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'

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentlntl

~

· www.mydailysentlnel.com

.

.

'

. DEAR ABBY: Years
.ago, when I first became a
daughter-in· law, it was a
good lesson in how NOT
to be a mother-in: la,w. So
when · our son · became
engaged, I told his chosen
one I considered her " in·
law" status only a legality,
that I felt I was gaining a
daughter, and that wives
should
always
come
before mothers.
My husband and I
offered advice only when
asked and kept still when
we saw them do something
we thought was a mistake.
When our son had to
ttavel out of town for
additional job trainin~.
Dad and I moved into the1r
home at their request. We
had a great fime with · our
'g randchildren ani! made it
· possible for our son and
his wife to have uninterrufted time for each other.
am now a widow in my
90s and live in a lovely
apartment my son and his
wife built onto their home.
They visit and help me
whenever I need them.
. When we drive places, I
have always insisted on
sitting in the back seat
because I find it easier to
get in and out of the car.
(The kids often have

Dear
Abby
'ADVI_CE
things to discuss and I
don't need to know every·
thing.) Believe me, the
back seat "ain't" all that
bad!
My daughters ' live in
Virginia and California
and come to stay whenever my son and his wife
want to get a way. All of
them keep me busy with
my computer, getting my
own meals, knitting and
library books . My girls
call daily • California · in
the mornings !ind Virginia
to say good-night. The
kids here in town are in
and . out several times a
day. When I tell each one
how blessed I feel, my son
always says, ''Mother, you
reap what you sow." GRATEFUL MOM/IN·
LAW
.
DEAR
G~ATEFUL
MOM/IN-LAW: In most
relationships, your son is

right. Love and respect are
a two-way street. I receive
so many leuers about bad
relationsliips that it's . a
pleasure to print one that
detail s such an exemplary
one .
And while we're on the
subject, I'll reprint a
favorite item that has
appeared . in my .&lt;:olumn
before:
TEN ' COMMAND·
MENTS FOR A MOTHER-IN-LAW
by lola M. Irwin
Thou shalt . love ,
honor and respect the new
couple .
.
Thou .. shalt allow
them complete independence.
-Thou shalt speak only
kindly aod loyally about
them.
- Thou shalt not find
fault. .
- Thou shalt not ·visit
them too frequently, and
never enter '' their home
without knocking.
- Thou shalt not expect
them to visit . you too
often .
- Thou shalt not give
advice unless requested.
- Thou shalt not mention how much you look
forward to grandchildren.
- Thou shalt respect

•

'•

Thursday, April 3, 2003 .
ACROSS

4ccommodating mother-in-law
gets back what she gives.
.

1 Movie's
need
5 Incite
(2 wds.)
10 Kind of
basket
12 ..:.. c. Scon
13 Yearbook
14 Whodunits
15 Coral
formation
their .taste in hom~ decorating, thou-gh it differs 16 Promise
to pay
from your own.
18 NBAer
- Thou shalt petition
- Unseld
daily the Heavenly Father, 19 Tact
in whose love they abide, 23 Flock·
member
for their happiness.
26
Polite
Dear Abby is ~Yritten by 27 Helen word
of ~
Abigail Van Buren, also 30 Runway
known as Jeanne Phillips,
surface .
and wa ~ founded by her 32 Vexes
mother, Pauline Phillips . 34 Wing II ·
· (hyph,)
Write Dear Abby at .
35
l&gt;iano'plece
www.DearAbby.com
or
36
Arid
P. 0. Box 69440, Los 37 Male
parent
Angeles, CA 90069.
38. Repair
39 Nooks
42 Food
· addltlve
45 RN
r-------='----·'-"
"'' -'"'-..:.-.,
.- . '
employer

:Dining guide 2003 inside today!

46 Tart ·
50 Selnleld pal
53 Consumer
lure
55 Bath powder
56 Myatery
unraveler
57 Goya's .
home

•

Friday, April4, 2003 ·

you'll be expected to contribute your skills.
ElY BERNICE BEDE OsoL
CANCER (June 21-July
It's quite possible in the
22)- Because of your restless nature today, the day will
year ahead that you could ascend to new heights where
be more pleasurable for you if
you associate with active pals.
your work or career is con·
cemed. Your driving ambition
You won't be happy with
and unfaltering persistence
friends who drag their feet.
will make ·things happen.
LEO (July 23-Aug\.42) · ARIES (March 21-April
If you have recently handled
19) - Be assertive today in
something successfully, you
situations where you need to wouldn't be out of line today
protect your material inter·
tooting your.own hom. You'll
ests,..You can do so properly
know how to tell others about
witliout alienating associates it without appearing boa~tful.
or business contacts by using
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
your great personality.
- you need activities today
TAURUS (April 20-May
that serve to stimulate you
20) - Don't waste a whole both mentally· and physically
in order to .help energize and
lot of time today wondering
about whether your ideas will
invigorate your outlook. Tenwork or not. You'll know
nis, anyone?
quickl.Y enou!fh opce you put
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
!hem ~nto actton and can ad· • - Don't be timid about
JUSt thmgs as you go ~long. _ slanding_up...fuLy.o.lluights_toGEMI~I (May 21-JUl'ieZO)
day when needed. Just be- .There s a good chance you cause another guy or gal has a
could reap so~ ~nefits tc:&gt;bigger mouth, it doesn't make
day from a Situation that IS this person an authority or
not of your own. mak mg.
right about anything.
However, once mvolved,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.

' DOWN
1 Film
2 Teen woe
3 Douse a
candle
23 Sweater
4 Pablo's·
letter
aunt
24 Gamblers'
5 Want-ad
rolls .
abbr.
25 Dashiell's
6 State VIP
peer .
7 Raised
28 Norse king
8 Stare
9 Famed loch 29 Hairy
humanoid
10 Golfer's
31 Actress
goal
-Sorvlno
11 Doctor's
33 Jazz
office
Instrument
12 Lions' prey
35 Enjoys
17 Above,
37 Funny
In verse'
• -Deluise
20 A Peron
21 Walked tall 40 HS class
41 Valuable
22 Actress
fur
-Moran

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
42 New York
nine
43 Cuff
44 Festival
47 Grotto
48 Ovid's

Easter drama

route
49 German
title start

51. Here,
to Henri
52 Habit
w11arer
54 Years on
end

I

Troopers fraT the Gallia-Melgs Post of the Ohio State Highway
Patrol mvesttgate the scene of an accident Thursday on
Raccoon Road where a truck from the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Department swerved off the road and flipped ' onto its side,
killing the driver. According to reports, the weight of the water
in the truck's tank shifted, causing the vehicle to overturn.
(Carrie Ann Wood)

.

No matter what
direction you turn
you can always nnd
It In the
classlneds!

"1-10 !'M
\HA\i\H&lt;l foR
INSP\1&lt;1\i\0\ol
~ 5W.\I&lt;t.

22) - Someone with whom tain you allow yourself some
you'll be associating today leisure time as well. A recreamight give you an inspiring tional break will do you a
idea. If you can't use it Imme- world of good.
diately, you'll file it away and
AQUARiUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
develop it as time and ·events 19)- Because you'll be as
dictate.
strong a finisher today ·as you
SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 23- are a starter, much of value
Dec. 21)- You won ' t be re- can be accomplished. Tackle
luctant to dig in and give your • those assignments that you
work or career the momentum have found challenging in the
and jolt it needs toda~ to gen· past.
erate a larger yield. Extra ef·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
fort on your part will produce 20)- Although outside inter·
extra dividends.
ests might place some heavy
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· demands on you today, it isn't
Jan. 19)- Attend to your es- likely that you will mind one
sential duties and responsi· bit. They'll all tum out to be a
bilities today, but make cer· fun way of keeping busy.

WORD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTIONrurtBV JUDD HAMBRICK .
C

~

Ullflf!.l F..

S)ftdltllt, 11"11;.

lsi DOWN

,

,

-

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---~

• 83
JUDD' S TOTAL

Answer

128

Y_,_ 2n&lt;illOWH__,_lQ9

....

1

!

Firefighter
dies in crash

417

to
-

previous
Word
Scrim-

.

mage ·

Pumper truck
flips over on
way to fire

WORD ®©®CD@@®@®·
0000000
®®@@@®@
0
0000000 .
®®®®®@@!'to~:"'' 0
'"aovm

News editor
CARRIE ANN WOOD

Staff writer

2nd DOWN

AVERAGE GAME 170.180

FOUR PlAY TOTAL _;__
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

~~.take • 2- to 7-letter-won::llrom the lltlers on each yatdinl.
Add poWrts 1o 18ch 'MHd OJ kilter using scoring dirlllctionl at f91t. ~
worcs get • 60-I)Oint Donl.ls. All words can be lound in Wllbsler's New WMd
Co11e!Ja llk:llono&lt;y
JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

DIRECnoNS:

.....

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C».'(, f'!!l/11
11l1NK YOU'~ A
SIJGl(E~ l'OR

f;.,'OOJT' A Sl-ltii&lt;'C. '?

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~llaiV

GIJMIICK

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COMES AlllNG

AND NO PtACE

io uo· .. .

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·

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis firefighters today
are mourning the loss of one
of their own.
Veteran volunteer firefighter Richard A. Long died of
injuries he suffered .when the
pumper truck he was driving
to a brush tire Thursday went
off
County
Road
94
(Raccoon) and overturned.
Long, 56, of 335 Green
Terrace Court, was pronounced dead at the scene of
the 12:50 p.m. accident by Dr.
Daniel H. Whiteley, Gallia
County cor~mer.
A ·30-year member of the
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
The fire department was
·
called to the brush fire at
Department, Long was retired 12:42 p.m., Gallia County 9_
fr\)m M&amp;G Polymers at 1-1 reported. The pumper driApp)e Grove, W.Va .. He was ven · by Long · was the first
the sole occupant of the
pumper, one of two trucks vehicle on the road, followed
dispatched to the brush fire at by _a brush truck .
Firefighters Joe Carter and
3039 R
R d · CI
accoon oa 111 ay Ronnie · Phillips, en route to
Township. ·
Gallipolis Police Chief the brush lire in private vehj·
Roger Brandeberry, acting as . cles, cam_e upon the accident
a spokeman for the fire and called 9·1·1.'
department, said Long 's death
Sgt. Brian Rutherford of the·
· "
1 f h d
State
Highway
Patrol's
IS a great oss or t e epart- Gallia-Meigs Post said Long
ment and the whole city.'
was eastbound about 0.3 of a
"I've been around Richard
since probably about 1979," mile east of Ohio Route 218,
Brandeberry said. "He was wh~n t~e pumper, a 2003
one of the most well-liked Fre1ghthner, rounded a left·nremen over there. Always· a -hand curve. .
willing
worker, always
Long apphed the brakes
worked hard."'
Ple•se see FINflcJder, A5

~g8~~~~ :·J~ !.'" 0
~~82~~~ 0
by JUDD HAMBRICK

Grief counselors were on
hand Thursday afternoon to
assist Long's fellow firefighters through the tragedy.
"It's going to .be hard to
lose not just a co-worker, but
a good friend," Bra_ndeberry
said. "Our thoughts are with
his family."
City Manager Bob Gordon
said this morning that for
more than 30 years; Long
exemplified the loyalty and
dedication that is evident in
all ·firefighters.
"He will be remembered
not only through tears and
memorials, but also through
the effons of the 32 fellow
firefighters who will continue
to rise and respond to the call
of duty with the same dedicalion," Gordori said.
"The members of the
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Departm'ent are assured that
the spirit of their absent colleague will always be by their
side."

BY KEVIN KELLY

IT I~N'T "All
~E5!&gt;EO 00\IIN

.Index

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'

•

58 - -do-well

Astrograph

I

•

•

rn.
E-

:=-

~

Q,;,

•

2 Sections - II Pile-

Calendar
Classifieds
' Comics
: Dear .Abby
· Editorials
Movies .
Obituaries
Sports
· Weather ' -

A3
B4-6

•

87
B7
A4
AS
AS ·
B·l -4
A2

0 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
G

~

&amp;
The Last Supper, a portrayal

Last Supper re-creation·slated for April 11
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

News editor
POMEROY -A portrayal
of The Last Supper will be
presented at II ·a.m. · Sunday,
Apn·1 6 , and a1 7 :30 p.m.
Friday, April 11 , at the St.
Paul Lutheran Church iil
Pomeroy.
Open to the public, the program is described as an hour

of drama, music and worship
telling the story of Christ's
last supper with his disciples
before his crucifixion.
·It is being presented by
members of the congrega·
lions of the St. John and St.
Paul churches under the
direction of Julie Rice and
Shirley Hamm.
. Carla Shuler is organist for
the dmma and Frank Ryther,

the narrator. Soloists are
Hamm, Ryan Davis, trumpet,
and Adelle Rice, flute.
Hamm is in charge of cos·
tumes.
Taking roles in the-presentation are, (in photo from the
left) Charles Frecker as ·
Nathaniel, Bill Downie as
James, · Ray Taylor ·as
Andrew; David Ridgeway
(standing) as Peter, Terry

'

Reuter as Judas, Bill Young·
as John, Roger Stearns . as
Jesus, Richard Moore (standing) as Thom~s. Tom Reuter
as James, Bill Roush .as
Phillip, Dan Davis as
Mathew, · Jim · Fry as
Thaddaeus, and Allen Moore
as Simon.
Refreshments will be
served following the presentation.
1

United
Fund distributes contributions
..
$20,000 allocated
to local charities
BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff. writer
POMEROY - Agencies
supported by charitable
contributions from the
United · Fund for Meigs
County received their first
checks through the fund's
2003 fundraising campaigrt
Thursday night."
The
local
charity
fundraising organization
.. collects
contributions
' through payroll deduction s
and other private contribu- United Fuild for Meigs County Treasurer Bruce Fisher presents checks representing the 2003
tions, and distributes the lundraising campaign to Tonya Huffman, Holzer Meigs Hospice; Sandra Edwards, Gallia/Meigs
. funds on a quarterly basis Community Action Agency; Rev. Keith Rader, God's Neighborhood Escape for Teens.: Vicky Peckham,
to charities serving Meigs Meigs County Humane Society; Mary Wise, Riverbend Arts Council, Rev. William Middleswarth,
County residents.
· Meigs County Museum; and Diana Coates, Yesteryear/Seniors in Schools. (Charlene Hoeflich)
UFMC's board of directors allocated $10,000 to Shelter on Union · Ave., and other services forn.e edy Co.unty Council on Aging 's
local non;profit organiza- Pomeroy, .which provides Meigs County families; Yesteryear and S'eniors in
tions through the 2003 cam -. emergency
shelter · for Riverbend Arts Co\.lnci.l; the School programs ; · Holzer
paign, acfording to l[FMC homeless
men; . God's Meigs County Historical Meigs · Hospice: and the
President~ Tom Dooley, Neighborhood Escape fer, Society, which will use Gallia/Mei gs Community'
Those agencie s are Serenity.· Teens, a church-suppo(t~d , funds-to purchase archival Action Agency. which uses
House, ;a shelter for W()lil,ert·. ac.t-ivities ; .:enter . f.qr:',are~ .,,m~t,irii!Js ; ,. Meigs County UFMC contributions for its
and ch1ldren who are vtc-· yourh , based In ' Pgrnei'oy;·• Humane Society, which emergency fund.
·
· · tims of domestic violence, . the Mei!);-!i Cooperative uses contributions to pay
Sue Mai son served as the
based in .' Gallipoiis ;. the .. Parish, an ecuminical in is· the salaryof a hl)mane offi- . fund 's 2003 campaign
· Meigs .• Meri's, .:. Homdess·',sion ·.operatirig a food bank · cer and educator; the Meigs . chairman .

Together we've ,lost ·252 pounds.
And we're still losing .
•
•

ToLL FREE (866) 821-4541
•

•
WWW.CCWL.INFO
.

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I

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

.

.

Page A2

Local News ·

.The Daily Sentinel .

F~:iday, April 4, 2003

•

Adams County.sctJ9ols pushed
to renlove-Ten Commandments
.

Ohio weather
Saturday, April 5

CINCINNATI (AP)- The
American Civil Liberties
Union has complained that
four high schools in Adams
County have not removed
stone tablets · displaying the
Ten Commandments si nce a
judge ordered them to do so
last June .
The ACLU asked fe&gt;Ieral
. 'Magistrate Timothy Hogan
to find Adams County/Ohio
Valley School District officials m contempt. ·
"Enough is enaugh," said
Scott
Greenwood,
the

I•

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•IColumbu• l47'/53' I

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C1ot&gt;!y • Si'owels T-stonns

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furies

&lt;·-·O;tHC

&gt; Y~

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Thunderstorms possible tonight
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A front will remain nearly stationary today and will
act as a path for a developing low pressure system to
move east. The low was in
northern Missouri this
morning and is expected to
cross northern ohio tonight.
Showers will spread east
ahead of the front today.
Rain had developed across
extreme northwest ohio
during the early morning
hours, and will gradually
overspread the area today.
Scattered ..thunderstorms
will also develop.
The showers and thunderstorms will continue much
of tonight and then move
east late tonight and
Saturday
morning.
Temperatures on Saturday
will be in the mid 60s.
Sunday will be a dry day,
with temperatures · only a
few degrees below normal.
Highs on Sunday will be in
the lower 60s.
Another low pressure
system will set its sights on
the region and rain is
expected to redevelop
Sunday night and Monday.
:

WIATHIR POIIICAIT

: Tonight ... Showers and
· thunderstorms likely, main. ly from late evening on.
Lows in the mid 50s.

Southwest winds 10 to,20
mph . Chance of rain 70
percent.
Saturday .. . A chance of
showers in the morning,
otherwise partial dearing .
Highs in the mid 60s. West
winds 10 to 15 mph .
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Saturday
night...Becoming mostly
clear. Lows in the mid 30s.
EXTENDED FORECAST

Sunday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Sunday
night. .. Partly
cloudy with a chance of
showers. Lows in the mid
40s . Chance of rain 50 percent.
Monday ... Mostly cloudy.
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms during the
day ... Then a chance of
showers. Highs in . the
upper 60s.
Tuesday ... Mostly cloudy.
A chance of showers during
the day. Lows in the lower
40s and highs 55 to 60.
Wednesday ... Partly
cloudy. Lows near 40 and
highs near 60.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 30s and
highs near 60.

ADAY ON WALL STREET
. April3, 2003

10,000

Dow
Jones·

9,000
8,000

8,240.38

,!AN

fEB

Low
~
8,335.62 s,23tn

Pd.dmJI!

flan IJS'IiOuS .0.54

7,000
APR
Reconl h~: 11 ,722.98
'Jan, 14,2000

MAR .

April3:2003

1,600

Nasdaq
composite

1,-100
1,201)

1,396.58
PlidmJI!
flan IJS'IiOOS: .0.01

JAN

FEB

Low
11;1
1,412.08 1,389.95

•

1,000

Standard&amp;
Poor's 500

900

CANTON
(AP)
Attorneys for a woman
accused of disposing of her
twin babies corpses in the
trash say she was mentally ill
and delusional when she gave
birth because she did not
have proper medicaHon.
Pohce say Felicia Jennings,
35, of Alliance, gave birth in
her home in October and disposed of the bodies after the
. babies died a few days later.
Police believe the bodies are
·buried in a landfill in
Tuscarawas County.
Stark County Common

JAN

FEB

tt;l

Low

885.89

876.12

,MAR

·

He ran into problems fro"m
for the outset, police said. The
bank teller · argued with him
when at first she didn't understand his note dell)andirrg
mon~y. He then ran mto th~
store s p~armacy mistaking II
as the exit.
_Police_ followed Wedge
With cru1sers, dolls and a ~ehcopter, Dwye~ sa1d. He, h1d m
the Great M1am1. R1ver f~r
hours trymg to avmd the hehcopter's sensors, police said.
Sheriff's deputies Melina
Smith and Mike Smith began

Pleas Judge John G. Haas
held a hearing Thursday on a
defense request to suppress
Jennings' statements to
police and a search of her
home.
Jennings, who has b~eJ!
diagnosed with schizophrenia, has pleaded innocent by
reason of insanity to two
felony counts each of involuntary manslaughter, endangering children and abuse of
a corpse.
Jennings was arrested Nov.
. 19 after police investigated
suspicions that she neglected

to provide medical care to her
newborn sons.
Alliance Patrolman Scott
Blake said at the hearing that
Jennings invited him in and
told him about the birth of
her babies. Jennings showed
him a furnished nursery
upstairs and bloody clothes

.

{

CLUE FOR FRIDAY.
APR(L 4

,.

1,527.46
March 24, 2000

PLEASE
- Egg Is not at a place of business
- Egg Is not at a private residence
- Egg Is ,ndt Inside a man-made object
- You "VVII not need digging tools
- You Will not need to dlrrib or the use of a ladder

The Daily Sentinel

1 92

Brought to you by:

Rocky

Whatever your
direction DanTax
is the path.

Hupp

DULIL.IIdl

www.dantax.org

DoWNING

(304)675-4020
328 Main Street

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CLINIC

Poiat Pleasant, WV

CHILDS MUUEN
MUSSER
j

·Insurance

CROW'S
.
'

FAMILY

, CHESTER A card
. shower for Erma Cleland
was planned for ' the next
:meeting of Chester Council
; 323, Daughters of America . .
: Meeting at the hall , the
:qu arterly birthdays of Mary
•Holter, Gary Holter, JoAnn
, Ritchie
and Mary Jo
:Barringer were observed. It
:was noted that Be ulah
:Maxey injured her back,
:Deloris Wo lfe is not · well,
:and Pauline Ridenour is
' sc heduled for surgery.
The District 8" rally will
:be held in Springfield on
:April 5, and the Di strict 13
:rall y in Pomeroy b n May
: I 0 , it was announced. Dori s
·Grueser co ndu cted the
, meeting which opened with
;flag pleQges, sc ripture and
:prayer. A silent auction was
:held following the meeting .
:Games were played with
:pri zes going to J ean ~Welsh ,
' Laura Nice, and Jo Ann
Ritchie .·,

group.
property to a non-government·
When
the
Portland agen'cy, it does nol limit the
Elementary School building county's options in· leasing
was vacated in fa vor 'of the the building. and commisnew Southern Elementary sinners yesterday ;'a isJ a longScho!)l two years ago, the term lease may be the only
Southem Local Board of option allowing the commuEducation transferred owner- nity organization to proceed
ship of t'Jf vaca1it building to with · I hei r plans -- until a
the commissioners, to filcili- loophole allowing transfer of
tate a second transfer to the ownership can be found .
co mmunity organization. The
One such possi bility is 1he
gro up plans 10 ·convert the developm ent of a museum.
building into a multi-use ceo- which makes~s
u ch 'l transfer
ter for after-school acti vities,
legal, accordin to Petro's ·
athle ti c programs and a .
1 nd. museu
opinion, and com 1issioners
Bul'fi 11g 1o n 1sa
. in .
,
.
"We were given the tmpres- urged the org;mization 's
sion that the deed had been members to pursue. those
transfe rred. but three to four plans while a lease agreement
months later, we ' re back to ,is finalized.
"We d'on' t wan t this bu ild s4uare one," Duhl said. "We
don' i understand why thi s ing
in
our
name,
opinion came up after two Commi ssione r Jim Sheets
said yeslerda y. "The onl y rea·
ye·ar:S 0 f. d'ISCUSSI·o n."
While Petro's opinion · son we took il over to begin
stri ctl y limits the terms under with was to transfer it to you.
which the co unty can transfer in turn ."

. POMEROY - Meigs
Republican Party meetIng, .7:30 p.m. at the
Courthouse.
LETART
Letart
TownshiR Trustees will
meet at 6:30 p.m at the
office building.

Memorial
Pomeroy.

Drive, at 6 · p.m. at the ·
Fellowship room of the
Middleport Church of
Christ, Fifth and Main,
Clubs
and
•
in Middleport. For mo're
Organizations
informaton call 992. j}l : rl ' 1'' :~
7637 or 740-245-5559,
.Frida_y,' April 4
POMEROY - Meigs
County PERl 74 wtil
Tuesday, April15 ·
meet at noon at the MASON - StewartSenior Ciizens Center. Johnson VFW Ladies
Ther.e will be lunch at Auxiliary, Mason , will
noon followed by a pro- meet at 7 p.m. at the
gram featuring· Bob hall. Officers to be . "
Byer,
· Emergency elected. Potluck to foiManagement Agency 1
director, on emergency, ow.
plannmg and homeland Oth
t.
security.
er even s

SYRACUSE
Sutton
Township
Saturday, April 5
Trustees will meet at
HARRISONVILLE 7:30 pi.m. at Syracuse
Harrisonville
Lodge
Village Hall.
411, 7:30. p.m . at tfle
Wednesday, ARril 9 hail.
POMEROY - . Board
Saturday, April 12
of Health meeting at 5
p.m. in the conference MIDDLEPORT- The
Sams
Bend
room of · the Meigs Big
Chapter
of
the
Good
Coun~
Hefih
Department ,
112 Sam RV Club will meet

Monday, April 7
SALEM CENTER - .
A TB cliniG wil be held
at the Salem Center
Star Grange building
from 5 to 7 p.ni . giving
skin tests. Readings will
be done at the sme
location April 9 from 5
to 6 p.m.

'

PONnAC

aoos•
Ptlntlat:

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Pontiac
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Vlbe ll't

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" Images from ~ Front on page A8

Pontiac

Bult:lr
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Arch Coal - 18.42
Rocky Boots - 7.13
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RD Shell - 41 .68
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Sears- 25.02
GKNLY-2.75
Ashland Inc. - 29.93
Wai-Mart
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Hartoy Davidson - 38.50
AT&amp;T -14.95
Wendy's27.16
Kmart- .10
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Worthington - 12.20
Kroger- 13.41 ·
L1d. - 13.39
Bob Evans- 24.44
Dally stocl&lt; reports are
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BorgWarFll!r- 51 .60
lha 4 p.m. closing
081&lt; Hll F'•wriaf- 24.25 quotes of lha previous .
. ·champion- 2.96
· Charming Shops - 4.0fl OVB-22
day's transactions, proBBT-32.11
. City Holding ,- 28 .19
vided
by Smith Partners
Peoples - 22.75
Col - 18.41
Adwst
Inc. of
at
DG -13.09
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Pepsico - 38.17
DuPon1 - 40.16 •
Gallipolis.
"' Premier - 9. 15,

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Monda_y, April 7
RUTLAND The
Rutland
. Township
Trustees will meet in
regular session at 5
p.m. at the Rutland Fire
Station .

number of so-called "quar• year since 1978. In 2003 ,
ters" you needed to be eligi- yo u get the maximum of
ble for Social Security ben- four credits once you make
efits depended on your age $3,560. If you earn l ~ss
The end of March marked and the type of benefit in than that, you get one cred, the end of the fir st calendat.it question . And most people it for each $890 in earnings .
:quarter in 2003. And this needed 40 quarters for
And whether you call
:might be a good time to relir~ent benefits.
them credits or 'quarters,
:remind you that calendar
Bu?' for the _las t quarter- you still need 40 to be eligi·quarters no longer are sig- century, Soc1al Secunty ble for Social Security
· nificant time periods when coverage has not been _lied retirement
-..·-benefits.
it comes to earning Social to calendar quarters. Smce Younger people need fewer
·Security caverage.
1978, it has been based on credits to qualify for· di s: I will bet that you still use the amount of money ability and survivors bene'
:the term "quarters" when earned. For example, in fits. The number of credit s
:referring to the amount of 1978, you were given the required depends on your
:time you ~ve spent paying · maximum . of four credits age. For example, if you
into Social Security. It is once ,you earned $1.000. (If were born in 1960 and
very common to hear some- you made less than $1.000 , became disabled this year,
:one say something like: - you received bne credit for you would need 21 credits
·"I've got my 40 quarters for each $250 you earned .)
to be "insured" for di sabiliWe started calling, them
·
:social Sec ur·ity."
: For the first four decades "credits" because they were 1Y benefits .
:that Social Security was in no longer earned on a quarWe produce a publication
place , coverage was earned terly ba sis. But old habit s called How You Earn
on a calendar quarter basis. must die hard because 25 Credits. You can print a free
The general rule was that years later, most Americans copy at www.social securi_you earned one "quarter of still refer to them as "quar- . ty/gov/pubs/10072.html. Or
ask to have a copy mailed to
·coverage" if you made at ters ."
:leas t $50 in a specific threeThe' amount of earnings you by callin g 1800-772~.
:month
period : Januar_y necessary to earn credits for 1213 (TTY: 1-800-325;through
March,
Apnl Social Security purpo ses 0778) .
through June, July through was tied to increases in the
Lou Horv.a th is the&gt; manSeptember
or
October average national wage, So ager at the Athens Socail
'through December. The the rate has gone up every Secr1rity Office. ·

,

,.

Public meetings

SOCIAL SECURTIY

..

But
said Thursday
detectives
now looking
into whether it may refer to
Juliana.
"It does seem to fit," he
said.
Dr. Ihsan Ul Haque, president of the Islamic Society
of Akro'n and Kent, said the
graffiti was not a random act
of vandalism .
As for the message, Haque
said he's still a bit puzzled.
"It could be someone's misplaced grief," he s.aid.
Around
last
year's
anniversary of the terrorist
attacks, seven bullet holes
were discovered in a window of the prayer hall.
Mayor Don Robart sai~
police officers already make
hourly checks on the
mosque in patrol cars, and
now the city is considering
adding foot patrols around
the grounds.

REED

Ohio Briefs

:Contributor

And Win

J.

POMEROY - The tran sfer
·of the Portland Elementary
School from the Meigs
County Commissioners to a
Portland community grou p
has. hit a snag in the form of a
legal opi ni on from Attorney
General Jim Petro.
Commissioners announcet!
the transfer of the property to
the Portland Co mmunit y
Center earlier thi s year, bul
before a deed --could be executed, ah opinion from Petro
ruled the tra nsfer improper.
Mike Du!Jl , president of the
Community
Portland
Center's governing board,
and Portland re sidents Bob
and Joetta Greenleaf and Bill
Murphy. met with commissioners Thursday to discuss
option s for
transfe rring
re sponsibility for the building
to the non-profit commu,nity

Hy se ll said if the rates are
too hi gh, the village would
not be able to save any
money Jor repairs and
improvements .
With the small amount
money left over after each
mowii\g season, Hyse ll
hope s e nough can be saved
to eventually improve the
road through the cemetery.
The pavement is broken in
places.
The increased cost also
.could exceed the $15 ,000
ceiling mandat.ed by the viilage and state and would
require the· contracts to be
bid out. Any work below
that amount does not have
to be bid.
Mayor John Blaettnar sai·d
he thinks the increased
amount the current contractor wants is too much.
Councilmember
Jackie
Welker and other coun cil
members
echoed
the
mayor' s se ntiment. Welker
said that while he supported
·a ~erson' s right to earn a
livtng, he thought the price
the contractor is asking is
excessive.
Congo was not ple ased
with th e news.
"It doe sn' t mean a damn
to me if they re-advertise,"
he said .
Congo said he will " more ·
than likely not" re submit his
name for consideration for
the contract this year. He
said if the village wants
so mebody else who " will
work for nothing" then they
can have the job.

