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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, January 23, 2006

Late rally sparks Trimble over Southern
BY ScoTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - Leading 24-21
at the half, the Southern
Tornadoes appeared to be o n
their way to an upset ·over
Trimble. howevet. the Lady
· Tomcats blistered the nets in
the second half en route to a
57-37 Tri- Valley Conference
wm.

The game was a tale of two'
halves .. Southern did nearly
everything right the first half.
but not much went their way ·
in the second. Trimb le.
meanwhile, regained their
championship form in the
second half. sparked predominantly by 16 points from
Jennifer Grandy. ·
Grandy, still hampered
·from a pulled hamstring. was
held to just nine· points in the
first hall and left in ti)e second period with 3:20 retitaining after picking up her third
foul. When the second half
began it was Grandy sprint-

rebounds, as
did
ing out of the big
gate
full Gem·getta Brickle s. Emma
t h r o t t I e . Hunter and Chelsea Pape, the
Southern freshman guard tandem.
contained played son1e qt1ality minutes
her
effort in the first half and played
somewhat, well ' in helping Southern
but cou ld not maintain the lead.
stop it. The
Trimble took the early lead
se ni or all- in the t1rst hal f at 2-0 on a
stater led all Tabby Jenkins juniper. That
Wolfe-Riffle score rs with score 'stood f1)r nearly two
25.
minutes, then Southernis
Roundin_g out the Trimble Linda Eddy iied the score.
scori ng was Jessie Burdette Southern took a 4-2 lead on a
with , eig ht points, Tabby · Sarah Eddy steal .and lay-in,
Jen kin s with six, Andra then Grandy drilled a three
Hooper five. Hannah Faires for a 5-4 Trimble lead. The
five. and four each froin game went nip-and-tuck in
Alicia Andrews, and Allie similar fashion the first half.
Jago.
. Ashley Robi e put Southern
Southern was led by sopho- back on top with a follow-up
more post Whitney . Wolfe- jumper, then Riffle hit a
Riftle with 12 points , senior deuce' for an 8-5 SHS lead.
point guard Linda Eddy had Grandy and Burdette then hit
nine. Virginia Brickle s eight, consecutive jumpers for a 9-8
Sarah · Eddy five. Ashley Trimble tally. Whitney Riffl e
Robie two , and Kristiina hit a long three-pointer to
Willi ams
one.
Rachae l once again give Southern an
Picken s co'ntributed · several advantage at 11 -9, th en

Grandy hit a final goal to tic a Tabby Jenkins jumper
it at II - II at the hu z.zer.
inside. Southern held a lead
The second quarter was for several possess ions, but
by the once controlled game
dominated
mostly
Southern. although . Trimbl e turned Helter-skelter as both
took a 13- 11 lead on clubs raced frantically up and
Grandyis only field goal of down the court in transi tion .
the second period. Junior · Sout hern put up _the first shot
Ashley Robi e did an out: and didnft work ' the ball
standing job of defense on around the perimeter like it
Grandy with . a brief relief had done the fi rst period .
stint from Virginia Bri-ckles. Southern called a time out to
Linda Edcty drained a three regroup. but Trimble sensed
pointer for a. 14- 1J SHS lead , Southern is sense of urge ncy.
then AnJra . Hooper pu t
Trimb le pl ayed its best
Trimbl e up 16- 1-1 with a defense. and Southern cou ld
three from the wi ng. Riftle not buy a bucket after the
tied the ""'re at 16- 16. then ti me out. Southern fouled
Brickles had a big steal to put Grandy on consecutive ·trips
Southern up 18-16. Despite and th~ senior drained 4-of-4
one tie Southern led by at at the foul ' line as Trimbl e
.l east one the rest, of th e crept to a 33-28 advantage.
frame·.
Trimble went on a 4-0 stint to
Riffl e and Eddy paced the end the frame , 37-28.
second period Southern
Trimbfe went on a 4-2 run
mtack with five points apiece to open the fi nal round and
as Southern went to the lock• Southern called ttme. but
er room up 24-21 at the half. Southernis ship was a'Jready
Trimbl e scored the first sunk. Southern m'ade three
bucket of the second half on strai ght
tur novers . and

Bridal edition
inside today's Sentinel
2006

Trimble scored with an
intense rhythm en route to
the 57-37 win.
Southern hit 14-for-44
overall, I0-tir-34 two's, 4for-1 0 three's, and 5-for-16 at
the line. Southern was I0for-20 the first half and 4-for24 the second half. Souther.n
grabbed 27 rebounds (Riffle
7, Robie 6, Pickens 5), IQ
steals (S. Eddy 5), 16
turnovers. four assists, and .
had 16 fouls.
Trimble was 23-for-49
overall. hitting 10-for-32
two's, 5-17 three 's, and
notching 7-for-12 at the foul
line. Trimble had
22
rebounds (Jenkin s 6, Grandy
5, Burdette · .&lt;ll. 10 steals
(Grandy 5), seven asSISts
(Grandy 5). 12 turnovers, and
15 foul s.
There _was no re serve
ga me.
Southern goes to Ohio
Valley Christian on Monday,
then returns the road trip to ·
T~imble on Thmsday.

\

WtLLIAMS

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Br~d Shennan/pholo

Rio Grande Redmen guari:f Chris Dinwiddie , with ball, shoots a runne·r in the lane in. front pf Tiffin
Dragons· Steve Beretich and Ryan Fras1er as Redmen teammate Will Norwell (52) looks on. Tiffin defeated the Redmen 85-75 Saturday at Newt Oliver Arena. dealing a major blow to Rio 's chances of making
the AMC Tournament.

'

.

:R.edwomen lose sixth straight

RIO GRANDE -. It was a disappointing night for the University of Rio
Grande Redmen basketball · team .
Playing for their post- season liv es
agai nsqhe Tiffin Dr)lgon s, the Redmen
could not answer the charge and suffered a crushin g 85-75 defeat to the
Dragons on Sat~rday evening at the
Newt Oliver Arena.
Rio ' Grande (9- 13, 3-7 AMCS) had
its' chances and Jed for a good portion
of the game. but in the end cou ld not
seal the deal in the dropping the cr_ucial
home tilt. The loss overshadowed ~~
career night for freshman guurd Brett
Beucler.
The Sa rd-inia native pa ce d the
Redmen with a. game- hi gh and new .
career- high, of 27 points on 9-of-1 1
shootin g from the fi eld . wh ich inc lude d
an un conscious 7-ot~ 9 fro m beyond th e
three-point arc . ·
,
Tiffin ( 12-7. ·4-6 AMCS) rece ived
outstanding guard play and se ni or
Jame s Ball stepped up in the aqsence of
Hernandez Skiver, who mis sed · th e
game due to atl inj ury suffered in the
previous game against Cedarv ille. Ball
tallied 14 points ( 12 in the first half)
and hit four big three- point shots in th e
fi rst half.
Tiffin led 37-35 at th e half.
· Rio · senior
forward . . Reggie
Williamson scored 1,4 points and corral led six rebou nd s before · fo ulin g out
late in the game. Freshman center Will
Norwell helq hi s own inside. totaling
12 points and nine boards .
h1 addition to Ball 's effort, th e
Dta.gons .placed four other _players in
doubl e figure s. Ju stin Butler carved up
tbe Rio defense for 23 points·. fi ve

rebounds and three steals in 38 min,
tiles. Ryan Pesse ll tallied IS points and
five caroms, Deonte Murphy added 12
points and five boards and Lamont Elli s
&gt;cored 12 points (all in the second
hal t).
Both teams shot the ball extremely
well. Rio shot 53 .7 percent (29-of-54)
from the floor. 50 percent ( 11 -of-22)
fro m the t~1ree - poi nt ·arc and 67 percent
(6-of-9) from .the free throw line . The
R.edmen did not ge t to the lin'e in th!! .
second half.
.
Tiffin shot 57.9 percent (33-of-57)
from the fie ld. 40.7 percent ( 11 -of-27)
from three-poi nt land and 50 percent
(8-of- 16) from the free throw line.
Rio Grande ou t-rebou nded Tiffin. 3 125, btl! also turned .the ball over five
more time s ·( 16-11 ).
Rio Grande_head coach Earl Thomas
was disappointed with the loss. " It was
another one 'of. those 'situations where
we· did it to ourse lves ... Thomas said.
"We we re just abso lutely pathetic
defensi ve iY:
.
"The second half. that may be the
wors t defensive effo rt I've seen us have
all year." Thomas added. "It was every•
bod y. we didn't get any kind of ball·
pressure and they j ust got open l oo k ~
aJ.J nigh t and we diun ' t do anything to
stop it.
"We just completely broke down
defen sively.
"Then when you turn th e ball over
and m'iss fo ur wide ope n lay-ups in the ·
sec01id half, it's going to be haru to beat
anybody ... Thomas. said .
Rio will tr ave l to Mount Vernon
Nazaren'e on Tuesday night. still ali ve
for a post- season berth. but in need of a
road win. Tip-o,ff is set for 7:30 p.m..
MVI\iU knocked off Rio Grande, 7468 , December I0 m the Newt.

Meigs County Visitors Guide

BY MARK WILLIAMS '
SPECIAL TO THE SE~TINEL

RIO GRAJ\DE- The n)argi n for error is shrinking by the
game for the University of Rio
Grande women 's basketball
team in regards to their
chances of making the
American Mideast Conference
· tournament next month.
Rio Grande hosted a critical
game against Titl'in on
Saturday evening at the Newt
Oliver Arena in desperate need
of wi n that would snap a fivegame losi ng ·streak and keep
. post-season hopes alive. Rio
lost for the sixth straight time
and eighth time in the last I0
outings , 67· 52 to Tiffin.
· .
Rio Grande {8-12. 3-7
AMCS) sent a depleted roster
out on the floor to tangle with
the Lady Dragons. Both point
guards. Carlesha Chambers
and Ka'Yanna Feaster, were
out as we ll as junior center
Candace Ferguson and sophomore off-guard Britney Walker
was limited as s h~ continued to
recover from an illness. As a
resu lt of the adversity the
Redwomen-staneu slowJ y·and
trailed for the majority of the
first half.
·
Tiffin (8-11. S-5 AMCSJ)
shot we ll in the firs t half from
beyond the arc. nailing 5-of-1 0
· (50 percent) attempts from
long range and carried a 28-24
lead to the locker room .
Jaclyn Burton had the hot
hand from three-point larid for
the Lady Dragons, hitting of 4of-7 attempts in the opening
haJf en route to scoring 14
points. She drained two more
trey\ from downtown in the
orening moments of the sec-

Rio
Grande's
Brind1
Kandel. left.
looks for a
teammate to
pass to d~ r- ·
ing
'
, Saturday's
game at
Newt Oliver
Arena.

ne

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o CENTS • \ 'ol. 55, No. t;~5

FRI!l.\Y, FEBRl i.\J{Y :.q. :wo(&gt;

ww-...mydail)wntind .mm

Development Group plans streetscape design, building.standards

SPORTs ·
• Buckeyes defeat No. 12
Purdue. See Page .81

Redmen lose key AMC South game to Tiffm
BY MARK

Iraqi gove~ent orders
daytime curfew after more
than 100 ·killed over
bombing in shrine, A2

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAfLYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT
- A
$10,000 grant awarded to a
leadership · committee which
began efforts to revitalize
downtown Middleport will
likely be spent on a
streetscape and design ' plan
for the project. .
·
T~ e
Middleport
Developmen t Group met
with Susan Garrison of Floyd
Browne Group Thursday, to
di scuss the process of developing a schematic plan for
sidewalk improvements, period . li ghtin g and other
streetscape work , whi ch

could also include architectural design standards for
building
facades. - The
$10.000, which was awarded
by the· Appalachian Regional
Commission after a volunleer
group completed leadership
trainin g, could serve as a
match in the village's application for downtown revitalizati on funding .
The Development Group is
now working with Buckeye
Valley
Hells/Hocking
Regional
Development
District to prepare a May
pre-appli cation for T ier II
revitalization funds. The final
application will be ·subm.itted
in October, and a grant

award , if approved, could tl_1e plan . Propmals from
come in early 2007 .
other finm_ famil iar with.
Floyd Browne Group .. strcctscape project s will be
which serves the village sought and a firm selected in
under contract . as an engi" coming months.
neering firm for its public
Before it can be completed,
work s impruvenient projects. the Deve lopment Group and
has comple ted stree tscape village must determine the
design s for Parkersburg. , scope of· th e project . includW.Va., Charleston, W.Va .. ing what types of infrastrucand Milton. W_Va. Garrison ture are neeued and whether
said a complete design cou ld uti li ty line s will need to be
cost anywhere from $3.000 moved or buried.
to $ 12,000, and would
Once completed, ,the plan
include an assessment of the will be included in the applicommunity's history and cation for state fu nding. and
input from the .public . _
would serve as a visual
The Deve lopment Group mode l for the D ~velopm·ent
.has
qat . chosen Floyd Group 's plans. Those plans
Browne Group to complete · will be outlined to merchants

and builuinQ owner-s in the
ce ntral husine&gt;s di,trict next
week. &lt;h a merchant survey
gets underway. Th"t -.urvey
is also ;r re4uirernent for a
downtown
· revitalization ·
gra nt applicatioit.
Earlkr_ thi s t1tonth. Village
Council appointed a sixmember Arc-hHectura l De sign
Rev iew Board. whic:h will. in
turn.
work
wi th
the
Deve lupm ent
Group
to
deve_lup design standurds for
bu.i.luin gs in the distr ict. to
en,ure architectural integrity
and cnnsistenc·y. That board
and its standards are also
part of the grant applka!ion
process.
·

Prom boutique opens Saturday at Meigs High

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• John Michael Roush
• Ronald Dewey Carr
Beth 5erient/ photo

INSIDE

/i'.

• Delay possible in ports
deal, Democrats want new
probe. See Page A2
• Bush campaigns .for
Republicans in Indiana and
Ohio. See Page A3
. • · Case professor mounts
effort to oust university · "'
president. See Page A3
• Opponents challenge
petitions that put
tax-spending limit oil '06
ballot. See Page AS
• Poodle draws out
reluctant readers.
See Page AS ,
• World Christian group
starts thinking small to
tackle big changes.
See Page AS

Meigs County American Cancer Society Taskforce members
Ferman Moore and Courtney S1m speak about the upcom ing
survivors appreciation dinner on March 17. The dinner is free
to cancer survivors and patients as well as a guest and i:l
sponsored by the American Cancer Society of Southeast Ohio.
Charlene Hoeftlchf photo

Need a prom dre.ss? looking for something beautiful , but not too expensive? The place to shop
is at Meigs High School where a prom dress sale will take place from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday
in the band room. As of Thursday night over a hundred dresses, in many styles. sizes and colors had been brought in for sale. Many look like they have never been worn. The prizes ran·ge
from a .Jaw of $25 to a high of $250 for a very special beaded gown . The band room is be ing
converted into the prom boutique for the day with dressing rooms and mirrors. The puqic is invited to come by and shop. "There are plenty of bargains." said Paula Mornson, left. and Robyn
Hawk, who are co-chairing t~e sale to raise money for 2006 yea rboo k prom pictures in color.

Meigs Cancer Taskforce
discusses survivors dinner
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Recognizing cancer survivors
is a high priority for the
Meig s . County Ameri,an
Cancer Society Taskforc e and
was a main topic of discl,lssion at the taskforce's regular
monthly meeting yesterday.
Tile survi vor\ dinner will
take place at 6 p.m. on Friday.
March 17 at Midd!epon

Church of Christ Family Life
Center. Regi stration begins at
5:30p .m.
·
Nearlv 200 RSVP invitations ha\·e been sent out to
cancer· ~urvivors and cancer
patients . Those cancer survivors and patients that did
not receive an invitation are
still \velcome to attend .along
with a _guest. You may still
pre-regi,ter b~ calltng Leigh

Please see Dinner, A5

Commissioners approve
expansion of YES program
R io Gr,mde Cro~_... roo:H. h pro~ram tu in~lude i..Jil additional

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CO M

WEATHER

~~ 0.500

Sherman/photo

serviC'c~ . to young ~X11rlL' 111

(ni,!:!ina l

need of job tra-ining "i1h funding.
and half to push the lead to 3424.
Tiffin continued to increase
their lead in the second half as
the perimeter shots continued
to fal l. The Lady Dragons led
54-37 with nine · minute s
remaining.
Fre~hman forw ard Sarah
Drabinski came otl the bench
to lead Ri o Grande wi th II
points and II rebounds. Senior
~u ard Tana Richey also tossed
In II· points.
Burton poured in 25 points
on 8-of-13 shooting and 7-ofI0 from long range. Brienne
Beaschler controlled the paint
with a double-double of 14
points and 14 rebounds.
Tiffin shot 43.4 perceMt (23of-53) from the floor, but.siztied from beyond the arc, hitting 10-of- 18 {55 6 percent)
attcmph. The Lady Dragons
were 11-of-18 (61.1 percent)
fro m the 'ftee throw line.
Rio countered with 35 percent 121 -of-t\l)j shooting ,from

. I

the field. 20 percent (4-of-20)
from three-point land and 75
percent (6-of-8) from the chartty stnpe.
Tiffin also claimed the
rebounuing -battle, 40-34, and
played dead even with Rio
Gtande in the turnove r department witt) 15 each.
· Rio Grande heud coach·
· DaYid Sma lley noted the
shooting ~truggles of his team .
"We've got to put the ball in
the hole," Smalley said . "Until
we do that. I don't know that
th~ngs are going·wchange.
·. ·our focu s 1s gm ngto he to
work hard and mavbe do ;;ome
extra shooting.'' he added.
Smalley also ;aid that his
team. will stay after it to try to .
·right the sh ip. ''We 're going to
keep plugging away.'' he said .
"There is still a gli mmer of
hope that we could possibly
lind that fifth seed (in the AMC ·
Tournament). hut we ha ve to
got .st&lt;u1 to winning. if that is
going to happen "

fLH ' ... cr:vice~

through

POMEROY - Th~ Me igs th,• YES prugram. The proCount y Youth Empl oymclu ~ram i~ l'xpect~d tn !'.erve 17
Service &gt; progtam will expand ~ outh t h rou~h 1Lme v•ith its

Brad

addition·al

fundin~

TllllrsJav bv

'

appr\nl'd

Met~'

C ommi ~·:" ioricr.......

Clnlnl'

..

·

J'V kcting in rci! ul ar '~'"i{l ll.
commi~sToncr ...... am~ndcd a

'-'ontract with

2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGfS

Dave Harris or Brenda Davis
992-2155

The Dail ·sentinel

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B4-6

Racine conmuttee to discuss
park
Meigs Intermediate students 'caught doing good' festivals, n1axinuzing
.-\rc'&lt;l
Communily
'
· BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

RUTLAND- The old saying
Comics
B7 "no ~nod deed -goes unpunDear Abby
A3 ished· does not ·apply to children at Meigs Intermediate
Editorials
A4 School that were · recently
"caught doing good."
Faith • Valu es
A6-7
Principal Ru sty Bookmart
that 163 of hi s roughly 500
.said
·Obituaries
As students
were honored wi \h
small
pri1.es
and a party to celB
Section
·
Sports
ebrate "doing good" and to celWeather
ebrate rand11m acts of kindness.
Each semester children are
~

Please see YES, A5

Meigs Intermediate Students (from left) Josiah Beha and Cotten Walters were two of 163 students who were "caught doing good" · this semeste r and .rewarded with prizes and a pMty fo'r
their good deeds and good citizenship.
'
'

INDEX

DON'T MISS OUT ON fiAVING YOUR BUSINESS
OR ORGANIZATION INCLUDED

of

' t....T.., tn thn ... t~ :uuth throug h
.tn add itinnal ~9 ..:1~~ in new
funding. h: increa . . in g: v. 'o rk

Submitted photo

Details on Page AS

.

L' ni,l'r,it~

\' ~)Tik t': \p enen ce
wil l expand o, er-

:-~nd

aoo6 Ohiu Vulle)' Puhlishing Co.

.

recognized for good deeds ~ uch
as picking up trash at school or
opening. a door for \omeonc on
campus.
Students are gi vcn paper
coins throughout the ;;cmestcr
for each good dc.co and at the
end of the semester if those students do not have anv detentions or ' uspensions ihey c:an
attenu the "caught doin g good
pany.-.
.
Thi; year·., party had a ,hip
theme .with food services direc1or Maril yn Mei er creating
ships troJ~l_watennelons a:- wt'il

as other hcahh\' treat-.
Also aucn~ling the part)
were spe~..:ial f:Ul''b Fanner...,
Bank Prc,idc·• n P;ud Reed ;md
Fanner&gt; Bank \1arkctin ~
Rcprcscnlat i\ C \l arilyn Mal1tll
lO pa:-' OUt pri/L''
"Thi' "a' a chatKc to
reward kids fnr ~O&lt;XI heha\·iur:· Bonk..man · ~aid ·of the
t:\ent.
B~in g ·\·:.w~llt 1 doin g

gcx)ll..

has tl&lt;•thin ~ to do 1\ ilh ac·;Kkmic-. and i~ "-lTilth k~u'-CJ on
good Jecd . ., and 1"-· ing a gnoU
cit ilt'Tl

~

.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSE R GEN T@ ~1YDA IL YSENf l NEL. CO M

R.\CINE -- "The main
f!Oa l j, Ill he (.'fl.'ati\t..' in '~\me
iJ.;a' t11 pn&gt;motc the 'ill age
pf Ra,·inc . and StM \l ill
Park. " Racine Park ' and
RL't r(' ;1t ion
(\ lllllll i tt t~L'
Ch:rirman T&lt;'lll Reed , ,uJ &lt;II
the !lt'\·, \~ fnr mcd ~r&lt;,up .
In tact thi' IlL'\\ h · fnrm cd
~I'IH!Jl ha-, at 1h L'url' ·rncmher'

Or~anrtini&lt;' ll. Dale Han from
the. R .t&lt;.:ln~ Park B&lt;1ard.
~1inJ,

P.ntcr,on . from
Southern Eklll&lt;'ntan .PTO.
Bt'tlc·h
\litchell · fmm
Sllutllcrn H1~h Sc·hool !'FA.
Kr 1n RPmtnc: from S&lt;,u thern
B;mJ B&lt;ll"tcr,_ Alkn Crisp.
S"ul hern I """I Schools
· .\ tltktic 'D•rcdm
Tlw Rac·inc Park' and
Rc·c·rcatlon Cl&gt;ltllllltiL'C \\as
lrnm ,lap le' 11f lht.:: ~umnHHli ~ 1111! fl, rm.:d tP t:limJnatc anv
t\ ,u,·h &lt;h Alkn Ttldc·r ln11n lllh~r ~rnup"' th.il u ... e or are
th e Racine y,,uth Lca~uc .
Ka thn n Hart frtlill Ra:·inc· · . Plene see P•rtl. A5

•

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.. The Daily Sentinel

PageA2 ·

NATION • WORLD

Friday, February 24, 2006 ·

Community Calendar

IRAQI GO
MORE THAN

ENT ORDERS DAYTIME CURFEWS AFTER
100 KillED OVER BOMBING OF SHRINE

bombing "an evil act" aimed
at c~ating strife.
A Western official, speakBAGHDAD,
Iraq
ing on condition of anonymiGunmen killed dozens of
ty because of the sensitivity
civilians
Thursday
and
of the subject, said discusdumpe\1 their bodies in a
sions were under way to
rebuild the shrine as quickly.
d1tch , as the government
ordered a tough daytime curas possible because the shatfew of Baghdad and three
tered structure would serve as
a "lasting provocation" until
provinces to stem the sectariit was reconstructed. Italy
. an violence that has left at
announced Thursday it was
least 114 dead since .the
offering to· rebuild the dome
bombing of a Shiite shrine.
Seven U.S. soldiers died in
to help battle "fanaticism."
. a pair of roadside bombings
Despite strident comments
north of the capi tal. and
from various Iraqi leaders,
·American military units in the
U .S. officials said -thc!y
Baghdad area were told to
believed mainstream politi,cians under~tood the grave ·
halt all but essential iravel to
avoid geuing caught up in .
danger facing t)te country and
demonstrations or roadblocks.
would try to prevent civil war.
"We' re not seeing civil war
As the country careened to
igniting in Iraq," · Maj. Gen.
the brink of civil war, Iraqi
state television announced an
Rick Lynch, a spokesman for
the U.S. command, told
unusual daytime curfew,
ordering r)eople off the streets
reporters.
Nevertheless, sectarian· pas-.
Friday in Baghdad and the
nearby flashpoint provinces
sions were running high.
of
Diyala.
Babil
and .
A Shiite cleric was shot
Salaheddin. where the shrine
dead Thursday night in Tuz
Khormato, a mostly Kurdish
bombing took place.
·
city 130 miles north of
Such .a sweeping daytime
Baghdad, and anoiher Sunni
curfew indicated the depth of
fear within the government
preacher was killed the mostthat the crisis could touch off
ly Shiite city of Hillah 60
a Sunni-Shiite civil war. "This
miles south of the capitaL
Two Sunni mosques were
is the first time that I liave
burned Thursday in Baghdad
heard politicians say they are
worried about the outbreak of
and another in Mussayib to
the south, police said. A Sunni
civil war," Kurdish e lder
AP ·Photo
was killed wpen gunmen fired
·statesman Mahmoud Othman
Followers of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada ai,Sadr wave swords, on a mosque in Baqouba, 35
told The Associated Press.
The biggest Sunni Anib copies of the Quran and guns as they rally in Sadr City district miles northeast of Baghdad.
bloc in parliament announced in' Baghdad. Shiite protesters attacked scores of Sunni
Dozens of bodies were
it was pulling out of talks on mosques across Iraq on Wednesday in retaliation for the found Thursday dumped at
a new government until th~ bombing of one of Shiite Is lam's holiest shrires, police, wit- . sites in Baghdad and the
national leadership apologizes nesses and pofitical groups said . · ·
Shiite heartland in southern
Iraq; many of them with their
for damage to Sunni mosques
sian station Al-Arabiya.
incidetits appeared to decline hands bound and shot execufrom reprisal attacks. ·
Gunmen in a pick;up truck after the government extend- . tion-style.
They
were
"It is illogical to negotiate
· believed to have been killed
with parties that are trying to shouting "We want the corre- ed the curfew.
Iraqi television said the cur- Wednesday night. ,
damage the political process," spondent!" killed Bajhat
Although the violc;1_1ce
said Tariq al-Hashimi. a along with her cameraman few would ext~nd until 4 p.m.
leader of the Iraqi Accordance and engineer while they were Friday, preventing people appeared to be wanmg
interviewi ng Iraqis about from anending the week's Thursday, the brutality did
Front. .
import~nt
Muslim not.
Most of the bloodshed has Wednesday's destruction , of most
The bodies of the 47. civilbeen concentrated iii the capi- the famed golden dome of the prayer service. Officials
tal, its surrounding provinces Shiite shrine Askariya in her feared mosques could be both ians, rnostly men between
a target for anacks and a ages 20 and 50, were found
and the ·province of Basra, hometown of Samarra.
Shiite and Sunni leaders venue for stirring sectarian early Thursday in a ditch near
340 miles to the southeast. .
Among the victims was · again appealed for calm feelings.
·
·
Baqouba. Police said the vicPresident Bush said he tims both Sunnis and
Atwar B'ahjat, a widely Thursday following the wave
known Sunni correspondent of attacks on Sunni mosques. -appreciated the appeals for . Shiites had apparently
for the Arab satellite televi- and the number of violent calm, and called the shrine been stopped by gunrnen,

BY ROBERT H. REID

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.'

