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                  <text>Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, Aprll10, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Families can find support
during spouses' active duty
DEAR ABBY: May I add
my 2 cents' worth to
"Miserable Daughter-in:utw
in Norfolk, Va.," who complained that her in-laws treat
her as though she's invisible
when her husband is away on
active duty?
To her I would say: "Don't
give up on his family, but don't
count on 'them to fill your time.
Call the Navy chaplain, the
local college or another Navy
wife." During my husband's
first long cruise, like her, I was
lost. Then I started volunteering for the Red Cross at
Portsmouth Naval Hospital
and for Navy Relief in the thrift
. shop. The more involved one
is, the less time one has for
· fretting over in-laws.
Most important, Navy wives
whose husbands are on sea
duty are usually very close-knit
and supportive of one another.
During deployments, such
friendships are often closer
than relationships with one's
own family. It is the responsibility of the captain of the ship,
or his wife, to see that the
spouses have points of contact
before the ship departs. A
spouse's sea duty can be
looked upon as an opPortunity
to take classes, get together
with other · spouses "in the
same boat," or get involved in
all sorts of projects. If

worth more than I can express.
In ·the Coast Guard, each unit
has an ombudsman who is in
charge of keeping spouses connected. This service is a lifesaver.
The family I have joined
here with the military is priceless. Knowing that my strength
to that of my husband's,
adds
ADVICE
and. seeing · others ,going
through the same thing, makes
"Miserable" takes my advice, it all worthwhile. -KAY IN
her husband 1 her marriage and KODIAK, ALASKA
DEAR KAY: My admirathe Navy w1ll profit fron\ her
·tion
for you; and for other milefforts.. EX- NAVY WIFE,
itary spouses and families, is
PINEBLUFF, N.C.
DEAR EX·NAVY WIFE: boundless.
Although I ad vise4 the young · DEAR ABBY: Please urge
woman to network with other "Miserable" to become active
Navy wives, I was not aware ' in her state's family readiness
when I wrote my answer that program. It provides muchprograms were already in place needed support for service
to help her. Thank you for your member families and signifihelpful letter. You were not the, cant others during peacetime or
only reader who wanted to deployment I am part of the
Maryland National Guard
help. Read on:
.
DEAR ABBY: I am also a Family Readiness progntm and
military spouse. One thing I can attest to the help during the
have · noticed is. that many deployment of my husband
wives- and husbands -have and my son. -GAYLA IN
a hard time adapting to the ELKTON, MD.
DEAR GAYLA: Bless you
strain their spouses feel at having to put duty over family. for reaching out
DEAR ABBY: I dealt with
Thankful! y, there are groups
out there to help us get through my in·laws by goirig to counthis. One of the best I have seling. There I learned to deal
found
is with them kindly and resr,ectwww.militarywives.com. The fully. Once "Miserable' is
message boards alone are strong enough emotionally, she

Dear

Abby

should . ask her in-laws why
she's not included in their family activities. Please tell her to
rise above the pettiness and
remember, people reap what
they sow. -ANOTHER
DAUGHTER-JN:LAW IN
ILLINOIS
DEAR D.I.L.: That's good
advice, to which I would like to
add: The phone works bo!h
ways: If the parents are not
inviting her over, she should
consider taking the initiative
and inviting THEM over.
' Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also known
as Jeanne Phillips, arui was
founded by her mother, Pauline
Phillips. Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or PO
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA

ACROSS
Ancient
tales
6 Large
parrot
11 Mideast hub
12 Spud
13 Type
'
of skiing
14 Access
15 Skillful
16 Film terrier
17 Mo. bill
19 Ready.
to eat
23 Gallon dlvs.
26 Energy
source
28 Cargo
hauler
29 Healing
31 Sullen
33 Audience
34 -del
Fuego
35 All·purpose
truck
36 Prefix
lor pod
39 Whiskey
grain
40 Vanna's
boss
42 Mars,
tp Plato

Church

44 Lazily
46 Jungle

•

· ruffs .

1

51 Fez

' dangler
PllliJet
Sound port
55 Edible
lizard
56 Cold place
57 Bright
flower
58 Make a
sound

54

"

DOWN

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 164

.

0 ,, . ,

l~stings, A6 ·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

.J~" :,, •.'"J~iii,· . .,~ F~IDAY, APRIL 11, .~,00~ ·~- ,, :·

..

to poets
34 Boot part
game
20 Off·whlle · 37 L.lnge lily
dismay
21 San Diego 38 Attempt
3 Journey
41 Travel
4 Searches
papers
22
~
Orinoco
for
43 Chic
Flow"
5 Fem. saint
45 Tum down
singer
6 Helena's st.
47 Bank dep.
23
Clle
7 Flower oil
24 Nearer the 48 Memo
8 Commuter
49 Qatar. ruler
facts
vehicle
50 Pouch
25. Bro.'s
9 Stopped
51 Useful hint
sibling
lor lunch
27 2001 In old 52 Turkish
10 Trouble
official .
Rome ,
11 Ewe's
53
Heal source
29 Buddy
plaint
54
Fratlellar
30
Prefix
for
12 Trolloria
11
recent"
sauce
32 Above,
16 Qty.
18 The "It"

Blend

1

www.mydailysentinelcom

2 Cry of

wo

.

•

Requests $29,000
shift in funds for
salaries

90069.

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

BY BRIAN

8Y

BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

Some type of interesting
situation may develop for you
in the year ahead that could
lead to a promotion or a
change from your present po·
sition. The alteration would
offer you more advantages
and benefits.
. ARIES (March 21-April
I?l - No one wants to de·
prive you of having a good
time today, but unless you
spend more hours producing
than playing. the guilt that
gnaws at you could ~keel? you
from relaxing. ·
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - It might be true that
someone else is getting the
breaks you feel should be
yours, but don't behave in a
petty or envious fashion today . Displays of jealousy
don't become you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- That big idea of yours
won't get off the ground today unless you stop fantasizing about it and start taking
some positive action to make
it fly . !he sooner you begin,

the more quickly you'll sucSCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov.
volvements today, you could
ceed.
22)- Be particularly careful
let your guard down and toCANCER '(June 21-July
about your conduct and image
tally, miss the wool being
22) - Examine all merchan·
when out among the masses
pulled over your eyes. Don' t
,dise carefully today so ihat
today. Your reputation could
get smug.
you don't end up buying an ilsuffer if you behave in ways
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb.
lusion instead of quality. Un·
that are socially unacoeptable.
19)- Trusting persons about
fortunately. your sharpness as
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
whom you know little today
a shopper might not be up to
Dec. 21)- What could cause
could be a big mistake. Take
par.
your plans to go awry today
ample til'(le to first get to
l-EO (July 23·Aug. 22)will not be your ideas. but
know an individual before letIt's important that you do not
rather your vagueness about
ting your guard down,
put up a false image of your·
them and your poor judgment.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
· self today with someone , Take the tnl)e to map out your
20) - Get your most undesir·
you'd like to impress. Inaccuevery move before swinging
able jobs out of the way early
rate disclosures aboul your·
mto act10n.
today, so that you don "t spend
self will cause things to back·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22the entire day brooding and
fire.
. Jan. 19) - If you think
bemoaning about what needs
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22)
you're pretty sharp about
to be done .
- Analyze your motives to·
business or commercial inday if there is someone you
do not want to help. If your
WORD scRIMM'-GE-c 2CI03
soLUTION BY JUDD nAMBRICK
intentions are selfish or
h11ur1 Syndic. .. rc.
grudging. the only person
Answer
you'll hurt is yourself. You'll
F, E.
lSI DOWN . •..J!...
to
get what you give.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23)
previous
2nd DOWN •.....!i..
- Budget your lime more
Word
prudently today regarding
3rdDOWN =
...lL
your less important activities.
Scrim·
Poor scheduling could cause
T,
41h DOWN •_!L
mag~ ·
you to neglect that which is
AVERAGE GAME 120.130
JUDO'S TOTAL
195
truly of consequence for that
which is not.

Nicole Prunty works on the quilt she is making as a God's NET 4·H Club member under the watchful eye of the volun·
teer advisors, Joann Vaughan, seate,j, and Alice Wamsley. (Charlene Hoefl ich) '·

God's NET teaches kids fine art of quilting
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

News editor

·-

POMEROY
"I've
learned a lot about sewing ,"
· said 9-year-old Nicole
Prunty as she begin tying
off a quilt she has constructed under the watchful
eye of God's NET volunteers.
Nicole is one of seven 9to-13 year -old girls and a
boy who are being tau ght

JodOOWN

0
0

41tt DOWN

~.~n~~-.1

®

AVERAGE GAME 215-225

FOUR PLAY TOTAL ...:...._
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS: Ma~e a 2- tc 7-lel1er word tram lhd'tel'tet'S on eacn yarCIIne.
Add points to each word or letter using scoring d1tedkln6 at fi!tit. S.V.O.~n•r

··-

Out for Tips, See
~&lt;S,

IN 1'.\C!; I WANf

AAVE~E

SONs IN tTIALS

.\f

account, See
• 'Victory Gar~s';':~
page A4
• North Korea out of
n udear treaty, See page A8

we llO,
MNOT'
WmiM
A; IGHTI

TO El'A~t OUR

HIGH SCORE

&gt;~oM-me~

TOP '!'EN!

T

Mostly ounny, HI: 608, Low: 3Ds

ITtlL
H/NE Y1
ro\E

A
LEASE!
~EAA

'tWO

PA'fi'II'ENl5

\

TO MilKE:

'0~R ·~EAII.
LEA~E!

ON 'fOIJP.

YE!IICLE:,

($A .

A

GAS·

&amp;u!ZLIN(,.

PIECE 01'
JUNI&lt;.! I

WANT

Hokll Pasquale, 4th lJade,
Pomeroy Elementary

Index
2 Sections - II Paps

•

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics

ONE-~

.$f{OfPJNG ..

ihe urt of quilt making by
Joann Vaughan and Alice
Wam sley. who volunteer
re gu larly at the Meigs
Cooperative Parish 's youth
in
downtown
center
Pomeroy.
The youngsters are fin·
ishing up quilts in the nine·
patch pattern created Irom.
4- 1/2 i11.ch squares of materiaL Over the past. several
months, Vaughan and
Wamsle·y have taught them

how to cut the·squares. sew
them together, put them
into quilting frames. and
sew the pretty tops to tbe
inside balling and quilt
back.
' Once completed, the chi 1dren will be taking them
home to use on their beds.
but not until after they have
been displayed them at the
Meigs County Fair as a part
of, God's NET 4·H Club's
exhibit.

The quilting frame was
made and donated to the
center by local woodworker
Eddie BaJ I. Nine sewing
machines were also donat· ·
ed so that the volunteers
could begin teaching chil·
dren how to sew for themselve s.
For the girl s, making a
dress will be their ne xt 4-H
project. This week. they
were looking at patterns
and talkin g about materials.

POMEROY
Meigs
Co unty
Sheriff
Ralph
Trussell musl wait for an
opinion from Meigs County
commissioners' legal coun·
se l
before
accessing
$29,000 set as ide for food
fo r prisoners for use in hi s
salary fund.
Trussell met wilh com·
mis sioner s Thur sday to
request the tran sfer of
$29,000 of $30,000 appropriated for the prisoners·
food supply into hi s salary
line item.
"This will kee p us afloat
longer,"
for
a while
Trussell said. "If I can ' t
access the se funds, which
are no lon ger neces sary
beca use the county jail is
closed. then I will be out of
money entirely in my
sa laries line item by midMay. "
Tru ssell said he hope s to
keep $1.000 in the food
line so that his staff can
provide interim meals for
tho se prisoners held in custody for brief periods, such
as for court appearances.
The county jail was
closed last year as. a cost-

Truessell

failed and
broke .
Trussell said la st year he
would not likely reopen the
jail anyw ay, because it is
cheaper to house priso ners
under contract in jails outside of the county.
Commissio.ners, meanwhile, said they mu st consult with Tom Lubers of
Cincinnati, who represents
them through the County
Commissioners Association
of Ohio in a pending civil
suit Trussell filed last year.
The suit alleges improper
appropriations into the
sheriff's general fund budget.
" I don ' t know if this
appropriation adjustment
can be approved at all. bur
we have to seek our attorney' s advice before we can
take
any
action ,"
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport .sa id . "Our
appropria.tions are at the
heart of the sheriff's civil
suit."

County unclaimed
New Syracuse floodplain funds list readied

Inside

won:n get a so - ~ DOI"llS. All woros can be tOLm 1n WebSial's New World
Colle&lt;;&gt;e &lt;&gt;-.ooy.
.
JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

NOT UNTIL-

1tl OONI!TE

REED

saving
measure,
and is now
un sui table
for
reopening
because of ·
water damage
late
last year
when the
jail's heating sys tem
water lines

L.,__--~-~~~~---=-==:=---=-=.. ____j

by JUDD HAMBRICK

!

M"i UNUJAN\£0
VEHICLE 1tl CHARCN ,

J.

Staff writer

Astrograph
: Friday. April II. 2003

Sheriff's
money query
put on hold

Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
Weather

A2
84-6
B7
B7

A4
AS,B
Bl-4
A2

C' 2003 Qhio Valley Publishing Co.

line draws questions

BY BRIAN

Bv J.

POMEROY - Readers
of Tuesday's edition of The
Daily Sentinel could find
out they are entitled to a
piece of $41 ,669 in
uncla imed fund s turned
over to the State of Ohio
[rom Meigs County in the
past year.
Lt . Gov . .Jennette Bradley
announced Thursday that
lhe Ohio Department of
Commerce's Division of
Unclaimed Funds will pub·
!ish a list of 1.763 Meigs
County unclaimed funds
ucwunls, valuing $154. 163.
The hst w1ll be pnnted m
Tuesday's newspaper.
The special insert will
include 97 unclaimed funds
accounts of $50 or more for
individuals whose lasl
known add re sses are in
Mei gs County. While the
insert will include only
those individual s with
rights to accou nts turned
over in the past year, a comprehen~ive li st can be found
at the Divi sion ·s website.
w w w, com. s tate. o h . us,
along wi th forms for indi·
viduals and organi zations to
use in c !aiming their
momes.
The unclaimed funds

MILES lAYTON

StaH writer
SYRACUSE - AI the
request of Syracuse village,
the Ohio Department of
Natuml Resources sent a representative to di scuss the
impact a newly-charted
. tlood plain will have on property owners Thursday at
municipal buildinl'.
Alicia A. Silveno, an envi·
ronment speciali st with
ODNR, heard citizens con·
cerns and answered question s &lt;~ bout how changes in
the floodpl ain will affect residents.
In 1998, the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers conducted a study on the Ohio River
floodplain . The Federal
Emergency
Managemenl
Agency (FEMA) analyzed
the results of that study and
decided to spread out the line
for areas which are now considered as part of the floodplain.
Several property owners
are no,w inside the newly
reconfigured floodplain . Thi s
could mean that they will
hav,~ to pay for flood insur-'
anee .

Several re sidents voiced

opposition to the changes. A
Another sce nario involves
few said that the new lines a person who seeks to buy
financially penalized them property inside the !loadfor buying or' building in plain . If the person pays the
areas that used to be clear of property up front. without a ·
the floodplain, but are now a loan, then there is' no mandapart of it.
tory r~quirement that the new
If anyone decides to dis· owner purchase tlood insurpule the claims of the new ance .
floodplain line und thinks
However. if ihe buyer
their property is safe from seeks to pay for the property
any llood, but particularly with a loan. the lender will
the 100-year tlood which the require the buyer to have
study is based on, then that 11ood in surance. This co uld
person has to run a cost ben- potentially affect property ·
efit analysis.
values in si de the lloodplain
The properly owner can beca1.1se sellers might need to
decide to conduct a speci al- take th~se increased costs
ized study and seek an eleva- inlo account when at,tracting
tion certificate saying his or a buyer.
her propt;rty is not at risk · The line determining the
should a tlood occur. The areas al risk for llooding is
cost of thi s study must be based on the 100-ycar llood
assessed against whether il data.
would be less expensive to
According
to Denni s ,
pay llood insurance year Moore, a resident of
after year.
Syracuse, thi s water level.
The lender who holds the ·whi ch det ermines where the
mortgage on the property line will be located, is based
may accept this elevation on a mathematical formu la.
certificate or may decide that This formula lakes into
the risk is too great and ask account prev iou s llood s
the property owner to pay for including the one where the
11ood insurance anyway. The water level went up the hi gh·
burden of proof is on the est.
property owner to prove his
He said engineers then take
or her property is not at risk
Please see Flood, AS
for flood damage.

J.

REED

Staff writer

f'eOO

Yost, deputy treasurer,

·~ws

a list of unclaimed

funds posted in tile Meigs

County Cour\tlouse. (Brian J
Reed)

accounts represent money
or the rights to money that
have been left dmmant or
forgotten, including dorman
checking
and
savings
accounts, forgotte n rent and
utility deposits, uncashed
checks, undelivered stock
certificates. uncashed insurance policies and fo.rgotten
layaway deposits.
A li st will also be posted
in lhe Meig s County
Courthouse. which includes
accounts listed for previous
years and accounts under
$50.

This week is

,

Nur5ing
Week.
Holzer Medical Center recognizes our
Pediatric Nurses for their dedication and service.
For more information on our Pediatric Services,
rpleose call /740) 446·5075.

'

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

' (

'

"

••

�The Daily Sentinel

Local• OhiO

Ohio weather

Time 9ut for Tips

Saturday, April 12
AccuWeather.com forecast tor d ime conditions low/hi h tem

0

0

0

·w.VA.

..
v a•••--~w•
"

'

Slllny Pt. Cloudy . ClOudy·

Sllowers T·storms

Ram

Flumes

Snow

~

Ice

Sunny skies predicted Saturday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A deep low pressure system
over the southeast will keep a
chance for some rain over the
southeast today. This f'din is
expected to end as the day
progresses.
· A cold front just northwest
of the area is expected to
move southeast tonight and
bring with it some cooler
temperatures. The front is
expected to move through the
area dry. Once the cold front
moves south, a strong high
pressure ridge will build,
bringing with it fair weather.
Somewhat milder temperatures can be expected across
the south and extreme westem part of the area today.
Highs are expected to climb
into the lower 60s.
Overnight lows are expected to drop into the 30s under
fair skies. A warming trend is
expected to occur through
early next week with highs up
around the 70 degree mark by
Monday.
The next chance for precipitation will come in the form
. of a chance of showers on

Wednesday. There is also a
chance for thunderstorms on .
Thursday.
WEATHER FORECAST

Tonight...Becoming clear
by early evening. Lows near
40. Northwest winds 5 to I0
mph.
Saturday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs near 60. North winds
10 1o 15 mph.
Saturday
night...Mostly
clear. Lows in the mid 30s.
ExTENDED FORECAST

Sunday ... Mostly · sunny.
Highs in the mid 60s.
Sunday
night. .. Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 30s.
Monday... Mostly clear and
warmer. Highs in the mid 70s.
Tuesday .. .Mostly
clear.
Lows in the upper 40s and
highs in the upper 70s.
Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers
from ·early afternoon on . .
Lows near 50 and highs in the
mid 70s.
Thursday ... Mostly cloudy
with a c'hance of showers.
Lows in the lower 50s and
highs in the lower 70s .

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Aprtlt0,2003

10,000

Dow
Jones

---g,ooo

JAN
High .

Pet ct\BrQO

-p!IMous: +0.29

FEB
low

8,225.04 8,145.87

MAR

APR

l,OOO

Record high: 11.722.98
Jan. 14, 2000

April t0, 2003

1,600

Nasdaq·

compos
t,365.6t

FEB

H"" 1,351 .10
1,368.11
low

Pet:=,.

-

JAN

' +0.65

Aprit10,2003

Record high: 5,048.62

March 10, 2000

- - - - - - - - - - - 1 .000

Standard
&amp; Poor's
Pt;l. change

-""""'"" +0.65

900
800

100

JAN

FEB

APR

High
871 .78

low

Record hi$Jh: 1,527.46
March :24, 2000

862.76

Local Stocks
AEP-24
Arch Coat- 17.7t
Akzo -22.25
AmTech/SBC - .21 .08
Ashland Inc.- 29.40
AT&amp;T -14.32
Bank One - 36.39
BLI-t2.43
Bob Evans - 24.87
BorgWarner- 50.2t
Champion - 2.95
Charming Shops - 3.85

City Holding - 28.22
Cot-t8.65
OG -t3.t3
·DuPont - 39.36

Federal Mogul - .t5
USB -t9.60
Gannett - 72.28
General Electric- 27.36
GKNLY- 2.90
Harley Davidson- 40.95
Kmart- .8
Kroger- 13.45 .
Ltd. -t3.60
NSC-19.42·
Oak Hill Financial- 24.Ool ·
OVB- 22.45
BBT-32.20
Peoples - 22.79
Pepsico - 39.79
Premier- 9.16

Rockwell- 2t .20
Rocky Boots - 6.68
AD Shell- 42.2t
Sears - 26.55
Wai·Marl - 54.58
Wendy's ~ 27.12
Worthinglon - 12.37
Daily stock reports are
1he 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Sm"h Parlners
at Advest tnc . of
Gallipolis.

Livestock report

,_.

I

GALLIPOLIS United
Producers Inc. market report
from Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday.
Feeder CattJe.Sidd~
275-415# St $90-$103 Hf.
$85-$93 425-525# St. $80-$94
Hf. $80-$88 550-625# St. $78$84 Hf. $72-$77 650-725# St.
$70-$78 Hf. $68-$75; 750-850#
St. $65-$70; Hf. $60-$65.
Fed Cattle ·
(Second Wednesday
of the month)
Choice Steers, $78$84.25: Heifers, $77-$83.
Select - . Steers, $72-$75 ;
Heifers, $70-$73.

Friday, April 11 , 2003

Grandfathers play important role ·
..

IND. •

PageA2

Holsteins - Steers, $62-$70.
Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/Fleshed $;36$42; Medium/Lean $30-$35 ;
Thin/Light $20-$28; Bulls
$710-$51
Back To The Fann:
Cow/Calf Pairs $41 0-$800;
Bred Cows $240-$570; Baby
Calves $3().$220; Goats $1 ().
$83; Lambs $107-$135; Hogs
$26-$35.
Upcoming specials:
Feeder cattle sale, I p.m.
Wednesday, April 16.
Call the office at 446-9696.
Visit the website at www.uproducers.com
~

'

Grandfathers play a signifi cant role in their grandchil. dren 's lives. They offer a different perspective that others
aren't able to provide.
Grandchildren tend to view
their grandpas as "bigger than
life." This lasting impression
tends to 'COntinue throughout
most. of their lives.
What can a grandfather do
to make special attachments
·with his grandchildren? Here
are some suggestions.
You should develop a relationship with your grandchildren th&lt;!t is appropriate for
you. Don't let grandma be the
main source of contact or wait
for the grandkids to approach
you. You should initiate the
relationship.
Share your talents and abill ~.
ties with · the youngsters.
Spend time with each one,

.

Becky
Baer
EXTENSION AGENT

teaching them things you like
to do or work on, increasing
their expertise in social or
"handyman" skills. Not only
does this pass down sports,
crafts or hobby traditions and
fix-it techniques, but it _,also
allows quality time with the
grandkids. This also serves as
a good time to relate stories
and experiences.of your youth
and teaches them personal and
family values.

For gf'dndfathers who live
far away, it is important to correspond with phone calls, emails, letters and cards - just
from you. Send care packages, tapes, videos and pictures to your grandchildren.
Don 't waste time C(')nlparing
yourself as a grandpa rent to
when you were a r,arenr.. They
are two · entire y different
stages of life. In addition,
make sure you don't consider
this _time with your grandkids
as just babysitting. Children
need time with their grandparents for proper development.
However, be alert to when
your kids may need a break.
Volunteer to take the young
ones for awhile, so your children can have time to re-energize themselves. lltis will
enable them to become better
parents.

Your grandchi ldren wi II
enjoy the slower pace you
have to offer them . With
today's hectic schedules. a little "down time" with grandpa
can help balance _their lives .
Many times grandtathers have
the time and patience to
devote to listening to their
grandchildren, when . other
people seem too busy. . . .
Since people are hv1ng·
longer. grandfathers may ha ve .
many years of grandparent1ng
ahead of them. They should
take this time to enjoy their
grandchildren, developing ;m
incomparable and significant
relationship with them.
8
e
c
k
r
Baer is . a Meigs Corm/\'
Extension agem with Fumilr
and
Consumer
Sciences/Community
De~&gt;elopml'!ll.

Police·chief under fire from judge, monitor
Cincinnati officer.
BY TERRY KINNEY
However, he is under fire
Associated Press ·
- - - - - - - - - - from a federal judge and the
monitor she appointed to overCINCINNATI (AP) - The see the reforms.
city's police chief faces criti"Chief Streicher must put
cism from a new quarter even his prestige and authority
as pressure eased from another behind them (the reforms).
direction in Cincinnati's and empower those within the
efforts to refonn police proce- department who are responsidures and pr'dctices.
ble for implementing them,"
Thomas Streicher Jr., chief monitor Saul Green said in his
since 1999, has been a focus of report to U.S. District Juqge
criticism for those unhappy Susan Dlott last week.
with his department. He was
"Similarly, the city manager
chief during Cincinnati's 2001 and the political leadership of
riots that occurred after a the city must hold the chief
white police officer shot . and and his command staff
killed a black man who .was accountable for accomplishing
wanted on charges when he !heir mission," Green said.
ran from police.
Dlott went even further on
Black activists backing an Monday in a ruling that a
economic boycott of the city black activists' group may
have dropped their demand .for withdraw from an agreement
the resignation or replacement aimed at reforming the police
of Streicher, a police officer department. She implied that
for 32 years and son of a ·reform is impossible under

Streicher.
Referring to attomeys for
some of the plaintitffs , she
wrote "they represellit clients
whose rights have bet:n violated by the police."
"Unfortunately, such violations continue to occur despite
the existence of the collaborative agreement," Dlott wrote.
''Inevitably, they will continue
in the future."
Streicher says he is committed to reforming the department and will make whatever
efforts are needed.
"That's the city 's commitment," he said Wednesday.
He said the department evaluates its leadership ~;tructure, ·
just as it regularly reviews its
operations with an ey•! to what
could be updatf:d and
improved. He said th,e department tries to learn from criticism, even if it is irksome.
"What you do is look at that

cnt1C1sm and pull out of it
what you can use." Streicher
said.
Mayor Charlie Luken said .
he is contldent thai Streicher is
the man to lead the police
department and work with
Green and other parties to
make changes.
"I work closely with the
chief."
Luken
said
Wednesday. "I think he's the
right guy for the job."
He was more emphatic in
responding to Green's criti- .
cism that the "political leadership of the city" was lax.
"When he says the political
leadership, meaning me .
should lean on the police
chief, I will not do that. ..
Luken told The Cincinnati
Post. "I will not do that
because I think the police
chief and the command staff
are working very well."

Community
Calendar

Clubs and
Organizations
Friday, ,April 11
MIDDLEPORT - Widows
Fellowship will meet at noon
at the Middleport Church of
Christ for an Easter potluck
dinner.
Saturday, April 12
RACINE
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
DAR, t 0 a.m. at the Racine
Public Library. Speaker will
be Mrs. Ferman Moore on
national defense.
POMEROY
A public
meeting will be held by the
Burlingham
Modern
Woodmen, 7 p.m. Saturday at
the hall. Robert Byer,
Emergency
Management
Agency director, will talk on
homeland security. A 6 p.m.
potluck will precede the
meeting.
· Monday, April 14
RUTLAND
Magis
County Soccer League will
meet at 6 p.m.at the Rutland
Civic Center. All coaches:
committee members and
interested parties are encouraged to attend. ·
POMEROY
Pomeroy
·Alumni Association planning
sessoin , 7 p.m. at Trinity
Church.
Tuesday, April 15
MASON
Stewart~
Johnson
VF.W
Ladies
Auxiliary. Mason, will meet at
7 p.m. at the hall. Officers to
be elected. Potluck to follow./
Wedneaday, April 16
ATHENS - An informal
meeting of the Southern
Consortium for Children
Board of Dire·ctors will be
held will be held at 10 a.m. at
the office. The next regularly
scheduled Board meeting will
be held May 26.

