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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Bettman: Deal must be in place by
weekend to save the hockey season
NEW YORK (AP) ....:. With just a little
bit of hedging, NHL commissioner Gary ·
Bettman all but issued a drop-dead date
for ,saving what's left of the season : this
weekend.
The lockout reached its . !47th day
Wednesday. If a deal is reached. Bettman
said, there wo~ld be ·a 28-game regular
season and the 16-team playoff structure
would 'be preserved.
"It is clear to me that if ·we're not
working on a written document by this
. weekend, I don't see how we can play
any .semblance of a season." Bettman
said. "Obviously we will listen to everything the union has to say, but we've
given all we can give and gone as far as
we can go."
Hours earlier, the players' association
rejected what was described by the
league as a wmpromise proposal during
a secret meeting in Toronto, NHL chief

Thursd.y, February to,

wwW.mydailysentinel.com

Tlle NHL offered to go with the playlegal officer .Bill Dat"y said.
"The NHL delivered a one-pa~e con· . ers: association proposal from Dec. 9
cept to us which they tried to suggest that featured a luxury-tax system and an
represented a compromise," players ' inut1ediate 24 percent rollback on all
association · executive director Bob existing contracts.
But the league also put in place four
Goodenow said. "The league's proposal
was a transparent attempt to impose on scenarios that would shift the agreement
'our Dec. 9 proposal the .effects of their back to what the league proposed on
twice-rejected Feb. 2 triple-cap propos- Feb. 2 - a salary cap that would force
al."
teams to spend at least $32 million on
Goodenow said the sides would meet player costs but no more thim $42 mil,
again . The union asked Bettman and lion, including benefits.
Daly to stay in Toronto through
Also included in that six-year offer which could be reopened by the union
Thursday for negotiating,sessions.
"The prospect that we'd be able to after four years - was a profit-sharing
conclude an agreement by the end of the plan that would allow the players' assoweekend is yery daunting," Goodenow ciation to evenly split revenues over a
said. "It is possible, but I don 't want to negotiated level with the league.
discuss the levels of probability."
"The union 's response 'was that this
The lockout has wiped out 813 of the . was not a framework that they were
1,230 regular-season games, as well as interested in going forward with,"
this weekend's scheduled All-Star game. Bettman said.

2005 '

Final AP girls ·state basketball poll
COLu"MBuS (AP) - How a stale panel
of sports wrhera and broadcasters rates
Ohio high school girls basketball teams in
the fifth and final weekly Associated Press
poll of 2005, by OHSAA di&lt;Jisions, with
won-lost record and total points (first-place
'votes In parentheses):

DIVISION I
1, Cin. MI. Notre Dame (17) 18-.2 ...... 254
2, Day. Ch8minade-Jutienne (4).18-2239
3, Stow-Munroe Fails {2) 18-1 ...........207
............ 203
4, Miamisburg (4) 2o-o ...
5, Barborlon (1 ) 17·2 ...................... 158
6, N. Can. Hoover (1) 16·3 ............... 120.

7, Cols, Brookhaven 18-2 .................. 100
8, Wadsworth 10-2 .. .' ..........................80
9, Tal. Cent. Cath. -16-2 ...... .-: ...... ........ 57
10, Cln. Winton WoodS 17-2 ............... 31
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11,
Youngs. Boardman 26. 12, Gahanna
Lincoln 20. 13, Sylvania Northview 15. 14,
Cin. Princeton 13.

DIVISION II
1, Ottawa-Glandorf (17) 16·0 ..
2, Upper Sandusky (4)

..244

;a!-o ... -.......... 223

· 3, Garfield Hts. Trinity (2} 18·1 .......... 190
. 4, Solem (4) 17·0 .............................. 171
5, Cols. Eastmoor 18·2 ...................... 144
6. Dresden Tri -Valley 16-1 ................. 142
7. Navarre Fairless 18·2 ...... .............. 78
B, BeloitW. BranCh 14-3 ................... 77·
9, JeHerson Area 16·2 ....... ........ ~ ....... 52
10, Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit (1) 15-3

46

'

OtllerS receiving 12 or more points: 11
(tie), Akr. Hoban, St. Bernard Roger Bacon

Meigs Senior
Center crowns king and
queen, AS

43. 13. Warsaw River View 23. 14 (tie),
Lancaster Fairfield Union, Spring. Kenton
Aldj]e17. 16, KetlorlnQ Alter (1) 13.

DIVISION II
1, Oak Hill ( 19) 20·0 ........... ............... 258
2, Cle. Coni. Calh. (3) 19·1.. .............. 222
3, Plain City Jonalllan Alder 19-1 ..... 197
4, Girard (2) 18-o ................ ............... 189
5, Bloomdale Elmwood 18-0 ...... ,...... 153
6, S. Euclid Regina (2) 14-3 .............. 118
?, Hamler Patrick Henry 16·1 ............ 107
B, Youngs. Ursuline 12·3 ....................64
. 9, Atwater Waterloo {2) 18-0 ........... ..46
10, Jollnstown-Monroe 13-1 .............. .28
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 , ,
Ironton 21 . 12. Sugarcreek Garaway 19. 1'3
(tie), Cln .' Hills Cllrist!an, Casstown Miami
E. (f) 17 . 15,. Akr. Manchester 13.
..

DIVISION IV
1, Berlin Hiiand (23) 20-0 ..................276
2, Maria Stein Marion Local { 6~ HHl 259
3, Xenia Chr'i&amp;\ian 19·1 .... .... ..............2i4
4, Miller City 17-1 ............ .. ................ 193
5; Ft. LOJllmie 19· 1 .......... .
........ 158
6, Ottoville 14·3 ..... ,....................... .' ... 109
7, New Riegel 14-2 ............................75
8, Lowellville 15-3 .......·.......................72
9, Minster 14-4 ........·..........................63
,10, E. Can. 15·4 .......... :....................... 39

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.~ o \ 'I'\ I~ • \ ol. ,) J. :\n . t .·. ~

Others receiving 12 or more· points: 11

(lie), Vienna Matllews, Fremont St. Joseph
22. 13, Glouster Trimble 20. 14, Slladyside
17.15, Cols. Af ~icentric 14.

Pebble
from Page B1
fifth major _ with 16 of the
last 21 champions having also
won majors. ·
·

· s0

·

·

It's an impi'eisive list.
Davis Love III has won
twice in the last four years.
Mickelson won the longest
Pebble Beach National ProAm in tournament History, in
1998, when it started in
February and ended in August
because of rain. Payne Stewart
won in 1999, the last time rain
· cut the tournament to 54·holes.
1jger Woods staged his sevenshot comeback a year later.
Singh made it look easy last

many maJOr wmners at
Pebble is no fluke.
"It's going to be a slow
process of putting yourself in
..
posttton and never really
shooting yourself out of the
tournament," said Mark YTI~ with Arron Oberholser
0' Meara, a Masters and
· British ()pen champion who going into the final round,
has won five times at Pebble. Singh missed the frrst three
'Th~n when the final round is fairways and made birdie each
time, the cruised to a three-.
played at Pebble, it's not like . shot victory. 11 proved to be
somebody is going out and
shooting super, super low. A the start of an incredible year
lot has to do with the fact the - nine wins. nearly $11 mil.
lion in earnings, and ending
~olf course can be a httle Wr - ~ , fi
·
uuus 1ve-year re1gn atop
mtiniidating at times."'
al' · f the world ranking,
ed th
."It was just ·a good platFuryk cit
e qu tty 0
the courses - · especially fonn," Singh said. "I just
Pebble and Spyglass - and
the size of the greens that . played really relaxed from
require precision iron shots.
there on and just played great.
He was reminded of that I think that was a key victory
.
.
to my great season because 11 .
dunng his prach~e round kind of relaxed everything."
Wednesday with ·formert
d h
·
th
Pittsburgh Sreelers receiver
An t at might be
e
biggest
key
of
all.
Lynn Swann. A fter negotiatThe celebrities out for a
ing a blind tee shot on No. 8, gOod time also contribute to 6then an approach over a comer hour rounds, and so many
of the ocean, the green is about
halfthesizeas ostheseeson footprints ·around the holeon
the PGA Tour. m
the sma_ll greens w1ll making
""It aniazes me still how the puttmg_ surface as smooth
small these greens are," said • as broccoli. It can get aggraFurylc, the 2003 U.S. Open vattng.
.
.
champion. "But it's a good
But the payoff.ts ~orth 1t
golf course. And it definitely
P~b.ble Be~ch 1sn t a m~Jor,
requires a lot of patience. I'd but Ill~ teemm~ w1th trad11Jon,
like to add my name to that and 11 s a· chance to JOIIl .a
list."
major roll call of past champions.

11{11)\' , II Bl{l \H\ 11 . ·•oo.)

\\\\\\ u•,d.uh..,•·ult• .. ·l•·uu•

AEP details plans for Monntaineer scrubbers

SPORTS
• Eastern'·clawed by
Panthers. See Page B1

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

f1REED&lt;l!&gt;fv1YDAILYSENTINEL.COM

P0MEROY - American Electric
Power will begin construction of-sulfur dioxide scrubbers at its
Mountaineer Plant in New Haven,
W.Va. in April, and has 'begun meet·
ings in communities surrounding the
plant to infonn local residents about
the process and its potential problems.
Chris Long. plan.t environment
coordinator for the plant, plant man-

Foster

coach, but his ego wasn't so
huge that he couldn't 'adapt to
the
players already on the Ohio
I
State
roster.
from Page B1
"When you walk into a gym
and you've recruited none of
start of practice sometimes and the players, you quickly have
tell us a little story about some- to identify and establish how
thing he read in the paper," star you have to play to · win
center Jessica Davenport said. games," Fost.er said.
"Sometimes he'll just go away
from basketball for a while and
He didn't come in with any 1
talk about life."
,
bold predictions.
The 56-year-old Foster does"''m always befuddled by
n't look like the coach of ~ coaches who walk in and say. 'I
have a five-year plan,"' Foster
national contender. Instead ·of said. ''Now if I'm sitting there
expensive suits, he favors com- and I'm a junior or a senior, 1
fonable sweaters and slacks. quickly wonder where do 1 fit
With his ever-present reading into that plan? Your obli~ation
glasses dangling around his is to the seniors that you 1nher·
neck by a chain, he al?pears to ·ited. They had never been to
be a librarian who m1stakenly the NCAA tournament and we
grabbed a seat on the bench.
wanted them to have that expeDon ~ , be fooled: he knows lienee, so that was the plan that
basketball, but his knowledge year."
~
goes far beyond that. · The Buckeyes went 22-10
Occasionally, he mentions his and made it to the second
two tours of duty in Vietnam round. of the NCAA tourna- the second coming when he ment, meeting their main
selflessly re-upped so that his objective.
younger brother "'iouldn 't have
A year ago he had a young
to face com~t overseas.
team built around the 6-foot-4
'The first time I heard him Davenport _ who appears a
talk I knew he cared about me foot taller because of her
beyond what l do on the court," incredibly long arms. Ohio
guard Brandie Hoskins said. .State went 21-10 and again lost
"He wanted to know how I was in the s~ond round of the
doing in schooL That was real- NCAAs.
ly big for me because a lot of
With most of the team back,
· college coaches can talk to the Buckeyes have matured
players only about basketbalL ' this season despite having a
He talked about what I did off young roster _ three sophothe court and what I wanted to mores and a junior are currentdo after basketbalL" ·
ly starting. The Buckeyes have
In the 18 seasons before he won 11 in a row by an average
took over as Ohio State's head of 18 points, including wins
coach in 2002, Foster's teams over No. 4 Rutgers, No. 6
at Saint Joseph's and M. h
Stat N 20 Purd
Vanderbilt had nusSed fewer
IC tgan · e. o.
ue
and No. 2l.Iowa.
NCAA tournaments (two) than
The Buckeyes are deep his new school had in ,the pre- the 13th and fmalplayeroffthe
vious three years.
·
th
Now in his third season at bench one game might be e
first sub the next - and are
Ohio State, the Buckeyes are capable of playing up-tempo,
22-2 heading into Thursday slowdown, full-court· pressure
night's game against Michigan. or a patterned game. When
That's a world away from the Davenport needs a rest, Foster
14--15 squad he inherited after frequently goes with a small
Beth Burns Was ftred at the end lineup that has more success
of the 2001-02 season.
.
than the one that includes his
Foster had won 504 games in top scorer and rebounder.
24 years · as a college head

' Retirement Edition
inside today's Sentinel

ager Charlie Powell. scrubber process
owner J .L. Pel!)' and others from the
plant (llet wit~ Meig s County
Commissioners on Thursday in the ·
second community meeting held in
Meigs County about the power company's plans to install a Flue Gas
Desulfurization system at the
Mountaineer project, located directly
across the Ohio River from Racine.
. The AEP representatives met with
Racine Village Council last month.
In addition to the construction.of the

FGD wet scrubbing system, the proj~c t · said , as pa11 of AEP's $3.5 b&gt;llion·
is expected to involve construction of a dollar &lt;.:ompany-wide envi ronmental
new limestone unloading facility along control prognim.
,
the Ohio River, new cells on the river,
According to Powell. the construcand the expansion of the AEP-owned tion of the project could result in the
Little Broad Run landtill.
employment of as many as 1.500 at its
The power company now burns peak, and. as many .as 800 during the
low-sulfur coat' at Mountaineer in remail)der of the constn1ction pn:iceS&gt;.
order to meet emissions compliance
AEP began site preparation fo r the
requiremenis set forth in the Clean · project la' l year. A new 1.000-foot ·
Air Act of 1990. The ever-increasing stack will be bui ll first. be&amp;inn.ing in
cost of low-sulfur coal has nece ss it~t­
ed the installation of scrubbers, Long
Please see AEP, As

Teaching kids to be
prepared for emergencies
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.C OM

2105Escape

0BITUARIFS

•••3&amp;Monas·

Page AS
• James Autherson, 74

' ====================

INSIDE
• Pope returns to Vatican
after 1Q-day hospital stay.
See Page~

The Focus
&amp; The Dell

· • Meigs County Court
News. See Page A3
• Southern Band
BOosters dinner.
See Page AS
• Valentine dinner set.
See Page A6
• Ohio creating plan to
make more transferred
college classes count.
See Page AS ·

BUV I FICUL 1111 Dell co•iUtlf

20D5n5o
36MIIIhs'

a

• ·.'1

board members. The increase was credited to
HOEFUCH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
increased salaries and fringes for ESC educators involved ..
POMEROY - .Concern about the cost of
Superintendent William Buckley exp!Jlined
contr~ting services for special and gifted that the money is used to provide services
education
from
the
Athens-Meigs relating to special and gifted educatiortal proEducational. Service Center (ESC) led to a , grams mandated by the State Department of
lively discussion and split vote Wednesday by Education .
the Meigs Local Board of-Education.
The programs, according to Rhonemus,
The amount of the contract listed as "excess cover speech therapy, handling of severe
.costs" for the ESC services was for $754,010; behavioral handicapped an multi-handicapped
an increas.e of $155,()()(), or 26.5 percent over
Please see Meigs, AS
last year, Treasurer
Mark ·Rhonemus
.
.
. told
. BY CHARLENE HoEFUCH

$
.LINCOLN
......... , ... '"'" ..
NEW

21•1rand

B~an J.

Commissioners open bids for wat~r project
,

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B4-6

Comics
Dear Abby

B7

.A3
A4

Faith•Values

A6-7

Movies

As
As

Obituaries

B Section

-Sports
·weather
payment and security deposit due at signing.

AS

© 2005 Ohio VaHey J!ubtlsllift8 Co.

Tax. title and lees extra. Rebates include+ 10% down in trade or cash.

REED

Henderson sworn in as
Syracuse postmaster

2 SECllONS- 16 'PAGES

· Editorials

J.

Artificial Intelligence
The next dimension in
care.
www.turripikeflm.com

I

!ME~~~y~

$

. JACKSON

LIN C O ·L N
Afllt•ot•M

Diane McYe)'
JII.A, CCC·A

~u•u•T

0wMr 6.,\MI I a!

.. .

t

Reed/photO

John Henderson , left, takes the oath of office of Syracuse
postmaster i~ a ceremony held Wednesday at Village Hall :
Also pictured are his son , ·Andrew, and Vickie Schnuerer of.
the U.S. Postal Service Columbus District.

delayed for nearly two years for a variety of
'
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
reasons. Commissioner Mick Davenport said
water pressure through the Village of Rutland's
POMEROY - The Athens firm J.C. Trivett w~ter system - supplied by Leading Creek is the apparent low bidder on a water line is inadequate to serve the planned community.
extension project at Rutland, designed to expe- Commissioners already have upgraded the ·
dite construction of a senior living center there .. sewer lines to serve the &lt;Jevelopment . .
Meigs County Commissioners opened bids
"This will make construction finally possi' BY BRIAN J. REED
for the project at Thursday's regular meeting . ble," Davenport said. ""The project represents
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
The project calls for the installation of 920 feet the federal, state, county and village governof four-inch water. pipe . from a 12-inch main- ments working together to free the way for
SYRACUSE - John Henderson of Portland was sworn in
line of the Leading Creek Conservancy District · construction. "
as Syracuse postmaster Wednesday in a ceremony held at the
to the site of a senior residential community,
,
Funding for the construction will come Syracuse Village Hall .
Heaven on Earth Senior Living Center.
from the Appalachiap Regional Commi ssion
Henderson has been with the U:S. Po"al Service. for 12
The Trivett bid was $41,350. Foil!, Inc., and a local match from the village.
years. and· has served as a mail carrier in Pomeroy. and in
W~verly, and Rose's Excavating, Racine,
The Legends Realty Co. of Indiana plans to positions at Raeine. Tuppers Plains and Hockingport offices.
each bid $53,500 for .the project. The engi- construct the $4 . million housing develop·
Vickie Schnuerer from the US[&gt;S Columbus District adminisneer's original estimate for completion of the ment, and while the site preparation has taken tered the oath of office to Henderson. Hi s son. Andrew. held the
project is $49,000. The·work i~ due for com- years, construction is expected to take as little Bible during the ceremony, and Henderson\ parents. John and
pletion in April.
Construction on the development has been
PleaH see Syracuse, AS
,Please see Bids, AS
BY BRIAN

Delalls on Po&amp;o AS

INDEX

• Payments based on 36 months. Lease through FMC with approved credit. 12,000 miles per year.

Please see Prepared, AS

Meigs Board concerned about increasing costs

WEATHER

NEW

RUTLANb Does your
fourth-grader know what to do in
the event of ari emergency such
as tire. tlood or winter storm?
If they were at Meigs Elementary
Thursday, they do now.
Volunteers from the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program visited
· all six classrooms · of fourth·
graders at Meigs Elementary to
'
distribute coloring books on disaster preparedness and door hang·
ers demonsr;rnting frre safety. ~
, The materials are produced by
FEMA and are designed to educate children on how lO be pre. Beth Ser&amp;onlfphoto
cparlie and Ellen Rife were among several RSVP volunteers who visited fourth-graders at pared for natural disasters withMeigs Elementary to pass out coloring books from FEMA and educate children on dis- out frightening them .
aster preparedness without frightening thef[l,.
·
Volunteers went over the

materials and encouraged questions frail) the children on everything from how to -arrange a
family meeting ·place in the
event of a fire to assembling a
disaster suppli es kit. · The children· were urged to. take the
materials home and discuss them
with their parents or caregi vers.
"I really enjoyed it," RSVP
vol unteer Ellen Rife said, "(
was nervous at first but it turned
out good:"
"The kids were really involved
and askillg questiorts," Rife's
husband Charlie l\(ld~d.
· Ano.ther service the volunteers
pr~vided were the phol)e numbers of local emergency service
agencies such as EMS, fire

l3Z Huron StrMI
(Mt'On.1111

PIIJikal ~

. Open Tues., Wed, Thun.

BIQ,J '

B , l().~

(740) 186·1430

AIJmNS

'1:75 Weoot Union Street
Opam Mon.· Fri. 8:30-5pm
Sawtdiy by Appointment

(740) 594-3571

-

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February,u,

Tsunami toll makes 2004 deadliest.
earthquake year in five centuries
\

.

Other
so urces
have mated ~30,000 people in was the 8.3 ,quake 111
Bv RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Hokkaido,
Japan ,
in
estimated the number of dead . Shansi, China.
The rriagnitude 9.0 temblor September of 2003.
at more than 160,000, with
WASHINGTON The thou sands
The largest earthquake in
Banda Aceh,
more
listed that · hit
death toll from the ea rth - as missing.
the
United States last year
Indonesia, causing the tsuna'
quake-ge nerated tsu nami in
"It's a complicated thing, to mi , was t)ot the only "great" was a magnitude 6.8 in
Asia made 2004 the deadliest figure out just how many earthquake that occurred dur- southeastern Alaska. There
year for earthquakes in fi ve people have been killed." ing 2004. Great quake s are was also a magnitude 6.0
centuries, the U.S. Geological· Person said.
those with a magnitude. of 8 quake -in Parkfield, Calif. ,
Survey said Thursday.
Based on the agency's esti- or higher and an 8.1 earth- on Sept. 28, a long-anticiThe agency estimated the mate, 2004 would have quake hit north of Macquarie pated event along the San
toll from the Dec. 26 tsunam i counted an earthquake death Is land, so uthwest of New Andreas Fault.
at 275,950. Waverly Person , ioll of 276,856, the second Zealand, three days before
director of the age ncy ' s hi ghest in recorded history.
011 tile Net:
the Indian Ocean quake and
earthquake information cenTile most destructive
The deadliest qu ake on tsunami , No deaths were
ter in Golden. Colo., said he reco rd · occurred Jan . 23, reported in that .event. ·
eartllquakes:
expects the final count to be 1556. when a magnitude 8
Before the Macquarie llttp:lllleic.usgs.gov!neisleqli
'
even higher.
earthquake killed an esti- event, the last great ·quake . sts!eqsmosde.html

Pope ·returns to Vatican
after 10-day hospital stay
.
Bv VICTOR L. SIMPSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

VATICAN
CITY
Waving to crowds from his
brightly lit popemobile. Pope
John Paul II returned to the
Vatican Thursday after a I0·d.ay hospital stay. declared
cured of breathing spas ms
that · fueled concerns about
the frail pontiffs ability to
remain in charge of the
Roman Catholic Church.
The pope 's return - a
hastily arranged procession
with a touch of pageantry
designed to show the world he
has recovered - was broadcast live on Italian tel,evision.
Hundreds of well-wishers,
including doctors and nurses,
applauded as the pope, in his
usual white robes , was driven
slowly out of the hospital
grounds. John Paul looked
weary as he sat in the back ,
accompanied by two aides,
and raised. his arms to bless
the throngs along the 2 l/2mile route to the Vatican.
Faithful lined the streets
around the Vatican as the
papal , motorcade
drove

•

through floodlit St. Peter 's
Square, through -the Arch of
the Bell s.and into the Vatican.
Shouts of '"Viva il Papa! " "Long Live the Popel" rang out from the crowd.
Papal spokesman Joaquin
Navarro-Valls .said the pope
had recovered completely
from the breathing crisis fol lowing influenza that led to
his urgent hospitalization at
Rome 's Gemelli Polyclinic
on Feb. I. and that his general condition was continuing
to improve.
Navarro-Valls said a bat·
tery of tests , including a CT
scan - a three-dimensional
X-ray - had ruled out any
new illnesses.
He said it was too soon to say
what the pope's schedule will
be like, but it seemed likely he
would appear at his apartment
window overlooking St. Peter's
Square to offer his Sunday
blessing - an appointment so
: important to the pontiff that he
felt strong enough to do it while
in the hospitaL
"When he gets back to the
Vatican, he will look over and
decide with his doctors what

AP photo

Pope John Paul II waves as he leaves Rome's Polyclinic
Agostino Gemelli hospital aboard his popemobile, Thursday.
Papal spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls announced Thursday
th&lt;;JI the frail pope had recovered completely .from the breath~
ing crisis that led to his urgent hospitalization on Feb. 1 arid
that his general condition continued to improve.
his appointments will be,"
Navarro-Valls -told reporters ·
after releasing the medical
bulletin at noon Thursday
The Vatican maintains a
small medical unit to assist the
pope. as well as an unmarked
ambulance that was used for
the late-night rush to the hos-

pita!. after John Paul suffered
what a Vatican official called
a "breathing crisis."
John . Paul 's return coincides . with a traditional
Lenten period of spiritual
reflection for the pontiff, with
no public ceremonies scheduled next week.

2005

This special is.only available to private, non-commercial individuals.
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the Pomeroy Sentinel and the Point Pleasant Register. Your ad will reach over .
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..

Public meetings
Thesday, Feb. IS
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
regula_r meeting, 7:30 p.m. ,
counctl chambers at Village
Hall.' Date · changed from
Feb. 14.
RUTLAND ·:_Rutland
Township Trustees, 5 p.m.,
. Rutland Fire Station.

Bv J.M. HIRSCH

beverages have little place in
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
a young c hild's diet. ·
"With the possible excepSoda in a sippy cup''
tion of milk, chiloren do not
Most parents wouldn't need ariy calorie containing
dream of lt. Researchers say beverages," Ludwig says.
that when a baby's bottle or "What i ~ needed to replace
cup is filled with juice par- fluid loss and sati sfy thirst is
e nts might as well be pour- th e sa me beverage we've
. _ been drinkin g for millions of
ing Pepsi.
A growing body of science years, and that 's water."
is linking sweet drinks, naturThe danger of juice is that
al or otherwise, to a host of too much ca n throw off the
child health concerns, every- balance of calories and nutri thing from bulging bellies to e nts children need, according
tooth decay.
to Dr. Terrill Bravender,
"All of these beverages are director of adolescent medilargely the · same. They are cine · at Duke University
I 00 percent sugar," Dr. David Medical Center.
Ludwig, an expert on pediIn very young children, too ·
atric obesity at Children's much juice cuts the appetite
Hospital Boston , said recent- for nutritionally superior
ly. "Juice is only minimally breast milk or formula. In ·
better than soda."
older children, it often su'pThe trouble is that parents plements other food s, potenwho are quick to limit a tially addin g hundreds of
child's so ft drink consumpo. excess calories.
tion ·often ·overlook or even
Part of the problem is that
encourage juice. indulgence · the • calories in juice are so
thanks to the · beverage 's concentrated. Just half a cup
good-for-you image.
· of apple juice has 60 calories,
That image can be overstat- the same as a whole apple,
ed. Though healthy in moder- but without the fiber that
ation, juice essentially is makes fruit filling.
water and sugar. A 12-0unce
In 2001 , the American
bottle of grape soda has 159 Academy of Pediatrics issued
calories. The same amount of · guidelines say in g fruit juice
un sweetened grape juice should not be give n to chilpacks 228 calories.
dren younger than 6 month&gt;.
The $10 billion juice indus- and th at there is no nutritiontry maintains that a conclu- al reason to give it to them
sive link between its products before the ir first birthday.
· and obesity has yet to be
After that, j uice is optionestablished, but researchers al. thou gh 'the group favors
say sugar is sugar, and sweet whole produce and urge s
drinks of any kind must be pare nts io limit juice to 4 to
consumed with care.
6 ounces a day for children
Overuse of juice is a·relative- up to 6 years old. and to no
ly receot phenomenon. ·Before more than 8 to ·12 ounces for
the rise of soda. juice and other older children. Experts say
sweetened ,drinks during the pud gy children should avoid
latter half of the 20th century, juice altogether.
water and milk were children's
Timse guidelines concern the
primary beverages.
juice industry. which markets 6
In a nation where nearly a 314-ounce juice boxes and bags
third of children are either to kids. Children drink about a
overweight or ar risk of lJUarler of all juice consumed,
becoming overweight, health according
to
the
U.S.
officials now say high-calorie Department of Agriculture.

·Clubs and
organizations.
Saturday, Feb. 12
.
POMEROY Return
Jonathon Meigs - Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution, will meet at I
p.m. at Grace Episcopal
Church.
Special music will be presented by Pat Mission of

740·446·2342
The Daily Sentinel
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Saturday, Feb. 12
REEDSVILLE
Valentine din'n er at . the
Reedsville United Methodist
Church, 5 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 13
. TOPPERS PLAINS - The
Amazing Grace Community
Church in Tuppers Plains is
having a special valentine's
service at 10 a.m. Couples' will
be renewing their wedding
vows. Pastor Wayne Dunlap
will officiate. Shannon Owen
wilf be the guest singer. A
sweetheart banquet will follow
the service.
Thursday, Feb. 17
ROCKSPRINGS -Rev.
Walter Heinz of Sacred Hean
. Church speaks at community
Friday, Feb. II
Lenten service, 7 · p.m. ,
LONG
BOTTOM
United
Hymn time, 7 p.m. at the Rocksprin'gs
Faith Full Gospel Church. Methodi st Church. Services
Singers will be Dave and planned
at
community
Debbie Dailey.
churches through March 25.

