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                  <text>Spring Home

Innprovennent2?10
Inside Today's Sentinel

100~/

Printed on
Recycled ~e~~print

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.r,... • •

.~·,. '
.._

~

•

~

www.mydailyscntincl.com

Middleport
man arrested
on drug charge

OBITUARIES

Meeting
jo1 'meals'

Page A2
• Harold R. Lohse
• Evelyn B. Thomas

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Last night community members packed the Me!gs
Senior Center for a spaghetti dinner, cake auct1on
and live entertainment all to support the Meals on
Wheels program. Pictured are members of the River
City Players performing show tunes for the c~owd
which later bid on cakes auct1oned off by B1lly
Goble. Last night's dinner was an integral part of
this month's March for Meals fundraisers.

SPORTS
• Meigs County lands
15 on All-TVC basketball
See Page 81

Beth SergenVphotos

INSIDE
• A Hunger for More.
See Page A4
• Church Notebook.
See -Page A4
• Cling to the cross.
See Page A5
• The Passover and
the Passion of Christ.
See Page AS
• Lawson to speak
at Mason County
Lenten luncheon.
See Page AS
• Meigs Local
Schools honor rolls.
See Page A6

,Southern

=-------------------~--=-=J

~ approves

personnel,
1graduates
1

-a
D.,.

Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTCMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT
A
Middleport man has been
arrested on charges of drug
possession. drug. pa~apher­
nalia. and contnbutmg to
the delinquency of a child,
according to Thursday's
report from the Middleport
Police Department.
John Gomez of Maple
Street. an adult male, and
the juvenile bo.th adm~~ted
thev were smokmg mariJUana in the parking-lot of the
Rejoicim.! Life Church.
The call to police on the
incident c:Jme from that
Church with Middleport
Patrolman Leslie Edwards
responding: The yout~ was
charged With possession of
a controlled substance and
released into the custody of
hi~ mother pending charges
to be filed in Meigs County
Juvenile Court.
Other police actl\'lty
included the arrest of Earl
Scott McKinley of Mill
Street who was arrested and
booked into the Middleport
jail after h~ was seen by witnesses trymg to burst out a
"indow of a truck owned b)
Snouffers Fire and Safety.
~1cKinley was charged
with disorderly bv intC'xication and two counts of criminal damaging. After being
jailed, McKinle) punched
the video surveillance camera off the wall in the jaiL
the repott noted.
Recent Middleport Court
activity reported included
the following charges and
fines: Jennifer Steinbeck.
speed. SI 06: Christopher
Tucker. stop sign \'iolation.
$170: Weston · ~1oquin.
speed. $107: Deana Adams.
open container. $195: K~vin
Purvb. reckles" operation.
S1.170: Carla RusselL stop
sign. S 170: Ariel Smith. no
passing zone. Sl_?O: Jeremy
Smith. stop s1gn. S 170:
David Easter. failure to controLS 195: Eric Crump. failure to control. $195; Daniel
Fisher driving under suspension and left center. $470:
and Duane Qualls, disorderly by intoxication. S 195.

I

RACINE
The
Southern Local Board of
Education
recently
approved several personnel
matters and the list of graduating seniors for the Class
of 2010.
Mindy Patterson was
hired on a supplemental
contract as reserve softball
i coach for the 20 I 0 season.
Sylvia
.Mickunas
was
approved as a certified substitute for the 2009-_10
school vear. A contract With
Beth SergenVphoto
Jackie • Spencer . in the
~leigs
amount of $2,160 tor e-rate The Me1gs Marauder High School Band plays the school .fight song at t~e Meigs .Local
Enrichment Foundation's Capital Campaign Kic~ Off held th1s w~ek. MLEF 1s a!ten:'ptmg to
services was approved.
A contract with Sally raise $300,000 to complete funding for a new h1gh school athletic complex which Includes
Jeffery for the remainder of a new football field.
•
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWSCMYOAILYSENTINELCOM
the 2009-10 ~chool year for
$40 per half da) f~r the Title
COLU~tBLS
Th1s
1 services at the h1gh school
High : Upper 40s.
Easter. the Ohio Poultr)
was
approved
pendin~ ~om­
Low: Upper 20s.
field but an "important part A-.sociation ( OPA) and
pletion of all the adnum~tra- f
of the communi tv.''
Ohio's egg fanners continue
tive requirements for t.he
According to the .\1LEF's to pia\ ~an acti\ e role in
position. A contract With
high school athletic comBY BETH SERGENT
Brittany Buckner for the BSERGENT@ MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM plex. The "capital cam- website. here is a financial local communities b) once
brcakdO\\ n of the S1.6 mil- again teaming up '' ith
remainder of the 2009- I0
paion" has :1 theme of "The lion cornple:\: field modifi- SeconJ Harvest Foodbanks
school year .as a middle
ROCK SPRINGS
Dr~llll b Still Alive" which
school math teacher at a rate With the Meigs .\1arauder plays upon the detennination cation-. (natural grass). $0.1 (0 \SHF) for the third year
a SEcnoNs- 12 PAGEs
of $ 150 per day was High School Band playing to brino the complex into m1llion: sound svstem and to donate more than one
~
'
scoreboard. $0. i million: m1llion eggs statewide.
approved.
the school tight ~ong in the reality despite the defeat of a
"line Ohio egg ramlCI'~
calendars
A6
The resignation of LeMer background, anm~d 100 le\ v which would've funded fem:ing, $0. 1 million. lighting. $0.1 million: pavement ag.ain will donate~nore than
Manuel as middle . ~ch?ol people gathered th1s week the-project.
ar~i \\alb. $0.2 million: 1.~ million eggs. to be pro83-4 math teacher dlcct_1ve to kick off the ,\leigs Local
"We might'n~ lost the
March 15. 2010. for retire- Enrichment Foundut ion's election but we did not lose eioht-lant• track. $0.3 mil- vided to local hunger chariment
purposes.
was campaign to complete fund- hope," ~1eigs High Sc.hool li&lt;~n; concessions and toi- tic~ \ ia the Second Han est
approved. Mayla Puckett ing for a new high school. Alumnus Paul Reed s:ud to lets, $0.3 million; bleachers. network: of 12 foodbanks.
·Faith
$0.4 million.
just in time for Easter. The
A3-5 and Shirley Sayre were athletic complex.
the audience.
As previous!) reported. ~ontribution of I 01.000
approved ~1s certified. per"We're all in this togethReed
and
Bartrum l\ILEF abo brenl\s the-.e dozen eggs has an estimated
B6 sonnel. whtle Rachel hm:as
NASCAR
er,''
Meigs
Coun!}~ strc-.sed ''hat they felt the
CO~!~
ll ,'1\\ n into more retail \'?1Iue of more than
and Kclli Bail~¥. were
B Section approved a~ clas~d1ed per- Commissioner and ~ILbl• complex could mean not descriptl\e terms on its $101.000. .
Sports
spokesperson Mike Bartnl!ll only to the ~chool dbtrict
The
~k1gs
Count)
sonnel on a one-year con- told the audience. ''We're 111 but .M eigs Count) in terms wdhitc. sa\ ing first, donaC&gt; 8010 Ohio Valll')' Publishing Co.
tract (222 day~) for the the fourth quarter and \\ e of economic Jevelopmcnt tions will 7·esult in a ne" Coun~il on Aging recci' es
practice
football
field 1 products thH~u.gh Second
grant period Apnl 1-March
and educational opportuni- bt'tween the ~Iiddle School Han·cst tor It s nutnt10n
31, 20 II, pending continued need you tonight" .
MLEF is attemptmg to ties for youth. Reed pointed loop road and the e:-.:isting p1\lgram although Sharon
receipt ot grant fund~ and
out he felt the compk:-.. was
rai~e $300,000 to compktc
Please see MLEF, Al
Please see Eggs, Al
Please see Southern, Al financing for its $1 .6 million more than just a football

of

WEATHER

Ohio Farmers
donate eggs
to Second
Harvest

1

Benefits

nutrition progratn

MLEF's dream still alive

Capital Campaign kicks off

INDEX

ss

.

.11.1~.1 !1!1.!1!11

I

•

�-

Friday, March

-

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~.......,...,........-~~------------------------~~~ ,~~~~ ~~·~~--

26, 2 010

The Dai]y Sentinel • Page A2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Democrats near victorious end of health care fight
BY D AVID ESPO

Harold R. Lohse

ASSOCI.ATED PRESS

Harold R. Loh~e. 94. Pomeroy. Ohio. passed away on
March 25, 2010, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center.
Pomeroy.
He was born on April 30, 1915. and established
Swisher and Lohse Drug Store in Pomeroy in 1946 He
was empln) ed as a chemist at the TNT Plant during
World War II .
•
Mr. Lohse served several years on the Pomeroy Board of
Education and the Mt!igs County Board of Education. He
was an avid golfer, a member of the Pomeroy Gun Club,
and a lifetime member of the Middleport Church of Christ.
He was preceded by his son. James R. Lohse.
He is survived by his wife of 73 Years. Elizabeth
Bradford Lohse: children: Jennifer Lohse Sheets and her
husband James R.: John Bradford Lohse and his wife, Mary
Beth; grandchildren, Dr. Jared Sheets and his wife Laura;
Dr. Aaron Sheets and his wife Ann: Adam Sheets and his
wife Jaclyn: Lori Tragesser and her husband Don: and
Angie Lohse: and six great grandchildren.
Services will be held at 3 p.m. on Sunday, March 28,
2010, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Officiating will be AI Hartson. Burial will follow in
Riverview Cemetery. Friends may call on Sunday. March
28, from I p.m. until time of service at 3 p.m. at the
funeral home.
An on-line registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
:

Evelyn B• ..._omas
Ill
•

Evelyn B. Thomas, 84, M1~dlep.ort. passed away on
March ~4, 20 lO. at her home m M1ddleport, surrounded
by family.
She was born on A~g. 6. 1925, in Henderson, W.Va .•
daughter of the late G1lbert and Laura (Newell) Bechtle.
S~e loved all her. family dearly and her love and devo~ion
wtll be greatly nlJSse~. Evelxn was a mother, care prov1d.er
and homemaker for mne chtldren and over 150 foster chlldren. She was a lifelong member of the Jehovah's
Witness~s a~d attended the Rutland Kingdom Hall of
Jehovah s. Witnesses..
Evelyn IS preceded m death by her parents. grandparents:
husband, Paul F. Thomas; son. Wheeler Joe Thomas: sonin-law. Jesse Mo!fis: grandson, Jesse Thomas; ~reat g_randdaughters ..Alex1s Shay Thompson. and Jess_1ca Wilson;
brother~, Gil be~ and John B.echtle; stster, Mane M~y.
She Is sun·1ved by: Chlldren, Dorothy Moms, Eva
(Homer) Griffith. Paul "Buck'' (Frances) Thomas, John
"Be~r" Thomas. J~ne (Jack ''Scoop") Griffin, Laura (Joe)
D~v1s, Pearl (Jctf N~well) Glaze and Ltsa (Randy)
Mttchell; brothers .. Ghfford Zeke and .Robert Bechtle:
numerous gr~ndchlldren. gr~at grandchtldren .and great
great g_randch_1ldren; several meces and nephews.
Ser\'lces wtll be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, March 27,
20 I0 .at ~nder~on McDaniel Funera~ Home i.n Mi?dlepo~t.
Offictatmg w1ll be Randy McDamel. Bunal ~til be m
f1:einey Cemetery. Fr~en~s may call ~me hour pnor to serVIce. from noon until t1me of servtce at 1 p.m .. at the
funeral ho!Tie·
.
.
A.n on-hne registry ts available at www.andersonmcdamel.com.

MLEF from Page At
football field. ~1LEF also explains the existin~ baseball
field will not be modified at this time and expansiOn will be
to the east with a shift of the football field and the installation of a new eight-lane 400 meter track. New bleachers for
home and visitors. including a press box. will be installed.
A new structure. serving as a "gateway" to the facilities,
will also house ticket sales and entry control. New concession stands for baseball and football, walks, steps/ roads.
restroom facilities. fencing. lights, gates, sound system and
a scoreboard will serve as a facility to highlight Meigs High
School Athletics and, MLEF hopes will be a "magnet'' to
. .
bring n~w peopl.e and busine~s. to th~ are.a.
At this ttme. tf the fundralSlng dnve ts successful, It IS
possible the Meigs Marauder football team could ~tep fo~t
m their new stadium in the fall of 2011 . The stadmm Wtll
be located behind the current MHS.
MLEF is currently circulating informational pamphlets
about the capital campaign kickoff which include d~nation
forms which begin at $50. Donations are tax-deductible.
For more information on MLEF go to www.meigsfmmdarion.org.

Eggs.from Page Al
Matson. nutrition director, said they have not in previous
years received the eggs .
''Eggs are a critical item for our foodbanks because they
are a protein-rich produ~t. ~ow~ve~. they are also o!le of the
hardest sources to acqutre. sa1d L1sa Hamler-Fug1tt, executive director of the Ohio Association of Second Harvest
Foodbanks (OASHF). "We commend Ohio's egg fal1ll:ers
for once again stepping up to help their neighb&lt;?rs espectally at a time v:·hen hundred~ of thousan?s of O~wans. many
for the first time, are seekmg food assistance. .
Every week, more than 225.000 Ohioans rece1ve emergency food assistance. ''We place great val~e on t~e relationship with our comumers, and ensunng thetr trust
requires us to help those who are less fortunate or who are
struggling in this economy;' said Jim Chakeres, OP~ executive vice president. "Ohio's egg farmers are commttte~ to
supporting our local communities and that means helpmg
out when needed.
. .
The Ohio contribution complements a national initlat!ve
being conducted by the United Egg Pwducer~ ~nd Feedmg
America that will provide more than .11 mtllton eg~s t.o
foodbanks nationwide through a donatwn from Amenca s
egg farmers located across the country.
. .
OASHF's 12 member foodbanks•provi~e hunger rehef m
all 88 Ohio counties. Meigs County rccetves foo~ t~rough
the Logan distribution center. In 2009, OASHF d1 s~nbuted
more than 113.7 million pounds of food an.d grocery •.terns to
nearly 3,000 member charities. food ~antnes, soup. k1t~hens,
homeless shelters, and other food assistance orgamzatwns.

WASHINGTON
Capping an epic struggle,
congressional Democrats
applied the final touches
Thursday to historic legislation enshrining health care
as the right of every citizen.
Republicans vowed to campaign for repeal in the fall
election sea~on, drawing a
quick retort from President
Barack Obama: "I welcome
that tight."
The president spoke in
Iowa as the Senate voted
56-43 for legislation making changes, including better benefits for seniors and
lower- and middle-class
families, to the bill he
signed with a flourish at the
White House on Tuesday.
Olivier Doullery/Abaca Press!MCT
That cleared the way for a Senator Max Baucus (0-MT) speaks during a news conference after the Senate passed
final, contir!lling vote in t~e an updated health care "fixes" bill Thursday in Washington D.C.
House. wh1ch Democratic
leaders hoped for by struggle was morphing into tion away from a serious as a government takeover of
evening.
a new phase. where public issue."
health care paid for in highPassage of the two bills debate was tinged with vio"Repeal and Replace'' er taxes and Medicare cuts.
was the culmination of what lence - and politician~ wa&lt;, the new slo!!an for they
Houo.;e
taunted
1 Obama called "a year of
accused one another of Republicans as they~pivoted Democrats who voted for it,
seeking to exploit it for their away from earlier attempts saving those lawmakers had
1 debate and a century of trying'' to ensure coverage for own advantage.
to kill the health care legis- cleared the way for their
nearly all in a nation where
More than I 0 lawmakers lation. Officials said it V.:a~ own defeat this fall.
millions lack it. Taken m the House said, they had meant to appeal to tea party
Democrats said any
1 together, the two bills also
received threats or worse as activists - who staged an unease was the result of
aim to crack down on insur- a consequence of the health occasionally unruly demon- months af Republican~
· •_
ance industry abuses, and to care debate. most of them stration outside the Capitol tractions - as far ba
reduce federal deficits by an Democrats who voted in over the weekend - as well last summer's debun CJ
I estimated $143 billion over favor of the legislation.
to independent voters charges of "death panels''
! a' decade. Most Americans There were reports of bricks as
eager for changes in the - and predicted the pubhc
I would be required to buy through windows, a cut health care system put fear- would warm to the new Jaw
insurance for the first time, propane line to a grill and ful the Democrats went too once its first benefit~ take
1
and face penalties if they numerous obscene and far.
effect.
! refused.
threatening phone calls and
That was Obama 's pitch
"Republicans fought on
1 The second of the two faxes . An undisclosed num- behalf of tlie American peo- in 10\va, where he touted a
bills also presented Obama ber 6f lawmakers were ple this week and will con- "set of reforms" that will
1
with another victory, strip- under increased police pro- tinue to fight until this bill i~ take effect before the elec1
ping banks and other private tection.
repealed and replaced with tions.
1 lenders of their ability to
Speaker Nancy Pelosi. D- commonsense ideas that
He said small businesses
I originate student loans in Calif.. and the GOP leader. solve our problems without would be eligible for tax
; favor of a system of direct Rep. John Boehner of Ohio. dismantling the health care credits to help them coYer
i government lending.
both denounced the threats system we have and without the cost of insurance for
I Apart from their impact and incidents of violence. burying
the American employees. including a
1 on nearly every Amencan But
Democrats
said dream under a mountain of $250 rebate from the govand an estimated one-sixth Republicans had been too debt."
said
Senate ernment for seniors with
1 of the American economy, slow to respond, drawing an Republican le?der Mitch high
prescription drug
. the week's events marked outraged response in return. McConnell of Kentuckv.
costs.
j Obama 's biggest political
"By ratcheting up the
"This year. insurance
Repeal was far-fetched in
l triumphs since he took rhetoric. some will only the
extreme.
since companies will no longer be
: office more than a year ago . inflame these situations to Republicans are now deep able to drop people'~ cover1 A pending arms control dangerous levels... said in the minority in both age when they get sick, or
agreement with Russia, Republican Whip Eric houses and would need a place lifetime limits or
announced on Wednesday. Cantor of Virginia. "Enough two-thirds majority to over restrictive annual limits on
come a certain veto bv the amount of care they can
added to his resume. and is enough. It has to stop."
White House officials said
An aide to Rep. Chris Van Obama.
• receive." he said.
But Republicans circulat"This is the reform
they hoped the momentum Hollen of Maryland, head of
would translate into further the Democratic 20 lO cam- ed polls showing public some folks in Wash
political successes in the paign effort. responded: backing for the overhaul at are still hollering about.
run-up to the midtenn elec- "This is straight out of the no better than 40 percent. And now that it's passed.
tions.
months
of they're already prom1sing to
Republicans' political play- despite
After a months-long bat- book of deflecting responsi- Democratic efforts to rally repeal it. ... WelL I say go
tle in Congress. the political bility and distracting atten- support. Attacking the bill for it:· lie said.

I
!

Southern from P~e At
meeting all the administrative requirements for the
position - salary is per
grant specifications.
Jennifer
Holt
was
approved for a one-year
contract as supervisor of the
elementary school guidance
counselor grant for April !March 31. 2011 . pending
continued receipt of grant
funds and meeting all the
administrative requirements
for the position - salary is
according to grant specifications.
The following list of
graduates for the Southern
High School Class of 20 lO
was approved: Dylan Boso.
Brooke Chadwell. Bradley
Coppick, Sean Coppick.
Isaac Cummins, Kyle
Cunningham, Taylor Deem,
Cheyene Dunn, Justin

Eblin.
James
Evans. Jacob Wilson. Cattienne
Victoria Freeman. Kayla Woods. Brandon Yare-..
Greenleaf.
Garry Andrew Young.
Also approved:
Huddleston,
Savannah
The parcel description
Hunt, Douglas Jenkins. Jr..
Gabrielle Johnson, Justin and easement a-; presented
Kimes, Kristopher Kleski, for the Syracuse-Racine
Taylor Lemley. Derrick Regional Sewer District. to
Lewis. Amanda Linkous. con~truct a pump station
Michael Manuel. Amillia and give the treasurer perMcNabb. Justin McNabb. mission to enter into this
Joseph Neal. Jonathan agreement.
The purchase of a buildPowell. Cy le Rees. Corey
Reitmire. Cody Richards. ing for use at the ballfields
Bobbi
Riffle.
Chelsi at a cost of no more than
Ritchie, Jesse Ritchie. $3.000.
Approved revised pemlaColby Roseberry. Dy Ian
Roush. Nathan Roush. nent appropriations of $10.3
Dustin Salser. Stephanie million.
Approved Auditor of
Shamblin. Dustin Smeck.
Ariel Smith, Kayla Stevens. State Local GoYernment
Breanna Taylor. Jordon Services to complete the
Taylor. Lindsay Teaford. district's annual financial
Nicholas Triplett. Lynzee statements for a cost not to
Tucker, Ashley Walker. exceed $12.000. This cost is

~
I

t

the same as last vear.
The meeting· adjourned
into exec uti\ e se&lt;;sion once
to discuss job structure and
personnel. The next meeting will be at 8 p.m .. April
26 at Southern High
School All SLBOE members were present for the
recent meeting.

DON'TMI$$
OUT ON OUR EXTRA
MONEY $AVINCi
COUPON$
THI$WEEK
IN$IDE
$liNDA Y'.S PAPER!!!
~unbap \!time~ ~enttnel
,,

"

�...... ..........................

----~------------------------------------------- ------- ~----------------------~~----~~----~
Page A3 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, March 26, 2010

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Fe lim' sluo
A llOStoltC

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ev. I !rope Chur&lt;h

A " ' lleglnomg
(• uU (,0\pel &lt;.'burch I H~msonvalle

llealb (Middlrport )
P
Br. Du m Sunday S hoot
O:OOa.m \\
p I OOam
Mlnemlllr
Pas1or Bob R msoo S nda~ S hool 9
am \\orsh p 10 4
Pearl Cbapcl
Sunday S.hool 9 am \\ooh1p 10 a.m

Rulland
Past r John Ch p n, Sund y School
910 a
\\or&lt;h p IG-30 am Thursday
'ierviC~ 7 p.m
y

m \\

S oda

~hoot

Sno1nille
10 a

&lt;'ah Dr) Bib~ (burch
P merO)

P 1on Bob and Ka) \tars
1'llun 7 p.m

•=

7lon Chur&lt;"b or ( h mt
le Rd tRI 141)

\\ rsh1p

P Qa

Cornrnunit) of Chri&lt;t
l'unland·R•cme Rd Pa.aor J Prortin,
Sunday School 9 lO a ~ \\orsh1p
10 30 am \\ednesday Serv1ces - 7'()()
pm
Bethel \\orsblp Crnler
19782 Sl Rl 7 2 mile&lt; south of TUpptl'$
PlaiD\ 011 Non de nom nauonal "11h
Cootempo
Pra1&lt;e &amp; \\ orsh1p Pastor
Rob Barba A ~ Pastor Karyn DaviS
Yo th D~recaor Ben Fu k• Sundav
semen 10 am \\.;~nbip &amp; 6 pm Faaul)
Life Classe \\ed &amp; Thur naght lafe
Oro ps at p Thurs. morrung ladles
L fe-Ci p a 10 Ouaa !.units )Outh Life
Group oo \\ed e\e g (rom 6 iO 10 8 30
\
I
nJine at W\1 I&gt; bethelv. oOfE

\\r.!t)lln 1l1hlr llolme;&lt;&gt;s l"hurcb
~ l~ar S1 M d port I' 1 r Doug
( O\ 'iund \ '&gt; h&lt;&gt;&lt; I
10
\\or&lt;h p
10 4S p
'Sunda\ lvc 6 00 p
\\ dne da) Sen 1 e
00 prn

Carmti.Suuon
Carme &amp; B han Rd
R~cme Oh o
Pas1or Joltn Rozev. 1c z S n ~ Schoo
9 4S a ~ \\ r h1p II 00 a m R le
Study \\ed " 30 pJn

9 lO am Mom ng \\or&lt;lup
&amp; 6 10 pm \\ ednesd&amp;) Scrv1ce
Youth Sm ICC 7:00 p m

Schoo
I

Agape life ( enter

10 10

Re

1

9

p

1

10 p

Cliflon Iuhernarl&lt; ( hur·• h
\\ \a Sunday S•hoo 10 a m
Wor&lt;h•p 7 p m \\edne
Ser~ e
p.m
Chilo~

age• .-er) Su dav
........... thorkch h .ne!
t'ull Gospel Churrh
or the Lhing S:nior
Rl338 A
' P~t
Je ~\I
Ser.accs Sat day 2'()() p

Rllu
2288. S nday Schoo 9 '10 am 'i ndJ)
e1en~eg ser\lce 7 00 pm ll•bl) Smd
\\ cdoesd3y sen ICe 7 00 pm
Hob,on Chri.ai~n hllmHillp ( hunh
Pa.aor Herschel \\hue. Sund ) Sd1ool
10 am. Sunda) Church scn1cc 6 ;o p
\\ednesday 7 pm

0 a m .

Se

s

Rt,toration Chrlstlaa fellowship
9365 Hooper Roa
1\the s P
Lonme Coats, Sunda, \\ r&lt;hap 10 00
\\ednesda) pm

Run BaptL&lt;I

s

Latter-Da) Saints
The Church or J

Pa
I

RuUand Church or Chri&lt;t
'I
3) 'khoo
9 I
C
~01oo
I
\\ ~
~hru
r

Lutheran
(J

Old Btlhtll red\ ill llupll&lt;l Chuf"(h
611 "it Rt 7 M dlcpon. Sund y
10 •
t' 00 par Tuesda)
600
lhlhlde llapti&lt;t Cllurcb
141

m

Re•

pm

l'l
,; pm

Re

P

198 A h S1 M•ddleport Pastors Mart
M rr w &amp; Rodney \\alker .Sunday

Tuppen Plain C burch or Christ

•

C'o Rd

\\ednesdly SerYo..e

Alllllzlng Gruc~ Communlt) Churrh
Pastor \\ ayne Du ap Swe R1 681,
Tupptrs Plaim Sun \\on p 10 am &amp;
b '!0 pm \\ed B•ble Srudy 7 00 p.rn

~

s

P1~e

Blacbo.ood Sllllday S boo

Alh ll'fft ('burch

Beam allo" Ridge \ hurrh or &lt;'brl.&lt;t
P t r BI\ICe Terry 'i nda) S hool 9 10
a.m
\\or h1 p
I 0 0 a m (: 1( p
\\ ednesda Sen
6 10 p.m

~1h er

~\t~lr\on

oast, Chr1stbn • eiiOIOShip
(Jiior.-dcnorrunaltonal fellowship
Meeung an the Me1gs M1ddle School
Cafetrna Pa\lor C'hns S1ev. an
10 00 am Noon Sunda),lnfonnal
\\orsh1p, C'hlldn:n's mmasuy

Rutland f lr.,J Bapll\1 C burch

1\tno Church or Christ
\\
p
lO a.m Sundav Sch
I0 '!0 a m . Pastor Je rey \\ lace I
lrd ') nda.