COMMUNITY

AUTOMOTIVE
Norris Northup Dodge

City of Point Pleasant

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

iNww.pointpleasantwv.org

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

Ma·son County Chamber of Commerce

www.turnpikeflm.com

www.masoncountychamber.org
Meigs County Chamber of. Commerce

BUSINESS TRAINING

. www.meigscountyohio.com

Gallipolis Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

-

,

NEWSPAPERS
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

www.mydailytribune.com

MEDICAL
Holzer Medical Center

www.holzer.org
Holzer Clinic

www.holzerclinic.com
Pleasant Valley Hospital
www.pvalley.o~g

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com
.

Point Pleasant Register

www.mydailyregister.com
GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES
Precious Memories

www.photosonchina.com
ENTERTAINMENT
Charter Communications

www.charter.com

.

AGRICULTURE

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Page A3

Faith • Values
Scientist defends Exodus account

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, April ll, 2003

RICHARD N. OSTLING
Assocaited Press

amateur status in archaeoiOb'Y
and Bible scholarship.
Humphreys doesn't feel hi s
A British scientist is making lack of expertise is a problem:
two claims about Jewish history He believes it gives him an
th 1s Passover season that could open mind. ''I am not precondisurely spark discussion over the tinned to accept 'tandard interSeder meal.
pretations." he :;ays.
Colin . J. Humphreys of
Other scholars have proposed
Camhridge University has con- that Sinai was in Arabia.
cluded that science backs tradiBut Humphreys' claim is distiona) beliefs that the Israelites' tinct because he reckons the
exodus from Egypt was led by holy mount must have been an
Moses pretty much the way the active volcano, since it shook
B1bie and the Haggadah ritual and emitted tire and smoke
·
(Exodus 19: 18). And he has
~ II ~
.
He also says that Mount carefully examined records
Sinai , where Scripture says ancient and modem to fi x.the
Moses received God's Law, is site.
located in Saudi Ardbia. not
His candidate: Present-day
Egypt 's Sinai Peninsula _ Mount Bedr in northwestern
moving a key site for Judaism Saudi Arabia, since there were
into the nation where Islam was no ancient volcanoes in what
founded.
was later named the Sinai
Humphreys· theories come at Peninsula.
a time when his close. literal
Humphreys also thinks . that
reading of the Book of Exodus near Mount Bedr, Moses expeis far out of fashion among rienced God's call at the "burnConservative and Refonn Jews, ing bush." He suggests the mysthough it may be welcomed by terious phenomenon was
Orthodox Jews and conserva- . caused by flammable natural
tive Christians. ·
gas or volcanic gas escaping
He details his ideas in a read- from a small vent in the ground.
able new book, "The Miracles
Such wnclusions are typical
of Exodus: A Scientist's of Humphreys' effort to read the
Discovery of the Extraordinary Book of Exodus as literallv as
Natural Causes of the Biblical possible and search for scici1tifStories" (HarperSanFrancisco). ic explanations of what's
The 61-year-old academic recorded there.
brings a solid intellectual repuThe approach is out of step
tation in his own fields of with Refonn and Conservative
· physics and materials science to · Bible commentaries. And
· dl y Jewish arch.aeologists such as
the ta bl e, thoug h ad mme
William Dever, from the
BY

.

University of Arizona, and
Israel Finkelstein, at Tel Aviv
University, treat the exodus
story as inspiring national fie· tion rdther than history.
.Dever's new "Who Were the
Earl y Israelites and Where Did
they Corne From ?" (Eerdmans)
says that, while the Exodus
·story "may rest on some historical foundations , however minimal," the Israelites qidn't develop -' at least not primari.ly from a people fleeing Egypt. ·
One reason fo r Dever's
doubts is that. there's no hard
evidence for the 40 years of
wandering in the Sinai wilderness. But if Humphreys is right,
archaeologists have looked in
the wrong nation. Others offer
circumstantial arguments, saying the odds are slim for finding
3,000-year-old remains from
vagabonds.
A churchgoing Bapti st,
Humphreys insists he was fully
prepared tO · find biblical mistakes and ' igns that the exodus
story was written many ceoturies after the events, as scholars like Dever believe.
The Book of Exodus obviously underwent later editing,
Humphreys concluded, but the
evidence strongly suggests eyewitness material that might well
come from Moses himself. The
book is "amazingly accurate
and coherent," he' asserts, and
all those mind-boggling events
happened as the Bible reports.
Some s·ay Exodus was t·Iction hecause the arid wilder-

Meigs County soldiers
now serving in the
Middle East.
B a r ringer, Car I
"Patrick", SPC - Son
of Carl and Barbara
Barringer of Reedsville
Bissell, .lonathon A.,
2nd Lt. - Son of Glen
Bi ssell of Racine and
Naomi Bi sse ll of Long
Bottom .
: Burns, Levi Ray, PFC
:son
of Debbie
:Schuler.
Fields, Russ, 1 LT Husband of Darlene
. ld s.
. F te
: Frechette, Aaron M.,
: L!!pl.- Son of Ron and
·Becky
Frechette
of
: Albany. Now serving in
Iraq .
Gaul, :Jeremy E., AM
- Son of Rodney and
. Sharon Gaul of Vincent.
: Grueser, Jerry, AM
.- Son of Jerry Grueser,
Sr. and Jean Grue ser of
Minersville.
Heck, Jennifer E.,
CP03 Daughter of
Mike and Susie Heck of
Pomeroy.
• Hill, . John, Lcpl. . Son of Pat and Nancy
·Hill of Pomeroy. Now
serving in Kuwait.
Hill, Erik Ian, Sgt. Son of Ron and Jorce
. Hill of Pomeroy. Servmg
:in the Army in Kuwait.
· Johnson, Robert W.,
SSG - Son of Kathy
Van Meter of Mason .
McKnight, Charles,
SPC
.
Meheney, Erik, SfC
.Son
of
Rtck

Metheney and Vickie
Bro111n. both of Salem
Center. Currently serving in the Middle East.
Michael, Derek W.
PVT Re sident of
Syracuse and son of
Jennifer Michael.
Pickens, Terry II,
SPC - Son of Terry and
Tammy Picken s. fomerly
of Rutland.
Robertson,
Justin,
LCPL - Son of Greg
. and Anna Parker of
Tuppers Plains. Serving
in the Marines Kuwait.
R ous h , R o d ney D .,
SSFC- Son of Beverly
and Richard Fetty of
Rutland and the late
Williford Lee Roush.
Serving in the Army in
the Middle East.
Stacy, Michael B.,
SPC - Son of Jim and
Cathy Stacy of Pomeroy.
Swann, Julian, HNSon of Mark Swann of
Pomeroy. A U.S. Navy
Hospital Corpsman serv ing with the I st Marine
D1vision in Kuwait.
Turner,
Roger
Clinton Jr., Staff Sgt.
- Son of Dottte Turner
of Pomeroy and the late
Roger Turner. Based at
Fort Hood , Tex. , and
now serving in Kuwait.
Ward:.. Christopher,
Army t'FC ·_ Son of
Cathy and Wayne Pauley
of Pomeroy ·
·
Willbarger,
John
GNY SGT - Serving in
the Marine Corps, son of
Eloise Willb!lrger.
Weber, Nathan, SRA

Assocaited Press
WASHINGTON
Abandoning President Bush 's
larger "faith-based initiative,"
the ·Senate passed scaled-back
legislation Wednesday granting
new tax breaks for charitable
donations.
· The initiative began as an
effort to &lt;.&gt;pen government programs to churches, synagogues
and other religious organizations, but that proved so contentious that backers dropped
every one of these provisions
from the bill.
Tbe rev ised bill was
approved 95-5.
It now simply provides a variety of tax breaks for donations
to charities. It also provides
$1.3 billion more over two
years for the Social Services
Block Grant. a favorite of
Democrats.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

cusPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Polley

Published

afternoon,

,,,,

and
Our main number Is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Reporteri Brian Reed, Ext. 14

Reporter: J. Miles Layton , Ext. 13"

to,

Newspaper

in our military on April13. ·

lions 16 The Daily Sentinel. tt t
Court Street. Pomeroy. Ohio
45769.

There will be a patriotic theme.
a multi-media presentation.
. and the names of all those serving fro111 o ur
area will be recognized during the services .

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route

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For Information call 740-949-2512 (Day)
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A Special "Yellow Ribbon" pin will be
given to all in attendance and
a free Spaghetti Luncheon will be served .
First Baptist Church invites all Family
members of persons now serving our country
to join them and represent their loved on es
during these special services.

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
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News

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lhe

You've Got The Cutest Baby Face!
Soturdc'V May

j

('

l . • '('

c "'·

t~

4

n • '

~

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• Infant &amp; child fashion show (Noon)
• Child passenger safety inspection sit11with certified inspec tors

!

• Featured presentations by PYH professionals &amp; members of th e medical staff

MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport Literary Club will
meet at 2 p.m . at the home of
Ann Rupe. Nadine Goebel
will review ' Watchers" by
Dean R. Koontz.

PLEASANT

• Informational booths &amp; demonstrations of child satety products
• Door prizes, refreshments &amp; much more 1
j

~y
I

t

w ''· ,.&gt;.T, ·n \Y•l'
..

VALLEY
t '

HOSPITAL

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WEBSITE DIRECTORY
for only a $1 a day.

ings of low-income peorle
It provides $150 million tllr a
new fund to help small charities, including religious groups.
expand their program.;.
The vote Wednesday came
atier more than two ye:1rs of
sometimes ang1y debate in
Congress about the role of religious groups using tax dollars.
Sen. Joe Liebennan. D-Con n..
one of the lead sponsors, said he
was "proud and in spme scme
relieved" to arrive at the vote.
"This began as an attempt to
give support to faith-based
groups that perform good
works," Lieber111an saict' "It no
longer contains any provisions
targeted specitically at carvi ng
out a large or lawful space for
faith-based groups in our social
services."
Sen. Rick Santorum. R-Pa.,
the other lead sponsor. said the
bill would encoumge charitable
giving and therefore suppo11
religious groups, as well as sec. ularones, that will receive more
contributions.

··
The Racine
First Baptist Church

accurate . If you know of an error in a Street , Pomeroy, Ohio. Secondstory, call the newsroom at (740) 992- class postage paid at Pomeroy
2156.
..
Member: The Associated Press

Advertising

.Lillies, Hyacinths, tulips, hedding &amp;
vegetable plants, hanging baskets,
foilage &amp; blooming.
Free Refreshments &amp; Door Prizes
Free Live Plant for everyone

every

The White House said it supported the· bill overall but
objected to the increased money
for the social services program,
and President Bush suggested
he wanted to see changes to
more closely reflect his proposal s.
·
"America's charities face
tough times, and we can do
more to support their efforts."
Bush said in a statement."! look
fo!Ward to continuing to work
with Congress to improve the
CARE Act legislation."
Most significantly, the bill
would give ~ople ·who do not
itemize on their taxes a break
for donations to charity beyond
$250 in any one year, up to
$500. To keep the cost down,
the new tax deduction would
expire in two years.
The bill also gives tax breaks
for corporate donations, allows
tax-free
donations
from
Individual Retirement Accounts
and encourages banks to offer
Individual
Development
Accounts. which match the sav-

Monday !hrough Friday, 111 Courl

Our main concern in an stories is to be

992-5776
Saturday, April 12
9am- Spm

Take your business into the homes of over 40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mamn, Meigs Counties EYERYDAY
with a listing of your web address in our

BY LAURA MECKLER

Names of local personnel
serving · in
Operation
Iraqi
Freedom can be emailed
to:
news@mydailysentinel,
b
.
· sent Y regu 1ar ma1 1 to, ·
or dropped at, The
Daily Sentinel's office:
111
Court
Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45679.
Please include the person's hometown, and
your name and phone
number for verification
purposes in case we
have any questions.

HUBBARDS·GREENHOUSE

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!

Senate approves new tax
breaks for donating to charities

- Son of Dennis and
Sally Weber of Grove
City,
formerly
of
Rutland. Serving in the
Air Force in · Saudi
Arabia.
Willis,
Larry
E.,
Spec. - Son of Buck
and Betty Willis of
Racine. Now deployed to
Iraq.

Spring Open House

www.jimsfarmequipment.com

Exodus route

Those who serve

CfMi'le

Jim's Farm Equipmeot

ness couldn' t have provided
food and water for 603.550
men (the usual translation of
In his new book, Colin J. Humphreys,
Numbers I :41i), or some 2
·a
61-year-old British scientist,
million people counting
outlines
scientific explanations
women and children.
......
for occurrences in the Book
Humphreys responds that
/\
of Exodus.
the Hebrew word often truns/
Hl,aysthe
t;tlated "thou sand'' also means
MEDITERRA!'IIll&lt;l'l !&gt;
salem
,.....-·-ISraelites
"clan" or "troop," which
.,./
crossed the
could reduce the fleein g
Red Sea
Israelites to a more managethanks to a
able 20.000.
\
JORDAN
powerful
Further reprawing the con"wind
tide ."
ventional Exodu s map,
!V::::?~-a
natural
Huf11phreys believes the
phenomIsraelites rushed from Egypt
enon like a
on a standard ancient trade
route - straight across the
super•low
Sinai Peninsula to the northtide.
ern tip of the Red Sea's Gulf
Mount
Bedr
of A4aba, near present-day
He
puts
Mount
Sina
·n
(MI.
Sinai)
Eilat.
Saudi
Arabia
instead
of
That's where the climactic
Egypt because he says e
crossing of the Red Sea
holy mount must have
occurred, Humphreys figan active volcano and the
ures.
were none in Sinai.
Nearly
trapped
by
Pharaoh's
forces .
the
Israeli les escaped aiong · the SOURCE: "The Miracles of Exodus: A Scientist's Discovery of the Extraordinary
AP
shoreline thanks to a power- Natural Causes of the.Biblical Stories·
ful "wind tide" or "wind setdown," a natural phenomeFor instance, he thinks that And so forth.
non like a supsr-low tide that escalating natural disasters
Some might argue that su&lt;.:h
would allow people to hun·y ~x plain each of the I0 scientific explaijations underacross the sea floor. Then the "plagues" that forced Pharaoh cut mirac.l es, but Humphreys .
sea water returned through a to let the lsf'delite slaves depart: disagrees. He believes narure
"wind setup" and drowned the The Nile "turned to blood" produced the occurrences with
Egyptians.
meant ·that toxic red algae JUSt the right timing. and l'rael,
Humphreys also offers other killed fish; the dead fish forced reasonably enough, regarded
"naturalistic'' scientific expla- frogs ashore; gnats and flies this as miraculou s.
nations for wondrous events, were drawn to the dead fish
Natural explanations on ly
along lines pursued by past and frogs; the insects transmit- serve to bolster the exodus
writers.
ted a virus that.killed livestock. story, he says.

•

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The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

•1n1on
•

\~·~ SPRING·

11 1 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

AND~ING

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fS COMING UP :

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

PageA4

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Exemptions to steel tariffs
create more havoc tha~ good
• The Times-Picayune, New Orleans, on propping up the
steel indusrrr: The Bush administration added another 295
exemptions (on March 2 1) to tariffs imposed a year ago to
prop up the old- line U.S. steel industry.
. That brings the total exemptions to 1,022, which prompts a
yuestion : When is the administration going to acknowledge
that thi s policy was a mistake?
A policy that requires so much tinkering in such a short
peri od of time clearly is a bad one. While steel industry executives insist that the tariffs are essential, some analysts say the ·
exe mptions have neutrali zed the benefit to the industry.
Even worse, the exemptions haven't done enough to undo
the damage done to ports, manufacturers and others dependent
upon stee l imports for business. Nor have the exemptions
brought down steel prices, which started rising as soon as the
tariffs we nt into effect.

'

Easters coloiful history and deep meaning
If you think it will do any
good, you ladies may want to
explain to your husbands that
there is nothing fr ivolous
about buying a new Easter
outfit. Remind him that it has
a long-standingJ;eligious significance.
If that doesn' t work.
remind him that it was once
believed that a curse would
fall upon anybody too stingy
to shell out for a new Easter
outfit.
The practice of getting new
finery for Easler dates back
centuries. In · hi s "Easter
Book," (Firefly Press, 1999)
the Rev. Francis X. Wei ser.
professor of philosophy at
Boston College , said , "As
newly bapti zed Christians
wore white garments of new
linen. so it became a tradition
among all the faithful to
appear in new clothes on
Easter Sunday, symboli zi'ng
'new life ' that the Lord,
through hi s resurrection.
bestowed upon· all believers."
"This custom." accordi ng
to Wei ser. "was widespread
during medieval times. In
many places. a popula r
superstition threatened with

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, April II ; the JOist day of 2003. There are
264 days left in the year.
Toda:&lt;'s Highlight in History :
On April II , 1945, during World War II, American soldiers
Iiberated the notorious Nazi concentration camp Buchenwald
in Germany.
On this date:
In 1689, William IJI and Mary II Were crowned as joint sovereigns of Britain.
In I8 14, Napoleon Bonaparte abdicated as emperor of
France and was banished to the island of Elba.
In 1898, President McKinley asked Congress for a.declaration of war against Spain.
In 1899, the treaty ending the Spanish-American War was
declared in effect.
In 1921, Iowa became
the .first state to impose a cigarette
.
tax.
In 195 1, President Truman relieved Gen. Douglas
MacArthur of his commands in the Far East. ·
In 1953, 50 years ago , Oveta Culp Hobby became the first
Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare.
In 1968, President Lyndon Johnson signed into law the Civil
Rights Act of 1968, a week after the assassination of Martin
Luther King Jr.
In 1970, Apo!lo 13 blasted off on its ill-fated mission to the
moon. (The astronauts managed to return safely). ·
In 1979. ldi Amin was deposed as president of Uganda as
rebels and exiles backed by Tanzanian forces seized control.
Ten years ago: A deadly riot erupted at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility in Lucasville ; one guard and nine
inmates were killed during the eleven-day siege.
Five years ago: The executive committee of the Ulster
Union Party voted 55-23 to support the Nonhero Ireland
peace accord and its leader, David Trimble, who had outmane uvered rebels in his ranks.
One year ago: U.S. Rep. James A. Traficant Jr., D-Ohio, was
convicted of taking bribes and kickbacks from businessmen
and hi s own staff. (Traficant was later expelled from Congress ·
and sentenced to eight years in prison.) The House responded
to the Enron collapse by voting to add more worker prote~­
tions to pension laws. Venezuelan police battled protesters
dema ndi ng President Hugo Chavez's ouster.
Today's Birthdays: "Brenda Starr" creator Dale Messick is
97. Fashion designer Oleg Cassini is 90 .. Former New York
State Governor Hugh Carey is 84. Ethel Kennedy is 75. Actor
Johnny Sheffield is 72. Actor Joel Grey is 71. Actress Louise
Lasser is 64. Syndicated columnist Ellen Goodman is 62.
Movie writer-director John Miliu s is 59. Actor Peter Riegen is
56. Actor Bill Irwin is 53. Country singer-songwriter Jim
Lauderdale is 46 . Songwriter-producer Daryl Simmons is 46.
Ac tor Lucky Vanous is 42. Country singer Steve Azar is 39.
Sin ger Lisa Stansfield is 37. Rock musician. Dylan Keefe
(Marcy Playground) is 33 .
Thought for Today: "If we were to wake up some morning
and find that everyone was the same race, creed, and color, we
would find some other causes for prejudice by noon." George Aiken. U.S . senator (1892-1984).

.

SPEAK OUT!
Ever ye ll at your television set1 Ever read something in the
newspaper that gets your dander up?
·
Next time you get t.IJe ur~e to expr~ss your opinion, pick up the
telephone and call The Dally Sentinel's new "Speak Out" lme.
Speak Out line callers need not give their name. They must,
however. follow a few simple rules - be brief (calls are limited to two minutes), no profanity, no personal attacks on individuals.
The "Speak Out" line is open only after 5 p.m. each day. Do
not call "Speak Out" during regular business hours .•
To call "Speak Out," dial the Sentinel 's main number (740)
-992-2156 and then dial extension 29. Begin talking at the tone.
'

George
Plagenz

ill luck all those who could
afford to buy new clothes for
Easter Sunday but refused to
do so."
The ori gi ns of many of our
Easter customs are lost to
history. While the symbol of
the lamb is easy to identify
(Christ is the "Lamb of God
that taketh away the sins of
th e world"), what about
Easter eggs? And the Easter
bunny ? And how did ham
become the traditional Easter
dish')
We ise r traces the Easter
egg to the Indo-European
races. To these people. he
said. it was a most startlin g
event to see a li ving creature
emerge from a see mingly
dead object. In Chri stian
times, the egg beca me a symbol of the rock tomb out of

which Christ emerged to the
new life of his resurrection.
For ages, Easter eggs were
painted in vibrant colors and
given as gift s to friends,
especially children.
The annual egg-rolling
party on the White House
lawn is r~lated to the spori of
"egg-pecking ," which is
practiced in Syria, Iraq and·
Iran and throughout Europe.
In Germany, Austria and
France. hard-boiled eggs are
rolled ag~inst each other on a
lawn or down a hill . The egg
that remains uncracked to the
end is called the "victory
egg. "
As for the Easter bunny, its
origin lies in pre-Christian
fertility lore .
Hares and rabbits were the
most fertile animals our forefathers
knew.
Wei ser
explains, "and they served as
symbols of abundant new life
in the spring." '
The pig's religio us associations with Easter are slight.
altbough Weiser says "it is an
age-old custo m. handed
down from pre-Chri stian
time s, to eat the tlesh of this
animal on festive occasions."

Why?
Wei ser says 1t ts because
the pig "has always been a
sy mbol of good luck and
prosperity among IndoEuropeans. In some German
popular expressions, the .
word ·'pig' is synonymous
wi!)l good luck (Schwein
haben ). In Hungary, the highest card (ace) in card games
is called ' pig' (di szno) . ._
Savings boxes for children in
the figure of a pig (piggy
banks) carry out tne ancient
symbolism of. good luck and
prosperity."
Easter, with its proof and
promise of immortality, is the
Christian's "good luck."
Indeed, Easter may mean
many things to us , but surely
it signifies that if we ne ver
lose sight of our highest
dreams and pursue them resolutely - in good times and
bad, through thick and thin,
even in the ·absence of an¥
encouraging signs- we will
see these dreams, though
they may appear to be dead,
come to glorious life'
(George R. Plagen&lt; is a
columnist for Newspaper
E111e1prise Association.)

Trouble with racial priferences
1

Both my sister and qrother
went to graduate school at
the University of Michigan.
My sister earned a Ph .D. in
organizational psyc hology.
my brother an MBA.
They intentl y · fo llowed
arguments this week before
the Supreme Court concerning their alma mater's raceconscious admissions practices, awaiting the outcome
of the most important affirmative action case in a quarter-century.
Both of my siblings believe
that universities ought to
seek as diverse a student pop.ulation as possible. But they
agree that admi ssions standards ought not to be sac rificed on t'he altar ofdiversity.
They recogni ze that when a
univ~ rs it y admits unqualified
minorities, while passing
over qualified whites. al l
minority enrollees -- meritorious and not -- are sti gmati zed. The biggest vic tims of
racial preferences are minorities who meet adm i"in n;,
standards on their .academic
merits. Their prai seworthy
achievements are devalued
by percepti ons that they were
admitted to a university. like
Mi chiga n. because of their
race.
That 's the problem wi th the
Universit y of Michigan's
undergrad uate admissions
program and. to a slightly
lesser extent. its law school
admissions pol icy.
Undergrad
admi ss ion'
gives an automatic 20 points
(o n a 150-poi nt scale ) to
applicants who are blac k.
Hispanic or American lndiiu1.