Church events

POMEROY - Meigs County Court Jud ge Columbus, $50 and costs, speeding; Eric R.
Steven · L. Story recently processed the fol - Lawson, Can a, Va. , $30 and costs, speeding;
lowing cases:
Karrell D. Lemley, Pomeroy. $30 and costs,
Eugene D. Adkins, Portland, $30 and seat belt violation.
costs, seat belt violation: John F: Aeiker,
David P. Lot\. Belpre, $20 and costs, fail Shade. $100 and costs, probation , disorderly ure to control; Troy M. McDaniel, Pomeroy,
conduct; Jasori R. Baldwin, Athens, $20 and $30 and costs, speeding: Harley E.
costs, seat belt-passenger; Troy E. Boggs, McDonald, Middleport, $250, 30 days in ja'il,
Chester, $100, 30 days in jai l, suspended, 27 suspended , probation, driving under susprobation, no operator 's licen'se, $25, proba- · pension/revocation, probation, display plates
tion, use of unauthorized pl ates, $50, proba- /valid sticker; Michael E. Mitchell ,
lion, failure to control, $25, li ghted lights Westerville , $50 and costs, speeding; Paul B.
·required ; Kurt A Bolin , Albany. $30 and Mullins, Athens, $20 and costs, failure to
costs, seat belt violation: Tyler R. Bowman. maintain assured clear di stance ; Richard W.
Langsville, $30 and costs, seat belt viola- Mullins; Gallipoli s, $30 and costs, seat 'belt
tion; Sergio E. Bracamontes, Parkersburg, violation: David L. Nelson, Marmet, W.Va.,
W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Brian W. , $35, speeding.
·
,
Bradbury, W~itehall, $30 and costs, speedTravis J. Older, Albany, $250, 60 day~ in
ing: .C hristopher Braniff, Elizabeth, W.Va., jail, 46 suspended, probation, possession,
$20
and . costs ,
traffic
control $300 and costs, 30 days in jail , suspended,
deviation/signs; Kyle D. Bray, Pi ckerin gton, probation, DWI and/or drugs of abuse, $200
$30 and costs, speeding.
.
and costs, 30 days in jail , 27 suspended, proCarl D. Brewer, Long Bottom, $20 and bation, FRA suspen sion, $50 and costs, procosts, driving on clos@ highway: David N. bation, use of unauthorized plates: Donald J.
Brown , Glouster. $30 and costs. speeding; Peters, Latrobe, Pa., $30 and costs, seat, belt
Russell R. Burns, Portland, $30 and costs, violation; Ri chard D. Phillips, Millfield, $30
seat belt violations; Michaell Cadle, Ripley, and costs, speeding; Bruce D. Pickens,
W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding: Carla L. Portland, $30 and costs, seat belt violation;
Case, Gallipolis, $30 and costs, speeding; Roy L. Pierce, R,acine, $250, three days in
Jesse P. Childs, Athens, $50 and costs, speed- j_ail, suspended, ptobation, driving under
ing; Heinz Coates, Pomeroy, $100, 30 days PRA suspension.
. in jail, suspended, probation, di sorderly conJeffrey ·A. Reitmire. Shade, $30 and
: duct; Joyce A. Cosgray-Vontz, Mt. Airy, Md., costs , speeding ; Michael T. Reitmire,
$30 and costs, speeding; Charles D. Cox, Pomeroy, $30 and costs, seat belt violation;
Radcliff, $20 and costs, failure to control: Ronald D. Rhea, Point Pleasant, ·W.Va., $30
Gary N. Curtis, Pomeroy, $25 and costs, and cost s, seat belt violation; Lee E:
three days-in jail , suspended, probation, pass- Rittgers, Racine, $200 and costs, three days
: ing bad checks.
in jail, suspended, probation, driving under
: Mark J. Dailey, Pomeroy, $300 and costs. suspension/revocation; Jamie N. Roberts,
- 90 days in jail , suspended, probation, menac- Reedsville, $200 and costs, 30 days in jail,
ing, $350 and costs, 90 days in jail, 87 sus- suspended, probation, possession; Robert L.
pended, probation, failure to control; Sarah Roush, Langsville , $2~0 and costs. I 0 days
R. Dailey, Pomeroy, $30 and cost s, seat belt in jail, suspended, probation, driving under ·
. violation; Roger' A, Davidson, Middleport, suspension/revocation; Everth A . Sancl!ez,
: $30 and costs, seat belt violation, $20 and Greenboro. N.C., $50 and costs, speeding; .
' costs, failure to control; Charles H. Davis. George E. Search, Middleport, $100 and
· Point Pleasant, W.Va., $20 and costs, traffic costs, three days in jail, suspended, probacont dev/signs; Shawn M . Delahoussaye, tion, no operator's license .
. Crown City, $150 and cost s, probation,
Johnny R. Sellers, Racine, $90, DUI, $70,
speeding; Kimberly L. Denner. West Chester, driving under DUI suspension, $30 and costs,
: $30 and costs, speeding; Joshua D. Dickens, seat belt violation, $20 and costs failure to
, Pomeroy, $250 and costs, 30 days in jail, sus- control ; Anthony W. Shamblin, Racine, pro: pended, probation , criminal trespass.
bat ion, disorderly . conduct; Rosemarie
. Gordon A. Dixon, Galton, $30 and costs, Singleton, West Columbia, W.Va., $30 and
· seat belt violation ; Davi s S. Edmonds, costs. speeding; Alston R. Smith', Jackson,
: Albany, $30 and costs; speeding; Charles E. Miss., $25 and costs, no taillights on vehicle;
: Fink, L:ong Bottom, $30 and costs, seat bell Angela J. Smith, Middleport, $70, 10 days· in
: violation ; Shawn C. Fitzgerald. Coolville, jail, suspended, probation, open container in
: $25 and costs, No O .L.: Daniel D. · motor vehicle; Catherine E. Smith, Racine. ~ Hampton, Durham , N.C., $30 and costs, ·. $20 and costs, seat bell.- passenger; Jason L.
' speeding ; Tabatha M: Haning , Pomeroy, Smith, Racine, S30 and costs, speeding;
: $100 and costs, 1()0 days in jail, ,97 sus- Jeffrey B. Smith, Racine. $20 and costs, seat
: pended, probation, domes lie violence; belt violation; Jason C. Spangler, Columbus.
: Jackie L. Happney, Medway, $30 and costs, $50 and costs, speeding: Waylon Spurlock,
. speeding; Thomas Harper, Pomeroy, $30 Middleport, $20 and costs, falsification:
: and cQsts, seat belt violation; Brian K. Aleta B. Terzopplous. Racine, $20 and costs,
'- Harris. Reedsville, $200, 10 days in jail, no child restraint, $30 and. costs; seat belt'
~ s uspended , probation , no operator's violation, $30 and costs, seat beli violation.
. license; David W. Hess. Pomeroy, $20 and . Faith D. Thoma, Pomeroy. $20 and costs,
costs, failed to yield; Luke . R. Holman, failure to control; Rodney A. Tripp. Pomeroy.
· Syracuse, $90, assault.
,.
$20 and costs, stop sign; Joseph W. Vie.rs.
Donna Jacks. Pomeroy, $70, traffi c control Black Lick, $30 and costs, speeding; Lisa M. ·
: deviation/signs; Ralph D. Jones, Gallipolis, .Waugh , Pol)leroy, probation. passing bad
~ $65, domestic violence ; Joshua M. Kin g, . checks. probation , passing bad checks: Carl
. Rutland, $30, seat belt viola)iun; Raymond A. Williams, Rutland, $350 and costs, 180
: E. Klein; P\)meroy, $5 and costs. d'omestic days in jail, 177 suspended, probation. DWI
: violence; Clell F. Labonte, Long Bottom, with intoxication over . 10; Gordon A.
· $250, three days in jail; suspended, proba- ·Williams, Coolville, $30 and costs, speeding ;
: tion. driving under susp/revoc, $25, proba- Megan A. Wright, Ravenswood, W.Va. , $30 ·
: tion, failure to register; Samuel R. Lacy. and costs, speeding.

.

'-'

lill .~~e Joint ~~a~ant l(egister
.

Jackson and the DAR good
citizenship awards and essay
winners will be recognized
and presented certificates.
Wednesday, Feb. 16
' POMEROY - American
Cancer .Society mej'! ting to
form task force to work on
cancer related issues, noon
luncheo n at (he Wilphorse.
Anyone interested in assisted
invited to attend.
POMEROY - Middleport
Litarary Club will meet at 2
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
Ida Diehl will review "Poe
and Fanny" by John May.

Meigs County CotJJ'l. News

Keeping _
Meigs
County
informed

Call us today at 304-675-1333 or 740-992-2155 or 740-446-2342
Limited time otTer expires 3-1-05

~~e ~aU~oh~ lailp lnbune

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Community Calendar·

DIET: Doctors say kids should skip
juice ~ even the natural kind ~
and stick with water, milk

We'll run yourclassified line ad to seltyour Boa~ Camper, Motorcycle, 4-Wheeler;
Van, Pick-Up Truck, or Automobile for the low price of only $25.00.

Februa~y 25, 2005
.Ad Deadline 2-17-05

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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. 992-2155

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PageA3
Friday, February u,

2005

Night-shift worker pleads for silence in light of day
DEAR ABBY: I work a
night- shift job, as does my sister-in-law, who lives in my
home. People who don 't work
ni ghts cannot seem to under·stand the need for us to get our
sleep during the day. They frequently call at noon, wondering why we're not up yet.
. The se people need to know
that noon is just like midnight
for people who work the day
shift. Many night s I go to
work on less than four hours
of sleep, mainly because if
people can't reach me on the
house phone. they' ll call my
cell phone, which is the emergency number for my hu sband and kids .
.
My answerin g machine
clearly states that . I "work
nights and sleep day s, so
please leave a message and I'll
return the call."
Your column is widely
read, and I'm certain that a
good number of other ni g htshiffworkers would appreci,
ate it if you could spread the
word: Those of us who work
nights need the sa me amount
of sleep that people who
work days do . - SLEEPLESS IN MISSOURI
DEAR SLEEPLESS : I'm
pleased to help spread the
word. For callers to bypass
your answering machine and
\] Se your cell phone number is
rude , incon siderate, and
could endanger your health.
Sleep deprivation can cause
memory . and concentration
problems, accident s and mi s-

Dear

Abby
----•

takes at work, increase bl ood
pressure. and even compromise the immune syste m. In
the interests of se lf-prese rvation , chan ge your ce ll phone
nu ~ b e r. and instruct your
husba nd and kids not to 'dis;
close it to anyone.
DEAR ABBY: I am the happily married mother of !year-old and 2-year-old boys;
"Jonathan" is the older. and
"Kevin" is my baby. Because
my elderly parents live close
by, we make sure they see our
children often . Al so, I make
time every morning to talk to
my mother.
It has become clear to my
hu sband and me that Mom
favors Jonathan. When Kevin
was
an infant, Mom would .lit.
erally step over him to get to
Jonathan. Until it caused a rift ,
she .would "jokingly" refer to
Kevin as "the other one."
Recently, Kevin had a violent allergic reaction to some
medication . Mom 's first conce rn was how Jonathan reacted
to his little brother' s being ill.
When I share a milestone

with my mother, she is quick to
compare Kev·in · unfavorably
with his brother. I co uld list
many other examples .
I am saddened, disgus'ted
and furiou s. I have co nfronted
Mother more times than I can
· count. Most times she denies
it ; sometimes she says she
feels Jo nath an is just ··speciaL" The boys are still too
young to understand, but it
won't always be that' way. My
husband 's fam il y is not
involved much in our lives, so
mine i's ex tra -import an t. How
do I deal with thi s problem ?-.
DISTRESSED IN DAYTON ·
DEAR
DISTRESSED;
Since reasoning with yo ur
mother has n' t helped, it's time ·
to lay down the law. Tell her
either she becomes a better
actress in dealin'g with the ·
'boys, or you' II be for~ed to
limit her access to them . And if
she· doesn 't shape up. act on it.
Small children can se nse
fay oriti s m and discrimination, and it is hurtful. Rath er
than blame the adult, chil dren often blame them selves
for it. So draw the .lin e now.
before your little one's se lfesteem is affected.

Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O. ·
Box 6944(/, Los Angeles,
CA90069.

News of local college students
GALLIPOLIS · Eva independent learnin g. Each
Lyon and Allen Skinner, Wooster se nior creates an
graduates of Galli a Academy original . re sea rch project.
High School. have been written work, performance.
named to the dean's list for or exhibit of artwork, supthe fall semester at the ported one-on-o'ne by a fac College of Wooster:
ulty mentor.
Lyon, a sophomore , and
•••
Dale
Skinner, a senior, both from · GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis, each achieved a Hoover of Gallipolis received
grade point average of 3.5 or a doctorate in philosophy
above.
(Ph.D.)
from
Qhio
The College of Wooster is University's Athens campus
an independent liberal arts at the end of fall quarter
college nationally recog- 2004.
nized for an innovative curHoover was among 604
riculum that emphasizes students who were candidates

for degrees at the concl usion
of the quarter.
Of th ese, 156 received
graduates degrees having
earned at least a 3.0 grade
point avetage. Of th e
remaining 448 candidates,
eight graduated with highest honors. ha ving earned
an accumulative GPA of 3.9
to 4.0; 24 graduated with
high honors, having earned
an accumulative GPA of
3.75 to 3 .89 ; and 74 graduated with honors, having
earned an accumulative
.GPA of 3.5 to 3.7.
-

.

.

�•

The Daily Sentinel

.Page ·A 4

OPINION

Friday, February 11,

2005

Mere was God?

The Daily Sentinel

Most people believe in tsunami that ravaged Sri
It WqS a defining moment.
God.
But their Oods may Lahka. His is "the still. small
for believers in God when the
(740) 9.92·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
differ. For some he is the · voice" that comforts our
tsunami struck in January.·
www.mydailysentlnel.com
God of the creeds who is bruised and breaking hearts
In the wake of Mothe r
almighty and all-loving. Me ih every catastrophe.
Nature' s
deadly
fury
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
The English preacher,
created the world and rules 'it
unleashed in , earthquakes
George
Leslie
Weatherhead, tells the
with
his
powerful
hand.
and raging tloods in Asia
Plagenz
Jim Freeland
story
of
the young . woman
,Nothing ht\ppens that is not
and Cali(ornia. how can we
Publisher
whose husband ·. had just
continue to believe in a lovhis will.
. ,
She was sitting on the
died.
The God of the deist, on
ing Father who watches over
Charlene Hoeflich
the other hand, is like the hearth rug in front of the
us.and protects us from life's
clockmaker
who makes the tlickering fire in the small
storms?
General Manager-News Editor
Strangely, for some peo- sure," he said. "God has sent clock ' but .then leaves the cottage. The arm of an old
ple, .their faith in God .was the mountainous ·waves as a care and maintenance of his white-haired woman was
around her shoulder.
handiwork to LIS.
reinforced rather than shak- warnin g."
The young woman was
Many who lived through the
When a deist .gets what he
en by the killer torrents.
Congress shall make no law respecting an
.
very
resentful as she said to
L&gt;Lmami's
fury
saw
their
delivhoped
for.
he
inay
say,
Here is the story of a bornestablishment of religion, or prohibiting the
again C)uistian in Sri Lanka erance as the work of a force "Thank God," but' he does the minister who was there:
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
, who spoke to a reporter for "far greater than the power of not really believe that God · "You talk about the love of
intervened in his behalf. And Christ. I don't ·believe it.. You
the Los Angeles Time s after some powetfu l waves."
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
But what of those tens of when he doesn't get what he talk about the everlasting
the catastrophic tsunami lev, people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
thou&gt;aiuls
who perished in wished for, he doesn't blame arms of God. I don't believe
eled his hometown and
the Government for a redress of grievances.
swept most of its inhabitants the deluges'' Where was God God. He shrugs · his shout- it: My husband and I w~re so
to a watery grave.
as their lives were being ders. and says some version .in love with one another and
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
"I was running out of air snatched away by the wind of "Well , that's how the now he has been taken away:"
And ihe minister said to her,
and trapped umlerwtiter with and water? If God didn't cookie crumbles. Maybe I'll
"My
dear, the love of Christ is
my head being held down by send the wind and water. have better luck next time."
A well-known clergyman · within a foot of you - . in your ·
a slab of concrete. My body why didn't he.stop it? ·
Answers to such questions once said, "From the begin- mother. And the everlasting
was being slammed by the
surging water. I called to · and others like them depend ning, the life of mankind has arms you don't believe in Today is Friday, Feb. II, the 42nd day of 2005. There are
on what kind of "God we been qne tragedy after why, they are around you at
Jesus
to save me." .
323 days left in the year.
His prayer, he . said, .was worship. Once we rule out another. How then can any. this moment. Whose do you
Today's Highlight in History: .On Feb. 11 , 1945, President
answered almost immediate- atheism (whiCh is denial of one say, with a voice that think is the arm across your
Roosevelt, British . Prime Minister Winston Churchill and
Soviet leader Josef Stalin signed the Yalta Agreement during
ly. The concrete broke apart the existence of God), there does not falter, 'I believe in shoulder now?"
World War II.
·
·
The minister was telling
and he \vas able to reach the are basically two positions God, the' Father almighty'"'"
On this date: In 1812, Massachusetts Gov. Elbridge Gerry
·surface. He is alive today.
we can take.
Yet there are those who do the woman that the reassursigned a redistricting law favoring hjs party- giving rise to
In a nearby village. as
The first is th eism , or sav this with arirm. unfaltcr- ing arm that was across her
the term "gerrymandering."
structures around were being belief in "one God who is ing voice. These are people shoulder at that moment was
In 1847, American. inventor Thomas Alva Edison was born
devastated, the Starlight Inn creator and ruler of the uni- who believe that everything the arm of God. It appeared
in Milan, Ohio.
Hotel suffered only minor verse." The other is deism. tl1at happens is God's wiU to be the arm of someone
In 1861, President-elect Lincoln departed ·springfield, .Ill.. ·
damage mud on the the doctrine that God created and has a purpose. They may else but it is often in such
for Washington.
.
.
veranda and a few branches the world anu its natural not understand that purpose guise that God ·visits the
In 1929, the Lateran Treaty was signed, with Italy recognizlaws but who takes no fur- now but they believe in the . world of men and women.
in
the dini'!g room. .
. ing the independence and sovereignty of Vatican City.
ther
part in its functioning .
words of 'the gospel song,
.
The
owner
of
the
hotel.
a
·God's power to stop evil
In 1937, a sit-down .strike against General Motors ended,
Buddhist.. attributed the . The theists account for the "Farther along we'U know aU may be litl'lited in this view,
with the company agreeing ' to recognize the United
near-miracle to the good evil in the world in different about il: Farther along we'll .but his goodness is unlimited
Automobile Workers Union.
karma he had b\lilt up over a ways. They admit that much understand why."
a!ld it is through th.e power
In 1972, McGraw-Hill Publishing Co. and Life magazine
decade
of
charity
work.
of
the
evil
we
encounter
in
.
Other
believers
reject
the
of gooaness, not through
canceled plans to publish what had turned out to be a fake
A
Muslim
businessman
life
is
the
direct
result
of
our
notion
that
God's
hand
can
some omnipotent comautobiography ofreclusive billionaire Howa~d Hughes.
who
escaped
the
mighty
pelling force, that we shall
own
vengefulness,
hatred
,
.
be
seen
in
many
of
the
sufIn 1979, followers of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini seized
surge
of
water
saw
in
the
ineptitude
and
slLlpidity.
In
.
fcrings
in
the
world.
Echoing
.
ultimately
triumph over all
.
power in Iran. .
tloods the haad of God send- other words, we (not God) "the words of· I Kings in the our tsunamis and 9/ll s.
In 1986, Soviet dissident Natan Sharansky was released by
(George Plagen z is an ·
ing a message.
arc to blame for most of the Old Testament. they s~y God
the Soviet Union after nine years of captivity as IJart of an
ordained
minister and veter"People
who
weren't
sure
East-West ·prisoner exchange.
evil and suffering we see aU "is n'ot in the earthquake,
an
newsman
In 1989, the Rev. Barbara C Harris became the first woman
there is a God, now are around us.
wind ami fii·e" - nor in the Columbus, Ohio.) based in
consecrated as a bishop in the Episcopal Church , in a cere·
mony held in Boston.
In 1990, South African black activist Nelson Mandela was
freed after 27 years in prison.
Ten years ago: The space shuttle Discovery landed at Cape
Canaveral, Fla., ending a historic rendezvous mission with
Russia's Mir space station. President Clinton, in his weekly radio
OF~
alldress, threatened to veto any attempt by Republicans to scrap
plans to·put 100,000 additional PQlice officers on the streets.
Five years ago: The space shuttle Endeavour thundered
away from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on a mission to map the .
world as never before. Britain stripped Northern Ireland's
Protestant-Catholic government of power in a bid to prevent ·
its collapse over the IRA's refusal to disarni. French movie .
director Roger Vadim died in Paris at age 72.
One year·ago: Wesley Clark dropped out of the race for the
· White House. Cable TV giant Comcast Corp; launched a hos- ·
tile bid tobuy The Walt Disney Co. for more than $54 billion.
(Corneas! later dropped its bid).
Today's Birthdays: Actor Leslie Nielsen is 79. Actress Tina
Lou'ise is 7 L Actor Burt Reynolds is 69. Singer Bobby "Boris"
Pickett is 65. Bandleader Sergio Mendes is 64. R&amp;B singer
Otis Clay is 63. Actress Carey Lowell is 44. Singer Sheryl
Crow is 43. Actress Jennifer Aniston is 36. A:ctor Damian
Lewis is 34. Singer D'Angelo is 31. Actor ·Brice Beckham is
29. Rock MC/vocalist Mike Shino¢1 (Linkin Park) is 28.
Singer-actress Brandy is 26. Actor Matthew Lawrence is 25.
R&amp;B singer Kelly, Rowland (Destiny's Child) is 24.
Thought for Tooay: "Time is really the only capital that any
: human being has, and the one thing that he can't afford to
: lose."- Thomas Alva Edison (1847-1931).

TODAY IN HISTORY

... AND THE
PRINCE RAN

WITUlHE
AGING

CONCUBINE.

(o

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editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
. be published. Letters should be in good taste,
: addressing issues; not personalities.

.The Daily Sentinel
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Dr. Dean to .the rescue
The Democratic National
Committee appears set ·to
elect fonner Vermont Gov.
Howard Dean as its chairman on Feb.l2. That date is.
of course, the birthday of
'Abraham Lince ln . the patron
saint of the Republican
Paity, and one's first impulse
is to wonder whether the
Democrats, in a burst of
inter-party amity, intend his
election as a sort of birthday
present to the GOP.
Certainly the Republican s
regard it as one. intended or
otherwise.
We can be pretty sure the
Democrats have le ss cordial
purposes in mind. It's striking, nevertheless, that any
Democrat discussing Dr.
Dean (he is, among his other
talents, a physician) has to
spend the first five minutes
insisting that he isn 'l as liberal as is generally believed:
that indeed he is by temperament a centrist; and that hi s
record as Vermont's governo~ demonstrates thi s. He
balanced the state's budget
(as required by law), and is
even on recor(j as pro-gun .
· Be that as it may, Dean
came to national prominence
by assuming an 'early lead in
. the race for the 2004 presidential nomination, and did
so by establishing himself as
the leftmost serious candi-

· William
. Rusher

date for the honor.. Alone
among the t.najor contenders,
he frank! y condemned the
invasion of Iraq, and burnished hi s partisan credential s by declaring proudly
that .he belonged to "the
De mocratic wing · of the
Democratic Party." Hi s performance proved pure catnip
to the Democratic rank'andfil e, who tlooded hi s Web
site with small contributions
- a new experience for the
party, which had long relied
on big money from labor
unions. Hollywood stars arid
liberaL . billionaires like
George Soros.
Eventually, Dean 's reputa·
. ti on as a frothing-mouthed
leftist ( de,~erved &gt;0~ not )
becaine counterproductive,
· even among Democrats, and
he attempted to correct mat.
ters by saying a few, kind
words about Southerners in
pick -up truck,, and hi s
party's need to woo them .
But then came hi s astonish-

Friday, February u,

'

ing pep talk to his followers Barbara Boxer's (D-Calif.)
after his defeat in the Iowa savaging of Condoleezza
caucuses. The primal scream Rice in her confirmation
with which it ended ,simply hearings; the brutal hazing
confirmed, for many, . the of Alberto Gonzalez by the
conclusion of one of his for- Democrats on the Senate
mer union backers: "He's . Judiciary Committee; Sen.
nuts."
Ted Kennedy's (D-Mass.)
On ce John Kerry was blazing attack on the Iraq
nominated, however, Dean ·war, just three days before
fell lloyally into line, and the national election therere co~ ped a portion of his all of these suggest that the
reputation by campaigning Democrats intend to leave
hard for Kerry and other Washington knee-deep in
Democratic candidates. And gore, rather than · yield an
after Bu sh's stunning re- inch to the GOP.
election,
Dean . slowly , To a party in such a mood,
emerged as the leading can- Howard Dean tilay look like
. dictate for the party chair- a positive godsend. Perhaps
mallsh i p.
·
his remark, iti a recent
· It isn't reall y difficult to speech,
"I
hate
that
&gt;ee why. He was by far the Republicans" was a little
best-known; as an ex-gover- over the top, but a bit of
nor he was the highest-rank- excess enthusiasm can be
ing; he had earned credit by forgiven, · Far better too
hi s loyalty and efforts c!uring much than too little.
the campaign ; and - perNo doubt an effort wili be
haps above ail - hi s earlier made to keep Dr. Dean's paspassionate liberalism had not sionate nature under wraps
been forgotten and was for the immediate future .
exactly in tune with the pri- But it cannot be suppressed
vate sentiments of most forever, nor would the .
rank-and-file Democratic Democrats want it sup. workers.
pressed . forever. The man
Indeed, it is in tune with and the party have found
the oyerall ·s trate gy that each other, at last.
seems to have· been. adopted
(William Rusher is a
by most major Democratic Distinguished Fellow of the
politicians since the election: Claremont Institute for the
to battle the Republican s Study of Statesmanship and
without
4uarter.
Sen. Political Philosophy.)

The Daily SentineJ. Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

-~----~--~------~------~~· ~~·~----~--------~--~~~

Obituaries
James Autherson

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

. LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

'

GM recalls n~arly200,000 Prepared
.vehicles for various defects from Page A1

RACINE -James F. Autherson, 74, of Tornado Road,
DETROIT
(AP)
Racme,. passed away on Feb. 7, 2005, at· Holzer Medical General Motors Corp. is
Center 111 Gallipoli s, following a brief iII ness,
, recalling nearly 200,000
He was born Dec. 7, 1930, in Long Bottom, son of the late vehicles becau se . of safety
Carl and Naom1 Keyes Autherson . He was a truck driver for
Goeglein Coal Co. , and attended Common Ground Mi ss ion . . defects with brakes, gas pedals and windshields, fedenil ·
He was a v~Leran of the U.S. Army.
·
Best des h1s parents, he was preceded in death by two sisters, regulators said Thursday.
Elva Dailey and Violet Brewer.
GM spokesman Alan Adler
Surviving are his wife Pauline Will Autherson of Racine . a said the . company is not·
daughter, Patricia (Leslie) Hayman Middleport; grandchil- aware of any injuries caused
dr~n: Josh Hayman of Middleport and Jenny (Tim) Fout s of by any of the defects.
. Fhnts.tone, Ga. ; ·a great grandson. Logan Fouts of Flintstone;
The large st recall is of
two ststers, Luc1lle Allen .of East Liverpool and Lillie (Ivan)
·
155,465
pickups, . vans and ·
. Roush of Gallipolis; two brothers, Pat (Georgia) Authersbn of
Newark and Tom (Marie) Autherson of Beverly; a sister-in- sporrutility vehicles because
law, Kat,hryn Butcher of Calvin; W.Va .; and several nieces of possible brake mal fu.ncand nepHews . ·
tions. · The recall covers a
Servi.ces will be held at I p.m. on Friday, Feb. II , 2005 , wide range of vehicles
at Ewmg Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Rev. Les including the Hummer H2,
Hayman ·officiating. Burial will follow at Beech Grove
Chevrolet Silverado and
Cemetery.
.
·
·
· Friends may call from 6 to 8 .p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 10 at Suburban; and the GMC
Yukon XL. All ofthe affected
the funeral home.
·
.
vehiCles are from the 2004
and 2005 model years .
The National Highway
Traffic· Safety Administration
said a pressure accumulator
in the braking system could
crack during driving and
POMEROY - Meigs County Health Departmenl will offer .fragments could inju~e peo·
hearing and vision clinics for patients from birth to age 21 ; for·
children with current or possible viSion or hearing problems.
The clinics will be held on Feb. 22 and 23 . Those who wish to
make an appointment should eall Sherry Weese
at 992-6626,
.
.

of

Local Briefs

Plan clinics

pie if the hood was open. The
crack al so c~uld allow t1uid
to leak, which could make it
harder to brake or steer and ·
could cause a crash ..
In
addition.
General
Motors is recalling . nearly
~0.000
Cadillac
XLR
coupe s, SRX SUVs and
Pontiac Grand Prix sedans
from the 2004 model year
because the gas pedal may
not work properly in
extremely cold temperatures.
GM also is recalling
17 ,815 . Buick
Raniers ,
Chevrolet Trailblazers, GMC
Envoys and lsuzu Ascenders
from the 2005 · .model .year
because the windshield isn't
properly fitted and could fall
out in a crash .

departments and local law
enforcement. These phone
numbers were placed in the
front of the coloring books.
RSVP Director Diana Coates
noted that most of the children
mi stakenly thought Meigs
Countv had a 911 service .
Coit~s· and the volunteers
hope to branch out into
Eastern and Southern Local

'Chou\ distri ct~ wi th their disaster prepa.redness materials . '
RSVP volunteers who participated in the visit to Meigs
Elementary we re Katheri ne·
Hart. Charli e and Ellen Rife.
Glenna
Reibel: Glady s
Cumings, June. Kloes. Li lli an
Harri s and Maxi ne Lillie.
RSVP volunteers are as so- ·
·ciated witl1 the Depa11ment of
Home land Securi ty and
dunal e time w thei r comm uni ties with the intent ion of
strengtheni ng them . and not
only' during di sasters.

