.;liiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-.,1
Excellent condition. HVAC. Sunday. (740)446-7300
Off
street
parking .
1967 Ford dual' wheel dump
$600fmonth plus utilities Tiffany gown , ivory w! gold truck. Looks rough, runs
Security · and key deposit ovurl ay. Size 4, Mermaid Iough. 446·2815
required. · No
pets . styl e. $100. Also, Precious - - - - - - - References required. 740· Prom tormaf gown, ivory w! 2004 Chevy Silverado. 4·3
446-4425 or 446·3936
. beautiful embroidery &amp; tra in. V-6, auto. AC, CD, 45k
Si ze 4 $250. 446·2815 ·
mil ... As~ng $9000. OBO
Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave,
·
645·871 2
Upstairs, All Utilities pd .
I'ETs
1BR, No Pets, Gallipolis.
FORSAI...E
2004 Ford Ra nger Edge ·
Call446-9523
-4X4. 20,000 miles-extended
=..:..:..::,..
h ld
P
warrenty,lots of extras.
Gracious Livmg 1 a.nd 2 9 mont o gray . arrol $13,250_. Call740-992·6282
Bedroom Apts. at Vt llage lemale, starting to talk, whia·
Manor and Riverside Apts. in ti e, wtcage. 740·742·3706. 79 Ford 9000 Truck, Rogers ·
Middleport. from $327 to _ _ _ _.....;___ 20 ton Lowboy Make offer .
$592. 740·992·5064. Equal Golden Retriever puppies. 9 441 ·7514 or 256-6926
Housin·g Opportunity.
wks old, (M) and (F) .$125.
each. First shots &amp; wormed. 95 1 ton Dodge Dually 4x4
Jordan Landing Apartments. 446-4105 after 4pm.
Make OHer. 740·441 -7514
2·3 Bedroom Apartme nts - - -- - - ' - - - or 256-6926
available. All utilities paid Ready to go wh ile miniature r;i'!:!"-~~:':"'--,
except' eledric. March Rent AKC SchnauZers, (740)416·
SUVS
Special $1 oo off Rent. 7403
RJR SALE
Please call· 304--674·0023 or
I \ll' I--.. [ 1'1'1 II "
304 -610:0776 for more
2001 blk lsuzu Rodeo, 4WD,
.\ I I\ I . ., It H 1,
..
~
6 cyl. Super clean, good
rto
FARM
shape. $6800. 446·2815

e

f115

2BR on Pnvate lot on
Shoestring Ridge, Gallipolis
city . schools. $550 rent
includes all utilities. $500
deposit 740-446-2847 or
645· 1668
2BR, 1 bath, 14x70 in Rio
Grande. WID, trash, water
paid. $375/month, $375
deposit. , Pets with written
permission! 254-5671

2BR, on private lot $450
• dep. + $450 per month rent
in Addison Twp. call (740)
645-34t 3 or (740) 367•0654
· .
"
2BA. on .. Private lot $550
dep. ·~ $550 per month rent
in Addison Twp. call (740)
'" 645·341 3 or (740) 367.()654
Mobile home for rent in the
Bidwell area. NO PETS.
. 740-441 ·5551
Mobile Homes for Rent
Apple Grove, WV Taking
applications, must be refi·
able with good references
ca ll 304·675·7059
Renters wanted Now! Free
Credit app. New 38R, 2BA,
spacious hOme. Application
D&amp;adline 3-11·2008. 740. 594·7962

t

I

r

=:...____

l!fl

..

==:..._-~information.

I

. MENT·---··
·-·F.Quti'

Newly remodeled apa rtment 2006
Kubota
87800
fo~ rent.
Downtown wllqader • 30 hp • 4wd • tUrf
Middleport. 740.985·3646. ·tires .· 114 hours. $12,500.
Newly renovated apt locat- 256·1871 or 339·2092
ed in Rio Grande, walk to - - - - - - - campus. $450/month. Dep.&amp;
Ret. 339-2494

r

4

FORx4
SALE

.,

Friday, March 14, 2008
: ALLEY OOP

www.mydallysenUnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

· o·r older?·

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

IU -

1 Rauld- 44 Dolame

5 WooA
8 Dirty pl...
11 Dorm
cllmbe&lt;s
13 Birthday
ccunt
14 Ull. .nn

If so, you qualify 'f or a

Senior l)tts.,oun t *
I.

'

/

•

when yo\ipay ·for a 6 or 12
. - ·-"
mont)l , su!?~c,rip~ ~~n on your
home delivei-ea:. ~lib:scription!
}

' ··!:i '

H~eJ.s

all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon beL -n
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

cfJa:llipoU• JBa:ilp tn:ribune
~}oint •lea•ant I\egi~ter
The Daily Sentinel
·6unba!'

Hill 's Self

liiBERT
BISSELL
CDISliUCnOI

Storage
29670 Bashan Roaa
Racine, Ohio

• New Homes
• Garages

45771
74().949·2217

~·

;

Hours

•

West
• J 8

Eul

9J954 2

, ·10 7 6

t82

t A5 4

4 AQJ 8

•

All Work

~------------------------------Subscriber's Name - - - - ' - -- - - -

Advertise
in this
space
for

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

: FRANK' &amp; EARNEST

Owner

..

actions are equivalent ... and ell ere
principle doomed to lailtn.'

•

II

BALLS 0' FIR&amp; It
ARE 'fA GONNA
ARREST ME .? .

HMMM ...

AW, WHAT TH' HECK-. IT'S FRIDA'( !!

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
N.W Gerage•

-

slble.
In yesterday's deal, West led a spade
agalnet throe n&lt;Hrump. which he lmmo·
diately learned was not the best start.
Then, when he got in with the club act,
he shifted to the heart two, telling his
pertner that ·he wanted to .-n tricks In
that sun, not tn spades. . .
This deal Is a fraternal twin.
Yoo are o1111ng, In the Eaat char. Against
three no-trump, your partner leads the
heenfour: three, 10, king. Dedarer plays
the diamond 1Q: llix, ieYen .. . ? How
would you plan the cleflnle?
Probably ycur first lhouglllla to .-n '"'h
the diamond aca and to retum the heart
seven. Yoo hope penner started with A·
J.x-x-• of hearts and can cosh loll' trid&lt;s
there.
·by Luis Campos
Maybe, though, your penner hae live
Celebrity Cipher crypll:vams ~ cteated ftr.m quotations by lam~ people, ~ n1 pesent
Ea::hlel!er In thedpherQnds ror another
weak hearts end four ,strong clube. How
TOilaVs clili: l equals W
do you llnow which?
.
,
You don't birt you .-1 you have
"EXPAWI
SYU
AUMUY
ID
CSV EXUN
patience. Allhcugh the dummy 1\as a ·
guaranteed entry, yciu shoUld hold up
the diamond ace until pettner cail ma~&lt;e . TSA'E CU KSVU LDYIU . " ·XRKOXYUN
a dlacard. Here, that 18 the third round.
CDWSYE"PA EXU UAV, UMUYNEXPAW
Yoo musi rely on partner to lteer you In
the right direction, n·he throws a klw PI S WSW . " · TXSYZPU TXSOZPA
club; return a heart .HoWever, here he
will pitch a hesrl wamlng you thai 11at .PREVIOUS SQUTION - "I prater~ make commcr cause will ltlose whose
aulltn1 a geed SOII'ce of lrlcka. Then,
weapons are guitars, banjos, fiddles and words.' ·Theodore Bikel
you ehculd lhtll to lhe club 10.

n

~~«&gt;W t&gt;Ji\ 1 su~

WV036725

TO

V.C. YOUNG Ill

K~OW

'{

. ...-....

