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                  <text>·\: '!'!J the River

Inside

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Million
Woman
March

Halloween

saflt!J tips
• Featured on ,_. C1

HI: SO.
Low: SOl

continues

Detalle on
pageA2

~Page AS

•Pill AI•

•

Probe of W.Va.
train crash
•

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Rain continues

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•

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • October 26, 1997

Vol. 32, No. 37

·county home supporter~s rally
in support of half-mill ~ tax levy
POMEROY -About two dozen people braved cool,
wet weather Friday afternoon to attend a brief rally in
support of a half-mill, five-year levy issue for tbe Meigs
County Home.
·
County Commissioner Jeff Thornton, standing on the
steps of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
introduced the Rev. Father Walter Heinz who briefly
read Matthew 25:40 which reads in part "inasmuch as ye
have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren,
ye have done it unto me. •
"This Is not a political issue. This is a pc:ople issue, a
life issue," he said, reminding those present of the need
to see Jesus Christ in other persons.
Afterwards, Thornton commented, "We may be small
In numbers today, but we are big in heart."

County Home

supporter• rally
PropoiiiiU of I

tiX leeue to eupport
the Melp County _-.
Home met In front "'
the Melp County
CourthouM In

The county home issue began in September, 199S
when county commissioners voted to auction off the
county home in ·lbe hopes that the property would be
purchased by a heilth care interest to benefit the county.
At the time, the board cited the building's liability to
the county and indicated the residents eould better be
served by other professional agencies.
About three weeks later, then commission Vice-president Janet Tackett moved the board cancel auctioning
the county home and put tbe Issue before voters.
This August, Howard and commission Vice-president
Fred Hoffman voted to put the Issue on the ballot with
Thornton . abstaining. The proposed levy would raise
$110,000 a year.for the home's operation, according to
the commissioners.

Pomeroy Frklly afternoon. Here, the Rev.
Fether Welter Heinz
and CommiMioMr
Jefl Thornton, ellnd-

. lng on the courthouM ltlpe, lddreM
the amen &amp;':~P thM
ltttndld · 1te
8CIIItered lhowere.

1997-98 HEAP

•
•

'
'

program be-gins _;

Get .To
Your
Child
·Be ore
The
Pressure
Does
Peer pressure. We've
all experienced it.
Remember ·how hard
it was to say "no"
when you were a kid,
even if it meant doing
something you knew
was wrong?
Young people today
3-dmit that pressure to ·
_/'~/'use drugs is intense.
As a parent, it's yourjob to give your child
the facts about the ·
dangers of drug
abuse.
"'
Talk to your kids. Get
to them before the
pressure does.

The·.Daily s·e ntinel
••

• ••

'

.:· .. 3~o,t~all
···results
•l't.,.llf•
It's standard time again

department begins giving flu shots

l-;WA;Siij[No~~(AP~) -

It is

time for another Ameri~n family
ritual, setting the clocks back.
The official hour of change is 2
a.m. Sunday, local time, though
most folks make the change
before hitting the sack, gaining an
extra hour of steep. Of course,
some will get up and use the time.
Daylight-saving time returns
the first Sunday in April.
·

Good Mornin

C 1997 Ohio

Ollllpolle rHidenl Anthony Logan, 11118 23, 18
ahown It the 1111 allot clinic held l'rldey It the 011118
County Junior Flllrgrounde.
Login wa Juat ana of 1111 over 700 I'Midantl who
took ldvlntlgt or the tree clinic to p..-t • winter
run In with the tllrM vlruMI lh8t - expected' to "• hHIIh prabllm.
. According Ia Judy Undw, public health nuFH,
the lnftUBnD YMICine II lmportlnt In prottctlng .,_
pie egalnlt tile flu which can c:euH fever, chilli,
heedachll, cougha, 110ra throathl, end muecle
8Chel.

While many dlaml11 the flu 11 being an -tiling

to tolerltld for 1 few cleye·af dllcomfort -II can be 1

-loul lllnell that Nqulrll hOIJIIIII(Izlllon. Elich

v- t11ou11nd1.of people die from Influenza rt11t1c1

IIIRIIIH Molt dllthe caulld by Inti~ ere In
lkltrly fMOplt. .
.
.
~n got • flu lhotlelt ..., It tiM tnelltlnCI or
h~_l,!rt;!rl.nd, MI.U Price of Oelllpolle. Tille year he
dldn t . hiYI Ia be telkld Into alttlng 8hOih1t - ·
According to Prtca, "I took thllllof lilt y.- end did-

n't gil elck 11 ell. I'm • beiiiYif,In getting tha ahot
lnd eteylng hHIIhy."
.
Tile health dt!*lrMnt will continue giving the
ahole It vartaua location• throughout the county.
Starting on TuHCiey, October 28, flu lhota will be
llllllleble II the County HHIIh Depebllltll In thl
beHment of the courthou11 on Tueldaya tnd Friday• from 8 - 11.:30 a.m. end 1 - 3 p.m.

CHESHIRE- The Emergency HEAP program for the 1997-98 bea~j
season will begin Monday, Nov. 3, and continue through Mar~h 31, 1~
according to an announcement made Friday day by the Gallia-Meigs Com•
. munity Action Agency.
;
The Emergency HEAP Program was created to provide financial U..
lance to low-income households that are threatened with disconnection !It
their heating source, have already had service disconnected or have less t~
a ten day supply of bulk fuel.
-:
Emergency HEAP funds can be paid on behalf or an eligible household
once pc:r winter heating season. The total payment of up to $175 must be sufficient to restore or continue home beating services.
1b be eligible, both the income guidelines and the emergency requirements must be met. Household jncome is defined as gross income for evq
one living in the home, except earned income of dependent minor's UDder 18.
Allowable Income for size of
·soils $15,9~5. thrle persons ~~~:;'hc;~~:hoj,~
$28,155, six persons $32,235. For
add $4,080. for each individual member.
Written proof of income must be provided for the current tbree or twelve
months prior to date of application. Examples of docllfllents which provides
proof of income are payroll stubs, statement from employers, public assiltance payment histories or ~Is letter from Social Security, Worker's
Compensation, Unemploymentlcompensation, etc.
A copy of the family's fuel bill or a document verifying a primary fuel·
supplier must be provide . Also, applicants must provide a copy of a electric bill if they do not ave ectric heat. Households with heat supplied by
PUCO regulated utilities must enrolled on the Percentage of Income PIQ
(PIP) to be eligible for emergen benefits.
:
Applications are also availab ~ r the Regular HEAP program, which is
additional heating assistance of a non-emergency nature. Regular HEAP is a
federally funded program, designed to help eligible Ohioans meet the risina·
cost of home heating this winter. Total household income must be at or
below 150% of the federal poveny level. HEAP helps our area's neediell
residents, who may be on fixed income or among the working poor.
HEAP helps senior citizens and families with children avoid the choice of
'heating or eating" this winter. Regular HEAP applicalions will be accepted
through March 31. The income guidelines are the same for both programs.
Both Emergency HEAP and Regular HEAP applications can be completed at the Cheshire CAA Office. Gallia CAA Outreach office, and Meip
CAA Outreach office. The CAA Central office is located at the comer of
State Route 7 and Route SS4 in Cheshire, The Gallia Outreach office Is .
locsted at 859 Third Avenue, Gallipolis. The Meigs Outreach office is located at 39350 Union Avenue, Pomeroy.'
·
Applications will be taken from 9 am to 12 and from I to 3:30pm Mon- ·
day through Thursday at all three locations. For further information residents may contact the Cheshire office at 367-7341 or 992-6629, the Gallla·
County Outreach office at 446-6849, and the Meigs County Outreach office:
at 992-5605.
•

Project ~hamp adds tutors in its third year
RIO GRANDE - There arc 1.4 million
people living in the designated 29 Appalachian counties.
•
.
The. college-going rate in these counties is ·
10 percent behind the state average and 20
. pc:rcent behind the national average, according
to Ohio Bureau of Regents figures.
That is why the Chairman of the Ohio
Appalachian Cernei for Higher Education,
Barry M. Dorsey, uqp:s K-12 schools to "try to
keep our young pe(lf)le in school past the 12
the grade."
Dorsey is Presid of the University of Rio
Grande and Rio Grande .Community College,

an institution that serves
ciency Test.
many counties in the southAmericaReads, a federal program that pro·
em heart of Appalachia.
vides tutors for students at no cost, as well as
"You earn more in a lifethree tutors from Americorps - another fed·
time with a college degree
era! program- are giving needed support to
than without one," Wayne
the CHAMP program, now in its third year.
White said at a recent meetFrom January, 1994 to 1997, CHAMP has
ing on the Rio Grande cammobilized 81 Rio Grande students and alumni
pus. White is the director of
as tutors, who ~ave helped 670 students from
OACHE. He and Jake Bapst,
20 different school districts in Ohio.
coordinator of Rio Grande's
Doruy ·
Bapst has personally visited with 515 stubranch of CACHE, have
dents in grades one through six since January,
added new services each year to help area 1994.
youth prepare for the Ohio Ninth Grade ProfiThanks to CHAMP and Rio Grande, Trist

Simmons, a second grade honor student from
Meigs County, will have the cost of her cotlege education covered by Rio Grande years
from now, when she is ready to attend college.
Simmons' name was drawn for the tuition-free
gift at the yearly awards ceremony held by the
school districts in 1997.
.
In total, over 8,SOO students have partici~ ·
pated in the services offered by the CHAMP;
program since 1994.
The forerunner to CHAMP, a tutoring program, was started five years ago with a grant
from thr Martha Holden Jennings Founda·
tion.

United Fund for Meigs Co. kicks off '98 campaign
By BRIAN J. REED
Tlmei·Sentlnel Steff
POMEROY - A challenge for increased giving to
the United Fund for Meigs County was issued by the
fund's !998 campaign on chairman on Friday.
Bruce Fisher of Middleport addrhssed a group of supporters and funded '8gencies at the Meigs County Multipurpose Senior Center during the fund's annual kickoff
breakfast on Friday morning.
·
The I998 campaign goal is $20,000. Last year'~ campaign raised in excess ?f $18,0&lt;?&lt;J for 1~1 non-profit
organizations and servtce provoders, mamiy thr~ugh
payroll deductions, but al~ thr!'ugh corporate donatoons
and one-time private contnbutoons.
'I would challenge ~II of yo~ to en70ura~ y_our
friends and associates to increase giVmg thts.year, Ftshcr said. "The United Fund has ~lways met ,~ts goal, .and
it's imponant that we do so agam thts year.
The United Fund for Meigs County was established

in 1993, and is not affiliated with any national organization. All funds raised through the non-profit organization
are distributed to local agencies. Because the organization is operated entirely by volunteers, the administrative cost of operating the United Fund was only $216.83
during the 1997 campalgn.
,
Rev. Keith Rader, representing God's NET, a youth
center affiliated with the Meigs United Methodist Cooperative Parish, gave a brief description of the mission of
the program, which provides center-based activities for
area youth.
.
Other representatives of'funded •aencies were Susan
Oliver and Diana Coates, representing the Meigs Cs~un­
ty Council on Agina and its Yesteryear progra~~t: Hilda
Tirado of Serenity House; Mary Wise from River Bend
Arts Council, who introduced Micheci London of the
Ohio Arts Council; Trisha McCollough from
Gallia/Meigs Community Action Agency; and Monica
Doddrill of the Community ~ult Prevention program.

.
I ••

Also funded through the agency are the Meigs County
Historical Society and Museum, and Boy Scout Troops
249 and 299.
The 19!18 campaign is 10 percent closer to meeting its
goal. Corporate donations to the kick-off were given by
representatives of Peoples Banking and Trust Co. offices
in Meigs County, $750; Southern Ohio Coal Company,
$1,300; and the AEP/General James M. Gavin Plant,
$4SO.
Fund President Chloris Gaul announced that a pan·
. cake and sausage aU-you-can-eat breakfast will be held
at McDonald's in Pomeroy on November IS. Tickets are
available through funded agencies and members of the
United Fund boarc). McDonald's is also filing the tickCHAIRMAN • Bruce Fllhar of Middleport,
ets, which arc $3 each.
Cempelgn Chelrmltn for tht Unltld Fund for, ......
The United Fund for Meigs County will also receive County, eddreiHd a group of fund au=-- It tfie
the proceeds of a doll drcssins contest conducted annu- fund't anriual kick-off brelldlllt on r1c1ey. I'1IMt'
ally by the Farmers Bank and Savings Company, which challegld donora to lncFHH giving to !Mit the
fund'l"1llill goat of $20,000.
.
will be held later this year.

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Oalllpolll, OH • Point Pluunt, wv~

:Aaaaclllld " ' - Wrlllr
: WASHINGTON (AP) - Scores of newly declassi!md intelligence reports frum tbe early Cold War show
:that the CIA in its . infancy was soinetimes prescient
:about events, at other times in the dark.
The spy agcocy released thousands of pages of Cold ·
War documents Friday, most of 'them inteUigetlcc: predictions or "estimates" by a growing team of CIA ana.lysts.
~ Some of the reports proved ~emarkably accurate
.OO.t Soviet moves in Central Europe and the victory of
Communist forces in China in 1949. At Olher times,
DOtably prior to the Korean War, cautious CIA analySIS
stopped shon of predicting hostUities.
, ' By January 1950, five months before the war broke
;0!11. the CIA's Office of Reports and Estimates said,
:"The continuing southward movement ofthe expinding
;Korean People's Army toward the 38th parallel probably
i(:Qnstitutes a defensive measure.... An invasion of SQuth
Korea is unlikely unless North Korean forces can develop a clear-cut superiority over the increasingly efficient
South Korean Army."
Scholars and retired analysts who lltended a seminar
on the documents at CIA headquanetS Friday said it was
too early to teD whether the declassified material contains any nuggets that will change the settled views
about Cold War history.
But the documents provide a window into the opera!ing style of an agency charged with informing the pres..ident in writing every day about tbe risks facing the
!Jnited States around the world.
. A 466-page volume published by the CIA that containS selections from the declassified documents, which
date from 1946 to 1950, notes that President Tntman
Instituted adaily and weekly intelligence brief and read
the 'reports assiduously. Other officials paid less allent(on
to a document
goes from CIA hcadquartelS to
the White
House 10 that
this day.
, Secretary of State George Marshall "stopped reading
the 'Weekly' after tbe firs! issue," writes Woodrow
Kuhns, a former CIA analyst who edited the collection.
"Secretary of th~ Navy James Fonestal considered both
summaries 'valuable but nOI ... indispensable,' accor'ding to one of his advisers."
Preventing another Pearl Harbor-style sneak attack

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -

was the primary reason for establishing the CIA in 1947.
With this charge, CIA analysts were cautious about predieting war, a position !bat made them right more often
than not.
l'l memo dated April2, 1948, is typical of the CIA's
. post-World War U assessments of Soviet reluctance to
go te war. II concluded: "The preponderance of available evidence and of considerations derived from the
'logic of the situation • supports the conclusion that the'
USSR will not resort to direct military action during
1948."
That year tbe CIA had 38 analysts in its Soviet and
East European branch. A dozen of them spoke Russian
and only one had a doctoral degree. Contrary to the
stereotypea about the CIA being an Ivy League bastion,
few in this group had gone to elite colleges and six had
no college degree at all.
In 1946, a report by the Central Intelligence Group,
an intelligence analysis center later folded into the CIA,
wrote a repon on Soviet foreign and military policy that
advanced many of the themes later seen in George Kennan's famous "Mr. X" article in the journal Foreign
Affairs tl)atlaid out the Cold War policy of containment
The Soviet Union, the report said, "seeks to increase
its itfalive power by building up its own strength and
underminin&amp; tbat of its assumed antagonists. At the
same time, the Soviet Union needs to avoid such a connict for an indefinite period."
The Soviet Ubion, the report continues, "will prove
grasping and opportunistic, but Oexibl~ in proportion to
the ,degree and nature of the resistance encountered."
Early CIA assessments of french · struggles against
communist guerriUas in Vietnam foreshadowed the diffiCUities U.S. forces would encounter two d~es later.
"GuerriUa tactics adopted by Vtetnam mrces will
conserve their ammunition and materiel while drawing
French forces into mountainous and difficult terrain,"

IRS.reform w,.I·I. ha·ve to wa ,. t

OIIYln plan1.

.

WASHINGTON ·- The drive to
speed reforms of the Internal Revenue Service through Congress is
running into an imexpecled but significant obstacle - Sen. William V.
Roth Jr., R·Del.
Roth is the chairman of the Senate Finance Commirtee, which held
hearings in September that exposed
IRS abuse and harassment of tax-·
payers.
But he made it clear last week he
has no intention of rubber-stamping
a package of IRS reforms tftat m
hurtling through the House.

I

.fAs summit nears, China says it
Will end nuclear ties With Iran
China as cooperating with nonpro~ ..,_ ~
liferation, Clinton also noted !bat
: ~ASHING~N .(AP) - U.S. Beijing bas made "impoltllll and
~ffJCtals are revtewmg assurances welcome decisions" to embrace
by the Chinese that tbey wiD end treaties to restrict nucleat, chemical
Jheir nuclear cooperation with Iran, and biological weapons, in contrast
J!oping ·that President Clinton can to its history of anns sales to Iran,
approve an atomic energy agree- Pakistan and other nations.
inent in time to announce it next
The bloody crackdown on
\week 11 his suminit with Chilli.'&amp; democnl:y ~ llCir Bci~.
Jcader, !illlB z.;m~.
.
jin&amp;'s. naaanmeo Sq~ in 1989
• Halttng Chma s nw:l~ar ISSIS- placed a strain on U-8.-Cbineac ~ela­
iante to Iran, which U.S. intelli- ti0118: In the 1992 elecaiori camteocc officials believe is.developing · pai1111. Clinton advocated a getIIOmic weapons, allows Clinton to tough stance, accusing President
certify the communist country is Bush of coddling China. But once in
cooperating on nonproliferatio~. - office, . he reversed course and
This. in tum, would open the way dropped his jJromise to link relations
for the U.S. nuclear power industry with China to its homan rights
to sell reactors and materials 10 R:cord.
China, which is developing alternate
"O.ange may not come as quickenergy.
• ly as we would like," Clinton said
The agreement, which U.S. aides friday. "But as our interest&amp; are
had been negotiating for months, long-term, so must our policies be."
was obtain~ in a breakthrough He made clear that he wQUld try to
Wednesday in Beijing, said two alter China's policy through· reason
administration officials who spoke and cooperation rather than by ultiFriday on condition of anonymity.
matums.
"Nothing is sillllecl, scaled and
Jiang, who is the late Deng
delivered yet," said one offiCial, not- Xiaoping's chosen successor, will be
ing the agreement was under review. the first Chinese leader to visit
Asked if a summit announcement Washington in 12 years. Like Clinwas assured, the second official said, too, he bas expressed hopes for
"This is going to depend on what is improved relations. Jiang will visit
said between the two heads of the White House on Wednesday
state."
after earlier stops in Honolulu and
In a conciliatory speecll Friday, Williamsburg, Va.
Clinton said be hoped next week's
Clinton faces criticism frum the
visit by President Jiang would chart left and right for dealing with a
a course "lhat,is more positive and country accused of suppressing
more stable and hopefully mole pro- human rights, religious f(eedom,
ductive than our relations have been free trade and democracy.
for the last few years."
"I know there m those who disIn an address at \1Jice of America agree," be said in his speech. "They
hcadquartetS beamed 10 China llld insist that Cbina's interests and
around the world, the president America's m inexorably in conflict.
atgUed that isolating the Chinese They do not believe that the Cbincse
would be ·~unworkable, counterpro- system will continue to evolve in a
ductive and potentially dangerous." way that elevates not only the
Preparing his case for certifying human material condition but the

human spirit"
"They therefore believe we
should be working harder to contain
or even to confront China before it
becomes even stronger," the president said. "I believe this view is
wrong."
"Isolation of China is unworkable, counterproductive ind potentiall.J ~~rous,~ he said.
Explammg hts polfcy, Clinton
Aid the United 5tata has a profound interest in promoting a peaceful, stable, prosperous world. "Our
task will be much easier if China is a
part of that process, not only playing
by the Nles of international behavior but helping to write and enforce
them."

But rather than rushing to pass
the package before Congress
adjourns, Roth issued a statement
Wednesday saying his committee
wiD get to it -next spring.
The package of reforms stems nOI
from Roth's highly publicized hearings on IRS abuses, but on the recommendations of a commission
headed by Rep. Rob Portman, ·ROhio, and §eo. Bob Kcm:y, D-Neb.
Congress created the commission in
1996 after Senate and House appropriators became incensed over continuing IRS requests for modemiza-

lion funds that seemed to be going to
waste.
The. reform legislations would;
•Create an independent 11-member board to oversee the IRS budget,
operations, and long-term plaMing.
•Make it easier for taxpayetS to
collect damages when the IRS is
wrong.
·
•Shift the burden of proof in tax
court c:aSes from the taxpayer to the
IRS.
•Cut the number of menial paperprocessing jobs that now swell the
IRS' payroll to 106,000 employees.

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or call800·837·2406

addreued tbe bomb - a package 10
Kaczynski's defiuKle.
And there wu no comment from him.."
Kaczynski hu pleaded innocent
tbe defense, which bas argued that
the tests- conducted by doctors for to a 10-count indictment accusing
tile ppecution - would violate birn of using bombs to kill a comKaczynski's constitutional protec- puter store owner and a lobbyist in
tiOD against self-incrimination and Sacramento, and injure two others.
He faces the death penalty if coninvade his privacy.
Defense attorney Quln Denvir victed.
Kaczynski's lawyers have .indi-. •.
also argued that proseculotS were
using the testS to develop evidence ,cated in court documents that he sufagainst Kaczynski.
. fered from paranoid schizophrenia, a
Federal prosecutors believe condition thai illcludes delusions
Kaczynski, 55, is responsible for aU and feelings of persecution.
Burrell permitted tbe government
16 bombings since 1978 attn'buted
to the anti-technology terrorist to have two of its psychiatrists conknown as the Unabomber. He is · duct 40 hours · of tests over seven
charged with four California bomb- days after prosecutotS said they
needed the examination to confront
ings, two of them fatal.
He is charged separately in New a potential meatal-defect defense.
But Kaczynski announced
Jersey with a fatal bombing in 1994.
On Thursday, prosecutors filed through his lawyers in a telephone
court documentS which quoted writ- conference call with Burrell and
ings found in Kaczynski's remote prosecutors that he wo~ld not take
Montana cabin after his arrest in the examination.
He "stated through his counsel
April1996.
The reclusive former mathemat- that he would not submit to the menics professor allegedly wrote "I sent tal examinations as required by the
tbese devices ... They detonated as court's orders," courtroom clerk
they should have" and "I picked the Connie Farnsworth said in a statename of an electrical engineering ment.
The next hearing in th~ case is
professor out of the catalogue of the
scheduled
for Thursday.
Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute and ·

Justice opens inquiry into Babbitt's
rejection of tribe's casino application

·---------------------------.

Intro_dudng Our "Best Rate CDs"

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WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Interior Department agreed to
arrange interviews between some of
its staff members and the Justice
Department, as part of an inquiry
into Secretary Bruce Babbitt's rejection of an Indian tribe's casino application.
The Justice Department opened
the inquiry friday into questions
surrounding Babbitt's decision to
rejecl a Wisconsin Indian tribe's bid
to open a casino.
Babbitt spokesman Mike Gauldin
said the department requested permission· to interview "a couple of
staff membelS." The department
agreed to set up the sessions.
"We will be happy to cooperate
with the Justice Department inquiry.
We are more interested than anybody else in getting the full story of
this out because. there has been so
much misinformation· in .the press,"
Babbitt spokesman Mike Gauldin

RETIREES HONORED - A public receptiOn wu
held Thuraday afternoon 11 Veler- Memorial Ho.
pltal for Scott Lucn, admlnlltrator, center, and Dorta
lhle, admlnlltrattve. &amp;Miatant. Both ara retiring on
Oct. 31. L.ucaa, who has a 35-year affllllllon with the

hoapltal, ancllhle who hn worUd !'*- lor 28 yeara,
ware praaanlld glfll by Jar! Warner on behalf of the
Veteran• Memorial Hoapltal Board of Trult-.
Lucaa waa alan preaantld a plaque In J11C011nltlon of
hla Mrvlce.

