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                  <text>Spring Home
Improvement edition
inside today's Sentinel
'

i

PJt 88 •,The Dail y Sentinel

: _ ,1 f

) -

www.mydailysentinel.com

'-"'-

•

- - ---

Thursday,

~arch 23, 2006

-

,-..

Children's Choir
to perforn1, A6

-

e

Briets
Photo display at FAC in March
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

GALLIPOLIS - "A Lifetime o(Photography," an exhibi tion of the \vorks Galli a County nati ve Robert Eugene Wallace.
will be presented at the French Art ,Colony March 8-3 L
Wallace is a photographer and author ' of "Anxieties in the
Outhouse." The display is sponsored by Gallipclis Career
College. Saunders Insurance and Thomas Do-It Center.
An opening reception and book sign ing will be held at the
FAC on Saturday. March II from ·10 a.m. until noon for
Wallace's new book, "B uttercups in Her Hair."
The FAC galleries are open Tuesday through Fridayfrom 10
a.m. until 6 p.m .. and Sunday from I to 5 p.m.

,)0 ( ' FNTS • \'ol. :;,) , ~o. 1:; ,;

• Redmen split pair with
Cedarville. See Page 81

RUTLAND - The River City Kids production of "Willy .
Wonka and the Chocolate Factory'' will take place at 7 p.n\. on
both Friday, March 24 and Saturday, March 25 at Meigs
.
Elementary School in Rutland.
A matinee performance will begin at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday,
March 26, also at the schooL
·
Tickets for the perform ~nces are 011 sale at Hometown
Market, Middleport Department Store. Dan 's, Peoples Bank of
RIO GRANDE - Excitement is in the air
· Middleport and Farmers Bank of Pomeroy or at the door the
for those who enjoy Broadway musicals, as
days of the shows. The pri ce i&gt; $7 each.
.
they anticipate attending the delightSpcnsored by· Holzer Meigs Clinic, the cast numbers 90, 60
ful musical comedy, "Marne," known for its '
of which are children. New sets have also been constructed to unbelievable run on Broadway for three years and eight months.
accommodate the ompalompas.
The Valley Artist Series will bring the Broadway cast of almost
40 people to the stage of the Fine and Performing Arts Center at
the University of Rio Grande at 2:30 p.m. this Sunday.
Vl\S season' subscribers have their tickets for this unique production. Tickets for the general public will be available for pur, JACKSON - The Lillian :Jones Museum, 75 Broadway St., chase at the door, preceding the performance.
.
Jackson. will host an exhibit of World War I memorabilia April · As VAS President Gary Stewart points out, ''Seldom do you
3 through May 31.
have the opportunity to see one of the liveliest,·happiest and must
The museum is currently accepting items on loan for this entertaining musicals of Broadway's golden age right here at
display, and welcomes photos ,of World War I soldiers, uni- home, without having to travel to New York City or a large metforms, medals, memorabilia from theater of'operations, mem- ropolitan area.
,
.
.
.
orabilia from th~ home front , etc .
"The Valley Artist Series is proud to bring such a production
· All possible care is taken with items loaned to the museum, to the local stage at the University of Rio Grande, and we antic~
and participation in this exhibit is welcomed .
ipate an enthusiastic crowd," Stewart added.
·
. Conracr rhe Jones Museum fo r more information at (740)
As ·one review stated, "'Marne' shows little sign of aging, 33
286-2556 or lillianjones@dmgrmbbs.com.
.
years after its birth and impressively long Broad~ay run."
Another said, '"Mam.e ' is a story of a woman of spirit, told with
spirit and embellished with pleasant song ... a good time all
around is to be had in 'her company." And still another said,
.
.
"Laugh and 'sing with 'Marne,' one of the' m.o~t stylish and pic'
NELSONVILLE - St.uait's Opera House in Nelsonville turesque madcaps·you ever m·e t.... a song and dance hit."
·
presents the only Ohio screening of the new movie about song~
Tickets will be available at the door for $30, or may be
writer Townes Van Zandt called "Be Here To Love Me," at 8 reserved in advance and picked up at the Fine and
p,m. Friday and Saturday.
·
Performing Arts Center within the hour before the 2:30
The ultimate songwriter's songwriter. Townes Van Zandt show time Sunday afternoon.
·
·
had a profound impact on generations of musicians from Bob
As Stewart emphasized, "What a rare opportunity to
Dylan to Norah Jones, yet he avoided the commercial success see a full Broadway production at a fraction of the cost
enjoyed by many of his own fans.
of a ticket in New York! We hope area residents will
For more informaricm, call (740) 75}c f924 or on the web at take advantage of this unique chance to see MAME
www.sruarrsoperahouse.org.
locally, made possible through the Valley Artist
Series." ·

·Sunday

POMEROY - The C8
Health Project has stopped
acce pting health qtiestionnaires, but will make
appointments for all those
whose questionnaires were
successfully su b1.ni tted.
. "We want to let people
Page AS
·know that we have not run out
• Virginia Jordan
of money, we are using the
• Roberta Humphrey Kerce! .. fund s as the settlement directed, and are continuing to
complete our goa l of 70,000
participants.'' said Art Maher,
one of the project directors .
Those participants who
were seen at C8 testing sites
• Cbmmunity Center
befo re Dec . 4 , 2005 , a(e
elects officers, plans
asked io sign an additional
form provided by the
consent
events. See Page A2
Sci ence. Pane!. Those early
• Ea5tem bell choir
· participants hve received the
perfonns. See Page A2 form in the mail , Those now
go in g through the testing
• 'FFA Week' at Racine
process are given the form Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory's
Southern chapter.
during their appointment.
formances at Meigs Elementary School.
See Page A3
The C8 Science Panel has
• UMW diseusses project been engaged to conduct a
· community study cif t11e health
. work. See Page A3
project dat~ and other . infor• Holzer Recognizes
mation coll ected. The Science
Panel
is asking participants to
.t:Jational Nutrition Month.
agree to be contacted at a later
See Page A3
date in order to obtain contin· • World War I film
uing health information for
longer-term
; tudie s.
·
series coming to Pomeroy
BY BETH SERGENT
To date, nearly 90 percent of .
Library. See Page AS
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
those asked for the informa• Transfers posted.
tion have agreed to participate.
RUTLAND - Beginning tonight and
See Page AS
continuing through the weekend big
• Local briefs.
kids and little kids alike will have a
to sample the mysterious world
chance
See Page AS
of
even
more mysterious candy . m,aker
• A Hunger For More. ·
Willy Wonka during the musical theater
See Page A6
production of Willy Wonka and the
Chocolate
Factory performed by the
• If you do not forgive.
River
City
Kids.
See Page A6
Tonight's performance begins at 7
p.m. at Meigs Elementary Sc hool; with
a show at 7 p.m. on Saturday and a matinee at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday. also at

trical. plumbing. and he(tting
and air conditioning systems.
and 'uni tary health and environn1emal standart.ls. including
an inspection for rodent.s.
Ren tal ccrtilicates would be
issued once a succe,s ful
inspection as completed. .
The new ordinan ce which
wi ll be &gt;ubmiltcd for coun:
cil's lir'i reading ne,xt week
increases the fee to $20 a
year. and prol'idc' for addi tional fees and fines in those
cases where a second or third
in spection is required.

0BITUARIFS

INSIDE

Photo

cour~esy

Oompa Loompas .take a moment to rehearse a catchy t.une
·
·

for

of The River Ctty Kkll

this weekend 's per-

·'Willy
and the Chocolate.
factory' opens tonight

To reserve tickets in advance, call (740)
245-7364..

3·Savile .Row to play at
Court Grill Saturday night

WEATHER

OSU students
to develop
colon cancer
screening plan
with MCCI
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAI LYSENTINEL.COM

•

· Details on Page A2

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

3 Savlle Row

16 PAGES

Calendars
A.3
· Classifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7
Dear Abby
A3
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A6-7
Movies ·
As
NASCAR
B3
Obituaries
AS
Sports
B. Section
Weather
A2
© aoo6 Ohio Volley Puhllshtng Co.

'

in the village.
A number of rental proper~
ties were among those properties identified as unsafe or
unsightly, and i rental property on South Second Avenue
in particularly poor condition
was discu&gt;sed at a council
meeting earlier this month.
The owner of that property
has been ordered by the village to clean it up after two
dead rats were seen in the
front yard . ·
If approved by council, the
inspections would include ,elec-

STAFF REPORT

..

.

landlords
attending
Wednesday 's meeting agreed ,
and questioned the need for
an inspection program at all.
The fee increase would help
the village pay for an annual
inspection of all 400 apartments, hou ses and mobile
homes cented in the village .
The inspection program, proposed by the Planning
Commission and Building
Inspector Randall Mullins, is ·
designed to enforce building
·and safety cpdes and improye.
the quality of rental housing

NEWS@MYDAI LYSENTI NEL.COM

Opera House slates film showing

'

property owners to attend the
~lin g in hopes of reaching
compromise on the propcsal ,
which would increase the
annual fee charged to rental
property owners from $12 to
$20 per year.
The fee increase and
. inspection pl an were first
introdu ~e d in January. but the
proposed ordinance was
tabled after two readings,
because some counci l members felt the fee increase from $12 to $25 at that time
- was excessive. Several

Appointments ·
planned for all
C8 applicants

War exhibit slated at Jones Museum

MINERAL WELLS. WVa . - With spring quickly
approaching. the first annual Lawn and Garden Exp? is right
POMEROY -· · The 3 Savile Row, a group of area
around the comer.
musicians.
who got together to pay homage fa the Bemles,
Saturday, April I , marks the start of what is expected to be a
will
be
performing
at the Court Street .Grill at 9 p.m .
·. we.ekend full of exhibits, vendors. children's activities, guest
Saturday.
.
·
.
.·
speakers and demonstrations. The show will be held on
The m_usicians' story is one of a touring bassist from
Saturday from 9 a. m. to 6 p.m . and Sunday. April 2, from noon
Texas,
a Lennon lookalike, and the rh ythm section 'from a
to 5 p.m. at the West Virginia Interstate Fair and Exposition
successful
jazz combo getting together last year to recreGrounds in Mineral Wel.ls right off exit 170 on 1-77.
The expo 'will feature a flower arrangement contest featuring ate the music. of one of the most influential bands of the
three categories as well as a fashion show run by the friends of 20th century.
3 Savi le Row returned this week from London, where
Blennerhassett Island and the Juli ana Square District that will
they played a show. According to Nick Michael of Savile,
showcase full historic costumes.
The· flower contest will have three categories, "Dried Flower they hooked up with .Richard Porter, "The Beatie Brain of
Arrangements," "Boxes in Bloom" and "Creative Containers" Britain" and pr~s ident of the British Beatles Fan Club.
"He set us up with a gig at the Carlton Tavern. It was a ·
and will be judged prior to the show. Along with the three contests, there will be a People's Choice Award that will be hand- great show and we played to a packed house," said Michael.
Early last y'ear, open stage veteran Michael, formerly of
ed out Sunday afternoqn. allowing the public to vote throughLiquid
Crystal, was approached by educated percussionist
out the entire show.
The fashion show. which will take place on Saturday at 2 Jon Jones and local singer/songw riter Nathan Wood about ·
p.m. along with the flower arrangement contest, is sure to starting a Beatles tribute band. Shortly after this fortu bring IT)Uch more to the program. Along with the fas hion show itous meeting, they,started rehearsing as a trio with Jon on
·
and flower arrangement contests, there are many other speak- drums, Nathan on bass, and Nick on guitar.
ers and demonstrations on the age nda that will cater to every-_ In the fall of 2005. they were introduced to Texas native
and bass guitar guru Jay Godeaux. After switching Nathan
one .
.
·
Little Kanawha and Buckeye Hills Resource Conservation Wood to rhythm guitar, the line-up was set.
3 Savile Row performs a well-rounded mix of Beatie
and Development (RC&amp;D) Councils, West Virginia Extension,
a small group of volun.tecrs and Results Radio are involved in classics, ranging from the touring days of Beatlemania all
the way to the .studio masterpieces of Abbey Road. While
the·show activities . ·
For more information ahour rh e }Ctshion ~how 'or for enrr:c paying attention to detail of the originals, the band adds
forms ro the flowe r arrangemenr com esr. call Dina Braniff ar their own sound and flair to the music of the Beatles set- ·
ting them apart from all other tribute acts out there today.
(304} 422-4597.
.
''You won't · see the costumes, wigs and the' vintage
For more informarion on rite· Lmm and Garden ExpiJsirlon,
instruments
when you ·see us.. You' II see working class
comact either of the RC&amp;D ojjice.1, Bol&gt; Firsr with Buckeye
Hills RC&amp;D, 21330 Ohio 676, Suire D. Marie rra. Ohio 45750, guys playing some of the greatest rock songs ever written.
(740) 373-7926 or 'Kurr Simon ll'irh Lirrle Kanawha RC&amp; D, I'd like to think that we play the s&lt;;Jngs the way The Beatles
Mo'unrwoad Park. Rowe 2. Box 56,. Wm •erlr. WVa . 26184. would play them today if they could tour again," says
Michael·.
. (304) 679-3639

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM,

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Courcil
w.i II propose a $20 annual
rental property fee at next
week's meeting, after three
committees met together with
landlords on Wednesday
evening to disc.uss a proposed
rental inspection program.
. Village council's building
and planning committee, ordi. nance committee a11d Planning
Commission invited rental

Rio Grande
stage this

'Willy Wonka' comes to Meigs

W\\w.mydail~st•ntint'l.t·uru

FRIDAY, I\1ARCII 24, 200(&gt;

Rental fee hike, inspection program back to council table

SPORTS

eMarne'hits

For more infomwrnm. conracr rhe FAC m 446-3834.

Lawn
and Garden
.
Expo ·opens in April.

....

POMEROY - Graduate
students from The Ohio State
University School of Public
. Health will be arriving in
Meigs C&lt;iunt y nex) .month to
develop a co lon cancer
scree ning progn1m for the
community with help from
the Meigs Cou nty Cancer
In itiati ve (MCC I).
Mira Kat z, assistant professor with the OSU School of
Public Health said her students wil l be arriving in the
county to take a hands-on
apr,roach on layi ng the
ground work for the program.
The hand s-on approach is
crucial to the students developi ng their theory based not
onl y on ab s tra~ t county cancer rates but on what they
·personally observe durin g
their visits to Meigs Count y. ·
The student s have incentive to complete 'the program
by. the end June to compll'te
their course.
"The coalition will hope,
fully benefit from my s!udents' work," Katz ex pl ained.
addi ng th;Il a benefit may

Please see Screening. AS

Meigs Elementary School.
Tickets are $7 each and c311 be purchased
at the door or at the following locations:
Hometown
Market,
Middleport
Department Store. Dan's, Peoples Bank of
Middlepon and Farmers Bank of Pomeroy.
Sponsored by Holzer Meigs Clinic. the
cast numbers 90. 60 of which are children. New sets have al.so been constructed to accommodate the bompa Loompas.
This version of Roald Dahl's children's novel is based on the 1971 Gene
Wilder film.
At the heart of the story is Charlie
Bucket who along with four other golden ticket winners get to experience the

·Chester
postmaster
honored for
•
semce

tour of a lifetime through Willv Wonka' s
chocolate factory.
'
'
Besides Wonka and a host of Oompa
Loompas, Charli e is accompanied by .
the spoilcd-rbt·ten . Vcru..:a Salt. gl uttonous Augu stu s Gloop. · gum-chewin g
Violet Beaureuarde. and te levi sion
junkie Mike Teavee.
They travel through not only the factory but life lesson' . put to song and
lyrics by Lesli e Bricu'&gt;se and. Anthony
Newley. The story wa., adapted for the
stage by Lau ra Blum. ·
This is the second prod uction for The
River City Kid' 1\hich i, a di'i,inn of
The River City Pla: ers th ~atre troupe .

AMP-Ohio adds-to
London Pool fund

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CHESTER - For service
during nearl y 44 years of
employment at the Chester
Post Ofllce; Opal Eichinger
of Chester has been selected
as .one or nine postal workers
Opal' Eichinger
in the Columbus Performance
Cluster of the Postal Service
the Postal Service in their own
to be honored thi s year.
The women were .honored by uni que v.ay. their ach·ieveand unyielding dedicathe Postal Service as an obser- ments
tion
to
the Postal Service.''
vance of Women's History
Eichinger. now 80. began
Month. Photographs and a brief
her postal career on July I ,
biography of each one js now 1962 as a clerk at the Chester
on display in the Colun,1hus Post oflic~ . At the time of her
Main Post Office retail lobhv employment. her' husband.
as we ll '" in the cafeteria at the Henry R. Eichinger was the
Citygate Process ing and postmaster. He served from
Distrillution Center.
Aug. 7. 1961 u ntil his death
Selection o.f the honorees on Nov. 29. 1967. Two
was made . according. to a months later hi s wife was
news release. on the basis of
"tremendous contributions to
Please see ·Service. AS

Belh Sergent;photo

judy Williams (center) of the London Poo l Steenng Committee
accepts a $1500 donatio n from Jo lene Thompson (left) and
Kent Carson . representatives .o! Ame ncan Muntc tpal Power·
Ohio (AMP.Qh io). The donation w1tl go towards reopenmg the
London Pool.

'I

•

�PageA2

LOCAL • .STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Community Ce!}ter elects officers, plans events
PORTLAND - Officers
were elected and several
events pl11nned at a recent
meeting of the Portland
Community Center Board.
Mila Powell Raymond was
elected president; Butch .
Mitchell. vice president;
Janet KJ;ider, treasurer; and
Ellie Teaford, secretary.
Bruce · McKelvey gave a
report on the horse show
held in the new ring behind
the old Portland School.
Other events discussed were
an Easter egg hunt, the open- ·
ing of a history library, and a
Memorial Day celebration.
It · was noted that several
members attended a seminar
in Athens which resulted in
the Center rt!cetvtng a
$3,000 grant. Attending were
Raymond . Ruby · Congo,
Hazel Life. and Butch
Mitchell. ·

While Larry Fisher was
not at the meeting to report
on the kitchen progress, it
was noted that a new warmer
had
been
donated
by
Ponderm;a. During the meeting,
Jim
Counts
of
Appalachian
Nutrition
Network paid $1 ,000 for a
lease of the last classroom
oh the left and the use of the
kitchen at the Center. The
lease is for five years with a
rent of $500 a month.
· As a fund raiser the Center
will take donations on a
Mike
Bartrum
football.
Funds raised will be eligible
for a match from the Modem
Woodmen for up ·to. $2,500,
it was reported.
Raymond reported on the
Morgan's Raid II meetings
being held in preparation for
the September reenactment.
It was noted that she will be

Friday, March 24,2006

Eastern bell choir performs·

DEAR ABBY: I h·ave an
acquaintance who calls me
by the wrong first name,
and I don ' t know how to
correct him without embarrassing both of us. We both
grew up in the same town,
although we didn't know
each other back then. He
became a doctor and moved
to northern California. Our
mothers know each other,
but his mother is now in a
nursing home and can't
communicate.
'When 1 first looked him
up, I introduced myself.
Since then, he has been
calling me Georg· e. (My
name i~ Jim.) Most of the
time I see him at the weight
room at the health club and
he greets ' me with a' big,

Nathan Pierce
mother, Ryan Terzopplous,
Rick Hawley, Nellie, Brian
Mitchell, Jim and Chasity
and Ethan Stewart.

Completes Marine training
ALBANY
-Marine combat . and
assorted
Pvt.
]erred
E. .weapons training . They perCorps
Bulstrom, son of Patrick E. formed close order drill and
Bulstrom of Albany, recently operated as a small infantry
completed 12 weeks of basic unit during fietd training.
and
other
training at Marine Corps
Bulstrom
also
received
Recruit Depot, Parris Island, recruits
S. C. designed to challenge instruction on the Marine
new Marine recruits both Corps' core vruues· - honor,
physically and mentally..
courage and commitment,
Bulstrom
and
fellow and what the core values
recruits began their training mean in guiding personal
at 5 .a. m.. by running three and professional conduct.
fellow
miles and performing calisBul strom . and
thenics.. In addition to the recruits ended the training
physical conditioning pro-~ phase with The Crucible, a
gram,
Bulstrom
spent 54-hbur, team evolution cuinumerous hours in class- mi.natit\g in an emotional
room and field assignments ceremony in which recruits
which included learning first are presented the Marine
Emblem,
and
aid, uniform regulations, Corps
combat
water
survival , addressed as "Mari!les" for
marksmanship, hand-to-hand the first time in their careers.

Hospital-affiliated foundation
gives $20. 6 million to Rainbow
the 244-bed hospital. The hospital is a unit of University
Hospitals of Cleveland.
.
The foundation was created
when
Rainbow
Hospital
merged in 1974 with Babies
!IDd Children's Hospital. The
foundation traces its roots to
1887 and the 'Rainbow Circle
of King's Daughters organization created to help . needy
Cleveland children.

CLEVELAND (AP)- An
affiliated foundation whose
only charitable . cause is
Rainbow Babies &amp; Children's
Hospital will give $20.6 million
over five years to the hospit;tl to
)lelp build a ne~ intensive care
unit for sick infants and attract
top physicians.
The
gift,
announced
Thursday from the Rainbow
&amp;
Children's
Babies
Foundation. is the largest for

RACINE
Nineteen
scholarships will be awarded
to Southern High School
graduates and RACO applications are now available to
the school.
The scholarships . included
10 $500 RACO scholarships;
three Edison Brace Memorial
Scholarships, $500; two Jim
Adams Memorial, $500; one
Frank Cleland Memorial,
$500, one David B. Sayre
Memorial, $400; and two
Crusin' Saturday Night Car
Show scholarships, $600,
sponsored by Hill 's Classic
Cars and Home Natiqnal
Bank.

Plan would put
slots at tracks and
in Cleveland,
Cincinnati
COLUMBUS (AP)
.Gambling proponents planned
to announce Friday a proposed
· constitutional amenliment in
November to place electro'nic·
slot machines at Ohio's seven
racetracks and in separate facilities
in
Cleveland
and
Cincilmati.
The plan would use the state'.s
share of revenue from the
machines to fund college scholarships for Ohio high school
graduates.
A group of slot machine backers called the Ohio Legacy Fund
is to discuss efforts to gather sig~
natures for the· initiative Friday
outside Ohio State University.
Dubbed the Learn and Earn
Ballot Issue, the proposal
includes two "slot machine
gaming places" in downtown
Cleveland and one in downtown
Cincinnati,
David
Hopcrnft, a spokesman for tl)e
group backing the plan, said
Thursday.
The plan is the latest attempt
to expand gambling in Ohio by
linking the proposal to education funding.
A similar signature~gathering
effonlast year allowing cities to
choose whether they wanted
casino gambling came up short.

Local weather
. Friday .. . A chance
of
snow in
the morning.
Mostly cloudy with a
chance of rain. Highs in the
mid 40s .. Light and variable
winds ... Be.coming northwest
around ·5 mph in the afternoon . Chance of precipitation 40 percent.
Friday
ni'ght...C loudy
with a chance of rain and
snow show.ers. Lows in the
lower 30s. Northwest winds
around 5 mph in the
evening.. . Becoming light
and variable. Chance of precipitation 50 percent.

Saturday ... Mostly cloudy
with .a chance of rain and
snow showers. Highs in the
lower 40s. Northwest winds
5 to I0 mph. Chance of
precipitation 5,0 percent.
Saturday night...Mo~tly
·cloudy with a slight chance
of snow and rain showers.
Cold with lows in the upper
20s . . Northwest
winds
around 5 mph. Chance o(
precipitation 20 percent.
Sunday ... Mostly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 40s.
Sunday
night...Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows in

. Federal Mogul - .34
USB- 30.94
Gannett - 59.40
General Elec:trlc - 34.12
GKNLY- 5.75
Harley Davidson - 49;19
JPM- 42.04
Kroger 20.84 ·
Ltd. - 24.65
NSC- 52.89
Oak Hill Financial - 3(&gt;-89
OVB- 25.20
BBT- 39.82
Peoples - 28.50

Charlene Hoeftlch/photo

A program of patriotic and contempora·ry music was presented by the Eastern bell choir directed by Cris Kuhn at the annual birthday part of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion,
Tuesday night. To the concluding number, "God Bless America." the legionnaires and guests
gave a standing ovation .

6-year-old' s surgery shown online
part of growing hospital trend .
AKRON (AP) The
online broadcast of a' ~hild's
heart surgery ·is part of a
growing trend of hospitals
showing operations on the
Web in an attempt to lure
potential patients to · their
doctors and showcase new
procedures.
Akron Children's Hospital
aired the previously recorded
operation Qf 6-year-old
Cheyenne Greiner this week,
Surgeons used a new tech nique to cure a rapid heart
beat caused by .a- part of the
girl's heart that did not work
properly.
The Akron hospital hopes

the upper 20s.
Monday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 50s.
Monday
night
and ·
Thesday ... Partly cloudy with
a 40 percent chance of rain
showers. Lows in the mid
30s. Highs in the upper 50s.
Tuesday
nighL.Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 30s. ·
Wednesday ·
through
Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 50s .
Lows in the upper 30s .

Pepsico - 59.13
Premier 15.81
Rockwell - 71.95
Rocky Boots - 25.28
Sears - 131.25
Wai-Mart ~ 48.54 .
Wendy's ·- 65.01
Worthington - 19.24
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Financial Advisors of
Hilliard Lyons In GalliPolis.

it will educate the public and
attract new patients, said
Andrea Reynolds, the hospital's manager of Web deve lopment and public relations.
The number of ho spital
webcasts is growing 50 percent each year. but they are
still rare, said Ross :Joel, an .
executive yice president at
slp3D, the Connecticut company that produced the web·
cast.
The company has produced about 500 public webcasts since 1997, but webcasts ha~e been done at only
75 hospitals, he said.
The typical ev.ent draws

more than 4,000 Web site
visits and ·generates anywhere from 12 to 15 cases
for the hospital in the following month or two, Joel said.
Akron Children' s Hospital
plans to host three m.ore program s this year on highdemand surgery or operations in which the hospital
specializes . Some surgery
may be shown live.
. Upcoming
webcasts
planned include scoliosis
surgery. a repair of an atrial
septal defect - a hole in the
heart ~ and a minimally
inva sive reconstruction of
the knee .

News and
information for
senior citizens of
the Tri-County...

"Hello, George·!" I thought
about correcting him, but he
can't hear me because; he
has earphones on.
Sometimes we'll cross
paths in the locker room
and he ' ll say, "How's it
going, George?" and keeps
.
d ,
on wa lk mg. 1 on t think it
would be cool -to open his
shower door and correct
him. How can I solve this
embarrassing problem? JIM AT THE GYM .
DEAR JIM: Your mistake
was in not correcting him
immediately. Unless being
called by the wrong name is
"george" with you , open the
shower door and correct the
man. I guarantee that if you
do it once, he won't get
your name wrong again.
DEAR ABBY: A guy in
our office forwards corny ernails to me and others. But
as soon as he sends them,
he enters our offices and
· asks if we. read the e-mail
he just forwarded. ff we say

D
ear
Abby

My bridesmaid&gt; had all purchased their dresses .
I plan to be married thi s
year and will use the same
bridesmaid
dresses:
However, I am no longer as
close to a couple of the
bridesmaids as I was then.
Since they have already
purchased the dresse s, am I
obligated to ask them to be
in this wedding ? What
would be proper'' - MAKlNG MY PLANS IN
NORTH CAROLINA
DEAR MAKING PLANS :
The proper thing to do
ld b 10 k 1
wou
e
as tle v;ome(\
who bought the dresses to
be in the wedding, or offer .
b
h d
f
to uy t e resses rom
them, and select bridesmaids w(10 wear their size.
(Hint: You'll make fewer
enemies if you use the origina! cast.)
DEAR ABBY:. My family
lives . in a three -bedroom
house, and my parents share
the largest bedroom. 1 am

no, he·says, " Well, go ahead
and open it." Then he hovers over our shoulders until
it's opened and read. If we
are in the hallway or a conference room after he emails it, he comes to find
us. Then he follows us back
into our offices and watche s
while we read it. Sometimes
he will even read it aloud.
as if we can't read.
In the rare cases that the
e-mail might actually be
funny, his interruption and
hovering ruins any enjoyment the e-mail might otherwise provide. All I can do
is offer an insincere snicker,
while 1 feel uncomfortable
about the content and his 15, my sister is . II and my
hovering .
, · .
brother is 7. The two other
How can we get him 10 bedrooms are the same size.
cut it out? _TRAPPED IN Should I share a . bedroom
MARYVILLE, TENN .
with my broth,er, or should
DEAR TRAPPED: You mY sister share one with
have described someo ne him? -STEVEN IN OHIO
who is socially inept and
DEAR STEVEN: Because
hungry for company. It 's two of you must ''double
·sad, really. But the most up· , " you should s hare a
1ogtc~.
· 1 way to d.~a 1. WI'th. t't ts
· bedroom with your brother.
to be too busy to be mter- . Dear Abby is written by
rupted. Be pleasant. but Abigail Van Buren also
ftrm, and tell him th at
· ' ..
you'll look at what he sent known as Jeanne Phillips,
"w hen time · permits." And and was fou'!ded bY_ ~er
don't take no for an answer. mother, Paulme Ph1{lrp .~.
DEAR . ABBY: 1 was Write
Dear Abby at
engaged three years ago, ,www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
and shortly before the wed- -Box 69440, Lqs Angeles,
ding my fiance called it off. CA 90069.

