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                  <text>www .mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

OHSAA Tournament Scoreboard
Girls basketball
State pairings
COLUMBUS (AP) - Pairings lor the
2006 g1rls state basketball tournament

semifinals, to be play&amp;d at Value City
Arena.

PIVISION I
Picker•ngton Cent. (23·3) vs . Cin. MI.
Notre Dame (23-3) , Fflday, 6 p.m :
Wadsworth (23-3) 11s. Solon (22-3) .
Friday. 8 p.m.
Morrow Little Miam1 (26-0) vs

Mentor

lake Cath. (16 -10) , Friday, 1 p.m .• Copley

(22-4) vs. Warsaw R•ver View (24-1).

Fnday. 3 p.m
O!V!S!ON Ill
Youngs .' Ursuline (2 1-4 ) vs. Sugarcreek

Garaway {24-2), Thursday 6 p.m.; Plain
C1ty Jonathan Alder (24-2) vs . Castalia
Margarett a (23-3). Thursday. 8 p m

DIVISION lY
Berlin Hiland (24·2) vs. Ft. Loram1e (24·

2), Thu rsday, 1 p.m.. : Hamler Patrick
Henry (25-0) vs. E Cat:l. (23-2). Thursday.
3pm .

Boys basketball
Wednesdi)y's results
DIVISION I

Can. McKinley 75. Barberton 52
Lancaster 57. Cols. Brookhaven 56
Strongsville 65, Lakewood St. Edward 63
Tol. St. John's 74. Mansl1eld Sr. 65
DIVISION Ill

Archbold 76, Gibsonburg 34

March Madness is as much about
money as it is basketball

Wapakoneta (19-5) vs. Willard (23·0),
Thursday, 7 p.m.
At Canton Fleklhouse
A&lt;&lt;. SVSM (19·3) vs. Roc&lt;y Rive&lt; (19·5),
Thursday, 7 p.m.
4t Wrlght State University
New Albany (19-4) vs. Tipp City
Tippecanoe (24-0), Thursday. 6:15p.m.;
Cin'. Woodward (13·9) vs. Day. Dunbar
(22· 2). Thu&lt;Sday, 8 P{$

Bedford Chanel77; W. Salem NW 72
C•n N College Hill 94, Bloom-Carroll 54
Cle VASJ 57. Youngs. Ursuline 48
Ironton 62 , Beverly Fort Frye 45
Johnstowf!-Monroe 62, St. Henry 48
Versailles 75. C•n . Madeira 53
Wheelersburg 62. Chesapeake 53

Rl!glonal pairings
DIVISION I
At University of Akron
Mentor (18-5) vs. Solon (22-1). Thursday.
7p.m
Finals
Can McKinley (22-2) vs. Melltor-S olon
w1nner. Saturday, 3 p.m
At University of Toledo
Tol St John's (20-5) vs. Strongsville (204). Saturday. 7.30 p.m.
At Xavier University
Cin. St. Xavier (2Q-.4) vs. W. Chester
L&lt;ikota.W (22-2). Thursday, 6:15:
Trotwood·Madison (18-5) vs. Cin.
Pnnceton (20-3}, Thursday, 8 p-m.
At Fairgrounds Coliseum, Columbus
Reynoldsburg (2t ·3} vs. Cin. Elder·(212). Thu rsday. 7 p.m.
Finals
Lancaster (24-1) vs. Reyno!dsburg-Cin.
Elder winner. Saturday, 7:30.

BY TiM

gloom lines last week about
The concerns are valid up
ASSOCIATED PRESS
how sports betting must be to a point because the organistopped to protect the game. zation is charged with proLAS VEGAS - If you're Surely, though, the organiza- · tecting the integrity of the
reading this, odds are you're tion must secretly hope 'it game. But it was Las Vegas
interested in the NCAA bas- doesn't get what-it wants.
bookmakers, not NCAA,
ketball tournament. If you're
That's because people who investigators, who smeHed
starting to sweat while doing can ' t tell the difference something fishy and called
so, odds are you have a few between .a 3'pointer and a authorities when Arizona
slam dunk, who don't know State players tried to tank
dollars on the games.
Twenty bucks in the office Bucknell from Bradley, sud- games a decade ago.
The guys handling the
pool is the accepted wager denly become big fans when
across most of America. But they have a few dollars on the money are always going to be
guys will stand in lines 20 line. That means ratings for the ones looking out for it.
deep in Vegas casinos CBS, and millions more in
"We are on. the same·side as
Thursday to bet such things the pockets of the NCAA and the NCAA," said Jay
as whether Southern will ever its member schools.
Kornegay, who runs the
have a lead in its game
It's the biggest reason sports book at.the Las Vegas
against Duke.
·
March Madness has gotten . Hilton. "We want nothing but
· That's enough to horrify so, well, mad.
· a fair and true game. If anythe NCAA by itself. But it . ''Whether you're a student. one is going to get hu~ by a
housewife, senior citizen or crooked or fixed game It's the
gets worse.
. Like the chances of a No. doctor l think the whole bookmakers."
13 seed winning a game? All country caJis it ·March
The· NCAA seems to have
it takes is a few clicks of the Madness for a reason ," said finally realized that. A few
mouse arid you can get 6-5 on Simon Noble, who runs ·the years ago it went to Congress
ii from the privacy of your offshore
betting
site to try to outlaw betting on
hot~se .
P i n n a c l e S p o r t s . c o m. college games in Las Vegas,
And who knows how much "Whether it is brackets or but now it' s reaching out to
of mom and dad's money taking the next step and mak- its archenemy to work togethfrom home is being wagered ing a wager, I think every- er to prevent anything funny.
in· donn rooms everywhere.
body's doing it."
An investigator is iu town
WeJI, not everybody.
this week 'to hang arou nd the
The Super Bowl has nothing on t!lis. By. the time the
NCAA president Myles sports books and talk with,
nets are cut down a few Brand certainly won't be fill- bookmakers, but the NCAA
weeks from now, billions of ing out his bracket at NCAA could have saved 1ts travel
dollars will have c~anged headquarters in Indianapolis, money.
hands.
probably the only office comNo one is buying games or
The NCAA frets about that, plex in the country where shaving points in this tournapartly because it rightfully there is no pool on the tour- ment. It rarely happens anywants to protect the integrity nament.
more, and it never happens in
of its games and partly
If NCAA staffers didn't games anybody in Las Vegas
because it always seems to know before what zero toler~ is paying attention to.
like to take the high moral ance meant, they found out
There's a better chance of
ground.
when Rick Neuheisel was finding conspiracies in the
But i.t also indirectly profits . fired as football coach at the tournament selection room in
from it, making millions University of Washington for Indianapolis than in a sports
witliout ever having to make winning a basketball pooL Of book in this gambling city.
a bet itself.
course, Neuheisel won a $4.5
So, fill out your office
Those running the tourna- million settlement, proving 'brackets, throw in your 20
ment would never admit it, that betting sometimes really bucks, sit back and relax.
·
And don 't start thinking
but ·the NCAA's . annual get dQes pay off.
The NCAA justifies its somethin g is fishy if J.J.
together of 64 teams owes
much of its success to the fact position by pointing to point- Redick misses a few free
that much of America has a shaving scandals of old, and a throws.
small financial i11terest in .the 2003 study it commissioned
outcome.
that showed 2.1 percent of
Tim Dahlberg is a national
Call it hypocritical, but that Division l basketball players sports columnist for The
didn't stop the NCAA from admitting· they had been A.1·sociated Press. Write to
dragging out it's doom-and- asked to throw a game.
him at tdahlbergap.org

(Srare Toumameryt Matah'ups: Canton vs.
Athens; Toledo vs. D{jyton)
QIVIS!ON Ill

At Bowling Green State University
Johnstown-Monroe (25-0) vs. Archbold
(2Q-4), Satu&lt;day, 7:30.

At Wright State University
Versailles (20-4) vs. Cin. N. College Hill
(23-1 ). Saturday, 2 p.m.
At Canton Fieldhouse
Bedford Chane! (18-6) vs. Cle. VASJ (196) , Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
At Ohio University, Athens
)ronton (19·5) vs. Wheelersburg (22-2),
Saturday. 7:30p.m.
(State Tournament Matchups: Bowlin9
Green vs. Dayton; Canton vs. Athens)

DIVISION IV

At Miami University
Lockland '(22-3) vs. Houston (21·4) ,
Friday, 7;30.

(State Tournament Matchups: Akron vs.
Toledo: Crnc:mna t1 vs Columbus)

At Fairgrounds Coliseum, Columbus
Worthington Christian (19-:EJ) vs. S.
Webster (23-2). Friday, 7:30p.m.
At Canton Fleldhouaa
Windham (21·3) vs Berlin Hiland (20-5) ,
Friday. 7:30.
At Bowling Green State University
Columbus Grove (19-5) vs. Bucyrus
Wyntord (20·5), Friday, 7:30p.m.

D!VISION.Jl

. ·At CantOn Civic Center
Cle . Benedictine (8-15) vs. Wooster
Tnway (23- 0). Thursday. 6:15p.m.;
Salem (20-3) vs. Painesvi!Je.Harvey ( 18·
5), Thursday, 8 p.m.
At Ohio Univen~ity
Cots. DeSales (t 7·6) vs. Cadiz Harrison
Cent. (2 1-2). Thursday, 6:15p.m. ,
Circleville Logan Elm (19-5) vs.
Zanesville (t 6-7). Thursday, 8 p.m.
.At University of Toledo

(State Tournament Matchups: Oxford vs
Columbus; Canton vs. Bowfing Green)

.·coaches Distrid 13 All-Star Teams
GIRLS BASKETBALL

BOYS BASKETBALL
Division

Divisions I-II
First Team
Jackson ·
Gal!ia Academy
Warren
Logan
Logan
Warren
Second Team
VInton County

Vtctorla Leali
Jackie Wamsley
Kristin Cozzens
Jessica Harris
Allison Angle
Chelsea Clifton
Me~an Owings

Cot efle Bolen
Catie Wolfe
Madison CoMefy
JennUynn. Martin

'

8•ittany Elliott
Kristin Collins
Whitney Swain
Kelsey Day
Kelly Smith

Reid Arnold
Dan Cawley
K.C. Chrlstlan
Anthoh~ Youngblood

Sr . .
Sr.
Sr
So.
S&lt;.
Sr.

Dustlh milh

Shaphen Robinson

Jarred Albright
Dustin Guthrie
Alex Sarth
Robby Caldwell
Lucas Wright

Jr.
So.
Fr.
Sr.
Sr

Logan
Meigs
Warren
Jackson
Special Mentlon
Gal!ia Academy
Vinton County
Warren
Vinton coun~
Jackson

· ·Player of the Year
Vi&lt;;;toria LeaU, Jackson
co-coaches or the vear
Pat Walsh, Logan; Kenny DeMoss, Warren
· North-South RepresentatiVe
Victoria Leall , 'Jackson

Chelsea Maoona
Ke!!ee Guthrie
Sarah Rl,ICk:er
Brlanna Davis
Jessica Craft

Beth Payne
Jami Turrill
Shawntae Cline
Annah Ruff
samantha Hall '
Manii McKemzie

Megan Auxier
MidleUe Pancake
Bobbl Harper

Amy Smith

Lacey Adkins

·
Molly. Bumgardner
Maranda Saker ·

Chelsea Stowers
Brigette Thompson
AliCia Andrews
Virginia Brickles
Jessi Drayer

so.

Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
·Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.

VInton C~r'lty
Vinton C&lt;lun!y

P., "'·

tiMi v-

North-South Rttpuu•ltettve

S&lt;.
. Jr.
J&lt;.
J&lt;.
S&lt;.

Dennis OagBI
PJ. Rase
Jordan Thornhill ·
Jeremiah Taylor
Justin Porter
,
Brar1,d0n Barnhart

Sr.

S&lt;.
J&lt;.
Sr.
J&lt;.
J&lt;.
Sr.

Darnel Skidmore
• Rylan Kirkendall
.Brandon Walker
Dustin Adams
Cole Ha~leld
Randy Wise
Michael COrdell
Chase McWhorter
Garland Stiltner.
Evan Garrett
Josh Johnson
Evan Mel\lln
Jaffe~ Th&lt;lrhburg
Zach edrici&lt;

J&lt;.

s•.

J&lt;.
Jr.
J&lt;.
Jr.
Sr.

Jr.

Ch-al&lt;e ·
' Federal HOCking
Slcon&lt;!TIIIIlll
A!exandl!r
· • 4!exandl!r
Ironton
Salpra
t:=alrland

Sr. ·
Sr.
Sr.

SpoC!ollttnllon
Coal Grove

.

R...rV81!ey
South G
Oak Hill
-IHOcktng
·Falriand
COB!Omve
ChMopeake
Alexander

P.,

Nathan Cozart
Matt Christman
Matt SChott
Patrick Johnson

Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Fr.

CurtWa~h

s•.
S&lt;.

Michael
.

Southarn

SouthGallia
Symmes Valley

· Second Tum

Anthony Di~.:on
Cory Lewis
Kyle Meadows
Matt Owens
Matt Townsend

Trimble
Ironton 51. Joe
SymmasVa!!ey
~mesValley
aterlord
Spoci81 Mention
Aie~e SWarts
Ironton Sl Joe
Mark Guass
Eastern
Shane Luning
Miller
Ouslin Householder
Miller
Ryan Statotl
Ironton St Joe
Chaz Mohlar
Trimble
Craig Simms
Wa(arford

Sr.
Sr.
S&lt;.
Jr.
Sa.
Sa.
S&lt;.
Sc.
F&lt;.
F&lt;.

Southern.

umphrey

Player of the Year
Jennifer Grand~, Trimble
Coach of the Year
Tim Sikorskt, Tr1mble
North-South Rep-resentative
~e~nifer Grandy, Tri~blo

RING
GUID

Sr.
Jr.
Jr.

Jt.
Sr.
Sr. .
Sr.
Jr.

ihi!

v-

· FlrotT....,
Eaetern
TrlrMble
Waterford

Thursd

h 30. 2006

Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.

Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
S&lt;.

So. ·
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.

Ploytr ollhe Year
Nathon Cozart. Eastorn
Cciach of·tlle Yeor
Greg Koons, Trimble
NDf'th..South Reprt 1
Nathan Cozart, Eastern

..

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENT!NEL.COM

POMEROY - "So far, so good,"
. was the sentiment of American
Municipal Power-Ohio (A MPOhio) President and CEO Marc
Gerken yesterday after touring th€
proposed site for his company's
n·ew · coal-fired power plant in
Letart Falls.
After the tour, Gerken and AMPOhio Board Members met with
local officials for an informal luncheon at the Wild Horse Cafe.
"Things are looking real good for
Beth Sergen1/ photo
us," Gerken told his audi ence.
President and CEO of American Municipal Power-Ohio (AMP.Ohio) Marc Gerken knocking on wood against any
(standing) addresses local officials concerning his tour earlier in the day of the problems in the permit proce ss anu
Letart Falls site that has been proposed for AMP-Ohio 's coal-fired power pl-ant.
any fatal flaws on the Letart Falls

BID NO.l

• BRICK CHURCH
•CARMEL
• McKENZIE RIDGE
• OAK CiROVE

ine is

24,2006
•
'

• Bid will be for MONTHLY Charge (April/ thru October J I, 2006)
• Yo~ may bid on No. l ... No. 2 or Total Ten ( 10) Cemeteries.
stones.
season) I to 2 times (Dry

ma i
season)
Sutton Townsh ip reserves the right to accept or reject any or .all
bido. Sutton Township must receive bids by March 31, 2006.
Se nd bids to SUTTON TOWNSHIP (MEIGS COUNTY),
43410

Dutchtown Road. Racine. Ohio 45771.
11

· Residen ts thar wam to .\an' dnora ttOIJS mtl,\f remon!
\O thai&lt; emt' le ne.~ r·an he prepared {or J{m!IJ.!.

Call Dave or Brenda
at 992-215.5 I

Pl!!a5!! Sft AMP-Ohio. AS

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAIL YSENT!NEL.COM

OBnuARIEs

INSIDE
• Rutland Nazarerte
Church to build new
facilities. See ·Page A2.
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
• Senate passes $2.8
trillion spending.blueprint
for 2007. See Page AS
• OVCS hosts regional
speech meeting.
See Page A6
• U.S. militaJY targets
insurgents in major
operation as Iraqi
parliament convenes.
See Page A7
• Woman accused
of scamming elderly
out of $1.4 million.
See Page AS

Details on

~age

As

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

•

prorerty. problem &gt; which have so
far not materiali zed.
When a' ked if AMP-Ohio still
cQnsiders .the Meig.&gt; Coynty site as
the home of what will be the flag. ship plant of hi s company, Gerken
did · not h es i~at e an,wering,
''Without a uoubt. .. .
Preliminary work has begun at
the sire such as soil boring, river
surveying and geological as well as
archeological survey s.
Gerken's speech focu sed mainly
on !he sile work and building good
relalionships throughout the county.
However. he briefly touched upon
the permit proce;s and di scussion
on Slate incentives.

County to
consider EMS
re-location to
VMHwing

SUTTON

BID NO. 1
• BEAVER CORNER
• GILMORE
• MINERSVILLE HILL
• SNOWBALL
• WELCHTOWN (5. Brown)

""" ·"')dailysl'ntind.com

AMP·-Ohio CEO:
'So far, so good'

• Let the madness ·
begin. See Page 81

p.m. and the boys at 8 p.m .
A slam dunk and 3-point
shootin g contest will be
held bet ween games .

Sutton Township is
Township Cetneterites

FRIDAY, MARl'll 17, :wob

SPORTS

WEATHER .

......,.

"ere on the first or. second
tea ms will be eligible to
play. ·
The girls game begins at 6

:;o CENTS • \'ol. 55. No. t;.o

.

o1 the
o'ennis Gagai, Ironton
Coach of tiW Year
Blain Gal&gt;riel, Alexander

Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Page AS
• Cecil Fleshman, 85
• Carrol N. Lamp, 93

Sr.
Sr.

SOuth Point

·Emergency Guide
inside today's edition

DAHLBERG

'·

.Firat Teonv
Ironton
CheSa"""""
Belpre

· 'Division IV

Waterford

the Year and Alexander\
Demon Guthrie wa; dubbed
Coach' of the Year. Senior
Beth Payne of Ri ve r Valley
wa; a 'econd team ;election.
Jennifer Grandy · wa;
named PI aver of the Year and
North' Smlth represental ive
in Di vi, ioil IV and her coach.
Tim Sikor,ki. was named top
coach .. Sou the rn 's Linda
Eddy made the fiN tea m an(i .
team m;tte Kri stiina Will iam s
'.was seco nd team . South
Gallia SOilhnmo re C hehe u
Stowers and Southern fresh·
man Virginia Brickle s were
· both Spec ial .'-.1cmion . .
The Di stri ct 13 All-Star
game will be held March 20
at Newt Oliver Arena on the
campu s of the Univers ity of
Rio Grande Dt vis ion;, I and
IJ will play · Di visioti Ill
while Di vi., ion IV meinhers
will he divided betwee n the
two team,. Sen!! lr' that

Sr.

DlvlsiQII Ill

Firat Team
Trimble
Waterford
Trimble
Waterford
Symmes Valley
Southern
Second Team
Trimble
Southern
Symmes Valley
Symmes Valley
Symmes Valley
Special Mention
South Gal~a
Symmes Valley
Trimble

from Page Bl

St.

~·"' Arnold, Jaci&lt;son

FfistTeam
Oak Hi!
Coal Grove
Alexander
Chesapeake
Fairland
South Point
Second Team
Aiver Valley
Alexander
Belpre
Oa&lt; HI!!
Coal Grove
Rock Hill
S~l~t Mention
Fairland
Rock Hill
RoCk HiU
Alexander
Oak Hill
Fairland
Belpre

.·Coaches

Jr.

so.

t.lo!ge.
Logan
Jacl&lt;sorl
Rool&lt; HM!

Division IV

Hannah Faires
Kristtina Williams
Megan Coomes
Tiffany Bryant
Emily Bowling

warren

OaiNa Academy
· SicondT. . .
Vinton County
Vinton C&lt;lunty
Warren
Warren
Lo!r.n

Reid 4mo!d, Jaci&lt;Bon
COOch o1 the Yur
Stain Maddox, Warren

Player of the Year
Keisa Davis, Oak Hill
Coach of the Year
Denton Guthrie, Alexander

·Jennifer Grandy
H81ey Drayer '
Julie Trace
Hope King
Rebecca Capper
Unda Eddy

St.
St.
St.
St.
Sr.
Sr.

· Marietta
RockHill
Marietta

Gatlia Academy
MeigS

Division III
KeiSa Davis

'

Flf'ltTeam

!lf'OC a! Mtnllon •

Jayme Haggerty
Enc VanMeter
David Poole
Clayton Fredenok
Marcus Boggs
Mike !son
Gage sower&gt;
Matt Eberts

J&lt;.
S&lt;.
Sr.•
.Sr.
S&lt;.

-

t.n

Thursday, March 16, 2006

16 PAGES

Calendars
A6
Classifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7
Dear Abby
A6
Editorials
A4
Faith • Val.ues
A2-3
Movies
As
B8
NASCAR
Obituaries
As
Sports
B Section
Weather
AB

POMEROY
Meigs
Emergency Mcpical Services
will likely relocate at least
part of its operation into the
old Veteran s Memorial
· Hospital building.
Meeting
with
Meigs
County Co mmissioners on
Thursday, Lyons said a slip of
th~ hillside on the back of the
building has caused serious
structural. damage, including
shifting of the foundation and
cracks in the walls. Those
cracks, Lyons said yesterday,
are causing a mold problem
inside the 25 year-old build.ing, locateu just be hind the
olu VMH building.
An agent with the Meigs
County Health Department
has visited the site and
inmu cted staff in mold
eradication. but Lyons said
· the mold problem returns
with every heavy rain. The
agen cy has also oulgtown
the office building · it now
occupies. she said, because
of an increase in staff wi th
the imple.mentation of a
paid paramedic service and
· addi tional a:dministrati ve
staff. The agency now
Please Sft EMS, AS

Beth Sorgontj photo

These children ·at Heart of the Valley Head Start are in no danger of being pmched tciday by wearing their green leprechaun hats
that they constructed with the help of teachers Lisa Morris and Judy Ganaway. Yesterday the ch ildren celebrated "rainbow day·
by constructing their own ra.inbows with paper streamers. Here . these' littie leprechauns give the "th umps up . to finding that
pot of gold at end of the rainbows they've been learning about.in head start.

Relay for tife luminaries go on sale
Bv CHARLENE HoEFUCH .
. HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - One of the
highlights of the annual
Meigs County Relav for Life
to be held May 12 and 13 at
'the
Rock
Springs
Fairgrounds is the luminary
ceremony held at dusk.
That's where . victims of
cancer - · those who surviv.ed
and those who didn ·t - are
remembered with a ring of
lighted luminaries around the
rnidwav track .
The luminary ceremony is
always a spec ial time because
it represents hope as cancer
ST4FF REPORT
·survivors walk the track
'NEWS@MYDA!LYSE NT INEL.COM
lighted by personalized luminaries given in remembrance
POMEROY Mic hael of a loved one or in honor of
Struble. presiuent uf the a survivor. It is an emotional
Athens-Meigs Educational time and the only time during
Service Center gove rning . t,he relay that the organizers
board, has been as ked to join ask for si lence.
a working group of the Ohio
After the survi vors take the
Senate
Educational first lap. caregivers.willtake a ·
Committee,
·
lap anu he recognized . . and
The group will be .focusing then there wi ll be a lap in
on recent legislation in vo lvsilence taken by everyone in
ing a statewide
za,
.rcoroani
e
of all those who
tion of ·the . Educational remembran.:e
have lost their han k with canService Centers in Ohio.
cer. After ihe lap in silence,
Struble along wilh the Ohio
teams will take to the track
School Boards A"ociation and·
walk lhrough the night.
and oth~r interested educa" I am very glad to represent
tional groups. spoke in opposition to Hou se Bill 115 a! a the many cancer survivors
recent· Sena1e meeting. The and the familie s nf llll»e who
bill , according 10 Struble. is ha ve Ins! thc.ir hallie In can !he state' s most recen! cer'' ""J Sue Li ghtfoo!, lumi -.
attempt to rcg ionali 7.e !he nar)i l: hairpcr~~m. "A~ the
del1very sy,tcm of services luminari e' ligh1 up the night.
offered by
Educational it i" very clear \\ hy we rl' lay
· and why \H~ need to cn tlt inue
Service Centers.

ESC president
to work
with Senate ·
committee

1

lo raise nH)Tlev for can cer

Please see Struble, AS .
•

fC St' i.lfl' h. Cdlll\itioi1. i ld\'()l'U·

ChMene Hoeft!chf pl!oto

Luminaries · for use at th1s year·s· Relay for Life, each one persona lized '" remembrance of a
loved one or in honor of a, survivor, are now ava ilable fo r a $10 donat ion. Here Sue Lightfoot.
project chairman . sells one to Courtney Sim .
Thi~

cy. and ....,e,y icc . Cancer never
~ives

up amlneitht'r can we:·

~he added.

· ·
·
rhe luminarie' can he purchased from any team mem ber or by calling Lightf&lt;Xll at
'992-3 1Jl.\. There is :t mini·
mum dnnatin!1 of $ 10 for each
of the uni4ue persnnalited
lumimu'ie' "hich can depicl
lifetime aLti\ ilie . . . lwhbic"'. ur

Hl·eupation . . &lt;t nd l ' i..lll tm.: luJe a
photograp h. nealing a reOec li&lt;il! of till' per,on hein!! hc\11 nreu or rl'!llC!11hl'rl'J ..

·

year tho'e purd1a" i.n g

luminarie&gt; ,·:m include 1\\ o
name;, on each one. said
Li ghtfoot. Ab&lt;&gt; ttii, ) car
luminaries" ill be u'ed in th,·
teams· fundrabi ng program'
.so Ah:tt the amounl of Jumi·
nark~ purc ha . . t!d can he
included in tlwi r tolal. In the
p:ht !hat mnnev wa' kepi
'epar:tlc but !his vear il "ill
pr(J\_itll' .a ho(JSt to the tL'am,·

fundrai,ing ll&gt;t:tl, .
Lumin aries sh,,uJd
()rd.: H.' tl al'- "0\H) J. ;.,

he

ri.Jv,jhJ.C .

ad1 i&gt;ed Lightf&lt;,ot. since it is
timc-con,ummg to pe r,onalitc eac·h one . While' thev " 'ill
be a\'ai lahk :t! ihc r~l:t~:. per"-Onalil in!! them th~ r~ i~ liin ilcd hccali,e of time. To g~t a
luminan persnna liteJ '" ypu
\\ ~uH . ..,t;,e -...t,gg.c . . led plal'lng
!he nrdct before Ma1 Ill.
"Las ! 1car ",. ~old 456
lum 1naric '. !he JllO&gt;t ever
lor
&lt;'llr
1't'la1...
\aid
Li~lllf&lt;&gt;nt. "Th i' \ear "e·re
h&lt;&gt;llin~ I&lt;&gt; do a~ well. or
mayMc Clc'!l Oc!tcr ...

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 17,2006

A Hunger For :More

Submitted photos

The Rev. Mike Clark , pastor of th e Rutland Nazarene Chu rch, left, talks with Dr. Richard Jordan,
Central Ohio Distri ct Superintendent. about plans for a new church.

E CHURCH
RUTLAND N
TO. BURD NEW FACRITIES
RUTLAND- The building committee of the Rutland
Nazarene Church is moving
forward with plans to construct a new church and campus in Rutland.
Plans call for the building
to include a new worship
·sanctuary, Sunday school
classrooms, a large foyer, a
gymnasium and soccer field,
according to the Rev. Mike
Clark, pastor.
The past&lt;;&gt;r met recently with
Dr. Richard Jordan, Central
Ohio district Superintendent
of the Church of the Nazarene
to discuss the building project.

Catholic bishops respond to 55 U.S.
House members' challenge on abortion
(Brooklyn. N.Y.) of the
WASHINGTON (AP) · Responding to a challenge · domestic policy committee .
In a Feb. 28 joint statement;
from 55 of the 73 Roman
Catholic Democrats in the the 55 House members had
House of Representati ves. key addressed abortion ·and other
·leaders of the Am erican matters, saying "we seek the
church said that "all Catholics church's 'guidance and ass is- ·
are obliged to shape our con- lance but helieve also· in the
sciences in accord with the primacy of conscience."
moral teaching of the church:"
The House members said
That includes teaching on they agree with Catholic social
principles on poverty, educaabortion. the prelates said.
The statement came frorn tion. health care and war and
the chairmen of three panels of "the undesintbility of abortion,"
the U.S. bishops' conference: but there is "disagreement with
Cardinal Theodore McCarrick the church in some areas."
(Washington, D.C.) of a speThe three church leaders
cial task force on Catholic responded: ''It is essential to
politicians: Cardinal William remember that conscience
Keeler (Baltimore) of the . pro- must be consistent with funlife committee. and Bishop damental moral principles."
Nicholas
DiMarzio
""Catholic teaching calls all ·

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Catholics to work actively to
restrain, restrict and bring to
an end the destruction of
unborn humlllllife," they said.
The Catholic leaders called
abortion "a grave violation of
the most fundamental -human
right -· · the right to life,"
which "grounds every other
right we possess."
· •
Last May, 48 Catholic
House Democrats wrote
McCarrick that "we · do not
believe it is our role to legislate
the teachings of the Catholic
Church." The 48 also opposed
refusal of Communion to dissenting Catholic politicians,
which had become an issue
during the presidential race of
John KeJTY, a Catholic who
favors liberal abortion laws.

