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                  <text>Thursday, March 17, 2005

· www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Emergency guide
.inside today's
edition

Homecoming for Alford in NCAA tourney opener
BY STEVE .HERMAN

Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS _ Steve
Alford walked onto the basketball court at the RCA
Dome on Wednesday amid a
flood of memories.
Alford was an AllAmerican at Indiana, and two
victories on this same court
starled a si~-game run to the
NCAA championship for
Alford and the Hoosiers in
1987. · Thursday's first-round
game against Cincinnati will
be his first at the Dome as the
Iowa coach.
"Those thoug,hts and memories came back, of playing
Fairfield and playing Auburn
in front of great crowdsllere,"

he said after the Hawkeyes'
practice.
"Playing two games in our
home (slate) ... I thought real ly kind of got us going
· momentum ~w ise," he said.
"So you just start thinking
about all the little . different
things. Obviously, very spe· ciaf memories then, and those
are memories that haven't
faded any now." .
·
Eighteen
years
later,
Alford's Hawkeyes are hoping to produce some memo.ries of thei( own. But Iowa
(21-11 ), the No. I0 seed il) the
Austin Regio•Jal, lost its top
player six weeks · ago, had a
losing record in the Big Ten
and sneaked into the NCAA
with an at-large bid by win-

school record.
two counts of burglary,
But the Bearcats' assault with intent to commit
edge in tourney experi- sexual assault against an exence is irrelevant, girlfriend and criminal mis. coach Bob Huggins chief. He has pleaded innosaid.
cent.
"You go out and
Once the 'Hawkeyes adjustplay," he said. "You ed to playing without Pierce,
have .to do the things th.ey won five in a row before
you do, well and hope- a loss to Wisconsin on a lastfully take away some things second 3-pointer in the semithey do well. We've watched finals of the Big Ten toutna.
a lot of tape of his (Iowa) ment:
team. They do a great job in · Usmg a .three-guard hneup,
the half-court offense and run · the Hawkeyes hope to offset a
a couple things we haven't Cincinnati defense that has
guarded."
·
limited opponents to 37 perIowa lost five of its first six cent shooting.
"It's going to be difficult to
games after. leading scorer
Pierre Pierce was kicked off match up with them," said
the team in February.
sophomore Adam Haluska,
Pierce was charged with who has ·averaged 11 points

over the past dozen games
without Pierce in the lineup.
"The key is to keep fighting
and keep their runs to a minimum."

.

•

.

Forward Greg Brunner is
averaging 14.5 points and 8.3
rebounds, and 6-11 center
Erek Hansen is averaging just
5 points but almost three
blocks per game.
"Brunner creates shots, not
only for himself but for his
t~ammates," Huggins said.
"It's hard to lose your· best
player and change gears, but
they have made the adjustments." ,
Cincinnati has five doublefigures scorers, led by Jason
Maxiell at 15.3 points a game
and Eric Hicks at 13.9.

~--~~--------~------~~~----------~----~--------~~----------,

Cavaliers
coach
sorry :for
comment ·
.

ning five of its last six
games.
None of the Iowa
players has ever been
in the NCAA tournament before now.
· "The one thing we
don ~ ! have is experi-.
ence," Alford said. "I
hope that doesn't have
a huge impact, but it may
early in the game. We've
starteq prettY well all year, bot
anytime you're in a one-and-'
done tournament, the start is
pretty crucial."
No. 23-ranked Cincinnati
(24-7), the No. 7 seed in the
regional, tied for second in the ·
Conference USA regular season and earned its 14th
straight NCAA appearance, a

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o

from Page B1
burst that tied it at 42.
During Cleveland's surge.
the Bucks went seven min- ·
utes and 30 seconds without
a basket.
Silas apologized before ·
tl)e. game for a derogatory
comment he made . about
Utah forward Carlos Boozer
following practice earlier
this week,
Silas made the remark to
reporters Monday, one day
before Boozer was due to
make his long-awaited
return .to Gund Arena after
leaving the Cavaliers as a
free agent last summer:
Boozer, though, didn't travel with the Jazz because of a
·
;
foot injury. ·
·"It was totally inappropriate," Silas .said. "It shouldn ~ t have happened, I apologize for it."
Notes: The Bucks did not
make a substitution the first
quarter and led 29-20 after
one. Cleveland's only · sub
was CIF .Anderson Varejao.
... Ilgauskas needed five
stitches in his chin at halftime. He was injured during
the first quarter.

Johnson
from Page B1
Jo,hnson's rushing total in
2004 brolce the Ben gals'
record of 1,435 yards set by
Corey Dillon in 2000.
Johnson ·also had 361 car.
ries in 2004, beating the
record of 340 Dillon posted·
in 2001.
Johnson tied the team
record for I 00-yard rushing
games in a season with five
and led the Bengals in
touchdowns with 12.
The Bengals drafted him
in the fourth round in 200 I
.from Auburn.

"" " -"'"l.•il"''"' ,,.,.,, .,,.,

Property taX increases not going to schools

SPORTS
• Gators must overcome
recent history, Ohio's good
· luck charm. See Page 81

,,

of the district's schools· actu- un succes sful.
al.ly decreased as can be seen . Rhoncmus also pointed out
on tax bills which came ·out that the amount of money colPOMEROY -While the earlier this month.
lected from district residents
property taxes of rriany resiA report on local tax fund - to make . payments on the
dents of the Meigs Local ing for schoo ls was given at bond issue which was passed
School District took a sizable Wednesday night 's .school for the new school buildings
jump this year, the board of board meeting by Mark has decreased:
. education contends none of Rhoenmus , treasurer. He
"That bond iss ue," said
the increase can be attributed ·rioted the .55-mi ll ·permaneJ11 . Rhollemus, "was made up of
to increases in school funding. improvements levy went off two parts totaling 4.45 'mill s
In fact the 'amou nt of local . the ballot ·on Dec. 31. Effort s and of that 3.95 was to pay for
tax dollars going for operaiion 'to renew · that. levy were the bonds , ami 1.5 was for
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
CHOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

capital maintenance of the
new st.ructures."
·
Since only the actual
amount of money needed (or
the payment on the construetion portion of the bonds can
be collected, according to law,
the millage on that part was
reduced last year to_ 3.8 -'and
this year to 3.4 mills.
The reappraisal last year
resulted in increases in valuation of . rrtany properties.

When the property val'ues ·
. were increased, the taxes
went up and that triggered the
decrease in the amount of
taxes which had to be collect- .
cd to satisfy the construction
part of the bond issue.
The result was a decrease in
the millage to 3.4, because by
law only the amount needed
to satisfy payment on the

Iowa students spend spring break In Meigs County
BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSII)E

NEW2005

NEW 2005 FORD

FQ178

Cavs

FR II l \ \'. :\1.\RC II 1~. :.!00,)

l I "- I S • \ o I. :;4. "- o. q-

.

CLEVELAND (AP) Cavaliers coach . Paul Silas
apologized Wednesday for a
derogatory
comment he
made about
Utah
forward Carlos
Boozer following practice
earlier this week. ·
Silas made the remark to
reporters Monday, one day
before Boozer was due to
make his long-awaited
return . to Gund Arena after
leaving the Cavaliers as a
free agent last summer.
~oozer, though, didn't travel
with the Jazz because of a
foot injury.
"It was totally inappropriate," Silas said . before
· Wednesday'.s
game
i~
' Milwaukee. "It shouldn't
have happened. I apologize
for it."
Cavaliers general manager
Jim Paxson said he spoke ·
with Silas about the· comment.
"I'm confident that he
· understands that it was completely inappropriate for him ·
to speak in the terms that he
did," Paxson said in a state. ' ·· ment released by the team. ·

OVCS celebrates St•.
Patrick's Day, A3

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NEW 2005 FORD

NEW 2005 FORD

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FOCUS

ESCAPE

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529

• Senate, House pass ·
. budgets that clash over
Medicaid, other Bush
savings. See Pllge A2
• Yeager returns tp
homeport. See Page A3
• HEAP application
deadline is March 31 .
See Pagl! A3
• DuPont to cut amount of
· chemical used..to make
Teflon. See Page AS
• Law You Can Use.
.See Page A&amp;
• A Hunger For More:
See Page A&amp;
• Coast Guard disciplines
tow captain in Ohio River
barge accident.
See Page AS

POMEROY - Most college students
spend their spring break at the beach or
catching up on sleep and laundry. Students
from Iowa State University's Lutheran
Campus Ministry spent their spring break ·
donating their time to Meigs County.
The students washed fences at Forest Run
Church in Racine and at Dave Diles Park in
Middleport to prepare them for pail!ting.
They also lent a helping hand at the Mulberry ·
Community Center, performing a variety of
chores like digging ditches for drainage and
cleaning out the gymnasium, which included
vacu11ming dust from the ceiling.
"We just did this so we cou ld play basketball," Iowa State student Ben Johansen, 22,
joked about emptying the 'gymnasium tloor.
Johansen was joined by fellow student
Nicki Pawlak, 23. in sweeping out the dust
from the gymnasium.
.
"We know we l'lelp people," Pawlak said
about why her friends chose to spend spring
break in Meigs Comity.
"It's not about the work but the people we
meet," Johansen agreed,
Pawlak said Meigs County was ·chosen
because their Lutheran Campus Ministry had
decided the Appalachian region was the best
· ··
place to donate their.time.
Beth Sergent/photo
While Johansen and Pawlak continued to
sweep away dust, students David Chipman, Zach Palko and David Chipman climb scaffolding to. vacuum the rafters of the gym23, and Zach Palko, 20, were high above nasium at the Mulberry Community Center, where they removed strips of dust near-·
them on scaffolding vacuuming layers upon· ly one-€.ighth of an inch thick. The tWo yqung men were joined by 14 fellow Iowa
State students who are members of their school's Lutheran Campus Ministry. The
Please see Iowa, AS
students donated. their spring break working throughout Meigs County.

· , Please see Tax, AS ·

Eastern alumni to ·
present community
fo~um on education
BY BRIAN J. REED
BAEED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS - .
Two Eastern · High School
graduates who have gone on
to school administration positions and a former Eastem
guidance counselor. will present a community education
forum at the Eastern
Elementary
School
on
Monday evening.
Eastern
Local
Superintendent
Rick
Edwards said Dr. Thomas·
Gumpf, the Ohio Department
of Education Area 6 coordinator. and Bob Caldwell,
superintendent of the Wolf
Creek Local School District,
both Eastern alumni, and
retired guidance counselor
John Redovian will address
issues affecting the public
school system at the forum,
to be held at 6:30 p.m. on
Monday. The event is sponsored by the Eastern Local
Board of Education.
Gumpf will lead a discussion on school finan.ce,
"What
a . Complicated

Please s" ·Eastem, AS

County to seek rental New cancer center opens doors Monday
·rehabilitation funding
.

WEAmER

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTR IBUNE .COM

GALLIPOLIS - Nearby
newest round of CHIP fundfor · cancer patients
treatment
. ing, offered through the Ohio
Department of Development, becbmes a reality Monday
POMEROY
- Meigs at Thursday's regular meet- when the doors of the: Holzer
County will likely seek fund- ing of Meigs County Center for Cancer Care offiing for two new housing pro- Commissioners. Trussell said cially swing open.
"We have a theme that I
grams in the upcoming round the cou·nty couid qualify for
believe
sums it all up: Trust.
of funding through the .additional funding for new
Community
Housing rental unit construction and Hope. Closer to' you," said
Improvement Program.
rental rehabilitation projects Ken Moore.
Moore is the center's execFair Housing Administrator in addition to funding used
· Details on Pap AS
utive director, who joined
Jean Trussell conducted the
.Please see County, AS
physicians and officials from
first public hearing on the
Holzer Clinic and Holzer
Medical Center in an open
house for local officials and
media Thursday.
2 SECI10NS - 16 PAGilS
KeVIn Kelly/ pilot&lt;(
The
facility
offers
radiation
A sign for the new Holzer Center for Cancer Care fronts the . ·
Calendars
A3
oncology, including services building housing the center and a healing garden. The center's
provided by a new linear doors open Monday.
Classifieds
B4 -6
accelerator and a CT simulaComics
B7
tor for treatment planning. ning and nearly a year in con- ment in the community and
The
medical oncology sec- struction of a new, two-story its future health care, said
Dear Abby
A3 ·
tion features an infusion area · structure of the campus of Tom Tope, president and
for chemotherapy, With 12 HMC. fronting Jackson Pike: · chief executive offi'cer of
Editorials
A4.
bays and two .private bays for
A joint venture between the Holzer Health Systems Inc. ·
A6-7
Faith •Values
treatment.
clinic and the hospital, the
"This facility is for you and
Physician offices. an center is designed to make
Movies
the
community," he said, also
As·
appearance center, dedicated . cancer treatment not only .
parking area and a comml!ni- local but less stressful for 'offering his thanks to individ·
NASCAR
B3
uals who have so far.donated
ty-centered lobby' for meet- patients and their families.
Brlln J. A""" / nhnln
B Section · Meigs County Commissioners Jim Sheets and Mick Davenport ings and education are
Sports
The $12 ' million spent on ·.more · than $1.5 million
' building and equipping the toward its construction
AS approved a resolution in support of the American Cancer included in the center.
Weather
"Healing
the
Its opening is the culmina- facility with stale-of-the-art through
Society Meigs · County Relay for Life. Meigs County Health
tion of several years of plan- technology was an invest© aoos .Ohio Valley Publlshl1111 CO.
Commissioner Larry Marshall also is pictured, center.
PIHH see Cent.r, AS
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX

suvs
95

TOWNCARS
$ · •·
15, A95

2002 CHRYLSER

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PT CRUISER

sn,905

ST'ARTI

•TAX, TITLE AND FEES EXTRA. DEALER RETAINS REBATES. PRICES MAY REQUIRE CUSTOMER TO FINANCE AT FMCC.

2005 Relay for Life Team Recruitment ·

~~

'Y

Mark your calendars for this year s Relay for Life. New teams are encouraged to participate!!

RELAY
FOR.LIFE

Meigs County Relay • May I 3 and 14 - at the Meigs Count}' Fairgrounds

1

•

·

To regis fer your team, please call Shawn Arnott or Joann Crisp at (740} 992-2136.

JCSallla County Relay • June ;3 and 4 - at the Gallipolis City Park
To re(;isfer your team, please call Tanya Cremeens at (740) 2.56-6393 or Shelli Barneffe at (304) 675-3659.

Join us in this community fight against cancer!
~-

'

----'"'-·

___

.........

_____... _,_

.

r·

�'·
J

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Friday, March tS, 2005

Senate, House.pass budgets that clash over Medicaid, other Bush savings
BY ALAN FRAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASj-UNGTON - The
Senate delivered a slap at
President Bush and its own
Republican leaders Thursday
by passing a $2.6 trillion budget erasing his plans for cutting Medicaid, community
development and school aid.
Foreshadowing
clashes
ahead, the Ho11se approved
its own fiscal outline relying
on far deeper reductions tn
Medicaid and other domestic
programs. After its 218-214
passage, ·
top
House
Republicans chided the other
chamber for not clamping
down more on ·spending at a
time of ·massive federal
deficits.
"I'm not real pleased with
what I' m hearing the Senate
say" with its votes on spending, said Hou se Budget
Committee Chairman Jim
Nussle, R-lowa. He said hf!
was looking forward to seeing what the Senate would
"limp off the tloor with.''
Before its 51-49 approval
of the budget, the Senate. in a
surpris.e, voted to practically

double the budget's tax cuts
to $134 billion over the next
five years. That is even more
than Bush and the more con.servative House have sougtll.
The Senate marched through
dozens
of
amendments
Thursday aitned at boosting
spe'nding, rejecting inany but .
agreein~ to add funds for
everythmg from anti-AIDS
efforts to water projects.
Senators voted to restore
money Bush proposed cutting from education and local
police, fire , and emergency
workers. They also voted to
kill Bush's plan to combine
community
development
block grants, a favorite of
many mayors, with dozens of
oJher programs and cutting
them by about $2 billion. .
Overall, the tax cuts and
spending increases the·Senate
approved during Thursday 's
votes would cpst more than
$80 billion over the next five
years even as GOP leaders
say they want to stanch federal ·red ink.
'
It was unclear whether the
Senate's larger tax cut, or the
other changes, will survive in
the . eventual House-Senate

compromise budget. The tax
cut was approved 55-45.
Senate Budget Committee
Chairman Judd Gregg, RN.H., said budgets often go
from being "cute little bunny
rabbits to camels" during
debates, then "hopefully get
back to cute little bunny rabbits" when the House -~e nate
compromise is completed.
Sen. Jim Bunning, R·Ky. ,
who sponsored the deep'er tax
reduction, suggested it be used
to roll back Social Security tax
increases imposed on some
higher-income recipients in
1993. That decision will be
made in later legislation.
. The budget sets overall tax
and spending targets to guide
Congress as it write.s bills
later in the year that make
. actual changes in programs
and tax laws. That means
some policies the budget suggests may 11ever be enacted,
though the votes are often
precursors for what lawmakers will eventmilly do.
In the Senate's watershed
52-48 roll call, a coalition of
Democrats and moderate
Republicans voted to yank all
$14 billion in proposed five-

year cuts from Medicaid, the Medicaid savings, he added, bills making those cuts fr.om
federal-state health care pro- "You just have to ask yourself filibusters, Senate delays that
gram for the poor and disabled. how they get up in the morn- take a hard to achieve 60 of
I00 senators ' votes.
Those reductions, I percent ing and look in the mirror."
In a win for Bush, the Senate
Bush proposed $8.5 billion
of expected Medicaid spending over the period, are the in five-year Medicaid sav- did vote against removing
keystone of plans by Bush ings. while the House would $2.8 billion in agriculture savand GOP congressional lead- rely on up to $20 billion in ings from the budget.
The House and Senate buders to start controlling feqeral reductions from the program.
Overall, Bush has proposed . gets follow the general course
deficits that surged to a record
$412 billion last year and $51 billion in five-year sav- set by Bush of slowly reducing
ings from benefit programs, federal deficits by trimming
show little sign of abating.
Sen. Gordon Smith, R- also including farm, veterans, domestic programs while
Ore. , who led the fight student loans and other areas. allowing growth for defense
against the Medicaid cuts, The House wants $69 billion and anti-terrorism programs at
conceded the House-Senate in such reductions and the home. All three would also
compromise budget will like- Senate $17 billion following extend expiting capital gains
and other tax cuts this year;
ly contain ~.orne Medicaid Thursdats Medicaid vote.
Bush by $100 billion over five
Smith
s
amendment,
which
savings and said he would
vote for it. Even so, the passed after heavy lobbying years, the House by $106 bilSenate vote highlighted many on. both sides, would have set lion and the Senate by $134
lawmakers' unease with mak- up · a commission to spend a billion - including the $64
ing even modest cuts in year studying- potential billion added by the Bunning
rapidly growing benefits, Medicaid savings. He said a amendment. ·
In a s tatem~nt released by
which consume nearly two- pause was merited because
the program serves "the lame, the White House, Bush said
thirds·of the budget.
"The courage simply ' isn' t the poor, the blind, the needy, nothing about the Senate 's
here," said Senate Budget · those who have no recourse if votes but praised the House's
Committee Chairman Judd we pull away this central budget.
"It closely follows my budGregg, R-N.H., who said ben- . strand in the safety net."
GOP leaders want this to be get proposal and re!lects our
efit savings were needed to
avoid passing unbearably high the first year since 1997 that shared commitment to be
debts to younger generations. Congress has made reduc- wise with the peoples money
Without naming his fellow tions in benefits. Passage of and restrain ·spending in
Republicans who opposed the the budget would protect later . Washington," Bush said.

'''
•••
AP photo

A young girl sits on an adult's shOulders while watching the St

,

Patrick's Day parade in Dublin Thursday as Dublin celebrated
St Patrick's Day.

Half a million line ··
Dublin's streets for St.
Patrick's Day parade
Bv SHAWN POGATCHNIK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

DUBLIN , Ireland - More
than 500,000 people lined
the streets of Dublin to watch
Ireland 's major St. Patrick;s
Day on Thursday, an extravaganza of artisuc skills that
featured towering butterflies
and teens dressed as mad
professors.
The parade. the centerpiece
of a five-day festival culminating this weekend with
Europe 's biggest annual fireworks show, involved about
3,000 participants in brightly·
colored costumes and a halfdozen marching bands from
Ireland and the United States.
Several floats had to be
·• shortened, or partly deflated,
: so they could clear the over. head power lines of Dublin's
new light rail network. It t:uts
across O'Connell Street, the
capital's major .thoroughfare,
where crowds stood I 0 deep to
watch the passing spectacle.
Donal Shiels, chief executive of the festival, called the
turnout, estimated at more than
500,000 people. "the biggest
crowd ever in the history of the
parade," though this couldn't
be independently confirmed.
While the midday parade
passed in a jovial atmosphere, police were on high
alert for alcohol-fueled trouble at night.
.
Officials reported 18 arrests
on various public-order
offenses in central Dublin by
Thursday evening. · But they

said it wasn't nearly as bad as
last ear, when police arrested
pe le on St. Patrick's
Day fo . isorderly behavior,
vandalism or assault.
The Dublin lord mayor,
Michael Conaghan, who led
this year's parade, said he·
was relieved that problems
associated with public drunkenness improved this year.
Most of Ireland's leaders
missed the Dublin festivities
in favor of promoting Irish
interests overseas. Prime
Minister Bertie Ahern was
the guest of President Bush,
while _ President
Mary
.McAleese was touring Japan.
"As our global Irish family
and friends celebrate this day
through the expression of our
culture and heritage in our
language, literature, games,
poetry, · music and dance, I
hope that the .legacy · of St.
Patrick will long encourage
us to treasure our strong com- ·
munity spirit and tradition of
welcome and care for one
anothe,r," McAleese said in
her traditional message on St.
Patrick's Day, a national holiday in Ireland.
Several other cities and
towns across this republic of
3.9 million people mounted
their own parades, including
in-.the second-largest city of
Cork, this year's European
City of Culture. In Limerick,
parade organizers · emphasized Ireland's increasing status as a destination .for immigrants from eastern Europe
and Africa. ·

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buildings or hire more teachers.
The data, the latest available, also reflect the first full
school year after the No Child
Left Behind Act was signed
into law in January 2002. The
sweeping reforms aimed at
upgrading school performance
are a cornerstone of President
Bush's education policy.
Collectively, spendmg for
public elementary and secondary
school
systems
increased roughly 4 percent
to $453 billion ih 2003. That ·
included over $38 billion in
that school year alone for
construction costs.

Saturday, March 19
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453 will hold a breakfast meeting to confer two
entered apprentice degrees
after an 8 a.m. breakfast.
· CHESTER -The .Chesier
Baseball · Association will
hold tina! signups for summer baseball and softball
: from 10 a.m. to noon at the
· · Chester firehouse.
: SALEM CENTER - Star
: orange No. 778 and .Junior
: Grange No. 878 Fun Night
and Potluck Supper, 6:30
p.m. followed by final plans
and set up for soup dinner to
: be held on Sunday.
_
Sunday, March 20
: MIDDLEPORT - A base. ball team sponsored by the
· American Legion Post 128,
Middleport, will be orga: nize.d on Sunday. Boys 19
· and under interested in par: ticipating are asked to
: attend. The meeting will be
· held at 2 p.m. 'at the old Post

Birthdays

celebrates St. Patri~k's Day

.304-675-4340

446-7619

Wheelc~airs

Diapers

Chux
Medicare/Medicaid

Wedo'the

740-446-0007
Toll Free 877·66!9-~IJ07
70 Pine Street • Callipolis
We care about

COOLVILLE
-Navy and U.S . Army Reserve
Seaman Darrick ·A. Yeager, Military Police in support of
· son of Patricia A, and Kevin the 90-day exercise. New
: W. Yeager of Coolville, Horizons supported the
:recently returned to his home- rebuilding of schools and
: port of Norfolk, Va., after par- wells, · and also . provided
: ticipating in New Horizons, medical support to the vican annual humanitarian assis- tims of Hurricane Jeanne.
tance exercise in Haiti, while · Elements of the . Saipan ,
: assigned to the amphibious Expeditionary Strike Group
also conducted maritime
: assault ship USS Saipan.
; Yeager and his shipmates interdiction operations train: offloaded .I ,200 tons of 'con- ing and multi-national exer: struction equipment and sup- cises with Marines from
. plies for U.S. Navy Seabees Honduras and Columbia.

.

~HEAP

675-1812

Point Pleasant, WV

173-5536
Mason, WV

316 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446-2933
Hours:
M·F lOam-Close

•• .

Now AMi/able
Current. &amp; Futon: Access
Areas lncl"de:
Crown City, Mercerville,
Centerville, Pomeroy,
Gallipolis, Pt. Pleasant,
Rodney &amp; Bidweli

.-.-- .....

~"PtiJ"'f!

www.kuplat.com~
.·
74().446-8500

328 2nd Ave. .
Gelllpolle, OH

uss

L---:------.---

_ __ _._ _ _ ____y__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __:___ __ ____ ,__•

Men will be boys during
holiday wrestling matches
DEAR ABBY: Every holi another one. (Most of his
. unemploym'ent checks are
day or special occasion that's
spent on movies, video
celebrated in our home
games, etc.) My problem is
involves a certain amount o.f
that Lara .usually asks me if
"horseplay'' between the men
- my two adult stepsons.and
Nicky can come along with
Dear
her to lunch. I always say yes
stepsons-in-law. Their ages
Abby
because I don't know how to
range from 38 to 4.0.
When these supposed
say no without offending her. ·
grown-ups come to visit,
This leads to another probopen gifts, etc., tliey wind up
lem . My budget only allows
wrestling in our living room. ·
for a certai n amount of fun
be
hun?
Someone
WAS
hurt
stuff. Paying for Nicky drains
The base of one of my lamps
has been chipped, and .once, - your granddaughter! If my budget pretty quickly. He .
my granddaughter (then I0) . that wasn't a wake-up call for invariably orders the most
was pushed into a glass table those literally "high"-spirit- expensive items on the menu,
and her back was scraped ed, overgrown adolescents. it and a $30 luncheon becomes
will never happen. At the a $50 or $60 tab.
through her shirt.
, Is there a nice way of
1, have asked them nicely to very least, the "boys" should
pay
to
repair
or
replace
any
stop or to go downstairs, and items they have damaged.
telling Lara that her husthis year I asked them to take
Alcohol isn't "involved''; band' s presence interferes
it outside. They'll quitfot a alcohol is the problem. It with my one-on-one time
while, but act like I'm ruin- appears to have lowered the with her without offending
ing their fun by telling them very inhibitions you r · step- her or embarrassing me? to stop. My husband refuses sons and stepsons-in-law FRUSTRATED IN RAINY
to say anything to thein about need to maintain in order to CALIFORNIA
it. He says it's a small price behave like civilized adults.
DEAR FRUSTRATED: I
to pay because they are oth- Until the issue is brought out think you've put it very well
erwise helpful, considerate into the open in your family, in your letter. Her husband's
and caring individuals. yow problem will continue.
presence restricts the kind of
which is true .
conversation
you'd prefer to
DEAR ABBY: I invite my
I should add that a:Jcohol is best friend, "Lara," out for have with her, and the
involved, but to remove it is lunch about twice a month, so · expense is busting your budnot an option. It would create we can sit down and catch up get, That's neither offensive
huge problems between my on our lives in person. I look · no( should it be embarrasshusband and me if I suggest- forward to it, and consider it ing. It's the truth.
ed it. I struggle between guilt female
Dear Abby is written by
bonding
time.
for being upset, and frustra- Because Lara currently has a Abigail Van Buren, also
tion because I'm afraid some-- low-paying job, l foot the bill known as Jeanne Phillips,
one will get hurt or my furni- for the se outings. I don ' t and was founded by her
ture will be broken. Any sug- · mind doing it because I enjoy mother, Pauline Phillips.
gestions?- NOT AMUSED her company.
Write Dear Abby · at
IN WASHINGTON
Lara's husband, "Nicky," is www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
DEAR NOT AMUSED : out of work, and frankly, he- s Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
You're afraid someone will not looking very hard to find 90069.

Completes
basic training
MIDDLEPORT -U.S.
Army Pvt. Joshua Distelhorst
has graduated from basic
combat military training at
Fort Sill, Lawton, Okla.
During the eight weeks of
training, the soldier studied
the Army mission and
received instruction in drill
and ceremonies, rifle marksmanship, weapons, map reading, tactics, afme4 and
unarmed combat, military
courtesy, military justice,
physical fitness, first aid,
Army hi story, core values
and traditions, and special
training in human relations .
He is the son of Sandra
Distelhorst of Pearl Street,
Middleporr
Di stelhorst graduated in
2000 from Southern High
School and received an associate degree in 2003 from
Hocking College.

fuel prices.
.
Documentation . verifying
NEWS®MYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM
income must be provided
CHESHIRE- The Gallia- when applying for HEAP.
; Meigs Community Action The client must provide 13
·Agency's Emergency Home weeks of income for E:Energy Assistance Program HEAP and 12 months of
:will end on March 31, leav- income for Regular HEAP.
· ing very little time to apply Also, a copy of the applifor assistance, explained cant's most recent electric
: Sandra Edwards, Emergency bill is required.
· Services Division director.
The following income lev; Emergency HEAP provides els by household size should
:assistance to households that . be used to determine eligibil: have had utilities disconnect- · ity. These income guidelines
~d, face the threat of discon- represent the !50-percent calnection or have 10 days or culation and are revised
: less supply of bulk fueL ·
annually.
: The program allows·a oneAllowable annu·al income
:time payment of up to $175 for a one-person household is
:per heating season to r~store $13,965;
two
people,
three
people,
: or retain home heating ser- $18,735 ;
· vices. For coal and wood $23,505;
four
people,
clients, the paymentis $250. $28,275;
five
people,
. However, propane, li.erosene $33,045; and six people,
: and fuel oil clients will have $37,815. Households with
: an increased benefit of $325 more . than six members
:because of the increase in should add an additional
•

Amphibious . assault ships
like USS Saipan deploy
throughout the world to
maintain U.S. pres~nce and
provide rapid response in
times of crisis. They serve as
a highly 'visible deterrent to .
would-be aggressors, and are
equipped with the most 'versatile and powerful weapons
available.
Yeager is a 2003 graduate
of Heritage Christian School
of Little Hocking, and joined
the Navy in Fe,bruary, 2004.'

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR
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Hours: M-Sat.