"FFA Week" at.Racine Southern chapter
RACINE - The Racine ·
Southern FFA recently celebrated FFA week with a variety of events meant to show- .
case what it means to be in
FFA and what the organizati&lt;'ln means to the community.
The week kicked off with
"Truck and Tractor . Day"
where FFA students brought
. their tractors and trucks · to
school and parked them in
front of the building for dis·
play.
The week · continued with
"Westem Day" when students
· dressed in their western
apparel.
"Western Day" was followed by a miniature tractor
pull at Southern Elementary
for the children. The tractor
pull · was meant to show
young kids the fun in FFA
and what it can bring to a person's life.
-. · The week ended with
"Barnyard Day" where members brought in a . variety of
animals for everyone to see.
The children came from the
elementary sc hool to see the
animals as did the · high

Public meetings

Youth events

Monday, March 27
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, 9 a.m.,
1!7 Memorial Drive .

Saturday, March 25
SYRACUSE
Youth
League signups, II a.m to I
p.m. at the ball field . For more
mformatton call Eber Ptckens,
992-5564.
CHESTER - The Shade
River Lodge 453 will have a
roadside trdSh pickuf Saturday,
8 a.m. Breakfast wil be served.

PORTLAND - Lebanon
Township Trustees. 7 p.m.,
township building.
RACINE
Southern
Local School Board, regular
meeting , 7:30· p.m., · high
school.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Library Board, 3 p .m.
at Pomeroy Library.

Clubs and
· organizations
Monday, MQrch 27
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coin Club. 7 p.m ., Pomeroy
Library. New ofticers elected.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Right to Life, regular
meeting, 7:30 p.m .. Pomeroy
Library; • changed to fourth
Monday of month.
Tuesday, March 28
RACINE - Racine Are·a
Community
Organization
will meet at 6:30p.m. at Star
Mill Park. ·Po'tluck. New
members welcome.

Rev. Eric Isbell and singers. the
Eric Isbell Family. 992-9796
for information. Steve Tomek.
pastor.
Saturday, March 25
BIDWELL - Go; pel &gt;ing at
the Poplar Ridge Free Wilf
Baptist Church. 7 p.m. featuring Gloryland Believer; and
the Christian Echo,.

Wednesday, March 29
MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport Literary Club will
meet at 2 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library. Alice Wamsley will
review "Light on Snow" by
Anita Shreve. Norma Torres
will be the hostess.

- Dan
MIDDLEPORT
Hayman and the Country
Hyt'nntimers will &gt;iAg at 7 p.m.
at the Middlepon Church of the
Nazarene. Refreshment s will
follow. Allen Midcap. pastor.
invites the public.

Church events

Sunday, March 26
MIDDLEPORt Billy
Zuspan will be installed as pas. tor of the Middleport F.irst
Baptist Church at 2 p.m.
Sunday.

. LONG BOTTOM - 24hour prayer vigil begins at 8
a.m., Mt. Olive Church. Mt.
Olive Rd.: Long Bottom.
Public invited to spend time in
prayer at the church, or send
prayer intentions to Mt. Olive
Community Church, do Carol
Bus)l, 50515 McKenzie Ridge
Road, Racine. Information ut
985-3471.
RUTLAND Weekend
revival will be held at the
Community Church, Main
Street, Rutland, 7 p.m Friday
through Sunday. Evangelist

Monday, March 27
REEDSVILLE -· Spring
revival at . the' Eden United
Brethren Church. · 7 . p.m.
through April 2. Evangelist.
Eric Ross. Singer&gt;. March 28,
Crossroads, March 380. The
Jarvis Family, and March 31,
The Crownsmen. Adam Will at
378-6444 for information. ,

·UMW discusses project work
ALFRED - The Alfred Madison of Paradise, Mich. the program on Earth Day
United Methodist Women a chu rch and community noting that we are the stewhave · voted . to "adopt" a worker. a sympathy card for ards . of the earth . O sie
class at the McCurdy School Charlotte VanMeter, and Follrod . read scripture from
in Espanola, N. M. as a part get -well cards for Clyde Psalm 24, and there was
of the churt'h's "Everybody Barringer and
Mildred group singing .of " For the
in the Pool" program.
B.rooks.
Beauty of the Earth. '' The ·· .
Meeting recently at the . Thelma Henderson had the leader explain_ed the focus
church. · members discussed mission program from . the image and pictures of the
sc hool bags along with Response magazine titled · beauty of the natural world
boxes for the meals for mil- "Dominican Children for were shown. Janice ·Weber
lions program . Ruth Brooks Peace" which related the read scripture from Psalm 96
conducted the meeting open- story of a pastor and a young and the group shared prayers
ing with prayer and reports man using baseball to teach they had written. Next meetfrom the officers. A total of children in the Dominican . ing will be April I I.
102 friendship calls were . Republic about peace and
Pastor Jane Beattie had
reported , a birthday card non-violence.
prayer before the meal
Florence Ann Spencer had · served by Brooks .
was sig ned . for Margaret

Submitted photo

Racine Southern FFA Member Grant Phillips assists with the
elementary tractor pull at Southern Elementar-y to celebrate
National FFA Wee k.
school students. The animals
that were . displayed were
baby sheep. a dog, turtle, calf,
horse, and goat.
The Racine Southern ' FFA

chapter considered the week a
success and hopes I hat some
of the elementary stude nt s
will one day grow up to be
fellow members in the FFA.

!]litl'Weirk oovers
i$growi_n~

Holzer Recognizes National Nutrition Month
GALLIPOLIS - Tips on activity choices you · make
maintaining a health lifestyle today - and every day have been listed by the Holzer affect your health and how
Health Systems as a part of · you feel today and in the
the observance of National tuture . Eating right and being
Nutrition Month. This year's physically active are keys to a
theme for the month is "Step healthy lifestyle .
Up to Nutrition ani' Health ."
• Make sn\art choices from
As a part of the ob~ervance, every food group. Give your
the
American
Dietetic body the balanced nutrition it
·Association and Holzer Health needs by eali~g a variety of
Sy~tems · promote healthful nutrienJ-packed foods every
eating by providing practical day. Just be sure to stay withnutrition guidance and focus- in your daily calorie needs.
ing attention on the impor•Get the most nutrition out
tance of making informed· of your calories, Choose the
food choices and developing most nutritionally rich foods
sound physical activity habits. you can from each food grqup
Tips shared include key - those packed with vitamessages to eat smart and stay mins. minerals. fiber and other
physically active all year long nutrients but lower in calories.
include:
• Find your balan~e between
•T.he food and physical food and physical activity.

APRIL 14, 2006

..

Local stocks
ACI - 74
AEP -35.02
Akzo - 52. 79
Ashland Inc. - 68.44
BU - 14.26
Bob Evans - 30.44
Qorgwamer - 59.70
CENX - 37.21
Champion - 5.75
Charming Shops - 14.51 ·
City Holding - 36.84
Col- 54.60
DG -17.62
DuPont - 42-97
·'

.

Friday, March 24, 2006

Case.of mistaken identity has dragged on too long Community Calendar

meeting with the owner of
the land where the Battle of
Buffington took place to discuss use of that area· for the
battle reenactment.
A discussion was held on
help which will be needed in
Portland when that event
occurs, and noted that bag
lunches will need to be provided for the participant.
Several members volunteered
to work on the Morgan ' s
Raid project. Also discussed
was the possibility of hosting
a Civil War camp in July.
Before the meeting the
original 1951 school plaque
was hung in the central hall
of the school. The plaque
details the school board
members who were in office
at the time of construction of
the building which is now
the Portland Community
Center.

applications

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel
'

First birthday observed Scholarship
RACINE Jason and
Marlene Pierce of Racine
hosted a party in celebration of the first birthday of
. their son, Nathan. The party
carried out· a ThQmas train
theme.
Cake and ice cream were
served to his brother, Justin
Pierce; grandparents, Narsa
and
Sam
Terzopplous,
Darlene Searles, Debbie and
Charles Jones, great-grandfather, Carroll Pierce, an
aunt, Clara Mae Hysell, and
Thomas . Hawley, . Brenda
Gray, and Hannha. Darlene
and Bradley Sellers.
Sending gifts were Gloria
Hutton, his great-grand-

PageA3

Senior Citizens make
up 65% of the total
population of the
Tri-County.
-To reach this group,
contact your
. Advertising
Representative. ·

&amp;it .

Regular physical activity is
important for your overall
health and fitness plus it helps
control body weight, promotes
a feeling of well-being and
reduces the risk of chronic
diseases.
·
• Play it safe with foods .
Prepare. handle and store food
properly to keep you and you r
family safe.
Registered dietitians are the
most valuable · and c,redible
source of fimely, sciencebased food mid nutrition information .
For more inforniation or to
speak wi th a registered ·dietit· ian at Holzer Health Systems.
call our Hospital in Gallipolis
at (740) 446-526K or our
Hu,pital in Jackson at (740)
395-83 17.

LG 2000

$3999
after $30 ma1l·in rebale -cara
With 2-year service agreemen t

And da1 a pack,age .

~

446-2342
675-1333
992-2155

raising the bar
. Authorized Retailer
.

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~II: I ~I roo. ~"''~ :~~111:-

COMM)lTED TO THE GL08AL FIGHT AG.o\I NST 1'13

Advertising Deadline- APRIL 5, 2006
•

cingular

Ingels Electronics
Radio Shack ·
.
-106 N 2nd Ave
Middleport,Oh
740-992-2825

WORLD TB DAY -MARCH 24,2006

• &lt;l9aUtpolis Bail!' arrtbune
• ~oint jleasant l\e~Jister
• The Daily Sentinel ·

~

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Paid for by the T8 LeyY fund

•

.·,

�PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily.Sentinel
· 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
w'NW.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

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; o.r the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the 'c o.vernment for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S · VIEW

Friday, March 24,

2006

Cops deserve more respect ·
"A policeman's lot is not a
liappy one," sings one of the
characters in "The Pirates of
Penzance." He may be right.
Evety 37 hours, a police.
officer is killed in the line of
duty in the United States.
Want an even more startling
statistic? Every 22 hours, a
policeman commits suic ide
in this country.
In tenns of respect, publicopinion polls rank policemen near the bottom of the
list, with used-car salesmen
and Rodney Dangerfield. If
we were to play . a wordassociation game, the word
most people would use after
"police" W()uld probaply be
"brutality," not ''protection."
We used to teach our children that the corner cop was
their friend. Now we teach
kids' their Miranda rights in
case a policeman tries to
bully them. Fortunately, that
attitude is changing since the
attack on the .World Trade
Center in New York and the
Pentagon in Washington.
Policemen are· working their
way back into the pantheon
of 'heroes in our society

George
Plagenz .

men and women who selflessly risk their lives, even
make the ultimate sacrifice,
often for people they' don't
know.
· ·
But there's still a long way
to go.
It would be hard to say
who was responsible for the
adversarial
relationship
between a community's citizens and . those who act as
guardians of their lives and
safety. In any case. it's time
for a truce. Both sides need
to reform. For sure, many
policemen could use a Dale
Carnegie course or two. In
fact, the police do the most
to s~ape a 'City's image especially in the eyes of outsiders. If the image they projeq is poor. the whole ci(y
has a public-relations prob-

lem.
clink. In one big city recentWhen !lived in Cleveland, ly, a woman · physician was
there was a traffic cop at the charged with resisting arrest,
corner of East 6th St.' and ·and
she
subsequently
Superior Ave., who would accused the arresting officer
accompany pedestrians on ·of police brutality. Many
their journey across the
·
· h h
b
street. all the while ·compli- people mtg 1 ave een ·
menting the ladies on their inclined to believe her .story
good looks andjoking with if the officer ~adn't reco~ded
the men . People like me · the enure mctdent on a Vtdeo
would walk an extra block or camera in his cruiser. There
two just to cross the street at was not a hint of brutality in
his conier. I· imagine out-of· the policeman's conduct, as
towners staying at the. near- docum'ented by the video.
by Hollenden Hotel returned
A policeman's lot may not
to New York, Dallas or be a happy one_ but it can
·Milwaukee with a good feel· b
·
ing about our city.
e. .
But if we want more
Officer Tom L~mbert,
policemen to act like this wh?m l met workmg the
officer• we will have to pohce beat for ·a newspaper
change our disdainful atti- in Boston, is thrilled with his
tude toward the police. They station in life. When I asked
are giving back what we are him how he would like it if
giving them. Even so, the his three young•sons grew up
police probably show more 10 be policemen, ·he said,
goodwill toward citizens "Nothing would make me
than citizens exhibit in
·
·
return. We are ready to cry prouder."
brutality if an officer so
(George Plagenz is an
much as speaks sharply to us ordained minister and veterwheli we commit an offense an newsman based in
. that should land us in · the Columbus, Ohio.)

.

it.

..

COULD I

SEE THt.
PAPERWORK
ON THAT

CHICKEN

.&amp;REA5T?

Syracuse

TODAY IN HISTORY

Letrers ro rhe editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and include address and telephone number. No unsigned let·
ters 11·il/ be published. Letters should btl in good taste,
addres'~ing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to organi~ations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(usPs 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Polley

Published · every :afternoon, Monday

Our main concern in all stories is t~ be through

Friday. 111

Court Stre·et.

accura te. If you know of an error in a Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage

story, ca~l the newsroom at (_740) 992 - paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and the

2156

Ohio Newspaper Association.

Our main number Is
(740) 992·2156.
Depanment extensions

Posimuter: Send address corrections

are: ·.

to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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Ed.ltor: Ch'ariene HoeHich. Ext. 12
Reporter: Bnan Reed , Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Serge~t. Ext. 13

Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext . 15
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Charlene Hoetiich. Ext. 12

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POMEROY - Virginia "Dale" Jordan died on March 22,
2006 at Holzer Senior Care Center in Bidwell.
·
Graveside funeral service will be held at I:30 p.m. on
Saturday, March 25, 2006, at Franklin Hills Memorial
Gardens in Lithopolis. Local arrangements are under ' the
direction of Fisher Funeral Home Pomeroy Chapel.

. Roberta Humphrey Kercel
COOLVILLE-· Roberta Humphrey Kerce! died March 23,
2006 at Arcadia Nursing Center, Coolville.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Frank J. Kerce!.
A public gathering of family and friends will be held II
a.m., Saturday, March 25, at the Coolville Cemetery,
Coolville, with Greg Traucht officiating.
·
Friends may call at White-~chwarzel Funeral Home Friday,
from 5 to 8 p.m.

Local Briefs
Immunization clinic
POMEROY - A childhood immunization clinic will take
place from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m . on Tuesday, March 28 at ·
the Meigs County Health Department. Bring child's shot
records. All children inust be accompanied by a parent or legal
guardian. Bring medical cards. A $5 donation appreciated but
not required for services. ·

StAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - An educational film/discussion series
focusing on World War I will
be presented at the Meigs
County
District
Public
Library in Pomeroy at 2 p.m.
Monday.
The presentation, free and
open to the public, is being
presented by the Jeanette
Albiez Davis Library at the
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College.
The film series over the next
· several months wi II be presented at several locations.
.Speaker will lead discussions
after each film.
The Pomeroy showing is
being co-sponsored by the
Friends of the Davis Library,
the Rio Grande Meigs Center
and the Meigs County
District Public Library,
Each film in the series
. focuses on a different topic,
and part of the focus of this

film will be on the years after
World War I.
In 2005, Davis Library at
Rio Grande was named as
one of just SO Iibraries
throughout the country to
receive the film viewing and
discussion series. "World
War I Years: America
Becomes a World Power."
The tilm series is presented
by National Video Resources
in association with the
American Library Association
and the National Endowment
for the Humanities. '
During the fall semester,
the Davis Library presented
the lilriJ series through at luncheon events on the Rio
Grande campus. During the
luncheons, the films were
shown and expert speakers
were brought in to lead discussions on the topks
focused on in the films.
· Now, the Friends of the
Davis Library is taking the
film and discussion series out
into the community, particu-

Parents distraught by accusation
that neighbor killed their son

Clothing giveaway

. BATAVIA (AP) - The . and reminded him to be good,
parents of a 15-year-o ld adding that she loved him. ·
whose neighbor is accused of
"I don't know whai we'l1 do
LITTLE HOCKLNG- Little Hocking Church of Christ on
him
for
walking
without
him," his mother said.
shooting
U.S. 50/7 will sponsor a spring clothing giveaway for those in
across
the
lawn
sat
in
his
bed·
"He
was
the love of our life."
need from 4 to 7 p.m·. on· April 14. Clothing for infants
'' He was taken from us too
through adu(\s wiH be availi'lble. Information is available by room clinging to each other
and
their
memories
while
early,''
his father said,
calling 989- S137.
surrounded by the iPod he
The Mugrage 's next-door
got for a birthday, a soccer neighbor, 66-year-old Charles
Baza~r
trophy ..he won last year and Martin. had confronted the
stacks of fitness magazines.
youth about being on his
lUPPERS PLAINS - Spring Bazaar and bake sale and soup
Larry and Anita Mugrage,, lawn. police said, and Martin
and sandwiches will be served from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Aprill in the of Union Township, had gone told officers he had several
basement of St. Paul United Methodist Church, Thppers Plains: out of slate Su11day to .visit a disputes with neighbors over
The activities are sponsored by the Mission Outreach Group. ·
sick relative and did not walking .on his grass.
make ·it to the hospital before
Mugrage
apparently
their son, Larry, died.
walked across Martin's yard
High School; and Laura Jean
"I · want my baby back, I on his way to a friend's house
Horton of Westerville, a can't take this, I can't be and got into a verbal
parks and recreation director. · strong, I want my .baby . exchange with him, Union
from Page A1
''The children ,were young home," Anita . Mugrage Township police Lt. Scott
when Henry died, but they all wailed Wedne&gt;day. evening, Gaviglia said ,Thursday.
named officer-in-charge. Her got through college and got as friends and family joined
"As Mugrage was walking
official appointment as post- good jobs because I had a them in their home near this back home a few hours later,
master for the Chester Post good job at the p.ost office," city about 20 miles east of Martin saw him and brought
Office came on . April 17, commented Eichinger. Three Cincinnati.
the shotgun out," Gaviglia
J971.
t
graduated from Ohio State
I.:arry Mugrage Sr. said he said. Mugrage was shot while
Eichinger has four chil-. University and the fourth from kissed his s·on goodbye standing in the middle of the
dren, Dennis of Reedsville, . the University of Rio Grande. before he and his wife left for street in front of Martin's
Meigs High School principal;
After all these ·years, West Virginia and told him house, with the first round
Charles of Pickerington, a Ei.chinger says she still. that he loved him. Anita grazing his chest area and the ·
retired educator; Donald o( enjoys her job and the people Mugrage said she spok~ to · second round hitting ·him in
Vincent, a teacher at Warren she serves.
her son later by cell . phone the side and back, he said.

Service

"

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

senes

I

planned

Jeff Fields

Today is Friday, March 24, the 83rd day of 2006. There
l!fe 282 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On March 24, 1765, Britain enacted the Quartering Act,
requiring American colonists to provide temporary. housing
to British s.oldiers.
' On this date:
.
In 1883, long-distance telephone service was inaugurated
between Chicago and New York.
.
In 1934, President Roosevelt .signed a bill granting future
. independence to the Philippines.
In 1944, ·in occupied Rome, the Nazis executed more than
300 civilians in reprisal for an attack by Italian partisans the
day before that killed 32 Germ~n soldiers.
..
In 1955 ~ 'the Tennessee Williams play "Cat on a Hot Tin
Roof ' opened on Broadwa&gt;' with Barbara Bel ~eddes as
Maggie, Ben Gazzara as Bnck and Burl Ives as Btg Daddy.
In 1976, the president 9f Argentina, Isabel Peron, . was
deposed by her country's mil.itary.
. ..
Thought for Today: "The htstory of almost every ctvthzation furnishes examples of geographical expansion coinciding with de,terioration in . quality.'' - Arnold Joseplj
Toynbee, English historian ( 1889-1975).

www.mydailysentinel.com

·Deaths
VIrginia Jordan

· J\1ilitary tradition questionable
Dear Editor:
,
Mv March 5 letter stated that the masses are programmed
with. mvths and illusions regarding U.S. military'operations.
The March 12 letter from a citizen in Patriot, which extols the
high tradition of the miltary, demonstrates my point.
Three years ago, I submitted a quote from Gen. Smedley
Butler. a war he(O of the early 20th century. Being central to
the current discussion, it bears repeating:
"I helped purify Nicaragua for the bank of Brown Brothers
Hamman. I helped make Mexico safe for American oil. I
helped rape half a dozen Central American countries for the
benefit of Wall Street. I was rewarded with medals and promotions. I might have given AI Capone a few hints. He operin three cities. ·The Marines operated
on three
ated .a racket
.,
.
contments.
That is the highest tradition of the U.S. military, regardless
of individual heroism. All· rational individuals will recognize
that each soldier is merely a polished' tool for corporate prof-

Friday, March 24, 2006

Scree11ing
from Page A1 .

.Getting sound advice in a democracy
.

One of the major problems
in a democracy is getting
sound advice on the best
course to take in matters of
public policy.
If your house has a plumbWilliam
ing problem, you call. a
Rusher
plumll'er. If your appendix is
painfully inflamed, you go to
a doctor - and probably.
after that, to a surgeon. We
sensibly solve many of life 's senior in ~ollege who once
problems by seeking the said to me, "I am getting a
· most aU!heritative advice Iittle tired hearing what some
available. ·
freshman thinks about
But . when it comes to Greece." He had a point. We
deciding major questions of spend an enormous amount
public policy - should we of time listening to the views
bomb lran, drill for oil in the of people who haven't the
Arctic · National Wildlife slightest credentials on the
Refuge, or gram amnesty to subject they arc talking
illegal aliens? - a democra- about. There' s nothing
tic society is to some extent a wrong with this, · if we
prisoner of its .own princi- believe thev are at least intel-·
ples. If we were a dictator- . li ge nt obs~rvers, capable of
ship, the ilig decisions would thinking logically. But all too
be made by . professed .often the loude st voices
experts 1people, say, particu- belong to people who ' are no
larly well versed in interpret- such thing.
ing Marx's laws of hi story).
Often their views will be
But a democratic society peddled as .some .sort of
gives everyone an e4ual vote . unassai !able collective wisin choosing those who shall dom. People with credentials
make .the big decisiQns as ''scientists" of one sort or
subject; of course. to contin- ·another are among-the worst
uing pres;ures on them to examples We are forever
decide in particular ways. being told, for example. that
And anyhody who has an ·'ten
thOLI\and
climate
, opinion is entitled to speak experts are united" in warnup and let hi s views be iT)g us , agai nsl the perils of
known. whether he knows global warming . Bul. as
anyth.ing abou t tiJe su bject or economiq and
former
not .
Chancellor of the Ex,:hequer
Thi' was first brought Lord Nigel Lawson wrote. in
home to me by · a fellow a highl y~i nt cll i gen t article 0.11

the subject in March It 's that they are celebri~ies -:The Spectator, "I readily famous as entertainers. Most
admit that I am not a scientist Hollywood "stars" got there
myse lf; but then the vast simply by having looks that
majority of those who pronoimce with far greater cer- register well on camera.
tainty than I shall on this ·Unlike actors on the stage,
aspect of the issue are not they don't even necessarily
scientists either; and the vast have to know how to act ·majority of those scientists ·able directors, using short
who speak with great cer- takes and enough repeats,
tainty and appareryt authority can sooner or later get what
about climate change are not,
ih fact climate sc ientists at ·they want out of them. A
good many have made their
all."
The truth is that scientists way upward via the casting
and other alleged experts couch. And it's a safe bet that
enjoy shooting off . their there are plenty of vivacious
mouths on subjects outside starlets who would be hard
their field of expertise as put to come up with a high .
much as anybody else, and school diploma.
are not above passing themBut they are indisputably
selves off as entitled to spe.cia! ·atte1ition when they do famou s. and they are just as
opinionated as college presiso.
Fa~ worse is the case with. dents, and so their views on
denizens cif that screwball Iraq, etc. are dinned into our
sanctuary calleq Hollywood. ears ad nauseam. (Not, by
To be sure, an. actor' or the way, that college presiactress has as much right to
dents are infallible, but they
an opinion on public issues
as anybody else, and there is do ~ave the minimum ere·
no natural: law \hat says their dentials to be listened to .)
opinions are11't worth listen- Decisions on public issues
ing to. (One lifelong actor. are hard enough, without
after all, became an eminent- having tO be arrived at with
ly successful president of the the advice of a b~nch of witUnited States.) But why any- less singers and piano-playbody should feel obliged to ers.
listen 1o, let alone ·value. the
( William Rusher is a
political opinions of Barbra
Streisand. George Clooney Distinguished Fellow of rhe
or Sean Penn simply .beggars Claremom Institute for the
the imagination.
Srudy of Statesmanship and
Their sole qualification is · Political P!zilosophy.)

include "zeroing in" on what
kind of colon cancer screening grant to apply for.
Katz made her offer at last
week's meeting of MCCI
which was quickly accepted.
Also included at the meeting was a visit from Barbara
Wingrove from the National
Cancer Institute (NCI).
·Wingrove was there to
observe how MCCl began
and maintain s its, grassroots
movement. She also .asked if
the g~oup will agree to
review drafts ·of NCI edLICa·
tional .materials which MCCI
agreed to.
'·
.
Wingrove observed first
hand MCCI's latest accomplishment which is receiving
·a $28,440 grant from the
S'usan ·G . Komen Breast
Cancer Foundation for its
''Jhink Pink" project.
MCCI received the grant
with assistance from LeAnn
Matvey and Darla Fickle of
the Appalachian Community
Cancer Network.
.
Thanks to the grant eligible
women 40-49 will have access
to free manunograms a.t Holzer
Clinic, O' Bleness Memorial
Hospital in Athens or Doctors
Seth Sercentfpholo
Hospital' in Nelsonville.
.
·Members
of
the
Meigs
County
Cancer
Initiative
recently
received.
visitors
from
The. National
Eligibility is determined by
income and meeting the 200 Cancer Institute. Appalachian Community Cancer Network and the OSU School of Public Health .
percent of p&lt;ivert~ guideline.
This 200 percenule mclud~s and Cervical Cancer Program.
Gasoline vouchers will also
2005-2006 Valley Artist Series
not only low income women
but many working women be offered to women who
Broadway Musical
,.
MAME
who are either underinsured keep their manimogram
appointments.
or have no insL1rance.
The grant also provides
lfyou c1re imerested in find~ 1Sundav;'March 26, 2006 • 2:30pm
referral services for women 50- . itig out more information
;;..,..,..,.=..,...,.=.., Fine and Performing Arts Center
64 for diagnostic follow-up and c1bout the "Think Pink" proUniversity of Rio Cirande
treatment when necessary to jeer call project mmwger ·
Tickets SlOat the door
L_--.:.=:=:..:.::.:...::.:....::::.:-=:.:::..
__Caii74G-:Z45·7364
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the Southeastem. Ohio Brea~t Norma Torres at 992-2 161.

Prrpare NOW

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· Now Enrolling for
2006-2007 School Year
K4-12th Grade
Call Early-Limited Availability
740-992-3662 870-565-6126
803 S. Third Ave. • Middleport, OH

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

larl~

Pomerov

in Jackson, Vinton.
Me1gs and Gallia counties.
The group received a grant
from the Ohio Humanities
Council to help fund the
community presentations.
Amy W1lson, reference
outreach specialist for the
Davis Library, explained that
part of Rio Grande's mission
. IS to· create new educational
opportunities in the community. The film series will go
to several places in the community in the hopes of
attracting large crowds of
area residents.
Sam Wilson, a history professor at Rio Grande and a
member of the Friends of the
Davis Library, said that
World War I was an important time in American history,
and the film series is one that
area rc.sidents will learn from
and enjoy. "We are bringing
in several· quality speakers,"
Wilson added.
The Monday film , "After
The War: · The Turbulent

Years ," will examine the
effects of World War J on
America in the yea" a her the
war. The film will focus on
·how the end of the war ush. ered in an unstable period in
the U.S. marked bv economic
problems. racial strife and a
bitter fight between Presidenl
Woodrow Wilso·n and .the
U.S.
Congress
over
America\ future place on the
world stage.
·
The ·guest speaker for the
film/discussion will be Lt.
Col. David Chase. professor
of military ;cience/U .S.
Army ROTC at Ohio
University. Lt. Col. Chase
will lead a discussion on how
the ten&gt;ions during the years
afte( the Great War resulted
in future conni cts. indud in ~
World War II and the more
recent regional and global
pol itical turmoil.
f:nr more information un
the Woi-ld Wor I Jilm senes,
call Amr Wilson at /-/W0282-720 / .

