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                  <text>Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, April 17, 2003

_ W\Yw.mydailysentinel.com

'Prenup' offers protection, .
but it first must ·be read
DEAR ABBY: I hope the
woman whose niece is manying
the rich doctor who wants her to
sign a prenup sees my letter.
When ''Harold" and I married.
he had considerably more prop;j
· eny and a bigger income than
did. I wanted him and his adult
children to know I wasn't after
his money; so I volunteered to
sign a prenuptial agreement ·
Harold's attorney drew up the
agreement, and I foohshly
signed it without reading it. I
assumed that anything either of
us owned prior to our marriage
would remain our respective
perronal proeerties - but that
after we roamed, we'd accumulate assets together.
Early on, it became clear that
Harold wanted our finances kept
separate. We never had a joint
checking account, and he made
me feel like I needed his permission to spend a penny. So I kept
my job and never once asked
Harold for money.
Well, I fl!lally got around to
reading the agreement I had
signed. To mY astonishment, it
specified that we would never
own anything jointly, nor have
access to anything the other
acquired during our marriage. I
was crushed. In my eyes, that
document made a mockery of
our union. I told Harold I d1dn 't
know I had married someone
who cared so little about my

·unless it has been carefully read
and understood --. and checked
by an independent attorney.
Your mistake was not taking the
document to a lawyer of your
own and havin~; it explained to
you !Jefore signmg it
· In my opinion. Harold took
advantage of your trust. And no.
you did not make "too big a
ADVICE
deal" out of the whole thing.
Read on:
.
DEAR
ABBY:
I
used
io be
welfare. He maintained that the
agreemem was a standard against prenuptial agreements.
Now, after a nasty divorce from
prenup.
.
After that, I knew' I had to my ex, who bilked' me out of my
"make my own way." I divorced inheritance from my grandHarold, got a highe11jpaying job mother and walked away with
and bought a home. I feel more 90 percent of the assets we
secure now than I did during our acquired during our marriage,
I'm sorry I didn 't insist on one. I
entire marriage.
The sad part is, Harold and I have since remarried. and
always got along great It was thought you'd like to know how
only our difference of opinion my ·current husband describes a
about money that wrecked our prenup: He says the agreeinent
marriage. Now I am asking ts like saying, " I love you so
myself if I made too big a deal much that I'm willing to protect
over the whole thing. Abby, you from what ' I' migh( do if we
your opinion, please. - ON ever split up.'' In essence, you
are pro!ecting not only yourself,
MY OWN IN TEXAS
DEAR ON YOUR OWN: A but the person you love. A noble
prenuptial agreement is sup- sentiment to be sure. -HAPPIposed to be a pact that is satis- LY MARRIED WITH TWO
factory to both parties regarding KIDS
DEAR HAPPILY MARthe division of propeny should
anything happen to either one of RIED: The document actually
them or to the marriage. Such does more than that, but I like
agreements are usually negotiat- your husband's definition. Read
ed, and as with any legal dOCJJ- on:
DEAR ABBY: I signed a
ment, should not be signed

Dear
Abby

prenup with my fiance before
we married. It was nerve-racking, but we worked it out The
document protects us both. It
gave my f1311Ce the peace of
. mind that I loved him, not his
money. And it protects me
because I know I'll have financial stability should we ever
divorce. My parents thought l
was foolish to sign it, but I think
they were foolish to object SECURE AND HAPPY
DEAR SECURE AND
HAPPY: You're not mly secure
and happy. but ·you are also a
sman woman.'
Dear Abby is written b,y
Abigail Van Burell, also k11own
as Jeanne Phillips, and was
founded by her mother, Pauline
Phillips. Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or PO.
Box 69440, .ws Angeles, CA

ACROSS

41

Inside: Lawn &amp; Garden edition

Sein~

•·

vista
1 Walk in
42 Gl tags
43 Duck's
step
6 Pita
loot
sandwiches 46 Most foxy
11 Banish
48 Not clear
12 Static
50 Racket
13 Comment 54 Summer
15 Muss
TV fare
16 Emergency 55 Mantra
18 Years
chanters
on end
56 Butte
• 19 Joke .
cousins
21 Grant
·57 Hang ollt
approval
22 Lalique or
DOWN
Russo
1 Sea,
'23 Verse
to Yves
forms
2 Wood
- 25 Green
chopper
shade
28 Miss a
3 Basketball
hoop
syllable
4 Rattled
30 Bonfire
5 Monsieur,
remains
in Berlin
31 Lick up
32 Andy
6 Wilde·
beests
Capp's
7 -Kippur
wile
33 Play a part 8 Plump and
juicy
35 Washstand
9 Norwegian
items
port
37 W·2 info
38 The others 10 Observed
14 Metric
40 Robust

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol . 53, No. 169

pound
15 Ceremonies
17 Calmly
19 Bellows
20 Workers'
'group
22 Umps
24 H. Rider
Haggard
novel
25 lfl1plore
26 Noblemen
27 Church
alcove
29 Have
supper
34 Andes ·
country
36 Poet

.
39
43
44
45
46
47
49
51
52
53

Watt Bump Into
Fish bait
Touche
provoker
Cakellke
cookies
Catches
some rays
Display of
displeasure
Sine- non
Ms.
Thurman
Insect
resin
"My, my I"

~9.

.

Reading the
11 newspaper keeps
. you informed and
in tune with
'what's happening .
now; whether I
it's across the
globe or in your
own backyard.

BY BERNICE BEDE 0soL
Conditions look very encouraging for you in the year
ahead financially. Influences
that will
an effect upon
oan1um&lt;&gt; will be more

to
mutation.
ARIES (~arch 21-April
19)- Assume a more assertive role today in an arrange·
men! in which you have a
vested interest with another. It
needs the momentum you-can
generate; as it may be .on the
verge o(falling apj!.rt . .
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - You could receive
some happy news today from
someone far away with whom
you have close ties. Make certain' you let this person know
how glad you are. for him or
her.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- Rectify any mistakes that
you might have made yesterday concerning work-related
issues. You're much more
adept today and will have excellent chances of cleaning

--

wllat you can on creative· en-

deavors that would beautify
your surroundings. You'll
have that magic touch in
·which you' ll be able to take
genume pride.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
··- Your ~;re-atest asset 'today
is your abt lity to sort out everybody's plans and meld them
together into one common
cause. Everybody will be
happy following your blueprint.
LIBRA (Sept. 23.0ct. 23)
- There could be a change
for the better today concerning your financial involvements, and you ' ll actually be
quite fortunate in a material
matter that had been left
hanging .
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.

22) - You might even surnow has good chances for
success. Don't give up on
prise yourse lf with the skills
you'll have today in selling or
your hopes.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb
promoting ideas or things that
you personally develop. Show
19) -lmponant personal inyour stuff to the right people.
terests can be quietly ad ·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23vanced today, allowing you to
Dec. 21) - There is sometake action that won't appear •
thing very -hope'fulgoing on
pushy or se lf-serving. You
today that could affect you
won't need recognition, only
success.
r.ersonally. It won' t necessarIly be known to you ri ght
away. but you ' ll hear of it bePISCES (Feb. 20-March
fore the day is out.
20) - Today, you could hear
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22about a good idea that can
lan..__.1.9.)--=--.Aithoug:h--¥OU- -benefit you-in the- f1lture. It
rntghl have been a btl drscourmight come in two parts and
aged yesterday. toda~ 1s anfrom two separate sources,
ot her day; Somcthtn g on
yet you'll tic them together
wh1ch you ·ve been wurktng
into a single usc.

=....!L

1st DOWN

3rd DOWN

111
-=..J!L

41h DOWN

=

2ndDOWN =

.....

AVERAGE GAME 220-230

JUDO'S TOTAL

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrin\-

-

71
349

magt: ·

i'

POMEROY
Pomeroy
Village Council decided · who
will cut the grass at the cemetery this year at its meeting
Wednesday .
Previously. the village had
decided to readvertise for the
position for cutting the grass at
Ihe I 0-acre cemetery on hilly
Mulberry Heights when the last
contractor, Terry Congo, raised
his rate s from $750 to $1.000
per cutting.
The increased costs wou ld
have placed the village at risk
for spending more than the
$15,000 in funds provided by a
!-mi ll levy for the job.
There were two proposals
submitted for cutting the grass
at the cemetery. The first proposal came from Evan 's Lawn
Care who offered to mow the
cemetery for $800 a week or
$3 ,200 a month.
The company would be at the
cemetery. every week to mow
half of it one week and half the
next.
Congo also subri1itted a pro_posal. This time he js asking for
$850 a cutting.
During the wet season
between Apri I and June, the
grass at the cemetery gets cut
usually three times per month
which would amount to $2,550
each month. During the dry season
between
July · and
September, the grass at the
cemetery gel~ cut twice per
month which would cost the village $1,700 each month.
Mayor John Blaettnar is
pleas!=!d wilh Congo's work and
Please see Cemetery, AS

AVERAGE GAME 175-185
by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOUR PLAY TOTIll
TIME liMIT: 20 MIN

=

Inside

DIRECTIONS: MaKe a 2- lo 7-lener 'NO!'~ !rom the letters on eactl ~ar&lt;llne .
Add poinls 10 Md'l word or letter using scoring dlr&amp;CiiOns 111 rtgtlt. seve~letter
"WOrds get a 60-pointiX!rtus . All woros can be "IOI..fld In Webster's New Wortd

College ,Dictionary.

• State asks for federal
help, See page A2
• Military Service, See
page Al
• Powell honored, See
page Al
• The joke of the cosmos, See page A6 .
• Good Friday, Easter services, See page A6
•
• Holy Week around the
world, See page AS

JUDO'S SOLUTtON TOMORROW

BLIT J'fl\ C:JUE!&gt;51Nq
II WA'ilfH

~ES.

&amp;:lMt. F\~\.1

OUR MeSSA(;!;

BUT SHE

010 LI&gt;TEN TO

OF SAWAT\otl ...

.r

Rain likely, HI: 70., Low: 50o ·

'TO 5~E 111!1E
MIJNE'i , l f'IIC.ICED ~
F~5T /Y\UFFI~ fRO"' KOM( .
ATE It WKI\t 8A~KINCr
OUT Of 'Tl\E DI&lt;W EWA'i.

rtNAL BUR~T
sPURRED ON ~' TilE '"""'"', 1
Of ACC.OIYIPL15K~(NT, HAD
I ATE liN ~ 1 0 · /1\0RNINCr
M~ AFTERNOON Sr.I&lt; CK IN
5NIIC~ ~T THE FIR5T LI&amp;IIT
... POUSK EO Off LUNGK ON
TilE PARKIN&amp; LOT! BEFORE
WAL~INCr INTO TilE OHICE
T~E F~EEWA~ ...
I COr!IPL(TED All ElfTIN&amp;'
DUE UNTIL C&gt;INNERTIME .

RESPONDED

TO trlaTIVATIONAl TAPe~
TilE WA'i "'' STOMACH OOE5,
!'D BE A ZILLIONAIRE,

Olivia Murphy,
Sotrthem Elementary

...

Index
~OU

KNOW

1 Sections - IIi Pages

W~AT \IJ!'RE 601N6

TO BE STVD~IN6
IN CLASS TODA'r'?
Q\JE5TIO~ MARKS .

OH . WHAT

HA HA HE£ '

A BETAAY,A.L LISTEN TO
OF ~LL
YOU!

THAT 1$ r'f/.-.._~:_:.."1
SACRED
YEAH , ft:I.\TE '

AND
HOlY'

'

-

Classifieds
Calendar
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
Weather

84-6
A3
B7
.87

A4
A3
Bl-3

A2

www.mydailysentinel.&lt;om

County expects
to end Noble
I
jaU contract
I

BY J. MtLES lAYTON
Staff writer

·Astrograph
things up.
·
CANCER (June 21-luly
22) - Everything should go
happily for you and yours today in the romance department. The time you spend together during this period
cou ld rovide some loving
uly 23-Aug. 22) Spend some time today doing

FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 2003

.

.
Pomeroy
Sign of faith
rehires
cemetery
contractor

"

Friday, Aprill8. 2003

.

Reserved beds
gone unused
BY BRIAN J. REED

Stat! writer

For more than 60 years, the lighted cross on Lincoln Hi ll in Pomeroy has been serving as a beacon in the night for the Bend area. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Cross a beacon of
hope for·area residents
BY

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

· News editor
POMEROY
Religious awareness ts
clothed in pictures and
symbols.
As we go- through life,
we collect a treasury of
familiar sights which bring
to life experiences and
emotions to be drawn on
for a relationship with
God.
At Easter, it is the cross.
In the Bend area, it is a
large li ghted one on
Lincoln Hill overlooking
the Ohio River - a cross
which for more than 60
years has been a beacon of
light in the night for miles
up . and down the river,
inspiring and encouraging
thousands.
It has been there since'
1940.
The cross was the inspiration of the Rev. Ralph
Kuether who · came to
Pomeroy in the late 1930s
to pastor what is now
Trinity
Congregational
Church.
It was a time when the
world was in lu.rmoil, the
country was coming out of
a severe depression, and

"Just as faith without works is
dead, dreams without enthusiasm
and effort go unfulfilled,:·

POMEROY Meigs
County, commissioners do
nol expect to rf'new a pn soner housing contrac t with
Noble Coumy.
At their re gular meeiin g
on Thursday, commission ers tabl ed action on a propo se d new contract for
reserv ed beds
at
the
Caldwell fac ility.
Last week. Meig s County
Sheriff Ralph Trusse ll recommended com missioners
reject a new contract.
becau se the reserved beds
have lately gone unoccupied by Meig s County pri soners in favor of faci lities
closer to home.
For two years , the county
has contracted with Noble
County Sheriff Landon
Smith and Noble County
commissioners for five
reserved beds in the fu ll service Noble County Jail.
Under the most recent
co ntracl , which expired last
month,
Noble
County
reserved five beds at a cost
of $40 per bed . The $6,000
per-month contract required
full payment regardless of
whether all beds were occupied, and Tru ssell said last
week he has heen housing
most pri so ners in the
Wa shington County Jail ,
and in jails in Middle port
and Gallipol is.
As of Thursday. only two
Meigs Coun ty prisoners
were housed in Noble
County.

The pro ·
posed ne"'
contrac ~

a I s •·
reflects :r
c 0 s
mcrease from 540
per bed pe1
day to $50
per bed fo r
Trussell . day _
~
$ 1 ,500
monthl y. cost hike which
commtsstoners
said
Thursday the y could ill
a !lord.
" I do n' t think we need it
anyway."
Commissioner
Jim Sheets said . "We cer
tainly can' t afford three 0 '
four contracts with dilleren,
facilities.' '
While j ail
beds
in
Wa shin gton County cost
Meigs County $nO per dtiy
it is still less expe nsive for
Trussell to use those bed '
rath er than those in Noble
County Jail, because only
those bed s needed are paid
for, and because the. cost
and tim e involved in transporting prisoners to th e
Mariena jail are le ss burdensome than in transporting them to Caldwe ll.
Sheets said other terms of
th e contract also concerned
the board, including a
clause increasing the cost
per bed if a prisoner is
placed on a suicide watch or
other special conditions.
Last week. co mmi ss ioners
approved a $55 per-day
·•pay . for stay" . policy.
requiring all pri soners capable of paying for the ir kee p
to do so. Commissioners are
res ponsible, by law, for the
housing and feeding of prisoners in county custody.

Mock crash

Sending a message

-Mae Mora, fonMr Pomeroy re1ldent descrtblng the Rev.
Ralpll Kuether, who wu responsible for building the cross.

the Bend area was recoveri ng from a devastating
flood.
"An idealist, yet a very
practical man. one with a
dream of placing a cross
on a hill which would be a
witness to the Christian
faith of a community," was
how the late Mae Mora of
Pomeroy described the
m'inisler in a paper she
wrote many yeats ago.
"Just as faith without
works is dead, dreams
\vithout enthu siasm and
effort go unfulfilled ."
wrote Mrs. Mora, about
the minister who accepted
the challenge of building a
large lighted cross 10 be
placed on a hill high
enough to be seen by mul titudes. ·
The work to build a
cross began in the basement of the parsonage. It

was made of wood and
erected on the Lincoln Hill
property of Nolan and
Clam Shuster, a place visible tor miles up and down
both sides of Ihe river.
Just before Christmas in
1940, it wa' lighied for the
first tim e.
'
In those early days. the
lights on the cross were
turned on and off by a
switch at regular intervals
every
weekend
throughout the year and
. every evening during reli gious holiday periods first by the late Frank
Carson and Loui s Reibel ,
and then by the late .Mr.
and Mrs. Shuster who
became long time ' 'keepers of the cross."
In the early years, th e
Shusters went outside·.
·

AJay Blackwell, a junior at Meigs High School, was one of the
unfortunate victims of a mock crash held at the Rocksprings
Fa11grounds. State Highway Patrol Troope r Jim Hannon hopes
the crash will sefve as a lesson and a warning about the dan·
gers of drinking and driving. (J. Miies Layton )

Please see Cross. AS

e 20DJ Ohio Valley Publish ing Co.

IStfT -SA(REt'l

See story on page A3.

AND HOL'( "

A.

a1r

~R'-"'~TI'?
----&lt;""__r."-'

This Week is

Infant Immunization·
Week

R

Holzer Medical Center encourages you to have your child immunized.

MEDICAL CENTER

The HMC Community Health and Wellness Department supports
the Gallia County Health Deportment in offering
free immunizations to Ohio residents. ·
For more information, please call

Discover/he Holzer Difference

(740) ·441-2950.

www .holzer .org

�I

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather
Saturday, April 19
AccuWeather.com '"""'asttor daytime condittons tow/high temperatures
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State asks for federal help in
removing contaminated soil
HAMILTON (AP)
State
regula tors
said
Thursday they have asked
the federal govern ment for
help in removing lead-cont·
aminated soil at ~ subdivisian where homeovl ners are
worried about wheth.er play
areas are safe for their chi! dren.
The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency said the
federal EPA has more staff
arid expertise to handle the
problem . The two agencies
said they will work together
to come up with a so lution.
Residents of homes worth

up to $300,000 went to the
state re gulators late la st
year to ask for help. The
·southwest Ohio subdivisian. about 20 mile s north
of Cincinnati. was built on
the site of a former skeetshooting range. where le ad
shot (ell into the so il years
ago.
Exposure to lead can
ca u ~e behavioral di sorders.
brain damage or death. No
health problems linked to
the subdivision's soil have
been reported.
Reg ulators would prefer
that the developer of the

Lexin gton Mimor subdivi sion remove the cnntami nated soil, said Heidi
Griesmer. a spokeswoman
for the Ohio EPA. No decision had been made about
when the . soil will be
remove\~ or who would handle it.
The federal EPA has the
authority. if necessary. to
have the soil removed
under the Superfund toxic
waste cleanup program pnd
then pursue reimburseme nt
from the respon sible private parties. U.S. EPA
spokesman Mick Hans said .

Showers

~

T-~torms

Rain

Flumes

Snol'.'

Ice

v;., A.SSOC'Ia/80' Pro.ss

·warmer for area on Saturday
BY THE ASSOCIAITD PRESS
Tonight... Partly cloudy. Lows .
A weather system aloft mov- in the lower , 50s. Southeast
ing across the region caused wind' 10 to 15 mph.
showers overnight and until the
Saturday... Partly cloudy and
system moves east later today. warmer. Highs in the mid 70s.
the threat of showers will contin- South winds around I 0 mph.
ue. Highs today will be in the · Saturday riight...Partly cloudy.
lower to mid 60s, which is about A slight chance of showers and
normal for this time of year. It thunderstorms atier midnight.
will be breezy with southeast Lows in the mid 50s. Chance of
winds. especially over the east. rain 20 percent.
em counties.
ExTENDED RlRECAST
Tonight will be mostly cloudy
Sunday... Mostly cloudy with a
with lows mainly 50 to 55.
chance of showers and thunderSaturday should be drY with storms. Highs in the lower 70s.
mainly cloudy skies and highs in Chance of rain 30 percent.
the lower to mid 70s.
Sunday night... Mostly _cloudy.
The next weather system that A chance of showers and !hunwill affect the area for the later · derstorms in the evening ...Then
part of the Easter wee~end was a chance of showers. Lows in
over the Plains states this morn- the lower 50s. Chance of rain 40
ing and will move into the mid- percent.
west Saturday and move slowly
Monday... Partly cloudy with a
east Sunday. This system will chance of showers. Highs in the
cause a threat of showers and upper 60s.
thunderstorms Saturday night,
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A
with the best chance Sunday and chance of showers until midSunday night
night: Lows in the upper 40s and
Highs Sunday will be general- highs in the mid 60s.
·
ly in the lower 70s.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Temperatures will cool off to Lows in the mid 40s and highs
readings a linle below normal in the mid 60s.
for early and mid week alier a
Thursday.. .Mostly clear. Lows
cold front moves through.
in the mid 40s and highs in the
WEATHER FORB:AST
upper 60s.

The partie s responsible
for the co ntam ina tion had
not been determined but
could includ e prevtous
landowners and anyone
who generated th e \vaste at
the site or took it there , said
St eve Renninge r. the U.S .
EPA's on-see ne coordinator.
Attorneys for the developer. Lexin gton Manor
In c .. ha ve said everyone
involved with the property
did the ri gh t thing and that
the deve loper fo llowed an
environmental firm 's rec ommendations.

Nuclear plant worker exposed to radiation
NORTH PERRY (APl A worker involved in
repairs to ,the Perry nuclear
power plant received a
radiation dose 44 percent
higher than projected.
The employee was making repairs in a high radia-

spokesman .
Todd
Schneider.
Officials stopped work in
three areas where employees could be exposed to
high level s of radiation.
Work resumed Thursday.
The repairs were part of
tion urea and was exposed scheduled routine mainteTuesday for about 15 to 20 nance at the plant , which
minute s,
sa .id
plant . shut down April 5. Perry is

expected to restart in early
May.
The exposed worker ·,
personal radiation monitor.
which records dose levels .
sent a signal to a monitoring board. said Schneider.
When the problem was discovered, the worker was
removed from the room.
The Nuclear Regulatory

Cnmmissinn did not identi fy any violat ion of federal
regulation &gt; by the plant.
agency
spoke,woman
Yiktoria Mitlyng sa id .
During the shutdown.
workers~will rep lace 280 of
748 fuel assembli es in th e
reactor core of the pram
located abou t 25 mil es
northeast of Cleveland.

N

April 17, 2003

RE FURNI,.URE'S INVEN,ORY

\

FROM ...BE GIGAN...IC

10,000

Dow
Jones
Pet. chango

+0.87

from previout:

8,347.45

FEB

Low
8,235.41

MAR

APR

Jan. 111 .2000
1,600

Nasdaq
composite

.

,....,.

-

1,425.50

Pet chango
from

PIOVIoua

+2.21

1,200

JAN
High

1,425,50

FEB
Low
1,393.13

MAR

APR

1,000

RKord high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000

April 17, 2003

1,000

Standard&amp;
Poor's 500

900

Pet. chango
from preVIOUs

+1.55

JAN

FEB

High

Low
87920

893.83

MAR

APR

Record high: 1,527 .46
March 24, 2000

Local Stocks
Federal Mogul - .15
USB- 21.75
Gannon- 74.34
General Electric- 28.49
GKNLV-3
Harley Davidson - 41 .08
Kmart- .6
·
Kroger- t4.06
Ltd . .:.. 14.05
NSC-19.85
Oak HI Financial- 24.05
OVB-2.2.72
BBT -32.20
Peoples- 22 .91
Pepsico - 42.54 ·
Premier- 9.15

Rockwell- 21 .32
Rocky Boots - 6.85
RD Shell- 43.34
Sears - 26.63
Wai·Mart- 55.41
Wendy's- 28.91
Worthington - 13.37
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing

Emergency workers are pull ing a sheet over the body of Amber
Will, a -freshman at Eastern High School, who was the victim of
a mock drinking and driving fatality accident (J Miles Layton)
Dave DiLldle , a radio
personality. spoke to stu dents about his first-hand
knowled ge of l.oss His
brother wa s killed in a
drinking and driving fatality more than I0 years
ago. Diddle said hi s broth er is nor in pain, but his
family still feels the pain
of loss.
"You are not 1i1akin g
that decisiQn for ju st yourse lf, you are making that
decision for everyone
around you," he said.

Tuesday, April 22
RACINE - Racine Area
--11--~-- Monday;"April 21
Community
Organization
LETART FALLS - Letart (RACO) meeting will be held
Township Trt~slees, 5 p.m., at at 6:30 p.m. Star Mill Park
building .
Pot luck to be
office building.
served. New members welcome.
Wednesday, April 23
TUPPERS ___ELAINS.....-= _---"-;.-;:c:;c-:-:~
~~-~-1
Eastern Local Board of
Wednesday, April 23
Education, regular meeting,
CHESTER Pomeroy .
6:30 p.m., Elementary nbrary Chapter 186, Order of the
1
Eastern Star, will have
conference room.
inspection 7:30 p.m. at the
Thursday, April 24
Chester hall: Deputy grand
CHESHIRE ~ The Gallia- matron will be the inspecting
Meigs Community Action · officer.
Agency will ho·Jct the April
Board of Directors meeting at
4:30 p.m., at the Cheshire
Thursday, April 24
office.
ATHENS
Survivors
Suicide Support Group, 7
p.m. at the Athens Church of
Christ
, 785 West Union
Saturday, April 19
Street Athens. For more
HARRISONVILLE
Easter egg hunt, 6 p.m.; informaton call the church, '
Scipio Township firehouse , 593-7414.
ages 12 and under: ·
POMEROY - Caring and
SALEM CENTER - Star Sharing Group will meet at
Grange #778, Junior Grange 1:30 p.m. at the Senior
Center.
Diana
#878 to hold Fun Night, Citizens
potluck supper at 6:30 p.m ., Coates will talk on homeland
at Grange Hall, C.R 1, three security..
miles north of Salem Center.

Meigs County ProbateJuvenile .Jud ge
Scott
Powell drove home the
lega l consequences of a
had deci sion .
He said this mock crash
should serve as a warning .
be cause peopl e lhat break
the law will go to jail. lose
their li ce nse. lose their
fr eedom antJ lose their
money.
.
" Don't come to my
court and expect to get a
break ." Powell said. "This
is your warning .

·

Nicholas A.
George
CHESHIRE
Marine
Corps Lance Cpl. Nicholas A.
George, a 200 I graduate of
River Valley High School in
Cheshire, recently made hi s
way through the Straits of
Gibraltar and into · the
Mediterranean Sea while
assigned to the 26th Marine
Expeditionary Unit, based in
Camp Lejeune. N.C.
George is one of more than
4,000 Pacific Fleet Sailors and
Marines aboard the ships of
U.S.S.
two
Jima
the
Amphibious Ready Group.
George's unit is an expeditionary intervention force
with the ability to rapidly
organize for combat operations in vittually any environment MEU's are composed
of more than 2,000 personnel

Powell honored

James Yeauger
POMEROY -Army Pvt.
James R. Yeauger has graduate&lt;! from the quartermaster
and -chemical equipment
repairer advanced individual
training (A IT) course at
Aberdeen Provi ng Ground in
Aberdeen, Md.
He is the son of Patsy A.
and stepson of George A.
Bunch of Pomeroy and a 2000
graduate of Meigs High
School in Pomeroy.
· He was trained to perform
direct and general su pport
maimenanee on chemical
equipment ,
quartermaster
machinery, air heaters and
spec ial purpose equipment
He learned to ·maintain and
repair electrical antl mechanical systems on fuel heaters,
pumps; filters. generators,
water purification and decontamination systems. and laun-'
dry washers and dryers.
'

Stephanie Jones
POMEROY - Army Pvt.
Stephanie I. Jones has graduated from basic combat training at Fort · Jackson · 111
Co1urn b'1a, S..
C
She is the daughter of
Connie Halley of Pomeroy
and Charlie Jones of
Langsville.
During the nine weeks of
training, Jone s studied the
Army mission, hi~tory, tradi tion and core values, physical
fitness, and received instruction and practice in basic
combat · skills,
military
weapons. chemical warfare
and bayonet training. drill and
ceremony, marching, rifle
marksmanship , armed and
unarmed combat, map reading, field tactics. military
·courtesy, military justice systern, basic first 'aid, foot
marches. and field training_
exercises.

road passing through New
Rome is too short for the speed
limit to be lowered to 35 mph.
New Rome officials could
switch the sign&gt; back, May
, said. "But if they do. I would
think that could be challenged
legally," she said.
Several New Rome officials
who support the 35 mph speed
limit did not return phone messages Thursday seeking comment.
New Rome, with a popula- ,
tion of 60. takes in more than
$300.000 a year in traffic fines
and spends most of that money
on the police department -

Other events

Reader Services

day's transactions. pro· ..

vided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. ot
Gallipolis.

