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                  <text>•

ACROSS

44 Extend
wide
1 Water slide 46 "Marla -"
6 Horse's
51 Appear
sound
54 Forms a
11 Wall Street
gully
denizen
55 Upholstery
12 Peanut
fabric
13 Fuel
56 Make shiny
carriers
57 Flavoring 1n
14 Become
pastis
rigid
58 Wheel
15 Vast chasm
turners
16 Burn
soother
DOWN
17 Nobleman
19 Over·
1 Baby bed
charge,
2 Sacred
slangily
3 Luau
23 Murmur
· strings
softly
4 Hardly
26 Enters data
wordy
28 Sgt.'s
5 RN stations
6 Fair (hyph.)
status
29 Meditation
7 Sense
chant
organs
31 Diva's per· 8 Kimono
formance
sash
33 Make one · 9 Sports
34 Ankle Injury
"zebra"
35 Egg10 Have a go
yung
at
36 Exam for
11 Anaconda
HS juniors 12 "Gee
39 Stale
whiz!"
40 - shui
16 They exist
42 Jet·black
18 FBI
gem
acronym

Husband can feel left out
after first baby comes along
.

I

Thursday, March 13,2003

www;mydallysentlnel .eom

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

.

DEAR ABBY: The leiter
from "Unhappy in North
Carolina," who decided with
her husband, after three years
of marriage, to have a child
but is now .unhappy, caused
me to write. You homed in on
her statement, "What I
thought would make us both
happy and bring us closer
actually did the opposite. "
You wondered if the husband
felt trapped and pushed into
unwanted fatherhood. I'm not
so sure.
Other phrases in her letter
jumped out at me: "Our son is
now 16 months old and the
apple of my eye," "We both
chan~ed with my pregnancy,"
and ' Jeff is a great father but
a lousy husband."
Abby. having your first
child changes everything. A
woman's concept of herself
changes dramattcally, from a
spontaneous, carefree individual to a matronly mother with
new
responsibilities.
"Un~aP.l'Y" appears to .be in
love w1th her son, wh1ch 1s
normal, but often the father
feels left out emotionally and
resentful of the relationship
between mother and child.
Threesomes are always diffi~ ult. Jeff is doing all the
thin~s a man who wants a
fruruty is supposed to do, i.e.,
working hard at his job and

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
buying a home in a good
neighborhood.
I think the wife is not admitting her role in the problem
and is putting the sole blame
on her husband. If he refuses
to go to counseling with her,
she should go alone, so she
can learn to reconnect with
her husband. If she does, I
suspect it won' t take long for
him to warm up and stop
pickin~ fights with her. Theu
son w1ll be the winner when
they realize they can have a
marriage and still have love
left for their child. - BEEN
THERE IN MARYLAND
DEAR BEEN THERE:
Thank you for the fust -person
insight. You were not the only
reader to offer it. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I read with
interest the letter from the
unhappy new mother. My
husband, "Carl," and I experienced the same problems.
After our precious daughter

was born. Carl was distant,
and we fought more than we
had before. I was convinced it
was all his fault. We were
ready to separate until, in a
last-ditch effort to save our
marriage, I sought counseling.
With the counselor's help, I
realized I had blamed my husband for everything that went
wrong and didn't recognize
the degree to which I was
neglectmg him. I had forgotten that Carl needed time with
me as much as the baby did,
and I had put my job as mother ahead of everything even our marriage.
In my desire to. be a good
mother, I had become a bad
wife and made Carl feel he
was inadequate for not caring
for the baby exactly the way I
would have -- not changing
enough diapers and not appreciating me. I was so focused
on our baby, I lost sight of the
fact that I had changed as
much as I had accused my
poor husband of changing.
A year of counseling helped
us to work through the rough
patch. A quick anecdote to
close: I got the greatest compliment at the doctor's office
yesterday. I was talking to
Carl on my cell phone, closing our conversation with "I
love you," and "Can't wait to
see you so we can talk some

more." After I hung up, the
receptionist said, "You newlyweds are so cute!" (We've
been married for 10 years.)
See, Abby? When you give
a little, you get a little. But
when you give alot, you get a
STILL CRAZY
lot! · ABOUT HIM AFfER ALL
THESE YEARS
DEAR "CRAZY" (LIKE
A FOX): Well said!
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips, and
was founded by her mother.
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. B ox 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
NBA's
sister
Shaquille- 41 Pita
21 Caustic
sandwiches
22 Zen
43 Office copier
question
45 Chills and
23 River
fever
transport 47 Taka It easy
24 Hamburger 48 Entertainer
extra
- Adams
25 New York 49 Famed loch
Giants hero 50 Bonfire
27 Drench
remains
29 Hand
51 . Role for
warmer
Madonna
30 Sales agent 52 Chess
32 Expert
places
34 Dirty place 53 Vale grad
37 Farmer, at 54 Clean water
times
org.
38 Dear
Abby's
20

The
newspaper
is a valuable
learning tool
for students
Pol"'to.l of all ages.
It connects
the principles
and facts they learn in the
classroom with stories
and events that are
happening here and
around the world.

BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

There is a good chance that
you could realize a rise in
status and prestige in .the year
ahead as you raise your sights
and ambitions. What you become involved in will serve to
promote your well-being.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -Others will be particularly willing to help you in
more ways than one today,
whether it be with service, financial aid or personal help.
All you have to do is ask
nicely.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - Get out and expose
yourself to as many new people as possible today. It's one
of those days when you' II
have a good chance of meeting someone who will prove
to be very lucky for you.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - Don't despair today,
even if looks like everything
is collapsing right before your
eyes. Lady Luck will come
through for you and bring you
smiles just when you ' ll need
her the most.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- What makes you especially appealing and attractive
today is your upbeat, positive
attitude. Everyone will want
to spend time with you, because you make them feel
good.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - If you've been able to
accumulate a little surplus
over the past few weeks, today may be a lucky time to
review your position and contact your financial advisor as
to making an investment.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In situations today where
you're the one who is in

charge of things, you should
be able to make things happen
in ways that will prove to be
quite fortuitous for all involved.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Se_pt. 22)
- Don't let anybody ontimidate you into believing you' re
the underdog today when a
competitive development
arises, especially careerwise.
The odds are clearly tilted in
your favor.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Should you have to deal

with severa-l people simultaneously today, 11 will only
make you more effective.
Your mind will become
sharper and quii!ker when you
think on your feet.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov.
22) - It's that kind of day
where you will be able to
achieve several important objectives if you put your mind
to doing so. Take advantage
of thin~s being easier to attain
at this tome.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec . 21 ) - Lady Luck could
be a bit kinder than usual today in matters or situations
where you express your opinions, desires and wants. She'll

be listening closely and granting your w1shes.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - There could be
some important changes stirring today that should prove
to be to your ultimate benefit,
whether you or someone else
has a hand in triggering the
events . You're JUSt darn
lucky.

·....!L

-

• 85

AVERAGE GAME 185-175

-

•

JUDD'S TOTAL

21

Highway department contract approved
BY BRIAN J. REED
· Staff writer

boriald Vaughan, admissions director of Overbrook Center,
Patty Pickens, activity director for the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center, Mike Crites, activity director Overbrook Center,
and Mary Alice Bise hold up one of the many blankets that
Bise has created during the last three years . The cloth blankets take at least four hours to make. (J. Miles Layton)

Staff writer

Answer
to
previous
Word

AVERAGE GAME 235-245

by JUDD HAMBRICK

Scrim·
41h DoWN

'

BY J. MILES LAYTON

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - In situations where
you and your special someone
are in harmony, Lady Luck
will bless the arrangements.
The more you support each
other' s efforts, the luckier
you' II become.

2003 Unlltd FMI..,.f ~&amp;NI , Inoe

FOUR PlAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

=

DIRECTIONS: Make a 2· to 7·1etter word lrom the letters on each yardllfll.
ADO points toe~ word or letter using scoring ~rectiOns at rlgr.t. Stvtn·letter
words get a 60-poirlt bonus. All words can be loood m Weostet's New Woi\CI

mage ·

.....

Col~

265

:J.II~

llctlo&lt;wy.

JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW
C 2003 Ullltd FHw. ~. 11'\C •

COULP ~00 M ~ NOISO?
t lli'lll: "M; UI*AS( Feam

· STATUI;

POMEROY - One woman
uses her time to provide
warmth to others.
Mary Alice Bise, a senior citizen with many years of sewing
experience, makes blankets for
people near and far. The colorful cloth blankets provide
warmth to senior citi2:ens and
people in hospitals in Meigs,
Gallia and Athens counties.
Bise said .it is a labor of love.
"lr'ls something to do," she
said. "I enjoy sewing and this is
a way' for me to help people."
Handy with a needle and
thfl!ad, the talented woman has
made hundreds of blankets
sin~ she started three years
ago.
Wal-Mart ·provides, free of
charge, the cloth and other supplies necessary to make the
blankets. Bise said it takes her
four hours to create and sew a

Deer accidents on
rise in Meigs, Gallia
POMEROY - Deer and
other animals are a common
problem for motori sts traveling in Mei gs and Galha
counties .
According to the GalliaMeigs Post of the State
Hi ghway Patro l, there were
220 vehtcle acciden\s involvong animals, mainly deer,

during 2000 in the two counties.
That number more than
doubled in 2001 with more
than 465 vehicle acc idents.
Last year there were more
than 516 vehicle accidents
involving animals in Meigs
and Gallia, according to the
patrol's Rick Weaver.
Many more collisions with
animals go unreported, he

Pluse SH Deer, AS

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I'M IN I&gt;. RUT,
GI&gt;.RFIEt..P

PACK M., EIAG5, PUi YOU IN

A KENNEL I&gt;.NP TI&gt;.Kf OFF I

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A3
84-6
87
87
A4

A3
AS
Bl -4
A2

c 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

"d
~

Hpplication for $500,000 in
Community
Housing
Improvement
Program
grant funds with Grants
Ad min istrator
Jean
Trussell.
• Approved a resolution
observing April as Ohio's
Bicenten nial Fair Housing
Month .
• Approved bids fro m various vendors for fire equipment for the Racine, Scipio,
Olive and Pomeroy volunteer fire departments, to be
financed
through
the
Community Development
Block Grant formula program.

·'

1

'

'

' '

students.rally to dpnate
, '

aY J, MtLES I,AVTON
f?tli.ff wjitilr ,

... ,
1,'

l

•RACINI;: -.- "I gave
·because it was .the
~ right thing to do,'' said C::odi
Davis, a first-time blood
donor.
high school. junior
was O,tie of 40 people WhO
donated blood ·during
Thursday's visit . of the
•. American Red Cros~ bltiodmo1&gt;ile · .to . Southern High
r' block!

The

' s~~~oJ

.. · ····'._ .··\.: , ·

. ' !)avis descrille!f the experience as "no! painful,"
althoygl). she ¢mittel~ to
,. :.: ··~·.'

'

'

feeling a little. weak: immediately after donating, She
said .she would do it again.
Forty units of blood were
collected during the bloodmobile ·vlsit spon!\()r~ by
th.e· ' Southern . N,auonal
HQnOr .Society (NHS). It
was 'the third visit to the
school this year.
Members of the
Huntington Chapter of the
Red Cross were on hand to
assist ·donors. Paula Orner, a
registered nurse, blamed the
bad' winter for the blood
shortage.
. '!We're trying 10 play
catch up now," she said.
Tlfe blood drive began at

10 a.m. and in less "i'lan so low now," it motivated•
three hours, the goal bJ: 35 him and the NHS students ·
units had been met.
·;
to sponsor another visit to ·Jtf
Bill Beegle, a speclal C$iu- the school to help incfCla~e . ; ,
cation teacher and the "NHS donations. He also said, the- i
adviSer, said the bloOd drive blood drive gives students a .- "
W:Js, very succes~ful. - . · . sense of community. :'" ""'' ..,,.,
"This is a W:JY for ,stu,
"So far lhi;s ts hthde , beh,st
response we ve a • "· ·e dents to ~et involv.ed iii ~ ·
said. "We have had-a r;eally community," he s"aid. ' ';good turnout."
:, .. ··,
· "' Th ·
· · and. ·
Beegle said the couptcy
lOrn
eJss, a seruor . '· .
had an over-supply of blood ll!ember of the NHS._, has .
immediately after the Sept.. g1ven blood _before and ,he ,.
II terrorist attack, but a y:ear :. know~ the tmport81J~e of
later there was a shortage as donatmg.
·
people cut back on donat"I would want someone to
in g.
.
give blood if I was ·in a situ·
The teacher said that ation where I needed it," he
because the blood supply is . said.

'' ;''' '

BY KEviN KEUY
News editor

. 2 Sections- t&amp; P111es

T H"T"!&gt; &amp;ECI'-USE OF
HOW YOU'RE l.OOJo;ING
A.T IT ~ You 'RE. ,..T
THE WRON~ AA&amp;L.E ~

Trusse ll said the department's cu rrent radio system
is 13 years old, and e)lperiencing serv ice problems.
Commissioners also :
• Opened bids for a new
four-wheel drive vehic le for
County
the
Meigs
Emergency Manage ment
Agency.
Don
Tate
Chevrolet of Pomeroy was
the appare nt low bidder at
$27,465.25'
Other bids were received
from Turn pike of Gallipolis
and Gene Johnson Motors,
also of Gallipolis.
• Conducted H first public
hear in g on the cou nty 's

Evans considers change in school building formula·

Index

OFF~

the-board pay raise thi s
year for employees covered
under the contract, and 45cent pay incieHses in the
second and third year.
Other terms of the contract were not changed,
Commissioner Jim Sheets
said.
Deputy Sheriff Scott
Trussell reported to commi ss ioners that the sheriff's
department wi II receive a
$39,240 Ho meland Security
gran t thro ugh the Ohi o
Criminal Ju stice Service s,
and that the grant will be
used to purchase new
radios.

rrg''blood
.

;'r

BY J. MILES LAYTON
Staff writer

Wl-I"T W l.L . THl!t
DO YOW
PP.R.T ON
TMINIC.,
T t-1E \.EFT
OF MY
U::CIU fti..
,_-, OR .....WIN(l. .
BIT. OY:F .

POMEROY Meigs
Co unty Engi nee r Eugene
Triplett and his employees
have approved a three-year
labor contrac t.
Meig s County commi ssioners, during their regular
meeting, announced that
negotiations
between
Triplett and his road workers were complete and the
contract was approved
Thursday morning.
The
new
contract
includes a 35-cent, ac ross-

blanket if everything is set up
properly.
Colorful and intricate patterns are sewed into the soft cotton cloth, which Bise said often
covers the legs of people sitting
in wheelchairs.
Bise has donated a number of
blankets to people at the
Overbrook
Center
in
Middleport. She said she is
pleased to provide something
so useful to the many residents
at Overbrook. Dorothy Oliver
has one of the blankets, which
she carries around r with her
often.
"I like the blanket," she said.
"It keeps me warm."
Mike Crites, activity director
for Overbrook Center, said the
people lire very fond of the
blankets.
''They love them," he said.
'They treasure them as part of
their everyday life."
Bise said she will continue to
create these blankets as long as
she knows they are needed.

l'M BeiNG FOLlOIIED SY A

~0 ~

""""'" '''i.o•ily,Mttn&gt;OJ "'"'

Blankets are
labor of love for
Pomeroy woman

\fORD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
~

FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 2003

50 CENTS • Vol. 53 . N''· 145

I,

Astrograph
Fridai March 14, 2003

1003 Inside!

Home

Soon Walker, 3rd pado
Pomeroy E!e"'ontary

GALUPOUS - Concemed
about local school districts still
waiting their tum at construction
money for new· buildings, State
Rep. Clyde Evans said he will
introduce legislation modifying
the financial fommla used by
the state School Facilities
CommisSion.
The bill proposes to adj ust the
formula to put emphasis on mid-

die income in such school systems rather than the average
property value.
"I' ve been pushing for a look
because we have a disparity in
income in Gallia County," said
Evans, a Republican fi·om Rio
Grande.
He outlined the justification
for the bill Thursday during the
quarterly business exchange of
the Gallia County Chamber of
Commerce, hosted by Ohio
Valley Bank.

Due to the presence of two
power plants in Gallia, property
value considered by the School
Facilties Commission - which
awards money lor new buildings based on need and tinancial
condition - is high for Gal lia
County.
That fact has pushed both of
Gallia's public .school districts
farther down the eligibility list
considered by the commission.
Gallipolis City Schools would
have to foot 38 percent of the

cost of a new building based on
that value,_ while Gallia County
Local Schools, where the plants
are situated, faces 88 percent,
Evans said.
He compared that with poorer
value districts such as Vinton
County Local and Wellston City
schools, which only supplied 7
and 12 percent local revenue,
respectively. for their new high
schools. The bulk of their new
Please see

Formula, AS

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.

The Daily Sentinel

...

PageA2

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 14, 2003 -

Community Calendar

Student Hoping for peace
pleads

Ohio weather
Saturday, March 15

Public meetings

guilty

in hoax

-............
•.

S!.rmy Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

".;···
Showers T-storrT'II!i

~"Flurrlee
,."'.," ~
·.:.·.·
Snow

Rain

Ice

Warm, dry weather in sight
and variable winds.
Dry weather with gradual
Saturday
night. .. Partly
wanning will take us through cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s.
the upcoming weekend.
EXTENDm FORECAST:
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A
Fair weather high pressure
from eastern Canada through slight chance of rain in the
the Ohio Valley and into the afternoon. Highs in the lower
mid Mississippi Valley will 60s.
Sunday night ... A slight
persist over the area for the
next couple of days. A weak chance of rain in the evening,
warm front will lift north otherwise partly cloudy.
through the area tonight and Lows in the mid 40s.
Monday... Partly cloudy and
Saturday but will have little
effect on the area.
warmer. Highs near 70.
Plenty of sunshine should
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A
help to warm things up a bit chance of showers and thuntoday, but chilly Canadian air derstonns from early afterwon't be pulling out until noon on. Continued warm.
later today. Afternoon highs Lows in the mid 40s and
will be in the mid 50s. Tl)e highs near 70.
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
mercury should gain another
5 to I 0 degrees for Saturday with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
and Sunday.
WEATHER FORECAST:
upper 40s and highs in the
Tonight ... Mostly
clear. mid 60s.
Lows near 40. Light southeast
Thursday... Partly cloudy
winds.
with a chance of showers and
Saturday... Partly cloudy. thunderstorms. Lows near 50
Highs in the mid 60s. Light and highs 55 to 60.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A DAY ON WALL STREET
March 13, 2003

10.000

Dow
Jones

9,000
8,000

7,821.75

Pet. change

+3.57

from previous:

Dec
High
7,824.34

JAN
Low
7,555.29

7,000
MAR
Record high: 11,722.98
Jan. 14. 2000

FEB

March 13, 2003

1,600
1,400
1,200

1,340.77

Pet=..: +4.81
from

DEC
High
1,340.78

JAN
Low
1,290.59

FEB

MAR

1,000

Record high: 5,048.82
March 1o. 2000

March 13, 2003

1,000

Standard&amp;
Poor's 500

90&lt;1

Pel.=-

-

+3.45

DEC
High
832.02

JAN
Low
804.19

700
MAR
Reconl hlgll: 1,527.48
March 24, 2000

FEB

~

Local Stocks
AEP -21 .95
·Arch Coal- ·19.71
Akzo - 19.07
AmTech/SBC - 20.50
Ashland Inc. - 27.80
AT&amp;T -16.32
Bank One - 35.58
Bll-10.38
Bob Evans - 23.94
BorgWarner - 46.09
Champion - 3. t5
Charming Shops- 3.03
City Holding- 28.79
Col-t8.11
DG -10.48
DuPont- 37.30

Federal Mogul - .11
USB -19.50
Gannett- 70.72
General Electric- 25.21
GKNLY-2.55
Har1ey Davidson- 39.71
Kmart - .10
Kroger- 12.64
Lid. - 12.21
NSC - 18.20
Oak Hill Financial- 23.39
OVB-22 .50
BBT- 32.16
Peoples - 21.60
Pepsico - 39.67
Premier- 9.15

Rockwall - 20.62

Rocky Boots- 6.72
AD Shall- 38.77
Sears - 18.62
Wai-Mart- 49.55
Wendy's- 25.69
Worthington - 13.t2
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m . closing
quotes of lhe previous
day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners
at
Advest
Inc. of
Gallipolis.

Prosecutor: Man says
he wants to change plea
DAITON (AP) -A man
occused of killing three people in
December 2001 told a judge
Thursday that he wants to withdraw his plea of innorent and pleai
guilty so he can be ~tenred to
death.
Darrell W Ferguson, 25,
informed Montgomery County
Common Pleas Judge David
Godown that he wanted to change
his plea, a-;sistant ~tor David
Ftanceschclli said GoOOwn scllOOuled a hearing March 21 to consid-

/

of Thxnas King, a 61-year-old
man on Cl'lllcOO&lt;;; and of the lh:.
ZJ, 200 I, deaths of Arlie Fugate,
68, and his wife, Mae, (J).
Ferguson stabbed the victims
and stomped thm with sreel-mt
boots, Prolecutor Mathia&lt;; Heck Jr.
said when fuguson was iixlicted a
year ago on charges of aggravaled
rn.uder, aggravaled bwglary and
aggravated robbery.
King was fCIUIXI dead in the diJJing room of his home. ]re Fugdles
er the request.
were foond dead the next day when
Fergu&lt;;011. known a~ "Gator," is their son came to salt their side. accused in the Dec. 26,2001. death walk.

Friday, March 14
MIDDLEPORT
Widows' fellowship, noon
at the Middleport Church of
Christ. Soup, sandwiches
and dessert will be served.
Those not contacted are
not to bring anything.
Saturday, March 15
POMEROY
The
Meigs County Retired
Teachers will meet at noon
in the Second Street meeting
room . of Trinity
Congregational Church in
Pomeroy. Ohio Retired
Teachers Association past
president John Milhoan of
Gallipolis will speak on
health care issues. Guests
are welcome. Reservations
for the luncheon may be
made by calling Gay Perrin
992-3214.

Wednesday, March 19
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Literary Club, 1
p.m . Trinity Church social
room. Gay Perrin will be
hostess. Jeanne Bowen
will review "1984" by
George Orwell. Bring book
suggestions for next year's
program .

Social Events
Sunday, March 16
MIDDLEPORT -Big
Bend Community Band to
perform at 2:30 p.m .,
Heath United Methodist
Church. Sponsored by
Riverbend Arts Council.
Public invited.

Other events

Monday, March 17
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Tuberculosis Office
to administer TB skin tests,
Monday, March 17
4:30
to 6 p.m., Pomeroy
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Order of Eastern Star, 7:30 firehouse . Tests to be read
p.m. at the Shade River March 19.

Alfred news notes
Bishop Anthony Pilla addresses high sehoul students from 17 Ohio schools assembled in the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist in downtown Cleveland, Wednesday.
The students then marched to Public Square for a peace rally. (AP)

ALFRED - The Alfred
United Methodi st Church
hosted a soup meal at the
church on Sunday. Besides
numerous members of the
church attending, there were
others from the Chester and
Long Bottom Churches.

Debbie Barber traveled
with members of the Will
Power Tumbling Team of
Gallipolis to Galveston
Island, Texas. The athletes
competed in the trampoline
and tumbling competition of
Stars of Tomorrow.

Jury says Jackson
owes $5.3 million
to concert promoter
SANTA MARIA, Calif.
(AP) - A jury decided
Thursday
that
Michael
Jackson owes a concert promoter $5.3 million for backing
out of two concert~ planned to
celebrate the millennium on
New Year's Eve 1999.
The verdict came in a $21
million breach-of-contract
lawsuit filed against the singer
by German concert organizer
Marcel Avram. Jackson's
attorneys said it was Avram
who canceled the shows over
concerns they would not be
profitable.
.
The jury deliberated for
nearly two weeks.
Avram's attorney, Louis
"Skip" Miller, said he was
pleased that the jury found
Jackson was at fault. "The jury
believed Avram, they did not
believe Michael Jackson.
That's what the whole thing
comes down to," he said.
Jackson attorney Steve
Cochran did not immediately
return a call.
Avram said Jack son had
agreed to . perfonn two con-

ADA (AP) Seven
Ohio Northern University
students may be expelled
from the school's pharma- ·
cy program for copying
someone else's work on a
biology lab report, the university's president said
Thursday.
The students, whose
names have not been disclosed, are challenging the
expulsion from the program, which enrolls about
960 of the university's
3,318 students.
The dean of Ohio
Northern's college of pharmacy
recommended
expelling the students.
Hearings are expected to
be completed by early next
week. University President
Ken Baker said the hearings will allow students to
tell their side and dispute
the penalty.
"They're not disputing
that academic dishonesty
took place," he said. "What
is being disputed is the
reaction by the college."
The students were not
expelled from the university, just from the pharmacy
program. They were in an
introductory-level biology
class. Pharmacy is a sixyear program at Ohio
Northern.

••

Lodge . Mock initiation.
Sunshine collection for be
taken for the heart fund.

Monday, March 17
CHESTER
The
Chester Township Board of
POMEROY
Drew
Trustees will hold a special
Post
39,
meeting on Monday, March Webster
17, 2003 at 7:00p.m. at the American Legion, annual
birthday party. 7 p.m . dinChester Town Hall .
ner at Trinity Church,
building
on
LETART
Letart Bethany
Township Trustees, 5 p.m. Second
Street .
at the office building .
Legionnaires,
spouses,
and members of Auxilairy
Tuesday, March 25 invited .
ATHENS Southern
Consortium for Children
POMEROY
Meigs
and
the
Southern
Consortium for Rural Care County Right to life 7:30
will meet at 10 a.m at the p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library upstairs room.
offices in Athens.

Clubs and
Organizations

Pharmacy
students
maybe
expelled

800

831.90

OXFORD (AP) - A
Miami University student
accused of sending a hoax
e-mail to more than
31,000 faculty members,
students and staff pleaded
guilty Thursday to unauthorized use of a computer..
Benjamin M. Field, 22,
of Salem, entered the plea
to a reduced first-degree
misdemeanor charge in
Butler County Area One
Court. He could be sentenced to as much as six
months in jail.
Pol ice said Field sent
the phony e-mail saying
that classes would be canceled March 6, which was
Green Beer Day. On that
day, traditionally celebrated in Oxford on the last
Thursday before spring
break, bars open early and
serve green-colored beer
all day.
·
Field initially was
charged with unauthorized use of a computer, a
fifth-degree felony that
carries a penalty of as
much as one year in jail.
Field used a laptop com·
puter to send the e-mails,
which purportedly were
from Miami President
James Garland, police
said. University officials
almost immediately posted a message on the university Web site saying
that the e-mail was a
hoax.
Miami computer technicians traced the message
to Field's computer,
police said.
"He engaged in a stupid
act with no criminal intention," Field's attorney,
Daniel Gattermeyer, said.
"He is hor.ing and praying
that he wtll be able to finish his career at Miami
and eventually graduate."
University
officials
have said Field will face
disciplinary
action.
including possible dismissal. The matter will be
handled by the university's Office of Judicial
Affairs, ·Miami spokeswoman Holly Wissing
said.
Judge Robert Lyons
ordered a 'pre-sentence
investigation and scheduled another hearing for
April 24.

Local • Enterta1nmen

certs on Dec. 31, 1999. He
would have performed in
Sydney, Australia, and then
flown across the int~rnat ional
dateline to Honolulu for
another concert, technically
within the same calendar day.
While much of the testimony drew little media attention ,
appearances from · Jackso n
became worldwide new s,
mostly because of his ghostly
appearance and witness-stand
antics.
At one point, the 44-yearold Jackson hobbled into court
on crutches With his left foot
wrapped in bandages because
of swelling from what he
described as a spider bite. He
also giggled during questioning and made comic aI faces at
people in the courtroom.
Miller said he plans to
appeal $6 million in damages
that Judge Zel Canter barred
the jury from considering.
That amount represent the loss
of TV revenues the concerts
would have created and
alleged detlts Avram says he
paid for the singer.

.

MIDDLEPORT
A
review of "The Voyage of
the
Jerl e
ShannaraMorgawr" by Terry Brook s
was given by Pat Holter at
a recent meeting of the
Middleport Literary Club.
The au thor is a master of
fantasy, whose first book
"The Sword of Shannara"
was a great success, said
Holter. He continued writing books in the Shannara
series with the IVIorgawr
book being the fourth in
the series. Brooks. accordin g to Holter, is also noted
for writing the screen plays
of the highly successful
"Star Wars" movies.
Holter said that fantasy
lovers find the Shannara

infected by a flesh-eating
virus. The best-known cast
member is Rider Strong, who
co-starred in the '90s teen sitcom "Boy Meets World."
About I 00 people were
turned away from a midnight
showing this week at the
Alamo Draft House, a theaterrestaurant where you can
enjoy burgers and beer with
your on-screen blood bath.
Those who managed to get a
seat screamed, laughed and
hollered at all the right places
- imd afterward, when Roth
addressed the crowd, he
received a deafening ovation.
"That was the best - sitting
there with people going crazy
and applauding," he · said.
"Everything I had in my head
worked."
A 30-year-old protege of
director David Lynch, Roth
saiq the pacing and cinematography of "Cabin Fever" were

Reader Services

.

in October.
Ed and Lois Smart
appeared twi ce on "The John
Walsh Show." in September
and December, to talk about
their daughter. The case was
discussed six time s on
"AMW," most recently on
Feb. 15 .
The late st "AMW" episode
on
Mitchell 's
focused
alleged involvement in
Smart's disappearance. It
was done with the assistance
of Mitchell's ex-wife, Walsh
sa id .
Walsh was working in
hotel management in 1981
when hi s 6-year-old son,
Adam, was abducted and
murdered . The prime suspect
in the case died in prison .
He 's made it his life's work

since to help capture lu gi- ·
tives and find missing chi! - .
dren.
On the Web 'site for :
"America's Mos t Wanted.";
the show claim s 746 cases •
were solved with the its help . '
The show was credited, fo r ·
instanc e, when a witness :
spotted
Texas
pri so n .
escapees who had killed a
police o.fficer and were hid - .
ing in Colorado .
:
With the sha red experience :
of a mi ssing child , Walsh had
befriended S mart . Wal sh'
tried to boost hi ' spiri". yet ·
also point out ho w th e vast :
majority of these cases don· t .
end happ ily. They al so tri ed
to think of ways to keep the
case in the news, like dou - .
bling the reward fund.

innuenced by the slow, moody
horror films of the 1970s and
early '80s, like "The Texas
Chain Saw Massacre" and
"Evil Dead." He wanted to
avoid the slick , speedy style of
recent slasher tlicks like
"Valentine."
"They' re edited way too
quickly. with the exception of
'Signs,' '(The) Blair Witch
(Project),' 'The Sixth Sense,"'
he said. "They're way overedired, way overlit, they use rock
songs instead of a score, the
acting is terrible."
Tom Ortenberg, president of
Lions Gate Films, picked up
the tilm immediately atier he
saw it in Toronto in September.
''It seemed clear from early
on in the film as we were
watching it that 'Cabin Fever'
works on several levels," said
Ortenberg, who plans to
release the film in late summer.
"It's one that would play

well to both old -time honur
fans who want a kind of throwback to the 1970s cla.-sic horror genre. but with a contemporary feel to it. so modernday audiences who may not be
as well schooled in ·70s horror
could still relate to it as well."
The genre that's increased in
popularity in recent years;
"The Ring" with Naomi Watts,
a remake of the hit Japanese
thriller "Ringd," gro"ed well
over $100 million last year.
And "Vanilla Sky,'' which
Cruise's production company
remade from the Spanish tilm
·'Open Your Eye,." grossed
nearly as much in 200 I.

Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
slory, call the newsroom. al (740) 992·
2156.
Our main number Is
(740~ 992·2156.

Department extensions are:

cusPs

213-960)

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resc heduled for April .10.
The meeting fur Ma y 1-1
will be held ~tt the new
meetir! room or the .\lci~s
Library in Pom eroy ai&lt;Htg
wi th a luncheon .
Olita Heigh ton . program
chairman for 11~X1 year.
asked that tn embers hrtng
to the ne .\ 1 meeting a lts t of
books that th ey wo uld recommend or would l1ke to
hear reviewed.
Members amwered roll
call by nam ing famous
Ohio inv entors and what
they had created. The next
meeting will be on March
19 at the downst airs meet ing room in the Trinity
Church in Pomeroy with
Gay Perrin as hostess.

The Daily Sentinel

Circulation

Point Pleasant, WV

of forgot about the Smarts,"
Walsh said in a later interview. "I didn't."
Anita and Alvin Dickerson
- one of the two couples
who tipped off police that
they . had spotted Bri an
Mitchell , the suspect being
held in Smart's kidnapping
- said they had recognized
Mitchell from pictures
shown on "America's Most
Wanted ." The other couple
that tipped police
to
Mitchell' s presence said they
recognized him from tel evision reports.
A Salt Lake City resident,
Daniel Trotta , told police
this week that he recognized
Mitchell from "AMW" as a
person who had stayed in his
apartment for nearly a week

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) Midnight screenings of two
tiny horror flicks drew some of
the biggest buzz at an otherwise low-key South by
Southwest film festival.
One was "Cabin Fever," the
subject of a bidding war at last
year's Toronto International
Film Festival that eventually
went to Lions Gate Films for
$3.5 million. The other was
'The Eye," a Hong Kong tilm
that Tom Cruise's production
company already plans to
remake.
Both
have
relatively
unknown actors and small
budgets, but they represent a
return to old-school gore and
suspense that the festival's
audiences found irresistible.
Writer-director Eli Roth 's
"Cabin Fever" is about five
college friends who go on
vacation at a cabin in the
woods and end up being

Outside Sales : Dave Harris, Ext. 15
ClassJCin:.: Judy Clark. Ext. 10

328 Main Street

prisoners so they will do
his every bidding. He can
also cause "shape-shift " in
which people can be turned
into somet hin g els'e in
appearance.
Holter said that Brooks '.
fiction is not to everyone 's
taste. but that real fans of
science fiction or fantasy
will find that it is a spell binding world that the
author Brooks created.
Nadine Goebel hosted
the meeting with Frankie
Hunn el. vice president,
conducting the meeting .
The associate membership
sta tu s of some member s
was discussed. The program that had been schedul ed for February was

Horror flicks at Austin film festival mark
a return to old-school gore and suspense

Advertising

(304)675-4020

books fascinat ing with a
cast of colorful characters
aboard a magnificent airship on a dangerous queq _
Holter noted that the
forces of good and evi I vie
in it with each other to possess an an cient race. Th e
heroes of the Four Lands
are seek in g to escape th e
powers of the merciless
lise Witch and monstrous
Antrax. But their greatest
enemy is the dark adversary Morgawr. a centuriesold sorcerer of tremendous
power. He has a fleet of
airships and a crew of
walking dead at hi s co mmand. He had raided prisons and created zombielike creatures from th e

NEW YORK CAP) Elizabeth Smart's safe return
home represents a coup perhaps the biggest ever for television personality
John Walsh, who has made it
his mission to help capture
fugitive s and find missing
children.
·Walsh, longtime host of
"A merica 's Most Wanted"
on Fox and of a syndicated
talk show that began last fall,
had focused on the Smart
case several times on both
shows in the nine months
Elizabeth was missing.
Elizabeth's father, Ed
Smart. . was interviewed
Thursday on "The John
Walsh Show," the first time
that show had gone live .
"The re st of the media kind

We are prepared for your "Return"

www.dantax.org

.

Smart case a coup for television's John
Walsh, host of 'America's Most Wanted'

News

Whatever your
direction DanTax
is the path.

Friday, March 14. 2Ufl3

Area literary club hears
review of Brooks' fantasy

EdHor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12

Income Tax by Dan Tax

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NATIONAL VIEW

Its costs
• The Modesto (Calif.) Bee , 011 American allies and the
emil' of •mr: To win allies for its campaign to disarm Iraq,
Pres1 den t Bush has opened the nation' s pocketbook He is
offe nng financial inducements whose total is unknown but
" sure to be in the ten s of billions of dollars, not including
the cost of fighting a war. At least as troubling as the price
t.tg IS whether the administration is making promises that
cou ld wme back to haunt it.
Turkey is a critical case in point. Washington wants to
deploy troops along Turkey's border with Iraq, to open a
not thern front in the event of war. As a condition, the Turks
ha ve demanded money - $1 5 billion is the latest reported
I•gu1e. m about $50 per American. But they also want
more: U.S. assent to a leading role for Turkish forces in
Kurdtsh areas of northern Iraq , a role U.S. officials appear
to h.tve approved. Ankara hopes to prevent a repeat of the
Kurdts h refugee exodus that followed the 1991 Persian
Gulf War by delivering huma nitarian relief to the Kurds in
Iraq
No one can foretell the exact course of events if war
m mes . But the ap parent extent of the U.S . commitment to
Tu rk ey - appare nt because many details are still unre'"1ved and because the Turkish parliament, facing strong
pop ular opposition to war, has delayed voting on the plan
- only adds to the list of dire consequences that could
flo w from a U.S. invasion of Iraq.
This is not the only reason for President Bush to think
twkc before going to war, but it's a powerful one.

TOD AY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, March 14, the 73rd day of 2003. There
.tre 292 days left in the year. .
Today \ Hi ghlight in History :
On March 14, 1743, the first recorded town meeting in
America was held, at Flmeuil Hall in Boston.
On th1s date:
In 1794, Eli Whttney received a patent for hts cotton gin,
.Ill 1nventi on that revolutiOnized America's cotton industry.
In 1900. Congress ratified the Gold Standard Act.
In 1923. President Harding became the first chief execlit ive to file an income tax report.
In 1939, the republic of Czechoslovakia was dissolved ,
ilpe ning the way for Nazi occupation .
In 1943, Aaron Copland's orchestral work "Fanfare for
the Com'mon Man" premiered in New York, with George
Ste ll conducttng .
In 1951. during the Korean War, United Nations forces
1ecaptured Seoul.
In 1964. a jury in Dallas found Jack Ruby guilty of murder ing Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of
!'reside nt Kennedy. the previou s November.
In 1965. Israel's cabinet formally approved establishmc nt of diplomatic relations with West Germany.
In 1%7, the body of President Kennedy was moved from
" te mporary grave to a permanent memorial site at
.\rlt ngton National Cemete ry.
In Ill'! I, a Brittsh court reversed the convictions of the
" llJJJlltngham Six ," who had spent 16 years in prison for
.Jn 11 "h Republtcan Army bombing , and ordered them
•e lca&gt;t!d.
Ten years ago: An independent U.N .-sponsored commis" "n rel eased a report blaming the bulk of atrocities comlllltteJ during El Salvador's civil war on the country' s miiIL ..II

v.

I' ;ve yea rs ago: India's. Congress party picked Sonia
(;,JJtdh i. the Italian-born wrdow of ass assmated pnme mtn·
"t~ r Rajiv Ga ndhi , as its new president. An earthquake
' Ji led at least five people and left some I0,000 homeless
111 "'uthe astern Iran .
One year ago . The government charg_ed the Arthur
\ nd~r&gt;en accounting firm with obstructiOn of JUStice ,
,ccunn" its first indictment in the collapse of Enron.
Se 1hi :1 ~nd Montenegro signed a hi storic accord to radical" ' '"t ru dure their federation, dropping the name
:Yu goslavia" and gran tin g greater autonomy to prevent
tile count ry's final breaku p.
T&lt;&gt;Li .ty·s Birthdays: Former astron aut. Frank Borman is
75. S1nge r Phil Phillips ts 72 Actor Mtchael Came rs 70 .
Com po&gt;cr-condu ctor Quincy Jones is 70. Former astrona ut Eugene Cern a n is 69 . Movie direc tor Wolfgang
Pcta\Cn is 62 Country singe r Mi chael Martin Murphey is
)X Rock mu sic ian Walt Parazaider (C hicago) ts 58 . Actor
Steve Kana ly is 57. Co medi an Btlly C rystal is 55. Country
SJII~e r Jan n Browne is 49. Actor Adrian Zmed ts 49 . Prince
.-\lbert of Monaco ts 45. Ac tress Penny Johnson Jerald is
-+2 Prod ucer-d irector-writer Kev in Williamson is 38.
.-\ctre" Megan Follows ts 35. Actress Elise Neal is 33.
Actm Jake Fogelnest is 24 . Actor Chris Kle tn is 24.
Act're " Kate Maberly is 21. Singer-musician Taylor
ll&lt;tnson (ilanson~ is 20.
Thou ~ h t lor Today : "CtviliLation is the progress toward
a ,oc JCt \ of priv.rcy .. - Ayn Rand, American a uthor
I I 905 - I'JH2r .

Sorry apologies for speaking the truth
Diana
West

Farooq'l Do some number of
them support AI Qaeda in
particular. or just ''jihad'' in
ge nera!'~ Or wete they all
duped into scraping toget her
hundreds of thousands of
do ll ars for some unknown
cause?
These and other questions
remain not only unan swered
but una sked, un speakabl e
Ciphers on the boundanes of
acceptable national discourse. There ts no help 111
sight from Brooklyn mosque
official&gt;. of co urse, who profess to be " very. very. very
surprised" by the gove rn ment' s charges. Meanwhile.
Yemen1 leaders huffily p&lt;&gt;illl
to Mr. al-Mouyad's res pected rnle as a chantabl e 1mam
who works in the Yemcm
mtmstry
that
oversees
mosques. (This last bit is not
necessaril y
confide ncebuilding given a recen t governmen t-broadcast out of
Yemen 's Grand Mosque: "0
God, destroy the unju st sons
of Zion and the arrogant
Ame ricans 0 God , shake
the ground under them.
instill panic into their hearts
and disperse them . 0 God,
destroy them, for they are
within your power." )
Which lea ves us exactly
where'' Left to wo nder why
the Islamic advocacy groups

in th e Uni ted States fail to
rejoice in a successful government &gt;tin g operation
wha t certalllly
aga in st
ap pears to be &lt;Ill unh oly ho ly
man .,.. hu g1 ves Islam a bad
name. An"d we're left to
wonder why Islamic moderates rema in 1ncapable of
bringing off a good old -fa shIoned ,chtsm to divide their
peaceabl e se lves from their
vtolent-minded co- rel igJon i'ls.
Do suc h moderates attend
the Dc~llas Cen tral Mosq ue.
where a tund-raiser for five
brothers charged with doing
business with the Palest iman
terronst gro up Hamas was
held last month? How about
I he lslam1 c Cente1 of Greater
Cleve la nd. where mosque
officia ls have dec ii:led to
retatn an 1mam li nked by
reports to th e federal indi ctment aga11"t suspected
Islami c Ji had lec~der Sami
AI-A11an·' One ha&gt; uncomfor tahl c qu est io ns. too. about
the moderat e v1cws of worshippers .tl the Islamic
Communit y of Tampa Bay,
where Mr. AI -Arian remams
1mam and president.
But such question s aren' t
being entertai ned. Whi ch
bring:s us to the second news
stm y. '" promised above. It
has to do with Lois
McMahan. a bespectacled ,
pearl- nee k Iace- wear ing ,
Republiciln state represe ntative who declined to take her
seat in the Was hington legislature tillS week unttl after
Olympia imam Mohamad
Joban f1ni shed openin g the
"sess ion of the House of
Represe ntati ves 111 the name
of Allah ... ."
Wh y'' C;illing it an '' issue

of patriotism," she told the
Seattle Post-lnte lligencer,
"The Islamic religion is so ...
part and parcel with the
attack on America. I just dtdn't want to be there, be part
of that . Even though the
mamstream Islamic religion
doesn' t profess to hate
Amenca, nonetheless it
spawns the groups. that hate
America." To Washin gton
state's Sun newspaper, she
said, "''d die for their right
to believe what they want to
believe; that's America. But
the Isla mic leaders of this
country have not been vocal
enough about their critici sm
of the enemies of this country."
One news cycle later, Rep.
McMahan was making headli nes again, only this time to
recant . "I apologize for
offenses give n and would
like to ask for forgrveness to
anv whom I have offended,"
she said, addressing her colleagues fro m the legislature
floor And soon. she added,
she would be delivenng her
apolog ies "personally" to the
imdm on an upcoming vistt
to his mosque.
What will she sayry
Something like, "I'm sorry
for observi ng that certain
Islamic groups hate America
religiously"? Or, "I'm sorry
tor noticmg that lslamtc
leaders have been tepid in
their condemnations of terrorist organizations"? ''I'm
sorry for raising a serious
concern in the hopes of fuel ing an honest exchange"?
I' m sorry, too.
(Diana West is a columnist
for The Washin gton Times.
She ca n be con/acted via
dimw ww@ arrglohal.net.)

There are stars in the galaxy ofpreachers
In a column a few months
ago Ill which I talked about
some preachers I admired and
respected , I menttoned the
Rev. Bernard Clausen, a
minister
!rom
Baptt st
Cleveland and one of the best
preachers I ever heard, but I
forgot to tell you thi s story
about him:
A teetotaler. Clausen looked
out the window of his office
one day to see a billboard pillclaiming
"Clear
Heads
Choose Calvert" (a brand of
whiskey).
He immediately went to
work on his next Sunday's sermon, wh1ch he tttled "CI~ar
Heads Choose WhatT The
refratn runntng throu gh the
sermon was. "Clear Heads
Choose What'' Not Calvert 1"
He even got in a poke at the
billboard writer who comet!
the advertising slogan.
" He tells you." said Clausen.
''that clear heads choose
Calvert, but he doesn't tell you
what happens to your dew·
head once Calvert 11&lt;1' been
chosen'"
Another star in the galaxy of
great preacher&gt; I ha ve heard
was the Rev. Lewis Raymond.
now 85. •·etJred and li vmg 111
Pottsville. Pa. For 15 years he
was pa&gt;tor of htstoric Old
Stone Church in C l e~eland\
Publtc Square.
Hi1 lennon&gt; h1oi-e many of
the rules studenh were tau~ht
111 &gt;CliiJnary Ill tlw'e day'

Deaths

Frank Butcher

Helen M. Black

Robert Gene
Hart

••••••
-------Thi s is a tale of two news
stories. They both pertain to
Islam and culture cl ash in
toe post-9/11 world. but they
take place in parallel universes: the first in a woild
where hard facts are prized
like battle stars, the second
tn a mtlieu where reality 's
sharper edges require plenty
of paddmg.
The fi rs t story is big stu ff:
The federal government is
making the case th at the
prominent Yemeni cleri c
Muhammad Ali Hassan alMouyad used the AI Farooq
Mosque In Brooklyn to help
funnel millions of dollars to
AI Qaeda - $20 million to
Osama btn Laden personally,
according to what the clenc
supposedly told an FBI
informant (Incidentally, the
AI Farooq Mosque is al so
where Egypt ian radical
Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman
- convicted in the 1993
bombing of the World Trade
Center that killed six and
wounded more than I ,000served bnetly as 1mam.)
As The New York Times
put it, fed eral authorittes see
the Yemeni imam 's arrest as
one of the major financial
busts since 9/11 "in term s of
both the amount of money
involved and the direct connection alleged to Mr. bin
Laden himself. "
Rita Katz, a speciali st in
terrorism finance , explained
the case's sign ificance this
way: "It shows that Islamic
clerics are havmg a lot to do
with funding and assisting
AI Qaeda." They are'! To be
sure, the govern ment says
that this particular cl eric has .
Have others? And what
about the worshippers at AI

Obituaries
POM EROY - Word has
been received of the death of
Meigs County native, Frank
Butcher, on Saturday, March
in
Fairfield.
8, 2003,
California.
He was hom on November
8, 1926, to the late Worley ami
Dorothy Little Butcher, and
was preceded m death by hts
wife, Margrid Seyler Butcher,
and two brothers, Willis and
Gene.
He is survived by two sons
and daughters-in-law, Erick
and Becky. and Rtc k and
Linda. and tive granddau ghters and one grandson Also
surviving are a brother, Ralph,
and three sisters, Loretta
Mulford, Wilma Barnhart, and
Joanna Caldwell.
. Burial will be in Fairfield.
· California.

THATtlC~T

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

The path to winning allies
is paved with our money

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Friday, March 14, 2003

The Daily Sentinel

Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Friday, March 14, 2003

opmentally clis.tbled. The
other daughter. Lois, contracted myasthe nia grav is. a serious muse ul a1· disorder that
ne&lt;u·ly took her life.
Out of the torment of those
ye&lt;u·s grew Ray mond's underlying ph tl n,ophy of li te: " It ts
how we can·y our grief that

George
Plagenz

count ....:·

They never had the dassic
"three points" and they &gt;eldom
(if ever] concluded within the
prescribed 20 m1nutes. But by
being totall y honest in the pulpit - layi ng hare hi s own
doubt&gt;. hi s own failings. his
own losses of faith - he \hiS
bredking .1 host of homiletical
rules But somehow all this
had the etTect of making each
person 111 the cnngregallon feel
tilat Raymond w.11 ,pe.tkmg
direct ly to him or her.
A p.!rt&gt;hioncJ nncc '" 'd
about htnt. ·· He identific, With
our teal~ .
R.1ymond\ identi fication
wtth the tears ol mhers lvas
nnth1ng contmed He grew up
in a broken home 1n New
Jcr,ey. He wmked h11 way
through Bloomlicld Colkgc
and WJ\ a ll1 L~. tt l 'C tniCI Il l a
packing hou se. as v.cl l .11 a
li~hcnnan ttl the IOIH!. h w;ne r.. ,
of tile Atlant ic Occ,ul.
He married ill&gt; college
sweetheart while 'till nt the
scmmarv. Thev h:1d tv.o chil dre n. F&lt;tilh . nt;l.l 62 " de vcl -

Says Raymond. "When we
get to the etemal judgment
sedt , God won't ask to see our
bankbook' or our academtc
degrees He will say to each
aml evety one ..•.&gt;i L~&gt; ' Let me
see your sl:dl'.\.
While I like good preac hing
there is 'omcthlnl!&gt; I like even
more - good p1~aching in a
black church
There ate"'" tlmtp that &gt;et
hl.tck d1urc·he' .Jpdrt from
most willie one' - the1r conta~Jou s entllU\la'm and the
he~t ~ in ~ ing tJw. ...,jJe of heaven.

and you will be all right. If you
take him home with you, he
wi ll even lie down with you."
If I had to pick out my
favorite black pastor, it would
be the Rev. E. Theophilus
Caviness. B.A., B.D., D.O. He
is as magni ficent as his name
and credentials.
On the Sunday I attended
Greater Abyssinia Baptist
Church in Cleveland where
Cav111ess, 74, is a pastor, the
service was not only a rich
religious experience, it was a
well-paced musical production. Caviness preached, sang
"Just a Closer Walk with
Thee." clapped hts hands in
enjoyment and presided over
everythmg with a sure and
steady touch.
He had plenty of help (two
cho1rs - one 111 gold robes,
the other in white with bright
red stoles) totaling about 50
~oices and soloists who sang
v. 1th rapture and enthusiasm
(always enthusiasm). Suffice it
to say. unttl you have heard a
bi,JCk choir sing, you haven't
heard singmg.
The service, which begmt at
I0:30 a.m., wasn't over till
1. 15. For those who wanted
more, there was a second servtce at 3 p m. and one more at
7 p.m.
Now that's religion. Say
"Amen ...

M.tny blac~ prcachcJS lwve
a gift of express ion tlldt is both
eloquent and "mple Con, ider
these ex.unplcs tlldt I ha ve
heard o'er the year&gt;.
• "Father. let all who are ill
hne go hnmc feeling bettet. ..
• "Don't forget to thank God
who rockl'd you inw slumber
la&gt;t night .utd kept w.ltch on
yu u till moming."
• On Davtd and Goliath:
" Nn m.rttc'J hu\\ &gt;mall you are.
(Georxe R. P/ager1~ is a
Clud JS .Jhlc ...
collllnllist for Newspaper
• Take .le'u' :dong v.ith you Elll&lt;' l]&gt;rise Aswciatim1.)

/

•

'

RACINE - Robert Gene
Hart, 74, passed away at I :45
p.m. Thursday. March 13,
2003, at his home in Racine.
He was born May 26, 1928,
in Racine, son of the late Earl
and Fannie Hart.
He accepted his Lord Jesus
Christ on January 13, 1969.
He was a member of the
Racine Ftrst Baptist Church
and was a veteran of the
United States Army, serving
during the Korean Conflict.
He retired from AEP's
Philip Sporn Power Plant after
39 years of service.
He is survived by his wife
of 52 years, Lillie Mae
Hayman Hart; daughters,
Beverly Cunningham, and her
hu sband,
Alan,
of
Cottagev ille, West Virginia,
and Beth Casto and her husband, Mark, of Cheshire; and
sons. Bruce Hart, and his
wtfe . Lorna, of Marietta,
Georgia. and Brice Hart and
of
hts
wife,
Marcie,
Westminster, Maryland.
Ht s grandchildren are
Olivia
and
Zachary
Cunmngham , Jonathan and
Michael Hart, Kyle and
Kelsey Hart, and Kayla Casto.
Also surviving are sisters,
. Patsy Willis, and her husband,
Jack, of Columbus, and Joyce
Manuel of Mason, West
Virginia.
Brothers-in-law and sistersin-law are Don and Donna
Hayman of Laurel, Maryland,
Ted and Sallie Hayman of
Columbus. and Keith and
Leslte Hayman of Racine.
Sisters-in-law are Mildred
Hm1 of Racine, Betty Hart of
Middleport, Phyllis Young of
Shade, and Linda Jewell of
New Haven, West Virginia.
Also surviving is his mother-in-law, Focie Hayman of
Mtddleport.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded in death by hts
brothers, Ronald Hart, Linley
Hart, Eldred Hart and Gilbert
Hart; a sister, Lorene Pyles; a
brother-in-law, Charles Pyles;
sisters- in-law, Ellie Hart.
Hilda Hart, Audrey Hart and
Pauline Hart; and his fatherin-law, Gerald Hayman
Services will be 2 p.m.
Sunday. March 16, 2003, in
the Cremeens Funeral Home
at Rac ine. Ofticiating will be
the Re~. Rick Rule. Interment
will be in the Greenwood
Cemetery in Racme. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday,
March 15. 2003.
Active casketbearers are
Zachary
and
Alan
Cunningham, Jonathan and
Michael Hat1, Mark Casto and
Kyle Hart.
.
.
Mtlitary gravestde ntes will
be conducted by Racine Post
No 602 of the American
Legion .
Memorial contributions can
be made in Robert's memory
to the Deacon's Fund, Rae me
First Baptist Church. Racine,
Ohio 45771 .

PORTLAND - Helen M.
Black , 81, Portland , died
Thursday, March 13. 2003. at
her residence.
Arrangements wtll be
announced by Cremeens
Funeral Home, Ractne.

Local Brief
Board to meet
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local School Board
wi ll meet at 6:30 p.m
Wednesday in the elementary
school library conference
room .

Police search for Formula
BY TONY M . LEACH
Staff writer

GAlLIPOLIS - Police continue their search for a masked
man who stole a deposit bag from
the Gallipolis Foodland on
Second Avenue late Wednesday
night.
.
According to Patrolman
Michael Fulks of the GaU1polis
Police Departmen~ the investigauon into a robbery that occurred
around 9 p.m. Wednesday at the
downtown grocety JS still ongc&gt;ing and officers are currently
exmnimng leads into the case.
Repons indicate an unknown
male was hiding near the grocery

Marriage
licenses

TUPPERS PLA INS Michelle E. Bell. 19 . 3783
Youba
Ridge
Road,
Coolville, was- cited for failure to yield from a stop sign
by the Gallia-Mei gs Post of
the State Highway Patrol
following a two -vehic le
accident Thursday at the
intersection of Ohio mutes 7
and 681.
Troopers sa td Bell was
eastbound on 681 at 3:30
p.m. when she entered 7,
failed to yield to a southbound pickup truck driven
by Marvin C. Whrte , 63,
24730
Rowley
Lane,
Cool " ille, and collided.
Both vehicles had functiOnal damage.

POMEROY - Marri age
licenses have been iss ued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to Ralph Denm s Jones, 2 1,
Pomeroy, and Leigha Louise
Brya nt.
18,
Pomeroy ;
Clifton Thomas Sisson, 23,
Syracuse, and Suzanne Jane
Milhoan, 21, Long Bottom;
and Michael Jeffery Meldau.
42 , Pomeroy, and Debbie
Marie
Campbe ll ,
46,
Pomeroy.

EMS runs
POMEROY
The se
were the ca ll s the Meigs
County Medical Emergency
Servrce re sponded to on
Thursday:
8:34 a.m. , Chris Rayburn,
Middleport
Elemetary.
Holzer Medi ca l Ce nter;
9:39 a. m. David Hindy.
Ohio Rotne
248 , St
Jose ph 's Hospital ;
I :3 2 p.m. Hele n Black,
Barringer Ridge . de ad on
arriva l;
I :56 p.m. Lorraine Ratliff.
Salem Street, HMC ;
fi :52 p.m. John Ohlinge r,
Ohio Route 143, HMC.

Civil actions
POMEROY - A foreclosure ac tion has been filed in
Metgs County Co mmon
Pl eas Court by Duetsche
Bank , Nat Jlma l Trust Co ,
Northridge, Calif., against
Roge r Hook, Pome roy, and
others. alleging default on a
mortgage agree me nt in the
amount of $34.810.66.
A civi l su1t for judgment
has bee n filed by DaunlerChrys ler Services North
America , ag ain st Nancy
Pettit, Middleport, alleg ing
default on a consu mer loan
agreement in the amount of
$ 15,()27. 12.

construction money can1e from
and as a Foodland employee left the state.
What the formul a ui;ed by the
the store to make a night deposit,
commission
doesn't take into
the suspect approached the
account,
Evans
satd, is that
employee and forcibly took a
income
is
lower than
annual
deposit bag, whtch contatned an
val ue sugwhat
the
property
undisclosed amount of cash and
gests.
checks.
" I have talked to some of
The perpetrator. who is
the
people in education and
described as being approximately
told them it 's unfair,'· he said.
6-feet tall, 200 to 250 pounds and
"High valuation does not tell
wearing a black and green coat the story of the county and
and ski mask, brandished no city school districts."
weapon dunng the robbery.
Evans didn ' t spec ulate on
Police are asking anyone with what the bill 's chances are
mformation about the robbery to when
introduced,
btl!
contact the police department at believes it s·hould be
446-1313. Callers do not have to addressed.
leave their name, just Ute infor"I want to bridge that gap,"
mation.
he said. " I want to adjust the
formula to put more weig ht
on the median or middle
income and less emphasiS on
average property value in the
formula ."
Evans, whose career was in
public and higher educa!lon
prior to his election to the
House representing the 87th
CH ICAGO (AP) - The Distnct last November, also
gruesome sight of an addressed thi s week's action
American soldier 's body to increase the state gas tax
being dragged through the by 2 cents e'll:h year from
streets of Somalia's capital now through 2005.
The action, he said, shifts
by a mob horrified the
of the gas tax revenue.
most
natron . Within days, a date
was announced for with· which had been shared with
the State Highway Patrol. to
drawal of U.S . troops.
state
and local road needs.
The terrorist bomb that
"I
agomzed over that ,"
ripped through a U.S. Marine
barracks in Lebanon and left Evans said. "I did not make a
more than 240 dead, sent decision until the last minme.
shock waves across the coun- . I continue to think about it ,
try.
Within
months, but for what it brings to thi s
America's
peacekeeptng
mission there was over.
Now the questions arise:
Will public support of war
w1th Iraq waver if casuallles
are high or fighting drags on?
from PageA1
And, do America's adversaries count on a weakening noted.
of resolve ?
He said that large trucks
Some
experts
say may often hit deer or other
Americans have become animals along major high·
more determined si nce the ways like U.S. Route 35.
attacks on the World Trade
Because the damage is !lliniCenter and the Pentagon and mal, they may never report
will stand tirm behind mili- anything to law enforce ment
tary action against Iraq just authorities who may be
as they have in the campaign responsible for contacting
to root qpt ai-Qaida terrorists ODOT for animal dtsposal.
throughout the world.
Weaver said more than a
" I have no doubt that after third of all vehicle accidents
Sept. 11, alFAmericans have each year are caused by deer
the resolve to see thi s or other animals.
through," says John Allen
A few years ago. he said a
Williams, professor of politi- large owl crashed into and
cal science at Loyola destroyed the mirror on a
University in Chicago. "It patrol crui se r. He also
has convin·ced them that remembers when a large
there are real threats out wild turkey came through
there and they need to do the windshield of another
something about them."
vehicle and injured both the
Not everyone agrees.
dnver and the passenger.
Charles Moskos, a military
Brent Thompson of th e
sociologist at Northwestern patrol said It js best to hit an
University, sees no new animal insteaa of swerving
mood of sacrifice in the post- to avoid it.
Sept. 11 climate, nottng that
He said that it ts riskier
military enlistment has not avoiding the animal because
tncreased since then.
of posstbility that th e
"Putting a flag on your motorist could get stuck in a
SUV ts not a sacritice," he ditch or face other grim trafsays. " It's patriotism lite."
fic possibi lities. If a motorist
Moskos also di smissed swerves to hit a deer and
public opinion surveys regis- gets stuck in a ditch, the pertering health y support for son could be charged with
war. "'Those polls mean noth- failure to control a motor
ing until people di e," he vehtcle.
says.
"It is always better to hit
He notes that fewer than the deer," Thompson said.
550 American military perMeigs County sheriff' s
sonnel were killed altoget her Deputy
Ben
Davidson
tn missions in Lebanon knows the damage deer can
( 1983) and Somalia ( 1993). do to an automobile.
the invas1on s of Grenada
A few weeks ago. he was
( 1983) and Panama ( 1989). on patrol when his cruiser
the first Persian Gulf war hit a deer. The passenger
( 1991 ) and the ongoing cam- side and front fender were
paign in Afghanistan .
damaged and will cost more
" Betng a taxi dri ve r is than $1. 100 to replace .
more dangerous than being a
Sheriff Ralph Trussell said
member of the military since that the department does not
Vietnam," Moskos says.
have the money to make
Some polls have shown the repairs since the co unty
majority of Americans back a raised the deductible on the
U.S . campaign to topple msurance to $2,500.
Saddam Hussein.
According to the patrol , in
One survey conducted by Meigs County there were 27
the Pew Research Center for vehicle acctdents involving
the People &amp; the Press in animals in 2000 and 7fi vehi mid-February showed 66 cles acc idents in 2001. Last
percent approval of military year, there were 13o ve hicle
action against Iraq .