Carleton lnterdrnomhutlon:~l Church
K
bury R
P
R bc:n
Sunday School
'I J
\\
Scrv1 e 1(1 10 m E.
pm
fret'&lt;~ om Coospcl M" !on
Bald Knob, on Co Rd I Pa 1 r Rn
Roger \\ •IIford Sunday School 'i
a m \licmhiJ&gt;' 7 p.m

fuin ie" ll1hle ( hurch
Le1a11 \\ Va R• I Pa lor Bnan M y
Sunda) School 9 30 I
\\
h p 7 00
p m \\edne'lda) B1ble S1 d) 7 00 p
fahb ftllo\\sbip ( ru'llld&lt; for Chrbt
Pastor Re' hank m 0 len Se
Fnda). 7 p.m

Old Arncnean I.e '"" Ha
fuurth A•r M ddlepo11 SundayS p.m
S)l1leu&lt;e Communlt) (.'burch
2480 Second S1 Syracuse OH
Sun $.;hoot I
S nd) mght6 '30 per
Pa IOC Joe Q.,. ~n

10

R&lt;KCI- S11ring.•
Pas1cr Oc"•&gt;ne Stuller Sunda) S&lt;hool
9·00 am \\or h1p
10 a m )outh
~ell "sh1p Sunda) 6 p m Early Sunday
v. r&lt;h1p 8 am Lcnur:. le•fh&lt;•t
rn
\\ dnt"sday

\\

C ouiY~' • Road. l'as1or Rev &lt;harle
9 3l a m
Marundale S ~ School
\\ofihlp-oO '!0 am \\cd &amp;m&lt;t 7 p m

p,.. lor EdJ•e llacr, Sun \\omup II am

y 'khool

fomt Run
Pas
Bob Robansoo Sunday Schoo
am \\onltip 9 a.m

Sunday S boo 9
10 am 2nd
41h S

\\Chile's C h~pt'l

Other Churches

"•" Bq:lnnlnJ:s &lt; hunh
t,onu·ro)
1'as1or Bnan Dunham \\orsh1p
am Sunday Scho&lt;&gt;l 10·4S am

hurch

l'omtro) \\e,hide &lt;hun:h cor Chrbl
!322&lt;&gt; Chldrcn Home Rd Sunda)
S.:hool II a
\\or htp lOam I' p m,
\\ednesda) Semces 7 p m

9l0

l'omt&gt;ro) ChuKb orthe "iatarene
Pa 1 r Jan l.a\endcr Sunday School
9 10 am \\ Jihlp 10 30 am and 6
p.m \\ nesda) Servaces 7 p.m

m

J) un111c ll olln~~ t

l'umeru) ('hurrb or Chrl't
212 \\ Mam S1 Sunda) ~chool 9 lO
• m , \\ vrsb p I 0 JO a m , 6 r m
Wcdnesda~ Serv1ces 7 p r::

Joppa
oc De z N I \\ h p 9 10 am
S nday S.bool 10 lO
Lon~: Botlom
S nday '&gt;•boo
9 '!0 a .m \\
p
I lOa
Rttds111!e
\\ol"\lup 9 10 a m 'iunda) School
10 lO a.m Fir I Sunday f M lh 7 ()()
p m «rYICe P
r Gene Goodv. m
IIJppt'l'S l'lafn., 'il. f'11ul
l'a\lor J '11 Corbm 'i~nday Schoo
9
a ':l \\ol'\h!p 1(, am IUesday Serv1 es
7 10pm
( enh •I n ..,...,
A'bury (Syracuse), Pa 10r lluh Rt&gt;hlll\011,
Sunda) S hool 9 45 urn, \\or hiJI It
6 m , \\cdnc ;day Semces 7 lOp m
P

pm

~

~

fo~ Kun llaptl•t· Pornrm&gt;
J ph \\'-'Od&lt; Sunday School
\\ hp II :l(hm

10

Bradford Churrh or Christ
( omer of 'it R1 124 &amp; Br4d Uf) R~
Mm1s1er Doug Shambhn )outh t.• "tcr
B1ll Amberger Sunday School 'I 10 ~
\\orsbip • !I 00 a m 10 10 m 7 00
p m ,\\ednesda• ServiCe&lt; 7 00 p •
llkkof) Jlills ('burch ol ( hrl•l
Tupper&lt; Plams. Paslor M leMoore B1b c
c &gt; 9 a.111 Sunday " r btp IJ am
Sunda• v. r&lt;h1p 6 JO pm Sunday 81
d s pmV.
Rffi!s, 1lle Church or ( hrl&lt;t
Past r J &lt; Col '" Su da) S,hool
!0 a
\\Or&lt;h p 'iem e 10 0 a
B be'irudy\\~y.t- 10pm
Deller Church or christ
Sunda' school "lO a.m S nda) v. h p
10 '!() .m
The Cllurch or ( hrl&lt;t or l'omcro)
lnterseLI or 7 and 124 \\. I;\ ngch t
Denms S jtnt &lt;; nday B•ble ~tud'
9 30 am V.orsh1p 10 'lO am and 6 JO
p m \\ednesda) B1ble Slud\ 7 p m

Christian Union
Mt. \lurlnh IIIIJIII•t
f n th &amp; Mam S , M ddlep rt, Sunday
S hnol 9 10 m \\,&gt;r;lup 104~ u ~
Pa lo&gt;r Rr1 l\1~eh A r humr..on, Sr
Anli&lt;111i11 llapll\1
\\or hlp
Sunday 'i&lt;hool 9 10 a

Hartford ChuHh of Chris! In
Chri,tian l nion
lfa1'1ford, \\ Va, Pa&lt;lor \hke Puc~ell,
Sunday Schot&gt;l oJ lO ,, m \\or•lur
10 30 a m 7 00 p m \\edne~day
Sen aces 7 00 p m

St Johu I uthtran Church
Sunday

Our Sa1luur Lu1hrn111 C'hur&lt;h
\\a•nul and llt"nr

'it

Ruven wo&lt;d

\\ Va Pa lt&gt;r llav1d RL sell. Sli day
School I0 00 '!1 \\ul'\hlp II a
M.l'aull.utheran Church
'i) c
•rc &amp; S ond 'it Pomer(l~,
Sun S.hoo 9 45 a
\\,
II • m
Cnm

United :M ethodist
(,roham l oltrd l\letbodl\1
\\on p II a
P 1 R
"
fl«htcll nittd Mt-thoda.t

~

p

Coohillt l ulttd l\lrtlwdLsl Parkh
P 1 r He
1\;h e. C ' le Ch ,h
M n &amp; F fth St Sun School 10 a
1 p rn
\\0cslup 9 .m Thes Sen

('hun·h
Kdlhf) n \\ 1le) Sunday S~ohoot 9 30
m, \\orshtp ,o 30 am Pastor PI! p
Bell
Tor.-b Church
Co Rd 63 Sunda' School
\\ornup 10 3(' am

'!Oa.m,

Nazarene
l'oint Rock Cburcb or tbe !ll~unnt
Route 689. Alban) Re• Llo d Onmm
~or. ~unda) School 10 am " rh p
sen•ce II am. e•rn•ng Stnlce 7 pm \\ed
pta\er lll&lt;..:t~ng 7 pm
\tiddlepon Church or I he "alDrent
Pao;lor l..conanl Po\\cll Sunday choo
910 am \\on;h!p 10 30 am (&gt;30 p.m
\\Cdncsda) SeC' ICes 7 p m

Mel~

l

oopcralh~

Parish
'&gt;onhc I Clu tcr Alfred Pa 10r Gene
liO&lt;KI'Ain, Sun v s.hool 'I 10 am
\\onhtp lam I' !Opm
('hrilrr
l'a'"" Jun Cu•b•ll \\on;h•p 'I am,
Sun y SchuOJ
10 am . 1 hursday
Serv11.e ? p m

Church of God

t.llddlepon Communi!) Cbun'h
S ~ S1 M dd epo11 Pastor. Sam
Ander
Sunda) School 10 a m •
E1enmg 7 'lO p.m \\Cdnesda) ~m•ce .
7 30pm

R~d"illt

h·llo"ship
Churc'l \&gt;f lhc r\azru-ene. Pa,tor Ru,sell
C'ur&lt;on • Sunda) Sdwol • 9 10 a m ,
\\or&lt;h1p • 10.45 am, 7 p m . Wednesda)
Sen"c' • 7 p m
S)raCU'IC ('hunh nr th~ ~ntarene
Sunda) s~.hO&lt;•I 9 10 am \\of\h p
'0 30 am 6 p m \\.:d Serv•ce• 7 p m

H S

~

Rrthel &lt;."huKh
To" nsh1p Rd 468C Sunda) School 9
u m, \\orsh1p
10 am \\cdncsda)
Sc.."\ICcs 10 u.m
ll&lt;&gt;&lt;·hin~porl

Hanisoa,ille Communi!) Church
lbef Durb:im Sunda) - 9 '10
p
\\edne$day 7 p.m

Musser s~oda
\\orsh•p I0 '10
Sm lCe 7:00pm
ream Jesus :\1m~ lri~
Pastor- Eddie B
1 1
Mecharuc Street Pomm:&gt;\ UH Sci'\ ,

talth \ulle) lahernade Church
Ba1le) Run Road, Pas1or Re• Emmell
Ra,.sun, sunda) henmg 7 p.m.
Thursday ~m •ce 1 p-Ill
'" ructL'&lt; Mission
1411 Brdgeman S1. ~yracuse Paslor •
Rev Roy ThollljOOn 'iunda) s,hool • 10
am J:,e m 6 p m \\cdnesda) s~ce
7pm.

llazel Communlt) Churcb
0 Rt 12-1 Pa o E.isc Han Sunda)
p • 10,30 a.m
S.hool 9 30 am \\

Middleport 1mb) Iman
Pastor J ::1&lt; Sn)der Sunda) School I
a.m \\'Orsh p &gt;Crl ce II

~•euth-l&gt;a) Ad,rnll~

S

dat

2 p

United Brethren

talth Gospel Church
l.oog llouom sunda) ~.hool. 9.30 a rn.
\\orshap
10 45 am 7 30 p m •
\\edne$da1 7 'lOp m

Sl

Presbyterian
Harri,on•ille Prnb) lrrian l burch
Paslor Ret Da1 d hu kner \\or~h•p
9'()()a m Sanda)

Mulbm) Hts Rd P me )
Seo"es Sabbath S,h
\\ orship 3 p.m

I)) rs•11~ Cornmunit) Church
Sunday School 9 30 am \\;,rslup
10 10a
p.m
l\lorw l"h::pel Church
Sunda) school 10 am \\ r&lt;h1p • II
\\Cdnesda) Sm-.ce 7 p.m.

h•ll Go,pcll ighthou•e
I II and RoaJ, Pumero). Paslor Ro)
Hun1cr sunda) S,hool 10 a.rn. ,1. 7·30
\\ ednesda) henmg 7 30 p m

Peut~ostal \•~mbl)

Pasaor· St R• ,24 Racme, 11 m do R
Sunda) Schoo • 10 am E1rnm~
p m , \\ednesda1 SeC\ Ices '11m

Seventh-Da) Ad' entist

7'!0pm

~30-1 ~

Pentecostal

\lt . llrnnon l nlted Breth~n
In Cbrut Church
Te~as Commun y ~6-111 \\ 1 kha
Rd
Pastor Pe1er !llanlndalc \und \ &lt;;~
9 30 am \\orsh p 10 '0
00
p m \\edne da1 ~en ~&lt;es
) l'Uih group mee1mg 2nd &amp; 4th Sund "
7pm
Eden l nilrd llrt'lhn n In l hri'l
Stal~ Roule 124, bc:1v.ccn Rceds\lllr &amp;
lio.;lmgpol'1 ~unda) S&gt;hocl 10 u m
Sunday \\ orsh•p II 00 a,. \\edne'd '
Ser\lces 7 00 p m • Pastor \I \dam
\\Ill

'outh Ki'lhel Communi!) Church
Rd
P t L d D
ood

Church announcetnents sponsored by these area tnerchants
.:lftshrr, ~nbrrson, .!:HcDamrl
.:lfnnrrnl ~omr

"Let your hght o shine before
men. tho~t the) ma} !'!CC your
good works und glorify your
Father Ill heaven."
Matthew 5:16

!\ltddleport,OH

. ~SURANCL

Bill Quickel

Full hne of
Insurance
Products+
F1nancial
Serv1ces
992·6677

740-992-5141

Jnnu-s And!'I"SSn, Adam McOunicl·

499 Richland A\enue. Athens
1-800-451-9806

740-594·6.~33

, Davls-Quickel Agency Inc.

Let \our llghr so s/une before
men, rhar the\ ma) see your
good 11 orks and glori[) your
Farher 111 helll·en."

If ye abide in .He, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

llln"ctOf'll
l'omero), 011

Matthew 5:16

740-992-5444

Commit thy works
unto the Lord, and thy
thoughts shall be
• established.
Proverbs 16:3

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
le-. than 30 mmutes from
Athen,, Pomcro) or Parke~burg

Locat~d

1-7~0-667-.'156

''Still ~mall

SWISHER
&amp; LOHSE
www. ThePharmacy4ll .com

Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112 East

White Funeral Home "1-'or God so loved the
Blessed are the pure "So I strive always to keep
Since 1858
world that he gave his one
in heart; for they my conscience clear bel'orl'
9 Fifth Street
God and man:·
and only Son ..."
shall
see
God.
Coolville, Ohio
John 3:16
Acts24:16
Jlfatthew 5:8
740-667-3110

For God \O loved the
that he gm·e his only
begotten son ...
John 3 :16

-

'i.tt our {dmuy kfp
prvtM ycur fam.Iy•
Suppn:.s1on • I ~tlllgu1shc" • Spnn~lcf)

• sectJf)lr

172 ::\ .2nd A\e..\ltUdleport, OH
'53-0SJ? Fa,· &lt;740)

to care''

MY i!race is sufficient
for thee: for mY
streni!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9
Tlte l.ord dol!.\ not loo/.. at tltt• tiring'
man loo/..~ at, man looh at thr
outward appl!arana. tltc l.nrd lonh
at the heart.
2 \amud 16·7b

�--------------------------------------------~.-~----~-.~--.---------~--~----

PageA4

fbe Daily Sentinel

-"'

Friday, March 26,

A Hunger for More
As the temperatures gradual·
h. begin thetr annual ascent up
the thermometer. a lnt of fl&gt;lks
"ecm to get the "Jtch'' fo1 \\ann
'' C&lt;~ther kJilds of act i dt tes.
\\ h~?n m a department store
era I days ago, I could not
help but. notice dtspla) s of oar·
den eqlllpmcnt and hi\\ n acces·
so1 ics. as \\ell as spring sports
equtpment. :--:o doubt \\ c 'II all
"Oon plunge again into our
S'e arl) Ul..,toms of spring and
summer C\ ents, not the least of
\vh1ch i" grilling out.
Hopefully. if I do ~rill out.
('11 be &lt;1 hit more careful th,m I
"'as on one occ&lt;hton a fe\\
)e_ars ago. I h,ld pulled the gas
gnll OLil a\\H) from the hou..,e
th,u morning .1nd dutifully
~leaned it. prept~ring It for usc.'
l.ller that da). \\ hen the late
~ftemoon rolled around, I cer
~;moniousl) exited the back
door of my house carefully
balancing a plate full of meat
on one hand and graspmg \ ar•Pu grilling utensils in the
other. I set out all the neccs·
'\&lt;JI) accouterments on a near·
bv tublc ami then reached
del\\ n to tum on the gas.
I then ahsemmmdedl) sorted
QUI the food th.1t I \\as going to
grill. takmg " good deal longer
than I reahzed. When I \\as sat·
il&gt;lted \\ ith m) preparations. I
lit a long match and began to
slide tt tO\\ ard~ the grill's bum·
ec. Be) ond the grill. I could see
Ill) ' ' 1fc come to the -.crecn
door to \\ atch me get started.
Just .15. &lt;;he got to the door. the
tlame of m\ match reached a
11oncentruted pocket of ga-; and
.t brilliant flt~..,h and roar leapt
out of the grill up into Ill) face.
The flame had leapt up and was
then gone '\O qukkl) that I did·
o't e\en flinch. I just stood
t}lere blinking, '' oi1dcring if
"hat I thought had happened
had real!) happened.
!\1y \\ ife cried out and sprang
out the door tO\\ ards me. "Are
you all right?'' she a!iked me
anx1ousl) as I stood reflectmg
on the \\ Jsdom of !'.tartmg the
lire \\hen one FIRST turns on
the gas so explosions don ' t
h.1ppen m )OUr back )ard (at
least wtth as much frequenc) ).
B) God'" grace. Ill) face \\as
not burned and m) C) e~ were
unharmed. M\ heard or evebrow&lt;, apparent!) were lwt
C\cn singed by m) little accident. All the fla&lt;;h and flare
that my \VJfe sa\\ bur&lt;;ting into
Ill) face had had no effect and
\\as little more. in the end.
than a light ... hO\\ (for "hich
I'm ! Mt\1I~NSELY thankful,
b) the \hly).
But '' hile I AM gl&lt;~d that th1s
oi1e occas1on ended up harmless, we should hope and work
tO\\ ards the opposite ''hen it
comes to sp1ritu,t1 renewal

'e'

~

Church Notebook
Gospel sing

Thorn
Mollohan

among Christians. There is vet
untnppcd an unimaginable sup·
pi) ofjo) and peace and power
tn the pre-.ence of God ... ready
to explode in the "e\ ervdny
lhes" of·'urdinar) Christi~ms."
II~stead of merely settling for
"!lashes'' and "bursts" of spiri·
tual enthusiasm (that don't
C\ en "singe the eve brows" of
discouragement and PO\\ cr·
les..,ncss. let alone blo\\ them
out of the \\&lt;tier). \\C should
recall that the God Who
rc\ ealed Himself in the ancient
Scriptures. is the same God
Who is on the mo\ c toda\.
lookmg to see '' ho will tru~t
Him in practical ways in their
homes, their \\ork places. their
"chool. . and. most especiall),
their churches.
King }kzekiah began his
reisn during a time \\hen his
ent1re nation had lost its spiJ·i·
tual moorings, ·nora! bearings,
and sense of national security.
Sound familiar? His life ston
i&lt;; told in 2 Kmgs chapters 18
through 20 as well as 2
Chronicles
chapters
29
through 32. if you \\Ould like
to read more.
In spite of the pitiable condi·
tion of hi" nation, he yet had a
heart to foliO\\ God. ''Hezekiah
tmsted in the LORD. the God
of b.rael. There wa-. no one like
hun among all the kings of
Judah, euher before him or
after him. He held fast to the
LORD and did not cease to fol·
lm' Him; he kept the com·
mand~ that the LORD had
gt\'Cn ~ 1 oses. And the LORD
\\as with him: he \\as succes..,.
fu I in whate\ er he undertook"
(2 Kings 18:5·7a NIV).
As a result of hi-. personal
conunitment. to faithfull) fol·
IO\\ God and to "'flesh out" that
commitment in practical \\ ays.
the people took courage and
were themselves softened in
heart enoul!h to vieltl their
pride. fear, '\,orry. ;clfishness,
and sin in order to embrace the
grace of God Almighty.
And because this was not
merely a "flash.. of spiritual
fen or but the flames of true
renewal as a people belonging
to God, the faith that they also
placed in God's love and power
to protect them, sustained them
through the most terrifying
time their countr) had yet
known: the invasion of the
Assy nan Empire. If their

rc\ ivai had only been a show
SYRACUSb
The Syracu&lt;;e
or a shallow display of reli·
Community Church will ho::.t a gospel
gious affectation, their courage
sing starttng at 7 p.m. on Saturday,
could not have stood up to the
March 27. featured singers include
AssHtan annie~ -.urroundin!!
Crosf. Creek or Buffalo, W.Va .. Roush
the capital city's \\ails.
~
htmily of New Haven, W.Va .. nineRut there was a \Ct) real and
yL·ar old Cody Smith and Covered by
sust,tining fuel supporting
Love
from
Webster,
Valoric
Hezekiah and his people: the
Higginbotham
of
Buffalo,
W.Va.
'I he
power of God." ... (Hczek.ah) '
sing is free though there will be a love
encouraged them with these
offering taken to support the Bend
worth: ·Be strong and coura·
Area Gospel Jubilee.
genus. Do not he afraid or dis·
coura~ed be~.:ause the k1ng of
Assvna and the va-.t arnn \\ ith
'The Last Supper'
him: for there is a greater j)owcr
to be presented
with us than \\ ith him With
him is only the arm of tlesh, but
POINT PLEASA!'\T. W.Va.
\\'ith us is the LORD our God to
Trinity
lJnite,d Methodio;t Church
help u... and to tight our battles.'
proud!) presents a li\ ing dramatiza·
And the people gained conti·
tion of 'The Last Supper' that v. ill take
dcnce from what Hczekiah the
place at 7 p.m. on April 1-2.
king of Judah said" (2
The drama i-, in sixth year, ha\ ing
Chronrcles 32:6h-X NIV).
been pe1 formed for the first time m
Because they trusted God's
19~1, with other dramas in 1992,
promises. thC)
faithfully
1993. 1994 and llJ97, The sanctunl)
obeyed God in their personal
lives (2 Chronicles chapters 29 d10ir also \\ill he presenting a musical
cantata, ""I he Shaclm\ of The Cross,"
through 31 ). Because they
correlating with thi&lt;; pm,e1ful piece
trusted Him and because that
During the presentations, the contrust was prodtlcing the fruit of
gregation \\ill join Jesus and h.s disciconsecratin!! their lives to God.
ples in the Cpper Room for lloh
they \\ere able to sec God per·
Comnl'union and relive the e' ents
form an amazing rescue for
from the Last Supper to the crucifix·
them b) doing as Hezekiah had
ion. The church ·s desire is that the
told them He \\otlld: He fought
play come&lt;&gt; alive m the heart.;; of their
their hallie t(l!· them (see 2 audiences .
King...
19:35-37
and
2
The publ1c i., \velcome and encourChronicles 32:20-22). And
aged to attend and child care wtll be
because their faith and their provided.
·
obedience had led them from
what seemed to be certain
Chancel Players at
doom to a great and glorious
victor),the entire known world
Good News Baptist
got to sec God at work (see 2
Chronicles 32:23 ).
GALLIPOLIS
The \1 alone
I pray that in our generation
Umversil) Chancel Player\ from
God's people in Gallia.
Canton. Ohio wJII perform at 7 p.m ..
Meip. and Mason counties Saturday. March 27 at Good i\ew s
\\ill hunger for God the way
Baptist Church on Georges Creek
that Hczekiah did. pra) that
Road. The Chancel Pia) er" is a group
we'll "hold fast to the Lord"'
of Malone t.Jnh ersity students who
and consecrate our lives ane\\
perform faith·based dramas in church·
to Him . not onl) for the
es and schoob. The public is im ited
Lenten season. but for some·
to attend For more information. call
thing far more enduring. And
the church at 446-0 I lSS.
I pray that in our trust, we "II
place before God all the probIngles preaching
lems ami \\ orries and burdens
at Patriot UMC
that are as intimidating to us
as Ass) rian legions, col1fidcnt
PATRIOT - Jarrod Indes \\ill be
in both His goodness anti His
the guest speaker Sunda). \1arch 28 at
power to deliver us and to
Patriot United ~lcthodi ... t Church.
bless us. His people.
"With us i-. the LORD our I nelcs is a high school senior \\ ho \\ill
God to help us and to fight our be- attendir1g Asbur) College in
Kentuck\ this fall. He is the son of :\.tr.
battles" C2 Chronicles 32:8
and Mrs. Tom Ingles. former!) of
NIV).
Gallia County. The service begins at
(Thom Mollohan and hi.\
II a.m. Sundav. For informatiOn. call
family hm·e miniHcrccl in
446-92S7.
southem Ohio the pll\t I-I I /2
year.\ and i5 the author of The
Fain Tale Parah/e,. He i., the
Crown Financial classes
pastcn· (~/ Pathll'ay Community
Church and ma) he reached for
BIDWELL - Certified Christian
comment\ or question., hy
Financial Counselor Ke' in Petrie \\ill
email at pa.\lorihom0 pathoffer a fi-\\ eek ...erie-., of educational
waygall ipolis .com.)
classes from Cro\\ n Financial. Classes
Copyright © 2010,
\\ill be held at 7 p.m. each Saturda)
Tlw m Mollohan.
from ~tarch 27 to Mn) I at White O.tk

!ts

Baptist Church, ~ibert Road , Bidwell.
There is no charge for the class, hut
participants rnu~t purchase materials.
'I he material cost 1s $45 for indrvidu·
als and $55 for couples. For infonnation. call Petrie at (740) 794· 1300.

Godsmen in concert
CROWN CITY - 'I he Godsmen
Quartet \\til be in concert at 6 p.m .,
Sunday. March 28 at !\lt. /.ton
Mis-;ionary Baptist Church . -~he
church is located ay &lt;J96 Valley V1cw
Dr., Crown City.

Pyles in concert
GALLIPOLIS
!\lark Pyle.;, w 1ll
be in concert at 6 p.m., Sunday. March
28 at l·irst Baptist Church. 1100
Fourth Ave., GallipoJis . Pastor Ah is
Pollard 111\ ites the public to attend.

Cheshire Baptist revival
CHESHIRE - The Re\. R)an
Eaton will be the guest speaker dunng.
revival ...ervices March 24 26 at
Cheshire Bapti st Church. Sen ic.;e-.
begin at 7 p.m. each da). Spect.ll
mu-;ic \\ill be featured . Rev Steve
Little im ites the pubhc .

Crusade at
French City Baptist •
GALLIPOLIS
French Ctty
Baptist Church ''ill ho-,t a simultanelHJs crusade '' uh other churches
Sunda) · Wednc,day, March 28·31
E\angdist Wa)ne Hines will be the
speaker. Special musk Will be pro' ided b) the French Cit) Ch01r on Sunda)
morning; Sharon Waugh on Sunda)
evening: Pa~tor Mark and Cind)
Williams on ~1ondav: Leah Sm1th on
Tue-.day: and .Robert Fulton from the
Palmetto State Quartet on Wednesda).
Services begin at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
on Sunda). and at 7 p.m . Monda)·
\\'edne-.da).
French Cit) Bapti..,t Church b locat
ed at 3554 Ohio 160 north. For infor·
mation, call 446-3331. (304) 675·
1043. or (304) 674·5550. LO\e offering \\ill be taken at all ...en ices.

