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                  <text>Page B 8 • The DIIIIY Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Thursday, April 24, 2003

Couples who live together
must tie up legal loose ends
. DEAR ABBY: I must
You
gave
"Forever what happened because he
respond
to
"Forever
Single" · the right advice refused to make a commitSingle," the man who's in
when you said mature pee- ment. I hope others will
love with "Kit," but never
pie want to take care of benefit from your sad expewants to get married. He's
those they love. Spouses rience. You have been, and
have legal protection bene- continue to be, a loyal and
not the ·only person who
fits that single people do not loving partner. You deserved
would rather just live
together. My boyfriend of
enjoy. If something were to better.
eight years and I have both
happen, "Kit" would be left
Dear Abby is written by
been married before. We do
ADVICE
with nothing but memories. Abigail Van Buren, also
not need a "piece of paper"
· I stayed with Martin for known as Jeanne Phj/[ips,
to tell us that we love each
15 years .. He didn't look out and was founded by her
other and will never stray.
proposed several times.
, for my future. and rlow he mother, Pauline Phillips.
I agree with your advice
A year ago, his family can't. His children declared Write
Dear Abby at
that they should t.alk to a made me leave his home. him mentally incompetent. www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
lawyer in case something · His money and their greed He has 24/7 attendant care. I {Jox 69440, Los Angeles, CA
ever happens. I work for an were the reasons. l didn't had to go back to work in 90()69.
attorney, so all our affairs care whether or not Martin the home health-care field to
are in order in case some- had money. We had . each support myself. It is "Kit's"
thing ever does happen. My other, and still love each chmce to go or to stay. I
boyfriend has two children other dearly. ·I now live with wish I had insisted on marfrom a previous marriage my son 30 miles away.
riage or future support. -A
and we have two together.
I go to see Martin three or YOUNG 81, GETTING
So we made sure if anything four times a week. He has ON WITH HER LIFE IN
bad happens to one of us, major health problems and TAMPA
the other has control over severe Alzheimer's. He no
DEAR YOUNG 8I: So
everything, and not our longer knows his children or do I. because at least you
exes.- JULIE IN SOUTH grandchildren. He only would have had security or
. CAROLINA
knows me, although he . known where you stood. I
DEAR JULIE: For rour remembers nothing we did find it sad that so many peosake and your children s, it together that he loved to do pie get caught up in the
was wise for you to tie up all - like traveling, cruises, "romance of the nontradithe loose ends. For the other dancing three or four times a tional" and forget that love
No matter what
week, golf, his poker games, includes responsibilities.
side of the story. read on:
DEAR ABBY: I am an 81- or the people we soctalized Whether or not your
direction you turn
year-old lady in good health with. When I visit him he beloved consciously intendand still driving. I lived with says, "Tell me about the ed to leave you vulnerable, , you can always find
, "Martin" for 15 years. He is things we did, the folks we with no choice but to reIt In the
now 87. Martin never want- ~ did them with, and the fun enter the job market as an
ed to marry me, although I we used to have."
octogenarian, that is exactly ,l.--"

Dear
Abb

Y

ACROSS
1 Blizzard
6 Eye color
11 Gulch
13 Spanish
dance
14 Despotic
ruler
15 Reach
16 Clank
18 Table part
19 Window
frame
21 Embraced
23 Youngster
24 Pollia

Was Idle
Sample
Bruin great
Jungle
noises
5 ChaUy pets
6 Inns

1
2
3
4

word

29 Go
courting
30 Valentine
color
32 Greek
leuer
34 Wounded
36 -de
cologne
37 Hindu Mr.
'38 Warrior
Princess
40 Golf peg
42 A bit
43 Skimpy top
45 Arab

7 Elev.
8 Ardor
9 New York
canal
10 Tedious
12 Slugger
Mel13 Hay unit
17 Menace
19 Crazy
Horse, e.g.
20 Love madly
22 Baker's
meas.

be righted.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)BY BERNICE 8EDE 0sOL
One of your greatest benefits
More interaction with oth·
today is likely to come from a
ers is in the offing for you in
situation that has been engithe year ahead. Even if you're
neered by another. You' II
not a joiner, there ·s·a possibilhave the means to make a
ity tnat you may become a
contribution that will enhance
prominent member of a large
the endeavor.
organization. .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
TAl!RUS (April 20-May
- Relationship arrangements
20) - Friends could play a · should work out better than
more prominent role in your
usual today. It won't matter if
affairs today than they may
it is a romantic or social arhave in the past. Make sure
rangement in which you're inyou show appreciation for
volved . .
their suppon by finding ways
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
to reciprocate.
- Don't waste any opportuGEMINI (May 21-June 20)
nities yqu get today in which
- Conditions that have a diyou have a chance to finalize
rect effect U]lOn your standing
something to your satisfacin the eyes of others are trendtion. If you leave things hanging in )'OUT favor. Today you
ing, your luck could wane.
could do yourself credit by
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
your actions and gain much
22) - II behooves you not to
pra~se.
be timid today in matters
CANCER (June 21-July
where bold strokes are re22) - An important arrangequired. Ventures or enterment that has been out of sync
prises that have only slight
lately can be brought back on
chances of working out could
track today. Openly air any
actually realize success.
points of disagreement that
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23are out there and things can
Dec. 21)- Something
quite
,___....;,.,;,.

good is presently stirring that
should make both you and
your famil~ feel more secure.
What is hkely to transpire
could begin to blossom as of
today.
, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - Some good news
for which you'.ve been anxiously awatting looks like it
may finally arrive today. Be
el(pectant and hold positive
thou_ghts until the facts are in.
AI,.!UARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - This could be a rather
fonuitous day for you where
things of a material nature are
concerned. Lady Luck will be
doing her best today to work

50 CENTS • 1/ol. 53, No. 174
23 Elec.
measure
25 Extreme
anger
27 Llngulne
topper
28 Tataml
· material
31 OWed
33 Help
35 Stump
remover
39 Goddess
of the dawn
41 Border
44 UncleRice
46 And so
47 Big laugh

ARIES (March 21-April
19) -· Persons in high places
are apt to do favors for you
today that they would not
readily grant to others. Take
advantage of their assistance
to achieve your objectives,

IVORD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
C ~ Urtellftllln

l

@

~li.:1JilE,

____

AVERAGE GAME 105·115

·~

~- 1M

tst DOWN

·~

2nd00WN

•..,lL

3td DOWN

• 38

4th DOWN

• 45

JUDO'S TOTAL

-

-

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrim. mag\!·

170

,

WORD ®©®0@@0@®·
0000000
·~ooWN
®®!WIT,\fc:\@!'N) "' 0
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~DOWN
~

MIDDLEPORT - Next
month's Middleport Youth
League Kickoff will honor
the 1957 State Champion
baseball
"team
from
Middleport High School,
and will give organizers an