How-firm is
America's
resolve?

State Highway
Patrol

TUPPERS PLAINS Jose ph C. Jordan, 51.
Huntington , W.Va ., was
cited for improper passing
by the patrol following a
two-vehicle
accident
Thursday .on Ohio Route 7
Troopers ~aid Jordan was
northbound .OS of a mile
north o Count y Road 46
(Success), at 3 p.m. when he
attempted to pass a ve hicle
and collided with a south·
bound car driven by Philip I.
Wolfe : 41. 52144 Eden
Ridge Road, Reedsv ille.
Wolfe was attempting to
make a left turn at the time
of the crash, the 1eport said.
Damage was di sabling to
Wolfe 's car and to the va n
driven by Jordan, owned by
Con Je l Sales, Huntmgtnn .

from PageA1

Foodland bandit

For the Record

...

The Dail y Sentinel • Page AS ,

Divorces, .
dissolutions
POMEROY - An action
for dissolution of marriage
has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court by Laura Dtane
Hen sley.
Portland, and
Charles Euge ne Hen sley,
Long Bottom.
A divorce ac ti on has been
filed by Patricia J. Eakins,
Pomeroy, against David R.
Eakins, Middleport.
Dtvorces have been granted to Mtke Meldau from
Betty Meldau; Janetta R.
While from Richard A.
White ; and Ronald Lee
Williams from Deborah
Leann Williams.
Dissolutions have been
granted to David Michael
Fetty I and Janice L. Fetty,
and to Melinda L. Baker and
Rodney E. Baker.
A domestic actton filed by
John Ryan Hill and Bobbi Jo
Hill has been dt smissed.

Grand jury
meets
POMEROY
Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court Jud ge Fred W. Crow
Ill has scheduled a session
of the Meigs County Grand
Jury for March 18.

Sentenced
POMEROY - The fol lowing have been sentenced
by Common Pleas Court
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill :
• Je sse A. Basham, to II
months on a count y of
forgery, following the filing
of a motion to revoke community control Basham will
continue on community control followin g release.
• R1 chard Castle, to one
ye ar 1n prison on a ftfth de gree fe lony count of
forgery.
• Robert H. Workman, to
four years in pri son on a
charge of burglary, a thirddegree felony.
Charges against Du st in
Fellure ha ve bee n di smissed

Deer

area, ll was the ri ght tl111t g to
do ."
The ad ditiona l re,·cnue
means more dollars lor road
v.mk. especially !hat needed
by townships. whtch "lw ve
very little to work Wit h... he
added .
") felt thi s wa&gt; one htl l
where southern Ohto made
out btg t1me,.. Evans 'aid
Evans. who has built con tact s with tnw n'&gt;hip tru stees
since hts campatgn. '"" one
of ni ne Republicans in the
House who voted aga1nst the
budget corre( tion htll lor the
current state spend ing pl an
because 1t cnntamed Senateintroduced cuts to local gm ernment funding.
Gov. Taft's Third Fronu er
·proposal to boost the 1tatc:·,
tech nical edge and tile new
budge t for 2003 -05 to be
approved before June .10
we re also discussed by
Evans. who took the opport unity to present Thelma L.
Elliott with a reso lution honoring her on her recent XOth
birthday.
Elliott is the re t1red secretary for the Gallw cham ber of
commerce who remains
act 1ve in commumty events.
In remarks prior to Evans'
ta lk, Chamber President Joh n
Pelletier announced that the
chamber' s 66th an nual meetmg and ban qu et ts 7 p.m
Thursday. Apnl 10 111 the
Student Center Anne :s at th e
Umversity
of
Ri o
Grande/Rio
Grdnde
Community College.
College football great
Archie Griffin will the
keynote speaker.

ace ide nts mvol v1ng deer in
the county.
Davidson
advtsed
motorists to be very cautious
and alert when trave lin g
roads and highways.
"The deer are all over," he
said. '' It's crazy that one
night you will see one m one
spot and then the next mght
there might be IS to 20. Ju st
be very cautious because
deer are everywhere ...
Trussell sa td motori sts
should be especial ly al ert
du ring the spnng and the
fall, which is dunng the mating season. Anothe r tip for
motorists is to stay wtthin
the speed limit and be very
observant especially at ni ght
when headlt ghts are on
wh ich tend to confuse the
animals.
When a motori st hi ts a
deer, a law officer responds
to the scene of the accident.
If the deer is se ri ou&gt;ly
· injured but still alive, the
officer di spatche&gt; the deer
with his serv ice revolvet.
The Ohio Department of
Transportation is notified
and it disposes of the deer. If
there is anythmg left of th e
ammal worth salvaging, the
motorist can keep the carcass.
According to the Ohio
Department of Publi c Safety.
the number of deer · which
have caused vehtcle accidents has .steadily increased
between 1997 and 200 I .
In 1'197. there were 24. 15 1
vehtcle acc idents involvi ng
deer and one fa talit y. In
1998. there were 24.868
vehicle acc idents invo lvi ng
deer and three fatalities
There was a dramatic
mcrease in 1999 when th ere
27,425 veh icle accidenh
mvo lving dee r a nd four
fa talities
The se numbers dipped
down 111 2000 to 16. X&lt;JX
ve htc le ace 1dent s lllvolvi ng
deer and two fa tal iti es . In
2001 . there were 3 1,581i
vehicle acc iden ts in volvi ng
deer and seve n fa tdliti es
Statistics for 2002 are
incomplete

G.B. Corn, MD
Board-certified in Family Practice
2410 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
304-675·7100
Accepting new patients
t Will treat patients of all ages,

t

t

newborns

t

Sports physicals available
Will provide hospital care

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�PageA6

•Valu

,.

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 14, 2003

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Angle and distance are
critical for proper call
Ric· k Smrth. of Ashton. and
I

were

ump irin g partner:. .

Ma rc h X in Bluefield. Va .. for
, ofthall double- header.
Blud icld
Coll ege
vs.
Mont reat College.
At nne point betwee n

a

Ron
Branch

in 11ing.... of th e second g: arne,

Rick and I &lt;:hatted bri eflv
,rbo ut fan reaction to the calfi n~ of ball s and strike s.
Rick related about a series
of prtches du ring the first first base line.
ga nlt' . whid1 we re clearl y out
But. in retrospect. there is a
of the strike zone off the spiritual truth that rings very
inside corner. Rick is a good clear in it, too.
umpire. and has a sharp. conFor examp le, when the
sistc llt eye for work behind de vi I was permitted to grievthe plate. Nonetheless, sever- ously afflic t righteous Job,
" I on lookers
apparenll y certain acquaintances gathmoaned the ir disagree ment ered to offer their particular
with the call s. despite their perspectives as to why Job
perspective being distorted by had been plunged into the
considerable angle and dis- throes of such woe.
tu lll..:e .
Evidently. their inane blathHowever, Rick said the er eventua lly irritated Job
catcher. kno wing that his calls enough that he blurted out at
we re accurate. looked up at them. " Miser{lble comforters
hi m. and said encouragingly, are ye all." \1'
"You and I are the onl y ones
They were, indeed, mi serwho really know where these able comforters, because nei pi tches actuall y are."
ther had the necessary spirituThe catcher's honest j udg- al angle and distance to make
ment coi ncided with the the proper call with Job. They
umprre \ honest judgment were seriously out of spiritual
because both shared the p~!'Jp ­ position, and it lett Job with
er ang le and distance in see- the unenviable task of making
ing e;rch pitch. Because of unconfirmed judgments conproper position, both could cerning the left-handed subsee that each pitch was out of marine pitches of suffering
the strike zone. Such a work- and misfortune being thrown
. ing relationship made for a at him .
better game experience. As a
But, fortunately, there was
matter of fact , it always does. one named Elihu who
Rick concluded his account involved himself with Job by
.by adding. "That is the kind assuming the proper spiritual
of catcher an umpire can re al- angle and distance with Job. It
ly appreciate!"
was as though he crouched
I got a good laugh from hi s down in front of Job. and
litt le story as we stood along spoke encouragi ngly, " You

and I are the only ones who
really know where these
pitches act uall y are ." In no
small way he confirmed Job:s
assessment of the dangerous
game being played out before
him .
What that did for Job was
that it made the boo-birds
irrelevant.
Herein lies the needful lesson for the peopl e of our
churches, for the Chri stian
ranks are often comprised of
too many spiritual externali sts
and moralists spouting criticisms at others ctJUght in the
spectacles of unfortunate circumstances. Thus, those who
need the ministry of Chri st
have to stand on the open
field having to not only deal
with the game being played
out before them, but also ha ving to deal with the judgments
of those who have too narrow
a concept of God.
In other words, too many in
the churches prove to be mi sera ble comforters.
However, the Scripture
says, "If a man be overtaken
in a fault, ye which are spiritual restore such a one in the
spirit of meekness; considering thyself, lest thou also be
tempted. Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfill the
law of Christ."
It is only as we assume
proper spiritual angle and distance with others in their particular circumstances that we
prove ourselves capable of
e ncouraging others in the
name of Jesus Christ at just
the right time.
As for me. I sure could have
used that same catcher behind
the plate in the game I called !

Wheaton College liberalizes its
venerable behavior "pledge"
BY RICHARD

N.

OSTLING

Associated Press writer
In the world of evangelical
,·ol leges. it was a momen t to
reme mber - a shift on
roughly the same level as a
' ingl e-sex school turnin g
into a coed in stitution.
in
Wheat on
Co llege
Illino is ann ounced th at,
henceforth. faculty members
may drink and smoke in private and students may dance
off-c amp us and at reg ul ated
co llege events.
The dec isio n highl~h t s
both the challenges faced by
conservative,
Protestant
schools in staki ng out their
identity in the 2 1st cent ury,
and Wheaton 's prominence
in evangelical America.
''Wheaton is the flag shi p,"
'ays the Rev. Timothy
Fulop, academic vice president of Tennes see 's King
College. "Wheaton rea ll y
does set the tone."
Alumni of the school
illcll!Cle Fulop. the Rev. Billy
Graham. House Speaker
Dennis Hastert. chief presidential
speec hwrite r
Mic hael Gerson and the late
businessman Todd Beamer,
the " let' s rol l" hero of Sept.
I I.
Located in a county seat
wes t of Chi cago. Wheaton is
a place where SAT scores
exceed the national average
hy 300 points , and this
year's freshmen incl ude 28

National Merit finalists . The
school ranked II th in a survey of the undergraduate
school s for Americans who
earned doctorates between
1920 and 1990.
school 's
Jie w
The
"Com muni ty
Covenan t,"
~ nn ou n ced two weeks ago,
still forbid s alcohol and
tobacco use on campu s, and
graduate students and profe ssors are directed to
abs tain if undergrad uate s who may only indulge during vacati ons - are present.
Whatever dancing students do off campus, on
campus they will attend only
official college dances.
Why the shift ? Fulop, who
has researched Wheaton's
hi story, thinks the trustees
"understa nd their faith as
part of a larger wo rld mo vement" and know "these are
uniquely American contro ve rs ies ."

They also realize, he says,
that "the tide shifted I 0 or
20 years ago" a mong U.S.
evangelicals , making drinkin g or dancin g matters of
personal discretion.
The college mailed explanations of the changes to
35.000 alumni thi s week.
Co llege Pre s ident Duane
Litfin issued a defens ive emai I Monday asserting that
"W heato n's standard s are
not weake ned : they are
strengthened ...
The mailin g notes that a

Jeff and Marlo Hood wuuru
like to announce the first
birthday of their son, Jeffery
Briggance . Brigg is the
grandson of Kathy and
Randall Mullins, Jo hn and
Crystal Hood, Jim and Krista
White and the great-grandson of Kenneth McElhinny,
Jenny Ashley, and Margaret
and David Yost.
·
The party wa s celebrated
with o Iunny clown, magic,
balloons, games, cake and
ice cream, many wonderf~l
fnends. and Nona. The theme of the party was
ani mals and photos honoring Brigg's first wond'et'!..!:-J!!
lui year of life were hung around for all to share.

I

Being military overseas, we certainly missed
the presen ce of all of prectous fa mily and
friends back home However. all were on our
hearts and shored in the experience despite
the miles aport.

1991 Illinois law for bid s
discrimination
against
employees wh o drink or
smoke off the job unless that
violates a "sinc ere ly held
religious beli ef." Wheaton
ac knowledges "t he Bible
nowhere requires abst inence" and the bans were
only traditions.
Like its previous code of
conduct - known as the
"S tatement
of
Respon sibilities" - the new
covenant commits teache rs
and students to a sweeping
I ist of biblical virtues (love ,
humility, hon esty, sex ual
propriety). A new clause
says hum an life must be protected "from conception to
deat h."
The long-standi ng ban on
gamblin g has vanished ,
though it 's no problem on
cam pu s, says Lisa Nudd .
editor of the campus newspaper.
Nudd said the
school's 2,400 undergraduates mostly wanted to drop
what they considered an outdated ban on "most forms of
social da ncin g."

The

Fellowship
Apostolic
Church of Jtsu~ Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd ., Pastor: James
Miller, Sunday Schoo l • 10:30 a .m.,
Evening· 7:30 p.m.

RJvtr Valley
Apostolic Worsh ip Center, 873 S. 3rd
A~e. , Middlepon, Ke.,.in Konkle. Pastor,
Su11doy, 10 a.m. and 6:00 p .m.,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Youth Fri. 7:30

p.m.

Emmanu•l Apostolic TabemMCle Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rutland,
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thurs. 7:00p.m.. Pastor Many R. Hunon

Assembly of God
Liberty Auembly of God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane, Muon,
W.Va .. Pastor : Neil Tennant, Sunday
~ices · 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m.

Baptist
Hope Baptist Cburth {Southern)
~70 Grant St .. Middleport, Pastor: Re\',
David Bryan, SundRy school - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - II a.m. 11nd 6 p.m., Wednesday
Service - 7 p.m.
Rudand Flnt Baptist Cburth
Sund11y School - 9:30 a.m., Wor ship 10:45 a.m.
Pomuoy First Baptist
Pasto r Jon Brockert, East Main St.,
Su nday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m.

Flnt Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: E. Lamar
0' Bryant, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 8: 15 a.m., 9:45 am &amp; 7:00 p.m..
Wednesda}' Services - 7:po p.m.
Fln:t Baptist Churth
Pastor: Mark Morrow, 6th and Pal mer St.,
Middleport, Su nday School - 9:15 a.m ..
Worship - 10 :15 a.m.. 7:00 p.m ..
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

The Old Time Gospe l Hour Quarter will perform at the the Southern High School, 7 p.m. on
March 21 .

Racin. Flnt BapUst
Pastor: Rick Rule, Su nday School - 9:30
a.m., Worsh ip - 10:40 a.m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Quartet to sing in Racine

Silver Ruo Baptlst
Po~tor: John Swnnson. Sunday School !Oa.m ., Worship - lla.m.• 7:00 p.m.
,Wt:dnesda'y Services-7:00p.m.

RACINE - The Old
Time Gospel Hour Quartet
will perform at the Southern
High School gymnasium at 7
p.m. on March 21.
There will be no admission
charge, but a freewi ll offering will be taken . The concert is being sponsored by
the First Baptist Church of
Racine.
The group is comprised of
Robbie Hiner, Wyatt Wilson.
Jeff Stanley and Christian
Davis. Hiner, who maintains
the tenor position, served as

MI. Union Baptist
Pastor ; David Wiseman, Sunday School9:45 o.m., Eve ning - 6:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Sef\lices ·6:30p.m.

minister of music for Dr.
Jerry Falwel l over a riveyear period and since ha'
res igned to start a music publishing and production company, Old Time Gospel Hour
Music. He has been involved
in the music industry for
many years and is noted for
such accompli shments as a
writer, producer and appearances on the Gaither Video
series.
Wyatt si ngs the lead, while
Jell holds down the baritone.
Chri stian Davis sing s bass.

He has been involved in
Gaither recording sessions
and spent time tra veling with
the Kin gsmen and Squire
Parsons. The quartet's debut
project, The Lamb Is King,
was produced by hi ghl y
acclaimed producer Lari
Goss and features a long list
of renowned writers inCluding Hiner, Matt Garinger,
Marty Funderburk, Cindi
Ballard, Gerald Crabb and
others.
Their current release is
"The Return."

Church briefs

Bethlehem Baptist Church
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH,
Pastor : Daniel Mecea, Sunday School 9:30 a. m., Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m.,
Wedoesday Bible Study - 6:00 p.m.
' Old Bethel Fl'ff: WID Baptist Chu~b
28601 St . Rt. 7, Middleport, Sunday
Schoof - 10 a.m .. Evening- 7:00 p.m.,
Thursday Services· 7:00
HUIBlde Baptist Cburcl&gt;

St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7, Pastor: Re v.
Jame1 R. Acree, Sr., Sunday Unified
Service, Won hip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service8 -7 p.m.

Revival to begin
Tuesday

Hensley of Gallipoli s, and
Eternity of Poim Pleasant.
W.Va.
Information is avai labl e
RUTLAND
- The from Evelyn Roush at (304)
MIDDLEPORT
Rutland Freewil l· Bapt ist 882-2049 .
Revival services will be held
Church will hold its 16th
March 18-23 at the Wesleyan
Annual Good Fridav AllBible Holine ss Church, 75
Night Gospel Sing. -beginPearl
Street,
ning at 7 p.m. on April 18 .
MIDDLEPORT
A MiddleportServices will be
Si ngers
will
in clude gospel sing planned for 7 held at 7:30 p.m. with the
Prophets of Charleston. p.m. on Apri l 26 at Hobson exception of Su nday when
W.Va ., Hi gher Ground of Chri stian Fellowship Church the services wi ll be at I0:45
Langsville,
Together-4- will benefit the I~th Annual a.m. and 7 p.m.
Christ of Hartford . W.Va .. Bend Area Gospel Jubilee . The Rev. and Mrs. Jera I
Mercy of New Haven . New Southern Harmony. Davi s will be the evangeli st
W.Va. , Gabri el Qu artet of Rou sh Family, Bill Cadle and singers. David A.
Cheshire and Just For Now and Ri ght Direction will per- Gi lbert. pastor. invites the
of
Ames vi lie.
Brenda form .
publ ic to attend .
0

Sings planned

525 N. 2nd St. MidcUeport, Putor: Jame8
E. Keesee, Wonhip • fOa.m., 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Faith Baptist Churcl&gt;
Railroad St., Mason. Sunday School - lO
a.m., Worship • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Forat Run Baptllt
Pastor : Arius Hun, SuntWy School • 10
a.m., Wol"'hip - II a.m.
M~

Morlob Baptist

Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport, Pauor:
Rev. Gilbert Crai&amp;, Jr., Sunday School •
9:30a.m ., Worship - 10:45 a.m.
AnUqully Baptist
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Wonhip 10:45 a.m., Sunday Evenina - 6:00 p.m..
Putor: Mart McComu

Rutland F,.. Will Boptkt
Salem St., Pat tor: Rev. Paul Taylor,
Sunday School - 10 a.m .• Evening - 7
p.m., Wedne~day Se~ice1- 7 p.m.

Se&lt;:ond Baptllt Chun:h
RavenMwood , WV, Pastor: David W.
McClain, Sunday School 10 am - ,
Moming wonhip I I am Evening • 1 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Young's Carpenter Seruice

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second Sl.

f Cllnllllcl"

1:1:.21

r ttlr•ld.1
I : ~Nl

SATUADAY

f Clwt~~lde~

! :SHl

'
I'

Have faith. Sprl rtg Is coming as II does every year. lor Golfs plans are so
much slronger thanoo1 doubts. We read in Job 12:13 and 22 , "WI1h God are
wisdom and might: He hiS couns~ and unclerslandlng...He uncovers the deeps
ou1 ol darkness. and brings deep darkness to tight." Yes. Deneath tile sheel of
lillow. crocus w1th colorlul potemlal arid dalfodll bulbs that hold the oolm of thtl
StJn wan tor the ~ur1aln ct winter lc lift so the show of spri1'19 CAn btg1n

Do you enry !eel that Ule colJid not posslbtw hold any goodness tor
~cu .. that you can no! dig OtJ11rom lJOder your cucumstaf'ICes? Vet. the same God
that Drtngs spr1ng from Cleptlls or wlnlef can bring li;hl and w&amp;rmth to yom lite

no m&lt;tller OOw hOpeless you feel.
VIsit Grn:l"! House 1his Sabhlth. Plant your ~of l&lt;tith Spring will come to
yoor sour sooner th1n yoo thlo~ ... &lt;tnd yolJ will blossom

Catholic
S.cftd Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulberry AtJe., Pomeroy, 992-5898,

Second &amp;: lynn. Pomeroy, Pastor: Rev.
Jack Noble, Worship 10:25 a.m., Sunday
Schoo19: IS a.m.

Episcopal

Pomeroy Churdt ot Christ
212 W. Main St.. Minister: Anthony

326 E. Main St .. Pomeroy. Rev. James
Bernacki, R(: V. Katharin Foster, Sunday
School and Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m.

Mo rri~

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship! 0:30 a.m., 6 p.m.. Wednesday Services 7 p.m.
Pomeroy WHtalde Church of Christ
33226 Children 's Home Rd., Sunday
School · II a.m.. Worship · lOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Mkldleport Chun:h of Chrillt
5th and Main, Pastor. AI Hanson, Youth
Minister: Bill Frazier, Sunday School ·
9:30a. m.. Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7
p.m. , Wedne&amp;day Services- 7 p.m.
Keno Chu~h ol Chrllll
Worship - 9:30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace. 1st and
Jrd Sunday

Bearwallow Rid&amp;&lt; Cburdt or Christ
Pa.stor:Bruce Terry, Sunday School -9:30
a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m.
Wedne~ay Services -.6:30 p.m.
lJon Church or Christ
Pomeroy, Harri&amp;onville Rd . (Rt.l43),
Pastor: Roger Walson, Sunday Sc hool •
9:30 a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Services - 7 p.m

Holiness
Community Church
Paslor: Sieve Tomek. Main Street.
Rutland, Sunday Worshi ~IO: OO a.m.,
Sunday Service-7 p.m.
Dao\110. Holiness Church
31057 State Route 325, Langsvlle, PllStor:
Gary Jackson, Sunday school - 9:30a.m.,
Sunday wonhip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.,
Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

Bradbury Church of Christ
Minister: Tom Runyon , 39558 Bradbury
Road, Middleport, Sunday School • 9:30
a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Chu~ll of Christ
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Wol"!lbip 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Bradford Chut-ch of Cbrkl
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
Minister: Doos·Shamblin, Youlh Minister:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.

Hickory Hills Cburcl&gt; or Cbmt
Evangelist Milr:e Moore, Sunday School •
9 a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
lltedtvllle Churdt of Cbrllt

Pastor: Philip Sturm, Suoday School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Service: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
Outer Church cl ChrUt
Pasr.or: Bill &amp;helman, Sunday school 9:30
a.m., Norman Will, superintendent,
Sunday wor~hip - 10:30 a.m.

Cllurcl&gt; or Christ
lntenection 7 and 124 W, Evanaeli81:
Dennis Sargent, Sunday Bible Study •
9:30 a.m., Wonnip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wedne&amp;day Bible Swdy - 7 p.m.

Christian Union
llard'ord Cburth of Chrllt Ia

CbrlldaaUDioa
Hartford, W.Va ., Plltor:David Greer,
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Wonhip •

tO:lO a.m.. 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Service~ -

ML Morlob Cburcl&gt; ol God
Mile Hill Rd ., Racine, P11tor: James
Satte~rfleld. Sunday School • 9:43 a.m.,
E\ltning - 6 p.m., Wedne.day Services - 7
p.m.

Rudal!d Cburcl&gt; of God
Pa1tor: Ron Healh, Sunday Wonhip • 10
a.m .. 6 p.m., Wednesday Service~ - 7
p.m.

Syracu. Flnl Cburcl&gt; ol God
Apple and Second Su., Putor: Rev. David
Ru11ell, Sunday School and Wonhip· 10
a.m.
E\ltnlnJ Se~ices- 6:30 p.m., Wodnelda.y
Services • 6:30 p.m.

Cbun:h or God or Proplteey
O.J. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160, PastOl": PJ.
Chapman. Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
Worship - II a.m., Wednellday Service&amp; -

FlatwoodJ
Pastor: Keith Rader, Su nday School - 10
a.m., Worship - 11 a.m.
Fonst Run
Pastor: Bob Robinson. Sunday School - 10
a.m., W0111hip - 9 a. m.

Heath (Mldd~poni
Pa~tor: Roh Brower. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Worship • I I:00 a.m.

Mintnrille

Roee of Sharon Hollneas Church
Leadini Creek Rd.. Rutland. PaMOr: Rev.
Dewey King, Sunday scOOol· 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship -7 p.m., Wednesday
prayer mcctin8· 7 p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower. Worship - 9:30a .m.,
Sunday School- 10: 3S a.m.

Plat Grote Bible Holinnl Churcb
1/2 mile off Rt. 325 , Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .•
Wol"!lhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Hollnea1 Churcll
Pearl Sl., Middleport. Pastor: Re\'.
Doug Cox, Sunday Worship - 9:30 p.m.•
7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m .
Hytell Run HoMna~ Church
Rev. Mart Michael, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Worsh ip • 10:45. a.m., 7 p.m.,
ThW11d.ay Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.
Laurel C lift' FrH Mdhodllt Churtb
Rev. Les Strandt and Myra L. Strandl,
Sunday Sc hool - 9:30 a.m ., Worship 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.. Wednesday Service
·7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
The Church of Jesu
Cbrbl of Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt . 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m., Reli ef
Society/Prie1thood 11 :05-12:00 noon,
Sacrament Service 9- 10: 15 a .m.,
Homema.kina: meeting, I st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

P..rl Cbopet
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.

Rock Sprlnp
Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday School - 9: 15
a.m., Worship - 10 a.m., Youth
fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.
Ruda11d
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship 10:30 a.m., Thursday ServiceA- 7 p.m.

Salem Clmler
Pastor: William K. Manhall, Sunday
School - 10:15 a.m., Worship-9:15a.m.,
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
SnowvUie
Sunday School - 10 a.m., Worship- 9 a.m.

'

IJelhl D)'

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler, Sunday School 10 a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m.. Wednesday
Services - 10 a.m.
CanMI-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. Racine, Ohio .
Pastor: Dewayne Stuller, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m. , Bible
Study Wed. 7:00p.m.
MomJnaStar
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler, Sunda y School •
II a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.
Eut L..tart
Pastor: Brian Hlirimess, Su nday School 10 a.m.. Worship - 9 a.m.. Wednesday - 7
p.m.

Lutheran
SL Joh•·LutMnn Church

Pine Grove, Worship - 9:00 a.m., Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m.
Our S.~lour Lullwran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood ,
W.Va., Pastor: David Russell. Sunday
School • 10:00 a.m., Wonhip • II a.m.
SL Plul Lutheran Clturdl
Comer Sycamore &amp;: Second St., Pomeroy,
Sunday School - 9:45a.m., Worship - II

Racine
Pastor: Brian Harknells, Sunday School •
10 a.m., Worship - I I a.m., Wednc:ada y 7
p.m.

Rutland Chu rth or lh!! Naun:ne
Pastor: Rev. Loui s S. Staubs, Sunday
Sc: hool - 9:30a.m., Wmhip - 10:30 a.m.,
(d O p.m., Wednesday Ser't'ices- 7 p.m.
Portland Fir.it Church or the Nazarene
Pastor: William Justis, Sunda y Sc hool 10:00 a. m.. Moming Worship - 10:45 a.m.,
Sunday Sen:ice - 6:30p.m.

Other Churches

Stlvusv:llle Communit y Churth
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewe ll, Sunday Services
- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m., Thu rsday - 7:00
p.m.

l&lt;'ailll Full ~pel C.hurch
Long Bottom, Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m., Friday fellowship service 7 p.m.

