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www.mydailysentinel.~m
J

Page 86 •

The Daily Sentinel
NCAA

DIY .

BASKETBA LL

CH. AMPIONSHIP

Men's matchup
,

Games are listed first in each area. Second game starts 30 minutes after first games ends.

Atlanta

East Rutherford

Phoenix

St. Louis

n

Raleigh, N.C. • Thurs .. 12:20 p.m.
15) Florida
20· t 0 • Southeastern

Denver • Thurs., 12:40 p.m.
(4) Maryland
19·11 • Atlantic Coast

Seattle • Thurs.. 7:35 p.m.

Allhllgh, N.c;. • Thurs ., 7:t0 p.m.
(1)DI!ke
27·5 • A~antic Coast
(16) Alabama State
16-14 • Southwestern
The Hornet's are 13-2 ol/er their
last 15 games, but it endS vs. Duke.

•

(1 2) Manhattan
24-5 • Metro Atlantic AthletiC
Streaky Gators will have hands full
with scrappy Jaspers .
~ 14) Wake Forest
19·9 • AtlantiC Coast

(8) Seton Hall
20-9 • Big East
(9) Arizona
2Cl-9 • Pac-1 o
Arizona has been an underachiev9f
and looks to move on vs. Hall.

1111 1t 3) Va. Commonwealth
23-7 • Colooial Athletio Assoc.
"
Demon Deacons should make short
work of Colonial's Rams.
'
Buffalo, N.Y. • Thurs ., 12:25 p.m.
(8) Texas Tech
22· 10 • Big 12

Denver • Thurs . ~ 7: 20 p.m.
(3) Texas
23-7 • Big 12
(14) Princeton
20-7 • Ivy League
!'rlnceton will look to slow down
game vs. athletic Longhorns.

~ (9) Charlotte

21·8 • Conference USA
Eddie Basde~ looks to shut down
Red Aaiders' Andre Emmen.
(1 ) Saint Joseph's

s

17) Michigan State
18-11 • Big Ten
110) Nevada
23-8 • Western Athletic
Wolf Pack look to upset State's battletested Spartan team.

r.i.Zij (13) Texas-EI Paso

24·7 • Western Athletic
Turnaround Terrapins will be tough
for UTEP.

12) Gonzaga
27-2 • West Coast

~ (5) Syracuse

21 ·7 • Big East
112) Brigham Young
21 ·8 • Mountain West
Last year's champs could have a
tough time with Cougars.

18· t 2 • Mid-Continent
Former Cinderella's meet, but 'Zags
will be staying at the danae.

Seattle • Thurs., 2:40p .m.

Milwaukee • Fri., 12:30 p.m.

~ 115) Valparaiso

I!J

(61 Boston College
23-9 • Big East

(8) Alabama
17-12 • Southeastern
(9) Southern Illinois
25-4 • Missouri Valley
Salukis could be too much lor a
mediocre Tide team.

Ill ) Utah
24-8 • Mountain West
Utes should give Eagles a game. but
will miss Majerus.

•

~~ (3) Georgia Tech

0

11) Air Force
22·6 • Mountain West
Best team the Falcons have had
in years is st~l no match for Heels.

18-14 • Big South
Hawks will take out loss in
conference tournament on Flames.

(1) Stanlord
29·1 • Pac-10
116) Texas-San Antonio
19-13 • Southland
Roadrunners will be no match for
tough Cardinal team .

Columbus, Ohio• Fri. , 12:25 p.m.
(5) Illinois
24·6 • Big Ten
( t 2) Murray State
28·5 • Ohio Valley
The Racers will use speed to liy
to knock off llllni.

Kansas City, Mo. • Fri., 12:30 p.m.
17) Memphis
21-7 • Conference USA
It 0) South carolina
23-10 • Southeastern
Both teams looking to straighten out
seasons after streaky second half.

Orlando, Fla. • Fn ., 12:15p.m.
(3) North carolina State
20-9 • Atlantic Coast
114) Loulslana·Lalayette
20-8 • Sun Ben Conferenoe
· Ragin' Cajuns and Wolfpaok should
put on high-scoring affair.

~ (4) Cincinnati

(2) Oklahoma State
27-3 • Big 12
(1 5) Eastern Washington
17-12 • Big Sky
Potential one-seed Cowboys should
handle Eagles no problem.

•

(6) Vanderbilt
21·9 • Southeastern
(11) Western Michigan
26-4 • Mid-American
Broncos should give COmmodores
all they can handle. /

19-11 • Pac-10
(9) Alabama-Birmingham
20-9 • Conference USA
Blazers could upset weak Pac 10

Orlando, Aa. • Fri., 7:10p.m.
(2) Mississippi State
25·3 • Southeastern
(15) Monmouth, N.J.
21 -11 • Northeast
Bulldogs will have easy time
aga!nst Hawks' defense.
(7) X.vter
23-1 0 • Atlantic 10

Milwaukee • Fri. , 7:20p .m.

Buffalo, N.Y. • Fri., 7:10p.m.

Kansas City, Mo. • Fri., 7:25p.m .

(TO) Louisville
20·9 • Conference USA
i took down St. Joe's, but
should watch out for Louisville.

114) Central Florida
25·5 • Atlantic Sun
Panthers looking to prove they're a
higller seed aner Big East f1nalloss.

16) North Caronna
18· 10 • Atlantic Coast

27-1 •Atlantic 10

lli!J (

1m

~ (16) Liberty

24-6 • Conterenoe USA

(13) East Tenness" St.
27-5 • Southam
• Huggins could take the 'Cats far
and will get past the Bucs.

9

II

(6) Wisconsin

~ (2) Connecticut

24-6 • Big Ten

27-6 • Big East
(15) Vermont
22·8 • America East
'
Despite injuries
to b~ men. Huskies
should roll over Catamounts.

•

(It) Richmond
20-12 • Atlantic 10
Badgers wary of upset-minded

Spiders - even at home.
13) Pittsburgh
29-4 • Big East
•

ifl

23-9 • Atlantic Coast
~ (1 4) Northern Iowa

21-9 • Missouri Valley
Yellowjackels should be too much lor
NIU's Panthers .
Columbus, Ohio • Fri., 7:10p.m.
11) Kentucky
26-4 • Southeastern
(t6)Lehlgh2Cl-10 • Patr. League
Fla. A&amp;M 14-16• MK~&amp;;t/&gt;lh.

A 16-seed has never beaten a oneseed and i1 won't happen with 'Cats.
~ (8) Washington

representative Huskies.

m

15) Providence
20·8 • Big East

~ 112) Pacific

24-7 • Big West
Rugged Friars should end Tigers' 15game winning st~eak .
14) Kansas
21·8 • Big 12

(7) DePaul
21 -9 • Conference USA

~ It 3) Illinois-Chicago

(10) Deyton
24-8 • Atlantic 10
Le1tao's Blue Demons should not
look past Flyers toward UConn.

24-7 • Horizon League
Experienced Jayhawks should be
able to hold off upstart Flames.

Thursday, March 18, 2004

UK in familiar
position, Bt

Outfielder Sizemore
) shines at Indians
spring training
WINTER HAV EN, Fla.
(AP) - Grady Size more
believes in se izing opportunities.
He did so when he
played high school quarterback.
"We onl y th rew the ball
four or fi ve times a game.
We had a few pass pl ays,"
he said Wednesday. "But I
turned them into run s."
Th e
21 -year-old
Cleveland Indians outfielder is now seizing the
chance to shine al hi s first
big-league spring training.
Since reporting last
month, Sizemore has been
perhaps the most impressive of the Indian s' young
players during spring
!raining. He's battin g .429
(9-for- 2 1) with fiv e extrabase hits through Tuesday
while
demonstrating
exceptional range in the
outfield and speed on the
basepaths.
Sizemore will begin the
season at Class AAA
Buffalo.
"Grady plays the game
you want everybody to
play it," Indians manager
Eric Wedge said . "He 's a
guy who is going to be
part of our future here. He
needs to go to Buffalo and
play every day for now. As
far as when he comes up
... that' s an issue of its
own."
It didn't take long for

Sizemore to become
known after the six-player
trade in 200 2 that' sent
pitcher Bartolo Colon to
Montreal and brou ght
Sizemore, Cliff Lee and
Brandon Phillips from the
Expos.
Sizemore hit .343 in 47
games for Class A Kinston

(N.C.) after the trade, then
was named Indians Minor ·
League Pl ayer of the Year
in 2003' after batting 3,P4
with 40 extra-base hits at
Class AA Akron .
He acknowledges hi s
first major-l eag ue camp
has been a learning expenence.
"The first thing you
notice is the pitching,"
Sizemore
said .
"Everything
-move s.
Nothing is straight. You
may get one pitch to hit
during an at-bat."
Si zemore ran for a
school-record 3,081 yards
as an option quarterback
in hi gh school and had
signed an NCAA football
letter-of-intent with the
University of Washington
before being drafted by
Montreal in the third
round in 2000.
Si zemore said he has no
second thoughts about his
career choice.
"I do mi~ s the emotion
of football," he said. "But,
looking back, it was the
only decision to make. I'll
play baseball until they
kick me . off the field .
Hopefully by that time I'll
be too old to pl ay football."
The Indians are likely to
kick Sizemore off the field
at Buffalo and up to
Cleveland at some point
thi s summer.
" I'm not even thinking ·
about when I am called
up, or if." Sizemore said.
"When the time is right,
they'll know. When I'm
ready, they ' ll know. I'm
trying to put the least pos'sible amount of pressure
on myself. Baseball is
hard enough as it is."

e
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:" '

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IBIP\\

\ 1 \ h 4 t l•. • •• " ' ' f

.

SPORTS
• UC has undergone major
changes. See Page 81

-

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CLEVELAND - For the
record, LeBron James filled
·out his NCAA tournament
brackets and picked Oklahoma
State to win it all.
And Cleveland's rookie star
already has his eyes on a sleeper in the NBA playoffs: the
Cavaliers.
"I think we're real dangerous," James said. "We're not
just a one-dimensional team.
There are a lot of Eastern
teams that have one player that
they go to. And that's not it for
us."
Hardly.
Right now, it's difficult to
find a team in the league playing as well as the Cavaliers,
who won their seventh straight
game Tuesday night, 111 -87
over the Chicago Bulls.
With James and center
Zydrunas llgauskas leading the
way. Cleveland has gone 11-3
since the All-Star break and
25- 17 since opening the season
6-19.
The Cavaliers are currently
clinging to the No. 6 playoff
SP9t in the wild, wild East's

wide-open race where on
Wednesday si~ teams were
ser.arated by just three games.
'We're clicking at the right
time," said Ilgauskas, the
reigning conference player of
the week averaging 20.4
points, 9.2 rebounds and• 3.5
blocks in his last 13 games.
"We' re playing our best basketball of the season right now,
and that' s when you want to
peak. A lot of teams are dropping and we're going up.
Hopefully, we'll keep on doing
that."
The seven-game win streak
is the Cavaliers' lon~est since
1997 - the last ltme they
made the playoffs. And with
just 15 games left in the regular
season, it might be time to start
looking at Cleveland as a legit·
imate contender.
Not so fast, says coach Paul
Silas.
·
"We have a little swa~ger
about us right now," said Srlas,
who isn 't quite ready to proclaim his team among the conference's elite with Indiana,
New Jersey and Detroit.
"We' re not quite there," he
said. "But if we rip off a few
more games in a row, I' II say
we' re there."

There hasn 't been anything
tluky about the Cavs' surge.
In winning II of 13,
Cleveland has posted home
wins over San Antonio,
Milwaukee and Indiana as well
as road victories in New York
and New Orleans.
James, who is averaging
22.5 points, 6.0 rebounds and
4.8 assists since the break,
understands Silas' reluctance
to crown the Cavs contenders.
But that's not stopping King
James.
"We believe," he 1 said .
"Coaches alway s say no to
stuff like· that. But as players,
we have arrived and we can
play with anybody. Anytime
we go out we're capable (of
winning) and we' re showing it.
We're on u seven-game winning streak and that's not just
playing any teams. We 've beaten competitive teams out
there."
They' re going to have to beat
a few more, too, if they plan on
making the playoffs.
Cleveland has three games
left Utah , · Detroit and

Phoenix - on its current
homestand before facin~ a
five-game gauntlet that mtght
determine the Cavs' postseason
fate.
They'll play road games in
Philadelphia, San Antonio,
Dallas and Milwaukee and
have a home date with New
Jersey, which spanked the
Cavs by 20 points just before
the All-Star break.
The Nets may not recognize
these Cavaliers and especially
not the 7 ~ foot-3 llgauskas,
whose in/·ury-riddled career
has never ooked brighter.
Ilgauskas has been dominant
on offense and with Silas prodding him, the 28-year-old has
become a defensive force by
blocking shots and altering
others.
"He's one of the top centers
in all of the NBA,' Indiana
coach Rick Carlisle said.
"There's not many guys at 7-3
who can do what he does on
· the court - facing the basket,
shooting with range, posting
up, He's a very potent
weapon."
··

-

.

..

. -

POMEROY - A $600
donation f~om the non-profit
Enterpri se
Development
Corporation will go toward a
local match for the purchase
of a new meal delivery vehicle for the Meigs County
Council on Aging.
·
Gary N. Seeley, executive
director of the Athens-based
agency, presented the check
to
MCCoA
Executive
Director Mark Sutton at
Thursday 's regular meeting
of the Meigs County
Commissioners. The $31,000
four-wheel drive "Hot Shot"
delivery truck has been
ordered, and its purchase
financed primarily through
Community Development
Block Grant formula funds
awarded by commi ssioners
last year.
The $600 contribution
will be used toward a
$4,400 local match required

Commissioners
tabled
action on a request from cilizens and the Meigs County
Humane Society to change
hours of adoption at the
Meigs County Dog Pound.
Commissioners have been
asked to adjust the current
hours of 2 to 3 p.m. each day

··.sunglasses HALF
New·stock

PRICE

Russell Stover

Chocolate Rabbits
6 oz. Reg. S1.49

Please see Donation, AS

THE SPRING SCENE

threatened him on March 10
while
driving
out side
Young's East Main Street
POMEROY - A Pomeroy home . According to Young's
village worker charged with statement to police, Spaun
menacing for allegedly was upset about comments
threatening former Pomeroy Young had allegedly made
Mayor Victor Young Ill has about
Spaun 's
mother,
denied the charge, and will Pomeroy Council member
appea r an court again on Ruth Spaun.
April 29.
Story appoi-nted Pomero y
Shannon Spaun. 29. an Attorney Charles Kn ight to
employee with the village represent Spaun. and set a
wat er department, face s a personal recognizance bond
fourth -degree misdemeanor in the amount of $5.000.
charge. and pleaded not Spaun will appear at a final
guilty before Judge Steven L. . pre-trial hearing on April 29.
Story on Thursday morning. and has been restrained from
Young alleges that Spaun contact with Young.

Tipster recounts how he led
police to suspeded sniper

WEATHER

ONLY

99'

Russell Stover

Crispy Caramel
Rabbits

INDEX
ONLY

68'
30~"'
-OFF ·

2 SECTIONS -

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Ed,itorials
Faith•Values
Movies
Nascar
Sports

Jewelry

HALF

Complete Stock

PRICE

Weather

t6

PAGES

A6
B4-6

B7
A6

IM
I
A2

As
B8

B1-1
AS

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publi~hlnK Co.

LAS VEGAS (AP) - An
unemployed sales man with
an extra slice of pepperoni
pizza ~nd bulldog persi stence
was
being credited with
Spring arrives on Saturday, at least by the calendar. For weeks, drivers passing by Joe's
pointing
police 10 a man susCountry Market in Rutland have watched the daily countdown to spring on the store ·s outdoor
pected in a string of shootings
marquis sign. Mandy Miller has the honor of changing the numbers one more time. (Brian-Reed) along Ohio highways.
Ch&lt;\rles A. McCoy Jr. , n.
was arrested early Wednesday
in th ~, parking lot of a motel
near
the Stardust hotel-casiYou know spring
no.
less
than 36 hours after
is almost here
Ohio
authoritie
s identified
when the daffodils bloom and him as a suspect.
McCoy will not fight extrathe forsythi a
dition
al a hearing Friday and
buds. Here twowants to return to Ohio "at the
year old Brayden government 's earliest po~si­
Cunningham, son ble convenience." his lawyer.
of Leanne and
Andrew Haney, said in a writ·
Shawn
ten.statemenl .
Cunningham of
The salesman who alened
Pomeroy.
authorities to McCoy's loca' admires a clump · tion, Conrad Malsom, 60, of
of blooming dafLas Vegas, said he recognized
fodil s in a
McCoy the day before from
friend 's yard .
news reports li,nking him to
(Charlene
the Ohio attacks. and did a litlie amateur detecti ve work to
Hoeflich)
locate McCoy' s car parked at
the mote I.
Police and the FBI did not

March is

National Nutrition Month

.flppllcatlons Being Accepted

and

·.s.er Vala''

Middleport, Ohio 992-2635
'

'

.

Spaun denies menacing
former Pomeroy Mayor

· (Former Kroger Location)

INGELS JEWELRY &amp; PIOURE GALLERY

I

STAFF REPORT

Detatto on Page AB

Complete StOck .

At

o:

Mark Sutton, standing left , acce pted a $600 donat ion from Enterprise Development Corp.
Executive D1rector Gary· N. Seeley Thursday, to be used fo r the purchase of a new home-delivered meals truck. Meigs County Commi ssioners Jim Sheets and Jeff Thornton are also pictured. (Brian J. Reed)

SeePage A2
• The Gracemen tb
perform Sunday.
See Page A2
• law You Can Use.
See Page A7
·
• Family Medicine.
See Page A7

.PO .
LIGHTERS

Part Time or Full Time
.
Pick-Up and Rerum Applications

.

Dog pound

• A Hunger.For More,

99C

1-"or Most Positions

1. .! 1

for the grant, Sutlon said.
The agency serves 47,000
meal s to elderly residents a
year, Sutton said, using a
tleet of three "Hot Shot"
trucks. Two trucks are on the
road each day.
from
The
donation
Ente.rprise Development was
made in conjunction with the
MCCaA's March for Meal s
fundraising drive. a monthlong effort to raise $10,000
for the home-deli vered meals
program, Sutton said.

INSIDE
'

Cleveland rocks: Cavs on a seven-game roll
Associated Press

..

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

NBA.
BY TOM WITHERS

.

Donation made for delivery truck

E. DeGasero; C. Osgood; M. StolgitiSIAP

SOURCE: Assodated Press

.

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.·
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
.

Ph.992~2955

112 East Main Street -

HOURS
MDn- Fri Sam - 9pm
Sat. Sam- Spm
Sun. CLOSED

I Poml!l·ov. Ohio
Open Weeknighls 'Till9 • Friendly Service

Prices Good Through Wednesday March 24, 2004

National Social Worker
Month
Holzer Medical Center salutes both our Nutrition Services and
Social Services Deparhnents during tbeir special month .

immediate·
ly corroborate
the
detail s of
Mal so m' s
account but
praised him
for
his
efforts.
"He provided the
information . Charles McCoy
He was persistent with it. " pol ice Lt. Ted
Lee sa id. "He did a little of
his own investigation, apparently goi11g to the (motel) and
locating the vehicle."
After receiving the tip. federal and local law enforcement officers surrounded the
Budget Su ites motel and
waited fo r McCoy to return .
He was taken into custody
without incident.
The arrest brought relief to
Ohio residents who have been
li ving in fear since the 24
shootings began in rhe
Columbus area last year. The
gunfire pierced homes and a

====

Please see Sniper. AS

�FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

r

Thorn
Mollohan

r

r

r

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK
a.m., Daily Ma.~~ · 8:30 a.m

I

VanZandt and Ward Rd .• Putor: Jamn

around. "No 1 Social action !"
"Aw, c'mon. guys!" replies
Tigger, punching the air.
''Let 's just take to the streets
and fight 'em all off! Fightin '
Heffalumps and Woozels and
them ridicerous Jagulars is
what us Tiggers do the bestus!"
"Couldn't we. just hide?''
squeaks Piglet's voice from
under the table .
"What wonderful times we
once had! " coos Owl. "Oh, I
remember the Great Revival!
My Uncle Owlvin would
preach and ."
The room fill s with the
noise of everyone talking at
once. Rabbit 's papers are
again flun g everywhere.
Gop her and Tigger are squaring off as if the y're going to
come to blows. Eeyore eyes
everyone and moans about
the dismal future . Owl continues to talk excitedly about the
past and the only part of
Piglet that can be seen is his
curl y-cue rail protruding from
under the table cloth.
Pooh timidly taps his gavel.
"I have another idea." No one
notices so he clears throat and
speaks louder and with a growly voice. "I said 'I have anomer
idea.' " Everyone stops speaking and Tigger stops bouncing.
"Couldn't we just reach out to
the Heffalumps and Woozels?
Oh, yes ... and me Jagulars?
After all. they need God's love,
too." His proposal is met with
silence at first.
Then suddenly
"My word! " says Owl.
"That' s just what Uncle
Owlvin said!"
"Ha, ha!" guffaws Tigger.
"What a great idea, Pooh-boy'"
"Oh, my!" Rabbit replies.
"I never thought of that!"
Eeyore continues . to look
gloomy. "I s' pose it might
work ... but it prob'ly won 't."
Piglet 's head pops out from
under the tablecloth . ."That's
a very good idea, Pooh."
"Why, thank you, Piglet,"
Pooh replies. "Now may we
break for lunch?
In Matthew 5: 13:Jesus says,
"You are the salt ofthe earth.
But if the salt loses its saltiness, how can it be made salty
again ? It is no longer good for
anything, except to he thrown
out and trampled by men."

Miller, Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.,
Evenins ·7:30p.m.

r

r

i·

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1

,

klvrr VaUty
Apostolic Worship Center. 873 S. J rd
Ave., Middleport , Kevi n Konkle , Pasto r,
Sunday, 10:30 a.m . Wednesday. 7:00
p.m.; Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.

E..m•nuel Apo~~lolk 1ibernade Int.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rutland,
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m . &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thurt. 7:00p.m., Pastor Many R. Hutton

Assembly. of God
Llbeo1J A.,mbly or God
P.O . Box 467 , Dudding Lane, Mason,
W.Va.. Pasto r: Neil Tennant, Sunday
Servic.es- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Baptist
Hopr Baptbt Church (Soulhern)
370 Grant St., Middleport, Sunday school
- 9:30a.m .• Worship - II a.m. and 6 p.m..
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Rulland Flnl Baptist Chun:h
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Wor~h ip 10:45 a.m.

The Gracemen of Barboursville will be si nging at 6:30p.m. Sunday at the Middleport Church
of the Nazarene. Pastor Allen Midcap invites the public. Refreshments will be ser.ved .

Pomeroy Flnt Bapt~t
Pastor Jon Brockert, Ea st Main St. ,
Su nday School - 9:30 a.m.• Worship 10:30 a.m.
First Soulhern Bapti1t
4 1872 Pomeroy Pike, Pastor: E. Lamar
O ' Bryant , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
Worship · 8:15a.m., 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wednesday Sef'lices - 7:00 p.m.

.9L specia{section in tfie f})aify Sentine{

F1nt Baptl,st Churc~
Pastor: Mark Morrow , 6th and Palme r St .•
Middh:port, Sunday School • 9: 15 a'.m.,
Wo rship • 10: 1.5 a.m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Service· 7:00 p.m.

to pu6{icize your upcoming f£aster f£Ve1Jtf
For Example Only:

Racine Firsl Baptist
Pastor: Rick Rule, Sunday School • 9 :30
a. m., Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Set"'ices·- 7:00p.m.

Name of Church
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

Contact Dave
or Brenda at

740-992-2155
to have your
church included or
for more
information.

Slh·er Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson. Sunday School ·
IOa.m., Worshi p - I la.m., 7:00 p.m.
,Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

MI. Union Baptist

•,

Pastor : David Wiseman. Sunday Scbool9 :45 a .m., E\!ening - 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptiit Church
Great Bend. Route 124. Racine. O H,
Pastor : Daniel Mecea, Sunday School 9:30a.m. , Sunday Worship- 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday Bible Stud y 6:00p.m.
4

Old Belbtl r,.. Will Baptist Chun:h
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport, Sunday
School • 10 a.m., Evening - 7:00 p.m.,
Thursday Services - 7:00

Advertising Deadline:
Friday, March 26th
Date of Publication:
March 30th and April 6th

Hllblde Boptist Chum
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt~ 7, Pastor: Rev.
James R . Acree, Sr., Sunday Unined
S~rvice. Worship - 10: 30 a.m., 6 p.m..
Wedne!lday Services -7 p.m.
Victory Baptlit lndependenc
.525 N. 2nd St. Middleport , Pas tor: Jame s
E. Keesee, Worship - lOa.m., 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

c enew-:

Faith Baptist Chun:h
Railroad St., Mason, Sunday School · 10
a .m., Worship - II a.m., 6 p. m.
Wednesday _Scrvic:eii- 7 p.m .
Fomt Run Bapdst
Past or Arius Hurt , Sunday School • 10
a.m., Worship- II a.m .

1

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I'

,.

1

i·

i

i·

r

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MI. Moriah HapUst
Founh &amp; Main St., Middleport. Pastor:
Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr., Sun day School •
9:30a.m., Worsh ip - 10:45 a.m.

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

The lone Cypreu

Young's Carpenter Service

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
Coolville, Ohio

.
"Let your light so shine before .

26 yurs In toes/ business

Located Jess than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
We offer physical, occupational,
speech, art &amp; music therapie s
740-667-3156

men , that they may see your
good works and glorify your
Father in heaven."
Matthew 5: 16

Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH

740-992-6215
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear I
before God and man." ,

A cts 24:16
uardrall , Fence &amp;
sign erection . --

•

_,
.......

-

WEDNEIDAY
-ioll
1:1-11

t4:11.a

-

......

~

P.O. Box683

U '!IIUIAY

Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

-•lnel•.-.tt,. •••

•nw-•rw

Tlllo
olandln!IIIY tho - oppnl'tl u • ton•
..,__ Yot, It you look_,, ,_eon.llot built• - • - • h41' IIUf pr«Htlna
lMr 1'0011 ..._ wm. P«bpo lilt Ia nut oo ott.e at .ar. .,llllt'll&lt;lac, •'IInde md
....., alntlmeap'·ot ..,, IIHiril...
"
At llllloo, weal feel olun.. ~......... wo npert.... the...., tit a ..... flifnd or
rtlall••~ or
fotl thtll lh•J do ntll uatlerslottd .,., A - • mo.,.. m• loulat• us
fi'DIII tiUI' hftltlly PftiiL Y«, I wall ot ...,port etiJI _..., ...d - IOUl .........
n.t •Uf11011 co- from..,. a.o-lr Fadlft'. R- K-edJ oald, "I

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

w•

w..-

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

!Uvo • ....,. btiMYed IN! OIJd 1111111' ..... a crc.t lo lltar
thl8 we cao ....,.
81...... tlftor • stun.. Wh7 st-ldn-. we?" C,....I•IJ, ... u..., i1w" lletld', r.,.. so

••ny l ......ltAio...., ll,..k tho KMn..y l'llml171hroufth lhe , ..,.., Porl11pel•l•
HM• ol~- lilt --..to •er loal*why.
Dell' l , . . W'&amp;ftl to potlftiiiM fW-Ibol com• from faith Ia G..!
I Corlllllllllll 1"':33 IUIII'tA .., '"For God ~Jaol • GQd tit -IIMion. bill of pfiiClt,"
· · w.. "l , ... lftk God al your dlurdt ar •s•K"'t•~ 1111• '"·" "'' 'l'loo proledloo or
flod'a ,...... wtllau"""nd ,.,,. ood,JlHp your soul nHJitd In Him.

Congregational

Hemlock Grove C hristian Cburth
Ministc= r: U rry Brown, Woohip - 9:30

a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m., Bibl e Study -

..'
r

- 7:30 p.m.

Church of Christ

Clwm ol J.,.. Chriot AIJC)IIOik

a wonderful time! Indeed, my
cousin. Owlbena. would plan
such superb potluck dinners."
Gopher rolls his eyes at Owl's
comments. " I say we build'
Twelve stories' IJ we build it,
they will come'" He Jeans over
towards Eeyore. "Everybody
knows that!" he grumbles.
"Not that my opinion matters much," moans Eeyore,
"since no one ever li stens to
me, but it's probably too late
to reach them anyway."
Pooh suddenl y brightens. "I
have an idea!" His expression
suddenly turns blank. "Oh,
bother! I forgot it ."
Ignoring Pooh, Rabbit
begins again, "Building will
never work.'" He produces a
huge stac k of papers and
slams it onto the table. "I've
taken the liberty of outlining a
144 step plan for action in the
Hundred-Acre-Wood. It's all
spelled out here in these 800
pages . Fight the Heffalumps
and Woozels on their own
term s, I say!"
"Don' t forget the Jagulars!"
shouts Tigger as he bounces
off his chair.
Pooh sighs and then says,
"What do you think, Piglet?
Piglet'!" He looks under the
table for the missing Piglet.
"Oh, there you are, Piglet," he
says as relief floods his face.
"I was worried for a moment ."
"What is it, Pooh?" squeaks
Pi glet from under the table.
"What is what, Pi glet?"
Pooh puzzles, scratching his
head.
"What were you asking me?"
"I can't remember," Pooh
replies. " It is so hard to
remember things when t·lll
you have for brains is fluf ."
Rabbit tries to pull a pa er
out from under Piglet, who\ is
still cowering under the tablf.
"Pooh ," he declares, "you
were clearly going to a ~k
what we should do about tHf
(Thorn Mollohan has minisHeffalumps and Woozels."
tered in southern Ohio the past
Tigger is now bouncin~ eight years and is currently the
enthusiastically all around th~ pa~tor of Pathway Community
room.
"Ha,
ha!
And\ Church. He and his wife are
Jagulars!"
\ the parents of three children.
Gopher leaps to his small, \ He may be reached by email at
furry feet. "Build!" he shou\s. \ P~Storthom@pathwaygallipo­
Rabbtt waves hts arms \h'i.com).

r

Friday, March 19, 2004

The Gracemen to perform Sunday

A Hunger For More
Being the father of young chil&amp;en, I have grown quite familiar
and fond of some of their
favorite storybook characters. I
even go so far at times as to
mentally make note of parallels
between me behavior of these
animated creatures and mings
we often find in "real life."
Take Winnie-the-Pooh. for
example. If one were to attend
a leadership meeting of the
First Church of Pooh Corner,
with Pooh presiding , one
might overhear the following .
Winnie-me-Pooh. turning to
Piglet. whispers, "What is it I do
now? I can't seem to remember."
Pi glet whispers his reply,
"You're supposed to call the
meeting to order. Pooh . You
ARE the chairperson."
"Oh, quite right." Pooh
then turns to everyone surrounding the table, "I call this
meeting to order. I AM the
chairperson, you know."
'·Bravo. Pooh'" proclaims
Owl. "Well said!"
"Atta boy. Buddy Bear! "
shouts Tigger. "Show 'em
what you· re made of!"
"Thank you," says Pooh,
bowing. "Now if there is no
other business, I suggest we
adjourn for lunch."
Piglet fidgets and whispers,
''But, Pooh! We haven't discussed any business yet I"
Rabbit, overhearing Piglet,
chimes in, "That's right! Pooh
Bear, we need to address the
seriou s problem of 'Moral
Decay' in the Hundred Acre
Wood!"
"Mom! Decay'"' says Pooh,
putting a honey-&lt;:olored paw to
his moum. "What's that. Rabbit?"
"Oh, you know. It's when
Heffalumps and Woozels do
... well, when Heffalumps and
Woozels do the nasty things
Heffalumps and Woozels do!
They' re all around us!
They' re taking over'"
Piglet's ears prick up. "Oh,
d-d-dear! Heffa-heffalumps
and Woozles')l 'l" he stammers.
Tigger, beginning to bounce
in his seat, rejoins with, "Don't
forget therri Jagulars, too!"
"That's right! " retorts
Rabbit. "They're the reason
our church never grows!
They're the reason that souls
don't get saved! They mUS\ be
gotten rid of! What are we
going to do about it?"
Eeyore wags his head side-toside in a most gloomy way. "It
probably doesn't matter what we
do. It's the end of life as we know
it." He sighs despondently. •·
· "Oh, my! " cackles Owl. "I
remember when our church
was overflowing. It was •such

PageA2

Antlqult} Baptist
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .• Worship 10:45 a.m.• Sunday Evening· 6:00p.m.,
Pastor. Mark McComas
Rutland Free Will Bapt18t
Salem St.. Pastor: Ja~ie Fortner, Sunday
School • 10 a.m., Evening • 7 p.m.,
Wedne!iday Services • 7 p.m.

