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                  <text>. . -.

Lockout
from Page B1

Hang time: LeBron undecided on All-Star dunk
BY TOM WITHERS

Associated Press
"The scary part now for
hockey is do the fans come
back? We're not baseball ,
we're not the national pastime," Nashville forward Jim
McKenzie said.
Between shifts of a pickup
game at the Denver rink
where the Avalanche used to
practice, fan Don Cameron
called the cancellation "a
shame."
"When they come back. it's ·
not going to be as easy to pay .
for a $90 season ticket," he
said.
Not to mention how dilficult it will be for all the u!Jlers,
trainers,
official s.
Zambon.i drivers and businesses near arenas that will
continue to be affected.
Bettman said the sides
. would keep working toward.
. an agreement.
"We' re planning to have
hockey next season," he said.
Goodenow stressed that the
players had already given a
lot o[ground. "Every offer by
the players moved in the owners' direction," he said.
"Keep one thing perfectly
clear," Goodenow. said. "The
players never asked for more
money - · they just asked for
a marketplace."
The league and players'
union traded a flurry of proposals and letters Tuesday
night, but could never agree
on a cap. The players proposed $49 million per team;
the owners said $42.5 million.
But a series of conditions and
fine print in both 'proposals ·
made the offers further apart
than just $6.5 million per
team.
"We weren't as close as
· people were speculating,"
Bettrnan said.
Although Bettman was
unequivocal . in announcing
the cancellation, Yzerman
held out hope that some kind
of a miracle was still possible.
"If you read into what
(Bellman) said, it sounds like
there is still an opportunity to
get .things done," the Detroit
Red Wings captain said:."The
principles are there to make a
peal, so I stiU think something
can happen in the next day or
two, because we' re really not
that far apart.''
Goodenow was less opti·
mistic.
"I think it's a fresh start and
everything is off the tab)e," he
said. "It's a totally new environment. That much . is for
sure.
Before Monday, the idea of '
a salary cap was a deal-breaker for the players' association
but the umon ·gave in and said
it would accept one when the
NHL dropped its insistence
that there be a link between
revenues and player costs.
That still wasn't enough to
end the lockout that started .on·
Sept. 16 and ultimately wiped
out the entire 1,230-game
schedule that was to begin in
October and run through the
Stanley Cup finals in June .
And now, those concessions are off the table.
"By necessity we have io
go back to linkage .since no
one knows what the damage
. to .the sport will ·be," Bellman
satd.
The NHL's last game came
in June, when the Tampa Bay
Lightning beat Calgary 2-l in
Game 7 to win the Stanley
Cup.
·
Since then, a lot . of stars
.have moved on, going overseas to play. Jaromir Jagr,
Vincent t.ecavalier, Teemu
Selanne, Joe Thornton and
Saku Koivu are among the
over 300 of the league's 700plus players who spent part of
this season playing in Europe .
Whenever a deal· is reached,
there won't be a clear-cut way
to determine the draft order.
Washington had the No. I
selection last year and
grabbed Russian sensation
Alexander Ovechkin . No
doubt the lowly Capitals
would love to go first again to
pick Crosby.
Shortly after B'ettman took
over as commissioner, a lockout cut the 1994-95 regular
season to 48 games, still more
than half the schedule.
The NHL began preparing
for the possibility of another
lockout in 1998 when each
team. contributed $10 million
toward a '$300 million war
chest. The collective bargaining agreement, which expired
on Sept 15, was extended
twice after it was originally
signed in 1995. That allowed
for the NHL to complete ·its
expansion, plans without
interrupting play.

~

Thursday,February17,2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

..

CLEVELAND - Usually
the one with his feet off the
floor. LeBron James has
every9ne else hanging.
With the NBA's All-Star
dunk contest in Denver just a
few days away, the Cleveland
Cavaliers star forward hasn 't
decided whether he'll take
. part against the league's other
premier leape[s·
" It is a ·y·es or no' answer_"
'.

Meigs
from PageB1
Harder score 20 points in the
opening half and 6-foot-4
forward Colby Reese add
nine points in the secorid,
quarter.
That helped River Val,ley
take a 33-25 lead at half·
time as . the Raiders
outscored the Marauders
14-5 during the final4:03 of
the second quarter.
.
"We switched defensives
at halftime," said Wolfe .
"We were able to shut down
the inside game. We got
hurt · in the second quarter
with their inside game. We
took the inside away."
Harder finished with 25
points, while Reese pitched
in with 14 points and I0
rebounds for the Raiders
(10-11).
Meigs (10- 11) was led by
Jared Casey with 17 points,
including a 11 -13 p'erformance from the free throw
line, all of which came in
the second half. Eric
Cullums added 13 points
for the Marauders off the
bench. while Carl Wolfe, Jr.
scored 10.
River Valley was forced
to shoot from the outside
more , which didn 't' 'bold
well for the Raiders all
night. River Valley fini shed
0-13 from beyond the arc in
the second half, 0-17 on the

said James, who has been
pressed about a decision
nearly eve1y day for the past
few weeks. "I just haven' t
decided if I' II do it or not.
You know me, I'm a last·
minute person."
James skipped last ,year's
dunk contest m Los Angeles,
partially because he was
upset at not being picked as a
reserve for the Eastern
Conference's All-Star team
as a rookie. James. who
recently l)lissed a few games
with ·a . sprained ankle, may

wait
until
F r i d a y
before
he
makes up his ·
mind.
The league
officiallY
announced at
least. . lour
P• artslcttpadn.ts
1
or a ur ay
. night's dunk
James
contest
at
one time the highlight .~fAll·
Star Weekend festiVIties.
Atlanta rookie Josh Smith

will compete along with J.R.
Smith and Chris Andersen of
New Orleans and Amare
Stoudemire of Phoenix.
"I'm excited about it,"
Josh Smith said before
Wednesday night 's game
against the Cavaliers. "It 's a
big deal for me. I've talked
to Dominique (Wilk ins) a lith .
l'k .
tie abo~~ w a~ 11 was 1 e fn
h1s day.
De~ver was the s.ite of the
NBA s f1rst dunk contest m
1984 and the ABA dunk-off

Waltrip and Earnhardt
up front again, Bt

between Julius Erving and ·
David Thompson in 1976.
James has a standing invi·
tation from the league,
which would love to see him
compete and possibly help
fans forget about some of the
turbulence from the ftr-st half
of the 2004-05 season.
"I know if Josh Smith is in
it, he's got a great shot," he
said: "If Jason Richardson is
in it , he's f!lways got a great
shot. Everyone thinks · I
should be in it."

night.
.:
boards the entire second ·
Meanwhile Meigs was half.
able to take advantage of
"We got very few second
River Valley 's s~ooting chances (in the second half)
woes; going on a Il-l run to and we didn't get anything
open the third quarter. in transition in the second
including a 3-point goal by half; either," said L'ayton.
Cullums at the 3:01 mark as
'It was the final game for
the Marauders took a 36-34 six River Valley seniors,
lead.
.
'including all five starters .
"That was a bad start for
"I hate to see them go out
us," said River Valley head like that, but there are only
. coach Gene Layton. "I did- four teams in the state that
n't like the way the secohd will win thei'r last game,"
half started just with the said Layton.
pace of the game. We settle
In
the
first
game
for the first open ·shot Wednesday, Fairfield Union
instead of having a little tied the game with six secmore patience. ·
onds left in Jhe game as
"Maybe we went to the 3- Jared Larson made one out
point shot to early. They of. two free throw attempts.
· Warren's Dustin Smith,
were just packing that zone
in so much and were just all though, . took the ball the
over Steve and Colhy both. length of the floor and made.
If we could have just hit a a driving layup as time
couple (3-pointers) and expired to help Warren
loosen that zone back up. advance to Saturday 's sec·
but none of them would. tiona) final with a 78-76
drop ."
·
Wtn.
River Valley managed to
"I know we've got our
tie the game on a basket by hand s full with Warren,"
Harder with 2:41 left in the said Wolfe. "They wqn the
third quarter, but Meigs
countered 'with a . 3-pointer SEOAL and won by a lot of
by Jeremy . Blackston 20 conv inci ng scores. But,
· these guys have surprised a
seconds later.
Bryan Walters/photo
River Valley never tied or lot of people. the second half Meigs senior Carl Wolfe, Jr., right. shoots a jump hook .over
took the lead again as they of the season, so I hope River.Valley senior Colby Reese (40) during Wednesday's secwere held to seven points in they've got one more sur- tional semis .at Katie Smith Gymnasium. Meigs won 68-50.
the third quarter and prise in them."
Meigs 68," River vaney 50
68.
outscored 43-17 in the sec- , "Overall, I think its just Meigs
RIVER VALLEY (HH1) - Chris Roush
12 13 18 25- 68
ond hal(
great .for these kids ," Wolfe AiverValley 11 22-.:7 10-50 1 1-1 3, Darren Clark 2 0-1 4, Derek
Smith 2 0·0 4, Colby Reese 5 4-8 14,
The Raiders also didn't added of the win. "That's MEIGS (10-11) - Jared Casey 3 11-13 Stephen Harder 11 3-6 25. TOTALS- 2 1
have an offensive rebound about as happy of a locker 17. Jeremy Blackston 2 4-4 9, Carl Wolfe. 8-16 50.
5 0.3 10, Eric VanMeter 3 1-2 9, Josh
in the third quarter an~ were room we've been in all year Jr.
Buzzard 1 0-0 2, Eric Cullums 6 0-0 13,
3-point goals - Meigs 4 (VilnMeter 2,
held to three offensive long."
David Poole 4 G-2 8. TOTAtS - 24 16-24
Blacksto n, Cullums). AV 0

GREAT

REB AT'

;;o

Cl :\IS • \

ol.

;;..j .

• Report: Ohio State
reprimanded assistant for
NCAA violation.
See PageB1

• Mf-:IS nursing students
make donation.
See Page A3
• Missionary society
makes bandages.
See Page A3
• W.Va. governor
addresses indust,.Y a day
after raising coal tax.
See Page AS
• ,Trees available.
See Page AS
• Bus driver takes gun
from kindergartner, officials
say. 'See Page .AS
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A&amp;
• Gospel concert set.
See Page A6
• Lenten service
Thursday. See Page A6
• Dedication announced.
See Page A6

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FLAIR ~~I
·

RACINE - Sgt. Travis
Neas!) of Seattle, formerly of
Racine, recently received the
Bronze Star Award and Army
Commendations
Medal
while servi ng as a ·senior
medic in Iraq .
Nease received the Bronze
Star Award for rushing to
provide medical care lo
wounded soldiers in A
Company Tas~ Force Tacoma
in the midst of an ambush by .
anti-Iraqi forces.
The award citation states
that Nease "entered the
enemy engagement area
without regard to his own
safety and . before the scouts
had cleared the area of
BY TtM MALONEY
enemy troops."
TMALONEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
Submllled photo
After·entering the engage- Sgt. Travis Nease of Seattle, Wash., formerly of Racine. recent·
ment atea Nease evaluated ly was ·.. awarded the Bronze Star Award and Army
GALLIPOLIS - David .J.
the wounded, superv'i5ed the Commendations Medal while serving in Iraq as a senior medic. Hawkins of Columbus,
loading .of patients into an
arrested Monday in connecambulance and continued to ous contact with the enemy in scout and sniper platoon tion with the largest crack
treat them as they moved to which they suffered their first medic for more than 150 mis- cocaine bust in county histothe
Combat
Support casualties. Nease's efforts sions. In addition to serving ry, now faces a minimum 10 ·
Hospital. The wounded were recognized in saving the as platoon medic., Nease exe- . years in prison after ]:&gt;eing
arrived at the hospital in less life of at least one soldier ·, c.uted (luties as a scout driver, charged in U.S. Magistrate
than 25 minu!es from the who was seriously wounded. gunner and dismount as mis- Court iQ Columbus.
·
time of the incident.
Nease also was awarded sion needs dictated.
The amount · of crack
The ambush of Task 'Force · the Army Commendation
cocaine seized Monday, 690
Please see Soldier. AS
Tacoma was their first seri- Medal for his service as the .
grams,
easily qualifies

Please

·see Meigs. AS

·Federal charges filed·in big crack bust
Hawkins , 18, for federal
mandatory minimum sentencing of '10 years to life.
Any amount over 50 grams
triggers the minimum.
The U :S. Marshal Service
came to Gallia County
Wednesday to pick up
Hawkins. He appeared in
Columbu s later Wednesday
afternoon before U.S:
Magistrate Mark Abel, who
said Thursday he charged
Please see Bust. AS

J.

REED

POMEROY -A Meigs County
grand jury has indicted a Pomeroy man
for laiowingly exposing others to the
human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV:
In an indictment filed on Thursday
morning. the grand jury retull'!ed a
charge of felonious assault against
Larry Drake, 34, alleging that he
knowingly engaged 'in sexual conduct
with an9ther. without disclosing that
he has tested positive as a carrier of
the virus, which causes AIDS.
The charge against Drake is a second·
degree felony. Details about the alleged
offense were not included in the indict·
men!, and, none of those most recently
Please see l11dlcted, A5

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED FOR SPECIAL OLYMPICS
BY BETit SERGENT

-·

SYRACUSE - Volunteers are
needed for thf Meigs County
'·_.;..,........
Special Olympics Program to
assist Special Olympians on their
journey to upcoming competitions
in Athens and Columbus.
This spring, athletes will com-·
'
pete in a training meet at Meigs
High School conducted by the
Meigs High School National
Honor Society. The date · has not
been finalized yet but the meet
will be in preparation for the
Regional Track and Field Meet to
be held on April 29 at 1\lexander
High School in Athens.
In preparation for this event
and others, Dr. Douglas Hunter of
Racine recently volunteered his
Submlltod phal!&gt;
services at Carleton School and Dr. Douglas Hunter of Racine ·recently volunteered his services at Carleton Schoo!
Meigs Industries to provide phys- and Meigs Industries to proyide physicals for Special Olympic athletes in Meigs
County. Pictured is Hunter examining 9-year-old Jimmy Withrow. a ·student at
Please see Olympics, AS
Carleton School.
•

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POMEROY- Two of nine
training sessions in Southeast
Ohio in preparation for partie·
ipation in Ohio Compassion
Capital Project funding oppor·
tunities have been scheduled
to be held in Pomeroy. ·
The program is a part of
Gov. Bob Taft's Faith Based
and Community Initiatives to
assist Ohio 's grass-roots,·
faith and community -based
organizations so they may
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enham;e their ability to provide social services and ere-

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serve those in need.
The training sessions to be
held in Pomeroy will be on
March 15 and May 24. the
place yet to be announced,
and will deal with local
board
development
to
.implement programs and
outcome management. ·
The ,other training sessions in
Southeast Ohio are being held
in Canton on · March I,
Zanesville on March 8,
Marietta on April I, Chillicothe
on April 19, Dennison on April
26, Canton on May 10, and

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iii3C•
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l.
'I

Meigs to host faith-based
community funding sessions

BY BETH SERGENT

BY BRIAN

Gibson
Reclina·Rocker®
Chaise Recliner

......... .

County Commissioners at a legisla- "The loss of those funds at the local percent cuts to local library boards.: .
tive meeting today, at which county level · will have a serious impact on
Sheets said yesterday the local offi"
officials, directors of Departments of local government at all levels. "
cials are .meeting together to discuss
House Speaker 'Jon Husted , R- ,ways to discourage those cuts. which
POMEROY - Meigs County Job and Family Services, state legisCommissioners hope a meeting in lators and other local leaders will dis- Kettering , has indicated the Ohio coulq seriously affect the operating
Jackson on Friday will give them and cuss strategies to combat' proposed Legislature plans to go ahead with abilities of county, township and village
other county officials from Southeast cuts in local government revenue plans to make major cuts in the Local governments. Sheets said ' township~
Ohio an opportunity to effectively from the state.
Governmeoit Fund redistribution to may lose eligibility for other funding
lobby against proposed state budget
"We have a full plate of topics to local governments. Those cuts would because of the cuts, including disaste~
cuts affecting local governments.
discuss, but at the top of the list are mean a loss of 20 percent in funding assistance from the Federal and Ohio
Commissioner Jim Sheets said he the proposed cuts 111 Local to county governments, I0 percent
plans to represent the Board · of Government Revenue," Sheets said. cuts to townships and villages and 5Please.see Meeting. AS .

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�PageA2

SCIENCE .

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 18, 2005

MHS nursin.g students make donation

Scientists map gene variation in quest against inherited disease
Bv LAURAN NEERGAARD

which published the research
AP MEDICAL WRITER
Thursday. The study also was
presented at a meeting of the
WASHINGTON - In a American Association for the
major step toward one day Advance merit of Science. .
offering gene-based cus-·
Public health ex perts view
tomized medicine. scientists it "with a lot of excitement,"
on Thursday unveiled the agreed Lawrence Lesko, who '
first map of common human heads the Food and Drug
geneiic variations - patterns Administ(ation 's division of
of DNA differences that may gene-base.d medicine.
Even unrelated people share
help forecast people's disease
risks and best treatments.
DNA that is 99.9 percentsimThis map. created by ilar. Variations in that last
California-based Perlegen 'remai ning bit are what make
Sciences Inc. , is essentially · us · itldividual, determining
the first chapter in the quest tmits from our hair color to
to identify tiny bits of gen~tic our risk of different diseases.
Until now, most genetics
information. known as SNPs
or "snips'', believed key in breakthroughs . have come .
creating gene-based medi- when a mutation in a single
cine. A more detailed version gene causes illness. But the ·
is expected later this year.
most common health · prob''It is a dramatic advance," !ems. such as heart disease, diasaid Barbara Jasny, a senior betes or depression, are caused
editor at the journal Science, by
complex
interactions

map, Lesko said, gives scie ntists a way to study such
questions and design better
drug treatment.
·
Perlegen scientists exam-.
inecl the DNA of 71
Americans of European,
African or Chinese ancestry,
and identified 1.58 · million
SNPs- most of them shared
across the three populations .
They're a fraction of the
estimated ·10 million · SNPs
thought to exist. But they
appear to be the most common
ones,
said
lead
researcher David R, Cox.
The map does not say whic~
SNPs cause various physical
or disease-related traits.
But Perlegen, of Mountain
View, Calif., is making the
map available for free to
other scientists to study that.
Cox suggested that they compare the DNA of 400 people

between numerous genes and
e nvironmental .or behavioral
risks. Teasing out the genetic ·
culprits under such conditions
has been almost impossible.
· Enter
SN.Ps,
singlenucleotide polymorphi sms.
DNA is made up of precise
orders of chemicals identified
with the letters A, T, C. or G.
SNPs are the most common
type of genetic variatio(l, sort
of a spelling ·ermr - · one of
those letters gets out of order.
Even that tiny a difference
may have profound effects.
Consider Lesko's example:
Only a fraction of smokers
get lung cancer, and on~y
about l 0 percent of those
patients respond to lung-cancer therapy -. but no one
knows why. or can predict
who will be the unlucky.
SNPs may hold some of
those answers. The SNP

Robo Toddler learns to walk like a human
AP SC IENCE WRITER

.

l

t

5l

*\-

~

AP AEROSPACE WRITER

.

WASHINGTON - The difference bet ween man and
machine
is
shrinking.
Scientists have developed a
robot that "learns" to walk like
a toddler, improving its step
and balance with everv s'tride.
•
The walking robot . looks
more like a moving Erector set
than a human being, but the
machine has the unmi stakable
·
gait of a person strolling along.
The robot uses its curved feet
and motorized ankJes to spring
its legs forward, its arms
swinging at every step to help
with balance.
.
AP photo
Researchtlrs ·on Thursday ·
This · image released oy "Science" shows · rooots which
showed off th e learning,
researchers unvieled Thursday in Washington at the national
. walking robot. along with
meeting of the American Association for .the Advancement of
two less-advanced models, at · Science. MIT, center; is a learning, walking robot, while Delta,
.' the national meeting of the_ left, and Cornell, right, are two less ad.vanced walking models.
. American Association for the
Advancement of Science. A motors. Ttie energy required · Asimo, developed by the
report , on the research ·is just a fraction of that need- . Honda Motor Co., require a
appears this week in the jour- ed by other walking robots, motor to power every motion.
said Andy Ruina, a Cornell
nal Science.
A robot designed by Russ
The machines use what the University researcher. ·
Tedrake of Massachusetts
researchers called a "passiveRuina said the walking · Institute . of Technology is ·
dynamic design?' that closely robots move like humans, equipped with sensors that
mimics the way humans walk. falling and catching themselves help the machine learn to walk
Earlier robots required power- as they move forward. This in a way· similar to humans'
. ful machines to stroll, with essentially is the same move- gait.
Appropriately,
the
each leg, knee and ankle requir- ment people use, a motion tod- machine is called "Toddler."
ing motorized assis.tance. The dlers must master to walk.
The robot's sensors measure
effort requires a lot of energy.
"We let the machines take the machine's motion, tilt and
The
passive . dynamic care of a lot of the motion," rate of movement and then
design !JSes gravity, along · he · said. In contrast, most direct small motors to adjust
with muscle-like springs and walking robots , such · as and compensate for changes.

A second version of tl'\e
map, due out later this year, ·
will contain many more
SNPs .. It comes from the
HapMap
International
Project, a collaboration of
government and private scientists to rmip patterns of
genetic vari.ation found in 270
people froin Nigeria, Japal)
and China and Americans of
European ancestry.
Researcbers' goal is . to be
inclusive, hunting genetic
variation among multiple populations because geography
and ethnicity can affect peo- .
pie's ri sks for certain diseases.
But finding different SNP
variations in different populations is not a biological definition of race. Cox cautioned.

mother's bloodstream. More
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
recent techniques, sometimes ·
called "walking epidurals,"
BOSTON -. Though med- provide lighter doses, allow
ical authorities have dropped women to push, and even
their reservations ·about giv- enable them to walk throughing women epidurals early in out labor.
laoor. some doctors and preg- .
Doctors have welcomed
nant women still worry the epidurals as an altert\ati ve to
. painkiller 's numbing effect "systemic" pain medicine
will prolong labor and through the bloodstream.
· prompt a Caesarean section .
which can. leave a woman feelA study reported in ing nauseated and doped-up .
Thursday's ·New England and even enter the baby's body. ·
'Journal of Medicine may
The
Northwestern
finally. dispel those fears.
University study tested type
"Women often feel guilty of low-dose pain · relief
or weak when they request an known as a ''combined spin,al
epidural early in labor. I hope epidural." A small dose of
this study will help women pain reliever is first injected
see that there is. no shame- in into the spinal fluid , and the
asking for an epidural," said epidural is later fed through
lead autho·r Dr. Cynthia the same hole into a space a
Wong
of Northwestern bit farther from the spihe.
University in Chicago. "The
In this study. 728 women in
message·for women and their firs·t-time lab&lt;;&gt;r were divided
obstetricians and .gynecolo- into two groups. One group
gists is that there 'is no reason received the spinal shot and
why women who want an then got epidumls when the
epidural should not get it cervix was dilated to about 2
centimeters. The other group
when they first request it."
More than 3.5 million initially received pain-relievwomen go into labor each ing medicine directly into their
year in this country. Epidural bloodstr:eams. and put off
use has greatly expanded epidurals until 4 centimeters it'
over the past decade, to more they could tolerate the pain.
In the end, the C-section
than ' 1.5 million women
rate was statistically a tie: 18
annually.
Epidurals deliver · numbing percent in the early epidural
medicine through a skinny group and 21 percent in the .
,
plastic tube that is threaded delayed group.
The early ep.idural group
into the back , close to spinal
· nerves, mostly bypassing the also delivered 90 minutes

a

CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla.
-NASA has met another one
of the Columbia accident
investigation board 's recommendations for resuming space
shuttle !lights: developing better methods for inspecting the
wing panels between missions.
The task force overseeing
NASA's ·effort to resume
launches as early as mid-May ·
.said · Thursday . the space
agency has fulfilled that recommendation.
During Columbia's doomed
flight in 2003, a piece of fueltank foam pierced one of
those panel s along the edge of .
the left wing, causing a .g ash
that led to the shuttle's
destruction over Texas during
. re-entry, and the deaths of all

sooner than the other women,
who averaged eight hours in
labor. However, Dr. ·Gary
Hankins, an obstetrician at
the University of Texas
Medical Branch at Galveston
who helped shape the medical guidelines, said 'it is not
clear if that finding would
apply broadly.
The finding seems to contradict
some
previous
research showing that women
who got early epidurals
underwent more C-sections.
In 2002, · the · American
College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists recommended
against epidurals before 4
centimeters of dilation . In
July, though , it dropped a
specific threshold.
'There's really no reason to
withhold the treatmeht if a .
women is in terrible pairi at l
or 2 or :i centimeters dila- .
tion."
said Dr.
David
Birnbach , a University of
Miami anesthesiologist who
is on the College of
Obstetricians committee that
devises ihe guidelines.

On the Net:
Ne":' England Journal of
Medicine:
http://media.nejm.org
Hospitn/ primer on· pain
relief during labor:
....
http://ww.w.brigllamandwomens.orglpainfreebirthing/

Meigs High School nwrsing students recently donated food and gift b.a skets to Holzer Hos.pice
for distrioution to the ir patients an families. The goal was to bring ho liday cheer. to those in
need. Participating in the project were lett to right, front Glena Jarvis, Jenny Bowles, Clare
Sisson, Britney Raubenolt. Courtney Nitz, Sierra Jackson , Miranda Casteel and Anita Moore,
Volunteer Coordinator ·for Holzer Hospice; oack Newson, RN, nursing class teacher, Daniel
Thornton, Shane Collins and Julia Cross. Holzer Hospice cares for patients with a life-li miting
illness in Gallia, Jackson,
. Meigs and surrounding counties.

On the Net:
Science:
http://www.sciencemag.org/

At the.'space station, meanseven crew members.
NASA has now met eight of while, a NASA and Russian
the investigation board's rec- Space Agency investigation
ommendations. In the next lew team concluded that miscomweeks, the task force hopes to munication led astronaut
get all the details it needs to Leroy Chiao to get too close
decide whether NASA has met to the orbiting craft's firing
the remaining seven.
thru sters during a spacewalk
Among the recommenda- three weeks ago.
tions already met hy NASA:
At the time, the thrusters
setting up cameras to provide were being fired to stabilize
sharp photographs of the fuef the space station. · Ground
tank throughout the . launch, controllers thought Chiao was
and arranging to obtain pic- farther away based on what
tures of the shuttle in orbit he told them, tlight directpr
·from spy satellites.
Annette f-lasbrook said. . ·
Among the recommendaChiao's spacesuit could
tions still open: eliminating have been contaminated by
dangerously big pieces of . propellant, but was not.
foam from coming off the · Hasbrook said.
fuel tank. toughening the
Better guidelines. will be in
shuttle to better withstand place for the next spacewalk
debris, and developing ways by Chiao and cosmonaut·
for astronauts to inspect and Salizhan Sharipov · in late
repair their shuttles in orbit.
March, she said.

SOUTHERN SENIORS CONCLUDE SEASON

· Bryan Walters; photo

Southern seniors pictured from left are Ashley Roush, Jordan Neigler. Joanne Pickens and
Brooke Kiser. The quartet comoined for 43 points in their finale at Art Hayman Gymnasium
: Monday against Wahama. The Tornadoes won 53-41.
..

Church events

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 n:ach over
13,500 homes. In addition, your ad will appear in our weekly Tri County Marketplace .
which is deliven:d to 17,000 homes. If you sell your vehicle within 25 days, just call
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***Only one Item per classified ad.
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***Available only to private, non-commercial individuals.

.