..

hauled from their cars and spokesman for the Sunni
association, blamed the vioshot.
. Fighting · erupted
in lence on . the country's top
Mahmoudiya, 20 miles south Shiite cleric; Grand Ayatollah
of Baghdad, between Sunni Ali al-Sistani, and other Shiite
gunmen and militiamen loyal religious leaders who called
to radical Shiite cleric for demonstrations against the
Muqtada al-Sadr who· were shrine attack. ·
Al-Sadr, the Shiite radical,
guarding a mosque. Two
civilians were killed and five . told Al-Jazeera television
militiamen were wounded, from Iran that Sunnis should
police Capt. Rashid al- join Shiites in pledging not to
kill fellow Muslims to dis- ·
Samaraie said.
Workers at two U.S.-funded tance themselves from "takwater treatment projects in -firis" - Sunni extremists
Baghdad were told to stay who target Shiites.
Al-Kubaisi
said
U.S .
home- Thursday to avoid trouAmbassador
Zalmay
ble. American officials also
ordered a lockdown in some Khalilzad enflallled the situalocations within the Green · tion when he warned at a ·
Zone, home of U.S. and Iraqi press conference Monday that
government offices, after two the U Iiited States would not
or three mortar shells explod- · continue t!) support institutions run by sectarian groups
ed, causing no casualties.
The bullet-riddled bodies of with links to armed militias.
the Al-Arabiya correspondent Shiites control the Interior
and her two colleagues from Ministry, which Sunnis claim
the Wassan media company operates death squads target·were found Thursday a few ing them.
· .
miles outside Samarra. All
Shiite pait,y leader Abdulthi'ee ·were Sunni Arabs. It Aziz al-Hakim said Khalilz!ld
was unclear why they were bore some responsibility for :
targeted, althOugh the station the Samarra attack because of
· has a reputation as critical of this warning, and al-Kubaisi
said "without doubt," the ·
the insurgency.
Eight Iraqi soldiers and ambassador's
comments
eight civilians were killed "mobilized all the Shiites"
Thursday when a bomb hid- and "made them ready to go
den in a soup vendor's cart down to the street at any
detonated in Baqouba, police moment.',
said. At least 20 people were
The United States considers
wounded in the blast. In Sunni participation in a new
Julula, 75 miles northeast of government vital to calming
Baghdad; a parked car the Sunni-led insurgency so ·
·exploded and . killed tl)ree that the 138,000 U.S. troops
civilians and injured three can . begin to go home this
year. ·
others, police said.
Following the sectarian
Sunni leaders also boy- .
attacks, Shiite and Sunni lead- cotted a reconciliation meet- ·
ers blamed each other for the ing with Shiites and Kurds ·
violence, with each side por- called by President ,Jalal
traying itself as the victim.
Talabani, a Kurd.
After the meeting, Talabani
The
Sunni
clerical
of
Musl!m told rep()rters that the particiAssociation
Scholars said at least 168 pants agreed the best way to
Sunni · mosques had been 'respond to 'Wednesday 's
attacked, 10 imams killed and anack was to form a unity
'ts abducted since the shrine government ·"whose top job
attack. The Interior Ministry · should be gelling the security
said it could only donflrm fig- si.tuation under control and
ures for Baghdad. where it fighting terrorism."
had reports of 19 mosques
" If the fire of internal strife
attacked, one cleric killed and breaks out. God forbid," .
Talabani said, "it will harm
one abducted.
Abdul-Salam al-Kubaisi, a everyone.,,

Delay possible in ports deal, Democrats want.new probe
BY LIZ SIDOTI

have the time to get fully hijackers from Sept. ll. 200 l .
briefed on this."
Bush had pledged earlier to
.
veto
such a measure .
· Lobbyist&gt; for Dubai Pons
. WASHINGTON - · Bush World indicated that while
Officials
from
the
. administration
officials the company is eager to close Homeland Security, Treasury,
opened the door Thursday to the deal. it IS wi lling to agree Defense and State-.. cleparta delay in allowing a state- to a delay to satisfy demands ments
appeared
before
owned United Arab Emirates by members of · Congress, C hai rman John Warner. Rcompany to assume signifi- according to a person familiar Va .. ' and four Democratic
cart operations at six u.s. with the conver~ations.
members of the Senate
ports as lawmakers pushed · Nonetheless,
Senate Armed Services Committee
' for a new 45-day investiga- Democratic leader Harry . for a brieling arranged while
tion of the deal.
Reid of Nevada sought quick Congress was officially away
The company, Dubai Ports action on legislation relating from Washington.
World, signaled to Congress to the deal when &lt;:;ongre~s
The officials tried to assure
that it, too, would be willing returns to Washington next the panel that the deal has
to agree to a delay while law- week.
been subject to a careful;
makers review the business · In a letter to · Majority three-month review and that
deal that :S supposed to be Leader Bill Frist. R-Tenn .. all security questions were
completed in early March.
Reid said the admini stration's satisfied. They sa id no one
"People don't need to handling of the deal ·'could raised an issue that would
security," not be more Hawed." Reid have prompted the need for a
worry
about
President Bush said shortly said he was alarmed at the further, 45-day investigation.
before administration officials failure of the admini stration
" We ' re not aware of a si nwho approved the transaction to "exercise the full statutory gle national securi ty concern
told a Senate committee their authorily to conduct a com- raised recently that was · not
90-day review did not turn up plete investigaiiurt into th e part of' the three-month
a single national ·security con- ··potential national sec urity review, Deputy. Treasury
. cern to justify blocking it.
Implications of this deaL"
Secretary Robert Kimmitt
Elsewhere, New Jersey
Also Thursday, administra- told the lawmakers.
sued in federa-l court to block - tion officials ,said that weeks
Democratic
committee
the UAE company from tak- before · Dubai Port s World members accused .officials of
ing over operations at the sought U.S. approval for the failing to take into account
Port Newark container termi - , de al, the UAE contributed issues raised abou! the Arab
nal until the federal govern- $ 100 million to help victims country in the Sept II comment investigates possible of Hurricane Katrina.
, mission's report.
·
sec urity risks. The owner of
Seo.
Carl
Levin
The admini stratio n said
of
the busy shipping center, the there was no co nn cct io~,. Michigan ~ the top Democrat
Port Authority of New York between the request for U.S. on the committee. derided the
and New Jersey, said it also approval of the ports deal and adminislralion's
"casual
has sec urity concerns about the UAE's contributio-n.
approach" in approving a deal
the takeover and plans to file
The Whi te House, which so i nvo tvi ng a country "with an
a lawsuit Friday to terminate far has gotten a total of S 126- uneven record of battling terthe firm 's lease at the port.
·
million in international dona- rorism."
As the political furor over ti ons, said the UAE 's cont riLevin at one p(Jint noted
the port deal persisted, Karl bution ' ho ws the close rela- that a spec ial commission thllt
[\I)Ne. the president's chief . tionship between the two investigated the Sqit. ll
political adviser. said ~u s h governments.
attack s found "a persistent
was willing to accept a slight
The deal allowing Dubai . co u1llerte rrori sm
problem
delay in Dubai Ports World 's Port s World to l&lt;ike. over sig- repre ~ e111ed by the United
purchase Of terminal leases nificant operations al port; Arah Em1rates."
and other operations at six from New York to Miami ha.s
··Ju st raise vou r hand if
U..S . ports from a British created an· e mbarra" in g anybody (al the· witness tahle)
standoff he1ween lhc pre,i - lalked tn the 9- ll 'commi,;company.
"There's no requirement dent . and a Co nt! re:...' con - siu n." com m&lt;~nded Levin .
that it · close. you know,. trol led by hi s own party.
There WliS no respon.se from
immediately after'' a B(itish
Rai.1ing conce rn s ahout lhc adm inistralion \ represengovernment - re view or the na tio na.l . . ecu rit y in ctn era &lt;~f tat ive... . ·
$6.8 billion purchase i; com- terro ri sm. Rcpu:hli can.s and
While HoL" e Homeland
pleted next week. R6ve ;aid Dcrmicrats al) ke an: crafling Securi t) adv ise r France;
on Fox Radio\ ·'Tony Snow legislation hlocking or dcla y- Fra g o" Tnwi1\ Cild ... aid th e
Show." " What is important i' mg the deal "i lh · &lt;Ill Ar,ah L' AE ' s cooper:tlion in the
thai memhe r.1 o f Congrc" country tied lo " 'me of th e fight ~tg a 1 n"t tcrrori . . m ha\
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

changed since Sept. II.
. ignoring a law that requires a
"They have been critical longer review - an additionallies in Afgh;mistan," she al 45 days - if a proposed
told reporters at a news con- business deal could affect
ference on a separate matter. national security.
Kimmitt responded: ''We
"They have been critical
allies in fighting the financial didn't ignore the law.
war against terror. They've Concerns were raised. They
been critical allies in terms of were resolved." ,
our military-to-military relaWarner said he would ask
tion ship."
Attorney General Albeno
Levin and Sen. Hillary Gonzales to prepare a memoRodham Clinton, D-N: Y., randum on the administraaccused the administration of tion's .interpretation of the

law to see if it deviates · from ·
Congress' intent.
While Warner emphasized ·
the U AE 's cooperation in
fighting terrorism, he questioned Kimmitt sharply on
whether the reviewing agencies considered the Arab
country's role in •the transfer ·
of money to al-Qaida and of
nuclear . components to suspect nations.
_
Kimmitt said those factors
were taken into account.

I: tl£ Ill~ IU:JHi a1ll l'j i·l: tl£ Ill,: IQ:tnt ~~l Ii'i i·l Itn: Ill,: IQ:Ul1 ijJ I,,, i·l: tm 111.:1~ :tnt ~,ll f:l i ·

. 2006 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION
will be here Friday, March 24, 2006
Supplement to:
Point Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Daily Sentinel

DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ....
• Hardware
• Paint

• Construction
• Banks

• Furniture

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RACINE- Racine United Harry Wingler, 7 p.m.,
Methodist Church will host a Abundant Grace ·Ministries,
free pancake supper, 4 to 7 923 South Third Avenue .
friday, Feb. 24
p.m. in cele\)ration of Fat.
DEAR ABBY: l was visitMIDDLEPORT
Sunday,
Feb.
26
Tuesday.
ing my friend, "Carla ," last
V~ance Committee, 6 p.m.,
RACINE
RACO
6:30
LANGSVILLE
The
week and arrive d a little
Middleport Village Council
Gracemen
sing
p.in
.
at
Star
Mill
Park
.
at
10:30
a.m
.
early
on our way to go shop"
. Chambers.
Potluck . Members to take at the Langville Chri stian ping. While I was waiting
stuffed animals. New mem- Church. A buffet dinner will for her 10 dress, I noticed
Monday,Feb.27
Dear
follow the moring w-orship so me photograph s on her
PORTLAND Lebonan bers welcome.
service. Public welcome .
Abby
kitchen co unter. I browsed
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. at
POMEROY
Frontline
thr6ugh the'm and was
the township building.
Quartet
from
St.
Albans,
shocked
to see they were
POMEROY
-Meigs
W.Va.,
10:30
a.m
.,
Laurel
pi
cture
s
of
Carla and her
County Vetenins Service
Saturday, Feb. 25
Cliff
Free
Methodi
st
Church.
hu
sband
,·
"Cesare,"
naked,
Commission , 9 a.m., 117
RUTLAND Rutland
MIDDLEPORT .
Memorial Drive.
in various position s. and your mind, becau se from my
ball signups, l 0 a.m to 2 p.m.
evangelist
Nationally-known
POMEROY Regular at
.stage s.
perspective , it see ms you
the
Rutland
Fire
meeting of Meigs County Department. Also Feb . 28 Harry Wingler, 10 a.m. and 7
Cesare has always flirted have too much time on your·
p.m.,
Abundant
Grace with me . He has e.ven sug- h an d s.
Library Board, 3 p.m . at the from 6 to 9 p.m.
Ministries, 923 South Third gested on a couple of occaDEAR ABBY: When 1
Pomeroy Library.
Avenue.
sions that he'd like to take was 7 or 8, 1 was molested
Sunday, Feb. 26
me out. Of course, l deflect- by a friend of the family Wednesday, March 1
RACINE Youth of
Monday, Feb. 27
PAGEVILLE Scipio Racine United Methodist
ed hi s advimces.
but my real problem is my
RACINE - Racine United
Township Trustees wi II meel . Church will be leading the
But now. after seeing mother. After the incident. I
6:30 p.m. at the Pageville Sunday services. The bell Methodist Church UMW will these pictures, l am torn . . had nightmares and wanted
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Cesare
town hall. ·
is
extremely my mother to sleep with me.
chooir and praise band will
church. Ladies to take items · "manly." My hu sband is a One morning I woke up and
·
perform .
for gift baskets for shutins.
kind and gentle person , but felt her touching me where I
POMEROY - St. Paul he ha s nothin g close to what shouldn ' t be touched. l did Lutheran Church, Pomeroy, .-e sare has .to offer. Now, n' t know what to do, so I
will begin Lent wi th Shrove whenever I see Carla 's hu s- moved away from her. ·It
Friday,
Feb.
24
Tuesday
pancake supper band, l flash back to those · happened three more · time s,
Saturday, Feb. 25
MIDDLEPORT
beginning at 5 p.m. Public pictures and can't help fah- until I finallv· asked her to
HARRISONVILLE
Nationally-known
evangalist
invited.
ta sizjng about what it would · stop sleeping" with me.
Annual
inspection ' of
Harry
Wingler,
7
p.m.
,
RACINE
·
Pancake
supbe like to be with him. Thi s
I am now .14, and about .to
HarrisonviJle Lodge 411 ,
Abundant
Grace
Ministries,
per
with
serving
from
4
to
7
·
has begun to 'a ffect my sex · become an au nt. I'm afraid
F&amp;AM. Dinner 6:30 p.m .
923
South
Third
Avenue.
p.m.
at
the
Racine
United
life
with my hu sband . ·I of what my mother might do
followed by inspection in the
Methodist
Church,
sponsored
know
il' s wmng, but l can't to the baby. I' m afraid to
Master Mason Degree . Take
Sat1,1rday,
F.
e
b.
25
by
the
Racine
Un
ited
help it.
say anything becau se I don't
.non-perishable food item for
PORTER Services 6 Methodist Men. Activity
Should l tell Carla I saw think anyone will believe
the Grand 'Master's Food
p.m. at Clark Chapel FWB kicks off church's !75th year. the pictures? Should I tell me . (After the incidents I
Drive.
Church,
Mike
Harmon
her that Cesar~ has bee.n became di stant to Mother
coming
on to me? Help 1 and we don ' t get along.) ·
Monday, Feb. 27
preaching, singers welcome.
Wednesday, March I
TEMPTED IN CAROLINA
What sho uld I do about
RACINE - The Racine . · BIDWELL - Special serMIDDLEPORT
DEAR TEMPTED: l see this. and what would make
UMW will meet at 7:30 p.m. vi_ces 6:30p.m. at the Popilar Middlepo.n First Presbyterian
Those attending are reminded R1dge FWB Church, off 554. Church,
5
p.m.
Ash nothing to be gained by her do such a thing to her
to take items for gift baskets. Tag-team style preachmg to Wednesday service. Public telling your friend you saw own daughter, knowing ·I
POMEROY - OHKAN include Bill Banks, Kenneth inviteQ. Pastor James Snyder. the picture s, nor du I think it wa s already trying to get
would help the situ ation to over having been mole sted?
Coin Club, 7 p.m . at the Bledsoe, T. .· R. Preston, · WilKESVILLE
SCARED IN SAN
Pomeroy Library. Auction to Echmel
Smith ,
Denni s · Wilkesville
First te ll her that her husband has
be held; prizes to be awarded. Weaver. Special singing.
Presbyterian Church, 7 p.m. been coming on to you. The DIEGO
· fanta sy in which you are
DEAR SCARED: Your
RACINE .
Southern
MIDDLEPORT
Ash Wednesday service.
indulging
is
a
common
one,
mother
is sick. Your conBand Boosters regular meet- Forgiven Fpur will be singing . PIOMEROY - St. Paul
ing 7 p.m. in high school at the Middleport Church 'of Lutheran
Church
Ash but lei 's get real here - not cerns about the baby are jusband room. Band parents and the Nazarene 7 p.m. Public Wednesday worship services. . all daydream s make for a tified, and- you have kept
supporters i'nv ited.
invited. Refres.hments.
7 p.m. Imposition of ashes pleasant reality. My advice this secret too long . Please
MIDDLEPORT
wil be vailable for those who is to snap out of it and find tell the parents- to-be so they
something else to oc~uj:ly. can protect their little one
Thesday,Feb.2!l
Nationally-known evangelist want them. Public invited.

Youth events

Clubs ·and
organizations

BY JENNIFER LOVEN
ASSOCIATW PRESS WRITER

MISHAWAKA, Ind. President Bush tried to give a
lift to two loyal Republicans
fights
in
. re -election
Thursday, and .the White
House said GOP candidates
elsewhere were clamoring
for hi s help despite his low
poll ratings. ,
· On a day when Bush faced
open rebellion from leading
Republicans
well as
Democrats for his admini stration's approval of a United
Arab Emirates company's
takeover of signitlcant U.S.
port operations, the presidentflew here to rai se over
$600,000 for Rep. Chris
Chocola, R-Ind. While not i.n
serious jeopardy for re-election in this fall 's congres~io n a l elections. Chocola is
consio;lered by ana lysts to be
more vulnerable than two
years ago.
Later, Bush went to
Cincinnati to help scoop up
more Republictm campaign
cash, an expected $1 million
or more on behalf of Sen.
Mike DeWine. R-Ohio. who
is in a toss-up re-election
race with Democratic Rep .
Sherrod Brown.
The trip was planned well
before the ports deal controversy erupted . But it provid-

as

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• Plumbing

• And More...

(740) ·446-2342
(740) 992~2155
(304)
.
675-1333
,.,.,.,......,
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2006

Church events

from yo ur mother. Becau'e
you are afraid you may nnt
be bel ieved. start out thi ~
way : "You may have woqdered why I don't get ~l"n g
with Mother. Thi' i&gt; the reason and I· m worr ied
abou t the safel y of your ·
baby."
!'
.
Your . mother ma y have ,
bee n ·molesled her1elf, m
s he ma y simpl y have :
.touched you out o f some .
warped sense of power. She .
should never be alone ·with :
any child who i' too sma ll ·
to fight her off. Please discuss thi s with a tru steu
tea c her or counsel o r a t ,
sc hool , so you can receive .·
professio nal
counse lin g .:
regarding yo ur niulliple ·
mole station s. You have my ,
sy mpathy.
DEAR ABBY: My husband of 10 years recently·
left me for an01her woman.
My mothe r- in-law e.n1ailed .
me tod ay te ll ing me to
return all of the gift s .g iven ·
to us for anni ver sarie s and ·
Christmas fnr th e past I 0 ..
years. l am hurt beyond·
words.
What would be the best
way 10 re spond to her e- ·
mails? STEWI'-IG IN .
SEATTLE
DEAR STEWING : There ·
are time s when silence
speaks
volume s.
The ·
stronge st message
you
could send thi s woman ·
would be to ·i gnore her nul- :
rageous e-mait.
Dear Abby is written b_y .

Abigail Van Burw, also '
known a~ Jea1111e Phillip.1, :,
and was founded by lrer ,
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby at :
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, .
CA 90069.

BUSH CAMPAIGNS FOR REPUBLICANS IN.INDIANA AND

CLEVELAND (AP ) ·A noted Case Weste.rn
Reserve University profe ssor, emboldened by the ·
' re s ign~tion
of Harvard
Univer sity' s
president.
h a s beg un a campaign to
oust lhe Case preside nt.
Lawrence Krau ss, an
award-winning phy s icist
and a u.t h o r. se nt a11 e- ·
mail to arts and sciences
faculty
' memb e rs
on
VVednesda y to gauge support for· takin g a ,non binding
no- co nfiden ce
vote
against
Edw.a rci
Hundert .
Only universit y• tru stees
c an te rminal e Hunde rt' s ·
c ontract. The art s and
s cience fac ulty re prese nts
about 9 percent of the
full -tim e fa cult v.
Kr au ss said. he and
o ther fac ult y members
were wo rri ed about· iss!JCS
in cl udin g Case·, · hud get

eaa

•

Public meetings

Friday, February 24,

Racy pictures fuel fantasies
about friend's hunky husband

Omo

ed some timely pictures of warrants - of inlernational
Bush surrounded by adoring comm unication s with sussbpporters. · , .
pected terrorists and give
Chocola, who !lew with lawmakers more oversight
Bush on Air Force One from through small . special comWashington to Indiana, was mittees. The White House
clearly glad to collect a pic- likes DeWine's approach.
ture coveted by many candi- . which has little support on
dates - a photo of him paus- Capitol Hill , because it
ing at the top of the maje'stic would not bring the program
. plane's jetway alongside the under the authority ot a
president. Later, at the lunch court , as some want.
Ttie president see1i1ed
. attended by about 600 people
at Bethel College Indiana, an happy io be on the road. He
evangelical Christian school, chatted longer than usual
lhe president was repeatedly with the locals who greeted
him at his plane - including
applauded .
The .affection was mutual.
Notre Dame football coach
"He is an honest. decent, Charlie Wei s. He even
down-to-earth , practical man appea'red to consider. minwho deserves to be re-elected gling with several hundred
to · the
United
States protesters who gathered out- ·
Congress." the president said side the college en trance.
of Chocola. "Chris is a ri sing Bush waved and stepped
toward the demonstrators star."
· The stop for DeWine was who held signs such as
Bush"
and
attended by about 15D peo- "Impeach
ple. a private affair held at "Quagmire Accompli shed"
..
.
~the suburban Cincinnati - but .reconsidered.
President Bush '$. motorcad e . passes protesters in suburban CinciQattl on h1s way to a pnvate
home 'of Mark Hauser. chief
Meanwhile,
the
fund raise r for Sen. Mike DeWine. R-Ohio. Thursday.
executive of rhe Hauser Democrats' campaign arm
.
Group. an insurance compa- for Senate candidates seized
ny. DeWine has helped Bush on the fact t.hat DeWine was Committee hearin g while for the Democratic Senat11rial requests for the president 10
partit'ipate in c·andidale'
in the difficult debate over an' absent when · Bush came to other top Republi can s in the Campaign Committee.
eaYesdropping program he · ·Ohio last week as proof of state appeared with Bush .
The 'White Hou se said events." spoke , woman . Dana
"These.ca ndidates are stay- Bush's popularity with . his Perino said. " In f&lt;ict. 'upp\1 ·
authorized after the Sept. II. Bush 's saggi ng popularity.
2001. terrori st attacks.
For the president's Feb. 15 ' mg away from Bush in pub- own party has not waned .
is not 'k eepin g up with
DeWine has pr&lt;;Jposed leg- stop in Dublin, Ohio. to pro- lic because the president's
"We · are .ge tting daily dem and."
islation lhat would specifi- mote hi s health care agenda. policie s are not a very strong
cally authorize the domestic DeWine elected to remain in platform to run on in 2006."
WEST VIRGINIA JOBS FOUNDATION
surve.illance - without court Washington for ~ - Judiciary said Phil Singer, spokesman
"

Case professor mountseffort to oust university president

iances
• Appl_
~lectrical

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

'

BINGO!

•

·i-

••

~

•

~

deficit ,
administratio n port and plan s to a sk the for 2005-06 to deal with
turnover nnd fundraising.
dean of arts. and sc ience s a projected rev enu e short - ·
Krau ss said he was to schedule a meeting .
fa ll. Univers it y officials
emboldened
by
the
The college has 22 1 bla1i1ed th e shortfa ll on a·
Tu es day re sig nalion of full -time facull y mem - decrease in fede ral fundHar vard .
President bers. Th ere · are 2,523 in e and donal.ions .
Lawrence Summers when full-time fa culty at th e
U ni vt·r sit } .
don ation s
he was confronted wi th · a university.
which
ha' dropped from $79 milli o n
n-o -co nfiden ce vote b y nearl y l 0.000 s tud ent' in 2003 to $68 .8 million
representin g 9.~ co untr ies.
in ~004 and reh nunded in
faculty.
" I ullim atelv have to do
Some faculty memher' 2005 tn Si 'i .6 million.
what · is rig.ht'.'' Krau ss fea r the uni versi ty faces a accord in g to 1he Cou ncil
said . '·J hav e been dri ve n $ 100 milli o n defi cit and 'for Aiu to Ed uca t io n ,
to do thi s."
may ha\·e to c ut about ·
Hund ert hecarne Case's
John Hacht e l. a&gt;sociate $40 million from .i ts pre"uent 111 2002 . He
vice presi de nt oi' mark et- . operating budget for next previnu&gt;ly 'L'rYed as . P'Y·
in g . and co mmuni cat ion s yea r.
.
l'hiatry
profe&gt;sor
and
at Ca ,e. sa iu Hund e rt
Hachtel sa icj the SIOO medical -dental de;n1 a t
.
was aware of the pciss ible . million
num be r
was the
Llnivcrs itv ·
of
(If not hit... Mondoy·s jacl&lt;pot will be S.J. SOO)
vote : " The pre sident . ha s · iniTated but co uld not Ro chester ;u1d l;iughl a1
ev.e ry confidence in Ihe pro1 ide the act ual figure . H arvard mcuil'al 'd10ol.
fanllt y," Hachtel said.
A me ssage see kin g addi KraLl' s' boob include
Krau ss need ., lo perce nt tiona! co mm e nt wa' left · "Th e Ph1 sic ' o,l Star
Doors Open 4:00 PM . Early Birds 5:30 PM
of th e arts and sc ien ce' with
the
. universily ·· Trel- ", in ·11hich he L"cs
Regular Session 6:30 PM
faculty lO sig n a petition au min istrat ion Thur,dav.
the l''' Plllar ICle\ IS!l&gt;n &gt;c·i124 HIGHLAND AVE .
PT PLEASANT, WV
bcfure th ey can hav e a
Ahout $ 17 milli on i1·a, cncc f1c11on 'cri ..;, 10
10id Carohna Lumber Bu•Jd•ng Across from CSX 1
niee ting to vote . He say' trimmed fro m the . un iH·r - C\pla1n
,,.,ii:cpts'
111
(304) 675-3877
he already h&gt;ls that sup - ,siL5 ·, operat1ng budge t piH st c \
~====~~mmmm~===~~=~

~ow Playing

Every
Friday &amp; Monday
Frida ,Februa

24th

Progressive· Coverall

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
• free exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom
. of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
· people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievance,J.
- The First Amendment to the

PageA4

u,s.

Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Feb. 24, the 55th day of 2006. T)1ere are
3 10 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in .History:
On Feb. 24. 1868, the House of Representatives impeached
President Andrew Johnson following his attempted dismissal
of Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton; Johnson was later
acquitted by the Senate.
On this date:
In 1821, Mexico declared its independence from Spain.
In 1863, Arizona was organized as a territory.
In 1903, the United States signed an agreement acquiring a
naval station at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.
ln. 192'0, a fledgling German political party held its first
meeting of importance in Munich; it became ·known as the
Nazi Party, and its chief spokesman was Adolf Hitler.
In 1942, the Voice of America went bn the air for the first
time.
·
in· 1945, American soldiers liberated the Philippine capital ·
of Manila from Japanese control durin~ World War II .
In 1955, the Cole Potter musical "S!Ik Stockings'' opened
at the Imperial Theater on Broadway..
In 1980, the U.S. hockey team defeated Finland, 4-2, to
clinch the gold medal at the Winter Olympic Games in Lake
· 'Placid, N.Y.
In 1981 , a jury in White ·Plains, N.Y., found Jean Harri s
guilty of second-degree. murder in the fatal shooting of
"Scarsdale Diet" author Dr. Herman Tarnower.
Ten years ago: Steve forbes won the Delaware presidential
. primary. Cuba downed two small American planes that it
claimed were violating Cuban airspace.
Five years .ago: In an ailli.cable first meeting held in
Jerusalem, Secretary of State Colin Powell and Russian
Foreign .Minister . Igor Ivanov pledged a constructive _.
approach to dealing with lraq, missile defenses . and other
points of policy discord. Fugitive financier Marc Rich , whose
1I th-hour pardon by former President Clinton caused a wave
of controversy, spoke &lt;?Ut fQr !'Je first till}e.• describing the
pardon as a "humamtanan act.' · Mathematician and computer scientist Claude Shannon, whose theories about binary
.code became the basis for modem mass communications networks, di~d in Medford, Mass., at age 84.
· One year ago: Pope John Paul II underwent an operation to
insert a tube in his throat to relieve his breathing problems,
hours after he was rushed back to the hospital-for the second
tir:ne in a month with flu-like symptoms.
Today's Birth\iays: Actor Abe Vigoda is 8;5. Actor Steven
Hill is 84. Actor-singer Dominic Chianese is 75. Movie composer Michel Legrand is 74. Actor James Farentino is 68 ,
Actor Barry Bostwick is 61. Actor Edward James Olmos is
59. Singer-writer-producer Rupert Holmes is 59. Actress
Debra Jo Rupp i~ 55. Actress Helen Shaver is 55. News
anchor Paula Zahn is 50. Country singer Sammy Kershaw is
48. Singer Michelle Shocked is 44. Movie director Todd F:ield
is 42. Actor Billy Zane is 40. Actress Bonnie Somerville is
32. Rhythm-and-blues singer Brandon Brown (Mista) is 23.
Thou~ht for Today: "It is the individual wh? is no~ interested· m ·h1s fellow men who has the greatest dtfficullles m hfe
and provides the greatest injury to others. It is from among
s11ch individuals ti;lat all human failures spring." - Alfred
Adler, Austrian psychoanalyst (1870-1937).
· .
'.

