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K-State QB -~sed f!l

·Hunters set record for
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio ·
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Mei$JS County Commisioners to escape budget cuts

SPORTS

'

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thenewyear'sbudgetisalmost to approve their 2004
finished, and cuts to county $3,267,039 genera !fund buddepartments are not included . ~ gef at their weekly meeting on
POMEROY - Despite In fact, Sheets said, some . Friday. The budget includes a.
anticipated revenue cuts for offices will receive stight $244,000cashcarryoverfro m
2004, county officeholders increases in appropriations to 2003,whichisexpectedtomeet
will escape budget cuts in the makeupforgra~d s which payroH for· general fund
Meigs
County havebeenlos .
employees and other basic
Commissioners 'new budget.
Last yefi ¢ c mission- operating expenses until the
The county will actually ersincl\)ded l's ercentcutsin county begins receiving revbegin this new year with more appropriations to all county enuefromitsone-percentsales
money in the general fund for offices. They imposed five- tax, local government assisearly-year expenditures than percentcutsin2002.Their2003. tancere ve nuefromthestateand
last year, according to budget budgetwasbasedona$3.4mil- . revenue from the tirst-halfreal
commissionprojections.
lionrevenuecertification,anda estate tax settlement later thi s
Commissioner Jim Sheets 2002 carryover balance of winter.
said Wednesday the process of $195,000.
"Our cash tlow should be
completingappropnationsfor . The commissioners expect good if the ·tax I) ills go out in a

• Kren~el not gushy about
return. See Page 81

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

· BY

Page AS
• Kay Cecil
• Charles Bowles
• Garfield Jett
• ArtHur W. Wiley

J.

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
'·'
• Harvara professor
joins the buzz about
Mary Magdalene.
See Page A2
• Community Calendar.
See Page AS

WEATHER
Cloudy, HI: 60s, Low: 50s

,,

Details on Page A2

LoTI'ERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 0-2-8
Pick 4 day: 5-3-3-2
Pick 3 night: 8-3-.1
Pick 4 night: 5-2-4-0
Buckeye 5: 18-22-26-29 -34
Daily 3: 7-3-6
Dally 4: 2-2-3-0
Cash 25: 2-5-8- 19-22-24

POMEROY - Pomeroy
has a new mayor.
Meigs
. County
Juvenile/Probate
Judge
Scott Powell swore-in John
Musser in a quiet ceremony
attended by family and
friends Tuesday inside the
· newly
remodeled
Juvenile/Probate
Courtroom.
Musser, 62, ran unopposed in the November general election. Between 1993
to 200 I, Musser was a member and president of
Pomeroy Village Council.
During that time, he spearheaded a number of initia. tives that included secu·ring
nearly $600,000 in grants
for the new river front walkway which will be completed within the month. Musst;r
has also been a key player.in
the )listoric .preservation of
downtown Pomeroy.
Most recently, Musser
worked closely with outgoing Mayor ·Victor Young Ill
to secure a $160,000 insurance settlement to pay for
damages caused by a fire
which destroyed the vi II age
garage inside the old
Pomeroy Junior ~Higll last
year. In the wake of the fire
and with the deteriorating
condition of the building,
Musser was a firm advocate
of tearing (Jown the
Pomeroy Junior High and
moving !he garage elsewhere.
As mayor, Musser said he
will work with Council to

BY DEB RIECHMANN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

INDEX
2 S EcnONS - ,12 PAGES

Mo~es

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

BY

J. MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

RACINE - A routine
audit of the Southern Local
School District by the state
auditor's office has issued a
finding for recovery against
Southern
High
Schoo l
teacher William K. Beegle "
for the return o l~ $1J88 in
funds.
Betwee n Jul y ::!00::! and
June 2003, the audit reports
that $1.388 raised through
0

Please see Teacher, AS

continue to improve the village and emphasize historic
preservation.
"I will serve the people to
the best of my ability," he
said. "My door is always
open."
.
Musser and Council will
have to cope with the ever
shrinking . village budget.
Council appropriated more
t~an $1.8 million in 2003 . .
which is down from previous. year's appropriittion of
$2.511 million. There are 29
employees working the village.
With help from Young,
Musser will have to steer the
construction of the new village garage located nearby.
The Pomeroy Police
Department is down two
full-time police officers.
Si nee there are on Iy three
full-time police officers currently on staff including
police. chief Mark Proffitt,
Musser and Council will be
responsible for filling these
staffing vacancies.
Musser is an active member oft several local boards
which
include
the
Sternwheel
Festival
Committee, the Community
Improvement Committee
and the Touri sm Board.
Earlier this year, the Meigs
County · Chamber
of ·
Commerce awarded Musser
the, Community Service
Award.
Musser is married to
Dottie and they have one
son and one grandchild.

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Meigs County Juvenile/Probate Judge Scott Powell swears in the· new mayor of Pomeroy, John
Musser, who is holding hjs four-year-old granddaughter, Elena. (J. Miles Layton)

Bush i·begins new year by .bagging.a few quail with father

West Virginia

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Faith•Values

timely fashion," Sheets said
Wednesday.
Two offices which receive
appropriationsfromthegeneral fund, Ohio State University
Extension and Soil and Water
Conservation Di strict, ha ve
received $ 10,000 and $ 1,000
cuts,respectivelyfromthegeneral fund , but those agencies
receive funding from other
sources,Sheetssaid.
The Common Pleas Court
will receive an increase in
appropriations, Sheets said, to
helpoffset losses in grant fundingwhichpaysforCommunity
Correctionsstaff.

Musser sworn-in as Pomeroy Mayor

OBITUARIES

•

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BRIAN

State audit issues
finding for recovery
against SHS teacher

As
B3-4
Bs

A4
A2

As
As
Bt
A2

FALPUR,RIAS, Texas - ·
The first U.S. case of mad
cow disease hasn't prompted
President Bush to stop eating
beef, but a New Year's resolution to start jogging again
means he might, be .cutting
back on sweets.
"I miss running," he told
reporters on New Year's Day
in southern Texas where he
went quail hunting with his
father. "That's one of my resolutions, which may require
eating less desserts - kind
of getting a little trimmer to take the pressure off the
knee."

© 2003 Ohio Valley Publishhtg Co.

president
said
The
Americans should feel safe·
. eating beef while Agriculture
Department officials try to
prevent any mad cow outbreak following the discovery of an infected cow in
Washington state. "As a mat- ·
ter of fact, I ate beef today,
and w.ill continue to eat
beef," he said.
Bush, who has been staying at his ranch near
Crawford, since the day after
Christmas, has· been slowed
by knee pain. Doctors in
Washington last month
advised him to be careful
jogging, attributing the pain

President Bush speaks to
reporters before. boarding Air
Force One at Brooks County
Airport in Falfurrias, Texas .
When asked about sending
aid to the ea,rthquake victims
in Iran, Bush said , "It' s right
to take care of people when
they hurt. " Bush spent his
New Year's Day . hunting for
quail with his~ father, former
President George H.W. Bush
at a private ranch called El
Tule in FalfurriaS.
(AP Photo/ Susan Walsh )

1

1

Please see Bush. ~

FREE .Surgical Weight Loss Seminar
Are you ..100 pounds overweight? Why weight?
•

Call TOLL FREE

In Gallipolis. OH
~

Monday, January 5
5:30PM - 6:30 PM
Holzer Medical Center
'
· Education &amp; Conference Center Rooms AB
/

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1-866-821-4541 ·
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Saturday, Jan. 3

ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

1r~1.do : 4r;/4a~:

•

• ( Columbus 52~/58"

W VA

.

0 2004 AccuWeather, Inc.

r. . 1"' u~., ..~ .(. ,;;;.;,_• .
·~ ~-!!!:'1 ~

Sunny Pt Cloudy

Cloudy

.mr:~
..
W,!II!PJ

~--~

ShOwers

T·slorms

•.- •

.

Ram

~

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•

Flumes

M
. .-.,, .

Snow

Ice

Mostly cloudy, warm
Today ... Morning
showers diminishing. Mostly
cloudy this afternuon ... With
still a slight chance of showers .
Highs around 60. Southwest
winds I 0 to 15 mph. Chance of
rain decreasing to rain 30 per- ·
cent in the afternoon.
Tonight... Mostly cloudy with
a 50 percent chance of showers.
Lows . in the lower 50s.
SQuthwest winds 10 to 15 mph.
(AP)

Saturday ... Showers likdy.
Highs in the mid 60s. Southwest
winds 10 to 15 mph with higher
gusl~. Ch•mce of rain 60 percent.
Saturday night...Cioudy
with a 60 percent chance of
showers. Lows around 50.
Southwest winds I 0 to 15 mph.
. Sunday ... Ciot!dy with a 70
percent chance of showers.
Hi ghs in the upper 50s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph .

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(UsPs 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

. Correction Polley

Published

Our matn concern tn all stories tS to be
accurate If you know of an e rror tn a

story, call the newsroomat
2t56.

every

afternoon,

Monday through Friday, 111 Court
Street~ Pomeroy, Ohio.

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Reporter: Brian Reed, E)(t. 14
Reporter: J.' Mtles Layton, Ext. t 3

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lmagtne that alongs ide
Matthew, Mark. Luke and
Jqhn . your New Testament
inQiudes a fifth Gospel where
~seve n Powers of Wrath"
interrogate the human soul.
accu sin g it of being a
"human-killer" and "spaceconqueror."
Imagi ne furthe r that the
soul responds. "I was s~ t
loose from a world and in a
type. from a type which is
above and from the chain or
forge tfulness in ttme" to
enter silent rest during "the
time of the due season of the
aeon."
And how about a Jesus
who says "matter gave birth
to a passion which has no
Image" and that "there is no
su~h thing as stn"')
There actually was a
Gospel that ~a id these things.
Although the words sound
like musings from sillne
1960s' 'New Age guru. they
appeared in an ancient te~ t
known as the "Gospel of
Maiy" The title referred to
the
disc iple
Mary
Magdalene. not to Jesus·
mother.
· The text, rediscovered in
1896 and published in 1941,
came from secret-knowledge
("Gnostic") sects that reject·
ed biblical Judai sm and
orthodox Christianity.
The quote s appear in "The
Gospel of Mary of Magdala:
Jesus and the First Woman
Apostle" by Karen L. King of
Harvard Divinity School.
The publisher is Polebridge
Press, allied with the left·
wing Jesus Seminar in which
King participates.
Since most of the original
''Mary" text vanished, King's
translations of the surviving
. fragments fill only five
pages.
.
Mary Magdalene is fashIOnable at the moment thanks
to the odd pseudo-historical

Fellowship
Apostolfc
Church or J esus Christ A pustoli,·
VanZandl ,mU Ward Rd , Pa~tor · J~m e~
Mtllcr, Sunda) School - 10m ,, m .
E\'cmng. • 7 JO p m

Rinr Vallry
1\pn ~ lohl Wm ~ lup Ct•nt~r.

I:PJ S Jrd
A~· c. Mtddlepnrt. Kt'\ln Kunkle. Paslnr
SundaY. II •• m WcJ ncstl:ly. 7 oo,J:m .
Ynuth Fn 7 JO p 111

fo.mnmnut&gt;l Apusloli c Tabernacle Inc.
Loop Hd ull Nc'.' Lllltll Rd RullanJ
Scn' ll C~

part-111ne workers, paid up to
$7 an hour.
Through a deal with the·
landlords, Venice Pizza can
stay put until the end of
January, But the lease was
not extended, Tensing said.
The Great~ Cincinnati
Foundation offered an emergency grant to cover debts
and pay for moving expenses, and a food bank said it
would store food and equipment.
There were other offers
too, including one from a
downtown businessman to
pay the difference between

the $400 rent the pizzeria had
been paying and the $600
rent being charged by the
new landlords.
Sister .Barbara Wheeler
refused to pay the higher rent
because sbe had signed a
long-term lease with the previous owner. That lease·
turned out to be invalid
because it had not been registered or renewed.
'
','This community provides
strength when people are
down," Tensing said. "We
feel like there is a lor of hope
and a lot of support behind
us."

Sun 10 00 ,, m . &amp; 7 J() p m ..

Thu n. 7 0~1

r m , !'astor Mar()

R lluuon

Assembly of God
Ubert)' Assembl y uf God
PO Hm . ..167. DuJJtng L lllc. Ma ~oo .
WVa. Past6 r : Nell Tc nnao1. Sunday
Scr v K·c~ - 10.00 d m and 7 p m

Baptist

...

Hope Ha ptio;t Churth (Southern t
~i?O Gro1111 SL. Mtdt.llepnn . Paswr · Rev
DHHd Br&gt;an. Sur11Jay ~choo 1 · IJ 311 a m
Wor, htp . 11 a 111 and t, p m . Wc\lnc~Ua}
Sen tee - 7 p m
Kuflllnd 1-'n'!it H11ptist l'hun'h
Sumh1 ~ SL hool . Y .10 am .. Wor~ hip 1045 a.m
Pomfroy t'lrs' Baptist ii
Hr o~· kcrt . Eas t Ma111 S1
Sunday Sc hool - 9 ..l0 a !Jl. , WPrshtp .
JO JOam

l' ••~ l n r Jn n

First Southern Baptist
..ti X72 r ontcrn y Ptl; c. 1-'a~t or I· L.tm.tr
O'B t y:ml. Sunday S&lt;; hoo l - g JO ot m.'.
Wnr~ h1 p - R 15 a rn .. 9·4S am &amp; 7 00 p.m.
Wcd m.'sd.ty Sci VIlCS- 7 00 p m
Fn'Sf Raptis! Church
Pao.; lyr Mark Morruw 6th .mU Piillllcl St ..
MtdOicp(l rt . Sunda &gt; School - 9:15am .
Wor~htp ·
J() 15 a m , 700 p m .
Wed nesday Sc n· t ~e- 7:!XJ p.m
R11t:ine First Bttptist
P.!~\u r Rick Rule, Su nday S~ hool · I.J 10
" m , Worsh tp · I U·4(1 d m ~ 7 I.IIJ p 111 •
Wed nesday Semccs. 7 00 p n t.
Silver RUn Ra pti§t
John Sw:m~&lt;m. Sunda y Sl·honl
111.1111 . Wor sl11p - llam . 7110 p m
.Wei.l ncsday Scrvp.:cs- 7·00 p n.1
p .t~ \ o r

MI. Umon"Uapti!o1
Pa~ tm · D a~1 d Wi i'C m,m, Suml:t y Sd mol9 ·&lt;l'i u m . En·ni ng - tt · W p m . .
Wcd nc~d ay So."rvKes - (, ~fl p m
Relhl ehern Rapli!OI Churrh
Grcm Bend Route 1:!4. R&lt;~nnc, OH.
Pa:; tor Dumcl Meci.•a. Su nd ay ScltO•\I
~ 10 .t m Sunday WM«htp · 10 ~(I am .
Wednesday Bthlc Stud ~ - 6 :\X) p.m

Pizzeria run by riuns wilf have plenty of help moving
CINCINNATI (AP) - A
pizzeria run by Roman
Catholi€ nuns will have plenty of help when it has to
move soon.
Sister Judy Te~sing said
Power Inspires Progress, a
nonprofit agency, received
nearly 80 phone calls from
people who hear~ that Venice
Pizza was being evicted and
told to move within 10 days.
Power Inspires Progress
was
founded
by
the
Dominican Sisters of Hope,
and provides jobs for hardto-employ people. Venice
Pizza had liS many as 12

•·M!

Old Bethel
Will Raptis! Church
2860 1 St Rt 7. M1dd leport . Su nday
SL hool - Ill d Ill Eve nmg - 7 no pIll .
·ntm sd;ty Sc1V1ees- 7 00

I

PROUD TO BEA PART
OF YOUR LIFE.
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Hlll!iide Baptist Churd1
St Rt 143 just off Rt 7. Pust tw Rc\
James R Ac ree Sr . S'imtla y Umll&lt;:d
Sc rv1ce. Wnrsh1 p - 10 ~ 0 a.m ... 0 p.m ,
Wed nesday Scr\o tccs -7 p.m.

1·1

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The Daily Sentinel

VIctory Baptist Independent

Subscribe today~ 992-2155
www.mydailysentinel.com

"'525 N 2nd St Mtddlepon . Pastlt r Jam es
E Keesee . Worship · IOa. m , 7 p.m ,
Wednesday Serv ices- 7 p.m.

:

Faith Baptist C hurch
Rail mad St . Ma~on . Sunday School • I 0
u m., Wors hip - I ( a .m , 6 p 111:
Wedn esday Services - 7 p m.
Forest Run Bapli!iiit

Pus tnr

Arius Hur1. Sun day School · 10

um , Wo r ~lup

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26 years fn local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6215
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man."

,Acts 24:/6
(7401 Y92-645 1

uardrell, Fence &amp;
sign

erect1on

.---..~

n~mn

"A Home Bank
Home People"