Sa~ior

Full Gospel Churth of the

The O.Htven' Ftllow1hip Ministry
New Lime Rd., Rutla'nd, Pastor: Rev.
Margaret J. Rob inson. Services:
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Sunday, 2:30p.m.
Harrisonv!Ue Community Churth
Pastor:· Theron Durham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Middleport Commwlity Cllurth
575 Pearl St.. Middleport , Pastor: Sam
Andermn. Sunday School 10 a.m.,
Evening - 7:30p.m. , Wednesday Service7:30p.m.

Faith Valley 18ber1W:I• Churtll
Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Rev. Emmett
Raw son , Su nday E'·cnin g 7 p.m ..
Th ursday Service- 7 p.m.
Syracu. Miakm
1411 Bridgeman St., SyriiCuse, Re,·. Mike
Thompson,Pastor, Sund11y School - 10
a.m. Evening - 6 p.m., Wednesday Service
- 7 p.m.
Hazel Com .. unlty Church-

Joppa
Pa1tor: Bob Randolph, Worahip - 9;30
a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Lena Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship !0:30a.m.
Reed..We
Worship - 9:30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m .. Fint Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. service

Hobson Christian F.Jiowshlp Church
Pastor: Herschel White, Sunday St·hool10 am, Sund ay Ch~ rch servic e-- 6: JO 11111
Wednesday 7 pm
RHIOnltlon Christian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, Athens, Pastor:
Lonn!e Coats. Sunday Worship 10:00 Am.
Wedntsday: 7 pm
LanpviUe Christian Church
Full Gospel, Pastor: Robcr1 Musse r,
Sunday School 9:30 am, , WorshiP. IO:JO
am - 7:00 pm. Wedn esday Service 7:00
pm

Pentecostal
Ptnl«ostal Asstmbly
St. Rt. 124, Racine, Pastor: W111iam
Hobock. Sunda)' School - 10 a.m.,
Evening · 7 p.m.. Wcdnc'lda y Scrvi.:cs- 1
p.m.

Presbyterian

Harrlsoafllle Presbyterian Church
Pastor: Robert Crow. Worsh ip - lJ ll.lll.

Belbe!Churcl&gt;
Mono Chapel Chun:b

Ralph Spire1, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonldp • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m., Thursday
Services - 1 p.m.

Cbtoter

Sidem Community Church
Lieving Road. West Columbia. w.w...
Pastor: Clyde Ferrell, Sunday Sr.:hool 9:.\0
am. Sunday evening sen·ice 6 pm.
We-dnesday se rvice 7 pm

DyaYIUe Community Church
Sunda)' School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Mt. OIIH Communlly Church
Pa&amp;tor: Lawrence Buah, Sunday School 9:30 ·a.m., Evening· 6:30p.m .• Wedneday
Service - 7 p.m.

Pa1tor: Jane Beattie, Worship - 9 a.m .,
Suaclay School - 10 a.m. • Thursday
Service~• • 7 p.m.

M o rri ~ .

Synu:ua Fint United Presbyterian
Pastor: Robert Crow, Worshi11 - II a.m.

Tordl Cbardt

Melp Cooperadve Pariah
Northeut Cluster, Alfred, Pastor: Jane
Beattie , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonbtp · tl o.m., 6,Jo p.m.

Rt.338, Antiquity, Pastor: J.: ssc
Services: SaiUrday 2:00p.m.

Uvln~

School· 9:30a.m ., WorshiP - 10:30 11.m ..
7:30p.m.

Co. Rd. fi3, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.

OUn United MethodiJI

New Lite Viclory Center
Pastor: Bill Staten, Sunday Service~ . 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wednc ~da y - 7 p.m. &amp;
Yo uth 7 p.m.

Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Paator: Rev.

M~

Clifton Tabernacle Chu rch
Cliftoo, W.Va., Sunday School - 10 a.m..
Worship - 7 p.m., Wednesday Scr.·icc- 1
p.m

Abundaml G n~ce R.F. I.
923 S. Third St. , MiddJepon. Pastor Teresa
Dav is , Sunday § er~;i c e . 10 a.m.,
Wednesday servir.:e, i p.m.

Faith GO!Ipel Durch
Long Bottom, Sunday Sc:hool · 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:45 a.m.• 7:30 p.m .,
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Graham UDII&lt;d Metllodlot ·
Worship · 9:30a.m. (l~t &amp; 2nd Sun), ,
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun),Wednelday
Service-7:30p.m.

Rejokin1 Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Mi ddl eport, Pastor:
Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus
LawrellCe Foreman , Worship- [0 ;00 am
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

3773 Georges Creek Ruad , Ga l li 1&gt;u li ~. OH

Hoddnaport Chun:h
Orand Street, Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
Worship - II a.m .. Wednesday Services 8 p.m.

United Methodist

Faith F-eJio,.·shlp Crw;ade fur Christ
Pastor: Rev. Frunklin Dickens. Sc rvh:c
Friday, 7 p.m.

Bethel Wonhlp Center
Chester School, Pastor: Rob Barber.
Ass istant Pastor: Karen Davis, SuOOay
Worship: I 0 am, Evening Worship: 6 pm,
Youth group 6 pm, Wednesday : Power in
Prayer . and Bible Study - 7 pm
Ash Stfftt Chu~b
A.sh St., Middleport- Pastor: Glenn Rowe.
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m.. Morni ng
Worship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 pm, Wednesday
Service - 7:00 p.m ., Youth Service- 7:00
p.m.
Agape Lire Center
"Full-Gospel Churc h" . Paslors John &amp;
Patty Wade, 60] Second Ave . Ma son, 7735017, Serv ice tim e: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday 7 pm

Sunday school - 10 a.m., Worship - 11
a.m., Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

a.m.

Fairview Bible Chur&lt;·h
W. Va. Rt. l. Pas1or: l:ln an M;1y.
Sunday School - 9;30 a. m., Wm~ h ip - 7:1.10
p.m., Wedne sday Bible S1Udy- 7:00 p.m
Letart .

Gelva.ry Bible Ch urch
Pomeroy Pike. Cl.). Rd.. Pcts101" Re v
Black:wood, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.•
Worsh ip lO:JO a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service -7:30 p.m .

Off Rt. I 24, Pastor: Edsel Hart, Sunday

Coalville United Methodillt Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline, Coolville Church.
Main &amp; Fifth St., Sunday School • 10
a.m., Worship- 9 a.m., T\le!lday Services·
7p.m.

White's ChaJN:I Wt·sle)an
Coolvil le Road. Pa~1 &lt;~r: f{c, . Philhp
Ridenour, Sunday S~· ho11l - lJ": .l(J a.m..
Worship · 10:30 a.m .. Wcdnc ~J~~ S~n ~~·r
-7 p.m.

Community ol Chri!il
Portland-Racine Rd .. Pastor: Michael
Duhl. Sunday School· Y:JOa.m., Worship
- 10:30 a.m., Wednesday Services - 7:00
p.m.

Township Rd .. 468C, Sunday School - 9
a.m. Worship • lb a. m., Wedne5day
Service•- 10 a.m.

t!Ceaforb
.1\eal Qfstate
216 E. Second Pomeroy

Jcunic Howell
J 11.1 ~ f-l y,L'II Run Rd

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc.
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Tropical Fish• Full Line of Perina
Chows • Garden Seed &amp; Fertilizers

, ,Jo

Cha~ter Ch urch ot the NIWllrtne
Pastor: Re v. Herben Grate. Sunday School
- 9:)0 a. m.. Wor~hi p - II a. m., b p.m..
Wednesday Se rvkes · 7 p.m..

Nazarene
Middleport Church olthe Nuanne
Pastor: Allen Midcap. Sunday School •
9:30a.m.,Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.,
Wednesday Servicea - 7 p.m., Pastor:
Allen Midcap

Syraaue Chun:b ol the NIWirtrtt
Pastor Milr:e Adkins, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Churth of th• Na:r.artn.
Pas10r: Jan Lavender, Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10 :30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh·Day Adventist
Mulherry Hts. Rd., Pomero y, Pa~ tm: f&lt;O)'
Lawinsky, Sa turday S e rvice~: Sabbath
School- 2 p.m., Worship - 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon United Brethren

Full Goopel Llpthou110
Hiland Road, Pomeroy, Paator: Roy
Hun ter, Sundlly School- 10 a.m., EveninK
7:30 p.m.• Tuesday &amp; Thursday - 7:30
p.m.
3304~

Rtedo..U. FeUo ... hlp
Church of the Nazarene,. Putor: Terc1a
Waldeck, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:4!1 a. m., 7 p.m., Wednesday
Services · 1 p.m.

Middleport PresbJ.Ierian
Pastor: Rober Crow., Worshi1&gt;- I 0 a .m

South Bethel CommarUty Church
Silver Ridae· Pa~tor Linda Damewood,
Sunday School · 9 a.m., Worship Service
IOa .m.
Carl•ton Interdenominational Churth
Kingsbu ry R011d, Pa1tor: Robert Vance,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Wonhip
Service 10:30 a.m., Eveni ng Sen.·ice fi
p.m.
Fmdom Go!pel Mlalon
Bald Knob , on Co. Rd. J I , Pastor Rev.
Roger Willford, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

In Chri1t Churt'h
Texa1i Community 364 11 Wk kham Rd.
Pastor: Robert Sonders. Sunday Sth()ol 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a. ni .. 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Se rvkl' ~ · 7:00 p. m
Eden United Brtlhren in Christ
State Rou1e 124, Real s ~· ill e . Pa~ tor: Rev
Bill Duty, Sunday Schou] - 11 a. nl .,
Sunday Wol"!lhip- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:!10 p.m.
Wednesday Servil.: e~ - 7:00 p.1i1. ,
Wednesday Youth Service - 7.00 p.m.

Roofing &amp; Building Work

740-992-6215

new &gt;m1

E.nterprlst
Pastor: Arland King, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship · 9 a.m., Bible Study Wed.

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

7:00 p.m.

Church of God

Cf:nlral Clwlfr
A§bury (Syracu5e), Pastor: Bob Robinson,
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m., Wonhip - II
a.m.. Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Calvary Pllarlm Chapel
Harrisonville Road, Pastor: Charles
McKenzie, Sunda y School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - II a.m., 7:00p.m., Wednesday
Service - 7:00p.m.

7~

Tuppcn Plaia Churclt of Cln1a1
Instrumental, Worship Service - 9 a.m.•
Com munion - 10 lt.m.,_Sundit)' School l 0: 15 a.m .. Youth- 5:30 pm Sunday. Bible
Study Wednesday 1 pm

Tuppen Pblna: St. Paul
Pastor· Jane Beattie. Sunday Schoo l - 9
a.m.. Wor§h ip - 10 a.m.. Tuelday Servi ces
- 7:30p.m.

Trinity Churcl&gt;

Grace EpiKopal Church

Herbalife Independent
Distributor

-

Congregational

7 p.m.

Pomeroy, OH

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cl this winter' I snowsto1ms ~nd blizzards."

Hemlock Greve Chrlldan Church
Minis ter: Larry Brown. Wonhip • 9:30
11.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 ll m., Bible Study -

7p.m.

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�The Daily Sentinel

Nation • World

Flying around

Texas man sentenced to stay in
doghouse for whipping stepson
doghouse. He chose the dog- patrol his home periodically
house so that he could con- each night to ensure he
serves his sentence .
tinue to go to work.
Rob in was to spend his
The deal also called for
first night in the 2-by-3-foot Robin to serve eight years '
state-supplied doghouse in probation and pay a $1,000
his front yard on Thursday. fine.
Rain was forecast.
Investigators said when
His lawyers argued he they first interviewed the 11 needed a bigger doghouse, a year-old in 2001, he was
sleeping bag and mosquito filthy and had mosquito bites
nettmg. Judge Buddie Hahn all over his body.
said the state would provide
Pat Anzaldi, the boy's
a doghouse about the same maternal grandfather, said
size as the one the boy once Robin deserved the punishclaimed to have slept in.
ment. "I know Mr. Robin is
Robin is allowed to sleep very concerned with mosquiwith either his h@ad or feet to netting and weather, but
outside, since he cannot fit my grandson was not preall the way into the dog- sented with the same treathouse. A sheriff's,deputy.. will.. ment," he said .

Final witnesses take the stand in
preliminary hearing for Robert Blake
LOS ANGELES (AP) Actor Robert Blake should not
have to stand tri.al on charges
of murdering his wife because
th~ prosecution failed to present any evidence linking him
to the crime, a defense attorney
said Thursday.
"All of this boils down to
one fundamental problem with
the prosecution 's case: There is
np evidence about what happened when Bonny Lee
Bakley was shot," Thomas
Mesereau Jr. argued at a preliminary
hearing
before
Superior Court Judge Lloyd
Nash.
Blake maintains his innocence in Bakley's death and
there are no witness to the
shooting, Mesereau said. He
said gunshot residue testing of
Blake and his clothes was
inconclusive.
"There is no evidence that
Robert Blake is the shooter,"
Mesereau said.
The judge was expected to
rule atier arguments from the
attorney for Blake's co-defendant and from the prosecution.
Mesereau also asked that
Blake be granted bail if he was
ordered to trial. He ha~ been
jailed si nce April 18.
After presenting nearly two
dozen witnesses over nine
days, prosecutors rested their
case Wednesday and defense
lawyers opted to present no
evidence, saying they had
made their points during crossexamination.
The 69-year-old former star
of TV 's "Baretta" is charged
with murder, solicitation of
murder and conspiracy. His
handyman-bodyguard, Earle
Caldwell. is charged with conspiracy.
AII that is needed is a showing of "reasonable suspicion"
to order the two to trial.
Bakley. 44, was shot on May
4, 2001, as she sat in Blake's
car near a restaurant where the
two had just dined. The actor
said he went back to the restaurant to retrieve a gun he had
left behind, returning tn find
her mortally wounded .
Among the last of 20 people

'

Friday, March 14, 2003

Some lawmakers call for
re.gulating, not banning,
of online gambling

Royal Marines carry a machine gun on the flight deck of Britain's Royal Navy Ship HMS Arc
Royal as a Chinook helicopter prepares to land on board in Gutf waters Thursday. The HMS Arc
Royal has been converted from an aircraft carrier to a helicopter landing platform to join HMS
Ocean in their duties in the Gulf region . (AP)

ORANGE, Texas (AP) A man accused of mistreating his 11-year-old stepson
was ordered Thursday to
spend 30 nights in a doghouse.
Prosecutors said Curtis Lee
Robin Jr. whipped Zachary
Weiger with a car antenna,
made him sleep in a doghouse and chop wood as punishment.
The boy later recanted the
doghouse allegation and
Robin denied making him
sleep outdoors. But Robin
did not dispute the other
claims.
He accepted a plea bargain
that gave him a choice of 30
days in jail or 30 nights in a

Page AS

"

WASHINGTON (AP) A small bipartisan group of
lawmakers wants to let states
regulate and tax Internet
gambling, even as others in
Congress renew efforts to
ban the burgeoning form of
wagering.
·
Rep. John Conyers, DMich., introduced legislation
Wednesday that would pave
the way to legalizing
Internet gambling in states
interested in licensing, over•
seeing and collecting taxes
from the growing industry.
"Just. as outlawing alcohol
did not work in the 1920s,
current attempts to prohibit
online gaming will not work,
either," said Conyers, the
ranking Democrat on the
House Judiciary Committee.
In a series of votes since
1998, large majorities in the
House and Senate have
voted to outlaw gambling
over the Internet. Disputes
over how to define illegal
gambling, what forms of
wagering to exempt and how
to enforce a ban have prevented Congress from agreeing on legislation.
Opponents of Internet
gambling are resuming their
campaign.
The
House
Financial
Services
Committee approved legislation Thursday that would
prohibit the use of credit
cards, checks and electronic
fund transfers to pay for
online betting transactions.
The committee approved

the bill last year, as did the
full Hou se. But the Senate
did not act on it.
Internet gambling has
exploded.
Christiansen
Capital Advisors, which
studies the gambling inaustry, est imates that online
wagering worldwide will top
$6 billion this year and $ 10
billion in 2005.
Leaders of the long-running effort to ban Internet
gambling say it cannot be
effectively regulated.
Rep. Bob Goodlatte, RVa., said he doubts that an
online casino would ever be
able to distinguish a bet
placed legally in a state that
regulates Internet gambling
from a bet placed illegally in
a state that bans it.
The Conyers bill would
create a commission to study
such questions.
A British online trading
company, Sportingbet PLC,
estimated that U.S. states
could have collected $1 .4
billion in 2002 by taxing
Internet gambling as ~hey do
real casinos.
MGM Mirage Inc., the
largest operator of Las Vegas
Strip hotel s, last year
became the first major U.S.
gambling company to open
an online · casino, based in
and regulated by the Isle of
Man off the British coast.
Becau se the current legal
status of Internet gambling
in the United States is hazy
- some site operators have

been prosec uted under the
19o I Wire Communications
Act, written to cover sports
betting via telephone MGM 's online casino does
not yet accept bets from the
United States.
MGM Mirage spokesman
Alan Feldman said the
Conyers proposal is a welcome indication that some
lawmakers have open minds
about how technology and
the public appetite for gambling have evolved.
"This is de serving of a
good debate here in the
United State s," he said.
"Let's look at technology
today. where the industry
stands today, and what the
public is doing. There are
hund.reds of thou sands of
Americans who go online
every day and wager mil lions of doll ars."
The American Gaming
Association, which represents commercial casinos,
continues to support a ban
on Internet gambling "as it
exists today," while holding
out the option of backing a
system in which online casinos are regulated and taxed.
But Nevada Sen. Harry
Reid, the No. 2 Democrat in
the Senate, said late last year
that online gambling is still
"ripe for cheating" and
should be banned.

OF

•

'•
Steven Dowell, a criminalist with the Los Angeles County
Coroner's Office , testifies Wednesday in Los Angeles during
Robert Blake's preliminary hearing on charges of murdering
Bonny Lee Bakley in 2001. Dowell testified that he could not
say whether material found on the hands and clothing of actor
Robert Blake was gunshot residue from the weapon used to
kill his wife. (AP)
·
called to the witness stand was
police firearms expert Kurt
Spies, who identified a vintage
ptstol found in a trash bin as
the gun used to kill Bakley.
Spies also testified Wednesday
that ammunition found in the

actor's home was not the same
type as the fatal bullets.
Spies said he examined the 9
mm Walther P-38, two cartridges found at the scene and
bullet fragments taken from
Bakley's body.

Scoreboard, Page 82
Girls basketball roundup, Page 83
Big Ten tourney, Page 84
•

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Orioles down
Reds in 10 inn.
FORT LAUDERDALE,
Fla. (AP) - Melvin Mora's
fourth hit of the game, a
bases-loaded single in the
IOth
inning,
led
the
Baltimore Orioles over the
Cincinnati
Reds
8-7
Thursday.
Baltimore starter Omar
Daal allowed three runs and
seven hits in three innings.
"He threw some pitches
ihat were borderline pitches
and got some offspeed stuff
over the plate that they hit,"
Orioles
manager
Mike
Hargrove said, adding he
wasn't concerned with the
spotty outing . "You don't
want to have too high expectations - it's too early in
camp."
Chris Reitsma, Cincinnati's
starter, gave up three runs
and nine hits in 4 1-3 innings.
Brandon Larson, who hadn' t played since March 2
\:lecause of a strained right
ribcage muscle, went 3-for-4
with a double and three RBI
as Cincinnati 's designated
hitter.
Wily Mo Pena and Adam
Dunn homered for the Reds.
Marty Cordova hit three
hits, including a home run
and drove in two runs for the
Orioles, who had lost five of
six. Willis Roberts got the
victory with two innings of
two-hit relief.
Baltimore tied the game at
7-all by scoring four
unearned runs off Bobby
Basham in the seventh. Larry
Bigbie, Cordova and Luis
Matos had RBI singles.

VIERA, Fla. (AP)
Orlando Hernandez allowed
two hits in four shutout
innings ,Thursday as the
MOillreal Expos beat the
Cleveland Indians 5-2.
. EI Duque, making his second spring start for t:he Expos,
had aft overpowering curveball. He struck out three and
walked none.
"He showed what pitching's
all about," Expos manager
Frank Robinson said. "He
changed his pitches up."
After taking a line drive off
a leg during a play that ended
the top of the third inning,
Hernandez batted in the bottom half and reached on an
error. He then stole second.
"Any time a pitcher steals a
base, that's surprising,"
Robinson said. "H~a smart
player. He knows wllat's going
on around him. He shows
energy. He bounces out to the
mound. He bounces up to the
plate. And when he was hit by
that ball, he didn't panic,
threw the guy out, and
bounced back to the d11gout.
"He's only been here a few
weeks, but during the season
tle will be a !food influence on
this ballclub. '
After breezing through three
inniogs,
loser
Ricardo
Rodriguez allowed five runs in
the fourth. After three consec~tive walks, Orlando Cabrera
nit ·an RBI single, and Scott
Hodge and Peter Bergeron followed with two-run doubles.
Bergeron, vying f9f a starting
spot, came in hitless in 18 at-bats
this spring and went 2-for-4.
"It looked like he was more
aggressive at the plate,"
Robinson said. "He's a better
!'titter than he's shown. He's
been confused up there. He
needs to relax and do the best
he can. He'll be all right."
Vladimir Guerrero was 1!or-1 with two walks, scoring
one run. Wendell Magee had a
pinch homer in the eighth for
the Indians.

Indians sign
Japanese pitcher
CLEVELAND (AP) Tbe Indians signed pitcher
Kazuhito Tadano to a free
agent minor league contract
Thursday.
It's the first professional
contract for Tadano, 22, who
pitched at Rikkyo University
m his native Tokyo.
The 6-foot, · 180-pound
right-hander will start the
season at Single-A Kinston.

Since1948...

The Quality Print Shop, Inc.
255 Mill Street
Middleport, OH 45760

992·3345- Fu: (740) tt2-3384
'

Page Bl
Friday, March 14, 2003

Hernandez shuts
down Tribe

II

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

College basketball

Soccer

Ohio State defeats Iowa

Crew's
McBride
·may stay
in England

CHICAGO (AP)- Their
lead gone, the Ohio State
Buckeyes gave the ball to
their best player and hoped
he could make something
good happen.
Brent Darby didn't disappoint them.
Darby banked in a layup
over two defender; with 1.8
seconds left Thursday, and
the Buckeyes hung on to
beat Iowa 66-64 after blowing a 12-point lead in the
first round of the Big Ten
tournament.
"We put the ball in the
hands of our best player, and
he delivered," Buckeyes
coach Jim O'Brien said.
"We were waiting for something like this to happen,
something good."
Darby finished with 18
points, seven assists, six
rebounds and five steals for
Ohio State (15-13, 8-9 Big
Ten). Sean Connolly added
15, and Velimir Radinovic
had 14 points and seven
rebounds.
Chauncey Leslie scored
nine of his 15 points in the
last two minutes to lead
Iowa's furious 17-7 run.
Brody Boyd also had 15
points, all on 3-pointers.
Jared Reiner, the Big
Ten's leading rebounder,
had one of his worst games
of the season. He finished
with just six points and four
rebounds.
"Obviously, we're very
frustrated," Iowa coach
Steve Alford said. '"This is a
tournament we've played
very well in. I thought our
kids played hard. But we're
one-and-done and have to
go home."
Ohio State, the eighth
seed, now plays No. 18
Wisconsin, the regular season conference champs, in
the second round Friday
morning.
1be Buckeyes beat Iowa
to win the Btg Ten tournament last season in
Indianapolis, but they
haven't fared as well when
it's in Chicago. They were
just 1-4 in the tournament at
the United Center.
Please see OSU, BJ

LIVERPOOL,
England
(AP) -· Everton wants to
keep Columbus Crew forward Brian McBride.
·
The 30-year-old is scheduled to tinish his three-month
loan deal this month with the
English club and return to the
Crew in time for the new
Major League Soccer season.
But Everton manager
David Moyes said Friday he
was in discussion with the
MLS and the Crew to keep
McBride at least until the end
of the season.
If the ex tension is not
arranged, Saturday 's game
against West Ham could be
the next to the last for
McBride with Everton- and
his last at Goodison Park.
He's expected to play in the
Crew's home opener April 5
against the Los. Angeles
Galaxy.
"Brian has done very well
for us and we believe he
would be a ~ood acquisition
to our squad, ' Moyes said.
"He has scored four goals
in six Premiership starts and
when we didn 't have Kevin
Campbell available earlier in
the season we lacked someone who could come in and
do that sort of role.
"I remember when I came
here a year ago, one of the
things I questioned was commitment and attitude, but
those are qualities Brian has
in abundance."
McBride's contract with
the Crew runs until 2005.
"Because of Brian's age and I have spoken to Brian
about this - I don't want to
spend too much money on
bringing him here, but I am
also very aware he has played
a big part in what we have
done in the la~t couple of
months."
Everton is in fourth place
in the English Premier
League. If it stays in at least
fourth, it will qualify for next
season's
presligious
European
Champions
League.

Ohio State's Brent Darby goes up with the winning shot in the final seconds past Iowa's Josh
Kimm during a first round game of the Big Ten .tournament Thursday at the United Center in
Chicago. Ohio State won 66-64. (AP)

Mid-American Conference

Bobcats upset Miami
in overtime, 65-55
stretch of the second
half with foul trouble.
Stephens . opened
overttme wtth a 3pointer and after
scoring on a layup on
a nice feed from
Hunter, Jeff Halbert
buried another 3 to
give the Bobcats a

BY ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

CLEVELAND- Brandon Hunter scored 15
points, including two on a putback to force overtime, leading Ohio to a 65-55 upset win over
Miami of Ohio in the Mid-American
Conference tournament quarterfinals.
Thomas Stephens led the No. II seed Bobcats
(14-15) with 17 points and Hunter, the nation's
leading rebounder, added 13 rebounds - none
bigger than one in the final seconds of regulation.
Ohio will play No. 2 seed Kent State in
Friday's ftrst semifinal. The Golden Flashes
advanced with a 79-57 rout of No. II Marshall
in the quartertinal ,opener.
In Thursday's evening session, top-seeded
Central Michigan plays No. 9 Bowli ng Green
~;:::..~~ and No. 4 Northern Illinois faces No. 5 Western
. Michigan.
Ohio's Thomas Stephens (22) puts up a shot against Miami
Josh Hausfeld led No.3 seed Miami (13- 15)
Ohio's Tim Schenke during the second half of the MAC quar- with 15 points and Juby Johnson had 12. but the
terfinals Thursday at Gund Arena. (AP)
RedHawks' leading scorer had to sit for a 9:30

60-51 lead with I :59 left.
Ohio outscored Miami 14-4 in overtime.
Halbert and Jaivon Harris added 13 points
apiece for Ohio, which beat Akron on a buzzerbeater in the tournament's opening round.
Trailing by seven with 3:51 left. the Bobcats
pulled within 51-49 and had the ball when
Hunter was called for a charging foul with 41 .8
seconds left.
But Miami turned the ball over, giving Ohio
another chance and Hunter made sure his team
took advantage by grabbing a missed 3-pointer
near the foul line and powering inside for a
layup to tie it 51 -51 with 5.2 seconds to go.

Kent rolls to easy victory over Marshall
BY TOM WITHERS
Associated Press

CLEVELAND - Antonio Gates
scored 21 points and Eric Haul added
13 to lead Kent State to a 79-57 win
over Marshall in the quarterfinals of
the Mid-American Conference tournament on Thursday.
Gates, the lone starter left from Kent
State's 2002 NCAA tournament
squad, and Haut fue led a 24-4 spurt
that helped the Golden Flashes (20-8)

advance to Friday's semifinals.
No. 2 seed Kent State. the two-time
defending MAC tourney champion,
will play No. II seed Ohio University,
which defeated No. 3 seed Miami of
Ohio 65-55 in overtime in Thursday's
second quarterfinal.
In the evening session, top-seeded
Central Michigan plays No. 9
Bowling Green and No. 4 Northern
Illinois faces No. 5 Western Michigan .
Marvin
Black and Ronald
Blackshear scored 10 points apie~e for
No. 7 Marshall (14-15), wh1ch went

8:0 I without scoring a basket in the
second half.
Kent State advanced to the NCAA
final eight last year, and after dropping
six or their last regular-season games,
tlle~lden Flashes will now have to
win die MAC to make the 65-team
NCAA field.
They took their first step against
MarshalL
With Gates on the bench after pickin!l up his third foul. Haut nailed a 3pomter to put Kent State up 55-48
with II :00 left. Gates returned ~0 sec-

onds later, and the Golden Flashes
responded with a 16-0 run to open a
71-48 lead.
Gates made a IS-foot jumper, two
free throws and dunk, and Haut
chipped in with another 3 during the
burst to put Marshall away.
Gates added seven rebounds and six
assists before being poked in the right
eye by Marshall's David Anderson
with 4:54 remaining. He was taken out
and needed five stitches to close a cut
on his eyelid.
"I'll be all right." Gates said.
"

�Friday, March 14, 2003

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March )

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Prep Basketball
Dlvlelon II Regional Semtflnel

w.clnelday'e G1m11
Utah 111, Orlando 108
Boston 93, New Orleans 65
Philadelphia 96. Indiana 93
Atlanta 111 , Milwaukee 92
Detroi1111 , L.A. Lakers 88
Memphis 124, Chicago 95
San Antonio 1t 1, Minnesota 99
Houston t 18, L.A. Clippers 114, OT
Ponland 125. Toronto 103
Thuraday't Game•
New Jersey 90, Boston 75
Seattle 107, Dallas 100
Phoeni)( 109, Sacramento 84
Frtday'• Gamet
Utah at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Portland at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
New York at Atlanta. 7:30 p.m.
New Orleans at Miami, 8 p.m.
Washington at Detroit. 8 p.m.
L.A. Laker&amp; at MlnneSQta, 8 p.m.
Chicago at Houston, 8:30p.m.
L.A. Clippers at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
Toronto at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
Dallas at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
saturday'• GamH
Miami at Washlngto,, 7 p.m.
New Orleans at Orlando, 7 p.m.
Boston at Detroit, 7:30p.m.
L.A. Lakera at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Golden State at Seattle, 10 p.m.
Sunday'• Gamel
Utah at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Philadelphia at New Jersey, 1 p.m.
Dallas at Sacramento, 3:30p.m.
Portland at Minnesota, 3:30p.m.
Atlanta at Memphis, .t4- p.m.
Chlcai)O at San Antonio, 7 p.m.
Milwaukee at New York, 7.p.m.
Phoeni)( at Houston, 8:30p.m.
Seattle at Denver, 9 p.m.
Toronto at L.A. Clippers, 9 p.m.