"Nest and Rest"
209 Third
Racine, OH

740-949-2210
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

7 40-949-2217
Sizes available 5x1 o !o 10 x 20

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

MEIGS FAMILY EVECARE, LLC
A . JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pollleroy, Ohio 45769 . ~­
(740) 991-3279
''-..!!Y
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

Stl'ond Bapt~t Church
Ravenswood, WV, Sunday School I 0 am
~ Morning wor.~h ip 11 am Evening· 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Hours
6 am- 8 prn

Wlmn Friendlv
Amwsph ere .

4

Mi[[ie's 1(estaurant

Catholic

H?memade Desserts Made Daily

Sac:M Heart Catholic Chun:h

Homt Cuok ed Meal.~ &amp; Daily Spe cial~·
Opc ri 7 da ys a week

16 1 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. 992 -5898,
Pastor : Rev. Wal ter E. Heinz, Sat. Con.
4:45-.5:15p.m.: Mass- 5:30p.m .. Sun.
Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m... Sun. Mass- 9:]0

740-992-7713

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

A sbury (Sy racuset. Pa .~ t o r : Hob R ob m~on .

Jo nathan Noble, Worshi p 10:25 a.m.,

Sunday Sc hool - 9:4 5 a.m.,

Sunday Scbool9: 15 a.m.

a.m., Wedne sday S e rvi c~s - 7:30 p.m.

Episcopal

7,p.m.

Holiness
Communit y Church
Pastor: Steve Tomek. Main Street.
Ru tland, Sunday Worshi p-10:00 a.m.,
Su nday Serv ice- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Westside Chun:b of Christ
33226 C hildren's Home Rd ., Su nda y
School · I I a.m., Wurship - JOa.m., 6 p.m,
Wednesday Serv ices- 7 p.m.

Foresl Run
Past~r: Boh Robinson. Su nd ~y Sl·hoo l - 10
a.m . Worship - IJ a.m

Danville Holiness Church
31057 State Route 325, Langsvlle, Pastor:
Gary Jackson. Sunda)' school • 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday wo rship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m.,
Wednesday prayer service - 1 p.m.

Middleport Chun-h or Christ
51h and Main , Pastor: AI Ha rtson. Youth
Mini ster: Josh Ulm. Sunday School · 9:30
a.m., Worship- 8:15. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m ..
Wedm:sday Sc:rv1ccs • 7 p.m.

Heath fMiddleporl l
Pa.'itor: Kod Brower. Sunday Sdlllul . tUO
a.m., Worshi p - II :00 a.m.
l\1int'rsl·ille
Pastor: Bob Rnb111~ on . Sunday Sehou l - 9
a.m.. Worshi p - I 0 a.m .

Ca ll'ary PiiKrim C hapel
Harri son\!JIIc Road. Pastor: Charles
McKem.ie. Sunday School 9:30 a.m:,
Wm ship - 11 a. m..- 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
, Service - 7:00 p.rt).

Keno Churth of Christ
Worship - Y:30 a.m., Sunday Sc hool 10:30 a.m., Pastor-Jeffre y Wallace, 1st and
3rd Sunday

Pearl C hapel
Sull(lay Schon! - tJ a.m .. w ,u ship . IO a.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Bmwcr. Worship Sunday S'hool- 10 : :1~ a.m.

Rose ol Sh11ron Holiness Church
Leading Creek Rd ., Rutland, Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King , Su nday school· 9:30 &lt;u n.,
Sunday wo rship 7 p.m.. Wednesday
prayer meeting" 7 p.m.

Bearwallow Ridge Church of C hrist
Pastor :Bruee Terry. Sun day School -9:30

9 :~0

a.m..

4

a.m.

Wor ship - 10: 30 a.m .. 6:30 p. m.
Wednesda y Serv ices · 6:30p.m.

Rock Spri n~~
P:Jstor: Keit h Rader. Sun day S.:houl - 9:15
a. m., Wo rs hip - Ill &lt;Lm .. Ymuh
Fellowship. Sunday · 6 p.m.

Pin e Grove Bible Holiness Church
112 mile ofT Rt. 325, Pastor: Rt!'v. O 'Dell
Manl ey, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
Worship • I0:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wedne sday Serv ice!' - 7:30p.m.

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy. Harriso nville Rd. (Rt.l 4 ] ) ,
Pastor: Roger Watson. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.• Wo r~h ip - IIUO a.m., 7:00
p.m ., Wednesday Sr:rvi~-.-cs ·_ 7 p.m.

Rutland
Sunda y Se houl - 9 :.10 a.m .. Wurship I0:30 u.m . Thu r~d uy S cn·• cc~ - 7 p. m.

Wesleyan Bible Hnllness Church
75 Pearl St., Middh:pun. Pa~tor: · Re\!.
David Gilbert, Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship . J0:4~ p.m., Sunday E ~·e. 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Set"'ice - 7:30 p.m.

l'uppen Plain Church of Christ
In stru mental, Worship Servir.:e - 9 :J. m.,
Co mmuni on - 10 a.m .• Sunday School 10:15 a.m., Youth- 5:30pm Sunday, Bible
St udy Wednesday J pm

Salem Ce nter
. Paslnr William K Mar ~ h a l l . Sun llay
&amp; huo] - I 0:! 5 a.m.. Wnn;hi p - 9:15 a.m. ,
Bible Stu dy: Monday 7: 00 prn
Sno wville
Sund ay School - 10 a.m .. \\lnr.-;hip - 9 a.m.

Hysell Run Holiness Church
Pastor: Re\!. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
• IJ:]O a.m.. Worship - 10:45 n.m., J p.m.,
Thursday Bible Study and Youth- 1 p.m.

Bradbur}' Church uf Chrisl
Minister: Tom Runyon. 39558 Bradbury
Road, Middleport. Su nday School · 9: 30
a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Beth1u~Y

Pastor: Juhn Gil more. Su nday School - 10
a. m., Wor shir - 9 &lt;1.111 ., Wcdnc:sday
Services - 10 ;1. 111.

Laurel CllrT Free Methodist Church
Pa stor: Glenn Row e, Sun day Schoo l 9 :30a.m.. Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wednesday Se-rvice· 7:00p.m

Rutland Churth of C hri st
Sunday School - 9: 30 a.m ., Worship and
Communi on • 10 :30 a.m .. Bub J. Werry,
Minister

C11 rm ei-SuUon
Carme l &amp; BasiHUl RJs. Ra cine. Ohio.
Pas tor: Jo hn Gilm or(!. Sunday Se houl 9J O a.m .. Wmship - 10:45 a. m . , Bible
S1udy Wed. 7:00p.m .

The Churth of Jesus
Chrlsl of Lalter·Day Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 ur 446-7486.
Sunday School 10:20- 11 a.m. , Relief
Suc i ety/Pries~huod
II :05- 12 :00 nou n, •
Sa cram ent Service ? - 10: IS a. m ..
Homemaking meeting. 1st Thurs. · 7 p .m.

Bradford Chun:h of Christ
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradhury Rd.,
Minister: Doug Shambli n, Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor~ hip - 8:00 a.m .. 11):]0 a.m ., 7:00
p.m .,Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Murnin11: Star
Pastor: Johti Gil mor~ . Sunday Schoo l - II
a.m . Worship - I() a.m .

East Letart
Pastor: Sunday School · JO a.m., Wnn;)up
- 9 a.m.. Wed n.;.-sd :~y - 7 p.m.

Lutheran

Hkkory Hills Churcb or Christ
Evangelist Mik e Moore, Sunday School 9 a.m.. Worship - 10 a.m .. 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday ServiL-es- 7 p.m.
Reedsville Church of Christ
PaMor: Philip St urm , Su nd~ y S~.:hool: 9:30
n.m., Worshi p Service: 10:30 n.m.. Bi ble
Stud y. We dnesday. 6:30 p.m.
Dexter Church of Christ
Piislor: Bill E~he l man, Sunday schoul9 :30
a.m., Norman Will. superin tendent.
Sunday worship - \0:3U a.m.

R~tcine

St. John Lutlleran Church
Pine Grove, Worshi p - 9:00 a.m., Sunday
Schoo l !0 :00 a.m. Pa .~tor : James P.
Brady

Pastor: Pete Shaffer. Sunday School - JU
a.m., Wo rshi('l - 11 a.m., Wed ncstt1y 7
p.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Su ., Ra ven~wood,
W.Va .. Pastor: Dnvid Russell. Sunday
School · 10:00 a.m., Worship - II a.m.

Coolville l lnited Mt'thodlst Parish
Pastor: He len Kline , Co nlvill c Churcll.
Ma in &amp; Fifth St., Sun day Sc h11ol - Ill
:1.111., Wo rshi p · 9 &lt;1 .111., Tu (!~da y Scn i n:~7 p.m.

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Com(!r Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy,'
Sunday School - 9: 45 a.m .. Worship - J I
a.m. Palitor: James P. Brady

Church of Chrisl
Intersect io n 7 and 124 W, E\langel ist:
Denni s Sarg ent. Sunday Bible S1udy 9 :30a.m., Worsh ip: IO:JO a.m. a nd 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Dib le Study - 7 p.m.

United Methodist

Mt. Olin United Methodist
OfT 124 behind Wilke sville, PasJOr: Rev.
Ralph Spires, Sunday School · 9:10 a.m.,
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7 p. m., Thursday
Services - 7 p.m.

Hartrord ChuKh of Christ in
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va ., Pastor:David Greer.
Sunday Sc hool - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a. m ., 7:00 p. m., Wednesday
Services · 7:00p.m.

Meigs Cooperalive Parish
Northcasl Cl uste r, Alfred, Pastor· Jane
Bean ie, Su,nd ay School - 9:30 a.m .,
Worship - I I a.m.. 6:30p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Church or God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine, Pa stor: James
Saucrfield, Sund ay School - 9:45 a.m.,
E\·cning - 6 p.m.. Wetlm.:sday Ser\'ices- 7
p.m.

Chester
Pa stnr : Ja ne Hcaui c, Wol'!lhip - 9 a.m .,
Sunda y School - 10 a.m. , Thut5day
Se r v i ce ~ - 7 p.m .

Rulland Church of God
Pnstor: Ron Heat h, Sunday Worshi p • 10
a.m.. 6 p.m., Wed nesday Services - 7
p.m.

Joppa
Pu stor: Rob Rand olph . Warship • 9:30
a.m.
Sunday &amp;:hool - 10:30 a.m .

Syr ac use Flrsc Church of God
Apple and Second Sts.. Pastor: Rev. David
Russell, S'unday S ~.: hool and Wtmhip- JO
a. m.
Ev ening Services- 6:30p .m., Wednesday
Scrvice!i - 6:30p.m.
C hurch of God of Prophecy
O.J. While Rd. off Sl. Rt. 160, Pastor: P.J .
Chapman , Sun day Schoo l - 10 a. m ..
Worship- II a.m., Wedncstlt~y Serv ices 7 p.m.
I

Lon11 Botlom
Sundny School - 9:30 a.m.• Worship 10:30 a.m
Reydsville
Worsh ip - 9:30 a.m.. Su nday Schoo! 10:30 a.m., First Sunday or Month - 7:00
p.m. serv ice
'IUppe ~ Plains Sl. Paul
, Pastor: Jane Beanie. Sunday School 9
n.m.. Worship - 10 a.m., J'uesday Services
4

Rdhcl Chun:h
Township Rd., 46RC, Sunday Sl'hoo l - '-J
a.m. Wo rshi)l • 10 a. m .. Wcduc:oday
Services - 10 a.m.
Hockingport Church
Grand Street. Sunda y Sc hool - 'J:JO u.m..
Wo rlihip - IO: ~flil . lll . , Paslor Phi ll ip Dr\1

Graham United Methodist
Worship - 9:30 a.m. ( I st &amp; 2nd Sun), .
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun),Wednesday
Servil-e - 7:30p.m.

Christian Union

Scnu:n · 7 pm

lctan

Torch Church
Co. Rtl. 63, Sunday Sehou l - 9:]0
Worship - 10: ~0 a.m.

il.lll.,

Nazarene
Middleport C hurch of lhc Naz•ren('
Pastor: Allen Mid .:ap, Sunday Schon] Y:30 a.m.,Worship - !(J-lll a.m.• 6 :J U p.m..
Wedn es da y Sl·rvk cs - 7 Jl.rn .. Pas tor:
Allen Midcap
ReedS\'ill&lt;' Fellowship
Church of !he Nanm:oc , Pa_,; lnr· Ly nd;i
Ku hn , Sunduy Se hou l - 9:~ 0 a.m ..
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. J p.m.. Wedncsdny
Services - 7 Jl .lll .
Syrac.'u!'le Chu~h or_the Nazan=ne
Pastor Mike Adk ins. Sundoty S ~.: houl - lJ:JO
a.m .. Wursl1ip - 1 0 : .~0 a.m., fi p.m ..
Wedne~lay S e rvice~ · J p m
Pomeroy Church of lhe Nuzarent
Pas tor: Jan L t\len der. Sufl(la y Scho r\) 9:30 a.m.• Worship - J0: .\0 a .m.- :md 6
p.m.. Wcd n (!~d :ty Scrv il:es - J p.m.
Cheslt!r Chun:h of th e Nazart" ne
l'n.~ l or: I&lt; CI'. Hcrhcrt Gmtr . Suml!ly School
- 9:30 a.m .. Wur ~ h i p · 11 a.m .. 6 p.m..
Wednesday Scrvir.:es · 7 Jl .m.

l·ainit•M llihlt· ( h uu ·h
\~ \ ,1

Kt

SunJ.t~Sdlo&gt;o•l

Portla nd First ('hu rr h orthr Saure ne
Pa,toor W1l li iilll Ju, ti\, Su n da~ S.:h11ol
JO :HO a.m .. Mnmmg Wor,htp - 10:-1 .' ru n.
S u n d u~ Sc r\lt:c · h ; 10 p m

pIll

I

H11.m \l.11 .
\\ ,q,htp -,I~ '

P.t•l••t

\il,,m

'J

\\,· dttt'" "' ~

lhhlt ... , ...~,

-~ ~ ~ , . Ill

F~i th h llu"''hi11 ( ' n l\ltth: lur l'hrhl
Pu'l"r. ~o.: \ I I.Jn~llll ll~.~n''· ··•~· •••ll'
1-- mt.~ .

Other Churches

.,

r It I

( 'ahar_• Biblt· ( ' hun·h
1-'•h•. (,. Hd . )',l' tor l&lt;c\
HI. .. - ~ I-\ mod '-.ur\.1;1! \dln«l
'-11!1 ,, 111 .

P Pillt:lu~

Ousis Christian t'ell nwship
(Nu n -l.lc llO!lli n at i •~ n&lt;t llc ll u~ ~ h• rJ
Meeti ng in \111.' old Am e 1 i~· an LA·g iun Hall
South Fuunh Ave nue, Mi dJ kpl'l1
Pa ~t l)f Chri '- Stev. an l i): C~ l ~ Ill S u n d~~
Other mec t mg~ 111 home'

'Wur~h l p

Wc,h le\ Ja~

Commu nity ur Christ
Ponland-Rai.' UWRd .. Pa~ l or : Jeri) S m g~r.
Sunila) Sd onl · ~: .\(1 J .lll . \\\,r,hi p JO:JO a .m , \'u:dn &lt;.')oda~ Scr\·l re~ - 7:00

p.m.

111·111 a 111 . 7111
.'iL'J'\ lc ~· 7 '\ (1 1) Ill

p.m .

Sti1 l' r~ l ilh· ( 'um mun il ~ \ j)J I~ tul il­
t 'hun·h
P:J,h•r· \\.1:01W I{ h-11,-11 \., r1J.11 \ ._· r 1 1~c
6:110pm . Thur,d.ll (oiH1p111
Rt·j&lt;~ il· i n g

) I MJ

~lid

\

\ \c' .

Lift· Churd1
\l 1dd kp"li .

1-nr..·•n.on
L n.o. r L'llcc· h 11 c' lll.lll. \\,11 ' hll'
\h• d rw-da~ \ c' l\1,,.,
p n,

-

1' , 1 ~ 1u1

\ ll h..-

Rethcl Worship Centl'r
Chestt· r s~-h i lll l. Pa,ltlr : Ro ll H.uh .: r.
A~~~ ~ l. m t Pa't"r: K;ul·n l&gt;cr1 ;,_ Su1ab y
Worship: 10 am. E\'..:n1r1g Wor ~ h i r : f• pm.
Youth !! Hl U('l II pm . W.:dn ..:, J&lt;I}. Pm.,n 111
Pra ye r , anti B1hli: Study - 7 p111
Ash Strtct Chun·h
A ~ h S l. , Middlcpnrt -Jla, l&lt;)r: Gr..:!! SL•;n ,
Slln Ja y Sd 1nn l - lJ: .lO a.m.. T\•l•1rnihg
Worshi p - 10:_,() a.m. &amp; 7 pm. \\b lnc,Ja:Scn·ic c• - 7-m p. m . Ynu1h S .:n i c· ~· - 7:00
p.m.
Agupt Lifl' Crntt'r
"Flri i-Gnspd Churd 1". P;r.'- ! 1 1 1 ~ John &amp;.
Patty Watl c, 6CB S..:rnnd Ave. M a~ r1 . 77_\ 501 7. Scn·ir.: lim.:: Suntlay 10:10 ;r. n1 .
Wednesd ay 7 p111
A.hundttnl (;ran · H.E I.
S. Th i1 d St.. ~-l iddkp u rt . Pa ~ tor· Tc re~ &gt;~
Du1-·is. SU11day scr\' il'e. 1!1 a.m ..
WcJm:sJ:. y sa viL·c. 7 p. m.
LJ~J

'.

Faith Full Gospel C hun·h
L1mg Bolt tJ ill , l':tsllll': Steve Reed. Sunday
Se houl - Y:JO a.m. Wur~h 1 p - 9:30 :..rn.
;md 7 r .m .. Wedn e~ d a y- 7 p.m .. Fridayldlnwshi p s~ rviec 7 p.m.
llarrison,·il\ e O mununity Clrurd1

Latter-Day Saints

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Acts 24:'16
Matthew 5:8

"So I strive ~!ways to
keep my conscience clear
before God and man."

..

Midd leport, OH

740·992-6128
:..
Local source for trophi~s:
nlanues !-shirts and more
Carolina Antique
&amp; Craft Mall

. II

Entuprlse
Pastor: Arland King. Sun day Scho111 10:30 a.m., Wnr.~ hip - 9:30a.m .. Bi bl~
Study Wed. 7:30
Flatwoods
Pastor: Kei lh Rader, Sunday Sd1uol - Ill
a.m., Worshi p - II a.m.

Gnu:e Episcop.. O..un:h
326 E. Mttin St .. Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Holy Eucharist I I :00 a.m.

Pomeroy Church of Christ
2 12 W. Mai n St. , Min ister: Anthon ~·
Morris
Sunday Sc hool - 9 :30 a.m., Worship10:30 a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesd ay Ser\!ices7 p.m.

Wo~ h t p

• j pI ll

Paslrlr: Th..:ro n Durha m. Sut\llay ~- ~~~ - anJ 7 p.m.. Wcdn.:,d&lt;
1)' - 7 r .rn .

1):,~ 0

t"ait h Vnllry Taht•rnal'lt• C hureh
lhi\c y Kun Rco;1ll . P&lt;t•aur I&lt; L' '-'· En1m c:ll
R;twsun . Sunday El'l'll l ll }! 7 Jl -111 .,
Thursday S.:rvitc - 7 p.m.
S)·rucusc 1\·lissiun
1-11 1 Bn dgcmau St. . S y r :Jc: u ~ ~- - Suud;1;
Sc hool - ICl a.m. E"c ning
0 p.111 ..
Wednesday Scn 'll'l! - 7 p.m.

Hazel Cummunll~' O mn·h
Ofl Rt . 1 ~ 4 . Po1St11r: l:chd ll;u1, Sund;1y
Sd u•t• l - l) J I) 01 .111 . , Wor~l u p - 10:.11.1 &lt;1.111 ..
7:.10 p.m.
l&gt;ycsvi llt• C unununit~· (.'hurt•h
SLU1day Sc hH IJI - 'J :.' ll 11 .111 .. Wurship lfUO oun .. 7 p.n1
M11rsc l:hnpel Chureh
S und&lt;~ y ~d um [

- \0 ;o .m ..

\Vc·r~ h ip

.1111

t.'Ji ll" n TH hl•rnadl· ( 'hurTh
Clilh&gt;ll. \\ \ ',\ . '\u r1d,1_1 \ ch• ••• l I•• .1 111.
\'1-&lt;l l', hiJl ,"; p I ll \\ ,·dm-,c l.o _l 'ic'i' llc&lt;.' 7
p.l ll.
"'o: l·n l.il't· \' il'lor·_\ t ·,·ntt- r
( ico •ll!L'' ( 'n:d f{, •&lt;~-.1 . ( i.ilh)"'lb. ( lH
P:1.'1&lt;11: 1·1111 ~l.r!c'll. '-.tll\11.1 ~ '-,,·Ilk&lt;'' Ill
,, Ill . ,\, 7 I' ill
\\ nl uc·,d.ll
., I' Ill /1;,
Yulllh 7 )111 1
.'177 .~

J-'ull Gu~ pt· l nmrd1 ol' tht• l.i• in).!
Su\ior
Rt .J.1X. An tllj ll lt) l'.•· h•l
J.-,,,. \J. ,rn,
Scnl '-'l' ' : S;uurd .ll -~ I•OJ'IIl
S;tlt•fll f 'nrnmun i! _\ f 'hun.·h
!h~ ~

,,r we~ ! (',J u111h1 .1. \\

\; '-"' n Lr l' \ IIl l!

R11;od. Pu., lllt" C h:n·J,· ,

1~"1 " 1 1

:! ~ KX, Suml, 1 ~

LJ.

e\l'llin g

, ~- .-~ ~ ~-,-

\\- ct hl c''d" ~

1 ltl.l 1 r,7_"o.
'II .1111. Sulllb:&gt;7:11(1 p111 . Bi hl:o Stu1l :

Sch,.,J

'CI'I Ic'L" 7 (~ljlll l

' Hobson Christi11n Fd luMhi )) { 'hun·h
P&lt;1st nr: H e r~l'lwl \\ 'hill' 'iiu n d. 1 ~ 5dH 1nl J 0 :1111. S und a~ Ctmn:h ,Ct'l 1 c~· fl lt1 p 111
Wed rw , d &lt;l ~ 7 r n1
Rt·s!nr;ltiun ( 'hrblilln Fl'i lm\ shiJ)
l·ltlll[1c'l' H,&gt;,lll. \lh 1' Jh . l'.l ~ lo l l'
Lo 1111 ie C1•:11 ,_ Suuti;l\ \\',,l·• fnp [1 1:1111 .1 111 .

Y~h ."o

Middltport Omtm u n it~· C hu rch
,'i75 1\ •arl S1. ,. Middk pnr! , l\ 1 ~ tur : S;tm
AtHk'r!--o n, Sund ay Sd1 1' nl IO :1.111 . •
Evening - i:Jil p.m . W-:dlll'Sda y SL'I\'Irc' 7:.\0 p.m .

&lt;1.111 •• Wc dnc s llii~'

II I I HI

4

W ~ d tlC , IIil~': 7 )1111

l.un).ls' ·iJJ t• ( ' hr · i.~ t i;ul ( 'hurdr
h ill (jlh jl&lt;'l, l' a•(olt l&lt;1 •hcr\ \\lh't'l
Stm d;l&gt; Srl uo, ,J 11 1(1 .1111. . \\o u, lll[l 10 _\II
;1111 - 7 II[ I )111 1. \\'._• dn ~·~li. l~ '-iL' I'I l\'c' -: !~1
Jl lll

Pentecostal
St. l&lt;!r.
Hnh&gt;t.-1-•.
p.lll.

Presbyterian
IIi r~ l ( ' nitt·d l'n·sh_l1t·ri :1n
l'•1-' t1•r: ){ 1 1 h ~: rt l'r"11 . w-..l, lllp 11 a. 1n

S~· r:r r u w

ll al'l'iscm\·il\c l' r• · ~h~ rni;111 l ' hun·h
P;l\t!ll , !{,oi• L" rl ( '!I'll , \\ '" 1'111 1' &lt;I .1111

P:o ~ t&lt;~r :

- II

l'l'nlc•t'll'!l;ll \ " t·mhl\
1 ~ -l . K;I\ II K'. 1'.1•1&lt; '1 1.\,)li:lm
S uut1 .1~
'\,h, ,,,)
Ill .1111..

Middll'lllll't l'n·~ h ~ ll•ria11
HI'I&gt;L• r( ·J&lt; ,\1 . \\ ,,1·-..fup )II,,IIJl

SL'I'\' ice 7 p.m .

•·aith Gospe l C hureh
Lon!! B111torn. Sunlluy Schno\ - 'J: J\1 n.m ..
Wor ~ h i p - 10 :J 5 a m .. 7 :.Hl p nr..
Wcd n e s ll a~ 7:.\l l p.m.

Mt. Q liw Communil y C hurl'h
Pasto r: Li.Jw n·ncc Bush. Sunda y Sr h1111 l 9JO a.m .. Evening - 6:_,( 1r.m .. \\'cJnnl;l}
Ser\' icc - 7 p.m.
Full Guspcll.ighlhoust·
Hihmtl R1•ad. Jl., m em~ . Po t~ to r: Ro~
1-lu ntl·r. Suntl:ry .'ic: hn11l - Ill ;u n . h ·cn ing
7:.' 0 p.m .. Tm·~d a y ·&amp; Thur~tl :l\ - 7:.lll
p.m.
~ -~ 04 5

South lklhe l &lt;.:ommunit}-' Ch urch
Sil vl!r Rid ge - l' a ~h l f Llri&lt;lii l)al\ll'\\&lt; 111&lt;1.
Sumlii }' Sr houl - 9 a.m .. Wo r~ l11 p Se n·in·
10 a.m.
C11 rlelon lnlt'rd t•nnmin~tlional C' hunh
King~ hu ry R11:1d . P :~ st or : R()lwn V;mn.·.
Sun J ay Sdl\lo l - 'J :JO 11.111 .. Wnr~h1p
Scn·i..:c 10:10 a. rn .. 1.:\ ·en ing s ,- r·1·in · fl

Seventh-Day Adven tist
Sl•w ntli- IIH_I \dlt'll1i' l
l ib Rd :. p,.lll l'l• '~ - 1'.1 ~ t.•1 R."~
l .;o \1'111\k) . S.llill'd, ,:- S!'rl I&lt;r• S.o hb.11h
Sd 111111- -~ p.n1 . \\ ,11~ Jup I 11111
.l\1u l hnr ~

United Brethren
1\1!. llt·rmun I ni lt·d Url'lhn•n

in ( 'hri't ( ' hurrh
Tl')i&lt;h f• ul tllllllllt _l &gt;11-11 1 \\ 1.- ~h .1 1 11 I~ d .
P;~ , 1o \f' Pcll'r \ l;11'11 nd .&lt;k . \ ii iHI. ol \,) u, •l -.
IJ :.t{l ;1.111 . W,q,hq •
ill: ; I I .1 Ti l
Ill) '
p.m . \\ ,·d u~·,d.t ~ _
, ,.,, ,,".,
-1111 1'111
y,,u rll !_!l ''lll ' II IL"&lt;' IIH~ .:"11~1 ,\ -l1h \und. o ~'
7 plm.
4

t:dl'll l ' uill'd Bn•chn•11 in l ' l1ri ~ !
Sta1•' R111tk' l ~-1 . R t·,·d ~ ll l k. "-. 1 m il;l ~
s._-h.,,J - II .t 111. "" "d.11 \\ .,r, lll)' Il l IH l
a.m. ,~;:· 7:111 1 I' 111 . \\ t•illl&lt;'''l.ll -.~ \' 1 1 1.-,--..
7:{ 1(1 ]1.111 .. \ \ ,·tln ~ · "l; l _l ~ . • nt lr SL' I_I I._.,.
7:11(1p Ill

p.m.

t' rerdom Gos pel J\·l ission
Bal d Knuh. oa Cu. Rd ..H . P:,~ t&lt;u Rn
Hoge r Wi llf11rJ. Sumf:t) Sd J(Io l - iJ:.lO :r.m.
Wor~h ip- 7 p.m.
White's Chapel Wt&gt;sll•yun
Cnnl \'l ll c ~&lt;)Ol d . l';l., tnr: l~ c \ l' h1ll ip
Ridenour. Surlllil)' Sdw11l - IJ .JO &lt;1 .111 ..
Wurship - I(I:Jtl 11.111., Wc lln ~· :-o. l ; t y Sl'f\ iL'l'

',•'

MIDDLEPORT '
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

Ctntral Cluskr

Trinity Churtb
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy, P~U~or. Rev.

Rulland C hurC' h uf lht' Nalilrt' llt"
Sunda) Sd1olll - ~ ·1 () J.lll ., Wor~ht r .
IO.JI) a m , l'l ~I) p 111 . Wl!drw.·,di.J~

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc.
Full

line of

Insurance

, 1· '
· !;,

Products+
Financial .

.

312 6th St. Point Pleasant
&amp;75·11&amp;0 ••· · •. ··,' n
Variety of furn i1ure, glassware_. c_
fali$,· ,\ , ,
collectio n of boules &amp; prit'nil iVeo. •· I .- ~ H
Outside tlea market April- Oct.
~
Lavawavs Avai lable
'
~

AGENCIES In&lt;.

,,

..

Services

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

White Funeral Home
Since

1858

9 Fifth Street.
0

174Loyn•s•..••·PO a.. 2,o
Nr,.· llaven, \'VV lSWi

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

!francis Florist

ROCKSPRINGS
Crew's Family Restaurant
REHABILITATION CENTER
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
The care you deserve, close to hom e
36759 Rocksprings Rd.

Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions

Pomeroy, Oh

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

•1pf U~ ~Pil~ 11011t lloOug/o t~ ~ i l/ o ~ ~!l&gt;f'illl MJ Jp "

T 740-992-2644

good works and ~:lor(fr yo ttr

Pomeroy

my co;:~science clear be fore

J

~~

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

&amp;noulftr's
.fire &amp;: &amp;aftt!'

•o""'"''

-_

740-992-6298

erace is sufficient
for thee: for my
strerii!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Let yvur light .1·o Iiline !J£:f(m•
men, that tlu'y may ,,·et~ your

Father-in hem ·en."
Malfhe" · 5:

"So I strive always to keep
God and man ."

Chicken"

992-5432

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

992-2955

M l' i g~ Cll Unl y·~ O l :k ~ t F l t 1ri ~1
352 East Main

... oo.ua-oen
•mDUPOIIT

:..; ~. .~C~o~o~lv~il~le~,~h~
. l~O. ..J~":~~l1 s~."~.A~~~HW~n.~LkE•~~·~d~F·~"'=~~~o=;rect~·:'j.......~At~a~tt~h:e:w~5~:8~..........~A~c~ts~2~4~;~~~::o-::•:--;·;"";;~~
......g~g~2~·~6~3~7~6.......J
740-667-3110
- - ·· ;;~:-:·:·~::·~:".'l.
,,

'·y.,

I'

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I

·II

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�OPINION

- The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress sllall make no law respectiug an
establishment of religiotl, or prohibiting tlte
free e;~ercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, at1d to petition
the Governmetlt for a redress ofgrievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

Economics
More needs to be done
Ohio was recently awarded Site Selection magazine's
Governor's Cup- setting Ohio as number one in the United
State s in terms of new facility expansions and site locations.
After winning the cup three years in a row in 1993-1995, the
magazine noted that several factors contributed to Ohio's number
one ranki ng this year. including the state's "central location, which
allm~ts manufacturing and distribution investment; strong investment 011lhe part of domestic and foreign-owned companies (more
than lJOO of the laller have a presence in the state, 60 of which
announced projects in 2003 worth $800 million); and sharp economic development tools. ranging from lax incentives to a lowintere)l linancing program to work-force training prognuns." But
while our state has been successful on ~ertain fronts in economic
improvement, I believe the time has come to rethink our development slmtegy.
· This is illustrated by the shocking and disappoiming news that
Thomson is closing its doors in Pickaway County. Until recently,
Thomson employed around 900 employees, and 545 more will be
laid off as a result of the closing. According to news reports. company officials said the plain is not profitable and has no prospects
tor recovery as it battles foreign competition and falling prices.
Unfortunately. the workers at the plant do not have many other
opt ions tor industrial employment in the region. Upon notification
of the news I called the Ohio Department of Development and
asked them to send their Rapid Response team to Thomson to let
the employees know what tools are available as they change jobs.
Ohio communities historically have gone after large employers,
which are vital, but our state has not focused as much on small
. busi ness and the kind of technology that may be part of the future.
The slate is helpful to attract new sites but it seems we need to do
more to keep the jobs that we have. It is true that many times that
the state cannot prevent closures but we need to do more to help
existing employers to stay in business. All these concepts are tied
together as we discuss tax reform and jobs legislation.
I am planning to introduce legislation that would create a fund to
. help counties like Pickaway that have taken a major hit because of a
major layoff or plant closure. The fund would help develop the proper infrastructure and make needed improvements to attmct or keep
industry or to have the resources to foster small businesses. The other
part of the bill would create a Small Business Investment Plan that
would appropriate $300,000 to each Appalachian County to foster
small business. The County Commissioners would set the guidelines
under the parameters set by the Ohio Department of Development.
The loans would be interest free for a period of time and the limit
would be $30,000, which could be used with either private or public
resources. In the past many of the counties in our region have not
been able to access these funds because they have not had big
eno;mgh project,_ My bill would help even the playing field.
There is good news out there on the job front but blows like the
dosing of Thomson remind us that we must rethink our job strate. gy and prepare lor the future . We need to do all we can to secure
the economic future of our state, and our workers.
As always. I welcome your views on state issues. If you
have any questions. thoughts or concerns. or if you need assistance working with a state government agency, please write to
me: Senator John A. Carey, Ohio Senate, Statehouse,
Columbus, Ohio 43215, or call my office at (614) 466-8156.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a

story, call the newsroom at {740} ·9922156.

Our main number Is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

.-.

.
•
•

''

· News
Editor: Charlene Hoellich, Ext. 12
Rep6rter: Brian Reed . Ext. t4
Reporter: J. Miles Layton. Ext. t3

Advertising

•.. Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Exl. t5
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark. Exl. 10

•;'
••

-. ..

Circulation
District Mgr.: TBA, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. t 2

•
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E-mail:
neWs @mydailysentinel .com
.Web:
"www.mydailysentinel.com

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published every afternoon,
Monday through Friday. t t t Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical

postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and the Ohio Newspaper
Association.
Postmaster: Send address correc-

tions to The Daily Sentinel. t 11
Court Street, Pomeroy, OhiO
45769.
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·L-------------------------~

"'

Let us wrap up our series
on meditation ' on the
Lord's Prayer with :
"Lead u&gt; not into temptation ... "
Most of us worry about
how we will stand up to
trouble and tragedy if it
should strike. Yet. oddly
enough, we &lt;.lon't have the
same fears abou t temptation . In fact. we are often
ex~ited and intrigued by
the thought of being tempted. '
"Tempt me 1" we say with
a gleam in our eyes.
Yet. according to Dr.
Ralph Sockman. one of
America's
bes t-know n
preachers. temptation has,
probably proven to be the
downfall of more people
. than any trouble or tragedy
·· we may experience. "There
is a curiou s difference
' between our estimates of
the trouble we can stand
and our e.sli mate.s of the
temptation we can withstand ," Sockman says. "We
look at a possible calamity
and we say, 'I don't believe
I could stand that_' but we
do. On the other hand, we

Local Briefs

give me st rength of spirit to
meet it without fear."
"Deliver us from evil ... "
The words , "Deliver us
from evil," are spoken
daily by millions of
Christians
when
they
repeat the Lord's Prayer.
Yet cvi I,continues to !lourish -- not only in war and
crime but sickness, accidents. family disharmony
and other evi ls that bring
unhappiness.
Are we praying, then, for
the impossible when we
ask that evil be kept from
our door? Obviously not .
for Jesus gave 1\S this
prayer. One of our troubles
is th at we really don't
believe 'that God will deliver us from evi l. Jes us said
that believing is a prcrcqui·sil e to answered prayer. If
you do not believe, you
probably ne ve r counted on
your
prayer
being
answered.
One way you can help to
make this "prayer for perfection" work is to slip in
the words, "Thou wilt,"
before "deliver us from
evil." This will replace

George
Plagenz

look at some pos sible
temptation and we say. 'Oh,
I cou ld resist that,' but we
don't."
Sock man add s, "It is
strange how trouble or suffering brings out the
strengt h we didn't know we
had
while
temptation
reveals the weaknesses we
didn't know we had ."
This is why "Lead us not
into temptation " is one of
tlie more important peti tions in the Lord's Prayer.
Meditate. then, upon the
following seg ment from
the Rev. Walter Russell
Bowie' s "A Meditation on
the Lord 's Prayer":
"Let me not go carelessly
this day within the reach of
any evil I can.not resist, but
if in the path of duty I must
go where temptation is,

your ambivalent feeling of
"''ve prayed. now will he or
won't he ?" wi th assurance
that he will .
"For thine is the kingdom, and the power and the
glory, forever and ever.
Amen ."
,
This doxology at the end
of the Lord's Prayer is not
in the most reliable ancient
manuscripts. It begins
appearing, however, in
many manusc ripts as early
as 100 A.D.
It was normal in Judaism
to conclude prayers with a
formal doxology or "hymn
of praise" and the early
Christian
commumlles
picked up this practice.
What the doxology says
is that we can do nothing of •
ourselves but choose the
good. The power is in the
spirit of God, which moves
throu gh us.
"A men" does not mean,
"Well. that' s it for now" or
"Over and out." It means,
"It is so." We must always
conclude our prayers with
the confidence that our
prayers will be answered.

•
•
:
•
'
;
:
:
••
•
~

.

.,

· William
Rusher
----

waves tomorrow, one or
more
Western
nations
would replace it as the primary focus of the attack,
. and the jihad would go on.
In the second place, it is
the first terrorist assault that
has been able to take full
advantage of the new technological developments that
small-but-deterenable
mined groups of people to
inflict unacceptable damage
upon much larger entities,
including modern nationstates. Money, weapons and
people can all be moved
swiftly and almost invisibly
from one point on the globe
to another. Depending on
the size of the weapons
involved, anywhere froin
scores of innocent people to
hundreds of thousands can
be killed in an i nsrant.
Finl;llly, the popul.ation
that the terrorists are able to
'" I

~----- · ··-

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

draw on for support is much
larger than any of their predecessors
have
ever
enjoyed. ll does not include
the entire Mus I im world by
any means, but it certainly
comprises millions all over
the globe. and includes
thou sands
who
would
cheerfully sacrifice their
own lives to insure the success of a given operation.
In the face of such a challenge, President Bush seems
guilty almost of understatement when he declares that
we are "at war." But this is a
war like no other that has
ever been fought , and that
can only be won by means
of brand- new techniques
and instrumentalities. What
good is an armored division,
a carrier task force or even a
n'uclear
missile
strike
against such a foe? The ·
world's major power-s must
almos_t ache for one of those
good old-fashioned enemies
with a defined homeland
that can be invaded and cQn•
quered. The Pentagon must
have sighed with relief when
it was ordered to attack Iraq.
But the grim truth is that
the global jihad will be far
more difticult to defeat than
Iraq . ll doesn't have a capi-

--- .. ... -

~hat

tal
can be bombed. It
doesfi't even have a governmen~ that can be overthro n. If Osama bin Laden
were captured or killed
tomo~w, his place would
be ta en by a shadowy,
shiftin handful of leaders,
each crtpable of conceiving
and e~ecuting devastating
operati~ns on his own or in
concert \ with the others .
Only a \major international
effort to\ penetrate the terrorist c~ll_s, dry up their
financial ! resources, and
deny thet~ the weapons they
need can .ever reduce the
\
threat posed by the current
terrorist jihad to manageable proportions. We can be
fairly sure that such an
effort is now under way, but
it may be years, even
decades, before we can call
it successful.
If the American people
can be brought to understand the true nature of the
problem, there can be no
doubt that they will regard
solving it as the major challe nge facing the country.
And they will turn to the
man and party who best
understand that challenge,
and who display the leadership needed to overcome it.

/

\'

BELPRE The Ohio
Department of Transportation
will close the southbound
lane of Ohio 7, approximately 1.63 mile north of Belpre,
from 7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
bcgmmng March 22, with no
width restriction in place for
the passing lane .
The closing is to repair a
shp. and the repair is expected to be completed on March
24.

PORTLAND
The
Meigs County Highway
Department will close C.R.
31, Bald Knob-Stiversville
Rd . 0.6 milewest of Ohio
124 in Lebanon Township
on Monday. for one week.
for a bridge replacement
project.

Meig~

Correction

Meeting set

Waziristan frontier. So far,
about two-thirds have said
they would provide inforrilation and turn over any
Islamic militant s in their territories, American defe nse
officials said on cond ition of
anonymity.
The others are facing
destruction of their homes by
the hands of Pakistani military, officials said.
It is believed that some of
these veterans are providing
a support network tor Osama
bin Laden and his followers
in the region, officials said.
U.S. officials say they are
watching to see if the
Pakistani actions se nd militant fighters moving back to
Afghanistan, where U.S.
troops operate freely.
Hundreds of Pakistani
troops have moved into three
South Waz.iristan towns Azam Warsak, Shirt Warsak '
and Kaloosha firin g
artillery and using helicopter
gunships against entrenched
positions.
At least 41 people were
killed Tuesday in fighting in
the
area,
and
army
spokesman Gen. Shaukat
Sultan said there were an
unknown number of casualties in continued action
Thursday.
The military said Thursday
that most of those killed
were foreigners. but it did
not give their nationalities
and acknowledged that only
two bodies had been recovered.
The two dead were
believed to be a Chechen and
someone of Middle Eastern
origin, a military official sa·id
on condition of anonymity.
A spokesman for the U.S.
military in Afghanistan told
AP the force hoped Pakistani
soldiers had indeed cornered
al-Zawahri, but he had no
new information on the
whereabouts of either of the
ai-Qaida leaders.
"All the senior leaders of
ai-Qaida will be brought to
justice," Lt. Col. Bryan
Hilferty said.

Donation

contract change order for the
new sewer line at Rutland.
adjusting the location of a
portion of the line across pri vate property. Sheets said the
project, funded through
Appalachian
Regional
Commission and the Village
of Rutland, is on schedule for
completion next month.
The new sewer line is now
. in place from Depot Street to
the sewer treatment plant,
Sheets said. Once completed
the new line will allow the
Meigs Elementary School
and the planned Heaven on
Earth retirement center to
conneCt to the village system.

for visiting the pound and
adopting dogs to early
evening, so working families
can have better access to the
Rocksprings pound. The
pound is also open for adoptions on Saturday mornings.
Commissioner Jim Sheets
said the pound has released
only two dogs for adoption so
far this year. Last year, 70
dogs were adopted and over
800 were euthanized at county expense.
Conunissioner JeffThomton
said he supports evening hours
at the pound, and commissioners plan to meet with Dog
Warden Bill Dye to explore
different hours of operation.

, Rutland
sewer line
Commissioners approved a

.,,

eve nt' lo talk with other leaders are Paige Cleek and
Beth Lydic .
scouts in the area.
The troop worked on
badges and made posters to
Big Bend Cadette Troop
be used at Cookie Booth
1208
Sales in March. Upcoming
The troop worked on their
cookie delivery was discussed and girls talked about Thinking
Day
project
ways to use their cookie prof- throughout the month of
its. A new member, Kri stin February. Australia was their
Prince.was accepted in the coun try.
The
troop
troop.
Girls
attending researched their materi als
February meetings were: and made their di splays for
Jordan Anderson. Brianna their room . The girls served
Buffington, Hannah Cleek, lamingtons, a delicious
Olivia Cleek, Kastle Balser, chocolate cake with coconut
Jahnna Lydic, Christian as the icing at Thinking Day..
Stacy Macomber was the
Woods, Paula VanMeter,
Holl y McGrath, Ashley guide for Australia with Kimi
Bateman-Lee,
Briana Swisher helping. She played
Schoolcraft, Joyce Romines, "Stevie" and wrestled Brucie the
Kayla Salser, Ashley Carey, crocodile a' well as giving interSamantha Pridemore, and esting facts about Austrai lia.
Cheyenne Beaver.
Troop Also attending and participating

at Titinking Day were: A~h ley
Romines, Chelsea Davis. Amber
Hockman, Hailey Ebershach.
Mariah Hill. and Autumn
Ebersbach.
The girb are working ve ry
hard on their Cadette Girl
Scout Challenge Pin.
Plans are being made to
hold a "Ki ck Butts Day" at
the Meigs Middle School on
March 31st. Brenda Curfman
of the Meigs County Early
Intervention Office is working closely with the troop
and will be the featured
speaker that day.
The girls plan to go to the
Program Aide Training. in
March as well a' having a
sleep over and eaming IPP\.
The troop meets from 6 to 8
p.m . on Friday evenings at
Pomeroy Library.

Teenager found with 20 homemade bombs .and a
note saying he planned carnage at his school

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan
Pakistani troops
(AP) believe they have surrounded
ai-Qaida No. 2 Ayman aiZawahri in an operation near
the Afghan border, three
senior Pakistani officials told
The Associated Press on
Thursday.
The officials, who spoke lo
AP on condition of anonymity, said intelligence indicated
the
Egyptian-born
aiZawahri has been cornered
in an operation that began
Tuesday in South Waziristan
involving hundreds of troops
and paramilitary rangers.
"We have been receiving
intelligence and information
from our agents who are
working in the tribal areas
that al-Zawahri could be
among the people hiding
there," a military official
said. "All of our efforts are
to capture ·him."
An intelligence official and
senior politician in President
Gen. Pervez Musharraf's
government both confirmed
the account.
In an interview with CNN,
Musharraf said he had spoken with the commander of
Pakistani troops in the
region. He said the commander reported "fierce resistance" from a group of fighters entrenched in fort -like
buildings and that there were
indications that a senior figure was surrounded.
"He's reasonably sure
there's a high-value target
there," Musharraf said.
Musharraf said the military
was using helicopter gunships and "pounding" the
area with artillery.
Speaking on the condition
of anonymity, a U.S. · counterterrorism official said: '\It
would appear that the
Pakistanis have surrounded a
very senior ai-Qaida figure.
but at this point we are not
certain who it is."
The Pakistani military has
been pursuing I 00 tribal
leaders that authorities want
to roll into their efforts to
hunt ai-Qaida
in
the

from Page A1

Junior Troop 1276

The troop meets at the
Pomeroy Library. from 6:30
to 8 p.m., every Wednesday.
The month of February was
spent learning about the
country of India. The girls
chose to research the country
of India and represent it at
the International Thinking
Day event / A family from
Athens , formerly of India.
vi sited with\ the troop and
RUTLAND Rutland talked of life in their native
country. They brought tradiMayor April Burke was t_ional costumes to show, as
incorrectly identified 111 well as photo albums. artTuesday 's edit ion . The work and crafts. The girls
Daily Sentinel regrets the enjoyed
questions
and
error.
answers with the mother and
!.laughter. Th e gi rls invited
their new friends to join
them at the Thinking Day
POMEROY
-Un ited
Fund for Meigs County
will hold its annual meeting at 6 p.m. on March 23
at the Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center.
Bv MARGERY BECK

Pakistani officials believe
ai-Qaida No. 2 Ayman aiZawahri m~y be surrounded

•
"
•

The terrorist bombings in
Madrid last week bring
home, in a way that nothing
since Sept. I I has, the scope
and viciousness of the threat
that civilized nations are
now facing .
To be sure. there is nothing new about terrori sm.
The Palestinian attackers in
Israel. the Iri sh Republican
Army in Northern Ireland
and the Basque organization
ETA in Spain, to name only
three examples. have all
been pursuing political
objectives by terrorist
means tor decades.
But the jihad that has been
waged by Muslim fanatics
in the last 15 years differs
frm11 the above examples in
several important respects.
To begin with, it is the first
terrorist assault that is ge nuinely global in its r~ac h.
Innocent lives havf; been
de stroyed hy the hundreds,
and even thousands. in a
dozen cou ntries on almost
every continent. And the
· target is Western civilization itself. The United
States is currently the bull'seye, but onl y because it .is
the West's (and the world's)
most powerful nation . If it
were to sink beneath the ·

Road closed

MIDDLEPORT The
Leading Creek ( onservttncy
District will interrupt water
service on Noble Summit
(T-174) Rd . to McElhinney
Hill from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
on Monday, weather permitting. Once water service
is restored, a boil advisory
will be in effect until samples are taken.

.,

The neW ace o war

Meigs County Girl Scout Diary

Road closed

Service
interrupted

..

- ---------------------· ......
I

Friday, March 19,2004

The Daily Sentinel •Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, March 19, 2004

The end of the Lord's Prayer, amen

The Daily Sentinel

GUEST

PageA4

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

MALCOLM. Neb. - A
tee nager was charged with
attempted murder after police
found him outside sc hool
with 20 homemade bombs, a
ritle and a note saying he
wanted to injure everyone at
hh high school except for
three friends.
Authorities believe they
averted what could have been
the worst school shooting
since the 1999 massacre at
Columbine High School.
Josh Magee, 17, was arrested Tuesday in the parking lot
of Malcolm Hi gh School
after a staff member saw him
swigging liquor from a tlask
and putting on a black overcoat.
Police
who
searched
Magee's car found a boltaction rifle, several rounds of
ammunition. small bottles of
propane and rig ged containers of a petroleum-based propellent.
" It had the potential of
badly."
sa id
going
Superintendent
Gene
Neddenriep. " With this student, at this school, on this
particular clay, we were suc·
cessful. We got lucky."
Parents and school officials
in this tiny town north of
Lincoln said Magee often
spoke about Columbine, where
Eric HwTis and Dylan Klebold
killed 12 students and a teacher
before killing themselves.
"He asked them in class

Sniper
from PageA1
school. dented sc hool buses.
tlattened tires and shattered
windshields. One woman
was killed.
"Once he started hitting
rant.lom other places, we felt
like there was nowhere safe
to go.'' said Aimee Wagner,
31. a chemistry professor
who often travels Interstate
270 to teaching jobs in the
Columbus area. ''I'm just
happy he didn't get the
chance to take another person\ life."
M~Coy was being held
without hail after being
charged with being a fugitive .
Fran'klin
County
Prosecutor Ron O'Brien in
Ohio said Thursday the task
force investigating the shoot ings was considering whether
the death penalty would
apply to McCoy's case.
Ohio permits the death
penalty in about a dozen circumstances. O'Brien said the
one most likely to apply
would be killing or attempting to kill two or more people .
Investigators have not
decided exactly what charges
McCoy will face. he said.
On Tuesday afternoon.
Malsom and a friend were
~amb lin g at the Stardust and
found they couldn't fini sh a
free
pepperoni
pizza.

. £agles
SpagheHi Dinner
Saturday; March 20
3:00 PM-6:00 PM
5.00 a plat_e

_1

All proceeds go to Pomeroy F1re Department
Take-out orders available
992-9976

last week if they knew who
Eri c Harris and Dylan
Kl ebold were," said Julia
Lostrah. whose daughter is
Magee's classmate. 'Then he
said, 'I know them."'
The arrest came in the
same week that authorities in
another rural town in the
heartland avoided a potentially violent school encounter.
Two second-grade boys
and an I 1-year-old schoolmate
were
arrested
in Forsyth.
Wednesday
Mont.. on charges that they
buried a loaded handgun in a
playground sandbox and
plotted to shoot and stab a
third-grade girl during recess.
Authorities said the boys
intended to harm the young
girl because she had teased
two of them.
No one answered the door
Thursday at Magee's red-brick
home just down the road from
the school in Malcom, a town
so small that its downtown
streets are unpaved.
School and law enforcement officials said his mother
works as a chef in Lincoln.
and his father is serving in
Afghanistan in the military.
Magee, who has attended
sc hools since
Malcolm
kindergarten, was always
been on the district's radar,
Neddenriep said.
"All the way through, he
was just a little different," he
said. "He liked to be alone,
he didn 't take part in many
things. His enjoyment was
weapons."

Joshua Magee is seen 111 this image from video
entenng a Lancaster County courtroom in Lincoln.
Neb . Magee, 17. was charged as an adult with
attempted murder and faces other charges for
bomb making materials and a loaded rifl e lo
school. (AP Photo/KLKN TV)
The superintendent said he asSistant, sait.l Magee joined
wasn 'I aware of reports that the cross-country team and
Magee was a target of bullies . was an impressive mu~ician.
"He was very tal ented."
"There were never any incidents reported," he said.
she said.
Magee was being held in a
When students began
reporting to faculty that juvenile jail, but he was
Magee bragged of making charged as an adult with
and testing explosives at attempted firq -Jegree murhome. Neddenriep said, the der.
Neddenriep said the school
school paid close attention to
of about 450 studeQ\S will
the teen.
Magee then began showing refine it s safety policies in
some interest in school activ- the wake of Magee's arrest.
'There's one thing I did
ities, he said.
Lostrah, who is also the learn,'' Neddenricp said. ·' It
school district's administrative can happen anywhere ."

Malsom said he offered a cled the Budget Suites parkslice to a man a few seats ing lot behind the Stardust
away and recognized him and found McCoy 's green
instantly. McCoy was read- 1999 Geo Metro.
A $60,000 reward had been
ing a copy of USA Today.
which featured the fugitive's offered for information leat.ling to the arrest and indict picture. Malsom said.
"I knew immediately this ment of the highway shnoter.
was the man I saw in the 0 ' Brien said officials have
not determined yet who is elinewspaper," Malsom said.
After McCoy left the casi- gible for the money.
"The fellow in Las Vegas
no, Malsom collected items
McCuy left behind - a water would be a candidate.'' he
glass. a matchbook, lunch said. "Certain members of
wrappers, receipts from horse the family would be candirace bets, and illegible hand- dates. They could decide to
writing on a betting sheet that give the full amount to one
he characterized as "written person or split it."
0' Brien would not be more
babble."
Malsom said he spent the specific about which members
rest of Tuesday alerting of McCoy 's family could
authoriti es and playing receive the reward or what
sleuth. He placed calls to the information they provided
Authorities
searched
sniper investigation task
force. He called Las Vegas McCoy's motel room, which
police and the FBI. and faxed ·he registered for under his
a copy of McCoy 's note to own name . Inve sti ga tors
emerged with a paper bag but·
Ohio authorities.
Malsom said he delivered did not disclose its contents.
McCoy was identified as a
the items he collected from
suspect.
Monday. when Ohio
McCoy to the FBI office in
Las Vegas, then went to a authorities released his phofriend's house and used the tograph, a de~cription of his
Internet to get a photo of the car and the license plate numfugitive and the license num- ber. A bulletin to police said
McCoy was believed to be
ber of his car.
"I thought, 'If I look, I' ll mentally ill and was carrying
a semiautomatic pistol.
find him,"' Malsom said .
He was charged in an arrest
On a hunch, he said he cir-

warrant
with
feloniou s
assault for a shooting with a 9
mm handgun that d[unaged a
house in Columbus on Dec.
15.
Little was known about
McCoy. He lives with his
mother in Columbus. in the
area where man y of the
shootings · took
place .
Neighbors said they did not
know if he had a job.
The shootings created a
wave of fear arc)und 1-270 ~md
two
nearby ' hi ghways.
Commuters 'have been forced
to take back roads. schools
have canceled classes and held
recess indoors. and the &gt;tate of
Ohio installed cameras on
Poles along- the main hinhwav
c~
that encircles Columbus.
The only per.son struck in
the shrmt ings. Gail Knisl ey.
62. was killed as a frient.l
dn&gt;ve her to a doctor's
appointment Nov. 25. Lab
tests showed that bullets from
nine of th e shootin gs including Kni~lcy ~s slaying
- were fired from the same
gun.
"We are glad for today\
news, but our hearts will
never be the same:· her son.
Brent
· Knisley.
said
Wednesday.
SPR ING VAL LEY
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�PageA6

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BY THE BEND

Community Calendar

Moocher wears out welcome by criticizing the handouts

:The Daily Sentinel

.Public meetings

•

Auxiliary will have a dinner at the hall in Tuppers
Plains. All members and
spunses invited.

DEAR ABBY: My husband's friend, "Kevin," has
been coming t9 our house
Thesday, March 23
once a week for the past eight
· . SYRACUSE Special
years. He is always broke and
meeting
of
Syracuse
Monday, March 22
looking for a handout, even
Village Council , 6:30 p.m.
RACINE
Southern though he has a fpll-time job.
, regarding trhe purchase of Band Boosters will hold its
In the beginning, I tried to
video camera equipment for regular meeting, 7 p.m. in help him by inviting him to
.a police cruiser and regard- the high school band room . stay for dinner once in a
ing campers in the village. All band parents arid sup- while. Now he has star;ted to
porters are
invited to complain: The steak isn ' t
cooked the way he likes it, or
attend.
I don't toss the salad the way
his mom does. (By the way,
Thesday, March 23
RACINE - Racine Area Kev in is 35 and still li ves at
Saturday, March 20
Community
Organization home). The reason he always
PORTLAND
Semi- will meet at 6:30 p.m. at needs money is that he spends
annual comrmmity meeting Star Mill Park building . every paycheck on drugs.
the
Port land Potluck will be served.
for
I recently gave birth to my
Community Center to show New members always wel- tlrst chi ld and I don' t want
, petlple what we have done come.
him to be around someone
up to now. I p.m .
like Kevin, but my husband
refuses to stop his friend from
CHESTER Material
coming to our house. How
on researching old roads or
can I - politely - get this
Sunday, March 21
the county will take place
moocher out of my home
MIDDLEPORT
The
at I p.m. at the Chester
without causing trouble
Gracemen will be singing
Courthouse.
between my hu sband and
at the Middleport Church
myself? - NEW MOM
of the Nazarene 6:30 p.m.
DEAR NEW MOM: That's
SALEM CENTER
Pastor
Allen
Midcap
easy. Stop feeding that
. Sdtr Grange 778 and Star
moocher steak, go vegetarian.
Jurlior Grange 878. fun inv ites the public.
will
be
Refreshments
night and piotluck . supper.1 Supper
will
be served.
served at 6:30 p.m.w ith
MIDDLEPORT - The
.fun night to follow. Fi nal
Gracemen
will be si ngi ng
plans will be made for
Sunday's soup dinner to at 6:30 p.m. at the
.be s~rved from II a.m. Middleport Church of the
Nazarene.
BY KEVIN KELLY
to 2 \P·m

Clubs and
Organizations

Church services

Dear
Abby

and toss the salads YOUR
way. I predict he' ll be out of
your hair as soon as the gravy
train stops rolling.
P.S. You don' t mention
what kind of drugs this man
is addicted to, but he should
not be around your baby
while he is under the influence. If your husband continues to object, explain to him
that it could be considered
child endangerment.
DEAR ABBY: My 13-yearold daughter was molested by
her half-brother for almost a
•year before she found the
courage to tell us.
When we found out, we did
everything we could to help
her overcome thrs. We even

Mason ·residents asked
to use new addressing

,

I

Birthdays

, SYRI'CUSE - · Syracuse
: Youth League will have
: ball sign ups from 10 a.m.
Saturday, March 20
; to noon at the Syracuse
REEDSVILLE Kemp
fFire Department.
Beaumont will observe his
85th birthday Saturday.
Sunday, March 21
Cards may be sent to him
.; TUPPERS PLAINS
at 39579 Silver Ridge
VFW
9053
Ladies Road, Reedsville, 45772.

,.

:Death row inmate
;Wants to drop appeals
'

~ · YOUNGSTOWN (AP) - .
'A judge has found a death
·row inmate competent to
. drop his appeals and be exe:co ted.
• If successfu l, Stephen
• Vrabel
of
suburban
: Youngstown would be the
: second · offender executed
~ after giving up appeals since
_Ohio resumed capital punishment in 1999.
"This is the real thing," said
David Bodiker, Ohio State
: Public Defender, on Thursday.
Vrabel was convicted of
: fatally shooting his girlfriend,
· Susan Clemente, and 3-yearold daughter, Lisa, in 1989,
then stuffing their bodies in a
refrigerator and freezer.
· Judge Scott. Krichbaum of
: Mahoning County Common
Pleas Court ruled Wednesday
that Vrabel was competent.
The · ruling follo wed a
decision last year by the
. Ohio Supreme Court to halt
: Vrabel's September execu : tion and send the case back
: to a judge so Vrabel's com. petency could be examined.

Experts hired by prosecutors and the state public
defender's office both said
Vrabel was competent to
drop his appeals. As a result,
Vrabel's attorneys asked
Krichbaum to waive a
requirement that they also
hire an expert to assess
Vrabel. The judge agreed.
A message was left for
Mahoning
County
Prosecutor Paul Gains.
Wilford Berry, dubbed
"The Volunteer," was the
first inmate executed after
Ohio resumed carrying out
the death penalty. He successfully dropped his appeals
before hi s February 1999
execution.
Ohio has executed 10 men
since 1999. Convicted killer
of
William
Wickline
Columbus is scheduled to be
put to death later this month.