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If you have really heard the
"Call" of Christ, His love and
His holiness sinking into
your awareness through the
murky night of the soul, then
somehow your life has
become different. The call of
Jesus in your life, if allowed
to have its way, cannot help
but whisk you into a new
reality, one that is completely
different from · what life
would be like had He never
sent you the Call or had you
not hearkened to it.
Don't think for a moment
that you can "meet" God, and
just walk away as if nothing
has happened. Folks often see
the salvation of God as simply a means to escape-punishment for wrong-doing. And
while it IS true that we are ·
released from conderruiation
forever once we have placed
our . faith in Him, ("There is
now no condemnation for
those who are in Christ Jesus,
because through Christ Jesus
the law of the Spirit of life set
me free ' from the law of sin
and death" (Romans · 8: I
NIV ), Jesus' invitation to you
is so much more than a mere
escape hatch from hell.
Neither is the Call simply a
m'atter getting your reserva_tions turned in for your afterlife. Although God Himself
has indeed promised us a
"forever after" life with Him
("For God did not appoint us
to -suffer wrath but to receive
salvation through our Lord
Jesus Christ. He died for us
so that, whether we are
awake or asleep, we may live
together with Him" · ( I
Thessalonians 5:9-10 NIY) ;
even so, Heaven is not just a
Hilton Hotel for all,_eternity.
The Call of Jesus Christ in
your life is an appeal for you
to leave what you once knew,
to cease to be what you once
were, and to become somethi~g completely new
recreated with a new position,
a new passion, and a new
power. " ... If anyone is in
Christ, he is a new c'reation;
the old has gone, tlie new has
come! All this is from God,
Who reconciled us to Himself
through Christ and gave ·us
the ministry of reconciliation"
(2 Corin~hians 5:17- 18 NIY). ·
When you turn in faith to
Jesus, your new position is
that of "child of God," citizen
of His . heavenly kingdom,
servant to the Lord, and
ambassador for the King of
Kings. "Consequently, you
are no longer foreigners and
aliens, but fellow citizens
with God's people and members of God's household,
built on the foundation of the
apostles .and prop~ets, with
Christ Jesus Himself as the
Chief
Cornerstone"

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we take captive every
thought to make it obedient
to Christ" (2 Corinthians
10:4-5 NJV) .
The Call of Jesus pulls you
Pastor
out of the despair of a life that
may seem beaten down and
Thom
Mollohan oppres sed by · tragedy and
heartbreak · and places you
squarely in the arms of the
One Who is all loving and all
powerful. The Call takes you
{Ephesians 2:19,20 NIY) .
by the hand, leading you
Your new passiOn ts a from the drudgery of a pointhunger for more of God's less existence and mere surglory to be revealed through vival mentality and puts your
your life and in the world suddenly eager feet upon a
and a forgetting the spiritu- path full of new purpose,
ally trivial priorities and meanin g and worth.
·goals you once kept for
If you cannot say that you
yourself. ·~ ... Whatever was have in the past "heard the
to my profit I now consider call -of Christ," God may even
loss for the 'sake of Christ: now be initiating a rel&amp;tionWhat is more, I consider ship with you, one in which
everything a loss compared He beckons you to join ijim, ·
to the surpassing greatness leaving behind your sin, your
of knowing Christ Jesus my · selfishness, and your plans.
Lord, for Whose sake I have Trust Him. Try Hirn. "Taste
lost all things. I consider and see that the LORD is
them rubbish , that I may good; blessed is the man who
gain Christ and be found in takes refuge in Him" (Psalm
Him, not having a righteous- 34:8 NIY).
ness of my own that comes
If you have heard the Call
from the law, but that which in the past and have yet to
is through faith in Christ really answer, perhaps you
the righteousness that comes
hesitate for fear that God
from God and is by faith"
will let you qowri. But know
(PhiLippians 3:7-9 NIY).
And tapping into the new thi s: those who really trust
power that is yours only in ·Him, allowing that trust to
Christ, you have an eternal result in faithful obedience,
hope given you through His are the ones whose . lives
victory over sin and death. matter most in the eternal
You ' II find yourself uncon- . realm. ''Those who look to
querable as long as you keep Him are radiant ; their faces
your eyes upon the Savior are never covered with
and discover that He faithful- shame" (Psalm 24:5 NIY).
(Thonr Mollohan and his
ly calms"either the storms in
your life or calms you in the family have ministered in
mist of those storms as you southern Ohio the past 10walk with Him. "The 1!2 years. He is the pastor of
weapons we fight with are Pathway
Community
not the weapons of the world. Church, which ·meets on
On the contrary, they have Sunday mornings at the
divine power to demolish Ariel Theatre. He may be
strongholds. We demoli sh reached for comments or
·arguments and every preten- questions by e-mail aJ ptission that sets itself up against torthom @pathwaygallipothe knowledge of God, and lis.com).

Ntxton Dtck

Blessed are the pure
i~ heart; for they
shall see God.
'
Matthew 5:8
If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye wil~ ahd it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7
uardrail, Fence &amp;
sign erection

(740) 992,645 I

••look;

· 1\rumarioollfthlll•lbr. lolh&gt;llh•r..,Hdtnrr,._ll.,.l...,.t;ot••lbll•
llrflllldu us th"',P ..,,. doy . T~oup .......,, God luurroodo. If w• U.·ormfully
p&lt;&gt;dlnd ..,.boUinfl. wnotU "r,.r ·~.,.. Wt. 2 Corttott"""Jol ttll••· "Not tloat wt
_, to•ptt'tm • ourvh'f\lo t Wa Ml)tWo~ forOUIVhfl. lu~~~rroaptUDt~ to~att
fiv•(.od."
\lur "pbJt.ool"" lotbt tMbt.. PB&lt;II&lt;t J............. )WI ....... · - a(
""Nip ll'r arr pelf of • ttl• ,.,. ptrfo,.,
to~~ftdrntr. for"' bow God •• •

w•

........ ..k".

......
l:t-11

IOIIU11
11*1
1:1-11

.,.....,

.

11:1-16

740-594·6333
1-800-451-9806
www.karraudiolo .com

Rlwer Valky
Riwer Valley Apostolic Worship Center,
873 S. 3rd · Ave., Middleport, Rev.'
Michael Bradford, Pas,10r, Sunday, 10·30
a.m. n1Cs. 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm Bible ,
Study
Emmanuel Aporitolk Tllbtrn•de Jnc:.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rutland .

Services: Sun 10:00 .a.m. &amp; 7:JO p.m.,
Thu rs. 7:00 p.m., Pastor MartyR. Hutton

. Assembly of God ·
Liberty Assembl)' of God .
P.O. Box 467. Dudding Lane. Mason.
W.V&amp;; , Pastor: Ndl Tennant. Sllnd~ y
Servicey 10:00 a.m . ;md 7 p.m.

Baptist
Carpenter Baptist Chun:h
Sunday School · 9:30am, Preaching
S(rvicc:;
lO:JOmn, E11ening Service
7:00pm, Wednesda y Bible Study 7:00 pm,
Interim Preacher - Aoyd Ros.~
· Cheshire Baptist Church
Pastor: Steve Little. Sunday School: 9 :30
am, Morn ing Woflihip: \0:30 ' am,
Wedne!idny Bible Study 6:30pm; choir
practice 7;30; youth and Hihle Buddies
6:30 p. m. Thun:. I pm book !itudy
Ho)W Daplisl Church (Southern)
57.0 Grant Sl.. Middleport. Sun'ttu y school
. 9:30a.m.. Wonhip - II a.m. and 0 p. m..
Wed ~e sday Scrvico • 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary
Ellis
Rutland First Baptist Church
Sunday School ·, 9:30 a.m., Worship
10:4.5 a.m.
· Pomeroy First Baptist
PasiOI' Joo Brockert East Main St ..
Sunday Sch. 9:30am, Worship 10:30 arn
Fint Soulhem Baptht
4 1872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: E. Lamar
O'Bryant , Sunday School · 9:30 a.m..
Worship . 8:1.5 a.m., 9:45 am &amp; 7:00p.m ..
Wednesday Services · 7:00 p.m.

First Baptist Chun:h
Pu stor: Bill y Zuspun 6th and Palmer St..
Middleport , Sunday, School . 9: 15 ~ . m .,
Worship - 10: 15 a.m .. 7:00 p . m ..
WedneWy S ~ rvicc· 7:00p.m.
Radnt First Baplist
Pastor : Joseph Godw in, intcr1m pastor ,
Su!llla y School · 9:30 a .m., Worsh ip ·
10: 40 a.OI. w 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Services · 7:00p.m.

Okl Bdhel Free Will· Baptist Chu~h
28601 St. Rt . 7. Middleport, Sunday
Ser\·ice • 10 a. m ·• b: OO p m.. Tucsduy
Service~ -6:00

VisH WWW.mydallysenUnei.COm and click tl1e blue button.

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ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
1-740-667-3156 .

"Still small enough to care"

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Victory Baptist lndtpendent

333 Page Street
(740) 992-6472
Middleoort OH Fax f740i 992·7406
Hou rs
6 am - 8 pm

Atmosplze re

Miffie's !J(estaurant
740-949-221 0

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

Open 7 days a week

Hills Self Storage

740-949-2217
Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

Home Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Spetilll;

Sac~

Heart Ca tholic Chun:h
lri l Mul berry Ave .. Pomeroy. IJ92-5H'l8,
Pastor: Re\'. Wal ter 6 . Hdn.t, Sat. Co n.
· 4:45-5: I Sp.m .; Ma ss-. 5:30 p.m .. Suo.
Coo. -8:45-9: IS a.m ... Sun. Mass ~ 9 :.~0
a.m., Daily Mas$ -"8:30a.m.

Church of Christ
West.~ide Chul'fh of C hri.!.1
.t322h Children's l-lo1iJC Wd, Pomeroy, OH
Co nl act 7-111·441 - 1296 Sunday morni ng
10:00,, Sun m orning Bible s!udy:
fo llow ing worship, Su n. eYe 6:00 pm.
Wed bihle study 7 pm

Hemlock Grove Christian Church
Mini ste r. Lllrry Brown, Worship · '9:3 0
a.m. Sunday School - lll::'-0 a.m., Bihle
Study · 7 p.m .Pomeroy Church of Christ .
212 W. Muin St .. Sunduy Sc~ol.ll· 9:JtJ
a.m .. Wnr ship- IO:JO a.m .., 6 p.m.,
Wed nesdLly Services - 7 p.m.
Pomervy Westside Church of Christ
3J226 Children' s Home Rd .. Sunday
School - II a.m .• Worship · I Ua.m., f. p.m.
WediK'sday Servic~:s. 7 p.m.
Middleport t:hurdi of ( ' hri.~t
51h a nd Mai n. Pas tor : A .1artsurl .
· Chil drcn s Director; Shamn ~lly re . Te en
Director: IJndger Vaughan. SunJay So:hnol
. 9:30 u.m.. Worshi p - IU~. I0:30.a.m.. 7
p.m.. Wedncsduy Services· 7 p. m.
'

.

Keno Chun:h or Christ .
W1nship - 'YW a.m.. Sunday s,·hnol ·
10:30 a. m.. Pa~H•r- J cffrey Wal\acc. lsi unci
Jrd Sunday
Bearwallow Ridge Church of t:hrist
Pas1or:Bruce Te rry. Sunday School -9: .\0
a. m

Wors hip • 10: ~0 ' a. 1\1 .. 6 :.\() p.m.
Wednesday Se rvices · 6 : ~0 p. m.

7Jnn Chun;h or Christ
Pomeroy. Harri so nvill e Rd: (Rt..14 3}.
Pt~s!or : R~1ge r Wat-.on . Sund&lt;~y So:htlol IJ :~ O a.m., Wors hip • ,10:30 a. m.. 7: 00
p.m .. Wcd1wsJay Services - 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plain Ch urth or C hrisl,
Instrumental. WONhip Service · 9 a.m.:
Co mmunion - 10 a.m.. Sunday Schuol :
_10: 15 a.m.. You th- ~ : J O prn Sun day, Bible
S1udy Wc.lne~Uy 7 pm
Brad~ury

Chun.·h of Christ
Tom Run ynn, W~ -~1\ H ro~db u r ~
Road. Mii.ldl epun. S u nda~: S(·hool · 9: ~0

Portable Toilet Rentals
Jack's Septic Tank &amp;
Portable Toilet Service
(In Darwin)
J9R2S Gold Ridge Road. Pomeroy. OH
Your #2 B1u ine.u is ou r Ill Busin ess ·
Phone or Fax 740-992-7 119
Owners: David &amp; Edith Brickles

Forest Run Daptisl
• Pastor ·: Arius Hurl , Su nJa}' School - I0
a.m.. Worship· II a.m.

Mt. Morh1h Baptist
Fourth &amp; Mllin St.. Middleport, Paswr:
Rev. Gilberl Craig, Jr. . Sunday School · ~
9:30a. m .. Worship · !0:45a.m.

~utland Fret Will Baptist
· Salem St.. Pastor: Jamie Fortner. Su nday

"Let your light so shine hef'or••l
men, that they may •ee vo ,url
good works and glorify
Father in heaven."
Matthew 5 : I

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

Worship · 9:30 a .m., Sunda y School ·
10:30 a. m., First Sunday of Montfi - 7:00
p.m. sen.·ice
Tuj:lptn Plains St. Paul
Pastor: Jane Beattie, Sunday School · 9
a. m.. Worship . 10 a.m.. Tuesd11y Ser'iices
·7 :30p.m.
Central CIWiter
Asbury (Syracuse), Pastor: Sob Robinson.
Sunday Schoo l' · 9:45 a.m.. Worship · II
.a. m., W~d nesday ~ervices - 7:30 p.m.

Congregational
Trinity Church
Second "&amp; Lynn, Pomeroy, Pastor: Rev.
Jomathan Nob le. Worship 10:25 a.m.,
Su nday Schoo l 9: 1.5 a. m.

Episcopal

Worship - HUll

~1. m .

Rutland Churc h of Chris(
Sunday So: hoo l • 9:JO.ilm .• Wnrship and
Co mmunion · 10:30 a.m.. Bob J. Wt;';)'·
Mini ~1 e r

Draclrord Church of Christ
Cnrncr nf St. Rt. 1~ -1 &amp; BradbUI)' Rd ..
Mini ster: Doug Shambl in. Youth Minish.'f"
Bill Ainberger. Sunday Schrx1l · 9:JO a.m.
W~rship · M:UO a.m., !0: .'0 a.m.. 7:0U
p.m., Wt-dnesday Se rv ice~ - 7:00 p.m.
Hicknry Hills Chun::h of Christ
. Tuppers Pl ain~. Pas_tor Mil e Mnore, Bible ·
class. IJ u.m. S unday : worship 10 a.m.
Sunday : \\'Of~hip 6:JO pm Su nday: Rihk
dass 7 pm Wed .
Reedsvilk&gt; t:h urth of Christ
Pas tor: Ph ilip Stunn. Sunday Sch uul: &lt;}:30
11.m .. Worship Se n ·ice: 10:30 a.m .. Bihlc
St udy, Wednesday. 6:30 p.m.

De11:ter ,C hurt'h or C hris1
Sunda) ~l:hl&gt;ul 9:.'0 &lt;1 .m.. Su nJ.1 y 11nr~ hif'
- ]0:)0 lUll .
TIM' ChuKh or Chrisl of Pomeroy
ln tcncl·~lt •n 7 am.! l].t W, f:\ ·angeli,l.
Den nis Sargent. Su nday R1hk Study
9:]0 u.m., Wnrsh 1p: II UO a.m. and fl : Ill
p.m., WcJnc sJa~ Bib le StuU y · 7 p.m

Christian Union

flartford Church or Christ In
·Christian Union
Hartford . W.Vu .. ·r ash• r: DaviJ Greer,
Sunduy Schunl · 9:)0 a·.m .. Worship 10 :10 a.m.. 7:00 p.m .. 'WCdncsda)
ServiL:('S . 7:0J p.m.

Church of God
Mt. l\loriath Chun.: h God
Mile Hill Rd .. Ral'inl'. Pas tor: J a m c~
S&lt;l lt l'rfieltl , Su nd i a~· Sc ht1tl l · 9:-1 ) &lt;1 m .
· E'•ening · 0 p.m.. Wcdnesdlly Scn-it.:c~ · 7

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
All Accounting &amp;
Financial Services Firm .
618 E.

Main S tree t~ Pomeroy

(740) 992 -7270

A Ne"'' Beglnn.,.a
(F'ull Gnspt':l Churth) Hatri sonvillt,
Pastur ~ :' Rob and Kay Mllrsh.all ,
Sunday Scr.'ic:e. 2 p.m.

Enterprise

Amazing Gnce C!lmmunh)' 'C hun:h
Pastor.. Wayne Dur\lap. Sta!t Rt. 681. ·
Tuppers Plams. Sun . Worship: lll ,am &amp;
tdO pm,. Thursday Dible Study 7:00 p.m.

Flatwoods
· Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunda y Scllool · 10
a.m., Worship · II a,.m

Holiness
~ommunlty Church
l'astnr : Sieve Tomek , Main' Street,
Rutland, Sul1duy WuTShi p-10:00 a.m.,
Sunl..lay Service- 7' p.m.

UL'Iis Chrl!itian Fellowship
(Nlo n-denominatinnal f~ llows hip J
Meeting in the old American Legion Hall
~ou th Fourth' Avenue. Middleport
Pas10r: Chr i~ Stewan 10:00 am Sunday
Other meetings in home~

F Oftllll Run
Pastor: Oob R,ohinson, Sunday School · 10
a.m., Worsh ip · 9 11.m.

ur

Heath (Middltport) ·
Pastor: Brian Dunham. Sunday .School .
9:30a.m .• Worship · I I:00 a.m.

. D11n,·me Holine!lfi Church ,
Lllngs,. lle, Pastor:
Victor Rem,_.,, Sunday !iehool • 9:30 a.m .,
Sundt~y wurship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.,
Wednesday pray~r sen.•ice - 7 p.m.
310~7 Slate Route 32~.

Mlnenvllle
Pastor: Bob Robinson. Sunday School · 9t
' a.m .. Worship · 10 a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Ch11pel
Harrison,. ille RoaJ. Pas tor: Charles
Mc Kenzie\ S1mday School Y:30 , a.m.; ·
Worshi p · 11 a. m., 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Service· 7:00 p.m.

Pearl Chapel
Sunda,y School : 9 a.m., Worship - 10 a. m.
Pomem~

.

Rock Sprin~

Ash Street C hurth ·
398 Ash.St .. Middlepott-Pastor Jeff Smith
Sunday S ~ hoo l • ~ : 3fl a.m ., Mornmg
!'Vl!rship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6 :30 pm,
Wednesduy Service - 6:30 p.m .. Youth
Se-rvice- fl:30 p.m
Agape l.ife Center
•·f ull -Gospe l Church", Palitors Joh n &amp;Patty Wade . 603 Second Ave . Mason, 7735017, Service 1ime: Sunday 10:30 a.m ..
Wednesday 7 pm

Paswr: Keith Rader. Sunday School · 9: 15
a.m., Wor ship · 10 a.m., Youth
Fdluwsh ip, Su0011y • 6 p.m.

Pine Gro,·e Blbk&gt; Holiness Church
112 ;nil e on· Rt. 325. Pa stor: Re v. O' Dell
Manl ey. Sunday Schoo l • 9:30 a.m ..
Wor.; hip · lO:JO a.m.. 7:30 p.m ..
Wed nesday Service · 7: 30p.m.

Rutland
Pastor: Rick Bourne, Sunda y Sehoul •
9:30a. m.. Worship . 10:30 a.m .. Thursday
Services . 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall. Sunday
School . 10d5 a. m.. Worship · 9:15a.m..
Bible Study: Monday 7:00 pm
Snowville
Sunday School · 10 a.m., WOrship · 9 a.m.

Wrsleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pt!arl St., Middleport. Pa.~tor : Rick ·
~ numc. Su nday Sd1ool - 10 a.m: Worship
-10:45 p. m.. Sunday Eve .. 7:00 p.m ..
Wedncsda)' ,Service· 7:30 p.in.
Hysell Run Community Churth
!'astor: Re'' Larry Lemley; Sunday' School
-,9::\0 H.m., Worship · 10:45 a.m.. 7 p,m..
ThurscJay Bi hlc Study and Youth · 7 P·-:tl·

Abundant Grace R.F. I.
923 S. Third St.. Middl epott . Pa stor TercsR
Da10 is. Su nd ay service. 10 ao~ n .,,
Wednesday ~ r vi cc, 7 p.m.

Bethany
Plt!ilor: Jotm Gilmore, Sunday Sehoul · 10
a.m., Wo rship · 9 a.m .. Wednesday
Services · I 0 a.m .

Laurel CIUf Free Methodl$i Chun:b
Pastor: Gknn Rowe, Sunda y School ·
9-.\{) ;u11.. Wurship · 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wt~l n ~sduy Sel'\'ice · 7:00p. m.

Cannel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bash an ,Rds. Racine, Ohio,
Pasto r: John Gi lmore, Sunda y School ·9:30a.m.. Wor ship - 10:4.5 11.ffi .. Bible
Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Community Christ
Pnrlland· R[lcine Rd .. Pllstor Ji m Proffitt.
Su nday •St·hool ·• 9:30 &lt;Uil .. Wu r~hip ·
10:30 a.m ., Wednesda~ Ser11ices - 7:00
p.m.
Bethel Wonhip Center
3Y782 S.R. 7, Reedsville, OH 45772, 112
mile north of Eastem Schools on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church. Pastor Rob Harber,
Assoc iate ~asto r K ~&amp; r yn Davis. Youth
Pasto r Slide Francis. Sunda y s er~~ ices
10:00 am worship, 6:00 pm Family Life
(: lass es. Wed. Hmne· Cell Groups 7:00
p.m .. Out er Limi's Cell· Gro up
the
chu rch 6:30pm to 8:30pm

at

Pastor: Brian Dunharh , Worship - .9:'30
a.m .. Sunday School - l 0:35a.m.

RO!it' of Sharon Holiness Church
Leudin'g Creek Rd .. Rutland, Pastor: Rev.
l:kw&lt;!y K i n~ . Sunday sc ~f1ol - 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday
wurship -7 p.m,, Wednesday
prnyc-r rnccting- 7 p.m.

The Churth or Jesus
Christ of·latter-Day S11ints
St. Rt . 100. 446 -6!47 or 446c7 486.
Sunday Sr hool 111:20-11 a.m., Relief
Socic•yfPries lhood II :05- 12:00 noun.
Sacrament · Se r vice 9- 1'0 : 15 a.m ..
Humcmak111g mt:eting.. l si Thurs.· 7 p.m.

Mnmin1$tsr
Pastor: John Oihnore. Su nday School ·, I I
a.m.. Worship · 10 a.m.

Eut Letart

. Faith F~Gospei,Chun-h
Long Bouom, Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunday
School . 9:3U a.m. Worship • 9:30 a.fTL
otml 7 p.m., Wcdne~day ·. 7 p.m., Friday fellowshi p service 7 p.m.
Harrisonville Community Chu!"'t:h
P:btor: Theron Durham . Sunday · 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednesday· 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Church
Pioc Grove, Worship - 9:00 u.m., Sunday
s~·h , "Hl l · 'to:OO a.m. Pa stor : James P.
Brady

Rulland Church of fiod
Pu~tm : Ron Hcmh. Su nday Wunhi p · 10
·u.m., 6 p. m.. Wed nesday Sc r\'lces · 7

K&amp; C JI;WELERS
212 E. Main Street

Pomeroy

Coolrilit United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Klin e, Coolvi lle Ch urch.
. Main ·&amp; Fifth St., Sunday School · 10
a.m .• Worship · 9 a.\Jl.. Tuesday Serv ices·
7 p,m

St. Paull.uthcran Churth
Corner Sycumone &amp; S.:.·~(lnd St., ·Pomeroy;
Sunday s~·huo l - 9 : 4~ a.m., Worship · II
•.m

United Methodist
Graham lJalted Methodist
Worship · 11 a.m. Pastor. RichanJ 'Nease
RMhtrl United Me1hodist
New li&lt;n•cn. Ri cha rd Neast:, Pasto r.
Sunday w11 rsh ip 9 : ~0 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer 11nd Bi hlc StUdy.
1\lt. Olh·e United Methodist
Off 1::!4 nt:hind Wilk~svil le , Pastor: Rc,·.
lb lph S pi rl·~. Su nday School • 9:30a.m.,
Wor~hip - 10:.' 0 a.m.. 7 p.m., Thursday
Ser\·it.::L's · 7 p.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Slreet. Sunda)' School · 9 :.~ 0 a.m ..
Wors hip- 10:)0 a.m., Pastor Phillip Bel l

Morse Chapel Church
Sunda y ~~onl · 10 a.m.. WoNh ip - II
a.m., Wednesday Scn•ice · 7 p.m.

Tol"l'h Church
Co. Rd . 63. 'S unday School · 9.30 a.m ..
Wor.ihip · 10:30 a.m.

t'aith Gospel Chureh
Long 8 otlum . Sunday Sc hool · 9:30a.m.,
Wors hip
10: 45 a. m .. i . JO p.m..
We:dn~~ay 7:) 11 p.m .
Mt. Ollwt Communit y Chun:h
Pastor: Lawre nce Bush . Sunday Sc hool ·
1):30 a.m., E\·eni n!! ·• 6 .'11 p.m . Wedneda y
Servkc ·- 7 p.m.

Church of the Nazarerw
l'astor: Allen t\lli,dt.:ap, Sunda)' Sehoul ·
~ : JO a.m. ,Wur:&gt;hip · 10 :.~0 a.m.. 6:30 p.n} ..
Wednesda y Services · 7 p m , Pa..,:tor :
Allen Midcap

~~0·.\.~

Reednillt l&lt;elloW~ship
Church of the NazW'ene. Pastor: . Sunday
School -9:30a.m.. Worship · 10:45 a.m ..
7 p.IJI., Wnlne'i&lt;.Lf:y Services · 7 p.m.

Pf!~tor : Jtmc Bea ni e.' Worship · 9 a.m ..

Syracuse Churth of I he Naza~ne ·

S unJIJ) Sr hlll ll • 10 a.m . . Thursday

Pa~ tor Mikl!" Adkins. Suno..lay Schoo l · 1-l:.JO

Sen·kcs · 7 p.m.

a.m.. Wm~ hip

Joppa
Pa~ t nr: Ruh Randolph. Wur~h ip . 9:30 ·
a . 1~1·. S~nJa)' Sr.: ~ oul · IOJO u. m.

MIIII-1444

992-s&amp;n

iffi1
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

992-5130
Pomeroy

Hazel Commu nit)' Chun:h
Off Rt. 124. Pastor: Edsel Hart. Sunday
S(hqol ·9:30a.m .. Worsh1p · 10· ~0 1l.m.,
7:30p.m.
l)yesville Cofnmunil)' Church
Sunday School · 9:.10 a.m., Wors hip ·
10 :30 a.m . 7 P,.lll.

Nazarene

Cbmec

. ..,Mil-_
.......... ··-

Syracuse Mission
14 11 Bri dge man St.. Syracuse. Sunday
.School • 10 a.m, Evening
6 p.m..
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Bethr:l Chul"l'h ,
Township Rd., 468C, Sunday School · 9
a.m. ,Worship . 10 a.m .. Wedne sday
Ser.· i(·es • 10 a.m .

~iddlepol1

Meigs Cooperative Parish
'lmlhcasl llu ster. Alhed. Pa!llor: Jane
Rcalli e, "Sunday School · 9:'30 a.m ..
Wur:; hip · II a.tn .• 6:30 p.nl.

...w1

Faith Valley Tahemacle Church
Baile11 Run Road. Pastor: Rev. Emmell
Raw;o n. Su ndaY Evening 7 p.m'.,
Thur~ay Ser'iice · 7 p.m.

Racine
Pastor: Kerry Wood, Sunday School - I0
a.m.. Worship · II a.m.

Our Sa'iour Lutheran Chun:h
wa'ln ut. a nd Henr}' Sts ., R11venswuud,
W.Va .,... Pastor: Da vid Ru ssell, Sunday
Sdl&lt;lOI . I0: 00 a.m .. Worship . 11 &lt;~ . m

;t'ilbtt .:funtral Jlamr
...............
t•

Pt:tiddleport Communily Church
575 P~ur l St., Middleport . Pastor: Sam
Anderso n, Sunday School 10 .a. m.,
~vcning ·7:30p.m.. Wednesday Service -

7.JO p.m.

Pastor: Bill ,\1arshall Sunday s,·hool ·
9a .m,, Worship • 10 a.m .. l ~ t Sunda y
e11ery 'month even ing service 7:00 p.m..
Wednesday - 7 p. m.

p.m.

)olw 15:7
Bill Quickel

Other Churches

Pastor: Arland King, Sunday School ·
10:30 a. m.. Worshi p · 9:30 a. m.. Bible
Study Wed. 7:30

Grace Episco pal Churth
J26 E. Mai n St.. Pomeroy. Sunday School
and
Holy F.uchari st 11 :00 a.m. Rev.
Edward Payne

If ye abide in Me, a11d My Brogan-Warner
words abide ill you, ye shall INSURANCE
ask ~hal ye will, a11d it shall . SERVICES
214 E. Main
be do11e t111to you.

Middleport, OH

Che!lkr Chord! of lbe Nazanrw
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Orate, Sunday Sc hool
- 9::\o a.m.. Worship - I I a. ~ .. 6 p.m..
Wednesday Sc-r'Oicelo · 7 p.m.
Ruthmd Church or the Nu.arent
Sunday School · 9.30 a~n . , Worship 10:30 am .. fd() p.m.. Wednesday
Services • 7 p.m Rev. Mike Clark ,

a......u~

Church otGod ofPruphn:y
O.J. Wh1tc Rd . off St. Rt ,. 160, Pastor: P.J.
Chapman, Sunday School • 10 a. m.,
Wurship · II 11.111., Wed nesday Ser10jccs · 7.
p.m.

.,r

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a. ~J~ .. Worship ·
10:45 a.m.. Sunduy Evening · 0:00 p.m..
Pastor: Don Walker

9: lO a.m.• Worsh1p · IH: J O a.m and 6
p.m., Wedne~y Se rv1ces · 7 p.m .

tone Bonom
Sunday School · ~ :30 a.m., Wors hip •
10:30 a.m .

R.m.

992-3785

740-992-6128
Local source for trophies.
Ia ues !-shirts and more

•

Faith Raptist Chuh'h
Ro.ilro:id Si.. Mason. Sundil y Sehoul • 10
tun .. Wo rshi p · II a. m.. 6 p .•n.
Wedne sday Sen.·ices · 7 p.m.

SynK:u!lf' Fint Chun::h of God
App le and Se~ond S1s., Pastor: Re10. David
Rullsell , Sunday School 11 nd Worsh ip- 10
u.m. Eve111 ng Services- 6:30. p.m.,
Wednt:Sday Services - tr30 p.m.

HUO 01.m.". 6 p.m ..

Wcilnc!illa~ Service~ ' 7 p.m.

740-992-7713

Sales • Service • Parts
"All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-3279
Tnl Ftee 1-877-583-2433

Hillside Baptist Church
. St. Rt . 143 just off Rt.. 7, Pastor: RC'\".
Jo.mes R. A c r~c. Sr.. Sunday Uni'fied
Ser10ice, Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m .
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

525 N. 2nd St. Middle port, Pasto r: Jame ~
E Keesee . Wo rsh1p - IOa .m., 7 p.m ..
Wednc:sdil y Servict:s · 7 p.m.

Michael L. C~ites
Dihctor of Family &amp;
Community Services
. Overbrook '
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration ol Lite"

Wam1 Friendf.r

740-985-3561
992-1550
499 Richland Avenue, Athens

School • 10 a. m .. Evening
7 p.m..
WednesJ")' Services· 7 p.m.
S«ond Bapthit Cburt'h
W:avenswood. WV. Sunday Sc hoo l 10 am' Morning worship I I wn Evening - 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Catholic

Be!h1ehem Baptist Chun::h
Oreat Bend, .Route 124. Racine , OH.
PastOr : Daniel Mecca, Sunday S'-·hool ·
9:30a.m., Sunday Worship · 10 :30 a.m .•
Wednesd11y Bible Study-6:00 p.m.

The Hppliance man

tr

Church or Jnus Chri1t A~tolir
VanZandt and Ward Rd .• Pastor: lames
Miller. Sunday School
10:30 a.m .•
Evening· 7:30 p.m.