Meigs·Local staff gets
contracts for 2003-04_

Odella M. Mack

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

NATIONAL VIEW

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS
'

Obituaries

TEMPERATURE

-

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Friday, April 11, 2003

Den Dickerson
Publisher
Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Friday, April 11, 2003

Joseph
Perki.ns

The law school doesn't use
such a scale. but it routinely
admit s minority applicants
who have lower grades and
test scores than whites it
adm it s.
That blacks. Hispanics and
American Indians are held to
a differe nt - apparen tly
lowe.r - admissions standard
than wh ites suggests unequal
treatment. It is hard to see
how such practices can pass
consti tu tional muster.
Now. if a university has
certain minimum academic
stant.lards - based on. say,
grade-point ave rage and standard ized-test score - and it
has far more qualified appli cants th an it h~s openings.
then the uni versity ough t to
be able to pick and choose
the qualified app li cants it
accepts.
And there is nothing wrong
wi th it taking a number of
variables into acwunt when
whittling down. say. 5.000
qualified appli cant s into a
class of 1,000.
Maybe some qua lified
applicant' wi II bt: accepted
for reasons of geographical
divers ity: some rnr gender
balan ce: some because they
arc the qualified progeny of
alumni : some because they

. are qualified athletes; some cent in 1998. However, by
beca use they are qualified last fall, minorities made up
fo re ign st udents; and · some 19 percent of the freshman
beca use they are qualified class.
membe rs of hi storicall y
So, indeed, it is possible to
under-represented mmonttes . . hold studenfs of all races to
The problem arises, as in . the same exacting academic
the Michiga n case,'when aca- standards, while also promotdemic qualification - which ing racial diversity. It is fallashould be absolute
cy to suggest th at the two
appears to be subordi1tated in worthwhile goals are 'mutualfavor of admissions vari - ly excl usive.
ab ies. !hat bastardi zes what
Twenty-five years ago, the
otherw1se would be a defen- Supreme Court issued a .landsi ble process of selecting stu- mark decision in Rege nts of
dents for enrollment.
the University of California
Of_ course. there are some vs. Bakke, in which the j usputative proponents of aff1r- ·t1cesdeclared that racial quomatl ve ac tion - who are tas 111 college admissions
really advocates of unlawful were unconstitutional.
raci al preferences - who
There was concern in some
suggest that if minorities are quarters that minorities
held to tlie same academic ., would be turned away from
standard s as whiles, that colleges and universities
diversity will be undermined. throughout the fair land. Yet
That there will be fewer minm-ity college enrollment
Hi span ics
and has increased since Bakke.
blacks.
We can expect hi story to
American Indians on college
campuses.
re peat itself when and if the
They are wrong. and the high . court declares the
exmnpk of ihe U 1~ iversi ty of University of Mi chigan's
Ca lltornta proves ll .
race-conscious ad mi ss ions
In 1995. Ward Connerly. a practices unconstitutional.
member of the University of
There will be much sound
Cali fornia Board of Regents, and fury from the education
proposed thllt t~c academi- establishment and civil-ri ghts
ca ll y elite. eigh t-campus UC community. There will be
system adopt a race-neutral . lamentations that the justices
admissions policy. The board have "turned ba ~k the clock"
approved Connerly's propos- on racial progress . But when
al - much to the cons tern a- all is said and done. the ranks
lion and co ndemnation of of minority collegians will
affirma tive-ac tion supporters continue to increase, and
- and it took effect in 1998. wi thout the dubious benefit
At fir't there was some of racial preferences.
drop-off in the number of
(Joseph PerkiiiS isaco/unmi.&lt;r
minorities offered ad mi ssion for The San Dieg'() Unionto UC schoo ls, from 18.8 Tribune and can be reached at .
percent in 1997 to 16.7 per- Jnseph.PerkinsUnionTrib.com.)
'

Mari etta .
II.
He was born February
He was a member of the
RIO G RAND E - Odella 18, 1923 , o'n Silver Rid ge Carthage
Pre sbyterian
M. Mack , in Meigs County, to Will Church since 1919 . and
82, of Rio and Ro se Kapple .
was president of the
Grande,
He had li ved in the Carth age
Ce metery BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
tracts were ~ Mary Grim. McKelvey. high school yearformerly Coolville area. in the earli- Association and a member News
editor
Sherry Hensler. Kathryn Hill - book advi sor; Rori · Drex ler.
o
f er part of hi s life and grad- of the Ohio Farm Bureau.
White ,
Jennifer
Jones Middle School yearboo k
Cheshire, uated from Carthage-Troy He was a well-respected
Henson.
Dan
Thomas
and · advisor; Robin Hawk. high
went to be High School in 194 1. -He far me r and neighbor in the
POMEROY - Teachers .
school new spaper ad\ i'or:
with
the mo ved to Belpre in 1969 .
coache s, non-certified and Donna Wolf. .
Guysville comm unit y.
Coaches
htred
on
suppleLinda Lear. Middle Sch ool
Pr ecio u s
He worked fo r· Fairmont
Survivin g are hi s great support personnel for the
L o r d Foods from 1949 to 1959, nie ce and great nephew-i n- · 2003-04 school year Of the mental contracts were Mike new spaper ad visor: Ralph
peacefully and re tired fro m DuPont in law, S haron and Ca lvin Meigs Local School District· Chancey. head lootball coach; Werry, high school chee ro
n 1983, after 24' years of ser- Manning . and thei r chil - were hired at Tuesday night 's Ri ck Blaettnar and Ron Hill , leader advisor : Celia McCoy.
ass tstant va rs1ty football drama advi sor ; Jennifer
Mack
ThursdJly, vice.
dren , Kristie and Ryan , school board meeting.
April I 0,
He was joined in mar- who had become his careOne-year teaching contracts coaches; Jesse Vall and Bryan · Hoffman. junior• class advi Reed. student
2003, at Hol ze r Med ical r'iage to Marga ret L. givers si nce 1997; three were awarded to Deni se Ztrkl e. seventh and etghtth ·or· Kath
grade
football
coaches:
Carl
'
·
.
Y
.
Center in Gallipoli s.
· Gribble on Janu a ry I 0. nieces. Twila Secoy Green , Arflold, . Kenneth
Bpnd . Wolfe. boys' var:;ity basket- council adv tsor: Jt.m Oltphant
:
She was born June 24, 1943, a union th at was Mary Secoy Koh lma n and Morga n Bragg, Vicki Bragg ,
ball coach: Jeremy Grimm qu 17 team ad_v tsor; V1ck 1
1920, in Cadmus. daughter blessed with four children . . Linda
Potter;
th ree Vicki Chancey, Jeff Ha,kins.
of the late C larence and
He was a ve teran of the nephews. Irvin L. Potter, Jennifer Hoffman, .Kath y and Jeff Wayland. boys· Chancey. Clilt Kennedy.
Kathryn Hlii -Wh tte . and
U.S. Army during World Robert L. Potte r and Larry Hudson, Matthew Kinnard. Middle School·
Lula Coonrod Drummond.
Mike
Ke
nnedy,
cross
counMike
Wilfong . guid ance
He r life was caring for War II . serv ing in the Army Potter; 20 great-nieces and Michelle Miller, Mary Lou
try;
John
Krawsczyn,
golf;
counse.lors:
and Mary Lou
her loving hu sband, family. Air
Corps
in
the great-nephews; and several Moegling, Jennifer Riffle .
church family and friends. · Phil ippine s in 1944 and · great -g reat ni ece s and Stacie Roach, Ronald Vlasak. Ri ck Ash, girl s' volley ball Moegltng. ltbranan and
Melissa Wilfong . and Travis coach; Dale Harrison , assis- library superv isor.
She was a willing partici- J 945.
nephews.
tant ; Paul Brannon. girls' va rOther personnel given twoHe was gloriou sly saved · Res ides hi s parents, he Abbott.
,
pant iri school and communit y activitie s. She was a by the Blood of Je sus was preceded in death by . Hired on one-year conttaqs sity hasketball coac h; Jerf yea r contracts were Jack
and
Cry q;Ji
devote d me mber of the Christ in 1969, and later three sisters, Elizabeth. pending completion of certifi- Haskins, gi rl s' reserve basket- McDaniel
cation
requirements
were
Cheshire Bapti st Church, baptized andjoined .thcfe l- Potter, Sarah · Potter and
ball coach;. Vicki Chancey, Richmond.
bus drivers;
and twi ce a Worthy Matron lo ws hip of Decatur Chapel · Da isy Secoy; and three Kristin Camara and Abigail girls' Middle School volley- Rehecca Frechette. cookof Cheshire C hapter No . Church in Little Hockin g.
brothe'r s, Roy, Laurel and Cauthorn.
ball ; John Sharp, girls· cashier: Mark Corbitt, custoThree-year contracts were Middle School basketball: dian and Janet Life and Paula
450. Order of the Eastern
Surviving are hi s fo ur Weston .
Star.
c hildren, She lvv Russell
Servi ces will be II a.m. given to Kellie Harmon, Travis Abbott. boys' reserye Mor~ison. secretaries.
She is surv ived by her and her hu sband, Ron , of Monday, April 14, 2.003 , at Sharon Hawley and Nikki basketball coa~h; andJenmler
John Davidson and Mike
husband of over 62 years . Portland, Texas. th e Rev. Carthage
Community Lambert.
Hoffman. g1rls fre shman vol- Kauff as custodians. and
Awarded five -year con- leyball coach l'endmg cert1f1- Debbie Cundiff as an aide.
. whom she married June 19, Keith Kapple , and hi s wife, Church in Guy sville , with
1940, Harold F. Mack of Carol , of Marietta , Rick the Re v. Billy C. Murphy tracts were Scott Brjnker, cauon compleuon.
Rio Grande ; a son , Myron Kapple , and hi s wife , 'Sue, offi ciating. Burial will fol- Pam Durst, Sharon Edmonds,
Toney Dingess was hired as were given continu ing conMack of Grove City; of Belpre, and Jack1e F1fe low at Carthage Church Sandra Holcomb, Mike bimd director. and Kennedy tracts.
In othe r personnel action.
Kennedy, Melanie Quillen. Bond and David Deem as
daughter . and son-in " law, and her husband, Craig, of Cemetery.
the
boii rd acceped res ignaPenny
Ramsburg,
Paula
Mary a nd Michael Fulton Middleport ; . ] 0 grandchilFriends may call from 6
assistants, part-time positions
ti ons from Jenryi fer Jones
of Woo ster; grandchildren, dren; 13 great grandehil- to 8 p.m. Sunday, April 13 . Roush, John Sharp, Carolyn paying $1,000.
Trevor, Jason and Andrew dren; and a sister, Norma 2003, at the White Funeral Smith and Darin Logan.
Teachers hired on 'supple- Henson, girls· r~serve softball
i Carl Wolfe was also given a mentary contracts were as fol- coach; Janice Cady, National
Mack , and Marcus and Randolph of Coolville .
Home in Coolville .
three-year contract, pending lows:
Ruth Fulton ; gre'at -grandBesides his parents, he
Ho nor Society advisor; and
completion of certification.
children , Alec and Olivia was preceded in death by
Mike Chancey, Athletic Nathan Hansen, assi stant varReceiving continuing con- Facilities care ; Eleanor sity football coach. ·
Mack ; and a sister, Ida his
wife,
Margaret
Kathryn Bartram of Dixon, (" Maggie") , in 1999; three
Tenne ssee.
sisters, Mable Swartz ,
She was preceded in Emma Golden and Ruby
.death by her parents, four Gillian ; and two brothers,
Harry Kapple and Ronald
brothers and SIX . sisters .
.
Services will be I p.m. Kapple.
Service s will be 2 p.m. ·
Saturday, April 12, 2003, ~t
MASON, W.Va. - The
Fa vo rit e message that Park er delivers.
Fisher Funeral Home tn Sunday~ Apnl 13, 2003, at
Mason
United
Methodist
L e a d
Tickets are $10 each and
Middleport.
Officiating the Wh1te Funeral Home 1n
Vocalist
for
Church
will
play
host
to
can
be
purchased
1n
will be the Rev. S. Craig Coolville, with Pastor Jay
WASHINGTON (AP) -·
gospel
artist
I
van
Parker
at
7
six
consecMiddleport
at
Office
Service
Furtick and burial will be Hubbard officiating . Burial Congressional lawmakers have
utive years and Supply; in Mason.
in Gra~el. Hill Cemetery. will follow at Silver Ridge received varied feedback from p.m . on Thursday, April 24 at
for
the W.Va.. at Shear -Des igns,
Wahama
High
School.
Friend s may call at the Cemetery.
Ohioans on what they think
According
to
a
press
so
uthern
funeral home from 6 to 9
Friends may call at the about President Bush's $726 bilMason Furniture and Bob's
go sp el Market and Greenhouses; in
release provided by local
p.m . Friday, April II, funeral home from 2 to 4 lion proposed tax cut.
S1ng1ng Point Pleas'a nt, W.Va .. at
concert promoters, Parker is
2003.
and 7 to 9 p.m . Saturday,
Opponents picketed outside taking the country by storm
News Fan
Memorial contributions April 12, 2003, and prior to Rep. Steve Chabot's downtown
Joy -FM's studios and Will a's
Awards.
with
numerous
appearances
may be made to the the service on Sunday.
Parker
Cincinnati office on Thursday, on national television and
Parker is Bible Book Store: in New
Cheshire Baptist Ch11rch,
known for Haven, W.Va., at Health Aid
saying, the tax cut could reduce guest appearances on the·Bill
8057
state Route 7.
hi s versatil- Pharmacy; and in Gallipolis
money for other federal pro- and Gloria Gaither homeCheshire, Ohio 45620, or
Market an~
ity in music styles, incorpo- at Bob 's
GUYSVILLE - Burton grams, such a~ veterans benefits. coming video series'
to the Humane Society.
Although . just a young rating old time favorites. his Greenhouses .
"We believe the veterans
Friends may send condo- Langdon Potter, 88 , of
Doors will open at 6 p.m.
lences - and register online Guysville, died Thursday, deserve the services and benefits man, Parker is a veteran in greatest hits and progressive
www.fisherfuneral- April I 0, 2003 , at the they were promised when they the gospel music industry. southern to in spirational The Joy -Fm. Trio will perat
Veterans ·Administration enlisted," said Jim Albers, 51, a He was voted Favorite Male music into hi s concerts. form at 6:30 p.m.
homes.com.
For information. call (304)
Medical
Center
in Cincinnati volunteer with a Vocalist seven years consec- Audience s everywhere are
drawn
to
the
mu
sic
and
the
utively
(1989-1995)
and
882-2102.
Chillicothe.
peace activists' group called the
He was born December Coalition for Peace with Iraq.
(
I , 1914, in Glendale ,
But GOP lawmakers said letWi sconsin , son of the late ters, phone calls and e-mails to
COOLVILLE
Bob Willie Lincoln and Marion their offices split either down the
Kapple, 80 , formerly of Smith Potter.
more able to handle prisoners wounds from tjle riot, artist
· middle or in favor of the tax cuts · BY JoHN McCARTHY
Coolville, died Thursday
He
graduated
from with many strong!y supporting a Associated Press
who are hellbent on causing Stephen Canneto said.
morning, April I 0, 2003 , at Stewart · High School, and
havoc."
"His visimi was .. . to capture
Marietta Nursing
and was a veteran of World War cut in taxes on stock dividends.
The
department
planned
a
that ~se of hope for the
. Chabot and feUow Republican
COLUMBUS -The state's
Rehabilitation Center in
Friday
dedicated
to
ceremony
future
a place that cre ates a
Rep. Rob Portman, both of prison system has made somethe
memory
of
the
victims
of
sense
of understandi ng,"
Cincinnati, approve of the presi- thing positive of the darkest
the 11-day riot. which began Canne said.
dent's plan and voted with other period of its recent history.
The department also is using
would be a long process Ohio Republicans to pass the tax
The lessons learned at the April II. 1993. at the Southern
requ iring cooperation and cut. All of Ohio's Democrats 1993 riot at the Southern Ohio Ohio Correctional Facility. the ceremony as a way to rec· Correctional
Facility
in Guard Robert Vallandingham ognize changes since the riot.
recognition from multiple voted against the tax cut.
from PageA1 It parties . before a buy-out The plan was under height- Lucasville have helped pre- and nine inmates were killed
could become possible. ened scrutiny in Washington on vent anot\ler one, Department in the siege.
Rehabilitation
and
The agency was to show the
this number and magnify it Silverio called buyout pro- Thursday as House and Senate of
Correction
Director
Reginald
grams
"bitter
sweet"
because
design
of a sculpture that will
leaders pushed for a budget
three times more, three times
said.
Wilkinson
"people
never
seem
to
get
be placed in a memorial park
higher than the worst flood
agreement. Republican Sens.
"! would not say anything for DRC employees at the
what
they
consider
their
le vel. Moore questioned
George Voinovich of Ohio and like that can't happen again,"
whether this · inflated final property to be worth."
Olympia Snow of Maine contin- Wilkinson said. "I think we agency's Orient pri son com. Bob Byer, Meigs County ued to buck their party and
plex south of-Columbus .
number was realistic.
have
more
fail-safe
measures
Emergency
Ma~agement
The sculptun: will reflect
... bther residents questioned
. oppose any tax cut more than now. r think our prisons are
· what the money for flood Agency director. smd the vil- $350 billion.
Wilkinson's desire to heal the
lage, like other Meigs vilinsurance is used for.
Silverio said the money is lages, is currently ineligible
used to minimize damages if for a buyout because there is
The Tuppers Plains- Chester. Water District will be flushing lines
a flood should occur. Unless no specific plan .in place to
otherwise specified, flood account for this possibility in
beginning Sunday, April 6 at 11 :00 PM through Friday, April 18.
insurance would pay for the the case of a catastrophic
Listed below are locations for this week:
value of the property, and not flood.
He said he is diligently
such things as carpets or perMonday. April14:
working on this plan so that
sonal items.
Meigs County: From the intersection of Pomeroy Pike &amp; Flatwoods Road to
The federal go vernment in the event of a major flood ,
could buy out a village•if the Syracuse and other places in
the Fl,atwoods Booster. Goldrige area and Pageville. From McKenzie Tank
risks of flood damage are too Meigs would be eligible for
to Stiversville and the Dorcas Area. From the intersection of SA 681 and
high.
.
. relief from the federal govCo. Rd. 50 to near Hockingport.
Silverio cautioned that th1s ernment.

Tax cut
sparks Ivan Parker in concert April 24
reaction

Burton Potter .

Robert '·Bob'
Kapple

Memorial remembers Lucasville victims

Flood

Income Tax by DariTax .
We are prepared for your "Return"

Whatever your
direction DanTax
is the path.
www.dantax.org

(304)67 S-4020
328 Main Street

Point Pleasant, WV

Tuesday. April15:
.
Meigs Cpunty: From the Flatwoods Booster to Carper Tank.
Athens County: Hockingport.
Wednesday. April16:
Meigs County: Carper Tank to Gold Ridge Booster, and Burlingham.
Athens County: Intersection of At. 50 &amp; Brimestone Ridge to South
Canaan Road.
Thursday. April 17:
Athens County: Intersection of At. 50 and South Canaan Road to
Stringtown and Canaanville. At. 50 to Best Photo Tank. Village of Stewart.
Friday. Aprll18:
Meigs County: From the Tackerville MPRV to the Dorcas Booster.
Most of the flushing will be done at night and some customers may experience low.
pressure. Pleas'e be aware that the water may be discolored for several miles
around these locations. If the water Is discolored for longer than a lew hours,
please contact the office so we will be aware of the problem.

•

•

�'.
:The Daily S~ntinel

Page A6

Faith • Values

Should we confront those
who threaten with weapons
of mass destruction?

P9rtrayal.

Church briefs

.'

The single reason cited for
military action in Iraq has been
justified. Saddam Hussein has
had in his possession.weapons
of mass destruction . Such
weapons give despotic leaders, ,
like Hussein. more terrorist
muscle with which to threaten
and attack others.
Personally, I am grateful that
our President has shown the
necessary fortitude in taking
action to confront a terror weapons of mass destruction at
regime posing a possible threat Annageddon be confronted?
to our United States. Latitude
Ultimately. the bottom-line
should not be given to those considemtion will not hinge on
who want us to live in fear. the question if they should be
President Bush and our splen- confronted, but the fact that
did military· personnel have they will be confronted. This
accomplished so much in such assorted array of evil and the
a short period of time to negate evil that instigates this proliferthe effect of those conspiring ation of destructive devices
will most certainly be conto inspire fear.
However. it is clear that fronted. and. according to
some disagree with the whole Revelation 19, the one who
concept of engaging the terror will confront and conquer at
forces involved with the Iraqi Armageddon wi II be none
regime. War protesters have other than Jesus Christ.
"The Lord shall go forth and
staged rallies and have
received a variety of media fight against those nations."
While Armageddon strikes
coverage. Their verbalized and
in the minds of
consternation
publicized opposition is genermany.
Armageddon
should
ally framed around the question whether brutal leaders inspire joyful expectation for
who threaten with weapons of the church. Many Biblical,
mass destruction should be faith-based factors may be
confronted with military force . cited, but one reason, in the
Nonetheless, the debate that light of current circumstances,
has raged recently concerning is noteworthy.
It is found in the fact that. if
confrontation of leaders, like
not
confronted, evil in the
Hussein, rather opens an exciting suhject from the pages of world will persist. God has
always had a fixed plan to put
God's word.
"And he gathered them an end to evi I. As outl~ned in
together into a place called in Scripture, Armageddon will,
the
Hebrew
tongue therefore, result in the eradicaArmageddon." (Revelation tion of evil. Should we not
reJOICe in that wonderful
16: 16)
Regardless whether reli- prospect? When it happens, it
giously invol ved or not, most is guaranteed that in Heaven,
people believe there is destined there be will be not one war
for world history a cataclysmic protest!
Nonetheless, what we are
confrontation and conflict in
which the world will be seeing now with the situation
in Iraq is merely a part of the
destroyed.
prelude
to Armageddon. It is
Even the movie moguls of
one
of
the
"wars and rumors of
Hollywood acknowledge an
approaching Armageddon as wars" about which Jesus
many of the motion pictures Christ informed us concerning
end-time events. Our present
invoke the very name.
of evil is a
One thing for sure is that confrontation
dynamic
·precursor
to the
Armageddon will involve the Lord's ultimate confrontation
amassing of weapons of mass of evil.
destruction never before seen.
As a believer in Jesus Christ,
At the appointed time, nations there is no reason to be afraid.
of the world will participate in
"Let not your hearts be trouan orchestrated conglomera- bled," Jesus said.
tion of lethal' arms.
We have every reason to be
But, let us apply our contem- full of faith . God is in control.
porary concern and question to And we should be able to live
the situation that will arise at confidently with that assurArmageddon. Should nations ance. '
who will threaten with
•

•

POMEROY - The Last
Supper drama will be presented at 7' 30 p.m. Friday
at S 1. Pau I Lutheran
Church . The public is inv it ed.

\
''

.

Ron

Fellowship
Apostolic
First Bapti st. C hur ~ h will be
honor in g all those serving
in th e military atlhe I 0:40
·a.m. Sunday service.
For more information call
740-&lt;J4&lt;J-2 512 (daytime) or
740-94&lt;J -2449 (evenings).

Bible class
moving

To speak

Branch

H'ARRISONVILLE
The Common Ground Bible
Cia" is mo vin g to th e
Harri sonvi ll e. s ~hool gy m
Sund ay for Bible study
hetwee n 10 and I I a.m . Le s
Hayman · is the teacher and
the publi c is invitetl .

LONG BOTTOM
Dave Dai'ley will preach
and sj ng at 7 p.m. Friday at
th e Faith Fu ll Gospel
Church, Long Bottom .

Drama to
be presented

David Hutchman portrays Chnst being crucified while others
portraying mourners and a Roman soldier look on during
rehearsals for Trinity Presbyterian Church's Easter Pageant ·
on the Hills ide, Sunday, in East Liverpool, Ohio. (AP)

RACINE - An Easter Gospel sing
drama "From .Triumpl1 to
Betrayal - The Finul Days announced
of Jesus " will be prese nt ed
at 8 p.m. on Palm Sunday
MIDDLEPORT,
A
anti Good Friday .at the gospe l sin g will be held at
Racin e United Methodi st the Middleport Church of
Church
the Na7.arene at 7 p.m .
'
Saturday featuring Etldi e
Service to
Lee and Anointed . Pastor
Allen Midcap in vites the
honor military publi
c. Refreshment s will
RACINE - The Racine be se rved.

Send us your church news. 992-2156

Church of Jnus Chrlst.Aposlollc
YonZ!m(ll and Ward ~d ., Pa ~ lur : lames
Mtllrr. Sund r1y Sdlllol . IO:JO a.m .,
EH•ning · 7 JO p .m.

Apll, loltl" Wor~hip ("(!fllCr, l!IH S. J rJ
AH: .. ~lit..ldkpun . Kcv m Konkle. Pastor.
Sunt..lay, 10 a.m. and b:UIJ P·'\J ··
Wl.'dll~.!~U)". L Hl p.m.: Youth Fn . 7:JO
p m.
Emmunuel Apn.~tolk Tubtormt~:l~ Inc
"L1mp Rd ntl New Lima Rd . Rut lund.
St:rnccs: Sun 10 00 lt.m . &amp; 7?.1 0 p m ,,
Thur'. 7:00p.m.. Pa .~ tor Man y R. Hutton

Assembly of God
llbt!rt~· A ssl'mbl~· or God
P.O .. B11-' 467 , IJu"ddin g_ Lane: Mit\on .
.W.Va .. Por ~to r : Ne ll Tcnnun l Sun day
· St:n I CC~ - 10 :!}{) ll.lrt . anJ 7 p.m.

Baptist
Uopt&gt; Hupti~l Chun:h (Snutht'rn)
Grant St.. Middlc pnrt. Pastn r: Re1·.
Dav id Bryan. Sun&lt;lay ~t"h&lt;li..J] - 9 · 30 a.m.,
w,,r,hip - I I :1. 111. and tl p.m.• \\'cd n l'~da} .
Sc r\'IL"l' . 7 r.rn.
Rutland First Haptist Chu rch
S un~· S(hnul - '1:."\IJ lUll .• Worshi p ·
1!1:4.'\ a.m.
~7 0

l'nnlt' I'O)" 1-"ino:t B~tptist

l ';1 ~ 1 11 r

Jon Brndcn . E&lt;1~l Main St ..

SunJ LI~

Sdh,ol - '' : "\0
I (i:JO a.m.

:~o m .

\\'Qrship .

First Southl'rn Huptist
41X72 PmncmJ P ik~· . Pu ~ t 11 r : E. Lmnur
L)"H r~ ant. SundU) Sdln,ll - 9:]ll a:m ..
W,li"Sil ip - A: I ~ a.m.. Y : -1~ otm &amp; 7:(K I p.m..
Wcdnc ~d! y Sl.' rvtce, · 7:1Hl p.m
First Ru!Jtist Chun:h
Milrl.. Ml•ITOW. 6th ;md Pill mer St.,
Middlepo rt, Sunday St:hu01 - Y: l5 a.m..
w,,rship -, IO: J.'\ a.m.. 7:00 p.m..
WcdncsJay Scn·kc · 7: 041 p.m.

P11stur: Riel.. l{ulc. Sunda y Sd1uol · 9 : ~{)
~ . m .. Wtlr!ii hip - 10 -l!l a.m .• 7:00 p.m.,
Wcdne~d ay Savu:c~ · 7:00p.m.

Siln'! r Run 811ptlst
Pu stor: Joh n Swanso n. Sunday Schoo !" ·
10a.m .. Wnrsh ip - ll :t .m .. 7:00 p.m.
,WcdncsJay Sl.'rviccs· 7:00p.m .
Mt. Lnion BapUst
: D~ vt d Wi seman, Sunday Sch.ool9 :45 a . m .. Evening · 6:3 0 \p.m.,
Wcdnesduy Sw• icc~ - 6:JOp.m
Pn ~ tor

The deadliest disease
for women is also the
most preventable.

Talk with your doctor about heart
disease. Learn more about heart health
under O'Bieness' Health Resources at
www.obleness.org, or call (740) 592-9300.

~O'BLENESS

~ Memorial Hospital

Bethlehem 8wpUst Chun:h
Grl!:ll Bond, Rou1e 124, Racine, OH.
Pastor : Daniel Mccea, Sunduy School 9:30a .m., Sunday Worship - 10 :~ 0 a.m .•
Wcdne~ny Bible S~udy · 6:00p.m.
Old Bethel F"tft Will Raptl!it Chun:h ·
2Ht10 I St. Rt. 7. Middleport Sunday
Schnnl · 10 fl. .m .• Evening · 7: 0£} p.m ..
ThundB)' SC'nices- 7:00
HUisldc Baptist Chlin:h
St. Rt. 14J just off Rt . 7, Pastor: Rev.
lom e~ R. Acree, Sr., Sunday Unified
Service, Worship • 10:30 a:m., 6 p.m.,
Wcdnew.ty Services -7 p.m.

;~
OhioHealth
~l~u-

This women's heart health initiative is provided by O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
in collaboration with OhioHealth.

"

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

4 4~ · :'U5 p. m ... Mass- 5:30

Sun .
Con. -8:45-9: 15 a .m ... Sun. Mass - 9:30
a. m., Dailey Mas s- 8:.30 a.m.

Church of Christ
Hemlock Gron Christian Church
Minister: L:~ rry Brown, Worshi p c 9:30
SL.Lnday School - 10:30 a.m.. Bible Study .
7 p.m.
J•Omeroy Churth of Christ
212 W. Main S1. . Minister : AnthOny
Mur·ris
Sund1ty Se houl - ·9 :30 a.m., Worship·
10:30 u.m ., 6 p.m.. WOOnesday Services ·
7 p.m.
Pomeroy Westside Church ol Chrlst
33!~ 6 Children's Home Rd ., Sunday
Sc h(.IOI · II tl.m .. ·Worship · IOa.m ., 6 p.fll.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Middleport Churt h of Christ
5th und Main .. Pastor: AI l·lart~pn , Youlh
Mini ~ler: ~ill F ral.i ~ r. Sund ay School •
'.UO a.m.. Worship· 8 : 1 ~. 10·30 a.m., 7
p.m., Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Keno Ch urth of Christ
W&lt;•rship - 9:JO a.m., Sunday Schoo l 10:)0 a.m .. Pastor·Jcffrey Wallac e, l st and
3rd Suuday
Rl'arwallow Ridgl' Chun:h of Christ
Pas1tlr:Brucc Terry. Sunday Sc hool -9:]0
i\. 111.

Wl• r~ h ip - 19:30 a.m.. 6:30 p. m.
Wcdm;sda.y St:i-v ic:cs · 6:30p.m .

Zion Church ol Christ
Pornr=my, Ha rriso nville Rd. lRt. l43 ).
Pastor: Roger Watson. Sundoy School 'J:JO 11.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m ., Wtxlnesduy Services- 7 p.m.
Thppers Plain Church of Chri5t
J n~ ll"ume ntal. Worship Serv ice • 9 a. m.,
Co mm union · 10 u.m., Sunday School 10: 15 a.m.. Youth- ~ :30 pm Su nd&lt;Ly, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm
Bradbury Chun:b or Christ
Mlnr ster: Tom Runyon. 3955S Brodbury
Road. Middleport, Sunday School - 9·.30
a.m.
Worsh ip - 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Church or Christ
Sunday Sl·hoo l - 9:30 a.m ., Wonhip 10:30 a. m., 7 p.m.
Bradrord Church or Christ
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Brodbury Rd .,
Mi nister: Doug Shamblin. Youth Minister:
Sill Amberger. Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worsh ip · 8:00 a.m .• 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m .. Wedne!iday Service§ ·7 :00p.m.
Hickory HIU. Church of Christ
Evanselist Mike Moore, Sunday Schoof·
9 a. m., Worship ' · 10 11.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services .. 7 p.m.