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Sunday.Cioaecl

.2nd .Street 740-992-4242. Syra.cuse., ~h
,......oiiiiiii;...,.. !Ill• • ..,. ~
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~-.~~,;
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··to pu6ficize your_upcoming T.aster 'Ev.~nt!
'·

For Example Only:

Name of Church

Contact Dave ·
or Brenda at

application deadline is March 31

STAFF REPORT

• Hair Care &amp;. Makeup
• Nail Care
·facials&amp;. Waxing
·Massage
• Body Treatment
• Spa Packages

Friday, March 18,2005

~Yeager returns to homeport ·

Electric Beds

Census: Nation's public schools
awash in $250 billion in red ink
WASHINGTON (APl - ·
The nation' s public school
systems are smking further
into debt, the Census Bureau
reported Thursday. They
were saddled with over $250
billion in red ink in the 200203 school year, up II percent
from the previous. year.
Many districts are stuck
with huge debts to pay for
new buildings to accommodate a surging student population. Nationally, enrollment
· grew sligJ:uly to"47 .6 million,
· up I percent.
. .
Other districts have struggled
to find money to fix older

Clubs andorganizations

Other events

Home Oxygen
Portable Oxygen

WHY PAY MORE??
EUERV DAY
LOW PRICES!
CJP,en~FIIIIm-.n
s.t !ll!m·1pm

446-9800

I

Own~r

Monday, March 21
LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m.,
. office building. .
TUPPERS PLAINS Community
Education
. Forum, 6:30 p.m., Eastern
.· Elementary SchooL "What a
Complicated System," presented by Dr. Thomas Gumpf
of Ohio Department of
Education ; "How Has the
Classroom Changed," by
Bob Caldwell, superintendent of Wolf Creek Local
·scliools; and presentation
about school and .community
partnerships . by
John
Redo vi an.

128 building on South Mason . Singing will be
Fourth Street. Chris Stewart Sandra Wi se, the Brian
will be the coach. For more Family Connection and Ray
information call him at (740) and Deloris Cundiff.
591-4605.
Sunday, March 20
Monday, March 21
POMEROY
-· Uni ty·
POMEROY
-Meigs Singers under the direction of
County Right to Life regul ar . Sue Matheny wi II present
meeting, 7:30 p.m. at "More Than Conquerors'" at
Pomeroy Library.
7 p.m., Mt. Hermon United
·
Thesday, March 22
Brethren in Christ Church,
POMEROY. - ' The Meigs . Wickham Road, Pomeroy.
High School winter sports
banquet will be held at 6:30
p.m. in the; school cafeteria.
Those attending are to take a·
Saturday, March f9
dessert aAd a covered dish
RACINE
- Meigs County
vegetable.
District
Public
Library in
Wednesday, March 23
Racine will hold its , annual
RACIN"Easter
egg hunt at II a.m. for
Racine/Southern
Future
children
ages 1-4. 5-8, and 9Farmers of America, 74th
annual awards banquet, 6:30 12. Candy, prizes and refreshp.m., Southern High School. ments will be provided.
Monday, March 21
gymnas?um. RSVP to 949POMEROY
- Salisbury
2611, extension 2118.
Township Trustees will .begin
Thursday, March 24
POMEROY - Alpha Iota cleaning cemeteries today.
Thesday, March 22
Masters wil meet at noon at · ·
POMEROY - Childhood
St. Paul Lutheran Church for
immunization
clinic, 9 to II
Ia meeting and luncheon.
a.m., I to 3 p.m.. at Meigs
County Health Department.
Bring shot records, medical
cards if applicable. Children
Friday, March 18
must be accompanied · by a
MIDDLEPORT - A free parent or legal guardian. $5
breakfast will be served at donation accepted but not
at
the required.
dinner
time
Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center. corner
of Fifth and Main, from 4:30
to 6:30p.m.
Monday. March 21
GALLIPOLIS - Chuck
POMEROY
Ruby
Compton, 7 p.m. at the New
Life Church of God. pre-con- Burnside will celebrate her
cert, 6:30 p.m . Earthen 90th bi'rthday, March 21 ..
Vessels. Refreshments will Cards may be sent to her at
be served following the con- 40532 Kingsbury Road, ·
·
cert. For more information Pomeroy, 45769.
Saturday, March 26
call 675-J538.
RACINE
Verneda
. Saturday, March 19
MASON - A benefit for Hartung will observe her
'the
World
Christian 98th birthday on March 26.
Outreach Ministry will be. Cards may be sent to her at
held at ' 7 p.m . at the 45881 P01neroy Pike, Reine,
Christian Brethren Church in Ohio 4577l.

: Ohio Valley Christian School Ge~
: ebrated St. Patrick's Day
· Thursday with the observance of
. "Be Seen in Green Day." llhe student council organized the day
: and the student body cheered to ·
:determine the "greenest" stu:dents during chapel. Guest
: speaker Scott Mishler told the
· students how St. Patrick took
the gospel of Jesus Christ to
. Ireland and how he opposed
: slavery, having been a slave
; himself. llhe top five greenest
: stjldents were, from left, Jacob
: El~ridge, Brandon Goughnour,
Joe Barnhart, Mary Sheets and
. Julie Hussell.

HELiOS
Pertonal

Community Calendar

~OVCS

OXYGEN

BY THE· BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Public meetings

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.740~992-2155
.

$4,770 to the yearly income.
Both Emergency HEAP and
Regular HEAP applications
can be completed at the Gallia
CAA HEAP Office, 859 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, or the Meigs
CAA HEAP Oftice at 1369
Powell St., .Middleport.
Applications will be taken by
appointment from 8:3p to II
a.m. and from I to 3:30 p.m.,
Monday through Thursday.
This year, CAA is still operating under the appointment
to
apply
for
system
Emergency HEAP.. Contact
992-6629 (Meigs County) and
367-7341 (Gallia County) to
scheduLe an appointment. The
.toll-free number for Regular
HEAP inquiries is (800) 2820880. For the heari ng
impaired with a telecommunication device for the deaf
(TDD). (800) 686-1557 .
For further information ,
contact the Cheshire office at
367-7341 or 992-6629.

to have your
church included or
for more
.information.

Date
Good Friday Service
All night Hymn sing
Date
Sunday Sunrise Service
6:00a.m.
Morning Service
:
10:00 a.m ..
Evening Worship
7:00p.m.
Pastor
Pastor's Name
Address of Church
•

.

Adverti~ing

Deadline:
Tuesday, March 22nd
Date of Publication:
Thursday, March 24th
(

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The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Friday, March 18, :zoos '

PageA4
Friday, March 18, 2005

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Terrorists shaped date for Easter

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 laJV respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Govemment for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

&gt;

Today is Friday. March 18, the 77th day of 2005. There are
288 days left in the year.
Today\ High light iQ History: On March 18. 1965, the first
spacewalk took place as Soviet &lt;.:osmonaut Aleksei Leonuv
left his "Voskhod 2" capsule. secure(! by a tether.
On this date: In 1766. Britain repealed the Stamp Act.
· In 1837. the 22nd and 24th president of the United States,
Grover Cleveland, was born in Ca!dwell, N.J.
In 1922. Mohandas K. Gandhi was sentenced in India to six
· years' impri ~&lt;:m ment for civil disobed.ience. He was released
after serving two years.
In 193 I: Schick Inc. marketed the first electric razor.
In 1937, more than 400 people, mostly children. were killed
in a gas explosion at a school in New London. Texas.
In 1940. Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini met at the
Brenner Pass, where the Italian dictator agreed to join
Germany's war against France and Britain.
In 1959, President Eisenhower signed the Hawaii statehood
bill .
In 1962, France and Algerian rebels agreed to a truce.
·
In 1974, most of the Arab oil-producing nations ended their
embargo against the United States.
In 1979, Iranian authorities detained American feminist
Kate Millett, a day before deporting her and a companion for
what were termed "provocations."
Ten years ago: The United States Catholic Conference's
administrative board criticized a Republican welfare reform
plan, saying it would hurt poor children and could push
women to have abortions. Spain's Princess Elena married a
banker, Jaime de Marichalar y Saenz de Tejada, in Seville; it
was Spain's first royal wedding in 89 years.
Five years ago: Taiwan ended more than a half century of
Nationalist Party rule, electing an opposition leader, Chen
Shui-bian, whose party favored Taiwan's formal independence from the rest of China.
.
One year a~o: Addressing thousands of soldiers at Fort
Campbell, Ky .. President Bush warned that terrorists could
never be appeased and saicl there was no safety for any nation
that "lives at the mercy of ·gangsters and mass murderers."
Overruling its staff, the Federal Communications
Commission declared-that an expletive (the "F-word") uttered
by rock star Bono on NBC the previous year was indecent and
profane.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Peter Graves is 79. Composer
John Kander o(''Chicago") is )8. Author John Updike is 73.
Nobel peace laureate and former South African president F.W.
.de Klerk is 69. Actor Kevin Dobson is 62. Actor Brad Dourif
is 55. Jazz musician Bill Frisell is' 54. Actor Thomas Jan
Griffith 'is 43. Singer James McMurtry is 43. Singer-actress .
Vanessa L. Williams is 42. Olympic gold medal spe~:dskater
Bonnie Blair is 41. Country musician Scott Saunders (Sons of
the Desert) is 41. Rock musician Jerry Cantrell (Alice in
Chains) is 39. Rock singer-musician Miki Berenyi is 38.
Rapper-actress Queen · Latifah is 35. Rock musician Stuart
Zender is 31. Singer Devin. Lima (LFO) is 28.
Thought for Today; "Liberty is from God, liberties from the
devil." - Old German proverb.
·

· There were no suicide
Apart from considerations
bombers in the Middle East
of ecclesiastical unity . . an
in the time of Jesus. but it ·
Easter festival that falls on a
was a terrorist threat of
different date from year to
another sort that left its
year (the variance between
indelible mark •On the
the
earliest and latest day for
. George
Christian calendar.
Easter is 35 days) is an
Plagenz
Our present-day reckoning
inconvenience. in the civic
co mmunity. Spring vaca.of Easter (the first Sunday
after the full moon following
tions in the schools. for
the vernal equinox on March
instance, are affected.
2 1) can be traced back to is March 22. The last time
The
Catholic
. 'A.D. 325. This was the year that occurred was in 1818 Encyclopedia says, "If
. of the Couilcil of Nicaea, the and it won't occur that early Easter was freed from its
first general church council, again any time in the 21st dependence on the moon,
which has always lived in century.
there would be , obvious
The latest possible date for . social and economic advantradition as the most impor-.
tant council in the hisWry of Easter is April 25. It last fell tages." .
.
the Church. This is when the on that date in 1943, but
The Vatican has saia it is
Nicene Creed was formulat- won't again until 2038.
not oppo~ed 'to t1xing Easter
ed.
Some eastern ~ hurche s , &lt;ll1 a definite Sunday, providAt that time, the pilgrims like the Greek Orthodox, ed agreement could be
going to Jerusalem to cele- follow a different calendar reached with "the Si!Jarated
brate Easler usually went in from the western churches · brethren" - the eastern
groups down the eastern side (United States, Europe, etc.) churches.
of the Mediterranean where which is why we have two
I took a poll of my readers
they were harassed by terror' Easters today. .
several years ago on the subists and brigands, especially.
The subject of establishing je.:t of establishing a fixed
at night. The Church thought a fixed date for both the east- date for Easter. By a margin
the pilgrims might have ern and western ·churches of 2 to I. respondents said
additional protection if they has periodically been raised. · they would like to see Easter
traveled in the · Jight of the · The reasons for nailing cekbrate'd on the same
full moon.
down one specific date do Sunday every year - preferPilgrims no longer need. not always have to do with ably lalf! iri April or May.
the 'full moon's· protection the uncertain weather in
Those favoring a change
when they go to Jerusalem March . What is of upper- (67 percent of those particibut the tradition has most concern to many pating in the poll ) often
remained.
church folk is that the entire mentioned the better weather
The earliest Easier can fall Christian world celebrates in late April or May. Some
accbrding to this calculation Easter on the same date.
added that thi s would rein-

. The Daily Sentinel
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Correction Polley

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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ar error in a

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.

. Agency that they will further
reduce PFOA emissions by 90 .
, percent by 2006.
· The company can' t eliminate
the chemical but will reduce the
remaining amounts by su bsti- ·
luting it with another substance,
·
Webb said.
· ·'There is no suitable alterna"
tive to replace PFOA," ·he said.
D1.1Pont maintains that the
chemical does not · harm
humans or the environment.
State investigators in Ohio and
West Virginia have found that
the chemical didn't threaten
drinking water supplie s near
the Washington Works plant.
Still , the company agreed as
part of last month 's $108 million settlement to pay for hlood
tests of area residents and fund
a $5 million independent study
of the chemical's effect on
humans. DuPont also will provide six drinking water utilities
in the area with $10 million
worth of equipment designed to
reduce levels of PFOA.
The EPA is studying how
PFOA makes its way into the
bloodstream and whether it
should be characterized as a
potential carcinogen.

Q.: I read that the U.S. Supreme This means that the boxes, and factors
. Court recently forma that the semenc- such as deliberate cruelty and hate
ing guidelines used in federal courts crimes, simply advise the judge, rather
must be voluntary, not mundatory. than forcing the judge to sentence from
What doe.s that mean?
a particular box. The judge may choose
A.: Congress sets a range of penalties · to sentence up to the maximum set by
for each offense. The U.S. Sentencing statute after considering these factors.
Guidelines then create "boxes" within
Q.: Does Ohio faa similar problems
the broad range to help judges tailor with the state's criminal semencing
sentences to particular· offen ses and guidelines'
offenders. A defendant's criminal histoA.: Ohio's felony guidelines are differry and the severity of the crime deter- ent from the federal rules in that Ohio
mine which box a judge will choose does not have a series of small "prefrom when sentencing the offel)der. sumed" boxes within its sentencing
However, judges also have been free to ranges. Rather, the judge may choose
take into account additional facts like from within the entire sentencing range.
"de liberate cruelty" or "motivated by For example, a person found guilty of
hate" that would allow them to choose aggravated robbery face s a possible
from· other boxes calling for longer prison term somewhere between three
prison terms. Judges have been able to and I 0 years. The judge weighs various
make such determinations without run- factors to select the appropriate sentence.
Ohio law guides judges to consider ·
ning the facts by the jury. In the recent
Blakely and Booker cases, the U.S. ·certain things in se lecting the approprjSupreme Court said that this practice . ate prison term from the range . .Some
denies the defendant's right ro a jury argue that those co nsiderations are
trial on all .essential facts.
si milar to the problems seen in Blakely
Q.: How will these two cases' affect and Booker. Others contend that the
sentencing for federal crimes ?
facto(s considered by Ohio's judges
In
the
Booker
case,
the
court
effecare
much different from those at .issue
A.:
tively said that the ju'ry's verdict and the in the federal cases. For instance, Ohio
range of sentences tl1at the judge consid- courts make decisions about "whether
ers should match. It then said that, to the offense demeans the·seriou sness of
make sure this is the case, all of ,the the conduct," is ''the worst form of the
boxes within the larger sentencing range offense," or whether the offender is
must be considered only as advisory. "most likely to commit future crimes."

Tax

Eastern
1"
.

TEXT· MESSAGE
ESSAY

'

'

.

Iowa
•

.

,,

.How about global freezing?
Beth

Lately I have been reading
"A Short History of Nearly
Everything," a breezy pop
summary of scientific
knowledge from the big
bang down to: us, by Bill
Bryson. Published in 2003
by Broadway books, it
rapidly became a bestseller,
and I can see why. However
well-educated you may consider yQurself, it will tell you
far more than· you ever knew
about the origins of the cosmos, the Earth. Iife and
mankind.
For · example, you may
think that the ice ages that
have afflicted the Earth
arrived and departed. gradually, ·over hundreds of !)lousands of years. But ice cores
from Greenland tell a very
different, very turbulent
story. According to Bryson,
"for most of its recent history Earth has been nothing
like the stable and tranquil
.place that civilization has
known, but rather has
lurched violently between
periods of·warmth and brutal
chill .
"Toward the end of the last
big glaciation, some 12,000
years ago, Earth began to
warm, and quite rapidly, but
then abruptly plunged back

•

William
Rusher

into bitter cold for a thousand years or so. ... At the
end of this thou sand-year
onslaught average temperatures leapt again, by as much
as seven degrees in 20 years,
which doesn't sound terribly
dramatic, but io· equivalent to
changing the climate of
Scandinavia for that of the
Mediterranean in just two
tlecades."
What
most
alarmed
Bryson is that, with all of the
current available data, ongoing research and modern
tech~ology, scientists have
absolutely no idea what natural events could have rattled the planet's "thermometer" so violently. ·
Contrast this description
of the recent history of the
Earth's climate with the
antics of the global-warming
hysterics. They have gone
into near-catatonic fits

because their dubious computer models predict that the
temperature of the Earth's
surface will rise between I
and 3 degrees centigrade.
over the next century. They
are so horrit1ed at that possibility, and at the further possibility that a fraction of that
increase may be caused by
human beings (notably
through large discharges of
carbon dioxide), that they
want whole sectors of the
global economy cut back to
prevent this "global warming."
Bryson has no special axe
to grind in the global-warming controversy; but he does
quote Elizabeth .Kolbert,
writing in The New Yorker
magazine, as pointing out
that "when you are confronting a fluctuating and
. unpredictable clil\late, 'the
'last thing you'd want to do is
conduct a vast unsupervised
experimem on it."'
People who arc detetmined to worry about the
near future of the Earth 's climate would do better to concentrate on the possible collapse of 'the West Antarctic
ice . sheet. In the pas( 50
years, Bryson points out, the
waters around it have

warmed by ·2.5 degrees
centigrade, and collapses
have increased dramatically.
Because of the underlying
geology of the area, a largescale collapse is all the more
possible. If so, "sea levels
globally would rise - and
pretty quickly - by between ·
15 and 20 feet on average."
The only trouble is that not
even the Sierra Club can
bring itself to blame the
warming of the Antarctic
waters in the past half-century on American industry, and
that takes all the fun (not to
mention sense) out of
demanding production cutbacks to stop it.
TJle simple fact is that the
Earth's climate ·fluctuates, to
a degree and o.wing to causes far vaster than any specified by the global-warming ..
alarmists. We should respect
that' fact, and not permit
these fluctuations to be tampere'd with by a bunch of
hysterics who have no idea
what they may be unloosing
in the name of their cockeyed political agenda .
(William Rusher is a
Distingu'ished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

These kinds of deci&gt;ions fit the traditional role of judges; jurors are not
expected to have the necessary experience to make such findings. However,
juries are expected to decide if an
offense is a hate crime or was done
with \leliberate ~ruelty. In Ohio, fact'
such as those about "hate" and "deliberate cruelty" typically are elements of
the crime charged, to be considered by
the jury in reaching its verdict.
Q.: Hm· the Supreme Court of Ohif&gt;
decided any cases about Ohio s criminal sentencing la-.,vs?
A.: The Supreme Court of Ohio 'oon
wil'l hear arguments' in two cases that
deal with these issues. When the court
rules later t)lis year. Ohioans wil'l have
a much clearer sense of how Ohio' s
sentencing statutes stack up against the
troubled federal guidelines.
Law You Can Use is a weekly consumer legal information column provided as a public service of the Ohio
State Bar Association and the Ohio
State Bar Foundation. This artide ·
was prepared by David Diro/1, E.1·q.,
executive director of the Ohio
Criminal Sentetrcing Commission.
Articles appearing in this column are
intended to provide broad, general
information about lite law. Before
applying this information to a specific
legal problem, readers are urged to .
seek advice from an attomey.

o'f the construction costs on $20 an hour not to exceed teacher were accepted.
more informed ."
Gumpf will discuss how
the $32 million dollar project five hours a week:
In other busine~s disposiSeveral sub stitutes ~ere · .tion of surplus computers,
schools are financed. ho"
were paid this week. The
only thing still facing the employed. They were Donald equipment and furnishings
from Page A1
from Page A1 ~ loca l funding afre~t' slate
fundin g. and vic~- versa. ;md
board of education is a court R. Karr, Sr.. custodian; Penny was approved, an overnight
action
taken
against
C&amp;R
Hysell
and
Billie
Jo
trip
to
Chicago
for
eighth
Systerl1 and Caldwell a dl· s- the sources or rel'enue
bonds can be collected.
schuol districts rely on Ill
regarding about Marcinko. aides;
Darla graders was approved for
What
this
mea ns, Masonry
cussion
about
academic
educate
c hild ren .
$45,000 on a contract default. Haning , bus driver, and May 16- 18, and Carl Wolfe
explained Rhonemu s, is that
achievement,
"How
Has
the
Caldwell's
·presentation
will
·
h ·
A revised
permanent Heather Harris , secretary.
tax bills of residents should appropriation o.f $24 million, · Brian Howard was hired as was given aut onty to Classroom Changedc'"
address state report card s.
show almost a mill less co m- for the 2004-2005 fi scal year junior varsity softball coach implement
"I hope people in the com- schoo l performance stan the
athletic
ing to the Meigs Local was approved by the board.
and Stacey Price as a volun- depar-;l~ent uniform rotation munity, whether they have dards and schoo l ratings as
schools considering the
children in the school sys- issued by the state .
Personnel issues
teer assistant softball coach.
purchase. plan.
removal of the permanent
On recommendation . of
The
resignations
of · Attcndmg were Rhonemus, tems or not. will attend this
Rcdovian will discuss comimprovements levy and· the Superinten&lt;lent
William Charles Freci&lt;er as industrial Buckley, and bo.ard members. e.vening of conversation munity and school district
reduction in the· tax rate, on Buckley, the board hired ' technology teacher, for Roger
Abbott,
Randy about our schools," Edwards . partnerships. and how the
the construction part of the Gloria
VanReeth, Troy retirement purposes, ·John Humphreys, Scott Walton, said·. "There is information , community can work with
bond issue.
Weaver and Jackie Newsome Sharp as eighth-grade girls Ron Logan and V1ctor to be gained that will cer- local school systems to
The treasurer reported dur-. as tutors for health handi- . basketball
coac h.
and Young.
tainly help local residents be improve education .
ing the meeting that the last ~upped students at the rate of Kristin Camara as French _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.:___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

from Page A1

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. ·They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subjectto
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone .number. No unsig1ied letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

force · the Easter theme of
rebirth. One woman wrote,
"We should be uplifted on
Easter by the beauty all ..
aroun d us. "
Another person argued,
"Since so many man-made
laws of the Church have .
been changed, changing
Easter wouldn't be any dif. ferent. Those who don't want
·the change probably haven't
gone along with any other
changes in the church laws
·so why wonry about them?"
Many who voted against a .. .
change (33 percent) did so
on the grounds that "Easter ..
should not be a dress
parade."
"Changing Easter so nice ·
clothes can be worn is ridiculous," wrote one couple.
While some people find it
annoying to have to consult ·
an almanac or calendar
every year to find out when
Easter is, .there were those
replying to the poll who said
they like the fact that Easter
comes on a different date
every year.
"He suffered for us," wrote
one re.spondent. "So what is
wrong if we suffer a little
cold weather on Easter?"
(George Plagenz is (In
ordained minister and veteran newsman based m
Columbus, Ohio.)

.

WILMINGTON , Del. (AP)
-· DuPont Co. has pledged to
further reduce the amount of a
chemical used in making the
nonstick substance Teflon, fol. lowing a $108 million settlement w.ith residents along the
Ohio River over possible dr.inking wa[er contamination.
DuPont has used tile chemical, also called PFOA or C-8, at
its Wash ington Works plant
near Parkersburg, W.Va., for 50
. years. Tellon is used to coat
cookware and other products.
Southeast Ohio and West
Virginia residents living near
the plant sued the company in
200 I , claiming the chemical
had gotten into their drinking
water and. posed a health risl(.
Dupont spokesman Cliff
Webb said Tuesday that the
Washington Works plant had
reduced emissions of the chemical by99 percent in the.past six
years. DuPont' l)lanaged the
reductions by recycling PFOA
and us·ing less of it in its products, he said.
DuPont and three other companies that compose the
Fluoropolymer Manufacturers
the
Group
have
told
Environmental
Protection

NEW STUDENT-PROPOSED

SAT SECTION ...

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

· DuPont
to cut amount
- - - LAW YOU CAN U S E - - .
. of
chemical used to make Teflon What you should know about criminal sentencing guidelines
.

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com ·

S~rcont/photo

Student volunteer Ben Johansen spent his. lqst day in Meigs
County sweeping out the gymnasium of the old Pomeroy
Elementary School which is now the Mulberry Community Center.
It took the volunteers three days to clear the gym floor of debris.

Center
from Page A1
Familes-Sharing Strengths"
fund-raising campaign.
"Holzer Clinic and Holzer
Medical Center are always
looking toward the interests
of the patients." added Dr.
· Wayne Munro, the clinic's
president. "We are very
proud of thi s facility and I
believe
the community
should also be proud."
Officials chose to proceed
with opening the center's
first tloor. where treatment
occurs, while continuing to
work on the second lloor,
where non-patient services
will be housed, Tope said.
"The cancer center was
ready and we wanted to move
now," Tope said. ·
The healing garden, a landscaped area adjoining the
building. is still in development and is expected to open
in June, he •dded.
The center will employ IS
people, including its three
physicians .Dr: Jame s
Ungerleider, medical direc-

tor and medical oncologist;
Dr. Khawaja Hamid, medical oncologist; and Dr.
Subhash Khosla, radiation
oncologist, who joined a
panel of officials in di scussing the center's purpose
during the open house.
Planning for the center
began several years ago when
it became clear to local
physicians that the number of
cancer patients seen by the
clinic and the hospital is
climbing.
Currently, between 180 and
190 people· are undergoing
radiation therapy through the
clinic from its multi-county
service area. while the tumor
regi,~try kept by the clinic is
totaling nearly 300.
The center will include a $2
million linear accelerator for
the actual radiation treatment
part of therapy. as well as a
CT simulator allowing staff to
test treatment on a patient
before actual application.
Patients and families will
also undergo support services
through counseling and
HMC's chaplaincy program
led by the Rev. Jay Tatum.
A Navigator position, pro-

layers of dust restin~ in the
rafters of the gymnasmm.
Out side the Mulberry
Community Center Jan
Cassady, 22. and Kevin
Schroeder. 22, were digging
a ditch line .
"Thi s is a different way to
spend spring break," said
Cassady. "It's a way to give
back."
Cassady said he and his
friends could not give finan cially but they could give
their time.
"l see good work being
done here,'' Schrodeder said
about programs at the
Mulberry
Community
Center.
Sixteen Iowa State students and their pastor, Fritz
Wehrealberg , drove five
vehicle s for 14 hours to
donate their spring break to
Meigs County. Their trip
was financed by fundraisers,
their church and their own
money.
"We pay to work,'' Pawlak
said.
After spending the last
week sleepin'g on the floor of
Asbury Methodist Church in
Syracuse. the students begin
their journey home to Iowa
today.

resoh.ltion in support of the
American Cancer Society
Meigs County Relay ' for
Life, a community fundraiser
from PageA1
benefitting the ACS. The
event
will be held from 6
each year for housing rehabilitation and smaller home p.m . on May 13 to noon on
May 14 at the Rocksprings
repair projects. ·
Fairground,
according to
Tru sse ll said she will
County
Health
apply for $500.000 to con- Meigs
Commissioner
Larry
tinue existing housing rehab
Marshall.
work for low and moderateThe . Fraternal Order of
income homeowners, and is
Eagles
Aerie 21}] will sponnow seeking owners ·of
sor
a
spaghetti
dinner benefit. rental · properties housing
low and moderate-income ting the annual Relay from
tenants who would be will- noon until 4 p.m. on
ing to participate in a rental Saturday, M&lt;!fshall said.
Commissioners also:
rehabilitation program. The
• Tabled action on approprogram. if funded, would
provide $15,000 in grant priations requests from the
funding for each rental unit extension service and Soil
to be renovated, and would and Water Conservation
require a cash match from District, pending review of
the property owner.
general fund balances.
At least one rental proper• Denied an animal damage
ty owner has expressed claim filed by David Watson
interest in building new
rental units if partial funding
SPRING VAHEY CINfMA
446-4524 ',
' '1
is secured through the CHIP
grant program . Those units
rehabilitated or· newly constructed )'lould be . reserved
for renters who qualify for
rental assistance for a period
of time after work is ·completed, Trussell said.
The county's application is
due April 26, and a second
public hearing will be held
before then, Trussell said.
Other bruiiness
Commissioners approved a

County

of Pomeroy.
• Recessed until 10 a.m. on
Monday, when they will consider payment of bills.
Present
were
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets.

(]limihJ
OXYGEN

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

SALES/RENTALS
SERVICE
~erving
Meig~

County
for over .
20 Yeat!l!

