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                  <text>Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

WW\V .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, February 2,

Cleveland cuts down Nets, 91 ~ss
CLEVELAND (AP) Cleveland Clinic on Tuesday.
LeBron James capped his sevPerhaps tired following
enth career triple-double
their win over the Pistons, the
when he rushed Jason Kidd
Nets shot just 25 percent from
into a miss and grabbed the
the floor in the first quarter. It
rebound in the final minute of
was a ragged first 12 minutes
for both clubs, who were
' the Cleveland Cavaliers' seventh straight win, 91-85 over
equally inept in a sloppy secthe New Jersev Nets on
· ond period which ended with
Wednesday night:
New Jersey leading 35-34.
New Jersey shot only · 33
James scored 26 points 22 in the second half .- and
percent in the first haiL but
added II rebounds and 10
the Cnvs didn't take advanassists as the Cavaliers held
tage as they shot .only 4 1 and
off the cold-shooting Nets,
committed II turnovers ..
who snapped Detroit"s . IINotes: It's a tough back-togame Winning streak Tuesday.
back for the Cavaliers, who
James, who averaged 32.8
play m Miami on Thursday in
points, 8.1 rebounds and 7.5
a nat ional TV game .... Cavs
assists in January, began ·
G Damon Jones, a journeyman who spent last season
February 'with his third tripledouble this season and helped
with Miami, is anxious to see
Cleveland end a five-game
how he'll be received by Heat
losing . skid against New
fans . in his first game there
Jersey.
since leaving as a free agent ·
Drew Gooden had 18 points
last summer. "I'm not even
and Sasha Pavlovic added 14,
nervous about the gam'e, _just
' the fimal
~~
including seven 111
the fan reaction," said· Jones,
three minutes. as the Cavs New Jersey Nets' Jason Kidd , right, strips the basketball from who described his one year in
closed it out.
Cleveland Cavaliers' Eric S.now during third quarter NBA bas- South Florida as "the best of
;
·
Vince C.arter ha d ;- 9 pomts, ketba ll action Wednesday in Cleveland.
my. 29 years." Jones, too.
Richard Jefferson 19 and made four free throws in the an 83-76 win with 2:57 to would like to meet with Heat
Kidd 14 onjust4-of-15 shoot- final 29 second s as the play. Pavlovic, whose inser- coach Pat Riley, who was
ing for the Nets.
Cavaliers improved to 17-5 at tion into the starting lineup angered by comments Jones
· Although New Jersey made home.
.
has coincided with the Cavs' made earlier thi s season after
on'Iy 38 percent (29-of-77) of
Unable to take over like he · win streak, hit another jumper Stan Van Gundy quit as
its shots, the Nets were sti ll has done so · often lately, and added t.wo lree throws Miami's coach. "Hopefully,
within 85 -81 when Kidd James stumbled across the w1th 44 seconds to go.
. \ve can go back .to being
made a steal near midcourt foul lane but was able 10 flip
Cavs forward Ira Newble bestest buds," Jones said ....
lmdheaded up the tloor for a .
f
. remamed hospltal tzed w1th Next Tuesday, Cavs G Larry
· h'l b .
possible layup. But James 111 a ·10 - 00 1er w 1 e · emg what the -team is calling a Hughes will have.a better idea
caught up to him and crowded fouled. Hts free throw put facial abscess. Newble, who how long he 'II be out followhim under the basket without Cleveland ahead 79-75 wah missed 23 games earli er thi s ing finger surgery. "We' ll see
making contact. and Kidd's 4: 15 left.
season with inflamed tissue in what the doctor says," said
shot was short .
James made one free throw .his foot, was sidelined for Hughes. who hasn't played
James tipped out the miss and picked up assist No. · 10 Monday's game in Charlotte since Dec. 31. Hughes was
and ran down his lOth when he fed Pavlovic for a 3- with it migraine headache. initially expected to miss at
rebound in the corner. He pointer that gave Cleveland .before he was admi tted to the. least eight weeks.

Frye hopes to follow Roethlisberger to Super Bowl
'·

' BEREA (AP)
Charlie 41-0. The Steelers sacked
Frye knows he will always be Frye eight times.
compared with Pittsburgh
Maybe that's why he's pickquarterback
Ben ing them to win the Super
Roe\hli sberger.
· Bowl.
!"fe can only hope that his
'They 're just playing at a
career takes a similar path.
whole other level than every"He's the starting quarter- body else is in the NFL." he
back in the Super Bowl," Frye said. "They were at a whole
said Wednesday. "That's oti)er speed and they 've been
obviously ·a dream that 1 had playing that way ever since."
when 1 was a kid. 1 want 10
Frye wants Cleveland to be
play in the Super Bowl.''
more competitive against
Frye, back at Browns head- Pittsburgh next season and
quarters after time off in' has committed to working out
Phoenix , is used to 'the at Browns headquarters durRoethlisberger comparisons.
ing the offseason to get ready.
"We've been compared to
He is hoping to build camaeach other ever since . high raderie with wide receiver
school," Frye said. "We grew Brayton Edwards and tight
up an hour aw~y from each end Kellen Winslow Jr., who
. other. It's been that way since are in Cleveland over the winwe wereJ8 years old."
ter to rehabilitate from knee
They left their rural north- injuries.
ern Ohio hometowns to play
He also plans to bulk up,
in
the
Mid-American adding 10 pounds to his 215Conference and were drafted pound frame. to ·better witha year apart by AFC North stand a 16-game schedule :
ri vals
Pittsburgh · and
Frye went 2-3 as a starter
Cleveland.
after taking over for Trent
But the similaritie s end Dilfer at the end of the season
there.
but didn 't win coach Romeo
Roethlisberger has the Crennel's endorsement to be
Steelers in the Super Bowl in the starter next season·.
just his second season, while Crennellias said there will be
Frye, entering his second an open competition at quaryear, still has to prove he can terback during training camp.
lead the Browns' offense. ·
Frye though will prepare
While not promising a trip thi s offseason as if he will be
to the Super Bowl · next sea- the starter.'
son. Frye said he can be as
"1 played pretty good in the
successful as Roethlisberger. last five games,'' Frye said.
"I believe in myself that I 'T m on fy going to get better.
can go out and do the same The rookie quarterback that
things," Frye said. ·' He's you saw this year, you won't
doing a great job of managing see that guy next year."
the game, He's going out
While Frye doesn't expect
there and when he has an the 'Roethlisberger comparopportunity to make a big isons to go away, he' s tired of
play, he's making· it."
critics 4uestioni'ng hi s arm
Frye saw that firsthand , strength.
when the Steelers 'came to
"We can go get on the field
Cleveland on Christmas Eve right now and I'll show you
and embarrassed the Browns how far I can throw it," Frye

.said sm iling. "Everybody's
been talking about it for so
long. They were saying the
same things about Bernie
(Kosar). I feel I can make all
the. throws. I've made all the
thro"ws. I'll show ~nybody 1
can make all the throws.
Hopefully, after this season.
we can end that."

Bowl. the NFL combine and
'his rookie. season with the
Browns.
· Frye will spend the next
few months working out at
Browns headqu arters and
meeting wiih coaches four
days a -week. As for his Super
Bowl weekend plans, he
won't be traveli ng to Detroit

He ·acknowledged that hi s
.arm felt tired at the end of the
season and he was exhausted
in general. having no break in
football from his senior year
at Akron through the Senior

for the game.
"That's tuo painful to go
· up . there and watch that,"
Frye said. ''I' ll go to · the
Super Bowl' when we are
playing in it."

PREP GIRlS BASKETBALL

2006

I AP POLL

Infant's heart goes to
3-month-old girl in
rare transplant, AS

Top teams unchanged in
AP girls basketball poll
COLUMBUS (AP) - The top teams were unchanged
in the fourth weekly Associated Press girls state high
school basketball poll for the 2006 season, released
Wedne sday.
.
With two more weeks remaining , i~ the medw balloting, Cincinnati Princeton remains No . I in Division .1,
Morrow · Little Miami tops Division II, South Eucltd
Reg ina leads Division Ill and Columbus Africentnc con 7
tinues as the team to beat in Division IV.
There was little movement below the front-runners,
either. The top three team s stayed in the same order in
the first three divisions. In Division IV, No. 3 Newar~
Catholic's 57-46 loss to Zanesville West Muskingurv
paved the way for East Canton and Ottoville to slide past
.the Green Wave into the No. 3 and No. 4 ·spots.
Champions in the 22nd annual AP poll will be declared
on Feb . 15 on the eve of girls sectional tournament~
around the state.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o (.'1·.'\i'l S • \ 'ol. ;,:;, :-.lo . t!.!t

• Nelsonville wins big
over Meigs. See Page 81

Ohio high school girls basketball teams in the third weekly Associated Press poll of
2006, by OHSAA divisions, with won -lost record arid total points (first-place votes in
parentheses):

DIVISION I

Cin. Princeton (25) 16-0 ..
2, Sylvania Southview (2) 14-0 . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... , . . ..
3. Avon Lake 14-1 . . . ..
4, Cin. Mt . Notre Dame (1) 15-2
5, Stow-Munroe Falls 14·2 .
6, N Can. Hoover (1) 14-2 .
7, Pickerington Cenl. ( 1) 13-2
B. Chardon 14- 1
9, Dublin Scioto Pl 14·2 . . . .. ... . .
10, Amherst Steele 14-1 ... . . . .. ... .. . .. .... . . .

.· . ' .
' ' .'
. ' .. '
.. '

.300
.231
,207
184 '

.146
" " " " .147
. ...... . 127

.... 100 •
" " " " .69
'' '''' 67

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Wadsworth 26. 12. PICkerington N, 17.

DIVISION II
1, MOrrow LiWe Miami ( 16) 17-0 .
2, Louisville (5) 16-0 . . , . a. • •• • • • •
3, Washington C.H. Miami Trace (3) 14·1
4, Cuyahoga ~ails Walsh Jesuit (1) 14-1
5, Warsaw Ai"ver View (4) ,16-1. .. ... .
6, Utica 16·0
7. Cots. OeSales 12-2 .

' .. ''' .264
' .240
' ' .202
" " " " 166

.. -.. ...

174

. • • • I • • • • • • • •'

'' .172;
... . . . . . . .. . ...... 110 ~.

a. Shelby 14·2 . . . . . . . . .. .

. ..... . .83 -

9. Cols. Eastmoor (1) 13-4 . . .
10, Kettering Alter'(!) 14·2 .. .. ..... . . . .

.59 .•

. ... .30 ::

Others rece iv1ng 12 or more points: 11. Cirde11ille 23. 12. Cin _ McNicholas · 19. 1'{;,
Chagrin Falls Kens ton 16. 14, Millersburg W. Holmes 13.
::: .

-

DIVISION Ill

3m ~

1, S. Euclid Regina (29) 17·0 ..... . . .
2, Plain City Jonathan Alder (1) 14-1
. ... ..•.
3. Ironton 13·2 . . . . . . . . _
' 4, Garfittld Hts. Trinity 1 ~-3 ..

5, Carey14· 1 . ... . . . . . . .
6. Cle . Cent. Cath . 12·3

•

•

r

0

0

•

0

. • , .. . . . ...

0

•

•

•

:

.. ·

:259~·

. . .204 ·:
. 157~

- -- -- ~ -

.OBITUARIES

. . 149•

... ....

7, Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 15-0 .

0

.. .. . .. 115'·

. ...... ... . . . . .69
. .85 -

8, Coldwater 12·3 .
9, Sugarcreek Garaway 14·2
10. Apple Creek Waynedale 15·2 .

.. .. 76 ~

' ' . ' ''' ' ' "

. Page AS
• Rachel D. Hawk Pullins

. ''' .48

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 , Columbus Grove 37. 12. Middlelown Fenwa
(1) 3 1.1 ~. Marion Elgin 2~ . 14 . Sarahsville Shenandoah23. 15. Marion Pleasaot 18.
16, Castalia Margaretta 14.
·
~

.. ".279
" . " .252

2. Hamler Patrick Henry (7) 14·0
3, E. Can: (1 '114·1

.. ... . 197

4, Ottoville 15·1
5., Newark Calh. (2) 15·1
.
6, Bel-lin Hiland (1) 12·2 " . .

. . . .. . .. 183

' '' '' .166
........ 161

7, New Riegel15· 1 , . .. .

. . ·.· . .. . ,. , .. 132

8, New Knoxv1lle 14-1
9. Jackson Center 1 3-3
10, Ft. Loramie (1 ) lS- i

.. . . . .. ' . ..... .. . .107
' '' ''.57
'

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

......37

Others recetving 12 or more potnts : 11. Monroeville 33. 12. Glouster Trimble 18. 13.
S. Charleston SE 13. 14 . Ft. Recovery t2

.,

'

; ~ . :.!IIUh

authorize cost recovery and including
the · county,
construction of the clean-coal Lebanon Township and ·
plant, the region could expect Southern Local
School
POMEROY
Meigs I ,200 building trade jobs dur- District would be of "tremenCounty
Commissioners ing the three-year construc- dous benefit" to the county's
passed a resolution in sup-· . tion period, and 125 "head of economy, the resolution says.
.port of American Electric household" jobs · once the
Pullins Excavating of
Power '.s proposed IGCC plant is operational.
Pomeroy was the apparent
power·plant on Thursday, citAEP&lt;estimates that the $1 .2 ·low bidder on the demolition
ing the potential payoff to billion plant will provide component of Middleport 's
local governments in taxes i( nearly $10 million each year Community Development
the plant is !milt.
in property taxes and income Block . Grant Community
•If the Public Utilities taxes for local governments.
Distress grant project, with 'a
Commission of Ohio and the
The jobs created and rev- bid of $ 11 ,680. Bids were
Ohio Power Siting Board enue to local governments, also received from Jeffers

""" ·111\llaih .,,· nli oo.-l .no n•

Trucking of Pomeroy, in the
amount of $15.400, and
Hash' s Construction of
Bidwell, in the amount of
$14,704.
The . project involve'S the
demolition of three aban :
doned and condemned
houses
near
the
Middleport/Pomeroy line
and on Vine Street. It is part
of a larger half million -dollar grant project which also
includes new fire equipment and firehouse repairs.

~ix- tnoffi W(!(!i&lt;!: of 'tnild' wint(!t!

Water·to
•
run agmn
in London
Pool,
hopefully ·
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE
The
London Pool has sat sile'nt
since the September 2004
flood but last night Syracuse
Village Council voted to turn
• AHuriger For More.
the water back on in the form
See Page A2.
of accepting funds from the
Federal
Emerg~ncy
•· Common courtesy
Management
Agency
and hospitality not so
..a'EMA) for the pool's re1.1.iili:
coirim6n.' see··fage A2.
. The .vote was unaninl.bi.ls
despite
some concerns ·that
• Four Chaplains
there is no money in the -genSunday service set.
eral fund to operate the pool
See Page A2.
or Pi'Y for the villa_ge's share
of
the repairs. ·
• For the Record.
"I know this is taxing for the
See Page AS
vi II age but anything good is
• Governor in Mason
.hot easy," Syracuse resident
.
Elob Wingett said to council
C9unty to discuss IGCC
during its regular session.
plant with execs.
Wingett and other conSee Page AS .
cerned citizens are aware that
it will take more than. a hand• Congress extends
out
from FEMA to get the pool
Patriot Act for another five
reopened which is the dilemweeks. See ·Page AS
ma council has been struggling with for over a year.
• Del Monte to stop
.· FEMA w.ill only pay 75 .
growing pineapples in
percent of the repair costs
Hawaii. See Page AS
which is estimated at roughly $75,000. The state will
• Smith lands job.
pay
for 12.5 percent of .that
See Page A6 ·
$75.000 and the village will
• Holleys announce birtb. have to come up with its
See Page A6
12.5 percent which amounts
to
$16 ,270 ,
• Daughter gets safely
That is $16,270 the village
upgrade at rail crossing
does not have at this time.
where dad died.
Besides lacking its share of
the repair costs, the village is
See Page A8
also facing 'footing the bill
for t~e pool's plumbing
repairs and operational. costs
which are not covered by the
FEMA award.
Those $7 5,000 worth of
repairs ate o,nl y to get the
pool to hold water and to .
repair part of the concrete
decking that surrounds it. '
In addition to the $16,270,
Syracuse Councilman Kenny ·
Buckley estimated that the

INSIDE

DIVISION IV
1. Cols.- Atncentnc (19)16·0 .

FKlllAY , FEHK li Ain

Commissioners approve support resolution for AEP plant

SPORTS

COLUMBUS (AP)- How a state panel of sports writers and broadcasters rates

t.

. Lady Tomcats
~e Eastern, Bt

Yesterday Punxsutawney
Phil saw his shadow on
Grount;lhog Day and
declared, "Six more
weeks of mild winter
there will be." Yes, the
old groundhog said "mild
winter," which would be
just fine for these
Southern Elementary
Kindergartners who were
enjoying the nearly 60
degree temperature yes·
terday on their play,
ground. Pictured below.
Emeleemanhattan
Deming (left) and Randy
Moore get·a helpful
shove from their class'
mates Kyle Lawson and
La'l'lrlile Blevins on the
swings, while .. pictured at
left, Hannah Evans (left)
and Carlene Carroll
"hang out" together. The
children are students of
teachers. Karen Hill and
Christy Essick .
Beth Sergent/ photoo

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Detallo on Pace A8

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'

ing balance on a mongage on

th e prosecuting allorney's
on We,t Second Street.
The I0-year mortgage to

offi~:e

Please see Plant. AS

911 issue
still under
consideration
for November
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MVDAILVSENTINEL:COM

POMEROY
Meigs
County Commissioners will
not place a funding i»ue for
911 service on the May ballot,
but they · are forming a new
committee to consider options
for the service and may try to
tlnance it in so me way with a
November ballot issue.
Meigs
County
Commissioner Jim Sheets said
''there is no way" the 'issue can
be placed on.'the May primary
ballot. because !he tiling deadline for the primary is two
weeks awav, However: he said,
a second attempt at a- telephone
surcharge or another means of
timlncing the service. such as a
sa les tax. could be placed on
the November ballot.
''It is a possibility in the
fall. but it will depend on the
finding ., and recommendation s of the 911 committee."
Sheets said.
A 911 committee appointed
. by commi,sioners will reevaluate recommendations of
a previous wm minee:which
re r~rned to commissioners a
recommended sales tax to
pay for the serv ice . That recommendatton.
howe ver.
called fm " major building
. project to house the 911 operation and other emergency
and emer~enn medical ser,·il·e,. ·and" a traininQ center.
· Commis,ioner' took a more
conscrvatil e approach in their
propo,al to Meig' County I'Oter, la.,t year. They proposed a
50-cent nionthly surcharge 11n
all conwntionai telephone
lines in the countv. whic~ voters · reje~ted overwhelmingly
in November. That telephone
line charge would ha1e generated about 535 .000 for the
operation. which commissioner.; hoped to operate from the
sheriff\ department. as it is
opemted in Vinton County.
Grant funJing through the
fede r~l and state governments is
available to purrhcbe Jispatc·h;
ing equi pnlenL CummJ~~ioners
could also benelit from
Meigs Colintl' remains the
on !I c:ClUnt\ in ·ohio witho~t
a 9 il scr1·icc.

Meigs Local school bus involved in accident Gallia County bus-vehicle ·
STAFF REPORT,
NEWS@MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

.INDEX

new ' idcwalk s. and re-roration
work
on
the
Middleport Frcight _Depot
in Dave Diles Park.
Commi ssioner&gt; aut,horized
transfer of S 1.1 .276.32 into
the gener.al fund debt &gt;c rvice
line. whic h will allow the
cou nt y to pay off the remain-

POMEROY - A Meigs
Local school bus was
involved in a traffic accident
Wedne sday
aftern'oon
according ' to a traffic crash
report filed by Officer Brent
Rose of the Pomeroy Police
Department.
The ·accident occurred at
around 4:54 p.m. when the
school bus driven by Patti K.
Arms, Pomeroy, was turning
left onto East Main Street
from Condor Street. The
report said Arms then "failed
to yield the right of way" and
hit a vehicle driven by Dan a
S. Ire land, Long Bottom .

There were nine children
on the school bu s and three
passengers in Ireland's vehicle. All the children were
released into the custody of
'their parents without any
report of injuries to the children or Arm s. Ireland and
the three passenger~ were
transported to O'Blene' s
Memorial . Hospital
in
Athens by Meigs County
EMS for what was described
as "poss ible injuries'' on the
. report.
.·
The report al 'o stated no
one was ejected or trapped in
· either vehicles which were
described · as sustaining
"functional damage" after the
accident.

Meigs
Local
Transportation Director Paul
McElroy stated that the damBY KEviN KELLY
age to the bus consisted of a
KKE ll¥@MY041LYTR,I BUNE .COM
bent bumper and side panel
that was bent toward s the rear
RIO GRANDE - .-\ co ll iof the v~hicle. . .
McElroy said officials 'ion between a 'dli&gt;ol bu,
and a sports uti lit) 1ehicle nn
· from the Ohio State
Ohio 5H8 JUSt ca&gt;t of Rio
Highway Patrol would be at Gran,de Wedne1day killed the
the bus · garage today for driver of the SUV. the Galliainspection of the vehic.le and .Meigs Post of. tile State
'he anticipates that the hus Highway Patrol reported .
will - be back on the road
According to the State
soon after th~t inspection . Highway Patrol. Rachel D
He added tha t the bus wa; Pullin,, 61. of Bidwel l. went
not a new model on the di,- left of center 1i·hik tra1 cling
tri t t's fl~ei.
east on Ohiu 5SR and hi t ·a
Anm 1\iJS cited for failure Gallipoh, Cit!' School hu'
to yield .
head on .

crash leaves one dead

.

•

Ri,·hard E. \'alentine . the
driver uf the' 'dwnl bu&gt;. and
three of the 52 &gt;tudenr- l&gt;n
til&lt;' hus we re- · tran sp,med
from the scene to H,1l1er
~kuical Center for treat- .
ment nf mmor in_juric . . . the
rcpl)rr.-..a JJ

Pull11" '"" pmnounced
dead al tlw scene' h1 G:tllia
Count\

C ornn~r.

Dr

Dan

Whitcle: . She " as tmnsp,,rted to Will" Funeral H(•me in

Galiipoli' .
The fe11 IIIJ Urcd ltudcnts
"ere taken \, ff the bu' and
·attended h1 emergency med-.
. Please see Crash, AS

�PageA2

Friday, February 3, 2006

WORSHIP

•

The Daily Sentinel

· Friday, February 3, 2006
.

Common 'courtesy and
hospitality not so common

'

A Hunger For More .One of two great perils 111
the world that we fac:e tod.1y
is the ever present danger of
"missing·· God at work. There
is nearl y no greater tragedy
Pastor
that we m1ght suffer than.
Thorn
when tn our neglect of God's
Mollohan
Word (the Bible), we fai l to
recognize His preseAce in our
lives. His activtty 111 ou1 ci r·c umstances. and His Invitation to joi n Him 111 !lis work
of redemption in our homes. powerlessness and despair
communtlles and wotld .
that are always bemg bUilt up
If we are a people who take by humamty 's tendency to try
Hi s Word li ghtly, perhaps to make tt through !Jie wahinwardl y yawnmg as we flip out Him. We as Chrts!Jans
through tts pages or openly seem to have a great deal of
yawning as we su under its trouble 111 tdki ng it for gran ted
proclamatton. we can' t heljJ that God is truly on the move
but he a people who t'til to toduv in the world and 111 our
recogm ze Hun when He ltves. Thus, when His Holv
comes a call in '
Spmt moves and sti1s our
Several years ago. I had hearts to respond to His invt dectdeJ one mght to sh.1ve off tation to know H1m by taking
my bearJ for a ch.mge I Hi s W01cl to heart. we fail to
shaved. cleaned up and then recogniLe Hi s p1 ese nce. We
went to lte down fn r the night shrug oil such movements
When I pulled back the blan- and ~promptmgs. suffocating
kets I found one of our ch!l- the famtl y glowing embers of
dren, who was not qune 3 p.tssionate worsh1p and heav)ears old at the tune. nestled enly servtl'C that He would
up snugly again&gt;t hts sleepmg fan into roaring and glorious
mother 's stde He evJdently tlamcs . And fa!ling to recoghad awakened .1t some pomt mze Hun mea n ~ fa!lmg to
in the mght and c!Jmbed mto experience a untquc blessmg
our bed. already nearly deeply that He would pour out upon
asleep. I quietly lay down us it we only we are ready io
bestde him and started to dnft acknow ledge
Hun
and
off m; well. HJS linle hand embrace HIS work lll our
stirred and reached up to li\es.
touch my face .lS he often did.
Perhap&gt; we ,tre otten Sl!jlply
When he touched 1\t) chin too preoccupied wtth our own
and then felt my JUW. he plans and ambiuons or maybe
jerked his hand back and sat we're too afraid that such
straight up 111 the bed. ··Mom- whole-hearted devotion to
e-e-e-e'"
he
screamed Hun IS cxccs'!ve or ··wetrd"
"There's a man 111 the bed,.. and that it can't REALLY be
My wife bolted upnght and His love stirnng our hearts.
looked around start led whtle I Maybe we ··feel H1m out" a
fumbled to switch on a bed- lntlc. cnJoymg the happy and
side lamp. It took several har- obviously
encouraging
rowing minutes. but we tina! - ~~&gt;pects of being Christians,
ly convinced hnn that I really but sometimes pull back
was hts father
when what He 1mpresses
Because I came to him m a upon our hearts fail s to match
way that he did not expect. what we always envisioned
he had a hard time recogn iz- He'd do, because what we
ing me and accepting me lor had envisioned is either too
who I was. In a (vqg uely ) IJttle or too selfi sh for an infisimilar way, we are frequent- mtely graceful God.
ly m danger of missing out
Of course, the other great
on God's work to constantly tragedy (but related to the one
blow the fres h winds ot ' mentioned above ) is the occarenewal and growth into our s1on of our havin g,reco~ nized
ltves for the s1 mple fac t that Htm but m the end stmply
He moves in ways that we, having no room for Ht s Word
according to our limited in our hearts. During the days
human perspectives. fail to of Jesus' physical incarnation
recognize .
on earth (between His b1rth
"Jesus said to them, 'My and H1s cruclli xion), some
Father ts always at Ht s work folk s lt stened closely to
to this very day. and I. too. am Jesus wo rds, nodding thetr
working '" (John 5:17 NIV). A heads at thm gs they ltked but
wonderful promise, don·t you &lt;:rJt t c t z m~ Him and even conthtnk? For tf He ts mdeed at demning ~Him for things that
work in the world today, we they didn't like. Instead of
have an assurance that the lookmg JnsJde their own
power ot God Htmself is still hearts, eager to let the transinftltraung the bastions ot formative power of God chal-

lenge and remake their ideas
of Who He ts and What He 's
like, they rejected things He
said that simply "didn't fit."
" ... You are ready to kill Me,
because you have no room for
My Word" (John 8:37 NIV).
How terrible when' we have
no room for Hts Word m our
hearts! It's not that our hearts
are too small (God's love
enlarges hea11s, after all ) ...
1t's rather that they'~e too cluttered with pride, selfishness,
fears and resentments. But the
SaviO! st!ll looks ulto our
world. 11110 our lives, and into
our hearts, and He still offers
us hope through Hi s Word.
"" Who are You'&gt;' they asked.
'Just what I have been claiming all along,' Jesus replied. ' I
have much to say in judgment
of you But He Who sent Me
is reliable, and what I have
heard from Him I tell the
world. I do nothing on My
own but speak just 'what the
Father has taught Me. The
One Who sent Me is with Me;
He has not left Me alone, for l
always do what pleases Htm"
(John 8:25-29 NIV).
Perhaps we all would do
we II to look at the great big
heart of Jesus! Why, for
instance: would He wander
from village and town to village and town, healt ng and
te \lc hing people who were
fickle wi th their loyalties and
were fnghtfully less interested in gen umely reconnecting
with God than with having
some want or short term need
being met? He graciously
poured out love and grace
upon them (as He does upon
us) knowing that they'd reject
tt far more often than they'd
embrace it, yet SOME would
turn .. SOME would listen ..
SOME would respond .. and
SOME would say yes to His
invttation to life.
And if we also would dare
to make room in our hearts, if
we'll really dare to love Jesus,
we are given the promise that
God Himself will reach down
into our lives and meet us,
lifting us out of worldly wornes and all its defeatism and,
bring us into a spiritual fel lowshtp. with Himself. "Jesus
replied. ·Jf anyone loves Me,
he will obey My teaching. My
Father wtll love him , and We
will come to him and make
Our home with Him' " (John
14:23 NIV). ·
(Thorn Mollohan and his
family have ministere4 in
southern Ohio the past110·
112 years. He is the pastor of
Pathway Community Chwch
and may be reached for com·
ments or questions by e-mail
at pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com).

Remind them ... to show
every courtesy to everyone. ·
Titus 3.1-2, NRSV

Apostolic

Chun:h or Jesus Chrls1 Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd, Pa~tor Jamts

seems infinite but we can offer
a few examples. It means
looking for ways to help people, saymg "thank you" when
they help us or give us a gift.
It means waiting our turn
and not getting upset if someone else does not. It means
tak ing the time to listen without tttterrupting . It means
warmly welcommg newcomers in}o our community and
findin g ways to involve them
and make them feel at home.
It means helping when it is
withm our power to help,
seeking out the lonely and loving them, opening our hearts
and homes to the stranger, "for
thereby some have entertained
angels unawares."
It means making an uncommon effort to exercise what,
in the "olden days," was real!y very common courtesy ...
moving out from our all-toocomfortable daily routine,
taking the blinders off and .
extending the love of Chnst
to everyone we meet.
This community may very
well have an unprecedented
opportunity to grow and prosper m next few years although I am not a prophet
- but that opp()rtumty . can
also quickly evaporate due to
the simple neglect of polite
decorum and good manners.
Let us, then, determine a
new to make common courtesy common once again, to
the honor and glory of God
the Father. by the power of
the Holy Spirit, through Jesus
Chn st our Lord. Amen.