KKELLY@MYDAILYREGISTER.CDM

MASON - Mason residents,
and homeowners throughout the
county, are being urged by the
Mason County Office of
Emergency Services to post the
new addressing numbers .for .
their residences to make the new
system work.
Emergency Services Director
Chuck Blake brought that lllCSSllge
at this week's Mason Town
Council, urging the town to
encourage homeowners to · put
their new address on their home in
plain sight so EMS and other
emergency personneL can rea:lily
identiJY the location while on a call.
"You need to get the word
out and perhaps enforce it by

ordinance before someone
gets killed," Blake said.
Mason County has adopted
a "city-style" addressing system to enhance 9-1- I , and
police, fire ·and ambulance
·
response to emergencies.
While recognizing that
change is sometimes hard to
acce pt, Blake said the new
system will only work if
everyone cooperates.
"It 's not ,In Mason , it's
everywhere," he said.
Sales of green signs bearing the new hou se numbers
are up. Blake said , but officials need to stress the importance of using the numbers to
hasten calls to emergencies
and eliminate confusion with
previous house addresses.

moved out of state to give her
a fresh stan.
The trouble is, her halfbrother has contacted my husband again. He wants to visit
us. I do not want him in this
house - and my daughter
feels the same way. Some
family members say I am
denying my hu,~band a n:lationship with his son. I'm not
trying to keep them apart; I'm
trying to protect my daughter.
I have reached the point that I
will leave and take my kids
with me before I'll expose
them to this again . Am I
STRONGLY
wrong?
AGAINST VISIT
DEAR STRONGLY: No,
yo u are not wrong. You are a
co nce rned and protective
mother, and your first obligation is to protect you r daughter from he r predator. Tell the
''fami ly members" that your
husband can visit his son, but
not vice versa. And make no
apologies.
DEAR /\BBY: My husband
and I are anticipating the arrival
of our tlrst ch ild in two montl1s.
We have registered at a local

store for the items we will need.
A close friend has graciously offered to give me a baby
shower. but she refuses to add
where we are registered to the
invitation . She says it's poor
etiquette.
lsn ' t the whole point of a
baby shower to receive gifts?
Is pointing people in the right '
direct ion so wrong?
·
The invitations go out in
less than a week. Help,
ASAP' BAFFLED IN
ORANGE, CA.
DEAR BAFFLED: Sorry,
but I agree wi th your friend.
While it is understood that
showers are all about getting
gifts, a more refined way to
ge t the message across is for
the hostess to verbally communicate whe re the guest of
honor is registered at the time
the invitees RSVP.
Dear Abby is written by
Abiga il Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips, and
was founded by her mother,
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

1 Month Unlimited $25.00

Melissa's Seyle &amp;
3:l l 05 Hiland Rd.
OH 45769

PnnnPr&lt;&gt;V

Eagles
SpagheHi Dinner
Saturday, March 20
3:00PM-6:00PM
'5.00 a plate
All proceeds go to Pomeroy. Fire Department
Take-out orders available

992-9976

KIPLING

''

MASON - Wahama High
School 's annual dinner theater production, an anxiouslyawaited eve nt for students
and the community, takes the
stage this weekend under the
banner of "Fiesta ."
Dinner will be served in the
gymnasium at 6 p.m. Friday
and Saturday, with the twohour show under the direction
of Crystal Hendricks starting at
7. On Sunday, dinner is at I
p.m. and the show follows at 2.
Cast members have had
their music since January.
Intense rehearsal has been
underway for the past week to
make the event, held for the
past 14 years, a memorable
presentation for itsaudience.
"This is a big thing for this
community," said Hendricks,
the school's choir director and
whose · husband, Chip, is

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NEW· DIED FARM AND
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MASON
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618 flit Main ST

Pomeroy,Ohio 45769

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Point Pleasant, WV

173-~538

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. (7 40) 446-1675
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www.turnpllllflm.com ,

Meigs County Commissioners, ·
Jeff Thornton
1\:Uck Davenport
. ·jim
SheeJs
.
·,
.
'

•

WHS' band director. "People
start calling us and asking
when it will be."
A number of alumni and
community members assist in
the production, and Hendricks
said the help they offer every
year is greatly appreciated.
One set of parents have
worked with the show for I l
years, and the electrician has
been with the program for
eight, Hendricks said. It's also
a family affair in that her parents, Gary and Linda Stewart,
have contributed to the production, along with her husband and her sister.
Her mother has crafted the
banners recognizing the
show's patrons - all 850 feet
of it this year.
As in the past, the production is designed to optimize
the choir and other participants, filled with tunes that
mvol ve numerous cast members, along with opportuni-

•'

from relaxing and allowing
urine to empty. Men with
acute urinary retention usually seek immediate medical
attention ; however. it's
important for' men with even
mild symptoms to seek an
evaluatio n by a physician.
Several things can be done
to minimize the symptoms in
the early
stages of BPH. Some suggestions are: avoid caffeine
and alcohol in the evenings,
Don't de lay unrination . when you have the urge go, and avoid the over-thecounter medications mention ed earlier. Also. some
men are helped by taking
Saw Palmetto extract. This
herbal remedy can be found
in pharmac ies and health
food stores. When the symptoms are not relieved by
these measures, it may be
time to start some prescription medications. Your doctor has several to choose
from. If medications fail. the
prostate can be surgicall y
"debulkcd." The most common procedure for thi s is
cal led TURP (transurethral
resecti on of the prostate). It
is minim all y invasive and
has a hi gh rate of success.

The great new s .is BPH
does NOT increa se a man 's
risk for developi ng prostate
ca nce r. Also. many men
n.: ve r requ ire any med ication for treatment for their
mild BPH. As always, your
husband should consu lt
with his physician prior to
starting any herbal remedie s. and he should ask the
pharmaci st about any overthe-counter medication \
potential for worsening his
BPH symptom s.
Famill' Medi cine® 1.1' 11
ll'eeklr column . ](J .)'rrfnnil
qw•.\'lirms, It T ill' to Marrha A.
Simpsmr , D.O .. M.B.A., 0/rio
UllilWSH\'
Coilt'g e
uf
Osteopathic Medici11e, PO.
Box 11 0, Athe11s, Ohio
4570 1, or ria email to
rea de rq Ill'S t i 0 11 s @/(rm i /.1'medicin eneH's.org. Mf!dicctl
injim11atio11 i11 !Iris column i.1
pro•·ided {IS em ed11catimral
sen·ice m rl r. It does not
replace the }udxme/11 of r o11r
perso11al plrrsicicm, \1'/ro
sfro111d be relied 011 to diag ·
nose and rt'cmnmnul trt)at m ent ./(Jr uny JJ/elhcul nnuliPost columll .\ on ·

tiuns.

U\ 1ailahft)

onfiJi e a/

\1'1 1'11'./lml -

iIrnwdic in em' 1t·s. o rg.

.

Saturday, March 20th
7:00 p.m. to ???
at

Mizway Tavern
with

''Bart &amp; The Chasers"
Everyone
Welcome
S5 per person

' "'

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

ties for solo renditions.
On tap for the tirst half are
"Street Pru1y," "There's Golla
Be More to Life," "Papa Loves
Mambo," "Jenny from the
Block," "The Voice Within ,"
"A Little Less Conversation,"
"Queen of Soul," "Bright
Lights," "Miss Independent,"
"Senorita," "Bring Me to
Life," "So Yesterday," "I Go to
Rio," "With You," "Concrete
Angel," "Footloose" and "It's
Raining Men."
Following an intermission, the
show picks up with "Me Against
the Music," uunweU," ~ urease."
"Hot. Hot. Hot." '1 Can Only
Imagine." "Girl from lpanema,"
"Johnny's Mambo," "In the
Swing," uDon't KnOw Why,"
"Sea
Cruise,"
"Intuition,"
"Complicated," "One Way or
Another," ''Come Sail Away" ru1d
"Let There Be Peace on Earth."
Admission is $8 for adults,
$6 fqr students and $5 for
seniors. The show on ly is $5.

The Meigs County Commissioners have received $15,000 from
the A.R.C. distressed program to restore the roof on the
Academy Building in Chester~ $5,000 will be matched from the
Chester-Shade Historical Society for a total of $20,000.
Specifications in bid packets will be made up and will be available at the Commissioner's office between 9:00 a.m · 4:00 p.m.,
from March 22nd through April 7th. Bids will be due back in
the Commissioners' Office by April 8th at 12:00 noon, then
opened and read aloud at 1:00 p.m. at the regular
Commissioner's meeting. All contrac.tors will be asked to participate in a walk-through at the Academy to get a better understanding of the project. Time of the walk-through will be set
and the date will be available in the bid packet. Commissioners
reserve the right to reject any and/or all bids.

Why torment your~lf

another part of the

Prostate enlargement not cancer factor

KKELLY@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

BUY, SEll, OR TRADE

SHOE CO.

What you should know about loaning your car to others

'Fiesta' this weekend at Wahama

'''
•••

HEARIN
CENTER

2004

- -Family Medicine- -

Question : My hu sband is a
healthy 65-year-old. At his
annual checkup. he was told
he had an enlarged prostate .
How concerned should we be
about thi s? · Can it lead to
prostate cancer'7 What new
symptoms would mean this
is getting worse '&gt;
Answer: Over 50 percent
of all men have henign prostatic hyperplasia by age 60.
Sometimes you'll see the
word "hypertrophy" substituted for "hyperplasia," but
it's still the same disease with
the same abbreviation BPH.
By the time a man reaches
80, there's an 90 percent
change that he'll have BPH .
Men don't usually start having symptoms of this problem until they have had it for
a few years. Interes tingly,
African American nien begin
to have sy mptoms at a
younger age than Caucasian
men, by about five years.
Now, for a brief anatomy
lesson: The prostate gland is
just below the bladder and is
o nl y fou nd in men . The
prostate produces lluicl that
liquefi es semen. This gland
is about the size of a walnut
and surrounds the urethra the tube that carries urine
from the bladder to the outside. ·When the prostate
enlarges, it presses on the
urethra and causes difficulty
urinating.
Some the common · symptoms of BPH include difficult y starting to urinate ,
needing to urinate more frequently. especiall y at night. a
weak urinary stream. a feeling of incomplete empt ying
of the bladder, dribbling after
urination, and painful urination.
Sometimes, the obstructed
urethra can back up urine and
cause an infection. Thi s can
lead to blood in the urine. In
severe cases, the man may
find himself unable to urinate
at all. This condition , called
ac ute urinary retention . may
be trigge red by taking overthe-counter cold or allergy
medicines that contain an
ingredie
nt that in men with
Cast memoers in "Miss Independent, " a selection from the Wahama High School' s annual dinner-theater production this weekend, include Tarah Gerlach as singer, and Christy Stewart, BPH can prevent the bladder
Jamie Ri ckard, Brooke Hankinson , Lauren Durst, Jaden Honaker, Alex Young, He idi Marks,
Paige Gerlach, Kara Foroes, Miranda Simpkins, Amber Durst and Ju ila Abbott as dancers .

Brln_g ..ld in for 1 visit fRff
with session purchase
(nell Cu$ltlme~s Onllj}

DILES

Friday, March 19,

Law You Can Use:
Q.: Can lose my car
A.: Under the old law, cated, didn't have insurance.
ifsomeone borrows 11 and many vehides were seized or had a suspended license
violates the traftic laws?
in such situations. You could or no license at all when he
A.: You can lose yo ur recover the car on Iy if you or she borrowed your ve himotor ve hicle if you loan it showed the court that you cle. then you cou ld be found
to someone who commits were an "innocent' owner." guilty of wrongfully entrustcertain serious traffic offens- While this defense often was ing your vehicle to someone
es. But under the new traffic successful, it cost time and who shouldn't have been drilaws that went into effect on money. Even if you recov- ving. A wrongful emrustJan. I, 2004, that becomes ered your vehicle, you still ment conviction can lead to
less likely, as long as you had to pay any towing and having the vehicle seized,
are carefu l about lending storage costs.
and, if you're convic ted a
your vehicle.
Q.: So how did the law second time, you could lose
Q.: What are these "seri- change ?
ownership of your car.
ous" traffic offenses that
A.: Tl'ie law now authomight cause me to lose my rizes the state to seize a
Law Ylm Can Use is a
car1
ve hicle only when it is weeklr con.w mer legal
A.: The law allows the owned by the offender. In informatioll column pro1'ided
stale to immobilize and take fact, the law now requi res 111 this nell'Sf1llf&gt;er as a pubownership of vehicles driven the government to pay the lic service of I ill' Ohio Slate
by certain persons found costs of removal and storage Bar Association and th e
guilty of driving While if the seizure was not appro- Ohio Slale Bar Fowrdalion.
intoxicated , wi thout insur- priate.
71ris arlicle was prepared b1·
ance, without a driver's
Q.: Does this mean I can David Dim//, Directm; Ohio
license, or under a license never get into troub le if Crimina l
Se 11 tenc in K
suspension. Until recently. someone else breaks the law Comrn is.\·ion_ Articles a earthese
penalties applied while driving my car?
in!-: ifl this column an~
whether or not the driver
A.: No. You still must be intended /o provide lmwd,
owned the veh icle.
careful. because the new law ge11eral i11formatio11 obmrl
Q.: You mean the state doesn't protect you anytime the law. Before appivi11K this
could take my car just you loan your car to some- i1~formalio11 to a specific
because the guy I loaned it one. If you knew (or reason- legalpmblem, reader.,· are
to committed one of these ably should have known) ur,ged lo seek tire tuh·ice of ll
crimes?
that the person was intoxi- lice 11 sed attom er.

•

New Shoes
Arriving 'DailyI

PageA7

COMMUNI1Y

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 19, 2004

Ap_ril 9, 2004
· senior Citizens make
up 65% of the tntal
population of the
Tri-County.
To reach this f!rnun.
contact your ,
Advertising
Representative.

~allipoli!il!Bail~ l!l:ribuuc
• ~oint J}leasant i\egigter
• The Daily Sentinel

Advertising Deadline -April 1, 2004

'

~- ·-7'-L.

'

____:

446-2342
675-1333
992·2155

I~

·-

'

..•
, ;.

'

••
'

�Page AS

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Local Stocks
ACI -30.58
AEP - 33.84
Akzo - 36.30
Ashland Inc. - 46.71
BBT - 36.39
BLI - 13.90
Bob Evans - 31 .61
BorgWarner - 86.25
City Holding - 35.02
Champion - 4.75
Charming Shops- 7.33
Col - 30.24
DuPont- 41.37
DG - 19.19
Federal Mogul - .34
Gannett - 89.59
General Electric - 30.72
GKNLY- 4.55
Ha rley Davidson - 52.40
Kmarl - 37.06
Kroger - 16.90
Lld - 19.16
NSC - 21 .06
Oak Hill Financial - 32.19
Bank One - 54.80
OVB - 29 .51
Peoples - 28. 14
Pepsico - 51 .42
Premier - 9.06
Rocky Boots - 22 .34
RD Shell - 47.71
Rockwell - 32.00

Prep Scoreboard, Page 82
NCAA Tournament results, Page 83
Wickman out for first half of season, Page 84

A DAY ON WALL STREET
March 18, 2004

10 ,750

D:::MJcnes
Wmia]s

10 .250

-·· 9.750

Friday, March 19,2004

-4.52 .
10,295.78
Pet change
fromprevtous : -0 .04

MAR

9,250

DEC

JA N

FEB

High

Low

Record high : 11 ,722.98

10.328.82

10,2 14 . 15

Jan 14.2000

-·- M-;;;;;;;--;8~2004 ·----·=-======~=:::=.:::::::=.::.:::

Nasdaq

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

:- · · ·2.200

Flames burn
Blue Jackets, 2-0

-l

.. -····-·--···· 2.ooo

cocp::site

CALGARY. Alberta (AP) Mal thew Lombardi and Jarome
lg inla scored, and Miikka
Kiprusoff made 23 saves to
help the Calgary Flames tighten their grip on a playoff berth
with a 2-0 victory Thursday
nighl over the Columbus Blue
Jackets.
Lombardi put the Flames up
1-0 at 6: 19 of the second period
and lginla added an empty-net
~oal for the Flames, unbeaten
111 a season-hiSh seven games
(5·0·2 ).1t's thc1r longest stretch
since a I0-game run early in
the 200 1-02 season.
Kiprusoff recorded his third
shutout thi s season and sixth of
his career while improving to
2 1-7-4 and lowering hi s NHLbest goals-against average to
1.63.
Calgary is five points ahead
of seventh-place St. Louis in
the Western Conference playoff race. With 86 points, the
Flames are one back of Dallas
for fifth and two behind
Vancouver for fourth . All three
teams have eight games
remaining.
The Flames have missed the
postseason an NHL-high seven
straight years.
Marc Denis made 33 saves
for the Blue Jackets, who lost
their eighth in a row, tying a
fran~hisc-high set in 2000-0 I.
Lombmdi scored after Denis
Gauthier's shot from the blue
line hit Columbus defenseman
Duvie Westcon. Lombardi got
the puck in the slot and tucked
a backhander behind Deni s.
The Blue Jackets nearly tied
it five minutes into the third
period during a power play
when Manny Malholra was
lhwarted by Kiprusoff, who
slid across the crease to get his
shoulder on a shot from inclose.
The save sparked chants of
"Kipper, Kipper" lromthe seHoul crowd.
The Blue Jackets had another
power play lale in the game,
but with Denis pulled in the
tinal minute, lginl a scored his
37th of the season .
Columbus was 0-for-7 on the
power play. Calgary went 0for-3.

- - - -- -- - -- - 1,800

·14.32
1,962.44
Pel change
from

prevloua: -0 .72

Mardi

18. 2004

- - - - - - - - - - - 1.600
FEB
MAR
DEC
JAN
High
Low
Record high : 5.048 .62

1.972.31

1.947.56

March 10. 2000

- - - - - - - - -- - 1.200

Stan:lard&amp;

Rnr' s 500
. ·1.43
---··-·-·-····--------·····-- ······---··--····-·····- ·····-·······--····-- 1.000
DEC
JAN
FEB
MAR

1 '122.32
Pet change
from previous :

-0. 13

High
.
Low
1.11 3.25
1,125.50

Reco rd high: 1,527 .4G
March 24.2000

AP

Sears - 44.48
SBC -24.70
AT&amp;T -19.58
USB -28.12
Wendy's - 40.68
Wai-Mart - 58.94

Worthington - 18.08
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the pre·
vious day's transactions, pro·
vided by Smith Partners at
Advestlnc . of Gallipolis.

Weare
Friday, March 19
Momi11g (7:00am-Nooll)
35 - 44 N I0 mph
Temperatures will rise from
35 to 44 by late this morning .
Skies wi ll be sunny to mos1ly
cloudy with I0 MPH winds
from the north.
Aftemoon
(I :OOpm·
6:00pm) 46 - 47 N-S 5 mph
Temperatures will stay near
46 with today's high of 47
occurring around 4:00pm .
Skies will be sunny with 5
MPH winds from lhe north
turning .from the south as the
afternoon progresses.
· Eve11i11g
(7:00pm·
Mid11ight) 37 - 42 SE 5 mph

Temperatures wi ll hold
steady around 39. Skies will
range from clear 10 mostly
clear wilh 5 MPH winds from
the southeast.
Overnight
(I :OOam·
6:00am) 33 - 3(, SE-S 5 mph
Temperatures will linger at
34 with loday's low of 33
occurrin g around 5:00am .
Skies will be mostly clear
with 5 MPH winds from lhe
southeast turnin g from the
south as the overnig ht progresses.

from 35 to 57 by lale this
morning. Skies will be mostly
sunny to cloudy with 5 10 I0
MPH winds from the south
turning from 1he southwest as
the rnorni ng progresses.
Aftemoon
(I :OOpm·
6:00pm) hI - h7 SW I0-15
mph
Breezy and clolllly afternoon. There could be some
drizzle and fog from time to
time . The rain is predicted to
start
ncar ·
4:00pm .
Temperatures wi ll rise from
61 early thi s afternoon to 67
Saturday, March 20
by 4:00pm then drop down to
Moming (7:00am-Noon) 65 late afternoon. Winds will
35- 57 S-SW 5- 10 mph
be 10 to 15 MPH from the ,
Temperalures will climb sou1hwest.

~~frGallipolis· ~~~..-..

'10·10% OH

SltJijw;de

n,w
ttH fesl
Selecl;,n I

Rio Grande
youth baseball
registration
RIO
GRANDE
Registration for Rio Grande
youth baseball for the 2004
season wi II be held from 6-8
p.m., Monday at· Rio Grande
Elementry Library.

District 13
all-star game to
be held Monday
RIO GRANDE High
school basketball fans in the
area will have an opportunity to
.~ee the top seniors from the
entire region compete in a pair
of games at the University of
Rio Grande Monday.
The District 13 All-Star basketball games will showcase
the talents of girls and boys
who · have been named to the
AII-Dis1ric1 teams .
The games will match a team
comprised of Division I and II
athletes against the best from
Divisions Ill and IV.
· The price of admission is $5
per person with tickets on sale
1\t the door of the Lyne Center's
Newt Oliver Arena. The girl s
will tip off at 6 p.m. followed
by the boys conlest at 8 p.m.
Fans will also be treated to a
~iam dunk contest by the boys
and 3-point shooting contest by
both the boys and girls, and a
large concession stand will be
available.

Spring sports
schedules
needed
.

• Taxes, Tags, Title Fees extra. Rebate included in sole price of new vehicle listed where applicable. ••on approved credit.
On selected models. Not responsible for typographical errors. Prices good March 18th Through March 21st.
CHIYIOLIT

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WIUIIIHIU

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13 Lll ( I&lt;

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8IOM8 ~

West Yrrglniaii 11 ~evy, ~;,ntiCic, hk£ Olds ·A,ICI·&lt;u$tom vql ~·*'·

Take

1·7710 Ripley FAIAPLAIN Interchange
(exil132 } Turn North on Rl. 21,

I

Dealership is 3 mil es on left

·Monclay • Saturday 9 am • 8 pm • Sunclay 1 pm • 7 p111

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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Friday, March 19, 2004

I•

-~;-·-

:: Gallia and Meigs County
\:arsity spring sports coaches
and/or athletic directors are
ferninded to send in your
Sl:hedules as soon as possible.
:: You may fax them to 4463008 or
them to

Redwomen close out West Coast trip
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydaily1ribune.com
ORANGE, Calif. - . For the third
consecutive day, the University of Rio
Grande Red women sof1ball team split a
pair of games in lheir final day of competition at the Sun West Softball
Tournament, Wednesday.
Rio Grande blitzed SUNY Institute of
Technology, 12-0 in the first game and
dropped the second game, 8-1 10
Vanguard (Calif.) University.
Rio Grande (6-4) was able [o run JUie
SUNYIT with 12 runs in its' final two

al-bats. Senior center fielder Krista
Tucker sw un g lhe big bat for the
Redwomen. ripping two hils, inducting
a triple, in four at-bats and driving in
four runs as well a~ scoring one herself
Sophomore righl fielder Jenn y
Olding. sophoniore thi rd baseman
Brandi Jones and sophomore left fielder Stephanie Flowers all drove in two
runs a piece. Senior second sacker
Emily Cooper went 1-for-2 with two
runs scored with an RBI and swiped
two bases.
SUNYIT ( 1-4) mustered only two
hils wilh Laura Murphy collecting both.
Stephanie Broccolo went four innings

Dettwiller had the olher hits for Rio.
Lotycz (3-2) was roughed up lor nine
hits and seven earned runs in 4''
innings. She had only one strikeout.
Rynda handcuffed the Redwomen in
going the distance for the win . She
fanned six and walked three.
Rio Gra'ldc was originally scheduled
10 face UMASS-Boston on Wedne&gt;day.
but the schedule was changed and the
game was not played.
Next up tor the Redwomen, a road
doubleheader at Concord College
Sunday. The tirst game is slated for I
p.m.

NCAA Tournament

Marshalrs
2004 foolball
schedule

UK in
familiar
position
BY TOM WITHERS
Associated Press

Sept. 4 -Troy State
Sept. 11 - at Ohio State
Sept. 18 - at Georgia
Sept. 29 -Miami of Ohio
Oct. 9 - a1 Ohio
Oct. 16 - at Kent Stale
Dei. 23 - Buffalo
Oct. 30 - Central Florida
Nov. 5 - at Akron
Nov. 13 - a1 Bowling Green
Nov. 20 - Weslern Michigan

,

COLUMBUS
Allhough the calendar
changes, Kentucky's missio n is lhe same each
March : Win or else.
In a college season
where no school was comfortable with being labeled
as 1he nation's No. I team,
the Wi Ideals enter the
NCAA tournament as the
ones 10 beat.
Isn' t thal alway s the
case?
IJ"s tough enough they
have to li ve up to the
impossible expectalions of
their rabid, blue-bleeding
fan s.
But now, the
Wildcats have been burdened with · the tournament's top overall seed for
1he second year in a row.
"Being at Kentucky,
they (fans) don' t like losses," senior guard Gerald
Filch said. "And when we
lose il"s a lot bigger than at
any other school."
Since seeding began in
1979,
Kentucky
has
received lhe field's hi ghest
seed nine ·times - more
than anyone else - and
won two NCAA titles in
1ha1 span.
The Wildcats (26-4) ,
who have won nine
. stra ight game s, begin
chasmg
their
eighth
nalional
championship
Friday in a matchup in 1he
St. Louis Regional against
Florida A&amp;M (15-16) the lone team in the tournamenl with a lo sin g
record.
The
16th-seeded
Rattlers advanced by beating Lehigh 72-57 in .
Monday nighl's play-in
game at Dayton.
It was the lhird straight
game Florida A&amp;M has
held an opponent in the
50s.
" Now if we can hold
Kentucky to 50 in a half,
I'll be happy with that,"
coach Mike Gillespie said
half-jokingly.
Thal might be Florida
A&amp;M's only consolation
Please sea UK. B:t

Marshall
releases
2004 grid
schedule
HUNTINGTON.
WVa.
(AP) - Trips to Ohio Slate
and
Georgia
highlight
Marshall's 2004 football
schedule released Thursday by
school oflicials and the MidAmerican Conference.
The Thundering Herd's
schedule includes liiree opponents which played in bowl
games last year. inclt1ding
Fiesla Bowl champion Ohio
Slate and Capital One Bowl
winner Georgia.
Marshall visils Columbus.
Ohio. and Alhens, Ga .. on consecutive
mid-September
· Saturdays
after
lhe
Thundering Herd's Sept. 4
home opener against Troy
State .
"This is without a doubt an
exciting and demanding
schedu le thal will test our vetenm football team." Marshall
coach Bob Pruett said.
Two non-Saturday games
already have been n1arked for
national television. Marshall
plays host to defending MAC
champion Miami of Ohio on
Wednesday. Sept. 29. and visits Akron on Friday. Nov. 5.
Those games will be televised
by either ESPN or ESPN2.
Miami of Ohio' beat
Louisv ille in last year's
GMAC Bowl.
The Herd went 3-2 against
those teams in 2003 . Troy
State beat Marshall the week
after the Herd upset then-No. 5
Kansas State, and Miami of
Ohio routed Marshall 45-6.
For the second straight year.
Marshall will play just five
home games. Four home
games are on Saturdays at
4:]0 p.m. In addition to the
Troy State game, Marshall
plays host to Buffnlo on Oct.
23, Central Florida on Oct. 30
and Western Michigan on
Nov. 20.
"This is arguabl y the toughest. most challengin g and
maybe the best home schedule
we have ever had.'' Pruett said.
The MAC cJlampionship
game will be played Dec. 2 al
the home field of 1he Easl
Division winner.
It's Marshall's final season
in the MAC; the Herd are
scheduled to join Conference
USA in 2005.
Marshall returns 13 Slarters
from last year's team. which
fini shed 8-4 and was the first
Herd team not to play in a
bowl game since Marshall
joined Division !·A in 1997.

Cincinnati's Jason Maxiell keeps his eye on the ball during practice for the NCAA tournament first round games in Columbus Thursday. (API

UC has undergone
major changes
BY JoE KAY
Associaled Press

COLUMBUS - No team in the NCAA
tournament has undergone a more drasti c
transformation than 1he one from ri ght
down the road.
No. II Ci Rcinnati started the season with
a fierce full-court press, a lO-man rotation .
a 13-0 record and Final Four aspirations.