7

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Home Oxygen
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Free Back Up Oxygen
Portables Delivered when
you want them
7 days a week 24 hrs. service
Complete line of respiratol)'
products
·
Nebulizers. C-pap, Ventilators
and much more.

vided by the American bility of experimental therapy
Cancer Society and tilled by exists through partnerships
Kim Painter will assist with similar cancer treatment.
patients and families. as will centers.
"It's
long-held belief
local ACS volunteers, said
Ungerleider.
that it provides a level of
"It's going to·be the focus of care~" he said. "I hope to
a team,'' he said. "It's people have affiliate relationships
like Jay Tatum, · financial with other cancer centers that
counselors, social workers will provide a greater service
and psychological . services for our community."
who will assist people through . {Additional coverate of
their journey with cancer."
the center will appear in the
Ungerleider said the possi'- Sunday Times-SentineL)

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�FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

"I still remember- that I
was hewn down at the forest's. edge, cut out of my
tree trunk. Strong foes took
me there, shaped me there
Pastor
Thorn
for themselves in the form
of a . spectacle, commanded
Mollohan
me to raise their criminals ,
Warriors carried me there on
shoulders, until that they se t
me on a hill; many foes fas.
.
d
tened me there. 1 then saw dies, 11 produces many see s
Now My heart I.s trou
manl,dnd's Lord hasten with ...
bled, and what shall I say?
great zeal; He wished to ' Father, save Me from thi s .
climb on me ."
hour'? No, it was for this
Sound familiar? Possibly very reason 1 came to thi s
not. Taken from an ancient
poem called the "Dream of hour ... But I, when I am
the Rood" (translated here lifted up from the earth, will
draw all men to myself.· He
by. Alexander Bruce), it wa~ · said this to show the kind of
whrittben by a Christian for death He was going to die"
t e enefit of Anglo-Saxon (John 12:23-24,27 . 33).
warriors· at the · end of the
lOth century. Through it, he
And so He pr~ssed on to .
co. mplete Hi s. ultimate mis weaves a tapestry of words
d
1 h
for a hardy and rough war- ~Ion, re eemtng ost uman rior people who had oniy Jty by .paymg the pncc tor
just begun to hear of the their .s!n wtth H•s own per-.
hope of Jesus Christ.
feet hte.
.
From the' perspective of .. The poem contmues,
the Cross of Calvary, the ~he young Hero stnpped
Himself - that was God
.story was proclaimed ·that almighty
strong and
the Son of God willing)y unflinching; He stepped up
embraced death to take on the high cross, brave in
away the sin of the world.
the sight of many, where He
"(The people of the city) wished. to redeem mankind.
took palm branches and 1 trembled when· the Warrior
·went out .to meet Him embraced me; nor did I
(!esus),
shouting, dare, however, to bow down
'Hosanna!' 'Blessed is He to the earth to fall to the·
Who comes in the · name; of · surfaces of ;he earth. But 1
the Lord! ' ' Blessed is the had to stand firm. As a rood
King of Israel!' Jesus found (cross) 1. was erected; 1
a youn?, donkey and sat raised the powerful King ,
upon It (John 12: 12-13), the Lord of heavens ... with
fulfilling prophecy uttered iron-colored . and sinister
in Zechariah 9:9, "Rejoice nails."
greatly, 0 Daughter of Zion'
"Carrying His own cross,
Shout,
Daughter
of He went out to the place of
Jerusalem! See, yqur king the Skull (which in Aramaic
comes tn you , righteous and is called Golgotha). Here
having salvation, gentle and they crucified Him, and
riding on a donkey, on a with Him two others- orie
on each side and Jesus in the
colt, the foal of a donkey."
The gentle Savior was middle .. : knowing that all
· coming in grace and not in was now completed, and so
judgment but He had no that the Scripture would be
plans to just ride into fulfilled , Jesus said, 'I am
Jerusalem and pick up His thirsty.' A jar of wine vinecrown: ·He was coming to gar wa·s there, so they
embrace the Cross. He knew soaked a sponge in it, put
that the crowds weren ' t the sponge on a stalk of the
readying a throne for His hyssop plant, and lifted it to
use, but a tomb for His bur- Jesus' lips. When He had
ial. He knew that on the receiv~d the drink , Jesus
other side of the shouts of said, 'It is finished.' With
"Hosanna!" were the fren- that, He bowed His head
zied calls to "Crucify Him! " and gave . up His spirit"
''Jesus replied, ' ... I tell (John 19;1 7-18, 19:28~30) .
you the truth, unless a kerThe poem records the
nel of wheat falls to the cross's perspective further,
ground and dies , it remains "I was completely stained
only a single seed. But if it with blood, covered from

r

r

r

r

r

r

Friday, March t8,

"Out of the abundance of
the
heart
the
mouth
the Man 's side after He had speaks," our Lord Je sus
released his spirit. I had Christ taught. "The good
endured on that hill much of person out of his good treacruel fates. I saw the God of sure brings forth good , and
hosts severely stretc11ed out. the evil person out of hi s
Shades of night had covered evil treasure bring s forth
with Clouds the . Lord's evil." (Mt. 12.34-35)
Indeed, how many people
corpse, the bright radi~nce;
have
been hurt by words?
shades went forth ·dar·k
under the sky. All creation How many heart s have been
mourned,
bewailed the broken and families ripped
apart by a fiery tongue ,
King 's. fall; Christ was on "full of deadly poison?"
the cross."
(James 3.8} How . many
For a typical Anglo- friendships
have
been
Saxon warrior, it was hard de stroyed , churches split
to understand why someone and businesses brought to
dYing a criminal's death ruin by one ill-tempered
could be said to be victori- person quick to " pour out
ous. Yet, when the whole evil things ?" (Proverbs
story was told, that His will- 15.28) ·
In his epistle, St. James
irig sacrifice of Hi s own life
would. forever defeat our cautions us to "be quick to
hear, slow to speak, slow to
grea t enemies, sin and anger," (I. 19) becau se the
death, and yet ri se again in
individual who is conglorious re surrection, the tentious , and speaks quick- '
dirge of sorrow gives way to ly and without much
the song of victory indeed'
thougtn or regard for the
And what was the final feelings of others " is a fire ,
word on the matter in the a .world of unrighteous·p oem "The Dream of the ne ss.'' Such a person "stains
R d''" "M th L d b
~o '
ay e or e a the whole body (not only
F11end to me, the. O~e Who hi s own body, but also fam here on earth earlier suf- ilies, churches, bu.s inesses
and · entire communities),
tered on the gallows-tree for
setting on fire the whole
the stns of men: He liberal- course of life, " being himed us and gave us again all self "set on fire py hell."
life, a heavenly ho111e."
(James 3.6)
Let us recall that the Son
In his commentary on the
of God was rushing into · Book of James, R . C. H .
Jerusalem to keep His Lenski comments, The
appointment with Calvary tongue does set fire to the
and that He even ' 'hastened whole round
our being or
to climb the cross" for our existence. Note how some
sake. Let us remember that bit of slander sets a whole
His sacrifice both washes
our sin away and secures for
us an eternity with Him.
And let us also sing the song
of victory'!
. "Death has beeh swallow ed up in victory. Where,
0 death , is your viciory?
Where , 0 death , . is your
sting? The sting of death is
POMEROY - An Easter
sin, and the .power of sin is
play, "The Three Naifs•· will
the law. But thanks be to
be presented at 7 p.m . March·
God! He gives us the victo- 26, at the Rutland Free Will
ry through our Lord Jesus Baptist Church. For more
Christ"
(I
Corinthians information contact Jamie
15:54b-57).
Fortner, 682.-8203.

of

piness.
Above all, our own prayer
should be that of St. Francis
of Assisi: Lord, make me an
instrument of your peace .
Where there is hatred, l~t
me sow love ; where there ts
injury, pardon; where there
is doubt, faith; where there
is despair, hope; where
there is darkness, light;
where there · is sadness, joy.
Grant that I may not so
much seek to he consoled
as to console; to be understood, as to understand, to
be loved, as to love. For It
is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we
are pardoned; and it is in
dying that we are born to
eternal life. Liv.ing out this
prayer and "bringing forth
good from the · good treasure" of our heart, we will
be a blessing to our family
a1)d friends , churches and
bu sines's es and communities.

Jonathan
Noble

village or a town afire. Or
see what vicious propagandadoes in a whole nation or
in
many
nation s.
Internati(Jnal hatreds are
thu s fanned into· wars.
Consider the moral and the
spiritual field.
Vicious
moral teachirig , popular
religious and doctrinal
errors, rage like vast conflagrations and leave countless
victims in their wake. The
whole round ·of existence is
se t aflame by the evil
ton g ue . The mou(h can
breed horrifying consequences or a healing balm,
the "so ft answer" that
(Jonathan Noble is pas"turns away wrath" and tor
of
Trinity
brings pea·c e in its wake. Congregational Church in
(Proverbs 15. I) Theologian Pomeroy, Ohio. He can be
and Christian philoso.pher reached by e-mail -atjnoR. J. Ru shdoony wrote, ble®Jrognet. net_)
"The tongue is a controlling
•••
force for good and evil. Its
(Meigs County mrmsters
power is very great." ·
are invited to submit serWe should be.ware of monettes of arr inspirational
those people who sow seeds nature, 500 ro 550 words,
of di sse nsion, who continu- for rhis Friday page. They
ally complain, who nip at should be typed and deliv. the heels of everything and ered, or e-mailed ro hoeeveryone good and are flir:h@mvda(lysentihel.com.
never quite completely All are subject to editing
happy. The dark clouds of and should not deal with
strife, envy and rancor controversial issues or spealway s bring storms of cijic church doctrine.)
&lt;

Easter play
planned

(Thorn Mollohan has
ministered in Southern
Ohio the past 9-112 years
and is ' the pastor of
Pathway
Comm!Jnity
Church. He and his wife
are the parents offour children. He may be reached by
e-mail
at
pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com)-

r

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Concert to
benefjt Ministry

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Apostolfc

Church' or Jesus Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd.. Pastor: JameS
Miller, Sunday School - 10:30 a.m ..
Evening ·. 7:30p.m.

Sandra Wise, the ' Brian
Family Connection and Ray
and Deloris Cundiff.

United Singers
to pe_rform ·
POMEROY
- Unity
Singers under the direction of
Sue. Matheny will present
"More than Conquerors!" at
7 p.m. Sunday at the Mt. ·
Hermon United Brethren in
Christ Church, Wickham
Road, Pomeroy.

Concert at New
Life church
GALLIPOLIS -

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Chuck

r ·r

Free breakfast
planned .
MIDDLEPORT- A free
breakfast will be served at
dinner
time
at
the
Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Cepter, corner
of Fifth a11d Main, from 4:30
to 6 :30p .m. Friday.
·

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Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6215

-.......

"'l1lo aportMIIMol......
_ wa.W..~~r1 A...,allk Kftant

ARCADIA NURSING
' CENTER
Coolville, Ohio

Located less ·than 30 minutes: from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
1-740-667-3156

"Still small enough to care"

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

_
I

Queen

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

Brazier

,,..,....,....,._doooftdr

700 N. 2nd St.

Wlwlt• nfr " II&gt;
''iw...,. Yoo,-

_,......
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.......
,..........
I

209 Third
Racine, OH

Dairq

.................
...........--..
,,,..
I

uardrail. Fence
s~gn

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

erection

'·'

Middleport, OH
&amp;

(740 } 992·645 1

~--...-

. . . . . F 0 c diiW.alte
W61dt le doolll 1 •tflllo
1 1 ttttd:t,. ..._It was a

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P.O. Box 683
Pomerb Ohio 45769-068

,

-.
w-·.,...-.

iNololfs.W.Wth"'
..
- - " ' ...:...Jdry_.,
~,. ... ,~~~eo ftuollly
d-IWtht'*elp
...... w.-IIIIM&lt;hok:au...U-wm-thtfat••f

,.,

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

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

words abide in you, ye shall
ask w/101 ye will; and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

_nl_ _ ...,..., .........11'atloo&lt;1W..rudlo

a

··r

_

.,,.... ,...... *

Js:

1

t

'"

•:Y

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

333 Page Street
Middl•oort OH

(740) 992-6472
Fax i740i 992-7406

Almo.~phere

Hours
6am-8pm

9rfi[{ie's IJ(estaurani
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked Meals &amp;,Daily !ipuiah

Open 7 days a week
740-992-7713

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God,
Matthew 5:8
· MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeniy, Ohio 45769

l'ii:'.

Services- 10:00 a.m." a nd 7 p.m.

Baptist

Pon1erny Westside Chun:h or Christ
33226 Children's Ho me Rd .. Sunday
St"hool - 11 a.m., \Vouhip - !Oa. m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Carpenter Baptist Chu'rth
Sunduy Schoo l - 9:30am. Preaching
Evenin g Servict'
Service · HUIIarn,

(740) 992-3279

Toi Free 1-877-583-2433

~

Middleport Churth of Christ
5lh and Main, Pastor: AI Han son.

Yo lll~

Minish:r: Josh Ulm, Su nd!ly School - 9:30
11 .m .. Worship- 8:15. l 0:30 a.m.. 7 p. m..

Clu:shire Baptist Church
Pasto r: S tc \"~ Lillie , Sunday School : \1 :30

W~:dm:sday

Morning Worship : 10:30 am. S unda~·

evening: 6:Jll pm Wednesday 6:30p m

- 9:30 a.m .. Worship - II a. m. and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Se~k'e. • 7 p.m.

Sundll)r School 9:15 a .m.
Pls10r:

Episcopal
Grace Episcopal Church
326 E. Mllin St.. Pomeroy. Sunday School
and Holy Eucharist 11 :00 a.m.

Pas lOr Jon Brockert. Ea st · Main SL.
Sunday School - 9 :30a.m .. Worship _-

Holiness
Pastor: Steve Tomek., Main Street,
Rutland, Sunday Wnrship-o-!0:00 ~ . m.,

1-'irr.t "Southern Bapti~t.
4 1872 Pomerny Pike, Pa ~ 10r : E. Lamar
U' Uryant. Su nday Sehoul - 9:30 r1.1n ..

Communion- 10 a .m., Sunday School , 10: l.'i ·a.m ., Youth- ." dO pm Sunday, Bihl e

Danville Holiness ChurCh
31057 Stall:: Rout~ 325, Langsv lle, Pastor:
Victor Rou sh. Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.,
Sunda)' worship - 10:30 a.m . &amp; 7 p.m.,
W~dncsday rraYc r service - 7 p.m.

Ham'sunvi!le Road,
Pastor: Charle s
McKenzie , Sunday Sc hoo l 9: 30 a.m.,

Rose of Sharnn Holiness Churth
Lcadin"g Creek Rd .. Rutl[l nd , Pastor: Rev.

Worship

10:30

a. m..

7:3 0

p.m ..

Wednesday Servic-e - 7:30p. m
Wl"Sieyan Bible H~ines:s Church
75 Pearl St.. Middleport . Pa-;tor: Ri~k
Boume. Sunday School : 10 a.m. Worship
-10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 7: 00 p.m.,
WeOOcstlay Service - 7:30p.m.
Hysell Run Community Church
Paslo r: Re\1. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
- 9:30 a.m., W~hip - Hl!45 a.m., 7 p.m.,
Thursday Bible ·Swdy and Yuutlt - 7 p.m.

Middleport, S u nd&lt;~y School -9:15 a.m .,
Wnrship - 10: 15 a .m., 7: 00 p .m.,

Bradbury Churt'h or Christ
..
Minister: Tom Run yon, :39 55~ Bradbury

Laurel ClifT' F-ree Melhodlst Chun:h .
Pas lor : Glenn Rowe, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.. Wnrship - 10:30 a. m. and 6

Wednesday Sm,icc- 7:00p.m.

Road . Middleport. Sunday Scho_ol - 9:30

p.m .. W~dnesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
The Chun:h of Jesus

Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

S unday School - 9 :30 a.m .. Worshi p and
Co mmunion - 10:30 a.m ., Bub J. Wt!rry.

Christ of Latter·DIIy ~aints
Sl. Rt. 160. 446 -6247 or 44ti-7486 ,

Slh·er Run B•pclst
PaMur: John Swanson, Sunday School -

Minisrer

Sunday School I 0:20-l l a.m ., Rel ie f
SocietyfPriesthood 11 :05- 12:00 noon ,

IUa.m .. Wnrs hip - ll a. m... 7:00 p.m .

BradFord &lt;.:burch of Christ

,Wednesday Sef\· i ..:~s - 7:00p.m.

Comer of St. Rl. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..
Minister: Duug Shamblin, Youth Minister:

Mt. Union Baptist
Pa§lor . Da vid Wise ma n. Sunday School-

Bill Amberger. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor~ hip .- !tOO u. m., l())O a. m. , 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday

Servi ce.~

-?:flO p.m.

Hit:kory Hills Chureh of Christ
Evangelisl Mike Moore. Su.nday School 9 a.rn .. Wor ship - 10 a .m ., 6:30 p.m.
Wedne!Kiay St;rvices - 7 p.m

Wednesday Bible Study - 0:00p.m.
Ba~st

Church

28601 5-t. Rt. 7. Middlcpun. Sunday
School - 10 a.m., E\·ening - 7:00 p.m ..

RmlniUe Church or Christ
Pastor: Philip SIUnn. Sund.ly School: 9:~0
a.m .. Worship Servic i: 10 :30 a.m .. Bible
Study. Wcdnc...Uay, 6 :30 p. m

Thursda)' Scn· ice~ - 7:00
Hillsid~

Dexter Church of Christ

Baptist Church

Sl. Rt. 143 j us! off Rl. 7, Pas tor: Rev.
James R. _Acree. Sr., Sunday Unified
Se rv ice. Wotshi p - IO :JO a.m.. 6 p.m ._.
· Wedncsd&lt;~ y Scrv ict:~ -7 p.m.

· Railroad St. , Ma..'lon. Su nd,ay School · 10
a.m .. Wors hip - 11 a.m .. 6 .p .m.
Wednt.!sday Scrvico;s- 7 p.m.

Sunday sc hoo l 9 :30a.m.. Sunday wor.&gt;hip
- 10:30 a.m.
Chun:h of Christ
ln h:rscclio n 7 and 124 W. Evangelist:
Dennis Sargent, Sunda y Bible S!udy ·
!:UO a. m.," Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:]0 -

Christian Union

·Lutheran

your light so shine before
that they may see your
works and glorify your
lf'atl1er in heaven."
Matthew 5: 16

Our SaviOur Lutheran Chun:h
Walnut and "Henry Sis .. Ra\·enswood.
W.Va., Pastor: Dav id Ru ssell, Sunday
School - lO:(X) a.£;11 .. Worshi p - 11 a.m.

Ch ~s ter

Bethel Worship Center
School, Pastor: Rob Barber ,

.

p.m.

Middlcpo rt - PB~ to r

Salem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall, Sunday

Sunda y

.

ML Moriah Churth ol God
Mile Hill Rd., RaCine. Pas tor: Jame s

a.m. Pastor: lames P. Brady
Sat. 7:00 put Contemporary Service

Patty Wade. 60J Secood Ave. Mason. 7H-'
50 17, Service li mt: : Sunday 10:3 0 a.m .,

RU 31S, Antiqui1y. Pas10r: Jesse Morris.
Scrv.i t.;t'~: S~ tu rda} :!:OU p.m.

· Wedne sday 7 pm
Salem Communil)" Church
Back qfWc!&gt;! Co lumllia . W.Vu.om Lie ving

Abundant Grace R.F. I.
923 S. Third St., Middlepon. PahiOr Teresa
Da\·t~.
Sunda y sen·tc('. 10 ;t.m . .

22 ~8 .

Wed_nesday service. 1 p.m.

e~ening scn•ice 7:00 pm . Bibly Study

Road. Paslor: Charles Ruush {3 04~ 675 Sundt!)' Sc-h!)jll 11:30 am, .Sunday
Wednesday

p.m.
Syracuse Flnl Chun:h ot God
Appl~ and Second Sis., Pastor: Re\'. David
Russell , Sunday Schpoland Wunhip- 10·
a .m . E,;ening. Ser-vices- 6 :30 p .m .,
Wednesday Services ~ 6:30p.m.

Graham Unittd Mc:thodilit
Wo rship - 9:30a.m. O sl &amp; 2n d Sun). ,
7 ~ 30 p. m. (3rd &amp; ' 4th Sun). Wednesday
Service - 7:30p.m.

/

Mt. Olht United Methodist:
Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Pastor: Rev.

C111nnei-Sullon
Carme l &amp; Bas han Rds. Racine , Ohio.
Paslor: John GilmOre, S_undily School 9:30 a .m., Worship - 10:45 a.m. , Bible
Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Faith Full Gospel Chun:.h
Lo ng Bnuom ,- Pastor: Slelll! Reed, S unda ~
School - 9 :30a.m. Worship - 9 :30 a.m

Hobson Christi•n 1-'ellowship Churth
White, Sunday School -

Pn~t Q r : H c l');~hc l

tO am. Sunduy Churt·h semce - 6:30pm
Wcd11c.'ida) 7 pm

Harrison,·il~

Community Churth

Restoratlon ( ' hristi•n Fellowship
9365

Pasto r: Theron Durhaffi. Sunday - 9 :30
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wt:Unesd ay- 7 p.m.

ANDt.RSON
FUNFRAI HOMF

Hnt)per

Road.

r\lhens.

Pastor

Lonnie Coal~. Sunday Worship !0:00am ,
' Wedne sday: 7 pm ·

MiddlepOrt Community Church
575 Pearl SL , Middlepon , !'a st or : Sam
Anderson. S unday School 10 a.m ..
Evening · 7:30p.m., Wednesday S e rvi ~e7 :30p .m .

Langq,•ille Christian Chun:h
Full Gospel. Pas1or: Rohen Musser,
Sunday Schno l 9:30a m.. Worship 10:30
am - 7:00 pm . Wednesday Service 7:00

Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunday School · 11
a.m ., Worship- 10 a.m.

Faith Valley T•bemade Church
Bailey Run Road, Pa stur: Rev. Emmell
Raw son . Sunday Evening 7 p .m ..

East Letart
Pas tor· ·am Mars~all Sunday School 9a.m., Worship - 10 a.m., l si Sunday

Thui'sday Service - 7 p.m.
SyractL'it l\.~ls..~ion

Hoback.

every month evening service 7:00 p.m.;

141 1 Bridgeman St., Syracuse, Sunday
School - 10 a.m . Evening - 6 p .m.,

~ ~ e ni ng

Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Ra~lne

Pastor: Pt:te Shaffer, Sunda}' .School - 10

I

Pentecostal
Penle(ostal Assem~h·
1~4. Racme. Pastor
William

St. Rt.

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday
- 7 p.m..

School

-

Wedn ~:sday

10 a.m..'
Services - 7

p.m

Presbyterian

'

Hazel Cm;nmunlty Church
OfT R1. 124, Pastor: Edsel Hart, Sunday

Sch~l ·9: 30a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m .. '

Syracuse •'irK United t'~byterian
Paslor: Rollcn Crow. Wnrship . 11 a.m.
Harri.wnville Prrsh~tf'rian C hurch

Coolvlllt United Methodist Parish
Paslor: Hele n .Kline. Coolv ille Churc h.
Main &amp; Fifth St .. Sunday Sc'hool · 10
a.m.. Wors hip - 9 a.m .. Tuesday Servict:s -

Dyes~Uie Communit)· Church

Pas1or: Rohcn Crow, Wor&lt;&gt;hi p - 9 a.m .

Sunday School - 9:.30 a. m . Wo rsh tp -

10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
P&lt;~ slor:

Township Rd .. 46SC. Sunday School - 9
a .m. Worship - 10 a .m., Wednesday

Hockingport Church
Grand S!reet. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
Worship- 10:30 a.m. , Pastor Phillip Bell

Subhath Scriool - .2 p.m .. Worship - 3 p.m.

Worship - 10 :45 a. m.. 7:.\0 p. m ..
Wednesd11y 7:30p.m.

United Brethren
.\11 . Hennon l lnited Brethren
in Christ C hi.Jrch
Tcxa~ Cnmmull il~- 3 6-111 W1d:hanl Rd .

~rship - 10 :30a. m.

Service- 7 p.m .

Pastor: Pe ter Martin dale. Sunday School 9 :30a. m.. Wor..hir : 10:.\0 a.m .. 7.00

Nazarene

f'ull Gospel

'

Lilitt~OUM:

Middleport Chun-h or the Naurene

_33045 Hilaitd Road. Pomeroy. Pastor: Ruy
Huntt:r, Sunl.iay s~· huo l - 10 a.m., Evening

Paslor: Allen Midcap. Sunday School ·9:3 0 a.m., Wors;flip - 10: 30 a.m., 6:30 p.m ..

7:.\0 p.m .. Thesday &amp; Thursday · 7:.10
p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.. Pastor:
Alkn Midcap
FrUuwshlp

-7

R-Ille

F111ilh Guspel Church
Long Bottom. Sunday School - 9:30a.m •.

Mt. Olive Community Church

Services· 7 p.m.

Worship - 9:30 a.m ., Sund11y School 10:30 a.m .• Fint Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. service

p.m.

. SyncuR Church of tiH NlZirtnt
Paslor Mike Adkins, SunrJay School - 9 :30
a.m .. Wors hip - 10:30 a .m .. 6 p .m .•
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

r
Pomtroy Chun:h of tht Nuartnr
Pastor: Jan Lavender. Sunday Sc hool ~:30 a.m., WOtsbip - 10:3 0 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

South Bethel Community Church
Silve r Ridge - Paslor Linda Damewood .
Sunday School - 9 a. m.. Worship Sen,.icc
10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sund!&amp;y

----·· ··_.llllltl

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.

Matthew 5:8

p.m .. Wcdn c~du y Sen in:s - ( :00 p.m .
Youth gruur me ctin ~ J nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7 p.m
Edl'n l"nit~ Brethren in Cbriit
State Rnu!(' 12-i . Rccds\"ille. Sunday

S~:hool - 11 a:rn .. Sunda)' Worship - 10:00
a.m . &amp; 7:()0 p.m. Yl- edni'"~da y Services 7(00 p .m .. Wednesday Yo!-Jth Ser\"ice 7:00p.m

C•rleton lnaerdeaomiaadonal Chun-h
Kingsbury Road , Pastor: Robert Vam."C.
Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m:. Worshi p
Service 10:30 a.m., Evening Service 6
p.m.
Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, "on Co . Rd . 31. Pastor: Re, .
Roger Willford. Sunday School -9:30a .m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

White'• Cbopet w'""'tu
Coo-lville Road, Pastor: Re-v. Phillip

Cbnter Churth or the Naarnw

Ridenour, Sunday School

- 9:30 a.m:,

ROCKSPRINGS
REHA&amp;ILITTION CENTER
. . l . . ._

Adventi.~r

Pastor: Lawrence Bush. Sunday School 9:30a.m., E~· enin}t - 6:30 p.m.. Wedncday

Pa sto r· Jane Beanie. Worship - 9 a.m ..
Sunday School - 10 a.m . . Thuriday

· LonaBoUom
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m.

St-venth-Day

Mulberr y Ht,. Rd .. Pome roy. Pa s10r:
Ben nett Lud:. 1 c~h. Saturday Servic·es:

Ton:b Chun:h
Co. Rd . 63, Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,

Reeds~We

Pasto r: Bob Randolph . Worship - 9:30
a. m. Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

Sunday schoOl - 10 a.m .. Worship - · ll
a.m., Wednesday Serv1ce- · 7 p.m.

Services- 10 a.m.

Church of the Nazarene. Pastor· Jamie
Pettit, Sunday School - 9:3 0a.m .~ Worship
- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m., Wednesday Services

Chater

Middlepor1 Presbyterian
Jamn Sn)dt&gt;r. Won.!ttp- I I a.m.

Morse Cbapel Churth
Bethel Chlirch

Worsh ip - II a-111·· 6:30p.m.

Pomeroy

l!ffiJ

7:00pm

pm

Wo rship -. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m .. Thursday

K&amp; C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

~o:rvice

Pastor: John Gilmor~ . Sunday Sc hoo l - 10
a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m .. Wednesday
' Sef'·ices • 10 a.m.

United Methodist

Joppa
Rutland Churth or God
• Pa stor: Ron _Heath, Sunday Worship - 10
a.m., 6 p.m ., Wednesday Services - 7

.

f'ull Gospel C hurch
or the Living Savior

and 7 p.m .. Wed11estia y- 7 p.m., Friduy •
.. fe llows hip sCrvtct' 7 p.m

Bethany"

a.m. &amp; 7 p. m. Wcdnc11day - 7 p.m . &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.
.

AKape Life Center
" Fui i-!Jos pcl Chu rc h". Paston J o hn &amp;

School - 10: 15 a.m .. Worship - 9:15a.m ..
Bi ble Study: M01day 7:00 pm
Sno\nllle
. . Sunday S~.:houl- 10 a.m., Worship - 9 a. m.

Victory Ct'nter

3773 George~ Creek Road. Ga!lipolis, OH
Pastm · Bill Slaten. Sunday Servire~ · 1_0

10:30 a.rn. &amp; 6:30pm. Wct.~n~:sday Serv ice
-6:30 p.ni.\ Youth Se~·ice- 6:30p .m.

St.- Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Po~eroy,
Sunday School - 9 :45 a.m., Worship - 11

Beanie, Sunday School - 9:30 a_. m.,

Church of God

'
Clifton Tahern"a dt Church

Clifton. W.Ytl.. Sy nduy S..:hoo! - 10 a.m.,
Wurship - 7 p.m.. Wt.-dnesday Service · 1

Ass istllnt Pastor: Karen Davis. Sunday
Worship: 10 am. Even ing Worship : 6 pm,
Youth group 6 pm. Wedn e~day : Po wer in

, 7 p.m

Services - 7:00 p.m.

992-66n

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

Lawr&lt;'llct' Furem;~n, Wurship- 10:00 am
Wedne'«.iay Sen•1 ce~- 7 p m

7:30 p.m.

If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
words abide in you, ye shall
SERVICES
ask what ye wil~ and it shall
214 E. Main
be done unto you.
992·5130
John 15:7
Bill

10:30 a.m ., Wednesday Ser\'ices - 7 :00
.p.m.

Ash St..

9: 30a .m.. Worship - I0:30a.m .. Thursdt~y
Sct"\lices- 7 p.m.

p .m.

Mrigs Couperali\'e Parish
Northeast. Cluster. Alfred , Pastor&gt;! Jane

992-a1es

BUSINESS SERVICES.

Rejoicing Lire Churth
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middle~rt. Pastor:
Mike Foreman . Pastor: Emeritus

Sehoul - 9:30a.m .. Morning Wo rship -

Rutland
Pastor: Rick Bnurne. Sunday Schoo l -

Brady

Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m .. Wo rsh ip 10:3 0 a. m .•. ~7 : 00 p .m .. Wednesday

p.m.

Fru Will Baptist

,6:00p.m .. Wednesday - ~:00 p.m.

Asb Street Church

Y9u1h

a. m.. Worship ·- 11 a.m.. Wednesday

a.m., Worsh!P- 10:45 a.m.

Salem si.. Pas tor: Jamie Fonner. Sunday
School - I 0 a .m ., EveniOg - 7 p .m .,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Church
Pastor: Wayne R. Je""·e ll . Sunday Service -

N~: ..· ur._.

Pine Gro\le, Worship ·- 9 :00a.m., Sunday
Schoo l - 10 :00 a.m . Pastor : Jam es P.

Servict•s - 7 P;m.

Rc\'. Gilbert Craig. Jr.. Sunday Schoo l -

Pastor: Don Walker

. Stivers:vlllr Community ApostoUc

. Prayer , and Bible Study -·7 pm

Pomeroy
Pa sw r: Brian tiunham. Worship - 9:30
a. m., Sunday Scho.1!- 10}5 a. m.

St. John Luthersn Church

Hartford Cburth ;, Christ in '1
Christian Union
Hartford , W. Ya ., Pa stor : David Greer,

Sauerfield. Sunda)' School - 9:4.5 a. m.•
Evening - 6 p.m., Wednesday Services- 7.

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School - 9 :."\0 a.m. : Wor ship 10:4.S a .m.. Sunday Evening - 6:00 p.m..

Prarl Ch11pel
Sunday School- 9 a.m .. Worshi p - 10 a.m.

Sen ice- 7:30 p:m.

Ponland-Racine Rd .. Pastor: Jim Proffit!.
Sunday School - 9 :3 0 a.m., Wo rsh i_p -

Mlnersvlll~t

Pa5tor: Bob Ro binson. Sunday School - 9
a. m.. Worship - 10 a.m.

Ralph Spires, Sunday Sc hool - 9:30a.m.,

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St ., Middl ~ port! Pa stnr:
9 :~0

Sacrament Ser\liec 9 - 10: 15 a.m ..
Ho memaking mceting, 1st Thurs .- 7 p.m.

p.m.. We~sday Bible S!ud)' · 7 p.m.

FoJYst Run Baptist
Pa§tor · Arius Hurt, Sunday Sch('Kll - l 0
a.m .. Worship - II a.m.

Wednc~ay

Morning Star
Rutland Church ofChrioit

Old Bethel free Will

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Su nday SchOOl 9:30a.m .. Worship - 11 :00a.m.

Pine Gron Bible Holint!i!'l Church

1n mile off Rl . 325, .Pastor: Rev. O'Ddl

S1udy Wednesday 7 pm

Pastor · Daniel Mecca. Sunday School 9.30 a.m., Sunday Worship - 10:JU a.m ,

Cal,, ·a!1)Bible C hurch
Pomeroy Pik~. Co . Rd ., Pastor: Re\' .
Bl ackwood. Sunday School -. 9:30 a.m .•
Wmhip
10·30 a.m..
7:30 p .m .,

Worship - 11 a.m .. 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday

Service - 7:00p .m .

f'irst Baptist Chun'h
Pas tor: Mark Morrow. flth and Palm~r St..

a.m.
Worshtp- ID :30 a.m

Friday. 7 p.m.