On the Net:
· National Highway Traffic
Safety
Administration:
http://www.n.htsa.dot.gov
General Motors Corpc:
http://www.gm.com

Syrac~se

Receives funding
GALLIPOLIS -The American Cancer Society awarded
$4,000 to Holzer Medical Center as a Community Investment
Grant. Funding for the grants is made possible by the Relay
for Life fundraiser. ·
.
The grant will be used for .a program , "Colorectal Cancer
Screening: Everything You Were Afraid to Ask," designed to
educate health care workers and the community on the value
of colorectal screenings.
The program will serve Gallia, Jackson , Meigs, Lawrence
and Vinton comities.
·
.

Syracuse, Henderson will
oversee the delivery of
400,000 pieces of ·' mail a
from Page A1
y,ear, and admiqister a
$185,000 budget.
Edith Henderson of Portland,
"Postmasters are the heart
attended.
Representatives of a community
like
from several post offices . in Syracuse," Schnuerer said.the county and .retired postal
Henderson said he and his
employees also attended.
clerk. Lori Kimes. will work
Postmasters are selected by hard to ensure good servi.ce
a merit process, Schnuerer to the postal customers of the
said. As postmaster · in community. .

Beth Sergent;pholo

RSVP volunteers spoke to fourth-graders at Meigs Elementary·
about how to prepare for natural disasters such as f1res.
floods and w1nter storms. The students received free coloring
books and educational materials that were supplied by FEMA.
Pictured is RSVP volunteer Katherine Hart.

-

.

Southern Band Boosters dinner

RACINE -The Southern High School Band Boosters will
have a turkey or ham noodle dinner served with mashed pota,
toes, green beans, cole slaw, homemad~ rolls. dessert and
drink from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Feb. 13 at Southern High
School. The price is $6 for adults and $4 for students. Eat-in
or take-out.

AEP
from PageA1
April, and the construction
of the FGD itself is expected
to start in August, and is
scheduled for January, 2007
completion.
The system will use
crushed limestone and
water. to form ' a slurry,
which combines with the
sulfur dioxide emitted by
the coal burning process, to
create gypsum. That gypsum. which can be marketed
as a component of drywall
· material, will be disposed of
in an AEP-ow'ned landfill at
the plant., 'Long said.
Long said AEP plans to
improve the landfill's liner in
or.der to protect groundwater
from
gypsum leachate,
although gypsum is consid~
ered "benign" in environmental terms.
Of greater concern to AEP,
Long said, is a potential fora
"blue plume" aerosol of sulfuric acid and · water emitted

from the wet stack into the
atmosphere.
Plans
for
Mountaineer take into considerations · a similar . "blue
plume" problem at the
General James M. Gavin
Plant at Cheshire. and use
technologies developed there.
''We don't anticipate prob.lems with the 'blue plume' at
the .level we had them 'at
Gavin, but AEP is a lot more
community-minded as the
result of problems we experienced there." Powell said,
"We will have the ingredi. entsto create a 'blue plume,'.
and we have plans to avoid
the problems we had at
Gavin using what we've
learned there."
High concentration ·of
those aerosols at ground level
may cause irritation and
breathing problems for some
people, Long said.
·
Powell said the new scrubber system will provide jobs
for 25 to 30 new AEP
employees once it is in operation . The plant regulafly
employs about 175 full-time
AEP employees.

Bids

• Approved payment . of
bills in the · amount of
from Page A1 · ' $208,63l.88.
• Approved a contract'
between the clerk of courts
as two months to complete and Department of Job and
because of the modular con- Family Services for filing
struction plan. The project is fees in child , support
a prototype for 17 more simi- enforcement cases , under
lar complexes to be built in · Title IVD , in the amount of
$18,257.18, based on a 66Indiana and Ohio. ·
tabled percent rate.
Commissioners
• Recessed until I 0 a.m. on
action on the bids until I0 a.m .
, on Thesday, allowing a review Feb. 15.
Present
were
of the bids by Prosecuting
Commissioners D; venport.
Attorney Pat Story. ·
Jeff Thornton and Jim Sheets,
Other business
and Clerk Gloria Kloes.
Commissioners also:

Meigs

favor of approving the con- the report showing . an
tract were Victor Young, Ron increasing deficit. "This proLogan and Roger Abbott, gram seems to be getting
from PageA1
with Scott Walton and · deeper and deeper in debt.
We raised the prices. we cut ·
Humphreys voting "no."
units, the alternative school,
The question of whether the personnel, yet the cafeteria is
the talented and gifted pro- service can be provided by the running at a greater deticit,"
gram, early childhood super- disirict · more economically he said.
vision, and supervisor/cur- was discussed, and Buckley . · The treasurer volunteered
nculum personnel. .
and . Rhone.nius agreed that to review the figures and proWith money to operate · cutting costs "could be a vide more information on
schools tight and tlie prospect future consideration."
why the cafeteria· continues
of passing a levy almost nil,
The
treasurer
later with ·heavier losses despite
several
board
members explained that right now it the changes made. by the
expressed concern about the would costtmore for the dis- board last fall.
increase and what it will do not trict to provide the service. · It was noted that $4,000
only this year but in the future "But that gap is closing," he has been received from ·
to the ovemll school budget.
said, "as salaries and fringes Ohio Reads to be used for
When a motion to approve to use the ESC services building volunteer coordin~­
the contract wasn't fonhcom- increase and our cost goes up. tor stipends.
ing, Superintendent William There may coine a time it
Interven"rion 'teachers and
Buckley explained that schools will be beneficial to do it on assistants to work with ·stureally "do not have a choice in our own."
dents to prepare for the profiRhonemus said Meigs ciency tests were hired at the
whether to offer the services."
"The State says you will Local is a part of the ESC's . meeting. The salary was set
provide the services. There is special and talented services at $75 per day for teachers
no choice ' here,'' . said program to all three districts and $65 per day for assistants
Buckley.
and because of student to be paid from grant money
Board member Norman enrollment Meigs Local's received by the district. In the
Humphreys responded by pro-rated share is about 56 · ·group were teachers Becky
asking what would happen if percent of the total cost to Zurcher, Jessica Roach , Gay
. the distriCt didti' t have the Meigs County schools of Perrin, Judy Gilmore. Carrie
money to pay for the service, $1.35 million. The other two Hartson, Dorothy Faulkner.
and Buckley countered, "lt districts, he said, pay about Jessica Marcum, Amanda
doesn' t matter, arid if you $300,000 each.
Miller. LaDonna Stew'art and
don~t have the money, you
The treasurer emphasizing Kathy Hoffman: and assisborrow it."
the importance of the pro- taqts Heather Harris and
Humphreys expressed con- grams concluded by saying, Maggie Smith.
cern about the effect of the , "They are good and needed.
Approved at the meeting
program costs over the next It's just that these programs was a resolution withholdi11g
se veral years as the district take so much money."
· consent for the remission of
moves into a deficit position,
·Other business
taxes, penalties and interest
"As I see it this just creates
The school cafeteria and on an application for real
more of a problem in the the t ost of operation became property lax exemption.
years ahead," he said.
another topic of discussion at
What that means, explained
, When a· motion to approve the meeting when the board Buckley. is that retroactive
the contract finally was niade was asked to approve the exemptions, once rejected
and seconded, and the_vote report of Marilyn Meier, food
was taken, it came out three service supervisor.
for and two against. Voting in
Logan raised the issue of

Rutland American Legion Post

ean

All you
eat &amp; drink $7.00
February 13, 2005

COACH CARTER (PG13)
1:00, 3:30. 7:00 &amp; 9:30

Community Ministerial

AssOciation
Lenten Services
2005
February 17th 7:00p.m. Rocksprings UMC

Instant Money. Nobody gets
you money faster.

February 24th 7:00p.m. Syracuse Asbury UMC

With

March3rd

7:00p.m. Chester UMC ·

March lOth

7:00p.m. Trinil~ Congregational
Cand eli~t Service ·
Pomeroy
MC
7:00p.m.

March 17th
American Legion Post 467

and then filed again. cannot
go back 10 previous years to
get reimbu'rsernenl on property taxes. The. action, it was
reported. was taken on the
recommendation of County .
Auditor Nancy Grueser.
On recommendation of the
superintendent, the board
awarded a four-year contract
to Kristin Acree. element¥)'
assistant . principal, accepted
the resignation of Janice L
Cady as an English teacher at
the end of this schoo I year.
and.hired Gloria VanReeth as
a tutor for a health handicapped student.
Substitute teachers hired oli
an as-needed basis for the
remainder of the sc hool year
were Dennis Flaherty, Eric
Paul Scites. Jennifer Friend.
Angelia Smith. Samuel
Pagan, Carrie Ann Towne.
Natalie
Pratt.
Kathy
Hoffman, Jennifer Ross and
Angela Weeks .

March 2Sth

I2:00p.m. Sacred Heart Catholic.
Church
·

fAme experielf~ ""' ectuffeltk11l sertliceJ
t~~el'fJfllfe if hlebme!

lm~tan l

·Mom•v. \·c,u can walk in

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_,·rUt a rr fJIIHi anl l&lt;:ip~tion lnan cht•r.k.' ls y~ur tax guy tlmt·fa."'" .
6181;ast Main St
Pomeroy, OH
773-992-M7~

C.ll 1·800-HRBLOCK or
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Ha.R BLOCK'

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"""Wl'L Ill(

~

•'

�FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

If you were to have
bumped into the humbl e "carpenter-turned-mess iah" of
Nazareth on one of Hi s many
walks along the dusty roads
Pastor
of the Judcan corner of the
Thorn
Roman Empire. you undoubtMollohan
edly would have , been
intrigued by the teachings He
uttered, been awed by the
miracles He · wrought, and
been astonished by His
u.nique claims.
awkwardly clear your throat
Of course. you would not and mumble somethin g like,
have been alone. After alL.... . "Wow' All that, huh ? You
the 0rowds were amazed at mean that we're to love Him
His teaching. because He that much?"
taught as one who had authorI think He would then
ity .and not as their teachers of smile kindly at you, place
the Law" (Matttiew 7:28-29). His hand on your shoulde~
If you were to actually sit ·and say, " Yeah. That's exactunder His teaching and joined ly what I mean." Maybe He
Him on His trek to" ... preach would then giv.e your shoulthe good news to the poor .. . der a reassuring squeeze and
to proclaim freedom for the bend close to your ear.
prisoners and recovery of "Don ' t be afraid though: You
sight for the blind, to release can't 'out-love' God. Ju st
the oppressed
" (Luke wait and see," He might have
4: 18), yl&gt;u may have mus- said with a wink.
tered just enough courage to
And if afterward you
speak up UJid ask Him, "Lord, stood . on a hill called
what is the most importalll Cal vary, be.neath an old
thing in life?'' ·
ru gged cross, you might
To this, He would have ha ve remembered all that He
perhaps turned and looked at had told you. Maybe both a
you with a smile of warmth deep sorrow and a calm
and understanding. "The most peace would strangely fill
important thing''" He might your heart. "He was right," '
have mused. "Just thi s. To you'd think. Watching the
love of God bear the' horror
love God. "
I can imag1ne your of the cross for the sake of
respmise, un sure of all that yo ur si n you would then
He might have meant. You have said to yourself, " I can
scratch your head and ponder never out-love God. But
aloud, 'To love God 0 Well , I He 's worth all the love that I
don't mean to be rude , but ca11 give Him back."
dOesn't that so rt of go with- · And then you'd walk
out saying 0 ''
away, never the same, seeking
Perhaps He would arch an to be emptied of yourself and
eyebrow. "'Does it really?" He filled up with Him.
asks you as you shift uncom"Fcir you know that it was
fortably under His penetrat- not with perishable things
ing gaze. He goes on, "You such as silver or gold that
see, when I say that the most you were redeemed from the
important thing you can do is empty way of life handed
to 'love God,' I mean for you down to you from your foreto really love Him ... with all fathers, but with the precious
your heart, with all your soul. blood of Christ, a Lamb
with all your mind and with without blemish or defect.
all your strength. I mean for He was chosen before the
you to love Him with both creation of the world, but
deep affection and with wild was revealed in these last
abandon and passion . I mean times for your sake. Through
for you to think deeply and Him 'you believe in God,
meditatively about His love Who raised Him from the
for you and all His promises, dead and glorified Him, and
as well as offer your body so your faith and hope are in
daily for His glory, keeping it God" (I Peter 1:18-21).
(Thorn MoUohan has minavailable for His purposes. I
mean for you to take all that istered i11 .wuthem Ohio the ·
you are, all that you' ve ever past 9-112 years and is the
been, and all that you may pastor
of
Pathway
become and place everything Community Church. He and
under the feet of your Father hi.~ wife are the parents of
in heaven" (adapted from four children. He may be
Mark 12:29-30).
·
reached_ by email at pas- :
Maybe yoli would catch torthom@pathwayga.llipoyour breath . Perhaps you'd lis.com).
·

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Friday, February 11,

Hymn time set
LONG BOTIOM - Hymn time will
be held at 7 p.m. Friday at ~~·e Faith Full
Gospel Church at Long Bottom. Singers
will be Dave and Debbie Dailey.

Valentine dinner set
REEDS VILLE - A valentine dinner
will be held at 5 p.m. Saturday at the
Reedsville United Methodist Church.

Amazing Grace
Church services

2005

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK
F~llowship

wedding vows with ,Pastor Wayne Dunlap p.m., Feb. 16, · Rev. Walter Heinz at
officiating. Providing special music will Rocksprin gs United Methodist Church;
be Shannon Owen. Following the service Feb. 24, Rev. Brian Dunham at Syracusea sweetheart banquet will be held.
Asbury United Methodist Church; Man;h
On March I, the church will celebrate 3, Dee Rader at Chester United
its first anniversary 'at the 10 a.m. and 6 Methodist; March 10, Rev. Bob
p.m. services. Endless praise .of Athens ·· Robinson at Trinity Congregational
and. guest si,nger Dennis Coe· will Church; March 17, ·Rev. Keith Rader at
provide special music at the morning Pomeroy Methodist; 12 p.m., March 25,
service, and performing at the evening Stations of the Cross at Sacred Heart
service will Roger Bissell and his group, Catholic Church.
Just for Now.
Special services arc also being planned
for 7 p.m. on Good Friday, March · 25,
with the Coolville C mmunity Singers.

Apostolic .

Church of Jesus Christ AjMJSlolic

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Amazing .
POMEROY - Th Meigs Ministerial
Grace Community . Church in Tuppers
Plains will have a ~pecial valentine's . Ass'ociation will be l osting Community
Lenten Services through March 25. ·
service ar 10 a.m. Surtday.
Services are -scheduled as follows: 7
Couples will be renewing their

Miller. Sunday School

River Valle)'
Wo!'!ihip Ccnto:r. k7J S. Jill
Ave .. Middlcpon. Kevin Konkle, Pnstnr.
Su nd1iy, 10:]0 a.m. Wednesda), 7:UO
p.m.: Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.
Ajl&lt; l~ loti c

Emmanuel Apostolk Tabernarle I nt·.
Lonp RJ off Ni!w Lima Rd. Rutland.
Services: Sun IO:(JO a.m,. &amp; 7: .~0 p.m.,
TilUn•. 7:00p.m., Pa~tur Man y R. Hutton

Assembly of God

Liberty As.~m~ly of God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane. MasOn,
W. Va., Pa~tor: Neil Tennant, S und a~
Services- 10:0&lt;! a.m. and 7 p.m.

ROCKSPRINGS - Rev. Walter
Heinz of Sacred Heart Church speaks at
community Lenten 'ervice, 7 p.m., .
Rotkspring s United Methodist Church
Thursday, Feb. 17. Services planned at
community churches through March25 . .

Baptist

Religion News in Brief

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AI')- California's
21 historic missions are falling apatt,
leaving preservationists and others
scrambling to find restoration funds.
Three missions are state parks. The others, run by the Roman Catholic Church or
a dwindling number of Fr.anciscan friars,
rely on proceeds from museum and gift
shop sales and donations.
That's not enough for the kind of
repairs that are needed, said Kristina
Foss of the California Missions
Foundation, which has raised about $3
million toward the $50 million needed
for preservation. '
Many of the missions, built by Spanish
colonists from 1769to 1823, sit on unstable ground. Mission San Miguel
Arcangel north of Paso Robles was so
badly damaged by a 2003 earthquake that
the county barred public access. Other
missions are in various states of decline.
"These are among the oldest buildings
in California, full of Native American
and Hispanic artwork, all intertwined
with the introduction of agriculture and
viticulture," says Knox Mellon, foundation executive director. "They are such a
part of our heritage that if you alll'lw
them to decay you're allowing a part of
yourself and your history to go under."
Legislation sponsored by U.S. Sen.
Barbara Boxer and U.S. Rep. Sam Farr
promised $10 million in preservation
funds if the foundation could match that
amount.
Americans
United
for
Separation of Church and State has

r

http://www.missiotlsofcalifomia.org

Cheshire Raplist Churrh
Pastor: Stc~· e Little, SU;nday School: 9:30
am, Mon1i ng Wnrship: 10:30 'am, Sunday
e\'ening: 6:30 pm Wednesday 6:30pm ·

versions of the ancient Talmud contain
oral interpretations of the Hebrew Bible
that constitute the authoritative source of
Jewish law and tradition.

Hope Baptist Church {Southern)
!i70 Gnmt St.. Middleport . Sunday school
- 9:30a.m .. Worship- II a.m. and 6 p.m ..
Wetlm:sduy Service - 7 p. m.
Rutland First Baptisl Churth
Sunduy Sd 1wl - 9:30 a. m.. Wnrship 10:45 11.1?1.

http:!lwww.artscroll.com!Ialmudl.htm
Jewish publisher
completes 73-volume
English translation of the Virginia Senate kills
disputed religious
Babylonian Talmud
property bill

l'omero)' First B~tplist
Pastnr Jon Brockert. East Main St.,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. ~or~hip lO: Jll a.m .

NEW YORK (AP) - A monumental
new English translation of Judaism's
RICHMOND. Va. (AP) - A bill to
Talmud was presented to the Library of give congregations that leave their
Congress this week, anticipating a denominations leverage to retain control
March 15 gala in New York that marks of their properties has died in Virginia's
public release of the work.
state Senate.
The 73-volume set comes from
Sponsoring- Sen. William Mims recArtScroii/Mesorah Publications of · ommended that the measure be referred
Brooklyn - it costs $1,900 and is back to a law committee, effectively
. some 35,000 pages long. . The killing it Monday, but said he hoped the
. "Schottenstein
Edition
of
the · issue can be reintroduced in next year's
Babylonian Talmud" is named for the legislative session.
Columbus, Ohio , department 's tore
The bill would have allowed seceding
family that sponsored the project.
congregations to be independent of any
ArtScroll says its English Talmud is
.church, diocese or society. Currently,
·distinguished by the comprehensive
breakaway congregations are limited to
commentary provided by more than 80
'joining another branch of their church
scholars from various · nations· wl)o
or society.
worked on the series.
The proposal created an uproar among
Rabbi Nos son Scherman: Art Scroll 's
general editor who led the project, now Virginia religious leaders who . said it
turns to an English translation of the was drafted due to dissent in the
Jerusalem Talmud, projected as a 47- Episcopal Church over consecration of
the church's first openly gay bishop.
volume work that will take 10 years.
"There. is a mushrooming interest in Mims said the bill had nothing to .do
Talmud study," Scherman said. In one with the Episcopal situation . and
popular program, Jews throughout the involved technical questions raised by a
world consider the same portion each 2002 federal court ruling.
Critics of the bill maintained the legisday in a system that covers the entire
lature has no place involving itself in
· Talmud in 7 112 y'ears.
The Babylonian and Jerusalem religious property disputes.

First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pik e. Pastor: E. Lamar
O'Bryant. Sund3~ School - 9: 30 a.m .,
Worship · 8: 15a. m.. 9:45 am &amp; 7:1.Xl p.m.,
Wl'flne'illay Sl·r,·in·s- 7:f.Kl p.m.
f'irst Baptist Church
'M:uk Morrnw, 6th anti Palmer St.,
Middleport. Sundi]J School - '): 15 a.m ..
' wors hip - 10: 15 a.m., 7:00 p. m..
Wcdne.;Jay Service-7:00p. m
lladn~ l'inl Bapti!llt
Pastor: Rick Rule: Sunday School - 9:30
a. m.. Wor~hip - 10:40 a.m" 7:00 p.m"
W~dnesday Services-7:00p.m.

Sllnr Run Baptist
John Swanson. Sunday School ·
!Oa.m .. Wor ship - lla.m.. 7:00 p.m._
.WcdnesJ &lt;ty Scr.·ices- 7:00 p.m.
Mt. lnion .Baptisl
Paslo( : David Wi ~i.'man. Sunda·y Schocil9:45 a.m .. b ·cning - fd O p. m ,
W~dncsday Ser.'ices - 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptist Chu~h
'Great Bend, Ruu1e 124. Radn_e, OH.
P:tstnr : Dan iel Mecea, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m.. Sunday Worsh ip- 10:30 a.m.•
Wednesday Bible Study-6:00p.m.
Old Bethel frH Will Baptist Chun:h
28601 St. R1 . 7, Mil.idlc port, Sunday
School - 10 a.m .. Evening - 7:00 p.m..
'111ursday Scrvict:s- 7:00

..

.

'

Hllhlide Baptist Church
St. Rt . 143 just off Rt. 7. Pastor: Rev.
J ;~mes R. 'Ac ree, Sr., Sunday Unified
Service, Wor~hip - !O:JO o.m .. 6 p.m .,
Wednesday Servkes -7 p.m.

The. Daily Sentinel • $ubscribe today ~ 992-2155 • www.mydailysentinel.com

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Vktory Baptist Jndependmt
525 N. 2n,d St. Middlepon, Pastor: James
E. Keesee , Worship · l Oa.m .• 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Ser.•ices - 7 p.m.

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
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ripeo.Hn the vine in 1!\lrrunt-rtlmt.\
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the irull ~ p~ly alllnlct, in
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Acts 24:16

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Home People"
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29670 Qashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217
Sizes available 5x10 to 10 x 20

If ye abide in Me, and My

words abide in yo!J, ye shall
ask what ye will, a11d it shall .
be done u11to you.
499 Richlond Avenue, Athens
740-594-6333
1-800-45 1-9806

' Jolin 15:7

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Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
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Matthew 5:8

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Middleoo~

OH

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Fax f7401 992-7406

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~~
(740) 992-3279
'..!.!lY
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

A tmn~pht•re ,

Hours
flam-8pm

Mi[{ie's !l{,estaurant

and Holy

Zion Chut"fh or Christ
Pomeroy, Harri_so nville. Rd (Rt .l43),
Pastor: Roger Watson. Sunday SchooJ 9:30 u.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m .• 7:00
p.m .. Wednc~y Services- 7 p.m.

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked MetJis &amp; DaUy SpUials
Open 7 days a week

740-992-7713

Bradbury Church of Christ
Minister: Tom R~nyon, 39558 Bradbury·
Koad. Middlcpnrt. Sunday Schoo.! - 9':30
a.m.
Worshi p : 10:30 a.m.

Rutland Free Will Baptist
Salem St:. Pastor: Jamie Fonner. Sunday
School - 10 a.m.. Eve ning - 7 p.m.,
Wednesda)· Service;; · 7 p .m.

Blessed are the pure
heart,· for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

in

your li ght so shine bet'on'l
men, that they' may see
good works and glorify
Father in heaven."
Matthew 5: I

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St. Middleport. OH
740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !-shirts and more

Rtedn-ille Church or Christ
Pastor: Phili p Stunn, Sunday Sdiool: 9:30
a.m., Won;hip Service: 10:30 a.m .. Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.

Laurel Clill Free Methodist Church
Pa stur: Glenn Rowe. Sunday School Q:.lll a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.,WcUnesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Cannei-:Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. Racine . Ohio.
Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. WorShip - 10:4~ a.m. , Bible
Study Wed. 7:00p.m

St. John Lutheran Chu~h
Pine Grove. Worship - 9:00 a.m., Sunday
School - IO:do l).m. Pasto r: Jame s P.
Brady

Racine
Pastor: Pete Shaffer, Sunday School - 10
a.m .. Worship - ~I a.m.. Wcdnesda)' 7
p.m.

OUr Sariour Lutheran Chun:b
Walnut and Henry Sts .• Ravenswood,
W.Va .. Pa stor: David Russell. Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m., Worship • 11 a.m.

Coolville United MethodUI Parish
Pa stor: Helen Kline. CooiYilie Church,
Main &amp; Fifth St., Sunday School • 10
a.m.. Worship - 9 a.m .• TUe~y Services7p.m.

MI. OUve United f4elhodllt
Off 124 behind wnkesvitle, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spites, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship , 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m., Thunday
Sen•ices- 7 p.m.

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618 E. Main Street • Pomeroy

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Since 1858 •
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CoolVille,
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Syracuse Churth or tH Nuarene
Pastor Mike Adkins, Sunday School - 9:.30
a.m .. WOr ship - 10:30 a.m.• 6 p.m.,
Wt4nesday Services · 7 p.m.

Lema Bouom
Sunday Schoo! - 9:30 a.m .. Worship !0:30a.m.
Rtc!dllovll~

Worship • 9:.'0 a.m.. .Sunday School ·
10:30 a.m.-, Firsi Sunday of Month • 7:00 ·
p.m. sef'\lice

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be done unto you~
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John 15:7
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992-6677

KEBLER

Reed11rille FelloW!ihip
Ch urch of the Nazarene, Pasto r: Jamie
Pettit, Sunday School-9:30a.m., Worship
• 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m ., Wednesday Son'iccs
-7p.m.'

Joppa
Pa sto r: Bob Randolph. Worship - 9:30
' .
a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

.114tr .1UIItfal Jfome

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
•"att'hew S.
iJ'~1

a.m ..

_Middleport Chun:h of the Nazarene
Pastor: ftl\t:n Midcap. Sunday School 9:30a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m ., Pastor :
Allen Midcap

Chester
Pastor: lane Beauie, Worsh\p - 9 a.m ..
Sunday School - 10 a,m. , Thursday
Seni(;es · 7 p.m.

Rutland Church or God
Pa5tor: Ron Heath. Sunda)' Worship - I0
a.m .. 6 p.m., Wednesday Service!' - 7 _
p.m.

9:~0

Nazar~ne

Melp Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluster. Alfred, Pastor: Jane.
Beattie, - Sunday School - IJ:JO a.m.,
Worship - II a.m .. 6:30p.m.

Mt. Moriah Church oiGod
Mile Hill Rd ., Racitie . Pastor: Jame s
Sanerfield. Sunday School - 9:45 a.m ..
Evening - 6 p.m.. Wednesday Sen·ices - 7
p.m.

Harrlsunville Community Churth
Pastor: Theron Durham. Su nday - 9:-30
a.m . and 7 p.m., Wednesday · 7 p.t_u.
Middlepurt Community Chun::h
575 Pearl St., Middleport , Pastor: Sam
Anderson, Su nda y School 10 a.m.,
Evening-7:30p.m .. Wednesday Ser.·ice 7:30p.m.
Faldtt Va•y Tabermu:le Chun:h
Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Re\'. Emmett
Raws_on, Sunday Evening 7 p.'m.,
Thursday Service- 7 p.m.
Syracuse Mll!iion
1411 Bridgeman ·St .. Syracuse. Sunday
School - Hl a.m. E\·ening - 6 p.m..
Wednesday Sel'\."ice - 7 p.m.
Haul Co•munlry Church
OIT R.t. 124, Pasto r: Edsel Hart Sunday
School - 9:30a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m ..
7:30p.m.
J)yavWe Communi!}' Churth
Sunday School '- 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Morw Chapel Church
Sunday school - ,JO a.m., -Worship - 11
a.m., Wednc:llday Service- 7 p.m..

Hocktnaport Church
Grand St1eet, Sunday SchooJ - 9:30 !1-m-,_Worship - 10:30 a.m .• Pastor Phillip Bell
Torch Church
Co. Rd . 63, Sunday_School Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Pomeroy Churth of the Naurr:nc
Pastor: Jan Lavender. Sunda.y School 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a..m. and 6
p.m .. Wednesday Sen •ices- 7 p.m.