Pastor: Dennis Weo11er Sunday School9:45 a.m.". Eve'ni ng · ' 6 :30 · p . m ..
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

Racine, OH

1\1• Y"""8 ntdotrlo~ l ll~batttrQ.b ""lon*&lt;ll.lkbp,..,.lr
~'""''~"!If .. I! a 30od .. lttr. lll!1mt, l .. h.. 011 dtd! ... hftn ........ for~· ,
111m . ftrl113 "'"-· l!'ld•a,..,,.,d "''• mdtrtln' to "l&lt;tl" ill• nolo1. lln.oly, h b IU
tum 111d ,; •• IJll"'..do"tw b:otlrr'obol&lt;.
ill illuoodo (or final tft!trucllin•

Fellowship
Apostolfc

Mt. Union BMplist

Smile! NoN you can own the picture m thai unforgettable
moment captured in the newspaper. Photos become timeless
when framed or printed on a mug or mouse pad.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Sil,cr Run B_aptist
P&lt;~stor : John Swa nson. sUnda y SLhool -·
lOa.m.. Worship · l l a.m., 7:00 p.m.
. ,Wednc:sOuy Sen·ices- 7:00 p.m.

29670 Bashan Rd.

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

www.mydallysentlnel.com

' Mini ~ t ~ r :

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

lUIINT

Friday, March 17, 2006

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

SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions ·
992-2955
Pomeroy

Fl"ftdom G01pel MlMion
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd .l l, Pastor Rev.
Roger Willford. Sunday School · 9 '0
a.m. Worship- 1 p m
Whltc'a CbaptJ Wesley•n
Cool10ilk Road 1 Pat.toi : Re10 Phllllp
Ridenour. Sunda y School · 9:30 a 111. ,
Worship · 10:30 a.m , Wednesday Service "
• 7 p.m.

F1lrview Bible Churth
Letarl , W.Va. Rt. 1'. Pw;tor: flrian ~by.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.. Wor~h ip . HlO
p.m.•.Wednesday Bible SLudy · 7:00p.m.
Faith Felowlblp Cru11ck for Chrl&amp;t
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens, Service
Friday, 7 p.m.
Calnl')' Bible Chu~h
Pomeroy Pih , Co. Rd ., Pa st01 R~:v
Blackwood . ·sunday Sc hoo l - 9;30 a.m .
Wor sh1p 10:30 a .m.: ? · Jo p .rn ..
Wednesda y Service · 7:30 p.m.

StivenYI.IIe t.:ommunltJ "JlO'dolk
Church
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell. ~ undi.ly '4-0rshl p
. 6:00 p.m.. .Wednesday · 6:00p.m J3ihlc,
Study

R.tjoiciDI Life Chun:h
500 N. 2nd A\'e.. Middlepon. Pastor :
Mike Foreman. Pa s'tor Emeritus Lawrence
Foreman, WorMlip- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Oifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton. W. Va., Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
Won;h ip · 7 l'.m.. Wednesday Servi('e · 7
p.m.
New Lift VktOry center
3.773 Geoi-gcs Cre~k Rood. Ga lli pOli s. OH
Pastor: Bill Staten, Sunday Strvice~ · IU
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wednesda~ -. 7
&amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

p.m.

Full Gospel Church
or lht Uvtn1 Snior
Rt .338, Antiqu ity, Pastor: Jesse Morris.
Service~: Saturday 2:00p.m.

Salem Community c hun:h
Back of West Col umbia. W.Va .om Lie ving
Road . Paslor: Charles Roum (304) 67.5228~. Sunday ·School 9:30 am. Sunday
evening service 7:00 pm. Bibly Study
Wednesday service 7:00 pm
Hobson.Christian fellowabip Churcb ·
Pastor: Hefschel White, Sunday School- ,
10 am . Sunday Chun:h service · 6:30pm
Wedne5day 7 pm

Restoralioo Christian FeDow1hlp
9365 Hooper Road. Athens. Pastor:
Lomlie CoaLS, Sunday Worshi p 10·00 am.
Wednesday: 7 pm
Lanpville Christian Church
Full Go spel._ Pil.sto r: Rohen Mu sser.
SunQay School 9:30am.. Worsh1p 10_:\IJ
am· 7:00pm. Wed. Sel'\lice 7:00pm

Pentecostal
Pentecc.tal Assembly
St. Rt. 124. Racine. Tornado Rd . Sunda}'
Schoo l . 10 a.m.. Evening . ? ~ . m ..
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Presbyteria~
HarrMnvillt Prabylerian Chun:h
Pastor: Robert Crow. Worship · 9 a.m.
Middleport Pnsbyt~:rian
Pastor: Jame s Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.m., worship servict II am.

Sev~nth-Day Adventist
Seventb·Dfly Adventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy. P~s t or
Bennet! Luckiesh. Saturda) Sen·ices
S11bb11th School - 2 p.m .. Worsh1p . 3 p m.

United Brethren
ML Heraton United Brethren
in Cluist C hun:h
Te xas Commumt)' 3M II W1d: ham Rt.l.
Pastor; Pe1er Martindale. Sunday Sdtol,l/ ·
9 : ~0 a.m .. Wors hip - IO.JO a.m , UXl
p.m .. Wednesday SemCt:s · 7:00 p.m.
Youth' gro~p meeti n~ 2nd &amp; 4th Sunday§
7 p.m.
Edrn United Rnothrtn in Christ
Slate R ~u tt' 124, between Rc."ed.~\ill e &amp;
Hock ingport. Sunda}' School · 10 am ..
Sunday Worship · II :00 a. m. Wedno."Mla~
S,ervices . 7:00 p.m.. Pastor - M. At.lilm
Will

Full GO!iptl Li]Chthousi
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Pa s11rr: Roy

H untcr:S undu yS~hnol - IOa.m.. Evcmn~
7:30p.m., Tuesda}' &amp; Thuf".: 7:30 r m

r--... ~././..., _
~,)II

.J /[} 1.. ..._ - ~ I.
f;f;t:}l«...fl:/TIU/Jt.:#l

South Rf-lhel Community Church
S1h er R1dge - Pastror ,LmJa DtUllC'MII.xl.
Sunday Schrr11l - 9 a.m. Wnrs h1p Scr.rl·c
10 a.m. .2nd anll4th S unda ~
C11.rleton lntt'rdenominMttonal C hurch
Ki ngsbur} R1raJ. Pa ~tor Roben Vance.
Su nd11) Sl:h,ml · !:J ·.~O a.nl .. Worsh1p
. Sen ·i.:e 10 :.10 .1 .111 . , 1:,\cning Sc-rvil·t: tr

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITATION CENTER men, that th ey may .H ' O you r
The can you desene, ·close to home

p.m.

good 11'o rks and glorify your

Father in hea\'f''-"
Matthew 5 : 16

Mei gs County \ Oldest Flon&gt;t
EastMam
~
Pomeroy, Oh

W

·l,tuc tend !JOUI thoughl'l wltfl ~IJP.C I I]

taNI"

740-992-2644 740-992-6298,

(Jod so lm'ed rile world
he gaPe his onlY
lbt' g()(ff'll .\"011 ...

.fohn3: /6

M)l erace is
for thee: for m)l .
streneth is made
Perfect iil weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

�.

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydally~entlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ·

'

.

Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich ·
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
.
'.

Today is Friday, March 17, the 76th day of 2006. There are
289 days left in the year. This is St. Patrick's Day.
Today's Highlight in History :
One hundred yeats ago, on March J 7, 1906, President
Theodore Roosevelt first used the term "muck-rake" as he
. criticized what he saw as the excesses of investigative journalism in a speech to the Gridiron Club in Washington .
On this date:
In A.D. 461, according to tradition, St. Patrick- the patron
saint of Ireland - died in SauL
·
.
.
In 1776, British forces evacuated Boston during the
Revolutionary War.
In 1910, the Camp Fire Girls organization was formed. (It
was formally presented. to the public on this date two years
later. )
In 1941 , the National Gallery of Art opened in Washington ·
D.C.
In 1950, scientists at · the University of California at .
Berkeley announced they had created a new radioactive element, "californium."
·
·
In 1956, 50 years ago, comedian Fred Allen died in New
York City at age 6 I.
In 1958. the U.S. Navy launched the Vanguard I satellite.
In 1966. a U.S. midget submarine located a missing hydrogen. bomb which had fallen from an American bomber into the
· Mediterranean off Spain.
Five years al!o: OPEC, decided to cu~ail its ~fficial output
. by 4 percent, or one lfltlhof! barrels of ml a day, m an effort to ·
halt a recent slide in oil prices, a deCision the Bush adminis"
tnition called "disappointing."
One year ago: Baseball players told Congress that steroids
were a problem in the sport; stars Rafael Palmeiro and Sammy
Sosa testified they hadn't used them while Mark McGwire
refused to say whether he had. Rapper Lil' Kim ·was convicted of lying to a grand jury about a .shootout outside a New
York radio station. (Lil ' J&lt;jm started serving her 366-day sentence just before her fourth album was released in Sep.tember
2005.) Stephane Lambie! of Switzerland won the men's title
at the World Figure Skating Championships in. Moscow.
Diplomat and Pulitzer Prize-winning historian George F.
Kennan died in Princeton, N.J .. at· age 10 I. .
·
.
Today's Birthdays: The former national chairwoman ()f the
NAACP, Myrlie Evers-Williams, is 73. Roc!( musician Paul .
Kantner is 65. Singer-songwriter Jim Weatherly is 63. Singersongwri.ter John Sebastian (The Lovin' Spoonful) is 62. Rock
musician Harol&lt;\ Brown (War) is 60. Actor Patrick Duffy is
· 57. Actor Kurt Russell is 55. Country singer Susie Allanson is
54. Actress Lesley-Anne Down is 52. Country singer Paul
Overstreet is 51. Actor Gary Sinise is 51. Actress Vicki Lewis
is 46. Actor Casey Siemaszko is 45 . Writer-directo·r Rob Sitch
is 44. Actor Rob Lowe is 42. Rock singer Billy Corgan is 39.
Rock musician Van Carmer (Screaming Trees) is 39. Actor
Mathew St. Patrick ("Six Feet Under," ) is 38. Actor Yanic
Truesdale is 37. Rock musician Melissa Auf der Maur is 34.
Rock musician Caroline Corr (The Corrs) is 33. Actress
Marisa Coughlan is 32. Singer Stephen dateiy is 30. Rapper
Swifty (Dl2) is 29.
·
·
Thought for Today: "Television is a device that permits people who haven ' t anything to do to watch people who can't do
anything ." -. Fred Allen, American comedian ( 1894-1956).·

LETTERS TO THE
. EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject 'to editing, must be signed,
and include address and telephone numba No unsigned letters will be pubiished. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to orga- .
ni:at.ions and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(usPs 213-96DJ
· Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~ublished every afternoon, Monday
through Frktay, 111 Court Street .
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13 Weeks
26 Weeks .
52 Weeks

PageA4

. . . '32.26
.'64 .20
,. .' 12V 1

Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks . .
. . '53. 55
26 Weeks ........ . .. .1 107.1 0
52 Weeks ........... '214.21

Friday, March 17,

2006

Friday, March 17, 2006

Another dog in the chancel can be seen at St.
Rocco's in Cleveland, Ohio
- this one appears in oil. It
caught my attention as soon
as I walked into the church.
George
.Just above . the altar, the
Plagenz
painting portrays. a man and
a dog. "The man must be
St. Rocco," I said to myself.
... But why the dog?" When I
got back . to the office, I
come was."
I recall attending a church looked up· St. Rocco in the
conference a few years ago encyclopedia. A t3th-cenat Kenyon College in Oh'io. tury French nobleman, he
During one of the daily tended to the sick during a
worship services at the plague in Italy and effected
Church of the Holy Spirit miraculous cures. Then he
on camp us, a white cat
wandered .up· and down the .fell ill with the plague and
aisles. One man chased the withdrew into the forest.
cat around the church and where he would have perput it out_ on\y to have it ished had not a dog sup"
return through a side door plied him with bread.
CONSEQUENCES OF
and lie down on the chancel
steps. Finally, the minister . INHOSPITALITY
got up and mildly censured
The woman who told the
the nervous ones in the con- .following story is relating
gregation. " !( is a tradition an incident that o~curred in
in this church to let the ani- the 1930s, concerning her
mals in," he said. He told of brother John :
the time when three visiting
It seems John had been to
bishops were seated in the · reform sc hool (a s they
chancel behind him . Three ca lled it in those days) .
dogs from the neighbor- When, h~ was released .. he
hood walked in, went made an effort to straighten
directly to the bi shops and out ·nis life . He went to
sniffed at their feet.
churc h one Sunday and.

Obituaries
Cedi Fleshman

when
the
minister
announced the "altar call"
at the end of the service,
John walked forward and
knelt down to ask for forgi,'eness. It was (and is) the
practice in evangelic al
churches at such times in
the service for a member to
go up and join the kneeling
penitent in prayer. But
nobody went to pray with •
John. The people knew who
he was . He was a bad actor.
l:le was no good.
When John left the
church that Sunday, he told
his sister, "! will never go
to church again so long as I
live." He ne;ver did. The
road not taken by John that
&lt;Jay was the road that could
have redeemed the man
w~o became the FBI's most
notorious
public-enemy
No. I.
John, of course , was John
Dillinger.
The church missed its
chance with John Dillinger,
as it had with John Charles
Thomas, Jr.
(G eorge . Plagenz · is an
ordained minister and veteran newsman based in
Columbus. Ohio.)

LETART FALLS -Cecil Fleshman, 85 , of Letart Falls,
passed away Dec. 9, 2005, after a short illness .
He was born April 13, .1920, in Tab, W.Va., and was the son
of the late Charles and Mattie Fleshman.
.
Mr. Fleshman was preceded in death by his wife, Stella
Fleshman, a son, three brothers, three ·sisters, and a great
granddaughter. He is survived by three sons, a daughter, two
brothers, two sisters, grandchildren and great grandchildren .
Btll also leaves behind many cherished friends he made
through the years .
Bill was a World War 11 veteran and quite the fi sherman and
hunter. He was .al so an avid farmer who loved to grow vegetables to give to his friends and family. .
·
. The · family of Bill Fleshman would like to give special
thanks to the neighbors and friends who took Spl:cial care of
h1rn over the years, especially Louie, Judy, Tracy, Zack, Mike,
Bill, Brenda and Kermit. "f1lank you all so very much.

Deaths
cawoll N..Lamp
COOLVILLE - Carroll N . Lamp, 93 , of Coolville died
Thursday, March 16, 2006, at the Russell's Nursing Center
in Albany.
·
His wife, Esta Geraldine Wigal Lamp, preceded him in death .
Services will be held.at l p.m. on SaturdaY., March 18, 2006,
· at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Cool v1lle. Burial will be
in the Tuppers Plains Christian Cemetery.
, Friends may ·call from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. ·on Friday at the
funeral home .
·.. . .
.
.

Local Briefs
Baseball camp
POMEROY - The Meigs baseball camp for youth players,
grades 3-8, will be held Saturday at Meigs High School.
Registration will be trom 9 to 10 a.m. The fee is $35 for individuals and $25 a person for those on teams of five or more players.
The camp will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., according to
head junior. varsity baseball coach NickDettwiller. Questions
ma y be directed tn him at 740-416-0344.

THAT$ ODD..
.I COULD HAVE.SWORN
THAT THE IRAQI PARLIAMENT
MET RIGHT HERE,
I

. GCC registration

YESTERDAY, .

.,

•

..

GALLIPOLIS - Registration is still open at Gallipolis
Career Colleg~ for the 2006 ~pr ing quarter, director of education, John Dimicki announced.
.
Registration continues through the April 3 start date for the
spring quarter. Applicants may ·also process fil)ancial aid
applicaltons to determine if they qualify for the, various educational assistance programs that are available.
For more information call 446-4367, 500-214-0452, or visit
the website at wvJ:w.gallipoliscareercolle&amp;e.com.

Benefit auction

-

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

.

Church hospitality is for the dogs
John Charles Thomas, Jr.,
son
of
the
famous
Metropolitan Opera baritone, once delivered a terrible indictment of church
hospitality in a letter to
"Dear Abby." Incredible as
it sounds, Thomas said he
had visited ·195 churches if\
the previous three years and
had been spoken to only
once by someone other than
an official greeter - "and
that was .to ask me to move
my feet!"
What did those churches
need? Dog s to welcome
people. Canines and other
animals are often more gregarious and companionable
than their two-footed coun- ·
terparts.
In his book on evangelism , Walt Kallestad, pastor
of the Community Church
of Joy in Phoenix, Ariz.,
told of walking into a
Roman Catholic church.
"To nly surpri se, just
inside the front door," he
wrote, "a large Irish setter
belonging to the parish
priest was vigorously wagging his tail , inviting me to
stop and pet him. I could
not get over how calming
and comforting this wei-

www. m.ydailysentinel.com

.

Senate passes $2.8 trillion spending blueprint for 2007
BY ANDREW TAYLOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Congress pushed the cei ling
on the national debt to nearly
$9 trillion Thursday, and the
House and Senate promptly
voted for major spending initiatives for the war in Iraq.
hurricane relief and education.
The House approved $92
billion in new money fo r the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
and for relief along the hurricane-ravaged 'Gulf Coast.
The Senate adopted a $2.8
trillion budget blueprint that
anticipates deficits greater
than $350 billion for both this
year and. next. The spending
blueprint , approved 51 -49,
little resembles President
Bush's proposal last month
for the budget year that
begin s Oct. I.
To the disappointment of
budget hawks, the Senate's
measure would break Bu sh's
proposed caps on spending
for programs such as education, low-income heating
subsidies and health research .
All . told, senators endorsed
more than $16 billion in
increases above Bush's proposed $873 billion cap on
spending appropriated by
Congress each year.
Vice
President
Dick
Cheney was on hand for a
possible tie-breaking vote ,
but that proved unnecessary.
Senators earlier voted 52-48
to send Bush a measure that
would allow the government
to borrow an additional $781
billion &lt;md prevent a first -ever
default on Treasury notes,
As·a result. the government
could pay for the war in Iraq
without .raising taxes or cutting popular domestic programs.
The budget blueprint
advanct;d without Cheney's
vote in the Repuh!)can-led
Senate when Democratic Sen.
Mary Landrieu supported the
plan after winning concessions to help her hurricanedamaged state of Louisiana
and rest of the Gulf Coast.
She won inclusion of a proposal that could provide up
.

.

from most Republi cans, .
including Majority Leader
New bill creates deeper deficit
Bill Frist of Tennessee. who
Congress pa88«1 a bill giving the government an additional
has criticized Congress for
$781 billion, increasing the fedenll deficit.
, embarking "down a wayward
path of wasteful Washington
Federal bu~ detlat., 1982·2016
spending."
RONALD
GEORGE
BILL
GEORGE
"All the talk in Memphi s
REAGAN
ttW BUSH CU N TO~
WBUSH
just doesn 'f comport with the
$300 billion
realities of these impbrtant
200
items" such as education and
100
health research, Specter said
0
The debt limit increase wa&gt;
. ·100
the fourth of Bush's presiden-200
cy. totaling $3 trillion . With the
-300
budget deficit r\ear record lev-400
els, an additional increase in
the debt limit almost certainly
• 1962. '&amp;I '86 '88 110 '92 '94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '12 '14 '18
will be required next year.
Treasury Secretary Joh n
SOURCES: Otlice of Ma~ and Budget; COngrusionollludgot Otlice
Snow applauded Congres'
for "protecting the full faith
$2 billion a year for levee and Conrad of North Dakota.
coastal restoration projects. . The votes di smayed deficit and credit of the United
The money would come from hawks such as Senate Budget States." He . said it ensure&gt;
auctioning television · air- Committee Chairman Judd .that .the government "can
waves to wireless companies · Gregg, R-N.H. He already deliver on promi ses alread)
and from potential oil lease had decided to drop Bush 's made, such as Social Sec uri tv
revenues from exploration in · proposals to cut the growth of and Medicare pay ment s and
an Alaskan wildlife refuge.
Medicare, strengthen taK-free aid for the victim s of the
Among' the specific votes health savings accounts and 2005 hurricanes."
for the bndget plan were :
advance legislation to rnake
The present limit on the
• $3 billion more for heat- permanent hi s 200 1 tax cut s. debt is $8.2 trillion .
ing subsidies for the poor. It
The White House issued a
The increase is an unh~pp)
passed 51-49.
tepid statement supporting the necessity - the alternati ve
• $7 billion more for educa- plan despite the numerous set- would be a disastrous first"
tion, health and worker safety backs experienced on the floor. ever default on U,S. obii ga"
accounts. It passed 73-27.
"While the Administration tions - that greatl y over• $3.7 billion more 'for mil- will ·contini.te to seek ·entitle- shadowed a mostly symboli c.
itary personnel costs .
ment reforms and the elimi - week long debate-. on the
• $1.2 billion more for avi- nation of additional di scre- GOP's budget resolution .
ation security and stopping tionary spending ... we recogDemocrats blasted the bill.
Bu sh's ·proposed increase in nize that th is is an important · saying it was needed because
airline ticket taxes. They first step in the congressional of fiscal mismanagement by
advanced by voice vote.
process," said . Joshua B. Bu sh, who came to . office
• $1 billion more for bene- Bolten, director of the White when the government was
House budget office.
fits for military survivors.
running record surpluses.
The Senate votes Thursday
,Republicans are eager to
"When it comes. to deficits.
set up·a confrontation with the show their conservative supHouse, which is certain to porters ·that they are getting this president owns all the
said
Sena te
oppose the additional spending. serious about cracking down records,"
Minority
Leader
Harry
Reid,
In fact, the Senate's moves on spending. Last weekend,
appear to make it less likely GOP presidential aspirants at 0-Nev. "The three lar.gest
that C!Jngress will settle on a the · Southern Republican deficits in our nation's hi sto. final budget plan this spring. I::eadership Conference in ry have all occurred under .
House Republicans will not Memphis, Tenn., promised to this administration's watch ."
Unlike last · .year, when .
release their budget until be rnore thrifty with the peopassed a bill trimCongress
after next week's congres- ple 's money.
But GOP moderates such ming $39 billion from the
sional recess.
as
Sen. Arlen · Specter of deficit through ..c urbs ~o
. "House conservatives are
going to look at this budget Penn sylvania apparently did Medi caid, Medicare and stuand say, ' Whoa, what hap- not get the .message. His dent loan subsidies, Senate
pened to fiscal conser- amendment to add $7 hi Ilion GOP leaders have abanvatism," ' said top Budget for education, health and doned plans to cut mand atoCommittee Democrat Kent labor programs won support ry programs .

---1&gt;11
-500-:-----------------

.

·Case study highlights possible. health risk associated with Atkins diet

said timet&gt; a day, the doctors wrote
dangerous condition called widow, Veronica Bv TARIQ PANJA
EAST LETART- A blind man's auction will be held at 6
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
in the paper.
ketoacidosis
was
not
triggered
ketoacidosis,
a
buildup
of
p.m Saturday at the East Letart United Methodist Church. All
Te sts confirmed ketoaci c
by
diet
and
could
only
occur
if
·
acids
called
ketones
in
the
.
ttems are to be gift wrapped. Proceeds will go to the East
LONDON
.The
popular
dosis.
the
patient
had
an
"abnormal
blood which can lead to
Letart. United Methodist Church bui !ding fund. Refreshments
to
'Atkins
diet
could
be
linked
. Ketones are produced in the
clinical metabolic condition."
patients
falling into a coma.
will be available.
a life-threatening complica"It is not brought on by diet liver when insulin levels fall
However, some outside
tion which one woman who experts saiil the case is rare unless she had an underlying due to starvation or diabetes.
clean~.:~p
claimed to be following it and does no~ reflect a major cause which she and her doc"Our patient had an underlydeve.Ioped. according to doc- health threat associated with tors weren't aware of," Bloch ing ketosis caused by the
REEDSVILLE- Olive Township Trustees ask that all dec- tors who publi shed a case low-carb diets.
said. .
·
Atkins diet ... This problem
orations be removed from township cemeteries by April I so report on it Friday in a 13ritish
"I think this is an isolated . ''Ketoacidosis is an abnor- may become more recognized
cleanup can begin.
medical journal.
·
case. The · idea that serious mal state that occurs when because thi~ diet is becoming
The Atkins diet calls · for ketoacidosis could be trig- there. is a clinical abnormali- increasingly popular worldrestricting carbohydrates to g'ered by a low-carb diet does ty. ft doesn't occur . when . wide,'; said Professor Klauspermltlmg process that will achieve weight loss , then not happen very often," said there's a normal state like a Dieter L\!ssnau, who led the
extend through 2007, possi- · gradually adding them back Dr. Paul Clayton, president of low-carb diet."
. ream from the .New York
bly early 2008 when· initial in. However, ·many people the forum on food and nutriThe patient, who was not University School of Medicine .
construction may begin ,
from PageA1
Clayton said that the main
who say they're following tion at the Royal Society of identified, was admitted to an
The intricacies of state the diet actually eat large Medicine .in London.
intensive care unit for four . problem of high protein dim
Dr. Abby Bloch, vice-presi- days after becoming short of is ·in the sirai n they put on
"We've had good di scus- incentives and the permit amou.nts of protein and fat.
process aside, Gerken said . Doctors from . New York dent of programs and research breath. Before being hospi- kidneys and the risk of renal
sions at the state level con- his company has an "open
cerning incentives," Gerken ear" to the concerns of Meigs · University wrote in The at the Dr. Robel'\ C. Atkins talized, · she. had lost her fai!Urlj .
Lancet journal of a 40cyear- Foundation a · medical appetite. felt nauseous and
optimistically confirmed but County's residents.
research
charity
ru·n
by Atkins' was voijliting four to six
oldwoman
who
developed
a
did not elaborate on the subPutting their money where
•
stance of those discuss ions. . their mouth is, last night AMPGerken also reminded the Ohio ofticials met with Racine
FRt 3117106- THURS 3123106
audience that AMP-Ohio Village Council and Mayor
BOK OFACE OPENS AT 6:30PM,
IION-THURS, AND AT 12:30 Pll
began the lengthy application Scott Hill to discuss how the
FOR SAT &amp; SUN MATINEES
de
sk
with
computer
work
staDAYTON
(AP)
A
virtuhigh:res
projection
screens.
process to interconnect to the nearby plant may impact the
'STADIUM SEATING IS NOW
al world where real-world
The move, which will be tions. · Behin&lt;l the desk are
transmission grid by filing a infrastructure of the village.
AVAILABLE
two
long
rows
of
black,
vinyl
military
pilots
train
for
realmade
by
:i!Oll.
is
part
of
the
, preliminarily application with.
Yesterday, AMP-Ohio offiV
FOR
VENDETTA (R)
couches.
On
each
side
of
the
mi
ssions
by
taking
part
.
Base
Reali
gnment
and
world
the PJM , Interconnection in cials Jolene Thompson and
1:00, 3:30, 7:00 &amp; 9:30
bay are four booth-like fli ght
Jan.uary. lf.approved this will Kent ·Carson also presented a in digital dogfight s has been · Closure Process:
simulators
Fe
16
cockpit
s
SHE'S
THE MAN (PG13)
created
in
the
Arizona
desert
..
The
division
currently
allow the company to trans- $ 1500 donat ion to the
enve
loped
in
video
screens.
That's all about to:change .
occupies a six-acre com1:15 3:t5 7:15 &amp; 9:t5
. mit power to· its .customers.
London Pool Fund .
Pilots
can
sit
in
the
simulaIn
a
few
years,
the
pound
·
at
Williams
Gateway
THE
SHAGGY DOG (PG)
The plant is due to go
AMP-Ohio is also currenttors
and
take
part
in
co
mplex
Warfighter
Readiness
Airport
in
Me
sa.
Inside
is
a
'1:10
3:t0 7:10&amp; 9:10 •
ly preparing for the ma~s ive online in 2012.
involve
real
exercises
that
Training Division will pull up cavernous chamber that looks
THE HILLS HAVE EYES (R)
stakes and move to ,Wright- like a cross Qetween a war airplanes, other · airmen in
. 1:30 3:30 7:30 &amp; 9:30
simulators and colilputerc
Medics working for EMS . Patterson Air Force Base, room and ·~ports ,bar.
FAILURE TO LAUNCH (PG13)
work two 24-hour shifts per bringing about 80 government
Dominating the dimly lit generated players . while ll)isc
1:20 3:20 7:2 &amp; 9:2
week. and stay on the premis- jobs alnn&amp;with a host of high~ bay are a· bank . of jumbo sion direct
. ors. monitor the
16 BLOCKS PGt3 9:20
es while on duty. There is · tech fli ght simu lators and vid~o screens that face a long action on giant ~ l't'C en~.
from PageA1
CURIOUS GEORGE (G)
currentl y one room set aside
1:00 llo 3:00
EIGHT
BELOW (PG)
employs 32, 10 of whom in the EMS headquarters. for
taxpayers of Ohio. We do not cy. make it accountah le to the
lodgi
ng
medics.
Lyon
s
said
at
work in the office during
1:00 3:30 7:00 &amp; 9:30
need solutions in search of a . public and to achieve it&gt;
,least two are necessary.
the business ·day.
DATE MOVIE (PG13)
goals in &gt;erving the l'hildren.
problein." said Struble.
Commissioners have tentaCommissioners
have
7:20
from PageA1
He said he is honored to be families and school distric ts
authorized Lyon s to ·move tively agreed to lease another
in
Ohio.''
Struble
conc
luded.
asked by the State Education
part or all of the EMS service portion of the building to an
"The current legislation adds Co.mmittee to work together
mto a portion of the Veterans agency as yet unidentified .
·
Commis
sioner
Mi
ck
five
levels of new bureaucracy and imn out differences in the
Memorial Hospital building.
Davenport
said
yesterday
the
. to a system already in place legi slation . .
They will meet . next week
locatio
n
of
the
EMS
opera"It is my hope to influence
and is totally · lacking in
with Lyo ns to identify space
tion
win
b.:
based.
in
part.
on
for the agcnc) .
accountability to the students. this puhlic policy· in such a
In
th e
meantime. those. plan s.
parents. school districts · and way a~ to reduCe bureaucra·
Commi ssioners al so:
\
Commissioner Jim · Sheet s
•
Approved
paym
ent
of
askeJ Lyons to secure cost
estimates for moving the radio hi li s in th e amount of
Prepare NOW fu..
and di spatching equipnient $348,090.88 .
'
ORDER NOW!
• Approved amendments tn
33105 Highland Rd. • Pomeroy. OH
from the current EMS bui!Jin~ into the hospital Lyon s the IV-D wntract between
Payment Plans Available
. 992-4200
satd it has not been . deter- . Department of Job and
Present
this
for
"10%
Discount'
We
are
no
lon~e
r
affiliated with the ,\dded Touch in
mined if the entire EMS oper- Family Services and the
''Serving Ohio &amp; WV"
Middleport. We wltl be welcomin~ atl our client~ .
ation will move into a hospital Clerk of Court s. and the
DJFS
and
Ju
ven
ile
Court
al our m·"··locatio n.
wing. or if only the admmisappro ved earlier 1hi' mont h:
t ru ti ~·e f \l!"h -~ rt li ll l lll! t.:L' nter
Watch ror Our Grand Opening ·
•[JcautlJuf ~ l(cmor·ies ~'l(ottuments .
ami m~J ic quwt.:r' 'will be
• AppnlY~d re!e a"t! of a
Announct&gt;mfnl Soon!
241 t Jurkson AH.
~!'1165 Eagl• Rl~gc Rd . ·
moved, leaving the dispatch mortgage iss ued under the
Thank You-Michelle Price and :'&gt;a!asha Stewart
l'oinl Pleasant. w\·
l'umero~. OH
Housi ng
area and ambulance bay in the Commun it y
i3lt.l i 67~-20t5
17~11! 99i-74-10
. Improvement Program .
current EMS office.