RetdsVult Cburdl o! Chrilt
Pastor: Philip Stunn. Sunday School : 9:30
a.m .• Worship Service: 10:30 a.Jll .• Bible
Study. '?'ednesday, 6:30p.m .
Dntn Chun:b Of Christ
Pas10r: Bill E!helman. Sunday ~hool 9 :30
a.m., Norman Will, superintendent,
Sunday wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Churc:h o! Chrilt

Victory BapliltlndtP£ndent
.525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon. Pa5tor: James
E. Ke esee, Wor~hip - JOa.m .. 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Intersection 71 and 124 _
w, Evangelist:
Dennis S11raent, Sunday Bible Study 9:.l0 a.m.. Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
, p.m.. Wednesday Bible S!Udy · 7 p.m.

Faith Baptist Chun:h
Railroad St., Mason, Sunday School- 10
a.m .. Wor ship . I I a. m., 6 p.m.
Wedne!&gt;day Ser\" ices - 7 p.m.

Christian Union

Forest Run Baptist
: ·Arius Hun . Su nL!ay Sc hool . 10
u.m.. Worship · 11 a.m.
P a ~ t or

Hartford Chun:h of Chrktln

Christian Union
Hart ford. W.Va., Pastor:David Greer,
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m ., Worship •
10:)0 a .m., ' 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Services · 7:00p.m.

Church of God

,\ Jt. Mori.wh Raplisl

Young's Carpenter 5eruice
This. may ~e m likt an unusual question to yqu.
Sure)J, Easter has been special1o rmny of lli for
all or our lives. Yet, i1 Easter spedal for you
in a personal way -.hen the bri1ht eggs
hl'e betn hiddm and round1 ·is il stilt
special when Easter serviee is o\u
and the rl othes are back in th e
cloJet ... arter the family lunch i1
done1 Will it be special M111day
m~rning?
11

]tSJS ChriJt die~" again for

or us tl'tfJ day of the .
week ... when we forget and
say something hurtful or ,
when that lillie 11illlelie slipo
out of nowhere. If we fee l
guilty, He iA our Redeemer.

uch

26 years in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6215

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
I Corinlhilnt 1 Corinlhiw
15,12-)lo
15~!11

FRIDAY
Jam

" '1·16

SATURDAY
11"""'
:17·44

"If your VCR 's in troublo
bring it to me the double"
34549 Ball Run Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

(740) 992-4507

ARCAD IA NU RSING CENTER
"Old Fashioned C'ompassi nn- Modem Care··
Nc~ l kd m a bea utifu l country !&lt;oellmg (SR
501J2 Easl) rmd easi ly acce s" ihlc from !he
Appalachian Hi!!hway.
Mu sil: &lt;Lml Arl Thcntpi cs
Hospice and Rc .. pite Cw-e
740-667 -3 156 Fax: 740-667 - (~HO
Ph ~"lcal. Occupational and Speech Thl•raprc'
We Accc pl Medtcarc. Mcdtcatd. &amp; ln~uranc..·

licensed Embalmer. Funeral Director

Licensed Pre·Need Insurance
Specialist

IJ4it'SURANCE
122 E. Main So. Pomcruy. OH 4p769
Be fur~.:: you pa y your next home 6r
uu1o premium. check out rate~!
992-.\985 (Pomero~· t 594-0660 I Athens)

(7 ~01992 - 645 1

___........

~

740-949-2210
"A Home &amp;mk for

Hills Self Storage
Racine, OH

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
sha.ll see God.
Matthew 5:8
Herbalife Independent
Distributor

c-

Jea ni e Howe ll

.1.11.14 Hy,c ll Run Rd .

&lt;l v.ho llllCYI )OU

Pnmc n 1y, O H.4 5769
740-992 -79lJ6

www.herbsndiet .com

6-&lt;J rn-=- ~ pm

%i[[ie's 1\,estaurant

29670 Bashan Rd.

P.O. Box 683
Pomero . Oh1o 45769-0683

Rutland Frer Will Baptist
Sall' rn St. , P:1sll"i r: Rev. Paul Taylm.
U IJ!~llill. ~-J.O i!- I(L, En:uing .:.. 7
p.m., W~dnesd:~y Sen il"c~ · 7 J-:;-:-;-11.-

Hour ~

FriemJh

740-949-2217
Sizes available 5xt0 to tO x 20.

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPI

~

399 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh
(740)
992-2164
Purina
" Stuff" For Pets, Farm Animals &amp;
Tropical Fish• Full Line of Perina
h w • Gard n Seed &amp; Fertilizers

"Let your light so shine before
men , that th ey may see your
good works and glorify your
Father m hea\ ~ n. "
Mall hew '5: I6

•
S«ond Bapdst Chun:h
'
Rll\'enswlxld. WV, SurKlay School 10 am. Mornin g wor~ip II "'m Evc n i n~ · 7 pm,
Wcd nesda} 7 p.m.

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
/lome Cook ed Mea{,\· &amp; IJai~\' Special:&lt;~

Open 7 day . . a wed;

Home People"
. uardrail, Fence &amp;
sign erection

Antiquity Baptist
Sundn y School · 9:30 tu n .. Worship lll : ~.'i a.m.. Sunday F. ventnll · 6:00p.m..
Pa•tor: Mark McComas
~·

Call: Judy. Brandi . or Jane Ann

AIIIW.Ipil i'rt' -

Ad~a11ced H1~ar.i1111 c~·11t1~r
1122 Jackson Pike Gallipolis, OH
(MOO) 434-4194

For

Coy's VCR Repair

Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy, OH
740-992-2121
Fax 740-992-2122
Ben H. Ewing

Fourth &amp; Ma in St., MldJi epor1 . "Pas1or·
Rc\', Gi lberl Cm ig, Jr.. Sum.la y School •
9:.\0 ll.m., Worship · 1Q:J.'i a.m.

WILLIAMS &amp; ASSOC.

~Ham

"'really are. It is then that
wt can remember 1hat ]t8US

1 Corinthil,.
15,1·11

1 06

Worship
God Together
This Week!

Sometimes our weakne•~
nnind UA of jtllt how human

rises above our humanity
when we bdle&gt;e that He gm
His tir~ on the OOiifl to save us
from our!ldvea and our sin.
We read in John 7:37·38. "Jesus
stood up and proclaimed , ' lr any
one thir1t , let him come to me and
drink1 He who believts in M e~, as th e
I&lt;Yiplure hu .. id, 'out or his heart ~ ..u
now riv~rs of living water."'
Won 1t yould Jesus 1 goodness and saiY.iltion
now fr om your hurt on East er and every day?
Mayyou ha,. a bt .... d Ea~er.

EWING FUNERAL HOME

740-992-7713

Catholic
Sacred Heurt Catholic Churrh
16 1 Mu lbe rry A\·c .. Pnmeroy, 992 -589H.
Paswr: Rt:v. Walll'T E. Heinz. Sal. Con

Birchfield Funeral
Home
'

"P.m..

Mt. Moriah Churrh of God
Mile Hill Rd,., Racine, Pastoi: James
Sllttcrfield, Sunday School - 9:45 a.m ..
Enning · 6 p.m.. Wednesday ~en: ices - 7
p.m.
Ruthmd Ch un:h of God ·
Ron Heath, Sunday Worship - 10
a. m.. 6 p.m.• Wednesday Services - 7
p.m.

Pastor: Re v. Herben Grate. SundBy School
.- 9:30a.m., Worship .. II a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wed ne~ay Services - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Jtmc Heatt ic. Sundoy School - 9
a.m .. Wor1h lp · 10 a.m.. Tuesday Servrces
- 7:30 p.m.

Congregational
ninlty Chun:h
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy. Pastor: Rev
Ja~k Noble. Worship 10:25 11.1n ., Sunday
School9: 15 a.m.

Ruthmd Church of the Nazan-n~
Pastor: Re v. Lou is S. Staubs, Sunday ·
School · 9:30 a.m....Worship - 10:30 a.m.,
6:30p.m., Wedn esday Service~ - 7 p.m.

Cl'ntral Clu1ter
Asbury IS)'I"II.'Ute), Pastor: Bob Rubinaoo.
Sunday Schf,&lt;JI • 9 : 4~ a.m., Worship · II
a.m ., WedneWuy Services - 7:30p.m.

&lt;1 .111 .

Rin•r V~tlle)·

Pa~ lnr:

More women die of
heart disease than of
any other cause.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Friday, April II, 200'3

Last Supper
re-creation

·- .

'Friday, April 11, 2003

Episcopal

PGI"tland First Church of the Nazartne
Pastor: William Juslis, Sunday School 10:00 a.m. , Morning Worship - 10:45 a.m ..
Sunday Service-6:30 p.m.

Enterprise

Grace EpiS&lt;"opal Church
326 E. Main St.. Pomeroy. Rev. James
Bernack i. Rev. Kalharin Foster. Sunday
School and Holy Eucharis! II:00 a. m.

Postor: Arland Kina. Sunday School · 10
a. m.• Worship .. 9 a.m.. Bible Study Wed.

7,30

Holiness
Community Chun:h
Pastor: S1eve Tomek, Main St~et.
· Ru1land, Su nday Wonhi~l9 : 00 a.m .,
Sunday Servke-7 p.m.

J

Other Churches

Flatwoods
Pa!itor Keith Rader, S~nday School · 10
a. m.• Worshi p · II a.m.
Fotl'lt Run
Pastor. · Bob Robinson, Sun~y School - l 0
a.m., Worship . 9 a.m.

Dan\'llle Holiness Churcll
31057 Suue Route 325, Langsvlle. Pastor:
Gary Jackson, Sunday school - 9:30a.m.•
Sunday worship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.,
Wednesday prayer se rvice· 7 p.m.

Httlh IMlddltport)
Pastor: Rob Brower, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Worship - I I :00 a.m.

MlnenttVIUc
Pas1or. Bob Robinson, Sunday
a.m., Worsh\p - 10 a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Ch•pc:l
Harrisonville Rnad. Pastor· Charles
McKenzie. Sunda y School 9:30 a. m.,
Worship · II a.m.. 7:00p.m., Wednesduy
Service · 7:00p.m.

S ~: hool

-9

Pearl Chapel
Sunday Schpol - 9 a.m.. Worship · 10 a.m.

Rose or Sharon Hollnm Churth
Leading Crtek Rd., Rutland, Pastor: Rev.
Dewey Kins. Sunday school· 9:30 a.m..
SUnday worshi p -7 p. m.. Wednesday
prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower, Worship - 9:3d o.m.,
Sunday School - 10: 3~ a.m.

Rock Sprinp
Putor: Keith Rader, S_unday School · 9: 15
a-.m., Worship • 10 am ., Youth
Fellowship, Sunday · 6 r:m

Pint Gron Hibll' Holines!l Chun::h
112 mil e nff Rt. 32~. Paslor: Rev . O'Dell
Man ley, Sunday Sl·hool - 9:3 0 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Scrvic:e · 7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Chun:h
75 Pe~ rl St., Middlepor!. Pa.s t~r: Rev.
David Gilbert. Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worshtp ·10:45 p.m.. Sunday Eve". 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Service- _7:30 p.m.
Hysell Run Holiness Chun:h
Rev. Mod Michael, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m ., Worship • 10: 45 a.ry-t .. 7 p.m.,
Thursday Bible S1udy and Youth .. 7 p.m.
Laurel Cllfl' Free Methodist Church
Rev. Les Strnndt ond Myra l . Strand!.
Su nday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.,Wedne sday Service
·7:00p.m.

The Church ol JrsWJ
Christ of Lattef'-O.y Sainll
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446·7486,
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m., Relief
SocietyfPriesthood I I :05-1 2:00 noon ,
Sacrament Ser..,ice 9- 10: 15 a.m,,
Homemaking meeting, lsi Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Mornlna Star
Dewayne Stutler, Sunday School ·
II a.m., Worship · 10 a.m.

Faith VaUey Tabem&amp;cle Church
Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Re v. Emmett
· Rawson, Sunda y Evening 1 p.m ..
Thursday Service· 1 p.m.

EutLttart
Pastor: Brian Harkness. Sunday School I0 a.m.• Worship - 9 a.m .. Wednesday - 7
p.m.

Fint "ChUrth of God
Appl~ and Semnd Sts .. Po ~ lnr : R~v. David
Russe ll, Sunday SchOol and Worship- 10

a.m.

E\·ening: Sen·io.:t:s- 6:30 p,m., WedneJday
Ser\'kes - 6 : ~0 p.m.

Church of God ol Prophecy
O.J . While Rd . off St. Rt. 160, Pas10r: ·P.J.
Chapman. Sunday School - 10 o.m.,
Wun hip - II a.m.", Wed nesday.Servlces 1p.nt .

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt. 124, Pastor: Edsel Harl, Sunday
School-9:30a.m., W0111hip · 10:30 a.m .•

Our Saviour Luehtnn Chun;b

Coolville Vnllcd Mclhodlot Parish

Walnut and -Henry Sts, Ravenswood,
W.Va., Pastor: David Russell. Suriday
School - 10:00 a.m.. Worship - I I a.m.

United Methodist
Gn.hlm United Methodbt
Worship-9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),,
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp;. 4th Sun),Wednesday
Service -7:30p.m.
Mt. Ollvt United Methodlsl
Off 124 behind Wilkesville, P11stor: Re\1.
Ralph Spire~. Sunday School ' 9:30a.m.,
Worship· 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m .. Th.ul"!lday
Services • 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Lon18ottom
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship - .
10:30 a.m.
Rtednilll'
Wors hip • 9:30 a.m.. Su nday School 10:30 a.m., First Sunday of Month · 7:00
p.m. service
tuppers P1airut St. Paul

Hobson Chris1lan •·enowshlp Chun::h
Pastor: Herschel White. Sunday School10 am, Sunday Church sl!rvice -6:30 pm
Wednesday 7 pm
R~ton.tlon

Christian Fellowship
Hooper Road. Athens. Pastof:·
lonnie Coats. Sunday Worship 10:00 11m.
Wednesday : 7 pm

9365

Lanpvllle Chrlsdan Church
Full Gospel. Pas1or: Roben Musser,
Sunday School 9:30 am, , Worship 10:30.
am - 7:00 pm. Wednesday Service 7:00 '

pm

Pentecostal
Pentecostal As~mbly
St. Rt. 124, Racine. PaStor: Willianl .
Hoback, Sunday School • 10 a.m.,
Evening . 7 p.m., Wednesday Services • 7
p.m.

Presbyterian

Mone Chapel Church
Sunday K hool - 10 a.m .. Worship · II
a.m., Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Middleport Prelbyterl1n
Pastor: Rober Crow., Worship· 10 a.m.

Hocldqport Chun:ll
Grand Str~et , Sullday School - 10 a.m.,
Worship · II a.m., Wednesday Services •
Sp.m.

faith Gotpcl Chun:h
Long Bonom, Sunday School -9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:45 a.m.• 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Torth Churth
Co. Rd. 63, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

ML Olin Corqmunlty Chun:h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush. Sundoy School 9:30a.m., Eveni ng -6:30p.m., Wedneday
Service - 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh-Day Adventiat
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy, Pastor: Roy~
Lawinsky, Saturda~ Ser" ices: Sabbat,h
School - 2 p.m.• Worship - 3 p.m.
•

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon llnltcd Brethren

Church of th~ Nazarene. Pastor: Teresa
Waldeck.. Sunday School · 9 :30 a.m.,
Wors hi p - I0:4.'1 ti.m.. 7 p.m .. Wednesday
Services· 7 p.m.

J~ppa

Salem Community Chun::h
Lieving Road, We st Columbia , W.Va ., ~
Pastor: Clyde Ferrell. Sunda:y SchlXll 9:3 0
am. Sunday evening se rvice 6 pm,
Wednesday service 7.pm

Btlhcl Church
Township Rd., 468C, Sunday School · 9
a.m. Wonhip • 10 a.m., Wednellday
Services • I 0 a.m.

Full Gospel Llghtbou.se
33045 Hi land Rood, Pomeroy, Pastor: Roy
Hunter. Su nday School - 10 a.m., E~· ening
7:30 p.m.. Tue sday &amp;. Thursday - 7:3 0
p.m.

Rtcd!YIIIe FelloWllhlp

Pastor: Bob Randolph, Worship • 9 :30

Full Gospel Church of the Livlna:Savlor
Rl.33!1. Ant rquily. Pastor: Jesse Morris.,
Scrvil.-es: Saturday 2:00 p.m.

Ha~nv!Ue Praby&amp;erlan Chureb
Pastor: Roben Cro"''· Wonhip - 9 a.m.

Middltpoi1 Chun:h ot the Nau.rene
Pastor: Allen Midcap, Sunday School 9:30 v..m.,Wonhip- 10:3 0 a.m., 6:30p.m.,
Wedne ~ day Servict:~ - 7 p.m., Paslor:
. Allen Midcap

Chester
Pastor: Jane Beattie, Worship - 9 o.m..
Sunday School • 10 a.m . , Thunday
Services- 7 p.m.

I

New Lifr Victory Center
3773 Georges Creek R o~td. Ga lli!XJiis, OH
Pastor: Brll Statt::rt, Sund&lt;IY Sc rvic~s · Ill
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wednesday - .7 p.m. &amp;.
You th 7 p.m.

. Dyenllle Communit)' Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ,. Wonhip 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Melp Coopuadn Parish
Northea st Cl uiter, Alfred. Pastor: Jane
Beanie, Sunday School .. 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - II a.m., 15:30 p.m.

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

7:30p.m,

Pas1or: Hclen.Kiine, Coolville Church,
Main &amp;. fifth St., Sunday School - 10
a.m ., Worship · 9 a.m., Tuescla)l Services·
7p.m.

SL Paul Lutheru Cburrb
Comer Sycamore &amp;. Second St .. Pomeroy.
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m., Wonhip • 1"1
a.m.

Rejoicing Llfl' Church
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport. Paslot:
Mike Foreman , Pastor: Emefirus
Luwrenct: Foreman, Won;hip- 10:00 am
Wedne sday Services - 7 p.m.

Syncuae Flnt Un,ted Prabyterlan
Pastor: Roben Crow, Worship- II a.m.

a.m.
Syr~cuBC

Syracu.~ Mission
1411 Bridgeman St. , Syraeu~e . Rev. Mike
Thornpson.Pastor, Sunday School · 10
a.m. E't'ening- 6 p.m., Wedne~ay Service
-?p.m.

RIM:Ine
Pas10r: Brian Harkneu, Sunday School ·
lO a.m., Wouhip • 11 a.m., Wednesday i
p.m.

St. John Luthcnn Chun:h
Pine Grove, Wor1hip • 9:00 a.m ., Sunday
Xhool • 10:00 a. m.

Pa~ tor :

_.

Middleport Community Church
57.5 Pearl St., Middl~port , Paslnr: Sam
Ander so n, Sunday School 10 &lt;L .m..
E,·tning- 7:30p.m. , Wednesday Sm·ice •
'7 :30p.m.

~astor :

Lutheran

Stl't'trsYiUe Community Churrh
Paslor: Wayne R. Jewdl. Sunday Scrvic~s
. 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m .. Thursday· 7:?0,
p.m.

Harrisonville Community Churth
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunda y · 9:30
n.m. and 7 p.m. . Wednesd ay· 7 p.m.

Carmei.Sutton
Carmel &amp;. Bashan Rds. Racine. Ohio.
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler, Sunday School • 9:~0 a.m. , WorShip· 10:45 a.m .. Bible
Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Bethel Worship Center
Chester Schoo l, Pastor: Rob Barber,
Assistant Pu stor: Karen Davis. Sunday
Worship: 10 am, Evening Worship: 6 pm..
Youth group 6 pm. Wednesday : Power in
Praye r , and Bible Study:, 7 pm
Ash Street Chun:h
A~h St., Middlepun- Pas10r: Glenn Rowe,
Sunday School • 9:30 a. m., Morning
Worship - 10:30,a.m . &amp; 7 pm, Wednes&amp;y
Service- 7:00 p.m., Youth Service- 7:00
p.m.
Aa:ape Life Ce nter
""Full-Gospel Church". Pas tors John &amp;
, Pauy Wade. 603 Second Ave. Mason. 773. 501 7. Service lime: Sunday 10:)0 a. m..
Wedneny 1 pm

The Believers' f'elloW!hip Ministry
New lime Rd ., Rulltt!ld· Pastor: Rl!v.
Margaret J. Ro binso n; St:rv ic es :
Wednesday, 7:30p.m., Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: Dewa)·ne Stutler. Sunday S\:hool •
10 a.m., Worship - 9 a.m .. Wednesday
Service!l - 10 n.m.

Faith Fellowship Cnwde for Cbrlst
Pasror: Re\'. Franklin Dickens. Service: :
Friday. 7 p.m.
CaiYHry Bible .C hurch
Pomeroy Pikt:, Co. Rd.. Pustor: Re\'.'
Blackwood, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m. ,
Worship \0:30 a.m. , 7:30 p.m.,
WeL!nesday Seroice ·7: 30 p.m.

F11ith Full GO!ipel Churth
Long Bottom . Pastor: Steve R1=cd. Su nday
Schoo l - 9:30 a.m. Worsh ip - 9:30 a.m .
and 7 p.m .. Wednesday · J r.m., l:rid.ay ·
l"cllnw ship Se rvice 7 r:rn

Salem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall, Sunday
School - 10: 15 a.m., Worship - 9:15a.m..
aible Study: Monday 7:00 pm
Snowville
Sunday School · 10 a.m., Worship · 9 a.m.

Faln-lew Bible Church
Letan, W.Va. Rt. I, Pasmr: Brian May,
Sunday Sc hool - 9:30a.m., Worship ·· 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Bible Study . 7:00 p.m.

Cvmm u~ty of Chris!
Portland-Racine Rd ., Pastor: Mic hael
Duhl, Sunday Sc hool · 9:30a.m., Worsh ip
- 10:30 a. m., Wednesday Services - 7:00
p.m.

Abund11nt Gr•ce R.F. I.
923 S. Third St.. Middleport. Pastor Teresa
D&lt;Lvi~ .
Sund&lt;Ly se rvice, 10 a.m ..
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Rutland
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.,. Worship .
10:30 a.~Thursday Sm•ices- 7 p.m.

Whlte'1 Chlptl Wesleyan
Coolville Rood, Ptt.'l tor: Re~. Phillip
Ridenour. Sunday School • 9:30 a.m..'
Worship · 10:30 .11.111., Wednesduy Service
· 7 p.m.

Syracuse Chun:h or the Na:t8n"IW
Pastor ~tike Adkins, Sun~oy School · 9:.\ 0
a.m., Worsbip · 10: 30 a.m.• 15 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Ch urtb of the Nazarene
Pastor: Jan Lavender. Sunday Schoo l ·
9:30 a.m., Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wednesday Service~ · 7 p.m.

South ~lh~l Community Churdl
Silver Ridge · Paslor l inda Damewood.
Sunday Sl·hool · 9 a.m., Wors hi p Sen•ice
IOu.m.
C11rleton Intrrdenominadon111 Chun:h
Kingsl"l ury Rnad," Pustor: Robert Vance,
Sunday Sehoul · 9:J O u.m .. Wnrship
Service 10:30 a.m., E\'tning Service 15
p.m.
Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd . 31.. Paslor: Rev.
Roger Willford. Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wo~hip- 7 p.m.

io Christ Chun:h
Texas Commu nity 36411 Wickham Rd ;·
Pastor: Rober! Sanders, Sunday School .::
9:30 a.m., Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.
Eden United Brethren In Christ
Stale Route 124. Recds,·ille, Pastor: Rev.::
Bi ll Duly, Sunday School - II a.m.. ~
Sunday Worship . 10:00 a.m . &amp; 7: 00p.m.;:
Wt:dne sday Sen·ices · 7: 00 p.m.;·
Wt:dne~day Youtl1 Service· 7:00p.m.
!'

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Rutland. OH 45l75

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Inside:

Page AS

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel
'

-.

Friday, Aprilll, 2003

Page Bl

North -Korea withdraws
from global nuclear treaty
Claims war with
Iraq reason to
build arsonal
BY CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA
Associated Press

Jim Magga!d, 67, of Dayton holds up a container of o.nions he has already started for his victory garden on Tuesday. Maggard was a child during World War II and helped his mott1er in the
'
family's garden. (AP)
'

War renews interest
in 'Victory Gardens'
. DAYTON (AP) Jim
Maggard remembers helping
k!nd his mother's Victory
Garden during World War U.
Now he has one of his own,
more than 50 years later and
during another war.
. Maggard, 67, grows onions,
~weet peas and beets in containers, which he wUI transfer outside to a little plot behind his
bouse that he decorated with a
small American flag. He plans
later to add tomatoes, cucumbers and other vegetables.
Others have had a similar
idea.
"After9/ll, I had a lot of people call me about Victory
Gardens,"
said
Susan
Pennington. a research associate at the Smithsonian
Institution. "It wa~ interesting
that so many people turned
back to that idea so quickly."
Pennin~ton is in charge of the
Smithsoruan's Feast Your Eyes:
The Unexpected Beauty of
Vege!3ble Gardens exhibit,
which will be on display May
10 to July 6 at Wegerzyn
Garden MetroPark.
She said the original Victory
Gardens were inspired by food

shortages during World War I.
And, with wars getting shortWith World War II on the hori- er, Pennington doesn't think the
zon, . the government told the gardens will have as much of an
public that gardens weren't impact today.
needed.
"World War U was a protract'The FDA stepped in at the ed conflict," she said, "and was
start of WW II. and said 'Leave really the last war of its kind. A ·
food production to the profes- vegetable garden wasn't going
sionals. We have plenry of food to help you in a nuclear war, or
the country,"' during the Cold War.
'
to feed
Pennington said.
But people still wanted to feel
"Frankly, the Army doesn't
like they were helping out, even need our help," Pennington
under some unusual circum- said.
stances. Pennington said she
Still, the gardens have had an
researched
Japanese- impact. They evolved into comAmericans who planted Victory · munity·gardetrpro~s in the · ·
Gardens while in internment 1960s, which began spreading
camps.
throughout cities.
"It was a clear sign, as clear
~·commurlity gardens are defa_s t_hetr )ODS and -~aughters initely· tbe- ·inheritors of the ··
stgnmg up for the mthtary, that Victory Gardens " Pennington
they .were keeping faith with said.
'
Amenca, even m ~.e face ~fthts
Maggard was in the first
grade when Japan bombed'
homble treatment, she satd.
Now, with gartlens common. p 1 Harbor · 1941 He and
Pennmgton says the symbolic ear
m . ·
value of l! Victory Garden hts brothers, VtclOr and
would limited during the war · Norman, helped thetr mother
with Iraq.
grow green beans, tomatoes,
"Unfortunately,
Arab- com and other vegetables m a
Americans 'growing Victory vacant lot next to thetr home.
Gardens today probably isn't
"It was a lot of fun, actually,"
going to help," she said.
he said.