Most or !hat is go ne as the NCAA tournament begins .
The press'' Scrapped.
The IO-man rotation? Forget it.
The hopes for a deep tournament run''
That's the last thin~ intact.
The Bearcats (:Z4-6} are doing thing&gt;
much difl'erently in March. but gelling
familiar resul1 s. They won a share of the
Please see UC. B:t

Ohio State Girls Basketball Tournament

High scoring Oaks advance to championship
BY ANDY RESN1K

Associated Press
COLUMBUS - The highest scoring 1eam at the girls state basketball
tournament didn't disappoint - at
least for one quarter.
. . .
Oak Hill set a record for a D1vtston
Ill · semifinal with nine 3-pointers,
ty;ng the previous mark of eight in the
first quarter of a 70-50 wm over
Smithville on Thursday.
Alyssa Hammond, the Division III
co-player of the year, led the Oaks
(25-1) with 25 points. She h1t 9-of-14
shots from the field, 3-of-5 from 3-

poinl range and 4-of-5 free throws .
Ali cia Hoff led the Smithies (24-3}
with 14 points and Beth Buchwalter
added 13.
The Oaks, whose 75.6 points per
game average topped the Ih-team
tournament field, fini shed 9-for- 18
behind tlie arc, shot 24-for-43 from
the field and went 13-for-14 at the
foul line . ·
They also tied the Divi sion Ill semi·
final record for points in a quarter
while taking a 30- 17 lead af1er one.
Oak Htll only scored II pomts 111 each
of the n_ext two periods, bu1 still led
52-41 after three.
Hammond made 1he record-break.-

' ,"
I ·------

to pick up the win. Broccolo (3-2)
stJUck oul three and walked one while
yielding both hits. Fellow sophomore
Andreu Lotycz pitched a scoreless lilih
inning. fannin g one and walking one.
Krista Hess suffered the loss for
SUNY IT, surrendering II runs (7
earned } and seven hils over 4', inni ngs,
striking out six and walki ng eigh t.
The bats we nt silent in game two. &lt;ts
the Redwo men onl y produced I(JUr hits
and one unearned m&lt;trker ag&lt;tinst
Vanguard pitcher Jennifer Rynda.
Cooper went 1-for-2 and scored the
only Rio mn . She also stole two bases.
Olding. Jones and freshman Michele

in g ninth )- pointer with J:JO re mainin g in the third, en din g a 9-4 run that
closed Sn11thville lo 45 -35.
The fir st school from Jackson
County to reach a state basketb&lt;tll
tournament, Oak Hill will go for its
first championship on Sa1Urday
asain~t Youngstown Ursuline . The
. Ftghllng lns h beat Plam City
Jonathan Alder 59-43 in the earlier
Di vision Ul semifinal .
.
.
Oak H1ll made e1ght o.f It s nme ]point attempls 111 t ~1 e hrst q~arter.
Ke1sa Dav1s. w)lo ftnt shed With II
points. made three, Hammond and
Please see Oaks. B:t

'

.;

�Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Oaks

lead to as -much as 22 at 51 -29 early in the
fourth quarter.
The Irish, who upset four-time defending
state champ South Euclid Regina in the
from Page 81
regional final s. looked tight in the opening
Jamie Slone each hit two and Dev in moments of their first state tournament game.
McGoon made one.
Whitney Hale added 13 points for the Division II
Oaks. whose 30-point opening period tied Beloit West Branch 57,
Sherwood Fairv1ew (ag-ain st Springfi eld
Kenton Ridge in 1995) for the most points in Thornville Sheridan 44
one quarter of a Division Ill semifinal.
Sardinia Eastern made eight 3-pointers in
Ashley Armstrong scored 18 points and
the 2000 semis against Bluffton and Beloit West Branch advanced to the Division
Baltimore Liberty Union-Thurston tied the II girls championship game with a win over
mark in 1993 against Castalia Margaret! a.
Thornville Sheridan in a semifinal.
Tori Arndt addei.l 12 points and 12
rebounds and Evelyn Woods had eight points
Youngs. Ursuline 59,
and I 0 rebounds for the Warriors (25-1 ),
Jonathan Alder 43
who wi ll play in th.eir first state final
Saturday.
Rebecca Slattery scored 17 points and
Darcy Williams led the Generals (24-2)
Youngstown Ursuline took advantage of with 13 points. Jessie Slack scored nine and
Plain City Jonathan Alder' s foul trouble for a Amanda Krafft had eight .
\victory in a Division Ill state girls semifina.
Offensive rebounds helped West Branch
Courtney Davidson. the divi sion's co-play- overcome poor shooting. Nothing could save
er of the year. had 16 points and Tyra Grant Sheridan 's offense. which had 18 turnovers
added 15 points with I I rebounds for the and only six assists.
Fighting Irish (25-2) . who will play for their
The Generals didn ' t get a basket for the
first state championship Saturday.
final 2:01 of the firs t quarter, the entire 8All-state selection Lauren Prochaska led minute second quarter and the first 3:06 of
the Pi oneers (25-2) with 21 points. but was the third- a span of 13:07.
limited by what she could do after getting
They shot an abysmal 4-for-18 in the first
called for her fourth foul with 57.3 seconds half and finished 15-for-42. Sheridan scored
remaining in the first half.
all seven of its second-quarter points on free
Not wanting to pick up a fifth and fou l out, throws and trailed 24- 15 at the half.
she had to let Vannessa Dickson drive by her
for a layup that gave Ursul ine a 38-22 lead
with 2:50 remaining in the third.
....-- Hamilton Badin 54,
Prochaska, a 5-foot-11 freshman who came Salem 50, OT
in averaging 25 points a game. was called for
two charges and committed two unnecessary
Kym Fiehrer scored the tying layup in
fouls on defense in the first half.
regulation and the go-ahead layup in overSh~ bumped Dickson on a jump shot with
time, her only baskets in Hamilton Badin 's
only t:our seconds left in the first quarter and, 54-50 win over Salem in a Divi sion II girls
with I :28 to play in the second, she was state semifinal.
whistled for her fourth foul while trying to
Fiehrer gave herself the .chance to drive
steal the ball from Davidson in the backcourt. for the winning score in OT, saving a backJo!lathan Alder's Jessie Adams also picked court violation by snaring an errant pass
up four fouls in the first half, when the teams near the midcourt line.
combined for 25 free-throw attempts.
Her basket put the Rams (22-5) ahead 52Ursuline made 13-of-16 free throws in the 50 wtth 31.2 seconds to play. She· was
first half and Jonathan Alder was 8-of-9 as fouled but missed the free throw for a threethe teams combined for 21 fouls. Only seven point lead.
fouls were called in the second half when the
The Quakers (25-2) turned the ball over
Irish broke the game open.
with 8 seconds to play, and Caitlin Beckett
Grant hit a 3-pointer at the halftime buzzer made two free throws to seal Badin's trip to
to put the Irish ahead 30-20. Ursuline built its the state finals .

UK
from Page 81

,'·

•

'

prize. Although there have been plenty of
upsets in the tournament. a No. 16 team has
never beaten a No. I.
Beyond that, none of the three previous
play-in winners has lost by less than 15 points
m first-round games, and their average margin of defeat has been 26 points.
Still, Gillespie thinks his team has a chance.
''One day, somehow, some way, a 16 team
is going to win a game," said Gillespie, whose .
team played at North Carolina State, Florida
and Georgia this season. "I hope it's tomorrow night. It could be 10 years from now.
"Our guys are confident. I don't want to say
they 're crazy enough. but they're confident
enough to believe they can step on the floor
·
and win this game."
In Friday's other first-round game in the St.
Louis Regional, Washington ( 19-11) plays
Alabama-Birmingham (20-9). The other
games in Nationwtde Arena are in the Atlanta
Regional with Illinois (24-6) playing Murray
State (28-5) followed by Cincinnati (24-6)
against East Tennessee State (27-5).
For Kentucky, the pressure to win never
ceases whether it's early November or April.
In Lexington and around the Bluegrass state,
Wildcats fan s view NCAA titles as birthrights
and anything short of one as a shocking failure .
:'After we lose, it's kind of traumatic," Fitch

uc

from Page 81
Conference USA regular season title and its
tournament this month.
Their reward was an NCAA berth in
Columbus, which is only a two-hour dri ve
from campus and should provide a homecourt advantage when they play East
Tennessee State (27-5) in the first round on
Friday.
It's a stunning outcome in light of the last
few months, when Cincinnati was sinking fast
and coach Bob Huggins started throwing
things overboard for ballast.
"We totally changed our offense," Huggins
said. "We totally changed the way we go
about things on defense. I think it's made us
better."
There might be a few more changes afoot in
the tournament.
· Huggin s brought back estranged ce nter
Robert Whaley on Tuesday, reuniting him
with the team he abandoned. The 6-foot-10
junior college transfer quil on Feb. 23
because of his limited playing time.
Huggi ns always is ready to welcome back a
player - several quit last season, including
guard Tony Bobbitt. Whaley mi ssed the last
seven games, but s1ayed in school and was on
the bench in street .clothes during the conference tournament.
"For the last two weeks he's been back, he's
been going hard and paying attention ," said
Bobbitt, the Bearcats' .second-leading scorer.
"He's in the same situation I was in. He wants
to overcome that."
Whaley, who was the star of Huggins' last
recruiting class, averaged 6.2 pojnts and 2.7
rebounds in 20 games before he quit. He
struggled with the physical play inside in

said.
Because of the annual anticipation for 25win seasons and tourney titles, Kentucky
coach Tubby Smith says it takes a special kid
to wear the blue and white.
They become Wildcats already knowing the
ground rules.
"We expect the best and only the best will
be accepted," Smith said. "If you can' t handle
that pressure, you can't play at Kentucky
because it's going to always be there."
Last year, the Wildcats entered the tournament as the nation's hottest team, riding a 23game winning streak and seemingly destined
to finish their IOOth season by adding another
trophy to their overcrowded case in Rupp
A.(ena.
But guard Keith Hogans sprained his ankle
in the regional semifinals against Wisconsin,
and the Wildcats had no one who could stop
Marquette's Dwyane Wade in an 83-691oss at
Minneapolis.
../
It was a reminder that nothing is a·givenespecially for teams carrying expectations
and a target.
"I thought we handled it as well as we
could," Smith said, "and if not for a great
gam~ by Dwyane Wade, I think we could
have gone farther. But that's behind us now."
And the team in front of them right now are
the Rattlers, who swear they won't be intimidated by Kentucky or its storied past.
They're thinking upset.
"Everybody is going to believe what they
want anyway," guard Moses White said. "It's
not what you believe, but what we believe
about ourselves as a team."
Division I, getting three or fewer rebounds in
13 games.
Huggins isn't sure whether he ' ll play
Whaley, who often got in foul trouble and
never stayed on the floor for long because of
his poor defense. The front line has been solid
with Jason Maxiell, Kareem Johnson and Eric
Hicks.
"We' re playing pretty well right now with
those three guys," Huggins said.
Whaley was part of Huggins' lO-man rotation at the start of the season, when the
Bearcats blew teams away by constantly
replenishing their press. After a 13-0 start,
they crashed hard when teams came in prepared for the press.
During the middle of the season, Huggins
changed point guards- Nick Williams went
to the bench - scrapped the press and got rid
of the I O-man rotation.
The result is a vintage Huggins teain solid half-court defense, a balanced otfense
and an emphasis on rebounding.
"There's a lot of wrinkles that I've s4en in
·the pas! on both sides," said East Tenrtessee
State's Murry Bartow. who coached against
Hugg.i ns for six years at UAB . "They're not
pressmg as much. They're ,still a very physical team, a very aggressi ve team."
They' re also desperate to make one more
break with their recent past. Cincinnati has
failed to make it through the first.weekend of
the tournament in six of the last seven years.
East Tennessee State nearly upset No. 2
seed Wake Forest last season, losing 76-73 in
the first round. The Buccaneers have the same
starting lineup back.
Huggins showed hi s players tape of the
Wake Forest game to convince them that the
ope~ing round is going to be a tough go
agam.
"Tape has a tendency to slow things down,
but th~y looked really fast on tape,' su I think
our guys got the message," Huggins said.

r

Friday, March 19, 2004

COLUMBUS {AP ) -

Pa irings for 1he

2004 girts state basketball tou rnament.
STATE SEMIFINA~S
AI Value Chy Arena, Columbua
DIVISION I

Day. Ch amin ade -Julienne (2 6-0) vs.
Barb erton (25- 1), Frldav. 6 p.m.: Cin . Mt
Notre Dame {26-0J vs. Sylvania
Northview (26-0), Friday, S p.m.

Finals: Saturday, 8 p.m.
DIVISION II
STATE FINAL
Beloi t W. Branch (25-1) vs. Hamilton
Badin (22-5 ), Sa turday. 2 p.m.
DIVISION Ill
STATE FINAL

Youngs. Ursuline (25-2) vs. Oak Hill {251). Saturday, 11 a.m
DIVISION IV
Mansfield St. Peter's (23·2) vs. Miller
City (25·0). Friday. 1 p.m.: Minster (22·3)
vs. Berlin Hiland (25· 1). Friday, 3 p.m.

Finals: Saturday, 5 p.m.
THURSDAY'S RESU~TS
STATE SEMIFINA~S
DIVISION II
Beloit W. Branch 57, Thornvi lle Sheridan

44

Hamilton Badin 54, Salem 50, OT DIVI·
SION Ill
Oak Hill 7o. Smithville 50
Youn gs. UrsuUne 59, Plain City
Jonathan Alder 43

Boys basketball state
tournament pairings
COLUMBUS (AP) -

Regional pairings

for the 2004 boys basketball tournament
REGIONAL FlNA~S
DIVISION I
A1 University of Toledo
Ol msted Falls (22 -2) vs. Tol. 51. John's
(2 1.-4), Saturday. 7:30p.m .
At Fairgrounds Coliseum, Columbus
Cols. Brookhaven (24· 2) vs. Cin. Moeller
(22-2) . Saturday. 7:30 p.m.
At University of Akron
Can. Mc Kinley (21 - 3) vs. Cle.
Collinwood (21-3), Satu rday, 7 :30 p.m.
At University of Dayton
Hamilton (22·2 } vs . Spring . S. (23·2),
Saturday. 7:30 p.m ..
Slate Tournamen t Pairings: Toledo vs
Columbus; Akron vs. Dayton.
DIVISION II
At Canton Civic Center
Cheste rland W. Gea uga (22-2) vs. Canal
Fulton NW (22· 1). Saturday. 3 p.m.
At Wright State University
Day. Chaminade·Julienne ( 17-7) vs .
Cols. Watte rson (19-5). Saturday, 11 a.m.
At Unlveralty of Toledo
Ottawa-Glandorf (24 -1) vs . Akr. SVS M
(t9-4). Saturday. 3 p.m.
At Ohio University
Cols. Beechcro ft (17-7) vs. D011e r (21 -3) .
Saturday, 11 :30 a.m.
State Tournament Pairings: Canton vs .
Fairborn, Toledo vs . Athens.
DIVISION Ill
At Canton Fieldhouse
Louisville Aqu inas (22-2) vs. loudonville
(22·2) . Saturday, 7:30 p.l'lr"
At Bowling Green State University
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA (21 -3) vs. St.
Henry (19·5), Saturday. 7:30p.m.
At Ohio University
Bellaire (21-4) vs . Chesapeake (22·2).
Saturday, 7:30 p. m.
At Wright State

•

· Reading ( 19-6) vs. VersaiNes ~(2~ -q .
Saturday, 1 15 p.m.
· ·· t
State Tournam ent Pamngs: Camon vs .
Bowling Green; Athens vs . Fa1rbo rn .
DIVISION IV
At Miami University, Oxford
Mana Stein Ma rion Loca l (1 6·9) vs. Day_
Jefferson Twp. P9·6). Fnday, 7·3Q.p.m.
At Canton Fieldhouse
Sebring McKin ley (23- 1) vs . Kidron
Cent. Chris tian (17-n Frtday. 7:30p.m.
At Fairgrounds Coliseum, Columbus
S. Webster (21 -3) vs . Mansfteld St.
Pe ter's (20·4). Fnday, 7:30 p.m.
At Bowling Green State
Holgate (17-7) '1(5. Ft. Jennings (20-4),
Friday. 7:30p.m.
State .Tournament Patrin gs: OJCford vs.
Camon. Columbus vs. Bowling Green
THURSDAY 'S RESULTS
DIVISION I
Cin. Moeller 94 . Cots. Mifflin 51
Cle. Colli nwood 69, Bedford 54
Hamilfon 65. Gin. Sycamore 55
Olmsted Falls 68, Mansiield Sr. 57
Spring. S. 84. Cin. LaSa lle 75
Tol. St. John's 60, Cle. Rhodes 47
DIVISION II
Canal Ful ton NW 65 . WarrensVille Hts.

49
DIVISION Ill
BeiiBire 73. Ironton 62
Chesape ake 50. Johnstown .'Monroe 43
Gin Reading 54. R1ptey Aipley.U nionLewis-Huntington 43
CuyahOga Fall s CV CA 45. Find lay
Li berty -Bentort 39
Loudonvtlle 68. Bed ford Chanel 62, OT
Loui sville Aquina s 65. Le ayi1tsburg
LaBrae 52
Sl. Henry 5 1. Bell vi lle Clear Fork 41
Versai lles 51. Bloom -Carro ll 43

NCAA Wrestling

No. 1 seeds all make ·it
through first round
BY R.B.

Lehigh (23 ), Iowa State (22 12), Michigan (2 1-1-2) and
Cornell and Oklahoma (20).
Among those qualifying for
ST. LOUIS - Defending Oklahoma
State was 133-pound
champion Oklahoma State took
Johnny
Thompson,
a two-time
the ftrst step toward a possible
champion
and
three-time
finalist
repeat in the NCAA wrestling
tournament Thursday night, seeded third this year after entergrabbing. the ftrst-day lead and . ing the tournament 23-6. He
advancing seven wrestlers to the won his ftrst-round match 4-2
over Mike Messina of Sacred
quartertinals.
"It's only Day 1," coach John Heart and pulled away late for a
Smith said. "Hunger is going to I0-5 second-round victory over
come into play tomorrow, and if Josh Keefe of Tennesseeyou're hungry, you're soing to Chattanooga.
"He mised my hand and that
be successful. Nothing 1s going
is
what is important here,"
to fall into your lap in this tourThompson
said. "You don't get
nament."
.
Oklahoma State, seeking its judged on style, just on wins."
All of the No. I seeds
32nd national title, has 30
advanced
to the quartertinals.
points. Illinois, which has never
won the championship, was two although one of the five unbeaten wrestlers in the competition
points back in second.
:rite Big Ten champions, who had a close call. Greg Jones of
finished ninth last year, West Virginia·(23-0) tmiled 1-0
advanced five wrestlers to the after two periods and needed a
quartertinals.
takedown with 15 seconds to go
"Sure, we had high hopes for for a 3-1 second-round victory
this tournament," coach Mark over Josh McLay of Minnesota.
.Johnson· said. "We know if we
At 125 pounds, Jason Powell
wrestle well, we can \Yrestle of NebrJSka won his first two
with anybody in the country.
matches by a combined score of
"I still think Oklahoma State 23-2. Chris Pendleton of
is the team to beat but we all Oklahoma State, who got a firstknow after that it can be a real round bye when his opponent at
scramble."
174 pounds didn't .1 nake weight,
Nebraska was third with 25 led 19-2 before a second-period
points and Iowa and Minnesota pin of Leone! Sanchez of Cal
were tied for founh with 23 /,. State- Fullerton.
Rounding out the top 10 were · Another Oklahoma State
FALLSTROM
Associated Press

wrestler. top-seeded Tyrone
Lewis, had his second straight
impressive match. Lewis had a
22-second pin in the ftrst round
and beat John Siorades of
Tennessee-Chattanooga 13-4 in
the second round.
Top-seeded Damian Hahn of
Minnesota won a pair of matches by a combined score uf 25-8
at 197 pounds.
Illinois led the team standings
with 22 points after the first
round, four more than
Oklahoma State.
The highest seed to fall in the
opening round was Matt Valenti
of Pennsy lvania. No. 3 in the
125-pound
class.
Mark
McKnight of Buffalo won a 2-2
overtime match on riding time.
Lewis macte quic.k work:;of
Christian Arellano of Cal Sta\eBakerstleld. pinning him in 22
seconds to raise his record to 301. That was the quickest match
of the tirst day.
All fi ve wrestlers with unbeaten records, three of them seeded
tirst and three in the 157 -JX&gt;Und
class, advanced to the quarterfinals. In addition to -Jones at 184
pounds, No. I Alex' Timpelle of
Illinois is 32-0 at \157, No. I
Scott Moore of Virginia is 48-0
at 14 1 pounds. No. 2 Matt
Gentry of Stanford is 38-0 at
157 and No. 4 Jake Percival ·of
Ohio University is 36-{l at 157.

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992"!'2155

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NCAA Tournament

Prep Scoreboard
Girls state basketball
pairings

Friday, March 19, 2oo4

Manhattan routs Florida
Associated Press

At Raleigh, the little team
from the Big Apple was
every bit as good as
promised.
Led by 26 points from hotshot guard Luis Flores, 12thseeded Manhattan beat fifthseeded Florida 75-60 in the
first round of the NCAA
tournament Thursday.
Manhattan (25-5) won its
first tournament game since
defeating Oklahoma in 1995,
and advanced to play fourthseeded Wake Forest in the
East Rutherford Regional.
The Gators (20-11 ), ranked
first in the country in
December, fa iled to make it
. out of the first weekend of
the tourney for the founh
straight time since they made
the national fin als in 2000.
Peter Mulligan added 17
points for the Jaspers, and
Dave Holmes had 12 points
and 12 rebounds.
Anthony Roberson led
Florida with 22 points.

Wake Forest 79,
VCU78
At Raleigh, Chris Paul had
22 points and seven assists,
and Justin Gray added 15
points for Wake Forest.
Jamaal Levy had 10 points
and 10 rebounds for the
Demon Deacons (20-9), who
.advanced to the second
· round for the third straight
.. year. Domonic Jones had 22
points and seven assists for
Virginia Commonwealth (238) .

Saint Joseph's 82, ·
·. Liberty 63
At Buffalo, Jameer Nelson
scored 22 of his season-high
33 points in the first half,
leading top-seeded Saint
'.Joseph's to an easy firstround victory over Liberty.
The Hawks (28-1 ), coming
off an 87-67loss to Xavier in
the Atlantic 10 Conference
quarterfinals, advanced to
.Play eighth-seeded Texas
Tech in the second round.
· Delonte West added 18
points and nine rebounds for
'Saint Joseph's. David Dees
led the Flames (18-15) with
22 points.

Texas Tech 76,
·Charlotte 73
At Buffalo, Andre Emmett
scored 20 points to help
Texas Tech beat Charlotte in
Red Raiders coach Bob
-Knight's first game in
: Buffalo since his 2000 finale
·with Indiana.
Janius Jackson added 17
points for Texas Tech (2310). Curtis Withers led
Charlotte (21-9) with 17
.Points and nine rebounds.

Atlanta Regional
Duke 96,
Alabama St. 61
At
Raleigh,
Shavlik
Randolph scored 20 points
for top-seeded Duke, coming
off a loss to Maryland on
Sunday in the Atlantic Coast
Conference tournament final
Daniel Ewing added 19
points for Duke (28-5), which
will play eighth,seeded Seton
Hall in the second round.
Malcolm Campbell scored
26 points for Alabama State
(16-15), seeded 16th and No.
230 in the latest RPI rankings.

points in the second half to
lead Texas past Princeton.
Texas (24-7), the No. 3 seed
in the regional, will face
sixth-seeded North Carolina
on Saturday.
Royal lvey had 15 points
and Brian Boddicker 14 for
Texas, making its sixth
straight NCAA tournament
appearance. Princeton (20-8),
the No. 14 seed, got 16 points
from Will Venable .

Rafael Araujo had 24
points and 12 rebounds for
BYU (21-9).

Maryland 86,
UTEP83

At Denver. Chris McCray
scored 19 points, including
two free throws with 13.6 seconds left, and Maryland held
off Texas- El Paso.
John Gilchrist added 18
points,
and Jamar Smith had
North Carolina 63,
14 for the Terrapins (20- 11 ),
Air Force 52
coming off an overtime win
against Duke in the ACC title
At Denver, Sean May had game. John Tofi had 16 points
14 points and North Carolina for UTEP (24-8).
pulled away in the second
half to . beat scrappy Air Stanford 71 ,
Force.
North Carolina {19-1 0) had Texas-S.Antonio 45
trouble with Air Force's
At Seattle, Josh Childress
deliberate
offense
and
swarming defense. and didn't scored six of his 26 points
get any breathing room until during a key 12-0 burst midgoing on an 11 -0 run midway way through the second half
and re serve Matt Haryasz ·
through the second hal f.
added
I0 points for Stanford.
Air Force (22-7) shot 50
Stanford (30-1 ). the No. I
percent in the first half, but
was ·just 8-for-21 in the sec- seed in the regional, won its
ond to lose in its first NCAA first-round NCAA game for
tournament appearance in 42 the I Oth straight year and will
pl ay eighth-seeded Alabama
years.
in the second round.
Things
went
much
St. Louis Regional smoother
than Stanford's last
Gonzaga 76,
visit to Seattle, a 75-62 loss to
the Washington Hu skies
Valparaiso 49
almost two weeks ago - tne
At Seattle, Ronny Turiaf only blemish on an otherwise
scored 14 of his 15 points in perfect season.
LeRoy Hurd led Texas-San
the second half and Cory
Antonio
(19-14) with 18
Violette added 13 points and
10 rebounds to help Gonzaga points.
beat Valparaiso.
Blake Stepp added 13 Alabama 65,
points and nine assists for Southern Illinois 64
Gonzaga
(28-2) .
The
Bulldogs won their 21st
At
Seattle,
Antoine
straight game and advanced Pettway
hit a 6-foot runner
to the second round against with 5 seconds left to lift
lOth-seeded Nevada.
Alabama past Southern
Joaquim Gomes had 13 Illinois.
points and eight rebounds for
Southern Illinoi s' Darren
Valparai so (18-13), the only
Brooks, the Missouri Valley
lnd1ana school in the tourna- Conference
player of the
ment.
year, missed a long jumper at
the buzzer.
Nevada 72,
Earne st Shelton scored 18
points
for Alabama (18-12).
Michigan St. 66
Brooks led Southern Illinois
At Seattle, Kirk Snyder hit (25-5) with 25 poin~s.
a 3-pointer that put Nevada
ahead with 2:52 left and the Connecticut 70,
Wolf Pack went on to upset Vermont 53
seventh-seeded
Michigan
State.
At
Buffalo,
Rasliad
It was Nevada's first win Anderson
scored 22 points,
ever in the tournament and its and Emeka Okafor had 15
first victory in nine games
points and 1,4 rebounds.
against Big Ten opponents.
Connecticut (28-6), the Big
Snyder, the WAC player of East champion and second
the year, fini shed with 19 seed, will play seventh-seedpoints for Nevada (24-8). ed
DePaul tn the second
Paul Davis led Michigan round.
State ( 18-12) with 16 points.
The Huskies improved .to
12-0 in first-round games
Phoenix Regional
under coach Jim Calhoun,
who
won his 30th tournaSyracuse 80,
ment game to tie Adolph
BVU75
Rupp for 12th on the career
list.
At
Denver,
Gerry
T.J. Sorrentine led Vermont
M~Namara hit nine 3-point- (22-9) with 19 points.
ers and had 43 points for
defending national champion DePaul76,
Syracuse :
Syracu se (22-7) shot 53 Dayton 69, 20T
percent and got 20 points
from Hakim Warrick, but
At Buffalo, Drake Diener
couldn't breathe easy against scored 10 of his 'career-high
12th-seeded BYU until 28 points in the second overMcNamara hit three free time, pro)1elling DePaul to the
throws in the final 16 sec- second round for the first time
onds.
15 years.
The Orangemen, the fifth
Delonte Holland added 13
seed in the regional , points and 14 rebounds for
advanced to face fourth- the Blue Demons (22-9).
seeded Maryland in the sec- Ramod Marshall led Dayton
(24-9) with 17 points.
ond round.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

NCAA Men's Tournament
OPENING ROUND
AI UD Arono
Doylon, Ohio

Mississippi
State
(25- 3)
vs. 2.15 or 4 45 p m
Monmouth, N.J. (21-11 ). 7: 10 p.m.
Semifinals
X'avler (23-10) VS LOU ISVIlle (20·9).
Friday, March 26
Tueeday, March 16 •
30 minutes after rirsl game
At Edward J one s Oome
Florida A&amp;M 72. Lehigh 57
Second Round
St . Louis
,,
Saturday, March 20
Kentucky·Fionda A&amp;M -WashlngtonEAST RUTHERFORD REGIONAL
At The Pepel Center
Aiabama· Birmlngnam
w1nne1
vs ·
Flrol Round
Den\ltr
Pr ov1dence- Pa c1 11c- K a nsas ·lUI !lOISThureday, March 18
North Caroli na ( 19- 10) vs. Texa s (24- Chica go w1nner
At HSBC Arena
7). 5:40 or 8 :10p.m .
Bo st on College-Uiai1-Georg1a Teet'!·
Buffalo, N .Y.
At RBC Center
Nort her n Iowa wmner vs NevadaTexas Tech 76. Charlotte 73
Raleigh , N.C.
Gonzaga w1nner
Sain t Joseph's 82 . Liberty 6 3
Duke (28-5) vs. Seton Hall !2 1-9).
Cham pions h ip
At RBC Centeir
1:10 p.m.
Sunday. Marc h 28
Rololgh , N .C.
Sunday, March 2 1
At Edward Jo nes Dome
Manhauan 75, Fl orida 6 0
At Nationwide Areru.t
St. Louis
Wak e
Fore st
79 .
Vi rginia
Columbus , Ohio
Semifinal wmners
Commonwealth 78
Il linoi s- Murray Sta te winner vs
Frld8i)t, March 19
Cinc innati-Ea st Tennessee State winPHOENIX RE GIONAL
At Kemper Aren a
ner, 2:30p.m .
First Round
Kansas City, Mo.
At TO Waterhouse Center
Thursday, Ma rch 18
Memphis (21 ·7) vs . South Carol ina
Orlando, Fla.
At HSB C Arena
(23· 10). 12:30 p.m.
Xav ier -Louisville
win ner
vs .
Buffalo , N.Y.
Oklahoma State (27 ·3) vs. Eastern Mi ssi ssippi Slate-Monmouth, N.J. winConn ect1CU1 70. VeriT.ont 53
Washington {17· 12), 30 minutes after ner, 12:10 or 2:40 p.m .
DePau l 76. Dayton 69 20T
firs! game
Semifinals
At The Pepsi Cen ter
At The Bradley Center
Friday, March 26
Denver
Milwaukee
At The Georgia Dome
Maryland
86
Texas·EI
Paso 83
Wisconsin (24·6) vs . Rich mond {20- ·
Allante
Syra cuse 80. Br~gh am Young 75
12), 7:20 p.m
Duke-S eton Hall wi nner vs . Il linois·
At Key Aren a
Pittsburgh (29-4) vs. Central Florida Murray
State- C incin nat i-E ast
Seattle
(25·5). 30 minutes afler 1irst game
Tennessee State wi nner
Alabama 65 South ern l!llnors 64
Second Round
Norlh C arolina-Te)( as winner vs .
Stanford 71 TekaS-SAn Anton10 45
Saturday, March 20
Xavi er· Louisville- Miss iss ippi State·
Friday. March 19
At HSBC Arena
Monmouth, N.J. winner
At TO Wate,rhouse Cent re
Buffalo , N.Y.
Championship
Orlando. Fla .
Saint Joseph's (28-1) vs. Texas Tech
Sunday, March 28
No r1h Ca rolin a Sla te 120-9) ~s
(23·10). 5:30 or 8 p.m.
At The Georgia Dome
AI RBC Center
Louis1ana-Lafay et te (20·8) 12·15 p rn
Atlanta
Raleigh , N.C.
Vande rb il1
(2 1-9)
\iS . Western
Semifinal winners
Manhattan (25·5) vs . Wake Forest
Michigan (26-4), 30 m1nu1es after f1rst
(20·9), 3:40 p.m .
game
ST. ~DUIS REGIONAL
Sunday~ March 21
First Round
Second Round
At Kemper Arena
Thursday, March 18
Saturday. March 20
Kansas City, Mo.
At Key Aren a
At HSBC Arena
Memphis-South Carolina win ner vs.
Seattle
Buffal o, N.Y.
Oklahoma State·Eastern Washington
Nevada 72 , Michigan Stat e 66
DePau l (2 2-9) vs Connec11c ut t28·6l.
winner. 2:20 p.m .
Gonzaga 76, Va lparaiso 49
5:30 or 8 p.m ·
At The B&lt;adley Center
Friday, March 19
AtThe Pepsi C enter
Milwaukee
At Nationwide Arena
Denver
Wisco nsin -Richmond winner vs.
Columbus , Ohio
M ary land (20- 11) vs Syracuse 122Pittsb urgh-,(l:entral Florida winner. 2:15
Kentucky (26-4) vs. Florida A&amp;M (15· 7). 5:40 or 8: 10 p m
or 4:45p.m.
16), 7: 10 p.m .
At Key Arena
Semlllnals
Wash ington ( 19- 11 ) vs . Alab amaSeattle
Thuroday, March 25
Birmingham (20-9). 30 minutes af1er
Stanford (30- I ) vs. Al abama ( 1B· 12).
At Continental Airlines Arena
first game
5:50 p.m.
East Rutherford, N.J.
At Kemper Arena
Sunday, March 21
Saint Joseph's-Tel(as Tech winner vs .
Kansas City, Mo.
AI TO Waterhouse Center
Manhat1an·Wake Forest winner
Providence (20-8) vs . Pacifrc (2 4- 7) ,
Orlando , Fla.
Memphis-South Carolina-Oklahoma 7 :25p.m.
Vanderbii1-Western Mich 1gan winner
State-Eastern Washington winner vs.
Kansas (21 -8) vs . Illinois -Chicago vs. North Carohna State·LOuiSianaWi sconsin-Richmond- P i llsbu rgh- (24-7), 30 minutes alter first ga me
Lafayet1 e w1 nner. 12 t 0 or 2·40 p m
Central Florida winner
At The Bradley Center
Sem,l f inals
Championship
Milwaukee
Thurs d ay. March 25
Saturday, March 27
.. Boston College (23-9) vs . Utah (24At America West Arena
At Contlnenlal Alrtlnes Arena
8). 12:30 p.m .
Phoenix
East Rutherford , N.J.
Georgia Tech (23- 9) vs. Northern
Stan ford -Al ab ama
w1 n ne r
vs.
Semi final winners
Iowa (21-9) , 30 minutes after first
Maryland · Syracu se winner
game
_ Va nderbi i1-Wester n MICil tgan - Noflll
ATLANTA REGIONA~
Second Round
Car olina S1ate- LOU1 Siana -Lafayelle
First Round
Saturday, March 20
winn er vs . DePau i·Connect 1cut wm ner
Thursday, March 18
At Key Arena
Championship
At The Pepsi Center
Seattle
Saturday, March 27
Denver
Nevada (24 -B) vs . Gonzaga (28-2),
At Ameri ca West Arena
Texas 66, Princeton 49
3:20p.m
Phoenix
North Carolina 63, Air Force 52
Sunday, March 21
Semifin al w1nners
• At RBC Center
At Nationwide Arena
Raleigh, N.C .
ColUmbus , Ohio
FINA~ FOUR
Duke 96 , Alabama State 61
Kentucky-Florid a A&amp; M winner vs.
At The Alamodome
SetQn Hall 80, Arizona 76
Washington -Alabama -Birmingham
San Antonio
Friday, March 19
win ner, 5 p.m.
Semifinals
At Nationwide Arena
At Kemper Arena
Saturd ay, April 3
Columbus, Ohio
Kansas City, Mo.
East -Rutherford c ha mpi on vs St
Ill inois (2 4·6) vs. Murray Stale (28 -5),
Providence-Pacific
w~nner
v s.
12:25 p.m .
•
Kansas-Illinois-Chicago winner. 4:50 Lou is champion
Atlan ta cham pion vs. Phoe n1x cham:
Cincinnati (24 -6) vs. E3st Tennessee p.m.
pio n
State (27-5), 30 mi nutes after first
At The Bradley Center
game
Champi onship
Milwaukee
At TO Watlrhouse Centre
Mond ay, Apr i l 5
Boston College -Utah winner vs .
Georgia Tech-Northern Iowa winner , , Semilinal wi nners
Orlando, Fla.