Friday, February 24,

2006

Choose your life philosophy
Do you have a philosophy
of life - some words or a
belief you live by? You don't
need a philosophy ' of life,
but il helps. Here are four,
you can 1ry.
George
· IZZY NEWBORN'S PHIPlagenz
LOSOPHY: Most people
thought Izzy was a horse
handicapper, not a philosopher. He did indeed pick the
horses for the sports pages, phy is, "Expect the worst."
but his attitude toward bet· She says it shields her from
ting stamped him as a disappointment For examphilosopher. When we were ple, she tell s herself every
colleagues in. the sports ·Saturday night : "Nobody
department of the Cleveland will call me for a date." If
Press, I noticed that · Izzy nobody does, she is not
never seemed dejected when upset. Many people have
a horse he had bet on lost a Nancy's philosophy. They
race. I asked him what sys- . set their hopes and goals so
ietn he used to beat the horse low they never have to risk
player's blues. ''Simple," he the chance of disappointsaid. "I do 11\y best to pick ment. This, however, is not a
the winner, but when ·1 pay satisfactory ·philosophy of
my two bucks at the win- life because there is a big
dow, I consider the money difference between ·being
gone -. just as I would · if I happy and merely keeping
had spent it on a box of cig- disappointment at arm's
ars .. I never expect to see it length .
VINCENT
NORMAN
agai"n," Of course, he added
PEALE
'S
PHILOSOPHY:
quickly, "I never tear up my
ticket stub. My horse just "Expect the best," said the
might surprise•me and win"' best-selling author and. clerWe all might do well to gyman who died in 1993, at .
adopt lzzy's philosophy: age 95 , ''and this will tend,
.like a magnet, to draw the
~oo your best . and expect
nothing in return. But don't best to you." This philosotear up your ticket on life 's phy. seems to work for some
race." T~at is, don't become people, but not for others. In
cynical about li fe. There the case of the latter,
although they confidently
may be 'surprises in store.
NANCY'S
PHILOSO- expected the best, they didPHY: Nancy is a 25-year-old , n't get it. Thus, they became
girl I k~ow whpse phi loso- disillusioned. The people

who are successful with this worthwhile in them.
philo~ophy
realize that
• To look at the sunny side
expecting the best is some- of everything.
thing like expecting a baby.
• To think only of the best
The · mother-to-be doesn't and to expect only the best.
have a baby simply by · • To be just as enthusiastic ·
expecting it. She does some- about the successes of others
thing about having it, and as you are about your own.
then she becomes an expec· ak
f
tant mother. Our outlook as a
•·To forget the mtst es 0
nation has seldom :· been the past and press on to the
bleaker than it is today. A greater achievements of the
·
rabbi - a man I usually can future.
count on to lift my spirits • To wear a cheerful" coun·
said to me last week, "I tenance at all times and to
myself am very glum." In smile at every _living creature
times of depression, we. . you meet.
would be smart to go to the
• To devote so much time
library and check out Peale's to. personal improvement
best-seller "The Power of that you have no time to crit·
Positive
Thinking" icize others.
(Hou~liton Mifflin, 19~2). It
• To be too large for worry,
became an instant classic
too .noble for anger, too
when it was published, and it
remained at the top of the strong for fear and too happy
book charts for decades.
to permit the presence · of
OPTIMISTS' CLUB PHI- trouble.
.
LOSOPHY: Th.ere used to be
There was an Optimists'
an Optimists' Club in every Club in the city where I lived
city. It met wee\dy for lunch , in the 1950s, but oddly
like the Rotary Club. The enough I was the 6nly clerOptimists have faded from gyman in its membership.
the luncheon circuit, but What does that tell you
anyone can still practice about clergymen? My
their creed. Paste it on your favorite philosophy. among
bathroom mirror. Promise those we have been considvourself:
J
ering is IzzyNewbom's "Do
~ To be ·so strong that nothing can disturb your peace of your best and expect nothing
in return."
mind.
What's your favorite?
• To talk health, happiness
(George Plagenz is an
and prosperity to every person you meet.
ordained minister and veter• To .make all your friends an newsman based in
feel there is something Columbus, Ohio.)

YOU'VE

·BECOME ILL&amp;

NO lONGER
CAN AFFORD

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·Obituaries
John Michael Roush
John Michael Roush, 82, of New Haven, W.Va., passed
, away Thursday, Feb. 23, 2006, at St. Mary's Hospital.
He was born Oct. 18, 1923, in Broad Run, W.Va., the son of
. the late Kennie and Nellie (Goodnite) Roush. He was·a laborer. He served in the Navy during World War II and was a
member of the Stewart-Johnson VFW Post 9926 in Mason,
W.Va. .
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by one
brolher and · sister-in-law, Walter and Anna Roush: and one
special cousin, Donald Goodnite.
,
He is survived by one son, Michael Roush of Mason ; two
grandsons, Mike (Christi) Roush of Rutland, Ohio, and Tony
(Tilty) Roush of Clifton, W.Va.; four great-grandchildren,
Morgan Roush, Chloe Roush, Savannah Rousll and Jake
. ~ou sh: one sister and brother-in-law, Marie and Don Rea of
· Minersvii1e, Ohio; one brother and sister-in-law, Nathan
(Carol) Roush of Syracuse, Ohio ; one special cousin, Grace
. Goodnite of Hartford, W.Va.; and several cousins, nieces and
nephews.
A graveside service will be 1 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 25, 2006,
at Graham Cemetery in New Haven, with Pastor Mike
Finnicum officiating. Special military graveside serv ices will
be performed by the VFW Post 9926 and .the American
Leg1on Post 140.
· ·
·
, ·
· ~ondolences to the family may be sent to foglesongtuck. er@m:yway.com.
In lieu of flowers donations can be made to their favorite
Charity.

Ronald Dewey can
Mr. Ronald Dewey Carr,
born Jan. 26. 1940, died
Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2006, fol.lowing an extended illness,
, surrounded by family in his
h'ome at 900 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis.
· A 1958 graduate of GaUia
· Academy and an honored u.s_
·Army veteran, he entered the
medical profession and then
went on to retire as a machine
. operator from AT&amp;T in
. Columbus before returning to·
!)alii polis in 199.7.
· He is preceded in death by
his grandmother, Ruth Brown:
his parents, Hazel and Jack
Carr; and his brother, William
Ronald Dewey Carr
''Billy" Carr.
He is Sl,lrvived, and will be deeply missed, by his sisters,
Jackie C;;trr Jenkins of Gallipoli s, Alice Carr Trent of Dayton,
and Julia Carr Quall s of Middleport; his uncle, Dana Fields of
Masseyville ; and his aunt, Evelyn Fi~lds of Gallipolis.
He also leaves behind a host of family, including cousins, I 0
nieces and nephews, 12 great nieces and nephews and 12
great-great nieces and nephews; hi s beloved godchildren,
,Danny Brown and Kimykm Riley, both of Columbus: and his
cherished extended family, Ms. Dawne Borden and her fami·
ly. and Mr. Donald Borden, all from Gallipolis.
· Services will be II a.m. Saturday, Feb. 25, 2006. at the
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home, 810 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, with the Rev. Gilbert Craig officiating. Burial will
follow in Pine Street Cemetery. Friends ·may call at the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday, Feb. 24, 2006.
Military funeral honors will be presented at the cemetery by
the Gallia County Veterans Organizations.
To send condolences, please visit us at www.timeformemory.coinlwhw.
·

CASSTOWN (AP) - The
stories don't have to be about
Lassie, Rin Tin Tin or Scooby
Doo. Sara the poodle will listen
to them anyway.
The 7-month-old canine is
being used by teachers at Miami
East Elementary School near
this western Ohio town to help
students reluctant to read out
loud in class because ofleaming
disabilities or simply because
they are too shy. .
The librdf)''s video room was
converted to digs for the dog
when she arrived in October.
The room is outlined with a
doggie bed, chairs, dog posters,
photos of the poodle and a hang~
er for its many scarves. 1bere is
also a bowl of treats for the dog,
wi)ich has its own photo ID.
Student~ sign up in their classrooms to read . to .{he poodle, ·
then come into the dog's room
for one-on-one sessions. The
pupils sit in a chair or on the
floor next to the poodle, crack
open a book and read to the dog
for 15 to 20 minutes.
"She'll put her paws on their
laps or will rest her head on
them when they read to her,''
said .Cris Shaw, the school
librarian and the poodle's
.owner. "She's great with oneon-one intentction. She lets kids
pull on .her or do whatever they
' want with her.

YES

Dinner
from Page A1

· Anne
Hehr with
the
American Cancer . Society
(ACS) toll free at 1-8 88-2276446.
.
· The dinner is sponsored by
the ACS of Southeast Ohio as
a reinvestment of local Relay
POMEROY- The Belles and Beaus Square Dance Club is for Life fund s back into the
sponsoring a square dance that will double as a fundrai ser for Meigs County cbmmunity.
member Kay Frederick. The dance is "from 2 p.m. to 4:30p.m.
The dinner will be a buf·
"this Sunday at the Mulberry Community Center. The suggest- fet-style meal catered by
ed donation is $10 per couple . Several daDcers are expected Hometown Market with
from Meig,s and surroundings counties.
entertainment provided by
the ·French City Barbershop
Chorus of which Gerald
PoweH and Gerald Kelly of
Pom~roy are a part:
ACS Patient Navigator
Coleen Krubl; who serves
. tion circulators did not proper- Meigs County, will be at the
BY CARRIE
ly fill- out the pe,tition torms. dinner but was at the !askSPENCER GHOSE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
such as by not Iisting what force meeting yesterday to
group paid them to collect sig- discuss how · her program is
COLUMBUS- In what is. natures or tilling in the wrong effectin g local people.
becoming a common cam- number of signatures .
'
Krubl sa id she had been
paign tactic, opponents of a
l.n many ca·ses, the petition assisting some Meigs County
constitutional circulators wrote they were residents who were lighting
proposed
amendment to sharply limit paid by Reform .Ohio No\". or cancer with accessing legal
· government spending are , RON, a left-leaning group that services anq filling tran s•
challenging the legality of campaigned for to ur ame nd- portation needs.
·
petitions filed in five counties ments· to overhaul state elecOne of those needs was for
to get the question on the tion law s last Novemt1er, a patient that is in · a wheelNovember ballot.
Faith said. The gro up behind chair. The patient needs to be
. Opponents said Thursday Blackwell's amendment is transported for an MRI but
has.110 transportation covered
they would expand the chal- Citizens for Tax Reform.
lenge s to dozens of ·other
''That could we lt mislead by insurance· to d.o this.
counties, eventually protest- the person signing '(the peti- Taskforce member Steve
ing about 25,000 signatures tion)," he said . ''They see the Beha offered use of a wheel- more than enough to inval- . circulator's being paid for by chair accessible van· from
Carleton School I Meigs
idate the ballo~ issue.
RQN. so they go ahead and
Secretary of.State Kenneth sign it thinking it 's for RON . Indu stries · if Krubl could
. Blackwell's proposal would Then. they (the circulators or aiTan ge a driver.
Taskforce
member
limit state and local spending other supporters) go through
to the rates of inflation and later, and it 's scratched oul Courtney Sim annou nced that
population growth combined, and they write in Citize ns for she would be meeting with a
representative from the
or 3.5 percent a year,
Tax
Reform."
National Cancer Institute
whichever· is ·greater, and
attorney
Dav
id
Cincinnati
who is vi , iting the count y on
require voter· approval of .tax
Langdon
,
who
has
representincreases..
Blackwe l) , a
Republican, also is seeking ed· Citizens fur Tax Retorm .
. hi s party 's nomination for said he would need to st.udy
goven1or in the May primary. the compla int hefore com.
· Bill Faith, a Columbus voter menting.
ba~kers
subAmendment
representing The Coalition for
. Ohio's Future, mailed , chal- mitted mor~ tha11?00,000 siglenge letterS coveri ng .about nature' last AuguSI, but about
· 7,000 signatures to five coun- 330,000 were certifi~d ty elections boards late some 7,000 more than needed.
"As bas occurred with otber
Wednesday. Officials in
Clermont and Cuyahoga petitions. 1hc prote st in . tbi'
The Daily Sentinel
counties had not yet received case will go thrm1 gh the northe letters. Messages were left mal pr.cx:e" :" 'aiu Janie' Lee.
Subscribe today
Thursda'y with Clark, Franklin spokesman f&lt;ir Black wcll"s
99.2·2155
and Lorain elections officials. ofticc, which mer,ee' 'tate
TI1e challenges say the peti - election,.

Opponents challenge petitions that
put tax-spending limit on '06 ballot .

BY DAVID HOFFMAN
teet. In return, yo u have would decrease by approxi- - - - - - - - - - . always supported us with mately $5,000. That reprewa·s surpri sed Monday what we needed and' we are sents a half-year's ·payment
evening to sit down and read grateful for that support. As on the new truck.
an article about a Middleport you know, we are I00 perCouncil approved the purVi llage Council meeting that cent volunteer. Our only clmse of lhe new truck in
had occurred a wcek ·carlicr. compensation is a place t.o December and it was
Various comments were occasionally wash or work ordered immediately to
directed at the Middleport on a car. That seems like a avoid a pending price
Fire Department, of which I bargain for responding at all increase. The departmenl
ain now chief. I found it very · hours of the night to calls for researched financing and
unprofessional that I was'not help and risking our lives.
obtained a quote from a repasked questions directly by · As was explained last year utable leasing company for a
council , I read them in the to ~ounc il , we plan sevt;rai loan at 4.2 percent, which .
newspaper as you did. I feel years out, our replacements, would be locked in now,
·I de,ervc to be treated better, because we cannot afford to 4lthough payments would
but obvious ly. a couple of be in 'a position that two not begin for approximately
our council members du nut trucks need replaced at one 16 months, since the truck
feel a need to treal others time. Various agencies rec- would not be delivered for .
with respect so I fee l I need qmmend truck replacements 12 months. We felt this was
·to explain to you the facts at 20 years and manufactur- a great opportunity to lock in
&lt;!nd·lel you tell me wh&lt;rt you ers cmly .agree to stock now at a very low interest
think .
·
replacem ent .parts f()r 20 rate and we pa ssed thi s .
I have been a part of the 'years. The truck we are information on to the mayor.
Middlep.ort Fire Dep&lt;rrtment . replacing i' 20 years old thi s We were asked no further
SJfll'C 19X~. and fieel ou r
ye&lt;rr. If we were to postpone questions until I read the
department has always rep lacement one year, the .. co mment s in Monday'.s
looked out for. the be.st inter- I ruck cost would increa se by newspaper.
est of the residc.nts who'e $10.000. and the value of the
Let me say we have
lives and propert y '&gt;'~ pro- lruck, which will. be .sold . &lt;rlway&gt; relied on your 'up-

port to renew our five-year
term tax levies and you have
never let us down and we
appreciate it.
I feel a couple of members
of council are consistently
going out of their way to ask
what would happen if you no
longer supported us as you
have always done. The ,
answer is obvious: If you do
not support us we cannot ful·
till our obligation to protect
you. I will not do something
that puts your fire' depart- .
ment in a position that we
cannot protect you. · Is our
department perfect? No. Are
we constantly striving to be
better? Absolutely. We will
with your continued support .
I would like to ask you
this : If you have any issues
with the department, contact
me at 992-6150 ., If you have
no issues with us, let our vii!age council know that .
(David Hvffman is the
chief of the Middleport Fire
Department.)

AP Photo/Troy Dally News, Anthony Weber
Miami East Elemetary School third grade student Adria nne Krites reads "Three Stories You Can
'Read to Y.our Dog" by Sara Swan Mil lei to Sara. a standard· poodle. Monday, in Casstown. T.he
7·month-old canine is being used by teachers at the school to help students who are reluctant
to
read out loud ·in class because of learning disabilities .qr simply because they are too shy.
.
.

Pike, Hocking, Athens,
Vinton and Meigs which did
·, not use the funds in their YES
' .
programs,
County
from Page A1
Commissioner Jim Sheets
said.
Commissioners awarded a
ex pe11~nce hours from I 20
hours per participant to 160 bid of $10,300 to Hendrix ·
hours. The youth are paid . Heating and Cooling for
heating and plumbing repairs
$6. 15 per hour.
·
·The additional funding will at the Portland Community
also allow the program to .Center.' Bids on the project, to
be .financed through the
s er~e an iidditional 17 youth
between now and June with Community Development
Youth Training. Support ser- Block Grant formula provices , making it possible· to gram, were opened last week .
provide additional supportive One other bid was received.
Commissioners
also
service to all clients enrolled
in the YES program's paid approved es.tablishment o.f a
new fund line item for the
\YOrk experience.
The YES serv ice is proyid- Juvenile Court and accepted
ed by the university through a a bid for bituminous materi&lt;;ontraCt with the county. It is als for .March from Asphalt
paid
for
through the · Materials, Inc .
Also
present
were
Work force I.n vestment Act,
'
Mick
and the-additional funds were Commissioner
made available from other Davenport and Clerk Gloria
·
counties in the WIA region of Kloes.

· Square dance

Guest View
Explaining the facts ·about fire equipment replacement

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

'POODLE DRAWS OUr RFI.U(TANT RFADERS

Local Briefs

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words., All lellers are subject to editing, must be signed.
.and indude address and telephone number. No unsigned let-:
rer_,. will be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing. issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will nat be accepted for publication.

;-. Friday, February 24, 2006

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed

this time, at least not to his
knowledge .
'
Reed added this does not
mean
the· village wants to
from Page A1
move away from fireworks
but will not have them due to
involved with the park but to the expense.
Reed said it i' possible
bring all .that use the park to
that
next year the village will
the same table and to supplement the efforts of these . have one, main festival on a
groups according to Mayor )Veekend when no other festiScott Hill who suggested .the vals are going on in the county: The new festival will
new committee months ago.
The committee's first hopefully draw mere people
meeting is at 7 p.m. on March to Racine rather than having
2 at the Star Mill Park office Racine compete with other
when~ the public is welcome . co mmunitie s with similar
Reed, who is also a village activities, and this new festicouncilman, said that at this val may see the return of tiremeeting festivals as well as W\)rks.
All these deci sion are too
use of the ball field by the
youth league and high school big for one person or one
·council to make which is why
. may be di scussed.
In regards to · festivals, the · committee has been
·
Reed said it was too late to formed.
· "Thi s will bring organizaplan for a Fourth of July festival this ·year though he tion and allow us to collecadded there may be some tivel y look for ideas to
kind of basic parade in the . improve the community and
. March 22.
raise awareness of the comHehr
and
· Julie village on the fourth though munity," Reed said.
no
fireworks
are
planned
at
Ellenwood, also of ACS,
updated the taskforce on the
Community
Resource
Center (CRC) sponsored by
ACS that will be hou sed at
the Mulberry Community
ACI-75.53
Kroier - 20.10
Center.
.
Ltd.
- 24.09
AEP
.:....36.29
Hehr said she would have
NSC- 50.30
the
cen.t er'"s
computer Akzo ,-51
Hill Rnanclal - 31.32
Oak
Ashland
Inc.
65.37
·
secured by the first week of
OVB
-25.15
BLI-12.79
March and that the plan tenBBT-39.94
Bob
Evans
29.46
tatively remains to open ·in
Peoples - 29.50
April. ACS will also provide BorgWarner- 57.19
Pepsico59.66
CEI!IX
:-36.79
·
signage.
Premier15.75
5.61
Champion
The CRC will provide
Rockwell
69.44 ,
local people with access to Charmlne Shops - 13.85
Rocky Boots - 22.78
educational and online mate· City Holding - 3 7.24
Sears
- 120.07
Col53.76
rials to assists in battling .
Wai·Mart
- 45.70
DG
-17,43
cancer.
Wendy's
-'
58.15
DuPont40.57
.
Sim also said she may be
Worthl11gton - 20.05
getting wigs and prosthetic s Federal Mogul --. .38
Dally stock reports are the 4
USB30.92
for the Meigs County CRC
p.m. closing quotes of the
Gannett
62.63
from the James Cancer
previous day's. transactions,
General Etectr!c - 33.26
Center in Columbus.
provided by Smith Rnanclal
Members of the cou nc iI GKNLY- 5.50
Advisors
of Hilliard Lyons In
Harley
Davidson
52.30
·
were reminded that March is
Gallipolis.
JPM.-41.U
Colorectal
Cancer
Awareness Month.
Ellenwood reported that
the taskforce now had
$742.40 rai sed for the Meig s
. County Relay for Life held
Friday ... Mostly . sunny. Highs m the lower -&lt;0&gt;. ··
May 12-13 at the Meig s Highs in the upper , -lOs.
\Vednesday night...Partly
County Fairgrounds.
clouJ~.
Cold with lows in
West winds around 5 mph.
Sim and Hehr reported
Friday
night ... Most ly the upper 20s. ,
that they had submitted a clear. Lows in the mid 30s.
Thursday ... Partl} cloudy
grant application to the South winds around 5 mph. with a chance of snow and
Susan G. Kome n Bre ast
rain showers . Hi~hs in the
Cancer Foundation .for i! s . Saturday ... Partly . cloudy lower -lOs. Chance of pre 0
"Think Pink Project" to with a 30 percem chance cipitation 40 percent.
assist local ·breast cancer of rain showers. High' in
the · upper 40s. Temperature
patients.
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA7
The taskforce welcomed falling into the mid 30s in
446·4514 I! 'I IL Hll" LINl
the
afternoon
.
We
st
·
winds
pack its chairman Ferman
FR12124106 • THURS 312106
Moore who had recently 10 10 15 mph.
Saturday night...M ost ly
BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 6:30 pM.
been ill .
.·
MON-THURS. AND AT 12:30 PM
~loudy.
Colder
with
low.'
in
The taskforce's · next
FOR SAT &amp; SUN MAnNEE S
the
.
lower
20s.
Northwe
st
meeting is at noon, March 23
'STADIUM SEATING IS NOW
at the Pomeroy Library . winds 5 to 10 mph with
AVAILABLE
· RSVP at 992 -6626, lunch gusts up to 20 mph .
DOOGAL
(G)
Sunday
thro:ugh
will be provided .
1:00 3:00 7:00 &amp; 9:00
cloudY.
Thesdav .. . Partlv
EIGHT BELOW (PG)
High' ·i n the' mid .\0~
1
:00 3:30 7:00 &amp; 9:30
Low s arou nd ~0.
DATE MOVIE (PG13)
Tuesday
night
and
I:
:20 7:2 &amp; 9:20
Wednesday ... Mo&gt;til clear.
NANNY MCPHEE (PG) .
SubS&lt;;ribe today • 992-:2155
Lows in the . lower '20s.

Park·

Local stocks

Local weather

.

'

·Proud to be apart of
· your life,

2005-2006 Valley Artist Series
ENSEMBLE AMARCORD
TUesday, February 28, 2006
8:00pm

,

Fine and Performing Arts Center
University of Rio Grande .
Tickets SlOat the door ·
Call 740-245-7364

1:15 3: 15 &amp; 7:15
'FINAL DESTINATION 3 (R)
I :20 3:20 7:20 &amp; 9:20
FIRE WALL (PG1 3)
9:30
THE PINK PANTHER (PG)
1:10 3:10 7:10 &amp;' 9:10 .
BIG MOMMA'S HOUSE 2

.,

�Page A(!

·FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 24,

2006

!friday, February 24, 2006
,.

humankind . The sovereign
Lord of the universe first
invites Moses to know .Him,
to trust and obey Him, and
then to become an insCrument
Rev.
of reconciliation and intimate
Jonathan communion with others.
Noble
B'eyond any doubt, God
could have rescued an
enslaved people in any number of ways that would not
have required the participation of anyone else, that
restoration for the transgres- would not have ·even required
sors.
Him ·to make Himself known
God reached down to earth ... but, then, where would be
that we might reach ·up to t)le renewal and restoration,
heaven. He became like us the association and union
that we might be like Him - with His wayward children?
the sum total of salvation. He
No, in order for the Lord to
called us to be holy as He is re-establish the communion
holy, and owing t,o our weak- humanity originally enjoyed
ness and inability to perfectly with its Creator, He must
restore His image within our- make Himself known in
selves and enter once &lt;~gail). order that we may be known.
into perfect comLnunion, He He must condescend to ask
also provided the means.
that we might answer. He
We · see tlris beautiful truth must feign weakness and
in the narrative of Moses as , dependence to allow us the
the transcendent God of the possibility of strength a!}d
universe relates to a renegade participation.
Hebrew-turned-shepherd in
The God of the universe,
ways and in words he can so high and lifted up. has to
comprehend, using an ele- · take upon Himself humanity
men.t and object common the in order that humanity might
world over - that is .. fire and take upon itself the Divine.
shrubbery. He does so. how- He must shoulder sin and ·
ever, in a manner that unmis- wic~edness to clothe us in
takably establishes .His holi- ·righteousness. He has to die
ness and inviolability.
that we might live and Jive in
And the Lord calls upon and through us that we might
Moses to lead, to fulfil a par- finally die to self to Jive the
ticular task. not out of any life He always intended ...
neces.sity but s1mply because life in and through Him, eterGod desires communion with nal and heavenly life. Amen.

, His divine power has given
us everything needed for life
and godliness through the
knowledge of him w)lo called
us by his own glory and
goodness Thus he has given
us, through these things, his
precious and very great
promises , so that through
them you .. ·may become participants of the divine nature.
(H Peter 1.3 -4. NRSV)
Unlike the "gods" of this
world, God is transcendent,
high and lifted up above all
creation, in control of all
things, yet mercifully so
close and so personal. He
defies definition. yet makes
Himself known. He surpasses
all human understanding, yet
communicates Himself in
ways
and
in
words
humankind can comprehend.
He .is holy and perfect, ethically and ontologically, yet
condescends to use the common and "profane" through
which to impart Himself
. Lacking nothing and in need
of no one. yet He desires an
intimate and personal relationship with His imagebearing creatures. ·
When humanity rebelled,
then, and confined itself to
sin and death, the Lord God
did not remove Himself.
rather He made Himself
known. He continued to
communicate Himself, to
remind the sick of perfect
health, to invite the dying to
renewal and recreation, to
initiate forgiveness and

World Christian group starts thinking s11Ulll to tackle big changes
Bv BRIAN MURPHY
AP RELIGION WRITER

PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil
- Charged with promoting
Christian unity, the World ·
Council of Churches has
taken its work seriously -.
each of its meetings has
grown bigger and more ambic
tious over' the past six
decades.
But now even some of the
most ardent backers of the
WCC's mission are wondering if smaller may be better.
During the WCC's latest
global assembly - bringing
together 4,000 envoys from
more than 350 churches·delegates challenged the
group to look hard at whether
such parliament-style, megameetings are still relevant at a
time when 'Chrisiianiiy is
being rapid! y reordered
around the world.
In the West, mainline
Protestant churches face
graying congregations and ·
declining influence. Some
denominations, most notably
Anglicans, also are in danger
in splintering over disputes

r

·r

AP Photo

An unidentified boy worships on his knees during the Holy
.Ghost festival night revivals run by. the Redeemed Christian
Church of God in Lagos, Nigeria Friday. The forces reshaping
Christianity are in full bloom in Lagos, where banners every-,
where announce services and revivals and the larger congre.gatlons have carved out massive camps in the jungle outside
Lagos.
on gay clergy and same-sex America and elsewhere blessings. Pentecostal and but accounted .for less than 2
evangelical
movements, percent of participants at the
meanwhile,. keep steam- wee gathering which ended
rolling through Africa, Latin Thursday.

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A Hunger For More
Who are you? Seriously
who are you? What
makes you what you are?
Where do you fit in the
great big picture puzzle of
the cosmos? Where exactly
do you belong? And how do
you define your worth on a
plan"! teeming with over six
billion other people?
Chances are really good
that your first response to
these questions is any of
these three :
I) Stunned silence ("Uhh-h");
2) Stammered ex.clama tions lis you try to articulate
the fragments of ideas that
are popping into your mind
("Well, urn ... naturally I
feel that I. uh .. . that is to
say ... "); or
3) Stilted statements that
don't really jive with what
the One Who made us ha s to
say about who and what we
are ("I ' m the MAN!' ; or
''I'm such a loser: nobody
likes me; everybody hates
me. Guess I'll go eat
worms").
Not knowing who you are
is a crisis. Men and women
experience a cognitive form
of that when they litera lly
forget their own names,
their addresses and their
loved ones as cruel dementia dims their . minds.
Christians experience something spiritually akin to this
when they've either forgotten or are ignorant of the
incredible identity change
that is theirs when they turn
to Jesus in faith, are forgiv en of their si n, and are made
spiritually new.ln a very
similar way, if we have not
yet met Christ (by which I
mean, if we have not personally trusted Him as our
Savior and invited Him into
our lives) we have an identity crisis of another lcind. On
the one hand, God's Word
(the Bible) paints us ·as people hopelessly separated
from the Holy Creator of the
universe. Having either
obviously or subtly transgressed His Law, we are
incapable of conjuring up
enough righteou snes s for
ourselves in order to be
accepted into His presence ..
Refusing to place our faith
in Jesus' work on the cross
leaves us with a grim future
indeed . "Our · destiny is
destruction, our. god is our
stomach , and our glory is in
our shame. Our ·minds are
on earthly things" (from
Philippians 3: 19) ..
On the other hand, thi s

i'

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i'

Fellowship ·
Apostolic

know that you are all these
things, how does your life
demon strate that know ledge? If you are really confiderlt that He is truly master of your identity and has
made a new person of you,
do you then live accordingly ? Or are you, defeated ,
broken , and enslaved still to
worldly patterns of thinking? Are you convinced that
you have no value and are
unimportant in the grand
scheme of things?
If so; allow God 's truth to
di spel such lies and set your
mind and your spirit free.
You have unimaginable
worth' Just consider what it
cost God to set you free
from the prison of sin and
its dreadful offspring;
deathl God would not have
given His own Son up for
you if it were true that your
life were not import ant to
Him'
''He Himself bore our
sins in His body on the .tree,
so that we might die to sins
and li ve fo r righteolfsness;
by His wounds you have
been healed. For you were·
like sheep going astray. but
now you have returned to
the Shepherd and Overseer
of your souls" ( 1 Peter 2:2425 NlV).
. And if you haven't yet
turned your eyes to Jesus
and allowed Him to wash
you free from sin and make
a new person of you, it is
good to know thal He can
and will set you free from
your destiny 9f destruction
if only you' ll let Him come
into your life as Lor&lt;!. ·
" ... If you confess with
you r mouth , 'Jesus is Lord,·
and believe in your heart
that God raised Him from
the dead. you will be saved.
For it IS with your heart that ,

Pastor
Thoni
Mollohan

same Bible paint s God as
being filled with compassion and sorrow over our
estate and not content to
leave the matter be. " ... The
present heavens ·and earth
are reserved for fire, being
kept for the day of judgment
and destructfon of ungodly
men" (2 Peter 2:7 NIV), but
we have hope in the fact that
"the· Lord ... is. patient with
you, not wanting anyone to
perish , but every011e to
come to repentance" (2
Peter 3:9b NIV) .
Gpd's amazing compassion for humanity is keenly
evident when .Jesus, God's
Son, confronts those who
are spiritually ·~ lost~ about
Him. Comparing such "lost
persons" to lost sheep and
Him self to ·a "Good
Shepherd," Jesus ·.Jets us
know in no unce rtai n terms
that He is searching out the
lost in order to bring them
safe ly home - home ... a
sweet daily fellowship with
Him as well as an everlasting destiny prepared for us
by His side (see also John
I 0: 1-18).
·
On the day that I realized
who 1 was apart fr()m Jesus
(a lo st person, reservt;d for
destruction) I also realized
that I could become someone new, complete with a
new identity. a.new purpose ,.
and a new destiny.
"Praise be to the ·God and
Father of our Lord Jesus
Chri st! In His great mercy
He has given us new birth
into a living hope through ,you believe and are jus\ithe resurrection of Jesus fied. and it is with your
Christ from the dead. and mouth that' you confess and
into an inheritance that can are saved. As the Scriptures
never perish , spo il ·or fade say. ' Anyoue who trusts in
- kept in heaven for you, Him will ne ver be put to
who through faith are share'" (Romans 10:9-11
shielded by God's power.. .. " NIV).
.
( 1 Peter 1:3-5a NIV).
(Thom Mollolwn and his
So ... if you have placed family have ministered in
your faith in Jesus Christ, southern Ohio tl1e past 10do you really know who you liZ yea;s. He· is the pastor
are' Do you know that you of Pathway Community
are a. cit izen of heaven . Church, which meets on
tEphesiuns 2: 19 )? A con- Sunday mor11ings at the
queror (Romans 8:37)? A Ariel Theatre. He may be·
chi ld of God (Romans 8:14. reached for comments or
1 John 3:1)? Members of a questions by e-mail at pas"royal priesthood and a holy torthom@pathwaygalliponati•:&gt;n" (I Peter 2:9)? If you lis.com).