740·992·7713

Hills Self Storage

B_lessed are the pwe
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

illNDAY ' TIJI8DAY
'lioi.!l ' llllall
~~~-~·

740-949-2217
Sizes available 5x 10 1o 10 x 20

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

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

Herbalife Independent
'
Distributor

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

G

-

Jeanie H oWe ll

For a whole
new )lO u

v

www.herbsndlet.com

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
...,

190 N. Second Sr

(740) 992-3279

"

M.trk •McCom&lt;ts

Rolland Free Will Baptist
S.dern St , Pa ~ tOI J,tmn: Port ner, Sund.t y
Sd1o11l
I0 .1 m . Evcmn g - 7 p.m :
Wcdn rsd ,ty Sc r~ ICes - 7 p m.
Second Baptist'Church
)b~· cnswnod . WV, Sund.t) Sl·hno l Ill am- .
. Mornin g. worship 11 am Eve ning - 7 pm ,

Wcduc!ld.ty 7 p m

· Pttnir roy Church of 'C hrist
212 w. M. tlti' St . M1n. ~ tc r Amp.my
Suuda, Sd •oul . I) 1(1 a .m , Wunhir ·
I() 30 U ll1 , (1 p.m . WcdllCsdny Scrv ll'C\ ·
7 r 111
Pnm l'I'O)' Wcst'iide f'hul"l'h ltff' hri!!l
1)226 Chtldrcn ·~ Home RJ , Sunda y
Sl·hool - I 1 •• In . WLlfShfp lOa Ill . 6 rIll.
\\ cd n~stlo y Scn·•ce' - 7 p m
Middleport C hurch of Chris1
'ilh ;md l\1.un. p,, ..lor AI Harl ~on. Yuuth
Mim ~te r· Jo ~h U hn. Sunday School - I.J Jo
a m., Wor ~ hip · x· I 'i. 1o. lO &lt;1 m. 7 p m
Wedm.: s d~ y Scn'ltCs. 7 p m .
Krno t:hurch of C hrist
~on h•p • 9·JO a.m, Sunda y s~· h, ll tl HHO il.lll .. Pastor Jeffrl'Y Wo llacc. IM und
~ ~J Sunday
Bea r wallow Ridge Chu reb of C h ri.'il
Pa~lor. Brocc Terry. Su nday School -li .\0
a.m.
Wor ~h1p - I 0 \0 .t m . fi 10 p m
Wedn.:sday Servtces . 6 ]0 p m.

"So 1 strive always to
keep rn y conscie nce clear
before God and man." .

Acts 24:16
Davls-Oulckel Agency Inc.

·
AGENCIES Inc

312 6th St. Point Pleasant
675·1160
Vanety of lum 1ture. g l assw~;tre , craft s,
collection of bottles &amp; primitive·
~ Out side neu market April- Oct.
Layaways AvaJ fable

•

Bill Quickel

Tuppl'rs Plain Churth of Christ
ln slrumcnlal Worshtp Serv1ce · li H m ,
Co mmuntun · 10 .t 111 , S umlii~ Sdwol -.
10: I S 11.1n . Youth D O pm Sullda&gt;: B1 hl•·
Sludy Wl·dnc,day 7 pm
Bradbury Chul"l'h of Christ
Mm i ~ l c r. Tum Run yull, J95)R Brudh w y
Rnad , Middleport . Su nd ay Sch110l - 9 \1)
.t ill

Wm sh1p - 10 3U

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Rutland C hurch c,f Chri~t
Su nJay Sl'110o l - 9 10 a m . \Vor~h1p ami
Cmnmun tnn · I 0 ~ ~~ a m.. Boh J Werry•

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llrndfcu·d t:hurch of Christ
Comer ut St R t 124 &amp; Bradbury R\1 ,
M1 n1ster Dou g Sh.Lm hhn You th Mnmtet
B11l Amhcrger. Sumla) S..:huol - 9 ~0 .1 111.
Worsh1p ~ . UO ,1 m , JO · 30 am .. 7 00
p m . Wc .t nt' ~da y Scn• 1ee ~ · 7 lXI p m
Hkkory Hills Church of Christ
[ \' , m geli~ l f\.hke Mo.1rc. Sunrl .t)' s, h• "ll I) a.m , Wors hip · 10 . l m. 6 30 p.m.
WetlncS&lt;Iay .Ser v te6 · 7 p m
Re~d s vill~

Church of Christ
Pastor· l'lnlt p S w rm, Sund a) Sthnnl Y .111
am. Wnr~ht p Sc t vt~·c 10 . ~0 .t m , Att&lt;k
Slltdy, Wcd n ~sda). 6 10 p m
Dexter Church of Chri st
Pastnr · Rtl l E.o; hel rnan. Sun duv ~l huo l Q:JO
a t'n , No rm a n Will. ~ u pe n n tend ent.
Sunday wnrs h1p - 10 \0 a.m

Church of Christ
lnl er~ce tl o n 7 'an d 124 W. Evange list
Dcnms S ar~!]cnt , Su~d ay Btble Sli.ldJ 9:30 am , Wors hip: 10·30 a rn tmd 6. JO
p m , \\'ednesday U1hle Sludy- 7 p m

Christian Union
Hwrtford Church of Cbrilltln

Christian Union
Hartford, W Va, Pn ~tor D:~v 111 Grcn,
Su nday Sc hoo l · 9 30 a.m , Wor~ h111 •
10: 30 am, 7:00 p m . Wednesday
Setvkcs - 700pm

Trinity Chun:h
Sc,·ttnd &amp; Lynn. Pome roy. Pa stor· Rc'
J,matlt.m Nnhle WoNh1p 10 :'5 a 111
Sunday Sdlnol 9 l.'i am

Cen tral C luster
(Syracuse I. Pa~tor Bob R obm~on,
• Sunday St·hool • 9 ·45 a.m , Worsht p - II
a m.. Wednesduy Ser.· 1cc~ - 7 JO p m.·

Episcopal
and Hnly Euchansl II 00

~

Holiness
. Stew

ro mck

Rul land. Sunda}
Sunday SCrvl l'C- 7

M um

W(lr~ lnp- 10

S!r~t:t

Pa ~ t nr

l&gt;an " ill ~

a.m.

Evcmng Sen · tees- 6 10 p m . WedtlC,d.ty
Scrvtu.•s . 6 ~0 p m.
Churt'h of God of Propht'cy

7

Hea th ( Middleport)
Pa~10r

Rod 8rower, Sund~y School
a.m . Woro;h tp- 11 UOam

9 30

Co mmunity ol Chri§l
Por1 1a nd· Racme Rd.. Pa~ lor Jeri! Singer.
Sunday Sc hool · 9 30 am. Wo r~htp
\() ~ ~~ il m . Wcdne;.da) Scntt.:e' - 7 00
pm

Pearl ~ ha~l
Sunday School 9 a.m .• Wol'l'\ht p- 10 am .

Pint' Gron Bible Holin ess C hun·h
mile t~ll R1. .\2), PaMor Rev o·Dcll

Rock Springs
Pa"l" r Ketth Radel , Sunday School- 9 l.'i
&lt;1 m . W1)r~h 1p
10 am . YoUih
Fell nwsh•p Sunday· fl p m

.

]Ol ()- a tn .

IJ 10
7~0

Pa~IUr

am .

pm.

WcdncsUay Scr\'t(·e - 7·JO p m

Rutland
Su nda) Schunl · 5J ~0 u m . Wo rsh tp .
10 'l.U 11.111, Th ur~ay Se rVIl'CS- 7 p m

Wt-sltyan Bible Holiness C hurch
75 l'e&lt;.J rl St . Mtddlcpnn Pas hlr· Rev.
D••, ~&lt;I Gilhcn. Su m.J av Sdmul - 10 il m
W(lrshtp 10·45 p m , Sunda y E\c 7 (X)
p ITl . \Vednrs d&lt;Jy Sei'VICC . 7 II) rIll

Salem Ct&gt;nter
PnMor Willwm K Mar shall, Sunday
School · 1,0 l .'i am Wo rship - 9 l'i a m .
H1blc StUdy. Monday 7.00 pm
Snowville
Su nday Schl)ol · 10 a m. Wo rshtp ~ 9 .1 rn

Hy!tell Run Holin~~ Church
Paslor Rev Lan y Lemley; Sunday Sch&lt;lol
9:30 !L.m.. \\our~hi p · 10 45 a rn ., 7 p.m.•
I hu r~d:L ) llth ll: Study il nd Yout,!l - 7 p m

" m..

Carmel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Ba ~h .m Rds Racme:, Ohto,
P~ ~ t or · John Gilmore. Sund:ty School .
9 ~~~ u m Wors htp - 10 45 i.t m . Htblc
S tlid y Wed 7 00 p m

The Church of Jes us
Morning Star
Pa ~ t nr . Juhn Gilmore, Sunda} St hoo l · II
u.m . Wl)fSillp - I() u Ill.

nf l.atter·Uay Saints
St R1 Jtl(l . ..t -16-6 247 nr 446-74X6.
Sund .1y s. hnn l 10·20- 11 11 m . lkltef
S u~ t c t y i P nl.' ~lhot • \l
II 05- 12.00 noon,
Saer.tt tlent Sl'I \' I ~C lJ - 10. 15 .1111 .
llnnlo.'tli.tktng m.·.·ttrlg. 1~t Th urs - 7 r nt
C hri~t

Elast Letart
l'aslnr Sun day Schnnl - 10 am . Worsh tp
• 9 a m , Wednesday . 7 p.m

,

Lutheran

Racint'
Pastor Pete ShaO'cr, Sunday Sdtuol - 10
am, Wo1 ship
I I am. Wednesday 7
p In

St. John Luthcnm Church
Pmc Gro H'. W1•r~h1 p - 1):{)() am.:s~nd:ty
Sdll) o] · Ill 0 0 a m. Pa ~ tor Jamc ~ P
H1;~dy

Conhillc United Methodist Parish
P.L ~tut IIde n Kim ~. Coolville Chtmh,
M:un &amp; Filt h S t . Su nd ay S~.;honl - ICi
am . Wnrsht p - 4 . 1m . Tue sday Sc rVt(CS ·
7 pIll

Our Savtour l.ulhi'ran Churrh
W~ llnu t lllld H l)llr} St ~. R:n cnsV.\lttd,
W va' . Pa~tur Duotd Russell. S und:~ y
S dt t~o l - 10 00 .t m . Wur,.htp - II .1m
St. I'Hull.ulheran Church
Comer Syl·:un mc &amp; St:l un J St.. Pumc 1oy,
Sunday Schoo l - 9 4.'i u m . Wnr.;htp-- 11
&lt;1 m Pa~ l &lt;)r James P Br.td y

United Methodist
Grahwm United Methodist
Worship 9: W a m ()SL &amp; 2nd Sun), ,
7 l U p m t.\rd &amp; 4th Sun). Wedne sday
Scrvtcc · 7 30 p.m.
MI . Olive United Methodist
O f1 124 beh ln'-'t,Wtlkesv1lle, Pastor Re\'.
Ral ph S pire .~. Sunday Schon l -· 9 30 am .
Wo u h1p . 10 30 ,, 111 . 7 p m , lhursday
Servil:es - 7 p m

Chester
Pas1nr . J.me Reat llc, Worsh1p - 9 ot m .
Sund uy Sc htt11 l • 10 am , Th 4,rs•lay
Sc1vtccs · 7 p 111
Joppa
B1;h R:mJ o1p h. Wor sh tp - 9 ~()

Su nd ,• ~ ~dtonl

· HI 10 .t m

Long Bottom
Sund.ty Sdmo l - 9 .10 a.m . Wo1 sh•p ·
10:.\0a.m
Rl't'dsvillr
Wn r ~ h1 p
9 30 .t.m., SunJil y Schuol ·
IO.JO a 111 .. Ftrs! Sundny of Mnntll 7:00

Tuppers l'buns St. P11ul

Bethel Wor~lip Ct&gt; nter
School.. Pasto r Rob B&lt;~rto c l.
A•~ I S ia n l l'a s1rw Ka ren Da'• ~~ Sund.t~
Worshrp Ill am. En: mng Wor~ h1p 6 pm,
Youth group 6 p'm. WedneSday : Po wer m
Prayer , and Bthle Study· 7 pm
Ash Street Church
A ~ h St . Mi ddleport- Sunday School · 9 m
am .. Mmn111g W01 ~ lup - 10 10 a 111 &amp; 7
pm, Wei.l nc sda~ Semcc 7 (K) p m . Yooth
Scn·rcc- 7 1)0 p m
AgaPf lif~ Ce nt~r
·'Fuii -C!nspcl Chu rch · Pastor s Jnh n &amp;
Pnuy Wnde {l{B Second ~w MaSon 7iJ50 J7 Servtce time Su n d:~y 10 JO am .

Fai th hllowship Crusadt• for Christ
Re\ Fr,mldm Ot ckco ~ St:rHCt'
Fnduy. 7 p.111
P &lt;t~ lor

Uihle Church
Pomcnw Ptli e. ('u Rd . Paswr R" v
Bl ack\\l)ixi. Sundu ~ Sdtolll · l) ~II .1m.
Wu r~ lu p
10 · ~0
a 111
7 ~~~
p 111.
WedncMia} Ser.·1n 7.1U pIll
Sth er.i,ille C~ mmunil~ Apostolic
C hurch
Pa~ l or Wayne R Je\Hl l. Sunda~ Sen llC
6·00 p m Thursd:ry O.IMJ p l1l

Rejoicl n wLife Chun·h
~00

N 2nd -\1 e. 1.. 11Jdlcport

7·pm

Pu,lor

L&lt;Jwren-=c Fml·man. W1 •rsh1p- I0 00 ,un
Weduesduv Sel\tl~ ' - 7 ]'I Ill

C h e~ \ e r

Wf dn~ ~uay

&lt;

l'ahar~1

Clifllln fabcrn~cle Church
C hll nn, W Vll Sund.t ) S.-h.•ol · 10 ·• Ill
Wu r~ ln p · 7 p 111, \\'eJ n t:~da ~ s,·rvtce · 7

pm
New Urt&lt; \ ktOr~· t:e m~r
.HD Gcol)!c~ Creek Rr•,nl Gttl li l'll • h~. OH
PJ ~ Iu r Bill Sta1eo . SunJ.1~ Sc 1 •1lt:~ - 10
a m &amp; 7 fllll
\\\•ducMlav
7 J1 m &amp;
Youlh 7 ]'I m
Full Gospel Church or the Ltving
Savinr
Rt '1.~8 . Armquu ~ . Pus lnr Jc s!&gt;C Mom s,
" Sen 1ces Sttlu rday 2 00 p m

Abundant Grtu•c R.F. I.
IJ23 S Thtrd Sl Middleporl . Pas.tor fcresa
Davts , Su nd :~y SC T\'ICC, 10 :1 m ,
Wedne:.day SCI'VICC / p m

S1tlem Cn mmunlt~· C hurch
Licv mg l{ nad \h••t Cnlumbt.l. W Va .
PaMor. ClyJc Ferre ll. Sunda } SL hool 9 30

Sunf .Y ''''en mg \t: r\ 1cc 6 pm
Wednc!Wa} :o-&lt;:T\ Il l' 7 pm

Hill.

Bethany
P.1~1u 1 Jnhn Gil more. Su nday Schoot - 10
Wo.rship - 9 a.m , Wedncsd&lt;~y
Sen·tecs- II) n m

L11un-l Clirr Frt.-e Methodi st Church
Rev Lc ~ Str.tndl &lt;l nd Myr,l L Slrandl,
Suit day Sd'toOI ~ I) .lll a m . Worship ·
10 ~~~ ,, m and fi p m .Wed nesd ay Scrvke
- 700p m

l\1ei g§ Cooreralivf' Parish

fd l ow~h tp )

Meetmg m the &lt;•ld Amct~e a n lc!J:IOII Hall
South Fllurth A\enuc , MtJd leport
Pa~to r Chn ~ Stewart lUIKl am Sund ay
Other m ce tm g~ m ho me ~

Pomeroy
Rod Brower. Worship · 9 30 a .m ,
Sunday Schckll - 10 ~5 am

0 J Wh11c Rd off St Rt.t IllO, P.tslllr r J
Ill a 111 .
C hapman. S unday S.,; honl
Wor~lll f! II a .m, Wcdnc!'&lt;,jay Sc1vk cs -

Oasis Chrh;ti11n •'cllo"!)hip
(Nun-dcnuminatumal

Rn!!e of Sh11ron Holmes~ C hurc-h
Le fldm,g Cree~ RU . Ru tland, Pu ~ t\.)f Rev
D l'\l. e~ Kmg . Sunduy schrKtl - 9:30 am .
Sund&lt;~ y wnrshtp · 7' p m , Wedocsd.l)'
pra ye r lll!!Cllng- 7 p.m

ll tll

1°irst C hul'&lt;'h of God
Apple .md Seumd Sis. 1-'aslnr Hev D.tvtd
Ru ~se ll , Sundoy School am! Wt•r slnp, 10

Wor~h 1p

Minersville
Paslnr Bnh Roh1n so n. Sunday Sc hool - \J
a.m.. Worshtp - 10 a.m

Po.~stnt
S~ rae use

• Royal l»ak RHOrt Chapel
flatwvod~ Ro.1~. PaMur Gle nn Ruwc,
Sunday wursh1p. II urn .. Child ren ~
Sunday Sehou l II 30 a m . Wcdno: sd a~
Bthlc ~tudy 7 rm

•·orest Run
Sunda y School · 10
- 9 a .m

C alvary Pil grim Chaptl
HarrN)Il\ tlk Road
Pu~ lor
('llarlc~
Mr.:Ken11c , ~ un day Schtxfl '9:30 am ,
Wor~htp • · II am, 7 00 p.m , Wcdnesda)
Scrv1.,;e · 7 00 p 111

Uca ll•e . S un d.ty Sehon l - q 10 a m .
Worship - II a 111 , fdO p 111

pm

Other Cbur&amp;;hes ,

R.}h tn ~on ,

a.m.,

Mt. Moriah Church of God
Mtle Hill Rd .• Run nc. Past or James
S;lllc1f1ekl Sun Jay Sd1no l - 9 45 am .
Evemng 6 p.m. Wednesd&lt;Jy Scm cc ~ . 7

Rutland C hun:h of God
Pastor Ron He .llh Sundny Wnr shtp - fn
,1m , 6 p ln ., Wednesday Set vi.:es - 7

Hnh

Holiness Church
J IO.'i7 Stutc R11U1c J 25 . Langs\'ll c. Pastor
G.try J a\~'nn . Sundo•y Slhoo l - 9 JO am ,
SunU:1y \O.nr~ hl p - 10.\0 a m &amp; 7 p m.,
Wcdn esd.Jy pr!\ycr SCf \ICC - 7 rIll

Wur ~h t p

•"airvltw Bible l:hu rth
l£tan . W Va Rt 1. Pa&amp;t11r Bnan l\·1a:..
Su nday S~ h uul · Y ?tO am. Wun.h•p 7 00
p m Wedu~ sJa&gt; Hthle Stud; 7 Oil p m

00 am .

pIll

Manley. Surlllfly St.hul)l

Portland First Chu rrh of the Nazarene
W1lham Juslt' Sunday S&lt;·hn&lt;tl •
10.00 a m . Mommg Worsh1p - 10 4.'i a m...
Sunday Scr.1cc - 6·30 p.m.
l'a ~ lnr

Ent~rprlse

Commu nlly Church
Pu~tor-

Rudand Churth of th~t Nazarent'
Sunllay School . I) ~0 a m . ""orsh•p •
10 30 am. 6 30 p m , Wednesdo! y
ServK·cs · 7 p m

Whilt&gt; 's Chapd We5lt-yan
Coolv1llt' Road . P&lt;rstor Re1 Phlih p
Hrdenqur SwKIB) Sl·honl - 'J 30 u m
Wllrsh•p - 10 JO a.m . WedneMiu) Sa\ tee
-7 pm

P!stur A rlaml K tng . SUnday Sc hool ·
10.10 a.m... Wor~ lu p • 9 30 a m ,~1hle
Study W~ d. 7 30
F1a1woods
Pa~10 r Kenh Rade r. Sunday Sch ool
10
.1111. Wor-;htp - 11 am

m

North e-ast Ciustcr, /\ ((red , P:1 ~10r: Jane

prn

7pm

A ~h ury

G ract Episcopa l Churrh
126 L Mum St.. 1-'lunemy. Sunday Sch,)(ll

Church of God

Brlh~tl C hunoh
Rd., 468C, Su nday School · 9
a m Wur~ h1p - I 0 a m.. Wcdnesd:ty
Se rv ice ~- 10 am
Tuw n ~h 1p

Hockingport Church
Grand Strecl, Sunday Schoo l · 9 30 a Ill
Worsh1p - 10.30 a m., Pastor Phillip Dell

.

Torch Church
Cn. Rd. 61. Sunday School · 9·30 am,
Wo r~h • p · 10 ~On m

Nazarene
Middleport C hurch of the Nazarene
Pastllr: Allen M1d cup . Sunday School ·
9 .~ ) a . n t , \Vnr~ h i r - JO JOa m.. 6 30pm ,
Wcdnc~duy Se r \' lces - 7 p.m.. Pas tor·
t\lle n Mtlk:ap

Rceds\ille Fellowship
Church ul the N.11:arcne. 1-'a~ l or Teresi!
W.ild Cl' k, Sunda y Sc hu ul - 9 JO am .
W11uh tp · 10:4.5 am .. 7 p.m. We d nc~duy
S~ rV I CCS - 7 Jl .lll
Syracust' Church orthe Nnzllrt'nt'
l'as tnr Mtkc A dkm ~. Sunday S~.: h nol · 9 JO
am , Wnr!!h lp
10 · ~0 :~ m , 6 pm .
WedncsJ.1y Servke'i - 7 p m

" Church of the Nuartne
l'omeroy
P:tstm Jan Lavender. Su nd11y S~,:hnn l fl:?tO am .. Wnr~ h• p - 10 W a m and 0
pIll . Wcllll c,llay SCf\'l CCS- 7 p m
C h e~ ler Church of tht' Nazarene
P:1 s1or Rev l le•hert Grate, Sund.1y School
. 9:.'ll ot m . Wmship · 11 ,, m . 6 p m .

l&lt;~aith Full GO§Pf'l Chunoh
Long Hu llum P~s h1 r· Steve Reed. Sun day
S~.:hou l • q ?tO ,, 111 . Wursltt p - 9 30 am
and 7 p m . Wednesday 7 p m.. Fnd&lt;J y fdlov.sh tp SC T\' I~o: e 7 pIll

Hurrisonville Community Church
Th eron D ~rha m . Sunda &gt; - I) 1tl
Ill .md 7 r Ill . Wedn es~·· Y ? p rn

Pa~lo r

~

Middk-port Cummunil) Church
575 Pe&lt;J rl St . Middleport , Past or. Sam
Ande rson, Sunlla y Sd 1oo l 10 am .
Evc mng · 7Jll p m . Wednesday Ser''ICe7 JO p.m
l&lt;'aith Vulley Tabt'rnacle C hurch
Hatle y Ru n ~nad , Pu ;;lur Hev 1-'tn mell
R"w so n . Sun day

Eve 11 tng
Thu rsda:. Scrvkc · 7 p m

Werlne~da} 7

S) rucust" Missinn
h p m.

Huzel Community l'hurch
Off R1 12..1. P.rsw r Edsel Hart, Sunday
Scht1ol · 'l : ~O a m.. Wur ~ hlp - 10 30 Elm.
7'0pm

Restoration C hri~ tian Fel\o"'ship
llnopn Road. Ath Cn'. P.tstor
l.nnme C'Pat~. Su nd:ty Wi1rs hjp 10 (\() :~m .

WcdnesJa~

i pm

L11n~s' 11\e Christian Church
Full Cin; pc t Pa .; lnr Roher1 M u s~cr.
SUJ ill·•~ Sdlilul Q 'l.() am, . Wo1 ~ lu p I0 10
am
7 00 pm. WednesJ,ty' Scn·tcc 7 00

J'l lll

Pentecostal
Penteeo~tal As~cmbly

St Rt \24, Ran nc. Pa~\\lr W1lham
Hohack. Sundav School . HI am .
Fvc nmg- 7 p m Wcdlll'\ du&gt; Sen·1ecs - 7
pm

Presbyterian
Svracnst" First United Presb~terbm
P tt~ h•r Roht: r·t Crow. \\'or~h tp - II ·• m
I

Httrrisonvillt'
P 01~tu r

Dyes,ill e Community Chql"l'h
School - 9 30 am .. Wo1sht p IO·?ton.m . 7 p m

fill

lJ l M

7 p m.

1411 Bndgcm:m Sl , Sy raL· use, Su nd ay

Sehnnl · Ill .1111 , hctun g
Well nc sday Se t VILe · 7 p m.

Hobson Chri~ tiun t'ellow§hip Churth
Hcr"l hd \\'lute. Sundu) School·
10 .1m. Sunr.la\ Church scrv K·e - 6 30 pnl' "~

P..t~h•r

P~h~ lerian

C hurch

Ruh1:rt C nm . Wl•t ~ht p - 9 am

Su nd ~y

Morse Chapel Church
Su nday ~ chool · 10 a rn .. Worsh tp - I I
a m . Wednesday Scn·tce • 7 p m
Faith Gospel Ctmrch
Lung Sottum, Sunduy St huol - 9 30 &lt;:1.111,
Wo rship · 10 : 4 ~ am .. 7·]0 p.m..
Wednesday 7 ID p 111
Mt. Olive Community Church
Pasto r Lawrence Hush. Sunda) Schonl 9JO a.m., Eveni ng - 6:30 p 111 •• WeJncday
Ser. 1ce • 7 p m

Full Gospel LiKhthous~
Htland Road. Pome roy Pustor· Ro)'
Hunter. Sun day School - 10 am . E \·enmg
1 JO p.m . Tue sda ~· &amp; Thursday - 1 .&lt;0
pm
.\104~

South Bethel Communi!)' Church
Sth·er Rtdgc · Pl~ tm Lmd,1 D.unewnnrl
SunJuy Sd1uul . 9 .1111 , Wo 1~htp Set\ t ~c
10 u.m
l'arlt&gt;lon lnludenuminationull'hurrh
Kmg~b ur,y 'Ro.!d, P.i~ h)f Rohert V,II K&gt;'.
Sunday Schoo l - Y lO a m \\ourshtp
Service IO.J O ~ m , E'enmg Se tvll l. h
p.m.
Freedom Gospel Mi.s.'l mn
Bald Knob, un Cn Rd . ?t I. P ~st l&gt;l Rel
Roger WtllfOI\I . Sunda&gt; Schoo l 9· ~(l a rn
Wo rsh tp- 7 p m

,\ liddleport Pm:b)' terian
Pastnr R(lbcr Cro\\ .. Wor,h tp - 10 am

Seventh-Day Ad\entist
Scllenth·Oa) 4.du·nlist
Mulberr&gt; Ht.o; Rd. Pumcro), P. tstor Roy
Ltwmsky. ·s,.t urday Scr\ 1Cc., S.1hbath '
School ·

~

p m . Wursh1p . J p m

United Brethren
1\11. llermon United IJrcthren
in Chri§t Church
Tuas C•lmmu nu y JM II \\
l'a st•W Pet er Manmdal e. Sun y Schoo l ·
9 JO a.m . \\-'o rsh1p - 10 10 a 111 . 7 00
p.m., Wc dn ~sda} Sen' tl C' 7.00 p m •
Youlh group lliCc:II Jt g :!_ntl &amp; 4th .Sundav" :
7 p.m.
Eden Unilrd Hrethren in Chris!
Sta le Rout e 124. R l·ed ~ \t lk . Sunll , t~
Sch11ol I I 11 . 111 . Spnduy WM' hi p W 00
,\ Ill &amp; 7 00 pIll Wcd ii L''&lt;I.I} s.·nr c··· .
7 00 r m.• Wed nesday ,,,u lh Sc1111.L
7 OOp

m

rm

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

...

1't•btt j'utttral ~omt
IM._IICIIIIIIII.•Eii \M

._L,_._
...........
,! .....
Mllll-1111

........

If ye abide ill Me, a11d My Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES

john 15:7

992-6677

214 E. Main

992-5130
Pomeroy

Blessed are the pure
';u,.e~tat ~tJ.IHe
in heart; for thty
174 Layne Street
shall see God.
New Haven , wV 25265
H.Anderson
Matthew 5:8
Fax: 304·882·8210

•

.'

- 7~ 1Jpm

Latter-Day Saints

M1n 1 ~ tn

..
··r - -

~.m

Fullltne of
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall
Ploduc1s + ask what ye will, a11d it shall
Financial
be done unto you.
Services

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
, 9 Fifth Street
Coolville, .Ohio
740-667-3110

a.m., Wol'l'\hl p - 10 a.m., Tuesday Ser\'ices

Congregational

I I~

;tion C hu'nh of C hrisl
Pomcmy H .t rn ~n n qllc Rd IRI 14Jt.
P;a"'\or Hngcr W,L t~u n . Sunday Slho ,l l ·
9 JO am . W, tr'ihl p ~ 10 311 ~ . m, 7.00
[1.111 • Wc~ nc~day Scrvtel·s - 7 p m

Serv~t:e~ -

Pa~h~~~ Jane Br-aille. Sunday Sch1&gt;0l - 9

Murm

Catholic
Sacred Hearl Catholic Ch11,rc:h
161 MUI\1crr v Ave . Pumeroy, \JY2-.'il!98
P.Lstor Rev Waller E HeLm , Sat. Cnn
4.45 -5. l5 p.m , Ma ~"' · 5 ~ 0 p m Sun

Carolina Antique
&amp; Craft Mall

Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

llll.f

Pa~ lnr

Local source for trophies,
. . o(aoues + shirts and more

~­
-~

Church of Christ
Hemlock Grovr C hri~tian C huiTh
Mm1~1 l·r L•rry Brm&gt;, n. Wmshtp · 9 )( I
a.m.
Sun day School · IU ~~~a m . llt hk Slud} ·
7 p.m

Middleport, OH

7 40·992·61 28

507 Mulberry Heights

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

6am ·8pm

Home Coobd MeidJ &amp; Daily Specials
Open 7 ~ays a week

P.O. Box 683
Pomaro Ohio 45769·0683

33334 Hysell Run Rd.
. Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-7996

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Sund&lt;t y S ~.:h nnl · 9 .~ 0 ,t 111 • Wor~ h•p ·
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Racine, OH

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29670 Bashan Rd.
ow often the chllllepges o( life teach us bow strong we
really are. Of course, winter with its unique challenges is
merely symbolic of surviYing the tough times. A
tionship ended, financiallosses...any difficulty we
overcome increases our confidence in ourselves.
Yet, in order to be truly strong i~ every situation, we must
have an equally strong faith in our Heavenly Father. Our Lord
proclaimed, "if you have faith and never doubt ..:if you say to
this mountain, 'Be taken up and cast into the sea,' it will be
done. And whatever you ask in prayer, you will receive, if you
have faith." (Matthew 21:21·22)
,
Do you want to feel invincible? Worship God this week
and Jearn of His love for you. The more you come to know
Him, the more confident you will be. With God beside you, it
will be .s ummer all year around.

9 10 am . Worship · 10·4.'\

"Let your light so shine before
men. th at they may see your
good works and glorify your
Father in heaven."
Matthew 5:16

209 Third
Racine, OH

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Wedne$y