Community of Christ
Heath (Middleport )

Manle y, Sundity Scflool - Y:3 0 a.m .,
10 :30 a.m .. 6:30 p,m .

Faith ~ellowihip C~r lor thrill
Pastor: Rev. Frankli n Dickens. Service :

Ou.IJ Chrhdan Fellowship
(Non-de11ominational fellowship )
Meeting in the old American Legion l~all
South Fourth A\'enue, Middleport
Pastor: Chris Stewan 10:00 am Sunday
Other meetings in homes

Sunday Service-? p.m .

a.m ., Worship
10 a .m ..
Fellowship, Sunda y- 6 p.m.

Tuppen Plain Church of Christ
.1ns rrumcnra1 , Wnrship ·s e rvice - 9 a.m .•

Wrn-ship - 8: 15a.m .. 9:45am &amp; 7:00 p.m..
Wedocsday Ser\' iccs - 7:00 p.m.

Bethlehem BapUsl Churth ·
Great B ~ nd . Hout(' 1::!4 , Rac ine . OH .

Foresl Run
Pas lor: Bob Robinson , Sunday School • I 0
a,m.. Worship - 9 a.m.

pmycr mce ling- 7 p.m .

9:3 0 a.m., Worship - 1 0:~0 a.m .. 7:00
p.m., W~dne.'idaY Serv ice~ · 7 p.m

p .m ..

Flat"'·Oods
Plistor: Keith Rader, Sunday School - 10

3rd Sunday

Zion Chun:h or Christ
Pomeroy, Harri so nville Rd. (Rt.l4.~).
Pastor: ~oger WallOon , Sunday School -

lO :~OII. m

a .m.. h t ning - 6 :30
W.- dnc~day Scrvb·s- 6:.'0p .m.

10:30 a.m., Wor~hip • 9:30 a.m .. Bible
· Study )Ved. 7:30

a.m ., Worship - I I a.m.

l'om eroy First Baptist

9 :4 ~

Arla~dE~:~r~:nday School -

10:30 a.m.. Pa_stor-Jeffrey Wallace. 1st and

Wednesday Services - 6 :30 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m .. Worship- 7:00
p.m., Wedne'iday Bible St udy ·7:00p.m.

p .m., Wedne sda ~·

Am•Dna Grace COmmunity Churth
PMtpr: Wayne Dunlap. State Rt. 681 .
TuppeR Plains! Sun. Woo;hip : 10 ~ &amp;
6:30 pm .. Thur!iday B i~ le Study 7:00 p.m.

Rock Sprinys
P11s!or.: Keith Rader. Sunday Schoo l - 9: 15

u. m.
Wors hip -

Fairvll'W Bible ChuiTh
Letan. W.Va. Rl. I. Pastor: Brian May,

Other Churches

a.m., WednesdaY St:rvice§- 7:30 p.m.

Dewey King. Sunday sc: hool - 9:30 a.m ..
Suqday
wor~hip -7 p.m., Wednesda y

Bearwallow R_idge Chun:-h ur Christ
Pa slor :Aruce Terry, Sunday S('hool -9: ~0

Rutland First Baptist Churth
Sund&lt;ty Se-hou l · 9 :30 a.m.. Worship 10:45 fi.Jil .

-7 p.m .

Sunday School ·. 9 :45 a.m .. Wonhip - II

St:rvice s · 7 p.m .

Keno Chun:h or Christ
Wo rship - 9:30 a.m., Sunday' School -

Hope Baptist Chu~h (Southern)
.'i711 (]rant St., Middleport . Sunday schnu l

KEHLER

618 E. Main Street • POmeroy
(740) 992-7270

Trlnlcy Church
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy, Pastor: Re".
Jonathan Noble, Worship 10:25 a.m.,

Cah·ary Pilgrim Chapel

7:00pm. Wednesday Bible S1udy 7:00pm.
Interim _Preacher - l-l oyd RuH

Local sourc;e for trophies ,

An Income Ttu &amp;

Congregational

Pastor: Rev. Herben Grate, Sunday Sc:hool
- 9 :3 0 a.m ., Wotship - II a.m .", 6 p.m,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m. Rutland Church ohhe Nazarenr
Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m.: Worship 10 :30 ' ll .m., 6 :30
Services - 7 p.m.

Central Cluscer
Asbury (Syracuse), ·Pastor: Bob Robinson ,

Cnmmunlly Churth
Pomeroy Churth of Christ
21:2 W. Main Sl., Ministt:r: Anthony
Morri ~- Sunday Schocil - 9 :3 0 a.m ..
Wor~ hip- 10: 30 a.m ., 6 p.m. , Wed.r11: sday
Ser\"ices - 7 p.m.

740.992-6128 '

•

.

Hemlock Grove Christian Church

Middleport, OH

Financial Services Firm

.-7:30p.m.

p .m.

Minisler: Larry Brown. Worship - 9:30
a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 a. m., Bible
Study -·7 p.m.

Liberty Assembly nr GOO
P.O. Bu;r; 467 , Dudding Lane, Mason,
W.Va .. Pa~ tnr: Neil Tennant, Sunday

Rutland

" Do not steal. Do not lie. Do not deceive one another."
Leviticus 19; II

'

Pastor: Jane Beattie, Sunday SchoOl ·- 9
a.m., Worship - 10 a.m., Tuesday Services

Church of Christ

Assembly of God

Ia ues !-shirts and more

Ia,...,

Dl•a ., 33:2'7. 1M eret'UI Get~
lwtf""'pt... .-4 rs 1 ntatb an 1tw
roaiMioj--.. ." GN't......,.w I' ...... b,...rlo&lt;al"-ol'"'ow...,_U.
woiUiloon .. . - - , . . -.......

. .,

"A Home B.mk for
Home

If ye abide in Me, and My

Wolloelth~oi'-"'J

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

7 40-949-221 0

29670 Bashan Rd •
Racine, OH

.......t-.Wt.lllllelioe

•

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community. Services
. Ovi:rbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
•A Celebration of Ufe"

Warm FriemJJy

alllotullp..l-lluto4dlor_tht .........
Mlr.nllallly.. • .sat

Chapman , Sundiy School - 10 a.m.,
Worship - II a.m., Wednesday S.:rvices - 7

a.m., Da iJy Mass- 8.30 a. m.

Services: Su n 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m ..
Thurs 7:00 p.m., Pastor MartyR. Huuo n

E. Kee sfe. Worshi p -·-10a.m .. 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Sm•i•.: es- 7 "p.m.

'I

Roofing &amp; Building Work

' Morning worship II am Evening - 7 pm ,
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Heart ·catholic Chun:h
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898,
Pas1or: Rev. Waller E. Hein z. Sal. Con.
4:45 -5: 15p.m.; Mass- 5:30 p.m .. Sun.
Con. -t\:45-9: 15 a.m ... Sun. Mass - 9 :30

Emm~tnuel Apustulk Tabernacle Inc.
Loop Rd nff New Lim11 Rd. Rut land,

Faith Baptist Chun·h

26 years In local business.

Tuppers Plains St. Paul

S~acred

A]X'Sto li~· Wmsh ip Center. 873 S. ·J1d ·
A\•e.: Middleport, Ke.vin Konklt:. Pasw r,
· Sunday. 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, 7:00
p.m ~. Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.

Victory Baptist !ndependent
525 N. 2nd Sl . Middlepo n , Pashlr: James

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Young's carpenter Service

Ch•rth of God of Prophecy
0.J. Whit.: Rd. off St. Rt. 160, Pastor: P.J.

Catholic

River Valley

:~m,

Steond Baptist Church
Ravenswood, WV, Sunday School 10 am-

Pastor: Ri ck Rule, Sunduy School • 9 :30
a. m .. Wt1nh.tp - HJ :411 a.m., 7:00 p .m .• ·

MASON - A benefit for
the World Christian Outreach
Ministry will be held at 7
p.m.
Saturday
at
the
Christian Brethren Church in
Mason. Singing will be

r

r

FJ!llowship

Racint Firsl Haptist

Compton will present a con, cert at 7 p.m. Friday at the
New Life Church of God.
There wi II be a pre-concert
adt · 6:30 p.m. with the
Earthen
Vessels .
Refreshments will be served
following the concert. For
more . information call 6753538.

The

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

d h
pain, suffenng an un ap-

·

nel.com

2005

Church Events

r

March 1

Beware
the
Power
of
the
Tongue
.
I
·
·

A Hunger For More -

r

PageA6

Let your lighr so shine before
men, rhat rhey may see your
careY"" deserve, close to home good works alld glorify your
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Father in heaven."
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ·
Manhew5:16

740-992-6606

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man."

Acts 24:1

!fnurcis Florist
Meigs County's Oldest Aorist
EastMaln
~
Pomeroy, Oh
•
.
~lJ11.1~

cand

!tQIH

thcMia,htl with CJIII!III CMI

740-8$2·2644

God so loved the world
he gave his only
lbel!OJ'ten son ...
John 3: /{j

.
...

6noufftr'•
.1in &amp; 61frtp

".,.
.......,.
,.. ......, ..............._.........
.....

-·-

1

740-992-6288

· MY arace is sufficient
for thee: for my
strenath is made
·Perfect in weakness.
n Cor. 12:9

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

�'
••

The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

OHIO

Friday, March 18, 2005

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
· Wildcat&amp; claw EKU, Page 82
WVU dunks Creighton, Page B2

NCAA tournament recap, Page B2
Ohio prep boya basketball, Paga B4

Coast Guard disciplines tow captain in Ohio River barge accident Local Stocks
BY BRIAN FARKAS
'ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CHARLESTON, W.Va. · The Coast Guard . has disciplined a towboat captain
found .to have misjudged
Oh10 Rtver currents during a ,
January flood, leading ·to a
barge accident that closed 42
miles of the waterway for
nearly two weeks.
In an investigative report
obtained by . The Associated
Press, the Coast Guard said it
warned of high and fast-moving water the day before the
Jan. 6 accident but the tow
captain "failed to request an
assist ·tow during severe
weather conditions and he
failed to ensure his tow and
vessel was adequate given
the river conditions."
Based on ..its investigation.
the Coast Guard suspended
.
Victor A .. Baker's merchant
mariners license for one
, .
.
.
.IU' photo
month and laced him on two Men work to remove a trapped barge on the Oh1o R1ver lodg1ng the gates open at the Bellvtlle Lock
months' /robation Baker . and Dam 1n th1s Jan. 25 file pl1oto taken 1n Bellville, W.Va. The Coast Guard diSCiplined a towboat
whose home addre s~ was noi captain found to have misjudged Ohio River currents during a January fiood , leading to a barge
released, was also required to acc1dent that closed 42 m1les a: the waterway for ~early two weeks.
attend refresher courses in
According to the Coast
Because of the amount of about 200 to .300 feet so he
navigation and pilot house
Guard report, Baker and the debris in the lock chamber. could get a running start.
management.
.
Once it hit the current "it
"He was ·an ·experienced . company, B&amp;H Towing Inc. Baker . pu shed the towboat
of
Paducah.
Ky
..
decided
not
into
the
river
so
debris
accujust
stopped," Vargo said.
pilot," Coast Guard investiin
front
of
the
two
mulated
to
delay
the
trip
because
the
·
"That's
what the investigagator Lt. Chris Vargo said
Tuesday. 'That why we're towboat had . successfu lly leading barges could be swept tion concluded. The reason it
requiring him as part of the navigated a stretch of river into the river. He then backed stalled out ... there was obvidownstream the barge into the chamber ously a lack of power," he said.
settlement agreement to go immediately
from
the
Belleville
lock.
through a refresher course."
"The information used by
The .towboat Jon J. Strong
stalled in the current as it was both B&amp;H Towing and the
pushing 12 coal barges out of Master in making the deterthe Belleville Lock and Dam . mination to push 12 loaded
Nine barges . broke free anp barges did not accurately repthree of them crashed into resent the true conditions at
dam, jamming its water 'con- the loci&lt; prior to this cas ualtrol gates open. A fourth sank ly," the report said.
A person whO answered the
next to the dam.
Because the gates couldn 't phone at B&amp;H on Tuesday
. Friday, March 18
from the southeast as the
be closed. water levels in the said company officials were
Morning
(7
a.m.-Noon)
.
evening
progresses.
river between .Belleville and out of the office and not
Temperatures will rise to 52
Overmght (1·6 a.m.)
the Willow Island Lock and available for comme nt.,
with
today's
low
of
32
occurTemperatures will linger ·at
Vargo said when the Jon
Dam fell too low for barges to
dog
around
6:00am.
Skies
Skies will be partly
40.
navigate. The U.S. Army J. Strong left the lock , it
be
sunny
to
mostly
sunny
will
cloudy
to cloudy with 5 MPH
Corps of Engineers closed the · didn ' t have enough momensection between Jan. 19 and tum to push into the oncom- with 5 MPH winds from the winds from the south.
southeast turning from the
Feb. I. The closure cost about ing current.
Saturday, March 19
$2.5 million a day in lost
"The water in the lock cham- south as the morning progresses.
Morning
(7 a.m.-Noon)
commerce and resulted in two ber is nowhere near the same
Afternoon (1·6 p.m.)
It shciuld be a cloudy mornclass-action lawsuits by resi- current a~ the river," he said.
Temperatures
will
stay
neilr
ing.
Temperatures will climb
dents who say the drop in
To break into the current.
53
with
today's
high
of
55
38 to 52 by late this
from
water caused their riverfront some captains back up their
occurring
aroUfld
3:00pm.
morning. Winds will be 5 to
property to erode and slip.
tows td get a running start.
Skies will be mostly sunny I 0 MPH from the south.
with 5 MPH winds from the
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
sou th turning from the east as ' It should remain cloudy.
the afternoon pr,ogresses.
Expect light rain. The rafu is
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight) predicted to start near
Temperatures will hold 3:00pm. Expect accumula·
steady around 42. Skies
tions
of 0.07
inches.
BY JOHN McCARTHY
required to tell approaching range froni mostly clear to Temperatures will hover at
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
ofticers that they had permits partly cloudy with 5 MPH 53. Winds will be 10 to 15
winds from the east turning MPH from the south.
and were armed, he said.
COLUMBUS - For the
The State Highway Patrol's
first time since Ohioans were apposition to concealed
permitted . to carry hidden weapons in cars led Gov. Bob
guns: legislators want to Taft to threaten a veto unless
rev1sU . the yea.r-old law to ·· the patrol was satisfied. The
address com~lamts that rules patro.I sees no reason to
abou\ guns 111 c~s are too remove the provi sion that
stnct and JOurnahsts ~hould guns must be locked or visinot ~ave access to hsts of ble in cars, spokesman Lt.
penmt·h~lders.
Rick Zwayer said.
A leadmg opponent of con- · "We haven ' t . seen any
cealed weapons saod Thursday adverse problems on the side
she fears the effort wtll lead to of permit holders at large, or
even more changes that would dealing with weapons in
httlttNM
endanger ~ubh~ safety.
vehicles," Zwayer said. "It
The l~w s ongmal sponsor, struck a balance that provid.
Preacher &amp; Singer
Repubhcan
Rep. . J1m ed for the safety of motorists,
As,lamdes of Coshocton, sa1d law enforcement officers and
he s workmg · With law others in those' vehicles."
Palm Sunday
enforcement officoals and the
Taft also opposed the idea of
attorney general's office on restricting the access the media
March 20, 2005 at the 11 A.M. Service
. the changes. The pnmary have to permit holders' names
Pastor Keesee Welcomes Everyone
requirements that permit and addresses. However,
Nursery Provided ·
seekers pass a background Aslanides said the publication
More Information call
check and t.ake 12 hours of of the names creates concerns
992-9052 or 992-7lll
safety trammg. w11l not be for the safety of permit holders
525 N. 2nd • Middleport, OH
and their families. He said didchanged, Aslamdes sa1d.
"'Yhat my office is going to n' t yet know how his bill
~o IS . find a balance. Our would change access.
mtent IS not to relax it to the
point that anyone in Ohio
would be uncomfortable,"
Asian ides said.
Aslanides has n\et with represent;ttives of the Buckeye
State Sheriffs' Association,
the Fraternal Order of Police
and other .law enforcement
groups about carrying guns in
cars, applying for permits and
clarifying the law concerning
where off,duty officers can
carry concealed guns. He
. expects to introduce legislation this summer.
He advocates elimination of
the rule that permit holders
must either lock up their ljUn
while in a car or keep it vistble
to others in the car and to
police officers who approach
the car. ·Some opponents of the
restriction say removal of the
gun from its· holster increases
the chance of an accidental
shooting, but Aslanides feels
the law is unevenly enforced.
"1' m mDI'e concerned with
the way officers have the ability to arrest practically anyone
because they say they can't
see it clearly,': Aslanides said.
Permit holders carryi ng
guns in cars would sti ll · be

ACI- 45.87
AEP- 33.91
Alao-44.88
Ashland Inc. - 67.78
ATAT-18.88
Bll-12
Bob Evans .- 23.•35

Bor&amp;Wamer - 50.82
Champion - 4.05
Charmlne Sho~ - 8.20
City Holdlni - 30.91
Col- 47.38
DG -21.82

DuPont - ·51, 58
Federal MoJul - .38
USB- 29.22
Gannett- 80

General Electric - 35.37
GKNLY- 5.10
Harley Davidson - 80.15
Kmart - 124.87
Kroger - 15.75

Reverend Wayne McLaughlin

'·

lioya basketball state
· tour"a~nent pairings
COLUMBUS (AI0) - Painnga for tho
2005 boya state basketbaN tournament~

SEMIFINALS
AN gamss at Valw City Arena.
COlumbus
•
'

Dally stoek reports are the 4
p.m . .cloalnll quotes of the prev~
cius day's transactions, provided
by Smith PartnetS at Advnt Inc;
of Gallipolis.

DIIIISION I
Mansfield Sr. (24-1) vs. Can. McKJniey

(25-1), Friday, 5:15p.m.; Cln. Sl. Xovi"'
(21·5) 11$. Cln. MeeDer (22-3), Frlday,
8:30p.m.
·
FINAL - Saltlrdsy. 8:30p.m. .

DIVISION HI

t

FINALS
DIVlSIONII

j

Wooster Tfiv,o3y (2~-3) vs. Upper
Sandusl&lt;y (26-0) ..
FINAL-. Saltlrdsy; 10:45 a.m.

And Win

DIVISION IV

Cle. Hts. Lutheran E. (20-5) va. M!flotor
(21-&lt;1) VB. Cola. Afilcentrlc (28-1).

FINAl- - Salti/Uoy, 2 p.m

Thursday's results
: DIVISION II
.
Upper Sandui!I&lt;Y 116, Dayton Dunbar 90·
Wooster Trlway·71, Llnden-1.1cKinley 70

CLUE FOR FRIDAY.

DIVISION IV

Lulh8111n East 86. Mln&amp;ter 84 (20T)
Afrlcentrlc 61. Continen1al45
·

MARCH 18. 2005
Think of the egg~~~ pot of gold
and think of where you'd find it
It might be eagy, it might not be
But uge common geMe qnd you'll gee

I

I

Legion baseball
meeting Sunday
MIDDLEPORT An
organizational meeting for
any players interested in
playing American . Legion
baseball for Post 1.2~ will
take place 2 p.m. Sunday at
the· old American Legion
· building in Middleport.

Rio's Fountain
earns NAIA
Scholar honor

will

Baptist . . _...

Friday, March 18, 2005

loudonville (22·3) va,,Cln. N.
loge
HIH (25·1), Friday. 10:45 a.m.; ronlon
(25-0) vo. ArChbOld (24-1), Fodiy, 2 p.m.
FINAL- SaltlrdsY, 5:15 p.in.

NewsCha

Lawmakers to consider changes
to year-old concealed carry law

Ltd.- 24.69
NSC ..,.- 37.35
Oak Hill Financial - 34.40
OVB-33
BBT -39.20
Peopln- 27.49
Pepsico - 52.30
Premier - 11.10
Rockwell - 58.70
Rocky Boote - 26.89
RD Shell - 62.19
SBC-23.40 ·
Saara- 56.88
Wa~Mart - 52.33
Wendy's- 38.93
Worthlncton -:- 20.15

PLEASE REMEMBER: ·

-

- Egg Is not at a place of business
- Egg Is not at a private residence
- Egg Is not lnsl~e a man-made object ..
- You will not need digging tools
,You will not need to climb or the use of a ladder,

The Daily Sentinel
Brought to you by: .

RIO
GRANDE
University of Rio Grande
senior
forward
Alkia
.fountain earned her second
consecutive
NAIA AllAmerican Scholar Athlete
award for her stellar work in
the classroom.
Fountain produced a 3. 79
grade point . average in
Information Technology. On
the court, the Columbus,
Ohio native led the women's
basketball team in both scoring (I 0.8 ppg.) and rebounding (8.6). She was named
first team All-American
Mideast Conference ·South
Division.
A student-athlete must be a
junior or senior ·in academic
standing and they must
achieve a minimum 3.5 GPA.
They must also play in at
least 75 percent of their
teams' games.
Fountain also earned the
honor last season.
'

Today's games
NCAA tournament
SYRACUSE REGIONAL
At DCU Center

worcelter, Mau.
Charlotte (2.1-7) vs. North Carolina State
t1.9·13), 12: 15 p.m.
Connecticut (22-7) vs. Central Florida (248), 2:45 p.m.
At Cherlotta Coliseum

Chlr1olle, N.C.
Minesota (21 -1 0) vs . iowa State ( 18-11),

Gators must overcome recent
history, Ohio's good luck charm
BY TERESA M. WALKER
Associated Press
NASHVILLE, Tenn .
Florida insists it' s a different
team this NCAA
tournament:
&amp;
older, more .ocused, .healthi·
er.
The Gators say last year's
firsHound loss to Manhattan
is merely a di stant memory. ·
They better be right:
Florida faces 13th-seeded
Ohio, which counters with a ·
talented freshman and a very
special good luck charm in
Friday's first-round game .
Assistant
coach
Kev in
' Kuwil&lt;, who started an 18month tour of duty as an
Army engineer in Iraq last
October, is using his twoweek leave to cheer on the

Bobcats.
"It's such . a motivational
factor because of what he's
been through and what he s~ ll
has to go through after he .
leaves," junior guard .Mychal
Green.said.Thursday. "He stt' l.l
has to go back . We want to
win and make his time as
enjoyable as we can make it."
Ohio (2 I- JO) plays Florida
(23-7) in the first game at the
Gaylord
Entertainment
Center in the Syracuse
Regional , followed by No. S
seed Villanova (22 -7) and
12th-seeded New Mexico
(26-6). .
.
.
The ntght sess1on features
No.4 seed Louisville (29-4)
playi~g
. .13th-seeded
LouiSiana-Lafayette (20-10 )
and fifth:seeded Georgta Tech
( 19-11) and 12th- seeded

George Washington (22~ 7) in
the Albuquerque RegionaL
, The Ohio Bobcats need all
tHe luck they can get in their
II th NCAA trip and first
slttce 1994.
•
ompare that to Fl on'd a,
which is enjoying its seve nth
straight berth - all under
coach Billy Donovan. The
Galors also are in very rare
teiTitory or being a top six
seeu in each of the past seven
years along · with only
Kentucky, Kansas and Duke.
The Gators have won seven
straight .game s and the
Southea stern
Conference
tournament, and have the distinction of being thefirst team
in 85 yea rs to beat Kentucky
twice in a 10-day span .

c

Please see Ohio, Bl

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Cincinnati mashes Hawkeyes, 76-64
BY STEVE HERMAN

Associated Press

Assistant
•
•
·enJOYing.
NCAA trip

INDIANAPOLIS
.C incinnati
expects
blocked
shots
and
rebound s from Jason
. Maxiell. But 3-pointers? ·
The 6-foot-7 senior had
22 points, nine rebounds,
six blocked shots, · a pair
of steals and the first two
3-point baskeis of his college career Thursday in a
76-64 first-round NCAA
tournament victory ·over
Iowa.
The Bearcats (25-7)
advanced to Saturday' s
second round of the
Austin Regional against
Kentucky (26-5), · which
won its opener 72-64 over
Eastern Kentucky at the
RCA Dome.
.
Maxiell had missed all
· five 3-point attempts he
had taken in his first 127
gaines with Cincinnati .
But in the closing minutes
against Iowa, with the
game already decided, he
shot twice from long
range and hit both.
" I just felt comfortable
with my range and shot
it;" he said. "It went in, so
I decided to iake a second
The Cincinnati bench
erupted.
"I knew he had it .in
him," teammate Eric
Hicks said, laughing.
"One, maybe, but not
two.''
With the 250-pound
Maxiell dominating the
inside , Cincinnati showed
a decidedly more physical
game and threatened to
run away from the
Hawkeyes (21-12) almost
from the start.
His six blocked shots
gave him 89 for the season, second only to the
· school-record 107 by

Please see Mash, Bl

AP' photo
Cincinnati 's Eric Hicks, right, blocks the shot of Iowa's Doug Thomas during the first half in
a first round game , e NCAA Tournament in lndi~napolis .

12:30 P·m·

·

McGwire refuses to ·answer
whether he took steroids
-

·

OklahOma City
Wisconsin (22-8) vs. Northern Iowa (21 ·

10), 7:20p.m.
Kansas 123-6) vs. Bucknell (22·9); 9:50

p.m.

.

Bv

HOWARD fENDRICH
AND RONALD BLUM

CHICAGO REGIONAL

At The Ford Co-

Associated Press

OktihOma City

Oklahoma State (24-6) vs. Southeastern

Louisiana (24-8), 12:30 p.m.
Southam Illinois (26-7) vs. Saint Mary'a,

Calif. (25-8). 3 p.m.

AUSTIN REGIONAL
At DCU Center

Worcelter,MIM.
Syracuse (27-6) vs. Vermont (24·6), 7:10

p.m.

.

Michigan State (22-6) vs. Old Dominion
(28·5), 9:40 p.m.
At ChllrloHe CoiiMum

• Chor10111, N.C.

Duke (25-5) vs. Delaware State I 19· 13),
7:25p.m.
.
Stanfurtl (ta- t2) vs. MiBSiosippl State (22- tO). 9:55p.m.
•

.ALBUQUERQUE REGIONAL
At The G8ytord Enlet181nmenl C.nler

-hvllle, Tonn.

louisville (2~) vo. Louislano·LIIayetto
(20-10), 7:10p.m.
Georgia Tech (19-11) va, George
Walhlngton (22-7), 9:40p.m.

Please see Kuwlk. 88

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

At The Ford Cerlter

.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
- . Win or lose, Kevin
Kuwik' s stay at · the NCAA
tournament will · end this
weekend.
The Ohio assistant coach is
serving an 18-month tour of .
duty as an Army engineer in
Iraq . He's spent his two-week
leave watching the Bobcats
· win · the
Mid-American
Confe·rence tournament and
helping them prepare for
their first NCAA appearance
in II years.
Ohio, seeded 13th in the
Syracuse Regiqnal, faces
fourth-seeded • Florida on
Friday in Nashville, Tenn. On
Tuesday. Kuwik goes back to
the Middle East.
Kuwik has been havin~ a
ball, motivating and cheenng
on a team that appeared to be
a long shot to make the
NCAA field when the season
began .
"These guys were 10-20
last year and picked for last
in the league," Kuwik said
Thursday. ''What they '.ve
accomplished is amazing."
Kuwik , who attended Notre
Dame on an ROTC scholarship, was recalled by the
Army into active duty in
October. He followed the
Bobcats during the regular
season by listening to games
on the Internet and exchanging e-mai l with coaches and
players.
In honor of the Army captain. the Bobcats wear gold
castle pins - the insignia of
the engineering branch -on

one."

North Carolina (27-4) vs. Oakland, Mich.
(13· 18), 3 p.m.
At The Gaylord Entertainment Center
Nathvllle, Tenn.
Florida (23-7) vs. Ohio (2t·10), 12:25 p.m.
Villanova (22·7) Vs. New Mexico (26·6),

2:55p.m.

AP pholo
Ohio forward Sonny Troutman practices Thursday for Ohio's
NCAA tournament game with Florid&lt;) in Nashville, Tenn.

WASHINGTON
On
Capitol Hill instead of a baseball ti eld. wearing suit' instead
of uniforms. they walked into
the room , stars all , forced by
subpoena to testify before
· Congress whether they cheated
by using steroids.
Heads
turned ,
strobes
flashed and necks craned to get
a glimpse of the humbled
heroes.
Fi·ve current and former
players, three of them among
the 10 lead,ing home run hitters
in history. hemoaned steroids
~
AP photo as a problem for their sport but
Mark McGwire , formerly of the Oakland Ath letics ahd the St. denied they are widespread. ·
.Louis Cardinals, testifies on Capitol Hill Thursday during a · Mark McGwire hemmed
hearing on the use of steroids in professional baseball .
and hawed. hi s voice choked
.

'

with emotion. his eyes nearly
filled with tears. Time after
time Thursday, he refused to
answer· the question everyone
wanted to know: Did he take
illegal steroids in the historic
home run summer of 1998 or
any other time?
No matte,~: how hard the congressmen tried , McGwire
wouldn 't say.
"If a player answers ' No,' he
simply will not be .believed,"
McGwtre srud m hts opemng
statement. "If he answers
' Yes:· he risks public scorn and
endless government investiga- ·
tions.''
·
On a day of e~traordinary
theater
at
the
House
Government
Reform
Committee, McGwire sat at a
wooden table, his accuser, Jose
Canseco, at the other end. Also
there, sitting biceps-to-biceps.

.
'

were Sammy Sosa. Rafael
Palmeiro and Cun Schilling.
Canseco raised his hand,
took the oath and repeated the
admissions and accusations in
his best-selling tell-all book,
•:Juiced": He used .steroids
himself, and they were rampam in the game. Sosa and
Palmeiro and Schilling · said
they didn 't use ihem.
Schilling backtracked from
his earlier claims of rampant
sleroid use, saying "the issue
was grosslr overstated by people. includmg myself." He esti~
mated that only ·five to 10 of
his teammates in the last 15
years used steroids but said he
had never actually seen anyone
·
take the dru8s.
CoinmisstOner Bud Selig
later said the extent Qf steroidS

PIIIM ... Sbiroldl, 81

•

�Friday, March 18, 2005

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 18, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

'

Wildcats claw past Eastern.Kentucky, 72-54
BY

MICHAEL MAROT
Associated Press

IND,lANAPOLIS - They
slowed Kentucky's fasfbreak,
shut down the Wildcats on the
perimeter and even stole some
of their state rival's fans. But
the
Eastern
Kentucky
Colonels couldn't stop the
second-seeded
Wildcats'
powerful inside game.
Chuck Hayes and Kelenna
Azubuike overpowered the
Colonels. Each scored 16 .
points, and Azubuike tgnited
an 8-0 run early in the second
half of Kentucky's 72-64
first-round victory Thursday.
"It was obvious from the
first half that we needed some
energy, somewhat of a spark,"
Hayes- sa id . "1 challenged
myself to get every rebound
and \vork my way around my
man .''