: Bv' Lou HORVATH

MORE.L~AL FOLKS.
j

POMERPY Pomeroy
Village Council plans to
advertise for bids to cut th e
grass at the village ce metery
after the current contractor
said he wanted to increase
hi s price .
The current contractor,
Terry Congo_, is considering
charging $250 more "per cutting than he did in the previous year.
·
Last year., Congo charged
$750 eac h time grass .was
cu t at th e l 0-acre cemetery,
located
on
Mulberry
Heights. During the wet season, which is petween April
and Jun e , the grass may
:need cutting three times a
~ month. During the dry sea. son, which is between July
·and September, the grass is
·generally cut twice a month.
· Congo, who was the only
contractor to apply for the
job last year, said he underbid the job.
Congo said the village
offered h1m a little more
; money during the course of
' the year, but pe· decided to
keep to lhe terms of the
original
contract
even
th.:mgh he wasn't making
that much money. Thhe he is
re que sting would put the
price per cut at $1,000.
· · "That's the cheapest I'm
going to bid," he said. "If
they can get someone for
cheaper, then God bless
them. "

Congo said he is chargin g
more
bec ause gasoline
prices have increased at
leasr 52 cents a gallon . Also,
he is p~ying .$ 50 more for
liability in surance premiurn s which have gone from
$350 to $400 since last year.
He also has had to make
more than $500 in repairs to
the equipmeflt he uses to cut
the grass.
"I didn't rriake enough on
the job last year to account
for my time," he said ,
Congo, who . 'also cuts
grass for several other
place s, said the time it takes
to complete the job varies .
He said if the village contacts 'h im to mow the cemetery a few weeks after it has
been overgrown with grass
and weeds, like during the
wet season, then it takes
longer to do the job.
Congo said he employs
four men .who cut weeds
while he mows the ce metery
with a riding lawn mower.
Congo said he and his
crew can complete the job
in three days or four .days,
or as little as 25 · hours,
depending on conditions .
Clerk- Treasurer
Kathy
,Hysell said the inc reased
rate could affect the budget
if there is a partic ularly wet
season. A f1ve-year, l -m ill
levy, which is in second
year of operation, provides
about $15,000 a year for
grounds maintenance at the
cemetery. A price hike could
exceed the cost the levy
covers.

:You say quarter.. J say credit

Income Tax by DanTax
AEP-22.90

and bedding in a washing
machine that filled with '
water as they talked. he sailf&gt;
Haas has ruled Jennings is
fit to stand tri al.
She remains jailed on a
$45,000 borid. Her trial is
scheduled for May 12 .

··. MORE LOCAL NEWS..·,

~ h~:

Local Stocks

'·

questioning Wedge when they
saw he was wet and muddy,
and he made up a story about
being . roblied and · thrown
from a oar. He then went to
the restroom and hid the cash
in the toilet tank.
The deputies called for help
and $I ,200 wa~ found. Wedge
s id he lost the rest of the
a.
. h .
m?.ney 10 t ~ ~tver. . . , ..
He also satd 1t ~asn t fair
because th1s w?s gomg to end
up on 'Amet1ca's Dumbest
Criminals,"' Dwyer said.

graffiti might be in reference
to the war
or
a

CUYAGOGA
FALLS
(AP) - Graffiti painted on
the side of a mosque may
refer to a victim of the Sept.
II terrorist attacks, pohce
said.
Members of the Islamic
Community Center founil "J.
MCCOURT 4" painted on
the side of ,the prayer hall
Saturday morning.
One of the victims on
Sept. II , 200 l, was 4-yearold
Juliana
Valentine
McCourt. Juliana was killed
along with her mother, Ruth,
on United Airlines Flight
175 when it was, hijacked
after it departed Boston's
Logan International Airport
and
then
intentionally
crashed into the south tower
of the World Trade Center.
The mother and daughter,
who were from New
London, Conn., were headed
to California for a vacation
and a trip to Disneyland.
Cuyahoga Falls Police
Capt. Jack Davis said investigators initially thought ' the

•

-;;-;;--~;;----;=----;-;;~ '700

'

he later confessed to the bank
robbery, said Maj. Tony
Dwyer of the Butler County
Sheriff's Department. Wedge
has been charged with robbery. ·
.
"He k~ew he had no chance
of 1eavmg Without bemg
an;ested," ~wyer said. "Good
fortune smtled upo~ us, H1s
on!~ success that mght was
getung the money."
Wedge robbed a FifthThird Bank in a grocery store
of about $1,700 earlier in the
evening, police said.

Police believe graffiti may
refer to Sept. 11 victim·

800

876.45
PlidmJI!
flan IJS'IiOuS -o.51

Bv J, MILEs LAYToN
. Staff writer

Since that appeal has not
come together, Manion said
he will recommend that
school officials move the
monuments.
"l don ' t see any alterna, tive," he sai4.
Manion said he thinks
school official s should be
g iven more time to complete
the appeals process.
"For ·some reason these
guys are afraid some kid 's
going to look at them and
turn to stone," he said.

Judge deciding if woman accused.in baby deaths was delusional

MAR

April3,2003

BY BRIAN

Staff writer

Robbery suspect arrested outside FOP meeting
HAMILTON (AP) -After
hiding out in rivers for severa! hours to escape· a police
search, a bank robbery suspec t stumbled up to a buildmg where a meeting was letling out and orfered some
men $100 for a rtde.
Th~ "men turned out ~o be
shen~f's deputies attendmg a
meetmg of the Fraternal
Order of Police.
.
They arrested John Wedge,
39, of Hamilton, about 10
p.m. Wednesday on an outstanding parole violation, and

Friday, April 4, 2003

Contractor ·in the weeds
Portland schdol transfer halted
wh.en ·it comes to price hi~e·

.

,,

1,00o
APR
Rtcord high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000

ACLU's lawyer. "The onl_y delay enforcement until they
thing left for them to do ts could file an appeal, said discl!fl the monuments away,"
trict lawyer Francis Manion.
.Hogan ru.Ied that display- · "The question is how mu.ch
ing the monuments on public time do we have to do it,"
property was unconstitution- Manion said. "It's not like
al and a violation of the se p- you can just go by and pick
aratio.n of church and state.
them up.'
'
The ACLU filed its lawsuit
H~ said school of(icials
in 1999 on behalf of Peebles decided last month to continresident Berry Baker, who ue to delay removal' because
objected to the display.
several
local
ministers
Officials in the rural south- jnvolved in the legal battle
ern Ohio ·district decided to · had. indicated they would
leave the 3-fqot, 800-J?Ound· appeal to the U.S. Supreme
monuments mtact, hopmg to Court.

Page AJ

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/

Den Dickerson
· Publisher

w, BUSH

Charlene Hoeflich

Editor

NATIONAL VIEW

Off base

'
''

I

ment ."

·

Now NBC owes its viewers an apology, too, for passing off
his "reports" as legitimate news.
11

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, April.4, the 94th day of2003. There are 271 .
days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
On April 4, 1968, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.,
39, was shot to death in Memphis, Tenn.
On this date:
In 1818, Congress decided the flag of the United States
would consist of 13 red and white stripes and 20 stars, with a
new star to be added for every new state of the Union.
In 1841, President William Henry Harrison succumbed to
pneumonia one month after his inaugural, becoming the frrst
U.S. chief executive to die in office.
In 1887, Susanna Medora Salter became the frrst woman
elected mayor of an American community -· Argonia. Kan.
In 1945, during World War II, U.S. forces liberated the Nazi
death pmp Ohrdruf in Germany.
Ten years ago: President Clinton and Russian President
Boris Yeltsin wrapped up their two-day summit in Vancouver, .
British Columbia. Clinton extended $1.6 billion in aid; Yeltsin
proclaimed the two countries "partners and future allies.''
One year ago: President Bush urged Israel to pull its troops
~back -from Palestinian-cities and dismissed Palestinian leader
Yasser Arafat as a failed leader who had "betrayed the hopes
of his people.'' Bush ordered Secretary of State Colin Powell
to the region to seek a cease-fire. Two teen-allers were sentenced to long prison terms in the stabbmg deaths of
Dartmouth College professors Half and Susarme Zantop.
(Robert Tulloch pleaded guilty to murder and received the
mandatory sentence of life without parole; James Parker was
sentenced to 25 years to life as an accomplice to murder.) ·
Today's Birthdays: Singer-actress Frances Langford is 89.
Composer Elmer Bernstein is 81. Actress Elizabeth Wilson is
78. Author-poet Maya Angelou is 75. Sen. Richard Lugar, RInd., is 71. Recording executive Clive Davis is 71. Actor
Michael Parks is 65. Bandleader Hugh Masekela is 64. Author
Kitty Kelley is 61. Actor Craig T. Nelson is 59. Actor Walter
Charles is 58. Actress Caroline McWilliams is 58. Actress
Christine Lahti is 53. Country singer Steve Gatlin (The Gatlin
Brothers) is 52. Writer-prQ(iucer David E. Kelley is 47. Actor
Phil . Morris is 44. Actress Lorraine Toussaint is 43. Rock ·
musician Craig Adams (The.Cult) is 41 . Actor Robert Downey
Junior is 38. Actress Nancy McKeon is 37. Actor Barry
Pepper is 33. Country sin~er Clay Davidson is ~2. Singer Jill
Scott is 31. Rock musiCian Magnus Svenmgsson (The
Cardigans) is 31. Magician· David Blaine is 30. Singer Kelly_
· Price is 30. R)lythm-and-blues singerAndre Dalyrimple (Soul
For Real) is 29. Actor Heath Ledger is 24. Actress Natasha
Lyonne is 24.
Thought for Today: "You can kill a man but you can't kill
·an idea." - Medgar Evers, American civil rights activist
( 1926-1963).

SPEAK OUT!
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Jarrod Oiler

BY J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer

Odds cfpassing drng beniftt in '03:Above 50-50
Harsh partisan rhetoric
attended the .launching of
rival Medicare plans last
month. Beneath the surface,
however, there's surprising
optimism that a prescription
drug benefit for seniors
might be enacted into law
this year.
When President Bush
unveiled his outline for a
revised plan to reform the
Medicare system and to.,.provide some drug assistance to
all seniors, it was denounced
by Sen. Edward Kennedy (DMass.) as "a sham and · a
hoax."
Senate Minority Leader
Thomas Daschle (D-S .D.)
declared that "once again, the
president will coerce seniors
out of Medicare and into
HMOs" and served notice
that Democrats are united
around the idea of "a . comprehensive benefit under
Medicare" - thht is, no private-sector reform.
House Minority Leader
Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) put
out her own no-reform proposal giving all seniors regardless of income - a
generous drug benefit at a
cost she estimated at $800
billion over I0 years
(Republicans ~ut it at $900
bilhon to $1 tnllion).
Bush said his plan, budgeted at $400 billion, was based
on "giving seniors a choice"
of health plan~. much · as
members of Congress and
federal employees have.
He contrasted his vision
with one - clearly he meant
that of the Democrats - in
which "the federal government decides care, the federal government rations care,
the federal government dictates coverage."
Despite . this yawning gap
in ideolo~y and money, however, vanous players in the

Morton
Kondracke

Medicare battle are expressing optimism that, at long
last, Congress might quit
USing prescription drug COV·
erage as a campaign issue
and actually pass a bill.
Kennedy staffers said their
boss rates the chances at
"more than 50-50." Rep.
Billy Tauzin (R-La.), chairman of the Energy and
Commerce Committee, put
the odds at "better than 5050." So did Alan Holmer,
president
of
the
Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufac!urers of America,
and Thomas Scully, head of
the federal agency that manages Medicare.
John Rother, policy director of the AARP, 8ut the
chances at "50-5 " · but
added, "I'm optimistic." The
most optimistic player of all
was Health and Human
Services Secretary Tommy
Thompson, who rated the
chances at an astounding
"80-20 - if it happens this
year."
The optimism is ba,sed primarily on the assumption that
seniors - who represent a
key swing voting block are fed up with Congress'
past promises of a drug benefit and failure to deliver.
Various players said the
pressure is especially felt by
Republicans because they're
in charge of both chambers
of Congress and • the White
House, and will get most of

the blame if no benefit gets lobbyist put it. "He put it up
passed.
Indeed,
House there as a rhetorical exercise
Republicans are planning to to fulfill his campaign
pass a bill by Memorial Day, promises , but Congress is
and Senate Majority Leader going to write the plan ."
Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) wants the
Lobbyists expect,that Ways
Senate to act by July 4, so and Means Chairman Bill
that a conference report Thomas (R-Calif.) will procould be completed by year's duce a dru g benefit bill conend.
taining limited reforms,
"The key IS Senate much like the one the House
Democrats ," said Rother. passed last year. .
"Will they really block a bill
They expect the Senate
just to keep a campaign issue J'inance Committee to evenalive?"
tually produce a bill similar
Tauzin agreed: "Se nate to last year's so-called "triDemocrats have to choose - partisan'' measure sponsored
do they want to stand in the by Republican Olympia
way of a benefit an,d risk the Snowe (Maine) , Democrat
political consequences? My John Breaux (La .) and
sense is that s~niors get it Independent Jim Jeffords
now - that shome peop1 e )ust (Vt.).
want to use t IS as a po1Itlca 1 That measure offered a
issue."
drug benefit to all se11iors and
Democrats do stand in an embodied reform only in the
advantageous
legislative sense that the benefit _ as
position . Most everyone opposed to all other
~xpec~s that Medicare
Medicare services - would
I~volvmg a. permanenl finan- be processed through private
Clal commitment - cannot .
.
be processed under the bud- msurance earners.
.
get reCOI)Ciliation rules that":' . Fnst and other Republicans
require orlly 51 vot~ but on the Fmance Commm.ee
will have to pass with 60, strongly favor Bush-style
requiring support from at Med1care reform.s -lx?th as
least nine Democrats.
a 1Jiatter of pnnc1ple to I!JtroTo get 60 votes, various duce choice and . pn~a~e
health
lobbyists
'imd msurance compeuuon mto
Congressional aides expect the system and t~ prevent the
that Republicans will have to system from gomg bankrupt
substantially scale back on as baby boomers retire.. ..
Bush's plans for substantial . But they have a political
Medicare reform.
Imperative to get 60 votes on
Bush wants a three-tiered the Senate floor. Kennedy
Medicare system that gives and the tripartisan group
Sj:niors the option of staying nearly reached a d~al . last
in the current fee-for-service year before GOP sun~mess
Medicare and getting a limit- and the Democrats' destre for
ed drug benefit or transfer- a campaign issue ended the
ring into two other private talks.
plans, one based on preThis year, though. the
ferred-provider networks and chances are better.
the other, with more-gener(Morton Ko11dracke is
ous drug coverage, on executive editor of Roll· Call.
HMOs.
the newspaper of Capitol
"Bush's plan is J?OA," one Hill)

Plays are
set at Meigs

coming to the center. He said
that those who have already
registered with FEMA do not
need .to repeat the process.
Gifford urged anyone with
damage who has not been in
contact with FEMA to make
that call right away and be
prepared for ' a 20 to 30
minute interview.
The information needed by
FEMA is . a current phone
Social Security
number,
number, a general list of
damages and losses suffered,
if insured insurance policy

number or agent's and company name, general financial
information. and a bank
account .code for those who
wish to speed up assistance
with direct deposit.
There is approximately
$1,153,473 in assistance
which has been authorized
for disbursal by FEMA.
Gifford said people who
have insurance should con.sider moving ahead with a
claim for storm damages in
the eveot some are not covered in the policy.

sprin~ recess as a watch officer Force Reserves trairilng at
in the Pentago!ls war room.
Maxwell Air Force Base near
- Rep. Steve Buyer, R-lnd., Montgomery. Ala. He recently
a lieutenant colonel in the Ann y said he has a better understandReserves who was a legal advis- ing for how most state employer in POW camps during the ees feel now that training has
Persian Gulf War, volunteered put him on the bottom of the
to serve overseas but the pecking order.
Pentagon turned down his offer.
"From the standpoint of
There are almost 217,000 empathy, I think there's tremenreservists and guardsmen cur- dous value," Santord said.
rently taking part in American · Another central Aorida politi·
military operations overseas cian,
Orange
County
and at home. said Pentagon Commissioner Bob Sindler, has
spokesman Lt. Col. ·Dan served as a veterinarian in
Stoneking.
Afghanistan tor the past six
While statehouses across the months.
When
Sindler
country have said occasional announced in September that
deployments are not a problem, his unit was being deployed,
some legislatures are pushing there was some outcry that he
for laws that would allow tern- wasn 'I giving up his job.
porary appointees to vote in
But there have been no calls
place of legislators called to for Baker - who commands
duty.
·
about 130 troops from Alpha
South Carolina Gov. Mark Company of the Florida
Sanford, a Republican elected National Guard's 2nd Battalion.
last November. is currently I24th Infantry Regiment - to
going through two weeks of Air quit.

During his State of the State
address in March , Gov. Jeb
Bush showed a video clip of the
lawmaker, dressed in hi s battle
fatigues during training at Fon
Stewart, Ga. Lawmakers from
both parties responded wi th
applause.
While Baker's desk in the
chamber remains empty, a political analyst said his absence has
actually worked to further his
aims on the House floor.
House lawmakers passed his·
bill last week that would give
private school vouchers to the
children of military personnel.
While the measure ww; opposed
by some Democrats who feared
it would siphon off funding to
public schools, it would 've
faced tougher scrutiny if
America wasn't in its current
"rally-round-the-flag mode,"
said University of Central
Florida political science protessor Aubrey Jewett.

Rescued POW's parents King's anti-war views reme~bered on death anniversary
MEMPHIS , Tenn. (AP) can avoid it," Lowery said. museum .
without more support from
say she's in good ~pirits -On
the 35th anniversary "That would be fretty hard 'Escaped
viet Jame s other nations.
~on

combat injustice. ·
In any event, is President
Bush neglecting a valuable
moral resource by not soliciting the views of the clergy in
tHe country's present crisis as
Roosevelt did in 1935? .
Should the president take a
leaf out of the book of
President Andrew Jackso n
who appointed a "kitchen
cabinet" in the 1830s? The
k't
1 chen ca b.met was a group
· d an d nonof ·non-appomte
1
1
d
d
·
· 1uded
e ec e a v1sers. 1t me
clergy, newspaper editors,
and ·. Jackson '.s longtime
friends and family member~
They were nicknamed the
"kitchen cabinet" becau se
people pictured them keeping
out of sight by coming into
Jackson's office ·by way of
the'kitchen and backstairs.
ki Jackson said he hoped the
·tchen cabinet would provide the kind of moral focus
needed to keep the shaky
union together. With our cultur'e in decline and our spirits
in . need of lifting, we are
looking . for the same moral
focus Jackson sought.
Could today's ' clergy pro· vide this?
·
(George R. Plagenz i.! a
colunmist for Newspaper
E11terprise Associar{on.)

in Meigs or Galla counties
who has any questions
involving any potential
financial relief from &amp;torm
damage should contact the
center.
There have been 56 residents in Meigs County and
82 in Gallia County who
have reported personal property damage from the' severe
storm that struck the area
Feb. 14.
Gifford said people should
regi ster first with FEMA by
calling 800-621-3362 before

Some communities feel the pin~h
when their statesmen
are also soldiers
.

Local Briefs

Does George W need a 'kitchen cabinet'?
In 1935, in the midsl of the
Enough." .
Great Depression, President
•
Gomes, who is Plummer
Ffanklin D. Roosevelt did the
Professor of Christian Morals
unexpected and turned-to the
at Harvard University, said
country's clergy for advice
that "Bombing Iraq into
on how to rescue the country
G
oblivion as payback to those
from its recession doldrums.
eorge
who have done us injury, at
"Because of the grave
Plagenz
·this moment seems to me to
·responsibilities
of
my
be the wrong thing to do. ...
office," Roosevelt wrote in a
' As a citizen 1 demand a better
"Letter to the Nation's
excuse than revenge, or oil,
Clergy'," dated· Sept. 24, ·
for the prosecution of a war
of the United States on the that is likely,to do more harm
1935, "I am turning to repre- mom~ntous matters of state ?. than good , that will destabisentative clergymen for
The 1ate Rab bi Rud o1~h lize not only the region but
counsel and advice, feeling Rosentha1once served on t e the world for year&amp; to come;
confident that no group can mayor of Cleveland's crime and that, worst of all, will
give more accurate or unbi- commission with four · other confirm for all the world to
ased views."
1
Th
·
c i!rgymen.
ey
were . see our .couiliry's reputation
Clergy from across the ridiculed as the "God squad ." as an irrational and undisciUnited StateS stepped up to Critics, Rosenthal said, often plined bully who acts not
the plate and just days later, asked, "What do they kno':" because it ought; but because
offered their ec~nomic sthimd- about. crime - these preach- it can. The full text of
ulus ideas, which tou~ ~ ers who have led sheltered Gomes' sermon is available
upon vanous aspects o t e lives?" Rosenthal 's response: online at www.memorieconomy - from Social It amused him to be charac- alchurc.h.harvard.edu/ser· d as a " naive
· c1ergyman mons/Patriotismnotenough.s
secun't y and Federa1 a1·d to tenze
'the ~blic Works Program in a naughty world."
html.
.
·
1
h
1
•
d
b
an even com atmg a co o
Should President Bush be
This is not to say that all
· Ihe c1ergy for the1r
· clergymen who are using the
consu Itmg
abuse.
·
· to war.? sorne church as. a forum to debate
Rooseve II Iater remarked views
on gomg
on how helpfu·l the replies ministers are speaking out on the morality of .war 'take
had been - and one would their own:
Gomes' position. Others
imagine that he took at least
The Harvard Magazine, in defend the use of force in
some of the advice to heart its January-February 2003 Iraq by using the argument of
.(though how much, we may issue, quotes the Rev. Peter theologians like Augustine
never know).
6omes, who spoke out and Aquinas that there is
But are today 's clergy wise against the war in a sermon such a thing as a "just war"
enough in the ways of the delivered on Oct/ 6, 2002, when military force is moral ,
world to advise the president entitled "Patrioti sm 'is Not · ly j~stified and necessary to

POMEROY - A disaster
recovery center for assistance
to Meigs and Gallia residents
who had personal property
damage in the February snow
and ice storm will be opened
in Gallipolis ne xt week by,
the Federal Emergency
Management
Agency
(FEMA).
The FEMA center wi II be
located at 1191 State Route

160 and it will be open kom
I0 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Monday
and Tuesday only before it
ceases operations at the site.
Financial assistance is now
available through the Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency (FEMA) to both
Meigs and Gallia Counties to
help homeowners, renters ,
and business .owners to
recover from the effect of the
storm.
Dick Gifford, public ;~ffairs
officer for FEMA , said any
individual or business owner

.
BIDWELL . Miranda
Pearce. 22, Bidwell, died
EUSTIS, Aa. (AP) - Most wished him a safe and speedy
Thursday, April 3, 2003, in
Holzer Medical Center, as a of America's soldiers and return.
result of injuries suffered in sailors serving in the Middle · And Rep. Doran Metzger told
East left family and friends colleagues in January he would
an auto accident.
Arra1igements will be behind when they were miss nearly the entire legislative
announced by MdZoy-Moore deployed. First Sgt. Carey session while serving with a
Baker also "bid farewell to his Vermont National Guard air
Funeral Home, Vinton.
ambulance company.
Condolences may be sent constituents.
Other lawmakers have felt the
Baker,
a
two-term
.
to mcmoore@zoomnet.net or
www.timeformemory.com/m Republican representing a cen- tension of balancing military
tral Aorida ·district in the state service with their constituents.
m
House of Representatives, has
- Ohio state R~p . John
spent the past two months on Boccieri missed seveml weeks
active duty in the Persian Gulf. of the legislative sessiorJ Ws
While Baker. 40, stands alone year while !lying a C-130~crui;lo
a&gt; the 'only state legislator cur- plane for the Guard ne¥ the
rently stationed in the Gulf, a Iraqi border.
'
handful of lawmakers at local
- Last month, John Pippy,
and state level s have either Pennsylvania's newest \state
recently served military ·com- senator, was sworn in whill! on
mitments or will do so soon.
a one-day pass from the A11111y's
New Hampshire state Sen. 332nd Engineer Company in
POMEROY - Meigs High
School drama students will Joe Kenney, a Marine reservist Aberdeen, Md. Pippy, a captain,
present Science ·Fiction and Gulf War veteran, learned commands ~1e unit.
Theater, 8 p.m. Friday, April last week he will be called to
- U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk, RII. ln the high sc hool gymna- active duty in early May. On Ill., a Naval Reserve intellisi um . Cost is $4 for adults Thursday. the Senate gave gence officer, has arranged to
and $2 for students.
Kenney a standing ovation and spend Congress' two-week

Peter Arnett made prcfessional
misstep·with Iraqi interview
• Observer-Dispatch, Utica, N.Y., o11 Peter Arnett:
Whenever a news reporter becomes part of the story he or she
is reporting, there's bound to be trouble.
Arnett went to Iraq as an employee of the MSNBC show,
"National Geographic Explorer.' But when NBC reporters left
Baghdad for safety reasons, he remained, and the network
began airing his reports.
But Arnett made a major blunder over the weekend by
granting an interview to state-run Iraqi TV in which he said ·
the American-led coalition's initial plan· for the war had failed
because of Iraq's resistance.
Granting an interview with the enemy during wartime is bad
'enough. And unless Gen. Tommy Franks has confided in Peter
Arnett. ~is "reporting" on U.S. war plans in that interview was
purely conjecture.
NBC originally defended Arnett, saying that he had given
the interview as a professional courtesy and that his remarks
were analytical in nature.
What's sad is that Arnett should have known better. He's a
longtime war correspondent, having won a Pulitzer Prize
reporting in Vietnam for The Associated Press, and he gained
much-prominence 'from covering the 1991 Gulf War for CNN.
Nevertheless, he was clearly off base here, and has since apologized to the American people for what he called a "misjudg-

FEMA locates center to help.with relief efforts

Miranda Pearce

"

I .

Deaths
GALLIPOLIS - Jerrad
Oiler, 22, Gallipolis, died
Thursday, April 3, 2003, at
his residence.
·
Services will be noon
Saturday in Vinton Baptist
Church, with the Rev. Marvin
Sallee and the Rev. Chester
·Hess officiating . Burial will
be in Vinton Memorial Park.
Friends may call at McCoyMoore
Funeral
Home,
Vinton ,"from 2 to 4 and 6to 8
p.m. today.
The body will lie in state in
the church one hour prior to
services. '
Condolences may be sent
to me moore@ zoomnet.net or
www.timeformemory.com/m
m

MEDICARE
OBSERVATORY

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Bette Pearce
M.anaging Editor

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

Friday, April 4, 2003

.

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

POmeroy/Middleport, Ohio

PALESTINE, W.Va. (AP)The father · of rescued POW
Army Pfc. Jessica Lynch said
Friday , she was in great spirits
following her first surgery and
had not been shot or stabbed dur•
ing her ordeal.
"I think we've got our girl
back," said Greg Lynch"Sr., who
appeared on the network news
morning shows.
Surgeons
at Landstuhl
Regional Medical Center in
Germany repaired a fractured
disc in . the 19-year-old's back
thursday; and on Friday were
operating on her broken legs and
broken arm, her father said.
He said ihe family still doesn't
know how or when sbe received
the injuries.
"It was requested by the doctor
we don't bring up too much of
the past she has been through,"
Greg Lynch told ABC's "Good
Morning America."
.
As for when the family will
see her, "We want that to be on
Jessi's tenns," he said. "Wben
she is ready, tm sure she will let
us know and we 'II be on the
way."
·
The commander of the medical center said Friday that Lynch
had been steadily improving and
was expected to make a full
recovery.
·
The Army supply clerk was

rescued from an Iraqi hospital on
Thesday, more than a week after
her
507th
Maintenance
Company convoy made a wrong
tum and was ambushed by Iraqi
troops. 1\velve other soldiers in
the convoy have been listed as
prisoners of war or missing in
action.
According to reports Friday in
USA Today and The Washington
Post. an Iraqi lawyer tipped U.S.
forces to Lynch's location in a
Nasiriyah hospital, supplying ·
detailed information that helped
rescuers find.her.
· "I am tnlly grateful," .Greg
Lynch told NBC's ''Today"
show. '1 realize he risked . his
own life to do this. The man is an
angel and a god in his own
ways.
If he ever meets the man, "He
would get a world of hugs," he
said on CBS' ''The Early Show,"
adding, "We hope the rest of the
MlAs do make it home as safe."
During the raid to rescue
Lynch, U.S. troops also found II
bodies in ancr near the hospital.
Military officials said Thursday
that nine are ~lieved to be
American soldiers, though it
·wasn't lalown if any were from
Lynch's unit. The remains wi II
be sent to the United States for
further analysis. ·· ·

Firefighter

scene.
Rutherford said the accident remains under investigation .
"It's unknown at this time
if we can perform a speed
analysis because we· can't
determine at what point the
front brakes locked up and
the rear brakes were
engaged," said Rutherford.
"That has .a lot of bearing
on the steering capabilities of
the truck," he added. "We
don't know if we can do it,
but we are going to try." .
Galli a·County EMS, rescue
squad, Harrison Township
and Guyan Township volunteer firefighters and other
emergency
' personnel
responded to the · accident,
along with the patrol.
Gallipolis
firefighters
extinguished the brush fire,
about one-quarter of a mile
from the accident , as the
accident investigation began.
Funeral arrangements for
Long are pending at Willis
Funeral Home .

from Page A1

•

and because of the speed at
which the pumper was moving. the weight of the water
in the vehicle's tank shifted,
causing the right side tires to
go off the right edge of the
road.
•
The vehicle began rotating
counter-clockwise .and then
caine back on the road,
Rutherford said .
The pumper's rear began to
spin clockwise and the truck
slid off . the left side of the
road, where it stryck a stone
pile, telephone junction box
and mailbox.
The vehitle then rolled
o~ce. comin~ t9 rest on the
passenger side, Rutherford
said. Long was weanng a
seatbeit, he added.
Rutherford described the
damage . to the truck's hood,
top of the cab and equipment
bay as "horre ndou s." The
pumper was towed from the

..

•,

-·

of his death, Martin Luther
King Jr. is being remembered by those who. knew
him as a man of peace who
would havt' spoken out
against the war 11&lt;ith Iraq.
"He was a drum major for
peace and justice," said the
Rev. Joseph . Lowery, a
longtime civil rights leader
and former King associate.
"He was very committed to
the anti-war movement."
Lowery is among the
many King admirers and
former associates scheduled
to help commemorate the
anniversary of King's death
on Friday. Events include a
march, panel discussions
and historical reviews of
King's life and a candlelight prayer vigil at the
National
Civil ' Rights
Museum.
Though King's main
focus was civil rights, he
also took part_ in marches
and prote sts that helped end
the Vietnam War. His anti·
war beliefs and protests ate
not scheduled for a specific
discu ss ion
but
they
undoubtedly will come up.
"I don 't know how we

in the midst o all• these, Earl Ray pleaded guilty to
cruise missiles and super the murder. fie died of liver
bombs and smart bombs on disease in prison in 1998.
dumb missions."
Frank McRae, a retired
With America at war with Methodist preacher who
Iraq, King's campaigns for took part in efforts to
iwnviolent social change peacefully resolve the saniand world peace are as ·· tat ion workers' strike, said
timely as ever, said Julian King's anti-war protests
Bond, chairman of the were based on religious
National Association for beliefs.
the · Advancement
of
"It was a Jesus thing for
Colored People.
King, as it is · for me,"
Bondwill direct a panel McRae said. "I just can't
discussion on King's life see Jesus manning a tank.':
"that will include members
Lowery, a former presi·
'of the Organization of dent the Southern Christian
American Historians , which Leadership
Conference,
is ·holding its national meet- said King, a leader in form. ing in Memphis this week. ing the . SCLC, rem~ined
''I'm sure somebody firm with his anti-war
among the panelists will ~rotests though thsy somemake this (anti-war) con- Urnes caused conflicts With
nection," said Bond,. who other. clVII nghts leaders.
also opposed the Vietnam
"There were some in the
War. "Dr. King is a constant SCLC who, while they
reference for today's prob- were not necessanly for the
lems, including war." .
war, weren't sure we s houl~
King was in Memphis to divide
?ur
energies,
lead a garbage workers ' Lowery sa1d.
strike on April 4, 1968
Many of King's admirers
when he was shot on the share his anti-war beliefs
balcony of the former today, Lowery said, and
Lorraine Motel, now the think the United States was
home of the civil rights too quick in going to war

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Subscribe .today.
992-2156

GOSPEL
CONCERT}
Eddie Lee
of Virginia

&amp;.. Anointed ·

-

will be at the

Middleport Church
of the Nazarene
Saturday, April 5th • 7-!JO p.m.