Clinton lawyer says Jones' supporters:
will reveal true motives behind case ~
By JAMES JEFFERSON
Aaaoc:latad Prill Writer
UTILE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -

Revealing the contributors to Paula
Jones' legal fund could reveal
motives behind her sexual harassment case against President Clinton,
his lawyer argued in calling for the
release of the names.
Robert Bennett on Friday asked
U.S. District Judge Susan Webber
Wright to order the former director
of the Paula Jones Legal Fund to
tum over donor records.
Bennett argued in court papers
that the president has a right to

the records, saying that disclosing
them would subject donors to
reprisals.
·
The fund was formed shortIy
after Jones filed a $700,000 lawsuit
in May 1994 claiming Clinton
exposed himself and asked her for
oral sex in a Little Rock hotel room
three years earlier. Clinton was
Arkansas governor at the time and
Mrs. Jones was a state employee.
Clinton has denied the allegations and said he does not recall
meeting Mrs. Jones.
· Bennett said contributotS to the

'

fund are not entitled to any spec\liJ
privilege, and that opening the
records would not violate contribu.tors' freedom of speech and associi~
lion, as Ms. Hays claims. He suigested the donor's identities be ke~t
secret unless they are needed at trial.
James Fisher, one of the pan~
lawyers representing Mrs. Jones,
said Bennett's suggestion misses the
point.
"
"The concern is not so much the
identities being disclosed publicly as
them being disclosed to Mr. ClintOn
and his forces," Fisher said.
'

reported Friday night
ment's regional office of the Bureau
that the department
of Indian Affairs recommended
has launched a 30-day
approving the license.
inquiry into whether
A year ago, Babbitt told Sen.
Babbitt was pressuJed
John McCain, R-Ariz., in a letter
by the White House to
that he had never told a Chippewa
prevent the tribe from
· attorney that he was instructed by
opening the casino.
the White House to decide the case.
Babbitt is covered
Babbitt
Ia an Oct. 10 letter .to the comunder federal law that
mittee, Babbitt reversed himself. He
Mrs. Jones'
partiecould lead to the appointment of a admitted \tiling the lawyer that then explore
ularly whether
she motives,
is seeking
to
special prosecutor if ~pecific and Deputy White House Chief of Staff profit from the civil suit and the pubcredible evidence of felonious crim- Harold Ickes had pressed him to licity surrounding it, or to embarrass
inal activity is found. The Justice make a decision. ·
and attack the president politically.
Department is using the same law to
Gauldin said he did not know
Bennett also is seeking informainvestigate fUnd-raising aUegations • what the department was investigat- tion about payouts from the fund,
involving President Clinton, Vice ing or whc&gt; was being investigated. especially whether Mrs. Jones is
President AI Gore and former Ener- He said Justice did not request an drawing expenses and having other
· gy Secretary Hazel O'Leary.
interview with Babbitt.
fees paid by contributotS.
Senate investigators are trying to
"The decision the department
"A party's motives always are
determine whether politics played a made ... is consistent with the Indian relevant to that party's credibility
part in the Interior Department's Gaming Act and the secretary's past and the credibility of her allegadecision in July 1995 to deny three policy in similar situations,'' tions," Bennett said. "lnfonnation
bands of Wisconsin Chippewas per- Gauldin said. "Since the secretary about the legal fund would shed
mission to build a casino at a Hud- has been at the department, he has light on ali these issues."
said.
son,
Wis., dog track.
never allowed a tribe to a~uire land
1
Mrs. Jones and Cindy Hays, the
l tluldik'n!feh'ed questi011s abolf
. The AP reported this week that for a casino off the resei'Vabon when fund's former director, are fighting a
'the il)quiries to !be Justice Dejlart- • internal documents showed the the local community was opposed. subpoena to produce the documents.
Paid foo by Marl&lt; S. MOoney
ment. Justice oft1cials bad no com- White House contacted the Interior And the local community in this Both have asked the judge to protect
2548 St. At. 141, Gaolllpolla, OH. 45631
ment.
Department three times while the case was ... opposed."
The Wall Strcct Journal reported .£8!1ino decision was pending.
in Friday editions and ABC News
The tribes that opposed it, including · the St. ' Croix Chippewa and
Oneida of Wisconsin and · the
Shakopee MdewakaniOn Sioux of
Minnesota, wanted to prevent competition for their own gaming enterprises. The tribes donated more thi.n
S270,000 to the Democratic Party
WASHINGTON (AP) - House
after the Interior Department rejectand Senate Republican leaders ed the plan. ·
agreed Friday to block President
Babbitt's decision to scuttle the
Clinton's national education tests application came after his depart•
but agreed to study an alternative
way for children to IC1111 how !bey
m doing in reading and math.
Clinton, however, said he would
veto any bill tbat stops his testing
plan and accused tbe Republicans of
No Credit, Slow Credit
wanting the government to .'.'walk
,..
away" from public schools.
Bad
CrediJ, Bankruptey?
The. GOP decision to block his
•
testing plan could further escalate
the battle between Clinton and
At Dutch Miller Chevrolet,
Republicans over education. But its
. WE CAN HEI.P
agreement to study an alternative
If You Have At Leu! $1,300
could offer both a way out of the
a month Income
impasse.
c.--h
The measure is included in an
$80 billion . i!PCDding bill for the
Education, Labor and Health and
,·
Human Services departments.
$
SAVE
THOUSANDS
$
"If there's any attempt in ConDon, Pay ThOR High Konlucky
gress to kill this effon at national
tnd Olllo lntareat Ral..t
standards and voluntary testing, li
Mony
V.hlclu
Avtllllllt With
will have to veto it," Clinton toldl
NO
DOWN!
teachers who were visiting the!
ADAY·
White House.
Republicans, he said, "are ready'
to raise the white nag and abandon•
''
public schools."
'
Sparring between the White
House and Congress over education
•
has intensified. House Republicans
have passed bills that would use
direct federal spending or tax breaks
to pay for private and public
..•
schools. And they have rejected his
call for an army of volunteer reading
tutors. .
J
Under the testing agreement, the
current spending bill would force
•
the Education Departmenuo cancel
its ·$13 million contract to develop
pt. pleasant 67+1 000
the tests, scheduled to stan in 1999.
mason 77 3-55 14
Instead, the National Academy of
Sciences, National Governors' Assonew haven 882-2135
ciation and National Conference of
loan hotline 675-AW
State Legislatures would study
whether existing commercial tests
customer sefllice 675-5645
that are widely given could be
tellebanker 675-6961
Member FDIC
•
adapted to give individual students
•• '
an idea of whether they are meeting
•
basic levels of achievement in those
A IXIupon book '- provided to riiCOid your paymenta. Automatic withdniWIII from a depod IKICOunl il not required.
two core subjects.
There ,II a penally aqualto one payment for early withdrawal or laihn to complete chb. Firat weekly paymlfll due the
Those tests, such as the Iowa
week of Oclobar 20, 1997. Final installment paid at maturity.
Tests of Basic Skills, now rate students against a moving average, not ~ 360 Second Ave
•
a fiXed standard that the administra-'
••
4460699
lion wants.
•

'I.----------------------..
R£..ELEC,.
Green Township Trustee

•Honest

• Bardworllillf

GOP leaders
agree to block
testing for now

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111es-11yn. . s fllel .nn ..otbtmpott•ible for .tv.z ,., IIWSibi . . . 10 Cllrim,
"This is a aensible solution to a
problem that could easily gel out of
hand if it is not controUed,'' Kyl
laid. "Gambling by telephone is
already illegal - tbis jll&amp;l extends
the prohibition to the Internet."
MAIL i!IJISCIJPnONI
Senators of batb parties agreed
c-.,
that
it is importanl to reirl, in an
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·

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I

Uaabombor auspect Theodore
Kaczylllki Je~ 10 IUbmlt 10 •
court-ordered psychiatric enm for
pr01«11tors, escalating tbe battle
over whether his
mental state will be
a top issue at his
trial.
.
Kaczynski had
been scheduled to
belin a week of tells today but attoreeya lllllOU:nCCd hili refusal late FriJia~. The decision underscored a ·
furious legal tussle between prosecutors and defease attorneys on
what will be tbe focus of a trial slated to begin Nov. 12.
Prosecution spokeswoman Lccsa
Brown responded by say,ing the government would seck to bar the introduction of any psychiatric evidence,
which would seemingly cripple an
insanity defense.
"We asked the coun that if he
didn't comply, that he he precluded
from introducing that evidence,'' she
said. "It's a question offairness."
There was no indication what
action U.S. District Judge Garland
Burrell Jr. would take in response to

· FIRST CHECKS • Th- COfllllllllea p,.unlld cMclla to Unlllrl Fund far lhlp County 1111111 Cam~lgn
Ct.lrmln Bruce Fllher, left, on l'rlcllly, 11 a part of the fund' a kick-off bruldaat P1111 nllrlll ciMCka Wlft
Sieve Dunlae, Cathy UNCOil and Daa Jtffwa of Pqlu Sink orne.. In Mtlge County, Chlorla Gaul, UFMC
Pl'llldlnt, ~ng Southam Ohio Coal Co., lnd Duane Phlag~r, ...,,.Mn11ng AEP/Genetal Jarnn M.

theAOct.
24,1947,Jeport
said.
document
titled "Probable
Developments in China," and written four months before the Chinese
communists declared the People's Republic, described ·1
tbe revolution as unstoppable.
"The U.S. cannot reverse or significantly check this
course of events, nor is there any prospect that the Sovlet orientation of tbe Chinese comm.unists can he altered
in the immediate future," the report concluded.

ily LAURA MYERS

~

.As trial date nears, Unabo.mber
suspect.balks at mental exams

documents shed light on cold war
Predictions - both ·right and wrong
~JOHN DIAMOND

.

F

• - - - - - -·- --·----

--F'r"----·-----------"--~---~

J

••

�·Commentary
By DeWAYNE WICkHAM
Gannett Nawa Service
WASHINGTON - Bring back

114 448 2342 • FIX: 441 3008
111 Court Street, Pomll'oy, Ohio
114-11112-2158 • FIX: 11112·2157

P.E.
The decline of physical education
in public schools has created a postbaby boom generation of slothful
couch potatoes - teen and young
adults whose' muscles have atrophied and waistlines have grown
prematurely to middle-age proportions.
Only one state - Illinois requires schoolchildren to take
physical education daily from
kindergarten through the 12th grade.
The other 49 nine are in varying
stages of denial about the irt)portanc~ of keeping the body as sharp
as the mind.
That's a serious mistake.
We are fast becoming a nation of
spectators. While the stands of
major league sports overflow with
fans, neighborhood athletic fields
' often stand empty. School gymnasi-

,,

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

Hobart WH~ Jr.
ExiCUIIve Editor

Deadline for publication
for election letters Oct. 28

ums
have
become
the
great wasteland of Ameri·
can education.
So · what,
you say?
Employers
who hire outof-shape work. ers are likely to
experience
Wickham
higher rates of
absenteeism and greater use of sick
leave - costs that get passed on to
consumers.

The lack of P.E. in public schools
even threatens our national defense.
Military preparedness is dependent
not only on the quality of our
weapons of war, but also on .the
physical conditioning of those who
are called upon to use them.
The condition of the current crop
of military recruits is so bad that the
Army has created a special fitness

unit for recruits who fail its entry
leyel physical test. E\ren with weeks
o(buffing up for those who are most
out of shape, S percent oftheArmy's
recruits are discharged because at
the end of basic training they can't
pass a second fitness test.
Desperate to find a few good
men, Marine Corps recruiters now
conduct conditioning classes for
wannabe grunts before they are sent
off to boot camp. In Baltimore, the
young men are attend twice-a·week
conditioning sessions for weeks
leading up to their depanure for
basic training.
And just who pays for all of this?
Taxpayers, of course. Cutting back
on. P.E. classes ·in public schools is
penny-wise and pound-foolish.
Is it less costly to whip older
Americans into shape and attend to
their medical problems that come
' from years of poor conditioning? I
don't think so. More likely, there are
real savings to be had from wide-

--~------------------,

Vou'R~ 1:8,

You S-riU.

\.i~ aT ~Me. 'loll Ha'Je
lW ~.No SKILl.$
4:1NP ~ PROSf@c:'l"&gt;!

· The Sunday Times-Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the Nov. 4 .gen·
eral election. However, in the interest of fairness, no election letters will be
accepted after 12 noon on Tuesday. Oct. 28.
·
Individuals should address issues and not personalities.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used.
.
Letters must be 300 words and preferably typed. All letters are subject to
editing and and must be signed with name, address and telephone number.
Telephone numbers will not be published. No unsigned letters will be pub·
lished. Letters should be in good taste.

•

Vealf, gvT

GoT a
ToTaLLY CooL ·
I'~Q

WeBSiT~!

Campaign finance tactics of
'96 campaign being replayed
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
• WASHINGTON - While Congress investigates what happened before
10 skirt campaign finance boundaries, there 's a rescripted replay running in
New York.
In the campaign to hold the one House seat up for election on Nov. 4, the
~epublican Party is broa!lcasting TV ads against the Democratic candidate
m the Staten Island district without mentioning its own man by name.
' That makes them issue ads, financed with party funds that aren't subject
to the limits applied to candidate contributions.
· All legal, the GOP says, because it is not coordinated with a candidate.
. The situations and the circumstances differ. But the tactics are much like
those for which Senate GOP investi~ators are accusin~ President Clinton of
improperly putting Democratic Party money to use in his 1996 campaign.
: They say he manipulated the system by putting his campaign in control
'of the funds, and they've got White House videotapes that show him talking
~bout it.
.
• Then again, Bob Dole, the Republican nominee, used similar tactics, and
)le talked about it on tape, too.
So go the campaign finance follies.
.
According to the Republicans, Clinton's conduct proves tbe peed for 11.
lipecial prosecutor in Democratic campaign finance cases.
·
: According to tbe Democrats, both parties do it and the whole mess proves
""' need for a new campaign financ~ law.
.
. "We will have campaign finance rdonn," said Clinton, saying the
Democrats are solidly for change _!)ut can't get there without Republican
llelp. "I don't know how long we wi.n have to labor under the illusion that
~t~ere is no responsibility for this issue. or somehow cveryon~ is responsi-

Confusion reigns in absence of logic and common sense
By ROBERT WEEDY
classroom,
Cause and effect is a very interand then wonesting subject, but not a great deal of
der why kids
thought is put to this subject in our
don't learn as
day. In some subject areas many
welL
.-arch dollars may be involved in
-· . · We
verifying the true cause and effect of
allow the stucertain activities whether they be
dents to determedical or engineering in nature.
mine the stanOnce the research is done a new
dards
they
medicine may the result or a new
choose
to
device or technique may be develWeedy
meet ·(called
oped.
social promoWhen it comes to societal mat- lion). and then wonder why their
ters, our relationships with one education level is inadequate.
another and the raising of our chil--We take 'uppers' and 'downers'
dren. we seem to have ·forgotten and drink alcohol. and wonder why
principles we once knew. Logic and our children do drugs.
common sense seem to have been
.. We OK abonion on demand,
lost in ihc shuffle. and the result is and then wonder .why there are not
that confusion reigns.
enough children to fill the schools.
Evaluate. please. a.' to ' whether
.. We remove God from the
we arc illustrating this confusion of schoolhouse, and wonder why chilmind:
drcn act as if there are no rules of
- We protect child pornography ' right and wrong.
as "free speech". and then wonder
-- We deny special creation and
why so many kids arc· abducted or accept evolution a.&lt; fact, and wonder
murdered.
why some among us act like ani- We remove God from our dcci· mals.
sion making process, and then wonDid you score us 10 out of 10
der why evil is taking over.
correct? Serious matters require
· - We want our children to have serious thought. They also involve
things we didn't have, so we give applying what . has been known to
them everything they want, and then work, principles proven by cxperiwonder why they are so materialis- ence. ·
tic.
Another ingredient in the confu- We encourage and entice people sion is to change the name of some·
to go into debt so they can have e thing, or to call things something
things now, and then wonder why other than what they really are. A
financial difficulties result in marital per.;on asked: "If you called a
breakup.
sheep's tail a leg, how many legs
- We take discipline out of the would he have?" The answer came

'

When the question is one of complying with the current. porous limits on
campaign finances. everyone is. The Clinton and Dole pr~sidential camraigns each got about $72 million in federal funds in 1996. and that was supposed to be it. It wasn't. because the pohucal pantes ratscd and spent more:
on ads and other purposes that were supposed to be independent of the nomi,nccs, and on issues. .
\
. That usc of party funds is not supposed to be coordinated with the campaigns.
·
.,
Sen. Fred Thompson. chairman of the Senate investigating committee.
said Clinton manipulated the system arid his campaign had total control of
the party money. He said there's been nothing like it in American history.
Party ads served the Dole campaign. too.
They're called generic or issue ads. They do not mention the candidate or
4sk for votes. But they do serve the candidate's purpose. They arc financed
with what's called soft money, unregulated donations to the political panies.
That kind of contribution is behind the whole controversy over illicit. in
some cases foreign. donations to the Democrats in the 1996 campaign. The
campaign finance bill Clinton supports would ban soft !llOney; Thompson is
one of four Senate Republicans supporting the stalled measure.
·
He accuses Clinton of breaching the current finance law by crossing tbe
line to put his campaign in total control of what was supposed to be party
money.
"If the interpretation is that this is legal aad this is proper, then we have
no campaign finance system in this country anymore,·: the Tennessee senator said.
Thompson said that would mean that in any congre5sional or presidential
campaign. unlimited sums could be raised and spent on what are called issue
ads. All it would take, he said, it a consultant to write issue ads that carefully stop just short of asking for votes.
He said that is absurd.
Thompson said that would mean anybody could go into a congressional
or presidential campaign with soft money. "set up an issue ad deal," and put
unlimited amounts from unrestricted sources to work for a candidate.
He was talking in theory. It sounds like Staten ·Island.
The Republican National Commiuee's TV ads accuse Eric Vitaliano, the
Democratic nominee, of voting to raise taxes and his own pay in the New
York legislature. The ads don't ask for votes, and they don't mention Vito
Fossella. the Republican city councilman running for the scat left open when
Susan Molinari resigned to go into TV.

-

To the editor,
People. don't be blinded by T.V. advertisements. Vote NO on Issue 2. We
the people have been given the opportunity. to VOTE for our rights. so please
VOTE NO ON ISSUE 2. Benefits for hard-workmg people will be cut We
make democracy work for the working family when we vote NO. This issue
is about the injured worker being denied fairness. Reduced medical benefits,
removes occupational diseases for eligibility, examination by the Bureau of
Workers' Compensation hired doctors and not your own. Safety and Hygiene
Records secret, hiding imponant work place safety infonnation. Why is government and rich corporation~ asking people who can lest afford it to make
this sacrifice?
Issue 2 is bad for working families. You and I can help protect the rights
of injured workers by Voting NO on November 4th.
,
By the way the T.V. ad is supponed by BIG BUSINESSES who want to
save big bucks to the tune of $200 million a year. This will be taken direct ly from injured workers in the fonn of cuts in benefits.
JaDe Ann Miller,

' i

Galllpolil

back "five legs". Well. that answer is diminished, we could do our thing.
incorrect. Calling a tail a leg does
It's a bit like the story of the frog
not make it a leg. The reality is that . in the kettle. The water temperature
the sheep still has four legs.
was raised very gradually, just a few
When most of us went to school degrees at a time. The effect was that
we learned aboul the "law of gravi- the frog was cooked IO· ~th. Had
ty". This law could be demonstrated, the frog been dropped into boiling
'it could be proven as a law. It wasn't water, he ·would have jumped out
a product of a thought pattern used immediately. Likewise, the enemy
to explain some phenomenon. it of the family ha• grldually instituted
actually existed.
the changes so we would not rise up
So, well and good? Not so, for and resist when it would have been
now we hear about the "theory of easier to do so.
gravity". If we downgrade gravity to , We could wonder why the frog.
a theory, does this place the theory didn't realize. after hour upon hour
of evolution in a better standing'! of increasing temperature, that he
Changing the name or label of· was in trouble. But why question the
something docs not change the real- frog's sensitivity to his surroundity.
ings? Are we the people rising to the
Another application of this tech- challenge of rescuing ourselv~'
nique is to call the child in the womb from the moral bog, from the
a fetus. So when we 'tenninatc' a malaise, from the cynicism of our
fetus that doesn't sound as bad as day'! When will adults get an anikilling a baby. After all, how many tude adjustment and begin to train
of us know Latin? Well, fetus is just up the children in the way they
a Latin word for "little one". And should go? When will all parents
isn't that what a child in utero is'!
take full responsibility to nunure
Well, you might ask. why did all their children into adulthood .and
this denial ot' reality, this unwilling· protect them from the many pitfalls
ness to face the cause of unfortunate they now face? Do matters have to
conditions get control in our lives?
get even worse before we resist the
It probably didn't seen too bad at evil around us?
fir.;t, the effects were not felt all that
If at all possible grandparents
much. It developed gradually. sort of need to come alongside and help the
a softening up process, like the parents in ways appropriate. Likebombers dropping a few bombs wise, churches can provide guidance
be tore the ground troops move in. to families and have a greater impact
Also. it seemed like we had more upon community life by standing in
'freedom', we could do more of what the gap.
we wanted to do, free of so many
Robert Weedy is a corresponrestrictions. The flesh could be bet- dent for the Sunday Times Sen·
tcr satisfied. Accountability was tlnel.

Wake up! Little Aliens walk among us

Letters to tire editor
Urges no vote on Issue 2

spreld physical education training in
our public schools.
And there are also some non.
monetary benefits.
, Physical education in pubhc
schools teaches teamwork and cooperation at a time when young people
need it most - in those formative
years when behavior is learned.
Team play and sportsmanship
learned in gym class create a sense
of intendependcnce and respect that
is lacking among far too many
young people.
Less than two-thirds of high
school students attend physical education classes. Nearly a third of all
high schools exempt youngsters
from taking gym if they are cheerleaders, members of the band, choir
or an athletic team. That's shortsighted. Youngsters need more, not
less physical activity.
America needs people with
healthy bodies as well as minds.
We need police who ure both
computer literate and physically fit.
Out-of-shape cops are a danger to
other officers and probably more
likely to usc their gun to settle a dispute.
We need soldiers who can operate sophisticated weapons systems
and who arc also able to run a mile
in full combat gear to throw a
grenade into an enemy gun emplacement.
We need ·corporate exccuti vcs
who can manage the high-tech
workplace of the 21st century and
still value the 19th century ideal of
teamwork on the job.
Physical education is no panacea.
but it is an important pan of what
makes a person whole. People are
not androids, at least not yet. We arc
flesh and blood. muscles ·and fat.
The key to a healthy life is to keep
all of this in proper balance.
The key to a healthy nation is to
develop both the minds and bodies
of future generations of Americans
- and not just one at the cost of the
other.

By Joseph Spear
· Everybody who knows anything
is aware that a spacecraft crashed
near Roswell, N.M.. in July 1947.
and that the aliens traveling in it
were allegedly killed, and that the
United States Air Force has been
covering up the Incident ever since.
What is not well known is that the
passengers in that vehicle from outer
space were only playing dead. They
hopped a freight train to Mena, Ark.,
and later dispersed to all comers of
the country. They multiplied like
Oies. and now reside in all 50 states .
A large colony lives in California.
I documented these new facts in a
previO!Js column last July, which
you may look up if you are a skeptical person .
Now for some additional confirmation.
On Oct. 12, singer John Denver. a
licen~ed pilot, took off from Monterey. Calif.. in a lightweight airplane and quickly plunged to his
death in the Pacifi9..Gcean. As a person who apprec1aled his music, I am
saddened tiy his untimely demise,
but this should not blind us to some
highly gennane facts. To wit:
John Denver was not this person's real name. He was born Henry

•

John Deutschendorf Jr.. His
hometown:
· Roswell, N.M.
Want more·~
His father was
an Air Force
officer.
Getting the
picture?
OK,
now consider
Spear
this: If you add
up the digit.&lt; of his birthdate (t2-31 43) and his death date (10-12-97)
and the time he took off ( 17:00
hours) and the time he crashed
(17:27) and his age (53) and the
yards offshore he crashed (I 00), and
then subtract the number of years it
has been since the Roswell Incident
(SO), you get 18. And we all know
what 18 is. Three sixes. The "mark
of the beast," from Revelation. The
~onclusion, it seems to me, is
inescapable.
John Denver was a Little Alien.
I know, the record indicates he
was 4 years old at the time of the
Incident, but believe me, those documents' can easily be fudged . I
would note, also, that I am not the
first person to deduce this. A reporter
for the Independent of London wrote

on Oct. 19 that John Denver was
· obviously "an alien chi'ld who survived the Roswell crash, was adopt·
ed. by an Air Force officer and has
now returned from whence he came.
I wouldn't be surprised if he is duct·
ting with Elvis right now."
So there you have it, documented
and clear as crystal.
As shocking as this development
is, it is but a hint of the whole story.
The Little Aliens have used their
five decades on earth to launch a
host of netarious plots and schemes
and arc behind most of the evil and
immoral things that plague us.
They have taken over the United
Nations, the ACLU, the Federal
Reserve Board, the Council on Foreign Relations and the Tri-Lateral
Commission. They infiltrated the
CIA and the FBI and the IRS and the
Environmental Protection Agency.
They Ouoridated our water and
learned to ny black helicopters.
Many have become politicians.
Quite a few are talk show hosts.
Some arc preachers. Many can be
found in newsrooms. .
.
They may even have penetrated
the White House.
,
Look at Ronald Wi Ison Reagan,
for example. Each
with six let-

••'!I•

ters. Three sixes. The mark of the
beast again.
Look at George Bush: Member of
the Skull and Bones secret society at
Yale, member of the Council on Foreign Relations, member of the TriLateral Commission, ex-director of
the CIA.
Look at Bill Clinton. He is a congenital Big Government man. Just
last month be decreed that 10 of the
nation's most important rivers will
get special protection under an
A~erican Heritag~ Rivers Program,
whtch sounds susptctously similar to
a United Nations program called
World Heritage Sites.
Is this a land grab? A scheme to
internationalize our rivers and seize
property from those who own waterfront parcels?
· •
I'll just point out two things=' (I)
Chnton was not the presidenrs·name
at birth, and (2) he was born in
Hope, Ark., which is only about 50
miles south of Mena. Need I say
more?