992 62 15
i'Oinf'IO '{ (1 i111o

..

en

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Pallo and Porch Oeck1

25Yf'~ r'iloo,li

r..::

or the cards
are distributed so that successlslmpos·

'

Electrical &amp; Plumbing ..
Rooting &amp; Gutter•
Vlny' Siding &amp; Painting

Wtllll

45 Revealed
DOWN
19 Ener~etlc 46 Orchtatra
member
1 Hopper
21
47 Arreola
2 A Gabor
22 "Marta-" 48 White
3 52, to Livy 23 Best case
wader
4 Flood
. 24' Yield, as
49 Shout from
barrier
territory
the bridge
5 Shaggy
26 Currier
51 -Paulo,
bellle
andBrazil
6 Turi&lt;lah
28 Skiing
53 Hole In one
olfl~lol
mecca
54 Mr. Mineo
7 Workplace 29 Rush-hcur 55 Hause wing
extru
8 Grodual
30 ~::has
9 Polynesian
a skirt
carving
35 Dellghtln

does not understand them,

-w.tlm-tokca~.com

Room Addition• &amp;
Remodeling

away
43 VoHaor

Not at.the bridge table! There are prind·

: BARNEY

Hardwood Cabinewy And FurnHure

de vlvre
40 Fjord city
41 Startled
crlea

37 Slaved

Laurent
12 UPS
customer
17 Focutad

pies that are only doomed when partner

City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - - Phone'---~-~.~.~-------

.....

~~

10 -St

Jean·Paul Sartro wrote, 'All human

PEPi.

Address - - - - - - - - - - -- -

bean
&amp;1 Volt

34 Guy Hke
Hamlet
3&amp; Rlbaand .
chope

A matching pair
for North and East

PAY~OLL ·

60 Nutrltloue.

33 Boldly
tllllmpl

Opening lead: ¥ 4

per
month

Roger Manley·

23 Belief
24 --de-ate
25 Wile
oiOoralnt
27 DtllnNie
31 Before
32 Ouah over

· 9 AK Q
• 10 9 3
4 K4 3

Stop &amp; Compare

99 Beech Street
Mlddl ' rt OH

10 9 2

.K1075

$64

G;ime~ -6enttnel

callllla

.Soul.

141-992-1

In print
46 Pizza
topping
48 Auel
hti'Oino
50 Immature
52 Expunge
56 Kimono
r...ener
57 Coomlc

15 Oulllblt
16 Bar
ling-along
Ioree
· 18 Runalta
58 Stlc~"'"
course
design
20 Fuzzy lrultt 59 Hairpin
21 Thick with
curve
.

• Q9 6 3

1/14/1 mo. pel

I·ONE IUTO REPAIR

olclnemll

, 83.
t KQj87
• 76 5

Remodeling

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

DS-14-&lt;l8

• AU

• Complete

t $IJ&amp;t5'x10' ·"

'" 'ti&gt; 1D'x30'

Nortb

42 Ri&gt;at beef

Xlf''I(IH•

•

..

~AstroCORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Roam
Additions
Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

W~!I:!:

J&amp;L
Construction

.. . ~ll THtiN ~
00 THE EXII.C:T
OI'I'OSITE .

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

Manley• a
Recycling.

ay-.lco-Ooot
- · - 1S.20C8
You might acquire IOf"8 powerful dealrM

It*"•

tor certain luxury·
in the . y..r
ahead, but unleH you can Hilly afford
ttwn, think twloe about getting i'l over
your head. Make nHd and quality your
priority con-ollot10.

PISCES (Fob. ~Mar&lt;h 20) - If l/OU are

unyielding about making compromor conceulonl, thoee wtlh whom you
are dealing win tonow your INd and
won't budge an Inch. either. If you want to
get alonO, eue up a bit.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) - It you're

not on guard, some u,.Pieaeant i'elpon~
albllltln or duties not of your milking are
llket)! to become your· axcl~atv. Blllgn·
ment - O&gt;Mng to an individual WhO It an
expert at pauing the buck.
TAURUS (April 2o-May 20) Be
extr.n«y diJlgent about not letting an
lneldtlnt arl• w.lth an lndMdual you die·
like. Regardlea of what he or she uya
or csoea, don't ._,, It provoke you ln10
being the one who createe dileard.
GEMINI (May 21.JuM 20) - Thoee who
usually overtook and excuae your little
fcMbiM might not be . , generou• •t thla
time, eo ft behC:XW.• you lc be extra
mindful of your ·behaYkJr and What you
118\1.
'C ANCER (June 21 -July 22) - A pi.Uant .,....tionthlp you enjQy with eomeone
you like could be jeopa;rdlzed If you neg-lect to show reepect ~r thle peraon'a
vtewe and oplnkml. Ke.p uncompllmWI·
tary l'loughta to yoursetr.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) got your·
aelt entangled· In a commercial trantac·

TillS CONCLliDES M'(
REPORT ON TilE SON ..

.........,...........
5113 . . Sl• . . . . .n.DIGJIO
J411-182-31114

IM11'11118:11 . .12:18 Ill

PIYIIIGTOP PRICES f11

NOTICE TO CONTRAC·
TORS
Sealed proposals for
the Bedford Township ----~'-­
Gilkey Ridge Street
Public Notlca
Ladies Auxiliary Tuppers
Improvement Project,
Plains
Melge County, Ohio aa NOTICE TO CONTRAC·
par apaclllcatlona In TORS
Sunday, March 16
bid packat will be Sealed proposals ·for
11 am-1:30pm
. Portland
received by the Meigs the
C
o
u
n
I y Community
Center
Adults $7.50
Commissioners
at Elactrlcal
Project,
Children $4.50
their office at the Meigs County, Ohio as
CourHtouse, Pomeroy, per apaclllcatlons In
Baked Steak, Mashed Potatoes
Ohio 45769 until 1:00 bid packet will be
· .Gravy, Green Beans, Cole. Slaw,
pm ·April 3, 2008 and received by the Meigs
Roll &amp; Coffee/tea
than at1 :15 pm e1Hld C o u n 1 y
office opened and read ·Conlmlsaloners
at
aloud lor the following: their office at . the
Town.shlp Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Bedford
Oil key Ridge Street Ohio 45769 until 1:00
at the
Improvement Projec1
pm April' 3, 2008 and
. Point Pleasant Moose Lodge!!
This Is a Prevailing then at 1:15 pm at said
Wage project. See office opaned and read
· Sunday doors open at 2:00 pm
Speclllcetlona In bid aloud lor the following:
·Fourteen $1'00 games &amp; one
packet. Specifications, Portland Community
extra buy game that pays $1000
Electrical
and bid forma may ba Center
secured
at
the
otnce
ProJect
Refreshments served by the
of
Melgo
County This Is a Prevailing
Moose Lodge
Commissioners , Wage project See
Courthouae, Pomeroy, Spaclficallons In bid
Ohio 45769 Phone 740· packet. Specifications,
992·2895. A deposit of and bid forms may ba
Mizway Tavern
0 dollaro will be IICUred at the office
Tues Night Lady's Nighl Pool
required lor each set of of
Melgi
County
plans lind spaclflca- Commlsaloners,
Tournaments Thursday Nights at 1::30
Ilona, check mada . Cour:thouse, Pomeroy,
Band Fri. Club House Drive 9· 1
payable to·. The 'f\111. Ohio 451611 Phone 74&lt;&gt;Band Sat AMIX 9-1
amount
will
be ·992·2195. A deposit of
returned within thirty · lf aollari · will be
(30) days alter racelpt required lor each Nl of
. of bkla.
plan• ~nd apeclfica·
-~ldl: Each bid must be tiona, check made
accompanied by ellher payable to·. The full
will
be
a bid bond · In an amount
Nail·Tech or Stylist
amount of 100% of the returned within thirty
bid amount with 1 (30) day• allor receipt
Cutting Connection
aurety 1attafactory to of bldo.
.,
Point Pleasant, WV
the aloreuld Melga Each bid must be
1·304·593·0825
C o u n t y accompanied by either
Commissioners or by a bid bond In an
certified
check, amount of 100% of the
caahlere check, or tat- bfd amount with a
ter of credh upon a aol· surety satisfactory to
vent benk In the the aforesaid Mtlgs
amount of not less C o u n t y
than 10% of the bid Commlaslone111 or by

111-••·-•••nla
.CIIIIWIICIIItlrlln•..... .
IIIIII!MIIIIIIII'II

Dinner

Spring Arrivals
Are Here!!