Cu rt - ~ 4.'i 9 I~ u 1.1,.. Sun . Ma.,., · Y .lH
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The Dall

WORSHIP GOD TH·IS .WEEK

2004

"Mary" originated iri the late
second century as a Gnostic
attack on the earlier New
Te stament. King mention s
that consensus only in her
final pages.
What is Kin g's argume nt
for leaping backward a century and putting "Mary" in the
tinie the New Testament was
written (as Pagels attempts
. with ''Thomas")? King says
the "M ary" topics "fit best in
an early second centu ry context," things like women's
role s and the meaning of
Jesus' life and teac hings. But
those issues were equally
pertinent a century later.
Whatever agenda "Mary"
originally promoted , it obviously meets 21st-century
desires for a feminist and
"spiritual" faith. unshackled
from traditional churches and
doctrines.
The Gnostic Magdalene
wa s the queen of apostles
who supposedly preserved
Jesus' secret revelations and
told the male apostles what 's
what. Poor befuddled St.
Peter asks , did Jesus "speak
with· a woman in private
without our knowing about
"The Virgin and Child With the Infant St. John, " attributed to it" and did he "choose her
the Italian pa1nter Botticelli in the late 15th century. (AP Photo) over us?"
In the "Mary" version of
thriller "The Da Vinci Code." it late and fraudulent.
reality, Jesu s and his followIt promotes the ludicrous
Dating is crucial for judg· ers despised material reality
rumor - developed many ing authenticity. King 's first and other aspects of their
centuries after Jesus' lifetime parag raph states flatly. that Jewish heritage, sought inner
that
he
married "Mary" was written "early in
Magdalene and had children the second century" but she enlightenment without exterwho migrated to France. waits unti I Page 183 to nal rules, and preached the
future dissolution of matter,
Newsweek ran a cover story explore the debate.
the
"modeled form" of creal·
Facts: Most of the "Mary"
on the Magdalene fad with
ed
beings,
the' soul's ascendthe misleading headline "The material that survived is
Bible's Lost Stories."
found in a partial manuscript •ing powers and the extermi ·
Gnosticism is also hot. due in Egypt's Coptic language. lnation of desire.
The "Mary" circle saw no
to "Beyond Belief," a book written in the fifth century.
saving
va'lue in Jesus' death
about the "Gospel of We al so have two fragments
on
the
cross
or his bodily resThomas" by King's Princeton in Greek from the early third"
urrection from the gra~e. and
soulmate Elaine Pagels.
century.
Like
Pagels
with
Though King doesn't say considered early church lead"Thomas," Kmg would like so, those fragments came a ers illegitimate.
In other words, the Gospel
to believe that "Mary" was a century later. than tlie earliest
full competitor alongside the surviving fragment from the according to "Mary" claimed
New Testament Gospels, New Testament Gospel s. the New Testament was a big
though church leaders judged Most scholars conclude that lie .

BY RICHARD N. OSTLING

KY

Friday, January 2,

Harvard professor join~ the buzz about Mary Magdalene

Ohio weather·

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FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

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Frida

ROCKSPRINGS
Crow's Family Restaurant
REHABILITATION CENTER
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
The care you deserve, close lfJ home
Chicken "
o
36759 Rocksprings Rd .
W. Main St., Pomeroy
Pomeroy, OH 45769
992-5432
740-992-6606

SWISHER &amp;
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
Goa and man."

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Acts 24:16

Ler your /ig/11 so shine b~fore
men, thatt!tey.rnay see yortr
good works and glorify yo11r
Far!rer in hem·err."
M a ll hell' 5. 16

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Me1gs County's Oldest Flonst

352 East Mai n
Pomeroy, Oh
"U!t \J~ und yorn

t ho~g.hl~ wllh ~Pilei~ I a~re"

740-992-2644 740-992·6298

MY erace is sufficient
for thee·: for mY
strenath is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp; Supply
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
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Diane K. Hill .
Controller-Interim Publish~r

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Charlene Hoeflich.
General Manager-News Editor

STATE
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PageA4.

OPINION

'lbe Daily Sentinel

VIEW

G~ilty. b~t

insane' plea·
l'he Cincinnati Enquirer. Dec. 22:
Three Butler County lawmakers introduced a bill Thursday
to add a "guilly bUI insane" plea to Ohio's justice system,
It would replace the "not gui lty by reason pf insanity" plea
that has made it possible for some who commit heinou s
~rimes ·IO be released after just a few years' treatment in a
mental institution.
.: Current law includes no prison time. and orders the judge to
place the defendant in the "least restrictive setting" for treatment. If the defense can convince a jury that a defendant commilled a crime while insane, he is commiued to a hospital ,
then released when considered "cured."
: Under the proposal by Rep. Greg Jolivette," R-H11millon, a
~efendant convicted as "guilty but insane" would receive
mental treatment, followed by prison time .
: Some argue it is unfair to confine and · treat a person who,
once cured, is then imprisoned for an act the Jaw has ruled he
was not responsible for.
That might be addressed if the n€W Jaw stipulates that the
total of treatment and prison time will be roughly equal to
what a straight.prison term would be for a "guilty" verdict and if it includes closer supervision after release.
Such a solution could satisfy both the community's sense of ·
justice and the defelldant 's right to fairness . Lawmaliers
should waste n,o time crafting ·a workable "guilty but insane"
~~.

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The paily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, January 2, 2004
•

Friday,' January 2, 2004

Four philosophies for _2004

If you're like most people,
you will "take life as it
comes" in 2004, and you
probably won't need any philosophy of life to see you
through the year.
If, however, you want to
have 'a 'hand in shaping what
the new year brings, a philosi\J)hy of life might help. Here
are four to choose from:
lSI NEWBORN'S PHI LOSOPHY -- The late lsi.
Newborn was a handicapper
of horses for a newspaper.
But hi s attitude toward betting on horses stamped him
as a philosopher as well .
When we were collea~ues
in Th~ Cleveland ~ress sports
department years ago, I
noticed Newborn never
seemed dejected when a
horse he had bet on lost a
race -- unlike most other peo•,Jlle. I asked him what system
he used to beat the horse
player's blues.
"Simple," he said. "I do my
best to pick the winner but
when I pay my two bucks at
the window, I consider my
money gone -- just as I would
if I had spent it on a box of
cigars or for getting my car
washed. I never expect to see
it again."
"Of course," Newborn
added quickly. "I never tear
up my ticket. My horse just
· might surprise me and win'"
The unhappiness of many
people is due to the fact that
they feel life · hasn't repaid
them for the good they have
done. They feel cheated.
They might do well to
adopt the New horn .phi Joso-

. .t

Obituaries

•

Garfield Jett .

life because the re is a differ- deveiQPing optimism as a
ence "between being happy philosophy of life.
and merely keeping disapThis is the Optimists'
pointment from the door. Creed: Promise yourself: ·
We'll just leave it as the
--To be so strong that nothSaturday Night Philosophy.
ing can di sturb your piece of
George
CLERGYMAN
NOR- mind.
Plagenz
MAN VINCENT PEALE'S
-- To talk health, ltappiness
PHILOSOPHY -· "Expect and prosr.erity to every perthe best," Peale advised, "and . son you meet.
this will tend, like a magnet,
-- To ,nake all your friends
phy: "Do your best and to draw the best to you."
feel there is something
This philosophy seems to worthwhile in them.
expect nothing in return. But
don't tear up the ticket you have worke!l for some people . --·To look at the sunny &amp;ide
hold on life's race." That -.is, but not for others, In the case of everything and make your ·
don't become cynical. There of the latter, although they optimi sm come true . ·
may be surprises in store for confidently expected the
-- To think only the bes't, to
you.
,
. besi, they didn't gei it. Thus work only for the best, to '
On a Christmas card I they became di sillusioned. expect only the best.
received was this message Nothing is worse than that.
-- To be just as enthusiastic
that reminded me of my old Even Nancy is beheroff with abour the success of-others as
friend: ''To believe in God is her · · Saturday
Night you are about your own.
to know that all the rules will Philosophy than the person
--To forget th6 mistakes of
be fair and there will be won- whose illusions have been the past and press on to the
derful surprises."
shattered.
greater achievements of the .
NANCY'S PHILOSOPHY
The people who are sue- · future.
.
-- Nancy is a 25,year-old cessful with Peale's philoso--To wear a cheerful counfriend of mine whose philos- phy re ali ze that expecting the tenance at all times and giv~
ophy is, "Expect the worst." best is something like a smile to every living crea~he says it shields ·her from expecting a baby. The expec- ture you meet.
disappointment.
tant mother doesn't have a
--To give so much time to :
For example, she tells her- baby simply by expecting it . the improvement of yourself
self every Saturday night, She does someth_ing about that you have no time to crit"Nobody will call me to go having a baby and tljen she icize others.
out." If nobody does, she is becomes an expectant moth--To be too large for worry,
not disappointed like the girl er.
too noble for anger, too
who sits by the phone all
Expecting the 'best would strong for fear and too happy
evening waiting. expectantly be a good philosophy. there- to permit . the presence of
-- but m vam --tor the phone fore, if it combines "doing" trouble.
to ring.
with having an optimistic
In a city where I once lived Many people have Nancy's attitude on.J.ife.
there was an Optimists Clul5
philosophy. They set their
OPTIMISTS CLUB PHI- that had a luncheon-meeting
hopes and goals ~o low that LOSOPHY -- The objectives once a month. Oddly enough,
they never have to risk the of the Optimi sts Club include there wasn't a single clergychance that these hopes and encouragement of youth. man in its membership.
inspiring respect for the Jaw.
In any case, may these four
goals will tie disappointed.
This, however, is really not promoting an active interest philosophies help guide you
a satisfactory philosophy of in . good government and through your new year.

•

· WAKEFIELD -Garfield
Jett, 61 , Wakefield, formerly
.of Pomeroy, passed away at
the Southern Ohio Medical
Center in Portsmouth on
Dec. 30. 2003. ·
He was born on April, 15,
1942, in Long Bottom, son
Of\ the late Whirley and
Beulah Rowh Jett.
. In addition to his brothers,
h~ was preceded in ~eath by
ht s brothers; Collitte• Jeft,
and an infant brother, and
twsv half-brothers, Junior Lee
.Hunt and Willard Jett.
Surviving are his brothers:
Harold Jett of Sweetland,
W.Va ., Jennings (Carol) Jett
of
Minersville, Burton
(Helen) Jett of Avon Lake,
and Don (Geraldine) Jett of
Morri stow n; three half brothe)'s: Bill (Linda) Jell of
Akron, Marvin (Brenda) Jett
of Adairville, Ga., and Lloyd
(Pam) Jett of Amma, W.Va.;
four half sisters: Anna
(Clarence)
Bletner
of
Jacksonville . N.C., Sue
(Charles)
Sheets
of
Hurricane , W.Va., Connie
Allen of Poe a, W.Va., and
Brenda (Randy) McDaniel of
Patriot; and special friends:
Marybelle and Dale Warner
and Jean and Rollin Durst,
all of Pomeroy.
• Memorial service will be
held at II a.m. on Monday,
Jan. 5, 2004 at Good
Shepherd
Ma'nor
in
Wakefield.
Local arrangements are
under the direction of Fisher
Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Friends may send online
condolences at www.fisher. fimeralhomes.com.

Community Calendar
Charles E.
Bowles
Charles E. Bowles, 62,
Greenfield, .formerly of
Rutland,
passed
away
Monday, Dec. 29, 2003, at
the Veterans Administration
Center
m
Medical
Chillicothe.
He was bom .Dec. 5, 1941
in Rutland, son of the late
Kenner and Jeanie Smith
Bowles. He was a veteran of
the U.S. Navy.
Surviving are an aunt,
Mary Smith of Columbus,
and several cousins.
Besides his parents, he was
also preceded in death by a
brother, Thomas Bowles, and
a sister, Martha Bowles.
Services will be held at I
p.m. on Saturday, Jan·. 3,
2004. at Birchfield Funeral
Home in Rutland with Pastor
Ron Tiller officiating. Burial
will follow at Temple
Cemetery io Albany.
Friends may call -an hour
prior to the service at the
funeral home.

served in the U.S . Army and
· was a member of the United
I
Methodi st Church in New
Friday, Jan. 2
Haven, W.Va.
POMEROY
Weekly
In addition to hi s parents,
meeting
of
Meigs.
County
he is survived by a son,
Commissioners,
II
a.m.
Arthur William Wiley, of
Georgia; a sister Jennifer
(Nick) Romeo, Alliance;
Saturday, Jan. 3
niece and nephew: Marianna ·. CHE~TER
- Chester
and Phillip Romeo, Allianc'!:~· Townsh1p Board of Trustees
and an uncle: David (Ruth • Will . hold their year-end
Ann) Wiley,..ci!M.Jeston, S.C. ~eeu~g at 9 a .m. on
He was preceded in death Saturday t.he .. ~hes:er Town
by his maternal grandpar- Hall. Orgamzaliondl meetents, David .and -- Eleanor mg Will follow.
Miller, and his paternal
Monday, Jan. 5
- grandparent ~.
Dick and
SYRACUSE
Sutton
Thelma Wiley.
Township
Trustees
will
hQid
Memorial services will be- their organizational meeting
held at 3:30 p.m. Saturday, for 2004 at 7:30 p.m. on
Jan. 3, 2004, at Grace Jan.
5 at . Syracuse Village
Church
. rn Hall.
Episcopal
Pomeroy with the Rev. Fr.
Walter Hein:zt. officiating.
Tuesday, Jan. 6
There will be no calling
SYRACUSE , ~ The
hours 'and a private gr&amp;veside Syracuse Board of Public
service will be conducted at Affairs will meet at 7 p.m.
a convenient time for the Tuesday at the Syracuse
family.
Village Hall.
Arrangements were handled by Fisher Funeral Home
Thursday, Jan. 8
in Middleport. On-line conROCKSPRINGS
dolences may be sent to
www.fi sherfuneralhomes.co

· Arthur Wiley
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Arthur W. Wiley,
38, Letart, W.Va., died
January I, 2004 at Pleasant
Point
Valley
Hospital,
Pleasant, W.Va.
He was born Sept. 18,
1965, in Gallipolis, the son
of Larry L. and Mary
Carolyn Wiley of New
Haven, W.Va. He graduated
from Wahama High School
and attended Marshall and
Fairmont Universities. He

Public .meetings

Benefit sing
pia~ ned

Kathleen Cecil ·

TODAY lN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Jan , 2. the second day of 2004. There are
363 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History :
On Jan . 2, 1900, Secretary of State John Hay announced the
"Op~n Door Policy" to facilltate trade with China.
.On this date:
. In 1492, the leader of the last Arab stronghold in Spain surrendered to Spanish forces Joyal to King Ferdinand II and
Queen Isabella I.
In 1788, Georgia became th&lt;; fourth state to ratify the U.S.
Constitution.
In 192 r; religious services were broadcast on radio for the ,
first time as KDKA in Pittsburgh aired the regular Sunday service of the city's Calvary Episcopal Church.
In 1929, the United States and Canada reached agreement
on joint action to preserve Niagara Falls.
In 1935, Bruno Hauptmann went on hial in Flemington, N.J., on
charges of kidnapping and,mw'de1ing the 20-month-old son of Charles
and Anne Lindbergh. (Hauptmann wa&gt; found guilty, and executed.)

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. -· A benefit gospel
slng will be held at 7 p.m. on
Jan. 10 at the 22nd Street
&lt;:;hurch of God in Point
Pleasant, W.Va. The sing will
benefit Mathew Browder, of
the Singing· Browder Family,
who was injured recently in
an auto accident.
:Cross-Creek,
Glory land
Believers, Ray and Deloris
Cundiff, and the Bledsoe
f)unily will sin~.
: Information IS available by

Clubs and
.Organizations·
Jo' riday, Jan. 2
RACINE
- ·Meigs
County, Pomona Grange
meets at 7:30 p.m. at
Racine Grange Hall, with
Racine as hosts .

Thursday, .Jan. 8
LANGSVILLE .
Langsville Christian Church
will have revival services at
7 p.m. on Jan. 8, 9 ~!ld I 0.
Brian Adams of the Soul
Harbor Church m Jackson.
will -be the s·peaker. The ..
church is located. three
miles west of ·Rutland,

on Ohio 124.•

MIDDLEPORT
Kathleen
(Kay)' Cecil,
Middleport, (lied Jan .. I,
2004 at Holzer · Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
Arrangements will be
announced by Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport when
completed. Friends my send
condolences and register online . at www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

Clinic planned

Lodge meets

POMEROY
Meigs
County Health Department
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge #411, will concuct a cbi.ldho.od
F&amp;AM will meet at 7:30p.m. · immunization clinic from I
on Saturday at the temple. to 7 p.m. on Tuesday at the
Refreshments will be served. health department. Child's
shot records and applicable
medical cards must be provided, and a parent or legal
RACINE - Soutllem Band guardian must accompany
Boosters regular meeting will be the child. A $5 donation will
~ld at 7 p.m. on Monday at the
high school band room. All be accepted but nobody will
band parents and supporters are be denied services because of
inability to pay.
invited to attend.

Boosters meet

I

Moderately.·confused

·

•

Other events .
..

MIDDLEPORT
Regular
meeting
of
Middleport Lodge 363 .
F&amp;AM , 7:30 p.m. All
members, Masons urged to
auend.

Saturday, Ja.n. -3
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
County Humane Society
straw giveaway, I0 a. m. to
2 p.m ., behind Middleport
thrift shop.

Saturday, Jan. 3
SALEM CENTER Star Grange #778 'and
Junior Grange #878 will
meet 111 regular sess1on
with potluck supper at 6:30
p.m. and meeting at 7:30
p.m.

Birthdays
Sunday, Jan. 4
P0MEROY - Mary L.
Starcher will be 84 years
old on Jan. 4. Cards may
be sent · to her at 40768
Starcher Road, Pomeroy.
45769.

·Sunday Times-Sentinel
740-992;.2155

For The Record
POMEROY -· Forec Iosure
actions have been filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court' by · Key Ban.k
USA, Mendota Heights,
Minn ., against Connie B.
Black,' Rutland, and other's.
alleging default on a mortgage agreement in the
amount of - $56,199.53:
Beneficial .Ohi\5,
Inc.:
. Elmhurst,
Ill., . against
Matthew. Strong ' Pomeroy,
and others, all~ging default
on a mbrtgage agreement in
. the amount of $61,079.81;
Home
National
Bank,
Raci.ne, against John· J.
Gint)ler, Racine, and others,
alleging default in the
amount of $2,234.19; Home
National Bank a~ainst James
S. Languell, Raeme, and others, alleging default in the
amount of $4,977 .24; LaSalle
Bank, Irvine, Tex., against
Virginia Anderson, alleging
default in the amount of
$41 ,405.89;
Nationwide
Mortgage Plan and Trust,
Scottsdale, Ariz., against
Michael W. Pore, Chester,
and others, alleging default in
the amount of $34,966: and
Richard Hagerty, Chillicothe,
and others. against Gary E.
Canterbury, Vinton, and oth-

ers, alleging default in the
amoupt of $14,070.30. .
A personal injury la.wsuit
has-been'. filed by ,Woodrow
W. 1-Jatl, Jr. , New Haven ,
W.Va ., and ~hers , against
Peggy L. Hall. New Haven ,
and others, alleging injury
·sustained in a motor vehicle
accident
in
Lebanon
Township on Au 7 1999
g. '
·
. Foreclo.sures .ha.ve been
ranted to. Benehctal . Oh10,
Inc . agamst De n~1s E.
Brooks; a~d ~the.rs, and. PY
Home Nauonal Bank agamst
Shannon N. Wood, and others.

·, Appointed
. ·.·: "
.
PQ.MEROY
-, Meigs
· County Cotnmon
.. w , Pleas
·w· · Court
.
JudgB Fred : · ~ro Ill has
appomtedJ~ruee _ L.. Young,
Reedsv ille. a~~ . Chnstopher
T. Wolle , Raome, to lhe
Met~s . . County
Jury
Commtsston.
•

Dl'ssolutl''on