Williamstown 70, Tolsia 49
Semifinal I

Frldor

Tygarts Valley (19-5) vs. Williamstown

122·4), 10 a.m.
a.chcrolt 59, Golllo Aclldomy 53
Pendleton County (23-1) vs. Wheeling
Gallia Academy 10 19 10 14 - 53 Cen1ral {18-7). 1:30 p.m.
Beechcroft
11 13 10 24 -59
Champlonahlp
GALLIA ACADEMY (20-4) - 2 2-2 7.
Saturday
Anthony Dey 2 0.0 4, Donnie Johnson 3 3·
Semifinal winners, 12:30 p.m.
4 11, Cody ColdweU 4 &lt;Hl 10, Angelo
Hardy o o-o O, Tom Bose 6 2·1 1 14 , Zach
Shawver 2 3-5 7. TOTALS- 19 10.22 53. College Basketball
BEECHCROFT (1&amp;-5) - Ben Wileen 0
2·2 2, James lloyd 3 3-4 9, Raylon A.lmon
Thunodoy'o Collogo 8-tblll
3 0-0 7, Sl~o Welch 3 3-8 9, Wayne Dudley
Major Score•
0 0-0 0, Dequan Owens 7 8·12 23, Tyler
TOURNAMENT
Perry 3 2-3 9. TOTALS - 19 18-29 59.
Atlantic 10 Conference
3-polnt g011l1 - Gallia Academy 5
Quartorllnalo
(Johnson 2. Caldwell 2, McKinnlss),
at Convocation Centw, Athena

Beechcroft 3 (Almon , Owens, Perry).

Reboundo - Gallla Academy 29 (Bose
10), Beechcroft 35 (Welch 6). Anlate -

Gallla Academy 18 (McKinniss 5, Johnson
5), Beechcrofl 3. Stull- Gallia Academy
6 !Johnson 3), Beechcroh 1 {Almon 3).
Blocked Shots - Gallia Academy 3
(ShawvUf 2), Beechcrofl 2. TUrnover. Gallia Academy 18, Beechcroft 11 .

Boye Blekatbell Pelrlnge

REGIONAL FINALS
DIVISION I
At Dayton

Hamilton p9-4) liS . Cin. Moeller (19-4) ,
Saturday, 3 p.m.
At Akron
Cle. Hts. (21-3) vs. Mass illon
Washington (22-3), Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
At Columbua
Lancaster (23-1) vs. Cots. Brookhaven

(23-1), Sa1urday, 6 p.m.
At Toledo
Tol. St. John's {20-4) vs. Ashland {19-5),
Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
DIVISION II
At Canton
Can . S. (22-2) liS . Poland Seminary (231), Saturday, 3 p.m.
At Toledo

Otlawa-Giandort (22-3) vs Akr. SVSM
(22- t). Sa1urday, 3 p.m.
At F1lrborn
St. Bernard Roger Bacon (20-5) vs.
Ket1ering Alter ( 16-8), Saturday, 11 a.m.
At Athena
E. Liverpool (18-6) vs. Cols. Beechcroft
(19-5), Saturday, 3 p.m.

DIVISIDN Ill

At Athenl
Marion Pleasant (22-2) vs. Sugarcreek
Garaw.ay (24·1), Saturday, 7:30 p.m.

At Bowling GI'Hfl

Archbold (21·3) liS. Elyria Cath. (20-4),
Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
At FairbOrn
Cots. Hartley (18-6) vs . Cin. Reading

(21-3), Saturday, 7:30p.m.

At Canton
W. Salem NW (21·3) 11s. Bedford Chane!

(21-3), Saturday, 7:30p.m.
DIVISION IV
At Oxford
Fort Loramie (2 1-4) vs. Marla Stein
Marion Local (21 -2) , Frldey, 7:30p.m.
At Canton
Elyria Open Door (19-5) vs. Sebring
McKinley (21-3), Friday, 7:30p.m.

Ata-llngGrwon
{21-4), Friday, 7:30p.m.

Convoy Crestview (21-3) vs. Van Buren

Dayton 74, Rhode Island 57
Saint Joseph's 68, La Salle 48
Temple 66, Richmond 52
)(avier 78, George Washington 73
Atlantic Cout Cont.rance

Flnot Round
Big 12 Confononc.

FlOrida St. 72, Clemson 61

Fll'8t Round

Colorado n, Kan&amp;as St. 76
Iowa St. 97, Texas A&amp;M 70

Mlssourl70, Nebraska 61
Big Eoot ConfONnco
Quarterfinal•
Bos1on COllege 82, Sl. John's 75, OT

Texas Tech 68, Baylor 65

Connecticut 83, Seton Hall 70
Pittsburgh 67, Providence 59
Syracuse 74, Georgetown 69
Big Ten Conference
Fl1'8t Round
Indiana
Penn St. 49
Northwestern 76, Minnesota 64

n,

Ohio St 66, Iowa 64
Big Wool Contorenco
Flnot Round
Cal Poly-SLO 54, Idaho 50
UC Irvine 70, CS NorthrldQe 64, OT
UC Santa Barbara 53, P'aclfic 44
Conference USA

Hampton 64, Norfolk St. 62
Mountain Wnt Conference

Flrtt Round
· BYU 71, New M..loo 56
Colorado St. 74, 'Nyoming 71
U1ah 42, Air Force 3B
Pocnlc·10 Confonlnco
Flnot Round
Oregon 83, Arizona St. 82
Southern Cal79, Slanlord 74

Flrot Round
LSU 85, Arkansas ~6
Mississippi 62, South Carolina 56

Vanderbilt 82, Alabama 69
W11llrn Athletic Conference
Quartartlnala

Xavier 78, George Washington 73

W.Va. prep_baaket:ball ecore•
Thu.-.day'a Aeaulll
Boya Regional•
Charleston Catholic 57, Williamson 48
Doddridge County 85, Clay·Benelle 65
Guyan Valley 60, St. Joseph 54
Mercer Christian 98, Mount Hope 47
Parkersburg Catholic 59, Wahama 40
Tucker County 61 , Moorefield 44
Valley Fayette 71 , Pocahontas County

69

Wheeling Central 60. St. Marys 46
Girls Baskatb•ll Palrlnga

AT COLUMBUS
DIVISION I

State semtflnala
Bea11ercreek
(25-1)
vs.
Cots.
Brookhaven (2 t -5), Friday, 6 p.m.
Hudson (25 - ~) vs. Mansfield Sr. (24-1).
Friday 8 p.m.
Finals : Saturday, 8:30p.m.
DIVISION II
State S.mlflnala
Day. Chaminade-Julienne (24-2) vs.
Lexington (18-6), Friday, 1 p.m.
Cle. VASJ (23-3) vs. New Albany (22·2),
Friday, 3 p.m.
Finals: Saturday, 5 p.m.

DIVISION Ill

Steta Finale
S. Euclid Regina (23-2) vs. Chillicothe
Huntington (22-5), Saturday, 2 p.m.

DIVISION IV

State Finale
Maria Stein Marion Local (21·6) vs.
Holgate (21-5), Saturday, 11 a.m.
Thuraday'a R11ult1
Semlflnele

Dlvlolon Ill

Chillicothe Huntington 55. Bucyrus

Wyntord 50
S. Euclld Regina 58, Cin. N. Collage Hill
41
Ohtltlon IV
Holgate 53, Shadyside 50
Maria Stein Marlon Local 52, Manafleld
St. Peter's 36
W.Ve. glrle bllkltball toum1ment

AT CHARLESTON, W.Vt.
CLASS AAA
Quarterflnale
Wodnooday

Arizona
Atlanta

Florida
. Los Angeles

7
7

Thuraday'a woman'• Bnketbllll

Major Scoreo
TOURNAMENT

Amertca Eaat Conferwnce
Firat Round
Boston U. 55. Northeastern 53
Maine 71 , Hartford 51

New Hampshire 70, Stony B&lt;ook 57
Vermont 69, Binghamton 58
Atlontlc Sun Confo,.nco
Flrot Round

Belmont 53, Troy St. 49
Georgia St . 63, Mert&amp;f" 50
Jacksonville St. 65, Florida AtlantiC 55

UCF 87, Campbell 53

Big 12 Conference
Semlflnala
Texas 62, Colorado 47
Texas Tech 7~ , Kansas St. 65

Big Sky Conforenco
Flnot Round

E. Washington 71 , Portland St. 64
Montana 65, N. Arizona 58
Colonlal Athletic Aaaoclatlon
Quarttrflnala
Delaware 68, Drexel 51
James Madison 70, George Mason 50
Old Dominion 88, Hofstra 46
Va. Commonwealth 76. N.C.·WUmington

Mld-Eootom Athlotlc Confononco

Quarterfinala
Florida A&amp;M 64, Bethune-Cookman 62
Howard 73, Md.-Eastern Shore 63
Mlaaourl Vllley ConfiNnce
Fll'lt Round
Creighton 70, Illinois St. 54
Indiana St. 81 , Wichita St. 60

N. Iowa 72, Bradley 62
SW Missouri St. 61, Drake 59
Soulhlond Conforwnoo
Slmlflnela
SW Toxaa 64. Stephen F.Aus11n 56

Louisiana·

Pro Basketball
Notlontl Boolcltlloll Aoooctotlon
EAITEAN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dlvltlon

New Jertey

9
9

.438
.438

375
.375
357
.333
.312

NOTE: Spllt·•"qua'd gamaa count In the
atandlngt; game• agelnat non·ma)or
league tum• do not.
Thu1'8dl)''l Gamet

Flo~da

{ss) 8, St Louis {ss) 7

Montreal 5, Cleveland 2
Houston 8, Pittsburgh 1
Philadelphia 13. Toronto 12
Baltimore 8, Cincinnati 7, 10 innings
Minnesota {ss) 6, Detroit 2

Booton (ss)8, Mlnneso1a {ss)4

St. Louis (ss) 6, Los Angeles 5
Texas 12, Milwaukee 8, 10 innings
San Diego 3. Anaheim 2
Colorado {ss) 4, Seattle 1
San Francisco 8, Kansas City 3

Arizona 11 , Chicago White Sox {ss)1
Chicago White Sox: (ss)13, Colorado (ss)

Cedarville 94, St. Ambrose 84

80,

7

Stewart headed
to Chicago,
Davis to Panthers .

and overtime loll.
x-cllnched playoff spot
Thuraday'a Gamea
Boston 4. New Jersey 3
Ottawa 3, N.Y. Rangers 2, OT
Colorado 5, Columbus 1
Philadelphia 5, Carolina 3
Montreal 4, Atlanta 2
Calgary 4. Toronto 3. OT
N.Y. Islanders 5, Edmonton 2
St. Louis 4, Vancou\ler 4. tie
An aheim 3, San Jose 2, OT
Friday's Games
Tampa Bay at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
Los Angeles at Washington, 7 p. m
Nashville at Minnesota. 8 p.m.
Chicago at Phoeni:lC, 9 p.m.
Seturday'a Games
Florida at Boston , Noon
Colorado at Detroit, 3 p.m.
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, 3 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey, 3 p.m.
Buffalo at Atlanta, 7 p.m.
Los Angeles at Carolina, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders al Ottawa, 7 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Montreal, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at Columbus, 7 p.m.
Toronto at Vancouver, 7 p.m.
St. Louis at Nash11ille, 8 p.m.
Anaheim at Phoeni)(, 9 p.m.
Dallas at Edmonton, 10 p.m.
Calgary at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.

Associaled Press

Transactions
BASEBALL
Amerlca.n League

ANAHEIM ANGELS-Qp11oned

RH~

Derrick Turnbow to Arkansas of the Texas
League and RHP Bobby Jenks to Rancho
Cucamonga of the California league.
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Signed RHP
Kazuhito Tadano to a minor league con tract.
KANSAS CITY AOYAL$-Aeturned C
Ronny Paulino to the Pinsburgh Pirates
for $25 ,000.
National League

CINCINNATI REDS- Optioned AHP

Ricardo Aramboles to Chat1anooga of the
Southern League. Assigned RHP Carlos
Almanzar to lhel' minor teague camp.

BASKETBALL

National Basketball AeaoclaUon
NBA-Suspended Indiana F Ron Artest
for one game, without pay, for r.:omminlng
a flagrant foul In a game March 12.

DALLAS MAVERICKS-Placed GAvery

Johnson on the injured list. Activated G~F
Tariq Abdui-Wahad from the injured list.
~HOENIX

SUNS-Placed G Randy

Brown on the injured list. Activated C Jake
Tsakalldis from the injured list.

WASHINGTON WIZARDS- Waived

Cl

Anthony Goldwire. Activated G Tyronn Lue
from the injured list.

FOOTBAll

National Football League
CHICAGO BEARS-Agreed to terms
with QB Kardell Stewart on a two-year
contract.

CINCINNATI BENGALS- Signed TE

Reg g~e

Kelly to a four-year contract.

CLEVELAND BROWNS--Signed S Earl

Little to a fi11e year contract.

DALLAS

COWBOYS-Signed

~l shermond

LB

Singleton to a four-year con-

tract.

DETROIT LIONS-Re-signed

OG

Ray

Brown and DT Kelvin Pritchen to one-year
contracts.

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS-Signed free

agent WR Brandon Stokley tp a two-year
contract.

Kordell Stewart.insists he still
should be an NFL starting quarterback. He ' II get the chance to
be one again in Chicago.
The Bears, who cut starter
Jim Miller last month. signed
Stewart to a two-year contmct
Thursday, one of the busier days
in the 2-week-old free agency
period. Stewart was 46-30 as a
starter during his ei~ht years in
Pittsburgh, and tWice led the
Steelers to the AFC title game.
He lost his job to Tommy
Maddox la~t season, and his
only substantial playing time
came in victories over the
Bengals and Jaguars when
Maddox was hurt.·
"We're just real happy we
have an experienced veteran in
the building. We needed to bring
somebody in here to hit the
ground running," Bears ~eneral
manager Jerry Angelo smd.
Stewart, released by the
Steeiers in February, has 13,328
career yards pa~sing, completing 1.190 of 2,107 attempts with
70 touchdown passes and 72
interceptions.
The Carolina Panthers also
made a big score, filling a hole
at running back with Stephen
Davis.
The fonner workhorse running back for Washington
agreed to a five-year deal that
also puts Davis, 29, near his
childhood home in Columbia,
S.C. Davis, released for salary
cap reasons last month, was the
Redskins' No. 3 career rusher
with 5.790 yards, and the only
player in franchise history to run
- for 1,000 yards in three consecutive seasons. But his straightahead running style wasn't a
good · fit in coach Steve
. Spurrier's wide-open offense.

Davis' agent, David Canter,
said Davis got a five-year deal
worth $ 15.5 million, with a $2.5 ·
million signing bonus.
"This is coming home for
him," Canter said. "He also
feels pan of a movement and hethinks he can be a catalyst. He ·
wants to be the franchise back
who carries them to the Super ·
Bowl."
An even more prominent run- ·
ning back spent the day meeting _
with the Arizona Cardinals - ·
Emmitt Smith, the NFL's career
rushing leader. The talks were
the first Smith has had with any
team since being released Feb. 27 by Dallas, the only team he
has played for in his 13-season '
career.
Smith ended the meeting say- ·
ing he believes the long-downtrodden Cardinals are committed to winning.
"Right now I can say one
thing about the Cardinals is I felt
at home ," Smith said. "For:
some reason, coming out here to ·
Arizona, I've always felt like
being at home."
·
Jacksonville,
meanwhile,
signed fonner Indianapolis linebacker Mike Peterson, who has been plagued by injuries the
past two seasons. Peterson is ·
also going back home - he's
from Gainesville and played at
Aorida.
The six-year, $20.4 million
contract, which includes $5 mil- ·
lion in guaranteed bonuses, is ·
modest by most standards, espe- ·
cia]ly those set by the Jaguars in
their free-spending early years. .
'This was a good move for US·
at this time," vice president of.
player personnel James Harris·
said. "We got one of the better
linebackers in the league."
New Jaguars coach Jack DeL
Rio is a fonner NFL linebacker .
and a linebackers coach.

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Philadelphia
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Friday
21 43 .328 18'1.
Rlploy (16-9) vo. South Charlnton { 2~· Miami
Control DlvloiDn
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W L POIQI
Spring Valley (13·12) vo. Morgantown
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( 2~ ·0) , 9:30p.m.
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Chicago
23 43 .348 18~
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Lowlt County ~2 , Tug Vol loy 150
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Sluonvlllo eo, 'l'ylor Contolldtttd 43
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Wyoming Eut ~e . ~o1or11&gt;urg 4~
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48 18 . 71 ~ 2 ~
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37 27 .&amp;78 11
Ullh
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Por11tnd
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Wodnoodoy
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3~ 28
. ~~8
9
PhOenhr
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34 30 .531 10'/,
Golden Stat•
Tyg1rt1 Valley e5, Meadow Bridge 1Q
31 33 .&lt;4-84 , 3 1~
Sttttlt
· ~eating Ctntrll 3~ . Pocahontll
2i 34 .480 1~
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COunty 37
2044 .313 24'/, .
Ripley 66, East Fairmont 48
South Charleston 80. Elkins 4G
Thuradly
Morgantown 89 , Greenbrier East S2
Spring Valley 39, Martinaburg 26

~IHsburgh

.625
.625

.615
.571
.562
.500
.461

6 to
6 10
5 9
4 8
5 11

~hlladelphla

Mid-American COnference
Quartartlnall
Cent. Michigan 87, Bowling Green 70
Kent St. 79, Marshall 57

Ohio 65, Miami {Ohio) 66
NAIA Dlvlolon II
FlrotAound

6

San Diego

Flret Round

Anton io

.733
.733

6
1
8

Ohio St 86, Iowa 64

Te)(as-San
Monroe .56

~ct

4
4

8
9
8

Big Ten Conteranct

66

L

6
6
5

San Francisco

.231

W

10
10
8

Mllwaul&lt;ee

Pet
.625
.615
.600
.571
.562
.556
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.533
..529
.500
.357
.357
.312

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Mon1real
Houston
New York
St. Louis
Chicago

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10 6
Toronto
8 5
Kansas City
9 6
·a 6
Oakland
Chicago
1
9
Minnesota
10 8
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8 7
Texas
7
8
Boston
9 8
Seattle
8 8
Ootrol1
5 9
New York
5 9
Anaheim
5 11
Tampa Bay
3 tO
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N. Illinois 75, W. MlchiQan 63
Ohio 65, Miami {Ohio) 55
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Quartarflnale ·
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Hawaii 62, Rice 61, OT
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54

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Kent St. 79, Marshall 57

At Columbua
Mowrystown Whiteoak (18·3) vs. Cols.
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Thurad•y'a Reaulta
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Cin. Moeller 53, Springboro 34
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Hamilton 66, Cin. Princeton 64, OT
Massillon Washington 71 , Mentor 59
Olvlelon II

Akr. SVSM 82, Tallmadge 32

Girls basketball

NFL

Scoreboard

Atlanta 10, Tampa Bay 7
N.Y. Mets vs. Florida (ss) at Jupiter, Fla.,
ccd, rain
N.Y. Yankees 6, Boston (ss) 3
Frkley'e G1m11
Toronto vs. Houston at Kissimmee, Fla.,

1:05 p.m.
Baltimore vs. St. Louis at Jupiter, Fla. ,
1:05 p.m.
Cincinnati (ss) vs. Boston at Fort Myers,
Fla .. 1:05 p.m.

N.Y. Yankees (ss) vs . Atlanta at
Kissimmee, Fla .. 1:05 p.m.
Los Angeles vs. Cleveland at Winter
Haven, Fla., 1;05 p.m.
Pittsburgh vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater,

Fla .. 1:05 p.m.

Minnesota liS. Tampa Bay (ss) at St.
Petersburg, Fla .. 1:05 p.m.
Detroit (ss) 11s. Cincinnati (ss) at
Sarasota, Fla .. 1:05 p.m.
Florida vs. N.Y. Mets at Port St. Lucie,

Fla .. 1:10 p.m.

Norris Northup Dodge

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Arizona vs. San Francisco at Scottsdale,
Ariz .. 3:05 p.m.
Oakland (liS) vs. Chicago Cubs (ss) at
Mesa, Ariz., 3:05 p.m.
' Chicago Cubs (ss) 11s. Chicago White SO)(
at Tucson, Ariz ., 3:05p.m.
Montreal liS . Detroit (ss) at Lakeland,

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There isn't one that says "domi nate,"
but Simone Redd did so anyway.
Redd, a first-team Division Ill all Ohioan, scored 14 points and controlled
the game as Regi na beat Cincinn ati
North College Hill 58-41 and moved
one step closer to an unprecedented
.fourth consec utive state title.
Every time the Trojans (20-5) started
to cut the lead. Redd would respond.
either scorin g herself. passing to a
teammate or knocki ng lhe ball away
from the frustrated Troj ans, who had no
answer for her.
Wh en North College Hili started
usin g a full -court press late in the game
in a desperate comeback attempt, Redd
had the ball in her hand s, breaking the
press repeatedly by either dribblin g
through it or whipping a pass over the
defenders to an open teammate in the
front court.
The Royals (23-2\ took a 32-16 lead
into halftime and seemed to rel ax iri the
third quarter, allowing North College
Hill to pull to within 40-27 with less
than a minute to play in the period.
However, Redd and Siedah Williams
each scored fou~ points as Re gina
opened the fourth quarter by outscoring
the Trojans 10-6 to take a 52-33 lead
with 3:3 1 to play.

COLUMBUS - Inability to execute
the fundamentals of basketball Bucyrus
Wynford a chance at its first state fin als
appearance.
The Lady Royals (26- 1) lost their
chance to be the lone unbeaten girls
team in the state because they shot I for-I I on free throws, were 23- for-58
from the field and couldn't overcome
one of the most basic premi ses of basketball : When in doubt, get it inside.
Nicole DePugh scored 28 points, had
18 rebounds and dominated the low
post as Chiti,cothe Huntington beat
Wynford 55 -50 Thursday nigh! to
advance in a Division Ill semifinal
game.
The Lady Huntsmen (22-5), making
their first state tournament appearance ,
take on three-time defending state
champion South Euclid Regina in
Saturday 's championship game.
And they can thank DePugh.
The 6-foot-3 center, the tallest player
on either team by three inches, dominated inside in the first half, scoring 16
point s on 8-for-13 shooting and pulling
down 12 rebounds.
In the second half, the Lady Royals
began using a zone to try and slow
DePugh down, but it didn ' t work.
DePugh kept the Lady Huntsmen in
the game. scoring from point-blank
range and shutting down the middle to
Vanessa Rothman and Holgate have
the Lady Royals. She finished with four
blocks and forced Wynford to settle for done it again - dashing the hopes _of
jump shots or attempts at lobbing the another state tournament opponent wtth
bail over her toward the basket.
a buzzer beater.
.
When Huntington needed her the · Rothman banked tn a head-on 30-foot
most, DePugh responded, scoring back- 3:pomter as ttme exptred Thursday to
to-back lay ups to give the Lady gtve Holgate a 53-50 v1ttory over
Huntsmen a 52-48 lead with a little Sh ad ys1'd e ·tn a D.!VISIOn
· ·
IV sem ·r·
i IIlli 1more than two minutes left
The Tigers (2 1-5) will play Maria Stein
Marion Local for the championship
Saturday.
• Shadyside's Shayla Hoienka made
one of two free throws to tie the score at
50 with 3.9 seconds left. Rothman took
' South Euclid Regina 's assistant the inbounds pass , weaved throu gh
coaches hold up cards that tell the play- defenders and hoisted the game-wi nner
ers what to do.
just before the horn sounded.

Holgate 53,
Shadyside 50

Regina 58,
North College·Hill 41

~pys

Holgate players ru shed the court and
mobbed Rothman in a ce lebrat ion remini scent of the semifinals two years ago.
when the Tigers forced overtime against
Wonhington Chri sti an on Alissa Gill's
40-foot 3-pointer at the buzzer. Holgate
won that ga me but lost in the finals , 53 47 to Jackson Center.
Rothman, one of three players to
share Division IV player of 1he year
honors, hit I 0-of- 18 shots from the
field, 6-of-6 free throws and fi ni shed
with 28 points. Serena Urdiales added
I0 points for Hol gate.
Holenka scored 22 points, Whitney
Brown added 12 and first-team all-state
performer Jenna Johnson had II for
Shadyside (23-4). which lost in the state
tournament for the second straight season. Shadyside dropped last season's
Division IV title game to Delphos St.
John 's, 50-32.

Marion Local 52,
St. Peter's 36
Erin Puthoff scored 18 points and
Maria Moeller added 15 as Maria Stein
Marion Local beat No. I Man sfi eld St.
Peter's 52-36 in a Division IV state
semifinal Thursday.
Margo Moeller added 12 points for
the Flyers (21 -6), who advanced to the
·championship game for 1he first time
since losing it in 2000 to Berlin Hiland .
There was little anyone could do on
offense to help St. Peter's, which lost in
the semifinals for the second strai ght
· year.
The Spartans (24-2) made ju st 13-of·
56 shots (23 percent) from
f 'J d
· d bJ f'the floor
· and
ate _ to sc?re tn ou e 1gures 1n the
ftrs t and thtrd quarters by shooting ! tor-12 and 2-for- I 3 m those penods,
resp.ect1vely.
.
D1ana Remdl , one of three players to
share Division IV player of the year
honors, led the Spartan s with 15 points
and I I rebounds. Gretchen Polinski
added I 2 points.

phrase throu ghout thcmuntn.
At Miller Park where lite
Brewer' play. the 1cam 'elh
Bob Uecker will be just a bit "Uecker Seat,..
high in the
inside - the Hall of Fame, upper deck and nhslnlc tcd.
that is.
they go for $ 1.
·
The popular Milwaukee
His wry descripllllll on a
Brewers' announcer. who par- wayward pitch - •"Juuuust a
layed humor about his career bit outside'" - in till' lllO \'i0
as a backup catcher into "Major League" j, \lill oftencelebrity that extended way repeated by announcer&gt; &lt;111J.
beyond baseball. was chosen fans at ballparks all over.
Thursday for induction into
Uecker joined the Brewers'·
lhe broadcasters' wing of the broadcast team in 1071. back
Hall of Fame.
"When I got the call this when current cum111issioner
morning. the first thing 1 Bud Selig owned 1hc team
thought was. ' Am 1 going to They had been friend' l(&gt;r e~
be in the regular ceremony or long time and Sd ig wanted
are they going to do some- him to work for the B;·cwer,,
thing in December1'" Uecker but didn 't have an immediate
said.
opening for an annoU IKer.
Uecker will be at the main
"So I hired hi m "' e~ scout."
event to get the Ford C. Frick · Selig recalled Thur&gt;day. "We
Award. He' lljoin fonner play- sent h1m up tn the Noithcm
ers Eddie Murmy and Gary League and the next lh ing I
Carter and Daylon Daily know (general 111anager )
News writer Hal McCoy for Frank Lane comes rag ing into
the festi vities in Cooperstown. my office, asking wh&lt;ll kind of
N.Y., on July 27.
swut I'd hired. I wa, n't sure
The 68-year-old Uecker will what he meanl. ami the n he
get a prime seat, too, right up threw down Bob\ &gt;cowing
there on the ]Jodium with the report. It was covered wittl
hkes ot Wtlhe Ma~s . Hank mashed potatoes and gravy."
Aaron and Shm MusmL
Earlier this month dulin!! an
. "Some of thoseguys were exhibition broadcasl. Uc~kcr
~n .!?ames I pl~yed m - or sat spotted Selig in the press box
m. Uecker J?dded on a con- and pulled him into the booth
ference call .. 'Thts has .got to with a heany. "Hey. Buddy' ''
be a firs~: lettmg a guy hke me
"He ·s got a great voice. a ·
m there.
great de I'1very. ... seJ'tg sat·d ,.
N ot bad ,tOr someone w ho "B
b U k . h 13
..
o .ec er
h1.t •200 w·1th 14 horne runs.
D
h' IS t e rewers.
.
esp1te IS reputation as
and 74 RBls in six seasons,
and was on the 1964 St. Louis funnyman. enhanced by a top·
team that won the World role tn the tel~~' I SIOn show
Series. But it was his humor "Mr. Belvedere and about.
that zoomed him to national 100 appearance on Johnny
prominence, and he turned his Carson's "Toni gh1 .. Show,"
jokes into slarring roles on Uecker " much dt ltcrenl on
television and the movies.
the rad1o.
His line - "Mus1 be in the
His
broadcasts rarely ·
front row!" - in a beer com- include the stand up humor
mercia! where he gels shunted that has made hi s a favorite on
from the box seats to the the banquet circuit. and he\
bleachers became a catch- known for being self-effacing .

basketball

James injures finger
but doesn't nliss a beat
BY JOHN SEEWER

Homestead Realty

www.homesteadrealtyl.com

B seball

Huntington advances.to state Uecker heads
to
Hall
of
Fame
finals with win over Wynford

Associated Press

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Anaheim -vs. Texas at Surprise, Ariz.,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel .com

4, 2003 .