Men &amp; Women's
NIKE SHOX,
K-SWISS, KEDS,
SANDALS plus
Many Many More!!
Hurry while the
selection is good!
Across from the City Park

Lafayette Mall
300 2nd Ave . Gallipolis. OH
7404419010
.

Mon • Sat 9am • 5pm

Broad Run Gun Club
Shoot Match
Sunday, March 16th
12 Noon
Factory 22

P.O. H. Bingo

. ICIIflrCifriiiPrlelll

:COW 'and BOY

H&amp;H
Guttering
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Village of Pomeroy
will
be · accepting
ground maintenance
propoaala lor Beech
Grove · Cemetery. All
proposals must be
racelved by 12:00 pm
on Aprll11 , 2008 in the
Clerk's office, 320 East
Main Street, Pomeroy,
OH. The maintenance
seasons bagins In the
last part of April
through
mid
September 2008. This
will Include mowing,
weed eating, etc., with
contractor providing
their own equipment
end supplies. Also
contractor must provide their own lnsur·
ance. Cemetery must
ba maintained 2 to 3
IImas per month In viet
periods and .1 to 2
times par month In dry
periods. Contractor
will ba paid on completion of each completed
mowing and ·With the
Utlsfactlon
· of
Pomeroy
VIllage
Pomeroy
Council.
Village
Council
~&amp;serves the right to
accept or reJect any or
all proposals.
Kathy Hysell
Clerk/Treaaurer
Village of Pomeroy
(3) 14, 24, 28

SEEMS UKE EVEIIY TIME

YOU PICK UP THE PAPEII,

YOU IIEAD ABOUT ANEW
E. mu CIJTIAEAK.

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding. Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded

L

740-653-9657

Don'

lfS LIJ&lt;E YOU
CAN'T EAT ABU!GEJ1
~YWRE

WITHOUT
WO!II1YING IF lfLL ··'
BE YOUII LAST.

SO YOU'RE
THE WRONG 01£
TO TAU&lt; TO
ABOUTTHIS. .
VA THtjj(?

(:

.

t1on unleu you underetand what yau're
getting lnlo and are pr.pared to handle
allhli ramlflc8.tlont. What• being ott.red

;GARFIELD
AH! A QUII!'T

&lt; &lt;l \ &lt; I(I I I
(ll'&gt;.C.II(l( lltl \

Coricrate Removal
and Replacement

MNINGt AT HOME!

~RK!
rorr-RK!
BARK!

At!. A OUI8f 8VI!NIN6
II!HIN!i' THI ~Me

...~~..~......~__..!,

MEG I l;N . , pl!lllC!III~

III
I
•

.

.

11'•~~:::~~"9:
dMlop from
Na. 3 below.
)'0&lt;1

ll8p

PRINT N!)M8fRED ,.
. lETIUS

UN~lE

ANSWU

FORI '

.

111111111

SCRAM.u1S ANSWHS_~I NA
bitt« - &amp;say - Zippy- ~otwn - VIRTUES
Afamous aetmt CHM:ellllid, "lbe problem witb people wbo
bal'!l no vices is that they're p111y sun .to haw: some annoying
VIR1UES."
.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

could be miiiHdlng.
·
VIAGO (Aug. 23-Stpl. 22) - Be Cll!efUI
not. to be drawn Into the tNnklng of
someone

Wno

Ia buicl;lly a negative

lndi'Jidual and about whom you' don't ·
know too much. 'rtlu could be borrowing
trOuble that you don't need.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ot. 23) - lnotood ol
encouraging thOH around vou who are
11ruggllng, yOu could make matters
woree by criticizing ttwtlr eflorta.

I I 1\IC.

.....

HistorianS tell us about the
past and economist about
tbe t1tnn, thus oo!y the .

~

~r

comment&amp; wquld make for a very
unpiHHnt day for alllnvotv.d.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - 'lbu might
Wrongly thl~ you nMd to play up to a
oel'lllln pei"'IM In order 10 get In hie or her
good giiCII. In rullty, by net being l/OUr·
Mit, you rlek reJection quicker - and you
may oOme off u a phony.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doo. 21) - Tho
baek: rul.. o1 the hounhold could
"-me vatolflo w
a olototontJ

-In

manner. Everyone, from the leut of
..... 10 ... lop lfoll, 01\aUid . .

-!Od .

wf!h r.opoct and undtr'ltondlng.
CAPRICORN (Dod. II.Jan. It) ·Oplnlorol tormoo at IIIII time might not oa
rwprw~•lllillw of YD\IP Ull.lal talrnHI.
~. the-..-yo~ drow
oro IPIIO lie quilt ononecue onct aau•
)'OU nofllng but grtot !WI ..~ .
AQUA ..IU. (Jon. fiO.~Ib. 18) Handling h joint Iundt or _ , ... rar
you- onct - . . might not lie one of

~~e!.'tr~
28 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured

your bel1or talonll 1t thlo limo. .

--·

lncllffti'WIOI to clltllll and ....,........
In Oiltrlllutloft 10 1M Ink In

WV0421B2 Free Eetlml

BOUPTONUTZ
lllti.L.,.f' I+IWP &lt;,bl

l'llti808li'T?

I

1

I

••
f
~

l;rs::~-(
I

•

_______ _______ ____________ --- .
.,

.,...

~

- ·---- - -·-

- ill•M-Io&lt;i

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 14,2008

www.mydaily!Jentinel.com

e :r lrL,-•Ail,;,FORI I\RI1\i .RENTiOIENTS- ,.I~ r ~ H,.l•O-rioFORiiiAii~iiiii-.,.1 ;Are yc;&gt;u 65·
~ Bed;oom House in

Ellm View
Apartments·

Syracuse $500/month +
deposit Hud App. No Pets. • 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
(304)675-5332 - weekends • Central heat &amp; NC
740-591-0265
• Washer/dryer hookup
House tor Rent. 3 bedroom • All electric· averag1ng
house in Pomeroy $425 Mo. $50·$60/month
• Owner pays water. sewer,
plus deposit 740·742·1903
trash
'
House for Rent. 3 bedroom
(304)882·3017
house in Pomeroy $425 Mo.
plus deposit 740·742·1903.
House or Rent Racine Area.
No pels. Call 740·992-5858

420 MOBILE HOMES
FORR~T

04 Monte Carlo SS, k&gt;aded,
garage kepi, well maintained, leather, heated
seats. great cond. $13,600.

4. gift certificates. to
Timberline Four Seasons
Resort for 2 days. $1,000.00
value. will sell far SJOO.OO or
best offer. For more InformatiOn. call 740·742·2376