Detecting early hearing loss
·gives kids lifelong benefits
DEAR ABBY: In a recent
co !ljmn, writers expressed
concerns about early hearing
scree ning for newborns and
young children. Your readers
should know that Early
Del!r
Hearing
Detection
and
Abby
Intervention (known as th e
EHDI program) is a n·ationwide. priority supported by
seve(al federal agencie s, state
governments, and mo st ho spi- ·
tal s thl\t offer obstetrics/deliv- children develop vital communication skills that will last a
.ery services.
We at the Centers . for lifetime, and maximi.ze their
Disease
Control . and potential for positive growth.
Prevention are proud to be a - JOSEF CORDERO, M.D ,
NATIONAL
part of this effort. We have DIRECTOR,
ON
BIRTH
long advocated screeni.ng CENTER
to detect hearing loss. Early DEFECTS AND DEVELOPintervention gives children MENTAL DISABILITIES ·
DEAR DR. CORDERO:
the best possible start
Your'letter
will be of interest
in life.
Most .states and territories . to l)arents-to-be, so thank you
have EHDI programs that for taking the time to write.
support etforts to detect hear, Readers, for more informa,
. ing loss in babies early. The tion on EHDI or how to con- ·
foundation of the EHDI pro- tact your state or territorial
gram is the 1-3-6 Plan, whose EHDI program , .visit the
. Centers for Disease Control
goals ensure that:
- Babies are sc reened for and Prevention Web site:
hearing loss before l month www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/ehdi . .
· DEAR ABBY: I have been
of ·age (ideally before the
to "Jeremy" for four
married
baby leaves the hospital).
- Babies are referred for years. I thought we had a
diagnostic hearing and med- wonderful marriage. A few
ical . evaluation . before 3 months ago, I had hi s cell
months of age (if they do not 'phone records pulled because
pass the first screening or a I suspected Jeremy was being
decettful about the people
re-screening).
- Babies arc enrolled in who were paging him. I was
.intervention services before 6 shocked to discover that he
months of age if a hearing had been in constant contact
with the girl he had c.\ated
loss is identified.
The importance of early before me, and al so another
interVention cannot be over~ woman who is also married .
stated. Earl'y · detection and Then l found out he had been
intervention help · very young out to dinner with both of

them without my knowledge.
Jeremy swore to me that he
would. no longer have contact.
with ei ther· of them and said
our marriage was more
important than hi s "friendsh ips." Because I no longer
trusted him , l had hi s phone
records pulled again: nothing
has changed. He says he
remai ns in contact with them
just to be nice.
Abby, I am not a jealous
spouse . Je remy ha s many
female friends who call the
house, and it doesn ' t upset
me becimse they ;peak to me
as well. l feel so betrayed.
Why would my husband
destroy · our marriage and
constantly lie if he has no
feelings· fo'r these other
women? HURTING lN
NEW ORLEANS
DEAR HURTING : You're
asking the wrong person.
Only your · hu sband can
answer that question. A marriage without trust is no marriage at all. and it' s important that you find out why he
would jeopardize hi s relation ship with you in order to
maintam those friendships.
Counseling for the two .of
you might be helpful - but
only if he's willing to work
on this issue. You have my
sympathy.

..

•

'-

- ··-'

·---- ---~-- ----

Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, · also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was ji.Junded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com· or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles,
CA 90069:
.

l

.

Saturday, Fe!). 19
MIDDLEPORT The
Glorybound Quartet w iII be
singing at the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene at 7
p.m. Saturday. Refreshments
. will be served followin g the
: smg.
Thursday, Feb. 24
SYRACUSE- - Rev. Brian
Dunham of Pomeroy and Heath
United Methodist Churches to
.speak at community Lenten ser. vices at Asbury United
: Methodist Church, Syracuse.
Sunday, Feb. 20
RACINE Dedication
and ribbon cutting ceremonies for the new l 00 by 95
foot community center 'of the
. Racine Baptist Church will
: be held at I 0:40a.m. Sunday.
: The service will take place in
· the new building.

Thursday, Feb. 24
. for county, township and vii"
.POMEROY - Alpha Iota !age officials at I p.m. in the
Masters noon luncheon at St. conference area of the
Paul Lutheran Church.
· County Annex. All county
POMEROY - · Caring an entities should have their
Sharing Support group, l p.m. estimates ofdamage from the
at the Meigs Senior Center. January 6 flood at that tip1e.
Linda King, speaker on food
pyramid and guidelines.

10:40 a.m.
Special singing by Craig Harrison
Ribbon cutting to follow morning
worship service.
Evening service at 7 pin
wiih reception to follow. .
Food- Fellowship- Fun .
Rev. Rick Rule invites public,
· 404 5th St
Racine. OH

Other events
Thesday, Feb .. 22
POMEROY - Childhood
immunization clinic will be.
held at the Meigs County
Health Department from 9 to
II a.r;n. and I to 3 p.m. Take
child's shot record s. Children
must \Je .accompanied by parents or legal guardian. Take
medical card if you have one ..

Birthdays

I

Church.

740-949·3131
"For whe're rwo or three are
ga thered togecher in my nwne.
rhere I am in the midst ojrhem."
·
Mauhrw 18:20

Come in and play for your chance to double . y~r refund!

Wednesday, Feb. 23
POMEROY
Liba · ' Ri!UJt IIQ'II', "'tAl ~ 11m&gt; }OOitues tb.e ac H&amp;R akrl: ~ o('tll plly
IN&gt; Oooi¥ Y~tr Rdurd bm.ali \ 'in GIUIM' 1l"'"'sk.uuf !ltulf t&lt;~ Witr
Watson. formerly of Mei gs
HIRBLOCK'
ca.1h prizrs, t:tx J:fl'PUttlun Yt•l mill- n.-n tk~Wk! rour fLodml refmd
Covnty, will observe her 80th
l'p to IID,I&lt;ll Comt ~ lor """*Y- to pr.,o
. birthday on Feb. 23. · Cards
may be sent to her at Apt. 3,
Sunday, Feb. 20
2354 Heather Glen Court,
CHESTER
Chester Beavercreek, Ohio·45431 .
Phone: 182-6674
H&amp;RBLOCK
Baseball Association, 2 p.m.,
Houf8: Mon.frl M
1
618 Main Street
Chester fire house.
. Sat. 8-5
Other Hours By Appointment
' Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
. Monday, Feb. 21
.
'
.' POMEROY
Meigs
Monday,Feb.2l
County Right to life 7:30
LETART
Letart
: p.m., Sacred Heart Rectory,
Township trustees, 5 p.m. at
· since library will be closed.
the office building.
·
Wednesday, Feb. 23
· Thesday, Feb. 22
POMEROY - The OH POMEROY · -Federa l
KAN Coin Club will meet at 7
Management
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. Emergency
Agency
will
hold
a briefing
There will be an auction.