'

Chest~r

Church of the Nazarene

F1lth Go.pel Churdt
Long -Bottom, Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
Wors_h ip - 10 :45 a.m., 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
ML OUve Community C~urtb
Pator: Lawrence Bush. Sunda)' Schqo! ·
9:30a.m .. Evening-6:30p.m.. Wedneday
Service - 7 p.m.
Full G01Pci Lipthousc
33045 Hil1111d Road, Pomeroy, Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday School - 10 a.m .. Evening
7:30 p.m.. Tue sday &amp; Tbursday · - 7:30
p.m
South Bt-thtl Community Churt'h
Silver Ridge· Pastor Lindn Daln~woOO,
Sunday School . 9 a.m .. Worship Sl:rvicc
10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday

Acts 24:

ScrvLl't:

r~tirvK-"M' Uiblr ('hun:h
Lctan. W.Va. Rt. I, P~ ~ wr · Brian May,
Sunda-y So:h•-.ol - lJ·_ill ;1m . Wnr~h1p - 7:(10
p. m.. Wcdne-'&gt;!iay Bihlc StuJy · 7:{)() p.m .
r8ilh rellow§hlp Ctu!iade for Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dt ckem•. Scr\io:e :
Friday. 7 p:m

Calvary Bible C.:hun:h
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.. P~ s tor: Re v
Blackwood. Sund~y Sd'k)()l - Y:JO a.m..
Worshtp
!fl:~O
a.m.. 7:30 p. m..
Wednt:sda y Sen'io.:c- 7 ·" ' p.m
Stin·nville Community Apostolic
Chun:h
Pasto r: Wa yno: K. Jewell. Sund:J) Scr\'u.:c ·
6:00 p.m.. Wednesday - 0:00 p.m.

I

Rtjolcing Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Mtddlernrt . P&lt;i~lnr·
Mike Foreman , Pastor: Emeritu~
Lawrence Foreman. Worsh ip- 10:1)(1 am
Wednesday Strvkc~- 7 p.m. ·
Clif1on Tabernach~ ~ hurch
Clifton, W.Va .. Sunday Sch&lt;M1l - 10 a.m..
Worship - 7 p.m.. Wednesday Scrvio:c - T
p.m.
. New Life Victory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road. Gallipo l i~. OH
Postm: Bill Staten, Sunda ~ S~irvire~ - I0
a. m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

Full Go!tl)el Chun"h
of the Uving S8\'lor
Rt.338, Antiquity, Pa.'itor: l cs~ Morris.
Servlc,e~: Saturday 2:00p.m.
Salem Community Chun:h
Back of West Co lumbiu, W.Va.um Lie~· ing
Road, Pa~tor : Charles Roush {304) 6752288, Sd.ni.by Sdmul 9::\0 am, Sunday
evening ..Cr\'1Cl' 7:1XI pm. Bi bly Study
Wednesday ser\' ice 7:00pm
Hobson Christian Fellowship Church
Pastor: Hersc hel Whllc. Sunday School·
10 am, Sunday Ch urc h se rvice-6:30pm
Wc:dnesda,y 7 pm
Restor11tion Chrislian Fl'lloMhip
4365 Hooper Road. Athens. Pastor:
Lonnie C~lats. Sunday V.'o!'!ihip IO:fKJ am.
Wednesday: 7. pm
Langsovllle Christian Churdl
Full Gospel. Pastor: Roben Musser.
Sunday School 9:30 am. , Worship 10:30
am - 7:00 pm. Wednesday Sen·ice 7:00
pm

Pentecostal
Pfntecostal Assembly
St. Rt. 124, Racine. Pastor: William
Hoback. Sunday School
10 a.m ..
Evening· 7 p.m .• Wt:dne!«day Sef".,kl's- 7
p.m .

Presbyterian
Sj-racu!le F~r:st United Prr:s~yterian
Pastor: Robert Crow. Worship -, I I a.m .
Harrisonville Pm;byterilln Churt'h
Pastor: l&lt;ober1 Cmw, Worship - 9 a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
· Pastor: Rober Crow.. Worship · 10 a.m ..

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seveatii.Da)' Adventist
Mulperry Hts. Rd ., Pomeroy, Plistor:
Bennett Luck iesh._ Saturday Services:
Sabbath School- 2 p.m., Worship · 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. ..ennon Uniled Brelhren
In Christ Cbun:h
Texas Communily 36411 Wickham Rd.
Pastor: Peter Manindp.le. Sunday School9:30 a.m .. Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m ... ~'ednesday Semces - 7:00 p.m.
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7p.m.
Eden United Brethren In Christ
State Route. IN . ReedS\'!lie. Sunday
School - II a.m .. Sunday Worship - 10:00
a. m. &amp; .7:00 p.m. WednC'ida~· Se'r.·il'cs 7:00 p.m.. Wedne s da ~ Youth Sef\·ice 7:00p.m.

White's Chaptl Wulcyap
Cooh·illc Road . PastOr: Rev. Phlll;p
Ri..Jenour. Sunday Schopl - 9:30 ·a.m ,

Meig&gt;County's Oldest FloriM

352 East Main

or God so loved the world
he gave his only
lb•?Rllltt'll

SOil...

'

John3: /6

........

.a .noaffrr'l
:firr &amp; &amp;afrt!'

·

,

.... ._~=·-=---~

·

Pomeroy,'Oh
·L.r ut: und yom thou&amp;hfl wJfh cptcJII

74()-992-2644

740.992-6606

God and man ."

'W~Un ~~U;~ y

Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd . 31. Pastor: Re\'
Roger Willford. Sunday School - 9:30a.m
Worship- 7 p.m.

LeT your lighT so shine before
met~ lhaT They ma.v see vour
The can you dtserve, close to home good works and glorify mur
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Father in hem•en. •·
Pomeroy, OH 45769
MaiThew 5; 16

"So [ .strive always to keep
my conscience clear before

:1.111..

Carleton lnlen:lenomiii.ationill Chun:h
Kingsbury Road . Pastor· _Robert Van~~ .
Sunday Schoo-l
9:30 a.m.. Worship
Service 10:30 a.m., Evening Serv1ce b
p.m.

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABIUniON CENTER

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
. Pre~riptioos
992-2955
Pomeroy

10 :~ 0

~ -

Bethtl Church
Township Rd., 468C, Sunday S,chool - 9
a.m. Worship - 10 a.m.. Wednesday
Services - 10 a.m.

Graham United Meduxllst
Won;hip- 9:30 a.m. (lsi &amp; 2nd Sun), ,
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun),Wcdne~y
Service- 7:30p.m.

Christian Union

Faith Full Gospel Churth
Long Bottom. Pastor: Steve Reed."Sunday
Sl:hool - 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30a.m
. and 7 p.m .. WCdnesday · 7 p.ni .. Friday fellowship oervi~e-7 p.m.

East Letut
Pastor: Bill Mar~hall ,Sunday School 9a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m., 1st Sunday
evei'y momh evening service 7:00p.m.;
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

United Methodist

Church of Christ
lnteN~ection 7 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis Sarge-nt, Sunday Bible Study 9:30a.m., Worship : IOi30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Abundant Grace R.F. 1.
923 S. Third St., Middlepon, Pasto r Teresa
Davis. Sunday service. 10 a.m.,
Wednesday' service. 7 p.m

MorniOR Shu
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday School - II
a.m., Won;hip - 10 a.m.

St. Paul Lutheran O.urth
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St .. Pomeroy.
SUnday School - 9:45 a.m ., Worship - II
· a.m. Pastor: lames P. Brady
Sat. 7:00 ~m Contemporary Servic'e

Dexter Church of Christ
Sunday school 9:30a.m.. Sunday worship ·
- 10:30 a.m.

992-3785

Bethany
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday School- 10
a.m .. Worship - IJ a.m .. Wednesday
'Services- 10 a. m.

Lutheran

Hickory Hills Chunh of Chri!lt
EYangclist Mike Moore. Sunday School ..
9 a.m., Worship - \o a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

Hy§ell Run Comm~nity Chu~h
Pas10r: Rev. Larry Lemley: Sunday Scbocil
- 9:30 a.m .. Worship : \0:45 a.m., 7 p.m.,
Thur.day Btble Study and Yomh ~ 7 p.m.

The Chun:h of Jesus
Christ ol Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt . 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday SchllOI 10:20-1 1 a.m.: Rcl_icf
Society/Priesthood II :05- 12:00 noon,
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.,
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs.- 7 p.m.

Bradford Church of Christ
Cvrncr of St. Rt. ! 24 &amp; Brndbury Rd .,
MinistCr: Doug Shamblin. Youth Minister:.
Bill Amlx:rger, Sund~y SchOt,l - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m .. - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00 ·
p.'m., Wednesday Services -7:00p.m -

K&amp; C JEWELERS

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Chu~h
Pearl St .. Middleport . Pastor: Rick
Bourne, Sunda)l School- 10 a.n1. Wo~hip
-10:45 ·p.m .. Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wcdne~day Service - 7:)0 p.m. ' ·

Latter-Day Saints

Rutland Church of Christ
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship and
Communion - 10:30 a.m .. Bob J Werry.
MiniSier

S)·racust Flnt Church of God
Apple and Second Sts .. ~stor : Re v. David
Russell. Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m. Evening s·en.-ices· 6:30 p.m. ,
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m

Rock Springs
Pastor: Keith Rad~r. Sunday School - 9:15
a.m .. Wors hip - 10 a.m .• Youth
Fellow~htp, Sunday - 6 p.m.

7~

Tupptrs Plain Church or Cttrist
lnstrumcntul, Worship Service - 9 a.m..
Communi on - 10 n.m.. Sunday School 10:15 il. nt .. Y\IUth- s·:-'0 pm Sunday, Bible
Study ~cdnesJay 7 pm

A!lh SIT'ftt Chun::h
Ash St., Middleport -Pastor: Greg Sears
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ., Morning
Worsh ip .' J0:30 a.m. &amp; 6 pm. Wednesday
,Service - 6:30p.m., Youth Servi~·t: · 6:30
. p.m.
. Aaape Lire Center
"Full-Gospel Church'-', Pastors John &amp;
Pntcy Wade. 603 Second Ave. Mason. 773_50i7, Service time: Sunday 1,0:30 a.m.,
Wednesday 7 pm

Pomeroy
Pastor: · Brian Dunham, WOrSchip - 9:30
a.m .. Sunda~ School- 10:35 a.m.

Rutland .
Pastor: Rick Bourne. Sunday School Y:Jn a.m.. Worship - !0 :_~0 a.m., Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall , Sunday
School- 10: I~ a.m., Wo~hip - 9:15a.m ..
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
Snowrille '
Sunday School - 10 a.m., Wofl&gt;hip- 9 a.m.

Wnr~ bip

. 7 p lll

Chest~r S~huul,

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School · 9 a.m., Wprsh ip • IU a.m.

Pine Grove Bible Hnlines~ Church
112 mi le off Rt. 325. Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley. Sunday Schoo! - 9:30 a.m ..
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wcdne~day Service- 7:]0 p.m.

Rearwallow Ridge Cburth or Christ
Terry, Sunday School -9: .\ 0
a.m.
Worship - IO:l O L\ .m., 6:]0 p.m. ·
Wednesday Si!rvices - 6:30p.m.
Pa stu r :Brun~

Belhel Worship Center
Pastor: Rub Barber,
Assistant Pastor: Karen Da vis. Sunday
WoTShip: 10 am , Evt: ning Worship: 6 pm.
Ynuth group 6 pm. Wednesday: Power in
Pr.zybr, and Bible Study - 7 pm

Min enVIlle
Pastor: Bob· Robinson, Sunday School- 9
a.m .• Wor;ship - 10 ~.m .

Rose or Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland , Pastor: Rev_
Dewey king, Sunday ~ boo! - 9:]0 a.m ..
Sunday worstlip -7 p.m., Wednesday
- pray~r meeting- 7 p.m.

Chul"fh of Christ
Worship - 9:30 a.m., Sunday School I0:30 a.m., Pasmr-Jcffrey Wallace, I St and
3rd Sunday

Communit)' of Ch['ist .
Portland-Racine Rd ., Pa stor ~ Jim Proffitt.
Sunday Sr.:hool - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m .. Wed~esday Ser~iee s - 7:00

He.&amp;th (Mlcldleport)
Pastor: Brian Dunham, Sunday School 9:30a.m .. Wo r~h ip - 11:00 a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Road, Pastor: Charles
McKenzie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - II a.m ., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Service · 7:00p. m.

K~no

Oilsls Christiiln Fello"·ship
(Nan-denomina tional fel lowship)
Meeting~ the old American Legion Hull
South Founh Avenue, Middlepon
Paslor: Chris Stewart 10:00 am Sunday
Olher meetings in homes

Forest Run
Pastor: Bob RobiMon. Sunda~ Schon! - 10
a. m.. Worship - 9 a.m

Dofl\•l,le Holiuess Church
31057 State Route 32~. Langsvllc, Pa stor:
Victor Rou sh. Sunday schOOl - 9:30 a.m.,
S unda~ worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.,
\\ledncsda~: prayer service - 7 P-~-

Middleport Cburth or Christ
5th anJ Main, Pastor: AI Hartson . Youth
Minister: Josh Ulm. Sunday School - 9:30
11.111 ., Worship· 8:1$, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m. ,
Wedne.'\day Services - 7 p.m.

Church of God

II:00 II-III.

Community Chun:h
Pastor: Steve Tomek, Main Stret:t,
l{utland. s·und&lt;lY Worship--10:011 a.m..
Sunday Service- 7 p.m.

..-omeroy West!lide Church of Christ
33220 Children.'s Hom e Rd .. 'Sumla.y
School - I I a.m., \t\lorship - IOa.m .. 6 p.m,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

t"orest'Run.Baptisl
: Arius Hurt, Sunda~ School - _I0
a.m. Worsh i p ~ I I a.m.

Euchari~t

Holiness

Pomtroy Chun"h of Christ
2!2 W. Main St., Minister: Arlthuny
Mnrri~ - Sunday Sc hoo l - 9:]0 o.m.,
Worship- I 0:30 a.m .. 6 p.m., Wednesday
Sen·tces- 7 p.m

Faith Baptist Churth
Railroad S1 ., Mu~on, Sunday School · 10
a.m.. Worsh ip - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sen ·ices- 7 p.m.

Antiquity Bapti!lll
Suhday School - 9:30 a.m., Worsh ip ·
!0:45a.m., Sunday Evening· fi:fXl p.m..
Pa~tor: Don Walker

•

·-

326 E. Main St .. Pomeroy. Sunday Schoo!

•lemlock Grun~ Christian Church
Mil)isrcr: Larry 8fown , Worship - 9:30
a.m, Sunday School - 10:30 a:m.. Bihle
Study- 7 p.m.

Other Churches
An'Jazing Grace Community C.:hureh
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap. St!lte Rt. 68 1.
Tuppers Plain s, Worsh ip: 10:00 am.
Thursday Bible Study 7:00p.m.

Entuprise
Pastor : Ar la nd King, Su nda y SchClol - .
10:30 a.m., Wor~hip - 9:30 a.m. -Bible
Study Wed. 7:30
Flatwoods
Pastm : Keith Rader, Sunday School - 10
a.m ., Worsh ip - II a.m.

Gra~ Eplticopul Church

Hutford Churth of Christ In
Chrisdan Union
HartfpnJ. W.Va., Pastm: David Greer,
Su nday School " 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10 :30 ~. m. , 7:00 p.m. , Wedn.esday
Sen·ices-7:00p.m.

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main ·st . Mtddlepon . Pastor:
Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.. Sunday Schuol ·
9:30a.m., Worship· 10:45 a.m.

(Syr;u.:ul&gt;C), Pastor: Bub Robin~n.
School - 9:4~ a.m .. Worsh1p - II
a.m .. Wedm:stla~ Se rvil:cs- 7:30 p.m.
Sunda~

Episcopal

Church of Christ

Pa~tor

"A Celebration of We"

Wann Fd1•11Jfy

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience cle~

P.O . Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.

Coolville, Ohio

Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6215

m""
""" •• ful~ Oout&gt;&lt;h. "b" q!Wo"' do
~desire ill l - ""-""Jpl

•

c

26 vears In local business ·
Rooting &amp; Bu'ilding Work

(740) 992-64JI

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

A~;bury

Trinity CIJurch
s~eo n d &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy, Pt~ ~ lor : Rev.
. Jomuhan Noble. Worship 10:25 u.m. ,
Sunday Schnol 9: l .'i a.m

Pa~t\lf

'Proud to be apart of your life.
0

Heart Calhulic Chun:h
16! Mulhcrry Ave., Pomcroy1 992-5898.
Pustu r: Rev. Wtther E. Hein l, Sal. COn.
4:-t.'i -.'i: 15p. nl .; Ma ~"- .'i:JO p.m , S_un
Con. -h:45-9:15. ;!.Ill.,. Sun. Mahs - 9:30
a.Ln ., Doily Mass-8:30a.m.

Pastor· Re,-_ Berben Grale. SundB)' SthllOI
- 9:30 a.m.: Worshi p - I I &gt;~ . m . , 6 p m..
Wednesda~ Services- 7 p.m.
Rutland Church ol the Nazart'ne
Sunday School - Y·3U a.m , Wnr ~h ip ·
10:30 a .m., 6:30 p .m .. Wcdncsduy
Service!- 7 p.m.

TUppers l»iains St. Paul
Pa'itor: Jane Beuuic. Sunday Sc hoo l - 9
a.m .. Wor ship · 1ll a.m., Tuesday Scr.·iccs
- 7:30p.m.

Congregational

S~t\:rtd

..-a~wr:

...
.,

Church of God of Prophecy
0.1 . White Rd. uff St. Rt. 160, Pastor: P.J.
Chapman, Su nday School
I0 u.m ..
Worship - 11 a.m ., Wednesday Serv-ices- 7 •
p.m.

Catholic

10:30 a.m ..

Eveni ng-7:30p.m.

Curpenltr Baplist ~hurch
Sunday School · 9:30a m, Prem:hinH
Scn•icc, IO:JOam. _Eveni ng Serv ice
7:00pm, Wedncstlay Bible Study 7:00pm,
Interim Preacher - Ao~d Ross

threatened a lawsuit to prevent public
spending on the religious buildings.

Second BBptist Church
Ravenswood. WV, Sunday School 10 am, Murning wm~hip 11 am Evening - 7 pm,
WL&gt;dnt:sday 7 p.m.

VanZ.md1 und Wurd Rd., Pastor : Jamt's

Community Lenten
service

Plan Lente services

California's historic
missions are falling apart,
preservationists say

7

The Dal

Church Briefs

A Hunger For More

r

Page A~

ettt~

74()-992-6298

Mv 2race is sufficient
for thee: for m11
strenli!th .is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

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

992-6376

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

•

�OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

MEI GS SENIOR
CENTER CROWNS
KING AND QUEEN
'. •.'tJ
~

.

Page AS·

Friday, February 11,

2005

Ohio creating plan to make more transferred college -classes count
JAME$ HANNAH

"It recognizes that the thing
that quakes like a duck at one
school should be recognized as
DAYTON
When a duck at the other school,"
Nicholas Brown transferred to said Bob Fee, senior assistant
Ohio State University as a dea 0 of the McMicken
sophomore, the school. only College of Arts and Sciences
gave him credit for one of two at the University of Cincinnati.
·English classes . and two of . Brown, 24, of Kettering,
three chemistry courses he took needed an extra quarter to get
at Wright State University.
his business degree · because
Brown is among transfer stu- he had to make up classes.
dents who have had to repeat
"That's $2.000 more I
courses, pay extra tuition and spent," Brown said. "I also
· even delay graduation because graduated in the summer. I
classes they took at one college didn't get to graduate with my
don't match those at another in spring class."
·
their degree of study. .
In the 2002-2003 scho9l
The state's 37 public col- year, 27 percent of the stuleges and universities are dents who graduated from a
working on .a new system : four-year public university in
designed to make many cours- Ohio with a bachelor's degree
es more consistent and guaran- had transferred at least 30
tee that they can be transferred hours from another schooL A
and count toward a degree.
majority of the students were
BY

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

from two-year colleges.
ties to · improve the transfer
On average, it took ·transfer system. The plan must be
students from two-year col· finalized by April and goes
leges about 146 semester into effect in 2006.
hours to get their bachelor's. Its objective is to provide
degrees~ compared to 140 consistency in general educahours for students who attend- tion courses that students
ed only one four-year college . . mu'st . take early in college
Jennifer Morrow, 40, before upper-level classes in
attended colleges in Ohio, their majors.
·
Kentucky and Texas otT and
In some cases, schools have
on before enrolling at Wright to rewrite their currioull!m to . ·
State in Dayton.
.
comply with the plan. Some
Many classes she took else- schools simply have to agree
where don't count toward her that their courses are consisbachelor's degree in educa- tent in content and will be
tion at Wright State.
transferrable.
"I was kind of blown away,"
At least 35 states have proshe said. "I don't like thai I'm grams in which general eduhaving to take some stuff over . cation courses transfer from
again. lt 's just frustrating. "
college to college a~ a pack. After hearing complaints age, according to Carol
from students, the Legislature Schneider, president of the
in 2003 ordered the state's Association of American
public colleges and universi- Colleges and Universities.

S.arcats beat Xavier, Page B2
Rio hoops action, Page B3
NHL lockout update, Page B4

\

LOCA-L
SCHEDULE
(REGULAR SEASON)

Todav

.

Boys Baakt'lblll

GalKa Academy at Marietta ·
Meigs at VInton County
Eastern at Millar .
Southern at.Trimble
Buffalo at South Gallia
(]&gt;JC at Cross lanes
Roa,: Hill at River,Vatley, 6 p.m. ...
Girls Basketball
(]&gt;JC at Cross lanes

· · Saturday, Feb. 12
· , Boys llaakillball
Soulh Gallla at.Oak Hill, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, &amp;·p.m.
Olrl• Basketball
Sclotovllle at South Gattla, .

ovc

School

ALL

~

'Chesapeake ............ t8·t ......9-0
Coal Grove ................ 9-9 ........6-3
River Valley ...............9-tO .... ..4-5
South Point .... .-..........8-11 ..... .4-4
Fairland .....................3-t5 ......2·7
Rock Hil1 ..................... 5·t2 ...... t-7

SEOAL

School

ALL
SEQ
Warren .... .................. tS-3 ......8-1
logan ........................ t2-6 ..... .7-2
Jackson ..................... t6-3 ......6-3
Marietta .................... .7-tt ......3·6
Gallia Academy .........7-12 ....:.2-7
Athens .......................2-16 ...... 1-8

Beth Ser&amp;enlfpholo

TVC ·
Ohio Division

School

ALL

M

Belpre ........................ t3-5 ......8-t ·
VInton County ........... t2-6 ....._.7•2
Alexander .................. t2-7 ......5·4
Meigs ........................ 9-10 ...,A-5
Nelsonville-York....... ..? -11 ...... 3-6
Wellston ....................2-17 ......0-9
H®king Divtston

. ALL . M

School

BRAND •w 200 5 CHm SILVERADO
414PICIUP
¥011• UN 1... S..ti Rtdo

s..,_.., DIW 11ft. &lt;Mior

Federal Hocking ........ tS-3 ......8-t
Eastern ..................... t5-3 ......6-2
Trimble ....................... t3-5 .. .... 6·2
Southern ...................5·14 ......3·6
Miller ....... ..................7-12 ......2-7
Waterford ..................3·16 ...... t·8

. BRANDNEW 2005 CHEVY COlORADO
.
CREW CAB 414

. . , .....

ll T"" ,_.., 3500 H ' - ' D., T1ol Ciuo

OTliERS
South Gallia ............................ 14-4
ovcs '""'''''"'""""""'"""'""' 1·t7

GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL

ovc

School

Bille NEW 2005 SilVERADO
3/4 ION HD Ell. Cll 414
6100 Y-1 r..,.. I•IZ•• A~ ......... AII/FM s-

ALL

·~

•south Point ,............. t8-2 ...... 11HJ
Chesapeake .........:.... t3-8 ......7-3 .
tFairland .................. 9-12 ......6-4
tCoai .Grove ........... ,.. t2-9 .. : ... 5·5
IRiver Valley ............. 3-17 ...... 1-9
IRock Hill .................. 2·15,...... 1·9

BRAND NEW 2005 CHIVY
TRllllllZIR lS 414

SEOAL .

4210 ~•1• o-~a~tt 1 s,_ Cnloo &amp; 111

School

ALL
SEQ
*Marietta ..... ............... 12-8 ......7&lt;~

•warren ..................... t4-6 ......7-3
logan ........................t2-9 ......6-4
Gallia Academy ......... t2·8 .... ..4·6
IIJackson ................... tt -10 .. ..4-6
Athens .. ................... ..?-13 ......2-8

TVC
Friday, February 11

28. Skies will range from
mostly clear to partly cloudy
with 5 to I 0 MPH winds from
the west iurning from the
southwest as the overnight·
progresses.

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will rise to 33
with today's low of 21 occur- ·
ring around 6:00am. Skies
will be sunny with 5 MPH
winds from the west.
Afternoon (1,6 p.m.)
Saturday, February 12
Temperatures will rise from
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
35 early afiemoon to the high
Temperatures will climb
for the day of 37 at2:00pm as from 28 to 42 by late this momthey drop back down to 31 ing .. Skies will be mostly sunny
later this afternoon. Skies will with 5 to 15 MPH winds from
be sunny ,with 5 to 10 MPH the southwest turning from the
winds from the west.
west as the morning progresses.
E11ening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Afternoon (1·6 p.m.)
Temperatures will linger at
Temperatures will rise from
29. Skies will be clear to part- 44 early this afternoon to 45 by
ly cloudy with 5 to 10 MPH 3:00pm then drop down to 37
winds from the west.
late afternoon. Skies will be
O.,etnight (1-6 a.m.)
sunny to mostly sunny with5 to
Temperatures will hover at . 15 MPH winds from the west.

School

BRAND •w 200 5 Cllm SILVERADO
1/2 TON CRIW:Cll 414
17' . _ Wloolr. ,._wWowo&amp; loeb, HI I....... ,....,.

l:hlr:k 111 , .. Great

.

DuPont- 50.63
Federal Mogul- .35
Gannett- 80.29
General Electric- 36.05
GKNLY'-4.62
Harley DIVIdaon...., 60.73
.JPM-37.45
Kmld-99.74
Kroger- 17.30
Ltd.- 24.03
.,

NSC-35.79
Oak Hill Financial- 37.49
OVB-34.13
BBT-39.96
Peoplee- 27.41
Pepalc:o- 55.16
Premier- 10.85
Rockwell- 59.70
Rocky Boote- 31.22
RD Shell- 58.56
. SBC'"-24.10
Sear.a- 51.03
USB-30.12
Wei-Mart- 52.26
Wendy'•- 40.59
Worthington- 20.49
Dally stock repor1l are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous dly'1 traniiCtlonl, provided by Smith
Plrtnera ilt Aclveet Inc. of
Gallipolis.
1

ALL

SchOol ,

M .

Dealslo• •••IIIJ 11 certme• ose• vehicles! ·

ALL

M

'Trimble .................20-t ......9-t
•waterford .: .............. .16·4 ......9·1
IEastern ................... t3-8 ......5·5
iiFederal Hocking ...... t0-t1 ....5-5
Southern ................... 7-14 .... :.1-9
tMiller ........ .. ............. 6-15 ...... t-9
OTliERS
ovcs ,.... ,.. ,,.:............ ,,,, :.........9,10
#South Gallia ..........................5-14
• - clinched league title
t - final record

2004 .CHIVY

CAVALIIR SIDO

Girls Tournament Scoies

2004 CHIVY
IMPII.ISIDIII

DIVISION I
Athens 64. JacksOn 62 ·
Unioto 50, McDermoh NW 4B
Vinton County 49, Fairland 39
Wash. C.H. Miami Trace 36, Circleville 35
DIVISlONIII
Ironton 42, Wheelersburg 22
Lynchburg-Clay 57, Cool Grove 34
Minford 48, New,Lexington 32
Oak Hill 59, Chillicothe Huntington 42
DIVSION IV
'
SoutheaStern 35. Eastern 34
Trimble 79, Southern 39
Lucasville Valley 64, Ports. Sclotovllle 31

Local Stocks
ACI-36.10
AEP-34.63
Alczo-41.53
Ashland Inc.- 62.54
AT&amp;T-19.38
. BLI-11.89
Bob Evan•- 22.74
BorgWamer- 52.79
Champion- 4.05
Charming Shop1- 8.24
City Holding- 32.55 ·
Col--'45.01
DG-21.83

Ohto Division

'INelsonville-York ..... t4-7 ......9-t
Vinton Co .. :............... t2·9 ......8-2
Belpre ........................ t3-8 ......7-3
Alexander ................ ,. 6-15 ......3·7
Meigs ...... .. ............. ..7-1'4 ...... 2-8
IWellston ................. .2-t9 ...... 1·9
Hocking Division

. . . NEW 2005 CHIVY
TAHOE lS 414 .

Portsmouth Clay 58, Paint Valley 47

20MIUICIMUI.U
SIDIII
• Jo!lw l'wr. ...... • Alta Whok

•&lt;... &amp;111

•&lt;IS_SJ_

2004 POIITIAC MOIITAU
11111DIDVO
•1•1101&amp;/li •CIS-

· 2004 CHIVY AS1RO lS
AWDYO
•Reor 1101 UC • Alta VBMio

• ( ... &amp; 111

• DMp .'llltGiost • Pwr. Wlo.. &amp;

••.,.... ""'

Upcomlfll 1ames
• MIG v-4
•.....
Wio....