740-441-9059 or645- t 191

2001 Ford ZX2. 2 door, 130k

JET
miles, clean, runs great.
AERATION MOTORS
$3, 199, 304·674·5055 Greet
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In on Gas
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
800·537-9528.
86 Jeep CJ7, Make Oflor
441 -7514 or 256-6926
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Quality cars, trucks, 'vans
For
Concrete,
,Angle, starting at $1500 to $8300.
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel Financing ·available with
Grating
For
Drains. warranty.
COOK
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L MOTORS 328 Jackson Pike.
For Lease: 2nd floor. spa· Scrap Metals Open Monday, _740'11"'
·44·6··0 1~0~3- - - - ,
cious. 3 bedroom, unfu r· Tu esday, Wednesday &amp;
TRUCKS
nished apt. In Victorian Friday. sam-4:30pm. Closed
FOR SALE
hOuse on City Park. Thu rsday,
Saturday
&amp; "--.,.;liiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-.,1
Excellent condition. HVAC. Sunday. (740)446-7300
Off
street
parking .
1967 Ford dual' wheel dump
$600fmonth plus utilities Tiffany gown , ivory w! gold truck. Looks rough, runs
Security · and key deposit ovurl ay. Size 4, Mermaid Iough. 446·2815
required. · No
pets . styl e. $100. Also, Precious - - - - - - - References required. 740· Prom tormaf gown, ivory w! 2004 Chevy Silverado. 4·3
446-4425 or 446·3936
. beautiful embroidery &amp; tra in. V-6, auto. AC, CD, 45k
Si ze 4 $250. 446·2815 ·
mil ... As~ng $9000. OBO
Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave,
·
645·871 2
Upstairs, All Utilities pd .
I'ETs
1BR, No Pets, Gallipolis.
FORSAI...E
2004 Ford Ra nger Edge ·
Call446-9523
-4X4. 20,000 miles-extended
=..:..:..::,..
h ld
P
warrenty,lots of extras.
Gracious Livmg 1 a.nd 2 9 mont o gray . arrol $13,250_. Call740-992·6282
Bedroom Apts. at Vt llage lemale, starting to talk, whia·
Manor and Riverside Apts. in ti e, wtcage. 740·742·3706. 79 Ford 9000 Truck, Rogers ·
Middleport. from $327 to _ _ _ _.....;___ 20 ton Lowboy Make offer .
$592. 740·992·5064. Equal Golden Retriever puppies. 9 441 ·7514 or 256-6926
Housin·g Opportunity.
wks old, (M) and (F) .$125.
each. First shots &amp; wormed. 95 1 ton Dodge Dually 4x4
Jordan Landing Apartments. 446-4105 after 4pm.
Make OHer. 740·441 -7514
2·3 Bedroom Apartme nts - - -- - - ' - - - or 256-6926
available. All utilities paid Ready to go wh ile miniature r;i'!:!"-~~:':"'--,
except' eledric. March Rent AKC SchnauZers, (740)416·
SUVS
Special $1 oo off Rent. 7403
RJR SALE
Please call· 304--674·0023 or
I \ll' I--.. [ 1'1'1 II "
304 -610:0776 for more
2001 blk lsuzu Rodeo, 4WD,
.\ I I\ I . ., It H 1,
..
~
6 cyl. Super clean, good
rto
FARM
shape. $6800. 446·2815

e

f115

2BR on Pnvate lot on
Shoestring Ridge, Gallipolis
city . schools. $550 rent
includes all utilities. $500
deposit 740-446-2847 or
645· 1668
2BR, 1 bath, 14x70 in Rio
Grande. WID, trash, water
paid. $375/month, $375
deposit. , Pets with written
permission! 254-5671

2BR, on private lot $450
• dep. + $450 per month rent
in Addison Twp. call (740)
645-34t 3 or (740) 367•0654
· .
"
2BA. on .. Private lot $550
dep. ·~ $550 per month rent
in Addison Twp. call (740)
'" 645·341 3 or (740) 367.()654
Mobile home for rent in the
Bidwell area. NO PETS.
. 740-441 ·5551
Mobile Homes for Rent
Apple Grove, WV Taking
applications, must be refi·
able with good references
ca ll 304·675·7059
Renters wanted Now! Free
Credit app. New 38R, 2BA,
spacious hOme. Application
D&amp;adline 3-11·2008. 740. 594·7962

t

I

r

=:...____

l!fl

..

==:..._-~information.

I

. MENT·---··
·-·F.Quti'

Newly remodeled apa rtment 2006
Kubota
87800
fo~ rent.
Downtown wllqader • 30 hp • 4wd • tUrf
Middleport. 740.985·3646. ·tires .· 114 hours. $12,500.
Newly renovated apt locat- 256·1871 or 339·2092
ed in Rio Grande, walk to - - - - - - - campus. $450/month. Dep.&amp;
Ret. 339-2494

r

4

FORx4
SALE

.,

Friday, March 14, 2008
: ALLEY OOP

www.mydallysenUnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

· o·r older?·

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

IU -

1 Rauld- 44 Dolame

5 WooA
8 Dirty pl...
11 Dorm
cllmbe&lt;s
13 Birthday
ccunt
14 Ull. .nn

If so, you qualify 'f or a

Senior l)tts.,oun t *
I.

'

/

•

when yo\ipay ·for a 6 or 12
. - ·-"
mont)l , su!?~c,rip~ ~~n on your
home delivei-ea:. ~lib:scription!
}

' ··!:i '

H~eJ.s

all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon beL -n
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

cfJa:llipoU• JBa:ilp tn:ribune
~}oint •lea•ant I\egi~ter
The Daily Sentinel
·6unba!'

Hill 's Self

liiBERT
BISSELL
CDISliUCnOI

Storage
29670 Bashan Roaa
Racine, Ohio

• New Homes
• Garages

45771
74().949·2217

~·

;

Hours

•

West
• J 8

Eul

9J954 2

, ·10 7 6

t82

t A5 4

4 AQJ 8

•

All Work

~------------------------------Subscriber's Name - - - - ' - -- - - -

Advertise
in this
space
for

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

: FRANK' &amp; EARNEST

Owner

..

actions are equivalent ... and ell ere
principle doomed to lailtn.'

•

II

BALLS 0' FIR&amp; It
ARE 'fA GONNA
ARREST ME .? .

HMMM ...

AW, WHAT TH' HECK-. IT'S FRIDA'( !!

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
N.W Gerage•

-

slble.
In yesterday's deal, West led a spade
agalnet throe n&lt;Hrump. which he lmmo·
diately learned was not the best start.
Then, when he got in with the club act,
he shifted to the heart two, telling his
pertner that ·he wanted to .-n tricks In
that sun, not tn spades. . .
This deal Is a fraternal twin.
Yoo are o1111ng, In the Eaat char. Against
three no-trump, your partner leads the
heenfour: three, 10, king. Dedarer plays
the diamond 1Q: llix, ieYen .. . ? How
would you plan the cleflnle?
Probably ycur first lhouglllla to .-n '"'h
the diamond aca and to retum the heart
seven. Yoo hope penner started with A·
J.x-x-• of hearts and can cosh loll' trid&lt;s
there.
·by Luis Campos
Maybe, though, your penner hae live
Celebrity Cipher crypll:vams ~ cteated ftr.m quotations by lam~ people, ~ n1 pesent
Ea::hlel!er In thedpherQnds ror another
weak hearts end four ,strong clube. How
TOilaVs clili: l equals W
do you llnow which?
.
,
You don't birt you .-1 you have
"EXPAWI
SYU
AUMUY
ID
CSV EXUN
patience. Allhcugh the dummy 1\as a ·
guaranteed entry, yciu shoUld hold up
the diamond ace until pettner cail ma~&lt;e . TSA'E CU KSVU LDYIU . " ·XRKOXYUN
a dlacard. Here, that 18 the third round.
CDWSYE"PA EXU UAV, UMUYNEXPAW
Yoo musi rely on partner to lteer you In
the right direction, n·he throws a klw PI S WSW . " · TXSYZPU TXSOZPA
club; return a heart .HoWever, here he
will pitch a hesrl wamlng you thai 11at .PREVIOUS SQUTION - "I prater~ make commcr cause will ltlose whose
aulltn1 a geed SOII'ce of lrlcka. Then,
weapons are guitars, banjos, fiddles and words.' ·Theodore Bikel
you ehculd lhtll to lhe club 10.

n

~~«&gt;W t&gt;Ji\ 1 su~

WV036725

TO

V.C. YOUNG Ill

K~OW

'{

. ...-....