Bill Clinton is a Little Alien. ·
Pass it on.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated

writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

'

~II t

;Ct

••

f t'' •Page AS

Streets 9f Philadelphia filled~
by 'Million Woman March' l

1;2,3,4; Let's reopen school gym door

'

825 Third Avenue, G..llpolll, Ohio

~.-

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpoll•, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

•

Sund8y, October 21, 111117

iunb~JI1!im5· i~ntitul
'Esttlbf1slid ill 1966

Sunday,Ckrtober28,1997

PageA4

By SCOTT BEKKER
i\811adl'ad p,_ Writer

red poncho and held a red umbrella subject of a South African govern.
against a driving rain that let up by ment inquiry into the disappearance
PHIU.DELPHIA (AP) -Thou- 8:30 p.m. She said she came to show of blaet youths in Soweto during the
sands of black women filled the men that women bave strength.
19809. She has said the allegatiOII$
streets Saturday at the Million
"Most men think that women • are aimed at undermining her politiWoman March, standing shoulder to .only go to malls with credit cands," cal clout.
shoulder for almost amile in a show
:::.~.aid. "We do get out and march, JUry SeleCtiorf8 WindS
of unity and strength.
. Hundreds of buses brought
"rm getting a wann feeling see- down at Nichols trial :
women from dozens of states to this ing all these sisters," said Tanya
DENVER (AP) - After fo.lr
morning's march and a day long rally Heard, 26, of Chicago.
weeks of jury selection in the second
organized by two housing activists
Mrs. Heand said the presence of Oklahoma City bombing trial, attorwho relied on a grass-roots approach so many people - city officials . neys predicted that opening statements
to reach out to black women.
expected 700,000 . - proved that could begin as early as next week.
"I feel like I belong to a powerful black ~omen have strength few sus"We're toward~ the end of the
bloc," said Roxanne Browne, 34, of peeled.
· process," said MiChael Tigar, the lead
Boston.
As she looked over the crowd, attomey for defendant Terry Nicho~
The march started with a proces- her husband, Anthony, yelled, " UbU.S. District Judge Richard
sion beginning at 7 a.m. near the crate the black woman!''
Matsch qualified 17 prospecti~
Liberty Bell and traveling two miles
The event echoes the Million jurors Friday, including a mine seci(to a stage at the Philadelphia Muse- Man March in 1995, a gathering of rity officer who lost his right hand in
um of Art.
black men, and the Promise Keep- a homemade bomb explosion and
Speakers scheduled to address ers, a Christian men's organization retired government worker who thl.
ihe crowd during the daylong rally that met earlier this month. Both ral- orized Nichols was a pawn in Timoincluded Winnie Madikizela-Man- lies were in Washington.
thy McVeigh's plot to blow up t~e
dela, the fonner wife of South Aft'ica · This march is not without contro- federal building.
President Nelson Mandela, and U.S. versy.
Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif.
Organizers used word of mouth
Clay Township Trustees
"I'm cold, but it's all worth it," and the Internet to gather support,
would like to make the
said Michelle Smith, who drove nine spuming the established national
hours with four friends from Canton, networks of mainstream leaders and
· residents of Clay
Ohio, and camped tbe night near the media that drew attention to the earTownship aware of the
speaken;' platfonn. "I get to hear lier marches.
R
I f th
• I
Ms. Waters has called for an
enewa O
e extst ng
W'mnie Mandela talk; it's a piece of
history that's going to be in the investigation into allegations of CIA
Fire Levy. ThiS Is a
books."
involvement with drug trafficken;
Renewal Levy NOT an
To many, the speeches were sec- who supplied crack to black com·
additional levy.
ondary.
munities.
Cynthia Jackson, 32, a Washing- ·
Ms. Madikizela-Mandela is the
Clay Township Trustees
ton, D.C., policewoman, stood in a
Pd. lor by Wondo Wough

a

r-,_--------"'1

MARCH BEGINS -llle 11111rch aterted with 1 proceeaiOn beginning 81 7 a.m. ne~r the Uberty Bell and

'

tm-ellng twa mila ta 1 atege .. the Phllldelphl1
Mu~eum or Art.

Investigators continue probe of train crash·
WIWAMSON, W.Va. (AP)Workers cleated mangled locomotives from tracks Friday and soaked
up diesel fuel that spilled in the Thg
Fork River when two Norfolk Southem trains collided and caught fire.
Investigators at Norfolk Southem's regional headquarters in Blue- ··
field were reviewing the event
recorden; from the trains to determine what caused Thursday's crash
about S miles from Williamson,
. company spokeswoman Susan Terpay said.
Three workers who jumped from
the trains were injured in the accident. Denver Copley of South
Williamson, Ky., was in fair condi·

tion after surgery Friday on a broken
ankle at Cabell Huntington Hospital,
said hospital spokeswoman Dayna
Massie.
The other two, Mike Webber of
Portsmouth, Ohio, and Frank Giordano of Turkey ·Creek, Ky., were
treated for leg abrasions and
released.
Meanwhile,
train
service
resumed Friday on the track adjacent to the one where the accident
occurred, and the other track was
expected to open by Friday night,
Terpay said from Roanoke, Va.
Workers scrambled to repair a
section of track damaged in the
crash, said Bob Phillips, assistant ·

chief of the W'tlliamson Fire Depart- slightly off the rails, Terpay said.
ment.
At least one of the engines leaked
"People have been working all diesel fuel and caught fire.
night to get Ibis cleaned up," he
Earlier, emergency officials had
said.
said at least 6,000 gallons of fuel ran
It remained unclear why both into the Thg Fork of the Big Sandy
photo flnlsh11nr1.
trains were on the same track. Nei- River 1 few yards away. Phillips said
ther could have been going faster the spill turned out to be smaller
than 35 mph, Terpay said.
than that, but would·not say by how
424 SECOND AVE.
An eastbound train carrying 98 much.
GALUPOUS
loaded coal cars to Williamson col- .. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;;.,_ _.::::!::::::=::::::::::::::::::~
lided with a westbound train headed 11
for Portsmouth, Ohio, which had 26
loaded coal cars and two empty cars,
Terpay said.
One of the trains had three locomotives, and the other had two. One
by T&amp;R
overturned, and the other four came

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PROBE CONTINUES - lnveatlgatora at Norfolk Southern's regional headquarters In Bluefteld
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Defense Department ·
proposes changes
In health care system ·
DAYTON (AP)- The Department of Defense has acknowledged
that its health care system has serious problems and is proposing
changes to correct them.
"The people I met with admitted
that mistakes have been made,"
Rep. David 'L. Hobson, R-Ohio, told
the Dayton Daily News on Friday
after meetings with the military's .
top health officials. "Frankly, I ftad
this refreshing, and it reassures me
that we will be able to get some
changes made to make patients safer
and to prevent future problems."
The military promised that an outside body would examine decisions
made by military health care officials.
. "This isn't the only fix that needs
to be done. It's not over with," said
Scott Milburn, Hobson's spokesman.
He said the military is also considering changes in th~ way it reports
incompetence and malpractice.
The proposed changes follow a
seven-part series published in the
Daily News earlier this month.
The newspaper reported that the
military! health care system lacks
the most significant safeguards protecting civilians from medical mal·
practice. Military doctors are not
required to have malpractice insur·
ance, they can practice in states
where they do not hold licenses and
they are virtually immune from
being sued for medical malpractice.
Hobson, who sits on the House
subcommittee that approves funding
for the Pentagon, met separately thi~
week with Rudy DeLeon, undersec·
retary of defense for pen;onnel and
readiness; and Dr. Ed Martin, acting
assistant secretary of defense. '

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•

�Pomeroy • Middleport • O.lllpolle, OH • Point Plelunt, WV

Sundlly, October 21, 1997

Deaths across the nation

Bowers named interim
administrator of VMH

lly 11lt ., I g Clltlltl ......