tfiOPOifi1S

~~~~~~~

0
0

""DOWN

· g~~~~~~ '•

Ath DOWN

Inside

0

AVERAGE GAI\IE 210.220

by JUDD .~AMBRlCK

BY BRIAN J. REED
St~ff wrtiler

Oow.o Toto t

@@@@(9@@ !'J~~,T~ot

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT; 20 MIN

• 83,000 may have
been infected with West
Nile, See page Al
• Meigs to organize new
chapter Sons of the
Revolution, See page Al
. • Pro football players to
attend coed tournament,

=

DIRECTIONS: Make a 2- to Hener word from N lehrs on eacro yardllnt.
Add polntslo each word or letler using sc01tng directions al Aghl. S.ven-ltt11tr
woros gel a 60-polnl DOn.JS . AJI words can be tOU'\d In Webs1efs New World
Coltoge Otctiooe'}.
JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

.....

'TIC.~!

See page Al

-'/\ l1CI&lt;S
l1CI&lt; ~~

• It is good to have Him
remembered, See page
A6
• Judge approves $20
million settlement, See

eft!

pageA4
R•tn, HI: 60a, Low: 50o

••

;

•

4

Kater Patterson, 4th ilJ'Ho,
Southern

Elementary

Index

'' Ti-115 15 M'( ~EPORT

ON

www.mydailysentinel.com

Awards banquet
notes academic
achievement

Youth .league kick:off to honor championship team
~~

•

FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 2003

Dave Boyd, vice president of the Middleport Youth League, stands beside a new sign erected at General Hartinger Park
to hono r the 1957 Middleport Yellowjacktlts state baseball champions . The team will be honored next month at Youth
League Kickoff day at the park. (Brian J. l~eed)

1

.

Bv J. MtLES lAYToN
Staff writer

pro~erous.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March
Your el(cellent leadershtp qualities willwbe very
much in evidence today to
persons with whom you'll be
involved. No one will have to
ask you to assume more responsibilities when you're
needed.
,

.

(hyph.)
48 Eros, In
Rome
49 Billow .
51 Summer
In France
53 Koan
discipline
55 Solomon
to David
56 Make e
mistake
57 Singer
Peggy -

out ways to make you more
20) -

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Astrograph
Friday, April25. 2003

..

.'

DOWN

26 Bribes

vessel

Church listings, A7 ·

47 Left,
to a mule
50 Back out
52 Mighty
river
54 Glitter
58 Won't go
away
59 Extra song
60 Stadium
61 Art
category

1 Sec:tlons - 1,1 Pic-·

MOUNTAINS .. .''

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
Weather

AS
BS-6
67
B7

A4
A3,5
Bl -5
A2

c 2003 Ohio Valley Pub.lishing Co.

opportunity to show off several improvements just completed at General Hartinger
Park.
The 19 57 Middleport
Yellowjackets
baseball
team, which took state
champions hip honors, are
now reco;~nized with an
orange 41nd black sign at the
entrance to the park, and

members of the team have
be~n invited to the kickoff
ceremony on May 17,
according to League Vice
President Dave Boyd ,
Boyd said over 200 boys
and girls between the ages
of five and 17 will participate in baseball and softball
league play this summer, on
19 different teams,

. The Youth League leadership has just completed a
number of improvements at
the park's ball field area,
including bulldozing and
other excavation work on
the fields themselves, the
installation of a new scoreboard. provided by tbe

Please see Champs. AS

RACINE - · Parents. teachers , students and staff gath ered to honor academic
·achievement at the Southern
Local Academic Awards banquet which
was held
Thursday night at Southern
High SchooL
State representative Jimmy
Stewart gave the keynote
address and told the large
crowd that the Ohio House
has heard their pleas about
financial parity in educational
opportunity.
While the state budset still
has a long way toward passage, Stewart said the house
~ersion of the budget increases parity aid funding to
schools by 50 percent for
2004, and another 50 percent
in 2005. He said that general
aid to schools could increase
by nearly 13.9 percent or
$500,000 in 2004, and by 4.5
percent the following year. or
by near! y $200,000. The senate now determines the fate of
the proposed budget.
Stewart then talked about
the importance of education
and stressed to the dozens of
honorees how passion can
change things. He said that
while he was in school pursuing a masters in business
administration, he often wondered what he was doing
tht!re, and why he was doing
it. During long hours of study,
Stewart questioned how

important it was for him to
fini~h the degree, '
.
Looking out over the crowd
of students in various stages
of their academic careers.
Stewart said he knew that
someday all his hard work
and passion would pay off. In
time , his education in
accounting and tax codes
proved invaluable when he
was sudden ly appointed city
auditor for' Athens. Stewilrt
advised student s learn as
much as they could about the
things they ·are passionate
about and that education
would guarantee them a better life.
Superintendent ,
Bob
Grueser said life is about
choices. He told a story about
a restaurant manager with a
positive attitude. No matter
how often this man was questioned, he could always see
the sunny slde of things ,
During one evening, three
criminals approached the man
as he was closing the restaurant They forced him over to
the safe and asked him to
open it. The man was nervous. The clock was ticking
as his life was literally under
the gun, which went off and
seriously injured the man :
The thieves escaped leaving
the poor man· to a grim fate.
The man was found and
taken to lhe hospitaL As he
lay looking up at the doctors
he could tell by the looks on
their faces that things were

Please see

Banqu~

AS

Rec:overy advocates
Eastern prom candidates
seek possible site
for group home
Group eYes
Children'S
home
BY TONY

1\11.

lEACH .

Staff writer
GALLIPOLIS - Interest
in the Gallia Coupty
Children's Home as a fufure
facility to house·· recovering
dru~ addicts was discussed
dunng Thursday's regular
meeting,pf the Gallia County
commissioners.
Dick Moore. vice-president
for th'e Southern . Ohio
Advocates for Recovery
(SOAR), and Larry Burnett,
executive director for the
Southern Consortium for
Rural Care. met with commissioners 'to inquire about
the future of the multi-story
structure on Shawnee Lane,
which is s&lt;;heduled to close
next month because of the
lack of funding needed to
keep the home operational.
Both Moore and Burnett
suggest.ed ·tlhe structure, once
empty, co111ld be converted
into a temporary shelter for
recovering drug addicts.
"What were looking for is
a residential setting where
men can reside for approximately 6-8 months while trying to reco\'er from their drug
addictions," said Burnett.

"It would be a well-structured, supervised environment where the men could
receive critical outpatient
counseling , and hopefully,
beat their addictions."
Burnett assured commissioners that patients staying
at the home would come
directly from Gallia County.
not "criminals" from other
locations, and strict admission criteria would be
enforced.
"What we're talking about
here is friends and family
from the area who want to get
help for their addictions,"
Burnett said. "We would not
allow people to come in from
off the street. Our admission
standards are tough and
would prevent those looking
for a 'free ride' from entering
into the program."
Burnett added that men
staying at the shelter will be
required to adhere to the program's schedule, attend all
meetings, and, n1ost importantly, work for their keep.
" All patients at the shelter
will be required to work at
one job or. another. They will
be asked to contribute a por·tion of their income towards
payment of their room and
board," said Burnett.
Through financial contributions of the men living at

Eastern High School prom candidates prepare for the prom Saturday in the high schOol
gymnasium. This year's theme is "Garden of Dreams" and 1]11~ prom colors are dark
green , silver and black. (front row, from left)· Travis Willford, Jenifer Chadwell , Erica
Lemons; (Back row, from left) Brandon Werry, Jared Hupp; Not pictured: Abbi Thompson.
(J. Miles Layton)

Please see Home. AS

·April 20-26 is

National Laundry and Linen
Week

... ...
~

· and

&gt;Jt'VE 1-J..f'.f..N)Y

&amp;E:f\

AA\1\(.IWK.N.J..~

Administrative Professionals
Week

tLIM\NI'.TE.\&gt; ITCio\

~l'.'fOff:,!

Holzer Medical Center ~olutes both our Laundry and Linen Deparhnent and
our Administrative Professionals duri this
week .

.,

'

'

r

'

Discover the Hol~er Differ·ence

www.holzer.org

..

v

�.•

I

PageA2

Ohio

The Pail)! Sentinel
Ohio weather

Friday, April 25, 2003

MICH.

•

I Toledo [42'/60' :

CLEVELAND (A P) . Health ofticials estimate that
the West Nile virus may have
infected as many as 83,000
people last year in Cuyahoga
County. which includes
Cleveland.
The county board of health
released its findin gs Thursday.
They were based on a federally commissioned study done
in -'d
December
I ,200
t 1n
· of1n•about
· re,·l
ens
ran dom 1y
selected communities.
.
The infection rate among
those surveyed was between 4
percent and (}.4 percent.
equivalent to berween 52,000
and 83,000 case~: countywide.
· Cuyahoga County reported
211 of Ohio's 441 confinned
cases of West Nile in 2002.
Eleven of the stale's 31 West
Nile death s occ urred in

---~-···

Sumy P1. Cloudy .Ciollty

Showers T·storms

Rain

F\JIIies

Soow

Ice

Rain today, then clearing
~EATHER

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The region was blJ!.nketed
with a thick cover of clouds
this morning. The clouds are
in response to a storm system over Missouri.
The thiCk blanket of cloud
cover contributed to warmer
temperatures by trapping
heat near the ground from
Thursday's warmer temperatures.
Rain is on the way for a
good part of the area today
through Saturday morning as
the st\)rm system moves east
across Kentucky and West
Virginia.
Temperatures are expected
to be in the 50s. A warming
trend will occur into the
early part of next week with
highs in the 60s to lower 70s
and low s generally in the
40s.
A chance for some show'61'S and thunderstorms will
return again on Monday.
There is also a chance for
some showers and thunderstorms on Thursday.

EXTENDED FORECAST

Tuesday ... Mostly clear.
Lows in the lower 50s and
highs in the lower 70s.
Wednesday ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s and highs in the mid 70s.
Thursday ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the mid 50s and
highs in the mid 70s.

Apnl24, 2003

tO,OOO

Dow
Jones

- - 9,000

~=-:

JAN
High

.0.89

FEB
Low

MAR

7 000
•

APR

RIICOid high: t1 ,722.98
Jan. t4,2000

8,512.44 8,395.70

1,600
1,400
t,200

1,457.23
Pet. clm,le

~001 previous:

JAN
High

.0.16

t,465.92

FEB

MAR

i,OOO

APR
RIICOid high: 5,048.62
March 10.2000

Low

t,448.05

(\pnl24, 2003

1,000

Standard&amp;

900

Poor's 500

·7·
Pd. change

m

previous

800

~

911.43

-o.83

JAN
High
9t9.02

FEB
Low

900.69

700

MAR
APR
RIICOid high: 1,527.46
March 24. 2000

AP

Local Stocks
Arch Coal- 18.30
AEP-25.65

Gannett- 75.64

Akzo- 21.03

K·Mjrt'- .102 ·
Kroger -14.25

Ashlaoo Inc. - 29.72

Ha~Oavidson

- 42.68

Big Lots-:__ 12.97
Bob Evans - 25.06
BorgWamer- 58.10
City Holding - 28.54
Champkln - 2.80

Oak Hill Financial - 24.17
Ban!&lt; One - 35.1 3

Charminjj Shops- 4.55

Promief- 9.18
Rocl&lt;y 8oo1S - 7.92
RO Sllell - 42.07
Roci&lt;well-21.94

DuPoo1 - 41.85
Dollar General- 14.40
Fed""l Mogul - . 153

OVBC -22.65
Paoplos - 23.26
~· - &lt;13.33

Sear&gt; - 27.27
SBC-22.52
AT&amp;T - 16.53
Wendy's - 28.15
Wai-Mart- 55.11
Wor1hlngton - 13.63

Dally stodl. reports are the 4
p.m. ctooing quo186 of 1t1e

pnMous daYs transactions,
provided by Smith Par1rle111
at Actvest Inc. ot Gallipolis.

'Iraqi Most Wanted' cards for sale
NORWOOD (AP)' .:__ A The decks sold at $5 apiece,
walk-up sale at United States with a limit to a dozen per cusPlaying Card Co. for decks of its tamer. Employees under a red"lrdQi Most Wanted" cards did and-white-striped tent in the
brisk business that was unprece- courtyard at the company's subdented in the company's 136- urban Cincinnati headquarters
year history, executives said.
were kept busy for hours.
"It's like a festival," said
People bought decks as colGeorge White, the company's lector items, gifts or emblems of
vice president of marlceting. "It's patriotic zeal.
been fun."
"It's a beautiful thing they
Proceeds frum one-&lt;lay sale did," said James Perdue, 52,
Thursday went to a Norwood . who also bought a dozen decks
charity that helps needy fami- from the company·to share with
lies.
siblings.

•

Officials

ready for
busy
weekend

at OSU

ADAY ON WALL STREET

8,440.04

President speaks to a crowd at the Lima Army Tank Plant
Thursday in Lima, Ohio. Bush was in the state Thursday,
promoting both his tax-cut package to fix a sluggish econ·
amy and his continued emphasis on national security.
Both issues are emerging as potential themes of his re·
election campaign. (AP)

AKRON (AP) - A sheriff's
deputy fatally shot a man who
was trying to bTellck into the officer's home in nearby Green.
police said.
. The man died ThlU'Sday morning, according to the Summit
County medical examiner.
Authorities were trying to identitY the man through fingerprints.
Summit County Sheriff's
Capt. Larry Momchilov said the
deputy. whose name was withheld, was placed on leave, a routine practice in investigations of
the use of deadly force.

COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio State University officials have set up video
cameras in strate~ic locations and are makmg plans
to bring in extra police and
liquor agents to keep parties under control this
weekend:
·
The university's annual
African-American
Heritage Festival, a street
party known as Chit Fest
and the Buckeyes' spring
football game are expected to bring thousands of
people to the campus area
Saturday.
Last year, 26 people
were arrested and seven
students were suspended
as a result of disturbances
during Chit Fest.
The event is named for
Chittenden Avenue, a
street near the campus.
Chittenden Avenue is six
blocks from a residence
where five students were
killed earlier this month in
a fire that' s been ruled an
arson.
University officials have
prepared for the weekend
by having student "ambassadors" and police canvass
neighborhoods and ask for
cooperation. Ribbons ha;ve
been given to students .
who pledged not to "be
destructive to my commu·

The deputy had returned home
from dinner with his wite late
Wednesday. and both were
watching television news In their
bedroom when they heard glass
breaking in a spare bedroom iri
the rear of the home. Momchilov
said.
The deputy entered the. room
and saw the suspect trying to gei
through the stonn window. he
said. The deputy warned the man
to stop, and shot him once in the
upper torso about 11:10 p.m.
when the man kept coming,
Momchilov said.

Friday, April 25, 2003

Meigs to·organize new chapter
of Sons of the Revolution

Cuyahoga County.
The numbers retlect a fraction of those who were
exposed to the viru s but never
were di agnosed i:lecause their
symptoms were too slight to
warrant medical attention;
officials said.
The federal Centers for
Disease
Control
and
Prevention suggested the local
study.. It ·was the fi f·th · suchd
exam111atton com mtss1one
by ;he CDC 1ntwo years. The
others were 111 New . York,
LoUi smna and Connecttcut.
. West Ntle
symptoms
mclude headache, lever, body·
ache~. skm rash and. swollen
lymph glands. The dt sease ts
carried by mosquitos and cari
be fatal to bird s and horses,
but rarely to humans.

Off-duty officer fatally .
shoot:s house intruder

FORECAST

Tonight .. . Rain ... Mainly
until midnight. Lows near
50. Northeast winds around
I 0 mph. Chance !lf rain 80
percent.
Saturday ...Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Highs in the mid 60s. North
winds I 0 to 15 mph. Chance
of rain 30 percent,
Saturday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
40s.
Sunday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Sunday
night. .. Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower 50s.
Monday ... Mostly clear.
Highs in the mid 70s.

.Local News

The Daily Sentinel

83,000 may have
beer1 infected
with W. Nile

Presidential visit

Saturday, Aprll26

PageA3

Mike Bartrum of the Ph iladelphia Eagles joins Amy J. Leach, director of marketing and
public relations for Pleasant Valley Hospital, left, and Erin and Mitch Roush of Riverside
Golf Course at a planning session for the May 16 banquet.

Pro football players to
attend coed tournament
MASON, W. VA. Special guests at a 6:30
p.m. May 16 banquet at
Riverside Golf Course
(Mary's Tee Time Grill) in
Mason, W. Va. in conjunction with Pleasant Valley
Hospital's coed flag football tournament will be
Mike Bartrum and Troy
Brown.
Bartrum.
a
Meigs
County native and current
valued longsnapper and

tight end with the
Philadelphia Eagles, and
Troy Brown, a wide
receiVer and punt returner
for the New England
Patriots, are tentatively
scheduled to be there, said
Amy J. Leach, director of
marketing and public relations for Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
·
All players who are listed on the participating
teams, rosters of the annu-

al PVH Coed Flag
Football Tournament will
receive VIP tickets.
' Additional tickets can be
purcbased at the PVH
Wellness
Center
or
Riverside Golf Course for
$1 0/adult and $5/children
under 12 years of age. ·
There are a limited number
of tickets available to the
general public, according
to Leach. .

Sc~olarship

applications being taken

POMEROY - Again this
year a Charles S. Gibbs
~Memorial Scholarship is being
·made available to a high
school graduate planning "to
major in education.
. The scholarship is available
:only to a graduate of the Class
·of 2003 . living in Pomeroy.
:This year, the receipient can
:attend any university as long
as the major is education. In
.previous years it had been
:restricted to University of Rio
-Grande or Ohio University.
: The amount of the scholar"ship is not definite at this time,

but will be detennined in the
next few weeks. It will be
awarded in the recipient's
name to the college after the
student is registered. The
scholarship
is · awarded
through the Pqmeroy Alumni
Association.
Charles Gibbs was a longtime
superintendent
of
Pomeroy Village Schools, and
his wife, Ellen Gibbs, was a
third grade teacher in Pomeroy
for many years. They both
devoted their lives to education.
Their mece Maryjean

Hartline of Shadyside, Ohio,
recently deceased, established
the scholarship hoping to help
students in need who plan to
go into the field of education.
Questions concerning the
scholarship may be directed to
April Smith (992-3483), chairman of the selection committee. A resume, letter of appliaction , an up-to-date grade
transcript from the school, and .
a photograph are to be mailed
to the Pomeroy Alumni
Association, P. 0 . Box 202,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769. The
deadline to apply is May 16.

POMEROY - The Son s of chapter is open to any male of
. the Rev0lution (S R) is char- good character age 21 or
tering a new chapter in Meigs older who has a direct, bloodCounty.
related ancestor who fought
The oldest heredltury orga- as a soldier or .sai lor in the
ni zation for men who American forces of the
descend from any soldier of American Revolution on or
the American Revolution, it after April 15, 1775, or who
should not be confused with was a signer of the
the Son s of the America-n Declaration of Independence.
Revolution (SAR), according Non-military patriotic service
to Keith Ashley who is solic- of an ancestor in the
iting qualified individual s American Revolution is not
who are interested in becom- accepted unless such service
ing charter members of the put the ancestor punishable
new organization.
by death or imprisonment by
Ashley described the SAR the British.
as a younger. more costly
The SR is a patriotic, hisorganization with different torica.l, charitable, non-profit
membership requirements organization seeking to keep
though similar in name and alive the memory of the solpurpose. The S.R. is recog- diers of the American
nized by (he Daughters of the Revolution and their princiAmerican Revolution as a ples.
brother o;ganization.
Plans include forming a
It was formed at Fraunces chapter named the "Roush
Tavern in New York City in Chapter" after the many local
1875. This tavern , owned by soldiers of the American
the SR today, was \he place Revolution who had the surwhere
Gen .
George name of Roush. Descendants
Washington delivered ' his of other eligible American
"Farewell Address" to his Revolutionary ancestors are
officers at the end of the equally desired. Anyone with
American Revolution.
a Revolutionary War ancestor
Membership in · the SR . buried in Meigs County is

especially encouraged to join .
Chapter .meetings will be
held strictly in Meigs County
and will not move . Meetings
will be held every two
months and programs
on
history, education. patriotis m,
and similar topics will be presented at each meeting.
Guests, male or female . will
be permitted to attend meetings.
·
Anyone wishing to be ,1
charter member should contact the organization. Any
potential applicant for membership who does not know if
they have an eli gihle
Revolutionary War ancestor
is encouraged to apply. Free
assistance will be given by a
trained genealogi st to as;ist .
in locating an eligible ancestor in preparing the application.
Chartering of the chapter is
planned for late in the calendar year.
Contar, t the Sons of the
Revolution by calling (74Q)
992-7874; by E-mai ling
&lt;kdashley2@hotmail.com&gt;.
or by writing Ashley at 34465
Crew Road, Pomeroy, OH
45769-9715.

Alumni trying to contact members
POMEROY- If you are a
member of the Pomeroy
gradu·ating class of 1968
and did not receive a letter
from the Pomeroy Alumni
Association about the May
24 banquet and dance, then
probably the committee
doesn't have your address.

Those 'who didn't get the
letter are asked to contact
Becky Anderson at 9492534 who is attempting to
update the address list.
Amon~ those for whom the
commtttee does not current
addesses are Michael Bentz,
Patricia Capehart, Darlene
.

Chafin, Charles Clarkson,
David Michael, Marie Smith
and Pauletta Snider Farley.
Tickets for the event are
on sale at Francis Florist and
Swisher and Lohse at $15 a
person for the dinner and
dance.

'

Yearbook:
edition

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
.Test kits to be distributed free by MCCI

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

.

: POMEROY-· As a part of
lhe Meigs County Cancer
:Initiative, Inc.'s program
toward early detection of cancer, members will be at
Farmers Bank Thursday to
distribute fecal occult blood
:test kits.
: Becky Baer and Carol
Adams will give out the free
test kitds from I 0 a.m to 2
p.m. that day. There with
them will be students from
Margie Blake's senior nursing
assistant class to do blood
pressure checks.

The test is used to check
for blood in a person's stool. It
is non-invasive and is a simple at-home procedure that
checks stool samples for hidden blood which can be a sign
of cancer, polyps, or other
internal disorders.
,It is recommended that anyone 50 or over have a fecal
occult blood test (FOBT)
every year.
The screeni ng is spon-

sored by Holzer Clinic, the
Meigs
County
Health
Department and the Meigs
County Cancer Initiative, Inc.
lnfonnation on how to perfonn the test will be given to
each person and the completed kit is to be returned to the
Meigs
County
Health
Department. Every person
who · returns a kit to be
checked will be notified of
the res uIts.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

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Correction Polley
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Department extensions

nity."

"We intend to try to do a
better job of identifying
people who are breaking
the law," said Bill Hall,
OSU 's vice president of
student affairs.
The u)liversity isn't saying where cameras to
record parties have been
set' up or how many there
are .. ,
Hall said small parties
are fine . but he' s concerned about events for
which several kegs of beer
are purchased and crowds
spill into the streets.
"When tl)ey (parties) get
big, we know from past
experience that the stu,
dents can't control them."
Hall said. "It's naive to
think you can."

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Obituaries
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Eleanor Jarrell

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Carl Esposito
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
Editor ··

NATIONAL VIEW

=
Open the door
Penchant for government
secrecy dtftats democracy
• Union-News, Springfield, Mass., on President Clinton's
pardons: A federal judge's decision allowing President
Clinton to keep under wraps documents relating to pardons he
issued on his final day in office might initially appear to be a
victory for the previous administration and its defense of its
much-criticized actions on its way out the door to the White
House.
Such a reading would be a mistake, an oversimplification of
the matter at hand.
The case for keeping the Clinton secrets was made by the
Depanment of Justice, which, .with Attorney .General John
Ashcroft at the helm, has favored secrecy over openness at
every turn .
By nearly any measure, the Bush administration is among
the most secretive in this nation's history. By arguing- and
winning- the case for protecting the pardon papers, the cur. rent administration can hope to set a precedent that will bol- ·
ster its own penchant for secrecy.
The need to have access to the workin11s of any administration is not simply an exercise for academicians, for those who
will be compiling the history of the day.
Unless the citizenry understand the doings of those at the
helm. the governors become distant from the governed,
imperiling our very democracy.
The federal judge's ruling on the Clinton documents may
not be - and should not be - the final word on the matter.
Those who care about the functioning of their government, no
matter who is in the White House, no matter which party is
writing the agenda, should be sorely concerned by this administration's attempts to suppress the flow of information.
Our government is based on the premise of openness. That
assumption cannot be washed away by one administration's
desire for secrecy.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, April 25, the !15th day of 2003. There are
250 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 25, 1792, highwayman Nicolas Jacques Pelletier
became the first person under French law to be executed by
the guillotine.
On this date:
In 1859, ground was broken for the Suez Canal.
In 1898, the United States formally declared war on Spain.
ln 1901, New York became the first state to require automobile license plates; the fee was $1.
· In 1945, during World War II, U.S. and Soviet forces linked
up on the Elbe River, a meeting that dramatized the collapse
of Nazi Germany's defenses.
In 1945, delegates from some 50 countries met in San
Francisco to organize the United Nations.
In 1.959, the St. Lawrence Seaway opened to shipping.
In 1983, Soviet leader Yuri V. Andropov invited Samantha
Smith to visit his country after receiving a letter in which the
Manchester, Maine. schoolgirl expressed fears about nuclear
war.
In 1983, the "Pioneer Ten" spacecraft crossed Pluto's orbit,
speeding on its endless voyage through the Milky Way.
In 1990, Violeta Barrios de Chamorro was inaugurated as
president of Nicaragua. ending eleven years of leftist
Sandinista rule.
In 1990, the Hubble Space Telescope was deployed from the
space shuttle Discovery.
Ten years ago: Hundreds of thousands of gay rights activists
and their supporters marched in Washington"D.C., demanding
equal rights and freedom from discrimination. Voters in
Russia participated in a referendum, giving President Boris N.
Yeltsin a sturdy vote of confidence.
. One year ago: President Bush hosted Crown Prince
Abdullah of Saudi Arabia at his Texas ranch for a day of talks.
The House voted 405-9 to abolish the embattled Immigration
and Naturalization Service. Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes, the effervescent, sometimes volatile member of the Grammy-winning
trio TLC. died in a car crash in Honduras; she was 30.
Today's Birthdays: TV personality Jane Clayson is 36.
Actress Renee Zellweger is 34. Actor Jason Lee is 33. Actor
Jason Wiles ("Third Wat~h") is 33. Actress Emily Berg! is 28.
Singer Jacob Underwood (0 Town) is 23.
Thought for Today: "I think that the glorious thing about the
human race is that it does change the world- constantly. The
world or 'life' may seem to more often overwhelm the human
being, but it is the human being's capacity for struggling
against being overwhelmed which is remarkable and exhilarating:• - Lorraine Hansberry, American author-dramatist
( 1930-1965)

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, pi~k up the
telephone and call ~ l)aily 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 0\lt" line is open only after 5 p.m. each day. Do
not call "Speak Out" during regular business hours.
To call "Speak Out," dil)l the Sentinel's main number (740)
992-2156 and then dial extension 29. Begin talking at the tone.

FQr the Record Local Briefs
Band Boosters
Incidents

MASON ; W.Va. - Eleanor
A. Jarrell, 74, Mason, W.Va. ,
died on Thursday, April 24,
POMEROY - Meigs
2003,_ · at Cabe ll-Huntington
Hospllal 10 Huntington, Cou nty Sheriff Ralph.
W.Va.
Trussell
reported
the
She was bom July 31, 1928 investigation of the folin Run a, W.Va., daughter of lowin g complaint s this
the late Arch E. and Anna week:
Jane Worlledge Bays.
• Todd
Cummings,
. She is survived by her hu~­ Racine, .reported his fence
band, James E. Jarrell of was damaged by a white
Mason .
mini-van
with
ladder
Services will be held at 2 racks. The owner was
p.m. orr Sunday, April 27, located and arrange me nt s
2003, at Mason United made for repairs.
Methodist Church with Rev.
• Dennis
Brooks,
Samuel Cale IV officiating. Pagevi lle , reported someBurial wili follow at the famone had kicked in hi s
ily's convenience. ·
Friends may call from 6 to garage door in an attempt
9
p.m.
Saturday
at to gain entry. The incident
Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral is still under inve stigation.
•
Charles
Harris ,
Home, Mason.
Reedsville , repo rted someone trespassing on hi s
property.
Trusell said deputies also
investigated one stalking
POMEROY
The complaint, five domestic
Emergency Medical Sei:Vice violence complaints, three
responded to these calls on telephone
harrass ment
Thursday.
complaints, one menacing
Centrnl Dispatch
complaints, one prowler
2:23 a.m. Robena Meredith, complaint, two trespassing
' Butternut, Treated not transported complaints, one assault
2:52 am. Roger Dillon, Fourth complaint, one theft co mStreet, St. Joseph's Hospital . plaint, one rape inve stiga4:59 a.m. Martha Slater. tion. a hit and run investiHudson Street, Treated not transgation and a report of a
ported
3:21 p.m. Kerry Bartlett, Beech violation of a civil protection order.
Street, Holzer Medical Center
3:46 p.m. Blaine Qualls,
Holzer Medical Clinic, Holzer
Medical Center
·
POMEROY - Meigs
6:38 p.m. Cliff Thomas,
Bashan Road, Holzer Medical County Sheriff Ralph
Trussell reported the arrest
Center