POMEROY - A dissolution . has · been granted in .
Meigs· County Common ·
. Pleas Court to Layne Robert
Gray and Helen Joann Gray.

.

.

·Sentenced

Divorce

POMEROY - Daniel W ..
Craycraft ·was sentenced to
POMEROY -A divorce
three years in prison on a has been granted in Meigs
motion to revoke communi~y County Common Pleas Court
control filed in Meigs County to Ginger Dawn Siders from
Common Pleas Court.
Vernon Wayne Siders.'
.
Craycraft was originally .
charged with trafficking in - Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage
crack cocaine and aggravated
assault, both fourth-degree licenses have been issued in
Meigs County Prob ~te Court
felonies.
to
David Kent Ramey. 48,
He was ordered to complete an evaluation for parti c- and Ann Elizabeth VanMatre,
ipation in the Southeastern 38, both of Shade: and to
Probationary
Treatment · Roger Lee Hudnall .. 32. and.
Charlene Sue Cruz. 4 7,:
Alternative program .
Langsville.
SPRING VALL FY

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center and for restocking
refrigerators in the faculty
lounge.
"The money was used for
from PageA1
whatever purposes were
deemed worthy by me or the
the sale of drinks from the administration, so I didn't
pop machine at Southern think I was doing anything
High School was supposed to wtong," said Beegle, ·the
be used by the schqol's National Honor Society
National Honor Society, but adviser. "I will work with the
was instead spent on. several school board to remedy the
i!ems that included steak diQ- situation. They are aware of
riers for the faculty, T-shirts, the situation and no blame
decorations for the media has been assigned."

These minor expenditures
were not approved by the
Southern Local School
Board.
"This type of finding is certainly not uncommon," said
Jennifer Detwiler, spokesperson for the state auditor's
office. "In cases like this, it is
simply that the money was
improperly spent. There was
certainly no indication of a
deliberate attempt to misappropriate funds. but still the
money must be returned to

dinners purcha sed for the
the student activity fund."
Beegle, who has taught faculty are a year end traat SHS for 25 years, sa id dition .
Detwiier said there are
he kept good record s of
th6 thmgs purchased with no allegations of theft , just
the money except for the that the students were not
most minor purchases like involved with the decisio n
awarding · a student a can making as to how this
of pop for a job well done. mone.y wa s to be spe nt.
Beegle said on one occas- Beegle will hav e to repay
sion money was used to the m'One y or the state
provide refreshment s fo.r ·a attorney general's office
Quiz Bowl tournament working with the Meig s
ho sted by Southern High -county -Prosec utors office
School. He said the steak can seek a legal remed y

.investigation into whether
someone in the Bush administration leaked the name of a
CIA operative and how many
quail he bagged.
"I think I shot five," he
·said. "I'm not that good a
shot, but it was a lot of fun.
It 's a good way to Start the
new year - outdoors (and)
in my C!lSe, with my dad."
The president offered no
opinion on Attorney General
John Ashcroft's decision this
week to remove himself from
the CIA leak investigation.
"I'm · not involved with the
investigation in any way,
sh~pe or form," the president
sa1d.
Bush said be wa.s pleased
the government of Iran was
allowing the United States·
to provide humanitarian aid
to help victims of last
week's devastating ,earthquake . Addressing the
broader issue of U.S.Iranian relations, the presi-

dent said Iran's government
must be open to the views of
democratic forces. abandon
nuclear weapons work an&lt;l
figh't terrorism.
"The I rani an government
must li sten to tfie voices of
those who long for freedom,
must tum over al-Qaida' that
are in their custody and must
abandon
their
nuclear
weapons program," he 'said.
Bush also said he did not
think that two recent assassination !llle)Jipts against
PakiStani President Pervez
Musharraf jeopardized the
security of' Pakistan 's nuclear
weapons. ' Bu sh
called
Musharraf a "stand-up guy"
in the war on terrorism.
Terrorists are
believed
responsible for at least one
- attempt on Mu sharraf's life.
"He (Musharraf) sounded
very confident that his·security forces would be able to
deal with the threat," Bush
said, recalling recent phone

asking them how the y
were doi ng .
As if in campaign mode,
Bush
held 9-month-old
situation ."
Befor e hunting , Bush Liana Flores, who calmly
sucked on a red pacifier. He
was greeted at the airport ki
ssed the baby, then turned
by Spanish -s peaking resi- to mug fo r the c~meras.
dent s who liv e in the
area, about 80 mil es north
of the Mexican border.
"Como estas?" he said .

Teacher

I

So the curtain goes up on
Bush would be routed polit- tic economy is reasonably
2004 and, being human, we
ically by the Democrats, ~ robust, Bush will be a hard
long to know what will hapregardless of whom they man indeed to dislodge
nominate.
from the White House .
pen in the new year.
The only dependable preAnd even \f these internaMeanwhile, there are vardiction is that it will surWilliam
tiona! disasters do not befall ious other poteJ;~tial events:
· prise us. From the standRusher
us, Bush remam s vulnera- that could affect this picpoint of the pre.sent, the
ble to · a downturn in the ture . For example, ·it is cereconoq~y, unlikely though tainly possible that Osama.
future always 1ooks like a
featureless projection of the
that seems at the moment. bin Laden will be captured
past -- the one thing that it
The American people are or killed this year. That
never is. The most cautious vance, or fail utterly and famous for ho.!ding presi- would almost certainly
·
po l1't'1ca1 ca 1·cu 1atwns
wt'II watch the American . initia- dents responstble for eco- redound to Bush's benefit,
turn out to •be wildly off tive bleed to death in a grim nomic slumps that occur on as the . recent capture .of
base. Events that seem, in guerilla war that will "their watch," and they are Saddam Hussein did.
prospect, unlikely to occur inspire new onslaughts not likely to spare Bush if
But what if -- say, along
will occur when ' least everywhere.
the economy looks bleak in about September -- AI
expected. No wonder the
Given. the immense dis- November.
Qaeda manages to pull qff
Democrats refuse-tQ-g.i-ve up- Q!OporllO_!l_ 111
power
But-, --to- repeat, - these--anetheF ~ouple of spectacu- ·
hope.
between the Un~ted ~tales developments seem, at the Jar air ~ijacki ngs, crashing
And yet we must antici- and the estimated S,OOO moment, unlikely, to say one plane into the Capitol.
pate the f~ture as best we _guerilla~ facing it in Iraq, the least. The polls indicate knocking its dome slightly
can. There is simply no the beltlng surely has 10 be that the voters still have far askew, and another into the ,
other way to proceed. So .that the. United S_tates will more confidence in Bu sh White House, mi ssing Bush
let's peer into the murk, and means
prevail.certain
But that
It •s21st
bycerino than Ill
· .r he D. emocrats· m
· b ut k'll
'
I mg scores of aides .
tury American s have the matters of secunty and for- and h1gh offtctals? wo·uld .
see what we can descry.
To take the biggest and stamina to watch one or two . e1gn affm~s. and .are even the Amencan peo~le blame
mo st obvious fact first: of their brav~ young so)- r~asonably sausf1ed wtth Bu ~ h , and throw h1m out of •
President Bush has commit- diers killed every day for h1s performance . on ...the off1ce? ~r would they. r~- ·
ted the Unite(! States to a. the indefinite future, as they domestic econo1mc front. elect htm by a huge maJonmajor geopolitical thrust in well may be. If the resolu- l_'he De~oc~lillc pres 1,1)~n- ty over ':fo~ard Dean, who
the Middle East. He has tion of the American people ual. n~m1~auon .looks h~e recently tns.'sted we mu~tn't
occupied Iraq , and will falters, the consequence s ,an tnv1tat10n to ntual sacn- launch fore1g~ attacks wtth ,
efther transform it · into a will be enormous.
ftc~. -- a fact ~en . Hillary ~ut t~e. U'~?tted Nations' ·
reasonably ,viable democraInternationally, the initia- Chnton has md1rectly con- permtsston .
· ti c and entrepreneurial soci- live would pass to France, ftrm~d bydefernng ~er own
In th~ year ahead, as
ety, li ghting the road ahead Germany and Russia, acting prestdt;nllal ambtllons to Thomas Carl.yle .~atd ~n
for tlie whole region and through the United Nations . 2~08 .. If, ~ext October, the anot~er occasto~,' th,er~ 1s
dooming the "fanatical Domestically,
President snuauon 111 Iraq IS clearly futunty enou~ . Lets JUS( .
Muslim jihadists. to irreleimproving, and the domes- hope we can stand it!'

Bush
from PageA1
to wear and tear and old
injuries in the right knee,
arthritis in the left.
Bush spoke at Brooks
'County Airport after a day of
hunting at a dusty, scrubby·
ranch owned by Nancy
Iirown Negley. She is a Bush
family friend who is relat.ed
to the founders of Brown &amp;
Root, a Texas engineering
and construction _company
that many years ago became
part of Halliburton, the co~­
pany formerly run by V1ce
President Dick Cheney.
,rl Standing on the tarmac of
the tiny airport, Bush also
answered questions from
reporters about postwar Iraq's
~truggle .with debt, rec.ent
assassination attempts agamst
the president of Pakistan, the
'

...

'"'¥~ .. .

conversations he' s had with
the Paki stani leader. "I feel
confident about his security

.

.

• ,f l

)

1

1
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)

&lt;&gt;l 1 !I ilii I! , ol'l' 1
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Church services

m.

Routines

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Regular
meeting
of
Town ship
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Trustees at 6:30 p.m. Jan, 8
at the town ship . hall on
Rocksprings Road .

•·

�;

· '1'age A6 • The Daily Sentinel

'NWW.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, January 2, 2004

•

..

INSIDE

Bl

The .Daily Sentinel

Blue Jackets coach steps down Page B2
• Hayes' hit still stunning, Page

BS

Friday, January 2, 2004

-~ig Cfi.I:i}.Rl;J~.
~~!'~ ··
, Setui-day•s ll'imea
Men!s Basketball ·

St. Vincent at Rio. 7:3o.p.m.' .
Women's Balketbell

.

Rio Grande at Walsh. ~:p.m. :
.'
'

Prep schedule
.
.

.

.

Friday's garnea
Boys Ei'ast~etball

P. Pleasant at Galli&amp; Academy
South Galli a at Ironton·St. Joe
Hannan at Hamlin
.

Girls Basketball ·

Hannan -at Hamlin

Saturday's games
t;loys Basketball

Gallia Academy at Portsmouth
· Meigs at Athens
.
OVt:; atWood County Christian
Belpre at·Eastern
•
.

K-State QB.accused of sexual assault
BY Boa BAUM
Associated Press
TEMPE, Ariz. - The Kansas State Wildcats consi_dered their Fies~ 'Bowl matchup with Ohio State the
b1ggest game yet for their once-downtrodden program.
The euphoria over the team's tirst BCS appearance
faded, though, with news that quarterback Ell
· Roberson has been accused by a woman of sexually
assaulting her at the team's hoiel.
The accusation was made early Thursday by a 22year-old woman, Paradise Valley police Lt. Ron
Warner.said.
,
.
Kansas State athletic director Tim Weiser said it
would be up to coach Bill Snyder whether Rdberson,
the Wildcats' career total-offense record holder, would

'
threat of the star quarterback and All-America
nmnino
back Darren Sproles wi ll present a major challenge 1~
· the Buckeyes.
Five weeks ago. in Ohio State's regular-sea:~on
finale at M1cl1Jgan, Chris Perry shredded the·
Buckeyes' vaunted run defense for 154 yards rushing ·
and two touchdown in the Wolverines' 35-2 1 victory.
Kansas State has a ground game that might be better than Michigan's, because Roberson is such a threat
to run as well as pass.
"That makes it exponentially more difficult, when
the quarterback has to be accounted for," Ohio State
play Friday night against Ohio State. Freshman Dylan coach Jim Tressel said. "TI1at's a whole new world
and you' have to do agood job of maybe keeping them
Meier is the backup quarterback.
off balance."
"''ve know coach Snyder for severafyears now and
No team entered the bowl season'ton a bigger roll
I know he' ll do the right thing," Weiser said.
If Roberson plays, the double-barreled running
Please see QB. B&amp;

Kickoff - 8 p.m., Today

Krenzel
not gushy
about
return

Girls Basketball

OVC at Wood County Christian
.

Wrestling

· Point Pleasant at Roane County
Duals Tournament

College Football
BOWL RESULTS
VVednesda~Dec . 31

Music City Bowl
At Nashville, Tenn.

The Arena District, located ·
in doWritown Columbps, is
~ifhin ·walkir;s .distance from
other Columbus attr•ctions,
including ··the·'·short; North
dimict,,North. Market, COS!,
the' City Cent~nnall and the
Greater.
Columbus
Convention Center. All major
freeways are -within five minutes of the Arena Distt'lct. , ·
'Additional inforniacion 'on
dinillg_ ·. ~nd ·, e_r\tertalnm ent
'i911UCS, withiri -tlw Distritt cari
be found at www.arena-dis-

Auburn 28, Wisconsin 14

Sun Bowl
At El Paso, Texas

Minnesota 31, Oregon 30
Liberty Bowl
At Memphis, Tenn.

Utah 17, Southern Mississippi a

Bv Bos ·BAuM
Associated Press

Independence Bowl
At Shreveport, La.
Arkansas 27, Missouri 14
s·an Francisco Bowl
B. College 35, Colorado State-21

TEMPE, Ariz. - Craig Krenzel will end hi s
Ohio State career on the same field he directed the
Buckeyes to th~n ational championship in one of
college football greatest games.
·
Do not expect him to get all teary-eyed, though,
when he takes the field agai nst Kansas State in the.
Fiesta Bowl on Friday. r.'Jolecul~r genetics majors
are not a sentimental lot. He just aims to win.
something he usually has done.
" I haven't taken a whole lot of time to dwell
·upon last year." Krenzel said. "Right now, last
year means nothing. All of what happened last
season was irrelevant."
Tell that to Ohio State fans who saw Kre nzel
lead the Buckeyes to a 31-24 double-overtime
victory over Miami to give the Buckeyes the
national championship. Krenzel completed just
seven passes in 21 attempts. but one came on
fourth -and-14 in the first overtime. He ran for 81
yards, and was named the game's offensive MVP.
Krenzel has never been one to roll up impressive statistics, except for one. Ohio State is 23-3
in games he has started.
"Craig's just one of those guys," coach Jim
Tressel said. "He's always goi ng to be there for
his teammates. He's going to do the right. things
on and off the field . He's goin g to do the best he
possibly can, no matter what hi s body feels like'·
"That kind of leadership, people are going to
follow, because they know what he's putt-ing into
it. That 's why he's been so successful."
That winning attitude is carrying itself right up
to his last collegiate game against a Kansas State
team that is coming off a stunning ro ut of thenNo. I and undefeated Oklahoma in the Big 12
championship game .
"What little I've thought about it is thai it's kind
of the end of one era." Krenzel said of his last

Thursday, Jan. 1
Outback Bowl
At Tampa, fla.

Iowa 37, Florida 17
Gator Bowl
At Jacksonville, Fla.

Maryland 41, West Virginia 7
Capital One Bowl- At Orlando, Fla.

Georgia 34, Purdue 27, OT
·Roes Bowl
At Pasadena, Calif.

Southern Cal 28, Michigan 14
Orange Bowl
At Miami

Miami 16, Florida State 14

Vermeil to coach
another year
with Chiefs

• KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
Dick Vermeil will coach
the playoff-bound Kansas
City Chiefs at least one more
season.
: He told The Associated
Press on Thursday that he
informed general manager
Carl Peterson he wanted to
stay. Vermei l is in his third·
season at Kansas City and
could become the first coach
to take three ieams to the
Super Bowl.
"I don't even know if it will (
be a one-year contract or
Ohio State quarterback Craig Krenzel addresses th~ media during the Fiesta Bowl media day earlier this
Please see Krenzel, B&amp;
not," the coach said. '
week at Sun Devil Stadium i~ Tempe, Ariz. Ohio State will face Kansas State in the Fiesta Bowl today. (AP)
The 67-year-old Vermeil is
I
.
the NFL's oldest coach . His
three-year, SH0 million con-·· ,
tract expires after this season
and he had been considering
for several weeks whether to
retire. .
The Chiefs began this seaA couple of weeks ago, l was fill Valley football team went 6-4 and
son 9-0 and finished 13-3.
ing oti'l:a ballot that th\! A sso~ iated
wa~ perhaps just one win away from
They arre the AFC's secondPress sends out every year for best
m a~·n g it to the playoffs.
·
seeded team in the playoffs. ---sports story of the year and stuff and
• he Rio Grande men's basket] realized one thing - how dull and
ball ,team overcame off-court probboring 2003 was in the national
UtC
!ems\ to win the American Mideast
Conifrence
tournament
and
sports scene.
COLUMBUS (AP)
Humers
~y
When the Kobe Bryant trial is
adval'\ce to the national tourney in
bagged
a
.record
24,981
deer
durvoted as the biggest sports story of
Missdvri.
ing
the
muzzleloader
season
that
the year, then good riddance to
THE BUTCHMEISTER
All i\1 all , not a bad year locall y.
.
ran from s.atu.[day to Tuesday, stale
2003.
• ANOTE FOR THE SUGAR
; ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP)
wildlife ofticials said Wednesday.
At
least
the
local
sports
front
was
Th~re was a reason several years
"-"' Bill Callahan's appearThe total represents a 13 percent
a memorable one.
in their respective regiollal tourna- ago ttiat the Bowl Championship
imce became increas mgly
It all began with Ohio State win- ments..
Series came to be.
·-· __ _ increase over the previous record
3isheveled as the Oakland
set last vear. when 22.088 deer
ning
a
college
football
national
Eastern
lost
to
White
Oak
in
BYU
winning
the
1984
natio.nal
Raiders' awful season wore
were kilied.
championship.
Division IV regional semifinal chah1pionship.
on and he worked every wakTuscarawas Count y reported the
Columbu s, while
No, the other reason.
Several months later, success was action in
ing hour tryillg to get his
felt
closer
to
home
when
the
Rio
Beechcroft
had
to
rally
to
beat
The
two
'
human'
polls ~ hi ghest number of deer brought· to
team to win.
Grande men's soccer team won a Gallia Academy in Dtvision ll (Associated Press and Coaches)
check stations during the "black
He · showed up each
national title of their own.
regional semis.
cou ldn 't agree at times on who
powder" season (936), followed by
Monday bleary-eyed with a
The
Redmen
domineered
over
all,
•
The
girls
volleyball
team
from
should
be
the
national
champions.
Washington
(934). Harrison (852).
day's worth of stubble on his
only
allowing
seven
goals
all
seaEastern
made
it's
second
straight
Then
a1ong
came
the
BCS
and
Athens
(835
) and Licking (790)
face.
.
to
finish
trip
to
the
regional
tournament,
losthat
was
all
put
behind
us,
right?
son,
including
the
playoffs
counties.
Callahan's bizarre fall from
the
2003
campaign
24-0-1.
ing
to
a
very
solid
Adena
squ~d ai . The BCS national champion will
Since Ohio's deer hunting season
~race culminated with his firBy
far,
the
Red
men
were
the
'
Lancaster.
·
·
still,br
i:tecided
Sunday
at
the
Sugar
opened
in early- October. about
mg, just one. season after he
bigges~
local
sports
story
of
the
•
The
Gallia
Academy
girls'
track
B&lt;fwl,
but
the
AP
and
may
have
180,000 deer have been ki lled,
took the team within a victoyear.
team
won
the
district
and
regional
al
ready
decided
its
champs.
to a new s release from
according
ry of an NFL championship
But,
~hey we not the only one of championship and fini shed seventh
The
AP
never
agreed
that
the
BCS
the
Ohio
Department
of Natural
as a rookie head coach,
note.
at
the
state
track
meet
in
Daytori
in
champions
would
be
its
national
Resources.
The team announced the
•
The
Wah11ma
football
team
June
.
'
champion.
Up
till
this
year,'
it
JUSt
Archery hunters have accounted
move Wednesday. a day after
made
its
second
trip
in
three
years
•
Gallia
•Academy
made
another
worked
out
that
,
w
ay.
for
36,241 deer kil led during the
informing Callahan. He
!O
the
Wes.t
Virginia
Class
A
semifi·