TRANSFERS POSTED
POMEROY
-Meigs Thomas B. Diddl e, Debra
County Recorder Kay Hill Ann Gress, Mark Gress, to
reported the following real Richard
E.
Martin.
estate transfers:
Gwendolyn K. Martin. deed . .
Paul 0. Ervin, Wilma Sutton.
Ervin, Howard R. Ervin. Roy
Kevin V. Wolfe to H. Victor
Edwin
Ervin,
Lynn Wolfe, Alice M . Wolfe . deed.
Verschoor, Nancy R. Ervin, Lebanon .
to Herbert C. Ervin, Patricia
Herbert Olen Hoover.
A. Ervin, deed, Sutton.
· Ricky
Eugene
Hoover. ,
Thomas A. ·Arnott , Carol , Jacqueline Hoover, deed.
Arnott, Thomas Arnott, to Salisbury.
.·
Liberty Oil and Gas Corp ..
Don Rose to Tuppers
right of way, Olive.
Plains-Chester
Water
Ocwen · Federal Bank, District, right of way, Sutton.
CSFB, to Fannie Mae ,
Ray L. Yonker. Rhea
Federal National Mortgage, Yonker, to,TP-CWD. ri ght of
deed, Village of Middleport. way, Chester.
·
Fannie Mae, Federal
Maureen T Burns to Gypsy
National Mortgage, to Scott . Winds. LLC, deed, Rutland.
Taylor, deed, Village of
Karolyn
J. . Boring.
Middleport.
deceased, to Paul Keith
Horace W. Karr to Roger Boring, affidavit. Olive.
W. Karr, Susan A. Karr, deed,
Ivor N . Farrar, deceased. to
Chester.
Elizabeth Farrar. affidavit.
Little John 's, LLC. to Orange .
Three. C Properties, deed;
Elizabeth ·Farrar to Terry
Village of Middleport. ·
Ray Farrar, Cynthia A .
James E. Bush. James E. Burkhamer. deed, Orange.
Bush II, Tina M. Bush, to
Virginia Carter to Jimmy
Nancy Sue Harrison, deed, Lee Carter, deed. Olive.
Ruland.
Nancy B. Reed ' to Julie
Lawrence M. Stewart, Howard, · deed , Village of
Beatrice · 0. Stewart, to Pomeroy.
Lawrence M. Stewart and
Charles'
Whittington.
Beatrice 0. Stewart, deed, Thomas Darst. Yvonne·Darst.
Village of Middleport.
to .Investors One Corp .. sherCo11ntrytyme ALC, Ltd. , i'ff's deed. Village of
Anthony Land Co ., to Pomeroy.
Anthony R. Russell, Pamela · Betty L. Marsh to Jay E.
~· Russell, deed, Scipio.
Wagner, Tanya Turner. deed ..
Allyson McBenge, Mark Village of Middleport.
McBenge. to Franklin Credit
Myrtle
Marie
Clark.
Management, deed, Olive.
· deceased , to Betty Sue
Clara E. Tipton , deceased, VanMatre, affidavit. Rutland .
to James Young, Barbara
Young. deed , Village of
Middleport. .
Linda L. Fields, Larry W.
FRI 3124108 · THURS 3130106
Fields, Sharon Marie Diddle.

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed
, ,The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today
992-2155

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PageA6

FAI'l'H. VALUES
IF YOU DO NOT FORGIVE
A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 24, 2006

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

.'

Scripture: Matthew 6.9-15
she has for the eternal, to her
was my 15th
quiet gentleness and firm
wedding anmversary. As
We are in the season of
courage even when confrontsuch. it quite compelled me
Lent,
of course, and during
ed with adversity and hate (I
to reflect on the most imporPeter 3:2,4.,6). Not only does this holy time we are encourtant person in my life. after
Pastor
her grace and patience hum- aged to especially focus on
the Lord Jesus . I found
Thom
ble me, her noble heart gives the sufferings, death and res -,
myself considering the beauMollohan mine strength when my own urrection of our Lord Jesus,
ty of my wife's charac ter and
spirit feel s crushed and the Messiah. Naturally, in
essence. the marvel of her
doing so, we also contemplate
downtrodden.
having chosen to spend her
To wives (or "about-to-be the great love of God - His
life with me, and the wonder
wives") in the area,'lmow that grace, mercy, patience, com,
\lf a life so intricately wound
God has created you and passion ... and forgiveness
with hers that I cannot imagObviously, forgiveness is a
another petal is hope. She has appointed you with a dignity
ine one without her.
key
theme during the holy
Chocolate.s are often pre- so otien spoken or written that is unique to you. You .
season
of Lent and ought to be
sented to my beloved on this aftirmations and encourage- have no replacement in all the
day. So have a few fee ble ments to others that one wide and wonderful universe: every day of the year. After
might wonder how can she there are some things that all, Christ brought forgiveness
attempts to wax eloquently give
so much away and yet
and reconciliation because. as
in ·verse as I attempted to keep so much within herse.If. only you can be, do, arid give. the Lord Himself taught,
share my love for her and my But my wife has learned the Without your being, doing, "God so loved the world that
thankfulness to God for His secret of abiding in God, so and giving these -things, the He gave His only begotten ·
having put her in my life. hope remains ever kindled world cannot be complete.
Son, that whoever believes in
And of course. flowers of within her, spi lling out mto
To .all husbands (or "about- Him should not perish but
various kinds have frequent- the lives of others.
to-be husbands" who may be · have everlasting life."
ly made appeara1ices in our
Still another petal is a will- reading this), I admonish you
But Jesus tells us something
home , not to mention . the ingness to .walk with me to cherish each of the pet~ Is rather frightening about this
numerous odds and ends that · throug~ life in partnership.. that together make ~p your forgiveness. After teaching ·
have somehow seemed Together we have ·learned that wife. Though your mmd may His disciples what we refer to
·
d
t 1· · h
only see a thorn or . two, as the Lord's Prayer, Jesus
appropriate as anniversary h
appmess
oes
no
•e
m
avchoose
instead to inhale the
gifts in times past. But of all ing our own way, but in
makes a point of saying, "If
of these. the most meaning- allowing our ambitions· and unique and wonderful quaE- you forgive those who sin
ful is the rose .
dreams. as well as our talents ties that God has created against you, your heavenl y
No rose is trulv beautiful and abilities, . to blend with within her and is even now Father w411 forgive you. But if
apart from the join-ing togeth- those of the other. By our- trying to use t(J bless you. you refuse io forgive others,
. er and blending of each of.its selves, our plans and accom- Some of things you perhaps your Father will not forgive
delicate petals. each velvet plishments may ha'{e great thought were thorns Will turn your sins." In other words, the
membrane resting against, merit and value. but with out, in the end, to have been forgiveness of God is continyet suppof!ing each of the these joined together, they petals all along. You just gent upon ou.r forgiveness of
others: together they exude a become richer and deeper and needed spiritual .eyes with · others. One requires the other.
rich imd lovely fragrance that inestimably more significant which to see· them.
Very recently 'I had occalifts the heart and fres hens in blessing and enriching the
"A wife of noble chanicter sion to really think about this
the spirit.
life of the other. And even as ... speaks With wisdom, and important truth . Deep inside I
"A wife of noble character she continually seeks to sup- faithful instruction is on her was terribly miserable, really
who can find'' She is worth port and honor God's activity tongue. She watches over the very pathetic, and had been
far more than rubies. Her through me, I also love and affairs of her household and for some time. And yes, I
husband has fLIII confidence cherish the miracle of . who does not eat the bread of idle- prayed. That same morning I
in her and lacks nothing of she is and what she gives of ness. Her children arise and had prayed, read some devovalue . She brings him ·good, herself to others as· she too call her blessed; her husband tional material and even sang
not harm, all the days of her seeks to serve God daily.
aiso, and he praises her: two or three hymns. My heart
life" (Proverbs 31:10-12
Such petals ·sometimes take 'Many women · do noble still ached. My spirit was still
Nl V). Each virtue that flows the form of tears as her tencler things, but you surpass them depressed.
·
from her life is like a beauti- heart grieves over the hurts of" all.' Charm is deceptiv~. and
By that evening I felt s9
fully sculpted ·petal, from others. Sometimes the petals beauty is fleeting; but a overwhelmed I finally cried
which a heavenly aroma are in her smile as the secret woman who fears the LORD out and said, "0 God!
flows. One petal is patience joy of GQd's love bubbles to is to be praised" (Proverbs Whatever it is You want me
... sufficient to give her a for- overflowing in her heart. At 31:26-30 NIV).
to do, I will do it. Just show
titude that never allows. her to other times those rose petals.
(Thom Mollohan and his me. Tell me!" Like a flash the
throw in the towel, but to . are in the tough things that family have . ministered in Spirit of the Lord answered,
keep running the race of life must be said because her southern Ohio the post 10with determination. Another resol ve to honor God and her l/2 years. He is the pastor of
is tenderness, certainly at courage have been siirred up · Pathway
Community
work in the rearing and within her.
Church, which meets on
teaching bf our children, but
As ., look at my wife, my Sunday morni{lgs aJ the Ariel
is also visible in the support eyes clearly perceive .the TheaJre; He may be reached
and .encou·ragement of others beauty with which God has for comments or questions by
in her life whether ·friends , .filled her lovely face, from e-mail aJ pa~·torthom@path­
family.
or even .strangers. Yet the purity and reverence that waygallipolis.com).
.

Rev.
Jonathan

'Noble
PASTOR ,
JRINITY CHURCH

"You haven' t forgiven . You
are harboring anger and
hatred, spite and malice, envy
and resen tment You need to
give it all up. Get it out of
your system and the only way
to do that is to forgive others,
once and for all. Period."
And do you know what? I
had been harboring all 9f
those nasty feelings and emotions. In fact, all of the resentment and spitefulness and
loathing and whatnot had literally consumed. I just hadn't
rea'iized it until that moment.
Those dark attitudes and ,sentiments were like a cancer and
they were eating me alive.
"How in the world can I
forgive you," the Lord .asked.
"You haven 't forgiven others
and I have a lot more I could
hold against you than yo·u .can
hold against anybody else.
Why should I forgive· yQu?
And -how can I ·give you
peace when you're making
war inside ,yourself. You
can't hold onto helli sh rage
and expect heavenly peace!"
There are at least two
ii11portant observations to
!)lake at this point:
I) If you have not forgiven
others, · then God cannot or
will not forgive you. And if
God has . not forgiven you,
then you are in an unforgiven
state. And if you are in an
unforgiven state, then how
can you expect God to
answer any of your petitions
and bless you"
2) If you harbor anger and
resentment in yout heart, then
·you cannot possiblY, expect

the divisjve gay clergy issue
at its June national assembly.
The report said unrestricted
receipts to support denomina"
tiona! programs in 2005 (as
opposed to giving designated
for special projects) totaled
$ 13.9 million, $2 :1 million
behind the b~dget . The
church only wound up
$460.000 in the red due to

Chun:h of Jesus Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pastor: James

Miller, Sunday School • 10:30 a.m ..

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River Valley
River Valley Apostohc Worship Cem~:r.

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a.m. Tues. 6:30 prayer, Wed. 1 pm Bible

Church of Christ

Emm•nuel ApostoUc Tabtrnade.lrtt.

Wtstslde Church of Chrisl
33226 Children·s·Home Rd. Pomeroy, OH
Cont~ct 740-441 - 1296 Sunday morning
10 :00. Sun mor ning Bible s tudy :
following worship, Sun. eve 6:00 pm ;
Wed bible study 7 pm

Service5: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p m.,
Thurs . 7:00p.m., Pastor Many R. Hutlon

Assembly of God
Liberty Aambly of God
P.O. Do~ 467, Dudding Lam:, M'a~n.
W.Va., Pastor: Ne1l Tennant, Sunday
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

School · 9:30am, Preaching
!0:30am, Evenin8 Serv1ce

· 212 W. Main St., Sunday School · 9:30
a.m., Wor~hip- 10 ~3 0 a.m., 6 p.m .•

7:00pm, Wt:dne6day Bible Study 7:00pm,
Interim Preache r ~ Floyd Ross

Wednesday Sef\'ices - 7 p.m.

Cheshire BapUsl Church
Pastor: Ste\;e Liulc, Sunday School: 9:30

Pomeroy Wests~de Church or Ch.risl
33226 Childre n's Home Rd ., S unda y
School - II a.m., Worsh lp • JOa.m., 6 p.m.

am, Morning Worship: 10:30 am,
Wednesday Bible Study 6:30pm ; choir

WednesdaY Sef\'ices · 7 p.m.

practice 7:30: youth and Bible Buddies
6:30 p.m. Thun; . 1 pm book study

Middleport Churth of C_b rls t ,
51 h a nd Main , Pastor: Al Hartson,

Hope Baptist Church (Sou"thern)

Childrens Director; Stloron Sayre. Teen

570 Grant SL, Middleport, Sunday sehoul
· 9:30a.m.. Worship c II a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Se.,·ice . 7 p.m Paslor: Gary
Ellis

Director: Dodger VaughlliJ, Sunday Sc hool
. 9:30a.m .. Worship- 8: 1.5, 10:30 a,m., 7

Rud1md Flrst BliPCist.Church .
Sunday School - 9 30 a.m., Won;hip •
10:4.5 a.m.

Keno Church of Christ
· WorShip ~ 9:30 a.m., Sunday School •

p.m., Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

10:30 a.m ..

Pomeroy Flnt B11ptlst
Pastor Jon Brockert, East' Matn St.,
Sunday Sch. 9:30am, Worship 10:30 am

Pastur:Bruce Terry, Sunday School · 9 :30
a.m.
Worshi_p - 10:30 a.m .. 6 :30 p.m~
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

8': 1.5 a.m .. 9·4.5 am &amp; 7:00p.m ..

Wednesday Services-7:00 p. m.

Zion Church or Christ .
Pomeroy. Harrisonville Rd . (Rt.14'3).

First Baptist C hun:h
Pastor: Bill y l':uspan 6 th and Palmer St..

Pastor: Rogt:r W.it~on, Su mla)' School 9 :30 a.m , Worsh1p · I 0 30 a m , 7:00

Middlepon . Sunday School - 9: I~ a.m..
Wpnhip - 10: 1.5 a.m., 7 :00 p .m ..

P· ~ · · Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

\\'ednesday Service -7:00p.m

Thppen Plain ·churcla or Christ
lnstrumtmal. Worship Service - 9 a.m ..
Com munion - 10 a.m ., Sunday School •

Pastor: Joseph Godwin. interitn pas10r .
Sunday School - 9 :30 a m., Worship -

10: 15 ·a .m .. Yomh~ 5:30pm Sunday, BibiC
S1Udy Wednesday 7 pm

p.m ., Wednesday
Brvdbury Church or Christ
Mmi stcr: Tom Runyon , 3955R Brndtlury

Sliver Run Baptist
Pll!ltor: John SWanson, Sunday School ·

Road. Middleport. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.
Worship - 10 : .~0 a,m.

9 :45

a ..m., Evening

-

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ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville·, Ohio
Located less 1han 30 minutes from
Athens. Pomeroy or Parkersburg

p .m .

1-7 40-667-3156

"Still small enough to care"

a.m .. Worship Service: 10:30 a m., Bible
Study, Wednesday, (!:30 p.m.

sign erection

1740) 992 ,645 1
·' Fa

--~,

P.O. Box 683
Pomeio ' Ohio 45769-0683

up

s.m...

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217
Sizes available 5x.10 to 10 x 20

740-985·3561
992-1550 .
499 Richland Avenue, Alhens
740-594-6333
1-800-45 t -9811fi
www.karraudiolo .com

Sales • Service • Parts

All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

Hapti~t

Founh &amp; Main St .. Middleport. Pastor:
Rev. Gi lbert Craig. Jr., s·uml~ty School -

Hour~

I"'"' ho... of worthlp anclotu&lt;fr Cod'• Word.

MEIGS FAMILY EYE CARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

Yo.. future

dep.... "" ,our fo&lt;.uol F~us on the Father.

........
SUNDAY

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110NOAT

THVIISI)AY

H.- .o
1:1·10

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II

507 Mulberry Hcigh,ts
Pomcro~·· Ohio 4571i9
1740) 9'J2-3279
Tnl F.r~c I-M77-5H.1-2433

&lt;~nd

p.m .. Wedne~y Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Hartford Church of C hrist in
Christian Union
Hartrord, W.Va ., Pastor, D&amp;v id Greer.
SundaY Sc hoo l - 9JO ~-111. Wor!&gt;hip ·
10 :30 am ., 7 :00 p .m. )'Vedncsday
Services · 7:00 p.m .

Church of God

a.~ .

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday Schoo l - 9 :30 a.m .. Worshi p ·
10:4.5 a.m., Sunday E"ening · 6 00 p.m.,
Pastor: Don W~tlli:cr

Ml. Moriah C hurth or God
Mile Hill Rd. Racine , Pastor: Jame s
Sallerfield, Sunday School · 9:45 a.m ..
b-enmg . 6 r .m .. Wednesday Scr\iccs - 7
p.m.
Ru,tland C burth God ,
Pa stor: Ron Heath. Sunday Wor.;hip - I0
a.m .• 6 p m,. Wednesday Sen·1ces - 7

or

Rutland Free Will Baptist

Meals &amp; /Jaily Specialt
OpCn 7 day~ a week

Salem St , P3.stor: Jamie Fonner, Su nday

Victor Roush, S~o~nday school - 9.30 a.m.,
Sun~ay worrJl1p . !0·30 a.m. &amp; 7 p m ..

your light so shine be:fonel K&amp;
that they may see vu,,.,.
works and glorify
Father in heaven."
Matthew 5:

WK2~ Gold Ridge Rllad, Pomeroy . .OH

Ytmr #2 Business

t .\

our #J

13Jmi11!S.~

Phone '" Fax 7~0-992 -7 11 9
.~ Owners: David &amp; Edilh Brickles

MIDDLEPORT .

Cahary Pilgrim Chapel
Ha:nsooville Road, Pa.~tor. Charles
McKenzie, Sunday School 9:30 am ..
Wor.;hip - II a.m., 7:00p.m., Wednesday
Service -7:00p .m.

Rose ot Sharoo Holiness Chun:h
' Leading Creek Rd.. Rutland, Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King, Sunday school- 9:.10 a.m.,
~-m _ .

.Sunday
wors h1p -7
prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

t90

Second St • ' Middleport, OH
740-992-6128
Local. sou rot) for trophies,
Ia ues !-shirts and more
N.

Bill Quickel

C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
Jn mile off Rt. 32.5, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday Schoo l - 9.30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., ~:30 p.m.,•
Wcdne!!dayService ·7:30p.m.

BUSINESS SERVICES
A11 Accorwti11g &amp; .
Iinanda/ Sen·ices Firm
bl ~ h. ~1.tm !itr"l:..:l ~ P\HllCroy

•

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-~

Communily of Christ
Portland- Ra~.:i ne Rd., Paslur: Jim Proffill,
Su nday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a, m ., Wednesd-ay Servic es · 7"{)0
Btthel Worship Cerl ter

39782 S.R. 7. Reedsville. OH 45772. 1/2
mile north of F..astem School~ on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church, P11stor Rob Barbe r.
Associate Pastor Karyn Davi ~. Youlh
Pastor Su1.ie Francis, Sunduy ~c rv1-.-e~
10:00 am \loOr:ohip, 6 :00 pm Famil ~ Life
Classes, Wed . Home Ct! ll Groups 7:00
p.m., Outer Limits ·~e ll Group at the
~ hurch ti:30 pm to 8:30 pm

Pomeroy
Pastor: Brian Du nham, Worship · 9 30
a.m .. Sunday School - 10:35 a.m.
· Rock Springs

Ash Str-Ht C hurc:h

Pastui-: Keith Rader, Sunday School - 9:1.5
a .m ., Worship -, 10 a.m ., Youlh

398 As h St .. Middleport · Pastor Jeff Smith

tfiDi

James H. Andt~n . l..ktnstd funrral f)imto.Heidi
, Fort.thoughl
Planning

-.

C11 lvary Blbl~e Church
Pomero Y P1ke. Co Rd .. Pastor: Rev.
Black w.ood. Sunday School · 9:30 l.m.,
Wo rs hip 10 30 a . m .,. 7 :30 p.m.,
Service- 7:30 _p.m

Sti,·ersville Community Apo~&amp;o&amp;k

.

Church .
.
Pastor. Wayne R. Jewell. Sunday worship

10 :30 a.m. &amp; 6 :30 pm.
- 6 :30 p.m., Youth
Scrv1ce- 6 :30p.m
Wedne~day Serv1~.:e

Rutland
Pastor: Rick Buurne , Sunday School 9 :30 a.m., Worship · .10:30 a.m, Thursday

School · 10:15 a.m., Worship · 9:15a.m.,
Bihk Study: Monday 7:00pm

Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Snowville
Sunday School- 10 a.m ., Worship- 9 am.

Appe Urt Center
"'FU II -Gospd C hurc h"', Pastot5 John &amp;

Davi s, Sunday serVice,
Wednesday sel'\'it:e. "'I p· m.

10

a .m ..

Lutheran

and 1 p.m .. Wednesday - 7 p.m .. Friday ,fellow ship sef\'ice 7 p.m.
Harrisonville Community Church
Pastor: l)lero n Durham, Sunday · 9 :30

Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

a. in and 7 p.m .. Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Morning Star
Pastor: Juhn Gilmore, Su nday School- ll

l\_1iddleporl Community C hurch

Pastor: Bill Marshall S unday School 9a.m., WorShip • 10 IL JU., l st Sunday

Fa.ith Valley Tabernacle Churth
'
Ba1lcy Run Road, Pastor: Re v Emmell

.

service · 7:00 p.m .:

Raw son. Sunday E ve ning 7 p .m ..
"Thursday Sendee - 7 p.m.

Racine

School • 10: 00 a.m. Pastor: , Jamt!s P.
Brady

a.m., Worship - II a.m

Sunday School • 10

Pa~tor:

Helen Kline, Coolville Churc h,
Mam &amp; Filth St., S unday School - 10

School · I O·OO a,m.• Wors.hip - 11 a._m_

a.m., Worship - 9 am .. Tuc_sday Sen.·ices 7 p.m.

Hazel Community ChuiTh
Off Rt. 124. Pastor : Edse l Hart. Sunda)'
Schoo l -9:30a.m., Worship · 10.30 am.,,
7 ·JO p.m

Bethel Church
Townshi p Rd .. 468C, Sunda~· Sctiool · 9
a .m. Worship - 10 a.m
Service§- 10 a.m.

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worship · I I a.rn . P11stur: Ru.:hlird Nease
Bechtel United Meth~ist
·
New H~ven , Richard Ncahc, Pa stor,
Sunday worship 9:JU a.m . Tues . 6:JO
prayer and Bible Study.

Morst Chaprl C hurch
Sunday school · I 0 a,m ., Worsh1p -

Grand Stract. Sunday School - 9 ]0 a m..
Worship - 10:30 a,m., Pastor Phillip Bell

II

a.m , Wedn esday Service - i p.m.

Torch ChuKh
ClY. Rd . 6J. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
Wnr~h1p · 10·30 a.m.

Failh Gm~prl Churrll
Long BqHom, Sunda)' School - 9JO a.m..
Wors hip • 10· 45 a .m ., 7JO p m :
Wednesday 7.30 p.m.

.

Nazarene

· .Ralph Spire.~. Sunday S..:hool - 9 :30 a.m.,
Wor.;hip - 10:30 a.m .. 1 p.m.. Thursday

Lawrence Bu sh. Sunda)' School 9JO a.m , Evening . 6:30 p,m .. Wedncday

9 :JO a in .. Wo rship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p m..

Ser'."lt:e - 7 p.m.

Pa~ t m ·

Mt. Olin

Pastor: Jane Beattie, Wo r~ hip - 9, a.m..
Su nday SchOOl · 10 a.m . . Thursday
Serv1ces - 7 p m
Joppa
Pastor: !Job Randolph, Wo rsh1p - 9:JO
a. in. Sunday School · 10:3 0 a. tn.

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

Presbyterian
Harrisonville PrtAbytt:ria.n Church

Middleport PmbyUPastor: James Snyder, Suoday School 10 '
a.m .. worship serv1cc II am.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh-DaY Adventist
Mulbtrry His Rd .. Poq~eroy. Pastor:
Benne11 Luckie sh. Saturdmy Services:
Sabbath School- 2 p .m., Wm~hip · 3 p.m.

United Brethren
ML Hennon Uniled Brdtlru

Churth

in Christ Church
Com munity 3641! Wickham Rd,

Pastor. Peter Martmdale. Sum1a~· School •
9 .~0 .a.m ,,- Wor ~hip • IO:JO a.m ., 7:00
p,m . Wednesday Sen.· ice~ · 7:00'p.m.
'r'uuth I!WUP meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundayi
7r m

. Eden Uniled Brtthl'f:" in Cbrilt
State Route IN, between Rtttlsv!lk 4.
Hocli.ingpon. Sunday School - 10 a.m..

S ~nda~ ' wur~lup - II :00 a.m. Wednesdly
Sernt: t'~ · 7 00 p.m . P~s tor- M Adlm
Will

l' ull Gospel

Reednilk Fellowdlip
Church ot the JI.Oa~arcne . Pa stor· . Sunday
School - 9;3 0 un .. Worship · 10·45 a.m.,

Lighlhou~

7·JO p m . Tuesday &amp; Thur&lt;o .- 7:30 pm .
South Bethel Communit}· Chr.tn:h
Lmda Da.mt'WUl.\d .

7 p m.. WedneMiay Savkcs - 7 p.m.

Chester

School
I 0 a.m .. E~ening - 7 p.m ..
Wednesday s~rvices - 7 p.m. .

33045 Hiland Road. Pomero). Pas1or: Roy
Hur\lcr. Sunday SChool · 10 a.m.. Eveni ng

Jane

Bcauic . Sunday S'hool · 9 :3 0 a. m.,
Worship . II a m .. -6.30 p.m.

Communit~·

P~s tor :

Wednesday Sen1CI.'s · 7 p m .. Pastor.
Allen Midcap

Meigs Coopenati ,·e Parish
Nonhcast Clu ster. Allred.

Pentecostal Asaembly

Te~as

Middleport Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Alle n Midcap, Sunday School -

7 p.m.

ChristiaD C't!ardt

Pentecostal

Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m .. W~rs hip ~
10:30 a.m .• 7 p.m.

Mt. Olive United Methodist
00" 12..- behind Wilkc~ v ille , Pastor: Rev.

ScP.· i~·c~-

Sll~· er R1d g~ - Past~lr

Sunday School - 9 a.m .. Worship Ser.ice
10 a.m. 2nd and ~th Sund&lt;t)'

Synu:we Church of the Nau.rtne
Pastor Mike Adkms. Sunday School- 9:30
a .m , Wor~hip .. 10:.30 a.m , 6 p .m ,

Carleton lntt:nlenomin•t.ion11l Chun:h
Kin ~s bur y Road. Pa~1or · Rohe r! Vanc-e .

. WC'dnesday Services· 7 p.m

Sunday Scho ol
9 30 a.m . WOrr.htp
Service 10 JO a rn . E\e mt1g Sen1~e - 6

Pomero)· Ch~rch or the N.-tartM
P·aswr: Jan La\•ender, Sund.ay School -

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.:fl•~et .:funeral -.,me

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ROCKSPRINGS
Ler ymir lighr slime before
REHABILJTATION CENTER men. that rh ey may see your
The care you deserve, close to home good works and glorif\' wmr
36759 fqocksprings Rd .
Father in hem·en.·''

Pomeroy, OH 45769
740·992-6606

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

Marrhe11 5:·/6

Meigs_Counly's Olde!'l F1orist

Easl Main
Pomeroy. Oh
'l•r 11£ und !t!O'll thot~ghtc wlrfl cpotcltl-."

740-992-2644

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We FIJI Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy .

Cod so loved the &gt;mrld
he gave his m!IY

..
.. :sonJohn
3:/6

f!Oiten

'

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before

, .··-v ·Let (lur.fiJmllY lif.tp ·

God and. man ."

Suppre:-.~1on • E\11ngu1'hCr!oo. • Spnnkln-.

prort&gt;ct _¥ourj.vn1(1f'

Acts 24:16

•

..J

Fu ll Gospel. Pastor: Roben Musser, ·
Sunda y School 9 :30 am , ·. Worship 10:30
am . 7:00 pm. Wed Service 7:00pm

Dyesville Communil)· Church

Wednes day

Hockingport Church

.

Lonme Coats, Sunday Worship 10:00 a~.
Wedne:.day 7 pm

1411 Bridge man St., Syracuse. Sunda)
Sc hool . 10 a.m. Eve ning · 6 p .m ..
We-dnesday S~fVI(e- 7 p m.

Walnut and Henry Sts .. Ra\'en swOod.
W. V~t ., P;~. s tor : Da,•i d Russe ll. Sunday

Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St.. Pomeroy.
Sunday Sc hool - 9:45a.m., Wurbhip · II
a_m_

Restoration Christian FeDoW"IIMp
9::\6.5 Hooper Road. Athens. Pastor:

Pastor: Roben Crow. Worship - 9 a.m.

Syracuse Mission

Coolville United Methodisl Parish

Our Savlour lutheran Church

Chlli'Cit

St Rt 124. Racme, Tornado Rd . Sunday

Wednesday - 7 p.m

W~.

F~eUowshlp

10 am, Sunday Church servi~e- 6:30pm
Wedncsda )· 1 pm

Evening - 7 JO p.m: , Wednesday Service 7 :30p.m.

East Leiart

PllStor: Kerry

se rvice 7:00 p m, Bibly Study
Wednesday &lt;.erv1ce 7:00 pm

Langsvlll~e

.575 Pearl St., Middlepon ·. Pas10r: Sam
Anderson. Sunday Schoo l 10 a. m.,

a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.

SL John Lutheran Church
, Pin~ Grove. Worship - 9:00a. m·.. Sunday

f'ull Gospel. Chun:h
of the Living Savior
Rt.338, Antiquity, Pastur: Jesse Morris.
Serv1ces. SaiUrday 2:00p.m.