6:39 p.m. Stacey Irvin, Bashan of Hank Alsept, age and
address unrepo-rted, on
Road, Holzer Medical Center
6:52 p.m. Rita Spires. drug charges following a
Rocksprings Retirement Center, traffic stop. He was
released on bond following
Holzer Medical Center
7:05 p.m. Martha Fry, Cole an initial appearance in
Street, Holzer Medical Center.
Meigs County Court.

reported

,

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Bette Pearce
. Managing Editor

EMS calls

I still think
As soon as Fidel Castro
seized power in 1959, l saw on
television the firing squad execution of an array of political
prisoners, which .he ordered.
He then began filling his brutal
prisons with Cubans whose
·sole crime was a desire to
breathe freedom after the
Batista dictatorship - only to
find themselves in another
totalitarian quicksand,
At one point, interviewing
the already legendary Che
Guevara - an international
Cuban revolutionruy icon at the Cuban misston to the
United Nations, I asked him if
he could foresee, anytime in
the future, free elections in
Cuba. Crisply dressed in his
military outfit, Guevara burst
out laughing at my callow
naivete.
·
Having interviewed Cubans
who survived Castro's gulags,
I have never understood or
respected the parade of
American entertainers, politicians aitd intellectuals who
travel to Cuba to be entranced
by this ruthless dictator who,
for me, has all the charisma of
a preening thug, akin to any
killer on "The Sopranos."
· These Castro-philes are
among those who discredit liberalism because they're unable
to recognize and be repelled
by unbridled evil. Consider
Steven Spielberg, who has
developed
impressive
resources
through . hi s
Survivors of the Shoah Visual
History Foundation to keep
alive the horrifying presence
of the !"olocaust. Yet, as quot-

The Daily Sentinel• Page AS

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Friday, April 25, 2003

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Frl day, April 25, 2003

Nat
Hentoff

ed in the April 11 Wall Street
Journal , Spielberg described
his audience with Castro last
November as "the eight most
important hours of my life.''
Was Spielberg's life that barren until those gloriously transcendent hours with the chief
warden of Cuba's prisons?
From time to time, I still
think of Elian Gonzalez, so
vivid a free spirit here until
condemned by Janet Reno and
Bill Clinton to a land where
schoolteachers must keep a
record of any signs of their
charges' lessening fealty to the
relentless light of their lives~
I wish the American press
would pay more attention to
the ongoing lawsuit alleging
that Doris Meissner - head of
Clinton 's Immigration and
Naturalization Service ordered the destruction of evidence that would have contradicted the Clinton administration's forcible removal of
Elian to Castro's continuation
of Stalinism. Judicial Watch in
Washington has the information on that lawsuit
In any case, the next batch of
fawning celebrities and mem·
bers of Congress who party

of Elian

with Castro, will try to evade whom the Castro "justice systhe recent show trial s of inde- tern" has turned into non-peapendent journalists, human ple. Not even such an emirights advocates, poets and nence as Spielberg will be free
other dre&lt;mlers of democracy to show Rivero videos of
who have been sentenced by Holocaust survivors.
Castro's kangaroo courts to
Spielberg, immersed in prepunishments of up to 27 years. production of .his next film,
Britain's Economist magazine was not available for comment
notes that ... since many of the on Castro's latest eradication
dissidents are aged between 50 of diss.enters. But his represen- .
and 60, in practical terms they . tative, Andy Spahn of
are being put away for life."
Dreamworks, told The Wall
One prisoner of. conscience Street Journal that Castro had
packed into the gulag is the been "provoked" to order the
mternationally respected inde- crackdown, because the head
pendent journalist Raul of the · American mission in
Rivero, director of Cuba Press Havana, James Cason, had
agency, and a board member been meeting - can you
of the Inter American Press imagine? - with Cuban disAssociation . In the Castro senters in their homes last
courtroom- from which for- February.
eign journalists and diplomats
And if an American official
were barred- Rivero, suffer- had, however discreetly, been
ing from phlebitis and other meetinR with Jews in Berlin
ailments, was sentenced to 20 who sull hoped that the world
~ears for being an independent would come to their rescue JOurnalist.
if it only knew of the design
"This is so arbitrary for a for the Final Solution -- would
man whose only crime is to that diplomat have exceeded
to
write what he thinks," his his · responsibilities
wife, Blanca Reyes, said in an humankind by ... provoking"
April 8 New York limes ani- Hitler?
cle. "What they found on him
HBO has wisely cancelled
was a tape recorder, not a the May showing of Oliver
Castro-admiring
grenade."
Stone 's ·
The Clinton administration "Commandante." During pro-. which has so much to duction, says the Journal, Fidel
answer to history for - pro- was "given the power to stop
mated
"people-to-people" filming at will."
trips to Cuba, which have conThe show would have been
tinued. The American tourists a fitting complement to HBO's
and the participants in educa- "The Sopranos." .
tiona! and cultural ·exchanges
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally
will not be able to engage in renowned authority on the
person-to-person visits 'with First Amendment and the Bill
Raul Rivero, and other Cubans of Rights.)

The Times isn't helping women.in Augusta
In the past few months, The
New York Times has published nearly three dozen
news anicles and commentaries on the matter of
Augusta National Golf Club's
Joseph
failure, as yet, to admit a
female member.
Perkins
Given such inordinate coverage, one would think that
Augusta chairman Hootie
Johnson and the Atlanta
club's 300 or so members Augusta each spring.
were secretly plotting to
Most odious is their suggesrepeal the 19th Amendment, tion that Ti ger Woods, the
which gave women th~ ri~ht tirst person of color to win the
to vote. It is hard to imagme Masters. forego his opponuthat. Susan B. Anthony and nity next year to become the
Elizabeth Stanton, the moth- tirst golfer of any complexion
ers of the woman suffrage to win the major three times
movement, received nearly as straight. "A tournament withmuch love from the so-called out Mr. Woods would send a·
Gray Lady as Manha Burk, powerful message that dischairwoman of the National crimination isn't good for the
Council
of
Women's golting business," the Times
Organization, who initiated editorialized.
the crusade against Augusta.
Of course, what the Times
What panicularly galls is really meant was that.
that both. Burk's organization.· because Tiger is half-blac~ .
ils well as the .Times, have he has a moral obligation to
taken their crusade . against _ speak out against Augusta's
Augusta beyond the club 's · membership policies . That
members (whom, the public because he has benetited from
should be reminded, have a the civil rights movement,
First Amendment right to from the struggle to desegreinclude or exclude whomever gate water fountains and
they wish). They are also try- lunch counters and public
ing to encourage corporations golf courses, he somehow
and professional golfers to owes it to all the oppressed
boycott the Masters, the pres- women ~olfers in the land to
tigmus golf tourney hosted by self-sacnfice on their ,behalf.

But the past struggle by . Masters three years in a row."
blacks to break 'Augusta's
And while Woods has pubcolor line is far different from· licly .stated that Augusta
the current crusade by the should have women members
Times and Burk's organiza- - which is more than many
tion. Through much of the of his golfing peers have said
first 40 years of its existence, -the fact is that the Southern
Augusta National Golf Club club's policies toward women
not only excluded blacks are not nearly as odious as was
from membership, it didn 't its policies toward blacks. •
even allow blacks to set foot
While it is true that Augusta
on the course unless they has no female members, it
were toting the bags of white does not bar women from the
golfers. Yet, no one demanded course, as it barred blacks
that Ben. Hogan or Arnold d ·
Palmer or Jack Nicklaus_ or unng the lirst four decades
of its history. In fact, women
any 01her Masters champion played more than l,OOO
- boycott the Masters in
protest of the Georgia club's rounds of golf on the exalted
racially exclusionary policies. layout last year. Moreover,
Nor,, for that matter, were women are free to use most of
there demands that the Augusta's facilities, as wives,
Masters' corporate sponsors daughters or guests of
withhold their financtal sup- Augusta's male members.
pon unless and until Augusta
The perverse irony of the
opened its doors to blacks, Augusta controversy is that
both as players and members. the golf club reportedly W(IS
Which is why it is under- on the verge of breaking its
standable that Woods was gender line before Burk 's
otl'ended to be singled out organization and the Times
among his golfing peers to went on the attack . So, for all
take a symbolic stand against the sound and fury stirred up
Augusta 's gender-exclusion- by the feminist organization
and by the crusading newspaary membership policy.
"lt 's frustrating , the 26- per, they actually set back,
year-old said during a recent rather than advanced, the
press conference, "because cause of women at Augusta.
I'm the only player they are
(Joseph Perkinsisaco/wnnisr
asking. They're asking me to for Tire Smt Diego Union- ·
give up an opportunity no one TribLuJe wul can be reached at
has ever had - winning the JosephPerkinsUnio11Trib.com) '

Incarcerated

Home
from PageA1
the shelter and donations from
local businesses, Burnett said
the house would basically
"pay for itself."
''The shelter is entirely capable of operating without the
!!SSistance of public money.
Money collected from residents would help pay for
things such as electricity and
heat and local grocery stores
are often asked to donate food
items," said Burnett.
"Just these two factors alone

can help cut out approximate!y 80 percent or more of our
costs. In other words, the shelter can be totally self-sufficient"
Burnell reminded commissioners that similar · facilities
throughout Ohio have proven
quite successful and the shelters have maintained a good
relationship with their com·mtmities.
After listening to Burnett's
presentation , Commissioners
Harold Montgomery, William
Davis Jr. and Shirley Angel all
agreed to thorough! y study the
matter and report back to
Burnett within a reasonable
period of time.

plan dinner

POMEROY - The Meigs
Local B&lt;md Boosters will serve
tl ·chicken-noodle dinner from
11 a.m to 2:30 p.m. Sunday at
the Meigs County Annex on
Mulberry Heights in the ba&lt;;ement community room. A ramp
has been instal led at one end of
the building for the convenience
ofthose coming in.

Offer dinner
RACINE - Racine United
Methodist Church will have a
takeout dinner beginning at
11 :30 a.m. Sunday. Chicken and
noodles, mashed potatoes, green
beans. cole slaw. a roll and
dessert will be available $6 for
adults and $3 for children under
five.

Tournament set
POMEROY - The · 13th
Annual Meigs Band Memorial
Weekend Golf Tournament will
be held at .9 a.in., May 24. The
tournament will honor John
Krawsczyn. Registration may
be completed by calling Twila
Childs, toumament chairman, at
992-6188 or 992-3387, qr
· Toney Dingess, at 992-2158.

VSCmeets
POMEROY
-Meigs
County Veterans · Service
Commission will meet at 9 am.
on Monday at the office, 117 E.
Memorial Dr.. Pomeroy.

Contest
sponsored
POMEROY
Meigs
County Ohio Bicentennial
Committee will sponsor a period costume contest at 4 p.m. on
May I0 at the Meigs County
Homecoming. to be ·held at the
Rocksprings Fairgrounds. The
conte~t will be held at the Hill
Stage.
Categories are 1803 to 1853,
1854to 1903,and 1903to 1953.
·Contestants may enter only one
category and are to wear their
costume to the judging. Winners
will be chosen on a look of
authenticity, and if the costume
is appropriate for the designated
time period. Multiple prizes will
be awarded. Registration is not
requ~.

Southern Local School district recognized the academic achievements of these students in
grades third through eighth at the Southern Local Academic Excellence Banquet held Thursday
at Southern High School. (J. Miles Layton)
·

Banquet
from Page A1
bad, but he refused to give
up. He knew that he must
motivate these people to do
their best or all would -be lost.
A nurse, probably not expecting an answer, asked the man
while he was being prepped for
surgery if he was allergic to
· anything. The man was weak,
but with all his strength forced
himself to say, "Yes." The man
then said he was allergic to bul·
lets. The doctors were inspired
because they knew they would
be operating on someone who
knew would be among the living instead of the dead.'
The lesson Grueser hoped to
impart to the room full of students was that a positive mental
attitude about life is everything.
Achievement is not based necessarily on who is the smartest,
but on who has the proper attitude to use their talents to their
highest potential.
Representing the University
of Rio Grande, Jake Bapst said
the Southern school district has
"defied all odds." He said there
are people who say that educational quality is poor in rural
school districts. Bapst said
these peo~le are wrong especially when it comes to a district
like Southern Local. He said
more than 90 percent of its well
prepared graduates go onto college.
.
Bapst said the district is doing
a "tremendous job." He noted
·that many schools have a lackluster awards banquet which

generates little more than nods
· fro!" students, parents and
teachers alike. Southern was
"unique" because the entire
community showed up to support its children.
As a representati ve of the
University of Rio Grande
(URG) Bapst was in charge of
awarding a scholarship which
would amount to a one year full
scholarship. Bapst drew a ran.dom name out of a hat and sixth
grader Brody Rint won the
scholarship. When his name
was announced, his grandmother, Mary Perry. was overcome
with emotion.
"I couldn't be any prouder,''
she said later after the awards
banquet. "He's really a joy and
a very smart kid."
Brody said that when he
graduates high school, he plans
to attend URG.
Distinguished guesi Robert
Beegle
presented
the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club Academic Award, which
was a $100 savings bond, to .
Sixth Grader Christopher
Holter.
Honorees
These were the students with
top academic honors who
received awards for academic
achievement at the Southern
Local Academic Excellence
Banquet held Thursday at
Southern High School.
Third grade: Justin · Young,
Abbie Williams, Jennifer
Stump, Emma Powell, Olivia
Murphy, Morgan McMillan,
Faith Harkness, Bobby Goode,
Tiffany Francis, Manina Arms.
Fourth grade: · Katelynn
Smith, Katey Patterson, Dakota

Community Calendar
Leading Creek .Stream Sweep
will be held from 9 a.m. to noon
at Rutland Fireman's Park.
Monday, April 28
Participants will receive lunch
and a stream sweep T-shirt. All
RUTlAND - Skin testing by
ages welcome. For more infor- the Tuberculosis Clinic will take
mation contact the Meigs SWCD place from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. at·
the Rutland Fire Department.
at 992-4282.
Personnel will return on April 30
MIDDLEPORT . - A benefit to read the tests.
·
sing for the Bend Area Gospel
Jubilee will be held at 7 p.m. at
the Hobson Christian Fellowship
Sunday, April 'ET
events
RACINE - Shiney Appleby
Church. Singing will be the Right
MIDDLEPORT
The
Direction,
Roiush
Family,
Bill
will
observe her 92nd birthday on
Saturday, April 26
Landmarl&lt;s to sing at Hobson
Cadle,
Matt
Scott,
and
the
New
April
28. Her address is 26291 •
MIDDLEPORT - Pancake
Christian Fellowship, 6:30 p.m.
Mile Hill Road, Racine. 45771 . '
breakfast to benefit the American Southern Harmony.
Cancer Society will be served
from 7 to 10 a.m. at the
Middeport Church of Christ
Family Ufe Center.

Hanisonville Senior Citizens will
·meet at 11 a.m. at the firehouse.
Blood pressures taken, potiuck
Monday, April 28
MIDDLEPORT - Special luncheon.
meeting of Board of Public
Tuesday, April 29
Affairs, 5:30 p.m., oouncil cham- ·
TUPPERS
· PLAINS
bers, to discuss overflow contract, ARC grant, prciperty pur- Eastern Music Boosters, 7 p.m.,
high school band room, to dischase.
cuss final details for concert band
trip: All members urged to attend.

Public meetings

pants needed to outfit the
players.
The May 17 kickoff day
will
begin with a 9 a.m.
from Page A1
parade through Middleport.
m which teams will ride on
Pepsi -Cola Bottling Co. • and floats. Baseball and softball
a new sign listing 41 local play will begin at 1 p.m. , and
sponsors who have provided each of the 19 teams will take
funding for uniforms, umpire to the field for a game.
fees and other operating costs
Boyd said a special cerefor the upcoming season.
mony honoring the members
"If it weren't for the spon- of the 1957 team will be held
sors and our concession stand at 1 p.m.
proceeds. we would be hard
"We hope that a lot of those
pressed to operate the pro- guys will be able to make it
gram," Boyd said. "We to the ceremony," Boyd said.
thought it was only appropri - "We already have commitate to prominently recognize . ments from seven or eight,
these local businesses who but we expect more to be
Monday, April 28
support what we ' re doing."
here ."
RUTLAND
Third annual
HARRISONVILLE
Boyd said the league has
paid over $1 ,000 just for hats
M----------------------------------------------------~M
for youth league players. The
league also provides uniform
shirts and socl\s for players,
and provides funding for
about half of the uniform

Champs

Imboden, Eric Buzzard, Katie
Barr.
Fifth grade: Catherine
Woods, Lynzee TucJ,er, . Cyle
Rees, John Powell, Michael
Manuel.
Sixth t,'Tade: Merri Collins,
Brody Flint. Bryan Harris,
Christopher Holler. Emma
Hunter, Brittany Meldau,
Chelsea Pape, · Samantha
Patterson, Rachael Pickens.
Jaime Warner.
Sevemh grade: Kaylyn
Spradling, Whitney Riffle.
Rebecca Hanstine, Sarah ElDabaja, Stephanie C4ndiff,
Heather Cundiff, Lindsey
Buzzard, Morgan Brown,
Bonnie Allen.
Eighth
grade : Ashlee
Teaford, Adelle Rice, Allie
Rees, Adam Phillips, Jacob
Hunter, Mallory Hill.
Ninth gmde: Ryan Amberger.
Johti Bentz, Nicole Jones,
Kristiniiana Williams. Nicole
Jones, 'John Bentz, Ryan
Amberger
.
Tenth grade: Chris Tucker,.
Craig Randolph, Jordan
Neigler, Ashton Brown.
Eleventh grade: Jeremy
Yeauger, Andrew Smith, Kati
Sayre, Henry Rider, Deana
Pullins, Amy Norman, Tabitha
Jones , Emily Hill , Sarah
Hawley, Chelsea Dilcher, Codi
Davis. Stephanie Bradford.
Bethany Amberger.
1\velth grade: Tom Theiss,
Brandon Smith, Tam Pickens,
Amy Lee, Jeri Hill, Brittany
Fortune, Mariam El-Dabajar
Curt Crouch; Crystal Cottrill,
Rachel Chapman.

Support Groups

Concerts, Shows

Birthdays

Other

Clubs and
Organizations

Meigs County Citizens

Please join us for ·
these National Day
of Prayer Events.

Do You Just
Your Sentinel
Newspaper""""''

Nominate them for

"Carrier-of-the-Month"
If they are' selected, your ~
carrier will win dinner
P./~~
for two at
filA \

.
PtzzaHut

compliments of
Pizza Hut

CIRCLE THE COURTHOUSE WITH PRAYER
Sunday April 27, 2003 at 3:00p.m.
NATIONAL DAY OF PRAYER OBSERVANCE
Thursday May 1st 11:.30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

Send us your name, address and phone number.
2.) Include your earners name, your route number
or subscriber number.
:t) In 50 words or less. tell us why we should choose
your carrier.
1.)

Come even if you can only stay a few minutes.

Continuation of Observance of
National Day of Prayer
May 1st at 7:00 p.m. at the Pomeroy Amphitheater
This event will be held at Rejoicing Life Church in case of rain.

/

Mall your entries to: Paul Barker
Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

\

\
I

�Faith • Values

The Daily Sentinel

It is good to have
Him remembere_
d

BY RtCHARD N.

. With Americans recovering
from the annual &lt;mgst of tiling
tax returns with the IRS, it's an
apt season to retlect on history's most famous directive to
taxpayers:
"Render to Caesar the things
that are Caesar's, and to God
the things that are God's."
Jesus· words were memorable enough to be included in
three of the fom Gospels
(Mark 12:17, Matthew 22:21 ,
Luke 20:25).
But modem readers often
distort what Jesus meant ,
according to IY.tvid T. Ball.
who holds degrees in both law
and theology. Ball teaches at
the Methodist Theological
School in Ohio and works at
the Ohio Legal Assistance
Foundation to provide free
legal clinics.
Writing in Bible Review
magazine, Ball recounts the
context of Jesus' saying.
Jesus is confronted by opponents hoping to trap him wi.th
his own words. For that purpose, they ask whether it is
"lawful" to pay taxes to Caesar
and the Roman regime that
occupied Israel.
That puts Jesus on the spot.
If he says no, he will be

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
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mg . .

"It might seem like Jesus is

telling us that we should cheerfully fultill our annual obligation to the IRS," Ball writes, m
more generally is advocating
the fu ltillment of civic obligations.

r

3. The finality of death is hell

"Dealh and hell were cast into lhe lake ot lire. ThiSis the
second dealh'" Rev: 20:14 ·
4]t!U! Chri!l, God's Snn pdid our debt
~aut God commendeth h is love toward us in

that. while
we were yet sinners. Christ died for us." Romans 5 :8

r

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5. You can be sdved today

"For whosoevershall call upon the name ollhe Lord
shall be saved"" Romans 10:13

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·r

992·9052
·r

·r

26 years In local business .

Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH

740-992-6215

Licensed Embalmer, Funeral Director
licensed Pre-Need Insurance
· ~eclal isl

Worship
God Together
This Week!
t:e·nt•~r
llll Jackson Pike Gallipolis, OH

Advanced Hearing

Into The Light

lhrly"'''."'·~
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11'11

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Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

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Blessed are the pure
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Matthew 5:8

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33334 Hysell Run Rd.

Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-7996

www.herbsndiet.com

""Let your light so shine before
men, that they may see your
good works and glorify your
Father in heaven."
Matth ew 5: 16

First Southern R"Hplist
41 1!71 Puu1 e1uy Pike. Pa~wr : .E·. Lamar
O"Bryanl . Sunduy S.:hno l · 1J:JO a .m ..
Wtn~hip . M: 1.'\ a. m.. ~ : ~5 am &amp; 7:00p.m ..

7·m p.m.

A fmvsp hat'

l·lours
6am . 8pm

:Mi{[ie 's ~taurant

t'irst Haptist Church
Pa~tor: Mark Morrow. 6th and Palme r St..
Middleport. Sunday School· 9:15a.m ..
Worship
ll): l .'i a.m.. 7: 00 p.m..
\\htn~·sd.;a y S~rvice- 7: 1Xl p.m.

Sc~ i ces-

7:00p.m.

p.m.,

740-992-7713

Birchfield funeral
Home

Pomeroy Churth of Christ
2!:::! W. Main S1., MiniMer : Anthony
Sunday School - . Y:JO a. m., Worship10 ..\0 a.m ., 6 p.m.. Wednesday Services 7 p.m.
PomeMy Westside Chur:ch of Christ
D:::!26 Ch ildren's Home Rd .• Sunday
Sch01.1l - I r a m .. Worshi p- lOam .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday St::rvices - 7 p m.
~-lldd leport Church ofChris1
51 h and Mil in. Pll.~ lor : A\ Hart son. Youth
Mi nister: Bill Fr:u.ier, Sunday School 9:30 11.m., Worsh ip- It I.'\, 10 : ~0 am .. 7
p.m., Wellnesday Services- 7 p.m.

Keno Church of Ch rist
9:3.0 a.m.. Sunday .School .
10:30 il.m., P11~ 1or-J eQ "rey Wall ace, ls1 and
Jrd Sunday

Wor~ hi)l -

Bearwallow Rid ge Church or Christ
Pa~ ror: Bru~c Terry, Sun day School -9:30

o.m

Congregational
Trinity Church
Ser,:ond &amp; Lynn, Pomero y, Pa~ lur. R.::v.
Jal' k Nohl e, Worship 10:25 a. m.. Sunda y
Schoo.l9.15 a.m.

Episcopal
GriK'e Episcopal Church
326 E. Main St .. Pomeroy. R ~:v James
Bernacki. Rev. Kathari n Foster. Sl!nday
School and Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m

Holiness
Community Church
Pas1or· Steve Tomek, Main Streel,
Rutland. Sunduy Worshi p-10:00 a.m..
Sun day Sen'lce-7 p.m.
l&gt;anvllle HollnH~ thun:b
31057 State Route 325, ~mg s vlle, Pasto r:
Gary Jacksun, Sunday «&lt;:hool - Y:JO a.m..
Sunday worship - lO:JO ruu. &amp; 7 p.m..
W~dnc ~dll)" pra yer ~ervice . 'I p.m.
Calury Pilgrim Chapel
Harri ~unvi llc
Road. Pastor: C h:~rle s
M.: Kenz.ic. Sunday School 9:W a.m..
Worsh ip - II a.m., 7:()0 p.m., Wedn esday
Service-7 :00 p.m.
Rose or Sharon Holiness Church
Leadi ng Cree;.: Rd ., Rutland, Pasiur: Re v.
Dewey King. Sundoy f.C"hool- 9:30 a.m ..
Su nday wur~hip · 7 p.m., Wedm..-sduy
prayer meetin g- 7 p.m.

Wor ~ hi p

- 10:30 a.m.. tdO p.m.
W~'tlnc sday Scrvkcs- 6:]0 p.m.

Zion Ch urth or Christ
P01new}'. H ;mi ~o n vil l e Rd . ( R1. 143),
PHSi ilT: Roger Wahnn. Sunday School -·
9: ~0 a.m.. Worship - 10 :~ 0 a.m., 7:00
p. m.. Wedne:o.dny Scrv1 ces - 7 p.m
TUppers Plain ChurTh of Chrl!it
lns rrum~ma l. Worsh ip Sei"vice - 9 a.m ..
Cummuninn - I (I a.m , S und&lt;~y School 10: 15 a.m., Yout h- 5:30pm Sunday, Hible
Study Wcdn c~ day 7 p1n
Bradbury Churt.h of Christ
Mim stt::r: Tvm Runyon, 39558 Bmdbury
Road. Mi ddlefXlr1. Su nday Schoo l · 9:30
a.m.
Worship - 10:30 11.111.
Rutland Chun:h of Christ
Sunda y SdiUul - 9:30 a.m., Wur~ hip ·
10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Bradford Chun:h of Chrl'it
Comer of St. R1. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .,
Minisl c:r: Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
Bi ll Amber~er, Sunday School -9:30a.m,
Worshi p - 8: 00 a.m., 10: 30 a.m.. 7:00
p.m., Wedoc sday Services -7 :00p.m.
Hlc.kory Hills Church of Christ
Evangelist Mik e Moore. Sunda)· School 9 a. m., Worship · 10 a.m., 6:30 p. m.
Wedn~sda y Services - 7 p.m.
Reedsville Church of Christ
Pastor: Philip StUnn. Sunday School : 9:30
a.m .. Worship Ser\lice: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study, Wedne5da)l, 6:30 p.m.
Oexttr Church of Christ
Pastor: Bill Eshelman, Sunday sc.hool9:30
a. m., Norman Will, auperintcndenl,
Sunday wolllhip · I 0:30 a.m.

VIctor)· Baplllt lndependrnl
n~ N. 2nd St. Middlepon, P1mor: Jame1
E. Kee5ee , Wo11ihip - IOa.m.. 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Servi ces · 7 p.m.

Churcb of Chrllt
lntenection 7 and 124 W, Evangeliat:
Dennis Sargc:n"t, Sunday Bible Study 9:30a.m ., Wor5hip : 10:30 a.m. ana 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Catholic
Sacred Hurl Catholic Church
161 Mull"!erry A~e .. Pom eroy. 9 ~2~5K9K.
Pa ~tor: Rev. Waller E. Heinl. Sat. C1m.

~

H~mlock Gro\·e Christian Church
Mini ster: La rry Drow n, Worsh ip . 9:30
a.m.
Stinduy School . 10:30 a.m. , Bible Study 7p.m.

Hillside Baptist Chun::h
Sl. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7, Pastor: Rev.
James R. Acree", Sr., Sunday Unified
Service. Worsbip - 10:30 tl'. m. ." 6 p.m ..
Wednuday Serv1ce5 · 7 p.m.

Second B•pllst Church
Ravcns\l. uod. WV, Sunday School 10 1101Mommg worshi p I I am Evening - 7 pm.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

ltomt Cookf!d Meals &amp; Daily Specials

Church of Christ

212 Main St- P.O. Box 188

Christian Union
Hartford Church of Christ In
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va ., Pastor: David Greer,
Sunday School - 9:3 0 a.m .. Wonh ip 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
ScrVIi:C:S · 7: 00p.m

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Chun::h or God
Mil e Hill Rd ., Racine , Past or: lume s
Sauerfield, Sun.d uy Sch~&gt;l - 9:45 a.m ..
bcnmg . 11 p.m.. Wedne sda~· Services · 7
p.m.
RutiKnd Chun:h of God
Knn Heuth . Sunday Worship - 10
a.m., 6 p.m., W~d n cs da y Service~ - 7
pm.

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
112 mile oil Rt. .\25. PashJr: Re\". O"Ddl
Manley, Sunday School
9:30 a.m..
Worsh ip - 10:30 a.m. , 7JO p.m.,
Wedn csduy Ser\•ke- 7:JO p .m.
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Chun::h
Pt:ilrl St., Middll'"pnrt. Pastm :· Rc,·.
David Gil hen. Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Worship -10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 7:00
p.m .. Wednesda y Ser..-ice - 7 :.~0 p.m.

H)'KII Run Holiness Church
Sunday Sth01..•\ . 9:30 a.m .. Wor~hi p ·
10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.. Thursday Bible St ud y
and Youth - 7 p.m.
Laurtl ClifT Fret Mt:thodist Chun::h
Re v. Les Strandt and My ra L. Strandl.
Sunday School - 9: 30 a .m .. Wor~ hip ·
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.,Wcdnesday Ser\' ice
- 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Tht Chun::h or Jesus
Chrlsl or_Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt . 160. 446·6247 or 446· 74ij6 ,
Su nday School 10:20- 11 a~ .• Relie f
Society/Priesthood II :05- 12:00 noon,
Sacrame nt St::rvice ll- \0 : 15 a.m .,
Homemaking meetin g, l si Thurs.· 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Luthenn Church
Pine Grm·e. Worship · 9:00 a:m ., Sunday
S~.:huo l · 10:00 a.m.
Our Saviour Lulh~ran Chun:h
Walnut and Henry .Sts. , Ravenswood,
W.Va .. Putor: David Russell, Sund11,y
School - 10:00 a.m .. Worship - II a.ni.
St. Paull,.udteran Churth
Comer Sycamore&amp;. Second St.. Pomeroy,
Sunday School - 9:4j a.m.. Won;hip - II
a.m.

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worsh ip - \UO a. m. ( I~~ &amp; 2nd Sun), ,
7:30 p. m. (3rd &amp; 4rh Sun),Wednesd.ay
Service· 7:30p.m
MI. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 beh ind Wilkesv ille , Paslor: Rev.
Ralph Spires. Sunday Sclhool - 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m., Thursday
Services · 7 p.m
Meigs Coopen~tive Parish
Nonhea~l Cluster, Alfred , Pasto r: Jan .::
Beanie, Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m.,
Worship - ll a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chesler
Pa!itor· Jane Beattie, Worship - 9 a.m ..
Sunday School · 10 a. m. , Thursdu y
Service~ - 7 p.m.

1~a ~ 1or :

Joppa
Piistor: Bub Randol ph, Worship - 9:30

Jane Heatlie, Su nday School - 9
a.m , Worship · 10 a.m., Tuesduy Serv1ces
·7:30p.m.

First Chun::h or God
Apple and Second Sts., Pasrur: Rev. Da,•id
Russell , Suntjay School und Worship - 10
a.m.
Ew ning Services- fdO p.m .. Wednesday
Se rvices - 6 :~0 p.m.
~ Chun:h or God of Prophecy
O.J . White Rd. off St . Rt. 160. Pastor: P.J.
Chapman, Su nd ay S~:hool - 10 a.m.,
Worship · II a.m.. Wednesday St::r\'ices 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
l.onK Bottom
Su nda y School · 9:30 a.m.. Worship 10:30 a.m.
Rreds\'illl"
Worship - 9:30 a.m., Sunday S!:"hool 10:]0 a.m.. Fi rsl Su nd11y of Mont h· 7:00
p.m. service

Rutland Chun::h or the Nu.are:nt
Pastor: Rev. Loui s S. Staubs, Sun day
School. 9:30a.m .. Wnrship - 10:30 a.m.,
6:30 p.m., Wednesday Serviceli · 7 p.m

Centr11l CIU!iter
Asbury (Syracuse). Pastor: Bob Robi nson.
Sunday School - 9.45 a .m ., Worsh ip - 1.1
a.m .• Wedne~ay Services· 7:30 p.m.