Rev.
Jonathan

Do 110t neglect to show hospitality ro · strangers, for
thereby some . have e!ltertained angels unawares.
Hebrews 13.2, RSV

F~llowship

Noble ·
PASTOR.
TRINITY CHURCH

Be hospitable to one another without gmmblmg.
about many of those who
I Peter 4.9F, NKJV
name the Name of Chnst.
In his letter to Titus, St. Paul
Cicero, of ancient times, tells
tells
us to "show e'ery courthe story of an elderly citizen,
tesy
to
everyone." The origi-.
who one day walked into one
of the crowded theaters of nal Greek really packs a lot of
Athens. A good many of his fel- meaning into this. It means to
low cttizens saw him come m, be gentle and gracious, showbut not one of them moved to ing goodness and kindness to
make room for h1m to stt down. everyone in general
Obviously, this ought to be
Now that day there hapa
common
dtsposition amo ng
pened to be ambassadors from
a foreign land, and when they followers of the Lord Jesus
saw him approaching they all God is merciful. We shou ld be
stood up to receive this elder- merciful. God is gracious. We
ly man mto their company. At should be gracious and courthe stght of thi s amazing act of teous. God is good and kind.
courtesy the whole assembly We should be good and kind
And "life is not so short," as
erupted into applause.
·
Emerson
one time said, "but that
Cicero rightly concludes,
"The citizens of Athens knew there is always time enough for
what was right... They just did- courtesy." Amen. But how often
n't do what was right" Well, and to what extent do we put
this anctent statesman and ora- this into practtce? An import:mt
tor might say the same of 2 I " question m our day and age.
Common courtesy may not
century America, and this realbe so common m our day and
ly shouldn't surprise us.
No doubt about it - com- age in our society. but courmon courtesy is ,not so very tesy should always be comcommon
anymore. mon among those who have
Unfortunately, what Cicero been saved by grace through
would likely say about 21st faith in Christ.
And what exactly does this
century ~ merican s in general,
he might also say specifically mean? Well , the answer to th1s

Four Chaplains Sunday service set
rabbi from Brooklyn, Lt.
Clarke
V.
Poltng,
a
Schenectady mmtster in the
Dutch Reform Church, and Lt.
John P. Washmgton, a Roman
Catholic priest from Newark,
N.J .. saved lives when they
gave up their life preserve rs
and their own chance for survival when the U.S Army
Transport Dorchester was
sunk by a German sub man ne
on Feb. 3, 1945. only 15 mtles
from its destinatton 10

POMEROY
Drew
Webster Post 39 American
Legion of Pomeroy wtll celebrate Four Chaplains Sunday
at the .9:30 a.m. Mass at
Sacred Heart Church.
Inspired by the heroic deed
of the four chaplains recognized, the post annual! y marks
the observance in a local
church. The four chaplains: Lt.
George L. Fox, a Methodtst
minister from Pennsylvania,
Lt. Alexander D. Goode, a

Greenland.
The four issued lifebelts to
American serv1cemen aboard
the troop transport after it
was torpedoed. When the
suppl y of lite preservers was
exhausted. the four,chaplains
removed their own Iifebelts
and gave them to four soldiers. Thev then stood on the
s1nking s·hip, · arms around
one another's sho ulders and
thetr hea&lt;ils bowed 10 prayer
as the sh1p went down. · '

Christian bookstores report losing sales to Wal-Mart, chains
NASHVILLE, Tenn, (AP)
- At the annual convention
of the Christian Booksellers
Association, retailers continued to fret over competition
from Wai-Mart and big bookstore chains.
Association
membership
peaked at around 3,000 stores
in the early 1990s but now

totals less than 2,300 CBA said
337 retailers closed last year.
CBA
President
Bill
Anderson said the independent
retatlers should emphasize
their wider selection, knowledgeable employees and partnerships with local churches.
To compete, independents
like Steve Gray of Eddy vi lie,

Ky .. look beyond books to sell
mu sic, gifts, jewelry, stationery, hymnals and communion supplies. Books now
account for only 40 percent of
sales in Christian reta1l stores.
Religtous books generated
U.S. sales of nearly $338 million 111 2003. a 37 percent
mcrease o'er the previous year.

Mtllcr, Sundrty S~;:hool
Evemng • 7 30 p m

Rrver Valley Aposlo hc Wor§htp Center.

873 , S ] rd
Ave . Mtddlepon. Rev
MKhad Bradlord, Pastur, Sunday, 10 ~0
am Thes 6·30 prayer Wed 7 pn1 Brbk
Study
Emmanuel Aposlollt Tabernacle Int.
Loop Rd' off New Lmut Rtl Rutland.
Servtces Sun 1000 am &amp; 7 ]0 p m.
'htun; 7 00 p m , Pastor Many R Hu tton

Assembly of God
L11M!rty AS5embly of God
P:O Boll 467. Duddmg Lane. Mason
W Va. Pastor Net! Tennant. Sunday

Io·oo a m and 7 p m

Serv1ce~-

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

.

Melt Your Troubles A.

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

Michael L. ·Crites
Director of Family &amp;

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

Community Services
~erbrook
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·A Celebration of life"

Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 mmutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

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Russell , Sunday School and Wnhhlp- If)

Sunday S~hnol

Stwnd Baptist Chul'\'h
RtM:nswood. WV, Sunday School 10 am
, Mommg o,~,orshtp II am E\emng - 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p m

a.m Everung Ser\1ces

10 3 0~rn

4 4~ - 5 · 1.5p m : Mas s 5 30 p m , Sun
Con -8 45 -9' 15 am .. Sun Mass - Y 30
am , 0!11ly Mass- 8.30 am

Church of Christ .
\'Vf!'ltslde Chun:h of Christ
'3 3Wl Cht ldren's Home Rd . Pomeroy. OH
Cn nt ~tct 740-441 - 1296 Sunday mornmg
10 011 Sun mnrn~n g Bthle !t udy
follow mg worship Sun eve 6 00 pm,

Wed h1blt: !&gt;tudy 7 pm

Baptist

Larry Brown. Worsht p · 9 " '

Carptnter Baplisl Churth
Sunday

School ·
SctviL'C
JO 30am

9 30am, Pruc hmg
Evenmg Serv1cc

7 OOpm. Wednesday Btblc Study 7•00 pm.
lntenm P1 eacher - Floyd Russ

Cht:!ihtre lbpllst Cbun:h
Pastor· Steve L1ttle. Su nday School 9·30
am. Mormng Worship 10 30 am .
Wedne ~ day

8tble Study 6 30pm , chou
practtce 7 ,30. youth and Btblc Budd1 e~
6 30 p m Thurs I .pm book study
Hopt Ba ptist Chun:h {Southern)
170 Grant St . M1ddlepo•1. Sundby !iehool
• 9 30 11m . Worshtp - II am and 6 p m
Wednesday ServK'C 7 p m Pastor Gary

Eilts
'
· Rutland First Bapthl Church
Sunday School • 9 30 a m
10 45 am

Pomeroy C hurch of C hrist
2 12 W Mam St Su nday School

9 30
a.m. Wurshlp · 1010 a.m . 6 p m .
Wednuday Serv1ces · 1 p m
Pomeroy Westside Church of Christ
D22ti Chtldre n·s Home Rd • Sunday
School - I ! am , Wor5hlp - lOam . 6 p m.
Wedn esday Se rvtL'CS • 7 p m

Middleport Church or C hrist
5th and Mam Pastor. AI Hanson. Youth
Mmt ster J o~h Uhn Sunday Sd100l - 9 30
a.m Worsh tp· 8 15. 10 30 am . 1 p m.
Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 p m ·
Keno Church of Christ

Worsht p · 9 30 a m Sunday Sc hool ·
10101,1 m , Pastor-Jeffrey Walhtce, Is! and
3rd Sunday

Worsh1p

Pomeroy First Baptist

Pastor Jon Brockert. East Ma m St ,
Sunday Sch ? 30 am. Worsh1p 10 ~0 am
First Snuthern Baptist
41872 Pomero ~ P1ke. Pasto r E Lamar
O'Brvan t, Sunday School · Y 30 a m .
Worsh1p - 8ISa.m 945am&amp;700pm.
Wednt:Sda)' ServiLe~ - 1 00 p m
First BaptL'it Churth
Pastor . 6th and Palmer St Mtddlcport ,
Sunday Sch()(JJ 9 I ~ am . Worshtp 10 15 a ih , 700 pm . Wednesday
Servt•·e 7 00 p m
Racine ··lrsl Baphst
Pastor Joseph GoJwm m11m m paswr .
Sunday Sc hool · 9 J() a m, Wmsh1 p ·
tO 40 a m
7 OU p m
Wednesday

St r\ 1ces 7 00 p m

Bearwallow Rldgt C hurth of C hrist
Paslur 8ruce Terry. Sunda y School -9 30
Wor ~ h1p

-

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy ,Harn sonv tll e Rd (Rt14' JPa ~ t or Roge r Wi!tson, Sumluy School 9 30 ., m . Wors htp . 10 10 a m . 1 00
p m Wednesday Servh.:es - 7 p m
Tup~rs

Plain Churth of Christ

lnstru memal Worship Scrvl!.:t: · 9 a m .
Conunumon - l 0 am . Sunday School 10 15 am . Youth 5 30 pm Sunday. 61ble
Stu dy Wednesday 7 pm

or

Hr11.dbury Church Chri~o1
Mnuster fom Runyon 395iK Brad huf)
Rt\ad Mtdd lepon . Sunday School - 9 ~0

''"
Worshtp

Wednesday Sel'\ 1ces 7 00 p m

Rulland C hurth or C hrbl
Su nday s~hool - 9 10 am , Worshtp and

Relhlehem Baptist Church
Great Be nd . Ro!llc: 124. Ra!.: tne. O H
Pastor Oan1d Mecca Sunda) Sc hool -

9 ~0 am. Sunday Worshtp · 10 JO am.
Wcdnc!iday B1h).: Stud) - b 00 p m

Old Bethfl FrH Will Baptist &lt;.:hurth
2~ 601

Semce

S! R1 7 Mtddl e port Sunday
I 0 a m . 6 00 p m . Tuc i&gt;day

S~rVI\e~

-6 ()(}

Hillside Bapdsl Chun:h
S t Rt 143 JUSt ull Rt 7 Pa:.tor Re v.
James R Acree Sr. Su nday Umlicd
Servtce WorshiP, · 10 30 a m . 6 p m .

IO, 30 a m

Cm~ m u mon

- Ill

~0

a m • Bah J Werry

~llm s te r

am . Wor shtp - I I am
Wednesday Sen ICes • 7 p m

6 p m.

H1ekory Hills Church of Christ
Tuppe rs Plarns Pa~tor M1kc Moore. B1bl e
class, I) a rn Sunday, worshtp 10 a m
Sunday , -.~.ors hlp 6 10 pm Sunday. Btble
class 7 pm Wed
Rl"t1isl·llle Churth ol C,hrist
Pas10r Ph iltp Stum1. Sunday School 9 30
a m . Worshtp Ser\ !Ce, \0 30 am . Btble

Study Wednesd ay. 6 JO p.m

I O ~Oam

or

The Church ef C hrist Pomeroy
lmcrse!.: tlon 7 and 124 W. Evangeli st
llcnm s Sarsent Sunday Btble Stud y
9 30 am . Worsh1p 10 30 a m and 6 30
r m. Wednesday U1hle Study - 7 p m

Christian Union

Fomocl Run Baptist

Anus llurt SunJa~ Sc hool
' am.Worsh1p I I am

or Christ in

C hristian Union

10

MI. Moriah Baptist
Founh &amp; ~1a1n St M1ddleport , Pastor
R ~v Gtlhert Cra1g Jr , Sunday Sc hoo l
910a m. WOfsh1 p "10 45 a m

Antiquity B•plis1
Sunday School · lJ \0 am . Worsh1p -

Hanfurd. 'W Va, Pa!&gt;tor Da \ 1J Greer
Sunda y Sc hon! . 9 '0 am, Worshtp
10 '0 a m , 7 00 p m . Wednesday
SerY1ces - 7 00 p m

Church of God
or

1\tt. Moriah Chun::h God
Mrle H1ll Rd Ra&lt;.: llte, Pastor Jame)
Satte rfie ld. Su nday School · 9 45 a m .
F~enmg - 6 p m Wednesday Servtces 7

~ 9 30

Jan~!

7 JOp m
Cent nil

Trinlly Chun:h
Set: ond &amp; Lynn , Pomeroy Pastor Rev
Jonathan Noble. WOC'sh1p 10 25 am .
Sunday School 9 15 a,m

Episcopal
Gr~ce E pilc:op~~l C hurch

326 E Ma.m Sl . Pomeroy Sunday School
and Holy Euchm!t 1! 00 a IJI Rev.
Edward Pmyne

Holiness

Ashu!)

f S yru c u ~ l.

Pastor Bob

Wnr ~h1p

-

A New

P&lt;J~for

Sunday Sel'\'tcc-7 p m

am . Worship · Yam

Minfrsvillt'
Roh m ~o n

Sundil)' S(hool · 9

McKern;tc . Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
Wonh•p - II a m 7 00 p m . Wednesday
Seiv1ce - 7 00 p m

Wor ~ h1p

[ huN:h
Wa yne H. Jc\l.cll
- h\O p m \l. edt ~e,tJ .J ~

10 45 am. 7 pm .
Thursday B1blc Study iii)J Youth - 7 p m.

- 930a m Wor.;ht p

Laurel Clitr Free Methodist Chun:h
Pastor Glenn Rowe Sunday Schoo l ·
9 30 am . Worshtp 10 30 a m and 6
p m .Wednesday Ser\'u.:e- 7 00 p m

S~ints

Latter-Day

The Chu!"Ch of Jesus
Chrlsl of Latter·Da) Saints
St P,t 160 446-6247 or 446 ;74!16.
Su nday School 10 20 I ! u m. Rd1cf
Socte ty/Pne stllooli I I ll5 - 12 lXI nt)On
Sac ram ent Servt ce 9 10 . 15 am,
Homcmak mg rneetmg ls1Thurs - 7 p m

Stud~

Yl)uth 7 p m
Full Gospd I hurch

or the Lh lnJ! :Sa, 10r

Rt

Uobson (,:hnst1an

pm,

Pastor Don Walker

Rutland Churth of God
Pltstor Ron Heath . Sunday Worsh1p • 10
a rn , 6 p m . Y.e dnciiday Serv1cc~ - 7
pm

rm

h ll o"~ htp

Hersl hd \\ h1t c

l hu rrh

S 110 da~

S, h(ull

\()am Sund ayc;:' hur~ h.., e n KL - 6 "\0 p m
\\edn c ~a) 7 pm

Restoratton lhnstut.n ~ tllo~~htp
Hooper Rn J d Ath.-n~ PJ,tnr
Lnnrue C u at• Sund.J\ 1.\ t•r-..hl r Ill fll \ :1 m
Wedn&lt;' , tl!l-. i pm

East L~turt
Pastt.lr Bill Marshal l Sund,ty Schuol •
9a m . Worshi p I 0 a m . I st Suod ay

Theron Durham , Sunda} - 9 ;\0
and 7 p m. 'W o:dnesda~ - 7 p m

Langs,lllelhmllan Churth
Full Go spel Paqnr I{ ,J b.- n \1u ~~~ •
Sunda\ S.Lhool 'J ~ 0 am V. ur~ h 1p I! I \ll

Middleport Community Chu~h
i 7:'i Pea rl S! , M1d!Jiepon . Pa~tor Sam
Anderson, Supday S( huul J 0 u m
E\·e.mng - ?·.\0 p m Wednt'sday Ser\tce
7 Wpm

am - 7 Ol l pm ¥- eU SCf\1~.: 7 i"KJ

.

Ptn(e(-oshd A!&gt;sembh
Raun &lt;' p~.,I Pr \\ tlh:a m
Sund av Sl h\•(• f
II! J m
Evcmng · 7 p m \\ e,! n,·-,dal Sl' r\ !l0::'
pm

Rethl'l Ct)urch
Tol'.n shtp Rd 468C, Sund:l)' S~hnol 9
a m Wor~ h • r - I 0 ,1 m WeJnc'l&lt;la)

Faith V11.llt) Tabemldt Chun:h
Run Road. Pas1or Re v Emmett
RawsM Sun day Eventng 7 • •P m •
Thu rsduy Sen ' lct: - 7 p m

Presbyterian

S)ranL&lt;oe l&lt;' trst I n1tl.'d l'resb\lt-riun
Pastor, Ruben Crov. \\ or~h •r II ~ tn

Ser. ICCl&gt; · I Oam

Graham United Melhodlst
- 11 a m Pa~ tor Rtchard Neas.e
Rechltl Un11ed Methodist
New Ha\ e n. Ric hard Nease. l?as,tor.
Sun day wors h1 p 9 10 am Tuc:s 6 ~0

llockmgport Chur'('h
Grand Snec t. Sunday Sc hool · 9 30 a m ,
Wur~lu r - 10 ~0 J m . Pastor Phillip Bdl

IO~O a m

prayer and Bthle S1udy

Co Rd

6~

10

MI. Ohve Unlttd M~lhodist

Sund a)
~0

SLht~tl l -

9

~U

il

Seventh·Day Adventist
St!lenth-Ou\ -\dlt'llttSI
\1u lherr~

ll h H....t I' Pm~ rn\ P :~ . wr
Bt·n ncu L u ~ ~· c~ h S tt urJJ\ s~T\I L ~·
s~ l •l&gt;;~th Sch•'Jo,•l ~ p m \\ "r'h•r ~ r m

7pm

Mont Chapel C hurrh

United Brethren

~c hoo l

Mt. Hrmw n I mll'd Rn'thn·n
in ('hnst C hul-ch
Teu ~ (\)mmun11' &lt;M J I \\ " l h 1m J.t d
P a ~!N Peter Munmdak Sun...t.1' 1\,h,, ,l

am ..

fKith Gospel Churth

am

Lon~ Bollnm Sunday School

Nazarene
or

Middleport Chun:h tht- NuarentPastor Alk n \11d.:a p Sunda) Sch,lol -

30 am Wtlr\h lp - ltl•30 am . 6 ~0 p m..
Wcdncsd.l\ Ser\ \L ~' - 7 p m . Pa~tor
.Aik n fvlldL.tp

I}

\fiddl,port Pmb1tman
J,\ mc' SJnJ, r Su nJa, Sdl&lt;K'I liJ
m .,.. or-,h lp . ~rol l.: ll Jill

Pa~ t or

· 10 am. Worship - II
a ,ul Wet.l ncsda} Scn••,e - 7 p m

Tun:h Chu rch
Worshtp

HarriSOnl ille Pmb\U.' nan C hun:h
Pastor Rllhcrt Crov. v. ,•r•hlp - 4 a m

SenKe- 7 p m.

Dytsvillr Community Chuf('h
Sun da) S(hool - 9 10 am . Wnr~htp -

Sun day

q 30

a m,

4

Wors htp
! 0 45 a m
7 "\0 p m .
Wednc!&gt;dav 7 30 p m
1\11. Oli\'e Communi!) Church
Pu~tnr

~~

rm

~0

pm

am

hllo"shlp

Church or the Na!arenl' PasrM Jamt ~
Penn Sund.l) Sdll"-ol - ') ill &lt;1m \\oor,h1 r
lll-l."i .! m 7 p 111 \\blnc~da y SlrH ~. e ~

- 7 pm
Syracuw thul'\'h or thf Nazaren«'
Sd 10ol - ':l \0

m • Wnr,h•p
I!) "\t) a m
Wedne~a~ Sen t o~~ 7 p m
1

Pomcro~

0 p

( hun:h of the Nar.arene

\ l nl , e ~

Youth )!tllUp nlc\'Un_!!

Scho'lo.)l •
\\t•dncd:.\1

~nrJ

~

11 1

'11
,\: -hh 1\und.;• ~
., Jill p

Edtn I n1ttd Rn·ttln·n m (.' hri~ l
StlllL' R••lltl'
HP.. L ill,I! J'l1J f1.

Reed~vi\le

111 •n _, n)

V. tn"hlp

\\ .: dn ~, da \

, pm

Lav. rcn~e Bu~h. Sunda~

9 ~{I~ 111 . [\ ('fling . 6
Senh..l.' 7 pm

I ~ --'

St Rt .
Hoback

Balle~

Hazel Communit} Chun:h
011 Rt 124 P a~tt.l r Edsel Hart Sunda)
Slhr)ol 9 ~0 a m Worsh tp 10 W a m .
1 .lOp m

pm

Pentecostal

ffi

WOOnc!&gt;day · 7 p m

'

am

1 pm

Joppa
Pas tor Bob Rand olph. Worship • ':l 'U
a m Sunday School - I0 \0 a m

1 ~"~ \1 &lt;tt rt'

9 ~(} 5

We d ncsda ~

Chesler
Pastur Jane Be a Ut ~. Worshtp · 9 11 m
Sunday Sr honl - 10 am
Thursda~
Servtees 1 p m

p~ ,t1 • r
~ I ~J r Ill

WeJn~~Ja~ '&lt;.' f\l u~ 7 IJO

Ma111 &amp; F1fth St . Su ndaY Sc hool - 10
a m Worsh1p - !Jam rue'l&lt;.tly Scn'ILCS

Beatt1e. Sunday School • 9 30 am •
Worship · ! I a m,6 ~0p m .

Ant14Uit\

Salem Lom munlh (hurc h
Back uf We ~ ! Clllumhll.t ~ \'a 111n Lu.'\ 111g
R o~d Pa,tor Ch~tk~ H.( ill'h 1&lt;114 1 f17~ ­
n !HI SunJa ~ SLh\1(1 \ 1) ~() :l m Sund,n
evenmg ~ e n ILC: '7 OU prn Bth l\ ~1uU1

Pastor Da\1d Russel l Sunday
School - 10 00 am. Worshtp I J am

Meigs Cooperative Parish
Nonheas t Cluster, Alfr ed. Pas tor Jane

] ~&amp;

Sen ILC ~ Satu rda\

Our Saviour Luthe:ran Churth
Walnut and Henry St s . Ra\ e nswood.

OfT 124 hehtnd Wilkes\11\e. Pi15lor Re''
Ral ph Sp1rcs Sunday Slhool · 9 3011 m
Wnr'&gt;hlr - 1010 am. 7 p m . Thursda&gt;
Serv~ c es · 1 p m

I

Sfv. L1fe Vktnn Center
l-l.n:.Jd ft ,!l l•f"•ll ' {) II
Pa ~ tnr Hill STate n S un Ja~ S&lt;'r\ ll'C:'
W
am &amp; 7 pIll v. ~ Jn ~, J .j\ 7 r 111 &amp;.

\4 11 Bndgeman St , Syra cuse. Su n da~
Schon! · 10 u m. Eventni!
6 pm.

Wo r~h • p

lf •o.~ m
,S~n l l~

n 7 ~ Gc: lH!W 'C r c d..

Cool viii~ Lniled Melhodist Pansh
P a~ t o r Helen Khne, Coohdlc Church

""

Sunda~ ~~ ~~ ~ •ol

pm

Brad)

St Paul Lulhenm C hurch
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St . Pornero ).
Sunday School - q 4'i am. Worsht p - II

1u'' 7 p rn

'Wunh1p - 7 p m , Vlocdn~ ~da~

Rac1ne
Paslor Kerry Wood. Su nday School - 10
a m . Worship - It am

W'\'a

li 1hk

Clifton labeTnadt Chu n h

Chflnn WVa

Harri~nville Co mmunity Church '

Morninjil; Slar
Pastor Jultn G1lmore. Sunday Sdloo l 11

St. John Lutheran Chu"'h

Pmc Gro~e. Worship 9 00 a m . Sunduy
School • I 0 00 a m Pa stor James P

h(~lpm

Pa ~ wr

C&gt;cry ll)lm lh e\C III Il£ SCf\' ILC 7 00 p

Lutheran

Wednc~da\ So:: n

S(hool 9 30 am Wor~h1p - 9 30 ~ m
and 7 p m Wedne,day - 7 p m f nday
l cllow ~ hlp servtce 7 p m

Wed 7 rM.I p m

" •r,htp

SunJ&lt;~\

2nd A H . M IJJIL I,'ll t 1-'J,t&lt;&gt;r
M1te Fore man
J&gt; J,tor ~ llll.'ri ' U'
Lav.rcn\e ~ ur.,.man V. or-. hlp HI 1~ 1 .1m

Faith Full Go!ipcl Churth
Long Rottnm Pa~ t or Ste\e Reed Sunday

Pastor John Gil more Sunduy School
9 30 am . Worsll1p - 10 4'i am . Hlblc

rm

N

Pa ~ tnr

Curmei- Sunon
&amp; H.1shan RJ s R.IL111C Uhto

C~ t mc\

\ ff

RtJOi( mg Lirl' Chun·h
~ I I{ \

Abuncbmt Grate R.F. I
Y23. S Th11il St M1ddlepon Pastor Teresa
Davt s Su nd ay serv 1cl! 10 am .
WcdneWa y -.ervKe 7 p m

Bethany
Pastor JOOn Gil nlore . Sundav Sthpul · lU
am Wm sh tp - 9 am. Wedne:.day
ServiCes · 10 am

m
r 111

~0 il

'J

...

Study

Ash Stretl Churth ,
NR Ash St . Mukllcpon-Pastor Jeff Sm1th
Sunday Sc hnol ,- 9,30 a m .' Mornm)!
Worsh 1p - !0 1{1 a m &amp; ti lO pm
Wcdne~d&lt;ty Se rvtce - 6 30 p m . Youth
St:ntcc:- 6 30 p m
o\gaJK' Ltre Center
· Full -Gos pel Church" Pa s tor~ Joh n &amp;
Pany Wade 603 Sew nd A\~ M:t~~Qn. 17 '50 17. Serv1ce ltme S ~nda ~ 10 30 u m .
'Wcdtk sda) 7 pm

Rullan(t
Pustnr Rll'k Bourne. Su nday Schoo l
9 30 a m , Wu r~ h1p - I0 30 a m Thu r~y
SL.':n1c~s - 7 (l m
Salem Ce nter
P'dstor Wilham K Marshall Sunda}
School 10 I ~ .t m.. Wurshtp - 9 1 ~ am.
Bthle Study Monday 7 00 pm
SnowvilltSurw.la~· Sehoul - I 0 a m • Worsh1p - 9 a m

m

P&lt;A ~ Ior

Su:t1o: Franu~, Sunda~ ~erv t c e s
10 00 am worshtp, 6 00 pm Fam1ly L1fe
Cla s~ c ~ . Wed Home Ce ll Grou p ~ 7 00
p m. Outer L1m1 ts Ce ll Group at the
chu rch 6 ~0 pm 1n K 30 pm

Hock Springs

~dwul

J

Stht'-n&gt;ville Curnmonih -It puo; tolu

P a~tor

Pastor Kl!lth Rader. Su nday School 9 15
u 111 . Wqr~l u p
I 0 &lt;1 m . Ynuth
Fcl l o w ~b 1p . S1mday . 6 p m

10 \0

Wcdnc-;J,,v Se n lc.l - 7 10

B~thel Worship Cenler
W7R2 S R 7 Rceds\ll le. OH 4'i772 1/2
mile north of Eastern Schr.ols on SR 7 A
Full GoSpel Church. PastOf Roh Barber,
Agsoclate Pasto r Ka r~n Davu Youth

Pomero)'
Pa~ tor Bnan Dunham . Worsh tp • 9 30
am , Sunda) Sthool· 10 ~'i am

\I ~ \

Calvur, 8 1b(r Church
Rd P ~' 1" r l-l. n

Cornmunily or Chris!
Port la nd-RaLmc Rt.! . P&lt;1stur Jm1 Proffitt.
Su nd uy S!.: hool · 9 W a,m Worshtp
10 30 am. Wednc oday Scr\tccs - 7- (Xl
pm

9 30a m .Worsh•p II OOa m

)"earl Chapel
Sunday School 9 a m Worshi p · 10 a m

Hysell Run Community Church
Pastor Re\' Larry Le mley Sund.l) School

r fll

Purn eroy P1 h l ol
EU adrn.t. uo; J Su nda\

Other me e ung ~ m Home~

Heath (Mtddleportl
Pastor Bnan Dunham Sundny Scht"-11 -

am Worsh1 p - IOa m

Wesleyan Rtble Holiness Church
15 Pearl St .. Mtddlepon Pastor Rtr,:k
Bourhc. Sunday School - 10 am Worsh1p
-10 45 pm .. Sunday Eve 700 pm.
Wednesday Sem ce - 7 30 p m

10 lq- ~

Fn.tlJ 7 p m

Oasis Chri stian ftllow~lp
1Non-denommauonal f611 owsfup l
Mcetmg m thc ol&lt;i Amertcan Lcgton Uall
Snuth Fourth "-.venue. Mtd. tlcpnn

10

Calury Pll~nm Chapel
Ham sOO\' IIIC Road. Paslor
Charles

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
In mile off Rt l2S. ea.'ltor Rev O'De ll
Manlc~. Sunday Sl; hool · 9 30 am .
Worsh tp - 1030 a m
730 pm .
Wednesday Servtce · 7 30 p m

V. o r ~ lu p

~ ... , i'hilhr
'ld11 1nl
'I 10 .r 1\1
111 \l.ul n&lt;.,J .t \ !., ~rLI&lt;~

SunJa 1 So,;b oul t; &lt;o J 111 v. , &gt;~, I II J ' 7 O( t
p m . We dn.: ~d .l ) ll 1hk &lt;.,tud~ ~ r,~: 1 p m
Fa ilh •. t ll ov.~hip ( ru ~adc for ( hrht
Pa , lnr He\ l rank lul l l•• ~ ' ' '' '&gt;•rl ll L

Amazing Grace Com munlt) Church
P ;t ~t ur Way11e Dunlap. Stale Rt 681 .
Tuppc~ Plams Sun Worship 10 ;un &amp;
f, m pm. Thun.day B1bh: Study 7 (X} p rn

•·orest Run
Roh Rnhm~un. Sunday Schon!

B~nning

PashJI C hns Stewart 10 00 am Sunday

Rost- of Sh11.rnn Holiness Churth
Leadmg Creek Rd,, Rutland, Pastor Rc:\'
Dewey Kmg , Sunday school- 9 30 am ,
Sunday worsh1p -7 p m , Wed nesday
prayer meetmg- 7 p m

P 11~""

~und.i\

hinit'" Hihle ( hun. h
Le tart \It \-a HI J PJ•hl! ll n.ut

ll"ull Go~ptt l Chun.h) HiU11WH\ tllc
Pa,tnr~ Huh and Kay M~(~haJI
Sund3 ) Scr~1ce 2 p m

Pastor Kt'1th Rader Sunday School - lfl
a m Worship l lam

Pastor Bob

haptl \\Kieun

HrdLnmu

1

Other Churches

Roh1 n~on

Enlt'rprik
PasTor Arlaml Kmg . Sunday S\·hoo l
10 ~0 am , Wonhtp - 9 ~0 am , Btble
Sllldy Wed 7 l!J

Communily Church
Steve Tomek
Mam Stn=e!
Rutland. Sunday Worsh1p--IO CXI 11 m

Danville Holiness Church
3 1057 State Route 325 Langsvll e PasH)r
Vtc!or Rou~ h , Sunday school - I) :m am
Sunday worsbtp · JO 30 am &amp; 7 p m ,
Wed nesday p rayer SO: I'\ tee · ? p nl

~0

C lu ~tt'r

Sunday Schqul • 9 4'i am , W11rship • II
•• nl
Wcdnew.•• yScrVICCS- 7 1H r m

Pastur

'I

7 r ill

Cuoh dk Ro&lt;tJ

10 30 a m . 6 lO p h1 · Wedne!oda)
Scrv1lC' - i p m Re• M 1 lc~.: C l ar~ ·

am Wrlr~h •p - I O am lu e~la) Scn Kt:'

P.t'l"r W.n

\ti!Hl.t ~ \~ h~,.,l

Whit~\&lt;.

Sunday Schnul · 9 10 ~ m

Reatlle , Sunday Sdm()l . 9

Rd ll

&lt;1

am . Wo1 ~ h1p - II &lt;~ m , IJ p m

Rutlamd Church ofthr NIZarene

l'upptrs Plains St. Paul
Pa!Hor

Congregational

V.or~htp

a Ill

Wedne-.day S e rv 1 ce ~- 7 p rn

P~ sttl f Mtk ~ 4.dkm~ Sund ~'

10.45 a m · Sunday E\ enmg · 6 00 p m..

Rutland Fret Will Bapti.'il
Salem St . Pas tor Jam1 t Fm1 net Sun(lay

pm

United Methodist

Dexter Church or Christ
Sunda} sc hool '9 30 a m . Sunru,y WOflihlp

Harlrord Chtirrh
Pastor

~aid Knub &lt;I ll (
Roger Wrlllt JHI

Syracuse Mlsslon

Servtcc:s · 7 p m

Faith Bapilsi Church
l&lt;a1lroad St . Maso n S undu~ School - 10

p m scrv1ce

Worship - II am , Wed/lCsday Serli iCes . 7

Bradford Church or Chrifl
Co rne r of St Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Mmt 5tcr Doug Shamhhn Youth Mtmstcr
Bill Amherger Sunday School - 9 30 am.
Worsh ip - 8.00 a m , 10 30 am . 7 00
p m 'Wedl'll!sda) Sen·•ces - 7 00 p m

Church of tht Naurtne
l'a.,tor R..:• Huhen Grate . Sunda~ S~: huol

:JS"~~"''' .....,
p ill

C h ~ter

Worsh •p 9 JO a m Su n da~ Sch&lt;ltll
10 1(1 am hrs1 Sunda) uf Mnn1h . 7 OU

10 am.