Cemetery

AMP-Ohio

Buckley throws .in the towel
My old friend and long- ·
time colleague Bill Buckley
has thrown in the towel on
Iraq. In a column dated Feb.
24, he declares, "One can' t
doubt that the American
William
objective in Iraq has failed,"
R1.1sher
and concludes that Presi dent
Bush must face .uP. to ''the
ac knowledgme.nt of defeat."
, The precipitating factor
seems to have been the teF opinions on many subjects,
rorists ' bombing of the · neither of whom has·hesi tatShiites' Golden Mosque in ed to disagree publicly with
Samarra. Buckley believes Bush in the past, are both on
that this event conclusively · record as Insisting that we
ended whatever hope there must remain in Iraq . As a
was that the Iraqi s would matter . of
fact,
the
suspend their religious divi- Republicans in Congress are
sions and submit to a "polit- by and large united on this,
ical structure that guaran- and the Democrats, thou gh
teed them religiou s free- divided. have a large .contindom." Toget.her with what ·gent of hawks, including
he considers our failure to Sen. Hillary Clinton, D.-N.Y.
"succeed in training Iraqi
When Tim Ru ssert, on
soldiers and policynlakers to "Meet ·the Press," call ed
cope with insurgents bent on Buckley 's conclusion to the
violence," he believe s it is attention of Marine Gen.
plain that we cannot succeed Peter Pace. chairman of the
in Iraq without resorting to Joint Chiefs of . Staff, the
"ll]easures · (we used these ge neral suggested mildly
against Hirohito and Hitler) that Bill would do well to
which we simply are not visi t Iraq and see for himse lf
prepared to take!'
how things are going there.
Bi II generously leave, it It's not bad advice ; between
to Bush to work out the the journalistic instinct to
detail s of the di sengage- dwell on bad news and the
ment. but it is pretty clear bitter hoqility of · most
that it would be an American reporters toward
appullingly rt~es~y process. Bu sh, nobody supposes that
Sens. Joseph .Biden, D-Oe!., the purveyors of news from
and John McCa in, R-Ariz., . Iraq have been doin g the
pen of strong .but differing administration any favors.

But it is probably true that seemed dangerously precarthere are · enough factors · in io us. It is these problems
play to justify almost any that have fin ally ex hau sted
conclusion one wants to Buckley's patience and led
.reach conc~rnihg ·Iraq. Bush him to declare that "the .
is condemned regularly by admi nistration has, now, to
'the Democrats for invading
'the country, even though cope with failure."
Well . maybe . . But the
many of them endorsed his
moment
when a strategy as
do ing so. Certainly, the
world 's intelligence agen- comprehensive as America's
. cies were united. at the time, in the Middle East becomes
in believing that Saddam unsustainable can be hard to
Hussein had weapons of ·di scern . The bombing of the
mass . destruction , and it Golden DoiTJe was a blow,
would surely have been irre.- no doubt about it, but it is
sponsible of Bush to disre- already receding in memory.
gard the implications of that And our individual abilities
belief.
to put up with had news
But once we had invaded. vary. both from others' and
and it had been establis hed internally.
that no such weapons were .
As r said in a recent colthere. the· remaining justifi cation for the invasion was umn. Abu Musab althe hope that post-Hussein Zarqawi can't oust the
Iraq could be transformed Un ited State s from Iraq and
into a democracy and a bea- he know s it. The United
con of li ght for the rest of States can. and will, prevail
the torniented niition s of the there if it is determined to
Middle East.
do so. But success can be
Unquestionabl y. bringing delayed and made more
about that tran sformati()n costly by the terrorist tactics·
has proven , in military !.!f suicide bombings, etc .,
terms. a vastly more diffi - and it can b~ replaced by
cult process than Bu sh en vi- .
sioned in the happy days · total defeat if - but only if
followin g the toppling of - t\le American people lose
Hu ssein . And
poli lical the will to.go on.
IWillidm Rushe-r is a
progress. though perhaps
rapid when compared with D1 .11ing lli;·hed Fellow of the
simil ar de velopments in the Cla remmit Institute fur the
hi stories of the Uni ted Stlidr rif Statesmanship and
St ates and Europe, has Political Philosophy. )

Virtual danger zone coming to Ohio military base

EMS

Struble

ad

�PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 17, 2oo6

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations

BY THE BEND
Wife wants to bench husband
from youth coaching duties

issues for woodland owners.
including ATY riders on personal property. Call 593-8555.

Thesday, March 21
Saturday, March 18
POMEROY
- A meeting
.MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting of Middleport lodge of garden clubs will be held ·at
363, R&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. at the 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library
Masonic Temple for annual to finalize plans for the
inspection in entered appren- . regional meeting on April 22
tice degree. All office to at the Senior Citizens Center.
attend. Meal, 6:30 p.m. with Anyone wanting to panicipate
members to take pies for is asked to auend or call
dessen. Take non-perishable Marge Fetty, regional director,
food items for the Grand 740-992-6862 after 6 p.m.
Masters food bank program.

concen, 7 p.m., National
Guard Armory. Doors open at
6 p.m. Free-will offering to
benefit
Jacob' s
Well
Ministries m New Haven,
W.Va.
POMEROY - Stations of
the . Crqss, 7 p. m·., Sacred
Heart Church, each Friday
through Lent.
MIDDLEPORT
Michelle Holsinger will be
guest speaker at 7 p.m. church
services at the old American
Legion hall in Middleport.

Youth events

Sunday, March 19
MIDDLEPORT - Bethel
62, International Order of
Job's' Daughers, semi-annuaJ
official visitation 4 p.m.
Kristen Davis to preside,
Sherri Ligotti grand guardian
to be ins~ting officer and a
reception to follow. Past
hoiored queens. majority
members, and former council
members invited to attend.

II

I

Monday, March 20
ATHENS Southeast
Ohio Woodland Interest
Group, 7 p.m. at . the Athens
Cotinty Extension office,
West Union Street. Speaker,
Jonathan Sowash of Sowash,
&lt;::arson and Ferrier on liability

Saturday, March 18
MASON, W.Va. - Benetit
Saturday, March 18
sing for missons at Christian
POMEROY
Meigs Brethren Church, 7 p.m.
youth baseball canip, grades 3 Singers .include Proclaim,
to 8, ·10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Earthen Vessels, Gloryland
Meigs High School. Work on Believers, Randy Parsons and
basic skills and terminology. Marty Short. Contact Pastor
Registration 9:30 a.m. For John Elswick, 593-7390. ·
more information contact
REEDSVILLE - Hymn
Coach Nick Dettwiller, 416- sing, 7 p.m., Eden United
0344.
Brethren
• Church.
RUTLAND - ·Last time to Refreshments.
signup .for Rutland ball, l to 4
FLATROCK, W.Va. p.m. ai the Rutland Fire Mason County Area Gospel
Department
Choir's ftrst gospel sing, 7
p.m., Good Shepherd United
Methodist Church. The
Humphreys . Family
of
Dunbar, W. Va . and the
Friday, M~JJ"Ch 17 .
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Maso!'l County Area Gospel
· - The Kingsmen Quartet in Choir featured.

Church events

-OVCS hosts regional speech meeting
.,

GALLIPOLIS- The ACSI
Ohio
Valley
Region
Elementary Speech Meet was
ttosted by ·Ohio Valley
Christian School on March 3
with 66 students participating.
: OVCS has hosted this event
for the past 6 years. Lori
Miller, one of the parents;
coordinated the event with the
~upport of 26 volunteers from
(he parents and community.
' Categories included poetry
for grades 1to 3 , poetry for
grades 4 to 6, Bible memory
fOr grades I to 3, Bible memory for grades 4 to
6,
fable/folklore, patriotic oration arid dramat-ic Bible prose.
: Students were scored on
presentation individually and
received blue ribbons (superipr rating), red ribbons (excellent rating ), white ribbons
(good rating), and yellow
(honorable mention). The
awards were given as follows :
.
Poetry
• Grade I : Karlee Edmonds,
lared Parissi . Jessica-Steeie,
blue, OVCW; Makaela
White, McKayla Patrick,
. ·
blue, PCA .
: Grade 2: Carolane Cox,
ted, Bran son Kritzwiser,
~hite; PCA
..
.
• Grade 3: Mtkayla Jewell,
)\shten
Crank,
Rachel
J-laddad, all blue, OVCS;
Kaley Blankenship, Madison
Parsons, Holly Miller, all
blue, PCA.
·: Grade 4: Maggie WestfaJI,
Jon Michael Kostival, Sarah
Sct10onover, all blue, PVCS;
Lauren Hopkins, Laura
Panzarella, both blue, PCA.
· Grade 5: Jordyn Benson,
Sarah
Walker,
Richard
Bowman, OVCS, all blue;
Jonathon Burkitt, red, PCA
· Grade 6: Peter Carman,
Micaela Owensm, both blue,
OVCS . .
Bible
Grade 1: Jus tin Watts,
Natalie
Wilcoxon,
Ben
.Rutherford • OVCS; Gabby
blue ,
Hannah
. Towler,
. McAllister, red, PCA.
: Grade 2: Eric Blevins,
Marshall Hood, both red,
96~a~e 3: Evan Bowman

u.s.

DEAR ABBY: My wife
is discuss the matter with
and I have been married just
your husband's physician .
shon of one year and are
Next, bring it to the attention
expecting our first child in
of the nursing supervisor on
about four months. Our maryour
husband 's
floor.
riage is a good one. We
Dear
Because of privacy issues,
communicate well and love
your husband's former wife
each other. There is one area,
Abby
is no longer entitled to the
however, that continues to be
information she is demandproblematic.
ing. Nor would she be able
I have been a youth basto visit your husband if his
kctba!l coach for three years.
doctor ordered "No Visitors."
DEAR ABBY: When placI was a coach before I met Your wife may be a little
my wife and throughout our in secure about her ability to ing your wei:Iding rings on
courtship. I have coached the handle motherhood. She your finger, which one goes
same group of players. many needs you to acknowledge t1rst? Would it be the diuof whose parents attribute her feelings right now. Four mond ~ngagement ring,
their higher grades ·and better hours of personal time a because 1t goes closer to the
teamwork to their participa- week may not seem ton .. heart, or would 1t be the
tion in the sport.
· · much to ask for. However, it band?
KAREN IN
My wife insists that I quii might be better if you tqok a G~ORGIA
,
coaching these 11-year-olds short leave of absence until
DEAR KAREN: Heres an
once · the baby arrives. the baby is on a regular easy way to remember: The
Practice takes ine away from schedule.
wedding band goes closest to
home two hours, one night a
I sincerely hope you ' ll the hean. The diamond ring
week, and the games are two return [o coaching youth bas- goes closest to the wallet.
CONFIDENTIAL TO MY
hours once a week. I don' t ketball in the future because
think that's a lot because I'm you are doing a wonderful IRISH FRIENDS: ·
home all of the other "free thing for those boys, and it's
May you always have
time."
something they will carry · A sunbeam to warm you
I love my wife ana the fact with them for the rest of
Good luck to charm you
that we will be parents. I their lives.
And a sheltering arigel so
don't think I' m asking too
DEAR ABBY: My hus- nothing can harm you
much ·when I tell her I'd like band and I have been marLaughter t(} cheer you
to continue coaching. l get a ried for two years. His ex- . Faithful friends near you
lot out of the experience and, wife interjects herself into ·· And whe~ever you pray,.
honestly, I need some time situations , such as visiting heaven to hear you.
to myself each week. Am I him in the hospital, and
HAPPY ST. PATRICK'S
unreasonable or selfish in while there. attempts to run DAY'
expecting her to support my the show by questioning
Dear Abby is written by
coaching? I love her and she staff, etc. This makes .me and Abigail Van Buren, also
loves me but I love my husband very uncomfort- known as jeanne Phillips,
coaching, too. I think ·it able.
and was founded by her .
makes a huge difference in · How should I handle this'! mother, Pauline Phillips . .
the lives of my team mem- .- UNCOMFORTABLE IN Write · Dear Abby
at
bers. - IN FOUL TROU- . KNOXVILLE
.
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
BLE
.
DEAR
UNCOMFORT- Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
DEAR IN
ABLE: The first thing to do 90069.

At the regional Association of Christian Schools Elementary
Speech Meet h~ld at the Ohio Valley Christian School (OV) and
attended by Pike Chrlsitian Academy (PC))on March 3 the following 5-6 graders won ribbons for their superior speeches:
front Jessica D'resbach (PC), Maegan Jewell (OV), Dominick
Kessler(PC); and b;Jck Samantha Westfal ·(OV). Jennifer
Blevins (OV).. Madison Crank (OV), and Chance Burleson (OV).

Grade 5: Chance Burelson,
red, and Madison Crank, blue ,
OVCS
'
Grade 6: Jennifer Blevins.
blue, and Samantha Westfall
and Maegan . Jewell, ·red.
OVCS ; Dominick Kessler
and Jessica Dresbach , blue,
~hd . Phil BHollifngsdhead, bred; PCA .
1ue,
&gt;-- ns
rum le 1 •
Those receiving honorable
OVCS: Jfly Scott and Sarah mention were the practice
Dreshler, blue, PCA.
· speeches for the judges.
: Grade 4: Katelyn Beaver,
These stud.ents were Jacob
1-G. Miller, Amy Ours, all · Riley (first grade, OVCS)
red, OVCS ; Andrew Lightle Th
H 11 (f
h
d
and Luke McAllister, blue,
omas 0 ey oun · gra e,
OVCS), Logan Edmonds
Samantha (fourth llrade, OVCS ) and
~~~de 6 :
McClure, Chelsea Adkins , Paul . Miller (sixth grade,
OVCS)
At the .awards assembly
l&lt;avla Brumfield, red, OVCS .
: •
Fable/Folklore
one student from each catego'
· Grade 2: Abby Parsons, ry was selected to do their
~~~~a~A : Teah Eiliott. speech presentation , which
'ennifer Lascar, blue OVCS; followed the judging. These
students included Holly
~ailey Patrick, PCA
Miller · (third grade , Pike
· Grade
4: ·
Morgan · Christian Academy) in poetry
Brumfield. red, Scotty Wood, for grades 1-3. Laura
t&gt;hie and Ranjit Mavi , blue. Panzarella (fo urth grade
OVCS ; Sable Kessler and PCA) 111
·
f
d
poetry or gra es 4Madison Patrick, blue, PCA.
6, -Jay Scott (third grade ,
PCA) in Bible Memory for
:
Patriotic Oration
; Grade 5: Joshua Blevins grades 1-3, Luke McAlli ster
and Olhe Lentz, red; and Alex (founh grade. PCAJ in Bible
.Haddad, blue, OVCS .
for grades 4-ti, Sable Kess ler
: Grade 6, Michael Fahmy (fourth grade,
pnd Ben Tillis, OVCS .
• PCA ) in Fable/Folklore,
• Dramatic Bible Prose
Michael
Fahmy
!sixth

grade,OVCS) in patriotic
oration, and Madison Crank
(fifth grade, OVCS) dramatic
Bible prose.
OhiO Valley ·. Christian
School is in it's 29th year of
offering a Bible-based education to kindergarten through·
grade 12.

~

{J~,}(f
·~ ·
A

Family practice
physician
joins Holzer
Clinic staff
GALLIPOLIS
. Holzer Clinic announces
Dr.
the
addition
of
Christopher 0. Branam to
Holzer Clinic of Lawrence
County.
Branam JOins Holzer
Clinic
from
the
Huntington
Emergency
· Physician s . Group, . St.
Mary' s
· Hospital,
Huntington.
Branam received his
medical degree from the
University of Pittsburgh,
School of Medicine. He
completed ·his
Family
Practice Residency at St.
Margaret
Memorial
Hospital (University of
Pittsburgh
Medical
Cehter) .
He is board certified by
the American Board of
Family Practice . Branam ·
and his family res ide in
the Huntin gton area. To
schedule a appointment,
call Holzer Clinic of
Lawrence Count y at (740)
886-9403 .

Here's to celebrating
St. Patrick's Day
'Irish-style, with us!
March 17th 9pm-2am

Submitted photo

.Make Someone Feel
:,~GGS'~TRA SPECIAL...

137 N. Second Avenue
Middleport, Ohio

Friday, March 17, 2006

operalion as

Division launched an opera- politician who administered
tion against the northern city the oath in the absence of a
of Mosul from Jskandariyah, parliament speaker, spoke of
BAGHDAD, Iraq .- In a south of Baghdad.
a country in crisis.
well-publicized show of · Many operations in Iraq
"We have to prove to the
force, U.S. and Iraqi forces since then - in such cities as world that a civtl war is not
· swept into the countryside Fallujah, Ramadi and Najaf and will not take place
nonh of the capital in 50 · - have included far more among our people," Pachachi
helicopters Thursday looking troops. But none has told lawmakers. "The danger
for insurgents in what the involved such a large force is still looming'·and the eneAmerican military called its moved in by air. Some 650 mies are ready for us because
"largest air assault" in nearly U.S. and 800 . Iraqi troops they do not like to see a unitthree years.
were participating Thursday. ed, strong, stable Iraq."
The military . said the
As he spoke, Pachachi was
The Pentagon said there
assault
Operation were no reponers embedded interrupted from the floor by
. Swanner- detained 41 peo- with U.S. troops, and it senior Shiite leader Abdulple, found stolen uniforms released video and a series of Aziz al-Hakim , who said the
and
captured
weapons photos of preparations for the remarks were political and
including explosives used in assault. The images showed inappropriate.
making roadside ·bombs. It soldiers receiving a preflight
Even the oath was a source
said the operation would briefing from a UH-60 of disagreement. with the
continue over several days.
·Blackhawk crew chief, sol- head of the committee that ·
There was ·no bombing or diers and aircraft positioned drafted the . country's new
firing from the air in the on a.n airstrip, and helicopters . constitution,
Humam
of taking off over a dusty land- l'lammoudi , protesting that
offensive
northeast
Samarra, a town 60 miles s~ ape.
lawmakers had strayed from
nonh of Baghdad, the U.S .
But Gen. John Abizaid, the text. After consultations ,
military said. All 50 aircraft chief of the U.S. Central j udicial ofticials agreed the
were helicopters - Black Command, sought to down- wording was acceptable.
Hawks,
Apaches . and play the uniqueness of the
Acting Prime Minister
Chinooks - · used to ferry in raid.
Ibrahim
al-Jaafari
,
told
and . provide cover for _ the
"I wouldn' t characterize reponers after the brief ses1,450 Iraqi and U.S. troops.
this as being anything that's a sion, "If politiciahs work
Residents in the area big departure from normal or seriously, we can have a govreponed a heavy U.S. and from the need to prosecute a ernment within a month."
Iraqi troop presence and said target that we think was
large · explosions could be lucrative enough to ·commit
heard in the distance.
· this much force to go get,"
· Operation Swanner came Abizaid said.
as the Bush admi nistration
In recent months u.s. ·
was attempting to show crit- forces have routinely used
ics at home and abroad that it helicopters to insert troops
is dealing effectively with during operations against
Iraq's
insurgency
and insurgent strongholds; espeincreasingly sectarian vio- cially in the Euphrates River
lence.
valley between Baghdad and
White House spokesman the Syrian border.
'
Scott McClellan denied the
Samarra, the largest city
offensive was tied to the new near the operation~ was the
campaign to change. opinjon site of a massive bombing
about the war. 'This was a against a Shiite shrine on
decision made by our com- Feb . 22 that touched off secmanders," he Si\id,. adding tarian bloodshed that has
that President Bush was killed more than 500 and
briefed but did not ·specifi'cal- injured hundreds more.
Iy authorize the operation.
It is a key city in
The at.tack was launched as Salahuddin province, a major
Iraq's new parliament met · part of the so-called Sunni
briefly for the first time. triangle where insurgents
Lawmakers took the oath but have bt:en active since shonand ly after the U.S.-led Invasion
did
no .busi nes~
adjourned after just 40 min- three years ·ago. Saddam
utes, unable to agree on a Hussein was captured in the
speaker; let alone a prime province, not far from its
minister. The legislature set capital and his hometown,
no date to meet again.
Tikrit.
Still, the session ·marked a
Presidential security advissmall step toward forming a er Lt. Gen. Wafiq alunity government that the Samaraei said the operation
United States hope s will was targeting "a bunch of
calm 'the insurgency and strange criminals who came
enable it to begin wi,thdraw- from outside the country and
ing American troops . The among them a bunch of Iraqi ·
U.S. military forces have . criminals who help them."
been trying to build up the
Iraq's interim foreign minIraqi army so that it can play ister, Hoshyar Zebari, said
a leading role in fighting the the attack was necessary to
insurgents.
prevent insurgents from
~peration
Thursday 's
forming a · new stronghold
appeared concentrated near such as they establishe.d in
. RaVING. GAU.IA fl
Jillam, Fallujah, . west of Baghdad,
four village·s SUUOIINDING COUNTIES
Mamlaha, Banat Hassan and until they were flushed out
·complete Above &amp; lnground Repair
Bukaddou - about 20 miles by U.S. forces at the .end of
Above Ground &amp; lnground Sales
.
nonh of Samarra. The settle- 2004.
&amp; Installation
"After · Fallujah and some
ments are near the highway
Cpmp!ttt Una OJ•
• Openings
• Closings
• Chem1ca1s &amp; Supplies
leading from Samarra to the of the operations carried out
•lrners
• Free Water Analyii&amp;S
city of Adwar, scene . of successfully in the Euphrates
• Pumps
• Flnanc.rng A'lallatllft
.. Filters
repeated insurgent road- and Syrian border, many of
OwrtS'r'Mr11
blocks and ambushes.
the insurgents moved to areas
"Gunmen exist in this area. · nearer to .Baghdad," Zebari
IIBIID •11w I'OR SPRI.BI
killing
and kidnapping said on CNN.
740-441-9896
policemen, soldiers imd civilHours after the assau It
380 State Rt. 7 N. •Gallipolis. OH
tan s," said Waqas al- began, Iraq's new parliament
Juwanya, a spokesman for was sworn in behind the conprovincial government's joint crete blast walls of the heavcoordination center in nearby ily fortified Green Zone, with
political factions sti ll .deadDowr.
Pentagon spokesman Lt. locked over the next governCol. Barry Venable said the ment and vehicles banned
operation was the biggest air from Baghdad'$ streets to
assault ' since April 22, 2003, prevent car bombings.
Ad nan Pachachi , the senior
when the 10 I st Airborne

COIMHI8S .

AP Photo/ Slit. Rrst Class Antony Joseph, 101st Combat Aviation Brigade Public Allalro-

ln this handout photo released by the u.s. Mi litary on Thursday. U.S. he licopters take off from·
a Forward Operating Base Remagen for .Operation Swarmer, a combined Iraqi and Coa!ition·
operation to clear a suspected insurgent operatmg area northeast of Samarra , Iraq, Thursday.
U.S. forces Thursday launched what was termed t~e .largest air assault si(lce the U.S .-Ied invasion, targeting insurgent stronghold s no rth of the capital. the u.s. military s aid . The Arrierican
troops were JOined by the Iraqi army.

PT

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Wednesday- Half Rack Dinner
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•. Today's:Number is

GREETING!!

HELlOS

Immigration bill ulifinished;
Frist poised to .file own March 27
BY SUZANNE GAMBOA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER ,

• Actual Size lx3
• Run date Fri.,
Aptil14, 2006
• Deadline Mon.
April tO, 2006

E.van &amp;.. Adam Rodgers
Happy Easter
Love, Mom· 8.. Dad

Mail to P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, OH 45769
or drop off at The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy; OH 45769

Anything Green Spedal"'
Green Draft Beer
Nightly Specials

Monday - Karaoke 9 -.1
· Tuesday - Pool Tnurn:.u ncfii - Hpm
Wednesday- Drink Specials 9 -2
Thursua:r. - Latlics Night/Karaoke 9 - 1
Friday - Dance Mu s ic/Drink Specials
S a turd ay-Da nce Mu ,i&lt;:/Dri 1ik Spc&lt;:ia.b
Sunday- Dollar Bccr- 1-Spm .

@

.,

Holzer Medical Center recently made a donation to the Meigs
Ribs Festival that will be held the fi rst weekend in June.
Accepting the check from Jenni Dovyak. Director of Community
Relations at H.olzer Medical Center, on behalf of the Ribs
Festival is Paul Darnell.

NATION • WORLD

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Submitted pllolos

Ribbon winners at the regional Association of Christian
·Schools Elementary Speech Meet held at the Ohio Valley
Christian School (OV) and attended lly Pike Chrisitian Academy
(PC) on March 3 the following 5-6 graders won ribbons for their
superior speeches: front Michael Fahmy, Alex Haddad . Joshua
Blevins, an back Ben Tillisca:nd Ollie Lentz. · ·

PageA7_

BY STEVEN R. HURST

HMC make.s donation

ali

3

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WASHINGTON
Senators writing an immigration bill moved closer
Thursday to . preventing millions of employed illegal
immigrants from
being
deponed in the face of a polit ical stampede to make it harder for them to cross into the·
United States or stay.
Majority Leader Bill Fri st.
who is looking at running for
president in 2008, prepared
his own bill focused more
narrowly on tightening ·border&gt; and said the Senate will
begin debating iL the week
after next if the Judiciary
Committee Cannot agree on a
bro&lt;tder bill by then.
"Our country needs sec uri ty at uur borders in order to
·slow the !low of illegal i mmigration and make America
safer from foreign criminals
and terrorists," said Frisr, ,;
Tennessee Republican.

He said giving the committee beyond March 27 to reach .
an accord would mean the
Senate would not have the
full two weeks he's set aside
to debate immigration and
border security is sues and
pass a bill.
·The House passed a bill in
December that makes it a
felony for illegal immigrant s
to be in the United States:
impose s new penalties on
employers who hire them a·nd
erects fencing along a third of
the U.S . -Mexico border.
Judiciary
Corhmil!ee ·
Chairman Arlen Specter. RPa .. said he understood Fri st' s ·
parliamentary reasons for Iii- ·
ing the bill . But he said he
remains apprehensive of the
. "chaos" resulting from handling complicated immigration and border . security
issues on the Senate lluor:
"My preference would have
been to complete· our markup
(of the bill) in the committee." said Specter. R-Pa.

·B INGO

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�'

.Page AS

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

.

ML8 roundup, 82

Prosecutor defends plea bargain
for .sex offender who avoided jail
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
prosecutor who agreed to a
plea bargain for a man
accused of repeatedly raping two young boys defend- ·
ed the decision to avoid a
trial, saying the goal was to
protect the victims while
ensuring some prison time
.for the defendant.
The sentence that Judge
John Connor of Franklin
County Common Pleas
Court
gave
defendant
Andrew Selva - five years'
probation with no time
behind bars - has top state
Republicans calling for hi s
removal from the be nch .
Ron Welch , a former
Franklin County pros€cutor,
said Th'ursday he did not

want to risk the possibility
that Selva would be found
not guilt y· after a triaL He
also said that while the victims said they wo uld testify
if necessary. they didn ' t
want to.
" I fully anticipated that he
wou ld go to prison and go
to pri son for a fairly lengthy
amount of time," Welch
said. " If I had it to do over
again, knowing what the
sentence be, would I do it
differently? Yes."
Selva had been charged
with 20 counts of rape but
prosecutors made . mistakes
in listing the boys' names
on the indictment and tried
unsuccess fully to change·
the errors.

Matta hopes good times continue in Dayton. 83
NCAA tournament roundup, 84

Instead of reindicting the
case, prosecutors dismissed
the charges and · agreed to
the plea bargain after discussions with Selva's attorney and the victims' families.
Connor approved the· deal ·
and sentenced Selva in
December to five years of
probatipn for two counts of
sexual battery involving the
boys, ages 5 and 12.
A minimal sentence for
sexual battery is not without
precedent. In
October,
AP Photo
Cham paign County Judge
Roger Wilson sen'tenced a Philanthropist Joe Mammana, left, stands with Ohio Attorney General Jim Petro during a ra!ly at
high sc hool teacher who the Rhodes State Office' Tower to have Franklin County Common Pleas Judge John A. Connor
pleaded guilty to sexual bat- removed from the bench , on Thursday. Petro and Gov. Bob Taft are seeking the removal of
tery to five years of proba- Connor because he ordered probation instead of jail time for the man who admitted sexually
assaulting two boys.
tion and 14 days in jaiL

J%man accused ofscamming
elderly out qf $1. 4 million

37° 128°

ROCK
SPRINGS
Tryout dates for Post 128
American Legion baseball
team ·all players are set for
May 24. 15 and 26 (every one
must come to all three, onlv
exception is if your high
school lef\m is still playing m
the State tournament) at
Meigs High SchooL
Post. I 28 plays its home
games m Mergs Count y; but
receives players from both
Meigs and Gallia Counties
from
these
respective
schools: Gall ia Academy.
River Valley, Meigs Local ,
Eastern and Southern.
•
From t h es~ tryouts, the
Post 128 team for 2006 ( 19
years old and under) as well
as a Junior Legion team ( 1516 year olds) will be selected.
There will be an organizati o nal meeting at the old
American Legion building in
Middleport on Sunday, Apri l
2 111 2 p.m. Everyone who
wishes to try out for the team
or the junior team is strongly
recommended to attend this
meeting on April 2.
Questions , shou ld
be
directed to coach Chris·
Stewart (740) 59 1-4605 nr email diamondD I @col um bus.rr.com.

PA

~
.

~
,,

Cincinnati
. •41 ' 133'
"

'~

.t:___:)

Portsmouth •
43• I ;!4'

.

~
.
CloUt;ly ~ Thunder-~
L...:)
'
storms
Partly

U

'/'/

Showers

~

'

W.VA.'

'&lt;Y.

Doody

,.,

Flurn8s

~
~

~~

Snow

•••••

"\.' Q• * . :.::· ~

~- . Ram

· Weather Undergromd • AP

Friday... Mostly
cloudy
· \\lith a chance of snow with
a slight chan~e of rain rn the
moming .. .Then partly cloudy
in the afternoon . Highs in
the lower 40s. North winds
10 to 15 mph with gusts up
to 25 mph . Chance of precipitation 40 percent.
Friday
night ... Mostly
clear. Co lder with lows in
the lower 20s . North winds
5 to I0 mph --:ith gusts up
to 20 mph.
Saturday...Mostly sunn y.
HighS ·in th e lower 40s.
We ~t winds I0 to 15 mph .
Saturday night ... Mostly
clear. Cold with lows in the
mid 20s. Northwest winds 5
to 10 inph .
Sunday
through
Monday... Partly
cloudy.
Kighs i~ the upper 40s .