Porti•nd Fln.1 Chun:h of th~ Naza~ne
Paslor: Willi am Justi~. Su nday School 10:00 a.m.. Morning Worship · 1_0:45 a.m ..
Sunday Service- 6:30 p.m.

Enterp"rist
Pustor: Arland King . Sunda y Sdi(,IUI - 10 '
'a. m.. Worship - 9 a.m.. Bible Stud y Wed.
7:30
FhU"'oodS
Pastor: Keith Rader, Sundu y Sc hool - 10
a.m .. Worsh ip - I I a.m.

Other Churches

i'omt Run
Pas10r: Bob Robinson, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.
Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Rob Brower. Sunday School- Q:30
a.m., Worship - II :00 a.m.
Mlners"llle
Pa stor: Bob Robinson, Sunday School - 9
a.m., Wun;hip - 10 a.m.
Pearl Chapel
Sunda y School - 9 a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.
PomtMy
Pa.'itur: Rod Brower, Worshi p · 9:30a.m.,
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.
Rork Springs
Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday School - 9: 15
a.m .. Worship
10 a.m .. Youth
Fell owship. Sunda y- 6 p.m.

A7

Falrvifw Blbie Church
Letart, W. Va. Rt. I. Pastor; Brian May,

Sunduy School -9:30a.m., Worsh1p - Hill
p.m .• Wednesday Bihle Study - 7:00p.m.
Faith J.'tUowshlp Crusade for Christ
Pastor: Rev Franklin D ick en~. Scrvir.:e:
Friday, 7 p.m.
Calvary Blblt Church
Pomeroy Pike . Co. Rd., Pas1ur: Re\'.
Bl11ckwood. Su nday Schoo l - q:J.O a.m.,
Warsh ip
10:30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m ..
W(..-dne sday Servil·e- 7:JOp.m.

Bethel Wunhip Cenlt'r
Ches ter Schoo l. Pastor: Rob Barber.
A~sistanl Pas1or: Karen Davis, Su nd ay
Worship: 10 am. benrng Worship: 6 pm.
Youlh group 6 pm. WcdncWay Powe r in
Prayer. 3nd Bible .S1udy - 7 pm
Ash Sllfft Church
Ash St., Middlepon- Pllswr: Glenn Rowe.
·Sunday Sl:hool . 9:~ 0 !1.11)., Morn1 ng
Worship " 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 pm , Wedn esda y
Scr ~Kc . 7:01..1 p.m .. Youlh Service- 7:00
p.m.
A(ilape Ure Center
" F.uii ·Gos pel Church".. Pn&lt;owrs Jnh n &amp;
Pall y Wade. fiO] Second Ave . Mn-.rm . 77l."itl\ 7, Ser vice lim e: Sun dav 10 : ~0 a.m .•
Wedn esday 7 pm

Stlven;vlllt Community Church
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell , Sun day Scr,kt::~
- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m., Thu rsduy · 7:00
p.m.

t'11ith Full GO!ipel Cbun:h
Long Bott om. Pa ~tor: S t c~,c RC'rd. Sund11y
Schunl - lJ:JO a.m. Worship - 9:30 a. m.
und 7 p.m.. Wednesday - 7 p.m .. Fridayfe ll ow~tu p ~crv ice 7 p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: Wi lliam K. Marshall , Sun day
School - !0:15a. m., Worship -9: 15a.m.,
' Bib le Study: Monday 7:00 pm
Snowville
Sunday School - 10 a.m.. Worsh ip - 9 a.m .

White'!l Cha,H-1 Wrsley•n
Coolville Road, Pastor: Rev. Phi llip
Ri den()Ur. Sunday School . Y:30 il.m .•
Worship - 10:30 a.m., Wednesday Service
- 7 p.m.

Community of Christ
Port land- Racin e Rd .. Pas1or: Michae l
Duhl, Sunday Sehoul . 9:30a.m., Worship
- !0:30 a.m., Wedne .~d ay Savices - 7:00
p.m.

Abundant Gra~.-e R.F. I.
913-S . Thi rd St.. Mid dle pon. P:~Mor Tl!re ~a
D avi~. Sunday se rvice . Iff a.m.
\Vcdncsd:1y ~cr~ icc, 7 p .m.

Rutland
Su nday ~chool - 9:30 a.m., Worsh ip 10:30 a.m.. Thursday Serv ices · 7 p.m.

Rejoicing Life Church (
500 N 2nd A\·e.. Middleporl. Pastor:
Mike Forem&lt;:~n . Pas10r: Eme.ritu~
l..~wrc n te Foreman. Worshi p· 10·00 11m
Wednesday Ser,·kes , 7 p.m.
Cllrton Tabernacle Chun:h
Cliflnn. W.Va .. Sllnday School · 'Hl a. m..
Wo r~h i p - 7 p.m.. Wednesday Scr\'icc - 7
p.m.

N.rw Life Vietor)· f:enter
· ~773 George~ Cree k Rood. Gallipo lis, OH
Puslm: H1ll Stal~n . S n nda~ Sa\' ICCS • 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m Wednesday · 7 p.m. &amp;
Ynu th 7 p.m
Full Gosptl Church of the Livin g
s.,·ior
Rt.33ft An1i4ui1 y. Pnshw Je.~~c M11rris
Sen· ices: Smurday 2:00 p.t!l
S•l~m

Community Chun.:h
Road . West Cnlumhia. W.Va ..
Pasto r: Clyde Ft:rrcll. Sund:1y Sdlllol 9:30
am. Sunday e\'eni ng ~~rv il"l.' n pm.
Wednesday !lef\"il·e 7 pm
Li~:vm g

The 8die~ers' Felluw!illip 1\tfinistry
New Lime Rd .. Rut\ aml. P u~tor : Rev.
Mar_gar ~t
J. R u b i n ~u n. Scrv i~·cs:
Wctlnc Jtday. 7:30p.m .. ?unday. :!:::10 p.m.

Bethany
Paslor: Oewayne Stutler, Sunday School 10 a.m., Wo rship - 9 a.m.. Wednesday
Sef\'ices- 10 a.m.

Harrisonville' Comm unity Cbun:h
PJ.~ tor : Theron Durham , Scmday - 9.30
a.m. und 7 p.m.. Wednesduy - 7 p. m.

Carmel-Sutton
Ca nn el &amp; Bashan Rd s. Racine . Obio.
Pastor: Dewa yne Stutler, Sunday School ·
9:30a.m., Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.. Bible
Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Middleport Community Chun:h
575 Pearl St., Middle port . Pastor: S11 m
Ander son. Sunda~· School 10 a.m ..
E\ening . 7:30p.m. , Wedne!iday Service7:30p.m.

Morning Star
Pastor: Dewa yne Stutler. Sunday School !I a.m..• Worship · 10 a.m.

Fal1h Valley Tabtmacle Church
Bai ley Run Road , Pa~to r: Re v. Emmett
Raw so n, Sunday Evening 7 p.m.,
Thursda ~Service · 7 p.m.

. Eut Letart
Pastor:· Brian Harkne ss, Suoday School 10 a.m ., Worship - 9 a.m ., Wednesday - 7
p.m.

SyriW:use Ml~lon
1411 Bridgeman St ., SyrKuse . Re\'. Mike
Th nmpMJn,Paslor, Sun day School - 10
11.m, Evening · 6 p.m., Wednesday Sen·ice
-7p.m.

Rachic
Pastor: Brian Harkness. Sunday School LO a.m., Worshi p - 1.1 a.m., Wednesday 7
p.m.

Hobson Christian Fellowship Churc h
Pastor: Her!'"'hel Wh ite. Sunda:-o School10 ~m . Sunday Churd1 .....-n kc • 6:.\0 Jllll
Wednesday 7 pm
Restoration Chri ~ti an ··t·llowshil'
9365 Hooper Road. A. th L· n ~, l'a~ 1 u r:
Lonnie Coats. Sund~:~ y \~Ja r~ hip 10:00 am,
Wednesday: 7 pm
L&amp;ngsville Christian Chun:h
Full Gospel. Pastor: Ro ben Musser.
Sunday Sc hool 9:30 am, . Worship 10:.'\0
am - 7:00 pm, Wednesday Servke 7:00
pm

Pentecostal
Penlecos~ll\.: .;;embly
St. Rt: 124. Racine, P11s1or: Willi nm
Hoback, Sunday Sehoul - 10 11.m ..
Evening- 7 p.m .. Wednesday Services· 7 '
p.m.

Hazel Community Churth
Off Rt. 124, Pastor: Edsel Hart, Su nday
School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m.,
7:30p.m.

Syracuse Fln1 Unlttd Presbyterian
Pas1or: Robert Crow, Worship · I I o.m

Dyttvllle Community Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship \0: 30a.m., 7 p.m.

Harri1on1'1Jle Presbyterian Church
Pas tor: Robert CI'O\Io·. Wnnhip · 9 a.m.

Bethel Chu~h
Township Rd., 468C, Sunday School - 9
a".m, Wonhip - 10 a.m ., Wednnday
Serv ice&amp;- 10 a.m.

Mone Chapel Church
Sunday achool - 10 a.m., Wonhipa.m.. Wedne!day Service- 7 p.m.

Middleport Presbyterian
Pastor: Rober Crow., Worship . 10 a.m.

Hocklnaport Churth
011l.nd Street, Sund~y School - I 0 a.m.,
Wor11ryip - II a.m., Wedneiid.ay Services Sp.m.

Faith Gotptl Church
Long Buttom, Sunday School-9:30a.m ..
Worship · 1"0:45 a.m., 7:30 p.m. ,
Wedn esday 7:30p.m.

Torch Church
Co . Rd . 63. Sunday School - 9:30a.m ..
Worship . I0:30 11.m.

Mt. Olive Community Chun:h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday Schoo_! 9:30a.m., Evening - 6:30p.m., Wedneday
Service- 7 p.m.

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline , Coolville Church,
Main &amp; Fifth St., Sunday School - 10 ....
a.m., Wonhip · 9 a.m .. Tuelday Services ·
7 p.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Chun::h ol' lh~ Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Midca p. Sunda~· School 9:30a.m .. Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.,
Wtdnesda y Services - 7 p.m., Past or:
Allen Midcap
Rttdsville Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene. Pas1or: Teresa
Waldec k. Su nda y School · 9:30 a.m ..
Worsh ip - 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m .. Wednesday
Services- 7 p.m.

n.m. ·
S~racuM'

Pastor: Rt-\'. Hcrben Gratt . Sunday S ~;h ool
,- 9:30a.m .. Worship - II a.m., 6 p.n1.,
.Wednesda y Services- 7 p m

Pa~olor :

7~

Rutland 1-' rtt Will B•plist
Salem St.. Pttsto r: Rev. Puul Tayltlr,
Sunday Schr.K&gt;l - \0 a.m., E~en. i ng · 7
p.m .. Wednc.';l.hty Sa\' il'C~ - 7 p.m.

S}' tMCUst' Church or tht' Nazarene
Pastor Mtke Adk ins. Sunday SchtXll - 9:30
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Servkes- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Ch urch oftht NBzarent
Jun La\· cnd~ r. Sunday School' ·
9:30 u.m .. Worshi p - 1 0:~0 ll.m. and 6
p. m., Wedn es~ay Servicek 7 p.m.
Pa~ tur :

II

Full Gospt:l LigblhouM:
33045 Hiland Road, Pome roy, Paswr: Roy
Hunter. Sunday School - 10 a.m., Eveni ng
7:30 p.m., Tuesday &amp; Thursda )' - 7:30
p.m.•
South Bethel Community Church
Sil ver Ridge- Pasto r Linda DamewoOO,
Sunday School - 9 a.m.. Worship Ser\'ice
tO a.m .
Carlelon lnterdenominalional Church
Kingshury Road, Paslur: Rubcr.t Vance,
Sun day. Sc hool - 9:30 a. m.. Worship
Service 10 :.~0 a.m .. E~eni n g Service 6p.m.
Freedom Gospel 1\Jiuion
Bald Kno h. on Co. Rd. 31. Pas10r: Rev.
R og~:: r Willford, Sunday Schc".11 - 9:30 a. m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian

Seventh-Day Adventist
Snrnth-Day A"dvrntlst
Mulberry Hts. Rd ., Pome ro)l, Paslor: Ruy '
Lawin~lr:y, Saturday Services: Sahbal h
School- 2 p.m., Worshi p- 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hermonllnlted B~thren
in Christ Church
Teus Communi !}' ~64 1 1 Wickham Rd, ·•
Pastor: Roben Sonders. Sunday School - ::
9:30 11.m., Worship - 10:30 &lt;1.n1.. 7:00 ·
p.m .. Wednesda y Services - 7:00 p.m.
Eden Uniled Brethren In Christ
State Route -124. Recds,·ille, Pa s t o r~ Rev.
Bill Du1 y. Sunday Schoo l - 11 a.m.. .:
Sunday Worship · 10:00 a. m. &amp; 7:00p.m. ::
Wedne s da~· Servkes
7:00 p.m..
Wednesday Youth Sel'~· i~'c · 7:00p.m.

Che!iter Church of the Nuarene

'

Rutland. OH 45775

740-742-2333
Our Carini! Wa~s HelP families
"So I strive always 10
keep my conscience clear
before God and man."

"IJU"'t (If

~! ........ .;....1 .. , (, · ro~ .a..~, It' !otto• $.)'. «t
..... ~"'lnu. t.~.,. ~ ....... ,. r- c nc.-&lt;10:'r.. ("Jut~-••

Coy's VCR Repair

Ca ll : Judy, Brandi, or Jane Ann

Open 7 days a week

Hills Self Storage

Pomero}' ··irst B11ptist
Bro.-k~rt. J:,h t Mam St. .
Su nday s~· h\•o l · \J : ~O a.m.. Wo r~h1p .
ICUO u.m.
Pa~ rnr Jpn

A ntiqult)' B11ptlst
Sunduy School · 9.30 a.m .. Worshi p • 10:45 a. m.. Sunday E'&gt;ening · 6:00 p.ht.,
Pastor: Mark M ~Coma~

992-3985 !Pomeroy) 594-0660 (At hens)

"A Home Bank for
Home People "

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

bt fHtl Mllrt

tl"rlo"' II &lt;&gt;trY da~ &lt;olld lttlllkt
tht n~&gt;~ oa1
11 .... _. ••
~""" · \\ • rnd to 1-.bo• l :! .. , -o

I;1HJ

l':fl.1

lffiM1'1:t fn:Hlt

yo u p ay your ncxl hdme o r
autO prcmiurn. check oul rates!

Before

740-949-221 0

hi

tiiiiC'

t 22 E. Main St. Pomeroy. OH 45769

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

(800) 434-4194

Baptist
llope Baptist Churrh (Southern )
~70 Grant St. , Midt.llt!IXtrl, P a~tor : ReY.
D:1vid Bryan. Sunday ~choo l . &lt;}:30 a m..
Wnr~ hip - II il.lll . a11d 6 p.m., Wcdnc OOr~y
Servit·e - 7 p.m.
Rutland •"il'!lt Baptist fhun::h
Sunday Schotll · 1) :~ 0 a.m .. w, mhi p .
10:45 ~ . ur.

.o1
l\1t . Moriah Baptist
Founh &amp; Main St .. Middlepon. Pastor:
Rev. Qil hcrt Craig, Jr.. Su nd ay School 9 : ~ 0 a.m.. W11 rshlp · 10:45 :uri .

WILLIAMS &amp; ASSOC.
INSURANCE

Wtmt1 1-"nnrdf.\

209 Third
Racine, OH

Libt&gt;rty Assemhl}' of God
P.O . .Rm; 467. Du dding Lane, Mason.
W.Va ., Pa~ t~ r: Nei l Tctlnant . Sunday
Savices- Ill IX.l ;1. 111. am.l 7 p.m.

Forni Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hun , Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship · 11 a.m.

.----·-···- ·-·~---··-·-···- ----··

Young's Carpenter Serulce

Assembly of God

Faith B11ptlst Chun:h
Rai lroad S!.. Maion. Sunday School - I0
a.m., Worship
II a:m., 6 p.m,
Wednesday Scrvicu · 7 p.m.

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
EWING FUNERAL HOME
106 Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy. OH
740-992-2121
Fax 740-992·2122
Ben H. Ewing ·

Emmanuel Apostolk Tabt'rn8('"1 e Inc.
Loop Rd off 'Jew L1ma Rd. Rutland.
Se~il·cs : Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:::1 0 p.m ,
Thurs. 7:00p.m., Pasto r Many R. Hunor1

Wedne sd ay Scni.:e~-

4:4."i·5: 15p.m.. Ma ss· ~ :30 p.m .. Su n.
Con. -M:4.5 -9: 15 ll.m.,. Su!J . Mass ~ 9:30
a.m.. Dailey Mas~ - 8:30a.m.
I

~orri ~

.

Old Bethel Free WIU Baptist Churi h
2!160 1 St. Rt . 7, Middleport. Sunday ·
School - 10 a. m.. Eveni ng - 7:00 p.m.,
Thursda y Servicei · 7:00

"The wages of sin is dealh'" Romans 6:1

r

.

Bethlehem Baplist Chun::h
Oreu\ Bend, Ruut e 12 4, R11l:ine , OH,
P"stor ; Dani~l M~ cea , Sunday School 9:30a.m., Sun day Wonhip · 10:30 a.m .,
Wednesday Bible Study - 6:00 p.m.

2. There ;, a payment fnrsin

r

p.m.

a.m., Eve nin_!! - (dO
Wednesday Serv ices- 6: .IDp.m

God"·Romans 3:23

r

Ccmer. HI.' S. ]rd
Aw .. Midd lepon . Kevm K\ •n~ lc, P:.~ s tur.
Sunday. 11 11 .111. an d fl :\10 run.
Wednesday. HIO p m.: Youth Fn. 7:30

9 : 4 .~

"For all have sinned and come s hort of the glory of

Provided-For More Info-Call

RinrVallt' ~'
Apo~ t olic Wl'l~hip

Mt. Union Blilptisl

I .AI/ l.ave !inned

Nurser

Chun::h or J l'!l u!i Christ Apostolic
VunZandl and Ward Kd .. Pastllr: Jam e~
M11l er. Sunday School
lfHU a.m.
Evening · 7:30 p.m

Pastor : Dav id Wiseman . Sunday Schonl-

Salvation-God's Way

]dmes E. Keesee
Pdstor-Founder-1977

Apostolfc

,Wcdnesd a)'

Sunday SchoollO:AM·Morning Worship ll:AM
Sunday Evening 7:PM Wednesday-Bible Study 7:PM
Youth Classes· Wednesday 7:PM
Fundamental-lndependant·KJV

·

F~llowship

Sllvtr Run Baptlsl
Pastor· John Swan~n n . Sunday Sehoul IOa.m.. Worship - ll a.m.. 7:00 p.m.

~

"WE INVITE YOU"

Sentinel •

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Racine 1-"il'flil. Baptist
Pastor: Rick Ru le. Sunday St·hool - 9:30
a.m . Worship · 10.40 a.m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wed nesday Sen ices- 7:CXl p.m.

525 North Second Avenue
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Fulte and others around the
country
persuaded
the
Catholic Diocese of Peoria
last year to petition for
Sheen's sainthood, and under
Vatican rules , one miracle
must be proven for beatification and a second for sainthood ..
It's a mission that supporters believe is divinely
inspired.
"You use saints as examples
of how you can Iive a life of
Christ," Peoria Bishop Daniel
Jenky said. "What a gift it
would be for our diocese."

r

· Others have said the words
mean citizenship exerts claims
that stand apan from religious
responsibilities, or that religion
and politics should be kept
separate, or even that Jesus fo~­
bids tiny kind of civil disobedience. including protests
against governments that are
unjust.
·
Ball contends that such
sweeping political interpretations are mistaken and result
from modem readers · frequent
tendency to ignore the second
half of the saying. If that's all
that Jesus meant. Ball contends, he would simply have
talked about rendering to
Caesar without the punch line
about God.
Jesus cleverly evades hi s
opponents' trap and shifts the
focus toward what people
should "render" to God.
To Ball , the key due comes
when Jesus relers to the image
of Caesar on the coin and asks
onlookers "whose likeness and
insc•iption is this?"
Here Jesu s was practicing a
classic fom1 of byplay among
first-century rabbis known as
forensic interrogation, .answering a question with a counterquestion. Typically the challenge would include a specific
reference to the Hebrew
Scriptures.

guilty of civil disobedience or
even revolt against Rome,
which is a criminal offense,
Ball explains.
But if he says yes, thai
expresses unpopular submi ssion to forei gn domination.
Also Jews might implicate
Jesus in the sin of idolatry,
because Rome's emperor is
worshipped -as di vine . That
violates the tirst commandment, "You shal l have no other
gods before me."
The problem is exemplified
by the silver denarius, the most
common coin then in use. It is
probably what Jesus asks
someone to give him as the
incident continues.
In Jesus' day a denarius
showed the profile of the
Emperor Tiberi us with a Latin
legend meaning "Tiberius
Caesar, son of the Di vine
Augumts." So this token of
idolatry was found in the pockets of most Jews.
Atier a question-and-answer
session about the coin, Jesus
utters the famous "render" say:

The

Ftiday, April 25, 2003

Victory Baptist Churclt

takes on sainthood
Church brief Diocese
EL PASO, Ill . (AP) is a miracle
1

OSTUNG

Associated Press

Ron
Branch

Karen f'ulte sits amid a room
full of photos, books and other
items related to Archbishop
Fulton J. Sheen, a pioneer of
television who made the
nation his pulpit.
Byt collecting memorabilia
is not her goaL
She is looking for stories
about the experiences of people whose lives were deeply
int1uenced by the late Roman
Catholic teacher - provable
testimonials tinged . rith
eno ugh divine influence to
persuade the church to name
Sheen a saint What she needs

· ·I

Jesus' famous 'render to Caesar'
no simple tax-time commandment

"Hey, Ron!"
rifi ced and ri sen life.
A gentle voice called to me
The que stion occurs to me
from down in the hallway.
if God is not often righteously
The person was evidently not
indignant with those who find
familiar where my study is
it so inconvenient to rememlocated in our church.
ber His Son. Should we not
"Down here," I replied as I
reciprocate the love of God
rose from my desk to go to the
for
us by remembering His
door.
·
Son?
Once in the hallway, I reclt prevail s upon us to
GUEST VIEW
ognized the visitor to be Pam
remember that remembering
Thompson, the lady I refer to
as the world famous librarian. having my son remembered, requires active participation.
d
She had in her hands a potted why should not the same be If worship, commitment, an
flower, which she handed to true for God concerning His faithfulness are drags to your
me as she entered the study. ·Son, Jesus Christ'J
life, then you have a serious
· "Every Easter in our
Says
the
Scripture, spiritual shortage. which
church, we place !lowers in "Remember that Jesus Christ needs to be addressed postmemory of fa mil~ and of the seed of David was haste.
friends. This flower ts from rai sed from the dead."" We are
The last time I saw Eran
our son. Steve. ' who pl aced· it ca lled to · remember that alive was as I walked with
in memory of your son, Eran. Christ died on the Cross for him out to the car. As he startSteve wanted Terry and you us, and that He was raised ed down the driveway, he
to have it."
from the dead to plow out of called out, "Bye, Pap! I'll see
The· flower is a Grape the way any sporitual hin,
Hyacinth. The blooms are drance to salvation and fel- you tomorrow.
When Eran died, he got to a
blue-bodied, white-tipped, lowship with God. "If 1 live,
and bell-shaped, dangling vou shall live al so," Jesus tomorrow that I have not gotfrom draping stems. Long, said. It is, therefore, good to ten to just yet. But, I remember his words with the same
light-green leaves intensify have Him remembered.
the impact of the hyacinth 's ·But , there is something that anticipation today as I had
presence. The pot is wrapped garners emphasis concerning . then .
m bright, gold-colored paper. it: " Remember" refers to "an
I will most definitely see
One thing I have noted unassisted recalling" which" my boy tomorrow, but it is
about grief is how comforting really gets the wind flying in good to remember most the
it is to have Eran remem- our face .
One who makes that tomorbered. There is something in
What is being suggested row so definite.
my soul that does not want strongly to · us is that we • More than ever before do I
my boy to be forgotten, not should not need any prompt- rejoice in remembering the
from the standpoint of perpet- mg t? remember the Lord. Lord Jesus Christ. It is just
ual pity, but because of the God ts not concerned about impossible to · describe how
extreme value of his life to our rememben~g Hts Son
eaningful it is today until I
my family and me .
from the standpomt of tempo- m
1
.
That is why I am so grateful raJ pity and mental acqmes- get to that tomorrow.
on
Steve
~ompsonyou
dod
cence
often
displayed
only
to Steve Thompson for choos- .
ing to remember Eran at spec ial occasions like the a good thmg for the Branch
family.
Easter in his church. It has Easter season, for ~xample .
Rather, it is good to have
(Ron Branch is the pastor at
become my special blessing
Him remembered because of Faith Baptist Church in
from the Lord for this day.
But, if there is meaning to the extreme value of His sac- Mason, W Va .)

CARPENTER
Proclaim will be in concert
at 6:30 p.m . on Sunday,
April 27, at the Mt. Union
Church
near
Baptist
Carpenter. Pastor David
Wiseman invites the public
to attend. For more infor'
mation contact the pastor at
(740) 742-2568.

PageA6

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God and man ."
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�The Daily Sentinel

Nation • World ·

Racing toward finish

Page AS .
Friday, April 25, 2003

Federal judge approves
$20 million settlement
for garment workers
BY DAVID BRISCOE

Associated Press

Bike racers take a sharp turri as they ride through downtown Warm Springs. Ga., Thursday on
their way to Columbus during stage 2 of the Tour de Georgia~ (AP)
-

Motorcyclists rumble to into
resort ·town amid tight security
BY KEN RITTER

Associated Press
LAUGHLIN, Nev.
Middle-aged motorcyclists
rumbled into thi s Colorado
River gambling town, most
not expecting a repeat of the
deadly biker gang violence
that marred the annual
Laughlin River Run a year
ago.
"I think that was a fluke
thing," said Jim Earls, a portrait photographer from
Tucson, Ariz., who idled on
his Harley-Davidson in traffic
on U.S. 95, the two-lane highway that leads into Laughlin.
"Violence isn't. what this
event is all about," said Earls,
who doesn't belong to a
motorcycle club. "The average age is about my age, 46.
I've been here fl ve years, and
I've never even seen a fight."
Earls said he and some
friends checked out of
Harrah's Laughlin hotel last
year about · an hour before
Hell's Angels and Mongols
motorcycle gang members
brawled inside the casino
using guns, knives, clubs and

wrenches.
Two Hell 's Angels and one
Mongols member died, and at
least 12 people were injurecl.
Another Hell's Angels member was later shot to death on
a highway in California that
leads to Laughlin.
This year, Las Vegas police.
who cover Laughlin 100
miles to the south, have
assigned 500 uniformed and
undercover officers to the
event, up from 145 last year.
Bullhead City, Ariz., a city
of 42,000 across the river,
granted its mayor emergency
powers in case of problems.
The nine major hotel-casinos in Laughlin banned bikers
from wearing gang and club
insignia inside, and police
promised checkpoints on the
roads - although none were
visible Thursday. .The event
ends Sunday.
"Friday is the day the rally
really starts coming in," said
Sgt. Rick Barela. a police
spokesman.
Event organizers expect
80,000 motorcycle-riding visitors to deliver a $25 million
economic benefit to thi s town·
of 8,000 residents and about

I I,000 hotel rooms.
But the security has spurred
a backlash, including an
announced boycott by members
of the
Arizona
Confederation of Motorcycle
Clubs, who said they were
hosting an anti-Laughlin rally
in Phoenix.
Andre. Carrier, an executive
at the Golden Nugget hotelcasino and chairman of 21st
annual Laughlin River Run.
called the boycott "unfortunate."
·
"It lacks scope of the 20.year tradition of thi s event,"
said Carrier. who said hotels
were not ,reporting canceled
reservations "other than what
we see for any normal event."
Richard Perna, 60, a retired ·
Boston police sergeant who
has lived in Laughlin for a
decade, said he welcomed the
motorcyclists.
"The significance for this
town is the money,'.' Perna
said. "It doesn 't bother me,
but some people don't like the
noi se and the bikers who
think they· own the roads.
They also screw up the parking."

HONOLULU - The federal court on the
Pacific island of Saipan ha~ approved a $20 million settlement that lawyers for garment workers say could lead to better working conditions
at factories around the world that make clothes
for sale in America.
"The day has arrived when workers' rights
will be truly protected," said Michael Rubin, a
lead attorney for the laborers in the U.S.
Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas.
On Thursday, U.S. District Judge Alex R.
Munson on Saipan. about 3,800 miles southwest of Honolulu, formally alproved the settlement first reached in a fedem racketeering lawsuit late last year.
·
The settlement will give compensation and
back pay to 30,000 workers and set up an independent monitoring system to regulate wages,
overtime pay, working conditions and living
conditions at factory barracks.
All but one of the 55 retailers and manufacturers involved in the Saipan garment industry
signed the settlement. Lone holdout Levi
Strauss &amp; Co. says it stopped buying garments
from Saipan factories in 2000.
The retailers in the agreement include Target

Corp., Gap Inc., J.C. Penney Co .. Abercrombie
&amp; Fitch and 22 others. The settlement does not
include an admission of wrongdoing by any of
the defendants.
Calls to some of the manufacturers were not
returned late Thursday, but a Gap spokeswoman
said earlier that th.e company was pleased to
help develop the monitoring program, which
has its full support.
An executive of Target, James Hale, has said
the retailer has its own monitoring program and
does \lOt admit to any oCthe "egregious violations that were alleged" in the lawsyit.
The settlement assures consumers who buy
clothing labeled "Made in the U.S.A." . that
workers who sew the clothes on Saipan are protected by American law, Rubin said in a telephone interview from Los Angeles.
The suit was flied as a class action on behalf
of garment workers from Bangladesh, China,
the• Pliilippines, Thailand and Vietnam. who
alleged they worked 12-hour days in unsafe
conditions. Most of the workers are Chinese
women.
Rubin said the monitoring system and a code
of conduct agreed upon by the factories goes
into effect in 60 days.
He said most of the attorney's fees in the case .
were waived by the plaintiff's law firms.

Grand jury indicts lone undercover
agent in controversial Texas drug sting
Bv BETSY BLANEY
A~s_s_o_ci_at_e_d_P_re_s_s_·_ _ _ _

TULIA, Texas -The former sheriff's deputy whose
sole testimony led to drug
charges against 46 people
now faces charges himself but not stemming from his
recently discredited 1999
drug stings.
A Swisher County grand
jury Thursday indicted Tom
Coleman, 43, on three counts
of aggravated perjury for

allegedly lying on the witness stand during evidentiary
hearings· involving the busts
last month.
Prosecutors said too much
time .had passed to charge
Coleman with lying in any of
the actual drug cases that bitterly divided this Panhandle
town of 5,000 residents.
Some complained the arrests
were racially motivated,
Coleman had claimed he
bought drugs from the defendants during an IS-month
investigation in which he

worked alone and used no
audio or video surveillance.
Earlier this month, a judge
recommended throwing out
the convictions against 38
mostly black defendants. The
case has led to investigations
by the Justice Department
and Texas attorney general.
The charges accuse him of
lying under oath about what
he knew about a theft charge
he faced in Cochran County,
where he worked as a sheriff's deputy before arriving
in Tulia.

·

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

Board considers auto emmissions
BY BRI•N MEUEY

Associated Press
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
- State air regulators have
weakened the nation's
toughest auto emissions regulations. favoring cleaner
cars over pollution-free
vehicles that automakers
have failed to mass produce.
California
Air
The
Resources Board voted 8'3
Thursday to cafl for large
·numbers of cleaner gasburning vehicles, thousands
of gas-electric hybrids and
250 hydrogen fuel cell vehicles in the next five years.
The old rules, which
effectively ·
required
automakers to prod11ce battery-powered electric cars,
was put on hold last year by
a federal court. It would
have required 10 percent of
~ars for sale this year about I 00,000 - be nonpolluting.
While the battery-electric
ve hicle showed promi se
when the first rule was
passed 13 years ago, the
board's latest vote officially
endorses the fuel cell to
power the nonpolluting car
of tomorrow.
Alan Lloyd, chairman of
the· resources board, defended the changc:s and said the
board was not retreating
from the original zero-emission objective in the
nation's smoggiest state.
" It 's not backsliding.
We ' re getting vehicles out
there in greater numbers
th at we anticipate being
closer to zero," Lloyd said.
"ln fact, we're probably get ting clean air faster."
The three board members
who voted against the
revised regulation said they
were skeptical of automakers after earlier failed
promises. They also sai d the
quota of 250 fuel cell vehicles by 2008 was too low.

66

"From Baja California to the
Gov. Gray Davis gives a thumbs up as he is given a ride past
the state Capitol in a hydrogen fuel-cell electric car, in
'sacramento, Calif., Tuesday. Davis took the ride as part of the
Earth Day demonstration of alternative powered vehicles
under development by the California Fuel Cell Project. (AP)
The regulations also allow
automakers to bypass the
fuel cell requirement for
five years throu~h a combination of offenng electric
cars. low-polluting vehicles
such as hybrids that run on
gasoline and electricity, and
credits for previously built
clean cars.
There also was concern
with a provision that allows
carmakers to meet the goal
by putting cars on roads in
New
York
and
Massachusetts, which have
adopted similar regulation s.
"I think it 's a bait-andswi tch strategy,",said board
member Dorene D' Adamo.
"I hope I'm wrong.''
The White Hou se has
pledged funds for fuel ce ll
development and automakers have embraced the tech nology that runs on electricity from a chemical reaction
between oxygen and hydrogen and only emits clean
water from the tailpipe.
Still. it 's not clear the
technology will ever be
competi tive in the auto mar-.
ketplace and there 's uncertainty whether hyd rogen
fueling stations will be

built . ·
_
Automakers, who produced electric cars in small
numbers , took a neutral
stance when the new regulations were di sc ussed at a
public hearing last month.
They favored it over past
versions, but generally
oppose regulation ·of any
kind and say they want ·market forces and competition
to drive
technological
changes.
.
Environmentalists who
have criticized re gulatory
rollbacks over the years had
mixed reaction to the
changes.
Rol and Hwan g, of the
Natural Resources Defen se
Council , said the additional
quota numbers . were a step
in the. right direction, but
said success will be determined by whether autom'akers embrace the changes and'
work with regulators.
Sandra Spelliscy, general
counsel of the Planning and
Conservation League, was
le ss optimistic.
"It 's .hard to categorize it
as anythin g but a huge win
for
the
automakers."
Spelliscy said.

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Friday, April 25, 2003

Two·olympic bid _
executives 'did'
break rules
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)
- Two Olympic bid executives accused of bribery