The Pomeroy Village Council honored Scott Powell for his
years of service as the magistrate of mayor's court.
Powell served as the magistrate for almost two years
before being elected Meigs County Juvenile/ Probate judge
in 2002. Powell was the -first magistrate to hold the pos ition. Mayor John Blaettnar said Powe ll provided ··an excelle nt example " for future magistrates. Powell said he did
his best to be fair to his fellow commun1ty members when
they came before the court. (J. Miles Layton)

_
Coming

Sunday:
Yearbook
Government ·

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Come experience the miracle of Easter in your beart.
It's the power of God's love to bring hope and joy to our lives!

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quotes of the previous

.State to raise speed limit in
village known as speed trap
NEW ROME (AP) - The
state plans to raise the speed
limit by 10 mph in a four-block
village known as a speed trap,
while acknowledging it lacks
authority to enforce the change.
The Ohio De~artment of
Transportation will swap 35
mph speed limit signs on U.S.
40-for 45 mph, the road's speed
limit on either side of the viilage on the western edge of
Columbus.
The change .will be made as
part of ODOT's regular signupdate program, spokeswoman
Michelle May said Wednesday.
ODOT has said the stretch of

served its purpo se."
Hannon said' lie thinks
many of those who attended learnep something about
the "tragedy and seriou sness of drinking and driving."
Will 's character did not
have a happy ending, as the
student she played died of
her injuries.
Will said she that while
she was under a sheet under
those circumstances, she
thought about the value of
life and how one decision
can take away everything.
The message was clear.
Will said she will not let ·
her friends drink and drive.
Brittany Davis, a senior
at Eastern, will be attending the prom in May. She
watched the scene unfold
and . thought about the
weeks ahead.
''This really opened up
my eyes and gave me a new
perspective on drinking and
driving . You can never be
too careful," Davis said.
Peer pressure is a powerful force.
"Peer pressure is a difficult thing. but if you make
the right choices, that is all
that ·matters in life ," Davis ·
said,

Saturday, April 19
SYRACUSE - The First
Church of God, located at the
corner of Second and Apple
Sts. in Syracuse, will have a
free food and clothing giveaway from 11 a .m. to noon .
POMEROY - The Meigs For more information call 992County Right to Life will be 1734 and leave a message.
held at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library.

700

AI'

AEP- 25.17
Arch Coat - 18.57
Akzo- 21 .34
AmTech/SBC- 20.60
Ashland Inc.- 29.81
AT&amp;T -14.23
Bank One - 35.32
BLI-12.55
Bob Evans- 26.05
Borg Warner- 55.13
Champion - 2.98
Charming Shops - 4.39
Ci1y Holding- 28.52
Cot- 20.55 .
DG - t3.89
DuPont - 40.63

POMEROY -· Twisted
wreckage ofa car, bleeding
victim s, . poltce and . emergency medical service perso nnel working frantica lly
to sa ve lives - the horrors
of an after-prom or postgraduation traffic accident
involving loss of life were
driven· home for Eastern
and Meigs high school students in a graphic re-creation Wednesday at the
Rock springs·Fairgrounds.
This mock crash was performed by Carl V,:olfe, a
sophomore at MHS, Ajay
Blackwell , a junior at
MHS. Jennifer Grady, a
sophomore at MHS , and
Amber Will, a freshman at
Eastern High SchooL They
portrayed the accident victim s.
Trooper Jim Hannon with
the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol
organized the mock crash
wit-h one goal in mind.
"If we can affect just one
teenager and keep them
from drinking and driving
during and after prom season or graduation, then this
demonstration wi II have

Monday, April 21 o
CHESTER Pomeroy
' Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet at 7:30
p.m . at the Chester hall foi
mock initiation. All officers are
asked to attend.

BOO

893.58

lAYTON

Social Events

7 000
'

Reoord hlgh: 11 ,722.98

April17, 2003

J. MILES
Staff writer
BY

CHESHIRE Marine
Corps Sgt. Larry M. Coon, ;t
1996 graduate of River Valley
High school, recently landed
on I he snore of Kuwait in support of Operation Iraqi
Freedom, while assigned to
the
24th
Marine
Expeditionary Unit based in
Camp Lejeune, N.C.
He is one of more than
4,000 Atlantic Fleet Sailors
and Marines who deployed
aboard the ships of the U.S.S.
Nassau Amphibious Ready
Group.
The unit has been deployed
for more than seven months,
participating in training ,
humanitarian assistance and
peace support operations in
Spain , Italy, Kosovo, Kenya
and Djibouti , Africa.
Coon's unit is an expeditionary intervention force
with the abi lity to rapidly
organize for combat operations in virtually any environment. MEU's are composed
of more than 2,000 personnel
and · are divided into an
infantry battalion, aircraft
squadron, support group and
command element. With this
combination. Coon 's unit
supplies and sustains itself for
quick mission accomplish111ent and for clearing the way
for follow-on forces.

and are divided into an
infantry battalion. aircraft
squadron, support group and
command element. With this
combination, Coon's unit supplies and sustains itself for
quick mission accomplishment and for clearing the way
for follow-on forces.

Support Groups

---s.ooo

JAN
High

.Larry M. Coon
Officials hope demonstration drives
home message about drinking, driving '

Public meetings

EVERYITE
***

Friday, AJ.'ril 18, 2003

Military Service

Community Calendar

.A DAY ON WALL STREET

8,337.65

Mock crash

• • 01&amp;7..--... . ,.

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Friday, April 18, 2003

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www.mydallysentlnel.com ·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Carl Esp~sito
Publisher
Bette Pearce

Charlene Hoeflich

Managing Editor

Editor

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio ·

Civil War-era dance
workshops slated

Local Briefs
To close
POMEROY - Ohio Route
681, about 2.5 miles east of
the Athens County line, will
close on Monday' for a bridge
deck replacement . .
·The roadway will reopen on
Apnl 25, weather permitting.
Motorists are asked to detour
on Ohio Route 692 to Ohio
Route 684. Ohio Route 143 to
Ohio Route 7 to U.S. 33 and
back to 68 I. ,

POMEROY - Meigs Area
Holiness Association Rally for
April will be held at 7 p.m.
Tue sday at the Rutland
Church of the Nazarene.
The Rev. Allen Midcap,
president, invites the public.

NATIONAL VIEW

Biting back

Boso personal

French, German product
boycott could hurt us, too

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

Today is Good Friday, April 18, the 108th day of 2003.
There are 257 days left 10 the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 18, 1775, Paul Revere began his famous ride from
Charlestown to Lexington, Mass., warning American
colonists that the British were coming.
On this date:
·
· In 1906, a devastating earthquake struck San Francisco, followed by raging fires. About 700 people died.
In I923, the first game was played m Yankee Stadium. The
· Yankees defeated the Boston Red Sox, 4- I.
In 1942. an air squadron from the USS Hornet Jed by Lt.
CoL Colonel James H. Doolittle raided Tokyo and other
Japanese cities.
In I945. fa,med American war correspondent Ernie Pyle, 44,,
was killed by Japanese gunfire on the Pacific island of Ie
Shima, off Okinawa.
In 1946, the League of Nations went out of business.
In I983, 62 people, including 17 Americans, were kiped at
the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, by a suicide bomber.
In 1994, fanner President Nixon suffered a stroke at his home in
Park Ridge, N.J.; he died four days later at a New York hospital.
Ten years ago: The government of Bosnia-Herzegovina
agreed to a truce, effectively relinquishing besieged
Srebrenica. Meanwhile, ·Bosnian Serb leader Radovan
Karadzic threatened to boycott further U.N. peace talks if
tou~her U.N. sanctions agamst Yugoslavia went into effect.
Ftve years ago: Despite fierce internal dissent, Northern
Ireland's main Protestant party, the Ulster Unionists, approved
a peace agreement. The remains of Pol Pot were cremated,
three days .after the Khmer Rouge leader blamed for the
killings of up to 2 million Cambodians died at age 73. Former
North Carolina governor and U.S. senator Terry Sanford died .
in Durham at age 80.
.
One year ago: Four Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan were
ki lied when they were mistakenly bombed by an American F16 pilot. Afghanistan's former king, Mohammad Zaher Shah;
returned to his country after 29 years in exile. A small P.lane
slammed into a landmark skyscraper in Milan, Italy, killing
the plane's sole occupant and two other people. Police arrested actor Robert Blake in the shooting death of his wife, Bonny
Lee Bakley, nearly a year earlier. Amtrak's Auto Train
derai'led near Crescent City, Fla., killing four passengers and
seriously injuring 36 others. Norwegian adventurer Thor
Heyerdahl died near Colla Michari, Italy, at age 87.
Today 's Biflhdays: Actress Barbara Hale is 82. Blues singer
Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown is 79. Actor Clive Revill is 73,
Actor James Drury is 69. Actor Robert Hooks is 66. Actress
Hayley Mills is 57. Actor James Woods is 56. Actress-director
Dorothy Lyman is 56. Actress Cindy Pickett is 56. Country
musician Walt Richmond (The Tractors) is 56. Actor James
Woods is 56. Actor Rick Moranis is 49. Actress Melody
Thoma' Scott is 47. Actor Eric Roberts is 47. Actor John
James is 47.
Tho~ght for TOday: "One of the paradoxes of war is that
those in the rear want to get up into the fight, while those in
the lines want to get out."- Ernie Pyle, American war correspondent (I 900- I 945).

SPEAK OUT!
Ever yell at your television set? Ever read something·in the
newspaper that gets your dander up?
·
Next time you get the urge to express your opinion, pick up the
telephone and call the Daily Sentinel's new "Speak Out" line.
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 "S peak Out" during regular business hours.
To call "Speak,Out," dial the Sertinel's main number (740)
992-2156 and then dial extension 29. Begin talking at the tone.

-

---

PORTLAND - Ann Boso
of Portland is recovering from
pneumonia at Health· 5outh
Rehabilitation Ceiller in
Parkersburg. W.Va. Cards can
be sent to her, in care of #3
Western
Hill s
Drive.
Parkersburg , W.Va. 26 I0 I.

·--

~!&lt;OTE,TIV5

._

C:.EAR fOR HIGHEST DE.&lt;:»~

OF \~Aq WA~ COVERA~E

Learning from your neighbors
Today's news is t1ooded
with images of war overseas.
But if, for a moment, you can
look past that, to the many
images of a land, a people
and their culture, you may .
George
begin to think about the
Plagenz
many cultural a,nd customdry
differences that set one country apart from another.
Living in a country where
bombings are an everyday
occurrence can be an unset- on a road that could be cleartling experience. I have never ly seen from the kibbutz. The
been caught in a bombi11g bombing I was hearing was
raid, but I came close once.
Israel's retaliation.
It was during a visit to
Such border incidents were
Israel in . the 1970s. I was a regular occurrence. The
spending the evening at the kibbutz residents took them
apart(l1ent of one of the kib- in stride even though only
butz families on the Israel- weeks before Arabs from
Lebanon-Syrian border in · Lebanon had lobbed a small
northern Galilee. A kibbutz is bomb over our kibbutz. It left
a communal or collectivist a hole behind the apartment
village.
. where I was now staying. ·
About 10 p.m. I heard what
Still, in many respects
I thought was thunder. ''!' d Israel is a tranquil country better hurry along before it or was during my two visits
rains," I said to my hostess. there in the 70s and 80s.
The guesthouse where I was Muggings are rare and crime
staying was a three-minute is rather uncommon. In hi s
walk away.
.
·
book
"Twelve
Cities"
I 969),
"It's not going to rain," she (HarperCollins,
replied. "Look at the sky'' author
John
Gunther
Sure enough, it was star- remarks, "murder in Israel is
·bright.
virtually unknown and there
"Then what was that is very little juvenile delin. noise?" I asked.
quency. "
Gunther, a distinguished
"Oh , that's the bombing in
Lebanon," she shrugged. journalistand foreign corre·
Earlier that day two Israeli ~ spondent, quotes Teddy
had been killed by Arab ter- Kolleck, then the mayor of
rorists as they were driving Jerusalem, · as
saying,

"Jerusalem is a working city.
People don't have time to be
corrupt. There were half a
million citizens in the streets
last week celebrating our
anniversary and we did not
have a single case of drunkenness.!'
Prisoners in the Jerusalem
jails are allowed in certain
circumstances to spend
weekends at home with their
families.
·
"This is a . sunny city in
several senses of the term.
Children Jpok marvelously
healthy and people · on the
street smile a lot," write s
Gunther. That, however, was
not my observation,
Much as I enjoyed my
stays in Israel, 1 noted that
the Israelis are not "overly·
friendly to visitors which is
strange in .a country where
tourists are wooed as a
source of income," as had
been described.
I mentioned this to a facul ty member at Hebrew
University in Israel who was
from the United States. She
said she had noticed the same
thing. ·
"I don't know why Israeli s
don' t smile more," she said.
"I don't think it is because
life is harder here, although
that might have something to
do with it."
She said that Israelis, for
their part, sometimes wonder
why Americans smile as

much as they do.
Israeli driving is something
else again. Horn-honking is
usually the mark of a bad driver and Israel is a country of
horn-honkers. I made some ·
inquiries and was told the
country has the world's highest auto accident rate.
Gunther called Israel's al,Jto
traffic "lively" and said accidents are "frequent." He
went on to say. however, that
the accident rate "does not
come near that of the U.S. in
proportion to the population."
.
· The Jerusalem Post carriedj
two letters to the editor abou!
the driving problem while I
was there .
One correspondent wrote,
"Young boy s might like to
make a note that aggressive
driving is known to be a sex
substitute and I'm sure most
of them wouldn 't like to
advertise their shortcomings
in that direction ."
Learning about these cultural differences helps to
enlighten us about life abroad
and may also offer solutions
to some of our country 's own
problems. For instance, could
publicizing this sex/driving
correlation cut · down on the
teen mayhem on lhe highways in this country?
(George R. Plagenz is a
columnist for Newspaper
Enterprise As.sociation.)

Psychopathology of war protestors
If you thought we would be
at least temporarily free from
protest marche s; now that
President Bush has cleansed
Iraq of Saddam Hussein, you
underestimated the determi nation of these peculiar .people.
On April I2, thousands of
protesters marched through
the streets around the Whtte
House, "demanding," as The
New York Times put it. "an
early end to the military's
presence in Iraq .... Although
the march focused on the
war, many in the crowd also
voice their frustrations with
other policies. Groups criti-.
cal of the World Bank, the
International Monetary Fund
and other global financial
institutions plan to rally
Sunday to protest economic
globahzation, and some of
·them joined the peace march
today."
The modern phenomenon
of the protest demonstration
dates from the Vietnam War,
and it s popularity is grounded in the firmly held belief
that the Vietnam protests
actually accomplished something- either ended .the war,
forced Nixon 's resignation,
or both. Most protesters are
fairly well educated - to the
coll ege or junior coll ege
level - and absorbed from

William
Rusher

their professors a positively
exhilarating hatred of how
(they think) America is run.
The liberal media, and especially . television, reinforce
this belief on a daily basis. As
a result, there is practically
always something going on
that spurs them to action,
whether it 's' war in Iraq or
just a meeting of the
International Monetary Fund.
But what accounts for the
popularity of the protest
march as a technique ? After
all, these people could just as
easily involve themselves in
more nonnal forms of political activism: working for the
political party of their choice
or even writing letters to their
local newspaper.
The truth is that most protesters feel, guiltily, that they
haven't accomplished much
with their lives. Above all
else, they long to do something ihat will make a differ-

ence. If such a person is a or more away from home. Of
really determined loner, he or course, a few will be supershe may choose to spend a annuated geezers long since
year living in the upper retired. trying to recapture
branches of a California red- the glory days of the Vietnam
wood to protest the lumber protests, and a good many
industry. But a protest march are no doubt students (more
is quicker, easter and a lot or less), on no parti cular
more fun.
schedule. Throw in the
They will spend the day in , unemployed and the selfa large crowd of similarly employed, and it is conceivminded people. With any able that a critical .mass
luck, they may actually get might be achieved. But sureon televtsion, or even get ly some of the protesters
(briet1y) arrested. The leaders must have jobs, just like the
of the mob will brief them in poor devils trying to get to
advance on where to slump
down in the middle of the work in the traffic jams they .
street, to block traffic. There cause.
The Times reporter may
will be instructions on how to
have
been trying to tell us
respond, or not respond, to
something.
"The effects of
orders from the police. It will
all be. or at least seem to be this war. are going to be
- deliciously - a little bit around for a long time," said
dangerous. And all in such a Tessie Fletcher, I9. Dripping
wet. she was at the edge of a
good, high-minded cause!
fountain
at Freedom Plaza,
I will confess, though, that
two
blocks
from the White
one thing puzzles ml!. Where
do these people find the time House, where she and others
to engage in these hijinks? in the group had frolicked on
Don't , they have jobs, like a pleasant spring afternoon.
most of the human race~ Or "The devastation from the
are they all on welfare, or bombing won't go away,"
getting an allowance from Ms. Fletcher said."
No, and neither will Tessie.
Daddy" A protest march
(William Rusher is a
requires devoting at least a
day to the project, and thou- Distiltguished Fellow of the
sands of these people find the Claremont Institute for the
time to be bused in from dis- .Study of Statesmanship and
tant cities, spending a week Political Philosophy.)
•

Smith personal
MIDDLEPORT - Mike
Smith of Middleport has been
hospitalized in Pennsylvania.
Cards may be sent to him, in
care of the Clarion Hospital ,
Room 263, I Hospital Drive.
. Clarion, Pa. I6214.

RACO meets
RACINE - Racine Area
Community Organiz.ation .
will hold its monthly meeting
at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. A
potluck dinner · will be
served. New members are
welcome.

Board meets
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local School Board
will meet in regular session at
6:30 p.m . Wednesday, in the
conference room of the
Eastern Elementary School
library.

Trustees meet
LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees will meet
at 5 p,m, Monday at the otlice
building.

Plan screening
TUPPERS PLAINS
Screening for kindergarte.n
students in Eastern Local
School District will be held on
April 28 and 29.
1
Parents are asked to call the
elementary school in 9853304 to make an appointlJlent,
and should bring the child's
Social Security number, original birth certi tkate, immunization records and custody
papers, if relevant.

Alumni plan
events
TUPPERS PLAINS The annual Eastern High
School Alumni banquet and
dance will be held at 6 p.m.
Saturday, May 24 in the
gymnasium of Eastern High
School.
All alumni are encouraged
to attend . Honored classes
are 1958, 1963, 1968, 1973 ,
1978, 1983. I 988, I 993,
I 998,
and
2003 .
Entertainment will be by
High Country following the
dinner.

Meigs County Commissioner.s Jim Sheets, Jeff Thornton and Mick Davenport join National Day
of Prayer Comm ittee members Peggy Crane, Gladys Cumings , Faith Hayman and Chairman
Brenda Barnhart in declaring May 1 a Day of Prayer for Meigs County. (Brian J. Reed)

National Day.of Prayer
planned for May 1
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

Staff writer
POMEROY .- A circle of
pray er surroundin g the
Meigs County Courthouse
and jail, a week-long prayer
and Bible-reading marathon
and a midday prayer service
on May I are planned for
Meigs County's National
Day of Prayer observance.
Meigs County commissioners Thursday issued a
proclamation declaring May
I as a Day of Prayer for
Meigs County. in conjunction with the National Day
of Prayer declared by
President Bu sh.
Brenda Barnhart is the
coordinator of the event,
and Peggy Crane, the Rev.

MHS plans
reunion
POMEROY - Meigs Hi gh
School class of I988 is planning its 15th reunion. .
Those interested in helping
or having updated addresses
are asked to contact Shannon
Slavin. 992-37 I0 or OU
Shanshan@hotmai .com, or
Laura Sheets 304-485-91 I2 or
Jasheetsmd@yahoo.cm

•

•

Rod Brower, Linda Haley,
Faith Hayman and Gladys
Cumings serve on the local
National Day of Prayer
committee.
The week-long observance will begin at 3 p.m .
on Sunday. April 27, with a
prayer cirCle around the
counhouse and jaiL
Barnhart said anyone
interested in joining in the
I 5 minutes of prayer for
county
officials
and
employees is invited, and
that those who are unable to
stand iri the circle are invited to bring lawn chairs and
join in the prayer service. '
A
six-hour
prayer
marathon will be held from
4 to · 10 p.m., from April 27
through ~April 30, and from

8 to 10 a.m. on May I, at the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church. The traditional
Bible-reading marathon will
begin at the gazebo on the
Pomeroy Parking Lot at the
same time the prayer service
begins at the church.
The
Fellowship
of
Christian Students and the
Meigs County National Day
of Prayer Committee will
co-sponsor a praise and
prayer rally for teenagers
from 7 to 8 p.m. on April30,
at Meigs Middle SchooL
On May I, the committee
will ·sponsor · its annual
prayer service for the community and its leaders at the
Meigs County Courthouse ..
The service will begin at
11:30 a.m.

Library funding reduction
considered by st~te
Layoffs possible
in local,system

Eblin said.
207,436. ·
According to the Ohio
The library has recently
the . finished additions and reoLibrary Council.
Library • and
Local ovations costing more than
Government Support Fund $778,000. Eblin stresses
BY J. MILES lAYTON
Staff-writer - ·
- (LLGS F) was set up in that this money came from
:::::::::...::.:.::::::_______ I986 as one of three local years' worth of savings
government fund s.
from the building fund set
li:r?r~;R~~ross ~~fga~ I Thhedse fuhndds dwe.re de stab~ up speci~ically to deal ~ith
. .
Is e wit
e tcate per capnal tmprovements to
County are at nsk tor los- centages of tax revenues
.
.
.
.
ing t~eir funding_jf_ the _ so that they would be able the hbrartes tn Metgs
.
state cuts thetr budgets to rise and fall with the County. .
between I 0 to 50 percent. econo my, and would not
She S~td even wit~ c.uts
The ltbrary reltes on the have to be subject to cuts to fundtng, the butldmg
state. for 95 percent of its or increases by the legisla- fund can not be touched.
fundmg.
tive process.
Ebhn urges people to
Library Director Kristi
In 2002, the LLGSF lost contact their legislators to
· Eblin said if the budget is about $48 million as a tell them how important
cut back. there may need result of declining tax rev- the library is . She has been
to be some staffing enue. As a result, Eblin in contact with both State
changes and programming said the library's share was Sen. Jim Carnes,. a
alterations to absorb the less than the year before. Republican
from
St.
lo~s m revenue.
..
Sh~ esttmates that translat- Clairsville, and State Rep.
It the money ts not ed mto an 8.5 percent loss Jimmy Stewart an Athens
the·re, •.~ere .i s nothing we to Meig~ County libraries . Republican, ~bout the
can do, · Eblm ~md.
The hbrary has already issue.
There are .5 people had to make some cuts to
"I do not know for sute
h t · 0 · to ha pen "
employed by the Me1g s programs and reduced
J'b
·
d.
Th e absence wh a ts'dg mg
,
·
C ounty
1 rary , sys tem expen Ilure s.
"It d 1p ·th
which has branches in of a summer reading pro- s e sat ·
ea s wt
Pomeroy,
Middleport, ~ram will save more than how the Senate handles
Racine and one in th e new 2,000. Eblin said the this."
Eastern Local School book budget has been
The final vote will be
building.
reduced. There are 17,017 taken sometime before
"If we redu ce stl!ff, we registered patrons who use June 30. Currently the
will have to reduce the the library, which has a budget hill is being considhours that we are open," cumulative circulation of ered by the Senate.

Woodman plan .
dinner
GALLIPOLIS - Modern
Woodmen will have a brunch
from 10:30 a.m. to I p.m.
Saturday at the Ponderosa in
Galliipolis.
The Middleport-Gallipolis
camp will pay $2.50 on each
meaL All Woodmen are invited.

WILKESVILLE - Civil
dance Jesson workshops will be held on the
third Tuesday of the following months at the se loca-.
tions: May 20 at Southern'
Elementary gymnasium in
Racine, and June I 7 at
Eastern Elementary gymnasium at Tuppers Plains.
The locatio n of the July
15 workshop will be
announced .
All workshops are scheduled from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
The cost is $3 per person.
More information is avail able from Mary and Gerald
Powell at (740) 992-2622,
Jane Ann Burns at (740)
·669-39 I 5 or David Stiffler
Jr. at (740) 669-4671.
The dance le ssons are
War~era

Rally planned

• Herald-Journal, Spartanburg, S,C., on French and
German bo.\'cons: A boycott of French and German goods has
gathered pace in the United States- a consequence of those
countries' continued resistance to the war in Iraq- but such
a movement is economically unsound and an overreaction.
Consumers have made the call to boycott French wine and
bottled water. even yogurt. Others have encouraged steering
clear of German automobiles. The growing list has had an
imp\lct on scores of businesses with ties to international companies.
Before taking pleasure at the notion of striking at the economy of those countries unwilling to join the coaljtion of
nations supporting the battle to liberate a suppressed Iraqi citizenry. consider the effects that first will be felt on American
soil.
·
When you refuse to buy a Michelih tire, think about the
workers who made that tire. Michelin's work force in the
United States totals 20,000.
Think about the distributors that hire people who daily
deliver yogurt and other dairy foods, wines, coffees and C(JS·
metics to grocers; who depend on sales of such products and
many others with French ties to keep their workers employed.
These companies are pumping money into our communities, where many livelihoods depend on their continued economic well-being, and boycotting their products should be
viewed as more un-American than anti-French or antiGerman.

The Daily Sentinel• Page AS

•

Friday, Aprill8, 2003
@100'3

'fhe Daily Sentinel .

•
Friday, April 18, 2003

. Forget the Bonnet!
Forget the Fancy Clothes!
YOU ARE INVITED TO OUR

Coming
Monday:
Kid
Scoop

Come:.As-You-Are
Easter Service!
9:30a.m.
.

being held in preparation
for
'the
Bicentennial
Military Ball set for Friday,
Sept. 5 at Chester as part of
the Sept. 3-8 Morgan 's Raid
reenactment in Vinton and
Meigs counti es.
All ages are encouraged
to participate. You do not
need to bring a partner.
There will be someone you
can dance wi th at the practice lessons. On the night of
the military ball , there will
be 200 Confederate cavalrymen, and 200 Union and
militia soldiers seeking a
partner for dancing.
.
All dancers must be in
period costume to participate on tlte eveni ng of the
military ball.

Cemetery

First, it is not responsible for
the upkeep and maintenance of
lawn equipment. Congo said
from Page A1
last season he spent $500 dollars on repairs in addition to
is glad to be working with purchasing a new large scale
him again. The mayor said he lawn mower.
is glad the situation is settled
Second, the village does not
because grass cutting season have to pay for any benefit
has already ~ tarted.
packages as it would if the
"Got to get mowing because employees were hired excluthe grass is growing," he said. sively by the village.
Kathy
Other business
Clerk-tre,asurer
Hysell said the village wants a
• Dale Riffle, who works
two-year contract with Congo. part-time downtown for the
The contract would not Jock village has been hired fulleither party into anything time.
which would allow for flexi• Amber Dugan will now
bility if either party decides to work as a substitute dispatcher
terminate the deal.
for the Pomeroy Police
Hysell said the contract Department. She will fill in for
would be similar to the one the the position as needed .
village has with the magistrate
• Village Tax Administrator
and would keep Congo on for Jean Durst advises people to
two seasons.
file their city income taxes by
Both the mayor and Hysell April 30 or there will be a $25
are pleased that this arrange- penalty.
ment would eliminate the
• Between April 28 and May
problems associated with 2, .the village will conduct its
renewing t)le contract next annual spring cleanup.
· year.
The first ward will . be
Hysell said the village used cleared Monday (April ·28)
to maintain the cemetery by with any cartyover being finhiring two or three part-time
workers and providing lawn ished Tuesday morning (April
care equipment. She said the 29). The second ward will be
workers often went unsuper- . cleared Tuesday with any car. vised which became a concern ryover ,, being
finished
as· work quality suffered at Wednesday (April 30) momtimes.
ing. The third ward will be
Lawn care equipment often cleared Wednesday with any
needed to be replaced, which carryover being finished
further made cutting the grass Thursday (May I) morning.
an expensive venture for the
Anything that is missed will
village.
_. _ ~---be:o'Fp""i"'ck"'e~d._,.u,J:l Friday. For more
Hysell said that by contract- information contact either the
ing out the job. the -village Pomeroy Police Department or
saves money in many ways .
the wate( department.