Kentucky (26-S) extended
its NCAA record of tournament victories to 94 and is
now 37-9 in NCAA tournament openers. The Wildcats
actually have won 96 NCAA
tournament gaines, but were
forced to forfeit two wins in
1988 because of NCAA rules

violations. They will .face
Cincinnati in Saturday's second-round game of the Austin
Regional.
But this was no typical
tuneup for the Wildcats.
The pairing pitted schools
about 30 miles a·part and challenged the loyalties of some
fans who normally cheer for
both teams. One fan even .held
up a sign with a Kentucky
message on one side and an
Eastern Kentucky message on
the other.
And the Colonels (22-9)
weren't about to let the
Wildcats coast. Instead, they
limited Kentucky to 2-of-ll
shooting from 3-point range
and got within five points in
the last two minutes.
differenct;
was
The
Kentucky's dominant interior
game. Hayes and Azubuike
combined for 15 rebounds,
and Kentucky had a 42-24
scoring advantage in the
paint.
.
'They're a very physical
team,'' Colonels forward
Michael. Haney said. " He
(Hayes) is very strong. He
always kept a body on me and
pushed me out of the post."
Eastern Kentucky hung

AP photo

Kentucky's Chuck Hayes, dnves on Eastern Kentucky's
Michael Haney in the second half during a first round game of
the NCAA Tour~ament in Indianapolis Thursday. Hayes scored
16 as Kentucky defeated Eastern Kentucky 72~64.

around long enough in its first
tournament appearance since
1979 to cause concern for
Kentucky.
Matt Witt scored 21 points,

Haney had 12 and Alonzo
Hird finished with II points
and 14 rebounds. The
Colonels longest winning
streak since 1964-65 ended at

seven, and they dropped to 06 in NCAA tournament games
and 0-9 against the Wildcats.
Eastern Kentucky was done
in by two major problems a sloppy first half and not
converting on fast-break
opportunities. About a halfdozen time s, the Colonels
either threw the ball aw&amp;y or
missed lay ups on breakaways.
"There were several points
in the game where guys could
have held their heads and gotten concerned," said Colonels
coach · Travis Ford, a former
Kentucky player. " But we
stuck with our game plan,
they continued to execute."
Ford tried everything to settle down his team early slammtng his foot on the
floor, pleading with players,
even trying to coax officials
into makin~ calls.
But wtth Hayes and
Azubuike patrolling the middle and help off the bench
from players such as Lukasz
Orbrzut and Bobby Perry, the
Wildcats were too strong.
"I was very impressed with
the toughness of Eastern,"
Kentucky coach Tuhby Smith
said. "That was out biggest
challenge, overcoming their

toughness ."
Kentucky took control with
a 25-9 tirst-half run that gave
it a 35-20 lead.
Eastern Kentucky rallied
within 40-32 al halftime and
trail ed 44-36 early in the second hal f, when Azubuike
sparked the key run. He
drove in for a thunderous
dunk , then sto le the ball and
passed to R~Jon Rondo for a
breakaway layup . When the
spurt ended, Kentucky led
52-36 and appeared heade&lt;;l
toward a blowout.
The Colonels, though ,
charged back later with eight
straight points. When Witt hit
the last of his three 3-pointers, with 2:13 left, Eastern
Kentucky was within .67-62.
Kentucky closed the game
by shutting out the Colonels
tor the last 89 seconds.
"I was just thinking that
we ' ve got to' exec ute our
offense, don 't panic and keep
our ultensity and confidence
executing ,"
and
keep
Azubuike said of the
Colonels' last spurt. "Teams
go on runs. You can't let that
shake you ."

~

Race: Golden Corral 500
Where: Atlanta Motor Speed·
way, Hampton, Ga. (1.54
mtles), 325 laps/500.5 mtles
When: Sunday
list year's winner: Dale
Earnhardt Jr.
Qualifying record: Geoffrey
Bod;ne, Ford , 197.478 mph,
Nov. 15, 1997.
Race record: Bobby Labonte.
Pontiac, 159.904 mph , Nov
16, 1997.
Last week: J;mmie Johnson
won the UAW·Da;mlerChrysler
400 In convmctng fashion,
lead;ng the final 55 laps for
the 15th vtctory of his career.
Johnson put a Chevrolet back
in victory lane after five of

CLEVELAND (AP)
WisconsinJason Klotz had a career-high 20 points
Kamarr Davis had 24 points for
Milwaukee pulled off the fu-st upset of the for Texas (20-11).
Montana (18-13).
NCAA tournament, stunning Alabama 83Pacific 79, Pittsburgh 71
73 on Thursday in the Cbicago Regional.
. Arizoqa 66; Utah St. 53
of-21 on 3s.
BY JOE KAY
BOISE, Idaho (AP) - Christian
Joab Tucker and Ed McCants scored 21
BOISE, Idaho (AP) - Channing Frye
Creighton's
Johnny
Associated Press
points apiece to · help 12th-seeded scored 13 of his· l7 'points in the second Maraker ClUne back after slamming his
Mathies, the ~~~~~~m~a~l~~ Milwaukee ·(25-5) win 1ts fu-st NCAA half ai1d had I 0·rebounds for third-seeded head to the floor in the first half and scored
17 paints, including a late 3-pointer that
CLEVELAND - Tyrone
MVP, made all tournament game in its second lzy. 1\vo Arizona. ·
helped
clinch it for the eighth"seeded
Sally decided a game of highyears
ago,
the
Panthers
nearly
knocked
off
Salim
Stoudamire
added
17
points
for
of his five
Tigers
(27-3).
difficulty 3s with the easiest
· the Wtldcats (28-6). Jaycee Carroll led
shots in the Notre Dame, losing 70-69.
Mike Webb scored a career-high 15
shot of all - the uncontested
The
Horizon
League
champions
ti.
o
14th-seeded Utah' State (24-8) with 18
first half and
dunk.
points,
going 4-for-4 from beyond the arc.
ished
the
job
thi~
time.
outplarng
one
of
points,
going
5,for-IO
from
3-point
range.
.
had 14 points.
Sally blocked Nate Funk's
Carl
Krauser
had 27 points for Pitt (20will
face AlabamaHe picked up th!: Southeastern Conference s top ' POO&gt;i ' I Arhon\1
3-point attempt, then raced his fourth foul with 9:22 le(t .z3lns and continuing a trend of No. 12s Bi.nn4l,gham in the seeond round.
9).
.
downcourt for a fast-break and fouled out with 2:21 to 6eafing No. 5s in March. That first-round .•
' '
·
dunk with 2.9 seconds to go go, scoring only two points in ml!!ChilP has pnAAK:ed an .upset in 16 of ·
UAB 82, LSU 68 ·
Wake Forest 70, Chattanooga 54
Thursday night, leading West the second half.
the 'past 17 toulJ,Illlllents, the only excepc
BOISE, Idaho (AP) ~ Marvett
CLEVELAND (AP) - Chris Paul
.
Virginia to a 63-61 first-round
The Creighton cheering sec- tion being in 2000.
· Mci;lonald h~d 21 points and hit five 3- scored 20 points in his return from a onevictory over Creighton.
tion included famous graduKennedy Winston had 20 points for pointers, and 11th-seeded A.labama- game suspension and second-seeded
West Virginia (22-1 0) will ates Kyle Korver, in town Alabama (24-8).
Birmingham used its stingy defense to Wake Forest shook off ahonible first.
play second-seeded Wake with the Philadelphia 76ers
MilWiiukee, which has won 10 straight pull·off.anoth.er upset.
Paul added six rebounds and five assists
Forest on Saturday. The for an NBA game the next andJ8 of 19, will face Boston College in
UAB (22-10) reached the round of 16 for Forest (27-5), which. will face West
Demon
Deacons
beat night, and Cavaliers coach the second round Saturday.
last YllUI' after. beating Washington and Virginia in the second round.
chattanooga 70-54 t(l advance Paul Silas, sitting a few feet
. ·
top-:seeded Kentucky. Brandon Bass, .the
Paul was back on the floor for the first
to the second round in the away.
- Boston~ 85, PennsyiY~nia 65 ·Southeastern Conference's player of the time since March 6, when he priilched
Albuquerque RegiOnal.
Both teams love to push the
~ CLBV~ (AP) - · Jared Dudley yellf, 1¢-LSU (20-10) with 25 points and North Carolina State's Julius Hooge in die
The Mountaineers knocked pace and fire away from
~adA S PQffi,ts to le_~; fouith·seeded 12 rebounds. • ;'
groin during the final regular-season
off Providence , Boston behind the arc. West Virginia
B~on c;:o~ge. .
.
.
,,
.
.
g~.
College and Villanova in the set a school record for 3s this
The ·~les ·,(25-4) opened the season
..
Utah 60, UTEP 54
Chris Brown scored 14 points for
Big East tournament before season and made an average
with
20'WUis,thep
closed
with
a4-4
f3de
TUCSON,
AdZ.
(AP)-Andrew
Bogut
Chattanooga
(20-11).
losing to Syracuse in the title of 8. 9 per game, one of the top
that
included·
a
first-game
loss
to,
West
had
24
points;
I
l
rebounds
and
four
the figures in the nation.
game,
earmng
. Gonzaga 74, Winthrop 64
Mountaineers a No. 7 seed. Creighton was right behind at Vtrgiriia in the 'Big East touniament., ~ ' blocks to lead siXth-seeded Utah (25-8):
·
Tun
Begley
led
Penn
(20-9)
with
19
Utiih,
which
has
won
23"11{
its
last
25
TIJCSON,
Ariz. (AP) Adam
After plowing through some 8.6 per game.
points.
·
•
"
gan.teS,
will
face
Oklahoma
on
Saturday.
·
.
M
orrisOn
scored
27
points
to
lead
thirdof the nation 's best teams, the
Double-digit leads evapoOmar'
Thomas
led
the
llth-seeded
seeded
Gonzaga
(26-4)
past
14th-seeded
Mountaineers had trouble rated in the time it took to
' D~ 67,
•; . Miners (27-8) with 24 points.
Wmthrop.
.
with one of its peskiest.
swish a few 3s.
.
Fairleigh
Di~
55
·.
Gonzaga,
which
won its 13th in a row
Creighton (23-ll) won four
Creighton stunned West·
INDJ,ANAPOUS {AI:) - Pee Bro~
Oltlahoma 84, Niagara 67
and snapped Winthrop's 18-game winning
games this season on its last Virginia by hitting its first
scored
19
points
and
Luther
Head~
'·
T)JCS9N
Ariz.
(AP)
Drew
stteak,
will face Texas Tech in the second
1
possession , and nine of its last four shots - two of them
13.
to
Jeli&lt;l
tOil"~
Dlinois
(33-1
),
fit
.
I.aveJidtlr
scored
17
points
for
third-seedround.
II that were decided by one from behind the arc -· and
FDU,'s Meo$ah Peters011 hit a 100'~: 3~ ~ ed·Oldahoma. •
,
J.P. Batista added 14 points · for
point. This time, the final shot pulling- ahead . 10-0. Beilein
had a little too much. Funk called a 30-second timeout to pointer' at the ·, first-lialf buzl.er that left · The SOoners (25-7) ~truggled with 46- Gonzaga, and Ronny Turiaf had 13 points
caught in inbounds pass from regroup Mountaineers, who Dlinois up only ~~-31~ but ~Dlini scored ~~ sho&lt;)ting, but were bel~ out by and 13 rebounds. Torrell Martin scored 22
midcourt with 1.7 seconds are experienced at making 3- 22 oftlle first 30 secand-baifpoints. · · solid defense that harassed N~agara into points for the Eagles (27-6).
'
left, turned and fired a 22-foot point binges but not at defend- · Gordon Klaiber scored ~ points for 16 llll'llqvers.
Fairleigh Dieldi,)SOII (20-14). ·
'
J~tan Mendez led the 14th-se,eded ·
Texas Tech 78, UCLA 66
,
shot that flew harmlessly over mg them.
· ·
the rim at the buzzer.
lllinnis 'ViJl.play Nevada in the secoild ~e:S (20-10) with 22 points and 15
TIJCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Ronald Ross
Pittsnogle, a '6-foot-ll cenThe Mountaineers then ter, ended West Viq~inia's rourid.
.
· reboUnds,
·
scored 28 pOints and sixth-seeded Texas
rat sed their arms and ce lebrat- scoreless streak wtth a
Tech
sJ:tot a season-high 62 percent'
.
ed career win No. 500 for jumper, then hit a 3 from the
·
, Nevada 61,,.~ !57 ~ . ·
, W~ 88, Montana .77
.
Texas Tech (21-10) improved to 2-2 in
coach John Betlein, who also top of the key as part of a
INDIANAPOUS~) - Kevinn ·, J)OISE, Idaho (AP) - l)randorr Roy NCAA tOUm1!111ent games since coach
has led Canisius and tymg 10-point run. Once their Pi~lkot'ed 15 · ts ,and ·runth-see4- had I7'pointS and Tre Simmons added' J5 Bob Knight
to Lubbock four seaRichmond. to NCAA tourna- bulky center with the feath~ry ed Ne.vi.da ·iallied to ·
eighth:Si!eded to pace top-seeded Washington, which sons agQ. Knight is 44-23 in 27 NCAA
touch started hitting 3s, the Texas. ': .: ~ :.•: " f . .' 1• , ., • •. woo an NCAA toumanient game' for !tie appearances, but it was only his fourth
ment appearances.
Kevin Pittsnogle had 17 Mountameers were ro!Jing . .
Chlirlh added 12 )SOI.nts the Wolf ~t time since reaching the round of 16 in VIctory · in 12 tournament games since
points for West Virginia, Pittsnpgle had a three-point Pal:i (25:.6), Rlilnoo ses~ons bali 11, and '1,998. '
. ..
..
1995.
which went 8-of-20 from play during another 10-J?Oint Nick Fazeps ·had, .10 .ppin!s, and · .J3 ,'I'he Huskies (28;5) will face Pacific in
Dijon Thompson led UCLA (17-12)
behind the arc. Funk had 23 spurt that put West Virgima up rebounds. ~·
·
• ·
. ., t,he second·tound.
.. wi\h 22 points.
for Creighton, which was 8- 33-22.

.

came

Mo

for
•

d

'

'

Mash
from Page 8.1
Kenyon Martin m 2000.
With two other blocks by
Hicks, the Bearcats are one
short of the team-record
223 also set in 2000.
"Our guys did a real good
job defensively," Cincinnati
coach Bob Huggins said.
"We got the shooters. We
were disciplined enough to
stay down most of the time.
Eric and Max were very
active, which we need them
to be .... They have to be
active and fly around the
ball."
·
With Maxiell repeatedly
swatting away shots under
the basket and Iowa unable
to hit from the outside, the
Bearcats
limited
the
Hawkeyes to just one field
goal and three free throws
in the first II minutes of the
game. Three-pointers by
Nick Wtlhams, James
White
and
Armein
Kirkland,
meanwhile.
sparked a 21-3 run that J?Ut
Cincinnati in control mtdway through the first half.

Iowa, which shot 34 percent for the game, missed
13 of tts first 14 shots
before a basket by Jeff
Horner and 3-pointer by
Carlton Reed with fewer
than 8 minutes left in the
first half. The Hawkeyes
finally started hitting late in
· the period, cutting their 18point deficit to 32-22 at the
break, and continued· their
rally early in the second
half.
A 3-pointer by Greg
Brunner, who led Iowa with
20 points and 10 rebounds,
pulled the Hawkeyes to 3429. Then, after Maxiell hit
one of two free throws,
another 3-poi nter by Horner
made it 35-32.
That was as close as Iowa
came.
"We thought we could get
baok in it," Iowa coach
Steve Alford said. "We
fought like crazy to get
back in it, but to
· Cincinnati's credit they
went on another big run and'
we just couldn't recover
from there.
"We picked a bad day to
have a not real good shooting day."
Williams hit two straight

3-pomters, Eric Hicks and
Maxiell each scored a basket and, afier an Iowa
turnover, Maxiell completed a 12-point Cincinnati run
with another basket for a
4 7-32 lead. Iowa never
came closer than 10 points
after that.
Another 3-pointer by
Horner
brought
the
Hawkeyes within 60-50,
but they then went without
a field goal for more than
six
minutes.
Maxiell
blocked two more shots and
put the game out of reach
with his two 3-pointers and
a dunk.
"He was making a big
presence tn the lane,"
Iowa's Adam Haluska said.
"He was throwing a lot of
stuff out of there. He caused
us to take some tough shots
from outside . and they
weren ' t going down."
White added 15 points
and Williams fimshed with
.13 for Cincinnati. Homer
had 12 pomts for · the
Hawkeyes, whose leading
scorer for the season, Pierre
Pierce, was kicked off the
team in February after his
arrest for assault.

Ohio
from Page 81
· But until they win another
first-round game. the 16thranked Gators may be more
known for their first-round
meltdowns against Creighton
in 2002 and Manhattan last
year. Aorida is l-4 in its last
five NCAA !lames.
"I haven t had the best
experience here in yea.rs past
...," Florida semor Matt
Walsh said.
Donovan downplayed last
year's tourney loss.
"Last year's team I heard
was soft, wouldn't guard, not
a good rebounding team. And
now this year's team, up to
this point in time, we've done
those things. I don't think
there's any comparisons
between last ·year and this
year,'' Donovan said.
Donovan thinks his Gators
were emotionally drained last
year and limped into the tournament: He also said
Manhattan was better that
day.
The Gators feature the
SEC's leading scorer tn

junior
guard
Anthony
Roberson (18.2 average), and
they are very deep with at
least nine players scoring in
17 of their games.
Ohio became the first MidAmerican Conference team
to win four gam~s in taking
the tournament title. Leon
Williams, the MAC freshman
of the year, scored 29 points
and grabbed 15 .rebounds to
help beat Buffalo 80-79 in
overtime of the MAC championship.
Still, Ohio coach Tim
O' Shea thinks the Bobcats
played their way into the
tournament a year early with
two· freshmen in the starting
lineup. He expects Florida to
play its best to erase last
year's ~anhattan loss from
memory.
"I'm doing the · sensible
thing. I'm talking up my
opponent. I don't want to
give them any ammunition,'"
0' Shea said.
T&gt;hat makes Kuwik's presence that much more helpful
to a team that has worn golden castle pins, the engineering bmnch ensignia, on its
warm ups.
He swapped leaves with a
fellow soldier to spend the
f

postseason with the Bobcats
and surprised them by showing up just before their first
game of the Mid-American
Conference
tournament.
0' Shea has had Kuwik deliver the pre-game speech
before each of the last four
games, including the MAC
championship.
Kuwik also will handle
Friday's talk .
"l gave hun a mandate you
need to come up with somethtng along the -lines of the
Gettysburg Address because
we' re up against it with
Florida," O'Shea said.
Both New Mexico and
Villanova are making their
tirst tournament appearances
since 1999. The Lobos. won
their first-round game that ·
year and see no reason why
they can't do the same thi s
year. The Mountain West
champs are coming in with a
nine-game winning streak.
Villanova survived an
injury-filled season by playing its way into the .Top 25
for the first time since the
1996-97 season. The 19thranked Wtldcats have won
eight games before losing to
West Virgima in the Big Ten
tournament.

Race : Aaron's 312
Where: Atlanta Motor Speed·
way, Hampton, Ga (1.54
miles ). 203 laps/ 312.62
miles
When: Saturday
Last year's winner: Ma tt
Kenseth
Qualifying record : Greg Biffle,
Ford. 192.300 mph, 2003 .
Race record: M11rk Mar tin,

Ford, 151.751 mph, March
8. 1997.
last week: Mark Marttn, tn a
Ford, won the Sam's Town
300 tn Las Vegas.

Race · World F;nan cia l Group
200
Where· Atlanta Motor Speed·
way. Ha mpton. Ga. (1.54
m;les), 133 laps/204 82
m11es
When : Fnday
Last year's winner : Bobby
Hamilton
Qualifying record Dav;d Re·
ut;mann, Toyota. 179 452
mph, March 13, 2004.
Race record: .Bobby Ham1 l·
ton, Dodge, 123.675 mph ,
March 13, 2004.
Las~ race: Steve Park. in a
Dodge , ;von the Amencan
Rac;ng Wheels 200 1n
Fontana. C~l1l.

No. 40

v

COORS LiGHT DODGE

E

R

s
ip
at this time
vea;r a2o. He remains suppOrt·
crew chief Pete Ron·
blames, no one but
,;,.•.;., '"" """ ct11sh that relegatto 42nd place In Vegas.
pressure is on at Darlingwhere officials face
m.. ott •••• of selling out a
for May 7. the
Mother's Day. Hmm.
NASCAR could
sell out a rsce or that weekend?
Maybe ". MeKiCO City?
.
.,Atlanta will be the third stratght
race on an Intermediate track .
Then.it's off to the short tracks
In Bristol, Tenn.. and Martinsville, va. For the critics of the
new rules, short·track racing will
be quite a relief because aero·
d)lflamics doesn't make much of
a difference at those tracks.
., Here's an amez;ng note: Kevtn
Lepage failed to make the start·
ing field in Vegas, yet he sttll
ranks 34th In the po;nts stand·
ings. He's ahead of Michael Wal·
trip, Jason Leffler, Bobby
Labonte, Kasey Kahne and Ricky
Rudtl, all of whom have com pet-.
ed in all three-races to date.
"'Before the UAW·Dalmten::hrysler
-400, guest announcer Robm
Leach Introduced Morgan Shepherd as the driver of the "Racing
W'tth HAY-soos" Dodge, inexplica·
bly using the Spanish pronuncta·
tion. 'My thinklrl\ is you would be
bett.tr o1r messing up 'Bud\WI1ser'
than ':Jesus," said Shepherd.

'Ill'

.

a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c(o The Gaston Gazette , P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053

the prev1ous seven ra ces at
Las Vegas Motor Speedway
had been won by Fords fteld·
ed by Jack Roush. Th ;s time
around , the Hendnck Motorsports Chevrolets crossed
the fmish line 1·2, leaving
Roush's reigning champiOn,
Kurt Busc'h . to settle for
third. It was the champ;on 's
kid brother, Kurt Bus ch, who
fintshed second .. in a Hen·
dnck Monte Carlo. It was the
fir st VICtory at LVMS for a
Chevy dnver smce Jeff Gor·
don won thiS race 1n 2001.

STERLING ·MARLIN

· Thursday's NCAA· tournament capsules

Mountaineers dunk
Creighton, 63-61

If you have a question or

• , WHO'&amp;HOT
~
·· A-NO WHO'S--NOT"'
&lt;

'

.

.·.~:~r~~~fiO~t~ ~-;8;J~tm~mie
Johnhis mnth

;:,:

. .. : Kyle
finish
run·
at

. Dale
Earnhardt Jr.

u

s

Brian
VIckers

Dele Earnhardt Jr.
YS. Brien VIckers

Although he .hasn't won in a while, Marlin not ready to hang it up
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

Sterling Marlin scoffs at the notion
that he is slowing down and expects to .
return to victory lane and compete for
a NexteJ Cup championship this year.
Marlin, 47, last won a race on March
17,2002, at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway.
During his Cup career, which began in
1976, he has won 11 times, starting
. witb the 1994 Daytona 500. In fact, he
won the 500 again the following year.
Of the young drivers who have
come to dominate NASCAR in recent
years, Marlin said: "Some of them are
good, but nowadays it ain't ... nobody's
fault the way it is. Somebody's got
their eye on somebody and they throw
them in a Cup car. Kurt Busch skipped
Busch (Series) racing, and he's been
real impressive. Obviously, he's the ·
defending series champion. I think
some of them need two or three years
of Busch racing so they can work
their way up to Cup.
"They never had to do it like we had
to do it. There just weren't .that many
good rides when I was coming up. We
had to beg and plead before anyone
would let us drive. It was like, 'let me
drive for nothing and I'll show you I
can do it.' My big break was driving
for Hoss Ellington. My dad (ex-driver
Coo Coo Marlin) was big friends with
him, and he gave me a break and let
me drive his car."
Marlin, who came close to winning
the championship in 2002, added: "I'd
like to run a couple more years. Chip
(Ganassi, the team owner,) said something about us talking about the future . I've just got to get with him and
sit down and see what he wants to do.
I'd like to get something worked out
by May or June. We need to get our
ducks in a row. A few people have
walked up and asked me when my
deal's up with Chip, but I ltke where
I'm at. If I can stay here, I'll stay
here."
Marlin is working with a new crew
chief, Steve Boyer.

&amp; Supply

Co.

Both drivers made early ex;ts in
Las Vegas after a bump from Earn·
hardt Jr.'s Chevy touched off a hard
crash that left both shaken but umn·
jured. ·Stuff happens and guys (llake
mtstakes,' sa1d Bnan Vtckers. " Ju·
nior apologized, which is good.'
Dale Earnhardt Jr. added: "It's a
btg m;s take on my part. ... It's my
fault , and 1t's a shame. and I ·apolo- ,
gtZed to him and everyone at Hen·
dnck Motorsports ."
NASCAR Thll Week's Monte
Dutton ~ves his take: "Th is was JUst
a case of racing too hard too early.
On the twelfth lap of a race, no one's
gomg to cause a crash on purpOse.
Earnhardt Jr. could use a break; and
he'll probably bounce back. It's time
for h; m and hts team to get their act
together. though, because It's going
to be an uphill cltmb to 'the Chase·
from here. He's currently 27th in the
potnts.'

Here's your cllence for
another dleceat ~
BAM Rac;ng and Schwan 's Home
Servtce are offenng free dte-c ast
cars to fans. A repl;ca of Ken Schrader's No. 49 Schwan's bodge is avai~
able by call;ng 1-877-3RACE49. Fans
will also receive a Schwan's .Home
Serv;ce catalog. The first 30,000 addresses to call w;ll recetve the dtecasts . Only one car per shipping address w;ll be allowed.

Fens of Martin lhould
check out this Web lite

John Clark/ NASCAR ThiS Week

Sterling Marlin has won 11 races in his call!er, but none since 200~. He says that younger driv·
ers, now so prevalent in the sport, might need more seasoning before reaching the big time.

"Winning helps everything," Marlin
said. "We know we've got a team that's
capable of winning in this series. If
we can get a break here and there and
not lose ground in the pits, we can
win. There's no doubt in my mind that

I can still get,the job done. We've just
got to get everything working right
and go out and do it."

Contact Monte Dutton at
hmdSO@aol.com

Mark Martin's "Salute to You"
Tour. commemorattng the veteran
dnver's final Nexte l Cup season,
has come to life on the Internet.
The off;c; al Web site of Mark Mar·
ttn's ·salute to You · Tour is now onlt ne at www.markmartinsalute.com.
The s;te features race news, vintage
photos, a video message from Mar·
lin and a career t;me line. The site
wtl l serve as the new home of the
offtc;al Mark Marlin tan club. Cur·
rent fan club members can use then
ex;sting tan club logm name and
password to access the ·Salute to
You · site . Fan club membership is
free by regtstering at www.roushracmg.com.