Satyrdov's games
• Track and Field ·

In-

World BasEball Classic

.Mexico eliminates United States

Post 128
American Legion
Baseball Meeting ·

Youngstown •
40° 123'

*Columbus

·prrpond Beach, Fla.) 10 a.m. .

. POMEROY Meigs
Baseball will be holding a
youth camp for baseball play ~
ers from grades 3-8 on
S~urday. March 18, head
jutlior varsity baseball coach·
Nick Denwiller announced
today.
.
_
"We will be worki!)g· on the
basic skills and tennmology
used by the TVC champion
Meigs Marauders. There wi II
be !·shirts for the first 50 '
campers," said Dettwiller.
Dettwiller . asked
that
campers bring clothes and
equipment to participate out.siile and inside, along with a
sack lunch. Questions about
the event are to made with
Dettwiller, 740-4 16-0344.

City/Region

~

1

Meigs youth
baseball camp

38° 124°

~

Softball

Huntington St.' Joe ai Point Pleasant 5
p.m.
.
College Baseball
Rio Grande vs . Missouri Baptist. (in

MIDDLEPORT
Middlerort Youth League
basebal and softball sign-ups
for girls (~es 5- 18) and boys
(ages 5-17) will be held 10
a,m, until 2 p.m. March 18 at
Counc il
the
Middleport
.
Chambers.
Copies of birth certiticates
· are require(! for new players.
For more information, call
Dave Boyd at 992-3668,
Tanya Cofeinan at 992-5481
or Tim Ebersbach at 9927747 ..
.

Hight Low temps.

Mansfield •
35' 123•

loday'a games

Middleport Youth
League sign-ups
set for March

Toledo•

··'

d upcOming coHege

Softball .
Williamstown at Wahari'la. 5 p.m.

Local weather
Forecast for Friday, March 11

' GALLI,POI.IS - A &amp;ehedule

and high 8Chool wrsity sporting 8\lef1~ Involving·
teams fftlffl G&lt;\flia, Meigs and Masoo counties.

p.m.

~-

Today's Forecast

LocAL SCHEDULE

Baseball
Huntington St. Joe at Point Pleasant, s

Kroger- 20:75
ltd.- 24.10
NSC- 53.65
Oak Hill Financial - 30.97
OVB-25.40
BBT- 40.34
Peoples - 28.45
Pepsico - 59.90
Premier - 15.00
· RoCkw!lll - 71,91
Rocky Boots - 25.82
Sears - 138.44
Wa~Mart. - 46.36
....
Wendy's - 64.90
Worthington - 19.75
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
· provided by Smith Financial
Advisors of Hilliard Lyons In
Gallipolis.

il regular for the second
, weekend. though, las t reach- - - - - - - - - - • it\g the regional semifinals in
Beware the 12.
2001. There wa&gt; a firs t-round
That is n' t .the title of a new. loss in 2002 and three sechorror movre about a Jury, · ond-ro und exits si nce.
JUSt a proven fact lor any
team that is a No:· 5 seed in • THE ' SCORERS: Adam
Morrison of Gonzaga and J.J .
the NCAA tournament.
Montana beat Nevada 87- Redick of Duke were 1-2 in
79 and Texas A&amp;M beat the national scoring race
Syrac~se 66-58 Thursday, almost all · season and
extendmg one of those unex- Morrison ·increased liis lead
f.:a~~~~~~ events that ryappen Thursd~y as · both had their
.
.
The wins meant at least one usual btg games: o
No. 12 seed l:las beaten a No. . Mornson had _,5 potnts 10
5 in 17 of the last 18 tourna- the , 79-75 v~cto ry ov~r
ments.
Wisconsin- Xavter and he tncrcased hts
Milwaukee did it last season averageto 28.6. Red.rck had
with an 83-73 victory over 29 1n the 70-54 wm over
·
Souther n Uni vers i&lt; y and
Alabama.
It was the 25th and 26th stayed at 27.4 per ftame. ,
times a 12 beat a 5 since that
The on ly sconng champtrun began in 1989. The onl y on to ,Play . on a natio nal
year the seven-line upset did- chami,J!Onshtp team was
n't happen in that span was Clyde Lovellette of Kansas,
2000.
·. who averaged 28.4 points in
And it was the 28th and 1951-52.
29th such upsets since the
ORANGE PEARL: Bruce
field went to 64 teams in
Pearl
sealed his coach ing star
1985; the only other year a 12
last
seaso
n when he led
didn ' t get at least one was
Wisconsin-Milwaukee to the
1988.
regional
semifinals.
One No . 5 did win
He left the Horizon League
Thursday
night
as
Washington beat Utah State school for a job in the
75-61. The last 5- 12 matchtip Southeastern. Conference at
is Pittsburgh-Kent State on Tennessee.
Friday..
played
Both
te,ams
"Obviously, 'the · seeding is Thursday and Pearl 's old
based on a lot of different players and new players all
· things," said Andrew Strai t, got wins.
who led Montana with 22
Second-seeded Tennessee
point$. "They were a great needed a miracle shot with
team. they played in a tough less than a second left by
· league, they ' ve beaten a lot Chris Lofton for a 63-61 vicof good teams thi s· year.''
tory over Winthrop.
About 2 hours earlier, II
WAITING
ZAGS: seeded
. WisconsinGonzaga has become a regu- . Milwaukee, with four players
lar in ihe NCAA tourrrament, back from last season's team '·
opening its eighth straight for ·new coach Rob Jeter.
AP photo
appearance with a 79-75 vic- upset No. 6 Oklahoma 82-74.
Illinois coach' Bruce Weber reacts lls his team plays against Air Force during an NCAA coltory ove r Xavier. .
Please see Madness, 83
lege basketball tournament game Thursday in San D1ego .
The Bulldogs haven't been
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tuasdav. March 21

Local stocks

GKNLY- 5.50

Bv 'JIM O'CoNNELL

Point Pleasant at Roane County, TBA

Jones, a paralegal who does
not have a law degree. is
accused· in the indictment of
creating a business to perfonn
legal work for people and then
2003.
writing herself into their wills. ·
Janet L Jones, 57, of · Court records show she set
Plymouth, abou t 80 · miles
. southwest of Cleveland. was , up a post office box ih an anorcharged in an 48-count indict- ney's mune and forged false
·
Huron documents that looked authenme nt · Mon day tn
County. Charges include multi- tic that she filed in various
pie counts of theft and forgery, court and government offices in
tampering with records and Huron and Richland counties.
false representation as an attorJones is accused of using the
ney.
scam to steal property and cash.

Harley Davidson - 49.39
JPM- 41.32

Friday, March 17,2006

.

PLYMOUTH (AP) - An
Ohio woman has been accused
&lt;if Pf\!tending to be. a lawyer to
scam elderly people out of $1A
million between 1989 and

i'CI- 72.36
AEP -35.87
Akzo- 53.21
Ashland Inc. :-- 67.44
au -13.45
I!Ob Evans - 29.91
BorgWamer - 57.79
CENX- 36.00
Champion - 6.00
Channing Shops - 13.48
City Holding - 36.81
Col- 53.60
DG.-17.54
DuPont - 42.64
Federal Mogul - .36
USB- 31.09
Gannett - 60.57
General Electric - 34.38

Lows in the mid 20s.
. Monday
night ... Partly
.cloudy wit h a chance of
snow. Cold with lows in the
upper 20s. Chance of snow
50 percent
.
Tuesday... Mo stly cloudy
with snow likely wi th a
chance of rain . Additional
light snow accumulation
possible . Highs in the upper
30s. Chance of precipitation
60 percent.
'fuesday
nighL.Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of snow showers.
Cold wit h lows in the mid
20s.
Wednesday
and
Wednesday night ... Mostly
cloudy. Hi ghs in the lower
40s. Low' in the mid 20s.
Thursday... Partly cloudy.
High s in the mid 40s.

Call 422-0756
Toll Free 1 -aoo;.a22-041 7
VIsit us online at
www.tompeden.com

. Take 1-77 to Ripley
FAIAF't.AIN·tnlerchange .
(exit l32)Turn North
on Route 21 .