.
Everyone Welcome!
For more Information. call 992-7956

"It's a kind of dangerous
arrogance that assumes that
all the world is wrong
except us," he said.
It 's common for people .
involved in all kind s of
soc ial protests to claim
King would be on their side
today, though no one can
say for sure.
Opponents of the war
with Iraq use King 's name:
with ease.
"I can't speak for Dr.
King because he · spoke so
eloquently for himself,"
Lowery said . "But as I.
knew him and worked with~
him for peace and justice,
there is no way in God's
world that I can believe
Martin would do anything
but condemn this war.''

'

�•

•

..

'·

..
\

The Daily Sentinel

We need to·do more ·
than just nip the bud
Barney Fife was often
heard in his admonition to
Sheriff Taylor that certain
things needed to be "nipped
in the bud."
.
·
Since . the terrorist attacks
on Sept II. 2002, that pithy
exhortation
from
the
Mayberry deputy clearly
suggests a needful mindset
from the people and government of our country when
one considers terrorist agendas directed toward America.
Just becaus.e people of the
Middle East live under constant threat of their homes
being blown up does not
mean you or I should be
accepting to live under the
same dark cloud. If America
can do something to thwart
terrorism against us, let us,
by all means. do what is necessary to dismantle and
defeat the evil of it. which
actually may involve more
than just nipping situations
in the bud.
But, the consideration of
such opens up two spiritual
fronts for the church ·tO contemplate, as suggested by the
Word of God.
The Bible relates that just
prior to the death of Elisha ,
the prophet of God, King
Joash visited with Elisha.
Joash did that which was
right in the sight of the Lord
during his 44-year reign, but
apparently he lacked the full
range of faith, which is
always available to God's
people, during critical points
of his leadership.
Elisha gave Joash a
tremendous
opportunity
manifested by two ~ignifi­
cant gestures.
First, he directed Joash to
shoot an arrow out of the
window. Elisha described
this arrow-shooting gesture
as "the arrow of the Lord's
deliverance from Syria."
Joash was assured of a certain victory over the Syrians
at the town of Aphek.
But, there was more from
Elisha to consider, for the
prophet next instructed the
king to take a hand full of
arrows and smack the ground
with them.
In that moment, Joash had
opportunity like he never
before had. He was most definitely aware of the possibility at hand manifested by
what he held in his hand. He
could either nip the Syrian
problem · in the bud; or he
could pull out the roots. But,
what would he do with it?

Pag¢A6
).._

Faith • Values

•

Friday, April 4, 2003

WORSHI.P GOD THIS ·wE-EK

Friday, April 4, 2003

Church briefs· ~
·Singers
coming

Cundiffs
to sing

With how much would he be ·
satisfied'' Would he settle for
just a victory. or would he
push for completed victory?
When he whacked the
ground only three times.
Elisha nearly jumped off his
death bed. "'You should have
done it five or six time s"
Joash' Think, S.on 1 You have
just wasted opportunity to do
more than nip your problem
in the bud. , The roots that
stimulate more buds could
have been pulled out. Indeed.
you have taken care of the
problem for now, but it will
come back."
.
Herein lies the first spiritual front characteristic of the
mistake most· ofteri commit- ·
ted by the people of God.
When problems confront
us, we are too prone to limit
our prayerful actions to budnipping rather than root
pulling. We seem to satisfy
ourselves with partial victory
rather than prayerfully pushing for completed victory!
But, why settle for less
when more may be a possibility with God. For example,
if you are sick, ask God for
complete healing. If you have
a financial need, ask God for
prosperity. Is your family
troubled? Ask God to solve
the root of the problem.
This principle is taught in
Scripture, which clarifies
that the "weapons of our
warfare are not carnal, but
mighty tllrough God to' the
pulling down of strongholds."
.
Just like the latitude· given
to Joash. I believe God gives
us opportunity to aggressively deal with problems utilizing full. range of faith in His
power. '
As for the second spiritual
front , we need to pray
earnestly for complete VICtory concerning America's military ·activity in Iraq, rather
than settle for just partial
victory.
After all, Saddam Hussein
has proven peskier than a
rock-throwing Ernest · T.
Bass.

Apostolic

Bible class
moving

MIDDLEPORT - "His
Own" will · be presenting
ministry in song at I 0:30
a.m. on Sunday. Apri I 27, at
the Ash Street Church, 398
Ash Street. Middleport. A
f~ee will offering .. will be
token. The public .is invited
to attend. ·

Ron
Branch

Ftllowship

Lubeck, W.
Va., and
Wednesday, Joe ' Rock of
Grove City. There will be
special singing nightly and a
HARRISONVILLE - The . nursery will be provided .'
Common Ground Bible Class
is moving to the Harrisonville
school gym Sunday for Bible
study between I0 and II a.111.
Les Hayman is the teacher
MIDDLEPORT
A
and the public is invited.
gospel sing will be held at the
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene at 7 p.m. Saturday
featuring Eddie Lee and
Anointed.' Pastor Allen
MIDDLEPORT The Midcap invites the public .
Silver Run Baptist Church Refreshments will be served.
will hold revival services at 7
p.m. · Saturday
through
Wednesday at the church.
Preaching Sunday at the
morning and evening service
will be Steve Richardson of
Vinton;
Monday
and
CHESTER - Spirilllal
Tuesday. Mark Watkins of Renewal ~~ek scr~ices will

CARPENTER- Ray &lt;UJd
Delores Cundiff will be
singing at the 10:30 ~.m.
Sunday service at the
Carpenter Baptist Church.
John
Elswich,
pastor,
invites the public.

.

Gospel sing
announced

·Revival
services set

Spiritual
Renewal Week
begins Monday·

be held at 7 p.m. April 7
through Apri I 12 at Bethel
Worship Center in Chester.
(ocated in the former elementary school.
Pastor Darrell Huffman
from New Life Chur.c!l,
Huntington . will be the
gues t
pastor
Monday
through Wednesday and
Evangelist Kenny Large
will be the guest evangelist
·Thursday through Saturday.
Special music will include
"Them Bow man s", Kathy
Large, Stik,n with Jesu s.
CORE (Cry.ing Out Revival
Everywhere).
Rejoi ce
Choir. and many others. A
nursery will be provided .
For more information ca ll
Pastor Rob Barber at the
church office , ,(74()) M76793.

The dispute continues
over the supposed discov ery of the first inscription
directly ti ed to one of the
antient kings in the Bible.
If authentic and truly
thousands of years old , the
words on the so-ca.lled
"Temple Tablet" wo·uld
undergird Israel 's presentday cl!lim to Jerusalem's
Temple Mount.
This would also buttress
traditional Jewish and
Christian belief in the reli ability of Old Testament
history, against liberal
scholars who treat the
accounts of King Solomon
and his Temple as fiction .
This is "'the most important and exciting archaeological discovery," according to one interested party,
the Temple Mount and
Land of Israel Faithful
Movement, which want s to
reconstruct
Jerusalem 's
Temple. But some leading
scholars say the business
is a hoax .
The tablet is a slab of
dark sandstone, the size of
a le~al pad , inscribed with
15 lmes in ancient Hebrew.
The message echoes biblical accounts (2 Kings 12. 2
Chronicles
24) about
Temple repairs under King
Jehoash (or Joash). By
conventional reckoning ,

the Temple· was completed
2,962 years ago and Joash
reigned several generations afterward.
The - d-iscovery
was
reported in the Israeli
press in January . .To sort
through the confusion that
has continued since then,
the current · issue of
Biblical
Archaeology
Review provides a typically . informative assessment
by its editor, Hershel
Shanks.
There's
considerable
mystery. since the lawyer
representing the tablet 's
owner won "t say who he is,
how he got it or exactly
where and how it was
found. Press reports say
spme Arabs obtained it in a
valley near the Temple
(or
Noble
Mount
Sanctuary, the name · used
by the holy site's Muslim
administrators).
The unknown origm
makes verification more
difficult and adds to suspicions of possible forgery.
W[lat's at stake ; Shanks
says, is not just this tablet
but how specialists make
decisions
about
any
ancient artifact.
If this inscription is
authentic, he wrues, that
will impugn the detective
ability · of epigraphers
(inscription experts) and
philologists
(language
experts) . If it 's a hoax, that
will undercut confidence

in work by geologists.
ln 200 I, the tablet was
shown to Joseph Naveh. a
specialist in ancient writings at Israel 's Hebrew
University. He concluded
it wa s probably a forger.y ,
and later became even
more dubious . The tablet
was then submitted to the
Geological
Survey of
Israel,
where experts
Michael Dvorchik , Shimon
llan1
and
Amnon
Rosenfeld pronounced il
authentic .
Since
then ,
textual
experts have split. Frank
Moore ·Cross of Harvard
,University, Kyle McCarter
of
John s
Hopkins
Uni·versity and . Rob.ert
Deutsch of Israel 's Haifa
University are among the
nay-sayers who think technical mistakt.S&gt; in spelling
and letter sliapes indicate
forgery.
Other text specialists are
undecided. One problem is
that there's little written
material from that era for
comparison.
On the opposite side. the
geologists report electron
microscope examination
showed the surface filni
(patina) formed naturally
and indicates an ancient
inscription. The patina in a
crack is said to reinforce
this conclusion. Nor was
there evidence of glues or
other artificial substances
ta apply patina .

VnnZandt and Ward

R.J., P~st~r.:

James

Miller, Sunday Scho"l . 10:30 a.m..
E\'Cnmg · 7:30 p.m.
Kl~er V~tlit'!}'

Aposwlk Wm~h1p Center, H7:\ S. Jn.J
Me ., Middl cpml. Kevin K~m~lc, Pastor.
·sunday, 10 . ~ . m . and fl :LJ[) p.m .:
W~dno:st.luy,

7:3() p.m.: Yuuth Fri 7:3!J

p.m
Emmanu~:l Apo!ilolic Tal~·rn11cle 111(,

Luop Rd off New Limn Rd . Rutlund ,
Services: Sun 10:00 a .m. &amp; 7:30 p.m•.,
Thu!':§ . 7:00 Jl.m., Pastor Man y R. H11Lton

'

Assembly of God
libt~)'

A.s!;fmbly of God
P.O. Bmt 467. Duddin~ Lane. Ma son.
W.Va ., Pustur: Nei l Tennant , Sunday
· Service!&gt;- 10:00 a.m. ~nd 7 p.m.

Baptist

.'

Ho~ Bapll~t Church (Southrrn)
570 Grant St .. M1ddfe.pmt , Pa'stor: Rev.
Da v1d Bryan, Sunday sd10ol . 9:JO a.m.•
Wor~ hip · I I ~ . m . and 6 p.m.. Wednesday
S..•rvicc - 7 p.m.
Rutland •lrst H11ptlst Chun:h
Sunday Sch nol · &lt;~ · JU a.m .. WorshiJJ .
10:45 a.,n.

Pomeroy First Blllptlst
P:1stnr ,Jon Bru..:kcn, Ea st Main St .,
Sunday St:l1 onl · ':1: .'\U a.m., Worship •
IO:.m u.m.
First Southern Baptist
.&amp; lll72 Pt)lllcrny Pike, Pasuw E. Lamar
O' Bryanl. Sund;1y Sd1m•l · IJ :JO a.m..
Wtlr.;hip - tl : 15 :l.m.. 9:45am &amp; 7: 00p.m..
Wedne:&gt;.do y St.·n.'ke!i • 7·00 p.m.
Finl

Bapli~t

Churth
6th and Palmer St ..
Mu.ldiCj'Kln ,~u n dJ y So.:hoo\ . 9: 15 u11 ..
Wm sh ip " \U : J ~ am, 7:UU , p.m..
Wednesday Scr\'ICC- 7:00p.m.
Pu.~ lur. M:~rt .\llurww,

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Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6215
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106 Mulbeny Ave. Pomeroy, OH
740-992-2121
Fax 740-992-2122
Ben H. Ewing
Licensed

emerge rrom

Into. The Light

dark winter dens. TuHp and daffodil
bulbs sprout from chilly beds to show

209 Third

Mt. lininn Raptl.&lt;il
Pastor : David Wiseman, Sunday School9:45 a.m ., J;vening - 6 :JO p.m..
Wednesday Sc:rvicu ·6:30p.m.
Bethlehtm Baptist Church
Great Beqd. Route 124, Rac ine. OH.
Pastor : Daniel Mecca, Sunday School ·
9:30 11.m., Sunday Wo111hi,p • 10:30 a.m.,
Wednelday Bible Study· 6:00p.m.
01~ Bethel Fm WID Baptllt Churth
28601 St. Rt . 7, Middleport, Sunday
School • 10 a.m., Evenina • 7:00p.m ..
Thursday Servicet • 7:00

Hllllldt Baptilt Churth
St. Rt. 143 juKt off Rt . 7, Putor: Rev.
Jame1 R Acree, Sr Sunda~cd
Service, Worthip · 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.,
Wedne~dny Servicell·7 p.m.

1 ~25

Vldnry Baptilltlndependent
N. lnd St. Mlddleport,'Pastor: Jamea

E. Keesee , Worship • IOa.m., 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Servim · 7 p.m.

glorious ihver)· day could feel like

-~

"The Lord is God. and lie has
"gi"n us llght. .. O give !honks to the
Lord, fur He is good; for His
sleadrastlou endures fonn~r! ,
1

ll's.ll8:27-l91

Did you keep resolutions in
January and telebi'ate l,o,·e in
t' rhruary? -If ) 'OU missed your
chance, spring is a mosl appropriate

-

SUI DAY

the first day of spring'! It can, you
know. Wt read In Isaiah 2:5... "0
htfUse or .lamb. come, let us \talk

in the tighl of lhe Lord.'' That
~' light ••

is the perpetual glow

"'hat th~ season "·hrn you come to
know God as your Henenll
Futher. Won ' l ~·ou visit lHs House
and lfYrn ho"' to Ihe in the wurm
tight or God's mercy toch day or
the year?

IUISDAT WEDIISDAY THUIIDAT

5:1-11

JUU

cury in yo ur heart nu matter

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FIIDAY

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Pomeroy. OH
740-992-543;_

Congregational
Trinity Church
Second &amp; lynn, Pomeroy, Pasfor: Rev.
Juck Nohle. Worship 10 :2 ~ a.m., Sunday
Schoo19: 15 a.m.

..

.

Episcopal

Gratt EpiKopal Churth
.U6 E. Moin St., Pomeroy. Rev Jam~ s
Bernacki. Rev. Kathruin Foster. Sunday
School and Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m.

Keno Chunb of Christ
.'
Wors hip • 9:30 a.m., Sunday School ·
10:30 u.m., Pastor-Jeffrex Walla c~. htand
Jrd Sunday
BearwaUow Rldw:e Church or Christ
Pastor:Bruce Terry, Sunday School ·9:JO
a.m.

W[)r ship · 10:30 a.m.. 6 :.\0 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.
Zion C'hunh of Christ
Pomeroy. Harrisonvi lle Rd . (Rt.l43) ,
PashH: Roger . Wat son, Sunday Scl1l)o] 9:30 a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Service6 - 1 p.m.

l'uppen Plain Church of Chrl1t
In strumen tal. Worship Service - 9 a.m.,
Cnmmunion - 10 a.m.. Sunday Sc~ool 10:\:'i a.m.. Youth- 5:30pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm

SMrtd Hur1 Catholk: Churtb
16\ Mulhcrry Ave., Pomeroy. 992-5898,
Pastor: Rev. Waller E. He inz. Sat. Con.

Bradford Church of Christ
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury' Rd.,
Minister: Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister.
Bill Amber&amp;er. Sundai School - 9:30 a.m:
Worship - 8:00 a.m ., 10:30 a.m., :7;00
p.m.,Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m. .

HkkM)' HIIIJ Church ol Chrlot
Evanselist Mike Moore. Sunday School -

Holiness
Cnmml!nlty Churth
Pastor: Steve Tomek. Main Sueet,
Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m.,
Sundity Setvice- 7 p.m.
DanviUe Hollnw Church
310.57 Slll.te Route 325. langsvlle. Pasior:
Gary Jackson, Sunday schooJ - 9:30a.m..
Slinda~ worship ~ 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.,
Wednesday prayer service· 7 p.m.

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

Rose of Sharon HotlnW Churth
Leading Creek Rd ., Rutland, Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King, Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship ~7 p.m., Wednesday
prnyer meeting· 7 p.m.

Pine Gron Bible Holiness Churth
112 mile off Rt. 325, Pastur: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 7:_'\0 p.m.,
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
7:'i Pearl St., Middle~rt . Pastor: R~v.
Oo.vid Gilhcrt, Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Worship -1 0:4~ p.m .. Sunday Eve. 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.
Hy!!ell Run Holintst Churth

Rev. Mark Michael, Sunday School · 9:,30
a.m .. Worship - 10:45 a.m .. 7 p.m..
Thursday Bible Study and Youth ·_ 7 p.m .
Laurel CUft' i'ru Methodist Cburtb
Rev Les Strandt and Myra L Strandt,
Sunday' S ~hool - 9:30 a.m., Worship ·
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.rn .. Wednesda)' Service
·7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
' Church of Jaus
Tht
Cllrilt of Latter-Day Sal at.
St. Rt. 160, 446~6247 or 446· 7486,
Sunday School 10:20·11 a.m., Relief
Society/Priesthood 11 :0!1 -12:00 noon,
Sacrament Ser..vJce _ 9· 10: LS~ a . m .•
Homcmakina mcetina. ht Thurs. • 7 p.m.

Lutheran ·

9 a.m., Worship ~ 10 a.m., 6:30 p.m,
Wednetday Services • 1 p.m.

Roedovttle Churdl.ol Chr!JI
Putor: Philip Stunn, Sunday Schoot: 9:30
a.m ., Wonhip Service: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study, Wednetday, 6:30p.m.
Deller Church ol Cbrlot
. Putor: Bill Eshelman, SWlday 1Choo19:30
a,m., Norman Will, luperlntendent,
Sunday worship· \0:30 a,m.
Churdlol Chrtol
Jnteructlon 7 and 124 W, Evanaelist:
Dennl• Saraent, Sunday Bib!~ Study •
9:30 a.m .. Wontlip: I 0:30a.m. and 6:30
p.m.. Wedne.a..y Bible Srudy • 7 p.m.

'Christian Union
H1rtford Church ol Cbrllt In
Cbr!JdaaUnlon
Hanford, W.VaiJ PalitOr:David Oreer,
Sunday School • 9 :30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m ., 1:00 p.m., Wednesday ..
Services - 7:{10 p.m.

Church of God
ML Moriah Churtb ofGed ·
Mile Hill Rd ., Racine , Pastor: James
Satterfield. Sunday School · 9:4~ a.m .•
Evening- 6 p.m., ·Wednesdil.y Services · 7
p.m.
Rutland Church of God
PaStor: Ron Heath , Sunday Worship· 10
a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesday Services · 7
p.m.
Syracuse Flnt Churcb ot God
·Apple and Second Sts .. Pastor: Re'f. David
Ruuell, Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m.
Evening Senlices· 6:30p.m .. Wednesday
Servi\:es; 6:30 P·!D·
Churth ol God of Pmp~)'
OJ. While Rd . off S1. Rt. 160, Pastor: P.J .

Chapman. Sunday Sthool - 10 a.m.,
Worship . II a.m., Wednesday Services~
7p.m.

St. Jolta Lutheran Cburdl
Pine Orove, Wonhip - 9:00 1.m .. Sunday
School · I 0:00a.m.

Rutllnd Church of tbt N117.1nne
Pastor: Rev. Louis S. Staubs, Sunday
School · 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m.,
Fa.lniew Bible Church
!i:)O p.m.. Wedne!;day Services . 7 p.m.
.- Letart, W.Va. Rt . I. Pastor: Brian May.,
Sunday School · 9:30a. m.. Won;hip • 7:00
p.m., W~sday Bible Study · 7:00p.m.
Portland First Chun:h olthe Nmu-ene
.Pa sto r: William Justis, Sunday sChool F1lth F.wthlp Cruadt for Cllrisl
10:00 a.m.• Morning Worship - 10:45 a.m.,
Sunday Sl:r\.ice - !'.dO p.m.
P~U;~r : Rev. Franklin Dickens. Service:
Frj.day. 7 p.m.

Central Clwter
Ashury (Syracuse), Ps.stor: Hob Robinson ,
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m., Wonhi p - II
a.m., Wednc5day Services - 7:30p.m.

EnkrprlR
Pastor: Arland King, Sunday School • 10
a.m..• Worship - 9 a.m.. Bible Study Wed.
7JO

Other Churches

Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday
a.m., Worship · II a.m.

~chool

Calvary Bible Church
Community or Chrisl
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.. Pastor: Rev.,
Portland· Racine Rd ., Pastor : Mic hael
Blackwood. Sunday School · 9:30 a.ni.,
Duhl, Sunday School · 9 :30a.m., Worship
· 10:30 a.m.. Wedne sday Services - 7:00 . Worship · 10:30 a.m. , 7:30 p.m ..'
Wednestilly Service· 7:30p.m.
p.m.

• 10

Forest_Run
Ptutor: Bob Robinson, Sunday School· 10
a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

Pastor: Rob Brower, Sunday School· 9:30
a.m., Worship · II :00 a.m.

Miatl'!lville
Pastor: Bob Robinson, Sundoy School - 9
a.m., Wun.hip • 10 a.m.

a...,..

Pari
Sunday School . 9 a.m., Worship .' 10 a.m.
Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower, Worship · 9:]0 ~ . m . ,
Sunday School· 10:35 a.m
Rook Springs
Pastor: Keith Rader, Sunday School- 9:JS
a,m., Wqrship • 10 a.m.. Yuuth
Fellowship, Sunday· 6 p.m.

School· I0:00a.m., Worthlp • II a.m.

·St. Paul Luthen• Clluftb
Comer Sycamorc &amp; Second St., Pomeroy.
Sunday School • 9:45 1.m., Wonhip • II

a.m.

United Methodist
Gnbom Untied Motloodlat
Worship ·9:30a.m. (lit &amp; 2nd Sun),.
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun),Wednelday
Sendee . 7:30p.m.

Mt. OUve Unlled Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires. Sunday School • 9 :30a.m..
Wor~hip ~ 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m., Thursday
Services - 7 p.m.

Cbater
Pastor: Jant Beanie, Worship- 9 ' a.m.,
Sunday School • 10 a.m. , Thursday
Services • 7 p.m. ,

Jop..
Pastor: Bub R11ndol~;&gt;h. Worship - 9:30
a.m
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
IA!n1 Bottom

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship ·
10:30 a.m.

tle&lt;ckvtu.·

.-uu· Gospel

Chun:h of the Li"lhJ
Savior
Rt .331!. Antiquity, Paslor: Je!l ~ Morris,
Se rvices: Saturday 2:00p.m.

•

Pa~tor :

Dewayne Stutler, Sund11y School ·
10 a.m .. Worship· · 9 a.m., Wednesday
Services - 10 a.m .

'

Salem Community Church
Lie\'ing R~d . West Colu nihiu. W.V11 ..
Past~r : C:lydc Ferrell. Sunday School 9:30
am. Sunday even ing SCI'\'It:e 6 PTJl.'
Wednesday strv ice 7 pm

The Belitvers' Fellowship Mlnilltry
New Lime Rd ., Rutland, Pastor: Rev,
Margarel J. Robinson, Su vices :
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.. Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Hobson Chri!Jtla'n 'Fellowship Churth
Pastor: Hersche l White, Sunda}"' Schoo'!.,
10 am, ~unday Chu'rch service· 6:30pm .
Wednesd11y 7 pm

Harrisonville CommunJt)' Churth
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sund11y • 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.. Wednesd&amp;)' • 7 p.m.

C1nnel-Suttoft
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds . Racine, Ohio.
Pastor: Oewayne Stutler, Sunday Scho6i ·
9:30 a.m .. Worship • 10:45 a.m. , Bible
Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Restoration Christian FelloWship
9365 Hooper Road, Athen~. Pa51or::
Lonnie Coats, Sunday Worship !0:00am.,
Wedne~iy: 7 pm

Middleport Communhy Church
. 57S Pearl St., Middlepon , P11stor: Sam
Anderson, Sunday ·school 10 a.m .,
Evening -1:30 p.m. , Wedne!lday Service7:30p.m.

Mornibl Star
Putor: Oewaync Stutler, Sunday School •
11 a.m., Worship • 10 a.m.

Lanpvllte C.hrUtiao Church
•
Full Gospel, Pastor: Robert Musser.
Sunday School 9:30 am, , Worship 10:30 1
am • 7:00 pm, WedneSday SerVice 7:00
Pill~
' l

FJith Valley 'hbernadt Church
Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Rev. Emmett
.
Rawson . Sund•y Evening
7 p.m.,
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.
. ~.

'

Eoot Lela11
-fastor: Brian Hukncss. Sunday School ~
•tQ.J..DL, Worship. 9 a.m., Wedneaday ~ 7
p.m.

'

Pentecostal

S)'ncutt Million
141 'Bridseman St., Syracu.e, Rev. Mike
lbompson,PastOr, Sunday School • 10
a.m. Evenina - 6 p.m:. Wedneid.ay Servit:e
• 7 p.m.

llodne
Pastor: Brian Harkness, Sunday School •
10 a.m., Wonhip • 11 1.m., ~sday 7

Coot•ltle Ualted Melbodlot l'lrtob
Putor: Helen kline, ·Coolvllle Church, ·
Main tt: Flflh St., Sunday School • I0
a.m., Worahip • 9 a.m., Tueedly Service• •

lp.m.
llelboiCiturdl
Town'1hlp Rd., 468C, Sunday School • 9
a.m. Wonhlp • 10 1.m., Wednesday
Service• • 10 a.m.

Ptniecoatal Auemb\y
.
St. Rt. 124. Rac;ine, Paslor: W'illlam
Hob11ck, Sunday School · 10 a.m.,,
Evening • 7 p.m., Wedne!Klay Services · 7
p.m.

Haal Comnnmlty Charch
Off Rt. 124, P11tor: Edsel Hart. Sunday
S&lt;:hool- 9:30 Lm .. Wonhip. • 10:30 a.m.,
7;30 p.m.

Presbyterian
Syr.euee Flnt Vnlttd Pmbyttrlan ·
Pastor: Robert Crow. Worship · ! I a.m.

Dyoovtlle Commualt, Church
Sund1y School · 9:30 a.m .• Wonhip 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.

Harrllonvlllt Prelbyterlen Ch•.U. ·
PallOr: Robert Crow, Worship· 9 a.m.

Mont Cblpel Church
Sunday achool • 10 a.m .. Worship - II
a.in.. Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Mtddlepori Pnobyterton
Paator: Rober Crow., WQnhip • 10 a.m . . •

Folth o..,.f Church

llodd-11 Cburdl
Grand Strut, Sundar School - 10 a.m ..
Wonhip • 11 a.m.. Wedne&amp;def Services •
Sp.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

Lons Bottom, SundaY School - 9:30 a.m..
Worship - 10;4~ a.JD .. 7;30 p.m..

Seven&amp;h·Dty AdvenUil
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy, Pastor: Ro~:
l..awinsky, Saturday Services: Sabbatta:
Sc~l- 2 p.m., Worship · 3 p.m.

WC&lt;hjc.day 7,30 p.m.
ML OUw~ Community Churth
Pastor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday School •
9:30a.m.. Evenin&amp; · 6:30p.m .. Wcdneday
Servke · 7 p.m..

Thrtk Churth
• Co. Rd. 63, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

·Nazarene

Melp CoopentJve Parish
Northeast Cluster, Alfred , Pastor: Jane
B~altie, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.,
~orship - I I a.m., 6:30p.m. '

Ntw Lift ViciOI')' Cenler
3773 Georges Creek Road, Ga llipoli~. OH
Pitstor: Bill Stuten, Suilliat· Services · 10
a. m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wednesda~· · 7 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

Faith Full Go!ipel Cbun:h
long Bouom, Pastor: Steve Reed. Sunday
School · 9:30a.m . Worship · 9:30a.m.
al'lli 7 p.m., Wednesd~)' · 7 p.m., Friday ·
fellowshi p servict. 7 p.m.

Beth an)'

'

Clifton Tabernacle Churth
Clifton. W.Va .. Su'nday School · 10 a.m..
Worship · 7 p.m., Wednesday Service '- .7, .
p.m.

~

p.m.
Our Saviour Lulbtran Cbu.rdl
Walnut and Henry SIB, Raven1wood,
W.Va .. P11tor: David Ruuell, Sunday

.

Rejoicing Life Churt~
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middlepon. Pastor:'
Mike Foreman . Pastor: Emerit~~
Lawrence Foreman. Worshi~ 10:00 am
Wcdnesd11y Services- 7 p.m .

Abundant Gr1ct R.F.J.
923 S. Third St., Middleport, Pastor Teresa
Davis, Sunday service. ~ w a.m.,
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Salein Center
Pltstor: Williilm K. Marshall , Sun4ay
School - 10:15 a.m .. Wofship - 9:15 3.m ..
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
SnoWYllle
Sunday School~ 10 a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

•

Stiversvillr CommunUy Church
Pasmr: Wayne R. Jewell. Sunday Services
- IO:OO 'a .m. &amp; 7:00p.m., Thursday· 7:00~
p.m.

Bethel Worship Centl:r
Ches.ter School, Pastor : Rob Barber,
Assista nt Pastor: Karen Davis. Sunqay
Worshipt ,]0 am, Evening Wor!ihip: 6 pm,
Youth group 6 pm, Wednesday : Power in
Prayer, and Bible Study · 7 pm
Ash Strut Church
Ash St.. Middtepon- Pastor: Glenn Rowe.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,' MNning
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 pm. Wednesday
Service · 7:00p.m .• Youth Service· 7:00
p.ni.
Agape Lift Cenl~r ·
"Fuli·Gospel Church", Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade. 603 Second Ave. Muon, 77 35017 , Sen ·ice time: Su nday. 10 :30 a.m ..
Wednesda y 7 pm

Heoth (Middleport)

Rudand
Sund11y School · 9:30 a.m.. Worship
10:30 11,m., Thursday Services~ 7 p.m.

White's Cba:pel Wesl~yan
Coolv ille Road. Pastor: Rev. 'Phillip
RKie~noui'. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
WorshJp .t 10:30 ·a.m., Wednesday ServiGe'
- 7 p.m.

PIIStor: Rev. He~r1 Grate, Sunday Sc hool
·9:30a.m., Worship - I l a.m., !i p.m.,
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Pastor: Jane Beattie, Sunday School · 9
. a.m., Wors~ip · 16 a.m. , Tuesday Services
· 7:30 p.m.