Clubs and
organizations

Pt1blic-.meetings

INGELS CARPET

~·

'

~~~ ~aU~ohs iailp ~ri~unt -~.. ~~~Joint ~leasant l\egister

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

:-----~-""'....._

.304-675·1333 ~.

"'c304·675·1333
..,••,..

_ _;....__ _ _ _

~---.~~-:_j,.,

!

•

INGELS CARPET
992-7028

The Meigs County Department
ot'Job &amp; Family
Services/Children Services
division is currently recruiting
Foster Parents for Abused,
Neglected.or Dependent
Children between the
ages of o- 18.
fior more infonnation attend one of our two
.
meetings, Tuesday February 22
or Thursday Feb. 24th at 5pm at
the Meigs Department of Job &amp;
Family Services.
Middleport or call
· Chris Shank at

740-992-2117
ext. 123

j

•

'

')

RACINE - Muslin squares Lillian Hayman , Nondus Cleland. and Mildred· Hart
to be used for bandages by' Hendrick s, Linda (irimm, who will host the meeting in
overseas mi ssions were cut Barbara Gheen, Geraldine · March.
during a recent meeting of the ·
Bertha M. Sayre Missionary
Society held at the home of
·Linda Grimm.
Mary K. Yost opened the
meeting with devotions titled
"What Fragrances Do You
Racine 1st
Leave" ·with scripture from
Solo)Tian l. A program on
Baptist
valentines was given by .
Welcome~ you to
Martha Lou Beegle using
come help us celebrate .
Romans 10 · and a love ·gift
the dedication of our
offering was taken. Members
Multipurpose Center
brought sack lunches.
Others attending ·were
Sunday, February 20th

Call us today at 304-675-1333 or 740-992-2155 or,740-446-2342
Limited time offer expires 3.1-05

740-446·2342 ' ~· llilliiJj
The Daily Sentinel
740·992·2155
. , VISA I

Friday, February 18, 2005

.Missionary society makes bandages

:community Calendar

We'll run your classified line ad to sell your Boat, Camper, Mot11n:ycle, 4-Wheeler,
Van, Pick-Up Truck, or Automobile for the low price of only $25.00.

PageAa

.

;

Relieving woman's pain early in labor does
not·raise chance of C-section; study finds .
BY JEFF DONN

·

NASA meets another recommendation for resuming shuttle flights .
BY MARCIA DUNN

v

Bv PAUL RECER

with high blood pressure
helped by standard medicines
I
and
400
hard-to-treat
patients. A handful of SNPs
may accou nt for that variability. Once doctors know that, a
simple blood test might tell
them .which patient should lie
prescribed which drug.
The goal is "to be able to .
use. genetic information in a
practical ·way ·... while I'm
still alive," Cox said, alluding
to the slow progress toward
gene-based medicine.
The work "is clea'rly exciting," said geneticist David
Altshuler of th e Broad
Institute of Harvard and
Massachu setts Institute of·
Technology. But he cauti91led
that there 's ,no guarantee
SNPs will usher in such personalized medicine. because
genes aren't the only things ·
that determine drug response.

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

_ ...

,,

•

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

He was buried in the rubble of the train wreck and
.felt sure he was going to die.
He wanted to leave a goodbye note for his wife but
there was no pen to write
with. He found a safety pin
in his pocket. which he used
to puncture his fingertip. He
was able to draw just enough
blood to scratch "I love yo u"
in the palm of hi s hal1d.
After he was miraculously
rescued: the newspapers and
TV stations spread hi s story
across the cou rmy. He
couldn't understand what all
the russ was about. "We
ought to be telling our loved
ones all the time that we love
them," he said. "What\ the
big deal?"
The big deal is that while
we pught to be tellin g our
spouses and children we
love them. often we don 't.
Thi s is a topic appropriate
to the mont h in which
Valentine's Day falls - a
time when we are encouraged to express our love w
those near and dear to us with Godiva chocolates if
we · are
independently
wealthy but , more impor'tantly, in words. We don't du
this oft~n enough.
At one point in a wedding
service I once conducted, I
asked those who· had come
to the wedding with a spouse
or a loved one to turn to that
individual and, .while holding hands, say mit loud, "!
love you." .
The church echoed wit h.
people saying "I love you 1"
Some of them told me later
that they hadn't sa id that to

111 ·court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
esta~lishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, ·and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
'

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Feb. 18, the 49th day of 2005. There are
' 316 days left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History : On Feb. 18, 1885, Mark
Twain's "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" was published in
.the United States for the first time.
"
On this date: In 1546, Martin Luther, leader ·of the
Protestant Reformation ·in Germany, died.
In 1564, artist Michelangelo died in Rome.
In .!861 , Jefferson Davis was sworn in as president of the
Confederate States of America in Montgomery, Ala.
In ·1930, the ninth planet of our solar system, Pluto, was discovered.
In 1960. the 8th Winter Olympic Games were formally
. opened in Squaw Valley, Calif., by Vice President Nixon.
In 1970, the "Chicago Seven" defendants were found innocent of conspiring to incite riots at the 1968 Democratic
national convention.
In 1972, the California Supreme Court struck down the
state's death penalty.
.
In 1977, the space shuttle Enterprise, sitting atop a Boeing
747, went on its maiden "flight" above the Mojave Desert.
In 1988, Anthony M. Kennedy was sworn in as the 104th
justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.
'
.
'In 2001, auto racing star Dale Earnhardt Sr. died from·
injuries suffered in a crash at the Daytona 500; he was 49. ·
Ten years ago: The NAACP replaced veteran chairman
William Gibson with Myrlie Evers-Williarns, the widow of
slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers, after the ran~-and-file
declared no confidence in Gibson's leadership.
Five .years ago: Iranians voted in an election that gave
reformers a majority in the parliament, long a bastion of hardliners. Announcer Bob Hite Sr., whose rich voice introduced
"the Lone Ranger" on radio, died in West Palm Beach, Fla.,
at age 86.
·
· One year ago: Howard Dean's quest for the presidency .
ended as the Democrat, winless in 17 contests, abandoned his
hid. In Iran, runa-.yay train cars can:ying fuel and industrial
chemicals cierailed, setting off explosions that destroyed five
villages and killed at least 200 people. Two bomb-laden trucks
blew up outside a Polish-run base in Hillah, Iraq, killing about
.
.
.
a dozen reople.
Today s Birthdays: Actor Jack Palance is 84. Former
Cosm&lt;;&gt;politan editor Helen Gurley Brown is 83. Author Toni
Morrison is 74. Movie director Milos Forman is 73. Singer
. Yoko Ono is 72 . Singer Irma Thomas is 64. Actress Sinead
Cusack is 57. Actress Cybill Shepherd is 55. Singer Juice
Newton is 53.Singer Randy Crawford is 53. Rock .musician
Robbie Bachman is 52. Rock musician Larry Rust (Iron
Butterfly) is 52. Actor John Travolta is 51. Game show host
Vanna White is 48. Actress Greta Scacchi is 45. Actor Matt
Dillon is 41. Rapper Dr. Ore is 40. Actress Molly Ringwald is
37. Actress Sarah Brown is 30. Singer-musician Sean Watkins
(Nickel Creek) is 28. Actor Tyrone Burton is 26. Actor Shane
Lyonsisl7.
Thought for Today : "Nothing great in the world has been
accomplished without passion." - Georg Wilhelm Friedrich
Hegel, German philosopher (1770-1831 &gt;:
·

Correction Policy

Published every afternoon , Monday

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llllOuld-

biggest step of their lives. In eyes looking up at the cruciint imate human reJation- fix above the altar. One day
ships, care less, hurtful the parish priest' said to the
words, no bigger than a peb- devout· peasant, "What do
ble, can break hearts and you·say all day to our Lord,
'
. d?"
.
· ..,
shatter dreams . They are my fnen
George
And the old soul replied,
never "just words."
Plagenz
Important as it is to "I say just nothing at all. I .
remember to say those three only look .at him and he
little words, Leo Buscaglia looks at me."
That is not our idea of a
has reminded us that often · it
fruitful
exchange. We want
their spouses - or heard it takes only two littl e words to
to 'talk . It doesn't matter who
from · their spouses - in get the same job done.
vcars!
Busc;:aglia, who died in you are, wise or simple.
· It is not enough just to 1998, was a popu lar author Tal'k to us. We'll listen.
I sometimes wonder
love our spouses. We must who toured the lecture cirwhether
God's ears don't get
put our love into .words and cuit drawing large ·crowds
tired from all the talk he has
say them out loud often dur- te Hing stories about love.
ing our married life together.
One of hi s favorite stories to listen to. Would our
· It· isn't only that we forget from hi s childhood growing prayer 1ife go better if we
to say those three . little up in a11 Itali an neig hbor- didn't talk so much when we
words. They become '! hood in Los Angeles con- pray - if we would be more
chore . But it rakes more than cerned his mother's habit of like the French peasant and
wori.ls of endearment to keep rubbing a foul-smelling "turn our eyes upon Jesus, I
a marriage strong. The salve on the necks of her look in his wonderful face , I
words spoken in day-to-day children when they had a and the things upon Earth
will grow strangely dim ... "
conversatio n are just as sore throat and then tying
im port ant. Words that wo uld · handkerchief around their .. Instead of being worshipped all th~ time, would it
not hurt if spoken by anyone
necks.
else can cause pain if spoken · "We children hated the rit- please God more if we just
by one we love.
ual," said Buscaglia, "but dropped him a simple comThere is a wonderful old when .we would complain pliment from time to time?
I imagine God was happy
Jew ish folk tale about a and say, 'Don 't do that,
criminal being stoned by a Mama, please; she wou ld with the remark of the little
crowd. He said nothing as say 'Shut up!! ' For she loved girl quoted in "Children's
heavy rocks &gt;truck him : But us."
Letters to God" (Workman, .
when a small pebble hit him .
Does God so metimes 1991) who told God, "I think ·
he winced in pain.
respond to our 'prayers like the stapler was one of your
When asked why this was Mama Buscag li a' and say best inventions ."
- why the big boulders did- "Shut up! " for he love s us
If Rick Warren, the bestn't hurt him. but when the and know s what is be st for selling author and preacher,
pebble hit him he cried out us without our telling is right that what God wants
- he said, 'The pebble was • him ?
from us most is that we
thrown by a fri end."
. I like the story of the would make him smile, that
"Be espec ially care ful French peasant who came to remark ·would do it.
with the words ,you say ·to church
(Geo rge Pla genz is an
every
day.
one another." I tell the men Somet imes he would stay ordained minister and veterand women standing before the whole day. He would sit an . ne wsman \. based in
me who arc making the in the front pew with his Columbus, Ohio.)

·. Religi~n in American politics
The United States is notoriously the most devout
major nation in the Western
world, .with something on
the order of 90 percent of its
. population professing faith
in God. The other I0 percent
include agnostics; for whom
the question is an open one.
and a relative .handful - say.
5 percent - of hardcore
atheists.
The distribution of believers and non bel ieveis, how·is
signi ric ant.
ever,America's intellectual e li te
comains far more than its
proportionate share of nonbelievers - not surprisingly,
since it is this elite that has
been most heavil y influ.enced by the pro-scientific
and antireligious sentiments
generated by the 18th-centu ry Enlightenment.
The result has been that
whereas the existence ·of
God and America's dependence on Him were almost
un iversally acknowled ged
by the nation's founders, and
reaffirmed repeatedly by its
political leaders for more
than a century thereafter.
America's intellectual e lite
was able, in the 20th century, to eliminate ' ret igion
from public life almost
· entirely. The courts led the

William
Rusher

way, holdi ng that the First
Amendment
raised an
impassible barrier between.
church and state. Ultimately,
the last shreds of re li ~io u s
influence - a nonde;ominational prayer at' the opening of school , a reference to
the Ten Commandments on
a monument - were purged
from the public square. A
. default atheism became the
official posture of Western
society's
most
devout
nation .
This, despite the fact that
the
First
Amendment
required no such result. It
simply forbade Congress to
establish· an official re ligion ·
(as the Church of England
was establisbed in Britain).
In recent years. aggressive
atheists have pursued their
advantage. Under the leadership of the American Civil
Liberties Union, the slightest
vestiges of public deference

to religious belief have been eroded its Catholic support.
ruthl essly
extirpated. The concern for "moral valInevitably, quarrels on thi s ues" detected , in exit polls
subject h.ave entered our last November is a political
political life, and involved fact of life that bodes ill for
the two major parties. ·
Democratic efforts to hang ·
To be sure. there are peo- on to the believers still in its
pie of fait~ in both parties. ranks.
And there are even religious
And abortion is, of.course,
leaders who vigorously just one issue among many. ·
defend that supposed "wall" The · growing readiness to
between church and state, extend equal legal treatment
considering it essential to to homosexuals, and even
the health of both. But there permit civil unions between
is no gainsayi ng the fact them, clearly must be distinthat , in our current political · guished from the strong supdebates. it is the Republican port still enjoyed by the traParty that is co mmonl y ditional concept of marriage,
identified as the defender of . on both religious and social
religious values, and the grounds .
·
Democratic Party that, while
As it debates its best
harboring many believers, course for' the future, the
has also become the home of Democratic Party .will be
the a~tivist atheists.
well-advised to consider
· This marks a major turn in what role, if any, religion is
our
political
hi story.' to play in its vision. Are .
America's Cath olics, to take b ~ liever s · in God si mply
just one example , were pre- another interest group, like
dominantly Democrats until gun owners or the sugar
very
recent
times. lobby ? Or is faith in God,
Go~ernment aid to the and the concept of America
needy was thoroughly con- · as a nation under His care.
gruent with Catholic inter- essential to our self-image,
pretations of the Gospel and our survival?
message. But · recently the
(William Rusher is a
passionate commitment of Distinguished Fellow of the
the Democratic Party to Claremonr In stitute for the
what amounts to abortion- Study of Statesmanship. and
on-demand ha s sharply Political Philosophy.)

want to work with you,"
Manchin said.
The state tries to issue a
mining permit within 180
days.
Coal a"ociation President
Bill Raney said permit appli:
cations generally take at least
a year, but the process can
take much longer.
.
"Sometimes these things can
last 20 months or more, 'and
that's just too long," he said.
"We just want to take some of
the guesswork out of it."
The state Department of
Environmental
Protection
recently started a prrgram
where opemtors can ftle perlllit applications online. The
process ·is expected. to expedite permit reviews because
the agency and the industry
can immediately update applications, said DEP spokeswoman Jessica Greathouse.
Manchin was joined on a
panel by President Bush 's top
en'vironmental
adviser,

Council on Environmental
Quality
Chairman
Jim
Connaughton, who said he has
been working with the governor and state departments to , POMEROY ·- Meigs Soil and Water .Conservation
.speed up mine permitting.
Distri ct is holdin g its annual tree sale through. March 31 .
" If the decision is yes, you Those interested in purchasing trees may stop at the office
can get on with it and you can to pick up an order form , or call the office at 992-4282
get your capital into your pro- with questions.
jects
and
equipment,"
.Connaughton sa id. " If tlie
• Appointed Susan Oliver
decision is · no, you . also
of Racine to the board of
· deserve a prompt ' no,' so you
directors
of Buckeye
from Page A1
can put your capital to where
Hills/Hocking
Valley
it will work. No one is served
Regional
De velo pment
by having the cjeci sion drawn Emergency
Manage ment District, represe nting Meigs
out for years."
·
Agencies, because local gov- County.
Connaughton
acknowt -· ernments
• Approved adding 400 feet
use
Local
edged that streamlined per- Government Revenue as a lo the road mileage on
·mining does nothing to pre- · match for those programs.
Rocksprings Ceme.tery Road .
·vent lawsuits.
Sheets said rhe County as requested by Salisbury
" But at least' we get to the Commissioners Association Township Trustees.
litigation phase quicker," of Ohio and other lobby ing
• Approved a S425 anima l
Connaughton said.
groups will work · with · local claim submitted by Lola
officials to discourage these Proffitt of Racine.
On the Net:
CU(S.
• Approved payme nt of
.West
Virginia
Coal
bills in the amount of
Other business
A s s o c i a t i ·a n :
Commissioners al so:
$2 13,435.09.
http://www. wvcoal.com
Also
prese nt
were
• Approved the appropriation of $18,895.49 for the Commissioner
Mick
county economic develop- Davenport and Clerk Gloria
ment office.
Kloes.

Trees available

Meeting

Bus ·driver ·takes· gun from For the Record
kindergartner, officials say
Divorce

COLUMBUS (AP)- The mother
·of a 6-year-old boy who showed a
loaded handgun to students on a
school bus was charged Thursday
with one count of child endangering,
• police said . .
The kindergartner, whose name
wasn't released, told police he brought
the·gun to school to show it off.
His mother, Shawntia Westb,ook,
26, kept the gun under a pillow. at
home, Sgt. Dan Kane said.

Meigs
Zanesville on May 17,.
Lorie McClain' of the Ohio
Community Action Training
Organization (OCATO), who
is organizing the training sessions, described the Ohio
Compassion Capital project
as a "statewide .initiative to
provide training, techni cal
assistance and mini-grants to
faith and community-based
organizati6ns serving their
neighbors in need."
She said it is an effort of
the federal and state govern ment to partner ·•with faithbased organizations which
are striving to provide care
f,or others but often encounter
difficulties finding and

.

Indicted
from PageA1
.

Subacriptlon Rates

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

· between 2000 and 2003, but
leapt to the $35-per-ton
range last year. Coal is
CHARLESTON, · W.Va. expected to se ll for more
A day after signing a new law t)lan $40 per ton for .the next
that raises coal taxes by 56 two years, according to state
cents a ton, Gov. Joe Manchin revenue officials.
told operators he wants to
As West Virginia is the
streamline mine permitting nation 's sewnd largest coal
and improve relations with producer, Manchin said he
the industry.
recognized coal'~ importmice
•· The tax hike is · part of an to the state's economy and
effort to rai se $230 million a said he wants to foster a spirit
year to pay down a $3 billion of cooperation and make
shortfall il) the state's work- mine permitting more effi ers' compensation program .
cient. But he warned opera" Nobody want s to , pay tors that they need to comply
more, l underswnd that," with the law.
Manchin
told
The ·''I don't want to be out there
Associated Press . before writing cease-and-desists and
Thursday 's speech to a con- fini ng and trying to kick the
ference hosted by the West living daylights out of you,"
Virginia Coal Association . he said. "That's not the best
" But thank God the market approach.
is strong enough right now
"But if you refuse to subfor this indu stry to step up to mit to what · we all agree on
the plate and do it.:'
·needs to be done , then we
West Virginia coal prices 'will do our job as needed.
averaged about $28 per ton But until then, by golly, we
'
ASSOCIATED PRE ss' WRITER

'

accurate. If you knoW of an error in a through Friday, 111 Court Street,
story, call the newsroom at (740) 9922156.

Bv ERIK SCHELZIG

RECOMMEND
TO HELP ME WITH
MY PERFORMANCE?

The Daily Sentinel
Our main concern fn all stories is to be

W.Va. governor addresses industry a day after raising coal tax Local Briefs

WHAT DO YOU

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
• be less than 300 words_ All letters are subject to
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.
·

(UsPs 213-96Dl
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

2005

The.Daily Sentinel• Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

2005

from PageA1

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

Friday, February iS,

VVOrds of honor

The Daily ~entinel ·

1

Fri~y, Febrnacyt8,

PageJ\4

indicted have appeared for
arraignment.
Also indicted were:·
• Mark A. Norton, 19.
address unreported, on
charges of trafficking in
crack · cocaine and possession of crack cocaine, both
second-degre e
felonie s,
having a weapon under di sability,
a
fifth-degree
felony, receiving stolen
property,
fourth-degree
felony, and complicity, a
second-degree felony.

a

Olympic$
from Page A1

·
I

icals for Special Olympic
athletes in Meig s County.
Executive
Director · at
Carleton School Steve Beha
commended Hunter for volunteerin g his servi ces for
several years, enabling ath. letes to obtain physicals to
participate in . various sporting events.
Approximately 40 athletes
from Carleton School and
Meigs MRIDD will participate in th~ events at Meigs
High School and in Athens.
Other individuals from Meigs
County with developmental
disabilities are eligible fo r
competition as welL
Carleton School Director
of Education Kay Davi s said
she
believes
Special
Olympics are important to
her students because they are

A substitute bus driver took the gun
from the boy minutes after the bus
left Harmon Elementary School on
Wednesday afternoon, said Jeff
Warner, a spokesman for SouthWestern City Schools.
One of the students yelled and
alerted the driver to the gun .
Warner said.
The school planned to se nd a letter to parents explaining what happened, Warner said.

applying for the right fundin g
through the ri ght agency.
,The program, according to
McClain, will provide training. technical assistance and
mini-grants to faith and
community-based organizations to serve their neighbors
· in need.
In .a ·message from Taft, the
program was described as
providing a "single point of
contact for. those organization·s to gain access to in.formation ab(lut funding and .
partnership opportunities: a
way to provide essential services and support to vulnerable citizens that can' t be done
by government alone."
The emphasis of his message was on "initiative s with'
greater cooperation and
increased
partnerships
between faith based and com-

POMEROY -A divorce action has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Tamrily
D. Boso, Portland, against Teresa Boso, Portland.

Foreclosure
POMEROY - An action for foreclosure ha~ been
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by the
United States Department of Agriculture, Columbus,
against Barbara K. Bunch, Middleport, and others,
alleging default in the amount of $97,559.19.

munity initiatives with a level
playing tield to ·access public
funding leading to the ultimate goal of bettering the
lives for Ohioans in need."
Kris Sisterhen, director of
OCATO, -said her offtce is
charged with three main
tasks:• Make it easier for faith based and community organizations to compete for public
funding.
• Encourage partnerships
among and between public
agencies. faith-based organizations and communitybased organizations who
share a common mission.
• Measure the impact of
these partnerships to reduce
the suffering of citizens in
need.
The program will cover a
variety of services including

• Mark Fairrow, 36, tection order on Jan. 12, a
address unreported, on first-degree misdemeanor.
counts of grand theft, receiv.
• Bengy J. Roades, 30.
ing stolen property and Middleport, on charges ·Of
forgery, all fifth-degree failure as a· sex offender to
felonie s, with specifications register a new address, theft
that the items involved were of a motor vehicle on Jan. 21,
and receiving stolen property,
printed check forms.
• Stephen D . .Clark , 31, all fpurth' degree felonies.
• Dewayne. E. Qualls, :45_,
addre ss unreported, , on
on a charge of vanPomeroy,
charges of robbery and felonious assault, second-degree dali sm, a fifth -degree felony.
, felonie s, and .vandalism, a He is accused of damaging
property owned by Pomeroy
fifth-degree felony.
• Kelly J. Daniel s, 41 , Police Department.
Arr indictment was filed
address unreported . on
charges of failure as a sex earlier thi s month against
offender to register a new Stephen E. Patterson , 26,
address; a fourth -degree · Pomeroy, on a count of traf. felony, and violation of a pro- fickin g in drugs (Lortab), a
put on a level playing field
with their peers in athletic
competition where winning is
ati important objective, but
not the most important.
"It's not about who wins but
finisl]ing the mce." Davis said
about the athletes' attitudes.
. The oat~ of the Special
Olympics athlete is as fol .)ows : "Let me win. But if I
cannot win, let me be .brave
in the attempt."
Davis said that people who
volunteer to help the · Meigs
County . Special Olympics
Program go away feeling good
about what they've done.
The
Meigs · County
Special Olympics Program
sponsors athletes throughout
the year who participate in
basketball a nd . track and
field events locall y, region all y, and state-wide.
The Ohio State Games
will be held June 24-26 in
Columbus and feature competition for more that 2,700

Special Olympic ~ompetitors
from ~cross. the state. .The
program will include competition in II sports, movies,
recreational clinics and the
colorful opening ceremonies.
Special Olympics Ohio
serves more than 17,000 citi~
zens with mental retardation,
with an. event calendar that

Soldier
from PageA1
Nease, 32, has served in the
US Army and National Guard
Reserves since 1991. He is
currently serving in Balad,
lmq, at Camp Anaconda.
Before being called up
for active duty in Iraq last
April, Nease was in physi cians .assistants school at
the
University
of
Washington in Seattle ,
Wash. where his Natiorial
Guard Divi sion is located .
Nease is the son ·of B iII
and Dmina Nease of Racine.

"He's a hard worker," Mr. ·
Nease said of hi s son. "He's
the guy you want on your
side. He's a dedicated and
patriotic young man."
To honor their son. Mr.
and Mrs. Nease han g -a blue
·star· service banner in their
front window that belonged
to Mr. Nease's father. who
served in WWIJ. Blue star
ser.vice banners are displayed
· by famili es who have loved
ones on active duty.
Sgt. Nease hopes to be
home on March 5..
'T m going to try to keep
from crying," said Mr. Nease
about when he can finally see
hi s son again .

school-based interventions
to prevent obesity, education
to aid in understanding the
mechanisms 'of health risk
behavior change in children
and adolescents, communiiy
Should federal charges
service supported by the
against Shortridge be further
Ohio AmeriCorps programs,
delayed or not tiled, he will ·
senior help, health intervene
from PageA1
appear in muni cipal court on
tion , re.searc.h, addiction,
Feb. 25 for a , preliminary
homelessness and HIVHawkins with po ssession hearing. Galli a . County
AIDS assistance.
The office was established of crack cocaine with intent Prosecutor Jeff Adkin s has
on the recommendation of a to deliver.
dropped the local charges
legislative task force which
Hawkins ir, being held in a against Hawkin s, ahd will do
met in 2002 to study the Franklin County jail normal- the same with the charges
value
of · partnerships ly used by the federal author- against Shortridge should
between government . and ities, Abel said. The Marshal federal charges be filed
faith-based and community Service is seeking permi ssion against him.
Gallia County sheriff s
organizations. 'It is located at to hold Hawkins without
77 S. High St., 30th Floor, bond, and a detention hearing deputies allegedly saw
Columbu s. The
e-mail was to be held Thursday. It Hawkins run to the bathdelayed
becau se room in a trailer at 1836
address is www.fbci.gov and was
the telephone number is 614- Hawkins' public defender, Ohio 141 when they arrived
Allison Clark, had to attend a · to execute a search warrant
466-3398.
district-\)'ide meeting of all at 5:30p.m. on Monday. His
attempt to flush the drugs
felony of the fourth degree. public defenders .
Abel said the detention down the toilent · proved
Patterson entered a guilty
hearing
likely would be held futile when the drugs caught
plea before Judge Fred W.
Crow III, and will be sen- today, at which time the fed- in the trap of the to ilet.
era! autho'rities ·will' have to Officers removed the toilet
tenced on March 14.
Pijtterson admitted to sell- show that Hawkins is either a and recovered all of it.
ing the pain medication to a . threat to society or unlikely
to return to court if released.
feq~ale who visited his home
A second man arrested in
on Spring Avenue.
The state has recommend- the case, Shane A. Shortridge,
ed an IS-month sentence, 21, 1701 - 1/2 Chestriut St.,
with release into tlie Gallipolis; remains lodged in
Community Corrections pro- the Gallia County Jail and had
gram after 90 days. Crow not had federal charges filed
ordered the completion of against him as of Thursday,
pre-sentence investigation according to sheriff's Chief
prior to sentencing. Patterson Deputy John Perry.
was placed on curfew and · Shortridge is being held in
was released on a $5,000 per- lieu of $50,000 cash bond as
o,dere'd
by
Gallipolis
sonal recognizance bond .
Muni cipal Judge Margaret
includes seven state-level Evans . He has been charged
'champion ships and more with complicity to trafficking
than 125 local and area in crack cocaine, a fifthevents in 23 Special degree felony.
Olympic-type spons. ·
lf you would like to volun. When a death occurs,
.
teer for the Meigs County
which statement would you rather make?
Special Olympics Program,
"I wanted to take care of this years ago."
please contact Davi s or· Beha
OR
at 992-6681.

Bust

"We took care of this together years ago."
o Guaranteed Funeral Prices (Frozen at uxlay's cost. regardless of
· age or health)
• Deciding Traditional Funeral or Cremation
• Making Decisions together. rather than doing it alone at amost
difficult time .
• Protecting assets from long term care or illness. ·
o Eliminating emotional overspending.
.
o Single cash payment or affordable, monthly payments (Depending
on age).
·

There are a variety of prepltllning options available - we would
welcome the opportunity to sit
and go through thes; wilh you.

' .
244 North SerontfA•enue 740-992·7900 Middleport, OH 45760
J-R. Acm Jr., Diroctor '

Tony B. Hawk,A-

·a.. '*"" -.,"" ,..... •

�FAITH
A Hunger For More

· The Daily Sentinel

About eight years ago, l had
taken a team of college students on a mission trip to a
resort town wherein ttiere lived
and worked several hundred
migrant workers from se veral
different·countries.
At the end of an especially
d.emanding day, a you~ g man
m our group was accompanying me along a darkened