Dealershtp is
3 mHes oo lef1

1

•

CONTACTS

~~~~.,.

.....
_ ...._

·-..,,.

' l1xts, Tags, Tille Fees exlro. Rebaltlndude4 in sale prke of new vehide t151e4
whert appli,abli. On lppr0'1e4 aedl. On selttted mo4els.
HOI responsible for typogJGphkal errDB. Prklis good Mirth 16th lhrough Mardll91h

Phone - 1-740-446-2342 ext 33
Fax -1 -740-446-3008
E·ma!l -

sports@mydally~ent lnel com

Sporls Stutf

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342. exl 33
bsherman@mydallytrlbune.com

Bryan Welters, Sports Writer

(740) 446·2342, ext 23
, ~Watters d mydailytnbune.corrr

475 South Church Street, Ripley • Monday- Saturday 9 am - 3 pm • Sunday I pm - 7 pm
•

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Friday, March 17,2006

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
f740) 446-2342. ext 33
rcrum@myd all)'regtster com

AP photo

Ohio State head coach Thad Matta celebrates on the court
after beating Indiana in the . semifinal· game, 52-51,
Saturday, March 11, during the Big Ten Conference men's
basketball tournament in Indianapolis. ,

In Matta OSU trusts
DAYTON (AP ) - The
Ohio State . Buckeyes h;)ve
some thing to say ro those
who consider them ove rrated and primed for a firs tround NCAA upset at the
hands of Davidso n.
"To .tnyone wtm thinks
· that . all they have to do is
look at Thad Matta\ peN
record in the NCAA tournafnrward
Matl
ment ,'"
Sylvester said. '"He\ proven
·it time ano tin1L' again . Hc"s
one of the best in the country at genin~ his players
rccldy lor the NC r\A lttunwmcnt."
Davidson ..:nad1 Bob
Mc Killop agn.:es.
Asked what cnncems him
the mo.st ahout playing the
second-seedeu Buckeyes

' (25-~J.

McKi llop said .
"They are extremely well
coached · and wi ll b~ well
prepared. They are not look i~ at tl1is as a 15 (seed) ve r... us a two" ·
· In other wonh. the big.
bad Bude)eS from the Big
Ten aren't loo]..in g past the
Wiidcats (20- 10). the .:hampions or the Southern
Conference. to " possihlc
Sunday mat..:hup with Big
East ~ullv Georgetown . •
" I have been on that side
hefnre ... said Matta. who
was an "'"'tanl .:ua.:h on
tcanb that "ere seeded I(,.
14 c111d I:!'. ''I LtndeNand
that , when the ha.ll gets
thrown up lotlltHTuw yoLt
Please see Matta, Bl

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)
- Roger Clemens was a
loser in what might have
been the fmal start of his
outstanding career. and
Mexico eliminated ,Team
USA from the World
Baseball Classic.
Oliver Perez and seven
rel ieve rs combined to
pitch
a
three-h itter
Thursday ni gh t as Mexico
beat the Rocket and the
Uni ted States 2-1. givi ng
Japan anoth er shot at
Korea in the WBC semitlnitls.
The outcome w'as u stunner. con; idering team
USA fielded a lineup
l oad~d with All-Stars even
witho u&lt; Derrek Lee and
Johnny Damon , sidel ined
with sore left shoulders .
South Korea had a 3-0
second-ro un d record in
Group One, with Team
USA. Japan and Mexico
all going 1- 2. Japan earned
the second ~em ifinal bertli
frot)l the gi·oup by &lt;illowing the fewest runs in
games ·betWeen the tied
· AP photo ·
-.
teams.
Team
Mexico
's
c1os1ng
pitc
her
Dav1d
Corte
s
t511
celebrates
Japan, which has already
lost twice 10 South Korea . with catcher Miguel Ojeda after Team Mex,co beat Team USA
in the Classic. face s it&gt; 2-1, Thursday at Angel Stadium in Anaheim. Cal1f.. in the sec- ·
ond round of tbe World Baseball Classic. The w1n eliminated
· Please see Mexico, 83
Team USA from the tournament.

rro THE 1.\TIEYfS OF BRr.fO\ L.liORf•.\\, 'ID .
1

'

Breton L. Morgan, MD is currently on a temporary family
medicalleaYe of absence. The primary cone em of our statT is the
continued care of our patients until he returns. At the present.
we are in the process of getting co\'erage for the ollie.:.
We tru~v appreciate your patience and undaslanding

�Page 82 • The

Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 17,2006

www .mydailysentinel.com

Garcia now McNabb's backup Saint Joseph flies by Rutgers in NIT
BY THE AssOCIATED PRESS

Philadelphia
The
Eagles signed Jeff Garcia
on Thursday to back up
Donovan McNabb at
quarterback.
The
36-year-old
Garcia, a three-time Pro
Bowl selection dljring hi s
five seasons in San
Francisco , · pl ayed fm
Cleveland in 2004 before
going ro Detroit last year.
l-Ie threw for 937 yards,
three touchdowns and six
interceptions in
six
games with the Lions.
. He will be a step up for
the Eagles over Mike
McMahon. who played
poorly in seven starts
after McNabb had season-ending surgery for a
sports hernia last year.
The Eagles weni · from .
NFC champion s to a 6-10
season without McNabb.
Garcia signed a oneyear
contract
witil
Philadelphia, as did Jabar
Gaffney, a wide receiver
signed from Hou ston.
Garcia
arrived
in
Philadelphia tw o days
after the . Eagles cut

Terre II
Owens,
w h o
o ften
crit ic i zed
Garcia
w h"e n
the two
played
together

McCown joins veteran
Jon Kitna, second-yearmttn Dun Orlovsky and
the recently signed Shaun'
King on the Lions' roster
along with Harrington,
who is due a $4 million
bonus if he is on the roster June 15.
Notebook
Harr ington, the third
overall pick in the 2002
with the -Ners.
draft. is 18-37 as the
"Had 1 signed a day or team's starting QB.
two ago. we could've
In
other
moves
been teanunate,," Garcia Thursday:
said. "He's moved on and
- New
England
I've stepped into a·place · released 33-year-old corwhere he played.
· nerback Tyrone Poole,
"I don ' t have a problem the latest veteran to leave
with the guy. He's a the · three-time Super
tremendous player on the Bowl
champions.
field. I've witnessed that. Linebacker
Willie ·
He ' s a difference-maker. McGinest
· signed
It I were to have an Wednesday
with
opportunity to be a team- Cleveland and wide
mate of hi s again , l receiver David Givens
wouldn ' t back dow.n joined Tennessee on
fron~ the situation."
Tuesday:
.
Another quarterback,
-Pittsburgh · re,signed
Joey Harrin gton , seemed several veterans, includon the way out of Detroit ing center Jeff Hartings
after the Lions agreed to and quarterback Charlie
terms
with
Josh Batch.
McCown . a part-time · -Kansas City signed
starter with Arizona the backup
quarterback
past
rwo
seasons. Damon Huard. ·

Bv

Spring training

MRI exam and second opin- stole ihree bases to lift their
ion from Dr. Tim Kremchek spring training total to 35,
Chicago pitcher Mark Prior was that Guzman has a tear in more than twice as many as
has a strained right shoulder, the shoulder and will miss any other team in the major.
and Cubs . officials are opening day. That makes leagues.
·
relieved.
Royc;e Clayton the club 's
Astros 10, Yankees (ss) 5 .
Prior' could miss the sta11 of everyday shortstop.
.
At Tampa, Fla., Houston
the season but the Cubs had . ".It 's a pretty senous surgery right fielder Luke Scott hit a
feared something much that has to take place and Dr. two-run homer and finished
worse.
Kremchek felt, since he's not with four RB!s and Mike
"!' m
very . pleased ," a pitcher, ht&gt;&lt;'s a shortstop, it Lamb drove in three runs.
Chicago team trainer Mark , was worth at least trying to Tigers (ss) 4, Yankees (ss) 3
O' Neal said of the initial rehabilitate it," general manAt Lakeland, Fla., Omar
diagnosis. "There's bad news, ager Jim Bowden said. "If he Infante, Vance Wilson ·and
extremely bad new s, that doesn't get better over the Marcus Thames homered for
next couple •of weeks, we'll the Tigers. Detroit's 33 home
could come our of it.
"Right now, if this is a pos- go ahead and operate."
runs in 17 games are the mo.st
rerior shoulder strain, we're
In Fort Myers. Fla., Boston in the majors this spring.
going to deal with it like you left-hander David Wells said .
Dodgers 5, MarlinS 2
would a hamstring strain. his knee felt fine when he
At Vero Beach, Fla.,
Unfortunatl!ly; it's · in the threw 53 pitches to Red Sox Dodgers starter Aaron Sele
s~oulder. So yes, for us. it' s minor
leaguers in an gave up his first two runs of
pretty gomj news." he - said intr4squad game in his first the spring in the third inning
Thursday.
· outing of spring training and Cody Ross, Bill Mueller,
Prior visited Dr. Lewis -Thursday. But he wasn 't Joel Guzman and Delwyn
Yocum in Los Angeles on thrilled that his first outing of Young hit solo home runs.
Wednesday, a day after feel - the regular season might be
Orioles 4, Cardinals 2
ing pain in his right shoulder delayed.
· At Jupiter. Fla., Brian Bock .
before he cou ld take the
With (wo days off in the hit a two-run single in the
mound for a bt1llpen session . first e1ght days of the season, ninth inning and four
Prior was sc:heduleu LO have Boston won ' t need a fifth Baltimore relievers combined
an MRJ' exam in Los Angeles starter until mid-April. Wells, to throw six shutout innings.
on Thursday to determine who was set back by offsea- The four relievers didn 't
whether his shoulder has suf- son surgery on his right knee, allow a hit and struck out six.
fered more extensive damage. would be the likely candidate
Athletics 10, Brewers 9
Yocum and the Cubs med- to.be he'ld back.
At Phoenix, Oakland first
ical suiff will meet in Arizona
"I'd have a problem with baseman Dan Johnson had a
on Saturday to discuss Prior's that,'' he said Thursday. "I two-run homer and John
status and determ ine a course know they've got an abun- Baker added three RB!s. ·
of action.
.
dance of pitching. That's one
Rangers 4, Giants 3
Prior has not thrown in an thing they don 't lack."
At Surprise, Ariz., Texas
exhibition game this spring.
Wells said Boston should starter Kameron Loe gave up
but the .Cubs have insisted start with a five-man rotation, four hits and two runs in 4 2there has been nothing wrong · but manager Terry Francona 3 innings.
·
with hin1 and tllat the shoul- prefers keeping hi s top four
Cubs 7, Ange~ 6
der problem came up just this pitchers on their regular four
At · Tempe, Ariz., . Jeff
week.
.
days rest. which would pre- Weaver struggled again for
The· team 'aid it was easing elude an early five-man rota- the Angels, allowing five
Prior into .action because tion.
. earned runs and nine hits in
elbow problems limited him
Well s "might give you four innings. This spring,
to just one exhibition start headaches. But he's a pretty Weaver has given up 16
· over the previou; two springs. good kid,'' Francona said. "In earned runs and .21 hits in I0
Prior was 11-7 with a 3.67 general , there are going to be 1-3 innings over three starts.
ERA in 27 starts last season. times when I have to tell pea- Royals 5, Diamondbacks 4
He began the 2005 season on pie thing s that they don ' t
At Tucson, Ariz., Alex
the di sabled list with intlam- .exactly want to hear. David 's Gordon went· 3-for-4 and
mation in his right elbow. but a good example. ·
scored two runs for Kansas
he missed just hi s tirst start.
"Sometimes you've got to City.
.
·
He · later mi ssed almo,.st one be a little tlexihle. For the
Mets.6, Braves 5
month after being hit 01.1 the most ·part, it \ hard to get
At Port St. Lucie. Fla., New
rfght elbow by a line dri ve in players to look at the big pic- York second baseman Kaz
late Ma y.
ture also. I understand that. Matsui sprained his right knee
At
.Viera . Fla.. . the They ' re looking at their next sliding into second bas.e in the
Washingto n Nationals played start or their next at-bat."
first inning. He will have an
without shortstop Cri&gt;t ian
In other &gt;pring training MRI on Friday.
Guzman in an 8-2 win ove r a games: .
Ramon Castro had a twosplit squad of Detroit Ti gers . Red Sox (ss) 4, Twins.(ss) 3 out RBI single in the ninth
Guzman is trying to avoid
At Fort . Myers. Fla. , Josh inning for the Mets.
surgery on hi s injured right Beckett allowed onj: run and
Phillies 7, Blue jays 1
shoulder, but .if two week&gt; of five hits in five innings for the
At Clearwater, Fla., Gavin
.rest and rehab do nul work. he Red Sox.
Floyd 'allowed one run and
could mi ss much of the seaDevil Ra}'S 7, Red Sox 2
five hits in four innings and
son .
At St. Petersburg. Fla.. Phillies
catcher
Mike
What was &lt;: lear Thursday Aubrev Huff had two hits and · Lieberthal hit his fir.st homer
after a trip to Ci-T)cinnatl for an two RBI , . and the Devil Rays of the spring.
THE AssOCIATED PRESS

Matta
from Page 81 ·
ca n throw th qse seed' out the
window.''

Matta·, fir; t Ohio State
team we nt 20-12 last year but
the 'school banned 'it from
gomg to the tournament to
mitigate NCAA \anction&gt; for
vio lations that oc:curred
under hi&gt; predecessor. J1rr1
O' Brien.
The last time Matta took a
team to the NCAA tourna -

menr two years ago, Xavier
rode three scn1or stars
Rom ai n
Sato.
Lionel
Chalmers and Anthony
Myles - to the regional
final.
Matta i·s 6-4 in NCAA play.
"You are only as good as
.YOUr leader,'· forward J .J .
. .Sullinger said .
This years Buckeyes are
huil t along ·the same lines.
with fo ur senior starter' -three 111 their fifth yea r.
Terence 'Dial s. the Big Ten ·s
playe r of the year. b the big
man inside. with Sy lvester.
Su llinger and Je.' Kel Foster
I·

The Daily Sentinel • Pqe 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

Buckeyes .coach hopes·good Ohio State to wipe away regular
season
accomplishments
too
times continue in·Dayton
2002 when
former playBoban
er
Savovic was
on
the
Bu c keye s'
roster.
In
addition ,
Ohio State must erase all
references to team accomplishments from those years.
A two-year NCAA investigation found that Savovic
received improper benefits
and committed academic
fraud while he played for
Ohio State.
Originally, the university
thought last week:s ruling
only dealt with NCAA tournameot games.
Snapp said Ohio State has
pulled down the banners at
Value City Areaa related to
NCAA trips, Final Fours and
Big Ten championships and
erased from them ·any reference to the years in que stion .
He said he was uncertain
when any tournament revenue would be paid back to
the NCAA. Ohio State ath-

Bv RUSTY MtWR

Debt forces cancellation of
Prior has strained right shoulder Ohio Classic football game

MLB roundup -

Friday, March 17,2006

CLEVELAND (AP) The Ohio Classic, an annual
football game between two
historically black colleges,
has been canceled because it
faces $600,000 in outstanding debt.
Ohio Classic president
John Pace . said ·the loss of
$300,000 in funding last year
frorri Procter &amp; Gamble Co.
meant that the Community

Quarterback,
Foundation
couldn 'r
market
the
September event as well and
they had to bring in lower
tier teams.
The matchu p between.
Morgan State and Savannah
· State didn 't attract as many
people - about 30,000 cornpared with more than 45,000
Ill 2004 - and the event lost
revenue.

Morgan State won 55-26.
Cleveland had become the
home .for the ·game, which
started in Cincinnati as the.
River Front Classic in 1999.
The event also featured edu- .
cation seminars, musicaJ performances and step _shows.
Pace said . he's leaving
open the possibility that the
event could be revived.

·Minnesota wallops Indians, 12-5
WINTER HAVEN. Fla.
2 lead.
(AP)- Cliff Lee's imn was
"The first
hanging·. Unfortunately, so
three innings
went fine,"
were a few of his pitches.
Lee, an 18-game winner .
Lee
said.
for Cleveland last season,
"The· last one
was roughed up for five runs
was one of
in four innings as the Twins
· those . things .
rolled to a 12-5 exhibition My arm was dead and kind
win over the Indians on of dragging. Hopefully, in
Thursday.
the next week or so I can get
Justin Morneau hit a three- out of that tired stage and go
run homer in the sixth inning into the season strong."
off Matt Miller and hittingLee was solid from stat! to
machine Ruben Sierra, · a finish last season as his 18
non-roster invitee expected wins were the most by a
to niake Minnesota's roster, Cleveland left-hander .since
connected in the third off 1988. He finished fourth in
Lee.
the AL Cy Young voting. The
The left-hander had little . Indians . would like to sign
trouble getting the frrst nine the ' 27-year-oJd· to a longouts, but Lee couldn't do term contract, and his agent
much with the Twins after has had talks. with Cleveland
that.
OM Mark Shapiro this
"I felt . good until · the spring.
fourth, " Lee said. "I wasn't
"If it gets done, great,"
hitting my spots, got behind said Lee. "But c.ontract or no
and they scored a bun,ch of contract, I'm still going to be
runs. It was one of those around here for a long time.
days.'.'
. .
It's great that they feel that
In the fourth, Jason Kubel way about me."
hit an RBI double, Luis
Shawn Wooten and Doug
Rodriguez had a run-scoring Deeds added homers for the
single, Lee walked Jason Twins.
Tyner with the bases loaded
Sierra was the one who got
and Nick Punta hit a sacri- things started, though. The
fice : fly when Minnesota 40-year-old, who played the
scored four times to take a 6- past 2 1/2 seasons for the

New York Yankees, gives the
Twins a valuable weapon off
the bench : an experienced
hitter who knows his way
around the league.
"We've · had a bunch of
young guys in that role in the
past," said Twins manager
Ron Gardenhire. · "He was
looking for a job. We always
respected him. · He's done
enough damage to us over
the years, so we figured why
not bring him over to our
side.''
Travi~ Hafner homered off
Minnesota starter Darrell
May and Grady Sizemore hit
a triple for the Indians.
May, who has been with
Kansas City, San Diego and
the Yankees the past two seasons. is among a .group Of
left-handers trying to win a
bullpen job. He had to start,
because the Twiris are short
on starters with Johan
Santana and Carlos Silva
away from the club at the
World Baseball Classic,
"He's mixed in there with
a few guys," Gardenhire said
of May, who allowed two
runs and five hits in three
innings. "H!! has thrown the
ball well for us."

.Cincinnati hammers Pittsburgh, 7-2
SARASOTA , Fla. (AP)
- Brandon· Claussen gave
up two runs in four innings,
and Adam Dunn hit his sec· ond home run of the spring
as the Cincinnati Red s
defeated the Pius burgh
Pirates 7-2 Thursday.
Dunn 's homer to rightcenter 'off lo sing pitcher
Ryan Vogelsong came in
the fourth inning. Dunn has
five hits this spring, all for

·

e x t r a
bases .
Claussen
gave up a
solo home
run to Ryan
Doumii · in the second
inning. It was Doumit's
. third homer ofthe spring.
Cincinnati relievers Ryan
Wagner, David Weathers,
Kent Mercker, Rick White
and Chris Hammond each

filling in around : him. The lla m~s -· granted, five of they ' re a great team, "
point guard is sophomore .them were v1ctones ~ they Davidson
forward
Ian
Jam ar Butler.
are shooting 40 percent from Johnson said ..
The Buckeyes captured an the field and 23 percent
The last time both teams
outright Big Ten title for the behind the arc .
were in the NCAA LOurnafi rst time 111 14 years and
With his father rebounding ment four years ago. they
have won seven of eight and for him , Foster shot "approx - also met 111 the opemng
. II of 13.
imately I ,000" shots to work round. Davidson. seeded
Yet there are good reasons on his technique and build his I Jth. pushed the Buckeyes to
to think the Buckeyes may be confidence: Foster ts Ohio the limit before fa lling 69vuln erable. · Foster led the Stale\ best defender. but 64 .
nation in 3-point shooting for when he's· not making shots · The NCAA ruled last week
the first 21 games, bur was the Buckeyes aren't the same that Ohio State must erase all
just 2- for-24 behind the arc in team they were down the references to that game.
the C\.lll Ference tournament.
stretch in conference play.
along with all the others
The Buckeyes as a whole
"Even though Ohio St ate from the 1998-99 throu gh
have not been shooting well. has been struggling (with it s 2001 -2002 seasons. for using
either. Over the last six .s hooting) we still know an ineligible player.

threw scoreless innings.
Mercker and Hammond
have not allowed a run this
spring.
Casey and Joe Randa,
both of whom started last
season with the Reds,
returned to face their former teammate s for the second time this spring . Casey.
was 0-for-3 with an RBI
and Randa doubled in two
at-bats .
'Most of. the crowd at the
University of Dayton Arena :
will be rooting for Ohio
State; which is just a(! hour
down the · road. That's OK
with the Wildcats, who have
played at Duke·. Syrawse
and North Carolina this season .
·"We· ve been in a lot of
tough atmospheres," said
Matt McKillop, a starting,
guard and the head coach's
son . "Tomorrow we'll face
sim ilar conditions . The
crowd will , be against us.
We're going to know how to
handle it."

-----

"'{'~.]

ASSOCIATED PRESS

DAYTON (AP) - Ohio
State coach Thad Matta has a
~ood vibe anytime he steps
mto the University of Dayton
Arena.
He hopes he still feels thai
way after his second-seeded
Buckeyes
(25-5)
.play
Davidson (20-1 0) on Friday
in . the first round of the
NCAA tournament.
Matta once scored the final
eight points including a late
3-pointer to lead Butler to a
wm over Dayton. As a Miami
(Ohio) assistant coach, he
was on the sidelines for a
stunning NCAA first-round
upset of fifth-seeded Arizona
there. And as the head coach
ar Xavier, his Musketeers
pounded No, !-ranked Saint
Joseph's two years ago in the
Atlantic 10 tournament in
Dayton. · ·
"Those have been very
good memories," Matta. said
Thursday.
In the other first-round
games in Dayton, defending
national champion North
Carolina
(22-7)
meets
Murray
State
(24-6),
Northern Iowa (23-9) ta~es
on Georgetown (21-9) and
Michigan State (22-ll) plays
Geor~e Mason (23- 7).
Ohto State, the regular-season champions' of the Big
Ten, will play before a parti san crowd. The Buckeyes
needed only a one-hour bus
trip to arrive at the arena~ .
Davidson, however, has
stared down tough crowds
before. having played road
' games this year at Duke,
Syracuse and North Carolina.
"We under'stand that 90

letic director Gene Smith
said last week that he estimated the school would
have to return around
$800,000 accrued from the
postseason .
Snapp said .the university
will &amp;e in touch with the
NCAA regarding how to list
the games from those four
seasons in future Ohio State
media gui-des . The NCAA
says the games must be
"vacated"- indicating they
are not forfeited but rather
listed as ·if they were not
even played .
Ohio · ·State's current
NCAA tournament media
guide already has been
. updated and ignores the
Buckeyes' trip to the Final
Four in 1999 and losses in
the second round in 2000,
first round in 200 I and second round of the 2002 tournament.
"Ohio State is making its
19th appearance in the
NCAA tournament and fir~t
since 1992," the media guide'
says.

percent of the crowd tomor- starting five this year and
_row is . going to be cheering we're coming off two
DAYTON - Ohio State
for Ohio State," said guard straight tournament appear. must erase references to all
Brendan Winters, the son of ances," Northern Iowa guard
regular-sea~on
games in
former NBA star Brian Ben
Jacobsen
said.
addition
to
NCAA
tournaWinters. "We're OK with "Experience is one advanment
trips
it
made
while
that though."
tage we have on them."
using an ineligible player,
North Carolina find s itself . Georgetown is still workthe
school said on Thursday.
back in the tournament as a ing its way bac~ into the
Ohio
State spokesman
No. 3 seed despite ·tosing its national spotlight. That's a
Steve
Snapp
said the univertop seven scorers from last point of pride for the Hoyas.
sity
asked
· the · NCAA
year's championship team.
"We can always say we
whether the university had
. "I told the guys. 'Look, it 's were a part of a program that ·
to
wipe out references to all
one loss and. you're gone got back to the tournament,"
,
games
played and not just
now so we can't afford to forward Jeff Green said. "We
those played in the postseamake the little mi stakes that pur a iot of hard worth into
son.
we h11ve been makin~ all sea- this year and I'm happy for
"They said it is for all the
son,"' senior Dav1d Noel my . teammate s and for the
regular-season
games and
said. "We have to execute the program to get back to this
postseason games,'' -Snapp
best way ~e can and play the place where we 've bee~ tiY,said
at the· University of
way we have all year."
mg to get back for a whtle.
Dayton
Arena, where the
Michigan State has four.
In No . 14 seed Murray
current Buckeyes meet
State, the Tar Heels will face starters back from last year's
Davidson on Friday in a
a school which has won just team · that ·we nt to the Final
first-round
NCAA tournaone of 12 NCAA tournament Four for the fourth time · in
ment
game.
games. Their conference, the the [ast seven years:
.
The NCAA put Ohio State
Ohio Valley, has lost 16 con- ' But after a mediocre reguon three years of probation
secutive games in the tourna- Jar season - the Spartans
March 10 and ordered it to
ment.
were jus\ 8-8 in the Big Ten,
pay back all tournament
"A lot of people don't goud for a tie for sixth place
money earned .from 1999know where Murray is,'.. .said - they realize · that the tourforward Shawn Witherspoon. nament provides a fresh start..
"They don't know how to say
"It's a new season," guard
'Murray,' really. It's a chance Maurice Ager said. "We're
to put our name out there and just trying to start off ripe .
let everyone know we're for this week and continue to
real." .
move forward."
. OWINGS MILLS, Md. this year's salary cap. Brown, dollar,·confidential settlement
game · between
Standing in their way ·is a
The
. (AP) . - . The· Baltimore 35, was scheduled to earn from the NFL to senle a perGeorgetown and Northern George !ylason team that has
sonal injury lawsuit. In !999,
Ravens have released ·offen- $2.75 million in 2006.
Iowa pits a school with a glit- no NCAA experience but
sive tackJe Orlando Brown,
Known as "Zeus" ·bec:ause he was struck in the eye by a
tering past against one which remembers how it played on
who still has designs of of his size, the 6-foot-7, 365- referee's penalty flag . while
has had more rec:ent suc;cess. even terms with Michigan
extending a career interrupted pound Brown signed a five- playing for' the Cleveland
Northern Iowa's Panthers State a year ago before
forthreeyearsbyaseriouseye year $17.5 million contract in Browns.
will be appearing in their falling 66-60.
'
injury.
2004 that included a $4 milMeanwhile, the Ravens also
third NCAA tournament' in a ·"We know we match up
Brown leamed of his release lion signing bonus. He was released four-time Pia Bowl
row while the Hoyas haven't well with this team," guard
after being informed last week scheduled to make base outside linebacker Peter ·
been in the tield in five long Lamar Butler said. "It's
by Ravens general manager .salaries of $3.46 million in Boulware, according to the
years.
going to he an interesting
Ozzie Newsofl)C that the team 2007 and $4.3 million in 2008. NFL's official web site. The
" We' ve returned all of our game.''
intended to let him go.
He was placed on injured team would not confmn the
"I went in to ask them what reserve in December after transaction Thursday, · but
they were going to do to me, injuring his back in a car acci - Boulware is no longer ·listed
beyond the 3. point arc in which faces UAB, are both . and they told me that they put dent. He started nine games, on \he roster.
Alabama's 90-85 victory No.8 seeds.
me on waivers," Brown said but eventually lost his job to ·T)Je departure of the franWhile the SEC was all
over Marquette. He went 7Thursday. "Ozzie was nice Tony Pashos after rotating chise's career sack leader crefor-8 from the free-throw smiles, the Big East had
from Page Bl
about it, he gave me a hug and during the ftrst half of the sea-. ates $1.3 · million in savings
line and had 31 points, bur some serious concerns.
then he cut me. I ain't mad. I son.
against the salary cap this year.
Three of its record eight
the
only
shots
he
took
from
Boulware, who has 70 career
don't
want
to
retire,
but
I
Before
rejoining
the
Ravens
"You have a group · of
tournament teams played
.
the
field
were
the
II
3-pointmiglit
be
forced
to
retire."
in
2003
after
a
three-year
sacks
in nine seasons, was due .
freshmen. you can just tell
and
all
three
lost.
Thursday
ers.
to
eam
a $2.1 million salary in .
The
move
will
save
absence
from
the
league,
them what to do." said Jeter,
Syracuse
,
Seton
Hall
and
The t:ight 3s were a ·s"hool
Baltimore $900,000 against Brown received a multimillion 2006:
who has five fifth-year
the
losing
Marquette
were
record.
and
he
hit
five
of
seniors on the team. "With
seniors who · have been them in the game's opening teams. Connecticut and
Villanova, both No. I seed&amp;,
around tlie block, of course 12 1/2 minutes .
Felix came into the game lead the rest of the confer- ·
they are going to see how far
29 .6 percent from · ence Friday, joined by West
shooting
they can go. But with this
Virginia, Pittsburgh and
3-point range (48-for-.162).
team, it's all in fun."
The last player to have Georgetown .
West
The
Mountain
more
35 than that in an
. PACIFIC WAVE: .Pacific
· eliminated a Big East team in NCAA tournament . game Conference .and Western
the first round of the last two was Gerry McNamara of Athletic Conference both
NCAA
tournaments, Syracuse, who had nine in a had their tournaments end
win
over Thursday as their only two
Providence in 2004 and first-round
teams lost. Air Force and San
Pittsburgh
in
2005 . .· Brigham Young in 2004.
The tournament record for Diego State of the Mountain
Apparently the Tigers didn't
hear about Boston College 3s is II by Jeff Fryer of West lost as did Nevada and
leaving that conference until Loyola Marymount against Utah State of the WAC.
Michigan in the second
the 'second overtime.
EITHER WAY: Only two
The Ea~les , who moved to round in 1990.
teams
in the 65-team field
the
Atlantic
Coast
came
in
shooting 40 percent
SEC
STOCK:
The
Conference after last season,
beat Pacific 88-76 in double Southeastern Conference got or better from 3-point range
off to a perfect start on and both lost Thursday with
overtime Thursday.
different .results from beyond
·
There were five overtime Thursday.
'
Florida,
Tennessee , the arc.
games in last season's tournament, including three in · Alabama and LS 1.) all won . lana \vas third in the nation
'
the regional finals. Two of their first-round games, not at 41 , I percent but the Gaels
bad for a conference ranked went 3-for-18 in an 80-64
those went two ovei-times.
fourth behind the Big Ten , loss to LSU.
Air Force came in right at
· RAINING 3S: Jean Felix ACC and Big East by the
40
percent and the falcons
computers.
earned 3 cheers.
,, '
Arkansas, which plays went 13-for-27 on 3s in th.eir
The 6-foot-7 senior forward went 8-for- 11 from Bucknell, and . Kentucky. . 78-69 loss to Illinois.

~J

Ravens -release OT Orlando ·Brown

Madness

lNG
GU-IDE

ini!
h 30. 2006

Thursd

.

~~:taff ' ·'
,...,,if~a~~

Mexico
from Page Bl
archri.val in Saturday's opening semifinal game at Petco
Park in San Diego, with the
Dominican Republic meet·ing
Cuba on Saturday night. The
winners play Monday night
for the championship.
Clemens, who has won 341
games and struck out 4,502
batters in his big league
career, has said he's leaning
toward retirement after the
Classic. He wasn' t.at hi s best
a~ainst Me~ico, allowing si"'
htts and two runs in 4 1-3
innings with no walks and
four strikeouts. He threw 73
pitches - seven below the
· maximum for the second
round.
Perez allowed only one hit
in three scoreless innings.
and the Mexican bullpen later
retired 12 straight batters
until Chipper Jones drew a
one-out walk off Jorge De La
Rosa in the ninth . -Luis Ayala
then walked Alex Rodriguez,
but David Cortes needed Of\ Iy
one pitch. getting Vernon
WPlls to ground into a game·.. ·n g dr,uhlc play.
Mexico took a 1-0 lead off
Clemens in the third on a
'leadoff double ·by Mario
Valenzuela &lt;mil a two-out sin-

opened with a double and
gle by Jorge Cantu.
Michael Barrett was h!t by a
But it wasn't that simple.
A .television replay showed · pitch. Francoeur strayed otT
Valenzuela's lly ball hit the second when Michael Young
right field foul pole at least squared to bunt, and was ·
I0 feet off the ground and caught in a rundown.
bounced back onto the field. Gonzalez then retired Young
However, ·first . base umpire and Derek Jeter on ground
Bob Davidson didn 't see it balls to end the inning .
Thanks to e1tceptional
that way; and Valenzuela
,
work
by relievers . Ricardo
wound up at second.
.
It was' Davidson. Ul)lpiring Rincon and Oscar Villareal,
behind the plate, who ruled . Team USA wouldn't . have
that
Japan's
Tsuyoshi another baserutiner ·until the
Nishioka left third base early ninth.
The game was played
in the eighth inning Sunday
before
an announced .crowd
to ·negate a sacrifice lly that
3~.2~4
at Angel Stadium.
of
would have snapped a 3-3 tie
in a game Team USA eventu - Among those attending was
Commissioner Bud Selig, a
ally won 4-3.
The Americans tied it in the proponent of the Classic.
"The intensity has been just
fourth off Francisco Campos
when Jones doubled. took remarkable," Selig said. "In
third on a lly ball and scored the end , the beneliciary of all
on Wells' sacrifice lly. barely thi' will be haseball all over
beating
right
fielder the world. I mean, who
Valenzuela 's throw to the knows, lon g after I'm gone,
this event will be big. But
plate.
.
Mexico touk a 2- 1 lead in more importantly than this
the fifth und chased Clemens. event will he big is what it's
wh.o left after allOwing ;I sin - going to do for baseball ,
gle to Valenzuela. a sacrilice. including American baseball.
"This moming. you read
and a si ngle by Alfredo
that
people are mad that
Amczaga to pur runners at
ESPN
hasn't ~ hown enough
first and third . Can tu fol lowed with an RBI grounder games. Well if yo u had told
somebody that two or three
off Scot Shields.
The Americans l:lkw an weeks ago . they wuuld .have
opportunity against Edgar all laughed. Now people are
Gonzalez in the lop uf the mad they can't . get the
fifth. when .letT Francoeur game, ...

:· .

.'Trac~
f?:JFie~J .
Reserv• ·your ~vertlalng. space today!
~dv.ertlsing d~line is
F;rlday, March 24, 2006
.

Call Dave or Brenda

.
.
I
at 2 2155----

�•

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 17. 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, March 17, 2006

www.mydallysentlnel.com
"

Tennessee survives scare from Winthrop, Shockers blast Seton Hall
GREENSBORO, N C (AP) Chns Lofton's remarkable shot
allowed Tennessee to avo1d a maJOr
·upset and sent the Volunteers (22-7)
. mto the NCAA tournament's second
round for the first ttme m stx years
The sophomore guard took an
mbound pass w1th 2 9 seconds left and
rattled home a fallaway JUmper from
:Just mstde the 3-pomt line to help the
second-seeded
Volunteers
beat
Wmthrop 63-61 Thursday m the first
round of the Washmgton RegiOnal.
Craig Bradshaw nussed a shot nght
before the buzzer that would have ued
11 for the Eagles (23-8), who rernamed
wmless m stx tnps to the tournament
They were trymg to become the fifth
15th seed to record an upset m the fiTS!
round, and the f!TSt since 200 I Instead
the Volunteers advance to face seventh-seeded Wich1ta State
The frantic flrush capped a heartpounding game that tearured nme ttes
and etghl lead changes, the final one
commg on Lofton's shot. His were the
only pomts m the final 2:42 as both
teams squandered chances to advance
to the second round
MaJor Wingate led Tennessee wtth
15 pomts, and Torrell Martin finished
with 14 pomts and a career-high 13
rebounds for the Eagles
Wichita St. 86, Seton Hall 66
GREENSBORO, N C (AP) Sean OgliTI had 23 pomts and hit stx 3pomters to lead Wichtta State, givmg
the Missoun Valley Conference an
rmpresstve debut after heanng plenty
about tts haul of fdur NCAA tournament b1ds
Paul Miller scored 15 pmnts for the
seventh-seeded Shockers (25-8) who
were playmg thetr first NCAA tournament game smce 1988 They advance
to play Tennessee on Saturday.
Kelly Whitney scored 18 pomts to
lead the IOth-seeded Pirates (18-12),
who battled through the rugged B1g
East to reach the tournament for the
second t1me m three seasons. It was
Wichita State's ftrst tournament wm in
25 years and provided the MVC a
qmck bit of vmdicatmn after ra~smg
eyebrows With four b1ds, the same as
the Atlantic Coast. Big 12 and Pac-10
conferences
Dlinois 78, Air Force 69
SAN DIEGO (AP)- Guard Jamar
Srruth had Sl)( 3-pomters among h1s 20
poml~ for the fourth-seeded Fightln,g
Dliru (26-6), who were playing m thetr
f!TSt NCAA tournament game smce
losmg last year's championship to
North Carolina
The opponent this lime was qUite a
bit different. The tournament selection
comnuttee took a ton ot gnef for
addmg Atr Force (24-7) of the
Mountain West Conference as the I3th
seed m the Washmgton Regional
Dee Brown was held to eight pomts,
the thtrd ume m the last five games that
the star IllinOis guard has been held to

smgle di~ts But he made up for 11 w1th
mne assistS and a career-high mne
rebounds
Bnan Randle scored 15 and Warren
Carter added 12 for Air Forre
The Ilhru wtll take on fifth-seeded
Washmgton m the second round
Saturday
Washington 75, Utah St 61
SAN DIEGO (AP)- Brandon Roy
scored 28 pomts and Jamaal Wtlhams
added I 5 to help fifth-seeded
Washmgton reach the second round.
Justm Dentmon and Bobby Jones
had II pomts apiece for the Huskies
(25-6), who tied a season-htgh w1th 12
3-pomters- mne m the second half
Jaycee Carroll scored 21 pomts and
Nate Hams had 19 pomts and 14
rebounds for Utah State, which had 22
turnovers
The Agg1es (23-9) lost m the. ftrSt
round for the 12th ume in the1r last 13
NCAA appeanances. Thetr only wm
smce 1971 was an upset of Oh1o State
m2001
Washmgton bmlt Its largest lead of
16 pomts rrudway through the second
half after a spurt m whiCn Roy scored
seven pomts and Jones s1x
Boston College 88, Pacific 76, 20T
SALT LAKE CITY (APy....__Boston
College derailed scrappy Pac~ and
the Maraker Express
The final overttrne was antlchmacllc, but the fourth-seeded Ea~les (27-7)
sure made th1s one mterestmg for the
first 45 mmutes They advanced to
play Montana
BC tnuled by SIX early m the ftrSt
overttme ·and needed a pair of free
throws from Cra1g Srruth, a 66-percent
shooter, with 4 seconds left to send the
game mto the next extra penod
With 9 seconds left m regulallOn,
Pacific's star, Chnst1an Maraker, hit an
open 3-pointer to tie the game at 65.
But the Eagles held Mardker scoreless
m the two overtlmes, and the 13thseeded Tigers (24-8) failed m their
quest to advance to the second round
for the th1rd straight year
Montana 87, Nevada 79
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)
Montana overcame a sizable height
disadvantage and became the latest
No. 12 seed to pull an upset.
Smce 1985, at least one 12th-seeded
team has upset a No 5 seed m the tournament every year except for 1988 and
2000 A year after being overwhelmed
early m a first-round loss, the Gnzzhes
(24-6) returned like NCAA tournament veterans and never trailed agamst
the Wolf Pack (27-6).
Andrew Strait, Montana's secondtallest player at 6-foot-8, had 22 pomts
and Vrrg1l Matthews scored 20 for the
Gnzzhes N1ck Fazekas had 24 pomts
and 12 rebounds for Nevada. Montana
moves on to play Boston College
Wis.-Milwaukee 82, Oklahoma 74
JACKSONVILLE, Fla (AP) Pullmg off thetr third maJor upset m

two years, I Ith-seeded WisconsinMilwaukee got 24 pomts ap1ece from
Joah Tucker and Boo Davis to knock
off stxth-seeded Oklahoma,
Tucker, one of the stars m
Mi !waukee's stunnmg run to the round
of 16 last season, scored nme dunng a
23-7 surge that earned the Panthers
(22-8) to a 60-46 lead with just over
seven minutes to go.
The closest Oklahoma (20-9) got the
rest of the way was six Terrell Everett
led the Sooners With 21 pomts, but
most of hts production carne after it
was too late W1sconsm-Milwaukee
plays Florida on SaUtrday
Florida 76, South Alabama SO
JACKSONVILLE, Fla (AP)- Lee
Humphrey scored 20 poin)s, mcludmg
12 on four 3-pomters in the second
half, and the third-seeded Gators
advanced m front of a partisan crowd
at Veterans Memonal Arena
Flonda (28-6) extended Its winmng
streak to six games and will play
Wisconsm-Milwaukee on Saturday
Joakim Noah and AI Harford combmed for 30 pomts and 21 rebounds
and dorrunated ms1de, not surprismg
constdering Flonda's significant size
advantage.
'
Leandro Buboltz made led the 14thseeded Jaguars (24-7) with 14 pomts,
most of them commg on four 3-pomters Mano Jomter added 10 pomts and
seven rebounds
Alabama 90, Marquette 85
SAN DIEGO (AP) ~ Jean Fell)(
was nearly perfect m sconng a seasonhigh 31 pomts for the Cnmson Tide, m
a game that was delayed 70 rrunutes
after bomb-smffing dogs detected
somethmg suspiCIOI\S at Sao D1ego
State's arena.
Once order was restored, Felix made
five 3-pomters m the firs! 12 1/2 mmutes to help the IOth-seeded Cnmson
Tide (18-12) take a I5-pomt lead
With Alabama leadmg 86-85, the
ball bounced off Fehx 's foot and went
out of bounds, but Steve Novak rrussed
a turnaround JUmper Alabama's
Ronald Steele made two free throws
for an 88-85 lead. Novak, Marquette's
all-ume 3-pomt shooter, nussed from
behind the arc with 7 8 seconds left
Seventh-seeded Marquette (20-11)
was ehrrunated m tis first NCAA tournament ap~?farance smce reaching the
Final Four m 2003. Alabama moves on
to play UCLA
UCLA 78, Bebnont 44
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Freshman
Luc Richard Mbah a Maute scored a
career-h1gh 17 pomts and UCLA routed the small Nashv1Ue schooL
Ryan Hollins added I0 pomts for
No 2 Seed UCLA (28-6), whtch won
tis seventh straight after holdmg 15thseeded Belmont to 21 second-half
pomts Justin Hare Boomer Herndon
and Andrew Preston had Sl)( pomts
each for Belmont (20-11)
UCLA coach Ben Howland earned

his f!TSt NCAA tournament VICtory
smce taking over m Westwood three
seasons ago The Brums advanced to
the second round for the ftrst tm1e
smce 2002 and will play I Oth-seeded
Alabama
Gonzaga 79, Xavier 75
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Adam
Monison scored seven of his 35 pomts
m the final two rrunutes as Gonzaga
rallied for the wm
Mornson Jed the thtrd-seeded
Bulldogs (28-3) on a late 10-2 run,
finally overcoming No - 14-seed
Xavier. The Musketeers held off every
prev1ous Gonzaga surge, but ulttrnately they were overrun by the nal!on's
leadmg scorer
Momson was 11-for-21 from the
floor and had four ass1sts. J P Bausta
added 18 pomts and eight rebounds for
the Zags, who are m the1r eighth
straight NCAA tournament.
A magical run of four wms in four
days of the Atlanllc I0 tournament got
Xavier (21-11) mto the natiOnal field,
and that stellar play earned over mto
the ftrSt round of the NCAA Stanley
Burrell led Xavier w1th 22 pomts
Gonzaga will face sixth-seeded
Indiana m the second round Saturday
Indiana 87, San Diego St 83
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)- Robert
Vaden h1t a clutch 3-pomter wnh 3.3
seconds left and fimshed with I8
pomts to help Indiana advance to the
second round.
Marco K1llmgsworth and Earl
Calloway also scored 18 pomts for the
Hoosiers ( 19-11 ), whose coach, M1ke
Davis, announced h1s resignatiOn four
weeks ago
They won despite lettmg I Ith-seeded San D1ego State (24-9) shoot 56
percent and desp1te getung outhustled,
outsmarted and outplayed by the
Aztecs for 39 minutes-plus
Mohamed Abukar scored 24 pomts
for the Aztecs.
G Wash 88, UNC Wibn 85, OT
GREENSBORO, N C. (AP) Maureece R1ce scored 20 pomts and
had a key defensive play m overtune to
help the Colomals rally from an 18pomt deficit
Omar Williams had 16 pomts and
mne rebounds for the e1ghth-seeded
Coloruals (27-2) Carl Elhon added IS
poml~ and hit two free throws w1th
11.6 seconds left to send the game mto
overttrne, while Danilo Pmnock had all
11 of his pomts after halftime
TJ Carter scored 25 pomts to lead
the ninth-seeded Seahawks (25-8),
who shot 59 percent and hit II 3-pomters tor the game but couldn't hold onto
a four-pomtlead w1th 2 mmutes left m
OT
George Wa~hmgton wdJ' face topseeded Duke m the second round
Saturday
Duke 70, Southern 54
GREENSBORO, N C (AP)
Shelden Williams and J J Red1ck com-

bmed for all but 12 of Duke's pomts to
help the Blue Devils overcome_ a sl~g­
gish start and beat Southern Umverstty
Williams flmshed with 29 pomts, 18
rebounds and four blocks, while
Red JCk matched those 29 pomts and
made five 3-pomters. The rest of the
Blue Devils (31-3) were 2-for-12 from
the field, w1th Josh McRoberts having
those two baskets on h1s way to e1ght
pomts.
Chris Alexander had 19 pomts for ·
the Jaguars (19-13), who gave an
msptred effort m trymg to become the
ftrSt No 16 seed to wm m the first
round They led twice in the ftrSt half
and trailed only 40-37 w1th 16 1/2 nunutes remaimng m the game
LSU ,80, lona 64
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)
Glen Davis scored I7 of his 22 points
m the second half and the fourth-seeded Southeastern Conference regularseason champ1ons overcame a sluggtsh start to advance
Davis, a 6-foot-9, 310-pound sophomore mcknamed "B1g Baby," took
over alter rrussmg eight of his fiTS! mne
shots and bemg held to five pomts m
the openmg halt The SEC player of
the year flmshed 7-of-15 from the field
and had 13 rebounds - , SIX of them
after halftime
Steve Burn and R1cky Sohver, the
htghest-sconng guard tandem tn
DIVISIOn I, did all they could to keep
No. 13 seed lona (23-8) m the game
Burtt had 23 points and Sohver 14 in
the1r final college contests, but were a
combmed 2-for-14 on 3-point
attempts
Darrel Mitchell scored 19 for the
fourth-seeded Tigers (24-8), who Will
play Texas A&amp;M m the second round
on Saturday
Texas A&amp;M 66, Syracuse 58
JACKSONVILLE, Fla (AP) Acte Law scored 23 pomts, mcluding a
dozen m the final 2 25, to lead 12thseeded Texa~ A&amp;M to the upset.
It was the third loss m as many
games for the powerhouse B1g East
Conference W1ch1ta State pounded
Seton Hall 86-66 m Greensboro, N C •
and Marquette was knocked off by
Alabama, 90-85 in San Diego
Omnge guanl Gerry McNamara was
held to two poml~ He was 0-for-6
from the field and nussed all five of his
shots from behmd the 3-pomt hne. The
star guard earned Syracuse through the
B1g East tournament last weekend and
helped the team secure an automatic
berth m the NCAA field
Terrence Roberts led the Orange
(2 1- 12) wuh I6 pomts
Law flmshed 7-of-17 from the field
and had seven rebounds and five
assists for the Agg1es (22-8)

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or 740·992-4144 or 740· Sol1ta1re Diamonds· M T S
949 1363
Com Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740-446-

All real estate advertising
In this newspaper 1e
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Fatr Hou•ing Act of 1968
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2842

Free to Good Home 6 Month
old male mhc breed Has 1st Wanted To Buy
Meigs
shot very lovmg Call 740 County Store Scrtpt Store
992 5402
Tokens and currency tram
Ractne
Pomeroy
and
Middleport
Banks
740.992·
Gweaway Two Male Part

ldvenise ~ anw
hm1tat1on or
dlscrlmln•tion based on
race. color, rett;lon sex
familial
or national
origin, or any Intention to
m.1kll any auch
preference, limltatton or
discrimination
prefet~

•t.tu•

labiPart Boxer dogs 1 1/2 6040
Years Old-Good Natured
I \ 11 '1
\II'\ I
Need to be out where they
" ' 1~\ ll I "
can run
Dog Bo~c:es
lncludedll 740-949 29a5

u'

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thia newspeper 11re
IYIIIIbll on In equal

Mtxed breed blackJtan
lemale dog medium Stze
Blacklwhtte Terner male
Found starv1ng 1n stnp mine

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Applicants are to submtt
res umes to the Galha
' County Veterans Servtce
Office at 1102 Jackson Pike
Galhpol1s No later than
March 21 2006

opportunity baHS

Crab
Creek
Roa d
Picturesque Old Cape Cod
Et4ROLLIIoiG NON
home Oak construct1on 3 4
IIEIJ&gt; WANI'ID
T red ol Not Havtng Enough
1
All
Real
bedroom 1 bath btg country
Money
to
Make
Ends
Meet
dvertlaements ar
kttchen lots ol cabme ts
or Gotng to Work For
ubject to the Feder•
ALLIANCE
Orlvera Needed
plus 'dtnlng room spac1ous
Ma1ntenance
01rector
Posttton
available
tor
Farm
Someone
Else?
Chns!lan
Lost
Female Golden
air Houalng Act
TRACTOR TRAILER
COL Onvers wtll ng to dnve Overbrook Reh;;tbtlttatlan
hv1ng room &amp; study on 3 2
Retriever
6
months
old
and
Lawn
Parts
associate
owned
Company
o1
nearly
2
111!:11'""~-----.,
TRAINING CENTERS
1168.
lor local ready-mLX·concrete
acres Beautiful rolling lawl'1
Center IS now accepting Health and rettrement bene decades offenng a home
I'RDH:ssiONAL
Greer Ad 8 Mile area
WYTHEVILLE VA
company EKpenence 1s
wl mature shade trees &amp; new
resumes lor the positiOn of fits Must have computer Busmess
Opportun
tty
SERVICE)
Please
contact
(304
)675
Thll
newapape
preferred but nCYt necessary Maintenance Dtrector The
pond &amp; doc:tl; , mce workshop
66161eave message tf nee·
sk1lls Plefer rarm back (304)576 2056 or (304)593· ~-------_.1
ccepta only hel
Med Insurance &amp; other
plus 4-&lt;lutbulldmgs &amp; car
qual1f1ed
cand1date
must
groun d Send resume to 0466 II no answer please
TURNED DOWN ON
essary
anted ada meetln
benefits ava1iable after wall- possess strong verbal and
i)OrO $68,500 (304)675
CLA
Box
566
cJo
Galhpohs
leave
me••ane
OE olllndlrdl,
""' .,.
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? 4680
Ing per1od Dnver must be written commumcat1on skills
_1
DO
WORKERS
NEEDED
WANIED
wllltng to do pre-matnte·
D-•I-ly_T_n_bu_n_e_PO_Bo_x_46_9_1'50
ScHools
No Fee
Unless We Wtnt
ahanntngOcha r ter net
Assemble crafts
mcludmg techntcel report Galltpolls
OH 45631
TO BUY
1•888 . 582.3345
nance on trucks &amp; equtp
Sorry No Land Contracts
wood t1ems
writing and record keep1ng IN'ITROCOON
ment yard work &amp; other
1, I \I I " I \II
POSTAL JOBS
.lllliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_.I
To $480/w!&lt;
Must have expertence 1n
miscellaneous chores
I buy Junk Cars (304)773
Matenals provtded
general ma1ntenance tnclud $15 67·$21 98/hr now h1r Concealed Ptstol Class ~ri!r;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Homes for sale 7 rooms
Expenence
operaltng equtp· mg carpentry
Free
Information
pkg
24Hr
5004
plumblr'IQ mg For apphcat1on and free OhiO WV Apnl 8 2006
HoMEs
frame kept mamlatned oul
ment &amp; extra sktlls such as electrtcal telephOne and
801 428 4649
governement JOb tnfo call $75 00
9 OOam VFW
FOR SALE
Side garage large lot natu
weldtng a plus
cable mstallatton pamttng Amencan Assoc of Labor 1 Mason WV Ph (740)643·
ral gas $50 000 Gall1pohs
Call
Robertsburg
A'dmtsslon
Concess1on
ground work evaluatton and 913 599-8042 24/hrs emp 5555
100' Kenny Ct (Behtnd Jr Ferry WI/ Mason County
(304)937 3410
4x4'a For Sale
725
Lifeguards and Asststant
lnspect1on of emergency serv
H1gh School) 3 Bedrooms Come see make offer
Announcement
030 • Pool Manager wanted at lhe
or Laktn(304)n3 5234
equtpment ttem assembly
Galllpolle Career COitlga full dry Basement
all (304)675 2942
Antiques
530
Located m Mason County and •o O
GallipoliS Mumctpal Pool
er syslem ope reo-n
AN s needed to prov1de hrst
Hardwood
Floors
Ex.cellent
u 1
.....
(Careers
Close
To
Home)
Apartments lor Rent .
.. .... 440
near Buffalo WV
Certiftcat1on 1s requtred tor
Must have knowledge of aid at consttuctton Slles Call Todayt 740-448 4367
Cond1ltOI1 $81 500 ' call
Auction and Flea Market................. .. .. ..080
l1faguarcts Apphcaltens may
OSHA Ltte sarety Code between Cheshtre and New
1 800 21 4 0452
(304)675 3123 (304)675·
Auto Parts " Accessories
760
be picked up at the Parks
FT PT
Ftrst www gallipol~reercolleg com
Long Trerm care expenence Haven
1
0032
Auto Repair
770
Expene{lced
Cosmetologtst
anct Recreation OffiCe 518
preferred but no; r eq Ul red Atd/ERJOccupat onai!Satety Accreoued Memoer Accredi11"g
710
Autos for Sale ...... .... .
Second Avenue Galltpol s wtth manager license want Quahfled candtdares may ellpenence helpful
Call coonc~ tor II'IOePflnOenl co~~ega 2 bedroom 1 bath hvtng
Boata &amp; Motors lor Sele ... .................... 750
Ohio Ali applicahons must ed for salon m Galllpol s send resume to
Charla(.8_8-'8)-26_9_634_4_ _ _ _ anc:j SchoolS 12748
room dinnmg room base
Building Supplies...........................
550
rental
Senous
be turned 1n by Fnday Booth
Brown McGutre AN LNHA n.
~·o,
'1"'1. !
ment
Middleport
Bualneu and Buildings .
340
Rutland Vtllage Counc1l
IVU.JI.
1 .,..
mqUtnes
only
please
March 31 2006
21 o
auslneoa Opportunltv,
Adm1ri1strator
333
Page
accepting
resumes
for
tem
&amp;
CD
REPAIR
S36
000
(740)992·3057
{740)645 2653
Buslneaa Training .......................
.140
Street Middleport OhiO porary partltme off1ce man ~-aiiiioiiiiiiiliiiiioooa,l 20 acre farm wtth barn and ..
An Excellent way to earn
79D
Campers " Motor Homes .. ............
For a !1m1ted tLme make 50% 45769 EOE
money The New Avon
e.gerl wa1er sewer clerk Ron s TV Sales and Repa 1r bedroom 3 bath home Newly remodeled 3 or .4
Cl'mplng Equipment........... ..... .
780
selling Avon Call (740)4~
Call Manlyn 304·882 2645
resumes accepted by matl Apphance
Warehouse located 1n Lawrence Co eedrooms central atr lull
Carda ol Thanks.... .
..
010
Me1gs County Chamber or
3358
only
PO
801(
420
Rutland
(304)675-7999
Call
fo r
mtormalton basement hardwood floors
190
Child/Elderly Care . . . .
Ashton WV workstle seeks
Commerce IS seekmg coor
detacned garage la rge cov
ElocfrlcaVReltlgeratlon
... 840
o_h_,o_4s_7_7_5
_
_
_
_
_
Misc~-:uANF.Ol!S
t740t643.()518
MACHINIST
Fuel truck dnver postlton d1nator of OperatiOns wtth
erad
patiO lenced bac"'
Equipment lor Rent
480
Full ttme poss1ble
avatlable Stra1ght truck fund ra1s1ng a plus Salary Substttute $6 20/hr 18 yrs 1
.
.
yard close to schools Po1n1
Excavating. ... ............
830
shth rotation
local rou te Compet1ttve pay based on expenence Send ol age &amp; H1gh SchOol
Pleasant
S69 500
Farm Equipment.
. 610
Good hours goOd benetns resume to 238 West Matn 0 1ploma requ1red
Send 6 steel beams 'approx 20
(740 )709 1382
. ............... 430
Farms for Rent. ...
Expertence wtth manual None Hazmat &amp; tanker Street Pomeroy Oh 45769 Resume to Early Education
leet each easy access call
Farma for Sole............. . ........... .. ...... . 330
lathes m1lhng machmes endorsements wtll be con Deadlme March 31 2006
Station 2 122 JeHerson Ave 740-992 2704 leave mesFor Leaae •••..•••••••••••• .• . ........•..
490
Sanahlll 3br 2ba skyhghl
saws rad1al dnlls Must be stdered Matl resume and
PI Pleasant WV 25550
For Sale....................
585
pa1nteC11ntenors
LA FA DA
Now
h1rmg
EMTs
&amp;
able to hold tolerances to copy of dnllll'lQ rocord to
For Sale or Trade
............590
WANJl])
garde n tub
applamces
ParamediCS
Call
(740)354
Super
8
Motel
Galllpolts
1s
0005"(1nches)
on
!me
work
CLA Box 555 c/o Gallipolis
.............580
Fruita &amp; Vegeteblea
seektng an energetiC outgo .
Ability to accurately cut van· Tribune
To Do
3BR 2 balh den 8 miles washer dryer 1• acre wa lk
PO Box 469 5433 or 1 866-971 5433
Furnished Roome • ..
•. •.. .450
1n Closet lancJscaptng &amp; out
1ng
personable
person
to
ous
male
and
female
Gallipolis OH 45631
General Hauling. .
.. .. .. ... 850
Overbrook Rehab lltlatton work PT tor pos1t1on for · - - - - - - · from Holzer Hospttal on 160 bu kMgs Must Sell $18 000
North
threads
(mcludtng
bu"ress
Owner
Ftnance
FHA
Qlve•way. . .
.. ...........040
Center IS currently accepttng Breakfast Bar Attendant Babysttltng Care oJ Elderly
OBO (304 )593·0852
threads) Background must Home Health Aides Sign
approved (740)«6·3570
Happy Ade
.................050
aP.phcat•ons lor a
AN ThiS IS an early morntng Housekeep1ng References
mclude mach1mng of matert On Bonus Home Healthcaro
Hay &amp; Gnoln....... .'. ...
640
(304)895 3723
www orvb.com
Superv1sor
The ava1lable posttlon
Please apply 1n
als of vanous hardness and ol SE Oh1o IS currently hmng
Help Wanted .
.
110
Home Ll•t•nga
sh1h
IS
7P-7A
All
1nterested
Home Improvements
. •....•....•81 0
machmtng charactenshcs home health aides compeh·
person No ph one calls Certtl ed
Care
Home
L1st your hOme tlv calling
applicants
should
piCk
up
an
Homealor Sale .
.. ................... 31 0
Must be able 16 read draw live wages Call (7 40)662·
please Only senous appli- Asststed &amp; Non Ass1sled
17 4ll)U6.J620
apphcatton at 333 Page
Household Goods .
. 510
mgs and m~ke the parts to 1222
c_a_n_Is_n__
__aP_P_1 Y_c-~- Persons meals &amp; snacks
Street
Middleport
OH
For
. .. 410
House&amp; for Rent.. .
the appropriate spectftca
Excellent Care
V ew pnotos 1nto online
Home Healthcare of SEQ IS rurther ntormatlon please Tak ng
Applications tor prov1ded
tn Memoriam.
.. ........... 020
bons Must be famlltar w1th
(304)882
3880
Currently
Accepltng
contact
Hoi
he
at
740
992·
Mach1mst
&amp;
Welder
5
years
Insurance .•• . .
.••....•••... 130
shop safety routines ancl
Home of 0 1Sitnct1on 3 bed
Applteattons For Full &amp; Part· 6472 EOE
experemce
apply 7 30
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
............ 660
procedures
CNC
oom 3 M lh 2 acres
ttme
AN
S
Compehtl\le
----~---4
OOpm
Ambros1a
Machme
Computer
Trouble
Shooter
4
year
ok:l
Coloma!
an
3
. 630
Llveotock...... . . .
Programm tng
&amp; Wages Bonuses &amp; Benellls Overbrook
Aehabtlltat10n Inc Route 2 Boll 254 Po 1nt and R8pa1r Expert Serv1ce acres approx 1 900 sq ft 3
ar 2 story una ttache
Loal and Found
•
•••• 060
Troubleshootmg ellpenence
Call Toll free 1 866·388 100 Centens currently accepting Pleasant wv
25550 740·992 2395
bdr 2 baths 2 car garage
Lola &amp; Acreage
................. 350
~a rage gas we ll 'tree gas
L1fl trucK operatmn a plus
Mlece:llaneoua ....•...•.•.••.....• ••••....
170
appltcal tons for a FIN (304)675- 1722
. . . , - - - - - - - - master Mr IS 2Bx24 Wllt1 a r'ulland
OH
Cal
Schedule
may
rotate Local are bustness tookmg Supervisor Compet•ttve pay - ' - - ' - - - - - - - - Lawn Care mtscellaneous jaculzt tub
$! 25 000
Miscellaneous Merchandise . .
540
7 4 0)7 4 2 3230
Works1te IS located w thm for
Wanted·Lieennd
Odd JObs l ree esttmates (7 40)"M6 7029
a
Sales
Person scale and benefit package
Mobile Home Repair
860
~£&gt;0tnfments only Cod
close
prox1m1ty
to Agncultural ellpenence nee· a~o~a11able The available shift
Health Profellllon•la
Call (740)446-6861
........ , ...... 420
Mobile Homes for Rent
306
78R SBA Foreclosure only
Huntington WV and Pt essary Salary based on 15 3P· 11p
Mobile Homealor Sale......... .........
320
All mterested Portamedte JS seektng expe
LOW-MOISture
$1 B 000 For I SlingS call
Pleasant wv Applteahon el(penence health msur apphcaiiOns should P.JCk up nenced Med Tech/LPN ?RN s
Money to Loan . ....... ... .
220
Carpet Cleanong
BOO 391 5228 9)(1 F2 54
requ~rec:l
US cttt1enshtp ance Send resumes to CLA an apphcat.an at 333 Page to complete mob1le paramed
Motorcycles a 4 Wheelers.
740
requtred lnqutre within Tel Box 568 c/o Gallipoli s Street Middleport OI-l For exams collect specmlens &amp;
www.orvb.com
Mualcallnstrumenta
.. 570
Brand New Method
909 Mossman C1rc1e Pt
Dry In 1 Hour
Peraonala.
005
I 866 231 2476
Home Listings
p
wv
b
sR
Tnbune
PO Box 469 furthe r 1nformat1on please ECG s 1n the Gall1pohs area
3
leasan t
1 ath
No Steam-or Shampoo
Palo for Sale.. .. ,
560
E rna11UJobsCutromnc com Gallipolis Ohto 45631
L1 st your home by call1ng
contact Holl1e at 740-992 We schedule the appo~nt
tutt oasement sea ooo
Plumbing " Heating
820
6472 EOE
ments fo r yo u You Process
Free Est1mates
(740)446-3620
675
AVQNI All Areas! To Buy or
Proresaklnal Services
230
med1cal rn lormatton and
""Ctearty Clean"·
(304 )
6804
Ohto Valley Home Health
Sell
Sh1rtey Spears 304
Radio, TY &amp; CB Repair .. ... .......
180
(3041875-0022
Inc htrtng Full T1me AN and Overbrook Aehablltta110n co mmunrcate case status
Attention!
V1ew photoslmlo oohne
675·1429
Reel Ealate Wanted .. ..... ... . . .
360
Local company oftenng "NO
Per D1e(n MSW Accep11ng Center 1s currently accepttng da1ly to the branch offiCe
Top
Notch
BUtiCIInQ_
Schootalnatruction . ...
ISO
~e.,., Haven WV ~
Dom1no s P11za Now Htrtn" apphcetlans lor LPN CNA appilcattons tor a AN Must have own transporta Contractors New AOd1110ns DOWN PAYMEtH " p•o
saecr , Plant &amp; Fertilizer , . ........ .. .... 650
STNA
CHHA
PCA Supervtsor Competitive pay t1onlva1td drtvers liCense 1
grams
tor
you
to
buy
your
~room 2 Bath 2 Ca
Pomt
Safe
Drivers
Sltuatlona Wanted................ ........
120
POle Barns HardWOOd Floor
Compettt ve Wages Mtleage scale and banef tl package year blood draw e)lpenence
homa
mstead
of
rennng
jGarage
Oulbu1ld ln~~
Pleasant
Gall
tpohs
&amp;
Space for Rent.... ••.......
460
and
Cerem1c
T te
ben eltts
1nclueltng available The avalia.ble shift teqULred Send resume v1a
' 100""" tmancmg
lc tose to town PRICEL
Pomeroy locations Apply 1n and
Sporting Goods
520
tnstall&amp;!lon Cuslom Decks
All 1nterested ema1i to
Health Insurance Apply at ts 7P ?A
0 SELL' Code 6505 o
• Less than perfect cred tt
Person
SUV'a for Sale
720
new
Roo ts
new
1480
Jackson
P ke. appliCants should piCk up an phla120mgr0por accepled
~a ll (30")882 33 68
Trucks for Sale
715
Full t1me Med1cal Claim Galhpolts or 2415 JaCkson appi cat1on at 333 Page tamedlc net Background ConstructiOn Licensed and
Upholalery
870
Insured
WV• 036661 • Payment co uld be the. ::::;;::=:;==~
b
tier No expenence neces Avenue POint Pleasant WV Streot Mtddleport OH For check IS required
same as rent
Veno For Sale
730
(3041875
304
2 or (304)593
sMy Must be data led or phOne to!l lree 1 666 441 further tnlorm a!IOn please
Mortgage
Loca tors
Wanted to Buy
090
1115
orgamzed good computer 1393
(7401367 oooo
.
Mollll.l' HOMt:S
contact Holl1e at 7 40 992
Wanted to Buy
620
and typmg sk1tls Please
mR S•tF
Wonted To Do
180
6472 EOE
Wtll do babySiftmg 1n my Besunlul 4 Or 3 lull bathS 2
apply 1n person at Famtly Painters wanted w1th e11pe
Wanledto Rent . .... .
470
complete1y
home 6 OO AU to 5 OOPM car garage
Oxygen 70 P1ne Street nef)ce or w1111ng to learn Part ttme barre ocr needed
Yard Sale- Gallipolis
.072
Sl 000 OBO Calli304)675
remOCieleCI
House
tor Sale
Monday
thru
Fnday
F1
ve
Leave
message
(7
40)367
lor
Good
T1mes
Pomeroy
Yard Sale·Pomeroy/Mictdle.........
074
Gall1po11s No phone calls
3423
Po1nts Area ... 40 99 2 182 1 304 882 2391
Yard Sale-Pl . Pleo•ont
076
must b(l 21 to apply
7680
please
FINAt«:.:ING AVA ~BLE

J06 PLACEMENT

110

i

1·800-334-1203

.... ._.bll~
~e&gt;t.ar

Pubttc~N~o~t~lce~iiii.iiiii~~~~~~~!!'-:N~a~tl~o~nal
Notlca: Ia hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, March 18,
2006 at 10 00 a m.,a
public sale woll be
held at 211 W. Second
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company Is selling
for cash In hand or
certified check the
following collateral·
2002 Pontiac Sunflre
1G2JB524027144464
1992 Dodge 050
JB7FM24W7NP01274
9
1993 Toyota T1 00
1T4V020A3P0004505
Oldsmobile
1992
R o y a I a
1G3HN53L4NH34635
7
1G90 Ford Ranger
X
L
T
1FTCR11YOLUC1646
2
Chevrolet
t 994
Beretta
1G1LV1540RYI74108
1998
Chevrolet
Malibu
LS
IGINE52M4WY18959
1
1986 Chevrolet Blazer
1G8EK13HOGF19646
0
1996 Chevrolet S-10
1 GCCS1445TK1 0060
7
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio reserves the
right to bid at this
aale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
proor to aale Further,
The Farmers bank
and
Savings
Company reserves
the right to reJect any
or all bide submitted
The
above
dalcrlbed collateral
will be IOid "as Ia·
where·!•", with no
expressed or omplled
warranty given
For further lnfor·
mellon, or for an
appointment
to
Inspect
collateral,
prior to sale date con·
tact Cyndle, Stacy or
Randy at992·2136
3115,16,17
I

Historic
Preaarvatlon Act. The
draft
FONStstataa
that the proposed
pro1act'a omplementa·
lion woll not stgnlll·
cantty Impact the
water
Treatment Immediate environ·
Plant, Water Storage ment or have an
Tank, Water Well, and adverse effect on cuiw a t a r 1 1 n a lura! resources/his·
Replacement Project
torlc properties, II
To all Interested par· any, located within
Ilea, this Ia notlflca· the project area The
tlon that the draft U.S
EPA's
draft
Finding
of
No
~ONSI Is based on
Slgnlllcant Impact the agency's review
( F 0 N S I ) , of the EA, which was
Environmental preparedbytheRural
Assessment
(EA), C o m m u n I t y
and easoclated docuAssostance Program,
mentation lor the proon behalf of the
posed
Water
Vltlage or Racine. The
Plant, draft
FONSt and
Treatment
water Storage Tank, EAcan be reviewed at
water
Well,
and
the following loca·
W a t e r l o n e lion
Library·
Replacement project Meigs
are
available for Racine Branch
review and commant
21 0 Tyree Blvd.
The proposed proJect
Racine, Ohio 45771
will consist of con· Hour a: Monday
structlng a new water through Saturday, 10
treatment plant, water am to 6 pm
storage tank and a Comments on the
draft FONSt will be
new elevated plat·
form well In addition, accepted from the
the project consists
public
through
ol lnotalllng water Saturday, April 8,
mains.
Theoe
2006. Please submit
omprovemento
are
your comments to:
deolgned to protect U.S. Environmental
human health by pro- Protection Agency
vodtng ufe drinking
Atlentton:
Julie
water to the local rea·
Guenther
Idents. Congress has Mall Code B· I 9J
designated this proj· 77 West Jackoon
act lor partial funding Blvd
($857,000) through a Chlcago, IL 60604
s p e c 1 a 1 At the close of the
Appropriation. The public comment parisponsor of this proj- od, the U S EPAwlll
eel, the VIllage ol review any commenta
Racine, haa applied received and deterfor
that
Federal mine whether any
modlllcatlons to the
money from the u.s
E n v 1 r o n m an t a 1 proposed
protect
Protecllon Agency
might be warranted II
(U
EPA) aa pert of no substantive com·
the grant application ments are received,
process, US EPA Ia the draft FONSI will
aubmlnlng the draft become final as Is
FONSI, EA, and auo- Once
the
NEPA
coated documentation
process has been
lor publiC comment,
coml'lated,
the
pursuant
to
the
Village of Rae one can
N a t 1 o n a 1 proceed with tho U S
Environmental Polley
EPA grant application
Act
(NEPA)
and process II you hav~
Section 106 of the any questions, please
contact Ma Guenther
Public Notice
LEGAL
NOTICE
Availability of Draft
Finding
ol
No
Significant
Impact
Vollage of Rae ina

s

at (312) 886·3172 or
Mr. J. Scotl Hill at
(740) 949-2296.
(3) 10, 17
PUbliC Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The
Village
of
Pomeroy will be
accepting
ground
maintenance proposala for Beech Grove
Cemetery. All proposala must be received
by 12·00 p m. on
March 27, 2006 In the
Clerk's Ofllce, 320
East Main Street,
Pomeroy, OH The

maintenance season
begonsln the last part
ol April through , Mid
September 2006. Thla
will onclude mowing,
weed eating, etc. with
contractor providing
their own equipment
and supplies . Also
contractor must provide their own lnsur·
ance Cemetery must
be maontalned 2 to 3
limes per month In
wet periods and 1to 2
times per month In
dry
periods.
Contractor will be
paid on completion ol
each complete mow·
lng and with the sal·
lalactlon al Pomeroy
Village
Council.
Pomeroy
VIllage

Council reserves the
right to accept or
reject any or all proposals
Kathy Hysell
Clerk!Treaaurer
VIllage of Pomeroy
(3) 3, 10, 17
Public Notice
In the Common Pleas
C!&gt;url
ol
Meigs
County, OhiQ
Franklin Real Estate
Company
Plaintiff
va Edmond Cooper,
eta I
Delendants
Notice
by
Publication
Case No 06 cv 011
To Edmond Cooper, II
living, Last Actdreot

~Ish~

1635 South Saint Paul
St.,
Denver.
CO
80210,
Currant
Add••••· Unknown,
and If docaaaad, the
Unknown
Heirs,
Devisees,
Successors, Assigns,
Next
ol
Kin,
Administrators,
Executors
and
Spouses, If any, of
Edmond
Cooper,
Names
and
.1\ddresaes t.JAicnown
and
Annabelle
Schneider Cooper, If
living, Last Address
1635 South Saint Paul
St ,
Denver,
CO
80210,
Current
Address Unknown,
and If deceaaad, the

Unknown

Heirs,

Devaaeea,

Succ:easors, Aaslgna,
Next
of
Kin,
Admlnlatratora,
Executors
and
Spouaas, II any, ol
Annabelle Schneider
Cooper, Names and
Addresses Unknown
You are hereby noli·
fled that you have
bean
named
Defendants In the
entltlled
action
Franklin Real Estate
Company, Plainllfl, vs
Edmond Coopar, at
at., Defendants. This
action
has
bean
assigned Case No
06CV017,
and
Is
pending In the Court
of Common Pleas of
Meigs County, Ohlo
The object or the
complaint damands
that the real estate
which Is the aub)ect
or the Complaint be
partitioned,
or
ordered sold lilt cannot be partitioned,
that each owner be
required to sat forth
their Interest In the
real estate, and for an
allowance ol atlorney
reea, real estate taxes
and coats
You are raqulrad to
answer the Complaint
within twenty-eight
(28) days alter the
last publication or
this Notice, which witt
be publilhod once
lor
each
week

tc:Jt

~.-.c::.vv.

slx(6)succasalve
weeks. The last pubtl·
cation will be made
on the 21st day of
April, 2006, and the
twenty"elghl
(28)
days for answer will
commence on that
date. In the case of
your failure to answer
or otherwise respond
as requested by the
Ohio Rules ol Civil
Procedure, judgment
by default wilt be ran·
dared against you
and for the relief
demanded In the
Complaint.
Dated
this
30 day of
January,
2006 .
Douglas w. Little
(0007537) Attorney
for the Plajntlfl Little,
Sheets "Warner, P.O.
Box 686, Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769,
Telephone (740) 992·
6689
(2) 17, 24, (3) 3, 10, 17,
24
Public Notice

I&gt;~II"Vc.-~d

the Wast Virginia
Department
ol
Environmental
Protection. Division
of Air Quality, 601·
57th
Street
SE,
Charleston,
WV
25304, for at least 30
calendar days from
the date ol publica·
lion of this notice
questions
Any
regarding this permit
application should be
to
the
directed
Dlvlalon
or
Air
Quality at (304) 926·
0499, extension 1227,
during normal busi·
ness hours.
Dated this 17th day of
March, 2006
By
Appalachian
Power company
Mr Mark C.
McCullough
VIce President
1 Riverside Plaza
Columbus,
Ohio
43215
(3) 17
Public Notice

AIR QUALITY PERMIT
NOTICE
Notice ol Application
Notice Is given that
Appalachian Power

Company,

~~-=•~~""

a

Corporation
has
applied to the West
VIrginia Department
of
Environmental
Protection, 1llvlalon
of Air Quality, for a
Class
11
Administrative
Update lor a material
handling aystem at
the
Mountaineer
Plant located near
New Haven, In Mason
County, West Virginia
The applicant aoll·
mates the potential to
discharge the follow·
lng Regulated Air
Pollutants witt be
Controlled
Particulate
~aller,
0.004 tan/year
Particulate Maner&lt;10
urn, 0 002 ton/year
Startup ol operation
Ia planned to begin
on or about the 7th ol
November.
2006
Written
comments
will be received by

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
BATE
DIVtSION
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PRO·
BATE COURT MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts
and
vouchers or the lol·
lowing named llducl·
ary has been llted In
the Probate Court,
Meigs County, Ohio
for approval and settlement.
ESTATENO. 26901·
Eighth and Final
Account or Robert
Wingett, Truatee of
the Trust Created by
lgtem VI, Sub Item F
of lhe Witt of Ernest
A Wingett, Deceased
Unless
exceptions
are Iliad thereto, sald
account will be aet
lor hearing before
said Court on the
17th day al April,
2006, at which lime
said account wilt be
considered and con·
tlnued from day to

a., r - ; l e _ . . s p . - p e r s .

I - . t l a h t t.e&gt; ..........-c.»&amp;.ar I:»e&gt;c&gt;r.

day until llnelly dis·
polled of.
Any person Interest·
ed may llle written
exception to sa1d
account or to matters
pertaining to the execution or the trust,
not less than f1ve
days prior to the date
set lor hearing
J S. Powell
Judge
Common
Pleas
Court,
Probate
Division
Meigs
County, Ohio
(3) 17
Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
BATE
DIVISION
COUNTY,
MEIGS
OHIO
.
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PRO·
BATE COURT MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Accounls
and
vouchers of the following named flducl·
ary has been Iliad In
the Probate Court,
Meigs County, Ohio

for approval and settlement.
ESTATENO. 32330Second Account of
Sandra
Southern,
Guardian ol the person and estate of
Brenton
Michael

Southern, a

minor

UQteaa
exceptions
are filed thereto, seld
accqunt wilt be set
lor hearing before
said Court an the
17th day or April,
2006, at which lime
said account witt be
considered and continued from day to
day unlit finally dis·
poaad of.
Any person lnteraeted may file wrlllan
exception Ia said
account or to matters
pertaining to the execution of the trust,
not teas than live
days prior to the data
set for hearing
J. S Powell
Judge
Common
Pleas
Court,
Probate
Dlvtston
Melga
County, Ohio
(3) 17

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CLASSIFIEDS

fi2D
'---- - - - - I

�Friday, March 17, 2006
ALLEYOOP

www.mydailysentinel :com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7 :

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

o3 17-06

•

K 9 7

•

J 4

t K 652
"" A I063
.

Parking Lots • Ball Courts • Private
Roads • Driveways • Streets •
- Free Estimates Playgrounds

. 20QI1D' Wldt
VinyVShingle
Only 5181 .00/mo.
Call (740)385-767 1

\. !
'

.

II

•II

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"" Q 75 4

'II

EIP.

,.

~No

HOlSEIIOUl

Locators.

Block, brick, sewer pipes,

Goous

Appliance

Nice 3B 0 house, 1ocated on
~ ~le homes for sale. At. 160, 2 miles !rom Holzer 2 apartments lor rent.
14' &amp; 16' wide. 2 &amp; 3 bed· Hospital, big ya·rd. (740)367- Raci ne, Ohio (short drive

rooms 6 to choose tram 7195.
1996 model &amp; up. (740)388·
Stop renting Buy 4 bed room
8513 (d aytl me ), {740)388• foreclosure
$15,000. Fof list·
17
(evenings)
(740)294.
80
'
ings 800-39 1-5228 ext.
0460 (weekends)
. 1709_
»-~--. ·
~
.
·

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I j.

AND BufuMNr.s

.
H~ I

Warehouse ·
in Henderson, WV.

Pre-

owned Applicanes startin§
&amp;
d
a1 75
up a 11 un er
Warranty,.
also
haveHousehold
Mi!iic . Items

s

rent. Rent inciudes Water. start ing at .99e &amp; up
sewer, trash .
No pets.· (304)675-7999
-..;
·,;Fioi'
O
RititRmriiiiiiio-_.l
Sufficient income needed to --,--~.---10 mlies up Rt. 62, towards L,
New E3erber carpet $6'.951
Buffalo,
Toyota
Plant.
qualify. 740-378-6111 .
yard . Remanents starting at
2 bedroom mobile home in
Currently being used as a 2 Racine, $350 mo. plus $350 2br Apartmen t. 600 sq. ft. $25. Mollohan Carpe l, 76

--

E

.

MOBU

from power plant) Deposit
required , no pets . {740)9925174 or (740)441 0110
•
,
2 Bedroom Apartment avail·
able in Syracuse. $200.00
deposit $350.00 per month

deposit,

years lease, no

r

A

:s

rrialn highway pertect for 4- Bidwell area. ·c lean 2BD,·
wheeler trails, (740)707·
$375/month~
ilicludes
21 09
sewer{wator. References
' 9,acres with 28x32 barn, 5 and deposit required, no.
pets. (304l!l76-4037.
acres, 2 trailer hookups. Call
(740)256-1922.
Mobile home sites for up to
Mason County Acreage tor 16x60 in Country Homes.
Sale (9 18)455-3301
(740)385·401 9 ·

n

(304)675·8635 , ·

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwoo d
Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740 -446 -2568 ·
Equal
::-Ho_u_s_in.::g_O.:.ppo'-:nc:u:nity
_:_._ _
Bran.d new 2BR apts. on
Bob McCormick' Rd. Call for
detail s. (740)441 ·0194 or
(740)441 -1184
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
andlor small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441 -11 11
~or

g f or
A New Horne.?

Tr. "f"the
Class I le dS''
•.•
U

~

Gallipol is, CKC Chihuahua puppy,
female, 18 wks old. light
Thompsons Appliance &amp; fawn and white . 3.31bs.
Repair-675· 7388. For sale, $350 firm (740)992 -5859
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp;' dryers, relrigera- Fox Terrier puppies.
tst
tors , ·gas and electric shots , 1st worming . $150
ranges, air conditioners, and (740)446·4446
wringer washers . Wil l do labrad Or Retrievers AKC
repairs on major brands in registered . Different color,
_
sh_o_:_p_o_ra_t_:_yo
_ur_h_o_m_e·~~ ages 8. price. (740)256-6463
Used Furnitur" .store,·· 130 or (740)645-6527.
•
B I 'II P 'k W h
d
u av1 e 1 e. as ers, ry· Regi stered Border Collie
.
1
1
1
ers, gas e ec nc ranges, pups. Wormed &amp; 1st shots.
mattresses,
couches ,· Imported blood lines, know
dinettes. chests. much for hearing instinct and clasmore. Grave Monuments sic colors. (740)379·9110.
(74Q)446~4782, Gallipolis.
OH. Hrs. 11·3 (M· S).
·p,ru
MUSICAL

r

application· &amp; informatiQn. ; .

ANmrv~
. vv~

..

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II'

IN:.'TituMWir.&gt;

L~-------

For Lease : Attractive, unfurnished, one bedroom apt. ,
r':~~F'""'"":':"'="""'""""":::'""'":=i;;~~ 2nd floor. corner Setond
~~kin
and
Pin e. · No
pets.
~
Referencerequired. Security
deposit. $300 per month ,
water
included.
Call
(740)446·4425 or (740)446·
3936.

T

,.

Fender
and Gibson
'
Epiphone acoustic guitars,
Buy or
sell. Rivi:!rine
h ·
9 · b
n 150
w m h OK
, your C O!Ce
Antiques, 11 24 East Main $
' "740
" '"3792""'01
cas . ' ' u" -•.- ·
on SA 124 E. POmeroy. 740·
992-2526 . Russ Moore.
FORS.4.1£
owner.

i
~~~ I