SEOUL. South Korea North Korea said the Iraq war
proved the need .for it to maintain a strong military deterrent
against the United States. as
the communist nation's with·
drawal from the global
nuclear arms control treaty
officially
took
effect
Thursday.
The North's comments
came a day after U.N .
Security Counci l members
said tfiey were worried by
North Korea's standotl with
Washington. but refused to
condenm it for pulling out of
the Nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty. China and Russia had
opposed
condemning
pyongyang.
Drawing parallels with the
U.S. showdown with Iraq.
. North Korea said that bowing
to demands to abandon its
suspected nuclear weapons
development would lead to
inspections and disarmament,
~uin~ the stage . for a U.S.
mvaston.
"The Iraqi war launched by
the U.S. pre-emptive attack
clearly proves that a war can
be prevented and the security
of the country and the nation
can be ensured only when one
has physical deterrent force,"
said KCNA. the North's state·
run news agency. It did not
specifically refer to nuclear

weapons as a deterrent.
weapons, though lhe United
The withdrawal from the States says il already has one
nuclear am1s control treaty or two atomic bombs .
officially
took
effect Washington says il has no
Thursday. three months after 1 plans to invade North Korea
the North announced tt was .and seeks J peaceful solution
pulling out. In a similar stand- to the nuclear problem, bul
off a decade ago. Nonh Korea has not ruled out a military
announced its withdrawal oplion
from the treaty but suspended
Washing10n wants the probits decision just before the 90- Iem to be addressed in a mulday notice period lapsed.
' tilaterul forum ·including
Pyongyang and Washington Russia. China, Japan and
negotiated an energy deal that · South Korea.
ended the earlier crisis.
Ru ssian Defen"e Minister
though a solution to the current standotl could be more Sergei Ivanov held talks on
difficult because U.S. officials the nucleJr issue Thursday
have taken a harder line this with Soulh Korean 6fftcials in
time. They have refused Seoul. Moscow was once a
North Korean appeals for clo,se ally of Nonh Korea,
direct talks, saying they will though the friendship faded
no! give into blackmail and after the end of the Cold War.
that other countries must be
South Korea's Defense
involved in any. solution,
Ministrv said Ivanov "shared
North Korea has said it our \iiew that the two counwould ignore any censure by tries should closely cooperate
the United Nations. and that to lind a peaceful solution" to ·
'·
economic · sanctions would the crisis.
constitute a declaration of ' Ivanov said the two sides
war.
agre~d the crisis should not be
"The U.N. Security Council . worsened by ma,king "hostile
discussion of the nuclear issue and extreme expressions,"
on the Korean Peninsula itself and he wam~d against driving
is a prelude to war," said North Korea "into a situation
North Korea's Py'ongyang where a solution is impossiRadio. North Korea has ble." He did not elaborate.
issued similar warnings in the
"Solution of the North
past, and belligerence is a
trademark of its statements.
Korea problem presupposes
The radio, monitored by thai Pyongyang returns to all
South Korea's Yonhap news the intemational non-proliferagency, called u.S. efforts w ation regimes and puts ;ts sites
discuss the nuclear dispute at under IAEA control, having
the council "a serious provo- received in return a guarantee
cation. rupturing efforts for of its security, sovereignty and
dialogue and spiking tension territorial integrity, as well as
on the Korean Peninsula."
no attacks,'' Russia's lnterfax
North Korea has never said news agency quoted Ivanov
that it is developing nuclear as saymg.

,----~ ~-

--

***

Court rules hearing closed for safety
RICHMOND. Va. (AP)- A · In his handwritten motion,
federal appeals court will not Moussaoui said the court was
:j]low Zacarias Moussaoui to "denying the most basic right to
&lt;)fgue in person that he should be heard."
have access to al-Qaida prisanThe government placed the
ers, who potentially could help issue before the appeals court,
his defense against charges that after U.S. District Judge Leonie
he conspired with the Sept. 11 Brinkema' ruled that Moussaoui
hijackers.
should have access to al-Qaida
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of captive Ramzi Binalshibh.
Appeals has oi:dered the May 6
hearing closed because classified information will be discussed. The court issued a onepage order Wednesday denying
Moussaoui 's request to appear
in person at the hearing.

Moussaoui, accused of conspiring with the Sept. II hijackers
to commit terrorism. has
argued that Binalshibh has
infonnation that could aid his
defense.
The prisoner is a suspected
coordinator of the attacks and
has been extensively interrogated:
;

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must consist of at leas1 three.
but no more I han four players
ages 16 and up.
Registration fee fur the
tournament is $20.00 per ,
team and first prize will be
trophies antl shirts.
To obtain a registration
form please contact Eric
McLaughlin at (800) 282720 I ext. 7128 or call (740)
245-7128. Registralion deadline for mail-ins is April 17.
Registration the day of the
event will be from 8 to 9 a.m.
at the athletic fields. Photo
l.D. will be required from all
participants.

Associated Press .
CLEVELAND - During
his brief career, Mark Buehrle
has · struggled again st the
Cleveland Indians.
Not
these
Cleveland
,
Indians.
Buehrle wasted little time
while
shutting
down
Cleveland for seven innings
and Magglio Ordonez homered Thursday nighl 10 give the
Chicago White Sox a 7-2 wip
over the Indians.
Working quickly on another
chilly night at Jacobs Field,
Buehrle (2-1) allowed one
run and five hits while facing
a Cleveland lineup vastly different from the ones he
remembered.
"I was kind of happy to see
Jim Thome gone," he said.
"They're a young team now
that's rebuilding ."
Buehrle slowed the process.
The left-bander, who shut
out Detroit for eight innings
in his last start, extended his
scoreless streak to 18 innings
before allowing a run with
two outs in the sixth.
Sandy Alomar Jr. went 3for-3 with two RB!s as the
White Sox won two of three
in the series. Alomar was 6for-7 with four RBis in the
three-game set.
Alomar downplayed hi~
success against the Indians,
his team from 1990-2000.
''At this point that really
doesn't matter." Alomar said.
"I have nothing against them.
It's been three years now, so
I'm way over the hump."
The White Sox scored five
runs in the first off rookie
Jason Davis (0-2), who hurt
himself with two walks in the
inning and only lasted four.
Davis settled down after the
rough first, but by then it was

URG offers
swim lessons
'·'

RIO GRANDE- Learn to
Swim lessons will be offered
at the University of ·Rio
Grande during the Spring
Semester. The less::ms, available to students ages 2 and
up, include a series of nine
30-minute sessions in the
University of Rio Grande
swimming pool.
This first series of lessons
will begin on Wednesday.
April 16 and continue
through Saturday. May 3.
The registration fee is $30
registration fee per student.
All students registering for
the course must be pottytrained. Students· 2 years-old
must be accompanied in the
. warer by a parenr.
To register, call Dale Whitt,
URG Adult and Continuing
Education at (800) 282-720 l or 040) 245-7325.

WILBERFORCE (AP) Central State, which won
three national championships
in the 1990s before dropping
its football program, said
Thursday it will hire a coach
to help res·urrect the program.
The university's board of
trustees and its president said
they will begin a nationwide
search for a coach. who is to
he.lp raise the rematnmg
funds needed to restart the
program.

MIDDLEPORT . The
Meigs Middle School participated in golf matches
Wednesday night at the Pine
Hill5 Course in Pomeroy.
The Meigs Maroon team
attained a score of 171 with
medalists being Cory Dill
with a 38 and Steven Stewart,
with a close 39.
The Meigs Gold team shot
a 182. Eastern 1\'as third with
20. Point Plf!asimt had a
score of 213

AND WIN

Rocky

'

medal for MMS
gold squad

COLDEN ECC ~--­

Brought to you by:

I

Dill, Stewart

FIND THE

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, April 11, 2003

Central State to
hire football coach

re

The Daily Sentinel

Major League Baseball, Page 83
.
Prep softball: EHS tops SHS, Page 84
Scoreboard, Page B4
·'

Willard player to
walk on with OSU
COLUMBUS(AP) - Twotime first-leam AII-Ohioan Nick
Dials of Willard has decided he
will walk on lo the Ohio Slate
basketball team til is fall.
Dials, a 6-foot-1 guard. averaged 28.1 points a game last season and 26.3 as a junior while
earning first~leam Associated
Press All-Ohio status each year.
He had been offered scholarships to Boise State, Orake and
New Orleans but felt that he
ciould contribute with the
buckeyes. Ohio State struggled
at the guard spot after point
guard Brandon Fuss-Cheatham
was hampered most of the year
with a bad knee.
Willard went 85- 14 during
Dials' four seasons.

Cleveland's Shane Spencer leaves the batter's box after being called out on strikes in the
eighth inning against the Chicago White Sox on Thu rsday at Jacobs Field. (AP)

F~eds

too lale for the Indians, who
stranded a season -high I0 and
can't bust out of an early-sea:
son slump.
.
"l wish I could take back
that first inning, but you
can't,'' Davis said. ·'It's going
to be a tough five day!
(between stans) for me but I
can't wait ·to get back out
there ."
The way he's going, neither
can Buehrle.
·
Last season, Buehrle's 34
starts were completed in an
average of 2 hours. 41 minutes - II minutes quicker
than the league average. He
. l
'
worked at hts usual pace
against the Indians, who came
in batting just .203 as a team.
The only thing that slowed
Buehrle down in the 1:25
game was Chicago's bullpen
as Tom Gordon loaded the
bases in the eighth. Damaso
Marte came on and walked in
a run befqre striking out two
to end the inning.
Buehrle, who improved to ·
4-4 in nin~ starts against
Cle veland, allowed just twp
hits through the first five
innings
before
Milton
Bradley led off with a double
i'n the sixth and .scored on
Ellis Burks' two-out single.
White Sox manager Jerry
Manuel was impressed by
Buehrle's gutsy outing.
"He's a guy that once he
gets into a rhythm and flow,
no matter who he's facing,
he's real tough," Manuel said.
"I don't know if he had his
best stuff tonight, but he's a
survivor - and sometim~s
that's enough."' .

lose to Astros again

HOUSTON ( AP)- As far
as the Houston Astros were
concerned, the most irnpressive thing about rookie
Jeriome Robertson was the
way he worked out of troublc:.
Robertson pitched seven
strong innings for his first
ca:reer victory and Craig
Bi,ggio set the NL record
wi •t h his 31st leado ff home
run as · Houston beat the
Cincinnati
Reds
4-2
Thursday night.
F:obertson was in a basesloaded · jam in the fourth
inning, similar to the one he
faced in the fifth inning of
his first start against
Colorado on April 3.
l:n that 'one, he gave up
eight runs and was pulled.
Thi s time, the left-hander
struck out Jose Quillen and

Ruben Mateo.
"He's not a kid who panics," Astros manager Jimy
Williams said. "He has very
· good
mound presence.
Certainly, I think (catcher
Gregg) Zaun helpedhim."
Robertson ( 1-1) all owed
just two hits while striking
out eight and walking three.
He retired the last II batters
he faced.
"I was feeling pretty ·good
until I got myself in that little
jam."
Robertson
said.
"Zaunie called some good
pitches anp l stepped off the
mound to get a little extra
focus."
Zaun is Robertson's regular catcher.
"I love working with him."
Robertson said. "He kind of
has that fiery attitude. I like
that."

Zaun lhinks he and
Robertson have a lot in common.
"We're both a lillie out
there," he said. "He's a real
competilor. I didn't really
say a io1 to him tonight
because when he was in trouble, he was still aggressive . ·
"The difference between
tonighl and the lasl time is he
was ampcd up a lillie more
then."
The Reds were impressed
with Robertson.
"He pitched a good game."
manager Bob Boone said .
"He kept us off balance, but
we chased an awful lot of
bad pitches."
Danny
Graves
(0- 1)
allowed four runs - three
earned -. and seven hits in Cincinnati's Jason LaRue dodges a pitch in the fifth inning
5', innings .
against the Houston Astros Thursday. (APl

Eastern edges Southern Scarbrough wins
BY SCOTT WoLFE
Spc.rts correspondent

--

RACINE
A Ken
Arnsbary triple and a Cody
Fa1.1lk sacrifice fly gave
Eastern the edge they needed
in the top of the seventh
inni ng as they defeated
Southern 4-3 Thursday in
Tri-Valley Conference baseball action. .
Eastern
hitters
were
Am .sbary with a triple and
sing,le, ·Cody Faulk a single
and sacrifice tly, Brett Parker
a single. and Jon Owen a
double and single. Southern
was led by Jordan Hill with a
triple, Jeremy Ya~ger a single. Joey Phillips two singles, Tommy Theiss a single,
ancl sin~les by Adam Ball
and Jusun Connolly.
Thursday's game develope:d into a great and exciting. lgame. cspeci&lt;llly the battit; lln the hill that unfolded
belween Southern's Justin

Allen and Eastern's Ryan
Smith. Southern took the
early lead on a walk to
Yeauger and an RBI single to
Joey Phillips.
Southern (2-5) led 1-0
until the fo!Irth inning when
Easten 's Cacy Faulk walked
with two outs, then scored on
&lt;l double by Jon Owen, the
score 1-1.
The Eagles (4-1) went
ahead in the fifth when
Smith walked , stole ·second,
Amsbary singled, then both
advanced ·an a balk, and
Cody Faulk added a two-run
single, the score 3-1 EHS.
Southern's · Allen and
Eastern's Smith went right at
each other. Allen worked his
way out of a jam in the second as EHS left two stranded. He struck out the side in '
the third before allowing the
run in the fourth.
Additionally. S~ith was
picking apart th • SHS
offense, He fanne two in
the first despite one:run scar·

I\

ing. Southern threatened in
the second and third innings,
but each lime Smith rallied
10 get out of the inning . .
Southern cui il to 3-2 in the
fifth when Yeauger singled
and advanced on two p:issed ·
balls , then swred on an error.
In the tlnale, Enstern wem
up 4-2 when Amsbary tripled
and scored on the Faulk sacrifice tly. So.uthern pulled
within one wl1en Ju stit1
Connolly singled and scored
on a H.ill triple. Hill was
thrown out trying to stretch
the triple into a home run.
Jeremy '(eauger hil what
hindsight would call a sacritlce tly. bul with Hill out it
was a routin~ lly out to end
the game. the score 4-3 .
Smith fanned eight and
walked two to pick up the
win . Allen suffered the loss
with five strikeouls and four
walh 1
Soulhern hosts Waterford
today ami Eastern -hosts
Mill er.

1

,

two events at VCHS

BY ScOTT WOlFE
Sports correspondent

McARTHUR
The
Eastern boys and girls track
teams opened their season
with a six-team meet at Vinton
County. where several Eastem
athletes earned top honors
among the mix of Division II.
Ill. and IV schools that competed. Brandon Werry claimed
the 200 meter dash.
In the field events, Darren
Scarbrough was able to power
his way to a double win in the
disc~ s and shot-put with a 118
foot-3 inch second place mark
and 43-foot-9 inch mark
respectively. Teammate Ross
Holter. stayed close behind
with two seconds in both
event~ with Tmvis Batey finishing sixth in the discus.
In the speed events. senior
Bmndon Werry sprinted to a
third place tin ish in the I00

meters and anchored a 4 x I00
relay team to a fourth place
tinish. Werry also captured
the 200 meter dasy with a time
of 24.2 seconds.
Jen Hayman was able to lay
claim to a second place in the
girls 400 meter da~h. and a
fourth place finish in a strong
field of sprinters in the girls
200 meters. Cassie Nutter finished sixth and fifth in the 800
meters and high jump. while
Rachel Elliott placed fourth in
the 3,200-meters.
Earlier the tmck team visited the land of the Lancers ,
where Sophomore Ross
Holter scored two first place
finishes in the shot-put (4311.5) . and discus (138.5).
Travis Batey threw his way to
a second {&gt;lace inthe shot-put
and Kevm Marcinko laid
claim to the long jump pit with
a jump of 17-9.

Please see Tr•ck. u

�•

j

•

Sentinel

-'-"'"'

2003

Frid

MIDDLEPORT· POMEROY.
ROTARY CLUB
INVITES YOU TO THE

Helton and ·Hernandez
homer in·Rockies·
'
win
.

Associated Press

.NL

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SATWDAY, APRIL 12, 200'3
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SERVING FROM 7.: 00 A.M. TO II: 0 A.M.
'Adults- 13 and up s4oo
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Expos 7, Cubs 1

CHI CAGO - Tony Armas
DENVER- ' Todd Helton Jr. struck out· a career-hi gh I I
hit a solo homer and Jose . batters in seven scoreless
· Hernand ez innings as the Montreal
added ~ two-run Expos heat the Chicago Cubs.
shot
in
the
Armas (2-1) gave up a lead.single
to
Mark
eighth inning as off
the
Colorado Grudzielanek.
walk ed
Rockies rallied Sammy Sosa two batters later
to bt!at the St. Lou is Cardinals and then retired the next 11 .
7-6 on Thursday.
He gave up just two more hit s
The Rock,ies also lllrnecl the &lt;lnd didn 't allow an01her runfirst triple play in their history ner ·p'\SI first base.
as they won for the sixt h time
Vladimir Guerrero homered
tn seven games.
and drove in three1runs for the
St. Louis had taken th e- lead E xpos.
in the top of the eighth with a
four-run outburst, including
three straight singles and Braves 6, Phillies 2
three Colorado e~rors.
. '
PHILADELPHIAPirates 3, Brewers 1 Andruw Jones and Robert
Fick both homered as the
At lanla Braves bounced back
PITTSBURGH - Randall from a, lopsided defeat with a
Simon's three-run homer in win over the Philadelphia
·the first inning supported Jeff PhiJJies on.
Suppan 's second consecutive
The Braves got a balanced
strong start. leading the
Pirates past the Mi lwaukee effort , 1vith six players knocking in run s and six pitchers
Brewers.
holding
the Phillics to just
The Brewers lost even
.though starter Ben Sheets (0· four hits.
2) didn't allow any scoring
· 'after the first.
Marlins 4, Mets 3
Supp;tn (2-0) gave up Geoff
Jenkins' run-scoring single in
MIAM I - · Juan Pierre
the first before settling down. drove in two runs with a two.giving up seven hits and strik- out single off Armando
:ing .out seven in 7 1-3 ir1nings. Benitez in the bottom of the

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Angels 3, Mariners 0

SEATTLE . - · J&lt;oTuu
NEW
YORK
David
Washbur.n
\brew eight ,harp
.ninth, and the Florida Marlins
Orioles
4,
Wells
pitched
a
three-hitter
innings and Brad Fullmer hil
scored four times in the fina l
&lt;tnd Hideki Matsui delivered Devil Rays 3
a two-run homer a' the
two innings to beat the New •
a two- run dou ·
Anaheim Angels . beat t·lic
York ~ets.
ble, 'ending the
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Seattle Mariners.
The Marlins ' comeback
New
York
David
Segui delivered a
,Washburn 11- I J • held
Y~nkees
over
spoiled a strong showing ,by
the Minnesota tiebrc aki ng RBI-single in the Seattle to five hits by mainTom Glavine, who pitched six
Twins
2-0. eighth inning and Sidney taining a low pitch coum
shutout innings . New York's
Thursday.
Ponson allowed three runs each inni ng and keeping the
Cliff Floyd homered, and so
Matsui
and
Bernie over seven innings as the Mariners out of swring posidid rooki e teammate · Ty
Williams each had three hits. Baltimore Orioles beat the tion almost al 1 night.
Wigginton.
WeJJs (2-0) was in control Tampa Bay Devil Rays.
The Jefl-hand er waiJ,cd
But Florida rall ied in 1he
the whole way. never perm itSegui's two-out single off one and struck olll one. Troy
t ing a runner past second
ninth again st Benitez (0-2).
Jesus
Colome (0-1) put the Perc iv al worked a hit Je,;,
base. He walked none, struck
ninth for Anaheim's fi"1
out six and twice hit A.J . Orioles in front,
Jay Gibbons put the save of the sea,on.
Giants 2, Dodgers 1
. Pierzynski with pitches.
Orioles
up 3-0 wi th a threeRick Reed (0-2 ) was in
ru
n
homer
off Steve Parris in
trouble aJJ four innings
Red Sox 8,
SAN · FRANCISCO before leaving with a the fourth.
Rooki e Kurt Ainsworth .. strained right groin . He was
. Blue Jays 7
pitched shutoul baJJ into the
listed as day-lo-day.
Royals 4, Tigers 2
ninth inning as the San
TORONTO - · Johnny .
Francisco Giants matched
Rangers 5, Athletics 4 DETROIT - Raul Ibanez Damon homered twice and
the best start' in fr anchi se
' homered and drove in three Trot· Nixon drove in four
hi story wit h their ninth win
ARLINGTON. Texas run s to lead the unbeaten runs as the Boston Red Sox
Carl Everett hi1 a ti ebreaking Kansas City Royals to a vicin I 0 games over the Los
held off Toronto 8-7 ln &gt;&lt;mp
homer in the eight h innin g tory over the wi nless Detroit
Ange les Dodgers.
the Blue Jays· five-game
and Mark: Teixeira hit his Tigers.
Manager Fe lipe Alou got
·
firsr major league home run
Mi guel Asencio (1-0) winning s1reak.
hi s 700th career victory, and
Nixon's tiebre ak ing twoas the Texas Rangers rallied allowed one unearned run in
Marquis Grissom hurt hi s
from a four-run deficit to tive innings for the Royals.
run shot in the eighth inning
fo rmer team with hi s first
Asencio allowed six hits off Cliff Politte (0. I J gave
beat the Oakland Athletics .
homer for San Francisco.
With the game tied at 4. and three walks. D.J. Boston a 6-4 lead .
Everett Jed off the eighth by Carrasco pitched three
In just his sixl h major
Damon had thre e hits.
loft
ing a soln homer off sh utout innings in relief of
league start, Ainsworth (2-0)
th ree RBis ' and three runs
reliever Chad Bradford ( J.J ) Asencio, striking out six
gave another tantali zing
scored.
He homered off Roy
just inside the right fi eld foul straight batters in one
g li mpse of the pote nt ial that
Halladay iri the third am:l
pole for his first of the sea- stretch.
convinced the Giants they
son.
Mike MacDougal got three gave Boston an' 8-4 lead [n
could trade Livan Hernande z ·
Francisco Cordero (I· I) outs for his fifth save in tive the ninth with a IW&lt;HU il 'hot
threw a hitless eighth inning chances.
last mont h.
off Trever Miller.

'

992-6611

to pick up the victory.
Ugueth Urbina pitched the
save.

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Friday, April 11 , 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Eagles rally to defeat
Southern in TVC action

Scoreboard

and Chapman-doubled. yet ·
Sports correspondent
the Tornadoes were unable
to score. That came after
RACINE - The "Battle Eastern went down 1-2-3.
of Meigs Cou nty•· held a . The swry was different
lot of meaning for the m the stxth, however, as
Eastern Eagles as they , Coach Pam Douthittfs gals
posted a 6-3 come-from- put . on .. _the rally caps.
behind wi n to rema.in White smgled to n ght,
undefeated at 6-0. and Lodwick doubled, then
hold
the Tri -Valley Morgan Weber laid down
Conference
Hockin g a safety squeeze. On batDivision at 4-0: Southern ter later, Sara Barrinser
is now 4-3 overall and 2-2 did the same but Lodwtck
in the kague.
beat home to the plate to
Southern took a ~-0 lead give EHS a 4-3 lead.
w~en Deana Pulhns led
Southern had yet to find
oft but was thrown out their bats from the first
s teal ~ng · on a broken . inning, Ro~eitson m~wed
passed . ball play. That down the stde 1-2- 3 111 the
rntssed run would later sixth then in the seventh ·
prove to be a valuable f '
d
d·'
missed opportunity for the a ter Eastern ha score m
Tornadoes. Katie Sayre the top of . the seventh
wa lked. the after a stnke mmng . _With two out,
out. Rachel Chapman dou- Holter smgled, Powell
bled home Sayre. Brigette walked,
Robertson
Barnes tripled home walked, and Lodwtch had
Chapman then a Joanne a bases loaded two-run
Pi cKe ns single brought smgle ..
home Barnes. the score 3In the Tornado half the
0.
inning following a strikeAs Southern 's Chapman out, Pullins and Chapman
~ree zed through t~e J?:HS singled
and doubled
Then
hne-up, SHS mamtamed respectively.
the lead. Southern, mean- Robertson famied another
wh il e. collapsed at the SHS batter and got
plate at the hand s of Katie Chapman to ground out to
Robertson. The veteran end the game.
EHS pitcher gre~ stronger
After the first inning,
and gamed confidence as Eastern 's Robertson domrthe game progres~ed . She nated . the game on the
went on to fan etght and
b
· · ·
walked just one.
mound. Ro ertson mtmu. In tile EHS fourth. dated the SHS batters wrth
· Kri sta White reached on her decelVlng deb very and
an error at second, then mowe~ the :rornadoes
with a two strike count down hke bowling pms.
Kass Lodwick launched a Robertson clatmed the
rocket over ·Emily Hill's win with eight strikeouts
head in center for a home and a w~;~lk. whtle ·
ruh , the score 3-2 . · Chapman pitched well but
Southern threatened in the suffered the loss with two
fifth when Pullins was hit strikeouts and four walks.

Baseball

Bv Scon WoLFE

in the 300 meter hurdles.
Distance man Chris Davis
pushed himself to a second
place in both the 1600 meters
from Page 81
and the 3200 meter events.
In the boys running events,
For the girls -ream Jennifer
Werry was able to sprint to a Hayman (31.0) and Brittani
second in both the 100 (11.5 Hensley (32.8) sprinted to a
,;ec) and the 200 {24.4). while second and fourth place finish
still anchoring the 4 x I00 in the 200 respectively. The
meter relay team to a second 400 was won by Hayman with
place finish. Austin Cross hur- a time of I:09 seconds.
dled his way to a second place

Track

De troit

W
1

National League

East Division
W, l

Pet·

GB

Montreal

5

Philadelphia

54

.556 ,

New York
Atlanta
Florida

4

5

~

6
6

.444 ,
.400 ·

4

4

556

.400,.

I

1.
,.

Central Division

W

Pet
750
66 7
.55 6
.500
.333
.222

L

Houston
Pittsburgh
Chicago
St. LOUIS
Cincin nat i

6

2

6
5
4

3
4
4

3

6

Milwau~ee

2

.7

' GB
'
•
. t ',
2
3'.
4.

West DiviSion

W

Pet
GB
San Francisco
9
1
.900.
6
3
.667
Co lorado
Los Angeles
5
6
455
4 6
.400
San Diego
,Arizona
2
7
.222
Wednesday's Games
Ch•cago Cubs 3. Montreal 0
San Francisco 15. San Diego 11
Los Angeles 5, Ar izona 2
•
Florida 3. N.Y. Mets 2
Milwaukee 3. Pittsburgh 2
Philadelphia 16. Atlanta 2
Houston 4 , Cinc•nna\1 3
Colorado 9, St. LOUIS 4
ThurwdaY's Games
Pittsburgh 3, Milwaukee 1
Montreal 7, Chicaco Cubs 1
Colorado 7, St. Louis 6
Florida 4, N.Y. Mets 3
Allanta 6, Philadelphia 2
Houston 4 , Cinctnnati 2
San Francisco 2, Los Angeles 1
Friday's Games ·
F»ittsburgh (D 'Am ico 0· 1) at Ch ic ago
Cubs (Zambrano 1·0). 3:20p.m .
N.Y. Mats (Cone 1·0) vs. Montrea l (Ohka
0·1) al San Juan , 6:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Myers 0-t) at Ci nCi nnati
(Wil son 0-0), 7:10p.m.
1
Atlanta (Ram irez 1· 1) al Florida (Penny
0·1), 7:35p.m.
St. Louis ·(Morris 0·0) at Housl on
(Moe hler 0·0) , 8:05 p.rri.
Colorado (Oii11er 0-0) at San Otego
(Lawrence 1·0) . 10:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Franklin 0-~) at A'rizona
(Johnson 0-1). 10:05 p.m.
Los Angeles (Od.Perez 0-0 ) at San
Francisco (Rueter 1-0), 10: 15. p m.
Saturday's Games
Philadelphia at Cincinnat i, 1:15 p.·m
Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs. 2 :20 p.m.
Los Angeles at San Francisco, 4 :05 p.m.
N.Y. Mats vs. Montreal at San Juan. 6:05p.m.
Atlanta at Florida, 6:05p.m.
St. Louis at Houston. 8 :05 p. m .
Colorado at San Diego, 10.05 p.m.
Milwaukee al Arizona. ~0 : 0 5p . m
Sunday 's Games
N.Y. Mets vs . Montreal at Sa n Juan.
12:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Cincinnati. 1.15 p.fl1
All3nla a1 Florida. 1:35 p.m.
St. Louis at Houslon, 2:05 p.m .
Pinsburgh at Chicago Cubs. 2 :20p .m
Milwaukee at Anzona, 4.35 p.m.
Colorado at San Diego, 5 p.m .
Los Angeles at San Francisco. 8 :05 p. m.