Seton Hall 80,
Arizona 76
At Raleigh, Kelly Whitney
had 24 points and 14
rebounds to lead Seton Hall
past Arizona.
Andre Barrett added 19
points and six assists for the
Pirates (21-9), who overcame
a 14-point deficit in the second half.
Andre Iguodala scored 19
.points to lead Arizona (20; 10), which lost in the opening
· round for the first time since
: 1999.
.

Texas 66,
.Princeton 49

s·groo•a

to fqcus cin si1npkr

o.l• ·· w; J.~!it i. f'lE!~. !lP. · ~he club s &lt;lnd play.
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Denver,
Brandon
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••

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I

medicine . Pin y

�. Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 19,20 04

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, March 19, 2004

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

:~Wickman injured, out

Spring Training

'atribune - Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED

!for first half of season Blue Jays pluck Reds

!

DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) - Josh Towers
allowed one run and four h1ts 10 five 10nin~s
Thursday m the Toronto Blue Jays' 7-2 wm
over the Cmc10nati Reds
Reds center fielder Ryan Freel spramed
his right ankle tn the first mning when he ran
fu ll speed mto the right-center field fence
trymg to run down Jorge Sequea's tnple.
Freel was hsted as day to day.
Carlos Delgado beat a Cmcmnau shtft
twice with a RBI smgle to left in the first and
a solo homer to left-center field in the thtrd.
Cincinnati had only the left fielder and third

WINTER HAVEN , Fla.
( AP)
Suddenly the
Cl eveland lndtans must
· answer a big question in
sprmg traming .
Wl10 wtll close''
Boh Wtckman , expected to
be the team 's closer thts season, wt\1 be sidelined fo r at
least the ltrst half of the
Amencan League season due
to a sprain in hi s surg ically
tep&lt;ttred nght elbow, the
Indians sa td Thursday
. Wickman, 35. wtll rest the
· · elbov. lor at least a month,
· then begm a throv. mg pro, grdm, Indians tramer Lonme
Solott satd.
Follol'mg the 2001 season,
. Wtckmdn signed a th ree. yea1. $15.9 milliOn contract
with a cl ub optton for 2005
If .dl goes we ll , could
reJOin the lncllans some time
• after the Ju ly 13 All-Star

GAih• County OH

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-----------------------------------------------------------------'

Indians edge Red Sox, 10-9
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) - Pmch
runner Zac h Sorensen scored the winnmg
run on a w1ld th row to ftrst fro m Boston
pitcher Anastac10 Martinez in the mn th
inning to give the Cleveland Indians a l 0-9
wm over the Red Sox on T h ursda~ .
Cleveland had !ted it on a six- rim etghth,
spoiling a 4-RBI performance for Boston
by David McCarty, who h1t a solo home run
off Jason Bere tn the second mn10g and a
three-run homer off Cliff Bartosh in the
third.
Both starters made early ex tts.
Bere was scheduled to work four 10nings,
but was removed 111 the thtrd after ftve consecutive Boston batters reached safely. He
gave up stx runs m 2 1/3 inn ings, mcl udmg
back-to-back doubles from Btll Mueller and

Game

The re is some damage to
. the ligament , although the
: lnd tans "don ' t belie'e that
te.tr to he a signiftcant one,"
Solotf sat d. "We are optimist ic Bob will be able to
JO in the tcd m lor the secon d
ha lf ol the season. "
The lnd tans have three
re ilel pttchers with ptevtous
- in.tJOr-league expe nence m a
closer' s ro le - n ght-handers
Jose J11nenez and Davtd
Rt&lt;kc and left -hander Scott
S t e\'&lt;~trt
Ge neral manager
Mark Shap11 o satd Ris ke will
be gtven th e first opportumty
to pitc h 111 thai role.
Wickman thought he was
· • mos th
recove red from
"Tomm y John '' elbow ligamen t replace ment surgery,
and m,mager Ene Wedge had
satd Wtckman wo uld be the
closer tht s season, if healthy.
·'[ wil l pttc h again ,"
Wtckman sa td "My arm ts
JUSt telling me now to take a
break, to take a step back."
Wt ckman has appeared m
only one spring-training
g.tme . He was errattc
th ro ugh one mning of work
Monday dunng a stmulated
game, then slammed the ball
to the ground as he lett the
mound .
The 2000 All-Star has a

baseman on the left side of the field.
Cincmnatt starter Brandon Claussen,
fighting for a spot in the rotation, j;ave up
tour runs and seven htts m three inmngs.
"My fastball was flat," he satd.
Aaron Harang, also trying to win a place in
the Reds' rotation, allowed an unearned run
and four htts 10 four innings and struck out
four.
Cincmnatt 's Dane Sardmha homered in
the ninth off Kerry Ligtenberg. Toronto's
Alexis Rtos hit a two-run homer in the
eighth off Todd Van Poppe!.

Cleveland lndtans reltef pttcher Bob Wtckman throws at s pnng
tratnmg Feb. 19 111 Wmter Haven, Fla. Wickman. expected to be
the team' s closer thts season, wi ll be Sideli ned for at least the
first half of the 2004 seaso n due to a spram in hts surgtca lly
repatred right elbow. Wickman, 35, wtll rest the e lbow four to
SIX weeks, then begm a throw tng program lasttng another SIX
weeks, lndtans tramer Lonnte Soloff satd . (AP)
3.68 career ERA and 156 August.
saves with the New York
''I' m not a yo ung ch1cken
Yankees,
Milwaukee any more, and I' m sure that
Brewers and Cleveland He pl ayed a factor in tht s,"
was traded to the Indians by Wtckman said. "R1ght now,
the Bre wers as part of a I'm thinkmg about ho w I Jet
seven-playe r deal tn July of the team do wn . The las t
2000.
thing I'm thmkmg about is
Wtck man saved 30 games myse lf."
in 2000 and 32 in 200 I
Wickman has con verted 66
before runmn g mto elbow of 74 save opportuntttes with
problems midway through Cleveland. He ranks fourth
the 2002 season The surgery on the team 's all-lime save
took pl ace that December.,
lt st behind Doug Jones
He was able to p1tch in (1 29) , Jose Mesa (I 04) and
four minor-league games last Mtke Jackson (94).

Mann y Ramirez that drove in three runs.
" ! felt fi ne," Bere satd, ''but l was definitely catchi ng too much of the plate with
two strikes."
Red Sox starter Derek Lowe was scheduled to wqrk at least fi ve mnings, but was
re moved after the first of Josh Bard's twp
RBI singles
" ! stru ggled, to say the least. But a hitter
doesn' t get discouraged by going 0-tor-3 tn
a spnng-trammg game, so neither will !,"
Lowe said.
Casey Blake of the lnd1ans doubled twice
and walked, tmproving hts spring average to
39 1 (9-for-23) with se ven of those hits
going fo r extra bases.
Boston's Cesar Crespo was 2-for-3 and is
hittmg 462 ( 12-for-26).

Phillies beat state rival Pirates
CLEARWATER. Fla. (AP) - Billy Wagner
gave the Philadelphia Phtlhes a perfonnance
they are used to seemg from their closer.
Wagner got mto trouble, then pttched out ot tt
to earn h1s first save of the spring 111 Thursday's
8-5 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates. Wagner,
who missed two weeks v.ith an InJUred mtddle
linger, wasn't pleased.
"I felt temble," he said. "! expect to be perfect every lime. l want to be able to say I'm
ready now."
Philadelphia acquired the three-time All-Star
from Houston to ti ll its b ~ggest need after Jose
Mesa suuggled last season and manager LatTy
Bowa turned to a closer-by-commJttee. Wagner
converted 44 of 47 saves and had a 1.78 ERA
last year
Three days earlier, Wagner gave up a homer
to Yankees pitcher Kevin Brown on the ftrst
pitch he tl1rew this spring. He allowed two smgles and a walk agatnst the Ptrates, but got out
of the jam.
"He's rusty," Bowa satd. "He's the least of

my worries."
Jtm Rushford hit a grand slam and Chase
Utley added a two-run homer for the Philhes.
Raul Mondest htt a two-run drive and added an
RB I double for the Pirates.
Mondest's two-run homer olf Randy Wolf in
the first gave the Pnates a 2-0 lead Hts RBI
double in the sixth oft wmner Rvan Madson
made it 3-1.
·
Rushford, a non-roster player wtth seemingly no chance to make the team, put the Phillies
ahead 5-3 with hts slam off loser Salomon
Torres Utley's two-run drive -- his third
homet of the spring- came off Willis Roberts.
Rya n Vogelsong, a candidate for Pittsburgh's
tifth spot in the rotation, gave up three htts and
one unearned run m four innings.
Wolf allowed two runs and two hits in four
mnmgs.
"! saw some good thmgs and some bad
thmgs. Overall, he had a pretty good outing,"
Pirates manager Lloyd McClendon said of 1
Vogelsong.
'

------------~~------.-

Offtee llo~~
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
\\\(11 '\t I \II'\ IS

H ELP WANTtl J

C-1 Beer Ca rry Out permit
for sale, Chesw Township
Me1gs Co unty, send letl ers
of mterest to The Dally
Sent1nel PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy O h1 o 45769

r

GIVEAWAY

Free German Ro1twe 11 er
male 3yr s old, very large &amp;
fna ndly
Pen
mcl udad
(304)458-1 823

t:.._

..-.c .... ovv.,.

P.-.blii c N o ti c e s I Jn :N ~"'Vs p a. p ers.
I &gt; e l l ....,.e r e c:::l Fl.lgh't: 'ltc::.. ~c: :»a.ar K:&gt;oc::».:»r.

Call (740)446·2805

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
RICHARD
HAGERTY, ET AL
PLAINTIFFS

Township, T·08·N, R15-W, Meigs County,
Ohio and being a por·
lion of the land• convoyed to Dick Hagerty
as
recorded
In
vs
Volume 35, Page 645
GARY L. CANTER- In Meigs County
BURY, ET AL
Official Records;
CASE NO. 03 CV 141
Commencing for
NOTICE OF SALE
reference at a 5/8"
By virtue of an Iron pin found In the
Order of Sale iasued Southwest corner of
out of the Common Soulhwest quarter of
Pleas Court of Meigs tho Southwest quar·
County, Ohio, In tho tar of Section 25;
of
Richard
Thence with the
case
al., West line of Section
Hagerty,
et
Plaintiff, vs. Gary R. 25, N 03 deg. 58' 55"
Canterbury, et al., E, 453.34' to an Iron
Defendants, upon a pin sat;
Judgment
therein
Thence departing
rendered, being Case said West line wtth 4
No. 03-CV-t41 In said new division lines, S
Court, tho sheriff of 51 deg. 12' 09" E,
Meigs County, Ohio, passing an Iron pin
will offer for sale at set at 855.40' to an
the front door of tho Iron pin set for a total
Courthouse
In distance of 885.40' to
Pomeroy,
Meigs a point In the centerCounty, Ohio, on the tina of County Road 1
30th day of April , (commonly
called
2004, at 10:00 a.m., Painter Ridge Road);
Thence with the
the following lands
and tenements, local· centerline of County
ed at 31005 Painter's Road 1 the following
Ridge Road, Vinton, 2 couraea;
OH 45686. A com·
Thence S 50 deg.
plote legal descrip- 58' 58" w, 56.99' to a
tion of t he raal estata point; 1
Is as follows:
Thence S 48 dag. 54'
Slluate In the State 05" w, t36.17' to a
of Ohio, County of point;
Meigs and In tha
Thence departing
said road, N 6B deg.
Township of Salem :
PARCEL ONE:
12' 15" W, passing an
Baing 5.00 acrea altu- Iron pin set lor referaled In Section 25,- ence at 30' for a total
Townshlp 8, Range distance ol617,21' to
15, Salem Township, the point of beginMeigs County, Ohio ning and containing
and
more
fully 5.00 acres.
The
above
described as follows:
Situate In the Stata of descr ibed tract Is
Ohio,
County
of sub(ect to all legal
Meigs and In the easements and legal
township of Salem:
rights-of-way
on
PARCEL ONE:
record.
All courses are
Being 5.00 acres situcorrected magnetic
ated In Section 25,
and are for angular
township 8, Range
15, Salem Townahlp, purpoaes only.
All Iron plno set ate
Meigs County, Ohio
and
mora
fully
112" In diameter and
30"1n length.
described as follows:
This description
A tract ol land located n the Southwest was prepared from
quarter
of
the the results or an actu·
Southwest quarter of at survey made April
Section 25, Salem 1996, by Ohio Mining

Consultants,
240
Huron
Street,
Jackson, OH 45640,
W. Royce Horton, P.S.
5465.
Excepting all that
certain vein of coal
locally and variously
known as Number 4,
4A,
Clarion
or
Limestone
Coal
underlying the above
described real estate,
along with all rights
and privileges granted In dead recorded
In Deed Volume 201 ,
Page 425, of the
Meigs County Deed
Recorda.
Grantees are aware
that the vain of coat
locally and variously

known as Number
Four, Four, Four A,
Clarion or Limestone
Coat underlying the
property has been
mined and that subeldence of the surface
has occurred or may
occur as a conae ..
quence.
Grantees
acknowledge
that
they have Inspected
the property and are
purchasing It In Ita
existing condition.
Grantees
further
acknowledge
that
they
have , not
received nor relied
upon any represent•
tiona from Grantor1
Ito employees or
agents, respecting
the physical condition of the property,
and that Grantor shall
not be liable lor any
future loss or damage that may arise
out of the existing
condition of the property or any repairs
lhereto undertaken
by Grantees, any and
all such liabi lity being
hereby
expressly
waived.
This conveya11ce to
made sub(ect to all
exceptions, reserva·
lions, covenants, and
conditions or record
now in force and
effect.
Grantors hereby
reserve to them ·
salves, their heirs,

successors,
and
assigns a twenty (20)
loot utility easement
along Painter Ridge
Road (County Road
Number 1). '
This conveyance Is
aubject to ths followIng
Restrictive
Covenants.
These
restrictions shall run
with the land and be
binding upon the
Grantees, their heirs,
succpssors
and
aaslgns:
1. Must have water
under pressure, and a
septic
system
approved by Meigs
County
Health
Department before
moving Into real ~
dance on lot
2. Only one rest·
dence per lot permittad on lots under five
acres.
3. No junk, unll·
censed vehicles shall
be allowed to accu·
mutate on lots.
4. Lola must be
neal and clean at all
times.
5. Permanent residences,
Including
house trailers or double wldos, must have
"underpinning" withIn 60 days of placing
them on lot.
6. Campers, buses,
tents or basements
cannot be used as
permanent
real·

dances.
7. Until the proper·
ty you are purchasing
Is paid off In lull, no
trees over three Inch·
es In diameter are to
be cut or removed,
unless permlsalon Is
granted in writing by
the seller.
B. Meigs County
Health Department
must be notified
" prior" lo placing res
I dance on said parcel.
Reference Deed :
Volume 44, Page 141 ,
Meigs County Official
8

Records.
PARCEL TWO :
Being 2.09 acres sltuatad In Section 25,
township &amp; Range 15,
Salem
Township,

Meigs County, Ohio,
and
more
fully
described as follows:
A tract of land located In tho Southwest
quarter
of
the
Southwest quarter of
Section 25, Salem
Township, T-08-N , R15·W, Meigs Counly,
Ohio and being a portion of the lands conveyed to Dick Hagerty
as recorded tn volume 35, Page 645 In
Meigs County Official
Recorda ;
Beginning at a 518"
Iron pin found In the
Southwaat comer of
Southwest quarter of
the Southwest quar·
ter of Section 25;
Thence with the
West line of Section
25, N 03 deg. 58' 55"
E, 251.17' to an Iron
pin s&amp;ti
Thence departing
said West line, S 66
dog. 12' 15" E, passIng an Iron pin sat lor
reference at 587.21 '
lor a total distance of
617.21' to a point In

the " centerline

of

County Road 1 (com·
monty catted Painter
Rldga Road);
Thence with the
centerline of said
road the following 2
courses:
Thence S 48 deg.
54' 05" W, 10.00' to a
point;
Thence S 42 dog.
32: 58" W, 58.21 ' to a
point where the cen·
terllne of County road
1 intersects the South
tina of Section 25;
Thence departing
said road and follow·
lng said South tina, N
87 deg. 02' 41 " W,
passing a 518" Iron
pin found at 30' lor a
total dlstanca of
544.35' to the point of
beginning and conlalnlng 2.02 acres.
The
above
described tract Is
oubject to all legal
easements and legal
rights-of-way
on
record.
All courses are
corrected magnetic

~nd

are for angular
purposes only.
All Iron pins set ate
112" In diameter and
30" In length.
This description
was prepared from t
he result&amp; of an actu·
at survey made April
1996 by Ohio Mining
240
Consultants,
Huron
Street,
Jackson, OH 45640,
w. Royce Horton, P.S.
5465.
Excepting all that
certain vein of coal
locally and variously
known aa Number 4,
4A,
Clarion
of
Limestone
Coat
underlying the aboVe
described real eatate,
along with all rights
and privileges granted In deed recorded
In Deed Volume 201,
Page 425, of tha
Meigs County Deed
Recorda.
Grantees are aware
that the vein of coal
locally and variously
known as Number
Four, Four, Four A,
Clarion of Limestone
Coal underlying the
property haa been
mined end that subsl·
dance of the surface
has occurred or may
occur as a conse·
quenca.
Grantees
acknowledge
that
they have Inspected
the pro~erty and are
purchasing It In Its
existing condition.
Grantees
further
acknowladge
that
not
they
have
received nor relhfd
upon any rapresenta·
lions from Grantor,
Its employees or
agents, respecting
the physical condition of the property,
and that Grantor shall
not be liable for any
future loss or damage that may arise
out of tho existi ng
condition of the property or any repairs
thereto undertaken
by Grantees, any and
all such liability being
expressly
hereby
waived.

Saturday,

Ttlls conveyance Is
ldance on said parcel.
made sub(ect to all
Reference Deed:
March 20
exceptions, reserva·
Volume 44, Page 141,
t1ons, covenants, and
Meigs County Official
Forked Run
conditions or record
Recorda.
Sportsman Club
now In force and
Auditor's
Parcel
effect.
Nos.: 13·00t&amp;1.005
Grantors hereby and 13-00161 .006
reserve to them- I The
above
MATC:H
selves, their heirs, described real estate
successors,
and 11s sold "as Is" without
12n-5pm
assigns a twenty (20) r'arranlles
or
loot utility easement
covenants.
March 20, 2004
I Property Address:
along Painter Ridge
31005 Painter's Ridge
Road (County Road
Number 1).
Road, VInton, OH
MATCH
This conveyance Is
4\i6B6
7:00pm
- ??
subject to the follow- Real
Estate
Restrictive Appraised
At:
Ing
Covenants.
These $~0, 000.00. The real
restrictions shall run
e~ate cannot be sold
with tho land and be for less than two·
binding upon the thirds the appraised
Grantees, their heirs, value.
an TerMs of Sale: 10%
successors
assigns:
. dow? day of sale, bal1, Must have water ance on delivery of
under pressure, and a deed! Sold subject to
septic
system
second hall 2003 and
approved by Meigs accrued 2004 real
county
Health estate taxes.
Department before
ALL
SHERIFF'S
OPERATE
moving Into real- SALES
dance on lot.
UNDER THE DOC2. Only ona resi- TRINE OF CAVEAT
dence per tot permUEMPTOR. PROSPEC·
ted on lots under five TIVE 'PURCHASERS
acres.
ARE
URGED TO
3. No junk, unli- CHECK FOR LIENS
IN
THE
PUBLIC
censed vehicles shall
be allowed to accu- RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO. THE
mulate on lots.
4. Lots muat be MEIGS
COUNTY
SHERIFF MAKES NO
neat and clean at all
GUARANTEE AS TO
times.
.
5. Permanent real· THE STATUS OF
dances ~
Including TITLE " PRIOR TO
house trallera or dou· SALE.
ble wldas, must have Douglas
Little,
" underpinning" with· Attorney lor Plaintiff
In 60 days of placing (3) 19, 26 , (4) 2
them on tot.
Help Wanted
Help wanted
6. Campers , buses,
tents or basements
cannot be used as WANTED: Emergency Relief Workers
perman•nt
resi- (Substitutes) needed to work with people with
dences.
mental retardation in Athens &amp; Meigs Counties,
7 Until the properHours
as scheduled as needed; some overntghts
ty you are purchasing
reqUi
red
Reqwements· High school diploma
Ia paid off In lull, no
trees over three Inch· / GED. vahd drivers license, three years 'good
as In diameter are to dnv1ng expenence and ad eq uate automobtle'
be cut or rt! moved,
msurance coveras e. $7.00/hour. No exper1ence
unless permission Ia necessary. Tra1n1ng provided.
granted In writing by
Send resume to·
the seller.
Buckeye Community Services
B. Meigs County
P.O Box 604,
Health Department
must be notified
Jackso n, Ohio 45640
" prior" to placing res- DcarJime lor ,lpphc.. nts: 3120/04, Equal Oppmtumt} Empl oyer.

·~--~.........................---------~~·--------------------------~~·----

RIMFIRE
RIFLE

OU'l'LAW

w.

Classlfleds!

• All ads must

Publica tion
S unday Di s play : 1 : 00 p.m .

Thursday for Sundays

be prepaid'

POLK:IES Ohto Valley Publishing r eaarv•• the right to edtt, reject Of cancel any ad at any time E rrors must be re ported oo the f tral d ay ol
Trib une-Sentinel-Register will be rea pon&amp;lbla for no more than the cost of the apace occupied by the error and only th e f1r11 m1ertlon We shall
any 1011 or e~tpen le that r1ault1 from the publication or om l1alon olan advert1aament Correction Wi ll be made 1n the l lrat avallabkoJ ll'l ditl on • Box
are always conllc:l entlal • Current rate card applln. • All real eablte adverti sements are subJect to the Federa l Fau Houe111g Act of 1968 • Th111
accepts onl y help wanted ads mell'lt1n g EOE atandards We will not knowingly accept any adverttsan g 1n vlolat 10n ol the law

{)
D
0

3 10

HOMF&gt;;

"'

""

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
ou do busmess w1th peo
le yo u kn ow, and NOT I
end money throug h th
a1l until you have 1nvest1
ated the offenn

j320

r:'l'l:--~----.,

r

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALt:

10

Hous&gt;,,

FOR RENT

1

"--------·

All real e• tate advertising
In th1s newspaper Is
subj ect to the Federal
Fa1r Housing Act o11968
which makes 11 lllagal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
dhummin atlon bast!l d on
race, col&lt;l r, religion, sex
familial status or national
ongm. or an y Intention to
make any sueh
preference, limitation or
di scrimination "

