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                  <text>•

University of North
Carolinastudentbodv
president fatally shot,

Bush,-Pentagon honor · .
country's oldest living .
World War I veteran, AS

Aa

Page 88 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, March 6, 2008

•

'Disney's
Beauty and
the Beast' at
GAHS Friday,
Saturday .

Dance lessons·
MIDDLEPORT
~
Be~inner dance fessons in
swmg and fox trot, and
another class in Shim Sham,
will be taught over the next
·five weeks at the Riverbend
Arts Council, 290 N.
Second Ave., Middleport.
Both classes begin on
March 4 and each one coqsists of · five sessions,
including .March 4, 11 nd
25, and April I and 8.
Instructors for both classes
are Tim and Edie King.
The swing and fox trot
class will be held from 7 to
8 p.m., and there is a charge
of $50 per couple for the ,
five sessions. The . Shim
Sham class will follow from
8:15 to 9 p.m. and the five
session class is $25 per person. The Shim Sham class is
encouraged for both singles
and couples.
To register for either
class, call (740) 992-3821.

GALLIPOLIS
Students at Gallia Academy
high school have been
rehearsing their production
of "Disney's Beauty and the
Beast" since auditions were
completed in December..
The directors, cast, crew,
orchestra, 'community volunteers and the GAHS Choir
Boosters have been working
diligently on the production.
The story begins when a
young prince is transformed
into a hideous beast after
being warned by an old
Beggar Woman " ... not to be
deceived by appearances for
beauty is found within."
The show provides a wonderful lyrical music score
written by Alan Menken
(music), and Howard Ashman
and Tim Rice . (lyrics). The
musical is based on the book
by Linda Woolverton. ·
The cast and crew include
Mrs. Marilyn Wills (director/piano), Mrs. Annie Roach
(Assistant director) Audrey
Nicole Flelda/photOS
Warner (assistant director), ·
GALLIPOLIS Bill
Singers
and
dancers
in
·oance
Evolution"
are,
front
row
from
left,
Hannah
Workman.
Leslee
Rice
and
Rachael
Fitzwater;
Jeremy Ward (Beast), Kristen
Hawks
and
Joey
Simms
of
Lynn (Belle), Kegan Angel second row, Brittany Sayre, Jennifer Freeman, Michaela Williamson and Emily Fowler; and third row, Logan Baisden, Katie
Bill
Hawks
and
the
(Gaston), Andy Walker Wilson, Heather Freeman, Sarah Walker and Whitney Moses.
Clearview Band will perform
(Maurice), Kari Evans
this Saturday from 9 p.m.
(Cogsworth), Hlinnah Fulton
until midnight at the Jencho
(Mrs. Potts), Jered Shaffer
Irin
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
(Lumiere), Jordyn Benson
The band will also appear
Tessa
Saxon
(Chip),
POINT
PLEASANT,
at
the Courtside Bar &amp; Grill
(Babette),.
I,.indsay
W.Va.
More
than
3,000
in
Gallipolis on Friday,
Pennington (Madame de. Ia
students
have
participated
21 from 10 p.m. until ·
March
· Grande Bouche) Dylan Rees
2 a.m. The band consists of
(LeFou), Dallas Craft (Young in the imnual event in the
past
38
years.
John
Polcyn, drummer;
Prince/Monsieur D' Arque),
is
it.
Literally.
But
this
Kent
Jolley.
bass/vocals;
Chelsea Lemley (Silly Girl),
Band
members
at
Point
1
oey
Stmms;
lead
Cassie Rhodes (Silly Girl),
guitar/vo~;als; . and
Bill
Ashley Spencer (SiUy Girl), Pleasant High School have
been
diligently
preparing
Hawks,
guitar/vocals
.
.
Lindsey Mink (Enchantress),
The . group will appear
Randy . Jackson (Wolf/ for this weekend's 38th
Saturday, March 29 from 9
Townsperson/Dou ble ), Annual Black Knight
Revue,
appropriately
titled.
p.m. until I a.m. at the
Brittany Arthur (Door Mat),
American
Legion Post in
"This
is
It,"
smce
it
will
be
Kathenne Simpson (Salt) and
.
the
final
year
for
the
event
Point
Pleasant.
Erin Mitchell (Pepper).
Townspeople and enchant- to be staged at the Point
ed objects include: Carly Pleasant Middle School
Atkins, Nicole Baker, Olivia gymnasium.
According
to
Jeff
Boone, Micaela Bryan,
Courtney Campbell, Jessica Hilbert, band director, the
GALLIPOLIS - The
Dotson, Morgan Foster, annual production will
Ariel-Ann
Carson Dater
Chelsea. Johnson, Kayla make an official move to
Performing
'Arts Centre
. Johnson, Bergan Koch, the Wedge Auditorium
would like to invite anyone
Mary Ann Lively, Nathan next year. He said the show
in acting to come
interested
Lynn, Alena Mich\il, Pearce will undergo a complete
and
audition
for the play
Michal, Kelsey Owens, redesign in order to be
"Thumbelina"
by Vera
Hannah Roush, Kayla properly presented in the
Morris,
to
be
produced
by
Sanders, Naomi Sebastian new auditorium, where
special arrangement with
and Tiffany Wegley.
state-of-the-art
sound
Pioneer Drama Services
The orchestra, under the equipment, lighting and a
Inc., Englewood, Colo.
directiop of Steve McGrew, stage likely will enhance
The audition dates for
Singers and dancers in ·oon't Stop the Music" are, front row from left, Samantha Likens
includes Mrs. Barb White the show.
"Thumbelina" are Monday
(synthesizer), Kaiti .Dovyak
But for now, everyone and Katie Wilson; and back row, Heather Freeman, Liz Finley and Tabbi Thomas .
and Tuesday, March 10 and
(violin), Katie Fisher (flute), involved is concentrqting on
Allyson Johnston (flute), making lhis weekend's move the production from 38-year history, adding don't cover. It's kind of· II, from 6 -to 8 p.m.
For. more information
Allison
Nolan . (flute), show one of. the best yet. the lllUSical stylings of the that many faithful support- cool," Hilbert added.
about auditions, call (740)
Courtney Ross (flute), Katie Hilbert said the event will 1940s to today.
ers likely will remember
The Black Knight Revue 446-ARTS (2787) or stop by
Patten (clarinet), Jessica be retrospective of the past
He said the show also the dancing fountains, will take place 7 p.m.
Ward (clarinet), Jarod Myers 37 years, and students act- will include throwbacks to laser show and other out- Friday and Saturday and 3 the Ariel-Dater Hall box
office ar 428 Second Ave.,
(saxophone), . Mrs. Jennifer ing as · masters of cere- some of the more memo- standing acts.
p.m. Sunday. Ticket prices Gallipolis.
Ross (saxophone), Kay Ia monies will use narration to rable events in the Revue's
"There's ·not anything we vary.
Theiss (saxophone), Mrs.
Sandy Forgey (trumpet),
Miss Kelsey Huffman (trum·
pet), Andrea Withee (trum., .
pet), Miss Andrea McCabe
MARIETTA
The
(French hom), Timmy
Evergreen · . Arts
arid
MARIETIA- If you are Hockey's Mario Lemieux Jabbar, and John Wooden the National Institute of Humanities
Huffman (trombone); Tim
Series
at
Seniur Centers and serving Washington
Yeager (trombone) and an autograph collector, and Gordie Howe as well as will be featured.
. State
The author LiUian Jackson citizens 55 years and older Community College will.
Caleb Janey (percussion/set). Marietta is the place to be golf's Jack Nicholas, Arnold
on
Sunday,
March
9
at
the
Palmer, and Tiger Woods Bmun.donated a si~ed copy in Washington County.
The crew mcludes Haley
present The Local Girls in
items will be sought after.'
of one her best sellmg books.
Angel, Caroline Baxter, Comfort Inn, 700 Pike St.
For more information, call concert at 8 p.m. on
Baseball's Yogi Berra, Other celebrity autographs Nancy Matheny at (740) 373- Saturday, . March 8 at
Over 120 autographed
Stephanie
Edelmann,
Michael Fahmy, Taylor items donated . by nauonal Sparkey Anderson, and Bill include 1M actor James Ead 3914 or send an email to: Graham Auditorium. .
Foster, Hannah Graham, celebrities, sports' greats and Mazeroski along with foot-· Jone~, artist Thomas Kinkade, lllii8theny@oneillcenter.com
The Local Girls hail from
Mackenzie Hornsby, Caroline authors will be auctioned.
ball's Lynn Swann, Archie and singers Amy Grant and Items may be vie:-ved on the Athens, where they are
Hudson, Ciara "Jackson,
A NASCAR racing helmet Griffith, John Madden, Jim Paul Anka. Many more items senior center's web site: known for three-pan vocal
Sharolyn Kinnerrian, Lacy signed by Darrell Waltrip Tressel, and Don Shula are arriving every week.
www.ori~iUcenter.com.
harmony. From the White
Lauder, Jordan Lear, Tiffany and other items signed by have donated collector
All proceeds of the aucThe O'Neill Senior is House and across the
Lewis, . Melissa . Long, NASCAR legends are avail- items. Basketball greats tion benefit the ·O'Neill located at 333 Fourth St., Midwest, fans have coveted
Samantha McClure, Amanda able including Tony Stewart. Jerry West, Kareem Abdul Senior Center, accredited by Marietta, Ohio 45750.
the engaging delivery The
McGhee, Sydnie Moritz,
Local Girls brin~ to the stage.
Halee Myers, Janelle Parsons,
"The repertmre's of the
Alex Pasquale, Grace Patrick,
three ladies is described as
Cayla Plese, Burgandi
"stellar."
Plymale, Chelsi Radvanyi,
Mimi Hart has toured
GALLIPOLIS - · The young pig, desperately give the actors and the audi- in advance or at the door. with the Allman Brothers,
Tori Rees, Nick Roach, David
Saunders, Jamie Saunders, Ariel-Ann Carson Dater wants to avoid the presence ence a period of enchant- VIP seatin~ is $1 0, Hotcakes,
the
Paula
Cole
Simpson,
Haley Performing Arts Centre is of the butcher. Fern is a ment, as the play ultimately reserved seatmg for adults Lockheart Band, and the
Simpson, Carson Stanley, committed to dramatically young girl that understands ends wiih Wilbur being · is $8, seniors are $7 and Bopcats, and sang backup
Nicole Taylor, Heather Ward, enriching our families and . what the farm animals say saved from the butcher and students. are $6.
for David Bromberg. Gay
Matt Watts and Nathan communities by offering to each other; Templeton is doing all ile can for his speWhat makes· this perfor- Dalzell has toured extenextraordinary children's lit- a rat who at times has been cial friend' Charlotte.
Wiseman.
mance of "Charlotte's Web" sively, singing a musical
The production will take erature based productions.
known to do a good deed;
"Charlotte's Web," direct- even more special will be rage from bluegrass ttl
In March, the Ariel will and Charlotte is an extraor- ed by Christina Cogar and the "Charlotte's Web" pre- . blues. She was a fea~Qr!d
place on Friday and
Saturday, at 7 p.m. in the present "Charlotte's Web," dinary spider who proves Lori·Sanders, will be shown show party, which will member of Appalachian
GAHS auditorium. Tickets adapted from the book by she can be a good friend and Friday and Saturday, March include crafts, games, and Green Parks ProJeCt.
are $7 each. You can reserve E.B . White by Joseph a great writer.
14 and 15, at 7 p.m., and snacks. The farmyard fun
Brenda Cantania has
tickets by calliilg 441 -7589 Robinette.
·
Charlotte is determined Sunday, March 16 at 3 p.m. begins at 6 p.m. and the cost toured in the Boston and
"Charlotte's Web" is an to save Wilbur from the in the Morris and Dorothy to attend the pre-party is $5. San Francisco areas doing
or 446-3212, extellsion 42.
"Disney 's Beauty and the enchanting . story about butcher and uses her web Haskins Ariel Theatre at the
For more information, studio work, cabaret, musiBeast" is presented through friendship and the relation: in which she writes , Ariel-Ann Carson Dater visit the
website at cal theatre, rock and roll,
special arrangement with ships that are built between "Some Pig."
Performing Arts Centre 426 www.arieltheatre.org, or an(l shared the stage with
Music Theatre International the farm yard animal's.
This knowingly beautiful Second Ave.,.Gallipolis.
(740) · . 446-ARTS 'artists including Etta James
call
(MTl)
Wilbur, an irresistible play about fritndship will
Tickets can be purchased · (2787)1
and Bonnie Bramlett. ,.

Local group
. to perform

Black Knight Revue set thisweekend

Auditions
scheduled

Autograph show set for Sunday

Ariel plans production of 'Charlotte's Web' March 14-16

'Local Girls'
in concert

Middlep()rt • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;o ( I·N 'IS • \'ol. ;;-.No. lhl

Ff{JJ),\Y, M .\Rt'll- . :!Ofll-1

1\\1"-"')'l'"l"'""'i"•·l.,·uuo

Architect to determine cost of hospital renovation for 911

SPORTS
• Bulls beat Cavs.

See Page 81

J.

Commissioner Jim Sheets
said Thursday a representative of the architectural firm
POMEROY -Meigs . Panich and Noel will meet
County Commissioners will with commissioners on
meet with _an architect next March 13 to review a floor
week to determine the costs plan of the east wing of the
involved in locating the hospital, and to discuss any.
new 911 call center and structural modifications that
other agencies in a portion might be needed in order to
of the .Veterans Memorial prepare the hospital wing
Hospital building.
for use. An estimate of costs
BY BRIAN

REED

BREE~MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

will follow by month's ·end,
Sheets said.
Sheets said the 911 dispatch center, Emergency
Medical SerVices and, probably,
the
Emergency
Management Agency will
be moved into the hospital
building's east wing. The
wing was once the emergency room area for
Veterans Memorial, and was

last used as a behavioral
health unit before the hospital closed. It is the wing
located to the left of the
main entrance lobby.
Sheets said most of the
improvements will be cosmetic, but some major renovations will be required. A
new heating and air conditioning system, for example,
will be required, because the

Bv CHARLENE HOEFUCH

BY BETH SERGENT

POMEROY - Following
the theme "Get into the
Game" Meigs County 4-Hers
and their families did just that
at the 4-H Week rally in the
Meigs High School cafeteria
Saturday night.
The over 125 .people
attending
the
kickoff
planned by the 4-H Teen
Leaders and advisory committee learned about 4-H
: Page A3
· through hands-oq activities,
: • Audrey Cremeans, 84 ,
educational displays, and
· ~ Bessie Mae Goodin, 86 conversation with current 4: • Robert Moodispaugh, 54 H members and volunteers.
Prior to the kickoff the
; • Lawrence Yeauger, 79
Meigs County 4-H Fashion ·
Board prepared a display for
Dan's in downtown Pomeroy,
the Teen Leaders had its
annual 4-H cookie baking
event with the cookies being ·
shared at the kickoff and
• Professor to.
through the Meigs ·County
conduct auditions. .
Chamber of Commerce in
IUbmttted pllotol
See Page A2
appreciation for local busi4'-H
Fes~lon
Board
members,
Breana
Hemsley,
left,
and
Tina
Drake,
work
together to
• The power
ness support. They also visit- ·
ed the Meigs County assemble their display at Dan's In downtown Pomeroy.
of Storytelling.
Commissioners where -infor- there are local clubs around
See Page A5
rnation on 4-H was shared
and a proclamation signed.
the county with members
• canto service
The
4-H
Teen
leaders
earlibeing
_given a choice of over
:best kind of sacrifice.
er visited the Meigs . l ~8 dtfferent pro~ams on a
See Page A7 ·
Elementary third and fourth wtde range of subjects, ..
graders to talk about 4-H and . She suggests that fanulies
wiU be going to the other who ~ere .unable to attend
school districts later this the kickoff event, but · are
WEATHER
month. Children at least ei~ht l&lt;J?king for a 4:H club to
years old and in the third JOin, or fo~ more mfo~on
~ may participate in pro- about getling mvolved m 4)CCt-oriented programs. Those H, should co1_1tact her at 992five and in kindergarten to 6696 or tunler.280@?su.edu.
eildtt years old can go into the They can · also vtstt the
Cfoverbud pro~ where the Extension Office · in the
program is acuvity based and Meigs County annex on
non-competitive.
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy,
Cas.sie
Turner, . 4-H to pick up information. Last
Educator for . the OSU year over 500 youth were Sewing Projects are, not just for girls. These boys practice a
basic sewing technique at the 4-H kickoff.
·
Extension Office, ooted that enrolled in 4-H.

OBITUARIES

INSIDE

Spring forward
this Sunday
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

GALLIPOLIS - It will
be time to spring forward
one hour on Sunday, and as
you tum the clock ahead,
also .think about changing
the batteries .in your home
smoke detectors.
In conjunction with the
public education program,
"Change Your Clocks,
Change Your Batteries,"
the Ohio · Department of
Commerce's Division of
State Fire Marshal and
local fire departments
encourage Oh10ans to
make it a habit to change

© aoo8 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

Pluse ... Sprlns. A3

.

From new

•
.'' .

~

;

~

J.

REED

BREE~MYDAILYSENTINEL.COtJ

POMEROY.- The result
of one county-wide primary
race will not be finally
determined until 122 provisional ballots are included
in an official ballot count
later this month.
With 3,955 Republican
ballots cast, Peggy Yost of
Rutland appears to be the
winne~ over Marty Cline of
Pomeroy in the GOP primary race for county treasurer, but the difference is
.only 33 votes . Yost
received 1,848 votes; and·
Cline, 1,815 - 50.45 per-

We have a
loan to fit
your needs

Home National Bank, we understand bow Important It Is to have a little
extra mohey around for your unique needs.. home theater system, a
champion purebred dog, a jacuzzi Or a new concrete ~rln:way. That•s why
we're offering you our Personal Loan services.

The Any Purpose Loan Store
;

cent to 49.55' percent.
The outcome of the race
will be determined at 8:30
a.m. on March 27, when
the board conducts its official count, according to
Becky Johnston, deputy
director of the Board of
Elections. That's when the
provisional ballots now
being held by the board
will be added to the mix.
Johnston said the 122 provisional ballots cast during
Thesday's primary· will be
added to ·the· ballots already
cast and counted at the polls
and during early and absentee voting . The board
mailed 890 absentee ballots,

Ple81e see River, A:S

Racine
questions
permit fee
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVDAILYSENTiNEL.COM

Please ... 'lfeasurer, A1

Please see·Radne, AJ

'-----u to a cruise

Racine 740-949-2210
Syracuse 740-992-63~3
•

RACINE - The ·Ohio
River was expected to crest
at I a.m. this morning in
Racine at a level of 39.6
feet, putting it just below
flood stage, according to a
spokesperson from the
Racine Locks and Dam.
The water was expected
to be less than two fe~t
below flood stage.in Racine
which is 41 feet. The Ohio
River is expected to crest iii ·
Pomeroy sometime today
just below flood stage .
which is 46 feet. At 5 p.m.
yesterday the gauge in the
Pomeroy Parking Lot read
43 feet with water well into
"the_dip" and splashi.2j.into
Iipper parkmg lot.
The Ohio River began to
noticeably rise on Thesday
according to National
Weather Service readings at
the Racine Locks and Dam.
The Racine Locks also had
a busy night around 3 a.m.
Thursday when witnesses
said three barges become
loose from the Gerald
Boggs, a vessel owned by
American Electric Power.

and received 813 back from
voters - a 91 percent
return rate. All absentee ballots were counted after polls
closed on Election Day,
with the ballots cast at
precinct polling places.
Johnston said the board
has rtot calculated how
many of the provisional bal •
lots cast were for the
Republican primary and
how many were fgr the
Democratic race, 'but said
the board will not declare a
winner until after the March
27 count.
Provisional ballots are

Provisional ballot count to
detertnine treasurer race
Bv BRIAN

Annie's Mailbox
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Faith • Values
As-7
Movies
A3
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.Obituaries ·
A3
B Section
sports
Weather
As

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE
· - Racine
Village Council is questioning a solid waste hauling
permit fee billed from the
Meigs County Health
Department.
Racine is the only village
in Meigs tounty that provides its ,own refuse service
and hauls the trash away to
a distributor. The Meigs
County Health Department ·
recently billed Racine for a
solid waste hauling permit
which is $100 plus a sur"
charge of $35 per truck. The
village has one truck and is
looking at a bill of $135.
Clerk Treasurer Dave
Spencer who'd received the
information
from
the .
MCHD, said the permit was
basically going to cost
Racine $135 to "allow us to
pick up our trash."
Spencer said he had

~n.onPqeA8

16 PAGES

'

Ohio River
crests today

' HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 S1',C110NS -

Pluse see 911, A3
.

4-Hers

INDEX

computer equipment to be
used for the 911 call center
must be kept at a closelyregulated temperature.
Sheets said the are:;t will
also require some new.
wiring, roof repairs, creation
of sleeping areas for crew,
and construction of a kitchen
area. The wing must also be

�I

Frida~,

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Community Cal~ndar
Public meetings

the Community Center.
POMEROY Meigs
County
Genealogical.
TUesday, March 11
Society 5 p.m. at the Meigs
REEDSVILLE -Olive
Museum. Open to the pubTownship Trustees, 6:30
lic.
p.m., township garage.
HARRISONVILLE
ATHENS - Area 14
Harrisonville 255, O.E.S.,
Workforce
Investment
7:30p.m. at the hall. Ladies
Board, . 8 a.m., Ohio
to take decorated hats.
University Inn.
POMEROY Meigs
Wednesday, March 12
High
School
winter
sports
•
POMEROY - Bedford
banquet, 6:30 p.m.' at the
Friday, March 7
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
cafeteria. Take vegetable
POMEROY
at the town hall.
Alzheimers
Caregivers and dessert.
Thursday, March 13
Support group meeting,
~vents noon Friday. Yvonne SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club,
Stover, speaker.
,
6:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Sunday, March 9
Monday, March 10
ALBANY -"Gospel
POMEROY -Big Bend Community Center. Joy
Jam Session," 6-8 p.m., Farm Antiques Club, 7:30 Bentley to give program on
· Carpenter Baptist Church, p.m., Mulberry Community hydrangeas.
RACINE
- . The
30711 Ohio 143. Public Center.
Sonshine
Circle,
7 p.m,. at
invited to participate.
Thesday, March 11
SYRACUSE
The the
Bethany
United
Scheduled second Sunday
of each month. Questions Syracuse Community Center Methodist Church. Easter
to Pastor Whitt Akers, Board of Directors, 7 p.m. at basket "meal exchange."

Clubs and
organizations

Church

Hostesses, Edie Hubbard
and Blondena Rainer.
CHESTER Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.
Refreshments:

Other events
Saturday, March 15
TUPPERS PLAINS Free clothing giveaway, 9
a.m. to noon, Bethel
Worship Center, Route 7.
Clothing for newborns to
children's size 14. contact
church at 667-6793.

Birthdays
Thesday, March 11
POMEROY Marie
Hauck will observe her 91st
birthday on March II.
Cards may be sent to her at
644 Osborne St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

Professor to conduct auditions
teach
the
Alexander mas and possibly films. The.
Technique since 1995. Her McPAC is seeking people
training and background who want to become Part of
include
Alexander a permanent drama group.
Technique certification from Everyone does not have to
the Alexander Alliance act. Dramas require carpenSchool in Philadelphia, work ters, electricians, sound
with Wolf Trap institute for technicians, seamstresses,
Early Learning Through the artists and people with variArts and the California ous skills.
Theatre Center in San Jose.
"Ten Nights in a BarLee recently published a room" was one of the bestchapter on Alexander known melodramas on the
Technique and actor training old showboats. Jack Fowler,
in ·the book, Movement for president of McPAC, seeks
Actors. She is the daughter to recreate the flavor of the
of the Revs. Jack and Nancy showboats that once cruised
Mayes of Point Pleasant.
the rivers of America. The
Teresa Lee
The Mason County production is expected to be
Lee has a rich background Performing Arts Council is ready for presentation in
in producing drama · with fortunate to have someone early summer.
Audition times are 7-9
young people, training with Ms. Lee's credentials
drama education and direct- to hold the first auditions p.m. Friday, March 14 and
ing theater for young audi- for the first production of 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday,
ences. She is also a move- what is expected to be many March 15. For information,
ment specialist, certified to . melodramas, historical dra- call 675-7472 or 675-0144.

Bridges struck Department of Labor seminar comes to.~o
by barges
RIO GRANDE ·_ Does yqur business employees.
'
·
need assistance· to understand which labor
Sessions will cover the Fair. Labor
reopen
after
laws actually aRply to your business?
Standards Act, EEOC, ADA, child labor
•
•
An employer s best defense is basic know)- laws, OSHA, Family Medical Leave Act
JDSpectiOD

·
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
(AP)- A dozen barges that
broke free from a tow boat
on the Ohio River have
been secured and two
bridges they struck have
reopened after passing dam·
age inspections.
The accident is still under
investigation, Lt. Herb
Lumpp of the Coast Guard's
Barboursville office said
Thursday.
The tow vessel Darin
Adrien was pushing the
barges upriver a little before
I p.m. Wednesday when it
lost the tow in the swift current, Lumpp said.
The tied-together barges
first struck a CSX B&amp;O
railroad bridge, which
caused them to break apart.
Two of the barges then hit
the highway bridge connecting .Parkersburg to
Belpre, Ohio.
Both bridges were closed
until inspectors deemed them
safe for transit Wednesday
night, Lumpp said.
One of the. barges may
have been damaged and was
taken to a nearby fleeting
area .where it will undergo
repairs if needed.
None of' the cargo from
the 12 barges spilled into
' the water, said Lumpp. Ten
were hauling coal, one was
filled with lime · and the
other was empty.
The others have been
· moored near the accident
site until officials decide
whether to reconfigure the
original tow or break it
apart into two smaller, more
manageable tows.
Lumpp wasn't sure where
the barges were coming
from or heading to, or who
owned them ...

Friday, March 7,

edge of and compliance with the wage and
hour laws. The Ohio State University South
Centers Small Business Development Center
will host a one-day seminar to help employers understand current wage and hour laws.
This informational seminar is ·scheduled
f~r Thursday, AJ;lril 3! from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. at
Rio Grande ·uruvefSity, B.ob Evans Farms
Hall Room 216. Representatives from the
U.S. Department of Labor, the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC), and the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration (OSHA), will cover
current laws covering employers and

(FMLA), COBRA, ERISA, and 401k. The
experts will explain such topics as how to
compute and pay .wages properly, how to
determine which employees are exempt from
minimum wage or overtime, and how to
maintain proper records. Awareness of these
' topic~ wi!l help emp!oyers le~~n ~e chance
for vtolattons, penalties, and htlgatton.

To register for this seminar or for more
information, contact Joy Bauman at (740)
289-3727 or jbauman@ag.osu.edu. The
charge for this event .is $25 per person and
includes lunch an'd refreshments. The deadline for registration is Moiulay, March 31.

Parent needs to keep
closer eye on kids ·
see him, but I'm tired of
making the first move. He
visits other family members
who
live two blocks from
Dear Annie: What do you
me,
but
won't drop by here.
think of an .adult man over 40 - playing hide- I miss my mother and would
and-seek with small chil- love to have Dad in my life.
I've stopped calling and
dren? I have repeatedly told
visiting
in the hope that he ,
this man to st.op, but he continues. He is a member of will reach out to me. Is that
the family, so there is a lot the wrong way to handle it?
Should I quit whining and
of contact.
just
be content with a oneLast .week at a family gathering, I found him in a bed- sided relationship? room with the door shut and Missing Dad in Kentucky
Dear Missing Dad:
the lights out, playing hideThere
is no right or wrong
and-seek with my 3-year-old
grandchild. I nave expressed way. The question to ask is,
my concerns to the child's "Do I want a relationship
parents (my son and daugh- with Dad?" If SO, the WO{k
ter-in-law), but they think will be on your shoulders. If ·
you miss him and can learn
this man is 'just a big kid."
Will you please write to accept the little he offers,
something on the actions of then continue calling and
a pedophile? - S~attle visiting. Over time, y'ou
might find that he's .recepGrandmother
Dear Seattle: Most adults tive to a closer relationship.
Dear Annie: I am writil)¥,
who play with children are
perfectly OK, but if this man in response to "Mr. Mom, '
IS looking for ways to get who is upset because his ~x­
your 3-year-old grandchild wife never wants to see
alone, it is cause for concern . . their 13-year-old dau~hler
Pedophiles usually seem and he cannot find reliable
normal, even respectable, babysitters so he can go ,out ·
..
but they often prefer the with his girlfriend.
Hello?
Most
babysitters
company of children and
be~in sitting at 13 years old.
arrange to be near them through work, activities or I d1d, and so did my friends.
adult relationships that · His daughter is too old for a
enable them to be around sitter, and if she went to her
young children on a regular mom's house, she could cerbasis. They often "groom" tainly stay by herself. It's
the children by playipg time for them to realize she
child-centered games, bring- is not a baby anymore. ing them gifts, making them Kim in Elkhart, Ind.
Dear Kim: It's true that
feel special and creating
many
kids start working .as
trust. (With older children, it
can include arranging parties . babysitters when they are 13
and outings.) Inappropriate and most are quite capable.
physical contact happens However, states have differgradually, and often parents ent re'strictions on leaving
are unaware anythmg is minor children home alone,
going on until it's too late. depending on the maturity ·of
This is why it is so important the child, the length of time
to educate children about the child is left alone and at
good 3Jid bad touching, and what time' of day the parents
to make sure they tell their are. gone. Before assuming ·
parents when anything hap- this particular 13-year-old
pens or if they are uncom- girl can be left alone, the-parfortable with certain people. ents should check their local
Young children should state guidelines.
not be left unsupervised
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
with someone w110 arranges ten by Kathy Mitchell and
to get them alone in a dark Mart;Y Sugar, longtime edi·
room with the door closed. tors of the Ann Landers
Talk to· your son again and column. Please e-mail your
· show him this letter. He questions to anniesmailneeds to keep a closer eye box@comcast.net, or write
on the situation.
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Dear Annie: I am a 32- Box 118190, Chicago, ,IL
year-old gay male living 60611. To find out more
with HIV. My mother died about Annie's Mailbox,
last year and all I have left is and read features by other
my dad. He knows I'm gay Creators Syndicate writers
and that I have HIV, but he and cartoonists, visit the
chooses to keep his distance. Creators Syndicate WJib
He talks to me if I call or go page at www.creators.co'l'.
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

2008

www .mydailysentinel.com

:.Obituaries

2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

591-1236.
Thursday, March 13
FOREST RUN - Rev.
Kerry Wood to speak at
community Lenten service,
7 p.m., Forest Run United
Methodist Church.

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Professor Teresa
Lee from the Appalachian
State University Department
· of Theatre and Dance will
be in Point Pleasant March
14-15 to conduct auditions
· for "Ten Nights in a Barroom," an 1854 Temperance
Melodrama by Timothy.
. Shay Arthur. ,
Lee is associate professor
of Appalachian Young
People's Theatre. She holds a
B.F.A. from Memphis State
University and an M.F.A.
from University of North
Caroline in Greensboro.
Lee
joined
the
Department of Theatre and
Dance in 1988. She teaches
· acting, creative drama and
stage movement and serves
as the Artistic Director for
the Appalachian Young
People's Theatre.

PageA2

March 7,

Aqdrey M. Cremeans

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

University of North C~rolina student body .
president·fatally shot; police call killing random

BY JoEov McCREARY
were erected fo r students to
.. COOLVILLE - Audrey M. Cremeans, 84, of Calaway
ASSO CiATED PRESS WRITER
leave
written memories. A
Rd. , Coolville, passed away Thursday, March 6, 2008 at St.
candlelighi vigil was held al
Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. The Pit, a popular campus '
Audrey was born June 26, 1923 in Coolville, to the late The Ul)iversity of North
gathering ' POL Dozens of
Thomas and Goldie Buchanan.
Carolina student body presicounselors
from both North
She is survived by two daughters, Violet and (Bob) dent was found shot to death
Carolina
and
nearby Duke
, Jenkms of Marietta and Dorothy Sue Lascar of Coolville; on a city street in what police
University were available to
· six grandchildren; and several great-grandchildren.
said Thursday appeared to ·
talk
to students.
, . In a,d!lition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her be a random crime, stunning
strange thillfj, how
'The
·. husband, George Cremeans in 1991; a son, Thomas; two step- the campus community who
the
last
time I saw her we
~ons, .Earl and Joe Cremeans; and a sister, Doris Cremeans.
knew her well.
made the types of plans
;• Services will be held II a m.. Saturday, March 8, 2008 at
Thousands of students
where you know you're
. White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville, with Edsel Hart gathered silently on campus
going
to run into someone,"
~ qffic.iating. Burial will be in the Meigs Memory Gardens.
to mourn Eve Marie Carson,
said
Keegan
Delancie, a
. . Fnends may call at the funeral home from 4-7 p.m. Friday. whose body was discovered
se nior from Los Angeles
1 · You can sign the online guestbook at www.white- about a mile away early
AP P,hoto and fellow Morehead schol : schwarzelfuneralhome.com.
Wednesday. The 22-year- North Carolina students gather quring a memorial for ar 'T d like to think someold senior from Athens, Ga., University of North Carolina student body president Eve how we will again ."
had be.en shot several times, · Carson in Chapel Hill, N.C. Thursday. Carson was round
Carson was a prestigious
1ncludmg at least once m dead Wednesday morning around 5 ·a.m.
Morehead-Cain scholar and
. ' · ALBANY - Bessie Mae (Lee) Goodin, 86, Albany, left the head, police. said .
a North Carolina Fellow,
: 'this earthly '!'Orld on Thursday March 6, 2008 , to. begin her Officials said there are no God. I just found tht: car,"' connected.
taking part in a four-year
' eternal life and receive her rewards for Faith in Jesus Christ. suspects and no .arrests have Rice said.
Moe ser said there was leadership
development
Carson's body was found nothing. to link Carson's· progral'l1 for undergraduShe will join her. husband Pearl and son Johnnie there in been made.
·:· heaven having been separated from both of them earlier by . "We have lost someone on the street at an intersec- slaying to anyone on North ates. A premed student, she
whom we cherish and love," tion after neighbors report- Carol.ina's campus.
, physical death.
majored in political science
·'Bessie will leave behind for now, a grandson John P. university Chancellor James ed hearing shots about 5
"My information is she and biology, taught science
' (Tammy) Goodin , granddaughter Christina (Heath) Ja&amp;o; Moeser told a massive a.m. Wednesday in . an was an extraordinarily busy at a Chapel !-('ill elementary
: seven great-grandchildren, a s1ster-m-law Martha Goodin, crowd on the school 's Polk upscale residential area. It woman and it wasn't unusu- school, studied abroad in
: several nieces and nephews and special friends Julia ~lace quad. "We're all in a was not clear why she was al tor her to go to the office Cuba, and spent summers
state of shock."
in the area, which does not in the middle of the night," volunteerin g in Ecuador,
Stanley and Cheryl Douglas.
.
Police
found
Carson's
have student housing.
Curran said. "But we don't Egypt and Ghana as part of
- The family would like to give recognition and thanks to
vehicle,
a
blue
2005
Toyota
Police publicly identified know that's what she was a school program.
~ose special family members and friends who were so dili··gent in helping to care for Bessie during these last few years. Highlander with Georgia the shooting victim as doing."
"I credit my prior experiCarson was last seen alive ences, especially my past
. We would like all of you to join her in a joyous reunion plates, about a mile from Carson on Thursday, and
: in heaven sol'l1e day by asking humbly, as she did, for the where her body was found: police Chief Brian Curran .I :30 a.m. Wednesday, when two Morehead summers, for
t'ord Jesus to come in to your life and allowing Him ·to be .after receiving a tip said her death appeared to she stayed behind at home preparing me Io get along
Thursday afternoon from a be a random act. Police had to do schoolwork while her with pretty much ·whatever
·.' I:.ORD of your Life.
.
, comes my way," she wrote
: ' · Services will be Sunday at 2 p.m. at Bigony-Jordan v.:iiness who spotted· it near no evidence other than her roommates went out.
the
main
drag
through
the
·
car,
and
the
medical
exam·
Moeser said he got a call in an e-mail posted on the
'"funeral Home. Friends may call Saturday 1-3 p.m .. at the
popular college town about iner said they was no indi- early Thursday informing Morehead Web site.
Ju.neral home. There will be no graveside services.
.
45 minutes west of Raleigh. ca! ion thai Carson had been him that Carson was the
In her position as student
Toby Rice, of Chapel Hill, sexually assaulted.
victim.
body president, she was a
told The Associated Press
Curran said police had
" It was shocking," he member of the university's
his wife discovered the car been in contact with author- said . "I sat down and said Board of Trustees. At inau' "
MIDDLEPORT - Robert Moodispaugh, 54, of and called 911.
ities in Alabama investigat- ·oh my God.' I couldn 't guration. she said, "This
Middleport, passed away Wednesday, March 5, 2008, at
"We saw ii on the new s ing the killing of .a female believe this."
year will be a year of
· 'Pleasapt Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
.
and we heard the woman is student
al
Auburn
On campus , students growth and inclusion. ...
. • Bom Oct. 3, 1953, in Middleport, he was the son of the the president of the student University, but added that passed out daisies and car- What an aniazing year this
late Homer Moodispaugh and Mildred ·Carol Barrett body, and she goes, '.Oh my the cases do not appear to be nations, and large boards is going to be."
Terrell. He was a laborer.
' .. Surviving are his wife, Julia Moodispaugh of
, Middleport; sons, . Robert and Crystal Moodispaugh of
at Point Pleasant, W.Va. by
"By taking the time to
' Plain City and Adam and Debbie Moodispaugh , Pataskala;
Friday
evening
with
a
crest
change
the batteries and by
.sisters: Virginia and Larry Lautermilt of Salem Center,
of
41
.84,
slightly
above
the
testing them monthly, you
. Darlene and Roger Searles of Columbus, Narsa and Sam
from
Page
A1
tlood
stage
of
40
feet.
The
from
Page
A
1·
may, save your life, the lives
..Terzopplous, Cheshire, and Kathy and Ron Guinther,
·
river
is
then
expected
to
of
your family members and
. Middleport; a brother, James and Cindy Terrell, Athens;
A spokesperson from the crest under tlood stage at the baitcries in their your property if tire ever
• grandsons: Brandon, Christopher, Zachary and Trenton
Racine
Locks and Dam said the Rober! C. Byrd Locks smoke detectors I wice a breaks out in your .home,"
· Moodispaugh; step grandchildren: Angela, Rodney and
·
the incident was minor and and Dam down river with a year - ai the beginning he added.
. Jacob; and several nieces and nephews.
Firefighiers sli II find that
vessel
apparently crest of 46.25, nearly four and end of daylight sav. Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a broth- the
. er, Darrell Eugene Moodispaugh; stepfather, Norman bumped the wall in the feet under : flood · stage ings time .
smoke detectors. which
; Terrell; and mother-in-law, Marica Capehart.
upper approach, knocking . which IS 50 .teet.
"The facts speak clearly typically retail for less
- . Service will be at 2 p.m. on Saturday, March 8, 2008, at some tows loose but those
According to NWS. the - · only a working smoke than $10, are often not pre: Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland with Tom Runyon tows were quickly reigned Ohio River crested at the detector can save your life," sent in homes or non-funcofficiating. Burial will be in Rocksprings Cemetery.
in. No damage was done to Belleville Locks and D•.un said State . Fire Marshal tional, Bell said. To date in
· The family will receive friends from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. on the locks and river traffic yesterday at 34.44 feet, sJg- Michael P. Bell. . "Ohioans 200R, more than 35 people
·, Ji'riday at the funeral home.
was not delayed.
nificantly below the flo~ can greatly reduce tragic have died in fires reported
As for the rising Ohio stage at 45 feet.
fire deaths and injuries by to the di.vision, Smoke
River, the National Weather
Of course all of these performing the simple task detectors were present and
Service does predict the readings are subjeci to of replacing smoke detector functioning in only three
batteries.
of Ihose fires .
, CHESHIRE - Lawrence Robert Yeauger, 79, ' of water will reach flood stage change and are not exact.
Cheshire, died Tuesday, March 4, 2008, at his residence.
. He was born Feb. 28, 1929, son of the late Mary ·Frances
Commi ssioner
Mick not determined specifically the end of 2008.
and Max well Yeauger.
Davenport
said
the
planned
how any modifications to
During their regular busi- · fle' had been in failing health for some time. He was a
renovations could be ·only the easl hospital wing will ness meeting, commission, former United States Army veteran, an equipment operator,
the tirst step in re-develop- be financed. He said the ers approved a bid from
from PageA1
and a truck driver and business owner.
ing the hospital building for Ohio Division of Public KAL Eleciric, Athens, in
' . ··He is survived by his son, Daron W. Yeauger, and his
: wife Lisa, a granddaughter, Darrian, and two grandsons, sealed off from the remain- county use. Commissioners Safety has indicated there the amount of $49,000, for
ow.n the building, and might be public funding the installation of new ball
' Casey and Xander, of Cheshire; a stepdaughter, Marri Anne ing area of the hospital.
·Darst of Gallipolis; tw() stepsons, William L. George of
The EMS operation will Davenport said once the available, and said modifi - · field lights. The project
,_vinton, and Richard D. Darst Jr. of Cheshire, and their share a dispatch are&lt;\ with east wing is renovated and cations for use of space by . will be financed through·
sealed off, other areas in the EM!\ could help the the
Community
'·mpther, Carolyn A. Yeauger of Gallipolis; a sister, Thelma
Jean and her husband, William Mayo of Florida; and two 911, Sheets said, and the worse condition could also county qualify for funding Development Block Grant
rrieces, Eugenia and her husband, Jim Lowery of Florida, current. EMS building locat- be repaired and. renovated through the U.S. Oftice of formula progr.am,
and Pam and her husband, Virgil Dill of Racine, and their ed directly behind the hos- and used for publ'ic office Homeland Security.
pital has begun to suffer space or other use. The
'children , Matthew and Jeremy Dill. .
If no other funding is
..~·N, C. l ~· .
, .- A memorial service will be held at the Fisher-Anderson- structural damage due to lobby area and central con·i- avaihible. the county has
: McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy at 2 p.m. · Sunday, slippage. The EMA center is dor have suffered the most money available in the gen~
' ,-.
d
~
'· ·
)..&gt;
located in a third-floor from non-use, due primarily eral fund, Sheets said. ·
: March 9, 2008, with Pastor Steve Little offiCiating.
lJ,l
: • A registry is available online at www.andersonmc- apartment on the third floor to a leaky roof.
The ·911 system is sched-;C
~
'&lt;" •. \
: ilaniel.com.
of the old county intirmary.
Sheets said the county has uled for implementation by
--

. Bessie Mae (Lee) Goodin

.

Robert Moodispaugh

•
RIVer

Spring

Lawrence Robert Yeauger

911

i/}t 'o,
i

I

Jl specia{sectjon in the f})ai(y Sentine[

to pub{icize your upcoming 'Easter 'Event!
For Example Only

Contact Dave
. or Brenda' at
·740-992-2155

.

:Act\aa.l Size lx:S

Person per ad
;,. ,.:~oo ... date Sun.,
oiU'Cil 23, 2008
Wed.
lili'CD 19, 2008

Caleb Jones

Happy Easter
Love, Aunt 8eth

Mall to or Drop off at The Dally Sentinel
.111 Court Street; Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Child's.Name1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
From _ _ _ _ __,__ _ _ _ _ _ __
Your Name ____________ __ __
Address---:-,.---- - - -- - - - ,. : Phone# - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , - - Ads Must Be Prepaid
•••••••••••

to have your
church included or
for more,
information.

Name of Church
Date,
Sunday Sunrise
Service
Morning Service
Evening Worship ·
7:00p.m.
Pastor's Name
Address of Church

Adveltlslng Deadline: Monday, March 17, 2008
Date of Publication: Wednesday, March 19; 2008

'

·· --------------~------------------~------------------------------------~-----. I, ;o.
I •

.

rules dealing with ' solid vehicles and facilities .
'
i•
waste. The health departLitile guessed between
ment has a solid waste pro- 15-20 clients pay the fee. He
gmm approved by the Ohio said in addition to local, prifrom Page A1
Environmental Proteciion vate haulers, the health
',
'.
Agency
allowing them to department charges the town
: asked the MCHD lor an inspect vehicles
that haul of Ravenswood and New
j tlxemption from the fee but trash and facilities which Haven, W.ya. the fee for
! was turned down. Rather dispose of it.
hauling and dumping trash
; ihan pa)( the fee at its most
Little said the permit fee at a local refuse station.
: recent meeting, council was established back in
According to a health
: pecided to table the issue 1999 and Racine had ~een · department spokesperson
: \IRtil discussing it with the inadvertently overlooked the permit fee and surcharge
; village solicitor to decide and therefore never billed. goes back into the solid
: ''what gives them the Little said the health depart- waste fund.
: authority to do this."
ment also charges the fees
Mayor J. Scott Hill said '
·: : Keith Little of the to private trash haulers but the village used to pay a fee
·' ' MCHD 's Environmental the rules don't provide an ·when hauling trash to Gallia
· Health division said the exemption for political sub- County and Little said the
: Ohio Revised Code autho- divisions. The fee is fee is ''common in mosl
. rizes local health depart- charged for businesses or in counties."
: roents to creates rul~ s and this case, .villages, that pick
Spencer said . he could
: regulations as necessary up and/or. deposit trash 'in understand the fee if some,. "for a better community" the county: Individuals are one was coming in and per; and the Ohio Administrative not charged for the fee. The forming a service "but
of they're not doing that."
· Code
allows. them to write fee includes' inspection
'
'

.. Racine
.l

1

SPAIN:', VAll FY

WWW.SPRINGVALLEYCINEMA.COM

from PageA1

6:30PM FOR EVENING SHOWS &amp;
12:30 PM FOR SAT I SUN MATINEES

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Auditions
Thumbelina

March 10 &amp; 11

Box Office Opens @.

issued for several reasons .
They are primarily cast by
previously registered voters who have moved from
one v.oting precinci to
another, either within the
state or within the county,
·after the deadline for
changing voter informaiion
at the elections board .

.., _

Pf.'RHJk\ll:\1 , . \ 10 ~ 'l \lkt.

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Treasure·r

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Jerry Tucker· Funeral Director In Charge
2nd st.... t

304-773-5561 M~•on, wv

fit0 \\ \hill!, \1 D.•!ilt"rr..JJ Hkmdlcnlll II \In. I ~Rglf M~lcr n
Jo&lt; RI J. II D•' '"'II K.\111Utll •ldll 1 ~jlD

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Frida~,

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Community Cal~ndar
Public meetings

the Community Center.
POMEROY Meigs
County
Genealogical.
TUesday, March 11
Society 5 p.m. at the Meigs
REEDSVILLE -Olive
Museum. Open to the pubTownship Trustees, 6:30
lic.
p.m., township garage.
HARRISONVILLE
ATHENS - Area 14
Harrisonville 255, O.E.S.,
Workforce
Investment
7:30p.m. at the hall. Ladies
Board, . 8 a.m., Ohio
to take decorated hats.
University Inn.
POMEROY Meigs
Wednesday, March 12
High
School
winter
sports
•
POMEROY - Bedford
banquet, 6:30 p.m.' at the
Friday, March 7
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
cafeteria. Take vegetable
POMEROY
at the town hall.
Alzheimers
Caregivers and dessert.
Thursday, March 13
Support group meeting,
~vents noon Friday. Yvonne SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club,
Stover, speaker.
,
6:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Sunday, March 9
Monday, March 10
ALBANY -"Gospel
POMEROY -Big Bend Community Center. Joy
Jam Session," 6-8 p.m., Farm Antiques Club, 7:30 Bentley to give program on
· Carpenter Baptist Church, p.m., Mulberry Community hydrangeas.
RACINE
- . The
30711 Ohio 143. Public Center.
Sonshine
Circle,
7 p.m,. at
invited to participate.
Thesday, March 11
SYRACUSE
The the
Bethany
United
Scheduled second Sunday
of each month. Questions Syracuse Community Center Methodist Church. Easter
to Pastor Whitt Akers, Board of Directors, 7 p.m. at basket "meal exchange."

Clubs and
organizations

Church

Hostesses, Edie Hubbard
and Blondena Rainer.
CHESTER Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.
Refreshments:

Other events
Saturday, March 15
TUPPERS PLAINS Free clothing giveaway, 9
a.m. to noon, Bethel
Worship Center, Route 7.
Clothing for newborns to
children's size 14. contact
church at 667-6793.

Birthdays
Thesday, March 11
POMEROY Marie
Hauck will observe her 91st
birthday on March II.
Cards may be sent to her at
644 Osborne St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

Professor to conduct auditions
teach
the
Alexander mas and possibly films. The.
Technique since 1995. Her McPAC is seeking people
training and background who want to become Part of
include
Alexander a permanent drama group.
Technique certification from Everyone does not have to
the Alexander Alliance act. Dramas require carpenSchool in Philadelphia, work ters, electricians, sound
with Wolf Trap institute for technicians, seamstresses,
Early Learning Through the artists and people with variArts and the California ous skills.
Theatre Center in San Jose.
"Ten Nights in a BarLee recently published a room" was one of the bestchapter on Alexander known melodramas on the
Technique and actor training old showboats. Jack Fowler,
in ·the book, Movement for president of McPAC, seeks
Actors. She is the daughter to recreate the flavor of the
of the Revs. Jack and Nancy showboats that once cruised
Mayes of Point Pleasant.
the rivers of America. The
Teresa Lee
The Mason County production is expected to be
Lee has a rich background Performing Arts Council is ready for presentation in
in producing drama · with fortunate to have someone early summer.
Audition times are 7-9
young people, training with Ms. Lee's credentials
drama education and direct- to hold the first auditions p.m. Friday, March 14 and
ing theater for young audi- for the first production of 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday,
ences. She is also a move- what is expected to be many March 15. For information,
ment specialist, certified to . melodramas, historical dra- call 675-7472 or 675-0144.

Bridges struck Department of Labor seminar comes to.~o
by barges
RIO GRANDE ·_ Does yqur business employees.
'
·
need assistance· to understand which labor
Sessions will cover the Fair. Labor
reopen
after
laws actually aRply to your business?
Standards Act, EEOC, ADA, child labor
•
•
An employer s best defense is basic know)- laws, OSHA, Family Medical Leave Act
JDSpectiOD

·
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
(AP)- A dozen barges that
broke free from a tow boat
on the Ohio River have
been secured and two
bridges they struck have
reopened after passing dam·
age inspections.
The accident is still under
investigation, Lt. Herb
Lumpp of the Coast Guard's
Barboursville office said
Thursday.
The tow vessel Darin
Adrien was pushing the
barges upriver a little before
I p.m. Wednesday when it
lost the tow in the swift current, Lumpp said.
The tied-together barges
first struck a CSX B&amp;O
railroad bridge, which
caused them to break apart.
Two of the barges then hit
the highway bridge connecting .Parkersburg to
Belpre, Ohio.
Both bridges were closed
until inspectors deemed them
safe for transit Wednesday
night, Lumpp said.
One of the. barges may
have been damaged and was
taken to a nearby fleeting
area .where it will undergo
repairs if needed.
None of' the cargo from
the 12 barges spilled into
' the water, said Lumpp. Ten
were hauling coal, one was
filled with lime · and the
other was empty.
The others have been
· moored near the accident
site until officials decide
whether to reconfigure the
original tow or break it
apart into two smaller, more
manageable tows.
Lumpp wasn't sure where
the barges were coming
from or heading to, or who
owned them ...

Friday, March 7,

edge of and compliance with the wage and
hour laws. The Ohio State University South
Centers Small Business Development Center
will host a one-day seminar to help employers understand current wage and hour laws.
This informational seminar is ·scheduled
f~r Thursday, AJ;lril 3! from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. at
Rio Grande ·uruvefSity, B.ob Evans Farms
Hall Room 216. Representatives from the
U.S. Department of Labor, the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC), and the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration (OSHA), will cover
current laws covering employers and

(FMLA), COBRA, ERISA, and 401k. The
experts will explain such topics as how to
compute and pay .wages properly, how to
determine which employees are exempt from
minimum wage or overtime, and how to
maintain proper records. Awareness of these
' topic~ wi!l help emp!oyers le~~n ~e chance
for vtolattons, penalties, and htlgatton.

To register for this seminar or for more
information, contact Joy Bauman at (740)
289-3727 or jbauman@ag.osu.edu. The
charge for this event .is $25 per person and
includes lunch an'd refreshments. The deadline for registration is Moiulay, March 31.

Parent needs to keep
closer eye on kids ·
see him, but I'm tired of
making the first move. He
visits other family members
who
live two blocks from
Dear Annie: What do you
me,
but
won't drop by here.
think of an .adult man over 40 - playing hide- I miss my mother and would
and-seek with small chil- love to have Dad in my life.
I've stopped calling and
dren? I have repeatedly told
visiting
in the hope that he ,
this man to st.op, but he continues. He is a member of will reach out to me. Is that
the family, so there is a lot the wrong way to handle it?
Should I quit whining and
of contact.
just
be content with a oneLast .week at a family gathering, I found him in a bed- sided relationship? room with the door shut and Missing Dad in Kentucky
Dear Missing Dad:
the lights out, playing hideThere
is no right or wrong
and-seek with my 3-year-old
grandchild. I nave expressed way. The question to ask is,
my concerns to the child's "Do I want a relationship
parents (my son and daugh- with Dad?" If SO, the WO{k
ter-in-law), but they think will be on your shoulders. If ·
you miss him and can learn
this man is 'just a big kid."
Will you please write to accept the little he offers,
something on the actions of then continue calling and
a pedophile? - S~attle visiting. Over time, y'ou
might find that he's .recepGrandmother
Dear Seattle: Most adults tive to a closer relationship.
Dear Annie: I am writil)¥,
who play with children are
perfectly OK, but if this man in response to "Mr. Mom, '
IS looking for ways to get who is upset because his ~x­
your 3-year-old grandchild wife never wants to see
alone, it is cause for concern . . their 13-year-old dau~hler
Pedophiles usually seem and he cannot find reliable
normal, even respectable, babysitters so he can go ,out ·
..
but they often prefer the with his girlfriend.
Hello?
Most
babysitters
company of children and
be~in sitting at 13 years old.
arrange to be near them through work, activities or I d1d, and so did my friends.
adult relationships that · His daughter is too old for a
enable them to be around sitter, and if she went to her
young children on a regular mom's house, she could cerbasis. They often "groom" tainly stay by herself. It's
the children by playipg time for them to realize she
child-centered games, bring- is not a baby anymore. ing them gifts, making them Kim in Elkhart, Ind.
Dear Kim: It's true that
feel special and creating
many
kids start working .as
trust. (With older children, it
can include arranging parties . babysitters when they are 13
and outings.) Inappropriate and most are quite capable.
physical contact happens However, states have differgradually, and often parents ent re'strictions on leaving
are unaware anythmg is minor children home alone,
going on until it's too late. depending on the maturity ·of
This is why it is so important the child, the length of time
to educate children about the child is left alone and at
good 3Jid bad touching, and what time' of day the parents
to make sure they tell their are. gone. Before assuming ·
parents when anything hap- this particular 13-year-old
pens or if they are uncom- girl can be left alone, the-parfortable with certain people. ents should check their local
Young children should state guidelines.
not be left unsupervised
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
with someone w110 arranges ten by Kathy Mitchell and
to get them alone in a dark Mart;Y Sugar, longtime edi·
room with the door closed. tors of the Ann Landers
Talk to· your son again and column. Please e-mail your
· show him this letter. He questions to anniesmailneeds to keep a closer eye box@comcast.net, or write
on the situation.
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Dear Annie: I am a 32- Box 118190, Chicago, ,IL
year-old gay male living 60611. To find out more
with HIV. My mother died about Annie's Mailbox,
last year and all I have left is and read features by other
my dad. He knows I'm gay Creators Syndicate writers
and that I have HIV, but he and cartoonists, visit the
chooses to keep his distance. Creators Syndicate WJib
He talks to me if I call or go page at www.creators.co'l'.
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

2008

www .mydailysentinel.com

:.Obituaries

2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

591-1236.
Thursday, March 13
FOREST RUN - Rev.
Kerry Wood to speak at
community Lenten service,
7 p.m., Forest Run United
Methodist Church.