Cross

still in use.
In the late 1970s, the
Shuster property was sold,_
the house was torn down and
from PageA1
preparations were made for
regardless of the weather, to building a new one on the lot.'
turn the lights on and off. The cross was located too
Later a switch was placed close to the planned new
structure so it became necesinside their home to make sary for the church to move it
their dedicated service a little onto the adjacent property of
easier. And finally the ,cross
Mary and Walter Grueser. .
was put on an automatic
In the summer of I 980. the
timer.
cross was taken from its origAbout 10 years after it was inal site, refurbished , the
erected, church officials electrical work and lighting
decided the wooden structure changed, and relocated to the
was unsafe and replaced it Grue scr lot.
with a steel cross built by the
All through the years the.
late Charles Newman in the expenses of the lighted cross,
yard of the Newman home in which appears in darkness to
Syracuse.
be suspended in the sky. have
It was 36 feet high and I4 been borne by the Trinity
feet wide and was lighted congregation.
with 250 bulbs. The new
The mem6ers consider the
steel cross replacing the orig- maintenance and electr1ic
inal wooden ope was dedicat- bi lis a small price to pay for
ed on May 10, I950, and is such a mighty message. ·

I

Giant

Saturday Apri/19, 2003
10:00 a.m.
Hundreds of Eggs- Great Prizes
Free Hot Dogs and Chips

Free Breakfast after the Service.

Laurel Cliff·

Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church

Free Melliodist Church
"Where Jesus Christ is Lord- 2417"

"Where Jesus Christ is Lord- 2417"
4().792 Laurel CliffRot~d- Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-1750 For More !'!formation

'.

407921Aure/ QijfR011d- Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-1750 For More Information

'

�Page A6

Faith • Values

The Daily Sentinel

7i\

Friday, April 18, 2003

~~

•

.·

"After 33 years beyond eternity, I tinally got Him'"
It was the devi I who spoke as
he leaned against the Cross.
The body oflesus had just been
removed, and several of the
Lord's followers were at tlmt
moment in the process of transporting Christ's corpse to a burial tomb.
"Out of sight. and out of mind
- take Him out of here !"
roared the devil, gesturing with
a wave of his hand. He gushed
with delight at the sight.
Looking toward Heaven, he
yelled, "''m laughing at you
God! I got your boy with a
cross. Look how I outwitted
you' Friday will be eternal!y
marked as the day when I,
Satan, prince of this world; got
the drop on God. The joke of
the cosmos is mine'"
Satan surveyed the scene of
his perceived spiritual caper. He
had long reasoned that the body
Christ assumed at birth made
God vulnerable. The Skull. that
haunting prectptce above
Jerusalem, would forever stand
as a monumental reminder to
humanity of the d~ y of the
de!!th of God.
•
Nearby, four believers knelt
in prayer, obviously distraught
over Jesus' unexpected crucitixion. Satan spied them and
muttered, "I got you now. I gut
all of you now."
Several of Satan's high-ranking powers stood encircling the
cross. They had worked feverishJy to intluence the religious
leaders and the populace to
demand the crucifixion of
Christ, while Satan had focused
on the possession of Judas, the
betrayer.
Abbadon addressed his eviI
master, "My lord. is that not
Gabriel, Heaven's archangel,
coming up the back slope with
Adam, the ftrst man?"
U ndau11ted by the presence of
powerful evil, Gabriel · and
Adam advanced to the scene. A
Heavenly glory enshrouded tlte
two as they made their unex. peeled appearance atop Mount
Calvary. They walked over to
the four prayer~. and stood
behind them like a dynamic
protective wall. Their glorified
· aura slipped over the believers,
as though solacing and minis·
tering to the human agony they
were expressing in their
prayers.

Center

MI DDLEPO RT
' Eas te r sunri se serv ice with
co mm union wi ll be he ld at
the
Ho bso n Chri sti an
Fe ll ows hip ·c hu rch a ft e r
whi ch a brea kfust will be
se rved . Sunday sc hoo l will
be at '1 :30 a.m. and Sun d ay
ni g ht service at li:3 0 p .m.

Ron

Branch .

C HES T ER
Bet hel
Wors hip Ce nt e r in Ches ter
pla ns
a
ca ndle lig ht
Te n.e brae ·service at 7 p. m.
Fri day, a:nd 8 a.m. sunri se
services.
fp ll o wed
by
breakfast, at 8 a. m . Easter
Sunday. A ce le bration service will be he ld at 10 a. m.
Sunday.

Carmei~Sutton

GUEST VIEW

United
Methodist
Church

Satan placed his hand on the
stake of the Cross: and swung
himself around like a child at
play. Looking at his fellow fallen ones. he said. ''You see. what
makes this crucifixion such a
great joke is because the
pre mise actually came from
what God told me in the presence of Adam in the Garden,
'You shall brui se His heel. ' Oh.
most certainly. G.od ordained it.
by some sort of plan He had, to
obtain a blood sacritice from
His Son to redeem humanity ·
from me. But, how subtle I was
in the Garden .to reali ze something about the an imals used to
provide coverings for Adam. I
was the reason for their death s.
I was the reason for Adam 's
death . The power of death was
my work. Those animals have
never lived again. and Adam's
spiritual fate is sealed. Now.
with the death Christ, my power
or death will become absolute.
The Son of God wi II never be
released from it. And, I lind it
all quite amusing."
· "Yes, my lord. But, why do
Gabriel and Adam appear to be
laughin g at us'' " observed
Abbadon .
Satan wheeled around, and
his sight shot in their direction.
His eyes began to glare. His
great intellect scrolled through
all the . spiritual possibilities.
Indeed, why would they be
laughing when all hope had
been s lande~(l and stolen from

Long Bottom
U.M.
LO NG BOTTOM
Long
Botto m Unit ed
Meth od is t C hurc h w ill
hold Good Friday se rv ice
at 7 :.1 0 Ji.m ., with Rev
Norm a n Butle r as speaker.

· RA C IN E - A ca nta ta
will be prese nte d at 8 p .m.
o n Good Fri day a t th e
Carme l Sutt o n · u n ited
Meth odi st C hu rc h
on
Carme l Road , Racin e·.

PomeroyMiddleport
U.M.

Sacred Heart
PO M EROY Sacre d
Hea rt Ca th o lic C hur c h.
Pom eroy, pl ans th e follow ing Ho ly Wee k se rvices:
Vi si ts to Re posi to ry until
II p.m.; G ood Friday :
Stations of th e Cross. 12
noon . Liturg y of th e
Pa ss io n a nd Dea th of O ur
Lord , Hol y Commu nio n,
7:30 p.til .: Holy Saturda y.
Ea ste r Vigil Servi ces,
Mass , 8:3 0 p .m.: Eas te r
Sunday, Mass, 9 :30a .m:

POMEROY
Eas te r
serv ices at th e Middl e po rtPomeroy United Meth odi st
C hurc h
Charge
w ill
in cl ud e an Easter sunri se
se rvice
at the Hea lth
United Met hodi st C hurch
in Middleport ; at 6 :30a.m .
followed by a brea kfas t
pre pa red
by
th e
United
Middl e port
Meth odi st Men .
On Eas ter Sunda y th e
worship se rvice wi ll be
held at th e Po meroy
Uni te d Method is t C hurc h
at 9:30 a .m. and at Heath
United Methodist Churc h
in
Middleport at II a. m.
MIDDL EPORT
Middl e po rt C hurc h of with Pa stor Rod Brower.
Chri st will hold a Sunri se
Servi ce at 6 a.m. Sunday,
with the Ea s te r cantat a.
" Ri sen." Breakfa st will be
serv ed at 7 a.m .. follow ed
POMEROY
Good
by wors hip service ' at 8: 15
Friday
ser•i
ce
at
th e
a .m .. Sund ay school at
United
Ent
erpri
se
9 :30 a .m .. and a seco nd
worship ser vice at I 0 :30 Met hodi st Church will be .
held at 7 p.m. on Friday.
a.m.
Easte r Sund ay service s
•at th e c hurch will in clude
sunri se se rvic e at 6 a. m.
with brea kfas t to foll ow:
wors hip service at 'I a.m.,
Sunday school at 10 a .m.;
~~and_al]__egg_hunt for . th e
MIDDLEPORT
children foll ow ing . Arlan d
Middl e port
Mini ste rial Kin g inv it es th e- publi c.
Ass ociati o n will hold a

Middleport
Church of
Christ

Enterprise U.M.
Church

them ~

Satan sensed a spirit now at
the Cross that wa' surely unsettling. With a huff, he gestured
tor hi s band to follow him.
Satan having departed, Adam
broke out in holy laughter, " I
can't wait until three days from
now!"
Gabriel.. smiling broadly,
cruiJmed, "The Serpent will
have no head when the Lord
rises from the dead 1 That - I
shall lind most amusing."

Middlepo·rt
Ministerial
Association

MID DLE PORT
Easter Sund ay servt ces
wi ll begin with a 6 a.m.
su nri se can dle li g ht and
co mm unio n service with
Pi1s tor Gle nn Rowe speak in g foll owed by a break fas t at 6 :30 a.m .. S ltnday
sc hool at 9 :30 a.m., wo rsh ip se rvtce a nd · yo uth
church at 10 :30 a.m . an d
a n Eas ter egg hunt for th e
c hil dre n. T he pub l ic is
invi ted .

~

'W

Good Friday, Easter services anno·unced
The jQke of.the
Hobson
Hemlock Grove
Ash Street
cosmos, comedy Christian
Church
Church
Fellowship
of misperceptio_
n church
Bethel Worship
Com mu nity Good Friday
serv ice at 7 p.m. on Friday
a t the Mi dd le po rt C hurch
of Chri st.

www.mydallysentlhel -com

Friday April 18• 2003
'

2S
WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

postolfc

Clmrch of J rsus C,.:hrisl' A postoUr
Vtt nZamlt 1111d Wa rd Rd ., Pa .. tor: J am&lt;:~
Miller. S u n d ~y S~: hoo l - 10 : ~ 0 a.m.,
E ~c.11 ing - 7 : ~ 0 fUll .•,;-; .,

CA RP ENTE R - A sun ri se •serv ice a nd brea kfa st
w ill he he ld by the
Carpen te r Baptist C hu rc h
at th e Co lumbia Fi re ho use
at 6:30 u. m. Sunda y.
R ~gu l ar se rv ices at the
PO MERO Y - An Eas ter c hu rch wi ll ta ke pl ace at
egg hllllt will be he ld :t t 10 9 :30 a.m .
a.m. Sa turd ay at the La urel
C li ff
Free
Met ho di st
C hu rc h. Prize s w ill be
awa rded and re fres hm en ts
se rved .
A
"come -as-yo u -a re
Eas te r se rvice will be hel d
~It 9: 30 a.m . Su nd ay fol- .
lo wed by a free bre a kfas t
SYR ACUSE
Ho ly
at the ch urc h located at W&gt;e k wo rshi p opportu ni40 792 Laurel Cliff Road . ti ~s ·n n the Syrac u se ,
Po meroy .
Unit ed Methodi st C hur ch
c irc ui t
inc lu de
Good
Frida y wo rship at 7 :30
p.m.: a nd Easter sunri se
worship and breakfa st at
6 :.1 0 a .m . at th e Fo re st Run
C hurc h . Reg ula r Eas ter
POM EROY - An Easter worship services will be
egg hun t will be he ld at I he ld at 9 a.m. Forest Run ,
p .m . Sa turd ay at the Ill a .m . Min(;' rsvill e, and
J. m .
A sbury
at
Hyse ll
Run
Ho li ness II
Syrac
use
.
C hurch. On Sunda y th e re
will be u sunri se se rvice. at
6 :30 a.m. fo ll o wed by
com mu nio n and a b rea kfas t. Ot her sc rvi·ccs will
include Sun dav sc hool at
9:3 0 a. m.. wo rship se rvi ce
at I 0 :45 wi th a cantata a nd
POM E ROY
Eas te r
co mmuni on. and at 7:3 0
service
s
at
the
Middl
e port p.m. an e ve ni ng wo rs hip
Po meroy United Methodi st
se rvice .
C hu rc h · Charge
wi ll
•
in cl ude an Eas ter sunri se
se rvic e at the Health
Un ited Meth od ist Church
inMiddl epo rt. at 6 :30a .m .
fo llo we d by a breakfa st
pre pa red
by
th e
Unit ed
S YR ACUSE - Su nri se Middl ep ort
,;e rvice will be hel d at 7 Me th od ist Men .
On Ea ster S unda y th e
a.m . S unda y follo wed by a
breakfa st at 8 a .m. a nd the wors hi p se rvice will be
reg ul ar se rvices of Sund ay he ld at th e Po me roy
.sc hoo l at , 9 :30 a .m . a ll d Unit ed Methodi st Churc h
wors hip a t 10:40 a.m . At I at 9:30 a .m. and at Heath
p. m . on Saturd ay t here United Meth odi st Churc h
will be an egg hunt.
in Middl epo rt at II a .m .
with Pas tor Rod Brower.

River Va lley
Apostoli c Wnr.. hip Ce nlcr. M7 3 S. 3n..l
Ave ., MidUic purt, K&lt;:vi n Konk le, P ~ s w.
SunJ a)' , I I a. m . and !l :OO p.m ..
Welinesday, 7:00 p.m.: Yo ut h Fri. 7:30
p.m .

Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist
Church

Syracuse
United
Methodist
circuit

Hysell Run
Holiness
Church

PomeroyMiddleport
U.M.

Syracuse
Church of the
Nazarene

Assembly of God
Llbe ~·

Assembly (Jr God

1•.0 . Ho:o; 407, IJuddin !!. l.an t", M a~ mt .
W.\':1. , P a~ l or: Neil Tenn;J nt , Surlday
Scrvkes- 10:00 a.m. :.md 7 p.m.

Baptist
llnpt&gt; Ba ptist _t:hu f'(" h (South~rn )
~ 7 1) Grant St. , Mitltll q m rt, P as t~r: Rev.

Da\' id Bryan, S unda~· sc hool - 9:30 a.m..
Wo r ~ hip - II a.m. and fi p.m.. Wednesday
Service · 7 p.m.
Rutland First Baptist C hun-h
Sund ay Sch(ml - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10: 4 5 a.m.
Pomeroy First Bapli!it
Pa ~ t ur

J un Bnx-ken, Eas t Main St ..
Sunday Schoo _! - 9 :31) a.rn .. :vo rshi p l iJ:.\0 a.m.

Fir')l Southern Baptist
.. 1872 Po me m y Pikl!, Pastor: E. Lumar
O 'Br ya nt . Suntln y School - 9 :10 u.m.,
Worsh 1p - K: l) a.m., 9 : --1 ~ am &amp; 7:00 p.m ,
Wl·d nesJu y S c n• i ~:e s - 7. 00 p.m .
First Baptist C hun:h
Pas tor: Mark Mo rrow. Oth and Pal m ~ r St. ,
Middleport. Sunday S..: h&lt;lOI - 9: 15a. m.,

a.m., Worship · 10 :&lt;10 :i.m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesda y Services- 7'()() p.m.
Silver Run Baptist
Pas tur: Joh n Swanson, Su nday Sdloo l -

IOa .m.. Wors hip - l la .m .. 7:00 p.m.
,Wcdnt"sday Serdccs- 7:00p.m.
Mt. Un~on Baptist
Pastor : David Wiseman, Sunday School· , .
9: 45 a.m .. Eve nin g - 6 : 30 p .m..
· Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m._

.

Bethlehem Baptist C hurch
Great Bend, Route 124, Raci!le, O H,
Pastor : Danie l Mecea. Sun day School 9:30 a.m., Sunday Worship · 10 :30 a.m.,
WedneSday Bi ble Siudy - 6.00 p.m.
Old Bethel Fret WID Baptist C hurch
2860 l ~t. Rt . 7, Midd leport. Su nda ~
School • 10 a.m.•. Even1ng · l :OO p.m., .
Thursday_Se rv i c~s • 7:00
Hillside Baptist Church
St. Rt . 14 3 just o ff Rt. 7, Pastor: Re v.
JAm c ~ R. Ar::ree, .Sr., Sunday Unifi ed
Serv ice, Worship • 10 :30 a.m :, 6 p.m.,

We d111:sdey SerV It:es--;-?·p.m.

Victory Baptist Independent
~ 2~

E.

N. 2nd St. Middl eport , PaJtor: Jamu
Keeiee, Wo rsh ip - IOa.m ., 7 p.m.,

This

seem lik e an unusual question to l ou.
Surely, East er has bten special toIIIIDYor us ror
~I or our lives. Yet, is Ea~ ersperi al ror you
in a personal way when the bright eggs
have been hidden and round? Is it still
special when Easter servi rr is o ver
and th e rhth es ar e bark in th e
cl o&amp;et ... aner th e famil y hm rh is
done? Will II be spuial Mooday
may

n»rnin1?
]!'SUI

Christ 'dit':S" a ~ain for
1

each or us

1': \' e ry da y

or lh t:

we ek ... wh en we forge! a n d

uy iomd hi ng hurtful or
whtn that lillie ~&gt;bi te lie ~ips
oul of nowhere. lr w ~ fed
guilty He is our Redeemer .
1

26 years in local business
Rooting &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH

740-992-6215
Worship

1

now fr om J our heart o n East er and
May you have a bleood Easter.
MONDA!
U.k
11: 12·~

WEDNESDAY

THURSOAV

1 Corinthiims 1 Comtli.-1'
15:1·11
t5f2·34

TUESDAY

1 Corinth~•
1!;35-58

SATURDAY

1 1 ; 1 ~11

JoiTI
t t ;t r.l4

Jcm

"lr your VC R·, in trnuhle
bring it to me the double"
34549 Ball Run Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

(740) 992-4507

·, ARCA DIA NURSING CENTER
.. Oitl F..... tlll mcd Co m ra"~ m n - Modrrn Care"

Licensed Embalmer, Funeral Director

Licensed Pre-Need l ns.urance

Soecialisl

SYRACUSE

Adva11ced
1122 Jackson Pike Gallipolis, OH
(800) 434-4194

_......_

uardrail, Fence &amp;
sign erection

(7 40) 942-M .'\ 1

7 40-949-221 0
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Raciril!, OH

P.O. Box 683
Pomero , Ohio 45769-0683

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

G
-

For :t

Coy's VCR Repair

740-992-2121
Fax· 740-992-2122
Ben H. Ewing

~ Raclne, OH

This Week!

everJ daJ?

FRIDAY

Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy, OH

df!ll!!._. 209 Third St.

God Together

S ometimes ou r wuk ne !tits

renind us or jtll;! how human
we rtally are. It i&amp;then that
we r an remember that jt':Sus
rises above our hum anitv
when we btlievt. tha1 He ga,-~
- H~ Hfe on the Cross to Sllve us
fromourstl\'esan d Otlf sin.
We rnd iu Joint 7:J7.;~ 11]t':Sils
stood u·p and prod airned1 11f any
one th irsl 1 lei him rome t o me :wd
drink . He- wh o beli eves in Me1 as the
scripture has said ~ out bl his lmu1 shall
now rivers orlivin g'wa ler."'
Woo 1t you Jet Jesus 1 goodms and salwt ion

106

t'ore~t Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt , Sund ay Sc hool - 10

~ h o lt:

.kame Ho~c l l
.13.B4 Hy&gt;cll Ru n Ru.
Pomcmy. OH ~ 57 ti'l
N 0-992· 7996

1\C'W )'011

7 40•949-2217
Sizes available 5x 10 to 10 x 20

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPP(

IICII.

399 W Main St.
111:111
Pome roy, Oh
Purina
(740) 992-2164
" Stuff" For Pets, Farm Animals &amp;
Tropical Fish• Full Line or Perina
Chows • Garden Seed &amp; Fertilizers
"Let your light 'o ' hinc bcrore
men, that they may sec yo ur
good work, unu glori fy your
Fat her in heaven."
Matt hew 5:16

)'\l ll

,.

pa) your next h0111c or
S und ;~ y-

Call : Judy. Hrand i. or June Ann

10 : 4~

IJ92.J9H5 1 Pomc ro~· ) 594·0660 (Alh~ns J

Fril 'lull\

.-\ lm O.\fJ ht •n·

• ~

rm

p.m., Wednesday Ser..-ices - 7 p.m .

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Hom ~:

a.m., Sunday Evening · 6:00 p.n!··

Rutland Free Will Baptist
Sale m St .. Pastor : Re v. Pa ul Taylor.
Sunday Schoo l · 10 a.m., E\·e ning - 7

Hours

' • 6 .Jil l

Antiquity Haptl!lt
Sl·hool - 9 :30 a.m., Wo rship -

Pastor : Mark McComas

%i[[ie's 'R,_estaurant

~ ond

Baptl1t Chun:h
L...--Ra ,.en swood, WV, Su nday School 10 am. Morning worship 11 am E"'eni ng - 1 pm ,

Cool.·u t Men!.-.· &amp; IJllify Spet.·ill/_,.

Opl'n 7 day~ '-~ wed
740-992-771 3

Pome roy-Westsid e Church of Christ
332 26 C hild ren's Ho me Rd ., Su nday
Schoo l · 11 a. m., Wnr!ihi p - \Oa.m , 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Mlddl~port

C hurch or Christ
Sth and Moin. Pastor: AI Hanso n, Youth
Mim ster: Bill Frazier, Sunday Schoo l ·
19;30 a. m .. Worship - 8: 15, 10:30. a. m., 7
p.m .. W(!d nesday S~ rv ic:e s - 7 p.m.

Keno Church of Christ
Worship - 9 .30 a. m., Sunday School 10:30 a. m., Pas10r-Jeffrey Wallace, lst and
3rd Suuday

Catholic

Sac red H~art C atholic Church
16 1 Mul berr~ Ave., P()meroy, 992-5898,
Past o r: Rt\'. Walter E. Hei nl. Sat. ((~ri .

212 .Main St· P.O. Box 188
Rutland. OH 45715

MillWork

Cabinet Making
Syracuse

190 N. Second

St. Middlep?rt· OH
740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
olaaues t-shirts a nd more

Carolina Antique
&amp; Craft Mall
312 6th St. Point Pleasan1
675-1160
Van ety of turmturl:, g la~~war~:. l:rafts.
..:o llc c t ion or h o u re.. &amp; prim iti ve·

992-3978
Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc ..

'

'

..
AGENCIES Inc.
Bill Quickel

Full tine or
Insurance
Products +
Financial
Setvices
992-6677

&amp;: ' L)•nn,

Ziun Chun:h of C hrilit
Pomeroy, H arri ~ on v ill e Rd. (RI. 143),
Pa~ t o r : Roger Watson, S unday ~ c h oo l Y:JO a.m ., Worship - Hl:JO a.m .. 7 :00
p.m ., Wcdnesda ~ Sen·ices- 7 p.m.

TUppers Plein Church or Christ
Instru mental. Worship Service - 9 a.m ..
Communion - IU a.m ., Sunday Schoo l •

a.m .Worship - I0:3 0 a.m.

Episcopal

E nt~rprist'

G race E piscopal C hu rch
J26 E. ·Ma in St.. Pomeroy, Rev. J 11 mes
Bernac ki. R~ v. Kat h11rin Fo!iler. Suf!da y

a.'m.. Worship - '} a.m.. Bible Stud_y Wed . .

Schoo l and · Holy Euchanst I I :00 a.m .

7:30

Pastor: Artand King, Sundu y Sc hool - 10

Holiness
C ommunity C hurch
Pasto'r: Ste \·c· Tome k , Mai n Street.

Pa~lur. Bob Robinson, SUlld&lt;~y Sc hool - 10
a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

Danville Holiness Church
3 11l57 State Route Ji5. Lang~\· l le, Paslor:

10 :30 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Bradford Cburc:h of Chrl?t
Corner o f St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .,
M ini ster: Doug Shambli n, Youth Mini st.er.
Bill Amberger. Sunday Sc hool - 9 :30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a. m.. !0:30 a:m., 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday Serv ices -7:00p.m.

Hickory Hllll Chun:h of Chr\11
E\·ange list Mik.e Moore, Sunday School ·
9 a.m., Wor5 hip - 10 t~ . m .. 6:30 p.m.
We d ne~d ay Services- 1 p.m.
R~ednllle Church or Chrl1t
Pastor: Philip -Sturm. Sunday Schoo l: 9:30
a.m.. Worship Servi ce: 10:30 a. m .. Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Duter Chun:h or Chrllt4
Pasto r: Bill Eshelman. Sunday srhool9 :30

Intersection 7 and 124 W, Evangelist :
De nni ! Saraent. Sunday Bible Study •
9:30 a. m., Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30

Christian Union
or

Hartford Churm Chrltt In
Chriad1n Union
Ha rtford, W.VB ., Paslor:Duid Greer.
Sunday School - 9:30 a .m., Worship 10 :3 0 a.m.. 7 :00 p .m .. Wednesday
Services - 7:00 p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Churth (Jr God
Mil e Hil l Rd .. Rac ine , Pa sto r: Jam es
Satterfi ~ ld , Sunday School • 9 : 4 ~ a.m.,
Evening - 6 p.m., Wednesday Servil'eli - 7

p.m.

Pomeroy

Agape Lire Cr-ntn

Pastor : Rud B rowe r, Won.hip · 9:30 a.m .,

"Fu ii .Gos pel Chu1ch". ~a s tor s Jo hn &amp;
P~ n y Wade, 603 S e~: on d Ave. M ::r.~o n , 77350 17. Service tim!.': Sunday 10:30 ~. m ..
W~ dn c.~day 7 pm

p.m .
S~racuse First Chun-h or God
Apple and Second Sts., Pastor: Rev. David
Russe ll , Sunday School and Wor~ h i p- 10

a.m.
Ew ning Se rvices- 6:30 p .m., Wednuday

Worship ·1 0: 45 p.m ., Su nday F.ve. 7:00
p.m.. Wedncsda ~ Se rvice · 7:30p.m.

O.J . Whi te Rd. off St . Rt. 16o. Pastor: P.J .
Cha pman, Sunday Sc hool • 10 a.m ..
Worship • I I a.m., Wednesday Services •

10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.. Thursday Bible St ud)'
and Youth - i p.m.

and ca..,tl )

Ap p c~ l no.: h llm

Mu s1c EmU1\rt

:~tx:e!&gt;srb t e

Wn r~ h ip

- 7 p.1.11 ..

WcU 1 w~ da}

Sen it·c . 7

p.m.
fllew Life \'ic t or~ Cente-r
George' Cret'k Ro.:rd . (i,rlli_rnl i ~. OH

37:7 .~

P&lt;t ~ t or. Bill Swlcn. S nnd~y Ser\'kC'&gt;- 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wed ne..Ua y • 1 p.m . &amp;
Ynut11 7 p.m .

Abunda••t Gract R.t: I.
92.' S. Third St , Middlcpnn , Pastor Teresa
Da vis. Sun du) ~ &lt;:r v i c e , 10 a .m ..
Wc d n c~d u y ~et\' ic t:. 7 p .m .

Full ( ;ospcl Ch urch

Or

lhf'

Lh·inl!

Faith Full Gospel Chu f'("tJ
R 1 .~.~8 .

Long Bono m. Pa.~tor: Stc\ e Reed . Sunday
Sc hool - '-, qo n.m. Wor~ hiP - 9:.~0 El.lll .
o1nd 7 p.m .. Wt• dn c~ du y - 7 p.m.. Friday-

.'\nuquity, Pa,;;wr: Jc,.,l!

~ 1 orll.,,

Services Su turda y 2:00 p.m.