Hot&gt;son Christian

Pa stor: John Gilmore . Sunda"y School ·
9 :30a.m , Worship - 10:45 a. m . . Hibll'

~\· e ni ng

a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. ~ednesday - 7 p.m . •
Yo uth 7 p.m

Pastor: Her5chel White. Sunday School-

Carmel-Sutton
Cannel &amp; Rash an Rds · Rac ine. Ohio.

mo nth

3773 George~ Creek. Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten. Sunday Serv1ces • 10

~.m.,

Long Bottom. Pastor: Ste\'e Reed, Sunday
Sc hool - 9· 30 am, Worship - 9:30 a.m.

9 - 10 : 15

7

~vening

Abundant Grace R.F. I.
923 S. Third SL. Middlepon. Pastor Teresa

Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

Se rvi ce

Worship · 7 p.m .. Wednesday Service ·
p.m.
Ne,.. Lift Victory CmfH

5017, Service time . Sum.l11y 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday 7 pm

F81th Full GosPtl Chul"(h

The Church nf Je.sw

Clifton Tabernacle Cburtb
Chftor;a, W Va . Sunday Sc~ l - 10 a,m.,

Saltm Community Churth

a .m , Worship -· 9 a. m., Wednesday
Sen·ices - I 0 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Serv1ces · 7 p.m.

Back of West Colu mbia. W.Va.om UevinJ
Road. Pastor: Charles Roush (304) 67~-2288. Sunday School 9 :30 am. Sundly

Bethany
Pastor· John Gilmore . Sunday School· 10

p.m"Wednesday Servlce- 7:00p.m.

Wedn~sday

Patty Wade. 603 Second A\'e. Mason. 77 3-

Pastor: Rcv. l.arry Lemley; Sunday School
-9:30a.m:, Wors.h1p- 10:4.5 a',m .. 7 p.m.,

Laurel Cliff Frte 'M ethodlsl ChurCh ·
Paslor: Glenn Rowe, Su nday S~.:hool -

Rejoidng Lite C hun:•
.500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport, Pastor:
Mike Fore man , Pastor Emerilui Law~ ,
Foreman. Won;hlp- 10·00 am

Worship

Bourne, Sunday School - 10 a.m. WorShip
·l 0·-l.5 p.m , Sunday Eve, 7:00 p.m..

.

.

Study

Sunday S~:hool · 9.30 a.m. ,· MQrning

Fellowship. Sunday- 6 p.m.

17-·!0 i9Y2-7270
•

Other "meeiings in homes.

Pearl Chapel
S un"day S~.:hool- 9 a.m ., Wor.;hip - 10 a.m .

Ser\'ices · 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: William K Mar.;hall, Su nday

'

Pomeroy

ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME
174 Llvnt Simi • PO Dol l7U
S"" llllll"tn. W\" 25W

- 7.p .m.

Wedm:sd:~ y

Metting in the nld Amerit:an Leg1&lt;10 Hall
South Founh Avo::nlle , Middl&lt;'port
Paslor: C hri s Stewart 10:00 am Surxhy

p.m

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St, Middleport . Pastor· R1ck

992-3785

. 992-6677

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

KEBLER

Oasis C hristian Fellowship
I Non-deno minatiOnal fcllmo,·ship )

Pastor· Bob Robinson, Sunda~ School · 9
a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m.

Wedne~ay

Davls..Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, .mrd My Brogan-Warner
Full line of
iNSURANCE
Insurance words abide i11 you, ye shall
SERVICES
Products+ ask what ye will, and it shall
·
Financial
214 E. Main
be done unto you..
·
Services
AGENCIES Inc.
992·5130
John 15:7

TROPHIES &amp; TEES

6 30 pm., Wed . Bib le S1udy 7:00p.m.

Minernllle

Wednesday prayer se rv ice · 7 p.m.

740-992-7713

Portable Toilet Rentals
.Ja.c k's Septic Ta11~ &amp;
Portable Toilet Service
(In Darwin)

Ridenour. Sunday School - 9:}0 a.m ..
Worship- IO·JO /l.m., Wednesday Sen.-ice

· 6:00p.m., Wednesday • 6.00 p.m. Bible

6:)0

Christian Union

a.m., Worship - ·II am.

-qullllty.
Vloh:

9 30 am, Wors.h1p : 10:30 am .

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Anus Hun, Sunday Schuol · 10 ·

Coo~ed

Hills Self Storage

The Hppliance man

""•Mod...

his phofoaraph of "Gihron" io
close ....t
on hll
nOM! ..... rflapo r.re mimics die skiM of a photocraphor. To
produ&lt;o o quol~ pho•ptroph, d&gt;a pho"'VVP...,. ~t tab
PI cp er aim •che ta,...e .and keep it in foc.ut..
Like tiM phatoJraphor. ,.,., of "' aim -11 for a pi'O,.ifll • - ·
but ,.,...., to fo."' our li...,. upon God'• Word. "At. for Gocl. ~- • .,
io perfed; tiM orerd.of •he Lord io llewlen ... :· (2
lll:ll)• .
WithoUt HI• Wotd- INb ufttleor detislons. o ... lifo"- not

"A Home Bank for ·
Home People"

The Cbun:h or Christ or Pumeroy
ln! e fSf'ction 7 and 124 W, E\·an gd ist:
Dennis Sargent, Sunday Bible Study .-

.Wedncsda} Services- 7 p.m.

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Hume

· 10:30 a.m

Faith Baptist Church
Railroad St., Mason, Sunday School · 10
a .m., Worsh1p • II · a .m., fi p. m.

!Mi[fie's f}{estaurant
740-949-2210

Sund~

Oultr Chun:h of Chrlsl
school9: 30 a.m .. Sunday wors h1 p

Whlk'l Cbllpel Wa&amp;ey•
Coo lv ille Road, Pastor: Rev. Phillip

Fnday. 7 p.m

Pastur: Wayne Dunlap . Stale Rt 681. ·
Tupper.; Pl ams, Sun. Wm~ h1p : 10 am &amp;

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Reedsville Church of Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm, Sunday School : Y· 30

Vlclory Baptist lndeprndent
52.5 N. 2nd St. Middlepon , Pastor: lame~
E Keesee, Worship • 1Oa.m .. 7 p.m ..

6 am-8pm

. Heath { Middl~eport)
Pastor: Brian Du nham . Sunday School •
9:JO ;un ., Worship - II :00 a.m.

~v ery

.'
Hickory Hills Chunh of Christ
Tuppers P'ains. Pastor Mike Moore. Bible
das s, Y a.m. Sunday: worship 10 a.m.
Sunday: wor.;h ip 6:30pm Sunday: Bible
dass 7 pm Wed.

Wednesday Sen'ice s·. 7 p.m .

Wa~·/ n Friendlr '
Atmwpllert'

Danville Holiness Church
3 10.57 State Route 32.5. Langsvlle . Pastor:

Or Christ

p. m .. Wednesdo.y Ser.·ices - 7 ·00 p.m.

Jaine s R. A~.:rce, Sr.. Sund11y Unified
Serv~ce . Worship · 10:30 a.m .• 6 p.m .,

Page Street
(740) 992-6472
Middleport OH Fax_j74QL992-7406

Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m.,
Sunday Serviee-7 p.m

Pastor: Bob Robinson, Sunday School- 10
a.m .• Worship- 9 a,m.

Fro&lt;dom Goope!Miolloo
81ld Knob. on Co Rd . 3 1, PllltOr: ac..
Rogu Willford . Sunday Sl:hool · 9:30
a m. Wursh1p- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Re~ . Frank lin Dickens, Service:

Amazing Grace Community Church

Foresl Run

Street,

Sacrament

- Bill Amberger, Sunday School ~ 9 :30a.m.
Worsh1p . 8:00 .a.rri .. 10 30 a.m ., 7.00

Hillside Baptist Church
St. Rl. !43 just off Rt . 7. Pastor: Rev.

333

Community Church
Steve. Tomek, Main

pm.

Faln'iew Bible Oun:h
letar1 . W.Va. Rt. 1." Pa stor: Bri1n May,
Sunday School - 9:30a .m., Wonhip - HJO
p.m., Wednesiia)' Bible Study -7:00p.m.
Faith Fellow~hlp ·Cnuadr for Ckrtlt

A New Beginning
lJo' ull Gospel Chun:h) Harrisor1ville.
Pastors: Bob and iC;a) Man.hall ,
Sunday Service. 2 p.m .

Pastor· Keith Rader, Sunday School - 10
a .m., Worship - 11 a.m.

Holiness

Minister

Pastor : Daniel Mecca, Sunday School ·

Senhces -6:00

Other Churches

J.latwoods

Sunday School 10:20- 11 a.m .. Re li ef
S_ocictyiPriesthoOO I! :05 - 12 :00 noon,

Comer or St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
Minister. Doug Shamblin. Youth MimSier:

ML Mori.a h

10 :30 a.m., Worship -9:30 a.m .. Bible
Study Wed. 7::\0

Sunday Schoo l - 9 :30a.m., Worship and
Communion • 10:30 a.m., BOO J. Werry,

Belhleh~m Baptist Church
Great Bend, Route !24, Racine, OH,

Old Bethel Free Will Baptllt Cbun:h
28601 St. Rt. 7. Middlepon. Sunday ·
Servke · 10 a.m ., 6.00 p .m .• Tuesday

"A Celebration of Life"

326 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Sunday School
lind
Holy Euchar1st II :00 a'.m Rev.

Homemaking meetilig, 1st Thu.rs. · 7 p.m.

9:::\0 a.m., Sunday Woo;hip • I0.30 a.m ,
WedneJday Bible Siudy · 6:00p .m.

.
@

Pastor: Arland King, Sunday Schoo l -

Rutland Church or Christ

Bradford Church

Michael L. Crites ·
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.

Grace Episcopal Church

Christ or Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. ·160, 446-6::!47 or 446-74116.

Wednesday Services - 6:.\0p.m.

-;-

Enterpri~

9 :30 a.m ., Worship - 10 :30 a.m. and 6

Servici:s 7:01fp.m.

MI. Union Baptlsl
Pastor. Oenni ~ Weaver Sunday Sc hool·

or

Rutland Church the Ne:u~ne
Sunday Schoo l ~ 9:30 a.m.. Worship ·
10 :3 0 am . , 6 · 30 p.m ., Wednesday
Serv1clis- 7 p.m. Rev. Mike Clark

~ystll Run CODtmunity Churth

Racine First Baptist

10:40 a .m ., 7·00

Wedne~y Serv1ce' - 7 p.m.

Pastor· Jane Beanie, Sunday School - 9

Episcopal

Wallace, 1st and

Bearwallow Ridge Church or Christ

First Southern Baptist
4llP2 Pomeroy Pike, P11stor: E. Lamar
O'Bryant , Sunday School - 9·30 a .m .
Wor~hip -

Pa~tor-Jcffrey

3rd Sunday

Pastor: Re,·. Herben Grate, Sunday School
- 9 30 a.m.. Worsh1p · II a.m. fl pm .,

Thppen Plains St. P•ul

Central Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse}. Pasc.or: Bob Robinson,
Sunday School - 9:4.5 a.m., Worship - II
a:m., W~dnesday S~rvices ·7:30p.m.

Pastor:

Pomeroy Church or Chrisl

Chester Church ollhe Nata rent

Trinity C hurch
Second &amp; Lynn ~ Pomeroy, Pastor: Rev.
Jonathilll Noble, Worship 10 : 2~ a.m ..
Sunday School 9:15a.m,

Hemlock Grove C hristian Cllurth

Study- 7 p.m.

9 :30 a.m .. Wonh1p - 10 30 a.m . 11nd 6
p.m.. Wednesday Serv1ces- 7 p .m.

a.m., Worsh1p - 10 a.m., Tuesdlly Service s
- Y '\Op,m

Congregational

Minister: Larry Brown', Worship - 9 :30
a.m . Sunday Sc hool • I0:3l.l a,m., Bib le

Baptist
Sunday
Service

Chapman. Sunday , School
10 a.m.,
Worship- II a,m., Wednesday Services· 7
p.m.

Edward Payne

Carpenter Baptist Church

The Middleport"Church
of Christ Children's
Choir will present "The
Tale of Three Trees" at
7 p.m. on ·Sunday at
the Family. Life Center.
The musical is under
the direction of Debbie
Gerlach, Debbie
Ferguson, Kathy Baker
and Angelia Gilkey.
This musical brings to
iife the traditional
story of some trees
with a dream and a
God 'with a plan.

Jf ye abide in Me, and My

uardrail, Fence &amp;

H~art Catholic C buKh

Con , ·8:45-9: 15 a.m., Sun. Mass - 9 :30
a.m ., Daily Mass-8:30a.m.

r

9:30am., Worship- 10:4.5

words abide in you; ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

Worship - 9 :3 0 a.m. Sunday School •
10:30 a.m .. First Sunday of Month- 7:00
p.m . servic~

Syr.cUK Flnt Church at God

4 :45-.5: 15p.m.; M11ss- .5:30p.m .. Sun.

Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rutland,

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

Catholic

Cburch or God or Prophecy
O.J . White ~d . off Sl. Rt. 160. Pastor: 'p.J_

161 Mulberry Ave ., Pumeroy, 992-.5898,
Pastor: Rev. Walte r E. Hei nz, Sat. Con.

873 S. 3rd
Aile .. Middleport, Rt:!v.
Michael Bradfo rd, Pastor, Sunday. 10:30
Study

Submitted photo

·r

Wednc!Kiay Servicn · 6:30p.m .

l.ong Bottom
Sunday School - 9 30 a.m , Worsh1p IO:JO a m
Rted.svllle

Sacred

10a.m.1 W}'rsh1p . lla .m, 7:00 p.m.

income from bequests and
earnings on investments.
Unrestricted receipts are
expected to decline further in
2007 and 2008.
John Detterick, executive
director of the church's
General Assembly Council,
said "this is clearly part of .a
longer trend in the church and
probably most churches."

i'

Apple und Second Sts .. Pastor: Rev Duvid
Ru s~ ll . Sunday S~.:ho?l and Worship- 10
a.m . Evening Services - 6·30 p m.,

Evening· 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

·r

School • 10 a.m., Evening • 7 p.m .,
Wedm:!lday Services - 7 p.m.
~nd Baptbt Chun:h
Ravenswood, WV, Sunday School 10 am·
, Morning worship, II am Evening - V pm.
Wednesda )· 1 p.m.

.Wednesday s~rvices- 7:00p.m.·

Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) announces budget crunch
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
leaders announced that program budgets must be cut by
$9.15 million between now and
2008, including $2.7 million
this year. Staff cuts are expected to be announced May I.
The financial news conies
at a time when the denomination faces a showdown over

Fellowship
Apostolic

any real and lasting sense of
peace and tranquillity: In fact,
you cannot reahstlcally
· expect to Jive a good and
.healthy life of faith- that1s,
the Christian life - with all
of those deadly emotions raging inside your soul.
Are you nursing anger in
your heart'! Holding on to
past hurts? Have any
grudges? Let it go. Release 1t
by forgiving. Do this today, as
soon as possible. Do not put it
off. God is eVer ready to foruive and heal you ... but you
first have to forgive others.
As the Apostle St. Paul
says. "Get rid of all bitterness,
rage. anger, harsh words, and
slander, as we,ll as all types of
malicious behavior. Instead,
be kind to each other, tender
hearted, forgiving one another, just us God through Christ
has forgiven you."
'
Thi s is Lent. an holy season
when we journey back to the
cross of Christ and His empty
tomb when we focus intently
' love of God and H1s
.
on the
forgiveness and reconcilia- ,
tion . This is alsQ an excellent
opportunity· to forgive and be
free once again to truly love
and li ve in peace.
Are you ready to forgive,
e\&gt;en if that· other person has
never asked you r forgiveness'? Perhaps they don 't
even realize they should be
sorry or recognize they've
done anything wrong ... And
maybe, after A, they have
not' Are you ready to forgive
them anyway and feel .the
peace of God's ass.ured forgiveness in your own life?
"Pardon your neighbor any
and all' wrongs done to you,
and when you pray, your sins
will be forgiven .. . Your heavenly Father will forgive you ."
And that peace. joy and happiness for which you long so
deeply will find the way back
into your heart, mind ·a nd
soul. Forgive . .Be forgiven.
Af1d be at pea,e.

Yest~rd ay

The Dally Sentinel • Pl!g! A7

• Securlt\

172 N. lnd A,&lt; , M;ddlcpo11. OH
353 - 0~.17 F:n : 7401

740-~2~298

MY 1!race is sufficient
for thee: for mY
strf,!nllth is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

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

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Friday, March 24, 2006

.www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 8

Bearcats fall to South Carolina in NIT, B2

'

Sweet 16 roundup, B4
Trojans, without Mayo, advance to final, BS
Wheelersburg falls to VASJ, B8

Friday, March 24,2006

ILLY

·Redmen split pair with Cedarville
Bv

MARK WILUAMS

SPECIAL TO THE· SENTINEL

GALLIPoliS- A SChedule ot upcoming cOllege
and htgh schOOl vtlrslly sporting evenls involving
teams from Gallla , Meigs and Mason counties .

Todav'• games
Baseball
Wahama at Huntington St. Joe, 5 p.m.
Softball
Wayne at .Point Pleasant, 5:30 p.m.
Poca at Wahama. 5 p.m.
·
a College Softball
Geneva at Rio Grande. 2 p.m
· Saturday's games ·
Baseball

Point Pleasar;, t at logan. ·a p.m.
Poca at Wahama, 5 p.m
Softball
Point Pfeasan t at Winfield, noon
Wahama at Buflalo-Guyan Valley, noon
Track and Field
Galli8 Academy, River Valley, South Gallia
at Warren Fairweather RelayS, 9:30 a .m.
Point Pleasant at Capital, TBA
College Baseball
Cedarville at Rio Grande (DH), 1 p.m.
·
Collage Softball
Malone at Rio Grande, 1 p.m.
Sunday's game
College Softball
"Rio Grande at Fairmont, 1 p.m.
Monday. March 27
Baseball

Eastern at River Valley, 4:30p.m.
Softball
Gallia Academy at Eastern. 4:30p.m
Marietta at River Valley, 4:30p.m.
Logan at Point Pleasant , 5 p.m
South Gallia at Coal Grove, 4:30p.m.
College SOftball
Rio Grande at Salem , 1 p.m . .

American Legion
·Baseball Post 128
tryout meeting set

.n.....,'-.r~N

CROW LawOffic.es

~

rfA.RNER \..!.:E:/
Insurance Services

Life • Auto • Home • Farm
Business • Boats • Motorcycles
Com~ercial • Hospitali zation ,(riA)
• Bonding Contractors
·· ··

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Representing:
Auto Owners
.

Westfi€1d Insurance Co.

214 E. l\hin Strcd • Pomeroy, Ohio

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LIFE • BONDS • MOBILE HOMES • HOSPITALIIAnON

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P.O. Box 828
.
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(749) 882·2136

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(740) 667-3161

·COMING SOON I . ~­
Pt. Pleasant, WV ·~

· 992 ~5444 • Pomeroy, OH
'b592-5141 ~Middleport, 0~ ,
I

Cronin hired
as.
.
coach of Bearcats
.

VALLEY LUMBER
992-6611
Middleport, OH
.

Swisher &amp;'. ,Cohse
.

;#,;JI

. K.E. McCullouglt, RPH

ana Affiliated CompanieS. Hom e Office: Columbus, 0~

FISHER ~:[
FUNERAL HOME
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Route7
P.O. BOx339

Pomeroy, Ohio

Insurance underwritten by Nationwide Life Insurance Company_Nationwide

I Mulua&lt;lllnnss.uurrance -.

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$92-2955

¢~

m.

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992-5479
113 W. 2nd • Pomeroy
Warnerl 1@nationwide.com

MMon,wv.

We Fill Any Doctor~s Prescription

Jeff Warner Insurance

1111urance &amp;
Financial Servtce~

4~ Second St.

110 W. 2nd Pomeroy
'
Established 1907
·1. Fred W. Crow, SA (1879-1957)
Fred W. Crow (1915· 1995)
I. Carson Crow

McCullough ~ . Riffle · Drug

IIJ~,UHANCf FOR ALL NEEDS

Nationwide•

992-6059
992-5132

.

Farmers·
Bank
&amp; Savings Co1J1P0ny

..

State Auto MutUal • Grange
Ohio Farmers

· RO~K
SPRINGS
Tryout dates for Post 128
American Legion baseball
team all players are set for
May 24, 25 and 26 (everyone
mu st come to all three. only
except ion is if your hi gh
school team is sti II playing in .
the state tournament ) al
Meigs High School.
Post 128 ·plays its home
games in Meigs Cou nty. but
receives players from both
Meigs and Galli a .Counties ·
from
these
rcspecti ve
sc hools: Ga lli a Acaden1y,
River Valley, Meigs Local ,
Eastern and Southern.
From these tryouts. the
Post 128 team for 2006 ( 19
years old and ooder) as well
as a Junior Legion team ( I 516 year olds) will be selected ..
There will be an organizational meeting at the old
American Legion building in
Middleport on Sunday, April
2 at 2 p.m. Everyone w ho
wishes to try oui for the team
or the junior team is strongly
recommended to attend this
meeting on April 2.
Questions shou ld be directed to coach Chris Stewart
(740) 591-4605 or e-mail
&lt;!.iamondD I @col umbus.rr.co

C.P. Riffle, RPH

·HOME NATIONAL
BANK
.Gl
i=Di
'
i
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949-2210 • Racine, OH
992-6533 .• Syracuse, OH

•

C INCINNATI (A P)
Former Cincinnati assistant
M ick Cronin took over the
Bearcats ~ progra111 Thursday
night , shortly after the team's
65-62 loss · to South Carolina
in the NIT quarterfinals and .
on the same day that former
~oach Bob Huggi ns landed a
job.
·
Earlier, Huggi ns signed a.
five-year contract
with
Kan sas State.
Al so Thursday
night.
Bearcats interim C()ach Andy
Kennedy - beaten out by
Cronin for the Cincinnati job
~ was hired by Mi ssissippi.
Cronin, who has been head
coach at Murray State the past ·
three seasons, will be introdu.ced at a news ~onferem:e
Friday, the uni -:er,ily said.

CONTACTS
Phone ..:.... 1 -740-446-2:}42 e)(t. 33

FaX -

1-740-446-3008

E·mall - sports@ mydailysentmel.com
~ports StaH
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor

1740' 446-2342. ext 33
·
bsherman@ myda1lytribune com
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer .
(740) 446-2342. " ' 23

bwalte rs@ myda11ytr1 bu ne .com

Larry Crum. Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342 . ext 33
_ lcrum@myd~ ilyreglster . com

'

Redmen
. The . Baseball

RIO . GRANDE University of Rio Grande
Redmen baseball team lost
for the first time at home this
season in the opening game
of a doubleheader on
Thursday at' Bob Evans Field.
The Redmen fell 2•1 to
Cedarville, but rebounded to
win rhesecond game 13-3 in
six innings.
Rio Grande (13-12, 4-2
AMCS) could not solve
Cedarville righthander Mait
Houchin. The Redmen had
only four hits and did not
score until the sixth inning.
Jun ior catcher Kyle Wells
drove in the lone for Rio
Grande with a bloop si ngle
into right field. ,
Cedarvil le
(6-8,
1- 1
AMCS ) collected five hits in
the pitcher 's duel. The
Yellow Jackets ' only runs
Brad Sharman/photo came via the long ball. Matt
Rio Grande's Keri Amsbary (7) rounds . second base on a Totten .· clubbed a . two-run
fielder's choice an'd looks back to the· pl ate during ·AMC · home run in the second
South action Thursday in F!io GrCJnde.
inning· and Houchin made it

~It.

stand up for the win.
Rio had the tyin g run at
third when pinch-hitter Dan
Crabtree grounded out to second base.
Senior lefthander Brent
Watterson · (5- I) was the
tough luck losi ng pitcher for
the Redmen . He went the dislance and fanned seven while
walking only one batter.
In game two Rio exploded
late, scoring 10 runs in the
5th and 6th innings to win in
run-rule fashion.
· Cedarvil le starter Matt
Bonin , the ace of the staff,
was .uncharacteristically wild,
walking and delivering three
wild pitche s in 4 1/3 inning&gt;.
She allowed frve hil s and
. seven runs (stx earned) fn
taking the loss.
. Rio starterDustin Gibbs (2I) pitched well in pick,ing up
the ~in . He was overpowermg m stnkm g out 12 batters

in S 2/3 inmng,. Gibbs scatteced seven hit' and allowed
thre'e run' whi"le walking only
one batter.
Seniit~
shomtop Matt
Martm had a big game fur the
Redmen. going 2-for-2 with
two walks. three run' scored.
three stole n bases and an
·RBI.
Junior leftfielct"er Michael
Warren went 2-for-3 with a
run scored and senior Kevin
Dolan was 2-for-3 with an
RBI , a run scored and a stole n
base. Junior Nate Chau.
ripped an RBI double in .the
fifth while. Wells ·and sophomme Kenta Sato had two
RBI each.
Rio had ,JJ hit s in the &gt;econd game lriumph .
Kevin Brown led the .
Yellow Jacket attack on
offense. ·going l-for-1 offi. ciall y with a wa lk . a sacrifice
1ly and two runs batted in.
Rio
wi ll
travel · to
Cedarville to finish up ttie
four-game sea;on series .on
Saturday wilh the first game
slated 10 hegi!' at I p.m.

Huggins to become Kansas·State coach Mayo
KANSAS CITY, Mo.
(AP) -· Bob Huggins is
returning to college basketball as Kansas State's
coach after 16 · years at
Cincinnati, where he
turned the Bearcats into a
national power but was
ousted following a drunken-driving conviction and
a clash with the school's
president.
Kansas
State
said
Thursday that Huggins
will be introduced at an
afternoon news . conference.
Huggin s,
who
left
Cincinnati in 2005 and did
not coach this season, will
replace Jim Wooldridge ,
who was I5,13 this year.
The Wildcats have not
been 10 the NCAA tournament since 1996. but the
52-year-old Huggins will
be \I epping into a ·promi sing situation with ·most of
. the team's top scorers
returning next season.
He agreed · to leave
Cincinnati last August
when university president
Nancy Zimpher refused to
.extend hi s four-year contract rollover following his
arrest and conviction for
drunken driving in 2004.
Huggins received a $3
million
buyout. · and
Zimpher' s decision proved
unpopular, with many fans.
Cincinna ti cit ed the
arrest as the culmi nat inn
of many problems. He also
had been criticized for a
low graduation rate and ·
for several off-court incident' involving players.
. AP photo
, "We expect our coaches
Bob
Huggins,
left,
accepts
·a
warmup
jacket
from
Kansas
State
Presjdent
Jon
Wefald
during a
In be role models , and we
news conference Thursday in Manhattan .' Kan. Huggins .was named basketball coach at Kansas
Please see Huggins. Bl State, taking over for Jim Wooldridge. who was fired earlier this month after six seasons.

banned
from state
·semifinal
COLUMBUS (AP)- OJ.
Mayo, one of the · most
acclaimed high school players in the nation. was banned
Cincinna~i
North
from
College
Hill's state
·.~ semifinal
z a · m .e
Thursday by
the school' s
· principal.
principal
K
e l I y
t'
Hu g h es
{
would not
Mayo
why he
was
not
playing. She said no deci sioA
has been made about whether
he would play in the champi. onship on Saturday if the
team wiJ)&gt; Thur,day night.
"I would nol 1crm il a suspension ... she said. "He will
not be traveling with the team
and will not be playing in the
game tonight. The deci sion
wa.s made hy me."
Mayo. a 6-fnot-5 junior. is
Ohio· s top high school basketball player. He won The
Associated
Pre ss
Mr.
Bas,eiba\1 in Oh10 award on
Wedne".la1 for the seco nd
strai~ht 1e:tr.
Mavo.' whu avera2ed 28.8
points a game thb season. is
the featured perfnrmer t'qr the
defending state champiml&gt; .
The Trojans 12-i-11. winners .
of the AP rcgular-,ca,on poll
the last 1h rec year'. mee t

l

J.

"'Y

Please see Mayo. 18

Jeeps secure berth in title
game by defeating Lockland
BY RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCI AT ED PRESS

COLUMBUS · This
model of Jeeps is apparently
good in rough terrain.
. Jordan Lower made two
fou l &gt;hots with 12 . ~ seconds
left and fifth-ranked South
Wch;ter played great defense
on the final shot to beat No.
I0 Lo~klaml 61-58 Thursday .
in a Division IV state sem ifi nal.

The Jeeps (25-2) 'put the
clamps "on the· Panther&gt;' hesl
shooters in the last 'econds,
crowding Sheldon Johnson
and Dajuan Harris and forc ing Antoine Wilhite to heaw
an oiT-b;,tl&lt;m,·e 3-pointer . a'
the bu1.1er ;ounded. It wa;n.'t
c lmc .
Nick A.ldridgc. South
Wehslcr 's a ll -time leatling
;corer with 1.956 point&gt;
-coming in. Jed the Jeep; with

2 1 points despite battling
The .teams traded the lead
early foul trouble and a bad and traded baskets for much
shooting day. H ~ hit 7-of-17 of the final period before
shots from the field, m()st in . 12.372 at Ohio State's Value
l:leavy traftic within a few City Arena in the first game
feel nf Jhe baskel.
of the 84th annual toumaLower added 18 points, ment.
maki n~ all six of h1s free
Aldridge lowered his
thro w ~
First-team All- shoulder and drove to the
Ohioan Brigham Waginger. hoop for a basket with 3•49
who played at state qualifier left to put South Webster in
Irunt on last xear and then front 51 -49. then later added
transferred In South Webster, a free thrnw.
n\ustered just .7 points on ·3- The teams swapped scores
with the Jeeps maintaining a
of-14 shooting.
Harris.. a second-ieam all - three -point lead until Harris
staler. had a brilliant game hir two free throws to cut the
with 22 points , II rebounds lead to 56-55 wi th under a
and · 'even a"isls for the . minute lefl.
Panthers ( 23-4 ).
Mack
With 23.9 &gt;econds remainOgletree added 16 points.and ing. Aldridge look a pass JUSt
"Wilhite 12 for Lockland. inside th e free throw line and
which wa' : making it's first wa; fouled . then continued
~tate tournament appearance on up for the· layup. with the
;i nce \nsing lo Upper offici•~! giving him the NBAArlingtnn in the 1937 championship game.
Please see Jeeps, 88

AP photo
Sou-th Webster's Jordan Lower. ngl1t. shoots over Lockland's
Antoine 1'1/tl hite (41 1 and Sheldon Johhson . center. during the
second half of the Boys Drvision IV Basketball State Semifinal.
Thursday 111 Columbus.