Bell Chapel fundraiser
GALLIPOLIS -Bell Chapel Church
is hosting a fundmiser Thursda) -Frida).
April 1-2. The event begin' at 8 a
each da:. Dre... ses. shirts. pants. hlous
and je\\elr: \\ill be mailable. "fh~
church is located next to Daile' Tire on
Eastem AH·. in Gallipolis.
•

Palmetto State
Quartet concert
GALLIPOLIS - The Palmetto
State Quartet will he m concert at 6
p.m .. Eaqer Sunda). Apnl 4 at Frr...t
Church of the :'\azarene in Gallipoli..,.
Admi-,sion is free. A IO\ e o iTcrine ''ill
be taken. The church i' located at1110
First A\ e .. Gallipolb. For information.
call 446·1772.

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

Wisdom
ISdOM IS 0 quo ly !hOI IS hard fO
de~ne though we usuo ly l&lt;now 1t
w'ler we see 11. and a 'Tlos•
always recogr ze Is absence. wr ::~ 1s
fO "y Wh :c II IS Often aSSOCIO'ed l
ftte•o'Jre w th bearded. w~ te-'laJred
gurus who g ve sage odv ce wisdoM IS
essen' ally about 1-toVIrg good adgerren•
and perspecltve 0 :ler peop e seeM to
hove 11 SIMply because they l'la,re hod
more expenences and ''ley rove be::,
through the tnals and t'1bula tors of a
long
We some• mes say I"'lOt yourg
people ore "wtse beyond the years· bt.:
1r reality no one who has at v.eathered
the storrrs of • ere con truly be w1se BL
1s 11 necessary to hove sJfferea tt&gt;rot..gll
~ :!&lt;ness or thfl deaths o' loved ones anCI
vonous ms'ortunes to ga1 o deeper
pe spect -ve on t 'a or do the ordil'ary
stresses of a cholle1gmg career and
re'at.onshiJiS suffice to g1ve one the
necessary perspect ve the' Is cors1dered
wsdom? IllS reported trot FrcJd was
once asked what a 'lOifTIOI heai'~Y
wson shou d be obis to do ard re
arswered -ro ove and to wo k" Perraps
the growth and rrafl..•tty 'ial comes from
o 'e o~ lov1rg and workmg IS e~ough for
rr:ost o• us to develop that ntang1ble
quality we cc' \'llsaom

W

Happy 1s the man who
finds wisdom, and the
man who gains
understanding.
New K.J.V. Proverbs 3:13

2010

Blessed are the pure
in lzeart; for they
shall see God.
A1atthew 5:8

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�Page As

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 26,

Cling to the cross
1 he \\orm JUSt happened to be in
the wood ''hen the Romans hewed
the Dogwood for a cross. And, being
worm charactelisticnlly sl \\. he
ver had ~u1ficicnt opportun11y to
t off "ithout potential I) being
squn~hed.

On the w.t) b:k k tnto Jerusalem, he
heard the cutter~ ~uy S{llllething ahout
this eros being special!) cut for a king
of the Jews. They l,llJghed at the
thought of a Je\\ 1sh king.
Liter, Roman torturers l,ud the
cross across the back of a man so hornbly disfigured th,lt it fnghtened the
\\Orm. The worm mchcd it-&gt;elt to a far
edge, and looked for .1 place to drop
off But. then.: \\ere horses. and soldters, .md people .. he \\ ould be
mu hed for sure .
"He), little fell a'"
The worm angled around at the
sound of a cert,un \ o1ce. \\ h1ch spoke
o distmctl) abo\ e .111 the other 'Ott:es
and noises. The beaten and berated
man can) mg the eros had spoken
specifically to him .
"Don't drop off. Cling to where ) ou
are, and st.1y with me. You will be
safe!&gt;t here ''
There was something spcci,tl about
e man's imitation that cau.,ed the
orm to hang on. Why \\Ould thb man
•
be 1\0 concerned about the safet) of n
\\Orm \\hen he \\as being so abu ...ed
and burdened h1mself?
Later, on a craggy tor. cro.-.s hangers
dro\e nntl'i through the man'&lt;, hands
and feet into the Dogwood '"1th
demonic feroclt), cndmg \hivenng
'ibrattons through the \\Ood and
\\Om1.
"C'hng here. felln. 'lou'll be s.tfc
here,'' the d) mg man assured

Ron
B'ranch
I'he \\Orm \\Ondered how thio;
human could be so concerned .1bout a
worm.
Winds ble\\ und thunder boomed.
The people on the ground were clearly
afraid. Lightemng flashed and an
earthquake cmshed. f•car rumbled
through the crO\\d. An unusu,ll midafternoon d.trkne s caused the tonfused congregation to shudder
The man hunging on the erose;
&lt;,eemed to ha\e an uncann) l&gt;eno;ltiVIt)
toward his suftenng .md the unul&gt;ual
nature of !'Jature. Once he cried out.
''MY GOD! M'l GOD! WHY ItAVL
YOU FORSAKEN Mb!" It seemed as
though the God of the Uni\er&lt;\e was
angf). and "as purposely ventmg holy
wrath on this man. I he landscape atop
the skull-like knoll took on an eerie
quality. and momentarily dampened
hope of a tomorrow for the worm .
)ct. as the worm clung to the cross,
a Mtbtlc secwity !tiled htm. The \\Orm
agreed in\\ardl) that mdccd thio; cross
was the safest place he could be
"Cling to me," the eros~ man weakly "h1spercd to the worm.
"IT IS f·INISHED 1" he cried loudly
and. d1ed.
Later. \\hen everal men remo\cd
the dead man from the cro s,the \\ann
remembered the man· Ill\ 1tat1on to

cltng to him. Unnouced, the worm
dropped onto the covering garments,
and hid himo;elf anong the folds.
un-;uJc of\\hcre he was gomg \\ith the
dc.1d man.
I he body was taken to a tomb, and
J,lid on a cold, stone slah. When the
ml!n sealed off the grave, the worm
Clawlecl from his soft hiding place. He
lay tmthfully bes1de the one who had
offered hun protection from sure
de.tth, and settled in a sleep.
"Wake up. httle fella!"
How surprised the \\Orm \\as when
he saw thnt dead man standmg alive.
When dtd this happen? How did this
happen? A bright glo\\ emanated from
the man, overnhelming the tomb's
darkness.
The li\ e man scooted the worm onto
his hand.
"You became my S)mbol of suffermg while on that cross. It \\as the
Scnpture that said about me. 'But I am
.t \\Orm, and no man, a reproach of
men, and despised of the people.'
Nm\. before I appear to my friends
m1c;en from the dead, I change you
into a beautiful butterflv. You will be a
symbol of hope and assurance in the
life-changing power of the Son of
God."

And. as he flew from the tomb a new
creation, he looked at himself and
in an cled at the miracle he had
become. He 1mmedmtely lit on the
arm of the first person he saw, a
woman headed m the direction of the
tomb. She smiled as she beheld his
beauty, and seemed to connect from
her O\\ n experience \\ ith his ilent
mes!&gt;age, "Just cling to the Cross."
(Re\'. Ron Branch 1s pastor of Faith
Baptist Church in Mason, \\.\ii.J

17te Passover and the Passion of Christ
H1thcre.) 'all' l ' m hupmg thts .u1tcle tmds ) ou h1gh .md dr). and wamt
and co ) Pcrhnp toO. )OU ure comfortahl\ n wnced m your fmonte
t:ha r \\ 1th
ood cup ot co!Tee or
orne.; ~u"'h be\ cr c to 'itp '"htlc
rc readmg th1s When }OU're
ady for 1t, feel free to ha\e a second
p on me.
LaM Thursda). the 18th. on be halt of
the Me1gs Count)' Mmi..,tenal
A oc1 1on th1 church hosted the
\\e kh Lent n entce Ours'" d1f
ferent ·from tho e w htch preceded It,
becauo;e '"e hosted a ) oung 1 d) \\ ho
came to us from e\\ York C1ty. \ 1
Ch1cago rcpre entmg .111 organ11aUon
knO\\ n as Jews for Je u.-.
Talk about a learning expenen...e!
Heathe1. our presenter, hared \\ ith us
the \ery real. c;ymbolic correlauon
between the Passover, as commemorated by the Je\\ ish people, and the
Passion and CJUcifixion of Jesus
Christ wh1ch we, as Chrisuans. celebrate dunng Lent and through Easter.
To say the lectst. the infom1ation
made a\ailable to u.-. totall) rules out
mere comc1dence as an acceptable
explanation for the relat1onshtp of
these l\\0 histoncal e\ent The ntunl
and foodstuffs used in the Pas..,O\ er are
each representative of somcthmg. and
some. tf not all of these ame elements
kely \\ere present at our Lord's La t
pper w1th his dtsc1ples.
Of course. it comes as no surpri e to
you to kno\\ that it took "an act of
God" - literally
to effect the
Past;over of the F1rst Covenant and the
salvation from our sins through Jesus
Christ. in the Second Covenant. Being
the astute believers you arc. ) ou also

Tom

Johnson

me
knov. n
ha\ mg made the conn ct1o
Chnst and the Passo\er. a he shared
\\ 1th us More in portantl). as do you
and I He&lt;tthe k \\S Jesu Chnst
her pe n I S
nd Lord
Con~equent
ts no longer \\d
thought of. or t II v.elcome. among
Jew1sh people. Somettmes she i&lt;&gt; md
to be "me huga" 1 e.,craz), or foolt h. That's qmte mild: at other times
her people call Heather a traator.
\\or&lt;;e yet, Heather\ O\\n family no
longer welcomes her as the daughter
.md sbtcr she is to them! She's
become persona non grat.1 among her
ktth and kin!
Matthew and Luke both express
Je~us' pwphec) that such thingl&gt;
ine' itably "'ould come to pass on his
account (Matt. 10:34-8. Lk. 12:51-3).
Heather is Jiving proof Christians.
even in America. are persecuted for
their faith! It doesn't just happen elsewhere, or O\ersea\. All she carec;
about. and asked us to pray for. is the
ah at ion of her family and her people.
Can do!
Imagine the h) mn "I Gave M) Life
for Thee'' as expre~,ing the thoughts
of our Lord. The question implied
therem i ··'"hat ha\ e you done for
me" - \\ith "me" being Je us. Let's
get it right and, like Heather, g1-.e Him
our pa.-.t, present, and future - our
lhes. in His "en icc. That'll work!
'"'hat

1

knO\\ a four-legged lamb '"a cnucal
to the O.T Passo\ r c\ent, and that
Jesus. m the per;on of "the l"1mb of
God,· IS the God-ordmned. absolute
and indispensable essence of
humankind's sah ation
One more thmg you knO\\ IS this:
\\C are saved by grace through faith.
In other \\Ords. there is nothing &lt;lll)one can do, apart from believing 111
and receh ing Chri t as Ius/her
Sa\ ior, whereby the Individual has
acces~ to God ami eternal life.
There·~ no "Plan B." no back door,
and nenher is there a loop-hole of
an) sort. If so. the New Te tamcnt
would be null and· vo1d.
Here· the rub· the Jewish people
only ubscnbc to the Old 1htament;
they have ne'er ,tccepted the Nc\\
Testament as being the lea t bit \ ahd
or rele\ ant. To this day. the 'ariou
rite~ and ob~enance&lt;; prescribed in the
Old Te tament arc scrupulously
adhered to and ob!&gt;ef\ ed. \\ 1th the
expectation being that the e "good
\\Orks'' on their part \\ill meet \\llh
God's appro,ul and. thus, qualify the
doers and practitioners thereof (i.e.,
the Jc\\ ish people) for heaven.
(Rev. Tom Jolm.\011 i~ pastor oj
Heather d1sagree ; but she · d1dn 't
al\\ a) s. You see, Heather herself is Trinit\' Church in Pomeroy, Ohiu.)

Word from the Word

_,

" ... if my people, who are called by n1y nan1e, will humble thetnselves and prav and
seek n1y face and turn fron1 their wicked ways, then will I hear fron1 heaven and
will forgive their sin and will heal their land."- 2 Chronicles 7:14

2010

The Government
of Heaven, Part 2
Last \\eek we \\er" t liking about John the ,r, tJst
ancl Jesu s' "&gt;lntement:
"Repent for the kingdom
of heaven is at hand."
If John 's statement unJ
mission in life was not
enough to get others riled
up, you should see whnt
Jesus d1d. Whtle others
followed John's teaching
of baptism unto repentance, yet the) still did not
become totally aware of
God's kingdom system.
But they were not about to
stay blinded to it. they
were nbout to rejoice in
their new-found faith.
One thmg is for. John to
make a radtcal statement
to rattle the religious
cages. but another thing is
for Jesus to use the same
statement as His O\\ n mission statement. Amazing!
After Jesus was baptited
by John in the Jordan River
(which was not a baptism
unto repentance to Jesus.
but rather a Rabbmical
Procedure at the age of 30
- this is another subject
all on its own). He went to
the '"ilderness for forty
da) to be tempted and
tried by satan. Shortly after
he came off the '' ildness
MattheY. tells us in chapter
4 \ cr e 17 "From that time
Jesu began to preach, and
to say. Repent: for the
kingdom of hea\ en is at
hand."
Jesus' mi sian Statement
\\,1 nlso H1s mission. His
\ISIOn and His total purpo e for H1s coming. It "as
toe tablish His kingdom in
earth as it \\as in heaven.
No wonder Jesus taught us
to pray· "Thy kmgdom
come. th) w11l be done. on
earth as it is 111 heaven.''
Tiu has become n mark of
1•1ous prayer throughany generations. but
1
not a religious
p
, but rather. a kingd. m reque t for a kingdom
tabh ;hment.
When a per on \\ ould
cetve a command from u
mg. they bo\\ed and
uttered the \\ ord : "th)
w11l be done.'' These ''ere

Alex
Colon

essenttally the same words
that Mary used '"hen the
angel tQld her the good
news of her pregnancy.
She said: "Be it unto me
according to )Our word.''
In other \\ ords, "thy will
be done.''
The Bible is a kingdom
book. In our western
mindset we are trying to
teach and understand the
principles. of a kingdom
book with a democratic
mind set.
Unfortunately, the only
way to truly understand
the truth's within the pages
of God's \\'ord to the pomt
of living a successful life
within God's plan, agenda
and will. is \ 1tally important that we repent.
Repentance is not to be
sorry, but rather a change
of mind, actions and direc-

tion.
Repentance does not
mean to bring all your
2arba!!e to the altar and tell
God you're sorry. That is
not repentance at all!
Repentance is a change of
mind. act and direction.
It's a decisive heart to turn
from gomg the wrong ~vay
or doing the wrong thmg.
Ho\\ever. being sorry for
what we'\e done wrong is
the right thing to do also (I
did not want to belittle the
act of being sorry and the
respon:-.e of forgiveness).
Next time. we 'II pick up
on this very subject.
You're in for some ~ood
tea~.:hing. I guaramc:e ttl
''Repent for the kmgdom
of hea' en is at hand.''
.Make it a great \\eek!
(Re\'. Alex Colon is pastor of U(?htlwuse Assembly
ofGod in Gallipolis, Ohio.
On
the lntemet at
www.lagohio .org.)

Lawson to Speak
at Mason County
Lenten luncheon
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWSCMYOA ..YSENTINEL COM

POINT PLEASAKT. W.Va.- The final luncheon of
the 2010 Lenten cason "ill take place at noon on
Wednesda). March 31 at the Trinit) United Methodi t
Church in Point Pleasant.
The e luncheon are sponsored by the Mason
Count) Ministerial As~ociation. Bellemead United
.Methodi t Church \\ill be preparing the meal composed of soup. ~and\\ iche-,. cookies and drinks. The
speaker for th1~ \\eck's senice
be Rev. James
La\\ on. Re\. Lawson IS pa~tor of Bellemead United
Methodi t Church \\here he has sen ed since July
2007. He has been in pa~toral ministry for 30 ) ear~
ha\ ing sencd in six appointments before coming to
Bellemcad. His first appointment \\a:- at Catawba, a
charge of six chur~he-. in ~!arion County. La\\ son
gradllated from West Virginia lJniYersity \\ ith a BA
degree in English. He received a Master of Di\ init)
degree from Pittsburgh Theological Seminary. Pastor
La\\Son b an acti\e member of the Mason County
~1inisterial Association and a volunteer chaplain at
Pleasant Valle) Hospital. He also volunteers with the
~1ason Countv Health Department.
He and hi:. \Hfe, Rebecca. ha\'e t\\O children. Denise
and Aaron. The Lenten luncheons and serv1ces are
mtcrdenominauonal o e'en one is '' elcome to participate. All luncheon are free: ho\\ e\ er, a free\\ ill donation \\ill be recehed for the ministerial a. sociation's
Samaritan Fund.

''ill

..

�PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March

ConiDlunity Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, March 29
POMEROY - Veterans
~ervice Commission. 9
a m .. 117 '• "nal Dr.
SYRA
Syracu ..
V11lage Counc1l, spec1al
meetings to Interview possible employees for 2010
London Pool season, 6
p.m , village hall, Monday
and Tuesday.

MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOLS HONOR ROLLS

Gary Ellis. pastor; Rev. Gary
Bowlin, evangelist Sunday,
March 28, 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
March 29 through March 31,
7 p.m. each evening. Nursery
provirfArl More mformation,

POMEROY
llonorrolls
for the third nine-week grading period at the Intermediate
and Middle School!&gt; in the
Meigs Local School Dastrict
have been announced by
Wtlliarn
Superintendent

Bn

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

Youth events

Meigs County Forecast

Local Stocks

- 14.62
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.25
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -

6.63
City Holding (NASDAQ) -33.78
Collins (NYSE) - 62.67
DuPont (NYSE)- 37.83
US Bank (NYSE)- 26.17
General Electric (NYSE) - 18.30
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 27.73
cJP Morgan (NYSE) - 44.94
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.24
tlmlted Brands (NYSE) - 25.34
~orfolk Southern (NYSE) - 54.70
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·

~·

Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.96
Rockwell (NYSE) - 55.92
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.66
Royal Dutch Shell - 56.94
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) -

109.29
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 55.61
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.89
WesBanco (NYSE)- 16.60
Worthington (NYSE) - 16.95
Dally stock reports are 1he 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for March 25, 2010, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant
at (304) 674·0174. Member SIPC.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(usPs 213-9so&gt;

Correction Policy

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our matn concern in all 61orlcs Is to
be accurate II you know of an error
t:in a slory. call the newsroom at (740)
e92-2156

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•

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
12 weeks
.'35.26
26 Weeks . . . . . . .'70.70
52 Weeks . . . . . • . '140.11
Outside Meigs
12 Weeks
26 Weeks . .
52 Weeks . . . .

County
.
'56.55
. .. ,'113.60
. . "227.21

Snodgrass, Lauren Stewart,
Bryce Swatzel. Destiny
Vining, Cierra Wolfe.
Grade 5: Layne Acree.
Grant Adams, Brady Andrew,
Robbie Backus, Alexander
Barton r " dv Bartrum , Tyler
01

•I. , ... ug a gralk
~ .................... vRT The
of
B
or
above in all their
Middleport Firs1 Baptist
Church will observe "Bring a subjects to qual1f'y for the
Friend Sunday" at the honor roll are as followl&gt;:
i\Ieigs Jntc.•rmcdiutc
church, 10:15 a.m. service
Sl·hool
followed by an Easter egg •
&lt;;rude
3:
Cole Adams,
hunt and a luncheon. Easter
sunrise service will be held Cheyanne Allman, Nicholas
at 6:30a.m. on April 3 with a Andrew, Zachary Bar1nun,
Bctz.ing.
Kassidy
breakfast before Sunday Cole
Betzing. Emmah Buck.
school and church service.
Layne Caldwell, Donavin
Thursday, April 1
Tuesday, March 30
Chapman.
Madison
POMEROY - Mass of
POMEROY OH-Kan the Lord's Supper, , 7:30 Cremeans.
Allbon
Com Club, meeting and p.m.,
Cunningham.
Cooper
Darst,
followed
by
euct1on, 6:30 p.m. at the Procession and Visits to the Dylan Da\idson, Andrea
Pomeroy Library.
Repository from 9-11 a.m., Dtxon, Shane Dixon, Josie
Donohue, Cole Durst, Lydia
Sacreq Heart Church
Edwards, Maxwell Edwards,
Friday, April 2
Madison
Field , Isaiah Fish.
POMEROY - Stations of
Hannah
Fortner, Allison
the
Cross,
noon,
Sacred
Saturday, March 27
POMEROY - Giveaway Heart Church, with minis- Han,tine, Gavin Harder,
Hart.
Evan
of gift cards to Dollar General ters of Meigs Ministerial Ethan
Hennmgton.
Anthony
Rev.
Association
assisting
, for needy children, noon-2
Hernandez, Grncie Hill,
p.m ,
Grace
Episcopal Walter E. Heinz, pastor.
Madelyn
Hill, Brandon
Church, East Main Street, Confessions heard at 1 p.m. Holley, Isaiah Hudson,Julyan
POMEROY
Liturgy
of
child must be present to
Huffman, Drew Humphrey~.
receive card, refreshments, the Passion and Death of Matthew Jackson. Chase
7:30
p.m.,
Sacred
Christ,
hot dogs available.
Jones, Trinity Jones, Billy
Chili Heart Church.
REEDSVILLE Joseph, Brandon Justis, Tesla
Sunday, April 4
cookoff and soup supper, 5
KaufT, Alysha King. Kaleb
TUPPERS
PLAINS
p.m.. Reedsville United
Easter Sunrise Service (The King, Makayla King. Kole
Method st Church.
Alexander
Rose) , St. Paul United Lambert,
Sunday, March 28
McWilliams,
Shnlynn
Methodist
Church,
St.
Rt.
7,
POMEROY Revival,
Mitchell,
Sage
Murdock.
Mt. Hermon Church, located Tuppers Plains, 6:30a.m. For Kori
Neece.
Claytin
off Route 7 on Texas Road, more information call Connie Neuvling. W)att Ntcholson.
turn at 36411 Wrckham Rankrn at 740-667-6329.
Maris a Noble. Sk)lar Petrie,
Road. Clifford B. Coleman,
Alexander Pridd&gt;·· Brody
.evangelist,
Meetings
Reynold • Gract Raffle,
Sunday, 10:30 a.m. and 7
Alyssa Rowe, Salem Russell.
p.m. through March 31 , 7
Saturday, March 27
Taylor
Sands,
blaina
p.m. each evening. More
HARRISONVILLE
Scarberry. Gloria Sis on.
mformation call 985-4220.
Harrisonville Youth League Joseph S1zemore, Alyssa
MIDDLEPORT - Revival, last ball signup, 4 to 6 p.m. Smith, Carter Smith, Wesley
Hope Baptist Church, 570 at the firehouse. For more Smith. William Smith, Tf\Yior
Grant St., Middleport, Rev. information call742-2525.
Swartz. Shawn TI10mas,
Aaliyah 'Iobin. Alexis Tobin.
Ashton Vance, Rileigh Ward,
Joshua Wibon, Br.td) Young,
Kevm Young. Sydney Zirkle.
Grade 4: Isaiah Ash1 Bullington, Robin Boyer,
}'riday.•. Partly
sunny southeast m the afternoon.
Bailey Caruthers , Wilham
with a chance of snow
Saturday nigbt ...Mostly Chapman. Lane Cullums,
.showers with a slight clear in the evening ...Then Shelbi Dailey. Olivia Davis,
chance of rain showers in becoming partly cloudy. Paige Denney, Paige Dill.
the morning ..Then !iUnny in Not as cool with lows in the Mica Drchel. Trenton Durst,
the afternoon. Breez) and Joy, er 40s. Southeast wmds T) ler Garretson, Mariah
much cooler \\ ith highs in 5 to 10 mph.
Haley. Kaylee Haning,
the upper 40.;,. North \\ inds
Sunday•..Showers. Htghs Aubrey Hart. De\ on Ha\\ ley.
J5 to 20 mph. Chance of around 60. Chance of ram Zachar) Helton. Madison
precipitation 50 percent.
80 percent.
Hendricks. Cole Hoffman.
:F nda)
night ...Clear.
Sunday night ...Showers De\ in Humphreys. Peyton
Cold with lows in the upper likely. Lows around 40. Humphreys. Gage Johnson.
20s. !':ortheast winds 5 to 10 Chance of rain 70 percent.
Jenna
Jordan,
Sydney
mph.
Monday...Mostly cloudy. Kennedy, Rachel Kesterson .
Saturda) ...Sunny. Not as Showers likely...Mainly in .\'takayla Kimes , Amanda
cool with highs in the lower the morning. Highs in the Landaker,
Steven
60s.
Northeast
winds lower 50s. Chance of rain Laudcrrnilt.
Raymond
around 5 mph ...Becoming 60 percent.
Lawson. Bmdley Logan,
1 Bowen Mat~on, Isabella
-~---------------- I McDaniel, Thco Mcelroy.
Shayla Molden, Thelma
I Morgan, Kaitlynn NC\\ land,
Mckenzie Ohlinger, Ka) Icy
Pierce. Chevanne Priddy,
DAQ)- 22.52
AEP (NYSE) - 33.90
Trenton Scarbuf)', Jake
BBT (NYSE) - 32.29
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 54.35
Scherfel. Gregory Sheets,
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 16.55
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 52.79
Ariann Sizemore. Wesley
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.55
Big Lots (NYSE) - 37.36
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)- 31.18
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 37.39
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

26, 2010

ill'
'''b"

n.

n

, ,..