PREP BASKETBALL

Eastern clawed by
Panthers in sectional
BY BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@ mydailytribune.com
THE PLAINS -All good
things come to an end, especially during tournament
time.
That was the case for
Eastern Thursday, dropping a
35-34 heartbreaker in the
Division IV sectional final at
Athens High SchooL
The Eagles fell behind 138 after one qlfarter of. play,
then gradually whittled away
at the ·Panthers ' .(16-5)
advantage to take a one-point
lead with I :24 remaining in
the contest.
A Jay•up by Southeastern's
Kristen Monroe with 44 sec- ·
onds left proved to be the
clincher that allowed the
Scioto Valley Conference
schoor to advance, while
sending a regional qualifier
over the previous two seasons-home.
Afterward, EHS coach
Rick Edwards was dejected
about . the outcome, but
stayed positive when reflecting on what this group. has
been able to accomplish dur-

DIVISION II

Sectlon•l Fin ..
81 the Untv. of Rio Grinde
·Meigs versus Gallla Academy, 1 p.m.
Warren ven~us Waverly, 2:45 p.m.
DIVISION Ill

S.C:IIonll Flnll
· Ill W.lloton High School
.Zane Trace versus Alexander, 1 p.m.

S.C:IIonol Fino!
ot Athenl High Sc'-1
Waterford versus Crooksville, 1 p.m.
Symmes Valley versus Green; 2:45p.m.

MONDAY- SATURDAY 9 am · 8 pm • SUNDAY 1pm · 7pm • 422-0756 • TOLL FREE 1-800-822-0417
r

~

.. North-·

High -

New Bosion versuS Leesburg, 1 p.m.

E.,rn Pike versus Whiteoak, 2:45p.m.

ing
their
m
days
Green aDd
White.
"It's just
one of those
things, it's
high school
basketball .
Your emotions
are
M. Weber
strong and
everyone
gets tight," said Edwards . "I
am just so proud .of the girls
for all the hard work and
what we have accomplished
during the time - that they
have been here. Those girls
mean a lot, they've continued a long tradition of girls
basketball."
SEHS avenged last year's
district loss by contolling the
glass 29-22, including a 14-8
edge ·ill offensive rebounding, and holding the Eagles
without a field goal over the
final 12:51 of the second
half. ·
However, Eastern overcame its shooting woes at the
free throw line, netting 15 of
17 tries· at the stripe. None
were bigger than at the I :24

of the fourth , when EHS
claimed its first and only
lead of the contest.
Krista .White ' nailed the
.back end of a pair, giving
Eastern a 34-33 lead . It also
capped an eight of I 0 effort
at the stripe in that frame.
Monroe's score came on
an out-of-bounds play following a timeout with 47.5 ·
remaining. allowing Eastern
to set up a final play.
Eastern had one last
chance with 7.5 remaining
on the clock, but Morgan
Weber's 10-foot jumper
went short and landed in
Monroe's arms as the buzzer
sounded.
Monroe finished with four
points and four blocks. with
Nikki
Youn~
leading
Southeastern wuh 14 points
and · 13 rebounds, I 0 · of
which came on the offensive
end .
"We knew that they were
going to be a very tough
rebounding team," elaborat- .
ed·Edwards. "The Young girl
Bryan WaHeralphoto
has a very good nose for the
Easterh 's Krista White, right, prepares to shoot ·past
basketball ."
.Southeastern ·defender Ashton Hice. White finished with eight
Ple•se see Eagles, Bl
points in the 35-34 loss to Southeastern Thursday.

Southern falls ·to TrimbleJn sectional final
BY ScoTT WOLFE
Sports correspondent

defensive intensity with full
court pressure and Southern
panicked . That . ignited .a
string
of
THE PLAINS - It was
eight straight
David versus Goliatb, but
S outhe.rn
without an initial knockout
turnovers
punch from the 11ndetdog,
and · fueled
Goliath Trimble responded in
the Trimble
a thunderous way to claim a ·
offense io
girls' Division IV sectional
the tune of ·
championship with a 79"39
13-2.
win over the Southern Lady
Southern
Tornadoes Thursday night at
used its third
Athens High SchooL
time out of the frame , but the
Southern (7-14) lost its bid snowball continued to grow
for a fourth straight sectional · at a rapid pace. Julie Trace
title and a return trip to the picked up on Grandy's frusdistrict, while No. 8 Trimble trations and spearheaded the
(20- 1) continues its quest for Trimble assault with seven
a state championship and first quarter points as the first
return · .trip to the regional frame ended at· 18-4.
where it lost to Berlin Hiland
Southern's half court game
· last spring. Trimble
face was not !hat bad, but the
the Lucasville Valley at turnovers again st the press
Wellston next Thursday in the thwarted Southern's chances
first round of the districts.
of survivaL SHS senior
Southern lost some of its Brooke Kiser and freshman
punch before the game even Sarah Eddy had ihe lone two
started, when leading scorer, Tornado fi eld goals.
junior Kristiina Williams was
Sou them showed some
sidelined Tuesday with a early' promise in the second
severe ankle sprain. Not only round. but poor shooting, two
did Southe111 miss Williams ' few rebounds, and 15
12 point average and ball han- turnovers bv halftime drastidling capabilities, but also her cally hindered their cause.
defensive skills.
Roush·. with help fro m Kiser.
Southern. senior Ashley held· Grandy to nine at the
Roush, however, picked .up half. but the rest of the
her def~nsive game and put Tornadoes had trouble finding
the wraps on Jennifer Grandy, Julie Trace, who ended the
who ent~red averaging 36 half with 15 points.
points per game . Roush held . Southern's Kiser had six at
Grandy to just two first quar- intermi ss ion. while Joanne
ter points.
Pickens haq a good second
Despite
three · · early round with . four points .
turnovers, Southern managed Trimble led 39- 12 at the half.
to control the early tempo
The second hal f was acade•
Bryan Walteralphoto somew hat and at the 4: 19 mic, although Southern did
Southern 's Ashley Roush (14) dribbles past the defense ofTrimble 's Hannah Faires (20 ) dur- mark trailed by just 4-0. Then have some bright spots from
ing the fi[St half of Thursday's sectional contest. Roush finished with five · points in the the giant awakened in a huge
Please see Southem; Bl
Tornadoes' 79-39 Joss at McAfee Gymnasium.
way. Trimble picked up the

will

.

'

Lady Buckeyes tame Wolverines, 72-39
BY RUSTY MIUER

'aturday

••(Ill
'""''
.. &amp;""'
111

Westfall Yeraus Belpre, 2:45 p.m.
11 lucoovllle Volley High School
South Point versus Portsmouth. 1 p.m.
Eastern Brown vs Chesapeake, 2:45 p.m.
DIVISION IV

~ ------

'Friday, February 11, 2005

Associated Press

• Tues. "•· flh Ftes uta. RHatelndudtd In sGtt prke of new vehidtllsted where applicable.
''On ''provt4 atdlt. On slleclltl models. Hat responsible f11 lypfllrophkol err01s.
Prim good ~ 1Oth Ihrough Fekuary 131ft

'•'

.

.

BOYS PREP BASKETBALL

After tallying 75 votes, Mary lou Hawkins of Middleport was
elected queen and Jimmie Cummins of Pomeroy was elected
king of the Meigs County Senior Center's Valentine's Day party.
The Pomeroy Rower Shop donated an arrangement of flowers
for Hawkins and a boutonniere for Cummins. Ruth Ward and
Mary·lou Hawkins donated homemade candy and other center
volunteers assembled party favors for the occasion.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

COLUMBUS Ohio
State could have taken over
the No. i spot in the rankings had Tennessee knocked
off top-ranked LS U on
Thursday night.
Yet Buckeyes coach Jim
Foster claimed he wasn' t
even aware of that show down.
"Are
they
playing
·. tonight?" he replied.
Single-minded Ohio State
continued on its hot streak,
winning its 12th in a row
with a 72-39 victory over
Mi chigan on. Thursday

1

night.
All season, the Buckeyes
(23-2, 10-1 Big' Ten) have
turned a blind eye to any
and all distractions .
Asked what teatns he
feared in the five remaining
conference games , Foster
said, " Iowa. That 's who we
play next. And that 's the
only thing we ha~e on o.ur
minds ."
.
One of the Buckeyes' supporting cast, Ashley Ailen
got her team untracked after
a slow start by scoring half
of the points in a 10-0 first~
half run .
"You can try to stop who

you think their leading scarers are, who they run their
offense through, and then
all of .a sudden, almost ~ny­
body comi ng off the be.nch
can really do a lot of
things,'' said Michigan
coach Cheryl Burnett.
Jessi\a Davenport had 16

points and II rebound s for
Ohio · State struggled in
Ohio State (43 -2, 10-1 .Big the first 10 minutes and led ·
Ten). which improved to just
14-10 after the
15-0 ai home thi s season. Wolverines' Ta 'S h.ia Walker
Kim Wilburn added I 0 hit a turnaround in the lane.
point s in a 'reserve role .
Davenport , shut down by
Eleven Buckeyes scored, multiple defenders. started a
nine had assists and 10 had 10-point run with ·a free
rebounds.
throw and then blocked a
"We have a lot of different shot at the other end before
looks," Foster said. "We can Wilburn scored on a transihave a diffe rent team on the tion basket. Allen then stole
floor than the nne they pre- the 15all fro m Walker ·and
pared to play."
dribbled the lengtl) of the .
Tabitha Pool scored 10 fl oor for a layup . After
points and was the lone another turnover by the
player in do.uble figures for Wolverine s.
Davenport
the Wolverines (5- 18. 1-11 ), ban ked 'in a shor•t shot
who have lost fiye in a row ·
PINse.sM OSU, Bl
and 14 of 15.
f

•

�J

I

Friday, February u,
Page 82 .• The Daily Sentinel

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Bearcats handle Xavier
in Queen City Shootout
and three blocked shots.
The Bearcats Jed by only six
at halftime, then tumed up the
intensity with their man-to-.
CINClNl\ATl - For 20 man defense. Xavier went
tense
minutes,
Xavier without a field goal for the first
appeared to be getting ready to 8 1/2 minutes of the second
pull off another arena-hushing half.
.
· upset. Eric Hi~:ks ami Jason
CincinMii 's defense leads
MaJdell
then
cut . the the nation in forcing errant
Musketeers down to their shots, holding opponents to
diminished size.
36.2 percent from the tield.
The two bulky Cincinnati The Musketeers managed only
power forwards dominated 33.3 percent and got outre,
Xavier's depleted front line bounded 43-36.
Thursday night, leading the
'We just pride omselves on
No. 21 Bearcats to a 65-54 vic- making them take the hardest
tory in the city's annual· shots possible, and it really
crosstown grudge match.
pays off for us," said forward
The Bearcats ( 18-5) used Armein Kirkland, who had 12
their biggest ;tdvantage - the points for Cincinnati.
one upfront - while pulling
Besides playing on its home
away to only their third victo- court, Cincinnati had the
ry in the last nine games · advantage of a healthy front
against the Musketeers ( 11-9), line. Three of Xavier's post
who had neither the size nor players are hurt, including
the exjJerience to pull off the leading scorer and rebounder
upset.
Brian Thomton.
'They have big guys who . For about a minute midway
make it hard for you to make through the first half, Xavier
your move," said Will Caudle, had three freshmen on the
Xavier's only healthy post tloor.
player. "They were flying
Maxiell and Hicks, a pair of
around and getting blocked power forwards who are.
shots."
brawnier and more experiHicks had 16 points and 12 enced than anyone on Xavier's
rebounds. Maxiell got the rims front line, set the tone by scarshaking with two emphatic ing II of Cincinnati's ftrSt 15
dunks that helped Cincinnati points.
take control in the second half,
"We do that with anybody,"
and finished with 15 points Hicks said. "It doesn't matter

who we're playing against.
Whatever's working that
night. we're going to go to it."
Thornton, who mi ssed the
last two game with severe tendinitis in his lower left leg,
moved
gingerly
during
wannups with the · calf
wrapped. He played for only a
few minutes at a time and had
limited movement, finishing
with only five· points and one
rebound in 13 minutes.
Stanley Burrell led Xavier
with 12 points.
Without Thornton , Xavier
was left with only one healthy
post player. Xavier masked the
deficiency by opening in a
zone defense that worked initially. Cincinnati held a slim
lead for most of the first half,
but couldn't pull away.
A pair of off-balance
jumpers by slumping point
guard Jihad Muhammad put
Cincinnati ahead 28-22 at halftime and revved a capacity
crowd that was getting a little
anxious about Xavier staying
so close.
There was reason for the
angst: Xavier had won the last
two games on . Cincinnati's
court. The Musketeers also
pulled off the biggest upset.of
the crosstown series on the
same court in 1996, beating
the No. !-ranked Bearcats on
Lenny Brown's jumper at the
buzzer.

BY JoE KAY

. Associated Press

\

osu

from Page 81
before Allen hit a 3-pointer
frorn the top of the circle.
Allen finished with seven
points, four assists and four
steals.
"We were just trying to
stay in the passing Janes,''
Allen said. "You do that and
you can get a couple of

Friday, February u,

www.mydailysentinel.com

layups."
Ohio State continued to
pull away after BreAnne
McPhilamy . hit a short
jumper for Michigan, with
Tia Battle making a peri meter )um~er ~nd _Wilburn
sconng. stx pOints m a row •
by kntfmg through the la.ne
for layups.
The Buckeyes scored 20 .
of the last 25 points in the
opening half to lead 34-15
at the break, then scored \3
of the. first 14 in the second
.

not specify when the alleged
infraction took place.
Geiger
told
The
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer that
two current players recefved
invoices from the orthodontist saying they owed nothing
and assumed their insurance
had paid for tile work. He said
three or four 'other players in
the past five years could have
also been involved. ·.
The school reported the situation to the NCAA, which
approved continued ·eligibility for the two current players,
Geiger said.
"It's in hand. We' re looking
at it," Geiger told The
Associated Press.
The school's athletic

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Redwomen lose to top-ranked Cedarville
Bv

with 12 :15 remammg in the
first half when play resumed.
The Redwomen kept it close
RIO GRANDE - The for a few minutes ·but then
began to self-destruct with
University of Rio Grande turnovers.
Redwomen basketball team,
Cedarville (27-1, 15-0
ranked 18th in the latest AMCS) took advantage of the
NAlA Division II Top 25 poll , mistakes and built the lead to
lost for the second time this · 10 points at the half, 39-29.
week 83-65 to NAIA No. I
The Red women got no closCedarville Tuesday evening at er than eight points in the secthe Newt Oliver Arena. It was ond half at 58-50.
the resumption of the susThe Lady Jackets placed
pended game from Jan. 13.
·four players in double figures
Rio Grande (20-8, 9-5 led by Kari Flunker's 20
AMCS) was leading 12-9 points. Brittany Smart added

department has faced a series
of NCAA investigations into
its football and men's basketball programs over the past
three years.
The series of public relations fiascos included the suspension of · former star running Maurice Clar~tt for lying
to investigators during an
NCAA probe of allegations
that . he received improper
benefits from a family friend.
In December, the school
imposed a one-year postseason tournament ban on its
men 's basketball team over
an alleged $6,000 payment to
a recruit by tormer coach Jim
O'Brien.

MARK WILLIAMS

Special to Sentinel

..

BY ,MARK WILLIAMS

mance against the Yellow
. Jackets. Vandall totaled 20
points in 36 minutes.
RIO . GRANDE _ The
Cedarville however, weathUniversity of Rio Grande . erect the early barrage by
Vandall and came back to
Red
men
.
basketball
team
grab·
the lead and extend ,.t to
b k
1
ro e a three-game home os- 37-30 with 2:42 remaining in
ing
·
· skid
N in a big way. down-. the opent'ng half.
. mg
AlA Divis.ion No.I\
The vellow
Jackets
.
t·
o
ok
a
''
· Cedarville, 76-71, Tuesday 43-37 lead to the halft·,· rne
· evening at the Newt Oliver · locker room and carried the
Arena. It was a m.ake-up advantage into the second
game from the Jan. 13 post- half. · Rio regained, the lead at
ponement due to a power out- 52-50 at the I0:55 mark,
age.
again bei'ng sparked by
Rio Grande (18-9, 7-7 Vandall.
. AMCS) got started quickly as
The lead vaulted back-andsenior guard Cain Vandall forth until late in the contest
continued his lethal · long when Rio Grande grabbed the
range shooting, giving Rio a advantage and held ort for a
quick
9-2
lead.
The huge upset victory.
Huntington native picked up
Senior
forward
Sean
where he left off from Plummer
followed
up
Tuesday night. Vandall natled Vandall 's 20 points with 14
8-of-ll . 3-point attempts points and six rebounds.
against
Wilberforce
on Junior
guard · Cedric
Tuesday. He followed ·that Hornbuckle added 12 points.
effort with a 6-of-8 perfor- Senior Dawayne Mcintosh

from Page81
Ashton Hice and Ashley
McCray rounded out the
Blue and White's scoring
with nine and eight respctively:
·
Eastern senior Morgan
Weber finished her final
'contest with 14 points, four
caroms and an assist, while
classmate Krista White
ended with eight points and
. a steal. Jennifer . Hayman
had two points and six
nebounds.
The loss also ended the
career of senior Cassie
Nutter.
Erin Weber and Jessie
Hupp rounded · out the

Bryan Walters/photo

Eagles' scoring with six and · 8 overall mark.
four markers, respectively.
. Southeastern 35, Eastern 34
Southeastern led 21-17 a.t
Eastern
- 34
intermission and held a 27- RossSE 813 89 69 88-35
26 edge after three quarters
EASTERN (13-8) - Krista White 3 2-3
of play.
Morgan Weber 2 9-10 14, Erin Weber ·
Edwards felt the closeness 8,
2 2-2 6. Janna Hupp 0 0-0 0, Jessie
of those scores retlected the Hupp 1 2·2 4, Jennifer Hayman 1 0-0 2.
'
similarities of the teams . He TOTALSc 9 15·17 34.
SOUTHEASTERN (16-5) - Ashton
also felt that a great basket- Hice 4 0-0 9. Julie Patterson 0 0-0 0,
ball game had just taken Ashley McCray 3 2·2 8, Kristen Monroe .
0-0 4, Nikki Young 7 0-0 14, Terra
place, maybe a little sooner 2·
K1nzer 0 0-0 0. Megan Pummill 0 0-0 0.
than it should have.
TOTALS c 16 2·2 35.
"I think you saw a districi Three-point goals: E - 1 (M. Weber) :
final game there. Those are SE- 1 !Hice).
two of the better teams playTeam atatlstlcSilndivldual leaders
ing each other in the section- EASTERN: 9·35 FG (.257), 1·6 3PG
15·17 FT (.882). 22'rebounds (E .
al final ," he commented. (.167),
Weber 8), 8 offensive rebounds (M .
"Nobody . wanted to play Weber 3), 5 assists (Jes.' Hupp 4), 7
either of us so they matched steals (Jes. Hupp 4), 1 block (E. Weber).
1_7 turnovers . a fouls .
us up against one another." SOUT~EASTERN:
16·47 FG I 340). 1·9
Eastern finished third (5-5) 3PG (.111). 2-2 FT (1.00) , 29 rebounds
in the Tri-Valley Conference , (Young 13). 14 ollenslve rebounds
10). 2 assists (Hice, McCray). 9
Hocking division during the (Young
steals (Young 4). 4 blocks (Monroe 4), 12
regular season and had a 13- turnovers, 14 fouls.

. Notice of Second Public Hearing

MORE

LOCAL NEWS.

Trimble was led · by 2 0-0 5, Joanne Pickens 5 0-3 11, Jordan
Nelgler 0 0-1 d. Mallory Hill 0 0-0 0, Adelle
Grandy's 28 points, Trace. Rice 0 0-0 0, Bethany yance 0 0-0 0,
with 20, six each ·from Alicia Ashley Robie 0 0-0 0, Amber Hill o 0-0 o,
'
Eddy 1 0·0 2. TOTALS.:... 16 2·11
from Page 81
Andrews, Hannah Faires, Sarah
39.
Abby Withem, and Tabby TRIMBLE - Jenny Sikorski 0 0·0 0, Julie
Trace 9 2-2 20, Megan Vore 0 0-0 0, Alicia
its younger players. Rou sh Jenkins with three from An*ews 3 0-0 6, Andra Hooper 0 0-0 0,
had a strong third frame to go Carrie· Woodgerd, and Allie Hannah Faires 3 0·0 6.Abby Withem 3 0·0
6, Jennifer Grandy 11 2·3 28, Allie Jago 1
with a nice stint. from junior Jago with two.
0-0 2. Carrie Woodgerd 2 1-2 3, Tabb
Subscribe todav.
Kasie Sellers. Both ended the
Southern · was led by Jenkins 3 0-0 6 TOTALS- 34 5-7 79.
''
.
3-polnl Goala: Southern' 6 (linda Eddy 2,
992-2155 .
frame with five points and Pickens with II points, Kiser Kiser,
Sellers. Roush. Pickens), Trimble 6
five for the game. Kiser also with three, Linda Eddy with (Jennifer Grandy 4, Trace 2).
hit a three in a frame that saw · eight 'in a great' game off the .JXIXIX%IIII%I%IIIIIIIIIIIIXXI%IIIIII%%%III;4
Trimble's Grandy stay on the . bench, and five each from
, floor to pick up 12 points. Roush and Sellers. Sarah
most of which came on run- Eddy added two.
offs on the fast break: The
Southern hit 16-of-32 field
thir&gt;l period ended at 64-25.
goals overall, had only 17
Both clubs played even and rebounds.. led by Pickens
substituted freely most of the with five, and 21 turnovers . ·
.
final round. Southern's
Trimble hit 34-of-56 floor
Pickens had seven points in shots and collected 25
.
.
the finale; and junior guard rebounds, b.ut turned it over
Linda Eddy had eight points just eight times.
for all of Southern's scoring. · Southern hosts Wahama on
Southern substituted its Monday in the regular season
seniors into the . game for a finale for senior night.
final curtain · calL The four
seniors-Roush, Kiser, Jordan
Trimble 7t, Southern 3t
Southern 4
e 13 115 - 3e
Neigler, and Pickens- were Trtmoto 1e 21 ae te - 79
part of a 56·32 record over
&lt;
Th fi 1 IOUTHIAN - Whltnoy Wo"e·Rifllo 0 0·
the Iast 10Ur years.
e Ina 0 0. BrO&lt;&gt;ko Kloor 3 2-5 9, Keelo Solloro 2
" score stood at 79-39.
fll-1 e, Lindo Eddy 3 0.1 s, Asnloy Rouon
IIIIIIIIIXX~XIXXIXXXXIXXXXXXXXXXXXIXXXXX

MORE

LOCAL FOLKS.

0 Ll IT ·~I

· ~ on the number of Bingo !i
Cards you can play. •
Cards in your Saturday,
February 26, 2005 paper
.

•

now we've got a huge advantage on some people because
we
have
split . with
Cedarville."
"It's a huge win for us all
the way around," he added.
"We had some guys that just
stepped up big time."
Rio Grande has won two
straight and will look to build
on the current momentum
Saturday night. The Red men
play host Tiftin at 8 p.m.

Associated Press

Eagles

r'

Rio shot 42 percent (25-of60) from. the field, 4 percent
(7-of-16) from 3~nt land
and 70 percent ( 19-of-27)
from the charity stripe.
Cedarville countered with 41
percent (28-of-69) from the
field, 21 percent (6-of-28)
from 3-point land and 56 percent (9-of-16) from the foul
line.
The rebounds were dead
even . at 43-43. Both teams

BY JAYMES SONG

Eastern 's Jessie Hupp, right, dribbles past Ashton Hice of Southeastern during Thursday's
sectional game. Hupp had ~our points, two reoounds, four assists and four steals in the 3534 loss to the Panthers at Athens High School.

Southern

and junior Reg~ie Williamson took outstanding care of the
continued the1r determined basketball. Rio Grande posted
play on the glass, recording II turnovers while Cedarville
I0 and eight caroms respec- turned it over only nine times.
lively.
Rio Grande Head Coach
Cedarville (21-7. 11-4 Earl Thomas was relieved to '
AMCS) was Ie d bY the dou- get a wtn
· once again on the
ble-double performance of horne court.
"Especially
M ugabe Th omas Wtt
· h 13 agamst
· that cal'b
f
1 er o compe·
d
pomts and 13 reboun s. He titian," Thomas said. "This·
. a1SO d.IS hed OUt SIX
· aSSIStS.
·
·
b'
· &lt;
d
Win SO tg, not JUSt 10f Stan ·
Ryan Short and .Anthony in·gs and our psyche and so
Delimpoeachadded 12points on, but right now what that
and Jason Weakley chipped in means is, if we happen to end
!0.
· up in a tie-breaker .situation

lan McNemar/photo

Rio's Cain Vandal, right, looks for an open teammate while
oeing defended by Cedarville. URG won 76·71.

.Giambi apologizes Brees wants ·long-term deal with Chargers
but he won't
:say the'S' ~ord
KAPOLEI, Hawaii
Drew Brees came to Hawaii
four years ago as a college
all-star, looking to impress
NFL teams at the Hula BowL
Brees is back on the
islands, practicing with, the
league's best and preparing
for his first appearance in the
·pro BowL And he's looking
for respect and a long-term
contract from the San Diego
Chargers.
.
Less than a year after San
Diego all but'gave up on him
by selecting Philip Rivers on
draft day, Brees is still basking in the glow of his superb
season ~nd the Chargers' run
to the AFC West title.
His performance at the end
of ·his four-year contract
earned him a, spot alongside
Peyton Manning and Tom
Brady on the AFC roster for
the NFL's all-star game
Sunday. It also made ·him one
of the NFL's most attractive
free agents, but Brees would
rather remain with the club
that didn't seem eager to
stick with him.
·
''I want to stay in San

$120 million, seven-year conAss.ociated Press
tract he was given before the
2002 season. Steinbrenner
NEW . YORK _· Jason frwk!e~k~ a~~ by telephone a
Giambi is sorry. He just would"The biggest thing that I told
n't say for what.
· him was f wa&gt;n't a .quitter,"
The All-Star ftrst baseman Giarnbi said. "f told him that I
twiddled his thumbs, crossed was ready to play, and I was
his legs and fidgeted in his chair ~oing to be,, that player that he
when he came to Yankee ad stgned.
.
Stadium on Thursday to make
Yankees · teammate Gary
his first public comments since Sheffield said last October he
it was reported in December unwittingly used substances
that he told a federal grand jury thai contained stem ids. He was
he took steroids for at least the team's most productive hitthree seasons.
ter last season and faced Jess
"When I went into that grai:KI scrutiny than Giambi.
jury, I told the truth," he said.
Giambi said he was pleased
He said he was sorry .five with the agreement between
times. He apologized three players and owners for mane
times.
frequent testing for perforTo the New York Yankees. To mance-enhancing drugs.
his teammates. To the fans.
He said he had not read the
But he never said why. And San Francisco Chronicle story,
he never talked about using which cited transcripl&gt; of Ius
steroids, never mentioned the 2003 grand jury testimony, and
word.
he would not say whether the
"I know the fans might want newspaper's neport was accu:
mone, but at this present time rate.
·
because of all the legal matters,
The 2000 AL MVP with
I can't get into specifics;" he Oakland, his numbers dropped
said. "Someda&gt;', hopefully, I in the second half of the 2003
will be able to.'
season when he had a knee
On this day, though, Giambi injury. He slumped to .208 with
wasn't telling all.
1'2 homers and 40 RBls and
'There's been a lot of distrac- was n'ever healthy last year. The
: tion, definitely, over the last Yankees even dropped him
year, and I'm sorry for that, I from their postseason roster.
i'eally am." Giambi said. "I feel
"I think w~'re all curious to
I let down the fans, 1 feel I let see how he's going to rebound
down the media, I feel I let from everything he .went
down the Yankees, not only the through last year," Torre said.
Yankees, but my teammates.
"I accept full responsibility "He certainly looks better than
. for that," he went on. ''I'm he did."
sorry, but I'm trying to go forTorre toyed with tiatting
ward now. Most of all, to the orders last week and given the
fans, I'm sorry. 1 know it's uncertainty, he didn't know
going to be hard, and 1 under- where to slot Giambi, who
stand how they feel."
could be supplanted by Tino
Only 10 days before he's M&lt;!rtinez at first base and
schedu Jed to neport to spring become a designated hitter.
training, Giambi met with print
One of the few topics Giambi
. neporters for 43 minutes, with specifically addressed was Jose
general
manager
Brian Canseco 's book, which is being
Cashman, manager Joe Torre released next week. The New
and Tellem at his side. He later York Daily New s reponed
did another interview session Sunday that Canseco says in the
for television and radio.
book that he, Giambi and Mark
Wearing a dark striped suit McGwine shot steroids togethand black shirt, his face stubbly cr. .
with several days of beard,
Ca5hman said the . Yankees
Giambi 's skin looked red, no! never discussed steroids with
pale as it did much of last sea- Giambi before they signed him,
. son, when he was bothered by a saying the environment in basep~Ite. and a bemgn tumor. ball was different then.
Hts we1ght was back up to , "Today was a step, a necesabout 235 pounds. He greeted .
.. c h . . ·d "0
fans outside the ballpark and sary step. as man sat · n~
signedautogrJphs.
olmany that needs to be taken.
Giambi, who last year nepeatCashm.an and Torre both
ectly denied using ille~al wore their shmy World Senes.
steroids is owed $82 million nngs, an adomment nottceably
from tm; Yankees as part of the absent from Giambi's lingers:
BY RONALD BLUM

Bryan WaHerslphoto

piing 24 times.
The Joss was the second
straight for the Red women
and only the second loss at
home this season.
Cedarville has now won 14
in a row and has all but locked
the
American
Mide ast
. Conference South Division
Championship. The t_.ady
Jacket s also gained the season
sweep of the . Redwomen.
Cedarville
won
88-75,
November 30 in Cedarvi lle .
Rio Grande will try to
rebound on Saturday night as
it plays ho&gt;t to Tiffin .