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, March 24. 2006

'

www.rnydailysentinel .com

Huggins arrives at K-State
with a troubling echo
BY JIM LITKE

NCAA "six or seven times"
to ensure integrity, and
about America being a great
The ink had barely dried place because it presents
on Bob Huggins' new con- opportunities "to fit in ...
tract when Kansas State and to start over again ." And
officials were Mfered a rare then he turned the micro·
glimpse of what they ,were phone over. to ... Huggms.
getting themselves into.
"I don 't know that I've
A few hundred miles east ever.been around nicer peafrom
Manhattan. Kan., pie ," Huggins said, "people
where Huggins was ·intro- committed to doing th ings
' ·
duced Thursday afternoon the right way."
as the Wildcats' new coach,
Any more questions about
a few of his former - and why big-t ime college athletperhaps future - ballplay- ics is such a cesspool?
ers were mal\ing headlines
Didn't think so.
at his last stop.
.
Had · Wefald been more
Maybe it was just an honest and less convoluted,
he would have said someunfortunate coincidence.
First , there was the story thing like thi s:
of O.J . Mayo, a junior at
"We ' re ti red of losing,
Cincinnati North College tired of being stuck at home
Hill High School and two- during Marc h Madness,
time Ohi.o Mr. Basketball. tired of being dumped on in
Mayo is silting out the state the Big 12, tired of not fill. high sc hool semifinals- on ing the arena, not selling
orders from .his principal, more programs , jerseys,
who wouldn 't disclose the
reason _ and has no idea bobbleheads, bott.le openers,
. yet whethe r he ' ll play in the keychains and every other
championship if his team doodad you can slap a .
advances with a chance to Wildcat logo on.
"That, plain a nd simple, is
defend its Divi sion Ill title .
But Mayo has known for why Bob Huggins is standawhile now where he. and ing next to me today. He
teammate Bill Walker wins basketball games. I'll
. . ' worry about all the other
another very . ta lented JUnior,; 1 ff wh th NCAA
.en e.
. opens
wanted to go to col lege: .s u
Whichever sc hool Huggins a s~!elhte off1ce on camwound up at.
pus.
,
.
.
"At the sume time, " Mayo· There s no need to revtew
s-aid recently, "we have to the laundry h st of accomsee where he ends up, what pllshments and troubles
Hu~gm ~,
the school's fan base is like, complied by
see what !he fans think beyond say mg that 1f h1s
about him .and make sure VIrtue s we_re . stacked . up
everyth ing is great."
alongstde hts. sms, the ptles
Everything is not great, would be. close. to even. •He
though , with the program f1nds ktds as des~erate as he
Huggins left behind. On the 1s to wm, doesn t graduate
eve ·or it s NIT quarterfinal as many as he should , but
gan1e, the University of saves more than the odds
Ci ncinnati annou nced it was would dtctate. He msp1res
suspend ing two starters . . loyalty in players that few
·leading scorer James White coaches can ~!latch, teaches
and· 3-point speciali st Jihad defense better than most of
Muh ammad,
effective the rest, and IS hounded by
immediately, for violating trouble - from the NCAA
undi sclosed NCAA eligibili- and the law - . more often
ty rules. .
· than al,l but a handful. .
Though Huggins hasn ' t
That s who Hug~ms IS. He
been part of the prograrri suffered a mass1ve heart
since he walked out the door attack Ill the P1ttsburgh atrlast August with a $3 mil- port in September ?f 2003
lion buyout check - hi s and Was m hts offtce two
contract wasn ' t renewed fol- weeks later. Huggms vowed
lowing his 2004 arrest for to change , but a few minutes
DUI - both White and into his first game back Muhammad
were
his an exhibition game! - he
recruits. Draw yo ur own exploded
. aga~n.
conclusions.
rnumtdatron and mtenslly
In a statement re leased by were his princ ipal teaching
the university, interim head tool s back then, and as
coa.c h Andy Kennedy sai d, !hursd_ay'.s ba~ news . back
"Our team will continue in m Cmcmnat1 rell11nded
its attempt to represent this . everyone, nothing much is
university in the manner hkely to change.
with which it deserves to be
Huggins will bring · some
represented.''
gre.at players to Kansas
Anybody who watched the State, the Wildcats will win
open in g few minutes of the way more than they'll lose,
Huggins news conference and sometime · down the
heard Kansas State pres ident road, that satellite NCAA
Jon Wefald try to say much office in Manhattan will be
the same thing.
calling Wefald with quesln a rambling introduc- tions.
tion , Wefald ·mentioned a
And anybody who didn't
handful ·of the sc hool 's see it coming has no busi'
recent academ ic achieve- ness running a grade school,
ments and said he wan ted an let alone a university.
athletic -program that wou ld
compliment them. He talked
Jim Litke is a national
about " plumbing the depths" sports columnist for The ·
in ·the school's search for a Associated Press. Writ e lo
coach. about contacting the him at.. jlitkeap.org
'
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Gam.ecocks sneak past Bearcats, 65-62
CINCINNATI (AP)
South Carolina left to defend
its NIT championship titl e
while Cincinnati headed into
the offseason with a new
coach.
Tre' Kelley 's nine-point
outburst early in the second
half and go-ahead basket in
the final minute led the
Gamecocks to a 65-62 victory Thursday night over a
Cincinnati team that had two
starters declared ineligible
just hours before its quarterfinal game.
.
"Those people who have
seen us play, there's no way
you could be surprised it was
a close game," said South
Carolina coach Dave Odom.
"All our games are li ke that. "
Kelley fi ni shed with 21
points and Tarence Kinsey
had 18 for South Carolina
(2 1- 15), which will play
Louisville in Tuesday night 's
semifinals at Madison Square
Garden in New York. Old
Dominion plays Michigan in
the other semifinal.
The Gamecocks are trying
to become the fir~t team to
win consecutive N!T championships since St. John's in
1943 and 1944.
Eric HickS led .the shonhanded Bearcats (21-13) with

' touch for Hicks.
22
points. Jihad."
last
A layup by Kelley with 48
Athletic direcChadd Moore . and Ronald
tor
Mike Allen started in place of seconds left put South
Thomas said Muhammad and White. Carolina ahead for good.
It was tina llv the end of the
after the game Moore, whose chronic back
that
former problems 1forced him to quit road fur Ci ndnnati, which
Bearcats assis- the team for a while last year,. lnst its coach shortly before "
tant
Mick recei ved lower back mas- the start of the season and
Cronin would sages from a trainer during was plagued by injuries.
The ruling on White and
leave Murray timeouts late in the game. He
Muhammad was announced
State to become finished with II points.
head coach at .Cincinnati.
The di smissal s of White less than two hours before the
Missis;;ippi also announced it and
Muhammad
left game and shortly before a
hired Cmcinnati's interim Cincinnati with just nine televised news conference .in
coach, Andy Kenn.edy, to take players in uniform. That which former Bearcats coach
mcluded Branden Miller, a Bob Huggins was Introduced
over its program.
A · Cincinnati spokesman, preseaSOJl · walk-on, and as Kansas State's new coach.
Kennedy. Huggins' former
citing an NCAA ruling, Connor Barwin , a freshman
declined 19 say why seniors tight end ·on the school's fo ot- . a s~ istant. served as interim
James White and Jihad ball team who volunteered to coach during Cincinnati's
Muhammad were declared help two months ago when hard-luck season. Fans chantineligible. Some players hint- the Bearcats didn't have . ed thei r support for him and
ed at academic problems.
enough healthy players to gave him three standing ovaWhite, a 6-foo t ~ 7 swing scrimmage.
tions - . when he came onto
player from Washington, was
The Bearcats led 37-33 in the court before the start of
the Bearcats ' leading scorer at the second half when Kelley each half, and when two fans
16
points ·a
game . hit a short jumper and stole a who pa11icipated in a freeMuhammad,, a 5- 11 guard pass under the Cincinnati bas- throw shooting contest during
fro m ·Plainfield, N.J ., aver- · ket and drove the length o( a timeout ht\ld up signs sayaged II point s and was the court for another hoop . ing, '' Hire Andy.'
Cincinnati's top 3- point He followed that with a 3"J think thi s is the end of
shooting threat.
pointer and then scored on a the chapter for Bob Huggins
"They let us down . They let put back
after
another basketball ," Kennedy said
the team down, they Jet us turnover.
after the game. "Th is ki nd of
down," · Cincinnati point
Cincinnati tied it ·three puts closure ... and it's kind of
guard Dev.on Downey said. times after that; the last tiine 1ronic it happens today - he
"There is no way that team at 59 with 2:22 to go on a bas- gets a job and we're done. I
beats ·us with James and ket by Hicks. But that was the .think it closes the chapter." .

· ON THE T UBE

·

.,. If ~ou have • q1Nt1110n or • comment, wrb: NASCAR This Week, c,lo Tile Gaston Gazette, P.O.

Box

1893, Gastonia , NC 28053
· - - BRISiOt -DATA- ·

e R-: Food City 500
e Wile,.: B~stol (Tenn .) Motor
Speedway (.533 miles). 50()
laps/266.5 miles.
e Wilen: S!Jnday, March 26
• Laot year'l-r: Kellin tiar·vlck
• QuaiJ~Winf - o: Ryan New·
man, ooage, 128.709 mp~ . March
21. 2003.
e R - - d : Charlie Glotzoach,
Chevrolet, 101.074 mph, July 11 .

.'

ered ~nlsh_ Kahne weatherea a
rally from Mark Marun and
moved up to second place In the
poln1S stan&lt;llngs. The a~vers w~ o

• Race : Sharpie Mini

•11!108: John Deere 200

300
WMre : Bristol

• WheN: Marunsvllle

a

(Tenn.) Motor Speedfollowed Kahna across the nn1s~ way (.~33 miles!. 300 .
line - Martln . Dale Earn~arot Jr., laps/159.9 n'llles.
Jeff Gordon, Tony S1ewart and
• Wilen : saturday,
Jimmie Jonnso"- reaa .uke a
Mardl25
wno·s wno or NASCAR racing In
• LHt yur'l wlnnor:
tne 21st century, out 11 was al$o
KeV1n Hal'llc&lt;
noteworthy mat Paul Menard.
• quiJIW1nf NCOI&lt;I:
Kyle Peny and rookl&amp; Reed
Greg Blme. Fora.
1971.
Sorenson also nnlshed In the top 127.132 mpn. March
e Laot week: Kasey Kahne start- 10. Kanne's victory. his second
26. 2004 .
ed on the pole ana dominated.
overall ano nrs t on a superspeed: · • Raco .....,,, No pr&amp;-

. l '
, ., SOM)e- asked llle l!J'e'at
. Qa&gt;itd Pearson abOut 11!9 fact
, that NASCAR accepted corpo-

rate flt4)!lort 111r lhree aecades
·!rom RJ , Re)TI(llds lbbacoo Co.
1!11&lt;1 now &amp;iadly works WI ttl
Nlcorette i&gt;n smoking cessauon.
-wtlat tnat proves: said Pearaon, "IS that NASCAR Will ckl
llfflltlln&amp; foi' ~oney.'
•Penon,wno won 1~ races.

qLitsmOI&lt;Ing manryears aeo. Sl•
areat names ltom 1he past ·' .Penon, Rlef1ard f'etl¥. Ned Jar- ·

the latter stages of the Golden
Corral eoo, tne or st cup race or

the season not to go Into overtime with a green-whl~e- check-

way, was the nrst for a Dodge
driver at this track slnce Richard
Petty's victory In 1977.

(Va .) Speedway (.526
miles). 250
lapsf131.5 miles.
• Wilen : Sa1Urday.
Apnl 1

SNtple 500
Aug. 26

.

a Lltt year'l Winner:

Ron Hornaaay Jr.
• QUtlfYI~ NCGtd :
Mike BliSS, Ford,
94 . 27~ mp~, 1\pnl 6,
1999.
• - .-cord; Jimmy

Hensley. Dodge. ·

74.294 mph. f\J)nll7 .
1999 .
• La1t ...,.k: Todd Bo-

vlous raCe has been
run at this distance.
• Laot - k: Jeff Bur·
ton drove a Chevrolet
to victory In the
Nlcorette 300 at At-

"ctlne , In a Toyota. won
tne John Deere 200 at

lan1a Motor speeaway.

AUanta Motor speeaway.

.,

BILL LESTER

NEXTEI:! CuP SERIES

. No. 23

AUUita Motor SpeedwQ
This tracx Is a slgntncant one oe-

cause of Its prollm&gt;(110 the soum·s

oust ness epicenter. but It's two annu·

a1 rate·s ran at ct~meult tJmes. Cold,

11)11 oonne Allison- served as

rainy weather has been common-

· &amp;nJrld ma!Shals for the Ntoorette

place In oom me sPnng ana the tall ;
~om the
a1suncuon 01 ending me season. that

ana AMS no lon~er benents

300 Busct! Se~es event. •
·li .t.aanta Motor Spoedway has
. been l1e Site or the last two
. C141 r&amp;ll'outs. 1lle fall race In
20011 w•s postponed to tM lol·
l..qday_

honor having been shlMed to Home·

stea&lt;l·Miaml Speedway In 2002 .

NASCAR Thlt - k ' l lllrltDn &amp;M• b l l -: ·· n·~ tougn.
e11en wnen It dOesn·t ratn . Atlanta
races go up agatnst me Georita-Florl ·
aa game 1n ~ fall and Marctl Maoness In 1he spring. That may be
more tlamaglng In terms of exPosure
as It IS ·In ter-ms of attenaan,ce ."

·• HOliday Inn, WhiCII will sponsor
Jell Burton In selected BusCh

'''
•••••

Powell's
FOODFAIR

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"B!rlon ended a long dry spell

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nactn't won a BuSCh Sones race
since OCtober 2002, W11en he

won at Lowe·s Motor speedwa'}.

••
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BuSCh seem to be moeUni In
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After 106 starts in Trucks Series, Lester breaks through in Nextel Cup
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This. Week

HAMPTON , Ga. - In spite of all the
attention inherent in being the first
black driver to compe te in a major
NASCAR race in nearly 20 years, Bill
Lester says be just wants to race.
When he qualified 19th for the Golden Corral 500, Lester crossed a barrier
last achie ved by Willy T. Ribbs. Ribbs
competed inthree races in 1986, never
qualifying better than 29tb ;~nd never
finishing better than 22nd
Though a bit uncomfortable with
the attentio n, Lester said he was willing to bear the responsibility thaf
came with the territory.
"I'm just trying to make the most of
it;'·said Lester, who finished 38th in
. Monday's race. '"If this is what I have
to do, this is fine."
.
Lester doesn't loo k it, but he's 45 '
yea rs old. Being black isn't the onl y
trend he's bucking. He never drove in

his first race until he
was in his 20s. He began as a road racer, and
it was 1999 before he
ever e ither found himself drawn to NASCAR
"I got that taste," he
.said, "and that's when I
knew NASCAR was
where I wanted .to go."
Lester is unlikely to become a star
at the Nextel Cup level. He came
along too late. On March 17, he made .
his IO@h start in the Crartsman Truck
Serie-s, 'and for the I061h time in a row,
failed to win , NASCAR has always
been dominated by the white, but now
it's also dominated by the young.
Many young drivers bring the advanta ge of wealth and privilege. Tough
· kids from the wrong side of the tracks
don 't reach the big time much anymore. Nowadays the obstacle to
Lester and other minorit y drivers is
more economic than racial.

"It 's a matter of exposure and op- ·
portunity," said Lester. "You have to
have money. Kids in urban areas,
whether black or Hispanic or white,
have mostly been exposed to stickand-ball sports_
·
"It takes a Jot of money. That's why
so many of today's young guns come
from affluent families . There are exceptions, though. I'm one of the exceptions. I wasn't exposed to the sport at
a young age. I'm just an anomaly."
He hopes to compete in Nextel Cup
full-time next year. That, .however,
will depend on his.abillty to prove he
. belongs and to convince sponsors or
that fact. .
"I hope this (competing in Monday's
race) will shak e the branches of corporate Ainerica," said Lester. "I wish I
could've been here 20 years ago. W)lo
knows ·how long my career will last?"

Contact Monte Dutton at
hmduttoi!SO@aol.com

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This 1\'eek

•

Make. 'em trucks - Perhaps
· the best idea for improving
the quality of major-league
stock-car racing would be the
following:
Take the Craf1sman Truck
Serie~ und rcnu me it Ne.r1el

------ - - - - - --· --- --

Daytona 500s. Tile' nrst was In 1986
W1.111 Geo1T Bodine. Darrell Wa11!1p
won In a Hendrick-owned cnevy In
1989 . Three af the vlctor1es were Oy

Jeff Gordon' 1997, 1999 ana 2005.
Jimmie Johnson·s victory thls season
was Hendnek's Slxtn . Tne wooo
Brotners are the au-ttme 1eae1ers In
total Daytona 1Jtctor1es wltn 14. rol·

lowed Ill' Petty Enterprises wltn 11.
counung 1he summerume Daytona

races. H8ndrlck Motorsports has oro-oucea 10 winners .

Why doe• tile ~ allow
drivers te do ckMt"'nuta?

H

ow ooes me EPA aJ1ow tne
NASCAR winners to Clo tl1at
"t:lougnnul spin"' tn front or tt'le
stands? All or thOse exnaust rumes
could overcome anyone w"lth breathIn&amp; probl&amp;ms as well burnln£ e~·es .
Janice Dudloy
Evansville. Ind.

we 4on ·r know now me EPA anows
it. but. then aP,ain, we aon l kriOw now
.tne EPA aflows some ot mose sm o~o:e-.
t&gt;elching C811i ftnd trucks on rhe free-

ways, either.

01' D.W. is going to give it one more try

• 9o

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- 127_

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Pi'!O&amp;nlx. so-caueo ··nrst-pnze• wl~;
prtzes . Prizes are selected

Darrell Waltrip, the Fox television analyst, conti nues to
- 136
a. J$1T GC)I'ckln
- 151
make· that "former driver"
,, t.liaiel'aiiiiiS.aijr.-- -156 de signation difficult to sub.e. I\YI8 SUSCf1
- 160
stantiate.
:-. Date ;arrett .
· 200
The three-time Winston Cup
champion last competed in that
•; :ID. Cll'!!!I~L ~--·--:J!li:
series In 1999, but he's competed occasionally in the Truck SeLK~!!_tl_~111!_------·····---?I.;?
ries since his so-called retirea. JJ _Veley
-11
ment.
Now he's goi ng to give
· ·; . Jamie McM!II'ay
-74
Busch
Series a try.
'
the
4. Clint Bowyer
- lOS
Waltrip announced. last week
1. Demr Hamnn
- 123
that he would compete in the
&amp; Jason Lerner
-133
r:-c-;riiowarcis-~
i58 llusch Series race scheduled
for July 22 at Martinsville
!:.__ Bur_!ley Lamar ·-·--:_!§6
(Va,) Speedway. He will drive
t. Jon wooo ·
· 176
the No . 99 car usually driven
:!P-,...9!.~~-e- ····-··- - · 17?
by · his younger brother,
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vs. the elements

WASTE MANAGEMENT DoDGE

rut, ~ Parsons, Suddy Sllkllr

Huggins

No. I seed in the NCAA tournament.
.
At Kansas State, ·he will
inherit a program that has
· from Page 81
enjoyed a clean reputation
while struggling to pull itself
expect our students to be role out
of mediocrity since
models," Zimpher said after Bramlage · Coli seum opened
his firing. " We make no in .1988-89.
apologies for setting high . Huggins could be joined at
standards."
Kansas State by two top
Huggins was 399-127 at recruits. O.J . Mayo, a twoCincinnati. · leading
the time Associated Press Mr.
Bearcats to 14 consecutive Basketball in Ohio, said this
NCAA tournament appear- ·
week he and Bill Walker, his
ances, inducting th.e 1992 teammate ·at Cincinnati North
Final Four. He won I0 regu- College Hill, may sign with
lar-season Conference USA whichever school · hires
titles and was honored as the Huggins.
ieague 's coach of the decade.
Wooldridge was 83-90 .at
He also coached at Walsh and
Kansas
State, with the .tea·m
Akron and lias a record of
6-10
in
the
Big 12 each of his
567-199 during a 24-year
last three seasons. In hi s sixth
career.
season,
the Wildcats proved
Huggi ns had a heart attack
competitive
. behind swingin Septembe·r 2002 but
showed up for t~e team 's f\rst man Cartier Martin. .
The Wildcats set a school
pr.actice two weeks later and
this season with nine
record
coached the entire season.
Huggi ns' best coaching job · losses of five points or fewer.
rna y have come in 200 J-02 Most frustrating were backwhen the Bearcah went into to-hack !-point defeats to
the 'eason unranked but nationally ranked Texas and
wound up 31-4." setting a Oklahoma. They beat Kansas
schoo l, record for victories. 59-55 in their first encounter
They also won the confer- to end a 3 1-game losing
ence tournament and were a s·lreak.to their archrivals.
'.

The Daily Semncl • Page 83

Q\"!!iii'--J'&gt;1:! cl# : tc1§'i"#J a Chevrolet entered by MB2
Motorsports, will compeie in at
NASCAR history, is more than least five more Cup races in a
a lillie ticked off at t~ c ru ling Dodge entered by Michael Walbody's insistence on a three- trip Racing.
The limited schedule - Elyear phase-in for the so-called
"Car of Tomorrow."
,
liott's No. OQ .will carry Burger
. Petty recalled the last major · King sponsors hip - probably
change in the specifications of represents a step in Waltrip's
cars, the "downsizing". of 1981 program to enter two Toyotas
when wheelbases were shot\- next year. Like Waltrip, Elliott
ened in whai was then the Wili- is a two-time winner of the
ston Cup Series.
Da)1ona 500.
"When we went to a smaller
The Elliott schedule will incar, they cut it off clean. and I elude races at Chicago! and
don't think they ought· to Speedway on July 9, New
'blend' these cars in ," he said. Hampshire o.n July 6, lndi"l'm coming a! it from the ana polis on Aug. 6, California
standpoint of th e monetary on Sept. 3 and Homestead on
deal. It doesn 't matter if the Nov. 9.
•square cars' (new designs )
arc coming, the teams arc going to keep working on the old
Funny guy - Will Ferrell,
.:ars as long as they'r~ used at
part of the tracks . It's a dumh star of the NASCAR-themed
way tu do· things , but I'm movie "Talladega Nights: The
afraid thel''re (NASCAR I not Ballad of Ricky. Bobby" that
going to do it the right war"
will probably earn no Academy
Award nominations, will
I
nonethelpss serve as grand
m11 rsha I of tbe Aaron's 499 at
Har sh criticism ~ Richard
Bill's ~ck - Hill Elliott. who Talladega. where there are actuPelt y, whnse name rivals the
found ing Francl' . family in t·ompeted in the Da11ona ~OQ in ally no,night races, on April.JO.

Cup.

.

For the fourth time in a row,
Atlanta Motor Speedway held a
truck race that was a classic.
Todd Bodine, in B Tqyota,
passed Mark Martin's Ford late
in the race and weathere(l yet
another "green-white-checker'ed" finish, endi ng Martin's
string of consecutive victo1ies. ·
The two have finished 1,2 in
each of the three series races
run·so far.
" I love this ra~ing," said
Martin. "This is the best racing. Congratulations to Todd
(Bod i~e ). He did an awesome
job, and he and his team made
his stuff better. He was in the
front when it ended ."
·
Bodine's pass of Martin, accomplished when the two were
tangled in traffic and Involving
an arrange ment of trucks that
were at least· briefly four
abreast, should show up highlights videos for years.

•

•

e••

·

again
•

Quote of the week --, "If it
don't have header~. a foui-speed (transmission ) and
slicks, I don't do no good with
it." .- Hobby Hamilton

•
Tall tale - Donnie Allison recalled a story in1·olving Joe
f'rasson, a Minnesotan who
came south to race in N!\SCAR
for most of the 1970s, and tbe
great A.J. Foyt
Allison and Foyt were seated
in a booth eating dinner. ~Iasson
sat in another booth behind f'o}t,
not knowing Foyt was there.
Frasson loudly procla1med that
only a mechanical failure had
prevented him from "wearing
Foyt out" in a recent race.·
"A.J . turned around and set
the record straight," recalled AllisQn. "He said to F'rasson, 'Joe,
if you could drive as fast as me,
you'd catch pneumonia ' That
preny much shut Frasson up."

Contact Monte Dutton

·at hmdu tton50@aol.com

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

College

Basket~a/1

-

Friday, March 24.2006

www .mydailysentinel.com

www.mydallysentlnel.com

m;ribune - Sentinel - 1\egister

SweEt I 6 roundup

Blue Devils upset by Louisiana State, Longhorns slip past WVU
ATLANTA ( AP ) - No
need fo r LS U and Btg Baby
to cry m th1s NCA A tournament
Glen " Big Baby" Dav1s, a
shot-blockmg freshman and
the rest of the Ttgers are one
wm away fro m the Ftnal Four
alter J J . Redi ck a nd topseeded Duke stumbled again
1n the round of 16.
Dav 1s scored 14 point s
des pite fo ul troubl e and
fres hman Tyr us Thomas
swatt ed away fi ve shots,
leadmg No 4 seed LSU to its
first reg ional final since 1987
w1 th a 62-54 upset of Duke
on Thursday ni gh!.
Redi ck. a fav orite for player of .the year. had o ne of hi s
worst games in the finale of
hts college career. The Duke
guard made o nl y 3-of-18
sho ts, hi s shooting woes
doom mg a team that got a big
pe rformance from its other
star. Shel den Withams.
Also playing his last college game , Williams went out
wtth 23 potnt s and 13
rebounds But Duke (32-4)
didn ' t have nearly the balance of LSU (26 -8), which
won
the
So utheastern
Confere nce reg ul ar-season
c hampion shtp and has its
stghts on a n even btgger title.
The T1gers advance to meet
e1ther Texas or West Virgm1a
tn the Atlanta Reg tonal ftnal
Saturda y
Tho se
teams
played 111 the second game
ThUI sday.
LSU hasn 't been to a
reg10nal fmal smce losmg to
IHdtana 77-76 nearly , two
decades ago
Not even
ShaqUJil e O' Neal , who
played three seasons m Baton
Rouge, co uld get the Tigers
past the second round of the
NCAA tournament.
Duke made on Iy 18-of-65
shots {28 percent) and struggled to get free of LSU's
lanky, qutck defenders epttomi zed by
6-foot-9
· Thomas, who play s even bigger, and Temple, a 6-5 guard
who draped himself on
Redick.
Memphis 80, Bradley 64
Rodney Carney kept topseeded
Memphis
from
becoming another victim of
Bradley 's surpnsmg NCAA

run.
Carney contnbuted on both
ends of the floor Thursday,
sconng 23 points and leadmg
a stingy defense that gave
Memph1s an 80-64 victory
and put the Tigers m the
reg1onal final for the first
t1me since 1992 - back
when Anfernee Hardaway
was the star
Darius Washington Jr.
added 18 points and Shawne
W1lhams had 12 points and
eight rebounds as Memphis
won the thtrd round of the
Oakland Regional, its se venth straight victory.
Carney raised his arms m
the atr in celebration after a
two-handed Jam midway
througQ the second half, one
of several emphatic dunks by
the 6-foot-7 forward who
was virtually unknown when
he first arrived at Memphis.
Now, he IS one win from finishing his stellar collegiate
career m his hometown of
Indianapolis for the Final
Four
Coach John Caltpari 's
young Tigers (33-3), an NIT
team last season , advanced to
Saturday's regional final
against the wmner of
Thllrsday ' s
late
game
between
second-seeded
UCLA and No. 3 Gonzaga.
The Ttgers beat both those
teams early this season.
Patnck O' Bryant had II of
hts 14 rebounds in the ftrst
half and only scored e1ght
pomts for Bradley (22-11 ),
which at No. 13 was the lowest seed still ahve m the tournament The Braves wtll
return home to another hero's
welcome after they put the
program on the map and
brought national attentwn to
the town of Peon a, Ill., where
they play
The Braves had been the
NCAA spoiler so far after
beating
Kansas
and
Ptttsburgh to reach their first
regional semifinal since 1955
when it was 24-team tournament, but they began the second half 4-for-16 and struggled to get open looks at the
basket
against
speedy,
aggreSSive Memphis.
Bradley committed 14
first-half turnovers, then took
better care of the ball after

game m a Zags uniform. He
is expected to turn pro.
J .P Batista missed a despera tton 15-footer at the
buzzer and fell mto the Zags'
bench, where coach Mark
Few helped htm up .
When the buzzer sounded,
UCLA
se n1or
Cedn c
Boze man ra n aro und the
court w1th the ball in · his
hands - Rya n Holltns n ght
with htm. ·
Holhns and Afflalo went to
help up Mormon, who was
spread on the floor at mtdcourt Few then came to hug
the crymg Mornsan .