\0 3.0 a m , 6 30 p m.

Wednesday Servtces. 6 30 p m

Silver Run Bapnst
Paswr John S"a n'il.m. Sun day S~.:hoo l lOa m • Wnrshtp - I I a m 7 00 p m

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor Dcnm~ Weaver SunJay School 9 H 11m , EHo1ng · 6 ~0 p m
Wednesday Semces 6 30p m

Cbun:h or Cod of Prophecy

•Htmlock Grme C hrillllan Churth

'' lO a m . 'Am~ h1p
Weed~ Villi'

U J Wh11e Kd off St Rt 160 Pastor P J

Sacred Heart Cr.lthollt Church
161 Mulberry Ave , Pomero y, 992 -.5898,
PastQr Rev Walter E He mz, Sat Con

Mm • ~ t cr

6 lO p m.

Pa&lt;,tor Ja n l.a&gt;t: ndcr Sunday Schotll
Y30am Wrmh1p l OlOam andb
r m 'W t: d!lf~d.1y Scrv~ee~ • 7 p m

Long Uultom

Wednesday Se-rvl(:l!s - 6 30 p m

Chapman. Sunday School

Portable Toilet Rentals

Hills Self Storage
Racine, OH

Wednesday Semces 7 p ,m

The

t:-&lt;

SundO\ V. tlf'.hlp

Full Gos~l Ltghlhouse
' ~045 Hlland Road Pomen.•) Pa ~tm Ro\
Hunter. Sunda\ SL hool 10 J m F1 enmg
7 \{) r m TUl':.dit\ &amp; thur~ ~ 1.0 r m

P~l,HI.'n R l'l·,l-..• d l ~

Su ml,l\ 'lc'IILk &gt;l

II

~ 'kl.tlll

,\.

I !I .1 111

l.hdm•tL •

;;tlti~~ ~~~~~A

So uth Bethel Commumt) Churc.-h
S1IH· r R1 dg&lt;• Pastor Lmd a Dal11l'l'.l~ ld
Sund111 Sd101.1l li am Y..or~ hlr S~n I \~
I 0 u m 1nd anJ ~th Sunda\

Ill

Carlt lon 1ntenlenomtoaliun•l C hun.·h
)\ 1ng. •\-tur\ Road Pit •h lr R,,nnt Van ~ e
SunJa ~ s ~ hn P!
'I 111 am
'Wor,h1p

740-992-7713

29670 Sashan Rd.

PO. Box 683
Pomero Oh1o 45769-0683 ·

6 am - 8 pm

Armo whe!t

Apple and Second Sts , Pasmr. Rev Davtd

am Sunday Sr.: hool - 10 30 a 111 • Btblc
Study · 7 p m

Victory Baptlstlndep.-ndtnt
525 N 2nd St M1ddlepon Pastor James
E Keesee. Worsh1 p . l{)a m 7 p m .
Wednesda) Scrvtce~ · 1 p m

·r

School - 10 am, Evemng · 7 p m ,

Catholic

RJver \'alley

Wcdnesd&lt;~y

·r

10 30 am.

GQ'IJ"Ti-11 S WEEK

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
An Acconnting &amp;
Financial Sen•ices Firm
6 1l:'! E. Maln S l ~t.:e t ~ Pomeroy

'

(740) 992· 7270

your light so' shine before
that they may see
works and glorify
ll' atlher m heaven "

K&amp; C JEWELERS
2,12 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

992-3785

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc. Jf ye abide in Me, and My
NSURANCE
Full line of
Insurance l~&lt;•nr.i.&lt; abide in you, ye shall
Products + ask what ye will, and it shall
"'
Flnanc1al
Serv1ces
be done unto you.
AGENCIES In'
john /5:7
Bill Quickel

White Funeral Home

d!fii

Since 1858

ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

740-667-3110

ROCKSPRINGS
Let vuw l1ght so shme b~fc&gt;re
REHABILITATION CENTER men , th at the' ma\ !'Jte _\our

'NIIIHM1

The care you desen •e, clme to home good works am/ [!.lorify ' our

. .l ...... . . _
...........

Matthew 5: I

9 Fifth Street
Coolville, ,Ohio

..

1t•btt 1un~al "amt

............ Fl. lit•

1....

1.111.....
Brogan-Warner

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

36759 Rocksprings Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

SWISHER &amp;
PHARMACY
'
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955

Pomeroy

f"ather 111 hem·en "
Matthew 5. 16

or Gnd -10 /o1·ed rhe 11 orld
he gm·e his n11ly
gotten 1011 . .
Jo/mJ: / 6

!francis Flo rist

t

MC1g.' C ou nt~ ~ 01dl' 't Fi n n~!

352 East Mai n
Pomeroy, Oh

•t , r u(

I

III!J,.

W

~gnd ijiiH fhou ~h l(,., l l h ~ fll' fl~ l r ~ rt

740-992·2644

740-992-6298

Mll erace is sufficient
for thee: for mY
streneth is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

�,.

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 3,

_ Friday, February 3,

2006

:·obituaries

Chrysostom told the people grant that the sacred must
Are our churches too
of Constantinople and have priority and that humor
humorless? Would ·a few
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
Antioch. "We are not assem- should not be a caricature or
knee-slappers in the sermon
www.mydallysentlnel.com
'
bled together to burst into treat matters of ullimate seribrighten our pathways on a
peals of laughter but to weep ousness as trivia.
Sunday morning?
"But seriousness alone is
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
for our sins."
There is the story of the
·George
So, are . Lutherans correct stultifying," says Hyers.
minister who was guest ·
·Piagenz
that
Jesus didn't tell jokes? It "Humor shouJd be an interJim Freeland
speaker at a banquet in his
depends on which Bible lude, a periodic suspension
community. After the speech
Publisher
of seriousness." As for the
scholar you li sten to.
was over, the editor of the
. Elton Trueblood.• author of rest of us, how important is
local paper asked the clergyCharlene Hoeflich
shame is taken away."
"The Humor of Christ" it that we have a sense of
man
for
permission
to
pubGeneral Manager-News Editor
But did Jesus tell jokes? (Harper &amp; Row, 1964), pic- · humor? Apparently, it is
lish his remarks. The minister agreed but requested the Lutherans emphasize the tures Jesus as keeping hi s very important for whenever
editor not include the jokes divinity of Jesus almost to li steners in stitches whenev- · the survey takers ask what it
he had told. " I may want to the excl usion of his humani- er he told the story of the .is we are looking for in a
Congress shall make no law respecting an
use them again," he ty. There are probably others Pharisees who had a habit of mate, most people say a
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
(apart from Lutherans) who being overly meticulous potential partner must have a
explain~d. · So the addre.ss
appeared in the next issue of frown on levity in church. ahout unimportant t,hings sense of humor, But what is
free ·exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
the paper with this footnote There is the story of a moth- imd overlooking the things a sense of humor?· Is it, as
· of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
at the end: "Rev. Johnson er whose small ·son kept that matter. They strain what
·say, the ability to .laugh
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition . also told some. ·very funny turning around in church and they drink , said Jesus, so some
at one's own mistakes? Most
at
everyone. they won't swallow a gnat, of us wol!ld like to be that
stories which, unfortunately, . gnnning
the Government for a redress ofgrievan.ces.
Finally, she jerked · the boy · but they will eat a camel and way. The .trouble is, we have
cannot be printed."
.
Would a pulpit o' .\aft's be by the sleeve. "Stop that , not even noti ce. To an leamed that if you laugh off
-The First "mendment to the U.S. Constitution ·
good for what ails the grinning," she admonished Oriental.
sugge sts too many of your mistakes,
church? Or would it be sacri- him. "You're in church." Trueblood. this could be you .will be fired. So ·we
legious? Would too many She gave him a spanking "wildly funny" as he imag- have found it wiser to defend
that made him cry. "That' s ines the camel's long, hairy
churchgoers object?
our slipups or blame them on
neck sliding down the neck somebody else. It's a matter
Laughter in church is by better," she said.
There are on! y three pas- of the Pharisee - "all that
no means as uncommon as it
used to be. If a good laugh is sages in the Bible where loose-hanging anatomy, the of survival. But. if we cannot
afford to laugh off our own
good for our bodies - as God is pictured as laughing.· hump, the legs ... " ·
Norman Cousins underlined. And in all three io stan1=e~ . it
But another theologian. . mistakes, we can make light .
dramatically in his book, ,is a laugh of derision - not William Hamilton, isn 't of other people's mistakes
"Anatomy of an Illness as a happy laugh. There are no laughing. "Jesus used irony, - especially when . they
·
Perceived by the .Patient" references to smiling or · yes - . exaggeration, yes," affect us. ·
Let 's say you are a huslaughter in the New he says. "But when a preach(W:W. Norto~. 1979)
band
'&amp;nd you . come home
could it also be therapeutic Testament except to protest er tries to make me laugh
Dear Editor:
fpr the soul? Cousins told us against it. .Luke warns, "Alas with the wildly funny (to from work to find the house
how he used laughter to help for you who laugh. you shall him) business about the gnat a mess, no supper on the
More and more of our politicians are caught in a web of susovercome a serious illness weep and mourn." James and the camel, I grab my hat table and your wife tells you
·picion as the scandal widens in Washington . I'm amazed that
that made doctors ,despair of advises, 'Turn your laughter and head for the door." the car is at the end of the
nothing has been done, as the solution is so obvious:Let the
his recovery. Does the soul into mourning and your gai- Whether Jesus told jokes or street. out of gas. You smile
CIA take all the suspects out somewhere and torture them.
respond similarly to a good ety into gloom."
. It's our new American policy.
· ·
not, most of the artistic rep- ' and say, "So what else is
, joke?
The taboos against laugh- resentations of him reveal a new, honey?," And you plant
Elisabeth McKown
ter
in church go back 'to the solemn · face or show · only a big kiss on her face . Sir,
"Sin
is
to
be
taken
·seriousRacine
ly but not too seriously," . dawn of Christianity. Many the faintest · smile. "You you have a se nse of humor
says Con~ad Hyers, .. author early Christians in the Greek never see him displaying his that is 'guaranteed to make
of a compilation of essays and Latin Church had had teeth in a jovial grin," notes you a popular man and sure
.:'Holy Laughter" (The pagan upbringings that made on~ Critic of religious art . to g'ive you a happy wife.
Today is Friday, Feb. 3, the 34th day of 2006: There are
Seabury Press, 1969) "In them naturally lighthearted. Those who would like to see
(Georg e J&gt;lagen z is an
.~31 days left m the year. ·
·
· · laughter as well as in repen- The Church Fathers had to more humor in the church ordained minister and veterToday 's Highlight in History:
tanCe," he says, ·~ siri is educate them in the serious, are not unaware of the dan- an 1iewsman based in
On Feb. 3, 1959, a plane crash near Clear Lake, Iowa,
purged, guilt is relieved and ness of Christian behavior. gers it ·would pose·. They Columbus, Ohio.)
claimed the lives of rock ' n' roll stars Buddy Holly, Ritchie
Valens and J.P. . "The. Big Bopper" Richardson. .
On this date:
In 1783. Spain recognized U.S. independence. ·
In 1809, the territory of Illinois was created.
In 1913. the 16th Amendment to the Constitution, providi ng for a federal income tax, was ratified.
.
· ln 19\6, Canada's original Parliament Buildings, in
Ottawa, burned down.
· , .
· .
In 1917, the United States broke off diplomatic relations
112.
with Germany, which had announced a policy of unremix
~tri cted submarine warfare.
·
In 1924, the 28th president of the United · States.
Wood10w Wilson, died in Washington at age 67.
In 1930, the chief JUStice of. the United States, William
Howard Taft, resigned for health reasons.
· .
· In 1943, during World War ll, the U.S. transport ship
Dorchester. .which was carrying troops to Greenland, sank
after being hit by a torpedo. (Four Army chaplains gave
their hfe belts to four other men , and went down with the
ship.)
In 1994. the space shuttle Discovery lifted off, carrying
Serget Knkalev, the first .Russian cosmonaut to .fly aboard
a U.S. spacecraft. .
In 1995 , the space shuttle Discovery blasted off with a
woman. Air Force Lt. Colonel Eileen Collins, in the pilot's
seat for the first time in NASA history.
Ten years . ago; Sgt. I st C!ass Do~ald A. Dugan, 38,
became the first U.S. soldier killed while on duty in Bosnia
when a piece of ammunition exploded in his hands. Actress
Audrey Meadows died in Los Angeles at the age of 71 .
Thought tor Today: "Your friend will argue with you."
- Alexander Solzhenjtsyn, Russian writer.

READER'S

Rachel D., Hawk Pullins
61 , of Bidwell, was taken t~
be with the Lord on
Wednesday, Feb. I, 2006. ·
She was born Nov. 18,
1944, in Athens, to the late
Ross and Zura Swartz Hawk.
Rachel was married to
. Marvin P. Pullins, and he sur. vives her.
She was a dedicated
e.mployee
of
Rockwell
International
(formerly
Robbins and Myers) for 29
years. She was a member of
. · the Grace United Methodist
Rachel D. Hawk Pullins
· Church at Gallipolis, where
.
she participated in the Elizabeth Circle, Bible Study and many
other church activities .
She enjoyed being a member of the Red Hat Society. Rachel
was a loving wife, mother and grandmother.
. She is survived by her husband of 43 years, Marvin P.
. Pullins of Sidwell: a daughter, Kelly D. Gleason of Grove
City; two sons, Kevin D. (Mindy) Pullins of Gallipolis, and
Marvm L. (Star) Pullins of Bidwell : and seven grandchildren, Miranda and Tyler Gleason of Grove City, Levi, Luke
and Lane Pullins of Gallipolis, and Stephen and Cody
Pullins of Bidwell.
·
· She is also survived by two sisters, Betty (Eugene) Williams
· of Heath , Ohio. and Caryl (Jack) Ruth of Athens; a brother,
· !:.loyd (Mary) Hawk of Newark; and a .sister-in-law, Willa·
Jean Hawk of Athens.
She wil'l be forever remembered and loved by numerous
brother-in-laws, si ster~in-laws , niec es, nephews and
numerous friends.
Preceding her in death were her parents ancl brother,
Merle Hawk .
.
·
Service s will be 2 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 5, 2006, at the Grace
·United .Methodi st Church, with Pastor. Doug Stockton officiating. Burial will follow in the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens·,
Friends may call at the Willis Funeral Home from 5 to 8 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 4, 2006.
·
Pallbearers will be John Ruth , Albert Hawk, Wilbur Pullins,
Robert Pullins , Michael Cochran and Mark Hager.
• In lieu of nowers, please make contributions in Rachel 's
· memory to the Grace United Methodist Church, 600 Second
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
. condolences.

VIEW

Scandalous

a

Solution.to problem obvious

TODAY IN HISTORY

.

blaming others

Bv LAURIE KELLMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Congress se nt President Bu sh
a second five-week extension
of the Patriot Act as Senate
negotiators worked to close a
deal with the White House on
renewing the antiterrorism
law with some new civil liberties protections.
"We need the Patriot Act,"
said Judiciary Committee
Chairman Arlen Specter.
''I'm prepared to work on it
further to improve it." · ·
Sixteen provisions of the
200 I law were to have
expired last Dec . 31, but
Congress extended them until
Friday after Democrats and a

.

Highway Patrol

HONOLULU ·- Aftet 90
years in the islands, Fresh
Del Monte f:roduce Inc . says
it will cease pineapple ,operations in Hawaii in a little
more than two years.
·Del Monte said it was no
longer economically feasible
to grow pineapple in Hawaii
be&lt;;:ause it can be produced
for less in other parts of the
world.
.
."It would be cheaper for
Del Monte to buy pineapples
on the open matket than for
the company to grow, market
and distribute Hawaiian
pineapple," the co,mpany said
·in a statement Wednesday.

POMEROY - A two-'vehicle accident at the intersection of
state routes 7 and 143 Thursday sent the drivers to an area
hospital with injurie s, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
.
·
l:lighw,ay Patrol reported.
Tra11sported to Holzer Medical Center by the Meigs·County
EMS from the 'sce ne of the ·8:05 a.m. crash were Sheryl S.
Wilson, 46, 36198 Peach Fork .Road, Pomeroy, and Cecelia
M. Core, 17, 39 126 Bunker Hill Church Road. Pomeroy,
according to the patrol.
·
'
Troopers said Core was eastbound on 143 when she stopped
the C&lt;\r she drove at the intersection. S])e then attempted a turn
onto 7 and traveled into the path' of a southbound minivan driven by Wilson, which collided with Core's car.
·
Both vehicles had disabling damage, and Core was cited for
failure to yield.
_ _ ___:__ _~-,-----------------~--------

add a pinch of . ·
·divert1ng attention
shred &amp;
half-bake.

handful
of
Senate that others needed more time.
Republican s demanded an
Earlier in the week, Sen.
avenue of appeals when the Larry Craig, R-ldaho, one of
FBI makes demands for peo- the negotiators who helped
ple's financial and other pri- block the act's renewal last
vate records.
year, told reporters almost all
The Senate voted 95-1 of hi s concerns had been
Thursday night to extend the worked out with the White
current law
unchanged House.
through March ·10 and give
He and Sen. John Sununu.
negotiators .more time to R-N .H., want parts of the-act
reach a' deal. Sen. Russell to be rewritten in several
Feingold, D-Wis ., a longtime areas, including giving
opponent of the Patriot Act; banks, Iibraries and Internet
cast the sole vote against the service providers the right to
· extension. Tbe House passed appeal when the FBI seeks
it Wednesday.
·
financial and other records of
Several , Republican and their customers and clients.
· officials
Democratic
Senate Democrats and
involved in negotiations said four · libertarian-leaning
that agreements had been . Republicans had blocked a
reached on several issues but final vote on a .measure

Lerre.rs 'to' the editor are welcome. They should be less 'than .
300 words. A/I letters lire subject to ediiing, must be signed."
· and include address and telephone number No unsigned let: ters will be published. Letters should be in good taste.
:address ill!? issues, tint personalities. Letters of thanks to orga. ni~arimrs and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

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The victory of Hamas in
the Palestinian elections is
being 'treated in the media as
an awful blow ro the hopes
fqr peace, or even progress,
in that eternally vexing
region of the Middle East.
· What, now, will happen to
the "peace process"' What
hope remains for President
Bush 's vaunted "road map,'.'
which beckoned the competing forces toward compromise?
Certainly, Hamas' ·victory
teaches us at least one important, and t~oroughly di scouraging, lesson. President Bush
has
warmly · endorsed
"democracy" as the solution
for the multiple ills of the
Islamic nations in the area,
During the Cold War, . the
United States unashamedly
backed all sorts of corrupt
and thoroughly undemocratic reg'imes there, on the
sound principle that, whatever their faults , they were
clearly preferable to a Soviet
· takeover of the entire region .
But in the past 15 years, and
especially since Sept. IJ, it
has becom'e plain that these
governments are not · only
obnoxious , but fatally . unstable . Mo't of them, moreover,
have been threatened wit h
overthrow at the hands of
fanatical lslamists hostile to
ihe United States. Steps·
1oward democracy. with concomitant economic and

war and terrorism will be our even armed with nuclear
lot for the foreseeable future. weapons. But the Muslim
But Hamas' victory does nations of the region have, of.
not represent any real set- course, remained loyal to the
back in the subordinate Palestinian cause, and con. struggle between Israel and tinue to support it with ecoWilliam
the Palestinians , for the si m- ·nomic and ~ven military aid .
Rusher
ple reason that there is not,
In the teeth of the determi and never has been, any seri- nation of the two sides, the
ous hope of a settlement of United States has stubbornly
th at quarrel.
persisted in promoting a
social reforms, see med like
Every few years I find it "peace process" which has
the s~undest, and perhaps the necessary to write a column .predictably gotten nowhere,
only, hope for progress.
re-emphasizing that unhappy and President Bush's "road
What the Hamas victory fact. Israel exists because, in .map" is simply · the latest
teaches us is the · unappet-iz- · 1948, a large number of casualty of this illusion. The
ing lesson that democratic European Jews, decimated - ultimate outcome of the
elections, in natipns without by the Holocaust, established struggle will depend on
a democratic tradition , a sub, a Jewish ~tate there, on land developments
demostantial middle 'class, and a they had once dominated and graphic and political - that
viable· economy, may result which 'their religion taught cannot now be foreseen . But
in the triumph of forces even them had been given to them the victory of Hamas over
more offensive than the by God. Many thou sands of Fatah basically changes regimes they overthrow, and the Palestinians living there nothing, because there was
far more hostile to the Uni ted fled. or at any ·rate left, and nothing
tb
change.
States and the values it repre- have survived as refugees in Eventually, by virtue of
sents.
nearby Mu slim nations. They financial or other pressures ,
That is bad news, but it at and their descendants, and the "peace process" may
least serves the purpose of the
Palestinians
who conceivably be reconstructed ,
throwing in\o sharp re li ~f the remai.ned , have deman'ded and stumble on. But the
seriousness of the problem "their' ' land back ever since. · underlying quarrel will not
America faces in the Middle
Most of the world , and in go away.
, East, and the absolutely criti- particular the United States,
In the long run, .the recogcal importance of victory in . having acquiesced in the cre- nition of an elemental truth is
our war against Islamic ter- ation of Israe l in the first never a mistake . In that
. rorism . If we ultimately pre- · place, has .continued to hope sense, even Hamas' victory
vail in that war, democracy that a co~1promise peace can may constitute a sort of
wi ll inevitably be the path be achieved between the two progress.
. followed by the Middle sides, and meanwhile Israel.
(William Rusher is a
Eastern nations, and gradual - with indi spensable American Distinguished Fellow of the
ly the bulk of the voters there help, has turned itself into a Claremont In stitute for the
wi ll accept membership i'n military power thorpughly Studv of Statesmanship and
modern society. If we fai I, capable of self-defense and Political Philosophy.)

.'

negotiated by the White
Hoose ·that would ha ve
· made
permanent
mu st
exp irin g provision s. Th e
Repub lican s were co ncerned about exces sive
police powers.
The law makes it easier for
federal agents to gather and
share information in terrorism
investigations, install wiretap&gt;
and conduct secret searches of
households and businesses. At ·
issue are 16 provisions that
Congress wanted review.ed
and renewed by the end of last
· year.
·
Sens. Jeff Bingaman, DN.M .. Conrad Burns. RMont. , Pete Domenii:i. RN.M. , and Tren.t LotL RMiss., did not vote .

• Approved an elevator
loan early to save interest
contract
charges. The building was maintenance
· between the DJFS and Dover
purchased in 1997 .
Elevator, in the amount of
Commissioners also:
frorri Page A1
.
• Approved membership in $4,112.06~
• Recessed until I0 a.m. on
the· Ohio Job and Family
Farmers Bank and Savings · Services ·
Directors Friday for payment of bills.
Company will be paid off in Association
Also
present
were
for
Meigs
· August, but Commissioner County
Mick
DJfS · DirectOr Commissioner
Jim Sheets s&lt;:~id commission- Michael Swisher, at a cost of Davenport and Clerk Gloria
Kloes.
ers decided· to pay off the $2,600.

Plant

'

'

Del Monte also cited diffi- sugar cane industry is barely
Del Monte said it will
culty in obtaining a long-term a presence now as companies work with its employees and
lease
extension
with found it cheaper to operate unioh representative ~ to
landowner Campbell Estate.
elsewhere.
"reduce the i·mpact of this
But' Campbell Estate Vice
Tens of tho11sands of acres · decision."
President Bert Hatton said · of former sugar cane fields
"Del Monte is mindful of
Del Monte declined a lease · on the densely ' populated · the company's obligations to
extension at the then-current island of Oahu, where about its , employees and the local
rent structure in 2001. The . 75 percent of the state's 1.3 community. and is commii.estate also offered to sell the million population reside, ted to making.every reasonpineapple tand in three sepa- have since been developed able effort to' lessen the
rate proposals , but Del into master-planned residen- ·impact on all individual s
Monte
rejected
those, tial communities and shop- involved." the company said
Hatton said.
ping centers.
in a statement. A compan)
The islands' red, volcanic spokeswoman declined furPlanting at Del Monte 's
Kunia plantation on Oahu soil and year-round sunny ther comment.
was set to end Feb. 19 and the . weather are ideal to grow
Coral Gables, Fla.-based
current crop will produce pineapple, the top agricultur- Del Monte began pineapple
fruit through mid-2008, the al .c;ommodity in Hawaii.
operations in Hawaii ir 1916.
company said.
Last year, Hawaii produced when the company was,
Fred Galdones, president of 212,000 tons of pmeapples called California Packing
· International Longshore and ·. worth an estimated $79 mil- Corp. Its main competitor is
Warehouse Union LQcal 142, .lion, according to the U.S. Dole Food Co., wpich prosaid' about the 700 pineapple Department of Agriculture. duces pineapples on 3,000
workers who will lose their Worldwide, the top pineapple ac res it owns in Wahiawa.
jobs. Ga\dones said he was producers are Thailand, the
"It is our plan to continue
also concerned with the Philippines, Brazil, China. growing pineapple) on Oahu
futl!re . of the two -remaining India and Costa Rica, accorp- . for tbe foreseeable future."
pineapple companies in ing to a USDA-report.
Dole spokeswoman · Marta
Hawaii, Dole Food Hawaii ·
"I think that American Maitles said Thursday. She
and Maui Pineapple Co.
workers everywhere, literally declined to comment on how
· "I hope it's not a domino from Hawaii to Maine to Del Monte's decision mav
effect like it did with the Texas to Michigan, are vul- affect Dole, which will be left
sugar companies, where one nerable to outsourcing and as the only major pineapple
had closed and the others fol- that 's really what this is grower on Oahu. Dole
lowed suit," he said.
about," said Hanan Kolko, a employ s 250 unionized
Hawaii 's once thriving New York labor lawyer.
workers.

The Hamas victory

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

billion. the lGCC plant will
mean 125 new permanent
jobs. During construction .
which is expected to take four
to six years. a peak of J .400
craft;men will be employed .
"I think that it b wi'e for
AEP to build thi, , plant in
West Virginia," Sen. Robert
Byrd &lt;D-W.Va.) has &gt;aid . "I
think that AEP chose the right
place."
Announcement of the plant
has renewed hope for economic development and job;
in Mason County, Coupled
with the reopening of the
Gatling Mine to feed coa l to
the Mountaineer and Sporn
plants , the IGCC plant aho
will mean an jf.lfu;ion of tax·
dollars into the county.

Del Monte to stop growing pineapples in Hawaii
ASSOCIATEO PRESS WRITER

,.

about the process we intend to
use." she said.
Appalachian Power has
filed for a Certificate of
Public Convenience and
Necessity · with the Public
Service Commission of West
Virginia.
It was Manchin who made
that announcement on Jan . II
during his State of the State
address.
"This isn't just good news;
it's great news," Manchin said
then. "AEP has made its commitmeht to West Virginia
· clear; it's now up to both of us
to work in the best interest of
o'ur ratepayers and citizens to
make this proposed partnership work."
Expected to cost about $1

Congress extends·Patriot Act for another five weeks

Bv JAYMES SONG

For the Record

Ken Lay'S FUDGED RECIPE
11b. confusion
cup white. lies
well with .

plant's ultimate construction
here in Mason County could
take the visit as a positive sign.
NEW HAVEN. W.Va. "He again expressed his
Gov. Joe Manchin met pri- support for having the plant
vately Thursday in New here in West Virginia,''
Haven with American Electric Matheney said.
Power executives to discuss
Manchin arrived at the proplans for a $1 billion coal posed site just south of the
gasification plant in Mason Mountaineer Plant at about
County.
II :30 a.m .• and met with
"It was an opportunity for Michael G. Morris, chairman
him to learn. -more about our of American Electric Power;
plans and how they fit in with and Dana Waldo,. president
his energy strategy," said Jeri · and' chief executive officer of
Matheney. AEPspokeswoman. 'Appalachian Power. Several
The governor's press office other AEP experts on . the
would say very little about the Integrated
Gasification
meeting and said Manchin Combined Cycle plant also
wo.uld have no comment on it. were
in
attendance,
However, Matheney said Matheney said.
that those hopeful for the
"He wanted to learn more
TMALONEY@MYDAILYREGISTER .COM

Rachel D. Hawk Pullins

· 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Governor in Mason County to discuss IGCC plant witli execs
BY TIM MALONEY

VVas Jesus afunny man?

The Daily S~ntinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

2006

allowing these ·solicitations·to
be made in the name of the
London Pool.
Williams and Syracuse resi from 'PageA1
dent Joy Bentley composed an
official letter that will be sent
village will need to rai se out · asking for donations that
$\0,000- $12,000 for plumq- each of the council members
ing repairs and $5,000 for · and Mayor Eric Cunningham .
operational costs to reopen signed last night.
the pool. ·
Donations will go directly
Concerned residents that into the pool fund.
·
attended this week's meeting
Jacks , reported that he
to save the London t'ool have already received donations of
devised a plan to raise the $300 · from Dorotny Sayre
money and brought it before and $250 from Richard Owen
councilla~t ' night.
to go into the pool fund .
Syracuse Councilman Mike
Council also approved a
Jacks · and ·syracuse resident steering committee for the.
Judy Williams will be solicit- pool that includes volunteers
ing donations to raise funds Williams. Jacks. Bentlev.
for the village's 12.5 percent Erin McDade, and . Dianna
. due towards the FEMA award Lawson.
for repairs, as well as money
Although council voted to
to repair the plumbing and reopen the pool by accepting
support the operational costs. the FEMA money it is unlikeCouncil passed · a motion ly that the pool would reopen

Pool

.

..

Ko•ln Kelly/ photo

The driver of a vehicle that collided with this Gallipolis City S.chools bus on Ohio 588 near Rio
Grande Wednesday was killed, the State Highway Patrol reported. Only ll)inor injuries were
reported to some of t~e 43 passengers aboard the bus when t.he crash occurred.

, Crash
from PageA1
ical personnel from Gallia
and Mason counties.
The crash occurred after
3:30p.m. near the entrance to
the Gallipolis Reduction Co.
plant. The bus, whose engine
section was severely damaged, came to a stop just
short of the reduction plant's

entrance, the patrol said.
. Safety belts were in use by
both drivers. Alcohol is not suspected of being involved in ihe
crash, according to the patrol.
The crash remains under investigation by the patrol.
City schools offic ial s credited the extra padding on the
seats of the bus with ·preventing any further injury to .the
passengers.
The Rio Grande Volunteer
Fire Department re;ponded

to the ' scene and utilized a
"Jaws of life " · extraction
device on loan from the
Greenfield
Township
Volunteer Fire Department
· on the SUV. The patrol was
also assisted at the scene by
the Oal\ia County Sheriff's
Department.
.
The crash kept that section
of 588 closed for a period of
time as authorities began
their inl'eStigation of the
accident. ·

this season.
Of course at this stage in
the game reopening the
Lon!le&gt;n Pool still hinges on
donations and support from
the community.
Tl)e more things change.
the more they stay the &gt;arne.
.---....;-------,

�BY THE BEND

. The Daily Sentinel

Saturday, Feb. 4
SALEM CENTER -Star
Grange .#778. Star Junior
Grange #878, potluck supper
at 6,:30 p.m., fo ll owed by
meeting at 7:30. Degree team
practice. Final plans for
March 12 soup dinner.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrsonville Lodge 41 I, 7:30
p.m. at the !Jail. Members to
take non-perishable food for
pantry. ·
SYRACUSE - ·Baseball
sign ups, Syracuse Youth Ball
League. 9 a.m. to I p.in, fire
station.
Monday, Feb. 6
RACINE
Rac ine
Chapter 134. · OES regu lar
meeting. 7:·30 p.m. Mock initiation, All officers asked to
anend. Refreshments.
POMEROY
Meigs
Band Boosters to meet at 6:30
p.m. in the band room.