·L

American League
East Division

W
New York
Boston
Toronto
Tampa Bay
Baltimore

Kansas City
Chicago
Cleveland
Minnesol a

L

Pet
.889
600
.556
.400
.333

8
1
6
4
5
4
4
6
3
6
Central Dh1ision

.W
7

L
0

5
3
3

4
5
6

0
8
West Division

Pet
1.000
.556
.375
.333

GB
2

3
4 ',

5
GB

3
4
5

.000

~rtbune
7' 1

Pet
GB
Oakland
778
4
5
.444
Anahe im
3
Seattle
4
5
.444
3
Texas
4
3
6
.333
Wednesday's Games
Kan sas City 9, Detroit 6
Toronl o 10. Boston 5
N Y. Yankees 2, Minnesota t
Cleveland 5. Chicago Wh ite Sox 3
Tampa Bay ~ 0, Balt•more 7
Oakla r)d 13. Texas 5 '
Anahe1m 5. Seattle 1
Thu rsday 's Games
Ba ll•more 4. Ta mpa Bay 3
Kansa s C •ty 4, Detroit 2
N.Y. Yankees 2, Minnesota 0
Texas 5, Oakla nd 4
Boston 8 , Toron!O 7
Chicago White Sox 7, Cleveland 2
Anahe1m 3, Seattle o
Friday 's Games
Bal!l more (Jo hn so n 0· 0) at Boston
(P.Marli nez 0-0) , 2:05 p.1n .
Minnesota (Rogers 0·0) at Toronto (lldle
1·1). 7:05 p.nl
Tampa Bay (Ke n n ed~ 0·0) at N Y
Yankees (Weaver 0-0 ). 7:05 p.m .
Chic ago Wh• te Sox (Loa •za 1-0) at
Detroit (Bernero 0-1). 7:0 5 p.m .
Kansas City (Hernandez 2-0) at
Cleveland (Westbro ok 0· 1), ?· OS p.m ·
Texas (Park 0-2) at Seatlle (Garcia I· t ),
10:05 p.m .
Oakland (Hudso n · 1·0) at Anaheim
(L ackey 0-1). 10·05 p.m.
Saturday 's Games
rvM nesota at Toronto, ~ ·05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees.. ~ :05 p.m
Ka nsas Cily at Cleveland, ~ :05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Oetroil. 1·as p m .
Baltimore at Boston, 5:05p.m .
Texa s at Seattle , 1o·o5 p.m
Oakland at Anahe im. t0:05 p.m.
Sunday's Games
Minnesota at Toro nto. 1 05 p.m.
Tam pa Bay al N.Y. Yankees. 1:05 p.m
Kansas C1ty at Cleve(and. 1:05 p.m
Ch1cago Wh1te Sox at Delro•l . 1 05 p m
Baltim ore at Boston, 2:05 p.m.
Texa s at Sealtl e. 4.0!5 p m.
Oakla nd at Anahe1m. 4'05 p m

L
2

Phoenix
42 36
.538
Seatt le
39 39
500
Golden State
38 40
.487
L.A. Clippers
· 24 54
.308
x-c linched playoff spol
y-clinched division
Wednesday's Games
Boston 87, Wash inQ1tm 83
Orlando 88, Toronto 82
Alla nta 97, New Jersey·92
,
Milwaukee t l2. L.A. Clippers 92
Detroi t 11t , Chicago 102, OT .
New Orleans ~00 . Cleveland 81
San Antoni o 84, Portland 79
Utah 94, Houston 73
Phoenix ~ ~ 2, Dallas 89
Sea11 1e 100. Mln nes ol a 92
Thursday'&amp; Gam••
Philadelph ia 99, Boston 78
L.A L a~ers 117, Sac1amenlo 104
Friday 's Games
Mi l wau~ee at Toronlo, 7 p.m.
Cleveland a! Atlanta . 7:30p.m.
Orlando at Indiana, 8 p.m.
Portland at Memphis, 8 p. m
Washi ngton at Miami , 6 p.m.
Ph iladelphia at New York, 8 p m.
L.A. Clippers at MinJTesota, 8 p.m
New Jersey at Ch 1cago. 8 :30 p.m .
Seattle at San Antonio, 9 :30 p.m .
De tro1t at New Orleans . 8 :30pm.
D.allas at U1ah, 9 p.m.
Denver at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m .
Golden Stal e at Phoen ix , t0:30 p.m.
Sa tu rday 's Games
Atla nla a! Washtngton . 7 p.m .
Boston at Orlando, 7 p.m.
New York at Cleveland 7:30p.m .
Toro nto at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Seanle at Hous1on. 8:30p.m.
Golden Stal e at Dallas. 8 :30p.m
L.A. Clippers at Denver, 9:30 p.m .
Sunday's Games
Indiana at Milwaukee. 3 p.m .
Ct1 1cago at Minnesota. 3 :30 p.m
L.A. La~ers at Portland , 3!30 p.m.
Detr o11 at Mernph1s, 4 p.m .
Boston at Miami, 6 p.m
New Orleans at Philadelphia . 6 p.m.
San Anton1o at PhOen ix. 9 p m.

Pro Basketball
Nation al Basketbal( Assoclall on
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L
Pc1
GB
x-New Jersey
48 30
.6 15
47 3 1
x-Ph•Jadelph•a
603
)(·B oston
42 37
.532
40 38
Orlando
513
.462
Washington
36 42
New YorK
35 . 43
449
Miami
24 55
304
Central Division
W
L
Pet
GB
)(·DetrOit
49 30
.61 5
)( ·Indiana
46 32
.590
2
)( ·New Orlea ns
43 35
.55 1
5
9 ",
Milwaukee
39 40
494
Atlanta
32 46
4 10
16
Ch1cago
28 5 1
354 20
24
Toronto
24 54
308
Clevelan
15 63
192
33
WESTERN CONFERENCE
M idwest Div ision
W
L
Pc1
GB
x-San Ant6n1o
58 20
744
x- Dallas
57 2 1
.73 1
x-Minnesota
.608
48 3 1
x- Utah
46 33
582
.506
40 39
Houston
.346
27 51
Memphis
Denver
.21 8
17 6 1
Pacific Division

d

w

y-S acramento
,:; -Portland
M·l.A La ~ ers

57
48
48

L

Pe1

23
30
31

.713
.61 5
60B

t4
17

18
32

Tuesday, April 15
New Jersey at Boston. 7 p.m .
Tam pa Bay at Washington. 7 p.m.
Dallas at Edmonton, 9 p.m.
Wednesday, April16
Ottawa at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m .
Tampa Be~ at Washingto~ . 7 p.m
Philadelphia at Toro nto. 7 p.m .
Colorado at Minnesota . 7:30p.m.
VanCOUIIer at St , LOUIS. 8:30p.m
Detroit at Anaheim, 10:30 p.m .

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
M.EIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
HOME
NATIONAL
BANK
PLAINTIFF
-vs
THOMAS F. CUM·
MINS, ET AL.
CASE NO. 02 CV 97 •
NOTICE OF SALE
By v,lrtue of an
Alias .Order of Sale
Issued out of the
Common Pleas Courl
of Meigs County,
Ohio, In the ease of
the Home National
Bank, Plaintiff, vs.
Thomas F. Cummlna,
et al.,
Defendants, upon a
Judgment
therein
rendered, being C11e
No. 02·CV·97 In oald
Court, tho Shariff of
Meigs County, Ohio,
will offer for •ale at

to a point; thence
Norlh 237.09 feet to
an Iron rod, passing
an Iron rod at 22 feat
for ref,rence; thence
East 208 feel to tha
point of beginning,
containing 1.06 acres,

more or less, except·
lng all legal rights of
way.
EXCEPT tha coal
underlying the above
real eatate aa pravl·
ouoly noted In Deed
recorded In Volume
207, Page 68i, Mal go
County
Deed
Roeordo.
EXCEPTING 0.041
acre conveyed to the
State
of
Ohio,
Department
of
Tranapo1'1allon,
by
deed doled June 1i,
200 1, and recordad In
Voluma 127, Page
249, Malgo County
Official Records.
Reference Dead·
Volume 108, Page 285
and Volume 108, Pafl•
287, Malgo County
Official Record1.
Audtlor'o Parcel No
: 18.01142 000
The above daocrlbad
real 811818 II IOld "81
II" without warranties

the lrbnt door of tho
Courthouse
In
Pomeroy,
Melgo
County, Ohio, on the
1tt day of May, 2003,
at 1o: 3 0 a.m., tha following Ianda and ton·
aments , located at
46480 and 46476
Morning Star Road,
Racine, OH 45771 . A or covenantl.
PROPERTY
lagal
complete
description of the raal ADDRESS: 4&amp;480 and
estate Is aalollowa: ..
48478 Morning Star
· Situate In Sutton Road. Racine, OH
Township,
Malgo 45n1
R'EAL
ESTATE
County, Stale of Ohio,
AT:
and being In section · APPRAISED
19, Town 3 Norlh, $55,000.00. The real
Range 12 West of the a1tata cannot ba oold
Ohio
Company's lor laoo than two
Purchase and being thlrda the appralud
described as lollowo: value.
TERMS OF SALE:
Beginning at an Iron
rod South 1079 feat 10% down day of
from the Northeaot sale, balance on
corner
of
the delivery of deed.
Sold oubjact to
Northwest Ouarlar of
Section 19; thence second half 2002 and
South 208 feat to a aeeruad 2003 real
aotale tu•.
p~lnt In County Road
ALL
SHERIFF'S
30 (Morning Star
OPERATE
Road), palling a 4 SALES
UNDER THE DOC·
loot oak trea at 171
feet for reference-, TRINE OF CAVEAT
thence South 82 EMPTOA. PROSPEC·
degreao 02 mlnutao TIVE PURCHASERS
URGED TO
14 seeondo Waot ARE
210.02 feat along CHECK FOR LIENS IN
PUBLIC
County
Road
30 THE
(Morning Star ROMI) RECORDS OF MEIGS

'

COUNTY, OHIO. THE
MEWS
COUNTY
SHERIFF MAKES NO
GUARANTEE AS TO
THE STATUS OF
TITLE PRIOR TO
SALE.
Pouglaa W. Llttla,
Attorney for Plaintiff
3{28), 4(4), 4(11) 3T

BASEBALL
America~ League

TA MPA BAY DEV IL RAYS - Signed
LHP John Rocker to a minor league contract.
National League
w1th RHP Shane Reynolds on a one -year
conlract.
SAN DIEGO PADRES-Op1ioned RHP
SAN FRANC ISCO GIANTS-Placed
RHP Ryan Jensen on the disabled list .
AHP

Recalled

Jesse

Foppert

FALGONS-Re-sign9d

S

Keion Carpenter. Signed C Kevi n Ooglns

\

w11h CB

Shop
Classifieds!

Da lnon Sidney. S igned LB

LEGION BINGO
in Rutland Post 467
' 4/14103
Starting
We will be paying
$80.00 per game.
Several special
games for extra
money.
Starting time 6:30.
Everyone Welcome

OENVER

BRONCOS-N amed

Barlow v ice president of finance .
JACKSONVILLE JAGUA RS- Signed K
James Tuthill
NEW YO RK GIANTS-Signed K Mike

r

Hollis .
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
NHL-Suspended New York Islanders F
Er1c Godard one game for high-slickmg
Ottawa F Chris Nei l during a game on
Ap ril 9
NEW J ER SEY DEVILS- Recalled RW
Mike Rup p, 0 Ray Giro ux. .tlnd G Ari
AhOnen !rom Albany of the AHL.
PHOEN IX COYOTE S- Si gn ed LW Mike
Stutze l to a one-year contract.
COLLEGE
PRE SBYTE RIAN- Named Ed wm Allen
wome n's volleyba ll coach .
QUINCY- Named Marty Bell men 's
basketball coach.
ST. VINCEN T -Named

Don

Harris

men 's basketball coach .
SOUTHWESTERN

OKLAHOMA-

Named Scott Reed men 's baskelbal l '
coach .

r

GIWAWAY

1

ANNouNmtENTS

s ·u ndays Paper

F.O.E.

April, 2003 SGt BC Peterson
Deputy Sheriff
01;,;
iitMi
as;.;o;;;n..;C;,;0;";;;
y,.;,WV;.;.._ _,

2171

r

Free Hot Dogs &amp; Pop
. Prizes from 0-12 yrs ol age.
Members and guest only

GIVEAWAY

l.o~-------_.1
2 free rabbits. 2 New
Zealand doe, 1 black mix
buck, (740)867-0631 asK for
Laura

BINGO
April 12th
6:30pm

Frien d ly Ridge. (740)256 ·
6499
FOUND· Si~e month old
Shepherd Wolf type , been
very well cared for by the
looKs ot it. (740)379·2256
Found· small1ool kit, around

1

Large basement sale , State
R eule . 124 Wesl end ot
Rutland, Friday, Satu rd ay,
S unda~.

c:..:....:.::::..______
M iddleport-Pomeroy's 61h
annual 6-mile long YetloVJ
Flag Yard Sale. May 2 &amp; 3.
look for !he yellow flags! Call
for info aboullocations, 740-

r

992-4055.

YARD SALE·
LOST OR STOLEN· $100
Pr. PLEAsANT
reward · /Of info leading to
retu rn ot Dirtbiko . 1997
Garage Sa le April 7 ·13, 3Honda XR100, white &amp; red .
1/2 Miles our J•m Hill Road .
With ,5. Call·(740)441· 1892
Lots of tools, clothes, &amp;
much more. 8:00 10 5 :00
LOST- 8 year old Male
Aotlweiler, Cherry Point Rd, Huge Sale. Thousands oi
Vinlon . Scar- Left front 10¢ Items . Lois of lree sluff.
Fr iday-Saturday B-3. 178
ankle . t740)388-0876
Mill on Rd . Camp Conley.
Lost. Tritronlc shock collar Rain or Shine.
~
on Carson Farm. (Clifton ,
Yard Sale. Saturday, April,
WV. ), red with reflective
12. 9am, Krodel Club House
1ape. Reward. · 1304)113 ·
side 1 &amp; 2.
9542 alter 5:00p.m . or reave
Yard Sate:=Saturday, April 1 ,
message.
9 :00 to 5:00 . 306 151h .
male dog found around At 7 Street. Near the DMV. Home
Forest Run Rd . area. Decor, clothes. com puler
Posslbiy lost dog alter vehi· equipment. something for
cle accident. (740)992-3779 everyone.

- - -- -

l~lto~
of

. , CIA"I' I . ,Ol.I.AN _.;....._ _...__ _

Reom1n.o•
scrambled worda bf'
low to form lour sj'"plt Wordt
fo11r

American Legion
Middleport

IJIBLOY

Chicken BBQ
Racine Fire Dept.
Sunday, April 13th
Serving at 11 :00 a.m.

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@ mydailyregister.com

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

Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

~

Whe,n my Dad was twenty he
made up h1s mind to get rich, but
he never did. When I asked him
~:~::::::::::-::_~...., why, he said .it was easier to
I; I l N I V
change -- . - - - 7
~-.,_,r~'i-T,.....::'"ol.::....;..l".!-.r,--1 0 Co..,plooo lho chvcklt ouorod

I. I. I.
s

I

I

1.-.J.I.-..1..-..1.-..1..-.1..-.J.

1st Pack $10.00
All after that $5
Starburst $1250

by flllil\g in the mit&amp;IOQ words
you develoP from step No. 3 b•low.

,

American Legion
Middleport

Yesterday's SCIIAM-I.ITS .ANSWIRS

Gamble -Blush- Query- Neuron • R',)MOR

someone asked the town spinster if it were true she
was getting married. • Oh no." the spinster laughed . '
but 1 ani really thankful for the RUMOR!'

.,

·-------················ ····-----------------~-----·
I

FLEA MAiuG:r

Kessel's Produce and Flea
Mkt. Open Thurs-Fri-Sat.
Now renting spaces , t354
Jackson PiKe, (740) 4467787

r

WAI'mD

roBuv

Absolute Top Dollar : U.S.
S ilver ,
Gold . Coins,
Proofsets , D•amonds, Gold
Rmgs ,
U.S Currency.M .T.S Coin Shop, 151
Second Avenue, Galhpotis,
740·446·2842
l \ lt'ltl, \ lf \ 1

-. 1 H\ H I .._

HFJ .P WANllll
ATIN : Point Pleasant
Poslal positions. Clerks/car riers /sorters .
No
exp.
· required . Benefils . For &amp;Mam ,
sala ry, and testing information ca ll (630)393-303~ Ext
782 . Bam-Bpm. 7 days.

AHn: Work from home.
$500· $1 500/mo. PT
$2000- 54500/mo. FT
800-286-9748
www.retire41 1.com

POUCIES: Ohlc Vallly Publishing reserves the rigtlt to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be reported on the first dey of publication ond1hel
Trlbune-Sentlnai-Regllltr will be responsible fOf' no more than the coat ol the space occ upied by the error and only the first Insertion. We shall not
any loss or tKpense thlt rea una from the publication Ot' omlulon or an advertisement. Correction will be made In the first available edition. • Box num'"'"'"'•
are alwaya confidential. • Currentl'l!lte card applle~. • All real estate advertisements are subjecl to tt1e Federsl Fsir Housing Act of 1968. • This new11pa~ll!rl
accepts only halp wanted ads meeting EOE standards. We will not knowingly accep1 an~ advenlslng in violation of the law.
"

1~.,11·0-HELP-·W-ANJED
__...II'10 HfllWANJED I r
. .1.0-·ll·~-~.s:u:-$•._,..~ ...~-M-~iiiiLEiiiRiiisiii!iiioE·M-ES.· r~.w-·A·La·CRE.IS.~&amp;-(;E..._;.~I
,.I

Do you enjoy talking to people on the telephOne? Are
you persuasive and confident? Do you enjoy knowing
What •s going on in Pomeroy,
Middleport and all of Meigs
Co unty? Would you onjoy
a ca~ee r in inside sales
wilh no night or weekend
' hours? How about 9am • 5:
30pm , Monday throu gh
Friday with paid holidays,
vacations. sick leave , a
401 (k) plan and medical
1nsurance? Our newspaper
1n Pomeroy has 1 opening
for a permanent. professioninside
salesperso n.
al
Compensation is a combine~
lion of base salary and commission. This job will not be
open long, so call L arr~
Boyer today at (740) 4462342 Monday through Friday

Medi Home Health Agency,
Inc. seeking AN's lor the
Gallipolis, OH area . We offer
a compe;titive salary, bene~
fils package, 40 1k, fl ex time,
and sign on bonus. Pl ease
send resume l o 430 Second
Avenue,
Gallipolis,
OH
45631 . Attn : Dia na Harless.
Clinical Manager.

t acre. riverfront brick and
vinyl, 3 bedrooms , 2 bath, 2
fireplaces, hardwood floors ,
approximate ly 2000 sq . It
Full basemen! , $160,000
(740)446-0538
- - - - - - -- 3
BEDROOM
MOME
2 bath. only $ 17.900. For
listings call t -800·7 19·3001
Ext. F144

Go to Work Immediately!
Laborers and Clerical need·
ed in Gallipolis Area . Call
Ex1ras al (304 )522- 4975

3 Bedroom

mornings between Sam and
9am
and
afternoons
belween 4pm and 5pm. It
those hours are not conven-

Gallipolis Career College

ient for you to call, email a
cover letler and your resume
to larry at lbover@mydajhdribune com Be 1asl !

1'40

Lawn Care Helper, must be
dependable, hard working ,
CNA'S
&amp;
Aes1dant (740)388·9416
Animnli In te rviews Are
Now Be1ng Co nducted For Loca l body shop seeks qual C NA &amp; Residenl Assist ant ified repair tech . Competl!ive
Positions. II You Are A pay. good working environ·
Caring
Enthus iastic. ment. Call lo set up in)er·
Dependable Pe rson . Then view. (7 40)446·4466
We Want You To Join Ou r
Team. Come . O n Over &amp; Ma ry 's Tee Time Grill at
Check tJ s Oull Competitive Riverside Golf Club- now
CNA
Wages,
Paid accePting applications for
Vacations. Paid Meals Many kitchen and wall staff, part·
time and lull·tlme positions
O!her Benefit&amp;.
avti.Uable, (304)773·5354
Ravenswood Care Center .
~ 1t3 Washington St ..
McOonalds Rio Grandt now
Ravenswood, WV.
hiring any time positions.
References Raqulred
Insurance available: Paid
Delivery Person needed for vsca11on and holidays . Apply
loc al Furniture Store. Send within.

REAL E:STA

n:

WANrEll

FOR RENT
rooms , 2 bedrooms, 1 2002 Clayton, 3 bedroom . 2
bath
,
14x64
.
li
ke
new,
bath , full' basement. Price
Homes From SI 99/Mo ,
$19 .000. (740)742·87 16
Reduced (740)446-1828
FORCLOSED HOMES 4%
95 Commodore Citation 1/2 Dow n, 30 Years at 8.5'%
Beautilul 3/2 home in private
iurnished . $16,000 Neg. APR . For L• stin gs, 800 -3t !:1Charolais Lake on 3 acres
(304)675·3094
3323 E,l 1709
mit Many extras. Must Seel

TR-YNING

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Toda91 740-446-4367.
1-800,21 4-()452

(7 40)446-2927

www.ga ll lpoilsca rearcol lega . ~om

I:Z~R,;;e;l!gi,;#;;::90::,·~05::,·~12;,:7..;;4;:B.,
. -,
1
1 10
't~

Gl:

Lw--..iiiiiliiii-_.J

All niJ\Ialate advertising
In tbla newspaper i1
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1969
which makes U Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, \Imitation or
discrifJlinatlon baaed on
race , coloi". religion, aex
familial atatua or national
origin . or any Intention to
make any such
preference, llmlllltlon or
dlacrtmlna11on,"
This newapaper will not
knowingly accftpt
advertisements for real
estate which 11 In
violation of the lew. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised In
lhia newapaper are
available on an equal
opportunity beau.

'

L.r.~o_OPPo_B.~
.......,.~
-.
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that
you do Ousiness with people
you know, and NOT to send
money tnrough the mail until
you have lnvestigaled the
offerin .
MONEY

TO loAN
DEBT CRISIS I
Conaolldelion Is !he key lo
personal loans, mortgages,
and other financial services.
Available up to $500 ,000
Low Interest. CALL TOLL
FREE : 1·8n·436·6297

.i

I'RomiSIONAL
Resume to JA 10, 200 Main
'Messe nger, part
ti me, __
SERVJW
Street, Point Pleasant, WV
de~ndable honest pe!'!lon,
25550 .
eart'y Saturday am work IO
TURNED DOWN ON
Medl Home Health ~gency, area. car &amp; refarences need· SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
Inc .. seeking a West VIrginia ed, $10 an hour, 1· 888·21 5·
Physical Therapy Assistant 5005 .
1-888-582-3345
lor the Gallipolis, Ohio area.
NUR6E8 tRNo) ·
We offer a compelitl ve
$47.00
per
hour,
salary, benelits pa ckage,
Columbus, OH. Al l Units.
401 k, snd !lex time . Please
FULL TIME (800)437·03'411
FOR SAI.t:
send resume to 430 Second
Avenue. Gallipol is, OH Truc;:k Drlvtra, Immed iate
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
45631 . Attn: Diane Harless, hire, class ACOL req uired,
tor immediate possession .all
Clinical Manager.
excellent pay, experience
within 15 min. of downtown
Full-time secretary needed required, Eam up to $1,000. Gallipolis. Rates as low as
lor a fast-paced Gallipolis por wHk.Call 304· 675· ~%. (740)446·3218 .
business . Applicant needS to 4005
be familiar with basic office
procedures, telephone com·
mun •cations &amp; computers.
and enjoy dealing with the
publiC. Send resume to P.O.
Box 1 133 , Gallipolis, OH
45631 .
Needed
Gallipolis/Pt .
Pleasanl area futt tim e
restaurant manager, experience required. Please send
rt:tsume clo Box J AOB Polnl
Pleasant Reg1ster. 200 Main
Street, Point Pleasant. WV
25550

1998 28x56 Duchess. 3 br.
2 lull baths, musl be moved
740·256-1683.

4:

BUSINES'i

san

Corp, 1·800·577-4310 .

Corner Build ing lot 80x130
on Monro e Ave (304)5933 104
- - -- - - -- Rio Grand e area, 3 to 30
acres lots, some restnc t1ons ,
wat er &amp; electric. (740)24 5·
5747

~

Experienced ,
licen sed
Physical
T he ra pist Georges Portable Sawmill,
Assistant, excellent benefits. don't haul your logs to the
se nd
resume:
141 m1ll just ca ll 304·675-1957
Avon Representalives want- Columbus Rd .. Athens. Oh
45701 or fax 74D-593-8221. - - - - - - - ed . t740)446-3358
Handyman . yard
wa:rK.
AVON! All Are8s! To Buy or Help wanted caring tor the (740)992-2741 ask lor Tlm .
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- el derly. Darst Group Home.
675- 1429.
now paying minimum wage, Lawn Care. Tree Tr imming,
new shifts: 7am-3pm, ?am· Tree Removal , Sprinkler
Occupational 5pm, 3pm-11 pm, f 1p r:n· System, U gh! Construction,
Ce!t)fied
Therapy Assistanl· The 7am, call740.992-5023.
and Excavalion. (304)638·
Therap~ team at Overbr~
Leave Message.
Rehab Center, a beautiful Join !he. team of quality care
1 DO bed skilled nursing and professionals at Overbrook
Will pressure wash homes,
rehab tacility. in MiddiSport. Center. We are taking appli·
trailers, decks, metal buildO hio is seekin g a tulltime ca lions
lor pa rt
lime
ings and gutters. Call
COTA Wages are $32-$37K LPN's/R N's for 12 'ho ur
(740)446-0151 ask for Ron
depending on experience shihs. Benefit i1ack~ge availor leave message
and benefits include med- able. Please come in and
II '\ \'\( 1\1
ical. denial, lite insurance, co mplete our application
22 paid days off. For more today at 333 PaQe Street.
information call Greg Stout
_M_idd_le.:.po
_•_1._0_h_ _ _ _
at
Dive rsified Health

AZ

1996 Norris Mobile Home
14x80. 3 bedrooms , 2 balhs ,
complele kitchen &amp; dining.
Cov\'!red porch, 2 storage
buildings. Lol SIZe 93lC462
A-1
Condition .
Call
Somerville Realty (304)6753030 (304)675·3431

new t~ remod 3 bedroom house or new
2001 ~4x80 Oakwood , 3
eled. in Middleport . call Tom
model tra iler w/ nlce yard for
BA, 2 bath, all appl1anc es
Anderson after 5 p.m.
sa
le on land contract
included. We'll make· down
992·3348
payment, you ta~e over pay.
Super 8, Gallipolis, now tak- 3 bedroom , 2 ba th. 508 ments of S370 month, or buy
ing applications for house- State Street, Thurman . OH lor $22 ,000. (216 )351-7086
(740)379· evenings and wee~end s, or
~eeping . Must apply in per- 145.000. Call
(216)257-1485 days .
9249 or (740)245-D358
HOU!iFS
son .

HoMES

-,.-~-1.._I..,.L::..,...Y....;O--ll ::~,

BINGO
April 15th ·6:30 pm

AucnoNAND

1

automatic washer, girls
clothes 10-14 Old Navy,
women's up to 14 &amp; miscel·
· laneous i1ems.