boardwalk that connected
mi scellaneous shops and
restaurants to each other with
little patios attached ·to it at
various intervals. In the daylight this was normall y lined
with families of tourists casu ally browsing through van.ous amusements, shopping
for miscellaneous what-nots
and trying out of all sorts of
delectable cui sines.
But at night ... it was dark,
mostIy deserted and barren of
any sense of wholesomeness.
The . police even in that city
generally stayed away from that
part of town at night (although I
didn't know it at the time).
Nevertheless, it was the
path (hat we had to tread that
night. As we walked along, my
companion breezily chattered
on about the expen ~ nce s he'd
had during the week and,
spurrep on by my occasiOnal
exclamations of interest,
moved on to other matters of
h1s life includmg girl s, in
which he'd been interested, job
prospects for the rest of the
summer and his success as a
black belt karate sruden1.
As we traversed a particularly remote portion of the
walkway, someone hailed us
from a shadowy comer of one
of the patio areas. "Could I
have a drink of water?" he
called out in a voiCe that left
me unsure if he had an accent
or if his speech was somewhat
slurred. Still. I slowed down
just enough to see a dark form
seated on one of the tourist
chairs commonly found there.
My younger friend and I were
both carrying water bottles. I
unslung my bottle from my
shoulde.r and walked over to
the man who I began to see
more clearly as I approached.
I offered him the water bottle
and he took it from my hands
appreciatively. He was a young
man, in his early 20s I guessed,
though his eyes seemed abnormally sunken into his head.
After he pulled the bottle
from his mouth, he offered it
back to me. I smiled weakly
and gestured that he keep it.
"It's OK," I replied, "you
might be thirsty later."' He.took
another drink, wiped hi s
mouth, and 'then rolled his
head strangely to one side.
"Hey, are you CIA T' he asked

r

Pastor
Thorn
Mollohan

grunly as he looked at me
sideways.
.,
"U rn, no," I answered,
somewhat startled. His eyes
narrowed a bit. "Are you KGB
then?" I shook my head.
"FBI '" he asked, his eyes narrowing to slits and suspicion
suddenly coating his tone.
Not often being in that situation, I was unsure how to
respond, but decided that by no
means would I say anything
inflammatory (I hoped).
"No. no, my friend and I are
here sharing God's love with
people:" He smiled and stood
up, wobbling ·as he did so. I
realized then that he was probably on a bad heroine trip .
Still, it didn't seem right or
wise to abruptly end the conversation and I was also \vondering what God might do
)Vith the conversation.
The man, who said his name
was Ramos, briefly told us how
he had come to work in this
town. But then he stopped and,
with a wild look in his eye,
asked me again, "Are· you
CIA ?" "No," I patiently replied.
'They 're everywhere," he
whispered, leaning toward me.
"Are you KGB '7" "No," I
replied. "Are you from outer
space?" This question seemed
out of rhythm with his other
queries, but I responded, convincingly I hope, that I was not
from outer space but was a
Christian telling people about
God 's love. He was again
friendly and mild for few more
moments but then suddenly
looked at me savagely and
reared his right arm back as if
he were going to hit one of us.
"So do you want to feel my
pain?" he snarled at me.
For the first 'time I noticed
in the very dim light that he
was holding an empty. hypodermic needle in his Hand
poised for stabbing. Hmm ...
nobody else around us at all.
For a split second I was glad
that my companion had a black
bel tin karate. But the only part
of him moving was his sagging
jaw wagging in the wind. Also,
I was responsible for him. I
pi voted my body toward the
stranger to make certain that I
was between him and my
young friend.
As a prayer lifted from my
heart to heaven as quick as an

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www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, February 18, 2005

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Religion NeWs in Brief

exhaled breath, I looked him in
the eye and simply smd, "No.
But I know Someone Who can
bring healing to your pain." He
·instantly calmed down and
flop~d back into his chair.
"Do you?" he asked quietly.
Though my friend and I
were not sure what he might
remember when he ·'came
back to earth," we told. him
how sin (doing what we want
over what God wants) separates us from fellowship with
God, but that God sent His
Son into this cruel, hard world
so that He might bring to us
hope. We shared with · the
young man the promise that
God Himself made to save any
and all who in faith call on His
Son. Ramos allowed us to
pray for him, tllat he might
experience the healing of his
heart in God's love, and with a
Bible in one ·hand and a water
bottle· in the otlier. he stag- ·
gered off into the darkness.
We returned to that ~pot
over the next few days, but we
never found out any more
about him. Nobody seemed to
know who we were talking
about. Still, we know that it
was a divine appointment
arranged by our Father in
heaven. Through what 5~;ems
to us often to be awkward acts
of service or words that fall all
over themselves, God was still
somehow sowing seeds of
hope in a broken man's life.
And it's good to know,
wherever I go, that God can
bring healing to even the
most wounded of souls, hope
to even the most forlorn and
lost of hearts, and freedom
to those ensnared by sin,
hate, or bitterness.
"The god of this age
(Satan) has blinded the minds
of unbelievers, so that they
cannot see the ·light of the
Gospel of the glory of Christ,
Who is the image of God. For
we do not preach ourselves,
bu!Jesus Christ as Lord, and
ourselves as you( servants for
Jesus' sake. For God, Who
said, 'Let light shine out of
darkness," mi!de His Jight
shine in our hearts t\) give us
the light of the knowledge of
the glory of God in the face of
Christ. But we have this treasure in jars of clay to show
that this all-surpassing power
is from God and not from us."
(2 Corinthians 4:4-7).
(Thom MoUohan has ministered. in southern Ohio the
past 9-112 years and is the pastor of Pathway Community
Church. He and his wife are
the parents of four children,
He may be reached by e-mail
at pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com),

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Christian radio
station in Florida
cancels Mustim ad
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -· A
Christian radio station canceled an advertising contract
with a Muslim organization,
saying the spots didn't serve
its listeners because the group
recruits people to Islam.
Christopher Gould, general
manager at W)BN-AM, said
it was unfortil!ate a contract
had been s.igned but the company reserves the right to
reject advertising after re'Jiew.
The Council on AmericanIslamic · Relations' ad discussed an event promoting
dialogue betl¥een Christians
and · Muslims
at
the
University of South Florida.
"This is exactly why we
need to be doing programs '
like this," said Ahmed
Bedier, director of the council's central Florida office.
He said "there's a lot of misinformation ab'out Islam and
relations are strained," The
Tampa Tribune reported.

Bedier said the meeting 's
intent was not COJlversion
but dialogue and protection
of civil liberties. But Gould .
said the council's Web site
showed it is "clearly ·interested in recruiting people"
to Islam.
WTBN is one of 95 stations owned by Salem
Communications. Gould said
the company would equally
bar ads by Mormons or
Jehovah's Witnesses because
"We' re here to serve evangelical Christians."

Africans help ·
boost Lutheran
membership to
65.9 million
GENEVA (AP) - The
Lutheran World Federation
announced member churches
have 65.9 million members
as or 2004, a one-year
increase of 5.8 percent,
thanks largely to a 1.1 million
gain in Africa and a merger
between a Lutheran church in

the Netherlands and two
large Reformed churches.
Wi th a total of 500,000 new
members, the Malagasy
Church
and
Lutheran
Evangelical Lutheran Church
in Tanzania each reported
having 3 million members.
Africa 's largest Lutheran
denomination is Ethiopia's
Evangelical Church Mekane
Yesus, with 4.2 million members, an increase of 131,006.
On the other hand, the
Evangelical Lutheran Church
in Southern Africa lost nearly
180,000 members, a 23 per"
cent d10p
Countin ~ c:hurches outside
the federation. world Lutheran
membership increased 3.6
million, to 69.5 million.
Germany remains th·e
nation w1th the largest num- .
ber of Lutherans, 13.1 mil. lion, representing a one-year
decline of 160,000. There was
a 2.2 percent loss in North
America, to 8.3 million. ,

Gospel
concert set
MIDDLEPORT The
Glorybound Quartet will be
singing at the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene at 7
p.m. Saturday. Refreshments
will be served following the

AP RELIGION WRITER

The Church ·of England
owes its creation to a royal
spat over divorce and remarriage: Henry VIII 's bre ak
with the Vatican after the
pope refused to grant .the
monarch dispensation to wed
Thurs~ay
his lover.
Now, nearly live centuries
SYRACUSE
Brian later, questions over another
Dunham of Pomeroy and wedding are pulling at
Heath United Methodist Anglican unity - the planned
Churches will speak at commu- marriage of Camilla Parker
nity Lenten ·services at 7 p.m. Bowles and Prince Charles,
Thursday at the Asbury United · the first in line to inherit the
Methodist Church, Syracuse.
throne and become the next
titular head of the church.
Conservative groups complain the scheduled April 8 ·
ci vi I ceremony and post-vows
service by the Archbishop of
RACINE - Dedication Canterbury .- although fully
and ribbon cutting cere- legal run counter to
monies forthe new I00 by 95 Church of England traditions
foot community center of the against remarriage and will
Racine Baptist Church will deepen rifts at a delicate time
be held at I0:40a.m. Sunday. for the world's 77 millionThe service will take place in strong Anglican Communion,
the new building.
which includes Episcopalians
in the United States.
Anglicans are struggling
with
serious quandaries over
part
doctrine and structure. Chief
Subscribe today • 992-2155
among them: · whether to
sanction the ordination of gay

~~-~ervice
-kev.

Dedication .
announced

Proud to be a of your life.

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"""''bas

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Young's Carpenter Service
26 years in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

AI,.• ...,.....,. 1'.-..ldtnfo J.lay. ~• mn&lt;u•ber !hot""'" G"'f11' Wll!loln ..... lho
"Fadlff ot Our C011ntry~ d!opptd .._,.IIW cherry tift- , .. .. be ........ 1M ._piAiiooiiO

llo-111Atl ol111 m«~~mb to l&lt;mpt.acions
" No l&lt;mplllllon h.. OVtrtllkfft Y"" -

1$ .... . . . . , _ •• - ·

740-992-6215

God lo (ollloAII. .............

In ,.,. be ltmpltd beyood your llron,ih. bill with tho tanplllioa wlllllls6 p.mriCko the way
tllotJou 11111y ht abl&lt;to tntlu"' II-"' C.oo ..._. usiO be k:apltd ron-.
Wbeto"' ...ut l....,...loa and ollow Him 10 br oar &amp;ulde. "'"spirit I$ OlrOaJtlhr.....
.....,,... - roald think of this .. • "dhln•" t lltrcise in lnllll"' our lha•taly Flllber.
Wou't'tou •lsi! your- 11-otW~pthls-tokftploo- with our
C......,. lllld r - Hi&lt; Wont illtbt lf&lt;&gt;ly Biblo? A• you"""" to k - God llld 1111 will.
JOU wlll.llkt
W•blftll..,, di&gt;aJ,«r divine ~IIIla
lite.

at-.

far,_,

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·Pomeroy, OH

n0w..,.. dltn. As 1 Cortatlll•mlO:ll oplolns k:

"So I strive always to keep
JIJY conscience clear
before God and man."

Acts 24:16

P,hhl l Rev W.tlle r E. H e n~;:. Sm Cnn
4 4:' - 5.1.~p.m . 1\lu-:,
p m.. .S un.

~r.t

•uo

Con -8 4:;-Y. I5 .t. m .. Sun M.1ss- IJ.JO
a. m . Dati)' Mus.~ 8:30 a m.

.Church of Christ
Hemlock Crow

'

Assembly of God

Pomeroy ChurTh or Christ
2 12 W. Ma in St., Mimsler. Anthony
Morris- Sunday School - 9 ·30 a. m .
Wo r~ hi p· 10.30 am., 6 p m . W~d~sda)
Scrvu:cs - 7 p m.

l.ib,crty A§!it'miJiy uf Cnd
Mason.

W Va. Pa ~tu r Nell Tennant, Sunduy
Scrvi~c.;- '10·1111 .rm and 7 p m

Baptist

Pomeroy Wt:slc;ide C hurch or Christ
33226 Chi ldre n's Home Rd , Sunday
Sc hool· 1I a m .. Wnrshtp- lOam .. 6 p.m.
Wcdn l'~da y S ~ 1 v ice li. 7 p m.

C arpenter llaplist Chunh

Su nU.ty Sdlllol
9 _,Onm. Pt c11clung
rvu.:c
IO·)Uam . Evening Scr\ tCC
7 OOpm, Wed ne~ da y Btlllc Stud y 7 00 pm.
lrllc nm ~r l•,u;ha · Fl oy d Rus&gt;

s. .

Motnmg Wurshtp ]() ~0 pm, SunJay
cwmng 6 '0 pm Wednesday 6 'Orm

um.

Keno Churth of Christ
Worsh1p - 9 30 a m . Su nday So.: hn(J I ·

Hopt' Baptist Churrh (Southern)

1 0: .~ 0

a.m , Pllstor-Jcffrc y_Wall a~ e.
J rd Sunda)

570 G rant St MuJLi lcpun. Sunduy Sl.·hool
• ':1 ' U &lt;1 m , Wnrshtp - l l a m .mJ 6 p m .
Wednesday Sc r. t~·c - 7 p. m.
Rutland Fint Baptist Churd'
SU nday S.:hiJ,;I -, 9·30 a. m.. Worshtp
10·45 am

1.740-667-3156

Wonu

209 Third
Racine, OH

41K72 Pomeroy Ptk e. P a~ t or · E Lamar
O' Bry,m t. Sun da) s ,·hnnl . l1 lO ,, m
Wur;..htp -•!-1·15 am .. 9·45 am &amp; 7·00 p m .
Wl'dn e~ d .1y Sen ICC~ . 7 ()() r Ill

ur

"A' Home Bank for
Home People"

Rutland Church or Chrisl
Sunduy Sl hOOI ·I) 10 ,, m . Wo'rsh•p rmd

Cornmu mon - 10 _,0 am., Bo b J. Wurry. .
Mimstcr
Bndrord Church of ~hrist

Corner of St. Rt. t 24 &amp; Bradbu r) Rd .
Mum tcr Doug Shamhhn . Youth Mm1ster
Dtll Amberger, Sunday ~hoot - 9 : 30a .m ,
Wursh•p · II 00 am . 10 ·~0 .a rn .. 7. 00
p.m.. Wc dnc ~da y S cnu,:c~ · 7.00 p.m.

Mt. ~ nion B~tpti~t

m~kory Hills Chun:h or Christ
l-v ungd1s1 M1J..:c Moore . Sunday School ·

Bl'thlrh~:m

Baptioit Church
Great Bo:11d, Route 124. Rac uw, OH ,
Pastor : Dan1cl Mecca. Sunda}• School IJ.JO•a. m , Sunday Wor~ h i p - 10.30 a.m.
Wednesday Btb lc Study· 6 00 p m.

9 a. m ..

..

•

a m.. Worsh ip Serv1ce· 10 ·30 a m , A1blc
Study. Wednesday. 6:30 p.m

Oeltiter Chui"Ch of Christ
Su nday school 9·30 am , Sunday worsh1p
· 10 30 a.m.

Hillside Bapllst Church
St Rt 14 3 JU~ t off Rt 7, Pll stor : Re\'

Jame s R. Adee, Sr., Sunday Unif1 ed
Service . Wa nhtp - 10· 30 a. m.. 6 p.m .•
Wednesday Se rv 1ce ~- 7 p.m

..

..,...,
It •.I

P.O . Box 663

Pomero Ohio 45769-0663

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Stzes available 5x10 to 10 x 20

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499 Richland Annue, AUtens
740-594-6333
1-800-451-9806

'Will: • IIM,V

190 N Second St

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

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Wo rship ·

10:30 a.m., 7.00 p m., Wedn¢sdB y

Church of God
· Mt. Mori11h Churth or God
Mile Hill Rd ., Rac me, Pa stor Jomes
Satte rfie ld , Sunday Sc hoo l - 9. 4 5 am ,
Evenin g · 6 p m .. Wednesday Services- 7

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fo urlh &amp; M,un St . M_tddl eport. Pastor·
Rev. G!l bcn Cra1g. Jr.. Sunda) Sc hoo l ·
9 30 am. Worship · 10 ~ 5 .t.m.

p. m

Antiquity Bapltst
Sund ay School - 9:.'\ 0 a.m.. Wurslup ·
10.45 am . Sunday F\'Cn mg - 6·00 p. m..

Rutland Chun:h of God
Pastor Ko n Heath, Sunday Worship 10
a. m , 6 p. m , Wednesday Servtccs - 7
p.m

tl urn · 8 pm

Don Wa lker

Syra&lt;'Use First C hurch of God

Appk and Second Sts, Pastor Rev Da\'t d
Russell. Sund ay Schoo l and 'Worship- tO
a -111 : E\'l' nlllg Sc rVICCS- 6 311 r m ..

Rutland t' ree \\-ill Bapti~t

J,m!lc Fortner Sunday

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another: ·
Le viticus 19; II

212 E. Main

Street

Pomeroy
992-3785

Middleport, OH

Rock Spring§
Pastor. Keith Rlldcr. Sundlly Schoo l ·. 9· 15
a.m , Wor~ h1p · 10 am . Youth

Pine Gro"e Bible Holiness Church
112 mil e LJl t RL 325. Pnsto r Re-v 0 Lkll

Rutland
Bou't nc'. Sund;;y Sdmol ·
iJ 30 am .. Wor ~ h1p UH O a.m.. Thursday
Scrv1ccs · 7 p. m.
Salt:m Center

INSURANCE

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Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
/40-667-3110

.
or

the l.i"lng Sa,·iur
Rl 331( i\nlh.jUit }'. P&lt;ts lor ks~&lt;~
ServKes. S11turday 2.00 p m

Dav h , Sunda y • cr''H.:e,
Wednc sdt1y ~ rv t~e . 7 p.m

S8lem Community C.:hurc:h
Wc~ l C ~&gt; l um h iO . W Va nm L1cvmg
Road. Pa ~t or C h u rl c~ Rou'ilt tJ04' 675
2288. Sunday Sc huol Y .~0 am. Sund&lt;t}'
c'cn mg ..cnR·e 7 oo rm. Btbly St udy
Wed ne~d a) ~crv1~;c

Long. Botlom, Pastor Steve RccJ . Sunday
St·h oul - 9·30 u m. Worsh ip - 9·10 11 m
aod 7 p.m.. We~ne sd a y · 7 p.m.. Fri da y ·
fellowship ~n· i ce 7 p m.

lkthany

Pastur. R ~,. Larry Lemlc). Sunday s ~·hool
- 9 ·~0 am . Worsh1 p · 10.45 a m.. 7 pin .
Thursday Bible Stud y and Yll Uth · 7 p.m.

Hobson Christian Fellow!ihip Churrh
Herschel White. Sunduy School10 am. Sunda} Church !tCTV I ~·c • 6.30 pm

Pll~tor

Wednesda&gt; 7 pm
Restoration Christian fello'l'lship
Huoper Road, Athens, P ~sl or.
l.nnn 1c C o~ l.'i Sunduy Worship 10·00 am.
Wednesday 7 pm

Harrisonville Communi I) Church

:1.m.. Wors hip · 9 a m .. Wednesday

P a~ tm

So:=rvtccs · I 0 a.m

~U 6 5

Theron Durh am, Su nda" · 9 30
m nnd 7 p m We dnesd ~y- 7 r m

Cannel-Sutton

Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. Racme, Oh1 o,
Past or Jnhn G•lmorc, Su nday School 9 ~ 0 a.m. Worsh1p · 10:45 a m . Bible•
Swdy 'Wed. 7 DO p m

The ( ' hurrh or Jesus
Christ or Latter-Da~· Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 o r 446 -7 4K6.
S und ay Schoo l 10.20 - 11 a.m .. Rchcf
SO~; u:- t ~/ Pnc s thorod
I I 05- 12 00 noon.
Sacru mc nt S er vil-e 9 10 15 a.m ,
Homl. ' mukmg meeti ng, ]st Thurs · 7 p m

Lutheran

Middlepor1 Community Church
515 Pt:arl St, Middle port . Pa ~ hlr Sam '
A nd c r ~ n n. Su n da ~ School 10 am.
Evening· 7.30 p 111 , Wednesday Scr.·kc ·
7 '0 r m

pm •

a m , Worship- 10 a m
East Letart

Rarine
Slmf.fc r, Sunday School - 10
a m, Wt'lfShtp · II am , Wednesday 7

Our Suiour l.ulheran ChurTh
Wal nut und Hen ry Sis, Rav en.'iw oud,
WVa, t•astnr· ~a \' l d Ku ~sc lt . S und ay
School- 10:00 a m .. Worshi p. 11 a.m.

Cool"ille United Methodist Parish
'Pas tor He le n Kltne. Coolv tlle Chu rc h.
Main &amp; Fifth S1.. Sunday School · 10
am .. Wa rshtp · 9 am Tuesday S e rvic e ~·
7 p.m.

United Methodist
Se~· ice

P~ te

r-''1\·

Bethel Chun:h
Townsh1p Rd , 468C. Sunday Schoo l - 9
- 10

· Melg11 Cooperathe Parish
Northe11s1 Clust~r. Alfred, Pastor : i ane
Beatue, Sund11y School • 9 :30 a.m.,
Wmshtp- 11 ll m , 6:30 p.m.

a.m..

Mlddltport Church ollhe Nuarene
Pa!ltor:- Allen Midcap, Sunday Schoo l ·
9;30 a.m.. Won hip · 10: 30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m.•
~dfl e~d 11y Serv 1ces • 7 p m , Pastor.
Allen M1dcap
Rerdnllle fellowship
of th e f'o.' uarenc , Pastor Jam1 e
Pettit , Sunday S..:hool - 9:30 a.m.. Wonhtp
. 1 0.4~ ~ m., 7 p. m , Wednesday Sem c;e§

Chester

Pa ~tur . J;m c Bea ttie, Worsh1 p,- 9 am ,
Sunda y S ~ h ool - 10 a.m , Th u~da y
Services. 7 p. rn

• 7 r 111.

Joppa
Buh Randolph. Worshtp · 9:30
a m. Sunday School.- tU JO a m
Po~ tor ·

Wur~ h i p

• 9 30

Nazarene

C hur~o: h

l.un.: Bottom
Su nday Sc hool · 9 ]Q a.m ..
!0.30 lUll.
RttdS\'ille

S~o: hool

Worshil' • 10·30 m.m

-

Worsh ip · 9:JO am. Sunday s~hoo l ·
tO·JO ,1m . F11"SI S unday of Month 7:00

Syracuse Chun::h of lhe Nazarene
M1ke Adk ins Sunday School· 9 ~0
a m. \\ orshtp · lO JO a.m.. 6 p m ,
Wed ncsda ~ ~r\ it.: e~ • 7 p.m.
Pa~tw

Pomeroy Chun:h of the Nazarene
Paslur· Jan La\'endcr. S unda) Sc hoo l ·
9:.10 a m.. Wur ~ hip • 10 JO ~ 111 i! lld 6
p m . Wedncsduy Scr.·lccs · 7 p.m
Chesler Churt'h oflhe Nazarene

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be done unto you.
992-5130
John15:7
Pomeroy

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llekli S. Andrl'!illn, Fortthought Funeral Planning

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ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITTION CENTER

•
Mone Ch11pel Church
Sunday school · 10 am , Worsh1p • 11
am.• Wednesday Service - 7 p m.

in

Gospel Church

Pastor. Lawrence Bu sh, Sunday School •
9:30a.m . Evenina . 6.30 p.m., Wedneday
Service · 7 p m

Full Golpel Llplhouse
3304.5 Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Hunter. Sunday School · 10 a.m.. Eventni
7 30 p.m , Tucs~y &amp; Thunda) · 7:30

'Harrisonrillt' Presbyterian Church
Pastor Robert Crov.- . Wooh• p. 9 am

'

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se"enth·D•J AdventiA

. Sabbath School • 2 p.m • Worship - 3 p m

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon Ualted Brethrrn
In Chrlat Clturcll
Teus Co mmunity 3641 1 Wickham Rd,
Putor· Peter Ma rtindale, Sundly School -

9:30 &amp;.m., Wonhip · 10:30 am ., 1:00
p.m , Wedne11d1 y Serv1ceA - 7 00 p.m
Youth group meeu na 2nd &amp; 4th Sunday•
7 p m.

Eden Untttd.Brethrtn in Christ
State Rout~ !24 , keed§~· i ll~ . SurJday

pm.
Soulh Brlhel Community Churth

School· 11 am , Sunday Wors hip . 10·00

Sih•er Ridge - P&amp;stor Linda Damewood.

1m &amp; 7.00 p.m. Wednesda y Servu:es ·

Sunday School - 9 a m.. Worship Service
10 am. 2nd and 4th Sunday

7·00 p m., Wednesda y Youth Sem ce 7:00 p.m

Carleton Interdenominational Churt'h
Kmgs bury Road, Past or Ro be rt Vance,
Sun day Sc hoo l · 9 :30 a .m .. Worsh1p
St.'f\ICt' I tHO am. Eveo mg Scn wr 6
p.m.
Frwdom Gospel MiMkm
Bald Km11l on c,, ltd 31. P a~lnr Rev
Roger Will!llrd. S unda~ St: hotll · 9 JO 3m
Wl1r~ h 1p-

7pm

White's t.:hapel Weslt)·an
Coo lvill e Road , Pustor · Rc\ . Phd lip
Ru.ko... ur. Sunda)
1 0·~0

s~· hoo l
· ~.J·lO a m
:u n. Wednesday S!!rv1ce

Let vo ur light so shine before

Marrh e•r 5:16

740·992-6606 .

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

Syrat·use Fint United Presb~terian
Pastnr Rohcrt Cmw, Worsh1p · l l a m

Mul be rry Hts. Rd . Pom e roy. Pmsw r·
B~nn ~ ll lu ckiesh, Salurday Sen•1ces:

LAng Bottom, Sunday School . 9·30 am :
Wor ~ hip · 10.45 u.m , 7:30 p.m ,
Wednesday 7: 30p.m.

OH 45769

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

10 a.m ,
Scn·1ces · 7

Pastor Roher Craw . Worshtp - 10 a m

men, that they may S()e you,.
The care you deserve, close to home good works and glorifr m ur
36759 Rocksprings Rd .
Father in heaven ··
Pomeroy,

.

Middlepurl Presbytt:rililn

!0 30 a.m., 7 p.m.

FaJt~

Torch Church

Co. Rd 63, Sundiy
Off 124 behmd Wilkesville. Pasto r: Rev.
Rlllph Spires, Sunday School • 9 30 11.111 ,
Worship • 10:30 u.m., 7 p m .. Thursday
Serv ice~ · 7 p. m.

D)es"ille Community Church
Sunday School . 9 m a.m . Wonh•p .

Ml. Oll"t Community Church

· 7:30p.m.

School

Wc dnesda ~

Presbyterian

a. m.. Wedne sday

Hocklna:port Church
Orand Street , Sund1y School . 9.30 am ..
Worsh1p - !0:30 a.m.• , Pa~lo r Phlihp Bell

Penln-oslal As~mbly
L!4 Raci ne. Pastor Wilham

pm.

Ha1:el f'ommunit) Churrh
Off Rt 124, P :~sto r . Edse l Hart. Sunday
Schoo l - Y·)O ,, m , 'Wo rs htp - 10·10 a m
7.]0 p. m

Services · 10 a.m

Rt

Hoback. Sunduy
E\ enmg- 7 p m.

Syracust Mission
'1411 Bndgeman St , Syrac uo;c, Su n d&lt;~ y
Sc hoo l - 10 a. m. Everung - 6 p m.•
Wednesd a) s~:-rvK e · 7 p m.

every month eve ning service 7.00 p.m :
Wcdn . . ~d ay · 7 p.m.

a. m. .Wo rship

Pentecostal
St

Pastor Bill Marshatl Sunday S' hool IJa .m , Wors hip · 10 a m . 1st Sunday

Pastor

Lan11svillt- Christian Chun:h
Full Gospel. Pastor· Robert M u~se r.
Sund&lt;iy Sc hoo l 9.30 am, , Worsh ip 10 30
am - 7.00 _pm. Wednesday Service 7:00

Faith Valley T111M'rnade Church
Blll lcy Run Road , Pastor· Re\' Em mett
l{ awsa n. Su nda y E\'e mn g 7 p m.
Thu rsday Scrvtce · 7 p.m.

Pastor. John Gtl morc. Sunday School · ! I

St. .luhn'l.uthenm Church
Pm..: Grovl' . Wo n; htr - ·9 00 a m. Sund uy
School • I U 00 .1 m. Pa ~ to1 : James P
Brady

St. Paul Lulhenm Chun:h
Comer Syc amore &amp; Second St , Pomeroy.
Sunday School · 9 45 a.m.. Worship - 11
am. Pastor· J a me~ P Brady
Sat 7:00 pm Contemporary Ser,.ice

7 00 pm

John G1lmorc, Sundu y School - 10

tl

l.aun!l Cliff F~ Methodist Church
Plhlur Gle nn Rnwt, Sunday Sc hool ·
9.30 a.m. , Wm sh1p . 10 .~ 0 am am.t 6
p.m ,Wednesday Servtce- 7-(XJ p.m

a rn

· Faith Full GosPfl Church

Bible S10dy J-i nnday 7.00 pm
• ~nowville
Sunday Schonl- !0 a.m . Worsh1p · 9 lun

l'a ~ 1or ·

10

~j &lt; lffl~

'

Bad:_ of

923 S llmd Sl . M1dtllcport. Pastor Tereso

Wii!HIIII K M ar~hall , S und&lt;~y
Schl-.ol - 10: 15 .a m' . Wo r~htp · 9.15 a,m.

t enl l' r

Full Go!ipel t:hu.n:h

Abundant Gr~tcl' R.F. I.

P,1stor.

\'id u r~

J77J G. . ocge' Cn;_..... ._ Ruad . Galhpo l1~. OH
Pasto r Hill 'it,ll~ n . Su nda~ t.;~r.' IL~' IU
a i11. &amp; 7 p m l.~'ednt:~da\' 7 p.m &amp;
Ynulh 7pm

P &lt;~ ~ IM . R1 ~ k

Hp1el1 Run Community Church

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My

? 18 E. Mam Slrcet • Pomeroy
(740) 992-7270

de~e iv e on ~

Ser,.tces 6 .\0 p.m

Matthew 5:1

An Income Tax &amp;
· Financial Senices Firm

(7411).992-3279 .
~
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

glorify

Clirton l~bt&gt;rnadt' t.:h urch
Chiton. W v~ . Sund~~ Sc.: h.1ol . I0 &lt;am .
Wor~h 1p · 1 p n1 • Wcdnc-. d a~ Scr\'ICC · 7
pm

Ash St . M1ddl e port- Pa~ l ur
Su nday
Sc hoo l - 'I 3() a. m.. .\1ornmg Worshi p
10 JO a m &amp; fo l() pm. Wc d oc~day St.'r\'ilr
. 6:.10 p.m .. Youth Serv1ce- 6.30 p m.
Agape Life Center" Fuii-Gospe l Ch ur ~· h ", Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade. 60 .~ Sc~·on d Avc. Mason, 77]50 17 Sc: rvtcc lime: Sund ay 10 JO a m .
We dne~ d ay 7 pm

Pn&lt;;tor: Bna n Dunhum. Wurs_h1 p · 9·30
a.m .. Sunday Schtllll· HJ J5 u m

Rose ol Sharon Holines!i Church
Lcadmg Creek Hd .. Rulland. 1-'aslor H.e\
Dewey Kmg, Su nd ay sC hoo l- _9.30 a.m ..
Su nd.ty WfH:«h ip -7 p m . Wed n e_~d ay
prayer meeti ng- 7 p.m

pIll

so shine befonel

works and
Father in heaven."

1 g •uuu ·

BUSINESS SERVICES

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~.

"Do not steaL Do not Iie. Do not

•

lighi

Lav.rcnL·e 1-nrcm.m. Wnr,hlr · lit [KJ am
Wlxinc'&gt;day Ser. • 1cc~ . 7 p.m

Ash S1ree1 Church

,

Worship -

KEBLER

'·

•
•
••
•

Wc d tw~ a y

· Wednesday Ser\'KC.'i • 7 p m

740-992-6128

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

,

Forest Run Baptist

your

Rejoidna l .irl' Church

SfKI N 2nd A\c . Mi llt.llcpun . Pa~tor
Mtkc Foreman . Pa~tur
Ementul.

New l.irr
J•omtruy

Sel'\l icc- 7. 00 p.m.

7 .30 p.m (3rd &amp; 4th Sun).Wcdne&amp;da)'

Chrl1tJan Union
H11rtford, W.Va ., Putar.Da vtd Greer,

Anus Hurt. Sund ay School • 10
n. m.• Worshtp - 11 ~J. .m

Local sou'rce for trophies,
Ia ues t-shirts nd m re

•

Pearl Chapel
Sunday Schoo l · Y u 111 Worsh1p- 10 am

P,tstnr· Charles

Denni s Sar11ent, Sunday Bible Study •
9·.30 am ., Wor!Jh1p: 10:30 a.m and 6 J0
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

Pa stor

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

wards abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, atid it shall
be done ullto you.
·John 15:7

Mln~rs"ille

Grah•m Unlttd Methodltt
' ,Wonhip • 9.30 u m. (1~1 &amp; 2nd Sun), ,

Christian Union

that they may see vourl·

If ye abide in Me, and My

$ ••

.........

7 40-949-2217

Communily or C hrist
Pa~ tor Jmt Protlln .
Sunday School · 9 30 a. m , Worship
10 1U u n . W~dn c*day Scn~~.:c~ · 7 00
p.m
Bethel Worship Ct-nler
CheSle r Sc hno l, Pa~tor. Ro h Barhcr.
A~§ l ~ ta n l P.h t.-Jr K&lt;t mn IJ,IV t\ Sund••Y
Worsh tp 10 am. Evcn mg Wnr shtp 6 pm.
Ynulh grnup b pm. W c dnc~d .l ~ Power 10
Pmycr ..md Ht hk S IUd ~ - 7 pm

Pastor· Bnh Rob 111~ 1111 , Sund,ty Schunl · Y
a.m.. Worshi p - I0 am

Me KI..' tlli c. SumLly Sdmnl 9 .30 am ,
Worsh1p · I I a m 7 ·IJ() p m Wcdncstlay

6.00 p.m.. Wl!dne'\.day - 600 p.m

Portl and -Racmc Rd .

Heath (Middlepor1 )
Pu~tor H r~&lt;m Du nhnm, Sunday School •
9:30 :t m • Worship · t I 00 :i in.

Dlln,·ille lloliness Church
3 1057 State Roul c ~::!~. Lan~w. ll c, Pa stor
V!"tor R uu~ h . Su nday sl'h uul · 9 30 am ..
Sund11y wnr-.hip · I 0 ~ 0 a m &amp; 7 p.m..
Wcdm:~ d.1y pr&gt;tyc1 ~e r v1c~ • 7 p rn .

C huf('h
Pas10r WaynL' 1;1. J..;_w&lt;'IL Su nda) Senu.:c ·

South Fomth Avi.'IIUl' , Middleport
Chns S1cwa11 10.00 am Sunday
Ot h~ r mce11ngs m homes

Sunday SciVice-:-7 p m.

Chutch or Christ
lntersewon 7 a nd 124 W, Evansehst:

Services· 7:00 p.m.

P ~~ lnr

l~l~ t o r· Bo b

Sem~.:t:

Sli,·erw ille Communily Aposlolic

Pa~tor

Forest Run
U: (lblnsnn Sunday School · 10

D 1cken~.

C al\ar~ Bihlt: Churrh
Pomero;' Pike. Co Rd .. Pastor· Rev.
Rl,lt;_k\\.ood , S unJ~) Schon! . I) ~0 am ,
Wm sh1p
10.30
am,
i :.'(J
p m..
Wednnda~ Scrv t c~ : 7 JO p m

, Oasis Chtistilm Ft' llowshlp
(Non-dcnomm&lt;atiOili! l lel l1• w~h • pl
Meeti ng m the old Amo.:nL·an le!l •on Hall

a.m , Worship - 9 a.m.

Rutla nU. Sunday Wmsh1p- W 00 am,

Mt. Olive United Melhodllt

Faith Baptist Church
Railruud St., Ma:!i on , Sunday School · 10
a. m.. Worsh ip - I I a.m . 6 p.m.
W~d ne sda y Ser,. k es • 7 p m

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

29670 B'a shari AdRacine, OH

· 10 a.m.. (d O p. m.

Rud.oJ\'tlle Churrh or Chri.o;t
Pas10r: Philip SlUnn, Sunday School: 9 30

Sc hool · 10 a.m.. E\ Cfllll J! • 7 p.m .

Hills Self Storage

Wor~ htp

Wednesday Scr\'iCCS • 7 p m

Old Ht:thel Free Will Baptisl Ctlurch
2860 1 St. Rt 7, M !ddle jxnl , Su nday
School · 10 am , E\'em ng - 7 00 p.m..
Thu rsday Sm ·1ces · 7:00

S.tlcm Sl .

Comnttmil~· C hurrh
Steve Tomd .. M.tin S n~el,

R&lt;)&lt;id

Paswr: Re\ . Frankltn
lnday?rm

Morning Star

IJa O'IIJ W1sc mun. Su nday Sc hool
I) 45 a 111 . b ellln g . 6 30 r m .
'Wednesda ~ Se rvu.:es · 6 10 p m

740-992-nt3

flatwoods

Kl..'lth H.ader. Sunday Schn111 - lfl
n m.. Worsht p - I I ~.m.

Holiness

J-l ,lr fi ~ Hn \' dk

SLhLIOI · q ]U am Wor&lt;;.hip • HXI
p.m , Wcdnesda) H1hlc Study . 7:00pm
1-"Mith t'~llcn•!i h i p (_' rus.a dt' (nr f'hrisl

Am111.in)( Grace Community Church
Pa\tor· Wayne Dunl ap. ~t a te Rt 6~1.
Tupper~ Plams, Sun Wnrship 10 am &amp;
'ft '0 pm . Thursday l:hh)c S w d~ 7 00 p m

1'~1 ,tnr

IJiblt t 'hurch

,.~ u nday

SIUdy WcJ 7 30

Latter-Day Saints

Worship . 10:30 a. m

Ptb lnr .

Home Cooked Meab' d: /Jaily Specials
Open 7 d &lt;iys a wed:

Epi'scopal
Grace Episcopal Church
326 E Miu n S1 . l'omcmy, Sunday Sc honl
an d Holy E u~·h a rt\ 1 II 00 lU ll

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St .. Middlcpoll P a~lor Ru:k;
Bourne. Sunday Sc hoo l - I0 a m Wnr ~ h1 p
-10 .4 5 p. m .. Sumluy Eve 7.00 p m.
Wc d ne~day Scr\'ICe • 7 :\{) p m.

Bradbury Church Christ .
Mm lslo.:r Tom Runyno, ~YS5R Rmdhury
Roud, Mt ddlc pon. Su ndlly Sc hllOl . Y·JO

,Wednesday Serhces- 7:00 p m.

Pa~to r :

Enterprise
Past&lt;lr : Arl ,md Km g. Sunda y Schon! -·
' 10:30 :1m ..· Wor~ hip - 9:30 a.m . Btble

Pas tur

hirvi ~ "'

Lctan . W Va Rt. I. Pas10r Bnan M01y

Other Churches

J onul hun Nohlc. Wor~h1p 10 25 a m .
Sunday Scltonl 'I · IS 11 m

Pm

Silnr Run Baptisl
Pas tur Juhn Swa nson. Sunday Sd wP I •
I !Ia m.. Wor ~ htp - I l11.1n .. 7-lli.J p m

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

Trinity C hun:h
SCl'tllld &amp; Ly nn. • Pomeroy. Pu:-.tu r: Rev

Zion Church or t.:hrist
Pomeroy. Hll rn so nv lil c Rd . I Rt 14 31.
Pa ~ lor . Roger W&lt;tl ~ an , Sunday Sl hool ·
9 _,0 a m. Worsh tp
10:30 a.m , 7.00
p. m , Wc dne~ da y Sc rv1ccs · 7 p. m
Chun:h or Christ
ln ~ lrtun~n l a l , Worship Scrv1ce · 9 a.m..
Com mumon - 10 a.m. Sunr.lay Sc hqol IU I ~ a m . Y!)Uth· 5:10pm Sunday. Btblc
Study Wl•dm.'liday 7

Radnt• i-'irsl Bapth.l
J&gt;n;..tnr Rid;. Rule. Sunda) Schoo l 9 '\()
a.m.. Worship • 10 40 a.m .. 7.00 p m ,
WldncsJay Scrv ll"C.'i · HXI p.m.

Mi[fie's 1(estaurant

Congregational

Wo rship · 10 ·~0 a.m . 6 ·3 0 p.m.
\Vc Uncsday Services • 6 ~0 p 111

Tup~ni Pl~tin

Firslllapttst Church
Postor: Mark Morrow. 6th and Palml! r S1..
MiJd k·port . Sunday St huol · Y 15 :1111 .