"c learly broke the rules,'' but
whether their conduct was
criminal remains questionable, Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt
said.
He added that the executives may have believed there
was an "i mplicit understanding" the¥ had to do whatever
it took to bring the 2002
Winter Games to Salt Lake .
But Leavitt said there was no
such understanding .
The governor was a member of a committee organized
·to bring the Olympics to
Utah. The committee, which
included Utah 's most prominent politicians and business
leaders, hired Tom Welch and
deputy Dave Johnson to carry
outthat task.
Prosecutors say Welch and
Jotmson deceived the board
by cooking the books and
drafting bogus contracts and
invoices to channel money to
. International ·
Olympic
Committee delegates who
awarded Salt Lake the 2002
games.
A federal appeals court on
Tuesday reinstated 15 felony
charges against the two men
that had been thrown out by a
federal judge in Utah.

-.Prep softball

.

ScoTT \NoLFE
Sports corrE1spondent
BY

-'------

WELLSTON - The now
,fourth ranked Eastern Lady.
Eagles entered their matchup against: Wellston with a
10- 1 overall record and 7- I
in the Tri -Valley Conference.
Eastern boosted those two
marks by grounding the Lady
Rockets a 13-0 loss at
American Legion Park in
Wellston on a one-hitter by

Krista White.
The loss drops Well ston's
record to 3-10 overall and 26 in the TV C.
Eastern's Krista White
started and worked five
innings, she averaged one
strikeout per inning and
allowing just one hit. Her
counterpart on the . mound;
Abby Thomas, held the
potent Eastern offense to
four runs on five hits before
giving way to Kay Ia Crace in

the fifth.
Eastern of Coach Pam
Douthitt, who lost its first
game earlier, this week
vowt;d to build l!pon the loss
and begin a new winning
streak in the latter part of the
season. Eastern has proven
to be the team to beat, both in
the Tri-Valley Conference
and Otltside the conference.
The Lady Ea~les tagged
Thomas for a pair of runs in
the top of the first and never

•

looked back. Eastern posted
single runs in the third and
fourth frames before e~p tod ­
ing for seven the fifth, in all
probability putting the game
out of reach.
. In the first inning Casey
Smith reached on an error,
and slole seco nd and third
and Jenny Armes walked. A
sacrifice by White brought
home one run and an RBI
single by Lodwick brought
home another, the score .2-0.

A Becky Taylor RBI single
scored the run in the third.
A run in the sixth and seventh · by the Lady oEagles
rounded out the scoring.
Well ston 's only hit was by
Hilary Patrick . She hit a oneout double in the home· half
of the fourth.
Eastern hitters were Casey
Smith with two singles,
Jenny Armes a single, Krista

. Please see Eastern, 81

Bengals ink
Palmer before
draft day
JoE KAY
Associated Press

BY

. CHICAGO (AP) - A 21year-old man was charged
with misdemeanor reckless
conduct for allegedly throwing a cel.l phonfi! onto Wrigley
Field during a Chicago Cubs
game.
Julio Alvarado, who was at
the game with a friend ,
became annoyed with his
companion's cell phone and
threw it in the direction of
third base at the bottom of the
eighth inning, Chicago Police
spokeswoman Ofticer Alice
Casanova said.
Alvarado, of Chicago, tolo
police he didn't intend to hit
anyone, Casanova said.
But San Diego Padres third
basemen Sean Burroughs
said the phone hit him in the
right foot.

INDIANAPOLIS CAP) A day·after a spectacular crash
Sent his race car somersaulting at more than 200 mph,
Mario Andretti decided he ,
will not attempt to qualify for
the Indianapolis 500 after all.
The 63-year-old Andretti,
who last cjrove an Indy car in
1994, crashed Wednesday
while testing a car for injured
driver
Tony
Kanaan.
Andre ttl's son, Michael, is a
co-owner ·of the new Andretti
Green Racing team .
· Other than a scratch on his
chin and a bump on his heel ,
the elder Andretti was not
hurt, and within 20 minutes of
the crash was back in the
~arage area saying he still
tntended to practice and if
necessary qualify Kanaan's
~ar for the race May 25.

.

Lady Eagles pound Wellston, beat Waterford

Fan charged for
throwing cell
phone

Andretti will not
enter Indy 500

They'll think you're a perfect angel for put-

.

Page 81

. CHICAGO (AP) - Fans
with upper-deck seats at
Chicago White .Sox home
games won 't be allowed into
other Levels of the ballpark
unless they have season tickets.
·
The change was made after
the team conducted an internal review of security and
crowd management at U.S.
Cellular Field. The review
was partly . prompted by an
attack on an umpire during a
game last week, White Sox
spokesman Scott Reifert said.
Eric Dybas, 24, ran onto
the field on April 15 and
grabbed umpire Laz Diaz
around the legs during a
game between. the White Sox
and Kan sas City Royal s.
FIGURE SKATING

2002 I'vlo11ey• magazin e...

The Daily Sentinel

Reds win, Page 82
OVP track honor roll, Page B3
Major League Baseball, Page 84

Chicago tightens
security at
baseball games

Give Your Golfer
One of Eight Perfect Place~t
for That Perfect HoliJay
ovemb~r.

Inside:·

'

Southern California quarterback Carson Palmer passes during the first half against Arizona
State, in tl'iiS file photo. Heisman Trophy winner Carson Palmer agreed to a contract Thursday,
with the Cincinnati Bengats, who have the draft's top pick and a history of ruinmg young qua ~­
terbacks. (,~p file)

CINCINNATI - Carson Palmer has signed on for the
Cincinnati Bengals' reconstruction.
The Heisman Trophy winner agreed to a contract
Thursday with the NFL's worst team, which has the draft's
top pick and a history of ruining young
quarterbacks.
Intrigued by the way first-year head
coach Marvin Lewis has changed the aura
around the NFL's worst team, Palmer
decided to sign on. ,...
·
"I'm proud to be part ofa new era of
· Bengals football," he said at a news con- ·
ference, shonly aft~r he signed a seven- •
year deal. ''I've been following them for
the past couple of months and seen the
chan~es he's made. I'm excited to be part
Palmer
.
of this thing."
The Bengals narrowed their candidates
for the No. I pick to Palmer, quarterback Byron Leftwich
and cornerback Terence Newman, then targeted the passet
from Southern California this week.
Palmer's agent, David Dunn, agreed on contract parame- .
ters late Wednesday, and filled in the rest of the details
Thursday on a contract that includes $14 million in bonuses.
. Palmer got a $10.01 million signing bonus, and will get
another $4.0 I million roster bonus in 22 months . The contract will turn into a six-year deal if he's in for 35 percent
of the plays in any season. .
Palmer can make roughly $40 million in bonuses and
base salary over six years, with escalators that could take it
to $49 million. He'll get $18,25 million in the first three
years through bonuses and salary.
Getting a pre-draft deal with Palmer was a priority for
Lewis, who is trying to change the Bengals' reputation for
bungling away chances to improve through the draft.
The Bengals have been the NFL's worst team over the
past 12 years, in part because they've mishandled their
quanerbacks. They moved up to take David Klingler with
the sixth overall pick in 1992. and chose Akili Smith with

Please see Palmer. 83

Report: Marshall Loss·of linebackers··
1o c:ut men's
opens.door for others
track programs
~

BY RusTY MILLER

Associated Press

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)-- Marshall University
plans to elliminate two men's athletics teams as part of
COLUMBUS - With All-American Matt
Wilhelm and Cie Grant gone, many say
budget cuts. The Charle ston Daily Mail reported
defending national champion Ohio State has a
Thursday.
mammoth hole in the middle of its defense.
The newspaper, citing sources it
. Even the guys who are left to till their cleats
did not name, said the men's indoor
are saying the same thing.
and 'outdoor track teams would be
"You can't replace them." said linebacker
dropped. The men 's outdoor track
A.J. Hawk, listed as the No. I player at Grant's
team has 26 athletes.
spot. "A guy like Matt, he's so smart he pretty
Track coach Jeff Small told his
much ran the whole defense. And Cie Grant,
team during a closed-door meeting·
no one can run around and make plays like
that his program was being eliminathim. We're just trying to do with what we've
ed, WSAZ-,T~ in Charleston reported Thursday ntght.
· · got."
What the Buckeyes have is still formidable.
"There's not mtich you can do ....
Heading
into Saturda~ 's spring game at Ohio
When they say it's over, it's over,"
•
StadiUm,
Hawk and fellow sophomore Mike
track team member Brent Garrett
D'Andrea,
transfer Anthony Schlegel and
told the television statio.n. We st Virginia University "has
senior
holdovers
Fred Pagac Jr. and Jason
got a bigger program, and they ' re not going to keep
Bond have been solid during Ohio State's
theirs."
'workouts.
Marshall President Dan Angel declined Thursday to
Robert Reynolds is a lock to start at the third
confirm the cuts. He told The As sociated Pre ss the unilinebacker
slot. It 's the other two positions that
versity wi II make an announcement on its sports proare
up
for
grabs.
grams after Athletic Director Bob Marcum returns to
Hawk and D·Andrea were acclaimed recruitHuntin~ton from a conference.
ing successes out of Centerville and Avon
" It's tn ti'Je process of being finalized," Angel said.
Lake, respectively. Schlegel, who won letters
Marcum did noi immediately return a telephone mest!Je
last two years at Air Force, must sit out·this
sage Thursday.
.
!all. Pagac stgned on board when h1s lather was
The track programs last won. a .conference champi,
the defensive coordinator and stuck around
onship in 1992, when Marshall took the Southern
after
coach Jim Tressel's regime came to town ·
Conference outdoor title. The last indoor team title was
three years ago. Bond has been used sparftlgly
in the Soui:hern Conference in 1987.
each of the last three seasons.
Dropping indoor and outd,oor track, which are consid"When you lose two linebackers like we lost
ered separate sports, would reduce the number of men 's
... it 'll be fun to watch those (new) guys,''
teams at Marshall to six. The university has 10 women's
Tressel said. "We lost some very productive
teams; the women's golf and sw imming teanis were
guys.''
,
added for t he current school year.
Every one of the linebackers - including
Schlegel who can't see action until the 2004
Please - ~rsh•ll. 83

..

season - wants to
make a good impression.
"Right now we.'re
a little young, so a
lot of people are
going to go in there
during the spring
game telling themselves they have to
prove themselves, that they have to make a big
play or something," D'Andrea said.
That's particularly true forD' Andrea, one of
the jewels of last year's recruiting class. It took
him a l()ng time to grasp the nuances of Ohio
State's defensive set. As a result, he played
only 31 minutes -roughly a third of Hawk's
playing time .
··
The 6-foot-3, 240-pound D'Andrea is trying
to take 11 a step at a tune.
•
"I'm trying to study and watch everybody
every day. I'm trying to improve every day," he
said. "I need to know what every single person
is doing on every single play, knowing the ·
defense inside out so I can get myself to a point
where. I don't h~ve to think at all. I can just
react.'
Despite the national championship rings on
their fingers, Hawk said there is little chance
for overconfidence. The Buckeyes' defenders
are well aware they are without four of their
top five tacklers.
"Maybe something that this spring has done
is humbled ns a little bit," Hawk said. "We lost
a lot of great players on our defense. We're trying to replace them. This spring really helped .
us out in letting us know what we have to learn
on coming into the fall camp."
Tressel said he's not as concerned with fmding starters as he is with finding manire emotional leaders at the five vacated positions on
defense.

�. Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

OVP Track ·Honor Roll

•

Associated Press

CINCINNATI- Kevin Brown struck out
I _1 in seven dominating innings Thursday
mght, but Reggie Taylor's RBI single in the
II th gave the Cincinnati Reds a 3-2 victory
over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
The Reds have won consecutive games for
only the second time this season, taking
advantage of a struggling offense that managed only four runs in the three-g~Jme series.
Brown, who had back surgery last season ,
gave l)is most dominating performance in
nearly a year. He gave up four hits and two
runs - one on a disputed call - in seven
innings.

last May 11 and the 25th of his career.
Cincinnati hitters tlailed at his 92 mph fastball, which darted down and out of the
strike zone.
The weak-hitting Dodgers couldn 't turn
Brown's dominance into a win. They stranded nine runners in scoring position , had one
thrown out at the plate and left the bases
loaded in the seventh . ·
All the scoring came late , with the deci sive run off a bullpen that has allowed only
four runs in the last 44 innings. Felipe
Lopez drew a leadoff walk in the lith from
Guillermo Mota (.1-1 ), advanced on a sacrifice and scored easily on Taylor 's single to
right.
Fe! ix Heredia ( 1-0) escaped a threat in the

Reds Notebook

The score went 'back-and-forth as neither
offense cou ld scratch out more than a run at
a time.
Lopez had an RBI single in the sixth off
Brown, but Ryan Dempster walked Brian
Jordan with ihe bases loaded to tie it in the
top of the se.venth. Dempster gave up five
hits and six walks in 6 2-3 innings.
The Reds regained the lead in the bottom
of the seventh after loading the base s on a
single and Brown 's two walks . The Dodgers
tried to turn an inning-ending double play
on Juan Castro's grounder, but umpire Larry
Poncino ruled him safe at first. .
Poncino he sitated after Wlltching first
baseman Fred McGriff dig Cesar lzturi s'
relay out of the dirt ,while trying to keep hi s

IJOe on the base. Brown dropped hi s head ,
several Dodgers swung their gloves and
manager Jim Tracy a,rgued the ca ll.
Alex Cora's single and Mike Kinkade's
pinch-hit double tied it at 2 in the eighth off
. reliever Kent Mercker.
The Dodgers' hitting troubles were magnified during the three-game senes. They
have scored two or fewer runs in 10 of their
22 games, winning only one o,f those.
Cora had three of the Dodgers ' ei~h t hits.
Dave Roberts was 0-for-4 , cndtn g !lis
career-best hittin g streak at I 0 games.
The lack of offense prev~nted Brown from
improving his stellar career record against .
the Reds. He 's 7-2 in II starts. holding
Cincinnati to one earned run in seven of
those games .

NHL playoffs

Still no room for Wily Mo Anaheim wins marathon
game over Dall~s
BY JoE KAY

Associated Press

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
CINCINNATI- Wily Mo Pena is a player without a place.
The Cincinnati Reds are keeping the 21year-old outfielder on the
roster because
he's out of
minor league
options and
they
don 't
want to lose
him .
While
he's
here,
they're
not
sure what to do
with him.
Pena is the only Reds position player who
has been on the roster since opening day and
hasn't started a game. He has appeared in
nine games . and gone 1-for-8 with five
strikeouts.
General manager Jim Bowden likes Pena
and doesn't want to put him on waivers to
try to demote him. Manager Bob Boone
doesn't feel comfortable playing him.
"I wouldn't mind startin~ him, but it's so
much about .winning, whtch it always is,
and I'm trying to put the team out there that
gives us the best chance to win today,"
Boone said Thursday.
As a result, Pena is going to have to learn
how to hit t~e breaking ball and how to play
the outfield while spending most of his time
on the bench - a tough way to improve.
Asked if he'll give Pena a start at some
point, Boone said, "I can't tell you."
· Boone has decided to let Austin Keams a
lot of play center field while Ken Griffey Jr.
recovers from a separated right shoulder.
Kearns made his seventh start there
Thursday night against Los Angeles.
Kearns got the chance in part because
Reggie Taylor struggled in center after

Griffey was hurt.
"I keep trying to find somebody who
wants to take ,the job, bvt it's also partly that
I'm giving all of them playing time because
DALLAS (AP) · - After sweeping the
I'm ~oing to need all of them," Boone said.
defending
Stanley Cup champion Detroit Red
Gnffey isn't expected back for at least a
Wings
in
the
tirst round, the Anaheim Mighty
month. He's getting several .hours of theraDucks
will
have
to do something pretty special
py a day to regain his range of motion and
to top that.
rebuild the strength in his shoulder.
..
Overcoming a blown two-go;tl lead by their
"Hts ·range of motton ts pretty good,
rock-solid
goalie and a disallowed goal in the
trainer, Mark Mann said Thursday. "It's like
third
overtime.
the Ducks beat the Dallas Stars
two steps forward and one step back .. He
4-3 on Petr Sykom 's goa148 seconds into a fifth
won't be doing any baseball-related activiovertitue
early Friday. It was the fourth-longest
ties until he has a pain-free range of .
game
in
NHL
history.
motion.
Anaheim
players
were too pooped to party
• AUSTIN FINALLY STARTS: Rightafter this one . They moved gingerly through the
hander Jeff Austin will make his first biglocker room. trying not to think about the fact
league start Friday against San Diego at
Game
2 started in about 37 hours.
Great American Ball Park. He'll have a few
And
because Sykora ·took a pass from Adam
friends, but expects few butterflies.
Oates
and
knocked it past the stick of Dallas
Austin, 26, made 31 relief arpearances for
goalie Marty Turco.
Kansas City in 2001-02, so tt's not like it
In the only other game Thursday night, New
will be totally new.
Jersey
beat Tampa Bay 1-0 in Game I of the
"I think it will be a little less emotional."
Eastern
Conference series. Two other conferhe said Thursday. "The first time, you're a
ence semifinal series open Friday night, with
little wide-eyed. After that, you have a little
Philadelphia at Ottawa in the East. and
bit more of an idea about what to expect."
Minnesota at Vancouver in the West.
The Reds got Austin from Kansas City
The Mighty Ducks and Stars played 80 minlast March liS part of a four-player minor
utes,
48 seconds beyond regulation. The most
league deal. He was the Royals' first-round
recent game that lasted longer was No. 3 on the
draft pick in 1998, and has closely watched
,OT
list, a 2-1 victory by Philadelphia over
their 15-3 start.
Pittsburgh
on May 4, 2000. Keith Primeau had
"It's tough not to," he said. "They ' re the·
that winner after 92:0 I.
leadoff story on Sportscenter every night . I
In real time. this one took 5:52 -from 6:40
talked to a couple of .guys out there , and
p.m.
until 12:32 a.m CDT.
they said it's a matter of a different guy
The
seventh-seeded Ducks are 5-0 in the
every night stepping up and having sue,
playoffs. with three wins in overtime. The
cess."
·
Ducks have needed nine extra periods, but
Austin was a starter in his tirst two seagoalie
Jean-Sebastien Giguere has made it
sons in the minors, before the Royals moved
worth
every
second.
him to the bullpen.
.
In
regulation.
Giguere had his shakiest per. • ETH.ERTON ON DLAGAIN: Rightformance of the playoffs by allowing three
hander Seth Etherton went on Triple-A
goals.
He gave up only six the entire Detroit
Louisville's disabled list with a strained
series.
Still,
it was better than he did in two regmuscle in his right arm. Etherton has spent
ular-season
games against Dallas; he was
most of the last two ~ears recovering from
chased from' both, giving up seven goals in little
shoulder surgery.
.

Prep baseball
.
.
Eastern loses to Wellston, Vinton County
BY Scon WoLFE
Sports correspondent

WELLSTON - Winning
their 12th game in a row the
Wellston Golden Rockets baseball team defeated the Eastern
Eagles by a score of 8-3 on
Wednesday afternoon at
Legion Field in Wellston.
Wellston runs their overall
record to an !mrressive 13-2
mark and 8-1 m Tri-Valley
ConferenceJiay. They still
remained ti atop the TVCOhio Division with Kyle
Wicklinefs Alexander Spartans,
who defeated Federal Hocking
on Wednesday night. Eastern
leaves Wellston with a 5-9
overall record and 3-6 mark in
the TVC.
Wellston
coach
Pat
Hendershott described his
team's effort as "workmanlike."
The Rockets were very efficient in building an eight run
lead 'over the ftrst fivr, innings,
most of those coming in the
third frame.
Wellston led 1-0 in the bottom of the third after Colin
Crabtree hit a two-out triple
over the left fielder's head and
then scored on a single by Andy
Parsons through a hole between
short and third.
Kisor reached safely with a
single before Ryan Collins
opened the floodgates by belting· a three-run home run off
Eastern hurler Cacy Faulk.
Collins also pitched two
1innings, relieving starter Josh
Moon, who had a fine pitching
performance on the mound.
Moon allowed zero runs on
four hits during his five innings
of service.
The Wellston bats added
insurance for Moon and Collins
by scoring two more runs in the

fourth and another in the fifth,
extending the lead to eight.
Eastern was finally able to
mount some offense and &amp;eore
three runs in the sixth thanks to
an influx. of infield hits and an
error.
Crabtree went 2-3 with a
triple and a single for the
Rockets, Kisor had two singles
with two runs scored and
Morgan Johnson had an RBI
double in the winning cause.

Vinton County
wins slugfest
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
bats were smokin'land the sawdust was seeping from the
seams of the old fastball as
Ymton County claimed a 13-10
slugfest style victory over the
Eastern Eagles Thursday ni~t
at Eastern High School dunng
an interdivisional boys varsity
baseball · contest. 'Eastern is
now 5-10 on the season.
In all 28 hits were pounded
out in the slugfest, and another
ten hard hit balls were booted
by the fielders O'rra cool hitters
rught on the East Shade River.
Despite Eastern's out-hitting
the Vikings, the Norsemen
went for the long ball and the
run production in claiming the
win.
For Eastern Chris Myers had
two doubles, Ryan Smith two
singles and a double, Ken
Amsbary a single, Cacy Faulk a
single, Terry Durst a double,
Cody Faulk a triple, single, and
double, and Jonny Owen two
singles, Dustin Riggs a single,
and Brent Buckley a single.
Ymton County hitters were
led by Cazil who on the second
pitch of the game hit a home
run, TaylOr had a home run,
Ruckel two singles, Robson a
triple, Ousley a single, and

•
___, ____

---

Brozac a single.
Vinton County jumped out to
a 4-0 lead fueled by a Cazil
home run, then added a single
run in the second inning.
Eastern took a 7-5 lead in the
third, but eventually squandered it away even after building the tally to 10-5. Behind a
couple errors and a lhit-em
where they ainti philosophy,
Vinton County plated six runs.
A depleted EHS pitching staff
tired as well and the floodgates
opened.
. Jonny Owen had pitched a
great game. but tired in the seventh after showing signs of
fatigue in the sixth. Still a couple good defensive plays could
have gonen him off the hook in
the sixth. Wil Woods came on
in the seventh. Eastem.pitching
had 2 strikeouts and 3 walks.
Vinton County reliever Cazil
picked IJP the win in relief of
Ruckels':'That duo had 6 strike-·
out~ and 6 walks.
Eastern goes to Waterford
Friday.

Eastern beats
South Gallia
MERCERVILLE - The
Eastern Eagles jumped out to
an early lead, then held off the
South Gallia Rebels Tuesday in
boys varsity baseball actton.

~

• WIN •

2 FlEE nciUJS
IPRIIGillLEY
CIIEMIJ
FIND YOUR NAME IN
TODAY'S CLASSIFIED
SECTION AND WIN!
114K )!)(I M!!IA C/AWFIED lATElY!

i SPI{II\(;

!Devils ·3, Lightning 0
At East ~utherford, N.J., Martin Brodeur
made 15 saves for his third shutou t in four
games. and Jamie Langenbrunner had a goal
and an assist 3:47 apart in the third period .
Brodeur has 16th career playoff shutouts, sec•:md only to Patrick Roy's 23. John Madden and
Turner Stevenson also scored.
Game 2 of the best-of-seven series is
Saturday.
·

from Page 81
1

White a single, 'Kass
Lodwick a double and single. Nikki Phillips two sin gles. Sandy Powell a double.
and three singles by Alyssa
Holter.
The Lady Rockets play
Friday at . Vinton County.
Eastern is idle u.ntil Monday.

Robertson shuts
out Wilcatts
WATERFORD Now
ranked fourth in the State of
Ohio, the Eastern Lady
Eagles walked with a swagger pounding t l1e team that
in the pre- seas-c&gt;n was to be
their nemesi s.
Thursday n i .~ ht Eastern
defeated Watertord 7-0 on a
one-hit shut o-u t by Katie
Robertson during Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division play.
Eastern has now defeated
Waterford ·twice this season
to esta\llish itself as not only
as the top warn in the
league, but one of the best in
the state.
Robertson , the 'pitcher of

Slm~~X,Ga/1/a

nt

Academy) 10.94a: 2.

Brown, Allan (AM!r Valley) 11.32: 3. Maddox, Newton (Point
Pleasant) 11.4; 4. Werry, Brandon (Eastern) 11 .6; 5. Bailey, Jarrod
(VInton County) 11 .6: 6. Simpson, A.J. (Southern) t1 .9: 1. Barney,
Michael (Vinton County) 11.9: 8. Batey, Ban
(Vinton County)
12.0: 9. Lewis, Dustin tSoutn GaHia) 12 os· 10 Kaiser Sebastlan
(Melgs)1208.
'
. ' .
•

I

200 - 1. Simmons. 1Y !Gall/a Academy) :22.3: 2. Brown, Allan
(Riwr Valley) 22.62: 3. Bailey. Jarrod (VInton County) 23 4 4
Barney. Michael (VInton County) 24.2; 5. Maddox. Newton (p;,ini
Pleasant} 24.36: 6. Werry, Brandon (EaS1ern) 24.3: 7. Batey, Ben
(VInton County) 24.3; B. Lewis. Dustin (Soulh Galna) 24.58; 9.
Stobart , Ayan (Mergs) 24.91; 10. Kaiser. Sebastian (Meigs) 25.30.
~- 1. Brown , Allan. (River Valley) 51 .9; 2. Roush, Daniel
(GaiWa A~my) 53.4; 3. Deshuk (Point Pleasant) 53.56; 4. Reffert,
Matt (V1n1o~ County) 54.2; 5. Peoples, Solomon (Gallia
Acadomy/Oh&lt;&gt; Valley Ch~sti an) 54.22; 6. Thaten. Raphael (Soulh
Gallla) 54 .41 ; N1bert 1 Charley (River Valley) 54.43; 8. Baker, Dustin
(Point Pleasant) 56.04: 9. Simpson, A.J. (Southern) 56.8: 10,
Pooples. CeietJ (Gallia Academy) 56.9.
•
BOO- 1. RoUsh, Daniel (Gallia Academy) 02:10.2; 2. Hudson ,
Ryan (Gallia Academy) 02:15.3:3. Thalen, Raphael (South Galliii)
02:1 5.5; 4. Hawkins (Vinton County) 02:16.0: 5. Roush, Chris (River
VeNey) 02:17.0; 6. Simmons (V inton County) 02:19.0; 7. Lester,
Chris (Riwr Valley) 02 19.9; 8. Hurt (Point Pleasant) 02;21 .0: 9.
HOWdyshell, Troy (Vinton County) 02:21.1; 10. Casto, Jonathan
(River Valleyl 02:27,2.
1,600- ·1. Roush, Chris (River Valley) 4 :49.9; 2. Saunders. Todd
(Gallia Academy) 4:56.0: 3. Lester, Chris
(River
Vall ey)
5:09.55; 4. Reynolds. Zach (VInton County) 5:15.7; 5. Harl&lt;ins, Wes
(Vinton County) 5:18.4; 6. Conley (Vinton Countyl5:18.4: 7. Sellers
(Southern) 5:18.8; B. Wolfe. Jeremy (Aiver Valley) 5:20.4:9. Arnokj,
Granl(Meigs) 5:23.4; 10. Manley tMeigs) 5:37.6.
3200- 1 Roush, Chris (River Valley) 10:30.31; 2. Sounders. Todd
(Gal~a Academy) 10:54.95: 3. WoNe. Jeremy (Riwr Valley) 11 :09.2:
4. Graham (V1nton County) 11:41 .0: 5. Conley (Vinton County)
11 :55.0; 6. Arnok:l, Grant (Meigs) 12:02 .0; 7. Hively. Kyle (River
Valley) 12:19.3; 8. Canady. Matt (Gallia Academy) 12:29.98; 9. Elliot,
Robert (Gallia Academy) 12:32.0: 10. Davis, Chris (Eastern)
12:33.2.
~x100 relay- 1. River Valley 46.41 ; 2. Vinton County 465: 3.
Po1nt Pleasant 47.31: 4. Gallia Academy 48.64; 5. Meigs 49 .7; 6.
Eastern 52.0
·
4~400- 1. Gallla Academy 3:40.6; 2. VInton County 3:44.6; 3. 3.
Riveryaltey 3:47.74; 4. Point Pleasant 3:48.43; 5. Metgs 4:09.58; 6.

a.

o·:

leslie (Qallla Academy) :!51.86; 3. Kayser, Jennifer (Po1nt Pleasant)
:52.01; 4. Be&gt;~. ElfOok (M~) :52.01 ; 5. Boster, Alex (Gallia
Academy) ;53.75; 8. PridemOre, H. (Vonlon County) :56.1. 1 Reos.
100- 1. Midkiff, Ashley (Oak Hill) :12.7; 2. McKinniss, Niki (Gatlla LexxJ (Galla Academy) :56.2; 8. Chadwell, Jeniler (E~ern) .56·5; 9. .
Acadoroy) :13.1; 2. P9ny, Kayla (Gall/a Academy) :13.1; 4. Close, Ratdlff. Mary Ei&lt;&gt;n (Vlntoo County) :57.9:10. Nipe ( inton County)
Felicia (Gallia Academy) :13.2; 5. Taylor. Kari Beth (Aiwr VeJ/ey) :59.7.
:13.71 : 6. Peoples. Charity (Gallia Academy) :13.5; 7. Keefer, Nikki
4M100 - '1. Gallla Acaderrl'/':!51 .78; 2. Point Pleasant :55.23; 3.
(Point Pleasant) :13.89; 8. Sickles, Leslie (Gallia Academy) :13.7; Q. Vinton County :56.7; 4. Jac:kson · :60.64 ~ 5. Wellston :61 .0; 6. Ohto
Hayes (VInton County) :1 4.1.: 9. Jenkins (Gallla AcaOOmyl :14.1; 9. Valley Chrjatlan :61.6; 7. Eastern :62.3; 8. River Valley :69.3
.
Jenkins, Sarah {Ohio Valley Christian) :14.1
4M200 - 1. Gallla Academy 1:54.82; 2. Meigs 1:55.97: 3. River
200 - 1. Perry, Kayla (GaiNa Academy)" :26.71; 2. Close, Felicia Valley 2:03.4; 4. Eastern 2:04.9; 5. VInton County 2:05 .0: 6. Wellston
(Gallla Academy) :27.5: 3. Peoples. Charily (Gallia Academy) :27.81 : 2:07.8; 7. Qak H/112:10.
4. Taylor. !{eri Beth (River Valley) :27.90; 5. Mldklfl. Ashley (Oak Hill)-'
411400- 1. Gallla Academy 4:18.27; 2. Meigs 4:29.28 ; 3. Jackson
:29.3; 6. Howard, Rachel (Point Pleasant) :29.18; 7. Mt:Kinniss (Gallia 4:48.64; 4. Vinton COunty 4:50.6; 5. Rlver Valley 4:53 .09: 6. Po1nt
Academy) :29 .6: 8. Jenkins (Gallia Academy) :29.7; 9.Janklns, Sarah Pleasar t 5:04.37,
{Ohio Valley Chnstian} :29.8; 10. Hayma!'l. J_
ennifer {Eastern) :29.9.
41t800- 1. G!lllla Academy 10:29.30; 2. P.oint Pleasant I 1:52.91 :
400- 1. Perry, Kayle (GaiUa Academy) :62 .7; 2. Peoples, Charity 3. AillerValey 12:02.58.
4.
......_
(Ga111a Academy) :62.9: 3. Soulsby, Shannon {Meigs) :64 .6t 4.
Discus- 1. Phillips, Harmony (River Valley) 121'03" · 2 Haner,
MI(M(Itf, Ash ley (Oak HiH) :64; 5. Caldwell, Lindsey (Gallia Academy) Nicole (Gallla Academy) 87'03"; 3tie. Harrlsor., Laura (R1ver Valley)
:65.25; 6. Garnes, Megan (Meigs) :67.58; 7. So'NefS, Brittany (Vinton AND Hipes, Katey (Point Pleasant) 86'0Cf; 5. Bunn ell. Leah
County) :67.6: 8. Hayman, Jennller (Eastern) :67 9: 9. Malone. Kayle (Wel~too) 83'02'; 8. Ostrander, Samantha (Jad&lt;SOn) 80'06": 7
(Oak Hill) :68.0; 10. Story, Emily (Meigs) :6B.4.
Evans, Leah {Jadu;on) 71'03~ : 8, Woods, M. (Vinton County) 75'03"
800- 1. Story, Emily {Meigs) 2:38.29; 2. Sanders, Tiffany (Gallia 9. Ashley, EmHy (Meigs) 73'11 "; 10. Davies, Ashley (Rt.,.or Valley)
Academy) 2:42.0; 3. Soulsby. Shannon (Meigs) 2:42.67: 4. Attar. . 73'02.5".
·
Sally (River Valley) 2:44.1; 5. Zlrille (Ohio Valley Christian) 2:44.6; 6.
High Jump - 1 tie. Rankin, Stacy (River Valley) AND Attar. Sally
Maher, Kallin (Gallia Academy) 2:46.7; 7. McCorkle, Kalil (Vinton (River Valley) 4'08"; 3tie. Davis, Ksylee (Oak Hill). Johnson. Knst1n
COunty) 248.2: 8. Adkins (Gall~ Academy) 2:47.8: 9. Godwin, (Point Pleasant), ANO Smith, Kelly (Jad&lt;son) 4'06": 6 tie Soulsby.
Bethany (Galha Academy) 2:52 .23: 10. Ireland, Kelly (River Valley) Shannon (Meigs), Games, Megan (Metgs) , Pridemore, H (Vtn!on
2:54.67.COunty), AND Nutter (Ea,stern) 4'04"; 10. Jenkins, Caitlin (Gall1a
1600 - 1. Wiseman. Sara (Gallla Academy) 5:18.4:2. Emmert. Academy) 4'02'',
S1ar (Jackson) 5:38.1; 3 ZiriRe (O~io Valley Christian) 5:59.2; 4.
Long Jump - 1. Close, Felicia {Gallia Academy) 16'08.25"; 2. Perry,
Wamsley. Jackie (Gallia Academy) 6;08.0; 5. Atlar, Sally (RM&gt;r Kayla (GaiiOI Academy) 16'07": 3 Taylor. Ken Betn (Rwer Valley)