Expe nence d
Account1ng
person 1n accounts payable
receivable, pay roll , taxes
PROFtNi10NAl.
This newspaper will not
roBuY
qu arter reports &amp; G L Send
SERVIOlS
kno wingly accept
resume to CLA 548, c1o
advertisements tor real
Absolute Top Dollar U S Gallipolis Tribune, Gall1pohs
estate which la in
Rober ts
Res1denllal
Silver,
Gold
Co ms, OH 4563 1
violation af tt'te law Our
Electncal
Se
rv
iC
e
A-Z
Proo fsets, Diamonds, Gold
reader&amp; are hereby
Amgs
U S Curre ncy · Full t1me desk clerk apply 1n Phone (740)256-66 10
Informed that all
M T S Com Shop , 151 perso n
dwellings ac:lvert!&amp;&amp;d 1n
l"l oll day
Inn
TURNED DOWN ON
Second Avenue. Gall1polls .
this newspaper are
GallipOli S
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
740·446-2842
availabl
e on an equal
No Faa Unless We Wml
opportunity bases.
Make 50% sellm g Avon
1·BB8 582-3345
Cash pa1d for- gold &amp; s11ver
Limited
t1me
ONLY
IH \I I.., I \II
coms &amp; coin collections free
(740)446-3356
Country home 1-year old
estimates, Glen B1ssell ,
new well sep tiC system
(740)992-7599
HOMES
Paramed1 cs
&amp;
EMT's
Includes 2 ac res 2 bedFOR SALE
room, 11/2 baths gas log
Ap ply at 1354
for 2br or b1gger/ need s
fireplace Asking $65 000 00
, with small/p1ece of Jackson Pike Gallipoli s
1600 sq It 3 yr old Ranch F1rm (740)247-2 102
on a rent-to-own bases
sty le home 2 1.'2 car garage
to $400month
3 bedroom large kitchen,. Letart Fa ll s OH 3 bedroom
/~04)89~5-3408
$15 44-$21 40/hr, now hi r- llvmg room 2 112 baths, house 1 ba th detached
Ing For app licatiOn and free laund ry room front po rch. garage new roo! Sld tn g
governm ent JOb 1nfo ca ll all electric Very well layed Windows carpet. &amp; k1tchen
Am encan Assoc of Labor, out bea utiful 1ntenor on 1 $65 000 00 (740)247·2000
1-(913)5 99-8220 24 hm 112 ac res 134B Prospect
New Home- 3 bedroom 2
e mp serv
HELP WANI'ID
Church Ad Won 1 last long
tlath, den On corne r lot
at only $1 15 000 (740)446Meadow H1lls Osher Ad Pt
Treatment 451 4 or (740)446·3248 after
Res1dentlaf'l
Pleasan t WV (740)446·
Addressers wan1ed 1mmedl· FaCility yo uth worker Pay
5pm
9340
ate lyl No Expenence nece&amp; based o n expenence Call
sary Wo rk at Home Call (740)379-9003 IO a ppl y
3 Bedroom home, located at
OPEN HOUSE
405· 47-6397
2 12 N
Tl11rd Avenue Amaz1ng quality bu1ll house
SATELLITE TECHNICIANS Middleport (740)992-6759
1[1 des1rable neighborhood
Amer pas Propane Is seek·
NEEDEDI
Great schools 3 bedroom 2
3
bed
room,
2
baths
on
4
3
lng a n expe nenced local
1/2 bath $120,000 Open
driver/Service Tach
for Mu st hav e good dnV1ng acres Close to Tycoon Lake
house Sat March 20th 12-3
Racine COL A or B with record w1 th own truck Calll740)709·1166
or call lor appomtment
tank &amp; hazm at req uired Expene nce m cable or satel3br, 2ba. House 1n New (740)«1 -1237
Prior
Propanelplu mbmg lite a plus If yo u have a 'DO
Haven totally remodeled
experience HELPFUL Must MORE, EARN• MORE" Wmk
M OBILE HOMES
$85,000 (304)682-313 1
be phys1cally capable to per· ethiC, you're a good cand iFOR SALE
form all demands of the JOb date 3D-35K per year Full 4 bedroom 3 bath, Buckeye
Competitive pay and bene- t1 me benefits are available Hills Ad In grouncl poo l 1
5
used homes under
fitS Q ualified applicants call Please call Digital Dish acre (740)709· 1166
$2 000 00 Will help Wll h
1 -80 0 -583-9675
between 9am-4pm to set up
del1very Call Harold, 740
an Interv iew 1•877 . 692 _ 4bedroom Ranch home
EOEIAMNFIDN
385-9948
2bath, 2500 sq ft w/800 sq
8324 Option 8
An Excellent way to earn
~~~arn;;io'll!";;o;;;r.mo.rrvt n pat1o room 1n New Haven For
Sale/Rent
19 99
money Lets ta lk the
ng
peop 8 oca
$ 125 ·000 Sits on 3 lots Woodfield 14x70 l1ke new
(30 4)882 _240 1
ho want to earn mon
NEW AVON
2br 2ba ce ntral a1r/hea1
h1le los ing we1ght, show
Call Mantyn 304-882-2645
ng
oth e rs
how B room Ranch, full base- $19, 000 sale rent $450/mo
Joyce 304-675·6919
Informational
DVO/C
me nt, 3 beclroom. 2·112- (304)675- 1519 (304 )895Apnl 304-882-3630
vatlabte upon requ est740 bath, 2-112 acres tam11y 3595
41-1984
room
cove red
deck New 14 wide, Only $849 00
$99 000 No land contracts down and only $164 88 per
Travel work &amp; pfay seekmg
(740)446·2196
month Call Karena, 740 _
tmergeuc people for fun Job
385-7671 ,
opporlumty earn money
HolJse for sale on 2 1/2
whrle seemg the USA calf acres of land fu ll basement
Director needed tor local
Robin 868-298-5732
3 bedrooms d1n1ng room
area to work wtth schools,
fam1ly room w/hreplace IIV·
PTA's. and yo uth groups
1ng room 2 lull Oaths, utility
w
an
ted
Someone
to
cleB.n
A' g 46K 813·788-6157
house Send resumes or let· room 2 car garage heat
Hiring: Full &amp; Part time tar of 1nterest to CLA 555, pump 20x20 out build1ng,
Gal lipolis" Tnbu ne, 30 loot pool with new deck
Nursery Greenhouse help c/o
(740)992-1641
'-----------'
Gallipolis. O H 45631
Call (740)256-9247

POSTAL J OBS

'

School

Fundralslng

© 2004 by NEA, In c .

FOR SALE

II'.:\\{ I \I
OA
MIDDLEPORT
HIFTINI GHT
SHI FT
ICK UP APPLI CATIO
URING
BUSINES
DURS

WANI'Eil

..
1 - 1'l

W1ll do BabySitting 1n my
home Smoke !ree l Call
(740}367 0429

Call 800-652-2362

(740) 339-1594

r

•

www c om1 cs c om

Se II y,0Uf
Mobl'le Home

Wl'th A

Classl'ft'ed Ad

V1cto r1an 1736 sq It 3 bedroom 2 bath Sta1nlass stee l
appli ances 8 It flat ce1lmgs
Hard1lap w1th saddle roo f 5'
on 12' roof pitCh - porch
Coles Mob1 le Homes 15266
US 50 E Attl ens Oh10
(740)592 1972 ' Where you
get your moneys worth

r

T hompsons

Repa~r-675·7388

Fo r Re nt or Sale on Land
Contract $40&lt;ll month +
depoSit 3 bed room. 2 ba th
(740)379-9a 87
0

bnck 1 5 balhs carport
No pets, No smokm g
~650 depo511 references

740)4 46·92 09
F ARMS

N1ce House for rent beh1ncl
the Armory 3Br Reference &amp;
req Ui red
$600
Fa rm for sa le $5 000 down Oepos 1t
month
(304
)593·3542
take over payments, double
ca rfgarage on p roperty, trailA1ver
v1ew 3 bd rm , 2
er
5rmsf2tullbaths
baths basement and dec k
304 576-9929
All electric Located m
340
GallipOliS
Ferry
WV
81JSIM~
$700fm o nth , no pets By
'\(;[) BUILJJINGS
appt (740)446-3481

FOR SALE

Co mmercial bu1ldmg fo r
MOHII.E HOMES
sa le, askmg $39 000 Great
FOR
opportu nity to sta rt a buSIness
or
to
lease
2 Br Mobile Home m Spnng
Acqu iSitiOnS 9 1 Mill St
Middleport OH Shown by Va lley area $300 a month +
$250 depOSit (304)675-2900
a 1 on! 740 992-597 1
or (740 )441 -6954

Rt:r.T

Lurs&amp;

!\CREAGE

.,r~-~~IYUM--E·N·m;-...,

---FORIIiirrirRENTiiiiii.-,J

TEXAS LAND LIQU IDATIONI

1 bedroom apt stove/ refng·
e rator &amp; ul1htles fu rn iShed

20 acre ranches 35 m1nutes
from boo mmg El Paso
referRoads surveyed
ences $8,995 $0 down
$89/mo Sunset Ranches
Free maps/pictures 1·800843-7537
www sun set ranches com
IH\1\1.'

HouSES

FOR RENT
2 or 3 bedroom house m
Pomeroy, no pets, (740)992-

5858
3

bedroom

house

1n

Pomeroy Depos1t reqw red
No Pets (740)949-7004

3 yr old 3 br 2 1!2 bath
e•cellenl cond•IIOn a ll alec·
Inc, 2 112 ca' ga,age, 10
m1nules from Holzer Po rte r
area

$750 mon th

$750

dopos11.
'"'"' encos
roqwed Call 740-446-45 14
or 740·446·324B after 5pm

'

r,o

Hou
GooSEH~
.
LA:J

Eureka

Wh trl

Wmd

'---·SiiliiriPiir'l.ii!Eiii:isi_ _.,

wmdO'-'-'S lintels etc Claude 2000 Red Foro Musta11g
W1nters A10 Grande OH one owner low m1les non
Ca ll 740·245·5121
smoker V-6 automattc cd
a1r tilt etc Ask1ng $8 500
call (740)44 1-9840

i

FO~E

I

200 1 Ford Ta urus S6 200
fema le 1998 Sable $4 395 1997
$100 Grande Che rokee $4 695
1998 Cava11er S3 295 1997
Sunf1re $2,995 1995 F·250
AKC
reg1s lered
male 4x4 d1esel $9 995 1994 F
German Sllapherd pupp1es 250 4x4 d iesel $9 000
3 mos old 1st sllots &amp; 1995 W1ndstar
$3 000
wormed $200 (740)992 - 1997 S-1 0 Extended cab
3972
$4 995 1997 Sable $3.495
1995 Sable 52695 1993
I \U\lSII'I'III"i
Salurn
$2 695 1991
,\ 11\I·SI(H h.
Cors1ca $995 t 985 Topaz
lit: .,
$795 1992 Sunb1rd $995
F.ro.t
Rome Auto Sales
10 week Old Reg
Beagle pups
(740)446-3645

I -r'ilto!"'".;..~~~--,
•

Call (740)245-5859

::.r=B'-o'-d'-,::.o::.
:::..:.:no::.a::.r_H
__o_l_za-r
0 m

Square bale hay lor sale
Ba led dry $1 80 per ba le
Ca ll (740)245 -5672

1980
Plymouth
Volare
Buy or sel l
R1ver1ne 69 000 m11es (304)B92-28 t 0
Conven1ent location N1ce 1 Ant1ques. 1124 East Ma1n after 4 pm
bedroom References and Qn SA 124 E Pomeroy 740·
1987 S~.;baru car 4 wheel
depos it reqUired No pets 992 2526
Russ Moore
dr1ver 2 door runs good
(740)« 6-01 39
$600 OBO Call (740)256
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT1652
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE,
N1ssan
Max1ma
1990
ap artmen ts
Townhouse
$1 000 080 (740)446
and/or smal l houses FOR Futon bunk bed &amp; super s1n
1619
RENT Call (740 )441 -11 11 gl e wal erbed lrame w1th
tor apphcat1 on &amp; mlormat1on headboa rd
$50
each 1992 Bonneville, $1 ,495
1995 Grand A'll 4 door
(740)742·280 1
Furn1shed ap t 1 br 2nd
$2 195
1993 Caravan
JET
Ave Up staus all ut1ilt1e s pd
$ 1 995 23 1n stock trades
No
pets
Ga ll ipolis,
AE RAT ION MOTORS
welcome
(740)446-9523
Repa1red New &amp; Re built 111
Cook Motor s
'--------Stock Ca ll Ron Evars 1
Grac1ous hvlng 1 and 2 bed
/ l~O J H 6·0 I Ol
roo m apart ments at V1llage 800·537 ·9528
1993 Ford Pco be SE elec Manor
and
A1ve rs1de
Apartme nts 1n Middlepo rt _
N_E_W
_ A_N_D_ U_S_E_
D_ S_TE
_E
_ L tric blue body excellenl con
d1t1on spo11er No transm1s
From $295·$444 Call 740· Steel Beams P1p e Reba r
SIOn $500 (740)446·7857
Concrete
Angle
992 506 4 Equ al Housmg For
Opport umlles
Ct1ann el Flat Ba r, Steel 1994 Camara for sale 1n
new
Modern 1 Bedroom apt Call Gralm g
For
Drains excellent cond1t1on
system
$3 500
(740)446- 039 0
Dr1veways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L stero
Scrap Melals Open Monday chrome ta1l p1pes &amp; How
Wednesday &amp; master (304)576·2929
New 1 bedroom apt Phone Tuesday
Fnday, aam-4 30pm Closed 1996 Chevy Cav1ler body 1n
740-446-3736
Thu rsday
Saturday
&amp; great shape needs some
Sunday (74 0)446-7300
work $1 200 (3041576-292~
Pleasant Va lley Apartmo11t
Are now ta kin g ApplicatiO ns Water hauling tank 125 gal 1996 Neon power Windows
lor 2BR. 3BR &amp; 4BR $100 one set scaffo ld1ng 2 ground effects 4 doo r, auto
$2,400
p layer
are
take n t1er complete $125 Queen CD
Appli cati ons
Monday thru Fnday fro m Ann sola $185 2 occasion- (740)44 1·0370
900 AM 4 P M Office 1s al arm cha1rs $25 eac h 1998 Dodge Avenger 4
Located at 1151 Evergreen GMC flJII s1ze truck topper cyhnder a1r cond1110nmg
On ve Po mt Pl easant , WV $75 3 wood ba r stools, $15 Power sunroof automatiC
Phone No 1s (304)675-5806 each contemporary desk &amp; 60 000
m1les
$3 900
cha1r $40 Oak coffee table
EHO
(740)446-2795
&amp; 2 end tab les $50 a set
Tara
Town house alum1nwn 16 extenhon lad 1999 BUick Celllury 50 000
Apa rlments Very SpaciOUS der $30 1999 Yamaha 4~4 m11es eJo:cellent conditiOn 4
2 Bed rooms, 2 Floors CA 1 B1g Bear four wheeler door power locks &amp; wm
112 Bath Newly Carpeted (740)843-1053
dews tape player 740-446·
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Poo l
4224
Pat1o Start $385/Mo No
Bunn iNG
2000 blue Jeta Vol 5 speed
Pets, Lease Plus Secur~ ty
AJC 4 door CD New brakes
Depos1t Requ1re d, Days and
t1res (740\446 7500
740 446 348 1
Eve nmgs Block bnck sewer p1pes

i

(740)« 8 906 1

Hay for Sale 1 500 lb bales
startmg
at
$10
Call
(740)446·21 09

t

Bea utiful nve r 111ew, 1deal for
one or two people No pets,
references
(740)441- 0181
16xBO Sites ava ilable $115
par month Includes water, N1ce 2 and 3 bedro om
sewe r &amp; trash (740)992· mobile ho mes for rent
2167
1ncludes water, sewer &amp; 740-367-0502
trash , no pels, depos1t &amp;
SPACE
Fo r Sa le 79 106 Ac res
$300 per month (740)9921
R1ver v1ew, produc1ng Oil &amp;
FOR RENT
gas wells Red uced to 2167
304·529-7 106
$115 000
2 store fronts 1n H1s1onca1
after 5pm
downtown
Pomeroy Oh, fac L,
1ng th e r1ver lor ren t
Lots for Sale Meadow H1lls
3 m11es fro m Po1nt Pleasant 1 and 2 bedroom apar t- (740)589-7 122
on Oshel Ad 304·675-3000- ment s furmshsd end unlu r
n~ shed,
secu nty depos1t Offi ce s pace down town
740-446·9340
requ1red no pe ts 740-992- Pome roy approx 1BOO SQ
ft , street leve l near courtPoplar He1ghts SubdiVISIOn 2218
house. $450 mo (740)592
two adjacent lots, 4 5acres
stream, view, mature hickory 1 bed room apt furni shed, 1758
&amp; wa lnut trees $30 000 $290 $150 depos it Ca ll
\liiH 11\\UI'\1

(304)675-8666

Good m1xed hay $1 50 a
bale (740)742·7004

I If \'iSI'OR I \ 110~
Used FL1r n11Ure Store 130
Bulav11te Pike Mattresses
dressers
couches
AIIIOS
bunkbeds Rec l1ners whatFOR SALE
nots Grave Monumenls
(740)446 4782 Ga llipolis S5001 Hondas
Chevys
OH Hrs 10 4 (M Sl Sunday Jeeps
POLICE
etc
by appo1ntment
lf~r1POU N DS
Cars
lrom
$500 For I1SllnQS 1 800 719
3001 ext 3901
ANTIQUES

BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Dr1ve from $344 to $44 2
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
740-446·2568
Equal
Hous1ng Opportunity

0

...

Appliance &amp;
Fo r sale
re-cond1t 1oned
automat1c
washers &amp; dryers refngera
tors
gas and electric
ranges a1r cond1t10ners and
wr1nger washers Will do
repa 1rs on mator brands 1n
shop or at you r home

Applicatio ns bemg taken tor
very clean 2 bedroom 1n
country sett1ng yet close to
town l arge k1tchen and hv
mg room Washer dryer
dishwasher, stove
and
retngerator Included Water
and garbage 1ncluded To tal
alectn c w1th AIC Tenant
pays e lectric $400 deposit
$475 per month No pets
{740)446·2205 or (740)446
9585 ask fo r VlfQima

MISCElLANEOUS

Barn IJ.emoval

...

L.,__

lwright@lc .net

All references &amp; lull lnsurar~ee Call 304·373·0011

"'""P••oe•l

r ~.~-~iiirriifwriil~iiiro- IO-•Hoii~iiiSiiiEHi~ii-IJ rL.,--ori~iiiRiyiAi ~irrooir

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

170

1

W1ll Pressure Wash houses
mobtle homes, metal bUild
tngs, and gutlers Ca ll
(740)446.()151 ask lor Ron
or leave message

~j
~-------__;;;_-~·------------"'

S unda y In- Column : 1:00 p . m.
Frl,da'y For Sunda ys Pape r

Acctadll ed Member A.cc redlllriD
Council lor Independent Colleges
anO Schools 12746

•Mechcallns, 401K
• Operation area 400 m1le
ra d1us of Jackson OH

Female Boston
last seen on 3/mll e
Road Reward answers to
~c h el si e" call (304}675-7443 Desk
Clerk
and
Housekeeper
needed
Lost Red &amp; whtte Coon Please apply at Budget Inn
Mound
neutered
male 260 Jackson P1ke GallipOlis
afraid o f guns and men OH No phone calls please
Reward
lor
rel urn
Te m~ r

SHOOT

Bu• lne• s Days Prior To

Gallipolis Career Colleg e
(Careers Close To Home)
Cal l Today I 740-446 4367
1-800-214-0452
www galllpOIISCareercollege com

Will do tmck or block work
reasonable or will wo rk for
Contractor 30yrs e11pen
ence (304 )675- 11 63

•Min of 2 years axp

6676

Gl1N

All D ispl a y : 12 Noo n 2

1180

Young male cat Short ha1r, Clall A COL Drivers
black/white Good Hunter• Wanted

LO ST

~l g ht

D a ily In -Column : 1 : 00 p .m.
Monday- Fri d a y f o r Inse rtion
In Ne xt D a y 's P a pe r

Attent1on D r~ver s &amp; OIOP'sl
Med s1ze do g M1 xed breed,
Home 90% of the weal&lt;
Golden Retnever &amp; ?
ends l Must be 23+ w/C iass· Reliable adu lt w1ll do grass
(740)4 46-16 19
A COL 2 yrs exp w/1 yr cuttmg (304)675-8902
RCA Floor model T v Needs fl atbed, clean MVR Les
Roof1ng s1d1ng po rches No
a 11111e work Ca ll (740)446- (800) 826-3560 •19
Job to small Free est1mates
8896
AVO NI All Areas! To Buy or 20+ yrs exp Reasonable
304-882Sell
Sh1rley Spears 304- (304) 7 73·5028
Rummage sale 1tems Call
2095
675- 1429
attar 5 pm (740)388-8217

Lost- small houn d dog white
&amp; tan, VICinity of Bashan Rd ,
Reward (740)985-3601

~~._..-

AS SEEN ON TV
INSTRUCTION
LEARN TO DR IVE
TRACTOR- TRA ILER
NEW PROGRAM
No Expene nce Needed
Placement Dept
F1 nancm g Avrulable
CDLJTra1010g
ALLI ANC E
Tractor-Tra11er
Tra1n1ng Cent ers
Wythev ille VA
Ca ll Toll Free
, -800-334-1203

St lt(Mli S
I~TRUCil()~

fJ;.

Now you can hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
,f
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

• Start You r Ads With A Keyword • [ n( lude Co mplet e
De scription • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation s
• I n clu de Pl1 one Number And Address When Need ed
• A d&amp; Sh ould Run 7 Day s

ISO

110

Lost Jack. Ru sse ll Terner
white
wlb rown
spots • Sign on Bonus
chppedltall, 16-18lbs, crown •34 cent per m1le
o n back, Reward {304)675- • 95% No touch

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p ~ m.
HOW IQ WRITE Art AD

0 eacllfirUi'

L1 te

t.--riEQUiiiiiiP!\
iiiitENT
iiiriirrrr-'

C1 A W/0 hookup quiet Sweeper Used less th an 6 '
location S379 pl us utilitieS mon ths
$50
Phone New Hol land Round baler
Spec1al
Mason County
Depos 1t &amp; lease reqUired (740)256 111 7
rece1ve
the lol
Residents
(740i446-2957
Fng1dan-e washer/drye r both low1ng d1scounts Ax5 baler
1 br apt 1n PI Pleasant
1n good condtl1on $150 for $1 500 4x4 baler $1 000
1 br house 1n Ohio cent ral tile pa1r (30 4)675-6986
Keefer s Serv1ce Center
a1r1 heat no pets dep req
304 895 3874
Good Used Applia nces
446-2200
and
Recond1l1oned
L1VFSIDCK
2 tledroom apt St At 160 Guaranteed
Washers
past Holzer $475 mo Dryers
Ranges
and
(740)441 -0 194
Refrlgerators.'Some start at Reg1ste red ANGUS and
66 1 3rd Ave, Gall1pohs, 2 $95 Skaggs Appliances. 76 Crossbred bulls Top bloodlines Slate Run Farm
bedroom unturmshed out- Vme St. {74 0)446-~398
\740}286 5395
Side storage $300 + 1 Kenmo re freeze, like new, Jackson
up
mon th depos1t + ut1ht 1es $1 25 Sears tras h com· look
www
stateruntarm
com
(740)245-9595
pactor, $75, Computer cha ir
HAY&amp;
Apa rtment lor rant $500 No $25 (740)446·3053
GRAIN
Pats Available May 12th
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
Call (740)441-1124
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohto 4X5 rou11d bale s covered
Twin R1vers Tower IS accept- . (740)446-744 4 1·877 830 good grass hay $ 1250
mg app 11cat1ons for walling 9162 Free Est1mates, Easy Square
Dales
mostly
list for Hud-subs1zed, 1- br financing 90 days same as orchard
gra$s
$2 50
apart ment , ca ll 675-6679 cash V1sa1 Master Card (7 40)992·2623
EHO
Dnve- a- little save alot

r

•

2002 4-doo r VB L1ncolnLs
Excellent cond1t10n approx
37 000 m1les
Ask1ng
$20,000
(740)446 1864
a her 6pm or (740)446 0974
93 Rodeo 33 000 m1le~ new
t1res brakes &amp; pamt JOb
$3 500 OBO (3041593·0922
94 Camara V-6, auto wla1r
looks &amp; runs good $2 500
(7 40)742 2357 alt er 6pm
leave message
Cavalier
Neon, Satur n
Grand Am Cutlass lntr1gL18
Geo
Tracker
F1reb1rd
Caravan Intrepid Sunf1re
GMC Bon nev1lle vehicles
are 1n stock from $1 195 lo

$3895
COO K MOTORS
(740}446-0103
Excellent cond1t1on White
95 Bu1Ck LaSabre, 68 500
m1les, $4 300 call (304)675·
4098

�.Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, March 19, 2004

Friday, March 19, 2004

www.mydailysentipel.com

ALLEY OOP

In Memory

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
'

In Loving

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Memory

1
5
8
12

Positions
Incite Rover

Dtnor special
Baldwfn or
Gulnness
Ancient
Tokyo
Kill time
Clock part
Smash Into
Midday
Bitten
Center
Doctor's
payment
All-purpose
vehicle
Boat, ship
or plan@
Sound

13

BENNETT'S

HEATING U COOLING

SYRACUSE
YOUTH LEAGUE
will have sign-ups
Saturday March 20th
from 10:00 a.m. til
noon at the Syracuse
Fire Depart_ment.

Our lives were
forever changed,
One year ago
today.
For that was the
day The good
Lord called,
Daddy home to
stay.

Residential &amp; Manufactured H ousing
Air Condi tio ners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmena..
• Free Estimates
• 5 &amp; I 0 yr Warranties
.~
• Huge Inventory
., .
• Vanguard Vent less Fireplaces ~;·

two,
So many things
they will never
learn from you .
Christmas time
exterior
illumination,
, --you were the
Clark Griswa ld of
Hysell Run:
• And how gard ening
:
in the summer,
•
can be so much
fun.
, They will never see
the "Lawn
Ranger" on his
trusty lawn
horse,
Happily cutting all
the grass weanng
a Ginigan ha~ of

BINGO
March 20 at 6:30p.m.
American Legion Middleport
Coverall in 46 numbers
pays $1 ,000.00.
150 people will pay $1,000.00
Coverall if hit in 46 numbers
will
pay $2,000.00
Plus $5,000.00 Jackpot 16
numbers left on Jackpot
. tipboard
Starburst $1,300.00

course.

These treasured
times, along with
your love help to
get us through.
Thank you for
teaching us by the
life you lead.
You were truly a
blessing to us all.
We love and

miss you,
.lim (Love you Pop),
Tracey (I will
always be your
little girl, Daddy)
and all or
your family
'

'•
Auras

r

Bonanza Get
SFREE

North

875-2457
Driveways • Tennis Courts
Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads• Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

LARRY SCHEY

(10'1110' 610'1120')

(740)446·7730.

(740) 992-3194
992·6635

91 Nissan 4WD Pickup
5spd . runs good S1 .500 call

(304)675·6545

VANS&amp;
4-WDs

Let me do t: for youl

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
General Contracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
Roofing •All types

per acre for Good
Hunting land in
Lebanon Twp.
·or
Will lease up to
$5.00 per acre.

740·992·7953

Call 740-592-4323
Cell740-541 -4323

1999 Honda 400 EX,
$2,200. Phons (740)446·
7730.

BARNEY
HOW COME BOYS
NEVER NOTICE
ME?

BOYS AIN'T TH'

!

BRIGHTEST

I

I
r
~

....._:_~~__J At.;........L...

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-2975

--:=---7.

THE BORN LOSER

Lawn and Garden i-:quipment ;,, our

business, trot our sidelitre
Manning K. Roush

"lfeellike
I'm out
on a limb!"

Care
FI'IIB
lSUmllBS
Call

"Not mel
My money is wilh
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services, ·
Box 189, Middleport, OH
Pho11e: BB~4423-5264 ."

Satu"rday, March 20, 2004
By Bernice Bede Oso l
A new partnership arrang ement could be
in the offing in the yea r ahe ad that would
prove to be quite beneficial lor you. II mi ght
have something to do with a job or acquiring a new soci al attach ment.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - The first
indicators ol a positive up swing in your
fi nancial aff airs rnay be !ell today. Although
you may only see small seed lin gs, with
care and nurturing. "th ey can grow sUb·
stantially.
AR IES (March 21-Apr ll1 9) - Begin today
to cast aw ay old unproduct ive projects or
enterprises that haven't been going anyplace. Let th em go without any reg rets.
regroup and start developing so mething

PEANUTS

Yamaha TTR 225. $1,000
OBO. (740)446·1619.

- VB-

RANDY 'l. MILLS AKA
NOTICE OF
: SALE
· RANDY MILLS, ET AL.
: DEFENDANTS.
By virtue of an
' Order of Sale Issued
; out of the Common
' Ptees Court of Meigs
: County, Ohio, In the
· case
of
Home
· ltallonal
Bank,
f'lalnttff, vs. Randy A.
Mills aka Randy Milts,

•

:·•t al.,

: Defendants, upon a
:

~:::.=.'betn~~:~

No. 03 ·CV· 123 In
said Court, the
Sheriff of Meigs
County, Ohio, witt
offer for sale at the
front door of the
Courthouse
In
Pomeroy.
Meigs
County. Ohio. on the
30th day of April,
2004, at 10:30 a.m.,
the following lands
and
tenements, located at
2894 SR 124, Racine,
OH 45n1 . A complete
legal description of
the real
estate Is aa follows:
PARCEL NO. 1:
iJ he
·
following
"described real estate
:lttuated In the VIllage
Syracuse, County
tll! Meigs and State of
Ohio, and the same
· being In 100 Acre
· Lots No. 291 and 292
' of
thol
Ohio
Company's Purchase.
bounded
and
~scribed as follows:

•+t

•

I

remove the same.
It Ia further under·
atood and agreed that
all pipe line or lines
running through said
property shall remain
the property of C. H.
Williams, Trustee, his
hairs, successors and
aaalgns, and the
rtght-of·way for these
linea are hereby
reserved by the said
C.
H.
Wttllama,
Trustee, his heirs,
auccaaaora
and
aaalgna, with the
right to repair, replace
and maintain the

Mayme
Holmea;
thence Southeuterly
to the Northeaat cor·
ner of a tract of land
now or formerly
owned by Mattie
Rlghthouse and des·
lgnated by a concrete
marker; thence North
30 deg. 30' West 90
feet; thence North 69
deg. East 249 teet to
the place of begin·
nlng, containing 1.7
acres, more or less.
Reserving unto the
former
Grantor,
Clifford H. Williams,
Trustee, his heirs,

same.

successors

and

Furthermore, this assigns, a rlght·of·
deed Ia given subject . way 25 feet wide and
to a lease given by c. known as the present
H. Williams, Trustee, roadway through aald
to Donald Weese for a premises herein conamall tract of land sit· _ veyed with the right
uated
In
the or Ingress and egress
Northeaat corner of at all times.
the herein abova
Fu r t h e r mo r e ,
deacrlbed tract of excepting all the coal,
land.
oil, gas and other
PARCEL NO. 2: .
minerals, with the
Situated In the right to mine and
VIllage of Syracuse, remove the same.
County of Meigs,
II Is further underState of Ohio, In 1DO stood and agreed that
Acre Lot No. 292 , all pipe lines running
Town 2, Range 12, through said premiaCompany's es shall remain the
Ohio
Purchase, bounded property of C. H.
and described as fol· Williams, Trustee, his
lows:
heirs, successors and
Beginning North 21 ' assigns, and the
deg. West 240 feet right-of-way for these
from the concrete lines are hereby
In
the reserved by the aald
marker
Southweat corner of C.
H. . Williams,
a lot now or formerly Trustee, his heirs,
owned by Bert Weese
aucceaaoro
and
and In the creek; assigns, with the
thence North 21 dog. right to repair, replace
.Weal 100 feet; thence and . maintain the
South 69 deg, West soma.
625 feet to an Oak
Excepting a parcel
Tree on a rock: thence of real estate con·
Southaaaterly to the vayed to Donald
Northeast corner of a Wease
by
deed
tract of land now or recorded In Volume
formerly owned by
164, Page 453, Meigs

County
Deed
Recorda.
Reference Dead :
Volume 337, Page 75,
Meigs County Deed
Records.
Parcel
Auditor's
Numbers:
20-00815.000,
2Q-00616.000,
and 20-D0617.000
The
above
described real estate
Is sold "as Is" without
warranties
or
covenants.
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
2894 SR 124,
Racine, OH 45771
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$50,000.00. The real
estate cannot be sold
for less than twothirds lhe appraised
value.
TERMS OF SALE:
10% down day of
sale, balance on
delivery of deed.
Sold subject to
second hall 2003 and
accrued 2004 real
estate taxes.
SHERIFF'S
ALL
OPERATE
SALES
UNDER THE DOC·
TRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE PUR·
CHASERS
ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO. THE MEIGS
COUNTY
SHERIFF
MAKES NO
GUARANTEE AS TO
THE STATUS OF
TITLE PRIOR TO SAL

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

IMPORTS

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·7599

FLAG

Athens

1988 Baja 19 ft. open bow
trailer. V-6. 4.3 titer engine,

AHEAD /'::

Bryan Reeves

$4500, (740)949·3029

New Homes,
Room Additions,

Dean Hill

ready tor fishing , $3,200,

Garages, Pole

(740)742·2877
19ft Fisher fully loaded
w/lrallor 75 Hp oxc . cond.
S4ooo (304J593· f994

Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More

New&amp; Used

SO H.P. Mercury boat motor,

FREE ESTIMATES!

stool, with controls and

740-742-341

1988 Bass Tracko•. 70 Hp,

3 extra props, 1 stainless

trolling

motor
$400 .
(304)675-5131 atter 4pm

*ROOFING
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMlESS
GOnER

3029
'ttnt&lt;l'
HOME

IMPRoVEMENTS

*Fl'llelsdmaaes.
949·1405

Unconditiona l lifetime guar·

NOW U[NTIN(i
.\-J
Mini-Storage

992-6396
992-2272

on
SAVINGS

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Rcom Additions &amp;
Remodeling

• New Garag••
•
•
•
•

Classlfleds!

CAN,\..E.T:&gt; GO SHOPPING!

"W.Y's # 1 Chevy, Pontiac. Buick , Olds
&amp; Custom Va n

GARFIELD
HI:Y, WHA1''5
GOIOO ON?

RIS NORTHUP DODGE

I

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740·44'6'-0B4l • 949-1155 Evenings

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

PONU1' RAC.K5
ONl-Y SPEAK
WHEN SPOKEN
1'0, PAL

.,._,..;

Il

,;:r,...j)
s

t~~.M~~~~~.6~~~·1!9~,==~~~:j~~~~~~~(:~~
GRIZZWELLS

'

Shop

1-800-822-0417

NOW 'TWIT MOGT OF YOUP.
CW:THES AAE IN 'THIS TAASH

WRITESfl

1988 Mallard camper, 36 tt.,
ex. cond., $5200, (740)949-

Douglas W. Little ,
AHorney for Plaintiff.
3119,26

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

BETIY

HOWARTJL

CAMI'IUIS &amp;
MoroRHOMES

antee. Local references fur·
ni shed . Established 1975.
Gaff 24 H&gt;S. (740) 446,
0870, Rogers Basement
Wa terproofing.

MA~

Sunset Home
Construction

Drive rebuilt run s groat
$2,000 (304)593·1990

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

TAURU S (A pr il 20 -May 20) New
in sights can be gained todAy in a situFJ.tion
that you have been viewing purely on an
int ellectua l level. Once you start to dig on
a di!lerent plane, the picture will become
clearer
GEMINI (M ay 2 1-June 20) - If you've
been wanting to check out a new group or
club to see if it holds some mterest lor you,
today is th e day to crack the ice. Don't wa1t
for an engraved invit ation .
CAN CER (June 2 1 ~ uly 22) - II you've
been feeling th at th ing s are a bit stale lately. and you're no longer usin g your talents
or capabilities to the ir tulles! extent. do
so mething about 11 today and seek out big·
ger ch all enges.
LEO (July 23· Aug . 22} - Som eone new
migh t en ter the scene today to whom you'll
be drawn . Yo u may not think a long similar
lines, but th e attraction will come from
what each can learr.l tram the other
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ) - The possibility of taking on a sideline could deve lop lor
you today thr ough someo ne who has
things go1ng tor h1m or her. If you do jump
on board , be suro to wear a life 1acket just
in cas e.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0 ct. 23) - A matter
which you have been negotiating may take
on a new twist tod ay, but not one that you ·u
lind annoying. It could be just wh at is
needed to !1nally close the deal
SCORPIO (Ocr. 24-Nov 22) - Inaugurate
that new die t or exe rcise prog ram today
you've been pr omi sing yoursell to get
started. What you begin now has exce ll en t
chancAs of turning out to be ongoing and
successful .
SAGtTIARIU S (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - That
breath of fresh a1r you've been henkenng
lor in your social life may aclually blow
through today and make some sweep1ng
chan ges that you' ll lind refreshi ng and
inv1gorat ing
CAPRI CORN (D ec 22-Jan . t 9) Changes you 've wanted to make !hat you
feel could benefit the entire family can be
in itiated today. Chances ar e the clan wi ll
now be in a fram e ol min d to at least give
things a try.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Instead of
conce ntrating on doing thtngs th e old way,
make a new game plan today that will
breath e new til e into an old projec t.
Ae"Ciaiming enthusiasm will pick up the
pace considerably.

7)

1987 Cltatlou 3.0 4/cylinder '::;;::==;:::;;:::~
4yrs old, Alpha Que Out r

E.

412

new

Windows • Roofing

For Sale: Motorcycle 200 1

Beginning at the
Southeast corner of a
lot now or formerly
owned by John J.
Hogan; thence In a
Northeasterly dirac·
tlon following the
meanderlnga of the
Pomeroy and Racine
to
the
Road
Southwest corner or
a lot now or formerly
owned
by
Bert
Weeae; thence North
21 deg. Wast and fol·
lowing the West line
of the Bert Weese lot
a distance of 240 feet
to a stake; thence
South 69 deg. Weal
·249 feet to a stake;
thence South 30·112
dog. East 90 feet to
the Nonheaat corner
of the John J. Hogan
lot; thence South 301/2 deg. East along
the Easl line of the
John J. Hogan lot a
dlslance of 150 feet to
the Southeast corner
of the John J. Hogan
lot, the place of
beginning, containing
1.24 acres, more or
less, there being
6811 DO or an acre In
100 Acre Lot No. 291
and about 361100 of
an acre In 100 Acre
Lot
No.
292.
Reserving unto the
former
Grantor,
Clifford H. Williams,
Trustee , his heirs,
successors
and
assigns, a rlght·ofway 25 feet wide, and
known as the present
roadway through said
premises herein conveyed. and the right
of Ingress and egress
at all times.
Furthermore,
excepting all the coal,
oil , gas and other
minerals with the
right to mine and

All pass

"R&gt;ur 'lllrthday:

PR INCIPAL
NI CHOLS '
wHI\T'S
UP, BIG
FELL A ?

• Replacement

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
HOME NATIONAL
BANK
PLAINTIFF
CASE NO. 00 CV 123

East

3 NT

BIG NATE

Siding • New Garages

~:~::::.•;•;';;:.';~:

North

Pass

AstroGraph

New Homes • Vinyl

Publh_· N o U ceN In

West

2 NT

~~~
High 81. Dry

ROBERT
BISSEll
CINSTRUCDON

Self-Storage

We do It aU except
turnact work

33795 Hiland Rd.

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-1m

740-992·5232 .