1\Jesday, Feb. 7
Refreshments.
SYRACUSE- Wildwood
POMEROY
-Orange
Garden Club, 6:30p.m. at the Township Trustees , 7:30
horne of Joy Bentley. p.m., home of Fiscal Officer
Program on techniques of · Osie Follrod.
basic flower a1nnging .
Wednesday, Feb. 8
POMEROY
Meigs
County Board of Health, regSaturday, Feb. 4
uJar meeting, 5 p.m., conferTUPPERS . PLAINS
ence room Meig s County
·
S ignups for the Tuppers · Health Department.
Plains Youth Baseball and
Thursday, Feb. 9
Softball program will be held
POMEROY
- Meigs
from 9 a.m. to noon at Eastern
County
Commissioners
reguElementary . schooL Chi ld's
lar
meeting,
I
0
a.m.
,
instead
birth certificate required .
March 4 is registration dead- of l p.m.
line.

School events

Thesday, Feb. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers
Pl~in s
Youth
B a s e b·. a I I I S o f t b a I I
Association, monthly meeting. 6 p. t)i.; tirehouse. I

Public meetings

Church events

· Sunday, Feb. 5
BiDWELL- Gospel con·
cert by the Forgivers 4 at 6:30
p.m. at the Poplar Ridge Free
Will Baptist Church. .
·
COOLVILLE - Healings
and
Miracles
services,
Evangelist Ken Greene, lO
a.m . and 7 p.m. at Faith
Harvest Church.
'
POMEROY
- Drew
Webster Post 39 American
· Legion will celebrate Four
Chaplains Sunday at 9:30
a.m. at Sacred Heart Church.
Members should meet at
church at 9: 15 a.m.
·

Monday, Feb. 6
· RACINE - Racine Village
Council, ·regular meeting, 7
Thesday, Feb. 7
p.m.. Racine Municipal
MIDDLEPORT
Building.
Middleport Lodge #363 ,
RUTLAND ·. Rutland
F&amp;AM. monthly business Council meeting, 6 p.m. in
meeting. 7:30 p.m. Lodge village council chambers.
officers to report at 6:45 for
SYRACUSE
- Sutton
·meeting with district deputy. To'wnship Trustees, regular
All members urged to bring monthly meeting. 7 p.m.,
.. non-perishable food items for Syracuse Village Hall.
the Grand Masters Food Bank
RUTLAND
-Rutland
Saturday, F~b. 4
Program. All Master Masons Township Trustees meet in
RACINE - Straw giyeinvited. Refreshments.
regular session at 5 p.m .,
for pet bedding, IO ·a.m.
away
Rutland Fire Station.
Thursday, Feb. 9
LETART. FALLS -Letart to 2 p.m., Hill's Citgb and
Meigs
County
CHESTER - Shade River . Township Trustees. 6:30 behind
Lodge 453 will meet at 7:JO p.m.. office building.
Humane Society Thrift Store,
· Middleport..
p.m.
at
the
haiL

Other events

Smith ·lands job

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Elizabeth Smith

DEAR ABBY: I have been
married 15 years to a woman
I have always placed on a
pedestal. I recently learned
that when she was single, she
had an affair with a married
man . I can't get it out of my
head. I'm afraid it will drive
me to drink.
Yes, she has been a good
wife and mother to our two
girls (ages l I and I 3), but I
no longer have.the respect for
her that I once had. We
·recently got into an argument
that escalated into name-call ing, and l called her a "slut"
because that's what I feel she
is. She dated at ·least seven or
. eight other men. before we
married, and knowing she
had sex with a married man,
I'm sure I can safely assume
that she had ·Sex with the oth·
ers.
Our sex life is deteriorating. I fee l I'm not making
Jove to a "clean" woman, that
she is used and dirty laundry.
I told her she had cheated me
the same as if I paid for a new
car and then found out the
dealer delivered a used one.
She always claimed to be a
good Catholic, and I told her
she even ignored her religious teachings, as they teach
you to be a virgin for your
husband. I won't leave her
because of the children. -but
I'm afraid I'll have a hard
time staying even though I
believe I love her.
In stead of having her on a
pedestal, I now have her in
the gutter. Please advise me
before I go out of my mind.
- HURT AND SAD, TRENTON, N.J.
.
DEAR HURT AND SAD:
Hurt and sad'l Imagine how

Dear
Abby

wife insists that he ~ hould
have "a child of his own" but through adoption. She
does not intend to have any
more children.
. My sister hasnow informed
all the members of our family
that the adoption fee is
$25,000 and that we will be
expected to make a donation!
l have never seen thi s matter
addressed in your columri.
Please teil m what to do, and
fast. Our fam ily awaits your
opinion. - M!JDDLED IN
THE MIDW EST · .
. DEAR MUDDLED: You ;
have never see n the matter·
addressed in my col umn
becau se the premise ·is so
original and outlandish that
. no . one has sent it to me •
before. It is my opinion that if :
your nephew and his wife :

SHE feels! Assuming that
you are also Catholic, were
you a virgin when you married your wife? Surely. the
same rule applies to Catholic
men as it does to Catholic
women. If, after 15 years of
solid marriage and two chi! dren, this _is what your wife
gets from the man . who
promised God he would love,
honor and cherish her until
death, frankly, I think she
deserves better.
Pedestals are cold. drafty cannot come · up with the · ·
1
money to finance the adop- ·
Pac~s on wh'tc h t0 I'tve, and t't ' tioit,
they should postpone it
ts unfair and unrealisti c to
label your wife as eith~r a until they ca n. (Just. what
Madonna .or a whore because would your sister consider"
of a youthful indiscretion. everyone's "fair share" of this
These days, most people fall project to be? And if you did
somewhere in between.
buy into thi s joint ventu re.
Please , don't be a "mart yr" does that mean you would
and "stay because of the chi! - have a say in how the child is
dren." Unless you can· find it rai sed')
·in your. heart to forgive (as
There are too many quesyour rehgton preaches). gtve tions that come to mind, and
the pqor woman a br;ak and · not enough answers. Tell your
go. Name:calltng t sn :t,g~ tn g sister. ''Nice try. though!"
to th thts, psychologtcal and
De r Abb is written b•
reltgtous counseltng for you .
. a.
Y
.. J
might. Your wife does not Abrgml Yan Burell, . a.tso
deserve the abuse you have known a.~ Jeamw Plltllrps,
heaped upon her. and you and was folll!ded by, ~er
need more help than anyone mo!her, Pau/111e Phrlilps.
can give you in a letter.
Write
Dear Abby
at
DEAR ABBY: My nephew www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
recently married a widow Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
with two teenage sons. His 90069.
·

Ohio, whose 20 electoral votes votes.
gave Bush aJJ he needed to win
Atier · Kerry conceded, the
the presidency.
· Democrats asked Marbley to
At the Democrats' request, dismi ss the case. However, the
U.S. District Judge Algenon Ohio anorney general's office,
Marbley ordered Blackwell's representing Blackwell, tried
office and the Knox and 'to keep it alive. Marbley disFranklin county officials to missed the·c~se in August and
provide alternative methods of Attorney General Jim Petro
voting the night of the election. appealed to the 6th U.S.
The polls remained open , Circuit Court of · Appeals.
· past their 7:30 p.ni. closing 8lackwell spokesman Carlo
time to accommodate anyone LoParo said his otiice chose to
who was in line at that time. remove itself tram the case.
Some voters waited in line
Petro asked the appeals
, more than seven hours and the court to dismiss the case on
last ballots were not cast until Jan. !2.
early' the next day.
Petro spokeswoman Kim
Democrat John Kerry con- Norris said Thursday that pasceded to President Bush the ·sage of a new law that allows
day after the election when his absentee voting · by any reg iscampaign determined he could tered voter and new federal
not significantly cut into guidelines that will increase
Bush's Ohio. lead, which the number of voting machines
wound up being 118,000 available should end the prob-

Iem of long lines at polling ·
places.
"The specific argument we
were making is now moot."
Norris said.
In one of the remaining lawsuits, the National Voting
Rights Institute alleges irregularities in the recount of the
2004 , election. Libertarian
Party candidate Michael
Badnarik and Green Part~ candidate David Cobb paid tor the
recount, despite ·collecting less
1han OJ percent of the vote.
The recount cut into Bush·s
lead, but not enough to change
the result.
The other lawsu it. filed by
the League or Women Voters
or Ohio, says · an inadequate
statewide electit,ms system has
violated the equal protection
and due process of some Ohio
voters.

friday. February 3. 2006 ·

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Sweetheart
Basket
Cliveaw83'

Krystal Dawn Holley
great-grandparents
are
Harley and Kathryn Johnson,
also of Wolf Pen Communi ty,
and Doris Holley of Racine.

Kroger - 18.27
Ltd.- 23.40
.NSC - 48.79
Oak Hill Financial - 32
OVB - 2S.14.
· BBT- 38.37
·Peoples - 29.37
Pepsico - 57.45
Premier- 15.97
' Rockwell - 65.43
Rocky Boots - 22.90
Sears - 121.10
Wai,Mart - 46.28
wendy's - 58.39
Worthington- 19.94
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
·previous day's transactions,
provided by·Smith Flnanchll
Advisors of Hilliard Lyons In ·
Gallipolis.

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BorgWamer - 55 .02
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Champion - 4.40
Charming Shops - 12.56
City Holding- 36.S1
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Federal Mogul - .34
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Gannett - 62.18
General Electric - 32.90 '
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Harley Davidson - 52.35
JPM- 39.99
'

COLUMBUS - The s)ate
dropped its appeal of a
lawsuit originally filed by
Democrats to alleviate long
voting lines in the 2004 presidential election.
The state had tried to keep
the lawsuit going to try to
prove Ohio conducted a legal
election.
The case, dismissed Monday
at the state 's request, was
brought
by
the
Ohio
Democratic · Pany against
Secretary of State Kenneth
Blackwell. a Republican, and
two county boards of election
on Election Day. The party
·sought to alleviate long lines at
polling places in two counties.
Two lawsuits still are pending from the 2004 election in
ha~

Holleys announce birth.
POMEROY -.
Britt&lt;)ny
Nicole Guinther and Justin
Michael Holley anno unce the
birth of a daughter, · Krystai'
Dawn Holley, on Dec. 20,
2005, at Pleasant Valley
HospitaL She weighed 7
pounds, 9.6 ounces.
Her maternal grandparents
are Malcolm!) and Charlotte
Guinther of Racine. · Her
maternal great-grandparents
are Donna Jean Guinther of
Syracuse and the late
Malcolm E. Guinther, and
James and Janice· Warner.
·Her paternal grandparents
are Jerry and Cheryl Holley
of the Wolf Pe'n Commun it y.
Pomeroy. and her paternal

2006

State drops court fig~t to try ·to show 2004 election was fair
BY JOHN McCARTHY

POMEROY - Elizabeth
Smith (formerly Farley).
daughter of Blair and Diana
Windon of Pomeroy, has
recentl y taken an ass istant
prosecuting attorney position
with the Clark Cou nty
Prosecutor's
Office
in
Springfield. She graduated
from The University of
Toledo College·of Law with a
J.D. degree .in May. 2005 and
passed the O)lio Bar Exam in
November. 2005. She curin
rently
resides
Reynoldsburg with her husband Randy and daughter
Hannah and will be relocat- ·
ing to Springfield in the near
future .

Friday, February 3,

News of old affair tarnishes man's sterling image of wife

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations

·PageA6

�Page AM·

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Thuraday'e gamea
High schOOl boya INieketbell
Ohio Valley Christian 76, Hannan 57
High schoOl glrta INieketball
.Ohio Valley Chris11an 55, Hannan 44
Logan 55, Gallia Academy 53, 20T
Point Pleasant 60, Roane County 40
Nelsonville· York 7t , Meigs 40
Tririwle 59, Eastern 36
South Point 54, River Valley 49

Friday, February 3, 2006 .

Daughter gets safety upgrade Local weather
at rail crossing where dad died Friday ... Mostly cloudy night... Cloudy

with a 40
percent chance of snow
showers. Highs in the
lower 30s. Lows in the
lower 20s.
·
Monday and Monday
night...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid ·30s. Lows ih
the lo~Yer 20s.
.,
Tuesday and Tuesday
night...Mostly clear. Highs
in the mid 30s. Lows in
the lower 20s.
".
Wednesday ... Partly
cloudy. Highs in the uppe~
30s.
Wednesday· nighL.Partly
cloudy with a. 30 percent
chance of snow showers.
Cold with lows in the mid
20s.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy
with a chance of snow. and
rain showers. Highs in the
upper 30s. l:;hance of precipitation 30 percent.
·

with ·a 40 percent chance
of rain. Highs in the lower
50s. Southwest winds I 0 to
15 mph.
·
Friday
nlght...Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of rain. Lows in the
mid -30s. Southwest winds
5 to 10 mph. '
Saturday ... Rain and snow
likely. Light sn()W accumulation possible. Cooler with
highs in the lower 40s.
Temperature falling into the
lower 30s in the afternoon.
West winds I0 to 15 mph
with gusts up to 25 mph.
Chance of precipitation 70
percent.
Saturday night...Cloudy
with scattered snow showers. Colder with lows . in
the mid 20s. West · winds
10 to 20 mph. Chance of
snow SO percent.
Sunday and Sunday ·

LORAIN (AP)- Ten-year- ify for government funding for
old Brianna Carroll wasn't safety gates, said Craig Miller,
going to forget how her beloved Lorain's safety-service director.
father was killed at a dangerous
Legislation
accepting
· · railroad crossing when his pick- Schaeffer's donation. is being
up was struck , by a Norfolk prepared for council to review
Southern Corp. train Jan. 18.
when it meets Monday. If
The private tracks did not approved, the Ohio . Rail
have safety gates Qr warning Development Commission will
lights public crossings have so begin the process to put up the
Brianna wrote Mayor Craig gates.
Follin, pleading with him to
"Once everything is agreed to
make the crossing safer in honor at the local level, we'll get a date
of her 31-year-old father, David set to get a crew up there," s.aid
Carroll. and the 16 other people commi~sion spokesman Stu
who have been killed at the Nicholson. "They' ll look at
crossing over the past 40 years. everything and anything to
"I am going to keep writing make sure lights and gates are
untiJ they put (the gates) up," . put up at the crossing."
she wrote.
The order will then be sent to
On Wednesday, the owner of Norfolk Southern. which will
the land that holds the tracks, likely assume responsibility for
John Schaeffer, agreed to donate the project and any costs not
125 feet of the private road to covered by federal and state
the city. That means it will quai- grants, Nicholson said.

HOLZER CLINIC

AP Photo

In this Ph.oto provided by the Columbus Children's Hospital
Maria Wolfe holds her son Jason for the very first time,
Wednesday ill Columbus Children's Hospital in Columbus ..
Jason was part of a domino·style transplant in January. The
four-month-old was g1ven a new heart and a new set of lungs ·
in January, and his healthy heart was then donated to a 12week-old girl. ·Kayla Richardson, in a rare transplant procedure ·
at the hospital.
,.

COLUMBUS (AP)- A 4month-old boy was given a
new heart and a new set of
lungs, and his healthy heart
was then donated to a 3month-old girl in a rare transplant procedu(e at Columbus
Children's Hospital.
Jason Wolfe, of Fairfield
Couniy, received the organs
from an out-of-state donor.
Although his · heart was
.health y, doctors wanted to
replace it because the dc:&gt;uble
procedure 'is safer in such

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LocAL SCHEDULE
'

GALLIPOLIS - A seh&amp;dule of UJI!XIITiin" college
and h~ school varsity sportin.g ew~nts lnvol'.'lng
teams from Gallla, Meloe; and Mason counties.

Fdd'V't gam11
Boy• Baaketball

Wahama at Hannan , 7:30 p.m.
Logan at Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m .
EaStet'n at Miller. 8 p.m.
Gallia Academy atl:ogan. 7:30p.m .
Meigs at Vinton County, B p.m.
·River Valley at Chesapeake, 7:30p.m.
· Cross Lanes at OVCS,.7 p.m.
Ironton St Joe at SOuth Gallla, 7:30p.m.
Southern at Trimble, a p.m.
at~•

. Helping pu sh the . Lady
Cats to victory was a solid 40
percent (24-of-60) shooting
effort from the floor while the
. Lady Eagles co uld only
muster a 24 percent ( 11-ot45) effort on the night.
Trimble also outrebounded
the Meigs Col)nty school 3329 and only gave up 13 total
turnovers as Eastern gave
away 20.
Trimble was led on the
n'ight by Grandy, who hat:l 30
points, five assists and live
· steals, Tabby Jenkins with
nine points, Hannah Faires

River Valley
stumbles to
South Point

Boya Bukatball
..wheelersburg at Gallia Academy, 7:30p.m.
. Glrta Baakatball

Sciotoville at' South Gallia, 7:30p.m.

The Multi-Slice cr Scan
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Wreatllng

Ppint Pleasant at Cardinal Conference ·
Meigs, River Val!ey at John Dena Classic
··

· College Basketball

Walsh at Rio Grande, a p.m.
Women '• College Buketball
·

STAFF REPORT

Walsh at Rio Grande, 6 p.m.'

SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

Sunday'• prot

SOUTH POINT - It was
shake-up night in the Ohio
Valley Conference .
South Point a&gt;cended lo the
top, while
River Valley
fell
·to .Jast
. . ,.·
.'
.
place. as the

Boyo Boo(&lt;ettlall

Southeast District Draw, noon
Mqndtv. Ftbruerv 6
Girls Basketbstt

Gallia Academy at Eastern , 6 p.m .
Rlwr Vatley at Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.
Coal Grove at. South Gallia , 6 p.m..
OVCS at Fairland, 6 p.m.
Vinton County at Southern, TBA .
Wahama at Buffalo. 7 p.m.

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·CONTACfS
Phone- 1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
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SJ10rlf_~l1H

Brad Shermen, Sportl Editor
(740) -'46-2342, ext 33' ·
,
b&amp;herman a mydallytribune.com
Bryan Wallera, Sporta Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext 23
bwa tters C myda1lytribune.com

Lerry Crum, Sportt Writer
.(740) 446·2342, ext. 33

Brlld Sherman/photo

Lady Buckeyes blast Meigs on senior night
•

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBUNE .COM

ROCK SPRINGS
Megan Edwards scored 18
points and co llected 20
rebounds
to
help
Nelsonville-York to a lopsided 71-40 Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division
victory on Thursday at Larry
R. Morrison gymnasium.
The Lady Buckeyes, who
led by just seven at halftime,
· held the Lady Marauders to
only three field goals in the
second half en route to their
II th win of the season.
Nelsonville- york improved

&lt;

•

Marauders (4- 14) lost for
· fift h straight time and fell to
1-8 in the conference.
. However. league record
are of little consequence
now. as the Ohio Divi sion
race was decided on
Thursday when Alexander
clinched the title with a win
over Belpre .
Kim Kline added II points
Haning
Clelland . to the balanced Lady
Buckeye scoring attack,
'
to 11 -7 and 5-4 in the TVC while Kayleigh Bunting al so
went for II off the bench.
Ohio.
Meigs, which had been Lisa Meade had nine with
Walter · and
showing steady i\]lprove - McKenzie
ment, took a step back on Kourtney Kinnison chipping
Thursday.
The
Lady in eight apiece.

.

Megan Clelland, despite
making only one tield goaL
led the Lady Marauders in
scoring with I0 points: she
also meshed 7-of-9 free
throws. Amy Barr scored six
point s. aJI Ill the first bali,
while Cayla Lee and Amber
Burton each chipped in live.
Also for the Maroon and
Gold, freshman Catie Wolfe
was held in check with three
· poinls. Leslie Preece also
scored three while Whitney
Smith and Talisha Beh&lt;l
rounded out the scoring with
two and ones respectively.
'

Please see Meigs. Bl

a d y

Point ers
overcame a
sluggish per~··i.Y'"
formance to
win 54,49 in
girb hasketPayne
ball action
on Thursday.
The South Point win. coupled with a Fairland win over
Coal Grove. gave the Lady
Pointers outright possession
of the OVC lead and al leas t a
share of the le ag ue title .
South Point 113-41 improved
to 8- 1 in the OYC.
River
Valley
(3-14),
though, is now all alone in
last - place . Chesapeake,
which entered the night in a
tie with the Lady Raiders.
beat Rock Hill to .climb out of
the cellar.
But the league's last-place
team gave the leaders a scare
on Thlirsday. The Lady
Raiders .only trailed by four
points entering the fourth. but
lost a free throw shooting
contest" and thtls. . ended up
on the short end of the score .
The Lady Pointers converted 10-of-12 free throws in the
final period. meanwhile.
Ri ver Valley J-of-8 over that
,same span .
· Jessi Craft scored 19 points
to pace the winners and
r Ann Mavo . also reached
double fi gures with 12 .
River Valley's Beth Payne
wenl for 19 points while
.K ir"en Caner added a dozen.
Bronk~ Ta' lor followed with
'even and. Rachel ·Walburn
went for five .. Kay Ia Smith

Please see Raiders, Bl

1Q.7

4·5
4·5

6-1

•

Meigs' defenders Amber Burton (22) and Leslie Preece .' right, try to block the shot of Nelsonville-York's Lisa Meade (:1.0)
during Thursday's TVC Ohio contest.at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium in Rock Springs.

L

, 1-7

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with eight points , Andra
H o,op~r and Julie Trace with
four poin ls and Jessica
Burdette with lwo points in
the win.
·
Eastern was paced by Erin
Weber who posted 13 points,
nine rebounds aod two steals,
Jemia Hupp wi th six points ·
and tw o . steals, Katie
Hayman. Jessie Hupp and ·
lillian Brannon with five
points each and Kay lee Milan
with two points in the loss.
Eastern returns to action
7:30 Monday at Gallia
Academy ..

Bukottlall

SoturdiY'I gom11

Now Available

young children. said Dr. Todd
Astor. medical director of the
hospital's lung and heart-lung
transplant programs:
Kayla Richardson . of
Franklin County, received
Wolfe's heart in a nearby
operating room during the
Jan. 14 transplants.
The procedure, called a
domino transplant, was first
used in 1988, but there are no
records of domino transplants
for hearts in the United States
~ince. 1996, the hospital said.

. GLOUSTER _ Up only
two points after eight minutes
f
1
T · y 11
0
P ay,
n- a ey
Conference
powerhouse
· Trimble stepped up their
game behind a 30 point performance from Jennifer
· Grandy, as the Lady Cats
rolled over Eastern 59-36
Thursday night in Glouster.
Trimble held a narrow 1210 lead after one quarter of
play, but began to pull .away

in the second quarter behind
. a I 5 point performance while
the defense Iimited' the Lady
· Eagles to a game low seven
points.
The Lady Cats continued
much of the same in the second half as the home squad
posted 15 more points, while
limiting Eastern to I0 to hold
a 42-27 lead heading into the
final cantos.
Weber
Jen Hupp
Once there, Trimble flexed
their championship muscle
The win now sets up a likewith IT pomts as the Lady ly
championship
game
Cats rolled to the 23-point between
Trimble
and
victory.
Waterford for the TVC title.

Flolnt Pleasant at Logan, 7:30p.m
OV~S at Cross Lanes, 5:30 p:m.

'

Infant's heart goes to 3-month-old
girl in rare transplant

Friday, February 3, 2006

·Grandy, Trbnble grounds Lady Eagles, 59-36

.

~--~--------~
. N~e-W. ~C~T~S~~--n~

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

l.ocAL ScoREBOARD

Angels fall to Logan ·in double OT
Bv BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS~MVDAILYTRIBUNE .CO M

onds show· ing on the
clock and
sank 1-of-2
at the free
t h r o w
stripe
to
secure the .

GALLIPOLIS - A good
' start can make all the difference between winning and
losing b.asketbaJI games.
Gallia Academy found out
the hard way Thursday dtir- road victory.
ing its ' 55-53 double overGallia Academy trailed I0time setback to Logan in the 4 after eight minutes and was
2005-06 Southeastern Ohio down 22-10 at halftime . The
Athletic League finale.
hosts went on a 21-10 run to
The Blue Angels (7-11, 2- open the second half to pull
8) trailep by double digits within one. 32-31. after three
( 16-6) after lhe opening 12 quarters of play.
minutes of play, then ral.lied
GAHS finally pu lled even
for a 37-27 ·run over the liqt at 36 after Ale,xis' Geiger
two-and-a-half 'quarters to · made a free throw wilh 5:22
end regulation knotted at 43 . left in the fourth. then Jacki e
Both the hosts and Lady Wamsley connected 'on a I SChieftains ( 14-4, 7-3) led in foot jumper to give the hosts
the first overtime before fin- their first lead (38-36) of the
ishing tied at 49. and both . night with 4: II remaining ..
clubs were all square at ~3
The Purpl e and Wh 1te
with 22 .3 seconds left in the quickly tied the game at JR.
second extra session.
but Brittany E;lliott sank a
Allison Angle made the charity toss for the Angels'
latter of two free throws to final lead of regulat ion .wi th
give LHS a 54-SJ lead with . 3: 18 showing on the L'lnck .
4.6 second s remaining, then
The guesl &gt; went on '' 4 -0
teammate Kri sten Ca~sady . run over the next 5J 'ecomb.
stole the fo llowing inbounds for a 43-39 lead .. Qlll Elliott
pa". Cas"idy was fouled came up wilh four q raight
immediately with 2.3 sec- point' over the final I :42 to

force the first extra frame .
The Angels scored first in
the overtime period, as
Wamslev connected on a
layup with three minutes left
for a 45-43 edge.
Logan went on a .6-2 run
over the next 2: I 0 for a 4947 lead, but Lindsey Niday's
layup · with 40 seconds left
again tied the con te st for
Galli a Academy at 49 . ·
Neither team scored in the
remainder of the first 0\ertim c.

GAHS again scored lirst in
the second extra session. as
Elliott gave the hosts a 5 1-.\9
lead with 2:27 left
·
Logan followed with a .J-0
run and recbimed the lead at
the I: 18 mark, but a J?air of
Wam sley free throws tted the
game at 53. Gallia Acaden1y
would get no closer.
. The Angels shot 20-of-63
from the field for 32 percent
induding a di,mul 2-of-15
effort (·13 · ·perl·ent) from
three-point territory. The
ho,ts ,abo connected on 11 of, I') free throw' for 58 percent

· Please see F•ll, Bl

Bryan Walters/photo

Ga ll la Academy:s Alex1s qe 1ger 11as a shot blocked b) Logan
defender Allison Angle dunng Thu rsda) ·s SCOAL contest in
Ga lli polis . Ge1ger and the Angels Ieist 55· 53 m double over.t1me.

_________

----'----- - - - - - - - -·---,-------- - - - - - - - - - - - ----·---··-.. .:

�~I:#

Page B2 • TI1e Daily Sentinel

Friday, Fcbrua~ 3,

www.mydailyscntinel.com

Miami burns Cavaliers, 101-73
MIAMI (A P) - The trio of
newly picked All-Star starters
each played as though they
deser\' ~ d
the
honor.
Fortunately for the Miami
Heat. two of those players
were on their side .
Dwyane Wade had 24
points and six . assists,
Shaquille O' Neal had 21
point' and eight rebounds,
and the Heat useq a pair of big
scoring bursts to . defeat
Cleveland
I01-73
on
Thursday night and snap the
Cavaliers ' seven-game winning streak.
The Heat used a 22-0 firs thalf run to build a lead, then
went on a 19-1 burst in the
founh quarter to seal. the
Cava liers' biggest loss this
season. Wade and O'Neal
capped it with a tlurry of
hi ghli gh t-ree l play s in the
final min utes. helping Miami
reach a season-best II games
above :.500.
"No question, this is one of
the best games we ' ve played
thus far this year, especiall y
play ing against a team that's
been play ing exceptionally
well of late," Wade said. "We
would like to see more of this.
And l think we're getting
there."
O' Neal was selected to hi s
13th All -Star team .e arlier
. Thursday and Wade was
vo ted . into the midseason
showcase as a starter for the
AP photo first time. Joining them will
Cleveland Cavaliers ' Drew Gooden (90) shoots over Miami be LeBron James, the .East's
, Heat's Udonis Haslem (40) in the first quarter of an NBA bas- leading vote-getter - who
had 29 points, seven assists
ketball game Thursday 1n Miami.

and five rebounds for the
Cavaliers.
But no other Cleveland
player reached double figure s,
and a stretch of four games in
five nights clearly taxed the
Cavaliers. Cleveland cut what
was a 26-point deficit early in
the third quarter down to nine
late in that period, but shot
just 4-for-22 in the tina! 12
,minutes.
·
. " You don't give up.~· James
said. "We still made our run .
It never got to a point where
we gave up on ourselves. But
when you make a run down
those many points,' it's hard to
make another run."
Gary Payton added 14
points. Antoine Walker had 12
and James Posey had II
points .and l 0 rebounds for
Miami, which won its fourth
straight.
"I'm tired of hearing it.
Tireiil of hearing about how,
well, '7e keep s hootin ~ ou_rse lves m the foot or we re not
doing this or we're not doing
that," He.at coach Pat Riley
said. "Somewhere, you've got
to take responsibility for who
you think you are." ·
Miami led 59-3'3 with 9:36
left in the th ird quarter before
Cle.veland rallied. Drew
Gooden 's. tip-in with 7:22 left
m the !htrd capped an 11 - 1
run, and the Cavaliers later
cut ·the deficit to 71-62 on
Anderson Varejao's layup
with l :32 remaming · in the
period.
The Cavaliers got within 10
on another basket by Varejao

Friday, February 3.

2006

early in the fourth, but Miami Miami quickly took comscored the game's next 13 mand - . scoring the next 22
points - capped by . Wade points, including 19 straight
dunking an alley-oop pass to open the second quaner. ·
from Jason Williams with
Wade had seven points and
5:22 left to push the Heat 's Walker six during the burst,
lead back to 91-68.
part of a stretch during which
"When it went from (26) to Cleveland missed 13 consecunine, I wasn't very happy," tive attempts from the field.
Riley said. " I . was thinking
"Any time you face a team .
that the worst nightmare was with five NBA All-Stars on
going to be coming our way. the road, you can't afford to
We gathered ourse lves very go down double digits and
quickly."
. expect to come · back,"
O' Neal sealed the win with Cleveland coach Mike Brown
two fan-pleasing plays.
said.
First, he took an e(ltry pass
Former ·Miami
guard
from Williams with 4:35 left Damon Jones, in his first
and was immediately fouled · game back since signing wi th
by
Cleveland 's
Alan Cleveland during the offseaHenderson. So O'Neal simply ' son, finished with three poirits
flipped the ball over hi s on l - for~6 shoo~ing. He ~as
shoulder· and into the bas- booed alter makmg a 3-pmnt- :
ket.
er early, and the fans cheered·
And about 90 seconds later, later in the half wh_en he .
Wade dribbled up the le'ft missed a pair of free throws. :
sideline
and
around
Notes: Williams returned ·
Clevelm1d's Sasha Pavlovic, after missing four ga mes with
who tried cutting bi s progress a lacerated finger. He ha~ four
off around the midcourt points and e1ght ass tsts m 26
stripe. Wade sidestepped minutes .... It was Cleveland's ·
Pavlovic, ,retrieved the ball ·first loss since Pavlovic .
and threw a long alley-oop to entered the starting lineup
O' Neal - who threw the · eight games ago - and since :
dunk down.
James started weari ng tights
"It looks like we're on our under his game s h ort~. saying
way," O'Neal said . "We j ust the accessory helps hi.s knee ..
have to keep it going. We · ... Wade and O'Neal were preknow what it takes for us to sented with their All-Star ·
play at that level.''
warmup jackets in a brief :
Miaroi . shot 52 percent. pregame ceremony .... Cavs C
compared to 34 percent by the Zydrunas ll gauskas missed
Cavaliers. .
·
abo ut 12 minutes midwa~
James' layup with 1:37 left through the first half after disin the opening quarter drew locating a finger on his right
Cleveland to · 21- 15 , but hand.