!Melvin Morton Caldwell
~~~us · -

Melvin Monon- Caldwell, ss, of Gallipolis, died
y, Oct. 22. 1997 at Holzer Medical Center.
, Born Nov. 18, 1911 in Crown City, son of the late James Marion and Cora
iAllce Beaver Caldwel~ he was a Dairyman Parmer, and a member of
'Northup Baptist Church.
i Surviving are his wife, Elma Daniels Caldwell; four sons, Marion (Car:olyn) Caldwell, Earl (Neld3) Caldwell and Mike {Martba)'Caldwell, all of
•Galbpolis, and Gilbert (Cheryl) Caldwell of ~wn City; six daughters,
·Phyllis (Dan) Stidham, Judy (Larry) Hall, Vicki (Wayne) Elliott and Cindy.
j(Mark) Cremeans, all of Gallipolis, Doris (Ross) Fulks of Crown City, and
:Rita (Tom) Myers of Dublin; 32 arandchildren, 42 pat-grandchildren; and
•two sisters, Alma Sanders of Crown City and Marie Rossiter of L«:tl.
: ln 'adCiitioa to his parents, he was preceded in death by a son, Farrell
:{SoMy) Caldwell; two grandchUdren; two brothers, Oyer Caldwell and
:Merrill Caldwell; and two sisters, Mella Fillinger and Pearl Watson.
i Services are 1 p.m. Monday at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral borne, with
;Rev. Jimmy Chapman officiatins. Burial will follow at the ·Ohio Valley
:Memory Gardens.
: · Friends may call at the funeral home today form 6-9 p.m.
.

: Gary Joseph Penn •. ngto n

..llmnlr Hlllllrt
NEW YORK (AP)- Jimmy Herbert, a track 11ar who once held world
indoor rccollls for the 60().mcter and 60().yard races, died Thursday of kidney failure. He wu 82.
HcrbcrtbadbcenbolpitalizedOct. 7forSIIIIIeryooalivertumor.
He set the record for 600 yards in 1938, clockin&amp; 1 minute,l1.1 seconds
at a New York City meet. He 'matched that time two weeks later in Cbica&amp;o
·and broke it~g~in in 1'940, clockin&amp; 1:10.8. He set the 600-meter record the
same year with a time of }:20.3.
Herbert also won five Mel Sheppard 60().yard races at the Mlllrosc
Games in New York, matching the record held by Alan Helfrich. ·
In addition, Herbert ran on eight national indoor relay cbampioaahlp
teams at different distances from 1935 to 1940, was ruMer-up in the outdoor
400-meter national championships in 1938 and 1945, fifth at the outdoor
440-yard NCAA championships for New York University in 1938 and
anchored a winning relay team for NYU at the 1940 Penn Relays.
·
Marjory Griffin Leake
MUSKOGEE, Okla. (AP)- Philanthropist Mlljory Griffin Leake, the
wife of K'IUL-lV and KWTV founder James C. Leake, died Thursday. She
was 79.
The Griffin and Leake families branched from the wholesale grocery
business into radio and television. The families founded 1V stations KTUL1V in Tulsa, KWrV in Oklahoma City and KATV in Uttle Rock, Ark.
Piv~Ci.VI.ei.,...~·T·n.Cbbesoct,aw Indian, was involved in various activities of the
w

""""

SOUTH EUCUD - Gary Joseph Pennington, M.D., 30, of South
Leticia Ochal'lln
Euclid, died Thursday, Oct. 23,l997 at his borne.
MEXICO CITY (AP) -Leticia Ocharan, a leading Mexican painter and
. Born in Columbus, and formerly of Gallipolis, he was a graduate of muralist, died Thursday of a liver ailment. She was 55.
. Kyger Creek High School, the University of Akron. and the North Eastern
Her paintinis were mainly ch1tracterized by her portrayals of Mexico's
:Ohio Universities College of Medicine. He served his residency in. internal native themes.
medicine at Aleron General and a neprology fellowship at Cleveland Clinic.
Sbc also taught art, wrote several art books and campaigried to dcfe!Uithe
Surviving are his wife, Disha H.; son, Jarad; his mother, Sharon K Rece . copyriibts of artists and writers.
.
of DeLand, Florida; and father, Garry Pennington of Columbus; and five sis. Herold Wet.tw Smith
ters, Penny Koshiol of Gain~ville, fla., Amy Johnson, Usa Bires, Stephanie
WATERBURY, Conn. (AP) - Harold Webster Smith, who started his
W'tlkerson, and Callie Rinehard~ all of Deland, Fla.
fitst bank with a few thousand dollars and built it into the billion-ilollar WebServices are 1 p.m. Monday at the Dunn-Quigley Ciriello &amp; Carr Cuya- ster Financial Corp., died Friday. He was 86.
hoga Falls Chapel (Portage Tr. at 8th St.), with Rev. Elmer Geiser officialSmith opened the First Federal Savinp of Watetbury in 1935 with
ing. Interment will be at Oakwood Cemetery. Friends may call at the funcr- $25,000 and was the bank's only employee duting its first year. Assets grew
a1 home today from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
to $1 million within three years. His .bank was the first in the state to issue
Glloanstoretumingservicemcn.
First Federal converted to stock ownership in 1986 and formed the holdPOINT PLEASANT, W.Va._ Pauline Marie Neal, 74, of Point Pleasant, inR company, Webster Financial Corp. Smith retired as chief executive the
died Saturday, October 25, 1997, at Cabell Huntington Hospital, Hunting- following year after managing the business for 52 years.
Smith served as chairman until retiring at age 84.
ton.
~.,.
Born April15, 1923 in Huntington, she was a daughter of the late William
Mlltl- "Mikey'' Trupiano
and Freda (Bates) Holley. She was a homemaker, member ofthe Point PleasST. LOUIS (AP)- Matthew "Mikey" Trupiano, known to authorities as
the head of the St. Louis mob, died Wednesday of.a heart attack. He was 58. ·
101 Presbyterian Church and Gallipolis Boat Club.
In additioo 10 her parents, she was also preceded in death by a brother, . F&lt;ir much of this life, Trupiano held office in the LocalllO of the LaborWilliam Holley, Jr.; and a great-grandchild, Michelle Denise Hendricks.
ers Union in a.St. Louis suburb. But authorities also identified him as head
Survivors include her husband, Olen Neal of Point Pleasant; 8 daughter of what has been in recent years a weak and disorganized St. Louis mob.
and son _ in _law, Linda and Gary Stewart of Point Pleasant; two sons, and
In 1991, federal agents charged Trupiano with gambling for his involvrdaughters _in . law, Ronald and Carolyn Neal of Millwood and Richard and ment in .an illegal &amp;in rummy gaine in a back room at a used-car dealership.
Anna Neal of Point Pleasant; a sister and brother _ in _law, Genevieve and Trupiano was later sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison.
Emo Wood of New Haven; a brother - in - law and sister- in - law, Robert
Tom TUcker
'-'· and Virginia Neal of Point Pleasant; seven grandchildren; and two great .
DAYTONA BEACH, fla. (AP)- Tom Tucker, longtime reporter, editor
. ~dchildren.
and columnist at The Daytona Beach News-Journal, died Wednesday of
, Services will be 11 a.m. Monday, October 27, at .Wilcoxen Funeral Home, lymphoma. He was 51.
Point Pleasant, with Rev. Ben Stevens officiating, Burial will follow in KirkTucker began his career with the newspaper in 1967 as an ad-proof couriland Memorial Gardens.
er before becoming a sportswriter. In 1974, he left for the sports department
Friends may call at the funeral hQme Sunday from 7 _9 p.m.
of The Atlanta Journal.
He later worked for the R.J. Reynolds Tob~ Co. as publicity man
. ag~r
for the sports car and motorcycle-racmg senes 11 sponsored. He then dad
·
publ1'c1'ty •or the Budwe··· Lol the 1 d
d by p 1N
d
"
a,
n y car owne
au ewman an
,· POINT PLEASANT, w."va. - Mary Em1'Iy (Keeney) Thomas, 83, of raced by Mario
Andretti1-r
,oint Pleasant, formerly of Leon, died Friday, October 24, 1997.-at Pleasant ,
:Valley Nursing and Rehabilitatioll Center. Born December 13,1913 m.Belle,
1W. Va., she was a dauptcr o{ d!c late Utica and Margaret . (Smithers)
Keeney. She was a homemaker.
•r,
l I•
: In addition to her parents, she was also pteeeded in death by her husband,
'Richard D. Thomas; five brothers and four sisters.
: Survivors include two daughters and son - in - law, Pat and Darrell
:Gandee of Leon and Betty EastcrlyotCanton, Ohio; a son and daughter- in
:· law, Okey B. and Patsy Thomas of Acworth, Ga; 12 grandchildren; 14
;sreat grandchildren; and one great.- great- grandchild.
·
, Services will be Sunday, October 26, at 2 p.m. in Wilcoxen Funeral
:Home, Point Pleasant, with Rev. Charles Moses officiating. Burial will fol•low in Forest Hills Cemetery, Letart.
: Friends may call at the funeral home Saturday from 7 - 9 p.m.
)

. Mar1e
. Nea I
Pau I1ne

ry
Em
"II y Th 0 mas
.
Ma

Henry _'Jay' Skl.dmore.

.

BIDWELL - Henry "Jay" Archibald Skidmore m, 32, of Bidwell (
Evergreen Cootlllunity) died unexpectedly Friday October 24, 1997 at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Born July 1, 1965 in Toul Rosicres Air Force Base,
France, son of Henry ArChibald skidmore 11 of Ward,
Arkansas and Eliane Willaurnc Younker of Lancaster.
In addition to his parents, Jay b.t resided with his
paternal grandparents, Hettry A. and Mary (Dolly)
Skidmore of Evc:ween for the last J8 years. He wu ,_
rest area supemsor employed by Riverview Produclionslnc.A1984graduateofNorlhGalliaHighScbool,
be lettered u a viii'Sity·football player.
.
In addition to his parents, he was survived by asoa,
Henry
Bennett Lee Axaver McMclanahan of Jackson; three
"·, sist~rs. Mary Skidmore and Patricia Dingess. both of
Lancaster and Kristen Skidmore of Ward, Arkansas; a brother, Justin Skid~re of Ward, Arkansas; two step-sisters, Patricia Jallaq and Deborah
Zladeh, both of Grpve City; a step-brother, Mike Younker of Aus&amp;in, Texas;
paternal grandparents, Henry A. and Mary (Dolly) Skidmore of Evergreen;
and a maternal grandmother. Renee Willaume of Pont-A-Mousson, France.
He was preceded in death by a maternal grandfather, Emile Paul
Willaume.
1
Services will be U a.m. Monday, October 27, 1997 at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, with Rev. Jim Lusher officiating. Burial will follow in the Vmton Memorial Park, Vinton. Friends may
call at .the funeral borne today from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.
In hcu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the American
Heart Association, Central Ohio Region, P.O. Box 361320, Columbus, Ohio
43236-1320.
'·
P~llbearers will be.Eric, Christopher, Brent and Jonathan Skidmore, Paul
Hollingshead, Matt Neal, Chad Fitch an~ David Roush.
Josh Skidmore wjll serve as an honorary pallbearer.

DO rOthIV A. Leno rt

·

POINT PLEASA*f, W.V:.- Dorol!hy A. (Knapp) Leport, 68, of Point
Pleasant•. WV died j:ilday evening, October 24, 1997, at St. Mary's Hospi·
tal, Huntmgton, WV.
She retired from Citizen's National Bank in Point Pleasant, WV., where
h
s e was the head of1bookkeeping department; and a member of 1hc Davies
Grove Baptist ChutCh in Letart, WV.
· Born August 25, 1929 in Mason County, WV, she was a daughter of the
late George Homer and Myrtle Gertrude (Thomas) l&lt;nBI'P· In addition to her
parent, she was also preceded in death by her husband, William "Bill" J.
Lepo~. Jr. who die\March 11, 1989; and daughter-in-law, Wanda Leport;
four SISters; and one rather.
She is survived by a daugl!ter and son-in-law, Lois and Curt Rime of
Point Pleasant, WV;,ra ,son, Chafles R. Leport of Point Pleasant, WV; five
grandchildren, Chad ~d Dixie l.eport, Amy and Lisa Rime, and Heather
Leport, all of Point Pleasant, WV; a sister and brother-in-law, Lillian and
Kenneth Durst of Springfield, Ohio; two brothers and sisters-in-law, Albert
W. and Helen Knapp of Brevard, NC and John F. and Wilma Knapp of
Millersburg. Ohio; and many nieces and nephews.
Service will be held at 10:30 a.m. Monday, October 27, 1997, at the
Crow-Russell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, WV with Rev. Louis A. Hus·
sell officiating. Buriafwill follow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens, near Point
Pleasant.
~
Visiting hours will be held at the funeral home Sunday, October 26, 1997,
from 7 to 9 p.m.

r=====:::::::·:.___________...__..._______.:_____........ . . _-:---------..,.... . .__...;__,
•'

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s

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'i BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) :standing scornful and defiant, the
;defendants shout their cases. They
'are sovereign citizens, not subject to
ithe court! The judges are unquali·
:fied! The lawyers are illegal!
: "To bell with you and your kan•garoo courtl'' one defendant bellows
:at his sentencing for dealing drugs.
: The bizarre claims are trade·
)narks of the Montana Freemen, the
'militant anti-government zealots
;....bo have been jailed here, awaiting
:trial, since their 81-day standoff
,ended \6 months ago.
. But the claims are now coming
:from garden-variety criminals, fci:Iow inmates in the Yellowstone
;County jail. The~ non-Freemen are
'proving to be ardent students of the
:convoluted legal fantasies of the
:jail's most famous residents.
They are firing their lawyers, torpedoing their own plea agreements,
.writing their 6wn legal briefs, argu~ng- and losing - their own cases.
~ey are making life and work diffi·cult, and often miserable, for those
who run the court system.
Chief public defender Sandy
Selvey calls the freemen a plague. At
·least seven clients of his office have
iried "Freemanspcak" in state court;
Plbers have tried it in federal court.
"They're contaminating our
good criminals," says District Judge
Diane Barz, who tangled with the
Freemen as a federal prosecutor.
About two dozen Freemen· have
been among the jail's 300 inmates
Iince June 13, 1996, when they surrendered after an armed, 81-day
standoff with FBI agents at their isolated farm compound in the remote
outback of eastern Montana's "Big
Open." Three minor figures have
pleaded guilty, but trials for the rest
won 'I begin until next spring.
The host of federal charges
against them include wir~ and blink
fraud and threatening the life of 1
federal judge and other public ofli.
cials. The FBI says some 800 people
from around the country attended
classes at the rural stronghold, learning to issue the worthless liens and
"warrants" that the Freemen claim

I

are legal tender.
People in several states have been
charged, and some convicted, of trying to use such documents, often
bearing the name of Fr~man leader
Leroy Schweitzer. The Dallas Morning News reported that at least 151
people in 23 states were under
investigation for Freeman connections.
The Freemen's legal "philosophy" is a jumble of odds and ends
from the Bible, the U.S. Constitution, the Magna Carta and the Uni·
form Commercial Code, the body of
federal laws that govern interstate
financial transactions. ·
They dress it up in pscudo-schol·
arly terms and meaningless Latin.
phrases and claim, in essence, they
are laws unto themselves - and
over everyone else.
"There arc some real gaps in
their education, and ... I think they
are darned close to acting like the
mentally ill," Ms. Barz says.
The Freemen commonly rant;
belch, challenge the federal judges
and get banished from the courtroom to watch on closcd~ircuitlV
as appointed lawyers try to defend
them. More conventiOnal inmates
soon started imitating them.
Their verbose legal filings, often _
prepared by Freemen. are so peculiar that District Court Clerk· Jean
Thompson rejects many of them.
County Attorney Dennis Paxinos,
public defender Selvey and the
judges say the biggest problem the
Freemen imitators have created is
how to protect themselves from
themselves.

POMEROY
N• Pomtroy-MIIon Bridge

VINTON

11UIIIInSl

..

'

daughters, Elizabeth and Kimberly, · both graduates of Miami ·University. l::=====:==:::;:::;:::::::;::::;;;:::::=;:======;:;:::::;::=:=:::::-:----::------:-------.:....==~
Elizabeth is currently enrolled in a master's .degree ~ a! Duke Uni- · . ::
versity in North Carolina. Kimberly, a resident of lmhl!lapol!s, Ind., Ia
employed by Ell Ully Co.
•
Bowers' father, the late Arlhw R. Bowen. was a state legislator from Jef- '
ferson County for 16 years serving as chairman of both the state highway
safety committee and the state building committee dur!Jtg his tenure. Bowers' mother, Betty, resides in Florida. ·
.
Bowers will officially begin his edminilllrativ~ duties at Veterana Memo:rial, the week of Nov. 10.

-

Local briefs: -

City pollee Issue c.ltatlons

The Best Cable has t:O'

•ISSUE 2 hurts INJURED WORKERS by denying
them the benefits and healthcant they need &amp;
deserve.
• ISSUE 2 hurts FAMILY FARMS by grantIng exemptions to mega-farms placing
our family farms at a competitive
disadvantage.

Suspects booked Into county )all
·

GAU.IPOUS- Bookcd·into the Gallia County Jail following arrests
by authorities were:
·
• Alfred K. Cordell, 26, Bidwell, Friday at 5:30 p.m., by the Gallipolis Municipal Court for escape.
• William R. Buttrick, 49, 2764 Millcreek Rd., Gallipolis, Friday at
8:34 p.m., by the municipal court for domestic violence.

I

Breaking and en,erlng probed .
SALEM CENTER - Several small items were reported missin&amp; Friday evening from the Ed Butterworth residence on Star Hall Road near
Salem Center.
·
~
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby stated deputies were called to
the Butterworth residence where, between 7 a·.m. and 7 p.m., thieves
aained entry by forcing open a rear door before ransackins the house.
An investigation continues, Soulsby reported.
·
·In an unrelated incident, Bill Combs, Eaton Ridge Road, Portland,
reported Thursday that SOII'Ieone had entered his barn, stealing a number
of tools.

DULch~rge

• ISSUE 2 hurtl ALL WORKERS
by making company . .fety
repo.U ..cret and making It
dKtlcult to track workplace safety.
• ISSUE 2 hurts WOMEN by
making It nearly lmpoaalble to
get claims lor Carpal Tunnel
Syndrome allowed.

·

·

MIDDLEPORT

Your second month of Cable- FREEl
$4.95 installation! Save up to $59!

7:15 a.m., Ovetbrook Nursing Ccntef, Jack Stivers, HMC;
8:30p.m., state Route 7, Keith Myers, VMH.
POMEROY
2:52 a.m., VFD to Pomeroy Cliffs Apartment, trash can fire, no
injuries reported, Middleport VFD and Central Dispatch squad assisted;
10:16 p.m., Pomeroy Police Departmen~ Shad Blankenship, VMH.
SYRACUSE
3:24 p.m., VFD and squad to 'Third Street, motor-vehicle accident,
Clifton Sisson and Howard Writesel.- refused treatment

USA NETWORK oft'en proaramming far the entire family - USA KIDS Action Exb et, oe Team ~
oms! USA Spons - up sizzling live tennis. areu ao1f and the WWF. USA original series inClude
Sil&lt; Stalkings. Pacific Blue. and La fe111a1E Nlkltt. And, new to USA th~ fall- £1arwatdl!
Dina •el) Channel- Explore ~ world with procnms like Into the Unknown. Wild Discovery,
Sea-Tek and Bonehead Dete&lt;:tives ol the Paleoworld! Nldoektde.on oKen Rugnts. the #I ~ted
show for kids plut prime-time trttenainment for kids ol all aps.
,

lhe 11118 fll..n 111101
2
"Issue 2 would talle •way worker's protection
against occupational hazarda, allow unscrupulous
employers to keep their hazardous working conditions In secrecy, and not live up to Its promises of
making the state Workers' Compensation System
alflcienl.

Judge says patrol stop Illegal, toasea out charges
TOLEDO (AP) -A state trooper illegally stopped and searched a van

on the Ohio Turnpike in a marijuana case, a judge ruled as he threw out evi-

HBO oilers first run films like Scar Trek: first Contact, original series like The Larry Sanders Show,
and sports and entenalnment specials. like the Garth Brooks concert In Central Park.
Nobody puts ~ In the middle ol breaking stories like the CHN .-s team. Then:~ enough
brealcneck ~ auto racirta on ESPN to keep )'OUr head spinning.

CcrllleWrlon CommunJcadonr oft'en jam-packedlV )'OU can't pt enough ol - Plus CcrllleVIrlon

Semce includes local ABC, cas. NBC, FOX and PBS necworta at no additional charge.
That's something NO Satellite service can dol

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1-800..766-0553

CABLEVISION
c.r .... lotlllt/ll'ld 11 ,_..lor,_.~ frlc.MIYillon ...... .-.en, Thl hi ..,a ...... ., 1M IIUind mon:h d 5laniWII ~- Oolllllmln.,.,......

What IssUe 2 does ID Ohio's Woltters!

GAUJPOUS- The following ,citations were issued by the Gallipolis Police Department:
Wtlliam P. Oldacre, 31, 1619 Chatham Ave., Gallipolis, disorderly by
intoxication; Robert R. Orimm, New Haven, W.va., open container; and
Jacqueline P. Jones, 43, 10 Old Port Trail, Gallipolis, driving under the
influence and left of center.

POMEROY- Units of the.Mcig.s County Emergency Medical Service recorded 11 calls for asSistance Friday. Units responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH·
12:52 a.m., Wolfe Pen Road, Pomeroy, Leta L. Goodwin McKnight,
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
5:34a.m., Broa4way Street, Middleport, John Keams Jr., PVH;
9:40 a.m., Main Strcc~ Middleport, Cash Bahr, Holzer Medical Ccn·
ter;
6:49 p.m., Zuspan Hollow Road, . Middleport, Connie Scholderer,
HMC. Middleport squad assisted;
8:31 p.m., West Main Street, Pomeroy, motor-vehicle accident, Shad
Blankenship, refused treatment, Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department
assisted;
· 10:28 p.m., Pine Grove Road, Racine, Linda Burdy, Veterans Memorial Hospital, Syracuse squad assisted.

Days Free

892-2581

a.m. County Dteptay van~

-·.
R
• ••

Meigs EMS logs 11 calls

COMMUNICATIONS

GAUJPOUS - Teachers at Gallia
Academy High School recently participated in an inscrvice workshop with Sheri
Bidwell from the \b:alional lnatructional
Materials Laboratory at The Ohio State
University. The workshop emphasized
ways to help students learn the importance
of using teamwork to solve problems, not
only in IICbool, but also in today 's marketplace. Teams of teachers were challenged
to construct matble roller coasters to meet
certa,in specifications, before making a
variety of curriculum connections to the
activit)'. Below, Dave Brown and Vmce
Hill adjust a loop to increase velocity. At
right, Rick HoweU, Matt Ward, Darlene ·
Carmichael, Letty Willis, Jim Craft and
Kim Adkins ma~e design changes to
improve rate.

POMEROY- George Hoschar Jr., 46, West Columbia. W.Va., was
arrested and jailed Friday evening by the Mcip County Sherifl's Department on charges of drivin&amp; under the influence and driving under suspension.
•
.
It was noted that, if found guilty of the charges, this would mark.
Hoschar's fourth DUI offense and second driving under suspension
offense.
Other arrests were: Gloria Ross, Portland, disorderly conduct, and
Mil&gt;e Henry, Portland, outstanding warrants.

current
custorners:
Cd II for a vert
ffer
special o

fro"' HBOI

Teachera a lifelong leamera

POMEROY- Robert A. (Bob) Bowers, Jadcson, bu been nlllllcd interim lldmlnistrator of Veteraos Memorill H011pital.
Bowers is currently chief executiYe olllcer of the Oak Hill Community
Medical Center and will coatl!aue to bold that position u well u serve u
lldminillrator of the Pomeroy boapital.
.He will replace. long-time Veterans Memorill adminIstrator, Walter Scott Wcas, wbo il retirina. Under the
present plan, BOwers will spend three 16-bour dlys
:,&amp;&lt;,··
each week at Veterans Memorial.
Born and ieUcd in Steubenville, Bowers received his
~,
« ~
bltcheiOI's
degree in psychology at Western Reserve
··~
Univenity, Qevcland, and his master's ~gree in management 11 Cue Western.
He began his career as personnel dlm:tor at an innercity hospital in Cleveland and bccarne Chief executive
officer of the Royal Pavillion, a 120-bcd fadlity in
Steubenville in ·1m. He remained there until 1980
when be wu aamed chief executive ~ of the
Bucyr.us Community Hospital where ~ wu employed unti11992. That Y~
he was named chief executive officer of the Oak Hill Community Medical
Center.
· .
Bowers' wife, Susan, a registered nurse, bolda a master's dep in education from Ohio University and she is also 1 ecrtified rehabilitation counselor and a licensed professional clinical counselor, She currently serves u
director of the Holzer Medical Center Hospice program in Gallia. Jackson
and Meig.s Counties. · ·
Mr. and Mrs. Bowers, wlio reside on a 90-acre farm in Jackaon, have two

Man jailed on

'
I

:Freemen's ·anti-government legal
\gibberish Infecting fellow prisoners

~at u•t..-~ lf••I•PageA7

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

Sunct.y, October 26,1997

WlldD'r:a;aJ·
TILe Dloc~ Clwwlll
t11 fllrW h bi'IIOI'IIh cl_. .......... . . _ -

~.

...._,_.~,..blln ,pod ..... OIIr ..... ID~ ,..._.., ~dlof' 10 .,_CIUIIIII F*' hl:a!Mtdd . C.-:m~nMilllllltriii~CGL......._.....,.. ................. ..,
. . . . . ~Sinb.~ e1w1 a IINIIdtunblrtlc:twMII.II ............... ....,...,._.-. rct be_....ln IICIIIIIVIIicr1tll"'b .... or..~ INF-

. dence in the case.
.
Visiting Judge Richard McQuide's ruling Thursday in Lucas County
Common Pleas Court came three months after a local judae tossed out evidence in another drug case for similar reasons. In both cases, attorneys
claimed that the State Highway Patrol used criminal profiling. The prosecutor in the latest case plans no appeal, so the charges will be disll)isscd.
Profiles, which are written descriptions ·of common characteristics of
criminals, sometimes based on age, appearance or race, canoot be the only
reason for stopping a motorist, courts have ruled.
The patrol denies that its troopers usc profiles. Patrol spokesman Lt.
John Born said Friday he disaareed with McQuade's decision.
"I think that decision bucks the overwhelming number of orginizations
that support our procedures and policies," Born said.
McQuade did not mention profiling but said Trooper Dean Laubacher's
questioning of the two men in the van was "clearly for the sole purpose of
'fiShing' for evidence of drug activity." That was unconstitutional, he ruled.
The trooper stopped Joel Sanchez, 26, of. Caldwell, Idaho, and Jose
Avila, 29, of Mishawaka, Ind., on the turnpike about1S miles west ofTbledo in April. He said they were driving 70 mph in a 65 mph zone and weaving slightly. A rear window of the van was broken and had been covered
with cardboard.
.
, Both men were charged with marijuana possession after investigators
said tliey found 47 pounds of the drug in the van.
.
Their lawyer, Sam Kaplan, argued that the men, who are Hispanic. were
lltopped only because they fit a profile.
·
Laubacher told McQuade he suspected that the van might be stolen or
Avila might be drunk. But Laubacher said he found no problem with
Avila's license and registration and determined he did not appear to drunlc.

more

· We are Blpeclally concerned with exemptions
to workers • compenaatlon laws given to mega-farm
operations. Under another provision, results of
lnveaUgatlons from the State's Division of Safety and
Hygi- would no longer be public record, If paaaed.
There - aome maga-fann operations In this state
which expose their workers to dangerous working
conditione, such as lack of lint exits and exposure
to high levels of hazardous materials. It workers
become Ill or Injured from theu conditions, Dlvlalon
of Safely and Hygiene inveatlgationa would no longer .
be public record as they currently ant. •

- Bont YOW' l)octor's

~ unc1or

,_awe Ruiu

File C1oifll ot lkr&lt;au of Worto...s' Compwation

Worker Injured

•

"'

.You'Ve

111811•

2

il Now Keep It

Paid for by The Committee to Stop Corporate Attacks on Injured WOII&lt;ers, Stephen Mlndzol&lt;. TreasUier.
51 North Hl(11 Street, Suite«ll. COlumbUS. Ohlo43215.

· -- ~-----------------------------------------------------------------------~--------

�Sunday,October28,1997

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, w:'

Student president: Shooting
casts pall over festive weekend
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) - A dormitory shooting that left one