Mkldlepo11 Churth of the Nua~M
Pastor: Allen Midcap. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.. Won;hip • 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m.,
Wedrtesday Services • 7 p.m., Pastor:
Allen ~idcap

United Brethren
MI. Hennon United Brethren
In Christ Church
Texas Community 36411 Wickham Rd~
Pastor: Roben Sanders, Sunday Sc.:hool ~ .
9:30 a.m., Worship - 10 : ~0 a.m., 7:00·
p.m., Wedoesd8y Services· 7:00 pm .
"

FuU c;.,.,.l UghtboUH
33045 Hiland Roltd, Pomeroy, Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday School • 10 a.m., Evening
7:30 p.m,. Thesday &amp; Thursday · 7:30
p.m.

ReedlviUe Fellowwltlp

Ch~rch of the Nazarene, Pastor: Teresa ~ ..
Waldeck, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .,
Worship · 10 :4~ a.m., 7 p.m., WMnesday
&amp;h'ices • 7 p.m.
SyrK~ Qtun:h of the Nuare~~t
Pastor Mik~ Adkins, Sunday School· 9:30
· a,m., Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Sen· ices· 7 p.m.

WorShip · 9:30 a.m., Sunday School ·
10:30 a.m .. First Sunday uf Month · 7:00
p.m. service

Pomeroy Church of the Nual"'lnt
Pastor: Jan Lavender, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wednesday Service~ • 7 p.m.

1'upptn Plahu St. Paul

Cllester Cllurch of che Naz~rtne

South Bdbel Community Churth 1
Silver Ridge - Pastor Lind~ Damewood,
Sunday School - 9 11.m.. Worship Service
IOa.m.
Carttlon lnlerdenomlnadonal Cburcb
Kings bury Road. Pastor: ~obert Vance,
Sunday Sc.:houl • 9:30 a.m.. Worship
Service 10:30 a.m., Evening Service 6'
p.m.
Fl'ftdom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd . 31. Pastor: Rev.
Roger Willford, Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

1

Eden United Brethren In Christ
State Route 124. Reedsville , Pastor: Rev~
Bill D'M')·, Sunday School - II a.m .•:
Sunday Worsh ip · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m,
Wedn.e~day Services · 7:00 p . m .~
Wednesday Youth Service . 7:()() p.m.
\

,.,,!'

Rutland, OH 45775
Our Carina WaYs HelP families

~
.

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Home

740-949-2217

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

Jeanie Howell
33334 Hy&gt;elt Run Rd.
Pomeroy. OH 45769
740-992-7996

Open 7 days

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH
Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

Herbalife Independent
Distributor

Hrm1r Ctmked Meals &amp; Daily Speci.als

Hills Self Storage

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

Sec-ond 81pli~t Churrh
Rav~nsw 'Xld , WV. Sunday School 10 am·
. Morning worship ll am Eveni ng - 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

"A Horne Bank for
HOme People"

happiness and to cetebrott lhe

young;' soon lhey , too, will open
newborn eyes lo this ~ibrant
environment. The earth awakens
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may hue been clouding ·, your
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Wouldn't it be even more

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darkness

Miffie 's l}{e.staurant

740-949-2210

Gallipolis, OH

'6am · 8pm

Middleport Cbun:h of Christ
5th and .Mllin, Pastor: AI Hanson , Youth
Minister: Hill Frazier, Sunday School •
9:_,0 a.m.. Won•hip- ~: l:'i , \0:!10 a.m., 7
p.m .. Wednesday Services .. 7 p.m.

Rutllnd Church of Chrlsl
Sunday School . 9:30 n.in .• Worship 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

Ruii•IMI Fne Will Bapthl
S1 lcm 51. , Pa~tnr: Re\'. Paul Taylor.
Sun~ay School - 10 a. m., Evening · 7
p.m,. Wednesday Scrvtcc~ - 7 p.m.

Hnurs

Ali,IW .\'f'h ere

Racine, OH

uardrail , Fence &amp;
sign erection

M' h8ft\' f f

of

their heads in the

..•

lime"
to
emerge from

992-3985 ll'omero)') S9.&amp;-066iJ {Athensl

Po me: roy W~tslde Churth of Chrlsl
33~26 Chi ldren' s ·Home Rd ., Sunday
School · II a.m., Worship · IOa.m.. 6 p.m,
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Silver Rui. Baptist
Paswr: John Swanson, Sunday Sc hoo l IOil.m., Worship · I h .m., 7:00 p.m.
.Wednesday Scrvkes· 7:00 p.m.

A ntlquity Baptist
Sunday Sch,nol . 9: 30 a.m .. Worship ·
10:45 o.m.. Sunday EvcninK - 6:00 p. m..
Pastor: Mark McCumus

rates~

Call: Judy. Brandi. or Jane Ann

Insurance

Warm Priend/1

1800) 434-4194

Burly bears
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It's spring!

auto premium , chCl'~ out

Licensed Embalmer, Funeral Director

Worship
God Together
This Week!
1122 Jackson Pike

t 22 E. Main 1&gt;1. Pomeroy. OH 457()9
Before you pay ym1r ncx1 ho.mc or

•- Sunda y School · 9 :30 a.m":", Worsh ip10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.. W~dnesday Services •
7p.m.

Rljcint nrst Baptist
RH,:k Rule, Sund&gt;~y SchPo l - 9JO
a.n_l , Wo~hip • IU:4U a.m., 7:00 p. m..
\\'t!llt'll'sday Services· 7:00 p.m.
Pa~tm:

MI. Moriah Bapllst
Fourth &amp; Main St .. Middleport P11stor:
Rev. Gilbert Craig. Jr., Sunda y Scl:!ool ·
9;}0 il.m., Wor~hip • 10:45 a.m .

INSURANCE

Pomeroy C~urrh of Chri.o;t
212 W. Main St .. Minister: Amhony

Bradbury Church of Christ
Minister: Tom Run yon. 39558 Bradbury
Road. Middleport, Sunday School · 9:30
a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m .

Forest Run Baptist
Pastur : Arius Hurt. Sunday School • 10
a.m., Worsh ip · II a.m.

WILLIAMS &amp; ASSOC.

Hemloc::k Grove ChristJan Church
Mini ster: Larry Brown, Worship • 9:30
a.m .
Sunday School - ' 10:30 a.m., Bible Study 7p.m.

,'

Railroad St., Mason, Sunday School • 10
a.m .. Worship · II a.m., 6 p·.m.
Wednesday Servkn · 7 p.m.

Young's carpenter Serulce

Church of Christ

.J. _"

F.Uth Baptist Churtb

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

Muss· 5:'30 p.m., Sun.
Con. ·R:4~·9: 15 a.m ... Sun . Mass • 9:30
a.m.. Dailey Mass ~ 8:30a.m

~Urri5

..

In addition. fine particlcs of carbon were discovered in the patina that
allowed carbon-14 tests to
fix a d~te of 400 B.C. to
200 B.C. at 95 percent certainty. There were also·
. micro scop ic globules of
pure gold. In one theory.
the carbon and gold could
have come from the burn in g of the Temple during
.
.
the B&lt;tbylonwn COilquest
(586 B.C. ).
Shanks rai ses circumstantial points: If the
owner knew the tablet was
fake he would never have
taken it to an expert like
N k
1· d
ave , ' so any rau . must
lie elsewhere. How.. could a
forger pl ant those ancient
bits of carbon or fake the
patina so cleverly that
expert geologists woula be
misled?
- ·-Are moder,n forge rs now
so adept th at they can produce writing that fools textual experts. or stones that
fool the geologists? An
unnerving prospect.
Some · Israeli historians
are now
and repeat testing to help
sett le all this .
Note : The next ISsuc of
the. Rev~ew will carry an
. article from Cross questioning the tablet.

.&amp; :4~-~ : 15p . m. ,

Church or Jl'!ius Chrlsl APO!ilolk

Mystery continues on Jerusalem's 'Temple Tablet'
Bv RtcH..,RD N. OsniNG
Associated Press

The Dally Sentinel • Page' ·A7

www.mydallyllentlnel.coin

\

Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

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

St.

Middleport, OH

74D-992-6128

Local source lor trophies,
olaaues t-shirts and more
Carolina Antique
&amp; Craft Mall
312 6th St. POit:ll Pleasant
675-1160
. Variety of Furniture, glassware, craft~.
mllection nf b(ll!lcs &amp; primiti veOutside lleu market April ~ Oct .
Luvuwuv~ Available

ROCKSPRINGS
lrrt...Jc family Restaurant
REHABILmiON CENl;ER
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
The..,., you tkstr~~t, c/outo homt
Chicken"
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
W. Main St., Pol)'leroy

RACINE-PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS

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Full tine ol

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992-3785

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Pomeroy

740-992-3325
Marketing Property
Since 1971 ·

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

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

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.,(

�....
•

.

.•
•

.~

'
"

Nation •World

The Daity sentinel

•

Inside:
Friday, April

~.

2003

American special· forces
operations in Baghdad will
continue, officials say·

Images from the Front

dust or 'smoke. if the tactic . of B:;ghdad, coa lition forces
works it is one of the most still control le ss than half \)f
precise ways to hit target s Iraq' s
territory.
Gen.
WASHINGTON
with the least . amount of Richard Myers. chairman of
. .,
damage to c.1V1ilans or the1r the Joint Chiefs of St_:lo(t:,_,
Wh et her or not US
, , 111 1antry property
. on'C
troops push into Bag ll(lad '· AI 1h h US 1111.•1. ·. . told a Pentagon press co ·
· pOSitiOnS
··
l'ere'1
·e Tlltii'O' d·ty
on the ·" ·, au, g, . ·· · " llary
·
I C
&lt; • •
I.rom the1r
•
.
·
otlt~1als
hc~~e
discussed
t~w
Military
officiab
said the
,
.
h
outs ktrts o1 . I e City, deta1ls of spectal forces I111S·
·
·
.
·
Amencan.spectal operat1o~s sions in Iraq so far. Brooks ~egolar Army . and Manne
forc~ s w11l continue their · al so said Thursday that com- l~rces . . arnvmg . on
m1ss1on s lllS ide the lraq1 mandos . raided one of Baghdad s outski rts planned
cap 1t:1l
to . .• undermme Saddam's pal aces near hi s ' to form a cordon around the
Saddam ~u sse m s reg1me . . hometown of Tikrit.
c1ty. rather than try1ng
U.S. lorce.s dr~ve Iraq1 The American soldiers immedia-tely to take control
defenders Irom. Saddam didn't tlnd any top Iraqis but of the entire city. Myers said
InternatiOnal A1rport . on did locate, documents -- ·and the coa lition may work to
F.nday. wh1le south ot. the other material that cou ld sei up an interim Iraqi gov·
c,tp!l,tl, 2,500 Repubil cd n help m future battles and 111 ernment during that period ,
Guard
to U.S. the ·hunt for chemical and mak'1ng s &lt;1· dd·&lt;1m ' s· 1·eg 1' n1e
· s surrendered
· 1
Mannes.
s sm'd . Anct biologica
l weapons offi. · 1 .
oIT1c1a
air strikes continued, includ - ·:1 .. 'd
·
me evant.
,
Ct.l S Sdl . '
"When you oet to the
mg a barrage on the headMilimry officials also said
.
B"' 1d d ·
·
d
h
poult
where
ag11 a h·IS
quarters. of Iraq' .s air force . . coa I'1t1on
com man as ave
.
·
Special operations forces secured dams. bridge s. air· ?aSically 1so.lated, I ten w at
were "in key locations" fields and oil facilitie s to IS the s1 tuat1on you have m
in.si de the capital, Brig. Gen. keep Iraqi s from blowing th e country''" Myers told
Vmcent Brooks told a press them up or using them fo r reporters at the Pentagon.
conference at command attacks on coalition troops "You have a country that
headquarters m Qatar.
or neighboring countries.
Baghdad no longer contr?ls,
Seizure of the airport was th at whatever's happemng
Pentagon otf1c1als have
sa1d U.S. commandos have an illustration of the tactic s in side Baghdad is almost
been opera~tng from mstde U.S. officials say the y will irrelevant compared to
Baghdad at least s1nce eady use in Baghdad: takfng con- what' s going on in the rest
111 the war. The spec tal tro.l of key mstallauons tn 'of the· country."
forces are scout1ng targets q.u1 ck th rusts, rather than
A meeting to start forming
tor bombs or ground gett1ng bogged down, 111 such an interim oovernment
assaults , contacting lr.aq l bloody, street-to-street ltght· . ld , k 1 "'·1 ·'d 1
off1C1al s.to encourage delec- ing .
c~u . ta . e P ac~ 11" e ~aq
tions and perhaps trying to That 's been the U:S. strat· "'lthln '1 wee.k.. a semor
kill key offiCials or destroy egy all along _ avoiding Pentagon otf1c1al . sa1d
important installations.
population centers as much Thu rsday. Intense discusCommandos can point as possible while focusing s1ons about prec1scly hbw to
las.ers at targets that laser· attacks on Iraqi military and go about lormtng that lhter·
gmded bombs lock onto and -gove rnment
targets. 1m _gove rnm ent cont1nue
· destroy. While those bombs Although American troops in side the Bush administ{a·
can be sent off course by and tank s are at the fringe s tion, the senior official said.
BY MATT KELLEY

Associated Press ·

Secondary explosions from a destroyed Iraqi SA-6 surface to air miss ile shoot across the sky
on the outskirts of Karbala, Iraq, Thursday. Ordhance on board the SA-6 ."cooked off'' and ignited causing a large explosion which threw debris for hundreds of yards in every direction. (APJ
'

.

•

•

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page 82 Indiana wln agal.n, Page 83
· West AP's top vote getter, Page 84

PageBl

Friday, A~, 2003

..

Ravenswood
pounds
Southern
'

RAVENSWOOD, . W.Va.
- The Southern Tornadoes
met their De vil Thursday
mght m· a non-le'ague baseball game with Ravenswood.
The/ Red Devils claimed the
16-3 w'in.
Southern is I:2 overall and
1-1 in the Tri· Valley
Conference.
, Ravenswood went up 3-0
in the fir st inning off
Southern starter Cole Brown.
An error on Chambers hit
ball and a Miller single
brought home the three runs.
Ravenswood got two rriore
in the second for a 5-0 lead.
then added six more in the
· third for an 11 -0 lead . The
Red De vi Is never looked
back.
,
·
Brown suffered the loss
allowing five runs on no
strike outs and a walk in one
inning of work. Ty Hill came
on in relief and gave up six
runs on one hit; three walks,
and one strike \)Ut; and Joey.
Phillips gave up five runs,
had no walks, and one strike
out. The Southern defense
made live errors. ,
For Ravenswood, Miller
had two doubles and a single,
and Greene a double.
Ravenswood pitching led
by Rector and Miller com·
bined for four strikeouts and
two walks.
For Southern, Curt Crouch
had two singles, Jordan Hill a
double and single, B.J.
Marnhout a single , Jeremy_
Yeauger a double, Jordan
Bass a single, i!nd Adam Ball
a single.
goes
to
Southern
Alexander tonight for a
league game.

c

Prep baseball

Prep softball

Meigs b8ts goto work River Valley
hurler
no·
in win Over .RiverValley
3-for-4 for the Marauders.
Kyle Hannan also had a pair of
hits for Meigs.
.
.River Valley opened the game
CHES HIR E - River Valley . With
a 2-0 lead after a Robert
jumped on Mei(:S early, but the Yost two-run home run that also
Marauders dug 111 and made the·
dJ · w d
·most of their outing against the score ess1e ar .
Raiders.
Yost was 3-for-4 for the
Raiders.
Meigs had the hot bats
Meigs, though, had three runs
Thursday afternoon as the · h
d · ·
d h
Marauders defeated River Valley, m t e secon mmng an t ree
·
more in the fifth to tak~ a 6-2
11 -6.
ad vantage late in the game.
Thursday's conteSt 'was a The Raiders cut into that lead
·
Fackler affair.
Brandon Fackler · started the in the bottom of the sixth inning.
RaySean Allen singled and
game and struck out three to pick scored on a Adam Schultz dou·up the \fin, while picking up a ble. Schultz would also score to
p~ir of hits at the plate.
make it a 6-4 game going into the
Buzzy Fackler had another seventh.
Clinging to a two run lead,
strong day at the plate as he went
BY BUTCH COOPER

!

Stall writer

Meigs blew the game oJen in the
top of the seventh with the held
of a pair of ground-rule doubles.
Enc Cullums and Buzzy
Fackler opened the seventh with
singles before
cback-to-back
· ullums scored on a base-hit by
Brandon Ramsburg.
Fackler and Ramsburg then
came home on the first Meigs'
ti
1rst ground-rule double, this one
by Eric Burnem to make it a 9-4
game.
Hannan singled and. Dave
Boyd walked to load the bases
with one out.
Two batters later. Brandon
Fackler connected bn the second.
ground-rule double of the inning.

Please see Meigs, Bl

Buckeyes spring into action

Meigs girls
win opener

U.S. Marines fire mortars at Iraqi positions in the town of Kut. central Iraq, Thursday. While some
Marine units advanced toward Baghdad Thursday, others from the 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines batfled building to building with Iraqi ftghters in Kut, a military town on the Tigris River. (AP)

.

.

'

TODAY 11· 7
SAtURDAY 10 • 6!

TIE CLOCK IS ,.ICRIIG OFF THE niAL DAYS
FOR YOU 70·SAVE 01 THESE ONCE II A
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U.S. Marines artillery pounds Iraqi positions near a key east-west road to Baghdad near Kut,
central Iraq, Thursday. (AP)

•WIN•

....

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TOD~Y 'S CLASSIFIED

SECTION AND

CIASJ•m• tAfim

On VVednesday, the Meigs
Ladies chalked up their second win in TVC play as they
blanked the Nelsonville· York
Buckeyes 11-0 Katie Jeffers
tumyd in a · stellar perfortnance on the mound fanning
17 batters, allowing only
ihree singles and no free
passes Only four baserunners
reached for the Buckeyes.
Meigs notched three first
inning runs as, with one. out,
Nikki Butcher, Kayte Davis
and Mindy Chancey each
drew a . base on balls,
Successive singles from the
bats of Jaynee Davis and .
Amanda Fetty a~counted for
the scoring.
Control problems continued ·to plague rhe Buckeye
hurlers as Miranda Stewart
and Jeffers walked and
· Butcher ripped a triple to
deep left. Kayte Dav1s was
issued a free pass and scored
on a fielders chooice. The
Marauders added a run in the
third and four more in their
tina! at ,. bat for the win.
Butcher led the team with
ttJree hits , Jaynee Davis
•added a pair with Amanda
Fetty a nd Xanthe ·smith
chip~ing in with one each.

'

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BY BUTCH COOPER

Staff writer
CHESHIRE - Since her first game in a
River Valley softball uniform, Geri Mcfann
has proven .herself as a capable pitcher.
Two years later. she continues to improve . .
The junior hurler threw a no-hitter, and
nearly pitched a perfect game as the Raiders
defeated Meigs Thursday, 1-0.
Mcfann, who struck out the first four
Meigs batters she faces, wiffed 14 on the
afternoon.
The only base runner the Marauders were .
able to produce came in the fourth inning
when , with two outs, Kayte Davi s picked up
a full-count walk.
The walk was the only thing standing
between McFann a rare perfect game.
The closest Meigs came to gaining a hit off
McFann came in the fifth inning when a shot
to centerfield by Jaynee Davis was grabbed
by centerfielder Ashley CaldwelL ,
Meigs starter Joey Haning threw the first
five innings, striking out three, while allowing five hits and three walks.
The lone run of the game came off Haning
in the third inning.
The Raiders had advanced base runners to
third base in the first two innings. but it wasn't until the third when they finally took
advantage .
Nicki Tracewell opened the third with a
double to centeJfield and advanced to third
on a wild pitch . .She then scored on a sacri·
fice grounder to the shortstop by Nicole
Watkins.
Tracewell was 2-for-3 for the Raiders (II), 'while Jamie Nickels went 2-for-2.
The Raiders were seeking to extend their
small lead in the sixth innin~ when Meigs
brought in Katie Jeffers to reheve Haning.
Freshman Kyla Adkins, who struck out in
her first two at-bats against Haning, nailed a
triple to centerfield to lead off the bottom of
the sixth inning.
Two batters later. Nickels was walked and
pitch runner Lindsey· Godwin stole second to
put base runners on second and third with
only one out.
·
Jeffers, though, managed to strike out .
Leslie VVard and force Caldwell to fly out to
right field to end the threat. Jeffers struck out
two in her one inning of work.
McFann struck out the side in the se~enth•
inning to secure the win.
Ward was the only other River Valley bat·
ter to earn a base hit, a single in the fourth.
River Valley travels to Vinton County
Saturday for a doubleheader. The first game
is scheduled to begin at I p.m.

.

Meigs boys
thump Miller
BY JIM SOjjLSBY

Sports correspondent

ry

'
•

Ohio State quarter·
back Craig Krenzel
(16) runs with the
ball during the first
day of spring practice Thursday in
Columbus. Below,
Ohio State coach
Jim Tressel, cen.
ter, addresses his
team. (AP)

POMEROY - The Lady
Marauder softball team
' opened its season with a win
over the Miller Falcons but
not without a scare.
Four hits combined with a
pajr of walks gave the
Maroon and Gold a 4-0 lead
in the second inning. The
lead was extended to seven in
the third as the Meigs defense
held the Falcons in check
~iving up no hits through the ·
fourth and allowing only two
base runpers via walks. The
fifth frame proved to be disasterous for the Marauders as
t}le Lady Falcons plated nine.
runs. Meigs bounced back in
the seventh as they pounded
out five hits and racked up
· four run s to gain an 11·9 vic·
tory.
In a non-league contest, the
Lady Marauders fell 7-6 to
Point Pleasant; despite outhitting the opposttion 9-6
The Marauders held a 6-2
read but the Point nine plated
two runs in the fifth and thre
in the sixth to gain the victo-

hits Meigs

Reds swept by Pirates in
first series at new park
CINCINNATI (AP) - The ftrst guests at Great
American Ball Park made off wi,th everything but
the towels.
First homer. First win. First series sweep. The
Pittsburgh Pirates l~ft town with all of the ballpark's
breakthrough moments packed away.
· Reggie Sanders went 4-for-5 with a pair of
homers. and the Pirates kept the Cincinnati Reds
winless i{t their new ballpark with a 7-5 victory
Thursday.
The Pirates hit eight homers overall - three by
Sanders -· as they improved to 3-0 for the first time
since 1993 and ruirted a big moment for baseball's
first professional team.
· "We all know what baseball is like when you get
that fll'St hit and you can relax," said Sanders, who
was 7-for-11 in the series .with seven RBis . "With
where we are ril!ht now, things are going extremely
well , so I'm trying to enloy the moment."
. .
The only .good moment for the Reds came way
bac~ in the ftrst inning of the OJ?Cner, when Ken
Griffey Jr. doubled for the ballpark s first official hit.
After that, it was one disappointment after another.
"Every day was like opening day again," said left
fielder Adam Dunn, who was 1-for-11 in the series.

"I just think we pui too much pressure on ourselves.
We wanted to do good to give the fans something to
cheer about. You 're not going to 'win a game all year
if you play like that."
.
The Reds are developing a habit of flopping in big '
series. They closed Cinergy Field last September
getting swept by the Phillies in front of capacity
crowds. They opened the new ballpark over the
weekend by losing both exhibitions against
Cleveland,'then 'got drubbed in the ftrst three games
that mattered.
.
The new ballpark was designed with a close right·
field wall to help their leti-handcd lineup. but the
Reds have been outscored 33-12 in the five games,
including 24-10 against Pittsburgh. )
"They pounded on us pretty good, no question
about that," Reds manag~ Bob Boone said. "When
you give UP, 24 runs in three games, I' m big-timed
concerned. '
By contrast, the Pirates' offense- the NL's worst
over the last two seasons - felt quite at ease in the
new place.
''That was good baseball for us." manager Lloyd

Ple•se see Reels, 81

POMEROY - Meigs opened the 2003
baseball season with a victory over the Miller
FalGons by a 16-2 score as they logged 16
safeties.
Eric Cullums led the Maroon and Gold with
three hits in four trips to the plate. Teammates
Doug Dill, Dave Boyd, Eric Burnem and Dave
McClure each contributed two each and Buzz,
Fackler, Brandon Ramsburg, Matt Holley,
Jeremy Blackston and Jimmy Smith all hit
safely. Coach Dan Thomas utilized his enti.re
roster in posting the·win . No Falcon stats were
available at press time.
In a contest · shortened by darkness•
Wednesday, the outlook looked bleak for the '
Marauders as the Nelsonville-York Buckeyes
jumped out to,a. 5-0 lead in the top of the secomd frame. Doug Dill started on the mound
for the Marauders but was relieved by Buzz
Fackler following a b&lt;1se on balls to the leadoff batter. Both hurlers seemed to struggle dur·
ing the initial innings.
Hits by J\!stin ~pbinette , Kenny Handa, Tim
Kline and Ernie Perkins plus a pair of base on
balls resulted in the BucRs·early lead. Meigs
picked up a pair of runs in the bottom of the
second as Dave McClure opened with a double to center, advanced on a passed ball then
scored on a hit off the bat of Brandon Fackler
who, in turn, came home on a sacrifice by
Jimmy Smith. In the third and fourth innings
Fackler, behind so.me excellent play from his
ftelders, limited the Buckeyes to just one hit.
Meigs, in their portion of the third, totally
overpowered the N-Y nine as they batted
aaround three times plating seventeen runs on
twelve hits, fpur wlks and a few wild pitches
and passed balls. Buzz Fackler led off -with a
double left advancing on a ground ball (6·3) •
for out number one. Cullums and McClure
banged back to back doubles sending starting
PIMse iH Opener, 81
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Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

friday, April-4, ·zoo~

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Scoreboard

..

·Reds

frOm Page B1

g.

9

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Red Sox 14 Devil Rays· 5

AL

Royals 12, White Sox 6

WEBSITE DIRECTORY

Twins 3, Tig·ers 0

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r

Associated ·Press

Robertson allowed e igh t runs and I 0 hils. in
4 1-3 innings.
·

.
NEW YORK - Sammy Sosa drove in
three runs with a pair of sin gles and left
Shea Stadium still looking for hi s SOOth
career homer as the Chicago Cubs beat the
New York Mets 6-3 Thursday.
Mark Prior pitched six sharp innings,
Moi ses Alou drove in t·hree runs and Mark
Gnidzielanek scored three times.

Marlins 8, Phillies 3
MIAMI _ Mark Redman had a career-high
10 strikeouts in hi s debut for the Florida
Marlins, who hit three home runs aml beat the
Philadelphia Phillies to avoid getting , wept in
their opening series .
. · ·
Juan Encarnacion, Alex Gonzalez and Mike
Lowell homered for the Marlin s. Ivan
Rodriguez added a two-run triple.
Redman allowed seven hits and two runs one earne'd _ in 6 2 _3 innings.

Sosa lined a sharp, two-ru n
sin gle in the firs t, then came up
with the bases loaded and no
·
\)Uts in the third against Steve
Trachsel. Sosa got an infi eld
single - although replays showed he was
Vicente Padilla (0-1) gave up six hil s and
tagged by first baseman Jay Bell.
three runs, all on homers. David Be ll hit the
Reliever Scott Strick land inten tionall y Phillies' first home run of tbe season .
After Lowell singled, Encarnacion put
walked him in the eighth.
Prior (1-0) gave up four hit s and one run Florida ahead with . a two-run bomer in Ihe
while strikiJlg out seven.
second . One batter later, Gonzalez homered lo
Trach sel (0- 1) picked off Corey Patterson make it 3-0. ,
and Mark Bell horn in succession in the secWith the score 5-2 , Florida added live inlbe
ond. Sosa was thrown out at the plate try ing seventh against Rhea! Cormier. Pinch hitter
to score on Alou 's two-run double in the · Mike Mordecai and Ju!ln Pi erre singled, and
'third. then Alou was nail ed at home when he Rodrigue z tri·pled for a 5-2 lead . After Derrek
I
.
Lee walked, Lowell hit a three-run homer.
tagged up on a fl y ball.

NL

~

.

Cardinals 6, Brewers 4

Padres 6, Dodgers 1

ST. LOUIS - Garrett Stephenson allowed
one run in 6 1-3 innings and Albert Pujol s had
three RB!s as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the
Milwaukee Brewers to complete a three-game
sweep.
Scott Rolen had a two-run single, and Pujol s
and Edgar Renteria homered for ihe
Cardinals.
Royce Clayton hit a three-run homer in the
ninth off Cal Eldred. Steye Kline got two outs
for his second save.
· 'Stephenson ( 1-0) alloweMour hits.
Milwaukee put on two runn ers, in each of
the first two innings but managed only one in
the next four. Eddie Perez, who had three hits,
chased Stephenson with a home run in the
seventh.
The Cardinals were 0-for-7 with runners in
scoring position in the first '• four innings
against Matt Kinney (0- 1) before b~eaking
through . Pujols hit a two-run homer With one
out in the ftfth to put Sto Loui s ahead.

SAN DIEGO - Wearin g camoutlage jerseys to honor the military, the San Diego
Padre s looked like a totall y differen l team
than the one that stumbled througl\ its open •
'
'
I
mg
senes.
Jake Peavy struck out a career-high I I and
combined with two other pitchers on a twohitter as the Padres beat the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
Mark Loretta hit a three-run trip le to highlight the five-run fourth. when the Padres
took their first lead of the season.
Peavy struck out Shawn Green and Fred
McGriff three times eac h. Peavy ( 1-0)
allowed one run and one hit Brian
Jordan 's second-inning homer - in five
innings.
Peavy walked five, and the Padres committed four errors.
Kazuhi sa Ishii (0-1 ) was sharp the first
three innings, then allowed five runs on four
hits and three walk s iwthe fourth.