992 62 15
i'Oinf'IO '{ (1 i111o

..

en

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Pallo and Porch Oeck1

25Yf'~ r'iloo,li

r..::

or the cards
are distributed so that successlslmpos·

'

Electrical &amp; Plumbing ..
Rooting &amp; Gutter•
Vlny' Siding &amp; Painting

Wtllll

45 Revealed
DOWN
19 Ener~etlc 46 Orchtatra
member
1 Hopper
21
47 Arreola
2 A Gabor
22 "Marta-" 48 White
3 52, to Livy 23 Best case
wader
4 Flood
. 24' Yield, as
49 Shout from
barrier
territory
the bridge
5 Shaggy
26 Currier
51 -Paulo,
bellle
andBrazil
6 Turi&lt;lah
28 Skiing
53 Hole In one
olfl~lol
mecca
54 Mr. Mineo
7 Workplace 29 Rush-hcur 55 Hause wing
extru
8 Grodual
30 ~::has
9 Polynesian
a skirt
carving
35 Dellghtln

does not understand them,

-w.tlm-tokca~.com

Room Addition• &amp;
Remodeling

away
43 VoHaor

Not at.the bridge table! There are prind·

: BARNEY

Hardwood Cabinewy And FurnHure

de vlvre
40 Fjord city
41 Startled
crlea

37 Slaved

Laurent
12 UPS
customer
17 Focutad

pies that are only doomed when partner

City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - - Phone'---~-~.~.~-------

.....

~~

10 -St

Jean·Paul Sartro wrote, 'All human

PEPi.

Address - - - - - - - - - - -- -

bean
&amp;1 Volt

34 Guy Hke
Hamlet
3&amp; Rlbaand .
chope

A matching pair
for North and East

PAY~OLL ·

60 Nutrltloue.

33 Boldly
tllllmpl

Opening lead: ¥ 4

per
month

Roger Manley·

23 Belief
24 --de-ate
25 Wile
oiOoralnt
27 DtllnNie
31 Before
32 Ouah over

· 9 AK Q
• 10 9 3
4 K4 3

Stop &amp; Compare

99 Beech Street
Mlddl ' rt OH

10 9 2

.K1075

$64

G;ime~ -6enttnel

callllla

.Soul.

141-992-1

In print
46 Pizza
topping
48 Auel
hti'Oino
50 Immature
52 Expunge
56 Kimono
r...ener
57 Coomlc

15 Oulllblt
16 Bar
ling-along
Ioree
· 18 Runalta
58 Stlc~"'"
course
design
20 Fuzzy lrultt 59 Hairpin
21 Thick with
curve
.

• Q9 6 3

1/14/1 mo. pel

I·ONE IUTO REPAIR

olclnemll

, 83.
t KQj87
• 76 5

Remodeling

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

DS-14-&lt;l8

• AU

• Complete

t $IJ&amp;t5'x10' ·"

'" 'ti&gt; 1D'x30'

Nortb

42 Ri&gt;at beef

Xlf''I(IH•

•

..

~AstroCORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Roam
Additions
Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

W~!I:!:

J&amp;L
Construction

.. . ~ll THtiN ~
00 THE EXII.C:T
OI'I'OSITE .

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

Manley• a
Recycling.

ay-.lco-Ooot
- · - 1S.20C8
You might acquire IOf"8 powerful dealrM

It*"•

tor certain luxury·
in the . y..r
ahead, but unleH you can Hilly afford
ttwn, think twloe about getting i'l over
your head. Make nHd and quality your
priority con-ollot10.

PISCES (Fob. ~Mar&lt;h 20) - If l/OU are

unyielding about making compromor conceulonl, thoee wtlh whom you
are dealing win tonow your INd and
won't budge an Inch. either. If you want to
get alonO, eue up a bit.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) - It you're

not on guard, some u,.Pieaeant i'elpon~
albllltln or duties not of your milking are
llket)! to become your· axcl~atv. Blllgn·
ment - O&gt;Mng to an individual WhO It an
expert at pauing the buck.
TAURUS (April 2o-May 20) Be
extr.n«y diJlgent about not letting an
lneldtlnt arl• w.lth an lndMdual you die·
like. Regardlea of what he or she uya
or csoea, don't ._,, It provoke you ln10
being the one who createe dileard.
GEMINI (May 21.JuM 20) - Thoee who
usually overtook and excuae your little
fcMbiM might not be . , generou• •t thla
time, eo ft behC:XW.• you lc be extra
mindful of your ·behaYkJr and What you
118\1.
'C ANCER (June 21 -July 22) - A pi.Uant .,....tionthlp you enjQy with eomeone
you like could be jeopa;rdlzed If you neg-lect to show reepect ~r thle peraon'a
vtewe and oplnkml. Ke.p uncompllmWI·
tary l'loughta to yoursetr.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) got your·
aelt entangled· In a commercial trantac·

TillS CONCLliDES M'(
REPORT ON TilE SON ..

.........,...........
5113 . . Sl• . . . . .n.DIGJIO
J411-182-31114

IM11'11118:11 . .12:18 Ill

PIYIIIGTOP PRICES f11

NOTICE TO CONTRAC·
TORS
Sealed proposals for
the Bedford Township ----~'-­
Gilkey Ridge Street
Public Notlca
Ladies Auxiliary Tuppers
Improvement Project,
Plains
Melge County, Ohio aa NOTICE TO CONTRAC·
par apaclllcatlona In TORS
Sunday, March 16
bid packat will be Sealed proposals ·for
11 am-1:30pm
. Portland
received by the Meigs the
C
o
u
n
I y Community
Center
Adults $7.50
Commissioners
at Elactrlcal
Project,
Children $4.50
their office at the Meigs County, Ohio as
CourHtouse, Pomeroy, per apaclllcatlons In
Baked Steak, Mashed Potatoes
Ohio 45769 until 1:00 bid packet will be
· .Gravy, Green Beans, Cole. Slaw,
pm ·April 3, 2008 and received by the Meigs
Roll &amp; Coffee/tea
than at1 :15 pm e1Hld C o u n 1 y
office opened and read ·Conlmlsaloners
at
aloud lor the following: their office at . the
Town.shlp Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Bedford
Oil key Ridge Street Ohio 45769 until 1:00
at the
Improvement Projec1
pm April' 3, 2008 and
. Point Pleasant Moose Lodge!!
This Is a Prevailing then at 1:15 pm at said
Wage project. See office opaned and read
· Sunday doors open at 2:00 pm
Speclllcetlona In bid aloud lor the following:
·Fourteen $1'00 games &amp; one
packet. Specifications, Portland Community
extra buy game that pays $1000
Electrical
and bid forma may ba Center
secured
at
the
otnce
ProJect
Refreshments served by the
of
Melgo
County This Is a Prevailing
Moose Lodge
Commissioners , Wage project See
Courthouae, Pomeroy, Spaclficallons In bid
Ohio 45769 Phone 740· packet. Specifications,
992·2895. A deposit of and bid forms may ba
Mizway Tavern
0 dollaro will be IICUred at the office
Tues Night Lady's Nighl Pool
required lor each set of of
Melgi
County
plans lind spaclflca- Commlsaloners,
Tournaments Thursday Nights at 1::30
Ilona, check mada . Cour:thouse, Pomeroy,
Band Fri. Club House Drive 9· 1
payable to·. The 'f\111. Ohio 451611 Phone 74&lt;&gt;Band Sat AMIX 9-1
amount
will
be ·992·2195. A deposit of
returned within thirty · lf aollari · will be
(30) days alter racelpt required lor each Nl of
. of bkla.
plan• ~nd apeclfica·
-~ldl: Each bid must be tiona, check made
accompanied by ellher payable to·. The full
will
be
a bid bond · In an amount
Nail·Tech or Stylist
amount of 100% of the returned within thirty
bid amount with 1 (30) day• allor receipt
Cutting Connection
aurety 1attafactory to of bldo.
.,
Point Pleasant, WV
the aloreuld Melga Each bid must be
1·304·593·0825
C o u n t y accompanied by either
Commissioners or by a bid bond In an
certified
check, amount of 100% of the
caahlere check, or tat- bfd amount with a
ter of credh upon a aol· surety satisfactory to
vent benk In the the aforesaid Mtlgs
amount of not less C o u n t y
than 10% of the bid Commlaslone111 or by

111-••·-•••nla
.CIIIIWIICIIItlrlln•..... .
IIIIII!MIIIIIIII'II

Dinner

Spring Arrivals
Are Here!!