dead and another critically injured cast a pall over what should have been an
exciting, sold-out football game against Virginia Tech.
,
..
West Virginia University President David C. Hardesty ~I ~a vtstt to
lehigh University to return to campus for counseling sesstons wtth students
Friday. More counseling will be available Sunday.
"People at WVU share a strong sense of community and when a tragedy
like this occurs, it rocks our entire family of students, faculty, staff and
friends," Hardesty said.
Andrew Willis, 20, of Wellsburg, died Friday morning, hours after shooting himself in the head "with a .22-caliber revolver while his former girlfriend and students watched.
She was identified only as an 18-year-old from Follansbee.
Before shooting himself, he fired three rounds that critically wounded the
woman's new boyfriend. Nicholas "Thompson, 1~. of Matewan, remained
hospitalized in critical condition at Ruby Memorial Hospital.
Willis, who attended West Liberty State College and was despondent
after his girlfriend broke up with him, drove 70 miles from his Northern Panhandle home to the university's Evansdale campus.
,
·
· He first went to the woman's room before being told she was in Thompson's room In another dormitory, police said.
Rachel Welsh, Student Administration president, said there were anxious
moments as word of the shooting spread and identities of the injured were
withheld pending notification of relatives.
.
"I was conipletely scared because I have so many friends in that dorm,"
Welsh said.
'
Students and faculty were shocked at BfO&lt;!ke High School, where Willis
was a member of the Future Business leaders of America, the tennis team
and Spanish Club last year, said Principal David Walker.
.
"If there is such a thing as an 'average' guy, that would have been Andy,"
he told The Intelligencer of Wheeling for today's editions. "He was certainly one who was a little quiet bu.l who contributed to his school."
The first reaction by nearly everyone who heard the shots late Thursday
was that it was a Halloween prank.
Even "the victim, who was shot in the chest, stomach and leg, told police
he initially believed his attacker· wielded a paintball gun and he was soaked
with fake blood.
Welsh, who used to work security in the dorms, said it was not surprising
that students thought it w:as a prank. It is common fop them to scare each
other around Halloween.
"I know they didn't take it seriously at first," she said. "During Halloween, we would always have silly stuff."
The university will review its security and visitation policies in light of
the shooting at Brooke Tower, one of four eiglit- to nine-story residential
complexes on the Evansdale campus.
Students currently can come and go through the front door until midnight,
said university spokesman Becky Lofstead. After midnight, IDs an:
required.

OHIO Weather
~unday, OcL

26

AccuWeather• forecast fur daytime conditions and
MICH.

• IColumbus Iss•,I

W.VA.

Southeast Ohio zone forecast
Sunday: Rain likely in the morning, then cloudy with a chance of
showers' .and thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs in the mid 60s.
cbance of rain 70 percent.
Extended foreceet ·
Sunday night: Showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the lower 50s.
Monday: Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. Highs near 60.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 30s and.highs in the upper
50s. .
Wednesday: Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper ·30s and highs in the
mid 50s.

Low-pressure system bringing moisture to Ohio

Ohio State cited for by feds for
mishandling radioactive material

By The Anoclllt.cl Pren

·
A low -pres:iure system moved into Ohio Saturday night, bringing
more moisture to the state, the National Weather Service said.
Showers were likely throughout Ohio and thunderstorms are possible
in tbe southern half of the state.
·
l.ows were in the 40s.
The rain will continue today, as will the chance of a thunderstorm in
southern Ohio.
Highs across ·the state will range from the lower 50s nortb to the
upper 50s south.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Federal
nuclear regulators are ready to hit
Ohio Stale University with its second fine in three years for violating
safety requirements.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission on Friday proposed a
$13,000 fine against the university
Storm pummels Plains, rain threatens South
for mishandling radioactive materiBy The Aaaocleted Preas
..
als used in medical research.
A strong storm bro)lghl blizzardlike conditions to the Plains Saturday
Three inspections between June
while heavy rain fell on parts of the Southeast. It was cool and fair in the
1996 and May turned up 11
Northeast and mild in the West.
inal- of miah•ndling of radioacIJp to 2 feel of snow and winds gusting to 45 mph were possible in tive materials used in more than 600
eutem Colorado by Saturday night, with ·leS&amp;Cr . amounts of l1lOW . laboratoriea acatteted, around &gt;lhe
expected in Wyoming, Nebraska, South Dakota and Kansas. ·'
university and Its related medical
· Dozens ·of accidents were reported and scores of travelers were
center, said Jan Sirasma, a
stranded in Denver. .
.
spokesman for the federal agency.
Ahea&lt;l of the cold front, rain was likely across southern Nebraska and
Most of the violations dealt with
Kansas before cooler temperatures arrive.
lax se&lt;;~~rity surrounding the storage
Behind the front, dry and cool conditions were predicted in the nortkof the material, poor record-keeping,
em Rockies and Utah. High pressure was expected across much of the
and failure to, quickly report the loss
West.
.
of two small packages of radioactive
In the South, flash flooding was possible in parts of Florida, Alabamaterial, the NRC said.
ma and Georgia as heavy rain moves to the cast.
"These failures are of significant
On Friday, violent weather struck the South bringing heavy rain from
safety and regulatory concern
Mississippi to Tennessee.
because of the potential for material
In Jackson, Miss., a tornado knocked down power lines and damaged
to enter the public domain and affect
~ homes but no injuries were reported. Strong winds damaged proppublic health and safety,:• A. Bill
etty in at least six counties.
Beach, the commission's regional
Farther east, a magnitude 4.9 earthquake centered near Brewton,
administrator, said in a news release.
Ala., jarred western Alabama and the Florida Panhandle at 3:40 a.m. ·
· Strasma conceded, though, that
Minor property damage was repo{led in Alabama.
most of the materials used for
Ncar Panama City, Fla., a tornado tossed a bread truck 20 feet into
research and in the university's
the air, injuring the driver, and overtunoed a fuel tanker. A water spout
nuclear medicine program are shortalso damaged buildings at Panama City Beach.
lived and pose little threat" to health.
The high temperature in the continental United States on Friday was
And both Strasma and university
93 at Ft. Hood, Texas.
officials emphasized that the violaThe low was 16 at Marquette, Mich., while the lowest wind-chill
tions did not endanger any "student,
reading was 16 degrees below iero at Casper, Wyo.
faculty member, university worker
High temperatures Saturday were expected to reach the 20s and 30s
or member of the public.
in the northern Plains and central Rockies; the 40s in New England and
"Given different circumstances,
· the northern Rockies; the 50s in the Northeasi and Northwest; the 60s in . there could be the potential for peothe mid-Atlantic states; the 70s across the- West; and the 80s in the
ple being exposed to radiation,"
·Southeast.
·
·
Strasma added.

COUNTRY CHQI~TMA~ IN NA~HVILLE
December 11·14
Join 'Farmers CJ3ank and Leo's Cruise &amp; qfavel
'For Country Cfiristmas in :Nasfiville
'Tour .Higfilig fits
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

3 nts. Opryland Hotel including hotel taxes &amp;: baggage handling
Roundrip transportation via Superior Motorcoach
Ticket to Country ChristJnas Dinner 8: Musical Revue
Ticket to the Grand Ole Opry
Ticket to the Art, Antique, 8: Ca:aft Fair
Ticket for a Breakfast Cruise on'the general jacJuon Showboat
Ticket to Christ~~~as in the park at Opryland Park
Lunch a: Dancing at the \VIldhorse Saloon Departing Buffet Breakfast at Rachel's Kitchen Opryland flotel
All Applicable Thxes
Excort Services
$50,000 Accidental Death 8: $5,000 Medical Pay Insurance

Hurry, Final Sign-up is due by November 3rd
'". Don't Miss out on this fun filled Festive Trip
Leo's Cruise &amp; travel
Brenda Roush
202 West Setond Streei, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
614-992-4322
B00-795-111 0

Farmers Bank &amp;Savings
Joanne Williams ,
221 West Se!and Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
614-992-2136

What most concerned the agency,
though, is that the university had not
corrected similar violations uncovered in an earlier inspection. The
commission fined Ohio State
.
$17,750 in June 1994.
Other universities have been
fined similar amounts, Strasma said.
What makes Ohio State unusual
were the repeal offenses.
"The university knew they
weren'.t complying with the" ·regulations, u he said.
Investigators reported that the
unlveJSity"dijl not ·~ Abe prolllel!ll
because the school's radiatiOn aafety
office lacked the money and staff.
"Our expectations are that if you
don't have the resources to run the
program, you stop using the radioactive materials," Strasma said.
An Ohio Slate official agreed that
the radiation program was understaffed at tlu: time of the first inspec-,
lion.
But Robert Haverkamp, assistant
vice president for business and
administration, ·said Ohio State has
spent more than $2.5 million since
1994 to upgrade the program.
Strasma said federal regnlators
now· will keep a closer eye on Ohio
State. Because its nuclear ptogram is
large and the handling of suth material is common, the university is free
from many federal oversight provisions, It will have to convince the
commission that it should not he
given a more restrictive licen~.

a~ pr~par~d

Sports·

B
Sunday, October H, 1117
Section

osu gets 49~6 win
over Northwestern ·
: By TIM PUET

GAHS HOMECoMING ,QUEEN CROWNED- Gallla Academy High
School principal Bruce Wllaon crowned Stephania Mayea 1997
homecoming quaen prior 1o Friday nlght'a GAHs-Jack--. footJ?III
game on Memorlel Field. The queen waa eacortld by Chad Mayll.
Tfte annual Gllllpolle homecoming denca wee held Saturday night
In the GAHS gymnasium. Rain and 1 58-14 lou to JIICkiOn dampened this year'• lctlvttlea.

Lottery drawings, wagers, winnings
CLEVELAND (AP)- The owner of one Buckeye 5 ticket with the correct five-number combination may claim an Ohio Lottery prize of $100,000,
the lottery announced today.
.
The winning ticket was sold at Alum Creek "Carryout in the Columbus
suburb of Obetz.
Here are Friday night's Ohio Lottery selections:
The Buckeye 5 numbers were 7, 12, 19, 20 and 32.
In Pick 3 Numbers, the winning number was 510. ·
In Pick 4 Numbers,•the winning number was 8739.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled $360,168.
The 128 Buckeye 5 game tickets with four of the numbers are each worth
$250. The 4,253 with three of the numbers are each worth $10. The 43,057
with two of the numbers are each worth $1.
The Ohio l.ottery will pay out $746,123 to winners in Friday's Pick 3
Numbers daily game. Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled $1,359,438.50.
In the other daily game, Pick 4 Numbers players wagered $400,224.50 and
will share $130,800.
The jackpot for Saturday night's Super Lotto drawing is worth $12 million.

ftLL Ktps co&lt;•nr
1

"It li wltll great pleasure ttial I, Oh behalf of ttle Gallia Couniy
Family and Children First Council, provide this tetter endorsing
the Gallla County Children's Services Board levy. The Gallia
County .Children's Home, along with the other seM&lt;;es provided by your Board, is a vital link in our 6onlinuum of care
for multi-need youth In this county. There are many instances
in which lhe Children's Home has provided emergency sheller
and/or respile care. for children who would otherwise have to
. be sent to a residential facility in another county. Children who
are already lraumatized by circumstances 11ecessitaling
removal from the family are spared further trauma by having a
facility within their community In which they can receive sheller
and care. The Council wholeheartedly supports your efforts to
oblain adequate funding lo mainlain this facility and continue·
to provide the array of services mandaled lo a Children's
Services Board. Our best wishes, along wllh our votes, will be
wllh you on Nov 41"
·
Robin Harris, lntersystems Coordinalor

VOTE "YES". FOR CHILDREN'S SERVICES LEVY!
Pold lor by All Ktdo count, ,., ond Moroho Smtth, Treoo.

to bave tbe &amp;'ari~st ~)tperiel)'e
of you lif~ !f!!

S.IO off coupon
to~ard&amp; tbe

admis&amp;iol) prite at tbe
'f'rel)tb Art eotol)y
al)d
1be \'il)tol) \7 ol(,ll)teer 'Fire l»epartn)el)t'&amp;
'

.

·6th Annual Haunted .Manor"
11

5 30 First Avenue • Gallipolis, OH

. . COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Joe
: Germaine threw three touchdown
- passes, two of them to Dee Miller,
: for No.9 Ohio State in a 49-6 victo• ry Saturday over Northweslem.
Pepe Pearson also scored twice
· for the Buckeyes, who put the game
: away by dominating the third quar: ter.
. Ohio Slate scored on each of its
· three drives -in the quarter, covering
·: a combined 176 yards in 23 plays.
. Northwestern llad the ball for nine
plays in the period, saining 5 yards. ,
The victory kept Ohio State (7-1
overall, 3-1 conference) in the Big
·: Ten Conference championship race,
: but the Buckeyes remain in fifth
: place behind Michigan, Purdue,
. Penn State and Wisconsin. The
: defeat eliminated the Wildcats (3-6,
1-4) from postseason contention
after two straight years ip bowl
games.
Ohio State's victory was its sec· ond in a row since losing at Penn
State. Northwestern, which blocked
a field goal in the final seconds last
week to defeat Michigan State 1917,haslostfiveofitslastsix.
The game was the first between
the teams since 1994, the year
Northwestern began its resurgence
after years as a Big Ten also-ran.
· The Wildcats won the Big Ten title
in 199"5 and .shared it with Ohio
State last year. when the Buckeyes
went to the Rose Bowl.
After taking a 14-6 halftime
lead, Ohio State held Northwestern
to 6 yards on the first series of the
third quarter and made it 21-6 on a
6-yard iouchdown run by Pearson,

completing a 55-yard, seven-play
drive.
The Buckeyes got the ball back
after limiting Northwestern to
minus-3 ·yards and increased the
IC8111o 28-6 on a 10-yard pass from
Jackson to Miller, ca~ng a drive
that covered 59 yards tn 13 plays,
Northwestern punted after gaining five yards on lhe next series and ·
the Buckeyes too1t: three. plays to go
"62 yards for their next score.
Germaine threw 23 yards to Miller,
Joe Montgotnery gained four and
David Boston took a pass from
Germaine to score on a play covering 35 yards.
Ohio State added two scores on
the next two series in the final quarter, with Germaine hitting Tommy
Hoying with a 29~yard touchdown
pass and Ken-Yon Rambo scoring
on a 38-yard pus from third-string
quarterback Mark Garcia.
Germaine finished with eight
pass completions in 12 attempts for
177 yards, while starting quarterback Stanley Jackson was 8-for-15
for 89 yards and one touchdown.
Michael Wiley led the Buckeyes
with 73 yards in 15 carries.
Northwestern's leading rusher,
Adrian Autry, was limited to 34
yards in 15 carries. Wildcats' quarterback Tim Hughes was 7-for-15
for 63 passing yards and was sacked
for times by the Buckeyes, who
went into the game "with a Big Ten
low of 10 sacks.
Ohio State's quarterbacks were
sacked twice. The Buckeyes had
allowed 25 sacks, the most in the
conference, entering the game
Pearson "scored the Buckeyes'

KNOCKED AWAY- Michigan wide receiver Tel Straeta (II)
finds the football knocked out of hll handa by Michigan State ..._
to the ground by
Casey Dalley or the ty Arlc Morris ln.lhe fourth quarter of Saturday's BIQ Ten IIdia In
liCk In the first quarter of Saturday'• Big Ten matchup In &amp;st Lansing, Mich., where the flfth-ntnked Wolverfne1 won 23-7.
Columbua~-.where the Buckeye• whipped the Wlldcate by a 49-t (A~)
margin. (A.-1
first touchdown. He finished a 92yard drive early in the second quarter by shaking off two tacklers to
get into the end zone from 13 yards
out to make the score 7-3.
Miller caught a touchdown pass
from Germaine with 27 seconds left
in the half to complete a two-play
scoring drive. Germaine had hit
David Boston with a 16-yard pass
on the previous play.
Brian Gowins kicked field goals
of 27 yards in the first quarter and
36 yards in the second quarter for
Northwestern's only points.
The Wildcats' first score came
after they• started the game by

recovering an onside kick on the
Ohio State 43 and drove to the I0.
Gowins' second field goal was set
up by the longest run of the game. a
31-yard scramble by quarterback
Tim Hughes to the Buckeyes' 19.
Ohio State finished with 563
yards of offense, including 339
passing,
while
limiting
Northwestern to 164 yards - I0 I
rushing and 63 passing.
Ohio State extended its lead in
the series between the two teams to
51-13-1 and defeated the Wildcats
for the 20th straight time since losing 14-10 in 1971 in Columbus.

No.. 5 Michigan

downs MSU 23-7;
Toledo beats BG

open Irvin for the touchdown with
3:39 left in the lirst period.
On its opening drive. Michigan
took a 3-0 lead on Baker's 30-yal-d
field goal 6:36 into the game.
No. l81owa 6l,lncllana 0
EAST LANSING, Mich .. (AP)
At Iowa City, Iowa, Randy
- Defense rules at No.5 Michigan. Reiners ran for a touchdown and
The Wolverines flexed their threw for two in his first stan and
defensive muscles with sil~ intereep- · Tim Dwight scored on a 92-yanl
lions, including two each by Charles punt return Saturday to pace No. 18
Woodson and Marcus Ray, and Iowa to a 62-0 victory over Indiana.
Brian Griese and Chris Howard ran
·The Haw keyes (5-2, 2-2 Big
for touchdowns as the Wolverines Ten) broke a two-game losing
beat No. 15 Michigan State 23-7 on streak while keeping Indiana (1-7,
Saturday.
0-5) scoreless in October. The
Michigan's iron-clad defense, Hoosiers, who have los! 20 of their
still unscored upon in the fourth last 21 Big Ten games , haven't
Fortkamp scored both Big Red touchdown run in the fourth quarter. quarter, was flawless again . The scored a point in 10 quarters and
touchdowns on passes of 10 yards Van Dam completed 10 of 23 for Spanans' only points came on a fake have gone without a touchdown in
· and 35 yards.
144.
fteld goal, when holder Bill Burke the last 18.
Denison is 4-4 overall and 3-3 in
Cla~ey picked up: l41 yards on thr~ a 22-yard touchdown pass to
Reiners. a sOphomore, filled in
conference.
10 carr,es for Valparatso.
Sed"rick Irvin in the second quarter.
for fil"th-ycar senior Matt She1"111111.
Heldelber&amp; lll, Otterbein 14
Case RaeMie 4%, Oberlin 6
•
The Wolverines (7-0 ·4-0 Big who had slarted the previous J2
.At Westerville, Scott J&gt;erhacs
· At Cleveland, Ted Otero rushed Ten) took a big step. toward a Nov. 8 games but "is out of aciion for It •
threw for 214 yards and two touch- 21 t1mes for 146 yards and four showdown against No.2 Penn State, least two weeks after hurting his
downs Saturday as Heidelberg beat touchdowns as Case Reserve beat while the Spartans (5-2, 2-2) right hand last week at Michigan.
Ouerbein .19-14.
Oberhn 42-6 Saturday .
dropped their second straight game
Reiners, who was 8-of-16 for.
Heidelberg (4-3 overall, 4-2 Ohio
Otero scored Case Reserve's first and fell out ot contention in the con- 148 yards, also gave the Hawkcyes
Conference) took a 19-0 lead early four touchdowns on two two-yard terence race.
,,
another running threat. He ran well
in the fourth quarter and had t&lt;i hold runs and two 11-yard runs as the
Before the Lions and Wolve~s on a variety of scrambles and option
off a late rally by Otterbein (1-6. 1- Spartans (2-2, 2-3 North Coast meet in a game with Big Ten. ~ plays, scoring on a seven-yard dash
5) for the victory.
Athletic Conference) built a 28-0 Bowl and national title implications, that made it 42-0 with I: IS remain. Perhacs hit Ryan -Pifer with a 19- early third quarter lead.
both must win next week - Penn ing in the third quarter.
yard scoring pass in the first quarter
Dwight, the No.2 punt returner
Frank Peters added 115 yards State at Northwestern. Minnesota at
and added a 37-yard scoring pass to rushing on 16 carries for Case Michigan.
in the -nation a year ago, had his secJames Donegall in the fourth quar- Reserve.
With a Spartan Stadium crowd of ond s·traight electrifying week
ter, giving Heidelberg a 19-0 lead
Felix Brooks-Church caught a 79,687 watching on an overcast day, returning kicks.
with about 10 minutes to play.
three-yard pass from James Parker Michigan ·wore down its state rival
No.%2 Purdue 48, Illinois 3
Ma.tt D'Orazio, who threw for with 5:33 left in the third for with releQtless pressure on Todd
AI Champaign, 111., Billy Dicken
184 yards, rallied Otterbein with two Oberlin's(l-6, O-S) only score.
Schultz and a runriing game led by threw for two touchdowns and ran
scoring plays, including a two-yard
Brooks-Church caught 12 passes Howard, Clarence Williams and for one as No. 22 Purdue won its
pass to Matt Redick with about one for 120 yards.
Anthony Thomas. Williams h1110 sixth straight game and extended
minute left in the game.
John Carroll 55, Capital 0
yards on 21 carries.
Illinois' losing streak to 13 'with a
Otte"rbein attempted an on-side
At Cleveland, John Carroll
In 28 of the last 29 meetings 48-3 victory Saturday.
kick, but was off-sides.
crushed Capital SS-0 Saturday between the teams. the one with the
The win guaranteed the
Baldwln-WaUace 47 ·
despite playing without its first and most rushing yards has come out on Boilermakers (6- 1, 4-0 Big Ten)
Hiram 20
second string quarterbacks.
top. The Wolverines outrushcd the their lirst six-win season since 1984,
At Berea, Josh Purdy scored
With star1er Nick Caserio out Spru\ans 173-95.
when they finished 7-5 and went to
three touchdowns leading Baldwin with a broken jaw, and backup Ryan
Five of the interceptions came in the Peach Bowl. That was also the
Wallace to a 47-20 win over Hiram Cavanaugh forced to leave on John the second half, as Michigan built last time the team was nationally
Saturday. securing the sch&lt;•&gt;l's 31st Carroll's first possession with a bro· on a 10-7 halftime lead. The inter- ranked.
consecutive winning season.
ken nose, the Blue Streaks relied on ception total, five against Schultz
The fighting Illini (0-7, 0-3),
The Yellow Jackets (6- 1, 5- l two freshmen, Eric Marcy and Craig and one against Burke, was the most meanwhile, arc still searching for
Ohio Athletic Conference) havon"t Rocko.
· for the Wolverines since picking off their lirst win under new coach Ron •
finished with a losin~ record since
Marcy and Recko each threw a six against Miami's Bernie Kosar in Thrner. The 13-gamc losing stn:~.
1967, goin~ - 5_-1 . The Central touchdown pass a.• John Carroll (6-1. 1984.
dating back to last season, is the
College of lo~holds the NCAA 5-1 Ohio Athletic Conference) comCornerback Andre Weathers second-longest in school history.
Division Ill rcc&lt;&gt;ril'lior cnnsL'l:utivc pletcd its fourth shutout of Capital picked off a pass early in the third
The Boilermakers capitalized on
winning season with 36.
(3-4. 2·4) in the school's nine meet- quarter and returned it 10 yards to numerous mistakes by the Illini,
Baldwin Wallace look" 21 -ll mgs .
midfield, selling up tbe second of who turned the hall over seven
lead on its first three po"cssinns .
Capital quarterback Shawn three field goals by Kraig Baker, a times.
Purdy scored on runs of t M and Whcclor didn't fair as well . g&lt;ling 30-yarder with 5:5H left in the periSeventeen of Purdue"'s first 24
seven yards and Jeremy C:li&lt;lwcll . 13 -of-32 for lOS yards and four od.
'
points came allerrc,covcred fumbles
tcc.:ovcrcU a~ tcumnmlc ' s fumhlc in interceptions.
Woodson then made an acrobatic or interceptions thrown hy tirst-timc
the .end wne. l'urdy 'cured 1111 three Blumon 40, Mount St. Joseph 35 interception at the Spartans 21 , but starting quarterback Kirk Johnson,
of hisscven carries.
At Bluffton, Tyson Goings ran Baker was wide left nn a 3M-yard who linished 14-of-27 for 128 yards
Hiram Cl-(&gt;. 0-51 IIIOIIIa~c.l JUst liir 224 yards and one touchdown as ticld goal.
with four interceptions.
29Cl tutal yards 1111 X1 play,. Thc·y lllutTtnn heat Mount St. Joseph 40- . No matter. be cause Woodson
The Purdue defense also sacked
were ftorcc'tl to punt II time, .
.15 Saturday.
intercepted Schultz"s pass nn I be Johnson seven limes. while Dicken
Dayton :W, Vulpur11isu U
Bluffton trailed 24-28 early in the next possession. and tbrcc plays and was saeked once.
At Dayton. Kevin John' lhrcw li&gt;urth quarter until Lamarr Renshaw a pass interferen ce call later,
Dicken completed 15 of 24 passfnr two wuchdown\ ;uul ran fur caught a 66-yard touchdown pass Howard scored from two yards out cs for 215 yards.
another'" Daytou heat Valparaiso frum Joel Parrett.
lor a 20-7 lead witb 12:261efl in the
No.l4 Toledo 3S,
34- D fur its l'lth strai~ht wiu
Then Goings got going with a 55- game.
Bowling Green 20
Saturday.
yard touchdown run just a few minBurke replaced Schultl. 16-of-30
At Bowling Green, Ohio, Chris
Dayton (K-Cl. 4-0 l'iouccr l.cil~uc) utos later, making the score 38-28.
for 130 yards and live interceptions. Wallace set a school record with
clinched at loasl a shltf..: of the
Mount St. Joseph quarterback T.l. and Ray then came up his second five touchdown passes as No . 24
league title hy lakin~ the lcaJ hole in Hilvcrt was tackled in the end wno intcrccrtion with 3:31 left.
Toledo ri:maincd undefeated with a
the second half and pullinl! nway . h&gt;r a safety. ·
Schultz returned and DiAiio 35-20 victory over Bowling Green
Johns' 24-yard tnuchdown pass to
Mount St. Joseph is 4-3 overall Johnson made the last interception on Saturday.
Mau M&lt;K&gt;rc on fourth down broke a .while Bluffton is 2-6.
in the final seconds.
111 d0 (6 0 50 M"d
1 · American)
• • •
Finella.y 6~ Iowa Wesleyan 7
e
10-10 lie with I6 seconds left he fore
..,
Baker had field •oats of 30, 30 trailed 20-14 late in the tht"rd quarter
halftime.
At Findlay, Bo Hurley passed for
c
Dayton ~:apitalizcd on turnovers three touchdowns and Chris and 27 yards, the linal one coming before Wallace gave the Rockets
their first lead with a 49-yard touch- •
for its first two scores . Nick Jaquillard ran for two as Findlay with 7:40 left.
With
the
Spartans
leading
7-3
in
down
to Dw"a yne Harris. :
Virostko returned a Paul Van Dam defeated Iowa Wesleyan 62-7 the second period, Michigan took Wallacepass
added scoring throws to
interception 42 yards, leading to a Saturday.
over at the five and drove 95 yards Kevin Kidd and Mace Freeman in
22-yard field goal by Ryan Hulme.
Hurley threw an 86-yard scoring to take the lead on Griese's touch- the fourth quarter.
On"Valparaiso's next possession. pass to Darrell Ramsey and a 29- down run. Howard's 51 -yard run to
It was the Rockets' third straight