AP photo

Duke's J.J. Redtck, left, hugs coach Mtke Krzyzewsk1 at the end of
Duke's 62-54 toss to Lou1stana State 111 an NCAA Atlanta Regtonal
basketball semtfinal at th13 Georg1a Dome 1n Atlanta on Thursday
halftime but couldn't make
shots. Coach J1m Les was
wh1 stled for a technical wuh
8:29 remaining for arguing, a
sign of his team 's fwstration
down the stretch.
After the Braves cut the
lead to seven with 12:25 left.
Williams htt a 3-pmnter with
the shot clock winding down
that started a 7-0 Memphis
run that al so featured a dunk
by Carney.
The 7-foot O' Bryant faced
two or three defenders almost
every lime he caught the ball
in the pamt. Marcellus
Sommervtlle led Bradley
w1th 18 points - making
nme of I 0 free throws - and
eight rebounds and Lawrence
Wright added 14 pomts
Memph1s, the Conference
USA regular-season and tournament champ1on, led 35-30
at halftime and started the
second half with a 7-0 spurt
to take control for good.
Bradley missed five shots
and
committed
three
turnovers in us first seven
possessions and fell behind
7-0 before taking a timeout at
17:45. O' Bryant fmally got
the Braves on the board with
a P!.!tback at 16.27.

UCLA 73, Gonzaga 71
OAKLAND, Caltf (AP) -

Luc Rt chard Mbah a Moute
prov1ded a shockmg ending
to Adam Morri son 's amazing
season.
Mbah a Maute scored
underneath with I 0 seconds
left and the second-seeded
Bruins scored the fin al II
points of the game to knock
out Morrison and third-seeded Gonzag'\ 73-71 Thursday
night to advance to the
regional fmal.
Mprrison , Gonzaga 's shaggy-hatred star, made two free
throws with 3 26 to go, giving htm 24 on the mght and
the Bulldogs (29-4) a 71-62
lead But the Bruins (30-6)
didn't wilt.
Mbah a Maute scored SIX
of the final II points and got
a key steal m the hnal st;c,
onds to seal the win and send
UCLA to its ftrst regional
fmal smce 1997 The Brums
w11l play Saturday against
Memph1s (33-3), which beat
Bradley 80-64 in the first
semi final of the Oakland
regional. The Tigers beat the
Brums 88-80 111 November.
Mornson put hi s hands on
hi s head and leaned over,
overcome with emot10n ,
Mbah a Moute stole the ball
from Derek Ratvto wtth 2 6
seconds left, fighting tears 1n
what was probably · hts final

Texas 74',
West Virginia 71
ATLANTA (AP) - Kenton
Paulino beat West Vtrgmm at
Its own game, h1tUng a 3pomter as lime expired to
g1ve Texas a 74-71 vtctory
over the Mountameers on
Thursday night in the thtrd
round of the NCAA tournament,
Ke vm Pittsnogle made a 3pointer for West Vtrgmia to
tie 11 With 5 seconds left, but
Paulino answered with his 3pointer for Texas as the
buzzer sounded.
Official s quickly huddled
to confirm Paulino's shot was
good.
'The whole thing was to
get it down the floor and see
what happens," Paulino sa1d
The senwr satd he had
ne ver made a similar shot
uNo, not even close," he
said.
West Virgtma, second 111
the nallon m 3-pomters made
thts season, made 15 of 33 3point shots m the game .
Texas was 4-tor-19 from 3pomt range.
LaMarcus Aldndge scored
26 potnts for second-seeded
Texas (30-6), and Pittsnogle
led
the
stxth-seeded
Mountaineers (22-11 ) with
19.
Texas IS in the round of
etght for the first time smce
2003, when it advanced to
the
Final
Four.
The
Longhorns will play LSU on
Saturday in the Atlanta
Regional final. LSU beat topseed Duke 62-54 earher
Thursday
West Vtrg tnta was demed a

CLASSIFIED

second straight appearance in
the round of eight.
The. Mountaineers rallied
from a 12-point halftime
deficit to briefly take the
lead, but the Longhorns led by the inside play of
Aldridge - answered the
challenge.
"We felt good about the
first half, but we know how
West Virginia shoots the
ball," Paulino satd
With I :29 left fo play,
Pittsnogle was called for a
foul on Aldridge, though it
was Pittsnogle who came
away from the contact with a
bloody nose.
Aldridge made one of two
free throws for a 68-65 lead,
and A J. Abrams added two
free throws with 26.9 seconds left to make it 70-65 .
Mike Gansey, who had 18
points for West Virginia, h1t a
3-pointer with 15 seconds
left to cut 1t to 70-68.
A free throw by Aldridge
pushed the lead to 71-68, setting the stage for the two late
3-pomters.
Relying almost completely
on its 3-point shooting, West
Vtrgtma trailed 39-27 at half,
time. All of its points came
on 3-pointers and free throws
until, with only 6 seconds left
Jn the half, J.D . Collins
scored on a short jumper for
the Mountaineers' first 2pomt shot.
When Texas began anticipating West Virginia would
continue to rely on 3-pointers. the Mountameers quickly
closed the deficit by scoring
on cuts to the basket.
West Virginia scored eight
pomts in the first mmute of
the second half and trailed
40-3 7 followmg a rare inside
basket by Pittsnogle 4 minutes mto the half.
A 3-pointer by Ptttsnogle
with 8 14 left pulled West
VirgmJa even at 58, and the
Mountaineers took a 61-58
lead on a 3-pointer by
Gansey less than a minute
later
Texas ~nswered with seven
straight pomts.

G•IIW. (ounly, OH

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For an appointment
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A C C E N T
KMHVD14N1XU43790

Public Notice

1
1986 FORD F150
1FTCF15NOGLA4869

.3

2000 CHEVY TAHOE
4
X
4
1GNEK13T5YJ10221 t
1999 CHEVY SILVER·
ADO
4X4·
1GCEK19V6XE18618
9
The Home National
Bank reserves the
right to reject any and
all bods. All vehtcles
Help Wanted

1

In the Common Pleas
Court
of
Meigs
County, Ohio
Franklin Real Estate
Company
Plaintiff
vs Edmond Cooper,
eta I
Defendants.
Notice
by
Publication.
Case No. 06 CV 017
To Edmond Cooper, If
tlvtng, Last Address:
Help Wanted

AEP- PHILIP SPORN

1635 South Saint Paul
St.,
Denver.
CO
80210,
Current
Addreso: Unknown,
and If deceased, the
Unknown
Heirs,

Devlaeea,
, Succesaora, AsaJgns,
Next
of
Kin,
Administrators,
Executors
and
Spouses, If any, of
Edmond
Cooper,
Names
and
Addresses Unknown
and
Annabelle
Schneider Cooper, H
living, Last Addreu:
1635 South Saint Paul
St.,
Denver,
CO
80210,
Current
Addreao: Unknown,
and if deceased, the
Unknown
Heirs,
Devisees,
Succe11ora, Aaatgna,
Next
of
Kin,
Admtnlatratora,
Executors
and
Spouses, If any, of

Annabelle Schneider
Cooper, Names and
Addresses Unknowh
You are hereby noll·
fled that you have
baen,
named
Defendants In tho
action
entttttod
Franklin Real Estate
Company, Ptalnttn, vs
Edmond Cooper, et
at., Defendants. This

acllon

has

been

assigned Case No.
06CV017, and
Is
pending in the Court
of Common Pleas of
Metgs County, Ohio.
The obloct of the
complaint demands
that the real estate
which Ia the subJect
of the Complaint be
partitioned,
or
ordared sold If It can·
not bo partitioned,

:~~~~.":~o":.~e~o~'

their Interest In tho
real estate; and for an

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted
American Electric Power Company's
'philip Sporn Plant, located in New
Haven, WV ts seeking personnel in the
Operations Department. Mimmum
qualifications
are an Associate
/Technical and/or equivalent. Regular
full -t1me pos1t1ons. Overttme and
rotating shtft schedule as required.
Entry level wage rate of pay is $15.46
per hour Benefits 111clude medical',
dental, v1ston, 40 I k and retirement.
Interested candidates should submit
their resumes to:
AEP-PHILIP SPORN PLANT
Attn: Human Resources
P.O. Box l89
New Haven, WV 25265
Resumes should be recetved no later
than : March 31 , 2006

for tho PtamtiH Little,
Sheets &amp; Warner, P.O.
Box 686, Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769,
Telephone (740) 9926689
(2) 17, 24, {3) 3,10, 17,
24
Public Notice
In the Common Pleas

Court,
Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio
In the matter of
Settlement
of
Accounts,
Probate
Court Motgs County,
Ohio
Accounts and vouch·
ers of the lottowong
named loduclary has
been filed In tho
Probata Court, Meigs
County, Ohio lor
approval and settle·
ment.
Estate No. 21275-The
Sixth Account of the
Trust Created by Item
Eighth of the Last Witt
and Testament of

Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley

Hospital
P l ea sa nt
Valle y
NurSJ ng
a nd
Rehabtlotatw n Center IS a I 00-bed tongterm care fac t illy that provtdes tntcrmedt atc

and sk11led care n eed ~ to res1dent!&lt;. Come
j01n our health care orgamzat10n w here we
prov1de exce llence 1n care. Applo canl " Ill
fun cuon as an LPN wnh addtllonal dulles as

a Lreatment nurse Long lerm ex pene nce
preferred
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
LPN- Full tome
RAT E
WILL
BE
BA SE D
ON
EXPERIENCE ,
Benefits mcl ude.
• Flex sched uling {mcludmg I 2 hour &lt;h tll 'i
• Shtfl dtlfer enlt al
• Weekend pos1110ns
• Tram1ng program fo r new g rad uate~
• H eaiJh Insurance smglc/famt ly plan

•,EXpenence pay and recent upgrade m pay
rates
APPLY IN PERSON ,OR C ALL
Angela Cleland, DON

An Equal O pportunity Employe r
M/ F/ DN

allowance of attorney
fees, real estate taxes
and costs.
You are required to
answer the Complaint
within twenty-eight
(28) days alter ·tho
last publication of
this Notice, which witt
bo published once
each
week
for
six ( 6 )success iva
weeks. Tho last publi·
cation wilt be made
on the 21st day of
April, 2006, and the
twenty-eight
{28)
days for answer witt
commence on that
date. tn the case of
you'r failure to answer
or otherwise respond
as requested by the
Ohio Rules of Covtt
Procedure, judgment
by default witt ba rondared agamst you
and lor the retial
demanded on the
Complaint.
Dated
this
30 day of
January,
2006.
Douglas W. Little
(0007537) Attorney

(304) 675-5236

.

Help Wanted

PL UMBERS &amp; I'IPEFITTERS LOCAL
#168 Joint o\pprenticeship Training
Comrnitt~

is recruiting a new class

or apprentices.
Applications Wilt be given out from I :00 PM
until S:tHI PM, Monday through Friday from
May 8th through May I'lth at the Training
Center, 119 Wood Street, Marietta, Ohio.
Applican ts must be 18 y ears or age and he a
high school graduate or ha&gt;e aGED

equi'\'alency. All applicants will be ft'()Uired
to take applicable aptitude tests in
accordance with the procedure established

the apprenticeship comm1Uee. An
admimstration l ee ol fift een i$ I 5.(HlJ dollars
mu ~t accompan) each returned a pplication.
I he appn~ nti ce term i" 5 years, com1sting of
on the job training as well as rt&gt;lated tnning
das!iiroorn training. and results in the final
\latu~ of journeyman Plumber andlnr
b~

Pipeliuer. All applicants Wilt be considertd
"ilhoul regard to Acnd•·r. ra&lt;'e. color.

AAIEOI;:

---- -·-- - - - - - - --- - - -

religion or national origm.

aecountortomatters
pertaining to tho execution of the trust,
not toss than live
days prior to the date
set for hearing,
L.S. Powell
Judge,
Common
Pleas Court,
Probata Oivos\on
Meigs County, Ohio
(3) 24

begin no tater than
May
1,
2006.
Administrative costa
may not exceed 15%
of the total contract
award. A copy of the
Request for Proposal,
may be picked up
from Jane Banks at
the Melga County
Department of Job
end Famtty Services
at (740)992-2117 ext.
106.
Proposals shall ba
subm ttted to Jane
Banks, Melgo County
Department of Job
and Family Servlcoa,
P.O. Box 191, 175
Race
Street,
Middleport, OH 45780
no tater than April 10,
2006 at 10:00 a.m.
The
Department
reserves th,e right to
reject any or all pro-

Publlehlng reaerv.s
the right to ~II.
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors MUit B
eported on the ftrs
ay of publlcatlo
nd ' the Tribune

GIVEAWAY

Giveaway to good home
onl y brmdle Boxer m1x

Call (740)446 4437
(740J794-04n

rror 1nd only th
rat lneertlon. W
hell not bo lloble fo

to meet us

lll bo r111ponolbl
or no more than th
o1t of the epee
ccupled

by

th

Please call 1740)379·9142

ny

1011 or exptne
It AIIUill. from
ubllcatton or omla
ion of an edvertl
ent. Correction
II be made In
lr1t IY&amp;IIable edl

lon. ·
Box number ad
re atw1y1 conflden

t.

r

accept an
dvertlaement
I
lolatlon of the law

Beaut1lul black/tan dOgs
w1th c ollars and b1g lovmg
eyes looki ng tor th&amp;~r lam1·

Found St Bernard with 5
blacklwh1te pupp1es 1n
B1dwell
area
Call

Male Cocker Spaniel at
Me1gs Pnma ry School

... .

.... ......... 530

Apartment• for Rent ................................ 440
Auction and Flea Market... . . . ............. .. ..080
Auto Parte a Acceeaorlea .......~ ................. 760
Auto Repair ........... ...................................... 770
Auto• lor Sale ............. ............................. 710
Bo•t• 11 Motor• for Sale ............................ 750

Bu11dlng Supplleo ........................ ............ .. 550
Buelnaat and Buildings
. .. .. ......... 340
euotneoo Opportunlty .................................2t0
Bu1lne•• Training.......
. ..... .... ......... . 140
C•mpert &amp; Motor Homes ...... .......... .......... 790
Camping Equipment... ..... ... . ................ 780
Cerda of Thank• . . ...... ....... ... ........... ... 010

Ch11d/Eiderly Care ............. ......................... 190
EleetrlcaiiR•Irlgerallon .. ..... ...... ..... .. ..... . 840
Equipment for Rent ... ....... ............ .... ........ 480

Excavating ................................................. 830
F8rm Equipment .......................... .. ..... ... .... .61 0
F1rma for Ren\............... .. .. ......... .. ....... . 430
Farma for S•l•.. ... . ... ..................... - ... . 330
For Leaae .. . .
. .............. ..... ...... ...... 490
For Sate............................................... .. 585
For Sale or Trade .. . ................... ...... ......... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables ... ........... ....... ...... -· · 580
Furnlehed Roome........... .. ..
. .......... 450

exceed

$300,000.00 for the
period
beginning
Apilt 17, 2006. It Ia
expected that the pro·
gram witt enroll 90
youth and provide
employment at $6 15
per hour The program witt also provide
Lifeguard
Training for no more
than
35
eligible
youth Actual enroll·
mont 10 expected to

.

. .

. . ...040

HIPPY Ado.... ......... ... .. . .. ......................050
Hay &amp; Grain......... ....... . ......... .
...... 640
Help Wanted ........... .
. . ................. 110
Home lmprovementa........ ......... .. . ........ 810
Homes for Sale............ ... ... . . . ........... 310
Houaehold Goods ..... ............... .. .... .. .. .... 510
Rent .... ............... ..... .

. 410

In Memoriam ...... ........... .. :.................... 020
lnaurance... ...... .. ....... ........... . .
. ... 130
Lllwn 6 Garden Equipment ..... ........... ..... 660

Ltveotock ........................ (.. ...

.. ........... . 630

Loet and Found .... ........
.
... ......... 060
Lota &amp; Acreage ......... .. ..... .......................... 350
Mlecellaneout. . ...
. . . .... ........... 170
Mlecellaneout Merchandise .. ............ .. .... . 540
Mobile Home Repair.... .
.. ..... ........ 860
Mobile Homea tor Rent . . . . .......... .......... 420
Mobile Home• tor Sale......... ....... ... ......
320
Money to Loan . .. . ... .
...................... 220
Motorcycle• &amp; 4 Wheelers.....................
740
Mualca lnatrumenta .. . ..
.
. ........ 570
Peraonale .. . .. .. ... ..... ............. . ................ .. 005
Pete for Sale..............
.
- ..... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating .. . ........ ....... ....... ... ..... 820
Proteaelonal Servlcee.. ....... ...... ........ ....
230
Radio, TV • CB Repatr ....... . .................... 180
Real Eatate Wanted ...... .... ...................... . 360
Schoolalnatruc:tlon ........................... ...... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ........................... , 650

Person or Petrsorls
Breaktng into house on Cook
Road Please return or call
about blue lock box
740-992-4169
No

Public Dinner Hosted By
Tuppers Plains
VFW Ladies
Sunday, Mar. 26, 12 Noon

Slluettono Wonted • . . ......................... 120
S~ce for Rent. ... ....... ... .... ... ............... . 460
sporting Goode . .
. ... ............ .. ........ 520

Baked steak, rolls, green
beans, cole slaw, dessert
&amp; annks
Adults $6 50
Ch1ldren: $3.50
Carry out available

SUV 'a for Sate
.... ,.............. .. .............. ..720
Truc:ke for Sale .. ...........
. . .. .... . . . 715

Upholotery

vane

.

.. . ..................... 870

For Sale .... ................ ..... ... . .
• .730
Wanted lo Buy
......................... ....... 090
Wanted to Buy ~ Farm Suppllee .... ... ..
620
Wanted To Do
.
. ...
.. . .. ... ..... 180
Wanted to Rent . ...................... .. . . . 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolla .... .. .
... 072
Y•rd Sale~Pomeroy/Middltt ...
. .• 074
Yard Sate-Pt Pleaeant ................. ....
076

LEARN

..

-~-

-------

110

1.

TO
DRIVE
EICPERIENCE NECESSARY
' FULL TI~ E CLASSES
' COL TRAINING

• FINANCING AIIAIL'BLE
' J09 Pt/.CEMENT
' ENROLLING NCYN

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR-TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

1-600-334-1203
Assemble crafts.
wood rtems
To $480/wk
Matenals provided
Free mformat1on pkg
24Hr
801 ~ 28 4649
An Excellent Way to earn
mo ney The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304-882-2645
AtteniiOn Onvers
R&amp;J
Truck mg IS looking tor
' Dnvers w/1 yr OTR
ExpM ence lor Reg1onal
Hauls Ave rage pay 40 s lo
m1d 50 's Home every
, Wee kend
call
Kent

(800)462-9365
AVON I All Areas' To Buy or
Sell Shirley Spears 304-

675 1429
Tne

Me1gs CoUnty Chambe r of
Com merce IS accepting
resumes for the pos1t1on of
Chamber
Coordmator
Th 1s pos1t1on requ1res
excelle nt wntten and ver ba l co mmunicatiOn sk 1lls
orQan1zat1onal sk!lls and
sell mot1val10n The cancl1
date must possess strong
leadershtp sk1lls
Send
resumes to 238 West Mam
StrE'et, Po meroy O hiO
45769
Couner FT Must have
perfect dr~vmg record
Resume to PO Box 33
• GallipoliS O H 4563 1
Darst Home needs help3- J1 sh1ft, 4 days a week ,

(740)992 5023
Dog Groomer With some
e)lpenence neede,d 1mme
d1ate1y 1n Ravenswood
wv 304-273-2 165
$16 78/Hr PT Contract
pos!tlon tor local Federal
Oft1ce through FY06 1
Yr Operalor exp
reqwred
Apply online al
www coocordps com
CPS. Inc or ta)l; resume
IO

(665)675 0432
ATIN Geoff HailS

CPS

Inc

EOE

POSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT
MEIGS COUNTY
FCFC INTERSYSTEM
COORDINATOR
The Metgs County Health
Department IS accepting
applica tiOns
fo r
the
lntenyttem Coordlnllf:or

1nclu de but are not ilm1l ed
to dev elo pment. 1mple
mentat1on and evaiuatton
of countywide se rv1ce
coordinatiO n and other
plans program momtonng
working w tth co mmun1ty
groups
represen llng
Family and Chi ldren F1rs1
Council at reqwed meal·
lngs and tram1ngs and
occasional travel

HF.LPWANml

COORDINATOR·

110

HELP WAiffiD

Drivers Needed
COL Onvers wllhng to
dnve for local ready·ml)(·
concrele company
E)(penence I! preferred
but no! necessary Med
1nsurance &amp; other benefits
'available aHer wa11Fng
penod Dnver must be
w1U1ng to do pre-mall'lle·
nance on trucks &amp; eqUip ment, yard work &amp; other
.rmscellaneous chores
Expenence operahng
equ1pment &amp; extra skillS
such as
welding a plus
Call Robertsburg

(304)937·341 0
or la ~ in (304 )77 3-52 34
Located m Mason County
nea r Buffa lo WV

:,0

1.

HELP W~NIID

Insurance Agency lookmg
for a. moiJVa.led hcensed
Ohro Property &amp; Casualty
Producer w1th a proven
!rack record Salary com·
miSSIOn and ben efi ts ,
dependanl on expenence
producers
Interested
plea se subm1l resume Ia
The Dally Sent mel, PO
Box 729-6, Pomeroy&lt;
OhiO 45769
Local Insurance olf1ce
(Me1gs Co) seeking motrvated person for staff positio n
Expenence helpful
but no! requ!red Please
send resu me Ia Sentinel,
PO Box 729-3, Pomeroy,

Oh10 45769

Mamtenance
D1rector
Overbrook Rehabil itation
ELECTRIANS
Center Is now acceptmg
res umes for the pos1t1on of
OSC O lndus tnes, In ~
Maintenance D1rector The
Jackson
DIVISion ha s
qualified cand1dale musl
openmgs for etectnc•ans
possess strong verbal a nd
All applicants must have
w,r1nen
c:o mmun1cat ron
knowledge arld expenence
SkillS mctud1n g technical
1n a manufactunn g envi· ' repor1 wrrllng a nd record
ron ment be willing to work
keepmg Mu st have expe
any sh1 H and have at least
nence In general mamte
2 years expenencf? 10
nance 1nclud1ng carpentry
~ndustna l ma1ntenance
plumtllng eleclrlcal telephone and cable 1nslalla·
Pay rate $ 14 875 to
liOn
pamtmg
ground
$16 125
eva luation
and
w ork
mspec t1on oi emergency
Co mplete benet1ts packequipment Item assembly
age mclu dmg medical ,
anel botler sys tem operadental 1nsurance and pentiOn
Must have knowlSIOn plan
edge ol OSHA Li fe Safety
Co de
Long Term care
Send resume to
expenence preferred but
OSCO lndustnes Inc
not reqUired
Qualified
PO Bolt 327
cand1da1es may send
Jackson Oh1o 45640
resu me to Charta BrownMcG uire
AN
LN HA
E)l;penenced Gr1ll Cook &amp;
Admm1strator 333 Page
F.ood Prep Apply 1n per·
S1ree1 Middleport, Oh1o
son Parkfront Ome r 314
45769 EOE
Second Ave Gall1pohs
For a hm1 ted t1me make
50% selling Avon Call
(740)446-3358
Full lime Me&lt;hcal Cla1m
b11ler No exper~nce nee·
essary Must be de ta1led
orgar'liZed good computer
and typ1ng sk1IIS Please
apply m person at Fam1ly
Oxygen 70 Pine Street
GalliRQI1s No phone calfs
please
Greenhouse Laborer and
Sales Person wanled
starling 1mmed1alely 740.

350 3104

Med1
Home
Health
Agency Inc seeking PAN
Speech TherapiSt and
Occupational Therapist lor
Galhpohs OhiO and sur·
rounding area L1censed
both 1n Ohio and West
Vlrgm1a preferred We offer
a compet1t1ve
salary
0 E
Please
send
resume to 352 Second
Avenue Gallipolis OH
4563 t Attn Jud1e Reese
or ema11 Jreese@msa·
corp com

e

Med1·Home Pnvate Care
IS look1ng tor a Pari T1me

AN

Help
wanted
Cooks
Cash1ers &amp; Ouvers Apply
Within PIZZB 1 PIUS 1044,
Jackson P1ke GallipoliS

Must have an OhiO AN
LICense Applications may
be piCked up at 430 2nd
Ave GallipoliS Oh10 Ask
tor John Kearns

H~rmg pa rt t1me Se " er
0 1shwasher &amp; K1tct1en
Prep Apply 1n person
J1manett1s P1zza Buckeye
Hills Rd R1o Grande

Experienced
Needed
Othce AS51S180t Book
kE!epmg &amp; computer sk1Us
necessary {7 40)441 7295
or (7 40)379 2245

110
1.

HELP WANI1'D

Now accepting ap pllc a~
liOns for Cake Decorat1ng
posttion and expenenced
Send
Produce
Clerk
re sume Ia
Eastmans
Foodland cJo Oh1 0 Valley
Supermarkets P 0 Box
769 Gal lipolis, OH 45631
Ohi o Valley Home Health
Inc hinng Full T 1 m~ RN
and Per 0 1em MSW
Accepllng applications fo r

LPN CNA STNA CHHA
PCA Competitive Wages
M1leage and benef1ts
mcluding
Heallh
Insurance Apply at 1480
Jackson P1ke Galhpo hs or
241 5 Jackson Avenue
Pomt Ple asant WV or
phone toll free 1·866-44 1 •

1393
OhiO Valley Home Hea lth
Inc h1nng Full Time AN
Mana ger
Case
Competitive Wages and
Benefits 1ncludlng Health
Insurance Apply a1 1480
Jackson P1ke Gallipolis or
241 5 Jackson Avenue WV
or phOne toll free 1-866
441 1393
Ove rbrook RehabllltBIIOn
Center 1s currently acc eptmg applicatfOns to r a AN
Supervisor The ava1lable
shift 1s 7P-7A All mrerest
ed apphcan1s should pick
up an app liCatiOn at 333
Page Street Middleport
O H For f1,1rther mform a
Mn please contact Hollie
at 7 40-992 64 72 EOE
'
Olierbrook Rehabilitation
Center IS currently accept
1ng appltca110ns for a RN
Superv1sor , Com pet1ttve
pay scale and benefit
pack age B'.'BIIable
The
av81fable Shift IS 3P 11 P
All lflter" sted applicatiOnS
should p1ci&lt;. up an applicatiOn at 333 Page Street
Mu::Jdleport OH For fur
ther 1nformat1on . please
c:ontacl Hollie at 740.992-

6472 EOE
Overorook Re habilitation
Center 1s curren tly accept
1ng applicatiOns for a AN
Supervl!;or
Compe11t1ve
pay scale and oenef1t
package ava1lable
The
available shift IS 7P-7A AU
apphcants
1n1erested
should picK up an apphcauon at 333 Page Street
M1ddlsport, OH For fur·
lher mlormaiiOn please
contacl Hollie at 7 40·992

6472 EOE
Pamters wanted
w1!h
exper1ence or w1 lhng to
lea•n leave message

(740]367-7680
Part-t1me bartender need·
ed for Good Ttmes
Pomeroy must be 21 to
apply

HtJ.I' WANlTJJ

HELP WAiffiD

QuaiHicatlona

100 WORKERS NEEDED

CALL 740·992·5066

1•

of the Meigs County
Family and Children
Firat CounciL Duties

I \ 11'1 &lt;I' \ II '\I
._, lin HI ..,

(740]386·9515

AnUqueo................... .. . .

Hou•e• for

INSIE:AI:&gt; oF

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Stiller and Gold Co tns
Proofsets Gold Rings
Pre -1935 US Cu,rency
Solitaire Diamo nds M T S
Cmn Shop 1 51 Second
Avenue GallipoliS 74 0·
446-2842

• NO

Found White &amp; Tan small
dog foOnd behind unem·
ployment off1ce m Pt
Pleasant 304-593--1 n 8

Giveaway...................... .

"'ns

Gt\oUJL.i'ollii" Ltt I~.; .

Fo und 1he most well
behaved young dog found
on Park Drive phone to
claim 304·675 5265

4x4'a For Sale............. .. ... ... . .. . ....... 725
Announcement ............. ... ................... ....... . 030

.

\ &lt;;:&gt;&lt;&gt; itA~~ ON£ /1\t No 1&lt;.
~~t\1'1~6 11'1 T~€ c..oo~tl:&gt;
{2€"C-\~e. M'( Ct\T ~,e.e~s

1\JNPI

ly (740)379-9142

CLASSIFIED INDEX

political belief or dla·
ability.
(3) 24, 31, (4) 7

www comica.com

5004

ngly

ux, age, religion,

110

&amp; CARLYLE

Cross
Creek
Auct1on
Buffalo
Fn mght 7 pm Country
band Star-Light $5 00
admiSSIOn
Sat 6pm large auct1on
seller Ron P.nce + lots at

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classtned ads
_t,~
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
E!
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

POUCIES Ohio V•lley Publlahlng 111Mnt. . the right to edit, rat-ct. or c•ncalany ad It 1ny time Error• mutt be r..,artlld on the
Trlbunt-StniiMI-Regltter wiH be reeponslbl• for no more than thto co.t of the apace occupied by-the error end only the flrtlintertlo,
any loa• or upenH thllt l'dulta trom the publlcttlon or omt.. lon ot an advertisement . Corr.ctlon wHI bl m•d• In the fl1al evallabht edition
.,. atwey1 conlldenliel • Cull'enl rat. cerd eppUH • All r-1 Hlllla MlvertlaerMnll are aubject to ttle fecltrll F11r H0u1ing Act ol 1968
aecapt• only help wanted eda mNdng EOE at41ndtrdl We wtll not
I
•ny advertialng In violation of tile law

I buy Junk Cars (304) 773-

675-6639

This newspape
ccepte only hel
anted ada meetl
DE otandarda.