,,

.- \h ~&amp;.l nda

Cole,' Adam Cotterill, Kylie
Dillon, Jade Dudding,Aaron
Dunham, Kenda Dunkle ,
Madison Dyer, Alii Hatfield,
Emily
Henry,
Gracie
Holfman, Trae Hood, Keaton
Huffman, Stephen Hysell,
Jared
Courtnev
Jones,
Kennedy• .\tegan King. John
L1ttle, ~1organ Lodwick~
Dillon Mahr, Tyler Marcum,
Makya Milhoan, Danielle
;\'!orris, Elena Musser, Luke
\1usser. Karlee Norton,
Oliver.
Raeline
Devyn
Reeves, Jake Row..h, Keynath
Rowe, Kayla Rowley. Tyler
Shull , Savannah Smith, K . J.
Tracy. Crystal Unbankes.
Matthew Vance , Abbygale
Watson, Dylan Weaver, T. J.
William~. Hanna Young,
Gage ZirkJc.
Meigs Middle School
Grade 6: Kristen Ashburn.
Halley Barnes. Lauren Booth ,
Dalton Bu!&gt;h, Alexis Carey.
Eric Chapman. Tiphanie
Damon, David Doerfer,
Haiden English, Courtney
Evans, Tyler Fields, Sadie
Fox, Evan George, Kaitlyn
Gilkey, Mirnnda Gillilan.
Matthew Ha\\kins, Macen;Je
Haye:s, Austin Hendricks.
Tracy Herdman, Alexandra
Houdashelt, Daniel Hysell,
Jackie Jordan. Brayden
Kopec . Jake Kom. Austin
Ltfe. Colton Lilly. Angel
Maffin, Zacharv Mash,
Dustin McGhee. Jaxon
Meadows, William Milliron.
Shawn Molden. Brandy
Parson!&gt;. Adriahna Patterson,
Lara Perrin, Matthew Austin
Pierce. Brittany Po...,ell ,
Kclsie Powell, Gregory
Priddy, Briar Rupe. Chase
Scarberry, Cory Scarberry.
Kalynn Seymour, Breanna
Smith, Cody Smith, Jack
Starcher, Krista Van~est,
Zachan• Warnecke. Evan
White, Benjamin Wilson, and
Sonja Beth Young.
Grade 7: Brook Andrus,
Jordvn Arnold. McKavla
Barrett, De:..tinee Black."\\
Sariah Brinker, Issac Bryant,
Alexis
Tyler
Casey.
Coleman, Shaun Coleman ,
Brandon Counts, Amanda
Crane, Hannah Cremean~ .
Amber David~on, David
Da\ h. , John Davis, Michael
Davis. Matthew Foster,
James Fuller. K ' Tavona
Game!&gt;, Brandon Giikey.
Chevenne Gorslene. Maris~a
Hali, Austin Hennington,
Orville Hill, Leslie Hoffman.
Mitchell Howard, Katelvn
Hysell. Breanna Johnson.
Haley Kennedy, Anthony
Kopec. Nicholas Lester,
Jared Long. Tekoa .\lartinez.
Nathan McClintock. Shelby
McCourt. Kerri ~loon,
Daylen i\eece. Beth Norris,

Rowe, Morgan Ru&amp;sell,
Alexis Schwab. 'icholas
Shamblin . Jacob Sllernorc,
Briana Smith , Eric Sm1th,
Braden M ichael Spencer,
Samantha Spires. Carolann
c:;, '"art . Tw lor Stc\\art.
I

Lindsay Patterson, Wesley
Patterson, 1Y Phelps, Paige
Phillips,
Robert
Rice,
Courtney Robinson , Jason
Robmson. Hailey Roush.
Dempsey Rupe, Elijah Adam
Russell, Angel Sanders.
Matthew Sm.tlh\ oocl
Smnh, Rand,dl Stev..tl l,
Mikayla VanMatre, Victoria
Walker, and Collen Young.
Grade 8: ShamJi Beaver,
Jeremy Black, Breanne
Bonnett, Jesse
Brooks,
Courtney Burnem , Ron
Capehart, Kimberly Casci ,
Megan Cleland , Hannah
Conley. Olivia Cremeans.
Kimberly
Cunningham,
Michaela Davidson , Alyson
Dettwiller. Devan Dugan,
Brittany Durst, Jarret Durst,
Paul Gibbs. David Hayes,
Bradley Helton, Taylor
Hood. Abigail Houser, Sk')'lar
Jennings, Jamee Johnson,
Rikey Jones, Sara Klein ,
Brandon Mahr, Miranda
Manley, Andrea McGrath.
'Blaine Perry, Brody Peyton,
Prater,
Leah
Trenton
Ramthun,
Christopher
Rayburn, Chnstian Romine,
Cassidy Rose , Adrianna
Rowe, Kaylee Rowe, Taylor

u)

\ancc.

K)

\ &lt;~nmeter. Gabnelle Walker,
James M Walters, Tara
WaiLer-Kuharic,
Cody
\\-h1tl. . and Darrin Will.

lnte:r net
_ ERYING1POMEROY

("-·f:':;:6x
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Taking Applications

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740-992-7022
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~ All.£ 1&gt;A ~~
Silverheels
• ~/~''" A Realty Company~EHO