Ryan Rapaszky knocked the hall out yard pass to Jaquillard in the first the Michigan State 33 was the key victory over the Falcons (3-6, 3-2).
of Van Dam's hands and the Flyers quarter. He added a 43-yard pass 10 play in the drive.
Bowling Green's Bob Niemct.
recovered. Dayton scored on Johns' Darrell Ramsey in the third.
Irvin had 81 yards on 21 carries,
d ~ 238 rd nd
h
Jaquillard ran in on third-quarter
passe or
ya s a two touc 28-yanj pass to Pat Hugar.
Valparaiso (3-5, 2·2) got a 70- runs of 71 yards and one yard for but could not make the big play downs, including a 77 ~yardcr 10
. dl
· h M"d against the Wolverines ' second- Terry Laville that gave the falcons
yard run by Steve Clancy. Eric F•n
ay (4-0 overa1I, 7·0 10 1 e 1 • ranked defense.
a 20-14 lead in the third quarter.
Strasser kicked field goals of 37 and States Football Association.)
With a fourth -and-13 at the
B I" G
d
·
Iowa Wesleyan (1-2, 4•4) scored
ow mg reen rove mto Toledo
49 yards for Valparaiso.
. Johns completed II of 30 passes on 8 3l -yard pass from Wyatt Miller Michigan 22, lhe Spartans lined up territory again late in the q11aner,
for a 40-yard .field goal. Burke took
for 150 yards and added a 25-yard
the
snap, stood up and hit the wide(Set COLLEGES on B-8)
(See TOP 25 oa B-1)

Top 25 college
football

Heidelberg, Case Reserve &amp; Dayton also win
· College
football scores
Eaa1

Army 35, Colgate 27
Bucknell 18, Holy Cross 6
Cent. Connecticut St. 55, La Salle 14
Columbia 21, Yale t0
Connecticut37, Rhode Island 21
Cornell 45, Fordham 13
Delaware 40, Massachusens 9
Fairfield 21. Canisius 14
•. Georgetown, D.C. 24, Duqueone 0
Harvardl4. Princeton 12
ltofstra 37, Buffalo 26
Lafayette 38, Towson 0
lehigh &lt;16, Dartmouth 26
Marist2t, WagnerO
New Hampshire 24, Maine 7
Northeastern 28, Boston U. 7
Penn 31, Brown 10
Pittsburgh 55, Rutgers 48 (2 OT)
Robert Moms 41. Monmouth, N.J.
20
. Siena 12, St. John's, NY 7
St. Francis, Pa. 41, Gannon 26
West Virginia 30, Virginia Tech 17
South
Alabama 29, Mississippi 20
Alabama St. 20, Alabama A&amp;M 13
Appalachian St. 26, Wofford 21
Chattanooga24. W. Carolina 21
Clemson 20, Maryland 9
E. Kentucky 26, Tennessee Tecb 7
E. Tennessee St. 58, Furman 28
East Carolina 32, Memphis 10
Georgia 23. Kentucky t 3
Georgia Southern 49. Citadel 7
Hampton 20, S. Carolina St. 14 (OT)
Houston 36. l.ouisville 22
Howard 21, N. Carolina A&amp;T 13
Liberty 48, Charleston Soutbem 14
Miami 47, Temple IS
Middle Tenn. 55, SE Missouri 6
Miss. Valley St. 13. Texa.• Southern
10
Mississippi St. 35. Cent. Florida 2R
Morgan St. 14, Delaware St. 7
Randolpb·Macon 22. Davidson IS
Ricblll'llld 26, James Madison 21
Samfoiil25. Troy St. 14
'
Tennessee St. 27. Tenn.-Martin 20
Villanova 20, William &amp; Mary I J
Wake Forest 38, Duke 24
Midwest
Ball St. 21. N. Illinois 14
Butler 38. Evansville 35
Cincinnati 34. Miami. Ohio J I (2
OT)
Dayton 34. Valparaiso IJ
E. Illinois 42, Austin Poay 14
Indiana St. 16.1tlinois St. 13 (2 OT)
Iowa 62, Indiana 0
Iowa St. 24. Baylor 17
Kent 60, Cent. Michigan 37
Miehi~an !J. Michigan St. 7
Morehead St. 37. St. Joscph"s.lnd. 7
Notre Dame 52. Boston College 20
Obio St. 49. Northwestern 6
Ohio lJ . 21. Akron 17
Purduo 48. Illinois J
Toledo J~ . Bowling Green 20
W. ltlinois 37. SW Missouri St. 7
W. Kentucky 52 . S. Illinois ~I
Wisconsin 22. Minnesota 21
Southwest
Ark.-Pine Bluff 44. Langston 0
Kansas St. 26, Oklahoma 7
Missouri 51. Oklahoma St. 50 (2
OT)
SW Te.as St. 21. S. Utah 7
Southern Meth. 22. Wyoming 13
Texas ·Tcch 16, Texas A&amp;M 13
Far West
Brigham Young 31. Texas Christian
10
E. Washington S!, Idaho St. 1
Louisiana Tech 31. Boise St. 27
Tulsa at Colorado St.. ppd .• snow
UCLA 35, California i1
Utah 15, New Mexico 10

Cincinn-a ti gets past Miami
RedHawks 34-31 in two OTs

OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Eric
Richards' 35-yard field goal in the
second overtime gave Cincinnati a
34-31 victory Saturday over Miami
of Ohio, ending the RedHawks'
five-game ~¥i~nina streak.
· ·
Miami's Sam Ricketts threw a
16-yard touchdown pass to Ty
Buxton with 23 seconds left in regulation, tying it 24-24. The teams
traded touchdowns in the first over_lime, when Cincinnati's Daryl Royal
went one yard on an option and
Ricketts threw a 14-yard PIISS to Jay
Hall.
Miami (6-2) came ufl empty in
the second overtime when Ricketts'
screen pass wa"s intercepted by
Artrell Hawkins. Cincinnati (6-2)
then ·ran three plays to set up
Richards' kick.
Last year's 8ame also went overtime, with Cincinnati winning 30-23
in the third overtime.
Chad Plummer's nine-yard pass
to Rodrick Monroe put Cincinnati
ahead 17-10 with 28 seconds left in
the first half. Plummer ran 61 yards
on an option on the first play of the
seco.nd half for a 24-10 lead.
Cincinnati-preserved a 24-17 lead
by stopping Travis Prentice on
fourth-arid-one at the UC 16-yard
line with I :32 to play, but the
Bcarcats punted after three runs and
Ricketts led Miami 57 yards for the
tic.
Ricketts completed 29 of 46 for
290 yards and was intercepted twice.
Plummer completed six of 13 for 87
yards with one interception and led
Cincinnati on the ground with 73
yards on 12carrics.
Mount Union 59
Muskingum 0
At Alliance, Mount Union
Salurday had its 3 Is1 consccuti\'c
victory - a college foothall record,
The Purple Raiders racked up the
wins over the last three years.
Mount Union (7-0, 6-0 OAC)
shut out Muskingum 59-0.
·
Senior quarterback Bill Borchert
was 20 of 24 for 204 yards and five
touchdowns.

Senior wide receiver Kevin
Kncstriek had six catches for 106
yards and two touchdowns.
Muskingum sophomore quarterback Jeff Morris was live of II for
32 yards and two interceptions. The
Muskies (1 -6. 1-5 OAC) were kept
to just 84 yards.
Wittenberg 57, Denison 14
At Granville, freshman tailback
Casey Do~aldson had four touchdowns and 92 yards today in
Wittenberg's 15th consecutive-victory.
The Tigers (7-0, 5-0 NCAC) beat
Denison 57-14.
Donaldson scored on runs of two,
II, five and 12 in a same where the
:riger defense stepped up with two
defensive touchdowns.
Junior cornerback Ken Pope had
a 91-yard interception return- the
third longest in Willeriberg history.
Junior outside linebacker Shakeer
Abdullah had a 62-yard fumble
recovery.
Denison senior receiver Ben

°

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�Sunday, ()ctober.28, 1997

-Page 82 • ~ , I •~!---' H•el •

was also sei up by a Marauder
turnover. Ryan Caudill intercepted a
POMEROY - The Meigs Davenport pass to give Vinton
Marauders put together a total team County the ball at their own 33-yard
effort and upset the Vinton County line. Eight plays later, J.D. Ousley
Vikings 26-18 before a small w.e t dove over from a yard out, the pass
crowd at Bob Roberts Field in for the extra points was no good, but
Pomeroy Friday evening.
with 56 secohds left in the half the
The win by the Marauders score was tied at 12-aiL
severely damaged the Vikings
Vinton County took its only lead
playoff hopes. Vinton County went of the night when Ousley scored
into the contest rated fourth in from 26 yards out. Once again the
Division Ill's Region II on the extra points was no. good, but with
strength of a. 7-1 record. Vinton five minutes left in the third period
County drops to 7·2 overall and 2· 1 the Vikings held nn 18-121ead.
in the Ohio Division. The only other
The Vikings' lead didn't last long • .
loss .the Vikings had was a 20· 12 as Roush took a Davenport handoff
loss to undefeated Nelsonville· York. and went 62 yards for the •core on
Meigs is now 5-4 and 2·2 in the the first play after the Viking
Ohio Division.
kickoff. Jeff Fowler added the extra
Meigs gained a measure of points to give Meig• a 19-18
revenge over the Vikings with the advantage with 4:55 left in the third
win. Last year Vinton County period.
Meigs held the Vikings to four
defeated the Marauders 27 -8 at
GETTING THROUGH lathe taak of the rnonwnt far Me1ge fullback
Vinton as both teams went into the and out and took over after a Viking
.luetin
~oueh (24), who u ... the block by tackle Brien Young (78)
contest with undefeated TVC punt at their own 24-yard line. Matt
to
get
by
VInton County'a Jeremy Barney during Frkllly nlght'a Ohio
records. But Meigs took advantage Williams picked up 13 yards on two
Dlvlalon
game
at Bob Roberta FJ.Id. The Maraudenl' 26-18 victory
of a Wellston upset over Vinton in straight carries, but he was hurt on
unt
them
back
Into above-.500 territory. (Tlmea-5antlnal photo by
the fi nal game of the year, and the second carry and mis:led the rest
Dave
Herrle)
coupled a Maraader win over Belpre of the contest with a possible
to tie for th~ TVC championship shoulder separotion .
Vinton County: Ousley 1-yd. run
witll the Vikings.
Despite losing Williams the passes for 113 yards. w ·illiams
caught
one
for
six
and
Chad
Hanson
(pass
no good), :56 2nd
The win by the Marauders was Marauders went to work however,
one
for
four.
Vinton
County : Ousley 27-yd.
the first win over a Vinton County and took a 26-18 qead with 9:00
Ousley
led
the
Vikings
with
97
run (pass no good), 5:00 3rd
team in 10 years. Meigs defeated the minutes left when Roush scored
yards
in
13
carries.
Meigs
Held
the
Meigs: Justin Roush 62-yd. run
Vikings 44-14 on Oct 9, 1987 for its from a yard out Once again Fowler's
last win over Vinton County.
kick was true and Meigs held a 26- Vikings outstanding fullback, Todd (Fowler kick), 4:55 3rd
Meigs : Justin Roush 1-yd . run
The Vikings won the toss and 18 advantage. The Roush touchdown Braden . to only 27 yards in II
(Fowler
carries.
Braden
went
into
the
contest
kick), 9:00 4th
deferred to the second half. Matt capped off a 12 play 76-yard drive.
962
yards
and
was
averaging
with
Williams then returned the Viking
After the Marauder score, the
Team statistics
kick 34 yards to the Marauder 39- Vikings went on.the move driving 10 I Y1 yards a game.
Hatem was five of eight passing
yard line .. On first down, Justin the Marauder 48-yard line . But
Roush was stopped behind the line Hatem's pass on fourth and 20 was for 97 yards. Ousley caught two for De
25 yards, David Dealoia one for 29, . partmept
E Mdu
for a three-yard loss. The Marauders tipped by Bentley and picked off by Caudill
one for 23, and Shane Firstdowns... ........ ......... IO
17
.were also guilty of clipping. giving John Davidson to give Meigs the McFerren one for _
Total yards ........: .......... 246
453
20
the Marauders the ball at their own ball at its own 33 with 5:30 left.
"We .didn't play very good Rushing att.-yds . .... 38-149 46-330
20-yard line for a first and 29.
Eleven plays later, Davenport d ~
• d'
. ted M Q
Passing yds ...... ,... ..........97
123
Roush picked up 14 yards on two took the sriap and fell on one knee as •. den~e, atheiSappol?,W . att. ueen Comp.·all .................... 5 . 8
9. 12
straight running plays giving Meigs the clock went to 0:00 giving the sat aoler . . g~me.
e dtdn t block Interceptions thrown ... :... 1
I
welL W~ dtdn l tackle weU and 1f Fumbles-no. lost.. ...... none . 3-2
. a third and 15 at tile Viking 37. After Marauders the upset victot;y.
7-65
Roush picked up a yard, Brad
"This was a great win for our yo~ ca~ I do those two thrngs you Penalties-yds.............. 5-25
Davenport hooked up with Jeremiah football team," a happy Mike canAl wm.
h ld be'
h Punts-yds ... .............. .3·1 02
none
ceremony was e
oore t e
B.entley on a 36-yard scoring toss Chancey said after the game. "ThiS
l jving Meigs a 6·0 lead with 9:04 shows what kind of kids we have contest as Meigs High School retired lndi.'Vidual StatiStiCS
~ft in the period. The Marauders they really stuck together when w~ the number 32 last worn by Matt
11\JSsed the extm poonls as Davenport . lost those four games in a row. They Ault. Ault was a senior defense back
Rushing
l5obbled the snap.
.stayed together and played together. that collapsed a year ago last week
Vinton County: Braden 11-27,
after
a
game
at
Waverly
and
died
the
;: Vi~ton County took advantage of This was a great way for our seniors
Ousley 13-97, Dafl6-14, Hatem 7-8,
'-.
!j_Me1gs turnover to tte the contest. to play their last home game. We can nextday.
·
This week's agenaa: Vinton Ryan Caudill.l-3
~ris Addington recovered a Ro.ush enjoy this game this weekend, but
Meigs
:
Justin
Roush
28-222,
IWnble at the Marauder 31-yard hne. Monday we have to get back to work County will close its season Friday Williams 7-101, Bcnlley ·6-24 ,
1).-o plays later, quarterback Matt and get ready for a good Belpre team at Wellston. Meigs will travel to Davenport 5·(-17)
Belpre.
'!Jatem hit Shane McFerren on a 20- next week.".
PIISSing
:f.llrd scoring toss. Bentley smashed
The Marauders gained 330 yards Ou•rter lllllll&amp;
Vinton
County:
Hatem 5/8/1 , 97
II(! the middle to block the kick for on the ground for an average of over Vinton County .......6 6 6 0 = 18
yards
•
.
the extra points, but the Vikings had seven yards a carry . Sophomore Meigs .....................6 6 7 7 = 26
Meigs : Davenport 911211 123
titd the score at six with 2:03 left in Justin Roush blasted through the
yards
~ first period.
- _Vinton County defense for a career Scoring summary
Receiving
:· The Marauders came right back higli 222 yards in 28 carries, besting
Vinton County : Ousley 2-25,
IK&gt;wever !lnd went 63 yards in I 0 the 209 he had last season against
Meigs: Bentley 36-yd. pass from David Dealioa 1-29, Ryan Caudill I·
pl).ys for the score. Roush went the Alexander. Williams added 101 in Davenport (pass no- good), 9:04 Ist
23, Shane Mcferren 1-20
tlftal 21 yl!fds to give Meigs a 12·6 just seven carries. Bentley added 24
Vinton County: McFerren 20-yd.
Meigs: Jeremiah Bentley 7-113,
l~d with 9:45 remaining in the half. in six carries.
pass from Hatem (kick blocked), Matt Williams 1·6, Chad Hanson 1· 4
~igs went for two on the extra
Davenport was nine of 12 passing 2:03 Is!
paints, but Davenport's pass was for 123 yards giving the senior 1,000
Meigs: Justio Roush 21-yd. run
incomplete.
yards for the season. Benlley had an (pass no good), 9:45 2nd
:. The Vikings second touchdown outstan-ding game catching seven
.

f.Jiiller -defeats Eastern 18-8
•

:•HEMLOCK - David Riley
Miller's Jim Hedge picked off an
spared on a 48-yard touchdown run Adam Sanders pass and returned it
ai time ran out in the first half to 28 yards to the Eastern 48-yard line
give Miller an 18-puint advantage at with 10 seconds left in the half. With
tl;le half and powered the Falcons lo everybody expecting a pass, R{ley
an 18-8 win over the Miller Falcons took a draw play up the middlt and
liriday night.
broke his 48-yard touchdown run to
•: The Hocking Division victory of . give Miller an 18-0edge at the half.
1~ Tri-Valley Conference left Miller
Eastern's lone touchdown came
a.~ 4·Q and 7-2 overalL Bas tern on a four-yard run by Steve Durst at
d!"Jpped to 0-4 and 0-8.
·
the 6:32 mark of the third frame. A
: Miller did all of its scoring in the Sanders to Buchanan pass added the
second period, although it dominated extras. The touchdown was set up by
the running between the goals a fumble recovery by Chris
throughout the game. Bxcept for the Buchanan.
·
second period, Eastern held its own,
The Eagles threatened midway
bending on defense, but keeping through the fourth frame, when at
e~ough composure to keep Miller the 16 yard line they fumbled the
Olll of the end zone.
ball away.
. Although Miller nearly had three
Defensively Abe Rach led
100-yard rushers tn the game, tl was Eastern with II tackles, followed by
the big play that put the Falcons on Shaun Long with 6, Wes Sanders 7
the board. Dnn1el Jones scored .on a and Buchanan 6. Brad Willford
7~-yard touchdown j~unt at the .9:38 caught a pass and was 1-8 receiving,
mark 10 the first period, then Heath while Buchanan was 1·1 1.
HOwdyshell rambled 56 yards to pay
For Miller, Anthony Riley had
dirt at the 4:12 mark. Both extra seven tackles. Shane Compston had
p~int attempt.s failed.
. six.
.\..... ..____,
.
. ..

--·-

•'
•

\.

HOLLEY BROS;

~ CONSTRUCTION

CO., INC.
:.'i:?l:Jo

-._?

, 01 11111111&amp;

IODIIEY, OHIO

•Backhoe
•Dozer
Work
JiuUJDITIAL • COXUUCIAL

: UMESTONE
TOP SOIL MUSHROOM
RIVER GR~VEL
COMPOST
ep.n Mond.y thru Frlny 7:30 am til 4:30pm.
Slturny 7:30 arn-12 noon

You Piek Up or We DeUHr
446-2114 or 245-5316

whipped them up front."
A sco"less first half had Logan
LOGAN - In Friday night's making the deepe.C penetralion into
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League opposing territory ia that stretch.
varsity football contest at Bill SaThe Chieftains' last drive of the
Field, River Valley's Raiders flllt quieter took t11ern eight yards to
reconled a few firsts in tallying an the. Raiders ' 17-yard line after the
18·0 victory over the host Logan first pf linebacker Josh Hinton' s
Chieftains.
·
three fumble recoveries. But Logan
The decision:
!ail back Chris Yates' fumble and
• Gave the Raiders three straight fullback Jake Howdyshell' s fumble
wins for_the first time in their six· "covery pushed the Chieft&amp;ins from
season htstory. .
;_ a third down-and-one situation to a
• ~urcd River Valley (4-4 over- fourth-and-five •ituation on River
al! &amp;; 4-2 in th~ SEOAL) its first Valley's 21. Quarterback Dan
wtMJng season m league play.
Cook's incomplete pass killed that
• Helped the 1997 edition tie the drive.
1994 crew for most wins in a season.
The closest River Valley got to
The 1994 Raiders finisbed their sea· . scoring before halftime was when
son with a 4-6 mark.
the Raiders drove 56 yards to the
• Was the first of the 1997 cam· Chieftains' 23-yard line in a drive
paigri in which River Valley shut out that consumed the last 3:59 of the
its hosi in the first half.
first qUartei and 'the first 40 seconds
• Gave the Raiders their first road of the second quaner. But fullback
viciCiry of the season.
Justin.Teny's fumble was recovered
Defense . was as vital to victory by Hinton at Logan's 18.
for the Raiders as their three second·
After halftime, the Chieftains
half touchdowns, because few teams went to the passing attack with
survive a first half without surren· greater frequency than in the first
dering some points after losing four half, when Cook threw only five
fumbles.
times and tallied one completion, a
. But the Raiders did.
12-yard pass to Howdyshell . But
"This was our first wet game of Logan moVed the ball three yards
the year," said Raider boss Merrill before its punt landed at the Raiders'
Trip len. "But our kids got ready to 37.
play the second half, and we
River Valley got the ball with
By G. 'SPENCER OSBORNE

Tlmel-sentlnal Staff

9y DAVE HARRIS
T..S Comtapondent

~

,_ge

~· • 1 ·--~ 1' I •

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

~

River Valley beats Logan 18-0 to collect third straight win .

Meigs notches
26-18 triumph .
vs. Vinton County

~

SUnday, October H, 1~

Oyartcr .lllllli
Eastern .................O 0 8 0= 8
Miller ............ .......o 18 o 0= 18

Team statistics
Department
. &amp;
M
First downs ... ................ ... 7
9
Scrimmage plays ...........33
42
Total yards ... ......... ....... ll8
400
Rushing all.·yds . .....33-98 42-396
passmg
. yards ........ ......... 20 . ' 4
Comp.·all . ................... .3,8
1·4
Interceptions thrown ....... 1
0
Fumbles-no. lost .......... 1·2
3-4
Punts-avg . .................. 6-37
2-34
Penalties-yds...\. ......... 6-35 14-105

Scorlna summary .
Miller: 1ones, '12-yd . run (run
. (S~ EAGLES on B-3)

The 12th
Annual Toy
Bun Held
SepL. 27 was a ·
great siaeeess.
The Meigs Co.
· Bikers ·
Association
would like to
thank everyone
In the

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start Friday

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Bakatball Writer
Time for a new slogan: The NBA
-Enjoy it while it lasts.
Think of where you are now as a
basketball fan. You're watching
Michael Jordan, the greatest player

business and
Individuals,
who donated to
help us.

ever. You're \)latching the Chicago
Bulls, a dynasty unlike anything
seen in any pro spurt since the '60s,
go for a sixth tit)e.
You have the stalwarts of one generation, Charles Barkley, Karl Malone, Patrick Ewing, Reggie Miller,

crossing paths with the most exciting
talents of the next generation,
Shaquille O' Neal, Grant Hill. Allen
Iverson, Kevin Garnett:
You have Rick Pitino back, you
have the old three-point line back,
you have Chuck Daly back, you even

By ODIE O'DONNELL
OVP Corre•pondent
GAlLIPOLIS -A steady drizzle
that fell on area gridirons Friday
night did not slow down the running
game in the Southeastern Ohio Ath·
1
1elic League contests as the four win·
ning teams outscored the opponents
by a 148-44 margin.
TWo players, Jackson's Shane
Wolford and Warren Local's Rob
Callihan, each scored five .touchdowns in leading their teamates to
lopsided winf over Gallipolis and
Athens respectively.
J&gt; );~!! .~~tigul:ll its .Ssault on
tne league record books in a .58-14
wreyking job on Gallia Academy,
Warren puunded Athens 58-30. River Va(ley blanked Logan 18·0, and
Point Pleasant defeated a vastly
improved Marietta team 14-0.
Thl: Big Blaeks remain as t!Je only
hurdle standing between Jackson and
a second straight undefeated league ,
championship, and a possible benh in
the state football playoffs that begin
next week. The lronmen will match
their 6-0, 8-1 record against the Big
· Blacks' 5-1, 7-2 mark Friday at

Eagles lose...

Sanders Memorial Field in Point
Pleasant.
Warren I,.ocal 58, Athens 30
At The Plains, the two teams
rolled up 71~ yards in total offense as
the Warriors ·ran and the Bulldogs
countered with their passing on rainsoaked Rutter Field.
Warren's Rob Callihan enjoyed a
career night liS he scored on runs of
47, 41, 20, and 4 uards and returned
a !kickoff 88 yards and Shane
Richards kicked six extra poiQts.
Athens' talented quarterback Nathan
White, completed seven of 22 passes for two touchdowns. a' two point
conversion, and 240 yards in the
defeat.

Warren grabbed a 22-15 first"period lead, added 16 in the second quar-

ter, and built a 45-30 lead after three
quarters of play.
Callihnn mn for 191 yards, Earl Tidd
98, and Todd Caslin _80 as the War·
riors netted 429 yards -rushing. The
Athens rushing game was led by for·
mer GAHS gridder Ryan Perdue,
who carried I0 times for 50 yards.
P~rdue also snagged four passes for
47 yard~, Chad Thomas caught three
for 53 yards and one touchdown, and
Mall Weaver had one catch for 65
yards and a touchdown.

IC you are between the ages of
50 and 80 and qualify, this
$7,500 whole life inst~rance
policy can help ease your loved
ones' financial decisions al
yQUrdeath.
For dtto;lt rwt ('UI'ti'ORt . wsl.i.. " sfrirtions and "'lt&lt;WOOiU~;
.ff'f Stuft Furm A~tnt:

1984 FORD T.BJRD Turbo

AJC; AMJFM caM, tilt, cru111,

1883 MERCURY SABLEI89t8crulll, PW, PL, P. -~ ................................................. t~:MI:I

SEOAL

w
Jackson .:: .. .............6

.L

Point Pleasant.......S
River Valley ·-....... 4
Logan ..................... 3
Gallipolis ...............3
Warren Local ......... 2
Athens :................... !
Mariella... ...............O

I

!am

f[

0 277

183

2 136
3 129
3 116
4 151
5 89
6 46

fA

32
112

113
141

147
193
239
150

w
8
7
4
3
3
5
I

I

Overall

L
I

2
4
6
6
4
8
8

f[

£A

346
267
148
166
138
251
131
89

66
160
I66
235
214
242
380
237

f[

£A

Sdeded non-league teams

w

Iwn

Lucasville Valley ............... ............................... 8
Wahama ...............................................- ..........6

Coal Grove ....................... ... .............................. 6 ·
Meigs ....•...•.......:................................................S
Ironton .................................. .............................5
Southem.....- ....................................................4
South GaUia .....................................................o
Eastern ...............................................................0
Frjdgy's Kllm ·
Jackson 58, Gallipolis 14
Point Pleasant 14, Marietta
0

River Valley 18, Logan 0
Warren Local 58, Athens 30
Miller 18, Eastern 8
Meigs 26, Vinton County 18
Waterford 26, Southern Q
Hannan 26, South Gallia 0
. Wahama 26, Hu~tington
Vtnson 6
Ironton 6, Portsmouth 3
Coal Grove pad open date

L

0
2
2
4
4

s

8
9

266

70
7S.
88

179
251

232

173 .

162

202
210

124
58
45

334

236

Illf Wttk JJI mnda
Friday: River Valley at
Gallipolis; Jack son at Point
Pleasant; Logan at Athens ;
Waterford at Eastern; Meigs at
Belpre ; Southern at Federal 1
Hocking ; Guyan Valley at ·
South Gallia; Wirt County at
Wahama; Fairland at Coal
Grove; Columbus Wallerson at
Ironton; Lucasville Valley at
Minford .

Ihu played Saturday
Lucasville Valley
at
Portsmouth Notre Dame

(614) 992-6614. (800)837·1094

BS,

@

22-16-7-13=58
15-0-15-0=30

VOTE FOR AIID RETAIN •••

,Sutton Township TRUSTEE

ROY F. VAN

R

Willing.&amp; Able to Devote the Tune it -Requires
28 years experience in road work.

Your Support Would Be Appreciated

(Continued from B-2)
failed), 9:38 2nd qtr.
Miller: Howdyshell, 56-yd. run
(pass failed), 4: 12 2nd qtr. ·
Miller: Riley , 48-yd . run (pass
failed), 0:00 2nd qtr.
·
Eastern : Durst 4-yd . run
(Buchanan pass from Sanders), 6:32
qlr . ..

(Renewal)
PERRY TOWNSHIP
A Majority Affirmative Vote Is Necessary
A renewal of a tax for the benefit of Perry
Township for the purpose of PROVIDING FIRE
PROTECTION at a rate not exceeding one {1) mill
for each one dollar of valuation, which amounts to
ten cents ($0.1 0) for each one hundred dollars of .
valuation, for a period of five (5) years, commencing
1997 tax year.

~~-.:P;:IIkl::::;.::=::::.:=~=~-==:=:=:~0:=~::.=~

eace of mind·
State Farm's
Final Expense
Policy.

have a scorer on Mike ·fmtello 's
team.
Soak it all in, folks. A year from
now, it may be gone.
From all indications. this is the
NBA's eve of destruction. The Bulls
are breaking up, a lockout looms, a
baseball-style labor war is possible
and the whole basketball of wax
could break apart like a shanered
backboard.
A year from now, you' ll be remi·
niscing about today - the last time
you went into an NBA season saying
"I love this game ."
The 1997-98 season opens on Halloween niehl with a scary subplot
(See FORECAST on

Area gridiron standings

Pd. lor by condldohl: Roy V•n Motor, 30615 Ml!chtll Rd., Racine, OH

Eastern: Buchanan 1- 11, Willford
1-8. Miller: Arkley 1·3.

in a stressful time.
~t'sa

Gilmore H -4)
Fumble recoveries- Teny 1-0
Interceptions rough! - Webb
1-0

~Apn Cldeflalns
Rlllhing- Yates 17-6 I
Passing - Cook 3- 13, 8 yd ...;
River V aUey Raiders
Yates
0.1 &amp; I int.
·
Rushing - · Gilmore 11· 79 &amp; I
Howdyshell
112;
Receiving
TO; Triplett 18· 78; Boso 11 -67 &amp; I
J. Wolfe 1-3; Wells J.(-7)
TO; Teny 10-52 &amp; I TO
Fumble recoveries - Hin ton 3Passing- Boso 2-3, 14 yds
Receiving .- Bradbury 1 -18 ; 0; Wells 1.()

Quarter lllllll&amp;

Warren Local
Athens

I
2·1
7-55
6-227

Statistical leaders

,

Warren Local downs Athens 58-30

·. ·Rushing
·Eastern: A.Sandcrs 9-47. Miller:
Riley 13-154. Jone• 16-147,
Howdy•hcll 13·90.
'
Passing
Eastern : Sanders 3-9· 1·20:
Miller: Tony Riley 1·3·0·3
Receiving ·

COIDIDDDfty,

Interceptions thrown .......0
Fumbles-lost ................6-4
Penalties-yds................ 1·5
Punts-yds ...................J -95

Two generations approach crossroads

Individual statistics

good reason for

.-.

NBA season to

only 59 seconds gone from the third f"Oved on until Terry scored from