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Churth ot Jesu ChrUt Apostolk
VanZandt and Ward Rd.. Pastor: James
M1lkr. Sunday S~.:hool - 10:30 am ..
Evening-7:30p.m.

Always Think

Positively

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye )!'ill, a11d it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

It JS probably impussiblti to overestimale
the value or po~it ive thmking Because our

Ihinking is often a self-fulfilling prophecy,
it create s the conditions for Jhc possibility
of succcs~ or fai lure. or for holiness or
sinfulness. Consider the negative~thinktng
sales man who is sure no one will want to buy
'
hi s product , and practically
exudeo;; that
negati ve thinkmg hy callmg on customers and

uardrail, Fence &amp;

R.S. V. .llarthtw 6·11·13

P.O. Box 683
Pomero , Ohio 45769-0683

209 Third
Racine, OH

740-985·3561
992-1550
499 Richland Avenue, At~ens
740-5114-6333

1-800-451-11806

•Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson, Sund ay S..:hool !Oa.m . Wnr sh1 p · l l a.m, 7 00 p m.
Wednesda y Servkes· 7:00pm.
Mt. Union Baptist •
Pas(or: Denn1s Weav er Sundil}' Schoolc
'6:30 p.m .
9·45 a.m. Evening
Wednel\day Servicc:s · 6.JOp.m
Bclhlehem Baptist Church
Great Bend, Ruutc 12J,. Ra ci ne. OH.
Pastor . Dame! Me..:ea. Sunday Schv•.ll ·
9· :\0 am .. Sunday 'Worship · 1,0:.\0 u m..
Wednesday B1ble Study· 6 (JO'p m.
Old Btthel Fret Will Baptisl Church
2A601 St. Rt. 7. Midd lepon. ~uriday
Ser'tlice - 10 a.m.. 6:00 p.m., Tuc ~day
Sef\.·ices -6:01)
Hillside Baptist Church
Sc Rt. l4J just off R1 . 7. Pastor. Re\
Jan;es R. Acree:, Sr. Sunday ll mf1cd
Service , Worship · 10 30 a.111 .. 6 p.m..
Wednesday Services .7 p.m.

· hith Baptist Chun:h
Railroad St.. Ma~ o n, Sunday School - 10
am, Wor ship
II .~· m . 6 p.m.
Wrdnesday s'~:rvJO,:i!'!t · 7 p.m.
Forest Run Baplist
Pastor : Ariu s Hun. Sunday School - 10
a.m.. Worship · II a.m.
Mt. f\.1ori8h Baptist
Founh &amp; _Main St .. ~1idd kpun, Pastor.
Rev. Gi lbert Crai!j, Jr., Sunday ·School 9:30am .. Worship - 10·45 am.
A.atiquit-' Baptist
Sunday School - 9 30 am ., Worshtp ·
!0·45 a.m, Sunday E'tleni ng · 6:00p.m ..
.. Pastor: Don Walker

'lvfi[[ie's fl(_estaurant
Hame Cooked Meals &amp; /Jaily ::-Jpecials

Portable Toilet Rentals
Jack's Septic Tank &amp; .
Portable Toilet Service
(In Darwm)

.
39825 Gold Ktdgc Road. Pomeroy. OH

Ym1r #2 Busint::.u is our# I Busine.\'J
Phone or Fax 740-992-7 1tlJ
0~; ners: Daviu &amp; Ediih Brickle&gt;

Rutland FrM Will Baptist
Salem St.. Past or. Jamie Furtner. Sunday

,.

your light so shine before
that !hey may see your
works and glorify your·
IFaiher in heaven ."
Manhew5:

t90 N. Second St.

Mtdd leport , OH

740-992-61,28

Local s~Jurce for trophies,
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MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

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BUSINESS SERVICES
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Pomeroy Westside Church of Chrigt
~3226 Children's Home Rd:, Sunday
School · II a.m .. Worship - IOa.m .• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p m.
Middleport Church of Christ
~ th and Mai n, Pasto r. AI HartsOn, Youth
Mmister: Josh VIm, Sunday Sthool · 9:30
11.m , Worship· 8 15, 10 30 a.m.. 7 p.m ..
· Wednesday St:r~i~.:es- 7 p m.
Keno Clturth nf Chrisl
WOrship - 9:30 a m., Sunday School 10.30 a.m., Pastor-Jdhey Wallace, Is! and
3rd Sunday
Be•n-·alluw Ridge Church or Chrilit
Pastor:Bruct Terry, Sunday School -!1'30

•m
Worship
10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m,
Wednesda)' Semces ·6:30 p.m.
. ZJon Church or ChriSt
Pumeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.l43),
Pastor Roger Watso n, Sunday School 9:30 a.m .• Worship - 10.30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m.. Wednesda y Services- 7 p.m.
Tupptl"!l Plaln Churth or Christ
In strum ental. Worship Ser'tlice '. 9 a.m ..
Communion - \0 a.m., Sunday School ·
10·15 am' . Youth- ~dO pm Su nday, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm
Bradbury ChtJtth of Christ
Mm 1s1cr· Ttlm Run yon. ~955!1 Bradbury
Rood. Mtddli:pon. Sunday School · 9:30
a m.
Worship · 10)0 am.
Rutland Chun:h of Christ
Sunda y Schon! . 1,1 · ~0 a.m , Worsh1p and I
Communion - 10:30 a.m , Bo b J. Werry.
Muu ~te r

Bradford Ch11rch of Christ
Cnrncr 11f St. Rt 124 &amp; Bradbu ry Rd,
Min1 s1er: D11ug Shamblln. Yumh Mmistcr.
H11l Amberger. Sund.1y School- 9·3U am,
Worsh•p - tl 00 a m . 10:30 am .. 7:00
p.ril .,Wcdncsday Sci"\'Jces - 7:00 p.m.
Hickory Hill§ Church or Christ
Tupptrs Plams. Pastor Mike Moore, Bihle
ci11SS, 9 a.m Sunday; "'orsh1p 10 am .
Sunday: · \1.11Uh1p 6:30 pm Sunday: B1ble
class 7 pm Wed
Reed§ville Chun:h of c:hrisl
Philip Slllml. Sunday SchOf!l: 9:30
a.m.. Wohhlp Ser\'ice. IO:JO :..m :, 'Sib il!
Study, w~u~~~~da y, 6:.10 p.m
Pa .~ tor·

Dtxtcr Church of Christ
Sunday schuol 9:30a.m, Sumluy wur.;l)jp_
. !O.JO am
Tht: Churth or Chrisl or Pomero)·
Intersection 7 and 124 W, EYangeltst:
Dennis Sargent. SU!lday B1bk , Study ·
9:10 D m.. Wor-.h lp IO·JO am and b:30
p.m .. Wedne sday Bible Sludy , 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Church of Christ in
Christian Union
Hanford, W.Va ., Pastor D~\'Jd Greer,
Sunday School - IJ:30 am, Wor~h•p •
10:30 a.m .. 7 00 p.m .. Wednesday
Sef\.'i{;es- 7:00p.m.

Ch!Jrch of God
MI. Moriah Church or God
Mde Hill Rd .. Ra cmc , Pastor Jamt~
Satterheld, SLJnday School - 9:4j a.m.,
Evemng- 6 p m., Wednesday Services - 1
p.m .
Rudand Church of God
PastOr: Ron Heath, ~unday Worsh ip - 10
a.m . 6 p. m , Wednesday Servip~• - 7

•

,

Apple ilnd Second Sts., PUtor: Rev. David
Russell, Sunday School and Wanhip-- 10
a.m. Evening. Services- !i :30 p.m.,
Wednesday Serv1ces - 6:30p.m.
Churrh of God of Prophuy
OJ . White Rd. ofT St Rt. 160. Pastor: P.J.
Chapman, Sunday School - lO a.m.,
WorVllp- I I a.m , Wednesday Services - 7
p.m.

Congregational
Trinity Church
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeru). Pas1or: Rev.
Jonathan Noble:, Worsht p 10:25 a.m.,
Sunday School9:1~ a.m.

·Episcopal

Holiness

ForntRun
Pastor: Bob Robinson , Sunday School · 10
a.m .. Worship - 9 am.

Ca ll'ary Pilgrim Ch11pel
Harnsonville Road, Pll!itor: Charles
McKenzie, Sunda)' SchQOI 9·30 A m .
Worship - II a.m., 7:0Q p.m.. Wednesda)'
Service-7:00p.m .
Rose oi.Sharun Holiness Church
Leading Cretlk Rd .. Rutland, pas.tor: Rev
Dewey Kmg. Sunday scbool- 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship -7 p m . Wedn e¥~ay
~rayer meeting- 7 p.m.
Pine Gron Bible Holiness Church
112 mile ofT Rt. 325, Pastor· Re\1. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School · 9:30 am ..
Worship - 10.30 a.m.. 7:30 p m..
Wednesday Service- 7 30 p.m
Wesleyart Bible Hollnm Church
75 Pearl St. , Middlepol'l Pastor: R1ck
Bourne:. Sunday School. !0 a.m Worship
-10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve 7:00 p m..
Wednesday Semce - 7:30pm ,
Hysell Run Community Chun:h
Pastor. Rev Larry Lemley, Sunda) School
. 9:30am . Wo,.hlp · 10:45 am., 7 p m .•
Thursday Bible S10dy and Youth_· 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
. The ~hu rch of Jesus
Chrisl of L.auer-Day Salni.S
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486.
Suuday . s~ hool I 0 ~0-11 a,m , Reild
Soclety/Pnesthood II : 0~- 12 :00 noon .
Sa&lt;:ramenl Se rvice 9-10:15 a.m ..
Homcmakmg mee1ing. ht n1urs ..- 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Chun.:h
Pine Grove. Worship . \l'tXJ a.m., Sllnday
10:00 a.m Pastor: James P.
·schonl

Beady
Our Sa~· iour Lulheran Church
Wnln01 and Htlnry Sts , RavensWood,
· W.Va, Pa~tor David Rus~ell. Sunday
Srhool · 10:00 am., Worsh1p - 1I a.m
St. P11ul Lutheran Chun.:b
Corner Syl·amo rc &amp; Sc:cond S1 , Pomeroy.
Sunday S~hunl - 9 4.5 a.m .. Worship · II
a.m .

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worsh1p · I I ~-m Pastor Richard Nease
Bechlel Uniled Methodist
New Ha\'en. R1 chard Nease. Pastor.
Sunday warship 9:30 a:m Tue s. ,6:30
pra)cr and B1ble Study '
Mt. Olive United Melhodlsl
Of! 124 behind Wi lkesvi ll e, Pa~tor Rev.
Ralph Spires. Sunday School - 9_JO a.m ..
Wor~ h1p - 10:~0 u.m . 7 p m.. Thursda y
Serv1ce~ - 7 p.m.
Meip Cooperathe Parldl
Non.heas1 Clu ster. Alfred. Pastor· Jane
Beat11e, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .,
Worship - II a.m. 6:30pm.
Chesler
Pastor Jane Beattit. Wor5hlp · 9 a.m .
Sunday Schoo) · 10 a.m. , Thursday
S~rvices - 7 p.m
Joppa
Paswr: Bob Randolph. W&lt;Jrshlp • 9:30
a.m. Sunday Sl.:houl · 10.30 a. m

212 E. Main Street

Pomeroy

t•
..
............
;fltlbrr ;fanull Jfam

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

7

'NNIHM1

.... l . . . . . . . .

*Ill....

Agency Inc . . If ye abide in Me, a11d My Brogan-Warner
Full line of
INSURANCE
words abide i11 you, ye shall
Insurance
SERVICES
Products+ a)·k what ye will, and it shall
Financial
214 E. Main
be done u11to you.
·
Services
AGENC IES Inc
992-5130
Jolm 15:7
Pomeroy
Quickel

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

liffii
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME
17-1 Lll,·nt Str«l• PU Box 270
Ne~ H11vt'fl, W\ 2S265
bmrs H. Andtrl\tlll. Lkth~ •·uneral Dir«tor
Heidi S. Andeoon.
I Plannlna

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for the~
shall see God.
Matthew 5.

P:~ stur :

Fairview Bible Church
Lttan. W.Va Rt. I , Pa~tor Bnan May,
Sunday School - 9 '0 a.m., Won;b1p . 7:0CJ
p m.. Wednel&gt;day. Bible $1udy - 7:00p.m
Faith 1-' ellowshlp CriWide for Christ
Pastor· Re\'. Franlr:hn Dickens. Sen·1ct'
Friday. 7 p.m

Pastor: Wayne Dunlap, State Rt. 681,
Tuppen Plams, S11n Wnr~~·p· 10 am &amp;
6 30 pm .. Thursday Btble Study 7.00 p m.

Calur-y Bible Chu~h
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd .. Pastor: Re 'tl
Bladwoud, Sundoiy Sd100 l - 9:30 am ..
WorJihlp !0 ·3 0 a .m . 7: 30 p m .
Wednesd3Y Ser ... ice - 7:30 pm .

OaJI.§ Christian Fellowship
(Non-dcnomina11unal fellowship)
Mectini in the old American Legion Hall
South Founh Avenue. Middleport
Pastor: Chris Slewart 10·00 am Sunday
Other meetingb in homes

Stive"''ille Community Apo81olk
c 'burcb
P&lt;tstor. Wa}ne R. Je well, Sunday Wllf~hi p
· 6.00 p m . Wednesday· 6.00 p.m B1ble
Study

CommuDh)· of Chria
Ponland-Racine Rd .. Pastor: Jim ProCfitt,
Sunday School · 9:JO a.m , . Wor~hip ·
10:30 a.m ., Wetlne sday Sen'1ces • 7:00
p.m.
Bethel Wunhip Center
39782 S.R. 7, Rctdsville, OH 4S772. 112
mile north of Eastern Schools on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Churcb." Pastor Roh Barber,
Asso{;iale Pastor Karyn Da'tiiS, Yuulh
Pastor Su;de Fr~tncts, Sunday ~c r'tl t l:es
10:00 am worship .- 600 pm Family Life
Classes, Wed. Home 'Cell Groups 7 00
p m . Outer L1m1ts Cell Grollp at the
·church 6:30 pm to !!:30 pm

Minersville
Pastor: Bob Robmson, Sunday School - 9
a.m., Worship - 10 a.m .
Pearl Chaptl
Sunday Sehoul · 9 a.m , Worship· 10 11.m
Pomeroy
Pia51or: Brian Dunham. Worship - 9:30
a.m., Sunday School- 10:35 a.m
Rock Springs
Pastor:.Ke ith Rader. Sunday School - 9: IS
a.m., Worship - 10 am ., Youth
Fellowshtp. Sunday - 6 p.m.

A.sh Street Churth
398 Aim St, Middlepon·Pastor Jeff Smtth
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ., Mcrnmg
Worsh1p - JO · JO a m. &amp; 6· 30 pm.
Wedne~day Servrce · 6· 30 p m , Youth
Service· 6:30 p.m.
Appe Life Center
"Full-Gospel Church", Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade, 6o3 Second Ave Mason, 773.5017. Service time:. Sunday 10:30 a.m .,
Wednesday 7 pm

'

' Rutland
Pastor: Rick Bourne . Sun day School 9:30a.m .. Worship - 10.30 a.m .. Thursday
Services· 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: WJ!Iiam K. Marshall. Sunday
School· 10. 15 a.m., Worsh1p · 9:1.5 a.m.,
Bible Study· Monday 7:00pm
· Snowville
SJinday School- 10 a.m., Worship- 9 a.1)1.

Abundant Grace R.F. I.
923 S. Th1rd St., Middleport, Pastor Teresa
Da v1s, Sunday SC T\'ICe. !0 a·!'" ··
Wednesday ser.,.ice. 7 p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: John Gilll!ore, Sunday School- 10
am., Worship - 9 a.JTI ., Wednesday
Serv1ces - I0 a m.

Faif1l Full Gospel Church
Long Bottom . Pastor: Steve Reed. Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m, Wor ~ hip - 9:30a.m.
and 7 p.m .. WedneWay - 7 p.m.• Friday fellowship service 7 p.m

Carmei·Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. Racu~e. Oh10.
Pastor: John Gt lmore. Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m .. Worsh;p · 10:45 a.m . , ~ible
Study Wed 7:00p.m.

Ha_rrisonville Community Chun:h
Pastor Theron Durham . Sunday - 9·JO
a.m . and 7 p.m .. WedneSday · 7 p.m.

~omJag Star
Paswr: John Gilmore, Sunday SchOo\· II
am., Worship · 10 a m.

Middleport CommUnity Church
57.5 Pearl St.. Middlepon . Pastor: Sam
Ander5oll, Sunday School l 0 a m ,
,Evening-7:30pm . . Wednesday Service ·
7 30pm

East Letlilrt
Pastor· B1ll Marshall S.unday School ·
9a m. Worsh 1p - !0 a.m .. l ~ t Sunday
e'tlery momh evening service 7:00 p m..
Wedne sd a~ - 7 p.m.

Fr.aith V11lley T~~;bernacle Church
Ba1l ey Run Road. Pastor·, Re\ Em mell
Raw son. Sunday E\'emng 7 p m..
Thursday Sei"\'ICl' · 7 p m

Racine
Pastor Kerry Wood , Sunday School • 10
a _m. Worsh•p · II am .

Syracuse !\li§sion
14.11 Bridgeman St .. S)ra~·usc. Sundar
School - 10 a.m. Even mg · 6 p m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p m.

Cooll'ille United Methodist Parish
Pa ~ tor Helen Kliue, Coolvil le Church,
Ma1n &amp; Fifth Sl .' Sunda~'
. . School · 10
am .. Worshtp - 9 a.m .. Tuesda~ Sei"\'!Ct'S ·
7.p.m

Huel Community Chutth
Off Rt 124. P.l\tor · ~dscl H~tr1 . Sunday
Sl:hool · 9:.'\0 a..m.. "Worship ·. 10. .~0 a. m .
7·30 p.m.

Bethel Church
Township Rd , -168C. Sunday S~hool · 9
a.m. Worsh1p - 10 am. Wednesday
Scrv1ccs- !O,a.m

. Oye5villc Community Church
Sunday School . 9:30 am, Wor~h tp .
10:.\0 a.m .• 7 p.m

HO(kingport Chutth ·
Grand Street. Sunday School · cuo am.
Worship . 10.30 a.m . Pastor Phillip sen

Morse- Chapel Church
Sunday s~.:hool • 10 a.r'n .. Wunhip . 11
a.m .. Wednesday Stl"\"lce · 7 p m

lbrdi Churth
Co. Rd. 63. Sunday ,School -9:30a .m..
Worship - lQ 30 a.m

Faith Gospel Church
Lon!! Bo!lom. Sunday School' - lJ ) 0 ;~ m..
Wnrsh1p · I 0·45 am ., 7 ~o · p m,.
Wednesduy 7·30 p rn.
Mt. Olhe CommUni~) ' Ch ul't'h .
Pastor Lawrcoce- Bush. Sunday So:huo! ·
9 30 am .. E\enmg - 6 ~0 p.m.. Wcdnt'da~
Sef\u:e·- 7 p.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Chun:h ollhe Nazarene.
Pastor: Allen M1dcap. Sunday S~.:hool 9·30 am., Worship- 10:30 am . 6 ~0 p.m.
\;Vednesday_ Serv1ces - 7 p m.. Pastor:
Allen Mukap

t"u.ll GO!ipe1 Lighlhouse
Hiland Road, Pomero) . Pa.•tor R t•~
Hunter, Sunda~ S c h~"-JI · 10 a In . Eo;:-mng
7 3U p m. Tutsda) &amp; Thurs - 7·Yil p.m

Retrulvllle Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene. Pastor: Jam ie
Pet tit, Sunday School.· 9.30 a.m., Worship
· 10:45 am .. 1 p m.. Wedn esda)· Sen· ice~
· 7 p,m.

Kejoicin~ Life Chur-ch
N 2nd Ave .. Middleport . Pijslor·
Mtke Foreman . Pastor: Emeritus
l.a\1-rcm:e Fon::man, Worship-- 10 00 am
Wednesday Strv1ces · 7 p m.

~00

Clifton Tahernaclt' Chun.h
Cl1fton. W Va . Sunday Srhool - 10 am .
Wonh1p · 1 p.m , We(lne!&gt;da) Service . 7
p.m.
New Life \'iclory Center
3771 Gt:orgc• Creek Road. Gallipolis. OH
Pastor. Bill Staten. Sunday Servkes - 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m Wednesda) • 7 p m. &amp;
Youth 7 p m.

l

FuU GO!ipel Chun:h
or the Livinl!l Sa~ior
Rt 33~. Antiquity. Pastor Jesse Mo"i s.
Services: Saturday 2:00p.m.
Salem Community Church
Back of West Columbia. W.Va.om Ueving
Ruild, Pastor Charle~ Roush (304) 675228~ Suni:Ja) School 9 30 am, Sllnday .,.
evemng s ervic·~ 7;(){) pm, Btbly Study
Wednesday service i:OO .pm
Hamon Christian Fel~owship Churrh
Pas10r HerS&lt;.·he l White. Sunday School·
10 am, Sunda ~ Chur~.:h ~cr"I' ICe · 6.30 pm
We dne~ ay 7 pm
Restoration Christian FeUowshlp
9365 . Hooper Road Athens. Pa stor:
Lonm e. Coats. Sunday Worship 10·00 ani.
Wednesday: 7 pm
Langsville Christlal) Church
Full Gospel. Pas1 or· Rotiert Mu sser.
S,u m.!a ~' SdH•u l9 :~ 0 a111. WorshtP 10 .~0
am · HlO pm . Wed S.:rv1ee HIO pm

Pentecostal'
Pe~tft'oslal As.!il'mbl~·

St. Rt. 124. Ra~1ne. Torn3do Rd Suni1a)'
Srhool - 10 a.m , EHnlng · 7 p.m

w''"''P';esl&gt;yti!rian
Syrac use First t;nited Presb-' terian
Pastor. Roht-n Cro". We&gt;r~h 1p - I I am
Harrisonl'llle Presb~ttrlan Church
Pastor. Robcn C_ro" ,.Wur~h_tp . Q a.m
Middleport Presbykrian
Pastor James Sn)dcr, Sunda} Sehoul 10
a.m.. wor-.h1p ~Cf\.' IL'C II am

Seventh-Day A~ventist
Mulb rrr~ His Rd
Pomero) Pa~tor ·
Benne It ' LucJ...1e.sh. Saturda:o Sen ""h :
Sabbath School· ~p . m .. Wor,hip · J r m

United Brethren
MI. Hermon United Brethnm
In ('hrist Chun:h
Tcu~ Cnmmumt) ~6411 W1 rkham R.J .
Pastor Ptter Mart ind.-l•e. Sunda~ School .
9 ,l [l am .. Worihl p c 10 W &lt;1m . 7 00
p m. Y.cdne~tla~ Sen ll' ~~ · "T ·On p.m
Y!IUlh sroup mc:cung ~nJ &amp; 4th Sunda~ s
.., p.m
'
.
•:den l nited Brethren in ChrU1
Stale Rou1c 1~-l. . ~~~ een Reed~\ tile &amp;
H ~o...: l.m gpMl. SLJ nda;. S.:hool · 10 am ..
Sunda\ \\or•h1p · ll \10 am V.edne~~
,S&lt;:r\i&lt;'C• · ii)O'pm Pa-.lnr· MAdam

J304~

South Btthel Communit;. f'hurt'h'
Sliver R1dge- Pastor LmJa Dame" l"-Ki.
Sunda} School · IJ a m . Wprsh!p Senlc"l'
10 a.m. 2nd and 41h Sunt'la~

Syracuse Churth of the Nazarene '
Pastor Mike Adkins. Sunday School · 9:30
a.m .. Worship . 10:30 a.m , 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Serv1ces • 7 p m.

Carieton lnltrdenominational t'hurch
K'mgsbury Road. Past or Rotlat \an,·e.
Sunday School - Q .~0 n 'm . Wnr~htr

ROCKSPRINGS
your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men. that they may see rour
The care you de$.ene~ close lo home good works and glorifr rour

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

Fa1her in heat·en."
Matrh e•r 5:16

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

or God so lol'ed the ,n,rld

e

Meigs Counl} ·!&lt;.O ide.,.t Flonst
352 East Main
•Lit u£

~~r.d

yo •Jr

thollght~

740-992-2644

t

he gal'e his only

We Fill Doctors'
lb&lt;'I!(ITtt•n so11 ...
Prescriptions
John3:/6
992-2955
Pomeroy

Acts 24:

Ph1lhp
Riden our. S und~t ~ lll·hnol · 'J 30 a m ,
Wor:o.h1p. I !I ~0 a m.. W~:dne-.t.lt~ y St!l"\lce
. 7 pm

Amulna Gract Community Church

tltath {Middlt:port)
Pastor: Brian Dunham, Sunday School .9:30 a,m., Worsh,ip · II :00 a.m.

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and q1an ..

Whitt's ( "hapel WnleyaR
Co ol\ 111 ~ ~ t oad . Pa•tor. Re~

A New Beatnnlna
(Full Gnspel Churth) Harrison'tlllle.
Pastors: Bob and Kay MarVtall,
SWiday Servtce, ~ p.m

Pomeroy Cbun:h of the Nazarene

K.&amp; C JEWELERS

Fl'f't'dom Gotpel Mlaion
Bald Knoh, on Co Rd ) I . Pa!&gt;IOr Rev
Roget W!lll'ord , Sundll)' Schoql · 9 30
a.m W1K~h1p· 7 p m '

.Other Churches

Lau~

Cliff Frft Methodist Chun:h
Pastor: Glenn Rowe, Sanday School ·
9 30 a m.. Wor!:ihlp · 10:30 a. m. and 6
p m.,Wednesda) Service- 7·1);) p m.

pm

Chesttr Church of the Naurene
I
PuJ&gt;tor: Rev. Herbert Gr;lle, Sunday School
- lj· 30 a.m., Wor~h1p · II am , 6 p m .
Wednesday Semces . 7 p.m.
Rudand Churdl of the Naurt&gt;ne
Sunday Sr huol · 11:30 am .. Wt1nh1p •
10 :30 a .m 6 30 p.m., Wedne~y
Sef'tllces · 7 p.m. Rev. M1kl! Cia*

Tuppers Plains Sl. Paul
Pa ~ ttn. Jane B~:atl1e, Sunday S~;houl · 9
a nl . Worship · 10 a 111 , Tuesday S~l"\ltces
- 7:30pm
Central Cluster
As~ury (Syr.teuse), Pastor: Bob Robmson ,
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.. Worship - II
a. m., Wedne~t.lay Ser\IJce~ · 7:30 p.m

Community Churth
Pastor: Steve Tomek. Main Street.
Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m.,
Sunday Servtc:e-7 p.m
Danville Holiness Chun:h
31057 State: Route 325, Langsvlle, Pastor:
V1ctor Rou~ h. Sunday school ~ 9:30 a.m,
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m ,
Wtdnesday prayer semce · 7 p m.