LOGAN 55,
GALLIA ACADEMY 53, 20T
LOGAN (1 4..C, 7-3)

Caitlin Holloway 3 0.~ 6, Krista Hanman 0
o-o 0, Carissa Bosch 0 o-o 0 Collette
BoNin 1 2-2 4, Kristen Cassady' 3 1-5 9
Allison Angle 6 4·5 16, Jessica Harns 7
9 20. Totals: 20-57 13-23 55.
GALLIA ACADEMY (7·11, 2-8)
Jackie Wamsley 6 2·:1!: 15, Leah Cummons
0 o-o 0, Brittany Elliott 6 6-10 18, Kayla
Perry 4 0·0 B ~ Alexis Geiger 2 3-4 B. Ryann
Leslie 1 0-0 2. Undsey Niday 1 0-3 2.

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHER MAN®MYDA ILYTR IBIJ N(COM

GALLIPOLI S
High
school foo tball plavers all
across the countrv made thetr
college plans ·k nown on
Wednesday as part of national
signing day. and that group
incl uded a pair of Oallia
Academy Blue Devils.
Dustin Winters has si~ ned
with the Vi rginia Military
Institute (VMI ) and Matt
Hemphill will continue his
·gridiron · career at . the
University of Charleston.
Both were key contributors
to Gallia· Academy\ g_J season in 2005. which culminated
in the program's sixth playoff
appearance in 'even year,_
The two also garnered postseason . individual honors .
Both landed spots on the
Assoc iated
Press
AllSoutheast District tirst team
and Ohio Valley Publishing
Super 25 footbal l team- just
to name a few .
For Winters, finall y deciding on a school was a relief.
''It feel s. good to finally get it
off your shoulders," he said.
"It was kind of a rough
process going through talki~g
to coaches. But it's !limed out
to be a good exrerience."
Winters liked the way he
was treated by VMI. an
NCAA Division I AA ,c hao! ,
durin~ · the recruiting proceS&gt;
and mat played a role in his
decixion io &lt;;ign with the
Keydets.
''They were up front with
everything: they were with me
from the "art ." he exp lained.

"Their coaches are 'really
disciplined - I like that," he
explained. "They really put
education first, that's the main
thing I wanted to do."
Hell)phill will be a phannacy maJor.
The
University
of
Charles.ton · is a NCAA
Division ll school located in
the capital city of We st
Virginia. The Golden Eagres
are members of the We st
Virginia
Intercot.legiate
Athletic Conference and finished thud out of nine teams
this past fall.
VMI is a located m
Brad Sherman/photo Lexington, · Va. and the
Ga lli a Academy·s· D~ st in Winters. left, and Matt Hemphill will Keydets play in the Big South
contmue their footbal l care(!rs in the college ranks. Winters Conference. ·
.Will play at VMI and Hemphill at the University of Charleston.
Unlike some militarv insti''Thcy basically kept . me up·'It 's really exciting, I never · tutions, there is no mandatory
to-date on everyth ing. reoula- dreamed of play ino college enlistment into the a rmed
tion' and things li ke that. they footbal l." admitted I'!emphill . force&gt; associated with VML
kept c:al ling and I went with ':It's goi ng to be a big step Winters plans to major in
them. ·
•
from h1oh school to colle,ge, politi'cal science.
Winters
16-foot.
2.15 but I'm fooking forward 10 tt."
Both athletes wanted to
pounds) lettered three years at
Hemphill was a two-year thank all those who' helped
Gallw At:ademy -am.l was the stafler ·on the offensive line them get to this point in their
team's leading rusher the past and also played on the defen" lives.
·
..
two seasons, as well as o.ne of sive line and at linebacker, the
"I want to thank my parents,
· it~ t&lt;~ taci;Jer&gt;. He rushed for position he'll most likely play . because they pushed me with
1.-f()_ yards and · 29 · touc h- 111 college.
,
education and athletics," said
downs during hi s career and
He made 35.5 tackles, 21.5 Hemphill, "and the coaches,
maLic 149 tack les fmm the of those solo, during the 2005 they really helped me along
l 111eb~cke r and defens1ve lme regular season . He also made the way."
··
·
posit ions. .
one of the most memorable
Winters echoed those stateThe versati le Winters is also defensive plays of the year ments. "I want to thank my
the al l-time , winni nges t whe n he recovered a fumble at parents for pushing me along.
&gt;~Te:.tler m the schoo l. He is the ~oa t line and rumbled 55 keepin g my head in .. the
unheate n thus far this season yaros to help preserve a game." he added. "And defim 215 pounds and has a career ' shutout win over Chi ll icothe. nitely the coac hes for giving
rewrd of 11 7-30.
.
The UC coaching staff and me a chance to play."
Hempjlil l (5-1 1, 255) is the strong academic reputaHemphill is the son of Mike
looking forward to the chal- tion of the school helped and Charlene Hemphill .
lenge ol' taking his game to the Hemphill s~ n on the dotted
Winters is the son of Chuck
next level.
·
line for the uolden Eagles.
. and Lynnie Winters.

BY 13RAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN&lt;ii&gt;MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

POINT PLEASANT, W. Va.
· -. It's :ill startin~ to come
. together for the Pmnt Pleasant
Lady Knights.
Every player scored as Point
Pleasant won its third straight
girls basketball game on
Thursday, and did so convim:ingly, by defeating visiting
Sommer
Bibbee
Roane County 60-40.
. It's the .first three-game winning streak for the program earlier in the season: the Lady .
since coach Mitch Meadows Kni ght s led by I5 at halftime ·
took over the rebuilding proiect. before faltering· in the second .
J
half.
·
three years ago. His Lady
Poi Ill faced a simil ar situa- ·
Knights now .stand at 8-9 overall, and find themselves in posi- tion thi s time around, ·as;
tion to challenge for a winning Meadows' crew held an ISseason for the tlrst time since point lead at· the break. The
Point Pleasant
coac h made sure
200 1-02 sea&gt;on.
·
Roane County: meanwhile. hi s girls remembered What hapfell to 9-9.
·
pened in that previous meeting.
Freshman Anna Sommer and
"At halftime, I wrote 'we've,
Char Bibbee each scored a been here before' on the
dozen points for Poin t Pleasant, board." Meadows said.
while Tri sta VanMatre also
This time, they responded.
reached double figures with 10 . The Lady Knights outscored
poims. Skye Smith scored tive Roane 15- 11 in the third quarfoll owed by Devin Birchtield, ter to build an insurmountable ·
Meli ssa Adkins and Jod y 22 point lead entering the final .
Hartley with four each.
stanza. The Black and Red ·
Freshman Tess.a Wyant cruised in the fouflh to the tri- ·
added three . and B'rittany umph.
Clonch, Liz Somervill e and · In the junior varsity Contest.
l,eah Eddy all chipped . in a Devin Cottrill scored l 0 points
bucket for the winners. .
as Point won a 4 1-36 overtime
Jessica Robens and Heather decision. The score stood 32Bird paced the Lady Raiders · 32 entering the extra session.
with 14 and II respectively. Jones scored 13 for Roane
Marie Hedges followed with County.
seven and Katie Jones tacked
Point Pleasant faces another
on six.
grou p of Lac:ly Raiders' on
The win also avenged a Monday as it plays host to
painful ovenime loss at Roane River Valley ..

William s o o-o o. Totals- 20 3·9 44.
OVCS
14 17 13 11- 55

Trimble 8 (Grandy 6). Rebounds-Eastern.
29 (Weber 9) , Trimble 33 (Andrews 9} .

Hannen
12 8 15 9 - 44
3-Point Goala-OVCS (none), Hannan 1

12

~

Summer Stover). Fouled Out- OVCS

1

(Grandy 5). Steals- Eastern a
Jen. Hupp, Weber 2), Trimble 13
Grandy 5) . Turnovers-Eastern 20,
rimble 13. Team Fouls-Eastern 6,
Trimble 18.
Hayman ,

POINT PLEASANT 60,
ROANE COUNTY 40
ROANE COUNTY (11-9)

Jessica Roberts 5 4-5 14, Heather Bird 502 11 1 Ashli Knotts 3 Q-0 7, Marie Hedges 1
4·6 6. Katie Jones 1 o-o 2, Myridia Boggs 0
o-o 0, Carmolleta Chambers 0 0-0 0. Totals

Totals: 20-63 11-19 53.
Logan
10 12 10 11 6 6 - 55''
NELSONVILLE-YORK 71,
' 148-1340 .
Galli•
4 6 21 12 6 4 - 53
MEIGS.40
POINT PLEASANT (8-9)
3·point goats-L 2-9 {Cassady 2), GA 2· NELSONVILLE· YORK (11 ·7, 5-4 TVC)
15 (Wamsley, Geiger). Total rebounds-L Kayleigh Bunting .5 1-2 1 1. Astl Powell! 2· Anna Sommer 5 0•0 12 , Char Bibbee 51-2
12. Trista VanMatre 4 1·2 10. Skye Smith 2
36, GA 2e (Perry 7, Leslie 7). Offensive
5, Melissa Adkins 2 0-0 4, Jody Hartley
rebounds-L11. GA 9 (Perry 3. Geiger 3). 4 4, Ashley Walker 0 0-0 0, Usa Meade 2
.A..Is15-&lt;lA 11 (Elliott 4). Stea ls-L 10 ' 3-6 9, McKenzie Walter 4 0·2 8, Megan 2 Q-0 4 1 Tessa Wyant 0 3·4 3, Brittany
Edwards 7 4·8 18 1 Kim Kline 5 P-O 11, Clonch 1
2, Elizabeth Sommerville 1 0Gil 14 (Elliott Getger 4). Blocks-L
GA 0 {none). Tu rnovers-L 26, GA 19. Kour1ney Kinnison 2 4-4 8. Jennifer o 2, Leah Eddy 1 o-o 2. Totals 25 5·8 60.
Tearrytouls-l 17, GA 21 . JV score-l 33, Andrews 1 0.0 2. Totals 27-63 14-26 71 . •· Roane
5 8 11 16 40
GA 19
MEIGS (4-14, 1-8TVC)
12 19 15 14 60
Point
Cayla Lee 2 0·0 5, Meg Clelland 1 7-9 10 1
3·1'!&gt;nt Goels-RC 2 (Bird, Knott) , PP 5
SOUTH POINT 54,
Joey Haning o o-2 0, Catie Wotle 0 3-7 '3, (Sommer 2, Bib~ . Smith, VanMatre):
RIVER VALLEY 49
Ta!isha Beha 0 1-2 1 I Ai'nber Burton 2 1-2
B6rs BaSKueau.
5, Amy Barr 3 0-0 S, Leslie Preece 1 1-2 3,
RIVER VALLEY ~3-14, 1-8 OVC)
Rachel Walburn 3-4 5, Beth Payne 9 (}{I Brittany Preast 1 0·2 2 , Whitney Smith 1 0·
OVCS 76, HANNAN 57
19, Kirsten Carter 6 ().4 12, Kayla Smith 2 2 2, Melissa Grueser 2 1-2 5. Totals 12-60
ovcs
(3·15)
.
0·0 4, man~ Co rflas 0 2-4 2 1 Brooke Taylor 14·28 40.
Brandon Coughenour 13 0:.1 31 1 Michael
2 3·8 7. Totals 20 8-20 49.
Nels.York 15 17 17 22 - 71
Williams 0 1-2 1, Michael Wright 1 0-0 3 1
SOUTH POINT 113-c, 8-1 OVCl
Meigs
9 16 3 12- 40
Kyle Scouten 0 o-o 0, Nathan Brown 00-1
Mia~ Wheeler
0·0 2, Jessl trah '7 3-4
3-Point Goals-NY 1-4 (Z.Murphy), Meigs 0, Zach Carr 5 2·3 13, Henry Patrick 1 0·0
191TAnn Mayo 5 2-3 12, Alison Queen 1 3· 13 (Nibert 2. Morrow) .
2, Richard MCCradv 1 1-2 3, l uke S winey
0-2 2, Whitney WoOdy 1 2-7 4 Amy
o 0-0 O, Luke St(nson 6 2-2 14, Drew
Frasure 1 6· 10 8, Vanessa Rogers 0-2 0,
TRIMBLE 59, EASTERN 36
Scouten 1 Q-1 2 . Tota lS;-- 31 7-14 76.
Summer Malone 3 1·3 71 Cassie Kelley 0
EASTERN (MO, 4-5)
HAI\tNAN(7-5)
.
0. Totals 19 12,29 54.
Jillian Bn:innon 2 1-2 5, Ryan Davis 0 Q-0 Kevin Blake 6 2·2 15, Ryan.Canterbury 7
R.Yolley 7 16 9
17 - 49
0. Katie Hayman 2 14 5 1 Janna HUpp 2 0· 7-8 22, Aaron Payne 1 0..0 2. Joe Kinnard
S.Polnt
9 17 10 18 - 54
0 6, JesSie Hupp 1 2-3 5. Georgana 5 Q.O 11 , Jared Taylor 1 1-2 3 Travis
3-l'!&gt;nl Goal~ 1 (Payne). SP 2
Bowman 0 0-0 0. Patrick Flora 1 0·0 2, Joe
Koblenlz o 0·0 0 1 Kaytee Milan o 2·3 2, Nell~ 0 .o-o 0, Justin~ Easta m 1 0-2 2.
. OVCS 55, HANNAN 44
Alyssa Newland 0 o-o 01Erin Weber 4 5-0 Totals- 22 10-1 4 57.
.
OVCS(Il-11)
.
13, Morgan Werry 0 0·0 0, Amber aves
19 11 24 t6 - 76

o-o

4.

4:

o-o

0

o-o

tCrall 2).

. Julie Hussell1 1·2 3, Alchelle Blankenship
5 3·8 11 . Sarah Burleson 2 0-0 4, Andrea
VanMeter 0 0-0 0, Annee Carmen o 0-0 O,
Kallee Edmonds 3 0- 1 6, Jasmine Owens
0 o-o 0, Laura Turner 0 0-0 0 Sarah
Jenkins 3 2·4 8 Lindsey Carr 0 1-2 1, Krisli
1

1

Davis 9 4·8 22 . Totals- 23 11·25 55.
HANNAN (1-9)

Summer Stover 6 0- 1 13, Tabby Payne 1 0o '2, Tabitha Bowman 1 0-D 2, BriHan y
Sabolsky 11 2-6 24, Amanda Porter 0 Q-0
0, Kalah Perry 0 0·0 0, Celeste Campbell 0

0.0 0, Kim Saunders 0 0-0 0, Carrie Watts
0

o-o 0,

Arianna Blake 1 1·2 3, Brooke

1

WilbergerOO-O O. Totals-11 11-1 936.

Hannan

TRIMBLE (17-2, 8-1)

3-Point Goais-QVCS 7 (Brandon
Cou ghenour 5), Hannan 3 (Kev1n Blake,
Ryan Canterbury, Joe Kinnard). Fouled
OutOVCS (none), Hannan 1 (Joe
Kin nard). Aebou nds~VCS 35 (Zach
Weber 11), Hannan 38 (Justin Eastam 8).
Asslsts--OVCS.5 (Zach Carr 2) Hannan 2
!Kevin Blake, Ryan Canterbury\. Slea ls- ·
OVCS 6 (Zeeh Weber, Drew Scouten 2).
Hannan 4 (Aaron Payne 2) . Blocks-OVCS
2 (Zach Webe r 2), Hannan 1 (Joe
Kin nard). Team Fouls- OVCS 17, Hannan
16.

Alicia Andrews 0 0-0 0, Jessica Burdette 1

D-O 2, Jennifer Grandy 12 0·0 30, Hannah
Faires 4 0·0 8, Hannah Harper 0 0-Q 0,
Andra Hooper 2 o-o 4, All ie Jago 0 o-o o.
Tabby Jenkins 4 1-1 9, Brandi Shamhart 0
0-0 0, Jenny Sikorski 0 Q.O 0, Julie Trace 1
2·2 4, Megan Yore 0 0·0 0. Total s- 24 3-3
59 .
Eastern
10 7 10 9 - 36
. Trimble
12 15 15 17 - 59
3-Point Goals-Eastern 3 (Jen Hupp 2),

13 7

10 27- 57

OVCS tames Lady Wildcats, 55-44
BY lARRY CRUM

blocks. She
was joined by
the scrappy
S .ummer
Stover, who.
saw 13 (:ioints,
s e v e n
rebounds, six
steals . and
four assists, as
the duo combined for 17
of the teams

ASHTON, W.Va. - For the
ftrst four minutes of the game, it
was all Hannan - but games
last 32 minutes.
Up 11-4 at the 4:27 mark, the
Lady 'Cats looked like they
might revenge a six point loss
from earlier in the season· ,to
Davis
Ohio Valley Christian School,
but once the Lady Defenders
got on a roll, they never looked 20 total buckets:
Hannan's early seven point
back on their way to a 55-44
lead
came . via s1x points from
victory Thursday night in
Stover
and six from Sabolsky.
Ashton.
·
but
OVC
quickly got on a roll
OVC battled back to tie the
game at the 12- 12 with II sec- and took the lead with a shot at
onds left in the ftrst quarter, fol- the buzzer.
Once . ahead, the Lady
lowed by a buzzer beater by
Sarah Burleson which put the · Defenders used the second
Lady Defenders ahead for quarter to pad 'their new found
lead as Davis added l 0 points in
'good,
' .
the
second eight minutes to help
They were led by Kristi
pusl1
OVC ahead 26--18 with
Davis who had a solid 22 points
and eight rebounds on the night, 4:24 left in the quarter.
Also helping the blue and
while Richelle Blankenship
gold
pull ahead was a large
added II points, seven
number
of Second chance
rebounds and seven ·steals,
while the powerful rebounding opportunities and mistakes
effort saw Sarah Jenkins come from Hannan. as the Lady 'Cats
down with 12 boards and · gave 13 fouls in the first half
Kallee Edmonds post II car- compared to three for OVC.
Despite the mistakes, Hannan
oms.
The strong .defensive show- still remained close as the Lady
ing saw OVC pull down 45 Defenders piled on 17 second
total rebounds, compared to a quarter points to take a 31-20
·
32 rebound mark by Hannan lead at the half.
A
few
haltlime
adjustments
with Brittany S~bolslcy leading
the team with 24 poinis, 13 seemed like all the Lady 'Cats
rebounds, li ve steals and five needed, as Hannan began to

Fall
from Page Bl
Conversely; the
Lady
Chieftains shot 35 perce nt in
the triumph, connecting on
· 20-of-57 tloor attempts. The
guests also hit 2-of-9 trifectas for 22 percent and 13-of23 free throws for 57 percent.
Logan also outrebounded
GAHS 36-26 in the triumph, including an 11 -9
edge on the offensive glass.
The guests also had seven
more turnovers in the game

with 26.
Galli a Academy had six ·
playersreach the scoring column , · led' by ElliOtt's 18
points . Wamsley followed
with I 5 markers, and both
Geiger and Kayla Perry
added eight apiece. Niday
and Ryann Leslie each had
two markers.
Perry and Leslie each led
GAHS with seven re bounds.
Jessica Harris led Logan
and all seaters with 20
_points, and Angle followed
with 16. Cassady added nine
points, including a pair of
three-pointers, to the victory.
Logan claimed a swee p
with a 33- 19 win in the

BY lARRY CRUM
lCRUM&gt;I&gt;MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Assists-Eastern 9 (Bfannon 4) . Trimble

Perry!' ~

none), Hannan
(Kalah
ebounds-OVCS 45 {Sarah Jenkins 12 ,
Hannan 32
Brittany Sabolsk
13
s (Sarah Jenkrns 3 ,
Hannan 7 (Summer Stover 4). StealsOVCS 14 (Richelle ~lankenshlp 7).
Hannan 12 {Summer Stover 6). BlocksOVCS 2 (Sarah Jenkins, Unds~ Carr),
Hannan 6 (Brittany Sabolsky 5). Team
Fouls- OVCS 12 1 Hannan 25.

a: Assists-ave~

LC RUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Two Blue Devils taking games to next level Point blasts Roane Co.

Defenders offend Hannan, 76-57

High School Basketball Scores
GIRLS BASKETBALL

The.Daily ?entinel • Page 83

www.tnydailysentinel.com

2006

storm back via a l 0 point third
quarter from Sabolsky. as the
horne squad battled back within ·
nine heading into the final cantos.
But OVC quickly established
that they were in ftrin control of.
the game a~ a group effon from
the Lady Defenders saw them
score just enough to bring home
an 11-point win.
The team effort was led by
Davis and Blankenship, followed by Jenkins with eight
points, Edmonds with six
points, Sarah Burleson with
four points and five rebounds,
Julie Hussell with thret: points
and Lindsey Carr with one
point in 'the win.
Hannan wa~ led by Sabolsky
and Stover, followed Arianna
Blake with three points and four
rebounds, Tabby Payne with
two points and three assists and
.Tabitha Bowman · with two
point.~ and four rebounds. Kalah
Perry added four rebounds and
a block in the loss.
OVC shot 35 percent (23-of66) from the floor and 44 percent ( 11 -of-25) from the charity
stripe, while Hannan shot. 33
percent (20-of-60) from the
hardwood and only 33 percent
(3-{)f-9) from the line.
The Lady Defenders will
return to the tloor 6:30 p.m.
tomorrow at Cross Lanes
Christian, while Hannan moves
on to face Grace Christian
Thesday.
junior varsity tilt.
Joan Sojka paced GAHS
with six markers, while both
Katie Hoffman and Megan
Hoffman li:d LHS with six
apiece.
.
The Lady Chie ftains. led
17 ~ 7 at halftime. ·
· ·
.Gallia Academy returns to
action Monday when it travels to Tuppers Plains for a
non-conference · matchup
with Eastern. Game time is ·
scheduled for 6 p.m.
.T he Blue Angels conclude·
their regular season on
Saturday, Feb. II , when it
hosts county-ri val River
Valley on' Senior Night. Tipoff is slated forl·'p.m.

ASHTON . W. Va. - It 1s
hard to believe that the same
Ohio Valley Christian School
boys teams that played
Thursday night was the same
one that hadn't won since
December 9.
But as tl)e game began,
Hannan quickly found out this
was a very different team.
Both teams traded the lead
back · and fourth throu,ghout
the first eight minutes. but a
surge in the late stages of the
first quarter saw OVC go on
top and never look back as the
Defenders pounded Hannan
for a 76--57 victory, revenging
a 13-point Hannan win from
earlier in the month and ending a 14-game losing steak .
The Defenders were led by
Brandon Coughenour, who
posted a career high 31 points
via five 3-pointers as he and
the rest of the visiting blue ·
and gold shot an impressive
'Larry Crum/photo
50 percent (3 1-of-62) from Ohio Valley Christian 's Brandon Coughenour, with ball , drives
the field.
·
. past Hannan·s Ryan Canterbury (10) during the first quarter
Hannan saw three players of Thursday's 76-57 victory over the Wildcats in Ashton. W.Va.
score in double figures, led by
Ryan Canterbu ry who's 12 break.
Luke Stinson with 14 points
fourth quarter points pushed ' Then came the third quarter. and ei~ht rebounds. Carr with
him to 22 points to pace the. Any hopes of a comeback 13 pomts. Weber with seven
Wildcats. The home sq uad were quickl y dashed follow- points and II rebounds .
also struggled through a 31 ing the break as OVC piled on Richard McCrady with three
percent (22-of-7 1) effon from - 24 points, 13 of which were points and four rebounds.
the hardwood.
contributed by Coughenour, Michael Wright wi th three
OVC jumped out !o 3 three as the Wildcats could only points. H~nry Patrick with
point lead early in the first muster a 10 point effOf! ancj two pomts, Drew Scouten
q.mirter, but. Hannan stormed faded to a 30-point deficit to a with two points and fi \ e
bock to take its tirst lead with . team that had not won a game rebounds
and
Michael
"
in two months.
·
'Williams with one point1n the
·3:59 left in 'the opening minThe
Wildcats
finally wm.
utes. The Defenders - then stepped it up in the final canThe Wildcats did edee the
retook the lead three minutes tQs, led by Canterburry with Gallipoli s natives with 38
later and never relinqui shed it, 12 points and Kevin Blake rebounds. led by Ju,tin
taking a 19-13 lead into the with nine points, as Hannan Eastams with eight board., . as
second quarter.
put up a· game high 27 fouflh the· team also added four
From there, OVC stepped quarter points, but it was not steals and two assish .
up its defensive effon, shut- enough to erase their early
Hannan was led · bv
ting Hannan down al}d hold- deficit as the Defenders eastl y Canterbury with 22 points and
ing them scoreless through the rolled to a 19-point victory.
four rebounds. Blake with 15
first five minutes of the secAlong with the stron g points and four re bounds. Joe
ond quarter as the Deferders shooting percentage, the team Kinnard with II points and
pouoced on the lead with a also rebounded very well with three rebounds
23-~3 edge.
35 boards, led by Zach Weber
'fhe Defenders wili nuw
The visitors then added 13 with a game high II caroms. travel to Cross Lanes later
more points in the final three OVC also added six steals and today. with the Wild~at&gt; aiso
minutes tallying 17 total aS five assists to their stats as returning to the hardwood for
Hannan could only muster we,IL .
a 7:30 ·match up later today
seven. giving the visitin g
The Defenders were led by agai nst fellow Mason County
Defenders a 36-20 lead at the Coughenour, followed by foe Wahama.

It's Time To

.E

B

Race tor the Nextel Cup Preview

Fe

arv.11, 2006

-~allipolit1 J9ailp utribune
446-2342
'

·York built a seven-point lead Haning and Brittany Hy sell
by intermi ssion, then put the were recognized prior to the
game away in the third stan- start of the game.
Meigs' Alex Cu lluni i
za.
from Page Bl
scored
II points in the j unior
Meigs' offense managed
just three points, all free varsity game. where the
Nel sonville-York jumped throws, in the third period.- · Lady Marauders pulled out a
in front 9-2-early, but Meigs meanwhile Nelsonville- York 32-3 1 victory. Alivia Osborn
stormed back and eventuall y_ kept up its scoring pace en scored l 0 for the Lady
evened the score at 19 apiece route to a 17-3 advantage - Bucks.
.Meigs welcomes crosswith tive minutes to go in the ·over the eight minute span.
river
rival Wahama on
The
fourth
quafler
saw
the
first half.
·
Wednesday
: tip time is se t
But Kline answered with a Lady . Bu~:ks hold leads in
3-pointer from the top of the excess of 30 points en route fo r around 7:15 p.-m.
Nelsonville- York plays host •
key to give the Lady Bucks to the victory.
to
Vinton County 111 the seaIt
was
also
"Senior
Night"
l;mck the lead and they never
son
fin ale on Thursday.
trailed again. Nelsonvi lle- as Meigs. Seni ors Joey

Meigs

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• All eligible participants whose questionnaires are accepted will be processed.
With more than 67,000 questionnaires on hand,
participation in the CB Health Project ha$ ·
exceeded everyone's expectations. Brookmar, Inc.

CS.HEALTH
l,ll()JI:CT

wishes to express its sincere appreciation for the
ongoing community cooperation and support in

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/

Conducted by:

I

,_ - - - - - ·-- - - - --

-

Raiders

one quarter, but was able to
open up a 17 -7 in the second
quarter.
Ri ver Valley fought back.
from PageBl
though . Six different Lady
Raiders scored as the Silver
and Iliana Corflas rounded ana Black was able ',to cut the
out the Raiders' scoring with defic it to 26-23 at halftime.
Again . South Point used a
fo ur and two respectively. · ·
South Point led 9-7 after third quarter surg_e to pull

ahead by nine - then again
Ri vet Valley battled back.
and was able to pull to within four entering the final
stanza .
Ri ver Val ley is at Point
Ple asl\111 Monday before
wrapping up the league 'eason against Rock Hill on
Thursday.

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992-2156
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9. 2006

�'Friday, February 3. aoo6

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Page 84,• The Daily Sentinel

friday, February 3, 2006

www.mydailysentlnel.com

mribune - Sentinel - l\e ister

:Wade, Nash joining familiar Lopez·settles for $2.7 tnillion
faces as All-Star starters
By TtM

REYNOLDS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Yao Ming edged Kobe
. Bryant as the top vote-getter
· tn fan balloting for the 55th
NBA
All-Star
game
Thursday, and ShaqUl lle
0 ' Neal became the fifth
:player Jn league history to
eani 13 consecutive selec·tlons for the midseason
' showcase.
Yao and Tracy McGrady
. gtve the host Houston
Rockets two starters in the
Feb. 19 game. They were
joined on the Wes tern
by
Conference
squad
· Bryant, San Antomo's Tim
:Duncan and reigmng MVP
Steve Nash of Phoenix who w11l be a f1rst-ttme AllStar starlet.
Cleve land's Le Bron James
, was
the top 'Eas tern
· Conference vo te-getter, edgtng O ' Neal by 15, 155 votes.
J't's the second stmg ht AllStar trip for James, who says
, he's still drawing motivation
· from being snubbed during
h1s rookte season
"What happened two years
:ago. that reall y moti vated
me to come out and play
eve n harder," James said .
Added Cle veland coach
Mtke Brown: " It 's an honor
to be around htm, tt 's an
honor to wo rk wt th h11n and
I' m exc1ted fo r him and hi s
famtly because he defini tely
deserves it. "
Ph tl ade lphta's
Allen
Iverson. lndtana's Jermaine
O'Neal and first-time All Star starte r Dwyane Wade of
Miami roun ded 'o ut the
East's starting five.
"Hopefu ll y, l can become
a staple. li ke my teammate
Shaq," Wade satd 'Tm
grate ful that NBA fa ns thtnk
so htgh ly of my game."
Jerma ine O'Neal will mt ss
the game with an injury;
Detrott 's Ras hee d Wallace
fimshed thtrd tn the vottng
amo ng East forwards, meantog he' II hkely be a strong
cand tdate for that starting
spbt. But no P1 stons were
vo ted mto the starting lineup, despite the team's 38-6
record - th e NBA's best by

a wide margi n.
He
finished
with
Yao edged Bryant by I ,8 18,230 votes for the sec71 , I 07 votes for the top ond Wes tern guard spot
overall spot in the balloting, behtnd Bryant. McGrady
despite missmg 21 games had I ,818,932 votes to lead
following surge ry to clean the West's forwards, while
out an infection in his left Duncan had I ,518,796 btg toe. It's the fourth All- 39,4 10
more
than
Star tnp tor the 7-foot-6 Minnesota's Kevin Garnett,
center from Chma and the who was a starter 'se ven
etghth for Bryan t, who leads times in his first etght All the NBA tn sconng and had 'Star trips.
an 8 1-point effort - the secDetroit's Flip Saunders
ond-biggest night in NBA wi ll coach the East and
history -last month in the Dall as' Avery Johnson w1ll
Los Ange les Lakers' win coach the West on Feb. 19m
over Toronto.
Houston . The All -Star
Yao
fi nished
wit h rese rves wtll be annou nced
2,342,738 votes; Bryant had · Feb 9.
2,271,63 1 m the closest finJames got 2,207.697 votes
ish among the top two play- - about I mtllton more than
ers m All- Star ba lloting Jerm atn e O'Nea l for the
since Vine~ Carter, then of other fo rward spot on the
Toronto, edged Mi ami 's East ros ter. And although
Alonzo Mourmng by 33,385 James said there may be a
votes tn 2000.
ttme when hi s excite ment
"It's every player's per- leve l ove r the All -Star Game
sonal goal, to make the All- dips a bit, he t hanked the
Star team," McGrady said. fans for thetr backmg.
"It 's a personal accomplish"Without them, there's no
ment guys want to make to us," James sa1d.
get a chance to participate
Iverson had 2,062,206
against the el ite pl ayers. vo tes
and Wade had
Eve ry player in thi s league I ,499,664 fo r the guard
wants to be there ."
slots, and Shaquille O 'Neal
Rockets coac h Jeff Van had 2,192,542 to easily nu tGundv, however, doesn' t dts tance Det ro tt' s
Ben
think · players on losing Wallace for the center spot.
" It 's an honor. It 's tough
teams should make 11
Housto n ( 16-29) has th e enough to make an All-Star
wors t record tn the Western team," said Iverson, last seaConference
son's All -Star MVP. "When
"One of the things I reall y yo u' re a starter it says a lot
do belie ve ts - and 1t about being one of the faces
would ' ve affected our two of the NBA because the fans
guys thi s year, so 1t wouldn ' t pick you."
have been good - I don' t
Since entering the leag ue,
believe anybody on sub-.500 Shaquille O' Neal has been
teams should be in the All- chosen as an All-Star every
Star game," Van Gundy said, season. Jerry West,- Karl
"It should be all a reward for Malone, Bob Cousy and
winn ing. Now that would John Havlicek are th.e onl y
affect our guys whtch, I'm other players to earn qt least
glad no one took my adyice 13 consecuti Ve All -S tar
for th ts year. "
spots West and Malo pe dtd
Nas h, meanwhile,. is a it 14 times .
"Each ttme I'm selected as
ftrst-ti me
starter
after
improv ing the numbers that an All-Star, it 's more .special
earned him MVP honors a than th e year before,"
year ago. Nash ts averagatg Shaqutlle O'Neal satd "It
a career-htgh 19 1 point s shows I can compete at a
and an NBA-leading 11. 3 high level on a con ststent
asststs this season , the first basis year in and year out. ...
player since Magic Johnson Hopefull y, I will see a few
in 1990-9 1 to average as more as my career moves
much in both categories.
on. "

CINCINNATI (AP) All-Star shortstop Felipe
Lopez agreed to a $2.7 mi llion contract Thursday wt th
the Cinc 1nnati Reds, avoiding an arbitratiOn heanng.
The deal leaves first
baseman Adam Dunn as the
team 's only player left in million in arbitration , and
arbttration. His hearing ts the Reds offered $2.)5 milset for Feb 17
lton .
Lopez made $4 15,000
Dunn asked for the seclast season, when lie hit ond-biggest salary increase
.291 and made his first Ail - among the 44 maJO r leaStar team He asked for $3 · guers who exc hanged arbi-

C L A S S ·1F I E D

tratton figures , wtth teams.
Dunn, who will move !O
first base this season now
that Sean Casey has been
traded to Pittsburgh, is asking fo r $§.95 mi ll ion. The
club has countered wt th a
$7.1 million offer.
Dunn made $4.6 million
last season, when he batted
.247 with 40 homers, lO I
RB (s and 11 4 walks. He is
the only player in Reds history to have ·two seasons w1 th
I00 runs, walks and RBls.