Stop &amp; Compare

992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Year• Local Experience

lq&gt;. r\.~f&gt; "'-~1\-\I;IA'( TM ~
Grn\~6 \\tR. 1&gt;. ?'W~P.iER

c:/f

6~1'\U\t\t

SOUP TO NUTZ

MI&gt;DE

Vll&lt;q II'\ WooL

• New Homes
• Garages
• C:omplete
Remodeling

Elec:trlcal &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutter•
VInyl Siding &amp; Pelntlng
Pallo and Porch Decks

sea

32 Elec. unit
34 Debtor's
note
35 Military
addr.
37 Strive
38 ltemtodunk
(2 wds.)
40 Ms. Garbo
42 Dry, as
champagne

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cai~baty

C1pller cryplcgrams a1e crealed lrom ilJOiaMns tly t~m ou s peop.e past and presenl
Eacllletler ll"llhe o~er stands 101 ano:t"ler

Today·s clue: F equals W
I ~ UA

"SU OH
OKKLKE

PZ

PR

FVKM

FUO
WK

FUO

OZ
GM

TZZE,

VK

OZYZA

OPGYY

GM

WYUDH·UME·FVGPK ."

PZL

DAGPGO

OVUYKO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'The way I see it. if you want the rainbow. you goua
put up with the rain ." - Dolly Parton

Phone 740-446-807 3.

You.- Rl11ht tu Kno"W. Delivered Kight to Your

South

ing low toward your A-0-J , ~;~ l a y · the
queen , not the jack.)
On th1s deal , you are South, the declarer
in three no-tru mp. Alter West lead s the
spade king , whal would De your line of
play ?
II th e lead had been a club, you would
have ducked a diamond. But West has hit
your Achilles ' heel. If you sacrifice a diamond trick, they are almost certain to
cash sufficient spade tricks to defeat you.
Instead, you mu st hope tor a 2-2 d iamond split. Cash th e dia mond ace. tlien
lead your second-lowest - higher spot-card: the nine.
Why? To avoid blocking the sutt. On the
third round. dummy's seven wil l squa sh
your six. You will get six diamond tricks
and at least 11 in all. II you lead the six on
either the fi rst o r sec ond round ol diamonds, though , you w111 have to win the
third round with your nine and finish an
ignomin1ous o ne down. Th en your partn er
might ask lor a divorce.
Surprisingly a{ld depress ingly. 50 percent
of second marriage s end in divorce in thi s
country.

For Sale: 93 Ford Tempo, 5
sp'eed. 51 .250, good shape

EILIC
NOTICE

,

second-lowest - hrgher - card. (For
example. when takrng a finesse'·by lead-

A PINEY BURR UPSIDE TH'
HAI'D WORKS FER ME

THINGS I
i 1'1-. .-,-.-----, r - -SAMANTHY ! ! ~
YA GOTTA MAKE ~ f':I;;'Y
'EM NOTICE f
•~YA !!
1

GRAVELYTRACTOR

Pro Lawn

•~$\PAl

tBoA~:~~RS I

30=
molorcycle
31 Cousteau 's

example. from B-5-2 . furn ish the live, not
the two. ) ~ nd if winnrng or trying to wm a
tr ick from two touc hmg honors. play the

r-r---1"1

Pomeroy, Ohio

27

veiL She wan ts to see what she is get·
t1ng:
Wh ile on th e subject. how many second
marria ges 1n thi s cou ntry end 1n divorce?
.This week. we are learni ng· that. when
you are dec larer and playing a low ca rd
from hand. you should follow suit with
your second-lowest spot-c ard . (For

Snapper

204 Condor Street

24

39 Stage
whispers
40 Ruby
41 Gave oft
fumes
43 Shipments
44 P!Jplnjays
45 Coarse file
47 First·
century
emperor
48 Rotate
49 Cal's prey
51 Louis XIV,
e.g.
53 Casual
wear

at her second marnage does not wear a

pd 1 mo

lll,&lt;:hes
.$250,00

FOR SALE

Gravely

23

Journ ali st Helen Row land wrote, "A bride

A Heuer

· • ccrtalnteed VInyl
Replacemenr
• Vinyl Siding
Windows
•Roollng
• Llfellmc warranty
• Glass • VInyl
• Blown l~u,fatlon
•
All
working Ports
• Room Additions
• Low E Argon
• VInyl
• Fusion w elded
.. comers ··
Jteplaccmcnl.
•0•10 I Uqlled
Windows

MOfORCYUES

A 96

Another aspect of
the big secret

Phone (7~10)!i93-66711
At hens, Ohio

992·2772

A/C. $4,500. 740 446·3277.

A 6 5 J

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

750 East State Street

J&amp;L construction

1990 Plymouth Voyager
Van , one owner, V6 LE, 7
pass, auto trans. Excellent
Condition. All power with

•

• AKQ J

/cH€VRO,~T/

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

14
15
16
f7
18
20
22

A4

Opening lead: 4 K

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949·2217

G®t IW•DD~iaill
MANlEYS
rAut~®~illm
SELF STORAGE Paying
up to $400

HJRSAIJl

R4

4

740·992·1431

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

•

03 -19-04

K75 4 32
• 6&gt; 2
We st
East
4K Q JJ Q8
4 9763
• K tO
. Q .I 972
+ 10 H
• Q J
• 10 8 7 4
• J 9
Soufh

Hill's Self
Storage

JIM'S SMALL ENGINE REPAIR

TRUCKS

52

+

Henderson, WV

t
t

•

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
FREE ESTIMATES • FAST TURNAROUND
WE REPAIR:
MINI BIKES • GO-KARTS • LAWN MOWERS •
POWER MOWERS • CHAIN SAWS • SNOW
BLOWERS • WEED EATERS • TILLERS • EDGERS

1991 Dodge 1/2 ton, auto.
air, 97.000 miles. $3.400 .

t)J

Gallipolis, OH , WVOI021 2

446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

Birthday Celebration
Ernerst &amp; Ferra Lou Barringer
at M.J .&amp; Family Restaurant
Sunday, March 21
3:00 to 5:00

bloom,
You lovingly cared
for each of us till
your last breath -- which came
too soon.
With every season
comes a fresh
memory of days
spent with you,

Cell Ph.one 674-3311 Fax 304·675·2457

740·992·7953

''

And like the many
• tiny seeds that
you nurtured into

6:30

'!!!!:£'!!! Gibson 1~

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
Backhoe, Dozer,
Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utiliti.es

Your grandchildren
have both turned

MYERS PAVING

Lust Thursday of
every month
All pack $5,00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.tHI

----

..

Pomeroy Eagl"'
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

43 Harper or
Majora
44 Check lor
weapons
46 Black cats,
maybe
49 Turnpike
50 Nest-egg
letters
52 Reserved
54 Vaulted •·
recess
55 Doze off
56 New York
canal
57 Baker's
amts.
58 New recruits 10 Narrow
59 Cooked
opening
enough
11 Egg source
19 Badml.1ton
DOWN
need
21 Colo's
1 Tear
h,lghway
2 Pamptona
24 T'alcheers
ch'uan
3 Mix bauer
25 Carrot or
4 Back
beet
otthe neck 26 Fit
5 Suit
o1 shivering
material
27 Pollution
6 Muckraker 28 Root part
-Tarbell
29 Leave out
7 Trip
33 G-. shade
to the office 35 Fortas and
8 Get
Saperstein
in the way
36 Traveler's
9 Turmoils
chore

••

(c) 2004 by NEA. Inc

3·19

S©tt4tl~-~r-~s·
GA MI
- - - - - - lll•od 'V.Y fl
_.;:.__ _ __
0 four
~eorranglt l1tten ol the
$Crombltd word1 be.
wan

TMlT DAILY

•uznu

low

10

~y

~OLU.N

lotm four simole words.

J
1 I I' I I I J
I

C ! Vt1JT

IrtF, I
• ,.L_E,. .o,•·..,oI_rr,_.,
·/-:
1
1 .I . .

~

1

,

.

0

•

• ': ··

T i K0

N T

Beio re we were marr ied 1
w ishea my husband had a nice
voice so he cou lc s.:1g me to
slee p Now, after fifteer. years I
. w1sh 11e wzs a -- .. --.

Ir--,,,1''"1-TI-;:'-Irli e

Comp i11te the d'11..: dd e quot~d
by filling in rho m1u1n9 wotdl
'--'---'-~-'--'"--' y&lt;lv de..,oloo from rteo No. J below
_

E)

•

.

.

PR!Nf 1\.UMAE .ii: ED LEITERS IN

TH ESE SClt'·' m
UNSCR•MBI E .•BOV E LEITE RS
TO Gt" AN SWER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS J - " - o;

Quorum · Oasis . Joust - Limpid - MOSQUITO
Whrle silting ou lside one balmy summer's evenmg,
the w'fe swatted the arr and mu rnbled. "How come the
Benga l T1ge r is enda nge red and the lowl y MOS QUITO
fl ourishes?'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

I?OwF
RowF ,._.
RDwF ~; ' J
i(OWF

i'

�88 • The Dai ly Sentinel

www.mydai lyse ntinel.com

Friday. March 19, 2004

ALONG

SPORTS

THE RIVER

LlVING

Wildcats pull
away from pesky
Rattlers, 84 .

Keeping the wheels
running, Cl

Chrysler PT Cruiser
conertible, Dl

.rf

lltJSl ~ li

Ntxtel Cup

Carolina Dodge
Dealers 400,
1 p.m. Sunday
llulch Series
Diamond Hill
Plyoyood Co. 200,
12:30 p.m. Saturday

ne

... If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week. qo The Gaston Gazette,'P.O.

All times Eastern

FX

Sl Hll:S

What: Carolina Dodge Deal
ers 400
Where: Darlington (S.C .)
Raceway (1.366 miles). 293
laps;40Q.238 miles
When: Green flag drops just
after 1 p.m. Sunday

What: Diamond Hill Plywood
Sunday's Golden Corral 500 Co. 200
at Atlanta Motor Speedway Where: Darlmgton (S.C. )
evened the series so far at
Raceway (1.366 miles). 147
two wins ap1ece. Earnhardt
laps/200.802 mrles
ran away with the latest bat· When: 1 p.m. Saturday
tie. bu t Kenseth remams Last year's, winner: Todd Bo-

last year's winner : R1cky
Craven

ahead in the war. His sixth·
place fin1sh preserved the
po1nts lead. and in its own

ser1es. Earnha rdt's VICtory in

dine

Track qualifying record: Ryan
Qualifying record: Ward BurNewman. Ford. 170.301
ton, Po nt1ac. 173.797 mpll. way - Kenseth overcame a mph. March 16, 2001
March 22. 1996
m1se rable start - was as Race record: Michael Wa lRace record:. David Pearson.
Impressive as Earnh ardt's
trip.'Pontiac. 138.140 mph,
Ford . 132 .703 mph, May VICtory. Dodge drivers and Sept. 5. 1992
11. 1968 (400 m1les)
teamma tes Jeremy Mayfield Most recent race: Chevrolet
Most recent race: So far. the and Kasey Kahne finished driver Kevin Harvi ck won the
season bo1 1s down to a re· second ano th~rd, respecMarch 6 race at Las Vegas.
umon of lhe Class of 2000. tively. Earnhardt led the final The Busch Senes wa s off
That's when Dale Earnhardt 16 laps and 52 of the final last week and prepares for
Jr. and Matt Kense th were
60 . He never led until the four consecu tive race s be·rook1es tn NASCAR·s prem1er 214th of 325 laps.
fore 1ts next off week.

Clllftsman Truck
Kroger 250,
1 p.m. April 17

,. NASCAR officials keep saying it
·despite the fact that it makes
no sense. It's impossible to
have ·random drug testing
based on reasonable suspi·
cion." Either the testing is ran·
dam or ii's based on suspicion.
You can't have it both ways.
,.It's hard to figure out some of
our colleagues in the media.
First they allege that Matt
Kenseth's consistency resulted
in the championship system be.
lng changed. Then they repeat·
edly ask Kenseth if he feels
•vindicated • by two early victo·
ries. He's just racing everyweek. same as last year. What
say let's move on?
,. What makes Atlanta noteworthy
is that the most popular driver,
Dale Earnhardt Jr., won the race.
Had anyone else won. everyone
would be talki ng about what a
boring race it was. Earnhardt
aside, it was a pretty tame affair.
• Want to make Nextel Cup racing better? Change it from cars
to trucks. Or make the cars less
aerodynamically slic k. At the
least. make themless alike.
• Next up is a grand old track.

t:UI\1 I SMAN I HlU : t\.

. Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs cowtties

What: Kroger 250
Where : Martinsvi lle (Va.)
Speedway. (.526 miles). 250
laps/131.5 m11es
When: 1 p.m. Apnl 17
Last year's winner: Denms
Setzer
Track qualifying record: Mike
Bliss, Chevrolet , 94 .275
mph. 2000
Race record: J1mmy Hensley,
Oodge, 74 .294 mph, April
17 . 1999
Most recent race: Bobby
Hamilton, in a Dodge, edged
Mike Skinner for a wild victory in Satu rday·s crash-filled
race at Atlanta. The race

Clhio \ :rlk~ l'ululi,hing ( ·...

Loc~l

SPOR'IS
• South Webster upsets
· St. Peter's. See Page 82
• Utah snaps Cavs'
winning streak. See
Page 83
• Cincinnati avoids
upset. See Page 85

was the series' f1rst since
Daytona, and now teams are
off lor another.month.

• " iddlu•l""'t • ( .allipoli' • \I :nTh"' · :,oo~

Ss.:!,) • \ 'ol. :11-1 . :\o . .) :1

man arrested for possession of1drugs Committee
to pursue
Meigs 911

BY' MtLUSSIA

RUSSELL

MRUSSELL@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - A local man was
arrested late Friday night fo llowing an
ongoing
investigation
by
the
Gallipolis Police Department.
Jason A. Peaks, 27, of Gallipolis,
was arrested just afler II p.m. when
officers executed a search warrant on
a home at 504 Fourth Ave.
Offices seized crack cocaine, cash

and drug documents from the home.
Peaks was placed into the Gallia
County Jail on a charge of possess ion
of crack cocaine and will be arraigned
in Gallipolis Municipal Court Monday
morning .
Gallipoli s Police Chief Roger
Brandeberry said he will consult with
Gallia County prosecuting attorney
Brent Saunders to determine what, if
any, additional charges are appropriate.
Brandeberry said that officers took

special intere st in the c-ase because of
the location of the h¢me .
"We take all reports of drug activity
seriously, but this case was of particular concern to us because it was located just three houses ~way from the
grade school , where scP.ool-aged children walk back and fo~ to the athletic tlelds every day." Brandeberry
said. "We are pleased \hat this drug
operation has been shut, down and no ·
one was hurt."

FEUD OF THE WEEK ·

Materials salvaged from old Pomeroy junior high

v
CASEY MEARS

BY

E
R

Nextel Cup Series, No. 41 Target Dodge Intrepid

Bobby
Hamilton

u

s

· Mike
Skinner

Bobby Hamilton and Mike Skin·
ner, two former Cup se ries drivers,

tangled twice during the final nine
laps of Saturday's Craftsman Truck
Series race at Atlanta Motor Speed·

cern: Soft walls have been 1n·
stalled there. and the track is so
tight that there IS very littl e
room for the space taken up by

way.

Can Mears keep his performance at high level?

cations and the race as Skinner,

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

firs t victory. cross ed the finish line
sideways in second place.

Casey Mears' father, Roger, raced
in the Indianapolis 500. His uncle,
Rick, won the 500 four times.
So what is 25·year·old Casey doing
in NASCAR?
"I'd love to run the Indy 500 some·
day," conceded Mears, who, like
Kevin Harvick, is from Bakersfield,
Calif. "I miss open wheel a little bit ,
but I've got to tell you, I'm so happy
with where I am. ln the past, the last
couple of years, I was trying to con·
vince myself of that.
"This year, I'm really happy. I'm really pleased with where I'm at right
now as far as the team I'm with and
what's going on. I'm really happy with
stock-car racing in general and
NASCAR Nextel Cup. I'm in a good
place right now, and I'm happy with
what I'm doing . I'm having a bla st
during the races. There's always
someone to race with whether you're
running 40th or in the top five."
Mears isn't often running 40th these
days. He led 37 laps at Atlanta Motor
Speedway before retiring late in the
race due to engine woes.. A week earli·
er, he had a career·best seventh·place
finish in Las Vegas.
But he realizes that he has to continue to run up front. He feel s some
pressure to .maintain his status, espe·
cially considering the fact that, prior
to Las Vega s, he had never finished
better than 15th in a Cup race.
"I think it's kind of a given , isn't itl
In this kind of motorsports and motor·
sports in general, yo u've got to per·
form," Mears said. ''lf you're not put·
ting the numbers on the board and
you're not running well, you're not go·
ing to get that next job, and you're not
going to keep the one you've got be·
cause somebody below you wants it
real bad, too.
"I think having the season we had
last year, definitely this season is very

the new walls. Every inch counts

at Darlington, where the cars often run inches from the wall.
Those rnches aren't there any·
more.

,. The Craftsman Truck Series
has provided great racing so far. ·
• but the early season schedule is
.so sparse. The next race isn't
until April 17. It's tough for the
Series to build momentum .

: t NASCAR officials keep declar-

ing that there is no requirement
from TV networks that the field
consist of 43 cars. yet. every
week, it's obllious that some se·
rious recrUiting is going on. The
sport has never been more pop.
· ular, and yet it's never been
harder for many teams to find

Hamilton won both of those alter·
fa lling short 1n a b1d to give Toyota its
"It was exc1t mg fo r both of us,"
Hamilton sa1d. "I went for the win·. he
went for the w1n and. today. I was
lucky enough to come out on top."
Indeed. it was an exciting finish.
"They'll be lucky if they have ha lf
the race we had ," Skinner said, refer·
ring to Sunday's Nextel Cup race.
NASCAR This Week 's Monte
Dutton gives his take: "Actually,
there seemed to be no lingering bad
will. Hamilton noted that the return
of Skinner 'brings a lot of excitement
back to thrs series: and Skinner just
chalked it up as ·one of them racin'
deals.' .

sponsors. Costs are rising at an

alarming rate.
· ,,. Ooe prominent team official es·
• timates that the new "softer"
·.tire compounds will result in
teams spending 40 percent
more for tires this year.

,. HOT: Matt Ken seth has fi n·
!shed In the to p 10 in all four
races .... Dale Earnhardt Jr. and
..Kasey Kahne have both scored
· three top·five finishes in four
tries .... \)ave Blaney finished
11th Sunday at Atlanta, despite
: his Bill Davis Racing team being
expected to run only four more
races because of sponsorship
problems.
Iii NOT: A quick glance at the
•points standings features a few
· glartng underachievers. Michael
. Waltrip is 36th after the first
four races. Robby Gordon is
·; ·32nd. Rusty Wallace is 22nd. It
:; :1s, of course, early.. .. "Field·

:·:~~~r:~~~~ ~~~t~~; ~~~~~~~eu~

• he still won $54,071.

YOUR TUHN
I~ I !~US

FHOM Ollll lflAUI:IIS

A little advice

M

John ClarkjNASCAR This Week

Before a failed engine relegated him to a 34th·place finish,. second-year
driver Casey Mears led 37 laps and ran ln the top 10 for much of Sunday's
Golden Corral 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

important, probably more so than last
year for sure on performing and doing
well."
Mears drives the No. 41 Target
Dodge Intrepid for owners Chip
Ganassi and Felix Sabates.
"Chip is a guy who likes to wi·n
races and run up front, and he gives
us everything he can for us to go do
that ," Mears said . "For sure, there
was some pressure to do well this
year, but I'm not trying any harder
this year than I was last year. I've
learned so much now. I think the team

•

has improved all the way around from
the motor program to the chassis,
even aerodynamically. We've just im·
proved all the way around.
"Everything is just starting to come
together. I think last year, jumping in
the Cup series as soon as I did, we
struggled and rightfully so, looking
back on it now and .knowing what I've
learned .... I want to win races, and l
want to run welL Whatever everybody
else thinks doesn 't get to me too
much.
11

Contact Monte Dut\011 at hmd4858@peoplepc.com .

y two cents ' worth on
iNASCAR's) rules and regula·
t1ons:
Points - First th ing, no one
shou ld get po ints on caution la ps.
That's not racing. FIVe (bonusl points
on leading a lap under caution
(should not be al lowed). only under
green-flag racing .... If a driver wipes
out another car intentionally .. . he
should have points taken away. and
the same for bad conduct in the pits
or on the track .... Same point s sys·
tem. with minor changes. Not the 10·
race shootout. All you work for mthe
beginning, to be wiped out, that's not
good .
Restrtctor plates - They should
no t be allowed on a car that races .
It's not a race if yo u make all the
cars run the sarne speed. Why don't
you go to smaller carburetors or a V6? Slow them down in the gears.
Safety- Don't let cars pit on
caution-flag laps, only under the
green flag. and th e pits w111 be _95
percent safer. I'm sure the pit crews
would like it a lot better, and the race
might even turn out a lot better and
safe r. ... Try it rn one race , and I
thi nk everyone would like it much
better.
lvey Evans
Fruitland Park, Fla.
Thanks for putting some thought
into so l'w'ing a few of what you per·
ceive as the sport 's problems.

Valley

&amp; Supply

Co.
555 Park St • Middleport

~

&amp; 1()atd tk

~au 1()itfe

1f4

~"' Seecdtlrf4I

Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

0BITUARIFS
·page AS
• Elizabeth P. Gllenwater
• Jaret Rae Boothe
• Brian L. Donley
• Kenneth I. Justice
• lshmeal W. Carter

• Community calendars .
See PageA3
. • Community Corner See
Page AS
• Down on the Farm See
Page AS

WEATHER
Colder, HI: 40s, Low: 30s

Details on Pace AS

Around Town
Celebrations '
Classifieds
Comics
Editori;J.ls
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather

SUM'MERFIELDS
46435 St. Rt. 248

Chester, OH

740-985-3857

Sample~ of materials salvaged from the old Pomeroy Junior High School building are on diS·

Please see Salvaged, A6

play at the Court Street mini·park for prospective buyers to see. Here George Wright, left. and
Dale Thoene display a window with frosted glass. (Charlene Hoeflich)

BY STEPHANIE JENKINS
SJENKINS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS The
French Art Colony, 530
First Avenue in Gallipolis,
announces spring classes for
both children and adults.
"Fling into Spring," with
instructor Lori Billings, from
I0 a.m. - 2 p.m. on Saturday,
April 3. Participant~. ages 57, are invited to have spring
fun. Billings stated, "We're
going to make Easter cookies,
Easter bonnets and hats, listen
to stories and do some really
creative Easter egg decorating. What better way to welcome spring!" Tuition for the
session is $40. Supplies and
lunch are included.
"Learn the basics of knitting," with expert knitters

Anne Jenkins and Hank Orr.
Students ages 16 and up will
be introduced to the world of
knitting in two sessions that
will be held from I0 a.m. - 12
p.m. on Saturdays, April 17
and 24. "Knitting is a fun thing
to do while watching TV or
listening to music," said Orr,
who has been knitting since
junior high. "And it's not like
sewing. where if you make a
mistake you have to start all
over. Wtth knitting, if you
· make a mistake, you can cut it
out." Jenkins also said of the
class, "It's a nice hobby to get
into. It's portable, and you can
create an original, one-of-akind item. There are several
things you can make."
"Painting on Glass" workshop is back by popular
demand! Learn how to paint

daisies, roses and other spri ng
flowers on glass with artist
Bonnie Penix. This one day
class, open to students age 16 ·
and up, will be held from 6
p.m. - 8 p.m. on Tuesday.
April 20. "This class is great
because it is such a good
time, and it's easy," said
Penix. "People are more hesitant to get into a fine art, like
oil painting, which can take a
long time. Painting on glass
takes less time and it leaves
eeople feeling satisfied with
their project." Participants for
the class need to bring a
smooth glass piece, such as a
vase or hurricane globe. The
paint and bnushes are provided. This class will prodtice a
great Mother's Day gift.
Tuition for the class is $20.
"Private Piano Lessons" is

taught by Allen Sttait. Private
half hour lessons are available
Mondays.
Tuesdays,
Thursdays, Fridays, and
Saturdays. Lessons are $40 a
month "I give special instruction for kids who have special
plans for music," said Sttait.
"What I teach really depends
on the student and the interest."
Sttait also teaches 12 piano students majoring in Music at the
University of Rio Grande.
Call the FAC at 446-3834
for more information or to
register for the above programming. Financial assistance is available. The Ohio
Arls Council helped fund
this organization with state
tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational
excellence ami cultural
enri dhment for all Ohioans.

Local lab recognized for quality laboratory services

INDEX
4 SECTIONS -

POMEROY
Distressed baseboards and
flooring, doors of several
sizes, windows with frosted glass, moldings, and
large slates galore salvaged from the old
Pomeroy Junior High
School building which is
scheduled for demolition
next month are for sale.
"Some of this is real
good stuff for do-it-yourself woodworkers and
refinishers," said George
Wright who . along with
a~sistance from several
others is removing everything that seems to have
some value from the building before the wrecking
begins.
Samples ofthe materials
for sale are being dis-

FAC announces spring classes

INSIDE

mance of proficiency testing, and pass a rigorous onsite laboratory survey.
GALLIPOLIS - Valley
Valley
Diagnostic
Diagnostic Laboratory has Laboratory had a 100 permet
all
criteria
for cent problem free survey.
Laboratory Accreditation Because of this COLA
by COLA. a national awarded Valley Diagnostic
healthcare
accreditation Lab with . its 'highest com,
organization.
mendation, the Laboratory
Accreditation is given Excellence Award. This
only to laboratories that award is only presented to
apply rigid standards of the top 14% of labs.
Valley Diagnostic Lab,
quality in day-to-day operations, demonstrate contin- located one mile west of
ued accuracy in perfor- Holzer Hospital is an indeSTAFF REPORT

28 PAGES

NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

As
C4
D3-5
insert

A4
A6
A2

Bt

AB

© aoo4 Ohio Valley Publloblng Co.

992-6611
, WIW GIIA,••n•IIL

CHARLENE HoEFUCH

HOEFUCH@MY~AILYSENTINEL.COM

s

Darlington . Here's a major con-

Nn,rth

l'onu·r ·o~

pendent, family owned
medical lab that began
doing blood tests for a
handful of clients in 1981.
Today it has grown to have
4 satellite offices and services physicians, hospitals,
nursing homes, government, and others in 3 states.
"Even after 23 years,
some people still · don' t
know what we do," · confides Kim Goldcamp. coowner. "We have a growing
group of individuals who
prefer to have their blood-

work done at our lab
becau se oT the time and
cost savings. I hope this
award he! ps the community
know that they have a top
quality alternative when it
comes to things like cholestu;rol. coumadin, cultures,
drug screens or any other
lab test that you or your
doctor orders. We do any
lab test for less money and
you're in and out in 5 minutes with no appointment.
We're in the book. Call us."

BY BRIAN J.

REED

BREED@MYDA ILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -A committee to work on behalf of
Meig s
County
Commissioners will examine
the cost involved in implementing and operating a 911
emergency service in Meigs
County.
Meeting Thursday, commissioners appointed Jeff
Thornton, Middleport Mayor
Sandy
lannarelli ,
and
Salisbury Township Trustee
Bill Spaun to a 911 planning
committee who will, in turn,
select a 911 Technical
Comminee, to examine the
costs of implementing ·and
operating a 911 service.
ln add ition to Thornton,
Iannarelli and Spaun, representing commi&gt;sioners, the
most populous village and
most populous township, the
technical committee will also
include a police chief, the
county sheriff. a fire chief,
representative of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol, representative of the telephone
company,
Emergency
Management Agency and
Emergency Medical Services
directors, prosecuting anorney and a member of the general public .
Mei gs County fire and
ambulal)Ce services are now
dispatched from a centralized
county office on Mulberry
·Heights, while police calls
are dispatched from their
respective offices. Through a
911 service, all emergency
call s would be dispatched
from the 911 center.
The EMS operates on a
total annual budget of approxPiease see 911. A6

Persons arrested
on felonies
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
County Sheriff's deputies
arrested a Middleport man
Friday on felony charges
stemmin~ from a November
incident un Racine.
David Persons, 43 , was
auTested at his mother's home
on
South
First Ave.,
Middleport. on charges of
felony vandalism. failure to
comply and domestic violence.
Persons allegedly drove a vehicle into a mobile home and fled
from a Racine ·police officer.
Persons was recently
released from jail in
Barboursville, W.Va. , and is
wanted in Jackson County,
W.Va. on a charge of failure
to appear for a Feb. 27 court
appearance.
Appearing before Judge
Steven L. Story on Friday,
Persons denied the charges
against
him .
Pomeroy
Attorney
Christopher
Tenaglia was appointed to
represent him, and a preliminary hearing set for Thursday.
Persons, who has a history
of fleeing from law enforcement officers and escape ,
accordi ng to the sheriff 's
department, remained in jail
Fnday on a $50,000 bond,
with 10 percent cash allowed.

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