'::~~~~, S©1\.~lA- ~ £/fs· ::~:
-----------=-=
O
l•"•n

All Packs $5.00
Starburst $1250

I

YARD SALE

y

the 6th Day of January 2003
in favor of Dona hues 's
Ente rprise s l or the sum
$1 ,490.00 . an d the 2 nd
iudgemenf was on the 4th
day of Febuety 2003 In favor
ol Fields Hardware l or the
sum of $1 ,732.28 . which has
been levied on the said
property by me as a Deputy
She riff of Mason County
posted
this 1oth day of

Easter Party
for kids April 13. 1 pm. 3 pm

'·'

r~r;:;Y;AR1:&gt;:SM;:.E:.:_:~ r

1 2
ma le
house
ca1S.
neutered. (740)992-7588
C·1 Beer Carry Out permit
GAll.IPOLIS
lor sale. Chesl er Township, 2 school buses tor storage,
. Meigs County. se nd letters already gulled ready for Friday &amp; Satu rday · April
of interest lo: The Daily immedia te
possession 11&amp;12. Yard tools. 6' disk.
Sent1nel, PO Bo)( 729·20, (740)742·2632 a~er 5pm .
lawn mowers, bicycles, baby
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
clolhes, stroller wl car seat,
crib , toys , computer games
part
lab
puppies.
3
and much more! 2144 Tyn
Do you need your GED or (740 )256·6827
Rhos Rd. (2.6 miles west of
High -School Diploma? Do - - - - - - - - Rio Grande otl Cherry Rid ge
you know how to write an 3 pu pp ies, 112 Auslralian
Rd .) Follow the signs to
effective resume? Do you Shep./ 1/2 German , Black &amp;
Camp Francis AsOury.
know what qualities employ· Wh ite. B wee~s old 740·367ers are looking For in an 7947 after 6pm .
Moving Sale· 1 day only,
employee? Do you know - - - - - - - ' -- - April 11th everythmg goes, 1
how lo keep a job once you 6 kinens , 3 black. 3 orange. mile oul German - Hollow
get it? We can Help! For liner trained, good &amp; chil- 1740)379·2762
more information, call the dren . 6 weeks old . '( 740)4414
Meigs
Cou nly 159()
'"
AIID S,\LE·
STEP!JOG!ABL E Program
-P oMEROV/MUliJU:
at 740·992·6600 or 740- Adult Black &amp; While male
992·6930, or stop in Monday dog 740·256-6499
307 Spring, Pomeroy, 4·12through Friday at 111 West - - - - - - - - - 03 . $1 a bag clothing , blue
Second S.treet in Pomeroy, To. good home. Black Lab jeans 251t a pair, compuler
Oh. Ma~e a d ifference •n milC . Black with while marKGarace sale· Sat. April 12th.
your lite Today!
ings. (7 40)388-94 16
8 :30-5p m, 40216 State
To whom il may concern;
ANI&gt;
. Route 684 Lantz residence,
Take notice thai 1will on the ~~---oioFiiOUNDiilii---"
22nd day of April 200 3, 81 '
the hOur of 12 noon, at The FOUND- Male &amp; Female
Mason county Courthouse goats. Black &amp; White .

Concessions available

Phone~---------------------

-----------------------------------

Bu•lness Days Prior To
Publication

!fu,nday In- Column: 1:00 p.m.

LaiT

PPMS Gym, April 12th 6 pm

Address .,...----------~-------­

Box 4611, Golllpollo, OH 45631

Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

r.

Furidraiser
20 games $20.00

r···································-···-········•
Subscriber's Name _________________

P,O .

\'\'\til \I I \II '\I"

r. ~

~unbap tltlme~ -~enttntl

Ohio Valley Publlohlng

Display Ads
All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

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

AUoys L.L.C.
Valley Lumber, (740)992The 1st judgement was on 3578

,tlotnt ,t9lea~ant 1\.egt~ter
The Daily ~entinel
6aturbap ~ime' -&amp;enttnel

Mall or drop off th is coupon along with a copy of your photo 10 to

Word Ads
Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Comple.te

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

J 1m

steps, sell at Public auc1ion.
for cash, the following prop·
erty1 to wit;
A ~ 997 Chev. Tahoe and a
1998 0\ds Aurora to sa11sfy
2 executions L!POn judge ment obtained
In th e
Magistrate Court of Mason
Countv anainst Highlanders

Jllatlp tlrribune

City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - - - -- - - --

HOW TO WRITE AN AD

Dashon Polk.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

SPECIAL
AMERICAN

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (7 40) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
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Monday thru · Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

'and K John Markham . Traded OT M ichael

National Hockey League
Playoffs
FIRST ROUND
(Best-ot·7)
Wednesday, April 9
N.Y Islanders 3, Ottawa 0, N.Y. Islanders
lead seri es ~ -0
New Jersey 2. Boston 1. New Jersey
leads sertes t-0
Toronto 5 , Philadelphia 3, To ronto leaPs
series 1-0
Edmonton 2. Dallas 1, Edmonton leads
seri es 1-0
Thursday, Aprll1 0
Washin gton 3, Tampa Bay 0, Washington
leads senes t-O
Anahe1m 2. Detroit 1. 30l Anaheim
leads ser1es t -0
.
Minne sota 4. Colorado 2, Minnesota
leads series t -0
St. LOUIS 6, Vancouver 0 . St. LOUIS leads
series 1·0
Friday, April 11
Boston at New Jersey, 7 p.m
Toronto at Philadelphia , 7 p.m.
Edmonton at Dallas. 9 p.m.
Saturday, April 12
Wash•ngton at Tampa Bay. 3 p.m
Anaheim at Detroit. 3 p.m .
Minnesota at Colorado, 3 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Ottawa . 7,p.m.
St. Lou is a! Vancouver, t 0 p.m.
Sunday, April 13
New Jersey al Boston. 3 p.m.
Dallas at Edmonton. 8 p.m .
Monday, April 14
Ottawa at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.
Philadelphia at Toronto, 7 p m.
Colorado at Minnesota . 7:30p.m.
Vancouver at St. Louis. 8:30 p,m.

on your home delivered subscription!

···..

Offiee !foal"~

FOOTBALL ·
National Football League

Hockey

ll\egtl)ter

from

Fresno of !he PCL.

ATLANTA

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailytribu ne.com

Ad ...

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.

Good used 3br/2bth. Only
$7995 Inc Iu des d e 11
·very, Near Cl iffside Golf CluO, 3
br., 2 ba .. 2000 sq. tt. home
Call Karena 740·385-9948
695 DO per mon dep &amp;
Land Home Packages avail- lease req . (no pets) 740·
able. In your area. {740)446· 446· 2957 or 304-59 3·0369
3384 .

1420 I\10811~E HOMES

Last 2002 Model Lincol n
Park. 64x28, 3 bedroo m , 2
bath , tot al e lect ric, heat
pump, dEilivered &amp; set on
your fou ndation, reduced
from $55.365 IO
only
$47.485. Cole 's
Mobil e
Homes , u.s. 50 Eas t.
Athens, Oh , 740-592 · 1972.
"Where You Ge1 Yo ur
Money 's Worth "

New 3 bedroom, brick , 2 car
· garage , corner lot. Great
location. 2 miles from
Holzer. Green
&amp; Cit~
Schools (740)448· 9986
Price tor quick sale- 3 bed·
room home in Middleport
plus 1 bedroom renlal on
same lot. reduced down td
$52.000. (740)992·6154

RFNr

14x72. 2 bedro om. 2 beth ,
all electric. aJr. Prtc e S450 +
deposit. 1 year lea se .
(7 40)446·1 062
2 bedr oom . large liv 1ng
room , a1r. porch &amp; awni ng.
storage build in g. Very nice.
1h Gall ipolis. (740)446- 1409

New 2003 Doublewide·. 3 BR
2 br mab1le home lor rent.
&amp; 2 Bath . Only $1695 down
liKe new cal l 740-446-2003
and &amp;295/mo. 1-800-691·

6717
New 3brl 2bth . Only S995
down and on ly 5197.4 7 per
month . Call Harold , 740385·7671.

3 Bedroom.. t - 112 bath, CIA ,
all elect nc . also 3 bedroom.
1 bat h hou se . no pets . each
$450 t depos1t. (740)4464824

We have new sectional &amp;
singl e wide homes as low as
$t80 per monlh, 800-8372338

3 bedroom , very ntce on
2 t a. refer ences requ ired .
$415 monlh. (740)256-1 41 7
or ;740 )256-6228

340

3br. Mobile Home . S1ts on
approx. 3 ac res. Central A1r.
E ~ecellent c ondition. Lease
Required . (304 )895-3400 o t
304·895-3562 afler 6pm . ·

8USINHi'i
Country home, t O rooms . 7
AND
8UIW~G.S
aCres, fenced pastu re. River
740
367·
Valle y dlslrict .
Co rner
Restaurant
0144
Middleporl , Ohio estabFor sale or rent. 3 bedroom , liShed 1991 business &amp;
1 bath , full basemen! home building, turn key operalion.
on Evan s Heights . (740)256- (740)992·3955

6846

FOR

Beautitul River View Ideal
For
1 O r 2 People .
References, Depos it, No
Reedsville corner ot SA 124 Pets. Foster Tra iler Pa rk ,
&amp; 68t, garage. equipped 740-44t-0181 .
lube room wfllre c hanger,
Mobile home fo r ren!, no
parts room or store on side
pe1S. (74 0)992·5858
and tire room in rear, on
90x90
lot.
$50.000 , Nice 2 br. trailer, Church St.
t7 40)378·6201
Bidwell
$325.mo.
plus
Rio Grande area. 2400
sq.ft. , Off1ce/ Com mercia l
Build 111g fo r Ren t/ Lease .
Plenty oH parking . (740)245·
5747

..

Priced to Selll $90 ,000
T ~ &amp;
1998. 3 bedr()Om, 2 bath .
large kitchen , stone lire- L,.
...._"'"•'•-•1.
_ __•ACRMGt:
place . On State Route 588
Immediate
Possession . ~ acre bUilding loi s: 3&amp;1/2
(740)983-()730
acres. and 5 acres tracls.
Green
Schools. Greal loca MOBILE HOMFS
li on. At 588. (740)446-9966

i

FOR SALE

1 Acre Lot out Jerrys Run
1973 Mobile Home, 2 bed - Roa d,
Apple
G ro ve.
room, new windows &amp; doors. $10.000. (304)576· 3389
Has under penn ing. Call
Lo t lor sale in Rac ine,
(7 40)446·131 Q
(740)992-5858

dep.ref. req. 740-388·8070.
One bedroom traile r, $300 ,
water paid. 49 Spruce St.
(740)446·8677 days.

r
-

APARTMENTS
FOR

RFJ~T

1. e nd 2 bed room apar tments , furn ished and unfu r·
nl shed . security deposit
requi~ed . no pels . 740-992·
22 18.
t Bedroo m Apartmenls
Starting
at
$289/mo,
Washer/ Dryer Hookup.
Slove and Refr igerator.
(740 )441-1519 .

�&lt;.

• Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

·r

It~

Friday, April 11, 2003

Friday, April 11 , 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com
AliiOS

QEAU'fiFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
.PRICES AT JACKSON
:-&amp;.STATES, 52 Westwood
'nrive from $297 to S383.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446-2568 .
Equal
Housing Opportun tly.
Beeoh Sl. M;ddleport, 2 bed·
room furnished apartment.
utilities paid. depOSit &amp; references. no pets. (740)9920165
'
Furnished efficiency. All utilities paid. share bath , $135
month , 919 2nd Avenue .
(740)446·3945
Gracious liv1ng. 1 anc;t 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
Fr9m $278-$348. Call 740992·5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.
Newly remodeled 2 bed.. ~o m apartment, Eastern
. Avenue. $400 a month
, iocludes water. Deposit
1
required , references a must.
; No pets·. For information call
'1740)446·4467 (740)446·
: 4262 Ask lor Faye
~Now Taking Appl ications~~ West 2 Bedroom
'b\vnhouse
Apartments,
:t!Ciudes Water Sewage,
' Trash, $350/Mo .. 740-446·
1

i -000~._8_·- - - - - -

• One bedroom apartments.
~ utilities included, 607 2nd,
• S325 single, $375 couple.
~(740) 446·8677 days.
; One bedroom · furnished
;-.:uutrhent in Pt. Pleasant.
......y clean and nice. No
~s . Phone(304)67S-1386

i4ne room efficienc·~ apart: ment, utilities included, $300
4single, $350 couple. 920 4th
~A11El. (740)446-8677 days.
~feasant Valley Apartment
; Are now taking Applications
..to' 2BR , 3BR &amp; 4BR.,
.Applications
are taken
·Monday thru Friday, !rom
;9:00 A.M .-4 P.M. Office is
• l ocated at 1151 Evergreen·
·. Drive Point Pleasant, WV
· Phone No Js (304}675-5806.
E.H.O

doors, trussel of mise items
for sale 304-675·2801
----,------BURN ' F;;tt .
BLOCK
Cravin gs. and
BOOST ~
Energy Like
You Have
Never Experienced .

Trucks !rom $500. For llstlngs 1·800-719·3001 ext.
3901
--------

1968 Ford M,ustang, 72 ,000
m.iles, automatic w/overdri11e. Excellent Condition.
(740)446· 1635 or (740)441·
6629
.:_:.::.:__ _ _ _ __
1984 Buick Limited, 83 ,000
miles, clean. AJC , electric
windows. AM/FM radio, runs
good , (740)446 ·097'v

;::=======i

WEIGHT· LOSS
REVOLUTION
New product launch October
23, 2002 . Call Tracy at
(740)441-1982
' --'-- - - - - Craltsman l awn tractor, 42
inch. 15 HP. 7 years old.
Sedan'
Devo'lle
Excellent Condition ! $600 198. 6
(740)256-1426 .
Cadillac. $600 . 080 call
~=..::_..::.:..::____ 304-67S-4S79
Gas grill, tank, $30; Manual ::::.:.::.:..::...:.:..:._ _ __
Treadmill, S25: Bar, 2 stools, 1992 Corsica V-6 auto. lots
$SO. Quilt tops. $4 5. Phone of new parts &amp; paint. Great
(740 )
_
446 8896
shape. $3200. 1989 Escort
4cyl. auto, 4dr, runs great.
JET
$1800. (740)742·0S09
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1red . New &amp; Re built In i994 Ford ESCOf'!lX , 4 dr., 5
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· speed. CD player S2500.00
800·S37-9528.
080 740-709-1566 or 740245-5399.

TRUCKING

740-985-3564
Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month .

New &amp; Used Heat Pumps-

1994 Ford Tempo, 2 door.
Gas
·Furn aces.
Free auto, $1SOO. (740)256·6104
Estimates. (740)446-6308
1995 Subaru lmpreza AWO.
NEW AND USED STEEL auto, air. AM/FM, cassette &amp;
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar CD, $3700. (7401256· 1189
For
Concre te,
Angle .
EVANS LAWN CARE
Racine, OH
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel 1997 Dodge Stratus. white,
·Fre-eEstlmole:s·
Grating
For
Dra1ns. 4cyl, 7t ,OOO miles. $4,450.
(304)675-40 14
Lawn Molntolnence, Shrub
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Trtmmlno. Snow Remawt
Scrap Metals Open Monday. 1998 Dodge Neon. 4 dr.
&amp; Other Lawn Care Heeds
Tu esday, Wednesday &amp; Sedan $3500. OBO 76,000
Jamie Evans
Linda Evan5
Friday, Bam-4 :30pm . Clo~d miles 304-593- 417
(740) 949-2108 (740) 841-5116
1
Thursd~y.
Saturday
&amp;
Paier (BOO) 976-2471 ,., ""
Sunday. (740)44&amp;-7300
1999 Cavalier 20, auto 41 K
$3,695
~~~
1994 Beretta Z-26 101K
.::rurrur..,-,
~..o.------_.1 $2.895
1996 Cava lier 96K $3.295
Bl ock, brick, sewer pipes,
Take Traqes Cookl
windows, lintels. etc. Claude Motors 740-446-0103
Winters, Rio Grande, DH
~
C;;•';.
";.;4;::.
0·.:;
24;;;5:.,:·5~1.:;.
2 ;.;1·--., 1999 Grand·Am. Automatic,
au power, 4·do'or. red. excel·
PETS
lent shape. Call after
FOR SALE
5.30P.M.
Phone
No.
____
(304)882·2198
Easter Puppies AKC Lab.
Choc/black. 7wks. old April 1999 Pontiac Bonneville SE
V-6 automatic, 70,000 miles.
t 9. (740)985·4174
- - - - - - - - Excellent Condition $8,500.
Pet Grooming- dogs &amp; cats, 2001 Chevy S-10 4cy. Ssp. L:,_ _ _ _ _ __:_
pick-up &amp; delivery, Linda LS package cd player, air
Wad e, Side Hill Rd ., con. aluminum wheels. bed
Rutland, (740)742-8916
cove r, 42, 000 miles, exc.
co nd . $7,SOO. (304)67S·
MUS! CAL
6325

;::;.=======

r

~~~
High&amp; Dry

we

i

Seff~Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992-5232

INSTRUMENTS

2001

Pontiac
Sunlire,
A complete public address 45,000 miles, sunroof, CO
system for Quartet singing, player. Warranty· 70,000
mi tes/ 7 years. $12,000.
7401378·6258
(740)709-1597
580
FRttrrs &amp;

VEGETABLE&lt;;

3

is accept-

OLD GLORY
AUCTION
SERVICES

:ing applications for waiting ~--oiiiiioitiiiiiiiio-.,J
•list tor Hud-su bsized, 1· br, Wanda Burke
:apartment, call 675-6679
74
•EHO
~98- 7244 You have
CongratulaUonol
SPACE
won 2 free movie t;ckels to
FOR RENr
the
Spring
Valley
7
Gallipolis. Call the Sentinel
.Trailer space fo r rent in
I \tnt ..., 1 1'1'1 II ...,
:M;ddleport. (7401992·5858
,\. 11\l ' lfHh.
:Two 1/2·1 acre lots. in
;;;;;;.;;;;...,,
•Mercerville area . $125 per
:month. (740)256· 1015 ·

:r«3

L

.

rrr:;;10;;;;;;;;;F.QuiPMENT~F
A;;;RM;;;
'

r

8116
-------92 Sedan Deville, low miles,
garage kept asking $4BOO

ir~-~~~~-~~S
A_LE_E_-., ~:~::~6 ::~~u~

Every Thursday

Cons~~:;.~·~ed. &amp;

door.

4
2.4. 4 cylinder. lull power,
ptayer, new t1res, 80,000
miles. AJC, ru ns &amp; drives
•4800
080 ·
great.
•
740
441
1547
1 ) "

Thurs. lUa m .. Jpm
•Now doing estate
&amp; h ou sehold sales.

co

Ph one 992•9553
or 742-0226

99 Ford Contour. aprax.
Auctioneer
44,000 miles, auto. ac,
Jim Taylor
· cru ise,
$5800.740·245· ..__..;....,....;:.;....._ _,
0372.

i

Riverwav•

TRUCKS
FOR SALE

(_'"a t"e

L.,~--iiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiio-,1 1978 Ford F-100,

4x4.
Mechanical
Fence post call 740-645· Con dition. Lots of new parts.
$ l 5 00 . (304)675-2 558
2743 will deliver

WANrn&gt;
roRmr

· in Syracuse

E.~ecellent

Wanted to rent- Pasture in
John Deere Model 435
Giltlia Co. with good fences round baler. Baled less than
&amp; water supply. Phone: Jim 800 bales. Like
new
Condition. list new $18,200
sell , lor
$8. 100.
will
(304)675·5724

~r

Sale : Reconditioned
washers. dryers and relrigThompsons
eTitors
Applia nce. 3407 Jackson
Av~nue, (304)675-7388 .

r

LMSroCK

31st Annual Bentley Pig
Sale, Friday, Apnt 18th.
7 :30pm. Fayene County Fair
Grounds,
Washington
Courthouse,
Oh1o.
Good Used Appliances , Consigners Roger Bentley
ReconditiOnfJd
and (937)584-2398 Consigner
G·uara nteed .
Washers. leroy Larric:~ (937)780-4802
Dryer-s,
Ran ge-s,
and
Refrigerators, Some start at 6 year old quarter horse
595 _S~ aggs Appiiances, 76 gelding. Brown. black tail &amp;
Vine St., (740 )446 . 7398
mane, wh1te blaze on face,
wh ite socks. Broke to ride,
Kenmore washer. $95; G.E spirited, saddle and bridle,
dryer. S9S G.E. electric $1100. (740)949·2574
range , $95; G.E. refrigerator,
goats. January·
$95; Kenmore portable Boar
February ~ids pl us Yearling
washer, $150 : Kenmore
Billies (740)446- 4111 or
washer &amp; dryer set. S300:
4~
0 1~
33
:.:9..:·00=s7_ _ __
Table and ch airs, solid :_:(7_:
wood, $125, several night Reg. Angus bulls· Top perStarids. $30 each: Queen formance bloodlines. Maine
size frame &amp; headboard. Chi· Angus show heifers,
very nice, $200. Skaggs heifers . Ored heifers and
Appl iances, 76 Vine Street. crossbred bulls. Slate Run
(740)446-7398
Farm,
Jackson ,
OH
Motlohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio.
(i40)446· 7444 1·87f.830·
9;162. Free Estimates, ~asy
linBncing, 90 days same as
c8sh. VIsa/ Master Card.
Driye- a· linle save alot.

28 6 53 95
0 1c..
~17_4_
__·__ _ __

Registered Black. Angus
Bulls and heifers. Yearlings
and older out of N BAA .
EXEXT, TRAVLERS and
Eclipse, Gentle Guaranteed
Bull. S1 ,0011 and up. Heifers
$7SO. and up. (304)372·
Us'Gd Furniture Stdre, 130
2389
6ulaville Pi~e . We sell mattresses, dressers, couches,
HAY&amp;
bunk beds, bedroom suites,
GRAIN
recliners. Grave monuments
(740)446·4782 Galnpolis, Good quality straw. Volume
OH . Wanted to buy· good discount &amp; deli11ery ava1l·
used couches. manresses, able. Heavy s_
quare bales.
dressers.
$2.85 per bale . (304)675·

r

(Formf'rl\ \Vf1irtlt' \'.t )

Unde r neW ow neiship
and new manage ment.

t979 Ford truck F150 $400
OBO
1993 Chevrolet Corsica,
runs good, working ale
$1850. 304-675-1407

COME JOIN US
7 Days A Week!
Morning

1983 Ford F-150, Extended
Cab, 4x4. 300, 6-cylinder,
lair shape, runs great
(740)446·2847 $2300.

llail• Spt•t·ial'
~'i.: 'lund;~\

Bnnu:h
or ( ·an in aiHI
(';uT' Out~

1997 Ford Ranger XLT.
Runs great, loo~s great.
$5,500. (304)675·6986

L

MllRC'IfANDISE

32119 Welshtown Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992·2432

Hl'alher A. Fry L.M.T.

97 Beech St.
ffiiddleport, OH
[lO'xlO' a10'x20'J

[740) 992-3194
992-6635

10x20
740-992-1717
St Rt 7 Goeglein Rd.
Pomeroy
J&amp;C Lawn Service
Mow&amp; Trim
740-992-6694
Please leave
message if no
answer

*Spring':.
':&lt; Special *

r

94 GMC 4x4 153,000 miles,
loaded , new tires $6000.
88 Jeep Grand Waggoner,
needs some work , runs
good. loaded $tSOO. 740.
_
245 0372

CA!\U'EIIS

&amp;

2001
Keystone
Hornet
Camper. 24 feet , Extra Nice
(304)67S·64q6

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

140-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

$ 1 I. q 5
0 in. P~·rcn11ial .., $ ~. 2 5 .
-1 in . pot " $1 .00 - 'I&gt; I -~.'i
R in &amp; IU in. Cla:y put :-.
&amp; t-'umhm:Hio niun plant ~..-,. $'4 .50 &amp; $7.9 )

740-992-5379
Otfl-r gr'l&gt;d 1hm .'i 11-0.l

'ww acap1i11g
most im·urmrce

Al~· o

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 lsi Thursday
of every'morith
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bnnanm
· (;et 5 FREE

750

F:as1

State Stroot Phone (7-10 )593-6671
Athens. Ohio

JONES'

Tree Service

k

Top · Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

We Make House Calls

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

(304) 675-5282

Gravely

ADVICE
violent. What should I tell
him? - · NERVOUS IN
MAINE
DEAR NERVOUS: Stop
evading Bert's calls. Tell
him , " I know we ' re old
acquaintanc"es, but I'm not
interested in any kind of
relationship with you. Please
do not call again ." If he continues, speak to your lawyer
and to the polite about a
restrai ning order. He appears
to be un able to face rejecti on. ·
·
DEAR ABBY: This summer I will be marrying
"Joan ," a wonderful woman
wh.o means the world to me.
She is a profess ional who has
done very well for herself, in
spite of her poor command
of the English language. For
example, Joan uses "them"
preceding a noun, says
"don't know nobody," and
other nonstandard forms. I
have noticed her grammar is

Smurday , April 12, 7003

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

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Pomeroy. Ohio

992-2975
Lnw11 and Garden Eq11ipmmt is our ·
busirtess, rrot our .. idelirr e

BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

You'H be happiest in the
year ahead if you strive to
keep a balance between your
worldly interests and you r social ones·. Although both areas
wil I vie for your attention.
don'l fa vor one and totall y ignore I he other.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - No matter how badly
you may need a favor today,
don· t accept it from a person
who is known to be a manipula tor. The price you' ll have to
PaY later on could be way out
of line.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - . If you have special
plans for this evenin g, don't
encourage so meone who
rea ll y does n'l want to go
along to join the group. The
odds are she or he will spoi l
the fun for everybody.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
- Someone yo u are depending on to tak e care of an important responsibility will not
come through for you if she
or he has other plans today . ·

1-800-822-041 '1
"W.V's # t Chevy. Pontiac.' Bui ck. Olds

Manning K. Roush
Owner
0 en Mon-Fri 9-5

BISSELL

Cuslom

Best Service at
the Best Price

BUILDERS InC.

New Homes • Vi nyl
New Garages
• Replacement

Sid ing~

Van

Dealer"

CANCER CHECK
Fim1lly... Munt:y raid

to~

when Cillll' t'r

!&gt;! lrik ~..:s .

Ynu chon1--l' the amnum up to $)0,{)00 !
P~lY~ in additilm to other i n ~ur ;tll l' C .
Yuu u"c-thl.' moncv how~.; vcr yl1l! lik~· .
Cam·c-r will ... tr ike \~- h~n you lc&lt;\St ex peel i1.
It will ka\1.' vou anJ )'l'llr famil) linanl'iillly

'"upped .· CANCER CHEC K will lie
thcrL· \\hen y o u need it.

Windows • Ruuling
COM MERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

Cu ll tli l W 1n fr0SL'!'\'C Yill!l ·Chcd
Opc11

'Ja m -~ t ' m

RO CKY H UPP INSU RA NCE

on'"'"'''

I "'' nmuoH." Ill'~
pk·~ur
Call~. folf•l ''""' ,.,,,.,,,.,," on.!•

FREE ESTIMATES
7 40-992-7599

&amp;

FINANCIAl. SEKVICES
Box 189 MIDDLE.PtlHT. OH 45760

(740) 446-1812
~ -'{ 11.1 ,,/ouu/ ••llr
s~ n · i, ·l' PhiiH.'

740-843-5264
J&amp;S Painting

Hill's Self
Storage

Frie ndly &amp; Professional

29670 Bashan Road

for free estimates

Racine, Ohio
4577 1

25

yrs. experience

.l l II\ i ll\

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do it for ycul

7 40-992-5678

tTl ~ '(o\J ['J[R ~li)ER
...:J IF '(oU 1-\AV~ A

740·949·2217

Hours

-

~

THOMPSON 'S
WATER

YOUNG'S
Vegetable, bedding flats &amp;
hanging baskets $6.60
4" annuals 94¢
Time to plant cool weather vegetable
plants &amp; pansy's, 4" perennials $1.18

RalnSoft
Water Tre:ument l-:Ajuipment

Mt . Vernon
740-397-9751

Custom
Building
&amp; Remodeling

Buv 6 ut 1 FREE

Largest selection of perennials &amp; shrubs
at the lowest prices In Meigs County

Over 16 years Experience
• Room Adt.li t ion~
• Knchen &amp; But h
Remodc lmg
• Replacement Winduws

Morning Star Road- C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH
1"740-949•2115
3124TFN

• Siding • Roofing
• Compl_ete R~hub"
Ful ly Insured
Free E~_timatc'

for personal reasons known

only to you. Slay in character
and be magnanimous, even if
it hurts.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Putting on airs today by
flashing money around will
not produce the effects you
desire. It will merely empty
your wallet and could even
make you look foolish.