quaner. The Raiders took 14 plays ~ven yards out with a little more tha
and nearly 6 1/2 minutes to move 63 five minutes left in the game.
yards. That was mainly the work of
Both offenses were confined to
halfbacks Jimmy Gilmore and tile spread between the 30-yard lines
Jeremiah Tripleu, who combined to the "sl of the way.
account for 10 carries for 45 yards in
Thh week's age~d" The
the series. Their work and that of Raiders will finish the season Friday
their teammates set the stage for w1th a 7:30 p.m. appointment with
quarterback J.B. Boso's two-yard the Gallia Academy Blue Devils at
touchdown run off left guard.
Memorial Field in Gallipolis . The
Apparently learning something Chieftains will play Athens Bulldogs
from the Chieftains about not capi- Friday at The Plains.
talizing on turnovers, the Raiders Ouarter llUib
cashed in on Logan 's fourth-quarter RiverValley ........... O 0 6 12 =-18
turnovers...:.. a fumbled punt by Josh Logim ............•........0 0 0 0" 0
Wolfe and Yates' interception.
Wolfe, taking Boso' s punt at Scoring summary
Logan's 12, fumbled the baiL Teny
recovered the bal.l at the Chieftains'
Valley- Boso 2-yd. run
nine. That set up Gilmore 's nine- (runRiver
failed), 4:36 3rd qtr.
yard sprint to the end zone before
River Valley -Gilmore 9-yd.
fotir minutes expired in the period.
run (run failed), 8:27 4th qtr.
Logan's next possession, the only
River Valley - Terry 7-yd. run
one in which the Chieftains weren 't (run failed), 5:04 4th qtr.
allowed to get as far as three-andout, stalled when Yates, on a half·
back option play, threw in traffic Team statistics
created by two Raider defenders and
RY Lo&amp;an
Logan fullback Nick Wells . River Department
3
Valley safety Jeremy Webb leaped First downs .......... .......... 18 .
71
above the other players, caught the Total yards....... ............ 290
Rushing
au.-yds
....
.56-276
23-63
ball and landed shoulder pads first
.8
Passing yds...... ............ .. 14
on tile Raiders ' 35 with 7:381eft.
Comp.·an
..................
...
2-3
3-14
Sparked by this and Boso' s 51 yard run to Logan's 14, the Raiders

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1994 MAZDA 84000 PICKUP 4x4, V6, stereo, more ....................... $11,500
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Sunday, October 26, 1897

Pomeroy • Mlddlaport • Galllpolle, OH • Point Plu•nt, WV

•

Hannan tallies 26-0 win over South Gallia in home finale · '

Humbles GAHS 58-14

Jackson cli·nches at least
a tie for SEOAL grid crown

By NEIL JUSTICE
Timet Sentinel Staff
ASHTON, W.Va.- Hannan foot·
ball coach Kent Price told his team
that if they had patience good things
were bound to happen. That's when
the Wildcats were a dismal ()..6 two
weeks ago.
,
Price's theory became a reality as
Hannan whitewashed South Gallia,
26-0 to post its second consecutive
win on a muddy Friday night.
"I told our kids that we would get
some wins but that it takes patience
and timing to get them," Price said.
"A lot of teams peek at different times
and unfortunately we're starting to gel
at the end of the season. But it's all

'

GALLIPOLIS • Jackson ran past
Gallipolis 58-14 on Memorial Field
Friday night before approximately
1,500 rain-soaked fans to clinch at
least a tic for the 1997 Southeastern
Ohio League football championship.
It's Jackson's third straight conference crown~ and 19th in the
school's history as the state's fifthranked b'onmen improved to 8-1
overall and 6-0 inside the league.
Gallipolis dropped to 3-6 overall
and 3-3 in league play.
GAHS shocked the redshirted visitors when Bert Craig returned Vince
Jenkins' opening kickoff 80 yards
with II :47 left in the period to give
the Blue Devils a quick 6-0 lead.
Heath Rothgeb rnn the two-point conversion to make it 8-0 for the Blue
and White warriors.
On Jeremy Payton'sensuing kickoff. Shane Wolford fumbled the slippery pigskin on Jackson's 25 with an
unidentified Blue Devil recovering. It
appeared Gallipolis was going to
score again, but the stingy JHS
defense came alive, and blanked the
Gallians the remainder of the game
·until Coach Jim Reynolds pulled his
regulars with 28 seconds remaining
in the third period with the Ironmcn

leading 50-8.
Gallipolis became the first league
team to score on Jackson in the first
perioil this fall. In fact, no other conference team has been ahead of the
Ironmen this year except the Blue
Devils.
Reynolds said, "We came down ·
here expecting a hard-fought game.
Our boys were fired up, but this is a
tough place to play. We were beginning to think that jinx was still
around. (It was Jackson's first win a1
Gallipolis in eight years) . I'm sure
Gallipolis' quick score and fumble
recovery stirred our boys up,"
Reynolds said.
After the Blue Devil fumble
recovery, the teams exchanged punts,
then it happened.
On a third and seven situation on
the JHS 20, Jackson ran a draw play
with Wolford romping 80- yards
untouched. The thrashing was on.
With 6: 18 left in the period, it was 86 after Josh Atkinson and Craig
stopped a run for the extra points.
Jackson's defensive unit forced
another GAHS punt with 3:21 left in
the quarter. 1\vo plays later, Wolford,
who reCeived excellent blocking from

his teammates all night, rambled SO two from where Blankenship carried
yards for a TD. Jay Blankenship split it in to make it 41-8. Blankenship
the uprights to make it 13-8. '
added the kick from placement to
Following the ensuing kickoff, make it42-8 with 5:5Jieft in the periTom Curtis.recovered a GAHS fum- od.
ble on the GAHS 36 to set up JackA 73-yard pass from Chamberlain
son's third score of the period. Wol- to Rodney Campbell set up Jackson's
ford took it in from the two with 35 third score of the period. Campbell
seconds left. Blankenship's kick look the pigskin to the GAHS five.
made it 20-8.
Wolford smashed over from the one
Jackson's defense, called one of for his fifth and final TD with 32 secthe best in the area by assisiant coach onds left in the quartet\ Chamberlain
Brett Wilson, forced another Blue ran the two-point conversion to make
Devil punt to start the second period .. it 50-8.
JHS quarterback Casey Chamberlain
Both coaches cleared their benchhit T. J. Mustard with a 40-yard es for the remainder of the game.
touchdown strike at the 10:08 mark,
Gallipolis scored again when T. R.
then ran the two point conversion for Rogers galloped 59 yards with II :47
a 28-8 halftime lead for Jackson.
left in the game. Jackson's Tony
Wolford set up the next Jackson GiUiland scored the final points of the
score by scampering 55 yards on the evening on a 49 yard run with l 0:55
first play of the second half down to left to play. Chad Spradlin passed to
the GAHS 19 Wolford scored his Jon Hubbard for the extra points to
fourth touchdown with 8:35 left in make it 58-14.
the period from three yards out.
On the night, Wolford ran for 261
Blankenship kicked the·point after to yards in 24 carries and scored five
times.
·
·
make it 35-8.
Chris Daniels blocked Payton's
Rogers paced GAHS with 84
punt to set up the b'onmen 's ·next ' yards in four trips.
score. It was the first time this season
II was Gallipolis' most lop-sided
Payton had a kick blocked. Jackson loss to a Jackson team in the long
recovered the ball on the Blue Devil

.- -----GAHS-JHS--facts, figures:-----Score by quarters:
Gallipolis ... ·. 8 0 0 6 = 14
Jackson. . . . 20 8 22 8 = 58

Statistics
Qloartmtnt
.G
.1.
First downs . . ...... 9
13
.Yards rushing ..... 194 408
Lost rushing . . . . . .. 25
2
·Net rushing ...... 169 406
Pass attempts .. ... 10
3
Completions ........ 2
3
Intercepted by . ..... 0
0
.Yards passing . . ... 37 144
~Total yards . . ..... 206
550
·Plays . . . . . . . . . . .. 47
49
~Return yards ... 10·153·1 4-47·0
Fumbles .......... 2
3
Lost fumbles ....... 1
2

Penalties .. ·...... 3·30 8-67
Punffi ...... . .. 7·216 3-97
Individual rushing •
. GAHS • Rogers, 4-84·1;
Reed, 7· 37-0; Craig, 3·25·0;
Davis, 7-18-0; Bodimer, 4·13-Q;
Mitchell, 4·4·0; Kelly, 4.0·0; Payton, 4·(·12)·0 Totala 37-169-1.
JHS • Wolford, 24·261·5;
Gilliand, 1·49·0; Rouse, 8·38·0;
Mustard, 4·31·0; Blankenship,
8·27-1;
Chamberlaln,1·0-0.
Totals 46-406-7.
Rtteelvlng •
GAHS • Craig, 1·22·0; Davis,
1-15·0. Totals 2·37-o.
JHS •
Campbell, 1·73·0;
Mustard, 1-40·1; Malone, 1·31·
0. Totals.3-144-1.

P81slngGAHS • Payton, 2·10·0-37-o
Totals 2·111-0-37-o.
JHS • Chamberlain 3·3·0·
144·1 Totals 3-~144-1.
Recovered tumbles •
GAHS • 2. Totals • 2
JHS • 1. Totale ·1.
Paea Interceptions •
GAHS • None. Totala 0.
JHS • None.
Total• 0. ·
Punta • GAHS • Payton, 7·
216; (30.8)
JHS ·Jenkins, 3-97 (32.3).
Scoring • GAHS • Craig, 80
yard kickoff return, 11:47 first,
Rothgeb run; T. A. Rogers, 59
yard run, 11:47 fourth, pass fail.

Hannan improves to 2-6 overall
while the Rebels fall to 0-8.
Meanwhile, Hannan relied on its
three running backs to off-balance the
South Gallia defense. And it worked.
Hannan had 330 yards rushing. Last
week the Wildcats rushed for 313 in
a 27-8 win over Clarksburg Notre
Dame.
On Friday, Seth Canterbury had
touchdown runs of 40 and 35 yards
WOLFORD SWARMED BY BLUE DEVILS • Jacklon'l out·
1tancllng tlllbttek Shlna Wolford (211) 11 sWirmed by a holt of
Blua Devil• on .this plly during Frldly nlght'l SEOAL game on
l'lln-IOiktld Mamorlll Field. WoMord, howa-, r1n tor 261 yards
In 24 trlp1 and scored five touchdown• In th'" quarter• of play
11 the lronmen rolled ovar GAHS 58-14 to clinch a1 IHit alhal'l
of the 1997 con1erence football champlon1hlp.
rivalry betwoen the two schools. The
Ironmen now lead the series with 32
wins against 31 losses and 5 lies.
Gallipolis closes out its 1997
campaign at home against River Valley Friday. It will be parents/seniors

Basketball
ABLstal!dings

night. Jackson travels to Point Pleasant where a victory will give the Ironmen the undisputed league championship. A Bis Black win would give
Point Pleasant a share of this year's

l•stem Cunt~rence

~lphio .......~.................J ~
A.IIM!Il . . .

. .......... ......... . .2
CO~tJMBtJS ........... .............. 2
NC'¥ Enaland ............ .............. 2

crown.

~.:: )

SonJosc ................................. .t

s•••n...................................... t

•

Your Vote Willa. AppreelaW

Early Wedoesday

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Brian Elltrbe, the assistant coach
whq had been running Michigan
basketball practices after Steve Fisher was fired, was named interim head
C'OICh.

1

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Cross~·ord

Puzzle on Page D-2

Santa Claus is coming to town!
Applications for toys to be donated by the Meigs County Bikers
Association will be taken at the Meigs County Health Department
beginning November 3, 1997. Applications will be taken for two
weeks. The final day to apply for toys is November 14, 1997. No
exceptions. Applicants must apply in person (ABSOWTELY NO
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(Medical card, pay stub, unemployment, etc)

.200
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Football
NFL's Week 9 slate
Today's games
B:lhimore ar Waahinsron, I p.m.
CINCINNA1l111 New York Oianls. I p.m.
DaiiUAC Philadelphia. I p.m.

Buffalo. I p.m.

Kanw Cily II Sr. Loui1, I p.m.
1., San FmncW;q.ar N.;w Or~. I p.m. . . , . 1
Minnes01a Ill Tampa. Bay. 4 p.m.
Clit::.o Ill Miami1 4 p.m.
Tenncuoe Ill Arizonu. 4 p.m.
lndilniiPOiis til San Diqo, 4 p.m.
Jacksonville at Pinabul)h, 4 p.m.
Oakland IV Sealrle, 4 p.m
Allantalll Carolina. 8 p.m.
()pea dale: Dc1roi1, New YOJk Jell

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Monday's gam• .
Green Blly a- New Englnnd. 9 p.m.

Ohio H.S. scores
Friday's action
Adal8. Upper Sciolo Val. B
Adtna 28, ZD.ne Trace 0
Akron El~ 69, Akron Cen·Howtf 8
Akron Fireslo~ 24. Akron Kcnmorc 1
Aki'On Hoban 61. SICUbcnviille Cath. 21
Akron Mam:hel:l~r63, Sandy Vnl. 0
Akron Sprin,_. 7:\, Marlington 0
Alliance 34, Wooster 8
Amanda..Ciearcreek fi I, Bloom-Currull 0
Amhersr 37, Fllin&gt;iew 28
Ansonia 12, Be1hel6
Amanum 20. Br~otl.l J
An:hbold l4. Wauseon 6
Arlington 16. Cory·Raw10n 0
Ashtabula 20. Ashlabula Edgewood IJ
Aurora 33, C01rdinal 18
A~on 19. Keys10ne 6
Avon Lake .56, N. Olmsted 22
Aymville 49, Anrwerp 20
Bellll5\'ille 42. Buckeye Trail 14
lktcbwood, Ky. :n. Cin. Purcell-Marian 12
Bellllire 40. Cols. Honley 14
Bellefonuaine 2.1. SpriAJ. Shawnee 12
Bellev~ 30, Tiffia Cohambi.an7
O..l•y 4J. London 14
'
., Bloo.:hester 12, Way~ ville 0
Bluffion SS. Cridtrsvlllc PErry 0
Bowling Green 14. Perry1burg 0
Brtek&amp;Yille 28. Bere!l 0
Brooke, W.Va. 28, Zllncsvillc.26
Brookf.eld 18. Piusburp! Alleaheny ll
Brun~wick 34. N. Rid,geville 12

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cass, PW, PL, PM, tilt, cruise, rear defrost, washer wiper, alloy

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,

Brudl 44. Geneva 18
811ckcye Local48, Richmond Edison 12
Buckeye Val. 27. Mr. Gilead 0
Bucyrus 21. Upper Sand1nky 19
Cadll24. Union l.lxal6
Cumbridge 37, Oaymoqt 21
CIUWI Fulron NW 35, Carrollton 12
Canton Cath. 14, Orrville 1
Canton Timken. 28. LeJ.in1ron 25 con
6, s..... E. 0
Carli•le 13. Bellbrook 6
Cednrvillc 19, Covinaton 6
CclliM 17, Uma Shawnet 7

c...,.

Cuyubop His. 10, Columbia 1
Dlllton :\4, Chippewa 0
Day. N011hridge 41, Dillie 6 ·
Day. Oakwood )4, Brookville 0
DefitallCe :\I, Von Wen 0 ..
DeGroff Riverside 12, lnlli1111 LAke 6l0TJ
Delpbos Jdlenon 48, Pttwlding 28
Delphos S1. John's S4, MinslerO
Della 37, Swnnlon 8
Dover 47, lndiM Val. 0
Dublin Cflfffi'!IID JO, Orov~ Ci1y 16
E. Clinlon 24, Gn!eneview 0
E. Liverpool 31, St. Clairsville 9
Easllake N. 16, Mayfield lJ
~aencn 49, Hiett ville I R
EIJiD 42, H. Union 2.0
Elmwood 48. Eas1wood 22
Elyria 35. Mentor 28
Euclid 54, Bedfold 1:\
E'la'grten 32, Monlpe.licr 6
Fllirbonb 17. Cenlerbur$0
Fairfield Union lO, Hamilton Twp. 1
Fairland 14. Chesopcajle 7

Fairlea 41. E. Kno11. 0
F'tdd 10, Oamttsv1lle 7
Fireland1l1, Clearvicw 6
Fostori:a 28, Oregon Clay 0
Frnnklin H1S. 21, Whi1ehllll 7
Fredericklown 27. Danville 20
Fremom Ross 14. Findlay 1.'
Fl. Frye 20, Shenandoah 7
Ft Retow-ery J I, Parkway 6
Galion IS, Shelby IJ
Garfield Hts. 39. Wo~tensv\1\e 0
Genoo. 19, Giblonburg 16
Gnh11m 2~. Sp:ina. Catholi\: 0
Graad Val. 41, Newbury 10
Granville )J, New Albany 10
Greenfield I3. Minford 6
Greensbura: Ora:n 14, Rc!vcrt 7
Hamihtm. 28. FIUrfield J
HmDWI. W. Va 26. S. Calha 0
Hardin Northern 38, Arcadin 6
Hani10n ~5. Cin. Hughes 20
Hawken 60, Berkshire 23
Hea1h 14. Ubei1y Union 1
Hilliard Da~i.UOn 34, Grcvepon 6

Hilllluu 4~ . We~tem Brown 6
Hilhop 20. Sdltn 0

· Holland Spring. 17, Syl~ania Nonb~iew 0
Howland 16. Campbell Memorinl7
Hubbmd JJ. Newlon Fnll1 M
. Huber Htt. WayM Sl, Sprina. North M
Huion 54, Port Clincon 0
Jndepeadeoce ~I, Brooklyn 0
_ _ Indian Creek )2, Oak Glen, W.V:l. 1
lrom016. Ponsmot.nh 3
Jackson S8. Gallipoli1 14
Jefferson 42, COAnCaut 20
John Glcmt ~~. Philo 0
Johnslown U.lbesville Rosecraru 6
Jo·na~hnn Alder 21 , Gri!Ddview 0
kenS! on 2S, W. Genua;a 0
Kenl Roosevelt 28. Hudwn 20
Kenton lO, Uma Bath 1-1
Keucrinj Alter )5, Oily. Pllllerson 12
~euering Fllinnont 48. Fairborn 6
kinland 22. Cb:lgrin Falls IS
Lukcwood J I. E. Clenlaml Shaw 12
Lebanon 49, Go!hen ,8
Libmy Center
Dr~an 27
Libcny·Benton 44. V:mlue IS
Licking .His. ~4. lkme Union 1
Limn 12, W. Oaeuer l..tikom E. 0
Limn Cn1h. 2R. Spencenillc 14
lisbon 2:\. Uni1al Locall9
Lockland 44. Cin. Hills Chri~lian 0
Lorain Cath. 20. Cuyolhug;1 Valley Cllr. 1
l..or.lin SouthvieW ,\4. L.Ornin Kinf!. J.'
L.!Ctll 27 , Marion Cal h. 6
Mildison 28, Ash1nbul11 Hnrbor 20
Mansfield Madisoo W. Man1liehJ Sr. 6
Marga.reua 20, Perkin5 14
Marion H;m.linJ lS. A~hland 20
Marlins Ferry 7, Billnt"Jville )
'Marysville 28. Bi~ W:.lnut ,7
MasoJ\ 14, ICinj!:sO
MliSsillon 10. Akron StV -Sc.M 3

n

Yards passing: Hannan 0. South
Gallia 74
.:
Interceptions thrown: Hannan 2,
South GaiJin 2
Total offense: Hannan 330, South,
Gallia 132
'
First downs: Hann~n 8. South •
Gallia II
Penalties/yds.: Hannan 9/95,
South Gallia 7/63
Turnovers: Hannan 5, South GaJ;,
Jia 4.

This week's agenda: South Gal-

lia will host Guyan Valley Friday.
Hannan will head south to face
Gauley Bridge Saturday.
Quarter lglaJi

South Gallia
Hannan - ·-

0-()..()..0=0

0-6-12-8=26

Scoring summary
Hannan: Cordell 45-yd. run (kick
failed)
Hannan: Canterbury 40-yd . run
(kick failed)
Hannan: Wray 1-yd. run (kick
failed)
Hannan: Canterbury 35-yd . run
(Waugh run)

Individual statistics
Rushing
Hannan: Wray 14-98 &amp; TO, '
Canterbury 6-91 &amp; 2 IDs, Cordell
ll-88 &amp; I TD: South Gallia: Calla- ·
han 22-58. Sanders 1-0, Stanley 6- (- ·
18), Queen s:6.
Passing
Hannan: Waugh '0·2·21NT; South
GaiJin: Stanley 4-6-33 yds &amp; INT, '
Sanders 1-6-41 -!NT
Receiving
Hannan None: South Galli a: Sta·
ton 3-30, Barcus 1- 13, Butler 'J-31.

Team statistics
Rush attempts: Hannan 37, South
Gallia 41
Yards rushing: Hannan 330, South
Gallia 58
,
Pass attempts: Hannan 2. South
Gallia 12
Pass completion s: Hannan 0,
South Gallia 5

Shop at home...

Massilloo Jackson ;\I , C11n1on GlenOak 7
Massillon Perry 28, Uniontown Lake 6
Maumet47. Ros1ford 29
Mnys"ille 20, Trl-Valley 6
Meigs 26, VlniOJI Coumy 18
Miar:ni1burg 41. l.cmun-Monroe I 3
Middlelown 26. Mi llord 7
Middletown Fenwick 24, Day. Stebbins I)
Middlclown Madison 14. Pftb\e Shaw net IJ
Miller 18. Reedsville Eurcrn 8
Mihon-Union 23, Benjnmin Logon 20 (2 OT)
Mlnen'll6~. CantonS. 0
Minsler 7, New Bremen 6
Monro!! Ccntr.ll 2S. Frontier 1
Monroe~ille :\6. Ashland Cresi&gt;Jiew 22
Morgan 21 , W. Muskingum 14
MI. Vernon 6, Watkins Memorial 0
N. Cunlon 41, New Ptlil31le1phia.O
N. Colle&amp;e Hill 1:\, Willi:armburg 12
N. Roynlron 1~ . Midpark 14
Narm~on 42. Co~lry 20
National TrWil.'i. Tri.County N. 21
N~lsonville.'York I J, (klpre :\
New Btemen 7. Marion Local 6
New London Jl. Collins Weuern Ra:servc 7 ·
New Middlerown Spring. I~. Mathews 0
New Richmond :\:'i. Bethel·Tille 0
Newark 28: Gailoway Wei~ land 7
Newcomerstown 3J,Iklltlii'C' Sl. John's 0
Nile1 24, Giranl 0
, Nor~hmonll:'i . Trotwood-Madi~on 12
Nortun 29, Toll~ge 0
Nnrwulk 19. Willard 1
.
Nurw:1lk St. Paul bl, Mllflltlon 0
Qbtrlin J9, Brook1ick 6
Ok:ntangy :\0, Hilliard Dtttby 0
Olmslcd F:alb 29. 8ay 21
On.rorin 2K. Riverdnle 0
OIS!!go ~4. Millbury Lake 8
Oltaw:a·GI:mdorr 19, Elida 0
Padua .~4. Oe. Carholic 10
P:une~&gt;Jille Rivenide 42, Painesville Harvey 6
Pt~int Vnl. :\0, Uni010 1
Partdora·Gilboa :'i I. McComb 20
Parma Hrs. Holy Name 23. Elyria Cath. 0
Pal rick Henry 49, Kansas Lakotu D
Pickerinttton 20. Gahnnnt1 12
Pi.ktron 26, Hunlinglcn 0
,Piqun 7. W. Carrollmn ~
Plcas11.m 6,, Cardirwon 6
Point Pleasant W.'/11. 14. Mariet1aO
Poland 16, Cunlield J
Portsmoolt\ E.c 14 . Symn'IC5 Val. 12
rymatuning Val ~6. Led,_cmom 6
Rt!'&gt;'LTe 14. Gret:nsbuiJ Green 7
R~ynoklsburg 69, Chillicothe 19
Ridgewuod 2!1. Malvern 0
Rinman )~. Hillsdale M
Ri"er 19. WheelinJ. (W .V:• I Ctn1rnl 7
River Val. 21 . Rid,edale 0
Ro.:k Hill7. S. Purm 0
R01.:ky River :4, Westl&lt;akcO
IWutstown 46. MottaWrc ,\.J
Ro~s J.l Luvdand 7
S Ccnlral2.'i. Plymuurh 14

S, Runge 28. Berlin Cenler Wes1crn Re~rve 6
Shadyside! 3. Bridgepon 0 !2 OTJ
Shaker Hrs. 41 , Nonn11ndy 0
Shmdan 20. River View 6
Sherwood flliNiew SO, Way~ Trace 12
Solon IJ, Nordonia 12
Southern Locnl 25. Sebrin~ 6
Spann Highland 4J , N&lt;~nhmor 21
s,ring. Nonh~em J2. Spring. NonhwcMern

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Spring. Soulh 48, Beavercreek 14
Sprina:boru 9. Uu)e Miami 7
Slow 21 . Rllvenna 0
Strnsburg 13.JeweU·SI:•o6
SlronJs\'illc J7. Medina 20
Srrurhen 46. Salem 41
Sylvani:a Southview 42. Aruhony Wayl'lt! 19
Talowanda 33. Fr.anldin 19
TenyM Val. 29, Canal Win~;hetiln 7
Te1:umM."h 27. Kc:nton Rir.J,e IJ
Thonw Worthington 37. Del;aware 7
l'illin Calvl!fl 2S, Hopewtll·lnudon 13
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npp City 14. Lmman 7
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SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

Womeo
High serlca: · Margaret Eynon
(522): Susan Mossman (520)
High aame: Mossman (190 and
186)

.lOll
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Alloota at New Enaland. 4 p.m.
l'llnl;md 11 Philodo:lpllia. 6 p.m.
COLUMBUS a1 San Jose. 7 p.m.

,.,ason Bowling Lanes results
Mixed Bowll111 ~ague
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Friday's KOres

RE·ELECT

WILLIAM H.
SAUNDERS

2

ld.

New En,Riand 79, Seaule 6~
'-PJlrtlanl62. COLUMBUS ~7
Long Beach 93. S1t11 Jose 67

Dcn~cr a1

ment players.
Most obslirvers feel Chicago will wins.
It's almost like Donald Fehr and drop a notch from the team tbat over
Bud Selig are hovering at the scorer's
table, waiting to check in.
"I'm not prepared tQ '!'ake a pre·
diction on it," commissioner David
Stem said Wednesday. "It's a very
volatile area, and there's no need to
make dire \'fonouncements."
.
Stem will ·say thiS: 11te league ts
'
at a crossroads as the Bulls end their
run and the game is handed to a ·
younger generation able to command long-term contracts of more
tha~. $,100 '?illion.
. ..
Our btggest problem ts that
we're paying too much money,"
Stem said. "The result is a cascading
salary structure that's OK if you're
generating enough revenues to keep
up with it. But we're not.
Pold by lho Cltndldlle, Wllllom H. Sounderl,
"I'm charged with keeping this
25 Summer W- Dr., lldwell, OH 451114
league on some economic course that
makes sense, and in their totality
these contracts are putting us in a
cycle where players earn mQre money, teams cam less money and tidc:et
prices ~eep going up for the fans.
That's a bad mix."
The possibility of a lockout will be
the No. I topic of discussion when
the Board of Governors meets Nov.
II .
By then, the defending champions
already will have begun their quest
for another title. .
.
Chicago will start the season without Scottie Pippen, who will be out
until at least January because of fOOl
surgery. Toni Kukoc also has been
slowed by a sore foot and Dennis
Rodman's status with the team ·was

2
2

Wtllern Conft~M't
l'onlllftd ..................................4 0

games: Oct. 31 · River
Valley at Gallipolis and Jackson
at Point Pleasant

. ~------------~----------------------------------------------------------------The Chicago Bulls will be gbing
attempt by the league to use replace- up in the air.
the past two seasons averaged 70 l/2

Cremeans had a blocked pass in the
second quarter on a second down and
12-yards to go play and two plays lat·
cr the Rebels had to punt. Also, Cre·
means created a fumble which Canterbury recovered with 7:50 left in the
second.
.
Hannan assistant coach Mike
Lambert said thauhose were two big
keys in the game, defense wise.
"Those were two huge plays,"
Lambert said. "The defense has done
a tremendous job the last two games.
We're pleased."
Hannan also got to see future
players as Price put in the second
team with 6:34 left in the game. And
for a coach to put in players with that
much time left is a luxury.
Hannan's Josh Long had 28 yards
on three carries and allowed the
Wildcats to run the clock down by
picking up two first downs.
"It's definitely a luxury to have our
younger kids come in and see some
playing lime," Price said. "They \lid
an excellent job. I wish we had that
luxury all season."
Amos Callahan led South Gallia
with 58 yards on 22 carries.

Scoreboard

Ne~

'

fur another title in the final season
under coach Phil Jackson, who says
"wild horses couldn't drag me back.::_
That co~ld mean the end of Jordan's career, since he has said he won't
play anywhere else.
.
· "Yes, I believe him. And yes, I'll
b-y to talk him out of it," Jackson
said. "I appreciate his loyalty and
appreciate that he said that, but I
don't want to limit his career. I'll
encourage him to go on if there's
something left in the tank."
·. There's no guarantee Jackson or
anyone else will be· able to do that.
· And by the time next July I rolls
around, the dynasty will almost certainly be finished and the start of the
1998-99 season may be in jeopardy.
; "We've had a great run. What
we've done is unparalleled in mod~m day sports,"Jackson said. "After
this year I'll step aside, look at the
!arne and the learns and at a lot of
tltings that arc going on with the
league. The possibility of a lockout
\Will affect the future of everyone."
: Ah, the lockout.
·: Didn't we just go through one of
tjlosc?
Actually, there have been two
lockouts in the NBA over the past
few years. a three-month one in
1995 and an eight-minute version in
1996.
The league has the right to tear up
the six-year labor agreement at the
end of the season, which would
inevitably lead to another lockout. the
possibility of the decertification of
the union, an anti-trust case brought
by the players and maybe even an

positive.~~

JHS • Wolford, 80 yard run,
4:42 first, run fail; Wolford, 50
yard run, 2:23 first, Blankenship,
kick; Wolford, 2 yard run, :35
first, Blankenship, kick; .Mustard,
40 yard pass from Chamberlain,
10:08 second, Chamberlain,
run; Wolforg, 3 yard run, 8:35
third,
Blankenship,
kick;
Blankenship, 2 yard run, 5:51
third, Blanken,ship, kick; Wol·
ford, 1 yard run,:32 third, Chamberlain, run; Gilliand, 49 yard
run, 10:55 fourth, Spradlin, pass
to Hubbard

NBA forecast... &lt;Continued from B·3l

':

,,

in the third and fourth quarters, quancr with tlirec minutes left.
respectively to lead the Wildcats. But for Wray the game against the
Canterbury finished with 91 yards on Rebels had a special meaning. Last
six carries.
year the Rebels came back from a 6Pricc said that Canterbury has 0 halftime deficit to score two touchplayed a crucial part of the offense in I downs in the fourth to beat Hannan
the two Hannan wins.
24-12.
"Seth's a tremendous athlete and
This year, however, Price told his
we used him primarily because South team, which led 6-0 at the half, that
Gallia was focusing on Jason Wray the same thing wasn't about to hapand Josh Cordell," Price said. "It's a pen .
luxury to have three good running
"Coach told us at halftime it wasbacks ond for all of them to have n'l going to happen," Wray said. "We ·
tremendous rushing games."
wanted this win bad and we're just
South Gallia coach Jack James glad to get it. We definitely made up
agreed.
for last year's Joss."
"Hannan has some great backs
South Gallia had a chance to score
and they killed us tonight," lames when they drove the ball 36 yards on
.said. "Their offensive line played a eight plays to the Wildcat 24 yard
·crucial part of whipping us tonight line. But, Russell Waugh intercepted
and giving their backs the room to a Rebels pass to deter the drive with
run."
6:03 left in the firs( quarter.
. Waugh also grabbed another interJosh Cordell rushed for 81 yards
on II carries and scored the Wildcats' ception in the fourth quarter when the
first touchdpwn on a 45 yard scam- Rebels were looking to get their first .
per to the end zone with 9:03 left in score of the game. Waugh has caught
the second quarter.
five interceptions in the last two
Wray also came up big as he games.
.
rushedJor98 yards on 14 carries with
Linebacker Shane Cremeans also
a touchdown coming in the third played stagnate defense for Hannan.

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Clyde JJ, Milan Edison 0
Col. Bttchcrofr41 . (fll. Nonhland IR
Col. BliJp 28, Col. Unden-McKinlcy 8
Col. Brookh:wen IJ. Col. lndcpt:~Mkn~ 6
Col. Ccnrennial 22. Col. ..\clldemy 20 (OT)
Col. OcSIUn 28, Sandusky 7
Col. Ew 24. Col . Wht111&lt;1nr 3
Col. EuiMOOC" 29. Ct~l. Mifflin 6