Men &amp; Women's
NIKE SHOX,
K-SWISS, KEDS,
SANDALS plus
Many Many More!!
Hurry while the
selection is good!
Across from the City Park

Lafayette Mall
300 2nd Ave . Gallipolis. OH
7404419010
.

Mon • Sat 9am • 5pm

Broad Run Gun Club
Shoot Match
Sunday, March 16th
12 Noon
Factory 22

P.O. H. Bingo

. ICIIflrCifriiiPrlelll

:COW 'and BOY

H&amp;H
Guttering
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Village of Pomeroy
will
be · accepting
ground maintenance
propoaala lor Beech
Grove · Cemetery. All
proposals must be
racelved by 12:00 pm
on Aprll11 , 2008 in the
Clerk's office, 320 East
Main Street, Pomeroy,
OH. The maintenance
seasons bagins In the
last part of April
through
mid
September 2008. This
will Include mowing,
weed eating, etc., with
contractor providing
their own equipment
end supplies. Also
contractor must provide their own lnsur·
ance. Cemetery must
ba maintained 2 to 3
IImas per month In viet
periods and .1 to 2
times par month In dry
periods. Contractor
will ba paid on completion of each completed
mowing and ·With the
Utlsfactlon
· of
Pomeroy
VIllage
Pomeroy
Council.
Village
Council
~&amp;serves the right to
accept or reJect any or
all proposals.
Kathy Hysell
Clerk/Treaaurer
Village of Pomeroy
(3) 14, 24, 28

SEEMS UKE EVEIIY TIME

YOU PICK UP THE PAPEII,

YOU IIEAD ABOUT ANEW
E. mu CIJTIAEAK.

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding. Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded

L

740-653-9657

Don'

lfS LIJ&lt;E YOU
CAN'T EAT ABU!GEJ1
~YWRE

WITHOUT
WO!II1YING IF lfLL ··'
BE YOUII LAST.

SO YOU'RE
THE WRONG 01£
TO TAU&lt; TO
ABOUTTHIS. .
VA THtjj(?

(:

.

t1on unleu you underetand what yau're
getting lnlo and are pr.pared to handle
allhli ramlflc8.tlont. What• being ott.red

;GARFIELD
AH! A QUII!'T

&lt; &lt;l \ &lt; I(I I I
(ll'&gt;.C.II(l( lltl \

Coricrate Removal
and Replacement

MNINGt AT HOME!

~RK!
rorr-RK!
BARK!

At!. A OUI8f 8VI!NIN6
II!HIN!i' THI ~Me

...~~..~......~__..!,

MEG I l;N . , pl!lllC!III~

III
I
•

.

.

11'•~~:::~~"9:
dMlop from
Na. 3 below.
)'0&lt;1

ll8p

PRINT N!)M8fRED ,.
. lETIUS

UN~lE

ANSWU

FORI '

.

111111111

SCRAM.u1S ANSWHS_~I NA
bitt« - &amp;say - Zippy- ~otwn - VIRTUES
Afamous aetmt CHM:ellllid, "lbe problem witb people wbo
bal'!l no vices is that they're p111y sun .to haw: some annoying
VIR1UES."
.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

could be miiiHdlng.
·
VIAGO (Aug. 23-Stpl. 22) - Be Cll!efUI
not. to be drawn Into the tNnklng of
someone

Wno

Ia buicl;lly a negative

lndi'Jidual and about whom you' don't ·
know too much. 'rtlu could be borrowing
trOuble that you don't need.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ot. 23) - lnotood ol
encouraging thOH around vou who are
11ruggllng, yOu could make matters
woree by criticizing ttwtlr eflorta.

I I 1\IC.

.....

HistorianS tell us about the
past and economist about
tbe t1tnn, thus oo!y the .

~

~r

comment&amp; wquld make for a very
unpiHHnt day for alllnvotv.d.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - 'lbu might
Wrongly thl~ you nMd to play up to a
oel'lllln pei"'IM In order 10 get In hie or her
good giiCII. In rullty, by net being l/OUr·
Mit, you rlek reJection quicker - and you
may oOme off u a phony.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doo. 21) - Tho
baek: rul.. o1 the hounhold could
"-me vatolflo w
a olototontJ

-In

manner. Everyone, from the leut of
..... 10 ... lop lfoll, 01\aUid . .

-!Od .

wf!h r.opoct and undtr'ltondlng.
CAPRICORN (Dod. II.Jan. It) ·Oplnlorol tormoo at IIIII time might not oa
rwprw~•lllillw of YD\IP Ull.lal talrnHI.
~. the-..-yo~ drow
oro IPIIO lie quilt ononecue onct aau•
)'OU nofllng but grtot !WI ..~ .
AQUA ..IU. (Jon. fiO.~Ib. 18) Handling h joint Iundt or _ , ... rar
you- onct - . . might not lie one of

~~e!.'tr~
28 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured

your bel1or talonll 1t thlo limo. .

--·

lncllffti'WIOI to clltllll and ....,........
In Oiltrlllutloft 10 1M Ink In

WV0421B2 Free Eetlml

BOUPTONUTZ
lllti.L.,.f' I+IWP &lt;,bl

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- ill•M-Io&lt;i

�•

Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, March 14,2008

ALONG THE RIVER

LiviNG

. Spring Rin~:
Things are beg1nning
to change around here ..., Cl

~

If you have il question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538; Gastonia, NC 28053

Sprint Cup
• Race: Food City 500
•
• Where; Bristol (Tenn.) Motor

•
'i'
i; •

•i

"·'

'

. ' 1&gt; Allnot\ no
Wl~ner. W&amp;i

~··

even

riot
the
· with the ·
• ~ tll8 comi)OUI\ds u~
lit Auenta Matot Speec!i", . ·

. '·

Speedway (.533 miles), 500
laps/266.5 miles:
• When: Sunday, March 16
• Last year'l winner: Kyle
.., Busch, Chevrolet.
1 Qualff)lnC reconl: Ryan New·
' man, Dodge, 128.709 mph,
' Maich 21, 2003.
• Race record: Charlie
Glotzbach , Chevrolet, 101.074
mph, July 11, 1971.
• Last - k: Kyle Busch has a
knack for distinctions, one of
which is that he's currently the
hottest driver in NASCAR. The
22-year-old from Las Vegas
was already the youngest driver ever to win a Cup race, a

distinction he claimed In

~· ltfollvac;,!•s~ . ··
. flnilhll,Torf Stewart, whO Slid;
, •tlfon't knC1W WhaU'II going 10 ·
, talie !D get (~) to give
use quality tire lh!l!:l\1!&amp; 5e{l8s

near-generic cars were In use.

At Atlanta Motor Speedway, he

became the first to win in a

car branded "Toyota." No word
yet on whether Busch is up for
a NASCAR mission to Mars.
The latest victory, the fifth of
his young but brilliant career, ,
merely put a cap on how fasfl.
ionable it Is to speak of Kyle
Busch's talent as ff he were
Bobby Fischer at a chessboard. Ted Williams at home
plate or Michael Jordan taking
flight from the free-throw line.

Nationwide

Craftsman Truck .

• Race: Sharpie

I Race; Kroger 250 ·
•Where; Martinsville (Va.)

Mini 300
•Where: Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway (. 533 miles),
300 laps/159.9 miles.
• When: saturday, March 15
· • Last JN('I wl1111r: Carl
Edwards, Ford.
• QuallfJinll recant: Greg
Biffle, Ford, 127.132 mph,
March 26, 2004.
i Race raconl: Harry Gant,
Buick, 92.929 mph, April 4,
1992 (250 laps); Carl Ed·
wards, Ford, 64.078 mph,
March 24, 2007 (300 laps).
• Last week: Matt Kenseth
drove a Ford to victory lane
inthe Nicorette 300 at At·
lanta Motor Speedway.