Rockies 10, Astros 5

EX'pos 4, Braves 0

.
M .
A hi . .
armers 7' t etiCS 6' 11

ATLANTA - The Atlanta Braves don ' t
HOUSTON - Bobby Estalella homered
twice and Nel so n Cruz pitched ftve inning s look aily.thing like the team that won II
to !;&gt;eat his fo rmer team as the Colorado straight division ti tle s. '
DETROIT- Kyle Lohse allowed two
Rockies avoided a three-game sweep by
Fi ve-time Gold Glove winner Andruw
hits in eight innings as the Minnesota
beating the Houston Astros.
Jones dropped a routine fly ba ll to lead to
Twins beat the Detroit Tigers to complete
Es'talella hit a solo homer in· the second Montrea l's first run and Brad Wilkerson hit
OAKLAND, Calif. - Ben Davis hit a - inning-against-Jeriome Robert son (0- 1) and a a two-run home r off Braves newcomer Ru ss
an opening three-game sweep.
- Minnesota improved to 3-0 for the sec- leadoff homer in the lith inning as the
two-run shot in a seve n-run fifth.
Orti z as the Expos won to se nd Atlanta to its
ond time in three yeaFs. For Detroit,- get- -Seattle Mariners blew two late- leads but
Todd Helton drove in three run s, Ronnie worst start in 15 years.
'
ting swept at the start of the season was still got new manager Bob Melvin his first
Belliard had two RBis and Jay Payton had
Montreal starter Jav ier Vazquez ( 1-0)
familiar. The .Tigers started 0-11 last sea- victory, beating the Oakland Athletics 7-6
three hits for the Rockies.
pitched 5 2-3 innings and allowed seven
son, a skid that caused the team to fire Thursday.
Cruz ( 1-0) allowed 'two runs and two hits. hits, walked two and struck out five .
Phil Garner., Luis~Pujols, who led the
Seattle lce"'
d-4'~'3----=
in the ninth . but Scott
After allowing Craig Bi ggio's homer in the
Vazquez escaped several jams with the
Tigers the re st of the way, was replaced Hatteberg !Jed 1t w1th an RBI ' smgle off
third, Cruz retired th ~ final eight batters he Braves stranding nine runners in the first six
at the end--of the season by Alan closer Kazuhiro Sasa~i. . After Mike
faced. He walked one and struck out one.
inning s.
·
Trammell.
Cameron drove home pmch-mnner Mark
Trailing 2-1 , the Rockies broke the ga me
Scott
Stewart
relieved
Vazquez in the
Detroit's debut series under its latest McLemore with a sacrifice tly off Keith
open in the fifth . Jose Hernandez singled and sixth with two runners on arid two outs and
manager showcased its off~nsive strug- Foulke in the IOth, Terrence I..ong hit a oneEstalella homered to make it 3-2. Chri s got pinch-hitter Julio Franco on a come·
gles. The T1gers managed JUSt two runs out homer to nghr off Jeff Nelson (1-0) to
Stynes doubled and scored on Belliard :s sin- backer.
and 10 hits. in the series and ha'l!e lost 12 tie it again .
gle.
T.J. Tucker and Joey Eischen finished the
. •
Davi s'·first hit of the season was a homer
straight to the Nns.
· After 'an infield hit by Pay ton, Helton hi t a nine -hitter.
The game ctrew 8,862, the smallest off Ricardo Rincon (0-1 ). McLemore apded
two-run double . Larry Walker added a twoOrtiz (0-1) allowed four runs - lhree
crowd at Comerica Park, which opened a run-sconng double .
run triple to knock out Robertson.
earrAIand fi ve hits in six innin gs.
in 2000. The gametime temperature was
Nelson allowed a sacrifice fly to Jermaine
42, 15 degrees colder than at the start Dye in the bottom half before striking out
Wednesday night.
Adam P1att w1th runners on second and
•
Lohse ( 1-0) retired his first 16 batters third to end it.
The Tuppers Plains- Chester Water Distrlc~ will be flushing lines
before Omar Infante lined a double into
lchiro Suzuki had three hits, and Edgar
beginning Sunday, AprilS at 11:00 PM through Friday, April.11 .
the left-center field gap· with· one out in Martinez drove in two runs for the
the sixth . Dmitri Young added a .single in . Manners.
Since it will take two weeks to complete, there will be another list in
\

next Friday's paper. Listed below are locations for this week:
MONDAY. APRIL 6:
Athens County: County Road 48 and New England area. Meigs County:
Longbottom to Riebel Road on SR 248 and CR 28 to two miles north of Bashan.
Long Bottom, Riverview, Bigley &amp; Mt. Olive, Curtis Hollow, #9 Road and Osborne
Road. SR 681 Booster to Reedsville.
TUESDAY. APRIL 7:
Meigs County: From the Intersection of Success Road and Rt. 7 to the fire
hydrants In Tuppers Plains. Rt. 7 to the Water Offlca. Tha Water Office to the end of
Silver Ridge. Athens County: From Stewart through Kllvert, Broadwell, and Haga
Ridge.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8:
Meigs County: From the Intersection of Riebel Road and SR 248 to Chester.
Chester to Five Points. Athens County: Rt. 50 from Vanderhopf to River Rd.

Take your business into the homes.of
over 40,000 consumers in Gallia;
Counties EVERYDAY
with a listing of your W.eb
in

...

Friday, April 4, 2003

.

the seventh inning .
.
Lohse stru ck out five and walked none,
and Eddie Guardado fini shed with a oneBALTIMORE - · Brian Anderson hit nintli for his second save.
·
marked hi s retur9 to the lpdi ans by' pitch- ' · ·
· ·
lOg eJght mnmgs ?f four-hit ball, and Matt
Lawto~ hll a three-run homer as '
·
Cleveland beat. the Baltimore Orioles 3-0
ST PETERSBURG · Fl
_ K ·
Thursday mght.
. ·
'I'
a..
ev1n
. The ganje drew a crowd of 18 ,470 _ · .M1IIar homered and drove 10 tour runs as
the lowest attendance in the 12-year his to· the ~osto n Red Sox beat the Tampa Bay
ry of Camden Yards'. The pre- Dev~l Rays: ,
_ . ·
. .
· yious tow was 20,279,, set last
M1llar had a!l R~ smgle. oft N1ck
September against Toronto .
B1erbrodt (0-1) 10 a f1ve-run th1rd 10mng,
In a matchu of pitchers . a so lo homer off reliever Jorge Sosa 1n the
. .
that played wit~ the ·Arizona fifth and a two-run double 111 the s1xth. He
D~amondbacks last year Anderson out- t11ed out m the eJ!)hth.
!"omar
Garc1aparra . a~d .. Shea
· pfrformed Rick Helling; 'who took a one· h1tter mto the sixth inning before falter- Hillenbrand had three RBis each for
ing .
·
Bo~ ton .
•
After Milton Bradley drew a one-out
Casey F_ossum (I :0) allowed three runs
walk and. Omar Vizquel reached on a bunt, and s1x h1ts over ftve_ 111nmgs. The left . Lawton drove the first pitch far over the hande~ e1ght -. . mclud111g four ot h1s fnst
nght·field wall _ his firsl hit of the sea- five batters - and walked two.
son after an 0-for-7 ·ta t .
.
Rey Ordonez had three RBi s for Tampa
. . s r..
Bay
That's. was enough offense for Ander~on
:
.
·
B1erbrodt all.ow.ed seven run s and e1ght
(1-0). who was 1-2--with a 1o47 ERA 111
·.
·· ·
H .
·
h1ts over four mn111gs.
spr10g trammg. e struck out two and
B' ll M 11 h d ' RBI d bl
d
ue er a "n .
ou e an
walked one.
. 1
The teft-hander.allowed just one runner Htllenbrand h1t a two-smgle as Boston
past first ba se in his first appearance for went up 5-0 10 the thlr,d . Mueller scored
the Indians since the Game 7 of the 1997 on catcher Toby B all s throwmg e~ror
World Serie s. Last year, Anderson lost' his ~fter Garc1aparra reached on a w1ld pllch
·first fi·ve deci sipn s before earning his ini- whJle stnkmg out.
ti al victory on June 5 in relief.
"He's been making ·steady progress in
terms of each and ev,ery outing going out
KANSAS CITY; Mo. - Brent Mayne hit
there and ~elting better, being a little bit
more crisp," Indians manager Eric Wedge a three-run homer in a seven-run eighth
said. "Obviously, today it really showed :" inning as the Kan sas City Royals rallied to
Danys Baez pitched a perfect ninth Jor beat Chicago for a three-game sweep of the
White Sox.
'
hi s second save.
. ·
Jose Valentin hit a pair of two-run homers
Helling (0-1) gave up three, hjts and
three walks over six innings in his debut and . also tripled for the White Sox . Billy
with the Oriole s. ··
Koch blew a save in his first chance for
The right-hander retired the firsi nine Chicago.
Kansas City scored all its runs with two
batters before Bradley singled to open the
fourth. Helling picked Bradley off ftrst, outs. ·
The Royals' Mike Sweeney hit a homer
then worked out of a jam in the fifth by
and
had three walks and three RBis.
striking out Josh Bard with two outs and
Chicago led 6-5 in the eighth when Tom
runners on the corners.
Anderson gave up four hits over the firs't Gordon (0-1 ).hit Joe Randa with a pitch and
five innings.and allowed only one runner Sweeney walked. Damaso Marte walked
Desi Relaford with two outs, loading the
past first base.
''l'll take that out of the gate. It was a bases, and· Koch relieved.
Ken Harvey hit a two-run single to put
pretty emotional night," he said. "It's the
, first start of the year, and then I'm going Karisas City ahead and Mayne hit an oppo·site-field homer to left on the next pitch.
' · up against my best friend in the game /'
Mayne had four hits and four RBi s.
Ryan Bukvich ( 1-0) pitched two scbreless
1 1
•
·-' innings of one-hit relief.
.

Opener

- Page B3

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Associated Press

Meigs

1

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The Daily Sentinel

made them look good. giving .
· UP.·eight hit&gt;and seven i'l!ns in
· 4 2-3 innings.
·
. · ·.
"EVerYthing I ~ot up,_they made
me pty for it," S31d Anderson, who
relies on ht' sintil:
Fogg, '\me
o[
· Josh
·Anderson's closest friends on
'the Pirates, gave up live runs.in
6 2-3 innings, including tworun homers by Sean Casey and .
Aaron Boone. McClendon
unsuccessfully argued that
Boone's·homer in the seventh
Hit the top of the wall in left
field and bounced back.
Cincinnati nati ve Scott
Sauerbeck got two outs, and
· Mike Williams retired two
batters for his' second save in
two days.
·
Sanders. a J)lainstay o~ the
Reds' 1995 playoff team, was
delighted to get tne ballpark's
first homer, and plans to add
th~ · ball to his collection of
memorabilia.