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Professor Teresa
Lee from the Appalachian
State University Department
· of Theatre and Dance will
be in Point Pleasant March
14-15 to conduct auditions
· for "Ten Nights in a Barroom," an 1854 Temperance
Melodrama by Timothy.
. Shay Arthur. ,
Lee is associate professor
of Appalachian Young
People's Theatre. She holds a
B.F.A. from Memphis State
University and an M.F.A.
from University of North
Caroline in Greensboro.
Lee
joined
the
Department of Theatre and
Dance in 1988. She teaches
· acting, creative drama and
stage movement and serves
as the Artistic Director for
the Appalachian Young
People's Theatre.

PageA2

March 7,

Aqdrey M. Cremeans

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

University of North C~rolina student body .
president·fatally shot; police call killing random

BY JoEov McCREARY
were erected fo r students to
.. COOLVILLE - Audrey M. Cremeans, 84, of Calaway
ASSO CiATED PRESS WRITER
leave
written memories. A
Rd. , Coolville, passed away Thursday, March 6, 2008 at St.
candlelighi vigil was held al
Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. The Pit, a popular campus '
Audrey was born June 26, 1923 in Coolville, to the late The Ul)iversity of North
gathering ' POL Dozens of
Thomas and Goldie Buchanan.
Carolina student body presicounselors
from both North
She is survived by two daughters, Violet and (Bob) dent was found shot to death
Carolina
and
nearby Duke
, Jenkms of Marietta and Dorothy Sue Lascar of Coolville; on a city street in what police
University were available to
· six grandchildren; and several great-grandchildren.
said Thursday appeared to ·
talk
to students.
, . In a,d!lition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her be a random crime, stunning
strange thillfj, how
'The
·. husband, George Cremeans in 1991; a son, Thomas; two step- the campus community who
the
last
time I saw her we
~ons, .Earl and Joe Cremeans; and a sister, Doris Cremeans.
knew her well.
made the types of plans
;• Services will be held II a m.. Saturday, March 8, 2008 at
Thousands of students
where you know you're
. White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville, with Edsel Hart gathered silently on campus
going
to run into someone,"
~ qffic.iating. Burial will be in the Meigs Memory Gardens.
to mourn Eve Marie Carson,
said
Keegan
Delancie, a
. . Fnends may call at the funeral home from 4-7 p.m. Friday. whose body was discovered
se nior from Los Angeles
1 · You can sign the online guestbook at www.white- about a mile away early
AP P,hoto and fellow Morehead schol : schwarzelfuneralhome.com.
Wednesday. The 22-year- North Carolina students gather quring a memorial for ar 'T d like to think someold senior from Athens, Ga., University of North Carolina student body president Eve how we will again ."
had be.en shot several times, · Carson in Chapel Hill, N.C. Thursday. Carson was round
Carson was a prestigious
1ncludmg at least once m dead Wednesday morning around 5 ·a.m.
Morehead-Cain scholar and
. ' · ALBANY - Bessie Mae (Lee) Goodin, 86, Albany, left the head, police. said .
a North Carolina Fellow,
: 'this earthly '!'Orld on Thursday March 6, 2008 , to. begin her Officials said there are no God. I just found tht: car,"' connected.
taking part in a four-year
' eternal life and receive her rewards for Faith in Jesus Christ. suspects and no .arrests have Rice said.
Moe ser said there was leadership
development
Carson's body was found nothing. to link Carson's· progral'l1 for undergraduShe will join her. husband Pearl and son Johnnie there in been made.
·:· heaven having been separated from both of them earlier by . "We have lost someone on the street at an intersec- slaying to anyone on North ates. A premed student, she
whom we cherish and love," tion after neighbors report- Carol.ina's campus.
, physical death.
majored in political science
·'Bessie will leave behind for now, a grandson John P. university Chancellor James ed hearing shots about 5
"My information is she and biology, taught science
' (Tammy) Goodin , granddaughter Christina (Heath) Ja&amp;o; Moeser told a massive a.m. Wednesday in . an was an extraordinarily busy at a Chapel !-('ill elementary
: seven great-grandchildren, a s1ster-m-law Martha Goodin, crowd on the school 's Polk upscale residential area. It woman and it wasn't unusu- school, studied abroad in
: several nieces and nephews and special friends Julia ~lace quad. "We're all in a was not clear why she was al tor her to go to the office Cuba, and spent summers
state of shock."
in the area, which does not in the middle of the night," volunteerin g in Ecuador,
Stanley and Cheryl Douglas.
.
Police
found
Carson's
have student housing.
Curran said. "But we don't Egypt and Ghana as part of
- The family would like to give recognition and thanks to
vehicle,
a
blue
2005
Toyota
Police publicly identified know that's what she was a school program.
~ose special family members and friends who were so dili··gent in helping to care for Bessie during these last few years. Highlander with Georgia the shooting victim as doing."
"I credit my prior experiCarson was last seen alive ences, especially my past
. We would like all of you to join her in a joyous reunion plates, about a mile from Carson on Thursday, and
: in heaven sol'l1e day by asking humbly, as she did, for the where her body was found: police Chief Brian Curran .I :30 a.m. Wednesday, when two Morehead summers, for
t'ord Jesus to come in to your life and allowing Him ·to be .after receiving a tip said her death appeared to she stayed behind at home preparing me Io get along
Thursday afternoon from a be a random act. Police had to do schoolwork while her with pretty much ·whatever
·.' I:.ORD of your Life.
.
, comes my way," she wrote
: ' · Services will be Sunday at 2 p.m. at Bigony-Jordan v.:iiness who spotted· it near no evidence other than her roommates went out.
the
main
drag
through
the
·
car,
and
the
medical
exam·
Moeser said he got a call in an e-mail posted on the
'"funeral Home. Friends may call Saturday 1-3 p.m .. at the
popular college town about iner said they was no indi- early Thursday informing Morehead Web site.
Ju.neral home. There will be no graveside services.
.
45 minutes west of Raleigh. ca! ion thai Carson had been him that Carson was the
In her position as student
Toby Rice, of Chapel Hill, sexually assaulted.
victim.
body president, she was a
told The Associated Press
Curran said police had
" It was shocking," he member of the university's
his wife discovered the car been in contact with author- said . "I sat down and said Board of Trustees. At inau' "
MIDDLEPORT - Robert Moodispaugh, 54, of and called 911.
ities in Alabama investigat- ·oh my God.' I couldn 't guration. she said, "This
Middleport, passed away Wednesday, March 5, 2008, at
"We saw ii on the new s ing the killing of .a female believe this."
year will be a year of
· 'Pleasapt Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
.
and we heard the woman is student
al
Auburn
On campus , students growth and inclusion. ...
. • Bom Oct. 3, 1953, in Middleport, he was the son of the the president of the student University, but added that passed out daisies and car- What an aniazing year this
late Homer Moodispaugh and Mildred ·Carol Barrett body, and she goes, '.Oh my the cases do not appear to be nations, and large boards is going to be."
Terrell. He was a laborer.
' .. Surviving are his wife, Julia Moodispaugh of
, Middleport; sons, . Robert and Crystal Moodispaugh of
at Point Pleasant, W.Va. by
"By taking the time to
' Plain City and Adam and Debbie Moodispaugh , Pataskala;
Friday
evening
with
a
crest
change
the batteries and by
.sisters: Virginia and Larry Lautermilt of Salem Center,
of
41
.84,
slightly
above
the
testing them monthly, you
. Darlene and Roger Searles of Columbus, Narsa and Sam
from
Page
A1
tlood
stage
of
40
feet.
The
from
Page
A
1·
may, save your life, the lives
..Terzopplous, Cheshire, and Kathy and Ron Guinther,
·
river
is
then
expected
to
of
your family members and
. Middleport; a brother, James and Cindy Terrell, Athens;
A spokesperson from the crest under tlood stage at the baitcries in their your property if tire ever
• grandsons: Brandon, Christopher, Zachary and Trenton
Racine
Locks and Dam said the Rober! C. Byrd Locks smoke detectors I wice a breaks out in your .home,"
· Moodispaugh; step grandchildren: Angela, Rodney and
·
the incident was minor and and Dam down river with a year - ai the beginning he added.
. Jacob; and several nieces and nephews.
Firefighiers sli II find that
vessel
apparently crest of 46.25, nearly four and end of daylight sav. Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a broth- the
. er, Darrell Eugene Moodispaugh; stepfather, Norman bumped the wall in the feet under : flood · stage ings time .
smoke detectors. which
; Terrell; and mother-in-law, Marica Capehart.
upper approach, knocking . which IS 50 .teet.
"The facts speak clearly typically retail for less
- . Service will be at 2 p.m. on Saturday, March 8, 2008, at some tows loose but those
According to NWS. the - · only a working smoke than $10, are often not pre: Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland with Tom Runyon tows were quickly reigned Ohio River crested at the detector can save your life," sent in homes or non-funcofficiating. Burial will be in Rocksprings Cemetery.
in. No damage was done to Belleville Locks and D•.un said State . Fire Marshal tional, Bell said. To date in
· The family will receive friends from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. on the locks and river traffic yesterday at 34.44 feet, sJg- Michael P. Bell. . "Ohioans 200R, more than 35 people
·, Ji'riday at the funeral home.
was not delayed.
nificantly below the flo~ can greatly reduce tragic have died in fires reported
As for the rising Ohio stage at 45 feet.
fire deaths and injuries by to the di.vision, Smoke
River, the National Weather
Of course all of these performing the simple task detectors were present and
Service does predict the readings are subjeci to of replacing smoke detector functioning in only three
batteries.
of Ihose fires .
, CHESHIRE - Lawrence Robert Yeauger, 79, ' of water will reach flood stage change and are not exact.
Cheshire, died Tuesday, March 4, 2008, at his residence.
. He was born Feb. 28, 1929, son of the late Mary ·Frances
Commi ssioner
Mick not determined specifically the end of 2008.
and Max well Yeauger.
Davenport
said
the
planned
how any modifications to
During their regular busi- · fle' had been in failing health for some time. He was a
renovations could be ·only the easl hospital wing will ness meeting, commission, former United States Army veteran, an equipment operator,
the tirst step in re-develop- be financed. He said the ers approved a bid from
from PageA1
and a truck driver and business owner.
ing the hospital building for Ohio Division of Public KAL Eleciric, Athens, in
' . ··He is survived by his son, Daron W. Yeauger, and his
: wife Lisa, a granddaughter, Darrian, and two grandsons, sealed off from the remain- county use. Commissioners Safety has indicated there the amount of $49,000, for
ow.n the building, and might be public funding the installation of new ball
' Casey and Xander, of Cheshire; a stepdaughter, Marri Anne ing area of the hospital.
·Darst of Gallipolis; tw() stepsons, William L. George of
The EMS operation will Davenport said once the available, and said modifi - · field lights. The project
,_vinton, and Richard D. Darst Jr. of Cheshire, and their share a dispatch are&lt;\ with east wing is renovated and cations for use of space by . will be financed through·
sealed off, other areas in the EM!\ could help the the
Community
'·mpther, Carolyn A. Yeauger of Gallipolis; a sister, Thelma
Jean and her husband, William Mayo of Florida; and two 911, Sheets said, and the worse condition could also county qualify for funding Development Block Grant
rrieces, Eugenia and her husband, Jim Lowery of Florida, current. EMS building locat- be repaired and. renovated through the U.S. Oftice of formula progr.am,
and Pam and her husband, Virgil Dill of Racine, and their ed directly behind the hos- and used for publ'ic office Homeland Security.
pital has begun to suffer space or other use. The
'children , Matthew and Jeremy Dill. .
If no other funding is
..~·N, C. l ~· .
, .- A memorial service will be held at the Fisher-Anderson- structural damage due to lobby area and central con·i- avaihible. the county has
: McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy at 2 p.m. · Sunday, slippage. The EMA center is dor have suffered the most money available in the gen~
' ,-.
d
~
'· ·
)..&gt;
located in a third-floor from non-use, due primarily eral fund, Sheets said. ·
: March 9, 2008, with Pastor Steve Little offiCiating.
lJ,l
: • A registry is available online at www.andersonmc- apartment on the third floor to a leaky roof.
The ·911 system is sched-;C
~
'&lt;" •. \
: ilaniel.com.
of the old county intirmary.
Sheets said the county has uled for implementation by
--

. Bessie Mae (Lee) Goodin

.

Robert Moodispaugh

•
RIVer

Spring

Lawrence Robert Yeauger

911

i/}t 'o,
i

I

Jl specia{sectjon in the f})ai(y Sentine[

to pub{icize your upcoming 'Easter 'Event!
For Example Only

Contact Dave
. or Brenda' at
·740-992-2155

.

:Act\aa.l Size lx:S

Person per ad
;,. ,.:~oo ... date Sun.,
oiU'Cil 23, 2008
Wed.
lili'CD 19, 2008

Caleb Jones

Happy Easter
Love, Aunt 8eth

Mall to or Drop off at The Dally Sentinel
.111 Court Street; Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Child's.Name1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
From _ _ _ _ __,__ _ _ _ _ _ __
Your Name ____________ __ __
Address---:-,.---- - - -- - - - ,. : Phone# - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , - - Ads Must Be Prepaid
•••••••••••

to have your
church included or
for more,
information.

Name of Church
Date,
Sunday Sunrise
Service
Morning Service
Evening Worship ·
7:00p.m.
Pastor's Name
Address of Church

Adveltlslng Deadline: Monday, March 17, 2008
Date of Publication: Wednesday, March 19; 2008

'

·· --------------~------------------~------------------------------------~-----. I, ;o.
I •

.

rules dealing with ' solid vehicles and facilities .
'
i•
waste. The health departLitile guessed between
ment has a solid waste pro- 15-20 clients pay the fee. He
gmm approved by the Ohio said in addition to local, prifrom Page A1
Environmental Proteciion vate haulers, the health
',
'.
Agency
allowing them to department charges the town
: asked the MCHD lor an inspect vehicles
that haul of Ravenswood and New
j tlxemption from the fee but trash and facilities which Haven, W.ya. the fee for
! was turned down. Rather dispose of it.
hauling and dumping trash
; ihan pa)( the fee at its most
Little said the permit fee at a local refuse station.
: recent meeting, council was established back in
According to a health
: pecided to table the issue 1999 and Racine had ~een · department spokesperson
: \IRtil discussing it with the inadvertently overlooked the permit fee and surcharge
; village solicitor to decide and therefore never billed. goes back into the solid
: ''what gives them the Little said the health depart- waste fund.
: authority to do this."
ment also charges the fees
Mayor J. Scott Hill said '
·: : Keith Little of the to private trash haulers but the village used to pay a fee
·' ' MCHD 's Environmental the rules don't provide an ·when hauling trash to Gallia
· Health division said the exemption for political sub- County and Little said the
: Ohio Revised Code autho- divisions. The fee is fee is ''common in mosl
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: roents to creates rul~ s and this case, .villages, that pick
Spencer said . he could
: regulations as necessary up and/or. deposit trash 'in understand the fee if some,. "for a better community" the county: Individuals are one was coming in and per; and the Ohio Administrative not charged for the fee. The forming a service "but
of they're not doing that."
· Code
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�OPINION

The Daily .Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher ·
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

PageA4

VIEW

Not.working
System fails ·middle class America
' Dear Editor:
I am concerned about middle class Americans. We have

been duped by the media into believing that we need all
sorts of things to make ourselves happy and achieve the
American Dream. It is not ·a dream but a nightmare. Americans are so far in debt and getting further into a pit
of despair. We need it all now and sometime in the future
pay it back later. What we have been doing is making a
small number of institutions rich and _making ourselves
poor. Banks, credit card companies and financial institutions are working hard to keep you in debt. Hey, at least
you look successfuL
·
We are financing our homes, .our cars, our food and even
our clothes. We look successful but are actually in worse
·shape than people who are in poverty; they do not owe hundreds of thousands of dollars. By 'the way, the word mortgage means death grip. There are many simple ways of getting out of debt and to start building a bank account.
Pay off.your debts, save and buy with cash. The system
we are in is not working for the American working class.
Get out of slavery, that is what I am doing. If you warit to
play big shot and finance the rest of your life do not worry.
They now have a "reverse mortga~e" so the banks can own
your home and take it when you dte after years of paying to'
close out your mortgage.
Todd Bissell

Friday, March 7,

2008

Terry
Mattingly

King's College are convinced that if their students
can make it-there, they can
make it anywhere.
- The college is based in a
45 ,000-square-foot "campus," with offices on the
15th floor and classrooms, a
small library, a . wbrkout
room, student lounge · and
other basic facilities on two
floors underground. There
are only 220 students, but ·
administrators expect 130
freshmen next fall, said Eric
Bennett, deal) of students.
This is not a normal
Christian college setting
and everyone knows it.
Qu'lf(ets of students live
in one-bedroom apartments
in two high-rise buildings
nearby on 6th Ave. Student
life activities revolve
around flexible activities innine academic houses
na.med after leaders selected
by earlier students -·
Elizabeth I, SoJourner
Truth, Winston Churchill,
C. S. Lewis, Dietrich
Bonhoeffer,
Ronald
Reagan, Margaret Thatcher,
Clara Barton and Susan B.
Anthony.
It's hard to exp,lain a college's mission to outsiders
who con'sider its core values

a kind of heresy against the
status quo. As a Village
Voice profile put it: "King's
students adjust well to the
style and pace of midtown,
ihough their relationship
with the city is never qutte
clear: Are -they here to contribute to New York? Or
save it?"
A recent Washington Post
style feature contrasted an
after-hours student chat
group about the writings of
Protestant hero John Calvin
with what it called a more
typical Saturday-night student scene in mid-town
Manhattan , which would
offer "mind-altering substances, which -segue to
deafening music , which
ultimately leads to nudity."
Continuing with its "Sex
· in the Ci ty" theme, the story
added, "Dating is permitted," and "there are no rules
against sex, but it's quietly
discouraged."
Actually, Bennett said
students pledge to follow an
honor code backed by a
handbook full of traditional
doctrine . The sexuality
statement, for example, says
the college "promotes a
lifestyle ... that precludes
premarital and extramarital
intercourse, homosexual
practice .and other forms of
sexual behavior incompati ble with biblical admonitions."
But the city is what it is.
Thus, these fresh-faced
Christians froin 37 states
and 11 countries are going
19 run into some New
Yorkers who want to hook

up, sell drugs, flash tattoos
or worse. Bennett said that
no one flinches when studentS'Sit in bars all hours of
the night, studying for tests.
No one wants to build a
cloister.
"We're not Ol!t to police _
our students," he said. "You
could try to live in a bubble
here, too. But that's' not
what we're trying to do.
. That's what we're fighting
against."
It would be easy to say
that King's College is about
evangelism, said Oakes . It
would be easy to explain
that it hopes to help churches serve . the poor and
engage in other social ministries. That work is· essential, but the goal is to 'build a
college, not a church. And the long-range plan is to
live and grow in New York
City, as strange as that may
sound
"We love it when people
mock us ," said Oakes. "But
we honestly believe that, if
we keep doing what we do
here, in about two decades
people are going to be saying, 'Even though we dOR' t
agree with theqt, tho'se
King's people are interesting.' We want to make it
hard for people to avoid us." .(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
. Council for Christian
Colleges and Universities
and
leads
-the
GetReligion.org project to
siudy religion and the
news. )

,,

MR.MICHAElS,I'VE GOT 'CNN' ON

LOkNE
MICHAELS

LINE ONE, 'FACE THE NATION' ON LINE TWO
AND 'NPR' ON LI~E THREE ... THEY'D
LIKE TO COVER THIS WEEK'S 'SN L.'

Long Bottom

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, March 7, the 67th day of 2008. There are
299 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 7, 1965, a march by civil rights demonstrators
was broken up in Selma, Ala., by. state troopers and asheriff's posse.
On this date:
In 1849, horticulturist Luther Burbank was born in
Lancaster, Mass.
In 1850, in a 3-hour speech to the U.S. Senate, Daniel
Webster endorsed the Compromise of 1850 as a means of
preservi11g the Union.
,
In I876, Alexander Graham Bell received a patent for his
telephone.
Thought for Today: "More tears are shed over answered
prayers · than unanswered ones." - St. Teresa of Avila
(1515-1582).

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
th'an 3(}(] words. All/ellefs are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No ·
unsigned leiters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks 10 organizations and individuals will not be accepted for pub,lication.

The Daily Sentinel
Correction Pollc_lf

(USPS 213-960)
Ohlo·vauey Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
be accurate. If you kMw of an e~ror , through Friday, .111 Court Street,
·
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Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.

992-2156. ·
Our main number Is

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· Department extensions are:

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Edtlor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
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One of my favorite old
hymns is ''Tell Me the Stories
of Jesus." Actually, as far. as
hymns go, it's not all that old.
The words were· penned by
William H. Parker in 1885,
and the ·music was written by
Frederic A. Challinor in
1903. So that's just over a
,century ago. ' ~ Hark! The
· Herald Angels Sing," another
· of my favorites, was written
_ by Charles Wesley back in
the 18th century - almost
300 years ago!
· What those hymns have in
· common is the quality of
- thetr story-telling. "Tell Me
.. the Stories" mentions special
. moments of Jesus' life: the
: gathering of the children
around Jesus for blessing, the
marching into Jerusalem
, waving palm branches as
, Jesus rode on the back of a
, don~ey. Through this song,
-. we are transported back in
.. time, imagining ourselves in
that place - receiving Jesus'
blessing on our hea&lt;)s, joining
the crowd in shouting triumphantly that Jesus is King!
"Hark 1",puts us in the shep. "herds· fields as the angels pro. . claimed Jesus' birth, telling us
the story that . resonates
, through tl\e ages: "Mild he
l,ays his glory by, born that
. mail no more may die. Born
., to raise the sons of earth, born
to give them second birth:
Hark! The herald angels sing,
· 'Glory to the newborn king."'
Storytelling is powerfuL I
rediscovered the power of sto' ries this week as I read a book
-·given to me last Christmas:
"Listening is an Act of LAJve"
· edited by Dave:; lsay. This ·
book is a collection of stories
recorded by the StoryCorps
Project, a non-profit organization dedicated to recording the
-:stories of ordinary Americans.
::With a portable studio-q1,1ality
:-recording booth, StoryCorps
: travels around the country and
. :le'ts people come together for a
: •conversation. Generally, peo: pie come in pairs, grandmoth: er and grand-~ughter, father
·.and son, close fnends, etc., but
· •;~asionally a person comes
• -alone. All of them come to
-:~toryCorps to share their lives
~ - tellil)g stories of who they
· ; are and where they have been.
Some of these stories air
on National Public Radio's
''Morning Edition" on
Fridays, and they have
: become one ofthe most pop·ular features of the most pop.ular morning radio program
in the country. Why are these
stories so popular? Because
-tliey reveal to us aspects of
·'the human spirit that cross all
boundaries of gender, generation, class, and geography.
Stories from New YorR City
can resonate with folks like

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13 Weeks ... ... .. . . .. .'32.26
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Friday, March 7,

2008

·{

Pastor
Kerry
Wood

us in Appalachia. Our stories
can ring true to people in the
wilds of Montana and in the
smog 'o f Los Angeles.
Here is an example: Joseph
Dittmar is from Chicago, but
he was in New York City for
business
meetings
on
September 11, 200 L His
meeting was with people on
the l05th floor of the South
Tower of the World Trade
Center. He arrived at 8:30
a.m. At 8:48, the lights flickered. No one thought much
about it - then a volunteer
fire marshall for the company came .into the room and
announced that an explosion
had just happened in the
North Tower and they were
being asked to evacuate.
Joseph Dittmar described
ttie reluctance of the people
to abandon their meeting.
They were more aggravated
than anything else. They
entered the fire escapes and
started walking down the
mountain of stairs towards
the bottom of the building.
At the 90th tloor, the fire
escape door was propped
open and people were walk~
ing out of the stairwell.
"It became pretty evident
what people were doing,"
said Dittmar. "It wound up
being probably the thirty to
forty worst seconds of my life
because it was the first opportunity we had to see the North
Tower in an unbelievable
state of tumult. The plumes of
smoke five, six, seven stories
high. Flame redder than anything you' ve seen before, and
the ftre just spilling out of the
building. It was a beautiful
clear day, and we clearly saw
through the smoke and
flames the signs of the fuselage of a plane. We saw the
paper and the furniture and
the people falling from the
building, and it was an unbelievably gruesome sight And
I thought to myself, 'I'm not
going to stay here.'"
Dittmar continues to vividly recall the rest of the events
of that day - the heroics of
the firefighters and · police
that they met around the 30th
floor, the constant encouragement people gave to one
another as they struggled
down the thousands of steps,
the shock of impact when the
second· plane hit the South

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Tower, the escape out of the
building moments before it
.collapsed.
· Reading Dittmar's firstperson account of 9/11- put
me back in touch' with my
own feelings on that terrible
day almost seven years a~o. I
felt his anguish, empathized
with his unanswe~ble question: "why did I escape when
so many others died?" :J'he
power of the story made
those experiences teal for me,
. even though I wasn't there.
The stories of the Bible do
the same thing for us. When
we read about Elijah's struggles with depression and fear
as he ran from King Ahab
and Queen Jezebel, we discover God's presence in the
midst of trouble. When we
read about Jonah and great
fish, we learn what its like to
run away from God - and
. how God never stops pursuing those He loves. And
when we read about Jesus'
_agony on the cross, we are
brought face-to-face with the
God who goes beyond the
pale in taking on the pain of
sin and separation so that we
can come home to God..
Dittmer described his
homecoming . back
to
Chicago: "I called my wife for
the thousandth time and I said,
'Where are you?' She · said,
'I'm just getting ready to go to
church because they're having
a service. I'll just wait for you
if you're getting close.' I said,
' No, no, today's a good day to
go to church. It's a good place
to be.J' II meet you there.'
· "I walked into the back of
the church and opened the
door into the sanctuary. This
place was just packed. These
hundreds of people in the
church were all staring back
at me because they knew
what just had occurred. I
looked over to the right- to
the pew where we always sit,
and there was my wife, and
· there were my kids and my
family and my friends.
"My wife's real nondemonstrative, real quiet,
and she jumped over the
back of the pew and ran to
the back of tlie church and
gave me this gigantic hug
and kiss. And I knew that I
was home. I was home.''
I invite you to come to
church and hear again the
power of stories. Let's di'scover anew that we are
home together through the
life, death, and resurrection
of Jesus Christ.
(Kmy 'KOOd is the pastor of
Racine - United Methodist
Chureh, s1a Elm Street in
Roeine. Sunday worship is at
II am. Postor Kerry can be
reached at meineumc@sud-

tknlink.net.)

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Chances are good that
you know someone who is
in trouble. Battered by circumstances or ,weighed
down by discouragement,
this person you know may
feel as if he or she is at wit's
end and may even be asking ·
the question, "Why is God
letting this happen to me?"
And it may occur to you that
the hand of God has placed
you in the life of this individual to encourage or help.
One thing you certainly
DON'T want to do is to offer
trite or glib remarks that
patronize the pain or suffering of the other. For example,
one might say to the other
that the Lord never gives us
more hardship than we can
bear. While well intended, it
doesn't enter into the pain of
the other nor does it acknowledge the fact of his or her desperation. In fact, it isn't everi
correct biblically. What the
Lord doesn't Jet us have more
of than we can handle is
temptation. "No temptation
has seized you except what is
common to man. And God is
faithful; He will not Jet you
be tempted beyond what you
can bear. But when you are
tempted, He will also provide
a way out so tha.t you can
stand up under it'' (I
Corinthians I 0:13 NIV).
Someone being told that
God doesn't permit circumstances in her life that she
cannot handle may result in
the unhappy effect of bitterness or despair, especially
when she is overwhelmed
with a hurt or loss thilt just
doesn't go away. So what
perspective can you share
with another who is suffering? What is the truth of the
· matter that brings hope and
strength in such times of
utter brokenness?
Simply this. That God will
ultimately bring about His
deliverance in the life of the
one who will trust Him and
persevere because of hope in

tions that He permits in our
lives? "He Who did not spare
His own Son, but gave Him
up for us all - how will He
not
also give us all things?" .
Pastor ·
(Romans 8:32 NIV ).
Thorn
No, I'm not suggesting that
Mollohan you "wax on and on" theologically when keeping company with the hurting, but
knowing what God says in
His Word does empower you
Him. "We do not want you to to simply say to the hu[ling
be uninformed, brothers, one, as your tears mingle
about the hardships we suf- with theirs, "Hold on to
fered in the province of Asia. Jesus. Trust God through this.
We were under great pres- He understands and weeps
sure, far beyond our abibty to with you, too." But do not be
endure, so that we despaired an encourager in worn only.
even of life. Indeed, in our As a channel of God's comhearts we felt the sentence of fort and encouragement, be
death. But this happened that . an encourager in deed, too.
we might not rely on our- Be creative and be ready to
selves but on God, Who rais- go
beyond ~hat is necessary
es the dead" (2 Corinthians
to
be
the friend this other may
I:8-9 NN). So what can we
need.
Cards, help with
say about hardship and suffering ihat isn't the. result of errands or chores, or thoughtsin or selfishness on our part, ful gestures that remind this
but seem instead to be friend or acquaintance that
allowed by God for either no they're not alone may be all it
reason or reasons known only takes for him or her to contin- ·
to God? Ftrst we recall to ue to cling to the hope that
mind that."God works for the only Jesus can provide.
''Suppose a brother or sisgood of those who love Him,
who have been called accord- ter is without clothes and
ing to His purpose" (Romans daily food. ·-If one of you
8:28 NIV). Second, we ~ays to him, 'Go, I wish you
remember that while our well; keep warm and well
Lord will permit us to fed,' but does nothing about
.exhaust all our resources, his physical needs, what
expend all our strength, and· good is it? In the same way, .
even forfeit all our hopes and faith by itself, if it- is not
dreams, He is merely cleating accompanied by actions, is
tht; way in our hearts for His dead" (James 2:15-17 NIV).
So, stay on the lookout and
deliverance, His strength, and
eternal rewards that infinitely let God make you a source
dwarf our meager hopes and of true encouragement today.
(Thom Mollohan and his
shallow dreams.
Indeed, "He has delivered family have ministered in
us from ... deadly peril, and s&amp;uthern Ohio the past 12He will deliver us. On ·Him 112 years and is the author of
we have set our hope that He "The Fairy -Tale Parables."
· will continue todehver us" (2 He is the pastor of Pathway
Corinthians I :810 NIV). So if Community Church, which
this God can deliver us from - meets on Sunday mornings
the deadly peril of our sin _ at 455 Third Ave. He 1111lY be
through the atoning sacrifice reached for comments or
of His Son, can we not count questions by e-mail at pason Him to '-'hold onto us" torthom@pathwaygallipothrough the trials and tribula- lis. com)

·Leaders of other faiths to meet Pqpe Benedict
WASHINGTON (AP) Repre~ntatives of five nonChristian faiths will meet
with Pope Benedict XVI
during his first U.S. visit as
~ntiff next month.
The 45-minute event on
April 17 at the Pope John
Paul II Cultural Center in
Washington will include a
papal address, greetings
from the faith 'leaders and a
presentation of gifts symllolic of each tradition by
young members of the
respective communities.
There will be no formal

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dialogue among participants and Benedict is scheduled to
because of time constraints meet personally with three
on the pope's schedule, said Jewish leaders, three Muslim
Sister Mary Ann Walsh, leaders, two Buddhist leaders,
spokeswoman for the U.S. a Hindu leader and Jain leader.
Conference of Catholic
That group includes
Bishops.
_
Rabbi Gilbert S. Rosenthal
Benedict's Aptil 15-20 of the National Council of
visit to New York and Synagogues; Rabbi Joel
Washington includes an Myers of the New Yorkaddress to the · United based Rabbinical Assembly ;
Nations, a visit to ground Sayyid M. Syeed of the
zero, two outdoor masses at Islamic Society of North
baseball stadiums and a America and Imam Hassan
meeting with President Bush. AI-Qazwini of the Islamic
The interfaith gathering Center of America, a large
includes 200 i~Jvited gues,ts. mosque in Dearborn, Mich.

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The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our comn1unity

Global-warming doubters strike back

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

'FAITH • VALUES
A Hunger For More
The power of storytellhtg ·
-

Evangelical college in New York·City _
Any Jist of great cities 'in
the ancient Mediterranean
World wopld have to
include Rome, Alexandria,
Jerusalem, Antioch and
Corinth, or some other crucial crossroads near what
would
become
Constantinople.
Th11s, these cities became .
the five patriarchal sees of
Christianity in the first millennium.
"From day one, there was
a commitment to the dominant cities and regions of
that time," said l Stanley
Oakes, chancellor of King's
College in New York City.
"That's where the early
church flouri shed. That 's
where the early church did
its work .... People who care
about nations and culture
and economics have to care .
about what happens in great
cities."
Yet
any
study.
of
American Protestantism in
the early 21st century would
focus on Colorado Springs,
Colo., Grand Rapids, Mich.,
Wheaton, Ill., Orlando. Fla.,
and, perhaps, Dallas, Texas.
It would not include New
York,
·Los
Angeles,
Philadelphia,
Chicago,
Boston,
Houston,
Washington, . D.C., or the
other great cities that shape
this culture.
Oakes thinks that's tragic,
which is why he has dedicated a decade - backed by
Campus
Crusade For
Christ's vast network - to
building an evangelical college in the Empire State
Building. The leaders of

Page As

: -: rhe Daily Sentinel

Every few years, some
group of scientists, egged
on by the media, is persuaded to warn mankind of
some new danger facing the
human race. This triggers
William
the anxiety that always
Rusher
floats just below the conscious level in most people,
and serves the ~urposes of
the media by generating
several months of gratify- vince a good many othering headlines. It also serves wistl sensible people that
the purposes of the scien- human activity is responsitists, by giving them ble for the warming, and
months of flattering public- that we must slam on the
ity, not to mention the brakes or face disaster.
financial ·rewards that
A November editorial in
accompany
scientific The ·New York Times
papers on the subject.
spelled it out:" ... the conseThe excitement dies quences could be disas- ·
down in due course, but trous: further melting at the
there is always some new poles, sea levels rising high
peril being discovered. enough to submerge island
Remember the ozone hole? nations, the elimination of
And whatever happened to one-quarter or more of ihe
acid rain? ·
world's species, widespread ·
But by far the most famine in places like
durable scare in recent Africa, more violent hurriyears has been that generat- .canes." What 's more, there
ed 'by the supposed dangers is no time to waste: " ...the
of global warming. The world mu st stabilize the
Earth's climate is never emission of greenhouse
absolutely stable. It Is gases by 2015, begin to always either warming or reduce theth shortly there~ cooling by tiny fractions of
after and largely free itself
a degree per year, and of carbqn-emitting techrecently it has been warm- nologies by midcentury."
ing. By extrapolating this
In support of this nonprocess beyond any justifi- sen se, the Times offered the
cation, the usual scaremon- report of "the International
gers have managed to con- Panel on Climate Change, a

group of 2500 scientists
who collectively constitute
the world's most authoritative voice on global warm:
ing." In the ensuing months,
a major effort has been
made to establish that this
panel's view is the all-butunanimous opinion of the
world's climatologists on
the question.' It is, however,
no such thing. More than
19,000 s-cientists have
signed a petition saying
global warming is probably
natural and not a crisis. (The
complete list can be seen at
www.oism.org/pproject.)
The
International
Conference on Climate
Change is meeting this
week in New York City. Its
topic is ··olobal Warming :
Truth or Swindle?" and
according to the announcement, "More than 400 scientists, economists and
experts will meet ... to chal lenge the claim that global
warming is a 'crisis."'
Under , the sponsorship of
the Heartland Institute, 50
organi~ations are co-spon'
soring the event, including
the John Locke Foundation,
the George C. Marshall
Institute and 'the National
Center for Policy Analysis.
Among those participating will_ be Vaclav Klaus,
president of the Czech
Republic , who has long'

St. Patrick's Example

opposed the global-warming hysteria; Dr. Robert
Balling,
professor 'bf
C Ii matology at Arizona
State
University;
Dr.
Vincent Gr~y. executive
director of the New Zealand
Climate Coalition; Dr.
Frederick Seitz, president
emeritus of The Rockefelfer
University; and Dr. Willie
Soon, chief scien~e ad-viser
to the Science and Public
Policy Institute. ·
It is too much to hope tl'iat
even a gathering of e~pens
as impressive as this one
Will deter the global-warming hysterics. The latter are
hell-bent on forcing down
·emissions associated with
the u~e of fossil fuel, on
which the United States
relies ·for 85 percent of its
energy. This can be done
only by restricting •the supply or raising the cost of
energy ·_ especially coal,
which provides half of
America's electricity.
But it is heartening to
know - that the scientific
community ·is at last finding
its voice and speaking out
against such folly.

It is believed that Saint Patrick was
born in either Scotland or Wales
around the year 385 . Both his father
and his grandfather arc believed to
have been deacons iA the cliurch thus
he had been raised as a Christian.
When he was approximately sixteen
years old he was captured by Irish
raiders who sold him into slavery in
Ireland. His faith helped him survive
the many hardships of slavery in
Ireland, where he was forced to tend
sheep for six years until he escaped
and returned to Great Britain, where
he chose to enter the priesthood. The
trials and tribulations ofslovery only
served to deepen his faith and
inspired him to eventually return to
Ireland and preach the Gospel. He is
credit~d with 'converting the Irish 10
Christianity and is the patron Saint o
Ireland. After all he had been- through
one can only wonder why he so
tirelessly preached the Gospel to the
people of Ireland. We would do well
to emulate St. Patrick's example.
That is, instead of being bitter about
his enslavement among theIrish. he
took it as an opportunity to grow in
faith and love and returned in later
years to giv~ the greatest gift of
Love.

Bless those who persecute you; bless and
do 1101 curse. RtjtJice in those who rejoice,
. and weep with those who weep.
f\lew KJ, V. Romans Il:/4-15

- (William Rusher is , a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Stifdy of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)
·

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�OPINION

The Daily .Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher ·
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

PageA4

VIEW

Not.working
System fails ·middle class America
' Dear Editor:
I am concerned about middle class Americans. We have

been duped by the media into believing that we need all
sorts of things to make ourselves happy and achieve the
American Dream. It is not ·a dream but a nightmare. Americans are so far in debt and getting further into a pit
of despair. We need it all now and sometime in the future
pay it back later. What we have been doing is making a
small number of institutions rich and _making ourselves
poor. Banks, credit card companies and financial institutions are working hard to keep you in debt. Hey, at least
you look successfuL
·
We are financing our homes, .our cars, our food and even
our clothes. We look successful but are actually in worse
·shape than people who are in poverty; they do not owe hundreds of thousands of dollars. By 'the way, the word mortgage means death grip. There are many simple ways of getting out of debt and to start building a bank account.
Pay off.your debts, save and buy with cash. The system
we are in is not working for the American working class.
Get out of slavery, that is what I am doing. If you warit to
play big shot and finance the rest of your life do not worry.
They now have a "reverse mortga~e" so the banks can own
your home and take it when you dte after years of paying to'
close out your mortgage.
Todd Bissell

Friday, March 7,

2008

Terry
Mattingly

King's College are convinced that if their students
can make it-there, they can
make it anywhere.
- The college is based in a
45 ,000-square-foot "campus," with offices on the
15th floor and classrooms, a
small library, a . wbrkout
room, student lounge · and
other basic facilities on two
floors underground. There
are only 220 students, but ·
administrators expect 130
freshmen next fall, said Eric
Bennett, deal) of students.
This is not a normal
Christian college setting
and everyone knows it.
Qu'lf(ets of students live
in one-bedroom apartments
in two high-rise buildings
nearby on 6th Ave. Student
life activities revolve
around flexible activities innine academic houses
na.med after leaders selected
by earlier students -·
Elizabeth I, SoJourner
Truth, Winston Churchill,
C. S. Lewis, Dietrich
Bonhoeffer,
Ronald
Reagan, Margaret Thatcher,
Clara Barton and Susan B.
Anthony.
It's hard to exp,lain a college's mission to outsiders
who con'sider its core values

a kind of heresy against the
status quo. As a Village
Voice profile put it: "King's
students adjust well to the
style and pace of midtown,
ihough their relationship
with the city is never qutte
clear: Are -they here to contribute to New York? Or
save it?"
A recent Washington Post
style feature contrasted an
after-hours student chat
group about the writings of
Protestant hero John Calvin
with what it called a more
typical Saturday-night student scene in mid-town
Manhattan , which would
offer "mind-altering substances, which -segue to
deafening music , which
ultimately leads to nudity."
Continuing with its "Sex
· in the Ci ty" theme, the story
added, "Dating is permitted," and "there are no rules
against sex, but it's quietly
discouraged."
Actually, Bennett said
students pledge to follow an
honor code backed by a
handbook full of traditional
doctrine . The sexuality
statement, for example, says
the college "promotes a
lifestyle ... that precludes
premarital and extramarital
intercourse, homosexual
practice .and other forms of
sexual behavior incompati ble with biblical admonitions."
But the city is what it is.
Thus, these fresh-faced
Christians froin 37 states
and 11 countries are going
19 run into some New
Yorkers who want to hook

up, sell drugs, flash tattoos
or worse. Bennett said that
no one flinches when studentS'Sit in bars all hours of
the night, studying for tests.
No one wants to build a
cloister.
"We're not Ol!t to police _
our students," he said. "You
could try to live in a bubble
here, too. But that's' not
what we're trying to do.
. That's what we're fighting
against."
It would be easy to say
that King's College is about
evangelism, said Oakes . It
would be easy to explain
that it hopes to help churches serve . the poor and
engage in other social ministries. That work is· essential, but the goal is to 'build a
college, not a church. And the long-range plan is to
live and grow in New York
City, as strange as that may
sound
"We love it when people
mock us ," said Oakes. "But
we honestly believe that, if
we keep doing what we do
here, in about two decades
people are going to be saying, 'Even though we dOR' t
agree with theqt, tho'se
King's people are interesting.' We want to make it
hard for people to avoid us." .(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
. Council for Christian
Colleges and Universities
and
leads
-the
GetReligion.org project to
siudy religion and the
news. )

,,

MR.MICHAElS,I'VE GOT 'CNN' ON

LOkNE
MICHAELS

LINE ONE, 'FACE THE NATION' ON LINE TWO
AND 'NPR' ON LI~E THREE ... THEY'D
LIKE TO COVER THIS WEEK'S 'SN L.'

Long Bottom

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, March 7, the 67th day of 2008. There are
299 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 7, 1965, a march by civil rights demonstrators
was broken up in Selma, Ala., by. state troopers and asheriff's posse.
On this date:
In 1849, horticulturist Luther Burbank was born in
Lancaster, Mass.
In 1850, in a 3-hour speech to the U.S. Senate, Daniel
Webster endorsed the Compromise of 1850 as a means of
preservi11g the Union.
,
In I876, Alexander Graham Bell received a patent for his
telephone.
Thought for Today: "More tears are shed over answered
prayers · than unanswered ones." - St. Teresa of Avila
(1515-1582).

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
th'an 3(}(] words. All/ellefs are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No ·
unsigned leiters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks 10 organizations and individuals will not be accepted for pub,lication.

The Daily Sentinel
Correction Pollc_lf

(USPS 213-960)
Ohlo·vauey Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
be accurate. If you kMw of an e~ror , through Friday, .111 Court Street,
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One of my favorite old
hymns is ''Tell Me the Stories
of Jesus." Actually, as far. as
hymns go, it's not all that old.
The words were· penned by
William H. Parker in 1885,
and the ·music was written by
Frederic A. Challinor in
1903. So that's just over a
,century ago. ' ~ Hark! The
· Herald Angels Sing," another
· of my favorites, was written
_ by Charles Wesley back in
the 18th century - almost
300 years ago!
· What those hymns have in
· common is the quality of
- thetr story-telling. "Tell Me
.. the Stories" mentions special
. moments of Jesus' life: the
: gathering of the children
around Jesus for blessing, the
marching into Jerusalem
, waving palm branches as
, Jesus rode on the back of a
, don~ey. Through this song,
-. we are transported back in
.. time, imagining ourselves in
that place - receiving Jesus'
blessing on our hea&lt;)s, joining
the crowd in shouting triumphantly that Jesus is King!
"Hark 1",puts us in the shep. "herds· fields as the angels pro. . claimed Jesus' birth, telling us
the story that . resonates
, through tl\e ages: "Mild he
l,ays his glory by, born that
. mail no more may die. Born
., to raise the sons of earth, born
to give them second birth:
Hark! The herald angels sing,
· 'Glory to the newborn king."'
Storytelling is powerfuL I
rediscovered the power of sto' ries this week as I read a book
-·given to me last Christmas:
"Listening is an Act of LAJve"
· edited by Dave:; lsay. This ·
book is a collection of stories
recorded by the StoryCorps
Project, a non-profit organization dedicated to recording the
-:stories of ordinary Americans.
::With a portable studio-q1,1ality
:-recording booth, StoryCorps
: travels around the country and
. :le'ts people come together for a
: •conversation. Generally, peo: pie come in pairs, grandmoth: er and grand-~ughter, father
·.and son, close fnends, etc., but
· •;~asionally a person comes
• -alone. All of them come to
-:~toryCorps to share their lives
~ - tellil)g stories of who they
· ; are and where they have been.
Some of these stories air
on National Public Radio's
''Morning Edition" on
Fridays, and they have
: become one ofthe most pop·ular features of the most pop.ular morning radio program
in the country. Why are these
stories so popular? Because
-tliey reveal to us aspects of
·'the human spirit that cross all
boundaries of gender, generation, class, and geography.
Stories from New YorR City
can resonate with folks like

f

•

Mall Subecrlptlon
lnllde Melga County

13 Weeks ... ... .. . . .. .'32.26
26 Weeks .. ...... • ....'64.20
52 Weeks . .. . ... . . . .. 1127.11
Outside Melge County

13 Weeks ............. '53.55
26 Weeks ............'107 . tO
52 Weeks . ...........'214.21

Friday, March 7,

2008

·{

Pastor
Kerry
Wood

us in Appalachia. Our stories
can ring true to people in the
wilds of Montana and in the
smog 'o f Los Angeles.
Here is an example: Joseph
Dittmar is from Chicago, but
he was in New York City for
business
meetings
on
September 11, 200 L His
meeting was with people on
the l05th floor of the South
Tower of the World Trade
Center. He arrived at 8:30
a.m. At 8:48, the lights flickered. No one thought much
about it - then a volunteer
fire marshall for the company came .into the room and
announced that an explosion
had just happened in the
North Tower and they were
being asked to evacuate.
Joseph Dittmar described
ttie reluctance of the people
to abandon their meeting.
They were more aggravated
than anything else. They
entered the fire escapes and
started walking down the
mountain of stairs towards
the bottom of the building.
At the 90th tloor, the fire
escape door was propped
open and people were walk~
ing out of the stairwell.
"It became pretty evident
what people were doing,"
said Dittmar. "It wound up
being probably the thirty to
forty worst seconds of my life
because it was the first opportunity we had to see the North
Tower in an unbelievable
state of tumult. The plumes of
smoke five, six, seven stories
high. Flame redder than anything you' ve seen before, and
the ftre just spilling out of the
building. It was a beautiful
clear day, and we clearly saw
through the smoke and
flames the signs of the fuselage of a plane. We saw the
paper and the furniture and
the people falling from the
building, and it was an unbelievably gruesome sight And
I thought to myself, 'I'm not
going to stay here.'"
Dittmar continues to vividly recall the rest of the events
of that day - the heroics of
the firefighters and · police
that they met around the 30th
floor, the constant encouragement people gave to one
another as they struggled
down the thousands of steps,
the shock of impact when the
second· plane hit the South

f

f

f

·(

Tower, the escape out of the
building moments before it
.collapsed.
· Reading Dittmar's firstperson account of 9/11- put
me back in touch' with my
own feelings on that terrible
day almost seven years a~o. I
felt his anguish, empathized
with his unanswe~ble question: "why did I escape when
so many others died?" :J'he
power of the story made
those experiences teal for me,
. even though I wasn't there.
The stories of the Bible do
the same thing for us. When
we read about Elijah's struggles with depression and fear
as he ran from King Ahab
and Queen Jezebel, we discover God's presence in the
midst of trouble. When we
read about Jonah and great
fish, we learn what its like to
run away from God - and
. how God never stops pursuing those He loves. And
when we read about Jesus'
_agony on the cross, we are
brought face-to-face with the
God who goes beyond the
pale in taking on the pain of
sin and separation so that we
can come home to God..
Dittmer described his
homecoming . back
to
Chicago: "I called my wife for
the thousandth time and I said,
'Where are you?' She · said,
'I'm just getting ready to go to
church because they're having
a service. I'll just wait for you
if you're getting close.' I said,
' No, no, today's a good day to
go to church. It's a good place
to be.J' II meet you there.'
· "I walked into the back of
the church and opened the
door into the sanctuary. This
place was just packed. These
hundreds of people in the
church were all staring back
at me because they knew
what just had occurred. I
looked over to the right- to
the pew where we always sit,
and there was my wife, and
· there were my kids and my
family and my friends.
"My wife's real nondemonstrative, real quiet,
and she jumped over the
back of the pew and ran to
the back of tlie church and
gave me this gigantic hug
and kiss. And I knew that I
was home. I was home.''
I invite you to come to
church and hear again the
power of stories. Let's di'scover anew that we are
home together through the
life, death, and resurrection
of Jesus Christ.
(Kmy 'KOOd is the pastor of
Racine - United Methodist
Chureh, s1a Elm Street in
Roeine. Sunday worship is at
II am. Postor Kerry can be
reached at meineumc@sud-

tknlink.net.)

f

f

f

.

r

r

Chances are good that
you know someone who is
in trouble. Battered by circumstances or ,weighed
down by discouragement,
this person you know may
feel as if he or she is at wit's
end and may even be asking ·
the question, "Why is God
letting this happen to me?"
And it may occur to you that
the hand of God has placed
you in the life of this individual to encourage or help.
One thing you certainly
DON'T want to do is to offer
trite or glib remarks that
patronize the pain or suffering of the other. For example,
one might say to the other
that the Lord never gives us
more hardship than we can
bear. While well intended, it
doesn't enter into the pain of
the other nor does it acknowledge the fact of his or her desperation. In fact, it isn't everi
correct biblically. What the
Lord doesn't Jet us have more
of than we can handle is
temptation. "No temptation
has seized you except what is
common to man. And God is
faithful; He will not Jet you
be tempted beyond what you
can bear. But when you are
tempted, He will also provide
a way out so tha.t you can
stand up under it'' (I
Corinthians I 0:13 NIV).
Someone being told that
God doesn't permit circumstances in her life that she
cannot handle may result in
the unhappy effect of bitterness or despair, especially
when she is overwhelmed
with a hurt or loss thilt just
doesn't go away. So what
perspective can you share
with another who is suffering? What is the truth of the
· matter that brings hope and
strength in such times of
utter brokenness?
Simply this. That God will
ultimately bring about His
deliverance in the life of the
one who will trust Him and
persevere because of hope in

tions that He permits in our
lives? "He Who did not spare
His own Son, but gave Him
up for us all - how will He
not
also give us all things?" .
Pastor ·
(Romans 8:32 NIV ).
Thorn
No, I'm not suggesting that
Mollohan you "wax on and on" theologically when keeping company with the hurting, but
knowing what God says in
His Word does empower you
Him. "We do not want you to to simply say to the hu[ling
be uninformed, brothers, one, as your tears mingle
about the hardships we suf- with theirs, "Hold on to
fered in the province of Asia. Jesus. Trust God through this.
We were under great pres- He understands and weeps
sure, far beyond our abibty to with you, too." But do not be
endure, so that we despaired an encourager in worn only.
even of life. Indeed, in our As a channel of God's comhearts we felt the sentence of fort and encouragement, be
death. But this happened that . an encourager in deed, too.
we might not rely on our- Be creative and be ready to
selves but on God, Who rais- go
beyond ~hat is necessary
es the dead" (2 Corinthians
to
be
the friend this other may
I:8-9 NN). So what can we
need.
Cards, help with
say about hardship and suffering ihat isn't the. result of errands or chores, or thoughtsin or selfishness on our part, ful gestures that remind this
but seem instead to be friend or acquaintance that
allowed by God for either no they're not alone may be all it
reason or reasons known only takes for him or her to contin- ·
to God? Ftrst we recall to ue to cling to the hope that
mind that."God works for the only Jesus can provide.
''Suppose a brother or sisgood of those who love Him,
who have been called accord- ter is without clothes and
ing to His purpose" (Romans daily food. ·-If one of you
8:28 NIV). Second, we ~ays to him, 'Go, I wish you
remember that while our well; keep warm and well
Lord will permit us to fed,' but does nothing about
.exhaust all our resources, his physical needs, what
expend all our strength, and· good is it? In the same way, .
even forfeit all our hopes and faith by itself, if it- is not
dreams, He is merely cleating accompanied by actions, is
tht; way in our hearts for His dead" (James 2:15-17 NIV).
So, stay on the lookout and
deliverance, His strength, and
eternal rewards that infinitely let God make you a source
dwarf our meager hopes and of true encouragement today.
(Thom Mollohan and his
shallow dreams.
Indeed, "He has delivered family have ministered in
us from ... deadly peril, and s&amp;uthern Ohio the past 12He will deliver us. On ·Him 112 years and is the author of
we have set our hope that He "The Fairy -Tale Parables."
· will continue todehver us" (2 He is the pastor of Pathway
Corinthians I :810 NIV). So if Community Church, which
this God can deliver us from - meets on Sunday mornings
the deadly peril of our sin _ at 455 Third Ave. He 1111lY be
through the atoning sacrifice reached for comments or
of His Son, can we not count questions by e-mail at pason Him to '-'hold onto us" torthom@pathwaygallipothrough the trials and tribula- lis. com)

·Leaders of other faiths to meet Pqpe Benedict
WASHINGTON (AP) Repre~ntatives of five nonChristian faiths will meet
with Pope Benedict XVI
during his first U.S. visit as
~ntiff next month.
The 45-minute event on
April 17 at the Pope John
Paul II Cultural Center in
Washington will include a
papal address, greetings
from the faith 'leaders and a
presentation of gifts symllolic of each tradition by
young members of the
respective communities.
There will be no formal

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dialogue among participants and Benedict is scheduled to
because of time constraints meet personally with three
on the pope's schedule, said Jewish leaders, three Muslim
Sister Mary Ann Walsh, leaders, two Buddhist leaders,
spokeswoman for the U.S. a Hindu leader and Jain leader.
Conference of Catholic
That group includes
Bishops.
_
Rabbi Gilbert S. Rosenthal
Benedict's Aptil 15-20 of the National Council of
visit to New York and Synagogues; Rabbi Joel
Washington includes an Myers of the New Yorkaddress to the · United based Rabbinical Assembly ;
Nations, a visit to ground Sayyid M. Syeed of the
zero, two outdoor masses at Islamic Society of North
baseball stadiums and a America and Imam Hassan
meeting with President Bush. AI-Qazwini of the Islamic
The interfaith gathering Center of America, a large
includes 200 i~Jvited gues,ts. mosque in Dearborn, Mich.