Galll1 Collllty OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR
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(

Safety Polamalu ''tweaks"
ankle during Steelers practice
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) Pittsburgh Steelers Pro
Bowl safety Troy Polamalu
said he "tweaked" an ankle
during practice Thursday
and was added to the team's
Super Bow l inJury report as
probable.
The cause of the injury ·
wasn't immediately known.
Only a pool reporte r selectThe tOJUry was firs t
ed by the NFL is permitted
to watch pre-Super Bowl revealed when the Steelers
prac tices, and Polamalu lt sted him on their da1l y
mentioned the inj ury to that inJu~y report
By NFL defimtton, a playreporter.

er listed as probable has a 75
percent chance of playi ng.
Polamalu , who lines up in
a variety of formations in
the Steelers' 3-4 defense,
has starred in all three
Ptttsburgh playoff victories.
He had 19 tackles, an interception and a half-sack in
road
vic tories
over
Cinctnnati, Indianapolis and
Denver
"He's not ltke any other
safety I have ever seen,"
Steelers defens1ve coordinator Dick LeBeau said.

Wrong Rothlisberger causes
confusion in Big Ben's hometown
FINDL AY (AP)
onl y
one
There's
Roth! isberger in the phone
book and that creates quite
a bit of confuston for one
famil y.
·
" ! could ret1re if I got a
doll ar or two fo r every
phone call or knock on the
door,"
sa1d
Steve
Roth! tsberger- who is not
- re peat not - related to
Pittsburgh quarterbac k Ben
Roe thlt sberger who gre w
up in th1 s north we~t Ohio
town and leads the Steelers
mto Super Bowl XL· on
Sunday·.
Thetr last names aren't
eve n spelled the same way,

but that doesn't stop people
from calling or dropping by
hi s house . .
" I look at it as a minor
in co nve ni ence,"
said
Rothlt sberger, an ass istant
coac h
whe n
footb all
Roethltsberger .was a star at
Findl ay High School
One ttme a woman hoping to get the quarterback
to show up at a fund raiser
came to the house. A year
ago. a dru nk fan fro m West
Vi rgm1a call ed in the middle of the mght.
He said his w1fe, who
wo rks at a furniture store.
can' t escape the attentwn
either. ''She wears a name

tag and she says she gets
askt&lt;d 15 . 20 times a day if
she's
Ben's
mom,"
Rothlisberge r said.
The quarterback's family,
who still live in Ftndla y
and have an unli sted phone
numbe r.
kn ows
the
Rothli sbergers and ca n
empathi ze .
. "They ' re ntce people,"
sa td
Brenda
Ben's
Roeth ltsberger,
mo m.
"U nfo rtun atel y,
since they ' re the onl y
Rothltsbergers in the phone
book, J think the y' ve taken
the bru nt of most of our
call s."

Help Wanted

UBLI
NOTICE
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
IRENE
M.
DILL,
PLAINTIFF,

vs

MARY JO WOLFE,
ET AL
CASE NO. 05-CV-110
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
TO ·
MARY
JO
WO LFE, whose last
known addresses are
1665 Lincoln Heights,
Pom eroy, Ohio 45769,
prese nt
address
unknown, and
KIMBERLY
HOLLI·
DAY,
whose
last
known addresses are
1665 Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769,
present
address
unknown, and
RHONDA L MOON
whose last known
addr esses a re

1665

Lincoln
He ights,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
pres ent

a ddress

unk nown .

You are hereby nolll ied that you have
been
named
Defenda nts in the
actio n entitled Irene
M. Dlll, Plalnltff, vs.
Mary Jo Wolfe , E;t AI ,
O..lendants.
This
action h a s
been
as&amp;rgne d Case No.
05-CV-11 0 an d is
pending m lhe court
of common Pleas of

Meigs County, Oh1o.
The ob ject or the
Comp laint demands
judgmen1 against the
Defendants , Mary Jo
Wolle and Ki mberly
Holliday. In the sum
of $1 0,737.78, plus
interest at lhe rate of
$2.95 per day from
August 1, 2004, In
order to f oreclos e on
said Land Installment
Contract located at
1665 Lincoln He1ghta,
Pomeroy, Ohio, whi ch
'"
more
fully
described In land
contract recorded In

Book 65, Page 617,
Meigs County Olllciat
records ; and costs of
this action , that the
land 1nstallmenl con·

tract be foreclosed

action

and all amounta due
Plaintiff be peld from
the proceeds of the

sale.
You are required to
answer the Complaint
within twenty-eight
(28) doya after the
last publication of
thts Notice, which wtli
be published once
each weak lor six (6)

succesalve

Help Wanted

Public NoU ce!ft in Ne"WspQpe r s.
Y o ur Rl a ht to Kno"W. D e li ve r e d Rla: ht t o Y ou r J_)n or.

and that the liens
and/or lntereets In or
on said property, II
any, be marshaled
and the real estate
tltle quieted and satd
property sold In the

foreclosure

Help Wanted

weeks.

The 1111 publication
will be mode on the
24th day of February,
2006, and the twentyeight (28) days after
lhe tall pubtleatton.of
this Notice, which will
be published once
each - k for six (6)
succeaalve weeks.
The last publication
will be made on the
24111 day of February,
2006, and the twenty·
eight (28) days tor
anawer will commenca on tt&gt;at data.
In lhe care of your

failure to anawer or
otherwise ras~nd as
requested by the
Ohto Rule of Ctvtl
Procedure, judgment
by default will be ren·
dared against you
and tor the relief
demanded In the
complaint.
Dated this 21 at day or
October, 2005.
Marlene
Harrison ,
Clerk of Courta
(1) 20, 27 , (2) 3, 10, 17,
24

Public Notice
VILLAGE
OF
POMEROY
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
LEGAL NOTICE
INVITATION TO BID
Sealed Bids will be
received for furnlehlng all labor, materials and equipment

necel aary to complete a pro[ect known
a1
Pomer oy

Riverfront
Wall
Restoration at the
VIllage of Pomeroy,
Village Clerk's Office,
320 East Matn Street,
Box
666,
P.O.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
unlit 10:00 am local
time
on
Friday,
February t 0, 2006,
and at said time, publicly opened and read
aloud. Blda may be
mailed or delivered In
advance to the Village
of Pomeroy at the
above address.
Bid Documents can
be obtained from the
VIllage Clerk's Office .
ts
Each
Bidder
raqulred to furnish
with Ita aubmlaslon
of the fully completed
Bid Documents, a Bid
Security In accordance with Section
153.54 of lhe Ohio
Revised Code. Bld
security furnished ln
Bond
form
(Bid
Guarantee
and
Contract
and
Pertormance Bond as
provided In Section
153.57.1 or the Ohio
Revised Code) must
be Issued by a Surety
Company
or
Corporation licensed
ln the Stale of Ohio to
provide sold surety.
Those Bidders that
elect to aubm II bid
guaranty In the rorm
of a cert~lad check,
cashier's check or tetter of &lt;:redlt pursuant
to Chapter 1305 of
the Ohio Revised
Code and In accordance with Section
153.54 (C) ol the Ot\lo
Ravlsed Coda . Any
such letter or credit
shall be revocable
only at the option of
the
beneficiary
Owner. The amount of
tho certified chock,
eoshlar's check or letter of credit shell be
equal lo len (10) percent or the bld and
the
Succasoful
Blddar
wilt
ba
required to submit a
bond In the form provided in 153.57 of the
Ohlo Revleed CO(Ie In
conjunction with the

execution of the con·
tract.
Each proposal must
contain the full name
of the party or parties
submitting the bid·
ding Documents and
all persons Interested
therein. Each bidder
muat submit evi dence of lhts experiences On proJects ol
similar size and com-

plexity.
Each Bidder must
Insure
that
all
employees and applicants lor employment
are not discriminated
against because ot
race , color, religion ,

aex, national origin,
handicap, ancestry,
or age.
All contractors and
sUbcontractors
Involved with the
project shall to the

extent

practicable ,

use Oh io products ,
materials, services
and tabor In the
Implementation
of
their pro[ect.
Contrector compllance with the equal
employment opportunity requlraments ot
Ohio Administrative
Coda Chapter 123,
the
Governor's
Executive Order of
1972, and Governor's
Executive Order 84-9
shall be required.
Bidders mual comply
wlth Oh io prava1llng
wage rates on Public
Improvements
In
Meigs County as
determined by the
U.S. Department of
Labor, Fede1al Wage
and Hour Divis ion.
The Engineer's estimate tor this project
ts $200,000.
The
VIllage
of
Pomeroy reserves t h e
right to waive any
tnformalltlet or Irregularities . The Village
of Pomeroy reserves
the right to reject any
or all bids or to
Increase or decrease
or om it any Item or
times and/or a ward
the bld to tho lowest,
reapon slve

and

reoponalbte bidder.

Help Wanted

PROFESSIONAl
DIESEL TECHNICIAN

By order of the
VIllage of .Pomeroy
located at 320 East
Main Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio, county of Meigs
(1) 20, 27 (2) 3
Public Notice
In the Common Pleas
Court,
Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohto
In the Malter of
Settlement
of
Accounts, Probate
Court, Meigs County,
Ohio.
Accounts and vouchers of the following
namad fiduciary has
been rtted In the
Probate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio for
approval and settle-

TRAINING ...
• Two week rn uial &amp;

onemauon classes wnh
contmu'ed ongomg

tnhnrng

• The be~t manage ment
team m the country to
asstst you .
COMPENSAl 'JON...
Bonuses, Aat Rate.
Health Care, Drsabr lr ty
Long Temi Care and

ment
ESTATE NO. 24905The Twenty-first and

At John Saug Ford-Ltncoln-Mercury we' ve
established a 35 year reputatiOn of honesty,
mtegnty and outstandmg customer servicebefore and after the sale. Wt th the hottest
products on the market and as the fastest
growing dealershtp in ouf region, we' re addtng diesel technictans to better service our
customer Ford Service trainmg preferred
but not required.
If you are a professiOnal techmc1an looking
to start a new career or maybe you don't feel
you're pa1d or treated as well as,you should
be and 1f you' re tired of workmg for someone who isn't workmg for you, gtve Jtm
Thomas a call today 1-740-446-9800 or
1-800-272-5 179 You may also apply m
at 195 Upper River RD.·
I Ohto Monday-Friday

r',;. ./•

account
of
Jennifer L,. Sheats,

final

Guardian of the person and estate of
Oliver E. Battey, an
Incompetent. Unless
excapttons ore filed

.

~-···h'"
•. • , ~~
U··-~- .. ·. · .

~

.t

..-,

liNCO LN

'

"-'

.IUICUIT

thereto, said account
will be set for hearing
before said Court on
the 3rd dey of March,
, 2006, at which time
said accoqnt wilt be
considered and conti nued from day to
day until rtnally disposed or. Any person
interested may fil e
written exception to
said account or t o
matters pertaining to
the execu tion or the
lrusl, not teas than
l ive daya prior to the
date set for haarlng.
L. S Powell , Judge ,
Common
Please
Court,
Probate
Division
Me igs
County, Ohio.
(2) 3

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Notice Is hereby
given that the Board
of Education of the
Meigs Local School
Dlatrlct,
41765
Pomeroy
Pike,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
will offer lor sale by

Public Notice

Public Notice

sealed bid all :00 pm,
Tuesday, February 14,
2006, the following
vehicles:
1990
International
Bus - 3
1990
International
Bus - 4
1990
International
Bus -5
1990
International
Bus -1 5
1982
International
Commodity Bus - 9
1997 Ford Econo Van

All bids musl be
received In, and bld
specification sheets
may be obtained
from ,
Treasurer's
Office,
41765
Pomaroy Pike, P.O
Box. 272 , Pomeroy,
Ohto 45769, or by
calllng (740) 9925650.
Mark E. Rhonemus,
Treasu rer
Motgs Local Board of
Education
P.O. Box 272
Pomoroy, O~ lo 45769
(2) 3, 7, 9, 13

1169
All seated envelopes
containing bids are to
be marked clearly on
t he outolde. Terms of
sale will be casll or
money order. Sa id
B o a rd r eserves t he
right to wai ve Informalities, to accept or
reject any and all, or
paris or any and all
bids Questions can
be answered by Mr.
Paul
McElroy,
Tr an spo rta tion
Supervisor at (740)
742-2990

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Gallipolis Career College 20 ac re farm with custom 2
(Caree rs Close To Home) , story home bullt rn 1999
Call Todayr 740-446-4367
located between Rro Grande
1-800·214 0452
and Jackson , 3 mrles off Rt

www g&amp;lllpohscareercollegt com
Accredited llotemb&amp;r Accredltmg
Coulldl lor lndttpendent Colleges

. (740)446·7595
Found Black tamale puppy
on Sand Hrll Ad call 304

675·2679

llx4's For Sale ........... .. . .................. 725
Announcement.. ....................... .................. 030
jl.ntlques ....................................................... 530
Apartments ror Rent ...... .... ........ ......... . .. 440
Auction and Flea Markat .............................OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ...... ...........................................770
Autos for Sale .............................................7t 0
Boals &amp; Motors for Sate ............................. 750
Building Suppltes ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunlty .................................210
Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Carda of Thanks .......................................... OIO
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlcat/Rafrtgeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent.. ................................... 480
Excavattng ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment. ....................................... 6t0
Farms for Rent.. .................. ...................430
Farms for Sale ............................................ 330
For Laaae .. ......... .. ................................... 490
For Sate ................................................... 585
For Sate or Trade ................ ... ............. 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables ... .. ................... 580
Furnished Rooms........................................ 450
General Hauling ..... ..................................... 850
Glveaway......................................................040
Happy Ads ................................................ .... 050
Hay &amp; Grain ................................................ 640
Help Wanted ................................................ 110
Home Impro vements ............... .......... .......81 o
Homes for Sate ....................................... :.. 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houeaa lor Rent.. ....................................... 410
tn Memoriam ............:............................ 020
Insurance .............. ........ .... .. ..... ............ 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment. .. ................. 660
Livestock ..................................................... 630
Lost and Found .......................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage......................................... 350
Mlscettaneous ..............................................170
Mlscellanaous Merchandise....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr....................................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent ............................. 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale................................320
Money to Loan ...................................... ..... 220
Motorcycles II&lt; 4 Wheelers..........................740
Mu atcallnstrumenll . ..
. . .. .. . ... 570
• . . . ... 005
Personals ................. .... 1.. .... • •
Peta lor Sale ........... ... . . . ... .. ........ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating .................................820
Professional Servicas ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repa lr............................... 160
Real Estate :;vantad ..................................... 360
Schools tnstructlon ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertlllzer .............................. 650
S ttualions Wanted ....................................... 120
Space for Rent... .......................................... 460
SPI&gt;rllng Goods ........................................... 520
SUV's for Sa le ..............................................720
Trucko lor Sale ......................................... 715
Upholstery ........................................ ... ... 870
Vans For Sale .........................................730
Wanted to Buy' .......................................... 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ................. 620
Wanted To Oo .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent ........................................... 470
Yard Sate- Gallipolis ................................. 072
Yard Sate-Pomaroy!Middla ......................... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076

0

II I ...,

ito

.

HEIJ' WAN1ID

100 WORKERS NEEDED

Assemble crafts,
wqod rtems
To $480/wk
Matertals provided
Free 1nlormatton okg 24Hr

801 428·4649
A keyboard playe r needed
lor new Ch nsttan roc!Vprarse
and wors hrp ba nd We are
not teenagers and we are
seasoned mustclans Great
sound system and lt ght
show wrth tog machrnes wrtl
be 1n place Studro racord•ng Wllll CD sales ln addrtron
to hve shows
740 3677129 Jrm
An ExCellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Cal l Manlyn 304 -882 -2645

AVON! All Areast To Buy or
Sell
Shtrley Spears, 304·

675-1429

Drivers Needed:
COL Drrvers willi ng to drt...a
fot" local ready-mtM-concrete
co mpany Expe r~ence Is
preferred but not necessary
Med Insurance &amp; other
benehts avarlable alter war l rng perrod Orrver must be
w11hng to do pre-marntenance on trucks &amp; eqwp·
ment, ya rd work 8. other
mrscellaneous chO res
Experrence operatin g equrpmenl &amp; extra skills such as
weld ing a plus

&lt;e 2006 by NEA, Inc.

• J09 PLACE MENT

• (NAOLLING NON

ALLIANCE

able transporta tion . Position
offers all company
benefits Including
health, denQI,
vision, and life

Submtt appllcattons w.WJ.
resume to GCCOA Attn
Councrl President 11 67
Sta te Route 160 Gallipolis
45631 by 3 30pm on
February 17 2006 GCCOA
rs Bfl Equal Opportunrty
Employer

InsUrance, 401K,
paid vacation, and
personal days .
Please send

res ume to:

TRACTOR Tf:jAflEA

TRAINING CENTERS

c/o Pomerov O.lty

Help Wanted
Start your
Own Internet Bus1n~ss For
details email
szmensanOaol com

ECKHANDSI
lngra
arge Co wtll be accept
ng app licatio ns at th
ept · tor Employmen
ervtces 225 Sr.dh Street
om! P leas ant, Wes
1rgrnla,
on
21712.00
hrough 2/812006 lrb
roam t1 l 3 OOpm MUS
AVE 2 yea rs heavy labo
ork e~&lt;perrence (t e tarm
ng logging, Conslructton
tc J Generous darly wag
nd
excellent
benelr
acka e EOE MIFN
Desk Cieri( needed Please
apply
at
Budget
Inn
Jackson Prke, Galhpol1s Ncr
phone calls please
Restde nll al
Treatment
Facllttv tak1ng appllcatrons
lor vouth worker Pay based
on • experrence
Pa1d
Insurance Call tl~tween
9 ooam ·3 OOpm Monday
Fnday (740)379 -9083 -

pm

Home Heallh A1de Classes·
Agency rs lookrng lor people
rnterested rn hav1ng a caleer
PO Box 72t
In the home health field
Pomerow, OH
Classes w•ll last .2 weekS
45711
and help wrth job placement
Class start date is Feb 13th
Full trme teachers ass1stant, Please call (7 40)44 t -1 377
$6 70/h r send resume to or (7 40)992· 0990 tor dete.rls
Early Educat ron Statron
2122 Jefferson Ave Pt
Home Health Care ol SE
Pleasa nt WV 25550
Ohro rs currently hinng
H ome
Health
Ardes
The Chi ldren s Home socre- Competrtr11e wages
Cal l
ty rl
Reg1on II offiCe has 7 40.662·t222
an openrng lor a Youth

wv

Servrces Social Worker rn
Mason County Th1s ts a
WVOHHR Contract ~51!10n
Pos1tron
requ•rements
1nclude Bachelor's degree
1n a Human Services t1eld
Soc1al Work Lrcense or
Temporary Social Work
h.cense ehgrbie, prevrous
expeuence wor~ lng wrth
chrldren and tamrhes 1s prelerred To be considered for
thrs positiOn quaht•ed appll·
canis shoulcfsubmll letter 'ot
rnterest and resume to
Arney G1ll
Cabell Co OHHR
2699 Park Ave Su11e 110
HuntrnQton WV 25704
By close
rf busmess.
Febn1a,ry 5, 2COO EOE

event a an d ht.ndle
aor:ne loc:::al government.
report.mg fo r daily nempt.per in aouthet.ater n
Oblo Expenence preferred but ent ry level is
acc:11 pta.ble
Bend resume and cltps t.o
Kevtn Kelly, Man&amp;flllg
Edttor, Ob1o Valley
Pubhahmg Co 826 Tbtrd
Ave , Ot.lllpolis, Ohio
40831 Phon11 (740)Wl23t2 ext. 18

Sentinel

1-800-334-1203

KNICKERBOCKER$
2407 Jackson Awenue
Pornt P leasant, WV
·open mteivrews wrll be
conducted on 2!7 from 5·8

DIWI

to work well With

CLA Box 200

WYTHEVILLE VA

Now accepting· applicatiOns
tor warters/Wartresses, bartenders dnvers and busboys Pick up applicatiOns at

Part-trme poSitron avarlable
lor a
Support Group
Facrllta lor lor a Women s
Bachelor's degree rn SOCial Shelter T hrs Is a contract
Call (304 )937·3410
Servrce/Bustn ess or related position lor approxtmately
Located rn ·Mason County
froid wtth a mrnrmum ol three lour
hours
a week
near Buffalo WV
yea rs SOCial ser\lrceslbust· Appl icants sho uld be famrhar
ness experrence required wrlh crrsrs tnterventron techBasrc knowledge of semor mques and group dynamiCS
Expenenced
hgh t
duly crtrzen needs and avar\able Interested applicants should
wrecker operator Clean servrces
needed send resu me to Personnel ,
dnvmg
record
Call Demonstrated organrzat10n· PO Box 454 GallrpoiiS OH
[740)388-8545
al, rt, anagenal, ad mtnrstra- 4563 1
lNe e11penence requ rred
pori or
Full time position
Computer sktlls mcludtng
In Meigs County.
Ot
ner&amp;l A11lgnmeut.
Mrcrosott Word and internet
Must be self·
navrget10ri reqU!fed Must be
Reporter to wnte and
starter, 1ervlce
bondable and have a valid
develop featurea cover
oriented and able
drrver 's license

the public. Must
have valid driver's
11cen1e and reli-

' NO EXP£AIENCE NECESSAIW
'FULl TIME CLASSES
' COl TRAINING
' FIN..t..NC!NG .. VAILA BLE

Galha County Co unctl on
Agmg
ts
see kl~ • an
Executt\l e
Orrector
Respons1btlltres
1nclude
tmpleme ntauon of pollctes
and progra ms staff employmenVdevelop menl , ftscal
man age ment.
proposal
preparalron, program 8\/alu·
al ro n, ma tnta1n relattonsh rps
w1th otM er agencres, 8)(·0ffl·
cro member of Co unty
Councd

--------Housekeep1ng and laundry
posrtrons ava rla ble at Arbors
of Galhpohs, Apply 10 person
at 170 Prnecrest Drive
Gallrpohs Absolutely No
Phone Calls Please

740-384·

1979 Schultz 14X70 mobrle
horne, 2 Bd 1 Ba CA
and Schooli1274B
3 Bedroom, 2 B~th w11h Mus! see to apprec1ate
OBO 740·992
Frreplace rn RIO Grande $8 000
area a acres m/1. 4011.60 4146
barn, $120,000 (740)709·
1989 Belmont t4x7 0 New
1166
heatpum p furnace hotwa·
Leaage Mini Storage
ter tank M ust be moved
For all your storage needs 3·4bd part1al brrck house,
1/ery
clean
$10 800
I
o
m ?acres , 646 Sand Hrll Rd [740)388-8375
Pleasant
Needs
some
Pt
5x10 10x 1 0,10~t20,20x30
boats RV s ca mpers cars repa1r $75 ,000 (740)388- 1996 Skyline 2Bx54 3BR
2BA l1rep1ace cathedral
trucks fenced outsrde park 8366
rng, 1st mon tree with 4
$35 000 17 40)709
month lease Hours Bam • 3BR 2 lull bath 1 900 sq ft 1166
lull , basement
2 car
dark 304·762·1 117 or 304·
638-5981 or 304-762-2014 attached garage 3 acres 2006 16 Wide Spec1a1 Pnce
Chester Townshrp Eastern $181 / mo Call 17~0)385
school dtstnct Off At 7 near 7671
WAmlD
Memo nal Gardens Cal l
2BR moorle nome tor sale (lf
Do
(740)985-4321 afte r 6pm
land con tract $3,000 $ 1 000
down {7 40)446·41 07
Are you rn need of A new 7BA 5BA , Foreclosure only
$18
,000
For
lrstmgs
call
rool plumbrng frxed lrammQ
96 Fleetwood 3 BA Only
8
_
00_
·
3
_9_
1
-_
52
_
2_8_e_x_
I_F2_
54
_
_
$169/mo
Call (740)385
a butldmg or any k1nd of carpen ter reparrs 1f so grve The
9jj48
Attention!
Handy-Man a call @ 304·
Local company offerrng MNO Good clean, used , mob1fe
675-5857
DOWN PAYMENr pro homes for sale
Day
Evenings
Co mpu ter Tro uble Shoot grams for you 10 buy your (740)388·8513
(740)388-801 7
a nd Repar r Expert Serv1ce home mstead of rentrng
• 100% lrnancrng
740·992·2395
• Less than perfect credrl Great locatron 30r 3bt
•
1+acre LA FA DA, many
House Cleantng ServiCes or accepted
s1ttrng With Elderly 1n !herr • Paymen t could oe the , extras (304)593- 0852
home In Mason County same as rent
Lrke new 2002 Clayton
area Call (304)895·32 17 to Mortgage
Locator s 14x52
$148/mo
Ca"
lea\/&amp; message or for 1nfor·
_17_40_13_6_7_·0000_____ 1740)385·9948
matron
Beautrful 4 br , 3 lull baths, 2 Mobtle Home 12 65 2br all
J&amp;C
iree
Servrce
&amp; car garage, fenc ed 1n lot
EleCHrc Cheap (304)675 E11cavatrng 25 years exp completely remodeled 3043927 before 9pm
Free estrmates 304-675 882 -2391
filental Property for Sale
2213
1970 H rllcrest on 50X225 lot
Wrll ca re for elderly I have
Hamsonvrlle
Currently
refe rences
P lease call
Rented $15 000 00 740
Bever~
304·675-1084
742-401t or 740·742·!:1009
11'\ \'\( 1\1

1180

www comics. com

35 $249 000
5182

1968 Mobtle Home Approx
1OX 50 Needs work Askrng
$5,00 00 Must 'move ASAP
740 949-7322 after 5 PM

ce•l•ng

0

I \11'1 It\ \II \I

SHOP l
CLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIED INDEX

0

Wrll buy Junk Cars lor Scrap

I~\

MOBILE HoM•:s
FOR SALE

H&lt;»IIS
FOR SALE

$60 00 Call 740·591-8936
..., ,

~

POUCIES· Ohio Valley Publlahlng r.urvM thl rigM lo edit, NiKt, or cancel anv ed It any Uma. Errors must be ,..,:IOrted on the first day ot
•,.e.
and o nly the flrtt ln...-tkln We
made In tM flrat ava ltat»e .c:llt!an
are atway1 confidential. • Cur,.nt rill Olrd appiiH. • All real Htltt advettlNmantl art aut»! act to the Fldlfll Fair Houelng Act ot 1968
IICceptll only hllp w.m.ct lldl meeting !OE lltlndllrde Wa wiR not knowingly accept 1ny ldverllelng In violation ol the law

Buffaio,H igh·Cou ntry Band
fro m Leon Feb 10th,7pm
Auction
Saturday 6pm
' Dealer Dave w/prest cakes
door -pnze on Sat 6pm
$ 1000
all
your
br ll
Auctroneer Sl ephen Reedy

Mrddleport Banks 740·9926040

1m

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

r
r

L-.!~~~=~.J

added to your classified ads
Borders$3 .00/perad
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Trlbun.-Sentlnei-R~~&amp;Iaf« wiU be rftpon•lllle for no moew than the coet of tt..
oc:cupW by tM ...,or
any lou or e~~:penM lh.t ,...un. from the publlt'lltlon Of omlnlon af In Mtvert!Mmtnl eorr.ctian wUI t.

r
il=-------....,

$75 Reward tor return of
W hite :Jack Russell Tamer
Mrssrng si nce 1/1/06 from Auctron House at Glenwood
Bunce Ad area Please call WV, besrde GlenwoOd Post
(140)446-4706 leave mas· Office, lots of new furntture
sage
household goods mise
Fn Feb 3 stans at 6pm
Female BlaCk Lab to a good
ttome 14·1 6 months old
good
natured
Vary

~

• All ada must be prepaid'

Cmema Retu rn Wtth Ao
question asked Any mfor- 1639
mallan please call (740)339 - [304)550-1616
5· 7 week-old Blue Healer 2008
pups, tatls docked 304·458WANnJJ
Male dog found near
1860
TO BUY
Homewood Dr , Btdwell Call
Beauttful white mdoor cat (740)388-8624
Abso lute Top Dollar US
bl ue eyes, very playful but
tim id (740)992-6288
Srl ver and Gold toms
Proofsets Gold AmijS. PreBoxer mtx needs good ...._
Currency,
1935
US
home Grea t wtth ktds
Sohtarre Otamonds· M T S
Needs IObe loved Call 74().
Coin Shop 151 Second
)79·2 153
~
Avenue , Gall1polis 740·446·
2B42
Gtveaway 2 dogs Call
Garage Saie Fn-Sun 12·
(740)256·6203
4pm, 638 Jay
Dr tve I buy Junk Cars (304)773lJsed hosprtal bed, m good Aefngerator, Craftsman tool 5004
cond 304-675-6183
chest baby cnb &amp; manress Wanted To Buy
Merg s
stroller
car seat. krds
f.:.urr AND
County Store Scrrpt, Store
I
Tokens, and currency from
FOUND
Racine ,
Pomeroy
and

G J\'FAWAY

-ta;.

Now you can have bOrders and graphics

Thur•d•v for Sunday•

Roosevelt C I OSS·C r ee k - A uc i iO n

scllooi, A tpl ey Rd youn g
I Allcta Roush am no longer male dog,Whrte &amp; multt col·
respo nstble
lor
debts ored wl chatn co llar 3~Incurred by Vtctor L Roush 675·11 38
II, as of Janua 30th, 2006 - - - - - -- , - - Lost Purse @ Spnng Valley

t

992·2157

Oearl~ir~

• Shirt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
De.crlptton • Include A 'rice • Avoid Abbrevl•tlonl
• Include Pho_f'e Number And Acldrest When NHded
• Ad1 Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response .. .
\ '\\HI \1 I \II \ I \

44~3008

Word Ads

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

i..