�J

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 18,

www.mydailysentinel.com
I

OHSAA BOYS BASKETBALL

e

FINAL FOUR

Nubians ground Continental Lutheran East beats Minster
BY

Perry scored ms1de oft an by that lime the Nubmns had
asSist from Brandon Bowers spnnted 10 an 18-4 lead They
Alter a m1ssed shot by Brown, did 1t by spreadmg the wealth
Bowers htt a lay up off a pass on offense and and by ul!h zmg
COLUMBUS
Top- from Sullivan The teams trad- the1r breakneck speed on
ranked Columbus Afncentri c ed turnovers before Bowers defense and m transition
used balance and blazmg speed scored agam wnh 3 03 left and
Brown was gu1lty of seven
to roll over Contmental 61-45 all of a sudden the lead was 46- turnovers by halft1me Three
umes, he had hts pocket ptcked
Thursday mght m a DIVISIOn 35
IV state senufinal
·
The adva ntage never fell by Bowers, every lime wtth
The Nub1ans (26-1) advance below mne pomts aga m for the JUSt the two of them alone m
to meet Cleveland He1ghts Nub1ans, the No I team m the the backcourt
Lutheran Fast (21-5) m Assoc1.ned Ptess final regular . Bowers fimshed w1th etght
Saturday's t1tle game. Lutheran season poll
pomts, tour asSISts, three
Brown ,, hrst team All - rebounds and four steals m 21
East edged Mmster 86-84 on
Donne! Washmgton 's 3-pomt- Ohtoan who shwed player of mmutes
er at the buzzer
the ye.u honors with Sue!, had
The Nubmns scored the first
LaQuawn Perry scored 14 16 pomts but suffered through five pomts on a dnvmg layup
pmhts, first-team AII-Oh10an a tmserable ntght Hounded by by
Marqutse
Hamler,
Donald Sue] had 12 Lance defende1s all over tl1e cowt, he Sullivan's tree throw anti a
Sullivan had II and Tmvante had nme turnovers and hll JUSt Pell) shot mstde otT an ass 1st
Leftenant chtpped m wtth I0 4 of 13 shots fro m the field, from Sullivan
pomts
mcludmg 1-of-7 behmd the
Contmental cut the lead to
After trathng by as many .ts arc
1
h
d
od
14 pmnts m the ft rst h,dt,
Ntck Wtlson added 10 pomts nme ate 111 1 e secon pen
Continental (22 4) tinall) got tor the P1rates, who were mak- only to have Afncentnc pull
back mto the game" 1th "spurt mg thetr thml tnp to the state away agam wtth another 7 0
to start the fourth quarter tournament They 've lost m the run built around Perry's four
Baskets b) Scott Keek ,md semtfinals e.tch tune, mcludmg pomts
Kurtis Brown cut the lead to setbacks 111 1972 and 1977
The Nubtans htt 52 percent
40-35
Afncentnc dommated the of thetr shots from the field,
Afncemnc coach M1ke tirst IMif completely shutlmg held a 29-21 reboundmg
Thornton qUickl y c.dled tune- · down Brown and shuttmg off advantage and had JUSt II
out to cut 11110 the Pirates' the Ptrates UlSide game
turnovers Even when the
momentum
.md the pause
Contment.tl htt JUSt one of Its Ptrates cut mto thetr lead, they
worked
tirst 12 shots !rom the tield and remamed patten! wtth the ball
RusTY MtUER
Assoc1ated Press

RUSTY MILLER
Associated Press

COLUMBUS
Jon
D1ebler led an offen&gt;I'e explo
ston as No !-ranked Upper
Sandusky made a record 16 3pomters m a 95-90 v1ctory over
Dayton Dunbar m a DIVISion 11
state semttinal on Thursday.
It was the htghest-sconng
regulatiOn game at the state
tournament m 29 years
D1ebler, a second-team AliOhJOan as a sophomore, ha 7of- 13 3-pomters and totaled 29
pomts - wtthout h1tttng a shot
behmd the arc m a lengthy,
defense-challenged
fourth
quarter
The Rams (26-0) wtll meet
Wooster Tnway m Saturday's
champ1onsh1p Tnway held off
Columbus Lmden McKinley
71-70 on Lmc Rottman's tree
throw "1th 8 3 seconds left
Greg Mtchell, the quarterback of the Rams unbeaten
football team, added 26 pomls
and the "other" Dtebler, sentor

Jake, mtssed by a rebound ot
wh,n IS beheved to be the first
tnple-double m stale toumament history He had 15 pomts,
I0 assiSts and nme rebounds
The Rams hll 16-ot-29 3pomters to shatter the tournament record of 13 set by
Worthmgton Chnstmn m a
DIVISion IV champtOnshtpgame victory SIX years ago
The only regulallon game
wtth more pomts was Loram
Cathohc's 108-84 wm over
Brookfield m a 1976 sem1tinal
Ftrst-team
Ali-Oh10an
Daequan Cook had 26 pomts,
12 1ebounds and four ass1sts
fo r Dunbar (22-5), ranked
nmth m the final Associated
Press regular-season poll
Antome Sam added 22 pomts,
Aaron Pogue had II pomls and
12 rebounds and Mark
Anderson had 17 rebounds to
go wllh nme pomts
Dunbar's 37 potnts m the
tinal quarter are the most smce
the sancllomng Ohto Htgh
School Athleuc Assoc1atton
started keepmg records 55

years ago
And the 20 combmed 3pomters (Dunbar was 4-for-18)
was eas1ly another state record
It was a gllttenng offenstve
shov,mg for the Rams' first tnp
to the state - after never gettmg out of the d1stnct before
thts season
Clmg)ng to a 48-40 lead late
m the thtrd quarter, they scored
21 pomts over the next 5 mmutes - 18 on 3-pomt bombs
-to forge a 69-5:1 lead Aaron
Wetherell's leanmg 3-pomter
at the end of the penod was a
littmg exclamation mark.
Dunbar kept foulmg over the
fina13 mmutes - forthat matter, so dtd Upper Sandusky but was never able to get closer than the final score
Upper Sandusky scored 30
pomts on 3-pomters before
Dunbar made Its ftrst shot
behmd the arc, late m the thtrd
quarter
Uppt:r Sandusky came 111 as
the h1ghest sconng team tn the
toumament, tf not the state, at
89 6 pomts per game

------·-=

IIWC»---•c::-=a:
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
BATE
DIVISION,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts
and
VO&lt;tchers of the lotlowing named fiduciary has been filed on
the Probate Courl,
Meigs County, Oboo
for approval and set-

tlement.
ESTATE NO 31260
Fifth
Annual
Account of Frances
Hunnel and Jeannine

E Cunningham~ Coguardians of the person and estate of
VIrginia V Blazewlcz,
an Incompetent
Unless exceptions
are filed thereto, satd

account Will be set
for hearing beforu
said Court on the
18th day of April,
2005 at which tome
said account will be
considered and continued from day to
day until finally dis·
posed ol
Any person mteraattcl may file written
exception to said
account or to mattera
pertaining to the execution of the trust,
not
than five
clay• prior to the date
aet for hearing
L Scott Powell
Judge
Common
Pleas
Court,
Probate
Dlylalon
Metga County, Ohio
(3) 181pd

I•••

Public Nottce
Sherlll'a Sl!le

RniEICaMNu04

cv ooe

Mortem Compliment
IIIII

Pia~ ••
.George C. Footer at al
DeNndenle

Court

of

Common

- · Meiga County

Ohio

In purauance

of an
Older of Sete to dlrect.cl from Hid
Court In I M entitled IICIIon, Will
expoM to Hie at

public auctton on the
front steps of the
Meogs County Court
House on Fnday,
April 8, 2DD5 at I D
a.m , of said day, the
following fjescrobed
real estate
Fosler Partition

Exhibit "A"
TRACT ONE B01ng
situated 1n the North
one-half of 100 Acr.e

lot No 261 and 100
Acre L()l No 262 ol
the Town One (1)
Range No Twelve (12)
Lot
No 1
Commencong at the
North East Corner ol
100 Acre Lot No 262 ,
thence West twenty·
two (22) chains and
lorty-stx (46) links to
a rock, thence South

thirteen (13) cha1ns
and seventy-one (71)
links to a stone 1n the
center line of 100
Acr~ lot
No 261 ,
thence East twentytwo chains and forty••• (46) links to the
East line of 1oo Acre
lot No 261 ; thence
North on said East
line of 100 Acre lots
Nos. 261 and 262 to
the North East corner
ol I 00 Acre Lot No
262, beong the place
of beglnmng Except
1D feet on the North
sode of I 00 Acre Lot
No. 262, being the
two Iota drawn In the
namaa of George L.
Wolf and Peter F Wolf
willed by Jonas Wolf
to hla five heln1 ol
that portion of the
lando
owned
by
Jonas Wolf at hla
deeth which Ilea Ealf
of the boHom land
willad to David B
Wolf by said Jonas
Wolf, and situate In
the North 112 ol I 00
Acre lot No 261 and
100 Acre Lot No 262,
the Mid Peter F Wolf
having sold his portion of hill land to
George L. Wolf, con-

tinuing m

&amp;aid

two

Iota

3o-89311 000
Acne, ucept 1D feet
on N aide next North
line of 100 Acre lot
212.
Lot No 2· Aloo the
lbl-lng lOt of land
which waa willed
direct to George L.
Wolf by Jon. . Wolle·

Commencing

at

•

South East corner of
the Cemetery known

as the Woll Cemlllery
of Letart Township
West ninety (9D)
chains and !wentymne (29) links from
the center ol the East
line ol 100 A lot No
261, Town one, Range
No 1, thence North
17 deg. East three (3)
chains and seventyfour (74) links to
North East corner of
sa1d
cemetery,
thence
Northerly
course to a sweat
cherry tree and same
course to road dis·
tanca from North
East comer of ceme-

tery I road Is eight (8)
chains and seventyseven (77) links,
thance North 49 112
deg East two (2)
chains and twentyfour links to a rock,
thence South thirtHn
(13) chains and saventy-one (71 D) links
to a stone In center
Line ol100 A Lot No.
261 ; thence West
eleven (11) chains
and seventy (70) links
to place ol beginning
Except I 0 feet along
the North line of 100
A. 262, containing t 2·
341100 Acres
Lot No. 3. Also that
portion ol land tying
East ot County Road
leading from Racine
to Latart, which woa
willed dt...ct to Mary
C Bentz by Jonas
Wolf, and was aold by
the heirs of Mary c
Bentz to George L
Wolf, bound and
described aa loliowl,
being In North onehaH ol 100 A. lot No.
261 and 100 A. lot no
262, Commencing at
South Weot comer of
the WoH Cemetery at
a atona In the centw
line of 100 A. lot No.
261, t - North 17
dog. Eaat three (3)
chaina fifty-nine
(59) llnka to North
West comer of Hid
cemetery,
thence
North 86 &lt;leg E11t
two (2) cholna and
eighty (80) llnka to
North Eaat corner of
cematary, thence a
Northerly courwe to a
• - cherry tree a~d
on same course to
the roed leading from

racine to Letart entire
dlslance eight chains
and seventy-seven
(77) links; thence to~
lowing said road
South 46 deg Wast
three (3) chains and
seventy-six (76) ltnka,
thence South 35 deg
West four (4) chains
and eighty-nine (89)
links, thence South
34 &lt;leg West alx (6)
chains and lifly-&lt;~ight
(58) links to point
where center line of
1DO A lot No 261
crosses center of
road, thence Eaat two
(2) chains eightythree (83) links to
place ol beginning
With reference to
Lot No 2 and Lot No
3, same Ia subject to
the following restrictive covenant as
apecHically set forth
In
conveyance
recorded In Volume
301 at Page 631 ofthe
Meigs County Deed
Racordo· "Ao a part
of the consideration
for this conveyance
and In consideration
ol the Incorporation
of
the
same
covenants,
the
Grantee, for herself,
hair hairs, succes·
so,.. and ass•gns,
agrees, for the benefit
Grantors, their auc-

www.mydailysentinel.com

•
•
•
•

m:rtbune - Sentinel - ~e

~--=-._.

BY

RusTY MILLER
Associated Press

COLUMBUS - Donnel
Washmgton's 3-pomter from
the nght comer at the buzzer
gave Cleveland Hetghts
Lutheran Ea.st an 86-84 wm m
double overtime over Mmster
on Thursday mght m a
D1vts1on IV state semtfinal
Washmgton, who fimshed
with 22 pomts, was the hero at
the end ot the first overtime as
well, luttmg a three-pomt play
wtth 21 4 seconds lett when
thmgs looked bleakest for the
Falcons (21-5)
Mmster (2 1-5) led most of
the second overttme until
Washmgton's shot nestled
mto the net
The Wildcats led 80-77
after Andy Beckman htt a
short shot off a mtssed free
throw wnh 3 mmutes left
Washmgton hll a 3-pomter
wtth 2 II left and another at
the I 43 mark - he "'as 6-of12 behmd the arc for the game
- to g1ve the Falcons an 83
821ead. But Justm Sptllers htt
a bank shot mstde "tth I 24
remammg to put Mmstet up
84-83
Sam L1ggms, a first-team

Ali-Ohtoan and co-player of
the year m D1 VISIOn IV,
mtssed a shot and a teammate
mtssed a follow With 35 seconds left Jacob Luttmer got
the rebound for the Wtldcats
and was fouled wtth 33 2 seconds left but he m1sfired on
both free throws
The Wtldcats were a woeful
16-of-33 at the line for the
evemng
Lutheran East called ttmeO\It wtth 19 seconds left to set
up a shot, and then warted
whtle the seconds licked
aw&lt;~y. Much hke at the end of
regulat1on, when they dawdled ani! dtdn 't even get off a
shot, thev mldjudged the
clock Jon.Ltgg ms was left to
dnve the lane, but hts path
was cut otf by two defenders
In desperation, he tossed a
pass Into the nght corner
where Washmgton was wmtmo
He released the shot JUSt as
the last second melted off the
dock ll appeared he was htt
by MnJ&gt;ter's Dane Sommer as
he let go ot the ball, and ended
up falling back onto the tloor
&lt;~s the ball sw1shed through
the net
Lutheran East coach Roger
McChnton rushed the court

lookm~

for someone to hug,
and h1s players piled on
Washmgton m the comer
Jon L1ggms totaled 24
pomts and Sam Liggms and
Washmgton each had 22 for
the Falcons, making the1r first
appearance at the state tournament
The Ltggms brothers Sam a semor and Jon a JUntor
- transferred from Euclid
Htgh School last summer
Sonuner had 22 pomts, 12
asststs and s1x rebounds for
Mmster, whtch was ranked
13th m the final regular-season Assoctated Press poll
Sp1llers had 18 pomts and 13
rebounds, Zac Boeke had 17
pomts and Beckman had 11
pomts and 16 rebounds
Mmster was making 1ts first
trtp to the state tournament m
40 years
At the end of the ftrst overlime, Lutheran East held 7775 lead but Sommer sltced
through the lane and pulled up
to h1t an 8-too!JUmperwJth II
second~ le{t The Falcons hurned the ball down the floor
but Sam Ltggms' shot was off
the mark w1th 3 seconds left
and Beckman secured the
rebound

RusTY MtLLER
Associated Press

COLUMBUS
Lmc
Rottman hu hts second treethrow attempt w1th 8.3 seconds left and Wooster Tnway
survtved a last-second scare to
grab tts first vtctory at the state
tournament, a 71 -70 wm over
underdog Columbus Lmdcn
McKmley m a Dtvtslon II
sellllfinal on Thursday
In a wild game wtth dramatIC momentum sw mgs each
way, the teams ended up t1ed at
70 after Robert Graves made
two free throws for Lmden
( 11-15) wtth 43 8 seconds left
Tnway (24-3), wmle &gt;s m
two l?revwus tnps to the linal
four m 1988 and 1991, barely
got the ball m on the ensumg
mbounds play ~ three Lmden
players got a hand on the ball
before 11 ended up Wtlh the
Titans.

.-

Rottman was near m1dcourt
when he drove to the basket
wtth 10 seconds left and was
fouled The Panthers' Samuel
Payne attempted to slap the
ball free as Rottman dnbbled
past htm, 18 feet from the basket
The JUnior's first shot
clwtged off the back of the nm,
but h1s second was good
Lmden mbounded and, after
a foul, was left With 6 2 seconds. The Panthers- mbounded
near the Tnway bench to
sophomore James Davts, who
scored 17 pomts wh11e htttmg
5-ot-10 3-pomters He dribbled over lllldcourt, shed two
defenders and had an open
shot behmd the arc w1th 2 seconds left, but hts humed
attempt bounced off the back
ot the nm
Rottman scored 25 pomts,
h1ttmg 10 of 14 shots from the
lield. to lead the Titans, who
lost thetr last two regular-sea-

~ ...

IFiK-.K .... t

262 being that portion of land In , the
East part of said
North 1/2 of 100 A lot
No. 262, which was
willed by Jonas Wolf
conjointly to his !Iva
heirs, to wit Peter A ,
Daniel B , John W
and George L. Wolt
and Mary C. Bentz,
and waa tn the dlvlalon of said hill land
allotted to Mary C
Bentz and by her
heirs sold to George
L. Wolf, bound aa follows,
to·wlt·
Commencing to a
atone thirty-seven
(37( chains and two
(2) links Waat of the
North East comer of
too A lot No 262 at a
stone, thence West
thorteen (13) chains
and saventy-slx (76)
links to a stone;
thence South thirteen
(13) chains and sev·
enty-one (71) llnko to
a atone In center line
of 100 Acre Lot No.
262; thence East thirteen (t3) chalno and
seventy-six (76) tlnluo
to e stone, thence
North thirteen (13)
chains end seventy·
one (71) links to place
ol beglnmng. Except
I D feel next to north
line ol 100 A tot No.
262, reserved aa
ce.aora and assigns,
right-of -way road
and every other per- Containing
18·
son who becomaa 865/100 Acres
the owner of Mid reel With reference to Lot
property, or any part No. 1, Lot No. 2, Lot
thereof, that only No. 3 and Lot No. 4,
structure•
parma· same is subJect to a
nently affixed to the warranty deed of
real estate shall be easement to the
eractad or maintained United StatiO of
upon said property, It America 11 contained
being the Intent of the In Volume 234 at Page
Grantors that mobile 899 of the Meigs
homes, trailers, and County
Deed
other
temporary Recorda, the real
structures by apacllt- eatata
conveyed
catty prahlbltad from therein being deolguse on the reel prop- natad aa Tract No 205
erty herein above of the RAcine Locko
deacrtbed.
This and Dam Pro]ect,
covenant ahetl run being daacrlbed as
with the land con- follow a:
veyad and lhall be
A certain tract of
binding upon the land ottuota In tile
Gr1ntH, hlr helra, State ol Ohio, ~·
and County,
eucceaaora
Letart
eaelgns, until June 1, Township, Township
2085 "
1 North, Range 12
Lot No 4 Also the
Weet, Section 18,
following lot ol land. being I part of The ,
altllllladln North on. Ohio
Company
haH of 100 A. lot No
PurcMae, and more
281 -100 A. tot No
particularly bounded

tc::a

a&lt; .... .-._....,

and described as fol-

tJ.J•oC"

J""oooo...-:~Jc::~s

•&gt;~•• _...c..-~..:a

&amp;Fa

•"k . g ... t

•
•

CaUl&amp; CIKinry, OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD

•
:

~egi~ter
To Place
m:rtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
Or Fax To
675-5234
Or Fax To
992-2157

:

(30~)

O{ftee llofU41'&amp;'

•

•
•

r

Dally In Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday ~ FrldaW' for ln5ertlon
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column · 1 00 p.m
Frldo•v For Sundays Paper

• Stait: Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

' Succes$fut Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

ANNOUNCEMTh'I'S

rI
.

'fi,~D

'-----~

I w1ll not be respons1ble lo1
any other debts but my own
S1dney V Watson

r

GIVEAWAY

Free pupp1e s 2 black Lab
m1x M ale &amp; fljmal e Call
1740)446 2188
~upp1es to gweaway half
Border Co llie Call (740)256
1233

Rottwe11er!Wolte pupp1es 3
females/ 2 males ready next
wee k 304 576 3080 they Absolute Top Dollar US
look like Rottwe1 1er
Si lver and Gold Cams
~r=-;,;;;;;~;;,m;.;;;AND;;.;._ __, Prootsets Gpld A1ngs u s
FOUND
Currency M T S Co1n Shop

1

L,.------_.1
Found m Spnng Valley area
Friendly black cat With wh1te
spot under neck W1ll lei you
piCk It up and hold 1t Call

151
G II

•

Second

Ave nue

I 740 446 2842
I \ 11'1 0\ \ II\ I
"' I 1{\ I&lt; I "

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Buslne•s Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display· 1 00 p m
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

---

POLICIES Ohio Valllt'J Publlehing reHJVea the r'&amp;htto edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any Hme Ecron muat be reported on tlie ftrat day of

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

116

1

HELPWANilll

I

"----

lwr~ght@!lc

'

o:
'

I

1973 Granclvlle l4x70 3
bedroom w1th stove &amp;
refr gerator $3 000 080
Caiii740I446 0194

'

'

2001 Oakwood 16)1;80 3
bedroom 2 bath v1nyl/stun
gle appliances c~n tral hea t
&amp; air $16 900 (304)633
6536
For Sale 1979 Homette 2
w/central a1r
bedroom
$3 495 00 Call (740} 385
4367

Plasse send or laJt resume
IO
Auto Club Dnv1ng School
Inc
1414 12th Street
Portsmouth Oh10 45662
Attn AI
Fa,l{ number 74Q-351 0537
An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645

)-If

~~~

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Tho
Village
of
Pomaroy will
be
accepting
. .aled
blda on •
teet
International Dump
truck for sate All blda
muat be received by
March 28, 2005 at
12·00 noon In the
Clerk's Olllca at 32D
Eaat Matn Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45768.
Kathy HyHII, Clerk
Vlltege of Pomeroy
(3) t6, 18, 20, 23

Auction and Flea Market. .. ... . ... . ... . ...08D
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .. ... ... .... , 76D
Auto Repair • .. ... . .... .. ,., ,,.,,,,, . , 770
Autos for Sale .. ,.,,., ,,.,., ........., .......... , .,, 71 D
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale. . .. .... . .. ... , 750
Building Supplies.. ...
. ,. ... ...550
Bualnaao and Buildings .
... .. ,, . 340
Bualneas Opportunity. ...
... . .. 2tD
Buatness Training.
.. ... .• .. . .. .. 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .. ,. , , .... . .. 790
Cbmplng Equipment .
.. .. ,. . .. 780
Cards of Thanks ...
. .... ,... ........ 01D
Child/Elderly Care ... ........ ................. 190
Electricat/Refrlgeratlon ........ ,, ........... , ....... 840
Equipment tor Rent..:. , ...................,, ... ..480
Excavating ... ... .. ............ ............. 83D
Fann Equipment,, ...., ... .... . .. . ..• . 610
Fanna for Rent ..... ,,, . , .•.. .. , .. . 430
Fannator Sate ....
. 330
For Lease. .... .. ,,,
, . 49D
For Sate .• ,, . .. ....
.. 585
For Sale or Trade ...
.. .• 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables.
, . .. 58D
Furnished Rooms .,.
.. . ......... .45D
General Hauling . ... ,, .....,, , .......... , .. B5D
Giveaway.. . ................... ........... ,, ....... 040
Happy Ada ........,,,,., ........... .... . .... .. .• ... DSD
Hay a Grain............ .... .. .. .. ..... .640
Help Wanted ..•. .... ..... ... ,.. ......• ,,.1t0
Home Improvements .• .. .. ..• ... .81 D
Homes lor Sate. , ., , .. . .. . .. ...• . , .3tD
HoUHhold Goods...
, ..... 5tD
HoUHs for Rent , ... ,
.. ..................... 41D
In Memoriam ,.. . ....
,,. ... ... , ..,,,, ... 02D
tnaurance. .... . ........ ....,,..,.,.., ..,.. 130
Lawn Garden Equipment............. ..... 6$0
Uveotock.................................... ,,, .........630
Loatand Found....... .. ........... .... ... , .06D
LOla &amp; Acreage .. ,.,.....,, , . ..................... 35D
Mtacellaneoua , .. ,, ..... . .... ,. ..•. ,, . .... 17D
Mlaceltaneoua Merchandise , .. ........ ......540
Mobile Home Repair.... , , .................... 86D
Moblte Homes for Rant ....................... , .... 42D
Mobile Homes for Sata. ............ ... .... ... 32D
Money to Loan......................... .•... . ...• .. .. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers...... ... .... . . 740
Musical Instruments .... .. ............. 570
Personal• ..
..• , ... ,
. 005
Peta tor Sate.... ... .. .... ..• ... ,
. 580
Plumbing &amp; Healing . .
. 820
Prolaaalonai Services .. .. ............. 230
Redlo, TV &amp; CB Repair ... .... ,,.,,,,. ...... 160
Real Eotote Wanted ........................ ,, ..... 360
Schoolslnatructlon . ...................... ,,, .... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .. ,...... .... ... .. 650
Sttuatlono Wanted .•..• , .... ......... ......... 120
Splice lor Rent ... ,,., •.. ..... ..
.480
Sporting Goods. . .. ,
. .. ..
520
SUV'alor Sate.., ...
... .. ... .
72D
Trucluo lor Sale.... ...
7t5
Upholstery .., .
87D
Vana For Sale. ,
.. . ..• . ... . , .. 73D
Wanted to Buy...
..• ,, ,., ,, .. 09D
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies... .. , .. , 620
Wanted To Do ., .. , ......... .... ,, ... lSD
Wanted to Rent. ,.. ... , .., .. .. . .470
Yard Sate- Galtlpollo. .•. .• ... ............072
Yard Sate-P-oy/Uiddte ... ,., ......., ..... 074
Yard Sate-Pl. Pleoaant ........., ..................... 078

a

Get AJump
on

SAVINGS
•

Dominos now H1nng
Sale Dr vers
All Locations
Apply m parson
1304)675 5858
Door
to Doo r Salas
Representatives Local deal
ersh1p H1gh CommiSSions
Part Time and ~ ull T1me
Open1ngs (304)675 7105
Farm
hand
wanted
Gallipolis
area
Ph
1304}675 1743

HEll' WAN!lJ)

,

W1bANIIDDo

Galllpol1s1 Now h1nng for all
pos1t1ons'
Send your resume to
petemonelt@gamestop com
or fax to 304 842 9019

"--------'
Georges Portable Sawmill

Home Health Care ol SE
OhiO IS currenlly hmng
Home Health A1dss cc m
pet1t1ve
wages
call
1740}662 12Z2

J1ms Carpentry
We do remodeling and most
any unfi mshed work also
small
lree
re moval
1740}446 2506 (7 4()}367·
0437

Local home ca re company
look1ng for a Cert1f1ed
Respiratory Therapist 10 set
up C ~ap/81 Pap and o~cy
gen 1n home for pat1ents
CompetitiVe wages With
benel1ts Send resume to
PO
Box
414
Po1nt
Pleasant WV 25550

Mlka pope
Roofmg Siding ~arches
Decks Phone ( 740 }3SB·

dent haul your logs to the
m111 tust call 304 675 1957

mLoAN

FOR SALE

t-1nanc1~1

4 bedroom 1 1/2 bath gas
heat aJc soft water sys1em
fully furn 1shed hnancmg
ava11able
$65 000
call
GUidO {740)992 2529 cr
740·992·3650.

~h

49 2 acres
home and
two-car garage Good prl
vale
farm land
some
woods Calll740}992-7037

Borrow Smart Contact th
Ph10 D1v1S10n of Fmancia
nst1tutlon s
Office
o
onsumer
Alla1r
!BEFORE you relmanc
our home or obta1n a loan
~EWARE of requests fo
ny large advance pay
~nts of fees or Insurance
~all
the
Of11ce
o
~onsumer Affairs toll Ire
t 1 866 278 0003 to lear
f the mortgage broker o
ender 1s properly licensed
Th1s 1s a public servjC4
nncuncement from th
phlo Valley PubhShln

l Careers Close To Home)
Call Today' 740 446 4367
1 BOO 214..()452
www gaH po•scareeroollege com
Accredited Member Accred11 ng
Counc1l lor I(Jjependent Colleges

111
1

1n

HOMEN

MLea01ng

Gallipolla Career College

New

MoNEY

Ins! tuhen approvtng Small
Bus1ness Mortgage
Personal and Vehicle
Loans lmmed1ate
response
gtve us a ca11a!
I 866 228 7063" Or apply
online at
www.investmentfinandal ~

Wantea
Licensed Na11
Tachs for new Na1l Salfin m
GallipOliS area Must be w1ll·
mg to learn and work Send
resume to CLA Box 648 clo
Galhpohs Tnbune P: 0 Box
469 Gallipolis OH 45631

and Schools 12748

open1ng

IF

Wanted L1censed Phys1cal
Therapy Assistant tor home
health serviCes Please send
resume IO McGraw PhySICal
Therapy Inc P: 0 Box 983
Jackson OH 45640 or call
1740}286 6631

GAMESTOP NOW HIRING
Store

© 2005 by NEA, Inc

www comics com

1110

AH r•l estate IKivertlelng

In this n.w.-per Ia
subject to the FMhKII
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
which rnak" It llleplla
8dvertiM any
prelerence, limitation or
dlacrtmlnatlon bliHd on
r~~e~~, color rwllglon, MX
familial statui or national
orlt;~ln,

~k:~ro~m~pran~y}====~

rj I'RoflsstONAL
SER.VIOS

1

L--ooiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiio--"
DIRECTV
Free Equltment
Free Proress10nal
mstallat1on
up to 4 rooms
Fraa 50 + prem1um
cnannels
free
player
calf lor detailS
Call 1 8Q0-523 7556

avo

8329

or any Intention 10

IMke any tueh
prefarance, limitation or
dlacrimln.tlon."

This new•paper will not
knowingly ac:cep1
advertiMmentl for real
•••• which 11 In
violation or the law Our
readera are heft1by
Informed that all
' dwalllnga ectVe111Md In
this newepaPif are
available on an equal
opportun4ty bl...
Love ly 3 bedroom hom'"e
overlooking Hocking R1ver
Coolville $129 000 call
Maggte Gifford 740 591
7221 Hayes Aealestate

j:)nvate duty RUrSing Call
{740)441 ·9515
'--"---'--'---Aacme area non smoker ----~----=Will babySit m my home Jewelry Buy Sell Gold
Near Holzer Hospital Good
McClure s Restaurant now state cart f1ed call (740)949 01amonds
Gemstones
Neighborhood 3 tte&lt;troom
hmng all tocat1ons full or r.1:1:
13::"5~~""'!~---, Aepa1r Appra sals Gem 1-1/2 baths large family
CH·· ~C"'AREUJERLY
Testing
Graduale room fireplace central au
part t1me p1ck up apphca·
lion at 1ocat1on &amp; brmg back
U.UE.o
Gemologtsl
Jeweler
garage Newly remodeled
between
10 OOam
&amp;
(740)645-6365 or (740)446
c1ty schools
$123 000
11 ooam
Monday thru
3080
(740}446
7881
Saturday
BabySIIIIng
Very _ _.:.__ _ _ _-:-- - - - -- - =.:_::;:__ _ _ _--::- Reasonable Rates Ages 4
TURNED DOWN ON
ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT s and under Call Crystal SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? Neat clean ranch style
home located 1n Racine Oh
needed Apply at 1354 (740)441 9654 or (740)590
No Fee Unless We W1n!
Th1s home has 3 bedrooms
Jackson P1ke Gallipolis
2590
1 888 582 3345
1 bath one car garage stor
Part time babySitter needed
age barn large deck. appll
I ~ I \ I I "' I \II
ances stay call 740 •949
m Vmton
area
Call ~r~,0~-~B~l,!;
·I•N£l•'X'ii---,,
3090 anytime aner 5pm
~~~388-8 1 60 or (740}645·
OtroRJ\JNITY

lt&amp;i

1

eO

Secunty Of11cers
1 5 lmmed Openmgs
Wackenhut Corp has 1mmed
opemngs at AEP Gav1n
Power Plan! for a temp out
age Must have HS 0 1p or
GED clean Police Record
valid DL .and w1llmg to work
any shltt Could turn 1nto FT
Perm pos1t1ons Please call
740·925·3015 M F 7a 3p

EOE MIF/DN
Manager
and
Wanted
Expenenced Auto Body
man Colhs1on pam11ng &amp;
frama expe nence neces
..ry Call 174())446 use 10
set up an appointment

FOR RENT

FOH SALE

net

AAA Drlvtng School 1s offer
mg a pos1t10n w1th flexible
hours at our Galhpohs off1ce
We requ1re candidate to
have
a H1gh
School
Olplema a Valid License to
be/beco me a Licensed
OrNer s
Educat on
lnstruC1or pass backgro und
checks relevant experien ce
1n Tralflc Safety
Law
En forcement or Teachmg
preferred or w1tl tram

HOUSES

MOBILE HOlli:S

_••_as_.,-__ .1110

providing their own
equipment and oupplles. Also contractor
must provide their
own
Insurance
Cemetery muat be
maintained 2 to 3
tlmea par montll In
wet pertoda and 1 to 2
times per month In
dry
parlodo.
Contractor will be
paid on completion of
each complete mowIng and with the Ntlafactlon of Pomeroy
Village
Council.
Pomeroy
Village
Council resarves the
right to eccept or
reject any or ell proposal&amp;.
Kathy Hyaall
Cterk/Traaaurar
VIllage of Pomeroy
(2) 25, (3) 4, 11, 18

Now you con have borders ond graphics
~
added ta your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOli for small
$1 .00 for large

Tnbun•S.n1•nel Fleg•at.r will be re~elble for no more tkan the coel of the epace occupied by the •ror end only the tlrat Insertion We
any to.. or elljM'nae tt'lat results from the publication or omleelon of en advertisement Correction will be rNide In the f1r1t .!IVI'ulable adlt1on
ere always confidential • Current rete card eppllea • All real estate advertisements ere eubjeet to the Federel Fa ir Houarng Act of 1968
1
wanted
not knowingly accept any ad\lertlalng In violation of the law

Oescrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

ATIN needed 23 people to
lose up to 30 lbs 1n the next
f1:_4().:..)4_4_6
HEt p WANrnD
30 days 1 00% natural
Found on Depot St 1n ~.,~,__ _ _ _ __ . 100%
guaran teed
no
ephedra Ca ll 1 888 234
Rutland poss1bty Husky m x
1DO Workers Needed
5146 or V1s1t www new
puppy sex no! sure phone
Assemble crafts
shaperesu lts com
1740)742 9927
wood terns
~.:._-,.-~--Matenals prov1ded
AVO N' Ali Areas! To Buy or
To $4B0+Wk
Sell
Sh1rley Spears 304
Free mlorm~hon pkg 24 hr 675 1429
'801 428 4649
Bates Bros Amusement Co
Spnng/Summer Must Be 17
Or Older And Able To Trave l
Late
March Late
4x4's For Sate........... ..... , .. , .... .. 725
September Weekly Pay
Announcement.
.030
L1v1ng Fac111 hes Bonus
Antiques..
. , . .. ... ... ..530
Contact Us At 740 266
Apartments lor Rent .., ... . .
... 44D
2950