Commercial Proper ty . &amp;
___
• Building for Sale. 9.9 acres.
Am brosia Machi ne Inc .
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- 20 'bulb BeauSoleil Tanning Route 2 Box 2S4 Poinl

-:--------

room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport
From $295-$444. Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing
. Opportuni1ies.

wv

BedlorsaleGood Condit'ion Pleasant.
25550
· 7:30(3:00po
4)em75-1722.
4
Alyce 6387 prom dress, yel- - : - - - - : : - - - - IQW, s ize 2 , $150. Call Orlando/Disney area. 7/6
(740)388-9556.
nights stay. Paid $600 sell
Modern 1 be~room apt Hot Tub3perSon,28 je1s. 2 for $ 19 ~ good for 1 yr.
pumps with extras $950 (304 ) 362 -00 14
(740)446-0390.
(
_
3041882 3369
WEEKLY AVAILABLE
I n c I u d e · s Toddler bed $30; Double
Re f r igera to r/ M icro wave stroller- Graco $45; Pack-N10
f.uu
1..,.. ...
From $175 To $250 College Play with sun tent and
Hill Motel Call ·(740) 245 _ changing bed $SS; Solid oak
EQUIPMENT
5326
crib $150. 17401578-1076.
Farman
Cub
with
Cultivetqrs. _$ 1.,400 Ford 3
bottom
plows
$ 500

_s1_.5_oo_(3_04_J_6_75_·1~7-42_ _

(304)576-2389

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

Regular Bingo
Starts 6:30pm
Eagles 2171

March 18, 2006
6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Beef Tips &amp; Noodles,
· Green Beans, Salad,
Roll, Dessert
Cost $6.00 Public Welcome
March 18. 2006
5 pm
East Letart United Methodist
Church
Proceeds go to Bt,Jilding

Fund

Eagles 21,71 Pomeroy
·. March .17th
7:30pm- 11 :30 pm
March 18th
8 pm - 12 midnight
Party Time Karaoke
&amp; DJ Service
Barb Coleman
&amp; Jimmy Joe Hemsley

Sponsored by the LSIC : to raise
funds for the students• end of the

year trip.
For advance·tickets, call 675-3620
Over $3000.00 i~ . prizes

Broad Run Gun Club
680&amp; Slug Match &amp;
22 Match
Sunday, March 19th
12 Noon
Outreach. Immunization
Clinic
Sponsored by .Meigs
County Health
Department &amp;
Middleport/Pomeroy
Rotary Club
Saturday, March 18th
toam - 12 pm

Grea t condition .
Asking
$4,500 ca ll (740)446-4096

miles, runs grea1, good on OBO. (740)245-5815
gas, $ 3 ,800 OBO. (740)256 •
903 1 or (]40) 256 "1233 ·
89 Honda Goldwing wltra il·
93 Toyota 4 Runner 4x4 er, Scyl. , 45,000 miles. very
$2,800.
good snape, well main- ,
93 Thunderbird
Super lain ad, Cover, extra lights
and
chrome .
$7 .150.
~;~~g:( ~~;~S-i~~~)3B8- (740)44 1·5540.

i~

Licensed Home Builder

West

Norrh

Pass

Pass
Pass

2•
4•

4.