t

•fa&amp; (101 •' •

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•f.u ''""'111t• •.,.,.
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•/ttl·
r
to

~~~ tdiii:DIIIted dJUilll toJ1.1
YOCI lllf/1 MltJMd elim6 ot Ute tl~

The Dally Sentinel
8f0Utht to ,YOQ by:

Good Luck
snd
h11ve fun!
\\\\ \\ .homenatlbank.com

ARE YOU ARESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY?
In order to vote in the May 4, 2010 Primary Election you
must be registered by April5. 2010.
Vote at your ne\\ precinct and avoid long lines at the board
on Election Day by changing your address (if you have
moved\\ ithin the county) or if you changed your name. by
updating your regi tration b) April5, 2010.
The Board of Elections will be open from 9:00 a.m. until
9:00p.m. on AprilS, 2010.
You may also register at the following locations: Meigs
County Departmept of Human Services, Meigs County
WIC Office, License Bureau, Board of MR/DD. Pomeroy
Public Library. Middleport Public Library. Eastern Local
School Library. Racine Public Library. Meigs County
Treasurer's Office. and all area high schools.
For any additional information. call 992-2697, or stop by
our office located at 117 E. Memorial Drive, Ste. I.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
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740-949-221
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March 26, 2010
•
A Special Supplement to:
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www.mydailysentinel.com www.mydailytribune.com w

--~~--~---~

-~~2W~~~~~~~~~~~~~

�Page 2 •

Home Improvement 2010

Friday. March 26, 2010

Easy Ways to Add
New Life to a oom
A little color here,
a little accent
piece there can go
~ .long way to
sp1c1ng up a room
While some rooms in th
houo.;e are alway, sunny,
other rooms can seem lifeless. Fortunately. many
thing can fit the blll for
homeowners looking to add
life to a room.
~
• Flowers. Flower. can adJ
a bold sense of color to an
otherwise bland room. Also.
flowers provide a pleasant
aroma that can make a room
more inviting to guests and
residents alike.
• Add photos to a bookshelf. A bookshelf might
contain great works of literature, but it can also give a
room a musty, antiquated
feel. To combat this problem, reserve one or two of
the shelves on the bookshelf
for family photos.
• Spice up the walls. No
one says wallpaper can't be
lively and eye opening.
While some rooms. such a · a
study or reading room ,
might be be. t suited to more
muted wallpapers, other

.....

-

A simple bouquet of flowers
can add significant life to a

room.
rooms that you find bland
can be spiced up with a
bright wallpaper.
• Add colorful blankets or
pillows. Draping a colorful
blanket over the couch or
adding a few brighter colored pillows to the couch is
a! o a way to adJ life to a
room. You can even re·-fabric older pillows with
brigher, more eye-catching
colors.

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�• Page 3

Home Improvement 2010

Friday, March 26, 2010

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Fertilizers
10-10-10 .••.•.••.•••. $11.99
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�Page 4 •

Home Improvement 2010

Friday, March 26,2010

Enjoy a No-Cost Room Re-Do
Homeowners know that
some of the fastest ways to
give a room a makeo\er
involve a change in paint
color .. or some new room
accessories. But did you
know that by simply switching around the furniture in the
room. namely the sofa. love
seat and entertainment center.
you may fi.nd the room takes
on an entirely new look?
It's important to point out
that playing musical furniture
can yield a new room look but
can also be strenuous work
that should be shared by two
or more physically capable
people. If you· re ready to
start, here are ways to do so in
a safe and effective way.
• Sketch out floor plans:
Professional decorators often
make quick outline sketches
of their ideas on paper. They
also do some of their work on
graph paper, which makes it
easy to map out the square
footage and then compare it
in relation to the squares of
the graph paper. Make each
square on the paper represent
one foot in the actual room.
Label the shapes for what
itorn of furniture or decorative item (like a rug)each is
repre&lt;;enting. For those who
want a higher-tech room tool.
there i ~computer software
that doe the ~arne thing Ill a
digital or virtual capacit). The
plan ... can then be printed out.
• More high-tech tool-;: You
can find computer software
that offers even more tooh for
the
do-it-yourself
room
designer. Some simp!) pro-

iiiiilli~~

are common in suburban
areas. Many of the houses
have
cookie-cutter floor
plans, meaning everyone on
your street could have the
same room dimensions. Take
advantage of open houses or
invitations for visits from
neighbors to get an idea of
how others have designed
their rooms. You'll be able to
gauge what works and what
doesn't in terms of color and
furniture placement.
• Hands-on approach: Some
homeowners can only get an
idea of how a room will look
by physically moving the furniture. If this is your plan, use
tools that can mak.e the job
easier. Firstly, bend at the
knees and let your legs rather
than your back do much of
the work. Stores sell slippery
disks that can be placed under
the feet of furniture so the
Open the door to the new room
possibilities a change in furniture placement can bring.
vide room plans, while others
enable you to upload photos
of your room and play with
virtual furniture placement.
You may also be able to do a
3-D virtual walk-through of
the room. where you can get a
very realistic view of ju t
wha·t the completed room may
look. like.
• Check out other home :If
vou don't know where to start
fn terms of furniture placement, see what other neigh bors have done. Housing i.Ubdivisions and developments

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t 74g Cent11naty Road fJallipoli~, Ohio

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pieces move easily over carpeting and other floors. Hand
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After you've experimented

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you may have a fresh take on
the room and find you ''redecorated" without spending a
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1

�Home Improvement 2010

•""riday, March 26,2010

Kitchens and Beyond:
Smart Remodels
( 1S)
Is a complett!
remodel too much to contt: mplate
right
now?
Con ider starting wi t h a
nook-and-crannv remake to
add zip to yo~r daily life
and inspire things to come.
Give yourse l f a comp ut er
work~; t atio n. ~t ud y corner,'
wine bar. With the righ t
planning and design. any
space can be brightened.
small job helps you work
your .,.. a) into a larger
remodel, and ha ing a plan
that CO\ er both make a big
dtffcrence.

Custom
Cabinetry,
Good Change
If ) ou are like most hom
n~:r , you can name
ome
neglected paces at ) our house
read) for a dose of refreshing.
Ever thought of using custom
cabinetry bc)ond the kitchen?
'l11ink family rooms, cmertamment centers {shelve~. video
cabinets, mantels), stud) arcus
(desks. bookcases), and hobb)
an.:as (workspaces. storage) .
Beside~ kitchens, remodeling
bathrooms can add the most
value to your home and com ·
fort to your life. Add a new
vanity or tub. refreshed hardware, or coat of paint - it\
easier than you think!
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Flooring or lighting can
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n entertainment center rna.&gt; he all for
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• Page 5

Ohio Valley Publishing
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Go

Home Improvement 2010

G~een

Friday, !\larch 26,2010

with Hydronic Heating

(MS) - The home of the
future is green - green for
environme~1tal friendliness and
green for energy efficiency. As
a way to achieve tomorrow's
green home. today· consumers
are increasingly turning to one
of America·.., most traditional
types of home heating. It is
hydronic heating. which is
heating with hot water as the
heat transfer medium. With
hydronic heating. hot water is
circulated from a centrally
located boiler through baseboards. radiators, or extremely
durable tubing embedded in
floors, walls, ceilings, sidewalks. and drivewavs.
Hydronic heating is the
es ence of .. green heating··
because the heating appliances
boast some of the highest heating appliance efficie~cy ratings
available to homeowners, both
in terms of fuel usage and heat
distribution. It is highly efficient
because water absorbs heat
from the flame so well and
because hot water retains and
emits heat for a long time. even
after the boiler shuts down. In
addition, only one burner is
needed to provide both home
heating and water heating.
therefore there is only one carbon footprint. Furthermore, it is
easy to set up numerous heating
zones in a house, allowing the
homeowner to economically
use heating energy only where
and when it is needed. Even
greater savings can be achieved
by using today's advanced energy efficient pumps to move
water through the home.
Other recent advances in
hydronic heating technology
include cond~nsing boilers that

may be vented through the wall jobs. These indirect water heater:;
and have modulating burners. can be used as supplemental
up to 98 "green" heat for solar panels and
Condensing boilers
percent efficient and have geothermal units.
Energy Star ratings that qualify for
The
Hydronics
Industry
new energy-efficiency tax credils. Alliance (HIA). a leadmg advoThese highly efficient system-, cate for the advancement of this
allow for a tax credit of 30 percent highly efficient and environmenof the total cost of the product tally gentle heating technology. is
plus installation. up to a I 500 a coalition of 34 manuhtcturen.
maximum cap per homeowner who are members of the
for all improvement'&gt; made in Hydronics Industry Section of
2009-2010. in addition to avail- the Air Conditioning. Heating
able state and local incentives.
and Refrigeration lnstitllle.
Hydronic units are quiet and
Several HIA members have
do not produce drafts, so they
LEED Certified Plants. and most
do not scatter dust, mites. or
t~anufacture
other allergenic
materials members
EnergyStar
rated
appliances.
throughout the hou ·e. Because
The
HIA
participates
widely at
hyc.lronic hygienic heating is
gentle. thoroul!h. and even. national Green Builder trade
there are no hotor cold spot in shows and programs.
For more information, visit
the room. These attributes can
have the effect o£ saving energy myhomeheating.com, or write
when the system doesn't have to the Hydronics Industry
to .. work overtime" to over- Alliance, 8225 Madrillon
Estates Drive. Vienna, VA
come these home deficiencies.
In addition to room he-dting. 22182, or e-mail to myhomeother hydronic applications heating@ verizon .net.
include domestic hot water heating. kick space heating. swimming
pool and hot tub heating. and bathroom towel rack warming. Manv
homes also use hydronic snow and
icc melting for sidewalks and driveways. an important safety factor
that helps prevent injuries from
falls on snow and ice. High velocity air conditioning may also be
added to hydronically heated
homes as a sepamte system.
Hydronic heating is ideal for a
newly coru tructed home or for an
addition to an existing home.
Hydronic boilers can also supply the hot water source for the
home with the installation of an
indirect water heater; thus only
one boiler is needed to do both

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�Home Improvement 2010

J?riday, March 26,2010

• Page 7

Spring Cleaning Room by Room
The weather may be getting
warmer, the flowers are bloom
ing, and you're ready to throw
open the windows and let in
))orne fresh nir. Now is the time
when
manv
hcmeo'h ners
dl·cide to cast away the winter
blues and ready their home f~&gt;r
the warm weather season
Spring cleaning can be the
perfect time to redecorate or
make space for new renovations. While the notion of
cleaning and organization can
seem overwhelming to . orne, if
you tackle a room a day, you
will see progress in no time.

Bathroom
The bathroom is generally
the smallest room in the hou e.
It can be a great place to start
your spring cleaning and build
up to larger rooms.
• Dust the vents and fans.
• Give the shower and bath a
thorough cleaning.
• Wipe down moldings and
the corners of the ceiling.
• Mop the floor.
• Wash down the toilet. sink
and other fixtures.
• Clean expired drugs out of
the medicine cabinet.
• Empty the trash pail.
• Replenish tissue and toilet
paper supplies.

Bedroom
The betlroom may be a col
lect-all room for items that
have to remain out of sighL
Nov. is the time to tackle the
clutter.
• Remove and launder bed
Iinens and draperies.
• Dust the ceiling fan and

window blinds.
• Dust do'hn all furniture
and decor items.
• Vacuum the floor.•
• Swttch out winter clothes
for spring wear in closets,
removing little-worn or old
items as vou go (tor donation).
• Organize~ bureau drawers.
especially the sock or lingene
ones.
• Tackle under-the-bed cleanmg.

Kitchen
You like!~ spend the bulk of
your time in the kitchen. It may
need'the most clean-up work.
• Remove refrigerator/freezer
Item:-. to a cooler ami thoroughly clean all the shel\'lng, bins.
etc.
• Dust ceiling fans, ~-;helving,
blinds, light fixtures anti ceilings.
• Spot-clean any wall surfaces that have been splattered
by cooking.
• Use a wood cleaner to :-.cour
grease or cooking residue from
cabinetry.
• Apply oven cleaner to the stove
or run the self-cleaning cycle.
• Remove the knobs from the
stove lop and clean the surface
and burners. Don't forget to
also clean the range hood.
• Wipe down the surfaces of
all other appliances, and clean
the interior of the microwave.
• Launder draperies.
• Sweep and mop the tloor.

and surface cleaning.
• Dust down all l'ampshades,
furntturc, cejfing comer..;, fans.
fixtures. etc.
• MO\ e furniture l'rom the
\\alb.
• Vacuum fun11ture, includ
ing under sofa cu~hions.
• Remove draperies and laun-

Ohio Valley Publishing
Point Pleasant Register ·The Daily Sentinel • Gallipolis Daily Tribune

der:
• Clean electronics after
unplugging.
• Dust decorative accents.
• Swap throw pillow..; and
blankets for lighter hues.
• Remove {ferns from china
cabinet: and clean.
• Polish silver flatware.
• Thoroughlv vacuum tlooring. carpcti~g and accent rugs.
• Steam clean or shampoo the
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�Page 8 •

Home Improvement 2010

Friday, March 26, 2010

How to Finance Home Improvements
In this economic climate
many homeowners are opting
to stay put rather than trying to
sell their homes in a buyer's
market. In tum, they're looking
for ways to improve upon their
home investment. Renovations
to properties are continuing
de!&gt;pite slow growth in the
housing market.
Renovations may bring about
a return on money spent if done
right, but they do require a preliminary investment of funds.
The key is fmding the best way
to finance home renovations.

Cash
Cash is the most economical
way to finance improvements,
provided you have enough discretionary money in accounts
to cover costs. You do not incur
any financing charges or interest, and will not be penalized
for past-due credit payments.
It is a good idea to keep all of
the receipts for purchases made
toward home improvements.
Though home improvements
are
typically
not
taxdeductible, certain improvements, such as purchasing
energy conserving appliances
and other environmentally
friendly renovations, may be
eligible for a tax credit. Your
accountant or another tax professional may be able to provide
further
information
regarding tax credits.

Personal Loans
If you do not have cash on
hand, you may want to take out
a loan to finance the costs of
improvements. Just weigh the
advantages and disadvantages
of the loan. Will the investment
be worth the interest you will
have to pay on the agreement
over the life of the loan?

T

Sit down with a loan officer at
your local bank to go over options
with reasonable terms before
committing tothe renovations.

Credit Cards
Paying for a renovation on a
credit card can be a viable
option for quick funds, provided that you are of the mind of
paying off the balance when
the bill comes, and not carrying
it over from month to month.
Otherwise,
high
finance
charges on certain cards could
end up costing you a great deal.
Check the terms of your credit
card. You may find incentive
deals for using your card at
home-improvement retailers.
Some cards also offer discounts on purchases if you
make your purchase through
their site with one of their partners. This could save you a percentage on the purchase and be
well worth using plastic to pay.

costs may be required if you are
refinancing, because essentially
you are closing on a home,
again. You will need to factor
these costs into your loan.

Title I Property
Improvement
Loan Program
According to the U.S.
Department of Housing and

Urban Development (HUD),
if the equity in your home is
limited, the answer may be
an FHA Title I loan. Banks
and other qualified lenders
make these loans from their
own funds, and FHA insures
the lender against a possible
loss. This loan insurance
program is authorized by
Title I of the National
Housing Act. FHA-insured
Title I loans may be used for

any improvements that will
make your home basically
more livable and useful. You
can use them even for dishwashers,
refrigerators,
freezers, and ovens that are
built into the house and not
free-standing. You cannot
use them for certain luxurytype items such as swimming pools or outdoor fireplaces, or to pay for work
already done.

Home Equity
Loans/Refinancing_
If you have been considering
refinancing your home to take
advantage of lower interest
rates, you may want to use a
portion of your equity to fund
home improvement projects.
For homeowners who are planning to stay in their homes for
several years and do not mind
starting from the beginning
again on a loan, home equity
loans can be a way to free up
cash now, and also benefit from,
lower interest rates.
Not all lenders have the same
rates and terms regarding home
equity loans and the refinancing
process. Request quotes from
several lenders to find a deal
that works for your situation.
Also, keep in mind that closing

You Can.
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with the: right bonk when YQJJ ~ a home

loon. That's where we come in.

Our Home loan Specialist

Whether you're

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and help you every step of the way. In fad, we
hove over o hundred years experience helping
people just like you get the kind of home loan
they need.

Jared Moser
Home loon Specialist
740-441-31 50
740-339.{) 128 Cell
jmoser@peoplesboncorp.com
www.peoplesboncorp.com

Come see us today and get a home loon that
you con live with. A loan that's affordable and
fits perfectly into your budget. just when you
think you can't find the kind of personal service
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I

•

�• Page 9

Home Improvement 2010

Friday, March 26, 2010

Hardwood Flooring Must-Know Shopping Facts·
(MS) - With so many available options for hardwood
· , today's environmenresponsible consumer
accurate information to
simplify the process of selecting a new hardwood floor.
"Be a knowledgeable consumer," says the American
Hardwood Information Center,
www .Hard wood Info .com,
"and get the facts about U.S.
hardwoods They're 'green,'
exceptionally beautiful and can
last a lifetime." Shop with confidence! These hardwood facts
will guide you in making the
right
hardwood
flooring
choice.
• A solid hardwood floor will
provide decades of extraordinary beauty, durable service
and flexibility. It may initially
cost a little more, but remember that solid hardwood flooring can be refinished for excessive wear or changing tastes.
• Hardwood floors are nontoxic and trap no allergens.
Simple maintenance - dust
mopping, sweeping or vacu. - will keep them lookgreat and allergen-free.
• U.S. hardwoods are truly
sustainable. A recent US Forest
Service report verified that the
volume of hardwood timberland in American forests is
almost double that of 50 years
ago.
• U.S. hardwoods are an allnatural, carbon-negative material. They have no emissions for
methane, nitrogen oxides and
other particulate matter and
they're homegrown, further
minimizing their carbon footprint.
• When considering a particular hardwood, pay attention to
its hardness rating. Consider
Oak, Maple, Cherry and Ash
for high traffic areas.

the initial higher material cost. tropical regions of the world.
Unfinished solid hardwood To make it into flooring, it
flooring must be sanded and must be glued together under
sealed on-site. While it offers tremendous pressures. Glue
more color choices, it requires content can range from three
extensive preparation. The to 20 percent. and often consanding process is messy; sig- tains urea formaldehyde, a
nificant drying time is needed probable human carcinogen.
manufacturers
after each sealing application Flooring
often requiring up to five days approximate it lasting 30
for completion. While the ini- years. Unlike hardwood, it's
tial material cost is lower, not carbon negative and
remember the additional finish- because it's typically manufactured in Southeast Asia,
ing cost.
Engineered flooring, consist- shipment to U.S. shores
ing of a plywood base that's increases its carbon footprint
covered with a 1116- to 1/8- significantly.
inch thick layer of wood, works
Tropical woods, not native
well in bathrooms and base- to the U.S., are being
ments where light moisture renamed and falsely marketmight be a concern. It's almost ed as favorite hardwoods. Be
always pre-finished. However, careful. Brazilian Cherry is
because the top layer is so thin, jatoba and Chilean Che~y is
it can't be sanded more than Ienga. Neither is Cherry.•
Oak
and
one to three times. The less Tasmanian
expensive choices cannot be Australian Heritage Oak are
eucalyptus
and
sanded at all due to the very really
Malaysian Oak is rubber
thin top layer.
wood. When in doubt, visit ·
www.Hardwoodlnfo.com to
review the U.S. hardwood Current design trends favor the natural variety in coloration and ·
Species Guide.
character marks as seen in this floor.
As you contemplate your
The least expensive floor- home improvement projects,
ing option is laminate. It make choices based on fact.
flooring,
furniture,
looks like wood, but it's real- For
:' t
'
ly a printed paper affixed to a mouldings, millwork and
wood-chip base or high-den- cabinetry that will last,
sity fiberboard. covered with choose
U.S.
hardwood,
quintessential
clear
surface
layer. nature's
a
Remember, it's not hard- "green" material.
For additional information
wood. Scratches or dings
about U.S. hardwoods, visit
can't be repaired.
Bamboo flooring is being the American Hardwood
called hardwood. It's not. It's Information
Center
at
a grass typically grown in www.Hardwoodlnfo.com.

Don't be Misled
· by Lookalikes

Which One?
Pre-finished solid hardwood
flooring is already sanded and
sealed with at least four coats
ultraviolet-cured urethane
in by the manufacturer. It
•
ers consistent quality, quicker installation and immediate
gratification, meaning you can
walk on it as soon as it is laid.
Time and money saved during
the installation tyt&gt;ically offset ...."-~~~~~~~m~'""':"l"~""'~!!"'!"'~~""'"""~""'!"!"'f'l'

re
391 No h Second
dleport, 0

Serving
the
Area
Since
1953

�...
Page 10 •

Home Improvement 2010

Ji'riday, March 26, 2010

·Get Three Times the Payback for Replacing Old Window
(MS l - Many factors have doors more energy elhcit!nt.
converged to make 2009 and The composition of the win20 I 0 a great time for home dow or -door is a major factor,
remodeling. Projects complet- as is the glass.
ed now wilJ increase a home's
All-aluminum windows will
curb appeal, make it more ener- b the least energy efficient,
gy efficient and reduce the whereas vinyl and dad wood
homeowner's tax burden.
windows will be the most cffi ·
- The federal government is cient Vinyl w.indows with mul
now offeri'ng a~ tax credit for tiple hollow chambers w1thm
homeowners\vho make quahfy- the frame perform better than
mg energy-dTicient upgmdes. vinyl windows without the
such a" replacing windows and chambers. If you want wood
doors. Homeowners can receive interiors on your wmdows.
- a tax credit equal to 30 percent
of the product cost, up to you'll want to choose a clad$1.500, for improvements made wood• window - vinyl-clad,
fiberglass-clad or aluminumin 2009 and 2010.
clad.
Peachtree ·s 600 Series
In order to receive the tax
premium
fiberglass-dad wood
credit. windows or doors must
meet strict criteria: .30 or lower windows yield U-factors and
U-factors. which measure the ~olar heat gain coefficients
amount of heat escaping well below the federal tax credthrough a window or door in an it criteria and the recently
hour; and .30 or lower solar revised EnergyStar criteria due
•
beat gain coefficient. which out in 2010. .
Most windows today have
measures how well a window
or door blocks the heat generat- low-emissivity (Low E) coat- ·
ed from sunlight. It is important ings and two panes of glass,
to note that not all EnergyStar using the airspace in between
rated windows or door meet the panes as insulation to help
the federal tax credit criteria.
minimize heat and cold loss.
"Consumers should not be Peachtree has an exclu. ive
deceived; not all windows and high-efficiency glass called
doors qualify for the federal tax Zo-e-shieldTM, which uses a
credit," said Dave Koester, proprietary combination of
._.. brand manager for Peachtree components and materials to
Doors and Windows, a manu- surpass energy t:fficiency ratfacturer of windows, patio ings of standard window glazdoors and entry doors. "Only ing available. Zo-e-shield can
select manufacturers produce reduce energy costs between
products that readily qualify 12 and 29 percent, depending
for the tax credit. Peachtree's on which area of the country
qualifying products include allyou reside. A cost-savings calvinyl, vinyl-clad, fiberglassculator
at www.zoeshield.com
clad and even select aluminumcan help you determine how
clad and wood windows."
much you could save on utility Energy efficient doors and windows can pay numerous dividends, including lower utility bills, higher
bills by replacing your old resale value and even tax breaks.
drafty windows with Peachtree
windows made with Zo-eshield glass.
For more information on the
federal energy tax credit, visit
or
Several- factors make win- www.recovery.gov
dows, patio doors and entry www.peachtreedoor.com.

Identifying
Energy Efficient
Windows, Doors

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�• Page 11

Home Improvement 2010

Friday, March 26, 2010

Hardwood Cabinets Enhance Universal Design
(MS) - A comfortable yet
more accessible and barrierfree home arc the desired aims
o
rsa l des ign.
coined in the 1980s
by architect Ron Mace. universal design is defined as
"the design of products and
environments to he usable by
all people, to the greatest
extent possible, without the
need fQr adaptation or specialized design ··
For the no~ aging Baby
Boomer generation, which
comprises about one-third of
the U.S. population. uni\'ersal
design is just '"hat the doctor
ordered.

the all-natural choice for
sturdy.
attractive
and
healthy design materials.
The wide range of species
- oak, cherry, maple, and
more
pro ide a spectmm
of colors and grain patterns
to satisfy any decorating
cheme."

dra'"er:-. will require reinforced hardware in case the)
are leaned on for support. •
• D- haped or le\ er-style
handles and magnetic touchand-relea&lt;;e cabinet doors are
perfect for hands of any si;:e
or strength.
• To allow full use of the
cabinet door frame consider
swing-away hinges.
• Under-the-counter refrigerator drawers and other
flexible appliances make a
kitchen more accessible for
someone wheelchair bound.
Similar universal design
ideas can be applied when
remodeling a bathroom:
• Vary the height of vanities to les en the need to
crouch. .
• Provide seated users adequate under-the-sink knee
. pace.
• For additional storage.
c01isider a cabinet on \\ heils.
stored under the sink and
movable.
Solid hardwood cabinets.
vanities and flooring add a
degree of elegance to the
remodel. Don't worry about
water
damage.
Today·s
\\ ater-res istant finishes form
a watertight eal protecting
the wood yet allowing it to
expand and contract, normally.

Kitchens
and Bath

Modern kitchens are much
more than a place for food
preparation.
row family
gathering place . eYen centers to en.tertain guest.,
kitchens need to be comfortable, convenient and safe for
everyone.
Key to making a home harrier-free is the use of
adjustable-height work areas
and unique cabinetry.
Universal design makes
Wall-mounted cabinets. for
homes practical and user- example. leave floor spaces
friendly,
and
whether clear and easy to clean. Add
remodeling or buying, as an all-natural material like
these active, older adults American hardwood. . and
co emplate future health you have a healthy, beautiful
bility i sues, they kitchen as well.
to remain in their
Here are some design feahomes and continue to live tures to raise the level of
independently.
convenience and usability for
To satisfy their desire for everyone:
a warm, beautiful space,
• Varied-height cabinets
incorporating
American · and countertop; will accomhardwoods into the homes modate multi-cook families.
makes them attractive and so parent and child may preinviting places in which to pare a meal together.
• Make components acceslive.
According
to
the sible whether standing or
American
Hardwood seated.
• tiding drawers, rollout
lnformation
Center.
(www.Hardwoodlnfo .com), shelves and lazy Susans
and Gil Thurm, executive make itt:ms easier to reach.
• At the ba, e- of floor cabi vice pre&lt;&gt;ident
of the
Hardw0od Manufacturers nets, keep the toe/kick space
Association.
"when
1t deep enough to accommocomes to universal de ign. date wheelchairs.
• Lower cabinet doors and
American hardwoods are

American
Hardwoods and
Universal Design

ing cabinets for .storage. a
small refrigerator and countertop space for brewing coffee.
Walk-in closets With builtin drawers. pull-out trays and
multi-height hang bars help
keep everything organized
and easilv acces:iblc.
To add stvle to the mix.
solid hard~ood cabinets
complement existing furniture and room decor and add
a level of quality unmatched
by other construction materials.
\\'1th a host of spec1es to
choose from. major cabinet
makers are embracing the:e
ideas with special lines and
feature _ that blend the concepts to add function, comfort and beauty.

Healthy Materials
Hardwood floors are commonlv found in uni\ersal
desig~ plans.
Pro\'iding easy maneu\'erability for wheelchairs and
mobile storage units, simple
regular maintenance such as

du. t mopping •. weeping and
vacuuming keep wood floors
looking great.
American hard'" oods are
al o non-toxic and do not
trap allergens such as mold
spores and dust, and are
ofteo recommended b)' doctors · for individual. '"ith
allergies or asthma.

A Perfect Match
For those looking to add
the functionality and comfort of universal de . . ign, a
simple ke) word search,
..universal home de~ign.'' on
any Internet search engine is
a great place to hegm.
Then enjo) the be. t of both
worlds b) incorporatmg the
timeless beauty ·and warmth
of American hardwoods into
your plan.
Learn more about so]jd
American hardwood cabinetry. flooring. furmture and
hard\\ ood u. tainability at
the American Hardwood
Information
Center
at
\YWw.Hardwoodlnfo.com.

0

Throughout
the Home
Built-ins and '"all-mounted
cabinets provide open floor
space
to
accommodate
wheelchairs and walkers.
Media room cabinets house
and hide electrical components.
Larger bedrooms often fea tun: a breakfast bar contain-

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�Page 12 •

Home Improvement 2010

Friday, March 26 2010

Paper Hanging Pointers for DIVer
Spring can be a great time for
homeowners. After a long winter pent lounging around the
houc e, c pring is a time many
homeowners can get around to
tho e home impro\ement proJect they' e been dreaming
about.
One project man) homeowner like to do in . pring b refurbi. hed a bedroom. pnng is
often the 1deal time to paint or
hang new wallpaper in a home.
a. the wam1 weather outside
allows homeowners to open the
wmdow and let the fresh air
in. allowing paint to dry and
homem ners to do some work
m a comfortable em 1ronment.
1
, ot all project , however, are
a eas) a the. ecm. uch i
th ca e wtth hangmg w ..tllpaper. Whtle hangmg paper m1ght
eem like a project that imply
requtre. orne common en e
and elbow grea-.e. there' a lot
more to hangmg paper than JUst
hard work and cho &gt;. ing the
right pattern When hanging
paper thi&lt;; pring, con ider the
following tip .
• tock the toolbox. Before
dom!! all\ thin!!, be sure to have
the proper tool . Mea uring
tape, a harp knife and cissorl&gt;
to trim the paper are all valuable tools. It' al o important to
have sponges and a earn roller
to make sure you can smooth
out the inevitable bubbles that
will form before the paper
dries. A poor paper hanging job
is alway evident becau&lt;;e of
bubble in the paper. so be sure
to have a roller on hand to
smooth these out and ensure
your end product look a good
in reality as it does in your
plans. Other tools or instrument to have handy include a
ladder. a step ladder and a cou-

pie of bucket:-..
• Mak.e vour mea urements.
Hanging paper can be like
doing
math
homework.
~ teasure the room carefully so
)OU don·t end up dela)ing a
project to order more paper.
Multiply the ceiling height by
the wall width to determine the
&lt;;quare footage of each wall.
After doing that \\ ith each wall
in a gi\en room. add the square
footage of all \valls to determine the total square footage of
a room.
But the measurinc does not
end there. In fact, to ensure \'OU
ha\e uffic1ent paper for a proJect. dt\ ide the total square
footage by 2-. That figure w-ill
how ho\\ man) ingle rolls of
paper )'OU need. BeLause all
paper ts ,old in double roll ,
divide the figure above by tV~o,
which wtll show how many
double rolls you '11 need to adequately paper a room.
• Ready the surface. Once the
measurements
have
been
made, it' &lt;&gt; time to readv the
walJs. Clean the -..urfa~e to
remove any ~tams. and fi11 any
holes in the wall· ·urface a
well. Ifs al:o a good idea to
remove any light switch plate.
and outlet covers.
• Hang the paper. Hanging
the paper should start by
choosing a good starting pomt.
Oftentimes, the area around a
window or door makes a good
·tarting point, as any errors will
not be as noticeable. When
starting, draw a straight line
from ceiling to floor to line up
the first strip of paper. This line
will essentially act as a guide to
use and make sure the paper i
hanged straight.
When the first strip of paper
is hung. use the roller to

remove any bubble .. Use the
knife to trim any excess from
the bottom or top of each sheet.
When moving on to the next
sheet, be sure to avoid any gaps
or overlap.
While hanging paper can
seem like a snap. 1t's often a
detail-oriented job that requires
careful attention.

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�• Page 13

Home lmpro\'ement 2010

Friday, March 26, 2010

Ask What Your Roof Can Do For You
(MS) -- Replacing a roof is
a major investment for any
wner. When considerch a significant home
vement
project,
it
m
sense that you wtll
have questions.
"Thoroughly researching
roofing options should be a
priority for any homeo\\ ncr
considering a new roof." say.
Tim G~.:ntry. technical director
of
DaVinci
Roofscapes(R).
''Many
aspects should be considered.
including a product's warranty. style and durability. A
homeowner should ask the
question ·what will this roof
do for me· before making a
decision."
~
According to Gentry. who
served 20 years as a roofing
installer and has been 111 the
industry for 40 ) ears. a roof
should be careful!) elected
to complement a home's
lksign and geographic weather condition-.. It should also
provide long -term comfort
a
·afcty for those who l1ve
home. Some of the
trequent
que twn
Gentry nx:e1ve. from homeowners nationwide include
the follow mg.
Q: What are the pro and
con of different roof1n~
materi.ll. q
A: fhree-tab asph •.It hmgle are rei at i \ely ea. v to
in tall. incxpen ive and ·look
good on ordinan home .
Ito\\c\er. they can.be a poor
ell\ ironment&lt;tl
chmc.e
becau e they !'0 to a landfill
after 20 years, the) perform
onlv modaately well. and
they don't add any special
design appeal to a home
Real \\Ooi '&gt;hlndcs or
-.ht~kes looh. good ~n some

style of homes and are moderately priced. however they
have l1ttle or no rcsi tance to
fire or impact unless 'pecHtlly treated. They aho attract
insects. have relatively p or
long-term performance and
are general I y con:. ide red a
poor use of our natural
re-;ources.
Real slate hinde al o
pro\ ide a good look on .,ome
stvles of homes and can he
considered very long-la~ting
when
installed
properly.
However, they are verv
expensive and extremely
hea\). During installation
you can have a ~ignificant
amount of waste from cracking and breaking of slate
tiles.
Metal roofs are perfect for
some very spec1fic home
designs. They have a unique
look to them, are lightweight
and snow can ea:.il) slide off
of them . .,Watch nut when it
ram or hai 1-. though ... these
roof are no1 y on the in ide
of the hom~: during torm'&gt;.
Synthetic roofing tile pro
vide a high performan e
option for homeo\\ ners The
tiles come in a "ariet\ of
·ty1e . including late- and
-h,lk , arc light\\&gt;CJght and
ha\c long-term dur.tbiiit_.
fhe e ttle&lt;&gt; are moderate!)

Pallltino In ide
Out
f-Ir· &amp; \at r Damat:!e

priced and a good environmental choice. While the
look complements many
home tyles. synthetic roofing tiles are moderately
priced, so they're affordable
for even one.
Q: What are the life spans
of different roofmg materials?
~
: Generally. real wood
''ill wear out the fa..,te~t, folIo\\ eel by • three-tab asphalt
shingles. You can ma) be get
I 5-20 years out of each of
these. Some metal roofs can
last up to 50 years. depending
on their warranty. Synthetic
roofing tiles last up to 50
years and require minimal
maintenance attention. Real
late also last: many ) ears on
a home ... some slate can last
up to I 00 years!
Q: Wh) \\ ould f con.'ider
S) nthetic roofing material
over traditional asphalt products'?
A: Aesthetics and durability. Typical a. phalt hingle
look. ordinarv. Con. 1der thi~.
\\hen ) ou ·look at man)
home . e peciall) tho-.e with
steep roofs. almost half of
\\hat vou ~ee 1. the roof.
\ h n ·.electmg a roof. thmk
about curb appeal und rc .1le
\alue. S)nthetic tile m&lt;tke an
ord111ar home look e traor-

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dinary . Additionally, they
give
you
peace-of-mind
because these roofing tiles
will perform exceptionally
well against fire. impact,
wind and other weather conditions.
Q: What i., the -,ynthetic
roofing material made of?
A: At DaVmc1. we u e an
engineered polymer. which i
impregnated with fire retardant and
tate-of-the-art
advanced
UV stabilizers
specifically formulated for
the tough conditions tiles are
expo-,ed to in all climates
throughout the vear. Our roof
tiles ~use only· 100 percent
pure virgin resin in order to
assure ~onsistency, and are
I 00 percent rec) clable.
Q: Do roofing tiles become
more brittle over time?
: That depends on the
k111d of roofing tiles. ·phalt
and real wood roofing materials do become mot:C brittle
to\\ ard the end of their life
cvcle Da in i tile. do not
hin e that problem The engineered polymer u d in ") nthetJc tile change \ ery little

over time or when ubjected
to extreme temperature and
weather condition. . Third
party independent extended
life te ting ha. hown m•mmal degradation of the material's pe~rformance qualities.
Q: Which roofing tiles are
con»i. tent with their colors
and \ on 't fade over time'?
: Mo:t synthetiC roofing
tile have the1r color blended
completely throughout their
tile~. These products won't
fade over time because UV
protection has been built into
each tile. When exposed to
contmual unhght and UV
ray, , man) other product..
such as metal and asphalt
roofing, will indeed fade over
time. ~losing their original
~harpne.. of color. Howe\er,
. ynthetic roofing tile maintain their .hcen regardle of
external factors or age. en. urJng homecn\,ners that their
roofing tik \\on 't devolve
into an C) esorc over time.
For more information on
roof and
ntheti roofing
tile . \ i~it \\\\ ".davinciroof ":.
capes com.

�Page 14 •

Friday. March 26, 2010

Home Improvement 2010

Residential Fire Sprinkler System Ignites Heated Debate
(MS) - Even 90 sec
ond,, a home fire ts reported 111 the Lnited
tales.
According to the Nat10nal
Fire
Protection
A:-.sociation. erdll out of
I 0 fire fat::\litie.-. occur
where we feel safest - in
our own homes Man. fire
tart at ni!!ht and research
show:-. \ ou~ng children and
older adults are the majority of victims in horne fire~.
• Would installing fire
~prinklers save li\ es?
• I-; the added co:-.t a nece:-.. ary
investment
'for
homeO\\ ners?
• Should it be mandated
by law'?
The
nation's
leading
building code body. the
International Code Council
(ICC&gt;. thinks so. The ICC
develops the codes u ed to
construct residential and
commercial • buildings,
including
homes
and
schools. Most U.S. cities.
counties and states that
adopt codes choose the
international codes developed by the ICC. The ICC
fire sprinkler mandate stipulates that all new residential homes. both one- and
two- ramily
dwellings,
must include fire sprin:
klers starting Jan. I. 2011.
A heated debate among
builders, fire marshals and
consumers has tgnited in
the wake of the fcc mandate. Opinions run the
gamut. depending on who
you talk to: Fire officials
welcome
the
mandate,
while some builders say
this is an unnecessary and
costly precaution.
"F1re sprinklers
save
lives.'' says Stan Scofield.
a
fire
inspector from

Plymouth, Y1 inn. "We h,l\ c
never :-.een a fatalitv tn a
home fire where a \\ orking
ftre sprinkler ')stem wain:&gt; tailed. L nfortunatclv.
we see our fair share
tragedies tn homes Without
one tnstalled.''
Critics argue that the
co-.t of building a new
home is already l1igh, and
that adding the expense of
fife sprinklers may turn
some homeowners away
from the building process.
"I am including a fire safety system in a home that
we arc currently building."
Jim
Moras.
owner of
High mark
Builders
-'"&gt;f
Burnsville. Minn .. sars.
"In this case. , we are
putting it in based on a
request from the homeowner. But I think the industry
is balking at having a mandate that demands sprinklers in every new home
built. potentially dnving
up the final house cost."
But some homeowners