.

.

Special to \he Sentinel

.

.

19 points and corralled eight
rebounds, Emily Delimpo
tossed in 16 points anlr-collected nine re.bounds ' and
Karah Walton chipped in 14
points and dished out eight
assists.
Rio was paced by junior
guard Marcia Smoot with 14
points on 5-of-6 shooting
from the field, including
3..

for-3 from 3-point land. their shots~ 40 perce nt (4-ofSenior
forward
Alkia. 10) from beyond the 3-point
Fountain added 12 points and. arc and 68 perce nt ( 13-of-19)
six rebounds, junior post from the' free throw line.
player Tiffanie Hager proRio. Grande countered with
duced a double-double with 43.5 percent (27-of-62) .from
II points and I0 rebounds the field, 35 percent (7-of-20)
whi!e senior guard Angel from long range and 80 perAllen chipped in 10 points cent (4-of-5) from the charity
and handed out a game-high stripe.
· nine assists.
Cedarville held a slight 40Cedarville shot a blistering . 37 edge on the glass.
54.5 percent in the second
One of telltale statistics of
half,
making
18-of-33 the night was turnover marattempts from the floor. For gin. Cedarville committed
the game, the Lady Jackets hit only 12 miscues while Rio
46.5 percent (33-of-71) of coughed up possession a crip-

Red men hang·upset on Yellow Jackets

half.
Burnett said things ·were
going well for her team
until it started throwing the
ball away .and . Ohio State
pounced.
"We really thought we
played a preuy good few
minutes to start the basket·
.
ball game unttl we turned
the -ball over .and .~ave them
~orne ~asy looks_. she satd.
'They re lethal m the open
floor."

Southern 's Joanne Pickens (22) defends Julie Trace of Trimble during the second half of
Thursday's 79-39 sectional victory. Pickens led the Tornatloes in scoring with 11 points.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

2005

OSU .investigating allegations
of.free.dental work for players.
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio State has informed· the
NCAA that the school is
looking into whether a booster provided free dental work
to members of the women's
basketball team.
Athletic director· Andy
Geiger told The Associated
Press on Thursday that no
current members of the second-ranked Buckeyes are in
danger of being declared inelijlible, and that an investigation was underway into
whether NCAA rules were
violated.
An orthodontist may have
done work on players without
billing their insorance companies, Geiger said, but would

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

The Meigs County Commissioner1 intend to apply 10 1he O .D.O.D ..
OITi ce of Community Partnerships. CDBG Water And Sewer
Program, for a Village of Syracuse Water System Improvements
Program. Meigs County is eligible for up lo $15 ,000, provided the
County meets applicable requirements . On October 7. 20!l4: the
County conducted its. first public hearing to inform citizen~ about
the CDBG New Horizon Fair Housing progmm. what activities are
eligible. nnd other important .requ .ircmcnts. :
A second public hearing will he held on February 24. 2005 at
I: 15 p.m. at the ·Meigs County Commissioners office, Meigs
County Court House. Pomeroy. Ohio. to allow ci tizens an
opportunity to review and comment on the County 's proposed

CDBG New Horizon application . ·
Written comments will be accep1ed until I :00 p.m. , February 24.
2005. and may be mailed to the Meigs County Commissioners,

Counhouse, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
If a participant will need au&lt;iliary aids (interpreter. hrailled or
taped material , assistivc listening

device~

other) due to a disability.
please contact Gloria Kloes, Clerk,. prior 10 February 24, 2005 at
(740) 992-2895 in order lo ensure that your needs will be

accommodated. The Meigs County Courthouse is handicapped
accessible.
·
, Based on the needs assessed, the following activity will be
undertaken in the Meigs County new Horizon program:
ACTIVITY:
Meigs County New Horizon• Predatory Lendlng/TI!}lants Right
·Seminars!Administration
CDBG funding: S15;000
Other Funds: 15,300 FY' 04 CDBG·Fdrmula Allocation
Total: $30,300

National Objective: Area LMI
Mick Davenport, President
Meigs County Commissioners

•

•
'

..

'

11--- - --·-

Diego. absolutely," he said. future," he said. "We have a that continuity and keep
"I want a long-term deal, lot to be proud of and a lot to those familiar faces around.''
because I feel like I'm the be happy about . We just have
The Chargers might desigguy. I'm the guy tharneeds to to keep improving."
, nate Brees as their franchise
be there and lead us to a Teammate
. LaDainian player thi s month , giving him
ch~mpionship, so that's the Tomltnson, makmg hts se~:- a one-vear contract offer
way I feel about it.
ond Pro. Bowl appearance , worth around $9 million. If
"The ball is in their ~ourt, also wants Brees to sta~. but Brees signs it, the club then
obviously, and we'll just see the star runmng back sat~ he could trade him or Jet him ·
what happens." ·
has no control over the situa- compete for the starting job
Brees' ,life hits changed t10n . Toml~nson and Brees with Rivers, ·who was
dramatically in the four years are close !nends, and they obtained in a draft-day trade
.
.
since he represented Purdue planned to spend much of
in the Hula BowL
their · free time · in Hawaii wtth the New York Gmnts.
.
· "I got married, had gopd · together with their families.
Rtvers held out f~r half of
·seasons and.bad seasons, bat-· "He's a leader. That sums it tratmng camp, allow~ng
tied for my starting job on up in one word," Tomlinson Brees to keep the startmg JOb
two occasions, been benched said. "He's a good friend and , - and Bree~ used :he chala few times," he said. "I a good teammate."
. lenge to mot1vate htrnself to
guess it's been . a learning Brees and · Tomlinson are his best professional season.
experience, but it has molded San Diego's first quarter- And just as he did four years
me into the person and play- back-running back duo to ago at the Hula Bowl, when
make the Pro Bowl together mal)y questioned hts future
er that I am now."
Brees was voted the NFL's since Dan Fouts and Chuck .as a 6-foot NFL quarterback.
comeback player ·of the year Muncie . in the' early 1980s. Brees is proving he's one of
.after throwing for 3,159 Tight end Antonio Gates also the best: .
yards, 27 touchdowns and made the trip to Hawaii,
"We don't play to prove
just seven interceptions in the earning his first Pro Bowl people wrong. There is some
regular season. In the play- berth in just his second NFL satisfaction r;&gt;ut of that, but I
think it's really just a personoffs, he passed for 319 yards season.
and two TDs in the Chargers'
"Obviously, with guys like al fear of failure," he said.
20- 17 overtime loss to the LT and Gates, I think we built . "It's the feeling that you want
New York Jets.
a solid foundation," Brees to be the best. Then you just
"We didn't accomplish our said. "I think we all see in fight, fight, fight to try to ~
ultimate goal to win a cham- one another that we can build that person, and .you don't
pionship, but we kind of something special with the worry about what other peo- ·
paved the . way for the Chargers. We want to keep pie say."

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14D-667-o771

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Friday; February u, 2oos

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, February 11, 2005

NHL lockout talks·are over; season appears next

ijtrihune- Sentinel-

CLASSIFIED

the league has been prepared

BY IRA PODELL
Associated Press

to do."

NEW YORK - The only
thing the NHL and the players' association are close to
. is stamping out a season that
' never started.
No talks, no deals, and
with the clock ticking on a
weekend deadline, virtually
no chance of playing hockey.
That was· the word from
both sides after yet another
failed negotiating session
Thursday in Toronto.
"I can tell · you unequivocally and without a doubt
that we are done," NHL chief
legal officer Bill Daly told
: The Associated Press on
Thursday night.
"Wiihout a change in position by the union, the season
will be canceled," Daly said.
"There will be no- further
. contact with the union before
: the season is cance,led unless
· they reach out to us."
Don't
count . on that hap.
pemng.
"We're not going to pick
up the phone this weekend,:'
. union senior director Ted·
' Saskin said after the four· hour meeting. "We're done."
And. so ended what was
likely the last chance tb keep
the NHL from becoming the
first major league in. North
America to cancel an entire
season because of a labor NHL's executive vice-president and chief legal officer Bill Daly
dispute.,
An . official meetings with the NHL Players Association. ·
announcement could come
within days.
to be their position, it 's way. The writing has been on
Nearly five moillhs after going to continue to be diffi· the-wall for some time ."
the lockout started, the cult for us to resolve this."
And now time is a niajor
league and the players are
But the players' associa- factor.
still on opposite sides of the tion doesn't understand why
Daly and commtsstoner
salary-cap argumeni. The the NHL . will only consider Gary Bettman· went to
owners insist on a I ink one option to fix the league 's Toronto on Wednesday to
. beiweeh revenues and player financial woes.
give the players' association
costs, and the union vows
"I think it's been very clear two things: a final offer and a
never to accept it.
from
Day I that this has deadline to make a deal. ·
"Their outright rejection of
·never been about having a
Bettman said an agreement
our proposal yesterday I
Saskin
said.
negotiation,"
had to be ready to be put into
think speaks more to the fact
"They
have
made
it
clear
writing
by the weekend in
that the union is never, ever,
they
have
only
one
way
of
order for there to be a· sea·ever, ever - under any . cirdoing
things
and
that's
son. The one he had in mind
cumstances - prepared to
play under any kind of cost- through their hard-cap sys· wa'!i already. cut down from
80 to 28 games but would
. certain, economi.c partner- tern .
"There are clearly other retain a standard. 16'-team
. ship, salary cap - you pick
: the term - type of system," ways to reduce player costs playoff structure.
: Daly Said. ·
but they have not been pre- · But the offer that came
"As long as that continues pared to look at any other with it never stood a chance.

AP photo

departs a news conference in Toronto on Thursday following

The NHL suggested a new
de'al be made using the play·
ers' association's proposal
from Dec. 9 that inciuded a
luxury -tax system . and a 24
percent salary rollback on
existing contracts,
But if any of four fi11ancial
conditions were exceeded,
then the NHL's salary-cap
offer from last week would'
go into effect the following
season. Teams would then be
forced to spend at least $32
.million on player costs but
no more than $42 million,
including benefits.
Players' association executive director .Bob Goodenow
said that at least one of the
triggers wo~ld immediately
be exceeded if this deal was

As to be expected, th,e
league felt the ,same about
the players ' association.
"Quite frankly, I don't
know why they asked us to
stay overnight," Daly said. "I
don't know what their agenda was. I just know there was
no progress."
If the deadline was set to
pressure the players' association to give in to the salarycap demand, it hasn't worked
so far.
"We were ·not deadline
hunting in any way," Saskin
said.
During the meeting at the
league's office in Canada,
the sides spent 2 I/2 hours
huddling separately. When it
was over, Daly and Bettmari
immediately returned to New
York.
The lockout has wiped out
824 of the I ,230 regular-season games through this
weekend's scheduled AllStar game. If the season is
canceled, there is no telling
when there will be NHL
hockey again.
"I have no idea as I sit here
today," Saskin said:
The sides have been assisted by mediators - as .recently as last week in Newark,
N.J. - but neither felt that
was how a deal would be
worked out.
"This isn't a negotiation
that failed due to a lack of
understanding," Daly said.
"This is a negotiation that
has failed for other reasons. I
dqn 't think a mediator would
help."
· The NHL also put some
more specific numbers to
t)leir revenue-sharing proposal, and Saskin said it was·
in the $80 million range of a
$2 billion pie. ·
Saskin said those numbers
showed that teams are not
willing to enter into partnerships with each other let
alone with the players' association.

put in plaq;. and others could
be easily reached.
Saskin called the proposal
a public relations "gimmick"
and the idea wasn 't revisited
Thursday.
Now it appears both sides
will have to deal with the
unknown repercussions that
come with canceling a season Ill a league that is
already low on the popularity scale in the-United States.
"We · rc all suffering from
the damage done ," Saskin
said. "But the players have
been re~o lute· in waiting to
get the right deal, the right
Rob Gillies, a stringer for
deal for the sport and one The Associated Pres~. con·
that's fair for both to operate t ributed to this report froiJI
under. And that 's not what Toronto.

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CARLYLE

"""Ill

'-1'.'6-HELP--W·AI'ITEO--•~ L.'o_;;.;.-~:;,;.;,-' ..__....r.&gt;R•&lt;!s•~•;:.,E_r
~

lwrighl@ic.net"...
· -------------

GIVFAWAY

dog &amp; children, only dog (740)388·0157.
lovers reply, all shots, vet REWARD!!
cnecked, (740)742-2377
Lost- 2 cats, 1 neutered
orange male, other one Is
To good hOme: 1 male. 1
black female. Bidwell area.
female cats
Declawed ,
(740)388·8 166.
fl~eed , shots up lo date .

~ou:

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ........ ,.. ,.................. ,..... ,....... 030
Antiques ............. ,.. ,,,,,, .. ,..............~ ............... 530
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market.............................OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 71 o
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Bu It ding Suppt les ,, ...................................... 550
Bualneaa and Buildings ....,........................ 340
Buslnen Opportunity ....................... ,......... 21 0
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campers I Motor Homes ................ , ......... 790
Camping Equlpment ....................................780

C•rda of Thanka .......................................... 01 0

HELPW~

I

**~*NECco••••

(740)992·5242

Free Beagle mix puppies to Lost: Very . Sick . Dog·Owner
a good home. {74d)3 88- of a Black Toy-Poodle on Mt
Vernon ran away on the
8358.
- - - - - - - - evening of Feb 1, 05 Please
Free to good home , three B call (304)675·5357 ,
mo. old ' black labfGerman
Shepherd mix pups, 60-651 , Reward for information
loving, sweet pups. excellent regarding lost white male
companion ,, good wi othei Wast Highland Terrier. Call

.r

110
1,

MAKE A
DIFFERENCE IN A
.CHILD'S UFE
Foster Parents needed.
To learn more about
.fostering and free training
opportunities contact:'
Kim Romeo at
740-89+4360

ln•urance ....................._
........;..............,...,.... 130

u..etock....................,., ...............................630

Loot and Found ........ ,.,., ••.,., ........................ QliO
Lata &amp; Acruge ..., ............., ........... ., .... ,........ 350
· Mlacellanaoua ..., .......................................... 170
Mlacellanaoua Merchandlae .. ... ,,:........... :... 540
Mobile Home ·Repair .................................... 860
Mobile Honlea lor Rent.. ............. ., .............. 420
Mobile' Homealor Sale ........ :....................... 320
Money to Loan .............,.............. ,.,,,,,,,,,,,,, 220
Motorcyctaa &amp; 4 Whaetero .......................... 740
Mualcat tnatrumenta .........., ............ ., •••••.• ,,, 570
Paroonata ,................. :........,......................... 005
Pall lor Sale ..., ......................................, .... , 560
Plumbing &amp; Heollng .......... ,......................... 820
Prot.aatonal Services ........................... , ..... 230
RadiO. TV &amp; CB Repair ..................... ,......... lBO
Rail Ealate Wanltd ...... ., ...................... ,. ..... 360
lk:hoola lnatructlon ..................................... 150
Baed, Pltlnt &amp; Fertltlar .............................. 850
Bltuatlona· wanted ....................................... 120
Spa_c e lor Rant ............................ ......:.......... 460
Sporting Good a., ......................................... 520
SUV'I lor Sate,.,., ....................................... 720
Trucks lor Sate ,,,,,,,,, ............................. 715
Upholatery ..... ,.. ,.. ,,,,.,,.. ,, .. ., ............. ,.......... 870
Yana For Sate............................................... 730
Wanted to Buy ............. ., ....................., ........ OliO
Wanted 10 Buy· Farm Suppllaa .................. 820
Wanted To Do ..................,., ..... ,. ................. 180
Wanted to Rent ........ .,,................................. 470
Yard Sat.. Galtlpolla............................... .,.,.072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ...... ,.................. 074
Yard Sale-Pl. Plaalant ................................ 078

Cl:l 2005 by NEA, Inc.

AI'ITEO

Hll.P W

Personnel

Group, INC. P.O. Box 12,
Point Pleasant WV 25550.

C J Hughes COnstruction
PO BoK 1305

No ·phone calls . EOE MIF.
AJA.

Huntin ton WV 25776
Immediate
Openings.
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Res id ential
Treatment
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· Facility for boys; now hiring
675·1429.
'
Youth Worker position.· Paid
Medical Insurance. Call
between 9:00am-4 :00pm
Ch ildren's Home Society (740)379·9083.
currently has an opening fo r :_::.;_:..:..:.:..:..:,,:__~a Youth Services Social ·
LICENSED

PRACTICAL NURSE

,

HELP WANID&gt;

McClure's Restaurant now
hiring all locations, lull or
part-tinw. pick· up application at location &amp; bring back
9:30am
&amp;
between
~1 :OOa m ,
Monday . tl'1ru
Saturday.
Medi Home Health Agency,
Inc. seeking a full-time . RN
Case -. Manager for the
Gallipolis. Ohid' loca tion.
Must be licensed both in
O hi o anQ West Virginia .
M inimum two years supervi·
sion. management and
home health experience. We
otfer a competitive salary,
benefits package , 401K, and
flex time . E.O.E. Please
send resume to 352 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis , OH
45631 . Ann: Audrey Farley.
R.N _Clinical Manager. .

New Year· New Career
Christian based Tech Co.
E)(panding in your area
Managers/Sales Rep.
Needed

Call 800-470·6843 ·
. (24 Hours)
Now taking applications for
Truck Drivers. Also, hiring
seasoned garden center
help. {740)256·9247 or
(740)645-o870.
;_.:.:_:.,..;...:..:_,..;.._ __
Now under new
management!
Pizza Plus
Hiring all shifts· all positions.
Must be neat and clean
Apply within , 1044 Jackson
Pike, Spring Valley Plaza.

Scenic Hilts Nursing Center,
a . Tandem H ealth Care
Facility. is· seek1ng ?- select
few to join our outstanding
team . We currently seek two
full time fill in LPN's to work
a11ery, weekend . Proper
certification
license or
required. We offer shift dff.
ferential, excellent benefits,
perfect attendance incen·
lives and much morel
Overbrook Center is current·
Please apply to :
ty accepting applications for
Nursing Assi~nts . ,_lease
Attn: Dianna Thotnpaon,
call Hollie at (740)992.-6472 ,
HR
or come Jn and fill out an
Scenic Hilla Nu,.lng
Full-time b~bysiner needed
application 333 Page Street,
Center
call between 6pm-9prri 304Middleport. Oh. EOE
311 Buckrldgt Road

Interim Healtheare- AN 's
full -time &amp; pan -time avail·
able for rapidl~ growing
hOme health agencv. 40 II&lt;
plan. health 1nsurance.
·vacation &amp; personal da~s &amp;
mileage reimbursement. calf
or
fa~e
{740 )592·6941
resume to 740-593-5348.

----·- ---·

1-866·228-7063' Or apply
onlme at
'frWW.iJWvstmentlinancial .ora

att'olertisa " any
preference. limitation or
discriminalionbesed on
race, color, religk&gt;n , seX
familial status ar national

origin,

or any intention to

make any such
preference, limitation or

discrimination."
All applicants are required to
H:"iOTICEH
take a .multiple choice exam·
l11o
Thla newepaper will no!
ination that will be given in
knowingly accept
April. Applican ts applying Borrow Smart Contact .thf
advertisements tor real
online will be sent a sched· Ohio Div1sion of Financia ~
estate which t. in
Office
oj
uling package that indudes lnstitullan's
vlolallon ot the law. Our
PLEASANT VALLEY
Atfa1r"'
the exam dates, time and Consumer
readers are hereby
HOSPITAL
location and materials need· ~EFORE you refinancE
Informed that an
PHLEBOTOMIST
our home or obtain a loan.;
dwelling• advertised in
ed to prepare for the exami·
ll'lis newspaper are
Pleasant Valley Hospital is
nation .. Completion of lhe BEwARE of requests fo
aVailable
on an equal
ny
large
advance
pay
currently aCcepting resumes examination and other !arms
opportunity bases.
for a Ptlr·Diem
will take approKimately 3 112 ~ents of fees or insurance.
the
Office
o,
Phlebotomist.· Applicants
hours to complete. All appli· ball
must have a valid driver's
cants ·on ~unenl _registers COnsumer Affairs toll freE!!
Fo r Sale ''Great Investment~
t 1-866-278-0003 to learn'
license. Six monthS experi· must take Test 473 to main3
homes. 7 acres. located
ence preferred. PoSition
' tain potential employment f the mortgage broker' ori
on
Graham School Rd .
ender is prope~ly licensed.
Involves drawling blood in a consideration .
$ 165,000 Phone 740-446This
is
a
publiq
se
rvic.:
nursing' home setting and
3184 or 740-441 -02_1 9 or
Qualified applicants m~t · nnouncemant from thE
transportlf'lg specimens.
740-44 1-9974.
successfully p ass a pre - Phio Valley Publ ishin~
For more Information:

~b~&lt;o~m~pian::y)====~

employment drug screening
to
meet
U.S.
Postal I!
Service's
employment
PR~IOI\lAL
requirements. The general
S
~
minimum age requirement L.
-,.J
for positions in I he U. S.
(304)675-2417
DtRECTV
Postal Serv1ce is 1B years at
AA/EOE
Free
OVD Player
the time of appointment or
·. www.pvalley.org
Free HBO &amp; Cinama•
16 years with a h1gh school
Free Professional
diploma. Appticants must be
Installation
a U.S. citizen or have per·
Reporter Opening
up
to 4 Rooms
manent resident alien sta·
Call
1-800-523-7556
.
The .right individual will have tus.
lor deta11s
common sense and the ·abil·
An Equal Opportunity
ily to recogn ize a news
Jewelry Buy Sell GoiO,
Employer
story, as wall as a Keen
Gemstone!?
Diamonds .'
sense of enthusiasm about
Repa1
r,
Appra1sals
. 'G em
the profession. We take our UNITED STATES
Testing '
GrMuate
job seri~sly and are com· POSTAL $ERVICE
Gemologist.
Jeweler .
mitted to the community we
(740)645·6365 or (740)446serve. Interested? We will "ll'"50---.,--.-~,.3000.
k&amp;tp you busy. Please email
~
your
resume
to
Jim L.-~INsrR,:,:~UCilON--;,.,.1
Roger's Home
Freeland. jheeland@myda lImprovements
lytribune.com or mail to Ga1Upoll1 Career College
Spec ializes in all mob1le
Gallipolis Tr ibune, 82'5 Third
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740-448-4367, home parts &amp; accessones.
Ave .. Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
with sales &amp; se rvice.
. H!00-214-0452 ·

i

Pleasant Valley Hospital
cte Humeri Resources
2520 ValleY Oi'ive.
Point Pleasant, Wv 25550

---EiiRiiV.ill"'li-ii''

.,,-....,

S.\SSY SCISSORS

www. gaiiii)Oii~e~:reercolleoe .com

Accredrted ~I mber
Stylist wanted . Salaryl
Commission. 740-441·1880 Council fOr I ,
_ ___::o~r~74:.:0:.:·2::56.:.·.:.6.:.336::::.._
...
Sell Avon make SO%. Call

( 740l~46 • 33 5B

Accreclltrng

Home· (7401384·3412
'cell· (740)710·1861 .

Col~!jlli

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!

L.-------,.1

1·888·582·3345

House tOr sale by Owner.
4br, 2ba. Lg. Eat-In K1~chen .
Bonus rooms, 0 /2 Car
Garage, Wood F'loors &amp; Tile
Located on appro)( _ 1-acre.
lots of Extras (304 )675·2523
House At. 141 Cen1enary 3
bedroom 2 baths. LA. FM. 2
car garage. Ba sem ent.

(740)446· 1035.
Move-1n condition .
room. 1 balh home.
deck. close to
Reasonably

3 bedgarage.
schoO l
priced

17 401949-3090

----~----

Over 2000 ISq ff · home $53,999 .00 Clel•vered Offer
ends 02128/05 Only 2 ava llable ~'o tractes-no dealers
1-BQ0-349-64, 1
Own your land?
Have
95"'c
$500 .00 down?
approval on your dream. 1-

800·34H411
Slwng.YIIIOO
3 Bedroom. 1·1 /2 baths .
Large
Family
Room .
Fireplace
&amp;
Garage
Aecenlly
renovated.
Immediate
Possess1on

(740)446·788 1.

employer.
McOonalda at Rio Grande
now hiring all shifts. Flexible .
haurs, paid vacation and
holid l'lys. Starting rate above
m ln1mum 'wage. Apply with.'

pobls. spas. Installing liners
and bullding billiard tables.
Wages considered on expe·
rlence . Must have valid drlvers _li censes . Contact
Dabble (304)295-6985 or
(304)488-7272 . After 6:00

in

PM call (740)378-6111

6411

FIX: 7401446--2.31 ,

Emtll : admln.ahnO
tandemhealthctre.com

(800)201 -0832

HlrinQ all shifls· all positions
Pizza Plus
Now under new manage·
ment . Must be neat and
clean. Apply within , 1044
Jackson Pilte, Spring Vallev
Plaza.

_"1.eao1ng t-1nanc1a
Institution approving Small
Business. Mortgage
Personal and Vehicle
Loans. l mmedi~te
response .
give us ·a call at.