Scrv1ce 10' 30 a.m.. E\cmng Ser\'iCe 6

Pastnr· Jan Lavendtr. ~unday School •
9·30 am ., Worsh1p · 10:30 a.m. 1nd 6
p m., Wednesday Scrviceb · 7 p m.

Long Bottom
C:unday School · 9:.10 a m., Wor~hip •
10:30 a.m.
Rffiinllk
Wor~hip · 9· 30 am , Sund ay School .
10:30 a.m.. First Sunday of Monlh. 7:00
p m. service

Enttrprise
Arland King, Sunday School •
10:30 a.m, Worship · 9·:30 a.m.. B1ble
Study Wed. 7:30
Flatwoods '
Pastor: Ke1th Rader, Sunday School • 10
am., Worsh1p . ll a.m

Gract Episcopal Church
326 E. Mam St., Pom eroy, Sunday School
and Holy Euchari:tr 11:00 a.m . Re'tl.
Edward Payne

p.m

992-3785

.MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomerov, Ohio 45769 ~'it)
(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-1177-5113-2433 ,

Hope Baptist Chut'(':h (Soothem)
.no Grant St.. Middl eport. Sunday ~ hool
· 9:30a.m, Worship · II am. and 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Scf\.'ICe · 7 p.m. Pii~tur Gary
Ellis
Rutl.nd 11rst Baptist Church ·
Sunday School · 9.30 am., Worship 10:45 am.
Pomemy Fint Rapti~
Pastor Jon Brockert. East Main St ..
Sunday Sch 9:30am, Worsh1p 10: 30 am

6 am- 8 pm

:1tnw.-tphere

Open 7 days a 'Week
740-992-7713

5x1 0 to 10 x 20

Pomeroy Church of Christ
212 W Mam St., Sunday School· 9:30
am .. Wouh1p-' 10;30 am., 6 p
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Radne Fin;t Baptist
Paslor : Joseph Godwm, mt er1m pa~tor
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m .. Worship ·
10:40 a.m .. 7 00 p.m .. Wednesda~
Sl!n'Jces • 7 00 p.m.

!lour ~

''A Home Bank for
· Home People"

Sizes available

. Baptist
Carpenter Baptist Church
Sunday School . 9:30am, Preaching
Servu;:e
!0·30am, Evcnin!! Scrvke
7:00pm. Wednesday Rible Study 7:00pm,
lntenm Preacher . Floyd Ross

Flnct Baptist Churth
Pastor: , 6th and Pa lmer St. Middleport.
Sund11y S~hnol · .9:1~ a.m .. Worship 10. 15 a.m .. 7.00 p.m .. Wednesday
Serv1cc- 7·00 p m

..

Westside Chun:h ol Chri!ii
3.1226 Chtldren's Home Rd, P&lt;Jm eroy, OH
Contact 740-441-1296 Sunday tporning
10:00, Sun morning Bible study ;
followmg worShip, Sun . eve 6 00 pm.
Wed hible study 7 pm
.fkmlock Grove Christian Churrh
Mmister: La"y Brown. Worship • 9:30
a.m Sunday School - 10.30 a.m., Bible
Sludy · 7 p m.

First Southern Bapllolt
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastur. E Lamar
O'Bryant. Sunday School · 9.30 am.
Wo~hir · 8 L'i am, 'NS am &amp; ·7:00pm .,
Wednesday Services- 7:00 p,m.

(740) 992-6472
Fa• 17401992-7406

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

740-949-2217

Church of Christ

Vlctnry Baplbt lndependenl
.525 N 2nd St Middleport. P3stor James
E. Keesee . Wqrship · lOam .. 7 p.m .
Wednesday 'Sm·~'ces · 7 p.m.

740-949-221 0

The Hppliance man

*

333 Page Streel
Middleoort QH

Wmm !-'ltendlr

Racine, OH

as " I know you're going to love this product, may I show itlo youo•·.

The eye is the lamp of the body. So, if your eye is sou11d, your
whole body will be full of light; but if your eye is not sound,
your whole b11dy will be full of darkness.

"Still small e~~ough to care"

29670 Bashan.Rd..

going to say. "no:" But. with a positive attitude and a sa les pitch such
the salesman i's much more likely to get a yes. Of, course, there are
limits to positi ve thinking; if m~rely thinking something made it so,
we would all he ITullionairc~ and saints. But. our thinking is the
foundation for our actions, and on ly by thmking positi ve ly Can we
make progres.r. towards our goal11 . And even when things go wrong,
as surely they will on occa~ i on. positive thinKing helps u~ to
overcome th e difficultie~ hy 1h1nki ng ..:on'ltructrvely. It is always
heuer to lrgh_t a candl e !han to cur~c the darkncs&lt;,;.

Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Alhens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
1-740-667-3156

Hills Self Storage

sign erection

saying, "you don't wam to huy any of my producJs, do you?"
You can be preuy sure thai everyone who is asked !hal question is

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTE.R·

Catholic

Emmanuel Apostolic T.btrn11de lnf,
Loop Rd off New Limo Rd . Rutland,
Se~kes : Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thurs. 7.00 p.m., Pastor MartyR. Huu on

Che5hlrt' Baptist Church
Pastor: Steve littl e. Sunday School· 9 ·~ 0
am, Moming Worship: 10:30 am.
Wednesday Bihlc Study 6 30pm, choir
pracrke 7:~0: youth and B1ble Buddies
' 6:30p.m. Thurs. 1 pm book ~tudY

,.

School • . 10 a.m.• Evening · 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
kond Baptill: Church
R;n·enswood, WV, Sunday School 10 am' Morning worship II am Evening- 7 pm.
Wednesday 7 p.m . •

Sacred Heart CathoHc t:hun:h
lbl Mulberry Ave , PomerQy, 992·51198,
Pasmr: R!!\1 , Waller E. Heinz. Sat. Con.
4.45 - ~ 15p.rn .. M3 ~S· .5:30 ~.m., Sun.
Con. -8:45'·9 .15 am .•• Sun. Mau • 9·30
a.m .. Da•ly Mass . 8:30 u.m.

Liberty A!l&amp;fmbly ol GOO
P.O. Box 4f'l7, Dudding Lane, Masun,
W.Va., PaslOr: Neil Tennant, Sundlly
Services· 10:00 a.m. and 7 ,p.m. ,

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

.

RherValley
River Valley Apostollt' Worstup Cem~:r,
HH S. 3r&lt;J. A\'e.. Middleport•. Rc\1
Michad Bradford, Pa~tor. Sunday, 10:30
a.m. -Tues 6 30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm Bible
Study

Assembly of God

·r

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
·A Celebration of Lite"

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

I

God Reaching\Dow~, Lifting Up

www.mydallysentlnel.com

with

t~lll l eat~~'

740-992-6298

erace
for thee: for
mY
•
~treneth is'm.ade
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

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

..
.

'

�Febru~ry
I" •

.1·\ 1

..

18-25 .

Frld~y, February 24, 2006

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page AS • The Dally Sentinel

~

Bl

Thur;day'e gamH
Girts Tournament Basketball

·Feb~ary

National FFA Week

The Daily Sentinel

LocAL SCOREBOARD
Circleville 52, Gallla Academy 24
Winfiald 76, Point Pleasant 34
Boys Basketball

·., 18-25

Wahama 64 , Calhoun Couply 36

Friday, February 24, :wo6

•

Wahama gets historic victory
The FFA is ·a national organization dedicated to preparing · members for
leadership and careers in the science, business anq technology of agriculture.
Local, state and· national activities and award programs provide ,opportunities to
apply knowledge and skills acquired through agriculture education. During the
2004-05 academic year the Ohio FFAAssociation had 21,531 members in 317
chapters.

Bv

GARY CLARK

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

__,.Break

GRANTSVILLE. W.Va .
- A determined season ending road victory at Calhoun
County Thursday evening
accomplished what no other
Wahama White Falcon basketball team has achieved in

LocAL SCHEDULE
GALUPOLIS - A schedule of upcoming college

and h19h school varsity sporting even1s involVing
teamg lrom G&amp;llia, Meigs and Mason counties.

Frkliy's games

26 years after three Falcon
cage stars scored 15 points
eacn in a convinci ng. onesided 64-36 hardwood victory.
.
The success starved. Class
A Mason County program
captured its 13th win of the
2005-06 sea,on to surp&lt;~ss a
win total that 25 previous

WHS cage teams have failed
to re~ li ze. In addition the
cu rrent Bend Area squad
·insured itself of a winning
.season for the first time in 12
years follvwing the di sman·
tl ing vf the Red Devil s on its
home cuun.
Please see Wahama, Bl

Boys Tournament Batketball

The FFAmission is to make a positive difference in the lives of students by
developing their potential for premier leadership, personal growth and career
success through agricultural education.

River Valley vs. Alexander. (at Athens). 6

p.m.

Girts Tournament Basketball
Whiteoak vs. Eastern (at JaCkson), 6:15

p.m.
Boys Basketball

Wayne at Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.
Wirt County at Hannan, 7:30p.m.

Meigs Career and Technical Center of(ers Agricultural Science and Horticulture
Technology programs. Instructors are Tim Simpson and Ron Vlasak.

Wrestling
W.Va. State Tournament (at Huntington)

2006 WINTER GAMES

Meigs FFA officers; Front: Ashley Samar, Vice President; Ashley Savage, Secretary; Constance Wyatt, Reporter r
Back: April Butcher, Sentinel; Brittany Varian, Treasurer; Kyle Hoover, Student Advisor; Chris Runyon, President ·
As 9f Feb. 23
Includes 70 of 84 medal events

ORIGINS OF F·FA
The original in~pir ation for the ot·gunization began after the Smith-Hughes National Vocational Education Act of llJ 17
.establ ished 'o{·:ttional agriculture courses. Virginia's Future Farmers clubs for boys in agriculture led to the establishment of a
natio.nal organization, The Future Farmers of America, at the Hotel Baltimore in Kansas City, Missouri in 1928'. The FFA was
grantl.'d a fl.'deral charter in 1950 when Congress passed Public Law 740.ln 1965 the organization consolidated with the .New
Fai·nwr-; of .\mt~rica, the organization for black agricultural students. Gil'ls were petmitted to join as members .in I,69. In
19~8. the oflkiul name of the organization was changed fro~n F.nturJ: Farmers of America tQ the National FFA Organization.
.

'

'

'

The FE\ is -;tructurcd on the local, state and national levels. The National }"FA Organization is led by a board of directors and
six· student national .ol'f1cers. Delegates representing the 's tate associations vote on tccommendations and polic~·' issucs at the
national
. come ntion. National F.FA staff members rarry thrungh the policies and provide programs and services while the
. national ofncers represent the members .and guide the organization.
',

'

Tht: Ohiq FF.\ :\ ssociation is led by the state officer team, consisting of a president, vice president, senetary, trrasurer,
reporter. sentinel and a district president representing eac h of Ohio's ten districts. Chapter members serve as delegall.'s to the
state con,cntion and elect the stat(· officers and conduct official busir1ess.

The five symbols ofFFA:
Cross Section of an Ear of Corn
Rising Sun
Eagle
An Owl
A Plow

The FFA

motto~

· ~'Learning to Do.
. Doing to Learn.
Earning.to Live.
Living to Serve."

G

s

B .TOT

Gennany

9 10

5 i 24

United States

7

8

Austna

6

Canada

8
5

5 ! 20
5 )9

8

6 ' 19

Russia

e

e i 19

Norway

2

3
8

Swltzenand

5 4

8 i 18
;
4 ; 13

Sweden

5

2

4 ·:; 11

Italy

4

0

6 ! 10

France

3

2

4' 9

China
South Korea

2
·4

3
3

4
1

Netherlands

2

Finland

0

2
3

3 ' 7
3 6

Estonia

0

Croatia

3
1

3,
3

Aust~lia

.1

0

0
0
1

Czach Rep.

0

2

0

2

Ukraine

0

0

1

0

2
0

~

Japan
Belarus

0

0

1

Britarn

0

1
1

0

1

Bulgaria

0

1

0

1

Slovakia

0

1

0

Latvia

0

0

1

1
1.

2

i

;

9
8

2

1

.

.

.

AP photo

Ohio State's Brandie Hoskins. left, drives to the basket for
a lay-up past Purdue's Natasha Bogdanova during the first
half of an NCAA basketball game Thursday in Columbus. ·

Ohio State beats
No. 12 Purdue ·
BY RUSTY MILLER

ly 63-61 ovenime lost to
Indiana at home on Sunday.
· .The Boilermakers were
. ' . -·icf:._t;-·.
: ,, f:~'. ~-\
·'r ~~~-"
.· COLUMBUS . Ohio unable to get any offense in
_.
."
AP
State coa~h J1m Foster the paint or even within 12
cltmbed g1~gerly . up the feet of the basket again.st the
stepladder, sc1ssors m hand. It Buckeyes, the nation's stingiwas · only s1x rungs, but 11 • est defense at 51.3 points per
seemed to take ·a long t1me to game. With the . 6-foot-5
get to ~he top.
Davenpon patrolling the lane
Jess.1ca Davenpon scored along with. Merrill. Purdue
20
pomts to lead No. 6 Oh10 was forced to shoot from the
BasebaU I SoftbaU
State to a 67-58 victory over perimeter.
·
sign-ups announced .No. 12 rurdue on Thursday "We just didn't have that
mght, g1vmg ~he Buckeyes tandem." Purdue coach Kristy
thetr
first outnght ·B1g Ten Curry said. "They had two
POMEROY - Pomeroy
ut!~ m two decade~. . .
, and we had one (post plaver).
Youth League will hold
. Wmntng 11 1s · great, That was the difference tram
baseball
and
softball
F?ster said. "We shared it the tirst game. Debbie Meni II
signups at th e Pomeroy
Wtth
a rreUy good team last is much more Of ·a presence
Fire Depa rtment 5:30year
(Mich1gan
State) and we right now."
·
7:30 p.m .· on Tue sday ,
had
to
go
14-2
to
do.
that.
We
The
Buckeyes,
up by seven
Feb. 28 and Thursday.
beat some really good teams at the half stretched the lead
March 2·; and from I 0
this ye~, including arguably to·. 39-28 'iri the openino 5
a.m.-1 p.m. on Saturday.
four of the best down the minutes of the second half
March 4 . · ·
stretch."
only to have the Boilennakers
For costs and .more
The victory -. Ohio State's pull within three points twice. '
information ,' co ntact Ken
!5th marowsmcelosmg61-· Widsom-Hylton s two free
McCullough at 992-5322.
:l9 at Purdue on Jan. I - throws witli 7:29 left cut the
· gave the Buckeyes (24-2. 141) a two-game lead .ii1 the
Please see OSU. B1
conference with·one to play.
A crowd of 7, 174 chanted
"Big Ten champs" in the final
seconds as Ohio State locked
up its tirst outright confer·
Ohio Valley Publishing is
ence title si nce the 1985-86
currently collecting basket·
season.
ball . season stati stics and
"Carpi ng in my freshman
1101T1inations for OVP I0 and
year we were a .500 ·team,"
AP All-District.
said Ashley Allen, one of five
As soon as·your team plays
seniors
. playing their final
its final regular season game.
home
game.
"Ohio State hasplease send us your inforn1a- ·
n't done it since the 1980s. so
tion.
it
means a lot."
~
You can fax to (740) 446Brandie
Hoskins
added
19
3008. or email them to:
points
and
Debbie
Menill
13
spans@ mydail ytri bune.com.
for
the
Buckeyes,
who
scored
Deadline is . 'Monday,
their final 14 points on foul
February 27.
shots.
,"Since this was my · hl~t
year. I really wanted to go·out
with a bang.'' said Merrill, .a
CONTACTS
transferfrom Cincinnati who
sat out last' season. "This was
Phone- 1· 740-446-2342 ext 33
really big for me."
Fax - 1-740-446-3008
Ohio State· was 19 of 27 at
E-mail - sports@mydailysentlnel.com
the line to Purdue's 6-for-9.
"We practice that all the
Sport• S.t~tt
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
time. httting free throws at
(740) 446·2342 . ext 33
c1unch time," Hoskins said.
bsherman@mydailymbune.com
Katie Gearllls led the
Boilermakers (22-5. 12·3)
Bryan Wallers. Spor1a write;
(740) 446·2342 , ext 23
with 19 points, with Lind,ay
bwatlers@mydellytnbune Com
Wisdom-Hylton adding 13.
TI1e Boilermakers have lo&gt;t
Lar~ Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342 , ext 33
two straight. inc•luding a cost-.

.

-

ASSOCIATED PRESS .

These are just a few of the manr sen·ices .
·at Pleas&lt;~1t Valley Hospital whe1:e you \\ill
find millions of dollars worth oftechnolOf,'Y·,
medical and
technological. specialists
.
and dozens of options, all to treat
just one ·condition ... THE Hl'~IA~ OSE.

BRIEFS

The emblem of the FFA represents the,history, goals and future .of the organization. FFA Colors
are·national blue and com gold.

Scenes fro~ the Meigs ·
Agricultural Science and
Horticulture Technology ·
classes

COUNTRY

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
2520 Valley Drive • P9int Pleasant. WV • 20 l-bcd facility

301-675-1310 ,.

Attention:.varsity
hoops coaches
1

Meigs FFA members are active in various ·soil judging contests, livestock judging, small engine
r~mir, an annual ski trip, the annual Farm Science Review trip, fruit sales, barbeque sauce sales.
summer Ohio camp, summer fair projects, rabbit, poultry, and swine production, plant doning.
plant ~nd flower production and sales, greenhouse maintenance and ·production, animal seminars.
forestry and landscaping topics, Enviroth01i, hydroponics, tractor restoration, careei development,
and the annual FFA banquet. ·.
Students are awarded The Greenhand and Chapter FFA degrees for their achievements during the
year. Proficiency awards are also presented.
·
·

•

Ierum@ myda 1ly re~ ISler .com

•

.·

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

HOLZER CLINIC

Urgent Care ·
Open 7 Days a week, with
convenient locations in:
Gallipolis·
Jackson
Athens
· Meigs

740.446.5287
Medical Excellence.
Local Carins: ·
Everywhere

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www. mydailysentinel.com

Maj_or League Basebail- Spring Training

.Gagne faces hitters for first time in months
prev iously received permisThe Dominicans won't
sion from the club 10 repo11 have Tex"as Rangers closer
Los Angeles Dodgers clos- next Wednesday. one day Francisco Cordero. who has a
er Eric Gagne faced hillers after the mandatory reporting sore ' houlder, or Arizona
reliever Jose Valverde, who
Thursday for the first time date.
since undergoing. elbow
Red Sox preside nt Larry pulled out because he wants
surgery last June and was ·Lucchino declined to take the to prepare for his season with
pleased with the results.
bait when asked about New the Di amondbac ks. Both
He· hopes to be ready for York
owner . George were on the Dominican
opening day, though he does- Steinbrenner's statement the Republic's preliminary roster.
At Scottsdale, Ari z., Barry
previous d~y that the Yankees
n't have a timetable.
"I expected to fee l good but would wi n th€ World Series. Bond.s had a quiet second day
·, I didn't expect to have so
'" We have enough to worry in spring training with a much
much zip on my fastball and about in our own camp let smaller media contingent premovement on my changeup,'·' alone worrying about what sent than upon hi s arrival the
Gagne said. " I was surprised. everybody else says in other previous day.
It's reassuring. I was under camps." Lucchino said. "I
"What happened to the
· control, staying inside myself take that as an expression of mob?" Giants manager.Felipe
and• throwing about 80 per- optimi sm rather than as a pre- Alou said. "'The mobsters." .
cent. The ball was going diction . I'm glad he's optiBonds hi t five home runs in
.where I wanted it to, which is mistic but we have nothing in batting practice against firsta big thing."
common on that. We sti II see base coach Lui s Pujols,
The 2003 NL Cy Young .ourselves as Oa vid against ihcluding two conseGutive
balls into the" right-field picAward winner was limited to Goliath."
14 games last season due to
Ramirez and former. Red me area.
At the end of his workout,
arm and knee injuries. On Sox
teammate
Pedro
· June 24, he had surgery to Martinez mi ght withdraw Bonds took a nap on the floor
the
Domini can . in the far corner of the clubrepair a ligament in his e1bow. from
Pat Borders, who caught ·Republic's team in lhe World house.
Gagne's 20-pitch, four-batter Baseball Classic . Mai1inez.
Alou said Bonds wouldn 't
session, said the right-hander who has a toe injury. still has- . play in an intrasquad game
. mixed fastballs. changeups n't pitched off a mound in next Wednesday and probably
and sliders. Gagne did not spring trainin g for the New would be limited to games in
throw · a curve ball but said York Mets. He said Thursday which he can be the designatthere wasn't a specific reason he will definitely miss the ed (litter. The Giants ' concern
why not.
·
tirst round of the tournament. now .is how Bonds will react
"I didn.'t know until after
"Our. understanding is that to running in the field or on
that, that was the first time Pedro. very frankly, is doubt- the bases.
he'd thrown against live hit- ful," said Gene Orza, the No.
At Viera Fla. , Alfonso
ters since last year," Borders 2 official of the players' asso- Soriano still isn 't ready to
said. "That being said, it ciation. "It's still possible he commit to playing the outmade what he did out there will play, but I think it's ' at field for the Washington
more impressive. His change- best 50-50 right now."
Nationals, so a resolution will
up was super."
·. Orza has spoken in recent have to wait until after the
In Fort Myers. Fla. , the , days with representatives for World Baseball Classic.
. Boston Red Sox had their Ma11inez and Ramirez.
A two-hour meeting with
frrst full- squad workout, with
"Coming to camp on March team offiCials failed to proManny · Ramirez the only ·no- I doe sn't · bode well for duce a breakthrough, and the
show.
Manny 's pa11icipation," Orza pal1ies esseniially agreed t~
The slugging left fielder said.
put ?If the problem.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

"We've been pretty clear
about being unclear," general
manager Jim Bowden said.
Soriano will be allowed to
work out at second base with
the Nationals for the first few
days of spring trammg
because \hat is the position he
will play for the Dominican
Republic. Soriano reports to
the Dominican team March 3
and could return as late as
March 21.
At Lakeland, Fla., Detroit
manager
Jim
Leyland
announced · veteran left-han·
der Kenny Rogers will sta11
the Tigers' season-opener
April 3 at Kansas City.
Jeremy Bonderrnan. last
year's opening-day starter,
will pitch the horne opener
April 10 agains1 the defending world champion Chkago
White Sox.
At Mesa, Ariz., Carlos
Zambrano, slimmer after los- ·
ing 15-20 poun&lt;!s in the offseason, talked about his lofty
expectations this season.
"One of my goals is to win
the Cy Young and help this
teani to go to the · World
Series," said Zambrano, who
used all his pitches during the
tearn:s · first session of live
batting practice.
At. Phoenix, Frank Thomas
arrived at Oak! an&lt;! Athletics
spring training but won't be
able to take pa11 in workouts
until the team's doctors check
out ;m MRI of his surgically
repaired left ankle.
·
He said he plans to spend
most of the spring hitting in
"B" games with minor leaguers.

Williams trying to hold Indians find motivation
spot in Reds' rotation in last season's collapse
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) .. When he got tr.aded to the
Cincinnati Reds for first
baseman Sean Casey last
December, left-hander Dave
Will-iams was concerned
about fitting into hi s new
team .
Now that training camp
has opened, he has a new
goal - keeping &lt;\spot in the
rotation.
Manager Jerry Narron has
already
decided
that
Williams will be in the rotation on "opening day,
although it's unclear where
. he 'll be slotted. Paul Wil son
is returning from shoulder
surgery, and the rotation had
the NL' s worst earned run
average last season ,
So, there's a lot of wiggle
room. And. a lot of room for
Williams to make a good
first impression.
The Reds. got William s
becau se their pitching is a
big deal.
Cincinnati had the league' s
top offense last season , scoring. an average .of- five run s
per game -. more than
enough to win most of them .
The problem was that the
pitching staff gave up an
average of 5.15 earned runs

per game, worst i.n the· NL.
That worked out to a fifthplace fini sh 111 the NL
Central and a fifth straight
losing season. It al so prompted the Reds to trade the popular Casey to Pittsburgh for a
starting pitcher.
Willi ams was shocked by
the trade - · he didn't think
the Pirates were shopping
him around . He '·s starting to
get used to the noti on of
pitching for another team.
William s. 26, led · the
Pirates· starters with I0 vi ctori es last season, going I0II with a 4.41 ERA during
.hi s first full season in the
rotation. He didn ' t win the
spot until the fin al week of
spring training.
Th e I·eft-hander mi ssed ·
more than half of the 2002.
season because of shoulder
surgery ahd spent all of 2003
in the mino rs. He struggled
in spring training last year,
but made the team and made
the mos.t of the chance.
. Williams has a good breaking ball and a detennina tio11
to keep his pitches down at
Great Ameri can Ball Park ,
wh ic h yielded th e most
homers in the majors last
season .

WINTER I-lAVEN, Fla. 'title. But they dropped two
(AP) - The sunny skies of three to Tampa Bay, got ·
over the Cleveland Indians' swept by the White Sox and
first
full- finished the season two
squad .work- games behind Boston in the
o
u
t wild-card race.
T h u r sd a y
Going · into last season,
w a s n ' t just about ev·erybody would
enough to have signed on for 93-69
make
the record, but in the end that
players for- was no consolation.
get the final week of last
"Everybody was disapseason.
pointed with the way we
After being one of the finished ," shortstop Jhonny
hottest teams in baseball for Peralta said. "We all thought
two months, the Indians · we were going to get in the
played themselves out of the playoffs that last week, but
postseason by losing six of It didn't work out."
·
their last seven games.
While the frustration
The late collapse lingered remains, many players are
in the minds of some play- turning it into a positive.
ers all winter.
·
"I talked to a lot of guys
·'I don 't know if you ever about it," Martinez said.
get over it,'" designated hit- ''We want ,to get back out
ter 'Travis Hafner said. "'We there and prove we can. do
we re re'lll Y close and it."
we ren't able to finish it off.'' . Manager Eri~ Wedge said
"People asked me about it he started thinking about
wherever I went,'' catcher · 2006 as soon as the season
Victor
Martinez said . ended . However, if his play"Everybodv asked me , ers want to tum the late col"What happened , to you lapse into an advantage,
guys' You were so close." " that's fine with him.
The Indians were in posi''When I talked to the
tion to win the Ameri can team after the last game, ·1
League wild-card spot and felt then there would be a
. were even threatening strong resolve going into
Chicago for the AL Central this year," he said,

Wahama

son secti onal . tournam ent outing we wanted to force an
play to be hel d n ~x t week.
up-tempo game from the
Once again the Falcon&gt; top beginning," Falcon assistant
from PageBl
th ree scorers and rebound coach Mike Wolfe said fol leaders nn the season came lowing the road victory. "We
· A Wahama basketball through in the clutch win exec uted that game plan right
SRUad hasn·r won more than ove r Calhoun
Couniy. from the opening tip and took
12 games in a season since -Seniors Brandon Fowler and control early .a nd I think that ·
the 1979-80 season when the Clay Roush along with junior was the difference. We kept
Bend Area team posted a 16- Brenton Clark scored 15 our .turnovers down to single
4 record. A WHS team also poi nt' apiece with sopho- digit numbers and that was
basn't assembled a winning more Casey Harrison adding also a big factor."
Wahama led by a 15- I0
campaign since a 12- 11 mark nine tallie&gt; in the energizing
margin after one quarter
in the 1·992-93 sc hool year. .WHS trium ph. .
.
The emotionally charged win . · "A fter standing aro und and before turning up the heat
gave Toth's veteran c~ ge ros- .gettin g off to a slow start defensively to limit the Red
ter a 13-9 slate with post - sea~ again st Hamlin in our ·last Dev ils 10 just eight second

osu

from Page Bl

f

,

lead to 48-45 . Bu t the
Buckeyes responded on
Merrill 's leaning bank shot that
ended up being a .thiee-point
play.
· After a Purdue turnover.
Allen pinpointed a pass to
Davenpon for another ba;,ket
inside to make it 53-45 with
just under 6 minutes remain ing
- the Buckeyes· lirial fi eld
goal. She scored 14 in the second half.
.
"1 was being more active.

w ww. mydai lysenti nel.com

T he Dai ly Sent nel • Page B3

High School Basketball

.

.