EVIL!

The
new~pap e r

bread
1 Baby
39 Brewery
soother
product
5 Young
40 Flex
Cratchlt
41 Outback
8 Radar meas.
birds
11 Luigi's
42 Hot iub
•
· romance
43 Drop the
13 Fish-to-be
ball
14 Help·
45 Disagree
wanted
47 Baby grand
abbr.
50 Hull part
15 Mason-- 51 "Yuckl"
line
52 Web addr.
16 Phys. ad.
54 Gung-ho
17 Slangy lady 58 Egg 18 Whale like
. yung
Shamu
59 Whiz leader
20 Piece of
60 TV teaser
lumber
61 Cook up
22 Allee's cat
· bacon
24 -Gatos, 62 Festive
Cal.
night
25 Weep
63 Dust
loudly
particle
26 "Our Gang"
DOWN
dog
28 Superman's
mother
1 Skosh
32 Commer·
2 Paris friend
cials
3 Bagel
· 33 Fruit pastry
partner
34 Sherif of
4 Hum
films
5 Caesar's
35 Screengarb
writer
6 Leafy
Jamesclimber

7 Ballroom
number
8 Part of MHz
9 Mellow fruit
10 Embrace
12 Starry-eyed
19 Fllmaler
21 Peace Prize
city
22 Avoid
23 "Peer Gynt"
creator
24 Garden
crop
25 Import car
27 Clip
·29 Gather
30 Bellamy or
Nader
31 Locale
36 Early

garden?
38 Oozing .
44 Cosmetic

· buy

46 Frighten
4 7 Wisp of

smoke

48 Borodln

prince

49 Captain's

shout

50 MOMA

artist

53 Gun the

engine

55 Infant'•

sound

56 CPR giver
57 Fish eggs

r.--~~,..,.._

is

a valuable
learning tool for
students of
all ages.
It
connects

the
principles and
facts they learn in the
classroom with stories and
events that are ·
happening here and around

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Guttera
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Oecke

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov.
22) - Class and demeanor
are going to be taken seriously by someone you are trying to impress: Don't dress
liKe a sex symbol or the latest
rapper.

something way beyond your
budget. Keep a handle on
your life and_)'our resources.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
.19) - Leave your business
deals at home safely in · a
drawer when you go out to a
gathering today that includes
influential contacts. It will not
be a place for wheeling and
dealing and will be resented.
PJSCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - All relationships,
whether they are personal or
work-related. will require
delicate handling today. Take
care not to see yourself as superior or inferior in your involvements with others.

.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) ·- What you consider to be just a harmless lit·lle lie could be taken as gossip today by your listeners.
The ripple effects it could
cause might produce harm
you never anticipated.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 Jan . 19) - Don' t be bashful
about saying no today to
friends who are trying to C'?·
erce you rnto part1c1 patmg rn

WORD SCRIMMAGE- SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
Cl2003lJNIM ,laltll'l Syndii:•I,IPIC.

2nd OOWN

-•.....!!!!....

3rdDDWN

•

40100WN

•

• 14

1st DOWN

JUDO'S TOTAL

o~ .MAN .. I 1-\o~ 1\t ~SWI
tolE&lt;;;$ IJJ\11-\ MY .SiUPII:J IW \14 1

...m_

-

89

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrimmag~ ·

339

WORD®©®CD@@®@®-

ooooooo .

@@@®@@@ !~~=~Toial

0000000

...~

0
0

""'OOWN

@@(9@@@®

~ 0
~~~~~~~ ~~~.!'"' 0
AVERAGE GAME 170.180

=

by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME UMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS: Malle a2-to 7-ietler WOfd lrom the '-tlM on HCtl yerdline.
Add points to eact'l word or'leftar USing scoring dlrtctlons at rtgN. S8Yaf\-letttr
words get a 60-polnt bonus. AI worda can be lound In Webster's New World
Cologe Dicttooa~.
JUDD'S SOLIIT!ON TOMORROW

e 2003 Unhd FMllrl ~1, N .

l KNCIJJ

'TillS 11\UST

SEEM SIU.Y

TO YOU ..

IT D0&lt;S
TOME

""'"'-

E-~~~1

CARPENTER
SERVICE

fflRRRIEO f't:Ofi.E
Pili /IIIIRE TA&gt;
'll'AN 51N6LE f'IOOPU .

!IJHE~~? lti~EN~? l«lVJLIIN(,. IIIU~T! WAIT'?

WHEP.E DIO l
WIN WO~'T

6-()

~OU

lllRON&amp; ??
'\10."1 '!"?

WH'i '?? IIIH'i ?? lilliE~?? WHEN'??

'

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·62 15
Poma1oy Oh o

22Ye r

al

MYERS·.PAVING

SORRV. MONSIEVR FL'&lt;IN&amp; ACE ...
FRENCH CAFE iS CLOSED ..

Henderson, WV

.75-2457 or 446-2912

740-991-1119

for visual perception problems. I know. I was 60 years
old before I was tested. It
doesn't help to understand
what to do with numbers if
yQUr perceptual problems
scramble them. - PENNY
IN BUCKLAND, MA.
DEAR PENNY: I agree .
The child should be tested,
because the problem could
also be dyslexia or some
other leammg·disability.
·
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

37 Pocket

~fAE·

5 \W~I&lt;.t

7:00AM- 8:00PM

&amp; f'\ ice Pnwi &lt;kr For

Belter follow up on it yourself
CANCER (June 21-July
22) :- Someone you may
come in lo contact with socially today might not be all
that she or he appears to be on
the surface. Be careful not to
be overly captivated by his or
her charm.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Feelings will be deeply hu it
today 1f you do not keep the
promises you made to family
members. You run the risk of
severely disappointing them
and severing the . closeness
·you l'_reviously enjoyed.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)
- Give credit where credit is
du e today . Don· t ignore .I he
accomplishments of anotber

-~ Sl\IP\0
~ l'NI\\ OU1
~ \\\t.l&lt;£

. Slz&amp;fl 5'x1 0' .
to 10'x30' ·

Si nce !979

worse when she 's under
pressure or tired.
· In six weeks. Joan will
meet my family for the first
tim e. I fear they'll be
appalled by .some of the
thin gs she says. How can I
help my sweetheart clean up
her grammar before she
meets th em? To Joan's cred it, she is making a sincere
effort to improve her language skills and has repeated! y asked me to correct her
- but it's a daunting task.
Pl ease don ' t tell me my
fiancee 's positive qualities
outweigh the language problem. This is a big roadblock
for me. Your suggestions
would be appreciated. WELL-SPOKEN GENT
IN TENNESSEE
DEAR WELL-SPOKEN
GENT: The bes t advice I can
offer is this: Make up your
mind whether or not you
love her enough to accept her
AS SHE IS - with room for
improvement. Do not correct
her in front of your parents.
If Joan's only flaw is her
grammar, you're really a
lucky . man . Nobody is perfect.
DEAR ABBY:. I can't help
feeling "Gotta Get Good
Grades in Wyoming" needs
more than a bright math student to tutor her in math.
That student should be tested

ACROSS

Astrograph

Snapper

GRAVELYTRACTOR

Aurhor11.1~d

Dear
Abby

www.wvpcdr.com
,
cdoctor@wv dr.com

[ HATE HAVIN6 TO
AROUND WIT~ THE
ENLISTED MEI'·L

~AN6

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

Randall L Shust

Seamless Gutter
Seroices

Owner

Certified Arborlsl

'Full Range ot Services
fBH' Ii) UtfATE S

• No Seam s
• No Lea.l.·s

(740)594·8724

• Free Eslimales
01\'/lt'r Opewred
Dm·id Rh()(/t' .\' &amp; Norma Rllodt' \

-------C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance- Pa1nt1ng. v1n.yl
siding. carpentry, doors.
windows , baths; mobile
home repair and more. For
free estim&lt;~te call Chet. 7401
992-6323.

Oflice (740) 985-3511
HDme (740) 985-1622

Parts • Service
Bags • Belts
()w•r

25 \'('(Jr.\' in Busines s

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

up \ \~cq~r~ ul )-\lUr home

•

Parb shipped UPS

~

f'ast, Jkpt'ndabh.• Sen ice

C. til Ben Cecl,u ~~Cedar Vacs

(304) 273-4098

.:I l&gt;ON'T N~rt&gt; TO L~ A,_ 1'1

Marcum
Building
Service
• Roo ting
• Yin) I &amp; Wood
Si ding
• Interior Remodeling
Gt:ncrul Curpcntry Wor~

Mib \hm·um. 0" ner

740-985-4141

SEAL IT CGSmiJCT100
Roofing , Siding ,
Pa1nting , Electrical,
Decks. Etc.
Free Estima1es
992-1189 992-2902

TtiE ST..4Tt CAPITALS"-··
1 l.~M A fTAY-

Roosa's
LIWN

AT·tiOMt $0/fT

CUE

• Deck .; &amp; Porche'
• Room AdUition ~

- · ~ s. ctf 'en II.' I! fcc for p1di ng

Rainbows. Kirb y, Eleclrolux. Hoovtr. Eurcku,
Tri-Star. Regina &amp; nu)SI other hrand s.

99 F1sher Bass Boat , 4
stro~e
Mercury engtne.
Riding Lawn Mower, $350. 1969 Camara less motor.
Garage Kept . U~e new.
i?-40)256-1102
$3900. (740)379·2436
S6SOO OBO. (7401388·9416

#cHiVRO,~T/

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school with "Bert " from
through
hig h
grammar
school. It 's no secret that
he 's been in love with me
sinc e seventh,· grade. After
we graduated from high
sc hool. Bert remained in our
hometown. I moved· away
and go back only to visit my
family.
Bert got my phone number
from a mutual frjend and, in
. th e four years si nce high
· sc hool, has called once .in a
while . Out of courtesy I'd
chat with him, thinking his
call s would eventually stop. I
was wrong.
For the last two months,
Bert's call s have become so
freq uent, I have . stopped
an swerin g my phone - or if
a girlfriend is visiting me,
I' II ask her to answer for me
and te ll Bert I'm "on a date ."
I hoped he' d take the hint,
but it hasn't worked.
Last Christmas he sent me
an expensive present . I did
not accept it and still have
not spoken to bini.
Then one night last week,
while I was out with the
.girls, Bert called every 20
minutes and maxed out my
voicemai l with me ssages
saying he loves me. I don ' t
know what to do. This has
escalated to the point I'm
afraid Bert could become

.

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The Daily Sentinel • Page B 7

Middle-school crush grows
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Co~ing Su~day: _ Yearbook

Friday, April 11, 2003

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

,

'

Education Edition

1

•

Hometown News for Gallia, Mason &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant • April 12. 200l

50 CENTS • Vol. 1, No. 33

~ II you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c,lo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053

Meigs County
What: Adva nee Auto Parts
• NASCAR's favori te no-nos and What: Pepsi 300
W"-1: Virginia 500
250 '
Where: Mart ins• ille (Va .) got away with it. Only, at Day- Where : Na shvi lle Supe rlana and Tallad ega do offi speedway, Lebanon. Tenn . Where: Martinsville (Va .)
Speedway (.526 mile), 500
(1.333
mi.les ).
225
Speedway (.526 mile), 250
cials penalize drivers for driv·
laps/ 263 miles •
ing
below
the
yel
low
lines
laps/
299.925
miles
laps/ 131.5 miles
When: Green flag drops at 1
When: 1 p.m . EDT Saturday
• painted at the bottom of th e . When: 3:30 p.m. E!lT Saturday
p .m : EDT Sunday
Laat year 's winner: Bobby racing groove . Earnhardt's Last year 's winner: Jack Last year'• winner: Dennis
bold move occurred in turn
.Sprague
Setzer
..
Labonte
Track qualifying record: Tony three, into which he managed Track qualifying MCord: Kev1n Track quallfylnr; record: Mike
Bli ss , Ford , 94.275 mph ,
to roar ahead of two carsHarvick, Chevro let, 159.678
Stewart, Pontiac, 95.371
a
Ford
driven
by
Malt
Kenselh
mph,
April
13,
2001
Ap
ril 16.. 1999
mph, Sept. 30, 2000
and a Chevy piloted by Ji m- Race record: Greg Biffle, Race record: Jimmy Hensley,
Race record: Jeff Gordon.
Dodge, 74 .294 mph, April
mie, Johnson - that had
Ford. 105.773 m ph , April
Chevrolet, 82 . ~23 mph,
17. 1999.
'
beeh ahead of him at the oth·
14. 2001 ·
Sept. 22, 1996
Most recent race: Dale Most recent race: Denni s
Most recent race: Dale Earn- er end of the back straight.
According
to
NASCAR
Earnhardt Jr.. 1n a Chevrolet,
Setzer, In a C~vrolet won
hardt Jr.'s victory -a recOrd
March 23 at Mesa Marin
spokesman Ji m Hunter, the
won Saturday's Aaron's 312
f ourt h in a row at Talla dega
at Talladega . Another Win·
Raceway in Bakersfield, Calif.
Superspeedway - was a pass was legiti mate because
Saturday's race is the last
Earnhardt never crossed the
ston Cup regular. Joe Negrand spectacle. Slightly over
mechek , fin1shed second in · befo re the series makes its
three laps from the end. Earn- yellow line until he had al ·
debut May 16 at Charlotte.
ready passed Kenseth.
. a Pontiac .
ha rdt pulled off one of

IN

u-

f I

"""P(., 11 U::;111·

WILflo•B
TO
Bll'l'OBIC
DOWNTOWN"
••

E

R

1n
NASCAR This Week •

I

•'...
10~"

:W(•l:ii!•ii?IQUI¢1.....
: :WIIIITOII

cW

·d. Matt Kenseth
; ·2'. oa!e Eamha!Vt Jr.
4:J. Kurt B\Jsell .
r ;!, Jimmie Johnson

:;,1. Jeff Ggrd()n

.

,

1.233

-129
· 187
• 220
•

m

· 1. Ricky Craven
" I. Michael Wtlll!ID
: ·a. !!evin Harvie!&lt;

-

•m
• 239
- 256

: •I. TOllY Stewart

· 296

·: 1Q, Elliott Sedler

- 338

.. BuscH SIRia
:1. Todd !lodine

.· a,

;-3.
. 4.

'·z.

:-=:- t .
..

,,... .

Jgmie M~MY!m
Ron HQm@!l~
~hane Hmlel
Jason f'&amp;ll~r

David Green

a,

. . a,

~.
.- 1-

.

i-

:.1-

-~

T!IQ Mysmve
• '9•. Dennl~ Seyer
1Q, JnQn L~lfl @r

Photos by John Clark/NASCAR Th1s week

Richard Childress won six Winston Cup champlons~lps with
the late Dale Earnhardt as his driver.
a lot tighter than any of us expected, but then there is a little room to work. We're working toward making our cars a
little better. That's a big key for us, is try to keep working
on making our cars better.
·
"There are a lot of bright things going on at RCR, and
we just keep moving and growing."
To Childress' way of thinking, the addition of a third
team in 2002 played a role in recent struggles.
"We were behind last year," Childress said. "I think we
started out behind. I don't believe in excuses; I don't accept them and I try not to give them. I think one of the
reasons that got us behind was adding an extra team .
There was more to it than what we realized. I think now ·
that we've gotten through building (new facilities), we're
where we need to be.
"We'll keep doing it until we get it where I think the
three-car team works. My goal was to have all three of
them the saine, and I accomplished
my goal. They're just all three
maybe 25th, 26th, 27th,.which
isn't good. I think we found
some stuff, and I think
we're going to get better
as the season goes on."
Contact Monte Dutton
at tug50@aol.com.

VC

n

John Musser, left, project coordinator for the village of Pomeroy, and George Wright, village councilman, inspect the site of the
community's proposed riverfront walkway. Construction on the project is set .to begin in early May. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Pomeroy riverfront walkway
project set to begin in May
Tuppers 'Plains
firm awarded
contrac'

J If

I l II U'-1
11 f lf H(.l f UOM Oi lIf Ul/\01 f1 1,

Popularity contest
'

I guess it is a show. And I can
only imagine what the fan react ion
would have been had they black·
flagged (Dale Earnhardt Jr. at Talladega Superspeedway),
They say Bill Elliott is t he most
.popUlar driver. I know one Elliott fan,
and about everyone else is a Junior
fan. ma inly because he is Earnhardt
blood, which is all fine with me. So it
would have been very unpopular to
take (the win ) away.
Seems like l"\le seen caut1on
flags come out for my favorite driver
(No. 24, JeH Gordon) before. and it
sure perks you up when your driver
has a chance to get back in the race .
But I wasn't surp rised at the nocall. ·
Roe•• Miller
North Freedom, Wis.
8

,.
'
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

News editor
POMEROY. Ohio - With
the contract · signed for the
construction of the riverfront
walkway and the work scheduled to begin in early May,
John Musser, project coordinator, gave a sigh of relief and
l
exclaimed that he feels "wonderful. "
'
"Everything has finally
•' •

It's pretty obvious. actually.

·.

Perhaps it's appropriate ro note
the annual award is based on tile
number wno actually vote ln the competition.

Earnhardt , by the way, leads the
balloting this year so far and led it un-rlllilte in-the voting in 2002, when the
· Elliott fans voted in large numbers.

I A .......

I II •• ....

~ Oriver; owner .Herm ie Sad ler recently announced , along with Virginia
Gov. Mark R. Warner, a par tnership
betwee n Sadler Motorspor t s and
fou r of the state's universities.
The tw o-year program , known as
"Go Team Virginia," includes Virginia
Tech . the Un ive rsity of Virg inia. Virginia Commo nwe alth and James
Madison.
The four will team up to compete
in at least six Winston Cup e\lents in
both 2003 and 2004 .
·
For more info.rmation. visit
goteamva.com . .... J·
I

. ~~
·Z1

.a1

·!11
. 94
'100

· 122

1•

• Voinovich at ease
despite budget clash .
See Page A2
• Labor leaders cite steel
-as election is~ue in 2004.
. See Page A2
• 'Pay for stay' at Meigs
County jail. See Page AS .

Index
l s.ctlons - 11 Paps

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A3,6
84-5

B6
B6
A4
A3
AS

Bl-3
A2

.0 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

ORRIS
HE'LL

COVER

ANnHING!

FREE Wltli •ny
USED car under
100.000 111lles!

TOflt \ O .. " o~•

IIIMUfl
... . , . _ l. .l

--t'"~

CHA.VSll.R

MIKE'S SUPER GUARANftE!!
8 months or 8,000 mi111

Manager: Pttt Som«vlllt Finance: Al•n Durtt
..... T. . . : H.+!~•...,.. MMIIOI\ LMy ~.Joe; T1111a. Johfl ...,....., ~ '"'*'•Aob 1JritM

252 Upper River~
1fJ Illite lo&amp;fth of IN 811Wf 8ftc9, Olltllpotlt, Ohio

BY KEVIN KEllY
News editor .

RIO GRANDE, Ohio Although it has never been
without Gallia County 9-1-1
emergency communications
service since its start in I 997,
the village of Rio Grande has
accepted a house numbering
system that confonns with
the 9- 1- 1 plan .
Vill age li:ouncil accepted
the system la~t year, but new
house numbers · for Rio
Grande residents are going
out now and will be found on
the water bills the village

$67,000.
ODOT is contributing about
$380,000 and the village has
received a grant of $ 130,000
from Ohio Department of
Natural Resources Clean
Ohio Rails Fund to go into the
project.
Musser said that he expects
the 7,600 foot walkway - to
extend from the Waterworks
Park on East Main Streel to
the upper parking lot in downtown Pomeroy - · to be completed before Labor Day.
It will have some railing on
the river side and will be
·lighted by 55 13-foot high
lights.

issues to its customers.
The ' village had used its
own numbering system for
years, the same system in use
before the new numbers were
drawn up for the village by
the Gallia County Engineer's
Office .
Mayor Donald Wothe
encouraged residents to call
Ameritech and other utilities
lhey use as soon as they get
the new numbers for two reasons: To update the utilities
on what their new . house
number is, and to have their
conneclion to 9-1-1 activated .

Some changes on street
signs will be seen in the
future, Wolhe said.
"As the village changes its
street signs, we encourage
residents to start utilizing the
new house numbers," Wothe
said.
·
The mayor also recommended that residents obtain
the reflective green signs thai
carry the house numbers ,
used by police and EMS in
locating
homes
when
responding to ait emergency.
Change of address form s
are available at the Rio
·. PIHn see Rio, AS

American ·
Alloys seeks
foreclosure on
·Highlanders.
Associated Press

CHARLESTON , W.Va.
- The former owner of
Highlander Allo ys LLC's
plant in Mason County is
seeking foreclosure because
the company has failed to
pay $750,000 that it owes for
the property.
American Alloys, which is
bankrupt, sold the plant to
Highl ander in November
200 I for $2 million .
Highlander paid $1 million
upfront and was to pay the
remainder within a year.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge
Ronald Pearson has scheduled a hearing on April 15 on
an emergency application
filed in March by American
Alloys seeking foreclosure
on the property. American
Alloys said it wanted to protect its collateral.
Pearson
has
give n
American Alloys permission
to hire security to protect the

plant and prevenl .anyone
from removing its assets.
The company also is allowed
to inventory the property in
preparation for a possible
foreclosure.
Financial and legal problems
have
dogged
Hi ghlander Alloys since last
year. ·
After it purchased the New
Haven plant, workers started
bringing the furnaces online.
Then, 'paychecks bounced in
June 2002 and state and federal labor officials took the
company to court.
The plant was shut down
until the money was raised.
When the company missed
another payday in August
2002, employee s went on
strike. Operations resumed
after a payment agreement
was worked out.
In February, a Kanawha
County judge ordered the
company to pay $220,000 in
back wages plus damages to
130 workers after it missed
two pay periods.

'

BY BmE PEARCE

Managing edilor
NEW HAVEN , W.Va. New Haven's dramatic drop
in crime over the last few
months would make any
community envious, and
leave many asking how the
small tow n acco mpli shed
such a feat.
Once inundated with trying to investigate 35 to 40
theft, vandalism and breaking and entering reports a
month, the New Haven
Police Department now typi cally gets only seven or eight
complaints a month.
" For the most part, it's
pretty quiet around here
now," Police Chief David
Varian says.
•
The formula for the town's
success in reducing crime is
actually
quite
simple:
Re sidents and local government officials who are willing to commit the financial
resources necessary to combat crime.
New Haven had been operating with only two full-time
officers - the chief and one
officer - and one part-time
officer a little more than a
year ago. Today, the community has four · full-time officers, including the chief, and
a part-ti~er, providing 24hou r,
seven-day-a-week
police protection. ·
About a year ago, the town
co unci I raised the fee that
residents pay to support a
police department from
$3.50 a month to $5.50 a

Wednesday, April 30, 2003 • 1 PM · 4:30 PM .
Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Conference Center

month per household. There
are about 650 households in
New Have n.
Complaints fro'in residents
about the increase were minimal, Mayor Stephen Smith
says. "People don ' t mind
paying when they get results,
which is what we've done."
A third full-time officer
was added to the force last
summer
after
council
rearranged some funding to
various town departments.
''Some departments .didn 't
need as much as they were
budgeted, and others, like the
police department, needed
more," the mayor said.
Last fall , the town obtained
a $55,000 federal grant,
which
is administered
through the state, to provide
for a fourth full-time officer.
Seventy-five percent of the
fourth officer"s pay the frrst
year comes from grant (unds,
with the remaining 25 percent paid by the town .
The Iown·s share of the
officer's pay in the second
and third year increases, with
the town responsible for I 00
percent of his pay in the
fourth year.
The gradual inhease
"gives us plenty of time to
plan and prepare for fully
funding that position; to put
more money into the police
budget," Smith said.
"We're examining now
where money might be available to invest in the police
department," he said; addi ng
the town is looking to inves~

Please sea Crime, AS

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Crime nosedives
in New Haven

Uvlng With Grief:
Coping with Public Ti agecly

COVER

~

tant, this will be the highly
visible one for everybody driving into Pomeroy.
"The amphitheater is great,
the boat docks are. loo and
they' re used a Jot, but they 're
not highly visible, he added .
"It's going to be real attractive
and hopefully used a lot."
The total cost of the riverfront walkway, including the
engineering of $102.000. will
be about $576,000, said
Musser.
While the village of
Pomeroy
committed
$100,000 toward the project.
Musser indicated that he
expects the actual cost to the
village will be in the range of

Rio Grande adopts new
house numbering system

HE'LL

ANYTHINC:!
CAR WARRANft!
NORRIS
NORTHUP
DODGE,
INC.
" \
-.nontsnorthupclodp.com
Owner: Mlkt Northup

come together," Musser said
Friday after being advised
that the contract have ·been
awarded to Parker Corp. of
Ohio Route 7, Tuppers Plains.
low bidder on the project.
Gary Stollar, LPA coordinator, Distri ct I 0, Ohio
Department
of
Transportation, aimounced
that the company's bid of
$474,977 has been accepted.
The walkway will be built by
ODOT.
.
''The walking path is something the people here really
want," said Musser. "We' ve
had more comments on it than
any other project we've done .
While all have been impor-

Gallia County

Inside

We agree with you that Earnhardt
Jr. is NASCAR 's mos t popular driver.

:110

. ~1

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Tony
Stewart

Kurt Bus ch aggravated another
long day for the reigning Winston Cup
champion by pinch ing Tony Stewart's
Chevy into the wall on the 90•11 lap of
Sunday's Aaron 's 499 .
Afterward, the two clashed verbally in the Talladega garage area.
' Ye ah, he ended up on my out·
side when (Greg) Biffle pinched me
up against him." Busch sa1d. ~ lt was·
n·t like I ended up runni ng into him
purposely: it" was ju st an acc ident .
My teammate pulled out in front of
me, and I didn 't have enough time to
make a move to get around him. If I.
woUld have slammed on the brakes,
we would have lost the draft ."
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton &amp;lves his take: "Accident or
not , Stewart is obviously growing
weary of be 1ng caught in accidents
not of )1is making. He's placed 26th,
34th, and 25th in the past three
races. and t he champion 's frustrations are mounting."

By Monte Dutton

nan age of multimillionaire team owners who came to
NASCAR from other businesses, Richard Childress is
a racer and a man who achieved his success the oldfashioned way.
Childress- owner of Winston Cup Chevrolets driven by
Kevin Harvick, Robby Gordon and Jeff Green- was once
a driver himself. Unlike many others, Childress built on
modesrsuccess behind the wheel to become one of the
more successful own~rs the sport has ever known.
"First of all, I couldn't get in the sport (now) like I got in
it then," Childress said. "I got in it at probably a prime
time- a young guy having fun , not really realizing what I
was doing -and built a race team. I knew what I wanted
to do, but at that point, I wasn't ready to get out of the car.
But I saw the Harry Raniers, the Rod Osterlunds- this ·
group of people coming in with money ~ and I could see
where a single guy like myself, who could run in the top
five or top 10, was being pushed back. I could see the
trend back in the '70s when these guys started coming....
I knew then that, if I wanted to stay in the sport, I had to
do something besides try to drive and own the cars."
Childress, who won six Winston Cup championships with
the late Dale Earnhardt (out of Earnhardt's career total of
seven), has been suffering some growing pains with his
teams of late. His drivers - Harvick, Gordon and Green
-currently sit eighth, 13th and 31st, respectively.
"We're not where we wanted to be, for sure," Childress
said. "We had hoped to be a little better. I think
RCR (Richard Chil·
dress Racing) got
From lelt,
, a little behind
Robby
the curve on
Gonion,
the downforce
Jeff Green
on our cars.
and Kevin
The 'box' that
Harvlck
NASCAR has
built for us
this year is

s
u
s

Kurt
Busch

Champion owner beginning
to make three-car team work

:- Winston Cup d!MIS.
some.;: lhlris.n a bit lfl!isa ~?

-"I

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•

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O~:tJROY

I

RICHARD CHILDRESS 1 WI NSTON CuP c•R owNER

~ "' Seven

Mason County

·

www.holzer.org

•

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