Seturdly, Mai"Ch 28
San Antonio at o&amp;trolt. 6 p.m·.
louisville at Toledo
Kansas 78, Arizona 75
Denver at Golden State, 6:30p.m.
Norfolk at oumam
FINAL FOUR "
Orlando at Houston, 8:30p.m. .
Ottawa at ScrantonM'tlkes-Barre
"' McClendon said. "We had 'it
NCAA Tournament
At The Loulel1n1 Supardome
Utah at Seanle, 9 p.m. ·
Pawtucket at Buffak,&gt;
OPENING ROUND
all going; for the most part."
New Ortt1n1
M
innesota
at
PortiMd,
9
p.m
.
Richmond at Charlotte
At Unlveralty ot o.yton Aren•
S.mtflna11
Phoenix
at
L.A.
Lakers,
9:30
~ . m. .
Sanders, who hit the ftrst
Syra'tuse
at
R
ochester
DT.on, Ohio
'
Soturdoy, April 5
TU11 1y, M•rch 18
homer
on opening day, sin•
Marquette (27-5) -vs. Kansas (29·7).
North Carolina-Asheville 92, Tex~s
6:o7pm
Baseball
gled
home
a run. in the second
Southern 84, OT
i11w.......
Transactions
·
Syracuse
(28·5)
vs.
Texas
(26-6) , 8:4_7
EAST REGl!lnl
and had a three-mn homer off
Fl,.t Round
p.m.
Chomplonohlp
.
Notlonol Loogue
BASEBALL
left-hander Jimmy Anderson
East Dl'llllon
Amer1can •..1agu1
lburtday, March 20
..
•
Monday, April 7
_.
At The Ford Cenltr
Semifinal winners, 9:22 p.m.
W
L
Pet GB
DETROIT TIGER3-Cialmed RHP Tyler in the third that put Pittsburgh
Okl~homo City
2002..03 AP AII·Amerlca
Montreat
3 0
1.000 - Walker off waivers from the New York ahead 5-1.
2
1
California 76, NOrth Carolina State 74,
Baakttblll TNm
Philadelphia
.667 1 Mats and optioned himto Toledo of the
He barely missed another
OT
FIRSTTEAM
Florida
1 2
.333 2 ll
1
2
333
2
· Oklahoma 71 , South CarOlina State 54 David West. Xavier, e-9. 232, senior~ New York
homer
in the ftfth, when the
·
National Llague
Frldoy, Morch 21
Teaneck,
N
.J
..
20.3
ppg,
12.0
'Pll· 51 .91g Atlonta
0
3
.000
3
LOS
ANGELES
DODGERSA
ctivated
wind
pushed
his drive just
At The FIMI Center
pet. 36.7 mlnutea (6• firSI·place votes,
c.ntrtl Dlvlelon Pet GB RHP Guillermo Mota. Optioned LHP wide of the left·fteld foul-pole.
_
Boaton
334 points).
Pittsburg. h
W L..
t .OOO ..:...
Steve Colyer )o Las Vegas of the. PCL.
Syracuse 76, Manhattan 65
Undaunted, Sanders hit
T
.J.
Ford,
Texas.
5·10,
1~5
.
sophomore,
~
Purchased the contract ot...38 Ron
Oklahoma State,77, Pennsylvania 63
Houaton. 15.0 ppg, 7.5 apg. 2.0 steals g~~~~~s
.~~ 1 Coomer from Las Vega&amp;. •
Anderson's
next pitch' into the
At St. Pete Tlmea Forum
1
2
(66, 343).
H t
f
NEW YORK MET&amp;-Asslgned LHP Mike seats in left-renter
~
Tampa, FIL
2
1
667
for a:7-3 lead.
Joah Howard, Wake Forest, 6·6, 2ft3, c:.~n~~ti
· ·000 3 Bacslk to Norfolk of the IL Sent INF
Auburn 65, Saint Joseph's 63, OT
1enlor,
Winston-Salem,
N.C.,
20.0
ppg,
M
ilwaukee
g
~
·
Marco
Scutaro
and
OF
Raul
Gonzalez
Anderson
was
determined
Wake Forest ·76. East Tennessee State 8.1 rpg, 2.0 steala (47, 303).
Witt DMalon
·000 3 outright to NorfOlk. Purchased ihe con- to prove that the Pirates did
73
Nl~ Collison, K,nsas, 6·9. 255, senior,
w L
Pet GB tract of AHP David Cone from Norfolk.
At Blrmlngham.Jett.rson Civic
him wrong by demoting him
' Iowa Falls, Iowa, 18.4 ppg, 9.3 rpg, 53.8 San Francisco 3 0
BASKETBALL
Center
1 000
pg pct, ·1.8 blocks (42 , 281) .
·
National
Baakttblll
Alloclallon
Blnnlnghtlm, Ala.
to
the bullpen last season, then
2
2
Dwyane Wade, Marquette, 8·4, 210, Arizona
Los Angeles
·5001 112 NBA-Fined Indiana F Ron Artesl
Louisville 86, Austin Peay 64
1
2
333 2
letting
him go. Instead. he
:333 2 S20,ordoof for directing obsAcan e gesrures
Butter 47, Mississippi State 46
J un 1~;.,.oa k L a w n . 11 1 .. 21.5 )ppg, 6.3 rpg, Colorado
1
2
4
1
7
2
2
1
4
5
1
08
5
3
2
3
1
1
1
12
1
Sec~nd Round
· -~~~ · ·
'
·
Sa o·
.1 3
.2502 112
owa ans n a game on pr .
SECONDTEAM
n oego
DALLAS MAVER ICKS- Pioced G·F
Solurdoy, Mlln:h 22
At The P:ord Center
• Hollis Price, Oklartama. 6-1,.170, senior,
Wadneactay'a Gamei
Michael Finley on the Injured list.
Oklohomo City
New Orleans. 19.5 ppg, 44.4 3-pt fg pet, MontreaiJ, Atlanta 0
Activated F Popeye Jones from the ·
Burnem, who was in pitchOklahoma 74, California 65
93.4ft pel (36 , 261 ).
~II d I hi
A ld
Injured list
Carmelo Anthony, Syracuse, 6·8, · 220, ..-u a 8 P 48 8' or a 2 1
FOOTBALL
ing retief . for Brandon
Sunday, March 23
freshman, Bahlmore, 22.7 ppg, 10.0 rpg , N.Y.Mets · Chicago Cubs
Natlontl Footblllltague
·•
AITIIo F- Contor
Fackler, stru ck out . Josh
36.4 minutes (19, 203).
Pittsburgh8,7,Colorado
Cincinnati7 4
.
Boaton
Houston
CINCINNATI
BENGALSA
cqulrod
FB
I;ddy,
~ Burnem 's
second
Syracuse 68, Oklahoma State 56
from Page B1 .
Kyle Korver, Creighton, 6·7, 210, senior, St. Louis 7, Milwaukee 0
Mike Green off waivers from Tennessee.
At St. Pete Tlmea Forum
Pella,
IoWa,
17.7
ppg, 6.3 rPQ, 3.0 apg, Los Angeles s, Arizona O
PHILADELPHIA
EAGLES-Signed
K
strike . out of the inn!ng, to.
Tampa, Fl•.
47.73·pt
pel, 90.7ft pet (5, 133).
san Franc 1sco 5 . san Dlego 3
Ca_rlos Martinez to a two-year contract.
end the game for the
Auburn 68, Wake Forest 62
Troy
BellMlfg, Boaton
College, 6-1. t83,
·
Thurodoy'o Gomoo
SAN FRANCISCO 49EAS-Signed OT . scoring Bumem and Hannan Marauders.
At Blrmlngham..Jetterson Civic
senIor. nneapolls. 25.4 ppg, 4.6 rpg, Pittsburgh 7. Cincinnati s
Travis Kir&amp;chke to a one-year contract.
'
ean..r
to make it a 11 -6 contest.
3.8 apg, 40.0 3·pt lg Pel, 2.3 steals, 38.6 Chicago Cubs B. N.Y.Mels 3
HOCKEY
River Valley pitcher Chris
Birmingham, Ala.
minutes
(4, 120).
N tl · 1H k L
The Raiders tried to rally in Brown struck out two as he
Jason Gardner, Arizona, 5 _10 , 181 , St.Louis6,MIIwaukee4
• one oc ay ••gua
Buller 79., louisville 71
senior, Indianapolis, 14. 4 ppg, 4.1 rpg, Florida 8, Philadelphia 3
NHL-Susper:tded Buftalo F Tim Connolly their half of the seventh.
S.mlftnala
pitched a complete ga me for
49
" 1 I7 113 )
Colorado 1a, Houston5
for four games, without pay, for a highAt Popol Arwno
1
Charlie
Hollanbaugh the Raiders.
. apg, ·~~~" stea' ·
·
.,. San otego 6, Los Angeles 1
sticking Incident In a game on Aprll2.
AI bony, N.Y.
. THIRD TEAM
Montreal4. Atlanto 0
CAROLINA HURRICANE&amp;-Reassignod scored on a wild pitch and
Frldoy, Morch 21
River Valley travels to
Brian Cook, Illinois, 6·10, 240, senior,
Frklly'l 01 ,ne1
LW Mike wan 10 Lowen of the A.HL.
Oklahoma 65, Butler 54
Ward came across home plate Vinton County for a twinbill .
lincoln,
Ill.,
20.1
ppg,
7.2
rpg,
~6
.
112).
Pitt
b
h
(S
"")
p
FLORIDA
"ANTHERS
A
.
d
0
Syracuse 79, Auburn 78
Reece Gaines, Louisville, 6-6, 205,
S urg
. uppan v-v at hlladelphla
r.
eass1gne
Champlonahlp
senior, Madlaon, Wll., 17.7 ppg, 5.0 apg ~ (Roa 0-Q), 1.30 p.m. .
Lukas Krajicek and RW Pierre Dagenais on a double by Yost.
Saturday.
At,Pepal A,..na
(t , 85).
San Francisco . (Amsworth 0·0) at to San Antonio of the AHL.
AI bony, N.Y.
Kirk Hlnrlch Kanau 6·3 190 senior Milwaukee (Ritchie o-o). 2:05p.m.
LOS ANGELES KINGS-Agreed to terms
Sunday, March SO
Sioux City, l~wa, 17.6 ppg, 3.9 'rPQ, 3 .6 Arizona (Kim o-b) at Colorado (Chacon(). with F Noah Clarke on one-year contract.
· Syracuse 63, Oklahoma 47
apg. 2.0 steals, -42.4 3-pt fg pel (2, 84).
0}, 4:05p.m.
,
.
! Recalled D Jason Holland from
~nnan, Smith, a free pass to
SOUTH REGIONAL
Keith
Bogana,
Klnrucq.,
6·5,
213,
senior,
Mon~real (Ohka Q..O) at N.Y. Meta (Cone~ Manchester of the AHL.
First Round .
"bill , R&lt;~:msburg' s single, bses
Alexan&lt;l•la, Va .. 16.0 ppg, 4.0 rpg (4, 74). 0),7. 10 p.m.
· NASHVILLE PREDATOR&amp;-Aaslgned F·
Thuraday, March 20
Ron
Slay
Tannesaee
6·8
240
senior
ChiCago
Cube
(Estes
Q-0) at Cincinnati 1 ,~cottia Upshall to Milwaukee ot the AHL.
on balls to Buzz Fackler and
At Spokono A"'no
· '
' ' 7 8'
' IGravesO.O) 7'10 p m
PHOENIX COYOTE&amp;-Recolled RW
4
21
3
Burnem and a trite from
Spokane, W11h.
from Page B1
~:)~hvllle, Tenn., · ppg, · rpg ( , Florida. (Teje~a 'o-o) 8t ·Atlanta (Marquis o- Frank Banham from Springfield of the
Connecticut 58, Brigham Young 53
0)
,
7:35p.m.
·
AHL.
Cullums which cleared ttie
HONORABLE MENTION
Stanford 77, San Diego 69
Houslpn (Moahlor 1).(1) at Sl. louis (Tomko SAN JOSE SHARK&amp;-Recalled fWI Nlko
(In olphebollcol ardor)
bases before the Bucks could
Frtdoy, Morch 21
Oimltrakos from Cleveland altha AHL.
hurler Chris Warren to ftrst in get the final out.
Mario Austin, Mississippi State; Marcus G-0), 8:10p.m.
At The Gaylord l!!ntertJinment
los
A
ngeles
ID•oilort
1).(1)
al
San
D
lago
VANCOUVER
CANUCK&amp;-Asslgned
C
Banks. UNLV: Steve Blake, Maryland;
favor of Robinette, who fared
Center
Brandon Reid to Manitoba of the AHL.
The Marauders were not
Bretl Blizzard. North Carolina- (Gondrey 0..1 ), 10:05 p.m.
Nllh'lllle, Tenn.
no better. Brandon Fackler
Soturdoy'l
GORMI'
I
COLLEGE
Wilmington; Matt Bonner, Florida;
XavkJr 71 , Troy State 59
through
with the onslaught
Montrealat N.Y.Mots, 1:10 p.m.
GAAONEA·WEBB-Signed
Rick was safe on ·an error and
Maf~land
75, North Carolina· Jermalne Boyene, Weber Stale; Gregory Chicago
Cubs at Clnclnnall, :1 : 1~ p.m.
Scruggs, men's basketball coach, to a things went from bad to •adding five more runs in the
Burks, Prairie View A&amp;M; Torrey Butler,
WllmJnglon 73
Francisco at Milwaukee. 2:05-p.m.
contract ext,nsion through the 2006·07
Coastal Carolina: Man Carroll, Notre San
• At Blrmlnghlm-..lefferaon CIVIC
season.
worse for the Buckeyes. fourth as a result of a pair of
Dame: Donald Cole, Sam Houston State. Houston at St. Louis, 2:10p.m. ··
Center
GEORGIA STATE-Named Michael Successive hits from Kyle Buckeye mi scues, a doubt ~
Taylor Coppenrath, Vermont; Ike Diogu. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 3:05p.m.
Birmingham, Ala.
Arizona
at
Colorado,
4:05p.m.
·
Perry
men's basketball coach and signed
Texas 82, North CarOlina-Asheville 6t Arizona State: Aul:)en Douglas, New
Hannan, Jimmy Smith, from Hannan , Dill's sinljle
himto a three-year contract.
Purdue 80, LSU 58
Mexico; Luis Flores. . Manhattan; Florida at Atlanta, 7:05 p.m.
JOHN JAY- Named Sean Couch Brandon Ramsburg-, Buzz and Buzz Fack-ler's three bagBrandulnn Fullove. UC Santa Barbara; Los Angeles at San Diego. 10:05 R-m.
At St. - nmoo FaNm
ger. The game' was ended by
Tompo, Flo.
Sunday"•
Galnft
·
women's basketball caach.
AntoniO Gates. Kent State; Willie Green,
Michigan State 79, Colorado 64
NEWBERRY-Named • Jason Brink Fackler, Eric Burnem pl\ls the men in blue due to darK- .
Detroit; Jermaine Hall, Wagner: Jarvis Florida at Atlanta, 1:05 p.m.
Aortda 85, Sam Houston State 55
women's basketball coach.
walks to Buzz, Cullums and
Hayes, Georgia; Mike Hetms, Oakland, Montreal at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.
S.Cond Round
Chtcago Cubs at Cincinnati, 1:15 p.m.
NORTH ALABAMA-Named· Bobby ~ McClure · resulted in Aaron ness and will, by mutual conMich.
Soturdoy, Morch 22
Champagne men's basketball coach. . McDonald going to the sent, probably not be continDahntav Jones, 10uka: Chris Kaman, Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 1:35"p.m.
At Spokane ANna
SEWANEE-Named Nick Cowell
Central Michigan; Brandln f&lt;nigh1. San Francisco at Milwaukee, 2:05p.m.
Spokono,Wooh.
Houston at St.louis, 2:10p.m.
women'a soccer coach.
Plttaburgh;
Ricky
M
inard,
Morehead
mound for N-Y. This did not ued at a future date. Buzz
ConnectiCut 85, Stanford 74
UCLA-Named Ben Howland men's bas·
State; James Moore, New Mexico· State; Arizona at Colorado, 3:05p.m.
deter the Meigs nine as they Fackler picked, up the win
' Sunday, Merch 23
ketball coach.
Jamaer Nelson, Saint Joseph's; Emelca loS Angeles at San Diego, 5 p.m.
and Warren was tagged with·
· At Tllo Goylard Entortolnmont
Okafor. Connecticut; Ugonne Onyekwe,
VIRGINIA
TECH-Named
Selh posted seven more scores the ·Joss.
Conlor
Amortcon
Looguo
Pennsylvania: Kirk ~nney, Wisconsin;
courtesy of Brandon Fackler,
Gre~rg men's basketball coach.
Nllhvllle, Tenn.
Eoot Dlvlolon
Luke Aldnour, Oregon.
Maryland 77, Xavier 64
·
w l
Pet GB
Quinton Ross, Southern MethOdist; Joe NewYort&lt;
At Blrmlnghem~on Civic
3
0
1.000 Shipp,
California;
Adam·
Sonn,
Belmont;
C.niO&lt;
Basten
3
I
.750 f/2
Blake
Stepp,
Gonzaga:
Mike
Sweetney,
Birmingham, Ale.
BaitilllOfe
1
2
.333 2
GeorgetoWn: Chris Thomas, Notre Dame; Tampa
Texas 77 , Purdue 67
Bay
1
3
.2502112
luke
Wahon,
Arizona;
Patrick
Whearty,
At St. Pete T1me1 Forum
0
3
.000 3
Holy Cross;· Troy Wheless, College ot Toronto
Tampa, F11.
Central Dlvlalon
Charleston;
Ron Williamson, Howard.
·Michigan State 68, Florida 46
w l
Pet GB
Slmlflnale
Kansas
City
3
0
1.000
Netlonallnvltatlon
Toum1rnent
At The Alomoclomo
Minnesota.
3
0
t
.OOO
- .
AI
Moclloon
Squo"'
Gordon
S.n Anlonlo
Cleveland
2
1
.887 1
Now Vorl&lt;
Frtdoy, March 21
Chicago
0
3
.000 3
s.mtftftlll
Texas 82, Connecticut 78
AUTOMOTIVE
REAL ESTATE
Detroit
0
3
.odo 3
Tuoocloy,
.
A
pril
1
Michigan Stale 60, Maryland 58
Wnt
Olvl1lon
Georgetown 88, Minnesota 74
Chomplonohlp
__ w L
Pet GB
St. John's 64, Texas Tech 63
Norris Northup Dodge
At Tllo Alomoclomo
Anaheim
2
1
.667
Chomplonohlp
Round
San Anlonlo
Oakland
2
1
.667
Thu-,, April 3
www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
Sunday, March 30
Seanle
1
2
.333
Third PfiCI
Texas 85, Michigan State 76
Texas
1
2
.333
Texas Tech 71 . Minnesota 61
MIDWEST .REGIONAL
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis
Chomplonohlp
Fl,..t Round
Wednoocloy'o Gomea
St. John's 70, Georgetown 67
Thurodoy, lolon:h 20
Kansas City 5, Chicago White Sox A
www.tuntpikeflm.com
AITIIoRCADoRMI
Homestead Realty .
Anaheim 11 , Texas 5
·
lncllo._uo
N
.Y
.
Yankees
9,
Toronto
7
Marquette 72, Holy Cross 68
Pro Basketball
www.homesteadrealtyl.com
Minnesota 8, DetrOit 1
Missouri 72, Southern ll,linois 71
BUSINESS TRAINING
Cleveland 4, 'Bahimcre 2
Nltlonel B..kltball.Anoclatlon
At Spokane Aren•
Boston 7, Tompo Bay 5
Spok•n~~, Wuh.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Oakland 8, Seattle 3
Wisconsin 81 , Weber State 74
I
Allonllc Olvlolon
Tulsa 84, Dayton 71
Thurodly'oOomoo
COMMUNITY
W L
Pel GB
Minnesota 3, Detroit 0
Frtdoy, Morch 21
x·New Jersey
46 29 .613
At Tllo Floe! C.ntor
x·Philaclelphia
45 29 .608 112 Kansas City 12, Chicago While Sox 6
City of Point Pleasant
Boaton
Boston
41 34 .5-47 5 Boston 14, Tampa Bay 5
Pittsburgh 87, wagner 61
.Seattle
7.
Oakland
6.
11
Innings
Orlando
39 36 .520 7
www.pointpleasantwv.org
Indiana 67, Alabama 62
Washington
34 41 .453 12 Cleveland 3, Battimore 0
MEDICAL
At The Geylord Entertainment
New Yorio:
Frkllr'• Gamea
33 42
.440 13
Center
Miami
23 53 .30323 112 Seattle {FranldinQ.O) at T&amp;)IBS (Valdes 1-&lt;&gt;),
N••hvllle, Tenn.
A.
2:05p.m.
Holzer Clinic
Cent11l
DivisiOn
Mason County Chamber of Commerce
Kentucky 95,
lndiana-PwrdueDetroit
(COrnejo
Q-0) at Chicago White Sox
Wl
PctGB
lndlanapolls 64
www.holzerdinic.com
www.masoncountychamber.org
.
)(·Detroit
47 27 .635 - (Loaiza 0-o), 4:05 p.m.
Utah 80, Oregon 58
Boston (Burken o-o) at Baltimore {Ponson
)l·lndlena
44 31
.5873
112
•
SecoRd Round
)l·r-.lew Orleans 42 34 .553 e 1).(1), 7:05p.m.
Saturday, M1rch 22
N.Y. Yankees (Wells G-0) at Tampa Bay
M
ilwaukee
37
39
.487 11
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce
Pleasant Valley Hospital
AITIIoRCADome
Atlanta
30 45
.40017 112 (Parris 0.0). 7:15p.m.
lndlanapoll1·
Chicago
26 50
.342 22 Toronto (Sturtze 00) at Minnesota (Reed
www.meigscountyohio.com •
www.pvalley.org
Marquette 101, Missouri 92, OT
1).(1), 8:05p.m.
Toronto
24
50
.324
23
At Spokono A"'no
Clevelan&lt;l
. 14 60 . .189 33 Cleveland (Oavis 0.0) at Kansas City .
Spo_, Welh.
(George 1).(1), 8:05p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
ENTERTAINMENT
Wisconsin 61 , Tulsa 60
Anaheim (Appler 1).(1) al Oakland (lilly oMklwe1t Olvlelon ,
NEWSPAPERS
Sunday, Mlrch 23
Wl
PciGB 0), 10:05 p.m.
At
The
,
....
Center
x·Dallas
56 19 .. .747
Saturdoy'o Go•
Charter Commyf!i@tions
Boaton
Boston at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.
x-San Antonio
55 20
.733
1
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
PiHsburgh 74, lmJiana 52
.
www.charter.com
x-Minneaota
47 29 .61891/2 Cleveland at Kansas City, 2~ 05 p.m.
At The Geylord Entertainment
. www.mydailytribune.com ·
Ulah
45 30 .800 11 Dotron at Chicago While Sox. 2:05p.m.
Canter
HousttV'l
38 37 .1507 18 Anaheim at Oakland, 4;05 p.m.
N11hvlh, Tenn.
Momphls
26 49 .347 30 N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 6:15p.m.
Kentucky 74, Utah 54
AGRICULTURE
Denver
17 59 .22439 112 Toronto at Mlnneso"" 7:05 p.m.
S.mlflnale
The Daily Sentinel
Seattle at Texas, 8;05 p.m.
Poc111c Dlvlolon
At The Hubort H. Humph roy
Suncloy'o
Gomoo
W L
Pel 08
Mal:rodome
www.mydailysentinel.com
x·Sacramento
5-4 22
.711 - N.Y,Yankees atTaml:'a Bay, 1:15 p.m.
Jim's Farm Equipment
Mlnnaapolle
•
x·Portland
46 28 .622 7 Boston at Battlmore, 1:35 p.m. ·
Thu,.doy, Mon:h 27
.
www.jiinsfarmequipment.com .
LA. Lakers
4. 31 .5879 1/2 TOI'onto at Minnesota, 2:05 p.m.
Kentucky 63, Wisconsin 57
Point Pleasant Register
Marquette 77, Pittsburgh 74
Phoenix
39 35 .527 14 Cleveland at Kanoos Cily. 2:05 p.m.
Ch1mplonahlp
SOaltle
38 38 .488 17 Detroit at ChiCago White Sc»c. 2:05p.m.
www.mydailyregister.com .
AtTIIo Hubort H, Humphroy
Golden Slalo
38 39 .411017 t/2 Seattle at Texas, 3:05p.m.
Anaheim
at
Oakland,
8:05
p.m
.
· IMiroda.,.
L.A. Clippers
23 51 .311 :Jo
Mlnnaapoll•
Soturdoy, Morch 28
x-cllnched playoff apot
lntomotlonol L.ooguo
Marquette 83, Kentucky 69
North DIYiolon
WEST REGIONAL
· --.,·o Oornoo
W L Pet! GB
Flrot Round
Booton 90, Miami 62
Buffalo (Indiana)
1 0 1.000•
Thuredly, Mlrch 20
Indiana 103, cteveland 82
Ottawa (Orloleo)
1 o 1.000At Tha ACA Dorno
Philadelphia 108, Chicago 101
Syracun {Blue Jaya) 1 0 1.000 lndlenapolla
Toronto 89, Detroit 78
Pawtucklt (Rod Sox) 0 1 .000 1
llllnof1 65, Weatern Kentucky 60
Milwaukee .106, Houston 99
Rocheater (TWint) 0 1 .OOQ t
Notre Dame 70, Wisconsin-Milwaukee San Antonio 105, Memphis 87
Scranton (Phllllet)
0 1 .000 1
69
1
South Dlvfolon
10
99
At Tnt 'Jon M. HUntlman C.nter
~~~:=~ 1 , if:J:'8'6g1on
W L Pel. Gl
Mason;~eigs
Son Loko City
Now Orloono 108, Now Jerooy 97
Charlotte (While So&gt;) 1 0• 1.000Gonzaga ?A, Clnc;:innatl 80
New York 83, Denver 7!5
..
Normlk (Moll) ,
1 o 1.000Arlzone 80, V1rmont 51
Thureclay'a Qernq
Durham (Oovll Aoyo) 0' 1 .000 1
~ddress
ContrOl Mlchlgon 79, Creighton 73
Allanlo 91 , Wuhlnglon 89
Richmond (Bnl,.o) o 1 .000 1
Ouko 87, COiorodo Sloll 67
L.A.Loktrs 100, Dollu 89
-Divfolon
At Tllo Pard Conlllr - . '
Utah 93, Port1on&lt;1 88
W L Pel Gl
Oklohomo Clly'
Frtdoy'oOomoo
lndlonopollo
(Broworw)
1
o 1.,000 Ariron• Statt 84, Mtmpl'lil 71
SanAntonio at Toronto, 7 p.m
·Toledo (Tigoro) ,
1 o 1.000 Utoh Slota 81
Houoton ol Phllodelphlo. 7 p.m.
Columbuo (Yonkito) 0 1 .000 t
·Konno &amp;4,
locondJIIound
loulovlllo (Redo)
0 t .000 1
loturdoy,
M""'h 22
Mloml 11 Now Jorwoy. 7:30p.m.
At The fiCA Dome
Sacramento at Botton, 8 p.m.
Thurodoy'l Ooln~lo
l.A.Lokors ol Mornphlo. 8 p.m.
Tolodo 8, loulaviDe 1
Notre Came ea. llllnofl 60
lndllna af 0.-trolt, 8 p.m.
Syracuu 5, ~odleller 2
AI The Jon M. Hunl•m•n Center
CIIYtilnd at Mllweukat. 8:30 p.m.
Buffalo to, Powtucf&lt;lt 8
IIH Loko City
Now Vorl&lt; •' Utoh, 9 p.m.
Chonono 7, Richmond 6
Arl%0nl ee, Gonzaga 95, 20T
L.A. CNpP'irs at Stattle, 10:30 p.m
onawa ~. ScrantorvW'IIkes-BI"e 4
Cuke 86, Central Michigan eo
Penland at Gotden State, 10:30 p.m.
lndlo--'1• 8, Columbus 2
At The Ford Cenlllr
lloturdoy'o o Norfolk 8, Ourhom2
~~ Clly
Momphla al Allonlo, 7 p.m.
KanDa 108, Arizona 'State 76
New Ortean• at Cfeveflnd, 7:30 p.m.
'rtdoy'IGornoo
lndllnapolla at Columbus
llmltlnolo
Mlwaukto at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
louisville at TdedO
At AiiOWhiMI Pond
Orla11do at Dallal, 8:30p.m.
Artlhelm, Clllf.
Minneeota at Phoenix. 9 p.m.
Norfolk at Durham
Thu-,, Morch 27
Now York at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.
Ottawa at Scnmton.Wilkaa~Barre
Art zona 88, Notre Oame 71 ·
SuncMW"'a 01mM
Pawlucklt al Bullalo
K1naaa 69, Oukl 85
Waahington a1 Bolton , t p.m.
o RIChmond at CharlOtte
Chemplonlhlp
NeW Jersey at Toronto, 1:30 p.m.
Rochealet' at Syracuse
At A••owi:Hd Pond
Sacramento at Flhlladelphia, 3:30p.m.
loturdoy'o Oomoo
Anaheim, C1llf.
Miamiat lndillrlll, 8 p.m.
Indianapolis at Columbus

College Basketball

.

Baseball
Arlderson hurls - ·Sosa still seeking
Tribe to shut-out win SOOth home run
.;&gt;

WEBSITE DIRECTORY

2081111CII C. .I'J

for only a $1 a day.

'12,800

Don Tate Motors .
East Main Street • Pomeroy, Oh
74G-992·6614 • 1·888-DON-TATE
'

--·

•
{(Z)Oidamoblla
-..'tllfllll&lt;t."

•

HOura:

, H Mon • Frl
'

9-4 S.lurdlly

Tox a Title 1ooo oot Included. All prtcito lnchldo

Hoi

'

@J

BWCK'

.

....,....,..... .... ,.. ~

~"
..,.,...,_, -~~
EXCITEMfNT.PASS fT ON ~"" .. ~

rooponolbfe tor typogoophlcolorroro.

THURSDAY. APRIL 9:
Meigs County: From the eashan-Booster to Bashan. From Bashan to Tackerville. ·. I ·
From Flva Points to Crew Road-Includes Royal Oak Resort, Wlpple Road, Crow
Sub-Division, Golf Course Hill, Forest ljun Road off Routs 7 to Blo.c k Plant. Eagle
Ridge off SR 7, Sand Ridge, Pine Grovl Road, VInegar Street, Roy Jones Road,
Amberger Road, Morning Star Road, Court· Street, Salser Road, Forest Run Road,
Yost Road, Minersville Hill, and Welchtown.
Meigs &amp; Athens Couf'y: tuppers Plains to At. 50 Booster.
FRIDAY. APRIL 10:
,·
Athen~ County: River Road off At. 50 through Guysville. Meigs County: Rt. 7 -.
around Tu'ppers Plains, TP to·Aifred and Bearwallow, TP to 681 Booster, Arbaugh
Addition, and TP to Coolville.
Most of the flushing will be done at night and some customers may experience tow
pressure. Please be aware lhi!tthe water may be discolored for several miles
around th~se-locatlons . If the water Is dl.scotored for longer than a few hours,
pl!!asa contact the office so we will be,aware ol the problem.

.'
I

�.

-

I
••
~

'

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

'

Friday, Apri14, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

r

Friday, April 4, 2003

www.mydailysentine.t.com
·~

College basketball

'

'

'

ntribune - Sentinel -

'

~.e

ister

CLASSIFIED

Howland vows to·return .West leading ~ote-getter,
first Xavier All-America
UCLA
to
past
glory
.
I

BY

BETH HARRIS

Associated Press

~ ----------------------------~·--

LOS ANGELES - Ben Howland knows he
will never be another John Wooden. He still
wants to try.
Howland took over as UCLA coach
Thursday, leaving behin~ a Pittsburgh program
he took to nattonal prommence for a chance·to
' lead the Bruins. whom he idolized growing up
in Santa Barbara.
"It's so exciting," he said. "It's a drearrtl've
realized."
The 45 ·year-old 'How land becomes the
eighth coach at UCLA since Wooden retired in
1975 after leading the Bruins to 10. NCAA
championships in a 12-year span.
UCLA has won only one title since Wooden
retired, unc!er Jim Harrick in 1995.
"I really embrace and revel in the history and
tradition of this program," Howland said.
"John Wooden and UCLA basketball are synonymous. He's the greatest, not only because
of tfle national championships he helped win,
but equally importantly, the way he conducted
the program in such class and dignity."
Howland signed a seven-year contract with a
base guarantee of $900,000-plus per year. It
includes bonuses for graduation rate, being
selected national coach of the year, reaching
the Final Four and winning national and Pac10 Conference titles that could push his salary
over $1 million.
UCLA athletic director Dan Guerrero said
Howland and the university will jointly pay a
$750,000 buyout of his Pitt contract..
'"The bottom line is we got our man,"
Guerrero said. "We expect big things from this
hire, and no more than what Ben expects."
Howland will try to rebuild the battered
Bruins, just as he led Pitt from Big East dOormat to national championship contender in
four years.
"We have a lot of work to do," he said. "This
is not an overnight project."
Howland has a 168-99 record in nine years
as a head coach - five at Northern Arizona
and fouratPitt. The Panthers reached the final
I 6 of the NCAA tournament the last two years.
He will run a UCLA program coming off its
firsi losing season in 55 years. Steve Lavin
was fit ed March 17 after the Bruins went I 019. ending iheir string of 14 consecutive
NCAA tournament appearances·.
''I don't know a lot about them as players or
as kids yet," said Howland, who met with his
new team for 30 minutes Thursday. "It's a
clean slate for everyone in the program."
Howland planned to fly to the Final Four in
New Orleans with his 15-year-old son later
Thursday, then go to Pittsburgh on Sunday to
meet with his former players before flying to

Associated Press
"That was always the goal that I wanted
- - - - - - - - - - - - -·-' ___ to give myself a chance at things like that,
and that's what I thought about as I went
David West knows how to get the most, through all that hard work in the offsea'
whether it's points on the court or votes off son," lie said.
of it.
His most remarkable performance came
He became the first Xavier player to earn against Dayton on Feb. 8, when he scored
AP AII-Ameri~a honors Thursday as the 47 points and had 18 rebolllnds, JUSt m1ssmg
, leading vote-getter on the 2002-03 team.
a double-double in each half.
.
The three-ttme Atlantic 10 player of the
''I've always wanted t1b set myself apart
year was joined on the first team by fellow from other players, and to be the first playseniors Nick Collison of Kansas and Josh er picked from Xavier is part of all that;" he
.
Howard of Wake Forest. along with junior . said.
West, the only preseason AII-Amenca.n to
Dwyane Wade of Marquette and sophomore
T.J. Ford of Texas.
earn the postseason honor. rece1ved 64 f1rs1•
Collison, Wade and Ford play Saturday in team voteS _and 344 points from the 72ihe Final Four.
member natiOnal med1a panel that selects
The 6-foot-9 West, a second-team All- the weekly AP Top 25. Each voter picked
American last year, averaged 20.3 points three teams and players recetved pomts on
and 12.0 rebounds for the Musketeers, lead- a 5-3-1 basis. The voting was done before
.
.
ing them to a Top I 0 ranking and a No: 3 the NCAA t~urnament.
·
West d1dn t sound 1mpressed With bemg
seed in the NCAA tournament.
West surprised a lot of people when he th~ l~ading vote-getter. •
·
decided to pass up the NBA draft and return .
It s JUSt such a s1_gn of r~spect to be on
for his senior season. He admitted honors the team penod that I don t know 1f that
adds any more to it," he· said.
like these were part of the reason.

Los Angeles on Monday to meet individually
with the Bruins.
"I saw the eyes of the players. IJ"hey were :&gt;itting 9n the edges of their seats and they were
all making eye contact," Guerrero said. "To a
person, I would say they all bought in."
Howland i::an begin recruiting next Tuesday;
however, all 13 of UCLA's scholarships are
·
·
committed for next season. ·
. "The No. I thing in recruiting is players in
your own area. There's not a more fertile
ground for players than right here in Southern
California,' he said. "We've got to get back
doing a great job of evaluating and attracting
that talent."
·
Howland said he would meet with the 92year-old Wooden at the Final Four.
"He's a living legend," he said. "He's a role
model for me. Basketball players want to be
like Mike (Jordan). Coaches want to be like
Wooden. But understand there's only one and
there will never be another John Wooden."
The day after Pitt lost to Marquette in the
third round of the NCAA tournament,
Howland had a friend contact Guerrero.
"I knew right away what I wmit~d to do,
which was to pursue this opportunity," the
coach said.
G11errero received permission from Pitt to
contact Howland last Saturday, and arrangements were made for the coach to meet with
Guerrero in Santa Barbara the next day.
On,,J'uesday, Guerrero negotiated with
Howland's representative, then the coach met
with UCLA chancellor Albert Camesale on
Wednesday night.
"I wanted it so badly, I arranged through
some friends who have a Gulfstream jet to ~et
myself here on my own," Howland said1 'In
fact, you owe me, Dan."
Howland thanked everyone, from his earliest coach at the Boys Club in Goleta, Calif.. to
Utah coach Rick Majerus, whom he described
as his best friend in coaching.
"I would not be sitting here if not for Rick,"
he said.
Howland was not the only candidate interviewed by Guerrero, although he was the only
one to meet with Camesale. The chancellor
briefly interrupted. Howland's chat with
reporters to hug him after the news conference
that was attended by Howland's parents, wife
and son.
"He's coming in with a different style than
what's been here before," Guerrero said.
One of Howland's top priorities is to hire his
staff, who will earn more than previous UCLA
assistants, a condition he sought.
·
"I'm really appreciative of that," he said.
'The key is your staff. The reason I've had
success through the past nine years is I had
great assistant coaches working together to get
the job done."

St. John's storms to NIT
championship over Hoyas
'

NEW YORK (AP) - Marcus Hatten
ended his collegiate career with something
that always eluded him: a championship.
Hatten scored 22 points and made a key
free throw as St. John's won its record silHh
National Invitational Tournament with a 7067 comeback victory over Big East rival
Georgetown in front of I 2.406 Thursday
night at Madison Square Garden.
Boisterous St. John's fans rushed the coun
after the game as "New York. New York"
played. Fans then crowded around Hatten
and lifted him up on their shoulders. Hatten
won tournament MVP honors.
"We were in purgatory, now we're in.heaven," coach Mike Jarvis said.
Freshman Elijah Ingram made two free
throws with 4. I · seconds remaining to seal
the game. Tony Bethel missed a 3-pointer
that would have tied it as the buzzer sounded.
Georgetown big man Michael Sweetney
led the Hoyas with 25 points and nine
rebounds.
·
The game came down to the final two minutes. Atier the Hoy as (I 9-15) trailed for most
of the second half. Bethel tied it at 67 with

I:27 remaining: Hatten made one of two free
throws to give St. John 's a 68-67 lead with
r: 13 to go.
The Hoy as had another chance to take the
lead, but Gerald Riley missed with 4. I seconds to go .. That 's when lngr&amp;m made hi s
final free throws.
Georgetown led by as many as eight in the
first half and was up 38-34 at the break. But
the Hoy as started the second half in a funk.
It took nearly six minutes for them• to
score, and St. John's (21-13) took advantage.
Hatten scored the Red Storm 's first seven
points, and they led 43-38 after a dunk , by
Grady ~eynolds five minutes into the half.
The Hoyas briefly took the lead back 4443, but St. John's led 60-54 with 7:40 to
play. St. John's hc;Id the lead until Bethel tied
It.
,
.
Sweetney, who scored 32 points againsf
Minnesota in the semifinals, dominated in ,
the first half. He scored 15J,JOints, including
5-of-6 from the free-throw lme, and had five
blocks to lead the Hoyas. Riley added I 0.
St. John's shot 29.3 percent from the field,
and misse~ine of 13 shots from 3-point
range in the first half.

Gun Shoot

PUBLIC NOTICE

Forked Run

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PROBATE
DIVISION
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MAITER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

Sportsman
Club.

with what you'll
find in the
Classifieds!

SUNDAY,
APRIL&amp;
12:00 noon

I

-The
Daily
Sentinel
Classifieds

Slugs Only

'

ANNOUNCEMENTS

ANNOUNCEMENT.S

Water's Edge
of Syracuse
Taking applications for
1 Bedroom Apartment

Call or Come by our office located at

A MITt

2070 St. Rt. 124

,

Eagles Club

Office Hours: Tues. noon • Thurs. 6p.m. ·

(740) 992-6419
TDDI1·800·7S0-07SO

Pomeroy

Band: Movin' On