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The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our comn1unity

Global-warming doubters strike back

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

'FAITH • VALUES
A Hunger For More
The power of storytellhtg ·
-

Evangelical college in New York·City _
Any Jist of great cities 'in
the ancient Mediterranean
World wopld have to
include Rome, Alexandria,
Jerusalem, Antioch and
Corinth, or some other crucial crossroads near what
would
become
Constantinople.
Th11s, these cities became .
the five patriarchal sees of
Christianity in the first millennium.
"From day one, there was
a commitment to the dominant cities and regions of
that time," said l Stanley
Oakes, chancellor of King's
College in New York City.
"That's where the early
church flouri shed. That 's
where the early church did
its work .... People who care
about nations and culture
and economics have to care .
about what happens in great
cities."
Yet
any
study.
of
American Protestantism in
the early 21st century would
focus on Colorado Springs,
Colo., Grand Rapids, Mich.,
Wheaton, Ill., Orlando. Fla.,
and, perhaps, Dallas, Texas.
It would not include New
York,
·Los
Angeles,
Philadelphia,
Chicago,
Boston,
Houston,
Washington, . D.C., or the
other great cities that shape
this culture.
Oakes thinks that's tragic,
which is why he has dedicated a decade - backed by
Campus
Crusade For
Christ's vast network - to
building an evangelical college in the Empire State
Building. The leaders of

Page As

: -: rhe Daily Sentinel

Every few years, some
group of scientists, egged
on by the media, is persuaded to warn mankind of
some new danger facing the
human race. This triggers
William
the anxiety that always
Rusher
floats just below the conscious level in most people,
and serves the ~urposes of
the media by generating
several months of gratify- vince a good many othering headlines. It also serves wistl sensible people that
the purposes of the scien- human activity is responsitists, by giving them ble for the warming, and
months of flattering public- that we must slam on the
ity, not to mention the brakes or face disaster.
financial ·rewards that
A November editorial in
accompany
scientific The ·New York Times
papers on the subject.
spelled it out:" ... the conseThe excitement dies quences could be disas- ·
down in due course, but trous: further melting at the
there is always some new poles, sea levels rising high
peril being discovered. enough to submerge island
Remember the ozone hole? nations, the elimination of
And whatever happened to one-quarter or more of ihe
acid rain? ·
world's species, widespread ·
But by far the most famine in places like
durable scare in recent Africa, more violent hurriyears has been that generat- .canes." What 's more, there
ed 'by the supposed dangers is no time to waste: " ...the
of global warming. The world mu st stabilize the
Earth's climate is never emission of greenhouse
absolutely stable. It Is gases by 2015, begin to always either warming or reduce theth shortly there~ cooling by tiny fractions of
after and largely free itself
a degree per year, and of carbqn-emitting techrecently it has been warm- nologies by midcentury."
ing. By extrapolating this
In support of this nonprocess beyond any justifi- sen se, the Times offered the
cation, the usual scaremon- report of "the International
gers have managed to con- Panel on Climate Change, a

group of 2500 scientists
who collectively constitute
the world's most authoritative voice on global warm:
ing." In the ensuing months,
a major effort has been
made to establish that this
panel's view is the all-butunanimous opinion of the
world's climatologists on
the question.' It is, however,
no such thing. More than
19,000 s-cientists have
signed a petition saying
global warming is probably
natural and not a crisis. (The
complete list can be seen at
www.oism.org/pproject.)
The
International
Conference on Climate
Change is meeting this
week in New York City. Its
topic is ··olobal Warming :
Truth or Swindle?" and
according to the announcement, "More than 400 scientists, economists and
experts will meet ... to chal lenge the claim that global
warming is a 'crisis."'
Under , the sponsorship of
the Heartland Institute, 50
organi~ations are co-spon'
soring the event, including
the John Locke Foundation,
the George C. Marshall
Institute and 'the National
Center for Policy Analysis.
Among those participating will_ be Vaclav Klaus,
president of the Czech
Republic , who has long'

St. Patrick's Example

opposed the global-warming hysteria; Dr. Robert
Balling,
professor 'bf
C Ii matology at Arizona
State
University;
Dr.
Vincent Gr~y. executive
director of the New Zealand
Climate Coalition; Dr.
Frederick Seitz, president
emeritus of The Rockefelfer
University; and Dr. Willie
Soon, chief scien~e ad-viser
to the Science and Public
Policy Institute. ·
It is too much to hope tl'iat
even a gathering of e~pens
as impressive as this one
Will deter the global-warming hysterics. The latter are
hell-bent on forcing down
·emissions associated with
the u~e of fossil fuel, on
which the United States
relies ·for 85 percent of its
energy. This can be done
only by restricting •the supply or raising the cost of
energy ·_ especially coal,
which provides half of
America's electricity.
But it is heartening to
know - that the scientific
community ·is at last finding
its voice and speaking out
against such folly.

It is believed that Saint Patrick was
born in either Scotland or Wales
around the year 385 . Both his father
and his grandfather arc believed to
have been deacons iA the cliurch thus
he had been raised as a Christian.
When he was approximately sixteen
years old he was captured by Irish
raiders who sold him into slavery in
Ireland. His faith helped him survive
the many hardships of slavery in
Ireland, where he was forced to tend
sheep for six years until he escaped
and returned to Great Britain, where
he chose to enter the priesthood. The
trials and tribulations ofslovery only
served to deepen his faith and
inspired him to eventually return to
Ireland and preach the Gospel. He is
credit~d with 'converting the Irish 10
Christianity and is the patron Saint o
Ireland. After all he had been- through
one can only wonder why he so
tirelessly preached the Gospel to the
people of Ireland. We would do well
to emulate St. Patrick's example.
That is, instead of being bitter about
his enslavement among theIrish. he
took it as an opportunity to grow in
faith and love and returned in later
years to giv~ the greatest gift of
Love.

Bless those who persecute you; bless and
do 1101 curse. RtjtJice in those who rejoice,
. and weep with those who weep.
f\lew KJ, V. Romans Il:/4-15

- (William Rusher is , a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Stifdy of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)
·

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•

.Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, March 7, 2008

Wwvi.mydailysentlnel.com
'

WORS1rHP GOD THIS WEEK
Fellowship
A poston~

Church of j i.'SUS l'htitj:l o\pmtolk

\.m/,mdt &lt;Jnd \\,mJ Rd .

Pa~lor·

Jollll&lt;"'

\}dl.·r 'Su oJJ~ Sdli.Jnl • 10 '1.1 am
I \~Oint-'- ?1llp nl

Rh er Va llt~
Rl\ct \,1Jic~ Apu•toltl \\'m-.Jlip Ccntd·

S71 S

Jrd

Aw. MuJJil'fliH1. Rc1

\lt lh;u=l BrJdfmd. Pa,tm Sumia~ . 1010
,t m Tue' 6 \() pr.wer. \\t"d 7 pm Btblc
StUllv

•:mmanut-1 ,\prn;ltlllt· T11hermtcle Inc.
Loop lhl olf f\l•v.

Ltm&lt;~

Rd . Rutl.mJ .

~t'r\h:C~ .

Sutt l\l 00 am. &amp;. 7 )0 pIll .
Th ur~. 7:{10 pm ~ P~\1\)r Manv R !-lull.( HI

Assembly of God
LiMrty ,\ SM&gt;mbly or God

PO. Bm, 46 7. Duddmg Lane , Ma,ou

W Va.. Pa ~tor Neil Tennant, Sund.t}
Sen t ee~ - IO.IJ(I a m. and 7 p m

Baptist
,

PUI!~' ' illt

•·rwwill Ba plist Church

PJ-.hlr. Fht) J Ro~~- Su~d&lt;~~ SchooJ9·~ m

HU O am. Wt1rsht!) ~ervice 10·30 to 11.00
nm . Wed preachmg 6 pm

Ca rpenter lndeptndcnt Baptist Chul'fh
SLULdt.l) S~h011l
9.J0t.ltn, Preuchlnl,l
Sen Ln: 10.3llam. Ewmng Se!'\'ke
7 OOpm . Wl!' thlt'~iliL~ B1hle Stud) HXJ pm.
J',L ~ tm . Whitt A~cr ~
Chesh1rt Baptist Chutth
ra ...lor· Stt'VC LLitlc. Sunday School: ()·30
ilm
Morntn)! Wnn.hLp: 10 JO am.
Wedncsda) H1ble Study fr30pm: chotr
pral'lice 7J O ;outh and IJ1ble BuddieS
6 .\tl p m Th11r' I pm hook .tudy
Uope Uapti5l C hurch (Southnn J
570 Gwm St M1dd leport. Sunday school
- '1
11m . w.1rsh•p · I I am und b p.m .
Wed ne.-.dlly' Serv~ce- 7 p m PaMm . Gary

'0

Eilts
Rulhmd J'irsl B.a plist Church
10

~:'i

a

111

Pomeroy Flr!&gt;t Bap tist
Pa,tur Juu Brockert East Main St .
Sund;~y Sch. g J() urn. Wur...hip 10 30 am

Kutbmd Fret Will Baptist
Solem St , Pa~ttw Ed Blrru:!Y . Sunday
S.:h1Xll
10 01 m . E\l~n1ng
7 p.m .
Wedneo.da~ S~r\ ict&gt;~ - 7 p.m
Sft'9nd Baptl81 Church
Ru\en~.,.·nod , WV, Sur~da)' School 10 am. ~h1mmj! l'ool\hlp II am E\•ening- 7 pm.
\l.ednf!ldJ~ 7 p.m.
first Baptist Church of Ma&amp;OD, \\-'V
Undepend~nt BaptiSI)
SR b'i~ anU {\nder:.on St Pastor: Roben
Grad). Sundu) s~· hool 10 um, Morning
~ hurch II nm. Sundn) evening 6 pm, Wed
B1blc Stllli) 7 pm

Catholic

MI. \turiah Ch urch u( God

M1le Hill Rtl. Ril~ lilt!. Pu,tor Jitm'''
S:~tterfid~. Sumla) Sd1oul - 9 ~) .t m .
E'emng - 6 p m , Wt:Jnt:..du) Ser' ll·e, · 7

161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy. 9fJ2-589!1,
Rev Waller E Hem£. Sat Con .
4 45 -5 l'ip m : Ma~s - 5.3U p m. Sun
Cun - R . 4~ - 9 ·15 a m... Sun. Mass· 9:30
am. Dm ly Ma~s · H·}(J am .
Pa~tnr

Wors htp • IJ .30 a m , Sunduy School
1,0:30 a.m , hrst Sunduy of Month · 7:00

Syracuse fo'ln t Chun·h of God
APple und St-!('ond Sts .. Pastor Rc\ Dav1d
Ruhe ll , Sunday School and Wunhip- 10
a.m. Eve ning Sen1ce s- 6 30 J' m ,
•
Wednesday Ser\'tces - 6 JO p.m .
Church or God of Prophec}
OJ . Whtle Rd . off S1. Rt. 160, Pasw PJ :
Ch,opman . Sunday Schoo l - 10 am.
Wor:;h1p II am .. Wed nesday Servke~- 7

pm.

Se,·ond &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy,

Middleport Church of Christ
5th anc.l Mo1n. Pas tor· AI Hamon.
Chil drens D1 rector. Sharon Sayre. Te~n
Director Dr.dge r Vaughan . Sunday School
.- 9:30a. m.. Worship- 8· 15, 10:30 a m , 7
p m . Wed n e~d ay Servio.;es · 7 p m
Chnst mos E\'e Can dle L1ght Serv1ce 6:30
pm We mvue you to celehrate th• bin h uf
011 r Savmr e\·eryday
w'ww mtddleportch urch.org

Keno Chutth of Christ
' Wo rshi p - -9:30 am, Sunday School 10.30 a m.. Pastor-Jeffrey W~ll ace. l.st and
.~rd Sunday

t' lrst Baptist Church

Bearwallow Rktgt Chutth of Christ
P11Sior Hruce Terry. Su nday Sc hool -9:30

Bob Wnrmouth, Worship 10:25 a.m.

Episcopal
Gret e Episcopal CbuKtl
32b E. Muin St .. Pomeroy, Sumtuy School
and
Holy Euchunst II:00 am . Rev
bdward Payne

Holiness
Paslor Sieve Tomek, Mam Street.
Rutland. Su nday Worsh1p-IO·tXJ a.m ..
Sunday Serv ice-? fl m
Danville Holiness Chun:h
31057 State Roule 325. Langs~ ll e, Pa~IOT
Benjamin Craw ford. Sunday schoo l · Q 30
a m , Sunday woo:hip - 10 30 a m &amp; 7
p m., Wednesday prayer ~ rvtce - 7 p m
Calvary PiiKrim Cha pel
Hot rrisonvillt: Road, Pastor Charles
McKen:tle, Sunday S~:houl 9 30 a m .•
WQrsh ip . I I a.m .. 7.00 p.p1. Wednesday
Service . 7:00 p.m.
Rose of Sharon Holiness C hun:h

· Lea dmg Cree k Rd., RUJiu nd . Pastor Rev.
De wey King. Sunday school- 9·30 am ..
· Sunday worshi p -7 p m, Wednesday
prayer mecung- 7 p.m

Pine Gro"e Bible Holiness Churth
112 m1le otT Rt. 325. Past(lr: Re\' . O' De ll
Manley. Sundtly Scbool
9·30 :~.m ..
Worship

Racine First Baptist
Hyun Eaton. pastor . Sunday
St:hnol • 11:30 u.m. Wor~h1p- 10·40 am ..
bUll p m . Wed n c~day Scrl' l CC~ - 7.00
P a~tor

11111

Sihr:r Run Hapllst
P,1~1nr John Swan~nn. Sllnda) Sc hool -

lOam. Worshi p - l in m. 7 00 p m.
W~:d nc!iclay Scmce~- 7.00 p m
MI. Union Baptist
Pa&gt;tor' Dt: u ll~&gt; !Wt:a~t:f Su nday Schoo iY.45 1.1 m , Evt:ning · 6 30 p m .
Wcdne,d&lt;~y Servu.:es- 6 30p m

Wors hi p - 10 .30 a.m.. 6:30 p m.
Wednesday Strv1ces - 6 30 p.m.
Zion Church of t.:hrlst
Pomeroy. Harnson \·d le Rd (Rt 143).
PasTor Roger WaTson, Sunday School ·
9.30 u m, Wor~hi p • 10 10 a m. 7'1}0
p.m . Wcdne!&gt;day Services - 7 p m
Tuppen; Plain Church of Chrbsl
Instrumental. Wu r ~ h 1 p Service • 9 a .m ,
Commumon · !0 a Ill . Sunday School 10: IS a.m , Youth- 5.30 pm Sunday. Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm

Old Bethel t'ree \\'Ill Baptist Church
28601 St . Rt. 7. Midd le'pon. Sund ay
Scn• •ce - 10 am .. 6.00 p m, Tuesduy
ServiCe!' -6'(()
Hillside Baptist Chunh
S! Rt 14~ J U~t off R.t ?, Pustor Rev.
h uncs I{ Al'rcc. Sr, Sunday Un1hed
Sen~t·c Wnr~hlp · 10':30 a.m.. 6 p.m.,
Wcdne~da) Scmccs · 7 p.m.
\ i[ inr) Ho.plist lndrpendent
'i~t; N :!1111 St M1ddlepnn. P a~tor · Jf me~
L Kec,ce . Wnr~ h lp - lOam . 7 p m.
Wcdnesdil) SL"mce~- 7 p m

t'aith Baptist Church
R.ulrn.nl St Ma,on. Su nday School - 10
um
Wor,hlp - I I l! m , 6 p m.
\\lcUnt·,d.ly Se 1 viu·~- 7 p m
Forest Run Baptist- Pomeroy
Re\' Jo.,·ph Woo ds. Su n U;~y School · 10
u.rn .. Wnr~ l u p - II 30 a 111
Mt. Morhth Bapti!il
Founh &amp; M:un St, Midtl lcpu rt . Sunday
School - 9 JO a.m , Worsh ip · 10.45 a m
Pa,tor. R~v . M1ch~l L Thompson, Jr.

Bradbury Church of Christ
Mmtsler· Tom Runyon, 39558 Bradbury
Road, Middlepo n . Sunday School · 9 30
Worship - lO:JO a.m
RuUand Church of Christ
Su nciuy Sc hool - 9.30 u.m .. Worshtp and
Commun 1on - 10.30 a.m, Bob J . Werry.
Mmtstcr
Brw:lford Chutth of Christ
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Hntdbury Rd • ~
~hm ~ter · Doug Shamblm Youth MmLster
B•ll Amherger. Sunday School · Y:3 0 a.m.
Worshi p - 8.00 am . 10·10 a m .. 7.0U
p m ,Wednesday·Sen. ices - 7 00 p m
Hlckor)l Hills c •un:h of Chrllt
Tupper' Plains , Pa510r Mike Moore, Bible
d a~~. 9 a m Su nday. worsh1p 10 am
Sunday; won;lup 6·30 pm Sunday. Bi ble
class 7 pm Wed.

Retdsvllle Church or Christ
Pastor Philip Stunn . Sunday School · 9 30
o..m., Worsh 1p Serv•ce 10 30 a.m .. B1ble
SLUdy, Wedne,.(]uy. 6 30 p.m
Dexter C hurch of Chl'ist
Sut1day sc hool 9:30 a.m . Sunday worsh1p
· 10:30 a m.
The Churth of Christ of Pomeroy
Intersec tio n 7 and 124 W, Evangelisl:
Denms Sargen t, Su nday B1ble Study ·
9 30 u m.. Worshi p. 10 30 a.m . and 6:30
p m .. Wednesday Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartrord Church of Christ ill

Antiquity Baptist
Sund:~ y School
9 30 a.m .. Worship IU.4S a.m. Sund&lt;Ly Evenmg- 6:00p.m ..
P,l..,tor. Don Walker

your ltght so shi ne beftJrel
men. that they may see
works and glorify
Father in heaven:·
Matthew 5:

Cl'lrlsiian Union
Hartford. W.Va .. Pastor: Dav1d Greer.
Su nday School · 9.30 am .. W01:s h1p I[)·](] a m , 7:UO p.m . Wedncsda)
Se n·K.:es • HX) p.m

992-66n

White Funeral.
•

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•

Since 1ass

9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

10:30 a m . 7.30
Sen. ice - 7.30 p.m

p.m ..

We~ltyan Hihle HolinesS C hurth
Pearl Sl., M1dd le port l'a~t or: D11ug
Cox, Su nday School - l fl a m 'W11rs h1p ·
10.45 p 111 , Sundny E\c H)() p m.
Wednesday Sen. ice - 7 30 p.m
7~

Hysell Run Cemmunlty Chu"h
Pas10r Rev. Larry Lemle), Sunday School
• 9:30 a.m, Won;h Lp · 10.45 a m • 7 p 111 ••
Thursday Htble Study ond Youth- 7 p.m.
Laurel Clift' t'ree Methodb;t Chu.n:h
Pas tor: Glenn Rowe, Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Wo rshi p - 10:30 a. m. and 6\
p m ,Wednc ~ ay Service· 7:00 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Thr Church of Jesus
Christ of l ..allrr-Day Saints .
St Rt. 160. 446-6247 or 446 -7486.
Sunday School 10:20 -11 a.m .. Re lief
Soclel) i l'ncsth ood I I .05- 12 ·OO noon.
Sac rame nt Scrv1ce IJ· I U:\5 a.m,
Homemak•ng meetmg. lsi Thurs .- 7 p m.

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran l:hu.n:h
Pme Grove, Wor.o;hip - IJ 00 ll m . Sunday
School • \0 00 fl.m. PAlitnr

Our Sa'"iour Lutheran Chunh
Walnut and Henry S t ~, Rttvcn!&gt;wood.
WV~t .. P1:1slllr Dav itt Russe ll Sunday
S~:h oo1 - \0 00 11 m., Wur-,hip • I I .t m

St. Paul L•theru Church

Comer Syciimore &amp; Second St .. Pu~eruy.
Su n School - 9:45 ii.m .. Worsh ip · I I a.m.

United Methodist

pm

.

p.m .. \\.:di'Jesdll) Sen.K't'S - 7 p.m.

liei'VICC

Tuppen Pl ~in~ St. Pllul
Pastor J1m Cnrbllt. S1mday Schoo l · q
am . Won;h1p • 10 am .. Thesday Semce~
- 7:30pm
Centra l 0Wtler
Ashury (Syracuo;e), Pa.\tor Rnb Rnbm son .
Sunday School - 9 45 am • Won;l'up - II
a m • WedneWay Serv1ces - 7 .lO p m

Chi:!Sier Churt h of the Nazare ne
Re v CurtiS Randolph . Sund:l\
Sl hnol - IJ·JH u m . Worship JI) : ~O ~ m.
Sunday c~enmg (J pm
Rutland t:h urt·h of lhe Nazarene
Pastor Isaac Shupe. Sunduy Srhoo1 \I· tO·
am , Worsh1p · HI ]0 a.m.. 6:30 11m ,
Wedne~da) Serv1cc' · 7 p m.

F.n lerpriq
Pastor Arland King . Sunday School- 9 ]()
am , Worship · 10 30 am 33105 H•land
Rd. Pomeroy

Other Churches

Flatwood~

Syracuse CommuniJ} Ch un- h
2480 Second St .. S} racu~, on
Sun School 10 am Su11dy nigh! (J lO pm
?.tstor Jl.ll..' G" inn

Pastor Dewayne Stuttkr. Sunday School ·
IOam , Wul'l&gt;hlp - ll am .

(t'ull Gospel Church) H arri~llll&gt;tll~.

A New Beginning
Pa~tor..:

t'urest Run
P:tSior Bob Ruhinsun. Su nd&lt;~y
a.m., Worship - 9 am

Bub .md.Kay Mur ~ h.tll .
Sunduy Sen1ce. ~ p !11 .

S~: hoo l -

.

10

Amazing Grace Commun it) t:hurch
l'a.'\tnr. Wuync Dunlup. St:1te. Rt 0~ I.
Tuppers Pl mn~ . Sun Worship 10 um &amp;
6·10 pm Wed. IJtblc Study 7 UO pIll.

Hellt h (Middleport)
Pastor. Bnan Dunham. Sunday Schoo l 9:30am .. Worship - 11 ·00 a.m.

oa~ l s

Pearl Chupel
Sunday School -I) u.m .. Worship · 10 ::~.m.

Rock Sprin gs
Pastor Dewayne S1utler. Sunday School Q 0{) n m . ,Wo rsh1p - HI a m . Youth
Fel lowship Sunday · 6 p m E11.r ly Sunday ~
worsh1p 8 am lenni Dun ham,

Rutland
Pas lor. R1ck Bourne, Su u d;~y School 9 30 a.m .. Worship · 10 30 ;u n. ThumLty
Services · 7 p.m.
Salem Cent~r .
PasTOr: W1lham K. M:u~ h al l. Su nilily
School . 10· 15 a m .. Worship · 9: 15am ..
Bible Stud): Monday 7:C() pm
Snow\lllle
Su nday Schoo l · 10 am., \Vorship · 9 am .

C.11rmei-Sutlon
Cannel &amp; Bnhan ~d s .. Racmc. Oh10.
Pas lor Jnhn Gilmore, Sunday School •
9 45 am . Worship· I UXI a.m. , H1blc
Study Wed 7 30 p.m
Morning Star

Ral pl1 Spires. Sunday School - 9.30 a.m .
Worsh1 p - 10 :311 am .. 7 p.m . Thur..d.ty
Scrv1ces - 7 p Ill
Meigs C ooperatln~ Parish
Northeast Cluster. Alfred . Paslor: J1m
Co,rblll , S und ay Sc hool • 9.30 a. m..
, Worsh1p - II 11 m ,6-30 p m
Chester
· Pa•tor Jun Corbttt . Worst·u p • 9 am ..
Sunday Se houl - W 11 m , Th u ~ay

.......................
.... llllliii·IIIIICIII'

740-594-6333

1-800-451-9806

Pastor : B1 ll Mar!hal l Sunday Sehoul ·

MNI2-5444

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992·5130
Pomeroy
~~~~ea are

the pure
·in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

l'uin It'" ltihle Church
Lelitn. WVa Rt J, Pa'1~1r . lJri .m Ma y,
Sund&lt;t~ Sdll'oO.II 9 341 a Ill .. Wor.htp · 7.00
p 111 . WcJnc'iJ:~; B1tlle Stud~ 7 m p.m
··111th h llu\\ship CruSade for Chr ist
p ,,~ tu r R.:\ 1-r:Lnl.hn D1~l.en~. Ser\ICe ~
l·rtdil~. 7 p m

C11 h ar) llibk L'hun- h
Pt&gt;mt:lll}' Ptl.e. [\, Hli .. l'ustnr· Re.v
Bl:id\\WnLI . Su nU.ty Sd\onl · 9:\0 u.m ..
Wl,(\lup 10 10 .tm. 7·30 p .m..
\V~Jn~ 'd:1y Scmu: · '1 111 p m
Stln•rs,·illl' l'ommunily Ch uKh
Sunt1:1y Scho(l] HI Oft .un Sunduy Wnr, h1p
II 00 :un , Wet.lnl!' •li.l ~ 7 00 pm p,,~tor'
Mt~'\ D.llle~

&amp;

Rejmcing Life C hurch
5110 N. 2nd "' l'

i\11~ 0.:

hm?milll.

•

MnJdlepnn , Pa~tltr

P.I~Lur l:.fllt.'TIIII~ L1wn:n~c
10 00 am
7 p.m

.

SL·r.• Jl·t&gt;~-

Cllftn n Tubcrnat• lr f:h urch

Btthel Worship Cente r
397K2 St Rt. 7, 2 m1b sllut h ol Tup1&gt;cr'
Plit m ~. O U Nnn-dcnollliOllllOnul WJih
Contempo rary Prai~e &amp; Wor,hip P:l\lllt
Rob Barber. A.w.K P,l\lllr Kl1ryn Dtl\"
Youth Dnccto r B en~ Fulk~. Su11d:J}
serv1ces 10 am Wor~ h 1 p &amp; 6 pm Fanu l:o&gt;
Life Cla~ses, Wed &amp; I hur m~hl L1te
Grou p ~ ut 7 pm, Thur~ m o m i n~ lad1e•."
Lift: Gmup al 10 Qutet L1m1T' Y\lUih l.1k
Group on Wed cvcn mg fr':lm 6 30 lo K JIJ
V1s11 u ~ oohnc at www hethc lwcmg

pm

Racine
Pastor: Kerry Wood, Su nday School - 10
a m.. Worsh1p - II a.m .Wedoesdlt}
Servtces 6.rm: Th ur Bible Study 7 pm

{it.'or~r' C1 ~c~ Hoall. G,LIItpolb, OH
Pll,lur J.om1.: \'v1r~m:.m . Sl!lldll) S.:r\'tees'Hl 'n .t m \\,·ci ne"!.'~ - 7 Jl m Thur~di1~
PL.t&gt;t·r &amp;_ Pr.m~ .11 (, prn C'lus\e~ for all

1771

e\&lt;"r~

·lft!'

Sun.l : t~

&amp; Wt'dll~~du)'

""" lhL·ar~dnuLh net
t' ull Guspd Clum·h
of lh e L h i n~ Sa\iur
Rl J3X. Anllllllit}. Pa&gt; IOI Jc\\e Morm .

A.~h

Syraeust Ml ~slon
1411 Br idgem:,m St , Syracu\t: Suml.1)
School
10 a.m. l:vening - 6 p 111 •
Wednc!&gt;dn) Servi(.'C - 7 p.m.
Hazel Communlly Ch un-h
Off Rt 124, P,L~!O r ' &amp;bel Han, Sun~.t:t;
School 9 3{] am .. WoN htp - IO:JO :t m..
7 30p 111

Dyesvillt Community Church
Sund lly Sehool - lJ ~ 0 a m Wor~ h1p lti JUa.m.,7 p m.
·•

· Nazarene
Point Ruck Church of the Nal.llren~
Route 689, AlbanY. Re'- . Lloyd Grnnm.
pastor. Su nday Sc hool 10 am, worhs•p
sen·ice II am, eve n 1 n ~ scn•1ce 7 pm . Wt:&lt;J
prayer meeting 7 pm

Morse ChaJKI Chun-h
Sun da) school • 10 am .. Wn ~&gt;lll p - I\
11m Wednesday Scr\K'C - 7 p m.

Mld41epott Church of the Nazarene
Pastor. Leonard Powell , Su nday Sc hool- ·
9·30 a.m..Worship - 10:30 a.nl : 6:30 pm ,
Wednesday SeN ices - 7 p.OJ ..
Rctdsl'ille Fellow ship
Church of the Nazarene. Pnstor : Ru~ ~e ll

' l' .11ilh Clospel Church
Lo ng Rottom Sunday Schuol - 9 10 :L m .
Worship . 10 4fi ,I m ? 1(} rIll
Wednesday 1 ~0 p m
t•ull Gospel U ghthou se

33045 Hdand R!,J&lt;Ld. Pu meru) , Pa~ lor . Roy
Hunter. SundaJ St:l1oo l - 10 t! m , EH·nmg
7 30 p m , Tue~d ay &amp; ThurN • 7.30 p.m.

Sund~}

S~·hnul

9 ..\0

ollil.

Presbyterian
·

Pa~lm .

1 1 rt' ~hy t c ritm

Chu rch
Rnho: n C11m. Wtll ,h1p · 9 ,1 111

Harrlsmnillc

\tlidd lep(lrl Pns b~ t erl an

l'a..wr Junw• Sn;der. Sund.tJ Sd1&lt;wl 10
am. lltlf\hlp....- t\ ll'l: II alll

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seyenth-Oay Ad\·e ntis t
Mulht•rr; llh Rd, Pumcrn}. Smu rday
Sl•rvL~c'
S:rllh.llh Sd111ul
~ p..m ..
W(ll~hlp

) p 111 .

United Brethren
1\lt . Hcfnlun United Urclhrcn ''

in ( 'hrist Chu n·h
lc\ ,r~ lommun1 t) ~1&gt;411 W1dham Rd.
l'a, tm l'cta MmtLild.Jk. Su ndt1y S~hnol 1} ·~0 .1111. Wor,hlp
10.1(1 .ttl1 ..7/l0
pm .

Wt·Jnc\da~

Acts 24:16

protect !JOUr Jatnif!J •

172 N. 2nd Ave . Mttldlcpmt. OH
J53-0K37 Fax:

It was ar .this moment that the
hone rang. It was my,Aunt Mary.
thought she was just calling to
give her condolence.s like so
many others did that day. -I was
wrong.
.
Mary asked, "Doug, when are
you going talk to the funeral
director?"
"Later, about 3," I responded.
"Why don't you leave your door
unlocked for your Uncle George
and me to come over and clean
your mother's room?"
In that instant, time stood still for
me. My aunt and uncle were very
close to my mother and this would
be difficult for them to do emotionally. I knew the walls and the carpet
and the bed were covered with
blood, human tissue, and pieces·of
bone. How could they possibly
clean all that mess? Why would
they he willipg to do this?
"Are you ·sure you want to do
this?" I a*ed.

r

"Absolutely sure," she said.
"Why are you doing this?" I
questioned.
"Because we love you and God
loves you."
I knew my aunt and uncle were
Christians. In fact, we attended
the same church. Until that day, I
didn't know that there was anything different about their faith
than mine.
For them, this kind of extraordinary service was really ordinary.
· They rendered service that
required loving sacrifice on their
part. And all because they loved
me and God loved me. I experienced God's love that day through
their sacrificial service. Their selfless act of service changed my life
and ultimately led to my decision
to answer God's call to full-time
Christian ministry and service.
(The Rev. Doug Stockton· is pastor of Grace United Methodist
Church in Gallipolis.)

RIO GRANDE - Marc Sarrett,
pastor of Trinity Baptist Church at
Rio Gmnde, invites all to hear Avi
Snyder, director of the lntemational
Post-Soviet Ministries of Jews for
. !esus, speak at the church on
Monday, March 10 at 7 p.m. .
Jews ·for Jesus was founded b)'
Moishe Rosen, the leading authont~ in contemporary Jewish , misstons.
Snyder, who is based in New

York, oversees Jews for Jesus
activities among Russian-speaking
Jewish people in the former Soviet
Union, Germany and lhe U.S.
An American Jew, Snyder, his
wife,
three
children
and ·
Uzbekistani Jewi sh believer
Elizabeth Terini moved to Odessa
in the Ukraine in 1991 to spread the
message. They returned to the U.S.
in 1998, leaving behind them a.
mi ssionary force of 30 indigenous

Jews for Jesus workers in five
Russian cities.
On staff with Jews for Jesus since
1978, Snyder received his theological trainmg from the Fuller School
of World Missions with a master's
degree in missiology and a concentration
on
Jewish
Evangelical/Jewish Studies. He
now coordinates post-Soviet ministries on an international level. A
team of three Soviet-born staff

members is a! work among the
300,000 Russian-speaking Jewish
r~sidents of the New York area.
"With so many post-Soviel
Jewish people living in the States,
in Canada, in Israel and Germany,
the time seems ripe for a coordinated strategy of direct evangelism, ·
literature production and the preparation of messianic Jewish missionaries from the ·former USSR,"
. Snyder said.

to care":

Mv erace is sufficienf
for thee: for mv
streneth is made ~':'il
Perfect in weakness.:
11 Cor; 12!9

..

COme on over to Bob's•••
Two Convenient Locations

•

Office Servlce &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992·6376

•

2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446·1711

1/4 mile north of
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
'
Mason, West
(304)

..

·- ------"---------------~------'----'--

This poem was written
by my mother, Ellaine
Coy, when I was undergoing chemotherapy for
breast cancer. My mother
has set the example elf
faith in God and the power
of prayer for all my life.
That faith definitely sustained me through a very
difficult time .
What a pleasure it has
been having your for a
daughter. You have given
me reason to worry; You
have given me much love.
You have become a
. woman that I am proud of
You have handled your
misfortune much better
than I could have.
I regret that/wasn 't close
by to comfort and /wid your
hand,
Thanks to a big sister
who was a solid brick
through it all.
'Which proves that family
means a lot after all.
I love you Lynn, iulnd in
there and keep up the good,
.
fight.
And I'm sure you 'II be
rewarded with a long and
beautiful life.
My mom, Ellaine, lives at
4543 Morgan Lane, Vinton.
My name is Lynn White
and I live in Galion, Ohio.
When I was in the hospital
for surgery, mom was
recovering from knee
replacement surgery. She
was bound determined to
be at my side, though, and
made the uncomfortable
drive.

1-740-667-3156
"Still small

Supprcs~ion • Exltng ui:-.her\ • Sprinkler.,
• SccurJ1)~

was my mother, lying in bed with a
shotgun and blood gushing out of
her neck where her head used to ·be.
My mother had been depressed for
some time over my father's de!!th
nearly six years earlier. Apparently
the pain and depression finally got
to be · too much for her and she
committed suicide.
The ent: • day of her suicide was
a blur. The police came. They
asked me many questions before an
ambulance took my mother to the
funeral home. As the police were
leaving, they told me that I should
probably ·call a cleaning service to
clean mother's room for me. For
the nelll hour, I tried to locate
someone to come to our home for
this miserable cleaning task. While
there are probably many services
today that will do this kind of work,
more: than 25 years ago in our small
community, there were none. The
thought began to dawn on me that I
may have to do the job myself.

Jews for Jesus leader speaking locally

Se-n let\ - 7 Oil p.m

Ymith gmup Ln&lt;.'l"'tmg :!'u.! &amp; ~1 h Sm1day\
7pm
Edtn Unill-d ltnt hrr n in Christ
Sta tt· ~uule 1~4 bcll.\l"t:/1 Rced~v l l le &amp;.
ll ul lmgp011. Suuda) ~dur1•f - 10 u.m .
Sunday 'Wor\hip - II 00 o1 m W..:linesd:Ly
Scrvi~:r:~ - 700 p m , Pa~tor - M. Adam
Wtll

Coolvtlle, Ohi o
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

cor famify ndp

With the election upon us, I am
reminded of John F. Kennedy's
famous speech in which he challenged all Americans to, "Ask not
what your country can do for you.
Rather ask what you can do for
your country." His call to service
was both inspiring and biblical.
What a difference this kind of sacrificial service could make today,
not only in our nation, but in the
lives of hurting people!
· I'll never forget how I was
touched by someone demonstrating
this kind of service. Early one
.August morning in 1982, I awoke
to a loud boom, kind of like the
sound of a car backfiring. With my
head still hazy from a deep sleep, I
·wandered down the hall to my
mother's bedroom. When I opened
her bedroom door, my mind could
not comprehend what I saw. There
was my mother, at least I thought it

l'e nltcu~t u l t\s.'ii'mhly
!',!,tor· St HI t2-l. ltacml!'. Tnrnu(kl Rd
Sund;ry S~:hnn l - 10 ,1111. l:.vcru ng -, 7
p m . Wt·dnc,tb' Scn1u·, - 7 p m

The care you dese111e, close to home good worb and glorify your

~L&lt;t

BY DOUG STOCKTON

Pentecostal

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
or God so loved rh e world
PHARMACY
he gave his only
We Fill Doctors'
lberw tten son...
Prescriptions ·
Jolm 3:16
992·2955
Pomeroy

.

Wonh1p 1it J O am . 1 Ol) pm, Wed
S~n· 1ce 7 00 pm
Tl.'lt m Jt'!ius Mlnl!ilrlts
Meetmg tn the Mulberry C'mnmunuy
Ce11tcr Gymn,htUlll Pa~tor Eddie Raer.
Scnltc Cl t·r~ hc~day l'i 30 pm

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, that they may see your
Father i11lzeaven ."
Matthew 5: 16

.Call to·service best kind of sacrifice

Full Gw. pt•l, Cl Pa•lllr. Ruben &amp; Rnbc11a

Faith Valley Tabernudt&gt; ( 'hun·h
Bailey Run RuaJ, Pastor Rc\ , bnml'H
Raw~on. Sunday EHni ng 7 p m .
Thursday Serv~ce · 7 p.m.

Btthel Church
Township Rd , 46XC, Sunday Sc hool • 9
a m. Wnr~ h1 p - 10 a m , Wednesday
Se rvi[es- 10 a m

A mother's
devotion

St. Rt. 1241 .an g;;l' lllt·.O H

l·n~.ht)

Middleport Cf'lmmunit~ t:hurth
575 Peatl ~~ . M1ddlepnrt . Pu ~t ur S.n11
An dersou, S unda )' Sch1111l I{) il m.
E\euing · 7 30 p m , Wednc, dny ~en 1,c 7 30 p Ill

Cooh·ile UniUd Mrthodlst Parish
Pastor He len Kl me. Coolville Churc h.
Ma1n &amp; hflh St.. Sun. Sc hool - 10 u m ..
Worsh1p - 1J a.m.. Tues. Servtccs- 7 p.m

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man ."

Understand and study.
Spread the message.
Share the first fruits.
Listen to the lonely.
Forgive a hurt.
Hold a hand.
Send a card.
Feed a family.
Pick up and carry His hurt.
Take up His cross.
Use His timepiece.
Walk His mile.
Respond to His calling.
Hear His cries.
Dry His tears.
Defend Him.
Five with His measure.
Love as He loves!
-Author unknown

I hr Ark Ch urch

Harrisonvlllt Communit) Churc h
Pastor· ~h ero n Durham . SunQay · •HO
am and 7 ,P m , Wcdne~d ll) - 7 p.m

7 00 p.m ,

36759 Rocksprings Rd .
Po,meroy, OH 45769
740·992-6606

Gods answers

a. m ,
- 7 p m . WeJJll'' d:ty Se rvtce • .7

C lilti m. WVa. SILillla; Sdwol · 10

MU\)\'r.

9a m, Wors hip • 10 a.m•.• 1st Su nday

Torch Church
Cu Rd 63, Su nday Sehou l · 9.]11 a m .
Wor~ h ip- 10:30 u 111

.Mt: Ollye United t\.1ethodlst

- 7 r rn

p.m

und 7 p.m , Wed•w~duy - 7 p m ..
lcllow~ h l p serv1ce 7 p.m

Eut Letart

BMhtel United Methodi st
New Haven . Ric hard Nease. Pasto r.
Su nday wo rship 9JO a m. Tues. 6:3Q
pm}er and Bt ble Study.

741-112-1141

499 Richland Avenue, Athens

Juhn Gilmore. Sund,Jy School · II
a.m . Wursh1p - 10 a m

~e r,• tce

\\ hite's Chapel \\es ley1m
l 't'O I\IIk Roud . f'."111r: Rev. l'h.ule~
Mou·;,n,lale Sund.l} Sdlfllll. - 9.~n :~ m .
~'ur• t1111 . 10 ~\) u m . Wednl·~da~ SrnKt:

Ash St r.~et C hurch
St . M1 d Jic p urt- P a~l O I ~ 1\oturk
Salem Cnmmunll v Church
,\1 nrrnw .~ Rodnq Wnl~cr Sunday
8:1\'k ot Weq C•1lumb1a , W V••nm L1cvmg
Sl hool • &lt;J 30 ... m Mnrn 1ng Wor.o,lup 10 10
. ~~ rl1 . &amp; 7 {)() p;n WeJne~Jny Scrvu:~ Road. P.t.,lor C'lwrk ~ Rtl\1\h 13114) 67.S 22l'iH. Sunday ~th&lt;llll () \fl am, Sun d a~·
- 7 00 ~ m., Y(lu lh Sel'\ llC· 7 ()\) p m
cvc nlllg ~cmcc 7:00 pm. B1bl)' Study
l\ ~11 pe l.lfc Center
Wednc:.day ..cr.tco.' 7 (l() pm
"Fu i i-Gu~pel Church". Pa~tor' John &amp;
Pall)' \V&lt;ti.k, 60J Second 1\ \c Mol'&gt;lln 771- •
Hobson t.:h ri~tiu n Frllo 1-1s hip Church
5017. Sen· 1~e tnnc Su11da) 10 lOam.
1',1,tor
l ler\~ h\·1 While Stinda) Sch11nl
' Wcdne~da} 7 pm
10 ,,m . Stmd.1y Churlh \Cf\'K'C • 1'1: 10 pm
\\'&lt;"tl nc"'-I•1Y' 7 rm
Aliundant G ra~:~ R.t'. l.
92J S Th1rd St , M!ddleJX&lt;rt , Pa\tur Tcrc.,a
Restoru1iBn ( 'hri ~ t ht.n t'l'llowshlp
Dav1s, Sun day ~Cf\' l l'C. 10 ,, m.
91f,.5 Hnu per Rtwd. Athen~. Pastor·
Wednesd:ty ~erv1ce, '1 p m.
Lu nmc Cuat~ \t nday Wor~ h 1p Ill ()() an1.
W,:J ne.....Ja;' 7 pr tt
Faith Full Gospel Chun:h
Long Bottom. Pa~tor: S 1 cv~ R c~d. ~und.J)
llousc of H c.ulln~ Mh1lstrl"~
Sch ool - 9 30 a.m. Worshtp - 9 ,.m am

a m.

month evemng
Wednesda} · 7 p.m .

The moral values of the
modem-day world differ
from valu11s of Yore, when
a handshake sufficed for a
signature, never needed
was anything more.
A man's reputation was
an object of pride, a man
was as good as his word .
No strings were attached to
the lending of hands, no
refusal to help ever heard.
Family life values were
taught in the home, and the
word of a parent was law.
But that was when families
were largely in tact with
sources from which they
could draw.
We can dream of re-living those long by-gone
days, but reality, alas, must
be faced. But not by wish- ,
ful thinking or .dreams can
now be replaced.
Just what is the key for
reversing the trend as far
away from true values we
roam? It's beyond our solution, but perhaps we should
ask that God fill in the void
in the home.
-Author unknown

.~Mdom Gospd !\tis.~ion
B,I]J Kn(lb, on ('o Rd J I. l'.t~tur R~v
Hoger W1lllurd. Sunda} Sdwul · 9 Jll
II m. Wor~h1p 7 p m

Br~,m

2008

Values

iJill

wm~hlp

WR.

· Bethany
Pas tor: John Gilmore! Sunday School · 10
am., Worsh• p - 9 a.m , Wednesday

e\'ery

Friday, March 7,

Car ll' lon lnterdtnominariurml ( ' hun:h
King'tt'IUf} RoaJ P.l'lllr Knhert \'am.'C.
Sunda~ s~hlll'll
I.J \() J nt
\\tlr,hLp
Srn1~·..- 10.30 am .. E\enm~ ~l·n1~e 0

\\t.'dnc, d,t)

Portland-Racmr Rd .. Pastor. Jm1 Prn11'tll,
Su nduy School - Q .'U a .m, \\'Cif'• lli p 10:30 u m, WednesJay Service' . 7:00

Pomeroy
l'nstor. ~na n Du nhit m. Wotship - 9 30
am .. Sunda) Schoo l- 10.35 a m

\0

FAITH. FAMILY

South Bflht•l Communi!~ ('hurrh
\iil\er R1dgr- PNOI LmJ ,1 Diliiii.'.,.Ol'll.i.
'IUrld.t\ 1khoul \),I Ill \\tor,h rp S~r\ICC
10 am . :!nJ and 41h SunJJ~

h m:nmn \\ nr~htp

Communil) of Ctw-ist

Hockingport Chu rch '
Grand Street. Su nday School - 9 ~0 am .
Wor~ h 1 p - 10 3() 01 m.. Pa~tnr Ph1lhp Bell

Off 124 bc hmd WJi kcsvtlle, Pa~ tor: Rev

l:hrlslian t'ellowship

(Non-dcnommatLUnu l fel\nw~hip )
Meetmg m the Meig' Middle SdJ&lt;&gt;oul
Caleten.a l'a~tor · Chris S1cwun
10:00 am - Noon Sunday: lnlllr111UI
Worship, Chtldre11's mini,try

Minersville
Pastor· Bob Robi nson, Sunday Sc hool - 9
11m. Worship - 10 p.m.

Scmce~ -

PageA7

Pa~tor

Graham United Metho4jisl
Worship . II a.m. Pastor R1ch:nd Nea~

.1f1•brr jfuneral ~ome
ZM . . . IICIIIIIII. ••• AliiI\ ..
Ulll

Davis-Quickel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My
I NSURANCE
Fu ll line of
·
'
InSUrance words abide in you, ye shall
Products+ ask whaJ .ye will, and it shall
"'
Financial
be done unto you.
Services
AGE~C I ES Inc
John 15:7
Bill Quickel

·

Wedne~day

Pom~ruy Church of the Nazanone
Pu ~tor Jan L:11ender. Sunday ~Schul•l 4J:3U a.m. WoNhtp 10:30 a.m llnd n

Rfeds,·me

Pa~tu r

a.m
Bethlehem Baptist C ~urch
'Grea t Bend . Route 124, Rac mt:. Oil,
Pastor: Ed Caner. Sunda} Sr.:hool - 9 30
am, Sundll} Wo r ~ h ip- 10.30 a.m ..&amp; 7
pm ; Wednesday B1ble Study-7:00 p.m

P:~swr· R~y .

Communlly C hurch

Pomeroy Wu L•Iide Church of Christ
B226 Children's ll nme Rd .. Su nday
School - 11 a m , Won;hip- lila m .•6 p.m
Wednesday Se rv ices- 7 p m

.m a.m.. Worship

p.m

Trln lly Churth

212 W. Mam St . Sundo) School - 9 30
am .. Worship- \0 :30 a.m .. 6 p m,
Wedne~ay Sen.1ces • 7 p.m.

s,. r8ruse Church or the ~IWdrCOt'
Pw.tor M1Ae Ad~m~. Sunday Schl"l(J] 4 11)
a.m. Wor ~ h1p
!0·1() am .. 6 p m.
Wl"&lt;lne..Ua~ S..:r\ 1ce~- 1 p.m

Long Bottom

Westside Chutth of Chrtst
33226 Children 's Hom~ Rd. Pomeroy. OH
Conl'act 740-441-1296 Sunday morning
10 :00 . Su n mormng Bible sludy;
foliO\I.in~ wors htp, Sun eve 6.00 pm.
Wed h1ble ~t u dy 7 pm

l'omrro)· Cburth of Christ

Q ~0 o~..m

Sunday School · IJ
10:30 am .

Congregational

Hemlock Grove Christi11n Chun:h
M1 mster: Larry .Brown, W()rship - 9 :30 :
am Stmdll) School · 10:30 a.m ., Btble
Study · 7 p m.

Joppa
r aslor: Dcnnl Null. Wt)l'\hlp
Sunday School- IU.~l u m.

Rutl11nd Chu n:h ol God
Pa~1or: Ron Ht:ulh. $und&lt;~y Worship · 10
a.m . 6 p.m , Wednesday Semces · 7

Church of Christ

'

Carson , Sunday Sch(lnl IJ 30 ct m .
Worship - I0.4.S a.m .. 6 p.1n, Welhlc,o.f..t)
Sef\llts · 7 p m.

1 p.m.

p.m

Sacred llt lll'l L'ulholic Cburch

t'ln:t Soutlrern Ba ptbit
41M72 Pomeroy Pik.e, Sunday School 9,30 u.m .. Worship- 9.45 am &amp; 7 00 p m.,
Wednesday Servtces- 7 00 p.m

Pa~t or. B1 lly Zuspan 6th and Palmer S1..
Mu.kl leport. Su nday School - 9: 15 a:m ..
Wor sh,1p - 10· 15 am .. 7:00 p m ..
Wednesday Semce- 7:00 p.m

SenJCe~ -

Church of God

The Daily Sentinel

77':1.~7'&gt;1

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.Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, March 7, 2008

Wwvi.mydailysentlnel.com
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WORS1rHP GOD THIS WEEK
Fellowship
A poston~

Church of j i.'SUS l'htitj:l o\pmtolk

\.m/,mdt &lt;Jnd \\,mJ Rd .

Pa~lor·

Jollll&lt;"'

\}dl.·r 'Su oJJ~ Sdli.Jnl • 10 '1.1 am
I \~Oint-'- ?1llp nl

Rh er Va llt~
Rl\ct \,1Jic~ Apu•toltl \\'m-.Jlip Ccntd·

S71 S

Jrd

Aw. MuJJil'fliH1. Rc1

\lt lh;u=l BrJdfmd. Pa,tm Sumia~ . 1010
,t m Tue' 6 \() pr.wer. \\t"d 7 pm Btblc
StUllv

•:mmanut-1 ,\prn;ltlllt· T11hermtcle Inc.
Loop lhl olf f\l•v.

Ltm&lt;~

Rd . Rutl.mJ .

~t'r\h:C~ .

Sutt l\l 00 am. &amp;. 7 )0 pIll .
Th ur~. 7:{10 pm ~ P~\1\)r Manv R !-lull.( HI

Assembly of God
LiMrty ,\ SM&gt;mbly or God

PO. Bm, 46 7. Duddmg Lane , Ma,ou

W Va.. Pa ~tor Neil Tennant, Sund.t}
Sen t ee~ - IO.IJ(I a m. and 7 p m

Baptist
,

PUI!~' ' illt

•·rwwill Ba plist Church

PJ-.hlr. Fht) J Ro~~- Su~d&lt;~~ SchooJ9·~ m

HU O am. Wt1rsht!) ~ervice 10·30 to 11.00
nm . Wed preachmg 6 pm

Ca rpenter lndeptndcnt Baptist Chul'fh
SLULdt.l) S~h011l
9.J0t.ltn, Preuchlnl,l
Sen Ln: 10.3llam. Ewmng Se!'\'ke
7 OOpm . Wl!' thlt'~iliL~ B1hle Stud) HXJ pm.
J',L ~ tm . Whitt A~cr ~
Chesh1rt Baptist Chutth
ra ...lor· Stt'VC LLitlc. Sunday School: ()·30
ilm
Morntn)! Wnn.hLp: 10 JO am.
Wedncsda) H1ble Study fr30pm: chotr
pral'lice 7J O ;outh and IJ1ble BuddieS
6 .\tl p m Th11r' I pm hook .tudy
Uope Uapti5l C hurch (Southnn J
570 Gwm St M1dd leport. Sunday school
- '1
11m . w.1rsh•p · I I am und b p.m .
Wed ne.-.dlly' Serv~ce- 7 p m PaMm . Gary

'0

Eilts
Rulhmd J'irsl B.a plist Church
10

~:'i

a

111

Pomeroy Flr!&gt;t Bap tist
Pa,tur Juu Brockert East Main St .
Sund;~y Sch. g J() urn. Wur...hip 10 30 am

Kutbmd Fret Will Baptist
Solem St , Pa~ttw Ed Blrru:!Y . Sunday
S.:h1Xll
10 01 m . E\l~n1ng
7 p.m .
Wedneo.da~ S~r\ ict&gt;~ - 7 p.m
Sft'9nd Baptl81 Church
Ru\en~.,.·nod , WV, Sur~da)' School 10 am. ~h1mmj! l'ool\hlp II am E\•ening- 7 pm.
\l.ednf!ldJ~ 7 p.m.
first Baptist Church of Ma&amp;OD, \\-'V
Undepend~nt BaptiSI)
SR b'i~ anU {\nder:.on St Pastor: Roben
Grad). Sundu) s~· hool 10 um, Morning
~ hurch II nm. Sundn) evening 6 pm, Wed
B1blc Stllli) 7 pm

Catholic

MI. \turiah Ch urch u( God

M1le Hill Rtl. Ril~ lilt!. Pu,tor Jitm'''
S:~tterfid~. Sumla) Sd1oul - 9 ~) .t m .
E'emng - 6 p m , Wt:Jnt:..du) Ser' ll·e, · 7

161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy. 9fJ2-589!1,
Rev Waller E Hem£. Sat Con .
4 45 -5 l'ip m : Ma~s - 5.3U p m. Sun
Cun - R . 4~ - 9 ·15 a m... Sun. Mass· 9:30
am. Dm ly Ma~s · H·}(J am .
Pa~tnr

Wors htp • IJ .30 a m , Sunduy School
1,0:30 a.m , hrst Sunduy of Month · 7:00

Syracuse fo'ln t Chun·h of God
APple und St-!('ond Sts .. Pastor Rc\ Dav1d
Ruhe ll , Sunday School and Wunhip- 10
a.m. Eve ning Sen1ce s- 6 30 J' m ,
•
Wednesday Ser\'tces - 6 JO p.m .
Church or God of Prophec}
OJ . Whtle Rd . off S1. Rt. 160, Pasw PJ :
Ch,opman . Sunday Schoo l - 10 am.
Wor:;h1p II am .. Wed nesday Servke~- 7

pm.

Se,·ond &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy,

Middleport Church of Christ
5th anc.l Mo1n. Pas tor· AI Hamon.
Chil drens D1 rector. Sharon Sayre. Te~n
Director Dr.dge r Vaughan . Sunday School
.- 9:30a. m.. Worship- 8· 15, 10:30 a m , 7
p m . Wed n e~d ay Servio.;es · 7 p m
Chnst mos E\'e Can dle L1ght Serv1ce 6:30
pm We mvue you to celehrate th• bin h uf
011 r Savmr e\·eryday
w'ww mtddleportch urch.org

Keno Chutth of Christ
' Wo rshi p - -9:30 am, Sunday School 10.30 a m.. Pastor-Jeffrey W~ll ace. l.st and
.~rd Sunday

t' lrst Baptist Church

Bearwallow Rktgt Chutth of Christ
P11Sior Hruce Terry. Su nday Sc hool -9:30

Bob Wnrmouth, Worship 10:25 a.m.

Episcopal
Gret e Episcopal CbuKtl
32b E. Muin St .. Pomeroy, Sumtuy School
and
Holy Euchunst II:00 am . Rev
bdward Payne

Holiness
Paslor Sieve Tomek, Mam Street.
Rutland. Su nday Worsh1p-IO·tXJ a.m ..
Sunday Serv ice-? fl m
Danville Holiness Chun:h
31057 State Roule 325. Langs~ ll e, Pa~IOT
Benjamin Craw ford. Sunday schoo l · Q 30
a m , Sunday woo:hip - 10 30 a m &amp; 7
p m., Wednesday prayer ~ rvtce - 7 p m
Calvary PiiKrim Cha pel
Hot rrisonvillt: Road, Pastor Charles
McKen:tle, Sunday S~:houl 9 30 a m .•
WQrsh ip . I I a.m .. 7.00 p.p1. Wednesday
Service . 7:00 p.m.
Rose of Sharon Holiness C hun:h

· Lea dmg Cree k Rd., RUJiu nd . Pastor Rev.
De wey King. Sunday school- 9·30 am ..
· Sunday worshi p -7 p m, Wednesday
prayer mecung- 7 p.m

Pine Gro"e Bible Holiness Churth
112 m1le otT Rt. 325. Past(lr: Re\' . O' De ll
Manley. Sundtly Scbool
9·30 :~.m ..
Worship

Racine First Baptist
Hyun Eaton. pastor . Sunday
St:hnol • 11:30 u.m. Wor~h1p- 10·40 am ..
bUll p m . Wed n c~day Scrl' l CC~ - 7.00
P a~tor

11111

Sihr:r Run Hapllst
P,1~1nr John Swan~nn. Sllnda) Sc hool -

lOam. Worshi p - l in m. 7 00 p m.
W~:d nc!iclay Scmce~- 7.00 p m
MI. Union Baptist
Pa&gt;tor' Dt: u ll~&gt; !Wt:a~t:f Su nday Schoo iY.45 1.1 m , Evt:ning · 6 30 p m .
Wcdne,d&lt;~y Servu.:es- 6 30p m

Wors hi p - 10 .30 a.m.. 6:30 p m.
Wednesday Strv1ces - 6 30 p.m.
Zion Church of t.:hrlst
Pomeroy. Harnson \·d le Rd (Rt 143).
PasTor Roger WaTson, Sunday School ·
9.30 u m, Wor~hi p • 10 10 a m. 7'1}0
p.m . Wcdne!&gt;day Services - 7 p m
Tuppen; Plain Church of Chrbsl
Instrumental. Wu r ~ h 1 p Service • 9 a .m ,
Commumon · !0 a Ill . Sunday School 10: IS a.m , Youth- 5.30 pm Sunday. Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm

Old Bethel t'ree \\'Ill Baptist Church
28601 St . Rt. 7. Midd le'pon. Sund ay
Scn• •ce - 10 am .. 6.00 p m, Tuesduy
ServiCe!' -6'(()
Hillside Baptist Chunh
S! Rt 14~ J U~t off R.t ?, Pustor Rev.
h uncs I{ Al'rcc. Sr, Sunday Un1hed
Sen~t·c Wnr~hlp · 10':30 a.m.. 6 p.m.,
Wcdne~da) Scmccs · 7 p.m.
\ i[ inr) Ho.plist lndrpendent
'i~t; N :!1111 St M1ddlepnn. P a~tor · Jf me~
L Kec,ce . Wnr~ h lp - lOam . 7 p m.
Wcdnesdil) SL"mce~- 7 p m

t'aith Baptist Church
R.ulrn.nl St Ma,on. Su nday School - 10
um
Wor,hlp - I I l! m , 6 p m.
\\lcUnt·,d.ly Se 1 viu·~- 7 p m
Forest Run Baptist- Pomeroy
Re\' Jo.,·ph Woo ds. Su n U;~y School · 10
u.rn .. Wnr~ l u p - II 30 a 111
Mt. Morhth Bapti!il
Founh &amp; M:un St, Midtl lcpu rt . Sunday
School - 9 JO a.m , Worsh ip · 10.45 a m
Pa,tor. R~v . M1ch~l L Thompson, Jr.

Bradbury Church of Christ
Mmtsler· Tom Runyon, 39558 Bradbury
Road, Middlepo n . Sunday School · 9 30
Worship - lO:JO a.m
RuUand Church of Christ
Su nciuy Sc hool - 9.30 u.m .. Worshtp and
Commun 1on - 10.30 a.m, Bob J . Werry.
Mmtstcr
Brw:lford Chutth of Christ
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Hntdbury Rd • ~
~hm ~ter · Doug Shamblm Youth MmLster
B•ll Amherger. Sunday School · Y:3 0 a.m.
Worshi p - 8.00 am . 10·10 a m .. 7.0U
p m ,Wednesday·Sen. ices - 7 00 p m
Hlckor)l Hills c •un:h of Chrllt
Tupper' Plains , Pa510r Mike Moore, Bible
d a~~. 9 a m Su nday. worsh1p 10 am
Sunday; won;lup 6·30 pm Sunday. Bi ble
class 7 pm Wed.

Retdsvllle Church or Christ
Pastor Philip Stunn . Sunday School · 9 30
o..m., Worsh 1p Serv•ce 10 30 a.m .. B1ble
SLUdy, Wedne,.(]uy. 6 30 p.m
Dexter C hurch of Chl'ist
Sut1day sc hool 9:30 a.m . Sunday worsh1p
· 10:30 a m.
The Churth of Christ of Pomeroy
Intersec tio n 7 and 124 W, Evangelisl:
Denms Sargen t, Su nday B1ble Study ·
9 30 u m.. Worshi p. 10 30 a.m . and 6:30
p m .. Wednesday Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartrord Church of Christ ill

Antiquity Baptist
Sund:~ y School
9 30 a.m .. Worship IU.4S a.m. Sund&lt;Ly Evenmg- 6:00p.m ..
P,l..,tor. Don Walker

your ltght so shi ne beftJrel
men. that they may see
works and glorify
Father in heaven:·
Matthew 5:

Cl'lrlsiian Union
Hartford. W.Va .. Pastor: Dav1d Greer.
Su nday School · 9.30 am .. W01:s h1p I[)·](] a m , 7:UO p.m . Wedncsda)
Se n·K.:es • HX) p.m

992-66n

White Funeral.
•

.

'

•

Since 1ass

9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

10:30 a m . 7.30
Sen. ice - 7.30 p.m

p.m ..

We~ltyan Hihle HolinesS C hurth
Pearl Sl., M1dd le port l'a~t or: D11ug
Cox, Su nday School - l fl a m 'W11rs h1p ·
10.45 p 111 , Sundny E\c H)() p m.
Wednesday Sen. ice - 7 30 p.m
7~

Hysell Run Cemmunlty Chu"h
Pas10r Rev. Larry Lemle), Sunday School
• 9:30 a.m, Won;h Lp · 10.45 a m • 7 p 111 ••
Thursday Htble Study ond Youth- 7 p.m.
Laurel Clift' t'ree Methodb;t Chu.n:h
Pas tor: Glenn Rowe, Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Wo rshi p - 10:30 a. m. and 6\
p m ,Wednc ~ ay Service· 7:00 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Thr Church of Jesus
Christ of l ..allrr-Day Saints .
St Rt. 160. 446-6247 or 446 -7486.
Sunday School 10:20 -11 a.m .. Re lief
Soclel) i l'ncsth ood I I .05- 12 ·OO noon.
Sac rame nt Scrv1ce IJ· I U:\5 a.m,
Homemak•ng meetmg. lsi Thurs .- 7 p m.

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran l:hu.n:h
Pme Grove, Wor.o;hip - IJ 00 ll m . Sunday
School • \0 00 fl.m. PAlitnr

Our Sa'"iour Lutheran Chunh
Walnut and Henry S t ~, Rttvcn!&gt;wood.
WV~t .. P1:1slllr Dav itt Russe ll Sunday
S~:h oo1 - \0 00 11 m., Wur-,hip • I I .t m

St. Paul L•theru Church

Comer Syciimore &amp; Second St .. Pu~eruy.
Su n School - 9:45 ii.m .. Worsh ip · I I a.m.

United Methodist

pm

.

p.m .. \\.:di'Jesdll) Sen.K't'S - 7 p.m.

liei'VICC

Tuppen Pl ~in~ St. Pllul
Pastor J1m Cnrbllt. S1mday Schoo l · q
am . Won;h1p • 10 am .. Thesday Semce~
- 7:30pm
Centra l 0Wtler
Ashury (Syracuo;e), Pa.\tor Rnb Rnbm son .
Sunday School - 9 45 am • Won;l'up - II
a m • WedneWay Serv1ces - 7 .lO p m

Chi:!Sier Churt h of the Nazare ne
Re v CurtiS Randolph . Sund:l\
Sl hnol - IJ·JH u m . Worship JI) : ~O ~ m.
Sunday c~enmg (J pm
Rutland t:h urt·h of lhe Nazarene
Pastor Isaac Shupe. Sunduy Srhoo1 \I· tO·
am , Worsh1p · HI ]0 a.m.. 6:30 11m ,
Wedne~da) Serv1cc' · 7 p m.

F.n lerpriq
Pastor Arland King . Sunday School- 9 ]()
am , Worship · 10 30 am 33105 H•land
Rd. Pomeroy

Other Churches

Flatwood~

Syracuse CommuniJ} Ch un- h
2480 Second St .. S} racu~, on
Sun School 10 am Su11dy nigh! (J lO pm
?.tstor Jl.ll..' G" inn

Pastor Dewayne Stuttkr. Sunday School ·
IOam , Wul'l&gt;hlp - ll am .

(t'ull Gospel Church) H arri~llll&gt;tll~.

A New Beginning
Pa~tor..:

t'urest Run
P:tSior Bob Ruhinsun. Su nd&lt;~y
a.m., Worship - 9 am

Bub .md.Kay Mur ~ h.tll .
Sunduy Sen1ce. ~ p !11 .

S~: hoo l -

.

10

Amazing Grace Commun it) t:hurch
l'a.'\tnr. Wuync Dunlup. St:1te. Rt 0~ I.
Tuppers Pl mn~ . Sun Worship 10 um &amp;
6·10 pm Wed. IJtblc Study 7 UO pIll.

Hellt h (Middleport)
Pastor. Bnan Dunham. Sunday Schoo l 9:30am .. Worship - 11 ·00 a.m.

oa~ l s

Pearl Chupel
Sunday School -I) u.m .. Worship · 10 ::~.m.

Rock Sprin gs
Pastor Dewayne S1utler. Sunday School Q 0{) n m . ,Wo rsh1p - HI a m . Youth
Fel lowship Sunday · 6 p m E11.r ly Sunday ~
worsh1p 8 am lenni Dun ham,

Rutland
Pas lor. R1ck Bourne, Su u d;~y School 9 30 a.m .. Worship · 10 30 ;u n. ThumLty
Services · 7 p.m.
Salem Cent~r .
PasTOr: W1lham K. M:u~ h al l. Su nilily
School . 10· 15 a m .. Worship · 9: 15am ..
Bible Stud): Monday 7:C() pm
Snow\lllle
Su nday Schoo l · 10 am., \Vorship · 9 am .

C.11rmei-Sutlon
Cannel &amp; Bnhan ~d s .. Racmc. Oh10.
Pas lor Jnhn Gilmore, Sunday School •
9 45 am . Worship· I UXI a.m. , H1blc
Study Wed 7 30 p.m
Morning Star

Ral pl1 Spires. Sunday School - 9.30 a.m .
Worsh1 p - 10 :311 am .. 7 p.m . Thur..d.ty
Scrv1ces - 7 p Ill
Meigs C ooperatln~ Parish
Northeast Cluster. Alfred . Paslor: J1m
Co,rblll , S und ay Sc hool • 9.30 a. m..
, Worsh1p - II 11 m ,6-30 p m
Chester
· Pa•tor Jun Corbttt . Worst·u p • 9 am ..
Sunday Se houl - W 11 m , Th u ~ay

.......................
.... llllliii·IIIIICIII'

740-594-6333

1-800-451-9806

Pastor : B1 ll Mar!hal l Sunday Sehoul ·

MNI2-5444

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992·5130
Pomeroy
~~~~ea are