!i=-c:.c:..-_

Shop
Closslfledsl

Display Ads

-

~~--IJ'-.-oe..-s_

Transfer and Record
the eppraloed value.
of
Real
Estate I 0% down on day of
Beginning at a point Inherited,
from
sale, -cash or certified
at the Intersection of George L Wolle,
check, balance on
existing Ohio State deceased, to Edna L.
confirmation of sale.
Route No 338 and Foster, dated October Ralph e. Trussell,
Township Road No
17, 1934 and filed tor
Meigs County ShertH.
214, said point being record October t 7, Attorney for PtalntiH
a corner common to 1934,and recorded In Crow &amp; Crow
the lando now or for- Deed Volume 138, Attornay at Law
merly owned by Fred Page 33D, In the
11 D W, 2nd Pomeroy,
M Unk, Trustee, and records of Meigs OH 45769
the subject owner County, Ohio
740-992-6059
and
having
an Auditor's Parcel Nos
Meigs County OHicial
approximate coordi- 08-D0215 000,
D8· Records
nate
value
of 00216 DOD,
D8· Subject to all leases,
N333 4D7 and E 2, 00217 .DOD,
and
08· easemenls
168, 412; thence, 00218 DDD,
or
08· rights-of-way
leaving said Intersec- 00219 .DOD, and D8· record.
tion and with the 0022DOOO
(3)4,11,18
lands of said Lmk , TRACT TWO Being
end following generLot Number Thirteen
ally the center of said (13)
In
Burn's
Public Notice
Route No 338, as fol· Addition In the VIllage
Iowa North 37 deg
of Letart Falls, Ohio.
The
Village
of
35' East 733 feet,
Auditors Parcel No
Middleport Ia offering
North 48 deg D8' East 08-00221 000
for bid one 1994
194 feet, North 60 Reference
Deed:
Whltlay Traitor, 12' x
deg 35' East 220 feet, Volume 338, Page 40' long Has AC and
471 , Meigs County heat Trailer has been
thence, leavlnsr the
center of Hid Route Deed Records
used lor claaa roomo
No 338 and the lands T R A C T THREE
and are II' x 19' MCh
ot Hid Link and aev- Situated In the Letart They have axles but
erlng the lands ol the Township,
Meigs
no wheels, has bolt
subject owner, as folCounty, Ohio, and
on tha tongue
lows; South 26 deg
beginning at a point
Can be - n at the
t 2' East 6D feet, ontheSouthsldaof Middleport
South 64 deg 28' the public river roed Elementary School or
West t i 9.20 feet,
leading from Letart to call 992-5711 and aak
South 57 deg 12' Racine, Ohio near the
for Don
West I D2.35 feet,
turn In the road In
Bids wilt be acceptSouth 51 deg 56' front of the residence
ed until 4:00 PM on
Weal 98 feel, South ol G.L Woll end run· March 23, 2005 at
40 &lt;leg 25' West 125 nlng oouth with tile Middleport
VIllage
feet, South 37 deg. west side ol the Free ' Hall
18' Weat 637 feet to a Mothodost Church to
The Village has the
point In the center of the south end of said right to n~ject any &amp;
said Townohlp Road church, thence east all blda. Minimum
No 214, said point 28 !eel to the south- bid· $9,000 00.
being In the line ol east corner of aatd Sandy
lannareltl,
the lands of said Link church Thence north Mayor
thence, with the lando with the east aida of VIllage of Middleport
of Hid Link and the said church to the (3) II, 14, 16, 18
center
of
sold south line ol said
Townohlp Road No. road; thence west
Public Nollce
214, North 116 deg. 23' with the south line of
Weot 72 teet to the the public road 28 · - - - - - - - place of beginning, feet to the place of PUBLIC NOTICE
containing
1 45 beginning, containing
The
Vtltage
of
acres, more or lese, 1175 sqUire IMt be Pomeroy
will
be
of which D 82 acre lo the same mora or accepting
ground
Included In the exist· • leiS Said described maintenance - lng right ol way for land being In Ranga ala for Grove
Ohio State Route No
t2, Town No ' 2, c-tery. Att propoa338. The bearing• Sections 5-12·18, Lot eta must be I'IICelved
uaad herein are refer- I DO Number 262,
by 12·00 pm on March
anced to tho Ohio Ohio
Company'o 28, 2005 In the Cterk'a
State
Coordinate Purchasa
Office, 320 Eaat Main
Syatem, South Zone Auditor's Parcel No. StrHt,
Pomeroy,
(Pege'a Ohjo Revised 08-00864.000
Ohio. The malnteCode, Section 157 01
Reference
Deed
nance
eeaaons
to 157.D71ncl)
Volume 7, Page 139,
begina In the taot pert
The
above
Apprataed of April through mtd
daacrlbed tract Ia a ., $114,000
ser,tember of 2005.
part of the Mme land Terma
of
Sale: Til 1 wtlt Include
oa lhat deacrtbed In Cannot be aold lor mowing, WMCI oatlng,
an
Affidavit
lor leal than 213rda ol etc with contractor
lows:

!Jearl~irtU"

Word Ads

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

son games wh1le allowmg an
avemge of 81 pomts Jarrue
Breneman added 24 pomts,
bnngmg Tnway back from an
early 21-9 defic1t by sconng
the Titans' final II pomts of
the first quarter to draw w1thin
21-20 at the break
Shaun Gunnell, who had 25
pomls and 14 rebounds for
Linden, was a monster ms1de,
but he d1d not get the ball
much after the Panthers butlt a
65-55 lead on a 7-3 spurt to
start the fourth quarter. Netther
dtd Davts, as PaY.ne took most
of the shots wh1le sconng 15
pomts
Lmden was trymg to
become the first team w1th a
losmg record to wm a game at
the state tournament m at least
45 years, back as far as Ohto
H1gh
School
Athletic
Assoctatton
records go.
Instead, they became the fifth
sub- 500 team to lose m the
selllls

tc:-a ""c::a._. .-

Melp CouNy OH

•
•

Triway beats McKinley at stripe
BY

i~ter

CLASSIFIED

.at buzzer in double overtime :

Upper Sandusky survives Dunbar
BY

Friday, March 18, 2005 ,

2005

HOMEll

roRSALE

Open House Saturday 1
5pm
100 Liberty Street
2br 1ba Qasement ~;~arage
2 stcry 7 room house 4
NG CO recommends tha bedroom 2 bath 2 porches $5~ 000 (304)593-0147 lor
~ou do busmess with peo ( 1 closed 1n) deck 2/3 acre d1rect10ns
P,e you know and NOT tc . tlal lot Heat pump R1ver
~end money through th
Velley
Scheel
0 1stnct
tna1l unt1l you have 1nve~~;
www.orvb.com
$69 500 ,
Butavllle P1ke
!gated the ottenno.
1740)367 7272
Home Uetlno•
L1st your heme by callmg
--,

P~IOil&gt;VA~U;Y"''pu':usH

FIND

AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

3 bedroom au electnc 1
story remodeled house 1n
Middlef&gt;(lrt 371 Broadwa;'
$26000 1740}992 3 194
3 bedroom 2 bath fireplace
on 1 6 acre1 Rio Grancte
area
S85 000
Call

[140}709 116e

(7401418-3620
V1ew phO!Os/lnfo online
bedroom 3 batn 4 5
"!""'res
-· 2 5 car garage
ackson O H Code 220
call (740)286-&lt;4750

p..

. ._""'_ _ _ _•

"

Grac1ous 1111 ng 1 and 2 Oed
room apartment s at V llage
and
R vers•de
close to schools $900/mo Manor
Apartments 1n M ddleport
Calll740)446 1082
From S295 $444 Call 740
Clean 2 Bedroom Ground 992 5064 Equal Hous1ng •
Floor WI D Hook Up Ref Opportunltms
Oep No Pets (304)675
5162
Moder n 1 bedroom apt Call
- - - - - - - - (7 40 )446 0390
Responsible couple to rent
1m1
from New 1 bedroom apt Call
2BR home
GallipoliS off State Route {740)446 3736
588 Reference and depos•t
One BA apartment 1n Spnng
reqUired (740 )446 3413
Valley $290 per month plus
MOBILE Ho~n-~
depOSit
W/0 hookups
RENT
(740}339 0362 (740)388
0017
48edroom 3Bath large LA

la"1JIY room 3 car garage

ruo

FOR

For Sale 14X10 3 bed
room set up m Country
Homes $6 995 00 Move 1n
2 bedroom Mob1le Home 1n P1lot Program
Renters
today' Call (740)385 4367
New Haven 14x70 gas neede d
Call (304)736
$300/depOSII 3409
Cla,yton S1era heat
For Sale
S3251month
(304)882
11 07
Double
W1de
28 x56
Pleasant Valley Apartment
Modular Home Buyer must
2 bedroom mob1l e home Are now tak1ng Appl ca11ons
move Home to the1r Site 3
C lose to
town
Call for 2BR 3BR &amp; 4BR
bedrooms MBA w th full
Applications are
taken
1740}256 6574
bath and 6 Soaker Tub 2
Monaay lhru fjnday from
Ad I Bed Rooms w1th lull 3 bedroom mobile home 1n
9 00 AM 4 F'M Otf1ce IS
bath Includes all up grade Middleport
no
pets Located at 1151 Evergreen
Appliances
also (740}992 5858
Dr ve Po1nt Pleasant WV
Refngerator Washer/Dryer :...:::.:..:.:.:._:::=..____
Phone No s (304)675
Mud
Room
LIVIng
Acorn
Small
2
bedroom
mob1le
n
1
5806
EHO
has 45 Surround sound TV home 1n Rac1ne $225 per
System With 6 Changer
CD/OVD Player 3 ton 3600
BTU Heat Pump Pnced at
$54 800 for InformatiOn and
vtew1ng call (304)675 7137
11 no answer leave message
With name and phone num
ber
-------Immediate posseSSIOn Only
$213 68 per mo New 3 bed

month $225 depos t years THE MAPLES
lease no pets nc calls after 100 MEMORIAL DRIVE
9 Pm (740 )992 5039
EAST
Totally remodeled mobtle POMEROY 740 992 7022
Res1dent1al
home on end let tcr rent! SutlS1d1Zed
lease
otb
E rna 1 at Housmg tor so years at age
red2371 @t1ctma 1
or and older Priority Givan to
(518)89 1 2296 $395LWOB Applicants with Income at
or below $10,900 00
(mcludes lot ,-ant)
Max1mum Income effective
APARThfEN'TS
02111 /2005 for 1 person
room 2 bath mob1le home
$18150 00
Only mmutes from Athens ..._
Muet meet HUDI/20218 cri
1 800-837 3238
1 and 2 bedroom apart tart• for houaettold com·
Managed by
ments lurmshed and unfur poslllon
Inventory Clearance New 3
mshed
secu nty deposit S lverheels Incorporated A
bedroom
home
required no pets 741)-992· Realty Co mp any Equal
$239 00/month
Includes
Hous ng Oppcrtun1ty
2218
AIC Delivery and Set·up
Call M1ke (740)385 7671
1 bedroom 1 bath kitchen Tw n Rivers Tower IS accept
wtd 1shwasher very spa 1ng applications for w~1tlng
lnventcry Clearance New 4 CIOUS Call (740)44 6 4639 hsl lcr Hud subs1zed 1 br
bedroom
Home Bam-" JOpm
apartment call 675 667.9
$319 00/month
Includes
EHO
AJC 0e1111ery and Set up 1 bedroom 2 bathroom
Call Harold (740)385 9948 k1tchen w/d1shwasher beau
SPACE

r

L--.OFORiililtRENTiliiilio-,.t

=:;..:.::.::c:=____

j

t1ful v1ew ot the Gallipolis ~--•FORiiiiiloiiDrriiiiiiit--"
SAVE SAVE SAVE
C1ty Park Call (740)446 ~
Stock models at otd priCes 4639 Sam-4 30pm
F0r Lease Off1ce or reta11
2005 models arnv1ng Now
spaces m very good cond1
Cole s
Mobile
Hemes 2 bedroom apartment lor liOn Downtown Galhpolls
15266 US 50 East Athens rent Racine OH DepoSit Approx 1600 sq ft each 1
OhiO 45701 (740)592·1972 required no pets (740)992 er 2 baths Lease pr~ce
~where You Get Your c5_17_4.:_
Ieav_o_m
_o_s_
sa_:g_e _ _ n99ot1able to encourage
bus ness
Money s Worth"
2 bedroom apl With stove new
Call
diShwasher (740)446 4425 or (7401446
refngerator
SSt! Soc1al Secunty
laundry hookups small stor 3936
$1 300 Net 1ncome We can age building No pets
\ II IH II\ \lll ' l
f1nance you a home Call References
reqUired
(304)736·3400
$350r"ent &amp;deposit plus Ullli
Hou,T.HOW
10 5 7 44 6 3888
We have approximately 13 c' ;:.::.1::..:.
4()::.)..,..:...:"c:..:.:.___
used homes for under Beaulllul 2-story townhouse
$2 000 1 800 837 3238
overlookmg Gallipolis C1ty
H1gh DefinitiOn H tachl
REAL EsrATE
park K tchen lam1ly D A w1de screen TV Excellent
L A 3 6 A study 2 baths cond 1t1on Less than 6
WAN'IF.D
laundry area Refe rences months old Mov1ng must
requ1red secur1ty depos1t sell $1500 (740}4419983
I BUY HOMES
no pet&amp; $900 per mo
Need tc sell your home (740)446 2325 or (740)446
qu1ckly because of a 4425
d1vorce bankrup tcy rob .:.,:::.::.:__ _ _ _ __
Appliance
APART..
transier or death Don t let BEAUTIFUL
the bank foreclose and ruin MENTS
AT
BUDGET
your cred 1t Local p~;uson PAICES AT JACKSON
Warehouse
buys hOuses Fast ctos 1ngs ESTATES, 52 Westwood
All cas h J 1m (740)992· DriVe from $344 to $442
m Henderson WV
Pre
6300 No calls after 9 m
Walk to shop &amp; roovles Call
owned appiiCanes starting at
740 446·2568
EQual
$75 &amp; up all under warranty
~Ho_:u;:.s::_ln;::g_:O:,:P_:DO::";:.";:."~'Y.:__ we do serviCe work on all
. , . - - - - - - - . . . . . . Beech Street MIOdleport 1 Make and Models (304)675H~
bedroem furn ished apart 7999
LT"OD n-~
ment utllmes pad deposit &amp;
.......... ftl!.nl
Kenmore
washer
$95
references
no
pets
Wh irlpool aryer' $95 GE
3 bedroom Condo with rJIIer ~17_4::0}_:99;:.2:..0:.:1.::6::.5_~-- electnc
range
$95
v 1ew
full
baseme nt Check oul a clean 2BR Whirlpool retngerator $150
Gallipolis Ferry $700 mont h
r wo l k
Whll
I d
co untry setllng w1t
1 e new
r poo
rye1
Call (740)446 3481
MQKup No pets $3501mfl S250 L1ke new Mag1c Chef
deposit (7 40)256 I 245
washer $2&amp;1 Octagon end
3 bedroom home w/full
tables $15 each Tappan
basement 2 car garage CONVENIENTLY LOCAT g.;~s range 5175
Skaggs Appliances
rural sett1ng Apro~t; 10 mrn ED. AFFORDABLE!
apartments
76 Vme Street
from Holler Hospi!al Ava11 Townhouse
\74014 45 7398
411105 $700 monlh plus and/or small houses FOR
sec depOsit Call {740}4&lt;46 RENT Call (740)441 1111
for appliCation &amp; rntormat100 M()llohan Carpet 202 Clartl.
3051
Chapel Road Porter Oh10
3 beOroom
house in Eff1C1ency apt S300 month (740 )446 7444 1 8 77 830
Pomeroy $.400 00 per month plus u!llltes No pets Call 9162 Free Estimates Easy
11nanc1ng 90 days same as
plus de~s1t (740 )992 0064 {740)446 4313
. Furmshed 2 &amp; 3 room aots r::~s~ V1sa Ma ste1 Card
t save alot
3 bedroom all electnc m Clean no pels Reterer1 e \
Middleport no m,.ldl:' pets oepos11
requ1r(' 1

riO

L,---liGooo;iiliiiilli-_.1
sr

t

r,o

$425 &amp; depos t (- 401992

("' -40)4461519

3194

Modern 1 bedrOOm apt No
4 room&amp; and bath 52 Olive pets $265 month 1ncludes
$200
d9POSit
St No pats $300 roonth water
(740)446·3945
'
174Q)446·361 7
\

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

lr

r

"'•IO-•IIocmtorn•Gomliimniii._n_..

Thompaons Appliance &amp;
Repalf..fS75·1388. For 81118,
re-conditioned automatic
waahe!o &amp; dryerl!, rofrlgorators, gas and llactrlc
ranges, air conditioners, end
,wringer washers.· Will do
repaR on mapr brands In
, shop or at your home.

== ~-=ln;:M:e:m:o:ry:;=~==ln=M:e:m:ory::::;;

Used garage door, 16x7
Nan-'naulated brown, flush
panel, all hardware included, $100. (740)446-4514 8-

White prom dress, size 314.
wm sell lor $125. can
(740)446-1648:

3118131-2116/01
"Poppy"

by Amber Fick

Furniture Store: 130
Bulaville Pike. Appliances,

He knew when to be
serious, He knew ivhen to laugh. He knew
when someone was md lllld needed cheering up. To many he was the produce man,
the tomato guy or the old man in the red
jeep. Tonie he was grandpa whose
memory I will keep.
He had many friends who will keep him
near even though he's gone.
But to me he will a/wai'S be as close to me
as when il'e were riding in his jeep.
Sadly missed by wife-Ruby
children &amp; Grandchildren

mat1resses;
dressers,
CQUChes, dtnettes, recliners, Block. brick, sewer pipes,
grave monuments, much windows. lintels. etc. Claude
more. ·
(740)446·4782, · Winters. Rio Grande, OH
Gallipolis. OH, Hrs 11-3 (M- Call 740-245-5121 .
S) We buy used furnhure.
PETs

r

~
1

Am1QIM;

IUR SALE

Chihuahua puppy, 6 weeKs
Buy or sell. Riverfne old, short hair, vet ch~ed
Antiques, 1124 . East Main and vaccinated , weighs 1.4
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- pounds, no papers, fu ll
S250 .
Call
992·2526. Russ Moore, blooded.
(740)441 -7218
owner.

r

Ml&lt;icELLANrous

MERatANDISE

I

CKC Jack Russell Terrier
puppies. 3 male, 2 female.

~
:$:.::12=5~
. (~74:.:0:::)2::56=--~'6::5::2·'-:=
For Sale Four Prom (formal) Dachshund puppies. AKC

r

I r~o
L---oiGiiRAINiliiliiio-_.1.

Gowns, sizes 3J4, 5/6, 9/10.
1st shots, 1st worming, ,
like new Ph. (304)675·7644 $350. Call (740.)446-4446.
-

$2()-$35

H.P. Laptop computer, ·Used
less than 3 hrs. Paid' $·t ,500
will take $1 ,000. Extended
warranty· 3 years. Call
(740)441-8299 or (740)44 1-

Dachshund-blacl( &amp; 1an &amp;
red dapple pl~J)pies, ready to
go $250-$300, 9 mon1h old
standard size male Boston
Terrier, $225, (740)3769833 .

54_7_2_
. - - - - - - - Golden Retr iever puppies
JET
for sale CKC, S2 50 · Phone
AERATION MOTORS
number (740)3811-8965,

IL\Y

&amp;

For Sale: Round Bal es,
1,000 ibs. Mostly orchard
grass. Kept inside. $20 each.
(740)446-0223.

~i'l:10~...;;;...:;;;;---,
AlJIUS
ffiR

&amp; riO

FARM

,--------:::: ~--=--iillmfiiii,;._.l
Pole Barn 30x50x10FT
$6795 . ' includes Painted·
Metal, Plans , Instruction
Book, Slider, Free Delivery
(9371559·8385
.
PrOm Gown, pink, size S,
matching gloves, $225. Call

after 5:30pm, M-F, (740)44138967.

RemingtOn exp. l'{lagnum 12
gauge . With both barrels,
$275; Lifestyler 1readmill
$200; 4 .Chevy rally wheelS
wilh beauty rings and cen.ter
caps, $200; Canon sure
sho1, 155 zoom w/case, $75;

19' IH Hydraulic Fold Disc.
21' J.D. Field Cultl.vator c1;:_98c:1::.:..0~1d::.:s..:.:..98~."'4"d"r.-=-R-un-s
Hydraulic Fold with Harrow. Good C 11 (304 )675 1264
21 ' Hydraulic Fold Packer
· •
•
call (304)675-4308
1989 Crown Vic. new !ires,
new battery, new trans. Very
Ounham-Lehr 22 QT loader. nice cer. 101 ,000 miles.
All hydraulic. wi1h bale $2 200 oo OBO (740)992
•
·
·
spear. Excellen1· condition. 5532
$1 ,600. (740)379-2768.
1991 S-10, 4x4, 4.3, 5
·Jo 7000 Min -Till · corn speed, $5,200. (304)675,
planter. 4-row, $2,000.
5612.
MF 680 Semi-MTD Plow 4bot1om , several new parts, 1994 while Thunderbird ,
:$500islr;.
· (:..7-40;,;)38.;.;.;8..;
-8_4;.66;....--, loaded, excellent condition,
V8. $3,200 or best offer.
(740)388-9875.

10x30
Janet Jeffers

SELL YOUR CAR
HERE .

6448.
--------2003 Chevrolet Trailblazer
EXT LT 4x4 . 3rd row seating,
loaded, - garage
kept.
Excellent
cond ition.
$24,500. (740)446-7484 or
(740)441 -7411 .
Honda Pilol Ex, rated
2004
best full size SUV. Red Pearl
ext. tan cloth Int., all options,
maintained and bab1ed, 21 k

WITH A PHOTO!

Call 1740)446-2342
For Details

TRUCKS

I . ~~~:

L.---HiiiiilRiiiSi11AiiiLiliii._ _.t. 99 Jeep Grand Yherokee
Laredo. Loaded, 6 cylinder,
1988 Ford F1qO, 79,300 excellent condition, 97,000
miles. Excellent condition, 5 miles,
$7,900
OBO.
speed. overdrive. (740)388- (740)592-2948.
0140
~r~;;.;.;.;;.~4-x4':""--.,
1993 Chevy I ton. 4x4. 6.5
FoR SALE
diesel aulomalic. PW, PD. ~
tilt, new motor, $5,500. 1989 ext.cab GMC 6.. lilt.
(740)379-2715.
4x4, .rebuilt VB-engine,
1993 Chevy 350.0 Turbo
Diesel, Red Pickup, Dully,
Power Windows, Locks,
Loaded
$8,000·
firm
(304)593-5073

( 0\11'\'\\
39728 SRI43
Purnt:roy. OH

rebuilt auto-trans. $3,500
OBO. (740)256-2280 leave
message.

1997 F-150 super cab Ford,
black. excellent condition.
1995 Ford F-150 XLT, 8 ft. Never in salt. Call (740)256bed, excellent condition. 1267
Asking $6,800 QBO. Call
2001 Dodge Ram 4x 4, 46 K,
(740)992-1n7.
26 months on 19K remaincall after 6pm, (740)447- ~-------• 1995 Olds Achieva. 4-dr, V6, · 1998 Chevy S-to pick-up ing factory warran1y. new
2795
'
165,000 miles, $1 ,400. 1i"uck. Ver'y good condition,~
long bed, quad cab,
4,H Pigs for Sale
(740 )388 _8466 .
speed,
good
mileage, tires,
tow package, am-fm-cass1120105
~ Replica" white tail deer Begin farrowing
and ' - - ' - - - - - - - - exiras.
(740)245-9502 cd , loaded, one owner,
should8r mount, hey some· stlll farrowing . Pure bred 1996
Pontiac
Sunfire. evenings.
$17,500, (740)992-2459
one out there killed a deer Yorks
and crossbreds. Convertible .
97,000 - - ' - - - - - like th is, 13 pOints, very Please call (740)448-2002 miles/auto, 2.4Liter engine, 1999 Chevy 1 ton with 11ft 2001 Jeep Cherokee Sport
(7401541 -7491
or all power, CD Nayer,
new utility bed. AC, cruise, lilt, 4x4 price reduced, loaded
massive and large, you Or
~·
should see this one, scores :(7-:-4-:0)~54-:'-·-:74_7-:0-,---:--:-:--:: tires,
- Black
w/Rt;td 350 gas. 5 speed trans., CD ,towing package 54.000
:
Pinstripes. $3,500 Firm. 69,000 miles. Excellent con· miles 304-675-1314
193-118, Ohio Big Bucks Black Australorps, hatching { 740 j24 5·9266.
dition. Call {740)256-1526 or
$1,400. Also, H&amp;R si'ngle April 6th. Now taking orders
(740 )645 _0446 _
99 Jeep Cherokee Sport,
barrel 12 ga. "topper" model St. Run only $1.25 each 1999 .Ford Contour SE- 4
4x4, EC, gold, auto, PW, PL.
Excellent
$110- (304)593-5073 .
door, 24,300 miles, excellen1 2000 Chevrolet-Silverado V6,
CD,
CC,
new
88.
(·740)533--3870.
condition,
$5,500. , Call~1500 LS, fully-optioned, rotors/brakes,
$5,995.
4x4 ,bed1iner.trailering· (614)231 -1355.
Yearling Angus Bulls, Mostly (740)446-0771 after 6pm.
SPA OUJUT
A.l . excellen1 bloodlines. 2000 Chrysler Cirrus 4-doar pkg .,Pewter ext.,Charcoal ;,,.,.;~-....,..,---....,
VANS
Grand Opening
prk:ed reasonably. Sla1e Aun sedan, automatic power int., 1OOk highway miles,
FOR SALE
Saturday/Sunclay
Farm, Jackson. (7'40)266- ·sea.ts,windows.door-locks, syn.oil, below bool&lt; S12,900. ~
l 1ai-n-7pm
5395
304-n3-6062
·
Silver excell. cond. 63,000
Open Dally
www.slaterunfarm.com
miles $6000. 304 _675 -6 047 2i:loo S1~LS, Ext-cab, 3rd 1993 Chevrole1 Astra Van,
60
condition
phone
._hl d
IIAy &amp;
door, 4-cyl , 5-spq. AC , CD. good
Cannanusb.s.
urg-no an
2000 Chrysler Concord,
v
(304)675-5077
(behind Mr. Gatti's)
..............,
82 000 'le $5 300 OBO
46,000
miles.
As"'mg
'606'922-7185
ml s,
•
· $7,900.00 080 · (7401949- 2000 Ford Winstar LX, 81K,
2002
Dodge
Strauss, 2621
,-I"YV"t.. bales, $ 7 .00-$10.00 64,000 miles, $5,500 OBO. - - - - - - - - - 2/sliding doors, seats 7, all
Treated Pool Deck $150
~
(740)256 1539
2001 Ford F-350 diesel, power, rear air, tinted ,win·
8X14 Building $250
&amp; $15.00, piCk up load or
•
·
dually, 4 door, 4x4, automat- dows, . asKing, $6,600;
Two Trailer Tongues $50
semi-loRd,
good
hay, 2001 Honda' CiviC LX ic. $22,500. Call '(740)446(740)669-5653
(304)675-6121 .
Coupe. Green , au1oma1ic, 9317.
(740)698-2765
41
excellent condition , "very
clean, 73,000 highway- 2002 Chevy ·1500, V8,
miles, $8,395 negotiable 29,060 miles, 5spd, PS/PB,
(614)313-7096.
•
AC. 1i1Vcruise, CD, $12,000.
02 Honda 400"EX. Excellent
R~con Iitie . (304)634-5131 .
condi1ion. rode little. $3,000
2002 Ford Escort ZX2. 5
speed, 29,000 miles, air, 2004' FORD F-150 Lariat neg. Catl (740)256· 1526 or
one owner. Nice (740)441- Super Crew, 10.000mi (740)645-0446.
2yr/20,000mi warranty left. 1979 Honda 750 10th
0157 or (740)645-5 141 .
loaded/extras,
$30,000. Anni\iersary limited Edition.
2002 Pontiac Grand AM SE. (304) 523-3500; (304)654Needs
ignition · work.
Red, AJG, CD, loade&lt;l, 56k 93.18; (304)886-1668.
EveQlng
(740)256-6870.
miles,
Euro
taillights,
chrome acc.ents, $8,995. 2004 Silverado 1500, Z71, Low'rtnneage. $2.ooo.
.Excellent cOndition . Call 4WD. Loaded, still under
1982 Honda 500 Trike
(740)25&amp;8816 .. ·
warranty, 29,000.miles, askFaring w/stereo sys1em. 'Ok
Ing $26,000 (304)675-4917
Speed and Agility Class
blue. Evenings (740)256 2003 Dodge Neon STX
WILL POWER TUMBLING
4door, 4cyl., au1omatic, 99 Qodg9 Dakota CILib Cab .6670. $3,000.
power everything, 11 ,000 SLT, Loa ded V-B. 4114, Bed- .:.19~9.:.3_S:.:u.:.z.:.uk::-i-800-'--K-a-n1-a-ne-.
Starts Friday, March 18th
miles , $6,500. (740)441- liner,
· Running-Boards, New paint last fall. Great
6-7 pm
Tonneau Cover, 95Kmi
0337 or (740)645-6153.
SQ,500 (304) 882 _2845
shape. AsKing $1,800 OBO.
Call441-1570 for more
(740)388-()172.
93 Lincoln Town Car. 81,000
information
miles. Very nice , $4,500.
SlNs
1996 Honda Goldwlng 1500
(740)446-1759.
IURSALE
Aspecade. 23,700 miles,
98 Cadill"ac Calera. Fully
excellent condition, 2 matchequipped, lea1her interior. 1999 Eddie Bauer Explorer ing helmets. Asking $8,000.
low miles, mint condition. AWD, load&amp;d, leather, 6 disc (740)388·8047.
Satu,rday, March 19, 2005
changer.
sunroof, '--==-'-----S7.900. Call (740)704-3751 . Co
92,000 miles. $9,500 pBO. 1998 Yamaha 400 Kodiak,
9:00 am to 4:00 pm
99 Cavalier, 4 door, auto- (740)446-7777.
4x4 four wheeler, 1,950.4K
· Spons(lred by Eastern High
matic, new paint, nice interi(great
shape)
asking
.or, 119,000 miles , runs 2001 Lincoln Navigator. $3,000,
(740)742-3029
School
• great $2 ,800. (740)669- AWQ, 5.4 VB, 3rd row seal- morning /eveniOg .
Class of 2007
~
0302.
ing. cassette/CO-changer, -------~­
Held at Eastern Elem. School
heated/cooled-seats, low 2001 Honda 250 EX Sport.
Mus1 sale, 1984 Corvet1e, mites, excellent condition, Trac $2.000 OBO (304)576·
Admission
350 engine. (740)992-8797 $23,900.(740)453-5535.
2903 or (3041675-0619
For,more information call

i

r

'
..,_,.
"•""IOii_illiil_ _. "---•"""""iiiiiiii-•,.l
·

740-1192-9922

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

IUD

8

...