Wors hip · 10 15 a.m , 7. 00 n.m,
W~· dn C~d;.1 y Sl..'n'llC· 7 00 p.lll

H ours

7

Mllnlcy. Sttn dlly Sl' hool. 9 ·30 a.m .
Wursh1 p · 103() a m 730 pm ,
W~.oxln c~duy Scr\'ice- 7 :\0 p.m.

,\ 111

Vlli'tory Baptllllndtpendent
~2!1 N 2nd St Middleport. Pasto r: JIUTleH
E. Keesee, Worsh ip - I Oacl) , 7 p m..
Wednelday Servtces - 1 p.m

f1 re11,JI\

and

Bear,. allow Ridge Church or Christ
Paswr:Hruce Terry. S unday School ·9·]0

First Southern Raplist

(740) 992·6472
F•x i740i 992-7406

Atmo1·plrere

7 40-949-221 0

l ~t

Hartford Chun:h of Chritt In

333 Page Street
M1ddleoort OH

"Still small enough to care"

WeUncJ.U~y ScnKc~-

Fellowsh ip. Sunda) · 6 p m

Pomeroy First Baptist
Pos tor Jon Brm kc rt . E a ~ t Mam St
Su n d &lt;~y Sc huu l · 9.]0 a.rJt , \\'m;.,lup .
IO:){J a m

r

Worship · ll1un ..

.7r m

PBS\or Rev Hl..'dl(rt G!ate, Sunday Schl~ll
- 9·30 11m .. Wor~l11p · II tun. fl p.m.
Wcdn. . ~~) Sen 1ct!~ 7 p 111
Rurlwnd ChuKh or the Nwl.lllrrne
Sunday S~.: h ut.)l · 9 \() a.rn. Wunhip ·
lll:JO o1.m •. 6 :W p.m.. Wednesday
Stf\ I Ce~ - 7 p m

'l'uJJ]M'I'S l'lains St. Paul
P J~Itl r . J.mc Bi!&lt;ttlll!, Sund&lt;Jy St·hool
9
.lm . Wur,hlr . I() ,1111 r u. . ~day ScrVIL1.'~
· 7 JO r .m.
·
Ct&gt;nlra l Cl u ~ l e r
A~hury !Syracuse], PaMor· Boh Rohmson.
Sunday Sc hon l - 9 4~ il m , Wmsh1p - I I
a.m , Wctlnc\rJay Scrdl· l!~ · 7 30 p m

Col vary PiiJ;~rim Chapel

Middleport Chunh uf Christ
Sth und Mllm , ra slor Al Har1 so n. Youth
Min ister Jobh Ulm, Sunday S~ h oul - 9 \0
a 111 . Wur~ h1 p· ~- ~ ~- tu·1 Q am .. 7 p.m .
Wednesday Se rvices'- 7 p m

Cheshire B~tptist Church
PaSh)l': Steve Ltttlc Sunda) School Y JU

Community Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration of We"

Located less than 30 mmutcs from
Athens. Pomeroy or Parkersburg

Churrh

Min1 stcr. l.urry BroWn, Worship · 9:30
u m. Sunday Schoyl - IO .~O,a m. Bible
Study 7 pm
,

Thurs. 1 00 p.m .. Pa stor M.rrty R Huttun

P.O. Box 467. Dudding Lalit'

Chri~tian

Church of God
Prophecy
O.J. While Rd ofl St Rt IW. P&lt;~~lm P 1
C hapma n. Sun d 11~ Schon! - 10 a.m,

pm

Sacrt'd Hearl Catholic Church
161 MUlberry Ave .. Pomeroy. 992 -.5M98,

Director of Family &amp;

Coolville, Ohio

'

Catholic

t:mmrmuel Apostolic Tabernaclt' Inc.
Loop Rd off Ne v. L11m1 Rd Rutland,
Scm ccs Sun 10 00 a m &amp; 7 ·30 p.m .

Michael L Crites

ARCAQIA NURSING
CENTER

VanZa ndt and W:-trd Rd.. Pust(lr. J:uncs
MIl ler Sunday Sdl&lt;l\1] - 10: ilO a Ill.•
Evening 7 ~or m

Wi:dnc~a~, 7\10
p.m : Yo uth l·n 7 ;\0 p. m

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
.....,calioo ha&lt; b«nltlrtiaa .. loog ..
' - t upon lho
arU.._.olittWrln&amp; """'nd In Ill• Ga- of f.dtn .••dls&amp;Uioia&amp; IhOff •llll afiUer..,..
lia-r, pnllllliolaa
and acapta...,., AIKI -11.... pnlmdin' to be lho 01111 ool.dlon

. Mouu ng wur~ lu p I I am Evcmng- 7 pm,
We d tlc~ay 7 p m.

Ave .. Mr ddlrport, Ke11i n Konkle, Pu~l••r.

clergy, give ble ssings to
same-sex unions and allow
women priests to become
bi shops. Fresh debate·s are
expected at a global gathering
of Anglican leaders beginning
Monday in Northern Ireland,
where the Episcopal Church
also could be sanctioned for
consecrating a gay bishop.
The wedding plans add
another point of friction, conservative leaders say.
''We know there ·s a head of
steam to liberalize the church
already," said George. Curry,
chairman of the Church
Society, comprising traditionminded Anglican clergy and
lay members in Britain.
"There are theological questions at stake. Charles is now
one of them."
Actually, it's the bride-tobe who appears to be deeper
in the religious quagm1re.
Her ex-husband, Andrew
Parker Bowles, is alive. For
conservative s, this is an
affront to Anglican tenets;
whereas Charle s, as a widower, is free to remarry.
"It has grave consequences
for the future of the church"
delegate Allan Jones told the
Church of England 'S governing General Synod, which
met thi s week in London.

·r

Chun:h of Juus Chris! Aposlolk

or

Second Bapth;t Church

Sunday, 10 30 a.m.

http: 1/w w w_/uthera nworld.org

. Bv BRIAN MURPHY

Ruvcnswood. WV. Sun day School 10 am-

Rin·r Valley
Ap"~lo li ~ \\tH~Iup CCnt&lt;.!r. XTl S

Royal wedding strays
into Anglican battles
over direction of church

Church Briefs

Ftllowship
ApostoTrc

Meigs Count y's Oldest R ori"t

352 East Main
Pomeroy, Oh

lb&lt;~ l?IJ/IIm SO/I .• .

Jolm 3:16
6nouflrr'•

:fire &amp; 6afrt!'

..........

......... ·---·

W

· l et uc c111nd qo·n thoughts: with ~lt l t:a111"

740-992-2644

God so lored the world
he gave his only

~

740-992-6298

·M!l erace is sufficient
for thee: for mll
strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9

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

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

�I

•
Page AS • The Daily Sentinel -

,

.

Friday, February 18, 2005;

www.mydailysentinel.com

.'

'

Bl

rhe Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Hockey offseason starts early, Page 82
Buckeye women down Minnesota, Page B4
Tlmberwolves topple Cava, Page sa·
J

Fri4ay,Februaryt8,2005

Boys Tourney

··Athens

Friday, February 18 ·

Morning

(7

Evming (7 p.m.-Midnight)

a.m.-Noon)

Temperatures will rise
from 24 to 28 by late this
morning. Skies will be
sunny with 5 to 10 MPH
winds from the northwest.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)

250 Columbus Rd.
740-594-3528
1-877-716-0685

.

Temperatures will ri se
from 29 early afternbon to
the high for the day of 30
at 3:00pm as they drop
back down .to 23 later this
afternoon. · Skies will ·range
from sunny to mostly
sunny with 5 MPH winds
, from the northwest.

Temperatures will hold
steady around 2 L Skies wiH
be clear with 5 MPH winds
from the northwest turning
from the . south as the
evening progresses.
Ovemight (1-6

as.Low 1 90/ APR*
. as
• to

2005 CHRYSLER 300C

a.m.)

Temperatures will linger
at 21 with today's low of
21
occurring
around
6:00am. Skies will be clear
to . .mostly clear with 5
MPH winds from the south
turning from · the southwest
as the overnight progresses.

$34,845 MSRP

2005 ·HOND4
'ACCORDS

BUY NOW $32,934

2005 HONDA
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2005 DODGE ·UM
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· Quad cob, Sll pkg., oolomol1c, loaded

Local Stocks
ACI-38.18
AEP-34.42
Akzo-44.45
Ashland Inc.. - ·63.52
AT&amp;T-19.42
BLI-11.81
Bob Eyans - 22.79
BorgWarner- 52.78
Champion- 4.03
Charming Shops - 8.03
City Holding- 31.87
Col-46.73
·
DG-21.92
DuPont - 52.31
Federal Mogul- .38
, Gannett ...:. 79.34
General Electric - 36.03
GKNLY-4.65
Harley Davidson - 61.68
JPM-36.78
.
. Kmart -100.52
Kroger- 17.66

$41,250 MSRP
Ltd. -24.15
NSC-34.80
Oak Hill Financial- 37.16
OVB-33.28
.BBT-39.74
Peoples - 26.77
pepsico - 53.73
Premier ...:. 11.31
Rockwell - 59.90
Rocky Boots - 33.9
RD Shell - 60.84
SBC-24.25
Sears - 51.32
USB...:. 29.71
Wai-Mart - 52.70
Wendy's-37.72
Worthington - 2~.97
Dally stock reports are ,the
4 p.m. closing quotes.of the
previous day's transactions, ·
provided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

.The' Pa(ly Sentinel
Subscribe .today • 992-2155'
www.inydailysentinel.com

.'

2005 HONDA
ODYSSEYS

$35,527

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2005 DODGE RAM
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VB eng., oulomot&lt;, SLT pkg., 61o choose from!

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~ock,

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'1.9%'04 Element
a .9% up to 60 mOI\ll. AHFC approved cred~ on Civic &amp; Accord

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25Q. Colunbut Rd.

CHRYSLeR

140-59-l-3528
1-877.715.fl686

••

·2005 Nissan Quest
·
2004 Nissan
Xterra XE

£~!188 - ~

Iii

250 Columbus Rd., Athens
740-59-HONDA I
Toll Free 1-877-772;8993

2005 Nissan Altima2 2.5

at this price

i'""'

$ 1,500

17,8

Wor1d Champi011 Pkg.

2 at this price

2004 Nissan Maxima SE

2 at thi! pric:l!

$19,990

Chromt wheels, sunroof, rw spoiler

lVQttt loeater/ at t/r,e
Plea~alft

f!o.lle! lfoo/1/tal ·
!/ul/eal Offtoe Cel(te~

- ~STEPHA.N SERFONTEIN, MD
Internal Medieiue
Lot•ation :
PVH Medical Office Center
2418 Jefferson Ave)lue
Point Pleasant, WV 25S5&lt;J

.
I t;,
'
"
'
DRIVE TO A

.

350

z

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Price
2
at this price

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Division II ·
at Logan-Hocking Middle
School
. Monday, February 14
Fairfield Union 72, Athens 51
Tuesday, February 15
Vinton County 59, New
Lexington 43
Gallia Academy 55, Sheridan
40
Wednesday, February 16
Warren 78, Fairfield Union 76
Meigs 68, River Valley 50
Friday, February 1.8
Vinton County vs. Gallia
Academy, 7 p.m. (winner
advances to district tournament
at Co~vocation Center. Athens.)
Saturday, February 19
Warren vs. Meigs, 7 _p.m. (winner advances to district tourna·
ment at Convocation Center,
Athens.) .
at Southeastern High
School
Monday, February 14
Washington Court House 53.
Rock Hill 44
·
Tuesday, February 15
Logan Elm 76, Waverly 35
Jackson 59, Miami Trace 44
Wednesday, February 16
McClain 62, Washington Court·
House 35
Hillsboro 70, Circleville 40
Friday, Felnuary 18
Logan Elm vs. Jackson, 7 p.m.
(winner advances to district tournament at Convocation Center,
Athens.)
Saturday, February 19 ·
McClain vs. Hillsboro, 7 p.m.
(winner advances to district tour·
namen1 at Convocation Center,
Athens.)
Division IV
at Wellston High School
Monday, February 14
Southeastern 55, Crooksville
45
Tuesday, February 15
Miller 60, Ironton St. Joe 38
Southern 65, Waterford 54
Friday, February 18
Eastern
(Meigs)
vs.
Southeastern, 6:15 p.m. (winner
advances to district tournament
at Convocation Center, Athens.)
South Gallia vs . Symmes
Valley, 6 p.m. (winner advances
to district tournament at
Convocation Center, Athens.)
Saturday, February 19
Eastern (Pike) vs. Miller, 6:15
p.m. (winner advances to district
tournament a1 Convocation
Center, Athens.)
Trimble vs. SoUthern, 6 p.m.
(winner advances to district tour:
nament at Convocation Center,
Athens.)
at Valley High School
Monday, Februa,Y 14
Leesburg Fairfield 57, New
Boston 44
Tuesday, February 15
Manchester 74, Western 61
Peebles 79, Notre Dame 39
Friday, February 18
South Webster vs. Leesburg
Fairfield, 6:15 p.m. (winner
advances to district tournament
at Convocation Center, Athens.)
Sciotoville vs·: Green, 8· p.m.
(winner advances to ·district tournament at Convocation Center,
Athens.)
·
Saturday, February 19
•Whiteoak vs. Manchester, 6:15
p.m. (winner advances to district
tournament at Convocation
Center, Athens.)
Portsmouth Clay \f$. Peebles, 8
p.m. (winner advances to district
tournament at Convocation
Center, Athens.)

Girls Tourney
Saturday's Games
Division II
at Chillicothe
Gallia Academy vs. UrJ!oto, 1 p.m.
Sheridan vs. Athens, 2:45 p.m.

Attention varsity
hoops coaches
Boys and girls varsity
basketball coaches are
reminded to send us your
final reJ!ular stats upon the
complellon of the season for
consideration
for
the
Associated Press all-district
team as well as the OVP
Super 10 teams .
·
You may fax them to 4463008 or drop them off at our
Gallipoli s office on Third
Avenue.
You may also e-mail them
to
sports @mydaily sen tinel. com or call in any
nominees, with their stats,
to 992-5287 , ext. 33.
Deadline for this information is 5 p.m., Feb. 23. To
get someone on · either of
these teams , thi s information is required.

2.005 Rio Grande Softball Preview - -- - -- -

Redwomen setting their sight~ ev~n higher
a.

components
to the 2004
team.
· The 2004
RIO GRANDE' - After a record,
squad
fin·'I ished the year
setting 2004 campaign the 2005 ver- s-~-ll&gt;b
sion of the University of Rio Grande "- ... ~ •
&lt;lAc' · with a 40-14
softball has its' sights se1 on getting record, winning the NAIA Region IX
even better.
Championship and finishing seventh
The task may somewhat difticult as · at the NAIA National Tournament.
fourth year head coach David Pyles . This year's team becomes the hunthas to replace four seniors, three of ed instead of the hunter.
which were tremendous offensive
"I think we probably gained a little
BY MARK WILLIAMS

Special to the Tribune

.
10
"tJ

respect within the. league," Pyles said.
"No·longer do people come in and just
walk over Rio Grande.''
Pyles said the 2004 experience was
great and that the ;05 squad would like
to build on that success. "Honestly,
fini shing 7th (at the Natiomil
Tournament) was a tremendous success for the '04 team, but thi s '05 team
would like build on that," he said.
"How much higher can we go, seven
more places would be tine. "
Pyles understands that replacing the

departed seniors will be a tough challenge. but he feels he has the talent to
fill the void. "We did lose- four
seniors, two starting outfielders. two
starti'ng infielders and three of those
seniors were hitting over .300,'' Pyles
said. "It 's tough to repl ace that, it's
tough to replace that senior leadership ."
"We may have some freshman coming in that are just as talented, but you

Please see Softball, Bl

Daytona 500

AP

NASCAR driver Michael Waltfip (15) eases the nose of his car past teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr., as they race through the tri-oval of the Daytona International
Speedway on ·!he final lap·of the first of two Gatorade Du~l 150 races on Thursday.

Waltrip and Earnhardt upfronfagain
BY MIKE HARRIS

Associated Press
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -The Daytona 500 is
still three days away and already NASCAR is in
midseason form. The Dale Earnhardt Inc. team is
. running out in front and Kevin Harvick is being
rapped for reckless driving.
Michael Waltrip passed DEI teamq~ate Dale
Earnhardt Jr. on the final straightaway to win the.first
of two !50-mile qualifying races Thursday. while
Tony Stewart won the second race after Harvick

bumped
leader
Jimmie Johnson and
ignited a wild crash.
Waltrip's victory
put to rest speculation that the DEI
team's days of dominance are over.
"We
certainly
caught a lot of flak over the last week about the way
our cars qualified," Waltrip said. 'This silenced.it...
It's hardly unusual for Waltrip and Earnhardt to
wind up at the front of a race at Daytona

International Speedway. where the two have combined to win three of the last four SQO.mile races and
a qualifying race each of those years.
This year. though. it was far from a certainty especially· after defending 500 champion Earnhardt
strug~led in· the non 7points Budweiser Shootout on ·
the 21,..ffiile oval and he and Waltrip qualified 39th
and 33rd in time trials last. week. ,
As for the dramatic pass that brought him the win,
. Waltrip said, •·] plan out moves like that all the time
and they never work. "

Please see o.ytona, Bl

Reds still scheduled for Report:.Ohio State
reprimanded
assistant
hearing with pitcher Ortiz for NCAA violation

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - Right-han ''It is not the
der Ramon Ortiz remained at .odds with .
preferred resothe Cincinnati Reds over hi s contract.
lution
and
Thursday, a day before his arbitration .
frankly. for .an
case was scheduled for a hearing .
i-n d i v i du a l
Ortiz is the only Reds player eli gible
coming into a
for arbitration who hasn't reach an
brand-new setting , thi s. is
agreement. He's aski11g for $4 million,
and the club has offered $3.45 million ,
really not the
His case was scheduled for a hearing in
.
.
fjrst step that
Tampa on Friday afternoon . Three arbi- you 'd hke as an tntroductton," 0 B'nen
trators will choose one of the two fig, said . "But we still continue to work at it,
ures.
and I can 't say I' m overly optimi stic, but
Ortiz participated in the Reds' first I'm still hopefuL "
workout for pitchers and catchers on
Ortiz would be the only Reds player to
Thursday. He didn' t care to talk about go to an arbitration hearing.
the arbitration case.
When last season ended, the Reds had
. "I don't think that ~uch a~out money six other players eligible for arbitration .
nght now," he Said. " I m putting my con- They dechned to offer a ·cpntract to nght centration on the game and playing the · hander John Riedling. and avoided arbigame." ·
tration hearings by agreeing to one-year
The Reds got Ortiz from Anaheim on deals with the other fiv e: outfielder
Dec. 14 for a minor league pitcher. Ortiz Adam Dunn ($4 .6 million), cat cher Jason
went 5-7 with a 4.43 earned .run average LaRue ($3 million), second base man
in 14 starts and 20 relief appearances for D'Angelo Jimenez ($2. 87 million). out the Angels last season . The Reds are fielder Au stin Kearns ($930,000), and
counting on liim to join their revamped catcher Javier Valentin ($450.000).
starting rotation.
. All of the pitchers and catchers were in
The Angel s had declined a contract camp for the first workout. joined by
option to keep Ortiz for $5.5 million in several position players reporting earl y.
2005 , giving him a $100,000 buyout
Right-hander Jose Acevedo arrived a
instead.
da y late, missing the phys ic;tl s for pi tchGeneral manager Dan 0 ' Brien said ers and catchers on Wedne&gt;day. He
Thursday that the two &gt;ides were not arrived on Thursday morning, bl ~tming a
close to a settlement, mak ing the hear'i ng· travel delay in the Domini can Republic,
likely:
. and participated in worko uts.

COLUMBUS (AP) - An
assistant football coach was .
reprimanded by Ohio State
for trying .to arrange for ~ car
and a loan for a recnlit and
getting him a tutor, The
Columbus Dispatch reported
Thursday.
Ohio State placed a letter of
reprimand in offensive coordinator 's Jim Bollman's per- ·
sonnet file and also wrote a ment Thursday.
let'ter of admonishment for
In a letter dated Feb. 23,
head coach Jim Tressel , 2003, &lt;;Jeiger _wrote that
be se Tressel is ·Bollman ·s Bollman s actions tn summer
cau
·
2002 "reflected poorly on our
supervisor.
. . .
The school determined thal coaches and our mstllutiOn
h
·
and are not to be repeated.
helpin g t e recrutt get a tutor Understand thar even inadfor a college entrance exam
was a secondary NCAA vio- vertent violations comprolation . Ohio State reported it mise the integritY, of our athto the NCAA. which declined letic department. '
to investigate. athletic direcBollman was upset, and
there have been no further
tor ·Andy Gei ger told the violations. Geiger told the ·
Di spatch.
D.
h
'The name of the recruit was
Ispate ·
not in Bollman's file.· Geiger
The NCAA started investitold The Associated Press on gating the football program in
November after former star
Thursday that the recruit running back Maurice Clarett
ne ver played for Ohio State; said Tressel, his staff and·
but he decl ined to identify school bOosters arranged f!lr
hi~~llman and Tressel did not him to get passing grades.
rctuni messages seeking com- ,
....." - NCAA. •1
·I

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

National Hockey League

Hockey offseason starts early
rumors that are out there, but
we have had absolutely no
contact with the union since
NEW YORK_ Day 155 of Bob's final letter," NHL chief
the NHL lockout was stun- legal officer Bill Daly told the
AP. "Unless or until we hear
ningly Day I ·of the offseason. from the union , the rumors
In becoming the first major are meaningless." '
Sports leag ue in North
The Hockey News cited
America to lose an entire sea- sources that said Wayne
son to a labor dispute on Oretzky and Mario 1 Lemieux
Wednesday, the NHL finally are trymg to work together to
got the national attention it 's get a deal done. Gretzky
always craved.
downplayed the report during
But it was for all the wrong a radio interview with the Fan
reasons.
590 in Toronto.
Now the fear 1s the fight
"To say Mario and 1 had a
over a new deal between owil- conversation to st ir up lhe
ers and players will JUSI slarl conversations and talks agai n,
over frmn'scratch. Everything that 's just not true," Gretzky
,
offered has been pulled back; said.
any softemng of the positions
And it appears that no other
has been lost.
scenarios could un-cancel the
One caneeled season could season, either.
easily become two if c:ooler
"The players we've spoken
heads don't prevml.
to understand the basis upon'
"I was expecting to hear
h' h G
1d h
ary cance e t e seathere wasn't a season for the w IC
son. and as a result there's no
past six weeks," Rangers for- expectatio'n among our memward Bobby Holik said. "I bership that there would be
hope the people in these nego- any further negotiations,"
tiations realize they're not NHLPA senior director Ted
that far apart. Let's not blame Saskin told The Associated ·
one or the other. The blame is
.
d ,
k Press.
co II ecttve, an 1et s get wor There was no progress
ing on a new day."
. made thro'ugh the first five
Late · Thursday, rumors months of the lockout; but
swirled that maybe there was breakthroughs were achieved
sttll a chance to save the sea- just days before the season
so.~1· h
bl'
was lost.
ear some rum mgs ... ' The dispute has always
tha.t owners and players are been about a salary cap, but
trymg to make an attempt_ to even after owners and players
get back to, the bargammg made concessions in an effort
table, but tt s got to occur to save the season it all fell
toda_r. tomorrow, or the next apart over dollar figures.
day, age~t Pat Bnsson told
"We didn't make good hisThe Ass~ctated Press.
tory, but we made history
Both stdes sa~d there ha_ve another way," Dallas forward
b~en no talks smce comm1s- Bill Guerin, a member of the
s10ner , Gary .. Bettman ~nd players ' association executive
P!ayers assoctatlon executive committee, said while making
dtrector Bob Goodenow trad- the radio rounds Thursday ..
.e~proposals Tuesday.
·"We have to be the first union
We have heard a lot of the to offer a salary cap and get
BY IRA PODELL
Associated Press

•

Friday, February 18, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

shot down."
All along, the union. swore
it would never accept a capbut that was before the NHL
dropped its insistence ori having a link between league revenues and player costs.
A wall was knocked down,
but it. was too late. Once the
sides started trading numbers,
it , became clear they weren 't
close enough to a deal. Even
though the league 's cap offer
of $42.5 million per team was
only $6.5 million less than the
players' proposal, it proved to
be a gap that couldn't be
bridged.
"It's crazy," said Islanders
general
manager
Mike
Milbury, a union representative during his · career.
"Twenty .years ago when I
played, we didn't have in the
dressing room catalogs of
'Christie's Great Estates of
the World.' I mean, these are
wealthy people, millionaires,
and they are losing valuable

for as long as the league is
s)lut down, and then even
more once it is back in operation. Hockey was already a
distant forth among the
United .States '· four major
sports .leagues, · and now it
could disappear . south of the
Canadian border, where 24 of
the 30 teaii1s are based.
"It 's done with, we'll never
get the season back . It will
probably lower the fan base,"
New York Rangers defenseman
Tom
Poti
said.
"Everybody's going to suffer
a lot from this lockout. I don't
see it starting in the t\III.
There.'s no pressure tQ get it
done."

www.mydailysentinel.com

Steelers again
replacing turf at Heinz ~
. PITTSBURGH '(AP) - ·The
Pittsburgh Steelers are replacing the much-mali ~ned turf at
Heinz Field - agam.
The work, however, actually
began before the NFL Players
Association released a player
.survey rating it among the tive
· worst playing surfaces earlier
this month. In that survey,
Steelers players rated their awn
playing surface as the worst in
the league.
1\vo Jears ago, the Steelers
installe DO GrassMaster - a
hybrid surface that combines
real sod with synthetic fibersafter complaints that the footing
wa~ poor on the sand-based
grass surface·in place when the
field opened in 200 I. ·
Earlier this month, workers
again scraped off the surface -

about a half-inch of top soil but they're not chan~ing turf's,
they're again installmg a .DD
GrassMaster 'surface.
The Steelers are hoping that
will help because the Denver
Broncos did the same thing at
lnvesco Field at Mile High, and
that field was ranked the
eighth-best in the league by
players.
·
Club president Art Rooney II
said the Steelers constdered
fully synthetic FieldTurf, which
the Steelers use on their indoor
praclice field across town.
"We didn't do any actual survey.'' Rooney said, "but we
talked to some of th~ players
about our field and whether to
put in FieldTurf. None of them
said thev 'd rather go to
FieldTurf.''

For now. many will look
ahead to this spring's world
cham{lionship tournament in
Austna. Usually, only players
(Hilliard) and Jenny Phillips
on teams eliminated from the
(Hamilton)
will. also get an
Stanley Cup playoffs had the
1
opportunity.
opportunity to take part - but
Laws and Ross will also be
many stars might be craving a
from Page 81
a part of
deeper and
competitive game.
improved
pitching
staff. The
time."
Over 300 of the 700-plus don 't replace that experitwo freshmen will join junior
Instead of starting a deal to players have spent at least ence," he added.
ace
Andrea
Lotycz
be on NBC and receiving pro,_ part of the season in European
Three ·of the four infield (Marysville). Lotycz re-wrote
mos during the&gt;- network's lea~ues , and that would be an positions
are solidified with the record book last year with
"Must See TV" lineup, the option again in the faiL
the
lone
senior Amy Cono · a 26-5 record and 28 complete
NHL now has people saying,
Settman didn't rule out the (Wheelersburg)
at first base. games in 42 appearances.
"Did you see what they did to use of replacement players for She will be backed-up
by Stephanie Broccolo elected
the hockey season?" ·
next season if a deal with the freshman Jenna Gauthier
The NHL's partnership with union can't be worked out. He (Gahanna). Junior Kristen not to return after suffering an
NBC will still be there when said the NHL plans to have
injury to her shoulder.
"Pitching wise, we're in
play resumes. The revenue~ hockey next season, and all ·chevalier (Chester) returns at
sharing deal in which the net- qptions will be explored by shortstop and junior Brandi much better shape this year,
(Hamilton) looks to than we ever been in my
work is not even paying rights the board of governors when Jones
have
third
base secured. Pyles tenure," Pyles said. "We' ve
fees is for two years, with the it convenes soon.
said
he
could
put Jones behind . never had the luxury of thrl!e
network holding the option
Milbury called some of his
plate &gt;ome this season if pitchers, so this year we
for another two.
players Wednesday night and the
needed.
·
.
should be much deeper."
That won'.t start until hock- urged them to push the union
Se~ond base is the question
Sophomore
Michelle
ey is played.
leadership to make a deal.
mark.
Dettwiller
(Greenfield)
"We were prepared for any
"This is not about a bluff."
Junior Ashley Lotycz
eventuality." NBC Sports Milbury said. "The best deal (Marysville) and freshman returns at catcher and will be
joined by freshman Whitney
spokesman Mike McCarley has already been offered. The Talya
Gillesfie
(Canal Harless (Jackson).
said. "We have profitable sooner they come to the con- Winchester)
wil vie for playRio is picked to tinish secreplacement programming in clusion that they need to make ing time in the absence of the
place."
a deal to move this business graduated Emily Cooper.
ond behind Ohio Dominican
And that is a big problem forward, the better off we all
"It's a touch of a queslion in the American Mideast
the NHL will be forced to face are."
mark," Pyles said speaking of Conference and third in NAIA
second base. "That spot's Region IX.
"I hope the players come in
wide open."
with a chip on their shoulder
The Redwomen return only (over
the prediction), I know I
one starter i'n the outtield in will be,"
Pyles said. "But I'm
the figure of junior right tield- not the one swinging a bat and
er Jenny Olding (Fairfield).
throwing the ball around."
Olding, arguably, had the best
The South D1vision should
season of any player to ever prove to be very tough as
wear the softball uniform at always.
.
Ohio Dominican
Rio
Grande 'in 2004. She led brings back plenty of experitwo sides would get together things on either side .and that's Alexei Kovalev, Lemieux said
before the press conference · why I've chosen to stay away the 38-year-old franchise 's the team in batting average ence as will Cedarville while
and make a deal ... that, at the from the negotiations."
very existence rides on a (.432), home runs (II) and Shawnee State and Mt.
end of the day, there would be
Lemieux said the NHL will more-favorable labor contract RBI (63).
"We lost two outfielders, Vernon Nazarene will tield
too much at stake for both be damaged by shutting down and a new arena.
strong squads.
sides."
Lemieux
said for a full season, but is confiAs for · his own career, but when you have the one
''The South is a struggle, I
Wednesday. "But I knew and dent it will make a strong Lemieux plans to keep playing coniing that put up the mim- think we're up to -the task,"
understood throughout this return with rules changes once the NHL returns to the bers that she put up, it's just Pyles said. "We've just got to
process that it would be a kmg designed to make the sport ice, despite missmg 145 games incredible," Pyles said. "But prove it on the tield."
battle."
·
more fan-friendly and enter- due to injury or rest in the we do have those other two
Rio Grande begins the sea·
Lemieux is the first owner- taining -. something he has three seasons before the lock- spots 10 ti II."
"I think we have some son today with a scrimmage
player in modern Ameri ·an sought for years.
out.
game versus Cleveland ·State
pro sports history, but there
"The game is going to suffer
Counting his 3 l/2-year 'freshman that are quite capa- (Tenn.) Community College.
never was a chance he would for a couple of years and it's retirement from 1997-2000, ble." he added.
The official regular season
Pyles also said junior opener
si(le with the players despite going to take time to win back injuries and the labor strifeis Saturd&lt;~y at Lee
being the NHL's best-known our fans and rebuild the busi- delayed 1994-95 season he sat Stephanie Flowers will get a University.
star. .
ness," he said. "And the play- out; Lemieux has missed the look at one of the two remainRio's home opener is
" A few years ago. I thought ers are going to have to share equivalent of 9 I /2 seasons for ing outfield slots. Freshmen against Geneva College
Laws
(Nellis, March 18 at Stanley Evans
the owners were .making a lot in that."
various reasons since his rook- Miranda
W.Va.).
Jessica
Ross Field.
of money ·and were hiding
The labor impasse couldn 't ie season - nearly half of a
some under the table," he said. come at a more critical time career that began in 1984.
"But then I got on this side and ' for the Penguins, two-t-ime .. "I've done it before, taken a
saw the losses this league was Stanley Cup champions who few years off, but it gets
get a car. The famil}i did ' not
accumulating,"
·
' enjoyed considerable on-ice tougher and tougher once ,you
get a car from the dealership,
Lemieux tried several weeks and box office success from get closer to 40 to lose a year,"
Bollman told the Dispatch.
ago to secretly move along a 1991 -200 I until soaring salary said Lemieux, who turns 40 in
Officials a1 Nourse's corfrom Page 81
deal, meeting in Toronto with costs forced Lemieux to dump October. "But I' II prepare
porate office in Columbus
Maple Leafs owner Larry all of his stars except himself. myself this summer to come