the pure
·in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

l'uin It'" ltihle Church
Lelitn. WVa Rt J, Pa'1~1r . lJri .m Ma y,
Sund&lt;t~ Sdll'oO.II 9 341 a Ill .. Wor.htp · 7.00
p 111 . WcJnc'iJ:~; B1tlle Stud~ 7 m p.m
··111th h llu\\ship CruSade for Chr ist
p ,,~ tu r R.:\ 1-r:Lnl.hn D1~l.en~. Ser\ICe ~
l·rtdil~. 7 p m

C11 h ar) llibk L'hun- h
Pt&gt;mt:lll}' Ptl.e. [\, Hli .. l'ustnr· Re.v
Bl:id\\WnLI . Su nU.ty Sd\onl · 9:\0 u.m ..
Wl,(\lup 10 10 .tm. 7·30 p .m..
\V~Jn~ 'd:1y Scmu: · '1 111 p m
Stln•rs,·illl' l'ommunily Ch uKh
Sunt1:1y Scho(l] HI Oft .un Sunduy Wnr, h1p
II 00 :un , Wet.lnl!' •li.l ~ 7 00 pm p,,~tor'
Mt~'\ D.llle~

&amp;

Rejmcing Life C hurch
5110 N. 2nd "' l'

i\11~ 0.:

hm?milll.

•

MnJdlepnn , Pa~tltr

P.I~Lur l:.fllt.'TIIII~ L1wn:n~c
10 00 am
7 p.m

.

SL·r.• Jl·t&gt;~-

Cllftn n Tubcrnat• lr f:h urch

Btthel Worship Cente r
397K2 St Rt. 7, 2 m1b sllut h ol Tup1&gt;cr'
Plit m ~. O U Nnn-dcnollliOllllOnul WJih
Contempo rary Prai~e &amp; Wor,hip P:l\lllt
Rob Barber. A.w.K P,l\lllr Kl1ryn Dtl\"
Youth Dnccto r B en~ Fulk~. Su11d:J}
serv1ces 10 am Wor~ h 1 p &amp; 6 pm Fanu l:o&gt;
Life Cla~ses, Wed &amp; I hur m~hl L1te
Grou p ~ ut 7 pm, Thur~ m o m i n~ lad1e•."
Lift: Gmup al 10 Qutet L1m1T' Y\lUih l.1k
Group on Wed cvcn mg fr':lm 6 30 lo K JIJ
V1s11 u ~ oohnc at www hethc lwcmg

pm

Racine
Pastor: Kerry Wood, Su nday School - 10
a m.. Worsh1p - II a.m .Wedoesdlt}
Servtces 6.rm: Th ur Bible Study 7 pm

{it.'or~r' C1 ~c~ Hoall. G,LIItpolb, OH
Pll,lur J.om1.: \'v1r~m:.m . Sl!lldll) S.:r\'tees'Hl 'n .t m \\,·ci ne"!.'~ - 7 Jl m Thur~di1~
PL.t&gt;t·r &amp;_ Pr.m~ .11 (, prn C'lus\e~ for all

1771

e\&lt;"r~

·lft!'

Sun.l : t~

&amp; Wt'dll~~du)'

""" lhL·ar~dnuLh net
t' ull Guspd Clum·h
of lh e L h i n~ Sa\iur
Rl J3X. Anllllllit}. Pa&gt; IOI Jc\\e Morm .

A.~h

Syraeust Ml ~slon
1411 Br idgem:,m St , Syracu\t: Suml.1)
School
10 a.m. l:vening - 6 p 111 •
Wednc!&gt;dn) Servi(.'C - 7 p.m.
Hazel Communlly Ch un-h
Off Rt 124, P,L~!O r ' &amp;bel Han, Sun~.t:t;
School 9 3{] am .. WoN htp - IO:JO :t m..
7 30p 111

Dyesvillt Community Church
Sund lly Sehool - lJ ~ 0 a m Wor~ h1p lti JUa.m.,7 p m.
·•

· Nazarene
Point Ruck Church of the Nal.llren~
Route 689, AlbanY. Re'- . Lloyd Grnnm.
pastor. Su nday Sc hool 10 am, worhs•p
sen·ice II am, eve n 1 n ~ scn•1ce 7 pm . Wt:&lt;J
prayer meeting 7 pm

Morse ChaJKI Chun-h
Sun da) school • 10 am .. Wn ~&gt;lll p - I\
11m Wednesday Scr\K'C - 7 p m.

Mld41epott Church of the Nazarene
Pastor. Leonard Powell , Su nday Sc hool- ·
9·30 a.m..Worship - 10:30 a.nl : 6:30 pm ,
Wednesday SeN ices - 7 p.OJ ..
Rctdsl'ille Fellow ship
Church of the Nazarene. Pnstor : Ru~ ~e ll

' l' .11ilh Clospel Church
Lo ng Rottom Sunday Schuol - 9 10 :L m .
Worship . 10 4fi ,I m ? 1(} rIll
Wednesday 1 ~0 p m
t•ull Gospel U ghthou se

33045 Hdand R!,J&lt;Ld. Pu meru) , Pa~ lor . Roy
Hunter. SundaJ St:l1oo l - 10 t! m , EH·nmg
7 30 p m , Tue~d ay &amp; ThurN • 7.30 p.m.

Sund~}

S~·hnul

9 ..\0

ollil.

Presbyterian
·

Pa~lm .

1 1 rt' ~hy t c ritm

Chu rch
Rnho: n C11m. Wtll ,h1p · 9 ,1 111

Harrlsmnillc

\tlidd lep(lrl Pns b~ t erl an

l'a..wr Junw• Sn;der. Sund.tJ Sd1&lt;wl 10
am. lltlf\hlp....- t\ ll'l: II alll

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seyenth-Oay Ad\·e ntis t
Mulht•rr; llh Rd, Pumcrn}. Smu rday
Sl•rvL~c'
S:rllh.llh Sd111ul
~ p..m ..
W(ll~hlp

) p 111 .

United Brethren
1\lt . Hcfnlun United Urclhrcn ''

in ( 'hrist Chu n·h
lc\ ,r~ lommun1 t) ~1&gt;411 W1dham Rd.
l'a, tm l'cta MmtLild.Jk. Su ndt1y S~hnol 1} ·~0 .1111. Wor,hlp
10.1(1 .ttl1 ..7/l0
pm .

Wt·Jnc\da~

Acts 24:16

protect !JOUr Jatnif!J •

172 N. 2nd Ave . Mttldlcpmt. OH
J53-0K37 Fax:

It was ar .this moment that the
hone rang. It was my,Aunt Mary.
thought she was just calling to
give her condolence.s like so
many others did that day. -I was
wrong.
.
Mary asked, "Doug, when are
you going talk to the funeral
director?"
"Later, about 3," I responded.
"Why don't you leave your door
unlocked for your Uncle George
and me to come over and clean
your mother's room?"
In that instant, time stood still for
me. My aunt and uncle were very
close to my mother and this would
be difficult for them to do emotionally. I knew the walls and the carpet
and the bed were covered with
blood, human tissue, and pieces·of
bone. How could they possibly
clean all that mess? Why would
they he willipg to do this?
"Are you ·sure you want to do
this?" I a*ed.

r

"Absolutely sure," she said.
"Why are you doing this?" I
questioned.
"Because we love you and God
loves you."
I knew my aunt and uncle were
Christians. In fact, we attended
the same church. Until that day, I
didn't know that there was anything different about their faith
than mine.
For them, this kind of extraordinary service was really ordinary.
· They rendered service that
required loving sacrifice on their
part. And all because they loved
me and God loved me. I experienced God's love that day through
their sacrificial service. Their selfless act of service changed my life
and ultimately led to my decision
to answer God's call to full-time
Christian ministry and service.
(The Rev. Doug Stockton· is pastor of Grace United Methodist
Church in Gallipolis.)

RIO GRANDE - Marc Sarrett,
pastor of Trinity Baptist Church at
Rio Gmnde, invites all to hear Avi
Snyder, director of the lntemational
Post-Soviet Ministries of Jews for
. !esus, speak at the church on
Monday, March 10 at 7 p.m. .
Jews ·for Jesus was founded b)'
Moishe Rosen, the leading authont~ in contemporary Jewish , misstons.
Snyder, who is based in New

York, oversees Jews for Jesus
activities among Russian-speaking
Jewish people in the former Soviet
Union, Germany and lhe U.S.
An American Jew, Snyder, his
wife,
three
children
and ·
Uzbekistani Jewi sh believer
Elizabeth Terini moved to Odessa
in the Ukraine in 1991 to spread the
message. They returned to the U.S.
in 1998, leaving behind them a.
mi ssionary force of 30 indigenous

Jews for Jesus workers in five
Russian cities.
On staff with Jews for Jesus since
1978, Snyder received his theological trainmg from the Fuller School
of World Missions with a master's
degree in missiology and a concentration
on
Jewish
Evangelical/Jewish Studies. He
now coordinates post-Soviet ministries on an international level. A
team of three Soviet-born staff

members is a! work among the
300,000 Russian-speaking Jewish
r~sidents of the New York area.
"With so many post-Soviel
Jewish people living in the States,
in Canada, in Israel and Germany,
the time seems ripe for a coordinated strategy of direct evangelism, ·
literature production and the preparation of messianic Jewish missionaries from the ·former USSR,"
. Snyder said.

to care":

Mv erace is sufficienf
for thee: for mv
streneth is made ~':'il
Perfect in weakness.:
11 Cor; 12!9

..

COme on over to Bob's•••
Two Convenient Locations

•

Office Servlce &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992·6376

•

2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446·1711

1/4 mile north of
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
'
Mason, West
(304)

..

·- ------"---------------~------'----'--

This poem was written
by my mother, Ellaine
Coy, when I was undergoing chemotherapy for
breast cancer. My mother
has set the example elf
faith in God and the power
of prayer for all my life.
That faith definitely sustained me through a very
difficult time .
What a pleasure it has
been having your for a
daughter. You have given
me reason to worry; You
have given me much love.
You have become a
. woman that I am proud of
You have handled your
misfortune much better
than I could have.
I regret that/wasn 't close
by to comfort and /wid your
hand,
Thanks to a big sister
who was a solid brick
through it all.
'Which proves that family
means a lot after all.
I love you Lynn, iulnd in
there and keep up the good,
.
fight.
And I'm sure you 'II be
rewarded with a long and
beautiful life.
My mom, Ellaine, lives at
4543 Morgan Lane, Vinton.
My name is Lynn White
and I live in Galion, Ohio.
When I was in the hospital
for surgery, mom was
recovering from knee
replacement surgery. She
was bound determined to
be at my side, though, and
made the uncomfortable
drive.

1-740-667-3156
"Still small

Supprcs~ion • Exltng ui:-.her\ • Sprinkler.,
• SccurJ1)~

was my mother, lying in bed with a
shotgun and blood gushing out of
her neck where her head used to ·be.
My mother had been depressed for
some time over my father's de!!th
nearly six years earlier. Apparently
the pain and depression finally got
to be · too much for her and she
committed suicide.
The ent: • day of her suicide was
a blur. The police came. They
asked me many questions before an
ambulance took my mother to the
funeral home. As the police were
leaving, they told me that I should
probably ·call a cleaning service to
clean mother's room for me. For
the nelll hour, I tried to locate
someone to come to our home for
this miserable cleaning task. While
there are probably many services
today that will do this kind of work,
more: than 25 years ago in our small
community, there were none. The
thought began to dawn on me that I
may have to do the job myself.

Jews for Jesus leader speaking locally

Se-n let\ - 7 Oil p.m

Ymith gmup Ln&lt;.'l"'tmg :!'u.! &amp; ~1 h Sm1day\
7pm
Edtn Unill-d ltnt hrr n in Christ
Sta tt· ~uule 1~4 bcll.\l"t:/1 Rced~v l l le &amp;.
ll ul lmgp011. Suuda) ~dur1•f - 10 u.m .
Sunday 'Wor\hip - II 00 o1 m W..:linesd:Ly
Scrvi~:r:~ - 700 p m , Pa~tor - M. Adam
Wtll

Coolvtlle, Ohi o
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

cor famify ndp

With the election upon us, I am
reminded of John F. Kennedy's
famous speech in which he challenged all Americans to, "Ask not
what your country can do for you.
Rather ask what you can do for
your country." His call to service
was both inspiring and biblical.
What a difference this kind of sacrificial service could make today,
not only in our nation, but in the
lives of hurting people!
· I'll never forget how I was
touched by someone demonstrating
this kind of service. Early one
.August morning in 1982, I awoke
to a loud boom, kind of like the
sound of a car backfiring. With my
head still hazy from a deep sleep, I
·wandered down the hall to my
mother's bedroom. When I opened
her bedroom door, my mind could
not comprehend what I saw. There
was my mother, at least I thought it

l'e nltcu~t u l t\s.'ii'mhly
!',!,tor· St HI t2-l. ltacml!'. Tnrnu(kl Rd
Sund;ry S~:hnn l - 10 ,1111. l:.vcru ng -, 7
p m . Wt·dnc,tb' Scn1u·, - 7 p m

The care you dese111e, close to home good worb and glorify your

~L&lt;t

BY DOUG STOCKTON

Pentecostal

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
or God so loved rh e world
PHARMACY
he gave his only
We Fill Doctors'
lberw tten son...
Prescriptions ·
Jolm 3:16
992·2955
Pomeroy

.

Wonh1p 1it J O am . 1 Ol) pm, Wed
S~n· 1ce 7 00 pm
Tl.'lt m Jt'!ius Mlnl!ilrlts
Meetmg tn the Mulberry C'mnmunuy
Ce11tcr Gymn,htUlll Pa~tor Eddie Raer.
Scnltc Cl t·r~ hc~day l'i 30 pm

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, that they may see your
Father i11lzeaven ."
Matthew 5: 16

.Call to·service best kind of sacrifice

Full Gw. pt•l, Cl Pa•lllr. Ruben &amp; Rnbc11a

Faith Valley Tabernudt&gt; ( 'hun·h
Bailey Run RuaJ, Pastor Rc\ , bnml'H
Raw~on. Sunday EHni ng 7 p m .
Thursday Serv~ce · 7 p.m.

Btthel Church
Township Rd , 46XC, Sunday Sc hool • 9
a m. Wnr~ h1 p - 10 a m , Wednesday
Se rvi[es- 10 a m

A mother's
devotion

St. Rt. 1241 .an g;;l' lllt·.O H

l·n~.ht)

Middleport Cf'lmmunit~ t:hurth
575 Peatl ~~ . M1ddlepnrt . Pu ~t ur S.n11
An dersou, S unda )' Sch1111l I{) il m.
E\euing · 7 30 p m , Wednc, dny ~en 1,c 7 30 p Ill

Cooh·ile UniUd Mrthodlst Parish
Pastor He len Kl me. Coolville Churc h.
Ma1n &amp; hflh St.. Sun. Sc hool - 10 u m ..
Worsh1p - 1J a.m.. Tues. Servtccs- 7 p.m

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man ."

Understand and study.
Spread the message.
Share the first fruits.
Listen to the lonely.
Forgive a hurt.
Hold a hand.
Send a card.
Feed a family.
Pick up and carry His hurt.
Take up His cross.
Use His timepiece.
Walk His mile.
Respond to His calling.
Hear His cries.
Dry His tears.
Defend Him.
Five with His measure.
Love as He loves!
-Author unknown

I hr Ark Ch urch

Harrisonvlllt Communit) Churc h
Pastor· ~h ero n Durham . SunQay · •HO
am and 7 ,P m , Wcdne~d ll) - 7 p.m

7 00 p.m ,

36759 Rocksprings Rd .
Po,meroy, OH 45769
740·992-6606

Gods answers

a. m ,
- 7 p m . WeJJll'' d:ty Se rvtce • .7

C lilti m. WVa. SILillla; Sdwol · 10

MU\)\'r.

9a m, Wors hip • 10 a.m•.• 1st Su nday

Torch Church
Cu Rd 63, Su nday Sehou l · 9.]11 a m .
Wor~ h ip- 10:30 u 111

.Mt: Ollye United t\.1ethodlst

- 7 r rn

p.m

und 7 p.m , Wed•w~duy - 7 p m ..
lcllow~ h l p serv1ce 7 p.m

Eut Letart

BMhtel United Methodi st
New Haven . Ric hard Nease. Pasto r.
Su nday wo rship 9JO a m. Tues. 6:3Q
pm}er and Bt ble Study.

741-112-1141

499 Richland Avenue, Athens

Juhn Gilmore. Sund,Jy School · II
a.m . Wursh1p - 10 a m

~e r,• tce

\\ hite's Chapel \\es ley1m
l 't'O I\IIk Roud . f'."111r: Rev. l'h.ule~
Mou·;,n,lale Sund.l} Sdlfllll. - 9.~n :~ m .
~'ur• t1111 . 10 ~\) u m . Wednl·~da~ SrnKt:

Ash St r.~et C hurch
St . M1 d Jic p urt- P a~l O I ~ 1\oturk
Salem Cnmmunll v Church
,\1 nrrnw .~ Rodnq Wnl~cr Sunday
8:1\'k ot Weq C•1lumb1a , W V••nm L1cvmg
Sl hool • &lt;J 30 ... m Mnrn 1ng Wor.o,lup 10 10
. ~~ rl1 . &amp; 7 {)() p;n WeJne~Jny Scrvu:~ Road. P.t.,lor C'lwrk ~ Rtl\1\h 13114) 67.S 22l'iH. Sunday ~th&lt;llll () \fl am, Sun d a~·
- 7 00 ~ m., Y(lu lh Sel'\ llC· 7 ()\) p m
cvc nlllg ~cmcc 7:00 pm. B1bl)' Study
l\ ~11 pe l.lfc Center
Wednc:.day ..cr.tco.' 7 (l() pm
"Fu i i-Gu~pel Church". Pa~tor' John &amp;
Pall)' \V&lt;ti.k, 60J Second 1\ \c Mol'&gt;lln 771- •
Hobson t.:h ri~tiu n Frllo 1-1s hip Church
5017. Sen· 1~e tnnc Su11da) 10 lOam.
1',1,tor
l ler\~ h\·1 While Stinda) Sch11nl
' Wcdne~da} 7 pm
10 ,,m . Stmd.1y Churlh \Cf\'K'C • 1'1: 10 pm
\\'&lt;"tl nc"'-I•1Y' 7 rm
Aliundant G ra~:~ R.t'. l.
92J S Th1rd St , M!ddleJX&lt;rt , Pa\tur Tcrc.,a
Restoru1iBn ( 'hri ~ t ht.n t'l'llowshlp
Dav1s, Sun day ~Cf\' l l'C. 10 ,, m.
91f,.5 Hnu per Rtwd. Athen~. Pastor·
Wednesd:ty ~erv1ce, '1 p m.
Lu nmc Cuat~ \t nday Wor~ h 1p Ill ()() an1.
W,:J ne.....Ja;' 7 pr tt
Faith Full Gospel Chun:h
Long Bottom. Pa~tor: S 1 cv~ R c~d. ~und.J)
llousc of H c.ulln~ Mh1lstrl"~
Sch ool - 9 30 a.m. Worshtp - 9 ,.m am

a m.

month evemng
Wednesda} · 7 p.m .

The moral values of the
modem-day world differ
from valu11s of Yore, when
a handshake sufficed for a
signature, never needed
was anything more.
A man's reputation was
an object of pride, a man
was as good as his word .
No strings were attached to
the lending of hands, no
refusal to help ever heard.
Family life values were
taught in the home, and the
word of a parent was law.
But that was when families
were largely in tact with
sources from which they
could draw.
We can dream of re-living those long by-gone
days, but reality, alas, must
be faced. But not by wish- ,
ful thinking or .dreams can
now be replaced.
Just what is the key for
reversing the trend as far
away from true values we
roam? It's beyond our solution, but perhaps we should
ask that God fill in the void
in the home.
-Author unknown

.~Mdom Gospd !\tis.~ion
B,I]J Kn(lb, on ('o Rd J I. l'.t~tur R~v
Hoger W1lllurd. Sunda} Sdwul · 9 Jll
II m. Wor~h1p 7 p m

Br~,m

2008

Values

iJill

wm~hlp

WR.

· Bethany
Pas tor: John Gilmore! Sunday School · 10
am., Worsh• p - 9 a.m , Wednesday

e\'ery

Friday, March 7,

Car ll' lon lnterdtnominariurml ( ' hun:h
King'tt'IUf} RoaJ P.l'lllr Knhert \'am.'C.
Sunda~ s~hlll'll
I.J \() J nt
\\tlr,hLp
Srn1~·..- 10.30 am .. E\enm~ ~l·n1~e 0

\\t.'dnc, d,t)

Portland-Racmr Rd .. Pastor. Jm1 Prn11'tll,
Su nduy School - Q .'U a .m, \\'Cif'• lli p 10:30 u m, WednesJay Service' . 7:00

Pomeroy
l'nstor. ~na n Du nhit m. Wotship - 9 30
am .. Sunda) Schoo l- 10.35 a m

\0

FAITH. FAMILY

South Bflht•l Communi!~ ('hurrh
\iil\er R1dgr- PNOI LmJ ,1 Diliiii.'.,.Ol'll.i.
'IUrld.t\ 1khoul \),I Ill \\tor,h rp S~r\ICC
10 am . :!nJ and 41h SunJJ~

h m:nmn \\ nr~htp

Communil) of Ctw-ist

Hockingport Chu rch '
Grand Street. Su nday School - 9 ~0 am .
Wor~ h 1 p - 10 3() 01 m.. Pa~tnr Ph1lhp Bell

Off 124 bc hmd WJi kcsvtlle, Pa~ tor: Rev

l:hrlslian t'ellowship

(Non-dcnommatLUnu l fel\nw~hip )
Meetmg m the Meig' Middle SdJ&lt;&gt;oul
Caleten.a l'a~tor · Chris S1cwun
10:00 am - Noon Sunday: lnlllr111UI
Worship, Chtldre11's mini,try

Minersville
Pastor· Bob Robi nson, Sunday Sc hool - 9
11m. Worship - 10 p.m.

Scmce~ -

PageA7

Pa~tor

Graham United Metho4jisl
Worship . II a.m. Pastor R1ch:nd Nea~

.1f1•brr jfuneral ~ome
ZM . . . IICIIIIIII. ••• AliiI\ ..
Ulll

Davis-Quickel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My
I NSURANCE
Fu ll line of
·
'
InSUrance words abide in you, ye shall
Products+ ask whaJ .ye will, and it shall
"'
Financial
be done unto you.
Services
AGE~C I ES Inc
John 15:7
Bill Quickel

·

Wedne~day

Pom~ruy Church of the Nazanone
Pu ~tor Jan L:11ender. Sunday ~Schul•l 4J:3U a.m. WoNhtp 10:30 a.m llnd n

Rfeds,·me

Pa~tu r

a.m
Bethlehem Baptist C ~urch
'Grea t Bend . Route 124, Rac mt:. Oil,
Pastor: Ed Caner. Sunda} Sr.:hool - 9 30
am, Sundll} Wo r ~ h ip- 10.30 a.m ..&amp; 7
pm ; Wednesday B1ble Study-7:00 p.m

P:~swr· R~y .

Communlly C hurch

Pomeroy Wu L•Iide Church of Christ
B226 Children's ll nme Rd .. Su nday
School - 11 a m , Won;hip- lila m .•6 p.m
Wednesday Se rv ices- 7 p m

.m a.m.. Worship

p.m

Trln lly Churth

212 W. Mam St . Sundo) School - 9 30
am .. Worship- \0 :30 a.m .. 6 p m,
Wedne~ay Sen.1ces • 7 p.m.

s,. r8ruse Church or the ~IWdrCOt'
Pw.tor M1Ae Ad~m~. Sunday Schl"l(J] 4 11)
a.m. Wor ~ h1p
!0·1() am .. 6 p m.
Wl"&lt;lne..Ua~ S..:r\ 1ce~- 1 p.m

Long Bottom

Westside Chutth of Chrtst
33226 Children 's Hom~ Rd. Pomeroy. OH
Conl'act 740-441-1296 Sunday morning
10 :00 . Su n mormng Bible sludy;
foliO\I.in~ wors htp, Sun eve 6.00 pm.
Wed h1ble ~t u dy 7 pm

l'omrro)· Cburth of Christ

Q ~0 o~..m

Sunday School · IJ
10:30 am .

Congregational

Hemlock Grove Christi11n Chun:h
M1 mster: Larry .Brown, W()rship - 9 :30 :
am Stmdll) School · 10:30 a.m ., Btble
Study · 7 p m.

Joppa
r aslor: Dcnnl Null. Wt)l'\hlp
Sunday School- IU.~l u m.

Rutl11nd Chu n:h ol God
Pa~1or: Ron Ht:ulh. $und&lt;~y Worship · 10
a.m . 6 p.m , Wednesday Semces · 7

Church of Christ

'

Carson , Sunday Sch(lnl IJ 30 ct m .
Worship - I0.4.S a.m .. 6 p.1n, Welhlc,o.f..t)
Sef\llts · 7 p m.

1 p.m.

p.m

Sacred llt lll'l L'ulholic Cburch

t'ln:t Soutlrern Ba ptbit
41M72 Pomeroy Pik.e, Sunday School 9,30 u.m .. Worship- 9.45 am &amp; 7 00 p m.,
Wednesday Servtces- 7 00 p.m

Pa~t or. B1 lly Zuspan 6th and Palmer S1..
Mu.kl leport. Su nday School - 9: 15 a:m ..
Wor sh,1p - 10· 15 am .. 7:00 p m ..
Wednesday Semce- 7:00 p.m

SenJCe~ -

Church of God

The Daily Sentinel

77':1.~7'&gt;1

I

�•

•

..

•

The Daily Sentinel

· REGIONAL

Bush, Pentagon.honor country's
oldest living World W~ I veteran
WASHINGTON (AP)Calling it a high honor,
on
President
Bush
Thursday warmly greeted
107-year-old
Frank
Woodruff
Buckles,
· described by the White
House as the l{lst known
surviving American-born
veteran of World War I.
· "Mr. Buckles' mind is
sharp, his memory is crisp,
and he's ~&gt;c&lt;en sharing with
me soine interesting anecdotes," Bush said in the
Oval Office. Buckles, in a
wheelchair to Bush's right,
sat quietly with his hands
clasped as the president
spoke during a short photo
opportunity.
Bush said that before
reporters came in the room,
Buckles had recalled chatting with General John J.
Pershing, a legendary figure
from World War I.
Eager to get in the Army
in 1917, Buckles lied to a
military recruiter about his
age and enlisted at the start
of the U.S. involvement in
the war. He served in the
United States, the United
· Kingdom, Germany and

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS The
nation's passenger rail operator is lookin$ at restoring
lines to Ohio Cities that have
been without them for
decades . at -the request af
Gov. Ted Strickland.
Strickland asked · Amtrak
in a Feb. 26 Jetter to evaluate how practical it would
be to restore a passenger mil
line
to
Cleveland,'
Columbus and Cincinnati,
with stops in some of the
other·cities along the route.
Strickland wants Amtrak
to work with the Ohio Rail
Development Commission
on the study, the governor
said Thursday, and a commission spokesman said it
should be completed within
18 months.
The governor said adding
passenger service · would
help Ohio's cities create jobs
and attract new business.
"Investment in a rail
transportation system that
links metropolitan .areas
with passenger rail service,
while improving freight
commerce, would represent
one such (development)
tool," Strickland wrote.

AP photo
World War I veteran Army Cpl. Frank Woodruff Buckles, 107, from Charles Town, W.Va.,
meets with P~esident Bush Thursday in the Oval Office of the White Pouse in Washington.
France ·bat never saw combat. By 1920, he was discharged .with the rank of
corporal.
"Mr. Buckles has a vivid
recollection· of historic

•..

2008

Local Weather

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

ML8 spring training, Page 82
NFL offseason moves, Page 82

Friday... A chance of rain
in the moming ...Then rain
in the afternoon. Highs in
the lower 40s. Northeast
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain near I 00 percent.
Friday night... Rain. Sleet
and srtow after midnight.
Snow and sleet accumulation around an inch. Ice
accumulation of less than
one quarter of an inch. Cold
with lows in the upper 20s.
Northeast winds around I 0
mph. Chance of preci pitalion near I00 percent
· Saturday...Snow. Several
inches of snow accumulation. Much colder with
highs in the upper 20s.

North winds 10 to 15 mph
·with gusts up to 25 mph:
Chance of snow 90 percent.
Saturday night... Mostly .
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of snow showers.
Colder with lows around IS.
West winds 5 to I 0 mph. '
Sunday and Sunday
night...Mostly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 30s. Lows
in the lower 20s.
Monday and Monday
night. ..Mostly . cloudy.
Highs in the mid 40s. Lows
in the upper 20s.
·
Tuesday
throug~
Thursday... Mostly cloudy:
Highs in the lower 50s.
Lows in the lower 30s.

AEP (NYSE) - 41.20
Alao (NASDAQ) - 73
Aahland Inc. (NYSE) - 44.58
Bill Lots (NYSE) _: 20.02·
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 27.48 "

BorgWamer (NYSE) - 42
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

32.88

Norfolk Southern ( NYSE) 52.35

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ) -25
BBT (NYSE) - 29.82
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 20.92
Pepsico (NYSE) '- 70.12
Premier (NASDAQ) - 12.18
Rockwell (NYSE)- 52.99
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 4.88 .

Royal .Dutch Shel.l - 89.12
Sears HokllnC (NASDAQ)93.49

WaJ.Mart (NYSE) - 49.98
Wendy'a (NYSE)- 23.84
Worthington (NYSE) - 17.73
Dally stock reporta are the 4
p.m. ET c1011n11 quotel of
tran~actlanl for March 8,
2008, provided by Edward
Jones financial adviiON luac
Mills In Galllpolla at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marraro
In Point Pleeunt at (304)
874-0174. Member SIPC.

Passenger lines once were hibitive, the state could they will support it, he said. Harley-Davidson (NYSE) a major transportation have passenger trains run"This is really great for 311.81
Mor~~&amp;n (NYSE) - 37.37
source .in Ohio but fell out ning within four years.
the. environment, but it's JP
Krocer
211.18
of favor due to the rise in air
Currently, the only trains good for the economy too," Umlted (NYSE)Brands
(NYSE)travel and the opening of offering passenger services he said.
14.82
interstate highways.
.
to Ohioans qriginate in New
Amtrak is using $3QO,OOO York,
Pittsburgh · and
in federal grant money fun- Washington, D.C. All three
SYRACUSE RESIDENTS
neled through the Oliio have Chicago as the ultimate
DeEeartrnent ofTransportation destination. 1\vo of the trains
Based on the needs that have been completed by Syracuse residents at this date, the following top
to f!lrmine the cost of con- have stops along Lake· Erie . · six priority needs for the village of Syracuse are:
strucnon and equipment.
and the Washington-Chicago
The state has studied the train has a stop m Cincinnati. .
issue many times, most
Columbus 1s the second- . Demol~ion of Abandoned s t r u c t u r e s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - recently in 2000 when a largest market, behind Street R e p a i r s - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - study concluded that inter- Phoenix, without passenger
est in rail service would · service.
Fire Equipment and Facilities--------------..,.-----dra\\1 ali"''estimalea 89,060 - .. If Americans relied less -: commurilry"tlinter ________________________
passen~ers a year.
on tl_leir cars and more. on · Parks and Recreation
But nmes have changed, pubhc
transportatiOn, .
-----.-----------------w.ilb .•~ ~c.~ pf gasolin~ -- mclu!Hpa rail, they would : Sidewalk Repairs _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;;..__ _ _ _ __
doubfe~w'Gat it was then and~ "'save 'money, makl!"the'··iiir ~ · ·
,,. ·•·•
highways getting more con- . cleaner and reduce their
Syracuse resldems are being aakad to complete this form and prcivlde specific locations within the
gested, and interest has been · reliance on foreign oil, said
VIllage that can baneflt any ol.the above needs. Funding for the stated projects may be Included In .
renewed, said rail commis- Morgan Keenan, a . 'con'
the CDE!G Distress application soon to be flied.
·
sion . spokesman
Stu sumer rights advocate for
Nicholson.
the nonprofit Ohio Public
Residents may leave completed forms at the Syracuse Water Off~ p~or to Ap~l 4, 2008.
"The object of the study is' Interest Research Group.
what does it take to get this
Instead of spendina bilEric cunningham, Mayor
done, not just look at the lions of dollars building
corridor but to sit down new highways, the governwith the freight railroads,'' ment should put some of the
Nicholson said. '"There real- mone~ into public transIy ought to be a benefit in it ' portat1on and reward confor them, because they own Sl\ffiers for using less gasothe corridor."
line, Keenan said. The more
If the study determines travelers know about public
that cost ' would not be pro- transportation, the more

Kentucky State Rep. marker when they buried their
Reginald
Meeks,
D- loot nearby. The fourth theory .
Louisville, a member of the is that it was carved by Nalive
state's Native American .Americans, and that theocy
Heritage Commission, is began in an account in the
sponsoring a resolution in the 1891 edition of the
Kentucky General Assembly Portsmouth newspaper. And
condemning the removal of the fifth theory is about I DOthe rock and demanding that years-old. It says a boy named .
it be returned to Kentucky.
1ohn Book, a prominent
''We're going to use all member of Scioto County
legal means to get them to society who was killed in the
return it to its rightful place Civil War, carved it."
in the commonwealth," he
said in January.
. Not much is known about
the origin of Indian Head
Rock, which has a crude carving of a face and another of a
house, along with the names
of several early settlers.
Some say it was a navigational marker. Its existence
was known locally during
the late 1800s and early
1900s, when it appeared
once in a while when the
river was low.
Historian Steve Shaff~r of
Ironton, who headed a team
that retrieved the rock in
September, said it had been
submerged since at least
1920, before a system of
dams kept the Ohio River at
a relatively constant level.
He said there are five
main theories about how a
face was carved on the rock.
"One is that in 1851, messages were placed on the
rock, likely by early pionqn to ll)8fk the low-water
made,'' Shaffer said.
'The second is that a quarry man carved it with a metal
tool. ~!Y No. 3 is that a
band of robbr,lrs used it as a •

Inside

Girls state basketball roundup, Page B4

times," Bush said. "And one you very much for your -89.48
way for me to honor the ser- patriotism and your love for Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.94
·
vice of thos,e who wear the America."
Charming Shops (NASDAQ).
uniform in the past and
Buckles, a resident of 5.08
those who wear it today is to Charles Town, W.Va., was City Holdlll( (NASDAQ) 34.53
.
herald you, sir, and to thank · born in 1901.
Colllna (NYSE) - 58.32
DuPont (NYSE) - 48.4 7
US Benk (NYSEI - 31.10
Gannett (NYSE) - 29.08
General Elactrlc (NYSE) -

Fight over fock taken from Ohio
River about to go to a grand jury
PORTSMOUTH (AP) The border fight over a
crudely carved 8-ton boulder known as Indian Head
Rock is-escalating.
Officials in Kentucky are
hauling the mayor of
Portsmouth into court in
their effon to get back the
rock, which an Ohio historian , and a team of divers
pulled from the Ohio River.
The river is mostly under
Kentucky jurisdiction. The
· prosecutor in Greenup
County, Kentucky, has issued '
a subpoena for Portsmouth
Mayor Jim Kalb to testify
before a grand jury on March
28 as a material witness in
the removal of the boulder, .
which is being stored in a
city'owned service garage.
"We have the . Antiquities
Act here in Kentucky, that
involves things that are registered under that act through
the University of Kentucky,"
said
Greenup
County
Prosecuting Attorney Cliff
Duvall. "It's a Class D
felony, and in Kentucky, thaJ
carries one to five years. That
charge will probably be the
most applicable. There isn't
any monetary value that anybody could put on it."
Kalb said he wasn't surprised when he received the
subpoena.
"I got a call from my office
a couple of days ago, saying
that a member of the Scioto
County sheriff's office was
there to serve me with a subpoena," Kalb said Monday.
"I kind of suspected that it
would be ovet' the rock."

Friday, March 7,

Local Stocks

Governor asks.Amtrak to study Ohio passenger line
BY JoHN McCARTHY

Page·AS

Purina Mills
Lumber

Hosted By
March 13, 2008
0 .6:30 PM

MEIGS COUNTY ANNEX

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Friday, March 7, 2008

Sabathia pitches
J perfect innings,
Cleveland beats
Houston 11-5

Rio volleyball signs first recruit for 2008
BY MARK WtWAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

"""''"'"Rm Fields
a~"is expecting=oh
a~
ors as a Patsy
big blockin~. especially playing
'!
. senior this things from Hilgenberg.
middle m college.
past season.
"Brittany is one of our top
"I think I need to work on

'"'

needs to improve on her

RIO GRANDE - The
· KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) University of Rio Grande ·
The three- recruits for the 2008 sea- ~etting stronger in blockvolleyball
program
.
is
.
-· CC. Sabathia breezed
year letter son," she said. "She is a mg." she said.
winner was very talented player who
through ~he Houston hitters pleased to announce its·first
She plans to major in biolso easily, he wanted more . signing for the 2008 season second in the conference in can play middle and/or out- ogy.
work in the as Brittany Hil~enberg of kills and -third in blocks side. Brittany will be an
She expressed what .her
Marion Elgin High School while leading her team to a impact player for us imme- ultimate goal as a player for
bullpen.
Sabathia has signed a national letter pair of MOAC champi- diately.
the next four years at Rio
"We are excite&lt;! and Grande is.
threw three of intent to play for the onships.
·
Redwomen
beginning
in
the
Hilgenberg
is
excited
pleased
that
she
has
chosen
·p e r. f e c t
"To become a volleyball
·
1nn1.ngs, fall.
about coming to Rio to be a part of our program." player that is consi.stent and
needing
Hilgenberg, a 5-10 middle Grande.
Hil$enberg prides herself to help win volleyball
only
28 hitter, is expected to be an
"I'm really excited and on bemg a good teammate. ·matches,"
~
pitches . to impact player for Rio can't wait to get started,''
"M~ best asset as a teamRio ·Grande will cenainly
get throul!h mne batters Grande. She earned 2nd she said. "I felt so welCome mate IS that I'm a great team vote for that.
Thursday as the Cleveland Team All-Mid Ohio Athletic on my visit (to campus) and player and just want sueBrittany is the daughter of
Indians beat the Astros 11- Conference (MOAC) and Coach (Patsy) Fields could- . cess," she satd.
· Harry &amp; Tammi Hilgenberg
5.
Second Team Central n't have made it any better."
She said she feels like she of Prospect, OH.
'· Sabathia struck out three
and barely broke a sweat.
Qn a 50-pitch count in his
seeond ·Start this spring, the
Cleveland ace threw 22
BY ANDREW SEUGMAN ·
ASSOCIATED PRESS
: Pleue
Perfect, 14
'
CHICAGO (AP)
LeBron James was at it
SPORTS BRIEFS
again. Then, the Bulls
swarmed him.
Ben Gordon and Luol
·RYLto hold
Deng . scored 23 points
baseball-softball apiece, and Chicago overcame James' 39 ·to beat the
~ign-ups Saturday Cleveland Cavaliers 107-96
Thursday night.
The Bulls went on a 17RACINE - Baseball and
softball signups for the point run early in the third
.Racine Youth League will quarter to grab a 66-53 lead,
be from II a.m. to I p.m. and Gordon scored nine
Saturday · at the Racine straight during a 51-second .
American Legion hall. ·
burst late in: the period to
For more information, make it a 17 -point game.
call Chris Davis at 949- That was enough to give
·1030 or Charlie Wolfe at Chicago back-to-back wU1s
for the first time since late
247-3200.
December and offset another
strong effort by James.
MYLto hold
"So much has happened ·
during the season, but we've
baseball-softball got to stick with it and keep
playing," Deng said. "It's all
sign-ups Saturday about
a rhythm."
James
had it
MIDDLEPORT - The early on. . certainly
Middleport Youth -League ,
Cleveland's
superstar ·
will be holding sign-ups
made
it
look
easy
while
for baseball and softball
scoring
26
in
the
first
half,
for boys and girls ages
stealing the show in
five to 18 on Saturday after
New
York
the previous night
from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.
with
50
points,
assists
nt
the and eight rebounds10during
a
~iddleport
Council 119- 1{)5 victory - a perforChambers.
mance that left the crowd
:, Anyone interested in chanting "MVP!"
~articipating should attend
He hit 13 of 27 shots overliither of these sign-up all but was just 3-of-12 in
~ates.
the second half. The Bulls
.·AP pholo
aitributed the drop-off to a
Chicago
Bull's
Luol
Deng,
foreground,
battles
Cleveland
Cavalier's
LeBron
James
for the
tighter
defense,
and
~YLto hold
although James acknowl- ball during first half NBA basketball action in Chicago on Thursday.
·baseball-softball edged
they were "a little
going to go far in the play- had a · quiet night. He fin- who reportedly clashed with
more
aggressive,"
sign-ups Saturday said, "I took shotshethatalsoI offs
and have a chance to ished with two points and I 0 Noah.
"Unfortunately.
know .I can rrtake, but I compete for an NBA cham- rebounds in his first appear- things didn't work out th1s
POMEROY
The missed."
pionship? Get ugly and dirty ·ance at the United Center season like we would have
Pomeroy You\h League will . Compounding matters was sometimes by getting stops and second against Chicago liked to, but now I'm OK."
be holding sign-ups for the fact that hts teammates flfSt and figure oui how to since being traded to
The Bulls outscored the
baseball and softball for weren't converting.
score second. It's very con- Cleveland for Larry Hughes Cavaliers 34-16 in the third
boys and girls ages four and
"We've got to dig down cerning for me right ·now." and Drew Gooden in a three- quarter with Gordon, Deng
up Saturday from 10 a.m. to deep and find ou~ who we
The Cavaliers got 15 team deal. And he got out-. and Hughes leading the war
2 p.m. at the Pomeroy Fire want to be," coach Mike points from · Devin Brown played by rookie Joakim
Deng had eight in the penDepartment.
14 from Wally Noah, who grabbed a career- od, while Hughes scored
Brown said. · "Play l1 0 to and
For more information, 115 on the road and win Szczerbiak, but that wasn't high 20 rebounds while seven of his 12 during that
contact Ken at 992-5322.
17-point run.
to
overcome scoring 13 points.
sometimes and look pretty enough
winning? Or do we .want to ·Chicago's balance.
"I had some great experibe
a
playoff
team
that's
Former
Bull
Ben
Wallace
ences
here," said Wallace,
District 13 All-Star
PluseseeC.Vs,B2

Gordon, Deng lead Bulls to 107-96 win over Cavs

..

see

Wang fails to
make it through
t;rst inning, Reds
beat Yankees 12-8
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP)
- Edwin Enci;lmacion hit a
grand slam and a two-run
single Thursclay, and the
Cincinnati Reds roughed up
Chien-Ming Wang on theu
way to a 12-8 victory over
the New York Yankees.
Wang, a 19-game winner
the last two years, failed to
make it through the first
inning. The Reds got six'
runs on six hits, and Wang
left after retirjng only two
batters.
,
Adam Dunn hit an RBI
single, and Encarnacion had
a two-run single off Wang,
who faced I 0 batters.
. Leadoff batter Norris
Hopper sipgled twice off
Wang in the inning.'
·
"My stride was too long,"
Wang said. "My ball was
not moving. I'll fix it
quick."
.
Maqager Joe Girardi has
made Wang the leading candidate for the No. I spot in
the rotation. Wang was
expected to pitch the season
OJ&gt;7ner last year, but· was
s1delin~d by a hamstring
injury during spring training.
In his first spring start,
Wang pitched two scoreless
innings against Philadelphia
and allowed only one hit.
His pitches dtdn 't dip
Thursday, making for a
quick exit.
"His sinker was up,"
Girardi said. "His slider was
flat and he got into some
bad counts. They were
ag~ressive and didn't miss.
' He knows what he has to
do. It was his second start
and obviously didn't go the
way he wanted."
Darrell Rasner walked
three batters before giving
up Encarnacion's slam in
the fourth inning, putting
the Reds up 10-0.
Aaron Harang, scheduled
to pitch the season opener
for Cincinnati, allawed two
hits and struck out two in
three innings.
Dunn's opposite-field single in the first inning got the
Reds going and provided
more encouragement ftlr the
left fielder, who has worked
hard to cut down his strikeout total in the last year.
"I'm trying to be more
aggressive early in the
count," Dunn said. "I think
where I got in trouble is taking a lot of good {'itches and
putting myself m a hole.
The second part of last year
Ple•se see Reels, 13

game Monday at Rio
RIO GRANDE - The
District 13 Basketball
Coaches Association All-·
~ Game for both boys
idd girls will be held
~nday at the University of
RiO Grande.
[~2fhe alrls contest will take
p,~ce at 6 p.m., while the
· ~~ aame wlllltllrt around
l p.m. There wlll be a Slam
Di!nk and 3-point contest in
becween aamea. ·
;::rickets are $' at the gate.
PJvislon 1-11 selections will
~laY D III·IV selections.

..

,

..toNTAcrUs
,
~

;•.:: 1·740·446-2342 .ext. 33
...