Valley) 6:09.8: 6. Maher. KaUin (Gallla Academy) 6:11 .4:7. Pyles. Erin 15'01": 4. Kinnard, Sarah (Point Pleasant) 14'08"; 5. Allen , Bethany
{Point Pleasant) 6:22.05; a. McCorkle, Kalli (Vinton County) 6:26.6; 9
(Vinton Col.llty) 14'07.5"; 6. Jenkins (Gallia Academy) 13'08"; 7.
W~liams (Southern) 6:27.9; 10. Burdette, Andrea (Meigs} 6:36.8.
Emmert, Rachel (Vinton COunty) 13'05.5"; B. Sammare (Meigs)
3200- 1. Wiseman. Sara (Gallla Academy) t1 :08.0: 2. Emmen. 12'01.25": 9. Lee (Meigs) 11'08.75"; 10. Marienova (South Gallia)
Star (Jackson) 13:08.6; 3. Wamsley, Jad&lt;ie (Gallia Academy) 11 '07.
13:17.0; 4. Burdette, Andrea (Meigs) 14:38.6; 5. Elliott, Rachel
Shot Put- 1. Bl.llnell, Leah (Wellston) 32,10%.,; 2. Ostrander,
(Eastern) 15:42.5; 6. Savage, Ashley (Meigs) 16:10.35; 7. Lester. Samantha (Jackson) 30'10. 75~; 3. PhMiips, Harmony (River Valley)
Summer (River Valley) 16:27.0.
'JIJ'OCJ'; 4. Haner, Nioole (Gallia Academy) 28'05"; 5. Scheffler, Sophia
100 hurdles- 1. Close, Felicia (Gallia Academy) :15.4; 2. Kinnard, (Point Pleasant) 2T10S; 6tie.Harrisoo, Laura (River Valley) AND
Sarah (Point Pleasant) :17.40: 3. Rees. Lexxl (GaiUa Acaderily) Holmes, Ashkly (Vinton County) 2T07S;8. Harms, J. (VintOn County)
17.65; 4. Kayser, Jennifer (Point Pleasant) :17.71 : 5. Boster, Alex 26'08.25"; 9. Thaxton, Undsey (RiwrValleyl26'00"; 10. Ashley, Emily
(Gallia Academy) :17.8: 6. Bolin, Brook (Meigsl :18.3; 7. Niple (Vinton (Melgs) 25'0T.
··
County) :20.0; Stle. Ratcliff, Mary Ellen (VIhtqn County~ AND
{The area girls' 0VP tmc:k honor roH is ccmpiled by Rivar Valley girls
Hayman. Jennifer (Eastern) :20.9; 10. Anc:tre.v (Southern) :21.0.
track coach Mark Cline. Girls'coaches In the area are urged to e-mail
300 hurdles- 1. Close. Felicia (Gallia Academy) :48.53; 2. Sickles, their track resultS to st gl_mcline0SBOV8C.org or runtv@aol.rum.)

B-fr)Bil

their track resuffs to at xcbaldcoachflaC6inter.net)

•I
.Glr S

record. struck out two and
walked four in giving up
just one hit. a sin gle to leadoff hitter Joanna Burchette
to post the win .
Eastern hitters were Krista
White with · two singles.
Sandy Powell two singles ,
Jenny Armes a triple , and
singles to Morgan Weber.
Casey Smith, and Tiffeny
Bissell.
Eastern took a 1-0 lead in
the second inning on a
White single and stolen
base. then a Sandy Powell
RBI single . In the fourth
inning Eastern took a 7-0
lead
off
starter
C.
Bauerbach. Armes led off
with a triple, NikJ&lt;i Phillips
walked. Morgan Weber had
an RBI singl e, Tiffeny
Bissell had an RBI single,
Lodwick walked home· a
run, and three runs on Sandy
Powellfs misplayed threerun tripl e, the score 7-0. ·
Jeconda Smith, who has
been fighting an injury and
is the WHS ace came in during the · sixth to finish the
game.
Meanwhile,
Robertson was clipping the
Wildcats in high fashion to
help pull the Eagles to victory.
..
· Eastern is idle till Monday
when they host Southern.

NBA playoffs

Timberwolves beat Lakers in OT; Celtics, Nets win
LOS ANGELES (AP)- It appeared to be
all over for the Minnesota Timberwolves.
First, the Los Angeles Lakers erased what
seemed to be an in surmountable deficit in
.the final seconds of regulation.
· Then, the Timberwolves ' leader and best
player, Kevin Ga~nett, fouled out early in
.overtime on a questionable call to join center Rasho Nesterovic on the bench.
Finally. the capacity crowd of 18,997 at
Staples Center was going crazy, anticipating another dramatic victory by Shaquille
O ' Neal, Kobe Bryant and the rest of the
'three-time defending NBA champions.
It didn't happen.
The upstart Timberwolves made seven of
eight free throws in the final 24.3 seconds
Thursday night to beat the Lakers 114- I 10
and take a 2-1 lead in the best-of-se ven
first-round series.
Minnesota has never won a playoff series,
being eliminated in the first round in each
of the last six years.
Game 4 is Sunday at Staples Center.
where the Lakers won their final 15 home
games in the regular season.
In other games; Boston beat Indiana I 0183, and New Jersey edged Milwaukee I 03101 in overtime. Friday night's schedule
features three Game 3s: Detroit at Orlando,
San Antonio at Phoenix and Dallas at
Portland.
Garnett said he hadn't fouled out since
his rookie year.
"It was miserable, knowin? I couldn't go
out there and help my team,' he said. "So I
thought of other ways to help out and that
was to channel my energy, motivate, cheer,
do whatever I had to do to get my teammates over the edge."
Garnett had 33 points, 14 rebounds, four
assists and four blocked shots before fouling out in the first I 2 seconds of overtime.
He had a hand on Rebert Horry 's back
while defending an inbounds play, and
Horry appeared to flop to the floor.

Palmer
from Page 81
the third overall pick in 1999.
Neither one had much of a chance on a
team that has~'t had ~ ~inning record since
1990. Both mtssed trammg_camp m _contract
disputes, then g?t thrown mto the hneup as
unprepar~d rookt~s.
.
,
If Lewts gets hts way, the same thu~g wont
. happen wtth Palmer. The plants for. htm to stt
for at least one year and learn beh,md starter
Jon Kttna. Palmer ts convmced he II be handied properly under Lewts .
. . ,
'There are tt~es m every organnatton s
life when you htt a cro~~ro~ds, you_htt .a ke_y
juncture," Du~n satd. Tht~ organnatton ts
clearly wandenng down a dtfferent IT!a~ t~an
they've wa~dered_ do:own before. And tt. s mce
to be at the begmmng of the fork 111 that
road."
Klingler, who came fro":' a run-and-shoot
offense at Houston, and Smtth, a mobtle passer from Oregon, both were confined by the

••
"I didn't even touch him . I know how to
foul," Garnett said.
Garnett walked to the bench incredulously, but the Timberwolve ~ found a way to
win anyway.
"1 think we relaxed a little bit when
Garnett went out of the ballgame ,'' Lakers
coach Phil Jackson .said. "They got some
rebounds . and some things that were really
fortunate for them down the stretch."
Gary Trent's two free throws - his only
points of the game
gave the
Timberwolves a 109-108 lead with 24.3
seconds left.
After Bryant mi ssed a driving bank shot,
Marc Jackson made two foul shots with
11.6 seconds left. O'Neal's made one of
two before Jackson did the saine with 7.7
seconds to go, making it 112- 109.
Bryant missed a 3-pointer with about
three seconds to play that could have tied it ,
and Minnesota's Troy Hudson made two
free throws to complete the scoring.
Hudson scored 27 points , Wally
Szczerbiak added 13 and Jackson had ·12.
"We really had guys step up,'' Hudson
said. "When you have a superstar go out of
the game, it usually takes the breath out of
a team. We know they're going to come
.
back on Sunday."
Bryant led the Lakers with 30 points.
O'Neal had 28 points, 17 rebounds and five
blocked shots and Derek Fisher scored 23,
but none after the 'third quarter.
"We had our opportunities," Bryant sa id.
"We have been in similar situations. We
have been down before and we know how
to deal with this. Now, we just have to
move on to the next game. It is really that
simple."
The Timberwolves appeared to have the
game wrapped up after Hudson 's two free
throws with 22.8 second s left in the fourth
quarter put them on top 101 -96.
But Bryant made a 3-pointer fi ve seconds
later, was fouled by Szczerbiak on another

questionable call and completed the fourpoint play to cut Minnesota's lead to one.
The Timberwolve s committed a turnover
trying to inbound the ball. and Bryant was
fouled by Nesterovic - who was standing
still with hi s hands· straight up- on a drive
to the basket with 12. 1 seconds to play.
It was Nesterovic's sixth foul.
Bryant missed the first foul shot but made
the second, tying the game at 10 I.
Hud son's long jumper as time expired· didn't come close, sending the game to overtime.
Jannero Pargo made two free throw s after
another suspect foul call, putting the Lakers
ahead 108-107 with 47 ;7 seconds left in
overtime. Trent was then fouled by Bryant
while attempting a jumper with one second
left on the shot clock and put the
Timberwolves ahead for good.

l
~l
~l
~

~:

L.:::===========::J~~

l
••

•,

Nets 103, Bucks 1Q1 .\

•

'I
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Bicentennial bell handcrafted by Fenton Art Glass. This breathtaking, two-sided bell features the Ohio Bicenten.nial logo on
one side and historical information about the state on the other.
These commemor.ative ruby red bells will have a certificate of
authenticity. You may order up to five bells at $35 each plus tax.

Order yours today before they sell out!
One Bell: $37.10 Includes sales tax
$74.20
ThrH Bella: $111.30
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By telephone with a credit card or debii
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Order your bells by calling (304) 485-1891

Marshall

l

cal fouls.
Boston's Mark Blount and Indiana 's Ron
Artest 'were ejected in se parate incidents,
two Celtics were assessed fla grant foul s
and the Pacers .picked up five technical s.
The Pacers, who trailed 48-44 at halftime ,
went without a field goal for a 14:20 stretch..
in the second half to allow the Celtics to
pull away. Boston leads the series 2-1.

At Milwaukee, Rodney Rogers tied hi s
season high with 18 points and hit the win ning basket after he mi ssed two free throws.
with 5 seconds left.
·
Teammate Kenyon Martin outfought
Anthony Mason for the rebound and tipped
the ball to Rogers, who sank the shot from
the top of\he circle. Gary Payton's 3-pointer to win it banged off the rim at the bu zzer..
The Nets got 26 points from Ja son Kidd:
Celtics 101, Pacers 83
and 23 from Martin as they took a 2- I:
At Boston, Paul Pierce scored 21 points series lead. Sam Cassell led the Bucks with
led six. Celtics in double figure s in a game 24 points, Thomas had 22 and Gary Payton
that featured a flurry of tlagrant and techni- 21.

Bengals' pas~ing philosophy. They tried to
turn both of them into Ken Anderson clones
- stand in the pocket until the last second,
then dump it off if necessary.
Klingler lasted only four years with a weak
offensive line and an unimpressive receiving
. corps.
The Bengals did even worse with Smith,
who got less-than one full season as a starter
before he was discarded. The Bengals teamed
him with rookie receivers Peter Warrick and
Ron Dugans in 2000, when head coach Bruce
Cos let quit three games into the season.
Coslet was in charge of developing Smith, ·
· who got little guidance and wound up rele•
gated to third string for the past two seasons.
.
He's still on the roster.
Palmer has one thing in his favor: Lewis
understands the importance of bringing a
young quarterback along slowly. Plus, Lewis
needs to win right away, so he'lllet Kitna run
the offense this season, with Smith currently
in line as the backup.
The Bengals were willing to trade down
with the first pick, but found no suitable partner.

year because of a looming $250 million
deficit in 2004.
Marshall's athletic department receives
state
funding. West Virginia's athletic
from Page 81
department
self-supporting, but tuition
A university must have _16 athletic teams increases theisuniversity
plans to offset the
in order to qualify for Dtvtston 1-A football. budget cuts will increase the cost of athlet"Whatever we cut, it won't be·because we
ic scholarships.
want to," Angel told the newsl'aper.
Marshall 's athletic department hasn't
The cuts would follow a stmtlar move by filled some vacant positions because of a
West Virginia University, which annmmced university-wide hiring freeze.
last week that five varsi ty sports wtll be
On Thursday, the state's Higher
dropped this fall to cut nearly $600,000 and Education Policy Commission approved a 9
help head off future budget problem s.
percent tuition increase at Marshall.
WVU is ·eliminating the coed nfle team
Marshall 's track team is scheduled to
and the men's .tennis, cross country and compete this week .at the Penn Relays in
indoor and outdoor .track teams . The um- Philadelphia .
The
Mid-American
versity has 16 other sports.
Conference championships are scheduled
Gov. Bob Wise has ordered a I 0 pe~cent for May 15-17 in Mount Pleasant, Mich .
cut in state spending for the 2003-04 ftscal

fl

VALLEY CINEMA 7

40 in the over.
Of the ones that got by him, the costliest was
a detlection by Brenden Morrow that tied the
game with 2:47 left in regulation. It also was the
easiest one to stop as it tluttered by hi s glove.
Turco made 50 saves and was at his best in
the lirst overtime. Among his most memorable
stops was using his shoulder to block a hard
smash from Paul Kariya as the second OT
expired .
When the eighth and tina! period began, the
public address announcer said. "Good morning.
Stars fans."
The deciding play began when Turco failed to
corral the puck behind the.net. While he skated
back to the goal, Anaheim's Adam Oates pulled
it off the boards and centered to a wide-open
Sykora. Mike Leclerc also had an assist oil
what's certainly among the · most memorable
goals in the tranchise's·IO·year history.
The winners surrounded Sykora in celebration, while the losers hurried to .the comforts of
their locker room. The remaining members of a
•:TOwd that started at 18.532 stood for a brief
ovation .
Jason Krog, Rob Niedermayer .and Steve
!Rucchin also scored for Anaheim, and Derian
Hatcher and Jason Arnott ac!ded goals for
lDallas.

!DO-meter dash- 1.

Eastern 4:30.1.
4x800- 1. Gall/a Academy 8:~7.70: 2. Vinton County 9:05.4; 3.
River Valley 9:19.09: 4. Poirrt Ple... 9:20.9: 5. Soulh Gal/ia
10:25.0.
11 0 hurdles - 1. Neal, Chris (Vinton County) 15.8; 2.
Flsco,
Nick (Gallia Academy) 18.00: 3. P9rry, Dane (Vinton County) 1B. 1;
4. Remy ('/lnton County) 18.4; 5. POlcyn. John (AwerValley) 20.2: 6
(Meigs) 20.4; 8
Cross. Austin (Eostern) 20.3; 7. H6ward
Klnnlan. An&lt;Jy (Meigs) 20.60; 9. Bay (V~lon County) 20.9; 10.
·
Garlinger (Vinton COunty) 21.5.
' 300 hurdles - 1. Aemy, Brody {Vinton County) 43.9; 2. Neal, Chip
{Vinton County) 44.5; 3. Smith, Justin (Point Pleasant) 45.15; 4.
Workman. Bryan (River Valley) 46.07; 5. Flsco, Nick (Gallla
Academy) 47.3: 6. Gill, Brodie (River Valley) 47.60; 7. Kinnan, Aney
.(Meigs)
49.00;
Errett, Robert (Point Pleasant) 50.58; 9.
ThaCker (Vinton County) 52 .1: 10. Beatty. Ed (Eastern) 52.6.
Shot
put- 1
Hundnall , Kevin (Point Pleasant) 46' 6.25;
2. Holter, Rqss (East9rn) 46' 4.5'; 3. Shipley, Shannon (Gallia
~cademy) 45'6"; 4. Nida, Chris (River Valley) 45' 0.75' : 5.
Scartlrough, Darren (Eastern) 43' 9.25"; 6. King, Nathan (Gallla
Academy) 41' 4.75"; 7. Batey, Tra.,.i s (Eastern) 40' 4.5"; 8. DeGarmo,
Luke (River Valley) 38' 6' : 9. East Gary (Vinton county) 38'
10.
Aoush (Meigs) 36' 9.5' .
·
Discus- 1. Hudnall (Poinl Pleasant) 139' 2'; 2. Holter, Ross
(Easte&lt;n) 138' 0.25": 3. Shipley. Shannon (Gal/ia Academy) 137' 8";
4. Scarbrough , Darren (Eastern) 127' 1'; 5. DeGarmo, Luke (River
Valley) 124' 1"; 6. Huffman, Bobby (Vinton County) 11T 6"; 7.
Thomas
(Southern) 1~4' 2.5': 8. King, Nathan (Galtia Academy)
113' 4'; 9. Nida, Chris (River Valley) 109' 8": 10. Roush
(Meigs) 108' 5' .
.
High jump - 1. Lewis, Dustin (South GaiWa) 5' 10': 1. Emmert.
Aaron (VInton County) 5' 10•: 3. Marcum (Point Pleasant) 5' 8"; 4.
Saunders, Pete (River Valley) 5' 4"; 4. Kinnan, Andy (Meigs) 5' 4"; 4.
Hallmark (Vinlon Counry) 5' 4': 7. PolCyn, John (River VaHey) 5' 2";
7. Payton, JeH (Gallia Academy) 5' 2' : 9. Nibert, Charley (River
Valley) 5' 0' ; 9. Lester, Chris (River Valley) 5' 0".
• Long jump - 1. Roush. Daniel (GaMia Academy} 19' 7"; 2.
Marcinko, Kevif1 (Eastern) 18' 3' ; 3. Henson, Drew
(River
Valley) 17' 3.75"; 4. Hallmark (Vintori County~ 17' 3.5'; 5. Simpson,
A.J. (Southern) 16' 6': 6. Sperry (Vinton CountY) 15' 11.5' : 7.
Winnett (Vinton County) 15' 9'; 8. Jenkins (Game Academy) 15'
5.25" ; 9. Stobart, Ryan (Meigs) 15' 3.5; 10. Anderson , Morgan (River
Valley) 15' 3'.
Pole Vault- 1. Payton, Jett (Gall!a AcademY) 12' 0"; 2.
Bodimer, J . {Gallia Academy) 11' o·.
(The area girts' OVP trael&lt; honor roll is compiled by River Valley
boys trach coach Ed Sayre. Boys' coaches 1/) the area are urged to

time~ .

Eastern

Eastem went up 9c0, but South
Gallia climbed all the way back
to 9-8 before Jonathan Owen
came in and barred the door just
at the right time to secure the
Eastem win.
Eastem is now 5-9,
South Gallia hitters were
Fulks with two singles,
Workman had a si ngle,
and
Lamphier a si ngle,
Williwnson had u single.
For Eastem Chris Myers had
a single and double, Smith had
two singles, Amsbary a single.
Cacy Faulk a double. Terry
Durst a single. Dustin Riggs a
single, &lt;md Brent Buckley two
singles. 'r
In what proved to be the winning tuns, Buckley led off with
a single, stole second, advanced
to third on a ground out by
Myers, then Smith doubled him
home. Smith then scored after
advancing on a ground out by
Amsbary and scored on a
passed ball. That run came
back to haunt the Rebels in
their effort to come from
behind.
· Eastern pitching had five
strikeouts and two walks; most
of which can1e at the hand~ of
starter Ken Amsbary who
pitched well and gained the
win. Semelsberger came on in
relief. but before getting an out
in the seventh, Owen came on
top pick up the save.

XXXXXIIIIIIIIIIIIXIIIIIIXIXIIIXIIXIIIIII%1

more than four periods.
Giguere made 60 saves -

Daily Sentinel • Page 83

I '

Brown dominates, Reds win in 11 innings
It was his first 10- strikeout game since top of the II th to get the win.

Th~

www.mydallysentlnel.com

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Friday, April 25, 2003

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�Page 84 •

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, April 25, 2003

www.mydallysentinel.com

The

~ajor League Baseball

m:rtbune - Sentinel

Braves ·win for ninth Angels snap Yanks'
tinie in 10 games

seven~game streak

' Associated Press

Associated

inning against Kris Benson (2-3) after sitting
out two games because of a stiff neck.
Tim Worrell gave up . an RBI double to
pinch-hitter
Matt Stairs with two outs in the
It didn't take long for the Atlanta Braves to
ninth,
then
retired Abraham Nunez on a
~esume their winning ways .
· After losing eight of their first . 12, the groundout for his seventh save.
Braves have won nine of I 0 to tie Montreal
and Philadelphia for the NL East · Padres 2, Cubs 1
lead.
An!kuw Jones sparked the !atOliver Perez (1-2), winless in his first four
est victory, hitting a two-run sin· starts, struck out six in 6 1-3 scoreless innings
gle in the ninth inning for a 4-3 at Wrigley Field, allowing six hits.
:
home victory over the St. Louis
Chicago lost consecutive games for only the
second time this season. The other was on
Cardinals on Thursday mght.
: "Everybody in the lineup is swin~ing the April 10-11 against Montreal.
ilat good," Jones said. "Everybody ts doing
San Diego got its runs in the third off Matt
the right things for us to win."
Clement (2-2) when Ramon Vazquez singled
With Atlanta trailin~ 3-2 in the ninth, Rafael and scored on a double by Keith Lockhart,
Furcal hit a leadoff smgle, Marcus Giles sac· who came around .on a single by Ryan Klesko.
rificed and Steve Kline (0-2) loaded the bases
with walks to Gary Sheffield and Chipper
{ones.
·
Mats 7, Astros 4
Andruw Jones then sin~Jed off Cal Eldred,
seeking the first save of hts career.
Pedro Astacio (1-0), out since spring train"It backfired on me," said Kline, who ing with right shoulder tendinitis, allowed two
pitched around Sheffield. '
.runs and four hits in six innings, and Roberto
In other games it was Philadelphia 9, Alomar had two doubles and two RBis.
Colorado I ; Cincinl]ati 3, Los Angeles 2 in I I
New York matched its longest winning
innings; San Francisco 3, Pittsburgh I ; San streak of the season at two and its season high
Diego 2, Chicago I; New York 7, Houston 4; for runs. Armando Benitez got the final out for
and Horida 4, Milwaukee 2.
his seventh save in II chances.
Ray King ( 1-0) pitched a hitless inning to
Wade Miller (0-2) gave up five runs, six hits
earn his first wm for the Braves. The and four walks in three-plus innings as visitCardinals lost their fifth in a row but starter ing Houston ( 1O-Il) fell below .500 fm the
Woody Williams stretched his scoreless streak first time this year.
to 25 innings before Atlanta scored twice in
the sixth to tie it.

NL

.Expos 1, Diamondbacks 0

Phillies 9; Rockies 1
Chase Utley hit a grand slam in his ftrst
major league game as a starter, leading
Philadelphia· to a three-game sweep of visiting
Colorado.
Utley flied out in the second, then gave the
Phillies a 6-0 lead in the third when homered
off Aaron Cook (1-2) and became the· first
major leaguer with a grand slam for his first
hit since Boston's Creighton Gubanich against
Oakland in 1999.
Pat 3urrell also homered to back Randy
Wolf (3-1 ), who struck out eight in 7 2-3
innings.

Javier Vazquez (3-1) combined with Joey
Eischen and Rocky Biddle for Montreal 's
major . league-leading fifth shutout, and
Vladimir Guerrero hit his fifth homer in the
seventh off Byung-Hyun Kim (1-4).
Vazquez allowed six hits in seven innings
and struck out nine as Montreal blanked visiting Arizona for the second time in three days.
Biddle got his fifth save. Montreal was outhit
6-3.

Marlins 4, Brewers 2

Mark Redman (2-2) struck out a career-high
II and pitched a four-hitter at Miami as
Florid&amp; completed a three-game sweep.
Giants 3, Pirates 1
Alex Gonzalez had two RBis off Todd
Ritchie (1-2), who gave up four ru·ns on nine
Damian Moss (4-0) allowed five hits over hits in five innings. The game drew 9,069, the
seven-plus shutout innings at Pittsburgh.
Marlins' lowest home crowd of the season.
Barry Bonds singled his first two times up Milwaukee lost for the seventh time in its last
and drove in the first run in a three-run third ll games.

Stoudemire named NBA
'Rookie of the Year'
'

PHOENIX (AP) - There coach Frank Johnson said.
will be an extra measure of "In points in the paint in the
hoopla when the Phoenix . second game, they just killed
Suns and San Antonio Spurs us :"
play in Game 3 of their firstStoudemire, who beat out
round playoff series Friday Houston center Yao Ming for
night.
rookie of the year, overcame
Not only do the upstart long odds to emerge an
Suns return home with the amazingly
levelheaded,
be st-of-seven series tied at poised and gifted power forI- !, they also will celebrate · ward not at all intimidated
the anointing of man-child by the big, tough and much
power
forward
Amare older players he faces.
Stoudemire as NBA Rookie
"I go out and practice
of the Year.
hard," he said, "and then I
Phoenix, the No. 8 seed in feel comfortable come
the West, almost certainly game-time."
would not have made it to
Stoudemire was 12 when
the playoffs if not for the his father died. His mother
of was ·in and out of jail
imposing
presence
Stoudemire,
who
on throughout his childhood.
Thursday became the first His older b~other is in prison
player to win the rookie on drug and sex abuse conaward after going directly to victions.
the NBA from hi$h school. .
Somehow,
Stoudemire
"He was the difference in stayed out of trouble. He
our team being in the middle went to six high schools, the
of the pack and making the last of them Cypress Creek
playoffs," Suns center Scott High School in Orlando, and
Williams said. "He ste£Ped he had to sit out his junior
IJ,J;l when Googs (Tom season because of transfer
··augliotta) went down and, rules.
was a tremendous force for
"From the adjustments that
us all season long."
I made growing up, and now
And, at 20 years old, he's here in the NBA having a
just getting started.
pretty good season and get" As a person, I couldn't be ling the rookie of the ,Year
happier for him," Williams award, it feels great,' he
sa1d. "He's a good kid. ·His said, "I feel like I stayed
personality fits real well in focused, and I've been
our locker room. There's blessed from God."
been no animosity towards
The Suns were elated that
· the attention that he's had ail Stoudemire was available
season long. And he's han- when they made their No. 9
died it real well. He hasn't pick overall in last year's
draft. It seems to be a perfect
gotten a swollen head."
Stoudemire, who averaged match,
as
Stoudemire
13.5 points and 8.8 rebounds teamed
with
Stephon
in lhe regular season, scored Marbury and Sh~wn M~ion
24 points in Phoenix's 96-95 to form as athlettcally gtfted
victory in Game 1, including a trio ofdoung players ~scan
an improbable 3-point bank be foun on any team m the
shot that forced the over- leafue.
·
time. But he was just 2-for" was so focused on doing
10 shooting for five ~oints in the things to help us make
the Suns' 84-76Joss m Game the playoffs that I wasn't
2.
even ·really thinking about
"He's very crucial in just the rookie of ~he y~ar
being able to score some award," Stoudemlfe satd.
points in the paint," Phoenix "But now that I have it, it's
,.

like a bonus. ll feels great."
The Spurs flew intQ town
Thursday afternoon about
the time Suns owner Jerry
Colangelo was presenting
Stoudemire with his award.
San Antonio won 18 of its
last 20 regular-season road
games . But one of those
losses was in Phoenix, a
game that clinched the Suns'
playoff berth. In fact, the
Suns are 2-0 at home against
the Spurs this season:
After losing Game I at
home, San Antonio must win
at least once at America West
Arena to advance to the second round.
"We understand that we
haven't played our best basketball against this team,"
the Spurs' Bruce Bowen
said. "I've struggled and others have struggled as well,
but it's about sticking to
what we've done altseason
and just getting through it."
The Suns have prepared
for the Spurs with or without
David Robinson, who is hop·
ing to be back after missing
Game 2 with a partial tear of
cartilage in his left knee. He
scored I 8 points on 8-for-8
shooting in Game I .
Kevin Willis .will be back
for San Antonio after being
suspended for one game for
a flagrant foul against Scott
Williams in Game 1.
The Suns' defensive strategy is simple - a relentless
double-team on Tim Duncan.
Its success is predicated on
the Phoenix defenders get-'
ting to Duncan before he can
do much damage, and on the
Spurs' failure to score consistently from the outside.
· "We don't want Tim
Duncan to beat us," Johnson
said. "If those other guys
beat us, we have to live with
it"

,.

'

'

Press

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

AL

HEALTH

and
FITNESS

CLASSIFIED

Getting fit and
staying fit is In!
A SPECIAL FEATURE

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
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To

·Place

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740)· 448-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
claaaltledOmydal

Your
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AD

• Include Complata
DaKrlptlon • lncluda A. Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone N~o~mbar And -'ddraaa Wl"'an Nead&lt;ad

HELP WANTID

~alltpoh• maup 'Cltrtbune.
~oint lQlea•ant ~eg;ifiter and

The Dally Sentinel
Friday, May 16

- Display AdvertisingCall Today
Tribune- 446·2342
Register - 675-1333
Sentinel - 992-2157
Reaching over 29,800 readers

7 Daya

II' to

I

..

HOliiE'i

HELP WAN1F.D

roRSALE

r

740..256-1.709
-------4 br. 1 l/2 baths, bric~ and

wv

c •

r

e~~erw~r r~~~~~: ~:~:~;!:~
s

1180

.

r
r

r ~~AL

-$$-FOR
-NEED
THE

. SPRING?? Now Hiring
· Flll&lt;M&gt;Io Scheduling 1-88897•·JOBS

WORD
QAMI
Aiarronao lt,.ars of tha
four JC"'mblad ""'rdo bto
low ro form lour llmplo worda.

I

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIA~ SECURITY 18111?
No Fee Union Wt Wlnl
1·888-582·334&amp;
HI \ I ' " " "

·rio

0

Hol111!li

~.--.:•IIOiiiRiiSiiiAiii.Eiiil-,.1

.,

(3)FHA &amp; VA homoo ott up
for lmmtdlalt poaoa..lon all
within 1&amp; min. of downtown

L!ERI~

Galllpolla. Aalll 10 lo.w II .
8% (740).483218
'
'
·
2br. 110u11 for aallln Apple
Grove. Mobllo Home apot for
ronl. (304)&amp;78·2e42

l
I1-....,lr·"ii--TI:,'.·:Tl.:...rl-t ·!.... ,
BROI T

frame, lull basement, 2 car
garage, New haven WV
(740)446-4274
_
-------:--:4br. 3 baths, storage building , fenced yard , CIA,
Modern appliances. All
d
Electric.
Goo
·

My son w•~ afraid to start a

pond. Free gas. $125,000.
can (740)367-7266 between
9ar'n &amp; 9pm.
-------Brie~ Ranch Home. 3br. 2ba
1 car Attached garage, 1 car
detached garage. lnground
pool. On 112 acre lot.
Serious
Inquires . only.
(304)675 . 8051
--------Bula11ine Pike, 2 story, 3 br.,
2 112 ba. , liv. room , dining,
fam ., &amp; game ,room, 2 car
gar., 3 car unattached. pool,
1
acre
$175.000.00
(740)446·8050

~

1..

I I I I I

.:\ PA INT NUM!EAED LETTERS
~ IN THfSE SQUARE

I• ' I.

UNSCRAM8lf LETTER~ TO

GfT A('J5WfR

Yesterday's

SCUM LITS ANSWIRS
. .
Aflame • Cycle - Round ; Unsold- YOURSELF
My parents were discussing whether to buy a family
sized car or a smaller model. 'The nev:; ·economy car Is
.something else." my dad kidded mom. It ~as an a1r bag
but you inflate It YOURSELF.'
'
j

I,

12•60 1970 PMC. good con·
dition, 4 yr. old furnace, new
floors, new carpet with
14M24 unfinished attached
room , $1500 080, must
move! Call (740)949·0812 ,
leave a mess_age.
x?O Shultz mobile
1984 14
home, 3 bedroom, 2 beth .
$ 000
1
1t h t
10,
, on arge o t a
can be rented, (740)9926914

2, 3, and 4 Bedrooms unites
available
Pomeroy/Middleport/Racine
area. Immediate occupahcy.
Hud approved, pets allowed,
no deposi t option. Lv. Msg.
t-800·340·8614

All realut..a advertlalng
In thle newspaper Ia
eubject to the Fecleret
FalrHouelnGActol1968.
which makee It Illegal to
advat11ea "any ·
pnlhlranca,llmlhltlon or
dlacrlmlnatlon b ..ed on
race, color, re 11gIon, HX
r.mlll.l • t•ua or national
origin, or anulntantlon
to
'
make any euch
Preference,.limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon."
Thla newtpaper will not
knowingly accept
advartlaementa tor reel
eehlte which Is In
violation ol the lew. Our
reeder• are hereby
Informed that all
dwelling• advertised In
this newepaper are
available on an equal
opportunity b111ea.
Fla t rock 213 acres. 2 story
house , 8 rooms, 2 baths,
Porch and large dec~ . heal

Gara ge Apt. 2 br. appliances
bedroom, .water furn . 106 Locust St.
1
2003
$275.00+ $150 .00 dep .
electric heat, air condition. (7 401446·9061
$300. month , $200. Deposit.

Whirlpool Washer, Oe sign~r
2000 , $175 ; GE Washer,
$95; GE Dryer, S95 ; Electnc
Ra nge , 30", $95 ; Frost Free
Refrigerato r, nice, $150; GE,
Elec tr ic Range, nice, $165;
Maytag Washer &amp; Dryer Set.:
like new, $400; Kenmore.
Washer an d Dryer Set,
$300: Drop Leaf Table and 4
chai rs, $165; Couch, $50;
King size Bed. $150; Full
size Bed , $150: Vario us
other pieces of furniture.
S~aggs
Appliances.
(7401446·7398

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartmflnts at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments m Middleport.
From $278-$348. Call 740992-5064 . Equal Housing --..:~------,
~;;:i
Opportunities.
.

-

- - - - -- - -

and &amp;2g5/mo. 1·800·69 1. ~~3~
04..:).:..58:_:6_·0_86_8____
6777
Nice 4-5 bedroom farm ' 3
N5ow W
Taeksin, g A2 ppiBI·c.adti?onosm•
New 3brl2bth Only $995 house. between Pomeroy &amp; Townhouse
Apartments.
down and only $197.47 per Athens , quite country set- Includes water Sewage,
month. Call Harold, 740- ling, available immediat~ly, Trash, $3SOJMo .. 740 . 446 •