did not ·return messages seekTanenbaum and player Tie
"I couldn't afford myself," back and play and hopefully money for bogus summer Ing comment Thursday.
. Domi to try to bridge the gap he said, referring to the below- stay healthy and play a few jobs, thousands of dollars in
A bank al so contacted
cash and loaner cars.
between the league and its market $5 million salary he more years."
Starting quarterback Jroy Bollman about a $3.000 loan
players union. But he was paid himself last season:
Even if he can't guess when Smith was suspended from that the recruit's familv had
unsuccessful.
.
With attendance down for the highest level of hockey
the
Alamo
Bowl
in applied for. Bollman said the
·'It's · been
difficult," lhree consecutive losing sea- will be played again.
December for accepting family apparently used him
Lemieux said of his dual role. sons amid the sell-off of play"Nobody knows," Lemieux money from a booster.
as a reference and he told the
... , don't want to say the ·wrong ers such as Jaromir Jagr and said.
. Geiger's letter said that bank that the recruit "was· a
Bollman· called Nourse Auto good guy. but don't give him
the loan just . because he
Leasing and asked the dealer knows
me."
·
know, been mediocre in prac- and Rusty Wallace.
Harvick said Johnson bob- to help the recruir's famil y
tice, and they always go in the
Johnson was furious, saying bled in the tum.
race," he' said. "I'd like to Harvick should know better
·~1 just got to him and he
know what it is that they got, than to bump draft in the turns. checked up and I got to him
because they obviously know He said Harvick should be and I couldn't get off of him,"
how to sandbag well."
tired by team owner Richard .Harvick said. "I just· spun him
Not true, Earnhardt prolest- Childress and penalized by out and I fee] · sorry for the
ed.
NASCAR.
teams
and
everybody
"I don 't know what the ben"It's a shame," Johnson said. involved. It's not something
efit to that would be," he said. "He tore up six or seven good where you want to bump draft
"If there was one, I would do race cars."
in the middle of the corner."
it. The cars have been slow,
we've changed some things
and I don't know if we're better or not. I think if we went
and qualified all over again
this car would still be slow.
pl~se
"I swear ' on the bible we
ain't been sandbagging.'''
Midway-through the second
race,
Jimmie
Johnson,
Gordon's
Hendrick
Motorsports teammate. who
trailed
only
three-time
Daytona winner Dale Jarrett in
.tM~.Le4~- tie' ~.
pole qualifying last Sunday,
. was out front when he was .
bumped
by
Harvick.
Get home delivery today
Johnson's Chevrolet was
turned sideways, igniting the
East Main Street • Pomeroy, OH
crash that took out top con740·992·6614 • 1·800·837·1094
tenders Johnson, Harvick,
Mark Martin, Joe Nemechek

"' II you have a question or

What: Daytona 500
Wher~ : Daytona (Beach, Fla.)
International Speedway (2 .5
miles ), 200 laps; soo miles.
When : Sunday. Feb. 20
Last year's , winner : Dale
Earnhardt Jr.
Qualifying record : B1ll El liott,
Ford, 210.364 mph. Feb. 9,
1987 '
Race record : Buddy Baker,
Oldsmobile, 177.602 mph,
Feb.17, 198D.
On the pole : Dale Jarrett
gave the Daytona 500 pole a
rather diStinguished look.
Only two men, Richard Petty
and Cale Yarborough, have
won the 500 mo re t1mes
than Jarrett, who won 11 in
1993, 1996 and 2000. Jar-

Softball

a

Mo1nte Car·lo forces still
pretty strong, by the way.
,. "il"a' Jarrett's Ford, the next six
In the order drove Chevys.
.,_And what happened to the new
·oodge Charier. The fastest one
in qualifying was Kyle Petty
·(12th). Ryan Newman, after an
impressive showing in the Bud·
weiser Shootout. could manage
no better than 29th.

ALAN ROBINSON

Associated Press

PITTSBURGH - There
never was any doubt where
hockey's biggest name stood
in the NHL lockout.
These days, Mario Lemieux
is the Pittsburgh Penguins'
owner first and a player second, not the other way around.
Lemieux might have captained Team Camida to a
World Cup championship in
September, but has said
repeatedly the NHL has no
choice but to negotiate a more
favOfable labor contract even if such a deal might trim
his own salary..
The only other option, he
said. is to risk losing hockey in
Pittsburgh and other smaller
cities, where fans are weary of
subsidizing big salaries in
what is becoming a niche sport
largely 1gnored by the· masses.
That's why Lemieux was
hopeful until minutes before
commissioner Gary Bettman
canceled the 2004-05 season
Wednesday there would be a
last-minute labor agreement to
save the season - and, in his
mind, the sport.
"Th is morning, I thought the

Daytona
from Page 81
But Waltrip, who won by
.030 seconds - about half a
car length - wasn't surpri sed
by the 1-2 DEI finish.
"After rractice yesterday, I
knew we d be a force in the
150 and the Daytona 500," the
two-time 500 winner said.
Earnhardt, who fought an
ill- ha_ndlin~ car early ~n the
race, Wll,'in t surpnsed, etther.
"It just seems to go in
cycles," Earnhardt said. "We
had our run and we've all
known over the last couple of
years they've been closing the
gap. Yet we ain't fallin~ off to
the point when we can t compete. Everybody is working
hard to catch us, and eventually they will ."
Jeff Gordon, a two-time
Daytona winner who finished
seventh in the first race, isn't
so sure about ,that.
.
"They've never qualified
good. They've always, you

Don't miss a BINGO
number and your

:• CHANCE TO WIN

retl put his No. 88 Ford on Race: Hershey's Take 5 300
Race : Flonda Dodge Dealers
the pole at an average speed Where: Daytona (Beach, Fla.) l50
ol 188.312 mph.
InternatiOnal Speedway (2.5 Where: Daytona (Beach, Fla.)
Last week : Jimm1e Johnson mites). 120 laps/300 miles.
International Speedway (2.5
won for the f1rst t1me at a re· When: Saturday, Feb. 19
miles), 100 laps/250 m11es.
strictor-plate track, leadmg Last year's winner: Dale When : Fnday, Feb. 18
the final 16 laps '" the Bud . Earnhardt Jr.
Last year's winner: Carl Ed·
we iser Shootout at Daytona . Qualifying record : Tommy wards ·
The Chevrolet dnver crossed Houston, Bu1ck, 194.3B9 Qualifying record : Joe
the line ahead of Ryan New- mph, Feb.10,1987.
Ruttman, Dodge, 187.563
man 1n a Dodge and Jeff Gor- Race record: Geoffrey Bod- mph , Feb. 16. 2000.
don and Tony Stewart, both 1n ine. Pont1ac. 157.137 mph, · Race record: Robert Pre ss ·
Chevys. Greg Biffle, who led Feb: 16,1985. ·
ley, Dodge, 140.121 mph,
44 of the 70 laps In h1s Ford, Last race: Kevin Harv1ck won Feb. 15. 2002.
f1n 1shed s1xth, one position the final race of th'e 2004 Last race: kasey Kahne won
ahead of Dale Earnhardt Jr. , season 1n Homestead, Fla .
the fmat race of 2004 m
who came bac k from meHomestead, Fla.
chamcal problems 1n the first
segment.

DALE EARNHARDT JR.

NEXTEL CUP SERIES,

No. 8

E

R

s
Kurt
Busch

rules will not make passing easier in the Daytona 500. The re'strtct0r plates have had their
· openings. narrowed ever so
slightly, from 29/32nds of an
. inch to 57/64ths, but that dlf·
terence, 1/64th, apparently
translates to about 15 horsepower.

.

~·

Greg
Biffle

The Nextel Cup champ1on . Busch,
and 'teammate Biffle both had strong
cars 1n the Budweiser Shootout'but
seemed unwill1ng to work together in
· the draft. Biffle made a breathtaking
s~ve dunng the wan1ng laps after h1s
Ford made contact with Busch's.
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives his take : "Oh. there's
no cause for concern here. First of

all. the BudweiSer Shootout 1sn't a
po1nts race. and it wasn't unusual for

teammates w1th competmg dnv1ng
styles not to draft together. As one
garage-area observer noted . 'That's
JUSt the way tho~e two guys raceJ"

. John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

Dale Earnhardt Jr. (top) passes Mark Martin on the high side of the track during the Budweiser Shootout at Daytona on Feb.' 12.

1&gt;AII eyes will be on Robby Gor·
don in the qualifying races. He
faces an uphill struggle to get in
the field, and since he IS starting a new team, he needs to
. make the early starting fields in
order to get "top 35" .protectiOn
later in the season.
·

t Early indications are that new

s

vs. Greg Biffle

ing Club of America (scheduled)
200-miler, 23 cars were destroyed-in a race that was shortened to 65 laps. One observer
said, ' I really think it's time we
withdraw our troops from ARCA. "

1&gt; The four drivers who do not
represent top-35 fields but who
did manage to clmch a spot In
the field via qualifying speeds
are Jason Leffler, Boris Said,
Mike Skinner and Jol]n Andretti.

u

Kurt Busch

I&gt; In Saturday's Automobile Rac-

1&gt; Thanks to' the changes 1n rules
that define the composition of
the Daytona 500 field. there re
ally ISn't much reason to run the
qualifying races anymore .
They've been extended to 150
miles this year. but not only do ·
the ·unprotected' have to race
their way into a fieid w1th on ly a
few spots open, but they have to
do so after starting near th e
rear.

v

BUDWEISER CHEVY

.John Clark./ NASCAR ThiS Week

Earnhardt Jr. battling mechanical problems early in the season
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR Th ;s Week
DAYTQNA BEACH, Fla. - The
2004 wjnner of the Daytona 500 enters
this year's "Great American Race'"
with a bit of adversity to overcome.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. overcame more
than his share during the Budweiser
Shootout, Saturday night's all-star
race. The fifth-place finisher in last
year's Nextel Cup standings finished
seventh after changing the transmission in his No. 8 Chevrolet 'before.the
race and overcoming mechanical
problem s that sent him almost to the
back of th'e pack during the race's
first segment.

Another downer occurred in pole
qualifying when Earnhardt's Chevrolet collld manage only 184.888 mph ,
39th fastest out of the 56 drivers who
completed runs.
Don't count out the defending cham·
pion just Yet, though. Tlie difference
between qualify.ing and racing at Daytona International Spee&lt;lway is considerable, thanks to the draft, aOfl few
understand its nuances better than the
30-year-old son of seven-time champi. on Dale Earnhardt.
"The car was fun to drive," said
. Earnhardt Jr. after the Shootout. "It
was a little bit loose, but it was fun ....
It's fun to really have to race and real- .
ly work for it, you know? It doesn't

.

bother me at all. We needed more
time."
Time Earnhardt will have in the SOO,
which consists of 200 laps around the
2.5-mile track. The Budweiser
Shootout was only 70 laps , or 175
miles.
Although he finished only fifth in
the 2004 Nextel Cup points standings,
Earnhardt Jr. had what, by any other
measure, was his best season. He won
six times, the most of any season dur·
ing his career, and, thanks in large .
part to the Daytona 500 victory,
earned $8,906,860, which would have
been the highest total had it not been
for Kurt Busch's championship bonus.
In the offseaso·n ; Earnhardt and

Jimmie Johnson
BUD SHOOTOUT RESULTS
1. Jimmie Johnson
2. R)!Jn Newman
3. Jeff Gordon
4. Ton~ Stewart
5. Greg Biffle
6. Kurt Busch
7. Dale Earnhardt Jr:
8. Mark Mart1n
9. Kase~ Kahne
10. Bobb! Labonte
11. Joe Nemechek
12. Ric~ Rudd
13. Case1 Mears
14. Rus!): Wallace
15. Dale Jarrett
16. Ken Schrader
17. B1ll Elliott
18. Jerem1 Mayfield
19. Brian V1ckers
20. Geoffre1 Bod~-

-

Chevrolet
Dodge
Chevrolet
Chevrolet
Ford
Ford
Chevrolet
Ford
Dodge
Chevrolet
Chevrolet
Ford ·
Dodge
Dod e
Fmd
Dodge
Dodge
Dodge
Chevrolet
Chevrolet

&amp; Supply

Co.

Service Technicians
apply in person.
Experience preferred
but others considered.

t(l4f

The Daily Sentinel

NASCAR This Week. c/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. BoK 1893, Gaston1a, NC 28053

1&gt; For trivia buffs: here's a fun
fact. In po le qualifymg, Kerry
Earnhardt (185.502 mph) went
faster than Dale Earnhardt Jr.
(184.888).

NCAA

SERVICE
TECHNICIANS
NEEDED

a comment, write:

.,. Neither Jimmie Johnson nor
· Tony Stewart has ever won an
official points race at a plate
track. bUt both have proved their
· mettle In the draft, and now that
Johnson Is commg off a Budweiser Shootout victory, both
have won that preliminary allstar event.

Despite losing another season, Lemieux
not altering hard-line labor stance
BY

The Dally Scntmel • Page 83

"Pifia

Don T&amp;te-Motors

,..... ... Q[Q[-·-.....-,,-....
106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

992·2155

~

I

•

'•

I
'

'

�Friday', February 18,

www. mydailysenti nel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 18, 2005

2005

Bullpen again
Davenport w1ns clash w1th McCarville key ·for Indians
Wome~·s College Ba~ketball

.

Assoc1ated Press

COLUMBUS - Jessica
Davenport played as· though
she had a chip on )ler shoulder
and her team on her back.
Davenport outdueled Janel
· McCarville in a battle of the
.
,
.
Btg Te~ s best centers. sconng
35 pomts and grabbmg ·I_I
rebounds to lead N?. 2 Ohto
State to a 65-53 vtctory over
No.
14 . Mmnesota on
~~sday mght.
.
I m excited to play agamst
· any post player," Dave nport
satd, dtsregardt~g the emphasts put on the showdo~n. My
teammates found me m good
spots against their one-on-one
c6ver?.ge I didn't force anythmg.
Davenport was 15-of-19
from the field, 5-of-7 from the
.fre~-tllrow line and had three
as~tsts an.d five blo_cked shots.
The dtfference Ill the gam~
was Jesstca Davenport,
Minnesota coach Pam Borton
said. "She had a heck of a
game, didn't she? She 's a
much more mature player. She
wor~s ~ard to g~t position.
She s btg and she s wtde and
she played 40 minutes there's not a lot of btg kids
who ha~e the stamma to play
the enttre game, . and sh~'s
done 11 two games m a row. ·
· ~randte Hoskins scored mne
pomts and had seven assists
for the Buckeyes (25-2, 12: I
Btg Jen), who have won 14m
a row.
McCarville had 22 points for
the Golden Gophers ( 19-6, 94). and April Calhoun added
12.
"She's one of the best in the
Big Ten," McCarville said of
. Davenport. "She's pretty hard
to move. When she gets posttion on you, it's almost over."
Minnesota, which trailed 2823 at the half, drew as close as
30-27 on McCarville 's 3pointer 2 1/2 mmutes mto the
second half. But the Buckeyes
then went on a 17-7 run, with
Davenport scoring 10 points.
"We're an unselfish team,"

Ohio State coach Jim Foster
said. "If you're going to give
us Jessica in a one-on-one situation like they were, and
she's having the kind of game ·
she' was having, we don't have
a bunch of players who feel
that they need to score."
J b• D
rt' fi 1
ust e.ore avenpo s ma
basket
in
the
streak,
McCarville was called for her
· third foul while tipping an
entry pass away from
Davenport. She protested and
was hit with a technicalfor her
fourth·foul. She spent the next
5 112 mmutes on the bench
before returning.
"It was nothing, really,"
McCarville satd. "I hardly
remember it. 1 tried to go fm
the ball and thought I got all
ball."
Now trailing 47-34 and with
their top player watching from
the sideline the Golden
Gophers neve~ got closer than
seven points again.
"It's devastating to a team,"
Borton satd. "You can't have
your All-American on the
bench dunng a stretch when
you're down and trying to
come back."
Ohio State, leading the
nation in field-goal percentage
at 51.7. shot 51 percent(25-of49).
"I was happy with our
defense all night," Foster said.
"The perception is that
because we're leading the
nation in field-goal percent· ·
age, we're an offensive team.
No. We're a defensive team."
McCarville scored six of the
points in a 7-0 run to give
Minnesota a 19-13 lead mid·
way through the opening half,
only to have Ohio State come
back with a Davenport-powered 11-0 run.
"The big key was going into
halftime they went on a 13-2
run," Borton said. "We missed
enough layups that would have
put us up four at halftime .
When you're playing against a
team like Ohio State that's No.
2 in the country and plays well
at home, you can't shoot 34
·percent and win the ballgame."

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\e

. •

as No. 2 Buckeyes beat Gophers
BY RUSTY MILLER

WINTER HAVEN, Fla.
(AP) - For the third year in a
row, Indians manager Eric
Wedge drove straight from
OhiO to Florida for spring
training, Stopping only for fuel
·ancJ food.
·
On the I, I00-mile trip south,
Wedge had time to contemplate an upcoming season he
feels should end with
Cleve land returning to the
playoffs for the first time since
2001.
'
'This year, our expectation
is to go out and compete for an
AL Central title," Wedge said.
"Everybody to a man feels that
we can do that."
As long as the bullpen cooperates.
Indians officially
The
opened their spring training
camp on Thursday with pitchers and catchers reporting to
Cham of Lakes . Park. Some
arrived last week to begin
warm-weather workouts in
anticipation of the 2005 season. They'll practice for the
tirst time .on Saturday.
The club's position players
are due by Tuesday and Wedge
will hold his tirst- full squad
practice on Feb. 24. The
Indians open their exhibition
season on March 3 against the
Houston Astros.
A strong September enabled
Cleveland to finish 80-82 and
in third place in the division
last season. But if the Indians'
shaky bullpen had only been
better in the first half of 2004,
there's no telling what might
have happened ..
"We'd have been right in it
at the end." Wedge concedes.
While Bob Wickman was
out until early July v-.ith an
elbow injury, the Indians didn't
have a proven closer and it cost
them. · Cleveland's relievers
blew 21 of 36 save chances in
the first half and posted a
leag ue-worst 5.60 ERA.
To guard against another
ca lamity, the Indians added
quality depth to their bullpen
during the offseason by signAP ing left-handers Arthur Rhodes
Ohio State's Jess1ca Davenport, nght, shoots over and Scott Sauerback. In addiMinnesota's Janel McCarville during the second half of Oh1o tion, the club re-signed
Wickman to a one-year deal
State's 65-53 win Thursday in Columbus.

•

worth $2.75 million. He blew
just one save in 14 uies and
converted his final 12 chances.
Wedge knows there's a risk
in having a 35-year-old with
elbow r.roblems as a closer.
8 ut unlike last season, Wedge
has other options and could
turn to Bob Howry or David
Riske if Wickman struggles.
Entering training camp, five
of the seven bullpen slots have
already been guaranteed with
Jason Davts, the club's No. 2
starter last season before being
sent to the bullpen, the leading
candidate to fill the sixth.
That leaves an open compe·
tit10n between several pitchers,
including Rafael Betancourt,
Matt Miller, Paul Shuey,
Jeremy Guthrie, Cliff Bartosh,
Kaz Tadano and Fernando
Cabrera for lhe final relief role.
Of that group, Betancourt
and Shuey, who signed a
minor league deal after not
pitching last season for Los
Angeles, have the most experience.
Betancourt went 5-6 with a
3.92 ERA in 68 appearances
last season. Before Wickman
came back, the right-han'der
briefly held down the closer's
role before a tired arm landed
him on the disabled list.
After finally makmg it to the
big leagues after an odyssey
through the minors; Miller
emerged as one of Wedge's
best weapons last season. His
awkward stde-arrn delivery
helped him dominate right· ·
banders, who batted just .216
against the 33-year-old.
Shuey spent 11 seasons with
the Indians before bemg traded in 2002. He missed last season with the Dodgers because
of a ruptured tendon in his
right thumb and a hip injury
that required season-endmg
surgery.
Wedge likes the fact that
there is at least one job up for
grabs.
"Miller, Betancourt and J.D.
(Davis) are going to have to
fight ," he said. "We need that
because we're never going to
l'&gt;e able to go out and spend $5
million to fix any of our problems."

G•ll"Cnunty, OH

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DESCENOENT, ALL
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby , OF WHOSE NAMES
given
that
on OR ADDRESSES ARE
Saturday, February UNKNOWN
TO
18,2005 at 10:00 a.m., PLAINTIFF, JOHN H.
a public sale will be WARNER, JR, IF LIVheld at 211 W. Second ING, THE SPOUSE IF
St., Pomeroy, Ohio. ANY AND TO THE
The Farmers Bank WIDOW,
HEIRS,
AND
and
Savings DEVISEES,
Company Is selling NEXT OF KIN OF
lor cash In hand or DESCENDENT, ALL
certified check the ·OF WHOSE NAMES
OR ADDRESSES ARE
lollowlng collateral:
1996
FORD UNKNOWN
TO
RANGER
RNS PLAINTIFF,
MARY
1FTCR15XTTTA56082 EMMA KING, IF LtV·
The Farmers Bank lNG THE SPOUSE IF
Savlnga ANY, AND TO THE
and
HEIRS,
Company, Pomt~roy, WIDOW,
Ohio, reserves the DEVISEES,
AND
right to bid at thla NEXT OF KIN OF
ule, and to withdraw DESCENDENT, ALL
.the obove colloteral OF WHOSE NAMES
priOr to ule. Further, OR ADDRESSES ARE
The Farmera Bank UNKNOWN TO THE
AND
and Savings compa· PLAINTIFF,
ny ....,..., the right DOROTHY A. HILL IF
to reJ-Ct ony or all 'LIVING THE SPOUSE
IF ANY, AND TO THE
blda aubmlttad.
HEIRS,
The
above WIDOW,
AND
deecrtbed colloteral DEVISEES,
will be aold ,"aa Is· NEXT OF KIN OF
· where Is", with no DESCENDENT, ALL
expreaHd or Implied OF WHOSE NAMES
warranty given. The OR ADDRESSES ARE
collateral must be UNKNOWN TO THE
THE
moved from property. PLAINTIFF.
For further lnfor· OBJECT OF THE
mellon, or for an COMPLAINT IS TO
THE
appointment
to PARTITION
PARCEL
Inspect
collateral, REALTY
prior to ule date con· NUMBER
11.01 1118.000,
111ct Diane Rector or
Randy Hays at 1192· 11.01 113.000,
11.01187.000,
2136.
11.011112.000, AND
(2) 18, 17, 18
THE PRAYER IS THAT
SAID REALTY BE
PARTITIONED
OR
Public Notice
ORDERED SOLD IF IT
. NOTICE BY PUBLI· CANNOT BE PARTICATION ON DEFEN· TIONED, FOR AN
OF
DANTS
AND ALLOWANCE
FEES
UNKNOWN HEIRS. IN ATTORNEY
THE COURT OF COM· HEREIN AND COSTS.
MON PLEAS, MEIGS YOU ARE REQUIRED
COUNTY, POMEROY, TO ANSWER THE
· OHio. THE CITIZENS COMPLAINT WITHIN
BANK OF LOGAN VS. 28 DAYS AFTER THE
MAE LAST PUBLICATION
ESTHER
OF THIS NOTICE
FRANKLIN, ET. AL.
CASE NUMBER 04· WHICH WILL BE PUBLISHED ONCE EACH
CY·142
TO: ESTHER MAE WEEK FOR SIX BUC.
WEEKS.
FRANKLIN, IF LIV· CESSIVE
lNG, THE SPOUSE IF THE LAST PUBLICA·
ANY, AND TO THE TION WILL BE MADE
WIDOW,
HEIRS, ON FEBRUARY 1I,
AND 2005 AND THE 28
DEVISEES,
FOR
AN
NEXT · OF KIN OF DAYS

. I

I

ANSWER WILL COMMENCE ON THAT
DATE. IN CASE OF
YOUR FAILURE TO
ANSWER OR OTHER·
WISE RESPOND AS
REQUIRED BY THE
OHIO RULES OF
CIVIL PROCEDURE,
BY
JUDGMENT
DEFAULT WILL BE
RENDI;RED AGAINST
YOU
FOR
THE
RELIEF DEMANDED
IN THE COMPLAINT.
(1) 14, 21. 28, (2) 4, 11 .
18
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Thomas
Darst,
Jane Doe, Unknown
Spouae, II any, of
Thomas
Darat,
*Yvonne Darst, *John

Doe,
Unknown
Spouae, If any, of
Charla• Whittington,
whoae laot known
address Ia P.O. Box
70 Smithfield, PA
15478-0070, and •118
Avenue
Union
Pomeroy, OH 45769·
1000, but whou pres·
ont place of res!·
dance Ia unknown
will take notice that
on Auguot 12, 2004. at
2:12 p.m., LaSalle
Bank,
N.A.,
fka
LaSalle
. National
Bank, •• Indenture
truatee under that
certain Sale and
Servicing Agreement
deled Decamber 1,
1991, among AFC
Truat Serle• 1888-4
aa laauer Superior
Bank FSB, aa Saller
and Servlcer,, and
LaSalle
Bank
Notional Aseoclotlon,
u Indenture TruatM,
AFCMortgoge Loan
AIIMI Becked Noteo,
Serial 111911-4 llled Its
Complolnt In c ...
No. 04 CV 110 and on
nlld ha Supplemental
Complolnt In the
Court of Common
Pleas Melgl County,
Ohio alleging !hot the
above-named
Defendant( a),

Thomu Darat, Jene
Doe,

---··- -···-

Unknown

Spouse, If any, of

Thomas

Darst,

*Yvonne Darst, •John
Doe,
Unknown

Spouse, if any, of
Yvonne
Darst ,
' Charles Whittington ,
*Jane Doe, Unknown
Spouse, if any, of
Charles Whittington,
have or claim to have
an Interest in the real
estate
described
below "The land
referred to In this
commitment is sltuat·
ad In the State of
Ohio, County of
Meigs Situated In the
V.lllaga of Pomeroy,
County of Meigs and
· State of Ohio:
Beginning at the
Southeast corner ol a
lot formerly owned by
Lucinda Starkey on
Union Avenue In said
Village of Pomeroy;
thence north 20 dog.
east along the north
line of said lot 100
teet; thence south 70
deg east 50 feet;
thence south 20 deg
west 100 feet to the
line of said Union
Avenue; thence along
the line of aald Union
Avenue, North 70 deg
west 50 feet to the
place of beginning,
said premlaes being
a·part of Lot No. 425
of· aald Village of
Pomeroy, and being
the same premises
deeded by Margaret
Nurst to Theodore
Elaetataln by deed
dated November 16,
1885, and recorded in
Volume 61 , Page 224
and 225 records,
Melga County, Ohio,
and
deeded
to
Eloelateln
George
and wno to Elsa s.
Lee by deed dated
November 19, 1891 ,
and recorded In
· Volume 73, Page 211
and 212 of the
Records of Deed of
Meigs County, Ohio.

Save and except a
small tract of Real
Estate conveyed to
Loula Reibel, begin·
nlng at Point 26 teet
North 20 dog. from
the Southeast corner
)

.. -...._. -..;:'•-.••""'. . •• . _....... . __.

of the M.E. Church or before the 18th day
Parsonage
Lot : of March, 2005.
thence North 66 1/2 By: Reimer, Lorber &amp;
dog. west 3 feet and 9 Arnovltz Co. , l .P.A.
inches; thence north
Ronald J . Chernek.
20 deg. east 17 teet Attorney at Law
and 4 inches; thence
EMCMortgage
south 66 112 deg. east Corporation
3 feet and 9 Inches; Attorney for Plainlitfthence south 20 deg Petlli9ner
west 17 feet and 4 P.O. Box 968
inches to the place of Twinsburg, OH 44087
beginning, and con- (330) 425-4201
tainin!j about 65 . (1) I 4, 21 , 28, (2) 4, 11,
square feet, more or
18
less, and 11 Is further
understood that no
pai-t of the weil on
Putilic Notice
sajd parsonage tot is
hareby
conveyed.
The 2004 Annual
Financial report of
Parcel No.: 16-01943
and currently set
lhe Meigs co. District
Public Library is
forth in Deed Book
335,
Page
95, complete and available for review at the
Recorded 5111/93.
office
Also
commonly
of
the
known as: 118 Union Clerk/Treasurer, 216
Avenue ,
Pomeroy, West
Main
St.,
Ohio, 45769.
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
The Petitioner fur- Connie
Taylor,
ther alleges that by Clerk/Treasurer
reason of detaull ot (2) 18
the Defendant(s) In
the payment of a
promissory
note,
Public Notice
according to Its te11or,
the conditions of a PUBLIC NOTICE
concurrent mortgage
In compliance with
dead given to secure
Section 5705.27 of
the payment of said the Ohio Revlaed
note and conveying Code, the Meigs
the
premises
County
Budget
described, hava been Commission
wilt
broken, and the same
meet ·to review the
has
become
2005-2006 budgets of
absolute.
the Eaotern Local ,
The
Petitioner Meigs Local and
prays
that
the Southern
Local
Defendanl(a) named School Districts. The
above be require to
meettng will be held
answer and set up a~ 10:00 a.m. in the
their interest said real
Auditor's Office of the
estate or be forever ·Me1gs ·
County
barr~d from asser.tlng
Courthouse
on
the same, for foreclo- 1 February 25, 2005.
sure of said mort· Nancy
Parker
gage, the marahallng Grueser, Secretary
of any liens, and the
Meigs County Budget
sale of said real commission
ealate, and the pro- (2) 18
ceeds of said sale
applied to the pay·
menl of Petitioner's
Public Notice
Claim In the proper
order of Ito priority, Notice to Contractors
and for sUch other Sealed proposals for
and further relief as Is the Purchase end
just and equitable.
Delivery of specific
The Defendant(o) fire equipment for the
named above are
Rutland
Fire
required to answer on
Department, Meigs
\

r-..~..-..-=•~~-

•&gt;~••-~·-~--=-

County, Ohio will be
received by the Meigs
County
Commissioners
at
their oHice at the
Courthouse Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 until 1:00
p.m., Thursday, March
10, 2005 and then at
1:15 p.m. at said
office opened and
read aloud lor the following:
and
P-urchase
Delivery of thermal
Imaging
carneraa/transmltter/r
ecelver
for
the
Rutland
Fire
Department.
Spec~lcatlons
provided In bid packet.
Specifications, and
bid forms may be
secured at the oHice
of Malgs County
Commlsalonera,
Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 740-992-2895
Each bid must be
accompanied
by
either a bid bond In
an amount of100% of
the bid amount wtlh a
surety satisfactory to
the aforeaald Meigs
County
Commissioners or by
certified
check,
cashiers check, or let·
ter of credh upon a
solvent bank In tho
amount of not leas
than 10% of the bid
amount In tavor of tho
Melga
aforesaid
County
Commlaslonera. Bid
shalt
be
Bonds
accompanied
by
Proof of Authority of
the oftlclal or agent
signing the bond.
Bids shall be sealed
and marked as Bid
Rutland
Fire
for
Department equip·
ment project and
mailed or delivered
to:
County
Meigs
Commissioners

Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;9
Attantlon of bidders
Is called to all of the
requirements
con·
talned In thlo bid
packet, particularly to
the Federal Labor

..... e;..,

•;c.a.,.,hc:

Commissioners

(2) 18, 23, 28
Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PROBATE
DIVISION
COUNTY,
MEIGS
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PRO·
BATE COURT MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts and vouch·
ers of the following
named fiduciary haa
been flied In the
Probate Court, Melga
County, Ohio for
approval and settle-

not lesa than five
days prior to the date
set lor hurlng.
S. Powell
Judge
Common
Pleal!l
Court,
Probate
Division
Meigs County, Ohio
(2) 18
Pu!lllc Notlce
LEGAL NOTICE
The 2004 Annual
Financial Report lot
the Meigs Soli and
Water Conaervallon
District for the yea•
ending December 31 ,
2004, Ia complete and
available lor revktw a1
the
Meigs
SWCDoHlce.
Steve
Janklns 1
Pr 'o g r a m
Administrator
(2) 18

NOMA
WHAT · YOU~I

STYLE...

ment:
I;STATENO. 33042·
Sacond Account of
Bobby
Arnold ,
Guardian of the per·
son and estate of
Allan Halliday, an
Incompetent peraon.
Uolaaa exceptions
are flied thereto, uld
account will be 111
for hearing before
eald Court on the
February 181 2005, at
which
time
aald
account ·will be con·
aldered and continued from doy to day
until finally dlapoaed
of
Any peroon ,Interested may file written
exception to oald
account or to mattera
pertaining to the execution of the truat,

Foster Parents needed
To learn more about
fostering and free tra1mng
opportunities contact
K1m Romeo at
740·894-4360

1·877·50· NEC CO An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon .
Call Mer11yn 304-882-2645
Are you a sales person?
.Aud1t and sell Cable TV
Excellent Comm1ss1ons

REWARD
Lost· Yellow Lab, 5 months
old, 1n A1o Grande Child 's
pet (740)245-5592 or Rio
Ti re- (740)245-9665

r

WANil'D

roBUY

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Sliver and Gold Co1ns,
Proolsets. Gold Rmgs.
US Currency, -M.TS Coin
Shop,
151
Second
Avenue , Gall1pohs. 740446 -2842

I"'" you Willing to trove
or eteady work, good
ay and beneflra?

aborers, Operators
Welders. CDL Onvers
nd Foreman needed for
1pelme work
Send resume to .
Personnel
C J Hughes Construct1on
PO Bo)( 7305
Huntington. WV 25776
AVON I All Areasl To Buy or
Sell Sh1rley Spears, 304-

675· 1429.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

r--.1 ~--p-a::a~·--­
~~-...- -=--&lt;»~.--

Standard Provisions
and
Davis-Bacon
Wages, varloua lnaur·
ance requirements,
various equal oppor·
tunlty provisions, and
the requirement for
payment bond and
performance bond for
100% of the contract
price. No blddar moy
withdraw his bid with·
In thirty (30) days
after the actual date
of the opening thereof. The Meigs County
Commissioners
reserve the right to
reject any or all blda.
Mlck
Davenport,
President
County
Meigs

MAKE A
DIFFERENCE IN A
CHILD'S LIFE

1-l!OQ-270-1780

(740)388·9327

•~•~•-.

** .. NECCQ•*u

· ... THE
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

I

-----

• SUut Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addreas When Needed
• A.di Should Run 7 Days

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Days Prior To
Publlc,.tlon