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Seekrng lull trme sece tary
!Paralegal exp requrred
Please send resume &amp;
requi rements to EB1 200
Ma1n St Pt Pleasant WV

To

at

'-n:r-':'!"----.,
8

rid

All real e.tate advertising
In this newepaper Is
aub:l.c:t to the Fedaf'81

•NOTI CE•

F1lr Ho ualng Act of 1968
wh ich makHit r lleg~~l to
, advertlae ~ a ny
preference, lim itation or
dlac rtmlnatlon bi!Md on

For Rent 3 Burlctrngs fo ·
Busrness Use
Located rn
Pomeroy
Also 2 Upstarrs
Un tur mshed
Apts
rn
PomerOy for flent Call 740-

ra&lt;:e, colo r, religion, aex

569·7122

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH

NG CO recommends tha
U do bUSII'leSS With peO
e you know, and NOT t
end money through th
arl unttl you have rnvesti
ted the ottenn

r

Local busrness loolung lor
Secretary/ReceptJonis!
Must have good telephone
skrlls &amp; good wtth thfl publiC
knowledge 1n computers &amp;
all other oflrce machines
Hours Bam 5pm Monday
Conc ealed Fl1stol Cless All
Frrday 8-12 Saturday
Sl ates Fe b
1 1 2006
Send resume to
$7~ 00
9 ooam VF W
Local Bus1nt ss
Mason WV Ph (7,.0)843·
PO Bo~~: 775
5555
Gallipolis , OH 45631

plO I'Rot~AL
SERI't(}:S '

TIJRNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURIT'I /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wrn '
1·BSB-582-3345

HOM!:&lt;i
FOR SALE

"' preference, limitation or
diacrirnlnatlan '

knawt ngly accept

0

Hl\11'1\11

make any sucn

adverttaements for real

arrow Smart Contac
tie OtHO DIVISIOn 0
rnancral
lnstttu llon
Consume
flrce ol
ttarrs BEFORE you refr
ance your home o
btarn a loan BEWAR
f requests for any larg
dvance payments o
ees Of 1nsurance Cal
he Otfrce of CMsume
ffarrs toll lree at 1 866
78-0003 to learn rf th

L

ramillal lta tua or natrona!
origin, or any intention to

Tnl• newspaper will not

M ONEY '
TO LoAN •

25550
The
Athens·Me1gs
EducatiOnal Servrce Center
has an ant~erpated posrtron
tor a PayroiVEMIS Clerk 1n
the Treasurers Oft•ce An
Associate degree preferred
In Buslness Adm~msttat lon.
or 3 years expenence m a
ASCII or Payroll OffiCB Thrs
poai!)Qn ha5 Board approved
beneltls
Subm11 letter of
mterest , resume ~nd refer·
ences to Br yM Swann
Treasu rer
Athens ·Melg s
Box
68 4
ESC , PO
Pomeroy,
OH
45769
Application
Deadline
fo,4onday Februal)i 13 2006
at noon Tl'le AMESC us an
Equal ·
Opporlunl!y
f;: rnployer/Pro'llidet

r ~~~~~~s I

~ITV

eau.te whrch Is In
violat ion of the lew Our
r . .defs are hlfeby
Informed that all
dwetl lnga ad vertlled In
this newapaper are
a va tlabte on an equal
opportunity basel

For
SaleLawncare
Busrness all equrp 97 3r4
ton
Four
Powerstroke
Gravely 260-Z Gravely Pro
50 16 trarler t740 )742·8504
evenrngs

r

22 acres wonoer141 vrew
r1dgetop property ctose tc
ma1n hrgnway perlect fo r 4 ·
wheeler trjiils /740)707

2109

Rnt

E,,,,n-

country set!lng n Galli a Lw--·\ii
~oio\:i,.ii
i ll-i]i.
ii ) _ _..~
Gauntt 3 bedrooms
2 '
ba ll'lS trreptace $85 000 Youse WV locatiO n nome &amp;
(740)709·1166
property wrthrn 10 mtles of
PT P leasant ranch style
Houses lor sale rn New1200·1600 sq ft c entral
Haven 4 br on Mayo Dr
a1rlheat garage prefer rural
$85 000 (remodeled)
set11ng please call 304·593·
4 br on Harven He1ghts.
3207
$79 000 (remodeled)
Neect to sell your home?
3 Or on M1dway Drrve
Late on oayments dtvarcEt
5130 000 (new const!
JOb transfer or a oea th? I
304·882-31311882·2728
can buy your home .4.11 cas h
and QuiCk. ClOSing 740·416www.orvb.com
Home Ustrnga
L1st your home by callrng

3130
IH ' I \I'

(740)446-.1620
Vrew photos, rnfo

Of'! line

1'10

HOt 'Sf~
FOR Rf:.'\T

New Haven WI/ 4
Bedroom 2 Bath 2 Ca r
Garage O utbulldmg 6 Close 2 Bel Rm ~ouse w1th large
to town PRICED TO SELL ' krtcMn OM street oarkrng
s1orage
Asl!;mg
Code 6505 or cell (304~82 and
3368
$425 00
PoSSible HUD

mi~~~-::-:---., , 740-243 -5811
I"" :\loon...: HOM!:s ------~

1t2 Pleasant Street 3 bed
•'OR S.u..E
rooms 1 1 '2. oathS New
Central AC New W1ndows
10 used homes unaer
New Water Tank
Gas
$3 000 00 Must Go 1 Ca ll
Buoget S88 ( 30-4 )6 75-4034
Elarne -40-385 0698

19'95 Doublewtde 3br 2ba
Garage 16x80 homes start~r'l g a1
w/ atta ched
Breezeway &amp; Barn
1 56 $25995 00 Includes v1nyl
acres Saf\dhrll Ad $72 000 s•d1ng st'u ngte root Call
Russ 740·385-2434
[304 )895·3068

2 br 1 ba 7 m1les on At (
North trorn PT Pleasant ren1
S37b dep 5300 no oets

304·675-2381
2 or 3 Bo Rm '1CitJSe rl'
M1ddteport $42.5 0() M
S200 J0 Deposrt ... 40 949
202!::
\1r
"'1'40 949 0007
HUD Ava1labte

3 to 4 t:ledrOOfT1 r-.ome 1n
3 br11 bath 1 5 acre lot 1n 1964 t OwSO Rembrandt w1th Pome roy HUO avarlable
PomerO'jl new roof leave furmsh•ngs S1 000 0 B 0 $450 mo $450 aeooSit call
(937}981 -21 1 1 cteys
17401992 2979
message 740·517·5388

�'

r~.'

.H_~
Rm
_RDIT
._--..rl

...

3

Bedroom

house

r:

Friday, February 3, 2006
.\LLEY OOP

www.mydaitysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87
NEA Crouw ord P u z z le

BRIDGE

In 1BA apt. close to Holzer.

ACROSS

Middleport $450.00 per M. WID hookup. Deposit/refer·
Plus $450.00 depos1t No ence requi red . (740)339lnslde pets. 740-416-1354 0362 cell number.
or 740-992-3194 .
1ST MON FREE RENT
3 Br. Pomeroy, $375 00 per
WITH PAID OEP NEW
month plus depoSit 740·4 16·
ELLM VIEW
4900.
'
TOWNHOUSE/APT$
4BA hoUse 1n town, near

school, $700/mo., deposit &amp;
refe rn eces required . No
pets. (740)388-1100.
4br
in
Syracuse,
$600/month &amp; Deposit.
Water/Sewer included. No
Pets (304 )675-5332

NOW LEASINGI

Phillip

Attention!

Local company offering "NO
DOWN. PAY MEN T" programs lor you to buy· your
home instead of renti ng.

,

141·882-0153
ROGER HYSELL I
GRRfiGE
Auto &amp; Truck

'GARBAGE DISPOSAL
'WIND BLINDS
'CE ILING FANS
'WATER. SEWAGE . &amp;,
"TRASH INCLUDED

Repair
3 miles west of
.Pomeroy, 08
on State Rt. 124

CONSTRUmOI

6111

2 bed room apt. W/D hookup.
Water, trash. sewer pd.
$400. '
14X70 tra1ler 3 bedrooms.
1 bedroom apr re frig , stove ,
E!ectric heat. $300.00 a
$325, water, sewe r. trash pd
montt1 -and $250.00 deposi t.
(7 40)367-77 46- (740)367No pets. Hud appro\led.
7015-(740)446-4734 .
7 40-742-2714

2BR . furnished, no pets. reference $375 mo. $300
deposit. wa ter paid Phone
(740)441-0829·
3 bedroom mobile home in
country. (740)256-6574 .
3Br. Refridg &amp; Sto\le ,Washer
&amp; Dryer included (304)576-'
2934
Mobi le home spaces in
Co untry Mob1le Home Park
(740 )385-40 t 9.
Newer 2 Bd. Am . trader.
Central
heat
and
air.
Co\lered porch and p at10.
Partly furn1shed. $425.00

740-243-5811 '
Nic e 14X70 two bedroom
·with new carpet in Sy racuse.
Washer/ Dryer. $400.00 pl us
depos'it and Utilit1es. 7 40992-7680 '

Shadylawn
Apar tment
Studio &amp; 1 bedroom apart·
men ts. Deposi t req uired.
Apply
at
Johnsons
SupermarKet in Gallipolis.

r16

HOUSEilot..D
Gooos

~~~~~n~~epos~p~l~~;~·io:~

seCu rity depoSit., no pets. rental references . (740)992 $900 mo Ca ll 1740)446· 0165
Nice 2 Bd . Am trailer in 2325 or (740)446-44 25
Middlepo rt. $350 00 M .,
Ntce one BR. unfurnishe.d
$200.00 deposit . 740· 949· BEAUTIFUl
APART- aPartment. Range &amp; refrig.
2025 or 740-949-0007 HUP MENTS
AT
BUDGET provided . Water &amp; garbage
A....ailable.
PRICE S AT JAC K S O~ paid. DepoSIT required . Call
ESTATE S , 52 Westwood (740)446-4345 aft er 6pm.
APARThiENTS
Onve from $344 to $442.
FOR R ENT
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call Pleasarit Vall13y" Apartment
740 -44 6-2568
Equa l Are noW taking Applications

r

for 2BA , 38R &amp; 4BR .,
t'\p pli cati on s
are
taken
Mon dily ·th ru Fr iday, from
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. OHi ce IS
Loci:lted at 1 15 1 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleas ant, WV
Ph one 1-lo is (304 )67 55806. E.H.O

i

Appliance

~i:Rf~i;i:u;;;u!;'l

Hill's Self
Storage

COcker Spaniel puppy, registered , buff/tan color. $175.
App rox , 3 112 months old.

(7 40)256-6346 .

2 9670

Full blooded Husky puppies
lor sate $300-450, 4 males,

Ownev

f;RANK &amp; EARNEST

!:;;=::;;::::::::~

·r70

(740) 992-0496
WV#039 7 14

~~15

j

·

--

I..IVF.STOCK

· Bluebooks
4WD wl tow

Regular Bingo
Starts 6:30pm

$3 ,500
clothing , t233.·

' ;

Karaoke Wed &amp; Fri. Nights _ ·
Pool Tourn Thurs_Nights at 7 pm

Your Silverado
Sweetheart Sale

Sat. Amix High Energy
Rock &amp; Roll 9-i

06 Chev. Silverado
'
Reg.
Cab New.
Auto Trans, Air cond

Racine American Legion
is hav1ng a public
Pork Chop Dinner with Noodles
sunday. ,February 5th
11 am til ? $6.00
Everyone Welcome

Buy Now "to r $14,820
All rebates to dealer
1911 Eastern Ave_
Gallipol is

.,,,, ~~~~
,.-wv Jobs. Foundation
Pt. Pleasant, WV

446-2282 ·

'

SPECIAL
BINGO
Friday, Feb. 3

Eagles 2171
presents
Friday, February 3rd
7:30 pm to 11 :30 pm

$8000

K&amp; [) Karaoke &amp; Disc Jockey

Up .for' grabs!!.

Over

..
'

.

Trailblazer

rj "1;:"j fa FU:s~ ·I
kept.

All types ol pa rts lor ptumbmg , hoi' water heater,
faucets, washer/ dryer parts.
Also Heating &amp; Coo ling tools
&amp; pcirts. $ 1,700 firm . Call
starling at .99t &amp; u p (740 )44 1-1236 lor appoint$500! ' Pol ice Impounds!
ment to view.
(304)675-7999
Ca rs !rom $500. For listings
800·391·5227 ext. 3901
M ovi ng Sale- Quality bed- lnsidtl/outside Sale Feb. 3,
4
,
5
,
6
at
the
home
of
.the
room, li vingroom lurnil ure,
1987 Chevy va n make good
console o rgan and more 1 Late Kenny Stewart, 4372 4
work van $800
Carr Road. From St. At. 7 in
(740)256- 1428: See
18ft. dual axle car trailer.
bc·sales.c:om for pictures Tuppers Plains, OH raKe St. wire floor. New tires , small
At. 681 WEist. Go Approx. 7
and into
winch . ·good shape. $800.
Miles to Elk Run Road . Turn
(740)J79-9297.,
nght Go 1/2 miles to the l ee
in road , turn right on Carr 1995 Chevrolet Lumin a LS
Road . 1st mobile home on for sale. Run s but needs
lett. Everything will be sold. worK , $500 080. Call
' 1994 B!-lick Century 4 door. (740)446-7005.
Water bed , dming room and ----~---'living room tables and odds 1995 Ford Crown Victoria
and ends. Tools computer LX 135k miles. good condi·
wi printer, other computer. tion, new tires, $2,600. Call
a nd PC's. Call 740-696 - (740)44 1-9282 .
1227.
2002 Chevy Malibu· pw,pl ,
cruise, · air, c d. 106k miles.
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Looks &amp; runs great $5,300.
Re pai red, New &amp; R ebuilt In (304)593-3178.
Stock. Call Aon Evans. 1·
2002 Dodge Neon 49.000
800-537-9528 .
miles , 4 cyl. , ·auto, air,

Mizway Tavern

OBO.

200 1 Ford Expedition, Eddie
Bauer Edition . fully loaded,
moonroof, running boards.
67 ,500 miles, great shape,
red and tan exterior, tan
leather i nterior, asking
$ 19,500 .' Cal144 1- 1417 after
5pm ·or leave message.
Black 1994 Ford F150, 5. 8L.
Short bed , gre'at condit1on,
$3,500. (740)367-7245.

r

VANS

FOR SAUl

1989 Ford Cl ub 'Wagon XLTIT. 99k miles. wel l maintained .
$2800.
Call
740 441 -9282.

t

.

(740)446-7300

8UUD~
SlJI'PLIEl&gt;

2003 SuzuKi 4WO Vinson
500 ATV w ith 34 miles.
$4900
C ARMICHAEL

(740)4 46-

Ha rley
David son
1999
X LSSJ Sportste r wl extras .
· $5, SOO OBO . Ca ll (740)2 45·

5 ~ 65 _

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

Aum PARI'S &amp;
·
A('(.~RU.:S
1.._-i.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii-_.J

9865.

ssn or

740 645-7400

· 97 Beech Street .
Middleport. OH

&amp; ~modelmg Co
Ru bber Roofing, Room

Aadltlons, Decks, Shingles, •
Srd1ng. Wind ows. Pole Barns,

1

l

Garages, New Homes
'
Ru sidenlial &amp; Commercial
740-2 45-0437'
JOY- •

Llo.t!MC!· -

I rt\U S"i S!&gt;-'&lt; , "'l

1997 HorOet 23tt . 5th·wheel.
w /ai r. awn ing. sell -con 94 H anda Acc ord, $700 . tainea&gt; light we ight, $6,000
Cars from $500. FO rd li st- OBO . (740 )245· 91 09 or
ings 800· 39 1-5227 ex t.

(740)446;4028.

' 95 Z-28. 350 auto T-Top,

~ 15

l'RtJCJ&lt;.S
1:
L..L--·Rm
ililiO.S
iiA!Jl
liliiO._.I.

~·

.rto

HOME'

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lrfet1me guar·

antee. Local references tur·
nished. Es tablished 1975 .
2 Ferilate Sha r-Pei pups ·9
1985 Chevy Hon dump Call 24 Hrs (740 ) 446weeKs old
Shots an d truck . nevv mo tor, cab &amp; 0870, Rogers Basemen t
NOrm s~ $150 00. 740·992paml. t.ts'e d daily. A skmg Waterproof ing
9 105 May can on Sunday.
$3,000. (740)256-t,253.
...,

AKC Lab puppies Chocolate 1993 Ford Ranger 4x4 e~~:t.
blade Price $ 100. C all cab, loaded V-6. automatic

$3500. 304 -576-3231
200 1 4dr V-6 Dakota. auto·
mal iC. 90 .009 miles , 4W O.

$8,500. (740)&gt;39· t 620.

2001 Dodge R am truck
2500 S LT Heavy Duty.'
Alaskan Ma lamute pupp1es springs , camper speci81. t O·
lor sale Can't reg1~ter . OUt · ply 11res $7-.500 Call Ed
we ha\le bOth parents (740 )367-Q624
~740)2 56 - 6414 or , (740)645·
98 Chevy ext cab 4x4. 350
2381
- - - - - - - - · Vonec 5-speed , $7 500
Border Co llie pups S 125 080 Mu st sell (7o40)256·
6772
{304)895-3328

U'.IC:L .

IZ\11\\l'.L'&lt; GOT\~€: BE~T'

p-1-.~D W~'i MU~\
. [Sf&gt;..' ( IT '?
BE.CAUSE-1-\E.

..__,+.!.,..Y... OF TI-lE:- C.ai\P€-Ti\ 101{

"''*"'~
TI-\\S jI
wE:-e.tt-! I

· "Middleport's only
5~11-Storage".

1 !'-IS \ ~T S 0~

IT, \ 1-\/&gt;..-f's 'r-Hi

!

~

~

dummy.

'

'

-Astro-

~

•

*
' 'Rocky ''RJ';·,
'I

·~t{;'

· StH!"'

~'~

I}IG NATE

. , GIT-IT· DONE
All Type• Homt Repairs
25 yrs . Ex perience,
Free Estimates .
24 Emergency Ser\IICe.

(304)675-3733 or
(304)593-0129

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
INTHE .
CLASSIFIEDS

t 8 Throw in

-

22

In Aall

1 College
doge.
2 Standing on
3 Worn loudly
4 Handbag.
logo

...,.nt.

36
38

39
41

42
44

43 C.roven
halt
45 Unmoving
46 Bing
CrOiby
tune
48 Mol lowed.
1 1 whlek.ty
49 Prectlcelly
forever
50 Make
muddy
54 Layer

~-,:r...,

Ath~ns

IIIII• Co. Realdenta!.!!

BDCmE Sanllallon
REA NUTS

SEPTIC TANK PIJMPING $95.00
PORTABlE TOIW RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
59f-8757

SEE. MAII.CI E'?MY
15 IN THE

PAPER.. .

'' &gt;IELP WANTED
ATTRACTIVE 'r'OUN6
LAD'{ CAN'T REMEMBER
1-!ISTORI{ DATES''

'' DOESN'T UNDERSTAND
FRACTIONS.. CALL
PAT~ ICIA REICf.IARDT
AT NUMBER BELOW .. "

W&gt;IAT DO 'r'OU ARE
VOU niiiKI EXT~EMEL'(
MARCIE ?
SIR

·Economy Beef $7.35
-Shade R1ver Beef $8.10
-Whole/Shell Corn $6.45/Bag
·Cracked Corn $7.45/Bag ·
-Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag
-Shade River Hog Feed $8.85
Why Drive Anywher~ Else?

•

SUNSHINE CLUB

Shade River AG Service. Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy. 0 1\io 45769
.740-985-.\831

Judy Kay's Has Re-ope11ed!
~ D a i!~

day

lunch ~ pcc i ah

WC;f. ,. Wing Nite SIM!S 4 pm with homemade.
Otiglnal-.F!idays- Steak nile StOrts-4 pq;·
· · New choice Blac~ angus ph illy stead sub. •
All hamburger made fresh not frozen! ,· }

.

GARFIELD
01' COU~E. WATCHING. .JON
WITH H 15 TONGUE STUCK TO
THE MAll-BOX UP5 THE
eN'fERfAINMENf VAl-UE
CON51PERABL..;&gt;

.lUST l-OOK Af
THAf SNOW .. .

195 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, OH
740-992- 1622

Now Renting
A-J Mini Sto rage

740-992-6396
740-992·2272
'Umts 10x20 10x12

Co mplet e Tr ee Care

0

ACE TREE SE RVI CE
-179 Rand St.
Gallipolis. OH
Rick John·s on , Jr.
O w ner

Insured

Free Est.

Now Avail ablo Ai

BAUM LUMBER
Scorpi"on Tractor s
''Taki11g Til e Sti11g Out OJ
' Hard Work.' "
Mid-Si Le '4Wheel Dri ve T rac lor
wilh 30hp &amp; 40hp KL1bo1 u E ng ines

GRIZZWELI.S
'

:'ti~A1 ~tb 11

:~11'\JT 1\.\AT

:t'AMPER \\\tiT
:TICI&lt;EQ \'Cti

I D\D\-1'1

CA~

FoR

MLIC-11

. by Luis Campos
C.t:rity.CV*. cryplogr&amp;m$1i!tl a aaled !rQnl QuotBiloos try·!arrioo&amp; ~ . Past ¥d present
Eltll ~ rn the~~ stlrds for i oott'«
Today's clue. D equals W

" L' P
LE

AlthoUgh you might he\le to :s houlder
greater responsibility in the yea r ahead
Where your ca reer is concerned, don't let II
dismay you. The returns for doing a good
job without compla ining will be greater
than you may realize.
AQUAR IU S (Jan. 20· Feb. 19)- YoU're apt
to be quite proficient in matters that a re
mean ingful to you materially today, bu t
when' it co mes l o handling peopl e. yo u
could tend to be dictatorial and completely
bomb out
PIS CES (Feb. 20- M arch 20) - Any limite· ·
!Ions you ~xpe rle nce today are likely tp be
the result of your own negali\le Th inki ng .
You 're c.apab!e of turning your attitu de
around, so take on a more oplim istlc.
expansive outlooK
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - Owing to
the fact that lila is a two-way · s't reel, it' s
importa nt that you be as equally generou s
to friends today 'as 1hey are to you. It yo u
are tigh t-l isted , you can expec t tt1em ro be
so as well.
·
TA~AUS (April 20- ~ay 20 ) - This· iS not
one of the bett er days to request business
1a110rs !rom persons who you know SQCial·
ty. You 'll Und tt1at you c an do what neeas
doin g w ithou t bri nging them In to- th e piclure.
,
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) - Set your
sights h1gh today. but don't lake on an y
unreasonably IottY aspirations that are
above ydur abilities . ll you'r e realistic, qo
matter what ·you accomplish. you 'll feel
you 've met yo ur mark.
' CANCER !June 21 ..July 22)- E)jpertment
with new techniq ues or procedures today
in matters: where you al-e not getting the
types of results you desire from trad rhonal
method s. You'll l ind one that'll work wonders.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) - AsSOC iates COUld
ha\le more influence over your actions
today th8n you rn 1ght like . Take control and
do not let crapehangers cause you 'to
retect your gOOd 1deas tor the1r less aHeCtive ones
VI RGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) - ''Think twi ce
before spontaneously prom1srng to do
somelhing tough tor a noth~r who yan do It
for him /herself. You 'll think of a gOOd rea·
. son to say "no" without so unding as 11 you
don't c are.
LI BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- If you are per-.
forming work tor anot her today. be sure
that you estimate the COSIS accu rately. rt
you spot an ove ra'ge that'll kilt your profit ,
stale !he new cha rge right on the spot.
SC ORPIO (Oct. 24•No\l. 22) - Should you
and your mate have a disagree ment today.
maKe amends as quickly as yo u can. By
doing so, you'll turn aro und what wovld
have been B bad day Into something wonderful.
SAGtTIA AIUS (Nov 23· 0 ec 211 Someon e wh o Is being ol help to you
today neada encouragement ' and praise .
not cr iticism If you see this person mak rng
an error. l1nc1 a ntce way to direct tne work
In a new airect1on
CA PR ICORN '( De c 22 ·Jan
19) Affectat ions of any sort are tota lly unnec·
eaaary todliy to win admlrara t'l you see
Oth ers 8re unimpressed'. don't turn It \JP .
turn II on Just be yOi,Jf M if .nd yOu 'll t'lave
, lots of tun
·

HV S F

EV

DVIHP

CVE

EV

DL C

GF

KZFNE

TL F Z B F

V~B N Z

NC

...

XNKCLM L B FC E ...

X F CE L VC

N

.KLSF

l

EWL C U

L'P

ATFFBW ."

GZVACN C

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I never lned to kill myseH, Ihal's a lie. I'm too alraid
ol God lo do that I'm a sp1ntua1 person: - Manah Carey
WOlD
~~~~:~:~· S© R~~ll~~- Ll c ~~· UMI
l dltu l lly CLAY I . f OlLAN - -- - - 0 fo~torro
n~e lener 1 cl 1Me
ur Kro mbled word s be-

'lllrthdltr:

SaturG.y, Fe. .-. 2008
By Bernice Bede Osol

IMPORTS

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Graph
-

' Hupp

H omemade tko,sL'I'l :- • B rea k fa \\ -..:-r V~d :-t l l

Block , brick, sewer pipes. looks and runs eM c ellent
windows. lintels, etc . Gla!Jde $5000.00. 92 Corsica V-6, 4 .._. .IiiiMPRiiiiiii
OiiVfl\
ii_ilfFjj,~iiNTS
iiio.-1
W mters. Rio Grande, OH door auto $1800.00. 740- '
BASEMENT
742- 4011 or 74 0·712·5009 .

AKC Lab pups, field and
waterfowl hunting bloodlines, calm an d famrly orient-·
ed . e11cellent pups , eKcel lent
price. a 4 0~418 · 8388

MIKE MARCUM

Sto p hy, &amp; L·hc(k o ut our ne \v ad Ji ti onll to o ur
· me nu a" well a... you r o l d fa vO rites

2004 Jeep Liberty, excellent
co ndition, less than 15,000
miles,
$ 17,000 : . Call

C548.

(740)446- t 062. '

s

MAYBE CHANGE
TH' LOCATION...!!

MuroRcva ..S

4WHEEIJO:RS

BUDGET
TRANSMISSteel Beams , Pipe Rebar speed, $9,000 (payotf),
SIONS,
All
types.
(740)245.black interior. · (7 40) 4" 1·

Su nd~y.

740.446.9200 '

$t8 ,900 (304)675-

EQUIPMENT,
(7 40)256- 2412.

Large womens
hospital scrubs size 3X-4x.
baby dothes &amp; household 2003 PT Cruiser, Power windows and locks, CO Player,
1tems 304·675·2801
Very
good
condition·,
N ew and Used Furnaces $7500.00. (7401388·0140
Ins ta llation
a\le ii8.ble.
2004 blue Pontiac Sunfire
(740)44 t -2667,
30 .000 mi. excellent condi·
NEW AND . IJ~ED STE.E l tion, great gas mileage, 5
For
Concrete,
Angie.
C hanne l, Flat Bar. Steel
Gratin Q
For
D rains,
Dri .... eways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metal s Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Friday. Bam-4 :30pm. Closed
Tllu rsday,
Saturday
&amp;

UNCLE CLEM, CUZZIN'
DOOLEY THIS HAS .
BEEN
FAMBL

FOR SAI.E
Che:vy .

Pasa

Pass

Soutli m ust advance with three clubs
Since two no-trump would show 10·12
points. But when North cue-bid s three
hearts to ask Jar a heart stopper, South
has an easy thfee-no-lrump rebid . (If
North had hearts stopped, he would have
bid three no-trump him self.)
If East has bot h missing aces, he would
have opened one heart, rtot two. But ·if
West has orte of the aces and only two
hearts - as th e bidding suggests .- the
contrac1 is makable as long as South ·
duckS: the first tr ick. Declare r .wir'l$ the
second hea rt and plays a diamond. Here.
when West wins with his ace, he doesn't
have another heart to lead .
If South wins the first trick and plays a
Qiamond , West should step in with his ·
ace and ·return his seco nd Mart·. esuib lishing East's ntiarts while East. still has
an entry in the spade ace.
Su ppose deClarer plays a spade at trick
, two. Then West should pu t up his jack to
show his sequence. After declarer covers
with dummy's queen, EaSt can win with
his ace and return a spade , estabHsh ing
We~fs spades while West still .has the
diamond ace as an entry.
Finally, there . is another parallel in this
deal. If West's operllng l~d is the spade .
jack, declarer must play low from the

!'

· 2'004

jli0\i46- 2 5 t 4 .

in Henderson, WV . Preowned Applicanes star ling
at $75 &amp; up all under
Warranty,
also ~ have
Household
Misc. Items

~w.tlmbtlrc.-M kcablne'b"Y.. OOnJ

SUVs

rli'C1"-------,I__

Pass

Pass

DOWN

and East plays his king .

TRUCKS

~:~~hSee ~~~ 81 ~;-~~~ ~;

Paes

59 lniiiCI killer

60 Cagey

we

SITUATION!

•

t151 kw r:tollble manual. Chevy Colot ado Ext. Cab
Great tor home or sma ll '05 . Auto. 2WD, W/bedlin er,
$
e~ttcelle nt cond ilion. Kell y
9
5
Blue .Bobi$ $14,600 . will s811
tor $ 13,600. (304)523· 1179

Dbl.

3•

E a•t

57 Nona ·

58 Thing,
In Latin

As
are al l aware , no-trump c ontracts
usuaHy turn into a race . Each side is try·
lng to establish winners, and the one that ·
first sets up enough of them breaks the
tape at the fin ish line.
In this deal, who should win ? Against
three no-trump, West leads the heart six

A IAI&gt;

· IOxiOxiOxlO
992-3194
..__ _RmioiiiliiiSiiALiE
i ioo-'
·
·
'
or 992-6635
Console.Organ- ·Gulbransen ·
MusiCAL

INsrRUMENTS

Pass

Pass

North

Take the sting
from their suit

Ttte tv~AYOfl fUfle ICNCNIS ttOW
TO MA~E T~t '
lesT of

-·

Licensed Home B uilder

MANlEY'S
SElF STO.RAGE

$50 eac h. (740 )379-9098.

Pass

West

29
3Q
· 34

Opening lead: • 6 ·

~oo t ing

Jack RusseiiJRat Terrier
puppies. 3 ma les, 7 weeks
old, tails docked , wormed,

26
28

3 ....

3 NT

45 771

$25o.·c all (740)707- 1964.

4
Q 7
6 3 2
5 4, 2

·

23 Beluga
product
24 Chago'all.
Bravo,
25 Hockey gool
In B&amp;c:alone
'1:7 Perty giver
- Tome
29 Dltdafn
Pale
5 -otCNN 31 Scurry
"Crocodile
6 Gorman
along
Rock"
lnduolrial
32 Unl ol wert&lt;
elnger
region
33 Preflx
Mr. 'Mineo
7 Zorbo
tor •
Spleen
portrayer
35 Choice
~ploys B Horsaa'
:rT Promlud
Toy-block
lflllll
40 Parachute
brand
9 Certain
material
Juat made H
NCO.
4f Dlgltll
(2 wdo.)
12 Kind
watch
Set the
of power
readout
dog on
13 lnlelllgence · 42 Coast along

21
23

2.