Bu•lne•s Day• Prior To
.-.ubllcatlon
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thun;:day for Sunday•- - ·---·

• All ads must be prepaid'

I KIT

Found Tuesday 3 14 small
white dog. 1n Camp Conley
area call to Identify 304·

Public Notice

not

Sunday lr1-Column : 1 ~00 p.m .
Frldav For Sunday• Paper

or

Qenerel Hauling ..... ......... ..... ............. ...... 850

The Meigs County
Department of Job &amp;
Fam1ly Services Is
seeking proposals to
provide a summer
youth program to ellglbte youth age 14-18
consistent with federal , state and local
guidellnes lor the
Temporary
Assistance for Needy
Families (TANF) program.
Youth who
reside
In
Meigs
Counly and whoso
family Income does
not exceed 200% of
the ·federal poverty
Index are ellglbte lor
participation .
Program costs must

All Dl•play: 1~ Noon :Z

AucnON Mn
t.iol..;FLEAitiiiilltliOiMAHKEiiliiiiirr_.l.

We are m1xed breed (1
male and 1 female) dogs,
black w1th tan markm g and
b1g 1nQu1rmg eyes We are
IOOklr.lQ lor a home w1th a
tam1ly who w1ll love us as
much as we love them We
listen well learn qUickly,
en)oy walkmg and plaYi ng

entlnei~Reglate

posato.
In ucordance with 29 CFR
part 31, 32 Melga
County Department
of Job &amp; Famtty
Services Ia prohibited
from dlacrtmtnatlon
on the basla of race,
color, national origin,

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

In Next DaV'5 Paper

I~

Ohio Volley

r-.1 c&gt; t l .c:~cg I •-a ,...., ~ """'s~~;»-. p e r s •-&gt;~•·""~-.co~ Jt..c.l~ht tc&gt; ~........ ~.- .::. ........ ~---

Ltnnle B.
Taylor,
Deceased by Joan M.
May, Trustee.
Unless exceptions
are filed thereto, said
account will be sot
for hearing before
said Court on the
Monday, April 24,
2006, at which time
Said account will be
considered and con·
tlnued from day to
day until finally disposed of
Any parson Interested may ftle written
exception to said

Ir .

1 male. 1 temaJe Sheltleto
lovmg homes
mature
house
tramed
Call
(740)446·8217 5pm·9pm

W. will not know

The Home National
Bank witt auction the
following 1tems on
Saturday, March 25,
2006 at 10:00 a.m at
the bank's parking
lot:
1999
HYUNDAl

Display Ads

Description • lnt:lude A Price • Avoid Abbrewolatlons
• Include Phone Number And Addre.. When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

a-.- La b I I&amp;:::1-&lt;ll:.lac;.l-at tc&gt;

Word AdS

AD. • Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Co(l"'plete

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
~~ . . . .-

Mrlp ClNnly OH

The successful cand1dale
wlll possess th e followtng
• Mtn1mum of Bachelor's
Degree
Master's pre~
!erred 1n related held com·
btned With eltpen ence
working 1ssues 1nvo lv1ng
chi ldren and the1r fam11ies
• Slro ng commun,catJon,
manaQemenl and o rga nizatiOnal sktlls
• Able to mult1task
• Expert1se m grant wntmg
• Competenf com pute r
sktlls mc ludmg use of
M1crosolt Ofl1ce appllca·
t10ns
Benefltt.
The Me1gs County Health
Department offe rs employees a com pet1!1ve benef1ts
pacl\age Pos1t1ons IS full
t1me with startmg salary
dependent on education
and expenence
Interested
cand 1dates
sh ould send a letter of
mlerest, resume , comp leted c1v1 l serviCe appliCation
and three letters of reference to Larry 0 Marshall
Health
Co mmiSSioner
Me1gs
Count
Hea lth
Depar tmen t, 112 East
Me m o r~ a l Dr, Su 1te A
Pomeroy Oh 45769 C11111
serv iCe applica tiO n~ m ay
be p1cked up at the Health
Department or on !he we b
at lhe follow1ng ,a ddress
http 1/www das phro gpylbr
d/pd1/Jo bapp2 pd!
The
poSition w1ll rema1n open
until filled
Pos111on available for Farm
and Lawn PaftS assoc•a1e
Health and ret1rement ben·
eftts Must have computer
sk1ll s Prefer tarm background Send resume to
C/O
CLA
Box
566,
Galhpol1s Dally Tnbu ne
PO Box 469 GaU1pohs

OH 45631
POSTAL JOBS
S15 67·$21 98/hr
now
hmnQ For appl1cat10n and
free governemenl 1ob mto
call Amer1can Assoc ot
Labo r
1·913·599-8042
24/hrs emp serv

AN/LPN (Home Heal1n]
Part or Full time per VISit
or hOurly 4011&lt;. catetena
plan mileage Un1 form
allowance CEU reimbursement Sam s Clu.b
Health &amp; L1te Ins PTO
Wh iCh accumulates tram
f~rst work day
Top pay 1n Tn Stale
S1gn-On Bonus

800-759-5383

EOE
RN s needed lo pr0111de
at co nstruCtiOn
s1tes between Ch~SI'ure
and New Haven FT PT
F
1
r
s
A1ctlER/Occuoallonal Satet
y exper1ence ne1ptul Call
(888)269 6344

T1red ol Not Hav1ng
Enough Money to Make
Ends Meet or Go1ng to
Work For Someone Else?
C hr~st1 a n owneCt Com pany
of nearly 2 decades oHer·
1ng a home Busmess
Opportumty
(304)576-

2056 or (304)593·0466 II
no answe1 plea se lea'.'e
message

ScHooLs
INsrRUC110N
Conceal ed P1stol Class
Oh•o WV Ap nl 8 2006
$75 00
9 '00arn VFW
Mason WV Ph (740)843-

5555
GalliPolis Career
College

De oq •· y
Pos1t10n lmrned1ate open
mg full-till'€! App l~ at
Lifestyle Furn1ture 3rd and
011\/e Gallipolis 9 30am·
5 OOpm no phone calls

~arrow Smart Cont8c
he O h10 DI'.'ISIOO o
F1nanc1al lnst11ut1on
P«1ce of Consume
fA,tfa~rs BEFORE yo
ehnance your Mrt;1e o
p btam
a
loan
~EWARE of request
or any large advanc
ayme nts of tees o
nsurance
Call the
Off iCe of Consume
fla~rs ooll lree ao I ...
66 278-0003 10 lear
f th~ mongage broke
r lender IS&gt; oroperl
ICensed (ThiS IS a pub
1C ser'o'ICe announce
~en1 lrom the Oh1
Vall ey
. Publi shm

C.omoanvl

(C areers Close To Home)
Can Todayt 7 40-446 4367

1·800·214-0452
_,. galllpoli&amp;CCHeen;:OIIQQe corn
Accredlled Member Accrodllmg
'COUilGII lot Independent ColleQe5
and Schcotll5 12748

11,0
1

RADio TV
I
&amp; CD liEPAIR

Ron s

TV

R epa ~r

WarehOuse

Sales and
Appliance
(304)675

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
/SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wm l
1 B88 582 3345
~I

~lO

7999

Two year old laymg hens
for sell 50 pe r hen 740

985-3956

\I l'l\11

HU\lES
FORSALE

.

1001 Kenny Ct (Beh1nd Jr
H1gh School) 3 Bedrooms
lull dry Bas ement al l
Hardwood
Floors
E;w;cellent
Ccndll10n
$81 500 call (304 \6753123 (304!6 7 5 Jd32
~-

Cer t1l1ed
Care Home
Asstsled &amp; Non-Ass1sted
Persons me als &amp; snacks
provided Exce llent Care
(304)682 3880
Computer Trouble Shooter
and R epa ~r
Expert
Serv1ce 7 40 992 2395

Dry'"~ Hour
No Steam-or-Shampoo
Free-Estimates
' "'Clearly Clean"'

304 75-0022
Top
No1ch
Bwlomg
New
Contractors
Additions
Pole Barns
Hardwood
Floor
and
CeramfC T1le lnstalla11on
Custom
Decks
new
Roots new Construct1on
Licensed and ln~ured

wv.

036667 (3041675·

3042 or (304 )593 1115
W1ll do Sabyslttmg 1n my
home
State Cert1f1ed
Non-Smoker
Have
References Call 740 9491135

190

Cmtn'Eu,.:RLY
CARE

Darst Home has rooms
ava1lable for those 1n need
at
ass1sted
I1V1ng

(740)992 ·5023
Needed
1mmed1ately
babys1tter 111 my home
Aftern(?on Shift vanous
days
1ncludes
some
wee~ends
Mu st
be
dependable re11a01e an::J
trustworlh)l Prefer non
·smoker Must tie gooa Wlfn
ch1ldren REFERENC ES A
MUS TII 1 Call 740-245
0321
tor
quest1ons
SeriOus InQUires on ly

f~rst-a 1d

Wa r e hou~e

r

M ONhl

ro Lo"s

oN OTI Cf•
HIO VA LL EY PUB
ISHING CO •ecorr

2 bedroom 1 bat'l hv1ng
room d1nn1ng •oor1 ~ase
ment
M diJ eoo •
$36 000 ,( 7401992 3057
20 acre farm w11 h barn and
4 bedroom 3 bath home
Located m Lawrence Co
Call
lor
mformat1on
(7 40)643·0518

4 year old Colon11:11 or ;
acres appro). 1 900 so f'
J hdr 2 bathS 2 ca
garage mas•er bdl s
28x2:4 With a Jac uzz tu t
S125 000 (7 40)44 6 7029
4BR Foreclosure on v
$14 900 Fo r listings ca
80CI·39 1·5228 ext F254
909 Messman C~rcle P1
Pleasant wv 3BR 1 ba t1
lull basemen! , sas OlJC
t304J675 6804
A Mention'
Loca co-.pa n\ (I 'IP
"NO DOWN PA YM£t.,

prograrlS lor .nu 1::

~.

your Mme 1ns!eAd nf "er l

ng
· 1 00"~ tmanc1 ng
· Less tha n pertec1 credll
accepted
• Payment could be me
same as ren1
MorlgAge
l...ocators
1740)367 0000
Co1on1a Br1ck Rancn Tare
Estates 3 bedrooms 2 1ul
baths soa rkl•ng h(l ~"'le
$128 900
P" 'l"f
Crab
Cre P ~o.
t- .. ,, •
PicturesQue
O t... C a ~' '
Cod home Oak ~.o ns tr u c
t1on 3 4 bedroom 1 oa tl1
b1g coun try k11cher lois of
cab1nets plus dtl11'19 room
spa CIOUS 1iv1ng room S
study on 3 2 ac res
Beaut1lul
rolling
la wr
w'mature shade trees a
new pond 8. dock ntCE:
work.shqp plus 4-outbwld
lf'lQS &amp; carport S6B 500
(304 )6 75· 4680
aha nn ., q~ cha to • ~&gt; I
Sorry Nc: L&lt; -

�Friday, March 24, 2006

Friday, March 24, 2006

www.mydailysentlnel.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

ALLEYOOP
10 miles up At 62, towards
Buffalo, Toyota Plant.
Currently being Used as a
2 Bay Auto Center, with or
withOut all Equipment. 1
acre lol. Business a! same
location tor 50 years
304 )586-4666 ._

..1=== t

All real 11ehM advertl•ing
In this newspaper is
aubject t(! the Federal

Lms&amp;
ACREAGE

Fair Housing Acl of 1968

jwhich makes It Illegal to

l"r ·•• &gt;, ldv.r1iae "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on ., 1.6 acres on Oak Hill Ad ..
Chester. Ohio. water. gas,
race, color, religion , sex
electric
on
property,
tamlllal status or national
$15.000, 304-483-7550
01-igin, or ilny intention to
make any such
22 acres. wonder1ul view.
preference, limitation or
ridgetop property, close to
discrimination."
main highway perlect for 4-.
This newspaper will not
wheeler tra tls, (740)707·
2t09
•
knowingly accept
advertlsementa lor real

Mason County Acreage for

estate which Is In

Sale (91 8)455·3301

violation or the law. Our
readers are hereby

Aen!a l prope rty w/ 1 5
acres. w/moblle home.
annual income $4,200.
Chesapeake
area.
$17,000 lor all (740)256·

· informed that all
dwellings advertiaed in
this newspaper are

available on an eq'ual ·
opportunity \lases .

6522.

r

Sandhill 3br, 2ba, skylight

painted
lntenors.
LR,FR ,DR, garden tub,
applainces. washer, dryer.
1+ acre, walk in closet,
landscaping &amp; outbu1ld·
ifigs. Must Sell $78,000

'
REALEsiArE
WANTEJI

QBO (304)593·0852

www.orv .com
Home Listings.

Private party wall pay
CASH for your trust
deed/2nd Mortgage note.
Please ca ll (740)441 -

Lis( your home by call·

ing (740)446-3620
photoslinro online.

5540.
I~ I

ew Haven, · WV.
edroom. 2 Bath . 2 Ca
arage, Oulbuildings
ose to town PRICE
0 SELL! Code 6505 o

..... \1 ....

H OUSffi

FORibNr .

all (304)982·3368

bedroom
hOuse
Excellen t location m town .
No pets (740)446·1 162.

3

3 large bedrooms,. ! battl,
very
clean.
porch.
Available
immediately,
$500/depoSit, $500/month,
3 references. no pets.
(740)388-9515 ask for
Amy.

v iew photos/info
online ..

3BD. 1ba . 17 aCres; Green
schools. S6501fll9nlh plus
. utilities.
plus deposit.

(740)256·8152.
4br
in
Syracuse,
$600/month &amp; Deposit..
Water/Sewer included. No

Pets (304)675·5332
AHentioni
Local compa ny olfering

"NO DOWN PAYMENT"

' MOBILE HOMES
ffiRMLE

Pets

,

Mobile hOme sites for up to
16x80 In Country Homes.

programs for you to buy
. your 'hoi-ne instead of renting.
• , 00°/., financing
• Less· than p~rfect crectil
acc~ pted

' Payment could be the
same -as rent.
Mortgage
Locato rs.

15 New Sinqlewldes
In Stock &amp; Ready
For Delivery!

(740)367·0000
For rent 2-br. house 21 11
lincoln Ave. dep.&amp; ref. no
pets $400.00 a man 304-

Call (740)385·9948
16x80 mobtle home 3 bed·
room, 2 bath , heat pump,
·5xB deck. Very nice~

675·2749
House tor Rent en Point
Pleasant (304)675-6224
leave message

(740)388·9170.
1970 Hill Cre'st MobileHome Two Bedroom, has
new carpet, was bought.
new and lived in for 30
years by older couple
Great ~tarter Home or
Rental
Unit.
In
Harrisonville. $13.600.00.

Immaculate 2 bedroom
hOuse in country, SitS on 1
acre lot, newly remodeled
inside &amp; out, naw ca rpet,
freshly painted, laundry &amp;
storage rooms. $450/mo.

(614)595·7773 or t·800·
798·4686:
'

7 40.742-4911
2000 Oakwood mobile
home 16xBO vinyflshingle,
4 bedroom. 2 baths. CIA
(740)245·000 1. Must be
moved

Small house at 608 First
Avenue. AC , washer/dryer. •
stovelfridge,
· sc reened
porcll $375fmo plus utilities . {7 40)446-{]260

2001 · doublewide on · 1.6
acres on Prospect Church
Rd. 3BA . 2BA w/fireplace.

Stop renting Buy 7 bedroom foreclosure $16.000.
For listings 800-391-5228

$80,000 (740)709·1166.

e~t .

1709.

2006 16' Wjde
Viny1/Sh1ngle

Only $181 .00/mo.
Call (740)385·7.67t
MUST SELL
2002 Clayton i ~h:52
Pmts Of $169/mo

2 bedroom 1n country. CIA.
absol.utely No -Pets lnstde.
$350/mof"11tl. $350 deposit.
(740)245-9491
be lore
9:00pm

Call (740)385·9948
Ni ce 1987 14x70 .3 bed·
room home . Only $8,995.
Will help with delivery. Call

2BA 5 mtnutes from town ,
$400/monlh. deposit &amp; rel erence 'equtred. No pets.
1740)446-9342 aher 6pm.

Ela1ne (740)385·0698
'Used mobile hOmes for
sale. 14 &amp; 16. wide. 2 8 3
qedrooms 6 to choose
from 1996 model &amp; up.

2BR. all electr1c, $360
month
plus
security
deposal. no peis. 4 miles
north o l Holzer. St . At. 160

(740)388·8513 (dayt,me).
(740)388-8017 (evenings) . .
(740)294 -0460
(week enQs)

1740)379·2923
(74,0)446·6865.

SHOP
·CLASSIFIEDS

Attention Construction
Workers Fully furn1shed
-2 bedroom . 2 ·baths, \'ery
nice. Located m quiet restdenllal area 1n PomeroY.
On1o
740-992-1517 or
740-992 -0031 .