liken spnnkler to ha\'ing
their own personal "fire
department" on call 24
hours a day. seven days a
week for protection and
peace of mind. A residential fire sprinkler system
can contain a fire in less
time than it would take the

of

.

fire department to arrive
( n the -;ccne. Yet, onh
ahout t\\ o pen.:ent of U.S.
homes are equipped with
fire sprinklers.
''Research mal-.es 'I compelling argument to mandate fire safety S) '-lcms in
residential
building
codes ... say J U) son Dr. ke,
o,;enior product manager.
Plumbing and Fire Safety.
for Uponor North Amenca.
"And \vith an indu:-.try
standard cost of approximately S I .6 J per :.quare
foot. the investment for
homeowners equals that of
granite countertops and
stainless .&lt;~teel appliances
common upgrades by
today·s standard. But this
upgrade saves lives."
Although the cost of
installing a fire safety system seems to be a central
issue. excluding a system
based on a price tag may
be a shortsighted decision.
According to the nonprofit
Home
Fire
Sprinkler
Coalition. fires cause more
than $6 billion in direct
property damage every
year in U.S. homes. Much
of this damage 1s caused by
firefighters' hoses, which
discharge 200 gallons of
water per minute into a
burning home.

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Rick Price - 17 yrs. Experience

Corn~rsely. a fire sprink I e r s p ra )' " I 0 to I 5 galIons per minute. minimtling overall property dam
age. And wrth only th~
sprinklers closest to the
fire activating. 90 pcn:ent
of fii·~s are contalrh:d by
th~ operation of just one or
t\\ o
sprinkler..,. causing
onh a fract1011 nf the water
Janiuge of a fire department hose. With the lCC
mandate in effect, the
annual $6 billiofl proper!)
damage
figure
should
decrease significantly over
the next decade. according
to Drake from Uponor.
Though these savings
won't pay for the initial
installation
investment,
some homeowners and real
estate agents arc starting to
recogni7,e that sprinklers
may be a good long-term
investment.
··As more and
more
homes include a.fire sprinkler system. I believe it
can increase the value of
your home and its resale
value,"
according
to
Colleen·
Larson.
a

1\itnncapolis h,-;ed
RE/1\tA,' re.il estate agent
.. 1 ev. homes often set the
trend for what con
dem,IJ1d. and c1s
more and mor~ homes out
fitted with :-.prinkkrs. they
will
bccom~
,t
muchdesired requl:st by buyers.''
side from cost, con:-.tllner demand. ins u ranee
rates. and water and property 'damage, the core rcason for including a fire
sa fc I y system is '0 rten an
emotional one The most
precious belongings we
have
our family. photo
albums showcasing our
lives and keepsakes from
the past - are found in our
homes.
A
house
fire
destroys
irreplaceable
mementos unique only to
our lives. For many, this
becomes the main reason
to include a fire prinkler
system.
Learn more about re i~
dential fire safety system:-.
by visiting www.uponorusa.com or callin
11rree: (800) 321-4 73

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740-446-2374
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�• Page 15.,

Home Improvement 2010

Friday, March 26, 2010

Achieving Comfort W.ith Cen ral Air Co ditioning
Tips for keeping your home cool
during the summer months
Blam it on global warmtng or O\Crpopulation, hut
the increasangly hotter temperature lea e much to be
de ir\;d for many people A
a re ult, we ::.eek out cooler
areas for a respite from the
sun and heat. Generally the
oa is i an air conditioned
building.
However, those who have
wrestled with a cumbersome, heavy and leaky Willdow air condationing unit
kno
how inconvenient
window
unit
can
be.
Perhap you've considered
in ·tailing central air conditioning in your home, hut
think it might provt! too difficult and costly? Think
again.
Homeowner
with
a
forced-air heating sy::.tem
already in place have the
majority of the framework
for an air conditioning
ition. Typic lly, the system un be added by two
technicians in a mere two or
three days. For a 2,000
square-foot home, the average cost may be between
$3.000 and 4.000.
If there is no ductwork in
place, the cost wtll increase
and it'll likely take twice as
long for the job to be completed. But don't worry
about your home being
destroyed. competent contractor experienced in doing
this sort of retrofitting can
l11dc ductwork in clo cts.
attrc
and behind \\ails
without ha ing ·to tear up
the hom .
·
Once you'v decided on
adding a unit, there \ ill be
certain proc~dures to !oflow.
I. 'I he contractor will
ha\'C tO do calculations for
the anticipated load on the
t m hased on how much
t
gain
your
horne
rccci cs. This \\ill help
determine the size of the
unit needed to cool thl'
home l'fficicntly. A unit that
is too small may have to

work h:frder and never com
plet ly cool the horne. A
unit that i too large may
o I the room too quickly
and not be able to properly
as css humidity levds
shuttmg off before hunudit
is redu~.:ed.
2. , ext vou'll decide on a
unit Th~re are package
units that pair all the equtpment into one piece that
attach • to ductwork. Then
there • re :.pi it ystem that
have the condenser outdoors
and the fan and coils in ·ade.
3. Placement of the unit
will be your final consideration. You don"t "'ant to
place a unit ne ·t to a win-

dow or door-; if you are
bothered by noi. c. E en
quiet untt will make not e.
AI o, you don't want to
re trict air flow around the
condenser. It need.
to
c haust warm air. You can,
however. camouflage the
unit with landscapang; JU. t
don't cover it up.
4. You may need to ha\!e
your ductwork inspected to
ensure it can meet the
capacity of the cooler
forced air for efficiency.
5. A you \\IOuld with heat,
a programmable thermostat
en ures you cool the hou e
when needed and don't
a te energy.

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Home 740-949-2160
Racine,OH

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�Page 16 •

Friday, March 26, 2010

Home Improvement 2010

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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, l\1arch 26,2010

8( Ill Dl I I
A aon.d~le of upcoming tugh
ty poMlng evonl! l11'10tvil&gt;g roams
Mas01&gt; ood Gall a count&lt;os
F~ktay, March..26

Baseball

Heroert Hoover at Point Plaasont, 5 p m
Softball
Scott at Point Pleasant 5 30 p m
Girls Tennis
Scott at Point Pleasant, 5 p m
BoyaTennla
ScOtt at Pornt Pleasant 5 p m

SA1lrni.Dy..Marm 2Z
Base boll
Wlrt County at Wahama (DHI 1 p"'
Harman at Wil amson, Burch 2 p.m
Softball
P.olnt Pleasant at Stterrral'll\.tberty 3

porn

W rt County at Wahama (OH) 1 p m.

Tracl&lt;
F'Dint P easant at Ast&gt;land Relays Paul
Blazer Htgh

E~tern Gal ~a Aced

am

rrry at Warren 10

Girls Tennis
P.otnt P•easant at W•lllamstown/St
M~ry's. 10 a'"
Boys Tcnms
Pont Pleasant at Wll&lt;lamstown/St
Mary's. 10 a rn

MQrutay. Mllrc.h..29
Baseball
Symmes Valley at South Galha '5 p m
Manetto at Me•gs, 5 p 1"1
Ravenswood at Po1nt Pleasant, 5 p m
Southern at WahaMa 4 30 p m
n at Galha Acadomy, 5 p 1"1
1
Softball
Gallla at Grean 5 p rn
n at Gall!a Acadamy, 5 p m
Poca at Potnt Pleasart 6 p rn
Southern at Wahama 4 30 p m
Manetta at Me gs 5 p m

I

SPORTS BRJE'FS

MYL adult co-ed
softball tourney
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio The M1ddleport Youth
League will be ponsoring
an Adult Co-ed softball
tournament April I 0 and 11.
The fee 1s $125 per team.
For more information
contact Dave Boyd at 740590-0438.

OHSAA boys
state tournament

Chesapeake falls
.LCC,59-48
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)
....._ Desi Kirkman cored 22
point:, and Lima Central
Catholic scored 36 points in
the
pamt
to
beat
Chesapeake
59-48
Thursday in a Dh ision lJI
state boy&lt;&gt; semifinal at Value
City Arena.
The Thunderbirds (22-4 ).
making their sixth trip to the
state tourney. also hit J9 of
28 free throws while the
Panthers (21-5) made just 5
of9.
•
Nathan Copley had 16
points on just o of 22 shootmg from the field. while
Austin McMaster added 15
points.
Down J5-11 after a quarter, LCC outscored the
Panthers 17-4 in the second
period. Six players scored,
led by five points ap1ece

~:~:::~·::::.::"~~

r final Four, got as close
as 44-38 early in the fourth
quarter but LCC scored
seven of the next nine
points to pull away.
ORRVILLE SINKS READY AT
FT LINE, 50-48

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
- Sam Miller coolly hit
both free throwli with 1.8
seconds left to give Om'illc
a 50-48 victory over
Columbus
Ready
on
Thursday in an Oh10
Division 111 state semifinal.
The Red Riders (21-5) go
for their fourth state championship when they meet
Lima Central Catholic in
Saturday's finale. LCC beat
Chesapeake 59-48 earlier
'ftlursday.
Ready (19-7) led 42-37
with 4 minutes left but had
tQ. come back to tic it three
down the stretch. The
on Eddy Bahen 's
with 19 seconds left
an assist from first-team
All-Ohioan Joe Graessle.
Jacob Bol yurd, also a
first-team all-stater, missed
a shot, but Miller rebounded
and was fouled.
A long Ready pass at the
end was intercepted by
Zach Wasson.
Graessle finished with 16

.

Please see State, Bl

•

Meigs County lands 15 on
All-TVC basketball teams
By BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSCMYDAILYTRiBUNE.COM

A total ot 14 players and
one head conch from
Meigs County were selected to the 2010 All-TriValley Conference basketball teams for both boys
and girls in the Ohio and
Hocking divisions this pa~t
wmter.
Six girls and eight boys
were selected from Meigs.
Eastern and Southern high
schools. wtth Eastern leadmg the wa) with eight of
the 15 overall \elections.
Southern \\as next v. tth
four honorees, while Meigs
wrapped things up with
three selection:..
The Ea:.tcrn boys - who
went unbeaten in league
play while posting a 20-2
overall record - had five
selections, including the

Eastern
boys basketball
coach
Howie
Caldwell,
middle facing front,
talks with
his team
during a
trmeout in
this
February
24 file
photo at
Wellston
High
School.
Caldwell
was named
the 2010
TVC
Hocking
coach of
the year.

coach of the year in llowic
Caldwell. Seniors Kelly
\Vinebrenner, .lake Lynch,
Mike Johnson and Titus
Pierce \\-ere the players
selected from the TVC
Hocking champion f:.aglcs.
Southern
hud
three
5.emor bo) s selected to the
TVC Hocking squad in
Sean Coppick, C) le Rees
and Michael Manuel. while
sophomore Je~se Smith
was the lone TVC Oh10
selectiOn for the Meigs
boys.
The Lady Eagles landed
three garls on the TVC
Hockmg team in seniors
Kac;cy
Turley
and
Audrionna Pullans, ns \\ell
as JUnior Emen Connery.
The other TVC Hocking
honoree
was
senior
Cheyene • Dunn
from

Bryan

Walters/
tile photo

Please see AII-TVC. Bl

No instant replay: Vols face different OSU
ST. LOt:IS (AP) - The
last time Tennessee faced
Ohio State in the NCAA
tournament. the Buckeyes
had a roster that made
NBA general managers
drool. \\ Hh mon ... trous
Greg Oden dominating
inside and :vtike Conley Jr.
making sure everything
flowed smoothlv.
Must be a relief to the
Volunteers that they won't
have to see those guys
again in Friday's Midwest
Regional semifinal, huh'?
Yeah, right.
The
second-seeded
Buckeyes (29-7) m1ght
look a lot different than
the) did when they held
off the Vols in the regional
semafinals three years ago.
but the) 're no less formidable. In fact. Tennessee
coach Bruce Pearl said this
Ohio State squad might be
e\en more daunting.
"They're a more difficult
team to game plan for."
Pearl
said
Thursday.
''What they did (in 2007)
is what they did. They
weren't us multiple.''
There wasn't much mysiery to the Buckeyes when
they made their run to the
2007 national tifle game,
where they lost to Florida.
Sure. they had Daequan
Cook. Conley and sharpshooters Ron Lew is and
Jamar Butler. But the 7foot Oden wa" the one who
set Ohio State apart, offensive!) and defensively, and
every bod) kne"" it.
Evan Turner is, without
a doubt. the star of th1s
)Car's Ohio State squad.
and a leadmg candidate to
add national honors to h1s
Big Ten player of the year
award. With 20 point5,
nine rebounds and six
assists a game. howe\'er.
the slippery guard is more

Please see Buckeyes. Bl

Neal C. Lauron/Columbus Dlsptach/MCT

Ohio State's Evan Turner (21) Is harassed by the defense of Georgia Tech's I man
Shumpert (1) and Zachery Peacock (35) in second· half action of the second round of the
NCAA to~;~rnament in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. on Sunday.

West Virginia beats Washington, 69-56
SYRACUSE, ::--.f.Y. (AP) Da'Sean Butler :-.hook off a
sore m!ht hand and helped
West \'Tfrginia shake off fetsty
Washington to reach the East
Regional finals.
Butler kept pla)ing after
hurtmg himself midway
through the second half and
scorea 14 points while Kevin
Jones added 18 and eight
rebounds in leading the second-seeded
Mountaineers
over the II th-sceded Huskies
69-56 Thursday !light.
Coach Bob Huggins' Big
bast champions (30·6) won
their ninth 1n a row and set a
school record for victories.
suqxtssing the mark set by the
Jerry West-led 1958-59 team
that lost 111 the NCAA championship game.
Justin Holtday scored 14
and ndded eight rebounds for
the Huskies (26-10). who
were at a disadvantage after
leading
scorer
Quincy

'

Pondexter picked ttp his third
foul with 4:27 left 111 the first
half. Pondexter didn't score
his first ba ket un•il 2:30 into
the second half. and finished
"ith seven points.
Point guard Isaiah Thomas
c;corcd 13 before fouling out
with 2:41 left. The Huskies
had a nine-game wan streak
snapped. 1l1ey wc1-c tt) ing to
become only the founh !\chool
seeded II th or knver to reach
the round of eight.
' ll1e MountaineCC'\ \\!lll their
first gam(• ~;ince point guard
Darryl Brvant broke a bo1w 111
his right ·root in pmcticc on
Tuesday. And it af1pcared to
take an entire hal for West
Virginia to lind it)o. rhythm on
offense.
The
~ lountainl'ers
improved to 11-0 at ncutml
sites this season and held their
sixth straight opponent to
under 59 points. a stretch that
dates to their 54-51 \\ m over

Cincinnati to open the Big
East toumrm1cnt.
It besan with a little O\er
nine mmute-" left when Butler
- the team's "eoior ouard and
leading scorer - fell hard to
the fl&lt;X)r and landed on his
right arm. He
do'' non the
court for a few minute~. and a
gasp \\ent up around the
Carrier Dome once C\ eryonc
realized it \\.as Butler, \\ho·~
made six game·\\ inn in!! ~hots
in the final seconds ah·~'1d) th
Getting the ball at til' top of
the key. Butler drew
ul as
he attempted to ~pin around
Holiday. 111e whistle ''a~ latL',
which mcenscd Huskies coach
l..on!nto Romar, who ripped
off his spot1 coat in anger a." he
marched up the sideline
toward the offidab. who gave
the coach lL tedmical.
De\ in Ebanks and Butler
combined to hit all four free
throws to pnn ide the
Mountaineer~ their largest

''a.. .

lead. 56-43.
fhe high-tempo Huskies
dtd control the pace b' leading
for most of the fir;t half. taking
ad\ nntage of the
Mountaineer; playmg without
Bl)ant.
Devin Ebanks and Butler
shared the duties of getting the
baII up court, b ut the
Mountamcrrs at tim~. lacked
t'h) thm a.nd \\ere P~~tcularly
:-.lopp) '!1 commltttng 13
lllnJO\ C~s Ul t~e ~rst half alon:
-. tlli"Cl mor~ tl.1.m th~)_ rot~l
mttted al! g.une 11111 l1X:)&lt;&gt; '' 111

~l.\'L:r :lt~~~llll'l ,ot~. S~md~~Y·

I~~~) \:nktnl th~ g.unt.: 3\~lngmg on I) II.() tumm er~.
The gnmc "ns played on the
l~ome c:o~1rt .of top-seeded
S) racuse. _111~ &lt;?range lo~t. to
Butler 63~l) m Snit Lake Ct.t),
and there \\ere some mtld
boos \\hen the ~~.·ore \\ a:oo
announced at the Can·ier
Dome

Sullinger is Ohio
AP Mr. Basketball
for second time
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)
- There were a lot of people who thought Jared
Sullinger was the best player in the country a year ago.
Then he went out and got
better.
Sullinger, the 6-foot-9
Columbus ~orthland post
player. has the numbers to
back that contention. That'~
one reason why he repeated
as the Ohio Associated
Press Mr. · Basketball in
2010. the unanimous choice
of a state media panel. He's
only the fifth player to win
the state's top individual
a\\ ard at least twice.
:'Thb year was a •Jot different.'' Sullin~er said earlier this \\ eek while in
Atlanta to recen e the
Naismith A\\ard for the
national pia~ er of the ) ear.
"I wac; more explosive. I
was li~hter in weight, and
that helped me out in my
game."
Not only did the Ohio
State signee average 24.5
point::. and 12.3 rebounds. 3
blocked shots and 2.4
as~ists !!arne while ~hooting
78 percent from the field, 38
percent' on 3-pointers and
77 percent at the Iine. He
also led Northland to a regular-season AP poll title.
The Vikings were ranked
No. I in the USA Today
national rankin!!S before a
stunning up,et ]o..,s to
unbeaten Gahanna Lincoln
in a regional cham~ionship
!!arne on Saturda) mght.
-"It's very disappointing,''
he said ...We worked ::.o
hard to !!et where we were.
But Gahanna played a great
came. It hurts, but at the
~arne time. God alwa)~ has
a plan tor ~, vt. ."
So drc St.. in!!er\ father
and coac.h. Sutch Sullinger.
He suspended Jared for a
tournament !!Ume a~ a
sophomore becam.e he wasn't paying enough attention
to
his
schoolwork .
Northland lost. :--.ow Jared
is an honor-roll student.
"He had a !!reat year." the

~~g~~n~~~li~~~:~~~~~~· ,~-~f

he made our defen~...e that
much better. He encouraged
the undercJa..,smen and he
ahva) s had something good
to ~a) to them. He was a
tremendous leader.''
Jared is the ) lmnge ... t of
three brothers. and the other
'" o ''ere high school and
colle!!e stars: J J. at Ohio
s tate~ an d Ark·ansas. J u1'tan
at Kent State.
A , ear a co. Jared a' eraged "19.9 point~ and 14.8
rebounds '' hile shooting 67
percent from the field f~1r H
team that won the AP'~ regular-season poll and then
followed up b\ winning the
, state champiOnship.
Along with Deshaun
Thoma; from fort Wa\ ne,
Ind., Lentel:e Smith. of
Zion. 111 .. '\onhland team1 mate J .D \\ eather!-poon.
Findla\
Libertv-Benton

I

•

•

Pleas,e see Ohio, Bl

�4

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

W\VW.mydailysentinel.com

All-TVC Team lists

State

BOYS TVC-OHIO ALL-LEAGUE BASKETBALL TEAM

from Page Bl

~
Collin PfaH
Con Butcher
Frank Valenlour
Joe Stanley
Dylan Guthrie
Andy Grillo
Adam ward
MarkieTato
Regg,o Sims
Mychel M1tchell
Damet Khne
Zech Bobo
M1chael Chapl"lan
Jaylen Praler
Jesse Sm1th

Tum

Athens
Athens
Athens
Athens
Vinton County
V1nton County
Vinlon County
Belpre
Belpre
Netsonv1lle-York
Nelsonville·York
Alexander
Alexander
Wellslon
Meigs

'1t.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr
Sr
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.

.P.21.
PG
G

F
F
F
G
G
G

c

G
G
GIF
G

F
G.tF

Moat Valuable Player: Cori Butcher Athens
Coach ol the Year: Jeff Skinner, Athens

BOYS TVC·HOCKING ALL·LEAGUE BASKETBALL TEAM
E'l.ayll[

Iu.m

Kelly Wlnebrenl'ler
Jake Lynch
M1ke Johnson
Titus P1erce
Sean Coppick
M1chael Manuel
Cyle Rees
Noah Guthrie
Richard Drake
1Yier Thompson
Ryan Rex
Levi Porter
Jacob Reynolds

Eastern
Eastern
Eastern
Eastern
Southern
Southern
Southern
Trimble
Tnmble
Federal Hocking
Federal Hock1ng
Waterford
M11ier

Yr.

Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.

a
c

!~
Alexander
Alexander
Alexander
Alex8flder
Athens
Athens
Athens
V1nton County
Vinton County
Meigs
Me1gs
Netsonv1lle·York
Nelsonville· York
Belpre
Wellston

.YL
Jr
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Fr.

G

F
F
F

E'l:!l.
G

G
G

G

c

G
G
G

p

c

G
G

G
F
G

Most Valuable Player: Tori D1xon, Vinton County
Coach of the Year: Denton -Guthrie, Alexander

GIRLS TVC·HOCKING ALL·LEAGUE BASKETBALL TEAM

era.
Stna King

rum

Waterford
Waterford
Waterford
Waterford
Eastern
Eastern
Eastern
Trimble
Trimble
Federal Hocking
Federal Hocking
Federal Hocking
Miller
Southern

AhWest
Emily Brown
Brooke Drayer
Kasey Turley
Audnonna Pullins
Emert Connery
Taylor Savage
Jessie Spears
Chanda Cuckler
Hannah McK1bben
Ins Butcher
AbbyToth
Cheyel'le Dunn

:u.

Sr.
Sr.
So.
Fr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.l

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)
- Allen Tigner hit an 8fuot jumper from the right
baseline with 4 seconds to
go to extend Port Clinton's
first trip to the state tournament with a 51-50 victory
over Zanesville in a
Division
II
semifinal

Ohio
from Page Bl

Fo

GIRLS TVC-OHIO ALL·LEAGUE BASKETBALL TEAM
Morgan Gnnstead
Whilney Oaugi'erty
Kayfa Radekln
Julie Els
Elena Leln
Cindy Willis
Raven Cline
Tori Dixon
Allison Graves
Morgan Howard
Miranda Grueser
Kelly Cox
Chelsey Mart1n
Regina Leftwich
Jordan Davis

TIGNER'S HEROICS LIFT
PORT CLINTON INTO FINALS

Tanner Gibson had 26
points for the Blue Devib.
WOLVERINES ROAR BACK IN
2ND HALF, 69·63 IN OHIO

02
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)
- Ryan Ba~s scored 14 of
his 16 points in the second
half and second-ranked
Dayton Dunbar eamt.! baek

from an 18-point deficit to
beat Cleveland Benedictine
69-62 Thursday 1n a
Division II state semifinal.
The Wolverines (24-3)
could have warmed up the
buses for the ride home
when they trailed 38-20 late

26, 2010

in the half, but they scored
46 points in the second half
while shooting 65 percent.
Geron Johnson had 14
poults
and
Deontae
Hawkins 13 for Dunbar.
chasing a fourth title.
Nick Harney had 22
points. Desmond Ridenour
16 and Derek Jackson 15
for
sixth-ranked
Ben~dictJne: (22-5). Firstteam Ali-Ohioan Cameron
Wright scored three pt.
1n ~0 minute:-..
Dunbar trailed by six
early in the fourth quarter
but took the lead for good
on Hawkins· fastbreak
layup with 6:361cft.

&amp;a.

G
G
w
w
F
F

Moat Valuable Player: Tyler Thompson, Federal Hocking
Coach of the Year: Howte Caldwell, Eastern

E'Jayer

points. Bolyard and Wasson
each had 13 points.

Thursday night.
Port Clinton (26-0) will
meet Dayton Dunbar, a 6963 winner over Cleveland
Benedictine, in Saturday's
title gflmc.
Down 48-41 with under 2
minutes left, the fourthranked Red:-.kins pulled to
50-49 on a three-point play
by Tigner. who had 14
points. with 42 second~ !eft.
With 24 seconds remammg,
a
Zanesville
(17-7)
inbounds pass was tipped
and intercepted by Cory
Brown. who had 15 points.
leading to the winning
bucket.
f1gner then intercepted
Zanesville's long pass.

Friday, March

point guard Aaron Craft and
Jordan Sibert of Cincinnati
Princeton, Sullinger is part
of what many consider the
nation's No. I recruiting
class, heading to Ohio State.
Sullinger is already savoring the challenge.
''It's going to be really
exciting," he said. "We have
three people who played on
the same AA U team
(Sullinger. Thomas, Smith).
so we've grown really close
off the court. It's a dynamic
group of players. but we
also have so much fun
together."

And Sullinger doesn't
head to Ohio State expecting to instantly be a star.
He's willing to get on-thejob training, particularly
since the Buckeyes return
almost everyone from the
team playing in the round of
16 this week in St. Louis.
"I look forw·ard to stepping in and doing whatever's asked of me." he said.
"If that means sitting on the
bench? OK. If it means
playing, then great. I'll do
anything that needs to be
done to make the team successful."
His father doesn't hesitate
when asked what his son's
biggest and best contribution was to Northland.
"He's a winner. He 'II dive

on the floor, take a charge,
be determined on the glass
or guard anyone if that's
what it takes to win,'' he
said. ''It's all about the team
with him. A lot of kids are
concerned about stats; all
he's concerned about is
winning."
Jared gives some of the
credit for his success to
Michael Jackson. Really.
Asked if there's anything
people don't know about
him, he said. "Before every
game l listen to Michael
Jackson, all his top hits.
Then we get off the bus and
go into the gym and I switch
to Jay-Z. And I mostly stick
with the slow-beat songs by
Michael : 'Man in · the
MirJor.' 'Dirty Diana.'

'Wanna
Be
Startin ·
Somethin' ... and 'Billie
Jean.'"
A landslide choice for Mr.
Basketball.
Sullinger's
selection certainly wasn't a
"Thriller.''
Other multiple winners of
the award include threetime winner LeBron James.
and two-timers OJ. Mayo,
Greg Simp~on and Jimmy
Jackson.
Others considered for the
2010 award included Craft.
Cleveland
Benedictine's
Cameron Wright, Mark
Henninger of Massillon
Jackson. Sibert and Paul
Honigford of Sugarc.
Garaway. Sullinger
receive a plaque in the
shape of Ohio .

FRIDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

.ea.._
C/F
G

F
PG

c

F

PG
G
F
F
G

G

c
F

Most Valuable Player: Sina King. Waterford
Coach of the Year: Jerry Close. Waterford

the TVC Ohio bovs. while
Tori Dixon o( Vinton
County
and
Denton
from Page Bl
Guthrie of Alexander won
the TVC Ohio girls honors
as player and coach of the
Southern.
year.
The Lady Marauders
Waterford's Sina King
landed two players on the and Jerry Close were
TVC Ohio team in juniors named player and coach of
Morgan
Howard
and the year in the TVC
Miranda Grueser.
Hocking girls, respectiveCori Butcher and Jeff ly.
Skinner of Athens were . Tyler Thompson was
named player and coach of named the TVC Hocking
the year, respectively, for boys player of the year.

All-TVC

Buckeyes
from Page Bl
versatile than Oden.
Or even Conley.
"They're the antithesis
to each other," Ohio State
coach Thad Matta said of
Turner
and
Conley.
"They're
both
point
guards. but they do completely different things."
Turner is a nasty defender - he's from Chicago,
after all - and is third on
Ohio State's career list
with J58 steals. Just when
you think you've got him
contai ned , he'll switch
gears and completely confound you. UC Santa
Barbara
bumped
and
bruised him all night long
in last weekend's first
round, and Turner had one
of the worst shooting
nights of his career.
Turned the ball over four
times, too.
But he also had I 0
boards and five assists.
including two during a key
13-0 run at the end of the
first hal f.
And say a team does find
a way to contain Turner.
David Lighty, Jon Diebler,
William Buford, they've
all gone off for 20-plus
points this year. It was
Diebler who carried the
Buckeyes against UCSB.
making ~even 3-pointers
and finishing with a season-high 23 points. He 's
averaging 21.5 points for
the tourney and shooting
50 percent from 3-point
range ( II for 22).
''Ohio State presents you
with the biggest mismatch
of any team in the tournament." Pearl said. ''Who
guards
Turner'?
Who

guards Lighty? If you put
two guys on him, who has
Diebler? It's pretty easy to
say your center might
guard (Dallas) Lauderdale,
but where you go from
there is ' really the great
challenge."
But the Vols (27-8) are
nothing if not resilient.
This. after all. is the team
that weathered the suspensions of Brian Williams,
Cameron
Tatum
and
Melvin Goins and the dismissal of Tyler Smith, a
two-time all-Southeastern
Conference player, after
they were arrested Jan. I
when a gun and marijuana
were found during a traffic
stop.
Nine days after the
arrest, with Williams,
Tatum and Goins still out
and Wayne Chism and J.P.
Prince in foul trouble, the
short-handed Vols upset
then-No.
1
Kansas.
Handily.
Tennessee also dealt
Kentucky one of its two
losses.
''[' m proud of my basketball team for being so
resilient throughout the
season. and continuing to
find ways to play good
basketball and improve."
Pearl said .
Though
this
is
Tennessee's third trip to
the regional semifinals in
four years - it missed last
season - and sixth overall. the Vols have never
gotten beyond this stage.
Don't think the players
aren't aware of it.
"If we win this game.
we 'II be the best team in
Tennessee basketball history,"
Williams
said.
"That's a great accomplishment for anybody."

SATURDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

�Friday, March 26, 2010

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www.mydailysentinel.com

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The Daily Sentinel ·Page 83
!• ~ ... (J

~ributte

Sentinel - l\egi.~ter
CLASSIFIED

/

1~,.

/,t/

;o,

Meigs County, OH

Webs1tes:
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Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

« Pu.a........ .,,.,~
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Publishing reserves
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re eel or cancel any
ad at any Ume.
Errors
t.lust
1Raoor11'!d on the

200

Notices

Found on Sumner Ad
male black Lab Yo orange
collar 740-985-38n

Notices
NOT'CE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO rec·
ommcnds that you do
busrness With people you
know and NOT to serd
Money through the rna
untl you have nvesllgat
ng the ollerlng

For Sale 2 Crypts side
by s o 3rd rr:tw from
bottorr SpeCial Block)
Chape of Hope ov
Memory Gardens ca
740-4-46-1969

Pictures that
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.
Personals

I need
help to pay FetvM u

He p

Needed

~!.a~witt ~ gre:o~

Fiftt&gt;Ave Gal polS
Free &amp;-Room DISH
NETWORK
Satel·
lte System I
Free
HD-DVR!
$19 991 mo. 12G+
dig tal channels
( lor 1 year) Call
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1-877-467.0535.
GUN SHOW GALLIPO
LIS Hobday inn Apnl 10
8. 11 Adm S4.00 6
TBLS $25 740-667-0412

Wanted
Wanted
Construction
work KitChens BR s tile
work pa ng now con
structJOn mob e hom
Cal
740-853·1230 or
304-593-6386

WANTED TO DO small
homo repa1r remodeling
&amp; complete lawn service
740·446·3682

Services

300

Budding Materials
Quality Steel Arch
Buildings
Cleamnce
Blow·
oull We are olfer·
lng
huge
dis·
counts on a few
sizes 16x20, 20x24
30x44 limited In·
ventory call now
866-352.0469

~~ i:~~rci;;;i-,;-c=c~~~~:;,;.;·:.·:..:.::...:::..~·:..:.: .:...·::.::...::..:~·:..:.:..::·.:..:::.:_:~..·:..:.::.~3 ~ g

Computers-................................................ 314
Contmctors..................................................316
Domestics/Janltorlal ....................."""""""'318
Electrical ..................................................... 320
Flnonclol .......................................................322
Heolth ........................................................... 326
Hooting &amp; Cooling ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
lnsurence ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Muslc/Oanca1Drama .................................... 336
Other Servlcea .............................................338
Plumblng/Eiectrical ..................................... 340
Professional Services................................. 342
Repairs ......................................................... 344
Rooling ......................................................... 346
Security ........................................................ 348
TaKIAccounting ........................................... 350
Trovet/Entertalnment ..................................352
Financlol ....................................................... 400
Financlol Services ....................................... 405
lnauronce .................................................... 410
Money to lend ............................................. 415
Education .....................................................500
Business &amp; Trade School ...........................505
Instruction &amp; Troining ................................. 510
lessons........................................................515
Personal ............... '""""'"""""" ................520
Anlmals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplies .......................................... 605
Horses ...................................." ................... 610
Livestock.....................................................61 5
Pets ..............................................................620
Went to buy ..................................................625
Agriculture ...................................................700
Farm Equipment ........................................705
Gordon &amp; Produce......................................710
Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
&amp; land ........................................... 720
to buy ..................................................725
Merchandise ....................................._......... 900
Antlques ....................................................... 905
Appilance .....................................................91 0
Auctlons .......................................................915
Bargain BAsement ....................................... 920
Collectlbles ..................................................925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment1Supplles.................................... 935
Fleo Morkets ................................................ 940
Fuol Oil Coat/Wood/Gos ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ....................................955
Kid's Corner........................................" .......960
Mlscalloneous..............................................965
Want to buy ............................................... 970
Yard Solo ......................................................975

POUCIES Ohio Yalley Publ!ehl"!! reaerne lho r1ghlto edll, re)od. Of CMCCII 1ny lei It an~ lime. ErrOft muat be reponed on tho H1111 day &lt;&gt;I pUll lcetlon and the
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any 1ote or expeot~e tnat resuttalrom thO publ c.tlon « omll$!on olen ad'ltrtt.mtnl C«ttctlon will be rnadeln the lir1l avalltblo edition. • Box number lela
ore alwllyt confidential • C~.rrem rata c.rd applle&amp; • All real tctllt ~enl~ementa are IUbjlc:IIC lhe Federal Fait HoUit"!! Ac1 o1 I!lee • Thill newspaper
accepta only help •ntt&lt;l IdS mo.tlng EOE ltlrdatdl Wa wlll110t knolwtngty accept any ld~ortiSing In -loiAitlon cltnelaw. Win na1 be rupcmlbl9 lor any
ancrwln an eel taken O'r« thO phone

r-IDoking For-,
ANew Home?
TrY the

Classifieds!!

Miscellaneous

Lond (Acreage)

Sw:mmrng pool. Above Wooded
acreage
tor
ground 4 yrs old Very •E!SidentJal or COf!lrlerciB
good cond $750 Call developnenl
388·1122 for more to
80 acres of
nd com
pfised of hatt rn:.. ol road
Want To Buy
frontage rura water and
30 acres o•
Absolute Top Dollar • sil- approx
located
on
ver gold
COIIlS
any woods
10Kf14KI18K gold OW· Jones Ad at V10~ OH.
tnlo
contact
etry dental gold pre For
1935
us
rurrency, 513-856-9743

prooflm nt
se11 dLB·
monds, MTS COrn Shop
151 2nd Avenue, Galrpo IS 446·2842

Apartments/

CONSU.M.EB
Own a now computer
for as little as $29.99
per weeki No credit
check! Guaranteed
Consumer Funding
1-888-282-3535

wv

-=~~Fi~n=-a~ncl~a=l~~=

Mar 26&amp;27 Sl At. 588 CONVEN ENTlY
L().
Rro Grande OH Some- CATED
&amp;
AFFORDttuno for everyone
ABlE• Townhouse apart·
Men+.s
and.or
small
1000
Recreational houses for rent Ca
Vehicles 740-441·1111 for app
horne ~:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;; calion &amp; ~nlonnation

CREDIT CARE.
BELIEF

D..E.e.I
SETTLEMENT

USA
We solve debt
problemsI
if you have over
$12,000 In debt
CALL NOW!

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles ...................................................... tOtO
Boats/Accessories ................................... 1015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ........................................................ 1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ............................................... 2000
Auto RentaVleose .....................................2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Clossic/An1iques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial ............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ..................................2025
Sports Utllity..............................................2030
Trucks ........................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
vans ............................................................2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sates ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commerclal ................................................3010
Condomrniums ......................................... 301 5
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................ 3035
Want to buy................................................ 3040
Real Estate Ren1als ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commerclal ................................................ 3510
Condominiums .......................................... 3516
Houses lor Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage.......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Houslng ............................. 4000
Lots.............................................................4005
Movers........................................................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sates ...........................................................4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property......................................... 5000
Resort Property lor sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employmen1...............................................6000
Accounting/Financial ...............................6002
Administrotlva1Professlonal .....................6004
Cashler/Cierk .............................................6006
Child/Elderly Care .................................... 6008
Clerlcal ....................................................... 6010
Constructron ..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
Education ...................................................6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agenclea .............................. 6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Services............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Malntenanca/Domeslic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics .................................................. 8036
Medical .......................................................6038
Musicai ....................................................... G040
Part·Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ...........................................................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory .........................................6052

Rentals

Buytng Suhl Charnsaws
Townhouses
any kind for parts &amp; re·
pair,
runnrng
or
not 1 and 2 bedroom apts.
lumiShed
and
unfur·
740.794-1188
n shed and hou..es In
Yard Sale
Pomeroy and M dd eport
secunty depos t roqu rod
Bargan Cenler yard sale no pets 740-992·2218
March 26th &amp; 27th 482
Horton St Mason
2BR APT Close to Holzer Hosprta on SA 160
Garage &amp; Yard Sale CIA (740 441-()194

.&lt;.iUABAtflfEO

Burled In Crecflt Csrd
Debt?
Call Cred1t Card
Relief for your free
consultations.
1-sn-264-8031

Real Estate

3500

Compulefl

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ........................................................... 100
Announcements'"""'""'""'""""""'""'"'""' 200
Blrthday/Annlversary.................................. 205
Happy Ads ................................" ..................210
lost &amp; Found ......" .........." ......................... 215
MemoryfThank You"'"""'"""'.................... 220
Notices ...........................""""""'"'............ 225
Personals.. ................................................. 230
Wonted .......................................- .............. 235
Services ...................................................... 300
Appl1anco Servlce ....................................... 302
Automotive '"' ......................................... 304
Building Materlats ....................................... 306
Business ... "'"'""""'"""""'""""'""............ 308

All Olsplayc 12 Noon 2
Buslneaa Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1100 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaid*

• Start Your Ad1 With A Keyword • Include Complete
Oe6criptlon • Include A Prke • Awid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And,Addrcu When Needed
• Ad• Should Run '1 D•V"

Announcements

Lost &amp; Found

Dally Jn-Colunuu 9c00 a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday Jn-cotumna l&gt;•OO a.m.
Friday For Sundays: Paper

Basement
Waterproofing
Uncondt!lonal • e
guarantee Loca re er·
ences fumished Es!abshed 1975 Ce 24 -irs
740-446.()870 Rogers
Basement Wate:orocfina.

lawn Service

MIT
Free Home Security
$850 Value
with purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from ADT
Secunty Services.
Call1-888·274·3888

Free 10 good
spayed beag e m1x. good
wckids &amp; house broken
Call740-446-3552

700

Agriculture

Farm Equipment
Tax / Accounting
H B s Lawn Care. Harvey ;;;:;;;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
2615 Bush Hog Deck
B3ro9w,::,_,474C:ns38u8red·8586Freeor
AMfRICAtiJAX. Rings, Chain Guards,
3 'VV&amp;.
Arrcraft foam·flilod ~res
Estimates
BELIEf
Good Shape $8,000 call
Settle IRS Taxes for
74D-367·n87
Other Services
a fraction of what
you owe. If you owe
Pel
Cremations
ca I
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
740-446·3745
over $15.000 In back KIEFER BUILT,
taxes call now for a
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
free consultation.
STOCK
TRAILERS
For the best TV
1-sn-258·5142
MAX
EOU P·
LOAD
MENT
TRAILERS
experience, upgrade
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
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$29.99
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GOOSENECK FtATBED
1-866-541..{)834
$3999 VIEW OUR EN·
NOTICE BorrO\\ Smart
NETWORK Contact the 01110 Drvt· TIRE TAAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
Save up to 40°o off
sron of F nancial lnstrtu·
WWW CARM CHAEL·
lions Ottce of Consur~er
your cable bill! Call
TRAILERS COM
Affrurs BEFORE you •ef
dish Network today!
74().446·3825
nanco your homo or ob1·877·274·2471
ta" a loan BEWARE of
requests tor any "'ge Have you pnced a John
advarce payments
of Deere lately? You II be
Are You Protected?
fees or Insurance Call surprlsodl Chock out our
An Identity is stolen
nventory
at
the Offtee of Consuf"lar usod
every 3 seconds.
Car·
Afftars
toll
tree
at www CAREQ com
Call Life lock now to
Equipment
1·866·278·0003 to team m1chae1
protect your family
II the mortgage broker or 74().446·2412
free for 30-days!
lender Is property h·
1·877-481·4882
censed (This IS a publiC ~1•'-"'Y I ~"uson Tractur
.,. muln po.,.er
seMCe
announooment 50 g
Promocode: •
s.hed kept
from the Ohl&lt;&gt; Va cy go&lt;Jd cond
FREEMONTH
$5~.00
JO.I S 6 2'47 or
Pub sl' ng Company)

PIRECTV

OlSJi

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No Fee Unless We Wm'
1·888·582·3345

chael
740-446-3825

Traders Tw n Rivers Tower IS ac·
cept ng appi cattons for
~~~~==== wattlng hst for HUD sub~=-=M=o=to=r;;;cy=c=le~s=-== sid1Zed 1·BR apartment
04
Yamaha
Roadstar for the elder&gt;y dtSablod,
1675 679
1700. lots of extras, 6089 ca
-6
ml
S6000
Ca
~
74().446.9219
1.:.1
and bath I rst
rent &amp; d~t
ste Chopper blue 5500 references req 'lid No
m l&lt;e new extras Ask- Pe!S
and
Cleo
74().441.()245
Ing $13 500 379-2360
1