•'""
• -1-740-448-3008
~-1-I!&gt;OrtiOmydallyaontlnel.com

~·-"

Jrlc Randolph, Sporta Writer
(740) 4-48-2342, ext. 33
oporiiOmydallysentlnet.com

Bryan Waltere, Sporte Writer
(740) 448·2342, ext. 33
b~UeraOmydallytrlbune.com

Larry Crum, Sporta Writer
(74QUI48·2342, ext 33 ·
lcru!";itmydallyreglater.com

Favre rules out return. to playing
football.
.
Bv CHRIS JINKINS

was over.
"As they say, all good
thinas must come to an
OREEN BAY, Wis.
end, Favre said. ''I look forSitting by himself on an air- ward to whatever the future
plane ride up to Oreen Bay may hold for me."
.
on Thursday momina, Brett
After a farewell news conFavre auuaaled to fine! a sin- ference that luted just over
cere and araceful way to lay an hour, Favre put his arm
he was finished with foot- around his tearful wife,
ball.
Deanna, and left the stage In the end, ·his tears told presumably for aoOd.
th~ story.
He takes with bim a Super
"I know I can plaX but I Bowl victory, vinually every
don't think I want to, ' Favre . quarterback record worth
said, choking with emotion having and the widespread
in a news conference at admiration of his peers and
Lambeau Field two days fans.
·
after he announced his
The 38-year-old Favre
retirement. "It's been a great also leaves with graying hair
career for me, but it's over." and a deliberate gait- signs
Wearing an untucked col- that the years were quietly
Jared shirt, blue jeans and taking a toll on the man who
several days' worth of stub- was. celebrated for playing a
ble, Favre said he was con-· serious and precise game
vii!Ced he could still play on with the carefree joy of a litSundays, but had lost his tie boy.
passion to practice and preHe cried Thursday as he
pare the way he would need discussed his decision.
AP photo to lead the Packers to anoth"I promised I wouldn't-get
Green Bay Packers quarterback Brett Favre talks about his ' er Super Bo\yl.
emotional,'' he said: But as
retirement Thursday during a press conference at Lambeau
Given that fact, he could the tears flowed, he added,
Field In Green Bay, W~.
'.
draw only on~onclusion: It "I've watched hundreds of
ASSOCIATED

~EBS

players retire and you wonder what that would be like.
You
think you're .prepared
n
.,
Favre thanked the Oreen
Bay Packers for letting him .
play,
"1 hope that with every
penny they've spent on me,
they know it · wus money
well spent,'' he said. "It wasn't about the money or fame
or records. I hear people t.alk
about ~our accomplishments
and thm~s. It was never my
accomphshmenis, it was our
·
accomplishments."
Favre is the NFL's only
three-time MVP, and leads
the league with 442 touchdown passes, 61 ,655 yards
passing and 160 career victories. He started 253 consecutive
regular-season
games, more than any other
quarterback in history.
Favre also holds the more
dubious mark of 288 interceptions - an indication of
the wild .streak that only
made him more human, to

'fluH1MFavre,B2

�•

•

..

•

The Daily Sentinel

· REGIONAL

Bush, Pentagon.honor country's
oldest living World W~ I veteran
WASHINGTON (AP)Calling it a high honor,
on
President
Bush
Thursday warmly greeted
107-year-old
Frank
Woodruff
Buckles,
· described by the White
House as the l{lst known
surviving American-born
veteran of World War I.
· "Mr. Buckles' mind is
sharp, his memory is crisp,
and he's ~&gt;c&lt;en sharing with
me soine interesting anecdotes," Bush said in the
Oval Office. Buckles, in a
wheelchair to Bush's right,
sat quietly with his hands
clasped as the president
spoke during a short photo
opportunity.
Bush said that before
reporters came in the room,
Buckles had recalled chatting with General John J.
Pershing, a legendary figure
from World War I.
Eager to get in the Army
in 1917, Buckles lied to a
military recruiter about his
age and enlisted at the start
of the U.S. involvement in
the war. He served in the
United States, the United
· Kingdom, Germany and

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS The
nation's passenger rail operator is lookin$ at restoring
lines to Ohio Cities that have
been without them for
decades . at -the request af
Gov. Ted Strickland.
Strickland asked · Amtrak
in a Feb. 26 Jetter to evaluate how practical it would
be to restore a passenger mil
line
to
Cleveland,'
Columbus and Cincinnati,
with stops in some of the
other·cities along the route.
Strickland wants Amtrak
to work with the Ohio Rail
Development Commission
on the study, the governor
said Thursday, and a commission spokesman said it
should be completed within
18 months.
The governor said adding
passenger service · would
help Ohio's cities create jobs
and attract new business.
"Investment in a rail
transportation system that
links metropolitan .areas
with passenger rail service,
while improving freight
commerce, would represent
one such (development)
tool," Strickland wrote.

AP photo
World War I veteran Army Cpl. Frank Woodruff Buckles, 107, from Charles Town, W.Va.,
meets with P~esident Bush Thursday in the Oval Office of the White Pouse in Washington.
France ·bat never saw combat. By 1920, he was discharged .with the rank of
corporal.
"Mr. Buckles has a vivid
recollection· of historic

•..

2008

Local Weather

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

ML8 spring training, Page 82
NFL offseason moves, Page 82

Friday... A chance of rain
in the moming ...Then rain
in the afternoon. Highs in
the lower 40s. Northeast
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain near I 00 percent.
Friday night... Rain. Sleet
and srtow after midnight.
Snow and sleet accumulation around an inch. Ice
accumulation of less than
one quarter of an inch. Cold
with lows in the upper 20s.
Northeast winds around I 0
mph. Chance of preci pitalion near I00 percent
· Saturday...Snow. Several
inches of snow accumulation. Much colder with
highs in the upper 20s.

North winds 10 to 15 mph
·with gusts up to 25 mph:
Chance of snow 90 percent.
Saturday night... Mostly .
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of snow showers.
Colder with lows around IS.
West winds 5 to I 0 mph. '
Sunday and Sunday
night...Mostly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 30s. Lows
in the lower 20s.
Monday and Monday
night. ..Mostly . cloudy.
Highs in the mid 40s. Lows
in the upper 20s.
·
Tuesday
throug~
Thursday... Mostly cloudy:
Highs in the lower 50s.
Lows in the lower 30s.

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Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 27.48 "

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Norfolk Southern ( NYSE) 52.35

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ) -25
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Pepsico (NYSE) '- 70.12
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Rockwell (NYSE)- 52.99
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 4.88 .

Royal .Dutch Shel.l - 89.12
Sears HokllnC (NASDAQ)93.49

WaJ.Mart (NYSE) - 49.98
Wendy'a (NYSE)- 23.84
Worthington (NYSE) - 17.73
Dally stock reporta are the 4
p.m. ET c1011n11 quotel of
tran~actlanl for March 8,
2008, provided by Edward
Jones financial adviiON luac
Mills In Galllpolla at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marraro
In Point Pleeunt at (304)
874-0174. Member SIPC.

Passenger lines once were hibitive, the state could they will support it, he said. Harley-Davidson (NYSE) a major transportation have passenger trains run"This is really great for 311.81
Mor~~&amp;n (NYSE) - 37.37
source .in Ohio but fell out ning within four years.
the. environment, but it's JP
Krocer
211.18
of favor due to the rise in air
Currently, the only trains good for the economy too," Umlted (NYSE)Brands
(NYSE)travel and the opening of offering passenger services he said.
14.82
interstate highways.
.
to Ohioans qriginate in New
Amtrak is using $3QO,OOO York,
Pittsburgh · and
in federal grant money fun- Washington, D.C. All three
SYRACUSE RESIDENTS
neled through the Oliio have Chicago as the ultimate
DeEeartrnent ofTransportation destination. 1\vo of the trains
Based on the needs that have been completed by Syracuse residents at this date, the following top
to f!lrmine the cost of con- have stops along Lake· Erie . · six priority needs for the village of Syracuse are:
strucnon and equipment.
and the Washington-Chicago
The state has studied the train has a stop m Cincinnati. .
issue many times, most
Columbus 1s the second- . Demol~ion of Abandoned s t r u c t u r e s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - recently in 2000 when a largest market, behind Street R e p a i r s - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - study concluded that inter- Phoenix, without passenger
est in rail service would · service.
Fire Equipment and Facilities--------------..,.-----dra\\1 ali"''estimalea 89,060 - .. If Americans relied less -: commurilry"tlinter ________________________
passen~ers a year.
on tl_leir cars and more. on · Parks and Recreation
But nmes have changed, pubhc
transportatiOn, .
-----.-----------------w.ilb .•~ ~c.~ pf gasolin~ -- mclu!Hpa rail, they would : Sidewalk Repairs _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;;..__ _ _ _ __
doubfe~w'Gat it was then and~ "'save 'money, makl!"the'··iiir ~ · ·
,,. ·•·•
highways getting more con- . cleaner and reduce their
Syracuse resldems are being aakad to complete this form and prcivlde specific locations within the
gested, and interest has been · reliance on foreign oil, said
VIllage that can baneflt any ol.the above needs. Funding for the stated projects may be Included In .
renewed, said rail commis- Morgan Keenan, a . 'con'
the CDE!G Distress application soon to be flied.
·
sion . spokesman
Stu sumer rights advocate for
Nicholson.
the nonprofit Ohio Public
Residents may leave completed forms at the Syracuse Water Off~ p~or to Ap~l 4, 2008.
"The object of the study is' Interest Research Group.
what does it take to get this
Instead of spendina bilEric cunningham, Mayor
done, not just look at the lions of dollars building
corridor but to sit down new highways, the governwith the freight railroads,'' ment should put some of the
Nicholson said. '"There real- mone~ into public transIy ought to be a benefit in it ' portat1on and reward confor them, because they own Sl\ffiers for using less gasothe corridor."
line, Keenan said. The more
If the study determines travelers know about public
that cost ' would not be pro- transportation, the more

Kentucky State Rep. marker when they buried their
Reginald
Meeks,
D- loot nearby. The fourth theory .
Louisville, a member of the is that it was carved by Nalive
state's Native American .Americans, and that theocy
Heritage Commission, is began in an account in the
sponsoring a resolution in the 1891 edition of the
Kentucky General Assembly Portsmouth newspaper. And
condemning the removal of the fifth theory is about I DOthe rock and demanding that years-old. It says a boy named .
it be returned to Kentucky.
1ohn Book, a prominent
''We're going to use all member of Scioto County
legal means to get them to society who was killed in the
return it to its rightful place Civil War, carved it."
in the commonwealth," he
said in January.
. Not much is known about
the origin of Indian Head
Rock, which has a crude carving of a face and another of a
house, along with the names
of several early settlers.
Some say it was a navigational marker. Its existence
was known locally during
the late 1800s and early
1900s, when it appeared
once in a while when the
river was low.
Historian Steve Shaff~r of
Ironton, who headed a team
that retrieved the rock in
September, said it had been
submerged since at least
1920, before a system of
dams kept the Ohio River at
a relatively constant level.
He said there are five
main theories about how a
face was carved on the rock.
"One is that in 1851, messages were placed on the
rock, likely by early pionqn to ll)8fk the low-water
made,'' Shaffer said.
'The second is that a quarry man carved it with a metal
tool. ~!Y No. 3 is that a
band of robbr,lrs used it as a •

Inside

Girls state basketball roundup, Page B4

times," Bush said. "And one you very much for your -89.48
way for me to honor the ser- patriotism and your love for Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.94
·
vice of thos,e who wear the America."
Charming Shops (NASDAQ).
uniform in the past and
Buckles, a resident of 5.08
those who wear it today is to Charles Town, W.Va., was City Holdlll( (NASDAQ) 34.53
.
herald you, sir, and to thank · born in 1901.
Colllna (NYSE) - 58.32
DuPont (NYSE) - 48.4 7
US Benk (NYSEI - 31.10
Gannett (NYSE) - 29.08
General Elactrlc (NYSE) -

Fight over fock taken from Ohio
River about to go to a grand jury
PORTSMOUTH (AP) The border fight over a
crudely carved 8-ton boulder known as Indian Head
Rock is-escalating.
Officials in Kentucky are
hauling the mayor of
Portsmouth into court in
their effon to get back the
rock, which an Ohio historian , and a team of divers
pulled from the Ohio River.
The river is mostly under
Kentucky jurisdiction. The
· prosecutor in Greenup
County, Kentucky, has issued '
a subpoena for Portsmouth
Mayor Jim Kalb to testify
before a grand jury on March
28 as a material witness in
the removal of the boulder, .
which is being stored in a
city'owned service garage.
"We have the . Antiquities
Act here in Kentucky, that
involves things that are registered under that act through
the University of Kentucky,"
said
Greenup
County
Prosecuting Attorney Cliff
Duvall. "It's a Class D
felony, and in Kentucky, thaJ
carries one to five years. That
charge will probably be the
most applicable. There isn't
any monetary value that anybody could put on it."
Kalb said he wasn't surprised when he received the
subpoena.
"I got a call from my office
a couple of days ago, saying
that a member of the Scioto
County sheriff's office was
there to serve me with a subpoena," Kalb said Monday.
"I kind of suspected that it
would be ovet' the rock."

Friday, March 7,

Local Stocks

Governor asks.Amtrak to study Ohio passenger line
BY JoHN McCARTHY

Page·AS

Purina Mills
Lumber

Hosted By
March 13, 2008
0 .6:30 PM

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Friday, March 7, 2008

Sabathia pitches
J perfect innings,
Cleveland beats
Houston 11-5

Rio volleyball signs first recruit for 2008
BY MARK WtWAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

"""''"'"Rm Fields
a~"is expecting=oh
a~
ors as a Patsy
big blockin~. especially playing
'!
. senior this things from Hilgenberg.
middle m college.
past season.
"Brittany is one of our top
"I think I need to work on

'"'

needs to improve on her

RIO GRANDE - The
· KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) University of Rio Grande ·
The three- recruits for the 2008 sea- ~etting stronger in blockvolleyball
program
.
is
.
-· CC. Sabathia breezed
year letter son," she said. "She is a mg." she said.
winner was very talented player who
through ~he Houston hitters pleased to announce its·first
She plans to major in biolso easily, he wanted more . signing for the 2008 season second in the conference in can play middle and/or out- ogy.
work in the as Brittany Hil~enberg of kills and -third in blocks side. Brittany will be an
She expressed what .her
Marion Elgin High School while leading her team to a impact player for us imme- ultimate goal as a player for
bullpen.
Sabathia has signed a national letter pair of MOAC champi- diately.
the next four years at Rio
"We are excite&lt;! and Grande is.
threw three of intent to play for the onships.
·
Redwomen
beginning
in
the
Hilgenberg
is
excited
pleased
that
she
has
chosen
·p e r. f e c t
"To become a volleyball
·
1nn1.ngs, fall.
about coming to Rio to be a part of our program." player that is consi.stent and
needing
Hilgenberg, a 5-10 middle Grande.
Hil$enberg prides herself to help win volleyball
only
28 hitter, is expected to be an
"I'm really excited and on bemg a good teammate. ·matches,"
~
pitches . to impact player for Rio can't wait to get started,''
"M~ best asset as a teamRio ·Grande will cenainly
get throul!h mne batters Grande. She earned 2nd she said. "I felt so welCome mate IS that I'm a great team vote for that.
Thursday as the Cleveland Team All-Mid Ohio Athletic on my visit (to campus) and player and just want sueBrittany is the daughter of
Indians beat the Astros 11- Conference (MOAC) and Coach (Patsy) Fields could- . cess," she satd.
· Harry &amp; Tammi Hilgenberg
5.
Second Team Central n't have made it any better."
She said she feels like she of Prospect, OH.
'· Sabathia struck out three
and barely broke a sweat.
Qn a 50-pitch count in his
seeond ·Start this spring, the
Cleveland ace threw 22
BY ANDREW SEUGMAN ·
ASSOCIATED PRESS
: Pleue
Perfect, 14
'
CHICAGO (AP)
LeBron James was at it
SPORTS BRIEFS
again. Then, the Bulls
swarmed him.
Ben Gordon and Luol
·RYLto hold
Deng . scored 23 points
baseball-softball apiece, and Chicago overcame James' 39 ·to beat the
~ign-ups Saturday Cleveland Cavaliers 107-96
Thursday night.
The Bulls went on a 17RACINE - Baseball and
softball signups for the point run early in the third
.Racine Youth League will quarter to grab a 66-53 lead,
be from II a.m. to I p.m. and Gordon scored nine
Saturday · at the Racine straight during a 51-second .
American Legion hall. ·
burst late in: the period to
For more information, make it a 17 -point game.
call Chris Davis at 949- That was enough to give
·1030 or Charlie Wolfe at Chicago back-to-back wU1s
for the first time since late
247-3200.
December and offset another
strong effort by James.
MYLto hold
"So much has happened ·
during the season, but we've
baseball-softball got to stick with it and keep
playing," Deng said. "It's all
sign-ups Saturday about
a rhythm."
James
had it
MIDDLEPORT - The early on. . certainly
Middleport Youth -League ,
Cleveland's
superstar ·
will be holding sign-ups
made
it
look
easy
while
for baseball and softball
scoring
26
in
the
first
half,
for boys and girls ages
stealing the show in
five to 18 on Saturday after
New
York
the previous night
from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.
with
50
points,
assists
nt
the and eight rebounds10during
a
~iddleport
Council 119- 1{)5 victory - a perforChambers.
mance that left the crowd
:, Anyone interested in chanting "MVP!"
~articipating should attend
He hit 13 of 27 shots overliither of these sign-up all but was just 3-of-12 in
~ates.
the second half. The Bulls
.·AP pholo
aitributed the drop-off to a
Chicago
Bull's
Luol
Deng,
foreground,
battles
Cleveland
Cavalier's
LeBron
James
for the
tighter
defense,
and
~YLto hold
although James acknowl- ball during first half NBA basketball action in Chicago on Thursday.
·baseball-softball edged
they were "a little
going to go far in the play- had a · quiet night. He fin- who reportedly clashed with
more
aggressive,"
sign-ups Saturday said, "I took shotshethatalsoI offs
and have a chance to ished with two points and I 0 Noah.
"Unfortunately.
know .I can rrtake, but I compete for an NBA cham- rebounds in his first appear- things didn't work out th1s
POMEROY
The missed."
pionship? Get ugly and dirty ·ance at the United Center season like we would have
Pomeroy You\h League will . Compounding matters was sometimes by getting stops and second against Chicago liked to, but now I'm OK."
be holding sign-ups for the fact that hts teammates flfSt and figure oui how to since being traded to
The Bulls outscored the
baseball and softball for weren't converting.
score second. It's very con- Cleveland for Larry Hughes Cavaliers 34-16 in the third
boys and girls ages four and
"We've got to dig down cerning for me right ·now." and Drew Gooden in a three- quarter with Gordon, Deng
up Saturday from 10 a.m. to deep and find ou~ who we
The Cavaliers got 15 team deal. And he got out-. and Hughes leading the war
2 p.m. at the Pomeroy Fire want to be," coach Mike points from · Devin Brown played by rookie Joakim
Deng had eight in the penDepartment.
14 from Wally Noah, who grabbed a career- od, while Hughes scored
Brown said. · "Play l1 0 to and
For more information, 115 on the road and win Szczerbiak, but that wasn't high 20 rebounds while seven of his 12 during that
contact Ken at 992-5322.
17-point run.
to
overcome scoring 13 points.
sometimes and look pretty enough
winning? Or do we .want to ·Chicago's balance.
"I had some great experibe
a
playoff
team
that's
Former
Bull
Ben
Wallace
ences
here," said Wallace,
District 13 All-Star
PluseseeC.Vs,B2

Gordon, Deng lead Bulls to 107-96 win over Cavs

..

see

Wang fails to
make it through
t;rst inning, Reds
beat Yankees 12-8
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP)
- Edwin Enci;lmacion hit a
grand slam and a two-run
single Thursclay, and the
Cincinnati Reds roughed up
Chien-Ming Wang on theu
way to a 12-8 victory over
the New York Yankees.
Wang, a 19-game winner
the last two years, failed to
make it through the first
inning. The Reds got six'
runs on six hits, and Wang
left after retirjng only two
batters.
,
Adam Dunn hit an RBI
single, and Encarnacion had
a two-run single off Wang,
who faced I 0 batters.
. Leadoff batter Norris
Hopper sipgled twice off
Wang in the inning.'
·
"My stride was too long,"
Wang said. "My ball was
not moving. I'll fix it
quick."
.
Maqager Joe Girardi has
made Wang the leading candidate for the No. I spot in
the rotation. Wang was
expected to pitch the season
OJ&gt;7ner last year, but· was
s1delin~d by a hamstring
injury during spring training.
In his first spring start,
Wang pitched two scoreless
innings against Philadelphia
and allowed only one hit.
His pitches dtdn 't dip
Thursday, making for a
quick exit.
"His sinker was up,"
Girardi said. "His slider was
flat and he got into some
bad counts. They were
ag~ressive and didn't miss.
' He knows what he has to
do. It was his second start
and obviously didn't go the
way he wanted."
Darrell Rasner walked
three batters before giving
up Encarnacion's slam in
the fourth inning, putting
the Reds up 10-0.
Aaron Harang, scheduled
to pitch the season opener
for Cincinnati, allawed two
hits and struck out two in
three innings.
Dunn's opposite-field single in the first inning got the
Reds going and provided
more encouragement ftlr the
left fielder, who has worked
hard to cut down his strikeout total in the last year.
"I'm trying to be more
aggressive early in the
count," Dunn said. "I think
where I got in trouble is taking a lot of good {'itches and
putting myself m a hole.
The second part of last year
Ple•se see Reels, 13

game Monday at Rio
RIO GRANDE - The
District 13 Basketball
Coaches Association All-·
~ Game for both boys
idd girls will be held
~nday at the University of
RiO Grande.
[~2fhe alrls contest will take
p,~ce at 6 p.m., while the
· ~~ aame wlllltllrt around
l p.m. There wlll be a Slam
Di!nk and 3-point contest in
becween aamea. ·
;::rickets are $' at the gate.
PJvislon 1-11 selections will
~laY D III·IV selections.

..

,

..toNTAcrUs
,
~

;•.:: 1·740·446-2342 .ext. 33
...

•'""
• -1-740-448-3008
~-1-I!&gt;OrtiOmydallyaontlnel.com

~·-"

Jrlc Randolph, Sporta Writer
(740) 4-48-2342, ext. 33
oporiiOmydallysentlnet.com

Bryan Waltere, Sporte Writer
(740) 448·2342, ext. 33
b~UeraOmydallytrlbune.com

Larry Crum, Sporta Writer
(74QUI48·2342, ext 33 ·
lcru!";itmydallyreglater.com

Favre rules out return. to playing
football.
.
Bv CHRIS JINKINS

was over.
"As they say, all good
thinas must come to an
OREEN BAY, Wis.
end, Favre said. ''I look forSitting by himself on an air- ward to whatever the future
plane ride up to Oreen Bay may hold for me."
.
on Thursday momina, Brett
After a farewell news conFavre auuaaled to fine! a sin- ference that luted just over
cere and araceful way to lay an hour, Favre put his arm
he was finished with foot- around his tearful wife,
ball.
Deanna, and left the stage In the end, ·his tears told presumably for aoOd.
th~ story.
He takes with bim a Super
"I know I can plaX but I Bowl victory, vinually every
don't think I want to, ' Favre . quarterback record worth
said, choking with emotion having and the widespread
in a news conference at admiration of his peers and
Lambeau Field two days fans.
·
after he announced his
The 38-year-old Favre
retirement. "It's been a great also leaves with graying hair
career for me, but it's over." and a deliberate gait- signs
Wearing an untucked col- that the years were quietly
Jared shirt, blue jeans and taking a toll on the man who
several days' worth of stub- was. celebrated for playing a
ble, Favre said he was con-· serious and precise game
vii!Ced he could still play on with the carefree joy of a litSundays, but had lost his tie boy.
passion to practice and preHe cried Thursday as he
pare the way he would need discussed his decision.
AP photo to lead the Packers to anoth"I promised I wouldn't-get
Green Bay Packers quarterback Brett Favre talks about his ' er Super Bo\yl.
emotional,'' he said: But as
retirement Thursday during a press conference at Lambeau
Given that fact, he could the tears flowed, he added,
Field In Green Bay, W~.
'.
draw only on~onclusion: It "I've watched hundreds of
ASSOCIATED

~EBS

players retire and you wonder what that would be like.
You
think you're .prepared
n
.,
Favre thanked the Oreen
Bay Packers for letting him .
play,
"1 hope that with every
penny they've spent on me,
they know it · wus money
well spent,'' he said. "It wasn't about the money or fame
or records. I hear people t.alk
about ~our accomplishments
and thm~s. It was never my
accomphshmenis, it was our
·
accomplishments."
Favre is the NFL's only
three-time MVP, and leads
the league with 442 touchdown passes, 61 ,655 yards
passing and 160 career victories. He started 253 consecutive
regular-season
games, more than any other
quarterback in history.
Favre also holds the more
dubious mark of 288 interceptions - an indication of
the wild .streak that only
made him more human, to

'fluH1MFavre,B2

�Friday, March 7,
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

H~rdly

www.mydm1ysentinel.com

Friday, March 7,

If Joe Torre and Terry
Francona had hugged at
Fenway Park or Yankee
Stadium. it might have been
seen as an act of treason.
Under. the sun of spring
training Thursday, there was
hardly a rivalry in sight.
Especially now that the two
managers are in different
leagues.
There was Francona, freslf
off his second World Series
championship · with Boston,
putting his arrn around Torre
behind home plate. There
was Torre, out of New York
and now with the Los
Angeles Dodgers, smiling
with his friend in the dugout.
"It's nice to chat with him
without someone thinking
that some eovert operation
was going oil," Torre kidded
after the Dodgers beat the
Red Sox 9-6 in Fort Myers,
Fla.
"You know, while we're

see that."
At Tempe, Ariz., Los
Angeles Angels ace John
Lackey. out with a sore
throwing shoulder, threw in
the bullpen. Lackey said he
would be able to make four
spring starts and be ready by
opening day, but Angels
manager Mike Scioscia said
four starts would not be
enough.
"That's not something
were considering," said
Scioscia, who said five
spring starts would be the
minimum for one of his
pitchers to open the season.
"You have to build up stamina. Unless something
unforeseen would happen,
we would at least want John
. to be at 100 pitches so that
he can pitch deep enough
into his first start. That'.s
going to take a .little bit of
work," Scioscia added.
In other spring games:
Braves 5, Ttgers 4, 8 1/2
innings

BASKElBALL

At
Fla. , slow-to-heal right shoulder, calf injury. Starter Jake
Dontrelle Willis allowed two singled. hit a sacrifice fly Peavy
allowed
Troy
hits in three innings, lower- and drove in two runs as the Tulowitzki 's solo homer in
ing his spring ERA fo 1.80 designated hitter.
an otherwise efficient three
after two starts. He walked
Cardinals 5, Marlins 2 innings: two runs and four
one and struck out three.
At Jupiter, Fla., Skip hits with four strikeouts and
Tom Glavine made his sec- Schumaker, Joe Mather and no walks. "
ond start of the spring for the ' Albert Pujols hit consecutive
Rangers 6, White Sox I
Braves and allowed two runs home runs off Marlins closer
At Tucson, Vincente
in 2 2-3 innings. He struck Kevin Gregg in the fifth ' Padilla allowed an unearned
out two put walked three.
inning.
run in three innings for the
Twins 8, Orioles 7
Royals 4, D-backs 3
Rangers . Chicago's Bobby
At Fort Myers, Fla. , Craig
At Surprise, Ariz., Kansas ·Jenks walked two in one
Monroe hit a two-run single City's Ryan Shealy led off scoreless inning.
for Minnesota after being the bottom of the ninth with
Mariners S, Brewers 2
out a week because of a a home run . off Jailen
At Phoenix, Seattle's Felix
Hernandez gave up home
strained calf. Delmon Young Peguero.
went 3-for-3 with a two-run
Angels 9, Giants I
runs to Ryan Braun and
single.
At Tempe, Ariz., Jered Rickie Weeks. Greg Norton
Rays 6, Phillies 4
Weaver allowed a solo hit a two-run homer for the
At Clearwater, Fla., homer to Eliezer Alfonzo in Mariners.
Philadelphia starter Adam three innin~s, and Vladimir
Athletics 2, Cubs 1
Eaton failed to overcome Guerrero htt his. first spring
At Phoenix , Chicago's
back problems and gave up . homer. Giants starter Matt Jason Marquis threw three
four runs and five hits in two Cain allowed five runs •and shutout innings. He has
innin~s. .
five hits in 2 1-3 innings.
allowed one run in five
Pirates 8, Blue Jays 7
Padres 10, Rockies 3
innings this spring. Kerry
At
Bradenton,
Fla.,
At Peoria, Ariz., Padres Wood threw a scoreless
Pittsburgh's
Freddy center fielder Jim Edmonds inning for the second
Sanchez, playing with a will miss a day or two with a straight time.

..

REGIONAL FINALS
AI Clevolll!ll ·111"-ooly
Lakewood st. EdwMI (20-&lt;1) VI.
; ' Warren Harding (~1), -Saturday,
1

.7:30p.m,
. ..
AI ....... Unlnlollly
Cln. St. Xevler (22•2) "'· Cln.
' Wi1nrow (22·~) - Satar&lt;Jooy, 11
· •
AI Untw.rotly ol Aluoot
ToL Whitmer (1lMl) ve. Cankln
nmklln (24-0)- Saturday, 7:30p.m.
, AI
Coti-.m
Newark (21-4) va. Weololvllle Soutll'
(11!·7)- Satunlay, 7:30p.m.
'

a.m.

Brett Favre tearfully told
the world Thursday what the
Green Bay Packers made
public two days ago: he's
retired.
After 275 straight starts,
Favre said he was convinced
he could still play on
Sundays, but had lost his
passion to practice and prepare.
.
Favre dominated the day
as free-agent signings continued to slow after the flurry of the first weekend.
Jevon Kearse, who had his
best seasons in ·Tennessee,
agreed to rejoin the Titans,
who will use him primarily

as a situational pass rusher.
He was released by
Philadelphia, which cut linebacker Takeo Spikes on
Thursday.
.
The 31-year-old Kearse
had 14 )/2 sacks as a rookie
with the Titans in 1999 and
helped lead them to the
Super Bowl. fie was in double figu~s in sacks the next
two seasons, but has been
plagued by injuries since
and missed all but two
games last season because of
a knee injury.
Spikes, also • 31, was
obll!ined last year in a trade
with Buffalo. He's a .twotime Pro Bowl 'player who
was second on the Eagles

.

Cleveland St. winner vet XA\Iilr win..
ner, March 14, 5:15p.m.; Akron wlil. • ner vs. Columbus winner, Mardi 14,
8:30p.m.

.

Favre

Chtsttr Tire Center

Cavs

TIRESILEI

fromPageBl

--·-·-==~

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

•UMIIIMIII. . III.._..

Gordon did his damage
during a 5!-second stretch
late 'in the quarter, scoring
nine to turn an eight-point
lead into an 80-63 advantage and sending the Bulls
to their second straight win.
That matches a season-high,
but extending it to three
straight will be tough, considering they visit Boston
on Friday.
.
·
"We are starting to figure
out our strengths and weaknesses," said Kirk Hinrich,
who scored six points. "We
are starting to ~et some
momentum and thts is a big

Af-1"' OrHn s-p.

: ,,

.

lextn:)lon (20-4) vs. Tol. Libbey (22:· 2)- Saturday, 3 p.m.
·
· ,
AI Dhto UniYoratly
, Chillicothe (22·2) va .. Byeavllle'
Mea-rook (15-9) - Satu'llaY. 3
p.m.
AI C8nton 11emor11J C1Wto

CINCINNATI - For 16
years, DePaul dreaded the
trip.
No matter who was the
coach - Joey Meyer, Pat
Kennedy, Dave Leitao or
Jerry Wainwright - the
Blue Demons always got
off the bus and lost The
players
changed,
the
schemes were different, but
the outcome was always the
same.
Finally, they've found the
players to end it.
Draelon Burns scored 24
points, and DePaul ended
its )()-year losing streak at
Cincinnati with a 60-54 victory Thursday night that
ruined the Bearcats' senior
night tribute and extended
their late-season slump.
DePaul (II cJ K, 6-11 Big
East) had lost its last 15
games at Cincinnati since a

c:.nw

,,. ..,.,.,.,.,.

. Thursday indicated the
decision was much simpler.
"I did it, but it got hard,"
he said. "I don't think it
would get easier next year
or the following year. It hasn't up until this point It's
only gotten tougher and
something told me 'You
know it's gotten too hard for
you.' I could probably come
back and do it. Suck it up:
But what kind of a toll
would that take on me,'my
family or my teammates? At
some point it would .affect
one of those if not all ·of
them. Maybe it.has already.
I don't know."
·
Some who know Favre
have doubts that he will be
. able to spend Sundaxs on
the couch wheli he sttll has
the ability to play.
·
A bearded Favre . said
Thursday he had no definite
plans for the future and did
not know whether he would

Lewis Sanders, who played injured reserve because of a
for Atlanta hi.st season and knee injury. Becht, a ninesafety Tank Williams, who year veteran, played 48
was
with
Minnesota. games for Tampa Bay the
Sanders is an eight-year vet- last three seasons.
eran and Williams a six-year
-Jacksonville re-signed
man.
offensive lineman Maurice
Denver signed linebacker Williams. A starter for six
Boss Bailey, uniting him . years and a backup last seawith his brother, star corner- son, he will compete with
back Champ Bailey. Boss Dennis Norman and Uche
Bailey spent his first five Nwaneri for a starting guard
seasons in Detroit.
spot.
In other moves Thursday:
- Baltimore agreed to
-St. Louis re-signed terms with special-teamer
guard Adam Goldberg and · Brendon Ayanbadejo ~ "a foragreed to terms with tight mer Bear. Ayanbadejo
end
Anthony
Becht. agreed to a four-year conGoldberg played in the first tract worth $4.9 million.
four games last season including a $1.9 million
before being place on signing bonus.
be involved in football or
with the Packers.
"I don'i even want to
think about next year," he
said-. "Will I watch games?
I'm sure I will. Will I be
involved? I always made

Wright State '!Inner vo. BowHng
Green winner, Mtroh 13, i0:46 a.m.;
Athens ·wtnner va. C&amp;ntan winner,
Mao:h 13, 2 p.m.
·

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- 'IJ'8ICf1 14. 10:45 a.m.; Bowling Green

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1~ ..2p.m.

...

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At ~Ia. Fai11Jraundo Colluum

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Wol!hington Christian (24-.1) vs. Oak
' Hill (21·3) '-Friday, 7:30p.m.

At Canton Flatdhouu

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'Malvern (25-11) va. BedfOrd Chan~l
(1&amp;-8)- Friday, 7:30p.m..
Al-lng Q ..... 8 - U.
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Wayne Trace (2().4) - Friday, 7:30
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DILES

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• • Shol&lt;er Hta. ~athaway Brown (22-4)
Kallerlng Mer (24-3) - Saturday.
A0:46a.m. •

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OMBIONI
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PLAY COVERALL BINGO

AI WrightS- llnlfl(..lj

TRUST YOUR loCAL AGENT .,

Farm - Bnsiness

and this spring, I've felt a
lot better. I even hit a ball
down the third-ba,e, line. I
don't think I've done that
my elltire life."
.
The Yankee' rallied !ate
against Reds minor leagtjers. Bobby Abreu homered oil Matt Maloney in
the seventh and Greg
Porter hit a grand slam off
Alexander Smit ·i n the
.
eighth.
"Our young lefties got
roughed up," manager
Dusty
Baker
said.
"Hopefu,lly lhey learn
from it."
Notes:
RHP
Gary
Majewski and LHP Bill
Bray signed one-year con~
tracts with the Reds. All
members of the 40-man
roster have been signed
without arbitration or a
forced renewal by the
club.

~

1

:~.

...

from Page 81

Ottawa-Glandorf (20-6) va, AIOhtlold
. ".,20-4)
Saturda'(, 7:30 p.m.

.::.. ,):ij.

:...~

"1 can ' t describe it,"
senior
center
Adam
Hrycaniuk said. "That \ all
I can say about it. We've
got a few more games.
"We weren't makin g We· ve got to still stay· posishots and slacked off on tive. 11 :s not like it's over
defense," Williamson--•aid. ror us."
Deonta Vaughn 's 3-point- · DePaul came out shooting
er cut it to 56-54 with 25 3s and making them - 9seconds left, but Burns and of-1 5 in the first half, which
Cliff Clinkscales each made ended with the Blue
a pair of free throws to Demons ahead 3 I -2S.
clinch it. Dar Tucker added Burns got it going, making
15 ' points for the Blue all four of hi s attempts from
Demons.
behind the arc during an
Williamson
led opening 1~ -4 run that got
Cincinnati with 19 points. DePaul enthused.
The forward is one of five
"Draelon 's fast start realseniors honored before the ly helped us," Wainwright
final home game for com - said. "Anytime you can
ing to Cincinnati and stabi- make some baskets early on
lizing the program after the road, it gives you some
Bob Huggins' ouster.
confidence. We 're fighting
The
Bearcats
have for our lives, as you know,
clinched a .berth in the: Big tryiin gto get into our conEast tournament , but are ference tournament. This is
watching their hopes of big- a very important win for
ger things slip away.
us."

,p.m.
. At-tngG-.-U. · ·

IJ:~ PI!).

Auto - Home - Life - Health

Cincinnati missed I 0
field-goal attempts and
turned the ball over four
times during the decisive 7minutc, 25-second ;pan.

·
' ' .Clove. VASJ (20·4) vs. Andover
· · ,Pymatuntng Valley · (23·1) Saturday, ,7:30p.m. ,
. '
AI ~to Un(Qrslly
" Col&amp; Read)&gt; (16·8) vS: Sugarnreek
Garaway (22-3) , ~ Satu~. ·7:30

the joke I'd be here for an
honorary coin toss. Well,
that time may come, so I
may be back for something
like that. 'But as far as giving advice, l don't think that
will happen."

~ WHEN LIFE HAPPENS .. ,

71-69 victory on Feb. 20,
1992. This one was a breakthrough in several ways.
The Blue Demons had lost
their last five games overall
and nine of their last 10.
"It was an ugly game in
some
ways,"
said
Wainwright, in hi s third
season at DePaul. "We've
really struggled over the
last couple of weeks. We've
had a lot of road g·ames."
For Cincinnati ( 13-16, 89), it was another homecourt loss to a . struggling
team. The Bearcats have
dropped four in a row, and
were coming off an 81-79
overtime loss at home to
struggling Providence on
Sunday.
The Bearcats took a 48-45
lead on John Williamson 's
tip-in with 8:29 to play,
then managed only one free
throw over the next seven·
minutes while DePaul built
a seven-point lead.

Reds

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win."

Note1: Bulls F Tyr111
Thomas would not reveal
hh reuon8 for Mklpplna
Wedne1duy'5 pmctlce, but
uid A r1cent reduction In
P.laylna time had nothln1 to
ilo with it. Thoma~ Will a
no·thow after phtytna jutt
under ntnu roul·plalued
minute• In Tuetday'• win
over Memphlt, drawlna 11
tWO•IIIme •utpen•lon from
the te11m. Thomas uid he
had a "nlce, lona convenatlon" with interim coach
Jim Boylan that "broke
some barriers. ~.· ... Boylan
picked up a technical foul
late in tfte second quarter,
after Noah was called for
offensive interference. i ·

··I

DMSIQNU

~ , AI Wrflhl Unl.-y
: St. Pano'Grahom (25-0) "'· Katterlng
·. Alter(17-7) --saturd8)111 a.m.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

- Clove. Benodlcllne (18-5) va Poland

deal worth a reported $3.5
"· million. After five years with
the Bears, including a teamrecord 100-catch season,
Booker
was traded to Miami
..
during the 2004 preseason.
"It's good to be back, plus,
No.' I, it's good to have a
job," Booker said.
The New York Jets signed
fullback Tony Richardson,
who played the last two seasons in Minnesota after 11
. years in Kansas City. He was
voted to his third Pro Bowl
with 139 tackles. The move with the Vikings last season.
saves Philadelphia $5 mil- · New England, which lost
lion in cap room.
cornerbacks Asante Samuel
Receiver Marty Booker and Randall Gay to free
returned to Chicago, agree- agency, signed two defening to a two-year, free-agent sive backs - cornerback

weeks, months or years, the ed oj,enly with retirement
final chapter in hts storied .- · because, of course, he
football career , . began never really meant it.
Monday night.
''
To a generation of fans
fromPageBl
Favre called Packers · who watched Favre start
coach Mike McCarthy and every game since taking
the fans who adored him.
told him he planned to over as the Packers' starting
The same was true of retire, then finalized his quarterback during the 1992
Favre's highly publicized decision in a conversation season, it' didn't make
struggles with an addiction with Packers general man- .· sj:nse. He wouldn't just
to prescription painkillers, ager, Ted Thompson on decide he was too tired to
his support of his wife •·Thesday morning.
play and walk away.
through a battle with breast
But
until
the
news
confer·
Would he? · .
cancer, and a memorable ence,
·Favre
.
hadil't
·
Recent coinments. by
Monday night game against
explained
his
decision
to
his
Fav_
re's agent, ·Bus Cook,
Oakland after h~ lost his
fans. He said Thursday stirred. suspicions about t)le
father.
Favre's exit comes after a th~re was nothing left to ...real" reason 'Favre was
retiring.
remarkable 2007 season, prove.
going
out
on
top,"
he
Had the Packers' front
"I'm
but his final pass was one to
forget: An mterception in said. "Believe me, I could office not done enough to
overtime of the NFC cham- care less what other people . talk him into coming back?
pionship game, a mistake think. It's what I think, and · Was Favre's retirement a
knee-jerk reaction to the
that set up the · New York rm going out on top!'
Favre's retirement came . fact that wide receiver
Giants' fi.eld goal that sent
·the Packers home instead of as a surprise to Packers Randy Moss, a player Favre
·executives, coaches and lobbied the Packers to sign
to the Super Bowl.
Most folks figured Favre teammates, virtually all of · a year ago, had. re-signed
couldn't exit that way, espe- whom expected him to with the New England
cially when he had at least return. And it was a shock to Patriots without an apparent
one more good year left in ·fans who sat r.atiently, year effort from the Packers?
him.
after year, whtle Favre flirt~
Favre's
comments
But barring a change of
heart in the upcoming

__,..,.

Coli.,.,.............

NFL moves: Favre dominates headlines, Kearse returns to Tennessee
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY JOE KAY

TOURNAMENrS

'
Lakeland,

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Burns leads DePaul to first win at ·cincinnati in 16 years

OHSAA

'

doing that,' we're in the clubhouse stealing everything
else that he has," he said.
Torre also got to spend
time with another member
of the Francona family.
Terry's father, Tito, and
Torre played together in
Atlanta.
For part of the game, Tito
stood m the stands next to
the Dodgers dugout and visited with his old teammate.
Torre called it a "bonus."
When Torre was in New
York, he and Francona used
to talk on the phone after
Yankees-Red Sox series.
The two of them were
always
close
friends,
although. they could hardly
afford to be so cordial on the
field.
"1 never went out there to
the batting cage" to greet
Torre the past four years,
Francona said, "not just
because of me. I just didn't
want to put him in that position. People don't want to

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008

a ri~alry in sight: Torre, Francona enjoy a spring ·visit

BY THE AssOCIATED PRESS

2008

38

co,..,Y

I

(740)446-7619

i

ATHENS

• ·b

�Friday, March 7,
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

H~rdly

www.mydm1ysentinel.com

Friday, March 7,

If Joe Torre and Terry
Francona had hugged at
Fenway Park or Yankee
Stadium. it might have been
seen as an act of treason.
Under. the sun of spring
training Thursday, there was
hardly a rivalry in sight.
Especially now that the two
managers are in different
leagues.
There was Francona, freslf
off his second World Series
championship · with Boston,
putting his arrn around Torre
behind home plate. There
was Torre, out of New York
and now with the Los
Angeles Dodgers, smiling
with his friend in the dugout.
"It's nice to chat with him
without someone thinking
that some eovert operation
was going oil," Torre kidded
after the Dodgers beat the
Red Sox 9-6 in Fort Myers,
Fla.
"You know, while we're

see that."
At Tempe, Ariz., Los
Angeles Angels ace John
Lackey. out with a sore
throwing shoulder, threw in
the bullpen. Lackey said he
would be able to make four
spring starts and be ready by
opening day, but Angels
manager Mike Scioscia said
four starts would not be
enough.
"That's not something
were considering," said
Scioscia, who said five
spring starts would be the
minimum for one of his
pitchers to open the season.
"You have to build up stamina. Unless something
unforeseen would happen,
we would at least want John
. to be at 100 pitches so that
he can pitch deep enough
into his first start. That'.s
going to take a .little bit of
work," Scioscia added.
In other spring games:
Braves 5, Ttgers 4, 8 1/2
innings

BASKElBALL

At
Fla. , slow-to-heal right shoulder, calf injury. Starter Jake
Dontrelle Willis allowed two singled. hit a sacrifice fly Peavy
allowed
Troy
hits in three innings, lower- and drove in two runs as the Tulowitzki 's solo homer in
ing his spring ERA fo 1.80 designated hitter.
an otherwise efficient three
after two starts. He walked
Cardinals 5, Marlins 2 innings: two runs and four
one and struck out three.
At Jupiter, Fla., Skip hits with four strikeouts and
Tom Glavine made his sec- Schumaker, Joe Mather and no walks. "
ond start of the spring for the ' Albert Pujols hit consecutive
Rangers 6, White Sox I
Braves and allowed two runs home runs off Marlins closer
At Tucson, Vincente
in 2 2-3 innings. He struck Kevin Gregg in the fifth ' Padilla allowed an unearned
out two put walked three.
inning.
run in three innings for the
Twins 8, Orioles 7
Royals 4, D-backs 3
Rangers . Chicago's Bobby
At Fort Myers, Fla. , Craig
At Surprise, Ariz., Kansas ·Jenks walked two in one
Monroe hit a two-run single City's Ryan Shealy led off scoreless inning.
for Minnesota after being the bottom of the ninth with
Mariners S, Brewers 2
out a week because of a a home run . off Jailen
At Phoenix, Seattle's Felix
Hernandez gave up home
strained calf. Delmon Young Peguero.
went 3-for-3 with a two-run
Angels 9, Giants I
runs to Ryan Braun and
single.
At Tempe, Ariz., Jered Rickie Weeks. Greg Norton
Rays 6, Phillies 4
Weaver allowed a solo hit a two-run homer for the
At Clearwater, Fla., homer to Eliezer Alfonzo in Mariners.
Philadelphia starter Adam three innin~s, and Vladimir
Athletics 2, Cubs 1
Eaton failed to overcome Guerrero htt his. first spring
At Phoenix , Chicago's
back problems and gave up . homer. Giants starter Matt Jason Marquis threw three
four runs and five hits in two Cain allowed five runs •and shutout innings. He has
innin~s. .
five hits in 2 1-3 innings.
allowed one run in five
Pirates 8, Blue Jays 7
Padres 10, Rockies 3
innings this spring. Kerry
At
Bradenton,
Fla.,
At Peoria, Ariz., Padres Wood threw a scoreless
Pittsburgh's
Freddy center fielder Jim Edmonds inning for the second
Sanchez, playing with a will miss a day or two with a straight time.

..

REGIONAL FINALS
AI Clevolll!ll ·111"-ooly
Lakewood st. EdwMI (20-&lt;1) VI.
; ' Warren Harding (~1), -Saturday,
1

.7:30p.m,
. ..
AI ....... Unlnlollly
Cln. St. Xevler (22•2) "'· Cln.
' Wi1nrow (22·~) - Satar&lt;Jooy, 11
· •
AI Untw.rotly ol Aluoot
ToL Whitmer (1lMl) ve. Cankln
nmklln (24-0)- Saturday, 7:30p.m.
, AI
Coti-.m
Newark (21-4) va. Weololvllle Soutll'
(11!·7)- Satunlay, 7:30p.m.
'

a.m.

Brett Favre tearfully told
the world Thursday what the
Green Bay Packers made
public two days ago: he's
retired.
After 275 straight starts,
Favre said he was convinced
he could still play on
Sundays, but had lost his
passion to practice and prepare.
.
Favre dominated the day
as free-agent signings continued to slow after the flurry of the first weekend.
Jevon Kearse, who had his
best seasons in ·Tennessee,
agreed to rejoin the Titans,
who will use him primarily

as a situational pass rusher.
He was released by
Philadelphia, which cut linebacker Takeo Spikes on
Thursday.
.
The 31-year-old Kearse
had 14 )/2 sacks as a rookie
with the Titans in 1999 and
helped lead them to the
Super Bowl. fie was in double figu~s in sacks the next
two seasons, but has been
plagued by injuries since
and missed all but two
games last season because of
a knee injury.
Spikes, also • 31, was
obll!ined last year in a trade
with Buffalo. He's a .twotime Pro Bowl 'player who
was second on the Eagles

.

Cleveland St. winner vet XA\Iilr win..
ner, March 14, 5:15p.m.; Akron wlil. • ner vs. Columbus winner, Mardi 14,
8:30p.m.

.

Favre

Chtsttr Tire Center

Cavs

TIRESILEI

fromPageBl

--·-·-==~

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

•UMIIIMIII. . III.._..

Gordon did his damage
during a 5!-second stretch
late 'in the quarter, scoring
nine to turn an eight-point
lead into an 80-63 advantage and sending the Bulls
to their second straight win.
That matches a season-high,
but extending it to three
straight will be tough, considering they visit Boston
on Friday.
.
·
"We are starting to figure
out our strengths and weaknesses," said Kirk Hinrich,
who scored six points. "We
are starting to ~et some
momentum and thts is a big

Af-1"' OrHn s-p.

: ,,

.

lextn:)lon (20-4) vs. Tol. Libbey (22:· 2)- Saturday, 3 p.m.
·
· ,
AI Dhto UniYoratly
, Chillicothe (22·2) va .. Byeavllle'
Mea-rook (15-9) - Satu'llaY. 3
p.m.
AI C8nton 11emor11J C1Wto

CINCINNATI - For 16
years, DePaul dreaded the
trip.
No matter who was the
coach - Joey Meyer, Pat
Kennedy, Dave Leitao or
Jerry Wainwright - the
Blue Demons always got
off the bus and lost The
players
changed,
the
schemes were different, but
the outcome was always the
same.
Finally, they've found the
players to end it.
Draelon Burns scored 24
points, and DePaul ended
its )()-year losing streak at
Cincinnati with a 60-54 victory Thursday night that
ruined the Bearcats' senior
night tribute and extended
their late-season slump.
DePaul (II cJ K, 6-11 Big
East) had lost its last 15
games at Cincinnati since a

c:.nw

,,. ..,.,.,.,.,.

. Thursday indicated the
decision was much simpler.
"I did it, but it got hard,"
he said. "I don't think it
would get easier next year
or the following year. It hasn't up until this point It's
only gotten tougher and
something told me 'You
know it's gotten too hard for
you.' I could probably come
back and do it. Suck it up:
But what kind of a toll
would that take on me,'my
family or my teammates? At
some point it would .affect
one of those if not all ·of
them. Maybe it.has already.
I don't know."
·
Some who know Favre
have doubts that he will be
. able to spend Sundaxs on
the couch wheli he sttll has
the ability to play.
·
A bearded Favre . said
Thursday he had no definite
plans for the future and did
not know whether he would

Lewis Sanders, who played injured reserve because of a
for Atlanta hi.st season and knee injury. Becht, a ninesafety Tank Williams, who year veteran, played 48
was
with
Minnesota. games for Tampa Bay the
Sanders is an eight-year vet- last three seasons.
eran and Williams a six-year
-Jacksonville re-signed
man.
offensive lineman Maurice
Denver signed linebacker Williams. A starter for six
Boss Bailey, uniting him . years and a backup last seawith his brother, star corner- son, he will compete with
back Champ Bailey. Boss Dennis Norman and Uche
Bailey spent his first five Nwaneri for a starting guard
seasons in Detroit.
spot.
In other moves Thursday:
- Baltimore agreed to
-St. Louis re-signed terms with special-teamer
guard Adam Goldberg and · Brendon Ayanbadejo ~ "a foragreed to terms with tight mer Bear. Ayanbadejo
end
Anthony
Becht. agreed to a four-year conGoldberg played in the first tract worth $4.9 million.
four games last season including a $1.9 million
before being place on signing bonus.
be involved in football or
with the Packers.
"I don'i even want to
think about next year," he
said-. "Will I watch games?
I'm sure I will. Will I be
involved? I always made

Wright State '!Inner vo. BowHng
Green winner, Mtroh 13, i0:46 a.m.;
Athens ·wtnner va. C&amp;ntan winner,
Mao:h 13, 2 p.m.
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1~ ..2p.m.

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At ~Ia. Fai11Jraundo Colluum

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Wol!hington Christian (24-.1) vs. Oak
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AI WrightS- llnlfl(..lj

TRUST YOUR loCAL AGENT .,

Farm - Bnsiness

and this spring, I've felt a
lot better. I even hit a ball
down the third-ba,e, line. I
don't think I've done that
my elltire life."
.
The Yankee' rallied !ate
against Reds minor leagtjers. Bobby Abreu homered oil Matt Maloney in
the seventh and Greg
Porter hit a grand slam off
Alexander Smit ·i n the
.
eighth.
"Our young lefties got
roughed up," manager
Dusty
Baker
said.
"Hopefu,lly lhey learn
from it."
Notes:
RHP
Gary
Majewski and LHP Bill
Bray signed one-year con~
tracts with the Reds. All
members of the 40-man
roster have been signed
without arbitration or a
forced renewal by the
club.

~

1

:~.

...

from Page 81

Ottawa-Glandorf (20-6) va, AIOhtlold
. ".,20-4)
Saturda'(, 7:30 p.m.

.::.. ,):ij.

:...~

"1 can ' t describe it,"
senior
center
Adam
Hrycaniuk said. "That \ all
I can say about it. We've
got a few more games.
"We weren't makin g We· ve got to still stay· posishots and slacked off on tive. 11 :s not like it's over
defense," Williamson--•aid. ror us."
Deonta Vaughn 's 3-point- · DePaul came out shooting
er cut it to 56-54 with 25 3s and making them - 9seconds left, but Burns and of-1 5 in the first half, which
Cliff Clinkscales each made ended with the Blue
a pair of free throws to Demons ahead 3 I -2S.
clinch it. Dar Tucker added Burns got it going, making
15 ' points for the Blue all four of hi s attempts from
Demons.
behind the arc during an
Williamson
led opening 1~ -4 run that got
Cincinnati with 19 points. DePaul enthused.
The forward is one of five
"Draelon 's fast start realseniors honored before the ly helped us," Wainwright
final home game for com - said. "Anytime you can
ing to Cincinnati and stabi- make some baskets early on
lizing the program after the road, it gives you some
Bob Huggins' ouster.
confidence. We 're fighting
The
Bearcats
have for our lives, as you know,
clinched a .berth in the: Big tryiin gto get into our conEast tournament , but are ference tournament. This is
watching their hopes of big- a very important win for
ger things slip away.
us."

,p.m.
. At-tngG-.-U. · ·

IJ:~ PI!).

Auto - Home - Life - Health

Cincinnati missed I 0
field-goal attempts and
turned the ball over four
times during the decisive 7minutc, 25-second ;pan.

·
' ' .Clove. VASJ (20·4) vs. Andover
· · ,Pymatuntng Valley · (23·1) Saturday, ,7:30p.m. ,
. '
AI ~to Un(Qrslly
" Col&amp; Read)&gt; (16·8) vS: Sugarnreek
Garaway (22-3) , ~ Satu~. ·7:30

the joke I'd be here for an
honorary coin toss. Well,
that time may come, so I
may be back for something
like that. 'But as far as giving advice, l don't think that
will happen."

~ WHEN LIFE HAPPENS .. ,

71-69 victory on Feb. 20,
1992. This one was a breakthrough in several ways.
The Blue Demons had lost
their last five games overall
and nine of their last 10.
"It was an ugly game in
some
ways,"
said
Wainwright, in hi s third
season at DePaul. "We've
really struggled over the
last couple of weeks. We've
had a lot of road g·ames."
For Cincinnati ( 13-16, 89), it was another homecourt loss to a . struggling
team. The Bearcats have
dropped four in a row, and
were coming off an 81-79
overtime loss at home to
struggling Providence on
Sunday.
The Bearcats took a 48-45
lead on John Williamson 's
tip-in with 8:29 to play,
then managed only one free
throw over the next seven·
minutes while DePaul built
a seven-point lead.