BY

Friday, February 24, 2006

Friday, February 24. 2006

more aggre ss ive: · Davenpon
said of her second-half surge.
''I· was able to see what they
were doing_ in the tirst half and
then I tried ·to make myself
more ~v a il abl e in the se&lt;:ond
. half and tried to get more
rebound&gt;...
Gearlds hit a 3-pointer to
pull the Boilermakers to 53 -4R
before Hoskins - a 48-percent shoote r at the line - hit
four w nsemti ve free throws ·
for a 57-48 lead with 2:21 left .
Purdue ne ver got closer than
\ iX point' again.
'" We cut i·t to li ve and then to
three and I thought we had a
chance:· Curry " tid. ··Bu t
) lllt ' ve · got to make plays
I

down the stretch and we we re
unable to do that' '
· Out rebounded in the. first
meeting, the Buckeyes controlled the hoards 32-27, with
Dave.npoi1 grabbing I0.
"I thought we played terrific
defensively
and well
eno ugh offe nsively.". Foster
said. '" I like the fact that Jess
cwne back aggressive in the
second half an&lt;.l that Debbie
.Merrill stayed aggrc'"ive
throughout the game . And
Brandte \ getti ng better."
Davenpon wa' hemmed "in
on ali· side., in the .Jirst half,
l}lanagi ng ju't li ve ' hots. But
H o~ k ifl s 'cored 10 points primarily on hur' ts throttgh the
r

01\IJI!ON II

o-o 0,

Jennifer Farmer 0 0·0 OL Amanda Wade 1
0·2 2, Lacey Reedy 4!: 3-4 7, Katelyn
Kal inoski 4().() 1~ . Rachel Spangler 0 1-2
1, Grace Winner 0 0-0 0, Liz Scudder 1
0 2, Casse Mogan 4 5·9 13, Molly Hlghlill

Cle. Cent. Cath. 67, Smithvi lle 52
Cols. Ready 64, Sparta Highland 44
Doylestown Chippewa 52, Massill on
Tuslaw 39
,
Lorain Cl earvlew 48, Sullivan Black River

o-

1

o-o 2. Abbey

Palmer 0

o-o

o-o

0, Kaltlyn

32

o-o

Graham 2
4, Mellasa Cydrus 1
2,
Jamie Johnson 1 o-o 2. Totals - 20-4 3 9-

Marlon Elgin 49, Amanda·Ciearcrtek 28 •
New Middletown Spring. 69, E. Palestine

1752.

54
Oak Hill 54, Sardinia Eastorri Brown 52

GAWA ACADEMY (11-12)
Jaokie Wamsley 2 2·2 6, Lauren Kyger 0 2·
2 2 Leah Cummons 0 o-o 0 Michelle

Peninsula Woodridge 53 ,
Garfield 41

Johrlson 1 0-0 2 Brtnany Elliott 2 Q-1 4

d

0.

3, Lindsey Niday 0 2-2 2. Totals- B-68 7·
10 24 .
.

15 16 16 5 · -

Circleville

... II

arrettavllle

3:30p.m., Sunday

.

·

'•

Warren JFK 52, Chagnn Falls 47
Youngs.
Ursuline
78,
Andover ·

52

Pymatuning \Iaiiey 36

G.Acldomy
3 6 2 · 13 - 24
DIVISION IV
3-polnt goals - Circleville 3-8 (Kalinoski
Ashtabula Sts. John &amp; Paul 47, Windham
3), GA h19 (Leslie). Fouled Oul- Wade, ' 40
Elllott. Total Rebounds - Circleville 46
E. Can. 66, Ainman 30
(Pontious 9, Highfill 9), GA 28 (Perry 10).
Glouster Trimble 50 , Leesburg Fairfield 41
Offensive Rebounds - ClrciSVille 15, GA
17: Steals - -Circlevilltp 1 (Mogan 3) , GA

13 (Perry 3). Blocks- Clrclovllle 4 (Highfill

1

2), GA 2· (Sojka, Niday) . TUf"novers Circleville 23, GA 16.

C• eg M kCDQN&amp; fiNAL

WINFIELD 76,
POINT PLEASANT 34
WINFIELD (21-2)
Bre Kyle 4 9·10 18, Amanda Ashey 0 0·0
Natalie Kline 6 4--4 16, Jessica Johnson
o o-o 0, Brldgette Harper 6 o-o 12, Kristen
Workman 1 o-o 2, Katie Claxton 2 7·8 12.

Ohio High SChool Boyo Baoketboll
Thurodoy'o Rooulto
Toumoment
DIVISION. I
Gin. Anderson 62, Cin . Walnut Hllts..30
Cin. La Salle 61_; Cin. Sycamore 48

o.

Julie Thompson 2 0-1 5, Brittany Lee 3 0-0
6, Rebecca Stidham 2 o-o 5, Courtney
Robertson 0
0, Austen Hazelen 0 0-0
o.Totals~ 26 2().23 76 .

o-o

POINT pLEASANT (12-12)
Leah Eddy .1 o-o 2; Anna Sommer 6 0-2
13, Char Bibbee 1 o-o 2, Trista VanMatre 1
o-6 2. Liz Somerville 0 0-0 0, Britteny
Clonch 0 0· 1 0, Tessa Wyant 1 2·7 4, Jody

Kidron Cent. Christian 56, Hartvlne Lake
Center Christian 41
Kirtla.nd !;6, Newbury 43
Lowellville 61 , Youngs. Christian .a
Mineral Ridge 57, McDonald 41
Portsmouth Clay 42, Corning Miller 28

I

Cin. Wester~ H1ils 61 , Trenton Edgewood
53
.
Clayton Northmont 60, Sidney 35
Delaware 53, Pickerington Cent. 51
Ketter1ng Fairmont 75, Huber Hts. Wayne

59

.

Lancaster 74 , Grove City Cent. Crossing

30
1

Harttey 0 1-2 1, Melissa AdkinS 0 2·6 2,

Mason 50 , Middletown 46
.
·Thomas Worthington 48 , Logan 42
w.C hester Lakota W. 52, Ci n. Colerain 36

Devin Birchlleld 0 2·2 2, Skye Smith 1 4-4 f

DIVISION H

6. Totals: 11 11-24 34.
Wlnflll_
d
23 . 20 22 11 - · 76
Point
4 9 8 13 - 34
3--Point Goals- Wlnfl.eld ~ (Kvte, Claxton,

Byesville Meadowbrook 66. Zanesville
Maysville 64.
Carrollton 60. Richmond Edison 41
Dresden Tri-Valley 32 , Cambridge 24
Thompson, Stidham), Po1nt 1 (Sommer).
New Philadelphia · 54 , Millersburg -w.
Fouled Out- Winfield (none), Point 1 : Holmes 50
·

(Smith). Rebounds- Winfield 39 (Kline. 1

Harp&amp;r 9), Point 2 4 (Hartley -4). Assists-

Winfield 17 (Ckmon 9), Poln13 (Wyanl2).
Stea61- Winfield 16 (Harper 4) Point 11
(Sommer 3). Blocks- Winfield 4' (Kline 2).
Point 2 (Wyant, Birchfield). Team FoulsWlnlleld 21 Point 16.
'
Bqra Bc:m,us

:;rew

WAHAMA &amp;4, CALHOUN

·

Uhnchsvllle

claymoRt 67, s teu benv "'e 65
DIVISION ffl

1

Sugarcreek Garaway 57, Toronto 34
Zanesville W. Muskingu_m 58, .Woodsfield
Monroe Cent. 52

DIVISION IV
Russia 78, N. Lewisburg Triad 30
Steubenville Cath. Cent . 47,

3e

New

Philedelpl1ie· Tuscarawas Cath. Cent. 44, ·

OT

WAHAMA (13 ..9)

Troy Christian 75, Sidney Fairlawn 63
Brandon Fowler 5 5-7 15, Clay Roush 6 3·
Wellsville 51 , Malvern 40.
4 15, Brenton Clark 7 1·3 15, Casey ' zanesville '
Rosecrans
92,
New
9, KINin Wasonga 1 3-5 6 1 Matamoras Frontier 53
Harrison 4
Brandon Russell1
2, Thoraten Hornig
Regular Seaton
0 2·2 2, Kameron , Sayre 0
'0, Josh
Archbold 66, Edgerton 58
.
, Pauley 0 0.0 0, Darrln Reece 0 0·0 0,
Arling1on 71 , Ridgeway Ridgemont 34
Gabe Roush 0 o-o 0, Keith Pearson 0
Cia. Collinwood 63, Cia. Benedictine 6t
c, Justin Arnold 0
0. TotalS 24 14-21 1 Convoy Crestvtew 49 , HiCkSville 44
~LHOUN (nlo)
·
I. ·Delphos Jelferson 57, Paulding 50
Tyler Schartlger 6 ~ 1 Tom Gerwig 2 1_
H_amler Patrick Henry ~2, Van Buren 32
2 5 Malt Houchin 2 0-0 5 Steve l Ltberty Center 59, Def1ance Ayer~llle 51
Cun~ingham 2 o-o 4 Jftcob DOdd ' 1 0·0 3 I Miller City 83, Columbus Grove 78, 20T
Josh DeWeese 1
2. Tofats 14 1-2 36. ' 1 N. Ridg_evllle _Lake Ridge 59, Cle. Hts.
3-polnt goals - Wahama 2 (Harrison, Fuchs M1zrach1 53 .
Wasonga),· Calhou n 7 (Schahiger 4. 1 Tol. Scan 56, Tol. St. Johns 51·, 20T
Houchin, Gerwig, Dodd).

o-o

o-o

o-o

1

1

o-o

o-o

s.

1

o-0

W.Va. pr-.p ba•.k t!tb•ll .ab"1
Thund.y'a Aeilult•
. Girt• s.ctional•

OhioHigh School Gl~o Bookatbell
ThuRd.y'a RHultl
Tournament
DI~ISION I

Bridgeport 44. Lewis County 18
Cabell Midland 51 , Hurricane 41
Capital 60, Ripley 44
Charleston Catholic 68. Fayetteville 37
· Elkins 61, Nicholas County 45 ,
George Washington 35. South Charleston

Akr.' Firestone 69, Medina 45
Amherst Steele 66, Lorain Admiral King

36

Berea 58, Wooster 55
Can. McKinley 66. Uniontown Lake 57
34
Gin. Glen Este 48. Cin. Ursuline 36
Greater Beckley ·christian 55, Mount
Cin. St. UrSula 50, Batavia Amelia 28
Hope 25
Cle. Glenville 64, Mayfield 36
Greenbrier East 63. Princeton 62
Cle, JFK 59. Brecksville 55
Guyan Valley 43, Hamlin 32
Cots. 'Brookhaven 53 , Lewis Center · 'Hampshire 57 , Musselman 41
Olentangy 31
Hundred 47, Trinity 23 .
De!aware 53. Mt. Vernon 39 .
Iaeger 47, Mount View 29
Hilliard Darby 45. Lancaster 44
Logan 45, Wayne 28
Mentor 73, Euclid 35
Montcalm 60. Mercer Christian 35
N. Royalton 49, Rocky River Magnificat J Morgantown 84, University 40
47
Oak Hill 59. Braxton County 53
Pickerington Cent. 48. Hilliard Davidson
Parkersburg South 62. Parkersburg 46
43
PikeView 41 , James Monroe 40
,
Shaker Hts. 54, Maple.l:fts. 39
Pocahontas County 51 , Midland Trail 45
Strongsville 59, Cle. St. Joseph 19
Ritchie County 56, lincoln 49 ·
Wadsworth 81 , Hudson 56
South Harrison 34. Notre Dame 23
Youngs . Boardman 55, Can. GlenOak 32
Summers County 72, lndQpendence 35
DIVISION II
Valley Wetzel 34, Paden City 23
Can. S. 61 , RaVenna SE 52
Wheeling Park 81, John Marshall 75
Canal Fallon NW 58, Mogadore Field 38
Winfield 76, Point Pleasantl-4
Circleville 52 , Gallipolis Gallia 24
Woodrow Wilson 73. Riverside 27
Cols. E. 47, Cots. Centennial 41
1 Girls
Cots. Eastmoor 78, Cols. Briggs 14
Fair Haven Christian 60, New lite
Cols.'Mittlin 47. Beltley 37
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 59, Akr. E. Christian 54

20

.

Boys

Greenville 51 , Day. 08kWood 44
JeHerson Area 63, Geneva 29
Kettering Alter 68, Day. Dunbar 25
Newark Licking Valley 49, Cots. Hartley 48
Richfield Revere 50. LouiS11ille 40
Shaker Hts. Hathaway Brown 64, Perry 40 _I
Warren Howlalld 66, Struthers 27·
Washifigton C.H. Miami Trace 56.

East Fairmont 59. Tyler Consolidated 44
Fair Haven C hristian 43, Clay Christian 42
Petersburg 75 . East Hardy 43

Pbca 78. Scort 66
Robert C. Byrd 77. Gratton 56
Sissonville 78, Sherman 29
Tug Valley 65. Burch 56, OT
Wahama 64 , Calhoun·36
·

Area te.am takes on Mason
County neighbor Hannan in ·
the second game of the four
team sectional field.
Top seeded and. third rated .
B4ffalo meets fourth seed St. :
Joe in the evening's first :
game at 6 P. m. with the .
Wahama-Hannan clash to ·
. follow at 8 p.m. The White
·Falcons split their home-andhome series with the
. Wildcats with Wahama win- .
ning at home by a 79-52 :
. score before Hannan evened :
the score on · its home floor ·
with a 69.-57 triumph.

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P.O.

Box 1893, Gastonia, NC

2805 3

J,l,l lh!1"!1.£-stem

~lfoo.

G

5 Joan Sojka o o-o o: S. Eucl id Regina 95, Beachwood 19
Ale)ljls Geiger 0 0.0
Ryann l.eslle 1 0.0 I Scioto McDermott NW _69, Minford 63

Kayla Perry 2

period .points. The White with positive results.
Falcons scored 16 points in
The Wahama junior varsity
the second canto to claim a team concluded its season by
31 - 18 halftime advantage winning I 0 consecutive
before holding off any games to fini sh with a 14-4
thoughts of a comeback .bid record.
Keith
Pearson
by Calhoun County in the · dropped in a game high 13
a t g 20 points for the Little Falcons
S ond half w"th
ec
. 1
s ron
- ·with Justin Arnold adding 12
7 scoring blitz in the final tallies in a 41 _33 Wahama
qual1er·
·
jayvee win. Both the WHS
"Clay Roush and Brandon varsity and junior varsity
Fowler gave us their usual units avenged losses 10
solid efforts on the boards," Calhoun County with the
Wolfe said.
"Brenton "double road triumphs.
(Clark) was also active on the
Waharna will open ·sectionboards for us and when that al tournament pl ay on
happens we usually respond Thursday when the Bend
lane or cuts across the baseline.
Allen, who fini shed with
seven points, six assists, five
steals and three rebounds,
was· the leader on · defense,
with four steals as the
Buckeyes took. a 30-23 lead at
the break.
T.he Buckeyes improved to
16-0 with Allen in the starting
lineup.
In the earlier meeting,
Davenport managed just I0
points on 4-of-5 shootin g.
Thts time. she pl ayed better .
and had a lot more help.
·'They" re a great basketbalL
tea m - the · most talented
team in the Big Ten." Curry
said. ''Give 'em credit."
·

Lancaster Fairfi eld Union •9
Youngs. Liberty 39, Poland Seminary 30
DIVISION Ill
Akr. Manchester 65. W. Salam ~ 37
Burton Berkshire 46., Middlefield Cardinal
23

DtueiC! IIM!f!IW,

CIRCLEVILLE 52,
GALLIA ACADEMY 24
CIRCLEVILLE (19-4)
Emily Pontious 3 o-o 6, Dava Betts 0

• How 'coot" was this? Car No.

' 48, drjven by Jlmmta Johnson ,
won the 48th Daytona 500.
• A little los's compelling was the
fact thet car No. 20, driven by
Tony SteWart, led once for 20
"' t~p.s . Stewart,had led the most
laps 'In the two previous Day. ·

--

~

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

-

~

~

-·

Race: Auto Club 500
t he principal 's office . As Johnson
was quick to note, the Monte Carlo
Where: California Speedway,
t ha t won t he race wa s n't illegal.
Fontana (2.0 miles). 250
And t he man callin g the sh ots, at
laps/ 500 miles.
lea st for now. wasn' t Knaus. It was
When: Sunday, Feb. 26
Oarian Grubb, a 30-yea r-ofd engi- ·
Laot year's winner: Greg Biffle
Qualifying record: Kyle Busch,
neer from Floyd, Va.• who has been
Chevrolet, 188.425 mph, Feb. 25,
t em porarily promoted t o c rew
2005 .
.
chief. Daytona 500 victories are
Race record : Jeff Gordon, Chevrq- · ·h~rd l y uncommon for Hen drick Molet, 155 .012 mph, June 22, 1997 . torsports. though. Johnson's first
last week : Daytona lnternatjonal
triumph in NASCAR's b igge st race
Spe e dway was as c loaked in fog
was the t e am's sixth . As is· so ofas any Scottis h moor, but Jimmie
. ten t he case, t he fr()nt"of the pack
Johnson said there wasn't alilywound up bei ng t he place to be at
thing murky about h is vi ctory. JO:hn- t he end simply beca u se those' racson's No . 48 Chevrolet had been
ing behin d Johnson ne ver cou ld
one of two cars to have qualifying
ge t them selves organized enough
speed s disallowed a week ea rli er.
t o make a cohesi11e run. The ra ce
went ove'rtime - the so-called
As a Consequence, his c rew chief.
the n otorious ly sneaky Chad
" gree n-wh ite-c heckered~ f1n is h Kna u s, had been sent home after · but cra shes occurre d on laps 187.
the NASCAR equiva lent of a trip to
197 and 203.

•• CRAFTSMAN TRUDM ·

Race: Stater Brothers
300

.Race: Craftsman 200
Where : Californ ia
Where : California
Speedway, Fontana
Speedway, Fontana
(2.0 mile s). 100
(2.0 miles), 150
la psj 200 miles .
laps/300 miles.
Wl*l: Friday, Feb . 24
When: Satu rday,
Last ·yl!!ar'e winner:
Feb. 25
•
Steve Park
Last year'• winner:
Qualifying record :
Mark M artin
Travis Kvapll , Toyota , .
QuaUiylne record : Tony 178.669 mph, Oct. 2.
Stewa rt . Chevrolet ,
2004.
185.941 mph, Feb.
Race record : Ted Mus·26, 2005.
grave , Dodge, 145.926
Race . record : Hank
mph; Sept. 30, 2003 .
Parker Jr., Chevrolet,
Last week: M ark Mar- ·
155.957 mph, Apri l
ti n drove a Ford to vic28, 2001.
tory in Dayto na. his
Last-: To ny Stew·
second vict ory in four
art, in a Chevrolet, won
career starts in t he set he season open~r at
Daytona for tt1e second
year in a row.

· CAliFORNIMJAiA-•

SOIIyHDSOO

AUlD Chill 500
. Feb. 26

SepL 3

ries.

tona 500's.
• )\II sorts of attention wa s devOted to the fact that re ce wiq·
ner Johnson had been caught
cheating during qualifying. Relax, folks . The winning car had a
legal rear wlnduw this time.
, What ·was he supposed to do?
·. Not win? The regular crew chie(,
Chad Knaus, had been sent
home. 'His replacement, Oarlan
Grubb. directed Johnson's victo(YIn wha t, to date, Is his only ·
appearance as a crew chief.

JiMMIE JOHNSON

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

No.

48

LOWE's CHEVROLET

'j.c Not one Jack Roush·owned
Ford finished In the top 10.
Mark Martin led ·NASCAR's su·
per team with a 12tl&gt;;&gt;la~e
showing. Rou sh 'Nent tryrough
the entire 2005 season w ithout
once ·having all his drivers fini sh
outside the top 10.
• By the time the next race is
run, in California, John son might
· not be the point s leader. Few
would be su rprised if NASCAR
officials tacked· on- fur ther pen alties, including a po ssible red uct ion in points, for Chad Knaus's ·

trari~ressions in qualifying. It
seems bit ·hars h to s ubt ract
points lor a violation that had
been corrected by r0ce time. but
NASCAR 's done It before:

a

.., Is this fi nally John son 's year' to

Johr1 Clark/ NASCAR Tt'IIS Week

order) Dale Earnhardt Jr. leads
Matt Kenseth, Tony Stewart and
·Jeff Gordon down the .front stretch
during
the Daytona 500.
..
(In

Matt Kenseth·.
vs. Tony Stewart

Pssst! Johnson won
the Daytona 500 ...
fair and square

win tile championship? .Not

based on the Daytona !?_90. No
Daytona 500. winner has gone
on to ~in the champion sh ip
since Jeff Gordon In 1997 . Gor·
don is the oi-lly driver to follow
up the 500 wit h a c ham p io ns hip

since 1979.
'
.., A Chevrolet driver has won 18
of the last 2 1 ~ r~stric tor- pl ate
races . ~ Those are t he races at

Daytona and Talladega where
the plates are used to limit
horsepower. Chevys have als o
won four Daytona 5 00 's in a row,

• The highest average finish of a
driver who competed in at least
five Daytona 500s belongs to
Fred Lorenzen. whose average
was 6.89 .

•
- WHO'S +taT- --· •
., AND WtiO' S ·NOT••

•WhO's eoo1 - Jimmie Johnson

won the ·Great American Race

for the f irst t ime .. .. Casey
Mears. already: a winner In the
Rolex 24 endurance race at
Daytona , finished second .
• Who'o not

-

Carl Ed·
wards:dldn't
make it to
the hallway
point, .
cra shed and
finished dead
last .. .. The
Dodges of
teammates
Bobb,y Labonte and Kyle Petty
were 35th and 39th , r espec·
tivety.

By .Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -It didn't
· tal\e long after the conchision of the
Daytona 500 for me to figure out what
the story was . ··
Jimmie Johnson's victory in the
Daytona 500 was going to be a morality tale. Jn.press conferences, over and
over and with anyone who sat behind
a microphone, the point was belabored.
What does this say abo11t'the sport?
Is there any taint? If a crew chief is
suspended, should a driver.be sus,
pended? Should they have taken away
the winner's primary car' If a situation happens time and time again,
should something be done besides a
suspension ? Do you believe Chad
Knaus had nothing to do with the racing here?
Great Caesar's Ghost. They might
as well have"been confirming a
Supreme Court Justice down there in
the infield media center. Add the late
Sen. Sam Ervin and it would've been
the Senate Watergate Committee. No
one would've been the least bit surprised had the show ended with Ed
Mu rrow saying somberly, "Good night
... and good luck."
For I he record, the Chevrolet that
Johnson drove to victory didn't have
·an illegal - oops , wrong word;
NASCAR prefers "unapproved" - ·

He's admitted that. He w&amp;s in Charlotte watching the,raee. He missed
the event. We're serving our penalty.
We're doing everything \ve can do. We
stepped up and won the biggest race '
in our sport, and it's something I'm so
· proud of."
·
Let'.s get off the high horse, all
right. Few among us could've ridden
it.
It's so easy to split the world into
black and white, yet neither shade appears in the world of NASCAR officials. The only rule that matters is, "If
you try something new, it better not
work."
But cheating, if that's what it is, isn't just something sneaky in the rearwindow glass. It's also cheating when
it involves illegal recruiting; shooting
up on steroids, corking a bat, scuffing
John Clar k/NA.SCA R This Week
ball or taking a few liberties with
a
Even without his suspended crew chief, Jimthe
old income taxes. Cheating is
mie Johnson had enough to win his first .
cheating
whether it's on your carbureDaytona 500.
tor or your wife.
If anyone had the right to complain,
it
was
Casey Mears, the second-place
rear window. That one was used in a
finisher.
Or Ryan Newman, the thirdqualifymg run that didn't even decide
place
finisher.
They had their backs to
where Johnson started on S)Jnday.
the
media
wall,
too .
NASCAR sent Chad Knau s, the crew
Mears: "I mean, .all this stuff is so
chief, home .
·
hypothetical,
just like grasping at
Still, Johnson had to sit in judgment
air."
in "front of a band of beady-eyed deNewman: "Ask us questions we can
tectives, with a light shining in his
answer.
Ask the hypothetical quesface, and say over and over, "I'm
tions to someone else."
dean, coppers. I paid my debt to ~ oci·
Mears: "I don't mean to be rude."
ety. I served my time. Leave me be."
Newman: "We'd like to go home,
Give Johnson some credit. He was
too."
dignified. He was polite .. He was paSo let 's just back off and let Johntient. Had it been Tonv Stewart fieldson celebrate a victory in NASCAR's
ing those kinds of que.stions, a mushbiggest race.
room cloud would've risen.
Oh the humanity.
•
"We play within a set of rules," he
Com act Monte Dutton at
said. "Chad (Knaus ) broke the rules.
hmduttonSo@aol.com

Dunng th e Daytona 500.
Ken seth's conten tton was tha t Stewart wrecked him intent ionall y. Stew•
art responded: "Matt always thmks

that ."

and added tha t Kenseth haa It
fo r hiS own dnvmg tact iC S.

comu~g

NASCAR This Week 's Monte

Dutton gives his take: "It was a con·
tent1ous 500 for St ewart who had
cr iti cized many o f his ca\leagu~s 'a
week ea r lier afte r the Budwetser
Shooto ut . But St ewart's .a tough man
tO keep down . Atte'r inci den ts w 1~h
Ke nseth. Jeff Gordo n and Kyle
Busc h, he still managed to ge t a toofive fi n iSh.'
·

Golf and racing make
perfect mix in Talladega
Play golf? Li ke racing? Talladega
Super speedway and the 'scen1c
Robe r t Trent Jone s Golf Tra11 have
carne up w1th a plan to combine the
two . For t ic ke t s , accommodat1ons or
informat1on on a ll events. go t o
www.alabama s pe edweek.corn.

When they. 118)' watet', they
really mean antifreeze

T

he TV announce rs keep refernn'g
t o an over t1 e at1ng car as los1ng
wate r. Do these c ars use water·
a s a coo lant? I a lways thought they
u:Sed stra igh t ant ifreeze If so. wnat .,
is the reason tor ustng wate r vs.

coolant?

'
John Smith
SeymoUI. Ind .

No. they use antrfreeze. "Wate r' is
ios r a figure bf speech. a :llch~. i' vou
w ill. They also say tney pur air ui rne
t1res. In realtly. it's nrtrogen

�•

Page 84 •

The Daily Sentinel

'www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, February 24.

Friday, February 24, 2006

2006

Sentinel- 3L\.egtster
CLASSIFIED
~rtbune-

•Circleville rolls to lopsided win over Gallia Academy
BY BRAD SHERMAN

Estep won t return next season

BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RICHMOND DALE Gallia Academy's side of the
scoreboard finally read 10 late
m
the
third
quarter.
Circleville, on the other hand,
was there and gone by the end
of the first.
The Lady Ttgers scored the
first IS' pomts of the basketball game, then st~mied the
Blue Angels defenstvely, for a
52-24 victory in a girls
Division II Southeast District
· semtfinal on Thursday at
Southeastern Htgh SchooL
Katelyn Kalinoski, who
scored
II
points
for
Circleville, nailed back-toback threes tel start the game
- and that set the tone as her
team cruised to a spot m the
dtstnct championship on
Saturday.
"We thought that (Gallia
Academy) would come out
zone ,"
said
and
play
Circleville coach
Steve
Kalinoski "Katelyn had two
threes nght off the bat l
thought that really got us
going offensively."
.
Circleville won every quarter handily and led by as
many as 37 in the fourth quarter. Casse Mogan paced the
winners with 13 points and
Lacey Reedy tacked on seven.
The Lady Tigers, who
improved to 19-4, face Miami
Trace next Thursday for the
district title. Miami Trace
punched lts ticket by defeating Fairfield Union 56-49 in'
the nightcap.
Galli a Academy made a late
season surge to make it this
far, but bails out of the tourney at 11-12 overall. And the
Blue Angels went quietly offensively anyway.
Gallia Academy amassed
only II points through three
quarters and made just 8-of-

llY liMo 111~11
BSHERMAIMIMYDA1LYTR18UNE.COM
GALLIPOL~S - D)l,ane· Estep. who has
headed the girls baSketball program at Oallia
Academy the past two sea~&gt;ns, says he will
not return to .the bench for a third.
Estep informed his players of the decision
earlier in the season, and re;tffumed his
choice after the Blue Angels' 52-24 loss to
CircleviJle in Division D district play on
Thursday.
Estep, who plans.to move back to Lincoln
County, W.Va., satd we wanted · to spepd
more time with his family.
,
,,
"We moved. over. and· gave 11 a shot, my
f3!"ilY really never got comfortable here," he

satd.

.