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

E!itlll

POUCIES: Ohio Y11f~ Publishing , ...rves the rlghtlo .ciit, reject, ot Cllncet any ad It 1ny time Error1 mu.t be l'ftPOI11d on the flr1t day of
Trlbune-Sentlnei·R~iat•r will be rellpOnslbl• for no mon thin lhe coat of the tpiCI occupied b~ the ...ror and only tt. flrlt lnHrtlon. We
any toH or expena• that r11uttt from the pubtle~~tlon or omiHion of an MlvertiMment. Correction will be mad4; in ,._, tlr1t available .clitiOn

are alw-v•

confld.ntlal. • Currant rata card appll.._ • All rul

••tat• advertl•mftnt• are

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

to the Fedilral F1lr Houilng Act ot 1988.

I~ I

ScHooL.~

twright@ic.net_....~r-..---..-...,.........,

INsmUCilON

www.comlcs.com

FOR SALE

Galllpalla Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today l740-446·4367.
1·8()()-214-0452
www galllpoljscarHrcollege com

2950

and Schools 127-48

Accredited Member Accred111ng

136 Graham Street for
Sale by Owner. 3 bedroom
house, 1 car garage, large
lot. Rodney Village II •
(740)245-9917
or

Council !of lno&amp;penden1 CoHegK

(740)446·3644

I 1\ \\I I \1

•

FuiHtme babysitter needed call between 6pm-9pm

3 Bedroom 1 1/2 bath ,
large llvmg-room , new wmdows &amp; roof No DownPayment
ava1lable

304 -576-3353 ~

$~25 / month

Gall1p0i1S Daj!y Queen.
now hmng Must be able 10
work all shifts. gnll and
cashiers. Apply wtthm

GET READY FOR
SPRING BREAKI

BUSINESS OPPORTUNI·

TY
25 yr old bunisess with
vert~at sales Create your
home based busmess
marketing Herbal and
BotaniCal based anti-aging
skm care and nutfi!IOn
Contact Unda at youngto·
morrowsOsbCglobal net

'.

Lose
Wetght
w1th
Herbaltfe
Call Tracy (740)441·1982

or (800)201·0832
http-/fwww famousnutn
t1on com
~

Help Wanted Bartenders.
Cooks &amp; W811ress, piCk-up
ApplicatiOns at the Moose
Lodge on Charleston Ad
1mmed1ate
Open1rlgs
Restdenttal
Treatment
Facthty lor boys, now h1nng
Youth Worker position
Pa1d Medtcal Insurance
Call between 9 OOam·

4.00pm (740)379·9083.
McClure's Restaurant now
h1nrig all locat10ns, ft,tll or
part-t1me. picJo. up appriCa·
tion at location &amp; brmg
back between 9.30am &amp;
11 .00am. Monday thru
Saturday

\I I . . , I \II

-t'i'

i.-AWl"'\

Wt&lt;ll61tf
® 2005 by NEA, Inc.

:10

.
1
Overbrook Rehab Center
1s currently accepting
ap p l1cat1ons for anyone
mterested, 1n the STNA
classes The class w111
Dag1n on February 22nd
anct appli CatiO ns should De
turned tn by Februar)"
17th Class space is limited , so it you are Interested, please stop by and hll
out an application at 333
Page Street, Middleport.

Reporter Opening

POSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT
Pos!lng Date·
February 16. 2005

ACCOUNTING

CLERK
The Umverslty ol Rio
Grande mv1tes applications for the pos1t1on ol
Accountmg Clerk

INDEPENDENT
CON·
Budd your
SULTANT.
home based busmess
markettng natural ant1a'g1ng s~1n care and nutn·
t1on 25 year old company
of 1ntegr1ty Contact Linda
at ~QUQgiQIIJQ[[QY!S!ISI:M:;·

·gi!O!bal

HE:u&gt; WMmD

The right ind1v1dual Will
have common sense and
the ab1llty to recogn1ze a
news stOI)I, as well as a
keen sense of enthusiasm
about tne prolesslon We
take our )Ob senously and
are comm1Hed to the com·
muntty
we
serve
Interested? We .w111 keep
you busy Please ema11
your resume to Jun
Freeland,
jf reetan d C myda1iytrl·
bune.com or mail to
Gall1polls Tnbune , 825
Th1rd Ave , Gallipolis, OH

45631

om

...,

"'

OH IO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG co recommend
hat you do bustness w1t
people you know, an
~OT to send mona
hrough the ma11 unt11 yo
~~ve Investigated Ihe

ffenng

E

Must have h1gh school
diploma or equivalent
Associate Degree or addl·
tiona! at:eount!ng classes
prelerred. Must
have
knowledge of computers,
word process1ng, e-matl,
and 1nternet usage. Three
to five years prev1ous
expenence 1n an off1ce or
accounting setting pre·
lerred. Good oral and writ·
ten communication skills
requtred .

Sw1mm1ng Pool Service
TechniCian
Job dut1es Include. serviC·
ing above ground and tn
ground
pools,
spas,
tnstalling lmers and build·
1ng billiard tables · Wages
considered on experience
Must have vahd dr1vers
lteenses Contact Debbie

(304)295·6985
or
(304)488·7272 Attar 6 00
PM call (740)378-6111
The
Athens-Me1gs
Ser111Ce·
Educat1onal
Cen ter has a pos1t1on
openmg as lnter11ent1on
Spec1ahst for the ED
Cooperative
Un.t
at
Southern Local School
DistriCt 1or the remainder

I

MONEY

ioLoAN

uaa1ng •1nancoa1
Institution approving
Small
Bus1ness, Mor1gage
Personal and Vet1icle
Loans lmmedta te
response.
gNe us a call at
1·866-228-7063" Or
apply onl1ne at
-lnlle&amp;tmentfrnanc~al

Respons1btl1ties include,
but are not limited to . 1/enfylng, entenng and posting
charges
tO
student
accounts, creatmg and
maintaining account flies,
ass1st1ng students with
problems,
pfepanng
reports and prov1dino general clerical assistance,
tncludtng assiSting wtth the
cashter w1ndow and tecnnical assistance for the
Accounting Offw::e

o

rrow Smart Conta
he Ohio Dlv1s1on o
1
manc1al
lnstttution
ff1ce
of
Consume
ffa1rs BEFORE you ref1
ance your home o
bta1n a loan BEWAR
I requests for e.ny larg
dvance payments o
eas or Insurance. Cal
e OffiCe of Consume
Hairs toll free at 1-866'
78-oo03 to learn if tn
broker
o
ender
IS
proper!
1censed. (Thi s 1s a publ1

• ol the 2004-2005 School

All appltcants must submit
a letter of Interest and
resume
mclud1ng the
names and addresses of
three references on or
before March i 2005 to
Ms. PhylliS Mason, SPHR,
Director
of
Human
Resources , \.Jmversily of
Rio Grande, A10 Grande,
OH 45674, &amp;-mall, PfD..I:
sonOno edy fax 740·245·

4909
EEOIAA Employer

Year
Applicants must
have a current Intervention
Specialist License
or
Spec:;ial
Education
Certificate Salary will be
based on expenence and
cert1flt:ation according to
the salary scale, and wil!
have Board approv'!KI ben·
eflts. Submit tetter of Inter·
est to John D Costanzo,
Supermtendent. Athens·
Matos EducatiOnal Service
Center, 320 112 East Main
Stre8t.
Pomeroy, OH

45769-0684

Applocatiorl

Deadline · February 25,
2005 The AMESC Is an
Equal
Opport~nity
EmplOyer/Provide!.
The City of Jackson ts

acc&amp;ptmg resumes lor the
~ ol Alo Grandi and
RIO Grandi Commulty College

SASS\'' SCISSORS
Stytitt wanted Salary!

Commillion. 7~1 ·
1660 or 7~0-256-6336.
Wanted 23 more peof)6e to
~se up to 30 !bl. Or recommend. Call Dartene or

Coroi(74Q)384·33n,

IShop Classmeds I

of
tull·time
posit1on
Recreation
Director
Annual salary Is ~-4.960
witt1 benefits. Ptlstborl con·
tingent upon final legislative BPProval EKP&amp;nence
preferred . s"ubmit resume.
including references, 10·
Mayor Shane Goodman

CttyoiJocksorl
145 Broadway Stroe1
Jacl&lt;sorl, Ohio 45640.

A- Team Cleaners· Homes
e.nd onus El(penenc:Bd.
d,iscreet, and honest
References (740) 992·
7414
DIRECTV

Frw OVO Player

Fr. HBO &amp; Cinam8.}1
FrM Professional
Installation
up to 4 Rooms

Call H!00-523· 7566
lor deta11s
Jewelry Buy Sell Gold ,
Diamonds. Gemstones
Repair, Appraisals, Gem
Teeling .
Graduate
Gemologist.
Jeweter.
(140)645-6365
or

(740)446·3080

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURfTY
/SSI?
No Fee Untess V.:e Win!

1-888·562·3345

MOBILE HOMES

FOR S!U.E

HOMES

Bates Bros Amusement
Co. Spnng/Summer Must
Be 17 Or Older And Able
To Travel La1e March-Late
September, Weekly Pay,
Liv1ng Factht1es, Bonus,
Contact Us At 7~0-266·

Medi
Home
Health
4x4's ForSale .............................................. 725
Agency
Inc
seeking
a fu llAnnouncement ............................................030 .
tJme AN Case Manager lor
Antlques .......... .'............................................ 530
the Gall1pohs, Oh1o locaOh 45760. EOE
Apartments tor Rent ............ :...................... 440
tion. Must be licensed both
Auction and Flea Market.. ...........................080
OWNER OPERATOR &amp;
m Oh1o and West V1rgm1a .
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
COMPANY DRIVERS
M1mmum two years superAuto Repair ..................................................no
WANTED
VISIOn, management and
Autos lor Sale ..............................................710
NEW PAY PACKAGE
home health expenence
l;loats &amp; Motors lor Sale: ............................ 750
36/ml Company Dnvers
We offer a 'competitive
Building Supplies................., ......................550
Under 500 mi-S1 00/ml
salary, benef1ts package.
Buslnesa and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
501·900 m1· 95/ml
401K, and lle11 t1me E O.E
Business Opportunity ................................. 210
901+· 90/mi
,
Plea se send resume to
Bualness Training ....................................... 140
ALL DISPATCHED MILl'S
352
Second
Avenue .
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
PAID
Gall1pohs, OH 45631 Attn
camping Equipment ................................... 780
Kuntzman Truck1ng , an eoAudrey
Farley.
A N.
Cerda of Thanks .......................................... ot 0
year-old regtonal earner
Cltmcal Manager
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
w1th term1nals In Alliance ,
Electrlcat/Refrlgeratlon ............................... 840
Me1gs So11 &amp; Water
Columbus and Piketon,
Equipment for Rent ..................................... 480
Conservation D1stnct IS
OH, and Indianapolis. IN,
Excavating ................................................... 830
accepting appllcat10ns for
nas 1mmedtate openmgs
Leading Cr-eek Watershed
Farm Equlpment .....................................,.... 610
lor O'O's and Company
Coordinator Call 740 992·
Drivers to help us serv1ce
Farms lor Rent... ......... - ...............................430
4282 lor applicatiOns and
our growmg customer
Farmalor Sale ............................................. 330
detailS
base In the Southern Oh1o
For Lease ..................................................... 490
area . You must have 2
For Sate ........................................................ 585
New Year· New Career
years over the road e;~~pen­
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Chnstian based Tech Co
ence (dry van) and a gOOd
Fruita &amp; Vegetables .....................................580
Ew:panding in your area
MVR. No trailer rental fees ,
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
Managers/Sales Rep
fleet
discount aYailable lor
General Haullng ...........................................850
Needed
Bobtail Insurance
Glvaaway ......................................................040
Call 800·470-6843
Happy Ada....................................................050
(24 Hours)
For More Deta1\s call Enca
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................840
1-866·436Piketon 0
Help wanted ...................................., ............ 110
Now
Htring
Trappers
1013
Home tmprovements ...................................B10
L1quor &amp; Tobacco, FuiVpart
Homealor Sate ............................................ 310
time clerks, needed. must
Paramedics
&amp; EMT's
Household Goods ...................................... 510
have 8)(P &amp; be 21 . Apply
needed. Apply at 1354
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
in Person at 203 Jones St
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis.
beside
Foodland
In Mamortam ................................................ 020
(304)675-4666
lnsurance ..................................................... 130
PLEASANT VAlLEY
Lawn &amp; Gordan Eq~lpment ........................ 6&amp;0
HOSPITAL
Now taktng appiJCS.tlons for
Llvestock ..............................:.......................&amp;30
PHLEBOTOMIST
Truck Drivers. Also, hiring
Loaland Found ........................................... 060
seasoned garden t:enter
Lola &amp; Acr-e ............................................350
Pleasant Valley Hospital Is
help (740)256-9247 or
Miscellaneous.............................................. 170
currently acceptmg
(740)645-{)870.
Mtacellaneoua Merchandlse ....................... 540
resumes for a Per-D1em
Mobile Home Repalr....................................860
Overbrook Center is cur·
Phlebotomist. AppiJCS.nts
Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420
must have a valid driver's
rently accepting applit:aMobile Homes lor Sale ................................320
tlons
for
Nursmg
hcense Stx months expeMoney to Loan ............................................. 220
Assistants . Ple_ase call
rience preferred Po61110n
MotorcyciH &amp; 4 Wheelera ..........................740
Hollie al (7.40)992-6472, or
in\IOives drawling blood in
Musical tnatrumenta ................................... 570
come In and fill out an
a nursing home setting
Peraonalo ..................................................... 005
application 333 Page
and transporting spec1·
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
Street , M 1ddleporl. Oh
mons
Plumbing &amp; Heating ....................................820
EOE
For more Information:
Profesalonal Sarvlcea.................................230
O....erbt'ook Center .Is curRadio, TV I Cf! Repair ............................... 160
Pleasant Valley Ho$pltal
rently acceptmo applicaRHI Estate Wanted ..................................... 380
c/o Human Resources
tions for a Full-Time LPN
2520 Valley Df'lw
Schools lnatructlon ............ :........................150
lor the 7p-7a shttt You may
Point Pleasant, W'i 25550
Seed Plant &amp; Fertlll•er ..............................650
call Hothe at 740-992-6472
'
(304)675·2417
Shuatlons
Wanted ....................................... 120
or come in and ltll out an
AMOE
Space for Rent ..:.......................................... 460
WNW pvalley org
,Sporting Goode ........................................... 520 . application at 333 Page
Street, Middleport. Oh.
SUV's for Sale .............................................. 720
EO~
Trucks for Sa~ .........................................,. .. 715
Upholatery ................................................... 870
Town of Hartford w1U be
The Gallipolis Super 8 1s
Vans For Sale ............................................... 730
giving out ~pplic.a!IOns
accepting applicatl008 lor
Wonted to Buy ............................................. 090
between the hours ot 9am
3
departmentsWanted to Buy· Farm Suppllea ......... ,........ &amp;20
to 1pm.
Monday thur
Housekeepn'J, tront desk
Wonted To Do .............................................. 180
Fnday for a Class I Water
and breakfast bar NO
Wonted to Rent ............................................470
PHONE CALLS. Mu51 • Operator
Yord Sale- Golllpolls ....................................072
apply 1n person Oualit1ed
Yard Sale'Pomeroy/Mtddle........................:074
applleants w111 be contactSell A~n make 50%. Call
Yord Sate-Pt. Pleaunt ................................ 076 . ed for interv1ews.
(740)446-3358.

'I

Now you can have borders and graphics
'-'
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphlcs 5011 for small
$ I . 00 for large

Display Ads

• All ads must be prepaid'

I \11'10\ \II\ I
"I I&lt;' I I I ...,

GIVEAWAY

Oecullfiru

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next D•y's Paper
sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
, !'orlday Far Sundays Paper

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

Want1ng to buy Lawn
mowers and weed eaters

.... ._•.-

t~ter

CLASSIFIED

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

www.mydallysentlnel.com

(304 ~675 ·

2749
3 bedroom, 1 bath, corner
lot, behind Armory, PI
Pleasant
$69,900,

(304)593·3542
3 bedroom. 2 bath. l1re·
place. on 1 6 acres A1o
Grande area $85 ,000 Call

(740)709· 1166 .

G:t ·

All r•al estete adverttaing
In thla newapaper Ia
subJect lo the Federel
Fair Housing Act of 1Q68
wt'!lch mekea It Illegal to
advertiM ··any
preference, limitation or
dl.crlminatton baa.ct on
r1ce, color, religion, MI.
tsmillal atetua or Mttonal
origin, or arty lntenUon to
mt~ke any such
praterenee, limitation or
diacriminetlon."
Thla new.p~~per will not
knowingly eccepl
advertiaenwrttll for real
estate which Is In
vlcMatton of the lew. Our
reader• are hereby
1ntormed that all
dwellings advertlaed in
thla newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity baMtll .

"Great Investment"
3 Homes, 7 Acres
3 bedroom, 1 bath. 2 car
garage. Nte&amp; DoubleWide
3 bedroom, 2 bath, above
ground pool . centra!•air.
3 b9droom, t 112 bath
M H With an additiOn
All 3 on 7 acres of land
Located on Graham

School Rd S165,000
Phone (740)44 1-9974or
(749)446-3184 or

(740)441-0219

No Down Payment needed even wtth less than per·
fect cred1t on th1s 3 bed· .
room .~2 112 bath home 4
years old. basement 15
acres, garage with a beau·
tlfUI VIeW, 14;~~70 mob1le
home on property used as
rental pays for large part of
payment. (740)992-4212
Spnoq \jalley
3 Bedroom. 1-112 baths,
Large
Fam11y
Room
F1replace
&amp;
Garage
Recently
renovated
Immediate
Possession

(740)446-788t

tM~~~

tmmed1ate
possess1on 1
Only S2 13 68 per mo New
3 bedroom. 2 bath mobile
home Only m1nutes from
Athens 1-800-837-3238
Inventory
Clearance
24X60. 3 bedroom, 2 bath
Delivery and set-up mctuded. Call M1lce (740)385-

9948
SAVE·SAVE·SAVE
Stock models at old prtees
2005 models arnv1ng Now
Cole 's Mobile Homes

U.S

15266

5Q

East

Athens . Oh1o
45701
(740)592- t 972, MWhere
You Get Your Money's
.Worth "
·

r

I..qrs&amp;
ACREAGE

SO• tOO lot w1th 28 ft 5th
wt1eel camper &amp; outbu1ld·
1ng
28)(24
shetter
Beautiful v1ew of Raccoon
Creek Access11)1e to the
Oh10 R1ver w1th boat Call
Asking $23 000
pnce
negotiable
\740)446·

0022 .

t

~~ffi

I BUY HOMES
Need 10 sen your home
quickly because of a
divorce, bankruptcy, · JOb
transfer. or death Don't let
the bank fo reclose and
ru1n your cred1t' Local per
son buys houses Fast
closmgs All cash J1m
(740)992·6300 No' calls

~
2 Bedroom 2123 L1ncoln
Ave. No Pets, Wlreterences &amp; Oepos1t. $385
Month (304)675-2749
2 or 3 bedroom house· in
Pomeroy tor rent no pets.

(7401992·5858
3 bedroom hOuse near R10
Grande. $550/month Can
(740)441 -0194
or
(740)441·1164
3

Room House
Tub
New Carpet very
clean. Wmdow .Act, 2003
Madison , call ,(304)674
Sh~er,

0471
4 rooms and bath 52 Olive
St. No pets, $300 month

(740)446·3945.
Clean 2 bdr , Ref, Oep. No

Pets

( 304)675 - ~162

Responstble couple to rent
2BA home, 1m1 tram
Galhpohs on St. At 58B
Reference and depoSit
requ1red (740)446·3413

rM~~~~

1-2 bedroom mobile home
1993 14x70 Noms. 2 bed·
tor re nt $375 00 per
room, 2 bath garden tub, f' month.
dtshwasher, 8x8 deck.
1·3 bedroom mobile home
$11 ,900 (740)446-9480
for rent
$475 00 per
montn CaU
(740)992·
768Q or (7 40)992·6236 _
1995 Skyline. 14X70. v1nyl
sid1ng ,
shingle
root
2 bedroom, $300 rent plus
$13.995 00 Call Karena,
$200 depoSit plus utilities
(740)385·767 1
Absol utely
no
pets
Ava1lable tor 1mmed1ate
Aelerence
requ1red
occupancy m Country
(740)256·6202
Homes
10%
down,
$175.44 per month. Call
2 bedroom. 1 bath, WID
Harold (740)385-4367
hookup,
$350
rent ,
depo&amp;iV
references
For Sale - 1979 Hornette, 2
requlfed Merterville area
bedroom w/central ai r.
(740)256· 1008
$3.495 00 Call (740) 385'

4367
For Sale, 14X70 , '3 bedroom, set up in Country
Homes, $6,995.00. Move
1n todayl Call (74'0)365·

2 bedrooms, 1 bath den .
Completely ref urbiShed
Located in Point Pleasant.
Deposit &amp; references
~50!montn can (304~75 -

4367

3423

'

Deadline · 4·00pm-Monday,

ssv Soc1a1 Security
$1 ,300 Net Income, We
can f1nanc:E1 you a home.

2BR mobile nome on Cora
Mill Ad 1-mlle OUI At 325
DepoaiVrelerence
No

February 28. 2005.

Call (304)738-3400

pelS (740)245·5622

�Page B6 • Th.e Daily Sentinel

· www.mydailysentinel.com
Card of Thanks

Get Your MetseQe Across
Wllh Ao.lly Sitntlnel
.

BINGO

The family of
Freda Searls wishes
10 thank alii hose
who ~ave gifls,
foods. tlowers and
most especially
their prayers,' love
and presence. Also
Holzer Hospice.

American Legion Middleport
February 19
6:30pm

Children &amp;

First Pack $10.00 All After 1st $5 .00

Grandchildren

8ULLEnN BOARD
~column

Inch Wet!tkda:~s
'15"' column Inch Sat. or

Paying a $100.00 a Game
$200.00 for I he X
$300.00 picture frame
$1 ,000.00 coverall
Crank II Up $1 6,000.00
18 Numbers l:eft
Starbursl $1,250.00
Weather Permitting

Plus·MisseS· M!otoo•nitv- .Joononr. • Girls
3 DAY :SAL.C
FEBRUARY 19, 20 &amp; 21

EXTRA 40% OFF
ALL REGULAR PRICES

EXTRA 60% OFF
YELLOW STICKER ITEMS
Excludes •nl1ma1e 11pp~rel. accessones. end l ootwear'

Ohio River Plaza Gallipolis
(740) 446~2009

Appalaphian 36" wood
burning fireplace insert.
Excellent condition. $400
080. (740)379-2706.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt
In Stock. Call Ron Evans, ·
.1·800·537-9528.
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, ,Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
, Driveways &amp; Walkways.
L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open
Monday,
. Tuesday,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Bam·
4:30pm. Closed Thursday,
saturdaY
&amp;
Sunday.
(740)446-7300

MAPLES,
100
THE
Memorial Drive East .
Pomeroy, 740·992-7022,
Subsidized
Residential
Hous1ng for 5.Q years of
ag_e and older. PRIORITY
GIVEN TO APPLICANTS .
8UU.Dl!liG
WITH INCOME AT OR
~
SUPPLIE'i
BELOW
$10,650.
Maximum Income effective
Block, brick. sewer pipes.
01 -28-2004 for 1 person
windows.
lintels.
etc.
S17. 700.00. MUst meet
Claude
Winters.
Rio
HUD /202/8 criteria for
Grande. OH Call 740.245househol·d compositiOn.
Managed by Silverheels,
5121.
Incorpo rated . A Realty
PFrs
Company Eq'ual Housing
FOR
SALE
Opportunity.
·

'1 BR apartment lor rent in
· Spring Valley. $350/month
plus deposit. water &amp; trash
included. (740)388-0017
or (740)339·0362.
2 bedroom apartment for
rent, Racine, OH Deposit
requi red ,
no
pets.
(74:0)992-51 74,
le€1Ve
message.
2 bedroom tr i-l13vel apt.
Spr!ng Vl,llley area . Deposit
required . Phone (740)44,.6·
2957.
'\
2 bedroom, 2 baths. full
kitchen , full living room ,
utilities
$490Jmonth.
included. Call (740)4464639
2BR apt, AJC , stove, ref ,
OW, $350 + dep &amp; utilities .
references.
· Need
(740)446-3888 8-S,M·F.
2BA apt. State Route 160.
$400/month, stove/refrig·
erator
included,
washer/dryer
hookup.
(740)441·0194
or
(740)441·1184.
3
room
and
bath ,
stove/refrigerator, downstairs, all _..utilities paid. 46
Olive
Sheet.
$450.
(740)446·3945.
Apt. for Rent 2 Bedroom in
Call
Point
Pleasant
(304)675-8845
Beautiful 2-story townoverlooking
house.
Gallipolis
City · park.
Kitchen-family, D.A .. L.~ . 3
B.A., study, 2 baths. laundry ·area. · References
required, si:!curity .deposit,
no pets. S900 per mo.
(740)446-2325
or
(740)446-'!425.
APARTBEAUTIFUL
MENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344· to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies.
Call 740-44;6·2568. Equal
Housing Opportunity.

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
.ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse apartments.
and/or ~mall houses FOR
RENT. Call (740}441-111 1
for application &amp; informa tion.
For Lease: One bedroom.
nics 2nd floor apt. Corner
Pine and Second. Large
kitchen with dining area.
New range, refrigerator.
included
Water
References
required.
$300imo. Security. deposit.
No pets. Call {740)4464425 or (740)446-3936.
Furnished 3 rqoms &amp; bath,
upstairs. newly decorateQ,
clean, no pets. Reference
&amp;
deposit
required.
(740)446·1519.
Gracious living. 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at
ViMage
Manor
and
Riverside Apartments in
Middleport. From $295$444. Call 740·992-5064.
Equal
Hous(ng
OpportunitieS. '
Modern • bedroom apt.
Call (7401446·0390

New 1 bedioom apt. Call
(740)446·3736.
Pilot Program- Renters
needed. Call (304)7363409.

i

r

Twin Rivers Tower is
accepting applications for
waiting list for Huc:l-subsized, 1- br, apartment.
call 675-6679 EHO

Sl'I.CE
FOil RENT

2 male Chihuahuas puppies, 10 weeks old, no
papers. S1 50 each.
1.8 fl . camper. good condition, $500. (740)388·8075.
AKC Mini Red Dachshund
puppies, ready March 1st.
$300. Firm (304)576·2999
or (304)654·1462

TIRED OF JUST HAVING
AJOB? LOOKING FOR
A NEW CAREER?

Warehouse
in Henderson, WV. Preowned applicanes starting
at $75 &amp; up all under war·
ranty, we do serv1ce work
on all Make and Models
(304)675·7999
Furniture: Sola- chair sets.
S399; SOfa· love seat sets,
$499. Mollohan Carpet
(740}446~ 7444
or
(740)388.01 73. '
lns1de sale: Mise items,
such as clothing, some furniture, pictures, lamps, all
reasonable priced.
Skaggs Appliances
76 Vine Street
(740)446-7398
Mollohan Carpet, 202
Clark
Chapel
Road,
Porter. Ohio. (740)4467444
1·877-830-9162.
Free EstimateS, Easy
finanCing. 90 days same
as cash. VisaJ Master
Carel Dri~e- a- linle ·save

alot
ThOmpSOr"!S Appliance &amp;
Repair-675-7;388 . For sale.
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refriger·
ators , gas and electric
ranges , air conditioners ,
·and wringer washers. Will
do repairs on major brands
in shop or at Your home.
Used Furniture Store. 130
BulaviUe Pike. Appliances.
dressers.
mattresses,
couches. dinettes. reclin ers. grave monuments.
much more. (740)446·
4782. Gallipolis. OH. Hrs .
11 -3 (M-S) We buy used
furniture.

r
Buy or sell. Al\letlnEi
Antiques. 1124 East Mam
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy,
740-992·2526.
Russ
Moore, owner.

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments ,
Very
Spacious, 2 Bedrooms. 2
Floors, CA. , 1 112 Bath ,
Newly Carpeted, Adult
Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa!io,
S!art $385/Mo. No Pets,
7 cta~ J 6 night Disney area
Lease
Plus
Security · vacation. Paid $600 must
Deposit ReQu ired. Days·
serr $199. carr (614)590740-446-3481 : Evenings;
5244 .
740-367-0502.

Phillip
Alder

North

·~

• Excellent Pay and Bonus Plan • Great Benefits
·Work At Thet1 Dealership

!

,... PoMEROY ...
SUVs

,

New Sig"rna Martin guitar
Model DR41 . Retail $675,
OBO.
asking
$425
I

\1~\f"t 1'1'1 II'
,\. I I\ I '-.I I )I I'

Bison stock trail'er, 18 ft.·
goose neck, excellent condition,
kept
inside.
(7 40)446-2075
D3 CAT, Bull Dozer, 6-way
blades, ROPPS, $12,500
runs &amp; operates good .
(304)895-3638 after 6pm
John Deere 2040, diesel,
EC. new tires. $8,950.
Ford 3000 diesel, $5,995.
(614)419-2781.

I

FOR SALE
Wanting to rent summer
pasture. for beef cat11e in
Gallia County. Call, after
6p'm, (740)446-3375.

1995 Jeep Cherokee
Sport. 4.0 automatic, air,
excellent cond: $3495.00
304-727-6924.

11{\\\1'(11{1 \fill'

1996 Nissan Pathfin der
SE. 1 owner, 55,000 miles.
auto,
loaded.
Phone
(740)992-7653.

FOR SALE

I

$5001 Honda's, Chevy's,
Police
Jeep's, ' Ect.
Impounds! Cars hom $500
for listings SQ0-391·5227
EXT 3901
1981 Olds 98, 4dr, Runs
Good,
Condition
fair
$1.000Call (304)675-1264

n.

1995 Ford F-150 XLT. 8
bed, excellent condition. ·
Asking S7 ,500 080. Call
(740)992-1777.
1996 Buick Century, 4 dr.
Maroon in color, 94,000
miles, good condition
$2,995 (304)675·1506
2001 Honda Civic LX
Coupe.. Green. automatic,
exceller:~t condition. very
clean. 73,000 highwaymiles, $8,395 negotiable
(614)313-7096.
2002 Ford Escort ZX2, 5
spee d. 29,600 miles, air,
one owner. Nice,(740)4410157 or (740)645-5141
2003 Dodge Neon STX
4door, 4cyl., automatic,
power everything, 11 ,000
miles, $6,500. (740)441·
0337 oi (740)645·6153.

r15 ~u~

r

Ask for Art
1-888-321-0311
740-682-6188

1-800-822.()417 ° 372·2844
475 South Church Street • Ripley, WV 25271

AlliUS

.I

1988 Ford F150, 79,300
miles. Excellent condition,
5
speed.
overdrive.
(740)388-0140.
1990 Chevy, extended
cab, 8·foo1 bed. 32.000
ac tual miles, excellent
mechanical shape. 305
Automatic.
$3,400.00
OBO. (740)696-1227
1997 Dodge Ram 1500,
4M4, truck. $4,900. Call
(740)446·0924.
78 Bronco 4x4, auto, 351
Windsor,
completely
rebuilt, as is $1 ,000. Call
(740)256·6984.
' '
87 Chevy 1_12-ton, 2WO
350·engine, 81 ,000-miles,
good condition , PWI PL,
orig.
4
new
tireS.
Red/black.
$4,700.
(740)506-1367.

1998 Jeep Cherokee
Classic, 4.0, automatic,
tully loaded $5495. 304727-6924
• •
2002 Chevy Avalanche
Z71 . Fully loaded. onstar,
·heated seats, 29.000
miles , moonroot, 4-wheetdrlve, CD, $23,400. OBO.
(614)989-6448 .

4x4
FORSAU:

EAGLES 2171

·

EUCHRE

1

86 Bronco XLT, 4 WD, 302,
4 BBL. auto. new tires, raters. $1,100. (740)9923679
99 Jeep Chero~e Sport,
4x4, EC, gold, auto, PW,
PL, V6 , CD, CC, keyless
enlry, $6,500. (614)231·
1355.

2000 Ford WindStar LX,
91 ,000 miles, 2 sliding
doors, power windows &amp;
cruise $6,300 {304)6754014

I Sign
up 7p.m. I
Starts at 7:30 ·
IS:gnSatu
rday
I
up I 30 p.m.

• New Garages

1... Starts 2 PM ;·I

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Vears Looal E• erience

2000 Ford Wlnstar LX,
81 K, 2/sllding doors, seats
7, all power, rear air, tinted .
windoWs, asking $6,900,
(740)669-5653
2001
Dodge Caravan
Sport, 70,000 miles, excel-.
lent condition, slidirlg
doors-both sides, auto, V6 ,
· AJC, power everything,
time/temperature gauge.
$11 ,000. (740)256·6543.

BISSEll

BUILDERS me.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

.• Replacer;ncnt

2004 Harley Davidson 883
4,500
custom, black,
miles. $7,500. (740)441·
1583.

\Vindows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

liNDn PIINnNG
ll40J 985-4180

Advertise
in this
space
·for .
$50 per
month

e\~~~
1979 Honda 750 I Oth
Anniversary
Limited
Edition . Needs ignition
work. Evening (740)2566870.
Low
mileage,
$2,500.
'
·1986 Hondll Foreman, 4
wd , excellent con dition ,
$2000,
garage
kept,
(740)992-0413

199ft
Harley
Softail
Custom, $9,995. Call
(606)232-6319.
1996 Yamaha Warrier. .
EMcellent
condition,
$2,600. 4-wheeler tiresvarious sizes and condi·
lions. (740)446.Q048.

1998 ~o· fifth wheel travel
trailer, double slide, excellent condition, · $13.900
phone: (740)698·9319
Class C Dutchman Motor
Home 2000 Model, New ·

Unconditional
· lifetime
guarantee. Local refer- ·
encas
furnished .
Established 1975. Cali 24
Hrs
(740) 446·0870,

Rogers
8asemen1
Waterproofing.

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

.r

LIV~TOCK

1 year old ~ens , heavy
breed. Call (740)245-5943.
Year"ling Angus Bulls,
Mostly A.L e:.ccellent blOOd·tines, priced reasonably.
Slate Run Farm, JackSon.
(740)286-5395.
www.slateruntarm .com

r

HAv&amp;
GRAIN

Mixed Square Bales of
Hey
$2 per Bales (304)67511 t8 if no answer leave
message

•

1

I

MINtErs
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only

~;;;;;'S;e;l;f.;S;to;r;a~g~e;·;;;;~

ROBERT

South

~ ~~AGT TO f:')(T~IlNAL STIMULI,
Tt4~1lf:f0fl~ ~ AM;

\
Sunset Home
Construction
In~ .

Brian Reeves
New Home Construclion. Remodeling,
Renovations, Decks, Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs. Siding, Windows &amp; All
Olher Residenlial Needs
Phone: 740-742-3411
for a free estimate.

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

'CUZ THAT'S TH' LAST TIME YO'RE
GITTIN' AMB'LANCE SERVICE !!

=~~~ !

·s. .

.Roc~!,!~. '1$1
·.. Huep

Hill's Self
Storage

•

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Oh1o

45771

Pass

Saturday, Feb. 19, 2005

P~o

BEFORE YOU
TRY ""'A1 N,
MP.Y I

SU6GEST A

'

" T1C. TA&lt;."&gt;

Whaley's Auto
Parts

Sl. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
~... tockfny tal£• Modf'l Sttlmge
t1 rid Arter Market R..rls

PEANUTS
WELL, I SEE THE
SUN IS SI:IININ6,

See Brent or Brian Whal ey
M-Fri 8:30-5 :00
Sal. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

AND THERE'S A
NICE BREEZE 50

I 6UE55 IT'S JUST ~-~\.
ABOUT THAT TIME
A6AIN ...

Now Available At

BALM LUMBER .
Hard Work!"
Mid-S ize 4 Wh eel Drive Tractor

with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota En_gines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

ADVERTI E
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $50 per month
GRIZZWELLS
~ 1 11M

to10'd0'