06 HD Road King Clas·

500

Edu~~

Business &amp; Trode
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(careers Close To Home)
Ca I Today 74().446.4367
1-SOQ-214.()452
o IPOiiSCarwrc«&lt;oge.edu
Acered; ed Mamber Accrad t

tras
$9000
446-1655

Cal

74().992.()165

N 411'

Ave Middleport
94 Hartey Davidson Soft· 2 br ft:mshed Bpi d p
rei
No
pets
ta I
446-9585
or 8.
740-992.0165
446-9595
2000

Automolrve

Autos
2000
Ford
Wtndstar
Auto A?C runs looks
good,
asktng
$2,1 00
OBO Call 74Q-446-4122
or 339-0636

Qua ty Cars &amp; Trucks
wtwarranty a I priced to
sell 15 yrs n busmess
STIHL Sa es 8. Servtee Cook Motors, 328 Jack·
Now Ava lablo at carmr- SOl' Pke,
OH
chael
Equ pment Gall polis
740-446-0103
74Q-446-2412

ret
Apartment avarlable now
Rlverbend
Apts
Now
Haven WV Now acceptrng
appllcatrons
lor
HUD·subsrdrzed
ore
Bedroom Apts
Utrl ties
nduded Based on 300..
of adJUSted incoll'o Ca
304.S82-3t21
eva abc
for Sen or and Oisab ed
people

Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain

For Sale By Owner

Beautiful Apts. at Jock·
son Estates. 52 W t
wood Dr 11'011' $411 o
S606
740-446-2568
Equal Housing Opport
mty '"11 s nst tut n tS n
Equal Opportu ty Pro·
Ylder and Employer

106 Mabeliine Dr Gall•·
polls 2BR, 1BA Full
Basement
Remodeled
kttchen 1 Car Garage
Cent a1r, AU app. stay.
$95,500. 740·645·7965.

Grac ous Lrv rg 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts at V ge
Manor
and
Riverside
Apts n M ddlcport I'Om
S387
to
$62...
740-992-5064
Equal
Housing Opportun ty

Mixed round ba es lor
sa:o
4x4
and
4x5
740-446-2412
3000

900

Merchandise

1r&gt;g CoUI'CIIIor Independent
Collegesand Scllools •2748

600

BR

rrron~s

Beech St M!:ld eport. 2
2005 Harley Dyna Super bf lumiShed apt u•
G ide 9500 m. With ex·
pd No Pets dep &amp; rei

~67~.(1(,1~

Anrmals

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia
Co.
OH
and
Pets
Mason Co. WV Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
AKC Mtmature Schnau·
800·537·9528
zers 2 part! maro white
chocolate
1 chocalate
M, 1 Chocalate F whrte
on chest &amp; back feet
parents
on
prom sos
takung deposits Ci!l to
sco 740-441·1657 Also
stud &amp; groom rg serv
lees

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

Free Rent Special !II
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up Cen•:a AJr W 0
RV
hookup,
tenanl
pays
SeMCe at Carmichael e ectnc
ca b tween
Tra ers
the hours of 8A·8P
740-446-3825
EHO
Ellm VIew Apt&amp;.
RV SeMCe at carmr·
(304)882-3017
Compe11/ RVs &amp;
Trotlen

Miscellaneous

Real Estate
Sales

Jordan Landing Apart·
12 Unit Apt. Complex. ments
446-0390.
3 br available a I elec
tnc no pets
Ask About
Houses For Salt
Our Rent Spec s
cal
-==-=-=-=-=-~== for deb s 304 674.()0.23
~-~--~-=- House lor sae !13 4th or304·6IO-On6
Frco
Hammond
Con- Ave Below $30 000 lm·
cordo Serres organ ca I medtate possession Ph Modem 1BR apt Ca
lorcleta s 740-446-4403
(740) 441·5165
740-446-0390
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Evans 1·800·537·9528

�----------------------------~~--~------.-----------~.-----~--~------.--.--~--------------~--~------ Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Education

Rentals

Help Wanted· General

Tho Athens-Me:gs Edu·
catiOna Serv100 Center
has a posrtiOO openmg
as Sdlool Psycholog t
for the Me1gs County
Schools
lor
the
2010-2011 SchOol Year
AppiiC80ts nvt hold a
oort~iCBte or 1100nse l'la1
a lOws !hem to serve as
a School Psycholog I
Salary w II be based on
expcnence ard certlflca·
t or- accord ng to tho salary schedule ThiS posiAA N w 4 Bodroor1s
tion has Board approved
benof1ts Submit letter of
Only .544.91.0
20t0 S ng ewlde
Interest resume and rof·
lncredoble $19,995
erences to John D. Co·
myf"'ldwosthome com
stanzo,
Superintendent,
740 828 2750
Athons-Me1gs
Educe·
tloll!ll
Servtc.e
Center,
For sale 2000 14x70
507 A1chtand Avenue,
+ 3br 2 ba a sure loan
Su1te 11108, Athens, Oh
Ol"ly
45701 Apphcat•on Dead·
ne Monday Apnl 19,
2010 12 00 Nooo Tho
AMESC Is an equal opportun ty
Employer-Pro-

Food Services
Accepung

res;Jmes

for

exp FT Subway Mgr 0
new locat!OI" Ill Ga pottS

Employment

Child/Elderly Care

4000

Manufactured
Housing

Maintenance/
Domestic

Unlimited Earning Po- .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
tentlatlll
101 5 Bob FM IS ookng
for tho nght person to
)o " our so
tearr A

Vkler

6000

Ferry
wv Salary &amp;
Bens C lr.tervlew Send
ret.J e to Mgr 0 24968
last-ley Ad ,Quaker C ty
OH 43n3 or apply on
I no
C
www pan!larstores com

Po on open at Darst ~~~~~~~~
Adu t Group Home I rst Help Wanted· General
ccond 8 third &amp;Pitts
740·992 5023
Veterfn~:y
Ass stan!
needed Expononce prebut will traon
ferred
PT/FT sone weekends
roqu~oed M1mmum wage.
Send resuMe to French
Town Veternary Cl me

person that s nt osUid
In a career th t aft rd
tho opportu ty to g e
yourself n r 0
ry
month a
r wnere
you're requ ed to ctua ty get out of the office
and f'IIO tho public a ca
rccr In the exeit :1g and
1nterestong I old o! radiO
If you th nk you havo
wrat It takes to succeed

=======~

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

Overbrook Center s cur
r t y accep ng appllca·
lions
for
SIAif
1ESIEQ Nur ng Ass 5 • •
tants tor a 1 6h ts lu
t me hours ava1lab o In·
lerastod applicants can
k
pic "P an app1lcatlon or
contact Lucy Goff BSN
1n this tun and reward ng AN Staff Dovctopment
career, then omall a ro Coordinator
@
sumo to pnoaceCcon
So· 740-992·6472 M·F 9a-5p
nolssourmedla COM
at 333 Page St . Middlortous roqulrlc!l only Ex- port Oh E:Ot &amp; a partiCI·
penenco Is preferred but p nt of tho Drug-Free
'lOt required
Conno .,. workplace Program
sour Medta Is an equa
Phlebotorr•st Part· TIMe
opportunity emplOyer
'M n mum 2 Years Pll
--~-~~-- botOIT'Y Exptenco
Your Caroor Starts
' Must be Cert I ed
Here!!
• Must hOve own tansFull and Part Tlmo Po- ponaton
sitions Available I
•p rttme pos on
3
hOUrs per Clay
Eam up to $12 25 an
'Mus1 be ava ble tor
hOur aft r Slx rronlhs
Sam stan
Recru ling Vo urtcors for ' Experoonce ~&gt; a hospt·
MaJOr No profit 0 gant·
ta or labo atory prezatonsl
ferred
Emn
r ume to
Weekly Pay + Bon
J&amp;notCad lab nat
Fax
Complete Bene! ts Pack· 267·525-2488 Job IS loage at 90 day!'
cated n West Colu bla
On Sne Physoctal"
Masor&gt; County
CaiiTODAVI
Interview TOMORROW•
Work NEXT WEEK'
1 888-IMC·PAYU
REMEMBER Ext. 1931
Apply onl no

RosCaro •s accept ng applications tor LPN s C
the Galltpol s, OH loca·
lion
Interested
appll·
cants may apply online
at ResCare coM click on
Careers

ResCare ts acceptlng apphcatlons lor D1rect Sup360 SR 160 Gall pollS or ·~======= port Profess onals In Galtax 740-446-4101
a &amp; Metgs Counu011
Maintenance /
0
I ed app cants f!'US1
Domestic
poss011s a valid dnvc s
He p change the fe of a ======~~ license c ean driving rech kl Become a profes·
cord r
1e transporta·
foster
parent
slonal
!Jon mctud ng auto msur·
Tra ng Support and f"lnee t. hiQI' SChool d nanaa
aSSiStanCe
·e
plcY.naiGED Apply on ne
provided For fY1ore for·
Ill t R Cate corr cftck on
matJOn cor:act Transieers
tions
lor
Youth
740-645-6337
lFIND

IJ!!pJJiobs !nfOCISion,com

=

EVERYTHING
YOU WANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

AVON AI Areas' To Buy
or Se Sh r1ey Spears
304-675-1429
Now hmng barlenders
Panc.t)os Mexican Canuna
npp!y WlthiO

T uck Drver Wanted
Roq 2 yrs exp
Class A COL
Resume w!3 Work Rot
Send to
DriVer
RO Box 1145
G pol OH 45631

FIND A JOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Friday, March 26, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

YOUNG'S

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II

CARPENTER
SERVICE

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
'1'12·lo21S 7411-S'.It-tli 11S

742·2332

1

SEAL IT
CO:\STRl

Roofing- S1dtngPatnung- Gutters •
Decks· Etc.
For Fast Couneous
Sen ice Free
Estimnte~

www extend«:are com
EOE

1

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

CTIO~

·New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

&amp;

atTordable Prices,

SUNSET
(ONSTRUCilON
Remodeling,

Roofs, Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,

•

. . . . .. ...

r

f

,

,;._

j

'

"I'

~_-:_ iiib_

Great coverage and
superior service
(that's easy on your wallet)
Hometown Insurance Center
teresa@holnotownlnsurancecenter.com

304-773-1111

!~Erie
~ Insurance"

Hcpl.tccment

Total Construction

\\indo\\ s and
\in) I Siding

One Call to Do It All

pecialist • 1.11&gt;
(7-'0&gt; 742-2563

I tre &amp; \\ ater Damage

Pole Barns Metal Roof-;
Dl)wall

Repair

• Siding • \in) I
\\ indm' s • \Ictal
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • dditiuns
•l h.•ctrkal
•Plumbing
• Pole Barn.~

Drywall, Additions
and New Homes.
Insured· Free
Estimates

740-742-3411

.-••
Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

('{),

Owners:

l'omcro). Ohio

Jon Van Meter &amp;

Cmmm·rdul •
RL'Sitll'nlial

Paul Rowe

Cell: 7 40-416-504 7
email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

R.L. Hollon
Trucking
Dump

!ruck

ScniC('
\\c do drhe"a)
Limestone • Grn,cl

lop oil• fill

Help Wanted

740-856-2609
Cell

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

0

Pleasant Valley Hospttal currently has
openings for a full-time MT Section
Head. Three years experience in
Microbiology. WV license required. Must
be able to work all shifts, holidays and
weekends.
Please send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resourclas
2520 Valley Dr., Pt. Pleasant. WV 25550
or Fax to (:504) 675-6975 or
apply on-line at WWWJValley&amp;rg

AA/EOE

•Prompt and Qual't)

::&gt;:m\ ScUm
• Ford &amp;

· MT SECTION HEAD

Oirt

740-985-4422

Benefit Gun Shoot
for Dorsey Ohlinger (Very 11!)
Sunday, March 28 12 Noon
Landaker Rd.
For d1r. call 992-27 42
Factory Only

Help Wanted

\1otorcr&lt;~ft

\\ork
• Rea! on.1hle Rates
Insured
•Ex.pcnenced

Parts • Eng toes,
Trnn,Jer Ca .:s &amp;

Transnu"10ns
• Aftenn.trket

Reference~

Replacemcnl Sheet
\1etal &amp; Component~
For \II \I

\

:0..\ntlablc'

Call Gar)' 'itanle) ·'

etc

740-591 8044

Racme.Ohto

Please

740-9-'9-1956

lca\c me s "

H&amp;H
Guttering

CO~CRETE

SI~R\'ICE CE~,·I-:R
1555~\'I&lt;:Mc.

CO~STHUCTIO~

l'om&lt;'l·m·. OH
• Otl &amp; ftlter ch.1nge

Concrete Removal
and Replacemert

•Tune l:ps
• Brake el'\ tt.-e
• AC Recharge

\II I) pc.-; Of
('oncretl' \\ork

• Mmor Cllhau 1

29 'cars I.XJK'rlcnct'

~patr • Tire

Rcpatr
• Tran mJ,ston Ftlter
&amp; Fluid Change
• Gener.tll\lechamc

Da' id Le" is
740-992-6971

\IOrk

-

Ml:\ml\ra'jiiPI!lo

We ha\e ,111 opening for a fulltime cu to mer sen ice po~ition.
Successful applicant mu t be
people oriented, pleasant
telephone etiquette. profe~-..ional
and dependable. Mu t ha\e
experience in computers, and
cnjO) working \\ ith numbers.
Position offer all compan)
benefits including health and life
insurance. 40 I K. paid vacation
and personal da) ~.
For employment consideration,
send resume to:
Pam Caldwell
c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Proposals shall be
submitted to Jane
Banks, Administrative
Assistant,
Meigs
County DJFS, P.O. Box
191, 175 Race Street,
Middleport, OH 45760
no Ialor than April 5,
2010 at 12:00 noon. All
submissions must be
received by mail or
hand delivered by the
above date and time.
No materials received
after that dato will be
included In previous
submissions nor be
considered. The de·
pArtment reserves the
right to reject any or all
proposals. In accor•
dance with 29-CRF·
part 31, 32 Meigs
County DJFS is prohlb·
lied from dlscrlmlna·
tlon on the basis of
race, color, national
origin, sex, age, reli·
glon, political belief or
dlsab1llty.
(3)19, 26 (4)2

(7-10) 742-2563

Pole Barns, Garages,
New Construction, Room Add.,
Roofing, Shingles, Metal. Rubber.
Concrete Work.
Any Type remodeling, Decks
Phone:74~7~16

Cell 74D-447·3642
35 yrs exp. Free Est. FuUy Insured

•

Owners:
Tim Cremeans 8 Roger Seiius

29625 Bashan Road
Racme, OH 4Sn1

740-949-2217
LEGAL NOTICE
The Meigs County De·
partment ol Job and
Family
Services
(DJFS), serving as the
administrative agent
lor the Meigs County
Family and Children
First Council, Is solicit·
ing proposals to Implement the county's Help
Me Grow Program for
the period of July 1,
2010 through June 30,
The program
2011,
serves children 0 to 3
years and their faml·
lies. Preference will be
given to the proposer
which presents the
most Integrated and
coordinated approach,
including the utilization
of sub-contracts, to
serving this population. For a copy of the
Request for Proposal
(RFP), contact Jane
Banks at the Molgs
County Department of
Job &amp; Family Services
(740) 992-2117 ext. 106.

\orth Carohnn
SIIRI\11'

sJ construcuOJt.

Hill's Self
Storage
lodQIIII~ lk!iltmiijlttfcr~

Fr~h

Sc-mless Gutters
Roof ng S d :'19 Gutters
lnsu ed &amp; Bonded
740-653·9657

LEWIS

MICBAEL'S

(7-'0) 992-11910

With so many
choices, it's easy to
get carried away
with our
Merchandise listings
in the classifieds!

'JI

-1,. . . . .

Stop &amp;Compare

7-'0-992-2029

-

.Home
Insurance

740-992-1671

Call Dennis Uo)d

lS

~:1Cextend1C8re corr

Co.

Rubber Roofing, Room Additions, Decks, ShfngiCHI,
Siding, Windows, Pole Barns, Gnr1ge5,
Insurance Work, ResklonUal &amp; Commercial
30 Yonrs
~ &amp; Bonded 740-245-0437
Ftee Estlma1es
ExperienCe

•

tSut omli3trd "ltb Mik~ Man:.m Roofing
&amp;~RI'IIIoddiql
t'l..;;y-yu-u.

MIKE MARCUM
ROOFING &amp; REMODJ:IJNG

STNAs
Arbors at Ga pottS 170
P1n0C1'esl D:1Ve Gal po-

Apply at center or ema
to

.,.

Pomoroy, Ohio
30 Yc.rs Local Experience
-Winter
lata-

no cAp

QUired

Fuundation'

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740·985-4141
740-416-1814
"c-''"f»"
Fully in&lt;;urcd
•,:.. , "
I•ret• esltmates • 2S+ )'ea_r::s e,pc.r~cncc

• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch 0C(:kl

8 7 ZtR 6t97

Seeki:'lg ca ng and corr
paSSJOOate proVIders of
greatseMCe
Cu rent STNA IJOOnse re-

• Room additions • Roofing •
• Gl'ncrnl Remodeling • Pole &amp; HorSt'
Iiams • \in) I &amp; \\ood J cncing

· Room Addfuona &amp;
Remodeling
• tJow Garagos
· E!leclrlcat &amp; Plumbing
· Roollng &amp; Gullora

1

,

Roofing. Su..lmg.
Solttt. lkd..~. Doors
\\ l'ld0\1 '• Elcllm.
Plumb ng. Dr}\lal

Remodeling. Room

Sizes 5' x 10'

Add tlon~

to 10' x 30'

Local Contractor

Hours
7:00am-8:00pm

ll'.ol;..,!"'~l

740-367-0544
rrec Estimatt:.
7 40-367-0536

;\ ~'" Con tnrctio11 ami
Rrplacemellt \ i11_d II wdo11 s

CONTRACTOR WINDOW
&amp; MANUFACTURING,llC
AND SIDING INSTALlAnON
1\, S11 , w/1: In Rt'plcw mel'/ \\u c/ • 1
for Oidtr H&lt; 11u 1 ,( Tra lrrs
\o cum, hart/( to repln&lt;' mcur/ (ram, 11m f,

11 ,

7411-iih7-0311ii

Fu,: 7411-h67·U,\2\I
foil 1-rl',•: X77-42S·SI \Iii

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Addtlton' Remodc mg. ~ictal &amp;
Shtnt-lc Roof,, ~e\\ Home,, Stdtn D~'l:ks
Bathroom Remodeling. LK'ei'~C&lt;t &amp; lr.\ d
Rick flrkc • 17 ~r,, F\pcrirnce
WVI04~54 Cel174o-416-2960 740.992-(1730

1

�Friday, March 26, 2010

www.mydailysentinel .~om

BLOND IE

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebrun

EETLE BAILEY

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Future
1 Remote
ra1sm
loca les? 43 Kitchen
6 Emerges
gadget
11 Ticked off 44 Keyed
12 M oral
up
system
45 P rom
13 European
group
fash1on
46 Core
center
feature
14 Toner s
DOWN
pndo
15 Campa1gn 1 Sm1le
pro
coyly
16 Be frugal
2 Jim
Palmer,
with
18 Yale
once
student
3 Become
19 Dawn
clear
goddess
4
loss
20 - -de
5 Detect
6 D reams
France
21 Monthly
up
expense
7 Phys1cs
2 3 River from
bit
Oijon
25 Woolen
cap
27 Was
1nact1ve
28 Tenn1s
star
Becker
30 Gangster's gal
33 Soak up
34 COs' forerunners
36 Shark's
home
37 "The
Fnendly
Island"
39 Crone
40 Desert
plant

Mort Walker

SHOULDN'T YOU

WeAR A HEL.MET
IN A COMBAT

ZONf, COOK
~

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Tom Batiuk

28 Dance at

the diSCO
29 Sauna
s1te
31 Bounded
32 Some
beers
33 Bnght

SIOn

26 Farmers.
at limes

3 ·26

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg W alker
or; COLJRG8,

1 t? UAve -ro

cser

1}18
CJI.R 8ACt&lt; ••.

..WHEN 'fOUR WIFE ASKS IF VOU'RE IN A GOOD
MOOD, SHE MEANS 'UP UNTIL- NOW.'"

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

I: COU L.D

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

USE A
CUP OF
COFFEE .

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green
HAPP'l BIRlliDA'Y for Fnda\ March '1h 2010

,_

I

3

1

I

1' 8 6

1--

1g

8

5

'11-w ) ear, vou expre;s a darit\ and se!lSJth It\ that
drJws many people \\ 1th &gt;our buildmg populanty,

~

i7

7 8 !5

1-

Ili!
....I

:i'

,;:
1;-

i

6 9 4
" Can you please fool my head and
see If I' m gettin' a headache?"

DENNIS T HE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

4

1I~

1
6 15-

~-

3

I~
.I

......

. v

£ 6

I~
l.zo

v6

L g ~
GL 9 9 £ 6
9 g ~ 9 v G
9 £ v 6 9 g
£

L

0

2

...,
Diflkul) ~vr ****

~

7 'I ~

IS

f-

1

G

"

Q

I!