appearance
in
the
Division
Ill
state
.
Th1s
year.
though,
the
AP
(and
the
first six weeks of archery season,
_asked •to delay the anriouncenals, falling to eventual state football playoffs, falling to a strong 'coaches for that matter) have their · which runs through Jan . 31.
m~nt because his son Brian's
champs Moorefield.
.
Beaver Local squad .
darlings and that's USC.
Young hunters killed 5,208 deer in
college team, UCLA, played
• In March, we had not one, but
• Only one year after snapping a
the first youth season, Nov. 22 and
in a bowl game Tuesday
two boys basketball teams playing 41-game losing streak, 'the Ri ver
Pleue see Cooper, B6
night.
· ' ·
23.
~

I

The ye~r"wasn't too bad • • • locally
B

Caliahan fired
Raiders after
4-12 season

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--- ·!·- . \

•

•

�•

•

•

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Page B2 • The Daily ~tinel
: •

Friday, January

~.mydailysentim;l.com

1

.

~

. .

~-

•

game, beating" Chicago on Dec. 26,
and have lost six straight a( home.
Columhus' 1-0 loss to San Jose on
Wednesday night matched the franchise's worst home stretch ever (0-61-1 ). The team is in last place in the
Conference's
Central
Western
Division with a record of 9-21·-4-3
and has a league-low 25 points.
·'We' ve played very close. We've
been beaten by one goal in I0 of the
last 13 losses. We've got to just work
a little bit harder and maybe those
will be wins,'' Gallant said.
Gallant broke into the NHL with
the Red Wings in 1984 and averaged
72 games and 56 points over the next
eight seasons. He had four consecuti ve 70-plus point seasons from 198690.
Injuries. scoring slumps and poor
goaltending have all contributed to
the Blue Jackets' lackluster performance. MacLean said. The team
exceeded expectations with 71 points
in its inaugural season, but has been
mediocre since.
MacLean said he might have placed
too much front-line goaltender Marc
Denis' shoulders after trading fan
favorite Ron Tugnutt, who was a rock
in ·goal du_d_flglile _team's first -season.
"! _probably asked or expected a lot
from a 25-year-old to be our No. l
goalie," he said of Denis.
Denis and backup Fred Brathwaite
have struggled most of the year and
had have frequently ·surrendered soft
goals.
MacLean has brou-ght in plenty of
young talent as GM. Nash, 19, has
been joined by 19-year-old Russian
star Nikolai Zherdev, who is still
learning the North American game.Team captain Luke Richardson
credited MacLean with '" trying to
shake the team from its slump.
"It's a fresh start and that 's what we
have to look at it as," Richardson
said. "Doug's tried everythin'g possible this year. He's brought in motivational speakers, he's given us &lt;;lays off
and he's skated us into the ice at
times. Sometimes you just need a jolt
in ~uiifferen!
~a_y.~
- , .....
-· . .
. ., .. ,......

Maclean picks Gallant
as replacement
Bv RusTY MILlER
Associated Press

: COLUMBUS ~ - Doug MacLean
'tepped down as coach or the
Columbus Blue Jackets on Thursday
after failing to- duplicate the success
he had in Florida.
·
MacLean remain s president and
general manage r of the Blue Jackets,
who have the worst record in the
IIIHL. Assistant Gerard Gallant was
elevated to the head coaching spot on
an interim basis.
. "We have a lot of guys who haven't
played to their potential. I hope I was
the reason for that," MacLean said.
:'Now, they won't have that for an
excuse."
: MacLean coached the Florida
Panthers to the 1996, Stanley Cup
finals in the franchise's third season.
· Gallant, an assistant with the Blue
Jackets since their inception 3 112
years ago and a veteran of over 600
~:areer NHL games, takes over immediately and will lead Columbus on a
seven-game road trip that opens
Friday in Tampa Bay.
"It takes 20 guys that compete
every night," Gallant said. "It can't be
15 or 14 guys. It can't be Rick Nash
scoring every goal for us. It's got to
be different guys. I'm going to
demand that they all compete and
play har(i.'c
Nash, the top pick in the draft two
years ago, has developed into the
league's top goal-scorer with 23. In
the laS\ few games, he provided
almost all the Jackets ' offense.
; The 49-year-old MacLean h,ad a
record of 24-43-8-4 as the Blue
Jackets' head coacb. He fired Dave
King, the franchise's fir-st coach , last
January and took over on an interim
basis. He took the job full time in
June.
The Blue Jackets have struggled
from the outset this season. They
were the last team to win a road

COLUMBUS - The numbers
finally got so bad that Doug MacLean
could no longer tolerate them - even
if that meant taking the fall.
MacLean, the president and general
manager of the Columbus Blue
Jackets. pulled the plug on himself as
head coach on Thursday after almost
exactly a year of futility.
• "For whatever reason, we've got a
lot of guys playing uptight," MacLean
said. ·
The Blue Jackets were 24-43-8-4
IInder MacLean. Assistant coach
Gerard Gallant takes over as interim
head coach.
With MacLean behind the bench instead of up in the GM's box, where
he was while Dave King handled the
Blue Jackets in their first 2 1/2 seasons - Columbus had the worst
record in the NHL (9-21-4-3) this season. That's not surprising when other
·
numbers are considered.
I .rhe Blue Jackets have scored 74
goals, fewer than all but two of the 30
teams in the NHJ,., despite having the.
top goal-scorer in Rick Nash, who ha~
23.
· "It can't be Rick Nash scoring every
goal for us. It's got to be ditTerent
guys," Gallant said. "It's not going to
be (one or) two guys who are going to
take us out of it."
I
As the new year dawned,
Columbus was 15 points behind the
Dallas Stars in the race for the eighth
and final playoff spot in the Western
Conference. How big of a gap is that?
The Blue Jackets have mustered just
.14 points in their last 24 games.
"We have guys in here who have not

·S
_.

- ~rtbune - Sentinel~

file

NAME: Doug Maclean.
AGE: . 49 (Born April t2,
1954).
•
BIRTHPLACE: Summerside, ·
Prince Edward J.sla'nd.
·
FAMILY: Wife, Jill; two chll-•
dren; Clark, MacKenzie.
f\IHL: genel'!ll manager and
president: Columbus Blue
Jackets 1998-present.
NHL ·· head
coach:
Columbus ·Blue 'Jackets,
2003; record · 24-43·8-4.
Florida Panthers. 1995·97;
regular season record 8371·23, playoff record 13·14.
Maclean's best season was
1995·96, w~en the Panthers
won the Eastern Conference
title and lost in the Stanley
Cup finals in the franchiSe's
third season.
OTliER JOBS:
Head coach.,University of
New Brunswick,_1985-86.
Assistant, St. Louis Blues,
1986-8.8.
Assistant,
Washington
· Capitals, ·1988·89. ·
Head coach of Baltimore,
Washington's AHL affiliate,
1989-90. Assistant, Detroit Red
Wings, 1990·92. ·
MILESTONES:. .
.
Got NHL front office job in
1992 as Detrolrs assistant
general manager and gener·
a!
manager of the
Adirondack Red Wings.
DetrOit's AHL.afiRiil.te.
,'
Named director df player
·development and pro scout
for Florida Panthers, 1994,
~ecoming coach following.
year.
Received Hockey NQws
eaach of the-year award with
· IIJe Panthers, 1996.
Coach of the winning East
team in 1996 and 1997 NHL
All-Star games.
Fired as,.Parithers coach in
1997. .
Hired as _general manager
of the expansion Columbus
Blue· Jackets on Feb. 11,
1998.
Fired .three-year coach
Dave Kihg and became
interim coach on ,. Jan. 7,
2003. The team was 14·20· ·
4·2 before the change and
15·22·4-) afterward.
Beceme permanent coach
on June 6, 2003. ·remaininggeneral ma.nager and presi·
·.c;fent.
·'
Resigned coaching position Jan. 1, 2004, keeping
frorit-office titles.

Columbus Blue Jackets' coach Doug Maclean watches his team during the first
period in Columbus Wednesday. Maclean resigned Thursday as coach of the
Blue Jackets but will remain will remain president and general manager. (AP)
Gallant _said he has reasonable
expectations for the rest of the season.
"I'm not going to say we're looking
at the playoffs and stuff like that," he
said. "We're going to compete every
game. We' ve got45 or46 games.left.

I want them to work hard and try to
win every hockey game.
"We've played very close. We ' ve
been beaten by one goal in IQ of the
last 13 los~es. We've got to just work
a little bit harder and maybe those
will pe wins·."

team captain Luke Richardson said.
" I don't believe anybody in the
sports world goes out there and dogs it
out on the ice or on the field or on the
court,". Richardson said. "Sometimes
confidence is a big issue. Frustration
is a big issue."
I Goaltenders Marc Denis and Fred
Brathwaite have been major disappointments. Neither ranks among the
top 35 goalies in the NHL in goalsagainst average. Soft goals and late
goals, have become commonplace.
"This hockey team hasn' t been winning and I'm the No. I guy who's supposed to bring these games home,"
said Denis, winless in his last eight
decisions. ''I'm hot going to be happy
until where we're supposed to be and
that's .at least battling for a playoff
spot. That 's what everybody here
expected ·this team to be doing. I'm
nof saying we should be on top of our
conference but we should at least be
in the mix."
• Perhaps worst of all , the fans'love
affair with the Blue Jackets may be
Gerard Gallant speaks in a locker room at Nationwide Arena after being named · waning. The game against S;m Jose on
coach of 'the Columbus Blue Jackets on Thursday in Columbus. Doug Maclean New Year's Eve was a sellout, but the
steppecl down as "coach of the Jackets on Thursday. Maclean remains presi· first one since Nov. 22. Despite a
dent and general manager of the Blue Jacke~s. who have the worst record' in the fight-filled game of close .calls and
NHL. Assistant Gerard Gallant was elevated to the head coaching spot. (AP)
dramatic plays, boos filtered from the
performed'as well as we should have, - boom, boom - were down two, rafters after the Blue Jackets gave up
including myself," said Tyler Wright, three goals."
a late goal Wlgain) and lost (again).
an original Blue Jackets player.
• Several of the team's highest paid
MacLean will concentrate on per"When that happens and you get some qnd highest touted veterans have been sonnel and contracts. With the NHL
injuries, things go for a bad turn."
all but invisible this season. Geoff bracing for the end of the· collective• They have the worst road record Sandersmi, the team's top scorer in bargaining agreement later this year,
in the league at 1-11 - 1-2 and are cur- team history, has one goal in hi s last he 'II have his hands full.
rently tied for the worst home stretch 12 games. Offseason sigriings Trevor
In the mean time, Gallant will add
in franchise hi story (0-6-1- l).
Letowski and Todd Marchant have his own imprint to the Blue Jackets.
"Details and focus," defenseman provided minimal punch to the About the only way to go is up.
Darryl Sydor pinpointed as the prob- offense.
;•we know. we're a better hockey
terns. "We take a few minutes off and
The problem _is not lack of effort,
team
than we have been," he said.
.,

Gallant file
NAME: Gerard Gallant.
AGE: 40 (Born Sept. 2,
1963).
BIRTHPLACE: Summerside,
Prince Edward Island.
. FAMILY: Wife Pam, daughter Melissa and son Jason.
NHL coaching: Assistant
coach, Columbus Blue
Jackets, 2000•03. Named '
Interim head coach, Biue,
Jackets, Jan. 1, 2004.
Junior and minor-league
coaching jobs:
Head
coach,
Summerside
Western
Capitals (Canadian Junior
A), 1995-1998. 1n his first full
season, 1996-1997, the
team won the Marijime
Junior A championship after
a.33-11-11 regular season.
- Assistant . cpach, Fort
Wayne Kometd "'(former·
International
Hockey
League), 1998'-99. .
- Top assistant coach,
Lou,isville
Panth!lrS
(f,merlcan Hockey League),
1999-2000.
'
NHL player, 1984'-1995:
- Detroit Red Wings,
1984-93, 207 goals and 260
assists for 467 points in 563
games. Chosen 107th over·
all In the 1981. entry draft
and played two seasons with
Adirondack. .·
·
, - Tampa .Bay Llghtnlng,1993-95, 4-9-13. In 52
Qllfn!IS: .

4

ebelius' loyalties with Wildcats, not her native state
.

.
8v ITIYI IRIIINDINI
Anoclattd Pr111

TEMPE, Ariz.. - Kansas Gov.
J(athleen Sebelius, daughter of a
former Ohio governor, .was decked
out in Kansas State purple on the
eve of the Wildcats' Fiesta Bowl
'game against Ohio State.
"My husband, Gary, a Kansas
State graduate, and I just celebrated our 29tb anniversary, and I just
celebrated m~ 29th anniversary as

When I.was In school
In Ohio, we learned
that a·buckeye was a
small, hairless nut of
no commercial value!'

Sebelius, a Democrat .. elected
governor last Novem.ber after
serving four term s in the Kansas
House and two terms as insurance
commissioner, had said jokingly
that being an Ohio native was "an
accident of birth."
She is the daughter of John
- Kanue Gov. Kathl..., Seboollue Gilligan, Ohio's governor- from
a Kansan by choice," Sebelius told 1971· 75.
a crowd of_ about 14,000 at a pep
Sebelius, who has of bachelor 's
rally Thursday afternoon at degree from Trinity College in
Arizona State University
, Washington and a master 's degree
11

from the University of Kansas,
also got in a dig at Ohio State's
·
mascot.
"When I was in school in Ohio,
we learned ~hat a buckeye was a
small, hairless nut of no commer'
cial value,", she said.
S,ebelius also made note of
Kansas State's 35-7 win over thenNo . I Oklahoma in the Bi g 12
Conference championship game in
Kansas " City, Mo. -, and of her
wager on that game with

Oklahoma Gov. Brad Henry.
"We arrived at the game together, and his ca,r was parked next to
mine," she said. "I gave him my
phone number, and we arranged to
meet at halftime-· and I haven't
seen him since."
After the laughter died down,
Sebelius continued:
. "But I did leave him a note Q.O
his windshield saying, 'I can ' t
wait to s";;e you when y.ou come to
Kansas to read to the children."'

'

nel.com

2, 2004

l\e

C l ·A·S S I F I'E D

•
Gall!.

Place
c:.r;~::v.
To

.

m:rthune

.

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-21~6 (304) 675-1333

•••

Or Fax To

446-3008

Or Fax To

In NeJCt

Day~•

Paper

.
!\NNOUNCEMFNrS

I

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale, Chester Township,
Meigs County, sen d letters
of interest to : The Daily
Sentinel , PO Bo.~e 729·20,
..,Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. ·

Private Property
No hunting/ trespassing or 4
wheelers , violators will be
prosecuted Old Lock Rd
Carl 0. Smith.
~r~-------,

GIVEAWAY

.,

...__ _ _ _ _ _.,!.
'
Giveaway female Mountain
Fiest cross. white w/ b rown
markings, 10 mon . old good
kids 304-895 -3577 call
after 5:30pm.

wl
' ~

r

roBuv

~

POL.ICIES: Ohio Valley Publllf'ling rtHtvtl the right to tdlt, reject, or cencel•ny ad at any time. E"or• muM be r..,orteCf on the tlret day of
1
Trlbun•S.ntlnei·Regleler will be reaponelbla for no mOJa then the coat of the 1p1101 occupied by the error end only the flrtl lneartlon. We ahall not be
any to.. or expenM thllt reeulta from the publication OJ omiHion ot an Mlvenlnmenl Corr.ctlon wtU be made In lhe tlrat available edition. • Box
are elwaye conll~ntlel. • Current ,.te card eppu... • All rut •llltl actvertlaement.l are aubject to the Federal Feir Houelng"'Act ot 1968. • Thie
wantld eda
EO! ... ndarde. W• I not
of the lew.

•••••po•,..-1

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
HaPWANrn&gt;

HOUSEHOLD

GooDS

lwrigh~ic.net

Absolute Top Dollar: ,u.s.
Silver,
Gold
Coins.
Prootsets, Diamonds. Gold
Rings,
U.S. Currency,·
M.T.S. • Coin Shop, 151
Second 'Avenue, Gallipolis,
740-446•2842.

District Circulation Sales
Manager. (Full time position)
include
Responsibilities
recruiting and training of carriers, customer service and
meeting sales goals. ll you
have a positive attitude, are
a self·starter, a team player
1 \11'1 (n \II\ 1
we would like to talk to you.
Must be dependable and
..,I In H I ..,
have reliable transportation.
Position otters all company
HELP WAN'fliD
benelits includ ing health,
" ' - - - - - - - - ' dental, vision and life. insurance, 401k, paid vacation,
An Excellent way to earn
and personal days. Please
money. Lets talk the
send resume to :
NEW AVON .
Paul Barker
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645
Circulation Manager
JOycE! 304·675·6919
Oh10 Valley Publishing
April 304·892·3630
925 Third Ave. •
Gallipolis, Ohio .45631
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell.· Shirley Spears. 304- Or email to pbarker@my
daily tribune.com
675-1429.

lliO

Christian RoCk Band needs EMT's · and Paramedic
Rottweller mi~ed puppies. male vocalist II interested,
Wanted
(740)742-2257
call (740)441 -1236, ask for
Joseph.
Tired or working for a
company where your not
Smokey colored kinen. Community
Excellence
Giveaway to a good home. Corporation is ·seeking a aura If your ambula~ce
Call Orville Hackney at professional to fill the posi- ~nd equipment will mak! it
(740)256-9125
between tion of E.~eecu tive Director. through the shift.
6pm -1 1pm.
Duties include managing
·Jan-Care Ambulance is curdaily ope ration s of housing
LosT AND
rently accepting applications
oriented non-profit co rpora·
for EMT's and Paramedics.
FOUND
tion , mortgage loan originaWe otter the following:
tion , rental PfOperty man Found med. build, short agement, and public rela legged blond I white female tions. public speaking is • Continuing Education at no
dog. red collar. no 10. very required . successful candi- cost to employee.
friendly,
Sandhill
Ad! date will report to Board Of
Meadow brook area 304- Directors . Please . hand • Fle~ible work schedule
EMT's in college are encour675-2841
deliver res ume to 501
aged to apply.
Shawnee · Trai l,
Point
Pleasant. Questions may be
Found: Dog found in Morgan
• Health. Dental and Optical
directed to 304-675-4900
Center area. Please call to
Insurance provided with
id entify, (740)388·8277.
Counter Sales person need· minimal employee contribu ·
ed for local electric distribu- lion.
to r. Electrical background,
Last- red Beagle . sized
and good communication • Retirement
faTale dog. black scar on
skills preferred. EOE . Send
hip. Bowmans Run/Morning
res ume to HR Department. • Paid Vacation · and Sick
Star area. (740)992-6060
P.O Box 6668, Huntington Days
25773-6668.
• Holiday Pay
Lost: small Silky Terrier,
The Mason Jar and Craft
Sandy Blonde hair, name
Mall is seeking responsibt6 • Un1torms provided
Cara. Last seen in the vicinipersons to handle daily
ty of Jackson Pike. If found operation s ol the sto re on a
• Advancement potential
please call Annie Robinson
part ti me basis . Duties
(140)446-7423.
int:lude c ustomer service, • Clean reliable ambulances
light cleaning , and minimal and equipment
YARil SALE
record keeping . Must work
and communicaJe weU with
Advanced
training
public. Hours available are become en instructor in
Monday-Friday 1 0-6, no ACLS , BTLS , PALSpor CPR
Wo\NTEIJ
weekends . Applications may
ro8UY ..
be completed from 3·6pm. • Competitive Salary
on F·riday. Jan . 2, .-Monday,
1995-2000 Chevy. or Ford ,
Jan. 5 at 408 Main St Point Come join the team of over
4)(4, pickup, with low miles.
Pleasant. Please call 304' 300 health care providers
Will pay good price. Call
675-4477 for more intorma· serving West Virginia and
(740)446-4053
lion.
Oh~io for more information

.

,_,_- o&lt;f

,.

r

wv.

r
r

-========::..========;
WE NEED TO
"TAlK" TO YOU!!
Help Wanted

Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

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·All Display: 1:Z Noon z
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Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
'rl&lt;lav For Sundays Paper

• Start VoUr Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

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Now you can have borders and graphics ·
~
added to your Cl!lSSifled ads
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1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
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Descrtptlon • Includ• A Price • Avoid Abbrllvlatlon•
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• Ad~ Should Run 7 Daya