TOLEDO (AP) - LeBron
James wasn't letting anybody
know just how badly he tore
his fingernail.
James bent back the nail on
his right index finger when his
hand hit the rim on a blocked
shot late in the first half
Thursday during a state tournament game.
He sat out the last two minutes of the quarter, but he came
back smiling and dancing on
the court to start the second
half.
With a green and white bandage on his finger, James threw
down a reverse dunk and
another thunderous jam off an
inbounds pass. A no-look pass
between his legs to a trailing
teammate proved he was just
fine.
He finished with 19 points
and had nine assists to lead
Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary to
an 82-32 victory over
Tallmadge in a Division II
regional semifinal.
James, expected to be the
No. I pick in this year's NBA
draft, didn't speak to reporters
after the game - one of the
few times he has missed a postgame press conference this
season.

osu

His coach, Dru Joyce II. said
the nail was bleeding a bit but
his star will be ready for the
team's next game Saturday
against Ottawa-Glandorf for a
trip to the state final four in
Columbus.
James injured the nail when
he leaped to swat a shot in the
lane. He grabbed the ball and
called timeout while bending
over in pain. He went to the
bench shaking his hand and
grimacing .
"It was hurting pretty bad,"
Joyce said.
Even though he played well
after the injury, he cradled his
hand against his body to protect the finger while he sat on
the bench in the fourth quarter.
At one time, he looked
dejected. Then minutes later he
was laughing as the Fighting
lr~sh
(23-1) finished off
Tallmadge (14-10).
In the opening quarter,
James seemed more interested
in setting up his teammates
than scoring. He had three
assists early on and didn't take
a shot until six minutes into the
game.
But with each no-look pass
and long-range shot. he
became more animated, blowing on his fingers after a 3pointer and flexing his muscles
along tl)e sideline after he

game going in the second.
Darby capped an 11 -0 run with
seven straight points to give the
Buckeyes a 59-47 lead and
from Page 81
seemingly lock up the game
with 2:43 left.
But they had some extra
But
the
ninth-seeded
motivation Thursday. They'd Hawkeyes ( 15- 13, 7-10)'
lost two of their last three weren't ready to quit playing
games, including a 71-64 loss just yet.
to Iowa in Columbus, Ohio.
"I just wanted to get the temn
'That game left a bitter taste back in the game," Leslie said.
in my moutll and everybody's "I did. I hit a few shots, and we
mouth," Radinovic said. "It we.re able to tie the game."
wa~ still fresh in our minds."
Boyd, the sharp-shooting
Ohio State looked like it was hero of the championship game
sleepwalking through the first two years ago, got the rally
half, shooting just 28 percent. started with a 3-pointer. Leslie
But they only trailed by four at then made back-to-back fi eld
the half and finally got their goals, including a scoop shot

jumped into the air and threw a
bullet pass to Corey Jones for a
layup.
"He was amazing." said
Dion Harvey, a forward for
Tallmadge. "It was real fun. I
think we ef\ioyed it."
His opponents seemed honored just to share the same
floor with him .
"I kind of felt helpless," said
5-foot-8 guard Shaun Rine. "I
think I came up to hi s waist."
James put on a show from
the first minute he stepped on
the court for the pregame
warmup with reverse dunks
and alley-oop slams. Even the
referees and a couple of
Tallmadge players couldn 't
help from sneaking looks all the while shaking their
heads and smiling. Tallmadge
students tried to distract James,
chanting 'overrated.' but it
only fired him up.
The game was a near sellout
at the University of Toledo.
Earlier in the mornin g. fan s
lined up' throughout the arena
to buy about 1,500 tickets that
those schools didn ' t sell to
their fans.
James needs just three more
victories to win his third state
title in four years - the only
tournament loss coming in last
year 's state championship
game.
from his hip, to pull Iowa within 59-54 with I :46 left.
After Connolly made a pair
of free throws, Leslie responded with a layup. Sean
Sonderleiter then stole the ·
inbounds pass and scored on a
layup to cut Ohio Slate's lead to
61 -58 with I :22 to play.
Darby made one foul shot,
but Glen Worley came right
back with a 3-pointer, pounding his chest as the bali swished
through the net. After a timeout, Ohio State scored on Zach
Williams' putback.
But Iowa was right there
with anot her 3. this time from
Leslie. to tie the game at 64
with 22.9 seconds left.

AI
I

FA

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
228 West Main

992-5432
••

Pomeroy

..

�Friday, March 14, 2003

www.mydailysentmel com

Page 84 • The Da1ly Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

d

Big Ten Tournament

CLASSIFIED

Davis praises officials, Alford criticizes player
Bv JASON STRAIT
Associated Press
C HICAGO Ind ia n,, s Mtke
Da1" h.ts ue1eloped a reputatto n for
cnttqttmg oll tctals m hi s short tenure
m ILhtn~ the Hoo, ters
He Jtu tt tgam Thursday - o nly
thts tttne he pr.J tsed the ofltctatmg
etc\\ thdt worked lndtana s 77-49 wm
met Penn Stdte
It s the best o ffictated game I ve
hall 111 ,, long tune Da&gt;ts smd 'They
olfiLitled tht s game ltke It was the
onlv ~ame bemg pla)ed m college
b tskelb.tll
Lttlle wonder that Davis felt all
'' .tl m .md fuzzy afterward
ln d t.tna was called for JUSt 13 per"''1.11 fouls dOd went to the free throw
Ime 26 ttmes Penn State was whistled
lor 2 1 loub and shot only seven free
tim""
Da1 ts hds never been shy offenng
hiS opimo n o n the officials He was
suspended eru he1 111 the season for
.ug umg a call a nd runnmg onto the

court m a loss to Kentucky In 200 I,
Dav1 s said after a loss to Butler that
"you can watch every one of my
games and you watch how we get
hosed down everywhere we go
• ANGRY ALFORD: Iowa com:h
Steve Alford made no effort to hide his
displeasure with center Jared Remer
after the Hawke)eS 66 64 loss to
OhiO State m the first round of the
tournament
Alford said Iowa as a team "really
got dommated ms1de '
He then smgled out Remer who finIshed with six pomt s and four
rebounds The 6-11 Remer entered the
~arne as the second-le11dtng rebounder
m the Btg Ten, averagmg 8 5 boards a
~arne, and led all players m reboundtog dunng Big Ten play
Afterward , Alford said Remer 's
play puzzled him
'That's hard for us to fi~ure out I
thought he was the most meffecuve
big man we had, ' Alford said
Remer had been parttcularly effecuve down the stretch, at least unul
Thursday He averaged 19 5 pomts

and II 5 rebounds mer the I.tst lour
games - mcludmg 16 pomts and I 0
rebounds m a 7 1 64 wm agai nst Oh to
State JUSt over tw o weeks .tgo
This ttme around he 11 as o utplayed
by Ohio State cen te r Ve lmm
Radmovtc ru1d backup Zach Wtlhams
Radmovtc had 14 pomts and seven
rebounds whtle Wtlltam s had 10
pomts and seven rebounds
For whate\et reason he d1dn t
work hke he s been workmg the last
two and a half weeks, the Iowa co.tc h
smd
I thou g ht Radin o\Ic .tnd
Williams really had their w.ty ~ tth
him tomght I thought they wet e mote
physical "
This will be a good learn mg expe
nence but he 's a JUmor now So the
learmng expenences need to take on a
little btt different mmdset '
• CARMODY OK: North~estem
coach Bill Carmody prono unced him
self line I m absolutely ltne' on
Thursday nearly a "eek after
checkmg himself mto an Evdnston
Ill hospital wtth chest pams
Carmod) le ft practtce on Fnd.ty

comp!Jttung of chest ttghtne" and
was held ovemtght for furthet testm g
The tests came bdck lme bu t
Carmody st.t) eel .tt home tor

Sctturdtty s g nne at lo'~"
I m tme They checked me out tnd
tl " ,,, nothtng wtth 111) he,u1 I m not

sure wh.tt It w.ts b ut I m Llotng I me
I m .tbsol utely Ime C tnnod) SdtLI
dfter Thursda} s wt n
• PENN STATE'S PROBLEMS:
Penn Stdte lmtshed 7 21 lo t the sec
ond str,ught year Alter tts IIN·r&lt;Junjl
loss to lnLlmna coach Jeny Dunn was
asked w hether hts cru-eet was lttnshcd
dl the sc hoo l
I \\ o uld hope to thmk th,tt I have
the opportu111ty to come back
he
satd After we stt do" n at the end o t
the ye.rr ltke we do every ye&amp; w tth mv
boss Time Curley and cv.tluate th mgs
I would like to ge t us b.t~:k on a wmmng tr&lt;1ck
Dunn coached Pe nn State to the
NCAA regtonal sem1finals two season
ago I tttle has gone 11ght stn ce
Attendance ts down dwppmg !rom
7 300 season ttcket holders ttl the fi1 st

year of Its new arena m 1995 96 to
The Ntttany LIOns also won Just two
games 111 the conference and fim shed
last m the Btg Ten
It was a dtfftcu lt season Without a
doubt I thmk that our team got better
.md I thmk we showed that and I thmk
we ha&gt;c som e very good young play
eiS that will give Penn State a lot to
cheer about m the future he sa1d
• TOURNAMENT TIDBITS:
Attendance for Thursday s three
gan1es totaled 16,299 an all-ume low
for the tournament The prevtous low
was 17 852 m 2000
OhiO State
guard Brent Darby scored 18 pomts,
mov mg h1m mto 21st place and past
Clark Ke llogg on the Buckeyes' career
sconng h st
Iowa's Brody Boyd
m.tde 5 ot II 3 pomters, a season
h1gh and has hit 22-of-49 m moe Big
Ten
tournament
g ames
Northwestern ad&gt;anced to play
llltnot s the second time tht s &gt;'ear the
Wildcats will face the Ilhm at the
Unned Center lllmms won the previo us meeung 73-61

C • IIJ County OH

In One Week With Us
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Offree llorq-tf

Selig considering Rose application Coroner's findings renew ephedra debate

..

~--·c:::

.... c:»...-.C:::E F
Sheriff Sale of Real
Estate State of Ohio
Me1gs County
Jeffrey C Hams et
at Plamtltfs
vs
Dale Holl aka Dale W
Holl Jr
aka Dale W Hill, Ill,
et at Defendants

Case No 01 CV 136
Pursuant to an Order
of Sale 1n the above

enlotled act10n I will
offer for sale at pubhc

auct1on
AT
THE
COURTHOUSE
STEPS 102 EAST
SECOND STREET
POMEROY OHIO on
Thursday March 20
2003 al 10 00 am
the lollowmg real
estate
PARCEL ONE
Situated m the State
of Ohio County of
Me1gs Township of
Lebanon Township
Two (2) North Range
Eleven (11) Wast,
Section Thirty lour
(34) and a part of Lot
Number 1182 being
more

particularly

described as lot
lows Being tho surtaco on ly of the lol·
lowing
Commencing at a
atone at the north
west corner of Lot

1182 thence eaat
along the north line
of said lot, a distance
of 1100 50 feet to a
point where the north
llna of said lot Inter·
sects the center of

State Route No 124,
thenca lasvlng oatd
north line along the
center of said road
south 83 degrees 36
minutes eaat, e dll

tance o1251 50 feetto
a point thence con·
tlnutng along the cen
tar of said road south
81 degrees 45 min·
utes east a distance

ol 338 70 feet to a
point thence contin·
ulng along the center
of said road oouth 72
degrees 10 minutes
east a dlotance of
125 00 feet to a point
thence
continuing
along the center of
saod road south 67

degrees 03 minutes
east, a distance of
534 80 feet to the
place of beginning for
tho herein described
tract of land, thence
continuing along the
center ol said road
south 67 degrees D3
minutes east a distance ol 392 00 feet to
a point on the east
line of the 80 acre
tract of land con
veyed from Joshua
and Sarah Spencer to
Fred
and
Edna
as
Wilcoxen
described In Deed
Volume 120 Page 172
of the Deed Records
of Meigs County
Ohio, thence south,
along uld east line a
distance of 804 20
feet to a post at the
southeast corner of
said 80 acre tract,
thence west, along
tho south Uno of .. ld
80 acre tract, a distance ol915 85 feet to
a post at the southeaat comer ol a 33 7
acre tract of lend now
or formerly owned by
Ronald and Hilda
Hart aa described In
Deed Volume 218,
Page 703 of aald
Deed
Recorda,
thence along Hart a
eut line north 22
degreea 12 mtnutea
east, a dlotance of
276 60 feet to a poat,
thence continuing
along Hart a line,
north 46 degreea, 45
minute• waat, a dla·
lance of 28 00 feet to
a point, thence leavIng Hart a tine, north
34 degreet 38 min·
utea, 30 aacondt tall
a dlatance ol 828 35
feet to the place ol
beginning, containing
fourteen and thirteen
hundredtha (14 13)
ecree, more or leu
Subject to teet·
mente ol all legal
hlghwaya and utili
ties
SAVE
AND
EXCEPT the coal
underlying
aeld
premll81 and right to
mine the ume
Being a part ol the
same premloee con·

veyed from Joshua
M Spencer and Sarah
Spencer to Fred Dye
Wilcoxen and Edna
Faye Wilcoxen by
deed
dated
December 22, 1919,
and
recorded
December 29, 1919, In
Deed Volume 120,
Paga 172 of the Deed
Recorda ol Meigs
County Ohto
This description
waa written August
29, 1979 by William
C Jewltt, Registered
Surveyor No 5758,
from exlatlng plats
and dtMtda and does
not represent a field
aurvey
EXCEPTING 3 00
acres more or leaa,
conveyed to Ellis
McMillan and Phyllis
McMillan by deed
dated March 24,1980,
and being recorded In
Volume 2n, Page n9
ol the Matga County
Deed Recorda
Reference Deed
Volume 332 Page
529, Metge County
Deed Recorde
PARCEL TWO
Situated In the
State of Ohio Melge
County,
Lebenon
Townehtp, T·2·N, R·
11-W Section 34 and
e pert ol 160 Acre Lot
No 1182 and being
further bounded end
deecrlbed ee followe
Commencing at a
at
the
etone
Northweat comer of
Lot 1182, thence a11t
along north line ol
uld tot a dlltence ol
1100 60 feet to 1 point
where the north line
lntereecte the center
of State Routo 124
thence along the cen·
ter ol utd road 8 83
deg • 38"E e dletence
ol 251 50 IMt to a
point, thence continuing along center of
road S 81 cleg 45 E
for 338 70 feet to a
point thence contln·
utng along center of
roadS72cleg-10 E
lor 125 teet, thence
continuing along center ol road S 87 deg
03 E lor 634 80 faet

FORT
LALDER DAL E
Fla (APJ A coroner
b!.tmecl e phedt t lor cotttt tbut
mg to the heatstroke death o f
Ba lllm ore pitcher .md the
ltndmg re newed deb.Jte about
the safety of the dtet suppleme nt
Consu me rs Umon sa td the
.tutopsy teport m the de,tth of
Steve Bechle1 was the latest
remtnder thdt e phedra ts dan
ge rou s
and
should
he
removed hom the market
pl.1ce
M o ntt ea l m.m ager
Frank Robmson s.ud the he t b
should be banned It om the
tn&lt;IJOI le .tg ues
But the dtet s upplem e nt
mdu stry defended ephedra .ts
s.tfe .md netthet the pia) e t s
umon nor commt sstOner Bud
Seltg took .t pos ttton on
whether It should be ba nned
tor b1 g leag uers
We re m 1111 ptepare d to
di SC USS the ISSUes rdtSed by
Mr Bechler s tr.tg ic de tth
w1th the Pl.tyeis Assoctatton
maJOr le.tg ue baseba ll s,ud 111
a statement
Toxicolog} tests coniirmed

to a point the true
place ol beginning of
the herein deecrlbed
parcel of land thence
continuing along the
center ol State Route
124S 67 deg 0 03 E
lor 180 0 feet, thence
S29deg-OOW
218 8 feet thence
West 67 5 feet thence
South lor 291 7 feet
thence West for
375 95 feet, thence N
34 deg • 36'30 E for
672 21eet to the place
of beginning con
talnlng 3 00 acres,
more or less, accord·
lng to a aurvey of
February 20, 1980 by
Wasley A Buehl, reglstared
surveyor
Ohto No 5965 subject
to all easements of
legal highways and
ullllttes
Alao being a part
ol the same promises
conveyed by deed,
Volume 275 Page
865 Meigs County
Deed Recorda
Subject to the
eaoementa of all legal
htghwaya and uttlltteo Being a part of
the 10mo premises
conveyed
from
Joahua M Spencer
and Sarah Spencer to
Fred Dye Wilcoxen
and
Edna
Faye
Wilcoxen by deed
dated December 22
11111, and recorded
December 29, 1919 In
Daed Volume 120
Page 172 of the Deed
Recorda of Melgo
County Ohio
Seve and except
the coat underlying
oetd premla81 and
the right to mine the
aame
Reference Deed
Volume 11 Page 503
ol the Metgo County
Official Recorda
Thlo description
furnlahed by Watley
A Buehl Reglllored
Surveyor
Perce!
One
apprataed
ot
$225,000 00 and can
not be oold for loao
than two thirds of
that amount Parcel
one Includes all

'-"'"~

._. a

I~

i J1!:: 1--..

Improvement except
the green house
Two
Parcel
appraised
at
$15 000 DO and can
not be sold for less
than two-thirds of
that amount
TERMS OF SALE
Each parcel shall be
sold separately and,
at the concluston of
each separate sale a
third sale shall be
conducted by the
Sheriff
w1th
the
beginning bid equal
to the sum of the two
separate sales If, but
only tf a bid Is
recetved
by
the
Sherttf exceeding the
sum ol the two separate sales then the
property shall be sold
to the b1ddar submit
ling the highest btd
If, on the other hand
no btds In excess of
the sum of the bids
from the separate
sales are received by
the Sheriff for the
sale of both proper
ttes together then the
successful bidders
from the two separate
sales
shall
be
deemed the aucceaaful blddera
Purchaser of each
parcel
shall
be
required to deposit
the sum of $3 ooo 00
for each parcel or
$6 ,000 00 for both
parcels, In the form of
cash, certified check
or money order at the
ttma ol sale balance
duo when deed Ia
delivered
Relph E Trussall
Sheriff
Jamea s Hugg ins
AHorney
(2) 28, (3) 7 14

PUBLIC NOTICE
SHERIFF S
SALE
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 02
CV-064
FARM CREDIT SEA
VICES OF MID AMER
ICA FLCA et al
vs
ROBERT E BUR

t

«•

~a--...-

.. """".,

DINE et al
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
In pursuant to an
order of sale to me
directed from said
Court In the above
entitled act1on I woll
expose to sale at
public auct1on on the
steps ol the Metgs
County Court House
100 East Second
Street Pomeroy OH
45769 on Aprtl 17
2003 at 10 00 o clock
a m of sale day the
followmg descnbed
real estate
Situate
In the
Township
of
Lebanon, County of
Meigs and State of
Ohio
PARCEL
NO
I
Beginning at the
southeast corner of
the
Southwest
Quarter of Section 34
Town 3 Range I 1
Ohlo
Company s
thence
Purchase
North t66
rods
thence West 86 rods
thence !iouth 166
Rods thence East to
the place ol beginning containing 90
acrea a•cepttng I 0
acres out of the
northeast corner and
8 acres out of the
northwest
corner
Also a piece of land
20 feet wide for the
purpose of a road or
outlet from the 90
acre lot formerly
owned
by
John
German deceased ,
and situated In the
southweat one forth
or Section 33 Town 3
Range 11 said road
to begin al the east
side of said d90 acre
Jot and running In a
southeasterly direction along a ridge to
Intersect the county
road near a home for
marly owned and
occupied by John
German
PARCEL NO 2
Being In Section 34
Town 3 Range 11
Ohio
Company a
Purchase Beglnntng
at the northeast cor

that stgll tf tLdnl .tmotlll!S Of
.tn O\er the co unter supple
ment co nt.tt n tng the he1b led
to Bechler s heatstroke along
wtth othe t l.tctots B10watd
Countv medteal cxamtnet Dr
Josh ua Pcrper satd T hm sday
fhe cmoner s teport closed
the
lllVeSt tg.ttl OII
11110
Bec hler s de.tt h b ut that was
ltttle consoldt ton for the
Ottolcs
II people .u c " uun.; lot an
,m swer .md tim 1S dll .mswer
lo t them the n tl s dosure
c.ttchet Btoo k Fot d yce s,ud
But we lost t ; eamnl.tte I
don t kmm how you put c losuie o n th.tl
Bec hl e t \\ ,ts t tk m ~o the sup
plement to lose w~t g ht .tl the
stan o f sp11ng ttammg w hen
ile co ll.tpsed Feb 16 The 23
ye.tr o ld pttc hmg prospect
dted the next d.ty alter hts
tempetattue tose to 108
Perpe1 s.ttd the toxicology
.mal) sts te1c tied stgntltcant
amounts o f ep hednne tn
Bechler s blood along with
sm allet .tm o un ts o f two other
stttnul .tnts Jl'cudoephednn e

i••

J :.&gt; atl-.lac...: l""'oo.o••• i ~ 4. .•s
I&gt;~ I a v c- a-c oel
I..C. I J!:.l-. t: t

ner of the Southwest
Quarter of satd sec
t1on thence south on
the lme between satd
German and Park
1DO rods to a post
thence West 14 rods
and 19 links to a post
on the east bank ot a
run thence North 100
rods to a post thence
East 17 rods and 9
links to the place of
begmmng contat mng
10 acres
PARCEL NO 3
Beginning at the
northeast corner of
the
Northwest
Quarter of Section 33
Town 3 Range 11
Ohto
Company s
thence
Purchase
West 30 rods to a
stake thence South
122 rods to a corner,
thence East 30 rods
to a corner thence
North 122 Rods to the
place of beginning
containing 23 acres
less
mora
or
EKceptlng t 0 acres
heretofore sold to
W C Orr off tho south
end and except a
right of ay heretofore
deeded to J C Rosa
by the window and
heirs
of
John
German, deceased
PARCEL NO 4
Beginning 30 rods
West of the northeast
corner
of
the
Northwest Quarter of
Section 33 Town 3
11
Ohio
Range
Company s
thence
Purchase
South 56 112 rods
thence West 29 rods 4
feet
to
Harrison
Darst s east Hne
thence North 56 112
rods to Ihe north tine
of
satd
section
thPnce East 29 rods 4
foot to the place of
beginning containing
I 0 acres 59 square
rods, excepting a
right of way heretofore granted to J C
Ross
PARCEL NO 5
Betng the East 50
acres
In
the
Northeast Qusrter of
Section 34 Town 3
11
Ohio
Range

and catte me That s const stent
"Ith takmg three or mote
tablets of the wei g ht loss supplement Xenad1me, Perper
said
Cytodyne Technolog ies
whtch makes Xenadrme, said
the coroner rushed to JUdgment
'The tact that the m edical
exd mtner found traces of
ephedra m Mr B ec hler 's sys
tem does not mean that Mr
Bechle r died from ephedra
He died trom heatstroke '
s,ud Shane Fteedman, legal
officer for the manufacturer
The Ephedra Educatton
Council ,m mdusLry group.
also di sputed Pet pel s conclu
SIOIIS
' Health pohcy concernmg
ephedra should be based on
sc te nti fie
evtdence ,
the
council smd 111 a statement
The current science supports
the safety &lt;Ind stgmflcant
weight loss benelits of
ephedra when It JS used
accordmg to mdustry standards"

Word Ads

Nc~:!SJ&gt;Op~r:s .
CJo

-y--=- L11 r

Company s Purchase
savtng and excepting
therefrom 44 314
acres heretofore con
veyed
Betng the same
real estate described
m daed from Pamala
Profitt nka Pamela
Burd1ne and Robert
E Burdme her hus·
to Pamela
band
Burdine and Robert
E Burdma recorded
tn Volume 318 Page
587 Deed Records of
Me1gs County Oh1o
PARCEL I D NOS
06 00021 06 00022
AND06
06 00023,
00024
Sa1d premtses have
been appratsed at
$t10 000 00 and must
not be sold for less
than I"Yo thirds of
said amount
Terms of Sale 10
percent down by
cash, certified check
or bank check (no
personal check&amp; will
be accepted) on the
day of the sale with
the balance due upon
confirmation by the
Court and delivery of
the Deed
The full purchaee
must be pold within
30 days ol the data of
the sale otherwise
the Purchaser ahall
be adjudged to be In
Contempt of Court
This Shariff 1 sale
oparatad under tho
Doctrine of Cavaat
Emptor the Metga
County Sheriff makes
no guarantee as to
status of Title Prior to
sale
Ralph
Trussell
She rtf!
Meigs County, Ohio
John E Bowers (No
0021415)
233 North Court
Street
Circleville,
Ohio
43113
(740) 477·13~1
Attorney for Farm
Credit Services ol
Mid-America FLCA
(3) 7 14, 21

"l:&gt;c&gt;e&gt; .-..

PUBLIC NOTICE
TO ALL PERSONS
INTERESTED IN THE
FOLLOWING
ESTATES PENDING
IN THE
GALLIA
COUNTY PROBATE
COURT The fidUCiary
In each estate has
flied an account of
his trust A hearmg
on the account m
each case w111 be held
at the date and time
shown below The
court ts located at the
County
Gallla
Courthouse, Locust
Street,
Gallipolis,
OhiO 45631
Dacedent s Name,
Case Number, Date of
Hearing, Time
Owen
0
1
Cantrell, 991027 April
15
2003,
10 00
o clock am
2 Hugh Niday,
002020, April 15,
2003, 1D OD o clock
am
3
Beulah
Carpenter, 011108,
April 15, 2003, 10 00
oclocka m
4 Gall Staaon,
D11113, April 15,
2003 10 00 o clock
am
5 Vera B 0 Dell,
011134, April 15,
2003 1o oo o clock
am
6
Wilms
E
Swleher,
011169,
April 15, 2003, 10 00
o clock am
7
Vtrgtnta
E
Hemphill aka Vfrgtnla
Hemphill
021127,
April 15, 2003 10 00
o clock am
8 Bernice Vlrgtnta
Pauley Roae aka
Bernice V Rooe,
021134, April 15,
2003 1o oo o clock
om
William S Medley
Probate Judge
March 14, 2003

r

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

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

I \ll'lll\

Oestrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid

1 ~t~10:"'"_ _ _ _ _.,

~

·
C 1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale Chester Townshtp
Metgs County send letters
of tnterest to The Datly
Sentmel PO Box 729 20
PomerQY, Ohto 45769

1

liELPWAr.:JFD

Avon Representattves want
ed (7 40)446 3358
AVON' All Areas' To Buy or
Sell Sh1rley Spears 304
675 1429

GI\ EAWA\

Busy Phys1ctan offtce has
lmmedtale open ng lor
3 month old German Jag Certtfted Med cal Asststant
Temer puppy (740) 388 and Recept on sl w/med cal
cod ng expenence Fax
resume to (304)675 3713 or
matl to JR12 200 Man
Street Po nt Pleasant WV
25550

Found black &amp; brown
puppy fema e South Th rd
Ave
Middleport area
(740)992 5182
LOST a purse taken at
Holzer Parkmg ramp 3/5
Return contents Call any
lt me (740)446 4312
LOST Chaco ate Lab puppy
9 weeks old Saturday
Btdwell/ Porter a ea Call
(740)367 7689 Reward
LOST
Black &amp; Tan Female German
Shepherd Weanng orange
collar New Haven 1 mtle
past Un1on Campground
(304)862 3570
Lost Brown/whtte boxer
male Wed 5th Eagle Rtdge
Reward lor hts safe eturn
(304)895 3742

r

Y&lt;\IID SAl f

i.t~::;;:;::~

"n
~

YiiRil SAI.Jo.GAILUQI IS

Movmg Sa e March 15
Bam 2pm reclmer table and
chatrs enterlamment center
computer desk ntsc !urn
lure cross bow guns and
clothes 290 White Road
Galltpohs

t

WAN"ITJI
I08UY

Abso ute Top Dollar U S
Stiver
Gold Cotns
Proofsets Damonds Gold
Rmgs
US Cur ency
MTS Cotn ShOp 151
Second Avenue Galltpol s
740 446 2842

Cert1l ed
Occupat anal
Therapy Assistant The
Therapy team at Overbrook
Rehab Center a beauhful
100 bed skilled nursmg and
rehab fact ty n Middleport
OhiO 1s seektng a fullllme
COTA Wages a e $32 S37K
depend ng on eMpenence
and beneftts tnclude med
ICal dental Ife nsurance
22 patd days off For more
tnfo rmatton call Greg Stout
at AZ D ve stfted Heath
Corp t 800 577 4310
CNA s
&amp;
AesJdeot
Asstsla nts lnterv ews Are
Now Being Conducted For
CNA &amp; Aestdent Ass1stant
PosttiOns If You Are A
Canng
Enthu s1ast c
Dependable Person Then
We Want You To Join Our
Team Come On Over &amp;
Check Us Out You I Be
Glad You Otdl Compellttve
CNA
Wages
Patd
vacatiOns Patd Meals
Many Other Benehts
Ravenswood Care Center
111 3 Washtngton St
Ravenswood WV refer
ences Requtred
CosmologtsV
Managmg
Cosmotog st wanted It you
want to work wth a team ort
anted staff and 1n a prem1ere
beauty salon Call Ctnda or
Lee at (740)446 2673
Offenng S1gn on Incant ve
and recruttment Bonus•
Full tune recept on stl sa esJ
oil ce asststant needed
good people sktlls baste
computer sk lis Hourly rate
plus commtss ons and
bonuses Ap ply at The
Image
Galery
11 10
Jackson P ke Galli pols
OH (7401446 7494

11t0

HFLPWAN"IliD

Crew Opportunoles We
seek career oriented ndtvtd
uals who wtll st ve to
achteve the best m customer
saltsfact on &amp; team work If
you have a des re to sue
ceed wtth a goal drtven
team or anted company
apply at Burger Ktng 65
Upper Rver Ad Galltpohs
OH
EASY WORK I EXCELLENT
Assemble Products at
Home Call Toll Free 1 BOO
467 5566 Ext 12t70
PAY