All real estate advertising
in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act ot 1~
whi,ch makes it illegal to

Pleasant from S:30- 3;30pm

Ph: 740144&amp;-7150

Lose Weight with HertJalife.
Call Tracy (740)441-1982 or

Help Wanted Bartenders,
Cooks &amp; Waitress, pldc-up
Applications at the Moose
Lodge on Charleston Rd .

r

MONF.\"

mloAN

Ava ilable for tmmed1ate
occupanc y
tn
Countr'r
3 br House , 5 ba th , Homes 10·~ down. $175 4A
Garage, Basement, New per month . Call Harold
AJC New Furnace, Large eat (740)385-4367
tn
Kitchen Located m
PI.Pieas $87,900 (304)675· For sale 14)(70 Windsor. 3
6052 or (304)593-1912
bedroom. set up m Country
Homes. $6.995 .00 Move In
Use your tax refund to txry today 1Call (740)992-21 67 or
your O~EAM HOME. We (7 401385-4019
have governffl8nt prQ9rams
and special financing to help Immediate possess1on1Only
malo:e your drea ms come $213 68 per mo. New 3 bed·
\fue . Cali now. L1mited pro- room. 2 bath mobt!e hOme
grams available 1-8()()..349- Only mmutes from Athens

Bl-11, OH 458l4
GET READY FOR
SPRING BREAK!

om

Opporlunlty-

wanted and need ed in '677 DVD video lot $10,000
Pomeroy, Ohio, Full time live or
trade
for
corwertlble/sports
car,
nego-Overbrook Center Is current· In care taker for specialty
1y accepting applications for bed and breakfaat. If you are 1iable, (304)693-0830 a«ei
a full-Time LPN tor the 7p· of EnQiish , Welch , Irish
7a shift. You may call HoUle decent , and an accent,
at 74Q-992-6472 or come in enjoy cooking. house keepend fill out an application at ing and gener~l- ca_ring for
333
Page
Street . · others this position· IS made
OHI&lt; Clea ning. Do you
Middleport. Oh. ~OE
for you . We offer a ~lary
House Cleaning or
·need?
plus and upscale enVIfon·
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's ment lifestyle. Non-smoking, E l~rly Care. Call (740)985needed . Apply at 1~4 non drinking cultured per· 3633 / (740)416·18~3
son(s) desired . Please con· Aere rences available. Ask
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis.
tact us at: Or. and Mrs. M for Kareru'Dave .
Pir.za Plus
Dellavalle. 8227 Blueberry
Now under new manage· Drive. New Port Richey, Fl, Furnace and air conditiOn
men!. Hiring all shifts· all 3~653 ,
727·808·4021 ' change. outs, hett pumps
and duct work. Certified
positions. Must be neat and OADOKTAOart.nol
(740)245-9108
clean. A,lpty within, t044
Jackson Pike, Spring Valley Wanted 23 mOre people to - - - - - - - - - ' lose up to 30 lbs. Or. reoom· Geor'ges Portable Sawmill,
Plaza.
mend. can Darlene or Carol don't haul your logs to the
SWimming Pool Service
(7-10)384·3377.
mHI 1us1 caii3Q4.675· 1957
Technic ian
Job duties' include, seMc!nn

576-3353

htlp:flwww.famousnutrition .c

Anyone interested should
apply opline February 14
througn February 18 at
www uapa com/employ :
mlli1 Hearing Impaired individuals may dial TTY number 1-8Q0-800-B776 and follow prompts to · apply.
Applicants may apply only
once per announcement
number. Duplicate appllca·
tions ~ill not oe .accepted

!ftpo------., ni'l!:'-------,
·" "'.------...,
lno

An Excellent way to earn .
money. The New Avo n.
Immediate ope ning for partCall Marilyn 304-882-2~45
time Driver at the Mason
Are you a sales person? County Action Group, INC.
Audit and sell Cable TV. -Must have current drivers
license. l'!ave a c lean driving
Excellent Commissions
record, and be willtng to
1-800-270-1780
work flexible hours. Starting
re you w ng o rave
Pay is $6 .1 5 per hour.
or steady work, good
St.Jbmit resume with refer·
ay and benefits?
ences or applications can be
picked· up from Mas611
Co'unty Action Group, INC.
aborers, Openuors;
Please respond
ASAP.
elders, COL Drivers and
Apply in confidence to 'Ruth
oreman needed for
Rice ,
Transportation
Manager. by · February H.
2005 . Mail or deliver to
nd resume !O:
Mason
County
Action

-----------.--- --- - ----- ----•

~

www.comics .com

sary. Work .a1 home. Call 1oll
405-447-6397
· lito

Chltd/Etdarly Care ....................................... 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ............................... 840
Equ lpment lor Rent.. ................ ,.................. 480
Excavatl ng ................................................... 830 .
Farm t;qulpmetit .......................................... 61 0
Worker in the Mason County
Farms lor Rent.. ...........................................430
office . Position will· provide
Farms lor Sate ............................................. 330 · case management and ~ up­
For Lease ............................ :........................ 490
porliv'e services to DHHR
For Sate.,,, .. ,,..... ,.,,,, ...... , .............................. 585
Service
cases .
Youth
For Sate or Trada ......................................... 590
Requirements
include
Fruita &amp; Vegetables, .................................... 580
Bachelor's degree and SW
Furnished Rooms ........................... ,,,,,,,, .. ,,,450
license eligibility. experience
General Hauling.............................:,, .. ,,•• , ,,,,850
CompetitiVe
preferred.
Glveaway......................................... ,....... ,•,,.040
Salary and benefits. Please
Happy -'da .................................:.... ,,.,, ...... ,.,050
sel')d lener of interest and
Hay &amp; Grain ..................................................540
resume to :
Help Wanted ................................................. 11 o
Mason County OHHR
Homalmprovamenta ..................... ,...........:.810
ATTN : Youth Services
Homaa lor Sate ............................................ 310
710 Viand Street.
Houaehotd Goodo ...... ,•,.............................. 51 o
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
HouHI lor Rent .... ,......................... :........... 410
~OE
In Memoriam •,•,,......... ,...................... ,.......... 020

Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment .....................-... 660

.,. ... ,

1-877-50·NECCO
Addresses wanted immedi·
ately! No eXperience naces.l

Business

Th ree rental properties lor
"EARN 50% TO OVER
sale Duple)(, each w1th 3
100% EVERY 2B DAYS!!" BIA , UR, DIR, K1tchen . Bath
CAREER EMPLOYMENT For complete in fo-send &amp; Porch . Hous e 3 8/R . UR ,
OPPORT~NITY
name address. faK or phone Kitchen. Balh_ Cottage SIR ,
to: Dale Pirlot 460 Hodges Kitchen , Bat h.
Rental
U.S. POSTAL SERVICE
Ave .. San Jose. CA 9512S,
1ncome to r all three-Appro• .
COLUMBUS DISTRICT
$900 per month . Pr1ce lbr all
-.&gt; ~v u~c " '
th ree-· $75.000
Located
The U.S. Postal Service is loHI_O VALLEY PUBLISH -104-106 7th Street. Po1nt
opening the Postal E;r;am lNG CO. recommends tha Pleasant. {304)675-2495
ou do' business with peo
Test 473 for career positions
atter 6:00
ircluding City Letter Carrier, ble you know, and NOT 't
end money through th
Mail
Flrocessing Clerk.
· Mailhandler, and - Sale5 r.au ·Until you have investi
ated the ofierino.
Services and Distribution
Associates.

9741 (Deut. 5:19)

Lost· Red Sable Pomerian.
between Paul's Exxon and
~erichO Ad ., answers to
Punkie. Reward, if found call

OPI'OR'IlJNITV

~

POSTAL SERVICE

.,

Female cal. 7 1/2 years old,
spayed. declawed, very lovIng, needs to be o,nly cat in
home, Indoor only. Her name
is NeStle. (740)245·5935.

BUSINESS

UNITED STATES

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silv6r and Gold Coins,.
Prootsets, Gold Rings, U.S.
Currency,-M.T.S. Coin Shop, '
151
Second
Avenue ,
Gallipolis, 740-446·2842. ·

Cash for junk cars ' &amp; trucksGallia,
Meigs, Athens ,
Black/white male · cat, 6 Found Saturday · Young Vinton
&amp;
Washington
'mo(lths old. Female calico, 6 Female Aollwei ler in lhe County, (740)508·0487
months old, 2 solid black kit· Lelart area, no ' collar
I '11'1 0' \11 \I
tens. 6 months old. All inside (304)895·3483 leave mas·
'I 1(\ I&lt; I ._,
cats. (740)446-763_
7.
sage

(740)992·2542

CLASSIFIED INDEX

BINGO

{p'

Now you can have borders and graphics
.ILJ
added to your classified ads
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
.Graphics 50¢ for smoll
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

POLICIES: Ohio Yai'-Y Publlehlng r..arvee the right to edit, reject, or e~~ncel any ad at any time. Error~ must be reported on the tlret day of
Trlbune-Sentlnei•Aeglater will be r"ponelble fOf no mOJe thlln the co.l of the ep.c:e occupl.t by the enOJ end only the flrstlnseftlon. We
not be li
any lo.. or ••pense thlt reeune from the publication ,or om111;1on ot an lldvertiHment. Correction will De made in the firet avalleble edition. • Box
are alwaya confidenti4J. • Currenl rete carj:l appllee. • All .-..1 eatate advertiMmante •• subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968. • Thle
eccepte only help wanted ade mHtlng EOE etlndlrda. We Will not knowlngtv accept any advertising lrl VIolation of the law,
·

&amp; 62 (304)675-6183

Wonderful opportunl!ies are available in Tom Peden Counlry.
We are expanding our staff and need mOre sales people
No Experie.nce is reqUired. on~ a willingness to learn. work
as a learn and have a slrong lnlliahve.

Oearltirec

Word Ads

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

Public Notices In N~;.::::.~~~.~;.~: l'1
Your RIR.ht to Kno"'• DeUven!d Right to Your

NOnCE BY PUBLI· ATIORNEt
FEES
LaSalle
Bank
George
Elselsteln
CATION ON DEFEN· HEREIN AND COSTS. National Association,
and wife to Elsa S.
DANTS
AND .YOU ARE REQUIRED
as Indenture Trustee,
Lee by deed dated
UNKNOWN HEIRS. IN TO ANSWER THE
AFCMortgage Loan
November 19, 1891 ,
THE COURT OF COM· COMPLAINT WITHIN
Asset Backed Notea,
and
recorded . in
MON PLEAS, MEIGS
28 DAYS AFTER THE
Series 1999-4 llled Its
Volume 73, Page 211
LAST PUBLICATION
COUNTY, POMEROY,
Complaint In Case . and
212
of the
OHIO. THE CITIZENS OF THIS NOTICE
No. 04 CV 110 and on
Records of Deed of
BANK OF LOGAN VS.
WHICH WtU BE PUB· llled its Supplemental
Meigs County, Ohio,
ESTHER
MAE
LISHED ONCE EACH
Complaint In the
Save and except a
FRANKLIN, ET. AL.
WEEK FOR SIX SUC..
Court of Common · small tract of Real
CASE NUMBER 04·
CESSIYE
WEEKS.
Pleas Meigs County,
Estate conveyed to
CV·142
THE LAST PUBLICA·
Ohio alleging that the
Louis Reibel, begin·
TO: ESTHER MAE TtON WILL BE MADE ·a b a v e • n a m a d
nlng at Point 26 feet
FRANKLIN, IF LIVING,
ON FEBRUARY 18, Defendant( a), Thomas
North 20 deg. from
THE SPOUSE IF ANY,
2005
AND THE 28
Darst, Jane Doe, the Southeast corner
DAYS
FOR ' AN
AND TO THE WIDOW,
Unknown Spouae, II
ol the M.E. Church
HEIRS,
DEVISEES,
ANSWER WILL COM·
any, of Thomas Darst,
Parsonage
Lot:
AND NEXT OF KIN OF MENCE ON THAT
.. Yvonne Darst, •John thence North· 66 1/2
DESCENDENT, ALL
DATE. IN CASE OF
Doe,
Unknown
dag. weal 3 feet and 9
OF WHOSE NAMES YOUR FAILURE TO
Spouse, tl any, of
Inches; thence north
OR ADDRESSES ARE ANSWER OR OTHER·
Yvonne
Da,rat, 20 dag. east 17 feel
UNKNOWN TO PLAIN· WISE RESPOND AS
'Charles Whltungton,
and 4 Inches; thence
TIFF, JOHN H. WARN·
REQUIRED BY THE
'"Jane Doe, Unknown south 66112 deg. east
ER, JR. IF. LIVING,
OHIO
RULES
OF · Spouse, If any, of
3 feel and 9 Inches;
THE SPOUSE IF ANY
CIVIL PROCEDURE,
Charles WhiHington,
thence south 20 deg
AND TO THE WIDOW, JUDGMENT
BY
hove or claim to have
weal 17 feet and 4
HEIRS,
DEVISEES,
DEFAULT WILL BE
an hitereatln the real
Inches to the place of
RENDERED AGAINST ealale
AND NEXT OF KIN OF
described
beginning, and conFOR
THE
DESCENDENT, ALL
YOU
below "The
land
taining
about • 65
OF WHOSE NAMES
RELIEF DEMANDED
referred to tn lhta
square feet, ·more or
· OR ADDRESSES ARE · IN THE COMPLAINT.
commitment Ia altual·
leaa, and It Is further
UNKNOWN TO PLAIN- (t) 14, 21 , 28, (2) 4, 11, ed In the State· ol
understood that no
18
TIFF, MARY EMMA
Ohio,
County
ol
part ol the watt on
KING, IF LIVING THE
Meigs Situated' In the
aeld partonage tot Is
SPOUSE IF ANY, AND
VIllage of Pomeroy,
hereby
conveyed.
TO THE
WIDOW,
Public Notice
County of Meigs and
Parcel No.: 16-01943
HEIRS,
DEVISEES,
Stele of Ohio: ,
·
and currently set
AND NEXT OF KIN OF
LEGAL NOTICE
Beginning at the
forth In Deed Book
DESCENDENT, ALL
Thomaa
Darot,
Southeaat corner or a
335,
Page
95,
OF WHOSE NAMES Jane Doe, Unkno'Nn
lot formerly owned by
Recorded 5111193.
OR. ADDRESSES ARE
Spouse, II any, of
Lucinda Starkey on
Also
commonty
UNKNOWN TO THE Thomas
Darst,
Union Avenue In Nld
known aa: 118 llnlon
PLAINTIFF,
AND
'Yvonne Daro~ • John
Yllt_age of Pomeroy;
Avenue,
Pomeroy,
Unknown
thence north 20 deg.
DOROTHY A. HILL IF Doe,
Ohio, 45769.
eaot along the north
LIVING THE SPOUSE Spouse, II any, of
The Patlllont~r furCharles WhiHington,
line of Nld lot 100
IF ANY, AND TO THE
ther attagea the! by
WIDOW,
HEIRS,
whose lui known teet; thence south 70
reaoon of deleutt of
AND
address Ia P.O. Box
deg e111 50 feel;
DEVISEES,
the Delendant(a) In
70 Smllhlleld, PA
thence aouth 20 deg
NEXT OF KIN OF
the payment ol a
weal 100 feel to the
DESCENDENT, ALL
15478-0070 and •118
promloaory
note,
OF WHOSE NAMES Union
Avenue
line of said Union
according to Ito tenor,
OR ADDRESSES ARE
Pomeroy, OH 45789- ' Avenue; thence along ·· the conditions of a
UNKNOWN TO THE
1000, but whoae pres· · I he line. of aald Union
concurrent mortgage
PLAINTIFF.
.T HE ant place of real·
Avenue, North 70 d8g
given to aecure
OBJECT OF THE
dance Ia unknown
wnl 50 to the the poymont of sold
place of beginning,
C.OMPLAINT IS TO wtll taka nottc. thai
note and conveying
PARTmON
THE on Auguat 12, 2004 at
Nld1premlaea being a
the
premises
REALTY
PARCEL 2:12 p.m., LaSalle
part 'of Lot No. 425 of
deacrlbed, hove been
·Bank,
N.A.,
fka
aald · VIllage
ot
NUMBER
broken, and the same
LaSalle
National
Pomeroy, and being
1HI1118.!JOO,
haa
become
Bank, aa Indenture the aama pramlNI
11&gt;«11113.000,
obaolule.
trustee under thaf deeeled by Marg~ret
1HI1187.000,
The
Petitioner
1Hl1182.000, AND , certain Sale
and Hunt to Th-re
praya
that
the
THI! PRAYER IS THAT Servicing Agreement
l!leatalaln by, deed
Delendenl{s) named
SAID REALTY BE
dated December 1, dated November 18,
above be require to
PARTmOHED . OR
ti99, among AFC
1885, and recorded In
anower· and aet up
ORDERED BOLD IF IT Truat Serlee 1989·4 Volume 81, " - 224
their Interest aeld rut
•• laauer Superior and 226 recorda, Illite clr be loraver
CANNOT BE PARTI·
TIONED, FOR . AN
Bank FSB, aa Seller
Meigs County, Ohio,
berred from aaMrtlng
and Servlcer, and
and
dHded
to
ALLOWANCE
OF
the 11me, for loreclo-

-'

El,.canl

Lost 'Red Pom. from Paul's
E:o:on and Jerk:ho Rd, Rl 2

Help Wanted

.. u~Je ·

~oOM

(740)388.0038.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Mtip Cc11only, O H

WeC:O.wL--'7
Meigs, Cilllll.,
And M••on

SFIDFIEOE
HAOIIIndemhHithcare.com

M ason
County
Action
Grou p, Inc . is acCepting
app lications for ln·Homa
Personal Care Asslsta!'lts
Our service area includes all
of Mason County. Starting
rate $6.15 per hour, plus .50
per 'hour additional for Sub·
Pay, plus .35 p8r mile for
travel , for shopping or travel
client lo client.. Apply at 221 :
1/ 2 Ma fn Street, Point

_____

;....::.:.;__

or 304/t75·3300. MCAG ,
•
Inc. is an EOE. M/F, AJA abow ground and In ground

__

,

__________ __
...:__

1~ 1 \I I " I \ I I

HoME&lt;;
FUR SALE

Your dream home is ooly a
phone call away. Apply nowlen d program's a a~ailable
with rates as low as 4 99%.

' -eoo-349-6411
136 Graham Street fo1 Sale
by Owner, 3 bedroom
house, 1 car garage . large
lot. Rod ney Village II.

MOBILE Hm!E'i
mRSAI.E
.

(740)245·9917
1740)446 14x70 mobile home , $2500 ,
~or
., (740)949·2072

364

1995 Skyline . 14·X70 , vi nyl
shi ngle
root
3 bedroom, t bath. corner S1Ci1ng.
$13
.995
'00.
Call
Karena
.
lot. beh1nd Armoty, Pt .
Pleasant.
$69.900, (7401385-7671

(304)593·,3542

1·800-837-3238
I

�'

www.mydailysentinetcom

==~
Inventory Clearance: 24X60, 1 bedroom Traile·r in Letart. New 1 bedroom apt. Call
3 bedroom. 2 bath. Delivery , lurnlshed. utilities pd. $350 (7401446-3736.
and set-up included. Cali month
$350
deposit
Mike: (7401385·99 48
(3041882-2858
P1lo t Program- Renters
needed. Call (304)736: SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
2 bedroom. 1 bath, WI D 3409.
StocK models at old prices. hookup.· $350 rani, deposit/
2.005 models arriving Now. relerences
required . Pleasant Valley Apartment
Cole's
Mobile
Homes. Mercerville area. (740)256· Are now taking Applications
15266 U.S. 50 East. Athens . 1008.
lo&lt; 2BR. 3BR &amp; 4BR ..
Ohio 45701. (7401592·1972.
Applications are
taken
:~where You
Get Your 2 bedroom. no pets. $275 Monday thru Friday, from
month ,
inc!ud'es
· Money's Worth~ ·
9:00 A.M.-4 P. ~ . OHice is
water/sewage,
$150
Located at 1151 Evergreen
SSII Social Security
deposit. Relerence required .
Drive· Point Pleasa11t. WV
~$1,300 Net incqme. We can (7401446-3617.
Phone No is (304)675-5806.
· finance you a home. Cali
2 Br. Mobile Home for Rent. E. H.O
(304)736-3400
~1!11'--~-~--., Gas Heat · $300/deposit.
Tara
Townhouse
$325/month. t304)882-!1q7 Apartments, very Spacious,
__
• 3 bedroom Trailer in Letart 2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
all Eleclnc $350 month $250'' 1/2 Bat~, Newly Carpeted,
12.40 acreS building site', deposit (3041882-2858
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool ,
960 tt . road frontage. some
Patio, Start $ 3BS/Mo. ,No
wooded, rural water on site, For re nt: 2 and 3 bedroom Pets, Lease Plu s Security
' gas &amp; electric available, mobile.. homes starting at Dep&lt;lsit Required , ·Days:
home site cleared, sur- $260.00 per month. Call
740-446·3481 ; Evenings:
veyed, road to site, $30,000 (7401992-2167.

·---'---- -

r. __

.A.~~.REA.~.·.~.E_,..~·I

740-367-0502.

firm , (7401992-2800

Thompso ns Appliance &amp;
Repalr-&amp;75-7388. For sale,
re-conditioned
automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refrigerators , gas and ( electric
ranges , air conditioners, and
wrmger washers . Will do
repairs or1 major brands in
shop.or at your home..

r

I BUY HOMES
'
· Need to sell yo ur hOme
' quickly because of a
divorce, bankruptcy. job
transfer, or death. Darn let
the ba nk foreclose and ruin
your credit Loca l pe rson
· buys houses. Fast closings.
:Au cash. Jim
(740)992-

~iiiiiiiiil

r

2957

j

room
and
bath.
downstove/refrigerator.
FOR ~'T
stai rs. all utilities pald. 46
Olive
Street.
$450
2 bedroom , ,Stale Route (740)446-3945.
160, small ' with garage. No
pets, $295 month plus Beautiful 2-story townhouse,
overlooking Gallipoli s City
deposit. (740)388·8371 .
park. Kitchen•family, D.R .,
2 or 3 bedroom house in L.A . 3 B.A .. study, 2 baths,
Pomeroy for rent, no pets, laundry area. References
. (740)992-5858
required, security deposit,
no pets. $900 per mo.
3 bedroom House in Letart
(740)446-2325 or (7401446$450 month $300 deposit
BEAUTIFUL ·,
APART·
3 bedroom
house in
BUDGET
MENTS
AT
Middleport, $400 a month,
$200 deposit, (7401949- PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwo&lt;ld
2025
Drive from $344 to $442
3 bedroom house near R·ia Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
Grande. $550/month . Call· 740-446 -2568
Equal
(740)441-0194 or (740)441 · Housin g Opportunity.
t 184.
___::_:.:...__-"...___
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
3 bedroom, 1 bath, kitchen, ED &amp; AFFORDABLE'!
large living room, dining Townho use
apartments,
roorT) , 2 car gar,age, and and/or srJ,au houses FOR
front porch. Kineon Drive RENT. Call (740)441·1 111
$5501month, $550/dep'osit. for application &amp; 1nformation.
3 bedroom, 2 112 bath, 1 car
garage. RACI,N E.
Hud
approved. pets allowed, 1·
800·340·861 4 leave mes·
sage.
HOuse un.furnished 2 br,
gas heat, Middleport. 740·

742-2424
3439.

0,

spaces in very goo d condi·
tion . Downtown Gallipolis.
Approx. 1600 sq. ft. each. 1
or 2 . baths. Le ase price
negotiable ·to encourage
new
business.
Call

(7401446-4425 or (74014463936.
\IIIH 11\ \ 111 ..,1

HOIJSEHOIJJ

Gooos

17401992 .

Nice Large 3br Home in
Town. Upstairs Launclry. 1·
Year Lease. $550/rhont(l
plus Deposit (304)675-4030

9-5

Appliance
Warehouse

Large 1 bedroom apt .~ new
carpet, stove. refrigerator.
2 bedroom Trailer for rent on Water/trash included. No
Plymale Ad
at Gallipolis pets. · $300 month plu9
Ferry. (304 )675·4044
deposit. (740)386·8371 .

96

GRAIN

Laredo 4 x4 (3041675-1705

$6,500.(6141231 ·1355.

,

VANS

North

.6

YOUNG'S

SERYICE

• Room Additions &amp;
RemocMIIng
•N•wG"a r•gn
• Electrical &amp; Plumblrig
• Roofing &amp; Guttert
~VInyl Sktlng &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
We do It all eKcapt
furnace work

2001 Dodge Caravan Sport,

BISSELL

70,000 miles, excellent condition, sliding doors-both
sides, auto, V6, AJC, power
everything, · time/temperature
gauge.
$11,000.

r

1981 · Olds 98, 4dr, Runs ' (7401256·6543.

~ood; . conditi.on fair $1.~ .
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Call (5041675·1264
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 11985 Mazda Low Rider,
800-537·9528.
1999 Ford Expedition, seri·
ous call s only (304 )675 •
NEW' AND USED STEEL 6640 or 593·0665
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For - Concrete,
Angle, 1992 Chrys. Imperial, V6,
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel nice car, $1 ,spa
Dqdge
Grand
Grating
For , Drains, 199~
Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L Caravan , V6 , dual air &amp; heat,
AM -FM -C D, dual sliding
Scrap Metals OPen Monday,
doors.
$3,250. (7.401256Tue sday. Wednesday &amp;
Friday. Bam-4:30pm. Closed 1189.
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; 1993 Chevrolet Astra Van,
Sunday (740)446-7300.
good
co ndition · ph one
(304)675·5077
SPA fACTORY Ounm
New Shipment
1996 bids V6 Autci, $1,600
20-tubs in-stock
{304)576-3231 ·
Cedar Knoll Mall.
1998
Dodge
Strauss.
Kentucky Trading PoSt,
100,000 miles, runs great.
Ashland.
power .everything, $2.400
1606l922·7185
17401256 ·903 1

40

I

MOTORcva.FSI

4 WHE£LER'i

1979 Hondh 750 lOth
Anniversary Limited Edition.
Needs
ignition
work.
Ev en ing
(740)256-6870.
Low mileage, $2,500.

992·6215

• .RePlacement
· Windows • Roofing

New Home Construction, Remodeling,

1995 Harley Softail Custom.
$9,995. Call (606)232·6319.

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

for a free estimate.

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me

do 1t for youl

4 -.wheeler tires- various
sizes
and
conditions.
1999 Honda ES 4-wheeler.
Excellent condition . $4,000

0

lloA~&amp;RSMALEOJORS

I

.. v
.
2003 Dodge Neon STX
4door, 4cyl.. automatic,
power everything, 11 ,000 2000 Yamaha Wave Runner
miles, $6,500. (7401441- &amp; Trailer. 760 GP (740)446·

i

9177
CAMPERS

&amp;

MOTOR HU'I&gt;IES

-6.=304~-------------

1997
24'
Coachman
93 maroon Caravan, 4 cyl.,
Catalina Lite Trailer Frt
3rd row seat, runs good .
$900 OBO. (740)256-1652. Queen Bed, Awning, 2 ·301b.
Propane,
Excellent
98 · Cadillac Calera . Fully Condition $7,495 OBO
equipped, leather interior, (3041675·2039
low miles, mint condition,

,\ 1 1\ l.., lf H I-.

·e5

~

TRUCKS

I

FOR SALE

1990 Chevy, extended cab,

(7401446-61 37.

r10

. HOlliE

$5,995.

Specials ot the M"ontfl on
Farmpro Tractors. Farmpro
20hp, 2·wheel drive, diesel
utility tractor, $3899.
Farmpro 30hp 4-wheel
drive, diesel utility tractor
wfloader, $8999. More
units available, all with 1Yr
warranty, call for more
details. (740)696·0358

•

BARNEY
M't' CONGREGATION SIN~S LIKE
A CHOIR OF ANGELS !!

THEM ONES THAT RIDE
MOTORC't'CLES !!

MINE, TOO !!

THE BORN LOSER
GROW~?

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635
'

"MI.d dleport's only
5elf·Storoce"

(3041882-2196, (304)377-

1998 Chev. Silverado 1/2
8266, cell.
Ton Extended Cab. 41C4,

4.3l, V-6; Au1o. PS, PEJ'. PL,
PW, Alum . Rims, Fiberglass
BASEMENT
topper, Pewter color 98 ,000
WATERPROOFING
miles Phone (304) 675-2039 Unconditional lifetime guar$9,995080
antee. Local references fur87 Chevy 1/2-ton, 2WD 350-' nished . Established 1975,
engine, 81 ,OOQ.miles. good Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
condition , PW/PL, orig. 4 0870, Rogers Ba semen t
new
tires.
Red/black. Waterproofing.

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICDON
.• New Homes
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

740-tt2-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

&amp;. FULL:
_,_..,.,

P''1'0U ~f-10\JL.'C&gt; eE FllU.Y ~~N

BY If~£'-""':.---,--,

·P"so You'~ 1'\0i
G(\i\~~'(

I

B\G&amp;ER?

BIG NATE

North ended in lour hearts, East cashed

'

IMPORTS
Athens

Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992· 7013 or 740-992-5553

Restocking l.ate Model Sa"age
and Arter MJrket Parts
See Brent or Brian

·PEANUTS

Whale~

I COULD HAVE BEEN A SLED
006, OR MAYBE A PAMPERED PET
OF SOME RICH LADV LIVIH6 IN
A TOWN HOUSE, OR MA'&lt;BE
SHEEP D06 IN
I

M-Fri 8:30 -5:00
Sa t. 8.:30-Noon
. Closed

Now Available At

BALJ!VI LU\IBER
Scorpion Tractors
" Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-Si ze 4Wheel Drive Tractor

with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-330.1

.SUNSHINE CLUB
DIDII'EU. 'r(X), DEAR :IHAT
l DIS(OVERE-0 "THE. MOSf
IAJOO~RFUL

C::HM

,.

I t HAVE 1'0 PO
[ _
5 0METHING KIND'...

I

ADVERTI
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $50 per month
GRIZZWELlS

•

'

•

knife

26 You, to
Httlng
Yves
4 Eccentric
ZT Whirlpool
5 TerrHory
28 Hubble
6 Ms. Merkel
component
7 Poetponea 31 Fedo (hyph.)
8 Comly Hat 33 Advanced
9 Guzzle
dega.
10 Pierre's
35 canter
head
37 OEA
11 Tayback or
operallve

49 Cafe au 50 GllmpH
51 Poor grade

54 Part of TNT

by Luis Campos
Celebrty Clpl'rer ctYJl!Ogrsms 110 ertaled. !rom'Quotl!iOnl by famous peopMI. paS1arll:l Pfaa&amp;nl
.
Each letter in the dpher lllnds for another

Todlly's clue: I equals s'
" P ' D.

T

C VI B

the dummy (Sou1hl, Wast had to overtake

YTZFIIH

~~

li

our•• .---....