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New coach will have to overcome problems
Bv RusTY MILLER
Associated Press

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fJiaCLean steps
down as Blue
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Help Wanted

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AGreat
Opportunity Awaits!
The Ohio Valley,
Publishing Company
.is seeking a highly motivated
individual who is interested in an .
"ADVERTISING
SALES cAREER",
with unlimited earning·potential!
Interested??

WE NEED TO TALK!
• Salary Plus Commission
• Great Working Environment
• Monday - Friday 8am-5pm
Send your resume to: Oblo Valley Publishing,
200 Main St~~ Point Pleasan~ WV 2550
No Phone Calls Please

' FIT janitors needed in the
Gallipolis, Point Pleasant
area. $6.50/hourly wlbenefits. Call Winans Services
(304)485· 4000.
Foster pa rents needed- If
you have an extra bedroom
&amp; wish to help a child, you
can become a Therapeutic
Foster Parent lor youth ages
birth 10 18, you will receive
reimbursement ol $33·$49 a
day plus paid respite. We are
looking lor hOmes in
Southern Ohio · Coun ties,
training begins Jan. 3rd, call
tor more information or to
set up an Initial meeting·
Oasis Therapeutic Foster
Clire Network toll free t·
877·325·1558.
Help~nted

The Town ot New Haven Is
now seeking applicants for
the position of a pollee chief.
requirement~ are th at t~e
applicant must be certified
through the State 01 WV. be
at least eighteen years ol
age, and present a resume
at the time of applying.
Applications
may
be
obtained at the New Haven
City
Bldg..
weekdays
between the hours of
7:00am-3:00pm, at 218 5th
St EOE,

~Imm~""mmTJ
EEDEO for busy salon.

ASSY

SCISSOR

740)441-188(}
740 256·6336.

0

~

110
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1

HELP WAI'ffiill

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© 2003 by NEA, Inc.

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II'\\ '\I I \I

I

Modi Home Health Agency.
Inc. seek 1ng a full-t1meJ AN
Case Manager for the
Ga llipo li s Ohio !ocation .
Must be licensed both in
Ohio and West Virgi nia .
Minimum two years supervisia n. management and
home health experience. We
offer a competitive sa lary,
benefits package, 401K. and
flex time . E.O.E. Please·
send resume to 352 Second
Avenue, ··Gallipolis, OH
45631 . Attn : Dian!i Harless,
AN . Clinical Manager.

Medi Home Health Agency,
Inc. seeking lull-time and
PAN Phys1cal TMrapists,
and PAN Physical Therapist

10

r~~~=0~P O;Bl.stN:KilJN:ES'&gt;~m~
~

ll!tl

joHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO: reco mmends tha
lvou do business with pea
le you know. and NOT t
~end money through the
mai l until you have investi
laated the offerinCJ.
·
"Prec1ous Memorie s" a
Middleport retail &amp; wholesate business that specializes in placing customers
photographs bn beautiful
ch.lna items. Over 80 in all
For less than the cost o1 a
car. you can own your own
business. Will train new ownin cluded.
ers. Website
www /photos onch ina .com ,
(740}992-4294

i

.

'G )

"

All real estate advertising
In thla newapaper Ia
aubject Ia the Federel
Fair Hou•lng Act of 1968
which makee It Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination baaed on
rae•, color, religion, aex
familial •tatus or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, limitation or
dl1crlmlnallon."
Thle new•paper will not
knowingly accept
adwertlaementa lor real
estate which lain
violation of the lew. Our
readera are hereby
lnform.ct that all
dwellings adwertlaed In
thla new•paper are
available on an equal
opportunity basel.

Assistants for Ohio . and 1'l'l:~":'-------.,
West Virginia client base.
PRO~ONAL
We after competitive sa lary.
SERVICES .
E.O.E. SIGN -ON -BONUS ·--iiiiiiiiitiio-r'
tor full -time status. Please
TURNED DOWN ON
---:---,-,.c-c:-::-~send resume to
352 SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
FORECLOSURE!
Second Avenue , Gallipolis.
No Fee Unless we Win!
4 Bedroom. 4 bath housa,
ONLY $9,900. For listings
OH 45631. Attn : Diana
1_899 •582 •3345
Harless . R.N . Clinical
Call 800·719-3001 ext.
Manager.
F144

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ng

peop e oca

ho want to earn 1 mane
il e losing weight . show
oth ers
how.

HOMFS

"Get Your Money's Worth" 2 Furnished small apart- Good Used App liances)
Stock
#D308
Save ments for rent. Living room . Recondi tioned
and
Washers-.
$5,130 .00;
kitchen, bedroom. &amp; bath. Guaranteed .
Stock
#0314
Save $_?75. each all utilities paid Dryers.
Ra nges.
and
$~630.00 ;
except electric. (304)675· Aelrigerators, Some start at
Stock
#0323
Save 1365
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76 '
$9160.00;
Vine St, (740)446-7398
Stock
#0324
Save 4 room apt. WID hookup
$10,950.00;
new. $450, water , sewer, Late model Estate washer
Site
Preparation, trash pa id. $200fdeposit · by Whirlpool. ,$75. 2 other
Foundations,
Septic Before 8pm, (740)367-7015 white washers. $65 each.
Systems our Speciality.
(740)367-7746
Almond GE dryer, $65. Can
Cote's
Mobile
Hom~s.
after 6pm.
APART·
15266 U.S. 50 E., Athens. BEAUTIFUL
AT
BUDGET Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Ohio 45701, 1·740·592· MENTS
PRICES AT JACKSON
1972
Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio,
ESTATt:S, 52 Westwood
(740)446-7444 ' 1-877-830·
l'lil!ll"._-:lms~-&amp;::---, Drive from $297 to $383.
9162. Free Estimates. EasY
ACREAGE
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call fina ncing, 90 days same as
,___iiiiiiiiiiiiiioo_,.. 740-446-2568.
Equal
cash . Visal Ma_ster Caret.
Hqusing Oppor1un1ty.
Drive- a- little save ·alot.
For Sale: 79.106 Acres .
River view. producing oil &amp; CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
gas wells. $125.000. 304- EO &amp; AFFORDABLE:!
529-7106 after 5pm.
Townhouse
apartments. Repair-675-7388 . For sale.
automatic
- - - - - - - - - hOu ses &amp; mobile homes re-co nditioned
Lots lt9 &amp; 10 Heatley S FOR RENT. Call (740)441 - washers &amp; dryers. refrigeraAddition in Bidwell. Two 1 11 1 f6r application &amp; 1nfor- tors. gas and elec tr ic
ra nges. air conditioners, an~
large level lots. Price to sale malion .
now. Phone 740-446-9539.
wringer wa_shers. Will do
Conage ideal lor couple w/ • repairs on major brands il't
Ul ' I \I . . ,
small child $275.00 a mon shOp or at your hOme .
_.,
ask fo r Nancy 304-675-5540
'
'
'·
Washer $95; Dryer $95:
or 304-675·4024.
110
HOliSFS
electric range $95: GE
HJRRENT
Efficiency , Apa.itmetit . .,. :3 refrigerator, frost fr&amp;e . ·$125:
rooms and bath . All utilities Kenmore washer/dryer set
Downstairs.
919 $350 ;
Hot
point
2 BR and 3B R. both paid .
water/trash paid, no pets. Second Ave. $285 month. washer/dryer sat $ 1set
need references. near porter (740)446-3945 .
Upright freezer $125; couch .
love seat &amp; chair $250; din 388· 1100.
For Lease: 1600 sq Feet. ing table $25:·Broylehill chair
beautifully restored 2nd $50 : full size bed with bo:oc
2br. References &amp; deposit. floor. 2 b ~d room apt. 1 1/2 sprin gs &amp; mattress $95;
No Pets. (304)675-5 162
baths. living and dining Queen size box springs &amp;
room. rear deck . Lo ts of stor- mattress set $150: twin size
1
3 be room. 1 bath. full baseage
HVAC. Downtown box springs &amp; mattress
ment. central heat . WID
Gallipolis. All modern ameni" Skaggs Appliance
hookup, new appliances.
ties . $600/month . Security
76 Vine Street Street
$500 month &amp; deposi~ .
and key deposits. No pets .
(740)446-7396
Evans Heights area, out
References
required .
14 t . (740)367-0299 oc
(740)446-4425 or (740)446·
(740)7Q9·0299.
ANTIQLES
3936.
3 bedroom. 1·112 bath,
located in Pt. Pleasant. No For Lease. 2 floor, spacious. Buy or · sell.
Riverine
pets, deposit and references totally remodeled , 2 bed- Antiques . 11 24 East Mailil
rooms , , 112 baths. unfurrequired. (740)446-0924.
on SA 124 E. Pom~roy, 740_nished apt. New HVAC and 992-2 526,... - Rus s Moore.
In Gallipolis. 2-3 bedroom appl1ances. $600/inonth .
lor
rent . Call plus utilities. Downtown
house
(740)446-7723
after Gallipolis. Security and Key
4:30pm.
deposit required. No pats.
required .
Pt Pleasant , large 4 br.. 1 References
(740)446-6882, 8:00 to 5 00. 5-KV Generator. E lectric
112 ba .. 'very private. fenced
yard , tease. references &amp; Furnished 3 rooms and a start . gov. surplus $500
sec. dep. required $500. a bath . Upstairs. clean . • no {740)992-3343 alter 4pm. ,
man .. no pe ts. 740-593- pets. Re'ference and doaposit
6 Plots at the Oh10 Memory
1454 or 740-709·9592.
requi red
(740)446·1 519.
Gardens, m the Chnstus.
Taking applications : 3 bed·
Call (740)446·7794 .
room
ho use. Pome roy, Furnished one bedroom Apt
$450~00 monthly+ deposit+ · clean, no pets. Must be will·
Baby 1tems brand new
utilities Call (740)992·5228
in g to give references.
Casco
tandem
strollet
PhOne . (304)675- 1386
•
$75.00 . Greco 3n I high 1 Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed· Chair, like new $25 .00.Used
room apartments at Village Grace high back car seal
Manor
and
Riverside $20.00 please ca ll 304-6752 Bedroom mobile home in
Apartments 10 Mid.dleport 8742
Racine area. NO PETS.
From $278-$349. Call 740(740)99&lt;·5858
992-5064 . Equal Housirrg Hosp1tal bed w1th new mattress . Call (740)446-7723
2 bedroom. WW carpet. Opportunities.
after
4:30pm .
wood deck. very. very nice.
Modern one bedroom apt.
In
Gallipolis .
Phone
740-446·0390.
.
JE,.
(740)446-2003 or (7 40)446·
AERATION
MOTORS
1409
New 1 bedroom apt. Phon e
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
3 bedroom mobile home 1n 740-446·3736.
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1·
Spring Valley area. $325
800-537 ·9528.
monthly. $325 deposit. Call
Tara
Town house
(740)441 ·6954 .
Apartments. Very Spacious,
Taking
applications for 2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors, CA. 1 NEW AND USED STEE~
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
newer 3 bedroom. 2 bath 112 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
For
Concrete,
Angle,
trailer. Gallipolis area. No Adult F'ool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
inside pets. 740-339·3 156.
Grating
For
Drains.
Pets, Lease Plus Security
Trailer tor rent, ideal lor one Deposit Required , Days: Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
or two people. No peUi, ref· 740·446·3491 ; Evenings : Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
erences. (740)44 t ·018 1.
740·367·0502
Friday. Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Saturday
&amp;
Twin Alve rs Tower is accept- Thursday,
~--lliiiiiiliiiiiiii-_.1 lng applications for waiting Sunday. (740)446-7300

sao,

In Crown City, 2 or 3 bedroom , very nice, $59,900.
Owner financing available.
1600 Sq. ft . 3 year old Ranch $5000 down. $403 per
DVDIC
vai table upon request 740 style home. 2 112 car month. (740)256· 1686.
41·1984.
garage, 3 bedroom , large
kitchen, dinning room, living
Tri-level 4 bedroom. 3 baths,
room, 2 1/2 baths, laundry
extra 2 car garage. on 2
The Point Pleasant Register -room, trent porch . all ,custom acres, $134.00&lt;1 .(140)843·
an immediate
full·time oak
trim doors
ar1dwell
cabinets
. has
cust omer
service position
All electric
. Very
layed 5159
available. " Successful appli - out, beautiful 1ntenor on 1
MOBILE HOME'l
cant mus t be computer liter- 1/2 acres .. WCln't last long at
HJRSALI:
ate, able to work with num· only $H 5,000. c al 1 74obars, and enjoy working 44&amp;4514 or 74 0.446-~49
1997 14 wide . Only'$4995 ,
with the public . Position after 5pm,
includes
delivery. Call
otters all company benefits
Harold 740·385·9948.
including health, dental , A 1996 o.,kwood manulacvision , and hie insurance: tured home bearing serial
401 K: PC!id vacation, and number HOTN 12C01493 1996. 29x52, on 6 acres
personal days. For employ- will be sold at public auction near Henderse&gt;P, 3 brm ., 2
ment consideration please on Tuesday, January 27, ba.. $29,900, (304):!35·
send resume with refer- 2004
at
1:OOpm
At 0528 or 642-9142.
ences to:
Oakwood Sales Lot 604
April Roach
State Route 7 S. Gallipolis. 2001 , 29)(59 w/. 2 acres in
c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune OH 45631 starling minimum Syracuse, 3 brm, 2 ba, perPO Bo&gt; 489
bid price of $t8,000 terms teet cond ., s"tone lireJl'ace,
Gall i pol i s. ~ OH 45631
cash, to the highest bidder. decks, storage bldg., fenced
aroach 0 mydailytr1bune .com
The manufactured home Is back yard , $49,900, OBO.
available to the public for (304)335·0528 or 642·9142.
inspection.., at the above
address during regular busl· 2003 16•80 Oakwood , 3
Wllf do babysitting In my ness hours. The manufac·
bedroom, 2 bath, w/appll·
home. Fult-.time and parttured home Is being sold ances, must be moved , 1 &amp;2 br. apt In downtown Pt
tim e openings. Non·smok· under. the terms of a
Pleasant no pets &amp; sec dep
evenings (740)949·2446
tng ,
Christian
home. Security
, Agreement
req~o~lred "740·446·2200
(740)446-3128
between James R. Cumpton
97 mobile home reduced to 1 and 2 bedroom apartand
tl'le
undersigned.
BUSINE!il&gt;
Oakwood Acceptance Corp. sel114.~eao 3 br.,2 ba., AC, all menta, furnished and unfurTRAINING
appliances, WID, ready to nlshed. security deposit
2225
S.
Holden
Rd . move In Lot 24 Famlty Pride required. no pets, 740·992·
Greensboro, NC 27407.
MH Park 304·261 -3816 or 2218.
Galllpollt CtrHr College
.,833 .
-------(Careers Clos&amp; To Home} Completely refinished home. 274
2
bedroom · apt
In
Call Today! 740·446-4367, Great "location, In Gallipolis
Centenary, appliances furt · 800-214·0452
Ohio. 3 bedrooms, 2 full NOVj 2003 Doublewlde. 3 BR nished, utilities paid. except.
www.galllpotlscareercollege .oom batns. priced to sale now. &amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down
electric, clean- $350 month·
and &amp;295/mo. t ·800-691·
Aes #90·05·1274B
Phone (740)446-9539
call740·256· 1135.
6777
- - - - --1gll"'1180
WANll'lJ
For Sale Of Rent: 3 bed· - - - - - - - - - 3rd Street , Racine. 3 bed·
.
Do
room , 2·car ·garage, Ranch. New 3 bedroom, only $995 room apartment $400 .00 a
Addaville
school district . down &amp; only $189.76 pee · month+ deposit end utilities.
Georges Portable Sawmill.
304·675-3348/ask
lor month, call Nikki 740·385· . HUD approved . (740)247 don't haul your logs to the
7671 .
4292
mill just cal1304-675-1957. Debbie.

FOR SALE

r M~~~~

r '%~

'

1'41

To

l

lls1 for Hud·subsized, 1- br,

apartment . call 675·6679 Nordic Tracks walk-Fit &amp;
Gazelle Free Style , llkS .r'\fi'W,
EHO
(740)992-5 t 81
\ II W 11\'1)1...,1

r•o

HOUSEHOW

GooDs

~..,._ _ _ _ _ _ _,..

Sawmill for sate, good workIng order. for more Info . call
740-747-2616

7 pe. sectional couch w/3 Solid oak, 3 pc. bedrOOrfi
suite w/mattress &amp; box
springs. paid $2.000 asklllQ
OBO, (740)992·.0039
3478
a

. r~linera &amp; 2 teal blue reclln·
ers, S66o tor all, (740)992·

--'----:--:--:--:-::
Belgium carpet_. • 6 feet 20
inches by 3 feet 30 inches .
(740)992·3980

r

~=
I

Block. brick, sewer pipes.
Dinette table . six chairs, windows. lintels, etc. Claude
couch . chair &amp; recliner. Sell Winters. Rio Grande . OH
all for $250. (740)446-3374
Call740·245·5 t2, .

=

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�Page 84 • The Daily Se~tinel

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Friday, January 2, 2004

www.mydailysentinel ~com

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•

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Friday, Jan,_uary 2, 2004
~LLEY OOP

www.mydallysentinel.com

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page

•

liORiil'ErsiiSAuiiiiiiO..,..F'
""•o-oiiFOR
iiiAUIOl
iiiSAu:
iiiiiii,_rll

d

•

ACROSS

puppies.

4250

Worme&lt;1/shots. extended cab. V6, lannau
each. (740)256-6341
cover. PW, PL. new t1res.
56,685
$11 ,000

5 miniature horses for sale
Call (740)256-&lt;! 136 between aflar spm.

9am to 8pm.

•

Flhillip
· Alder

m11es.
Asking
(740)446· )992

--"-----1999 Ford W1ndstar. very

AKC Pomeranian puppies, 6

n 1ce, tow mtles Owner til ,

weeks old. 1 male 1 tamale
Parents
on
premt~s
(740)388-841,,

needs 10 sell $10,000. or
take
over
payments
(740)441 -1 236 if no answer

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
, Early birds start
6:30
Last Thursday of

PATEL CLINIC
Halesh M. Patel
MD,FACP

For sale AKC Dachshund
leave .a message.
2 males red lOng hatr reacfy 96 Oldsmob ile Cterra 4Jan. 4th 740·894·4422
door.
power · steering ,
brakes. windows , crUise
Iguana and cage 2 ft . long, co ntrol, AJC ,"!01 .000 miles

Internal Medicine
Medical Oncology

tame inch.Jdes foOd, heat· Good condition Well ma 1nrock &amp; tamp $60 00 304·
895-35n call afte r s ·JOpm tamed $ 2 ·500 ·00 {7401 949•

every month

2849

Mate Border Collie, ABCA
reg., no bad habits, started
to work , Bl ack &amp;Wh1te
markmgs and transferable
papers , call after 5 30 pm
364·895·35n

r

M U!.1CAL

I

fNsmUMIN1S

.

97 Chevy Mal 1bu. $3.995.9 1
Ford Explorer, 4,;4, 2 door,
$~. 9 00 .
Southern Auto Sa les

(740)446-8554

~40

If medical care is all about caring with
heart's_tender touch and warmth of
tears and smiles along with the cutting
edge care, .well, you can count on us!

MaroKcYo ...s

Gemei nhardt
Open-hole ..._
Flute Used for 2- 1/2 years.
2· 2003 KLX110 Kawasaki,
$400 OBO. Call (740)446- Honda 50 dirt b1ke. 1982
1545.
Honda 650 Nighthawk, 1995
I \I&lt;' I " t 1'1'1 II "
Suzuk1 DA400 (740)379·
,\I I\ I 'ifH 1,
9242

EQutP!I1ENT
Jol1n Deere 4440 tractor
power shift &amp; duals
Jol1n Deere 7000 B· row
corn planter, nQ t1ll , dry ferlli·
tier call 304-675--4308

r

'10

Pomeroy Auto Pans
Maeblne Shop Str•ke
W Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) !1'12-2139

II'

•

••

HAY &amp;
·

I

•

,J 9
A 1\ 53
• Q95 ~
• A 8 3
•

Dealer East
Vulnerable Bolh

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Phone (7&lt;10)~!93-61i7l l
Alhens, Ohio

750 East State Street

'
;_. tiOvl AIOVT S'OM~ GLOVI&gt;S
fJl•
ON YOV~ S'G~NI(. ~"

~ANk-

Gtf~(.KS SING~

' ANP.

~~t

ANYwAY?

~~

CL~A~

Connie Curnutt

815-3982 Shop

owner{operator

885-3512 nome

J# buy quilt tops

BARNEY
I NEED YORE

· AD\liCI!,

ElVINEY !!

I'M OUT OF TH' ADVICE
BUSINESS !! IT'S A
....._TM
.ANKLESS TASK AN'
NOBODY
NEVER
LiSTENS
NO HOW!!

BUT IF YOU'LL SETTLE
FER AN' OPINION, I GOT
OF THEM !!

New&amp; Used

475 South Church St.
25271
Ripley,

THE·BORN LOSER

-

wv

Pf'fl.l:&gt; 1:'&gt; 1'\ Rf.C0\&lt;.1&gt; FOIZ.

1·800-822-0417

1-\f. Kfff'lt-\GOI'lfOf

II-\'( \'.(')()i_.l)\10~ !

"W .Vs # I Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp;
Van Dealer"

~

~

$3.500 00 Call (740)9927769 or (740)59 1·052 1

~

t--1"-ot

1994 Mazda MX·6 5-speed.

19S!ffbUr

M

YOU
LANDED ON
MY \10TEL I
YOU O WE 11 E

and Financial Services,

Do you· see any way that three no-trump
could fail?
AI th e f1rst tab le, W est led the diamond
e1ght Aft er win n.~ng w1th dummy's tack ,
' declarer ran the.,..club queen . West won
w1th lhe kmg and casl1ed his two top dia-

monds, so South c la1med tl1e rest for plus
630.
•
.
At thiS !able, Greco led the d1amond -ace.
1ack two, five Greco, seeing that the contract could not be beaten by normal
means and hop1ng declare r would miSread th e layout, exited with a low diamond. Sou th, after winn1ng w1th his diamond nme, wei-It 1nto the' dummy w1th a
arld
spade, finessed the club queen
won the tnck.

(excluding Ha(twell items (R&amp;R)
Ant&lt;ques &amp; Sta1ned glass)

HARTWELL
HOUSE
100 E. Ma1n Pomeroy

992-7696

Broad Run Gun Club
Outlaw/Slug Shoot
Sunday, January _4th
Club Maeting ~
10 • 11 am

.

not blessed w1th X-ray v1s10n, look a second club ftnesse . Greco won wtl h hiS dub
kmg and continued the perfect defense
by leadmg lhe spade queen
·

SeD-Storage ·
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·5232

'

YOUNG'S

• Room Addlllona &amp;
Remodeling

'tPhone'~·------------------------------P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

~- ..,.a.~·-~~

.

..... k:t.'-~ltto- ...:..~o:.i.:..

MARCIE AND PATTV ARE
OUTSIDE _T~EV WAt-4T ME
TO TELL TI-l EM liJI.(ICI-l ONE

I LIKE 8E5T .. WHAT