36
:_
:_:5-_7~671_._ _ _ _ _ call (740)593-7456 . 740·
0008 _
707-0030.
-------Vindale mobile home; 1 2x60 -Pa-rt-ia-l-fu-rn-is-ha_d_3_b_ad_r_oo_m One bedroom furnished
. Pt Pleasant
with expando, window
air,
d
doublewide
w/attached apar1men1 1n
.
.
gas heat, 1urn 1she , one garage
3 mites from . ery c 1ean an d n1·0 0 . No
family owned, 11ery n1ce.
·
price reduced, (740) 742 . Pomeroy on ~43. $375 plus Pets . Phone (304)675- 1386
740 992 7401
_ _ deposit. (
)
·Pleasant Valley Apartment
We have new sectional &amp; Unfurnished 2 br, house with Are now taking Applications
single wide homes 85 low as full basement, close to toW~ , for 28 A. 3 BR &amp; 4 BR .,
$ 180 per month, 800 . 837 _ asking $350.00
. a man . +utll· Applications
are
taken
IUes,dep.reqUired call 304- Monday thru Friday, from
2338 _
675·8902 or 304-593·0152. 9:00 A.M .-4 P.M. Office is

::29:..:7~9:..,7..:4.:..0-~99:..:2:..·3:. :3.:. 49 :.._

r

8 USIII'E'SS

AND BulLmNGS

Ij
•

Rio Grande area. 2400
sq.ft., Office/ Commercial
'Building for RenU Lease.
Plenty ott paril:ing: (740)2455747

r .

~&amp;

.LA.J 1 "

r

v

.

I

MOBILE H~=
FOR IU.I'II
n-'=~

I

14x70. mobile home, 2br. w/
den, l1v. rm w I pull~_out, all
electric located on Fmch Dr.
behind Fox's Pizza ih Point
Pleasant $435.00 a man .
call 304-675·3423

ACREAGE
14x70 mobile home, 3 bed113 acre lot on 554 in Por.ter, room ' 2 bath' r"omer~·.
"''
all utilities (including sewer) $390 per month . (740)992Ready to build. $16,900. 6914
(740)256-9200
_:..__ _ __ _ _ _ 2 Bedroom ST. At 554 &amp;
h,
154 Acres of Hardwood Fall Ward Road..,$325.001mont
740
I D
Timber &amp; Pine Pulp wood for Pus eposl ' no pes.
•
71_,._ _ __ _
sale by owner. Show date 24
_ _5_-5_6_
May 2, 10am. May 3. t Dam. 3br. Mobile Home 2 miles
(304)458-1656
outside of New Haven.
Building lots. State Route Adults .Only. (304)882-3362
141 , 10 minutes from
Gallipolis. Restricted , with
water &amp; electric. All with road
frontage . (740)379·2830

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments , Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $385 /Mo. No
Pels, Lease · Plus Security
Deposit ReqUired , Days:
: Evenin9s:
_ _
740 446 3481
_ _
.
740 367 0502
- - - - - - -Twin Rivers Tower is accept -

r:

;;,!;;------..,

oea•

~~=~~;~=;lmmtdlataly,
aftar 8pm .

(740)928-11141

;:..::~...,.-------

~owi:n~·~··~~-......~:--1
___

MISCrn..ANF.Dl.S
M

D'SE

ERC1-IAN ...: ~

r
•

1946 Willy Jeep, 5x8 Utility
Trailer . Diamond Metal tooibox for pickup., sony
playstation·ll, 32" RCA-TV.
(304)675-71663
--------

3 pc. wood lawn furn .l w
cushions $SO.OO

7 cu . ft . chest freezer $50 .0Q
Westinghouse washer &amp;
dryer $25.00 each
2-200w
spea~ers
00 technics
k
12 ·
$100. , aro~ee w. m1cs,
weight bench , 2 bar bellsw/
I
(740) 44 6 2791
Located at 1151 Evergreen 185# o wts
Drive Point Pleasant, WV BURN
Fat.
BLOCK
Phone No is (304)675·5806. Crallings , and . BOOST
E.H.O
.Energy Like
You Have
Never Experienced.
Pleasant Vall~y Apartment
WEIGHT· LOSS
Are now taking Applications
REVOLUTION
for 2BA, 3BA &amp; 4BA ., Newproductlaunch October
Applications are
taken
Monday thru Friday, from 23• 2002 - Call Tracy at
0 )_
44
82_ _ __
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Of1ice is ~(7_4_:
_1_·1_9_
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Catwal~ . 10', $50; sweeper,•
Drive Point Pleasant. WV
1
'"'hone
No
•
".
.
$40
(74 0)992·1 426 eave
.
r
sage
16 13041675 58 ~
.me.::_':.:.:.::__·- - - - E.H.O
_

Beautiful Ri11er View Ideal
For 1 Or 2 People,
Refe rences, . Deposit, No
Pets , Foster Traile r Par~ .
0_18_1_·_ _ _ ing applications for waiting
74_0_-4_4_1._
CampSite
on Raccoon _
Cree~ Ad &amp; Barefoot Park, Mobile home for rent . no list for Hud-subsized. 1· br,
alec. &amp; water on site $3000. pets, (740)992-5858
apar tment. call 675-6679
(740)286-8806
:___..:..:.-,-.:..:._-,--,---:- EHO
:....:.:::.::.:__:_:..:.:..____ Newly redecorated trailer in
For sale- shares of property Middleport, deposit &amp; refer·
SPAO:
"h'
~R
In Langsv111 e. "' IO !!rea, ences requested , no pets. L.,--·-~il"""iOil'-,..11
pa rt of 135 acre farm. great (740)992-5073 or 740·992· -

a

I

ANnQUF.S

~-------,.1
·

Honeysuckle Hills Apt. locat- ed on Colonial Dr, behind
3 dressers, Oak ward robe ,
Highway Patro l post. 2 br pedal cars. old signs.. cans.
now avai lable rent starts porcelain gas stolle., rocking
$285 .00 per man. low &amp;
chairs, laundry stove , school
moderate income Equal
Housing
Opportunity d
_e_s_&lt;._l7_4_o_)4-46_·_3oo
_5_ _
(740)446-3344 or TDD 1·
A'
111e;nne
_ _
Buy or sell
800 750 0750
- - - - - - - - - Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740Modem 1 br. apt (7 40)446·
992-2526. Russ Moore,
0390

n........

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired . New &amp; R(lbullt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1800·537·9528.
John Deere F-5 25 mower ·
Grea t condition. Ju.:lt tuned
up ' please call {3 04 )675·
5909 after 5 pm. Or leave
Message
Large swing set; full size
truck cap: love seat older
child's chopped 3 wheeler,
(740)985·3810
'

p
New &amp; Used Heat
Gas
Furnaces .

umps-.
Free

Estimates. (740)446-6308

Trailer space for rent in NEW AND USED STEEL

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
I

I •--~:=;::0-.J
~

For Si lo: Reconditioned
W.lh.r.' dryer • • ~d rofrlg· .
eratora.
Thompaont
Appllonot 3407 Jackaon
Avonua, (304)87&amp;·711S8 . •

steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete ,
Ang le,
Channel . Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains .•
Orl 11 eways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Matllll Open Monday.
Tu d
d oaday &amp;
8 n
ea ay.
F1
8
4 30
Cl otd
r day, am· : pm. o
Th oda
sot rday
&amp;
ur
y,
u
44
740
7300
Sunday. 1 l eWaohtr and Oryor for oalt .,
$!!50.
)
•
1304 878 4498

w

Appllancti, :.=..::.:..:..:..;.-:-~and Whlle'a Motel Otttotore '
Guarantttd .
Wuhara.
Ron All laon
Orytra,
Ran8ta.
ond
&amp;88 Wllaon Rd
R II
t
S
I
Sidwell OH. • 4
4• 81
1 1a
ergoraora, omtoar
$11&amp;. Skaggo •""llancaa, 78
Phone (740, )448·4338
..,..
Vlno Sl. , (740l••&amp;-r388
Wotk-Capa lor 1884-118
Mollohan Carpel, 202 Clark· Codgt D1&gt;o11 long whttl•
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio. but &amp; tullolza dodga Aam ,
(740)448·7444 1·817·830· long wttoelboot (740)388··
Good

Uotd

Rooon~lflonod

j

I

IIAUT.,UL
APA~T· 81 82. Frtt Eotlmotoa. Eaoy i841jDj:1--::-............- . ,
lnvg , go Mdayt umC11d1 ·
BUILDING .
MINTI AT IUDQIT flnanc
1
cu 11 . 1111 aur
or .
SVPPtJ&amp;'i
PAICII A~ JACKiilN
Orlvt· •· un1e 11111 alot.
L,~---iliitiiiii.-,.1
·"• a-droom
houao In .town. IITATII, &amp;2 Wtllwood
~
NO
"ETS.
5287 to $383.
BloCk. brick, uwer plpll,
01 ,..;., 0011, Drive
r
W lk from
•• &amp; --•o C 11
. .'frfl/• ,
windowt , llntlll , etc. Claude
Rtltrtncoo. Call 1•" 11 •"PM 7'0
I '48
to ~·OP
"~'
•
·
a
21•8
E
t
r
••
• ·• - • .
qua · IHir Nr~t ·
1 Wln tera , Rio Grande , OH'
448 888
~
\
',
I
Houolng Opportunity.
Call 740·24&amp;-5121 .

ldntaflt~

3 year old Brick · Aanch ,
pool , storage
•lngroui'ld
building, excellent neighborhood, (7.0)446-0149

GooDs

Beech St. Middleport, 2 bedroom fu rnished apartment,
utilities paid, deposit &amp; references, no pets , (740)9920165

3 br., 2 ba ., 2 car garage
18x38 In ground pool, extra
lot Addavllle achool dlatrlct
740·446·4262 or 740-446·
.487 ,

3,000.., aq.h., 2·112 acres,

HOUSEHOLD

FOR RE!.T

Madison,

pump. recently remodeled.
corner of Green tree of
Pk. $89,500.
Bulavllle
(740)367-7272
for hunting, call (740)742· 5443.
2008
"r.,...-AP.-~---....,
For 1111 by owner• In
Lot for sale In Rac ine,
FOR lbNr
Addison overlooking river, 1
(740)992·5B5B
L,~-------,1
,,2 acre, 3 br., 1 ba., din. rm, :....:.:::.:.:..::.:.:;;____
kit .. full banment, In ground Prloed to sell, 47 acre• · 1 and 2 bedroom apart pool, frulf lrooo (740)448- woodland tuitable for pat· manta, furnished and unfur·
4e28
ture or nuntlng, 3·t l2 mllll nlat'ted, aecurlty dapoalt
North of Mllltr. Ohio off roqulrtd, no poll. 740·882·
Owner Muot Still
county Rd. 73. 128,000. 2218.
~riot Reduced.
13041887 7870
Ranch Style Homo. 8yra.
"
1 Bedroom Apartmanta
old. Approx . 2000oq. ~. 3br. Prop•rty for ula· cloot to Starting
11
$288/mo.
Zba, ~R . OR, FR, 2 011
Grttn School.
mobllt waahtrl Dryer Hookup,
homo loll. Own 112
&amp; rent I . · Stova and Rtlrlgorllo r.
gar.g.' Co nvonlant
~ooatlon .
Appro•lmately I
aora. (740)~1·1118.
304-t74·•8n
Great lnvutmtnl. (418)8111·
1br. apt, In Ntw Haven.
Appllanctl
Included .
Rio Grande arta, 3 to 30
bl
(304)882
RHdlvllla looatlon, t 112
Avalla • now.
•
aorea lotl, aam1 r111rlctlon1 , 3131 ·
llory homo on approx. 1 water A aleotrlc. 17•0)24&amp;· :.:.:.;...~---:--:2 ont bedroom aparlmtnto
acrt, 3 btdroomt, 12 8747
upatalra, t on flrll lloor,) I
In Mlddltoort, avalloblo

onclootd front porch uud
11 TV room . Groat io&lt;:lflon,
In walking dllllnoo of local
marklt and Poll offlot. Fruit
trtll, city water, naturt.l gal,
dttachtd 1 car garogt, for
mora
Information
call
(740)378-82&amp;3

APARTMENTS

(304)675·6453 or (304)674·
0471- - - - - - -.
1995 Sultan mobile home, 3 Bedroom, Brick Ranch , full
great cond., 2 baths. 2 basement.garage,screene d
br.,heatpump, deck$15,000 deck, sundeck.Fire place.
(740)682-7571
$550.00 mo. 740-441-0113.
•- - ' - - - - - - - -

.,

-

~and contract optiMol with porch uotd 11 utility room ,

11&amp;00. Down paymenl. Call
(30.)882·38e4
after
6:00pm.
·
. 3 bedroom.
1 blfh, 2 ltory
1'1ome In Pomeroy, 1,· car
garage, flrtplact, (740)882·
4
9 82
3 br. home at 171 Lariat Or.
Galllpolla OH ., appt. only
ploaae 740-448·8403 or
740·448-78450r 1·304·675·
3218 .

r Mo~n:s~ I.r.'o--~-~-RENr--._.1
.
r

Neighborhood, Pt. Pleasant. 3 l;ledroom trailer, total elec - 3 br. house in town a11ailable
Call (304)675-651 5 after trlc. must be moved from lot, May 15th unfurnished w/
$
th
5pm.
call (740)992·2272
carpe t 400. per man
$400. dep. 1 yr. tease con5 room on 1 acre lot , in Cole's Mobile Homes
tract call (740)446-0332 ask
Mercerville Oh . (740)256- US 50 East, Athens, Ohio, for Heather.
1717
45701 , 74 0 -592• 1972
_ _:__:_ _ _ _ _ _ House in Leon area.
55 acre farm on SA 554. 3 Land Home Packages av: il· Beautiful 4 bedroom, 3 bath.
bedroom, 2 bath house with able. In your area, (740)4 6· 2300 s'quare feet 2 car
basement. 2 barns, 10 acres 3384.
garage, privacy in country.
k
$500
pasture. Spring fed ltvestoc New 2003 Doublewide. 3 SA $700
a month,
.
tan~. Good hunting. Stoc:~ed &amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down Deposit. Ref. require d .

room , ••Hn
3 Sod room In Pomeroy. bath.
kitchen,living
ancloood
baok

new aport bu,~ .had been readlndg
•. many artlclu about the sport an
==~~=:::::.1• how It was played . Gramps tolr:t
,..
. him thai curiosity would conquer
....,.~R,_v,.:·r~A_Gr-:E:.,--i· fear faater than - •• --- -.
i 7
A Camolttt r~o chuckle quoted
fL.-.I.....I-..L.-.I.....L
...-11V by fllflnv In the mloofn; -d•
you dovolop from lfeP No. 3 b,Iow.

'lj

I'

Th e Mason County Public 4 BEDROOM HOME, 4
Library has 3 part-time bath, only $14,900. For listi
openings. Min. wage, 15 ings call 1-800-719·3001
hours a week wi th some Ext.F144
evening and weekend hours.
Apply by Api-11 29, 2003 4 ,Bedrooms, 2 Baths, 2 Car
PositiOn requires, but Is not ~ Garage, 4 miles out 218.

NURSES (ANI)
limited to: good people s~ills,
$4700
h
good computer s~ills, work
GlVF.Awl\y
.l'LtA lT~~UUU:.I
·
per
our,
1
Columbus , OH . All Units. well with persons of all ages,
some custodial work Y&lt;hen
Kessel's Produce ·and Flea -F-UL_L_T_IM_E_
18_00_l4_3_7·034_8_ needed, orderly and neat in
Cats to
good
home . Mkt 0
· s at Part-time position available appearance. pre1110US
·
l'b
.
pen Th urs· FnI rary
spayed .
neutered
&amp;
Now
renting
spaces,
1354
for
a
Shelter
Manager
for
the
experience
not
needed,
li~es
(740)441·0905
Jac kson P.tke , (740) 44 6 - Meigs County Homeless to rea d . APP1Y 1o: D'lrec 1or,
.
8
Pu bl tc
7...
7~7------..,
Shelter. PositiOn requires at Mason
County
Free male cat . fixed &amp; £F
·
s
Pt
1 1 "'._~
a minimum , a high school Library
508 VIBnd t..
.
\ •/'\.1-.,cu
declawed (inside), 1 yr.,
p
25550 N0
diploma, preferably
an
leasant,
·
B
excellent
w/children ,
TO UV
phone calls, please. Mason
(7 40)992-1090
Associates Degree in a County Public Library is an
social wor~ field . The Ideal
Old car motor to give-away Absolute Top Dollar: U.S·. candidate will have strong equal opportunity employer.
Sillier,
Gold
Cams.
,.,.,~-....- - - - .
. 304·675·3307
Proofsets. Diamonds. Gold interpersonal skills, be able 1140
B USINL""i:'L'
to wor~ with minimal super u.-x~
Puppies Black/White 4 1f2 Rings,
k
"""INING
U.S. Currency,- . .
VISIOn,
eep
accura 1e
1 1\i\.
1
1
weeks old . 740-3880416.
!5 records, and be able to Work
M.T.S . Coin Shop,
Secom:l Avenue, Gallipolis, with · other area service Gallipolis career College
740 446 2842
Puppies to a good home
agencies. Interested parties
(Careers Close To Home)
·
388·8358
I \ll'lln \ I t \ I
may send resumes to:
1740 446 4367
'lin II I ..,
all ,oday
•
•
·
Personnel , P.O. Box 454 ,
1-800-214-0452
puppies, 1/2 lab, 112
Galli~olis.
OH
45631
.
www.galllpoliscarearcollage.com
German Shepherd, 1 male,
1 female : 8 weeks, wormed,
,..,,.::Rlllei.::n'90~·0~5;.:·1~27:,:4::;:6'. ..,
(740)388·0411
PT Desk Clerk need'ed, 170
must be able to work all 3
ML.~l.ll..ANEOUS
Tan couch &amp; love seat in fair
AHn: Work trorh home.
shlhs. Apply In person at ~-------:l
...,
Super· Motel, Gallipolis.
oondillon, (740)992-6895
$5DO- $1500/mo. PT
NO PHONE CALLS.
Beautiful 14 CT gold Bridal
$2000- $4500/mo. FT
Set rounded cluster dla800·286·9748
Retlred·Children
grown- ·mends. wide gold band .
www.retire411.com
Extra bedroom-Empty Nest· Pretty Design $300.00. 2
Ba s k.ls
Bl ac~ male cat. lost In AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or Want to stay at home. Foster Longa b erger
•
545.00
446
4338
Oakwood/Glendale Dri11e Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· Parents Needed: Become a &gt;;;~..:::~~--....,
f'!
area. please call 7 4D-446- 675·1429.
Therapeutic Foster Care
WANTFD
5684 or 740-441-1977 sad - - - - - - - - - ' To Do
!amily.
Harris Steak house Now
Hiring. (3o4)675-9726
ment 30· $4S a day plus
nlileage and paid respite . Expenenced college student
Found: Beagle Dog, on
.
t
Belle Ad . (304 )675 _7162
. Help wanted canng or the We are looking tor homEis in will do basic house cleaning ,
elderly, Darst Group Home,
reliable, and honest. Call
Lost small skinny beagle now paying minimum wage. Athens , Meigs, Gallia. and (740)645-1 050 ask for Ta ra .
counties.
dog named Twiggy please new shifts: 7am·3pm, ?am- surrounding
Training beg:ns May 2. Cal I LAWN CARE
11 •
4
call (740)388 -8449 ~miss Spm, 3pm-11pm . 11pmca . aner
for more information or to PM. 74 o-256 _9361
7am, call 740-992-5o23.
set up an initial meeting.
il
hliiimi. ------,
Oasis
Therapeutic Foste r Newell's Lawn Mowing
Individual .with Secretarial,
Care Network-Albany-toll Services. Call (304895-3399
YARDSALE
Accounting, and sales skills .
Cell (304)674-0870
tree-1-877-325-1558.
Send resume and references along with salary -T-he-1-ol-low-in-g-is_a_sc-had_u_
le Will pressure wash homes,
requirements to: 4367 State of dates and places the cor- trailers, decks. metal' build·
Rout8 160, Gallipolis. OH ractlonal Officers tesllng will ings and gutters. Call
(740)446-0151 ask for Ron
45631
be given
or leave message.
2 family yard sale May 1-2·3
April
25,
2003
Charles
E
Insurance Inspector Part10-5 , hice ~ids stuff 1636
Career Center
IJ'\\\tl\1
time. ProPerty Inspector Yeager
Chatam A11e .
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...;.;;;._....,
needed for Mason Co. Car, Hamlin , WV
10
8USlN~
- - - - - - - - 35mm camera , measuring April 29, 2003 Career
596 Orchard Hlll Road.
Center L-~0~1'1'0~·;;,fl;,;lU;;,NiiiTV;.;.-:l
device Required . Send Technology
Friday,
Silturday.Down Resume to Mr. Mike, PO Box Huntington WV
Route 7 to Clipper Mill rlgtit 339 , Brick, NJ 08723 or May 6, 2003 Mason Co,
INOTICEI
Library Point Pleasant WV
on 'orchard Hill Road. Follow email upfromlkeOaol.com
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
signs. Mowers, weedeater,
All testing will begin at 10
lNG CO. recommends thai
~ . race track, toys, cloth- Lost your Job? Need to am. to make an appointment
you do bu$iness with people
Ing, gun.
Work? Let's talk ... The new to take the test please call
you know, and NOT to send
are 304-558-2110 and as~ for
A11on !
There
money
through the mail until
CRAFT SALE
*"25,ooo••customers in our Helerl or Sandy. The test will you have in11estigated the
Memorial Flowers. Saturday
area needing service. Earn also be given on April 30. offerin .
Apri126 . 7983 Bullrun Vinton
$1 .000+ Monthly by selling 2003 and May 13. 2003.
, Ohio 1Q-4, Cancel if rain.
MONEY
$20. of Beauty Products to 6 Please call for more lnfor·
mation
on
these
tesl
dates.
TO
WAN
People,
5
days
a
Weeki
p74 YARD SAIL. PoliiF.ROYIMIDDLE Great for : Couples-Single
Moms-Families · - - - - - - : - - - : - : DEBT CRISIS I
Handicapped. Plans to Fit Truck Drivar•, Immediate Consolidation is the key to
Middleport-Pomeroy's 6th
any Need. No Stock Ups, No hire, class A COL required , personal loans. mortgages.
annuaJ 6-mile tong Yellow
Door to tioor. It will Work for excellent pay, e~eperijilnce and other financial ser11ices.
Flag Yard Sale. May 2 &amp; 3 .
Youl $10.00 Start up Fee. required. Earn up to $1,000. Available up to $500,000.
look tor th8 yellow flags ! Call
Call April , 304-882-3630 for per week.Call 304·675- Low Interest. CALL TOLL
for Info abOut locations. 740·
Detalls.
4005
FREE: H7H36-6297
992-4055.

1-·

Advertising Deadlines:
Wednesday, May 7, 2003

R~o~n

A
.,~~L
. NA~ND

OF
tltbe

1100 p.m.
P•p•r

Carolina Flea Market Now No Layoffs Hera 111
Open- Fri. Sat. Sun. Vet1dors Earn an extra $420.·
C- 1 Beer Carry Out permit Welcome. (304)675-5270
$1680/mon.
tor sale, Chester Township,
P'art-time. flexible schedule!
Meigs County, send letters Ya rd Sale 86 Burdette . 1-800.695-9166 or v1sit
of interest to: The Daily Addition. April 25-26. 'earn-? www.NoleyoffaHere.com
Sentinel, PO Box 729-'20, ~R;;jai;;,n;;:or:,;S;;:h;;;in;;;e_ _ _..., - - -- - - - -

r

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

• Start Vow,. Ada With A Keyword

1110

i

Visit us at: 200 Main Str-t, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675·5234.
E-mail us st:
·
claaalfled@ mydatlyreglatar.com

C/~tt'S'a/~

JneertJon

• Adl Should

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

3S..egtster

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155 ·
Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
E-mslf us at:
ctaaaltlad 0 mydallyaentlnel.com

~~·~,oo p.~.

Monday t:hru Friday
:00 a.m. t:o s:oo p.m.

2003
..

0:.
,,

j

by Brad Radke (1-3), improved to 16-3
overall and sen t the Twtns to thetr second
six-game losing streak this season.
Kansas City is the ninth team to start 100 at home two shy of the major league
record, set 'by the 1911 Detroit Ti~ers . .
Chris George (3-1) allowed one, r~n m
six innin,gs, and Mtk~ MacDougal ftmshed
for his mnth save. Mike Sweeney homered
for the Royals, apprehensive about opening a three-game series Friday night in
Toronto because of the SARS outbreak in
that city.

Sooner or later, somebody in the New
York Yankee s' starting rotation had to lose.
Andy Pettine just wishes it wasn't him .
Bengie Molina hit a three-run homer and
the Anaheim Angels beat the visiting
Yankees 6-2 Thursday night to
avoid a three-game sweep in a
rematch of last year's playoff
series.
Pettine's loss ended a 16-0
run by Yankees start.ers, the. Athletics 2 Tigers 0
longest such wmnmg streak to begtn a sea. '
so.~ in maj?r league history.
.
·
At Oakland, Calif., Mark Mulder (3-1)
, We d&lt;:ftm,t,ely re.altzed we .~ad a goo~ itched a three-hitter for his first shutout of
d ping Detroit to 2-18.
thtng gomg, Pettnte sa~d:. You don t Ph
want to be the one to stop. 11.
t e season, rop
Anaheim, outscored 17-5 the previous
two nights, snapped the Yankees ' seven- Rangers 16, Red Sox 5
game winning streak and handed them
only .their fourth defeat in 22 games this
At ·Arlington, Texas, Rafael Palmeiro
season. The first th ree losses were all by and Juan Gonzalez hit three-run homers
one run .
and Carl Everett added a three-run triple as
" It would be. nice to win 150-155 ganies, the Rangers piled up 19 hits.
but it 's not going to happen," manager Joe . Pal meiro's 496th career homer, his sixth .
Torre said. "Thi s was a game we weren 't this season, put Texas ahead 13-5. Derek
supposed to win , because we didn't pitch Lowe (3-2) was roughed up for seven runs
well enough to win. You have to under- and six hits in two innings.
stand that !hat' s going to happen ."
The Rangers placed pitcher lsmael
In other AL games. it was: Texa s 16, Valdes on the IS-day disabled list.
Bo ston 5; Kansas City 2, Minnesota I;
Oakland 2. Detroit 0; Baltimore 5, Chicago Orioles 5, White Sox 4
4; Toronto 5, Tampa Bay 3; and Seattle 4,
Cleveland 2.
At Baltimore, Deivi Cruz and Gary
Tim Salmon hit a solo homer in the first Matthews
Jr. homered in a three-run sevinning for the World Series champion enth as the
Orioles rallied from a 4-2
Angels, who eliminated the Yankees 3-1 in deficit against
Rick White and Tom
the first round of the playoffs last October Gordon (1-2).
.
- endin g their run of four straight AL
Melvin
Mora
went
3-for-4' with a homer
pennants.
for
the
Orioles.
who
climbed over .500
Ramon Ortiz (3-2) wen! 5 1-3 . innings (11-10) for the first time
since opening
and allowed two runs on eight hits. includ- day.
ing Bernie Williams' leadoff homer in the
sixth.
3
"They have a lot of good hitters, but 1 Blue Jays 5, Devil Rays
was making my pitches," Ortiz said . ..
At St. Petersburg, Fla .. Tanyon Sturtze
Pettine (3- 1) gave up six runs and eight
(3-1)
allowed two runs in six innings to
hits in five innings.
"Our starters have been challenging each beat hi s former team and Orlando Hudson
other. I'm sure Andy will take scme grief hit a two-run single during a three·run
fifth. Toronto went 3-8 on its longest road
from the rest of them," Torre said.
Jason Giambi was sc ratched from the trip of the season.
Yankee s' starling lineup because of a
bruised finger on his left hand, hurt when Mariners 4, Indians 2
he was hit by a pitch the previous night. He
struck out as a pinch-hitter with the bases
At Seattle, Jamie Moyer (3-1) pitched
loaded to end the sixth .
six strong innings and Bret Boone hit a
two-run single as the Mariners completed
their first three-'game sweep of Cleveland
Royal$ 2, Twins 1
since 1993.
With closer Kazuhiro Sasaki on the dis· .
At Kansas City, Mo., Joe Randa hit a goahead double in the sixth inning and the abled list, Jeff Nelson pitched the ninth for
Royal s became the first team since 1987 to his first save. Billy Traber (0-2) lost in his
first major league start after scheduled
win its first 10 home games.
starter
Brian Anderson was scratched with
The Royal s, who overcame a four-hitter
a strained right hamstring.

85

Sentinel •

.~&gt;

'•

r•;w.·.

t

�Friday, April 25, 2003

www.mydailysentlnel.com

2 year old male black lab. 2· 1994 Corvette. White Red 1980 Econollne, 1 Ton
3 ·year old male rottweiler. feather, glass top S1 t .OOO E~~:tended Len~th Cargo
(304)882·2558
Van, V-8, Auto, 4 New
1740)682·7512
Wheels And Tires, 84 ,000
A.K.C. .Boston Terrier pup- 1994 Ford Thunderbird. like miles. On Board Power
pies $250.00 -$300.00 vat new condl11on, 75,000 miles. Convertor,
Small
checked (740)446·7573
(740)992;1401
Refrigerator, AsKing $1500.
AKC Pug Puppy male,shots 1994 Ford Th underbird, like

_1

16_02_ _ _ _
304
_!6_75_._

and wormed. $350.00
Call: 740-388-9325

new condi1ion, 75,000 miles. 1990 Ch911Y 411.4, 112 ton .
(740}992·7401
350, Sspd, a1r, runs great,

AKC Registered Labrador
Retriever
RUP.Pies,
Bloodlines,
Champion
Ready for Easter, Males
$200, Females, $300, Black
&amp; Yellow. (740)446-ooao

1996 Saturn $ 3 , 195., 1997
Cavalier 52.495 . Four
Grand-ams from $2,895.,
1995 Monte-Carlo $3,695.,
13 others instock. We take

Yery good cond ition, $4,100,

314 Ton GMC Work Van.
34M. OriQinal Owner, air.
auto, tilt, cruise. $10,500.

trades. Cook Motors. 74Q- 1740)446·2957
44
C.K.C. Registered Jack -:-___s-o
_ 10_3_____ 89
~::-=:'-----,,..----Plymouth Grand Voyager,

Russell Terrier puppy, male. 1998 Grand Prix GT 3800. handicapped equipped, aU
7 weeks, $150. {740)256- Loaded, $7,200. No Trading. electric, fair condition. good

1652

1304)576-2667

Fuii·Btooded Saint Bernard 2000

R.B.

Join the 6th annual Yellow Flag Yard Sale!
May 2nd &amp; 3rd.

Trucking

$5 gets you on the map &amp; a yellow flag .

•

Dirt

transportation,
S2000,
Ag Lime
1
~171:4:"0)-99-2·3-586_ _ _.,
[7411
7'0•985•3564
l Mon&gt;RC\'CUS ~~~~~="'=· ,~.

Oldsmobile

An additional $5 if you need an in-town

location for your yard sale.

HAULING:
"
1 Limestone
• Sand

I Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

I

Alero
female Spayed, 3 years 42,500 mi e&gt;t. warranty to
• old.needs to be 1n country. 100,000 mi. 4 new tires,
• 7~3576.
AM/FM/&amp;
cassette/CO, -,

r

1 pair 200 watt EV. PA system speakers, tits 24K28 in
cabinet 12 in. EV speakers
811.16 in horns aSking
$500
1 \In I 'I 1'1'111...,
~\ 11\I .., ICit

Cellular

All for $5.00!
Sron~on::rJ

by Th~ Middleport Cunnu ~ ni ly A.~M)I.: am.l
Th e Pn m~roy Merchanl!i AHociatmn .
Tt• ~i g n up. 'toP in Ohio Ri ver Bt·tu (\• ur Midlllt.-ron
Dept Store or Ofikc Scr\"kc &amp; Supply m Middkpon Hr
. Chapman

Shoe~

&amp; Ohm Va lley Hulk Slorc-l'nmew) .

for more inrormation call 992-4055

Jeff Warner Ins.
'· 992-5479

• ;;;;;;

1:&lt; Spring ':&lt;-

':'

2Q02 Mitsub1sh1Eclipse 2dr.
power sunroof, keyless
entry. Excellent Condition.
To take over payments or
payoff. (304)675-n44 after
5pm.
- - - - . , . -- 2002 Nissan Que ~ SE,
7000 miles, Excellenl condition , fully loaded, video sys-

L.,--;:,::;--:;.,,.1

.Alll&amp;L

6 mi les long through Middleport &amp; Pomeroy! Hundred
of maps distributed ! Advenised &amp; pro moted widely un
radi o. ncw !lpaper~. flyer.; &amp; pt)Stcr's!

:' =

Reg. Border Collie pupp1es White w/ Gray int. , spoiler, 1987 XR-250, good condiimported bloodlines classic exc. cond. (740 }441 -9865 lion. new tires, runs strong,
markings (740)379-9110
_•M_er_S_pm_._____ $950 080, (740)992-6925

ML51CAL
ir6rRUMENTS

Special '~

tem, $22.000 74Q-446·7370.

h.

JONES'

PC DOCTOR

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

2000 Hornet 29 fl . Camper.
Allis Chalmers DO Road sleaps 9, Exce 1lent condl··
Grader. diesel
engine. t.10n. As•-....11'Q $12 ,000 . 446"-17-40-'-)2-::-5_6·_61_47::-----.,-- 4473 AHar 5 PM . .

204 &lt;;ondor Street

HARTWELL
STORAGE

Riding Horses For Sale
388-8 358

1997 Dodge Extended Cab
Tow
packaQe
running
~.;;;;~~~-..., boards. Brush guard 77.000

r

~

miles $12.SOO 740·388·
9017.

IL\Y &amp;

GRAIN

·--·---'
Good quality straw. Volume
discount &amp; delivery available. Heavy square bales.

10x10
1 20
Ox

1997 Dodge Extended Cab.
Tow package. Running
boards, Brush guard 77,000
miles. $12,500 740-388-

740·992·1117

$2.85 par bale. 1304)675· 9017
sn•
------------lin \"' l't lH I \ 110 \

Auro;
FOR SALE

I

Sl Rl 7 Cioeglein'Rd.

Toy ota 4x4 , been
wrecked, new rebuilt motor
..., , H\ It I ...,
2,000 miles. $800: 89 S-10,
2 wheel drive, runs great. 11':111"""-~--...,
new tires. no problems,.
HOME

87"

$850.1740)256·1t05
$5001 Pollee Impounds!
Hondas, c~ . ate! Cars/
VANS &amp;
Trucks from $500. For list·
4-WDs

i

r•o

I

Pomeroy

~=====~

HOWARD L
WR/TfSf£

IMPRoVEMENIS

&amp;.,.lllliiiiii.iiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiorl

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
lngs 1-800-719· 3001 ext. - Unconditional lifetime guar3901
1988 Ford Bronco 4ll:4.
antee. Local references ·fur1995 Ford Mustang GT Good
Cor~dition .
Call nished. Established 1975.
$5.500 4&lt;16_ 6389
1304)67S·6St5 aHar Spm. Call 24 Hrs. 1740) 446·
0870. Rogers
Waterproofing.

992·6323.
Custom
Building
&amp;
Remodel ing,
Free
·Estimates, tor All Your Home
Repair and Remodeling
Needs, (740)992- 1119

SPAGHETTI DINNER
Open to the public ·

Saturday, April 26
2:00-5:00
Adults: $6.00
Children under 12 $3.00
Proceeds go to Sr. Citizens
Meals-on-wheels
Sr's over 60 eat free

r~~~~
Sherry Cunnlnaham

Congratulations! You have
won 2 free movie tickets to

Chicken BBQ
Syracuse Fire Dept.
Sunday, April 27
Starts 11 am _

BINGO
April 26th ·
6:30pm
All Packs $5.00 ea.
Starburst $1300

American Legion
Middleport

New Homes • Vinyl
p11lmg • New Gar·agesl
Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COMMEACIALand
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

COimiCDII
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740·112-lm
Stop &amp; Compare

WILSON'

.\II m · Sl'lll'l.l S
Wht/'8 th4 CU5t0ftl6r
~sfirsn

Under New
Managagement

Open 9 am-~ l 'm
t...., 1n h'~"" pO.:t up
fo• •II y.~~&lt;t c-&lt;~nrum m'dl&lt;

F~ ~'IIIIWC&lt;.

Call

L!.'

(740) 446-1812
~hm&lt;l

nur

Hill's Self
Storage

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES
BOX I~9 MIDDLEPORT.

WOLFE
MECHANICAL
Spring Special

a.m. at the storage

$75

1!1411 mo. pd

per

Meigs Count)ls Largest selection of
annlllliS, perenn/Qis, vegetables,
shrubbery, (111/t, or~Mmenta/ trees,

month

roses. rhododendrons, and tUiileas.

CO'jPARE THESE PRICESII
4" pol of annuals 9#
4" potofperennlala S1.181Bif 6 ttl! FREE)
Rat of plan!a $6.60
0pon 1 ""''
• --daylight
Hanging Basketa $6.60
•• dorkt
Morning Star Road • C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

FISHING DER8Y
Racine Gun Club
Prizes Awarded
Food, Beverages &amp;
Bait Provided
Sun., May 18th
All Kids 17 &amp; Under

turas, wicker chair,

Plaslic &amp; Melal Welding

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
order to get the rrioney she'
owes him. It's not a pretty picture, but ii's the unfortunale
truth.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 53year-old woman who is 100plus pounds' overweight. Six
months ago, I finally made a
commitment to lose the excess
pounds, and with my doctor's
approval, joined a weight
reduction program. Slowly but
surely, I am succeeding. I
intend to stick with it.
The problem is my live-in
boyfriend, "Jack." I know he
loves me and has my best
interests at heart, but he acts
like a "food cop." I resent
being ~iven the third degree,
and bemg told what and when
to eat and drink.
Abby, is there any tactful
way to tell Jack to butt out? If
he keeps this up, I could fall
into some of my old eating
habits, and I don't want that to
happen. - BIG GIRL IN

DES MOINES
DEAR BIG GIRL: You are
starting to make progress, and
for that I congratulate rou.
The next time your boyfnend
acts like a "food cop," tell him
you know he means well, but
this is a project you need to do
on your own -· for yourself
and by yourself. Explain that
when someone looks over
your shoulder, it makes you
nervous, and when you get
nervous you want to overeat.
So he should please stop.
DEAR ABBY: "Devoted
Daughter in Houston" wrote
about her mother having vascular dementia, and how a
family member took advantage of her condition and
.removed a valued possession
ft?m. her home without pernussion.
My mother .has vascular
dementia and we, too, had
family members who tried to