· BRISTOL DATA

Speedway (.526 miles), 250
laps/ 200.3 miles.
1 When: seturday, March 29
•Last rNr'l .,._,Mike
Skinner, TO)'Ota
• Qualllytnc NCanl: Mike
Skinner, TO)'Ota, 95.985
mph, March 31, 2007.
• Race NConl: Jimmy Hensley, Dodge, 74.294 mph,
Aprll17, 1999.
• Last Mel!: Kyle Busch, in
a Toyota, won the American
Commercial Unes 200 at
Atlanta Motor Speedway.

SAM HORNISH JR • .·

No..77

MOBIL

•

·• Spartans likely
· ·slam door on
-Buckeyes' llJCAA
toumey hopes.
See Page B1

.......
&amp;n r l (l
;s 'J' J£1 111;?::?11
r _.:..J.:J
.JI'. I - :JJ ........... J .

C•. tllip11li .., • \l.11·d1

lf1

_•ottH

Impact on Meigs plant unlaiown
mou s ruling Thursday, said
AEP cannot charge for the
construction of the plant
COLUMBUS
throu$h its regulated disAmerican Electric Power tribution operations, since
Co. cannot ·pass on to cus- power from the new plant
tomers the cost of building a would fall within the gennew power plant because it eration portion of the comviolates the 1999 law that pany's operations that the
restructured the regulation· Legislature allowed to be
of utilities, the Ohio deregulated under the
Supreme Court has ruled.
1999 law.
The court, in a unaniAEP had argued that
STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

J

Tony Stewart

1 DODGE

YI,Goody. .

Stewart wasn't
alone in his critl·.
cism of the ~res .
used at Atlanta Motor Speedway, but
he led the charge
and hit hardest.
'We're on such a
bad tire." he said.
'It's the worst tire
Stewart
I've been on in any
form of racing.... In all the other
professional (racing series),
Goodyear has exited ·... because
they can't compete. All these tires
are being dictated by·&amp; tire company
building tires thllt aren't fit for a
street car."
·

· n't fartng ·weH so far. Thli hiChest-finlshlng rookie at Atlanta
waa 25th-place Sam HamiSh Jr.
• Aweek eartler in las Vegas, it
was 33~1~-p~ace Darlo Franchitti.
In California, Regan Smith finished 31st.
1&gt; The reigning champion, Jimmie
Johnson, Is now 13th In points
· and also finiShed 13th in the
race.

why was the race uneventful in
terms of cr·ashes? "Look at the
lap times we were running."
,said Dale Earnhardt Jr. "We
were all !lying not to wreck."

I'DIIh'I'O _\ • \llddlt'IHII'I •

.

consiruction would fall
under the distribution category of "provider of last
resort." The court said it
may be able to recover the
co·sts of designing and
developing the plant that
way, but that the Public
Utilities Commission of
Ohio did not fully address
that provision in its ruling
that allowed AEP to recover its costs.

BY EUZABETH RIGEL
ERIGEL@MYOAtlYTRIBUNE .COM

OBITUARIES
John Clark,INASCAR This-

'

'

'

.

Yadlarau...'s once went
wlr..to-wlre In Brlltol
. On March 25, 1973, Cafe Yarbor·
ough's first Bri,stol Motor Speedway
victory was an exercise hi perfecllon.
He would win eight
more, but the first
one was special.
Yarlloroogh started
on the pole and led
all 500 laps.. No
other driver has
come close to duplicating this feat · YARIIOIIOUQH
at the .533-mlle
oval in northeastern Tennessae. Only
five other drivers have led every lap
of a major NASCAR race. The most
recent was Jeff Burton, who led
every lap at New Hampghire in
2000.

. Page AS
:. Ruby M. Carder, 89
• John Junior Carroll, 69
• 'Odie' O'Donnell; 78
• 1Jodie' Kapp Rose, 78
• Harland Sanders, 84

/ ·. "1

• -l

Horn ish one of sport's most accompli&amp;hed drive~ already
By Monte Dutton

"It's definitely a learning experi; ,
ence,"
said Hornish. "Next week will ·
NASCAR This Week
be differet~t, and each time we go'to
Two-time Indy · Racing League one of these races and get to run the
champion Sam Uornish Jr. is·one of full thing, I've got a better idea of ·
the more familiar names in a much- what I need out of the car the next
celebrated Raybestos Rookie class, time we come back.
"You know, it's.pretty difficult. You
but the transition has been difficult
for the driver ()f Roger Penske's No. want to go out there, and you want to
77 Mobil-1 Dodge.
· feel like you're making the right
Hornish, 28, is the only driver who changes and you're moving forward.
has twice ended up the highest-finish- ... It can be frustrating at times, but
ing rookie. That's the good news. Less it's part of the learning process.•
. impressive is the fact that Hornish
During the offseason, Penske got
. has yet to finish better than 15th and NASCAR officials to let him switch
is only 36th in the points standings.
points between Hornish and·another of
A more important consideration is his three drivers, Kurt Busch, who is
reaching the top 35 - Hornish's team eligible for an ex-champion's proviis also 36th in owner standings - in sional starting spot and used one to
the next race. After five races, auto- make the Daytona 500 field. That move .
matic spots. in starting fields are gave Hornisb a spot in the field for the
based on the current season's stand- season's first five races. The move
ings. That means if Hornish doesn't worked fine for Busch, who is lOth in
move up a spot, he will face the diffi· the Sprint Cup points standings.
cult task of securing one of eight slots . Tbe pressure's on, lhougb, for Horopen each week to drivers outside the nish, a native of Defiance, Qhio. He
top,35.
credited teammates Busch and Ryan

Newman, the Daytona winner, with
helping him make the difficult transition from Indy to stock cars.
"It's a learning year for us, and we
know that the best thing I can do is get
a whole bunch of time out there on the
race track," said Hornish.' "What
we're trying to do is just be smatt and
make it to the end of lhe races. · ·
"Kurt (Bu.sch) and Ryan (Newman)
have helped me in every possible way.
... It's just getting to know everybody
and leai'ning who you can run side-byside with, and them getting comfort·
able with you, too, .and feeling like
they can let you go because you'll let
them go next time."
"Sam doesn't say a whole lot," said
his crew chief, Chris Carrier. "He's
very quiet, and to me that shows con·
fidence and inner strength. There's
not an arrogant bone in his body, but
on top of that, down deep, there's a
fierce competitor."
·

Read more from Monte Dutton at
www.gastongazette.com

INSIDE
'·

•

J..,..... care vtrtulllly

· more Amerlan thM 111011

· • March proclaimed
·MRDD Awareness
Month. See Page A2
• Burglary try nets 2
. arrests. See Page A2 ·
• Local E!'riefs.
SeePageA3
:. Banquet rescheduled.
·SeePageA6
. • Emergency funds
90 to Gallia-Meigs CAA.
~ .P~geA6

Sixty-five years ago, 14 million of
, us men left our hOmes for years to
stop Japan's Tojo from invading our
shores, and years later, millions of
traitorous car buyers broughUapan
to our shores anyway. A Toyota in my
driveway? Neverl . ·

t'.ii.

Milo A. Potil

Brookings, S.D.
Some people never forge~ which
is their right. Most Toyota vehicles
sold In the United States are assembled by American workers, though. It~
one thing to hope the other manufa&lt;&gt;
. turers win. It's quite another to feel
Toyctta shoulant have a right ro compete. ·

4 SI!CI'IONS-

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
.Pomeroy, ' OH
(740) 992-2155,

l- 1·
vr
~J

r r

c:tA8IIC CAt lllmllmON I PUIS

"Es~
·•

Around Town

Let's Go Racin!!