Help wanted canng for the
elderly Darst Group Home
now paytng mmtmum wage
new shtfls 7am 3pm 7am
Spm 3pm 11pm 11pm
7am call 740 992 5023
Now hmng
A leadmg
provtder to nd Vtduals With
mental retardatton and
developments dtsabtltttes IS
look ng lor help tn Galltpohs
No exper ence necessa ry
$6 35 per hou r Pad tram ng
f you would like to JOtn our
team to help tndtvtduals
achteve their lui est poten
Ita call (740)446-8 145 or
apply n person at MuXI eton
Estates 8204 Car a Dnve
Galhpol s OH An Equal
Opportumty
Employer
F/M/DN
NURSES (RNs)
$4 7 00
per
hour
Columbus OH All Umts
FULL TIME !800)437 0348
Part T~me Bartenders need
ed Contact Dave at
{304)675 3449 leave name
and numbe~
Part ttme help wanted
Aelt ed or JUSt need to gel
out of the house a couple of
days a week? A cove Books
s look ng fo a mature
respons ble person Come tn
and see E1leen at 17 Ohto
A ver Plaza lor deta1ls
PI Housekeeoer
PT Housekeepe Des red 4
hOurs da ly/2 3 days per
week occastonal weekend
for a coni dent al mterv ew
cal (304)273 9824 after
5pm
Truck Drivers mmedtate
htre c ass A COL requ1 ed
excel ent pay expenence
requ red Earn up to $1 000
per week Call 304 675
4005

~~:~:t:~T s©~~~\.-lG"B~s·

- - - - - - - fdltoo ~y CLAY I

Reorrang• leu•rs of the
lour scromblod words ba
low to form four :~~•rnt:~l• words

0

WOlD

GAMI

,OLI.AN

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S l RI LH
YAF T F

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j" I :::,'

The woman was try1ng on a
dress that was obvtously too
_
.
.
_
small • My husband was r1ght •
~==~==~==~==~=~-'"'.....,she stghed • too many calones
Gl E GI
!add up to an awfully b1g -- • • • • '
f---r,..:..-i,~sr=-rl;;..-Tj;....;'l,'iirl A Complo1o tho &lt;ltucklo quotod
W by fllf,ng 1n the m1wng words
11--.I...-L--1...,--L-...L...-1 you dtvolop from stop No 3 below
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PRINT NUMBEREO lETTERS IN
THE Sf SQU,\R£5
A

V

UNSCRAM8U ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ,\NSWER

llttO

IIIIII

Yesterdays SCRAM-LETS ANSWIRS

Torpor- Pornt • Decoy • Crunch • PIN DROP
Our son got a summer JOb worktng at a local bowling
alley Hts work shirts read " Bowling Alley A Place
Where You're Glad To Hear a PIN DROP·

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publlthlng renrvet the right to edit reject or cancel any ad at any lime Error1 mutt be reported on the first day of publication and
Tribune-Sentinel Regltter will be r11pon1lble for no more than the COli of the 1pace occup ..d by the error and only the llr1t Insertion We ahall not be liable
any lose or ••penn that r11ultl from tl'le publication or oml11lon of an advertiHmant Correction will be made In the first available edition • Bo• n~;:,~.::~~
are alwaya confidential • Current 111te card applltl • All real ettate advertltementa are aubject to the Federal Fair Housing Act ol 1968 • Thla r
accepts only help want.d ad• meeting EOE etandard• We will not knowingly accept an~ advertising In violation of the law

Abbreviations

\II ' I

"111&lt;\ICI"'

p m

Sundaya Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

ANNOUNO~!EmS

040

In Next Dav'• Paper

Sunday In-Column 1 00

V1s1t us at 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at (304) 675-1333
Fax us at (304) 675-5234
E-ma1/ us at
classified@ mydallyreglster.com

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

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

HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ

\\'\CH \(I \II \i"'

l\.egtster

V1s1t us at 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis V1s1t us at: 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at (740) 446-2342
Call us at (740) 992-2155
Fax us at (740) 446-3008
Fax us at (740) 992-2157
E-ma1/ us at
E-ma1/ us at
classified@mydailytribune.com
classified@ mydallysentlnel.com

Ad .••

Baseball
hen on a home he Ol' ns 111 the
Los Angeles area clattntng
he owes $151 689 m federal
taxe s from 1998
Bart was one of the best
fnends I ve ever had m the
world " Seltg sm d " Yes , we
did have a \ ery close rei a
tiOnship But as comnHsston
er, I have to do what I thmk IS
nght a nd make a deci s ton
based on the !acts
Bob DuPuy
b ase ball 's
chief
operatmg
otiicer
mtends to meet with Ros e s
bustness manager W.trre n
Greene later thts month and
Rose ma y attend that meet
mg
Baseball oftictals ha ve said
Seltg doe sn t mtend to make
a deciston for openmg d.ty
However he may allow Rose
to participate 111 ceremomes
to open C10cmnatt s new
ballp.1rk on M.trch 3 1 Rose
was granted perm1sston to
participat e 111 an on-held
sponsor's promouon pnor to
World Sen e s g ames m 1999
and last year

OH

3 266 this season

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

refused comment when asked
Bv RoNALD BLUM
about Rose who broke In
Assoctated Press
- - - - - -- - - - - -,.wifnttltrtltllwte Cmcmnau Reds to
1963 and later managed the
NEW YORK Base ball tea m until he was banned
u1 mmt " ton er Bud Seli g
"Bart gave Pete the nght to
conf1 tm cd Thursday that he
apply for reinstatement,"
ts tlt tl c ly constdermg Pete
Selig said
I kept 11 on my
Rose ' .tpphcatton for rem
desk for 5 112 years J thtok II
~ • lit: rnen t
was ttme to at leas t consider
Scltg wou ldn t put a
that
ttmcl thlc on a dectston and
As long a s Rose Is banned
Lhdn t htnt llhtch way he wa s
from baseball he IS mehgilc tnm g but hiS remarks fo l
ble for the Hall of Fame balln11 tttg ,t speech to sports
lot Selig said the commiS
husllt&lt;" executives were ht s
swner's offtce wasn t connlllsl dct.ttl e d public statecerned with that Issue and
mLnh on Rose smce he met
w tth tltt c ueer htts leader on that It was solely up to the
Hall of Fame board
Nm 2~
" I )USt need to look at his
Rose a2reed to a lifetime
application
for remstateh.tn It om baseball m August
19R9 fo ll ow ing an mve stiga- ment Selig said
G1amatu said that If Rose
u o n o f hi s gambling and
were to ever be allowed back
applted for reinstatement 111
September 1997 Until last toto baseball he would have
reconfigure hts life "
f1ll Sel tg re peatedly s,ud he to
Baseball
executives are look
s.tw no t eason to alter the
mg
mto
reports that Rose
puntshtnent that Rose accept
ed lt om co mmis sionei A was seen m January at a Las
Vegas casino and sports
B.trtktt G t.ml.ttll
In tcce nt months Selig ha s book and that the Internal
Revenue Service placed a

MelpCo~~onty

lblPWANTED

I f!lr=to:-"~B-U_SINE$
_ _...,1..,rt.O--~-~-~-ALE--r11
0 l'I'ORIUNflY

Sales persons needed
secunty systems cameras
mot on sensors etc rest
dentlal &amp; com mereta! sales
comm1ss ons &amp; bonus Send
resume
to
Sterl ng
237
Enterpnses LLC
Washmgton
St
Ravenswood WV 26164

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends that
you do busmess wtth people
you know and NOT to send
money through the matt unt 1
you have nveshgated the
olleri ng.
Someone who can deliver
MONEY
and tratn to repa r apph JUU
TOI..oAN
ances (740)446 7398
State tested nurs ng ass s John Blake
!ant needed fo busy Or 74D-992 5858
Offtce Mon F No week Congratulations' You have
ends or holidays Matl won 2 free mov e I ckets to
resume or b ng lo 3009 the Sprng Vall ey 7
Jackson Ave Pi Pleasant Galhpol s Ca I the Sent nel
wv 25550
lor details (740)992 2 ~ 55 )
Trash hauler mus1 have
COL liCense Knowledge of Second Chance Ftnanctal
Second
Gall a County area Ntght Lookmg lor a borrowtng
Chance
fo
sh H (7401388 9686
money or re estab tshtng
credtt We can help Good or
Dulles nctude bad cred t accepted Call toll
patten! s asststance offtee Free
I 866 576 4685
sktlls and some cleamng Follow the prompts.
respons1b Itt es
Fnendly
PROtl'S'ilONAL
atmosphere to work under
No phone calls pl ease '"---iiSiiEiiRVIItiiCE'iiio_ _..
Apply at Complete Care
Chtropracttc 10 A Airport
TURNED DOWN ON
Rd Ga hpo ts
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
Vtl age of Syracuse London No Fee Unless We Wtnl
1 888 582 3345
Pool are accept ng appltca
hons for pool manager 8. hie
guards for the summer sea
0
son appl cations are due
HOJ\.'IES
nlo clerks offtce by noon ~~---FOiiiiRiiSAu:iiiiiiia-r'
Mar 3 1 2003 Clerks Offtce
PO Box 266 Syracuse Oh (3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
45779
for tmmedtate possesston all
Wanted Med1cal Ofhce w1th1n 15 mtn of downtown
Ass slant for phySICtan Galhpohs Rates as ow as
offtce Rei able transporta 6"o (740)446 3218
tton expenence and com 2 bedroom 1 batll full base
puter sk Us preferred No men! Garfteld Avenue Call
weekends or ho tdays Fu I (7401446 1828
or part ttme Beneftls avatl
able Fax resume to 2 houses on 1 lot 1520 Oh1o
(304)675 7800 or ma11 to St Pt Pleasant $15 000
CLA 573 c/o Galltpolts Datly (304)576 2247
Tnbune P 0 Box 469 3 Bedroom newly remod
Gallipolis OH 45631
eted n Mtddteporl call Tom
Anderson
after 5 p m
140
BustNEN;
992
3348
'fJL\ININC.
3 bedroom 1 oath 2 story
Gallipolis Career College home tn Pomeroy 1 car
(Careers Close To Home) garage ltreplace (740)992
Ca ITodayl 740 446-4367 9492
18002140452
3 bedroom bath &amp; a half
www galt pol sea ee col ege com
large
I vmgroom
Rea #90 05 12748
kttchen/d tn1ng room uhllty
tao
WANTI I)
room attached garage
fenced
back yard one acre
.
ToDo
land on SR 124 naar new
24h Road Servtce Towtng school Reduced $50 000
and Manne and Auto Aepa r 1740)992 3911
Low Rates (304)675 7834 3br 2ba attached 2 car
garage pool many extras
Handyman yard work Senous
mqutres only
(740)992 2741 ask forT1m $105 000 (304)882
2531
House c ean ng reasonable 4 B~DRDOM HOME
rates opemngs now looktng 4 bath Only $14 900 Wont
to ftll &amp;Mper enced refer last!
For listings call 1 BOO
ences call (7 40)992 9761
719
3001
Ext F144
leave message
55 acre farm on SA 554 3
bedroom 2 bath hOuse w lh
Non smok ng
Chrlsttan basement 2 barn s 10 acres
mom wil babySit n my home pastu a Spnng fed livestock
on Mil Creek Call (740)448 tank Good nuntlng Stocked
3128
pond Free gas $125 000
Call (740)367 7266 between
9am &amp; 9pm
PRIVATE DUTY
Beaut1ful 312 home In prtvate
Wtll care for your loved one Charotats Lake on 3 acres
m their home (304)882 mil Many extras Must Seel
2766
(740)441 0381

r
F'

I

Qua ty Lawn care Mow ng
Plus Trimming clean and
weed flower beds hghl tree
trlmm ng 25 years expert
ence Keith Wh te (740)446
7t39

Brick Ranch 2 bedroom 2
bath garaQe on river 5
miles south of Gallipolis
(740)441 8817

G:t

real estate advertising
In this newspaper Is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act ot 1968
which makes II Illegal to
advertise eny
preference limitation or
discrimination baaed on
race color religion sex
familial statue or national
origin or any Intention to
make an~ auch
preference limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon

All

r M%':f~MES l..,tt·O--f~-~-~-SE'i-rr-rl
2001 14x80 Oakwood 3
BR 2 bath all appliances
mcluded Wei make down
payment ~au take over pay
ments of $370 month or buy
for $22 000 {216}35 1 7086
or (216)257 1485

used 14x70 3 bed
room 2 bath Only $799 5
Includes delivery Call N kk:t
740 365 9948
Land Home Packages av2t11
able In your area (740)446
3384
Last 2002 Model Lncoln
Park 64x28 3 bedroom 2
bath total e ectnc heat
pump delivered &amp; set on
This newspaper will not
your foundal on reduced
knowingly accept
!rom sss 365 to on y
advartlaementa for real
$47 485 Coles Mob le
estate which Ia In
Homes U S 50 East
violation of the law Our
Alhens Oh 740 592 1972
readers are herl!by
Where You Get Your
Informed that all
Moneys
Worth
dwellings advertlted In
this newspaper are
New 14 w1de only $799
avallable on an equal
down and only $159 96 per
opportunity bases
month Call Karena 740
385
7671
, _,
Debbte Dnve Galhpohs 3
bedrooms
2
baths New 2003 Ooublewtde 3 BA
$t29 ooo Call (740)245 &amp; 2 Bath Only $1695 down
and &amp;295/mo 1 800 691
9268
6777
Hurncane 3br 2ba Bnck and
Lens &amp;
Vnyl Mtd Entry w/plenty of
storage 1 car garage large ~--llliiAiiCREAiiiiiioiiiGiiE.,.aa;'
lot Owner wtl lmance w1th '
,.
$20 000 down $800 Per 3 acres 8 mtles outstde at
_m_o_nt_h...:130_4.:.15_6_2_5_84_0_ _ Pmnt Peasant on At 62
New home 4 bedroom 2 Dozer work done septtc
bath ltv ngroom tamlly well e ectnc on 6ft game
room dlnmg room den fence on 2 s des $20 000
(304)458 1916
mo dern k11chen 2 car
garage hp all atectrlc wtlh Mason Co 17 mtles from
In walktng distance Pomerc:~y M1l1on ex1t of I 64 near At 2
Golf Course 3 acres w/ctty water large tots tor
$116000
call Susan Double &amp; s ngle Wtde mobt e
(740)985 4291 work 740 home Vtnyl stdtng &amp; shmgle
446 7267
roof only Owner !tnancmg
Pomeroy spac ous 3 bed w/down payment $22 000
room 1 bath large lot (304)562 5840
$22 500 Dtscount for cash Patnot area 20+ wooded
(3041837 7507 (740)709 acres county wale eleclnc
0064
good home stte AdJacent
Pnced to Sellt $90 000 Wayne NatiOnal Forrest
1998 3 bedroom 2 bath Excelent hunt ng $32 000
large kttchen stone ft re (7401379 9141
place On Slate Route 589
IH'I\IS
tmmedtate
Possesston
(7 401983 0730
Hou.r:s
Thts cozy 3 BR Ranch home
FORRE'Nr
Is conven ently located tn
Greeh Twp JUSt m nutes
from town and hospttal Lg 1 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
level ot tn a beaultful coun Homes From $199/Mo 4%
try sett:mg Lg deck off dtn Down 30 Years at 8 5%
mg area Green Elem I APR For Ltsttngs 800 319
GAHS Priced tor a qutck 3323 E&gt;t !709
salel Serious InqUires only
please (740)446 0094
~r·~;....-~!"'"'-..,1 2 story house 3 or 4 bed
M~S~~ room ltvtng room famtly
__
, room 3 car garage (one
year lease) Depos t $500
1968 12x60 Tra ler new wtn Rent $650 Call (740)388
dows good shape ha s 6699
underptnnlng $5000 080
(740)388 8699
3 bedroom house ve y ntce
1994 16)CBO Cadtlac by Rodney Vtllage II No pets
Carollan CIA vinyl &amp; sld ng $475/mo plus depos11
shtngled roof Completely (740)446 3128
turntshed
$22 000
(740)256 6543
Good

c •.

r

Two houses for rent 3 BR 1
bath n ce pnvate $475 3
BR 1 bath f replace close
to town $550 References
and depostt reqwed Please
call Wtseman Rea Estate at
(74Q)446 3644

..,_ _ _ _ _ _rl
Noce qUiet c ean 2 bedroom
apartment Almost new
kttchen range and efngera
tor Furn shed forced heat
and AJC WID hookup Ref &amp;
Oepos t requtred (304)675
7628

North
Fourth
Ave
Mddteport 2 bedroom fur
•'OR RENT
n shed apartment depos 1 8.
references
no
pets
2 Bedroom At Glenwood (740)992 0165
Has Stove &amp; Relr1gerator
Washe D yer Sec110n 8
Approved (304)576 9991
TownhOuse Apartments
2 bedroom Ctty schools 4 Includes Wa1er Sewage
mtes from town $340/mo Tra$h $350/Mo 740 446
$340 deposit (740)446 0008
9~ 16 leave message
Pleasant Valley Apa rtm~nt
2br 1 112 bath Excellent Are now taktng Appl cattons
cond 1on on Sandh II Ad tor 2BR 3BR &amp; 48R
$300 month Ret requtred ApphcaiiOns are taken
no pets (3041675 3834
Monday thru Fnday from
900 AM 4 PM Oll ce s
Lorttted at 1151 Evergreen
For
Or 2 People
Dr
ve Pont Pleasant WV
References Oepos t No Phone
Pets Foster Tra1ter Park EHO No s (304)675 5806
740 441 0181
a
Tow1 ouse
Mob1le home lor rent no Ta
Apartments Very Spac ous
pets &lt;740 )992 5858
2 Bedrooms 2 F oors CA 1
Mob le home for re nt 1/2 Bath Newly Ca peted
(740)446 1279
Adult Poo &amp; Baby Pool
Palla Sta t $385/Mo No
Nce 2 bedroom ra1ler fur Pets Lea se Plus Secur ty
n1shed 15 mm from Pt Depos1t Aequ red Days
Pleasant S400 month ... 740 446 3481 Even ngs
Depostt (304)675-4893 or 740 367 0502
(304)593 2032
Twtn Atvers Tower s accept
APAim\IENTS
ng appl cal ons tor wa t ng
Its! to Hud substzed 1 or
~
FORRENT
apa tment call 675 6679
1 and 2 bedroom apart EHO
ments furnished and unfur
SP\Q
n shed secunty depos t
.UHRIN!
requ red no pets 740 992
2218
20

MOBILE HOMES

r

t

Bedroom Apartments
Start ng at
$289/mo
Washer/ Drye r HooKup
Stove and Refngerator
{740)441 1519
BEAUTIFUL
APART
MENTS AT BUOGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood
Dr ve !rom $297 to $383
Walk to shop &amp; movtes Call
740 446 2568
Equal
Housmg Opporlumty
Beech St Mddleport 2 bed
room fu rntshed apartment
ut Itt es pa1d depostl &amp; tefer
ences no pets (740)992
0165
For rent one and two room
apartments wtth shared
bath ut hiles ncluded $200
stngte $250 couple 607
2nd Ave (740)446 8677
days
(740)256 19n
evenmgs
Furn shed efftc1ency down
statrs 919 2nd Avenue 3
rooms &amp; bath All ut Itt es
patd $295/ mo (740)446
3945

For Sale Recond toned
washers dryers and rei g
erators
Thompsons
Appl ance 3407 Jackson
Avenue (304)675 7388

1997 Redman New Moon
14x48 all alec /AC 6x8
deck e•c cond tlon Ask ng
cred t union blue book prtce
$9 BOO (304)695 3t31

Gractous Iv ng 1 anc! 2 bed
room apa tments at v Iage
3br 1 bath ce port pond Manor and Rtverstde
$450 a month pus secunty Apartments n Mddlepo t
deposit (740)992 6244 or From $278 $348 Call 740
(330)328 6863
992 5064 EQua Hous ng
Opportun Ies

Good Used Appliances
Reco 1d toned
and
Guaranteed
Washers
Dryers
Ranges
and
Refr gerato s Some start at
$95 Skaggs App tances 76
V ne St (740)446 7398
Kenmore washe r $95
Kenmo e dryer $95 GE
Fm:!ge wh te Frost free ltke
new $350 Range 30
wh te $95 Queen s ze bed
room sutte blond S200
K1ng s ze bed $ ~ 50 Dn ng
room chars wooden $20
each Couch $50 Skaggs
Appl ance 76 Vme Street
1740)446 7396
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
Chapel Road Porter Oh o
{7401446 7444 1 877 830
9182 Free Est mates Easy
hnanc ng 90 days same as
cash Vsa Master Cs d
Dr ve a lit! e save atot
New sofa &amp; Cha r $399
9x 12 carpel room s ze $50
Mo Iehan Carpet &amp; Furn tu e
(740)446 7444
Cla k
Chapel Road Porter OH

Blowout sale on all S ngle
Section hOmes save thou
sands good unt February
29 (7 40)448 3093

One &amp; Two bedroom homes
tor rent on upper 3rd
Avenue Call (740)441 0219
after 4 OOpm

TWo or lh ee bedroom apa t
men1s 920 4th Ave utlllt es
mcluded $450 (740)446
8677 1740)256 1972

Sola &amp; Love Seat $500
Ant que Dnmg Set $500
Anttque Oak Chest S75
(740)2S6 1249

�fL,.•o-·H•&lt;.&amp;ou,
; ;os•E:H:(o~..uJ-,JI L,t__,;r,11oPl; ,R11sli~~•. _,.,I r•o

I.

E.: .

Used Furniture Store. 130
Bulaville P1ke .. We sell mattresses. dressers, couches.
· appl1ances. bedroom sui1es.
recliners
Grave menumen ts.
(740 )446·4782
GalliPOliS. OH. Wanted to
bl!y- good used couches .
mattresses. dressers

AKC
Registered
Male
Miniatu re Pinscher. Block/
Tan . 6 mo. old. all shots. tail/
ears cropped . $320 f1 rm .
Serious inquirss on ly. Call
Bn an (740)446~0682

1987 Pontiac F1ero GT
Automatic trans . En gine
rebuilt with less than 20.000
miles. Good tires, Interior
good . body good . $3.000
obo. (304)458-2551

AKC Registe red Pug . 1
male
1 female . shots .
wormed . vet cnecked . Now
depos1ts.
Whlllpool &amp; Kenmor e wash- accep ting
er, · $65 each. Whirlpool (740)388·9325
dryer. $65 All white. Call
AKC Reg1stered Siberian
after 6pm. (740)446-9066
Husky puppy. 13 week old
mal e blacl&lt;. and wh1te w1th
A:VI'IQUf:,
Beaullful blue eyes Had first
shots. Mother and Fa ther on

200 1 Chevy Cavalier.

~

H OME

IMPROVF.Ml-:NTS

Arevou
laid on;»

L,....,;liii.iiiio-liiiilili.rl
BASEMENT

FRUHS &amp;
on SA 124 E Pomeroy. 14096 Lumina. excellent cond1992-2526. Russ Moore.
Vl·:GE'II\UU.:. "'i
lion , h1gh miles , white,
~...;.:;;,;:~:,;;,..J
owner
$3300 . (740) 44 1-9389
CRE SS GREENS. You cut
540 \'IN 'ELI.-'c'IEOlJS
$6.00 bushel. already cut live ly 's Auto Sales, 15 cars
MEN&lt;:HANIJ~l:
$12 .00 bushel
Charl es tor sale from $350- S2000
McKean
Farm
556 Cal l (740)388-9303 M-F
9 ceme tery lots at Mound
trom 9-Spm , Sat 9-3, c losed
Road.
Gallipolis.
Centenary
Hill. Pr1m0 location Even ing
Sunday. This is NOT a buy
phone n (51Ti553-2731
here . pay here ca r lot.
I· \lUI Sll'l'l II·S

AK gas generator. newer,
e1ectr1c
start.
$2000
1740)983·1900

~10

BURN

~--E·'.()i;IUOilill'fi;,;IE;,;;CNT
-..._.1

Fat.

BLO CK
BOOST

and

Energ·{ Like
You
Never Expe1ienced .

WEIGHT- LOSS

Remodetmg,
Free
One 1995 and three 1996 Estimates. for All You r Home
Grand-Ams 1998 S- 10 LS Repair and Remode ling
Aula. A/C. 24k Ac1Ua l Needs, (7 40)992 -1 11 9
$6,295. Cavaliers, Berettas,
David's Home Repair
Mon te Carlo. We take
Electric11y,
Plumbing,
trades.
COOK MOTORS
Pai nting . We Do It All.
(7 40}44 1·5707
74()-446-0103
E. hi
1·
d Qh.
1g yea rs as 1cense
10
Dealer at same locations.
r---:---:-.,-- --,

.UI\1 .,101~

FARM

Have Cralt sman GT 300 Garden
Tractor. 6-speed , 42 inch

m ulCh ing deck . bumper
guard, wheel weights, new
New product launch October blades, used
1 sum mer.
23. 2002 . Cal l Tracy at Was $2400 new. askin g
(( 401441 · 1982
$ I 500. Phone (7 40)446·
IUR SALE
complele se t ot Griswold 8
_5_5_9_at_1e_r_6p_m_
. _ _ _ ..__ _ _ _ _ __.~
REVOLUTIO N

i

Cast l1on sk1llets. #0 thru 20.
15 Skil lets. Large Logo
Emblemf l'olith 4ft. high
medal disp lay ra ck, very
uniqu e. $4900: A lso Jumbo
Peanut Butter &amp; Apple
BUtter Jar Coll ection . Please
ca ll (740)533-3870

-------C&amp;C
General
Home
Ma1ntenence- Painting, v1nyl
sid ing. ca rpentry, doors.
windows , baths, mobile
home repair and more For
tree estimate ca ll Chet. 740992-6323.
-------Custom
Building
&amp;