Beth•ny

Harrisonville Community Church
Pa!;tor: The rOn Durham. Su ndoy - IJ·30
a.m. and 7 p.m ., Wedn&lt;:'iday • 7 p.m

Pa)&gt;tor: Herschel Whitt:. Su nday Sch oo l10 am. Suntlay Churrh s~ r' ll'l!- O:.tO pm
\\- c-dnc:-.Liay 7 pm

Mlddlepon Community Church
575 Pearl St.. Middlepon , Pastor : Sam
Anderson , S un day Schoo l 10 a .m. ,

Resturallun C hris tia n Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, A\ h ~ n s, Pastor:
Lonnie Co~ts. Sunday Worship 10:00 om.

F&amp;l1h Valley Tabernacle Church
·Railey Ru n Road, Pasto r: Rev. Emm ett

La n p,· lll ~ C h risti&amp;~ Church
Ful l Gospel, Pastor: Robert Musser,
Sunday School 9:30 am. , Wor!i hip 10:.30
am • 7:00 pm , Wednesday Ser'i'lt'C 7: 00 ,

Hob!ion C hris tian l' elluw,hip C hurd1

Carmei~Sutton

S und ay Sc hool · 9:30 ~ - m .. Worsh ip •
10:30 a. m. and 6 p.m.. Wed nesday Service
. H Xl p.m .

Carmel &amp; Bas htm Rds. Rac ine, O hio ,
Pastor: Dewayne Stuller, Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Worship - 10:45 a.m. , Bible

1-atter-I&gt;ay Sai?t~S~----~s~'":d~~~·~d~:'~,oo~p~.m~·~~---------~E;~;n;in~g~-J~3~0~p~.m~.~·w~e~d~ne~~~'~Y~S~e~ i~,,~--~~~~~------------~------The Church or JC!Ius
Cbrbit of L.ltrr-Day Saint!
St. Rt . 160 , 4 46-6247 or 446-7 486,

MornJng: Star
Pastor : Dewayne Stutler. Sunda~ Sc hool 11 a.m., Worn hip · I 0 a.m.

S unday School 10:20· 11 a.m ., Re li ef
Soc ie ty/Pri esthood II :05· 12:00 ooon,
Sac ra me nt Se rv ic e 9 - 10 : 15 a .m ..
Homemaking meeting , l st Thur,~ . • 7 p .m

Raws on , S u nd ay Even in g 1
Thumlay Servke • 7 p.m.

Eat Letart
Pastor: Brian Harkness. Sunday School •
10 a.m., Worship- 91\.m .. Wednc:sday - 7
p.m.

l-utheran
St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove, Worship - 9:00 a.m .. Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.

Jt.clne
Pastor: Bri an Harkness, Sunday School 10 a.m.. Worship - I t a.m.. Wednesday 1
p.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Wa lnut a nd Henr~ Sts ., Ravenswood,
W.Va ., Pastor: Da vid Russell. Sunday
School · 10: 00 a.m .• Wonhip · II a.m.

Coolville Unl1ed Methodist P1rlsb
Pastor: Helen Kl ine , Coolville Churr::h,
Main &amp; Firth St.. Sunday Sc hool - 10
a.m., Wonhip - 9 a.m., Tu e sda~ Services 7 p.m.

United Methodist

Bethel Chun:h
Township Rd .. 468C. Sunday School · 9
a.m. W~ r s hip • 10 a.m., Wednesday
Service,· lO a.m.

Gnham United Mtthodilll
Worship · 9:30 a.m. ( 1st &amp;: 2nd Sun ), ,
7:30 p.m. (3 rd &amp; 4th Sun), Wednesday
Service · 7:30 p.m.

Grand Street, Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
Worship - 11 a.m.. Wednesday Services -

Sunday School - 9 :45 a.m .. Worship • II
a.m.

Horklnii)Ort Church

8 p.m.
~U.

p .m.,

Ton:h Chun:h
Co. Rd . 63 . Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a. m.

Services· 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Melp Cooperallve Parish
Cluster, Alfred , Pastor: Ja ne
Be attie , Sunday Sc hool • 9 :30 a.m.,
Worship · II a.m., 6:30p .m.
N orth ea ~ t

C hestrr

Se rvices - 7 p.m.
Jopp•
Pastor: Bo b Randolph, Worship · 9 :30
a.m.
Sunday Sc hoo l - I0:30 a.m.

~~·~·c~u~~M~t~u~too~----~~--~P~e~ntecostal

S)·racUlle Flnl United Pl't'1lbylerian
Pa stor: Ro bert Crow, Wors hip - I 1 a.m .

Dytl\'ille Community Church
Sunday Sc hool - 9:30 a. m .. Worship !0:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Harrisonville Presbyterl1n Churth
Pastor: Robert C~w. Worship - 9 u.m .··

Mone Chaprl Churth
Sunday school - 10 a.m., Wors hip a.m., WedneMiay Service· 7_p.m.

Pa stor: Rober Crow.. Wors hip - 10 a.m .

Faith G01pel Church
Long Bottom. Sunday Sc hoo l - 9:30a .m.,
Wo rship - !0:4$ a.m .. 7 :30 p .m .,
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.

Chun.:h of 1he Nuaren e, Pastor· Teresa
Waldec k. Sunday School • 9 :30 a.m.,
Worship - 10;45 a.m., 7 p.m., Wednesday

South Bethtl CommunitY Churc:h
Sih·e r Ridge- PasiOr Linda Damewood ,
Sun day School - 9 a.m., Wor!:ihip S e rv i c~:

Sef\·ices • 7 p.m.

IO a.m.
Carleton Interdenominational C hurch
Ki n ~ s bu r y Rond . Pa~tor : Robert V11nce,
Su nda y Sc hool · 9 :30 a.m ., Wo rship
Service 10:.10 a. m., Eve ning Se r\·ice 6

· Pastor: Jan Lave nder, S und ay Sc hool •

Middleport Presbyterian

Seventh-Day Adventist· .
Seventh·D11y Ad,·cmtlst ·

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon United Brethrep
In Chrl.!it Chun:h
Texa s Communi ty 364 11 Wickh am Rd. ;
Pastor: Roben Sanders , Sunda y School • :
9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m ., 7:00 ~
p.m .. Wednesd11y Services-7:00 p.m.
•

p.m.

R()ger Willford, SunUay School • 9JO a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Chester Chun:h of the NllZIIrtne

7 p.m.

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy
992·3785

m:eaforb
1\eal Q!:~tate
216 E. Second Pomeroy
740·992·3325

Marketing Property
Since 1911 ·

..
......................
11•btt .1anmiJ;omr

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

~

-~
Mllllltu

Brogan·Warner
INSURANCE
.SERVICES
214 E. Main

992·5130
Pomeroy

It•

ROCKSPRINGS
Craw's F9mily Restaurant
REHABILITTION CENTER
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
The care you deserve, close to home
Chicken"

36759 Ro,eksprings Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
7411-992-6606

&amp; LOHSE

PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

ma rk ..:! Apri l· Ocl.

Lt)'il \\ ay"&lt; An1i l ahl ~

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432
fLOWER
106 8UITERNUT AVE.
POMEROY,OH 992-6454
'Flowers for all occasions'

·

Bi ll Duty. Sunday School
I I a.m ..
Sunday Worship - I0:00a .m. &amp; 7:lXl p.m. ·
We dn esd ay Scrv1c e!i · '7 00 p .m .. '.
Wcdncsda}' Youth Sen-·icc · 7:00p.m .

Freedom Gospel Mission
Ba ld Knob , on Co. Rd ] l , Paslor Re \'.

9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10 :30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wednl'!sday Services - 7 p.m.

·

Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomero}', Pastor: Roy ,
Lawinsky, Saturday Se rvice: ~:· Sab both :
School - 2 p.m., Wor~hip, 3 p.m.
;

Eden United Bnothren In Christ
State Roulc 1.2-l , Reedsville, Pastor: Rev.

Reed..vi'lle Fellowlblp

Reedsville

Tuppers Plains St. Paul

9:30a.m., Evenini - 6:30 p.m., Wedneday
Service· 7 p.m.

p.m.

Wors hip - 9:30 a .m .• Sunday School •
10 :30 a.m., Fin l S unday of Monlh • 7:00
p.m. service

Mt. Olive Community Chun:-h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday Sc hool •

7:30 p.m .• Tuesday &amp; Thursday • 7:30

Pomeroy Chun-h of' the Naurtne

Presbyterian

II

Allen Midcap

a. m .. Wo rship - 10 :30 a.m .. 6 p.m.,
Wed n ~sdny Services- 7 p.m.

~

p.m.
Community Church
Off Rt. 124;, PaSi or: Edse l Han. Sunday
School -9:30 a.m., W9nh ip • 10:30 a.m., .
7:30p.m.

Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 I-Ii land R:oad. Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday School· 10 a.m., Even ing

Lone Bottom
Sunday Sl"h ool - 9 :30 a.m .. Wo rshi p '
10:30 a.m.

PentecostaJAsstm~ly

St. Rt. 124, Racine. Pastor : Will iam
Hoback , Sunday SchOI'i l --: · 10 ~ a . m ..
E\'ening . 7 p.m.. Wednesday S e rv k~s - 7

Haz~l

Middleport Church of the Nwrne
Pastor: Alle n Midcap. S unday School 9:30 a.m.,Worshi p- 10:30 a.m:, !):30 p.m.,
Wednesda y Services - 7 p.m. , Pastor:

S)·racuse Chun-h or the Naurtne
Pas10r Mike Adkins, Sunday School- 9:30

pm

1411 Bridgeman St.. Syrac use, Rev. Mike
Thompson ,Pa~to r, Sunday School • IU
a. m. E,·ening- 6 p.m., Wednesday Sentice
. 7 p.m.

Olive United Methodist

Off 124 behind Wilkes\'ille. Pu stor: Rev.
Ralph Spires, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worsh ip • 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m., Thur5day

I

•

C lirton Tabernarl c C hurch
Clifton . W Va .. Shnda) Schno&gt;l - 10 ;uh,

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler, Sunday School •
10 a.m .• WOrship - 9 a .m., We dnesda~
Ser\'iccs - 10 a.m.

'

.

pm

Services - 7 p.m

Paswr: Clyde Ferrell, Suntlay S~: hon l 1):.1.0
am , Sunday C\'ening · ~..: r vkc 6 pm,
\Vcdnesday So!f'o-' 1.-c 7 pm

Th c ra p ic ~

740- 6h7-_l l 56 Fa ~ · 740-667-!MJAII

We dn c.~d ay

The Belie\ ·er5'_Fellowsh_Jp M inis try
Ne w Lime Rd .. Rutla nd. Pfts Wr: Rev.
Marg are t J. Ro hi rl so n. S ~ r vrccii:
Wednesday, 7:30p .m., Sunday. 2:30 p.m

lrom the

Ph) ~teal. Occupathmul und Speech Thc rupte~
We A ~,;n pt McJi ~· urc , M cJi~.·:ii d. &amp; l n'- Ur\ mcc

Rejoiri nJ: Ufe C hurch
500 N. :! nd t\ ve .. \1iddlcpor1 . Pa~tu r :
Mike Fllrt·man . Pas1or
E m e ii t u ~
L a~,&lt;, l t'nl'e For·c man, \Vor·\h ip- l(l:(J(J am

Sa l.-m Co mm1m i t~· Chu rch
Liev ing RuaU, We~ t C\•lu111hio1. W.V&lt;.l ..

Htghway

Hospice and Rcl&gt; pite Care

Pa ~ t or:

.fello wsh ip se rvice 7 p m.

Ne,tkd in •• ~au t r ful co untry scn rng l ~ f{
:"iO/J~ E. r ~tJ

Youth

Bible Study: Mondily 7:00pm
Snowville
Sunday School - 10 a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

I
Hysell Run Hol_ina "i Churth
S unday Sclmo l - 9:30 a.m., Worshi p ·

Sentices- 6 :30p.m.

Church of God of Prophecy

Rorie Spring.~
Keith Rader, Sunday School - 9: 15 .

Salem Center
Pustnr: Willi a m K . Mar~hall , Su nd 11y'
School - 10: 15 a. m., Worship· 9: 15 a. m.,

Pastor: h ne Bealli e, Worship • 9 a .m.,
S unday Sc hool - 10 a.m . • Th u rsda~

Rulland Churth of God
PasttJr: Ron Hea;h, Sunday Worsh ip - 10
a.m ., 6 p.m., Wednesda}' Sentices - 1

a.m.

. Hudand
Su nday School - 9:30 a.m .. Wo rshi p 10:30 a.m. Thursday Sc f\·il:es- 7 p.m.

David G ilbe rt, Su nda y School - 10 a.m.

a. m·.. No rman Will , superintendent ,
St. Paul Luthenm Church
Sunday won;hiJ1:' -'·_!IO
&gt;r:,!l
30L!l1Jm
fb._ _ _ _ _ _ ,Comcr-Sycamo re &amp; Second-St., Pomero y,
-Church of Ghri11

Su nda y Sc hoo l - 9:30 a.m., Morni ng
Wonhip - 1 0:~ 0 a.m. &amp; 7 -pm. ~e d n csda y
Se rvil.:c - 7:00p.m., Youth Servke- 7:00

a.nr , Wo rs hi p - 10 a. m.,
Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.

W~sley an Bible Holintss Church
75 Pe arl St., Middl eport . Pastor: Rev

Stivers ,·m ~

Pearl Chapel
Sunday Schoo l - 9 a.m.. Wor.; hip · 10 a.m.

IO:J ~

~

Wcd nestlay s~ r vice . 1:.111 p.m.

Pastor: s ·a b R o b in ~ on . Sunday Srhool. - 9
a.m., Worship· l Qa .m.

Pa ~ t01 ·

Wednesday St'rvil.:~ · 7:30 p. m.

- 10:3 0 11 .m .. Wednesday Se 1 ~ i ce s · 7:00
p. m.

p.m.

Sunday School -

Pine Grove Bible Holiness CJlurch
1!2 mile off Rt. 325, Pastor: ReY. O' Dell
Manley, Su nday Sc hoo l · 9:J n a .m.,
Worsh ip · 10:3 0 a .m., 7 :10 p. m.,

Ca lv&amp;l1' Bible Chu t;t·h
Pomero) Pi ke. Co. Rd., Pa ~tor : Re\.
Blackwond, S\1nday Schuo l - 9:.'0 a.m.,
Worship
1/):30
tun .. 7:Jil
p.m .

Worsh1p: W am. Even ing Worsh ip : 6 pm,
Yo uth group 6 pm, We dnesday· Powe r in
Prayer , a nd Bible Study - 7 pm
Ash Strtel t huf'("h
A ~ h Sl. . Middleport · Pastor· Glenn Rowe.

·Minersville "
Harris on vilh: Ruad . PastOI' : Cha rl e ~
Mc Ken z ie, Su nday School 9 :30 a.m.,
Worship - 11 a .m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Ser\'tce - 7:00 p.ln.

Friday, 7 p.m.

Community C hu rth
Wayne R. Jewel l. Stlllduy Se rvice~
- lO:IlU a rn . &amp; H IO p 111 ., Thursd.1y- 7·0U

a.m., Wors hip- IJ :00 a. m

Calvary Pilgri~ l:hapel

Fllllh Fellowship C ruSM d ~ rQr C hri st
l-l.ev. Franklm O rcke n ~. S&lt;:rv1cc:

P.o~s l o r:

Bethel Worship Ce'nter
Che ster Se houL Pas tor: Ro h Ba rber.
A ~sist an 1 Pas tor: Kare n Da\' is, Sunday

Heath (Middleport)
Pas1or: Rob B ~owe r , S u nd ~ y School - ':1 :30

Gary J a:ks~n. Sunday sr.: hool - 9:30a.m..
Su nday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m ..
Wednesday pruye r service - 7 p.m.

Porthmd Fi r.ot C hun:h u rth ~ Nazuen ~
Pasto r: Wil li am J us t i ~. S und a~·. Sc hool 10:00 11.111 .. Morning Worship · I0:45 a.m.:
Sunday S e n·i c ~- 0:30 p,m.

Community of Christ
Porthmd-Raci nc Rd .. Pas tor: Michae l
Duhl, Sunday School · 9:]11 a m , Wonhip

Fore!il Run

R ut land . Su nda y Wo rship--- 10:00 a.m.,
Sunday SerVic~-7 p.m .

Fair\'i£W Bible Chorth
\
Letart . W.Va. 1-/. t. I. Paslor: Brian Ma&gt;\ '
Su nday S..:hool • "UO a.m., Wor~h 1p - 7:ll0
p.m., WetlncM.by Bible Swdy - 7 00 p.m

Other Churches

tlatwoods
Pa stor: Keith Rader, Sunday School - 10
a:-tn ., Worship - I I a. m.

L•urel Olfl' Free Methodist Church
Rev. Les Slrandt and Myra L. Stran dt,

Rulland Chun:h of Chri!it
Su nday Sc hool • 9:30 a.m.• Worsh ip -

Ruthmd C hun:h of the Naza nme
Pasto r: Re\·. Lo uis S. Staubs., Sun d ay
Sc hool - ~ :30 a. m.. Wor.o; hip- 10:30 a. m..
6:30p.m .. Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Ce ntra l Cluster
Asbury (Symcuse). PliStor: Bob Robinson.
Suriday Schoo l - Y:45 a. m., Worship - II
a.m., Wcdnu day Ser.\•ices · 7:30pm

a.m.•. Sunday

prayer meet ing- 7 p.m .

' Wo rship · 10 :30 a .m .. 6:30 p .m .
Wetlnesday S~ rv 1ces- 6:30 p.m.

Worshi p - I0:30 a.m., Wednesda y Serv ice :
- 7 p.m·.

- 7:30p.m.

Po meroy, Pastor: Rev.

Pastor:Bruce Terry, Sunday School -9:30

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

Second

Jack Nohle. Wors hi p 10:25
School 9 : I ~ a.m. -

ll.m.

Hearwallow RidGt Church of C hrist

740-742·2333
O.ur Carina Wavs HelP families

'

\\'hilt 's C hapel Wesltylln
Cuol\' lllc Rortd. Pastor: Rev. Phillip
Ridenou r, Sunday Schoo l - 9 :30 :i.,m .•

Rev. Herbert Grate, Sunday S1.·hool '

· - IJ :30 a.m.. Worshtp · I I 3.m , b p.m ..
. Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Trlnil} Churrh

Rust or Sha ron Holiness Church
Leading. Creek Rd ., Ru tland, Pastor : Rev.
Qcwcy King. Sunday schuol- 9:30 a.m..
Sui-tday wors hip -7 p.m.. Wednesday

Wednesday 7 p.m.

Birchfield funeral
Home

.()ut ..;kk lka

www.herbsndiet.com

Rev. G ilbe rt Craig, Jr., Sunday Sc hool 9 ~ 30 a.m., Worship · 10:45 a.m.

:uno rwcmi ulll. dwck nut ralcs!

\~ (um

S unday Sch'ool - 9:30 a .m .. Worsh ip10:30 a.m., b p .m.. Wedne&lt;\da y Servic-es7 p.m.
.

Fourth &amp; Ma in St. , Middleport, Pastor:

INSURANCE
122 E. \1uin St. P11111Croy. OH 457ti'l

Congregational

M orri ~

Mt. Moriah· Baptist

WILLlAMS &amp; ASSOC.
lk forl'

Pomeroy Church of C hrh1t
2 12 W. Main St., Min ister: Anthony

p.m., ~edne sday B ible Study· 7 p.m.

Wedne sday Se rvices· 7 p.m.

Pastor: Jane BeaUte. Sunday School - 9
a.m., Wtlrship · 10 11. m , Tuesday Scrvkcli

a.m.
SunJay Schnol - 10:30 a.m., Bible Stud y 7 p.m.

Bradbury C hun:h ofChri!1
Mi ni ster.: Tom Runyon, 39558 aradhury
Road, Middleport, Sunday SchoJI .• 9:30

a.m., Worship · II a.m.

E.WING FUNERAL HOME.

Church of Christ
Hendock Grove C hrbtl1n C h ~ n-h

Hadne Fint Baptist
P11stor: Rkk Rule , Sunday Sdmol · 9J O

F1lth Baptist Church
Railroad St. , Mason, 'Sunday Sc hool - 10
a .m .• Wo rs h ip • I I a.m ., 6 p.m,

Young's Carpenter Serulce

Cull. - K ·.4)~&lt;:J: I _'; a"iu ,. Su n. Ma"~ - 9:Jo'
a.m.. D&lt;tih:y Muss - M_,()a. m.

10 : 1 ~ a.m .. Youth- 5;30 pm Su ~day, B ib! ~
SIUdy W~dnesday 7 pm

- 10 : 15 [1. 111 ., 7 :00 p.m.,
Wednesda y Ser\'icc- 7.00 p.m.

P11 ~t or

l5p.m .: Ma-.s - .''d U p.m., Sun

W~m hip

Wednesd11y Service s· 7 p.m.

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

.,
4.:4~· .'; :

M i n i ~ t er : Larry Bro1wn , Worship • 9 :30

E mnumut:l Apoiitulic Tabernuc.'le Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . R utl and .
Sen •ir.:es: Sun 10:00 a. m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thurs. 7:txl p .m., Pastor Mart y R. Hutton

Carpenter
Baptist

-

· I..

FA~llowship

POME ROY
T he
Hem lock Grove Christi an
Ch urc h will have sunri se
se rvice at 6 :3 0 a .tn .,
breakfast at 7 :30 ,~.~n . , a nd
worshi p at IJ :JO a.m. wit h
Larry
Brow n.
pa s tor.
speakin g.

· The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

~rands Flo rist
Ml:igs

Coun ty·~

352 East Main

Pomeroy, Oh

Oldcsl 1-'lori..,,

III!I'J.
W·

·~AI uc cAnd yo!.l ~ !h ()ufhl ~ wll ~ ~ p~ cl~ l Cli P'!!•

740-992-2644

740-992-6298

f!.artdte4 &amp; ~
93 Mill St. Middleport, OH

(740) 992-9513

�'

Page AS

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

.

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Southern, Eastern win, Page B2
Lakers gear up forT-wolves, Page 83
Major League Baseball, Page B4

Friday, April 18, 2003

Page Bl

Holy Week around the world

Friday, Apr_il 18, 2003

Pope John Paul II
puts his hands to
his mouth as he celebrates
Holy
Thursday Mass in
St. Peter's Basilica
at the Vatican . Holy
Thursday marks the
beginning of four
days of Easter celebrations . (AP)

Redwomen split
with Tiffin

Conine's tworun single puts
O's past Tribe

TIFFIN - The University of
Rio ,Grande Redwomen softball
team once ag.Un struggled getting
off the bus, losing game one of a
doubleheader. 1-0 at Tiffin on
Wednesday afternoon . The
Redwomen bounced back to win
the night cap 5-0.
Rio Grande (16-9) pn:x:luced
only four hits for tough luck loser
Andrea Lotycz in the game one
defeat. Lo\)'cz (8-5) pitched six
innings, striking out one and
walkin~ two while giving up
three hits.
Tiffin (21 -17) won the game in
the sixth inning when Missy
Smith lifted a wind-aided base hit
to left field. Rachel Richardson .
fired a shutout for the Lady
, Dragons. .
Emily Cooper and Amy Conn ·
collected two hit' each and
Cooper stole a base.
Rio Grande tallied nine hits in
game two in getting the 5-0 triumph
Stephanie Broccolo pitched a
wmplete game, three-hitter, striking out one and w&lt;~king three.
Btocc~lo improved to 8-4 on the

Honduran Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez embraces a priest during the renewal of the vow ceremony in
preparation for Easter holidays in the Suyapa Sanctuary, in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, Thursday. (AP)

season.
Cooper, Lauren McQuin and
Annie Tucker all had two hits
each for the Redwomen.
McQuin had one RBI and
Cooper stole two bases and
scored two runs. Kristen
Chevalier and Brandi Jones both
had one hit and one PBl each.
Krista Tucker was 1-for-4 with
two runs scored.
Rio Grande will return horne to
face Shawnee State on Tuesday. ·
The Lady Bears swept the
Redwornen in Portsmouth on
April 14.

Wellston pounds
Tornadoes
Hooded penitents take part i9 a Holy Week Easter
1
Spanish town of Segura Thursday. (AP)

-

......'

6\lf~~'''

.,.-·

* '(Is.-~

..
&gt;1-

RACINE - ·The Wellston
Golden Rockets blasted off· on
Southern pitching en route to a
17-5 Tri-Valley Conference victo!)' over the Southem Tornadoes
Thursday night during boys varsity baseball action at Star Mill
Park.
.
Southern is now 4-7 overd!l.
Southern hitters were Curt
-'1- -1- -t':rotJch"with a double and single,
Joey ·Philli~ a double, Jordan
Hill a single, Jeremy Yeauger
single. and singles by Tommy .
Theiss, Justin Allen, and Cole
Brown.
Wellston hitters were Johnson
and Kisor with three hits apiece,
including a Kisor home run.
. Cmbtree had two singles, Denuw
a single, Collins a single, Essman
Pope John Paul II arrives in St. Peter's Basilica to preside over the rite of the washing the feet of
a single, and Johnson a single.
priests which evokes, as a sign of humility, Jesus' washing of the apostles' feet before his cruxiWellston took a 3-0 lead in the ·
fiction, Thursday. The Pope signed during the ceremony an encyclical against the faithful taking part
second
on two walks, two hit batin unauthorized communion. (AP)
ter.; a fly out and a Cmbtree single. The Golden Rockets plated
eight runs in the third inning on a
Collins single, an Essman single,
a Jeffers walk three more walks, a
fly out and two singles by Kisor,
the score 11 -0. Southem tnliled at
one (Xlint 16-1. but made a late
wrneback bid, too little, too late.
Moon was the winning pitcher
with two strikeouts and three
walks, while scattering nine hit~.
For Southern Kyle McKeever
was the slllrting pitcher with relief
from Curt Crouch, BJ.
Marnhout, and Joey Phillips.
McKeever sufiered the loss with
a combined one strikeout, seven
walks, and two hit batters, while
giving up 12 hits.
'
Southern hosts Trimble on
Friday.Williams' gets ~tanding
ovation at Kansas
1

a

Sculptor Roger Powell does some detailing work on hi s !;aster sand sculpture of
Christ carrying the cross at Findlay, Ohio's Riverside Park Thursday. Powell has
been working since Monday on his artwork that is made of 75 tons of sand. The
scu lpture also depicts Christ's crucifixtion and resurection. (AP)

Abbie Lynn Ridenour Kelsey Laine Roberts
Happy 3rd Easter
Love, Mommy &amp;.. Daddy

Happy 1st Easter
Mommy &amp;.. Daddy

Sidney Marie Ridenour
Happy 1st Easter
love, Mommy &amp;. Daddy

\

I

Kylee Mitch
. Happy Easter

Aubree jalene Lyons
Happy Easter

Mommy &amp;.. Daddy

Love, Mum Mum

Gunner Lee McKinney
Happy Easter
Love. Mom &amp;.. Dad

· St. Bonaventure
fires basketball
coach; AD
resigns
OLEAN, N.Y. (AP) - St.
Bonaventw'e ftred ba~ketball
coach Jan van Breda Kolff and
accepted athletic director Gothard
Lane's resignation six weeks after
the team boycotted games over
an ineligible player.
The school also accepted the
resignation . of assistant coach
Kort Wickenheiser, whose father
was the school's president.
V.m Breda Kolff. Lane and
Wickenheiser were placed on
adminislmtive leave m March,
shortly after the Atlantic 10 sanctioned the team for using center
Jamil Terrell, who was dtx:lared
ineligible for Violating NCAA
junior wllege tr.msfer guidelines.