Reds

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Note1: Bulls F Tyr111
Thomas would not reveal
hh reuon8 for Mklpplna
Wedne1duy'5 pmctlce, but
uid A r1cent reduction In
P.laylna time had nothln1 to
ilo with it. Thoma~ Will a
no·thow after phtytna jutt
under ntnu roul·plalued
minute• In Tuetday'• win
over Memphlt, drawlna 11
tWO•IIIme •utpen•lon from
the te11m. Thomas uid he
had a "nlce, lona convenatlon" with interim coach
Jim Boylan that "broke
some barriers. ~.· ... Boylan
picked up a technical foul
late in tfte second quarter,
after Noah was called for
offensive interference. i ·

··I

DMSIQNU

~ , AI Wrflhl Unl.-y
: St. Pano'Grahom (25-0) "'· Katterlng
·. Alter(17-7) --saturd8)111 a.m.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

- Clove. Benodlcllne (18-5) va Poland

deal worth a reported $3.5
"· million. After five years with
the Bears, including a teamrecord 100-catch season,
Booker
was traded to Miami
..
during the 2004 preseason.
"It's good to be back, plus,
No.' I, it's good to have a
job," Booker said.
The New York Jets signed
fullback Tony Richardson,
who played the last two seasons in Minnesota after 11
. years in Kansas City. He was
voted to his third Pro Bowl
with 139 tackles. The move with the Vikings last season.
saves Philadelphia $5 mil- · New England, which lost
lion in cap room.
cornerbacks Asante Samuel
Receiver Marty Booker and Randall Gay to free
returned to Chicago, agree- agency, signed two defening to a two-year, free-agent sive backs - cornerback

weeks, months or years, the ed oj,enly with retirement
final chapter in hts storied .- · because, of course, he
football career , . began never really meant it.
Monday night.
''
To a generation of fans
fromPageBl
Favre called Packers · who watched Favre start
coach Mike McCarthy and every game since taking
the fans who adored him.
told him he planned to over as the Packers' starting
The same was true of retire, then finalized his quarterback during the 1992
Favre's highly publicized decision in a conversation season, it' didn't make
struggles with an addiction with Packers general man- .· sj:nse. He wouldn't just
to prescription painkillers, ager, Ted Thompson on decide he was too tired to
his support of his wife •·Thesday morning.
play and walk away.
through a battle with breast
But
until
the
news
confer·
Would he? · .
cancer, and a memorable ence,
·Favre
.
hadil't
·
Recent coinments. by
Monday night game against
explained
his
decision
to
his
Fav_
re's agent, ·Bus Cook,
Oakland after h~ lost his
fans. He said Thursday stirred. suspicions about t)le
father.
Favre's exit comes after a th~re was nothing left to ...real" reason 'Favre was
retiring.
remarkable 2007 season, prove.
going
out
on
top,"
he
Had the Packers' front
"I'm
but his final pass was one to
forget: An mterception in said. "Believe me, I could office not done enough to
overtime of the NFC cham- care less what other people . talk him into coming back?
pionship game, a mistake think. It's what I think, and · Was Favre's retirement a
knee-jerk reaction to the
that set up the · New York rm going out on top!'
Favre's retirement came . fact that wide receiver
Giants' fi.eld goal that sent
·the Packers home instead of as a surprise to Packers Randy Moss, a player Favre
·executives, coaches and lobbied the Packers to sign
to the Super Bowl.
Most folks figured Favre teammates, virtually all of · a year ago, had. re-signed
couldn't exit that way, espe- whom expected him to with the New England
cially when he had at least return. And it was a shock to Patriots without an apparent
one more good year left in ·fans who sat r.atiently, year effort from the Packers?
him.
after year, whtle Favre flirt~
Favre's
comments
But barring a change of
heart in the upcoming

__,..,.

Coli.,.,.............

NFL moves: Favre dominates headlines, Kearse returns to Tennessee
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY JOE KAY

TOURNAMENrS

'
Lakeland,

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Burns leads DePaul to first win at ·cincinnati in 16 years

OHSAA

'

doing that,' we're in the clubhouse stealing everything
else that he has," he said.
Torre also got to spend
time with another member
of the Francona family.
Terry's father, Tito, and
Torre played together in
Atlanta.
For part of the game, Tito
stood m the stands next to
the Dodgers dugout and visited with his old teammate.
Torre called it a "bonus."
When Torre was in New
York, he and Francona used
to talk on the phone after
Yankees-Red Sox series.
The two of them were
always
close
friends,
although. they could hardly
afford to be so cordial on the
field.
"1 never went out there to
the batting cage" to greet
Torre the past four years,
Francona said, "not just
because of me. I just didn't
want to put him in that position. People don't want to

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008

a ri~alry in sight: Torre, Francona enjoy a spring ·visit

BY THE AssOCIATED PRESS

2008

38

co,..,Y

I

(740)446-7619

i

ATHENS

• ·b

�Friday, March 7,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Prep Girls Basketball -

2008

2008 OHSAA Final Four

Hathaway Brown, Kettering Alter advance to Division II finals
Africentric, Berlin Hiland move on in Division IV
BY RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS Alexis
Dobbs scored eight of her 12
points in the last I :46 of overtime - all on free throws to help Shaker Heights
Hathaway Brown hold off
Lima Bath 68-58 and earn its
second straight trip to the
Di v1sion II state c hampi onship game.
Hathaway Brown (22-4)
won its lOth game in a row,
avo1ding a major collapse
after building a 16-point firsthalf lead.
Angela Groves scored 25
pomts and first -team AllOhioan Mylan Woods had 17
despite hea"vy foul trouble
and persistent leg cramps for
the lOth-ranked Blazers, who
lost to Warsaw River View in
last year's IItle game in their
only previous trip to the state 's final tour.
Rachel Mauk had 18 points
and Nicki Hopkins and second-team all -stater Stefanic
Mauk each had 12 for No. 3ranked Bath (24-2), which
trailed 19-8 after a quarter
and by seven points at halftime and through three penods.
The Wildkittens, who
outscored the Blazers 19-12
in the tina! period, had two
good shots at winning in the
final seconds of regulation.
With the score tied at 56,
Rachel
Mauk,
Stefanic
Mauk's sister, drove the lane
and put up a shot in traffic
with '5 seconds left that
missed the mark, with Alanna
Guy
rebounding
for
Hathaway Brown. But Guy
was pressured, lost her balance and was called for traveling with 2.6 seconds left.
Bath iribounded to Stefanie
Mauk, who drove to the risht
elbow. Her hurried shot w1th
a hand in her face came up
short.
Hathaway Brown tben
dominated the extra 4-minute
period, never trailing after
Groves scored inside and
Dobbs followed a Bath miss
w1th two foul shots with I :46
left for a tiO- 56 lead.
Dobbs was 8-for-9 at the
line in the overtime.
Bath came into the game as
the top 3-point shootins team
m state history, connectmg on
a record 230 3-pointers and
shooting 32 percent behind
the arc. But their long-distance marksmanship failed
them down the stretch. They
missed all eight 3-point

state
semifinals
The
Punchers won that showdown, 58-50, before falling to
Cleveland East Tech in the
title game.
Alter came out firing on all
9 linders this tiljle, forcing
Mifflin to tum over ·the ball
on its first four possessions
while grabbing a 7-0 lead.
But the Punchers • defense
also started forcing mistakes.
Down 16-10 after a quarter,
they held the Knights scoreless in the first 4 1/2 minutes
of the second quarter. They
took their fiN lead at 22-21
on Johnson's baseline jumper
late in the quarter before
Ashley Christie hit three free
throws in the waning seconds
to help the Knights take a 2422 lead mto halftime.
·
With the score tied at 26
and 6 1/2 minutes left in the
third quarter, the Knights ran
away w1th the game. They
scored 12 .of the next 14
points - many m transition
after forcing another Puncher
turnover - and the lead
never dropped below double
figures agam.
Chihil touched off the spun
Kettering Alter 45,
with
a 3-pointer and added
Cols. Mimio 31
two more layups. Nicole
Christie al so had a 3 and
COLUMBUS (AP)
Courtney Chihil scored 18 Mary Bruner added a basket.
Chihil came in averaging
points and Kettering Alter
just
12.8 points a game.
forced 26 turnovers in beating
Columbus Mifflin 45-31
Berlin Hiland 58,
Thursday, earning a bit of
New Riegel 38
payback for the last time the
teams met in the Division II
COLUMBUS
Karli
state semifinals.
The
seventh-ranked Mast jolted Berlin H1land to
Knights (24"3) advance to life w1th 16 points off the
Saturday's
championship bench, spurring the Hawks
game to meet the team that past New Riegel 58-38
lost in last year's final, Shaker Thursday in a Division IV
Heights Hathaway Brown. state semifinal at Ohio State' s
·
The Blazers (22-4) moved on Value City Arena.
With Hiland Down 9-2
with a 68-58 overtime win
over Lima Bath in the first when she came on the floor
midway through the first perisemifinal.
Alter won its II th in a row od, Mast hit her first four
with a tenacious pressure shots from the field to score
defense that caused the eight consecutive points for
Punchers (20-5) problems all the Hawks and keep them in
the game. Then, when
day.
Chihil, a second-team Hiland's jitters faded and it
Associated Press All-Ohioan, was able to get settled in its
directed traffic and kept the end-to-end pressure, Mast
Knights on track. She hit 7- had a hand in it when the
of-10 shots from the field, Hawks took command with a
lethal 24-2 run.
including 2-of-3 3-pointers.
Katelyn Stuckey had II
Meghan Waterman chipped
points and Hilary Weaver in with II points.
Amber Arter was the lead- another non-starter - added
in~ scorer for unranked 10 for Hiland (26-1 ), ranked
Mifflin, which had won its second in the final Associated
last 13 games, with eight Press regular-season poll .
The Hawks, whose only
points.
The teams had met once loss was 39-30 to Division II
before - the only other time state semifinalist Sugarcreek
either team had been in the Garaway, could end up with a

attempts in the overtime, finishing 11-of-36.
The fir st half was built
around two major momentum
swings.
Relying 011 their strength
inside, the Blazers dominated
the fi rst 10 minutes, building
a 29- 13 lead. Groves
outscored the Wildkittens by
herself, with 15 points in the
opening 9 1/2 minutes.
But all of a sudden Bath's
defensive pressure started
forcing turnovers and the
turnovers turned into transition baskets. Outrebounded
17-2 heading into the final 6
minutes of the second quarter,
the Wildkittens regrouped to
hold the Blazers scoreless
while running off the last nine
points of the half to cut the
deficit to 29-22 at the break.
They still trailed 44-37
head1 0g into the final period
before finding the range outside, taking their first lead on
Hopkins ' NBA-length 3 with
4:49Ieft in regulation, 49-48.
The teams traded points until
the wild closing seconds.

much-anticipated showdown
with top-ranked and defending champion Columbus
Africentric.
·
Hiland will be gunninr for
its fourth state champion, hip.
following earlier titles m
2000, 2005 and 2006.
Lauren Hutton had 15
points for 12th-ranked New
Riegel (22-4), making its second appeamnce at the state
tournament and first since
1997. The Blue Jackets had
no seniors on their roster· and
started two sophomores and
three juniors.
The game spun around in
Hiland's favor in a hurry.
Down 18-13 late in the lirst
quarter, Hiland started finding seams in the New Riegel
zone, collectin~ turnovers
with its mamc fullcourt
defense, and began turning
everything into quick baskets.
The Hawks scored the final
point of the second quarter
and held th e Blue Jacket s
scoreless for the first 5: 11 of
the third quarter. Over that
span. New Riegel misfired on
all six shots from the field and
had seven turnovers while
Hiland was hitting 6-of-12
field attempts and comm1ttmg
just two turnovers.
Perhaps 'the most amazing
part of the 14-0 run was that
six players scored and none
.had more than Stutzman's
four points. Mast played a
role with another field goal
and a couple of assists.
After Hutton hit a turnaround to end New Riegel's
drought at the 2:49 mark of
the second period, the Jackets
di_dn 't score again - and
Mast hit a 12-foot jumper and
another 3 to8ut the Hawks in
control 32-2 at the half.
New Riegel missed its first
six shots of the .second half to
fall behind 37-20. The lead
never dropped below 14
points ;~gain.
First-team All-Ohioan Jena
Stutzman had ~even points,
four rebomids, five assists
and six steals for the Hawks ..
Cols. Africentric 47,
Convoy Crestview 42

COLUMBUS Ashar
Harris sliced into the lane for
an offensive rebound off a
missed free throw with 7.8
seconds left and then hit two
foul shots of her own to
clinch tOJ?-ranked Columbus
Africentnc's 47-42 victory
over Convoy Crestview in a
Division IV state semifinal on
Thursday night.
The
Nubians
(25-1)
advance to play sec6nd-

CLASSIFIED

New
Riegel's
Paula
Kelbey,
right ,
tries to
get
around
Berlin
Hiland's
Amy
Wank .
during
the first
quartl)r
of an ·
Ohio girls
Divisiqn
IV state
semi-final
basketball
game-In'
Columbus on
Thurs~ay.

Galli a
County
OH

E·mall
classifi'ed@ mydailytnbune .com

(304) 675-1333

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

..

\ \ \ 111 \\ I \ II \ I '-

•POLICIES*

..

OhloYalley
Publishing reserves
the rlghl to odll,
reject or cancel any
od at any lime.
Errors I!Uit B
aportod on the ttra
of publication
Tribune-Sentinel
will
agloter
'
oponslble tor n
ore thin the cott o

.
'

BY GREG RtSLING

ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

LOS
ANGELES
Forrner baseball player Matt
Williams testified Thursday
that he refused an offer from
private investigator Anthony
Pel.licano to wiretap the
phone of his second wife.
"'It's an illegal act,"
Williams test1fied.
Williams was the first
prosecution witness called in
the wiretapping trial of
Pellicano and four co-defendants.
Prosecutors said Pellicano,
63 , w&amp;s the architect of a
thriving criminal enterprise
that raked in more than $2
million by spying on
Hollywood's
rich
arid
famou s then supplying the
dirt to their rivals .
Clients " would pay a prem1um fee to di scredit, and in
some case' destroy, their
adversaries," Assistant U.S.'
Attorney Kevin Lally said in
hi s opening statement.
Amon g those allegedly
targeted by the scheme were
Sylveste r Stallone
and
comedi ans Garry Shandling
and Ke vin Nealon .
Williams, whose 17-year

baseball career was spent
mostly
with the San
Francisco
Giants
and
Arizona Diamondbacks, testified that he paid Pellicano
$25,000 in December 2001
to mvestigate his first wife
because he was concerned
about the safety of their
three children.
Within a month, Williams
and Pellicano talked about
the possible monitoring of
his then -w1fe, Michelle
Johnson, who was living in
Los Angeles, apart from her
husband.
Prosecutors played a
recorded
conversation
between the two men tn
which Pellicano suggests he
could "keep an eye" on
Johnson by listening to her
private
conversations.
Williams said he didn't
know he was being recorded
by Pellicano.
In the portion of the tape
played, Williams didn ' t
explicitly say he didn't want
to wiretap the phone.
ln ~tead, at one point
Williams tells Pellicano: " I
need to think about it."
Williams said Thursday he
didn ' t kriow he was being
recorded by Pellicano.

Williams, a five-time AllStar who retired in 2003, is
among dozens of players
named in December in the
Mitchell Report as having
used performance-enhancing drugs. He now works as
a broadcaster for the Arizona
Dia'mondback.s. ·
The recording is one of
more than 70 audio recordings prosecutors intend to
introduce
as
evidence
against Pellicano, who is
accused of wiretapping
phones and bribing police
and telephone workers to
intercept conversation s that
could g1ve his clients an
advantage ill legal disputes.
Lally called Pellicano a
prolific snoop who also
taped his own discussions
with clients. He said a treasure trove of recordings
seized durirrg a 2000 FBt
raid on Pellicano's office
paint a "clear and crystal"
picture of the detective's
shady dealings.
In that sense, " he ' s the
biggest government informant in thi s case;" Lally
said .
Pellicano, actin g as hi s
own attorney, spoke for only
10 minutes during hi s open-

ing statement, contending he enlisted by Pellicano were
Adam Braun, who reprerec~Jrded and encrypted his retired Los Angeles police sents Kachikian, said in his
own calls only as a way to Sgt. Mark Arneson and for- opening statement that
create a referencing system. mer telephone company Pellicano hired his client to
Because he was acting as employee Rayford Earl develop the eavesdropping
his own lawyer, Pellicano Turner. Other co-defendants software.
was told by the court to refer in the case are Kevin
Braun said Kachikian
to himself in the third person Kachikian
and
Abner thought the software would
when he addressed jurors.'
~icherie. All have pleaded be marketed to law enforce"His presumption was that not guilty.
ment agencies: , "He didn't
Seven people have plead- know it was going to be misthese conversations would.
be made available to no one ed guilty to a 'variety of used on wiretaps ."
but him," Pellicano told the charges including perjury
Pellicano could provide
panel.
.
and conspiracy. Six· of the some fireworks · when he
He also said he prided seven, including film direc- cross-examines some of his
himself on being a secretive tor John McTiernan and for person who treated the prob- mer Hollywood Records former clients and employlems of his clients &lt;Is hi s president Robert Pfeifer, are ees. Federal prosecutors
own.
expected to be called as wit- filed a list of 121 potential
Lally said Pellicano took . nesses.
witnesses that included
Attorneys for Arneson and Stallone, Chris Rock lind
extreme measures to cloak
hi s alleged illegal activities, Turner told jurors the evi- Shandling. It was not clear,
recruiting
senior
law dence won't show that their however, how many people
enforcement officers. and clients were part of a crirni- would actually testify.
telephone company employ- nal enterprise, and that they
Other
promi~ent
ees who didn't need much didn't even know each other Hollywood players on the
supervi sion, then talking to before they were arre sted . poten.tial witness l!st i!lclude
them in code .
two years ago.
one-.u me Walt D1 sne~ Co.
In addition, he rigged a
Arneson may have crossed pre~1dent and agent M~chael
wiretapping software pro- a line by providing a "short- Ovuz; Brad Grey, chamrtan
gram known as Telesleuth so cut" for Pellicano in search- and chief executive officer
no one el se could access the ing government databases, of Paramount Pictures; and
recordings, Lally said.
but he wasn't a corrupt offi- Ron Meyer, president and
'Omena, an Italian word cer and was paid by the pri- chief. executive office r: of
meamng code of silence, vate detective for legitimate Universal Studios.
was used as a password.
private security work , attorThe tri al is expected to last
Amon g those allegedly . ney Chad Hummel said.
about I 0 weeks .

r~

G~WAY

Perfect

I

aches and pains," \Je said.
, "It's feelipg pretty good,
though."
The Indians got 19 hits, a
day after Atlanta came
within one out of pitching a
no-hitter again st them .
Grady 'Sizemore tripled
and doubled , Franklin
Gutierre z added three hits
and Ben Franci sco went 4for-4 with two RB! s.
A coupl e o t proj,ec ted
starting pitchers for the
Astros didn 't fare too well .
Woody Williams all owed

•

five runs dnd six hit s in 2 23 innings and Brandon
Backe gave up four runs
and
. . seven bits in three
mmngs.
Williams stru ggled with
hi s control , throw1ng 71
pitches and falling behind a
lot of batters.
"I went into a lot of deep
counts," he said. "That's
not reall y the way I wanted
it to go. But my arm felt
good out there."
Backe didn 't throw any
breaking balls in hi s fir st

.

two inning s, in wh ich he
allowed all of his hits and
runs.
"Other than a few bad
pitche s, I think he threw the
ball sharply," Houston
manager Cec il Cooper said.
Notes: Indians manager
Eric Wedge is still toying
with some ideas to shu (Oe
hi s batting order thi s seaso n. Abo ut the only certaintie s are Size more hitting
leadoff, Travis Hafner battin g third and Vi ctor
Martine z m th e c leanup
J

spot.
Beau Mill s,
Cle veland 's
fir st-roand
pick last season, hit a tworun homer. Brad Sny{!er
also homered . ... J ,R.
Towles, expected to :tle
Houston's top catcher this
year, srole second base in
the fifth inning and then
scored on a passed ball. He
is 7-for- 12 thi s spring . ...
Houston 3B Ty Wiggint;on
was held out of the lineup
with a sore quadriceps.
He' ll likely return on
Saturday.

tI

·L . _ _ - _ . 1

11 f2yr oldPugle, neute red,
housebroken. Very fnendly &amp;
e.ttect•onate, CaU (740)441 ·
9865 after 5pm.
- - - - - - -4 dogs, 1 mother, 3 pup!f,
mu(ed breed, (740)441 ·0524
after 6pm

Display Ads

O.lly Jn..:Column: 1;00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for lnHrtlon

All Dl•playt 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne• Day• Prior To

In Next Day~a Paper
Sunday lnMColumn: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundaya Paper

Publldtlon
Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
Thuraday for Sundaye

i

I'MII'YM tl'll rftht to

any 1oM or llprtnM
.,.. llwl}'l

-only

r.::---.-,.-,::----:-"7""'----------'""II'"'IIII--~-..
Do
. . . .•l~.r.
_..FO."~.s.w:--.,J1• l_
~ M~~OI&lt;m! ' .I
kltncartytectcomcaat.nat
••
,
10

Need a help1ng hand for

~!.w.::.. ~ I

r

.....

cleaning, Reslden11a l or.
Commercial 446·2313 and
ask for Kay
-------aU
types
RoofingCommercJ&amp;l·Res•dental, 20
yrs expenance In all types
metal
rooUng,
Bnan
(740)992-2910

CVMr..KU•IJTlWULI'...

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
U M Ch basement sale,
Mar 7 9-7pm. Mar 8 9-2pm,
rurm ture, cloth•ng, dtshes,
books, 1 s, mise 1tems

AucnDNAND
MARKEr

FI~

111J

dvertlaements

ar

b]ect 1o the Fodera
lr Houalng Act o

968.
Thlo
cepts

newopope
only hal

OE otandardo.

-------Wanted to buy Junk Cars,&amp;
Farm Machtnery c:all 741J..
388-0884 Can can COllect
Wantmg to Buy Junk Cars
304-675·2176

CLASSIFIED INDEX
. 4x4'a For Sale ••..••••. ....•••••••••..•••••.... ••••••.•.•••• 725
Announcement ................... ..................: •••••• 030
Antlqueo .. .. ..............: ......................: ••.••••••••••S30
• : Apartments tor Rent •••••••..•..•••••••.•••••••••.••••• 440
Auction and Flea Markat ....... .................... ..oao
: Auto Porta &amp; Accesoorles ••..•••.•... ..•••••.....•. 760
• Auto Repair ........ ....................................... ...
Autoolor Sale................ .............................. 710
Boato &amp; Motors tor Sale ••.•...•••••... ..•••••.. .. .•• 750
Building Supptles ...... ... .......... .....................
• . Buolne11 and Buildings ••.••..•••••... ..••.••...••.• 340
Bualneso Opportunlty ........... ............. ......... 210
Bualneao Tralnlng •••.••.••••••••....•••••.••..•••••. •••• 140

no
sso

' r Campers &amp; Motor Homes .......•..•.•.....•••...... 790
Camping Equipment ............................... .... 760
Carda ot Thlnki .••••••. ..•: .••••••..•••••••..•..•••••. ••• 010
. ChlldiEidarly Care ....................................... ISO
• . Electrtcai/Retrtgoratton .. .•.•.....• .•••••.. ...•••.•... 840
Equipment tor Ront ................ .......... ........... 480
• Excavating ........ ........... ............................. " . 830
Form Equtpment ..••••••••.....••••.....•••••.. ..••••••••• 610
Farm• tor Rant............................................. 430
Forma tor Sole ••.. ..•••.... ....•.••. ... .•••.•.. ..•••••• •••. 330
1

Child care done •n my home,
Infants welcome. meals
Included lots of activitieS tor
your child, days, night and
weekends. $2.00 per hour.
Call 256· 1438 ask tor

0

c
6

'!&gt; -"1

Absolute Top Dollar - Sllver/gold
cams,
any
10KJ14KJ18K gold jltwelry,
· 193 5 US
demal gold. pre
curfency, prool/m1nt sets,
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
t 51 2nd Avenue Gallipolis
446-2842 ·
Small ChUrch needs small
Ptano call 304·773·5166 or
304-675·2338

For Leaae ................••..•.....••••....•••••..•.••••••••• . 490

For Sale ...... ... ..... ......... ....................... .......... 585
for Sole or Trade .••••.••.•. .., ••••••••. ...•.•......•••••• 590
, FruHo &amp; Vagetablea ....... .............................. 580
" ' · Furnllhed Rooms •.•..•.•••.••.••••••••••. ••••••...•••.•• 450
General Haullng .....................:... ..................850
GlvNway .................................... ........ .......... 040
Happy Ads .............. ........... .......... ................. 050
Hay &amp; Graln .. ... ...... .................... ......... .......... 640
Help Wanted .................................................110
Home tmprovamants ........ ........................... 810
Homeolor.Salo ••••.••••••••.•...•..•..• ...••••...•..•••••• 310
Houoehold Goods ....................................... 610
Houaaa for Rent ........... ......... ...................... 410
, In Memorlam ......... ................... .................... 020

· · lnaurance ..................................................... 130
• .. Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ••.•••..• , ••.•. ...•••••. 660
Ltveato&lt;:k ........ .. .......................... ..................630
LDSt and Found •• ••• •••••••••...••••.•.. .•••••....•.•••••. 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ....... ......... ........................... 350
. • MtaceltMaoua ......... ............ ........... ....... ....... 170
Mloceltonaoua Merchandlae·•••••.....•..••... ..••• S40
- l i e Homo Ropalr ..................... ......... .. ....860
Mobile Homeo tor Rent •••...••••• ••... .•••••.....•••• 420
Mobile Homes tor Sale ....... .........................320
Money to Loan .......... ......... .......................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..••••••••... ..•••••. ...•.740
Muslceltnatrumonts ................. ........ .......... 570
Peraonalo ............................ .........................
, Pete tor Sale .. ............................. ................. 660
- Plumbing &amp; Heating ........... ......... ......... ....... 820
• ' ' ~roleoalonal Sarvlcea .•••••..•. ..••••......•••••.•...• 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ..... ........... ............... 160
Pleat Estate Wanled ••• ..•• ••... .•••.••••... ..••• :..•. .•• 360
Schoolo tnatructlon ........... ..................... .. ... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertlll•er ...... .......... .............. 650
. , SHuotlono Wonled ••.•. ..•••••.••. ..••••• .•...•••••....•• 120
. Space tor Rent .......... .......... ............ ............. 460
·
Sporting Gooda ..•••.. ..•••••••••• ..•••••• ..•..•••••....••520
. SUY'o tor Sate ... ......... ........... ....................... 720
Trucko for Sole ........ ................... ................. 715
Upholatery •••••••..•••.....•.••••.••• .•••••. ..•••••••••• .•••• 870
Vans For Sate .... ........... ..................... ........... 7~ .
Wanted to Buy .•..••••.....•••••.. .•..••••••.•..•••••.• •••• 090
Wonted to Buy- Farm Suppllee .................. 820
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
wanted to Rent .......... .................................. 470
Yard Sale- Gallllpolta•••. ..•••••••....••••••...••.••••... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Ukldle ....•••••••.•• ••••••••••• 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Ple11ont. ................. ......... ..... 076

I \ 1!'1 l n \ II \ I
'- I 1&lt;\ II I '

116
1

u., ... W.··~
..-.ur ~,. ~

1

~

~ lll1f

I
100 WORKERS NEEDED

ccount1ng Clerk needed for
fast paced otf1~ Computer
skills with a htgh level of
accuracy required. Must
possess excellent data entry
skills and be abl e to meet
deadlmes punctually and
display a strong attention to
detail, accuracy and confidentlallty E~epenence 1n payroll &amp; benellls prelerred bul
not requtred Send re!lume ,
to CLA-4 cJo flolnt Pl easant
Register 200 Ma1n St. Pt.
Pleasan1, WV 25550

u--W.•~
DUI

Home

tvUI:ooU

Apply In person or call Workers In the Buffalo, WV
(740)~1 -9371 to set up an Area Benefits available CaM
Interview. 308 2nd Ave., Toda 304·757-3338
Galllpol~
__Y_ _ _ _ _ _

Marietta, Ohio 18 searching
for qualified COL A Dnvers
to operate Sami·Dumps
Pneumatic Bulk Tankers..;

-------Dnvers Wanted
Must live Within a 25 mile
radius of H""'son Oh
...,...
'
•
Paid by the mile plus wait
•
~
lng t•me, VacatiOn, Holiday
Pay, Full and Part time avatl·
Ahle Ideal for s pplemental
.,... •
u
,
Income for Retired Penwns
For MoN lnlorm:.tlon C.ll

bolh raglonal and OTR
opportunllles.
Qualified
applicants must be at least
23 yrs, have a minimum of 1
years Of 11fe commerlcal
driving experience, Haz Mat
Certification, Clean MVR

Medical Testing Aa01atant,
PT, to pertorrn drug lestlng,
other medical servkles. and
conduct tralnilg courses 1n
the Ashland, Charleston,
and Ravenswood areas.
Medical --.w.......... .v4 unnec-

~.........

eoaary-wlll train. Prefer ootgoing
peraonallty
Fax
resume to {7-40) 268-88? 1 or
call888·269-6344

----..,.--.....:..-

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS

IT Techn1c1an Must ha\le
experience. Fax resume to
740·446·9104
- -- -- - ' - -LIQuid Asphalt Dnvers
Needed, Must be 2t years
ol d Of ~er
Must nave
Class A COL wnh Hazmat
Endorsement and good
MVA Local Tripe Gall 1800·598-6122
- - - - - - -Management poa1t1on with
local shoe store In Gallipolis.
E xe~tlng career opportunity
Reloll e"'lerlence preterred
Competitive benefit package AWt'l at SHOE SHOW,
305 Upper River Rd. EOE
MIF

Midnight Cieri&lt; needed at At
35 VIdeo &amp; Bookstore 304·
937-4900
New Carry Out/Delivery
Potnt
Rastaurant
In
Pleasant
Hiring,
for
Interview can 304-593-3120
or 304·812..SOSS

All realelblte advertltln;
ln thlt newapaper It ,
eubltc:t to the Feder•l
Ftlr Houtln; Act ot 1961
w.hlch m~k.. lt IUepltc
1dventae "any
pNflrenc•, limitation or
diiCflmlnatton buod on
rtce, color, religion, ae•
f•mlll•lltatul or ftlltlun~l

i

coni

Repair Techrudan needed .
.u.'llty work----·· direct
""'~
8 must. . Sell
starter and detail Oriented.
lfavellng Involved Monday
thur Fri. MaU reaumeto:

**NOTit::E•*

10
-Supervillon

n-

wv

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohio Olv•s•on of
Financial
InstitutiOn's
Office of Consumer
AHalrs BEFORE you rellnence your home or
obtain a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or Insurance Call the
Office
of Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1-866278·0003 to learn if the
mortgage
broker or
lender
is
properly
llcen!led (Th•s 1!1 a public
serv1ce announcement
from the OhiO Valley

r

HIRING
Avg Pay $2Mir or
$57Kiyr, Includes
Federal Benefit&amp;, OT
Offered by Exam Services,
not offered wl USPS who
hires
I-866-S42•1531

S:3Qam-4pm
Welders needed 1yr experi·
ence Good wages &amp; benefits Send resumes to: CLA

- - - - - -- -

li!iil

~

-

1 ·866-40~2582

- - - - - -Post Office Now Hiring!
Avg pay $20/hr 57~r1
Incl. Fed. ben.. QT. Offered
by Exam Services, not aft.
w!USPS 'Nho h1res
1-866-506-9119
- - -- -- - Thl Chln.ton G..U.
Independent Contractor
carrier Needed FOf
Newspaper Delivery Rt 35Stave Branch-5&amp;20 Ml, AdBufla.lo .ftrea Eam about
$1 .800 monthly before
expenses Approximately 4
hours a day Dependable
vehicle a must CALL 1·800-982-63!l7 Ext. 1709

Bolt 103, do Galhpolls Daily
Tribune, PO Box 469,
Gallipolis, OH 45631

ScHooLs

•·-·~·

I

1

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURnY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wmi
1·888·582-3345

rlO
~

HOMffi

Ji(JR SALE

0 down payment 4 bed·
1ooms Large ya rd. Covered
GatllpoMoc- Collego de&lt;k Attached garage 740·
(Gareera Cl... To Home) 367-71 29
Cai1To&lt;i0yl 740-446-4367,
t-800-214-()452
2,600 sq ft, 4br. 2 acres
wwwgaii~~«SJ wlpool, 1n New Haven
Accl*t!IICI t.temt~tr Accr.clllng $139,500 304·593-8871 call
~sa!'. ~n~:: 01"" ~ after epm
&amp;mnu.J\...liUI'f

1176

'

~

. ~ - -- ---'- - -

4'~~-.,

-:""

·------·

-,

George's Portable sawmm,
don't hlut your Logs to the
Mill juot cal 304-875-ti57
- - : : - - -- , : - - --:
Small Home Repair and
Brush Cutting,
Service.
(7&lt;4()~3882

-,.rd

~ '

$400 monlh , $400 Sec
Depos~ . Up·Town, 1·BDRM
(304 )675-7381
Leave
Message
2 Br house 1n Pomeroy dep
&amp; ref reqUired 740-9926385

mllke lillY IUCh

preference, Imitation cr
dltcrlmlnetlon.''

2br. m Pt. Pleasant Depos•t
required $450 month, 304593-5363 or 304-593·0128

Thlanewapaperwll\not
knotmgty ac:cept
edverflMm.nta
estate which I• In
vlollltion ol tht lew. Our
readers are her.by
Informed thlt all
dwelling• ldvertiaed in
thl• new1 paper 1 ,.
evallabl•ananequtl

for,..,

3 BR 1 bath, FA, Baeement,
2 car garage, At 141 2 m
from town, $700 Includes
wtr/swrltrash $650 dep 4464824 I

(304) 273-2969 Join &amp; get
$500 1n merchand•se for $99
run rue@ hughes net
- - -- ' - - - - Mary Kay Consultant Buy,
Sell, or Host Earn Free
Products, Call Angle (740) ~~·:•~port~un~lty~b·~·"~·~
245·5206 o' (740) 578·1051 -

Outalda Sales Poal11on. MUSI · 0 · ~ 339 Ravenswood,
have experience with oper· WV 26164
ating larm equ!....,.nt and
.....
RN's needed lo provide
computers. Fax Rasume to basic first aid at Industrial
740--446·9104
site In Point Aeaaam,
Owner
Operator Part IVld Full time. INTER·
Opportunities:
R&amp;J ESTINGI LOW STRESSI
Trucking - Manetta, Ohto Call 888·269-6344 or tax
has opportuntt!es available· resume 10 740~266-6671
1or Owner Operators within lh.Jtk Drivers COL Class A
the region
we feature R
d
.
1
1 2
weeklysett1ement&amp;and1rall· equre' mln•mum 0
rental n......,rators should years
driving
exp
er
• ....,.....
Experience
on
have newer equ~nt and Overdelmenskmal loads Publlshmg company)
trametypetrailera. for more
.
· ':::;:::::::::=~
information . contact Dennis Must have good dr•vlng W
at S00-462•9365
record E'arQ up to $2.000
~NAL
- - - -- - - - weekly For application Call
SE.RVICl-li
•
POST OFFICE NOW
(304)722·2 18 4
M·F

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay $20illror
"71&lt;/yr, tnctudes
Federal Benellla. OT.
Oflared by Exam Ser&lt;lcea,
not offered w/ USPS who
hires.

Lots&amp;
ACRFAGE

FORlb:Nr

ortgln, cr ln~ lnlentlcn tc

lntenors &amp; GiftS

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG co r-ommends
""'
that you do bus1ness With
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mall until you
and good lob stabU11y. We
offer 1 full state of benefits have Investigated the
p!ua 401 (k) and vacation lio:He:n:ng:.::;:;:==~
pay. For !nformatloo contact W
Kent at 800· 462•9365 or
MONEY
I
visit our wall 8118 al
TO LoAN
wwwritrw:kiig
E.C.E.
~
•

~

r

Rd, 44H111'
I ~ I \ I \I '

1
• Conlac1 Rosalie Unrue at

Co~rtside ~r &amp; Grill now Manpower 18 now hiring for Regional, J)neumatic Tanker
tak1ng apphcattons tor &amp;JCPEI· the followmg positions &amp; OTR driving F-os•Uons·
nenced grl11 and try cooks Automobile
Produtlon R&amp;J Trucking Company In

$17.89·$28 27illr , now hlrAssemble craHs, wood !ng. For application and free
1tems To $480fwk Matenals
governement job Info, call
provided Free mformattOn
pkg. 24Hr 801-428·4649
American A880C of Labor 1 ~
913-599-8226, 24/hrs. amp.
A LOCAL manfacturer IS serv
look1ng to1 EXPERIENCED - - - - - - - Goll1o County Council on
M1g
Welde rs
Agmg I Semor Resource
a ndEXPERIENCED
Center •s curren11y accepting
Operators of brake presses
pllcatlons t
d
1
or van nver
and shears Apply 1n person ap
Eltcellent opportunity for
at Kmg Kutter II 2150 ret.red person looking for
Eastern Ave Galllpolls. No activity Must be a high
Phone Calls Please
school graduate or equivalent, must have wild dnvers
An Excellent way to earn
license and be an Insurable
money The New Avon
nsk. Mus{ be able to pass
Call Manlyn 304-882·2645
medical exam•nat!on. Hours
Are you Interested 1n a as needed , part time posl~
rewarding position? PAIS 1s tlon. EOE
currently acceptlng applica- - - - - - - -tions for full tune/ part t1me Help wanted at. Darst Home
Group HOOle. 740..992·5023
d1rect care positions 1n
Ripley, WV prOVIding res1·
Care
Company
dentia!lcommumty skill train· HOITKI
accepting resumes tor CRS
lnQ Wllh IndiVIdUalS With
and delivery Technicians
MR/00. Needl IO be able
Please forward resumes to
and willing to phyolcaHy
CLA Box 3 c/o Polnl
ln'tervene at times for
Pleasant Reglster 200 Main
cllentl with challenging
St Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
behavlora. H•gh school
diploma or GED requ1 red
and
Homemaking
No expenence necessary
Personal Cora Att.-illl
Cr1mmal background check
re qUired Mus1 have rtill•able Training. Local Agency now
appli cations tor
transportation Hourly rate accepling
classes to be held March 17$10.00, after trammg Call 1· 2 1st CHHA'I, STNA'o,
304·373- 101 1
CNA'o and PCA'1 welcome
AVON! All Areas I To Buy or to apply Please call
Sell Shirley Spears, 3Q.4· (740)441·1 377 tor more
1nformat1on.
675-1 429
Babysitter needed in my
home for 2 children before
school only. Must have refer~
ences. (740) 208·71n

liEu» wAmm

Ho.P WANim

S2900 Down i'mt

· RENT, 1031 Georges-Creek

;w~w:w:.:co~m::ic:•:.c:o:m~~;=====::;~0~2008~=b=y=N:E:A:,:•n:c:.~ lorAece~ve
$500 merchandise
only $99

1~531-&amp;553

1

Home lntenor- contact
Rosalie Unrue all304)2732969, limited time Jo•n and

L-~~

li.16_ _ _ _ _ _.lli.16_ _ _ _ _ _.,JIIt16

from

M•dwesl 740-828-2750

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR

0

FOUND

Lost F. German Shepherd
last seen Jan 30 w/st1tches
1n belly &amp; red collar,
CarpenterfDyesv•lle , $250
for sate return (740)698·
2267

USED HOME SALE
N1ce 3BA S•ngleWldes

1 (740)36G)7·0000=

l..orrAND

anted ads meet!

•

~~-V

DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
grams for you to buy your
home instead of renting
•100%financ1ng
• Less than perfect cr'ed1t
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Morlgage
Localors

I

1987 Mercedes Benz 190 E,
Found Red and White 4 Cly, ga~ 2.3 for par(s
Basseit Hound, Tycoon lake PhOne 740-256·11 02 ask for
Vicinity, found on 2/20 441- Jr
9443

NEW 2001 4 BR·2BA
1,700+ sq H $49.989
!rom 1397 Month
Midwesl 740-828·2750
mymidwesthome com

Attention!

everyday cklan •ng, or Spnng Local company offenng •No

(740)256· 1664
·-----·
Four m•xed Beagles 2-4 Cross Cre ek Auction Buffalo
Saturday 6pm
mos old 2·1 yr old 949· Auction
Sugar Creek Bacon, Food,
2188.
'
Rubber M! •d prodt.~cts, Lots
Free to good home, 6 month of Used 11ems 1Olbs of
old muced breed pupp1es Potatoes $2 bag Start1ng to
par1 coonhound Please ca ll sell h1gh qual1ty kmves such
(740) 256· 1445
as Case, Buck &amp; Mossy
Free to good homes Oak. Bu1ld1ng is full. V1sa
and Masler Card (304)550·
Lab/Shepherd mix puppieS.
1616Ste enRe
1639
Call256·8169

llol number adl
lways conftdenllat.

tcln, reltct. or cane.! any lid at any time. Enora ~Mtat be reported on the llrat
than tht coat ol the apace occupied by the error and only the lira! lnHrllon.
II
pubi61Uition or omlulon of an advertiMmtnt. Correction will be m11de In the ftralavallable Mhlon. • Bax
cad applln. • All rut tttaW ldvlftiaementa are subject lo th• Ptdlfll Fair Houalng Act of 1MI. • Ttl II
IOI.a.ndlnll. W. wttl nol knowingly ' " • 1ny advertlalng In vlollllon of tiM law.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

4

......

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!i4
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

• All ads must b8 prepaid'

YARDSAU:

AuSirallan Shepherd dog

oos

made a conscious effort to·
get it in there and made
some good pitche s," he
said. "I can build off that."
from Page Bl
In the bullpen, he threw
more pitches down the to catcher Wyatt Toregas,
who told Sabathia whether
right-field line.
"I wa s just trying to to envision he was facing a
pound the strike zone, stay right- or left-handed. hitter.
tall and throw the ball . Sabathia, who led the
downhill , somethmg I did-. majors with 241 innings
n ' t do iry my last start," he last year, is throwing only
one
bullpen
sess ion
said .
between
starts.
"Tl)e last lime I had a
"My arm feel s a lot betto ugh time th row ing in on
ter.
Us ually you get some
ri ghll es. but today I j ust

Word Ads

• Start Vour Ade Wtth A Keyword • Include Complete
Descrlptlun • Include A Price • Avoid Ahbrevl•tlom
• Include PhonB Number And Address When Need_.
• Ads Should Run 7 DIYI

ltelt!S

Prosecutor: Private eye helped clients 'discredit' ·ramous riv~
'

Vy'ebsites:
www.mydailytnbune.com
www.myda1lysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister:com

l\egister

AP photo

ranked Berlin Hiland (26-1), minutes wiping off the floor
which beat New Riegel 58-38 after spraying it with disinfecin an earlier semifinal . It's a tant.
dream matchup between . the
After the teams traded basstate's top two teams in the kets, Morrison-Fountain 'trotfinal
regular-season ted back to the scorer's table
Associated Press poll.
and checked in. The Nublans
First-team All-Ohioan and went into a weave to take
Division IV player of the year time off the clock, with
Tyeasha Moss scored 14 Morrison-Fountain driving
points, as did third-team all- the lane and passing to Hams
stater Alesia Howard. Harris , for a layup with 2:06 left.
The Knights responde&lt;\ on
added II points and 14
rebounds as the Nubians were a
basket
inside - by
held to their lowest point total Nedderman, who also had
this season.
returned to the lineup, cutting
Kelsey Nedderman hail 12 the lead to 43-40 with 1:~5
points
and
Carly remaining .
The Knights committed a
Lichtensteiger II for Convoy
Crestview (23-3), which costly turnover with 36.3 seccame in allowing just 28.1 onds left when Mefhan
points a game.
The game was tight Henry bounced the bal off
throughout, with no more her foot and out of bounds.
~
·
·
On the inbounds pass,
h
t an our pomts separatmg Howard was fouled and hit
the teams at each of the first
the first of a bonus situation,
three quarter breaks.
Afncentric was hurt briefly but with 24.8 seconds left
by the loss of its sterling point Mehssa Eickholt made two
guard, Shardai Mornson- foul shots to cut the gap to44Fountain, who was knocked 42.
down during a serum with
Morrison-Fountain missed
4:09 to play and the Nubians the front end of a one-andahead 39-36. She limped off one with 23 . ~ seconds left,
the court, sat briefly on the with Jo Thompson reboundbench and then walked slow- ing for Crestview. She
ly to the locker room.
brought the ball back the
At
the
same
time, length of the floor and missed
Nedderman sustained a a jump shot with 12 seconds
bloody nose that required a · left that would have tied the
·
game off1cial to spend several game.

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

77 Hawthorne Ln.. Pt
Pleasant, 3br, tba, 1015/SF
New floor cove nngs fresh
pa1nt. new heat pump
$79,000 304-674·3698
9 room 2500 sq. ft ranch,
Bailey Run Ad., Pomeroy,
Ohio. $10 5,000, (740}992 9363, 304·722·3894
-------Let your garage make the
morlgage pyml , wilh 7.000
lb Mft and mini ap1 Near
Walman, 2BA. CIA. lo~~e tub.
1816
Chatham
Ave.
$6.2 ,500. 740-446·3442

3 br house, Pomeroy, 2 full
bath, barage. full basement.
new carpet, vefy clean,
Duplex lor Sale on Land handicap accessible, $635 a
Conlract 740·992-5858.
monlh, (740)949-2303

House tor sale •n Raccne
area Approx . 4 acres, all
professionally landscaped
Ranch style .house w1th 4
bedrooms, llvmg room. dill·
mg room, kitchen, large tamlly room. central a1r, gas heat
and 1 fireplace. Add1tion of a
large Flortda room com
plelely cedar opens on1o
patio &amp; pool area Healed In
ground pool endosed by pn·
1
d 1
vacy enclng an
and·
scaped F1nishad 2 car
tt hed to ho
garage a ac
use
and finished &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unattached
Excellent cond1tlon ready to
move ln. $255,000 oo, Call:
(740)949-2217
'-"-------

3BR, 1 1/2 bath, Ranc h,
basement, carport, all appliances, plus washer &amp; dryer
Included, No Pets, Cheshtre
$575 mo Call446·0725
4 Bedroom House for Rent
(740) 446-4060 or 367·7762
Double Wide tor Rent-Extra
N1ce, 3BR, 2Bath, CA, large
deck. No Pets, 1622
Chatham Ave, Ga!11pohs
446-4234 ()( (740)208·7861
~
•
Bedroom
.
House •n

Syracuse $500/month +
depoSit Hud App No Pets
(304)675·5332 • weekends
740-591·0265

2BR, on pnvate lot $450
dep + $450 per month rent
PRICE AEOUCEOI
1n Addison Twp call (740)
3BR t bath on 1/2 acre lot, 645·3413 or (740) 367·0654
Rt 325 S 3 5 m1 from R•o
Grande College
Kit, LA. 2BA , on pnvate lot $550
DR, WfO hook up, 10xt0 dep + ~50 per month rent
shed, elec heat or propane 1n Addison Twp call (740)
new w1nOows m LR, DR &amp; 645 -3413 or (740) 367-0654
k1t. $65.000 Call Chuck
Lambert 419·782-9715 or
PLEASE
419 •789 . 1808
leave a message ,1 there 10
no answerl
as orne o eona
. &amp; Lalah Sergent,
ooms 2 fult baths, 2 ca
arage, secunty system
ack up heat, chai n lin
ence on corner lot 201
orest St, Henderson w
04-675_6411 or 304-574
070

3 bedroom, 2 bath, all elec·
trlc In Mlddleporl, $450 plus
$450 depoSit. (740)416·
_t354
_ _ _ _ _ __
3br, 2ba med storag.:~ bUild,
Dep req GallipOliS Ferry. No
•ns1de pets, Ref requ1red
$450 month 304·576·2296
N•ce 2BR mobile home In
Mobile Home
Park 740·446·1409 or 740·

· Johnsons
448·2003

·

'

N•ce 2BA mostly furnished.
MOBILE HOI&lt;m! I No
pel s
$375/rent
SALE
53 75/depoS11. 740-441-0829
APARfMiiNili I
16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
FUR RENr
Vtnyl S1d1ng Shingle Roof ~--oiriliiiiiiiiiiiror_.l·
$2 30 pet month 740·385· 1 and
' 2 bedroom apart·
9948
- - - - - - - - 'ments tum•shed and untur2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sec- nlshed, and houses In
tlonal home $279 per month Pomeroy and Mtddleport,
740·385-7671
secunty deposit required , no
pets,
2008 sectional home 3 :__740·992·2218
_ _ _ _ __
Bedroom 2 Bath delive red 1aA Apt WID hookups.
and set up 538 .695 74a- •nterneVsatelllle TV mel
wtrent , close to ho""ltal Call
385 9948
__
- - - - ''- - - -· 740 _339 _0362
.....
from $199 Month
__:~~-----New 2008 S1nglew•de
1BA Cabin, stove &amp; fndge
M1dwest 740- 828·2750
turmshed Thurman ¥1Cinity
mymidwesthome com
Al l utilities pd Call 740-441·
3702 or 286·5789
- - - - - - - - ::.~.:....:~__:.:__ _
N•w 3 Bedroom hOmes from t BR, t bath upstairs garage
$214.36 per month, Includes apt
$285/month
many Upgrades, delivery &amp; $285/deposit Call 740-446-.
sot·up (740)385-2434
3481'

~

l

r

FOR

,,

�Friday, March 7,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Prep Girls Basketball -

2008

2008 OHSAA Final Four

Hathaway Brown, Kettering Alter advance to Division II finals
Africentric, Berlin Hiland move on in Division IV
BY RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS Alexis
Dobbs scored eight of her 12
points in the last I :46 of overtime - all on free throws to help Shaker Heights
Hathaway Brown hold off
Lima Bath 68-58 and earn its
second straight trip to the
Di v1sion II state c hampi onship game.
Hathaway Brown (22-4)
won its lOth game in a row,
avo1ding a major collapse
after building a 16-point firsthalf lead.
Angela Groves scored 25
pomts and first -team AllOhioan Mylan Woods had 17
despite hea"vy foul trouble
and persistent leg cramps for
the lOth-ranked Blazers, who
lost to Warsaw River View in
last year's IItle game in their
only previous trip to the state 's final tour.
Rachel Mauk had 18 points
and Nicki Hopkins and second-team all -stater Stefanic
Mauk each had 12 for No. 3ranked Bath (24-2), which
trailed 19-8 after a quarter
and by seven points at halftime and through three penods.
The Wildkittens, who
outscored the Blazers 19-12
in the tina! period, had two
good shots at winning in the
final seconds of regulation.
With the score tied at 56,
Rachel
Mauk,
Stefanic
Mauk's sister, drove the lane
and put up a shot in traffic
with '5 seconds left that
missed the mark, with Alanna
Guy
rebounding
for
Hathaway Brown. But Guy
was pressured, lost her balance and was called for traveling with 2.6 seconds left.
Bath iribounded to Stefanie
Mauk, who drove to the risht
elbow. Her hurried shot w1th
a hand in her face came up
short.
Hathaway Brown tben
dominated the extra 4-minute
period, never trailing after
Groves scored inside and
Dobbs followed a Bath miss
w1th two foul shots with I :46
left for a tiO- 56 lead.
Dobbs was 8-for-9 at the
line in the overtime.
Bath came into the game as
the top 3-point shootins team
m state history, connectmg on
a record 230 3-pointers and
shooting 32 percent behind
the arc. But their long-distance marksmanship failed
them down the stretch. They
missed all eight 3-point

state
semifinals
The
Punchers won that showdown, 58-50, before falling to
Cleveland East Tech in the
title game.
Alter came out firing on all
9 linders this tiljle, forcing
Mifflin to tum over ·the ball
on its first four possessions
while grabbing a 7-0 lead.
But the Punchers • defense
also started forcing mistakes.
Down 16-10 after a quarter,
they held the Knights scoreless in the first 4 1/2 minutes
of the second quarter. They
took their fiN lead at 22-21
on Johnson's baseline jumper
late in the quarter before
Ashley Christie hit three free
throws in the waning seconds
to help the Knights take a 2422 lead mto halftime.
·
With the score tied at 26
and 6 1/2 minutes left in the
third quarter, the Knights ran
away w1th the game. They
scored 12 .of the next 14
points - many m transition
after forcing another Puncher
turnover - and the lead
never dropped below double
figures agam.
Chihil touched off the spun
Kettering Alter 45,
with
a 3-pointer and added
Cols. Mimio 31
two more layups. Nicole
Christie al so had a 3 and
COLUMBUS (AP)
Courtney Chihil scored 18 Mary Bruner added a basket.
Chihil came in averaging
points and Kettering Alter
just
12.8 points a game.
forced 26 turnovers in beating
Columbus Mifflin 45-31
Berlin Hiland 58,
Thursday, earning a bit of
New Riegel 38
payback for the last time the
teams met in the Division II
COLUMBUS
Karli
state semifinals.
The
seventh-ranked Mast jolted Berlin H1land to
Knights (24"3) advance to life w1th 16 points off the
Saturday's
championship bench, spurring the Hawks
game to meet the team that past New Riegel 58-38
lost in last year's final, Shaker Thursday in a Division IV
Heights Hathaway Brown. state semifinal at Ohio State' s
·
The Blazers (22-4) moved on Value City Arena.
With Hiland Down 9-2
with a 68-58 overtime win
over Lima Bath in the first when she came on the floor
midway through the first perisemifinal.
Alter won its II th in a row od, Mast hit her first four
with a tenacious pressure shots from the field to score
defense that caused the eight consecutive points for
Punchers (20-5) problems all the Hawks and keep them in
the game. Then, when
day.
Chihil, a second-team Hiland's jitters faded and it
Associated Press All-Ohioan, was able to get settled in its
directed traffic and kept the end-to-end pressure, Mast
Knights on track. She hit 7- had a hand in it when the
of-10 shots from the field, Hawks took command with a
lethal 24-2 run.
including 2-of-3 3-pointers.
Katelyn Stuckey had II
Meghan Waterman chipped
points and Hilary Weaver in with II points.
Amber Arter was the lead- another non-starter - added
in~ scorer for unranked 10 for Hiland (26-1 ), ranked
Mifflin, which had won its second in the final Associated
last 13 games, with eight Press regular-season poll .
The Hawks, whose only
points.
The teams had met once loss was 39-30 to Division II
before - the only other time state semifinalist Sugarcreek
either team had been in the Garaway, could end up with a

attempts in the overtime, finishing 11-of-36.
The fir st half was built
around two major momentum
swings.
Relying 011 their strength
inside, the Blazers dominated
the fi rst 10 minutes, building
a 29- 13 lead. Groves
outscored the Wildkittens by
herself, with 15 points in the
opening 9 1/2 minutes.
But all of a sudden Bath's
defensive pressure started
forcing turnovers and the
turnovers turned into transition baskets. Outrebounded
17-2 heading into the final 6
minutes of the second quarter,
the Wildkittens regrouped to
hold the Blazers scoreless
while running off the last nine
points of the half to cut the
deficit to 29-22 at the break.
They still trailed 44-37
head1 0g into the final period
before finding the range outside, taking their first lead on
Hopkins ' NBA-length 3 with
4:49Ieft in regulation, 49-48.
The teams traded points until
the wild closing seconds.

much-anticipated showdown
with top-ranked and defending champion Columbus
Africentric.
·
Hiland will be gunninr for
its fourth state champion, hip.
following earlier titles m
2000, 2005 and 2006.
Lauren Hutton had 15
points for 12th-ranked New
Riegel (22-4), making its second appeamnce at the state
tournament and first since
1997. The Blue Jackets had
no seniors on their roster· and
started two sophomores and
three juniors.
The game spun around in
Hiland's favor in a hurry.
Down 18-13 late in the lirst
quarter, Hiland started finding seams in the New Riegel
zone, collectin~ turnovers
with its mamc fullcourt
defense, and began turning
everything into quick baskets.
The Hawks scored the final
point of the second quarter
and held th e Blue Jacket s
scoreless for the first 5: 11 of
the third quarter. Over that
span. New Riegel misfired on
all six shots from the field and
had seven turnovers while
Hiland was hitting 6-of-12
field attempts and comm1ttmg
just two turnovers.
Perhaps 'the most amazing
part of the 14-0 run was that
six players scored and none
.had more than Stutzman's
four points. Mast played a
role with another field goal
and a couple of assists.
After Hutton hit a turnaround to end New Riegel's
drought at the 2:49 mark of
the second period, the Jackets
di_dn 't score again - and
Mast hit a 12-foot jumper and
another 3 to8ut the Hawks in
control 32-2 at the half.
New Riegel missed its first
six shots of the .second half to
fall behind 37-20. The lead
never dropped below 14
points ;~gain.
First-team All-Ohioan Jena
Stutzman had ~even points,
four rebomids, five assists
and six steals for the Hawks ..
Cols. Africentric 47,
Convoy Crestview 42

COLUMBUS Ashar
Harris sliced into the lane for
an offensive rebound off a
missed free throw with 7.8
seconds left and then hit two
foul shots of her own to
clinch tOJ?-ranked Columbus
Africentnc's 47-42 victory
over Convoy Crestview in a
Division IV state semifinal on
Thursday night.
The
Nubians
(25-1)
advance to play sec6nd-

CLASSIFIED

New
Riegel's
Paula
Kelbey,
right ,
tries to
get
around
Berlin
Hiland's
Amy
Wank .
during
the first
quartl)r
of an ·
Ohio girls
Divisiqn
IV state
semi-final
basketball
game-In'
Columbus on
Thurs~ay.