~~~£._;I DO?

TELL 1EM '(OU CAN 1T
STAND EIT~Ef/. ONE OF
TI-IEM!TELL 'EM TO
6ET LOST! SIC VOUR
D06 ON'EM!

Advertise
in this .
space f9r $1 00
•
per month.

'
"ETTY

97 Beech·St.
ffilddleport~ OH

1

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••
'

992-6635'

Ph 7&lt;111-Hl•ot:n
C1ll 740·511·1 07J

BISSEll

cnm1cn•
• New Homes
• Garages

• Roorlng 6 Guuera
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Palnllng

• Complete

V. C. YOU~G Ill
992· 6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
Y

oe&amp;l

Remodeling

7ca-an-1m
. Stop &amp; Compare

KAGJ . AM

XDZ

AMM

YOU'VE TAKEN TOO LONG
TO DECIDE, C~UCK, 50
WE'RE GOING ~OME ..

GO BACK TO
SLEEP.. I WON'T
NEED YOU ..

CFGXY. BKZ

n't have run the clubs, so he allowed
West to hold the trick Declarer was hoping for another spade play. so that he
could d1scard ht s blockmg club ace on
dummy's spade ace But Greco d1d n't err:
he shifted to a heart
Declarer won only one spade, two hearts.
one d1amond and two clubs - an amazing three down minus 300

'111ur'lllrthdoiw:

JZK
GAGZ

DBSNK
AG

AM

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BK

KNBJ
HGCZD

WZAWVZ. "

W.SLKHDZ
KNZ

RXYZJ

XSZZ ,

" KFLAAG "

PREVIOUS SOLU,TION - ' There will c ome a t1me. when you believe
everything IS ftntshed That wtll be the beg1nn1ng · ..._ LoLJts L'Amour
(c) 20q4 by NEA. Inc 1-1

'::~~~:~' ~©~~~-~'£~~· I AMI
- - -- - - ; , . . 11111•11 by ClAY I POLlAN _.:.__ _ _, _
WOlD

0

Rl'OHon ge len•rs of I he
lour scrambled wo rd~ bttSaturday, Jan. 3, 2004
low to f or m fovt wordl
By Bernice Bade Osol
Ttlere Is a good possib1hty th at your innovative te ndencies wil~ be extremely strong
HU GRES
in the year ahead and you could come up
With a number ol new 1deas Let them
prove themselves, howeve r, before you
launch anyth1r;19
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) - Stlou ld
you have to 1un around on a number ol
errands today, be cert ain to schedu le yo\J r
time sensrbly If you fly a ll w1thout enough
fuel. so mewhe re a long th e way you'll
crash
AQUAA1US (Ja n 20-Feb t 9) - ThiS IS
so hard keeping wilh
one ' of those days when a devil-m ay-dare
attitude could get you 1nto a who le lot of
my neighbors,' my sister comtroubl e It IS OK to wan t some exc rl ement 1n
- _ _ _ _ plained. 'Well." llaughect "just
your life, but be1ng recKless IS goin g too far
. - - - - -- ----, th&lt;n k how hard it is fo~them to
PI SCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Au nmng off
f keep • • • to play today, knowm~ l ull we ll that you 're
neglectmg your dut1es (particularly tam11y
Comple te the chvd le quoted
obligatio ns). w111 ge t you 1n more hot water
_
.
.
•
.
.
bt ftll1ng 1n th e m•u1ng wQfds
tha n you may be prepared to handle
.__.__ _,__._...__._,_ t OU davelap frOm st~p No J bi!-low ·
ARIE S (March 2 1-Apnl t 9) - Whereas
yesterday your senses where sharpe r than
PRIN1 NUMB!R!D lHTUI IN
ever today they are liKely lo be rather dull
1H[SI SQUARES
If you don't have to do any c r1 ttcal work at
thiS ttme, table things unt1l you're back 1n
oft. UNSCIAMBlE MOVE lEilEII
shape.
'V 10 GET AN SWER
TAUR US (Apr il 20-May 20) - Novelties,
u'nusual rnen.;·h andi se or gadgets ol ali
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
kinds cou ld have a spec1a1 appeal to you
today so take ca re that you d on't trade
Mildew- Lusty· Crimp· Jasper- SMARTER
your money tor any whtte elephants that
We
attended a ve ry bonng seminar. "Thai speaker
you'll nevl:lr use
,
was
a
se
ll made man." my friend laug hed, "an d I thmk he
GEMINI (May 2 1:June 20) r It you IMtal·
ly experience a setback riQ_hl out ol the
should have made one SMAR TER."
starting ga te today. don't let tt dtscourage
you from moving forward on an import ant
objective Find a way arou nd the road·
block
CANCE R (June 21 ·July 22) - Opttmlsm IS
WHAf'~ 1HAT
an admirable qu ality. but today you could
TO [Xl WITH AIJY~IIJ&amp;~
be tncllned to con fuse 11 with Wishful th tnKIng Being unrealistrc ca n lalsely encour·
age you to tackle things you 're 1ncapable of
d01ng
LEO (July 23-Aug 22)- An acquaintance
who had promiSed never to lo rget.what you
did for h1m or her cou ld co nventEm tly have
a lapse ol memory today knowmg that w1th
enough w1ggllng, you'll let htm or her off
the hook.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) - Don' t get
trapped today into relymg once aga1n on
someone who has lei you down 1n the past
This person hasn 't c tl an~ ed and when the
ch1ps are down chances are that history
will rll peat itsefl.
·
LIB RA (Sept 23-0ct 23) - Try to tr uly
make th is a day of rest and tempo rarily
shelve diffiCUlt or tedious tasks because
you're not apt to be at your best 11 you
can't, be sure to wo rk _In a very methodical
,!ashton
SCORPIO
(Oct
24-Nov
22) · Disappointment Ia In atora for you today II
you treat 11ometh lng that haa not yet mate·
rlallzed u though It Ia already a loregoMt
conclualo9 Anyth ing_ can. ~ 11.ppen . and
chance• art It will
•
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov ;23-Dec . 21) Spring ing unexpecttd changes on your
apauae or the family without r1r11 illklng ,,
ti'IIMQI OVIr With lhlm It I IUraflre WIY to
up1et thl hOUIIhOid
conalderatl
of th eir dealr... -

I I I' I I

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DA

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~-r~-r~-T~--.~-:-s-rl--1-- 0

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$

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.1Eiedric
Licensed &amp; Bonded
ROBERT

" JZIZOXV

If South had won m the dummy. he could·

ARLO &amp; JA't~IS

J&amp;L

• Etectrtcat I PtumblnQI

Free Estimates

•

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

• Ntw Garage•

• Patio and Porch Decks

Mall or drop on this coupon along with a copy of your photo ID to

Ohio Valley flubllshlng

.d:

--=lf'i'-- .
740-992-7696

CARPENTER (lO'xll' 610'K20')
(740) 992-3194
SERVICE

.

' '