Lance Andrew Stewart
Happy Easter
love, Mom &amp;. Dad

Baltimore Orioles' Marty Cordova slides safely into second base on a steal as Cleveland
Indians second baseman Brandon Phillips tries to make the tag durmg the 11th inning
Thursday, at Jacobs Field in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak)

CLEVELAND (A P) Mike Hargrove used to wit ness late-inning victories all
the time at Jacobs Field
when he managed the powerful Cleveland ln(li ans .
For lwo straight nights,
Hargrove
watched
his
Baltimore Orioles do the
sa me thing.
Jeff Conine hit a two strike, two-out. two-run single in the 12th inning
Thursday night to give the
Baltimore Orioles -a 6-4 win
over the Cleveland Indians.
Conine, who homered in
the second inning. fouled off
four pitches with two strikes
before completing a I0pitch at-bat by lining a single off Carl Sadler to score
pinch-runner Jose Morban
and Melvin Mora.
" Best one in memory,"
Conine said when asked
about his battle with Sadler.
"He has great stuff. and he
was throwing everylhing he
had at me. I just got lucky
and hit it.."
Willis Roberts ( 1-1 )
pitched one inning for the
win, and Jorge Julio gol
three outs for his third save.
The Orioles, who won on
Mora's ninth-inning homer
on Wednesday, won twice in

Please see Tribe. 82

Chicago smashes Reds again
CHICAGO (AP) - The
Chicago Cubs were scuffling
through the season a year
ago. trying desperately to
scratch out a run here and
there as the losses piled up .
Now look at them.
Kerry Wood and Sammy
-sosa hit two of Chicago's
. four homers, and the Cubs
scored at least I0 runs for a
third straight day in a 16-3
rout of lhe Cincinnati Reds
on Thursday. With their third
straight win, they 're atop the
NL Central with a I 0-6
record.
Last year. they never even
got above .500.
''There 's always question
marks, but question marks
are. created by everybody
else:· fir st-year manager
Dusty Baker said. "The only
way to get rid of question
marks is to perform. These
guy s are playing hard.
they ' re playing good bas.eball. they run the bases well
and we played a . good
game ."

·

A big part of the turn around is Baker, who left the
San Francisco Giants after
taking them to the. World
Series. He' s created a more

professional attitude in the
clubhouse. and it's carrying
over onto the field.
The Cubs had 16 hits
against the Reds, getting at
least one from every starter
but catcher Damian Miller.
Mark Grudzielanek and Hee
Seop Choi also homered, and
Grudzielanek. Sosa and
Mark Bellhorn all drove in
three iuns eacb.

Wood (3-0) didn't have his
best stuff. allowing thr~e
runs and five hits in six
innin gs. Alan Be nes went
three innings for his first
career save.
But Wood didn't. have to
be at his best, not with
Chicago's otfensivc output.
The Cubs roughed up
Haynes early. scori ng four
runs in the first inning with
two outs. Sosa started it with
And they did it despite the a walk, and Moises Alou folwind blowing in at 14 mph .
The_Reds. meanwhile. lost. lowed with a single to center.

for the fifth time in six
games. And they . got more
bad news after the gan\f',
when opening day starter
Jimmy Haynes was put on
·
·
·
t he_dtsab 1ed_jtsL wnh a bulgmg dtsc and suffncss m
ht s back.
Haynes _(0-4) had allowed
acareer-h1g~ 10 runs and 10
htts m 4 2-3 mmngs. and also
walked six . He's the first
Reds pttcher to lose hts lirst
four starts since Joey Jay lost
hi s first five in 1963.
"They've been hot the last
three days," Haynes said.
"They're not missing many
pitches. It seems like everything they hit finds a hole."

lo;dh~~et~~~~e~.r~~d-aP~;~~,~~

and Bcllhorn hit consecutive
two-ru·n singles.
Tl C b . ·h· s d. H ,
. lC u s c u. e a) nes
wnh another btg mnmg . tn
the tift h. · Wood -homereatoright-center on a 1-1 pitch. a
two-run shot that drew a
stand ing ova!ion and chants
of ''Ker-ry! Ker-ry! " from
the crowd of 29,672.
Hayn~s gave up walks to
Grudzielanek and Alex
Gonzalez . before Jo si as
Manzanillo relieved him.
Bul Manzanillo didn't fare
any better. giving up a homer
to Sosa that was last seen Cincinnati Reds' Brandon Larson walks back to the dugou t
bouncing down Waveland after strik ing out in the eighth inning against the Chicago Cubs. ·
Thu rsday in Chicago . (AP)
Avenue .

OSU's scrimmage transformed Reds' Haynes goes
by ESPN GameDay's presence on DL with stiff back
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

former Ohio State quarterback Kirk
Herbstreit.
Defending national champion Ohio State
will be the fifth and final stop on the
GameDay crew's tour of college campuses
this spring. They have already traveled to
practices at Oklahoma. Notre Dame, Penn
State and iowa.
Ohio State coach Jim Tressel will be
interviewed hut will not have a microphone
on throughout the practice.
The gates of Ohio Stadium wi ll open at
1:30 p.m. to the public . Practice gets under
way at 3:30 with the kick scrimmage starting an ~our later and lasting for an hour. A
university spokesm•in said a large rrowd of
spectators was expected. although no one
can· predict how large because this .is
uncharted territory for both Ohio State and
ESPN.
Tressel said his players will get a charge
out of a practice that is usually a snooze fest .
Tight end Ben Hartsock said Friday_ 's

COLUMBUS _These are the dog days
of Ohio State's spring workouts, with the
players lookin11 forward to the end of a
month of collisiOns with teammates.
Yet the Buckeyes ' kick scrimmage on
Friday has taken on a flavor all its own. The
GameDay crew from ESPN will be on hand
to enlive n what would normally be a dull
day limited 10 punting. place-kicks, returns
and blocking.
·
Ohio State 's players have taken notice.
Usually a kick scrimmage is interesting to
only two groups of people: coach~s and
kickers. Just about everyone else on the
team takes off their ))elmets and works on
their su ntan s. ·
A typical kick scrimmage goes ~muething
like this: Two lines form on the field. the
ball is snapped •ind kicked. there's a short
runback 1 and the coaches yell at the players
while the ball is tossed back to the center.
That scene is repeated over and over and workout won't be as stirring as a game but
over.
win be ITIOre spirited than a typical practice.
Many people not involyed in kick scrimPortions of the pr~ctice will be taped and
mages don't have a clear understanding of shown 'during IWO SportsCenter segments
them.
later in the day. ESPI':I will profile running
Still, ESPN will bring its full on-camera back Maurice Clarett and will take a look at
GameDay c·rew inckulihg host Chris those who have followed in his footsteps by
Fowler 'and commentators Lee Corso and · ~nrolling at Ohio State early so they can get
a head start on other freshmen recruit s.

C HICAGO (AP)
Cincinnat i Reds righthander J immy Haynes
went on the 15-day disabled li st with a bulging
disk and stiffness in his
back after giving up I 0
runs in ' Ihe worst outing
of his career Thursday.
Hayne s flew back to
Cincinnati for treatment
while the rest of the team
Went to Puerto R i~ o fo r a
three-game series against
Momreal. The Reds will
probably wait until after
the weekend to call up a
pitcher to take Hayne ,:
pla ce.
"lt's probably a good
dec ision. " Haynes said
after the Red s' 16-3 loss
to Ihe Chicago Cubs. " It 's
tough enough to pitch
with an injury or something bothering you.
especially a back . I want
to get this thing taken
care of."

Haynes.
Ciitcinnati's
opening day starter. left
his second start after just
four innings because of
back sp.asms. His third
st art was push ed back a

\
"

the three-game set and
evened the season series· at
3-3. The teams won't se~
each other again until 2004.
The Orioles went 4-4 on a .
road trip to Tampa Bay.
Boston at'd Cleveland.
Travis Hafner hit a threerun homer and Karim Garci;•
added a solo shot for th&lt;
Indians, who got just threl
hils after the seventh am '
have been outscored 27- )(
;rt.ter the sixth inning thi:.
season.
"We have to do a bette ·
job of fini shing things of'
and finding ways· to . win ; ·
manager Eric Wedge said.
Geronimo Gil walked tlJ
open the 12th off Chacl
Parente W-2) and wa:, ·
replaced by Morban , wh&lt; ·
moved
up
on
Jerr)
Hairston's sacrifice.
Mora walked and Paronto
was lifted for Sadler, who
struck out BJ. Surhoff
before his wild pitch
advanced the runners.
Conine fell behi nd 0-2 in
the count before battling
back - barely fouling ofl
two balls - and deliveri n~
his base hit.
"If I could pick somebody
in our lineup to be up there

I

day, but he was still bothered by stiffness in 'hi s
back .
He allowed a careerworst I0 rl!ns and I 0 hit;
in
4
2-3
inning s
Thursday , becoming the
first Red s pitcher to los"
his first four starts since
. Joey Jay lost fi v~ in 1963 .
Haynes als'o walked six
and threw ,t wild pitch .
"I'm not ge tting out and
comp leting my pitches
I'm kind o f cutting the·m
otT," Haynes said. "Toda_'
I rea ll y had no clue wher ·
the ball wa s going.''
• Havnes (0-4) is releas ing the ball several inches
short of wher~ he normal ly does . Reds manage t
Bob Boone said. Even it
there's no pain in th e
back. that 's a symptom
that something is wrong .
" It's rike you subcon .sdous ly
protect
it ,"
Boone ~aid .
" It's gettin g belter from

how it feels . But it's
allowing him to pitch
way he 's capable
pit..:hing or the_ way
need him to pit ch."

not
the
of
we

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

Friday, April 18, 2003

Prep softball

Chapman's pit~hing,
Lady Eagles remain
good hitting lead
undefeated with win
Southern ·past Wellston. over Marauders

By ScoTT WOLFE

Sports correspondent
RACINE - Behind an 11 hlt attack and another well·
pitched game by Rachel
Chapman, the Southern Lady
Tornadoes
defeated the
Wellston Golden Rockets 1 5~
0 in five innings Thursday
nigilt at Racine 's Star Mill
Park. Southern is now 8-3, 52 in the league.
Southern hitting was led by
Rachel Chapman with a triple
and single, Deana Pullin s,
Ashlee Hili and Holly Duffy
with two sing les each, Katie
Sayre a single, Brooke Kiser a
double, and Ashley Roush a·
double. Chapman had four
RBI 's on the night and Duffy
had three. Wellston hitters
were Abby Thomas, Kayia
Crace, Lindsey Crown, Ziz
Abr;lelie, and Tara Lockard,

ali with singles.
Chapman piiched her 17th
consecutive shut.out inning
of bali and the Tornado
defense, which strugjlled
early in the year, paste its
second consecutive errorless
game . Chapman struck out
three, gave up five hits. and
walked none for the third
straight game.
· Kayla Crace suffered the
loss with seven walks, II hits,
three hit batters, and one
struck out.
·
Southern took the lead in
the second inning when Kiser
walked; Ashlee Hill was hit
by a pitch. and Duffy singled
to load the bases.
Pullins
walked home a run, Sayre
was hit with pitch to force
home a run, and Chapman
cleared the bases with a triple
and 3 RB!fs, the score 5-0,
· Meanwhile, Chapman had
retired the side in order each

of the tirst two innings before
giving up a couple bloop sin·
gles in the third.
The
Tornadoes a~ded a single run
in the third when Kiser
reached on a ftelderfs choice,

Hill singled, and Ashley
Roush was hit with a pitch to
load the bases. Duffy grounded out to shan to bring home
the lone run of the inning for
. a 6-0 SHS lead.
Southern plated a single run
in the fourth , then in the tifth
inning plated eight runs pn
singles by Pullins, Sayre,
Chapman. Duffy, Hill , and
doub les to Kiser and Roush.
A Duffy single knocked home
Roush and Emily Hill to give
Southern the 15-run mercy
win.
Southern
Friday.

hosis Trimble

BY ScoTT WoLFE

Sports correspondent
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Lady Eagles, ranked
seventh in the state in Division
IV, remained undefeated at.
10-0 with a convincing 5-2
win over the Meigs Marauders
Thursday night during Tri·
Valley
Conference
Interdivisional play.
Coach Pam Douthitt's
Eagles have now claimed big
wins over the upper division
of the league and the SEOAL
as well to attain one of Ohio's
top rankings.
Eastern hitters were Sandy
Powell with a double and sin·
gle, Krista White two singles.
Kass Lodwick a double, and
singles by Casey Smith, Nikki
Phillips, and Morgan Weber.

Meigs hitters were Mindy
Meigs scored two runs in
Chancey with two doubles. the seventh when with one
Ka~tie Davis a single, and . out, Fetty and Bailey drew
Kaue Jeffers a smgle. .
back-to-back walks.. Alicia
Eastern ~lated one ru~ m the Werry had a sacrifice 6-3
ftrst on a smgle by Phdhps. a
.
.
sacrift~ bunt by Alyssa Holter ground OLtl. atld Hanmg
and RBI single by Sandy reached on an error. Chancey
Powell. Eastern plated another had a double to dnve home a
in the second on a single by 11111. but Robertson got out of
Casey Sll)ith, a Morg:m Weber the jam to claim the win.
smgle and a fielder s chotee
Robet1son was the win ning
ground out by Jenny Annes. .
.
2.()
pttcher wtth another great out·
h
tescore
.
d t· .
h M d
Eastern's big inning and ing, e eatthg t e . rn:au .ers
eventual clincher was in the on a four·httter. wh.tle tannmg
fourth when Annes led off by six and · walking just three.
reaching on an error, Phillips Jeffers suffered the loss with
walked, and Holter reached on four stri.keouts and three
an error to score a run. Then walks whiie giving up eight
Powell had an RBI 4-3 sacn· .
•
.
fice to plate another run, and · htts to the hot Eastern otfen~e.
White had an RBI single to
Eastern ts tdle unul Monday
make it 5-0 at the time.
when it hosts Trimble.

Friday, April 18, 2003

NBA

Around
The
Diamond
Atlanta

Ftonda
New York

Associated Press ·

C1n11111

·W

L

Chicago

10

S1. louis

6

6
B
8

6
7

Houston
Pittsburgh
MilwauKee
Cincinnati

1

6 10
5 11
, Weat

PctOB
.625 -

.m

.533
.533
.375
.313

1.
1\\
1'k
4
5

PctOB

W

L

San Francisco 13

2

.867

-

Colorado
Los Angeles
San Diego

9
7
7

7
9
9

.563
.438
.438

4~

6h

Arizona

5

11

.3 13

8',.,

\.

61,1,

Wedneaday'a Games
St. Louis 15, M!twaukee 2

Chicago Cuba10, Cincinnati 4
Atlanta 3, Montreal 2
Pittsburgh 6, N.Y. Mots 3
Florida 3, Philadelphia 1
Housron 8, San Franc:lsco 5
Arizona 4, Coloraelo 3
Los Angeles 3, San Diego 0

Thursday'• Gamea
Chicago Cubs 16, Cincinnati 3,
· Flortda 7, Philadelphia 3

· Atlanta 14, Montreal 8, 10 Inning!
Arizona 11. Colorado 2
N.Y. Mots 7, Pittsbu~h 2
Milwaukee 4, HOuston 2
Los Angeles 4, San Diego 3
Today '&amp; Games
Cincinnati (Dempster 1-1) vs.
Montreat (Day H) at San JUan. 7:05

p.m.

College basketball

Chicago Cubs (Clement 1-1) at
Pittsburgh (Benson 2·1), 7: 05p.m.

Golf

Williams' Kansas farewell Barlow finds, record
marked by tears, cheers round Harbour Town
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP)
Sure, Roy · Williams
thought about staying in
Nonh Carolina.
Why, .he wondered, should
he risk . the wrath of the

HILTON HEAD ISLAND,
S.C. (AP) - Craig Barlow's
search for a solid swing
ended abruptly Thursday
wi th a nine-hole tournament·
record 28 that gave him a

Tribe
from Page 81
Har~rove

said.
·
.
Contne said he was completely fookd by two of
Sadler's pitches, and onl y
stayed alive because one of
his foul ti ps popped out of
catcher Tim Laker's mitt.
"I don't know how he did·
n't catch it," Conine said. "I
didn't get much of it."
Cleveland's
Milton
Bradley went 0-for-5 with a
walk and had his seasonopening
hitting . streak
stopped at 14 games.

Former Kansas coach Roy Williams rece ives hugs fro m one of
his former players before the start of the men's basketball
awards ceremony Thursday, in Lawrence , Kan. Earlier in the
week Williams took the coaching job at North Carolina. (AP)
seasons in the NBA after
graduating in I 993. "A lot of
coaches would have headed
out of towp and not come
back."
Still, Williams was nervous
when he sat down at the start
of the ceremony.
"When I walked in , I was
son of a chicken," he said. "I
wanted tocome in in the middle of the players because I
didn't think people wo uld boo
the players." .
When Williams was introduced. se veral people rattled
newspapers in front of their
faces, as fan s at Allen
Fieldhou s~ do during the
announce ment of an oppo·
nent's starti ng lineup. As the
ovation died down after
Williams ' remarks, a man in
the second balcony of the
concert hail yelled, "traitor!"
Dave Colli son, father of
star forward and team MVP
Nick Collison. drew cheers
when he stood and told the
protester. "You should be
ashamed of yourself!"
Nick Collison defended his
former coach during the cere·
many.
"This is the same man 'I said
ail th&lt;lse nice. things about on
Senior Night," Collison said.
"I stili feel the same way."
Kansas ' returning players,

inany of whom looked grim
whe n Williams was introduced, hugged him after hi s
speech.
"I ain 't going to lie," point
guard Aaron Miles said. ~· 1
was ki.nd of mad at first ... but
everyone's got dreams and
goals. and yo u going to North
Carolina is a dream of yours.
J wish you well , but it's unfortun ate you're not goi ng lobe
a part of thi s special program
an ymore:·
The Jayhawk5
(30-S)
advanced to the NCAA title ·
game · before . losing to
Syracuse. It was the fourth
Final Four appearance fo r the
school · in Williams' 15 seasons there .
Some Kansas fa ns viewed
Williams' return to Lawrence
as a class act. Others called it
another slap in the face of the
players.
"Peop le say, ' He 's just out
to get attention,'" Williams
said at a news conference
after the awards ceremony.
"Anyone who says that doesn't know Roy Williams."
Williams said he planned to
leave Lawrence early Friday
-but not for Chapel HilL
"I' m going to the beach," ·
he said, his voice breaking
again. "''m just going to sit
there and think of 15 great,
great years."

Bradley's streak was Lhe
longest to open a season for
the Indians since Toby
Harrah hit in 14 in a row in
1982.
The indian s loaded the
bases with two outs in the
ninth but failed to score.
They got the potential win·
ning run to second wtth
two outs in the I Oth but
cou ldn 't push it across.
Hairston's two-run s.ingle
tied it 4-4 for Baltimore in
the seventh off indians
starter C.C. Sabathia, who
threw just 69 pitches in the
fi rst six innings but needed
29 to get through the seventh.
After Sabathia struck out
Mora to end the inning. he

walked disgustedly to the
dugou t after letting his first
win of the season slip
away.
"1 was cruising," Sabath,ia
said . "1 left one pitc h out
over the pi ate and I paid for

(

it."

•WIN•

....

2FREETICKm
SPRIIB VlllR
CIIEUJ
FINO YOUR NAME IN
TOOAY'S CLASSIFIED
SECTION AND WINI

opening round of the MCI
Heritage.
red up .and desperate after
he shot a 2-over-par 37 on
his firs t nine at Harbour
Golf Links,
a drastic, mid-round
change - moving the bali
two inches forward in his
stance. The result was a
stretch .like none other on
Pete Dye's famous layout,
and left Barlow with a 6- .
under 65 .
He had two eagles and four
birdies coming , in to break
the course mark of 29 set by
Brad Faxon in 1997 and tied
four times si nce. Barlow also
was a shot off the PGA Tour
record of 27 for nine holes
- shared by Mike Souchak
( 1955), Andy North ( 1975) Craig Barlow pumps his fi st after sinking a birdie putt on the
ninth hole to fin ish at 6-under-par 65 during the first round of
and Billy Mayfair (200 I)..
"You know what. I was the Heritage Thursday at Harbour Town Golf Links on Hilton
happy that I felt like a golfer Head Island, S.C. (AP)
again," said Barlow, never a And the problems continued
The last time anyone had
wi nner in six PGA Tour sea- with two bogeys on his first two eagles in the same 18
sons. "I mean. I haven 't four holes here as he contin· holes here was Love during
played well this year and it ually pushed shots to the his first round in 1992. He
just felt good to fee l like me." righ.t. Barlow finall y snapped went on to win his third
Barlow was a shot ahead afte r a sloppy drive on No. Heritage that year.
of Davis Love Ill. a four· ·18, the lighthoose hole.
"1 detini tely never would
time champion here, and
"1 said, · You know what') have guessed I wou ld go
John ·Senden, an Australian 'Enough's enough;'" he said. from shooting 2-ovcr to 8in his second tour season.
Barlow figured the ball under." Barlow said . "I've
Another shot behind was a was too far back in hi s never done it before. and not
group of 10 led by Hal Sutton stance. After his adj ustment, many guys have ever done it
and 2000 Heritage wi nner he struck a solid S-iron shot before out &lt;here. either."
Stewart Cink. Masters run- within IS feet of the cup and
For Love, it was a typical
ner-up Len Mattiace and knew he had something spe· low round at a course he.
Nick Price, the champio n cia!.
well , loves.
here six years ago. were tied
The ball "made a different
He had th ree birdies in a
with II others at 68.
noise. it tlew different," strelch of four holes on the
Masters winner Mike Weir Barlow said. " I looked up way to a 66 - his 32nd
and world No. I Tiger and it was like, 'Wow, &lt;hat's rou nd in the 60s out of the 60
Woods were ~mong those a change.·"
he' s played at Harbour
taking the week off.
.
Barlow rolled in a 30-fooL· Town:·
Barlow, who worked at er for eagle on the par-5 sec·
'T m real confident in my
Pizza Hut for five years ond hole. He landed a 4- game and I'm hitt ing really
before joining the tour full wood about 8 feet away on good,'' Love said. "That's
time in I 998, has struggled the fifth , another par 5, and even better, coming to a
sihce to keep hi s swing made the putt for another place where yo u know the
together and hi s playing eagle.
go!f course arid you know
card.
He tied Love for the lead the tournament so well."
He's never been higher with a birdie on No. 8 and
Senden had birdies on two
than 122nd on the money closed the record perfor- of his last three holes, the
list: He has mi ssed the cut in mance with a birdie on No. seventh and the ninth, to tie
six .of nine eve~ts t~is year. 9.
Lov~ :'

cOmlng Sunday

Yearbook
Government
'

Saturday~

Apri/19

G~~J T!'trt~
POKER RUN
Last Bike Out ll:OOam
Last Bike In 5:00pm
~..,~
Food • Games

4fA-..
~

•

Diego

(Qt. Perez

0·1)

at

Colorado (Cook 0-1), 9:05p.m.
San Francisco (Schmidt H)) at Los
Angeles (K.Brown 1·0), 10:10 p.m.
Seturday'a Game•
Florida (Burnett 0-1) at N.Y. Mats
'(l'rachaet 0-1), 1:10 p.m.
HouS1oo (W.Miller 0· 1) at Milwaukee
(Ritchie H), 2:05p.m.
Arizona (Kim . 0-3) at St Louis

o ne-stro ~ l eacr:irter-tlie

"We love you, Roy" turned to
howls of outrage when the
longtime basketball coach
decided he couldn 't turn
down the Tar Heels for the
second time in three year~ _
---~.en-.. .,- come hack he did, for
R.ansas' team banquet and
aw-ards ceremony Thursday
night - and not even a lone
Cry of "traitor" from the audience could spoil his evening.
He received a standing ovation from the crowd of about
• 2,000, signed autographs and
shook hands for about 15
minutes after the 2 112-hour
ceremony - and spent . a'
good part of the night close to
tears.
"I will admit that it's difficult," Williams said. "The
easy way out would have
. been not to come, but I would
never do that to these players,
because that would not show
the respect for these players
and what they did and what
they mean to me."
Williams tlew .to Chapel
Hill on Monday for the
announcement that he was
going back to his alma mater
after 15 seasons in Lawrence.
He returned Wednesday
after receiving an invitation to
the ceremony and banquet
from Kansas chancellor
Robert Hemenway.
On Thursday, several players from past Kansas teams
were on hand to greet
Williams with hugs when
buses carrying the former
cdac h and the team arrived at
the university's Lied Center
. for the Performing Arts.
"Here's a man who gave us
15 years of his life and had
enough guts to come back and
pay his respects to what this
team was able .to do," said
former Jayhawks guard Rex
Walters. wllO played seven

Florida (Redman 1-2) at N.Y. Mats
(Leiter 2·0), 7:10p.m.
Philadelphia {Wotf 2-&lt;l) at Atlanta
(Maddux 1·3), 7:35p.m.
Houston {Oswalt H ) at Milwaukee
(Rusch 1·2), 6;05 p.m.
Arizona (Dessens 1·1) at St. Louis
(Williams 2-0). 8:10p.m.
San

MPT BOX

~

•

(Simontacchl 0·0), 2:10 p.rn.
San Diego (Condrey · 1·1)
Colorado (Cruz 3-0). 3:05p.m.

at

Cincinnati (Ji.Anderson 1-1) 111.

Montreal (Vazquez 1·1) at San Juan,
7:05 p.m.
Chicago

Cube

(Prior

2·1)

at

Pittsburgh (Wells 0-1 ), 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Padilla 2· t ) at Atlanta
(Hampton 0-o), 7:05 p.m.
San Francisco (Moss 2,0) at Los ·
Angelas (Ashby 0-2), 10:10 p.m.
Sunday'&amp; Gamea
Cincinnati ve..MontreaJ at San Juan,

t:os p.rn,

·
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 1:05 p.m.
Florida at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.
ChiCago Cubs at Pln&amp;burgh, 1:35

p.m.
Houston at Milwaukee, 2:05 p.m.
AriZona at Sll.ootS, 2:10p.m.
San Otego et Cotor~do , 3:05 p.m.
S$n Francisco a1 Lo~ Ang&amp;Jes, &amp;.. ~o

p.m.

.

American League
Eaat
New 'lllrl&lt;
Bcston
Betttmore
Torpnto

Tampa Bay

•

PciOB

W

L

12
10

3

,.800

-

5
8

.667

.2
5%

6
.429
6 10 .375 ' 6~ .
5 10 .333
7
Conln!l

W

L

PctGB

Kansas City 11
3 . .786
9 6 .600
Chicago
Minnesota
9 6
.600
5 10 .333
Ct&lt;M&gt;I"""
1 13 .071
Detroit

. WtO!
W L

'

LA takers' campaign for fourth
straight title begins on the road

eeot
WLPclOB
9 7 .56397.5636 6 .500
1
6 9
.471
1~
6 10
.375
3

Montreal

r

.

.

Natl!ll1al League

Phlladetphta

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

www.niydailysentinel.com

-

2'.ia
2\'.

it&gt;
10

PctGB

9 ., .563 1
8 8 .500
8 8 .500
1
7 9 .43$
2
'TillCU
Wodneoday'l O.mot
Boston 6, Tampa Bay 4
Toronto 7, N.Y. Y4nkeee 6
Baltimore 4, Ctavetand a
Minnesota 4, Detroit 2
Anahetrn 9, TeWI 8
Chicago White Sox • • Kan1111 City 3.
Oaldand 4, Seattle ,
Ttturodey'l
N.Y. Yankeea 4, Toronto o
Texas 9, Anaheim 7
Chicago White 5o&gt;&lt; 8, Kantllll City 2
Seattle 4, Oakland 3, 10 lpnlngs
Boston 6, Tampa Bay o
Bel!tmoro 6, CtOYetand 4, 12 1nntngo
Minnesota 6, Detroit 0
Seottlo
Anaheim
Oakland

Q-·

Tadly'oO.meo
Toronto (Hendrlcicocn 1·2) at Bcston
(Wakefield 1-o), 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Zambrano !1-1) at
Beltlmore (Johnoon 1.()), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Clemens 2.0) at ·
Mlnneocta (Radl&lt;e 1·1), 8:05p.m.
Detrott (COrnejo 1·!) at Kanoaa City
(May 0-1), 8:05p.m.
Cleveland (Ric.Rodrlguez 2·0) at
'chicago White sox (ColOn 1-&lt;l)•.8:05
p.m.
Seattte (M&lt;&gt;yer H) et Anaheim
(Ra.Orttz 2·1), 10:05 p.m.
Texas (Thomson ().1) a1 Oakland
(Zilo 2·1), 10:05 p.m.

SlturdiY'I ~·~·
Toronto (Sturtza 2·0) at Beeton
(Lowe 2·1), t :20 p.m.
· Tampa Bey (SOtlll 0.1) 11 Be~ti\'IOf8
(Lopez (}2) , 1:35 p.m.
Detroit (Knotts 0-1) at Kan... City
(Aifetdl 2·0), 2:05 p.m. · ·
Cleveland (B.Anderson 2· I) at
Chicago White Sox (Stewart 0.1 ), 2:05
p.m.
•
Texas (Vatdea 2·1) at Oakland
(Mulder 1·1), 4:05 p.m.
• N.Y. Yankee&amp; IPattltte 2·0) at
Minnesota (Mays 2·1), 7:05p.m.
soattte (Pineiro H) at Anaheim
(Appler 1·2), 10:05 p.m.
Sundoy'oQomot
Tampa Bay at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.