Galli a
County
OH

E·mall
classifi'ed@ mydailytnbune .com

(304) 675-1333

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

..

\ \ \ 111 \\ I \ II \ I '-

•POLICIES*

..

OhloYalley
Publishing reserves
the rlghl to odll,
reject or cancel any
od at any lime.
Errors I!Uit B
aportod on the ttra
of publication
Tribune-Sentinel
will
agloter
'
oponslble tor n
ore thin the cott o

.
'

BY GREG RtSLING

ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

LOS
ANGELES
Forrner baseball player Matt
Williams testified Thursday
that he refused an offer from
private investigator Anthony
Pel.licano to wiretap the
phone of his second wife.
"'It's an illegal act,"
Williams test1fied.
Williams was the first
prosecution witness called in
the wiretapping trial of
Pellicano and four co-defendants.
Prosecutors said Pellicano,
63 , w&amp;s the architect of a
thriving criminal enterprise
that raked in more than $2
million by spying on
Hollywood's
rich
arid
famou s then supplying the
dirt to their rivals .
Clients " would pay a prem1um fee to di scredit, and in
some case' destroy, their
adversaries," Assistant U.S.'
Attorney Kevin Lally said in
hi s opening statement.
Amon g those allegedly
targeted by the scheme were
Sylveste r Stallone
and
comedi ans Garry Shandling
and Ke vin Nealon .
Williams, whose 17-year

baseball career was spent
mostly
with the San
Francisco
Giants
and
Arizona Diamondbacks, testified that he paid Pellicano
$25,000 in December 2001
to mvestigate his first wife
because he was concerned
about the safety of their
three children.
Within a month, Williams
and Pellicano talked about
the possible monitoring of
his then -w1fe, Michelle
Johnson, who was living in
Los Angeles, apart from her
husband.
Prosecutors played a
recorded
conversation
between the two men tn
which Pellicano suggests he
could "keep an eye" on
Johnson by listening to her
private
conversations.
Williams said he didn't
know he was being recorded
by Pellicano.
In the portion of the tape
played, Williams didn ' t
explicitly say he didn't want
to wiretap the phone.
ln ~tead, at one point
Williams tells Pellicano: " I
need to think about it."
Williams said Thursday he
didn ' t kriow he was being
recorded by Pellicano.

Williams, a five-time AllStar who retired in 2003, is
among dozens of players
named in December in the
Mitchell Report as having
used performance-enhancing drugs. He now works as
a broadcaster for the Arizona
Dia'mondback.s. ·
The recording is one of
more than 70 audio recordings prosecutors intend to
introduce
as
evidence
against Pellicano, who is
accused of wiretapping
phones and bribing police
and telephone workers to
intercept conversation s that
could g1ve his clients an
advantage ill legal disputes.
Lally called Pellicano a
prolific snoop who also
taped his own discussions
with clients. He said a treasure trove of recordings
seized durirrg a 2000 FBt
raid on Pellicano's office
paint a "clear and crystal"
picture of the detective's
shady dealings.
In that sense, " he ' s the
biggest government informant in thi s case;" Lally
said .
Pellicano, actin g as hi s
own attorney, spoke for only
10 minutes during hi s open-

ing statement, contending he enlisted by Pellicano were
Adam Braun, who reprerec~Jrded and encrypted his retired Los Angeles police sents Kachikian, said in his
own calls only as a way to Sgt. Mark Arneson and for- opening statement that
create a referencing system. mer telephone company Pellicano hired his client to
Because he was acting as employee Rayford Earl develop the eavesdropping
his own lawyer, Pellicano Turner. Other co-defendants software.
was told by the court to refer in the case are Kevin
Braun said Kachikian
to himself in the third person Kachikian
and
Abner thought the software would
when he addressed jurors.'
~icherie. All have pleaded be marketed to law enforce"His presumption was that not guilty.
ment agencies: , "He didn't
Seven people have plead- know it was going to be misthese conversations would.
be made available to no one ed guilty to a 'variety of used on wiretaps ."
but him," Pellicano told the charges including perjury
Pellicano could provide
panel.
.
and conspiracy. Six· of the some fireworks · when he
He also said he prided seven, including film direc- cross-examines some of his
himself on being a secretive tor John McTiernan and for person who treated the prob- mer Hollywood Records former clients and employlems of his clients &lt;Is hi s president Robert Pfeifer, are ees. Federal prosecutors
own.
expected to be called as wit- filed a list of 121 potential
Lally said Pellicano took . nesses.
witnesses that included
Attorneys for Arneson and Stallone, Chris Rock lind
extreme measures to cloak
hi s alleged illegal activities, Turner told jurors the evi- Shandling. It was not clear,
recruiting
senior
law dence won't show that their however, how many people
enforcement officers. and clients were part of a crirni- would actually testify.
telephone company employ- nal enterprise, and that they
Other
promi~ent
ees who didn't need much didn't even know each other Hollywood players on the
supervi sion, then talking to before they were arre sted . poten.tial witness l!st i!lclude
them in code .
two years ago.
one-.u me Walt D1 sne~ Co.
In addition, he rigged a
Arneson may have crossed pre~1dent and agent M~chael
wiretapping software pro- a line by providing a "short- Ovuz; Brad Grey, chamrtan
gram known as Telesleuth so cut" for Pellicano in search- and chief executive officer
no one el se could access the ing government databases, of Paramount Pictures; and
recordings, Lally said.
but he wasn't a corrupt offi- Ron Meyer, president and
'Omena, an Italian word cer and was paid by the pri- chief. executive office r: of
meamng code of silence, vate detective for legitimate Universal Studios.
was used as a password.
private security work , attorThe tri al is expected to last
Amon g those allegedly . ney Chad Hummel said.
about I 0 weeks .

r~

G~WAY

Perfect

I

aches and pains," \Je said.
, "It's feelipg pretty good,
though."
The Indians got 19 hits, a
day after Atlanta came
within one out of pitching a
no-hitter again st them .
Grady 'Sizemore tripled
and doubled , Franklin
Gutierre z added three hits
and Ben Franci sco went 4for-4 with two RB! s.
A coupl e o t proj,ec ted
starting pitchers for the
Astros didn 't fare too well .
Woody Williams all owed

•

five runs dnd six hit s in 2 23 innings and Brandon
Backe gave up four runs
and
. . seven bits in three
mmngs.
Williams stru ggled with
hi s control , throw1ng 71
pitches and falling behind a
lot of batters.
"I went into a lot of deep
counts," he said. "That's
not reall y the way I wanted
it to go. But my arm felt
good out there."
Backe didn 't throw any
breaking balls in hi s fir st

.

two inning s, in wh ich he
allowed all of his hits and
runs.
"Other than a few bad
pitche s, I think he threw the
ball sharply," Houston
manager Cec il Cooper said.
Notes: Indians manager
Eric Wedge is still toying
with some ideas to shu (Oe
hi s batting order thi s seaso n. Abo ut the only certaintie s are Size more hitting
leadoff, Travis Hafner battin g third and Vi ctor
Martine z m th e c leanup
J

spot.
Beau Mill s,
Cle veland 's
fir st-roand
pick last season, hit a tworun homer. Brad Sny{!er
also homered . ... J ,R.
Towles, expected to :tle
Houston's top catcher this
year, srole second base in
the fifth inning and then
scored on a passed ball. He
is 7-for- 12 thi s spring . ...
Houston 3B Ty Wiggint;on
was held out of the lineup
with a sore quadriceps.
He' ll likely return on
Saturday.

tI

·L . _ _ - _ . 1

11 f2yr oldPugle, neute red,
housebroken. Very fnendly &amp;
e.ttect•onate, CaU (740)441 ·
9865 after 5pm.
- - - - - - -4 dogs, 1 mother, 3 pup!f,
mu(ed breed, (740)441 ·0524
after 6pm

Display Ads

O.lly Jn..:Column: 1;00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for lnHrtlon

All Dl•playt 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne• Day• Prior To

In Next Day~a Paper
Sunday lnMColumn: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundaya Paper

Publldtlon
Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
Thuraday for Sundaye

i

I'MII'YM tl'll rftht to

any 1oM or llprtnM
.,.. llwl}'l

-only

r.::---.-,.-,::----:-"7""'----------'""II'"'IIII--~-..
Do
. . . .•l~.r.
_..FO."~.s.w:--.,J1• l_
~ M~~OI&lt;m! ' .I
kltncartytectcomcaat.nat
••
,
10

Need a help1ng hand for

~!.w.::.. ~ I

r

.....

cleaning, Reslden11a l or.
Commercial 446·2313 and
ask for Kay
-------aU
types
RoofingCommercJ&amp;l·Res•dental, 20
yrs expenance In all types
metal
rooUng,
Bnan
(740)992-2910

CVMr..KU•IJTlWULI'...

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
U M Ch basement sale,
Mar 7 9-7pm. Mar 8 9-2pm,
rurm ture, cloth•ng, dtshes,
books, 1 s, mise 1tems

AucnDNAND
MARKEr

FI~

111J

dvertlaements

ar

b]ect 1o the Fodera
lr Houalng Act o

968.
Thlo
cepts

newopope
only hal

OE otandardo.

-------Wanted to buy Junk Cars,&amp;
Farm Machtnery c:all 741J..
388-0884 Can can COllect
Wantmg to Buy Junk Cars
304-675·2176

CLASSIFIED INDEX
. 4x4'a For Sale ••..••••. ....•••••••••..•••••.... ••••••.•.•••• 725
Announcement ................... ..................: •••••• 030
Antlqueo .. .. ..............: ......................: ••.••••••••••S30
• : Apartments tor Rent •••••••..•..•••••••.•••••••••.••••• 440
Auction and Flea Markat ....... .................... ..oao
: Auto Porta &amp; Accesoorles ••..•••.•... ..•••••.....•. 760
• Auto Repair ........ ....................................... ...
Autoolor Sale................ .............................. 710
Boato &amp; Motors tor Sale ••.•...•••••... ..•••••.. .. .•• 750
Building Supptles ...... ... .......... .....................
• . Buolne11 and Buildings ••.••..•••••... ..••.••...••.• 340
Bualneso Opportunlty ........... ............. ......... 210
Bualneao Tralnlng •••.••.••••••••....•••••.••..•••••. •••• 140

no
sso

' r Campers &amp; Motor Homes .......•..•.•.....•••...... 790
Camping Equipment ............................... .... 760
Carda ot Thlnki .••••••. ..•: .••••••..•••••••..•..•••••. ••• 010
. ChlldiEidarly Care ....................................... ISO
• . Electrtcai/Retrtgoratton .. .•.•.....• .•••••.. ...•••.•... 840
Equipment tor Ront ................ .......... ........... 480
• Excavating ........ ........... ............................. " . 830
Form Equtpment ..••••••••.....••••.....•••••.. ..••••••••• 610
Farm• tor Rant............................................. 430
Forma tor Sole ••.. ..•••.... ....•.••. ... .•••.•.. ..•••••• •••. 330
1

Child care done •n my home,
Infants welcome. meals
Included lots of activitieS tor
your child, days, night and
weekends. $2.00 per hour.
Call 256· 1438 ask tor

0

c
6

'!&gt; -"1

Absolute Top Dollar - Sllver/gold
cams,
any
10KJ14KJ18K gold jltwelry,
· 193 5 US
demal gold. pre
curfency, prool/m1nt sets,
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
t 51 2nd Avenue Gallipolis
446-2842 ·
Small ChUrch needs small
Ptano call 304·773·5166 or
304-675·2338

For Leaae ................••..•.....••••....•••••..•.••••••••• . 490

For Sale ...... ... ..... ......... ....................... .......... 585
for Sole or Trade .••••.••.•. .., ••••••••. ...•.•......•••••• 590
, FruHo &amp; Vagetablea ....... .............................. 580
" ' · Furnllhed Rooms •.•..•.•••.••.••••••••••. ••••••...•••.•• 450
General Haullng .....................:... ..................850
GlvNway .................................... ........ .......... 040
Happy Ads .............. ........... .......... ................. 050
Hay &amp; Graln .. ... ...... .................... ......... .......... 640
Help Wanted .................................................110
Home tmprovamants ........ ........................... 810
Homeolor.Salo ••••.••••••••.•...•..•..• ...••••...•..•••••• 310
Houoehold Goods ....................................... 610
Houaaa for Rent ........... ......... ...................... 410
, In Memorlam ......... ................... .................... 020

· · lnaurance ..................................................... 130
• .. Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ••.•••..• , ••.•. ...•••••. 660
Ltveato&lt;:k ........ .. .......................... ..................630
LDSt and Found •• ••• •••••••••...••••.•.. .•••••....•.•••••. 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ....... ......... ........................... 350
. • MtaceltMaoua ......... ............ ........... ....... ....... 170
Mloceltonaoua Merchandlae·•••••.....•..••... ..••• S40
- l i e Homo Ropalr ..................... ......... .. ....860
Mobile Homeo tor Rent •••...••••• ••... .•••••.....•••• 420
Mobile Homes tor Sale ....... .........................320
Money to Loan .......... ......... .......................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..••••••••... ..•••••. ...•.740
Muslceltnatrumonts ................. ........ .......... 570
Peraonalo ............................ .........................
, Pete tor Sale .. ............................. ................. 660
- Plumbing &amp; Heating ........... ......... ......... ....... 820
• ' ' ~roleoalonal Sarvlcea .•••••..•. ..••••......•••••.•...• 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ..... ........... ............... 160
Pleat Estate Wanled ••• ..•• ••... .•••.••••... ..••• :..•. .•• 360
Schoolo tnatructlon ........... ..................... .. ... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertlll•er ...... .......... .............. 650
. , SHuotlono Wonled ••.•. ..•••••.••. ..••••• .•...•••••....•• 120
. Space tor Rent .......... .......... ............ ............. 460
·
Sporting Gooda ..•••.. ..•••••••••• ..•••••• ..•..•••••....••520
. SUY'o tor Sate ... ......... ........... ....................... 720
Trucko for Sole ........ ................... ................. 715
Upholatery •••••••..•••.....•.••••.••• .•••••. ..•••••••••• .•••• 870
Vans For Sate .... ........... ..................... ........... 7~ .
Wanted to Buy .•..••••.....•••••.. .•..••••••.•..•••••.• •••• 090
Wonted to Buy- Farm Suppllee .................. 820
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
wanted to Rent .......... .................................. 470
Yard Sale- Gallllpolta•••. ..•••••••....••••••...••.••••... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Ukldle ....•••••••.•• ••••••••••• 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Ple11ont. ................. ......... ..... 076

I \ 1!'1 l n \ II \ I
'- I 1&lt;\ II I '

116
1

u., ... W.··~
..-.ur ~,. ~

1

~

~ lll1f

I
100 WORKERS NEEDED

ccount1ng Clerk needed for
fast paced otf1~ Computer
skills with a htgh level of
accuracy required. Must
possess excellent data entry
skills and be abl e to meet
deadlmes punctually and
display a strong attention to
detail, accuracy and confidentlallty E~epenence 1n payroll &amp; benellls prelerred bul
not requtred Send re!lume ,
to CLA-4 cJo flolnt Pl easant
Register 200 Ma1n St. Pt.
Pleasan1, WV 25550

u--W.•~
DUI

Home

tvUI:ooU

Apply In person or call Workers In the Buffalo, WV
(740)~1 -9371 to set up an Area Benefits available CaM
Interview. 308 2nd Ave., Toda 304·757-3338
Galllpol~
__Y_ _ _ _ _ _

Marietta, Ohio 18 searching
for qualified COL A Dnvers
to operate Sami·Dumps
Pneumatic Bulk Tankers..;

-------Dnvers Wanted
Must live Within a 25 mile
radius of H""'son Oh
...,...
'
•
Paid by the mile plus wait
•
~
lng t•me, VacatiOn, Holiday
Pay, Full and Part time avatl·
Ahle Ideal for s pplemental
.,... •
u
,
Income for Retired Penwns
For MoN lnlorm:.tlon C.ll

bolh raglonal and OTR
opportunllles.
Qualified
applicants must be at least
23 yrs, have a minimum of 1
years Of 11fe commerlcal
driving experience, Haz Mat
Certification, Clean MVR

Medical Testing Aa01atant,
PT, to pertorrn drug lestlng,
other medical servkles. and
conduct tralnilg courses 1n
the Ashland, Charleston,
and Ravenswood areas.
Medical --.w.......... .v4 unnec-

~.........

eoaary-wlll train. Prefer ootgoing
peraonallty
Fax
resume to {7-40) 268-88? 1 or
call888·269-6344

----..,.--.....:..-

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS

IT Techn1c1an Must ha\le
experience. Fax resume to
740·446·9104
- -- -- - ' - -LIQuid Asphalt Dnvers
Needed, Must be 2t years
ol d Of ~er
Must nave
Class A COL wnh Hazmat
Endorsement and good
MVA Local Tripe Gall 1800·598-6122
- - - - - - -Management poa1t1on with
local shoe store In Gallipolis.
E xe~tlng career opportunity
Reloll e"'lerlence preterred
Competitive benefit package AWt'l at SHOE SHOW,
305 Upper River Rd. EOE
MIF

Midnight Cieri&lt; needed at At
35 VIdeo &amp; Bookstore 304·
937-4900
New Carry Out/Delivery
Potnt
Rastaurant
In
Pleasant
Hiring,
for
Interview can 304-593-3120
or 304·812..SOSS

All realelblte advertltln;
ln thlt newapaper It ,
eubltc:t to the Feder•l
Ftlr Houtln; Act ot 1961
w.hlch m~k.. lt IUepltc
1dventae "any
pNflrenc•, limitation or
diiCflmlnatton buod on
rtce, color, religion, ae•
f•mlll•lltatul or ftlltlun~l

i

coni

Repair Techrudan needed .
.u.'llty work----·· direct
""'~
8 must. . Sell
starter and detail Oriented.
lfavellng Involved Monday
thur Fri. MaU reaumeto:

**NOTit::E•*

10
-Supervillon

n-

wv

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohio Olv•s•on of
Financial
InstitutiOn's
Office of Consumer
AHalrs BEFORE you rellnence your home or
obtain a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or Insurance Call the
Office
of Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1-866278·0003 to learn if the
mortgage
broker or
lender
is
properly
llcen!led (Th•s 1!1 a public
serv1ce announcement
from the OhiO Valley

r

HIRING
Avg Pay $2Mir or
$57Kiyr, Includes
Federal Benefit&amp;, OT
Offered by Exam Services,
not offered wl USPS who
hires
I-866-S42•1531

S:3Qam-4pm
Welders needed 1yr experi·
ence Good wages &amp; benefits Send resumes to: CLA

- - - - - -- -

li!iil

~

-

1 ·866-40~2582

- - - - - -Post Office Now Hiring!
Avg pay $20/hr 57~r1
Incl. Fed. ben.. QT. Offered
by Exam Services, not aft.
w!USPS 'Nho h1res
1-866-506-9119
- - -- -- - Thl Chln.ton G..U.
Independent Contractor
carrier Needed FOf
Newspaper Delivery Rt 35Stave Branch-5&amp;20 Ml, AdBufla.lo .ftrea Eam about
$1 .800 monthly before
expenses Approximately 4
hours a day Dependable
vehicle a must CALL 1·800-982-63!l7 Ext. 1709

Bolt 103, do Galhpolls Daily
Tribune, PO Box 469,
Gallipolis, OH 45631

ScHooLs

•·-·~·

I

1

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURnY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wmi
1·888·582-3345

rlO
~

HOMffi

Ji(JR SALE

0 down payment 4 bed·
1ooms Large ya rd. Covered
GatllpoMoc- Collego de&lt;k Attached garage 740·
(Gareera Cl... To Home) 367-71 29
Cai1To&lt;i0yl 740-446-4367,
t-800-214-()452
2,600 sq ft, 4br. 2 acres
wwwgaii~~«SJ wlpool, 1n New Haven
Accl*t!IICI t.temt~tr Accr.clllng $139,500 304·593-8871 call
~sa!'. ~n~:: 01"" ~ after epm
&amp;mnu.J\...liUI'f

1176

'

~

. ~ - -- ---'- - -

4'~~-.,

-:""

·------·

-,

George's Portable sawmm,
don't hlut your Logs to the
Mill juot cal 304-875-ti57
- - : : - - -- , : - - --:
Small Home Repair and
Brush Cutting,
Service.
(7&lt;4()~3882

-,.rd

~ '

$400 monlh , $400 Sec
Depos~ . Up·Town, 1·BDRM
(304 )675-7381
Leave
Message
2 Br house 1n Pomeroy dep
&amp; ref reqUired 740-9926385

mllke lillY IUCh

preference, Imitation cr
dltcrlmlnetlon.''

2br. m Pt. Pleasant Depos•t
required $450 month, 304593-5363 or 304-593·0128

Thlanewapaperwll\not
knotmgty ac:cept
edverflMm.nta
estate which I• In
vlollltion ol tht lew. Our
readers are her.by
Informed thlt all
dwelling• ldvertiaed in
thl• new1 paper 1 ,.
evallabl•ananequtl

for,..,

3 BR 1 bath, FA, Baeement,
2 car garage, At 141 2 m
from town, $700 Includes
wtr/swrltrash $650 dep 4464824 I

(304) 273-2969 Join &amp; get
$500 1n merchand•se for $99
run rue@ hughes net
- - -- ' - - - - Mary Kay Consultant Buy,
Sell, or Host Earn Free
Products, Call Angle (740) ~~·:•~port~un~lty~b·~·"~·~
245·5206 o' (740) 578·1051 -

Outalda Sales Poal11on. MUSI · 0 · ~ 339 Ravenswood,
have experience with oper· WV 26164
ating larm equ!....,.nt and
.....
RN's needed lo provide
computers. Fax Rasume to basic first aid at Industrial
740--446·9104
site In Point Aeaaam,
Owner
Operator Part IVld Full time. INTER·
Opportunities:
R&amp;J ESTINGI LOW STRESSI
Trucking - Manetta, Ohto Call 888·269-6344 or tax
has opportuntt!es available· resume 10 740~266-6671
1or Owner Operators within lh.Jtk Drivers COL Class A
the region
we feature R
d
.
1
1 2
weeklysett1ement&amp;and1rall· equre' mln•mum 0
rental n......,rators should years
driving
exp
er
• ....,.....
Experience
on
have newer equ~nt and Overdelmenskmal loads Publlshmg company)
trametypetrailera. for more
.
· ':::;:::::::::=~
information . contact Dennis Must have good dr•vlng W
at S00-462•9365
record E'arQ up to $2.000
~NAL
- - - -- - - - weekly For application Call
SE.RVICl-li
•
POST OFFICE NOW
(304)722·2 18 4
M·F

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay $20illror
"71&lt;/yr, tnctudes
Federal Benellla. OT.
Oflared by Exam Ser&lt;lcea,
not offered w/ USPS who
hires.

Lots&amp;
ACRFAGE

FORlb:Nr

ortgln, cr ln~ lnlentlcn tc

lntenors &amp; GiftS

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG co r-ommends
""'
that you do bus1ness With
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mall until you
and good lob stabU11y. We
offer 1 full state of benefits have Investigated the
p!ua 401 (k) and vacation lio:He:n:ng:.::;:;:==~
pay. For !nformatloo contact W
Kent at 800· 462•9365 or
MONEY
I
visit our wall 8118 al
TO LoAN
wwwritrw:kiig
E.C.E.
~
•

~

r

Rd, 44H111'
I ~ I \ I \I '

1
• Conlac1 Rosalie Unrue at

Co~rtside ~r &amp; Grill now Manpower 18 now hiring for Regional, J)neumatic Tanker
tak1ng apphcattons tor &amp;JCPEI· the followmg positions &amp; OTR driving F-os•Uons·
nenced grl11 and try cooks Automobile
Produtlon R&amp;J Trucking Company In

$17.89·$28 27illr , now hlrAssemble craHs, wood !ng. For application and free
1tems To $480fwk Matenals
governement job Info, call
provided Free mformattOn
pkg. 24Hr 801-428·4649
American A880C of Labor 1 ~
913-599-8226, 24/hrs. amp.
A LOCAL manfacturer IS serv
look1ng to1 EXPERIENCED - - - - - - - Goll1o County Council on
M1g
Welde rs
Agmg I Semor Resource
a ndEXPERIENCED
Center •s curren11y accepting
Operators of brake presses
pllcatlons t
d
1
or van nver
and shears Apply 1n person ap
Eltcellent opportunity for
at Kmg Kutter II 2150 ret.red person looking for
Eastern Ave Galllpolls. No activity Must be a high
Phone Calls Please
school graduate or equivalent, must have wild dnvers
An Excellent way to earn
license and be an Insurable
money The New Avon
nsk. Mus{ be able to pass
Call Manlyn 304-882·2645
medical exam•nat!on. Hours
Are you Interested 1n a as needed , part time posl~
rewarding position? PAIS 1s tlon. EOE
currently acceptlng applica- - - - - - - -tions for full tune/ part t1me Help wanted at. Darst Home
Group HOOle. 740..992·5023
d1rect care positions 1n
Ripley, WV prOVIding res1·
Care
Company
dentia!lcommumty skill train· HOITKI
accepting resumes tor CRS
lnQ Wllh IndiVIdUalS With
and delivery Technicians
MR/00. Needl IO be able
Please forward resumes to
and willing to phyolcaHy
CLA Box 3 c/o Polnl
ln'tervene at times for
Pleasant Reglster 200 Main
cllentl with challenging
St Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
behavlora. H•gh school
diploma or GED requ1 red
and
Homemaking
No expenence necessary
Personal Cora Att.-illl
Cr1mmal background check
re qUired Mus1 have rtill•able Training. Local Agency now
appli cations tor
transportation Hourly rate accepling
classes to be held March 17$10.00, after trammg Call 1· 2 1st CHHA'I, STNA'o,
304·373- 101 1
CNA'o and PCA'1 welcome
AVON! All Areas I To Buy or to apply Please call
Sell Shirley Spears, 3Q.4· (740)441·1 377 tor more
1nformat1on.
675-1 429
Babysitter needed in my
home for 2 children before
school only. Must have refer~
ences. (740) 208·71n

liEu» wAmm

Ho.P WANim

S2900 Down i'mt

· RENT, 1031 Georges-Creek

;w~w:w:.:co~m::ic:•:.c:o:m~~;=====::;~0~2008~=b=y=N:E:A:,:•n:c:.~ lorAece~ve
$500 merchandise
only $99

1~531-&amp;553

1

Home lntenor- contact
Rosalie Unrue all304)2732969, limited time Jo•n and

L-~~

li.16_ _ _ _ _ _.lli.16_ _ _ _ _ _.,JIIt16

from

M•dwesl 740-828-2750

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR

0

FOUND

Lost F. German Shepherd
last seen Jan 30 w/st1tches
1n belly &amp; red collar,
CarpenterfDyesv•lle , $250
for sate return (740)698·
2267

USED HOME SALE
N1ce 3BA S•ngleWldes

1 (740)36G)7·0000=

l..orrAND

anted ads meet!

•

~~-V

DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
grams for you to buy your
home instead of renting
•100%financ1ng
• Less than perfect cr'ed1t
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Morlgage
Localors

I

1987 Mercedes Benz 190 E,
Found Red and White 4 Cly, ga~ 2.3 for par(s
Basseit Hound, Tycoon lake PhOne 740-256·11 02 ask for
Vicinity, found on 2/20 441- Jr
9443

NEW 2001 4 BR·2BA
1,700+ sq H $49.989
!rom 1397 Month
Midwesl 740-828·2750
mymidwesthome com

Attention!

everyday cklan •ng, or Spnng Local company offenng •No

(740)256· 1664
·-----·
Four m•xed Beagles 2-4 Cross Cre ek Auction Buffalo
Saturday 6pm
mos old 2·1 yr old 949· Auction
Sugar Creek Bacon, Food,
2188.
'
Rubber M! •d prodt.~cts, Lots
Free to good home, 6 month of Used 11ems 1Olbs of
old muced breed pupp1es Potatoes $2 bag Start1ng to
par1 coonhound Please ca ll sell h1gh qual1ty kmves such
(740) 256· 1445
as Case, Buck &amp; Mossy
Free to good homes Oak. Bu1ld1ng is full. V1sa
and Masler Card (304)550·
Lab/Shepherd mix puppieS.
1616Ste enRe
1639
Call256·8169

llol number adl
lways conftdenllat.

tcln, reltct. or cane.! any lid at any time. Enora ~Mtat be reported on the llrat
than tht coat ol the apace occupied by the error and only the lira! lnHrllon.
II
pubi61Uition or omlulon of an advertiMmtnt. Correction will be m11de In the ftralavallable Mhlon. • Bax
cad applln. • All rut tttaW ldvlftiaementa are subject lo th• Ptdlfll Fair Houalng Act of 1MI. • Ttl II
IOI.a.ndlnll. W. wttl nol knowingly ' " • 1ny advertlalng In vlollllon of tiM law.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

4

......

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!i4
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

• All ads must b8 prepaid'

YARDSAU:

AuSirallan Shepherd dog

oos

made a conscious effort to·
get it in there and made
some good pitche s," he
said. "I can build off that."
from Page Bl
In the bullpen, he threw
more pitches down the to catcher Wyatt Toregas,
who told Sabathia whether
right-field line.
"I wa s just trying to to envision he was facing a
pound the strike zone, stay right- or left-handed. hitter.
tall and throw the ball . Sabathia, who led the
downhill , somethmg I did-. majors with 241 innings
n ' t do iry my last start," he last year, is throwing only
one
bullpen
sess ion
said .
between
starts.
"Tl)e last lime I had a
"My arm feel s a lot betto ugh time th row ing in on
ter.
Us ually you get some
ri ghll es. but today I j ust

Word Ads

• Start Vour Ade Wtth A Keyword • Include Complete
Descrlptlun • Include A Price • Avoid Ahbrevl•tlom
• Include PhonB Number And Address When Need_.
• Ads Should Run 7 DIYI

ltelt!S

Prosecutor: Private eye helped clients 'discredit' ·ramous riv~
'

Vy'ebsites:
www.mydailytnbune.com
www.myda1lysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister:com

l\egister

AP photo

ranked Berlin Hiland (26-1), minutes wiping off the floor
which beat New Riegel 58-38 after spraying it with disinfecin an earlier semifinal . It's a tant.
dream matchup between . the
After the teams traded basstate's top two teams in the kets, Morrison-Fountain 'trotfinal
regular-season ted back to the scorer's table
Associated Press poll.
and checked in. The Nublans
First-team All-Ohioan and went into a weave to take
Division IV player of the year time off the clock, with
Tyeasha Moss scored 14 Morrison-Fountain driving
points, as did third-team all- the lane and passing to Hams
stater Alesia Howard. Harris , for a layup with 2:06 left.
The Knights responde&lt;\ on
added II points and 14
rebounds as the Nubians were a
basket
inside - by
held to their lowest point total Nedderman, who also had
this season.
returned to the lineup, cutting
Kelsey Nedderman hail 12 the lead to 43-40 with 1:~5
points
and
Carly remaining .
The Knights committed a
Lichtensteiger II for Convoy
Crestview (23-3), which costly turnover with 36.3 seccame in allowing just 28.1 onds left when Mefhan
points a game.
The game was tight Henry bounced the bal off
throughout, with no more her foot and out of bounds.
~
·
·
On the inbounds pass,
h
t an our pomts separatmg Howard was fouled and hit
the teams at each of the first
the first of a bonus situation,
three quarter breaks.
Afncentric was hurt briefly but with 24.8 seconds left
by the loss of its sterling point Mehssa Eickholt made two
guard, Shardai Mornson- foul shots to cut the gap to44Fountain, who was knocked 42.
down during a serum with
Morrison-Fountain missed
4:09 to play and the Nubians the front end of a one-andahead 39-36. She limped off one with 23 . ~ seconds left,
the court, sat briefly on the with Jo Thompson reboundbench and then walked slow- ing for Crestview. She
ly to the locker room.
brought the ball back the
At
the
same
time, length of the floor and missed
Nedderman sustained a a jump shot with 12 seconds
bloody nose that required a · left that would have tied the
·
game off1cial to spend several game.

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

77 Hawthorne Ln.. Pt
Pleasant, 3br, tba, 1015/SF
New floor cove nngs fresh
pa1nt. new heat pump
$79,000 304-674·3698
9 room 2500 sq. ft ranch,
Bailey Run Ad., Pomeroy,
Ohio. $10 5,000, (740}992 9363, 304·722·3894
-------Let your garage make the
morlgage pyml , wilh 7.000
lb Mft and mini ap1 Near
Walman, 2BA. CIA. lo~~e tub.
1816
Chatham
Ave.
$6.2 ,500. 740-446·3442

3 br house, Pomeroy, 2 full
bath, barage. full basement.
new carpet, vefy clean,
Duplex lor Sale on Land handicap accessible, $635 a
Conlract 740·992-5858.
monlh, (740)949-2303

House tor sale •n Raccne
area Approx . 4 acres, all
professionally landscaped
Ranch style .house w1th 4
bedrooms, llvmg room. dill·
mg room, kitchen, large tamlly room. central a1r, gas heat
and 1 fireplace. Add1tion of a
large Flortda room com
plelely cedar opens on1o
patio &amp; pool area Healed In
ground pool endosed by pn·
1
d 1
vacy enclng an
and·
scaped F1nishad 2 car
tt hed to ho
garage a ac
use
and finished &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unattached
Excellent cond1tlon ready to
move ln. $255,000 oo, Call:
(740)949-2217
'-"-------

3BR, 1 1/2 bath, Ranc h,
basement, carport, all appliances, plus washer &amp; dryer
Included, No Pets, Cheshtre
$575 mo Call446·0725
4 Bedroom House for Rent
(740) 446-4060 or 367·7762
Double Wide tor Rent-Extra
N1ce, 3BR, 2Bath, CA, large
deck. No Pets, 1622
Chatham Ave, Ga!11pohs
446-4234 ()( (740)208·7861
~
•
Bedroom
.
House •n

Syracuse $500/month +
depoSit Hud App No Pets
(304)675·5332 • weekends
740-591·0265

2BR, on pnvate lot $450
dep + $450 per month rent
PRICE AEOUCEOI
1n Addison Twp call (740)
3BR t bath on 1/2 acre lot, 645·3413 or (740) 367·0654
Rt 325 S 3 5 m1 from R•o
Grande College
Kit, LA. 2BA , on pnvate lot $550
DR, WfO hook up, 10xt0 dep + ~50 per month rent
shed, elec heat or propane 1n Addison Twp call (740)
new w1nOows m LR, DR &amp; 645 -3413 or (740) 367-0654
k1t. $65.000 Call Chuck
Lambert 419·782-9715 or
PLEASE
419 •789 . 1808
leave a message ,1 there 10
no answerl
as orne o eona
. &amp; Lalah Sergent,
ooms 2 fult baths, 2 ca
arage, secunty system
ack up heat, chai n lin
ence on corner lot 201
orest St, Henderson w
04-675_6411 or 304-574
070

3 bedroom, 2 bath, all elec·
trlc In Mlddleporl, $450 plus
$450 depoSit. (740)416·
_t354
_ _ _ _ _ __
3br, 2ba med storag.:~ bUild,
Dep req GallipOliS Ferry. No
•ns1de pets, Ref requ1red
$450 month 304·576·2296
N•ce 2BR mobile home In
Mobile Home
Park 740·446·1409 or 740·

· Johnsons
448·2003

·

'

N•ce 2BA mostly furnished.
MOBILE HOI&lt;m! I No
pel s
$375/rent
SALE
53 75/depoS11. 740-441-0829
APARfMiiNili I
16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
FUR RENr
Vtnyl S1d1ng Shingle Roof ~--oiriliiiiiiiiiiiror_.l·
$2 30 pet month 740·385· 1 and
' 2 bedroom apart·
9948
- - - - - - - - 'ments tum•shed and untur2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sec- nlshed, and houses In
tlonal home $279 per month Pomeroy and Mtddleport,
740·385-7671
secunty deposit required , no
pets,
2008 sectional home 3 :__740·992·2218
_ _ _ _ __
Bedroom 2 Bath delive red 1aA Apt WID hookups.
and set up 538 .695 74a- •nterneVsatelllle TV mel
wtrent , close to ho""ltal Call
385 9948
__
- - - - ''- - - -· 740 _339 _0362
.....
from $199 Month
__:~~-----New 2008 S1nglew•de
1BA Cabin, stove &amp; fndge
M1dwest 740- 828·2750
turmshed Thurman ¥1Cinity
mymidwesthome com
Al l utilities pd Call 740-441·
3702 or 286·5789
- - - - - - - - ::.~.:....:~__:.:__ _
N•w 3 Bedroom hOmes from t BR, t bath upstairs garage
$214.36 per month, Includes apt
$285/month
many Upgrades, delivery &amp; $285/deposit Call 740-446-.
sot·up (740)385-2434
3481'

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FOR

,,

�Page

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B6 • The Uaily Sentinel

'

I-mlay, Marcn

www.myaa11ysentine1.com

7, 2008
Friday, March

\IIIH ll \\111..,1

,' ALLEY
1BR, W/0 hooK-up, stove

a.

Sale : Berber Carpet $5.95
yd remnants $40.00 &amp; up.
Mollohan Carpet. 2212
Eastern Ave, Galli~ is, Oh
740-446-7444

Apartments

· 740-367-7453 or 645-nt4

• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
· 2 bedroom Apt Mt. Vernon •Central heat .&amp; NC
: Ave. Pt Pleasant $425 • washer/ dryer hookup
· month,
$200
Damage · •All electric- averaging
~ Deposit 304-675-7902
$50-$60/mooth

;
·
•
:

: 441..0194

'

Friday, March 7
SPECIAL

condition $iZ5; Glass Top &amp;
Iron Coffee, &amp; End Tables
$125 for tho pair (740) 388-

--------:7

kitchen chairs, Singer elec!ric sewing·machine in cabinet. 3 Jld treadle sewing
machines. Splayed press
cupboard,' Old sideboard, 1
iron bed wlr'ails and m~lal
mattress. 1 iron bed w/rails.

Pool, Patio, Slart $4251Mo. _eo-'0--5-'37_-9_:5_28_._ _ __
No Pets, Lease Plus
Sewrity Depoe~ Required, NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
1740)367-0547.
For

Employer.

Twin Rivers Tower is acceptlng
appllcatloll3 for waltihg
CONVENIENTLY, LOCATlist tor Hud-subsized, 1· br,
'ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
the
Townhouse
apartments, aparlment,for
andfor small houses FOR elderly/disabled call 675·
Equal
Housing
RENT Call (740)441-1111 6679
Opportunity
for applicatior) &amp; information.

Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat. Bar, S~eel
Gr~tlng
for
-oratns,
,Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tu_esday, Wednesday &amp;
Fnday, B~·4:30pm, aosed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;

Sunday. (740)446-7300

Cu1e 2 br. apartment, wid Upstairs apt. downtown
Free,
3·Piaque
hook·up, no pets, $370 a Gallipolis. clean, 28 R, 2 Vent
month plus utilities. deposit Baths, OW. WID hookup, Propane Gas Heater, Man.
requrred, ask for Merge, 1500 dep.. ref. 17401 446 _ Controi(Was $143.95) Now

$122.36. Save .15% on att
other Gas and Electric
· d to Hoa1ors
Heaters. (Umrto
"
in .stock) We have IV•elting
chocolates and Molds for
Easter Eggs in stock. Paint

(740)992-411 9

9209
_ _ _=--=-=~
For Lease: 2nd floor. spa- -Very n1·08 18R, SlAt 588cious, 3 bedroom. unfur- ~att pot ·s, 112 m• from
1 1
1
nished apt. ih Victorian ...,school. HaS: appl. $4001 mo
house on City Park,
$400/.dep. + utll,·o1·os. Must
Excellent condition. HVAC. ha\16ref.Nopets6 s. s 3 Plus Hardware 304-675·
4 7 1
Off • street
park1ng. -z:~--i:----, 4084
Sll
$600/month plus utilities _

i

IN

Ir.

"""~~.,~~•

. . _,

---,----3059
AKC Golderi' Retriever pup·
pies $300, shots, 6 females
&amp; 2 mates 304-675-3363
Free to good home. 1.year

,
e
yo·
~
,:
.
5
·'
'
,
,
'
,q:
'
.
,
_
.
_,,
Ar
,

·

,or older?;?
...

.

If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

1

~i&gt;!i10!""'-·F~ARM---.,

Lw-•F.QuiPMENrillliiiillili-.,J
-,
4WD M105S Kubota Tractor.
607 hrs, loader, CHA.
$46,000 new, must selL
$34,000. (740)256·6347
EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER

City/State/Zip _ __

_

_ _ __

mites. Asking 59000. OBO

BUill
VALLEY
1
H0 AS E Il l VEST 0 c K ~645,p;-8;;.7;,;
2;_~~-~
TRAILERS, LOAD MAX
4X4
EQUIPMENT TRAILERS.
FOR SAlE
·
CARGO EXPRESS &amp; ~~--~~~:.,._.1,
H0 MES T E ADE R
~ · c 0 NCEoSt
" 0 N 2004 Ford F·350 S~er Duly
CAR~O/
1 ton V~ Crew Cab,
TRAIL EAS. -B+W GOOS E· . Pickup,
,
XLT, (4WD) 65,000 miles,
NECK
HITCHES. S.Ol, VB. Turbo Diesel
CARM ICHAEL
EQUIP·
MENT/CARMICHAE L Engine, Fiber GlaSs
. Cap. 8ft
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA- bod, Traitor Towing &amp;
Camper Pkg, Aluminum
VICE . SPECIAl 20FT Wheels, Power Seats 304GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE -675-3753
TRAILER INVENTORY AT - - - - - - ' - - WWW .C ARMICHAEL· 2004FordRangerEdgeext.
TRAILERS.COM 740-4~6- Cab, 4x4, 4 door, 4.p titer,
_38_2_5_ _ _ _ _ _ 20,000 miles, extended war-

i

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• • •

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•

• • •

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American Electric Power/
Mountaineer Plant.ln New Haven,
WV seeking temporary personnel.

Stop &amp; Compare

operations department position(s), 40
Hr. workweeks anticipated, rotating
shift work required. Two Year Degree
preferred.
Entry l.evel wage rate @ approx:
$12,00 per hr. with moderate benelil
package being offered. :
Interested candidates should mark
which interest they prefer and submit
re:&gt;umes lo:
Human Resources Dept.

:
. FRANK

&amp; EARNEST

(74{1)446-4060

r

$~ ,000

~:~s:~~~~~~~~i=i M~~ I
FO~~ Ira~~

PO Bux 453
Pomeroy; OH
Toll Free

1-888-992-7090 ,
Phone: 740-992-7990 •

Hmlw~d C~binetry And Furllit!ire
.

www.tlmb.,.,.,.tol«:•l&gt;mot.ey.oom

-•

BARNEY

TELL US, GRAMPY, .

. HARD WORK

WHAT'S TH' SECRET
TO A LONG,
.

EVER'DA'l'
· FROM SUNUP

THAT'S
TH'

"LONG" ·

TO SUNDOWN!!

PART

LIFE ?

Stanley Tree-

YOUNG'S

Trimming

CARPENTER
SERVICE

&amp; Removal
*Prompt.and Quulity .
Work

*Rcasonablt' Rat~.:~
*lnsurt:d
.*'EXpericn&lt;.:cd
ReJCrcnces Avai lahl~ 1
Call Gary Star)lcy

@

740-591 -8044

!!

i

•'

i

}"

•••
•

Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
New Garages
•
Electrical &amp; Plumbing _.
Rooting· &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting·

THE BORN LOSER

Patio and Porch Oeclc•

T~KE. OUT
1'1-\€. (,/&gt;-~~FOR II£, tLL

WV036725
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

,..-

II' 'IOU TWO

304-675-6975 or
apply on-line at
www.pvalley.org ·
AA/EOE

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

7 40·367·0544
Free Estimates

7 40·367·0536

Eul
All pass

Q

52 Woody'o
1011

53 Cell

C

10 Outlhlnes
(2 wdo.)
11 Codgera' 38 Novo!
querleo
' .ciOMr
f 9 BlcHnouth 39 CUoiuo
2f Eu
Clay
molding
41 TN CU.
24 Average . 42 Crocuo
25 Gnert11gv
"bulb" ·
layera
43 ·AUJ'I
26 - and kin 45 McClurg

of ~

27 Food

28
29
31
33
35
36

cookero
46 By holr1
Shrfl
·47 Ph olop buy
Fictlonti
49 Up for
Jane
payment
Broak'e
51 Account
OOUnd
OXIC .
Terminate
Lock up
lloat-np~lr

place

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by ~uls Campos
Caletw!IJCipher~ wecrs&amp;t!ldtrl)'ll ~s by IM'IOUS peopiB,'put.-:1 IQIII'II.

Efh ~ in IN! tiplw liM I« .-diet'

"WZG SEZ JYOZ NAZZJ. TFZG
JLNZ AFZYE

e

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
•-Roofing
• Decks
• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room 1\ddltlons
. Owner:
James Keesee II

TI-llS SUMMER 11M 601Nj; TO
ENTER Tue•RO~LE'1' HOLE"
CIIAMPIONSHIP IN.STANOIN6
lstoiiESTIITE PMK'INTENNESSEE ..

P~A'1'1N6 FANATIC! ·

WJ.IEREVER
THAT

IS ..

~ h~-r.;:;~---::::::-u

I#...Y

I

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.

•
-.

. n~d~B~O~Y~;;;;;;J r---------, r_....GO&lt;iD.ruli'"':lii;;;;;;~ fliiiiii!!!;i!Jil"'-.....~;;;;j
;~~~87
DID YOU HAVE A
P11E5EMT57 WOW, YOU
GOOD, CUZ I

.• ,uvv BI""'HD'Y2.
r
"
"

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding ,,Gutters

- . - - - - Wlholloy ClAY I. 10IIAN

Astro•
Graph

ltners of !Itt
Ofl«&lt;rroi!Sit
four ICJIImblod words be-

low to form four tllrrplt words.

'

"hhr411 ......: '

mopus operand ftexlble becauee 'fbu'll
accomplish your goals by finding an
unusual way or dOing things. tn racr: The
more unusual the route, the larger the

PlYING TOP PIICES RIR

Guttering

IAII

· ANTIBO.

l UGI T

Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653-9657

DIDN'T NEED TO GET
MEPI!ESENTS. THE FACT
YOU EVEN I!EMEMBEI!ED
IT WAS MY BlriTHDAY IS

COULDN'T
. OF "v'" ..'",,"~ ,....,
·
TO

PI!ESENT ENOUGH.

success.
TAURUS (April 2()-.May 20). - Try to
associate with friends who are u progressive and futurJstic in their thinking u
you are. Together, you might be able to
gat samething In the works that wil be
new and Inviting.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Look out
worid. You could turn out to be quite progresaiva by getting eome brilliant flashes
of insight regarding way• to handle
unplanned development• or lnYOive·
mente.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Just
beCause a number of lngenlou• Idees
come easy for you, don't make the mls·
take of discounting them merely becluse
of the ease by wNch tnev Clme. The best

t-• uauatty como In a ftaoh. ,
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)· - There are
strong ;n&lt;~;cauona t11a1 thlnao thao could
be oeneficlat will mantfoot th&amp;moefwla 1n
a sudden manner, ao you'll need 'to be
prepared to make a qutcl&lt; declaion and
move taot oo take edvantage ot t11em.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- You wttt get
that Opportunity to become more familiar
with oomeone vou'd tlke to know better' .
Yo.u'll have much In common upon whlct'l
to build a relationahlp.
LlBRA (Sept 23o0cl:. 23) -

uae

IJ

I

~HESE.

14

ARIES (Maroh 21-Aprlt 19)- Koepyour

SIIUniiJ8:11 D12:08tm

H&amp;H

....
'=~=· S~1\~1J. -~r.!fe·

could provide opportuoruet to expreaa
your talents In ways that would propel
you Into the profit column.
PISCES (Fob. 2o-March 20) - Try 10
ln\101~ youl'88" In some kind of endeav·
or that otfera an opportunity to expreu
your natural originality and Inventive·
ness. "'bu could be more auoceaetul
operating In this venue than ever before.

.... .._dlltfriiiiV9:DOft5:DO Ill

1111111111 Clll•lllllllllll Wtllll
CIIIIJIICCinertn ·C.t•
hlllllnllllllllnl
ICIII Jtr Clrrlll PrlceJJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'II you know somelhing welt, you can always painl

ahead where your material lnterellhl lliV
concerned. Sudden shtfta In conditions

11VE BECOME A MAA6L.E

AFZD JLNZ

n,but people WoUld be better off bu~ng chicken .• -Grandme Moses

's.turca.r, March 1, 2008
By lemlce lhct. O.ol
Major Improvements are likely In the year

742-2332

AzWKZE,

I I

.,

"Love,~ tile mom

~

explained, "is an act of
endleSs forglveDCSS and
tender looks which ~wonmca

'i'

r-""'r''T"~:--::''-::--.. .,
~ I L ME B

I I I I I !•~=:·~~:
you dMiap from Jllp No. 3 boiow.

•

PR~~s~!~~slETTERS IN

I u.~~~~~flETTER~

,.

r , t rI

I I I I I I'

SCRAM4m ANSWERS 3~6~o a
KiUal ~CXICI- Fruit- NOIIIy- TAX RETURN
A• mentioned his slumplag blllioo11 to acus1omer, "If it
gels any worse l won't have to lie about my TAX RB'IURN."
'

'

ARLO &amp;JANIS

your

could be quite revolutionary.

I
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0
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•I

Shop

PUBLIC NOTICE
Improvement project
VILLAGE OF SYRA- can only take place
CUSE
where the need Is
MUNICIPAL
PARK delermined and it is
IMPROVEMENTS
known that the need
NOTICE OF EXPLANA- will be targeted in
TION FLOOD PLAIN some of those bose
DEVELOPMENT
. flood areas. Therefore,
The
Village
of It is the judgmen1 of
Syracuse ,
Meigs the,VIllage of Syracuse
County, Ohio, if award- that the benefits to
ad funding, intends to low-moderale houseundertake a municipal holds affected by . tho ·
project for the purpose
park
improvements
of
Improving
the ball
field lighting at the
municipal park In lhe
VIIIage of Syracuse.
Portions of tho ·project
may be locatecl In the
100·500 year flood
plain, The proposed
project cannot be
underlaken In any
other localfon as there
Ia no practical allornalive for lho IQCatlons of
portions of tbe project.
• The ·municipal park

slderation of Executive
project outweighs
Orders
11988 conand ·
11990. A more detailed
description of 111e projeel and the FLA Flood
!ilaps are available for
citizen review at lho
office of the Syracuse
VIllage Clerk, located
al 2581 Third St,
Syracuse, Ohio,
VIllage of Syracuse
Meigs County, Ohio
Eric
Cunningham,
Mayor
(3) 7

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov, 22) - You wttl
be extraon::linarnv productive at this time
by getting Involved In tlllkl or ullgnmenll that you truly enjoy. The key to
your eucoe11 I• not allowing - ~reelf to

-~ARFIELD

l 0'-'d Hl r l i t "

tooua on·anything dlltuteful.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23•Doc . 21) -

Concrete Removal .
and Replacement

ftnaiiZI 1 rnatter that r'IM OIIUMdr muol'l

,All Types~f j
Concrete Wqtl(: ).
28 Years Experienct

David Lewis :'
740·992-6971 :
lneured
W¥'042182 Free Estimates

r-~:~~ii~~~~~~~J

When you tlnd youf'Htf In 1 poaltlon to

0
0

aggravation, Jump on lt. It doeln't malttlr
what tha: enci relultll u long u you oan
IIIII with n,

CAPf'IICCf'IN (DOll, II.Jon. II)- Don'1
got vouttotr oo1tghltv otruaturtellhtt vou
loolt 11 motrl11y, Oltlnaoo oro Hmo1htn;
tun to gotng 10 pop up lhll )'OU'tt won110
be ""'I of, 1111n W you hM lo mollt
Ujuolmonlt, tl'tl be worlll tl,
AQ~~IUI (olin, 10-Jfl-, I I) - Mlltrlll
benotllt nuli Hmt •-ou1 .1hro14h on
UftUIUit Ill of OlrtumlllnHt. In 1101,
Whllllrtrtii!IIIIO mlgltl be I OMI•In•l•lile•
llmt tituotton lhol ttntrltll rtturnt
lrtm tn unltPIIM HuJH,

IOUP TO NU.TZ

-

· --- ~·

--·····--

. . ·-

.

I a~.·

smarts, which you have plenty ol, to
come up With better ways ot doing things
concernlng whatever It Is that has
bogged you down. What you conceive

Ill\ I'
lll,ltUII

AFZD

AFZYE TLEAF."- XFPXO GLEEYN

Yes, East defended very badly by failing
lo play his club king at lrfc:k one lo
unblock lhe sun. But you must cash in
wtoon an opponenlbimdera

BIG NATE

.

Today's cluo: WsquaJs II

&lt;:fulls. .