or

didn' t go alone, for

appreciated and

(740)385-4019

r

~~~

I

1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, furnished
and
unfurni.shed.
secudty·
deposit required. no pels,

7'40·992·22 t 8,
1 br.apt. aU util. paid
$350.00 also commerical
space both on Main St. Pl.
Pleasant 740-446 -2200

WITH PAID DEP NEW
ELLM VIEW.

TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
NOW LEASING!
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
. BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE

"ALL ELECTRIC
'CE~TRAL. AC &amp; HEAT
'STOVE , REF.
"DISHWASHER
"GARAGE DISPOSAL
'WIND BLINDS
"CEILING FANS
"WATER , SEWAGE &amp;
TRASH INCLUDED
PETS
CONOI· ·
TIONAL
(304)982·

2 apartments for

rent.
Racine, Ohio (short drive
from power plan t) Deposit
required,
no
pets.
(740)992-517.4
or
(740)441·01 10.
. 2 Bedroom Apartmenl
avai lable m Syracuse.

$200.00 deposi1 $350.00
per month rent.
Rent
1n'c1udes water. sewer.
1rash No pets. Sufficient
income needed to qualify.
740-378-6 11 ,
2 br.upstairs apt. $400 00
a mon. + dep &amp; ref. no ·
pets,
washer/dryer,
re:fridge/stove included in
Pt. Pleasant. 304-593-

r

FOR RENT.

Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies.
Ca ll 740·446-256a. Equal
Housing Opportunity.
Brand new 2SR apts. on
Bob McCormick Rd. Call
for details (7 40)441 - 0~ 94
or (740)441- 1184

CONVENIENtLY LOCAT·
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse apartments,
and/or small houses FOR

RENT. Call (740)441·111 t

tor application &amp; information.
For Lea·se: Attr.active ,
unfurnished, one bedroom
apt., 2nd floo r, corner
Second and Pine No pets.
Reference
. reqUtred .
Security depoSit, $300 per
month. water in cluded .
Call (740)446~4425 or

(740)446·3936.
Grac1ous living. 1 and 2
bedroom ' apartments at
Village
Manor
and
Riverside Apartments 1n
Middleport. Frorri $29.5$444. Call 740-992-5064..
Equal '
Housing
Opportun11les.
Modern 1 bedroom apt.

(740i446.Q390.
N·ew 2BA apts. Watson
Ad .
Rodney P 1kel 8~0
area. Reference/ Depo"$it
required , · no
pets

(740)446·1271 , (740)709·
1657.
Small Apa rtment on Laure!
Cliff Road. Pomeroy. For
Info. Call 740-992-6396.

1

r

MlscELiANEous
MERcHANDISE

1

Prom Dresses: 1 TIHany
pink size- 8 $150; 1 Alyce

Applications for 2BA, 3BR
&amp; 4BR. , AppliCations are
laken Monday thru Fnday,
lrom 9:00 A.M .-4 PM.
Office is located at 1151
Evergreen Drive Po int
Pleasant. WV Ph one No. is

pink size-6 $150; 1 rad/silver size-2; 1 A1ort lori navy
slze-3/4 $25. (1"40)441 ·
0712

(304)675·5806. E.H.O
Tara

·Townh'o use
Apartments,
Very
Spacious, 2 Bedrooms,

C/A, 1' 112 Bath, Adult
Pool &amp; BilbY ~ol. Patio.
Start $4.25/Mo. No Pets,
lease
Plus
Secunty
Depo sit
Requ ired,

(740)367·7086.

r

WEEKLY AVAILABLE
l ' n a l udes
A e fr tge ra to r /M tc ro wave
Fro m $175 To $250
College 11111 Motel Call

(740)245·5326

t

FORRmf

Downtown OHice Space· 5
room suite $6501mo, 1
room office- $225/mo.; 2
room
sui te
$250/mo.
Security deposit requlrE!d.
You pay utilities All :5Peces
ve ry n1ce. Elevator. Call
(740)446·3644 tor appoint·
ment.
Ae1ail and office spac~
available in downtov.fl ·
Point
Plea~arit,
$500/m.onth,
next
to
Courlhouse. Contact Julie
a
t
pointpleasant_comm_rent
al@yahoo.com
or .

(703)528·0617.
' Ill((

1! \\ 11 1~ 1

HOl5EIIOLD
Gooos

Warehouse
H enderson, WV.. Pre·
owned Applicanes star.ting
at S7'5 &amp; up all under
Warranty.
also
!lave
"OusehOid Misc. Items
1n

&amp; up

(304)675·7999
Maytag
washe r
$50 ;
Frigidaire
dryer
$90; ·
General electr ic 13." 800
BTU atr conditioner $150.

Caii(740)709·175B.
Moving Sale! Uvmgroom/
Dinning room !urn.. min
bike. Weider weight room
(350# +free) Housewares .
Priced to move! 3120·3124.
Call ·soon for more selection. (740)446-2846.

89 C-70 Dump

dogs 304·937·3059

truck •.
43,000 original miles, 9t1.
telescoping dumP. air
brakes. 427 Allison auto-

www.Tristatek·9.com

matic . $6,500. (740)388·

AKC German Shepherds
pups &amp; adults, working

Labrador Retrievers AKC
registered . Different color,
ages &amp; price. (740)256·
6463 or (740)645-6527.

r

Fender
Gibson
and
Epiphone acoustic guitars,
new in box, you r choice
$150 cash
(740)379-

2601

Orlando/Disney area. 7/6
nights stay. Paid $600 sell
for $199 "good for 1 yr.
1'1'111...,

,\11\I.., I CHI'\

eo....~FNr
.-....

answer. leave message.
2001 , Blazer LT 4x4,
9 1,000ml, loaded. New
. Goodyears,
Onstar.
Leather, All Power, S7, 900.·

(740)245·9245, (740)387·

I 0624~

r
,

740)387.0394,
41 MOTORCYCLE!;'
4 WIIEELERS

Massey FergCJson 1125 4
4WD dleset, good cond.

$7800. 304·675-41 10

Angus Bulls, two X-breds,
4 heifers. Excellent breed·
ing. Slate Run Farm. See
www .s Ia ter rJ n1a rm .co m ,

(740)286·5395.

HAY&amp;
GRAIN '

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Aepair-675-7388 For sale,
re-conditioned au tomatic
washers &amp; dry.ers, relrigerators, gas and electric
ranges. a1r condi tioners,
and wringer washers. Will
do rePairs on major brands
tn shop or at your home.

$201bale . (74b)446· t 909
or (740)446·9160.
Very good mi~ed hay.
Square bales Carmichael
!;quipment
{740)4462412 . .

II(\ \"'1'0H I\ 110\

Auro;
lOR SALE
$5001 Police Impound s!
Cars !rom $500. For list·
tngs 800-391·5227 ext.

3901
04 Oldsmobile Alera. 4
.door. auto. ·vs.
PL.
PS. rear spoiler. air. CD
player, excellent .condition .

·

~o2w

Honda 919. 2,200
miles with cover and tank
bag.
Great 'col'ldltion .
Asking
$4 ,500
call

04 ·Dyna Super ~I ide. fuel
injected. serria red. lots of
chrome, 2.400 miles.
bea utiful bike, garage
Kept Call Mon-Fri am
{740)446·9416, weekend
&amp; evenings 1740)441·
1724.
·1998 Yamaha 350 Warrior
great conditiOn K&amp;N a1r filter $2300 . 740-245-5770
or 245-92 14
1999 Harley Davidson
Ultra Classic. Loaded.
Excellent
.condition,
29,000 total mtles Price
$13,500. Call 740·949•
.22 17 until 7 pm.
1999 Hond a 300 EX ,
many new parts Asking
$1 ,650 OBO. 2000 Suzuki
AM 125, many aftermarket
Parts. Aski ng $1 ,600 OBO.
Both look and run great!

Call(740)388-9021 ,
2000
Yamaha
V·Star
Motorcycle 8700 m1les 1
black &amp; chrome wtth
leather. Many extras, Must

·ADVERTISE
YOUR
.·
BUSINESS

'•

'

'

,,

ONTHIS'PAGE FOR
.
AS LOW AS
'
. $27.00 PER MONTH!

Disney/Beach area. 7!6
nights stay. Paid $600,
sacrifice for $199. Good for
1 year.·(614)590-038,1 .

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa ired , New &amp; Rebuilt
In Stade: , Call Ron E¥ans,
1-800·537-9528.

'

Ltncoln Aan~,ter 250 weldef
with m1g attachments 100
foot of lead $2800.
Hendy t 4"x6 foot Lathe
Sin gle-phase $2000.call
304,675·4 t44 it no answer
lea-.k message

NEW AND USED STEEL

The Daily Sentinel

992-2155
•

1993 Cadillac De_y il le
64,000 miles. good shape.

$4,000. (740)645·0626.
spd. about ~40,000 miles.
Needs engine. $800 abo.

(740)339·2356
1995 Crown Viqtoria . 4
door, runs good. and looks·
1;100d
740-416-1472 or
740-992-1493
2002 Cavalier 4D. $3 .895.
1999 Malibu $3.295: 1998
Metro LSI $2 .995: ' 1996
Monte
Carlo
$2 995
01hers m stock star ttng at
$1 .300 Cook Motors. 328
Jackson P1ke . (740)446·

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Fo r Concrete,
Angle ,•
Channel , Flal Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drams ..
Or1veways &amp; Walkways
L&amp; l Scrap Metals Open
Mon"ay,
Tuesday.
Wednesday &amp; Fr1day. Bam4 30pm. Closed Thursday.
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday

96 Bwck LeSaiJre 97 .000
mt. .' needs body work and
radra'tor. new ltr~s . battery
brakes and rotors . $1 .500

(7 40)446-7300

OBO 1740)446·9632

0103.
95 Camara. black , T-top,
auto $1 800, 1740)2561618 or (7 ~0 ) 256-6200

$7 .t50 (740)441 ·5540.
99 Harley Fat Boy, 9,4.00
m1teS. lots of Chrome and
extras (7 4~ )446-9954

N)S &amp; McmiRs
HIRSAI.E
1984 Sea Ray Cuddy
t40hp, 19tt
tnter1or 1n
good shape rur\s _great
$3,300(neg)
Call
(740)992·7478
Of
.(740)4t6- 1903
94 Sead~ SPX 2 pas,senge! Jet sk1 excellent cona•liOn
mCiude s
trailer
$,t 300 (740'1.38~·1579

Obi.

'"'

LAWN CARE
Mowing- Tree

Trimming - AerationFerti lization- p l antingMulching

· Homes- DecksDriveways - Equipment
Degrcasi ng- BoarsCa mpers- Trucks- Deck
~raining

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1-1~ CA/,L~t&gt; 1T A "'cATNIP MOV.Sf"-~­

or painting

Special rates for
Truc king 1:0mpanies

(740) 992-2804

TtiiNIC IT'S SOME- S'O/lT OF
P/lACTIC.r
\
l&gt;UMMY.

(740) 517·6 883

Jeff Stethem ·Owner

Hardwood Cabinetry A!ld ·Furniture

DADBURN

_.w,fu,...,. CJO~Iu:ablnetry.oem

'

HE DO AWA'( WIF
,TH' WRIST SLAP ?!

JEJ)GE IS .
HANDIN' OUT
STIFFER
PENALTIES,
LUKEY !!

740.446.9200
2A59 St Rt. 160 • Ga!UpoUs

Ch uck Wolfe

(740)949-1405

·Owner

~"l!::"t!:1!:!1.!!1S...t.:t!ru!

1

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
CONTRACTING

P"'l ~Pm'&gt; n n't I'(R(£..1'\r or"'

Licensed Home Bui.lder

T'J, WP--K\-\11&gt;\G Pi'!06~':l ...

I~ ~l"&lt;.t\1 l..OOKII'li&gt; ffiK\f\E.

~ lt(f"'\C.I

Ir----..,-

71

',

BIG NATE .
TO '&lt;0 U J:'M M S

,us &amp; Mamws

WHAT :L'D LIKE YOL&gt;

FOR SALE
1998 · 2 1" Marada MX-3
(Gold Package) open bow
bOat. Mercury V6 engine ,"
1.9aHP, with just 110 hour.s
of use. Custom tops, track
and accessones. Excellent
condition $9.700 OBO.
Call after · 6pm (740)446-

4066

f7W

At,W PAKIS

&amp;

TO CALL ME
,

29670 Bashan Road

Rac1ne , Ohio

(740)645-7400
Fiberglass truck topper
w/sl1dmg windows . F11s
FQrd Ranger or Chevy
510 $100 (740)446-1327

f79l

CAMI'F.RS·&amp;
MmQRHOMES

18 II. camper. co vered
porch, located nver front at
Lone Oak Camp -G round
$110000 lot rent extra
$500 00 tncludes water,
electric &amp; sewer 304-882-

3237
2000 Camplite by Damon
pop up camper sleeps 8
22'.~7' ,
furnace . 3- way
refng 8'-1 2 ', sell stormg
awning Jacks &amp; leveling
systems, spare tire &amp; cam ·
er. , 2 bruner propane
portable stove. in vary
good condition only used 3
ti mes, Asking $4000 calf
after (pm (740)949 -2908

New 2002 ~ockwood ·popup camper . Air/furnace . 2
queen w/heated mattress.
1 twin $5:ooo
Lance trucK camper 10.6
ft , mint cond1tton. air,
refng arator,
lull
b~U h,
queen
bed ,
awn1ng ,

$4,900, (740)256·6522

810

45771
740.949·2217

, TRANSMIS·

SIONS. Double bolted All
types . (740)245-5677 or

H m tE

bii 1ROV ..:~u:~TS
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondition al
ltfetime
guarantee Local reter·
ences
.
fu rntshed
Established 1975. Call 24
Hrs. · (7 40;
446-087 0,
Rogers
Base~enl
W?tcrprooflng

New to the. area Casto
Cb nt •:~ctlr&gt;Q "18 y•s expen·
ence Dependable. honest
affordaole
rates
.Call
(740)446·0306

AH!

r.

t;ETTER. ACQLIA.INTEP
LATER~

, PROFE SS IONAL'
I CAN AC·
CEP-r THAT!

Hill's Self
Storage

$lze85' 1110'
.,., tq.1
' ' ,,,_,....

o·xao· · ..

Hours

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

J40-992·1m
Stop &amp; Compare

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

PEANUTS
TWO

ONE FINGER
MEAN 'f'OVR FAST
BALL

BE

'(OUR CURVE

Wl.tiOI DOESN'T
CURVE AT ALL ..

WI-IICI-II5N'T

FAST ANt(WA'I'.•

David Lewis

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-992-6971
4f7.1

CHANGE ·UP
Wl.tiCI-11-lASN'T
rwLcvAt•I'&lt;ONE
YET...

PITCiol~OUl; BOT

WE WON'T0SE
TlolAT ON

EVER't'TI.IIN6

'(OV TlolROW
LOOKS LIKE

PITC 14 ·OUT!

SUNSHINE CI,..UB
(SJGH)t ~D
ARll.IIJD tWIT£ A Brr

•r •,

·~,
~

-

GARFIELD

WAH-HA!I-IA! HA!HA!

Ohio 45769

FOR RENT· MEI&lt;iS COUNTY
1-4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
I Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
740-416-5547

GRIZZWELLS

BAUI\1 LlJI\1BER
Scorpion Tractors
"Taki11g Til e Sti11g Out Of
Hard nork !"
Miu - Si1c -l.Wlle~J Drive Tractor
wi1h JOhp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. .124 Chester 9115-3301

35

Opening lead:. 4 3

37
39

He may be long
in the unbid major

40
41

delay

57 HIIO .

wo.ur.

different

responding hand,)
North, hoping his partner has fou r hearts.
makes his value rebid. (If South guesses
to pass ool lhree hearls, North can get
home by laking the diamond finesse ) But
when South rebids lhree spades, Norlh
passes - his partner musl be weak
because he d1d nol respond two spades.
How can lite defense defeat 1hree spades
after Wesl leads a tlub?
Easl lakes two club !ricks, then has two
possible defenses. .If he shifts lo lhe ace
and anolher heart, declarer gels home by
conllnuing with lhe ace anll queen of
spades; but if ,Soulh tries the spade
finesse, East gets ~ heart ruff to defeat
lhe conlract Alternatively, and basi here,
Easl plays a third club. Suppose declarer
ruffs on lhe board and 1akes lhe trump
finesse. West wins wi1h his king and puts
Easl on lead \l'lth .a heart. A fourth club
promotes Wesl's spade 10 to lite setting
trick.

AstroGraph
- . . &lt;JIIrthdaiy:

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

CNb"ily Cipher cryptog1ams are created from ctLWllonl.by 1amou1 pecipe, _, tnd ~
Ell:flie!ter 111 the apher sc.Us to" anchr

Today's Clue: M BqUBIS P

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(PGDRF

ED G E T

ABEZRPZF
RGGMIF

PZ 'U UGBUYGHD)

YJ G AB HWJ YGUY
ZDR

PHil

OH, UUGR ."

AG

PZU

I H W J Y U ED :
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ZIGVZDRGB
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'II is easier lo live through someone else than to
become complete yourself." - Betty Fnedan ("The Feminine Mystique")

TIIHAit.l

IUilL.I

0 fcvr
horranQe ""•~"~ cf
ICr~unbled wonf1

rht

b•

low 10 ~rm favr limp~ wordo.

ARIES (March 21-Aprll -19)- Find amlca;
ble companions early on· with whom to
share your time and interests, because 1t is
unlikely you wilt enjoy being left to your own
dev1ces ancl do1ng th mgs alone today.
Know where to look for romance. and you'll
" Have you
lind tt.
TAU~US (April 20·May 20) - If your aspi·
gent
"that
rations are in accordance with your hiQhest
7
oxtra
in
ideals today, your chances for SUCC8!$S at
whatever you undertake are excellent. If
detergenls but meus t:nr1 you deviate. you're .3.P1 to be a big flop.
7
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Try to con?" ..
duct all your affairs today b8sed on what
you have learned !rom past personal eJ:pe·
g
Comolott tl&gt;t cloucllo ........,
rtences. Your acqiJtred knowte:dge IS likely
~
· .........· ...I.......J..;..
• ...I.....J..-1
by l illi"'' 1• Jlio mbting _ .
to be far better than any new suggestions.
· ·
you de,.iop froo. •111&gt;
S below.
· CANCER (June 21.-July 22) - When
1nvolved In a comrriercial dealing today, be
,.£\ P~1,_1 NUM8!R!D 11
1
.
cogn1zant·ol the 1$CI tha t you have certain ' ~ l!TTFRS
adVan1ages gotng for you . If you believe
you're in the driver's seat. you'll gel a better
deal
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Look at l1te from
the other guyfgal"s perspecttve. and it will ·
:I.'D'M
enhance the quality of your one-on-one
Involvements today. Conversely, a lack of
Quorum
.,.
sensitivity could create a misunderstand·
lbe lwd way tblllllytbing
1ng.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl 22)· - II you're
a seem am go in one ear and 0111 the·MOUTH.
nego t1~tmg a deal. today with another who
has need of your sen1aces. don' t underestt·
mate your talents and worth . Le t this person know what you offer is top-notch .
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct 29) - You're 1n an
excellent cycle where persons you know
SOCially can be of great help to you tn other
areas of your lile. Don't abUse this cond1·
lion, but use it Wisely Joday whe rever you
can
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NO.V. 22) - Starl!ng
today, it looks like things are gomg to work .
out rather well for you in a si1uation that has
been causing you some concern lately
Strtve to be hopetul . and locus on happy
' end results
SAGITIAAIUS {Nov. 23-0ec . 21) -You
should do pa,ticularly well today at pursu\ts
of a mental and creative nature. It could be
an e~remely grattfy1ng expenence It you
attempt to do something artiStiC.
·
CAPRICORN {Dec . 22-Jan 19) - If you
set your mind to it today. you should be able
to manage your resources or material
ittfa1rs far more competef'otly than usU81
Look for ways to get mor~ mileage out of
· your dollars.
AQVARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Persons
w1th whom you'll be 1nyolv&amp;d toHay w1ll be
looking t6 you to take charge of the agenda ·
and establish the pace. They'll sense that
you seem to ·~now what would be plaa smg
lor all.
PISCES {Feb 20-March 20) - You have a
. very special g1ft t ed~ tor 9en1ng to tne bot·
.tom ot th1ng s and solv1 t1g problems atthe1r '
root causes Do"n't waste ·th1s valuable tal·
ent: put these p10bmg powers 10 work lor

eve: IIOiiced.• ilie ·

quizzed,
size means

ecooomy

ilrJe

r-1---;i-E L-:S:-N::-:-E~T---.1 ~

I Ii f I ·1

ARLO &amp; JANIS

Shade River AG Service, Inc

Now Ava ilable AI ·

34

0

No.

r 1· 1I' I' .1· r 1

ICRAMtiTS ANSW!RI
Chcrd- Fruit - Viom: MOIJI'H
My daughter leanied
·tOld

Pomeroy Ot1 1n
)', YNH&lt;; l :Jc&lt;il E)P'' ''enrr

• Pnm•roy,

Pass

Pass

I I I I I ltN I I I I J

WV036725

Beef $8.25
Beef $8.75
Corn $7 .25/Bag
'·Cra~cked Corn $8.25/Bag
·Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag
·"'"""~ River Hog Feed $8.85
Why Driv~ Anywhere Else?

'"'

33

1~

992-6215

Insured
Frcl' Esti mate- s

35537 St Rt 7 N

A

CARPENTER
SERVICE

l6 Years Experience

.,;:AUTYPes or··
. '.(tl)~~&lt;:~~ Wp~·' .

FOUR FIN&amp;ER5
WAS FORA

TLIREE FIN&amp;ER5
WILL 6E '(OUR

FIN6ER5 woiLI'-I

YOUNG'S

Aoorri Addl11one. &amp;
Atmgdellng
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Guttera
VInyl Siding 6 Patntlng
Pallo •nd Pou:h O.Ck•

Pass

East

T A MU 0

1,'14/1 mo pd

1.1 Ill~
!'0'\( Rl II
!'0\S IIH I 110\

Pass

Pass

North
I t
3•

ra!OII-

49 Courta
50 Contonllod
murmuro
53 Aahlng
S5 r.=rack ""lol
,..
56 Wltlloul

lives.

-:11.

.ROBERT
BISSEll
COIISlliiCDII
' • New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

26
28
32

S•turday, M•n::h 25, 2006
By Bernice Bede Oaol.
Ties you have already establiShed Wi ll become far more significant lof yOu in the
year ahead. From time tq time. you and
your cherished friends will do many helpful
!hings to bring happiness int9 each other's

WE 'L L ~VE f'LENTY
OF TiME TO GET

GOTCHA! Yl
WANT TO &amp;E

Athens

At:CHNINif:S
BUDGET

,

PHILLIPS , AND THAT's

West

G

740-742·2293
• Leave a message

6 2

Hid 1
cough
47 lAip
In 1 tutu
~ Mild

prelerri"ng to try to stay lower with a weak

~\-\( OTI\E.~ f'l fT't PE.~U:.t-1 T 'II

~" Tlt-\1:.. 11'1 fro~'\\ Of Tl\t.

· Are you io the market
fora new car

•

~

points and live or six cards in lhe unbid
major?
He makes a negqllve double and hopes
to bid the suit a1 a convenient level on the
next round. (This is not a universal agreement Wilh the South hand, some pa~rs
""uld respond three spades, a weak
jump shift in compel~ion . l do noll ike 1hls,

'DOC!!

New Homes 1 Additions
• Remodeling
wv

·
24
25

the next players overcalls in a

NO,- BUT NOW HE
DOES IT SO HARD
'&lt;A GOTTA GO SEE

(740) 992-0496

• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
1
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"
Call Gary Stanley

AQJ985
J 8 3

suil, to respond in an unbid majoi allhe
lwo·level requires at leasl 10 high-card
points and a five-card or longer suit. So
what does lhe responder do with 6·9

New or Aepaar
Seamless Gutter
Downspout

FREE
ESTIMATES

22

.
•

38 ReviMd
44 Hotel on

Mer the opener bids one of a suil and

~

!='rep [s1t!Thl1(~s Gu.l l ,l!l\N'ril nw1 •,1 P11.''

All types IJf roofing:

(740)339·0218,

89
Honda
Goldwing
wltrailer, 6cyl.
45,000
mtles. very good l;ihape,
well malntaif)ed, cover.
e)(tra lights and chrome.

South

20

South

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Neither

POWER WASHING'

H.l. Wrhasal
and Sons

2001-600 Grizzly Auto
less Than 350 miles on 1t
S4oob.oo 740-742-4011

pao.

EIP.

!

TRI - STATE mOBILE POWER WASH
HnD lAWn CARE

~l!iU:!I!::1!:11ltLl151.!::1!ru::"L.&amp;:l!:IS!:'U:! 1:

2003 Jayco Eagle 34' 5th
wheal wislide out ·New
condition. $22.000 080.

199~ Ford EScort LX 5

"

BARNEY

See. $4 ,200. 304-675·
1094 or 304·593·6886

2005 CRF.250A oarely ndden never raced , $3.900
(740)245-5815.

::HH !J,' 4 ,(1 11

•

' (740)992-0496
S91-4348 ,

(740)446·4096

Pw.

$9,600. (740)388·1579

CL~II
·.

11
13

17
18

A 5

• 7.

Ch ut:k Wolfe/1\tjiiir.

FoRSALE

A K J 10 9 8

20YRS

304·615·2451

expnie n ct.'
Ed Dilllowner
(740)992-'lt OO

&amp;.:

9 5 2

•

Playgrounds

Over 30 years

VA~

98 Ford Windstar 92,000
miles, quad seats, dual
heatlair.
new
tuel
pump/battery.
$4 ,500.

24 12,

- Free Es1imates

s~nice

,.a

•

•

74 3

5
8

16

East
• 63
•

1

14
15

Wesl
• K tO 7
• 7 6 4 2
• Q 6 3

Roads • Driveways • Streets •

Licensed &amp; Insured

L,--oiiliiiiiOIIiii,_.-J

Load . T(aii/Load
Max
TrailersGo osen"eoks / 0 u mp sl
Utilities.
Carmictlael
Equipment
(740)446-

Parking Lots • Ball Courts • Private

GENERAL

$9,800. (740)245·5757 or
(740)339·0885.
No

~.

rL~

4x4
FoR SALE

1999.
Jeep
Grand
CheroKee Li mited.. Good
condition. low mileage.

I

SALE

For sate Good miic:ed hay,
never wet. Large bales

Buy Or sell . . Riverine
Ant1ques, 1124 East "Main
on SA· 124 E. Pomeroy,
740-992·2526.
Russ
Moore, owner.

Chevy Colorado Ext. Cab
'05. Auto. 2WD. wlbedliner,
excellent co ndition. Kelly
Blue Book $14,600, w111
sell for $13.000. (304)523·
11 79"

• SEAL COATiNG
•PATCHING

14h•· Eme •·~ nc~·

(740)388·9649,

rro ~~~I

7100.

r

94 Dodge Ram , 4x4, standard, tool box, CD player,
$2,950 (740)446-7444 or

$200, (740)441-0931

r

• H ealing'
• Cooling
• Refrigeration

1579.

AKC Reg. Lab pups, shots
&amp; pape rs. Born 218/06.

~,

lrff'll4NICM

OBO. (74Q)441- 1014.

(740)379·2~68, '

Reg. Angus Bulls a nd
Heifers
with . EPD's.
New Berber carpet,$6.95/
1740)446·9856
or
yard. ~emanents starting
at _$25. Mollollan Carpe~. , (740)446-7421.
76 Vine St., Gall ipolis.
Stlelled Corn $3.50 per 50,
(740)446·7444.
12% All Slack $5.40 per
50.
Other livestock feed
Aefngera tor. white, $25; · ·
available.
74Q-698·09 11.
Wh irlpool washer. white .

$95 : dryer, VJhtte, $95;
Fridge, like new, $H5. The
ApJ:)Iiance Store, 76 Vine
St. GallipOlis (740 )446-

TRUCKS

1999 GMC w/exte nded
cab. loaded, 305 engine.
automatic, 67,000 miles,
good 'c lean, solid truck ,
excellent condition, $8,500

AKC Boxer pups, 7 males,
aft colors, shots &amp; wormed.

\In I '-I I

FOIIf (EMCN(

Truck. $2,500 OBO. 740·
992·56t 7,

"1yr. old Jack Russe ll inside
dog housebroken, to good
home only 304-nJ-6063

I

Complete Tree Care
ACE TREE SERVICE
20yrs. exp.
Gallipolis , OH
Rick Johnson , Jr.
· Owner
Insured Free Est.

03·24-06

•• 2
• K Q 10 9
+ AKJ108
• Q 5

"Middleport's only
· Self-Storage"

1982 In ter. Cab Over 400
Big Cam, J~Ke Brake, 13
SPD , Wet11ne . , Gciod

roRSALE

r

10x10x10xl0
992·:5194
or992·66l5

HJRMLE

PErs

Appliance

slarting at .99¢

15

www . nationwidepole·
barns. com

FoR

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

$1 ,800.00, 740·742·4011.

Pole Barn 30x50x12 feet
painted metal, slider, free
deliv$ry, Only $7,595 .

$300,

~CE

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

95·Z·28 Camara T-Tops
Lealhei" 350 Auto Looks
and Run ~ Great $4700.00.
92 - Corsica 4 door. New
Pa int lots of New Parts.
Runs and looks Great

Block, brick, sewer pipes,
, windows .
lintels, etc.
Claude
Winters,
Rio
Grande, OH Cal1740-2455121.

call 675·6679 EHO

North

~eH~

( 937 )7 1 8·1471 ,

' Twin Rivers Tower ts
accepting applications for
waiting list tor Hud·sub·
sized, 1· br, apartment,

663 Third , GallipoliS. 2B A,
w/applianoes, pay own utilIties, $350/month pl us
$350/deposit. (740)2459595 leave message.

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood

The family of
Harold E. Hager

Pleasant Valley Apartmen1
Are
now
taking

3542

Beautiful 2 bt3droom apan ment in country, beautiful
setting , laundry room &amp;
appliances mcluded , very
clean. $400/mo. (61 4)5957773 or 1-SQ0-798-4686.

be

remembered.

~randchildren

APARThlilNrs

to all ofyou
who called
me or sent
the beautiful
cards for my
89th birthday.
I enjoyed
them so
much.

sorrow. Your
kindness is deeply

~on

(304)675·3151

Phillip
Alder

It broke our hearts to
lose you, but you

Smokers, 8-mi. from Pt.
Pleasant.
At
2-N

42 Sing~
43 lllgbl WIIICh
Throw a
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rider
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wear
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In combos
opol
Aends
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films
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Mauna loners
Joyful
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shou,t
cousin
Neckline
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type
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Nimitz
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Dressy
drama
event
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9Radiance
design
Hashanoh
Indira 's
61 Sullivan and 10 Sunrise
lather
Murrow
locale
Unusual
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Old garment 63 Lawn
rival
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wetter•
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Every
21 - llxe
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DOWN
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of league
areas
Post·
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workout
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feeling
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Say likewise
man
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Fall mo.
4 Retirement 27 Hey 1herol
Bagel cen1er
plan
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nominee
Comic
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language
-Conway
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This, In
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land
Bar&lt;:elona
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In apec1ed
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ACROSS

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Wife, Mary K..
Children and

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THIO fHi"iGS I CdnT

�Pag~ 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 24. zoo6

www .mydailysentinel.com

·Trojans advance without O.J., face Cleveland VASJ in D-ill state final
.

COLUMBUS (AP)- No O.J .? No trouble .
Even without two-time Mr. Basketball. O.J.
Mayo, defendin~ champion Cincinnati North
College Hill haa more thitn enough firepower
to roll over Archbold 49-34 on Thursday night
in a Division Ill state semifinaL
Six-foot-6 junior Bill Walker - like Mayo.
a first -team AII-Ohioan - was his usual
intimidatin~ selL scoring 23 points on u vari-·
ety of .3-pomters. layups and vicious dunks for
the top-ranked Trojans. He also had 13
rebounds. three assists. two blocked shots and
countless moments when he forc·ed opponents
to head the other dtrecttun to av01d hnn on
defense.
Archbold (21-5)' set a divisional record for
fewest points in a semi tinaL
Desptte not having Mayo - who averages
28.8 pomts. 8.8 rebounds. 5.8 asststs and 5
steals a game- the Trojans t25-l l had more
than enouoh firepower. ·
Gene Guerin~ . a third-team · Associated
Press AII-Ohioat1. and Josh Wv~ each scored
12 points for the Blue Streaks. who shot just
. 23 percent from the fie ld (I 0 of 43) including
4-of-22 on3-pointcrs ( 18 percent ).
Archbold came out stru n~ at the outset -·
perhaps because the Trojans were sti ll feeling

Jeeps
from PageBJ
style three-point continuatto n
play to push the lead w fou r.
At the other end. Johnson
scored his·on ly points of the
game when he banged in a
long 3"pointer with 16' seconds left.
After ·the, inbounds p&lt;!ss.
Lower wa; fou led and cal mly
hit both fo ul shots fo r a 61-58
lead with 12.8 seconds
remaining .
Lockland hurried down the
floor and mad~ four passes
but was not able to dent the
Jeeps' pressure. Johnson tried
to get off a 3. but he was
squeezed
between
two
defenders and the sidel ine.
With 3 seconds left he passed
to Harris but he also had a
defender 'in his face. He
tlire w tj1e ball to Wilhite with
a seconc) left. wit h Wilhite
forced to jump, catch and
shoot in one motion . The ball
was wide of the mark.
South Webster is makin ~
its ·. second trip 10 th e final
four in the last three. years.
The Jeeps lost to l;lolgate 3128 'in the 2003 semifinals.
Columbus Grove 75, ·
Windham 62
COLUMBUS (AP)
Columbus Grove sure di dn't
' have any state tournament jit ters. .
Eric Ma.ag scored 31 poi nrs
and Kyle Meyer added 26
points and 13 rebounds to
lead tiny Columbus Grove to
a 75-62
vic tory ov~ r
Windham on Thursday in a
Division IY state semi fin aL
The Bulldogs 121-5) will
meet South Webster 125-2) in
Saturday morn ing\ smallschool championship game.
Columbus . Grove: nestled
into the farmland not far from
Lima, has just I06 boys in its
upper three grades. It had
ne~er before climbed all the
way to the state tourname nt.
The Bulldogs d.id not play

.

their way without their top player. The Blue
Streaks led 7-2 after the game's ftrst six minutes. Fans who didn't not have a rooting interest before the game started cheering for the
big underdogs:
·
Then Walker hit a 3-pointer and Paul Leary
added another to put the Trojans ahead 8-7
after a period.
.
Intimidated by the Trojans' height and
jumping ability. Archbold was forced to rely
on long 3-pointers. When t~ey didr 't hit them,
the Trojans pounded .down the court on fast
breaks for easy baskets.
Cleve. VASJ 71, Wheelersburg 62
COLUMBUS (AP)- David Lighty apparentl y likes the floor at Value City Arena and that's very good news for Ohiu State
coach Thad Matta.
Lighty Iii up Wheelersburg for 32 points
and tl irted wi th a triple-double to lead
Cleveland Villa Angela-St. Joseph to a 71-62
victory on Friday mght in a Division Ill state
.semifinal.
.
A member of Ohio State's incoming "TI1ad
Five'' recruiting class, Lighty was spectacular
atier getting off to a rix:ky start, making the
most of his tirst start &lt;111 the court which will

be his home for his collegiate career.
The tirst-team Associated Press All-Ohioan
hit just one of his first six shots while trying to
do top much. Once he setUed into the rhythm
of the game, he finished I 0-of-19 from the
field including 2~f-4 on 3-pointers and 10-of11 at the line. He also had II rebounds and
eight assists to go with four steals and a
blocked shot:
On top of that, he scored all of the points in
an 8-D run that put the Vikings ahead to stay.
VASJ (21-5) meets top-ranked Cihcinnat~
North College Hill (25-1) in the championship game on Saturday afternoon. Nonh
College Hill, even without two-time Mr.
Basketball OJ. Mayo. defeated Archbold 4934.
- Darryl Rushton added 17 points for VASJ ,
ranked No. 8 in the final regular-season. AP
rankings. The Vikings are seekin$ their fifth
state title, following championshtps in 1991,
'92. '94 and '95. They are milking their first
appearance at the state tournament since Josing in the 1997 finale.
AP photo
. Camden Miller, a third-team all-stater, had
Cincinnati
North
College
Hill's
Bill
Walker.
right,
drives
19 points, Nick Carrington 15 and Drew
·Spradlin 14 for Wheelersburg ·(23-3), mak- past Archbold 's Josh Johnson during the second half
of a boys' Division Ill semifinal Thursday in Columbus.
ifig its tifth trip to the state tournament.

'

.

like first-timers. They never
trailed while shooting 53 percent from the field, holding a
4 1-·2R rebouoding advantage
and outscoring Windham
(22--1) 2 1-5 from the fo ul
line..
Maag was I 0-of- 12 by
himse lf 10 double the
Bombers· output .at the line
and matc hed Windham with
five 3-pointers. Meyer, a second-team Assoc iated Pres.s
A II -Ohioan , was I0-of-14
from the field and a horse on
the boards.
Finu-team al l- stater Ian
McGuire had 22 points for
Windh am. with honorable
cho ice
Brett .
me ntion
Apthorpe adding 20 points .
Zach Jaco bson had I 0
rebounds to go with nine
points.
Columbus Grove rolled to
a big lead earl y, hitting seven
of its first 10 shots from the
fi eld while Windham was
mi ssi ng II of 12.
The Bulldogs led I 7-3
through the first 4 112 minutes and were on top 26-13 at
the end of th.e quarter.
The Bombers narrowed the
lead in the second quarter as
they started finding the
range. hilling half of their 16
shots from the fie ld including three 3-pointers. They
cut tl1e lead to six late in the·
half on back-to-back 3-puintcrs by Apthorpc. ·
Apthorpe's driv ing layup
with I second left drew the
Bombers to 56-53 through
th ree quarters.
Windham trai led just 6057 )'lith 5 1/2 minu\es left
after field goals by McGuire
a nd
Jacobson
before
Columbu s Grove's big two
too k liver.
Meyer hit a base line drive
and a free throw and Maag
had the other 12 points in a
15-7 ru n to close the game.
Meyer hit 8-of- 10 free
throws during the spurt and
had a 3-pointer. He .scored
the BulldogS' fi nal e ight
poims- all on fo ul shotsover the final 3 .J/2 ·minutes.

•

•

•

Mayo

fract ures in hi s left foot that
wi ll require surgery when the
season is over. He also has
been battling a nagg ing chest
from Page Bl
co ld that. even after several
wee ks. \till leaves him
Archbold in the Divi ;lon Ill coughitrg. ·
"This has been one of the
semifinals Thursday nigh t at
Ohio State·, Value City most difficu lt seasons I've
had ." Mavo said earlier this
Arena.
He shares the spotlig ht on week . "A t th e ·same time,
his team. ranked amon~ the we've gotten thrnugh it as a
top fi ve in the country hy team and We've 'given our·several publications. with 6-6 'el vc' anothe r chance at winj.unior Bill Walker. also a tl'in g th e Division Ill state
·firstoteam · all -state selenion champ ionship.''
by The Associated PreS' . .
Mayo · and Walker have
Just last mont h, more than close ties w ith former
16,000 bo·u ght tickets to L; mvers ity of Cincinnati
watch the TroJan&gt; play Oak coach Bub Huggin s, hired on
Hill (Va .) Ac&lt;tdemy in Thursday to take over as
Cinci nn at i's
U.S.
Bank coach at Kansas State. Mayo
said this week he and Walker
Arena.
Mayo was not with the t:nay sign with whic hever
team when it "eppetl on the sehoul hires Hu ggins.
Mayo. whose mother li ves
court about an hour before
the game on Thur,day. After in Huntine tb n. W.Va., is
a team piqure was taken. the WatChed over by relatives.
players warmed up in th e fr iend&gt;, his coach and hi ,'
t~ammate .s - a&gt; he attends
near-empty arena.
· Coach Jam ie Maha!Tey school in Cincinnati. Walker
sa id throu gh Ohio Hi gh ;,I"' is a Huntington nati ve.
School Ath letic A'soci ation
Mahaffey sa id thi ' week
&gt;pok.esman Bob Gnldrin£ that Mayo has m;ttured.
thai he would talk on I] aho~t
"On the coun. he\ more
the game after hi, team consiste nt and he 's shoot ing
played. Athletic director Joe the hall a Jut better:. He's
Nickel said he hoped th&lt;tt played Jhe majority or time at
. Hughe&gt; would 'peak with the (s hooting gua rd ~pot), but
reporters when she arrived in our type of Mlcnse. ~tny of
fro m Cincinnati. Ni ckel 'aid four guy' can .be a point
no one else from tht' ' chool . ~uard at anv time:· Mahaffev
wou ld ct.)ll1111eni.
~aid. "He\ handled that
Thi' season ha,n't hct n a responsibility and has taken
slam dunk for Ma;o and hi s more of.a leadership ro le on
the team...
·
team. Mayo h&lt;" i11 o ,tre"

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where upprttable. On approved aedH. On stltded mo4tls.
, Nol r8Sf1005ible lor typographical erroo. Prices good Marm 23rd through MOrm 26th

•

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Call 422-07.56
Toll Free 1-800·822·0417
VIsit us online at
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FAIRPLAtN lnlecchange
onRoure 21.

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