East

All pass

miles, lots of Chrome and
extras. (740)446-9954.
....

i

s

BoAlS &amp; MCJI9RS
FOR S

I

PASTIN' PATCHES ON
A PASSEL 0'
PUGNACIOUS
POOL
PLAYERS

and Sen

Heating
Cooling
R f ·
t'
e ngei"a 10 ~
•
•

•

24

hr'-~•mr•~kr•gen("y

.,., ..

Lice n""' &amp; lnsurt'd

Onr 3U ye .. rs
cxperienct.

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

Alf types ot roofing:
New or Repair
See(T1tess Guner
Downspout

Ed Dill/owner
(74U)992-4100

FREE
ESTIMATES

C huck Wolfe/Mgr.
i740.) 99l-0496

(740) 9~9-1405

1999 GMC w/extended ca b,
loaded . 305 engine, automalic, 67,000 miles, good
.clean, solid truck. •excellent
condition, sa ,5·o o OBO

'WfW \Sf\l'\ 11'-.C:Rt: P.. ~LF­
CL£1\N I~G F!&lt;: \C&gt;c.E.:;:.;~~=----1

hand 1 returned to dummy with a spade
ruff, and ran the diamonds. West lost only
one spade and one cl ub. Plus 850 gave
New Zealand 16 international match
points.

591-4348

AstroGraph

2 man Bass Boat New with
electric anchor, 4.5 gasoline
Mercury engine, new battery
$2,300 OBO • (740 )441 8299

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AA~~,.!'

~740)367-0624 .

types. (740)245-5677 or
-------~~ (740)645· 7400
98 Dodge Dakota Sport. 2
WD, Red , Auto, V6 mag ..
·
$5.800.00. 388!.9693
·
For s a le~ Parts vehicles .
n1ce.
199 1 F250 314 ton pickup.
or 740-742-2662.
- - - - - - - - - lull size Bronco. 87 &amp; 86
Chevy Colorado Ext Cab Bronco II. ( 740)37~·9887
'05. Auto , 2WD, w/bedliner.
. . . Kelly
MCaiOR·
..~H~o!.
excellent cond1t1on
f'LI"•rr~
Blue Book $14,600, will sell
lor $13,000. (304)523-1179

ll'lU

r

4X4 •

1.

2003 Jayco Eagle 34' 51h
wheel w/sllde out. New con·

FOR SALE

.._'_iiiiiioiiiHioOMiiiFii:iiiiiiotP

~

IMPROVEMENTS .

,. ADYERTISEYOUR
· BUSJN'ESS
oj!

OMJHIS PAGE FOR.

ASlOW·
AS
.

ME:'

-~=
SaturdaY. March 18,2006

JENNY ~

WEAI',iNC,

COLOGNE!

IMPORTS
Athens

{740)441·1014.
----:-----,--.·
2001 Dodge Ram hucK
\...\_,['~~
,
2500 SLT Hea vy Duty,
springs, ca"1Per spec1al, 10. BUDGET
TRANSMISply tires . $7,500. Ca ll Ed SIONS, Double bolted . All

-:... KOFf~ ~~~

T
Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
4577 1
740-949-2217

f'-'1'x1cr-

.•• :t,0·11i'db\,;
Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

ROBERT
BISSELL

"I nsured"

CDNmiCTI81
• New Homes

PEANUTS

• Gara~es

• Complete
Remodeling

llOW ARE THINGS

I PUT BURNT CORK

,, PAit•ITIN6

IN LEFT FIELD,

UNDER Ml( EVES JUST
LIKE THE PRO$ ..

TilE LILY ''
llUH? '

740·912-1m

PIGPEN?

. MANAGERS ARE
ALWA'fS SA'fl N6
STRANGE T~INGS ..

Stop &amp; Compare

• Leave a message

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

/rl7t.r:"""'-.~ ..:-.

"----=-""

Room Addhlons a
Remodelin"
HewG•ntg..
El~trlcal&amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutter•
Vinyl Siding· &amp; Painting
Pallo and Porch O.CIIs

SUNSHINE CLUB

ShOU ld.
LEO (Juty 23- Aug 22) -

Although you
may not 1ntend 11. you could come ofl being
a tntle toO d1ctator1al with others You· may
l&lt;;~ l s et y thmk you're be ing imoress1va . but
sadly you' ll be anythmg bUt
V I ~GO (Aug 23·Sept 22) - Associates
Will have a d1ff1 cull t1me attemptmg to hve
up to your standon;t s and exPectations
· today. Unforl unately, you could have a ten ·
dency to lead by demands, not examples.
LIBRA (S e p t 23-0cl. 23) - Str ive to be
totally open about your intentions and ·
methods of dorng things when managrng
the resources ol other s. II yOu are not, you
co uld eas1ly be misunderstood.
SCOR PIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - You tend to
be a shanng anq giv1ng person under
mosl c•rcumstances, but today, for fe a•
so ns known only to you , your focus may
tJo m01e on yoursell. Others could find you
too self-serv1ng.
SAG ITTARI U S (Nov. 23 -Dec. 21) Farling to )'leld to your bett er judgment wil l
make you yol:lr own worst enemy today
Wha t ypu do to ~ourse lf will be far wp rse
than anythmg the world mght lhrow at

· WV038725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-G21 S
1-'0J!lf'fi)~

2"- Ye lfS

( lil l i1

Loc,l l f Jfll'fiC'n'

f'

·Economy Beef $8.25
-Shade R1ver Beef $8.75
·Whole/Shell Corn $7.25/Bag
·Cracked Corn $8.25/Bag
·Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag
·Shade River Hog Feed $8.85 .
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

GARFIELD
L-ET'S PL-AY "HIDE AND 5fEK.'
GARFIEL-D!

Shade River AG Service, Inc

.

t
I

EIGHT, Nl NE, "fEN ...

READ&lt;.'. OR NOT',.
__,.......__
' ,HERE I COME/

35537 St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-3 31

740-416·5547
Now Available At

The Daily Sentinel

992·2155

HAUM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors
..Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard Work !"
Mid-Si1.c 4Whce l Drive Tractor
.with

24
·27

34

57

CharlotteStock on
hand: abbr.
Substantial
Varie1y
shows
Night fliers ·
Bouquet
Forensic
scleilce tool
Phrcsique,
afangfly
Like a bow .
string

and yang

Deep sleep

. DOWN
1 Pricey car
2 ·Churn up
3 Otherwise

21 Begrudge
24 Crowd
25 Jed! &lt;illy
26 Longtime.

39 Out
of """'ti
41 Aden'l
country

28 Novelist -

45 Alone

Ferber .
29 Save a
coupon
31 Fonnar

46

Swit costar 42 Zorro atltre
27 Womanizer 43 Pro votn

4 Leaves

5 Alcove
6 Gold, In
Peru
7 Moat chatty

Krict&lt;s""""'

8 Earle faef(2--)
35
tng (2 wds.) 33 Unser and
9 FrankenGore
36 Indigo plan1
stein's
35 like a sour· gofer
37 Martial art
39 Book jacket 10 Felines
parts
11 MS readers
40 Bobby of
.19 Coral

fee hockey

Island

WIX~.

chaeae
•
47 Cleaning •
· Implement :

49 Meye.. of
"Kate ..
Alfie"
51·

That, In
Mexico

ball

36 Planting
guide

38 ' Baroq-ue
slyfe

-

EFEIB - JPFX

IB

o.z

LSPFLS

JSFXOFA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'When in doubt. sing loud.' - Robert Merrill
'It 's OK i1 you mess up. You should 'give yourself a brea&lt;.'- Billy Joel

r~~~;~r S©\\cS\llA-Ltt.~s·
10tlt4
CLU l . 'OLIAN
0 ~eorn:r,;t letten of tl-:•

.... :
IAMI '

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four Krambled words beID".v ro form four Jimpll words..

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ERUGSH
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"My husband is always
hurting people's feelings,"
my sister cnnfided. "He

G 1 L C N /"'

1----,/-TI:-'5 ..,,~6---,1~:
.__._
__._
_--J_'-_._-....J ~-

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. usually says what he think•

I. IT HI I·1S•.,C NI j ()

without -------,." ·

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---'----''----'--"----'-----' vov

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Co~p l~to tho ch"':l~ ovoiod
by f11!•ng In th• m•ssmg Wofds
dt'elco lrom stoo No. J bolow.

P ~ INf NUMSf QfO
U !T l i S IN SQW,RfS

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 3116/06
Rilfi(y - Truth - Jolly - Ironic- HOT AIR
TwQpolitici31\S were trying (0 win tl1e votes of senior
citizens. One elderly 'man commented d;at votes can only'
show which way the HOT AIR blow&gt;.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

yo c

FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY
1·4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
l Luxury· Also HUD
Also Commercial Space

•

56 -

CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Don't
get angry at your tnends 1! you decide to
do whAt the group hBS planned and then
en c1 up spend1ng lar more ihan you can
afford l!'s up to you to know When to call it

..

.$27.00 PER MONTH!

By Bernice Bede O.ol
You might be eJC.Posed to so me of life's
bigg er competitiVe deve loPments 1n the
year ahead. but you'll handle them masterlully. Othe rs will see you as an intelligent compe titor, an d they will end up
admiring your enterpris e.
PI SCE S (Feb. ·2()--M arch 20) Befo ~e
mak ing any promises to others today. be
sure you 're capable of delivering what you
say you can . You won't took Qood if things
go wrong and
can't come throu gh lor
them Know where to look lor romance.
and you'll fmd it
ARIE's (March 21-April 19) - Assistance
from others upon wh ich ·you have been
counting 1sn 't apt to co me throu gh for you
today. due to unforeseen ci rcumstances.
Whatever yo u had planned will ha ve to be
done alone
TAURUS (A pril 20-May 2 0 ) - Getting all
ol the 1family to pull together for the pur·
pose of accomplishing a pro1eCt co~ ld be
tar more d ifficult than you anticipa te
Everyone seems to have nrsfher. own
plans.
'
GEMINI (M ay 21 -Juhe 20) - It's not
unusual lor you _to enjoy cono,: ersmg with
everyone within earshot, but toda)l thiS
could mterfere with your productive
desires !1 you 'te 100 dis 1racte0 . you'll ' not
get anyth1ng done. .
C AN C E R (June 2i·Jufy 22) Be
extre'mety sele ctivo olthe types of persons·
you choos e to tun around wrtll If you
dec•de to be with a lot of h ee spe nder s. Oe
prepared to bloW lar more money than you

You

1/1411 mo. pd

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
.CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
· work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

23

Pedro's

coin

CELEBRITY CIPHER

~

'
1984 Sea Ray Cuddy.
140hp, 19ft. Interior In good
_ _ _ _ _ _ __;;_ sh ape.
run s
great.
96 Buick LeSabre 97,000 $3,300(neg.) Call (740)992mi.,, needs body work and 7478 or (740)416· 1903

. 740-742,2293

.

I'M 50 TURRISLE TIRED I ' M
TALKIN' IN TONGUE
TWISTERS !!

.

u

ll.l. Wrlle..au•l

Call Gary Stanley

H

I WUZ UP PAST DAWN

~~;:;:~~~~~~~~~~~=~~·

L----iiiiiAiiLE-_.1

1998 Jeep Wrangler 4X4. 4
BASEMENT ·
Angus Bulls, two X·breds, 4 cld ., auto , air, soft top ,
WATERPROOFING
84.000
mi
..
$8,500:00.
740·
.heifers. Excellent breeding.
Unconditional lifetime guarSlate Run Farm. See 742·2357.
antee. Local references 4-Jr·
www.slate r unfarm .c o m .
2001
Blazer LT .4114 , nished . Establi shed 1975.
( 740 )286 . 5395 ·
9 1.ooOmi. loaded , New Call .24 Hrs. (740) 446Breeding age registered Goodyears. Onstar. Leather. 0870. Rogers Basement
Holstein Bulls (304)674- All Power. $7.900. {740)245- Waterproofing.
0209
9245, (740)367 -0624 ,

•

.

www.tlmbercree.kcabln..try.••

94 Ford Probe comes with 99 Harley Fat Boy. 9,400

trans . $ 10,000. (740)25661 1
t ·~

LIVfSIOCK

'Hardwood Cablneerj And FurnHure

7

system , d1d overheat but
hasn't recently, no AIC, fast
d
oo
an easy on gas 7 .
(740)64 5-33861 (740)256·
6281 _
- - - - - ----'--95 Camara. black. T-top,
autO. $1,800. (740)256-1618
or (740)256-6200

BARNEY ··
.
CANCEL MY 'POINTMENTS, NURSE "

I 1Q

1

To balance the bool&lt; s after yesterday's ·
column , here is a double game-swing
gained by the New. Zeal and women 's
team against Fra nce , the eventual win·
ners. at las t year's wa ~ld championships
held in -Estoril, PortugaL
Agains1 four spades, the French West led
her singleton diamond, East w1nning with
her qlleen and returning a low ,diamond.
South rutted high , drew trumps in three
roun ds, and cashed the club' king. When
East obligingly played the 1ac~. Soulh ran
her club nine to )laid her loSers to two ·
hearts and one diamond: pl us 620.
At lhe other lable, lhe New Zeala nd West
overcalled one .spade with a gossamer·
thin two hearts. North made a.negative
double, and East jumped to tour hearts.
South Co ntinued with four spades, but
East pushed on Ia five hearts . North doubled this m the pasS-out seat.
North led a trump, usually the best lead
against a high·level sacrilice. Here ,
though, it was a disaster. (If North leads a
black su/l,. the detenders ·can triumph .)
Paula Mc l eish , the decl arer (West ),
by Luis Campos
Celt!OO!y C1ph@r cryptograms 11e oeated hom quolirllons by lanY.lUs people, paat .-.:I17Mnl
played as if lookin~ through the cards.
Each lenrr m !tie opher stands lor arlOther
She won with her heart ace, overtook the
roaay·s clue: HequsiS P
dia mond jack with the dummy's queen,
ca she~ t he dummy's heart k1ng and dia·
" HMG OX EFEIBVOX PX , GBS IHEG ,
mond ace, then r~Hed a diamond in hand.
She how exited with a club. The defend~
OXA .RPM WOX OKZORI LSG OXPGBSF
ers won , cashed their spade trick, then
exited with a spade. West ruffed on the
EFEIBVOX GP GMFX BEV. "
board, trumped another diamond ' in her

(740) 992 0496
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Utilities .
Carmichael 1998 C hell_ TRK 3500 ex.
5quipment (740)446·2412. cab 4x4 Dually 350 auto

BASKET GAMES
Friday, March 24, 2006
6:00pm
Point Pleasant Middle
School Gym

"02" Honda 919, 2.200 miles
with cover and tank bag.

.lUST T,.INt:: OF Mti&gt;ITATION
/ AS "MtNTAL FLOSS:'

radiator. new'\tires. battery.
brakes and rotors . $1,500 1997 Yamaha Jets~i with
080. (740)446-9632
-'.::r""'"-~.;....._,.__., tra iler· yellow &amp; wh. ite· as~,;
.15
TRuc~·s
in.Q $2,700 OBO - call (304)
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St. Patrick's. Day
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South

eleven

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From a double minus
to a double plus .

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Bay Auto
with or
remodeled,
reference Vine
St. ,
wirhOut
a11 Center,
q~:npment.
1 pets, 00 calls after 9pm, Newly
required,
in Point Pleasant.
(740)446-7444.

acre lot. Business at same
location for 50 years &lt;740 )992 "5039
304)586-466Lars6 &amp;
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5_m_i-nu-t-es-fro_m_to_w_
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$4001 · th d s't &amp; eta •
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man ' epo I r r~
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(740)446- 9342 after Spm.
1 acres on Oak Hill Ad ., Attention
Conatructlon
CheSter, Ot"lio, water. gas. Workers. Fully furnished -2
· elm::tric
on
property, bedroom, 2 baths, very nice.
$1 5,000, 304-483-7550
Located In quiet residential
· ~
Oh' 74Q22 acres, wonderful view, area In rumerO'j. 10.
ridgetop property, close to 992· 1517 or 740--992-0031.,

MmoRCYa.t:-;/

1994
5
delivery. Only
$7,595. about 140 .000 miles. Needs
{937)7 18· 1471, www.nation· engine. SBOO obo. (740)339 • 1999 Harley Davidson Ultra
-'Wiz
·d~ep;.o,.le,.b..
ar":n~s...
co;.m_ __, 2356
Classic. Loaded. Excellent
condition, 29 ,000 total mites.
.- I!.J-3
1996 Grand Am, V-6, 4 dr., Price $13,500. Ca ll 740·
' .
S . _ _. ,good con d,.t,·on, $2200,, 949 -2217 untll 7 pm.
..__ _iomiiiRiiiiiiiAiiLEiii
,
(740)992·3 138
AKC BaSsett hound pups, 6 - - - , - - - - - - 2000 Yama ha Road Star
weeks old, $250 male. $300 2001 Grand Jeep Cherokee
female. Catt (740)256-68.77 Limited. white . new tires. ~o~~~~·6 .~6(730~ii~~s5.2~~~
excellent condition. $ 12,500.
AKC Boston Terrier puppies. 17401446 _4060 or 17401367_ or (304)593·5157
2 brindle, 2 black and white. 7762
$400_ Ready 3/15/06. Call - -- -- - , - - - 2005 CRF250R barely rid·
(740)441 -1047.
2004 Dodge N&amp;on 37,000 den , never raced , $3,900

r ....

New Homes 1 Additions
1 Remodeling

1

..
. _.1. ,

Police lrn poundsl
Call740·245-5121 .
Cars from $500. For listings
Pole Bern 30x5Qx12 teet 800 -391-5227 ext. 3901
---::---:---:-'--· ed meta1. sld
1
pamt
1 er, ree
Ford EscOrt LX spd

with delivery. Call Elaine leave message
(740)385-0698.

ALTilll

windows, lintel s, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Gran~e . OH $500!

Ntce 198? 14x70 3 bedroom House for Rent in Point
(304)675·6224
home. Only $6,995 ..Will help Pleasant

If 4 WHEELERS

r~,-...;FOR-.IiSALiiiiiiE
10

41

FRANK &amp; i:ARNEST

Owner

self-storaae·

lit\ '\'I I'( lUI \I UJ\

• Payment could be the
same a.s rent.

Call (740)385-9948

C huck Wolfe

"Middleport's only

accepted
Mortgage
(740)367-DOOO

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baths on Ohio St., Point home ihstead of renting.
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• .If you have a question or a com'ment, write: NASCAR This Week; C/o The 'Gaston Gazette , P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia , NC
Nl

)(If I

c : tlt•

a Race: Golden Corral 500

a Where : Atlanta Motor Speedway,
Ham pton, Ga. (1.54 miles) , 325
laps/ 500.-5 miles.
a When: Sunday, March 19
a Last year's winner: Carl Edwards
a Qualifying record: Geoff Bodine,
Ford, 197.478 mph, Nov. 15,
1997.
a Race record: Bobby Labonte,
Pontiac, 159.904 mph , Nov. 16,
. 1997.
a Las.t week: Had it not been for
the roar of racing engines. might it
have peen possible to hear the
swish of the nets and the sound, ing of a buzzer'?' On a sporting
weekend otherwise dominated by
basketball, Jimm ie cJohnson won
the UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400 with
the NASCAR. version of a buzzer
nearer
a new inarea, similar
will have been

.
'

~!&gt;Speedway

Motorsports CEO
·, 8n.lt9n Smith also announced
plans to build condominiums
cwerlooklng turn one. ~und fa.
mi.liar? Smith has built similar
units at his tracks near Char- ·
, '!(ltt8, Fort Worth and Atlanta.

·

J.J.

YELEY .

•-.. t

I~

If !"'!9

beater. Isn't it funny how a last lap
erases from memory the humdrum
racing that preceded it? Jimmie
Johnson, given an opportunity by
debris on the track and an overtime finish, took his Hendrick
Chevy and drove the lane on Matt
Kenseth 's Roush Ford with the
clock winding down. T)1e race took
3 hours, 2 minutes, 13 seconds.
When Johnson pulled ahead - he
led by about half the length of his
Monte Carlo at the finish line - the
time on the clock probably wasn 't
even a second. Officially he led
one lap, but the precise distanc~
was likely no more than 200

yarqs.

BUt;(; H bEHI.S

• Rac:e: Nicorette 300
a Where: Atlanta Motor
Speedway, Hampton,
Ga. (1.54 miles). 203
laps/ 3.12.62 miles.
a When: Saturday,
March 18
a Last year's winner:
Carl Edwards
a Qualifying record:
Greg Biffle, Chevrolet.
192.300 mph, Oct.
25. 2003.
.
• Race record : Mark
Martin, Ford ,·151. 751
mph, March 8, 1997.
a Last week: Kasey
Kahne drove a Dodge
,to victory in the Sam's
Town 300 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

NEXTEL CuP SERIES

No.

18

C RAf-l'SM4.N

HfU&lt;:~

a Race: John Deere 200
• Where: Atlanta Motor Speedway, Hamptqn, Ga. (1.54 miles),
130 laps/ 200.2 miles.
a When: Friday, March
17
a Laat year's winner:
Ron Hornaday Jr.
• Quallfyllll! record:
Rlck ·crawford, Ford ,
182.735 mph, March
17,2005.
•liace record: Ron
Hornaday Jr., Chevrolet, 142.424 mph,
March 18, 2005.
• Last race: 1\itark Martin, in a Ford, won for
the second week in a
row, this time at California Speedway.

·

· F£UD OF THE WEEK ·

l

v

INTERSTATE 8ATIERIES CHEVROLET

E

R

I
Tony

· MallY drivers like the track the
, way it is, by the way. Smith insists the higher banliing will
make the racing more exciting
for the fans.
.,. The four Busch Series races to
date have ail been won by drivers who compete regularly in
• Cup . Tony Stewart, Greg Biffle.
: Oenny Hamlin and.Kasey Kahne
• have each won once.

.

• • Mark Martin; who's two-for-two
~ In Craftsman Truck Series
• races, praised the professional:· ism of the drivers in that ser.ies .
• Martin said the truck racing is
• : the best In NASCAR.
; .,. The odds seem to ·favor a split
between owner Richard Chi I- ,
dress and driver Kevin Harvick.
No final decision has been
made, but many expect Harv1ck
to be In a Toyota next year.
; .,. Casey Mears has emerged , at
• least so far, as· a Chase con• tender. It wasn't that long ago
that Mears was worried whether
he would even have a ride this
year.
.,. Some of his detractors have
likened Jeff Gordon to a statue .
Now they can go see his likeness at Madame Tussaud's Wax
Museum In Las Vegas.
.,. If you're wondering why
NASCAR hasn't had a hall of
fame before now, it's because
the National Motorsports Press
Association has maintained a
Stock Car Racing tiall of Fame
for more than 40 years. It's .
housed at Darlington Raceway
in South Carolina . .

•
..

WHO'S HOT
ANI&gt; WHO ' S NO'T

• .. Who.. llllt
-Jimmie
Johnson's average finish
is1.33.
That's jllmost
as good as
FD~ In pres~
dentlal elec&gt;

liOns.
~ .,;. Who'* iiOt -'IJle champ,
Tony StMart. ·1$ currently a
f!Ot-~lof!Y 19th' In-the $land-

' .., li18$,, 'and It's mostly his own
: doing.. ·tie must be \hanklng

·· his l!lCky stars for the Chase
• .100nat rlglit now. Hfl's 236
behlild John!lon, but ,
~ :pNy 69,out of 10th place.

·- Jl!il'iits

Stl!wart

s
u
s

Kyle
Buach

Tony Stewart
vs. Kyle Busch

Veley's long path to Nextel-Cup came through the open~wheel ranks
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

Could J.J. Yeley, one of two rookies competing this year
in the Nextel Cup Series for Joe Gibbs Racing, follow in the
footsteps of teammate and champion Tony Stewart?
That's a lot to ask, but Yeley and Stewart have more than
a little in common.
·
Yeley, from Phoenix, Ariz., is 30 years old. When Stewart
debuted in NASCAR's premier series in 1999, he was 27.
Stewart won three times as a rookie, but at the time, he had
never won a Busch Series race. Neither has Yeley. Both carne
up in the open-wheel divisions of the United States Auto Club.
As it turns out, both surprisingly displayed a knack for
road racing early in their careers. Yeley surprised many by
finishing fourth in t)le Busch Series race at Autodromo
Hermanos Rodriguez in Mexico City on March 5. His teammate, Denny Hamlin, won the race.
Yeley finished in the top ·10 in the season's first three
Busch races. A year ago, it took him 15 races toget his second top-10 finish.
"We have achampionship-contending team, and we plan
on staying up there all year long," said yeley, who will compete full-time in both Cup and Busch.
Stewart, now a' two-time Cup champion, has said many
.times that ·he found the more powerful Cup cars easier to
drive than the Busch cars. The light, powerful sprint cars
and midgets have provided a sound foundation for the
NASCAR careers of Stewart, Jeff Gordon, Ryan Newman,
Kasey Kahne and others.
"Last·year," said Yeley, "I just put too mqch emphasis in
trying to run well. I tried too hard and got myself into bad
positions, and that's something I have had the winter to reflect on.
"If you can go out and finish top 15, top 20 every week,
not have any accidents, crashes, have that average finish,
that's going to put you Top 10 in points. That's going to win
you Rookie of the Ye.a r. You just have to decide if you want
to go out there and put the car on the edge, give yourself
that position to win a race, or if you want to go out and
make sure that you finish. Start out, I just need to make
sure that I just take things easy, work my way up consistently. This year is going to be a lot.different for me." '
Yeley was quick to add that adjusting frQm USAC racing
to NASCAR is a considerable change.
"The biggest thing for me is that I'm used to races that are
20 minutes long," he said. "I'm used to running a 30-lap race
on a half mile, so .I've had that mentality for so long that you
race the guys as hard as you can when the green flag drops
to the checkered flag.
"In the Cup side, you learn a lot more that a lot of guys
·will let you go, and you cruise for a while. For me, it was
just hard getting used to cruising along for that long."

'"

The story is starting. to grow legs .
Each 1\eek, they run afoul of each
other. Busch says he doesn't know
what he's doing wrong. Stewart says
he's getting in the way at a time of
the race when it doesn't make
sense. Stewart let his anger get the
best of him this time. Busch. mean·while. finished third . .
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives hla·take: "The reigning
champion has a fast car every 1\eek
and relatively little to show for it so
far. That probably won't last the entire season, but. Stewart's impa·
lienee might last a lifetime."

·

YOUR TURN
LfTTERS fROM OUR READERS

That Newman's tot a lot of
nerve to call out Johnson
thought it took ~ne heck of a lot of
nerve for Ryan Newman to come
right out and accuse the '48' ·
team (Jimmie Johnson) of cheating
in their. last three wins . Appa_rently.
he's asking for a target on his back .
I'm sure I'm no! the only one who
finds it odd that Mr. Newman can
consistently run like a bat out of hell
for two laps but never over· the long
haul. ...
Maybe he needs to make sure all
of his windows are lexan before he
starts throwing stones .
As for fault, or blame lying, I put
• it right at NA$CAR 's feet. They have
homogenized this sport to the point
where these drivers are but a small
step away from driving IROC-style
cars. They say it is to give the
smaller teams the same advantage.
They say it is for safety. They say all
sorts of (stuff). I say they are making this sport more boring by the .
week.
.
.lt.needs to go back to letting the
teams build the best car they can .
Saying that this is detrimental to
smaller teams is ludicrous because
no matter what, in this era small ·
teams are alwMs going to be at a
disadvantage. : ..

I

John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

JJ. Veley is competing full-tin\e .in both Nextel Cup and the Busch Series
this season.

Suaan Eblin
Papillion, Neb.

He's currently third In points. In Buscll and 21st In Nextel

Cup as a .rookie.

Spring&amp;..
StJironer
·First Aid Guide
Emergency Servlces.... l
Burns............................ 4

Eye lnjurles ................,6

Most emergency doctors see

Bleedlng ....................... 6

a man having a heart attack.

Hearing Needs ............. 8

.Poisons ....................... tO
Dlabetlc ...................... IO

WE SEE·

CPR ............................ Il
Thanks for letting us know h6w
you feel. Ask Ryan Newman for his
opinion, and you will get it.
·

· Electrical Satetr ........ u
Cold Exposure ........... 13

'·

A man· having a heart attack .

Candle Flre ••_.............. 14
Heart Attack .............. IS

Home Toxlns .............. 16
Insect Bltes.......:......... l8
Water Safety ...•. ,........ 19

Child Birth ................ 22'
Heat Exposure ... ~....... 26
Cho~ng

.................... 28

J,

with a wife and three children.

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