'·'I; ve decided to move back home and
spend more time with my kids. I'm not ~ure
I m going to co!~Ch any~here for a~hile.
. "I've got two boys that are· playmg (bas-

Brad Sherman/photo
Gall1a Academy's Lindsey Niday makes a move in the post as
Circleville's Molly H1ghfiell defends.
'

68 shots from the field,
including a 1-of-17 performance from beyond the 3point arc.
· "We rushed all of our
shots, we never took a comfortable shot," admitted
Gallia
Academy
coach
Duane Estep, who· was
coaching his final game at
the school (see related story) .
Circleville pressured the
Angels mto quick shots which was responsible for
much of the offensive struggles

··we've played defense
well all year long and I thmk
we cont1 nued to do that well
tomght ,"
added
coach
Kalinoski, whose game plan
to contc~in Jackie Wamsley
worked to perfecllon ..
Wamsley, a dangerous 3pomter shooter who averaged 17 points per game this
season, did not make a three
and fini shed with six points.
"Wamsley is a very good
player, and we went righ(
after her from the get-go, we
played as many as five dif-

ferent girls against her
game,"
throughout
the
Kahnoski explained.
Wamsley's six still led the
team. Kayla Perry had the
biggest impact with five
points, I 0 rebounds and
three steals. The team's second leading scorer, Brittany
Elliott, finished with four
points - all in the fourth
quarter
After Kalinoski's back-tohack triples made tt 6-0,
Emily Pontious stuck back
an offensive rebound . The
much taller Lady Tigers
owned a 46-28 advantage on
the boards. Pontious and
Molly Rtghfll each hauled in
nine caroms.
Mogan scored five consecutive points, then Liz
Scudder scored her only
bucket when the defense lost
her on a backdoor cut for an
uncontested layup That
made II 15-0.
"We were kmd of in a bind
when the game started. We

ketball) aU the lime ind. I n.evtr ~ to .•
them play andl've 'got a girl,lo coJteP.: I
·think 1t' might be time ·to Spen4 $OJ11e liQie
with the,family." .
.
•.fl. 1.
.~••
Gallla Academy went 24-~ I ..llie Jldt tW!)
seaS()ns. and w011 ~ pair ·Of SC'Cii~ ~.
Estep missed "mllcll ' of hi&amp; ' fu$t ~ .ill
Gallipolis, however, after rearing his A.CL
during pract,ice.
.
•
·"I had that inJury last ~ear."and, hliink U
killll of threw ti\!Jlis offkil~er.," nd'admitt«J.
•. Assistant Ch~s Etlcessor I09fc ,ovq lifter
tlie injqcy and the Blue Al).~!s. :t'ihl~ ~
year 13,9, As 8 teS\111, Ji!l~ :~!1 En~
shared ().hio Val~y P\tplil!hin~ ~~,~~~f.\lilj
Year honors.
Ill'' ~··
:Estep has more th)ln 3SO c~. . ,
y.tctorles, Befpre takin~ .~ .~~~~
JOb, he was .a boys vatstty J;ollfll'g ''tlli:f!D
Valley, W.Va. ·
. · ~·
·,if;•
Whoe~r replace~ fist;ep ~' 0!!3~.­
gram's third coach. m four Y~·
·• r 'I~

were trying to figure out how
we were going to match-ur,
and what defense to start in , '
Estep said. "We were looking at three or four different
defenses, but I tell you what,
I think the way Citcleville
played tonight it didn't matter what we came out in."
Circleville played an efficient game - making 20-of43 shots from the field and
turmng it over just 10 times
through three quarters. The
Lady Tigers' bench players
!lave the ball away 13 times
m the fourth under the pressure of a · tenacious Blue
Angel press.
Gal11a Academy finally
dented the scoreboard with
59 seconds left in the first
quarter when Ryann Leslie
nmled a 3-pointer from the
corner. The score stood 15-3
at the first stop.
.Wamsley scored In the post
to start the second quarter,
cutting the lead to 10. But
'that was as close as her team

'

'

.

POCA, W.Va. - A team
does not get to the top of the
rankings without earning it,
and Wtnfield showed the
Potnt Pleasant girls Thursday
night just why they are number one.
The Lady Generals (21-2)
used a 21-0 run to start the
game and from there never
· looked back, on their way to
the Region 5, Section 2
Championship in a convmcing 76-34 victory over Point
Pleasant (12-12) Thursday
night in Poca.
·
"They are better than us,
plain and simple," said Point
Pleasant
coach
Mitch
"Their
gtrls
Meadows .
,deserve to win the state title,
that is why they are the No. I
team in the state."
other
hand,
On the
Thursday 's game ends a
resurgent season for the Lady
Knights, who ends the year
With their tirst .500 finish in
three years.
,
Thursday night, however,
the Lady Knight squad could
overcome an overwhelming
· Lady General attack which
rarely let Point Pleasant cross
midcourt in the first half.
Winfield forced a total of
16 steals and dominated the
.boards by a 39-24 ad vantage
m the game while collecting
17 assists on an all around
very efficient night of basketLarry Crum/photo
ball.
They also shot 46 percent Point Pleasant's Skye Srn1th dnbbles around a Wmf1eld
(26-of-57) from the floor defender during the second quarter of the Lady Kn ights ' 76-34
including a nearly perfect 9- toss Thursday n1ght 1n Poca. W.Va ..
of- 10 shootu)g 10 the ftrst
quarter._ wh1le grabbtng a · two assists and Jody Hartley of-1 0 shooting from the foul
sohd 87 percent (20-of-23) added one point and four II ne to score.
rebounds.
from the chanty stripe.
Coming out of the half.
Winfield jumped out front Winfield held a 43- 13 advanThey were led by Bre Kyle
with 18 points and four in the first seven minutes of tage and d1d not let up, adding
rebounds, Natalie Kline with the game with a nearly perfect 22 more pomts to the score16 points, nine rebounds and 21 -0 run, including a defen- board with seven from Kyle,
three steals, Bndgette Harper sive effort which forced sev- SIX from Harper and five from
Wlth 12 points. nine rebounds. era! turnovers near ,midcourt Claxton , as Point Pleasant
and four steals, Katie Claxton and dominated the offens1 ve again struggled to score with
with 12 points, two rebounds, and defensive glass.
only a pair of free-throws
From there, Point Pleasant from Smith and three field
two steals and nine assists.
The Lady Knights could added a pair of baskets from go,al s.
·
only muster 24 rebounds m Smith and Wyant. but it was
Point Pleasant fin all y came
the contest, while grabbing II only good enough to close the to 'life m the fourth quarter as
steals and only three assists tn first quarter gap to 23-4.
Sommer scored nine of the
"They just blitzed us from team s' 13 points whtle th e
the game. They also shot a
poor 24 percent (11-of-46) the beginning They are sim- defense held Wmfield to only
from the field ;~nd 46 percent •ply bigger, stronger ·and fas ter II markers. but the earl y run
( 11-of-24) from the foul line. than us," said Meadows . .
by Win field proved the differPoint Pleasant was raced by . The Lady Generals contm- ence as the Lady General s
Anna Sommer with 13 pomts, ued with much of the same in take th e momentum of a 42
three rebounds and three the second eight minutes, pomt victory wnh them to
steals as the only Lady Knight pounding the board s for 20 the1r next tourname nt g'mne.
in double dtgits in the sconng more points while holding
Pomi Pl ea,ant end' the seacolumn Skye Smith added P01nt Pleasant to JUSt mne son on a stro ng r4 n. rebo(Indsix pmntl and three rebounds, points on only 18 percent (2- ing from a 5-9 'ta rt and gomg
Te"a Wyant had four points. of- II) shooting as the Lad): on a 7-1 n m ' lnt:e late Janua rv
three rebounds, two steals and Knights mstead relied on 5- to grab" ;ol1d .500 lin1 1h '

---

f

t

ijtrt.bune

Sentinel

1\.egtster

992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740)
992-2157
Or Fax To
/)eat/If;,~
§§~~~~! p.m. DISplay Ads

Offtee 11o~$'

got the rest of the way.
Circleville used a 16-6 scoring edge in the second quarter to ·lead 31-9 at halftime
and the rout was on.
A pa1r of Lindsey Niday
free throws were the only
points for the Gallians in the
third quarter as the Lady
Tigers built a 47-11 lead
entering the final stanza.
Gallia Academy won the
fourth quarter 16-5.
Pontious added six points
in the victory followed by
Kaitlyn Graham with four.
Amanda Wade, Melissa ·
Cydrus and Jamie Johnson
all chipped in two and
Rachael Spangler tossed in a
free throw ..
Lauren
Kyger
and
Michelle Johnson
each
scored two points for
Gallipolis.
Circleville 's district title
gatne against Miami Trace
tips at 7 p.m. next Thursday,
also at Southeastern High
School

~

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

1.:00

Jn..ertlon

1:00 p.m.
Sundays Paper

• All

e~
I
r----~--- Croao Creek Auction
GIVEAWAY

·
1/2 St
Bernard,
112
Australian Shepherd p'up·
· ~es to a good home
(J40)367-o46V

ails must be prepaid'

r:

·------r

50tO

2-dog English Red 1110
Females 6-mon old
lhl.P WAN'm&gt;
no collars Jest on Jerrys Run
~d . Apple Grove (304)674·
5493
100 WORKERS NEEDED
AS6emble crafts,
wood 1tems
To $48diwk
Matenals prov1ded
Free •nlormafiOn pkg 24Hr
801-428-4649
Lost

Ticks.

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

1!0

l.wrighl20050comcut.net

A keyboard p'layer needed
Buflalo
for new Christian rock/praise
this Friday mght Live and worship bend We are
Band Sound-of-Bluegrass, not teenagers and we are
Dancmg Admission $5
seasoned muStetans Great
Saturday
Ron
Pnce. sound system and hght
Cons•gner, along with used show with fog machines w11l
local Cons1gnments Bwld1ng be in place StudiO record1s full (304}937·2118 or ing w1thCD sales 1nadd1hon
304 550..1616
to live shows
740-367·
-~:;;..;~:.---..., 7129 Jtm

Benji type dOg to
gtve away to good home
Good with Children, wonder·
lui pet (740)367·7328
WANI:ED
Old upnghl plano Wllh brass
10 BUY
hammers
Call
(304)675·
·
---·
6671
Absolute Top Dollar U S
Wooden
Handmade Silver and Gold .Co1ns
Wheelchair
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre·
1Meadowbrook area Ramp
Yo~ 1935" U.S ' Currency
like down 2915 Birch Ave. Solitaire Diamonds· M.TS
PI:. PI (304)675·5915
Com Shop, 151 Second
ilir.;..-:,.._.;...;.._, , Avenue GallipoliS 740·446LorrFOUNDAND
2842
1
~ol.,..--...,;i:iiiii::iii--,&lt; - - - - - - - '
I buy Junk Cars (304)773·
Found
near SA 850, brown 5004
~ w1th black tall and white
o11est Call (740)208·6080
Wanted To Buy MeigS
Lost Neutered female County Store Scnpt, Store
Australian Shepherd herd Tokens, and curreJlcy hom
dog
Shaggy White head Rac1ne, Pomeroy, and
and chest WJth dark grey Middleport Banks 740-992·
coat · reported picked up at 6040
St AI 7 and Oatry Lane
Please return or II s•ghted
call 740..992·7261 or 992·
Blonde

Home Health Aides· 'S•gn
On Bonus Home Healthcare
.of SE Oh1o 1s currently hmng
home health atdes. compel•·
tl&gt;9 wages Call 1740)662·
1222

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sate .............................................. 725
Announcamant ............................................ 030

lmtlqueo ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market ............................. oao
Auto Parts &amp; Accaasorlea .......................... 760

Auto Repolr .................................................. no
Autaoolor Sate ..............................................710
Boat a &amp; Motoro lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Suppltea ........................................ 550
Buotneaa and Bulldlnga ............................. 340
Bustneoa Opportuntty ................................. 210
Buolneaa Training ....................................... 140
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
, Camping Equlpment ................................... 780
Carda ol Thanks .......................................... 010
Chltd/Eldarly Core ....................................... 190
Elec1rk:at/Refrlgeratlon ...............................840
Equipment lor Rent ..................................... 480
Excavatlng ................................... ................ 830
Farm Equtpmont ..........................................610
Forma lor Ront ............................................. 430
Forma lor Salo .......................... :.................. 330
For La011e ..................................................... 490
for Sato .......................................................585
For Sate or Trade ............,............................ 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetebteo ..................................... 580
Furnished Roomo ........................................ 450
Genaral Haultng ........................................... 850
Glveaway ...................................................... 040
Happy Ads ....................................................oso
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................840
Help WontM! .................................................1I0
Home lmprovemants ...................................810
Homeolor Ssle ............................................ 310
Houaahold Goodo ....................................... 510
Houoeo for Rent .......................................... 410
tn Memoriam ................................................ 020

E)(cellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Mar.lyn 304·882-2645

An

Attent1on Drl11ers R&amp;J
Truckmg is looking lor
Of1vers w/1 yr OTR,
Expenence tor Aeg1onal
Hauls Average pay 40 s to
mtd SO's Home every
Weekend
call
Kent
00;;14,;,6;.;2..;
1 ~,;,
;;
' 9.;,36,;,5_ _ _""'1

AUTOMOTIVE
TECHNICIAN

.

Jom the wmnmg team•
•Two week tntt•al
nentatlon classes w•l
ntlnued ongcmg 1rain1ng
. The bas
anagement team m th
untry tc asstst you
~~ltli.auclllUl- Bonuses,
lat rate health care
Disability, long Term Car
nd more

,

1

Srnoo!.s

I

INsniuCllON

i

"'p~
10~-~-~-1ES-i,......., ~

L

80

I

serviCe-before and alter
the sale W1th the h0t1est
products on the market
and as the fastest grow1ng
dealership in our regton,
we 're addmg tech moans
to better servtce our customers Ford ServiCe trammg preferred but not
requ1red

L.------,..1

I,

l
~

~

r
r

l!l!ia r ~:e tract onratl er

If you are a professiOnal
techm01an looking to start
a new career or maybe
you don 'I feel you 're pa1d
or treated as well as you
should be and 1f you 're
ttred of wor"lng lor some
one who 1sn 1 work1ng for
you. g1ve JtmThomas or
Brad Sang a
call tOday
1·740·446-9800 or
1-600·272·5179
You may also apply 10
personat
195 Upper R1ver AD
'Gatllpohs Oh•o
Monda -Frtda
AVON• All Areas• To Buy or
Sell Shtrley Spears, 304·
675·1429

Gil &gt;,..........

1

r

Transitions lor Youth IS seek·
lng e part t1me LSW to
license aM recruit foster
homes and 10 do public relattons w1tt'1 county· agenctes
Make your own hourS and
work !rom home Please
send resume to
Trans1t10ns for Youth
5801State Route 141
Gallipohto Oh1o 45631
N, \ ~hO ne calls please
For a hmlted ttme make 5(Ja ~
'sel11ng Avon Call (740)4463358
1

MORILE HQIIm; I
RJR SALE

.

Concealed Postel Class Ail
FOR SALE
2006 16 wcde Speccai Pnce
States Mar 11 2006 ,
$181 /mo Call (740)385·
$75 00
9 ooam VFW 3 becfroom 1 bath DR LA 7671
Mason WV Ph (740)843- k•tchen newfu rnace Sits on - -::-'- ---:::'-::-:5555
1 Sere on Ne1ghborhood Ad
96 Fleetwood 3 BA Only
$62 000 (740)446·0650
$169/mo Call (740 )385Uke wor ~1ng With numbers? 3BR 2 Car attached Garage 9948
~-~---'-­
Check out
on 1 06 acres S62 ooo 98 Holly Pa rk 14x70
Accounting
Glenmora 3bdr 2batn gas
P 04)S?S·SJJt
furnace &amp; new stove. new
classes/progtams @
Gallipolis Career College 3BR 2 lull bath. 1 900 sq It carpel CIA new underpin·
(740)446·4367
full ba semenl , 2 car nmg &amp; Wlrlng, sh1ngled roof.
800-214-0452
attached garage 3 acres set.- up on pnvate lot
12748
Chester TownShip, Eastern Excellent
cond1t1on
170
sch.ooi drstnct Off At 7near ~(7_4...,01_4 4_1_·0_9_53____
•
MlscnJ.ANEOUS
Memonal Gardens Call 99 16x80 Schultz New
1
(740)985·4321 after 6pm
Generat 10 n, Vmyl Sld1ng.
shmgle
roof 2x6 outs1de
Club Car, Golf Carts, Gas 3BR 2BA log Sided, manu
w
alls.
3BR
2 bath kitchen
W1th Tops Good Shape lactured home near Ato
appliances
central
gas
Pines H1lls Golf Course Grande
1 86
acres. &amp; el ect r~ c heat. axAJC
12
cov$1 200 00 740 992-2720 01 $98.500 [740)245·9851 or
ered front porch Sx 12 Shin·
740-992-631 2
(740)4t8·01 04
gled. roof m1n1.barn Ask•ng
. S26 000 (740)256·6427
Do you use lobacco prod- 4BR , ForecIosure, on Iy
ucts? Are you mterested 1n $ t 4,900 For listings call L•ke new ' 2002 Clayton
talk1ng about smoking an~ 8Q0-391·5228 ext F254
14x52 $14Bimo Call
qUittmg?. Tell us what you
(740)385·9948
Attention!
thtnk We are loOking tor
local company offen ng "NO New Doublew1de Aepo,
women
who
currently
smoke
www.c:om•c•.com
o~garettes or w
ho have been DOWN PAYMENT" pro· never lived 1r1 owrter l1ance,
us1ng ntCOIIne replacement grams for you to buy your on 1 3 acres, 8 m1les north
ol Holzer Hospital on 160
Instead of rent1ng
ho
1116
1110
therapy tor more than three home
(740)446·3570
HELP WAmlD
HElP WM'Il!D
HELP WANrnD
months Participate en a · 100%fmancmg
· less than per1ect credit
N1ce 1987 141170 3 bedroom
~~~~~~~~ ~-------r'
group For
d1scuss1on
and earn accepted
'
$25
more mlormat1on
home
Only S8 995 W11l help
·
Payment
could
be
the
GKN Maintenance
Looking for an md1vldual "Or abou1 th1s s1udy please can' same as ren ~
With delivery Call Ela1ne
Technician
couple to ass•st with a 45 Arrr-; FerketiCh at The Oh•o
Loca1ors (740)385·0698
GKN Smter Metals, 1he year old gentleman In the State UmverStty 1·866-nO- Mortgage
t740)367-0000 '
Used mob•le homes for sale
worlds !eadlng manutactur· Reedsville, Ohio area He ft73z7:-6-~~--~
14' &amp; 16 w1de 2 &amp; 3 beder of po'wder metal compo· has de'l/elopmental disab•ll- 1180
WANTID
rooms 6 to chOose from
nents seeks a mot1vated, ties and requires asststance
TO Do
1996 model &amp; up (740)388
s~1lled
Mamtenance wtth au Dally LIVIng Sk1tl ·--oiiii::iiiiiiioo-r
• fjO EXP€ AIENCE NECESS ARV
8513 (dayt•me) (740)388·
Techn1c1an
for
equipment,
tasks
ThiS
trve-m
posttlon
' FUL L· TIME CLASSES ,
Computer Trouble Shoot
6017 {even1ngs) (740)294·
process and facihhes at our would be from 4 p m. on and
'CDL TRAINING
Repa1r Expert Servtee
0400 (wee~ends )
' FINANCING AVAILABLE
Plant
In Gallipolis, Ohio
Sundays
thru
Friday
morn·
All re•last.te ldvertlslng
• JOB PLACEMENT
740·992·2395
OuallfJCatiOns.
lng. Days are free &lt;a:OO' ENROL LING Nr:ffl
In thla newtpaper 11
LOTs&amp;
Sk•lled at both corrective 3·00). Applicant will need to - - - " - -- - subject to the Federal
ACREAGE
and preventiVe maintenance become a certified Wavter Computer Trouble Shooter Fair Houalng Act ot 1988
A workmg knowledge of Prov•der
With
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M-F SA·JP E0 E M/F/01\/ message)
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e
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V1ew photos.-mto'online 1709
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tQh
school
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or
GED
45631
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requtred ' No expenence
ew Ha v~n WV
Ortvera Wanted· NO CDL OverbrookCenterIS current· necessary Cnmlnal back·
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Sen.on!i ly seekmg a beautiCian to ground check required
arage
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\\\0 1 " I \II \ l'-1

gance and unparalleled musi- Olympic champion.
,., NATIONAL WRITER
cality that set her apart. She
No country has 'had three
didn't show much emotion different skaters win gold in
TURIN, Italy - Shizuka on her face, but she spoke it .three straight Olympics.
Arakawa
clutched
the with every other part of her Norway won golds in I 928,
Olympic gold medal in her body, from her toes to the tips 1932 and 1936, but all by
hand, refusing to let it go lest of her fingers.
Sonja Henie; two of East
it all be a mistake.
Skating
to
Puccini's Germany's three golds in
It wa~ hers, all nght. And "Violin · Fantasy
of 1~80, 1984 and 1988 were by
Japan's.
Turandot," her gracefulness Katariria Witt.
"No, I didn't cry," Cohen
A surprise winner from a was edged with power. Her
surprise country.
spirals were breathtakmg. said. "I don't usually cry
"I still can't believe this," And when she did an Ina unless I'm angry. I'm not
said Arakawa, whose gold in Bauer. a variation of a really angry, more of a letwomen's figure skating spread-eagle that puts her in a down. Ultimately, it's four
Thursday night gave Japan full backbend while her toes minutes of one day in my
its flfst medal of these games. point in opposite directions, life."
For Sasha Cohen and Irina the crowd gaspep in delight
Cohen brushed off quesArakawa's face lit up when tions of an injury, saying the
Slutskaya, gold was thms to
grab but got away.
she finished. When she saw nagging aches and pains had
Falls and mistakes pull.ed the marks that moved her nothing to do with her disapCohen down to silver and left
into first place, she pumped pointing
--· performance.
Slutskaya with ~ bron~e. her fists m a rare display of Looking nervous when she
They knew they are lucky to exuberance and flashed a took the ice, she gave away
her claim to gold in the first
have anything. Arakawa tin- "V" for victory sign.
"Right now I' m just so sur- minute.
ished with 191.34 pomts,
almost eight points ahead of prised about all of this that
She went down heavily on
Cohen Slutskaya was third at I'm speechless," she said. "I a tnple lutz that ruined a
181.44.
• '
"It 's bmersweet," Cohen never expected that I would planned three-jump combinasmd. "I tried hard. 1 have no be the first one. to win a tion, then put two hands on
regrets."
medal for Japan, so I didn't the ice on a triple flip . Her
Arakawa is the first feel that pressure. But I'm interpretation of "Romeo and
Japanese woman to win very happy that I am .the one Juliet" was so strong, though,
Olympic gold , and she has who won it."
it made up for her technical
lifted a burden for those who
She sang the entire nation- errors.
al anthem, and stayed on the
When she came off the tee,
will come after her.
When Midon Ito finished ice for more than a half-hour, she told coach John Nicks
second to Knsti Yamaguchi clutching her medal. The she didn't think she was
m 1992, Ito apologtzed, fear- only time she let it go was to going to get a medal .
ing she had disappointed her grab a Japanese flag.
"Wait and see how every:
country. No one had come
For her people, the medal one skates," Nicks respondclose since then, and pressure was a celebrauon twice over. ed
Cohen went backstage and
mounted with every passing Through 14 days, in the
games.
mountains and on the ice, took off her dress and skates,
Arakawa dropped to mnth Japanese athletes had come sure she wouldn't be needing
at worlds last year, after hav- up empty
them again this .night. But
mg won the title in 2004.
"It really took a long time," Fumie Suguri was unimpresWorse, she · had to watch said Kenichi Chizuka, head sive, and Slutskaya was
while the next generation ~f Japan's .Olympic delega- underwhelmmg. The twoemerged: Mii(i Ando, the tiOn. "I was very excited. time world champion fell on
junior world champion and When I saw her win, I cried. a triple loop, her spirals
the first woman to do a ... One gol.d 1s wortjl ·10 weren' t even in ·the same
arena as Arakawa's, and
quailruple jump; Grand Prix bronzes."
For Cohen, her silver is Slutskaya looked spent with
chamfton Mao Asada, whose
age, 5, was the only thing another reminder of potential a minute still to go in the prothat kept her away from squandered .
. gram.
Tunn.
• The successor to Michelle
When Slutskaya's marks
In November, Arakawa Kwan as national champion came up, showing Cohen as
called Nikolai Morozov and has all the makings of a the silver medalist, the
asked if he ' d be her coach. superstar, but she can't break American had to go and fetch
She wanted a change - her through when the stakes are her dress and skates .
coach, her costumes, her pro- highest:
Her silver was the eighth
The 2003 and 2004 nation- ever by an American woman
grams. It had to be drasuc if
she were to have any chance. al championships. The 2004 and the second for the United
"Yes, of course I was sur- · worlds. Even the Salt Lake States in the games; ice
pri sed." Morozov satd " I City Olympics. She went mto dancers Tanith Belbin and
thou g.ht she could medal. But the tree skate with a chance Ben Agosto won the other.
I didn ' t thmk she would win to medal. if not win, and she Those were the only U.S. figgold."
faltered at all of them .
ure skatmg medals in Turin.
- But Arakawa has the deterThis event was supposed to
Teenagers
Kimmie
minatjon that turn s con- erase those demons. In first Meissner and Emily Hughes,
tender&gt; into chump10ns
place after the short program , who replaced Kwan when
She landed fi ve triple she needed onl y four minutes she withdrew with a groin
JUmps. three in combmation , to join Tara Lipinski ( 1998) injury, fini shed s i~th ' and sevbut it wa; her heaut y. ele- ,md Sarah Hughes (2002) as enth
·
I

~.: - )'

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i

Sasha Cohen gives away gold

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ht.!p Co uft i , , OH

C 1lll.l C!Nnly, O H

Resurgent season ends for Point Arakawa gives Japan a surprise,
BY lARRY CRUM

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydallysentlnel.com

1

1

t.------_.,1

�Friday, February 24, 2006

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Mobile home spaces in
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(740)385-4019.

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~
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38R,

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Water/trash paid . Contact
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AT
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Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
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o

Equipment (740)446·2412.

Mason County
Community Foundation
Dinner

• ..__ _LMsrocK
_____.
•
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&amp; Father also
Born in January, very limited
Thompsor'ls Appl iance &amp;
_

sell.
Riverine
Antiques. 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740Volunteers Needed
992· 2526. Russ Moore , Please call (740)645·7275
owner.

r . ~llscaLANF.OUS
MEKCHANUISE

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nlshed or unfurnished apart- slave. Call (740)245·9378.
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rental references &amp;,deposit. Factory Diamond Style Tool
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Box for 2005 Dodge Dakota
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Nice 2br Apartment located $22s.oq Takes-It It is in
in
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Retridge/Kitchen Range furnished.
Forced Air Gas Firewood sp lit and delivered.

HAY&amp;
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Maltese
puppy,.
AKC,
female, yet checked. DOS· For sale sxs round Cales of
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1085

Very

square

mixed hay·
bales. (740)446-

24t2 or (740)645-0608. ·

7 5•
A J 82

• 7 6.
• A Q 10

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tack
25 lilted up
26 GrHnlah·
blue
28 Auction
32 Envlronmen. tal prefix
33 Bag
34 Survay
cha!1
35 Fly catchero
37 H®var Dam

7 3
Q8
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Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

West
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Opening lead: • K

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New Homes Additions
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39 Mexican
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40 Quell
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city

.Circumstances can
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tle~e Ttle~e A~e MO~e

.1ors

George Bernard Shaw

AVAILA,Le ·

(740) 992-0496

Self·Storag~·

54 Pea.,.

aoddeso
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component
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marglna
61 Token
amount
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pa!1

7 Worker's
pay
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slightly
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I 0 Bill, ,briefly
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(2 wds.)
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22 Gem
au rlace
23 Taos
dwelling
24 Lime and
potash
25 Pet pleas
27 Quean ·
beaters
. 29 Tag-wHh

DOWN

1 Cadge
2 Buckeye
campus
3 Mideast
export
4 Skulk
around
5 Japan 's
highest
pea~

6 NOll-flying
bird .

30 Cowboy
star Leah
31 Bond'l
alma mtter

36 Sell-•••~
36 Realm
44 PC button
46 Tire center
47 Sadlmonl
46 Thua
49 Stop dttlng
50 Charged
pa rtlclea
53 Cloael need
55 Thst
muchacha
56 Caroon City
loc.
57 Wind dlr.

wrote, •People are

. always blaming their circumstances for
what they are. I don't believe in circumstances. The people who get ·on in !his

fOE( T~EM.

world are the people who gel up and look

11· \\IS

.... Atl·· Ttiev·~e

( 0\('IH II·
Concrete R~moval
and Replacement

~,~illw~W&lt; ~

.

26 Years Experience

they can't find lhem, make them."
In bridge, circumstances can alte'r our
normal approach. It is variety that has
kept the game alive for so long .
Look at the North and .East hands. You

6~Al&gt;,.OCt:!

••

'i¥~1;~ ·~ "'"

for the circumstances they want , and, if

STUGt: IN

-- ·

&lt; 0\ s I lH &lt; I I 0\

I H \ \ "1'01{ I\ Ill l '\

9 5 3 2

7 6. 2

anlmala
16 Container
17 Jacktt .
feature
18 Autobahn
Vlhlcle .
20 Wading bird
22 Mystic of
India
24 Sharp - -

South
.KQ96 32

Owner
·1

•
•

•

Chuck

"Middleport's only

Regular Bingo
Starts 6:30pm

good

•

•

WOLFE~%.,;

10x10x10x20
992-3194

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

J

¥ K Q 10 6

740·843·5264

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

BINGO ·

45760

Licensed in

or 992~6635

12% All Stock $5.40 per 50. ·
Other livestock feed avail-

West
•

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Roll overs • Major Med
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

LIMITED TICKETS!

ShelleQ Corn $3.50 per 50,

I--------,-- r

e

992-5682

Tickets are $40/person
Corporate table sponsorships
available. To make
reservations please call
Sarah Holt at 1·866·428·4438
or Amy J. ~each , 675-4340,
E&gt;ct. 1492

(740)379-2754
or

3 miles west of
, Pomeroy, OH
on Slate Rt. 124

Thursday, March 23, 2006
Riverside Golf Course
6:30 p-In

number. Champion bloodRepa ir-675-7388. For sale ,
on both
sides.
Doberman Pinscher pup- lines
re-conditio ned automatic
breeder.
pies, AKC , red/rus1 , 1 male, Professional
washers· &amp; dryers, refrigera- 1 female , vet checked $400 (740)245-0485 after 6pm.
tors . gas and electric ea.,
DOB-1105/06,
Miniature Donkey 's 2 Jacks,
ranges, air conditioners. and (740)696· 1085
1 white 2yrs old, 1 white with
wringer washers. Wilt do
gray spots 2yrs old. Good
repairs on major brands in
cs_ho:.::.p..co_r.:.at_;yc:o.:.ur_h_o_m_e-,
. ' : - ~Jack~ Loves to be held. Guard Animals wi1h Cattle &amp;
AYailable for Adoption at The · Sheep (304 )882-2213
V~ry large corner cabfnetl Perennial Cat.
entertainment center, solid
Re1;1: Abriail Brood mare
wbod, cherry fmish , $300.
black in color white star ori
Call (740)379·221 8.
forehead , good bloodline, 7
~:i::o;...;;.;,..;.;;.;..~--,
years old, has been shown.
A stud colt on the property.

r

Box 189
Auto &amp; Truck
I t4;!~~Middleport, OH
Repair

Putting Grant 'Money Back
Into the Community

Norlh
.,_,...,.
• A 10 8
• 9 5 •
• A K J 10
• KJ 9
Easl

and Financial Services
I•

1 Ceteatla
.,_
5 Not rneny
45 CamjNIIgn
I DJ'o oupply
1.....
11 lrnpoalng
47 Projeclton
an
.
50 Baroneu
13 Ma. Thumwl
K.....,
14 Punch
51 Bunglot
15 Drill
52 Sellout

I

Rocky Hupp Insurance

ROGER HVSELI ,
GHRHGE

c_o-,u-,ch'-&amp;-L_o_v~_s_e_at, ..,r___mi~iiiisii!uiiii_•.,.~1 r·

::cNe-,w__Call (740)446-7444.
$450.

location. 1 BR
apt, unfUrnished. no pets, ___
.. references ,
deposit.
(740)446-0139.
Buy

- , - - - - -- - - - . , -

LoadTraiVLoad Max TrailersG 0 o sene c ks 1 u m p s t
Utilities.
Carmichael

Antwer to Prevloue Puzzle -

42 St.IM
43 40-cup

are defending against three spades. Your
partner, West, leads the heBrt king. How

Hardwood Cablnetrr And Flll'lllture
www.tlmbercreekeablnlfb'J'.eom

wotJid you plan the defens8?
South opened with a weak two-bid, show·

I'M POSITIVE THAT'S TH'
WAY SNUFFY TOLD ME TO
;;-TELL YA !_
!

David Lewis
740-992-6971

in9 a decent six-&lt;:ard suit and some 6·1 0
high-card points. North, knowing that his
partner hked light weak twos, inquired
with two no-trump. South's rebid &amp;hewed

a minimum, so North passed.

Heat &amp; AC. S2r5Jmonth, CC~a::..ll1::_7::..40::.cl::25::6::
-9::1-'1::5·_ _
5200/deposit.
(.304)675JET
7628
AERATION MOTORS

When the first defensive lead in a side

suit is a high honor, third hand typically
signals attitude: II he wiShes partner to
conttnue the suit, he plays the highest

Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt. in
Slack. Call Ron Evans. 1·

CELEBRITY CIPHER

card he ..can aflord. But if third hand
prefers partner to shift, he ·drops his low·

800-537-9528.

by Luis Campos

est card. Normally, when partner leads
t~e king, third hanQ will encourage emhu-

O"'fPPogtii!'IS ;ra creatao from q~ by farncos people. past ll'l!l ~

~ Ciphet

EICfl~ 11

40 .MIJ!URCYCI.ES/
4WHEELFA~

he shouk! take the dummy and his hand

"C B A

into acco~nt.
Here, East should see the need for a club

.

East will take the trick as cheaply as pos·

..

ZREZ . JZ

Sible, underlead his heart ace to put West
back on lead, and another club through

GANZ

-

giV.es the defenders two hearts and ~ree