6\~l?f:El)

AstroGraph

1 COUL.P GoNE
!IOMEONE A

PEPICUREI

Saturday, Feb. 12, 2005
By B•mlc• Bede Oeol
Look lor a marked improvement in th8
year ahead with conditions In general.
However, It will still be up to !fOU to take
advantage or any opportunities that
come your way. YoU have to be ready to
grow and harve5t a crop before you can
eat it.
·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. t 9) · Exaggerating your worth may be tun, but
it's likely to lead to embarrassmenltoday.
There's a chance you may tetl a big fish
tale to a guy whO has a ruler In his b8ck
pocket.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Ma.rch 20) - Be sure
you have your head screwed on straight
today when it comes to analyzing any
financial situation ~ If your thinking is of1
even a bit, you could lose a wad.
ARIES (March 21-April 19} -:- ThiS might
be a ~damned If you do, damned If you
don't" day for you. Those you're with
today may ask you to take charge, yet
unless you read the ir minds, they won'1
be pleased.
·
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You may
start ofl with Qreat -speed today, but
unless you ca n keep up the .pace you
might faller a bit. Mistakes can happen If
you try to push past your endurance
. point.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) .:.... It's OK to
sugarcoat anything harsh that may n~
lo be told to friends today, but be as
straightforward as possible In reporting
all the facts . They would resent being
!Ofally lied to.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - It's not
enough to have faith in your abilities and
talents today. You need lo be able to sus·
tain that confidence should you run Into
snags and problems. Don '! let self·
doubts creep ln.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - , The way you
perceive things today will be reasonably
accurate. Yet if you're not totally sure. you
will put too much cred~nce in the optn~
Ions ot others and be easily swayed into
wrong thinking .
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)- Be advised
that promoters who dangle a carrot In
front of your eyes may be interested in
something other than gratifying your
hunger. Before agreeing to anything,
anaty~e thek motives.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - In a joint
venture today, you may begin to feel that
you're the one doing the lion's ahara, but
before you react to that; carefully weigh
the input of others. The opposite may be
true .
' SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - The key
to being' truly effective today is not 'to try
to do more things than you can compete ntly and comfortabty manage. If you
step over the !Ina, you could ·undo all the
good you ·.,..e done.
SAGITTARIUS (NO'v'. 23·Dec. 21) Should you rind yournn in • competitiw
situation today, believe in your abilities to
tak&amp; on thtt oppon8nt, bu1, by th. same
token, dOn't fooflahly undereattiN'Irte your
competition .
CAPRICORN (Dec:. 22-Jan. 19) - lfs
always best not to 1rwotve nonprotaasiOnal oulaldere In tt.tlcate family matters,
and today Ia no ax~ton . Their Intentione may be well-meaning, but they m.y
furtha ~

I'M~~

'lllrthdoly:

muddy lha wale,.,

SOUPTONUTZ
~E Gc.A'a.S Of :FILla

740-742·3217

powder

46 Unlocked
47 Small bird
48 Oaf

·.. CELEBRITY CIPHER

NXW

1114/1 mo. pd

Caitlin Carpenler

23 Sl1com alleq 45 .Bath

24 Slant
2!i Jungle

3 "Kubla.
Khan"

30 Borodln

44 Childhood
malady

UWZFPLA

TEBWZ

the spade ace, then shifted lo the club

-

MARY ONL-Y PA1'ES
COMPA5610NA1'E GUYS

&amp; VldetJMrapily
Any occaslon·l'orlralt
Sn!Jions, Wtddlngs,
famlli~, t:ngagrmen(J,
Habit::'l

maybe

queen (mayb8 the nine would have been
beHer). When declarer played tow from

.•

GARFIELD

PICTURE
THIS!!
Pmfessiomd Photograph,·

lhlp
29 August kid,
prince
32 Footnote
· word
34 Drop
36 Phyolca
particle
36 Choomoeome
meterlal
39LaU08
4t Chasm
43 KHchen

22 Roman
emperor

1 Flaky
mineral
2 The race

IIPJFI

IGTP A

PA

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The seffing to musi c ol a poem must b!! an act

Belarus. (7401696-0358

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

fer bid, West overcalled two spades, and

spade king and give hiS partner a spade
ruff. The diamond queen would be the
fiffh defE!nsive trfck. But West let the club

$4,700.(7401506-1367.

29670 Bashan Road
Rac ine , Ohio
45771
740--949·2217

DOWN

Guy"
23 Scrapbook
26 Bowl or

This deal occurred during the quarterfinals of the Women's and Open Series in
Istanbul. Study the layout and decide
what should happen in four hearts. Does
it make any difference if North is the
declarer?
The diarTiond eight was 'ihe popular lead.
_Declarer won with dummy's king and
drew trumps. Now il was time for thought.
Since West hadn't led a top spade. East
had to have the ace or king . And si!"Ce
declarer would lose a diamond Irick, the
spades n·eeded to be 6·1; otherwise, the
defenders would easily take two spades,
one ~iamond and one club. But there was
still a danger that the ·defense woUld get
lh&lt;lse tricks .
Jenny Ryman , from Sweden, sponed the

.-th his club ace. Than , he could cash the

Tractor parts &amp; service, spe·
ciallzlng
in
Massey
Ferguson , Ford, Long, and

Hill's Se lf
Storage

All the possibilities
were covered

·

Queen hold- contract made.

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimaies
Call Gary Stanley
740-742-2293
• Leave a messa e

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

Demone
40 Light
18 18-wheeler
lunchea
20 He loved
42 Sturgli
· Lucy
vlahors

home

way to stop that from happening. She

BUCKEYE Sanitation
P'Wf\QJ. WIU.. t.

· 22 PBS

drew trumps ending on the board, then
played a club to her king, which cui the
defenders' communications. West took
the trick and played a spade to her part·
ner's ace, bUt declarer ruffed the club exit
and called tor a low diamond. rJer last two
spaqes disappeared on dummy's estab·
lished diamonds.
At one table, North, Zejun Zhuang from ·
China, &lt;lpened an off-center one notrump. South used a two-diamond trans·

AHimllon
Meigs Co. Raldenlsllf

IMPROVEMENTS

8-loot bed . 32, 000 actual
miles, excellent mechanical Affordable . Service.' paint,
shape. 305
Automatic. chimneys. trees, Gutters,
John Deere 2040, diesel , $3,400.00 080. (7401696· Jack of All Trades. Senior
EC, new tires, $8,950. F.ord 1227
discount, free estimates.

3000
diesel ,
' (61414 19-2781 .

~:7...._7"-· TIM~.

STANLEY TREE .
TRIMMING&amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work

$7,900. Call (7401704-3751 .

11

&amp; All

SEPTIC TANK PIJMPING $95.00
PORTABLE TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
992·3251 OR 591-8757

(7401446·0048.

r

PB, AIC , 88,000 miles,
$1 ,800 OBO. (7 401446· ·

Buildings, Roofs, Siding, Windows

Other Residential Needs
Phone: 740-742-34'11

1998 Yamaha , Warrier.
Excellent condition, $2,600.

qne owner. Nice (740)441- $4.,·;,.•.;..00;..;;
13..;04_)..;6.75.;..·.;;29.;..4..;2;._....,

93 Ford Escort LX. Auto, PS,

Pole

SLEPT

Tt'I~OUGt'l
Tt'l~ ~IGt'IT

Sunset Home
Construction

Siding • New Garages

or OB0.(740)25'S·6655.

0337 or (7401645-6 153.

Tt'l~ IUGt'IT
PLAG~. lUT ~

•

Brian Reeves

RESIDENTIAL

Pass ·

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

·'

Decks, Garages,

East
Pa5B
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: '?

wAS AT

Renovation s,

Nortll

It

Pass

W'l ' " " '

· COMMERCIAL and

West

17 1950s card
chann.e l
game
60 Round
19 Old uylng
Table tltlto
21 TUnle pasha 61 Shoet'a

"Science

I.4. I. 3.
SOulb

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

New Homes • Vinyl

• Q 75
... Q J 10 9 4 3

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Neither

Tree Service

BUilDERS lnt

4
8 3
A 8 7 2

10 4 3
K 10 9 6 5
• J 4z
4o K5

1986 Honda Foreman , 4 wd,

kept, $2000,(7401992-0413

East
4o A
• J 82

•
•

Pomeroy, Ohio

TFN
e~ecellent condition , garage

02-IHIS .

Soutb

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Tow-dolly, new tires, 6 ply cl7:..4::0.::12::5::6:..·1.:2.:.33:..·_· - - - - 2005 Kaw,asaki V-TWil) 750
and new straps, $425 080. 2002 • Ford Escort zx~. 5 Vulcan
Cycle,
never
(740)379-2706.
speed, 29,000 miles, air, dropped, garaged, 50mpg.

0157 or (740)645-5141 .

4o

JONES'

CARPENTER

25 Years Local EKPtrltnce

FoRSAU

•
•

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

·r•r, kin

45 Poo side

4 Modomwonl
turban
8 Very faa1 jet 48 Warped
11 En1ry permH 52 Spring mo.
12 "Ro11n1011d'' 53 n may be
eott~
opUt
13 Part oiiOU 55 Moderate
14 Click-on . 56 BruceItem
of Kung fu
15 Greenish57 Bead
blue color 58 Not green
16 Appropriate 59 Cabla

Q8 5
• A Q 7 3
~ A K 10 9 6

West
• KJ9762

utensil

44 X

1 Combine

•

(740)669·5653

S100 each.(7401256-6824.
RCA T.V. maple woOd cabiI \lnl..,l 1'1' 1 II "

Say it in
q:'fie '~(assifted$!
:

Jeep Grand Cherokee

1998 30' fifth wheel travel
Je.ep Grand Cherokee &lt;10 trailer, double slide, excel·
$13,900
Laredo, 65K miles. Excellent lent cpndition,
condition. 4x4. remote start. phone (7401698·9319
(7401446-7398
(7401379-2615.
extras.
$i 3,000neg .
Mollohar:l CS:rpet, 202 Clark The , perfect
Class C Dutchman Motor
gift
for (3041617·1380.
·Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. Valentine's Day! Yellow Lab,
Toyota Aav- 4. '9 7 all wheel Home 2000 M&lt;ldel, New
(7401446-7444 1-'877-830· 5 females, 3 males. $125. drive. Loaded,
all
accessories,
1 owner, tires,
9162. Free Estimates, Easy Cell(740)446·4589.
$5,700. Call (60£1923. 3259 steeps-B. (3041675·7388 to
financing, 90 days same as
or (304)429-8032, leave i.nquire
cash. Visa/ Master Card . UKG reg. Rat Terr ier puppies. Shots and wormed , m,.e,;.ss..;•.,:9.;..e·- - - - - - .
Drive- a- little save alot. .

§ot SometfiinB to sa
to' tRat Syecia{ S

..

FOR SALE

HAY &amp;

FOR SALE

in Henderson, WV. Pre· Block, brick, sewer pipes,
owned applicanes starting at windO!~f:S , lintels, etc. Claude
$75 &amp; up all unde"r warranty, Winters. Rio Grande, OH
we do serv1ce work on all
Make. and Models (304)675·
7999

net, swivel base, 38~ wide.
Good condition , $75. Call

Phillip
Alder

3870.

Furniture: Sofa· chair sets,
Reg istered
Toy
$399; Sofa· love seal sets, AKC
Poodles, 4 black males, 1
$499.
·
Mollohan
Carpet
For Lease: One bedroom,
black, 1 cream female. $500.
nice 2nd floor apt. COrner (740)446·7444 or (7401388·
Ready by 2121l/05.(74013670173.
Pine and Second. Large
7429.
kitchen with dining area.
Inside sale: Mise items, such
New range , refri gerator.
Llewellyn Setter puppies.
as
clothing, some lurnitui-e,
Water included. References
FDSB Registered . Excellent
pictures, temps, all reasonbloodlines. DNA certified .
required . $300/mo. Security able priced.
Intelligent, loyal, make out·
deposit . No pets . Call
Skaggs Appliances
stanejing hunters &amp; loving
(7401446-4425 or i740)44676 Vine Street
pets. Ready Valentine's Day.
3936.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Ap artments in Middlepo,rt.
From $295-$444. Call 740.
992·5064 . Equal Housing
Opportunities.

ACROSS

2000 Ford Winstar ,LX. 81K,
2/sliding doors, seats 7, all
power, rear air, tinted wln'dows.
asking
$6,900,

r

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

"Barrels Only" have 3 Mixed Square Bales of Hay
Winchester'model 1200. 16 S2 per Bales (3041675·1118
&amp; 20 ga .. $125. For the 3; if no answer leave message
also lver Johnson 32 ga.
II~ \\..,I'C 110 \Ill I\
sh&lt;ltgun, very unusual ga ..
and excellent condition,
Aurus
$895. Ironton , OH (740)533·

OBO.

4425 .

Phone 17401245-0437

r

(7401245·9652.

AERATION MOTORS

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

6924

1 electric scooter, i electric .1,000 lb, round bales, 99 Jeep Cherokee· SP.orl.
wheel chair, 2 electric Iitts for orchard grass and alph 4x4, EC, gold, auto, PW, PL,
vehicles. Call (740)446· alph8 mix. Barn stored. V6, CD, CC, keyless entry,

I

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

2BA apt. State Route 160.
SPACE .
FOR·REN'r
.
$400/month, stove/refrigera·
lor included. washer/dry,er ,
hookup. (740)441 -0 194 or Commercial office space tor
~740)441-1184.
lease-approx. 900sq. ft. in
downtown Gallipolis. Ideal
28R upsta1rs apt. 238 First for professionals, $450/mo.
Ave Stove/refrigerator, no Call (7401286-3100.
pets. $385imon th + utilities +
deposit. (740)446-4926.
.For Lease: Office or retail

www.mydailysentinel.com

Buckskin Quarter Stallion,
Jeep
Cherokee
Shown Running Color pro· 1998
ducer. $3500, (7401992 - Classic, 4.0, automatic, fully
2800
loaded $5495 304-727·
6;92;,4;.__ _ _ _ _ _.,
For S&amp;le: 14 foot stock trail- ;;

r

0022."

Friday, February 11 , 2005
ALLEY OOP

4 Pygmy goats. $50 each or 1995 Jeep Cherokee Sport,
all 4 for $175. (740)256· 4.0 automatic, air, excellent
1090 or (740)645-6746.
cond . $3495.00 304·727·

Chain link lance, various $ 00!
5
Honda's, • Chevy's,
heights, 740·949-2803.
Jeep's,
Ect.
Police
2218.
Twi n Rivers Tower Is accept- Electric Scooter.
Rarely lmpo~n d s! Cars from $500
ing applications for waiting used, Excellent Condition for listings 600-391·5227
2 bed room tri·level apt. ·list for Hud-subslzed, 1- br,
EXT 39()1
SpriOg Valley area. Deposit
$900 (304)675-6114
. apartment, call 675-6619
- - - - - - - -.req uired. Phone (740)446· EHO
JET

r.::l1o:--·H='='"OIN-.-'li·,- - , 3

(304 1882·2858

IURSALE

,:.;;;;;;,;;;;;;.;;:,;;;;.:;;=:::........

r

- ~~1&lt;

======~======================
SUVs

UVESIQCK

er, in good conditio n.
4x4
Several registered fullblood
.
yearling Boer Bucks (goats) ,
registered 2 year old Suffolk 1998 Dodge Dakota Sport
Colt lightweight boll riHie ram (sheep). Call (740)256• extended cab 4x4, ve, auto·
. 63,000 m11es,
. . $ 7,000.
30.06 cal. N.LB. '$500, 1330 anytime.
mat1C,
Armalite M·15 $650, 4 Colt Miniature Donkeys, All ~hite (740) 441·0337 0r (740)645·
AA· 15's, like l'lew, $1,100 Jack5Yrold,'2· 1 112yrold 6153 .
each. 740 379·2601.
Jennys, 2· 6 months old 1·
Jenny ~.JBck, 2· Syr old 2004 Ford Expedition XLT,
ANnQlTF.S
Jennys Call (304)882·2213 5.-il Triton V-8, air, cruise,
3rd
row
seat ,
Yearling Angus Bulls, Mostly AM/FM!CD/Cassette 34,000
1
Buy
or sell.
Aive ri~e A.l. excellent ' bloodlines, miles, remainder factory
r Antlqu~s , 1124 Ea5t Ma1~
priced reasOnably. Slate Run warranty. (?40}245·9162
on SA 24 E. Pomeroy, 740 Farm. Jackson. (740)286- 86 Bronco XLT. 4 WD, 302,4
992 " 2526 · Russ Moore, 5395 ·
BBL, auto. n.,..., tires, roters,
....
:~~;:;:;;;;00,~ wWw.slaterunfarm .com
$1 '100, (7401992·3679

Mobile home. Rio Grande
MAPLES,
100
60xf00 lot with 28 ft . 5th area, 2 bedroom, 2 bath- TH E
Drive
East,
$300/deposit, Memorial
wheel camper &amp; outbuilding, ro.om,
740-992-7022,
28x24 shelter. Beautiful view $400/month. No pets. Phone Pomeroy,
SubSidized
Residential
of
Raccoon
· Creek (7401367-7025
Accessible to the· Ohio River Nice 2br. Mobile-Home for Housing for 5Q years pi age
older.
PRIORITY
with boat. Call
Asking Rent, Apple Grove Area . and
$23,000, price negotiable. Garbage;Water paid No- GIVEN TO APPLICAN TS
1
WITH INCOM E AT OA
(7401448-0022.
Pets.
From
$260
to BELOW $10,650. Maximum
Approx. 64 acres of wooded $300/month(304l576-2999
Income effective 01·28·2004
land west side St. At. 160
for 1 person ·$17,700.00.
.between Kerr &amp;. Evergreen.
Must meet HUD/202/8 crite'$95 ,000.
740-245-54 18;
rja for .household composi·
:740·446-76 11 after 5pm.
tion .
Managed
by
1 and 2 bedroom apart· Silverheels, Incorporated, A
For sate: 6 acres. has water
ments, furnished and unfur- Realty Company Equal
&amp; electric. 25 minutes from
nis hed, security deposit Housing Opportunity.
·
Gallipolis. (740)379-9098.
required, no pets, 740·992· ·

r

Friday, February 11, 2005

;JbcE IS HlllF DlPl'Y,..

ollove, never a marriage

of convenience." -

Francis Poulenc

(cl2005byNEA, Inc.

2·11

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WORD

. ~VIlLI!

UMI

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!our K rc.'nbl ed worc:: s

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3

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O· Co:-r.cil'!~e
the thvckle Quo:.:d
.
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b~ f.lltr,Q in !he m•5""0 word,
yo~ Cewelcp lrom s!ep fo,:o,

fJ I'~ tNT NUMBHEO lETTERS

3 beloW.

t

IN THESE SQUARES

E) ~~iC,:~~~~~ t EllE RS

TO

IIIIIIII

SCJIAM.LETS ANSWERS

Z- 1 o- o~

Runner· Knock- Grope· Pestle· NECK OUT
· "It's okay lobe cautious ," my wise old aunl told me .
oJut one should remember . that even a lurtle gets no where
J niess he sticks h1s NE CK OUT !'

. ARLO &amp; JANIS

�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday? February u,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

AP Exclusive: Former NBA star's mlosque donated
money to alleg·ed terror fronts, records indicate
investigating Olajuwon, a 7foot center born in Nigeria
who played 17 seasons for
the NBA's Houston Rockets
WASHINGTON
and one for the Toronto
Former NBA star Hakeem Raptors before retiring in
O!ajuwon
insists
his 2002.
mosque's donations . to
The 42-year-old Olajuwon,
groups the government later who became a U.S. citizen in
determined to be terrorist !993. won the NBA's Most
fronts were meant to help the Valuable Player award in
poor, not sponsor terrorism. !994, when he led the
A Houston mosque that Rockets to the first of back. Olajuwon established and to-back championships.
suppoJ;ted gave mote than
The
Olajuwon-founded
$80,000 . to groups the gov- Islamic Da'Wah Center in
ernment labeled as fronts for Houston gave more than
al-Qaida and the Palestinian $60,000 in 2000 and $20,000
terrorist group Hamas, in 2002 to the Islamic
according to documents African Relief Agency, the
obtained by The Associated center's tax records show.
Press.
The mosque gave more than
Olajuwon told the AP he $1 million in donations durwouldn't have given money ing2000 and about $291,000
to the groups had be known in 2002, the records show.
of the alleged terrorist ties The government shut down
-some of whic~ had been the the relief agency in October,
subject of news 'reports ·saying it gave money and
before the contributions . other support to Osama bin
were made. Olajuwon 's Laden and al-Qaida.
.
mosque gave the money
But the agency and its rosbefore the United States des- sible ties to terrorism had
ignated the groups as terror- been in news stories years
ist fronts.
earlier, before Olajuwon's
"There is no way you can contributions:
·go back in time," Olajuwon · - The U.S. Agency for
said in a recent telephone International Development
interview from Jordan, cut off two . government
where he is studying Arabic. grants to the Islamic African
"After the fact, now they Relief Agency in 1999, sayhave the list of organizations ing funding the gro_up
that are banned by the gov- "would not be in the national
ernment."
interest of the United
A Treasury Department States."
. spokeswoman,
Molly
-A former fund-raiser for
Millerwise, declined to dis- the · relief agency, Ziyad
cuss Olajuwon's contribu- Khaleel, was named in a fedtions. She said that "in many era! trial in 200 1 as the man
cases, donors are being who bought a satellite tele·unwittingly misled by the phone bin Laden used to plan
charities.:'
the 1998 bombings of U.S.
Federal law enforcement embassies in Kenya and
officials said they weren't Tanzania.

BY MATT KEUEY

· Fonner bisllatball•s chatnv conbl•uuws linked 10 ta1roriSIS

Associated Press

Tax records show that a Houston mosque founded
and funded by basketl)all star Hakeem Olajuwon
gave·more than $80,000 to charities that the U.S.
1994- Olajuwon
won NBA's
MVPaward

1996- Hakeem Islamic
Da'Wah Institute founded
(later renamed Islamic .
Da'Wah Center)

Jwr

lfW'

Islamic Da'Wah

2000 - Center gave the Holy
Land Foundation (HtF)
$2,43(} and Islamic African
· Relief AgOncy (lARA) $61,250

Downtown Houston
bank building remodeled
into a mosque (left),
· which opened in 2002

wn

' rt)i@

Contribution

Center In downtown Houston

government later determined to be fronts for terrorist
organizations. Olajuwon says he did not know of any
links to terrorism when
the donations were
made.
.
'

1999- Olajuwon par·
tlclpated In celebrity
bowling toumament for
Holy Land Foundation'
charity group

2001 .:. U.S. govemment shul down
HLFforalleged
funding of Hamas
terrorists

2002 - Islamic
Da'Wah Center
gave U.S. branch
of IAR'A $20,000

Olajuwon
retired
from basketball

2004 - lARA shut
down for alleged
funding d Osama bin
Laden and ai-Qaida

AP

Islamic De'Wah Center and 01ajuwon foundation ; corporate records from 1he Te11.as Secretary of State's o~ice: T~easury Department

-Numerous news organizations reported shortly after
the 2001 terrorist attacks that
the relief agency was among
more than two dozen Islamic
charities under scrutiny for
possible terrorist ties.
~Olajuwon also participated
in a 1999 celebrity bowling
tournament f?r the · H~ly
Land Foundation for. Rehef
and Development, wh1ch the
· government. shut down. in
2001, accusmg It of sendmg
money to Hamas. The
Islamic Da'Wah Center gave
more than $2,000 to the
Texas-based Holy Land
Foundation in 2000, according to its tax returns.
At the time, Olajuwon was
. vic,e president of the mosque
- which was named -after
·him - and provided more
than three-quarters of its
money. Olajuwon heads the
separate foundation that controis the Islamic Da' Wah
Center.
All the donations came
before the government designated the Holy Land
Foundation and the Islamic

African Relief Agency asterrorist fronts. Vi"pul Worah, an
accountant for Olajuwon's
charities, said U.S. authori.ties have never asked about
the contributions.
Olajuwon
beca:me
a
Muslim during . his professional career and was known
for playing in key . games
while observing dawn-to-.
dusk fasting during the
Islamic t\oly month of
Ramadan.
Tax returns for Olajuwon's
Islamic Da'Wah Center show
it gave the Islamic Afriqn
Relief Agency $61 ,250 in
2000 and $20.000 in-2002.
Those donations accounted
for 2.2 percent of the $2.8
million the Islamic African
Relief Agency received during 2000 and 1.4 percent of
the $1.4 million It raised in
2002, record~ show.
Olajuwon said the donalions came after fund-raisers
from the Islamic African
Relief
Agency
visited
Houston. He said the group
told him donations would
help the needy in Africa.

"They
came
and ·was at the same conference
approached us and every- as someone who supported
thing was legitimate. 1 had. terrorism, doesn't mean the
no knowledge of their activi- organization sponsors or
ty," Olajuwon said.
condones acts of terrorism,"
The Treasury Department Akeel said. ·
alleged in October that sevThe Holy Land Foundation
era! top officials of the was shut down in December
group's branches overseas 2001. Federal authorities say
are al-Qaida members or it was the main U.S. fundassociates, and the group raiser for Hamas and sent
gave bin Laden hundreds of
thou sands of dollars in 1999. $12.4
million to the
The federal government Palestinian terrorist group
says the Sudan-based Islamic from 1995 to 200 I. Hamas
African Relief Agency's U.S. has claimed responsibility
branch is lARA-USA, based for dozens of suicide bombin Columbia, Mo. That group ings in Israellhat have killed
has challenged the terrorist . scores of people, including
designation in COl,lrl, saying Americans.
it is separate · from the
The Holy Land Foundation .
Sudanese group.
and several leaders are
Shereef Akeel, a lawyer for awaiting trial on criminal
lARA-USA. acknowledged charges of supporting terror:
the U.S . . group and the. ism, which they deny. U.S.
Sudanese group "may be in a
partnership together," and District
Judge
Gladys
that some people .with links Kessler rejected the group's
to lARA-USA have te)Torist 2002 . lawsuit challenging its
associations. ,:
terrorist designation •. ruling
"Just because someone federal officials had "ample
traveled in the same circles, evidence" · of financial supjust because one employee 'port for Hamas.

WORLD CUP SOCCER QUALIFYING

U.S. beats Trinidad ·and Tobago
BY RoN BLUM

said. "We never agreed with the near post, headed the
that. I think the way our ball into the net from 12
team pulled together over . Yll!'ds out. Goalkeeper Neil
p 0 R T _ 0 F _ s p A. 1 N , the last couple of weeks to Shaka Hislop had no chance.
Trinidad _ Eddie Johnson be ready to play this game . Johnson has six goals in
knows this type of personal · under d1~cult co~dltlons- just
four
international
success probably won't last . travel, f1eld conduwns, th_e appearances and became the
Johnson scored a goal in heat, everythmg else - .11 first player to score in each
his fourth straight game to turns out to be a fantasl!c of his first four games with
put the United States ahead result."
. the U. S . national team. He
against
Trinidad
and
In the region's other quali- matched William Looby
Tobago, Eddie Lewis boost- fiers, Mexico won 2-1 at · ( 1955) and Brian McBride
ed the lead early in the sec- Costa Rica as Juan Lozano (2001) as the only player to
·ond half and Kasey Keller scored . in the eighth and score in four straight games,
minutes
and and his six goals in qualifymade some great saves in a ninth
2-1 victory Wednesday in Guatemala and Panama ing already tied Willy Roy
-the opener of the final round played a 0-0 tie in Panama for third on the career scor. of World Cup qualifying.
City.
ing list in qualifying behind
"He's still a little .bit inexAsh Wednesday usually is Earnie Stewart (nine) and ·
perienced, but there's so a beach day in · this McBtide (seven).
. many good qualities: s·ize, Caribbean nation, where the
"It' b t t k'
d
Carnival celebration that · s a ou a mg a vanstrength, ability to take peod h
.
.
tage of the chances you get,"
ple on, speed, ability to hold en s t e previOus mght is Johnson said. "I didn't get
the ball," U.S. coach Bruce huge. But the steel and
h
d ,
samba drums were sounding many·c ances to ay.
Arena said of the 20-year
. Keller who had a 23 hour
for the Soca Warriors in the ·
'
old Johnson.
searing 90-degree heat at the JOUrney f rom G ermany on
"Bruce told me it's only
Monday to get to the game
Park Oval, with made·
·
•
going to get harder," Queen's
a sl1'd'ng
T &amp;T hoping to continue the
I
sa ve on
Johnson said, "I'm not going ceh;bration
t · k on a .
and
exact L es I'Je F't
I zpa nc
to score .a goal in every revenge for the November b rea kaway e1g
· ht mmu
· tes
1989 loss to the Americans into the second half. One
game. It was tougher."
Less than three weeks ago, that denied it a berth at· the minute later, Johnson passed
the Americans didn't even 1990 World Cup in Italy.
the bal 1 to Landon· Donovan,
know if they would have
Johnson struck in. the 30th who gave it to Lewis for a
their top players or would minute, J. ust as
Paul 1e f t- foote d shot from ab out
send a team o f minor leaguers because of a labor dis- Caligiuri did 15 years ago in 23 yards out that easily went
pute. But an. interim settle- the famous qualifier at near- in.
ment ensured the 'regulars by
Hasley
Crawford
"We told our guys we've
would be on the field Stadium, a game that put the got to get the second goal,"
through 2005. and the 11th- United States in soccer's top Arena said. "We got it.:'
~anke~ u.s. team imposed event for the first time since
U.S.
players
Notes:
1ts will on No. 61 Trinidad I 950.
received
$7,500
each,
and Tobago unti,l tiring in
Coming down the right
the final minutes.
flank of the 80-yard-wide including' a $4,750 bonus for
"It's massive," Keller said, field, Steve Cherunoldo the win .... MF Clint Mathis
''especially with all the crossed the ball into the was among the five players
drama that's gone on around penalty . area and Johnson, on the 23-man roster who
the team. The guys came with no ·defenders. clo11e on did not dress.
----------------,
together and got a great 'Victory."
Until Angus Eve scored in
the 89th minute on a cross
that went in off Keller's
:·
hand, the home team didn't
have much to cheer for. The
United States, which plays
its next qualifier at · Mexico
on March 27, is 23-0-7
against North and Central
American and Caribbean
rivals since a September ·
2001 loss at Costa Rica. The
Americans haven't lost to a
Get home delivery today
Caribbean opponent since a
1994 defeat in Trinidad.
.
"There were a bunch of
reasons why we couldn't be
successful today," Arena
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February, 11, 2005

2005
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