llqua1 HouliDJ 0pp011unity

992-2155

HELP WANTED

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
OPERATING ROOM TECHNICIAN
Graduate

of

· BINGO
April 5th
6:30pm

HELP WANTED

t
accredit&lt;d surgical technology

piognm or equivaient experience required.
· Cc!iified ORT preferred.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL .
do Human Reaoun:es
25:ZO Valley Drive
Pl.....,t, WV 25550
(304) 6754340

Point

•

•

First pack $10.00
All other after $5.00
Starburst $1200

The Racine American Legion 602
will be having a

Steak and Noodle dinner
April 6th from 11 :Oo - ?
· The public is welcome.

AAIEOE

•

Visit
at 111' Court Stree.t , Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
·
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallysentlnel.com

Offtee-!fowc-tS""

DisplaY Ads
All Dl•pl•y; 1:Z Noon :Z
Bu•l
D•v• Prior To

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

a.rn.

HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ
Succeaaful Ada

1 Adlt Should Run 7 Day•

r .~ .Ir·r~:;Y;ARD::;;:SALE='~I e~y~ r....~-~--SALE-·

•

Accounts and vouch·
ers of the following
named fiduciary has
been flied In the
Probate Court, Malga
County,
Ohio
lor
approval and settle'

~

·

C·1 Beer Carry Out permit
lor sale, Chester Township.
Meigs County, send letters
of interest to: The Oaily
Sentinel, PO Box 729·20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
::-------::-::::-Do you need your GED or
High-School Olploma? Do
you know how to write an
effective resume? Do you
know what qualities emp4oyers are looking For in ari
employee? Do you know
how to keep a job once you
get it? We can Help! For
more information. call the
Meigs
County
STEP/JOG/ABLE Program
at 74()-992·6600 or 74()992·6930, or stop in Monday
through Friday at 111 West
second Street in Pomeroy,
Oh. Make a difference in
your lite Today!

PPHS "0-KAN ~ Yearbooks
from 1952· 1963. Will pay
$25. each, plus postage .
Email April Wamsley Nicola
at nicotajaCan.net.

r

PUBLIC NOTICE
Jo
Ann
Secretary

Crlap,

(3) 24. (4)4, 9, t5

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE
an Iron rod at 22 foal
for reler811C8i thence
Eaot 208 feet to the
pafnt al beginning,

containing

t oe acrea,

more or leafS, IIC&amp;pl·
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
HOME
NATIONAL
BANK
PLAINTIFF

-vs .

THOMAS F. CUMMINS, ETAL.
CASE NO. 02 CV 97
ment.
,
NOTICE OF SALE
ESTATE NO. 32160
By virtue of an
Tho third ·account of Al,l aa Order of Sale
Jeannine
E.
laaued oul of the
Cunningham
and Common Pleas Court
Frances J. Hunnel, of Melga County.
CoOhio, In lha cue of
Guardians of tho per- the Home National
,a on .and astala of
Bank, Plaintiff, ve.
VIrginia Btanwlcz an Thomaa F. Cummine,
alleged Incompetent et 11.,
peraon.
Dafendanta, upon a
Unleee excepllone ~udgmant
therein
are flied thereto, uld
rendered, baing Cue
account will be sailor
No. 02.CV·II7 In iald
hearing before uld Court, the Shariff of
Court on tha 51h dey
Melgl County, Ohio,
of May, 2003, at which will offer lor aela at
lima aald account will
tha Irani door of the
be cdneldered end
Courthou11
In
continued from day to
Pomeroy,
Mala•
. dey until ftnally die·
County, Ohio, on tile
poled or •.
111 Clay of May, 2003,
Any pereon Inter· at 10: 3 0 a.m., thllol·
aetad may ftle written
lowing fande and len·
axoeptlon to eald emenla, located at
ecoount or to mattere 41410
and 41478
pertaining to the ex.. Morning liar Roed,
cutlon ol the trYel,
Racine, OH 41771. A
not 1111 than ltve CO!Yipltll
legal
daye prior to the dell
daecrtptlon oltha real
HI lOr hearing.
lltale It 11 lollowe:
J. 1. Powell, Judge
Situate In Sutton
Common Pllll Court, Tawnthlp,
Mala•
Probate Dlvlelon County, Stilt ol Ohio,
Malge County, Ohio
and baing In ltctlon
(4) 4
11, Town 3 North,
Range 12
~ of I he
Compenv'•
PUBLIC NOTICE Ohio
Purchett and baing
dtecrlblcl 11 followa:
Natlca · It hereby
Beginning et 1n Iron
given that the annual
rod South 1071 feat
meeting ol the ehar.. lfom the Northe11t
holder• at Farmare corner
of
the
lancahern, Inc. will Northwatt Quertar of
be
held
•t
the
Section 11; thence '
Middleport C!lurch of South 208 fHt to a
Chrltl, Family Lilt point In County Roed
Center,
437
Main 30 (Morning Star
Street,
Middleport,
Roed), paeelng • 4
Ohio, on the third loot oek traa at 171
Wlldneaday of Aprtl,
lilt lor reference-,
2003, II 4:00 p.m.
thence
South
82
according
to
Itt
dagraaa 02. mlnutea
bylewt, lor the pur· 14 ttconda Weal
poaa
ol
electing · 210.02 feat along
director• and the
County
Road
30
treneactlon of tuch
(Morning Shlr Roed)
other buelne.. u
to a point ; thence
may properly come
North 237.0SI IHI to ,_
before eald mHtlng.
an Iron !od, Pilling

lng ell legal rlghll of
way.
EXCEPT the coal
underlying the above
real eetate aa pravl·
auoly noled In Deed
recorded In Volume
207, Page 689, Malga
County
Deed
Recorda.
EXCEPTING 0.041
acre conveyed to the
Slate
of
Ohio,
Department
of
Transportation,
by
deed dated June 19,
200 1, and recorded In
Volume 127, Page
249, Meigs County
Official Records.
Reference DeedVolume 108, Page 285
and Volume 108, Page
287, Melga Coynty
OHiclal Recorda.
Audllor'a Parcel No
: 18-01142 000
The above daec~becl
real 11tat1 II IOid "18
le" without warrent111

GIVF.AW~Y

Giveaway: Beagle· puppy,
5mo . old: Black Lab mix
puppy, 6mo. old, to good
home (740)441·8298 . GOOd
with children

Male 3 1!2yr old Full BlOOd
long haired Jack: Russel
Tamer to good home.
13041937·3954

Thursday &amp; Friday. 5 !amilies. 112 mile Qn Johnsons
Ridge oft GeOrges ,. Creek
Pulp Wood to giveaway. Ad, (740)446-6345
(304')895·3577 ask tor
4
yARD SA!£Mitchell or Sean call after

or

HCOnd half 2002 and
accrued

2003

real

Illata IIXH.
ALL
SHERIFF'S
SALES
OPERATE
UNDER THE DOC·
TRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR. PROSPI!C.
TIVE PURCHASERS
ARE
URGED
TO
CHECK FOR UENSIN
THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO. THE
MEWS
COUNTY
SHERIFF MAKES NO
GUARANTEE AS TO
THE
STATUS OF
TITLE
PRIOR TO
SALE.
Douglae W. LIHit, ·
Attorney lor Plaintiff
3(28), 4(4), 4(11) 3T

.

I

r

~ Jl'oMERoy/MJooLE .

4~m .

Apnl 2-3-4. Hysell Run Rd.
White Toy Poodle, male,
lo\les children, 3 years old. April 4-5, at Rutland
(i:7~:40:-:l-446.;·-·3~906-----, Firehouse, S:30·?, clothes·
Larr AND
kids through plus sizes, fur·
niture, lots of everything,

i

FOUND

·-------"'
Lost- 1 1/2 year old blacK
Lab w/whlle markings in
Peach Fork area. Reward.
(740)992·5351
- -------Lost- Chocolate Lab. male.
unneutered tOO•. near
Salem School Lot &amp; 143,
3/28/03, 740·664-3067 or
740·707·2065
ask
tor
Gabby
-::-:--:--:::-:--:-:-:-:
.LOST· Pine St, male· black/
white. some gray alound
race. medium size, part
sheep dog, needs medical
ottonllon, (7401446-7685

or coven1nta.
PROPERTY
ADDRESS: 48480 and
41478 Morntog Star
Roed, Recine, DH
41771
REAL
!ITAT!
APPRAIIED
AT!
888,000.00. Tht real
Hilla cannot be IOid
far 1111 than two
lhlrdl lht IPPfllllld
value.
TERMI 01' IALI:
10% down day of
1111,
balance on
delivery
deed.
lold eub)aot to

Garage &amp; bake sale- Fry
residence next to Salisbury
"'••oiGiiAUJI'OLiiiioiiiiilS;..orl Elementary School. Frjday
Aprll4, 9-4, Saturday AprilS,
3 f.!lmlly· firs t time. 1038 9-4, Proceeds to HemlocK
Buck Ridge Ad, grey house, Orange.
top of ill, tools. fumiture. .
misc.
--------Garage sale- 4 family,
Friday,
April 4th , 8·5, 74Q4 family yard sale. St At554,
985-4260,
3rd house on left
Bidwell, 112 mile past corner
Store on left. Friday, on top ol Chester Hill ~SA
2481
infant,
children,
Saturday, Sunday 9-6.
women's .&amp; maternity cloth·
53 Shawnee Lane, 3 tamily, ing, toddler bed wlmattress,
carseat.
lots of clothes. furniture, crad le,
household, toys &amp; leopard washer/dryer, home enter·
Shoe Chair hom Big Sandy, tainment center, dresser;
e11erctse
muc.h
morel
10-pm, table/lamp ,
machin8, Step 2 swingset
Saturday, April 5.
w/club house. lots morel
--------April 4th &amp; 5th , Colonial
drive, Honeysuck;le Apt. Garage sate- rain or shine,
April 4th &amp; 5th , Fri. &amp; Sat.,
Something for e~o~eryone .
- - - - - - - - Bam-?. turn at Meigs
Mo\ling Sale· 227 4th Memory Gardens off At. 7
Avenue,
9am-4pm. go 114 mile 2nd house on
Saturday 5th.
left,. old mantel clock. old
- - - - - - -crocks, quilts. old toys, old
Moving Sale· 4/3 &amp; ·4/4, colored glass. frost lree
Thursday- Friday. Located refrigerator 2 old trunks, lots
behind Pepsi Distributing in olmisc .. (740)992-7599
Cheshire. 9am-4pm, Rain or
shine Clothes, furniture , -M-ld-dle-p-or1·-P-om
- er-o-y'_s __
Sth.
curtains, toys. household annual 6·mite tong Yellow
Items, computer printer, Flag Ya....t Sale, May 2 &amp; 3,
'""
scanner. desk, chair, and took tor the yellow flags! can
oak filing cabinet. Much for into about locations, 74DMorel
992·4055.
--------Moving Yard Sale . 2608
State Aoute 141 , Friday &amp; Sat.· April 5th . 9-4 Rain or
Saturday,
namebrand shine. 3 miles from Chester
clothes, girts infant. 10-12. on SA 248. Baby girls
boys infant- 12, womens 14- clothes 0 · 12 months, other
Hems,
kenmore
16, twin bedding. Pooh. lion baby
!Tiisc
toys,
King, cars. household. sweeper,
Disney 1 movies,
toys, women/Men clothes. Small
btack&amp;white TV. 985·3479
playstati&lt;ln. walker.

YARD SALE·

something !Of everyone :
Basement sale· April 3-4,
first house on Kerr St.
across
from Pomeroy
Municipal
Park:, .,.baby
clothes, baby items , ·deer
stand , pool table &amp; lots
more.
-'•'----.,--.,.--,.Community yard sale· at the
comir of Eagle Ridge Rd. &amp;
Pine Gro1.1e Rd from
Pomeroy go to Memorial
Gardens on AT 7 tum right,
111'81 Intersection approxi·
mately 1/2 mile, Bam till
whenever, will hi&gt;J&amp; tools
clothea, glassware, guns,
antiques, furniture , collect
ltemo, Sat. Apnl5.

Wednesday-Saturday, Sam,
Tackerville Rd., Racine ,
bikes, • dresser, treadmill ,
books,
decorative ,
baby/adult clothing.

rL~-·PJ:·.v

ARD SAJ.E-

;"

Oil'l..EA.sANTiliiliii!iiiii.....

Estate Sale 2635 Lincoln
Ave. April 2, 3, 4 , 5. 9·?.
Furniture, glassware, round
bed, dressers, dishes. Lots
of misc.
Huge Yard Sale Thursday,
Friday, Saturday. April 3,4,5
7:30-? . Sandhill Rd at Letart.
Clothes all sizes , baby
stroller, rocking horse.
microwave, much more
misc.
- - -- - - - - Indoor Moving Slt:lel
April 4th, 10-7pm , April 5tl'1
t0-5 .
lyons
Addition,
Mason , WV. Antiques.
Furniture, Home Interior.
baskets, clothing , glass·
ware.
Treaaurea Beyond
vaur llallofl

'=~~;~' s~~d.llA-Ci~~s~ .....

walt

_ _ _ _..;........ 1...., loy ClAY I. POLIAH
loerran.. ,.,..,. of lht
four O&lt;rt~mbled -d• boo
low to form four ~mplt wotdo.

0

'

SREVEP

III
I

1• I I

I I I I' I I
K U, Q R I

G U F E 0 , .. , Granny sBys 'that, 'everythl"!.
t---,-T"....,.-'T:---1 ~ has taken great strides forwar •
. 1. 1. 1_ 1. . 1 even opportunity. People now ex'----'--'--..l~..&amp;-....1 ,
pact opportunity to arrive via a- •

I

II 1I

I B I E BM

I I

, .. • -I" .

0

5
1
Cornplot• the clluckle qvottd
. .....1.
by filling 1r1 lilt 111lul"9 wordo
L -.I..-.1.-..I.L--...1..-.&amp;.
you d... lop lram llop No. 3 bolow.

A

~

PRINT NUMBE_REO LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

Yesterday's

......111'0 HluWANCID

Large Garage Salt.
April 4·5. 8 miles out on
Sandhill Road (from light)
(Letart area) Lots of every·
thing. baby clothes &amp; 1t~ms .
changing table, strollers,
walker, boys &amp; adult cloth·
ing, household items. wm:th
yoyr Plyel
Rain or Shine April 5. Huge
moving and garage sale at
He1en (Marr1 Lem 1eys , an d
Marrs. Follow signs. 2 miles
from New Haven on Union
Calnpground Rd. turn on
Barlow Ad . the 3 houses
past Union .Church. Lois of
good cloth8s , antiques,
w hee lhorse n·d·tng mower.
too much to list. household
items and furniture .

r

:~:~n~
I'LL'\ JYVUU\.F..I

I

KesSel 's Prod!JCB and Flea
Mkt. Open Thurs-Fri-Sat.
Now renting spaces, 1354
Jackson Pike, (740)4467787

r

'I'~c~sai'U'
·up To 15 Words, ,1,:3 pays
Over :15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid
"'It

Trlbu.,..S.n11net-A~It.,

Description • lnclucM ,_ Prlc• • Avoid Abbr~~vlatlone
• Include Phon• Num!Mr And Addr••• V#h•n N"ded

l ...

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallyreglster.com

POl.ICIES: Ohio Y•l ..y Publ .. hlng r...,.., .. ttt. rtghl to Hit, r•t-ct, or canoei•!!.Y Ml at 1ny tl~. error• mu•t tM r•pon.ct on U11
will bl ~-~for oo morw thlln U.. co.t oft~ lfHICI oecuptl'd by t~ wror 1nd only tt. flr1t ln.ertlon.
1ny 1011 or •·~- t"-t rieulta h'orn tt.
I
oml11lon of •n 1d...-tl~. Con'ect:lon wiM bl m1d1t In t~ flr1t IVIIIitbll
I
•r• •lw•Y• confldltntill . • Current ret.
to the '&lt;ldtlr•l 1"1lr Hou•lng Act of 1a68.

IW Sort Your fiiUI• With A Kevword • lnclud·a compl.t•

Should Include Theae Items
To Help Get Response •• •

•

w..

f

E&lt;cellcnl salary, . holidays, health insurance
singltlfamity plan, denUtl plan, life insurance.
vacation, loog-term disability and retirement
For more information:

Place
Your
Ad •••

3Regts'ter

us

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call UIJ at: (740) 446-2342
.
Fax us at: (740) 446·3008
~-mail us at:
· classified@ mydallytrlbune.com

\ \ \ i l l \ ( I \ I I \ 1'-.

..

1

To

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW
·
ql:rtbune
Sentinel

WANim

TO BuY
L~-----"'"-_.1

~
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver,
Gold Coins.
Proofsets, Diamonds, Gold
Rings,
U.S. Currency,M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151
Second Avenue. Gallipolis,
740-446·2842.
- - - - - -- - - ·
Old Photos and picture postcards of Mason County
area; towns, boats, build·
ings, etc.
Call Robert
Keathley (304)B82·3396

l.._lho_Hiu_W_ANIED_.I

Oo you enjoy talking to peopie on the telephone? Are
you . persuasive and confi·
dent? Oo you enjoy knowing
what is going on in Pomeroy,
Middleport and all of Meigs
County? Would you enjoy
a career in inside sales
with no night or weekend
hours? How about 9am- 5:
30pm, Monday 'through
Friday with paid holidays,
\lacatrons , sick leave, a
401 {k) plan and medical
insurance? Our newspaper
in Pomeroy has 1 opening
lor a permanent, professiona1 ·ms1·d e sa 1esperson .
Compensation is a combination of t:v~se salary and commission. This job will not be
open long , so call larry
Boyer tOday at (740) 446·
2342 Monday through
Friday mornings between
Sam and 9~m and afternoons between 4pm and
5pm. If those hours are not
convenient for you to call,
email a cover letter and your
resume to Larry at ~
erftmydajlytrjbynacgm Be
fast!

---------

EASY WORK! EXCELLENT
PAY! Assemble Products at
Home. Call Toll Free 1-8()().
467·5566 Ext. 12170

~-------­

rM

HDME&lt;s

WANIID
To DO

FOR SALE

AN wanted for a pafl·time Will pressure wash homes,
position as a health ServJces . trailers, decks , metal build·
Coordinator. Hours 10am· ings and gutters. Call
1pm. Monday through (740}446·0151 ask for Ron
Friday with some ttexiblli1y, or leave message .
Must ha1.1e current AN
license in the State of Ohio. Will stay wtelder1y in there
Prefer experience in public home. nights only. Nursing
w/25yr.
health nursing and/or work· Technician
Good
lng with chHdren and adults Experience.
with de~.~elopmental disabili· References . In no answer
lies. Send resume by Friday, leave message. (3tM)6751898
April 1tth to:
Meigs County Board of
I I \ \ \4 I \I
M
e
n
1
a' I
Retardation/Oe~o~elopmental
BI!SINI:Sll
Disabilities. 1310 Car1eton
Ol'l'olm.MJy
stree!, p.0 . Box 307 ,
Syracuse,
Oh
45779,
INOTICE!
(740)992-6681
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHSomeone to do deliveries lNG CO. recommends that
and train to repair appli· you do business with people
ances. Must nave &gt;Jalid driv· you know, and NOT to send
ers
license.
Skaggs money through the mail until
you have investigated the
Appliances (7401446-7398

I

r16

It

G:t

At! ,.., utate advertlelng
In thlt newiPiper It

aubfect to tM Fede,.l
Fair Houalng Act ,or 1968
whloh makes h llleg~l to
.c:t....rtiN "any
preference, limitation or
dlM:rimlnetlon bleed on
rae., color, religion, aex
familial atatua or national
origin, Of any lntontlor:~ to

llmlgHon or
dltcrlrfiinallon." '

Thia new..,.per will not
krlowlngly ~~ecept
IKfvertiternents for real
..tate which II In
vlola11on of the taw. Our
reeders ere hereby
Informed ttt.t all

~PR~ONAL

110

L.• •

l
"-••lliii
___.

FOR SALE

Last 2002 Model Lincoln
Park, 64x28, 3 bedroom, 2
bath, total electri ~ heat
pump , delivered &amp; set on
your foundation , reduced
from $55,365 to only
$47,485, Cote·s Mobile
Homes. U.S. 50 East ,
Athens, Oh, 740 ·5 92~ 1972,
~ where
You Get Your
Money's Worth"
New 3brl2bth. Only $995
doWn and only $197.47 per

month. Call Haro ld. 740385·7671 .

m.ke any auch
preterenc•,

dwellings .advenlaed In
The Meigs County Council
thlt nawtpaper are
on
Aging Is accepting
available
on an equal
SER\10:S
resumes tor t,t~e position of
opportunity bllae•.
Nutrition Program Assistant.
TURNED DOWN ON
Minimum of 3 years experience In food preparation for SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI7 For sate or rent, 3 bedroom ,
No Fee Unless We Win!
1 bath, full basement home
large groups. In addition; the
1-888·582·3345
on
~~ao.s
Heights .
success!ul candidate will
(7401256-6846
have good computer and
HI \I I .., I \II
math skills . This is a 32-hour
Price for quick sale· 3 bed·
a week position with health
room home in Middleport
HOME!i
and 401K benefits available.
plus t bedroom rental on
FOR SALE
Send resume to Darla
same lot, ·reduced down to
Hawley, HA Director, P.O.
(3)FHA &amp; 'I'JA homes set up $52,000, (7401992·6154
BoiC 722. Pomeroy. Oh
for immediate possession all Priced to Sell! $90.000.
45769. An EOE.
within 15 min. of downtown 199a 3 bedroom. 2 bath.
The Town of New Haven is .• Gallipolis. Rates as low as large kitchen, stone fi re·
now accepting applications 6"/o. (740)446·321 8.
place. On State Route 588.
lor the position of pool man·
Immediate
Possession.

Full-time sec:retary neEKIEid
for a last-paced Gallipolis
business. Applicant needs to
be familiar with basic office
procedures, telephonJt communications &amp; computers.
and enjoy dealing with the
public . Send resume to P.O.
I
Box 1133,
I
vinyl, 3 bedrooms. 2 bath, 2
Applications
may
be
45631 .
fireplaces, hardwOOd flOors,
I ' 11'111\ \1 1 \ I
obtained at the New Haven
approximately
2000 sq .ft .
'I It\ It I ..,
Help wanted caring for the Qity Building between the
elderly, Oarst Group Home, hours of 7:00 AM and 3:00 Full basement. $160,000.
I nOw paying minimum wage, PM . Mo_rlday through Friday. (7401446.()538
liELP
WANI'FD
new shifts: 7am-3pm. 7am· Life guard appliCants must 3
BEDROOM
HOllE
1
"'-•••••••"'5pm,~ 3pm-11pm , 1tpm· be certified.
ARCADIA NURSING
7am, call 740-992-5023.
Truck Ortvera, Immediate
CENTER
Immediate Opening for hire, class A COL required, 3 Bedroom newly remod·
Part- Time AN or LPN need· Permanent.
Part-lime excellent pay, experience eled, in Middlepor1, call Tom
ed. Available, 11 ·7 shift. We ~eceplionist in busy internal required. Earn up to Anderson after 5 p.m.
oHer excellent benefits that · medicine practice_Resumes $1,000. per week.Call 304· 992-3348
include Health Insurance.
may be taken to the offiCe of 675-4005
3 bedroom Ranch style
401 K, Ute Insurance , com· Or. Randall F Hawkins.
house
our of town. Excellent
petitive wages, plus shift
Suite 212. 2520 Valley . Wanted: Clinical Medical
differential and opportuniDrive , Pt. Pl., WV
Office Assistant with phle· Condition. (304!675-0932
ties for advancement. If you
botomy experience lor 3 bedroom. 2 bath, brick
want to join our team.-con- Local body shop seeks qual- physician office. Reliable home. new carpet. paint.
tact Susan Winland, D.O.N. ified repair tech. Competitive transportation
needed . appfiances. concrete drive.
pay, good working environ· Computer skills preferred. $45 000 oo 16' M lb
Arcadia Nursing. Cenrer
·
· ·
~
u erry
ment. Call to set up inter· No weekends or holidays.·
East Main Street
Ave., Pomeroy, 740·394·
\liew. (740)446-4466
Coolville, Oh
Full or part-time. Benefits 1211
·
740 '"0
evemngs,
·o10 •
740-667-3156
a\lailable . Fax resume to 9800 d
McOonalds Rio Grande now (3041675·7800
or mail 10
ays
EOE-MIF/H/DV
hiring. any lime positions. CLA574, c/o Gallipolis Daily 3br. 2ba . anached 2 car
Insurance a&gt;Jailable. Paid
vacation and holidays. Apply Tribune, ~.0. BoX 469, garage. pool, many extras.
Attn: Work trom home.
Gallipolis, OH 4563~ .
Sorious
inquires
only.
within .
$500· $1500/mo. PT
F,l14il~;.;.,;,;.B~~...;,;.;..
_ _ , $ 100•000 · (304)BB2·2531
$2000· $4500/mo. FT
Mecli Home Private Care hir·
TRAINING
5 bedroom. 2 bath, 10
8()()-286-9748
ing LPN tor Gallipolis office.
iiiiiiiliiliii..-J acres. Call Melissa Pettit.
www.retire411 .com
Fax ·resume to 1·740-699·
Century Homes. Holley and
2315'
or
call
Karen
1800·
Avon
Representatives
~~1!1:'::
g~:-;o
:~
ASsoc. (740)286·71 13 .
533-5848
wanted. (7401446-3358
Call Todayl740·446-4367 , 55 acre farm on SA 554. 3
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or Medical Biller. Business
1·80Q..214-o452
bedroom, 2 bath house with
Soli. Shirley Spears, 304· orttce needs a sharp, www.getllpoii~C~I'Mrcol•.com basement. 2 cams, 10 acres
dependable,
knowleclgeal&gt;lo
Res J91Hl5-1274B.
pasture. Spring led livestock
675·1429.
person tor medical inaur· "iir;;;&amp;~W~ANIED;;;;.;,;,;,.-...., tank. QOOd hunting. Stocked
Community action Ia aeek· ance billing. ·Resume ' to:
To DO
pond. Free gas . $125,000.
lng a Laborer/Recorda Clerk P.O. Box 33. Clalllpoll,, OH
Call (740~38?· 726S between
tor the WeathtriZitlon 4!831'
Qam &amp; 8pm.
Program. Weatharlzatlon
Gtorg11 Portoblo Sowmlll,
Ntfd $$ For Tbe SMog?? dOn~ haul your. toga to rhi Beauttfut312 home In private
experience prefarrld. Good
LOCI/ Complny Now Hlnng mill jult call ~7e . a .
re•dlng, writing, compre·
1 57 Charolala Lake on 3 acres
Schodullng,
m/1. Mony ll!trll. Muot Seal
henalon, organl~atlona! and Flll!lblo
A'Jattabte Jlm'o Co'l)tntr; ond omon (740)4&gt;18·2921
compulor oklllo 1 MUST. Potltlona
1-688·974·
Thlo lo a lull limo poonlon. lmmodlaloly,
landeeaplng. 20 Vfl lxptrl· Brick Aanch Home. 3br.
JOBS
enca.
Free
11t1mata.
Send or deliver reaume and
(74014&gt;18-2110e
2CI. 1 cor Anocnld gorogo,
reterencaa to GMCAA, ~Naed ao'tneone to Mow ;__...:__ _ _ _ _ _ 1 cor do1acnod garage .
otttnllon Sondra Edwl«&lt;l, Yo«&lt;. Coli (304)875-11!23
l..lwn Care, Tr" Trimming, lngraund pool. On 112 acre
8010 N. Stole Roull 7,
Trll
Rtnioval, Sprinkler lot, Serloul lnqulrea. onty.
Cheahlre, Ohio, 4!820 by Part~tlme http needed at
Syolom,
Light Conatruollon, (304)8 75·805!
04·11-03 ClMCAA lun EOE A&amp;A Auto 001111. Mill or
tomllo. Apply wlmln, 220 41h ond El&lt;covollon, (304)836· Homo wlm lour codroomo
Demo/ Somploro/ Evtnl Avenue, Gallipolis.
5677 L'I"YO Mllllgt.
d 1
L
d
- - - ' - - - - - - - an arge garage. ocate
Peraonnel. Excellent ply,
L.lwr1 mowing HI'VIcel, call acrou from Graham School
higheat In area. aamplera Mtdl Home Health Agency,
Road. on SA 141 . For mora
for
frH 11ttmate home 304·
.
needed In local retail ·store. Inc. Hiking RN'a for the
89o-3399 or con 874-ll870. lnlorma~on. can (740)992Flexible weekend work, Sell Gal11polla, OH area. We otter
8797 It no answer, lea\it
Sun, 8 houis a day. Looking • comptlltlvo oolory, bono- Mothor of 2 will babyal1 Coy
lor hard working. sell motl· ttta package, .-o1 k, tfelt time, ahttt only. Fenced In yard on molllgl.
House to be moved. Brtck
vated people who will take , and algn on bonus. Pl.... Sandhill. (304188S·3741
and Cedar. 6062 · State
pride In their work. FOr more lind reaume to 356 Second
InfOrmation call Diana at 1 • Avenue, OalttpoHa, OH Will wori&lt; ~ ~ per nour. •R~te 7 North. Taking, Clda.
Se&amp;-547•3368.
45631 , Attn: Diane Hln., Odd joCa &amp; yar&lt;! wori&lt;, (7~0)367 ·7560 (7401387(740)448-4437
0317
- - - - - - - - - Clinical Menogor.
Dental Aulstant, MondayThurSday, medical or demal
office experience required,
send resume to : PO Box
380, MilSOn, WV 25260

MOBll.E H&lt;lMI-S

r

We ha1.1e new sectiona l
homes as low as $23.995
and new single wide homes
as low as $19.995 . 1·800·
837·3238
Windale mobile home .
12xso· w11h expando . win·
doV( air, gas heat, lurnished,
one family owned. very nice.
price reduced , $5,500,
(7401742·2979, 740·992·
3394 '

0ffice Building/ Apartments
for sale/ 'rent. Second
Avenue. Asking $102.000 .
(7401286·2828 or (740)71()1467

r

LoTs&amp;
ACREAGE

1:

1/3 acre lot on 554 in Porter.
all utilities (including sewer)
Ready to build. $16,900.
17401256-9200

32 acres. ten minutes from
Holzer Medical Center. Off
FOR SALE
1 160 North . County water
a~o~allable . Nice homesite . No
land
contrac ts. $40,000. ·
15 acres. rural water. alec·
tric, phone hook up, mobile (7401446·3228
home. building, well water:
Hunters Paradise. (740)379· 4.5 acres, no restri ctions.
Call Melissa Penit
at
2809
Century Homes. Holley an&lt;f
1980 14x70, 3 BR, 2 bath , Assoc. (7401286·7113
central air. new carpet, great
shape , must be mo\led . Acreage off. Nye Aven ue.
$7500 (7401446 9'57 c 11 some timber access road.
·
• ~
a can (7401992·2377
after
5pm.
'--'-'-----1984 141170 mobile home , Lot lor sale in Racine.
•
7x21 ft. e:dension, deck and (7401992·5858
building . Green School Mason Co. 20 acres near
District. (740)245·9084
Cornstalk. good hunti ng.

MOBILE JklMfS

1995 t4x70, 3BR. 1 bath,
heat pump. 2 covered
d~ks. Ask ing
$12 .000
·
080. 17401245.()333
--'--'-C::---1996 14x70 layton Mabile
Home, 3bf, 2ba with Garden
tub , new carpet. ·Extra
Clean. Must see. $15,000.
Call (304)675·8647
1999 Fleetwood Mobile
Home tGxBO Complete
kitchen, dining, 3 bedrooms .
2 baths, (one with Garden

121 acres off AT 87
·Somewhat private wlbuild·
ing and Double Wide.
Cornec lot in Pl. Pl. $5,000.
JJ Wedge Broker (304 )344·
13oo. Uwedge@charter.net
Patriot' area. 20+ wooded
acres, county water. electnc,
good home site. Adjacent
Wayne National Forrest.
·excellent hurlting. $32,000.
(740)379·9t41

tub),
utility
room ;::=::;;====~
{washer/Dryer) deck 8. utility ~
building on rented lot. Call r16
HOUSES
Somerville Realty (304)675·
FOR RENT
3030 (3041675·3431
...;oiiiiliiiliii•_.l

L.•

2 bedrooms, 12x60, ready to 1 -3 Bedrooms Forecloeed
move Into. On rented lot. ,
$&amp;,000. (740}«6·3617
915 18xeo mobile home,
51 UOO OBO. Muat ba
moved.
(7401256·6558
leave meuage

Homes From $199/Mo ., ,4% ..,
Down,' 30 Years at 8.5%
APR. For LlsUnga . 800·3t9·
3323 Ext •ro9.

2 br. newly remodel~. rar, &amp;
dep. no pats 304·675-6224
95 Commodroro Cltotlon leave mnsage
14x72 3br. 2ba. Hall fur·
nlshtd wlnew furniture . 'Nery 3 bedrooms, 2 batha. Nice
Qood Condition. Asking and clean. Great locaUon In
$16 ,000 lor moro lnlo. city. Ideal lor Senior peraon
or couple. (7401448-9S39
(3041875·309-4

"

Good ' uald lbrf2bth. Only 3br. hou11 in Mason for
S 995
Aent. $375. month . $300
7
. Includes del 1&gt;Jery, D
I N

Call Karena140·385·9948

Land Home Packages avail·

-~-~·_·_'n_v_ou_r_•_r•_a_,1_7_0. _144_6·

epos I. o Indoor Pets.Call (3041e&amp;2·3e52

r M~\ID! Ic..

___
•
New 2003 Doublewlde. 3
2 bedroom, air, porch, 1.11ry
BR &amp; 2 Bam. Only $1695
down and &amp;295/mo. 1-600· nlco, Clalllpolla . (7401446·
2003 (740)446·1409
6g1-8777

SCIAM LITS ANSWIIS

Freeze -Icing- Naive- Pestle· C/TI~EN
A famous politician once said to a group of voters. 'The
most important poli.tical office that a person can hold •s
that of private CITIZEN." .

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__

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Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

t

Friday, April 4, 2003

Www.mydailysentinel.com

r

M~~()Mlli ·I ~ lr
~,_...

A~uired

(304l&amp;l2·2706

(304)895·3400

18 Horsepower riding lawn =;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Eteautiful River View Ideal mower. 42 inch cut. S450. f!J
Fe&gt;r f Or 2 People,' (740)38S-8972

- ~eterences , Deposit , No .:.__ _ _ _ _~,__

t.,._.,.iiiiiiiijiiioo_.l

Pats , foster Trailer Park, 85 Topaz, runs good, good
740-44~-0181.
body, $~00; Qining room $S.OO POLICE IMPOUNOSI
table, entertainment center, H0ndas, Chevys, aiel Cars/
MobMe home tor rent,
Trucks fro"m $500 .
For
no
(740)992-2563
1)81S, (7401992-5858
listings 1-800-719-3001 eKt.
BURN
Fat ,
BLOCK 3901

t-r- AP~

R.B.

Join the 6th ann ual Yellow Flag Yard Sale!
. · May 2nd &amp; 3rd.
·
$5 gets you on the map &amp; a yellow fl ag.
An additional $5 if you need nn in-town
location for )'O ur yard sale
6 miles long through Middlepon &amp; Pomeroy! Hundred
of m;~ps distributed! Advenised &amp; promoted widely on

TRUCKING

Craviogs, and BOOST - - -- - - - HAULING:
Energy Like You Have ..1989 Z-24 Chevy Cavalier.
Never Expenenced
New 3 1-Engine 35,000
1 and 2 bedroom apartwEIGHT· LOSS
mtles on it Lots of new • Limestone
ments , ·fu rnished and unfurradio, newspaper... flye rs &amp; poster.~ !
REVOLUTION
parts. $2.500. (304)675Makes &amp; Models I
•Sand
nished. security deposit New product launch October _48_2_2_·---~-AII for $5.00!
Free Estimates
required, no pels, 740-992Spon~ored.hy
The
Middkport Community A NX' and
•
Dirt
23· 2002. Call Tracy at 1992 Corsica V-6 auto. lots
Fast Turnaround
2Z18. .
The Pomc ruy M ~rc ha m~ A"soctation.
(740)441-1982
of new pans &amp; paint. Great
To\l)l O up, «top in Ohio Ri\&lt;T Bl·ar Com· Ml(kllcpon
1 Bedroom Apartments Crafts,man
Aiding . shape. $3200. f989 .Escort •Ag1Jne
4 2"
Dept Store nr Oflke Scr&gt; icc &amp; Supply in Mttidkpll r1 or
WE
REPAIR
4cyl. auto, 4dr, runs great
Starting at $289/mO.
Ch~l'lllaq Sh oe~ &amp; Oh il' Valley Bulk Stmt·-Ponll.:fll}'.
Mower, 6-~peed , K~~ler $1800. (740)742-0509
• Lawn Mowers
Washe'r/ Dryer Hookup, eng~a
740-985-3564
. Nrce Condrtron.
For more lnfonnation caii992-40SS
Sto11e and Refrigerator. (304 )895-3020
• Power Mowers
1994
Ford
Taurus
Station
(7401441-1519.
Wagon, wine in· color, all
• Chain Saws
HUBBARDS
1br furnished apartment. For sale- new baby bed &amp; power, AWFM, AJC. great
1:&lt;1:&lt;
• Snow Blowers
$325 _ a month. Includes mattress, used two times. condition, $3295. (740)441·
GREENHOUSE
• Weed Eaters
water, trash. Deposit &amp; ref. ~hone 304·687-5372
1029
992-5776
l;;~'
Required. (304)675-3042
JET
•
Tillers
•
Edgers
Syracuse
1995 . Ford Crown Vic LX,
Now
Open
Apartment Available Now.
AERATION M(HORS
•
Go
Karts
•
Mini
6.1 V-8. 4 de.. every ophon,
You could be
Bedding &amp; Vcgctnblc
RiverBend Place. New Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In new !ices. fine condition . eligible for F'REE
Bikes
MASSAGE
PhulL..,,$b.95 tl at
Haven, WV now accepting Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· •·3200. 17401992-6719
help getting
Easter
&amp; Motheri Day
Hunging Botskct s
applications for HUQ·subsi· 800·537·9528.
1996 Meccury Sable. 4 de..
back tp work
JIM'S SMALL
Buy 1 Cift Certificate,
$5.95- 11 .95
Qi~:ed, 1 bedroom apart3.0 V-6. extra good condi- For more information ,
ENGINE REPAIR
Perennial s Kin $2 .2 5
men!. Utilities included Call - - - - - - - - tion,
Get
lnd
Free!
option, low, low
call Gallia Mei~s
~ $3.~5
(304)882-31 21 Apartment Large swing set: full size price,every
Heather i\. Fry L.M .T.
&amp;4500.
1740)992-6719
Community
Actoon .
32119 Welshtown Rd .
truck
cap:
love
seat;
older
. --1 in. Annu;tl .-. $ 1.2.5
avai lable for qualified sen740-992-5379
Agency
Pomeroy, OH 45769
child's chopped 3 wheeler,
Potting Soil
ior/disabled person. EHO
1996 Seturn 4d 90k (740) 992·2222 or
(740)985-3810
Offer !JOOd lhru ~ · ll -Ol
. ' 1.7Q, ~4. 00&amp; '16.95
Condi1ion,
(740 ) 446 1018
74()..992·2432
. BEAUTIFUL
APART- - - - - - - - - Excellent
Also 11ow aueptJ'11g
Open Mon ~Sut 9~~
"ENTS AT BUDGET New &amp; Used Heat Pumps· $3.195