~~~
&lt;-REASE

'(OUR STRES.&gt;

TO C::ON TRtllUTE TO
THE' !!oLlRNOUT

l&gt;HENDMENON .

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~:-~~~~~~:m~~~~~~~~~~

In the Common Pleas fees, real estate taxes
lincoln
Heights, , will be made on the
Court
ol
Meigs · and costs.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
24th day -ol February,
County, Ohio
You are requlrad to
prosenl
address 2006, and the twenty·
Franklin Ileal Estate
answer the Complaint
unknown.
eight (28) days for
ComjNiny
within twenty-eight
You are hereby noll· ·answer will com·
Plaintiff
(28) days after the lied that you have
mence on that date.
. VII Edmond Cooper,
last publicalion of
been
oamed
In the care of your
tlal
this Notice, which will
Defendants In the
failure to answer or
Defendants.
be published once
action entitled Irene
otherwise res. pond as
Notice by Publ_lcatlon.
week
lor
M. 0111, Plaintiff, vs.
requeated .by the
each
Case.No. 06 cv 017
slx(6)successive
Mary Jo WoHe, Et AI,
Ohio Rule ol Civil
To Edmond Cooper, H weeks. The last publl·
Defendants.
This
Procedure, judgment
living, Last Addreu:
cation will be made
action
has
been
by dafault will be ranA
1835 South Saint PIUI on tha 21st day ol
assigned Case No.
dared against you
St., Denver. CO 80210, April, 2006, and the 05-CV-110 end Is and lor the relief
Current
Address:
twenty-eight
(28)
pending In the court demanded In the
Unknown, and '' if days for answer will Ill connmon Pleas ol complaint.
decee1ed,
the commence on that Meigs County, Ohio. Dated this 21st day ol
Unknown
Hairs,
date. In the case ol
The object ol the
October, 2005.
Devisees,
your failure to answer
Complaint demands
Marlene
Harrison,
Succeaaors, Assigns,
or otherwise respond' judgment against the
Clerk ol Courts
Next
ol
Kin,
as requeeted by the . Defendants, Mary Jo
(1) 20, 27, (2) 3, 10, 17,
AdmIn lstra tors,
Ohio Rules ol Civil
Wolle and Kimberly
24
·
Executors
and
Procedure, judgment
Holliday, In the sum
·Spouse,, II any, ol
by default will be renol $10,737.78, plus · - - - - - - - Edmond
Cooper,
dared against you
interest at the rate ol
Public Notice
Names
.
and
and lor the relief
$2.95 per day !rom
. Addresses Unknown
demanded In the
August • 1, 2004, in
Public Notice
and
Annabelle
Complaint.
Dated
order to foreclose on
NOTICE: Is , hereby
Schneider Cooper, II
lhls
30
day· ol SO!id Land Installment
given
that
on
living, Last Addreas:
January,
2006.
Contract located at
Saturday, February
1835 South Saint Paul
Douglas W. Little ' 1665 Lincoln Hefghto,
25,2006 at 10:00 a.m.,
St., Denver, CO 80210, (0007537) Attorney Pomeroy, Ohio, which a public ule will be ·
Current
Address:
lor the Plalntlll Little,
Is
more
fully
held at 211 W Second
Unknown, and
II
Sheets &amp; Warner, P.O. described In land
St, Pomeroy, Ohl.o.
deceased·,
the
Box 686, Pomeroy, con1ract recorded In The Farmers Bank
Unknowri
Heirs,
Ohio
45769;
Book 65, Page 617,
and
Savings
Davlaeea,
Telephone (740) 992·
Meigs County Official
Company Is selling
Succeseors. Aaalgns,
6689
records; and costs ol
lor cash In hand or
Next
. of
Kin , (2) 17, 24, (3) 3, 10, 17, this action; that .the
certlllod check the
Administrators,
24 ·
land installment con· . following collatenil:
Executors
and
tract be foreclosed
1993 DODGE DAKO·
Spouaea, ·11 any, ell
and that the liens T
A·
Annebelle Schneider
Public Notice
and/or interests In or
1B7FL23X7PS120656 .
Cooper. Names and
on · said property, il
The Farmers Bank
Addresses Unknown
IN THE COMMON
any, be marshaled
Savings
and
You are hereby notiPLEAS COURT OF' and the real oatate · Company, Pomeroy,
fied that you have , 1,1EIGS
COUNTY, title quieted and .said
Ohio, reserves the
been
named
OHIO
·property aold In the ' right to bid at · thla
Defendants In the
IRENE
M.
DILL, foreclosure
action
sale, and to withdraw
action
entltlled
PLAit:ITIFF,
and all amounts due tho above collateral
Franklin Ileal . Estate vs
Plaintiff be paid !rom
prior to the sale.
Company, Plaintiff, va
MARY JO WOLFE,
the proceeds ol the , Further, The Farmers
Edmond Cooper, et
ET AL
sale.
Bank and Savingo
al., Defendants. Thla
CASE NO. 05·CV·110
Vou are required to
Company ' reserves
action
has
been
NOTICE BY PUBLl·
answer the Complaint
tho rlghl to reject any
aaalgned Case No.
CATION
wjthln twenty·elg~t
or all bids submitted,
08CV017,
and
Ia
TO:
MARY
JO
(28) days . after !he The above described
jNindlng In the Court
WOLFE, whoso last
last publication ol collateral will be. sold
of Common Pleas ol ·known addresses ani this. Notice, which will
"as le·whera le", with ·
Melga County, Ohio . 1665 lincoln Helgh1a,
be published once
no .e xpressed
or
The objact ol the
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769', each Wflek· for six (6)
Implied
warranty
complaint demands present
address
successive weeks.
given.
that the real estate
unknown, and
The last publication · For lurthar lnlorma·
which Ia the subject
KIMBERLY
HOLLI·
will be made on the
tlon,
or
lor
an
of the Complaint be
DAY,
whose
last
24th day ol February, · appointment
to
partitioned,
· .or known addresses are
2006, and the twentyInspect
collateral,
ordered aold II H can·
1665 Lincoln Helghls, eight (28) daya after
prior to sale date connot be partitioned ;
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
the last publication ol
tact Cyndle, Stacy, or
·lhat each owner be
present
address
this Notice, which will
Randy al992·2136.
required to aet 'lorih
unknown 1 and
be published once (2) 22, 23, 2~
!hair Interest In · lh&amp;
RHONOA L MOON
each W"'!k lor sl• (6)
realastate; and lor an
whose last known
successive weeks.
allowance ol attorney addresses are 1665 · The 1as1 publication

·

Public Notice
The 200 5 Annual
Financial Reporl ol
the
Village
of
Mlddlaport . Ia avail·
bl
f
bl'
a e · or
pu tc
Inspection at the
Fiscal Officer's office
In City Hall at 237

kept.
1408

F40

$17.900 (304)675,

~'fJIIEELERSIORCYl-U:sl

4"

I

~.
10

. HOME .

liiiPROVEMENTS

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
.Racine , Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

.•.

1995 H.D. Super Glide ,
WA~:~;:~~~NG
~ 10'~J
20·soo m·1
T
1 es ·
'oo many
r
c 11 1
r t Unconditional lifetime guarHours .
e&gt;r1ras 10 051 · a or a " ·
antee.
Local
reterepces
lu'r·
AM
• B:OO.PM
:00
No leeks and never
7
Race
Street, wrecked.
$9,000(Firm) ~shed. Established 1975.
11 14 1 1
Middleport,
Ohio 740 -742 ·2768 ·
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446· L---...,;;~;;,:.;m:.::.,pd~
o
45760 between the
0870 , Rogers Basemen!
hours ol 9 am and 4
1998.Sof1ail Chopper. 96 cu . Waterproofing
STANLEY TREE
pm Monday through
in. S&amp;S engine, 5 ·sp , trans, r&amp;;;;;-;;;;;;;..-;~,
TRIMMING &amp;
Friday.
wideglide front end $14.500
GENERAL
7
Fresh built HD Shovelhead
(2) 22 • 24 • 2
engine .040 over 74 cu . in 1o
many new parts to list. plus

P.ubllc Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COUR,T, PRO·
BATE
DIVISION
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,'
PRO·
BATE COURT MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts and vouch·
era ol the ~!lowing
named fiduciary has
been · Iliad In the
Probtle Cou!1, Meigs
County, Ohio lor

· approval and settlement.
ESTATENO. 33042·
The Second Account
ol Bobby Arnold,.'
Guardian ol the person and estate of
Alan Halliday, an
Incompetent peroon.
Unless
excep,lons:
are !lied thereto, said
account will be set lor
hearing before said
Court on tho 24th day
ol March, .2006, at
which'
lime
said
accqunt will be conslderad and contln·
~ed !rom day to day
until finally dlaposed
ol.
Any person Interest·
ed may l!le . written
exception to said
account or lo matters
pertaining to the execution ol the trust,
not leas than live
days prior to the date
set for hearing . ·
J.S. Powell
Judge
Common
Pleas
Courl,
Probate
Dlvlelon
Meigs
County, Ohio
(2) 24

79 rotary top trans new

m~in

shaft and kiCker assem~y.
$4,800 1304)593·6945
1999 Harley DaYidson Uttra
Classic. Loaded, 'Excellent
conditiorl , 29,000 1otal miles.
Price $13,500. Call 740·
949·2217 until ? pm.

Help Wanted

ADVERTISE
YQUR
BUSINESS

IN THE
'
CLASSIFIEDS

"

Local Area Industry in New Haven
(Mason Co) WV seeking personnel
for entry level positions in the
coaJ ya-rd line of progression.
·40 Hr. workweeks, rotating shift
work required. Two Year Degree
. or Equivalent. Entry level wage
rate@ approx. $14.68 per hour
with steps for progressions.
Benefit package being offered.
Interested candidates are to .
submit resumes to:

Human Resource Dept.
P.O. Box 1051
New Haven, WV 25265-1051
By ~ March

work
·
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insu red"

Call' Gary Stanley
740·742·2293
• Leave a message

flelp Wanted

-Industrial WorkersAmerican Electric Power/
.
.
.
Mountameer Power Plant

·

CONTRACTING

• Prompt &amp; quality

3,2006

-·An Equal Opportunity Employer --

M/F/ 0/V

NO, MAAM, 51-iE DOE:SN'TI
i-UANT ME TO TAKE j.jER
HOMEWORK TO HE~ ..

Stop &amp; Compare

ARE '(OU OUT OF
'(OUit MINE'?

JUST QUOTING
HER, MA'AM ..

YOUNG'S

are

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Remodeling

New Garagea
Elaetrlcat &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutter•
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio •nd Porch Oeeka

SUNSHINE CLUB

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992 6215
PomNu y Oh w
25 Vei!IS local Ex pc r~ cnc•·
II'.

.,

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

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 Sl Rt 7 N • .Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-3831

Advertise in
this space

for$26
per month.
Now

I

t--.-,-r,s;-,r--,lr:6,...,,--l 0 c....lilline
•

•

•

•

•

by

pltrt lht chv&lt;klt quortd
In 1M llli""'e

;-ou d...lco '"""

-.n

l!tp

No. 3 btlow.

1:1. l'tiNT NIJM&amp;! RIO ll li~RS IN
'.::1
THfS! SQUAtfS
. ~ UNSCRAM81! ABOVE lfTTERS

SCORPIO (Oct , 24-Nov. 22) -The sane·
tuary and peace of mind you're seeking
today can be found right in· your own home
environment. Leave the pressures ot the
ou tside world at your doorstep where ihey
belong.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec 21) - It is
Imperative ·today that you keep an open
mind in all situations and v,'ith all people.
Harboring praconceive9 ideas or making
impulsive judgmentS would be to your own

ClARFIELD
•

WHO'S CAl.l-iNGr,
Pl-EA51i."'

•
.,•
•
,,•

•

TO G!l . ANSWER

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 2123101

Behold - Midst - Vital - TbriU - HAVE the BILLS

Upon returning from boiiday my husband sighed. "Mail .
delivery isn"t that slow. We've been back one day and
already HA Vf the BILL:;;:· .

we
.

ARL:O &amp; JANIS

detnment

rr WA~ WRI)' I .COUUliJ'T ·
~~p

fAAG. fiJIIJ(?. ...

n.i?IZIBL€ I'"HIJ.)(;iS.r

~

COIJ£li1AA.V.Tilllb

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19) - Rather
than let old obligations prey upon your
mind today, ·do everyth ing w1t hln you r
power to take positr\18 measUres to clear
them up once aM lor all Be a lo'lcto r. not a
'
victim. ·
AQUARIUS (J an 20-Feb 19 ) - You r
asSOCIBt$S or trre nds might not be as
enlerpnslng and ad\18f!tu rous as you are
today, but you mustn 't let their lack ot
eh thuslasm halt your momentum Press on
without them 11 you must ·

LAWN WORK

(740) 992-0472

Scorpion Tractors

C REE N F

tocol.

Will cut &amp; ~IIIIIH~ tret'S or
vrill t' Ul intO nrewood. '
TRIM TREES &amp;

BA lJJ\11 Lll l\'IBER

guesl

to his glowing introduclion.
After thanking the host he
smiled and quipped,
::~~~;ry is okay if you don't

a

'.

ROCKY'S TREE
SERVICE

Available At

i

~

r'::::=~~:::::~~

CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Someone
· you kn ow lrom experience who Isn't apt to
, repay loans may teet you out again today
tor a lree handout. You can be of help. If
you wish . by offering assistance in other
ways.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Valued relationShips, mu st be de8tt with In a tolerant and
understanding manner today. Unless
you're consciously sensitive to their needs,
you're likely to be sharp and may evoke
their ill will
·
VIRGO {Aug 23-Sept 22)- Do not leave
. to the last minute today what you consider
to be an important task to complete . You
are not l!kety to perform at your highest
ltWel of competency should you feel pres· ·
sured .
LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct . 23) - You'll teet ta r
more at ease in socia l situati ons today
where you ca,n relax and let your hair down
bll , rather than beir)g at stuft&amp;d-shi~t
gatherings where you must adhere to pro -

.

-1

fi I l A F
•-r,-r-"T.--n-l
r

daY.

""•••••••

H0 PNAR

oD

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) - You'd be
smart ·to b.eg off from a social involvement
today where you know you could run 1nto
someone you dislike. Don't let others spoil
what shou.ld be a fun day tor you.
.
TAURUS (April 2()-May 20) - AlthOugh
you might be quick and energetic as you
you could quk:kly tire if you
start the
don't pace yourself properly. Much that
could be accomplished might not be.
GEMINI {May 2t·June 20) - There's 8
chance that your self-confidence could be
liery lOw today. Thus, It might take nothing
short of a «flallenge to get you to be the
assertllo'e and commanding person you

• New Homes

Aoom Addltlone &amp;

.

trOt over you·, think ahead and plan all your

• Garages
• Complete

dte

;=~:::;::;~:::;=:7-'

moves wisely.

140-992-1611

GEFRENEFR

I0,-y,-T,il_..,.,-_y,-.
I ll I -l I I
J-

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Put that
imagination of yours to rest today 11 It
begins to create complications for you
where none ·need exist. To combat its con-

Remodeling

IIBZPI,

b.
low 10 IOtm lout """"' -ds.

roll, your most outstandtng qualities will
come to the fore,

ROBERT
BISSELl
COISTRIC

•sizes 5'~1 o·

E XPT

R. JL. "

0 fOoJr
fl4ot"'"81 ""'" . ol
ICiambitd wotdl

Satu~·~Feb . 25,2ooe
By Bernice e.de Oaol
Destiny might call upon you In the year
ahead to' play a leading role in an lmportant enterprise. Don't let shyness or lack of
confidence stop you; oACe you get on a

LEVEL. WE OON 'T WAN

RJght to Your

TEl

ZREM

TJZRBAZ

lrllto4 ..
WELL, TEt&gt;I&gt;Y AND I
llON"r WANT TO tN -

D~Uvered

LBNP

SMPT

TIIAT DAILY
PIUIU

~IGNATE

'Vour Right to Know.

UBA

are no limits to music, so

..

2004 Chevy Trailblazer 1997 Hornet 23ft. 5th wheel,
4WD wltow pkg..
Kelly w/air, awning, setf-con·
tained. light weight. $~.000
Bluebooks
$22,000
many eXtras @
10.500
miles., OBO. (740)245-9109 or
excellent condi1ion. garage

B M P B X. Z R P X P T

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I diln't put myself in any particular category . . there
why should l limtt myself?" - lou Rawls
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�Page B8 • The baily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, February 24. 2006

Cavalier·s make deadline deals
BY JOE MIUCJA
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo

Tiger Woods hits his bunker shot on the 18th hole to set up
his match-winning birdie putt against Robert Allenby in the second round of the Accenture World Golf Championship Thursday
in Carlsbad, Calif.

CLEVELAND
The
Cleveland Cavaliers, looking
to add some depth and scoring
at the guard position, acquired
Ronald "Flip" Murray from
the Seattle SuperSonics on
Thursday, ·one of their two
deals before the trade deadline.
The Cavaliers got Murray in
exchange for , _guard Mike
Wilks and cash. Murray, 26, is
in his founh season. and averaged 9. 9 points per game for
the Sonics.
General manager Da'nny
Ferry said Murra~ill help the
Cavaliers with.
Hughes
likely miss the rest o the regular season with a bro~en finger.
"We needed to add more
scoring and athleticism on the
wing, especially comin~ off
the bench," Ferry said. ' With
Flip, that's his strength. He'll

Sixers in the offseason and was league, Ferry said. They curexpected to provide an offen- rently have the sixth-best
sive boost off the bench after record in the league.
averaging a career-high 14.2
"Most likely we 'U have two
points last season with New second-round picks next year,"
Orleans. Nailon hasn't played ·. Ferry said.
since the end of last month
To make room for Nailon.
after his arrest in an alleged Cleveland waived swingman
be able to come in and create dispute with his wife.
Stephen Graham, who was
baskets for himself."
Ferry said he did not expect signed to a second IO' day COI;lMurray was drafted by Nailon to report to the tract on Feb. 20. Ferry satd
Milwaukee 'in the second Cavaliers. He said the deal they may look to re-sign
round m 2002 . He scored a allows Philadelphia 'to get Graham, who impressed the ·
season-h1gh 29 f,?mts agamst under the luxury tax.
team in his limited time.
Boston on Dec. -6.
. · Nailon, 30, played in 22
The Cavaliers elected not to
W1Iks, who_ started the sea- games this season, averaging · make a major deal involvmg
SO!] a~ an wmgned free agent, 4.2 points and .1.9 rebounds in . forward Drew Gooden. He has
saw little lllaymg_ ttme at pomt 10.8 minutes · per game. He played well this season, averguard behmd Enc Snow and played briefly for the Cavaliers aging II points and 8.8
Damon Jones.
m 2003-04, averaging 7.7 . reoounds per game, but his talThe Cavaliers _also sent a points in 22 games. He's ent and upcoming status as free
conditional second-round pick played with six NBA teams in agent made him a candidate
in this · year's draft to a stx-year career. ·
for a trade.
Philadelphia in ex.change for · The Cavaliers will keep the
"We were not ever close to
forward Lee Nailon and the pick they sent to Philadelphia trading Drew Gooden," Ferry
7,6ers' second-round pick.
unless they finish with. one of said. "He's been very valuable
Nail on signed with the the top three records in the to us this year."

Longer day_for Woods
but the same results
BY DOUG FERGUSON

beat bi g- hitting Heririk
Stenson of Sweden.lt was the
Accenture · Match
Play
CARLSBAD. Calif.
Championship debut for
Tiger Woods went from a Stenson, who surely left with
breeze to ·a wheeze in the· a sour taste having played two
Match Play Championship, rounds without making a sinnot taking the lead until the gle bogey.
lOth hole and having to make
Defending champion David
a 7-foot birdie on the 18th to Toms made it to the third
get past Robert Allenby on round . for the fifth consecuThursday.
tive year with three straight
"I ' m advancing," Woods birdies on the back nine to
said·. "That 's a good thing."_ surge past Jo se Maria
Ultl. mately, that's all · that 01 aza ba1, 2 ·and I. He WI'II
mattered in a second ·round play Ryder Cup captain Tom
filled with dramatic shots, Lehman. who holed out from
stirring comebacks and some. the si xth fairway for eagle on
familiar faces who are press" his way to a I-up victory over
ing on toward the $1.3 mil- Adam Scott .
lion prize that awaits the win~ . "You 've got to be ready for
ner.
everything ," Toms said. "I
Vijay Singh overcame a know I've played well here,
slow · start to be'at Miguel · and 1 know all you ha.ve to do
Angel Jimenez, and while it 's is outplay the other guy."
hard to call that . a surprise
The easiest day belon~ed to
because Singh is the No. 2 Chris DiMarco. who 'birdied
seed, it was the first tim.s_ in five straight holes to beat
seven tries that he advi9ced Arron Oberholser, 6 and 5.
to the third round . Tliird- DiMarco lost in the finals a
seeded Retief Goosen also year ago.
won, but not before Ben
'There mi ght be guys that
. Crane made a hole-in -one on are better than me, but as far
the 16th hole to make him as competitiveness and never
sweat.
Phil Mickelson missed sev- giving up and always fighting
eral 5-foot putts, but he holed and clawing, I don 't think
a 25-foot eagle putt on the there 's too many guys that
II th that sent him Qn his way have that,'' he said.
There was· plenty of
·
1 a scratching
to a vtctory over John Day,
and clawing at La
match that might have carried Costa. _Eight of the 16 matchmore buzz had it not been
played in the morning.
es went the distance, with
The best rally .came from three of them · going extra
Padraig Harrington , who . holes. Mike Weir was among
birdied the last three holes to the survivors, losing the last
send his match into overtime. two hol es 'in regulation to
then beat Angel Cabrera with Bernhard Langer, then gathera par on the first extra hole .
ing him self on the 20th hole
After two days of wild with a tee shot into 5 feet for
swings in emotion and birdie.
momentum, only 16 players
It was ·rare for Woods to
remained . And while any- play all 18 holes. Of his 23
thing goes in match play. this victories in _match play at La
tournament was shaping up to Costa, this was only toe sixth
time he was extended to the
be a dan dy. S.tx 0 f the top last
hole. But more than ttie 7eight seeds are still around,
the highest' number since the . foot birdie to win, he looked
Accenture
Match
Pl ay back on consecutive birdies
Championship began in 1999 . on the front nine that turned
Woods had to labor to join h'is fortune s.
After makin g three bogeys
them .
He opened with six straight on hi s first five holes to fall
birdies and smoked Stephen two holes behind. Woods
Ames in the first round. a vic- made a IS-foot birdie putt on
tory· so resounding that the the sev~nth hole to cut into·
match lasted the minimum 10 All enby's lead. Then came
holes. Against Allenby, it took the par-5 eighth. a mixed bag
him that long simply to .get of good. shot s and ordinary
ohe s.
his first lead.
It was a struggle to the end.
With water down the right
"We both battled," Allenby side and the breeze· in hi s
said.'"At least 1 made it inter- face. Woods hit dri ve r off the
esting ."
.
deck and kept it to the left, in
Allenby, who deve loped .a back bunker with plenty of
cramps in his right calf over green between him and the
the final three hol e~. pulled h ole. But he caught hi s
even with a birdie on the par· bunker 'hot heavy, and slung
3 16th . Afte r both pl qye rs hi s club toward hi s bag.
missed birdie putts by inches All enby hit wedge into 8 feeL
on the 17th, it came down to a ·. "I hit two. rea lly nice shot s
fairway metal from the mid- and then just chickened out
die of the fairway on the par- on a bunker shot and left it
5 closing hole .
way short." Woods . said. "I
Woods went first. hitting 3- wasn't in position to make
wood into the left bunker. birdie, and he was. And I
Allenby came out of hi s 3- made the putt and he did n't.
wood, and sent it sailing to All of a sudden. it .looked
the right. beyond the bunker from potentially going back
into grass that had been tram- to 2 up for him ... now we're
pled by the gallery. It was a all square...
.
And now it \ back to square
bad place to mi ss, becau se 1he
·pin was cu t to the right s ide . one. ,
·•t couldn't afford to get delThe heatlty of match play is
icate with it,''· Allenbv said .
that the, 'cores are wiped out
His wedge bounced off the eac h dav. All that remai n are
hard ground and sai led 40 feet one-quarter of the 64-man .
beyond the pin . Woods blast- fie ld. all of them playing well
ed .out to 7 feet. and after. to get to th " poin t.
Allenby mi ~sed: he ro lled the
" I was 5 under todav."
birdie pull into the center of Da,id Hov.ell \aid after his3the cup.
. anJ -2 win over ,Swtt
Woods next play\ Chad Verplank. "At this st1tge in the
Campbell, who ''on the l ~th tournament. that\ the stanhole 'with an R,foot birdie to ·ctard whe re you need to he ...
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