Toronto al Boston. 2:06 p.m.
Detroit a1 Kansas City, 2:05 p.m.
Ctevatand at Chicago White Sole,
2:05p.m.
Seattle at Ana~m, 4:05p.m. •
N.Y. Yankees at Minnesota, 4;05 p.m.
Texas el Oakland. 8:05 p.rn.

.

.

points.
Despite what they've shown
over the past three seasons, the
In order for the Los Angeles Lakers can prove themselves
Lakers to reach the NBA Finals worthy of the dynasty title they
and go for a fourth straight title, J~n:armly sel t~embraced lasl
they might need to do something they didn't have to do in
Yes, these Lukers are one of
2000. 2001 and 2002 _ begin the great teams in NBA history.
each Western Conference series But are they among the greatest
on the road.
of the great'' Four straight titles
would put them in that realm :
Shaqu ille 0' Neal, · Kobe three in a row comes up a little
Bryant, Phil Jackson and their lacking.
supporting cast begin theirquest
As for Garnett, he's still seekfor championship No.4 Sunday ing 10 prove the theory that a
afternoon in Minneapolis. the team with the league's most
~~~~ Lakers called ho~e until expensive young player can
actually make i1 to the second
Actually, it's a quest for title round of the postseason. K.G. is
No. 10 for Jackson, who is seek· ().6 for his career in the tirst
mg to become the only coach round, 5-18 if it's broken down
besides Red Auerbach to lead game- by-game.
his team to that many champi·
There was plenty of unceronships.
tainly early Wednesday evening,
"Minnesota is our tirst test," · when no one except Sacramento
O' Neal said. "Mr. (Kevin) and Utah knew who their firstGarnett has something to prove, · round opponent would be. But
and we have something to the other ·14 teams now ktiow
prove. It should be a good exactly what lies ahead of them.
series."
And until the L'lkers lose, if
O' Neal makes two good they lose, the foc us will be on

tl1em.
It will even be that way for the
Western Conference teams that
aren ·t playing Los Angeles many of which have endured
their share of mental distress at
the hands of the Lakers over the
past few seasons.
Take the Sacramento Kings.
The Lakers' biggest rivals
took the eventual NBA champions to overtime in Game 7 of the
Westem Conference finals a
year ago. The Kings still feel as
though &lt;hey were cheated in
Game 6, when the Lakers went
to the fllul line 27 times in the
fourth quarter alone.
If the Kings can get past the
Utah Jazz in the lirst round and
the Dallas Mavericks or the
Portland Trail Blazers in the second round, it's entirely pos;,ible
that they' II earn their chance for
redemption against the team that
hils eli minated them from the
postseason three stntight years.
TI1e. playoffs begin Saturday
at 12:30 p.m. EDT when
Mi lwaukee plays at New Jersey,
to be followed that day by four
more Game Is: Boston at

'

Indiana, Phoenix at San together for John Stockton and
Antonio, Portland at Dallas and Karl Malone, who have helped
Utah at Sacramento.
build Utah's 20-year run · of
Sunday's games, aside from qualifying for the playoffs Los Angeles-Minnesota, are second only to Portland's 210rlando at Detroii and New year streak.
Orleans at Philadelphia.
The Blazers will be playing in
This is the first year the NBA what figures 10 be one of the
will play a best-of-7 format in
the first round, replacing the old most wide-open first-round
best-of-5 format that had been series. taking ' on the league's
highest-scori ng team - Dallas.
used since 1984.
There will be a four-day break
The Mavericks were fonunat,e
between Games 2 and 3 in the to avoid a ftrst-round matchup
Jazz-Kings series and three-day with the Lakers, a tewn that has
breaks in the Portland-Dallas defeated the·m in 44 of thdr last
series and the San Antonio- . 49 meetings _ including 25 in a
Phoenix series.
row in Los Angeles.
·
The Jazz ended their regular
sem;on with a loss at Sacramento
For now, the defending
on Wednesday night and decid- c hamps are the conce rn of the
ed to tly home rather than stick Timberwolves.
·
around in northern California
If Los Angeles gtjtS past
for a couple of extra days. But Minnesota and the other highsince it's well-documented what er-seeded teams advance, the
c;m happen in Sacramento when Lakers will open the second
a visiting player orders a bacon round and possibly the third on
cheeseburger from room service, perhaps getting out of town the road.
wa~ the right idea for the Jazz.
Not for a team that went 7-2
The Jazz still doesn't know if on the road in lasl year's playthis will be the .. last season olfs and 8-0 the year before.

'

National Hockey League

Stars defeat Edmonton, takes 3-2 lead
DALLAS (AP) - Sergei
Zubov scored two long goals
and set up another, leading the
Stars past Edmonton for a 3-2
lead in their series.
Mike Modano had a goal
and two assists, and Scott
Young and Manny Malhotra
also scored as Dallas moved
within a victory of reaching

the second round. The first
chance comes Saturday night
in Edmonton.
This is the first time the top·
seeded team in the Western
Conference has led No. 8 in
the best-of-seven se ries.
Young and Zubov scored
power-play goals 53 seconds

apart midway through the first
period Ia put Dallas in control. In the previous game, the
Stars scored twice within 23
'econds itHhe third period to
take the lead then ,pad it.
Modano scored in the second and Zubov in the third. At
that po int. lhe biggest question was whether goaltender

Red Wings do
something not seen
in a half-century
DETROIT (AP) · - Even
after coach Scotty Bowman
and goaltender Dominik
Hasek retired, the Detroit Red
Wings hoped to win a fourth
NHL Iitle in seven years.
That would have been the
best run since Edmonton won
five championships from
1984-90.
Instead , the . Red Wings
became the first reigning
Stanley Cup champion to be
swept in the first round of the
playoffs since 1952, when the
Toronto Maple Leafs were
upset by Detroit.
The current Red Wings
were ushered out of the post·
season by the Anaheim
Mighty Ducks with a 3-2
overtime loss Thursday night.
"It's almost like a waste of
a year for us, the way we ftnished the season," defenseman Chri s Chelios said. "It's
a shame."
Before Game 4, Curtis
Joseph - the 14-year veteran
who replaced Hasek -. said
he would accept the blame if
Detroit lost.
He might get his share.
Joseph allowed I 0 goals on
120 shots in the series.
Jean:
Anaheim
goalie
Sebastien Giguere, playing in
the postseason for the ftrst
time, aifowed only six goals
"
on 171 shots.
Red Wings forward Darren
McCarty defended Joseph .
"We didn't get it done for
him," . McCarty said. "He
played great. In Detroit, the
toughest jobs are goaltender
forthe Wings and quarterback
for the Lions. That's the way
it is."
Another tough job: suc:
ceeding Hall of Famer
Bowman as coach of the Red
Wings. That's what 14-year
assistant Dave Lewis was
asked to do. Some will wonder whether Bowman would
have been able to make
enough adjustments to make
a difference . against the
Mighty Ducks .

.Lewis knew he wou ld face
such second-guessing.
"I don 't know what 1 would
ha ve done different ly," Lewi s
said. "You try to do things to
get performance and produc·
tion and try to put guys in situations where 'they'd be successful. You' re hoping the
work level you put into it
matches (Anahe im's) and
your tale nt kicks in, and that
didn't seem to happen.
"l' tn extremely di sappointed, not so much for myself
but for the team. 1·feel empty.
I guess ' numb' would be a
good word . 1 really can't
believe it."
As many stars as Detroit
has; few played particularly
well against Anaheim.
Cheiios didn't register a
point. Brett Hull , Nicklas
Lidstrom and Steve Yzerman
did not score. Sergei Fedorov
didn 't have a' goal until he
forced overtime with 2:15 left
in Game,4.
Lewis. clearly was not
happy with his best players.
"You have to cou nt on
everybody, and everybody
wasn't as good as 1 thought
they could be," the coach
said. "I just don't think we
sati sfied our commitments
enough . Some players were
extremely committed in every
scenario. I guess some individuals didn' t do it."
It wi ll be interesting to see
what happens in the offseason.
Red Wings owner Mike
Hitch invested about $68 million this season and, could
take a ·nnancial hit because
his team hosted just two p l ay ~
off games.
That could make a difference when Hitch- who also
owns major league baseball 's
Tige'rs and &lt;heir Comerica
Park - decides how much to
offer key free agents such as
Fedorov, Yzerman . McCarty,
Igor Larionov and Jason
Woolley.

Dallas' Marty Turco would
get his first career playoff
shu tout. It was the third
straight game he .took a
shutout into the third period.
Then Mike Comrie scored
midway through and Eric
Brewer fo llowed with I :52
left. The Oilers went with an
empty net soon after Brewer's

goal, but it ended up costing
them when Malhotra scored
from beyond the blue line
with 27 seconds left.
Turco faced nine shots in
the third period, one more
than he saw the first two combined. He fin ished with 15
stops. Edmonton 's Tommy
Salo made 23 saves.

COMMUNITY

AUTOMOTIVE
.

Norris Northup Dodge

City of Point Pleasant

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

www.pointpleasantwv.org

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

Mason 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
.

MEDICAL

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

www.mydailytribune.com

Holzer Medical Center

www.holzer.org

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Holzer Clinic

Point Pleasant Register

www.holzerclinic.com

www.mydailyregister.com

Pleasant Valley Hospital

GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES _

www.pvalley.org

Precious Memories

www.photosonchina.com

_ ENTERTAINMENT

AGRICULTURE

Charter Communications

www.charter.com

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequipment.com
WELLNESS &amp; WEIGHT LOSS

INTERNET SERVICES

Herbalife Independent Distributor

BlueStarr Network

www.herbsndiet.com

www.bluestarr.net

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!
Take your business into the homes of over 40,000 con·
sumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs Counties EVERYDAY
with a listing of your web address in our

WEBSITE DIRECTORY
· for only a $1 a day.

-

I
---------

�Page 84 • The Oaily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

Friday, April 18, 2003

National League

American League

Lopez's-gland sl~m
gives ~raves extra-inning
win in Puerto·Rico

"Pedro's pitching puts
BoSox past Devil Rays·

.

Javy Lopez made it a day of celebration in
Puerto Rico.
: Lopez capped a two-homer day with a lOthi-nning grand slam that gave the Atlanta
llraves a 14-8 win over Montreal on
Thursday, and set off a festive celebration in
• San Juan.
The Atlanta catcher bought at least 40 tickets for each game in his homeland and each of
hi:s homers sparked prolonged chants and
cheers led by his father.
· Lopez was 0-for-8 In the first two games in
San Juan, disappointing the fans who came to
See him. He singled his first time up Thursday,
then hit a two-run homer in the seventh for an
8-6 l·ead. helping the Braves to a three-game
sweep.
: Both teams broke out of a collective slump
after combining to score a total of just eight
runs in the ·first two games at Hiram Bithom
Stadium.
· In other NL games, it was Chicago I6,
Cincinnati 3; Florida 7, Phil adelphia 3;
Arizona ll , Colorado 2; New York 7,
Pittsburgh 2; Milwaukee 4, Houston 2; and
Los Angeles 4, San Diego 3.
: The Braves-Expos game was- delayed 53
minutes because of rain, which also washed
away batting practice. It didn' t hurt the
offense as Rafael Furcal homered on the third
pitch of the game by Livan Hernandez.
Marcus Giles homered, doubled twice and
singled. and Andruw ·Jone s also homered as
the Braves won their fourth in a row and
reached .500 for the first time this season.
Endy Chavez hit a two-run homer in the
eighth for Montreal that made it 8-all.
Chipper Jones, out of the starting lineup for
the second straight day because of a sprained
left groin, pinch-hit in .the lOth and drew a
leadoff walk from Rocky Biddle (l-1 ). After
Furcal· sacrificed, Giles doubled home the goahead run.
A pair of intentional walks and right fielder
Vladimir Guerrero's second error of the game
produced a run and loaded the b~s for
Lopez. With the rain starting to fall harder,
Lopez hit a long drive to left field that sent the
crowd of 13,170 into a frenzy.
J ung Keun Bong (2-0) picked up the win for
Atlanta by pitching a perfect ninth.

'

Dodgers 4, Padres 3
At Los Angeles, pinch-hitter Todd Hundley
hit a three-run homer to cap a four-run eighth
as Los Angeles beat San Diego.
Daryle Ward delivered an RBI si ngle for the
Dodgers' first run.
Troy Brohawn ( 1-0) recorded the victory
with an inning of one-hit relief. Eric Gagne
pitched a perfect ninth fo r his fourth save in as
many attempts. Randell White homered for
the fifth time in seven games for the Padres.

At Pittsburgh, Jae Seo ( 1-0) pitched seven
shutout innings for his first major league victory and Mo Vaughn · had four hits and four
RBis.
Jeromy Burnitz and Mike Piazza hit long
homers as the Mets won for the lhird time on
a 10-game trip.

Brewers 4, Astros 2

Twins 6, Tigers 0

Marlins 7, Phillies 3
At Philadelphia, Mike Lowell drove in four
runs with three extra-base hits and . Carl
Pavano, pitched six shutout innings for
Florida.
Pavano (2-2) allowed only two hits , struck
out five and walked one. Kevin Millwood (21) lasted only 3 2-3 innings in his worst outing of the year, giving up seven runs, seven
hits and four walks.

Mets 7, Pirates 2

• Aaveltise AYard Silk
• Buy Farm Equipmtlft
• St/1 Misc. Mercllanaise
• Clltek out the Business mrds for.local clean·
/119, exclltlatillg ana otller services!

The newspaper
i's a valuable
leaming tool
for students of
all ages.
It connects
the principles
and facts they
le.am in the
classroom
vvith
'
stories and
events that are
happening here
and around
the world.

Shop
Classlfleds!

Mariners 4, Athletics 3, 10 inn.

At Minneapolis, Bobby Kielty hit two
solo homers and Kenny Rogers (2-0)
struck out nine in" eight innings as
Minnesota won its sixth in a row after losing six strai ght.
Corey Koskie also homered - for the
'
Twins.
Detroit lost its fourth in a row and fell to
1-13, the worst start in the majors since the
· Chicago Cubs opened 1997 with an 0- 14

Cll«lc out the
ci~JSsifleas (or all your
spring cleaning neeas!

•

We have it all!
in the Classifietts!

ANNOUNCEMENTS

At Seattle, Mark McLemore atoned for
his tying error in the ninth inning with a
two-out RBI single in the lOth.
The Mariners took three of four from the
A's, who have lost seven or eight following a 7-1 s~art.
Oakland rallied from a 3-1 deficit
against closer Kazuhiro Sasaki in the
ninth . Eric Chavez led off the inning with
'his third homer in three days.
•

HEALTH

and
FITNESS

Legion

HELP WANTED

Getting fit and
staying fit is in!

All-You-Can-Eat
Italian Buffet
Starting at5 p.m.
Entertainment on the Ver11nda

Ad •••

HELP WANTED

Mason, WV (304) 7735354

~otnt

HEARTLAND HOME CARE ·
We are currently seeking for immediate
hire the following positions in
Gallia &amp; Meigs Counties:
•
RN's Per Diem at $30.00 per visit plus mileage
PT's, OT's, ST's at $50.00 per visit

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

't

\'\\111

r

I \ II ' ' "

ANNo!JNoJ\tEN'I'S

r
I

.C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
lor sale, Chester Township,
Me1gs County, send letters
of inte re st to: The Daiiy
Sent1nel, PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Do you neeo ·your GED or
High-School Diploma? Do
you know how to write an
effective ·re'wn'mi""OO you
know what qualities employers are looking For in an
employee ? Do you know
how to keep a job once you
get It? We can Help! For
more inlormation , call the
Meigs
County
SIEI:&gt;JJOG/ABLE Program
at 740-992-6600 or 740·
992-6930, or stop In Monday
through Friday at t11 West
Second Street · in Pomeroy.
Oh. Make a diffe1ence m
yo_u_r'_ife_~_od_•_Y_'- - - _
To w.hom it may COr"1cern:.
Take notice that 1w111 on the
22nd day of April 2003 , at
the hour ol 12 noon, at The
Mason County Courthouse
steps, sell at PubliC auction.
for cash , th e following proparty,. to wit;
A 1997 Chev. Tahoe ar1d a
1998 Olds Aurora to satisty
2 executions upon Judgemen! obtained in the

Magistra ~e Court of Mason
County against Highlanders
All oys L·L·C·
The 1st judgement was on
the 6th Day of January 2003
in favor of Donahues's
Enterprises for lhe sum
$1.490.00 . and the 2nd
Judgement was on the 4th
day of Febuary 2003 in favor
Of Fields Hardware lor the
sum of S1 ,732.28. which has
been levied o·n the said
property by m6 as a Deputy
SheriH of Mason County
Posted this 1Oth day of
April, 2003 SGt BC Peterson
Deputy Sheriff
Mason County, WV

GIVEAWAY

For interview call Julie at

1-888-653-1609

Tiger &amp; Calico kittens. 11ery
playful (740)448-1542

r·----~~: 1ro ~WANIID

Weiner Dog. (304)882-2829
- - -- - - - Lost Car Keys Fo.odtand
Parking Lot 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis. Friday
Eve .
(740)446-9764

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver,
Gold COins,
Proolsets, Diamonds, Gold
Rmgs.
U.S. Currency,M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151
Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
740- 446-284 2.

I

'-------_.J·

rro-

e
7787

974-JOBS

time, tocal area. experience
preferred . (312)427·0900

Advertising Deadlines:
Wednesday, May 7, 2003
• Display Advertising. Call Today
Tribune- 446·2342
Register· 675-1333
Reaching over 29,800 readers Sentinel· 992·2157

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

Middleport, Oh
Local body shop,ee~tks qual·
tiled repair tech, Competitive
pay. good working environment. Call to . set up Inter:
view. {740)446-4486

m::

15 I
.

.

;::~=~~~::::;~--~
:-TC:::..·-TR~O:,;:.C-;H:...::,S

~

.r.6

L--OPro--R'JUNITYiiliiiii;.,,J

I

1'RAINING
"---iiiiiiitiiittooorl

always
theMy
lastuncle
minute
to dowaited
thtngs until
and
then everything would go wrong.
His dad told him he should learn
to dig his well before he gol • , · •

r;-1,.
···
I
I
I
I
:;
_Y
1

_

f t Comploll lh&amp; chuckle quo&gt;•d • .
by fUIIng in the mlulm~ words,
yell develop from step No. 3 btlow,

..:'lo PRfNI NUM6fRfO LfllERS
,., IN THESE SQUARE$

i) ~,S'!~~!~ER LETTERS

TO

I

I. I I I I

. Yesterday's
SCRAM-UTI ANSWERS
Charge - Musty -_Irish - Jovial • EIGHT
One ovel'5ized matron to another: • Do you lhtnk it's
possible to lose weight while you sleep?" Second ma·
Iron: - If it is, wake me when I'm a size EIGHT!"

month. Call Harold, 740- asking $350.00 a man. +utilities.dep.required c~ll 304385-7671 .
-------~ 675-8902 or 304-593-0152.
We ha11e new sectional &amp;

single wide homes as tow as
$180 per month, 800·837·
2338.

~'~r-=--AND~B-~SJ~C&gt;-utu&gt;_tN_GS_..,I

All real estate sct.r:ertlslng
In thla nawapaper Ia
subject to tho Federal
Fair Hou.lng Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
edvertiM "any
preference, limitation or
discrlnMnallon baaed on
race, color, religion, 1ex
fftfllllllal atatul or national
origin, or any lnientlon to
make any such
preference, llmltlitlon or
dlacrlmlnatlon,"

~740)992-3955

l ings

r

Couch $200 .• Table $60.,
Recliner
125., Bed &amp;
Dr.ttner $150., Coffee Table
$2'0., Car Carrier 5!50 .
(740)441-1263 (740)448;::40ii60r--:::-....~--,

s

WAN'IUl
Mary 's Tee Time Grill at
RI¥elslde Golf Club- now •
To Do
accepting applications for
kitchen and waitstaft, partS
Ill
Georges Portable awm ,
time and full-time positions don't haul your logs to t he
available. (304)773-5354
mtll juat call304-ll75·11157.

"---lllliiiitiiio-,..1

frame , full basement, 2 car
N
·
wv
garage,
aw · haven ,
(740)«8·4274
55 acre r&amp;'rm on SA 5&amp;4 . 3
bedroom, 2 bath house with
buement. 2 barns, 10 aerea
~•lur,. Spring fad ll¥aat001&lt;

,..-

tan&lt;. llood hunting. Stocl&lt;od
pond. Free gas. $125,000.
Call {740)387·7258 between
9am &amp; 9pm .

Beautlful312 home In private
Need 5 lad1es to sell Avon - - - - - - - - Cherolala Lake on 3 acres
(740)446-3358
Handyman, yard work , mJI. Many extras. ·Must Seal
(740)992-2741 ask tor nm. ~740)446-21127
Need. carpenter with 10 yra.
back· ground experience lri
remodeling 304-727-4811

~

I
•

2 bedroom 14x70 mobile
home in Middleport, $325
plus deposit ,
no pets .
(740)992-31 94
.

LoTs&amp;
ACREAGE

2 bedroom , large liYing
room , air, porch &amp; awning ,
storage building. Very nice,
in Gallipolis. (740)446-1409
2 br. mobile home, $350.00
a mon. plus dep."Bnd util. no
pets (740(446-4313

2 br. trailer At 7 Gallipolis
City limits 740-(740)4462491
::.::~-----­
3 bedroom. 1 bath, reference &amp; deposit, (740)367·
1 lot on Sandhill Rd. 0.78 ~06:.:32
_ _ _ _ _ __

1 acre building lots; 3&amp;112
acres, and 5 acres tracts.
Green Schools. Great toealion. At 588. (740)446-9966

dwellings advertised In

thil new1paper are
available on •n equal
opport~o~nlty bu...

Beautiful River Vi&amp;~~ tdeat
New 3 bedroom, brick, 2 car 1/3 sere lot on 554 in Porter. For 1 Or 2 People,
garage, corner lot. Great all ulilities (including sewer) Aefererlces, Dep osit. No
location. 2 miles from Ready to build. $16,900. Pets, Foster Trailer Parkr
740-441-0181 .
Holzer. Green &amp; City (7 40)256-9200
SChools. (740)446-9966
154 Acres ol Hardwood Fall Mobile heme for rent, no
·,
4::
01::_
99:.:2:.:·58 5_
8 __
Timber
&amp; Pine Pulp wood for :P:.:•t•::·_:_l7.,
Aeeds11ille location, 1 1/2
story home on approx. 1 sale by owner. Show date Sm~U 2 bedroom $.285. per
acre,. 3 be drooms, (2 May 2, lOam. May 3, lOam. month. 3 bedroom&amp; 2 baths
upstairs, 1 on lirst floor,) 1 ~304)458-1656
$400. per month. $400,
bath , living room, eat-in - - -- - -- - Deposit up fronl r9ference~
kitchen.- enclosed bacK 58 Acres just off Crab Creek required . No pels inside 0'porch u98d as utility rOom. Road. j oins Cornstalk. Call out. Free gas with bath. Calt
endosed front porch used Somerville Realty (304)675- (740)245·5622
as TV room . Great location. 3030 (304)675-3431
- - - - - - - -. Trailer for rent $400 . $400.
in walking distance of local
(740)441-1 283
market and Post office. Fruit Building lots, State Aoule Deposit.
141, 10 minutes from i740)446--4060
trees, city water, natural gas,
Gallipolis. Restricted , wilh :...=.:....:.:.:--,-detached 1 c'ar garage, for
water &amp; electric. All with road Trailer for Rent (740)446-:.
more
information
cal l
fr~ntago. (740)379-2830
c48~2i-4-:---....-"1
(740)678·6253
Lot for sate in Racine,
APARJMENfS
M OBFOR.ERSuO!
H IES
(740)992-5858
~
11&gt;R lbNf
•
___
~
,
,•
Property for sate . Serious 1 and 2 bedroom apart.:- ·
Calls only. ~304)576 :9929
ments, furnished and unfur1989 Clayton Newport
mobile home 14xso 2 br.
nished, security deposit
Rio Grande area, 3 to 30
9)(C. cond, (740)256--6147
required. no pets. 740-992·
.
- - - - - - - - - acres lots. some restrictions, 2218.
water &amp; electric .. (740)245·
2 Bedroom Mobile Home,
5747
1 Bedroom Apartments
Central Air, Nice Corner Lot
Starting
at
$289/mo:
1&lt;1 '\I \I "
50x95; carport: public water
Washer/ Dryer Hooku pr
&amp;
Sewer.
$20,000. ~;::=:;::::;:=:, Stove and Refrigerate(
Homestead Bend, Broker. t:l
(740)441-1519.
acre. {304)675-5999

=

i

r

I

~304)882-2405

2001 14x80 Oakwood, 3
BR, 2 bath, all appliances
Included. We'll make down
payment, you take over paymenta" of $370 month. or buy
for $22,000. ~216)351·7086
111enlnga and weekends, or
(218)257-1485 deyo.

rio

I

HOUSiiS

FOR RENT

3 br., 1 car garage, nice out·
building, Country setting,
convenient
location
In
Gallipolis, close lo town .
$500. o mon.l $500 .00 dep.
no polS 740-(740)245-0372
Homes From $199/Mo.,
FORCLOSEO HOMES 4%
Down, 30 Years at 8.5%
APR For listings, 800-319·
3323 Ext I 709.

3 rooms &amp; bath , all utilities
paid . downstairs $285.00
919 2nd street 7~0-446·
3945.
BEAUTIFUL
APAATl
MENTS
AT
BUDilE{
PRICES AT JACKSOM
ESTATES, S2 Westwooc!

Drive from $297 to· $383.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740·446·2568 .
Equal
0::;PPD:.:.,:rt::un.,fly"-.-:-:-::H::.ou::•.:.'n-:-g.:
Beech St Mkldleport, 2 bed•
Cole's Mobile Homes US 50 EAit, Athena , Ohio, House For Re nt air and roorn furnished apartment:
utilities paid, deposit &amp; refer•
45701 , 740-592-1972 •
electric. 2003 Madison Ave. ences. no pets, (7 40)992·
Pt Ploaoant. (304)675·6453 0165
Good used 3brl2bth. Only
$7995. Includes delivery, Near Cliffside Golf Club, 3 Furnished e.fflclency. All utilibr.. 2 Da .. 2000 sq. home ties paid, share bath, $135
Coli Korona 740-385·9948
$695 per man . dep, &amp; lease month , 919 2nd Avenue
Land Home Packages avail· req . (no pets) 740.446·2957 ~7 40 )4 46- 3945
able. In your area, (740)448· or 304·593-0369
Now Ta.kl_
ng Applications3384.
Partial furnished 2 bedroom 35 West 2
Bedroom
wfat1ached Townhouse
New 2003 Ooublewlde. 3 BA doubtewide
Apartments.
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down garaQe. 3 miles from Includes W8ter
Sewage.
and &amp;295/mo. 1·800·191· F'omeroy on 143, $375 plus Trash, $350/Mo .. 740·446daposlt, (740)992·7 401
an1
0008.

s

1

MOBFOR.ERof!...~~rm;

(740)441-6954

Rio Grande area, 2400
sq.ll ., Office/ Commercial
Building lor Renv Lease.
Plenty off parking. (740)245·
5747

3 year old Brick Ranch.
3,000+ oq.ft., 2·112 acrao,
Qalllpolle CarMr College lnground . pool, storage
{Careers Ctoae To Home)
building, excellent neighbor·
Call Todayl740-446-4387, hood, (740)448·0149
1·800.214-0452
·
www. gtlllpoll~earMrcolleQI.oom .4 8!0AOOM HOM!, 4
A~a lt90-05-1274B.
balh, only $14,900. For lilt·
call 1·800·718·3001 20Q2 Clayton, 3 bedroom, 2
u"""" p~m
EICI.F144
bolh, 14x64, like new,
"~""""'
19,000. (740)742·8716
.__ _ _ _ _ __. 4 br. 1 1/2 baths, brick and ·

176

i

Corner
Aestauranl
Middleport, Ohio estab- 2 bedroom Mobile Home for
lished 1991 business &amp; rent . Spring Valley Area .
building, turn ,key operation, NC.
(3041675 -2900 01

This newapaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlaementa for riHII
estate whiCh Ia In
violation of the law. Our
readera .,. hereby
Informed that all

own

11
1180

:-:~r-T~r7--r-ll
U H T 0 'I .
_

Join the team of quality care
professional&amp;_ at 011erbrook
Center. We are taking appli·
cations for part
time
LPN 's/AN's for 12 M ur
shlfta. Benefit package avail·
able. Please come In and
I
comple le our applicaton
today at ~33 Page Street.

New 3br/2bth. Only $995 Ur1lurnished 2 br, house with
down and only $197.47 per full basement, close to town;

NURSES (ANa)
Logan's
Lawn
Care . Clean 5 room house In
$47.00
per
hour, (740)441·0720 Lawn mow· Rutland (out ol flood plain,)
$22.000, (740)992-0309
Columbus, OH . All Units, ing in Gallla and Mason
FULL TIME (800)437-0348
Newell's Lawn Mowing
Overbrook Rehabilitation Services. Call (304895-3399
Center is currently accepting Cell(304)674-0870

I

II
I

lr"il---~-:w
...no.._.,. ~.,r.io--~-~-~-~--..1r Mo~U:s~~ I~.,r.·o--~;;,:;~-~~-_.11

rJb

A RMP T

_

HELl' WANIID

j

·GLIPTH

•, I

1"0

applications tor its upcoming Will pressure wash homes,
LOST- Blond, short haired
nursing assistant class. trailers, decks, metal builddog, 1n East End area .
Applicatior1s will be accept- ings and gutters. Call
answers
to
~Maggie " . ~t~IO~------,
ed until May 1, 2003. The (740)446-015t ask for Ron
Reward. (740)446-4395
HEI.I•\V&lt;\N""mf)
class will begin May 12. or leave message.
200.3. App lications may be
LoSt- small Pomeranian
picked up at 333 Page St.,
Long Botlom on 124 Long Add ress wanted immediate Middleport, Oh or con1act "'r"tO;;;;;;;;_;;~;_-----..,
Run,
Friday
4-11-03 ty! No exper ience necesGassy
Lee,
Staff
an swers
to
Sassie. sary. Work at home. Call
Oe11elopment Coordinator at
(740)949-1703
405-447-6397
740)992·6472 For more · ..,
- -- - - - -----~---!NOTICE!
information. E.O.E.
Mate dog. black 8. wnite /
ARCADIA NURSING
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHbrown , beagle lost in Bidwell
CENTER
Medi Home Health Agency, lNG CO. reco mmends that
area.--Vew-Skinny small dog . ~Fuii·Time AN or-LPN need- ·
Inc. seeking RN's lor the you do business with people
(740)388-8449
ed. Available . 11 -7 shift. We
Gallipolis, oH area. we offer you know, and NOT to send
offer excellent benefits that
a competitive salary, bene- money through the mail until
Please return .. Maggie'" to include Health Insurance,
fits package, 401k, fleJC time, you have Investigated the
Maple Shade-East end. we 401K , L1fe Insurance, comand sign on bonus. Please offering.
miss her.
petitive wages. plus shift
send resume to 430 Second - - ' ' - - - - - diflerential and opportuni·
Avenue , Gallipolis, OH Want to be your
bOSS,
Y.o\.UHSr\U~
ties for advancement. I! you
45631 . Attn: Diana Harless, pick your own schedule ,
want to join our team. con~
Clinical Manager.
very reputable salon, work
...,~_,..-..,.--.., tact Susan Winland, D.O.N .
:-:-~---,:::-:::--:: on commission or rent your
~74
YARD SALE•
Arcadia Nursing Center
Sub contractor iOr siding &amp; own station call (740)446·
n.....tERO\'/MJIJOI E
East Main Street
soffit! installer, send resume ~ 4247 or 740-446-3697 ask
n.J~''
•
Coolville. Oh
Dr1ver wanted . to delh•er
29 for Kim.
Daily Sentinel, PO Box 7 - 'i~;;_~~--~
740-667·3156
u
.s
.
Mail
Part-time.
Must
31
.
Pomeroy,
Oh
45769
~i
.
MONEY
d&amp;
Apnt 17-18, corner o1 2n
EOE-M/FfHf!)V- -navestatrc;nwagon or MiniMain St., Racine, Qam·? at
Van ar1d liv.e in Rio Grande,
ro loAN
the par&lt;
P t . t
E
It t T_he following is a schedule ~-------r
Ann: Work from home.
a no
area.
xce en of dates and places 11 corWages and fuel allowance reciKJ
. nal o"•"cors
' tosl•'ng w•"ll
DEBT CRISIS!
11
$500· S1500/mo. PT
·
Catt Monday- Fr•"day 2·00- be ,·ven .·
Consolidation is the key to
Middleport-Pomeroy's 6th
9
$2000- $4500/mo. FT
' ·
·5 personal loans, mortgegos,
annual 6-mile long Yellow
s·oopm (330)721-9706
April 15 . 2oo 3 A.D. Lew 1
800-286-9748
·
Flag Yard Sate. May 2 8. 3.
community
center and other financial services.
took for the·yellow flags! Call
www.retire411 .com
Expe.rienced.
lic ens~d Huntington , WV
~ Availa~e up to $500,000.
tor info about locations. 740_ - - -- - - - - Phy_
s 1cal
Therap.!St Apr_ •
Putnam Co. Low Interest. CALL TOLL
11 22 2003
AVON! All Areas ! To Buy or Ass1stan t, exce lie r1t bene 1its,
d
Ed
. Off
FREE: 1 _877•436 •6297
992-4055
~~~~..,.--- Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- send
resume ·
141~-8 oar 01· ucatlon
ICes
016
YARIJ SAJ.E·
67 5· 1429.
Columbus Ad ., A!hens, Oh Win.field • WV
~
25 · 2003 Charles E.
Pr. Pl.EA'jANf
SERVICES
Bookkeeper needed, part- 45701 or fax 740-593-8221 . vApnt
c
c
ntor
•
,eager
areer · e
time,
kn owledge
at G
nh
ke need- H I' WV
wor rs
TURNED DOWN ON
3 Family Yard Sale. April 19. Peachtree. AP &amp; AA &amp; data 8drea dous~
t Aam., In'29 2003. c
B.am 1,11 ?.
an a1so managemen
pn
·
•
areer SOCIAl SECURITY ISSI?
entry, Alexis Taylor Garden,
,,.
·t bl
all T h clog
Center
!402 Kanawha
pas Ions aval a e, c
ec n
Y
No Fee Unless we Win I
Street. (740)643-1248
(740)843-1248, Alexis Taylor Huntington 'NV
1·888·582·3345
clothes, household, miscel·
003 M
c
0·
6• 2
ason
Lost
your
Job?
Need
to
Gardens.
May
·
1
_•_neo_u•_ _ _ _ _ _ Work? Lei's ta lk .. The new
Library Point Pleasant VN.
Ha rris Steak house Now All testing will begin at 10
Carolina Flea Market Now Avant
Thero
are Hiring. (304}675-9726
am, to make an appointment
HOMES '
Open- Fri . Sat. Sun. Vendors *"25,000""customers in our
I~R S••.,
area .needing ser 111 ce. Earn Heavy equipment operator, to take the test please call L,---uiiitlili~--,..1
Welcome. (304)675-5270
304 558 2110
d sk fo
- - - - -- - - $1 ,000-t Monthly by selling 50% paid on health insuran a
r
Garage SSte 5 Mile Ad , off $20. of Beauty Products toe anee. panial payment retire- Helen or Sandy. lhe test will {3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
Crab Creek 18 thru 21st
People, 5 tlays a weeki ment, wages baseq on also be Qiven. on April 30. for Immediate possession all
- - - - - - - - Great lor : Couples-Single experience,
maJI 2003 and May 13, 2003. within 15 min. of downtown
Porch Sale 3 1/2 miles on M 0 m s • F a m i 1 i 8 s _ resume/wages expected to: Please call for more lnfor· Gallipolis. Rates as tow as
Jim Hill Ad. Thurs-Sat. Lee Handicapped. Plans to Fit Daily Sentinel, PO Bol( 729- mation on these test dates. 6%. (740)446-3218.
Residence.
any Need. No Stock Ups, No 30, Pomeroy, Oh 45769
3 Bedroom newly remadDoor to Door. It will Work for_ Help wanted caring for the Truck Drlvere, Immediate eled, In Middleport, call Tom
AUCilON 1\ND , Youl
$10.00 Start up Fee
Fl...EA MA.RKhl
Call April , 304-882-3630 for elderly. Darst Group Home, hire, clall A COL required,
Anderson after 5·p.m.
now paying minimum wage, excellent pay, experience :99::2:.:·334=.::8:__ _ _ __
Details.
new ahlflt~: 7am-3pm, 7am1ad E
t at 000
Kessel 's Produce and Flaa ~=-----requ r · 1'" up 0 '
· 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 508
$$ FOR THE 5pm , 3pm-11pm. 11pm- por wH"Coll 3"'675·
NEED
Mkt. Open Thurs-Fri-Sat.
•·
~·
Stole Stroot, Thurman, OH
7am, caii74Q-992·5023.
4005
HI 1I
SPRING?? N
Now renting spaces, 1354
ow
ng
""Jr-~~~~--,
$45,000. Call ~740)379·
Jackson Pl~e. {740)446- Flexible Scheduling 1·888· Insurance Inspector. Hard ~101
9249 or (740)245-0358