100 E. Main

Today scluc FC!l1ip]ls Y

I

PEANUTS

~~~
High 8l Dry

:Subscriber's
Name -----------~---'----'
.
•Aadress - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - '
:City/State/Zip _
· ------.------------

•

V.C. YOUNG Ill

by Luis Campos
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Tax Budget Hearing
Nolice is hereby given
that on Tuesday, the
13th day of January,
2004 at 7:00 p.m. at
the
Meigs
Local
Board of Education
j)fllce, Pomeroy, Ohio,
the
Meigs
Local
School board will
hold ito public hearIng for the tax budget
for the period of July
1, 2004 through June
30, 2005.
Mark E. Rhonemus,
Treasurer
Meigs Local Board of
Education
-J
320 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(1) 2

Wes t

Opcmng lead. t A
'

Hill 's Self
Storage

A public hearing
will be held January
14, 2004, af approximately 4:30p.m. In the
conference
room
located
with
the
library at Eastern
Elementary. The purpose ol the hearing Is
to review the 20042005 tax budget lor
the district. The budg·
et Is available lor
Inspection during regular business hours
at the administrative
offices of Eastern
Local School District.
Lisa
M.
Ritchie,
Treasurer
Eastern Local School
District 50008 SR 681
Readavllla,
Ohio
45.772
.{740) 667-3319

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Page B6 • The Daily 5entinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, January 2,

•

.ALoNG

2004

•

25 years -later, ·Hayes'
hit still stunning
he did for people."
A quarter-century after the
Associated Press
hit, and 16 years after Hayes'
.
death, 'the wheel of history has
.JACKSONVILLE. Fla. - _ com~ around a bit, 6-pecially
For decade upon decade, foot- in and around Ohio.
.
baJI co~ches ha~e struggled to · The coach who skulked out
mamtam a d~hcate balance. of Jacksonville in disgrace was
They teach .a vwlent. emon~:m- awarded an honorary doctoral game! yet try to do so wnh- ate by the university in 1986.
out }ettmg the fer~11y and Me gave a heartfelt speech that
passiOn compromise the1r stressed the value of educalmage or tamt the1.r m:s~age.. . tion, the worth of a diploma
Twenty-five Y_e~s ago this and the need for good acts in
week, Wo9&lt;!y Ha)es lost con- the community. It r.esonated
trol m that ·1strug~le .
:· with even his most harsh
Even m today s era of reah- detractors.
ty TV and mstant analySIS and
Three years earlier, he was
results, the 1mages and conse- taken on the field to dot the "i"
quenc~s fro111 the Oh1o State in the "Ohio" that the
coach s ternble moment mthe Buckeyes· marching band
1978 Gator Bowl are startling .• spells out during halftime in
. One . second, Cle~son one of college football's great
defens1ve_ t'!ckle Charhe traditions. Tears flowed in the
Bau~an IS mfiking an mter- stands. Hayes called it one of
ce!ltlon, a pl~y fbat ends on t~the greatest honors of his life.
Oh10 State s1delme. .
.
Hayes often acknowledged
Next. Hayes, aw_hne-ha1red, aving flaws as a coach but
65-year-old. man m the tWI· never publicly explained why
hght. of h1s career. comes he slugged Bauman, who did
see!Umgly from nowhere ..He not respond to requests for
dehvers a rtght-hand.ed hay- comment from The Associated
maker across Bauman s collar· Press.
bone, stunmnll the lineman
In the llattering glow of retmore than hurtmg h1m.
rospect. Hayes is. still viewed
B~t there ':"as damage done. by many as an icon, a tell -itIt ':",as a VIC.IQUS, moment that like-it-is taskmaster who wordehned one mans total loss of shipped
George
Patton ,
self-controh The headline m demanded discipline and wasthe _I~al newspaper the ~ext n't afmid to threaten, cajole or
day. Fnd~y N1ght F1ghts.
ifltimidate to get it.
By the t1me the team landed, .. "In those days. if Coach
backhome_,17-_151oserstocap said, 'We're meeting at 1, and
an otherw1se forgettable sea- jut!Jping off the bridge,· people
son, t~e. coach - who ~on would be in line to jump off,"
two nallona.l cha_mp1onsh1ps. Stillwagon said. "These day·s,
205 gru:nes and e1ght .tnps to some of the things he did, and
the R~se Bowl over 28 sea- he said, you'd have litigation. "
sons ':"llh the Buckeyes- had
And while many. especially
lost h1s JOb.
in his old home turf are will'"! ayes was ~scorted b~ ing to look at the slngle rash
pollee from the auplane to a m'pment as an anomaly, _the
car on th.e tarmac, .rushed farther one strays from OhiO,
home m pnvacy- d,ecades of the more that hit seems to
solid, albeit ham-handed, define Hayes.
"I wish 1 could say-1 didn't
work tam1shed by one ugly
p~nch.
think it did," said Gene
'I twas sad, .~ca use he was Stallings, a Bear Bryant discia great man, former Oh1o pie who, as coach at Texas
State
hneba.~ker
Jnn A&amp;M, competed against
Stillwagon smd. A lot ofpeo- Hayes in the 1960s and '70s.
.~e l talk, ~ . 2.12!Y. re~mber "He was a great historian. He
. liim foT\1\at one illing. ~ey won. Jots of games. He meant
never saw all the great thmgs so much to Ohio State over 25
BY EDDIE PEUS

years. But it ta.inted him .. Ask
the majority of the people to
tell you something about
Woody Hayes, and that's what
they're going to tell you."
Surely, Hayes - the consummate teacher and coach would have wanted some
lessons to be gleaned from his
misfortune. But it's' hard to tell
exactly what was learned.
This is, after.all, a sport~ culture that · preaches zero tolerance and yet turns Virginia
Tech coach Frank Beamer's
slapping a player on the sideline - and the player's foulmouthed retort - into a lead
highlight on TV. Beamer was
never punished.
Bob Kili~ht is caught on
video grabbmg a player by the
neck in practice and eventually gets fired. But two years
later, he's coaching again,
swearing on television and acting every bit as outlandish as
before.
Former Jacksonville Jaguars
coach Tom Coughlin, who
swore for eight years while
stomping up and down the
same sideline on which Hayes
lost his job, remembers watching TV the night of Hayes'
punch.
.
''It was very unfortunilte,"
Coughlin said. "But you've
got to remember the other
things he did while he was the
football coach. He was always
teaching vocabulary, ·etiquette,
manners. He had some rather
crude way of explaining
things, ~.ut he was always
teachmg.
.
· Stillwagon sees the irony
there.
Hayes, he says, was always
teaching, always preaching
and yes, always violent
·
Back then, though, the linebacker recalled, it seemed like
the message was more important than the method.
"I remember he said you
never remain the same,''
Stillwagon said. "He .said you
either get better or get worse.
You don't stay constant. He
always had a lot of great
advice like that. Sometimes. l
wish he would have taken it
for himself."

Oester returns to Reds as
minor league coordinator
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ron Oester, a former
Cincinnati Reds player and coach who soured
on the team after he was passed over for the
manager's job in 2000, said Wednesday he is
~appy to ·be returning now as the team's minor
league field coordinator.
Oester, who says fortner Reds general manager Jim Bowden offered him the job as manager
in 2000 and then hired Bob Boone instead when
Oester asked for an improved salary offer, told
reporters he welcomed. the Reds' offer to bring
him)lack to his hometown.
·
But when asked if he would have returned had
Bowden still been with the Reds, Oester said.
"No." The · Reds fired Bowden and Boone in
July 2003 as the team fell out of contention.
Bowden couJd not be reached for a respoilse
Wednesday afternoon. A cell telephone number

QB

that had been listed in his nan1e has been disconnected.
.
Oester told reporters at a news conference at
Great American Ball Park that his disappointment with the Reds is behind him. He said he
enjoyed the past two seasons in the Philadelphia
Phillies' minor league system but had kept his
house in Cincinnati.
"They pursued me aggressively," Oester said
of the Reds. ''That meant a lot to me."
With the Phillies. Oester was responsible for
developing infielders in the minor leagues. With
the Reds, the former second baseman will be
responsible for developing aJI minor league
players.
.
,
Oester, 47, spent his entire 17-year career with
the Reds, playing in the majors from 1978 to
1990.

gO."
· Craig Krenzel, the MVP of
last ·season's national title
· game, will be playing his last
for Buckeyes. He is 23-3 as, a
starter.
Ohio State's offense ranked
only eighth in the Big Ten, but
its rushing defense is No. I
nationaJiy, allowing 61).5 yards
per game- 1.9 yards per carry
- even with the bad day in
.Ann Arbor.
The Buckeyes won two
games without their offense
scoring a tol)chdown. ·

from .Page 81

No."'7 Ohio State (t0-2)

No. B Kansas State "'
(11·3)

, Schedule re11111te:
Washington
W, 28·9
San Diego State w; 16·13
N. Carolina State w. 44·38 (3 OT)
Bowling Green W, 24-17
Northwestern
W, 20-0
at Wisconsin
L, 17-10
•
at Iowa
W, 19-10
Coach Jim at Indiana
W, 35-6
Tressel
at Penn State
W, 21-20
Michigan State W, 33-23
Purdue
W, 16-13 (OT)
at Michigan
L, 35-21
What to Watch: The Buckeyes' pass 1jelensa i~
solid, though they're not close to baing as good
as they are against )he run. DB Will Allen was a
first-lllam All-American, along with DE Will Smith.
On o~ens~ OB Craig Krenzel threw for just 1 ,851
yards ancit1 TDs. but he's also a threat on
planned draws and when scrambling. Most of the
Buckeyes' passes go to WR Michael Jenkins or
TE Ben Hartsock (33 catches), though Santonio
Holmes has also emerged, with 30 catches for
512 yards and five TDs.
Defense
Offense
Total defense: 3,481
Total offense: 3,_981

Schedule re11u1ts:
California
W. 42-28
Troy State
W, 41-5
McNeese State
W, 55-14
Massachusetts
W 38-7
Marshall
L, 27-20
atTexas
L, 24·20
Oklahoma State L, 38·34
Coach Bill 1at
Colorado
W. 49·20
Snyder
Kansas
w. 42·6
Baylor
W. 38-10
at Iowa Stat&amp;
W, 45-0
at !ljebraska
W, 38-9
Missouri
W, 24-14
'Big 12
Championship Oklahoma'
W, 35-7
What to Watch: Ohio State's top-ranked run
defense will try to stymie the nation's mo-~lific
RB this season, Kansas Slate's Darren
es.
The Buckeyes, who yield just60.5 yards per game
on the ground, will also have to contend with OB
Ell Roberson, whpse 943 yards rushing are ·still
more than 1,000 behind Sproles' 1,948. Roberson
was also the nation's 12th-rated passer, completing
132 of 243 passes for 2,251 yards and 24 TDs.

Individual yardage leaders:
Lydell Ross
771
--f,85r
Craig Krenzel
Michael Jenkins
738

Rushing
Passing' '
Receiving

...

St.:.!:; • \ ol. :!1-1. 'io. -t:l

Frank requests additional office funding

• W. Va. man who enjoys ·
hunting shows and videos
is noW in them:See Page
81
• Man's injury helps
quadriplegic return to
hunting. See Page 81
:. South Gallia downs
Flyers. See Page 83
• Buckeyes win second
straight Fiesta Bowl.
See Page 81

Retums
employees to full

of mailing taX bills and advertising J,ll"qperty tax infonnation,
made tt impossible for him to
make up the cuts anywhere but
iri his salaries line item.
As a result, Frank reduced
BY BRiAN J. REED
his
staff to four-day work
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
'
weeks early last year.
''The
county
commissioner.;
POMEROY Meigs
County Treasurer Howard are balancing the budget on
Frank has requested an addi- the backs"of the eniployeeiiiif '
treasurer's office," Frank
tional, $28,000 in fundin~ for the
told
Friday.
his office for 2004, and sat.d he "Othercommissioner.;
offices found places.to
will return his employees to a cut to make up the difference,
five-day work week this year. but I'm not able to do that."
Last year, commissioner.;
Frank said his office appropriimposed 15-percent cuts in ation was reduced from
appropriadot)S for all county $116,1XXlin2001to$108,00lin
general fund offices, including 2002, to $88,1XXl last year- an
Frank's, but Frank said required amount equal to the treasurer's
expenditures, including the cost office appropriation in 1988. .

workweek

Meanwhile, he said his office ·
collected $268,()X) in tax collection fees and interest on county
investments last year alone.
"I earn my way," Frank
said. "To continue operating
my office on the current
appropriation will force a
layoff of employees."
•Frank said his three fulltime employees lost a cornbined $14,103 in wages due to
lost hour.; last year. but said he
will return his employees to a
full work week this month,
regardless of the amount
appropriated for salaries.
Commissioners did not
pledge additional funds
beyond the $88,000 appi'opriated for 2004 during their
meeting with Frank but

Commissioner Jeff Thornton
asked Fmnk to work with
Auditor
Nancy
Parker
Grueser and Prosecuting
Attorney Pat Story to adjust
the certification of revenue
for the oew year, in hopes that
additionaJ funding for Frank's
office might be found.
In particular, Thornton
suggested a re-evaluation of
the projected sales tax
income for 2004, which the
budget commission estimates to be $100,000 less
than that of last year.
Frank said such an adjustment is unlikely.
'1f we JXUja.t mcre than we're
capiDie Of generating, we'll be
operating the COlUlo/. in the red by
the end of the Y&gt;Uf, ' ~ saitl. ·

TAKING THE OATH OF .,OFFICE
-

AP

BY CARRIE ANN Wooo
CWOOD@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

"That's all that matters;" Kansas State safety Rash~Washington . "Even though they
don't get a lot of credit, they've found ways
to win games. They do whatever it takes to
· from Page 81
win game~."
Krenzel is as smart as he is tough. College
game as a Buckeye. "It's been a great time, sports information directors named the fifth·
but life moves on."
year senior the all-academic player of the
He will miss the camamderie the most.
year. But it doesn't take a genius to know how
"The best thing about college football, impol;tant it is for him, and his team, to go out
hands down, is you've got a team of guys a winner.
from all different parts of tjle country. from
The Buckeyes were clobbered at Michigan
all different backgrounds," Krenzel·smd' "All in their final regular-season game. They have
these guys come together and you would never lost two in a row with Krenzel at the
think that all the guys on !JUr, team have been controls.
friends since we were real little."
•
"When you're young like we are, you're
Through Krenzel's career, the Ohio State always looking forward," Krenzel said. "You
offense has been just good enough to help the have your whole life to look back on these
powerhouse Buckeyes' defense succeed . years. We don't want 30 years from now to
Unlike the double-barr~led Kansas State look back on this year and say 'Oh, we were
attack of Darren sr.roles and Ell Ro erson, reminiscing on the year before and' we didn't
Ohio State doesn I do many spect Jar have as good a year as we wanted.'"
things. They just win.
·

Krenzel

Cooper
from Page 81
Not LSU or Oklahoma.
And all you·' ve heard through the media is
how good USC is . and how the Trojans
should be the national champs.
·
' Why?
Because ESPN recognizes Jhe ESPN
Coaches Poll, while the other media outlets
acknowledges the AP poll. The 'Sportscasters
at ESPN seem to be taking defense because
their No. I isn't the BCS No. I.
They're li1erally rallying around the
Trojans almost as much as NBC supports

Notre Dame.
In the meantime, you are getting a biased
opinion from a source that's not suppose to
be so one-sided.
The ' human' poll s'. are flawed.
I don't completely support the BCS or the
computer polls that it uses along with the
'human polls', but in this case, I have to
side with the geeks.
.
The Trojans come ~om a very weak conference.
LSU and Oklahoma are in strong conferences.
Until some sort of playoff can be devised
in which colleges can still ma]l:e their big
bucks, the true national champions will
come out of New Orleans.

'

0BflUARIES
.
. Page AS
: • Connie F. Bradley
• Kathleen 0. Cecil
• Marvin Devett Ferrell

WEATHER
ShoweJS, HI: 80s, Low: 301 ,

sioners for the city.
"We ' ve gdt 5 city commissioners that will work
together and work for the
city of Gallipolis,'' Giles
said after taking office. John

said he also looked forward
to working for the city.
The next commission
meeting will be 7 p.m.
Tuesday. Jan . . 6 in the
Municipal Building.

MILES lAYTON

POMEROY - A national
investment banking firm i'
looking for buyers to purchase
· the vacant Kroger locations in
Pomeroy and Gallipolis.
Don Tate, who owns 12 FasChek and six Save-A-Lot stores,
said in the Charleston Daily Mail
the Kroger stores closed. si,nce
the strike ended in December
· have been offered for sale by
The Food Partners, a banking
fum cate1ing to the tood industry. on behalf of Kroger. .
Tate said he and several
other prospective businessmen have been contacted
twice by The Food Partners
since early November aboul
whether they are interested in
purchasing Kroger stores in
Pomeroy. Gallipolis, and othet
locations in West Virginia.
Matthew Morris, The Food
Partners. would not comment
what action the firm is taking
to market the locations to
prospective business people.
Tate. who owns a car dealership In Pomeroy. told the Daily
Mail he would have considered
taking over the store in
Pomeroy and converting it to a
Sav-A-Lot, but wouldn't
because there is already SavA·Lot there ow ned by Bob
Eastman. Tate said Sav-A-L.ots
do well against WaJ-Mart.
Perry Varnadoe, , Meigs
.County Economic Development
Director, confirmed that The
Food Partner.;, located in
Washington. D.C., has been try· •
ing to find someone interested in
the site of the former Kroger
Store sites in Gallipolis and
Pomeroy. He said the Kroger in
Pomeroy is in good condition
and is at a prime location that
·will make it easy to attract a
prospective business.
"These peofle are pros at
this sort o stuff," said
Please see Kroger, AS

Dryer fire

Ariel boasts headliners for upcoming .series

Robin, Cinderella, the Care
CWOOD®MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
Bears, Spiderman. Winnie
the Pooh, Tigger, the Hulk
GALLIPOLIS The and Scooby Doo and tfie
Ariel Theater will have sev- Gang. The characters will
era) big acts gracing the be taking over the stage
Ste"' McGhee; Artet
stage in the riext few Feb, 21. Bentley is an up
'.. ;botlrd&lt;ft!ltm.,..;
,' ,
months.
' and coming country star
. .'''-' '·•:,,
.
· Bluegrass singer Rhonda and he is scheduled to perthey have to drive sexeral
Vincent, country singer fortn March 24.
hours away and pay $30-40
Derks Bentley and a live
He said the acts are not
action cartoon show with for the Ariel as much as for tickets, McGhet would
famous characters are all they are for the whole com,- like to see the image
scheduled to perfortn at the munity. McGhee said he change, that people thmk
Ariel according to board hopes the shows will help · about coming to Gallipolis
member Steve McGhee.
bring in tourism dollars for instead of driving hours
The shows are diverse the area. He said it is part of away.
and offer something-differ- an initiative to folJow up
"It is a place of freedom
ent for everyone. The acts with the push st~ed with and fun;" McGhee said. He I·
will each have two shows. Marty Stuart, Ricky ' Van said the Ariel is there for the
All tickets are under $20 for Shelton and the Christian community. He said it is not
all shows. Vincent has won group 4-Him. McGhee said
numerous awards for her the Ariel will ot make about dressing up ii"J'i"tuxefrom the dos. It is t_he opportunity to
bluegrass music. She is much mo
Gallipolis Fire Chief Bob Donnelly and volunteer firefighters
it is for the com- have good quality•. affordwork to clean up after fir!l broke .out Saturday flt the Gallipolis ' .
scheduled to perform Jan.
as a whole: .He able entertainment in the
Holiday Inn. Donnelly said the fire began in a dryer and was .
23. Among the cartoon muni
quickly contained,There were no casualties and damage was
characters scheduled .to adde nortnally for area res- area with something for all
restricted to the dryer and its contents. (Agnes Hapka )
appear are Batman and idents to see acts like this, ages.
.''

I

)'

APTIST CHURCH
leccmd Avenue
Ohio 45760

Detail• on Pace A2

INDEX

' 2 SECI'IONS- 24 PAGES.

Celebrations

. Sunday SC-1\IQl.·l;O,
Sunday EvEmiil ..,, .c ...-

Classified~

Comics
Editorials
Obituaries

·.Region

Pastor- Founder 1977

Dow was voted president of
the
Gallipolis
City
Commission and Giles vice
president. Dow said he
looked forward' to working
with his fellow commis-

Bv J.

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL. .COM

and fun."

.•.

James E. Keesee

John H. Saunders takes the oath of office for the Gallipolis City Commission as administered by Judge Margaret Evans in a ceremony Friday. (Carrie Ann Wood)

National firm
seeks buyers
for Kf'Qger
locations

"It is a place
of freedom

sports@mydailytribune.com
VICT.O

'
GALLIPOLIS
The
face of the Gallipolis City
has
just
Commission
changed a little.
John Saunders and Joe
Gills took the oath of office
in a swearing in ceremony
Friday. Judge Margaret
Evans administered the oath
to serve the City of
Gallipolis to the new commissioners.
The ceremony began with
a welcome from commissioner Dow Saunders. "We
look forward to the next two
years. We have a lot of work
to do," he said. Dow added,
"On a personal' note, Dad,
I'd think ~ou 'd 'be proud of
us today. ' Dow and John
are twin brothers which is a
first for servin~ on the commission.
Their
father
Howard Baker Saunders
served the city on the commission
for
years.
Following the introductions, the oaths were taken.
Giles took the oath first,
followed by John. The new
commissioners were then
by
the
congratulated
remaiging commissioners.
After""'he taking office, the
commission held a short
organizational
meeting.

BY CARRIE ANN WOOD

E-mail us your.sports news:

~.

.

"'""'''''" • \li&lt;I.lkporl • t .allipoli' • . laiiiJal '~ -l · :!Ofq

SPORTS

2,026
2.251
1,174

Sports
. .

1. All' have sinned.
"For all have sinned, and come short of the"glory of God"·
'
Romans 3:23
·
2. The.re Is a payment for sin.
"The wage!"of sin is death" Romans 6:1
3. The finality or death Is hell.
.
·"Death and hell were cast into the lake offire. This is.the
s~cond, death" Rev. 20.'14
'
4. Jesus Christ, God's·Son paid our debt.
. _
"But God c~mmendeth his love toward·us'in. their, while we
we~ yet simzers ..t;hrist died for us. ''• Romani 5:.8
S. You can be ~ved'todar. . 'i
"For whosoever .•hall call upon the. name of the Lard shall
be saved.". Roma~ts 10:13 .·

.

'

t lhio \all··~ l'uhli,hiug ( o.

Total defense: 3,909

SOURCES: Kansas State University; Ohio State UnJversity

•

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Mefgs counties

Defense

Darren Sproles
Eli' Roberson
James Terry

B.ehingthe Wheel, 81 .

"
~lJ t

..

Offense
Total offense: 6,237

LIVING

Blue Devils burn
Point, Dl

War becomes
reality, Cl

. 2004 Fiesta Bowl, Friday, Jan. 2 Tempe, Ariz .
.~ 8 p.m. (EST) ABC

SALVATION- GOD'S WAY

corps that's very
probably one of the
!iest offens1ve lines we've seen
· all year, if not the best."
Sproles ru&amp;hed for a school!llllord 1,948 yards this season,
.t,021 in the last five games.
Roberson, despite missing' 2
112 games wi~ a wr!st injury,
needs 57 yards rushing to be
the .third .player in NCAA
·Division I history to rush for
1,000 yards and pass for 2,000

THE RivER

Hesta In,.... • State batdes State
•

SPORTS

I .

.

~

•

.

.

"msert

A4
As
A2
·Bt
'
A2

© aoo4 Ohio Valley Publts~ Co.

~

Information at your fi~gertips ...
For the latest healthcare information and to
learn more about the programs and services
Holzer Medical Center provides,
log onto our website:

~

www.holze~.org

' '

..

I ,.

..

•

\

Discover the Holzer Difference
•

wwW-.hob;er.org
•

'

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