9 g G9 L
9 9 B L 6 G v ~ £
£ L v 6 ~ 9 B G 9
6 G9 g 9 £ ~ L v
~ B g v G L £ 6 9

..
'I

~

you hil\ e many more options. Your cre.1th 1~ helps
you through any problem. though you an: often
uncomfortable ,,,fh n..~ You are lucky this yeN: 'lou
''Ill land on' our fee It} ou are ~le guard agamst
g tting m\ oh ed " lh !;Ol11eone who Is W'lil\ ailab1t: or
marned If you are clttddled, as couple you11 gam
through "eekends tJWJ)' together. Pbn on as many as
poss1ble PISCES understands.
,
TIIC "' r~ "lllW the Kind ofD 11/ )au1J H n~ 5DI(nam 4-l'c5 I
k'1.'117ge; ' 5Mo; 1 D. ~fie II
ARIES (March 21 April19)
*"it**"* Rerogruzmg e\ en dung that must be
romp! hed could be O\ em helmmg Return mes
ages, schedule meetings for next '' eck and cleill' your
desk and mmd. (ommumcatmn flourishes and ide.l!o
em rge m a brmn lom\Ulg session lbnight. Go off
and eno} yourself.
TAURUS (Apri120-Ma\ 20)
*'* '* If) ou mn "ork (rom home do In anv m.;e
vou are finishing oft a lot ol projects and meeting,;
t1kt&gt; needed time to put together llr complete a pror.;ct Your reflections about ,1 situation o1re nght-on
lom~ht Home IS '' here the heart IS
GL\ 1L'\;I (Ma\ 21 jw1e 20)
*'* *'*'* Keep com rs.1tiOnS movmg, J.Jiowing
vou dre ftnall} cle.:mn~ the all' At '' ork.. a meeting
could bt' mol\' unport,ml than you reJl1ze
t ,mwr-;ation.s open up better understand mg. fmally,
m luctmg m 'our persoml life. Tomght Lea\ e lvfore
you gel caught up m 0111? mol\' proJL'Ct
~"lCER Qune 21 July 22)
**._. ~ Glreful about spending or OKmg ar
t: pcnd1tun: Withm ad~) ) ou could cha11ge }"'Ur
mmd What \\,\Sao: ptable nught no Ionge! be. A
boos h.1s many gl\'alJdt:,\.~, work wtth them. F&lt;xus on
getting "ork done lomght Get out earl}
Ll 0 Ouly 23 Aug 22)
*"it**"* You h.l\ other&gt; listerun and re;pond
mg l'o" nu~l ill: th time to move a project a.~
.md l.lke the lligh ro.:1d hnd exper\s and drcl\\ in Oth
er; opm10n.~ and th, md re.-ults could be exceptional
')[,ut thinking
\ .lmhon. • Tomght: \\'hate' er nwkt"&gt;lhe Lton roa~
V Ol GO (Aug 2.'\.Sept 22)

**'*' 'lou 'ieiN! that something IS happerung
behmd the scenes thou~ 'ou might not be totallv
dear as to who1t that IS. t&gt;o less reacttng and more1J.Stenlng ~ote "pqt isn't being s.ud Play the ::;leuth, and
fmd an&lt;wers. Gam greater knO\\ ledge of those around
you Torught Doyourthing
UBRA

SePt 2.3-0ct !:!f

***** FOC\IS on the b1g pictUre not the details
Oth~ ha\ e a lot to Sc1\ and are full oi details. You
rrught ''onder "hen thb all will end so ) ou can gel
gomg or mo' e on ,, project. M.nnt.un ,, lligh profile in
ke) matters Thmght Where the crowds are
SCORPIO (Ckt. 2.3- '0\ 21)
*'*'*' A must appcarnnre could lc\ke a while In a
meeting. a bos.c: or dSSOL'lale helps c'l&lt;ldres.'&gt; the man}
que&lt;;tions rommg fomard Delt&gt;gate and get as much
done cb possible, knowing 1! is rnday. Clear YOUr
desk. a!J,m mg tor some :nuch net.'ded dmmtime.
Tonight. VJSJt "1th .m older fnend
SAGilTARIUS ( 0\. 22 Dec 21)
*'*''*'*'* 'lou ha'-e difficult\ stavtng present in the
momenL What 1 gomg on around you inight not
mtere:,'t you T't'Jh ps \ ou are read} for some time off
It \ ou can '' ork on a pruJed of mterest. and you "1U
gam. Torught fl] a ne'' spot.
CAPRICOR:'I: (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
**'*'._. A partner nught h.ne man} idea' Your
nund could be on o1 per'Onal m.1tter, nome or a real
t' ate investmen ('.ather more mform•tion. but take
your lime Sometimes the most unportant detail rould
be missed. Torught Be a duu
AQUA1UllS Q,m. 20-Feb. 18)
*''*'**._. Other; seek' ou out be 1 at work or at
ho.'Tie In\ ttatians lead to'exccllent networking opportumttes. it at ''ork. 'lour hfe certlmh l'&gt; far fro:n dull
\\hen e\'t't) one L~ howling around 'lake choices that
function ''ell for you Thrught Ju&lt;;t don t be alone
PISCES (Feb 19 M.:trch 20\
* *'*''* You mJght escape'' ork O\ erload b} asking
for help from a ~nsiti\ e assoaate or fnend. 'lou tend
to get qUJrk\ at times. You are exhaustt.&gt;d b) eve!)·
~ that b on ' our pl.1te Defer to other-;. but 5.1\
no to t.1k.'lllg .mymore on lonight 1\Jt) our feet up
(alhtay,eek

�. . . _.,. . ___..--__

~~~-~-~-""':""---"":""-'!'"------~-----~.._.--""!":"_"':"""'

--~-'--c-.-..._~

•

Page 8 6 • '01e Daily Sentinel

Friday, March

www .mydailysentinel.com

26, 2010

NASCARTHIS
Feb r.
fro

11

Feb.••
FEQ 4
1

Fro :.&gt;•

Rb 28

J:tr;;o,

SPRINT CUP SCHEDULE
ANO STANDINGS
x.a~ Sh:Dl:lll (l&lt;D.ol Har\ox)

·~~ 11-)JYnl)J:ms(rl)
·~ ~2 (Kaso, Kd'ni)
tQ,1a'o &amp;XI (,brron M;MJnay)

A&lt;lO CUJ&amp;Xl ~ .))tnroll
S1Wf Nncn:m, LA&lt;; 'k,rls ~.moo

J.tm. 7- t&lt;dDI T&lt;&gt;OO &amp;XI (I&lt;Lrt &amp;o:tl)
t.btt\2• -Focd Cty eoo. ~· 'TOm(..mm

Hamlin heads to Martinsville under pressure
B Y J ENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

.kiTro1)

t.b(t, 28- GooOy's Alit F\!h fUj SOO.Iolar1i1MG.

\a
~

10-&amp;bMiyfroshR!Dl,!'o.cnlal:lAtiz.
""" 16-Sanst.rg Mc:t:*l 500, Fa1W:lrtl,lbm
fvri 25- Alwn's400. ~ Na.
t.bi 1 - CroM1 Ac¥li ~ 11-e H&lt;dleotn.n
&lt;IQ:l, ftiTr&lt;rd. \a
..,_8~&amp;Xl. Cl&lt;mP\SC.

......, 16-P&lt;Ab'n ~ 400, o:-. Del
M\1 Z!-x-5prn ~ Cc:r'&lt;x&gt;U. NC.

~ Z!-x-NASCAR Spi1 AJSar Race, Cc:r'&lt;x&gt;U.

~~1-C&lt;xl&amp;COOtm.

Ccn:oti NC.
.l.ro 6- Rxmo SOO.loog R:rd, Pa.
.Anl13- t1i.Ml Gcodl ScuQoml ope 400.
~WI.

.l.ro 20-~ Mltt 350. Scrana Ce6.
.U1a 'Z7- Leroc lntiG!i:d'lbtfi 3:l1 ,1..cuin N H.
JJi 3-Col&lt;&amp; Zillo 400 R:Mored ~ Coc:aC&lt;la.
~llEn:t\Fh

~ 10 -l.li&lt;xl&lt;.cxJT1400, .,kjct, ll

.Ali 25- Btd&lt;)ad 400. hm!pob

~ 1-~&amp;Xl. loog A:nd. Pa.

A9 8-HelMI Gcodl ScuOoml Dips. 11-e G1on

e

v.llllnab\ NV.

15-Caltut400.~~

21- irlw1 T&lt;&gt;OO Ni1t Fm., atsaa. '1lm
5-I..IIIJor[QyCI:l::si:&amp;Xl. ~Ga.
$q,. 11 - Ri:trrond -400. Fi:tm:nd. \a
Sip.19-~0CO,l..ou±rl NH.
Sep 28-AAA400, D&lt;Mlr, ~0:1.3- Pr\:(1 Q-ocwer 400, Klr6a5 Cly, I'.M.
O:t. 10-~ MJx 400. f'a'b'n. Cal!
0:1.16- NASCAR ~&amp;XI, Ccn::oc. NC.
c:tt 24-1\M) FilS! F\:!1&lt;( 500. Mlt1nMG. Va
0:1. 31-IWf' Eroaw 500, lill&lt;'d:gl, Ala
f.b.l7 - La-e SbrSOO. Fort Wort\~
l'b.t 14-MI:m!OO,~Atiz.
l'b.t 21-Fad 400. ~ Fh
~~~raoo

on- Standings

2010
K.elli!HoNdi,774
2.];1&lt;C l&lt;milllt\ 773
3 .kmie Jotmon. 760
-~regBil!le, 750

~ TO&lt;?f Ste.vart. 685

B:'fu'IBusch, m
(tiel Jeff Burlon. m
B Dale EatmMI Jr 621
II Pau1Mena!d,614
Ky!o Busch, 606
11 Jell Gortbl. 6CXl
12. Cirt llow)'er. 601
13- Cor1 8t.varcls. 585
14. Brien Vid&lt;8ts. 584
· 15. Jamie McM..nay. 581
16. Mark MaM. 579
17 Joe( Logano. 558
18. Scoc1 Speed. S52
19 Ocm,t HaiTWl, 515
20 Marin Truex Jr. 513

o.

NATIONWIDE SERIES

SCHEDULE JH:J STANDINGS
Rb 13-OAIVE4COPO 300 {Ta1y ~
Alb 20- Sla:tlr eros. 300 {Kf1e &amp;.Jsch)
Feb. 'Z7 -Sr.'slbwn 300, 1.A&lt;; ~ ~
I'Mt:l&lt;)

Martt&gt; 20- Socll3 T(Jf Buldct 300 (J.Jstn A1gaio0
Aprf 3-Na!tM1o OCO. Lebanon. Tem.
~9-Ba:otlas'~200,~

Aprt 17- ORely /&gt;dt:J l'llr1s 300, Fori Wor'll, TIICIIS
Aprf 24 -~ 312. Tab1ega. An

Aprt ro- RictJror1d 250. Aicl"m:tld. Va

May7-~200,~SC

May 15- HalMt Gocxl200, IJcMJr. Del
~ 29- 'TEC:WET IIUto SeM::e 300. Ccrccn:l.
.lrto 5- Fe&lt;ba!ad IIUto Pot18 300, Leb!nan, Tem.
Ule 12- Meljo&lt; 300 Spatia. Ky
Ule 19- Road Amell:a 200. El&lt;hart lAle. Wa
;1m 26- N!m En(lan:l200, l..c&lt;d:ln, N.H.
oUt 2- s.tNet .kll:lpcro 250 ~By CocaCoh. ~ e-.tl. Aa.
oUt 9- Oolar GEnetal300 A:Mmld By Coal·
Cola. Jolet. II.
oUt 17- ~Dodge OaaleB 250,
Madson. II.
oU'/24-Kroger:i!OO. ~
.:.if31 """'250,
Aug 7- Z:W0 200 81 The Glen, wa!!&lt;ns Glen. N.Y.
Aug 14-Car1ax250.~Mdl.
Aug 20- Food Cly 250 M:lol, T«Yl
Aug 29-NAPA/&gt;dt:J l'llr1s200, ~
&amp;p.4 -AbU 300. ~ Ga
Sep. 10-Vigna f&gt;29 C&lt;-.ego SIM1gs 250.
R&lt;:tm&lt;i1d. Va.
Sep. 25- DcM!r 200 DcM!r. Del.
Oct. 2- Kinas l..dleiY 300. Koonsas Cly. Kan
0:1. 9- Cerr¥Ji1g \'Jtrtl300. F&lt;lr1arv!. Calf
Oct. 1 S - · = 3 0 0, Calcord. NC.
Oct. 23250. Madson. I.
~ 6- OReilly
l'llr1s ChaJenge. Fort 'Mrtl,

No.W&gt;n."""'

Taxas
Nov 13 - Anrona 200 Avondale. Ariz.
NoY. 20 Ford 300. Homeslead, Fla.
2010 DrMt Standings
! . Carl Edwards. 670
4!. Iliad K.eselawsk! 644
3..11$1 ~. 639
4 . 1(yte Busch. 594

s.l&lt;.eWI HaMel&lt;; 569

a Greg Bi!11e, 563
7. Pa~ Menard, 528
a: SCeYe Walace, 472
~ M.l&lt;aWlllaeo, 458

1o. Boon Vickers. 457

CAMPING WORLD TRUCK
SCHEDULE AND STANDINGS
Feb. • 3 - NextEra Energy Resources 250
(TimQihy Petera)
March 6 - E·Z-GO 200 (Kevin HarvtCk)
March 27 - Kloger 250. Martinsville, va.
Apnl 2 - Nashvi le 200. Lebanon. Tenn.
May 2 - 0 Rel1ly AUio Parts 250, Kansas
Crty. Kan.
May 14 - Dover 200. Dover, DeL
May 21 - North Caroline Educabon Lonery
200. Concord, N C
June 4 - W•nSlar World Casu10 400k, Fort
Worth, Toxas
June 12- VFW 200. Brooklyn, M1ch.
July 11 - Iowa 200, Newton, Iowa
July 16- Camping Wof1d 200, Madoson. Ill.
July 23 - AAA Insurance 200. lndiafll!polls
July 31 - Pocooo Mo..n1a111s 125, long
Pond. Pa
/Wg. 7 - Nashv•lle 200 (Summer), (.&amp;banon.
Tenn
AUg 14 -Too Tough To Tame 200. Darling.
1on. S.C
"'ug 18 -Q'Aeilly 200, Bns1ol, Tenn.
Aug. 27 - Chicagolar&gt;d 225. JoHel, Ill.
Sep. 3 - Buill Ford Tough 225. Sparta. Ky
Sep. 18 - New Hampshore 200, Lo!Jdon, N H.
Sep. 25 - Las Vegas 350, Las Vegu
Oct 23 - Kroger 200, MartonSVllle. Va.
Oct 30- Mountain Dew 250. Talla:!e98 . Ala
Nov. 5 - Longhorn 3501&lt;. f()(l Wort&gt;. Texas
l'lov. 12- Lucas Ool150. Awndale, Ariz
Nov 19 - Ford 200. Homes1ead. Fla
2010 Driver Slandlnga
1. Todd Bod ne. 340
2l Tomothy Pelerll 336
a. Jason While. 295
4 . Aroc Almorola. 292
S Kyle Busch. 272
6 Slaey Compron , 257
7. Dennis Setzer, 246
B. Matt Crafton, 242
II. Tayler Malsam 236
10 D®nle Neuenberger. 229

CONCORD. N.C.
Denny Hamlin stared silently at his race car. hb. hands
in the pockets of his firesuit,
his hat pulled low on his
head. He smiled, made a
quick joke. then quickly
turned serious with his crew
chief.
Hamlin has no more time
to waste. and everyone
knows it.
The popular preseason
pick to unseat four.time
defending
NASCAR
champion Jimmie Johnson
is off to a disappointing
!'.tart in what everyone predicted would be a break·
through season. This was
going to be the year that
Hamlin separated himself
from the crowded pack of
top drivers who win a race
here or there, but never
make the leap into superstar status.
Instead. through the first
five races. he's failed to
meet expectations. Hamlin
is winless, hasn' t scored a
top·IO finish and is ranked
19th in the points. He's led
just 39 laps all season. 32 of
which were at Atlanta.
"He's a little disheartened. A little concerned,"
crew chief Mike Ford
admitted. "But I would say
optimistic."
With good reason.
The Sprint Cup Series
shifts this weekend to
Martinsville
Speedway.
where Hamlin has two vic·
tories and eight top- I0 tin·

ishes in nine career starts.
He ran a frustratmg second
to six-time Martinsville
winner Johnson last spring,
then flipped the finishing
order last October for a
gratifying victory.
So Hamlin goes home to
Virginia. to a short track
where he figures he can run
top five "in reverse. blindfolded," knowirlg Sunday is
t~e day he must jump start
hts season.
Although team owner Joe
Gibbs pointed out Thursday
that Hamlin traditionally
starts slow each year. he
was only half-kidding about
the importance of this
weekend.
'Til say this." Gibbs said,
smiling, "if we have problems at Martinsville. you're
going to see panic city.''
ln fairness to Hamlin.
he's not had a great deal of
luck this season.
His strategy in the
Daytona 500 was to be in
position to race for the win
at the end. and if not for ·
three late restarts. he proba·
bly would have left the season opener with at least a
top- I 0 finish. Instead, he
and Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch were shuffled out of traffic in the
chaotic final laps, and
Hamlin finished 17th.
Ford admits the No. II
was off at Fontana. where a
tire issue contributed to the
29th-place finish. and the
car was just bad at Las
Vegas. where Hamlin was
19th.
But Atlanta was encour-

aging. and if not for another be considered. particularly
tire problem. Hamlin fig - when dealing with drivers
ures he would have been top who are trying to keep
three instead of 21 st. His Johnson out of their heads.
third tire issue of the season The most dominant driver
last week at Bristol never in NASCAR has won three
gave him an opportunity to of the season's first five
sec how good his car was, races, success that can play
mind games with everyone
and he was 19th again.
Three tire problems in in the garage.
Hamlin is a prime target.
five races gives Hamlin
His strong closing effort
hope that he's not that far
off despite what the record last season moved him to
another level, and the confibook reflects .
"Other than Vegas, where •dence Hamlin gained conwe ran completely terrible, I tributed to a celebrity status
haven't had a clean week,'' that began to inch outside
he said. "I need just a clean the
confines
of the
week with nothing break- NASCAR industry. He celing. no tires blowing. things ebrated with a bash in Las
like that. That's when we Vegas, a whirlwind trip
Southern
can assess where we're at." through
That's why Martinsville California, the opening of a
is so critical. The event glitzy Charlotte nightclub
Sunday will reveal the truth and a spread in Sports
about Hamlin's season Illustrated that announced
because if he runs poorly, his arrival.
It was maddening attenand doesn't
have
a
mechanical issue to blame. tion for Ford, a quiet crew
then he's got a much bigger chief who prefers his team
problem than anyone imag- operates off the radar.
"For a crew chief. that's
med.
"If we run sixth-to-10th , what's bothersome;· Ford
we know we're not bring- said. ''You'd rather take all
ing good enough cars to the the media and all the hype
race track,'' Hamlin said. and just isolate your guys
"If we're leading and we from it. but you know you
get caught up in a wreck, can't do that."
So Ford tried to manage
then we know it's another
week of we just need a Hamlin's psyche. warn his
week without problems. I driver of the dangers of getthink it will be a telling ting too high too early After
race for sure, because it is a all. it's an 11-month season.
race you can typically stay and under the Chase for the
out of trouble. and usually Sprint Cup championship
the top performers perform format. the final 12 weeks
well there."
are the most important
Still. there 's a mental stretch of the year.
The challenge for Ford is
aspect to this sport that must

AUTO RACING GLANCE
NASCAR
SPRINT CUP
Goody's Fast Pain Relief 500
Site: Martinsville, Va.
Schedule: Friday, pract1ce (Speed,
11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.), qualifying (Speed, 3·
4:30 p.m.): Saturday, practice (Speed,
10:30 a.m.-1 p.m.); Sunday. race. 1 p.m.
(FOX, noon·5 p.m.).
Track Martinsville Speedway (oval,
0.526 miles).
Race d istance: 263 miles, 500 laps.
Last year: Jimm1e Johnson won the first
of h1s seven 2009 victories en route to
his record fourth straight series championship. Johnson nudged Denny Hamlin
aside '" the third and fourth turns with 15
laps left to take the lead.
Last week: Johnson won for the first
time at Bristol Motor Speedway, power·
lng from sixth to first In three laps alter a
late four-tire stop. Tony Stewart was second. and Kurt Busch was relegated to
third after leading 278 laps. Johnson has
three victories in five races thiS season
alter winmng four of the final nine last
season.
Fast facts : The race marks the switch
to the traditional spoiler from the rear
wing that was introduced in 2007.
NASCAR decided during the offseason
to go back to the spoiler, partly in a
hope that it Improves competition.
Martinsville was the earliest the change
could be made because of the planning
needed for such a technical change ...
Johnson has won five of the last seven
races at the track and six of the last 11
He has 50 Cup victories to tie Ned
Jarrett and Jumor Johnson for 1Oth
place on the career list. .. Denny
Hamlin won the 2008 spring race and
2009 fall event at Martinsville... Kevin
Harv1ck leads the series standings with
n4 points. one more than Matt
Kenseth. Johnson Is third, 14 points
behind Harvick .... Richard Petty won a

record 15 Cup races at the track. four
more than Darrell Waltnp. Jeff Gordon
leads active drivers with seven
Martinsville 'llctOries.
Next r ace: Subway Fresh Fit 600, April
10, Phoen1x International Speedway,
Phoenix.

season standings w1th 340 points, four
more than Daytona winner Timothy
Peters.... Peters won the October race at
Martinsville... Toyota has won six of the
last eight races at Martinsville.
Next race: Nashville 200, April 2,
Nashville Superspeedway, Nashville,
Tenn.

CAMPING WORLD TRUCKS
Kroger 250
Site. Martinsville, Va.
Schedule: Friday, practice (Speed, 1·2
p.m.), qualifying (Speed. 4:30·5:30 p.m.);
Saturday, race, 2 p.m. (Speed, 1:30-4:30
p.m.).
T;ack MartinSville Speedway (oval,
0.526 miles).
Race distance : 131.5 miles, 250 laps.
Last year: Kevin Harvick won the raindelayed race 1n a Monday fimsh for the
first of his three 2009 senes victones. He
took the lead from Kyle Busch w1th just
over nine laps left and held on through
an ab1Jrev1ated final restart.
Last race: Harv1ck won at Atlanta Motor
Speedway on March 6 The Sprint Cup
driver has won three straight starts in the
series and frJe of his last nine.
Fast facts: Harvick finished last season
with consecut1ve victories at Phoenix
and Homestead-Miami, then skipped the
season·opening race at Daytona. He has
seven victories in 102 Trucks starts. •..
Johnny Benson, the 2008 series champion. is driv1ng the No. 15 Toyota for Billy
Ballew Motorsports. Benson won the
2008 fall race at Martinsville for the last
of his 14 series victones. . .. Former
Formula One driver Narain Karthikeyan
is making his Trucks debut. The first
series driver from India. Karthikeyan will
race the No. 60 Chevrolet for newly
formed Starbeast Motorsports. ... Rick
Crawford is making his series-record
325th start, all for Tom Mitchell and
Circle Bar Racing. CraWford has five victones, including the 2004 Martinsville
spring race . ... Todd Bodme leads the

Serving you for over 60 years

NATIONWIDE
Next race : Nashville 300, April 3,
Nashville Superspeedway, Nashville,
Tenn.
Last week: Justin Allgaier raced to his
first NASCAR victory, holding off Penske
Racmg teammate Brad Keselowski at
Bnstol Motor Speedway. Allgaier and
Keselowskt gave Penske Racing its first
1·2 finish in the Nationwide Series.
IZOD INDYCAR
Honda
Grand
Prix
of
St. Petersburg
Site: St. Petersburg. Fla.
Schedule: Friday, practice; Saturday,
practice, qualifying; Sunday. race, 3:45
p.m. (ABC, 3:30-6 p.m.)
Track: Streets of St. Petersburg (street
course, 1.8 miles).
Race distance: 181 miles, 100 laps.
Last year: Ryan Briscoe won the sea·
son·opening race, outdueling Ryan
Hunter-Reay and Justin Wilson for the
first of the Penske driver's three 2009
victories.
OTHER RACES
WORLD OF OUTLAWS: Late Model:
Friday.
Battleground
Speedway,
Highlands, Texas; Saturday, Lonestar
Speedway, Kilgore. Texas. Super
Dirtcar:
Saturday,
Hagerstown
Speedway, Hagerstown, Md. On the
Net: http://www.worldofoutlaws.com
FIRESTONE INDY LIGHTS: Honda
Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Sunday,
Streets of St. Petersburg, St.
Petersburg, Fla.

keeping Hamlin focused
what they need to improve
and havmg the momentum
when it matters most.
"He gets wrapped up in it,
and he worries about it, but
again . no matter how hard
you worry about it, the
more you worry about it,
the more it screws you up,''
Ford said . "We've talked
about it several times. I
think he's getting more intunc with the nuts and bolts
of what actually matters .
But I know it does affect
him quite a bit."
Hamlin, for his part, has
not lost his confi dence. He's
only 86 points out of 12th.
and there's a long stretch of
racing in front of him. So
there was no hesitation
when he was asked this
week if he' ll make the
Chase.
"Yeah," he said. nodding .
"Yeah. We're gonna make
the Chase ."
•
Then he admitted th
work he's got cut out for
him.
"If we' re going to make
the Chase, we have no
choice but to be better every
single week from here on
out." he said . " One maybe
encouragi ng
thing
is
(Johnson) has never started
out this strong. So is he
going to be able to maintain
that all year long? I don't
see how. It's possible. I
guess . Nothing is impossible with those guys
"But usually when you
start out very. very strong.
people catch up. We'll see if
that's the case or not."

Hendrick valued
as top NASCAR
team by Forbes •
NEW YORK (AP) ....., Forbes' annual
rankings show that Hendrick Motorsports
is the most valuable team in NASCAR
for the second consecutive year.
Forbes· report released Wednesday
shows 1\ASCAR 's top team IS v.orth
$350 million. But the report claims the
average team value has declined $5 million over the past year.
Roush Fenway Racing is ranked second at a value of $238 million, and
Richard Childress Racing is ranked thtrd
at $153 million.

Kyle Busch swaps truck
races with Ickier
MARTINSVILLE, Va. - A sponsorship opportunity has prompted Kyle
Busch to gtve up his seat in this weekend's Truck Series race at Martinsville
Speedway
Brian Ickier will make his first start i.
a Kyle Busch Motorsports truck in
Saturday's race at Martmsville.
Ickier was scheduled to make hi~ KBM
debut next weekend at Nashville. Busch
will now race in that event instead of
Ickler.
Ickier is scheduled to drive I0 races
this season for KBM . The organization
runs a full schedule for Tayler Mal sam in
one truck. and Busch and Ickier were
scheduled to split the season in the second entry.

r
Genera1 &amp; Mechanical Contractors

www.rutlandbottlegas.com
Gallipolis • The Plains • J ackson
Torch • Logan • McConnelsville • Rutland

Robert W. McMillan
President

Rt. 1 Box 119, Old Town Road
Point Pleasant, WV

Bus. (304) 675-8810 ·Fax: (304) 675-8811

I•

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