woaD

.

Do you enjoy talking to peapte on the telephone? Are
you persuasive and colitident? Do you enjoy knowing
what is going on In PomerOy,
Middleport and all of Meigs
County? Would you enjoy
a career in inside sates
with no night or weekend
hours?. How about 9am - 5:
30pm , Monday th_rou gh
Friday with paid holidays,
vacations, sick leave , a
401 (k) ptar-1 and medical
insurance? Our newspaper
10 Pomeroy has 1 opening
for a permanent, profession•
al
inside
salesperson
Compensation is a combina•
lion of base salary and com·
miSSion. ThiS job will not be
open long, so call Larry
Boyer today at (740) 4462342 Monday through FridaY
mornings betWeen Sam and
and
afternoons
9arn
between 4pm and 5pm. It
those hOurs are not convenient for you to call, email a
cover letter ar"1d your resume
to Larry at tboyer@mydaj!ytrjbyne com Be fastt

POUCIES: Ohio V.llty Publl1hlng ~Ht'Vtl the right to edit, reject, or c.1ncel any ed at any time. ErrDfl muat be reported on the first day of
Tribuoe-Sentlnei-Regleter will be mponelbtt for no mOrt thin the COlt of the lpiCt occup'" by the error and only the firat lnaertion. We ehal\ not
eny lou or expenM thatrnulte from the pubiiCidon or ominlon of en advlfrtlaement. Correction will be made in the firat availa~le edition. • Box
are alwaya confidential. • Current rete card appl'''· • All r.. l tatllt adveniumentl are eubJect to the Federal Fair Houelng Act of 1968. • This nO\"P••pe•l
accepts only t.IP wanted ads meeting EOE atlndtlrdl. We will not knowingly accept any advertialnliJin ~lolation of the law.

BUSIN!3

TV, Call ~304)875-3458

t

For Sundays Paper

~~1&gt; 1

1._--~:.;..._.1
Found: Small Long haired

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

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Mondayafrlday for ln•ertlon
In Next Day' s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

• St~rt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

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

classlfled@inydailyregister.com

Word Ads

t)leasant l\egtster and

-Friday, May 16

American Legion
Middleport
Pomeroy Eagles
April18-19
Band- Blue Jeans

classified@ mydallysentlnel.com

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

The Daily Sentinel

BINGO
1st Pack $1 0.00
All after that $5 ·
Starburst $1300

classified@ mydailytri bune.cam

Offiee lfoar~

OF .
ijtbe ~autpolis mailp 'O!rtbune,

Riverside Golf Club

Come join the Professio,-.al staff of

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Call us at: (304) 675·1333
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
Fax us at: (304) 675·5234
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:

A SPECIAL FEATURE

Starting at 7:30 p.m.
Friday, April 18th

April 19th 6:30 pm

f

Your

1\egtster

Visit us at: 825 Tl'!ird Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446·2342
·
Fax us at: (740) 446·3008
E-mail us at:

UMI

Paul Doeffinger

Now Hiring RN's, OT's, PT's, ST's

eoelrnlf

Place

4121/03 4123103

~

HELP WANTED

To

Free puppies 1 female , 6
m81es · (740)388-8277 or
740.0867.

BINGO l.n
Rutland Poat 467

In One Week With Us
-.-.CH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
-akrtbune
Sentinel
&lt;.'

r

Special American

Wa will be paying
$80.00 per game
Several Special
gemaa lor extra
money
All packe you can
play for $20.00
Plue A $50.00
Door Prize Each
Night
Starting nme
6:30
Everyone
Welcome

Mrlp Count,, OH

GaliU. Count)', OH

21.

Martine z allowed just one runner Rangers 9, Angels 7
to reach second base . He struck out
three and walked three , five days
At Arlington, Texas, Carl Everett homeafter he was rough ed up by red and scored the go-ahead run on a
Baltimore for I 0 run s in 4 1-3 throwing error by reliever Scott
innings in Bo ston 's home opener - · Schoeneweis as the Rangers rallied past
th e worst start of his career.
Anaheim .
He was booed as he left the field
David Eckstein hit a leadoff home run
after that outing. Perhaps irked by
.
the ·reaction, Martine z declined to . and Troy Glaus added a two-run shot tn the
speak to reporters after Th~rsday' s Angel s' four-run first. But that was all they
game.
managed against Ryan Dre se ( 1-1 ), who
In other AL games, it was: rf+overed with six shutout innings to help
Minne so ta 6, Detroit 0: New York 4, Texa s take ' three of four from the World
Toronto O;· Texas 9 , Anaheim 7; Series champions.
Chicago 8. Kansas City 2: Seattle 4. ·
Oakland 3 in 10 innings: an d
Baltimor e 6, .Cleveland 4 in 12 White Sox 8, Royals 2
inning s.
At Chicago, Esteban Loaiza (3-0)
In hi s other three appearances this
season, Martinez ( 1- 1) ha s allowed matched a. career high with I I strikeouts
and Carlos Lee's grand. slam was one of
one earned run in 22 innings.
Mike Timlin got six outs to finish four White Sox homers off Chris George
the four-hitter as the Red Sox won (2- l ).
their fourth straight and improved to
Miguel Olivo, Tony Graffanino and Paul
6- 1-aga inst Tampa Bay.'
Konerko also homered for Chicago. After
Doug Mirabelli also homered for
a
fan attacked an umpire Tuesday night ,
the Red Sox, who sco red four runs in
the sixth inning to c hase Joe there was no trouble the rest of the series.
Kennedy (0 - 1).

At Milwaukee, Matt Kinney (2- 1) pitched
seven innings and Richie Sexson and Geoff
Jenkins hit consecutive home runs for
Milwaukee.
Jeff Bagwell and Richard Hidalgo in the
Diamondbacks 11, Rockies 2
ninth for Houston. Tim Redding (0-2) lasted
only 3 l-3 innings. He has not won in 12 conAt Phoenix , Carlos Baerga drove in a secutive starts dating to May 13. 2002, against
career-best seven runs with two homers and a Philadelphia.

CLASSIFIED

Associated Press

'
double, and Curt Schilling pitched
a four-)1itter for his first victory of the season :for
Arizona.
Baerga hit his first grand slam in nearly I0
years, off Jason Jennings (1-2) in the second
inning. Schilling. -(i·2) struck out 10 and
walked none in his 77th career complete game
and first this season.

Associated Press

April 18, 2003

\!rrtbune - Sentinel -

record, according to the Elias Sports
Bureau . The Tigers have dropped 15
straight to Minnesota- their longest skid,
On a freezing night at Fenway against one opponent in franchise history.
Park, the ' Tampa Bay De vil Rays
· were almost afraid to swi ng at Pedro Yankees 4, Blue Jays 0
Martinez's pitches.
•
Martinez bounced ' right back from
At New York, Raul Mondesi -and
the worst start of hi s career, allowing just two singles in seven innings Alfonso Soriano homered to back a sharp
to pitch the Boston Red Sox to a 6-0 outing by Jeff Weaver ( 1-0) as Yankees.
starters improved to 10-0 for the first time
victory Thursday night.
Several players wore hoods under in franchise hi story.
their ca ps that left only their eyes
Hideki Matsui added a two-run double.
and noses exposed to temperatures Toronto, which has Ieist seven of eight, is .
that dropped down to 31 degrees by 1-6 against the Yankees this year.
the ninth innin g, with a wind chill of

.

•

The Daily Sentinel

«.

Needed- 1 Receptionist,
must have experienced on
computer &amp; typing and 1
Medical Assistant for Pain
Management
ol
Southeastern Ohio opening
June 1. In Galtlpol~. Send
resume to Gary Stone, c/o
Pain
Management
of
Sournern Ohio, 1616 Grant
Street. Portsmouth, Ohio
45662 . Training will start
May 19

I

�r .~ Ir ~ l~,l'._ .:.R.~.ALE-·-,~
6

Gracious llvlnQ. 1 and 2 Ded· Used Hot Springs Jet sener
room apartments at Village hot tub, will sacntice ,
Manor and Riverside (740)992-6907 .
Apartments in ~lddleport.
From S278·S34a. Call 740'BUilDING
992·5064 . Equal Housing
SUPPuEs
Opportunities.
L,~--rrriiiliiiriliii;;,_,J
Block, brick. sewer pipes,
Mobile home for rent 2 br.,
windows,
etc. Claude
water &amp; kitchen appliances Winters, lintels,
Rio
Grande,
OH
fuin., no pets call (740)441· Coll740-245-5121.
4540 leave message.

i

~,t___FOi i~i i~i iALEi i -il-pil

Modern 1 Dr. apt (740)4460390
.One bedroom furnished
apartment in Pt. Pleasant.
Very clean and nice. No
Pels. Phone (304)675-1386

1

98

~~U~

AKC Aegjstered Labrador 1996 F150, 6 cyl. $1900.

RBtriever
puppies. 740-388·0 173 or 740-367Champion
Bloodlines, 7187.
Ready for Easter, Males - - - - - - - $200 , Females, $300, Black 1997 Ford Ranger XLT,
Runs great, looks great.
&amp;Yellow. (740)446-0080
$5.000. (304)675-6986
Cute boxer mixed pups.
Shots &amp; womied. 6 weeks 97 Honda SRBOR, new
old April 21 550.379-2915 motor $1200:

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now lakin~ Applicalions
for 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BR.,
Applications are taken
Monday thru Friday, from
9:00 A.M.4 P.M. Office 1s
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant. WV
Phone No is (304)675-5806.
E.H.O

88 S-10 4 cyl., 5 sp. $1000.
Pet GroOming- dogs &amp; cats. 304-675-3959
pick-up &amp; delivery, Linda
Wade, S1de Hill Rd., 99 3 314 LT Silverado, 4)(4,
ext. cab, exc. cond., heated
Rutland, (740)742·8916
seats 70K, $19.500. 304V~~Bt.s
675-3664 or 304-593-1251 .

r

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spac1ous.
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1
1f2 Bath, ~ewly Carpeted ,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool ,
Pailo, Start $385/Mo. No
Pets, Lease Plus Security
Deposit Required.· Days :

I

Hbme grown Asparagus.
Charles McKean Farm 740·
446·9442_

t

740·446-3481; · Evenings:

740.367-0502.

ro

_.l

r

r~

I

1985 Ford, 4 wheel drive,
runs good , uses very little
oi l, $1,100- neg. (740)742-

9217

1994 Ford Thunderbird, like
Twin Ril1ers Tower _is accept- new condition, 75,000 miles,
h')g applicatiOns for waiting
fist for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
I II&lt; \I 't 1'1'111'
apSrtment. call 675-6679
,\ 11\1 .... 11)( h.
EHO

~,L"":-•FOR•S•PAiii~iii-io r_

96 Monte Carlo Z34. excellent shape, grouhd eHecls,
dual exhaust, low mileage,
(740)339-3267

r

FARro!

EQuiPMINf

Chevy Blazer, ru ns
good, $1200, {740)9922563
1991

1998
Dodge
Grand
Caravan. 4 door. loaded with
rear heat &amp; air, $6995,
Riverview Motors (740)9923490

R.B.
Trucking

I

HAULING:

'

I

• Limestone
• Sand
• Din
• Ag Lime

740·985·1564
EVANS LAWN CARE
Rad ne, OH
• Fr~ Estlmotes•
Lawn Malntalnence, ShNb
Trimming, Snow Removal
&amp;Other lawn CQ[fl Meeds