Celebrations
'
'
Ciassifieds

'

,-·11-t"
Now Hlllng:

· • Ford a Motorcl'llft Part.
* EnglnH, Tranafer C1- a Tranaml881ons.
* Afllrmarket Rlplace,lllfl'lt SIIMt Metal a. Components
.• For All Mekn of Vehlc:ln
. ·

'·

HOLZER CLINIC
'

"

Subml1tod photo

Completion of the new Rio Meigs Center at Rock Sprlngs is near, as seen in the above photo. The center is expected to
meet needs targeted in a survey recently conducted by Rio Grande Community College lr1 its four-county district of Gallia,
Meigs ,- Jackson and VInton counties.
'

Opening soon

24

PAGES

Please- Audit. Al

STAFF REPOin'

NEWSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

and the distribution of
paper surveys to key stakeholders in areas of education, government and economic development in the
fo11r-county district.
According to the report,
respondents felt "the purpose of RGCC is, and
should remain, to serve the
communities in the local
area by providing a skilled
workforce for existing jobs
or a skilled workforce that
. will attract employers to
locate in this·area."
The new Bernard V. Fultz

grams, flexible scheduling,
workforce training and continuing education.
.
"Area residents would
'like RGCC to take a
greater leadership role in
the community, working
with local stakeholders. to
assess needs of local
employers so people can
live and work in the
region." the report states.
One · respondent stated
that sentiment as follows:
"The future of the community college lies in its ability
to adapt to the economy and

labor · market needs, said
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDOMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM
Brent Patterson, RGCC's
Meigs Center. director. In
POMEROY -A Point
addition to classroom and
Pleasant,
W.Va., woman has
office space, the center feabeen
indicted
on charges
tures two technology labs.
One · of the labs ·provides she embezzled money from
access. to high-tech com~ the Sternwheel Riverfest
puters and innovative ·Soft· Committee.
Five months after the
ware; the second lab can
indictment
was
first
serve as a distance learning returned by the grand jury,
lab, allowing for both the Helen Maxine McClintock,
receipt and transmissiorl' of 72, appeared before Meigs
educational and training County Common Pleas·
programs.
Court Judge Fred W. Crow
III
last week on a single
P........ Center, A2
count of grand theft.
During
McClintock's ·
.arraignment
hearing,
Assistant
Prosecuting
Attorney Matthew Donahue
said "the state believes
(McClintock) was engaged
in a pattern of embezzlement" from the sternwheel
Worllers
committee, which orgadismantle nizes aud operates the festiwhat was
val on Pomeroy 's riverfront
once the
each September.
·
White
A secret indictinent containing the charge against
Rock Salt
McClintock
was dated Nov.
Worlls iri
Minersville 19, 2007, and a warrant to
arresl her was issued the folwhich
lowing day, but McClintock
ceas,ed 1
was just served with the
operation
indictment
last week,
in the late
according
to
court
records.
1930s.
As a matter of local court
procedure, all indictments
returne~ QY . the Meigs
PIHH ... nmt..Al

Future of salt works landmark uncertain
'

A3

MORGAN CENTER Ohio Auditor Mary Taylor
recently released the audit
of Morgan Township for fiscal years 2005 and 2006.
The audit indicates that
the township's financial
activity was not properly
recorded and that the town-·
ship had a deficit of nearly
$16,000 in the general fund.
"(To.w.nship)
officials
must maintain proper
records of their financial
activity in accordance with
state law," Taylor said. "The
failure to do so increases the
potential for misspending of
public funds."
The audit reports that
township officials did not
properly identify the source
of all public funds the township received, nor did they
properly identify how the
money was spent. As a
result, auditors spent additional record keeping issues.
The audit also reveals that
the township had a general

New Fultz Cimter·to meet area's educational, training needs Stemwheel
Findings of the survey Center
for .
Higher ' labor market in the area."
has · been
were released this week. Education
The 13,500-square-foot theft results
of
the
study
were
both
structurally
designed,
Results
Fultz
Center features faciliRIO GRANDE - The based primarily on 25 and technologically, to ties designed specifically. to
opening of the new Rio face-to-face interviews, allow for expanded pro- meet such econoinic and in indictment

Grande Meigs Center will
.fultill a major . educational
need in southeastern Ohio
as identified by local citizens in a recently completed
study . sponsored by the
community college.
The study, conducted by
the Voinovich School of
Leadership and Public
Affairs, is a part of the community college'srcontinuing
effort to assess the educational needs of its local service district that includes
Gallia, Jackson,· Meigs and
Vinton counties.

INDEX ·

•
I
A LJ Tr . JIVl

ol. -l:.! . :\o. H

Township
addresses
concerns
in audit

the first time Stewart and Goodyear
have tangled, but these remarks will
earn himrespect in the garage. He
said what others were thinking and
certainly got his point across."

Althougll Sam Horttlsh Jr. has had'tonJ of sUccess • an IPIA 'lllliiiiMI', lllltllnlrt ~to IIASCAIIMIUIU jult ,it.

• \

Thursday's ruling sends ther action by the PUCO
the case back to the PUCO and the courts before deterfor reconsideration. The mining if it will build an
court did not order AEP to IGCC plant in Ohio.
AEP received approval
refund the $24 million it has
March
6 from the We st
collected from customers
for the cost of research and Virginia Public Service
development, but said it Commission to buold a
may do so pending another 629-megawatt IGCC plant
in .Mason County, W.Va.
PUCO ruling in the case.
AEP Utilities President The company ha s proRobert Powers said the rul- posed a similar facility for
ing did not provide the Meigs County.
In a news release
clarity needed to move forward with construction and Friday, AEP reaffirmed its
. the company w.ill await furPlease ... AEP,Al

NASCAR Tills Wtek'l Monte
Dutton pes lila tal&lt;e: "This Isn't

•

~ 1.,) (1

Court blocks AEP cost recovery plan

SPORTS

, " Tha Rl)'bestos Rooi&lt;Je class is·

same weekelld.
I' Hthe tire was so bad, then

{ H1io \ :dlt·\ Puhli~hin~ ( o.
'

.

• Atlanta continues to have at·
tellda~ trouble. The crowd estimate circulated after the race
listed attelldance at ·an esti·
mated 100,000." Amore accu·
rate, even liberal, estimate
would be about.30,000 less.
1&gt; The Wood Brothers, winners of
12 Atlanta races, failed to Quail·
fy for this one.
1&gt; Atlanta has produced three of
the 12 closest finishes since
electronic soaring was introduced In May 1993: Dale Earnhardt over Bobby Labonte by
.010 of a second on March 12,
2000; Kevin Hal'\lick over Jeff
Gordon by .006 oo March 11,
2001; and Edwards over Jimmie
Johnson by .02B on March 20,
2005.
• At present, Kyle Busch is the
points leader in both Sprint Cup
and Craftsman Trucks. He be. came the flrst driver ever to win
truck and Cup races on the

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs·counties

Ql Marchi&amp;

r
,.

SPRINT CuP SERIES

ObVIo\lsly aren't ~Pable or do: lng ~ H&amp;llt 110\'1." '&gt;
,.
: l&gt;,t!llnt.llowYlri' haii finished s~
·.. ·In ·:three consecutive Cup ra~s
,, .. AA$;

Fontana, Calif., on Sept. 4,
2005, when he was 20. Just
last year, the junior Busch (his
brother is Kurt) won the first
race in which next-generation,

c

• alld NASCAR de&amp;eNe, but they

Dreaming about colored eggs,
chocolate and ham?
It must be Easter, 01

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

C4

MINERSVILLE - During its
industrial heyday, Meigs County was
COmics
insert the leading producer of coal and salt
in the U.S., with,remnants of this past
Editorials
still
visible in physical reminders
A4
as what's left of The White
MoVies
cs such
Rock Salt Works in Minersville.
'
You've never heard of The White
Obituaries
As · Rock
Salt Works? If you've ·never
heard
of
it, more than likely you've
Sports
B Section
seen it along Ohio 124 with its tong
' A6 silent, stone stack protruding into
Weather
the sky. Currently, workers from
© 2008 Ohio Valley Publlshl"'l Co.
Jaymar Inc. of Cheshire appear to be
dismantling the old facility.
.
According to tbe . book Me1gs
• · PIHse see Landmark. A2
D3-5

,

'

·-photo'

,

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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="13738">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="13737">
              <text>March 14, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