Chuck Wolfe

Bashan Road

pkg..
Kelt y
@
$22:000 .
For Sale· Black Angus bull. many extras 10,500 mites.
~p rox 1,200 lbs. Call eltlcellent condition, ga ra ge

Warehouse

'

Saturday, Feb . 4th
8:00pm to 12:00
midni ght
Still Standing Band

CONSTRUCTION~

740-949-2217

Tuesday &amp; Saturday
Middleport American
Legion
Early Bird Game 5 pm

'

WOLFE~
• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

7
A
8
7

20

Dealer: East

So uth

16
17
19

• 7 5 •
... 9 6
South

Vu lne rab le : Both

R ac ine , O hi o

1 female.
Also ' AK C
&amp;
APR!
Registered ~Si berian. Husky
stud available lor breeding.

6 3

•
•
•
•

HardWOod Cablnetry.And Furniture _

FORSAU:

•

.. .., 3
. KJ I 0 982

' t:;;n;:.J

Stop &amp; Compare

I'Ers

d~~? t

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, Feb. 5th
680/Siug Match
Starts a1 noon

\

East

JI 09 8 6

!fOd

baforels
Sticky 8011
Tumult
Sign
KHchen
peeta
Huge racket
Ghoot towns
l emon peel
Sharp spine

!5

West

• A9
... j 10 8 3

740-992·1671

G. E . was her heavy duty
$95: G.E. dryer $95 ; refrige rator 2 door frost free $125;
May tag washer like new
$165. Genes Appliances 76
Vine St. (740)446-7100 or
Tw in Rivers Tower 1S accept- (740)367 -7886 .
ing applications for wall ing - - - - - - - - '
Fo r
sale .
list for Hud "subsized , 1, br, Longabe rger
Al:lartmen ts in Middleport. aparTment , call 675-6679 Baske ts and Pottery. Call
2BA apartments. Starting at
7 40-446-3168.
From $295·$444. Call 740- EHO
$375/month. Loca ted on SA
..
,
.
Eq
ual
Housing
·
r.:rr--~----,
992506
4
160.
SA
850 .
Bob Opportu n1 11es.
.
.
SPACE
New F urnitu re $450. Call
McCo rmick
Ad
Call
FOR JbNr
(740)446-7444.
(740)441·0 194 or 1,740)441 · Large modern upstairs apt.,
- - - -- - - 1184
2- Br., nea r Tuppe rs Plains,
T hompsons Appli ance &amp;,
Downtown Office Space~ 5
no pets.
$425.00 plus r
. $
m . r
ReP;air-675-7388. Fdr sale.
Ap artme nt avail able now deposit
740- 985·4~ 69 or oom SUite 6501 o. 1 oorn re-c o nditioned au tomatic
RiverOend Apts. New Haven 6 14-264-6409.
office· $225tmo. ; 2 room washers &amp; dryers re'frigeraWV. Now accepting applica s uite . $250/~o. Security tors; gas and' elec tric
81 reqwed. You pay · ranges, air conditioners, and
ti ons for Hlld·Subsiaized, Middleport 1 and 2 Bedroom
· h d A · N Pet ut1hl1es. All spaces very n1ce.
.
.
one Bedroom Apl s. Utilities t
urms e
PIS.
o
s. Ele\lator. Call
_
wnn~er wash~rs . W11t ~o
17401446 3644 repa1 rs on maJOr brands 1n
included . Based on 30% of deposi t, ant;:\ previous rental
.
1nrment.
Call references . 740·992-0165. f~
adjusted !ncome.
ra
shop or at your home.
(304)882 -3 121 availaOie for
Senior and Disable d People. Modern 1 bedrOom apt. No
E.H.O
pe ts . $265/mo includes
ANn~
water.
$200
depo sit
1
Bea ut1lul 2-story townhouse ( 740) 446-36 ~ 7.
·
..__ _ _ _ _ __ . Bu y
or sell. Riverine
ovE:l rlooking Gallipolis C1ty
Antiques, 11 24 East Main
park . .Ki tchen . DR . L. A . New Have n. 1 bedroom
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740t ' hed
study. 3BR , 2 baths. 'lau ndry
992·2526. Ru ss M oore ,
a ~ea . References required ,

SMITH
SUPERSTORE

/

14 Nota

KQJlO

.

P.O.BII118
Mlddlepan,
Obit
Ntw MtdiCIIIIIriD
PIH Ill VII IItty~ Phone: 740-143-5284
Fax: 740.843·1214
We en 10111111
-

02-0H I6

.. A K Q

• Complete
Remodeling

2 room furnished eHiciency
apartment. clean . down s!ai rs1
uti lities
paid
(740)446-15 19.
Garage Apt Qn Roush St
Mason.
Fu rni shed .
2bd upstairs apt. stove , 5325/month + utilities . $100
fridge furnished. water/tras h utili ty/deposi t.
Available
plus immediately (304 )773-5054
paid . $325/month
deposi t. · ·
3bd hOf.-158 $350-'month plus GraciOus li\llng. 1 and 2 bed·
deposit (7 40)446-7620 or room apa rtments at Village
(7 40)441 -9872.
Manor
and
Ri¥:erside

1 and 2 bedroom apart- Housing Opportunity.
ments , fu rnished and unfur- ---~---- ·
nished. sec urity deposit CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
. required. no pets, 740·992- ED &amp; AFFORDABLE !
Townh ous e
ap artme nts.
22 18.
aildlor sma ll houses FOR
Mod ern 1 bed room apt. RENT. Call (740)44 1-1 t 1 t
tor applic ation &amp; inlorm ation
(740)446-0390.

.

52 Grimm
cherector
53 Oota'l guy
55 Wor
56 Not o on
once

10 Dined
11 Bryce
Canyon ·
locetlon
13 Small town

• s.

AND FINANCIAL
SERVICES

•New Homes
• Garages

FOR R ENT

2BR house lor rent $500 per
mo.
$500 deposit.
In
Kanauga , no pets. (7 40)44641 07.
'

I

992-5682
ROBERT
BISSELL

No rth
• K Q 52

, ROCKY H.PP
~ INS.RANCE

llltl' IICkhll

2 bed room Apt. .available in
Th tee bedroom House in Syracuse
$200 deposit
Pome roy. Rent is $450 and $350 per month rent. Rent
deposi t is $450. References incl udes water, sewer. trash
requ ired . Gas heat and No pe ts. Sufficient mcome
electric air. 740-388·8277.
needed to qualify. 740-378-

(740)992-5039

Are Your·
Investments
Malllnu You BillY
Give Us I Clll AI:

BARN
REMOVAL

SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
'ALL EL!'CTRIC
'CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
"STOVE, REF ,

Stop rent1ng Buy. 4 bedroom County. \lery nice . clean.
$425 per mon th
pl us
foreclosure $15,000 , For liStdeposit. no pets , re ferences
ings 8'00-39 1·5228 ~xt.
reqUifed , (740)992-51-74
1709.
.

2 bedrooni mobile~home in
Racine, $350 mo. plus $350
deposit , years lease, no
pets, no cans after 9pm ,

IOUp

filler

7 Milk amte.

• 100% fmancing
PETS CONDITIONAL
• Less than perfect credit
(304)882-30 17
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgag e
Locators.
(740)367-0000
2 bedroom apa!lment Meigs

Moou.E HOMhl; ·

46 Aolsn
mountalna
47 Waeh
51 Suahl·bar

t Laurel
4 Balloon

Alder

'DISHWASHER

'

.

Friday, Februa,ry 3, 2006 ~

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
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SCRAMLET S ANSWERS 21Z/t16

AclU11cn - (i Ioat - MQtuid - Jasper - PLUNGE
Silly coed tn her friend. "I ' m going to get
married on a di,·ing hC1ard b~ca u sc I'm ready to
take the PLUNGE!"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
';/~

UbE-D TO ~TAI1T AVlot.O
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Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentineJ.com

·Friday, February a, 2006

ALONG THE RivER

Tough··rookies prepare for one final test
DETROIT
(AP)
downs in the regular season.
Steelers tight end Heath His touchdown receptions
Miller started to get worn out were tied for third among all
toward the middle of the sea- tight ends.
son, when the hits and the
The Steelers ended up getextra games started to take ting a steal in the 6-foot-5,
their toll.
256-pound Miller when they
That will happen to a rook- drafted him late in the first
ie. Seahawks linebackers round. · Miller
slipped
Leroy Hill and Lofa Tatupu 'because he was recovering
must know the feeling. too.
from a spans hernia, but he
But once the playoffs fit
perfectly into the
rolled around, they got ener- Pittsburgh system.
gized. Now all three are playHe started off fast, cmching
mg for a Super Bowl champi- all six of his touchdown passunship, something few play- es .in his first ·seven games.
ers get a chance to do, let The only other rookie tight
ends to do that were
alone in their first year.
")'here was a point in there Raymond Ghester of the
when it was · rough. but the Ratders ( 1970) and Eric
playoffs reall y buJ!t my ener- · Green of the Steelers ( 1990).
gy · level back up and I
Miller fmally scored aga in
haven't looked back," Miller when he caught a touchdown
said. "We had a few days off pass against Denver in the
and my body fee ls great right A,FC championship game.
now."
Tatupu has anchored the
Miller had 39 catches for Seahawks defense with his
459 yards and six touch- aggressive P.lay, finishing

second to Chargers end
Shawne
Merriman
for
Defensive Rookie of the
Year. The 6-foot, 238-pound
Tatupu led the team with 105
tackles, while Hill was. tied
for third with 67. Tatupu
added four sacks and three
interceptions, and broke up
10 passes.
Of course, Tatupu is used
to the ·srotHght . He won the
nationa championship last
year at Southern California.
"I would like to say that's
alii know. But like 1 said, situation, circumst;mces, they
worked well for me and I am
just gratefu I to be here,"
Tatupu said.
STEE-RIKE!
Detroit
Mayor Kwame · Kilpatrick
rolled a strike on hts first
attempt at Jerome Bettis'
Superbowling charity event
Thursday night, putting pressure on The Bus when he
arrived soon thereafter.

Bettis. who has rolled a
300 game, said, "Hold on I
Let me get my ball!"
Bettis left the 10 pin standJn?,He ~as supposed to thro~

'

tote Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio\ alit·~ l'uhlishin~ ('u.

SPORTS
• High school basketball
action. See B section

ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSBURGH - They
wear black and gold to work.
for weeks, they paint their
·face s. and when their
favori te team · announce s a
pep rally, 30,000 men,
women and children shpw
up on a weekday and stay for
hours chanting and cheering
high lights of a ga me already
played.
They're
Pittsburgh
Steelers .fan s.
"Look at them, they're the
great.est fans in ihe wor ld ,"
Mayor Bob O'Connor sai d,
as he shook hands and
waved to people downtown.
"If you cut me open , I
bleed black and gold," one
woman told the mayor
before hurrying away.
Earl ier
Thursday,
· O'Connor joined thousands
for an afternoon Steelers
ral ly that Closed otie city
block.
Pittsburgh is in the grips of
St'eelers frenzy.
Steelers co,ve rage dominates local TV new scasts. A
"Welcome
to
Steelers
.Country" banner stretches
across the City County
Building. Below. a Terrible
rowel dangles from the statJle of late Mayor Ri chard
!=al iguiri. . "Go Stee lcrs"
signs adorn windows of government officeS. Nea rby, an
~atery offers· "the Steeler sub
-·
tender rib- eye steak,
grilled mushrooms, onions,.
wrapped with an egg. and
ioppcd
wit h
melted
American cheese." ·
· Restaurants and supermarkets sell Steelers cookies.
cup'cakes &lt;\nd Other blackand-gold comestibles.
· Even area churches join i~.
In a northern suburb,' a
~hurch sign offers good
wishes for quarterback Ben
Roethlisberger. Just west of
ihe city, a sign in a church
building reads, ·'Go Steelers.
Beat the Seahawks."
· Steelers fans· can't ge t
enough of the mania.
· On SatUrday. the ~rowd
outside a city store se lling
black-and-gold trinkets got
~o large that police closed a
~hree-block area to traffic .
Soon , . an impromptu pep
rally and block party broke
out.
to
Thousands
came
Thursday's .rally de cked tn
Steelers appare l. Sotl)e came
in wheelchairs: many had the
team logo painted on their
face s and mothers.. cart ed
their children in .strollers.
Even a' pet . dog had a
Steelers scarf around its
neck.
An experi in fan s' behavior said people do · thi s
because they want to belong
to ·some thin g bigger than
them selves.
" Fan s think there's thi s
greatne ss with at hl e te ~ ... -,ai d
Allyce Najimy of the C~n ter
for the Study of Sport in
Society at · Northeastern
University in Boston .
''With sports. it'&gt; easy f[1r

people to coq1e toge ther.
That' s why they paint faces, .
buy uniforms ," she said.
"S ports highlight tradition
and hi story and sen timent
with people . This team
might make history, and
(fa n&gt;) could say, ' I w.as
there. "'
· Jamelle Moultrie, '35 , of
Pitt sbu rgh. says she was
born a Steelers fa n.
" I was raised on foot ball.
It 's
hereditary."
said ·
Moultrie, adorned in blackand -g old bal)oon hat ' and
corsage. Terrible Towel , two
Steelers T-shir.ts and large
button celebrating "The
lmmaculate
Tackle ,"
Roethlisberger's shoestrin g
tackle to save a certain
touc hdown in the Jan. 15
AFC
Divisional
game
against Indianapolis.
"Every ye ar, I acc umulate
stuff. I just love the blackand-gold." she said:
When Pittsburghers cheer
l'or the black-a nd-gold, they
mean the Steelers, al though
baseball 's Pitt sburgh Pirates
and
NHL's
Pitt sburgh
Pe11guins also use the; colors.
Then again, the Pirates and
Penguins haven ' t g iven fan s
here muc h to cheer about
lately.
No, this · is Steelets country. its residents members of
"the Stee ler Nation," which
incl udes 975 Stee lers bars in
the. U.S. and 70 abroad,
acco rd ing to the Greater.
Pittsburgh Conve ntio n &amp;
Visitors Bureau.
" We love our Stee lers,"
sa id Elaine . DeHaven of
Pittsburg h. as she snapped
photos of the Chri stmas treeturned-Stee lers Terrible Tree
in the count y courthou se.
"They're rough and tough
lik e the city." she . sa id .
"They give thi s city heart .
It 's awesome ."
"The spirit of the team it 's th e attitude of the people
who (,ive here," said Sherry
Guzewi cz. 45 , of West
Newton .
But · she was n't thrilled
about running into a co uple
of Seahawks fans on her way
to the rall y, especiall y when
they yell ed in support of
their team.
" How
dare
they?"
Guzewicz s.aid. " It was very
upsetting." ·
SPRING VAllEY CINIMA7

446-4524 MOVt[ HOTLINE

FRt 213/06 - THURS 219/06
BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 6:30 PM.•
MON-THURS, AND AT 12:30 PM
FOR SAT &amp; SUN MATtNEES

'STADIUM SEATING IS N.OW
AVAilABLE
WHEN A STRANGER GALLS
PG13 1:30 3:30 7: 30 &amp; 9:30
BIG MOMMA'S HOUSE 2 ·
PG13 t :20 3:20 7:20 &amp; 9:20
THE RINGER (PGI3)
t :tO 3:10 7:10 &amp; 9:10
HOODWINKED (PG)
1:15 3:t5 7:15 &amp; 9:15
- GLORY ROAD (PG)
t :OO 3:1 0 7:00 &amp; 9:10
UNDERWORLD EVOLUTION
(R) t :30, 3:30, 7:30 &amp; 9:30

$1.511 • Vol. 40 . No.

:.!

.

Commissioners expect FutureGen site selection
BY BRtANJ. REED
BRE EO@MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

POMEROY
Meigs
County · Commissioners
ex pect a state commi ttee to
select a preferred Ohio site for
the FutureGen plant sometime
this month , Commissioner
Mick Dave nport said.
Officials in Athens a.nd
Meigs counties have joined
together in an attempt to
attract the resean:h-baseq
faci li tv to an Ohio River site
in Meigs County, near the site

~

In Steel City, 'football
·frenzy affects .every .
part of fans' lives·.
BY RAMESH 5ANTANAM

l'nlllt'l'o~ • ~liddlt·,,...-t • (,allipolis • l'dwmwy :,, :wo6

.

AP photo
Pittsburgh Steeters fans attend a pep rally for .the football
team in downtown Pittsburgh on Thursday. The Steelers meet
the Seattle Seahawks Sunday in the Super Bowl in Detroit.

. '

Flavors of the Week: Hot and sour
Thai chicken soup with lemon grass, 01

a gutter ball, and I would roU

the strike and be the herot
the NFL's fifth-leading rust(~
er said with a smile.
;
NOT CLEARED FOR
TAKEOFF: Whether the
Pittsburgh Steelers win ot
lose the Super Bowl, there's
one place their fans won't be
welcome .to celebrate or commiserate:
· - Pittsburgh
International Airport.
•
Allegheny County Airport
Authority
officialS
announced Thursday · then~
will be no public event to
welcome the Steelers back to
Pittsburgh the day after th~:
game. Instead, the team will
be escorted off their plane tq
an
area
. undisclosed,..secured
.
of the airport.

LIVING

A new approach:
Meigs Alternative School
tackles students' need, Cl

chosen by American Electric · attract the plant here.
Power for its proposed $ 1 bil Three sites in Athens
.lion IGCC·clean-coal plant .
County are abo being proFutureGen is a $1 billion, posed as potelllial loqtions.
near-zero emissions facility hut the Meigs County site is
that will use integrated seen as more viable .because
sequestration and hydrogen of its proximity to the Ohio
production in a research- Ri ver. Other proposed Ohio
·
based power plant.
sites inclttde ;t fo ur-co unty
At hens and Meigs offi- area near Cmiton . and a site
cial s joined together a year promoted by Clermont and
ago to promote so uthe aster n Hamilton counties.
Ohio as a site for th&lt;! plant.
sa id
Ohi o
Davenport
·and hope the proxim it y of University would be ex pectOhio Uni versity to an Ohio ed to operate some type of
River location wi ll serve to research faci lity in the county

near the plant. if the · Meigs
County site t'; chosen.
Bctausc the plant is rescarchuri ve n and planned l'or ex perimental purposes. a nearby
uni ve rsity wi ll strengthen Jny
site under consideration.
Davenport '&gt;aid .
Ohio Unive rsity operates
the Ohio Coal Research
Center. which brings together
multi-disciplinary· teams to
research l'uel diversi ty &lt;tnd
the production of en,·ironmentally safe and reliable
electric power. The ce nter

.also manage&gt; the Ohio Coal ·
Research Consortium for the
State of Oh io\ Ai r Quality
De velopment Au thority.
There are 211 ,ite' aero" the
Un ited States 'ying f•&gt;r the
pla nt.
and
the
Ohi b
Dc.partmcnt of Energ) expect.\
to· tlnalite a "short lis t" of
potential -;ites by mid-2006,
and announce a preferred &gt;ite
by the middle nf 2007.
When operati onal. the pro:
toty pe wt ll be the cleanest
foss il fu e l tired power pl ant
in the world .

Stabbing
suspect
in custody
BY KEVIN KELLY

KK ELLY@MYDAILYT ~ tBUNE . CD M

..
....

.,..

·~

'

2006 CHEVY TAHOE

82B,Biill~
V-8 5300, Power Windows, l'ow&amp;r Locks, lilt.

. 9rd Row Seating, CD Player

2006 CHEVY COBALT
LS COUPE

811. lllill•

'

• Gallia County l,.ocal ·
Schools prepare for bond
sale. See Page A2
• Ohio University students.
staff restore hurricanedamaged photos.
SeePageA2
• Local Briefs.
SeePageA2
• ca study. sign ups
are closed at 70,000.
SeePage AS

Fiont Wheel Drive, Air Condilionng. AM!FM Stereo

'

'2:1,BiiB· 'Jllilil*
'Jl,llil*
'
.

V-8, AllomGk, Air Condillo~

Page AS
• Robert' 'Bob' Carrico
• Harold J. 'John' Evans
• Louise A. Johnson
• Kathryn Mora
• Ray Perry
• Deborah Lynn Petry
• Helen Sayre
• Nancy Shaw
• Larry R. 'Dobie' Thomas

INSIDE

.

• CIBY S0.1/2 Tl EXT.CAl 410

0BITUARIFS

WEATIIER

2lil CIYY SIIYERADO 214 T8l EnW 40
All (omtliontng'

CHESHIRE
A
Gal lipol is man so ught by
au th orities in the all eged
stabbing nf another. man near
Cheshire is now .in custod y.''
Donald Da\'i d Craigo. 30,
512 Fifth Av~ .. was arrested
by Gallia County sheriff 's
deputies and Gall·ipo li s City
Poli ce at -US p.m: Frida y
on the I 000 block of Second
Avenue after he allegedly
dudcd iwtho rities for several hour, .
Cra igo has been charged
wi-th felon iou' assau lt in
connection with the incident
that &gt;e nt Brandon Blocke.
23.
Columbus.
to
a
Huntington. W.Va .. hospital
with injuri es arising from
the alleged stabbin g.
Galli a County sherifl".s
Cl1ie f Deput y Capt. John
Perry 'aid Craigo is ex pected
to lle Jhn char~ed wt th robbery and ~ id naj1p in g in connection with the incident.
Pern ,ai d the sheriff\ ·
lan McNemarj photo
l1lf1ce rcnnveLi an t:mergency
For nearly 30 years, Ron Strauss, of Ga ll ipolis, has been collecting Pittsburgh Steelers memorabilia. Having grown up in c·all th rou~ h LJ-1- 1 at 9:32
Ambridge, Pa. , a suburb of Pittsburgh, a love fo( the Steelers, Penguins and Pirates has been ingrained into him since child-' a. m.' Frid&lt;l) frLH11 ·a femal e
hood. His Stealers gear witt decorate his living room as he and his friends root for the black and gold as they take on the Seattle rcqu ~~t in g .~ . . .., i:•it anci: 10
Seahawks in ·Super Bowl XL Sunday in Detro1t.
Che,hi re To11 n, hip.
Th e ,·;il ler. later ident ified
ct' . Mi c· lw lle Smt th. 22.
Syracuse. infurmed dcputi6
she h.td hcen in the c'O IJlpany
oft"'' rnaks who were idcnj tified a' Craigo and Blocke in
"It's going to be a great
Tickets can be purchased at a 1e hi.d c . An argu ment
BY ·IAN McNEMAR
every five minutes from noon
tMCNEMAR@MYDAILYTR tBU NE.COM . . until 7 p.m.
·
event both days." said R.W. the Galli a Count 'v Conwntinn
.
enstted bet\\ een b~tween the
The lirst 'Prize to be given Boggs. of the Children 's and Visitors Bureau .
me n. "hll \\Cre identitied as
Mega away at noon wi ll be a 2(X)5 Center of Ohio . ··'Thi s is
GALLIPOLIS Only 10.000 will be sold. her fnc nd' .
·Bash 2006 is planned for Honda Goldwi ng motorcycle. going to pull a lot of people Those purchasing tici--ets for
Crai~o. ridin~ in the vehtJune 26 and 27 at the Gallia Some other prizes include a into southern Ohio. It's going Sat urchiy must be 18'ycar'- de·, back ,c'at . allegedly
County Junior Fairgrounds ·laptop computer. 2006 R~tro to be huge .
old. Those with tickets n~eu st:tbl:&gt;cd Blockc num~ r o u ~
with proceeds of the event to Mustang. dining room set.
" I think people that wait not be present towin .
time' wi th a knife. Perry ' aid .
benefit the Children's Center Ruger Red Labe l shotgun. until Ma y will probably not
Smith told deputies that
The committee has bee n
of Ohio, loc.ated in Patriot 2006 Bayliner, two plasma be goi ng to the event."
C
re~i
£n remm·cd her from the
planning the event since
and Kill &gt; Hill .
Tickets for Friday\ event Aug ust 21 Kl5 and hopes that 1. ,· eh i ~·k and kft the sce ne
televisions. 2006 . FLSTFI
Friday will feature a well Black . Harley Davidson are $20. Tickets fo r the June ' this fundraiscr will give the with the iniurcJ man still 111
known national recording Fatboy, 32 foot Travel Trailer 27 drawing's are $100 each. center the fund, needed to 'help 1 the \'ehtck: P,·m said.
artis t that · is yet to be Camper. one karat diamond Ti cket holders ma) bring build a school fo r the chi ldren.
The' ehtde ·" ,i, later fo und
anmlllnced by the Mega .Bash tennis bracelet, Suzuki 4x4 guests for an additiona l $20.
b!
deputtes on St ingy Creek
imprOve exi:"!ling programs and
.commi ttee. ·
Roctd. a dead end road near
ATV. Remington 1187 Super however. everyone attending improve faciltties.
Saturday's
activities Magnum and over $200,000 the eve nt on June 27 must be
Che,hire .
Crai£0
had
·Please see Bash, 'A l
alle £etlh tled llll fc)o t and left
include cash and prize raffles in cash.
18-years-old .
Bl\&gt;~'ke in the "·hide.
uallia C\'Unt\ EMS tran&gt;ported th e ,·ictlm to a nearl'' Iandin£ '''ne. " here he
"·,t, ri-:~eJ u1, h1 lle :tlth \~t
.tnd fin\\ n t\l the tra.uma
BY BETH SERGENT
re$ign but if th at's what you ·Hatfield and Donna Peterson. found it diffi,·ult to del&lt;&gt;tc c0nter &lt;tt Ce~ht'II ' Huntin~l\lO
BSERGENT@MYDAtLYS ENTt NEL .COM
The bulk of the debate ,ur- the tii1K' h~ kit nc,.,.,,an tn Hn,pital
want to do ." ,
Hat,fi eld
and counc il. th e ' fai r bo&lt;~rd. · hi,
Dugan turned in his keys n\unded
. Ho ,r ltal oiliL'Iah npec1
SYRACUSE - The- belea- and other Items and left the P~ ter~n n ·_. . COIICCrn.,
·
that job and farnih .
Bhx· ~,· 1\l 'un i\C. hut Jtu nell
gue red Syr&lt;Kuse Police Force meeting.
Cunningham w~L' not \..eep ing · Cuu nL·tl th;111kcd .Bu c ~ le\
lllltl1cdi.Jtcil
ha'e the 'wtus
h~1 s been hack on the heat
Dugan's resignation lea\'(!:"! theni in the loop a' far ,t, dec i- fur hi&lt;.. -.en il'L', partiutl arl~ ii1 t~f hi, ~ l 'ndiuun. PL' IT\ ... aid.·
' ince Jan. R but at last week\ Ryan Hill as the ' onl y police- si ons made concc-rmng thc helpin g t'P "L'CUI"L' · FL'Lkra l
loallta
C"ui11' · L&lt;&gt;cal
·Syracuse Vi II age Count: il man on . the syracuse beat. p&lt;ilicc
\1 -tnaCl'lll\.'llt
departm ent. EmL'f'L!\.'11('\
S,·h·mh
Sup,;n nt~nJcnt
meet ing · Syracuse Police Dugan and Hill were brought Cu n i1in~ham stat,·d that :ts ·A.!..!L'Il ~., -nlnn.~..·,· t'&lt;~r the
Charle~ h .uh cllntirnwd that
Chief l).cvin Dugan resigned , back in January after tem p\1- mavor he w.h in d1ar~c of the L,~ndoi1 Pn,11 rqiair.
leaving on ly one officer left rary approp1iations were made pollee Jcpw1 ment Cn~ lll' JIIl1&lt; Ul · BuL·Uc\ ·.., \kpanurc ,.:rc~th&gt; Ri1er \',, Jk \ l! ie h Sch"''l
\\ "' 1~ h. ~L·d ~.f1 ''' n i\ 11 -~t period
to do the job.·
to reinstate the police J{Jrce hut Mtke Jacks &lt;tiso spo~e up. in o11l cmpl ! ·CPLHlL'll .... el.lt- lh~ll the of.t1mc ''hlic Ilk '-L'i.trL·h ''a"
Duga n stated that he was onl y on a part-t ime basis.
L'LI ITL'I\1 l'llll lll'i) ' \\ j]j h;l\l' ~()
. . uppon oft 'u n111 ngharn.
und01'\\ ..l\
resigning effecttve immediNo· dc cisio'n at last week·,
Aft~..·.r Du~an ·, rc-..i!.!rHtllon.
da\' t" ftll. Aft~r th .u JO da1'
"L'rnn· th,· .t.h tL·c "t ihe
atel y due to conllict between meeting wa·, made as 1&lt;.1 if CoutKi lm;u] Kenn" i'lucl-.k-1 cxril\' .' • the nWI'!ll' th~·n •het ill', Jq'.trtmenl. t\1,·~
himsel f and Mayor Eri c Hill will be.:ome a fu ll-ll nw t urned in h~-.. r~·..,IL!I1,1titlll. :lJ'lPl'lllh \Oilll'll!h.' tn lhL' "L\11
tll\lU:.!hl II \\ PUJd l-x· -.,afl' \~)
Ourin~ lhl' rqwlar l '&lt;'UllL'd
Cunningham .
offi cer or chief. or if anothc1' ~·t'fc\Ztiv~ im ml!diatd~ . due h1
"'L'IH.(thc . . tud ~. ·nh hP!lll.:? ;ll l ht~
·' It \ not worth the hassle part -time &lt;&gt;lli l:e'r will he council nict.'linl.!.., uinflictin1! lllCL'llll':.!. lOtHh.'il ~ ~llld lh\.' rcl!ul.1r tlllll'_-· "hl' ,:tid ·
fnr S7.50 an hour." Dugan brou ght into the \'illagL' \\ Hh hi-. 10h anLi dutic.., 1lll th~ ma\ ll! ~l . . o ~IL' ~ IHl\\ ledt:!eJ . .t nd
\ttL' r-,.._hn,,l ]'radiL'\.'' :\l
· th&lt;~it~,·d .lud ~,, h L·d \\'·. Cn!\\
o..,a id tll counc il whom he abo . pu licc 1kpartment.
~l L'ig'- c·Olllll~ J-- .11r f·h l&lt;il'd .
.
.tnd K' "''' Crcd
. thanked fo r their su pport.
\\'hen Bud.lc\ llri~Jnalh III lor h1..., L"(lorh Ill &amp;r~HH.!liH! R\'HS
Du gan\
rc~ i g n a t ion
\
Jtddk
~L'il''''l \\·e~C ,,Jtk'l'ieJ
" I di d not as k yo u to sparked some debate hetwccn n.·1oin~d ~,.·ounL·il- 1~ lilPllth·., a ~,'tlllli11Ulllt\ ... en 1\.'L' \~~,r~ ·· tllr t h~ .tlh:l'llnPn. I--' an' ..... ud .
re,i grr.'' C'unil ingham cl ari - Cunnin gham ·
and a~t,, Ill' \\ ~~.., J\.'llrcJ hm lw. . ,·rei\ l&lt;l hl'IJl rt,· ~ up l.iner
fieJ
.
"You
dun
't
ha
ve
)I&gt;
... ~lll'l' l'l' lllrnL' d In \\ ur~ and
thn;u~lll'lit the' ill . t ~e. ·
Please see Stabbing, Al
Counci
lwomen
Jcnn1
1

Mega Bash planned for June

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Syracuse police force back, sort of

'21l :;:;g· . '22 :;:;:;·
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.

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Toll Free 1~aQ0·822·0417
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•
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luit132)Turn North

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' luxes, lags, lltle Fees extra. Rebate Induded in sole price of naw vehldelisled .
whlre applie~blt. On approved uedll. On stleded modek. Not riSp0!151ble
lor ty~rupliclli mon.
.· Prices good fJbruory 2nd through February 5th.
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Details on Page A6

INDEX .
4 SE&lt;.'TIONS -

· Around Town
Celebrations·
Classifieds
Comics .
Editorials
Movi es
Obituaries
Regional
Sports
Weather

24

I'AGES

A3
C4~5

D Section
insett
A4

A3
As

A2
ll Section
A6

t 2006 Ohio \'~Ill') Puhliothing Cu.
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