Jamie EvallS

linda Evans

(740)949-2108 "(740) 643·511 6
Pager (800) 976·247 1 I'&lt;~'"'"

~~~
High 8L Dry
Seff-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

1

I Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

.

Sp&lt;.l ll •Ned hy Ttw Mldttl"epnr1 Ctllllll\Unll~ ·- ""'K
' The P\lllWi"O~ M c r.: h~nl • A"••L·i,tl!!'ll

~nJ

Tu "ign up. MI'P in Ohio Ri\cr Bea r ('t• ''r Mn.ldlcpnn
Dept Store t'r Offke Sl'n il'c &amp; Sup11l) 111 M1ddll'll&lt;ll1 nr

Chapman S h t~~:'" &amp; Ohi •• Valley Kul~ S~o•rc - P,, m..:ro~ .
For more infur:ma,ion call 992-4055

• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
• Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
• Tillars • Edgers
• Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

32 119 Wels htown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769 .

Cellular

6mile" long throug h Mlddlepnrt &amp; Po meroy ~ Hundred.
of 111ap.' distributl:!d! Aclverti~ed &amp; promoted widely on
r"dio. n cw~ papc r !&gt;, fi yc r)o &amp; pu,tc r!&gt; ~
All for $5.00!

WE REPAIR

JIM'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR

n the 6th annual Yellow Flag Yard Sale!
May 2nd &amp; 3rd.
. $5 gets you on the tllllp &amp; u yellow nug.
An ad.ditiunal S5 if.yuu need un in-tuwn
loca 11nn1'nr ) "Our ~ ard 'la le.

*Spring*.

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
992-5776
Syracuse Now Open
All Fla t ~ .'lo 6 . ~5

~~Special*

THERAPEUTIC
MASSAGE

mix ormmch
'10 in .

Easter &amp; Mothers Day
Buy t Gift Certificate,
Get lnd Free!

Craft, Baske1 and
Antique Mall

740-992-5232

Sales Rcprcscntatiw

h~t~l..~·t~

LARRY

$lJ . 9~

12 i n_

l--l ;m~mg B" ""~~~

h in .

Pcn: nniul~ $.:!.~5.

&amp; l'\l lllhinatilmit\11 p lanl \!1"'- $-UO &amp; $7.lJ5

O!Tt•r goul tlo n1 ~ l I n1

SCHEY

lcHiVRO,~T/

750 [ast State Str&lt;el

l'hone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio.

Mon-Sat 9 - ~
Closed Sundil

trow accepti11g

Pomeroy Eagles
BIN(;O 2171
Evory Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early h.irds start
6:30 Jst Thursday
of every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
GetS FR[E

Steve Riffle

in . put" '!i i .OfJ . '1' 1 . ~5
X in &amp; lOi n. CI:J.y pui s
Open

mou insuram·e

THE CRAFT
SHACK

Stop In and sec

-1-

740-992"5379
Al!w

&amp;

TFN

'lo I \.Y~

HcllUu.•r A. Fry L.M.T.

740·992·2432

HangiuJ,:

$:'\.l)~

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

I

JONES'

PC DOCTOR

Tree Service

~

Top • Removal • Trim
Grafters Wanted
Trailer space for rent in 1968 International Low Boy 3/4 Ton GMC Work Van,
Grand
Opening
• Stump Grinding
Middleport, .(740)992-5858 tractor, 5' belly mower, 34M, Original Owner. air.
excellent condition , great for a:uto, tilt, cruise. $10,500.
May 1st
Bucket Truck
We Make House Calls
' Trailer space for rent just yards ·or farming, (740)742- (740)446-2957
202 East Main
above Addison. Water 2301 after 5:00.
Computers, Repairs,
Street Downtown,
included. Call (740)367· - - - - - - - - 87 dodge van $1300. ask for
Pomeroy
Upgrades, Networks
'-'78ii7F-8-'":'!:':""_ _ _., Farm Tra?1or f~r Sael:430 Jr. (740 )256. 1102
(7 40) 992-0003
Case
w1th
K1ng
Cutter
,
VVAN~
Brushhog. 35 HP, Diesel. 12 --------------Prime location with
89 Ply. Voyager, good 2nd
(304) 675-5282
L...o!r.--ro-·Rmriiiiiioo-,.1
forwards
3
reverses.
live
vehicle,
needs
motor
work,
lots
of
arkin
.
www. wvpcdr.co~
'
power. new bralc;es, new exc. body &amp; int. $300.00
cdoctor@wv cdr.com
Wanted to rent- Pasture in Iron! tires, new core in 060 (740)379-9122
Gallia Co. with good fences Radiator. Tractor runs great
&amp; water
Phone: Jim $3300.00 (304)675-5387
Snapper
Gravely
92 Ply Gra nd Voyager
150,000 miles, looks and
LIVESfOCK
ruris good. $2200. obo.
1
11!'111""'~-----, ~
(740)388·9875
Dean Hill
~ 11 Reg. Quarter horse mare i;V..,r------.,1
SALES &amp; SERVICE
New &amp; Used
1 Reg Quarter horse
M010RCY~ ~~~~~~~~
l"""""'""'""'""'""''""''
204 Condor Street Pomeroy, Ohio
Gelding
~
OLD
GLORY
. f=:or Sale: Reconditioned both 6 yrs old, good riding
475 South Church St.
washers, dryers and refrig- horses, 1 yearling colt 304- t983 Yamaha Venture.
AUCTION
992-2975
Ripley, WV 25271
erators.
Thompsons
36,000K mi. , lull dress, new
SERVICES
lires, runs great, looks good
Law11 mrd Gardeu Equipmelll i.1 our
Appliance. 3407 Jackson 675-2648
1·800-822-0417
Avenue, (304t675-7388.
Every Thursday
3151 Annual Bentley .Pig $3,500 (740)245·0460
busi11ess, not our sidelirrf!
Sale. Friday, April 18th.
at 5:30p.m.
-wvs # l Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds
Good Used Appliances, 7:30pm. Fayene County Fair 1995 Harley soft tail custom Consignment Wed. &amp;
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"
$12,500.. 11l86 BMW
Reconditioned
and Grounds,
Washington
Thurs. 10am-3pm
Tou
ring
K100
Ai
$3500.
Guaranteed.
Washers, Courthouse,
Oh10.
Now duin•• estate
Dryers, Ranges, and Consigners
Roger Bentley (740 1245 "5747
~
10x20
Ftelrigerators, Some start at (937)584-2398 Consigner - - - - - - - - &amp; household sales.
Best Service at
1996
H
arley
Sportsler,
t200
·ph
992
9553
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76 ~eroy Larrick (937)780-4802
one
•
Fimtlly... Money p:.~id 10 Ylli!. when cancer
.
Custom "cellen1 cood.
or 742 •0226
\line St, (740)446-7398
the Best Price
740·992·1717
~trike~. You dlOI.)~t' the ;.~muum up to $50,000!
m
any
B)(tras
300o
miles
askAT Stud A.O.H.A. 1996
Pays in udd ition to ot ht: r insurance.
St Rt 7 Goeglein Rd.
Auctioneer
~nmore Washer/Dryer 2yrs Palomino t6 H/H 12001bs. ing $8.500. 304-675-8957
Nc1.v Homes • Vinyl
oid. Excellent Condit1on. Very good Natured. See
You t.I SL the mo n~:y hnwcvcr you like.
Jim Taylor
Pomeroy
Omcc r wi ll strike when you lcltst expect it
Super capacity, Heavy Duty. Fouls on Farm. Mare 1998 Yamaha Wolverine
Siding • New Garages
It wil llcuve you and your family tinancially
Gall.
(740)446·4116 Transportation Available. 4x4, 350 with hitch. ramps &amp;
• Replaceme nt
slrappcu. CANCER CHECK will b&lt; ("?40)441·9414
L.F.G. Stud Fee s3oo. storage bag, $3200. Call
J&amp;C Lawn Service
Windows • Roofing
then: when yon need il.
~te
model Whirlpool (304)675-6440
(740)208·7258 (cell phOne)
•
Mow&amp; Trim
BidWell area.
COMMERCIAL and
Call now to reserve ):ill![ check.
r~lridg . 5125.00, Whirlpool
HAY &amp;
111'~~-~~--.,
Opt' ll
740·992-6694
RESIDENTIAL
ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
Fn·~ nlln.,ln. hn• 111111""-' lfiL""•up
washer $75.00. GE dryer
G~
lloATSFOR&amp;SMALEo_IoR&lt;;
$65.00 all Almond (740)446.
Cull [I~ all)"'"'''"'"!''*' ne,-J,
Please leave
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVJCt:S
in Syracuse
FREE ESTIMATES
(740) 446-t8t2
0066
message if no
BOX 189 MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760
(Formerlv Whitn evS!
Good quality straw. Volume
;\\k I• S 11/lf/U/ &lt;'Ur
7 40-992· 7599
t975 Chrysler outboard Undcr nt:Wuwnci·s hip
answer
740·843·5264
~ 1 •n" l &lt; ' t l'ft111.1'.'
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark discount &amp; delivery avail· 10hp,
.11 18 lfl1
electric start, ., wltiller and new managernen l.
Qhapel Road , Porter, Ohid. able. Heavy square, bales.
and w/remote cables,
It40)446-7444 1-877-1!30- $2.85 per bale. (304)675- arm
J&amp;S Pa ntlng
runs
good. SalefTrade. COME JOIN US
5724
Take the PAIN
. 91162. Free Estimates, Easy
Hill's
Self
(304)675-2787
Glen
D.
7
Days
A
w..,k!
inlerk&gt;r. E~ltrlur. Cmnmtrri11l
fi~aQCing, 90 days same as
11~\'\...,1'(~1{1 \Ill)'\
Hatten
out of PAINTING!
25 yrs . experience
Morning
cash. Visa/ Master Card.
Storage
Friendly &amp; Professional
Qrlve- a- little save alot.
Auros
Let me do 1! for youl
2001 Sea-Doo XP jet-ski.
HOOFING
for
free
estimates·
29670 Bashan Road
I );til~ SptTial"'
L.,._..,;FOoiliiRiiSiiALEiiiiii-_.l 135 H.P., garage kep1, used
740-992-5678
HOME
· Racin e, Ohio
ANI1QUES
----.
less than 20 hrs. must sell ._\\_ StliHii" Hnmrh
45771
$5001 Police Impounds! $5700. 304-882·3662 or
MAIIITEIIIINCE
or ( "all in and
740-949·2217
Buy 'or sell. Riverine Hondas. Chevys, etc! CarS/ 304·882·2476
TrUcks
hom
$500.
For
list·
,;;;:--:":-....
-::--,
*SEAMlESS
( arr.' ( l11t!
Antiques, 1124 East Main
Sizes 5'J.C1 0'
CAMPERS &amp;
on SA 124 E..Pomeroy, 740- lngs 1-800-719·3001 e:d.
MoroR HOMES
992-2507
992·2526. Russ Moore, 3901
~o·~· ··,
··The
Little
re~ta u rant
•freelstlmatn•
1987 Pontiac 6000 runs 2000 Tioga G-Molorhome,
Hours
with the big tuste"
needs tires, $350.00 OBO 29ft. Ford- E450 Motor. Fully
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
304-675-6870 or 740-446- Equ ipped. 15,013 miles.
2639.
Inside Shelter_ Excellent
- - - - - - - Condition. Sale due ·to
6 ft. finished mower, used 3 1988 Buick Skylark, bodies Health. (304)675_5827
times.
YOUNG'S
good. needs motor, asking
5 H.P. Craftsman planer
_S3_oo_._I7_4_0_I7:-42_·_24:-8-1_ _ 2001 KeyS1one Hornel
CARPENTER
304-675-5162
Vegetable, bedding flats &amp;
1988 CamarO, At, Ac , Hops Camper. 24 feet. EIC!ra Nice.
SERVICE
75 Chevy 1 ton Dumptruck. 89.000
hanging baakets $6.60
mi.
good 1304)675-6436
•
Room
Addition• &amp;
$4,000. obo. 1974 12&lt;60 cond.$2500. firm. Also 96
• New Homes
4" annuals 94¢
Remodeling
2br. mobile home on rented Plymouth Voyager, At, AC, 2002
Hornet Camper,
~ Garages
• New Garage•
Time to plant cool weather vegetable
lot. Central Air. May stay with located al
sleeps 10, has dlnene &amp; liv•
Etectrlc•l l Plumbing
• Complete
appro"ved
application. 2515 Jefferson 304-875- ing area slide out, 32 ft.long.
plants &amp; pansy's, 4" perennials $1.18
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
(304)675-3000 or (304)675· 2117
Never been trailered.
Remodeling
Custom
Owner
• Vln~l Siding I Painting
Buy 6 gtt I FREE
6277 after 8pm.
Excellent
condition
Certlhd
Arborlat
•
P•tlo and Porch Deck•
Building
1992 Mere. cougar 2dr a $15.000. (740)446-2252
selection Of JH!rtnntats £r shrubs
BURN
Fot, BLOCK cyl., sunroot, auto. ale.
·Full Range ol Seru1ces· &amp; Remodeling Largest
Free Estimates
at the lowest prices In Meigs County
Cnt-.'lngs, and BOOST 107,000 miles , excellent '36' Terry Fleetwood camper.
Stop &amp; Compare
FBffi r:sroous
V.
C. YOUNG Ill
0\'cr 16 years Experience
Energy Like You Have condl1ion. Phone. 1304)675· queen size bed. ba1h, ale,
Morning
Star
Road·
C.Rd
30
•
Racine,
OH
992-6215
•
Room
Addi1iom
Never Experienced.
1519
new furnace, no refrigerator, ' - • • • • • • •
Pom&amp;roy, Ohlo
1·740·949·2115
l'2&lt;TFN
• Kitchen &amp; Bath
WEIGHT· LOSS
2~ Ye r
1
with(7401992II, ask"'"""~rr"-nm~;
REVOLUTION
Remodeling
t993 Cavalier Good 51h
inQ wheel
54.000goes
060.
New product launch OCtober Condition. 106,000 mil es. 6190 after 5pm
• Replacement Wind ows
23, 2002. Call Tracy at New tires. $2,000. Make
• Porches ,• Dec,ks • Garages
33561 Ballev Run Rd.
(740)441-1982
good work car. Call
• Siding • Roo ling
ATV's fe nders
Poltlerov. OH m&amp;9
(304)882-2098 after 5 pm.
•
Complete
Rehabs
Structural
Pipe
MotOTC)'cles fairings
Craftsman Mower 38~ cut 6Henderson, WV
"Service
vou can c01mt on"
Fully
Insu
red
Aluminum
Auro: Bumpers
speed, 12 H.P: New Blades 1993 Pontiac Grand Am SE. -,
Free Estimates
Gene Iritis
Stainless Steel El
Grilles
and battery. Vary goqd 2 dr, 6 cyt. 139.000 miles.
Cast
Iron
740·991·1119
Radiators
shrouds
&amp;
Cgodlt!pn
$300 Phone. remote starter, Pioneer · '
992·3114
BASEMENT
Side tanks
Bra~S
(304)675-3101
Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457
cass/sterio, new tires, runs
WATERPROOFING
Stick. Mi g, Tig, Ga~.
good, nice car, $2,500. Unconditional lifetime guar· Broken tabs
Gorgeous Butter Yellow for- (740 )949_9008
Propane Wc.lding
• Driveways • Tennis Courts
antee. Local references tur- Plastic lanks &amp; Boxe'l
mal gown , worn approxi- : - : - - - - : - - - - nis~ed . Established 1975. Taillight lcnse:-. ·
Plasma. Air Arc. &amp;
mately 3 hr., new asking 19~7 Dodge Stratus, white. Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446- • Mild Steel
Acety lene cuuing
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
$80.00 size 14 call304·675· 4Cyl, 71 ,000 miles. $4,450. 0810,
Rogers Basement
Stare Certified • Porra!J/e
• Roads t Streets
8902
1304)675-4014
Waterproofing.
•
No
Senm.&lt;
APWelding (740) 949-0901
WV Contractors Lie. li003506
JET
t999 Dodge Ayeriger. V·6.
•. No Leaks
AERATION MOTORS ·auto. loaded, 41 ,000 miles,
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In wholesale price $7750, C&amp;C General Home
• Free /!:stim;•tes
Marcum
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· RiverviewMotors, (740)992· Maintenenca. Painting, vinyl
•
siding, carpentry, doors,
800.537-9528.
3490
Owner Opemtnl
Building
windows, baths, mobile
l)avid Rlwrfc:,· &amp; Normo Rhodt'.\
Service
- - - -- - - - - 2000 Chev. malibu llmited home repa1r and more. For
Edition,33K m1les, loaded, free estimate cau Chet, 740• Decks &amp; Porc he;.
Office (740) 985-35ll
exc. cond.call after 6pm 992·6323.
• Roum Additiun i(740)446-1955
=r=-~~--~-.,
Home
985 -3622
• Roofing
LAWN
- - - - - - - - - - - , ___~_.IDm_
. __
ING_._&amp;-ri
NEW AND USED STEEL ~Yin)' I &amp; Wnod ....,_
2000
Ch"'. Malibu. Lim~ed
liFATING
MOWING
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar Edition. 33k Miles, loaded.
Siding
For Concrete, Angle, Excellent Condition. Call Joyce c1rc1e
CONTRACTS
(10'1110' 610'1120')
• Interior Remodeling
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel After 6 pm. (740)446-1955 740-992-Q165
.$15 · $25 for
General
Carpentry Wmk
Grating
For
Drains,
Congro1utotlono1
You
have
Parts
•
Service
small yard
2000
Oldsmobile
Alero
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
won 2 lree movie tickets to
Mikt'
Marcum.
Ownl'r
Scrap Metals Open Monday, 42,500 mi. ext. warranty ta the Spring Valley 7
Bags • Belts
$35 per acre
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; 100.000 mi. 4 new tires 1
7
40-985-4141
Gallipolis.
Call
the
Sentinel
·
0vl'r 25 vear,\· in Busine.u
cesseUe/CO. for details, (740)992-2155)
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed AMIFMI&amp;
Call now to
- ' 25.00 ~c rvi 1.:c fee ft)r pick1ng
Thursday, Salurday &amp; Whlte w/ Gray int., spoiler,
schedule your
e,~~;c . cond. (740)441·9865
Sunday.(740)446-7300
up ;.weeper" at )OU r home
THOMPSON'S
SEAL COOSTR\JC'l100
atter5pm.
lawn care
WATER
Pl:lo' dome, 24x33, asking
Roofing, Siding,
Rainbuws. Kirh)'. Electrolu~, Hvuvl'r, Eureka.
service.
Since 1979
$2000, only used 6 months, 2002 4 dr. Taurus SES fully
Pa inting, Electrical ,
Tri-Stau. Reji:ina &amp; most other brands.
AulhnnJeUSc:r&gt; ~~:c """'"'-'• Fur
eq. $11 ,800 304-675-3354
(740)446-6982 ' .
Insured
Decks, Etc.
Part.~ shippt.'CI lJPS • Fast, OePfndahlt• Service
RainSort
Wa1cr Tr~:mnent Equ1Pment
Free Estimates
91 . Ford Thunderbtrd. 5.0
( .. til R"" C&gt;rJ.H .11 Ccd~r Vdcs
Mt Vernon
Sears A/C 25,000 BTU. $35-. motor looks &amp; runs good
992-1189 992·2902
1·866·21ROISH
(304) 273-4098
740-397-9751
(304)88Z-2755
(740)-446-0130

"j

r

·------_.j.

GRAVELY TRACTOR

l

HARTWELL
STORAGE
lOxlO

CANCER CHECK

BISSEll
BUILDERS InC.

r

r

I

Riverwav
Cafe

~;om : ~Jll l l

U\

HOWARDl.

WRITfSfl

r16

i

DEAR ABBY: I am very
worried about my 12-yearold daughter, "Carrie." She's
in seventh grade. The other
night, I came across a letter
she was writing to a girlfriend from schooL It said,
"I have 'Frenched' with him
tw ice in the hallway."' I was
shocked! After taking a little
while to get it together: I
calmly asked Carrie about it.
She refused to explain .
Abby, this . is a girl who
wanted (and got) a Barbie
Talking ··Dream House for
Christmas! How can she be
French- kissing anyone?
Carrie and I have always
been close, but now I realize
she has confided in me less
and less over the last several
months. As she's gotten
older, I'm afraid I don't
know who she is anymore .
Her- father and I are separated.
He is currently
enrolled in a 28-day alcohol
recovery program. Carrie
has not had much of a relationship with him for a cou·
pie of years now. I know that
you are going to suggest
counseling, and I am not
opposed to that. However,
my real question is, how do I
convince
daughter to go?
I know she II fight it, and I
hate the idea of forcing her
to do anything. - WOR·
RIED AND CONFUSED

mr

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
MOM IN DELAWARE
DEAR MOM: If ~ou
haven ' t already done so, 11 is
time for you to have a frank
mother-daughter talk with
your daughter about sex ; and
the responsibilities that go
with it. Children are matur·
ing faster than ever, and
Carrie is right on schedule.
There are many books for
parents and , teens on this
tmportant subject.
After you have done that,
family
counseling
will
improve your level of communication. As long as she
knows the counseling isn ' t
being aimed solely at her,
she'll be less likely to
object. As a member of the
family, Carrie should be
included.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 38year-old, college-educated,
single woman . I have a good
job and own my own home.
A few ·months ago, I met

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7;

I

"Willie," a divorced man
who is a couple of years
younger than me. We initial·
ly exchanged e-mails, then
met in person after several
weeks. Willie is also well·
educated and has a good job.
We are extremely compati·
ble , and our relauonship has
progressed to the point that
we are now discus sing marriage.
The problem is my mot)ler
and single, older s1ster dis ·
approve of me spending time
with Willie. They say I don ' t
spend enou~h time with
them and he ts trying to sep·
arate us.
When we began dating, I
invited Mom and my sister
to join us for dinners . All my
offers were refused . Willie
did spend Christmas with us,
but it was awkward.
·
I have told them how
much Willie and I care for
each other and that marriage
is a . possibility, but every
time I see them, all they do
is complain about my relationship.
Wouldn't you think that
when I finally found someone, they would be supportive? What can I do to rriake
this a more peaceful situation?- TORN IN ALABAMA
DEAR TORN: If the only
concern your mother and

sister. have about Willie is
the fact that your relationship leaves you with less
time to spend with them, the
problem is theirs, and you
should not make it yours.
Neither should you put yourself into the thankless position of being the family
peacemaker. I have a feeling
no man will ever measure up
to their "standard s." Follow
you heart and have a happy,
fulfilling life .
·

Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Va11 Burell, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded .by her
mother, Pauline Phillips .
Dear Abby
at
Write
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

44 That guy's
46 Asset
47 Physics
1 Trend
topic
4 Fan shoul
51 Flint or
7 Vote in
marble
favor
10 Have debts 52 Matador's
foe
11 Writer
53 Falnl
-Seton
13 Horror-111m 55 Diva's
melody
servant
56 Final word
14 Honey
57 Lennon's
maker
wile
15 Obi-Wan,
58 Ticked off
e.g.
59 Bradley and
16 Tropical
Sneed
Iale
12 Buenos- 35 Eskimo's
17 Romantic 60 Soho co.
home
13 Bratty
19 ·Evergreen
DOWN
18 Goof up · 37 Ledtoaseat '
20 Sweater
22 Summer · 40 Japanese
letter
lo summer
dog
1 Watch
21 Staring at
23 Make lace 41 Devotee
pocket
23 Despot
like granny 42 Plant life
2 Overcome
26 Sniffs
.
24 Knight's
43 Clear.
28 Help
3 Shy
title
.
45
Tailors'.
crealure
29 Not
25 Citrus drink
needs
4 Elephant
hungry
27 Hound's
46 Wheels for ·
owner
30 in lhe lead
trail
baby
5 Spring
34 Footstep
29 S&amp;L
48 lditarod
nower
36 Not their
protector
city
6 Jekyll's
38 Bullfight
31 Dawn ·
49 Teen lave
other half
yell
goddess
50 "Thai 7 One more
39 Fibbers
32 Ms.
hayl''
time
41 Nile
MacGraw 54 In vogue
8 l)nderage
goddess .
33 -Moines,
9 A Greal
42 Preas
Iowa
agent
Lake
ACROSS

.

The
newspaper
is a valuable
learning tool
for students
~.J 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.

Astrograph
Saturday, April 19, 2003
BY BERNICE BEDE 0soL

Even when things may appear at times to . be going
against you in ihe year ahead.
you'll maintain your lofty ideals and turn things around.
l"he months ahead hold considerable promise for you
both socially and materially.
' ARIES (March 21-April
19) - You ' ll not only be
very careful about not stepping on anybody's toes when
going after an Important objective today . but you'll also
be sure to share the benefits
with those around you .
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - Remembering something a friend did for you in
ihe past will inspire yoiJ to
perform a similarly compassionate gesture for him or her
today when you see this person struggling. Good for you.
GEMINI (May 21 -lune 20)
-,;- There· s a good chance today that you'll achieve something in which you can take
great personal pride, yet you

won ' t' be a braggart about il.
You'll simply enjoy the fruits
of your labor.
·
. CANCER (June 21-July
22) - The aspects indicate
that you're going to be a bit
more creative today than
usual. Use this gift to envision
what you'd Iike to create and
then go about the business of
doin~ so.
• LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)It won ' t be ·luck that has two
separate people doing something nice for you today, it
will be because of your kindness to them in the past. You
deserve it.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- Because of the remarkable
way you have in dealing with
friends today, they'll w·am to
spend their recreational hours
with you. Don't be surprised
if several invita(ions come
your way.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- The results of a project
that you consider more of a
hobby than work should be
very gratifying to you today.
Your labor of love will turn

I

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F~lday, Aprll18,,2003

•

Friday, April 18, 2003

out quite beautiful.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - That special mystique
you have abqut you today will
be most noticeable at social
gatherings. People will find
you guite charming, pleasing
and fascinating to be. around .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) - Your material
trends are on the rise today
' and could yield more than
you anticipate. This will al~
low you to purchase a special
treat for yourself that will
· bring you much joy .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - Sprinkle your
presentation today with small
touches of amiability and

you'll have your audience ap·
plauding your performance.
Treating people well always
guarantees goOd reviews.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Although it might
come about in somewhat of a
mysterious manner today,
chances are something material you've wanted to acquire
will be possible at this time . .
PISCES (Feb: 20-March
20) - What makes your in·
f1 uence over your peer group
stronger today is the manner
in which you ' ll deal with
them. Your charm and graciousness will have an enchanting effect.

WORD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBR1CK
e 2QO:J UniiMI FHI~ !i¥"diCII •. InC

Answer

1st DOWN

=.2!....

2nd DOWN

=...lL

3rd00WN

=

41h DOWN

= 51

JUOO'S TOTAL

4th DOWN

-

81

to
previous
Word
Scrim-

-279

mag~

AVERAGE GAME 115·125
by JUDD HAMBRICK.

0
FOUR PLAY TOTAL =
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

OU~ECnoNS : Make a 2· to 7-letter wora hom lh9iet1ers on 8liCh yercilne
Add points to eaetl word or
uSing scoring directions at r1ght. StNeo-leltlf
words get a 60-polnt bono!. AM words can be found In Webster's New WOrld

letter

.....

College Ok;tionarv.

JUDD'S SOLUT10N TOMORROW

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I

�Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

'friday, Aprll18, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

~

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

WI ... ST~...

(~UP SFI~It'S

What: Auto Clul&gt; 500
Labonte's Chevy was in the
Where: California Speedway, lead was that Labonte's
Fontana (2 miles), 250 team opted to take a chance
laps/ 500 miles
by changing only two ' tires
When: Green flag drops at 3 whi le all the prime con·
p.m. EDT April27
'tenders were changing four
Last year's winner: Jimmie · with 63 laps to go. Labonte
Johnson
led 49 laps, inserting himTrack qualifying record: Ryan self with unorthodox strate·
Newman, Ford, 187.432 gy into a battle royal among
mph, April 26, 2002
Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr., .
Race record: Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart and Jimmie
Chevrolet, 155.012 mph , , Johnson. He kept them at
June 22, 1997
bay for lap after lap by work·
Most recent race : Who 'd ing.traffic and "pinching· his
have bel ieved Jeff Gordon pursuers down. Gordon ··put
wo~ld wind up be1ng the
a bumper to him." Didn't
ninth driver to win a.Winston wreck Labonte. Didn't knock
Cup race in 2003? Gordon·s him ou t of the way. Just
Chevrolet had been strong nudged him enough to get
all day in Sunday's Virgima by. That was on the 487th of
500, an d the reason Bobby 500 laps.

·

JACK

Bli!'CH SERIES

·

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

·

Whst:·Californiaspeedway.com What: Hardee's 200 .
300
Where: Lowe's Motor SpeedWhere: California Speedway,
way, Concord, · N.C. (1.5
Fonta na (2 miles), 150
miles), 134 laps/201 miles
laps/300 miles
When: 8 p.m. EDT' May 16
When: 4 p.m. EDT April 26 · Last year's winner: This will
Last year's winner: Scott
be the first Craftsman Truck
Riggs
Series at Lowe's Motor
Track qualifying record: BobSpeedway.
by Hamilton Jr., Chevrolet, Track ' qualifying record:
179.198 rnph , April 27,
None
2001
Race record: None
Race record : Hank Parker Most recent race : Dennis
Jr., Chevrolet, 155.957
Setzer, in a Chevrolet. won
mph, April 28, 2001
Saturday's Advance Auto
Most recent race : Former
Parts 250 at Martinsville
Busch Senes c'ham pion (Va. ) Speedway. Ted M~ sOavid Green, in a Chevrolet, grave finished second, fatwon Saturday's Pepsi 300.
lowed by Wlhston Cup reg~Green passed Johnny Sauter
lar Kevin Harvick, Carl Edon the final lap for his first
wards and point s leader
victory of the season.
Bobby Hamilton.

G~UFORNIA

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

v

RousH, W•NsroN cuP cAR owNER

E

R

s

1vean

Jimmie
Johnson

Roush taking much less for granted after surviving plane crash
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
•

J

1
·
&amp;!per~" apeedWay,
~n a
, 8usch Serle$ race for the nrat
! time since 1996. . ·
Dennis Setzer 'nas won two
' Cnlllsrrian Truck Series races In
~· •row and two strai8ht at Mer-

l.

; tin&amp;'ltHe: ; '
'r~'• FAN
''
• ).:.r·'
'

'liPS

I

.; . Daytona 500 winner Michael
, Vollltrlp Is ~tvlng men across the
' country a chance to s~ in the clrl: ver's seat -and accelerate charita; ble donations with the Just For
: Men·HalrcOlOr ·rune Up' sweep.
• stakes.
By
entering
at
'
' Justformen.com, men can be eli·
: glble to win stock-car racing les- ·
sons and help drive funds for ·
: Give Kids The World, a non-profit,
; 51-acre resort for children with
• life-threatening Illnesses.
Entries will be accepted
:
: through July 31, 2003. To.enter
via mail, send a self-addressed,
stamped envelope to receive an
entry form, or print out the online
. entry, and mall to: Just For Men
• Haircolor "Tune Up" Sweep: stakes, P.O. Box 2697 , Pitts·
' b~rgh . PA 15230.

OATA " •

Auto Clllb 500
April27 '

•

~

..

ack Roush turns 6l .on Aprill9, but the NASCAR multi-car team owner
figures he's one year into his new life. ·
•
It was also on his birthday, a year ago, that Roush nearly perished
when the experimental aircraft, a 1\vin Aircam, he was piloting crashed
into a pond near Troy, Ala. Only the most incredible and far-fetched of
circumstances prevented his death. A man who just happened to live
nearby, Larry Hicks, had been trained in sea rescue of llilots while
serving in the Marine Corps. Hicks paddled out to the crash site in
a small boat and plucked Roush from the water. Doctors had to
induce a coma to stabilize Roush's vital signs, but he had re·
· gained his health within a few months .
. "I don't believe in reincarnation, however, in anything but
the biblical way, and I look forward to having a reunion
sometime with my God and to be able to be with some people who have preceded me," Roush said recently. "Having
said that, the year has been really, really interesting. I've al·
most certainly paid more attention to myself and to things
going on around me than I did in th.e preceding decade, for
sure. I was in the fray ... so much conflict and so much
competition in all the business ways and in the racing
as well.
"I guess I look at every day when I get up in the
morning, and I say, 'I've got another extra day,' and
that has probably been the change in my perspec·
tive to just look at having more time."
Oddly enough, the 2002 season was Roush's
most successful as a NASCAR owner. Three
of his four Ford drivers finished in the top
I0 in the Winston Cup standings. One,
Mark Martin, finished second in the
championship race, and another, Matt
Kenseth, won more races (five) than
any other driver.
"I thank God and thank Larry
Hicks for giving me my extra days,"
Roush said. "! had a miraculous recovery."
Roush still flies his airplanes; he
has nine of them . And he owns the
wreckage of the plane that almost
took his life. It's yet another reminder of how lucky he was. And how
will Roush spend his birthday this year?
"I thought about staying in bed," Roush
said. "I'd be OK unless a tree came
\hrough the roof. "
No - and tpis comes as no surprise to
those who know him - Roush said he's going
to go flying again.
"I am almost certain to go out and fly everything in
my 'inventory that I can get my hands on," Roush said. ,
Contact Monte

D~tton

Jack Roush has fielded cars In Winston
Cup racing since 1988 and became
the first owner to field a llvKar
team In 1998. His drivera have
raced In nearly 1,400
events and have won 62
times.
John Clark/
NASCAR This week

u

s

Second-year driver Ji mmie John·
son, who had run near the front all
day in Sunday's V~rginia 500,
dropped all the way to ninth after a
rough-and·tumble race to the ye llow
ftag with veteran Rusty Wallace.
"It was getti ng out of control,"
Johnson said, "but what do you do?
Everybody IS beating on one another
and then the '2' (Wallace) races me
back to the caution, which - you
know, gentleman's agreement- you
think it's 'there and it's not. I guess
that's just part of it."
NASCAR Thll Week's Monte
DuttQn iJves his take: "Wallace saw
an opening and went for it. Johnson
- and Tony Stewart. for that matter
-took the fall . As Johnson said ,
'what do you do?' The rule s don't
have any mention of a ·gentleman's
agreement.' •

COVER
IIYTIIINC:!

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~

••

CHRYSUR

YOUR TURN ·
· lt"llfRS FROM OUR READERS ·

QulckQ 6 A

N

ow that I have my wife into
Winston Cup . racing, she
co mes up with questions that I
don't know the answers to:
Why are there always 43 cars in
the race?
What are th e most po int s in a
race that the driver can get?
Do they get anything to drink?
In races that last four or five
hours, how do they relieve the mselves (go to the bath room)?
Bob Stiles
Buena, N.J.
(1.) There's no particular magic to
the field size of 43. It's just evolved
over time. At one time, there were 38
cars admitted to the fields based on
qualifying speed and four so-called
'provisional" positions. When an ·ex·
champion 's provisional" was added,
that took the field to 43, where it has
remained ever since (although there
are now seven provisional spots); (2.)
If a driver wins the race, he receives
175 points, plus five-bonus points for
leading a tap, which he would obvi·
ous/y have to do in order to win. If he
leads the most taps ..he would'get five
more bonus points, so the most
points a driver co uld get In a single
race are 185. (3.) Yes. There are a ·variety of ways. Most have systems with·
in the car. Some merely have cups of
liquid given them during pit stops. (4.)
Careful planning, one would presume,

·
WHO'SHOT
·
· ANn WHO'S NOl
~

HDT: Since the second race, Dale
Earnhardt Jr. has climbed from 38th
to second in the points standings.
~ NOT: Dale Jarrett hasn't scored a
top-10 finish si nce he won at Rockingham in February.

at tug50@aol.com.

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.
The Daily Sentinel

�</text>
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