BIJ-'•e B~nM
. . .,

-r·

Complete small
. engine repair
J

ames

A w··11 J
I

at (740) 667-3368 or
Terri at (740) 949·2397

UIII'S PIINnNB

r_

Owner
32119 WelshtownRd.
Pomeroy, O~io 45769
Phone: 740-992-2432

American Legion Middleport
March 19th
6:30pm
First Pack $10.00AII After 1st $5.00

Paying a $100.00 a Game
$200.00 for the X
$300.00 picture frame
$1,000.00 coverall
Crank It Up $1,000.n&lt;l
Door prize $550
Starburst $1 ,450.00 .
Weather Permitting

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, March 20th
12 gauge stock/
12 gauge slug. match
12 noon

-....

..

New Home Construction, Remodeling,
Renovations, Decks, Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs, Siding, Windows &amp; All
Other Residential Needs

j40 WMOTORIIEELERSCYCU:~
4 .

I

BARNEY
GUESS I'M LUCKY, PAW
IN woMEN'S

2003 Suzuki Vinson 500, 4wheeler, 34o miles, Red 4
WD. $4800 OBO 304-675·
2790 .
94 Harley Davidson Ultra
Classic, 10.000 miles. blue,
exce!len1 condi1ion, $13,500,
(740)R49-2217
99 H.D. Fat Boy 9,000 miles,
$5,000 wor1h e&gt;1ra's. AsKing
$15,~ (740)339-3528 or

•_Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gary Stanley

(740) 46-9954
Kawasaki Mule 4x4, Cab,
Healer, Bed Liner. less than

' I

I

2yrs old. (304)675-3773

New shipment of
100% Cotton
MateriaL.Patriotic
&amp; Quilters Prints

THE BORN LOSER

2002 Stingray 20 ft. open
bow, Red/ White, s .o liter v·8, Husrler trailer, eiCcellenr

Hrs.: Thes-Satll-5
Sunday &amp; Monday

Closed

"Middleport's only

S_e lf-Storq:e•

ROBERT

BISSELL

CONSTIUCnM
1997 Coachman Catalina
Lite 24'1oot, Fron1 Bedroom,
many
extras
phone
(3041675-2039 $6,995 OBO
1998 30' fifth wheel travel
trailer, double slide, excellent condition, . $13,900
phone: (740)898-9319

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

2001 Hornet Bunkhouse 32',
12' expando, $1eeps 10,
excellentcandition. $16 ,600,
(740)441 -1S01 .

G

BIG NATE

'

WHO 'S

NEXT

THREE ..
TWO .
ONE

FO"

THE

ASLOW~ As

I

&lt;jl

$26.00. PERMOtn'H!
The Daily Sentinel
.
-

992·2155

By Bernice Bec:le Oaol
the quality of reward that you ~ ll be
seeking. Those things that you previously thought wartt out of reach can
be achieved If you go after them.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Your
comfort zone will be found in Churrimlng around with good friends of long

Rl DE.?

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1&amp;n

.
'ill•••••••
Stop &amp; Compare

Whaley\s Auto
Parts
St. Rt681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

PEANUTS

and Afle,. t'ltlfket Parts

CHARLIE 6ROWN '?
IS TI-IAT YOU? I'M
GLAD YOU CALLED..

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5 :00
Sat 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

WOULD '(OU LIKE TO

··wooF"?

5AV 50MWUN6 TO
t~IHIM?HE'5 RI6~T HERE ..

WJ.IAT DOE5
THAT MEAN?

'{OUR. 006 ?OJ.!,

l-IE'S

FINE ..

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

178-2487
SUNSHINE CLUB

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -

IA1\LKI NG IS

ooro.-roo

GARFIELD
THE.,. CAN RE.1'REA1' IN'It)
eHE.L-1-5, !IHo'r 001'
1'HE. WORLP. ANr;&gt; et.EEP
AWAY

b1PIIOVEMENrS

Culverts
plas1ic and rm~tal, 6~ incheseo inches in slack. Ron
Evans Enterprise. Jackson.
OH 1(800)537-9528

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

29670 Bashan Aoad

Racine, OhiO
45771
740-949;2217

.... l'x10'
10 10'1130'
. Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

0

ADVERTISE

0

IN THIS SPACE
F=OR $52 PER MONTH

50 Tender
eutlell

52 Falling that
53 ·Ocean
dweller

54 Sidle pas1

55 Pull

dandelions
11 Thoughtful 35 Ricky
56 Suaan of .
"L.A. Law"
murmur •
RicardO
57 Take H easy 19 Hod lunc:h 36 Vet
21 " Garfield" 38 Stroked
22 "-bean
honor"
DOWN
pooch
39 Def24 Ply a
41 Toast
23 Lyric poem
1 The " merry
24 Buying
-.Ito
opread
month"
25 B.C. or
42 Uncle or
frenzy
27 Uke lemon
Love, 10
Que.
- ~~:juice
Claudius
26 Hindu
43
n
30 Geologie
3 Orchidroyalty
ridivisions
loving
27 Ptesl8d
45 Yield
algha
· territory
31 Do. fall
WoHe
chore
28 Coust. .u's 46 License
4 Bad guys
·32 Musical
5 Recttly
Islands .
plates
notes
6 Dad 's lad
29 Eatery
47 Smattering
34 Outacored
7 Secures
31 Like lhe
49 PeaY or
35 Dlt partners 8 Set down
uppar
Brenda
36 Hofat .
9 WeebH
atmosphere 51 Allow
37 Polaonoua 10 Handy.33 Farm
snakes
man's need
structure

~!

BAl 'l\1 Ll 'l\IBER

~:------~

I 'JUST 1-\W

Scorpion Tractors

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
.
Celebrity Cij::her ~rams a-e ae11ed lr001 qwtaoons tJv tamous ~ - past W ~
Each lert&amp;r 111 the cipher stands IOf 8flOthef

Toctay's Clue: F 9QUS/s M .
"IRSP

KYFSYPS

NYYU,

MXXOMBUI

WIY

'H\\(1
\W'I'9IEt' ?

~EAM'

30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

---

UYSK
ZYB

KYFSWREPN
IEOD

FMLS

RMXXZ. "
NYDUIZP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'An tnshman can be woni9d by the consciousness
ltla11here is nothing 10 worry about'- Aus1in O'Malley

WOlD
GAM I

Oiovr
itcrrar~~o l etter~
$;rambled

o: 1~!

w:rc'~ b~-

1~ ··o for.'Ti tour Sl&lt;i!fle w~r~1

I_· IfRAOLE
I
I I I I' .
I IKLINB
I I 1·.I

. l

,---~~-L~Y~~O~A~R~~~·.~
. .~-'
5

1-

.I'

I'
.

J

J

.

.

A famous
in
court
and wasauthor
swornamved
'"· by t~e

court bailiff. ''D~ yoL solemnly

the
1ruth in court as you ..-ould in
~wear to tell

r---------,

1--r:;l~-.,.ul.a;f-o

as

much of

o'-r-1_,1-o -~~2;~,. m'··•.,,,,,.. '"'"" .

,..IR-rul,

.

•

.

.

_

::: ~ ! di;r; ;

_

!;Hr ., ,sw~g ~ r ::1

.__.._..__.._..___,---' .yov ce .·e1: : :·o-; ~te::: ~J:-. 3 t:elow.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 1 - : , - os
Caddie - Tempt • Ebony - Ossify - SPEED

The teen had gotten several traffic tldcets so when
he came home with one mo~e h1s irate father scolded, .
"There is more lo life than increasing it's SPEED."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21} An opportunity might arise today
which wiH enable you to change a
negattva situation you've been dealing
with into something rewarding for
yourseH and trose for whpm you care.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Merely keeping yourself busy won't
suffice today. It will be important that
you find a uSeful, producuve outlet for
your talents, abilities and lime in order ·
to truly be happy and feel satisfied.

]

i

SOUPTONUTZ

AWEIR~?

"Taking The Sting Out Qf
Hard Work!"·
Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor

XSYXDS
KMFBSD

AQUARtl:I.S (Jan . 20 ~ Feb . 19) When the final score Ia tallied today,
you'll. lind yourself on the plus side of
lhe column . However. II wilt ~ due to
others' efforts as much as due to your
own that will bring this about .

GRIZZWELLS

Now Available At .

with

Standing
tall
47 -accompli
48 Feeling
touoy

detail.

· 11fe.tR

Hill 's Self
Storage

44

to ferret things out.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Friendly
agreements you enter into today with
those you deem to be good friends will
prove to be bef)elicial. In fact , what
you start now could continue to grow
stronger with time .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - You have
a special knack today that enables
you to bring order Into other peoples'
lives through constructive interven·
lion. If asked to step .in. don't hesitate
to offer your services.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Ventures in which you get yoursetf
lnvotved today with those who are gogetters will turn out quite succesa,ul,
provided you keep a steady hand on
the helm. PersonaMy eupervise wery

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

HOME

The possl·

bilittes for opening addlttonal chaf")nels
()f earnings look partl~ularty favorable
lor you today, so if you're serious
about wanling 10 do so, make the time

-:-=::-c::::::----::==

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondi1ional lifetime guarantee. Local references Jurnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446 0870, Rogers Basement
Wa1erprooflng.

stan\1tng rather than attempting to mix
with unfamiliar group5 today. Stick to
the tried and true for now.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19)- Should
any critical situation arise today,'
whelhCilr it is work-relatetl or not, yOu'll
tNt the one everyone can rely on to ferret out the complications and bring
them under contr~ .
TAURUS (April 2Q-May 20) - You're
an especially good student today, so
hit the books or analyi:8 your personal experiences to see what you can
learn from them so that you can muhlply your stockpile of knowledge.
GEMINI {May 21-June 20) - There·s
a pos;,bility that a liHie bravado may
be required today, but be sure to use it
wisely and judiciously. You can be bokj
and forceful without being foolhardy In
achieving your goals.
CANCER (June 2\.-July 22)- H you
find yourself facing a perplexing problem, seek out the counsel of someone
you trust who yOu consider knDYIIadgaable
in
these
matters.
Collectively, you'll be able to find the
solution .

• Driveways• Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

2002 RV
Hauler ·8x24.
Living Quarters. Cargo
Area. Call (740)446-2266.

-'Birthdlttr:

In the year ahead it wm b8 persistence
and determlnatlori that wilt bring you

it~R.I LL

Restocking l.a.te Mxlel

.Astro..
Graph

S .. urday, March 19, 2005

nence

992-3194
or 992-6635.

41 Gooalp

42 Theme

Firs1, took only at 1he West hand. What
would you lead agains1 six hea~s doubled
after that exciting sequence? Once you
have decide&lt;!, study the full layout Wha1
do you think ollhe auction? What is par 1or
this deal (1he resun when bo1h sides do as
well as possible)?
II is impossible to predict the auction. Firs t,
Eas1 might jump straight to four spades.
Although this risks missing a slam, i1 does
make South's life much harder. ~ere, if
Eas1 did bid lour spades, I guess Sou1h
would compete with live diamonds. That
would go back to East, who might sud-

down three.

740-416-3508

cond., garage kep1 , price ~;;;;~;;~
new $24.000 sell $15,700 . •
celf Tray Krebs 304-675·

r

ON THIS PAGE.fOR

....

I 1'\t:l/t:.K 1&lt;:EN.J Zt:.l&gt; f\OW DOlL
OUt&lt;:.. L\1/E.Y
Wt:.RE. ...

YO\.J KloiOW , (:.tJ&gt;J)'&lt;S ...

" 1 1n H t ..,

.BUSINESS .

I"'

I"'

Barns
• Kitchens • Baths
··No Job To Smalf"
· Racine, OH
740-247-2162 or

lOx I Ox I OxlO

A double fit ·
gives more tricks

tricks 1han the combined point-count
would suggest Also, il is usually righ1 to
try to become the declaring side. So,
although Wes1's fit isn't great, a bid o1 six
spades over six hearts is not inconceiv·
able.
.
Six hearts is deteated by three tricks if
West leads a diamond , or shifts 1o a dia·
mond after starting wilt\ the spade ace.
But East viould probably guess ihe cltbs
to make six spades.
The par result is seven diamonds double&lt;!

•

• Room Add. • Mini

Middleport, OH

Obi.

a double fit If you do, you will win more

lmprovcrllcnt N~eds
• Siding • Window&lt;;
• Decks • Porches
• Ci:a-ports • Garages

97 Beech Street

•8•..

Mac hmr Quiltmg

'I'D

MANLEY'S
SElf STORAGE

Pass

Pass ·

1 Luxuriant
treoees
5 Mind
reader's gift
a·Kind
of helmet
12 Anal word
13 Extlnc1 bird
14 Weavor'i
frame
15 Dillon! past
16 Conclusion
17 Lep1on'o
home
18 Candle or
legion
.20 Union
branch

a

Construction

14 yr s. Ex

Pass

Obi.

MILL END
FABRICS

All Your HomC
2000
Harley
Davidson .
,Sportster 883 Hugger, 6,350
mile.s, new tires. extras,
$6,500 Neg. Day: (740)6453248, even1ng affer 7pm ,
(740)256-6589

• Pass

East

I •

denly be inconsistent, bidding ~' clubs.
One minute, he is happy with game; the
next, he is torcing to ~am .
In the given sequence, it is vital1or Soulh
to bid live diamonds. When you know ol. a
double 1il, tell pa~ner. Equally, nyou have
a two-suiter and 1ind
fit in one ol the
suits, try lo show your second suit, so that
partner w~l know whether Or nol .you have

RIGMTS

Phone: 740-742-3411
for a free estimate.
STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

YOtJft .101 IS
Ttltttf: WI/,L
It NO wAY
TO titT A
PtMOTION.
•

Brian Reeve s

• Leave a messa e

l'flll""~----~~

· .. ·

Sunset Home
Construction

740-742-2293

E-mail
jwill45769@ yahoo.com

io

BINGO

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Le: me de 1! for youl

:-:'"'-':::--'--:--:::-::--=-:-

Becky

Ta~e

69

,.2.

Nor.tll

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

~

740-992-7599
r--"::".,_--:,~S=-:--a1/-::-,

Pass
Pass

39 Dowdle
40 Flight dlr.

:i

Opening lead :??

~ · Tttt NICf: TttiNG ABOuT

FREE ESTIMATES

L 4~=cusi ItaoA~s~oRSI

No

Top • Removal •. Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket True~

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Years Local Ex mnce

Mon -Sm IOAM -5PM

1•
5 t

West

Pass

WV 036725

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing

\10'\1 \II·'\ I

$26,900. 304-773· ·

Tree Service

BUILDERs·me.

\I ' REE

3

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Both

JONES'

BISSEll

Let us help you
choose a lasting
tribute to your loPed
one's m,emory.

8

.. AKJ9 5

•

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

·•

· •Q9' 542
+AJ96 3
.. Q 8

We·dO It all except
furnace work

33795 Hiland Road ·
Pomeroy, Ohio

seats, 29,000 miles, moonroof, 4-wheel -drive, CD,
$23,400 OBO. (6141989-

North
03-tl-05
• J 8 2
• A K J 10
• K Q 10 7
• 6 3
East
• . KQJ09734

South

South

• Room Addltiona &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• E!.ctrk:al &amp; ptumblng
•. Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks

SxiO, lOxlO;
10xl5, 10x20,

'

r

,

Storage

CARPENTER
SERVICE

(740) 992-5232

West
• A 6
• l 6 3
• 6 5. 2:
• 10 7 4 2

wv

YOUNG'S ·

r

41800 SR #7
Tuppers Plains, OH
~.... ~ 45783 •

740·667-0700 1·888-HUPP234

Blgb and Dry
Phone

Rocky Hupp
··ance
and Financial Services

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

1-888-321-0311
740-682-6188

· Birdie Mae
., Hysell

'

'

Buyers of standing timber
Also Land Clearing
· Ask for Art

~ the Birchfield
l'uneral Home.
' !·The family of

·

i 15

excellent, Mechanical excellent, · body good . ~eeds
minor repair and paint .
$3.300.00 OBO. (74'0)696'1373. (740)591 -5888.

~ tlttl~~~~.Jil~

Rbnald Heath and

9943 ,

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuitt In Ppodle puppies- tiny toys, $500! Honda's, Chevy's ,
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1- AKC , while &amp; cream, 2 male, Je8p's,
Ect.
Police
SOD-537-9528.
1 female, {740)401-0327
d 1C
$SOO
1
1
mpoun s
ars rom
Sheltle pupa:
for lis1ings 800·391 -5227
EXT 3901
.
NEW AND USED STEEL
male. AKC Born 12/31
S1eel Beams, Pipe Rebar ~at Chk'd, shots 8 1952 PlymOuth 4dr. engine
Angle, ~rmed .
$500, 'POP. runs good. body excell., all
For
Concrete,
Channel. Flal Bar, Steel
740)473-2785, (740)23~
· 1
132 ooo ·1
'"''f
org1na , no rus
.
m1 es
Grating
For
Drains, h.-.26 .
304 57"2532
fA'•
- ..,..
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NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

much. A special
1hanks to Rev.

ruRSALE

_..

Phillip
Alder

kindness meant so

Amos

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.!llydailysentinel.com

BRIDGE

We would like to
express our
heartfelt thanks to
the many friends
and neighbors for
the outpouring ol'
love and support
given to us during
the death of our
beloved sister,
Birdie Mae Hysell.
To all who visited,
seni cards, brought
food or sen t
llowers, your

Charlie
Marshall

•:~m.

Friday, March 18, 2005
ALLf;:Y OOP

Card ot Thanka

In memory of

'used

r

Friday, March 18, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

\&lt;1 TI-\E

�. Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel'

Steroids

During a break after the
players' opening statements . .
four of the stars gathered in
one nearby room, Canseco in
another.
,
When Red Sox pitcher Curt
Schilling testified, he .said
flatly of Canseco: " He's a

from Page 81

in baseball had been blown out
of proportion.
"Did we have a major prob· liar."
lem? No," he said. "So let me
The hearin g came after
say this to ,you: There is no·
committee members accused
concrete evidence of that, baseball · of ignoring · its
there is no testing evidence. steroids problem for years and
there is no other kind of evi- · then, only under pressure,
dence."
embracing a Weak testing prO· ·
McGwire repeatedly avoid- gram.
,
ed direct responses, saying his
At
the
he~ring ' s
start,
lawyers advised him not to
almost all Of the congressmen
answer certain questions.
gushed about the sport, recall·
Often, he said he couldn't
answer or had no opinion ing how they collected base·
ball cards and autographs and
because "I'm retired."
naming several retired heroes
Peering over reading glass· before leveling their harsh
es, McGwire fidgeted as he
looked up at the congressmen, criticisms.
For the most part, though,
no longer the larger-than-life
the
congressmen were defer·
figure who was the greatest
entia!
and unwilling to press
single-season home run hitter
the players, .saving their
ever.
.
.
toughest comments for base·
Asked by Rep . Elijah ball's new testing progra01,
Cummings, D·Md., whether including a provision allow· .
he was asserting his Fifth ing for tines instead of penal·
Amendment right not to ties. A first offense could cost
incriminate himself. McGwire a player $10,000 instead of I 0
said: "I'm not here to talk days out of a six-month sea·
. about the past. I'm here to be .son.
·
positive about this subject."
Selig, however, said he
Asked whether m;e of would suspend anyone who
steroids
was
cheating, fails a test, adding: "There
McGwire said: "That's not for will be no exceptions."
·Using n\ost steroids without
me to determine."
Still, he. said he knew a doctor's presc ription for
steroids could be dangerous medical purposes. is illegaL
and would do whatever he Baseball banned steroids in
could to discourage young · September 2002 and · began
testing for them in 2004.
.
athletes from using them.
Selig sat with arms crossed
"What I will not do, howev·
er, is participate in naming and lips pursed for much of
names and Implicating my the hearing. He .craned his
friends and teammates," said neck to get a better view as the
McGwire, who ranks sixth in players spoke.
"Whv should we believe
major league history with 583
the baseball commission·
that
homers.
"What anybody can do to er and the baseball union will
improve it so that there 's no want to do something when
more meetings like this. I'm we have a 30-year record of
them not responding to this
all for it."
It was · a tense scene. problem?" asked Henry
Canseco sat stone-faced. at the Waxman of California, the
· · ranking
table and said he could ·not committee's
fully
answer
questions Democrat. "Why should we '
because of concerns that his believe it's all going to be
testimony .could be used done now the way it should be
done?"
against h1m . .

Kuwik

after this year, I think I'll be
abl.e to handle it," said
Kuwik, who will return to
living
in a 7-by-20 foot metal
from Page 81
trailer; where some fellow
soldiers set up a makeshift
their warm-ups.
scoreboard to post results of
Kuwik swapped leaves regular season games.
with another officer and
"There's a bunch of troops
rejoined the Bobcats for the over in Iraq really following
MAC tourney, which Ohio . the Bobcats that prior to this
won by overcoming a 19· had nci. affiliation to Ohio
point deficit against Buffalo University. It's a great story.
in the title game.
It really is," O'Shea said.
Coach Tim 0' Shea had
Kuwik expects to leave
K!iwik deliver the pregame Iraq in Decembe.r and hopes
speech before each of the last to return to the sideline in
four games, and plans to do early January for the start of
so again on Friday.
the Bobcats' conference
"Whatever life throws me sehedule.

/Vo"' loeatel at tlu

•

www.mydaily,s entinel.com

1~ 2005

Friday, March

Burress changes mind, signs with Giants) ·
with Drew Rosenhaus.
Plaxico Burress will play
Rosenhaus was not immedi·
with the New York Giants ately available for corriment
after alI. ·
Thursday.
The free-agent wide receiv·
Also Tht~rsday, NFL leading
er reached an agreement with rusher Emmitt Smith signed a
the team he spurned last week one-year contract with Dallas
on a six-year, $25 million con· so )le can retire as a Cowboy,
tract Thursday,
footl;&gt;all and the Browns signed run·
source said.
.
ning back Chester Taylor to a
The. deal includes an $8 mil· one-year, $3 million offer
liornigning bonus, the sourGe ·· sheet. The Seahawks also said
told The Associated Press on they have signed Broncos cor·
condition of anonymity.
nerback Kelly Herndon to an
The agreement comes a offer sheet.
week after the Giants said they
Burress, --who spent the last
were no longer interested in five seasons with Pittsburgh,
signi ng · the · speedy former brings considerable size and
Pittsburgh Steel~rs receiver, big-play ability to a Giants
and just days after Burress offense that sorely needs both.
switched agents.
At 6-foot-5 and 226 pounds,
Burress met with the Giants · Burress has the size and speed
eight days ago and rejected an to get down ihe field and catch .
otrer that was almost the same the fade pattern in the · end
as the one he agreed to zone, which no doubt is attracThursday. He then fired agent tive to Eli Manning heading
Michael Harrison and signed irito his first ·full season as a
BY THE ASSOCIATED PBESS

a

starter.
Burress had 35 catches for
698 yards and . five tJuchdowns last season. His finest
season was in 2002, when he
had 78 catches.
·
Smith spent the last two seasons with the Arizona
Cardinals after playing with
Dallas for 13 years. After
Smith submits his official
retirement notification to the
NFL, he will be placed on the
Cowboys' reserve retired list.
Smith announced his retin;ment last month.
The Browns' move to sign
Ta&gt;:lor could signal the end of
Wtlliam Green's time in
Cleveland. Baltimore has· urnil
Wednesday to..Jilatch the offer
for Taylor, a restricted free
agent, Browns spokesman Bill
Bonsiewicz said. If the Ravens
decline, the Browns would
owe the Ravens a sixth-round
drat! pick.

Taylor would likely COm·
pete with .Lee Suggs. for the
starting job in Cleveland. fli~
addition would allow the
Browns to release Green, who
has been given pennission ~~
se4 a trade.
,Denver has one week to ·
match the offer to Herndon, a
restricted free agent. If th~
Broncos decide not to match
. the offer, the Seahawks won'i
give up a dritft choice because
Herndon joined the Broncos
as an undrafted free agent in
2

Internal : Uedidne
Location:

Refreshing home for refreshing
· vacation, D1

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

• Redmen svveep Shawnee
State. $ee Page ,81

~

:!O. :.!00.)

1•.)0 •

\ 'ol. :l9· ,o, ; ~

J.

REED

GREAT
BEND
Columbus Southern Power
Co. and Ohio Power Co.
filed an application Friday
with the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio seeking
. auth~rity to recover costs

related to building and operating a new clean-coal power
. plant in Ohio, and has tdenti· ·
fied Meigs County as the
intended site for the plant.
· Before AEP can proceed
with plans to construct the
plant,. the PUCO must
ap~rove the power compa·
ny s plans to recover the

costs of plant construction.The application filed Friday
outlines those cost-recovery
plans, and are the first step
toward constructing the plant
in Meigs County, AEP
Spokesman Jeff Reonie said
Frida~.

"Fnday's filing with the
PUCO should be seen as the

tirst step in the process, and
if the PUCO approves the
cost recovery plan, AEP can
continue · that process,"
Rennie said.
American Electric Power,
which owns . Columbus
Southern Power and Ohio
Power companies as sub·
sidiaries, has announced

plans to build up to 1.200
megawatts of new genera·
lion using clean-coal tech·
nology. The new plant would
be the first commercial-scale
use of the new technology
for power generation and the
largest
Integrated

Please see Plant. A5

'

.

.

.

.

'

BY KEVIN· KELLY .·
1\KELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

'

OBITUARIES

$9,

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Page AS.
• Harry "Kearny"
Kearns
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WEATHER

GALLIPOLIS -. A $2
million piece of equipment is
a key component in the ser·
vices the new Holzer Center
for Can.c er Care will offer its
patients when the facility
·
opens Monday.
The linear accelerator that
provides the center's radia· ·
tion oncology treatment is ·
the third of its kirid to be .
installed at similar facilities
around the country, said
Bryon Murray, medical
physicist at th.e center, who
was among .the center staff
who gave a tour of the center·
to local officials and media
. Thursday.
.
Emory University is one of
the sites featuring an acceler·
ator similar .to the one at the
· Holzer center, Murray said.
One of the unique features
of the accelerator is its abili·
ty to offer intensity modulat·
ed radiation therapy (IMRT),
allowing the pinpointing of
radiation to areas that need
the most therapy, said Dr.
Subhash Khosla, the center's
radiation oncologist.
. "It delivers a higher dose
to a smaller area, the area we
want to treat," Murray
added.
The
accelerator . can
expand for a second unit and
required about ·12 weeks for
installation, calibration and
and preparation, said offi·
cials for Holzer Clinic and
Holzer · Medical Center,
which have joined forces in
building and operating .the .
center.
Another major investment

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AEP files cost recovery plan for proposed Meigs plant

SPORTS

INDEX
4 SECflONS- 24 PAGES

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

l'onuTo~

()hio \aile) Puhli'-lhing ( o.

.

PVH Medical .
2418

T!u

Teenager finds strength following his
parents' deaths, Cl

tm

K

·Pleacra,t !/aile! !foflt'tal
!/el/eal Of{ree Ce,te~ .
'8rEPDN 8EUONTEIN, MD

.LIVING

If

~~ Seahawks are in need of

a starting cornerback after en
Lucas signed a six-year deal
with the Carolina Panther~
two weeks ago. Herndon start'
ed every game last season,
leading the Broncos with .20
passes defensed while finish.
ing fifth with 77 tackles. He
added two interceptions.
..

ALONG .THE RIVER

· Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
.Region
Sports
Weather

A:3
C Section
I) Section
insert ·

A4
A6
A2
B Section
A6

© 2005 Ohio Valley hbtl•hlnl Co. .

Kevin lleiiJ/[IIIoto

Bryon Murray; rnedical physicist at the Holzer Center for Cancer Care, explains the functions of the $2 million linear acceler·
ator at the center, a joint venture of Ho lzer Clinic and Holzer Medicai Center which opens to patients on Monday.
in equipment was in the CT
simulator, a $500,000 item
that allows for treatment
planning, officials said.
It's all part of the $12 mil·

lion investment by the clinic
and the hospital, with more
than $1.5 million raised · so
far by the ongoing "Healin¥,
Families-Sharing Strengths '

Some 42 years later, bingo game comes to an end

Shuler

BY TIM MALONEY

trial
delayed

TMALONEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Jane McCully could be
found in the same spot every Friday night for
42· 112 years now: Running the bingo game at
•
the Elks Lodge in Gallipolis.
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
Her partner, Teresa Gleason, has been at it .
for 30 years. ·
MIDDLEPORT
If
And so, it was a longstanding tradition thfit
being a parent were easy, · ·came to an end Friday at the lodge~ when
everyone would do it. Its the they held their last bingo game.
"It's !Qnd of s&amp;d," McCulty said, "but I'm
hard part that makes it spe·
cia! and special people are getting ready to start another chapter in my
needed by the Me1gs County .life, and it's going to be fun." ·
,
Department ·. of Jobs and
After all, McCulty. 75, just witnessed the
Family Services as foster b'nh of her first gre;tt-grandson, Robbie
parents for abused and Keeton, son of Elizabeth and D.R. Keeton of
neglected children.
~
People who become foster V'nton. Mrs. Kee n is the daughter of ·
parents have an opportunity McCully's son, Bo · McCully.
to step up in their communi~
"I've been available for my kids and grand·
ty and make a difference in a kids for 6· 112 days a week for the past 42
child's life by providing years, and now I'm going to be available for
shelter and support.
him," McCulty said.
Foster parents in Meigs
It's time to start a new tradition, McCulty
County are themselves sup· said. She and her husband, Gene, are going to
ported by social workers start going out for dinner on Friday nights.

Pluse IH folter, A5 .

fund-raising campaign.
travel to cancer centers . in
The end result is a facility Huniington .or Columbus.
providing up-to-date cancer ·The center's theme is "Trust.
treatment locally, eliminat·
ing the ne~d for patients'
Pluse IH Cancer. A1

Pluse ... Blnp, A2

BY TIM MALONEY
TMALONEY®MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Tim

_,;plooto

It was 42"1/2 years and more than 2,200
Friday nights ago that Jane McCully ran her
first bingo game at the Elks Lodge in
Gallipolis.", She and her partner, Teresa
Gleason, whd has 30 years experience oper·
atlng the Elks bingo game, are retiring.

GALLIPOLIS
The
. murder
trial
of
Denis R.
ShU'ler
scheduled
for
later
this month
has · been
delayed to
allow time
for
his
defense to Denis Shuler ·
have its own
experts examine ballistic evi·
dence .
Shuler, 42, Langsville, was
scheduled to . stand tria~
beginning March 28 for th~
'

'

Please IH ntaL A1

PERFtCT FOR MARCH MADNESS!! "
•
•
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Use in public facilities
Traveling
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Stop disturbing' others

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