~~~

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

~y
'RI~.
~~C.\P

~fflllll

PICTURE THIS!!
Professional Photography

~~m~! ·

&amp; VidOOJ{r11phy •
Any Orca!don-Ponni t
~slons, Wedding§.
Famlliu,•EnJCill!le'"'wnls,
Rabies
Ca lll11n Carpenler

740.742-3116
I

, ' Inc

Q

By Bernice Bede Oaol
Your ingenuity .in adding to your
resources will be considerably heightened In ·the year ahead. New contacts
you make might play a rote in helping you
put together some solid deals that could
yield big bucks.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - There
will be plenty of financiet opportunities
around yOu today, b'ut you must be on
' your toes to recognize their worth .
Some thing profitable might be suggested
through a least-expected person.
PISCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20)- Be both a
person of ideas and one of action today.
When you conceive something clever,
don't lei any grass grow under your feet
1r1 putting in It into motion . All could be
fleeting .
ARIES (March 21·April 19)- You should
be able to get a better .handle on manors
over which you may have had little or no
co ntrol. Instincts, coupled with e good
attitude tOday, can establish a c6urse
you'd like.
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) ~ If you have
met someone new recently who you'd
like to get to know better, t8.ke the i~Jitia­
tlve today and get in touch with this person to do something together. It'll be your
loss if you don 't.
'
GEMI NI (May 21 -June 20) ~ There
could be a sudden beneficial shift in circumstances today which would give you
that edge you've been looking for In a sit uation wh~re you have been competing
against a strong opponent.
CANCER (Juno 21 -Juty 22) -'- More than
· one bright idea for improving your finan cial position is like ly to come to you 1n
rapid succession. It you can"! make them
all count, select the one thai holds the
most promise.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) - By asking the
right questions of the right person wheli
you get the chance today, information
which you know has been denied you
ca n be brought out into the light of day.
VtRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ~ You' ll have
an opportunity today to forge bonds with
someone who hasn't. always been sup·
portlve of you in the pas1. Don't forsake
this chance to gel to know each other
better.
.
.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - If you feel
you're in a rut, take on something new to
do today. It doesn't maner If It is a project
you've wanted to do or doing something
social with friends : either will be refreshIng.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- Be on the
alert lor a fun social opportunity to devel·
op tOday. It might be meeting and getting
to know a new •friend on a chance
encounter or hearing about a new spot to
visit.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 ) - Use
your ingenuity today to help you find new
ways to get certain Items you 've wanted
to 112' up your surroundings. What you c;to
at th is time will be pleasing to the entire
fa mU~.

7&lt;10·949·2217

......x10' '

Journalist Sydney J: Harris wrote, 'We
have not passed that subtle line betWeen
childhood 8nd adunhood , until we move
from the passive voic;:e to !he active voice
- that is, until we have stopped saying 'It
got lost' and say, 'I los! it'"
Now look only a1 the WeSI hand. Whal
would you lead against four hearts?
An opening lead may be passive or
active. The former tries to avoid giving
away a trick; the latter strives to build up
tricks.
What make~ a lead passi\le? A common
choice is a weak suit. A !rump is also usually passi~e. bur· it can be acti~e if your
aim is to red uce the rutting power of tile
dummy.
In this deal , a trump leS.d would be pas·
siva because the dummy probably does·
n't have much in the way of rutting values.
The spade 10 would also be relalively
. passi~e . The club two would be acti\le. A
diamond would be rated as suicidal unless it worked, of course!
On most deals, l.lhink it .is betler to be
active than passiye. If you don't try to
develop lflcks, the declarer will typically
win the race . And this deal is a good
e.ample ol thai. If West leads a trump,
South wins, draws a second ' rouod,
unblocks his spade honors, cros·ses to
du~my with a trump, and throws his clubs
'on the king-jack ol spades. One diamond
trick later and declarer is home.
.
Note that a club lead- not coincidental·
ly! - kills the contract. East wins with the
ace and shifts to his singleton diamond.
West takes two tricks in the suit, then

\W~!!?!,

NP.TE'S TRYIN G TO
B~EP.l&lt;. THE WORLD
RECORD FOR HOLDING H1S !&gt;RE,..TH.

IMPORTS
Athens

Is passive better
than aggressive?

~Astro-

BIG NATE

,~.

"Taki11g The Sti11g .Out Of

Stop &amp; Compare

Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

gives his partner a diamond ruff.

E

NORTHUP DODGE

182-2156

&gt;'"'1\t-lt&gt; 1\l:L t ~1&gt;-1&gt; TO \)\&lt;.\~\(., .
'Nil~ II WI\~ \&lt;.Et:&gt; WI"'(!

P'I I:&gt;R:EI\MT t W~S EATit-&lt;G
Tf-\~ MO'::&gt;T C&gt;E.L.IC.IOUS
OF SOLE. I f-1.1\t&gt; (\IE:.\&lt;:.
TI&gt;_S\E:I) ...

~
z

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740·4(6'-0842 • 949· I I 55 Evenings

Sentinel

...----'--t

P'[ ~1\'Y f&gt;..I~O~\F\C
I-ll Gfl.I Ml\1~£.
LI\~T ~\GI-ll ...

GARFIELD

Daily'

--

THE BORN LOSER

Scorpion Tractors

141·992-1&amp;11

Pass

North
Pass
2•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• New Homes
• Complete
Remodeling

West

Opening lead:' '

BISSEll
COISTIUCDON
• Garages

KB

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Both

C ~ HOWIII SCnnokiDr

·:tfi~

PEOPL..E..!

6 4 3
9 53
East

• 10 9 5
• 8 6 4 ::1
• 6 2
• 5 4 3
+AQ 985
• 2
.AJI084
.• Q 7 2
South
olio A Q
.AQ 987
K J 10 7

+

~;::;;;;:;;;

Specials o.f the Month on
FarmPro Tractors .
Farmpro 20hp, 2·wheel
drive, diesel utility ttactor,
$3899. Farmpro 25hp 4wheel drive, diesel utMity
tractor w/loader, $8999.
More units available, all
with 1yr warrahty, call for
more details. (740)6960358
.
Tractor parts &amp; service,
specializing In M~ssey
Ferguson
Ford. Long,
and Belarus. (i40)696·'
0358

MY

~

"03" 34' Jayco Eagle 5th
wheel Lots of extraS.
(740)339·0218.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

!le ON

MORE GOOD

Let me cJo it for youl

For Sate: Projector Beam
.headlights for 1-:londa Civic.
(2001-2003,all models).
·New in original box. Dot
compliant. Asking $l50.00
Call/74019492401

IMPRoVEI\IENTS

~ELP

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

tAA:~I

HOI\IE

,.... Ff.f; AND

W&gt;.'Y '1'0

992-6215 1'111 0367~

4-~heel-

For sate 2001 Tow lite
HH o Camojng Trailer
19 loot. like new- used
very linle. For information
and
viewing,
phone
17401446 9539
•
.
"'tlnlll"'

7~

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

V.C. YOUNG Ill

1999 'Honda ES
er. EXcel lent condition_.
$4,000 080. ,(740)256·
6655.

(304)675-7~8

I AM AFJiWD iJf'( \NOR!&lt;. H!U. IS
OON!1 '10UQ,. lotiGHhl~! l'l..L- .JU~T

• Electricat &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; quners
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks
We do It all e~cept
furnace work

r~4wuHEF~~~U'-~ I

accessories,

West

Remodeling

Wednesday :

tires, all
sleeps-e.
to inquire

.

• Room Additions &amp;

FoR SALE

1994 Chevy Astra Van,
New Tires &amp; Battery, Runs
Grea1 $2,000 (304)6754096

Box 189
Middleport
)• ., 45760 .

CARPENTER
SERVICE

VANS

1993 Chevrolet Astra Van,
good condition phone
(304 )675·50n

~·{

•
•

YOUNG'S

1998 Dodge Dakota Sport
2004 Honda· 450-A. Fror t
extended cab 4x4 , V6 ,
rack/back six-pack rack ,
automatic, 63,000 miles, • lull underneath skid plate,
$7,000. (740)441-0337 or
cot'nplete · shock covers
(740)645·61 53.
set
$4.500.(740)4460350.
2004 Ford Expedition 4X4
2005 Kawasaki V-Twin 750
XLT, 5. 4L Triton V-8 , all
power, air, cruise , 3rd row
VulCan
Cycle.
neVer
dropped, garaged, 5ompg.
s
e
a
t
,
$4,400 (304)675-2942
A MfF M IC OIC assette,
34,000 · miles, remainder
Must sal~. 2003. Rincon 4factory warranty. Excellent
wheeler. 650 engine.
condition.
. $25,500.
(740)992-6797
(740)245·9162.

r

.

Buyers of standing tim·be1r ~
· Also Land Clearing

Tom Peden Country

Toyota"Rav-4, '97 all wheel
dri\le. Loaded, 1 owner,
$5,700. Call. (806)923·
.. 3259 or (304)429·8032 ..
Sheltie pups: 2M/2F, AKC,
leave message.
Boi"n ,2/31 . Vet Chk ~d.
shots &amp; worined. POP.·
(740)473·2785.

MUSICAL,
INsTRUMENTS

ClM~~~~~

02-18-05 ·

4 K J 72
• K J 10

S®~U®lt' lb®f~~fQ~

No Experience is required, onl~ a wilfingness to learn, work
as a team and have ~ strorltl initiative.

Register English Setter
puppies 1Olweeks old
$275 (740)388-0182,

7U

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Wocde&lt;IIJI opportunl10s ar! availa~e in Tom Peden Country.
We are expanding our staN and need more sales people.

For Lease: Office or retail
spaces in very good condiAKC Siberian Huskie puption. Downtown Gallipolis. pies, 8wks. old , shots &amp;
Approx . 1600 sq. ft . each. 1
wormeq $250 .00 each ·
or 2 baths. Lease price
93 F-ord Escort LX . Auto.
740: 286-8095
negotiable to eQcourage
PS. PB, IVC. 88.000 miles.
new
business.
Call
CKG Black Pugs, 8-weeks • $1,800 OBO. (740)446·
or
(740)446·4425
old. $400. CKC Basset
6304.
\
(740)446·3996.
Hound, 4-months old,
93 Lincoln Town car. Good
female.
$275.
For rent: Gro und level luxconc;iition, 137.000 miles.
Shots/wormed. {740)388ury office suite{s) lor rent,
S2,800. (740)446·2302.
9327. .
'
3, 4, or 7 rooms suite, util98 CadillaC Calera. Fully ·
ities included. Suites offer
Golden Retriever puppies.
equipped, leather interior,
private restroom dedicated
Full blooded/no ·papers, 4
low miiSs, mint condition,
to area, private entrance,
mate, 2 female, 7 weeks
$7,900. Call (740)704and ample parking. All
old. Vet checked-wormed·
3751 .
handicapped accessible.
first shots. Parent on premises
$100.
Phone:
Downtown Gallipolis, For
Jeep Grand Cherokee 00
further information contact
(740)441.0243.
Laredo,
65K
miles.
Jackie a! '(740)446-7866.
E:.ccellent
condition,
4x4,
Llewellyn SeHer puppies.
remote
st3rt, extras.
\II W II \ \ lll'-.1
FDSB
Registered .
$13 ,000neg.
(304)617Excellent blOOdlines, DNA
1380.
.certitied. Intelligent, loyal ,
make outstanding hunters . Must sale, 1964 Corvette,
&amp; loving pets. $300.
350 engine. (740)992(740)379·2615.
6797

Appliance

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydailysentioel.com
BRIDGE

Butcher-block table &amp; 6
chairs $50.
2 SS
wate rbeds with drawers
$50 each. 2 Twin bookcase
&amp; drawer bed- fremes $50
each. Exercise equipment:
including "solo-flex bestoffer (304)675-4474

Mobile home. Rio Grailde
. area . bedroom. 2 bath·
·room,
$300/deposit.
:s400/month . NO pets.
:Phone (,740)367-7025

1 and 2 bedroom apart. ments. furnished and
:unlurnis~ed ,
security
·dePosit required , no pets.
:740·992;2218.

I

MiscELLANEOUS
MF..RC.'HANOISE

440

APARTI\IEN'IS
FUR RENT

Help Wanted

Call To Schedule An Interview:

: 4211 MOBILE HOMt::S
mRRENT

2

l

APAR1~1ENTS
FOil RENT

Help wanted

Friday, February 18, 2005
ALLEY OOP

.
'

CAPR ICORN (Dee . 22-Jan. 19) - It '
· behooves you to be e good llatener today,
because you can pick up aoma valuable
tidbits trom conversations that might go
1?\l•r the head• ?f oth•"· You'll know
what to do with th• Info.

SOUP TO NUTZ

1 Gorden tool
5 UK
broadCIIItr
8 Amtrak
driver
12 Computer
ayatam
13 Feel awful
14 Get
ocqualnted
15 Swallow
hard
16 NBA coach
- Jackson
17 Bleached·
oul
18 Winter
forecast
20 Sends a
package
22 Bill - ,

36 Ebb
37 Cry
of Mmlng
38 Bedouln'a

mount
40 Colony
member
41 Decay
42 Farewell
44 Philbin or

Salak

47 Oalrla'
b9loved
48 Shag
50 Go under·
ground
52 Talk wildly
53 Brackal

tYpe

54 Work units
55 Does
a takeoff
56 Gloudy

_the Science
Guy
23 Isaac
Newton's
IIIla
24 Battery
poat

region

38 Cummar·

bund sttes

center
21
24
25
26
27
28
29
31
.
33
35

1 Warm
welcome
2 Responslbillty •
3 Threshold
4 Uses up
5 Sthch
loosely
6 Chomped
7 Awkwardly

~~~~

Oscar·

39
alternatives 41
11 Hwy.
42
19 Storm .
43

DOWN

27 Apple drinks

36 Paid
ottenllon

winner
10 Mousse

57 Far down

30 Essences
31 Cairo's river
32 Boathouse
Implement
34 Glgl's
f1oyfriend
35 Weak

a Realm
9 " Hud"

candy slr1*
Miscellany
Deaden
Play award
Movie
Gallivant
Nol daffy
Tends
carefully
Aunt or bro.
Glass
square

~~~

Web oufflx
Answer
Immediately
Have supper

45 Colleen's
home
46 Brink
47 S&amp;L
offering
49 Variety
51 Mind
reacter'e
gift

----~--

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptog1ams are ~eated hom ttuo\1110111 !J'j famous pqis , -ard IJ"eSenl
Each letter in t.t Ciphel stanjs icf a~
.
Today's clue: Gequals X

"R' FII. CW

Cll

'

HGKHBCHDWH

CN

LAF

VAD ' P

LAFB

OAD ' P

WARH

ZABD."

A VD

LA ·f B

E C J H•

A FP

WZIBECH

AN

YCMOAR .
CP,

cp

L ·AFB

K IB X H B

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'lnlernalional compassion has never been like this."
-Jan Egeland, U.N. relief coordinator, of aid to tsunami victims
(C) 2005 by NEA, Inc. 2·18

-~.:..~-~~-:~-:~-,-S-©-~-4}~~-1\J\~----=LG:"""':t..~tr~s-·--::::::
_:..:,:..:,::.__::._,:: Edit•lll by CLA'f I . '0Ll,AN
llet:~:ran;e

lotte~! of
KtOrrlbiad words
!ow fO fo·~ lo~Jr word•

0 fo ur

I CUMSU
I I 1: I f
"'
·•~.-,-A-c~·--'~,-~,-~!

. I I I' I

.~

"A. tr ue far lure," an old ool·
ieoe professor once leclurod,
· :5 one whc sits an d wa•ts tor

S 4 E.T E 6

. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

'- !7- o!

Nudism. Forgo- Round. Hrnder • FINDING
fellow at work 1s always w illing to qudly admt h1s
errors He claims th ai it' slops other people tram F IND·
A

lNG

them kst

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

NBA

Wolves leave
James, Cavs
feeling ill
. bit." Garnett said .. "I just
looked down and saw hi s
Nikes and I flicked it lo him."
MINNEAPOLIS _ Kevin
Garnett was the only Wolves
Garnett glared at Drew starter in double tigures. but he
· Gooden after swatting away had plenty of help.
·
h' 1
··
Fred Hoiberg added 13
IS ayup attempt m the third points and ·fellow reserve
~uarter, then stalked thf! lane as Griffin finished with · nine
to say: "Try again, 1 dare points, 10 rebounds and four
yon;~s in large part to new blocks to lead the balanced
coach Kevin McHale, the effort.
Mipnesota Timberwolves have
"Our bench just killed
their swagger back.
them," Szczerbiak said.
llgauskas had 24 points, nine
Wally Szczerbiak scored 26
· points off the bench ahd rebounds and two blocks,
Garnett added 20 points, 18 Mcinni s had 17 points and
rebounds and six assists to lead ·seven a~sists and Gooden
the Timberwolves 10 a 94-88 added 12 points and 10 boards
victory over the Cleveland fo~. Cleveland.
Cavaliers on Thursday night.
Really good teams \hat go
"We are playing with a lot . deep 111 the playoffs wm gar'?e.~
more confidence" Szczerbiak ltkl: that and we haven t,
.
said. '1There's 'no question llgauskas sai~.
about that."
·
In McHale .' three games as
Led by Szczerbiak, ·the coach, the Ttmberwolves are
Timberwolves' bench players 2-1 and have started to dtsplay
outscored Cleveland's backups the hustle. determmauon and
55-6, which was enough to teamwork that were so mtegral
hold off Cleveland's All-Star to thm run to the Western
tandem of LeBron James and Conference finals last season.
· Zydrunas tllgauskas and give
"T,hey're (Jiaying a}ot differMcHale his second straight em, Mclnms sat~. They are
win.
taking on McHale s per&gt;onaltJames had 26 points, eight ty and playing a lot harder."
assists and seven rebounds, but
Dunng one exchange m the
was helped to the locker room s~cond · quarter,
the
early in the fourth quarter Ttmberwolves blocked two
while battling exhaustion from shots down. l~w before
being ill. After getting tluids in Anthony Carter upped away
the locker room, James the loose ball, fought with Eric
returned to the court with just Snow to get to it first, ~en
over 4 minutes to play and had pushed 11 ahead to a streaking
to drop to his knees in the hud- Hmberg for an easy layup.
die during a timeout.
_It was a _huge step in the right
James did not address the drrectron lor a Mumesota team·
media after the game and a that has so often been uninspirCavs ,spokesman said he was ing during a disappointing first
half of the season that ultibeing treated for the flu.
"We didn't know what was · mately resulted in longtime
wrong with him," llgauskas coach Flip Saunders' firing.
"We fought hard," McHale
said. "So we were concerned at
first. When he came back, it said. "We can go through some
was a relief."
'
dry spells on offense when
Jeff Mcinnis did his best to you're kicking rear ends on
fill in, hitting two big jumpers defense. That's the way you
off drives to the basket that have to play."
gave Cleveland an 81-79 lead
Since reluctantly taking over
with 4:30 to play.
for his old college buddy,
The Tunberwolves respond- McHale has preached effort
edwithan'll-2run.Garnetthit and pleaded for his players to
a layup and jumper, Szczerbiak contest shots and dominate the
added a jumper of his own and pjlint. .
Garnett was able to slither in
The message has definitely
for an offensive rebound off a hit home.
missed free. throw from Eddie
Minnesota outrebounded
Griffin that led to a 90-83 Cleveland 47-37, blocked a
advantage with 1:27 to .play.
season -high 14 shots and
James scored six more outscored the Cavs 36-30 in
points after returning to the the paint.
··
court, but Griffin sealed the
"We were getting outplayed
win when he took a no-look in a lot of games and most of it .
pass from Garnett and made a was because of effort,"
reverse layup with 23 seconds Hoi berg said. "With Kevin
to go. ·
here now, he's not going to
"I bobbled the ball a little allow that to happen."
BY JQN KRAWCZYNSKI

Associated Press

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The shifting
wind and gloomy rain gave the Nissan
Open a distinctively British feel
Thursday.
So did the leaderboard.
Two months after tinally earning his
PGA Tour card by winning Q-school,
Brian Davis of England. opened with an
eagle and fini shed with eight straight pars
on his way to a 6-under 65 for the early
lead at dreary Riviera Country Club. .
Luke Donald of England and Darren
Clarke of Northeri1 Ireland were among
those one shot behind.
Donald was tied for the lead until landing in a divot just short of a fairway
bunker, going into a greenside bunker and
making bogey on his last hole. Clarke had
one of many highlights at Riviera with his
7-iron that skirted the edge ofthe bunker
in the middle of the par-3 sixth green,then rolled down the slope and into the
. cup for an ace.
Brett Quigley made a birdie on the 18th
and also shot a 66.

BRAND NEW

Two-time defending champion Mike
Weir was at 5 under until finding a bunker
on his final hole and making,bogey, dropping him into a large group at 67. Still, it
was a solid start in his bid to become the
first player to win the Nissan Open three
straight years.
Tiger Woods should have no complaints, either.
· Despite three-putting for bogey three
times, Woods managed a 67 for his best
start ever in his hometown tournament,
which has given him fits like no other.
The Nissan Open is the only PGA Tour
event he has played at least four times
without winning.
Woods needs to finish no worse than
fourth to return to No. l in the world.
He wasn't all that impressed with his
start.
"I putted like a fool today," Woods said.
"It was an absOlutely horrific day on the
greens. I probably could have shot an 8
under par with not too much effort."
The first round was suspended by

2005 CHEVY SILVERADO

darkness with four players still on· the
course.
The effort was figuring out the weather. The wind changed direction when the
morning starters were about halfway
through their rounds, then gave way to a ·
cool, steady rain the rest of the afternoon..
"V!c played the front nine into the
wind, so .we thought, 'That's handy; we
woulc;l make the tum anc! play it downwind.· And the wind switched and came
straight back at us', " Davis said. "It's a lot
like playing links gal.f back home."
It hardly mattered to Davis.
He hit 4-iron into 4 feet on the par-5
opening hole for eagle, picked up short
btrdies on the sixth and seventh, then hit
a 4-iron into the uphill ninth td about 3
feet to make the b~m in 30. Equally
important to Davis was a 12-foot par
save on the 15th, even though his round
was almost over.
"I've played a lot of links ~olf, and if
you drop a shot, you start fighting it,"
Davis said.
·

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Crennel add·s two
,more coaches to
Browns staff

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Parcells.' staff in New England.

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Browns coach to
speak in Washington
Browns coa~h Romeo
Crennel will speak at the State
Department in Washington on
Friday as part of a celebration
for Black History Month.
Crennel. the first black
coach in Browns history, was
invited to speak by Secretary ·
of State Condoleezza Rice, a
longtime Cleveland fan who
visited the team last season and
has spoken to the Browns in
the past.
·
Other speakers will be .Dr.
Bernard Lafayette Jr., a civil
rights activist, a:nd Dr. Dorothy
Irene Height, the former presi- .
dent of the Nation(\[ Council of
Negro
Women
and
a
Congressional Gold Medal
recipient.
Before
being
named
Cleveland's head coach on
Feb. 8, Crennel was defensive
coordinator for the Super Bowl
champion
New
England
Patriots. Crennel, 57, spent 24 .
years in the NFL as an assistant
coach before · getting • the
Browns' job.

-

2005

Davis takes the lead,. with Tiger lurking

Yo... H

CLEVELAND (AP) Todd Grantham, who spent the
past. three seasons coaching
Houston's defensive linemen,
was named defensive coordinator of the Cleveland Browns
on Thursday night.
Browns
coach · Romeo
Crennel also added Dave
Atkins to his staff as running
backs coach. Atkins was with
New Orleans the last five seasons.
The Texans played a 3-4
defensive scheme, . the one
Crennel used with New
England and wants to implement with the Browns. ·
''Todd is energetic and
drnamic in how he motivates
hts players, helr,ing them reach
the!f potential,' Crennel said.
"He has a good background .
with the ;3-4 defense and will
certainly enhance what we are
building here."
Grantham wasn't Crennel's
first choice, however: The
Browns tried to lure Patriots
defensive backs coach Eric
Mangini to Cleveland, but
Mangini stayed with New
England, replacing Crennel as
defensive coordinator.
Atkins previously worked
wfth Crennel in 1993 on Bill

Friday, February i8,

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