most ;nsura11ce
78k $3,995.
, 1995
Grandam
I"'
rC lost=d Su uda
..
1996
Grandam
2d.
~::=====·==~
~=====::=~
tRICES AT JACKSON Gas
Furnaces. Free 2d. 99k, $2,895. 16 others in '%1. ... .,
EVA"'SLAW"'CARE
"
"
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
40 446 6308
Pomeroy Eagles
stock. COOK MOTORS ~~ "'11·/jJIJJ,
• ~~;~tes•
olive from $297 to $383. Estimates. (7 ) ·
""~
LawnMolntahwnce, Shrub
~lk to shop &amp; movies . Call NEW AND USED STi:EL (740)446-0103
BINGO 2171
Trtmmlnq,Snow Removal
140-446-2568
Equal Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar '-t9-9-'7-F-o-rd-C-on-1o-u-c.-a-u-to;
Every Thursday &amp;
loOtha,LownCareNHds
~1usil1g Oppor1unity.
For Concrete, Angle. 1997 Ford Escorl. auto.
1
Sunday
Ch anne I, FlaI Bar, Sl ee I $2150 each. (740)742·2357
Iamie Evans
Linda Evans
Beech St. Middleport, 2 bed· Gratin·g For
Drains,
(740) 949-2108 (740) 843-5 11 6
Doors Open 4:30
room furnished apartment, Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L 1998 Ca11alier 2 door, black. Self•Stor~
Pager (BOO) 976- 2471 r-1 1••'
utilities paid, deposit &amp; refer· Scrap Metals Open Monday, 4&lt;::yl. 5 speed, 78,000 miles.
Early birds start
"6
We Make House Calls
ences. no pets, (740)992- Tuesday, wednesday &amp; $3,800. OBO.
NICE.
6:30 1st Thursday
0165
7
40
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed :..1:304_..:.17__3-_58__ _ _ _
33795 HilandRd.
Computers, Repairs,
or every month
Furnished efficiency, down· Thursday. Saturday &amp; 1998 Toyota Sienna LE , 7
All pack $5.00
Upgrades, Networks
itairs, 919 2nd Avenue, 3 Sunday. (740)446-7300
passenger van, v-6, ,
Pomeroy,Ohio
Bring this coupon
rai&gt;ms &amp; bath. All utilities Red Fiberglass Topper lor owner, low miles, excellent
(304) 675-5282
~aid. $295/ mo. (740)446~ short' bed {step side} Ford condit1on, (740)992-5407
•
•
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
www.wvpcdr.com
,
~~5
Ranger. $250. (304)675· 2001 Pontiac Trans Am L------------~
Get 5 FREE
doctorflwv dr.com
Fumished efficierlCy. All utili· .57.;0;;;3_ _ _ _ ___, w!Ram air, white. 11,072
ties paid, share bath, SUS
BUilDING
miles, excellent condition,
Gravely
Snapper
month, 919 2nd A11enue .
one owner, still under war(10'x10' 610'x20.')
::17_•o:.:l4_4..:6..:-3.:.94..:5_ _ _ _ ~.,_ _.;s;;;!JI'I'Lill)-.
....._.~ ranty, $24,000. 1304)273Gracious living. 1and 2 bed· Block. brick. sewer pipes, 9558
gg2~3194
room apartments at Village windows, lintels. etc. Claude 2002 Chevy Cavalier,
Manor and Riverside Winters, Rio Grande, OH Yellow. Chrome wheels with
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Apartments in Middleport. '-'call;tt;.:7;:4 o~-~24:i:5~.5~1 2~1:.,.---, span package. Still just like
From $278-$348. Call 740~ cr
new, 18,200 miles. Asking
204 Condor Street Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5064. Equal Hous ing
PETs
$9500. Phone (740)256·
992-2975
._o;..;ppo~rtu_n_iti_es_._ _ _ _ L,--·!·'01!-SAu:iiliii-_.l 1253 leave message if no
·Newly remode led 2 bed·
answer
Lawn and Garden Equipment is our
AKC 1 female Boston Terrier
'room apartment, Eastern and AKC ·1 female Chinese 79 Vette, auto 350, needs
business, not our sideline
Avenue. $400 a month
interior, 56500 OBO.
includes water. Deposit· Pug pt.rppies. $350 now tak· (740)949·1175
required, tefer&amp;nces a must ing payments and deposits. "-=-'---'---,-740
No pets. For infOrmation call ( )388·932 5
88 Honda Accord, 4 cylinder. . . - - - - - - - - .
7401446-4467
(740)446mites, racer nms, OLD GLORY
1
AKC.Boston Terrier. male, 4 120,000
4262 Ask for Faye
light body damf!Qe. $900 .
A ""TJON
months old, $250, (740)446- 1740)446-8124
Best Service aJ
Now Taking Applications- 0972
:.:...:..:.._:.::.::.:.::_____
SERVICES
the Best Price
740-992-1717
:35 West 2 Bedroom - - - - - - - - 99 Olds Cutlass Calais.
·Townhouse Apartments, Full Blooded Bloodhound needs engine work.
Every Thursday
St. Rt 7 Goeglein Rd.
'Includes water Sewage, pups , $150 each. 5 females. (740)245-5393
at 5:30p.DL
New Homes • Vinyl
Pomeroy
·Trash, $35UIMo., 74D-446· must sale ASAP! Call 99 Pontiac Sunfire auto/air. Consignment Wed. &amp;
pu1mg • New Garage:sl
740 245
0008.
1 1 .0304
CD pteyer exc. cond. 60,000 . Thurs. IOam-Jpm
Replacement
Tara
, . Townhouse Pet Grooming· dogs &amp; cats, miles $4,500 304-675·6325
No"'· doing estate
J&amp;Clawn Service
Windows • Roofi ng
Apartments, 'Very Spacious, pick-up ~ delivery, Linda
TRUCKS
&amp; household sales.
COMMERCIAL and
Mow&amp;
Ttlm
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors, CA. 1 Wade, Side Hill Ad.,
FOR SALE
Phone 992-9553
Open 'hm -~ pm
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted, Rutland, (740)742-8916
Of 742-0226
RESIDENTIAL
74Q.gg2-6694
;r,... e\h nLillt&gt;, ~~~• on hoo~ ro~·MJr
Actult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
C• ll u• f,.- all
nL'&lt;-'\1&gt;
Please leave
FREE ESTIMATES
.Patio. Start $385/~o . . No
FRUITS &amp;
1978 Ford Pick-up, very
Auctioneer
(740) 446·1812
Flats, Lease Plus Security L~--VioF.GiliiiiTiiiii.-\JiiiiUlliiiiiilw good condition, 302. auto.
Jim Taylor
message if no
A;k UJII/&gt;t)llt'P ur
740-992-7599
Deposit Required, Days: ...,
rebuilt engine: tool box, bed·
Sl'n·icr P/11/I.S'
answer
740·446·3481 ; Evenings: Diane Eddla
liner, boely very good condi·
7-40-367.0502.
Congratulations! You have tion. (740)256-1235
BoATS &amp; MmuRS
won 2 free movie tickets to
P/B
FUR SALE
1
Hill's Self
Twin Rivers Tower is accept- lhe Spring Valley 7 in ,2001 Dodge Ram Quad
ing applications for waiting Gallipolis. Call the Register Cab, .tots of extras, 25,000
CONTRACTORS,
INC.
list for Hud-subsil:ed, 1- br, toelay for details.(304)675· miles. Asking $21 ,900. 1994Stratos264
Storage
1 BassBoat.
20 h
Racine. Ohio 45111
apanment, call 675-6679 1333
,17:0::4:i-01;;;2;;56;.·1~4~26;...~--. Black &amp; Siver, 1
.p. i dOOANG
EHO
J
Euinrude 421b trolling motor
29670 Bashan Road
740-985-3948
I»
"4-•WJ)s
·~&amp;
~ ~~
fish Iinder. Great shape ' *HOlE
Racine, Ohio
I

.

Arevou

Spring
Special
TIERAPEmC

laid on;.

(740)
992-6635

r

992-5479
Stnp In and

-===::....:.=--·

u ...

lOxlO
10x20

._======•

r

•

r

)Wr~&lt;llllf'l' lt'r

r

HOWARD l.
WRITESEL

r'--•-••••_.Jr
~t:!.r

I
·------·
$7500. (740)742-0509
ii;;i,o;=;;;;:F::;A:R::M;;;;;;;;:;I1 993 Jimmy SLE. dr., . 1997 Marada MX-1 Span

Trailer spac;:e for rent in
/'l i ilei in,i 740
i i 992-5858
ildd

F.QuJPMENl'

4 4
wheel dri11e. Cloth interior.
PW, PB, ps, Good
co ndition. $3,900. 080.
1304)675·7653
------1997 Chevy Silverado Z-71,
4x4, autO, :3rd dr. low miles.
Excellent
Condition.
(304)895·3825 After 5:00
1997 Dodge extend cab
4lf4 , 4" lett kit, must see.
(740)742·8500
'--'---'----'-1999 GMC Jimmy SLT, 4dr,
leather. moon' root , Bose
Excellent, loaded, low
1-nileane, (740)645·2127
"'
2000 Ford Windstar LX,
50.000 miles , $9500, call
(740)992-6968 if no answer
please Ieaiie n;essage.
2002 Ford ·Ranger Edge
comfortably equipped 8,000
miles $13,500. 2000 Ford
Ranger Ext. Cab fully
equipped, 20,000 miles.
$14,300. (30-1)675·3354

John Deere Model 435
round baler. Baled less thah
10
800 bB'Ies. Uke new
r:-.
Condition. List new $18,200
will sell lor S8.100.
67~
5;;;
~Or Sale: ReconditiOned "304
~;::
· 5;:.72:;;4;...._ __,
c
Washers, dryers and reffig·
.,LM'STOCK
4rators.
Thompsons L_ _ _ _ _ __.
Applia(lce. 3407 Jackson
Avenue, (:l04)675·7388.
5 year old ·say Gelding. For
sale oi trade. Phone.
Good Used Appliances, (304)675-2443
F,leconditioned
and
Guaranteed.
Washers, - - - - - - - Oryers, Ranges, and
FAIR PIGS
Refrigerators, Some start at
sired by:
$;95. Skaggs Appliances, 76 Artie Blast. Dot.com. Black
Vine St., (740)446·7398
Ice by Hi1man 11 and Bearcat
Sows, $100 ea .. (740)698·
Kenmore washer, $95; G.E. 6231
· dryer. $95: G'.E. ,electric
range, '$95; G.E. refrigera· Polled Hereford Bulls and
tor. $95; Kenmore portable · Heifers. 6 to 8 mo. Call
washer, $150; Kenmore (304)882·2426
washer &amp; dryer set, $300 :
T(ble and chairs, solid Pure Breed Angus yearlings,
.ftQod, $125; several night heifers &amp; bulls for sale.
marlds, $30 each. Queen $1 .001b. (304)675·6248
~ Ton GMC Work Van ,
~lze frame &amp; headboard,
3-4M, Original Owner, air,
~ery nice , $200. Skaggs Reg. Angus bulls- ToP per- auto, tilt, cruise. $10,500.
lormance bloodlines, Maine (740)446-2957
Appliances, 76 Vine Street Chi- Angus s~1oW heifers,
446 73
{?4°) · 98
heifers, bred heifers and
MOIURCYCUli I
~llohan Carpet, 202 Clark crossbred bulls. Slate' Run ___
.
C:hapel Aoad, Porter, -Ohio. Farm. Jackson . OH.
(740)446-7-444 t-877-830- (740)286-5395
$1500 reward lor inloand
9162. Free. Esttmates, Easy - - - - - - - - recovery of stolen TAX
financing, 90 days same as Registered 5yr. old AOHA 450
ES. yelloW, VIN#
Qash. Visa/ Master Card. Stud Red Dun. Contact Ktm 478TE224X24305505
Drive- a- little sa11e alot.
.(304)773·6000
Engine* 86085491740)367·
7893
call anytime
Used Furniture Store. 130 Registered Angus Bulls.
Bulaville Fllke. We sell mat· (740)296·1 460 call ,after ·1993 Suzuki Katana Bike,
tresses, dresse~s , couches, Spm.
asking $1~00 080 mint
bunk beds, be&lt;ioom suites,·
condition, (740)388-0481
recliners. Grave monuments Registered Black Angus
(740)446--4782 Gallipolis, Bulls an~ heifers. Yeartings 1997 Harley ·Davidson 883
OH. Wanted to bUy- good and older out of N BAR, Sportster. extra chrome.
used couches, mattresses, EXEXT, TRAV LERS and . lowered, new tires, bra~es.
dressers.
Eclipse, Gentle. Gw~r,nteed Excellent condition, t4,000
Bull. $1 ,000. and up. Heif~rs miles. $7000 Call after 5pm.
ANriQtJEs
S750. and up. (304)372- (740)441.0131·
2389
A
1997 Softail Custom. 8.500
1
JUy &amp;
miles. Lots of extras. Plus all
Bt.iy or sell. Riverine
GRArN
original eq'uipment $12,500
Antiques, 1124 East Matn on
abo. MUST SELL!
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
(304)675·1178 leave mas·
992·2526. Russ Moore. 9001b Round Bales, s~red sane.
owner.
inside. $15 each, will load. :.:_:•:.:...__ _ _ _ __
(740)379-2768 evenings.
2000 Honda Motorcycle,
Very old canning jars. pop
CBR 600, 4.6K actual m11es,
bottles, Miners Lunch Pail. Good quality straw. Volume excellent condition. Call
poison, Biners, Inks. d1scount &amp; delivery avail· {7401446-1731
Medicine bOttJes, Gallipolis able. Heavy squa re bales
· ~isla~ ItemS, different col- SA!85 per bale. (304)675- 98 Honda -400 Foreman 4x4,
ored fiddles and more. Will 572-4
stick stoppers, floor boards,,
din devil tires, excellent connot split up. Sell all $1000
$3400
OBO
Gall (740)441-1236 if no Round bales of hay. dition,
(7401446-2724
(7401446-8124
~nswer. leave message.
HOUSEHOc;Ooo;W ·

r:

t::or------.,

F
'

CONCREH
BlOCK/BRICK

. IIIMRIWJCE
I *SEIIlESS

45771

Sales Rcpresentatiw
LARRY SCHEY

#cHiVRO,~T/ _

750 East Stale Street Phone (740)593-6671
Athe11s, Ohio

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal ; Trim
• ·stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
Free Estimates

30 Vrs. Exp. •

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

1-800-822-0417
·w.v·s #1

Ch evy. Pontiac. Buick, Olds

&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

CANCER CHECK
Finally... M0ney paid tow. w~en cancer
strikes. You choose the amount up to $50,000!
Pays in addition 10 mher insurance.
You use the money however you like .
Cancer will strike when you lt=ast t!Xpect it.
It will leave you and yo ur fnmily financ i;;~lly
strapped. CANCER CHECK will be
there w hen you need il.
Call now tu rc!Servc X-QUI cheCk.

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; FINANCIAL SERViCES
Box 189 MIODCEPORT. OH 45760

7 40-843-5264
J&amp;S Painting
lnlfrior, F:xlt rinr,

l 'nam~r..l•l

25 yrs. experience
Friendly 4 ProFe18lonat
fo r lree estimates

74D-992·567a

Bess boat. 1994 Ranger
R72, 115HP, Mere Tracker,
loaded. runs and looks
nreat, $ 7000.(740)446-6
. 970
&gt;#

THOMPSON'S
WATER ·

SUE's GREENHOUSE

CAAIPEMS &amp;
I
MOTOR HOI\tE'i
--.
1999 Coleman Pop up
camper. With Air !It heat.
$2500. (304)675-4792

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

1999 Jayco 26f.t. Travel
Trailer. Used very little., non·
srnoker, ' no pets. Can be
Stop &amp; Compare
seen at 2912 Meadowbrook
Drive, Pt. Pl. or call '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
(:3041675-3823
AC. r
miCrowave.

l40-992-1m

" I I ~\ 14 I "

=;;;~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

mr.o

IMPRo
- HOMEVEMENJS

BASEMENT
CARE
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar- R•!ldlll L. Shult
antee Local references fur·
OWner
nished . Established 1975.
c.rtlfl
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement ~~:fl::.
Waterproofing.
~~

Since !979

Vegetable, bedding flats &amp;
hanging baskets $6.60
4" annuale 94~
nme to plant cool weather vegetable
plante &amp; pansy's, 4" perennials $1.18

RalnSort
Water Treatment Equ ipment

Mt. Vernon ·
' . 97-9751

Buy 6 get 1 FREE
Largest selection of perennials li' sllrubs

at the lowest prices In Meigs County

Over 16 years Experience

Morning Star Road • C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

• RoomAdditions

1-740-949-2115

• Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
• Replacement

Windows

• Porches • Decks • Garages
• Siding • Roofing

• Complete Rehabs

Let me .:Jo 1\ fer y•)ul

CIIGI!Ou..df~•,... .lllc .

C,

K

-

L

AVERAGE GAME 170-180

®

@

Answer

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to

2n&lt;l DOWN •

140

previous

3rdDOWN

95 '

. 1st OOW:N

4th DOWN
JUDO'S TOTAL

•

·....l!..

Word
Scrim· .

mag\l ·

268

AVERAGE GAME 180-180
by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOUR PLAYTDTAL =
TIME UMIT: 20 MIN
DIFIECTIOHS: Utile a 2- to 7·1etfer won:i lrtm the lefttrS on eactl yardllnt.

M:l polnlt to MCh word or letter using scorlng directlool'at right. Sev~
words gei 1 60-pdnl: bOnos. AI words CI!WI bt tOU'Id In WtOellr'S New WOitl
Co1ogo 1&gt;e11onaoy.
JUOO'S SOLUTION TOIIORIIOW

.....

•

M 11» I!P?REC.IA\£

G&amp;R Sanitation
33561 Batlev Run Rd
Pomerov OH 45169

312-4 tFN

• No Seams
• No Leaks '
• Free Estitrtates

Office (740) 985-3511
'

Sweeper Repairs
Parts • Service
Bags • Belts
Over 25 year.'i i'1 Bus;ness

" VER~ ROMANTIC !

PEAFEC.TI.\f HAPP'l

"" NEW DRE&gt;&gt;

I'.EQ~ IRE ~

V10LIN5 AND R05E-5 ... CAN·
OLELioHT AND OIINCINfr ...

992-62 15
v

'

MYERS PAVING

~E'5 SITTIN&amp; IN
MARCIE 'S KITC~EN
DRINKIN6 ROOT SEER,
TNAT'S W~I\T I MEAN !

~E &amp;OES Tf!ERE
EVERY NI6~T...W~AT
ARE I'OU &amp;ONNA
A80UT IT, C~UCK?

I
~EAR
'fOU.. IT'S TOO
OARK OUTSIDE

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457 ·

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrou~ds
"'·"
• Roads • Streets
Marcum
Building

Service
• Decks &amp; Porches
• Room A~dit lo ns

• Roofing

• Vinyl &amp; Wood
Siding
•J merior Remodeling
General Carpentry Work

740-985-4141

up sweepen.: m your home

Rainbows, Kirb}'. Etectrolux. Hoovrr, Eu~ka.
Tri-Star, Regina &amp; most other bnmds.

Ports shipped UPS • Fos1, O.pendoble Se~vlce
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IT COOSlRt.t1KlN
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Painting, Electrical,
Decks. Etc.
Free,Estimates
992· t189 992-2902

W~t/1/Wfll .t'M

· r~e rcetr

.....
CIRE

LAWN
MOWING
CONTRAm
$15 · $25 for
$35 per acre

Call n-to ·
schedule your

. lawncare
service.
Insured

140-149-1101
1-888-281DISI

IN Tt4f MODI&gt; TO

OF Tt4f "'fOitLl&gt; GO S'(, ;t
$1Mf"/.'( tcfep TO Tl'le LeGA£. IP~tl&gt; LIMIT.

IODSB'S

small yard
Mike Marcum, Owner

!.Crvicc- fcc for picking

(304) 273-4098

50f11EWHER( fAN~~ AND

W,ll~

.~rr• A QUICK Y~LAO, eur

WV Contraclors Lie. #OQ3506

Owner Operated
David Rhodes &amp; Norma Rhodes

Home

I CAU.£0 Htm eAC.K.

.NO ' "'0 Ill( NEEO TO 6()

Pomeroy. Ofllo

878-2487 or 448-2112

Seamless Gutter
•
Seroices

I RVIN&amp; ANO I OIEIE J~&amp;T
0011%- TO HillE ~ CIIWAL
OINNE .... . 6~T I fOUNO A
fA8ULOU5 NEW ORE 55, MOII'l-

• Electrical &amp;: Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; GUtter•
• Vlnyt Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks
Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-3174

J

.

• New Garages

Cene Arms

\

today to avoid attempting jobs
that require a lot of ileep concentration and tenaciousness.
Your restless altention span
may not be up to the task.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - It might be too easy
for you to blow your hard·
earned cash today on something foolish . If you do go
shopping, strive to confine
your extravagant urges and
make every penny count.
PISCES (Feb. 20- March
20) - It's quite possible that
today you might be able to
operate as independently of
others as you •d like.

WOlD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK

• Room Additions a.
Remodeling

740·62·1119

~25.00

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Just because another can
talk louder and faster than
you can, it does not mean that
his or her thinking is right.
Don't be bullied into follow·
ing another's call today •• use
your own judgment.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. ·23)
-It's unlike you today to not
be tolerant and patient with
those who don't grasp ideas ·
as quickly as • you do . You
~

know it is no big deal to have
to repeat some information.
Get back. in character.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov .
22) ~ Taking chances on.
people or situations about
which you know little is an
unwise course to follew today . It can cause you IJ)Ore
than just financial trouble.
.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21)- It isn't wise to let
impulstveness · cause you
complications today. Making
hasty judgments or agreement~ are not in your best in·
terests.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jan. 19) - - It might be better

CARPENTER
SERVICE

se rv1cevou can count on·

-

BY BERNICE BEDE 0soL
There will be rewards at
your port of call in the year
ahead if yol! set a course and
conscientiously stay on it . If
you start switching directions
because you hit a snag. you
could get lost and gel stuck on
a sandbar.
ARIES (March 21·April
19) - Monitor your mouth
and what comes out of it very
carefully today . so that you
don't inadvertently tell some·
thing to a blabbermouth that
is supposed to be confidential.
TAURUS {April 20-May
20) - When out shopping,
don ' t be influenced by friends
today and let them talk you
into buying oome faddish, un:
usual merchandise or strange
gadget that' ll go out of fashton as quickly as it came, in.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-Be careful you don't cause
others to believe that you
don't need anybody when it
comes to handling a delicate

career situatton. They'll
gladly let you struggle and
fend for yourself.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - You had better care·
fully re-examine those flashes
of tnspiration you get today
before springing them into llc·
tion. ·un.d er cfoser scrutiny,
the)' might not be so great.
LEO (July 23-Aug; 22) ~
Patience will be required lo·
day pertaining to a new project in which you 'II gel in·
volved. If you attempt to ac·
complish everything in one
big leap,-you mtght fall flat.

YOUNG'S

fully Insured
Free Estimates

r

5, 2003

liiDI1 PIIITIII

Henderson, WV

q&amp;c General Home
Malnlonence· Painting, vinyl
siding, cafpentry, doors ,
windows , baths, mobile
home repair and more. For
free eslimate call Chet, 740·
992-6323.

The
Daily
Sentinel

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

11

. . . . . .10"
to tO'dO'

Authom.etl Servtcc Ptowider For

Custom
Building
&amp; Remodeling

Ta~e

4

co-star
40 Mtsdow
sound ·
41 Ornate
43 Mug
_
44 Car Import
45 Snug
retreat
47 Door
opener
48 Gllt&lt;glvlng
. time
49 Current
meas.
51 -Claire,
Wis.
53 Remark

'(oUR ~~ST'(

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
111411 ro.a. JXl

r

1/llltfn

'

42 High
mountain
43 - Paulo
1 Appoint
44 Leg part
5 Family
46 Stlckv
docs
49 Novelist
8 Health
Jeanlood
50 Fair grade
12 ·~Pawl""
52 Heavy
13 NOW ·
burden
cause
54 Store stock
1.4 Hwys-.
28,000 potential recipients don't seem to be on the same 15 Office
{abbr.)
55 Maldied waiting for kidneys . In · page. Am I wasting my time?
sub
cocktali
2001, 14,000" kidney transc Please hNOI . -'- HURT IN 16 Worthless
56
Soda
pop
coin
rf
8
200
plants were pe onned' · •
RUTLA , MASS.
11 Refuses to 57 Mercy
from cadaver donors and
DEAR HURT: This quaii · 18 Hotel
58 Heat source
5,900 from living donors. The ties as a case of bad timing. ,
staffer•
1o Sawbucks
59 Comply
t 1 Fast plane
good news is that living dona· It 's obvious from what Adam 20 Abounds
19
Bad-mouth,
DOWN
tion is becoming a viable is ielling you that he's not 22 Carioca's.
slangily
alternative to cadaveric dona- ready to make the kind ~~ ~orne
21 Essay byline
3
1 RCMP
tion. The number of living commitment _ you • want. 2 Chl,::~eys
24
Monk's
petrol zona
kidney donors grew 12 per· Accept 11. And tf you re really 27 Hlddep
title
2 Polite
cent last year, while cadaveric in love with the apartment, 30 Hemelln
25 Farm baby
cou~h
26 Elec.
donations showed only a I consider renting it with a
pest
3 Dolls cry
or water
4 Realm
percent increase.
roommate.
31 Spud s~.
27
Feeling
5
Fresco
DEAR ABBY: I am 20 and ·
Dear Abby is written by · 32 A Gerahwln
28
Ireland
baa
a
. h "Adam'" a I'It· Ab1ga1
' '/ V.an Buren, aIso 34 In
Pal,Dllon
ha ve been wll
8 Debate side 29 Sketched
tie over two years. (He's also known as Jeanne Phillips, and 35 Msrvy
33 Tummy
7 Cooked
20.) We have always been was founded by her mother;
37 CSA
muscles
In butter
35 GIS tank
serious about each other. I am Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
delend~r
8 1984"
statue
author
now ready to move forward in Abby at www.DearAbby.com 38 Woman •
36
Fecete
9 Electron
our relationship and get an .or P. 0. Box 69440, LOs 40 ~~::\.
39 Cody
site
apartment with him. I finally Angeles, CA 90069.
found one .we can afford . It's
near Adam's college, not far
The
from both our families. You
newspaper ts
should see it ·· it's beautiful!
a valuable
A week before we planned
learning tool for
to move in, Adam told me he
students of
is unsure about our re.l ationship. We had been quarreling
all ages.
a lot, but we talked and
It
straightened everything out.
connects
Now, a month later, the
the
landlord called and said the
principles and
apartment is · ready. I told
Adam, and he came up with
facts they learn .in the
yet another excuse not to live . classroom with stories and
with me. When I asked if he
events that are
wanted our relationship to go
haptpeiiing here and around
further, he said he used to!
·I love him dearly, but we
ACROSS

Astrograph

740-949-2217

Footers.Walls.
Steps • Flat work.
Replacements.
Walks. and Drives.
Stencil Crete
FREIISTIMATIS 11 "

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTIICTIII

I
Saturday, April

17'10" with 110 135
Mercruiser. Loaded, excel- ! GmER
lent
condition,
•te.garage
Tra1'Ierkept.
has
used ¥Bry 1tu
·
d
All
1or I*Fn1 Elllntltlh
spare trre mounte .
$7,000. C,all (740)446-2444 !
anytime or lea¥e a mes·
sage.

949-1405

Sl'l'

Steve Riffle

GRAVELY TRACTOR

.HARTWELL
STORAGE

Abby

Jeff ·warner Ins.

k

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
740 992 5232
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Dear ,

Cellular

PC DOCTOR

H'gh &amp;Dry
de

DEAR ABBY: At 35, my
hu sband, Tony, was so. gorgeous he stop_pCd traffic . He
was also artisuc, talented, and
had the biggest heart of anyo ne I'd ever met. Like most
young couples, we dreamed
of buying O\lr first home,
starting a family and growing
old together. However. on
ADVICE
Sept. 23, 1996, our dreanis
were shattered.
The memories are still a
blur: The ambulance trip to today; or the fanner who used
the . hospital. Emergency to have to drive six hours for
sur~ery for bleeding ·in .the kidney dialysis , who can now
bram. The shocking discovery enjoy the work he loves again.
· of a brain tumor. He was With so many people on the
briefly
conscious
after waiting lists toda~, orllan
surgery, then my darling donation is truly a gtft of hfe.
slipped into a coma . •The ROSE D'ACQUISTO,
bleeding was . unstoppable . NATIONAL
KIDNEY
Brain death was imminent.
FOUNDATION DONOR
That's when I . met Mary. FAMILY COUNCIL
She was Tony's nurse in
DEAR ROSE: Thank you
intensive care, Mary asked·me lor your important letter. April
if Tony was an organ donor. is National Donate Life
From the depths of my grief, I Month. For more infonnation
was suddenly give n a differ· about organ donation, or a
ent kind of hope • that other free organ donor card, readers
lives could be saved and Tony _ can contact the National
wouldn't die for nothing. I Kidney Foundation at Box
remember that we had talked DA. 30 E. 33rd St., New
about his becoming an organ York, NY 10016, or call (800)
· donor when he renewed his 622. 9010. The Web site is:
driver's license. I knew it was www.kidney.org.
what he had wan ted. ,
I've learned that as of
Tony 's gift of organ dona· October 2002. 80,000 individ·
lion is his living legacy in the uals are waiting for trans1
truest sense. Just ask Mel. the plants; of those, 53,000 are
liver recipient, who is healthy waiting for kidneys. Last year,

.ALaR

1

l!i

The Dally sentinel • Page B 1

www.mydallysentinel.com

Organ donation provides wife
solace after husband's death

F!:K
_SF.m
_ll_ll&amp;iii
n ii
' R.....

'· bed
3br. "Mobile Home. Sits on 1 old wood fullsize
aQprox. 3 acres . Central Air. frame . 1 freezer ca b.
EKceUent condition. lease

:

Friday, April 4, 2003

1'HOI.KOI&lt;T loiOU C:OUI..P I.OCK
ME Ollf. PIPN'T YOU?

1HA1
FI!I!I..ING1!
FACIINii

�Page B B • Tha Dally Sentinel

Friday, April 4, 2003

~

If you have a question

~r

a comment, write: NASCAR This Week. c,lo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893; Gastonia, NC 28053
•'
tUJ ~ ' tl '• I lUI ' •

What: 1\aron's 499
Where: Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway (2 .666 miles).
188 laps/501.208 miles
When: Green flag drops at
12:30 p.m. EDT Sunday
Last year'i winner: Dale
Earnhardt Jr.
Track qualifying record: Bill
Elliott, Ford, 212.809 mph ,
April 30 , 1987
•
Race record: Mark Martin,
Ford , 1~8.354 mph, May
10, 1997
Moot -.1 race: Finally, seven races into the 2003 Winston Cup season, Ryan Newman finished the deal . Before Newman 's career at
stock-car racing's highest level was 14 months old, he 'd

already started nine races on What: Aaron's 312
._
the pole . Victories on Sun- . Where: Talladega (AI~. ) Su·
day, though. were much hardperspeedway (2 .666 mile s).
er to come by. Until a bright,
117 laps/ 311.922 miles
clear day at Texas Motor When: i p.m. EDT Satu'rday
Speedway, Newman had nev- 'Last year's winner: Jason
er won a 500-mile Winst on
Keller
Cup race. He had won The Track qualifying record: Joe
Winston at Lowe's Motor
Nemechek,
Chevro let ,
Speedway, an exhibition race.
193.517 mph , April 24.
and a 300-miler in New
1997
Hampshire last September. Race record: Mark Martin.
'It was on my mind a little .Ford . 168.937 mph, April
bit." Newman admitted. 'We
26. 1997
got down and it was hard to Most recent race: Joe Nepick our chins up i;lgain. ~
ffiechek, in a Chevrolet, won
Problem solved . Newman ran
Saturday 's O'Rei lly 300 at
down Dale Earnhardt Jr. and
Texas Motor Speedway.
made up for an apparent
Scott Riggs finished second.
strategic mistake in the Sam- · and Shane Hmiel posted a
sung/Radio Shack 500.
career-best finish in third .

·

I 11 • \1 l ' ol \11 \f'l Jl/1)1 h

What: Advance Auto Parts
250
Where: Martinsville (Va. )
Speedway (.526 mile ). 250
laps/131.5 miles
When: 1 p.m. EDT April12 .
Last year's winner: Dennis
Setzer
"
Track qualifying record: Mike
Bliss. Ford. 94.27 5 mph,
April16 , 1999
Race record: Jimmy Hensley,
Dodge, 74 .294 mph , April
17. 1999
Most recent race: Dennis
Setze r, in a Chevrolet , won

the March 23 event at Mesa
Marin Ra ceway in Bakersfield. Ca li f. The Martinsville
race is . the series ' only

event In Apr II.

~ . . ()I

IN I I l l

I I&lt; ;,t I I

I

KENNY WALLACE, WINSTON CUP SERIES

.

~TERNAL

PTI

IST

Wallace's spirits remain high during chase for first Cup victory
'
St. Louis native Kenny
Wallace, right, talks
with Bill .Davis Racing
teammate Ward
Burton. At the start
of the season, Wallace
signed a two-year
deal to·drive,Davis'
Dodge lntreplds.
John Clark/
NASCAR This Week

,.,

llulc:H SaiD
: ·1. Tod!l Bodine
: 1

2.

914

·104

Ja190 Kaf!er

J. Jami@ McMuiray

·107

4.

·-152

Ron Hgmaday

f· Kaser Kohne

·153
·174
·182

I. David Grpen

I. Shane Hm!el

·190

• 1. Scott Rjus

· ,t.
• ;10.

·199
·216

Soott Wimmer
Mike Bllu

i ' CRAF.IIMAN TIIUCII
i. ·1.

510

Bobb'/ Hamilton
' ~ 2, Rick Crawford

, 3,
' 4.
: · I.
· 8.
:. I.
l
, 1.

·29

Bnsod8n GaUII!lao

·31

Travis Kyapil
RObert Pressl,r
Jon Wood

·55
. 71
• 87
. 91

Terry Cook
Ted Musgrave

· 94

t.

Dennis Setzer
:&amp;Q, Joson Leffler

•

'

K

enny Wallace, at 39, has raced in the
Winston Cup Series 271 times without
,
winning._He and older brother Mike have
been unable to duplicate the success of the eldest Wallace, Rusty, who h~s won 54 races and
the 1989 championship.
Recently, however, Kenny had hitf'irst top-10
finish of the season in the Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway.
"Our team really needed that 10th.place finish
at Bristol" Wallace said. "It seems like, if you
r'finish 11th, nobody really cares about it Finish·
ing lQth was a good boost for a team that had
been struggling."
~sked to define his greatest moments in life,
Wallace said, "There's so many. It could be in
racing or it could be in human life. On the human life side, it was when my first kid, Brooke,
was born. That was pretty wild.
"In auto racing, it would be a couple of things.
Obviously, when I pushed Dale Earnhardt to his
very last win (at Talladega in 2000)- and get·
ting Dale's approval after that race over the
loudspeakers -was pretty cool. It seems like
I'm always pushing somebody to a win. Me and
my brother finished first and second in the '98
Bud Shootout"
Like millions of Americans, Wallace said he
has turned his attention recently to world
events and the progress of the country's war ef·
fort in Iraq.
·
"I can tell you that I'm obsessed with the
war," Wallace said. :'1 don't care if I'm the minority or majority either one. I'm very obsessed
with it. I go to bed watching it, and l.wake up
watching it. I caught myself the last couple of
days getting tired watching it."
Wallace remains enthusiastic. He believes he
has the ability and confidence to be a Winston
Cup winner.
.
"I would say my drive and determination is
what separates me from the other people," Wallace said. "There are a lot of great race-car
drivers out there. I always heard Dale Earnhardt say this. He'd say, 'You know there's a ton
of talent out there and they're all hidden. There
are shy people and people afraid to sacrifice'\\
The!'~ are people who are marned and have ......_
children and are afr~id to quit their jobs and
chase their dreams.' When I met my wife in
high school, she knew I was racing. She knew
better than to challenge me and ta,ke away what
!dreamed of. You have to h_ave.a dream, and
you have to have people support that."
Contact Monte Dutton at tug50@aol.com.

·100

'

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR ThiS Week

· 126

'

NOW AT

JIM.'S FARM EQUIPM
2150 Eadem Ave. (SL Rt. 7) • Cilllllpalls, OH

(740) 446-9777· •. (740). 446-2484

.' '

' '

'

.'

'

'

'

.

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