take advantage of her. I
obtained legal documents
from , our family lawyer and
had my mother's doctor
declare her incompetent. I ·
then photocopied the ·forms,
along with my durable power
of attorney, and mailed them
to the guilty parties. .
Needless ttl say, these folks
are \lpset, but they no longer
try to get · money from my
mother. - FAMILY "BAD
GUY'' IN NEVADA

45 Pub sign
· (2 wda.)
48 toast
1 Btg
•
toppers
success
4 Tag along 52 Pit stop
llem
8 Brat
11 Unusual · sa Holy
Image
12 Tel55 Mlne·flnd
13 "My gal"
56 Rim
of song
57 Bridge
14 Eggy
58 Coupd'DEAR ·F AMILY "BAD
dessert
. 59 EmleGUY'': The lesson is, as hard 15 Jusl
ofthe PGA
16
High
card
as it may be to face, that some60
Swank
17
Spy'sllle
times it's necessary to take 19 Micro61 Pond
legal action .to protect a loved
·. maker
waved
one from exploitation and ' 21 "I" trouble
financial disaster. That's what 22 After taxes
DOWN
23
Urban
attorneys and elder-laws are
abOde
1 Nimbus
for. So please don't let anyone
26
Bova,Y'o
2 SomeCDa.
make you feel like a bad guy
3 Got upllghl
title
for acting like a good guy.
29 Make
4 Engraved
Dear Abby is written by
tracks
gem
5 Done with
Abigail Van Buren, also 30 Tree
anchor
6 Former
known as Jeanne Phillips, and
space lab
32
Dilficull
was founded by her · mother.
34 No fulure
7
Tied
the
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
score
Abby at www.DearAbby.com 36 Clarinet
8 Author ·
or P.O. Box 69440, Los
kin
- Dlneaen ·
38 Sundial
9 Kitchen
Angeles, CA 90069.
·
numeral
spice
39 Clumsy
10 Implored
41 Striving
11 P.O.
43 "So long!"
service
44 Fruit paalry 18 Horror-film
ACROSS

'
servant
worker
.
20 Jazz's
42 Cheered
home ·
44 Small
22 Pact letters
change
23 ·T'al 45 Leer
ch'uan
46 Catch
24 Sound from
red·handed
Babe
47 Recipe
25 Diamond or
amts.
Simon
48 Rocker
26 "- Dick"
- Jell
27 Skirt length 49 Kappa
28 Gray or
preceder
Moran
50 Gouda
31 Slime
cousin
33 Use a
51 Firm up,
spade
as pudding 35 Band
· 54 Navy
Instrument
noncom
37 Fiendish
· '
40 Office

r.-"~"T."""""T;"-

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

Pd1 mo

tl~l&gt;.i ' S

titne.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - ·
If you're smart you won't go
ncar any speculative situa·
tions tod ay. Lady Luck is off
taking a coffee b(eak al this
time and she won't be around
when you need her most.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-There is a good chance an
unresolved domestic issue
might rear iiS ugly head today. Should this occur, make
it a point not to say any onkind things to the one you
love, no mauer what's been
said to you .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Although your powers of .
observation may be very keen
today, you could mis~se this
gtft by unduly focustng on
only the tiegalive aspects of
life. Tum lhis around quickly.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22)- Unless you put a lid on
your spending today, you
could be far too extravagant
for your own good . Give in to
your prudent instincts when
beckoned to do so.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21)- Be realistic today
regarding the climale of your

'51':1.1'&lt; Nl\\-1\lil':~:·..

0\1 ~

~

~

relationships. It will help you
minimize your frustrations
over not getting your way
wilh everylhing you lhink you
should.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22Jan. 19) - When it comes to
any important undertaking
you engage youfself in today,
you need to clearly think out
every step you plan to take or
you coula risk painting yourself into acomer.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - Don't allow your
friends to inlimidate you inlo
going along with something
you clearly do not want to do.

It's your prerogative .to do as
you please.
.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20)- If you get too involved
with persons who impose
upon your time, don't expect
to get anything done that you
had planned to do. It's your
choice if you want to be a
patsy for olhers.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) -· Usually you can rely
upon your instincts to be rea·
sonably accurate and work for
you, but this mi&amp;ht not be the
case today. Don I allow your
inner feelings to overrule your
logic.

\VORD
SCRIMMAGE'" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
.
.
c
:roM IJriiiM , ..... ~.... Inc.

1st OOWN

._!!_

2nd00WN ·~

-

J&lt;dOOWN •
"I&gt;OOWN
AVERAGE GAME 210·220

JUDO'S TOTAL

78

·~

lrdDOWN

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrim·
mage ·

AVERAGE GAME 195-205

FOUR PLAV TOTAL
TIME UMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS: Make a 2- to Hmer worel1rom the letters on each yardline.
AOd points to each word or lelt•r using scorin~ direction! et right . SeverHeltef
words get a £0-poinl borus. AU words can De IOunelln .WebSter's New Wend
Collage llletiono&lt;y.
JUDD'S SOLUTION TOIIORROW
102003 U..lod Faahn ~·· nt.

.....

332

.. ~ .. OJ

•

COOL!... \\ciN
Lol-l~ ~ILL
IT~

~?

-=
~
~

YOUNG'S

.CARPENTER
SERVICE

=
E... RifT'&amp;.

l11E N I .
REA L"

• Room Additions 1:
Remodeling

IIAV~

• New G"ISitl
• Electrlcel &amp; Plumbing

0000 ,

• Roollng &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Pllntlng
• Patio and Porch Deckl

1 Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Pomtroy, 01'110
y

I

878-2417 or 448-2112
Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675·2457
t Driveways t Tennis Courts

t Parking Lots t Playgrounds

I 'f"'\

-•na

(10'x11' 61D'x20')
Parts • Service ·
Bags • Belts
Over 25 years in Business

(740) gg2-]1g4
gg2-6635

Rht·r\\:t\

( 'a fl·

o~ll H1'll (

11 ( r !,11 V-11 '-.

(304) 273-4098

fl£("U~E.

II':&gt; ~00~ D"'&lt;-"

~'(\0~~~--~,

I'JJC.I\ \&lt;If.
&amp;.lle.m Fl10'\
rm~ 1. TULS
~{)\)it

1'1':\u-&lt;OSI

• Fast, Dtpendabl~ Se.-vk't

r·rl.t

•"

~

Rainbow!l, Kirby, Electrolux, Hoover, Eureka,
Tri.Star, Reglna &amp; most!Mher brands.
r

~OUTINE

FOil. THE
T Al.E NT SHOW ·

Under new ownership
and new management.

up sweepers at you r home

Jarts shipped UPS

. THAT WA.!»N 'T
FVNI"'Y .

In Syracuse

- '25.00 senrice fee for picking
•

\oiOitKIN~

ON r1"i'
STAND ·l1P

(Farmnl)' Whilnt)"'s }

COME JOIN US
7 Days A Week!
Morning

;'The l.inle re~I:IUrant
, with the ll1 g taste"

TO

LOOt'.

Henderson, WV

g7 Beech St.
middleport, OH

=

by JUDD HAMBRICK

MYERS PAVING

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

0
0

4th DOWN

t Roads t Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

BINGO

ba•••·

rll

992-1385

SUE's GREENHOUSE

Bv BERNICE BED£ OsoL
In the year ahead you could
develop an alliance thai will
' tum out to be very imporlant
, to you. where your career is
concerned. -It will prove to be
one of the mosl conslructive
:arrangements you've ever
· made..
. TAURUS (April 20-May
. 20)- Be cautious today with
,where you place your trust.
You should be especially dili- .
gent concerning business matters. Unless firms or associ·
ates have proven themselves,
don't take an1 s;hances.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- Make certain there is a
clear-cut underslanding in ad·
vance as to who is responsible
for what or you will risk a
partnership arrangement collapsing from. its own weight
today.
· CANCER (June 21-July
,22) - Should a misunder·
•standing arise with a co·
·worker today, try to resolve it
as quickly as posstble. If 1t ts
.allowed to smolder, lhe rift
could gradually worsen with

:j

l140J

lng·, got grill, mite.
household llama, pic·

facility addreta llated
above. The following
un~• and occupan11
are
at followt:
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UnH. 76 Occupant:
Staphanle Rouoh
lllml.
218
Rock
St.,
Unit 75 Occupant:
Special
POmoroy, Ohio
CMotlna Horter
American
Contenla: Two cheat 1508 Nye Avo.,
of drawere, telephone POmeroy, Ohio
LeQion
atand, oofo, coffee Content•:
table,
microwave Refrigerator, Wither,
tland, Chrlotmoo dec• Iampi, bed and m•toritlona,
trumpel, lreoa, child's blcyclal,
lnRuHand
lampa, Chrlatmaa tree charcoal grill, potting
Past467
aland, wall ohell unit, canlatera, mlcrqw•ve,
chlld'o toyo ouitcaH,
chlld'o gameo,
4/28/03box, pholo albums, window olr condition4/30/03
electric fan , Ohio er, clolhat." pillow,
Slate jacket, Melgt Tupperw1re ,
Paying $80.00
High School year· Chrlttm•• llnat, conper game
books, CD'a, video diet, chlld't wood
Starburst SI 500 tapea, mlac. house- chalra, IIHer bd1,
hold Item a.
phcher, utenalla, all·
Each Hlc;aht
unit 71 Occupant: vorw11re, Nallvlty HI,
Starting at
Robert Freeman 368 ceramic
mugs,
E.
Main
St.,
POIMf'OV,
Halloween
flgurlnea,
6:30pm
Ohio
many
unopend
Everyone
Contento: Bicycle,
hand tools, rake1 , (4) 25 (5) 2
Welcome
ahovela, hoet, cloth-

Le\ me :k 11 fer y:.u

'W.A.C.

1•740•949·2115

Shop
Classlfleds!

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

sggtmonth'

r.llj ..

kltch1111 utentllo, alec·
trlc fan, weight bench,
cordlata phone, many
unopened boxet.
Unll 53 Occuponl:
Annetta Sherman
305 Nc3rd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
Conlenla:
Night
tlond, free weight
bench, wood 11001,
T.V., folding cholrt,
bench, chlld'e bed
frame, mite. boxed

J/18 tfn

as low as

Get A Jump

PUBLIC ADVERTISEMENT
The following per·
aonal property will be
oold al auction tq aatltly lien claim• by
Hartwell
Slorage,
34055 Laurel Cliff Rd.,
POmeroy, Ohio 45788.
Sale will be held
May 10, 2003, al 10:00

OH 45760

740-843-5264

Add on A/C

·space
for

N~w

on
SAVINGS

Finally... Money paid to )1!U. when cancer
strikes. You choose the amount up to $50,000!

strapped. CANCER CHECK will be
th ere when yo u need it.
Call now to reserve~ check .

in this

tquipmanl

ttoun1Npm
CloMd lun•r•

CANCER CHECK
Pays in addition to other insurance.

"sk Jll

Advertise

tclorhi1111 •nd hunlina

1-740-992-7007

-w.v·s # 1 Chevy. Ponttac, Buick, Olds
Custom Van Dealer··

Stn•wt Plam!

A variety of c-anmuflage

ltt:ttU Add~d l#dJt'
36198 Pt •clt For~ Rd.
Pomaoy, Ohio, 45769

1-800-822-0417

You usc the money .however you like,
Cancer wil l strike when you least eli:J&gt;eCI it.
It will le ave you and your fam ily financially

740-992·7599

1149-1485

ROBERT
BISSELL

Best Service at
the Best Price

•

1333

BASKET BINGO
May 1, 2003
6:30pm
All proceeds go to
Meigs County Relay for Life

BUILDERS InC.

the Spring
7 in · · - - - - Gallipolis.
Call Valley
the Register
today tor detalls.(304)675-

Pomeroy Eagles
Band: Stone Street
April25- 26

Middleport Legion

BISSEll

I mEl

*frllll!l •••*

475 South Church St.
RJpley, WV 25271

992-2975

dii..MLESS

Basement

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance- Painting, \linyl
siding. carpentry, doors,
windows. baths, mobile
home repair and more. For
ti-ee estimate call Chet, 740-

Pomeroy Eagles

. *108flllll
' diME
lllllmiiiiiCE

New&amp;: Used

Pomeroy, Ohio

lAwn and Garden Equipment is our
business, not our sideline

Hill

Dean

SALES &amp; SERVICE

1990 International Single
Axle Dump truck , 466 DT,

I740)286·S395

DEAR ABBY: I was maid
-pf honor in my cousin
"Denise's" wedding. As such,
I helped her to get a good deal
on her photography. My close
'friend, "Arthur," had just
begun shoolingprofessionally,
and photographed the wedding for a greatly reduced
price.
My problem is that Denise
never paid Arthur. It has been
several months, and Arthur
'finally asked me if I would
track her down because she
has not return his repeated
phone calls.
· Denise admitted that she
spent the money on cosmetic
dentistry, but now more time
has elapsed, and she still hasn't paid him.
·
My cousin claims she will
:pay Artliur "one day," but I am
embarrassed and angry. How
should I handle this? Denise is
not an easy person to confront
- she is easily' offended and
moody. CAUGHT IN
THE MIDDLE, OAKLAND, CALIF.
DEAR CAUGHT IN THE
'MIDDLE: Your cousin
Denise is more than easily
·offended and moody ~ she's
also a deadbeat. Step back and
:do not allow yourself to be {lUI
in the middle. If the bnde
signed a contract with the photographer, he may have to take
her to small claims court in

Saturday, April26, 2003

GRAVELYTRACTOR

1740)446·2847 $1800.

t.Jimance bloodlines, Maine
Chi- Angus show hei1ers,
heiters, bred heifers and
crossbred bulls. Slate. Run
Farm ,
Jackson,
OH .

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 7

www.mY,dallysentlnel.com

Astrograph

Fair Lambs, (740)441-9814 1983 Ford F-150. Extended
after 4:30pm. Also, one 3 Cab. 4ll:4. 300- 6-cylinder.
month old billy goat tor sale. lair shape . . runs great

fie; .·Angus bulls- Top per-

Friday, April 25, 2003

.

:-Maid of honor is frowning
after photo bill goes unpaid

;:======::;

75_84_ _ __
:..17_40..;.)9_9_2._

'

"

0P.f.~5\NCJ fOR.
LOVE I~ EA,~.

DRES""fr 1'0
DUMP I&amp; ntE
TOU~H ONE .

�Coming Sunday: Yearbook Community Religion
I

I
'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant • Aprill6, lODl

SO CENTS • Vol. 1, No. 35

... If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week. C/o. The Gaston Gazette. P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053
WINS .-&lt;&gt;N

~

I~UP

What: Auto Club 500

SFH'tF'Rr

-cnAfT"tMI\N fffllf l t(

•

Labonte's Chevy wa s in the

What: Californ1aspeedway.com

with 63 laps to go. Labonte
led 49 laps. iflserting him-

Last ' year's winner: Scott

be the first Craftsman Truck

Chevrolet. 155 012 mph, . Joh nson. He kept them at

Race record: Hank Parker

Most recent race: Dennis

Most recent race: Former

the April 12 Advance Auto
Parts 250 at Martinsville
(Va.) Speedway. Ted Mus-

Where: California Speedway.
Fontana (2 miles). 250

laps/500 miles

When: Green flBg drops at 3

p.m.

EDT Sunday

Last year's winner: Jim mie

Mason County

Gallia County Bicentennial

4' AI II UUNIA liMA

What: Hardee's 200
300 '
Where: Lowe's Motor Speedlead was that Labonte 's
way, Concord , N.C. (1.5
team opted to take a chance Wher111: California Speedway.
by changing only two tires Fontana (2 miles), 150 milesl,134 laps/ 201 miles
laps/300 miles
Whan: 8 p.m. EDT May 16
while all the prime con Last year's winner: Th is will
tenders were changmg four When: 4 p.m . EDT Saturday

Criminal
Records
closes
location

Riggs
Series at lowe ·s Motor
Track quallfylnC lfton!: Ryan . ·self with unorthodo• strategy Track quallf)'lnc record: Bob- Speedwa1.
Newman , Ford , 187 .442 into a battle royal among by Hamilton Jr. . Chevrolet. Track quolllylnC record:
mph. Apnl 26. 2002
Gordon. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 179.198 mph, April 27, None
Race record: None
Race record: Jeff Gordon. Tony Stewart and Jimmie
2001
Johnson

June 22, 1997

Most recent race: Who 'd
have bel ieved Jeff Gordon
would wind up being the
ninth driver to win a Winston

Cup race 1n 2003? Gordon's
Chevrolet had been strong

all da11n the Apnl13 V~rginia
· 500. and the reason Bobbj

bay for lap after lap by work- Jr.. Chevrolet. 155 .957
mph. Apnl 28. 2001
ing traffic and MpinchingM his

pursuers down. Gordon ·put
a bumper to him." D1dn't
wreck ·labonte . Didn 't knocK

Busch Se ri es champion
Oavid Green, in a Chevrolet,

him out of the waj. Just . won the April 12 Pepsi 300.
Green passed Johnny Sauter
on the final lap for his f irst
by. That was on the 487th of
victory of tile season.
500 laps.
nudged him enough to get

Setzer. in a Che-vrolet, won

BY lAWRENCE J. SMITH
Staff writer

grave fin i shed second, fol ·
lowed by Winston Cup regu-

lar Kevm Harvick. Car l Edwards and points leader

Bobby Hamilton.

n ·un

flf' 1111·

wn"11

v

JEFF GORDON' WINSTON CUP SERIES

E

R

s
u

Humpy

Wheeler

The Winston is coming

, ure
a !!.~~-~~.~~
. pre-eml)tedbya

that NASCAR president Bill France
may be considering moving the race-

sent mo111 than 530.000.
11&gt; Fans are up In arms over th~ .

disclosure that NASCAR has
made considerable donations to
thi'Rev. Jessa Jaei&lt;Son's,0f8811lzatlon recently. Quite a tew·are
calii"ll ~ 'hush money."
• Thare Is absolutely no tMII to ,
:the rumor thlll, ·011er 'Eastlir,
NASCAR officials met to redeflne the term 'PisSOY8r."
11&gt; Many racers Spt!nt ,Enter In
•
the Bahamas. Remember When
they dll spent their spare time
racing on dirt tracks? . _ .. ,
11&gt; The good news? ABusc~ Se- .
rles regular, David Green, won
the race at -N81hvllle Super. speedway: The bed'.news? Tile
Cup &amp;uYS _.In Martlnevlllil.
" Tha Winston Is go;,. to pay $1
• ·mmion to the Winner. Tl\llt' OU!IIll .
• to prodUC!I a ff{W risky moves.
• 11&gt; Nine different drivers have won
Cup races so far. None ·of them
Is named'Johnny Benson, Jeff
Burton, WBr!l ·Burton, Kevin Her·
vlck, Jimmie Johnson, Sterll!lll
Martin, Mark Martin, Ricky Ruqd,
TO!'¥ Stewart or Rusw Wallace'.

I. Je!fGordon

~.

jlmml~ JQOn~

!!. llutl ~Ylll:h
!!, Ke\oiQ !:Iii~~
z. TQ!!I Stewa!l
·,
Michael ~ttri~
•• Ric!!\' graven
10. Elliott §!!dl~r ·
BuscH 5rJaa

•.

1.

Tod~~int

.a. RQn Hornadav
' J, Davlg llr~o
-~. §h!!ne Hm!!l
~- M'l!@ Bll~
Jason Kell~r

~

,.
'·
7.

J~mie

McMyrrn

JQhn!l)! Sauter

" t.

s~on Rill&amp;~
~2. Brian Vi~kers

; CRAmMAN TIIUCIC
~- BobbY HamlttQn
2. Rick Qrawtor~
- 3. er~n~an Gaughan
. '4. Ted M~~IU8Ve
!!. Dennis Setz~r
II Trl!l:ii KY!!RII

.

Io

Itt[):!;~~

I· B!l!l!lrt Pr§§§~

9. JQn Wood
10. J~§Qn l~ffl§r

up May

17 , and. once again, rumors swirl

What's the bill deal?

w-·ewo
;a. Mi!ll Kenseth
a. Da!l! Eamhardt Jr,

Bill
·France Jr.

s

. ;!.,330

·51

- 139

·171!,
-~22
·2~3

-zaa.
. 242
· 21!!

· 27~

1,120

. 7~

.s~

·W
·t.Q;l

· 149
· 163

·168
·17Q
. 2~Q

§7Q
- ~9

-7§
. 79
·ell
'1Ql

· U3

. 1:1.2
· 1~Q
- 1~§

.. HOT: Jeff Gordon has finished
fourth or better In four of the sl•
races run at Cal~ornia Speedway.
•NOT: Elliott Sadler·has never
finished in the top 20 at California Speedway, but he's never

to another track in 2004.
It has been held -very successfully

at Lowe's Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C., in every year except one

since 1986.
MThis isn 't going anywhere beM.
cause NASCA'R i s going to ha11e to

shoot me, and drag me down to Daytona and bury me right next to Bill
Fra nce.~ Wheeler said . ·we're going

to work hard to keep it here. It's not

going away. Fans like it toe much.

You're not going to stop anyth ing

Tim Verdin of the Verdin Company keeps a close watch on
molten bronze being poured into the mold for the Gallia
County bicentennial bell Friday in Gallipolis City Park.
(Andrew Carter)
The Galli a County 50, right, students from schools through-·
out the county, pass pieces of bronze ingots down the line
Friday. The ingots are be ing used in the forging of the county's bicentennial bell . The bell will be unveiled and presented to the public today. (Andrew Carter)

that's this popular.M

NASCAR Thlo Week'o Monte ·
&amp;lveo hlo take: ·T~e Winston

Dutton

Points piling up
as Gordon starts
season off strong

ought to be in the Charlotte area.

There) that old saying: 'If 1! ain't
broke, don't

fix it.' Th e Charlotte area

is home to most of the teams. It's
the epicenter of the who le sport.
There's another all-star race. the

Budweiser Shootout. In Daytona.

Every poll shows tha t the fans are in
favor of keeping the race where it is."

I · AN

By Monte Dutton

II-"~

• Winston Cup driver Elliott Sadler is
hosting the M&amp;M's Hoops for Hope
charity basketball game at the Uni-

NASCAR Tl)is Week

F

our-time Winston Cup champion
Jeff Gordon is coming off his
first victory of the season and is
heading to a track. California Speed- ·
way, where he is the only two-time
winner.
He's moved up to third in the
points standings, trailing only Matt
Kenseth and Dale Earnhardt Jr.
To summarize, Gordon's "drive for
five" is very much alive.
"These guys have just been bringing the best cars to the race track,"
Gordon said. "We've been leading a lot
of laps, we've been qualifYing great
and pit stops ha1•e been phenomenal. I
can't exactly put my finger on why
some races have slipped away from.
us. Just little things here and there
have kept us out of victory lane ."
That having been said, it's still a bit
early for title talk
"We certainly keep track of it and
pay attention .to it," Gordon said, "but
I think it's too early to be racing for
points. Right now you just need to
race as hard as you can for those top
fives and top lOs and get those wins
when you can, I think the points come
by racing that way. We do everything
- every lap of every race- to get
the best possible position we can.
We're looking at bringing great cars
to the track and trying to win with
them."
Crew chief Robbie Loomis agreed.
"It's not something that we sit there
and focus on yet ... especially on a bad
day," Loomis said. "I hardly ev~n look
at the (points standings) sheet going
home."
Gordon's victory April13 at Mar-

I

versity of North C~rolina at Char

lotte's Halton Arena on May 15. The
game will pair NASCAR drivers and
other celebrities against members of
the motorsports media in a one-hour
shootout. The game will benefit
autism researcl1 . Halie Oru Sadler.
Sadler's nie ce and the daughter of

brother and fellow NASCAR driver
Herm ie Sadler, was diagnosed with

the disability in 2001.
,. It was only

a

matter of time .

'Chicken Soup for the NASCA:R

Gallia residents answer the bell
BY ANDREW CARTER
News editor

...c:.:;..:_.:.:..:.:...,_ _.:._ _ _ _ _ _ _

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - A crowd
numbering in the hundreds gathered Friday in Gallipolis City Park
as Gallia County kicked off its
bicentennial celebration.
The large gathering, composed
mainly of elementary school stu·
dents, bore witness to local history as 'a group of children known as
the G;illia County 50 passed
pieces of bronze ingots to craftsmen from the Verdin Company,
who then wenl about the bu siness
of forging th e county' s bicentenni-

Please see Records. AS

Soul" (Health Commun ications Inc ..

authors

Photos by John Clark/NA;lCAR This Week

Hendrick Motcil'lports driver Jeff Gordon took his No. 24 Chevrolet to Ylctory lane
In the 'Aprll13 VIrginia 500 at Martinsville Speedway. It was the four-time Winston
Cup champion's nret victory of the season. I.Mt year, Gordon didn't win hie nrst
race until Aug. 24; In the Sharpie 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway.
tinsville (Va.) Speedway was the 62"d
of his career. At .the age of 31, healready ranks seventh on NASCAR's alltime list of winners in its premier series.
Born in Vallejo, Calif., on Aug. 4,
1971, Gordon moved to Pittsboro, Ind.,
in his teens, primarily to advance his
racing career. He enjoyed spectacular
success in go-karts and open-wheel
cars.
He never raced stock cars until the
age of 19, but was Busch Series Rookie of the Year in 1991 and won the
same honor in the Winston Cup Series
in 1993.
Gordon then won Cup championships in 1995, 1997, 1998 and 2001.
He won 10 or more races in three consecutive years - 10 in 1996, 10 in

a

1997 and 13 in 1998::.. and won total
of 47 in the five-year period from
1995 through 1999.
In 2002, Gordon won three times,
but the first did not occur until late
August
"There are so many sweet things
about getting a victory early in the
season," Gordon said. "In the first
third of the season, I think it means so
much. It just takes that weight off
your shoulder.
"We don't have to go each weekend
saying, 'OK, it's been 18, 20, 30, 40,'
however many races it's been since
we :won .... Any win is special, and it
was awesome and it was great to be
able to do it from the pole."
Contact Monte Dutton at 'tug50@aol .c6m.

inc lude

a

number

of

NASCAR dr ivers as well as writers
longaffiliated w1th the sport. As t~e

back cover reads, • ..·. auto racing is
a metaphor for life. We all need the
support and .lo-ve of our own pit crew
to keep us on track and in winning
form as we go througl1 our own ra ce

every day:

• Here 's something new. or at least
it's something we ha-ven't seen be-

fore. 'Martin &amp;IJ .'s Race CarRepair" is a kids book on racing. Not

surprisingly, it's dirt-track racing, be-

cause author Susan Kelly Hearn's

husband is one of the better dirt-

tra ck racers in the wor ld, Brett

Hearn. Ma rtin and lJ .. by the way, .

are mice who live in a race-&lt;::ar shop,

and they end up playing a role in a
big victory for their, uh, roommates.
The ill ustrator is Gary ~obmson . If
your local bookstore can't get you a
copy of 'Martin &amp;H's Race CarRepair." check out the publ isher's Web

Seventy-three cars started the
Modified-S portsman 250 in 1960 on
the day before the Daytona 500. but
many weren't racing for long. On the
f irst lap . 37 cars were involved in a

first-lap crash that was the largest in
flipped during the crash.

• Bridge groundbreaking .
set for May, See page Al
• Mysterious dog carcus
creates

COVER

COVER

See page A6

Index
1 _S~!dions - .11 hges

-

~Jl!! ~.
CHRYSLER

252 Upper Rlvor Road

A3
B4·S
B6
86
A4
AS
AS
Bl-3
A2

2003 Ohio Vall!y·Publishing Co.

CHESTER, Ohio- A replica of the restored 1823 Meigs
County Courthoiuse in Chester
is being built for a centerpiece
on the county's float in the the
Ohio Bicentennial parade on
May 3 in Chillicothe .
How,ard Wolfe is heading up
construction work to build the
miniature courthouse. He said
that his crew of four have been
working for the past two
weeks to piece together a
courthouse worthy of being
di splayed as the centerpiece
on the Meigs County float.
Crew members Gerald
Powell, Dale Col bum, and
Glen Thoma are assisling
Wolfe in constructing the
replica which is built of wood.
-"glass and faux brick \vall paper.

The roof has shingles glued anniversary of the creation of
and individually nailed into the Northwest Territory in
1938. While they were young
place.
The large windows, a trade- children, Meigs County resimark of the courthouse, are dents Don Mom and Mary
perfection in detai I as is the Rose road on the original float
wooden cupola which will _ which featured the courthouse
crown the courthouse.
replica · in the parade in
Wolfe said the materials Pomeroy. Wolfe said the repli·
were donated by Badger ca disappeared in the early
Lumber Company in Belpre 90s.
Since the bicentennial is
and Baum Lumber Company
of Chester. If the builders and approaching, Wolfe and his
architects of the courthouse crew decided to keep the same
replica 'have any questions theme of featuring a courtabout what the original court- house replica. Colburn noted
house looks like, all they need the significance of the court·
to do is look outside. The house to Ohio.
"The courthouse not , only
replica is being built in a
garage space, which was also belongs to Meigs County, but
donated by the Baum family. also to Ohio as the oldest
nearby the foot · of the hill standing courthouse in Ohio,"
where the original is perched. he said.
The replica will also be
Wolfe said the replica will
replace an earlier model which shown during the Meigs
was bui It in time for the I50th County homecoming May 10.

Several dogs will be terminated soon if they don 't find a
good home. Please contact the Gallia County Animal Shelter
to see if there is a perfect pet waiting for you.
This Cocker Spaniel looks a little older, but very loveable
and in need of a good home.

2881 State Route 160 • Gallipolis

ANYTHING!

ANYTHING!

BY J. MILES LAYTON
writer

Staff

See

• Bicentennial photos,

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Replica nears·completion

Needing a home

The Tobacco Use Paevention
NOW OPEN!

HI'LL

. HE'LL

problem,

page Al

~

UP

Meigs County

Inside

site at coastal181 .co m.

the history of ·superspeedways"tracks of a mile or mo re. Eight cars

top-five finishes. either.

FREE with any
USED car under
100,000 miles!

said Kari Campbell. 10, a fourth· exclaimed.
gr.ader
at
Hannan
Trace
Elementary School.
.
' Good crowd
Jay Stapleton. 12. a SIXth-grade
student
at
Hannan
Trace
Bill Lowe, Bell · Program
Elementary, echoed Campbell's Coordinator, said he was encoursentiment regarding the occasion. a~ed by the large crowd, and espe- '
" I thought it was pretty cool," he ctally the number children in
said. Stapleton said he would def- attendance Friday.
initely be back today to see the
"We say every week , 'Well,
other bicentennial activities.
there's only going to be three or
Nicole Baker. II, a fifth -grader four people here ,' but so mehow,
at Hannan Trace Elementary. also someway, they show up ," said
said she would be back today and Lowe , who lives in Delaware. " It
was surprised at the weight of the was a great crowd today. It is so
piece of ingot she passed along to neat to see all those school kids
lhe bell craftsmen.
'
Please see Bell. AS
" It was real heavy," Baker

$14 .95) goes on sale Thursday. The

race d there after consecutive

'

a! bell.
Rochelle Finley, principal at
Hannan Trace Elementary School,
said she was pleased that her students were provided the opportunity to participate.
"It was wonderful for (the
Bicentennial Committee) to ask us
to do that and it's an opportunity
the kids will remember for a life·
time, " she said. "I hope they take
their families and their children
when they grow to the courthouse
and see the bell thai they' cast."
Bottom line for the students
involved was that the event was
enjoyable.
"I thought it was kind of fun ,"

(At the intersection of Route 160 and Jackson Pike}

No gimmicks,
no deductible •

NORRIS-.norrlsnorthupclocll•·com
NORTH·UP DODGE, INC.
Owntr: Mille Northup
Ge.....-.1 lit._.,: P~ &amp;orn.rvllle Fln1nc:e: Alln Du.,.t
S.... fMm : ,_.. Pe"-'1 JM!Ie AdMIIOII, lMT)I P!ww, ,X,. T'l!h, John a....ncMn~, John~ Aqb lrighC

112 Mil s.uth ot..., SN...-Iktdue. Gllltlpolt., on~&lt;o

.

.,..,....,...•••••n•tnf'

POINT PLEASANT, WVa.
- Another Main Street retailer has had to close up shop
and take its business across
the river to Gallipolis, Ohio.
After seven and a-half
years, Criminal Records'
ceased operations earlier this
week . Owner Jeff Wamsley
said the reason for the closing
is the reason why most businesses close.- no money.
"Basically its the same old
song and dance - a negative
cash flow,'' Wamsley said.
Wamsley was quick to point .
out that the Point Pleasant
location is the only store
that's being closed. The two
other locations he owns in
Gallipolis and Jackson. Ohio
are alive and well.
In fact, Wamsley said the
Point Pleasant store was being
kept aliv~ from the profits of
the two other locations.
"It just wasn ' t a good environment." Wamsley said.
Likewise, Wamsley said
both internal and external factors contributed to the declining revenue . Among the internal factors was his having to
rent the building .
External factors included
lack of foot traffic. Wamsley
said despite other Main Street
retailers like Woodyard's
Mini-Mall who've struggled
with trying to gel people to
downtown. music retailers ·
regardless of size and location
are experiencing sagging
sales.
Wamsley said. this is due to
people burning CD's off the
Internet. He said when adding
the factors togetfier it isn't
hard to figure out the answer.
"Negative cash flow plus a
lack of foot traffic plus CD
burning equals store closing,"
· he said.
· Wamsley, a Point native,

800-446-0842

and
no cost to

II

••

Information on ,Secondhand smoke, tobacco prevention and
much morel No appoi~hnent necessary!

www .holzer.org

For more information, please call (740) 446·5940

l

•

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

·"

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