5131111 SL •ll•••n. 0145180
. 140-982-3194

FIND AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

North
3 NT

"'

iJets

~I

. Manley's.
Recycling:

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

A K ~
A 782
A 8 3

(hods.)
50 Aromo

hlbll8nl
54 Mike
bridge
a flocootnllnCIIOiela
17 Gloula~ 55 Urban air
' 18 Drfvet'l'
·
problem
MOdo
56 Mild
20 Emblen.
expletive
22 Family
57 Room tnd
1111m.
bolrd
23 0tt01111n
lttlt .
OOWN
24 Lapdap
27 Mike holeo 1 Quieti
In
2 King in a
30 Surrounded
pity
3 lllctUke
31 ' l.oet
32 Grain crop 4
34 W1lHl track
ollpptry
35 Roptftber
5 Copper and
36 Minda toe , line
37 Big
6 Melody
ocfucn
7 Actreos
39 WantedShlrlty , potter~ 8 GIOII
40 A rill oWine 9 T*lai~Da

card In lheled sun is lhe ace {or lhe king,
ff righty v.;ns lhe firsllrick wilh lhe ace),
You sublract the number of cards your
side has in lhis sun from seven, and oold
up your ace for lhat number ol rounds. ,
~-7
This rule works beaulifuity when an
opponent has led from a five-card sun
and you ..;11 lose a Irick lo his paflner.
You hold up long enough,for theleadar's
TH' "'HAPPY" PART IS
partner to be out ot lhe BOil.
L'ARNIN' TO LIKE IT !!
Tha rule uniortunaleiy has a lendency lo
push you inlo the·deep end ollhe sv.imming pooll Look al this deaL You reach
lhrae r)O-Irump. West leads tttt club
queen, and East plays lhe lour. How
would you plan the play?
Tha Rule of s- tellS you to duck lhe
firstlnck (six from ileven Is one) and 1o
~ lhe second, But 11ton you would go
down in your cootrai:l, How.oer, ~ you .
eitler win lht first trick or duck the first
and seoond lricks, you would be all right.
When West
in wnh his diamond
ooq king, ha cannel run the clubs,
&amp;.C.tr.IJ~~ YOU CAI-!.'T t&gt;\\1\l&gt;t · How oo you recognize lhi8 possibility?
&amp;.'J~'N·I'Nt::. CL!'\1'5 t~HWO! .Becauselhe keydamondfl,_ is into
lhe hand with the long suil You lhould
duck lhe firsl and second r!llllds of

r

"''

Pf&gt;..'( 'IOU &amp;.\JI::t&gt;l'l''l·ri\J(CffiTSI

Pomeroy, Ohto
2J Y.esrs LOCa l Expe11CI 1 te
'I

Local Contractor

... THE

QH

•
•
•

In Bonn
Norrow Inlet
Klulz'l cry
(hyph.)
'
lliin fog
Eltctric

hi

HAPPY

Roofing, Siding, ·
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
£/ectric, Plumbmg,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

I

15
16

An opponent might
I&gt;OING YOV#l TA~~S ON .Ttl~
have blundered
'OMPVnll, UNI~?
~~~ This week we are looking at lhe Rule of
Seven. Well, !ilonday we looked a1 wtoen
J.'M TtlYING···IUT ~fi lo use ~- Since lhen, we haw been
checking wtoen lo ign&lt;&gt;'e ~I
NOTtiiN6 tfAPP~NS
You are in lhree no-lru""'.Your only high

www. 1cJc .upct tn:alntcnt.Or~

wM_~~~CLFSI I ~======M:/:F_I~D~N=====:::

orchid grass w/ alfalfa_ Call 4-wheeler 300EX,

•

Opening lead: •

__

NURSING
HOUSE
SUPERVISOR

6 3

Wesl
Pass

INT

,By: March 14, 2008

·e

Puzzle

i~~~~ii-~
Wti~N
1. P~~SSI'~Y!
Ttl~ ~if
~~~
.. ~fTV~N"
~~~

P.O. Box 1051
New Haven, WV 25266-1051

ranty, tots .of extras, great
truck,
$14,900,
call

--------

245-5175 before 9pm.

Soulb

Solution
Marty O'Bryant
Owner

99 Beech Street
M"ddl • rt OH
Roger Manley Owner

•

13
14

Dealer: South

\'our Carpet and

All Work
Guaranteed

AK2

Vulnerable: East-West

yard/equipment operator position(s)
as well as personnel interested in

(740)992-6282
~r:::.=.;;:;;.,__, ~
Equal Opportunity Employer
40
WWW .C AAEQ ,CO at
M [ 4 ~-'
•
in,en1ory
Carmichael Equipment 740·
446-2412
2000 Yamaha Wolverine,
;.,IIA:_Y_&amp;
__""t tots 01 extra's, 13,500 oso, ;=:H:e:lp=W:a:n:te:d=:;
GRAIN
(740)416·~588
·

•r,.p....

'Thill.

·~, J CliNt
r.~ ••~'
l'rlltniiJd"
Upho lster~· peaning

•

SoUib

Seeking people interested in the coal

Or fax: .

I

I •

"

740-992-1611

1

03-(17-(18

• Q J 10 9 8
• 9 71
West
Eut
• 9 7 6
• J 10 8 3
• Q J 10
• 9 8 7 42
• K4
• ~ s·
• Q J 10 8 5
• K4

INDUSTRIAL
WORKERS

Point Pleasant, WV

Phone'-~--~----~~--~~~

Mail or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O . Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Help Wanted

Resources

I

•

Hours

2520 Valley Drive

I
I

I
0
0

45771
740·949· 2217

Doors open @ 4:00pm

Point Pleasant, WV
Call Jenny
1-304-675·5246

2000 CheiJY 1/2 ton. 63,000
miles. $8900. Call 740-2455839
----:----:---:-2004 Chevy Sii&lt;.Jerado, 4-3
V-6 , auto, AC, CD, 45k

I

:

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Cutting Connection Salon

TRUCKS
FOR SALE
1.,.---~--,J

p•••••••••••••-•••••••••••••••••

Address ___~----------~------

l'lacine, Ohio

,··~··

~ 15

c§alltpoli• JBatlp O::rfbune.
tlotnt ~leasant 1\.egt•ter
· The Daily Sentinel
&amp;unba!' tEtme- -6enttntl
Name -------~

CONSTRICTION

Non

1114/1 mo.pd

Purebred Westie (F} i 1 Quality cars. trucks. vans
months old,
all shots, starling at $1500 to $6300.
spayed. $150.00 Can 740- Financing available with
709-6218
warranty.
COOK
MOTORS 328 Jackson Pike.
I \I' \I"! 1'1'111'
740-446·01.03
,\ I I\ I ' I I I( 1,

Here's all you .
,need to do ...
Fill ou·t the ·coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
•
copy of your photo ID.

Subscriber 's

29670 Bashan Road

~r~·lOIO
·, UHD-6Q68
Fax 740·992·5706

rm

.··"

.

ROBERT
BISSELL

(12) $100 GAMES

Pleasant Valley
Hospital
is currently
245 ·048SafterSp.m.
RV Service at Carmichael
accepting resumes
11&lt;\\,I'(IHI\IIlJ\
·Traitors 7~0-446-3825
for a Full time
"I I~\ 14 I "
Nursing House
Supervisor.
I
Experience in acute
01
Hyundai
Accent ~,-.iiilioilliiiiiiiiilliiiiiorJcare
setting
Halchback. 5 speed trans,
BASEI,IENT
preferred. ·Current
65,310 miles, good condl·
WATERPROOFING
tioo. needs catalyti~ convert·
Unconditional lifetime guar· WV license,
er. Asking $2600. Call 740antee. Local references fur- Send fesum'es to:
709-6339.
.
nished. Established 1975.
Pleasant Valley ,
0':1 Suzuki Grand Vilar, 4DR, Catt 24 Hrs. (740) 446Hospital
AC, 4WD, . 100k miles. 0870, Rogers Basement
c/o liuman
.$4000. Call740-339-2457 Waterproofing.

a· '

Hill's Self
Storage

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

old neutered Blue Hoeler: L~------_.j
Call 74Q-843·5401
BOO# rOund bale Hay. 740 _ 2002 HBrley Devid$on Ultra
Golden Retriever puppies. 9 ·- 388-8950.
· Classic Elec1ra Glide, new
custom paint. $12,000 OBO,
wks old, (M) and (F) $125. Hay tor sale· 200 round (740)416-1588
eaCh. First shots &amp; wormed. bales, .grass · and some

r:;;;;;;::::::::::::::~=====~=44=6~-4:1:,0:5a:ft:er:4:p:m=.~,

Alder

SlzM s 'x10'
to 10'x30'

(2) $200 GAMES

City Park
Lafayette Mall
300 2nd Ave
Gallipolis, OH
(~40) 441 9010
Mon • Sat 9am • Spm

SecuritY and key deposit
r~••
required.
No
pets.
FOR SAIJ!
References required. 740· RetoH/Warehouoe/Storage
446·442!:! or 446-3936
Location in Gallipolis 1800 5 cute, cuddly puppies.
NeWly remodeled apartment sq. ft. building $400 mo. off Mixed breed, free to g?Od
for rent
. Downtown street parking call Wayne at home, 7 wks old, mad srze.
446-2896
Middleport 7.40-985·3646. 1404)456-3802
- - - - - - - - !"lave you priced -a John
AKC German Shepherds, Deere lately? You'll be surPups &amp; Adutts 304-937- pnsod! Chock out our used

. :

PACK II

Help Wanted

(304)675-5806.
Equal
Tara
Townhouse
JET
Housing Opportunity
Apartments, Very Spacious.
AERATION MOTORS
Beautiful Apia. at JackSon
2 BeOrooms, CIA. 1 1/2 Repaired, New &amp; Aebulh In
Estates. 52 Westwood Bath, AduH Pool &amp; Baby Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·

Dri11e. from $365 to $560.
740 ... 46·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
inslltutiOn is an Equal
Opportunity Pro11ider and

,, (3) $100 GAMES.

Cro11word

41 Not
fcrtllttghl
42 Truf
llproin
44 Fruity drink
47 Ambition
41 Soitmnvow

Phillip

Across _
f rom

2-Winchester Model 370
Single - Barrel Shotguns, 12
and iS Ga., both 30" Full,
look ktentical, Clean Guns.
$350 Buys Both (740) 5333870 Ironton, Ohio

Apartments
tor
Rent:
Pleasant Valley Apartment
· Are now taking Applications
for 28R . 3BR &amp; 48R .
Apartments
Applications
are taken Monda)' thru information.
Friday, from 9:00 A.M.-4
P.M. Office is L.ocated at
115 1 Evergreen Drive Point
Pleasant, WV Phohe II is

$25 1st pack
$5 ea. add'l pack

$AVE $AVE $AVE
Select items have
been REDUCED!!!
50% or more off
original prices

2BR apts 6 mi from Holzer.
Duncan Phyfe drop leaf
Some utilities pd. $400+dep. FUrnished Apt, 2nd Avh. table, 7 mahogany chairs.
740-418-5288
Upstairs, All UtiJH:ies pd. Knock down oak flatwall
18R,
No Pels, Gallipolis, cabinet, (6) SO's style
2BR
in
Rio G'rande .

$340/rent $340/deposit: Call Call 446-9523
------~
740-245-9060
Graclous Livli'lg 1 and 2
Apartment a&lt;.Jailable now Bedroqm Apts. at Village
Riverbend Apts. New Haven Manor and Riverside Apts. in
WV. Now accepting applica- Middleport . from $327 Ia
lions· for Hud-Subsidized-:' $592. 740·992-5064. Equal
one Bedroom Apts. Utilities Housing Opportunity.
induded. Based on 30% of -~----~
adjusted Income.
Call
(304)882-3121 available for
Senior and Disabled People.
Equal Housing Opportunity_

ACROSS

124 Highland Ave
Poinl Pleasan1, WV

er~

· tor Rent in Rodney (740 )

NEA
BRIDGE

BINGO

White/Oak Tile Top Kitchen
Table : with .6 chairs-goOd

2Br apr, WID hookup, water • Owner pays water, sewer,
pd. close to hospital &amp; coltrash
lege on Centenary Ad, no
(304)882'3017
pets. 446-9442 after Spm

• 2BR apt. Also 3BR House

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

www.mydailysentinel.com

OOP

WV Jobs Foundation

EllmView

fridge furn ., water &amp; trash
mclu~ed No pets Ret. Req .

7, 2008

"- •·- -

- ··· .... ---·----·-·- -

---·--· ... ...

�Page

'

•

•
B6 • The Uaily Sentinel

'

I-mlay, Marcn

www.myaa11ysentine1.com

7, 2008
Friday, March

\IIIH ll \\111..,1

,' ALLEY
1BR, W/0 hooK-up, stove

a.

Sale : Berber Carpet $5.95
yd remnants $40.00 &amp; up.
Mollohan Carpet. 2212
Eastern Ave, Galli~ is, Oh
740-446-7444

Apartments

· 740-367-7453 or 645-nt4

• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
· 2 bedroom Apt Mt. Vernon •Central heat .&amp; NC
: Ave. Pt Pleasant $425 • washer/ dryer hookup
· month,
$200
Damage · •All electric- averaging
~ Deposit 304-675-7902
$50-$60/mooth

;
·
•
:

: 441..0194

'

Friday, March 7
SPECIAL

condition $iZ5; Glass Top &amp;
Iron Coffee, &amp; End Tables
$125 for tho pair (740) 388-

--------:7

kitchen chairs, Singer elec!ric sewing·machine in cabinet. 3 Jld treadle sewing
machines. Splayed press
cupboard,' Old sideboard, 1
iron bed wlr'ails and m~lal
mattress. 1 iron bed w/rails.

Pool, Patio, Slart $4251Mo. _eo-'0--5-'37_-9_:5_28_._ _ __
No Pets, Lease Plus
Sewrity Depoe~ Required, NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
1740)367-0547.
For

Employer.

Twin Rivers Tower is acceptlng
appllcatloll3 for waltihg
CONVENIENTLY, LOCATlist tor Hud-subsized, 1· br,
'ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
the
Townhouse
apartments, aparlment,for
andfor small houses FOR elderly/disabled call 675·
Equal
Housing
RENT Call (740)441-1111 6679
Opportunity
for applicatior) &amp; information.

Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat. Bar, S~eel
Gr~tlng
for
-oratns,
,Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tu_esday, Wednesday &amp;
Fnday, B~·4:30pm, aosed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;

Sunday. (740)446-7300

Cu1e 2 br. apartment, wid Upstairs apt. downtown
Free,
3·Piaque
hook·up, no pets, $370 a Gallipolis. clean, 28 R, 2 Vent
month plus utilities. deposit Baths, OW. WID hookup, Propane Gas Heater, Man.
requrred, ask for Merge, 1500 dep.. ref. 17401 446 _ Controi(Was $143.95) Now

$122.36. Save .15% on att
other Gas and Electric
· d to Hoa1ors
Heaters. (Umrto
"
in .stock) We have IV•elting
chocolates and Molds for
Easter Eggs in stock. Paint

(740)992-411 9

9209
_ _ _=--=-=~
For Lease: 2nd floor. spa- -Very n1·08 18R, SlAt 588cious, 3 bedroom. unfur- ~att pot ·s, 112 m• from
1 1
1
nished apt. ih Victorian ...,school. HaS: appl. $4001 mo
house on City Park,
$400/.dep. + utll,·o1·os. Must
Excellent condition. HVAC. ha\16ref.Nopets6 s. s 3 Plus Hardware 304-675·
4 7 1
Off • street
park1ng. -z:~--i:----, 4084
Sll
$600/month plus utilities _

i

IN

Ir.

"""~~.,~~•

. . _,

---,----3059
AKC Golderi' Retriever pup·
pies $300, shots, 6 females
&amp; 2 mates 304-675-3363
Free to good home. 1.year

,
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.
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,
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,or older?;?
...

.

If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

1

~i&gt;!i10!""'-·F~ARM---.,

Lw-•F.QuiPMENrillliiiillili-.,J
-,
4WD M105S Kubota Tractor.
607 hrs, loader, CHA.
$46,000 new, must selL
$34,000. (740)256·6347
EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER

City/State/Zip _ __

_

_ _ __

mites. Asking 59000. OBO

BUill
VALLEY
1
H0 AS E Il l VEST 0 c K ~645,p;-8;;.7;,;
2;_~~-~
TRAILERS, LOAD MAX
4X4
EQUIPMENT TRAILERS.
FOR SAlE
·
CARGO EXPRESS &amp; ~~--~~~:.,._.1,
H0 MES T E ADE R
~ · c 0 NCEoSt
" 0 N 2004 Ford F·350 S~er Duly
CAR~O/
1 ton V~ Crew Cab,
TRAIL EAS. -B+W GOOS E· . Pickup,
,
XLT, (4WD) 65,000 miles,
NECK
HITCHES. S.Ol, VB. Turbo Diesel
CARM ICHAEL
EQUIP·
MENT/CARMICHAE L Engine, Fiber GlaSs
. Cap. 8ft
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA- bod, Traitor Towing &amp;
Camper Pkg, Aluminum
VICE . SPECIAl 20FT Wheels, Power Seats 304GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE -675-3753
TRAILER INVENTORY AT - - - - - - ' - - WWW .C ARMICHAEL· 2004FordRangerEdgeext.
TRAILERS.COM 740-4~6- Cab, 4x4, 4 door, 4.p titer,
_38_2_5_ _ _ _ _ _ 20,000 miles, extended war-

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American Electric Power/
Mountaineer Plant.ln New Haven,
WV seeking temporary personnel.

Stop &amp; Compare

operations department position(s), 40
Hr. workweeks anticipated, rotating
shift work required. Two Year Degree
preferred.
Entry l.evel wage rate @ approx:
$12,00 per hr. with moderate benelil
package being offered. :
Interested candidates should mark
which interest they prefer and submit
re:&gt;umes lo:
Human Resources Dept.

:
. FRANK

&amp; EARNEST

(74{1)446-4060

r

$~ ,000

~:~s:~~~~~~~~i=i M~~ I
FO~~ Ira~~

PO Bux 453
Pomeroy; OH
Toll Free

1-888-992-7090 ,
Phone: 740-992-7990 •

Hmlw~d C~binetry And Furllit!ire
.

www.tlmb.,.,.,.tol«:•l&gt;mot.ey.oom

-•

BARNEY

TELL US, GRAMPY, .

. HARD WORK

WHAT'S TH' SECRET
TO A LONG,
.

EVER'DA'l'
· FROM SUNUP

THAT'S
TH'

"LONG" ·

TO SUNDOWN!!

PART

LIFE ?

Stanley Tree-

YOUNG'S

Trimming

CARPENTER
SERVICE

&amp; Removal
*Prompt.and Quulity .
Work

*Rcasonablt' Rat~.:~
*lnsurt:d
.*'EXpericn&lt;.:cd
ReJCrcnces Avai lahl~ 1
Call Gary Star)lcy

@

740-591 -8044

!!

i

•'

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}"

•••
•

Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
New Garages
•
Electrical &amp; Plumbing _.
Rooting· &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting·

THE BORN LOSER

Patio and Porch Oeclc•

T~KE. OUT
1'1-\€. (,/&gt;-~~FOR II£, tLL

WV036725
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

,..-

II' 'IOU TWO

304-675-6975 or
apply on-line at
www.pvalley.org ·
AA/EOE

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

7 40·367·0544
Free Estimates

7 40·367·0536

Eul
All pass

Q

52 Woody'o
1011

53 Cell

C

10 Outlhlnes
(2 wdo.)
11 Codgera' 38 Novo!
querleo
' .ciOMr
f 9 BlcHnouth 39 CUoiuo
2f Eu
Clay
molding
41 TN CU.
24 Average . 42 Crocuo
25 Gnert11gv
"bulb" ·
layera
43 ·AUJ'I
26 - and kin 45 McClurg

of ~

27 Food

28
29
31
33
35
36

cookero
46 By holr1
Shrfl
·47 Ph olop buy
Fictlonti
49 Up for
Jane
payment
Broak'e
51 Account
OOUnd
OXIC .
Terminate
Lock up
lloat-np~lr

place

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by ~uls Campos
Caletw!IJCipher~ wecrs&amp;t!ldtrl)'ll ~s by IM'IOUS peopiB,'put.-:1 IQIII'II.

Efh ~ in IN! tiplw liM I« .-diet'

"WZG SEZ JYOZ NAZZJ. TFZG
JLNZ AFZYE

e

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
•-Roofing
• Decks
• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room 1\ddltlons
. Owner:
James Keesee II

TI-llS SUMMER 11M 601Nj; TO
ENTER Tue•RO~LE'1' HOLE"
CIIAMPIONSHIP IN.STANOIN6
lstoiiESTIITE PMK'INTENNESSEE ..

P~A'1'1N6 FANATIC! ·

WJ.IEREVER
THAT

IS ..

~ h~-r.;:;~---::::::-u

I#...Y

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. n~d~B~O~Y~;;;;;;J r---------, r_....GO&lt;iD.ruli'"':lii;;;;;;~ fliiiiii!!!;i!Jil"'-.....~;;;;j
;~~~87
DID YOU HAVE A
P11E5EMT57 WOW, YOU
GOOD, CUZ I

.• ,uvv BI""'HD'Y2.
r
"
"

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding ,,Gutters

- . - - - - Wlholloy ClAY I. 10IIAN

Astro•
Graph

ltners of !Itt
Ofl«&lt;rroi!Sit
four ICJIImblod words be-

low to form four tllrrplt words.

'

"hhr411 ......: '

mopus operand ftexlble becauee 'fbu'll
accomplish your goals by finding an
unusual way or dOing things. tn racr: The
more unusual the route, the larger the

PlYING TOP PIICES RIR

Guttering

IAII

· ANTIBO.

l UGI T

Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653-9657

DIDN'T NEED TO GET
MEPI!ESENTS. THE FACT
YOU EVEN I!EMEMBEI!ED
IT WAS MY BlriTHDAY IS

COULDN'T
. OF "v'" ..'",,"~ ,....,
·
TO

PI!ESENT ENOUGH.

success.
TAURUS (April 2()-.May 20). - Try to
associate with friends who are u progressive and futurJstic in their thinking u
you are. Together, you might be able to
gat samething In the works that wil be
new and Inviting.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Look out
worid. You could turn out to be quite progresaiva by getting eome brilliant flashes
of insight regarding way• to handle
unplanned development• or lnYOive·
mente.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Just
beCause a number of lngenlou• Idees
come easy for you, don't make the mls·
take of discounting them merely becluse
of the ease by wNch tnev Clme. The best

t-• uauatty como In a ftaoh. ,
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)· - There are
strong ;n&lt;~;cauona t11a1 thlnao thao could
be oeneficlat will mantfoot th&amp;moefwla 1n
a sudden manner, ao you'll need 'to be
prepared to make a qutcl&lt; declaion and
move taot oo take edvantage ot t11em.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- You wttt get
that Opportunity to become more familiar
with oomeone vou'd tlke to know better' .
Yo.u'll have much In common upon whlct'l
to build a relationahlp.
LlBRA (Sept 23o0cl:. 23) -

uae

IJ

I

~HESE.

14

ARIES (Maroh 21-Aprlt 19)- Koepyour

SIIUniiJ8:11 D12:08tm

H&amp;H

....
'=~=· S~1\~1J. -~r.!fe·

could provide opportuoruet to expreaa
your talents In ways that would propel
you Into the profit column.
PISCES (Fob. 2o-March 20) - Try 10
ln\101~ youl'88" In some kind of endeav·
or that otfera an opportunity to expreu
your natural originality and Inventive·
ness. "'bu could be more auoceaetul
operating In this venue than ever before.

.... .._dlltfriiiiV9:DOft5:DO Ill

1111111111 Clll•lllllllllll Wtllll
CIIIIJIICCinertn ·C.t•
hlllllnllllllllnl
ICIII Jtr Clrrlll PrlceJJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'II you know somelhing welt, you can always painl

ahead where your material lnterellhl lliV
concerned. Sudden shtfta In conditions

11VE BECOME A MAA6L.E

AFZD JLNZ

n,but people WoUld be better off bu~ng chicken .• -Grandme Moses

's.turca.r, March 1, 2008
By lemlce lhct. O.ol
Major Improvements are likely In the year

742-2332

AzWKZE,

I I

.,

"Love,~ tile mom

~

explained, "is an act of
endleSs forglveDCSS and
tender looks which ~wonmca

'i'

r-""'r''T"~:--::''-::--.. .,
~ I L ME B

I I I I I !•~=:·~~:
you dMiap from Jllp No. 3 boiow.

•

PR~~s~!~~slETTERS IN

I u.~~~~~flETTER~

,.

r , t rI

I I I I I I'

SCRAM4m ANSWERS 3~6~o a
KiUal ~CXICI- Fruit- NOIIIy- TAX RETURN
A• mentioned his slumplag blllioo11 to acus1omer, "If it
gels any worse l won't have to lie about my TAX RB'IURN."
'

'

ARLO &amp;JANIS

your

could be quite revolutionary.

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Shop

PUBLIC NOTICE
Improvement project
VILLAGE OF SYRA- can only take place
CUSE
where the need Is
MUNICIPAL
PARK delermined and it is
IMPROVEMENTS
known that the need
NOTICE OF EXPLANA- will be targeted in
TION FLOOD PLAIN some of those bose
DEVELOPMENT
. flood areas. Therefore,
The
Village
of It is the judgmen1 of
Syracuse ,
Meigs the,VIllage of Syracuse
County, Ohio, if award- that the benefits to
ad funding, intends to low-moderale houseundertake a municipal holds affected by . tho ·
project for the purpose
park
improvements
of
Improving
the ball
field lighting at the
municipal park In lhe
VIIIage of Syracuse.
Portions of tho ·project
may be locatecl In the
100·500 year flood
plain, The proposed
project cannot be
underlaken In any
other localfon as there
Ia no practical allornalive for lho IQCatlons of
portions of tbe project.
• The ·municipal park

slderation of Executive
project outweighs
Orders
11988 conand ·
11990. A more detailed
description of 111e projeel and the FLA Flood
!ilaps are available for
citizen review at lho
office of the Syracuse
VIllage Clerk, located
al 2581 Third St,
Syracuse, Ohio,
VIllage of Syracuse
Meigs County, Ohio
Eric
Cunningham,
Mayor
(3) 7

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov, 22) - You wttl
be extraon::linarnv productive at this time
by getting Involved In tlllkl or ullgnmenll that you truly enjoy. The key to
your eucoe11 I• not allowing - ~reelf to

-~ARFIELD

l 0'-'d Hl r l i t "

tooua on·anything dlltuteful.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23•Doc . 21) -

Concrete Removal .
and Replacement

ftnaiiZI 1 rnatter that r'IM OIIUMdr muol'l

,All Types~f j
Concrete Wqtl(: ).
28 Years Experienct

David Lewis :'
740·992-6971 :
lneured
W¥'042182 Free Estimates

r-~:~~ii~~~~~~~J

When you tlnd youf'Htf In 1 poaltlon to

0
0

aggravation, Jump on lt. It doeln't malttlr
what tha: enci relultll u long u you oan
IIIII with n,

CAPf'IICCf'IN (DOll, II.Jon. II)- Don'1
got vouttotr oo1tghltv otruaturtellhtt vou
loolt 11 motrl11y, Oltlnaoo oro Hmo1htn;
tun to gotng 10 pop up lhll )'OU'tt won110
be ""'I of, 1111n W you hM lo mollt
Ujuolmonlt, tl'tl be worlll tl,
AQ~~IUI (olin, 10-Jfl-, I I) - Mlltrlll
benotllt nuli Hmt •-ou1 .1hro14h on
UftUIUit Ill of OlrtumlllnHt. In 1101,
Whllllrtrtii!IIIIO mlgltl be I OMI•In•l•lile•
llmt tituotton lhol ttntrltll rtturnt
lrtm tn unltPIIM HuJH,

IOUP TO NU.TZ

-

· --- ~·

--·····--

. . ·-

.

I a~.·

smarts, which you have plenty ol, to
come up With better ways ot doing things
concernlng whatever It Is that has
bogged you down. What you conceive

Ill\ I'
lll,ltUII

AFZD

AFZYE TLEAF."- XFPXO GLEEYN

Yes, East defended very badly by failing
lo play his club king at lrfc:k one lo
unblock lhe sun. But you must cash in
wtoon an opponenlbimdera

BIG NATE

.

Today's cluo: WsquaJs II

&lt;:fulls. .

5131111 SL •ll•••n. 0145180
. 140-982-3194

FIND AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

North
3 NT

"'

iJets

~I

. Manley's.
Recycling:

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

A K ~
A 782
A 8 3

(hods.)
50 Aromo

hlbll8nl
54 Mike
bridge
a flocootnllnCIIOiela
17 Gloula~ 55 Urban air
' 18 Drfvet'l'
·
problem
MOdo
56 Mild
20 Emblen.
expletive
22 Family
57 Room tnd
1111m.
bolrd
23 0tt01111n
lttlt .
OOWN
24 Lapdap
27 Mike holeo 1 Quieti
In
2 King in a
30 Surrounded
pity
3 lllctUke
31 ' l.oet
32 Grain crop 4
34 W1lHl track
ollpptry
35 Roptftber
5 Copper and
36 Minda toe , line
37 Big
6 Melody
ocfucn
7 Actreos
39 WantedShlrlty , potter~ 8 GIOII
40 A rill oWine 9 T*lai~Da

card In lheled sun is lhe ace {or lhe king,
ff righty v.;ns lhe firsllrick wilh lhe ace),
You sublract the number of cards your
side has in lhis sun from seven, and oold
up your ace for lhat number ol rounds. ,
~-7
This rule works beaulifuity when an
opponent has led from a five-card sun
and you ..;11 lose a Irick lo his paflner.
You hold up long enough,for theleadar's
TH' "'HAPPY" PART IS
partner to be out ot lhe BOil.
L'ARNIN' TO LIKE IT !!
Tha rule uniortunaleiy has a lendency lo
push you inlo the·deep end ollhe sv.imming pooll Look al this deaL You reach
lhrae r)O-Irump. West leads tttt club
queen, and East plays lhe lour. How
would you plan the play?
Tha Rule of s- tellS you to duck lhe
firstlnck (six from ileven Is one) and 1o
~ lhe second, But 11ton you would go
down in your cootrai:l, How.oer, ~ you .
eitler win lht first trick or duck the first
and seoond lricks, you would be all right.
When West
in wnh his diamond
ooq king, ha cannel run the clubs,
&amp;.C.tr.IJ~~ YOU CAI-!.'T t&gt;\\1\l&gt;t · How oo you recognize lhi8 possibility?
&amp;.'J~'N·I'Nt::. CL!'\1'5 t~HWO! .Becauselhe keydamondfl,_ is into
lhe hand with the long suil You lhould
duck lhe firsl and second r!llllds of

r

"''

Pf&gt;..'( 'IOU &amp;.\JI::t&gt;l'l''l·ri\J(CffiTSI

Pomeroy, Ohto
2J Y.esrs LOCa l Expe11CI 1 te
'I

Local Contractor

... THE

QH

•
•
•

In Bonn
Norrow Inlet
Klulz'l cry
(hyph.)
'
lliin fog
Eltctric

hi

HAPPY

Roofing, Siding, ·
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
£/ectric, Plumbmg,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

I

15
16

An opponent might
I&gt;OING YOV#l TA~~S ON .Ttl~
have blundered
'OMPVnll, UNI~?
~~~ This week we are looking at lhe Rule of
Seven. Well, !ilonday we looked a1 wtoen
J.'M TtlYING···IUT ~fi lo use ~- Since lhen, we haw been
checking wtoen lo ign&lt;&gt;'e ~I
NOTtiiN6 tfAPP~NS
You are in lhree no-lru""'.Your only high

www. 1cJc .upct tn:alntcnt.Or~

wM_~~~CLFSI I ~======M:/:F_I~D~N=====:::

orchid grass w/ alfalfa_ Call 4-wheeler 300EX,

•

Opening lead: •

__

NURSING
HOUSE
SUPERVISOR

6 3

Wesl
Pass

INT

,By: March 14, 2008

·e

Puzzle

i~~~~ii-~
Wti~N
1. P~~SSI'~Y!
Ttl~ ~if
~~~
.. ~fTV~N"
~~~

P.O. Box 1051
New Haven, WV 25266-1051

ranty, tots .of extras, great
truck,
$14,900,
call

--------

245-5175 before 9pm.

Soulb

Solution
Marty O'Bryant
Owner

99 Beech Street
M"ddl • rt OH
Roger Manley Owner

•

13
14

Dealer: South

\'our Carpet and

All Work
Guaranteed

AK2

Vulnerable: East-West

yard/equipment operator position(s)
as well as personnel interested in

(740)992-6282
~r:::.=.;;:;;.,__, ~
Equal Opportunity Employer
40
WWW .C AAEQ ,CO at
M [ 4 ~-'
•
in,en1ory
Carmichael Equipment 740·
446-2412
2000 Yamaha Wolverine,
;.,IIA:_Y_&amp;
__""t tots 01 extra's, 13,500 oso, ;=:H:e:lp=W:a:n:te:d=:;
GRAIN
(740)416·~588
·

•r,.p....

'Thill.

·~, J CliNt
r.~ ••~'
l'rlltniiJd"
Upho lster~· peaning

•

SoUib

Seeking people interested in the coal

Or fax: .

I

I •

"

740-992-1611

1

03-(17-(18

• Q J 10 9 8
• 9 71
West
Eut
• 9 7 6
• J 10 8 3
• Q J 10
• 9 8 7 42
• K4
• ~ s·
• Q J 10 8 5
• K4

INDUSTRIAL
WORKERS

Point Pleasant, WV

Phone'-~--~----~~--~~~

Mail or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O . Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Help Wanted

Resources

I

•

Hours

2520 Valley Drive

I
I

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0

45771
740·949· 2217

Doors open @ 4:00pm

Point Pleasant, WV
Call Jenny
1-304-675·5246

2000 CheiJY 1/2 ton. 63,000
miles. $8900. Call 740-2455839
----:----:---:-2004 Chevy Sii&lt;.Jerado, 4-3
V-6 , auto, AC, CD, 45k

I

:

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Cutting Connection Salon

TRUCKS
FOR SALE
1.,.---~--,J

p•••••••••••••-•••••••••••••••••

Address ___~----------~------

l'lacine, Ohio

,··~··

~ 15

c§alltpoli• JBatlp O::rfbune.
tlotnt ~leasant 1\.egt•ter
· The Daily Sentinel
&amp;unba!' tEtme- -6enttntl
Name -------~

CONSTRICTION

Non

1114/1 mo.pd

Purebred Westie (F} i 1 Quality cars. trucks. vans
months old,
all shots, starling at $1500 to $6300.
spayed. $150.00 Can 740- Financing available with
709-6218
warranty.
COOK
MOTORS 328 Jackson Pike.
I \I' \I"! 1'1'111'
740-446·01.03
,\ I I\ I ' I I I( 1,

Here's all you .
,need to do ...
Fill ou·t the ·coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
•
copy of your photo ID.

Subscriber 's

29670 Bashan Road

~r~·lOIO
·, UHD-6Q68
Fax 740·992·5706

rm

.··"

.

ROBERT
BISSELL

(12) $100 GAMES

Pleasant Valley
Hospital
is currently
245 ·048SafterSp.m.
RV Service at Carmichael
accepting resumes
11&lt;\\,I'(IHI\IIlJ\
·Traitors 7~0-446-3825
for a Full time
"I I~\ 14 I "
Nursing House
Supervisor.
I
Experience in acute
01
Hyundai
Accent ~,-.iiilioilliiiiiiiiilliiiiiorJcare
setting
Halchback. 5 speed trans,
BASEI,IENT
preferred. ·Current
65,310 miles, good condl·
WATERPROOFING
tioo. needs catalyti~ convert·
Unconditional lifetime guar· WV license,
er. Asking $2600. Call 740antee. Local references fur- Send fesum'es to:
709-6339.
.
nished. Established 1975.
Pleasant Valley ,
0':1 Suzuki Grand Vilar, 4DR, Catt 24 Hrs. (740) 446Hospital
AC, 4WD, . 100k miles. 0870, Rogers Basement
c/o liuman
.$4000. Call740-339-2457 Waterproofing.

a· '

Hill's Self
Storage

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

old neutered Blue Hoeler: L~------_.j
Call 74Q-843·5401
BOO# rOund bale Hay. 740 _ 2002 HBrley Devid$on Ultra
Golden Retriever puppies. 9 ·- 388-8950.
· Classic Elec1ra Glide, new
custom paint. $12,000 OBO,
wks old, (M) and (F) $125. Hay tor sale· 200 round (740)416-1588
eaCh. First shots &amp; wormed. bales, .grass · and some

r:;;;;;;::::::::::::::~=====~=44=6~-4:1:,0:5a:ft:er:4:p:m=.~,

Alder

SlzM s 'x10'
to 10'x30'

(2) $200 GAMES

City Park
Lafayette Mall
300 2nd Ave
Gallipolis, OH
(~40) 441 9010
Mon • Sat 9am • Spm

SecuritY and key deposit
r~••
required.
No
pets.
FOR SAIJ!
References required. 740· RetoH/Warehouoe/Storage
446·442!:! or 446-3936
Location in Gallipolis 1800 5 cute, cuddly puppies.
NeWly remodeled apartment sq. ft. building $400 mo. off Mixed breed, free to g?Od
for rent
. Downtown street parking call Wayne at home, 7 wks old, mad srze.
446-2896
Middleport 7.40-985·3646. 1404)456-3802
- - - - - - - - !"lave you priced -a John
AKC German Shepherds, Deere lately? You'll be surPups &amp; Adutts 304-937- pnsod! Chock out our used

. :

PACK II

Help Wanted

(304)675-5806.
Equal
Tara
Townhouse
JET
Housing Opportunity
Apartments, Very Spacious.
AERATION MOTORS
Beautiful Apia. at JackSon
2 BeOrooms, CIA. 1 1/2 Repaired, New &amp; Aebulh In
Estates. 52 Westwood Bath, AduH Pool &amp; Baby Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·

Dri11e. from $365 to $560.
740 ... 46·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
inslltutiOn is an Equal
Opportunity Pro11ider and

,, (3) $100 GAMES.

Cro11word

41 Not
fcrtllttghl
42 Truf
llproin
44 Fruity drink
47 Ambition
41 Soitmnvow

Phillip

Across _
f rom

2-Winchester Model 370
Single - Barrel Shotguns, 12
and iS Ga., both 30" Full,
look ktentical, Clean Guns.
$350 Buys Both (740) 5333870 Ironton, Ohio

Apartments
tor
Rent:
Pleasant Valley Apartment
· Are now taking Applications
for 28R . 3BR &amp; 48R .
Apartments
Applications
are taken Monda)' thru information.
Friday, from 9:00 A.M.-4
P.M. Office is L.ocated at
115 1 Evergreen Drive Point
Pleasant, WV Phohe II is

$25 1st pack
$5 ea. add'l pack

$AVE $AVE $AVE
Select items have
been REDUCED!!!
50% or more off
original prices

2BR apts 6 mi from Holzer.
Duncan Phyfe drop leaf
Some utilities pd. $400+dep. FUrnished Apt, 2nd Avh. table, 7 mahogany chairs.
740-418-5288
Upstairs, All UtiJH:ies pd. Knock down oak flatwall
18R,
No Pels, Gallipolis, cabinet, (6) SO's style
2BR
in
Rio G'rande .

$340/rent $340/deposit: Call Call 446-9523
------~
740-245-9060
Graclous Livli'lg 1 and 2
Apartment a&lt;.Jailable now Bedroqm Apts. at Village
Riverbend Apts. New Haven Manor and Riverside Apts. in
WV. Now accepting applica- Middleport . from $327 Ia
lions· for Hud-Subsidized-:' $592. 740·992-5064. Equal
one Bedroom Apts. Utilities Housing Opportunity.
induded. Based on 30% of -~----~
adjusted Income.
Call
(304)882-3121 available for
Senior and Disabled People.
Equal Housing Opportunity_

ACROSS

124 Highland Ave
Poinl Pleasan1, WV

er~

· tor Rent in Rodney (740 )

NEA
BRIDGE

BINGO

White/Oak Tile Top Kitchen
Table : with .6 chairs-goOd

2Br apr, WID hookup, water • Owner pays water, sewer,
pd. close to hospital &amp; coltrash
lege on Centenary Ad, no
(304)882'3017
pets. 446-9442 after Spm

• 2BR apt. Also 3BR House

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

www.mydailysentinel.com

OOP

WV Jobs Foundation

EllmView

fridge furn ., water &amp; trash
mclu~ed No pets Ret. Req .

7, 2008

"- •·- -

- ··· .... ---·----·-·- -

---·--· ... ...

�,.

.ALONG THE RivER

•

Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, March 7, 2008

LiviNG

Celebratins Seu.ss:
·
Aut; 10r makes b1g impression
with 'tall and small,' Cl

Cruise trends for 2008:
New ships, more luxuiy, potential deals, Dl

·u n
Jl!o

If ~au have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053

Sprint Cup

Nationwide

Craftsman Truck

' KobaltTools 500
wrecked behind him. That left
1 R-:
1Whefe: Atlanta Motor Speed- him w~h Dale Earnhardt Jr.
and Greg Biffle to hold off with
Wirf, Hampton, Ga. (1.54
miles), 325 laps/500.5 miles. two laps to go. Though Ed1 When: Sunday, March 9
wards fin ished th ird in the Nex·
tel Cup point standings in
1 LMt yur'l winner: Jimmie
.2005, the victory gave him
Johnson, Chevrolet
what is now the Sprint Cup Se-·
• QuallfylnC NCOni: Geoffrey
ries lead for the first time in
Bodine, Ford, 197.478 mph,
his career. II was career victory
Nov. 15, 1997.
1 R- rec:onl: Bobb¥ Labonte, No. 9. After a rough and rowdy
series of events late in the
Pontiac, 159.904 mph, Nov.
race, among Edwards' first
16,1997.
words to.hls crew were: "It is
1 LMt -k: Carl Edwards,
finally over, right?" Earnhardt
who won a week earlier at
Auto Club Speedwltf of South· said, "I had the car about
where I wanted at the end, but
ern California, promptly made
It two In a row with a victory In the race being stopped (red
ftag) really hurt us. I'd liked to
las Vegas Motor Speedw~r~s
have had a shot at Carl (EdUAW-Oodge 400. Edwards
weathered a red-fleg stoppage wards). We mi&amp;ht've had
with four laps to &amp;o when Matt something for him."
Kenseth and Jell Gordon

1 Race: Nicorette 300
1 Where: Atlanta Motor
Speedway, Hampton, Ga.
(1.54 miles), 195
laps/300.3 miles.
• When: Saturday, March 8
1 Last year's winner: J~ff
Burton, Chevrolet
1 Qualifying record: Greg
Biffle, Chevrolet, 192.300
mph, Oct. 25, 2003.
1 R- record: Mark Mar·
tin, Ford, 151.751 mph,
Marth 8, 1997.
·
1Last -k: Mark Martin
took the blame for a crash
that took out Brad Keselowskl and Carl Edwards,
but Martin went on to win at
Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

• R-: American Cammer·
clal Unes 200
• Where: AUania Motor
Speedwlrf, Hampton, Ga.
(1.54 miles), 130
laps/200.3 miles.
1 When: Friday, March 7
1 Last year'l winner: Mike
Skinner, Toyota
1 Quallfyt"l record: Rick
Crawford, Ford, 182.735
mph, March 17; 2005.
1 R- record: Ron Horna·
dlrf, Chevrolet, Vi2.424
mph, March 18, 2005. .
1Laat rece: Kyle Busch, in
one Toyota, outdueled Todd
Bodine, In another, to win
the San Bernardino County
200 at Auto Club Speedway
of Southern California.

•

'

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

' RVHS nets five
players on AII-OVC
hoops teams.
See Page 81

s
u
Gonion

during e ~ stop. Interference

s

~

Jeff Gonion YL

why olllclals cut what would be
the winning team some slaok.
~Dale Earnhardt Jr. hasn't won
In nea~y two years, but seoond
plaoe wasn't bad. Even if he
hedn1 made a crucial mistake,
spinning the tires on his No. 88
on a late restart, he probably
couldn't have oaught Edwards.
. ~ The dominant manufacturer of
·the past two seasons, Chevrolet, hasn't won a race yet. A
·· year agO, Jimmie Johnson's Las
Vegas victOty began a streak of
12 consecutive Chevy victories.
' This Johnson was practloally a
no-show, finiShing 29th.
. ~The Las Vegas race was an ex·
cttlng one, but the most impor·
tant factor In a sucoessful week·
ehd has become the absence of
rain. ~ does, quite obviously,
reln ·ln Southern California. Not
this time, tMugh, In the desert.
~The heralded rookie class has
been quite a bust so far. Dario
· R'lnchlttl was best in·class at
Ve&amp;as. He finished 33rd, which
' · was enough to put him a point
ahead of Regan Smith In
. Raybestos Rookie palms.

It was only light contact between
the two .:- Gordon's fault, by all ac·
counts- but it sent Gordon's car
skittering Into oblivion and cost both
drivers a shot at winning the UA'I/·
Dodge 400. "It was a little bit my
fault," conceded Gordon.

DIIVId Ragan's••• flnllllls 21.0 IIIJtU&amp;II tltree races, •lllree spots from lilt year.

~

• .r·:

Ragan has learned much h~ading into second sea·san
.,., Monti Dutton
NASCAR This Week

you really couldn't predict what was
going to be around the corner. I didn't
know all the answers to the ·questions
David Ragan, a seconil-year driver ... I didn't even know all the questions
still trying to make a name for him- last year. You had to make really
self at Roush Fenway Racing, is glad quick decisions, and sometimes they
'were right and sometimes they were
he isn't a rookie anymore.
Even being a second-year driver is wrong.... (This y~ is) all about mak·
ing less mistakes than last year....
a plus.
.
'"It means you .successfully made it I've been to the tracks before, and I
through your first year, and you have should be better at making decisions
a job and you're still around working than I was last year, and hopefully,
your second year," he said. "But the that just boils down to less mistakes
.
things I learned that rookie year just and better runs."
Ragan,
22,
is
from
Unadilla,
Ga. His
helped me so much. We've only been .
through (three) races so far this year father, Ken Ragan, competed in what
and a few tests, but I.can just tell .that is now the Sprint Cup Series from
I'm a lot more calm. I know what's 1983 through '90, never managing a
· around the comer, I can make better top-10 finish. David collected two topde,cisions, and we're going to be a lot fives last year. He finished fifth in the
Daytona 500 and third in the latter
more prepared ibis year.
"Last year things happened so fast, race in Richmond, Va.

"You've always got to prove something," David said. ~'Years ago, you
were trying to do something spectacu·
lar to catch the eye of a te11m owner,
where you could get a chance at a ride
in one of his race cars."
Quality opportunities for young
drivers were rare in his father's day.
"Now you're in and just have to do
the right things to stay here," added
David. "It's all about consistency.
We're not necessarily looking at the
next race; we're lqoking at six mo!lths
from now and one year from now.
We're looking into the future, and certainly, we're taking it race by race,
but we're doing things now to make us
better six months from now."

Read more from Monte Dutton at
www.gllstongazette.com

0BITUARIFS
• David D. Gilbert, 58
• Betty Gray, 79
• Hilda L. Hunt, 79
,• Myrtle L. Pierce, 75
• Jhomas E..Roach, 76
:• Marguerite Swisher, 92
• George 'Jack' Warner, 87
• Evelyn H. WMe, 89

t

INSIDE

I

OkMchoolllllldnys let
a claeer look In new book
Longtime fans of NASCAR history
will love "Silent Speedways of the
Carolinas: The Grand National Histories of 29 Former Tracks~ (Jefferson,
N.C.: McFarland &amp; Company, $35).
All ofthese tracks are ·out of busl·
ness: most of them have disappeared completely. NASCAR's top clr·
cuit was known as Grand National, by the way, from 1950 through
1971. Some of the sport's original
tracks, like North Wilkesboro SpeedWirf, still stand. Perry Allen Wood has
lovingly written a history of every
track In the Carolinas that held at
least one big·time race through
1971 but is no longer in use. The
author also went back to all the
sites and took photographs showing
where the tracks were and whether
some remnants remain, Hl&amp;hiY recomme~ded'for those with historical
Interest. It mey be ordered at
w.w~.mofirlandpub.com or by callln&amp;

Page AS
• Phyllis Kay Fife, 64

.! Over4,500 participate
· in Telephone Town
. Hall. See Paige A2
·• 4 die in house
·:fire in Portsmouth.
SeePage A&amp;

WEATHER

INDEX
" 4 SEcnONS -

The Dally Sentinel
111. Court St
Pomeroy, OH
(740)

992~2155

I

'

'Z .

/\.1 J I I Jl'./11 _1 I 1 ' / f

Let's Go Racin!!

a.AIIJC CAl IUrOIA'ItON &amp;l'tii'JS

•8J ...~., ,..·11-t.

.• Ford &amp; Motorcl'llft P1rt1
• Englnee, Tran1fer Ca111 &amp; Trlnaml~alone.
• Aftermarket Replacement Sheet Metll &amp; Component•
' For All M1kea of Vehlclll

24 PAGFS

Around Town

A3

Celebrations

C4

Classifieds
Comics

Now 11lllng:

D3-5
insert

Editorials

A4

~ovies

cs

Obituaries

As

$ports
Weather

.

B Section
A6

~. ooo8 Ohio VaUey PubUshlng Co.

HOLZER CLINIC

sions and less impact on our ·
environment.
"West Virginia Gov. Joe
Manchin and the state's regulatory commissioners have
wisely focused on the future
of their state and our world
by supporting. IGCC:: technology," Morris added. "We
hope for a similar decision
from the members of the
Virginia State Corporation
Commission and are ready
to begin construction on our

IGCC plant as soon
we
have all the necessary
approvals in hand."
"With new record peak
demands for electricity set
twice within the 'last year.
Appalachian Power ha; a
clear need for addi tiunal
generation capacity." said
Dan·a Waldo, Appalachian
Power president and chief
operating officer. ''We
recently
added
175

Please see Plant, A2
'

Gatling.
schedules
blasting

Elizabeth Rigel/photo

From left, River Valley High School students Jerrod Roberts and Scot Ward collect literature on career opportunities.
Students from. area high schools and technical colleges attended the first ever Power Industry Career Education Fair at
American Electric Power's Gavin Plant on Friday and Saturday.

.-Career Fair

AEP connects students with profe~sionals
BY

ELIZABETH RIGEL ·

ERIGEL®MVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

9 a.m. to 2 . p.m. and was
held at AEP's Gavin Plant
in Cheshire. Approximately
250 high school students
attended the first day, while
students from area technical
colleges were invited to
come Friday. .
The fair was not open to
the public and no job applications were taken. ·
.
The purpose of the career
fair was to connect various
AEP work units a11d build-

'"&amp; and construction trade
muons with students.
Several ~roups participated
to explam to students the
characteristics of various
jobs available within the
company and the building
tr~es so that they can prepare themselves academically for the requirements of
the different positions.
Some non-AEP groups were
also involved with the
career fair.

CHESHIRE - . High
school. students from South
Gallia and River Valley high
schools, along with students
from area teclmical colleges
were in vi ted to. attend a
Power Industry Career
Education· Fair at hosted by
BY BETH SERGENT
American Electric Power on
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
· Friday and Saturday.
.The event took place from
POMEROY -· Gatling
Ohio has announced a blast-·
ing schedule which is tp
begin no earlier than April
14 but not before the
·issuance of a mining ~rmit
it has applied for wtth the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources.
·
Th'e permit is still gain~
through the "process
according to Laney Erdos,
permitting manager for
ODNR, who also· said that
April 14 date doesn't mean
the permit will be approved
by then. The blasting period
is from April 14 of this year
until Aptil 14, 2009.
Mike Mann, a blasting
specialist with ODNR, said
the blasting Gatling has
planned is "incidental to
underground coal mining .
and not the kind of full scale
blastin!;!: f!:Oing on in surface
coal mmmg:" Mann said the
blasting the company has
planned is to create a portal
mto the mine to develop the
coal seam.
Mann said. it may not take
Gatling a )!ear to do the
blasting but they have until
,
Jor Kocmoud/photo
April 14, 2009 to complete The clock facing Second Avenue from the Gallipolis City Park is seen at night, a reminder
it, if the permit is issued. ,. that today is the day io set your clock one hour forward for daylight savings time. The hour ,
'
Ple•M ... Blalltln~o A1 of sleep that will be lost with the change returns with standard time on Nov. 2.

Did you 'spring forward?

o.tallo on P.,.. AI

I

GALLIPOLIS - Local
and state road crews are
expected to continue battling the after-effects of this
weekend's winter weather
into today after more than 2
inches of snow and
overnight lows in the teens
caused surfaces to refreeze.
Staff from the Gallia
County ·
Highway
Department and Gallia's
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation
garage
began treating roads shortly
after 3:30a.m. Saturday and
by early afternoon were
ready for a break.
"I'm real proud of our
guys. They've done a fantastic job," Gallia ODOT
Supervisor Mark Kirkhart
said.
"It's about time to give
them a rest," Galli a Highway
Garage ~uperintendent Bob
Howard said early Saturday

Please see Winter. A2 ·

8()0.253-2187'

I

nation and the world that we
move
forward
with
advanced, cleaner technologies ·that allow us to .contin~
ue, to ·use coal for electricity
generalion," Michael G.
Morris, AEP chairman,
president anq chief executive officer, said in a news
release. "With IGCC generation, we · can continue to
· rely on our nation 's and
West Virginia 's abundant
coal resources as a general-

Bv KEVIN KEuv

NASCAR's memorable upsets when
he won the 1962 southern 500 at
Darlington Raceway. Junior Johnson
took the checkered fieg, but a post·
race scoring check revealed Frank,
driving a Ford, had completed the
race's 364 lap5- it now takes 367
laps to complete 500 miles at the
track- ahead of Johnson. Thirdplace Marvin Panch and fourth-place
David Pearson also finished on the
lead lap. It was the only victory of
Frank's NASCAR career, which
spanned 103 races from 1956
throug111966.

ft~_JZ] -j]_p~·

" It is critical' for our 'ing fuel with f~wer emis-

KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

NASCAR Tbla Week'a Monte
Dutton elves hlallkll: "There's a bit
of history between these two.
Kenseth has a fine memory."

Frink's first win ................ fouled
Lanry Frank pulled off one of

Cycle (IGCC) ·electric generating plant in New Haven.
The
PSC
granted
Appalachian Power a
Certificate
of
Public
Convenience and Necessity
for the plant, which would
be located beside the company's
existing
Mountaineer Plant. The
plant's estimated cost is
$2.23 billion, and the new
facility will create I ,400
construction jobs and 125
full-time positions.

Winter·
delivers
one-two
punch
to area

E
R

·trom a photOgrapher reportedly
· oaused the Incident, which Is

'~

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. It's good news for Mason
County.
According to a statement
issued by Americ.an Electric·
Power, its operating unit
Appalachian Power has
received authority from the
Public Service Commission
of West Virginia to build a
629-megawatt , Integrated
Gasification
Combined

v

.~~ IS IPJ!'ll\

;·,!:"

BY NICOLE fiELDS

NAELDS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

' &gt; -r'J.s.
~~ ==r&gt; •
r;:.;:fir
.::.~J.J ':.Jr
r :.:;:, &lt;'J .r:::.:::..;
~ •

•

S 1.;; o • \ 'ol. -l:! , No . ~

'iiddlqHII'I • ( .. dlipuf i, • \I. 11Th •1 . :,ooX

IGCC plant approved for New Havena'

SPORTS

sentiment. ~. 1
;-.We.! Edwetds oaiJCht ~ break In
the UAW-Ood&amp;e 400 fl!len otfi.
Clats elected 'not to fllll!llize him
after a tire rolled across~ road

John ClarkfNASCAR This week

l'tilllt'l'il ~ •

Ol: in \alit·' l'uhli,hin g ( o .

No. 6 AAA FORD

DAVID RAGAN

SPRINT CuP SERIES

The fact thet Earnhardt Jr.
seems to be poised to break
the victory drought should be
, CPDd for Atlanta ticket sales. At~
•., tenil8nce has been a disap':'1101ntni8nt there in recent years.

•

••

"We wanted to reach out
to students to talk about life
after school and what they
can do to prepare for cateer
opportunities," said Gavin
Plant Manager David
Hoffman. "We' ve got career
opportunities for a variety .
of different backgrounds."
Students , were given an
overview of the power plant
and taught some things

Please see Fair, A2

Middleport
takes early
steps to ensure
accurate census
BY BRIAN

J,

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEl COM

MIDDLEPORT
Although the U.S. Ccn&gt;us
will not take plac·e for
another two years. local
government s are taking
early steps to ensure that
everyone is counted.
Middleport
' Mayo r
Michael Gerlach said he. his
wife
Debbie,
Linda
Broderick from the village's
public works office and 1
Cinda Harris of the local
post office worked with
information provided by the
U.S. Census Bureau ami
local water department
information
to verify
addresses in prepara1ion li&gt;r
the 20 I0 census.
That work, Gerlach said,

PleaM ... Cansus, A2

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