TRucKS

;::::======::;

~~~

You'll

High&amp; Dry

Find

Self-Storage

Get A Jump

33795 HilandRd.
Pomeroy. Oh10

on

740-992-5232

SAVINGS

JD 4040 C/HIA; J D 12 19
Haybme: JD 200 ga l
sprayer : IH
fie ld cu lt
(740)256 _6011

1986 Chevy' Sub urban .
2WD. auto, needs transmiss1on, $800 080. (740)3677266
- -- - - - - John Deer X485 Tractor 25 1996 GMC E)(l. cab, pick up
H.P., 54" mower deck, power SL V-8 auto. exc. co nd.
steering . under warranty. 31 82,000 miles $8,900. 304hou rs on trac tor. (740)379-6-:_:75:__·7-=946
~:___ _ __

i

WANTED
'IU Rtr\'

I

--

In the
Sentinel
Classifieds!

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

Jlfzi:y
Motonzed
LIVE.&lt;;lUCK
W}lee lchalr, used I yea r.
Pa id over $6.000; will take
$4,500 If int erested . Ca ll
(740)256-6305. If no answer. 100% PUREBRED BOER
GOATS Few kids fo r sale
leave message.
Some
ad ults.
Proven
JET
Champion Bloodlines. Galli a
: AERAT ION MOTORS
Cou n1y grown. (740)245 Repai red. New &amp; Rebuilt In 0485 after 5pm.
StOck. Ca ll Ron Evans. 1- _ _ _:___ _ _ _
800 -537-9528
Bo arding,
Tra ining,
Co nditi on ing, Indoor and
Outdoor ri ding facilities.
Mori-Lee prom gown, 5/6 , trails and was h bay. 1· 740·
beautiful Royal Blue w/bead- 446·47 10
ed accents Paid $200. wore .:_::_::_:.::..______
once_Ask1ng $75 (740)256- Brooders, waterers, feeders,
incubato rs an d other poultry
9323
equ ipmen_
t . (304)895-3577
New &amp; Used Heat PumpsGas
Furnaces.
Free For sa le and extremely
Estimates. (740)446-6308
impress ive set of registered
Red Angus Bulls with pow·
NEW AND USED STEEL erful pedi grees and EPDs.
Sleet Beams. Pi pe Reba r They are yearling bulls with
For
Concrete.
Ang le.
Chan nel, Flat Bar, $!eel
Grating
For
Drai ns.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thu rsday,
Sa turday
&amp;
Sunday (740)446-7300

tio n . low miles.
g rea t
mileage. $395 0. (740)44 1~9::.:38~9_ _ _ _ __

wan led to buy, used mobile 99 Dod ge DUrango, good
homes. Call (740)4 46-0175 shape, 318 motor, 60,000
m iles, 4WD. $10,000. Call
or 304 675-5965.
(740)446·4484

1730

Classifieds!

Silve r ado
1993
4x4
Ex ten ded -cab,
loaded.
$8,900. 82,000 mil es. exc.
cond. (304)675-7946

---=-----1998 .Jeep Grand Cherokee
li mited , loaded, 32.300
miles, llke new in si de/o ut
$ 114 .900 OBO. j740) 9920640

49,000
m1les,
loade d.
Payo fl. $13,570. (304) 743·
0866
200 1 Dodge Durango SLT,
loaded, 4x4, 41,000 mites,
$20 .500 0 80. (740)44 6-·
6962
,;,;,;._ _ _ _ ___,

I.

I

4 ----'---- needs
wo rk ,
Nice large ch in a cabi net. --20::7~
(7 40)256-1304
Reg . Ang us bulls· Top per- (740)367 -7266

$ 750 .

formance blood li nes, Maine 2002 Honda Rancher 350,
Refrigerator, Chi- Angu s show heifers.
Wh irlpool
Hunter Gree n. 4x4. use d
Kenmore
SIC
range. heifers, bred heif ers and
less th an 4 hrs, with wind·
(,.3::,04::;15::,:7::,6·.:::29:,::0::,3_ _ _ _ cross bred bull s. Slate Ru n
shi eld Gun rack acces·
Wmchester Model 12. 16 Farm.
Jac kson,
OH. sories, $4500. Excell ent
40
GA .. 30" Fu lL Solid Rib. e,:
l7~
::l2:__8:::6_:
· 5::.:
39:::5_ _ _ _ condition_ (740) 441 -0972
Rare Barrel, l ength $1,700., Registered An gus Bulls.
Also Remmgton Model 11. 5- (740)288· 1460 ca ll afler
BoATS &amp; SMmoRS
shot Automatic. 16 GA., 32"
L,--·1·-·oiiiRiiiiiiALiiE-..,.1
_5 ,p;m~·--~~~--....,
Full $1 ,200, or Both for II'
$2,700. Both guns excellent.
ft\y &amp;
1969 Gtastron Boat 14 foot.
new
carpet, Depth Bounder,
~~7~40~·153-3·-38~7·0------~ ~. . . . . .G.wu._N. . . .rl
tro llin g motor, 9.9 Johnson
BUII.IJING
Hay- sq uare bales. seco nd Gasolin e, trailer- new tires
SUPI'UFS
cutting, 740-992-52 18, 740- a nd paint job. $ 1500 .
(740)441-8299
992·3912
BlOCk , brick . sewer pipes.
wifuiows, lintels, etc . Claude Haylage round ba les 60·90 t 997 Marada MX-1 S po rt
0
With
1/Q
135
W~ rfters. Rio G rande, OH 10 Alfalfa about 2000 lbs 17' 1 0"
$35·$40.00 per bale 304· Merc ruiser. Loaded. exce llent co ndition. garage kept ,
88 2·325 1
used very littl e. Trailer has
Wanting to buy large round spare tire mounted. A ll for
I~
mRSALE
bales of hay. (740)446- 1052 $7.000. Call (740)446·2444
AKC (M) She!tie. blta nlwh 8
anytime or leave a m ess~g e.
'llon th s. $150: AK,G (F)
10
brown Pomerianan. spayed,

r

~ 740·245~~

Auros

CAMPERS &amp;

MoTOR HoME.'!

......,;iiiiliii,;,;;iiiiiiiiiorl
1993 G-29 Conv van . Low
miles with or w/o 99 Starlite
25" Cam per_(304)895·3742

Pomeroy Eagles
· BING0 2171
Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday
of every month
All pack $5.fMI
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
Get 5 FREE ··

PC DOCTOR
We

~

Make House Calls

(10'x10' 610'x20')

Meigs Co. Bikers
Mizway Tavern
on the corner of St. At 7 &amp; St.
At. 143 Pomeroy, OH
Saturday, March 15th
7 pm-?
Live music by : AMIX
Raffles 50/50
Wet T-shirt &amp; Hot Buns Contest
Cash prizes
(Must have at least 5 entries)
Come party with us get
ready 4 summer
Info (740) 742-1513 or
992-6221

(304) 675-5282

740-992-1717
St. Rt. 7 Goeglein Rd.
Pomeroy

BISSELL

Best Service at
the Best Price

BUILDERS IDC.

N ~w Home~

Registered Nurses. Applicants must have
a current West Virginia license.
Flexible schedul ing, excell enl salary.
ho liuays. health msu rance singlelrami ly
plan. den ia l plan, life insurance. vaca11on,
long-term disabil ity and reti rement.
..:;,"' nd

rP ... IIn1f'' h 1'

CARD OF THANKS CARD OF THANKS

Card of ThankS
l h l'lf

We v.ou ld l ike to thank everyone fnr
kindn c'" du ri ng the lo s~ of our loved

Betty G•w•dall.
,\ "rccia lthank:-. to tht: Middleport

i-mcrgcnq S4u&lt;Jd

Vol unteer:-..

Dr. Cru m and the

Hol;cr MeJicu l C'L'nter Emcrg¢ nl·y Room :-.wiT.
kt:\ Odell Mank y. Bruce Fi ~hcr i.!nd tile FJ-;her
Futll..' f&lt;tl Ht)ml:' . Vaugho.111\ Su permarket and it\
~o.·rn ri\I Yl-'L'~

and L'' cryonc th~11 "ent tln"

L"f&gt;;.

1-llod . card-. ;md fttr allthL' \~ord&lt;., of
1.lllllfPn Ill nUl' I111K' pf \PtT\ IV.

Th is
mo nth
comes with sad
regrets
It rings back
days we will never
forget as each day
passes our emptiness grows.
The tears we
shed we can wipe
away, but th e ache
in our heart will
always stay.
Someday we can
be home with you
in heaven and that
will last.
Sadly m1ssed by
Daughter- Dorothy
Ann &amp; family Carl
Veith &amp; family

LARRY SCHEY

#cHivRok~T#

l'hone i74101~;93-6~o7tl
Athens, Ohio

75U Eas t Sla1e Street

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

30 Yrs. Exp. •

Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
Free Estimates

RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

Open 'Jwti-:i pm
I ·r.•e " '""'·"~'- r,,,,. 1n ~ " ' " ' 1'"- ~u p

Call "' r, r,,11 .1'•"" , ''"'•' ,,.., '"'"'I'

(740) 446-1812
"w
.\','ITiCo' /'/rm_l'

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417
·w.v-s # I Chevy. Pontiac.

Buick. Olds
stom Va n Dealer-

My money is wifh
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services,
Box 18 9, Middleport, OH
Phone: 843-5264."

At~ 11.1 uhrJ II!

TaKe the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Hill's Self
Storage

BINGO
March 18
American Legion
Middleport
Doors open at 4:00
Starts at 6:30 pm
Every Tuesday

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7
ACROSS

DEAR ABBY: I'm a 56year-old grandmother. The
love of my life died last summer. As I cared for him
throughout his illness, I grew
deeply lonely and despondent. Around that time I began
havins coffee with an
acquamtance of ours. To
make a long story short - he
gave me genital herpes.
Abby, PLEASE remind
your readers to protect themselves. This disease is a life
sentence. The physical and
emotional pain can be overwhelming. A couple of hours
in someone's arms isn't worth
the isolation afterward. Now
this affliction is with me for
the rest of my life. It's a horrible disease. There's nothing
romantic about it. I'm an
intelligent person who should
have known better. - PAYING THE PRICE
DEAR PAYING THE
PRICE: You have learned a
painful lesson, but an important one. Every sexually
active person, regardless of
age, should be tested before
engaging in sex with a new
partner. It is estimated that
one out of four sexually active
people have herpes - and 90
percent of them do not realite
they have it. If everyone acted
responsibly, it could save a
lifetime of pain, embarrassment and regret.

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
More information on this
important subject can be
obtained by calling the
Centers for Disease Control
National STD Hotline tollfree number: (800) 227-8922.
It is open 2417.
DEAR ABBY: The letter
you
printed
from
"Rehabilitation Counselor,"
advising people with seizure
disorders about state agencies
that assist individuals with
disabilities to become gainfully employed, was excellent.
However, I would like to add
more information:
Canine Partners for Life
(CPL) is an organization that
provides "service" dogs to
people with various disabilities to assist them in leading
more normal lives. These service dogs can be trained to
detect a seizure up to 30 minutes before · it happens,
enablinl! the individual to take
precaubons required to possi-

bly prevent or alleviate the
problem. - PETER ESHERICK, OREFIELD, PA.
DEAR PETER: I am
familiar with service dogs and
the important role they can
play in the lives of people
with disabilities. While most
of us are aware that Seeing
Eye dogs l,lCrform an important funcuon for sightless
peopl~, special dolls ca~ also
be tramed to retneve 1tems,
open and close doors, provide
stability when walking, and
alert their owners to oncoming seizures.
Canine Partners for Life can
be contacted by writing to
P.O. Box 170, Cochranville,
PA 19330-0170. The phone
number is (61 0) 869-4902 and
the fax number is (610) 8699785 . The Web site is
www.k941ife.org.
DEAR ABBY: I have been
with my girlfriend, "Adrian,"
for two years. She has always
been obsessed with my past.
Recently,
Adrian
went
through all my old letters
from ex- girlfriends, dating
back to early grammar schooL
Now she is demanding that I
burn them. I have refused
because she read them without permission, disregarding
my privacy.
.
Is it wrong to keep old letters? I've always assumed it's
OK until I get married - or at

Let me do it fer you I

liNIA'S PAINTING

4577 1

1 Ponytail
site
5 Child's
ammo

Si nc e JY7Y
S~r d,,e

l'rn&lt; Hk r t"m

RainSot't
Wat~·r Tre:HUICIH l ~ quip1 ll\.'11 l

least engaged. To me, the letters and notes are a "diary" of
sorts. What's your opinion?
- SENTIMENTAL GUY
IN IDAHO
DEAR SENTIMENTAL
GUY: Your girlfriend is jealous, insecure, nosy and nervy.
She has no right to "demand"
anything from you. If I were
you, I'.d .keep the letters and
give Adrian a change-ofaddress form. In the long run,
you' II be happier.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips, and
was founded by her mother,
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

MI. Vernon
740-397-975 1

Over 16

ye ar ~

Experi l'lll'C

949-1405

who entered Heavc:ll""lli
Marc h 16, 1999.
One day you were here
and walked beside us and
the next day yo u were
gone. You were here fo r
43 years and still we feel
so alone.

We knew GOD had his reasons but the
pai n is still the same as the day we lost
you and you went sadly away.
You gave me three sons.
so you cou ld live on.
Evere11... he looksjust like you and
Bruce .. . wi lh his calm smile,
But Ralph... has your younger years
to a "T" and now he 's even drivi ng
and says my Dad rides wi th me.
Your Mother mi sses yo u so dearly,
as an Angel with yo u soon she ' II be.
So wail by the living water and
wi1h her. your Aunt Wilma you
wil l also meet.
Dad. Tony a had our lillie gi rl just like
you said she wo uld. She is a beaut iful
baby 1ha1talks ahou1 her PAPA Bruce
that comes and sleeps 111 her room.
So IOday. I Jus I need lo Ihank you lor
always being my hest friend.

relat1ve

Saturday, March 15, 2003
BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

It may be all the nonmate-

rial things in life that bring
you your greatest pleasures in
the year ahead. You ' ll realize
the value of what is really important.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20)- A family issue that has
made everyone in the household a bit uncomfortable
looks like it can be resolved
once and for all today , It
won' t come easy, but good
things will come.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - An appropriate opening may present itself today to
get something off your mind
that you' ve been anx1ous to
thrash out with a friend. Everything will work out for the
better.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - This could be one of
your ·better days for getting
out and shopping for all those
essentials you've needed but
couldn't afford. You'll find
the right item at the right

rental

16 Two-piece

part
17 Aunts and
uncles
18 Fr. IItle
20 Trolan War
. story
22 Clapton
classic
24 Street
salutation
25 Hack
26 Theater
award
28 Acorn trees
32 Turkish VIP
33 Chest
muscles
34 Cool candy
35 Yard tool
37 R2D2's

owner
39 Worthless
coin

Sadlr miS.\'l' d and lm·(~J but JU:' I'er
for,~ol/e u '''' rite Caldwdljiuuilr

58
59

60

61

36 Per person
steps
38 Weak
8 Polynesian 44 Sheer

flnd
62 Willard's

63

earring

comment

7 Flight of

Image
46 Twig
junctures
9 Diva's solo
10 Cape Town 47 Jules Verne

~~g.

manager

captain

currency
Blob
Classified
DOWN
Tower over
Permlned
1 Carson
Fully aware
City's st.
2 Muhammad 24 Anack
25 Dwell on
3 Walk softly 27 Froze over
4 Hatfield, to 29 Usher's
beat
a Mccov
5 Bunyan s
30 Pinewood
blue ox
features
31 Small
6 Subzero

48 "Munsters"

12
19
21
22
23

pet bat

49 Left

50 Execs

Menu
phrase
(2 wds.)
55 -de
cologne
56 Viper
57 Rent out

53

The
newspaper 1s
a valuable
learning tool for
students of
all ages.
It
connects
the
principles and
facts they learn in the
classroom with stories and
events that are
hatiPetlin~ here and around
world.

price.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
- If you have a critical situation you need to work out today, take on a no-nonsense
posture. Once those you' II be
dealing with see how serious
you are, they'll fall in line.
.
CANCER (June 21-July
22)- This might be the time
to give someone who is indebted to you a reminder that
his or her obli~ation has gone
unpaid. There IS a better than
average chance that you'll receive at least a partial payment.
LEO (July 23-Aul!. 22) Even if it means puttmg yourself out today, tt w,ould behoove you to return the favor
to a person who has been kind
to you in the past. This (!Crson
will think all the more of you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sejlt. 22)
- Keep in the back of your
mind at all times today the
fact that you 'II have plenty reserves to draw uyon when
needed and you' I do very
well in competitive developments.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Conditions are ripe today
for attaining something
you've long desired. This
doesn't mean it'll be handed
to you on a silver platter, but
with the right effort, it can become a real1ty.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov .
22) - Altho1.1gh profits may
be harder to attain than you
thought from a ven&amp;ure with
which you've been associated, don't get discouraged.
Keep plugging and, in the
end, the returns will be there.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec . 21) - Re ly upon your
good judgment today and
don't alter your course or de-

cisions. What you take the
time to reason out will turn
out to be best for you and all
others who are involved.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19)- Even though the
pickings appear to be a trifle
slim, the fruits of your labors
today will yield a decent harvest. You' II use this as a lesson that, when one tries
harder, she or he can do well.

WORD®©®CD@@@@®·
0000000
@@@@@@@

0000000
@@(9@@@®
0 ¥. 0.T, 2°~~ "hlel,ler T~ol

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19)- A structured gathering
that .looked like it wou ldn't
come off could turn out as a
solid event: Much of this will
be due to your intervention to
make it happen.

@@@@@@@

WORD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDD H"MBRICK
C 200:1 iJIIIIICI ffi!UII Sfndkltl, IIIC ,

1st DOWN

-113
-

2ndDOWN =

.,...

AVERAGE GAME 235-245

89

3&gt;d00WN

•

41tlOOWN

= 78

JUDO'S TOTAL

0

Answer
• 87

• New Homes
• Ga rages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1671

0
0

l o!DOWN

999.99.9

©@®®®®®

to
previous
Word
Scrim-

2nd DOWN

0

+7 Pomts

'ooowN
'"

41hDown Tolal
+ 20POIO!$

AVERAGE GAME 180.190 ·

by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOUR PLAY TOTAL ' - - TIME UMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS: Malte a 2- to 7·1etter word frcm !he letters on eac~ ~ard•n e .
Add points to ead"o word 01' letter using scoring directions at right. Seven-letter
words ~~ a BO-polnt bonus. All WOlds can be found In Webster's New Wm1d

mag\! ·

Cologe Dlo1lonory

367

JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW
C 2003 Unlll! Flllurt 5yndlcllle , InC .

WELL, FOR
STARTIRS,
NO MORE
STAIRS!

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• ROom Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Deck&amp;

Free Estimates
V_ C. YOUNG Ill
992-62t5

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

Fu lly lnsmed ,

875-2457 or 448-2912

740-991-1119

oSl

--------·

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

t Driveways t Tennis Courts
t Parking Lots t Playg rounds
t IRoads t Streets

SEAL IT CONS1RUC110N
Roofing. Siding,
Painting. Electrical ,
Decks, Etc.
Free Estimates
992-1189 992-2902

CARE

Randall L. Shust
Owner

Certified Arborist

'full Ranoe of Services'
11l£.HillJLU~

in this
space

(140) 594·8724

for

TRUCKING

$75

HAULING :

per
month

·

52
54

Copa Jeannie
portrayer
British Inc.
Cow's
chew
Heredity
factors
Evening
Note
Sense of
sell
Label
Flawless
Wk. day
Graceful
tree
Refrain
from
Sourdough's

Pomero y, Ohio
22 Year~ Local

Frc~: E ~ t i uMt e~

•

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

Stop &amp; Compare

Window~

Advertise

50
51

15 Movie

y

Custom
Building
&amp; Remodeling ·*Free EsllmaJes *

47

14 Keo~h

~

*HOOFING
dOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMlESS
GUUER

45

11 Antelope
13 Museum
contents

Hours

l\ulh&lt;1fiJcd

42
43

8 Sailor

740-949-2217

HOWARD l.
WRITESEl

40
41

Astrograph

HNotme!

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and

• Cn mpk lc Rehabs

Pleasa nt Valley Hospital is curre ntly

Sales Re resentativc

• R cpl m:~mc iu

• Replace ment

uccc pti ng res umes for Fu! l time -

Steve Riffle

• V iny l

• Porches • Decks • Garages
• Sidi ng • Roofin g

REGISTERED
NURSES

Stop In and sec

Siding • New Garages

29670 Bash an Road
Racine, Ohio

Rat Terrier pup·
black/ tan , red/ tan . 1st
shots $150. (740)256-1 147

who God milt~d
lr omt' nvo yean a&amp;o
March 30. 200/ and
Dvrothy 21 yean
Mall ·h /6, /982

TFN

www_wvpcdr.com
cdoctor@wv cdr.com

March 14th &amp; 15th
Pomeroy Eagles
Band
American Highway

pie~

John ([nip-paw ) Veith

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

• Room AdJition\
• K i t ~.: h e n &amp; Bllth
Remodeli ng

HELP WANTED

Cellular

Spring Party at the

Re~ut iful

HELP WANTED

.ALLtEL

MANLEYS
HARTWELL
SELF STORAGE
STORAGE
97 Beech St.
lOxlO
middleport, OH
10x20

4--WDs

L,.---~;;;.,-.,1

great herdsire p rospects. 1740 MaroRCYa..F.S
Maternal grandsire tor both
bu lls
is
Leachman's
Monument $1200 each, for 1981 Harley Dav1dso n low
lh e serious buyer only. Call rider 11 oo mi les~new m otor
(740)682-3236
lots extras. As king $9. 000.
"-=:::...:.=---- {304)882-25 16
Full Breed half Linger filly. 10 :__:___ _ _ _ __
months old. $800. (304)882- 1982 Honda CXSOO Turbo,

$2 00
AKC
(M}(F)
HlR SAI.E
Po menanan, puppies. white L,..o....,;iiiii.iiiij,iiiio_.,.
sab)e $350 each; AKC (M)
blltan/wh 10 month s. Collie, SSOO POLICE IMPOUNDS!
Hondas. Chevys. etc! Cars/
N-eyes. $l SO; AKC (M) Blue Trucks !rom $500. For list·
Merle Collie. 8 months. N~:yes. $ 1SO; (7401696 _1085
ings 1-800-7 19-3001 ext
3901

Shop

VANS &amp;

==------2000 Ford Exp lorer Sport.

For more information ,
call Gallia Meigs
Cpmmunity Action

Agency
(740) 992-2222 or
(740) 446-1018

rloba rt Gas Welder &amp; too ls. 938 1
sl 700: Onan Pro 4000, ,.,,...._ _ _ _ _.., 94 Ranger. excel lent condi·
Generator.. $1500 : 1985
Dodge Aries &amp; 1987 Grand
AM- motor bad. good parts,
make
offer;
Giveaway·
Speed Queen dryer. dishwaiher. (740)446-7556

You could be
eligible for FREE
help getting
back to work

Natio nal
Agricu!Me
Week is 1
M arch 16-22

www.mydallysentlnel-com

Lonely caregiver seeks
comfort in wrotlg arms

Farmer!

2 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

CD player. spoi ler. Metallic
blue. 4 cylinder, 32mpg,
54.000 miles. $6500 060.
(740)441-1547

•

Friday, March 14, 2003

Hug A

M()f!JRHoMES

2003
Keystone Hornet
Lite, 24Ql with
many
optio ns.
$ 11,975
Ca ll
(740)446-9210 or (740)6452496 (cell)

door. automatic, overdrive, 1:'10

r.

.....I

=r~
CAMPF.
_
JlS_&amp;

WATERPROOFING
2001 Grand PriK SE . 22.000 Unconditional lifetime guar·
m1les, PS. PB, lo ad ed . antee Loca l references ture,:l7_:4::_c0)::_
94:.::9_:·2:::00:.::9_ _ _ _ nished. Establi shed 1975.
Ca ll
24 Hrs. (740) 4462002 Mercury Sable , fully
Buy or se ll
River ine premises S200 (304)773- loaded.
10.000
mi les. 0870, Rogers Basement
57
0 _ _ _ _ _...., $12,000. (304)675-3354
AnliQues. 11 24 East Main ;;,
;,;3;;,
Waterproofi ng.

Cra vn1 gs

Friday, March 14, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

I ... o.

R.B.
• Limestone
•Sand

• Dirt

• Ag Line
740-985-3564

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Marcum

Building
Service
• Ded" &amp;. Pon.:lu:~
• Room Adtlitiun."
• Roo fin g
• Viny l &amp; Wnod "'""
''Siding
• l nt ~: rior Rc modt•l1 11g
Gl! ncra l Cur pcntry Work

Mike l\·1an:u m, Ownt·r

ROUSH'S

LAWN
CIRE

,-- LAWN
MOWING
CONTRAOS
$ 15- $25 for
small yard
$35 p er acre

Call now to
schedule your
lawn care
seniice.
Insured

140-949-1101
1-886-28ROUSH

t!ITHI!It I'VI! AL.I&amp;NATIC'
IVI!It.,.ON! I KNOW .. .

\o.IM-11'1"- (1:1 OOWL.ING.- ,
TONtC.f\T, Tl-\0~1--1'(;
C.N'-I'i - 1 M ilE TO

I»TiUIC&gt; !&gt;. LE.C.TU~!

NO IUbt&gt;it-IC.. ?'
Ntt:: '(OU TN'JN' "C:OU~E. 1\T N t C:.~i
::,u.\001.- 1

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OI:OOJ Tlllvn I Ollt .

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1-\P\IJ 11\l(,

D\1\l'lt:~ WI~ M,'(
/o\~flt,lt-Jt-1- ~.~,.,!

.,

�•

www.mydallysentinel.com

Page B 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 14,2003

.,. If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/o The Gaston Gazette , P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053

What: Carolina Dodge Dea lers 400
Whore: Darlington {S.C.)
Raceway {1.366 miles), 293
laps; 400.238 miles
When: Green flag drops at 1
p.m. EST Sunday
Lett year's winner : Sterling
Marlin
Track qualltyln&amp; record: Ward
Burton , Pontiac, 173.797
mph, March 22, 1996
Race record: David Pearso n,
Ford. 132 .699 mph , May
11. 1968
Mott recent race : Bobby
Labonte's MBNA 500 victory
was made memorable by an

exchange between him and
runn er- up finisher Jeff Gordon that decided the race.

Gordon seized the lead away
from Labonte on the fi rst lap
{313) after the fi nal caution
period by passing him on
the right as the cars came
up to speed . Gordon's edge
was tantalizingly short-lived.
Labonte's Chevrolet quickly
tra cked down Gordon 's. The
two cars bum ped at the
star t- fin ish line as Gordon
led lap 3 14 . By the time
they hit the first turn ,
though. Labonte was around
Gordon - on t he outside,
no less - and ·streaking
merrily away to what eventually was a 1.27 4-second victory. "He didn 't do anything
to me that I wouldn't have
done to him." Gordon said.

IN

What: Oarlingtonraceway.com
200
Where: Da rli ngton {S .C.)
Raceway {1.366 miles),147
laps/ 200.802 miles
Wilen: 1 p.m. EST Saturday
Laet year'a winner: Jeff Burton
Track quallfylne: record:
Ryan
Newman.
Ford,
170.301 mp h, Marcn 16,
2001
Race record: Michae l Wal trip, Pontiac, 138.140 mph,
Sept. 5, 1992
Moat recent race: Joe Ne mechek, in a Chevrolet. won
the Sam's Town 300 on
March 1 at Las Vegas. Only
two Bu sch Series regu lars
are in the top five in points.

fllf

· ~ l·t'Jfl

What: Craftsman 200
Whore: Darlington (S .C.)
Raceway {1.366 miles), 147
laps/ 200.802 miles
When: 4 p.m. EST Fnday

Laat year's wlmer: Ted Musgrave
Track qualllylne record: Jason Leffler. Dodge. 163.703
mph, March 14, 2002
Race record: Ted Musgrave .
Dodge, 109.000 mph,
March 15, 2002
Most recant race: Ford driver Rick Crawford won the
season-opening
Florida
Dodge Dealers 250 at Daytona . The Truck Series returns to action this week after a one-month layoff.

v

U ~ ttf

E
R

JiMMY SPENCER, WINSTON C~P SERIES

s
u

Brett

~XCITED

AGAIN

After Atlanta, Spencer feeling good about ride in Sirius Dodge
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

0

CRAFTIMAN TRUCK

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RoQ§rt Pt!!Ui§):
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Mike W~il@ce
~nnl§ §~er

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WHO 'S HOT
ANO WHO S NO T
· • HOT: Matt Ken seth hes f in·
. Ished In the top five of three of
the four races.
1
• NOT: Since his Rockingham
win, Dale Jarrett has had a 41st
In Vegas and a 21st In Atlanta.

ne of the season's small suc·
cess stories so far is what Jimmy Spencer has done driving
the No. 7 Sirius Dodge owned by Jim
Smith.
In Sunday's Bass Pro Shops MBNA
500, Spencer starteil fifth and fin·
ished seventh, making him the high·
est-finishing Dodge driver. Spencer's
first top-10 finish of the season left
him 23rd in the Winston Cup points
standings.
1\venty·third place may not seem
like much, but Smith's previous driver, Casey Atwood, was 35th in the
2002 standings. Atwood, who is no
longer competing in NASCAR's premier series, went through the entire
season witho11t a top-10 finish. Smith
made the comment earlier that, in
the Subway 400 at Rockingham,
Spencer passed more cars than the
car passed during the entire 2002
season.
Also pertinent to the team's im·
provement is the addition of crew
chief Tommy Baldwin, who won the
2002 Daytona 500 with Ward Burton.
"We came together pretty quick·
ly," Spencer said. "Tommy Baldwin
brought a bunch of good guys in.
We've had some problems, but the
pit crew is impressive ... very, very
fast. I'm impressed how, in less than
a month, we've gotten a good relationship going. That's what you need.
If you can't get along with your peo·
pie, if they don't believe in you and
you don't believe in them, I'll guarantee you that's the quickest way to
failure there is.
"Earlier in the year, we said we
were looking forward to having a
top-IS car. I quickly changed my
mind to where I think we can win . .. .
I don't think it'll be long until we're
contending for a win."
Spencer, 46, has won twice but not
since 1994, when he won races at
Daytona and Talladega while driving
Fords for Junior Johnson. He fin·
ished 27th in the 2002 standings.
"Tommy and I have the same personalities, so you'd never think we'd
get along,'' said Spencer, who is orig·
inally from Berwick, Pa. "The
biggest thing is that Tommy isn't in·
timidated by me, and I'm not intimi·

Kenny
Wallace

s

Bodine

Th e two struggling drivers tangled
on lap 145 of Sunday's MBNA 500 at
Atlanta. Bodine finished 41st, and
Wallace mustered only a 26th-place
showing.
"We stru ggled with the car all
day, ~ Bodine said. ~T h e car was really, rea ll y pushing (difficu lt to turn )
and it just wouldn 't turn t he corner.
... I didn't know t he ye llow {flag)
came out. The guys checked up in
front of me, and I got into the side of
Kenny Wallace . I just hope I did n't
da mage hi s car too bad, but it was
totally my fau lt."
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton e1veo hla take: "It's been a
long year for Wallace and an even
longer one for Bodine, who pla ns to
skip Darlington and is runn ing only a
limited schedule because of limited
finances . Bodine is having problems
both on and off the track , and he at
least deserves cred it for owning up
t o his mi sta.kes. ~

V&lt; H l i t
I f r i r W, f

~I()M

I l lPN
'JI HI Hf MH P'"'

How dare Rusty?

H

John Clark/NASCAR ThiS Week

Jimmy Spencer said he couldn't walt for laat season to end with Chip Qanassl
Racing. Now Spencer Is driving a Dodge owned by Jim Smith, and the Berwick,
Pa., driver posted a season-high flnlsh of aeventh Sunday at Atlanta.

dated by Tommy. That's the key, I
think. Tommy really thinks I can do
it, and I really think Tommy can do
it. He never acts like he's above
those guys (on the crew). He's on the
same level as the guys in the shop.
That means a lot."
Spencer was a two-time NASCAR
modified champion. He began his career racing at Port Royal (Pa.)
Speedway. During his Cup career, he
has driven cars owned by Buddy
Baker, Rod Osterlund, Travis Carter,
Bobby Allison, Johnson and Chip
Ganassi, among others.
The 2002 season, in which Spencer
drove for Ganassi, was a bitter dis·
appointment.

"I was doing everything I was sup·
posed to do last year," Spencer said.
"I drove my heart out. I just didn't
get along with the people there. I
feel like you have to have good peo·
pie. Every team has good people, but
y9u've got'" be able to get along
with one another. The most excited
I've ever been in my life, and my
greatest pleasure, was the day I got
out of it.
"I love racing. I've done it my
whole life. I don't know when I'm going to retire or quit driving. When I
do, I'll probably own a race team.
I've given my whole life to this
sport."
Contact Monte Dutton at tug50aol .com.

ave you heard or possibly read
what Rusty Wallace was quot- .
ed as saying in a Dodge news
release Friday {Feb . 21) at Rocki ngham?
Wal lace said, "I don't know why
they (Chevrolets) were so good at
Daytona . ... Four or five of them were
cheating rea lly, really hard and didn't
get caught . The NASC AR guys know
it , and they're ou t fo r them when they
get to Talladega:
If I remember correctly, Walloce's
No. 2 Dodge was the one caught
cheating with an "unapproved carbu reto r" In a pre-Daytona qualifying
race. The Chevrole t teams of DEl and
RCR went through the same techni ca l checks as everyb ody else who
visited the dreaded 'room of doom:
I think the changeover from Ford
to Dodge and learni ng what makes
th is new body tick Is not sitting well
with Ru sty.
Burt F. Underwood

Fontana, CaiU.
We were aware of those com men ts. Th e lobbying be tween the
manufacturers has already started,
just as it does every year. And thereS
no sign of If slowing down anytfme
soon. Griping fn the garage Is com-

monplace nowadays.

I AN

I II •• -.

NASCAR This Week's Monte Out·
ton has a new book out.
"Postcards from Pit Road: Inside
NASCAR 's 2002 Season" (Brassey's
Inc ., $15 .951 t akes the reader
through the season week by week,
but it 's more than just a remem brance of th e checkered flags and
crashes .
From an encounter with cops extorting souvenirs In the Rockingham
infield t o a hot night in a Texas
hanky tonk, "Postcards " is irrever·
ent , freewheeli ng and, quite often ,
criti cal of the way NASCAR administers the sport.

NOW AT

..

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT .
1150 Elitem Ave. (St. Rt. 7) • Gallipolis, OH
I-FORCE
0 Tum Rider

(740) 446·9777 • (740) 446·1484
www.jimsfann.com

Supplement to
~allipoll&amp;

JBailp QI:ribunt
~oint ~lta&amp;ant ·~t!lilttr
The Daily Sentinel

. . . . ..

March 14, 2003

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