Col. Mllrion-Fronldin 9, Col. Walnu1 Rid&amp;e 6
• Col. Warter1011 J~. Cui. Sl. Charks 6
• Col. Wm 14, Col. Soulh 8
Coldwaler 24, Sl . Henry 10
Columbi~~~a62, Ltctonla 8
ColumbiiWI Crettvlew ll. E. Palcaline 0
Columbu1 Grove 19. Allen E. 0
Coa!Wx:ron 1-4. Tu~~:W"awu Val. 0
Cresrwood 16. RaYCnna SE 10
Croobville 26, New Le.dnJIOn. 0
• CuyllhoJII Falb ,l l, Barbenon 28 (0T)

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•

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446·36'72
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Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point PIIIIPt, WV

Sunday, October 20,1H7-

Sunday,October26,1897

Point Ple~sant beats Marietta 14-0 in homecoming game.
By RICK SIMPKINS
will not only affect the SEOAL, but gave us some breathiag room and
T-s Correspondent
also the playoff picture for the locals. changed a lot of things for the second
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A A win next week wiU keep the Big half. It allowed us to concentrate
sometimes heavy rain that set in ear- Blacks in the top eight of the Class more controlling the football and less
ly in the afternoon turned the playing AAAralings and will give the locals on the score of the game," added Saffield of Sanders Memorial Field into a home field advantage in the first fond.
a quagmire, but the annual Home- round of~ playoffs. It will also give
The Tigers took the opening kickcoming game went on as scheduled. the Blacks a share of the league off and came out of the blocks with
Both teams played as well as could crown, a first for boys' sports. The a bang. They moved the ball at will
be expected considering the condi- Lady Knights softball team garnered from their 38 to the Point 35, but a
tions, and the Big Blacks secured the first ever league crown for PPHS fumble that was recovered by the
their second consecutive playoff when they captured the SEOAL Blacks' Adam t amphell snuffed out
berth with a hard-fought 14-0 win championship in their first year of the threat. Campbell fell on the ball
over Marietta.
. compelition in that span.
at the Point 37 and the Big Blacks
:'Playing under these cor!' ·tions is
Senior fullback Jeremy Rickard needed only 10 plays to tum the misa lot of fun for the players, b is an provided most of the offense for the clle into six points.
'
absolute nighhnare for coaches," 'd Big Blacks, rushing for 130yards and
The Tigers aided the, drive with
PPHS head coach Steve Satroiil both Point touchdowns. His rushing thm: encroachment penalties, but
"There were several things we wa~t.:-_ total gives him 956 yards on the sea- the credit goes to the Point Pleasant
ed to do offensively but couldn't . son, just 44 yards shy of the coveted offensive linemen, who opened up
because of the condition of the field. 1,
yard mlllll.
huge holes for their running backs.
And. I'm sure Marietta feels the
J 'e Buskirk also tum.:d in a fine
Brent Rollins had th~ big play in
same way. This just wasn't the kind offensiv rformance, picking, up 66 the series, a 20-yard gainer that put
of
we wanted for our home- yards on 0 eight carries. The bulk the ball on the Marietta 28-yard line.
...--coming, but you have to play the · of Buskirk's
s came during the Dusty Higginbotham picked up a
hand
is dealt to you," added Saf- Big Blacks' seco touchdown drive yard IO the 27 and two consecutive
ford.
late in the second q er.,Thatdrive encroachment penalties put the ball at
The Big Blacks parlayed apair of was the key to the gam ccordrng to the 17. Rickard took care of things
first half touchdowns with a great Safford.
from there, going the final 17 yards
defensive stand in the second quarter
"Our drive at the end of the.._sec- for the first score of too game. Matt
to record the victory. their se venth of · ond quarter was definitely the ke)-{o Young added the exira point and it
the season agamst two los!es. The the game. We had come up empty on was 7;0.
· . .
win also sc~ up a big matchup next a drive earlier in the game and we "- Potnt's d~fense forced ~anetta to
Friday nighr wlien the Jackson Iron- were up only 7-0. That scoring drive 'punr on thetr next possesston and the
men come to town for a game that
·

Blacks began another drive that
seemed destined to put another score
on the board.
But. a fourth l1lld one from the
Tiger 15-yard line fell short and
Marieila dodged a huge bullet. Following another Tiger punt, the Blacks
started a drive at their own 20.
This was a short series, however,
as Point fumbled the ball away on the
ftrstplayofthedrive. Mariettarecovered the ball on the Point 18, butt~
proud Point defense took over. Three
plays netted nine yards and the Tigers
,
were .acing
a fourth and one from .'L_
u"'
· Theyopted •.or a pass wh'1ch •re11
mne.
incomplete and it was Point's tum to
do the dodging.
The reams traded punts and the
Big Blacks Clll'l1e; out on the good side
of the fic!d post!l~n exchange, be~10mng a dnve at thetr own 34-yard hne.
The l~ls put together another 10
play w;1ve that was capped by
R1ckard s. 0~-yard plunge. Busk1rk
had the hon s share of the yardage,
p1ck10g up 4"! of the 66 yards ~~ the
dnve. Youngs extra potnt made II 140. The sc?re came wtth only 44 sec·
onds left tn the half.
.
There were only two real sconng
threats tn the ~ond half, one by each
team. Manetta s chance came on
their thind possession of the half. Fol-

Quarter lltllli

Wahama grabs 26·6 win over Vinson
'By GARY CLARK
them and our line answered that quesT-S Correspondent
tion which led to a couple of early
MASON, W.Va.- The Wahama scores for us," added Cromley.
. football team bounced back in a big
Wahama reached the end zone on
.'way Friday night with a surprisingly its first possession by marching 91
easy 26-6 win over Vinson before a yards in six plays with Tennant bust~parse Parents Night crowd at the
ing through the middle on a 55-yard
;Bend Area school.
scoring _gallop. Tennant added the
David Tennant and Chris Roush two-point conversion run to give the
scored on long touchdown runs in the White Falcons a 8-0 lead with 6:02
opening quarter to stake the 12th left in the opening quarter.
ranked Class A Falcons to an early
Wahama made it a 14-0 game
:14~0 advantage before the locals 'minutes later when Nick Northup
:lidded a David Mitchell run in the recovered a Tiger fumble at the Fal:~hird quarter and another Tennant con 37-yard line. One play later It
•iaunt in.the final quarter for the win. was Roush 'who burst through the
lWahama snapped a two-game losing middle of the line untouched on a 63. kid with the win and edged closer to yard scoring run.
/ts second straight post season playThe White Falcons threatened on
;pff appearance.
their next two possessions but each
:1 Tennant finished the night with his time was turned away after driving
;)ifth !00-yard rushing game while inside the Vinson 10-yard line. Late
{irant Huff added 96 yards with in the third period, the White Falcons
·Roush picking up 65 yards in two wouldn't be denied they complet:
~arries. Wahama rushed for 294 yards ed a 59-yard, seven play drive which
~ break free from its mid-season Mitchell capped off with a one -yard
:~ffensive slump to impro•• to 6,2 run for a 20-0 lead.
:p~erall while Vinson fell to 3-5 in the
On its next series, Wahama
:last meeting between the two teams. enjoyed its lof\gest drive of ihe,night
:!fhe T1gers will join Ceredo Kenova and put the game out-of-reach by
·P.od Buffalo Wayne ne&lt;t season to going 61 yards in 12 plays with TeniJorm Spring Valley High School.
nant going the final eight yards on a
:1' Wahama put up some impressive - fourth down run off the left side to
;Pumbers offensively with 374 yards make it a 26-0 contest with 4:36
~otal but in reality the night belonged remaining in the game.Vinson avojded the shut out on the
:to the White Falcon defense. More
:Important!~ tilt; Be~d Area's front final play of the night afterJosh Ver·line. The mtenor hne of Wahama genz scored from seven yards out.
minated the line of scrimmage on The Tigers didn't get the opportunity
th sides of the ball albeit the ,locals for a point-after-touchdown due to
' ere able to bounce back from a pal! the ruling that if a teain hasn't a
hf losses in its last two outings,
chance to a least tie the score with tilt;
;: "We ,biocked them pretty well up point after it will not be BJiempted.
"We wanted to throw the ball a lit1ront and fundamentally we per, ,armed much better," Wahama coach tie more than we did tonight," Crom; Cromley said. "We thought we ley said. "But due to the success of
'auld attack their tackles and that's our running game we kept the ball on
1 what we were able to aceom- the ground.
·Iish.
· ''We had a good balance between
, "Early on were were searching for all three of our backs in Tennant, Huff
:$Qmcthing that would work against and Roush while David Mitchell
:\
Joel Lloyd combined on a couple of
;1.
big plays that helped sustain two of
;~
b ief
our ball control offensive scheme. We
I r I
got a little sloppy handling the ball
"
Buketball
late in too game but for the most part
;: HARRISONBURG, Va. (AP) ~ I w115 pleased with our effon considFormer NBA referee George Toliver ering how the weather turned out,"
Cromley said.
was fined more tluln $30,000, but got
The Falcon defense turned Vinson
iio jail time for filing a false federal away four times inside the Waharna
income tax return in an airline ticket 20-yard line with two of those stops
learn.
coming early in the game as the Bend
\' Toliver. of Harrisonburg, pleaded · Area team took over on downs at
guilty in July to one count of filing a their own·seven and 19,-yard lines on
false income tax statement to 1993. the Tiger first two possessions of the
:I'wo other counts were dismissed as nigh). Tyson Reihnire. Aaron Scott.
pan of the plea agreement. He was Huff; Bob Kingery, Corey Roush and
placed on probation for two years.
Lloyd joined too front wall of B.J.
; NBA referees Jess KC{scy, Henry Davis, Mike Nonhup, Nick Northup
Clinger Armstrong and Mike Math- and Chris Chandler in a standout perIs also were indicted earlier this year formance by the WHS defensive
pn charges of defrauding the Internal
!tevenue Service. IRS investigators
~liege the referees downgr_
aded firstf iiiSs airline tickets supphed by the
league to cheaper fares , then pocketed the difference without reporting
(he gain liS income.
Football
ST. LOUIS (AP) - NA. commissioner Paul Tagliabue had a 4 If2hour videotaped deP?silion. in the
eity's antitrust lawsUit agru~ s t the
league, and it's only the first 10stall- .

as

t

t"po

rt

unit.
Wahama will attempt to nail down
a playoff spot next Friday when they
host Win County on Senior Night in
the White Falcons' home finale
before traveling to Winfield to close
out the regular season.
Tbls week's ageDda: The White
Falcons will host Win County Friday.
Ouartcr lfWib
Vinson
0-0-0-6--6
Wahama
14-0-6-6=26

Scoring summa~
Wahama: Tennant 55-yd. run
(Tennant run)
Waharna: Roush 63-yd. run (run
failed)
Waharna: Mitchell 1-yd. run (pass
failed)
Wahama: Tennant 8-yd. runi pass
failed)
Vinson : Vergenz 7-yd. run

0-0-0-0=0
7-7-0-0=14

t,'

Scoring summary

Punts/avg.: Wahama 0, Vinson: 2Point Pleasant: Rickard 17-yd.
34.5
run (Young kick) .
Off plays: Wahama 52, Vinson :
Point Pleasant: Rickard 2-yd. run
56 .

'· .

•
•

Game totals
·
Rush attempts: Point Pleasant 53;
Marietta 32
Yards rushing: Point Pleasant 283.
Marietta 74
Pass anempts: Point Pleasant O,
Marietta 7
Pass.completions:' Point Pleasant
0• Marietta 1
.
Yards passing: Point Pleasant 0,
Marietta 41
Point Pleasant 0,
M Interceptions:
. Ita
0
arle
Total offense: Point Pleasant 283,
Marietla 115
First downs: Point Pleasant 16,.
Marietta 6
, Penalties/yards: Point Pleasant320, Marietta 1a- 80
Thmovers: Point Pleasant! , Mari27, Marietta 4-43
Return yards: Point Pleasant 10,,
Marietta 32.

I di id 1 t t' ti
n v ua I a IS cs
Ruohlnc
Point Pleasant: Rickard 22-130-2
TOs, Buskirk 8·66, Ron ins I H8,
Higginbotham 12-39. Marietta: Olllll
7-27, Swartz 12-28, Francisco 4-ll,
Ash 2-9, Weppler ·2-8, Westbrook 5.

N J ·. Ia·nts to host
st rug gII. ng BengaIs

.

Passing
Marietta: Westbrook 1-7-0-41. ·
Recdvlag
Marietta: Simmons 1-41.

,.AYLOR

MOUIJIII

12
Yards rushing: Wahama 44-294,
Vinson: 32-90
Yards passing: Wahama 80, Vinson: 104
Totals yards: Wahama 374, Vinson: 194
Passing: Wahama 5·8, Vinson: 922
Interceptions: Wahama 0, Vinson : O
Fumbles/lost: Wahama 7-2, Vinson: 2-1
Penalties/yards: Wahama 6-51.
Vinson: 2-15

8 Regions * 8 Auctions
VACANT .LAND

STATEWIDE · OHIO

Nov. 4 llfW Nov. 12
Over 250 P,uc e ls /Sialew1de

Property Information Available

a-ICII Pr. . . ll'awilt•l, IIC.
Audlonlt!tllnt:

(513) 579~6810

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~ 00tEPOR1' 0~

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1997 JEEP WRANGLER: Air, Stereo ................................. u ....... ...... ........ .............. ....... ..... ........ .. ..... $14,988.00
1997 NISSAN SENTRA: GLE Pkg, loaded, Only 5500 Milei......,....................:.................................$13,988.00
1997 FORD CONVERSION VAN: Loaded, Only 4900 Miit/5 .......................... ............................... $18,988.00
1996 NISSAN EXTENDED CAB 4x4: Air, cruise, aluminum wheels .............:.......... :....,................. $16,988.00
1996 DODGE RAM 2500 4x4: Auto, air, VB magnum ........................... ,...............................,........... $18,988.00
199&amp; EXPLORER AWD: VB, XLT pkg, super clean ...........:................................................................$19,98800
1996 EXCOiiT LX: Sport pkg, 2door, air, spoiler, low mil~ ......................................... .......................$9,988.00
1996 FORD F150: XLT pkg, po~ equipped, 1 owner.......................................................................$15,988.00
1995 CROWN VIC: 4 Dr, Full Power, Loaded ..................................................................................... $13,988.00
1995 TAURUS GL: All Power Equipped, Super Nice Car................................................................... $10,988.00 .
1995 EXPLORER SPORT: Power Equipped,Air, One Owner..........................,................................ $17,988.00
1995 EAGLE TALON AWD: Turbo, Lealher, Moonroof, CO, Loaded ................................................ $13,988.00
1995 GRAND PRIX: 2Or, All Power Equipped, Only 22,000 Miles .................................................... $13,988.00
1i95 GRAND MARQUIS: GS Pkg, One Owner, Power.. ,..................................................................$13,988.00
1994 OLDS CIERA: V6, AH Power Equipment ...................................................................................... $8,988.00
1994 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE: Aulo, Air, Power Equip...,...................................................... :.: ........... $7,988.00
1994 AEROSTARWAGON: Air, Ti~. Cruise, Only 28,000 Miles ........................................................ $11,988.00
1994 JEEP GRAND CH~OKEE: VB, Leather, Moonroof, Only39K Miles..................................... $17,988.00
1994 AEROSTAR XLT: Power Windows, power Locks, Equipped ...................................................... $8,988.00
1994 TAURUS GL: 4 Dr, All Power..................... ~.................................................................................. $7,988.00
1994 GIIC JIMMY: 2 Or, Auto, Air, Alum: Wheels, Loaded With Equip ............................................... $14,988.00
1994 FORD F150: 4x4, L.onf1 BedWorX Truek .................................................................................... $11,988~00
1994 FORD EXPLORER: Eddie Bauer Pkg, Auto, 4 Dr, Loaded ................:...................................... $15,988.00
1993 MERCURY VILLAGER: Loaded With Options, One Owner.......................................................$9,988.00
1993 FORD EXPLORER: 4 Dr, Air, One Ownef............................................................................. ,..:$10,988.00
1993 ...ERCURV TRACER WAGON:Auto, Air:..................................................................................
$3,988.00
.
1993 NISSAN 4x4:·Shor1 Bed, Bedliner, Stereo ..................................................................................:.$8,988.00
1993 FORD CONVERSION VAN: Full Power Equipped, One Owner .............................................. $11,988.00
1993 MERCURY TOPAZ: 4 Or, Power Equipment.. ............................................................................. $5,988.00
1W2 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL: Leather, Loaded Wrth Options .............................................................$7,988.00
1991 FORD F150: XLT Pkg, Auto, Air, Power Equipment, One Owner ................................................. $8,988.00
1991 BUICK LESABRE: 4 Dr, Loaded Wrth Options ..............................................,............................ $6,988.00
1891 PONTIAC LEMANS:.Sunroof, Stereo, Only
Miles .......................:..................................$2,988.00

-.g-..-

Davls·Qulckel
Agency Inc.

+

.....

1111 Quickel 992•6677

...OP SMOKIIID

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.;..-----sports briefs.- - - - -

IN POMEROY
• DONATIONS At:t:EPI'ED' •

..

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'

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.•

Tennis
LUXEMBOURG (AP) - Topseeded Amanda Coct1.cr of South
Africa beat Miriam Orcmans of the
Netherlands7·5, 6-7 (4-7). 6-4 to
advance to the semilinnls of the Scat
Open tournament.
Coctzer, ranked fjfrh in the world,
will play Slovak qualifier Katrina
Studenikova, a 6-3, 6-4 winner over
South African Jooneuc Kruger 6-3. 64 in the qullrlerfinals. Also advancing
-.yere Anne-Gaelle Sidot, who heat
Henrieta Nagyova 6-4, 1·6, and No.
5Bllfbam Paulus, a ~-6, 6·3, 6-2 winrier over Sabine Appelmans.
Auto ntciMI .
. SONOMA, Calif. (AP) - Brian
Crail Wilson was killed during a
Jiracticc session at Sears Point Raceway-when his car cra.~hed into a track
barrier. authorities said.
: Wilson, of Rohnert Park, Calif.,
lOst control of his Fonnula Mazda
and collided with a barrier near the
pft lane entrance on the 2.52-mile
road course. The Sonoma County
Coroner's Office and Sears Point
RAceway were investisating the acci·
dent.
Soccer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Major
·League Soccer awarded its 1998
cliampionship game to the Rose
BOwl in Los Angeles, where a
league-high 9001000 fans have
watched the Galaxy at home over the
last two years. Los Angeles is the first

West Coast site for the game.
BtuebaU
S.-.N DIEGO IAP) - Eight·time
National League batting champion
Tony Gwynn of the San Diego Padres
underwent successful arthroscopic ·
surgery on his left knee. ·

I
I
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I
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I

1

$39.

J

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28TH
6 P.M.
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR
CITIZENS CENTE-

I

'*""

----Lyne Center. slate-.- - -

·-

REPUBLICAN
BEAN DINNER

.

l oca1sport no1es------

T&lt;p&lt;idermist:

(-5).

.

.

Member of: ,
Ohio Association of Taxidermist
National Taxidermist Association
'

By SCOTT WOLFE
T.;s Comtspondent

~'t\-COUlJt ..~

Individual statistics
Rushing
Wahama: Tennant 16-110 &amp; 2
TOs, Huff9-26, Roush 2-65 &amp; I TO,
Mitchell 9-21, Staats 1-3, Reitmire II, Wood 3·(·2). VHS: Koslow 15-49,
Vergenz 8-18, Dean 5-13, Berry 3-9,
Childers 1-1.
Passing
Wahama: Mitchell4-6-59, Russell
1-2-29. VHS: Vergenz 9-22-104 &amp; I
TO.
.
Receiving
Wahama: Mitchelll-29. Lloyd 227, Cundiff I ~ 3. Huff 1-11. VHS:
Smith 3-45, Brown 2-24, Burt 1-20,
Callaway 1·12. Suttles 1-8. Dean 1-

Waterford shuts out Southern 26-0

proved

ett~nts/avg. yards: Point Pleasant 4~

(- 11).

1 ·---~ lb11l • Page 87

0-3'
bled 6S yards to paydirt. The twoDespite running only a handful of Fumblesllost .................0- 1
point conversion run failed at the plays in the second half, Ash had a Penalties ..................... 4-50
7-75
· RACINE- Dustin Jones scored S:33 mark of the fint quarter.
I t-S7 yard night and Cummings was Punts-avg ................ S-29.9 3-33.3
By SAil WILSON
three touchdowns in leading the
Many Southern rallies were cut 16-4S . Jones led Waterford with a
........,
. Waterford Wildcats to their first win short by catchable passes that were 15-73 night.
Tl
S
Cor
Scoring summary
~: M::!!s~lndi&amp;JI!~=es
onc:e
of the 1997 season, a 26-0 rout of dropped by the Southern receivers.
Writesel caught four passes for
and for all that baseball is unlike most professional
the Southern Tornadoes Friday ni'ht Additiona_lly , Ash sat out much of 58 yands, Ryan Hill was 3-33, and
Waterford: Jones 6S-yard inter·sports. Home field advmlage is J'ust 1101 as domi;
at Roger Lee Adams Memortal the game on offense, leaving sopho- Josh Davis 2-9. Jesse Little, Derek ception return (run failed), 5:33 lst
field.
more Adam Cumings to shoulder the Smith , and Willie Collins pos ted
nant in baseball. This was to be a series for tbe Ori·
Waterfond is t-3 in the Tri-Valley rushing load. Adams did a fine job, sacks and Adam Williams had an qtr.
Waterford : Jones '2-yard run ,
oles.and Braves. But io baseball, the unlikely is more likely to happeD lbln Conference, tied with Souihem for but Waterford soon keyed on.1136 interception.
one imagines.
·
·
·
(Waller
third, while the Willlcats are 1-8 · and stifled his early success.
Evans had a good night passing at 3nd qtr. pass to Luke Heiss), 6:16
Larry Bird used to say tllat NBA cbampionlbipl were WOD in December. overall. Southern dropped to below
The score stood 6-0 at the rial f. 12-23, but his effort was overshadWaterford: Jones 11 -yard run
lt was a batde for home oourt advanlage throusJiout the entire season. Thams .500 for the first time this season at On what was ruly a bizarre night, a · owed by six Waterfond sacks.
(kick
failed), 6:49 4th qtr.
with such an advantage have the greatest c(!anc:es of beiDa clllmpioaa. With 4-S.
night th•t saw both teams try for
This week's agenda: Southern
Waterford:
Waller 20-yard pass
the exeeption of the Houston Rockets in 199S, 111CJ1t NBA champions have
Dr. Scholl would have a feast first downs deep in their own territ~ travels to Federal Hocking Friday
to
Curt
Reed
(run
failed ). 4:26 4th
home oourt adv1111age for at least three of the fOut playoff rounds.
with the sOre feet Southern has pro- ry, the Waterford band performed Waterford will play at Eastern.
. qtr.
Up to this fill classic, home teams in World Series biatory hav~ WOD j~t duced in its losses this season. Often their half-lime show "without'! their Ouartcr 111&amp;111
two more games than visiting teams o\rerthe-c:oune of over 570 pmes. ThiS overstated, but yet a reliable anec- instruments..Southem clearly domi- Waterfond ...... .........6 0 8 12 = 26
is another remarkable statistic, of which IlleR ue mmy in buebtil. lmag· · dote: Southern again "shot itself in oared the first half yardage, but to no Southem ........ .........O 0 0 0 = 0 Individual statistics
ine, in 92World Series, borne teams havcjustwontwo more games.lhlll vis- the feet." Southern dominated avail as the "big play" cast a gloomy
Rushiag·
iti~~gteamsl
.
between the goal lines, but forecaston ,thesecondhalf.
Team statistics I '
Southern-Ash 11 -57. Cumings
Crilics were always quick to clamor, bowcver, that bueball ~ to Waterfond dominated the scoring.
Southern passed deep· in their
16·45, Writesel 2-21. Waterfordmodemize.irs approach 10 fans, like baskctbaU and hockey. ·The~ ~~~ the
Southern started out slrong with own territory and Cun Reed interlbL Slut.. Jones 15-73, Reed 11-9.
game needs more draml and excilement. That may be true, but tt s ampor· three. consecutive first downs in a cepled. he returned the ball 38 yards DQarlmenl
First downs ......................6
II
Passing
tant to remember that what is applicable for othersporlll isn't necessarily the driving southern Ohio rain. Southern to the two yard line, where one play Rushing att.-yds ....... 33·63 38-70
Southern
-Evans
12-23· 110-3:
·
case with baseball.
·
mixed passing with running and like later Dustin Jones hammered in a Passing yds ..... ............... 3S
110 Waterford, Waller 3-5-35- 1.
After all, when was the last time a wild card team made~ Su~ Bowl? early n .th~ ~e11son was. successful two-yard run. Southern held on the
180
~eceiving
Try the t98S New England Patriots! Only once, in 1981, did a wtld card I beh1nd rurinmg back Mrchael Ash. · initial two-point conversion, but a Total yards ..................... 98
Comp.-au
................
....
.3-5
·
12-23
SouthernWritesel 4-58, Hill 3team win the game.
Dnvmg t~ 'Y.aterford 25, penalty set up a Mark Waller pass to
Interceptions
thrown
.......
1
3
33, Davis 2-9. Waterfond-Lang 2- 15.
In this case, the wild card label is misleading. The Oaldand Raid~ bad Southern was m pos111on to set up a Luke Heiss for the two point converthe same ·12-4 record as the division champipn CbugeJS; bul San Otego,, •.core, but passed one too many sian at the 6:16 mark in the third
under tbe highly explosive offense of Dan Fours, bad alaJgcr point differ- bmes.
.
.
. , with the score 14-0.
entia! in their victories. Heoce, Oakland became the wild card team.
. Holes m the Southern hne d1dn t
Jones added an 11-yard run, and
The National League champion .florida Marlins are a wild cmt team. ~tve freshman qu~rterback_ e~ough the kick failed. In the fourth quarter
Th fin'shed second 10 th B
b 1 the also had the second best record t1me to pass and hts last aenaltn the at the 6:49 mark, Waller hurled a
. e raves, u . Y
was tipped as' it left his hands, · 20-yard pass to Curt Reed. The run
. ey •
1not opted for drive
tn the league. They mtght ~ave won the dtvlslon had bascbal
then tumble about a yard in mid air failed, and at the 4:26 mark,
a balanced scbed~le w~en tl expa11ded five yeltlll ago.
before Jones gathered it U(! and ram- Waterford led 26-0.
411 SOUTH THIAO
PHONE tf2·2196
Under the traditional unbalanced schedule, teams play more games
· --.--·- G.
•
- -·
·
·
1
I
against divisiopal foes. When the National league bad 12.franchises, teams
~
in the Eastern Division played divisional rivals 18 times, as opposed to 12
•
games against those teams itt the other division: This meant teams played 90
of ~~~ games inside their divisions. :roday's schedule, with ~ divisions
and mlerleague·play, has learns playmg far more games agamst teams outside their bwn division&amp;.
·
' Consequently, the' Braves were the best teain in their league, but, unfor- By TOM CANAVAN
ning streak since 1994. The game is
'IUnately for them, not iri their' division. An unbalanced schedule probably
EAST RIJI'HERFORD, N.J. (AP) even more critical for the Giants
,would have ~ Florida as Eastern Division champs. The wild card is one -It's taken rhe New York Giants so because the last thing they need to-do
way of accommodating 'the balanced schedule to baseball's tradilional fans, long to get back into first place in the heading into their bye week is to lose
'even though they don't realize it.
' NFC East that one can sense the to a team that is riding a six-game
' Atlanta would have beaten any team in the playoffs but the Marlins. resolve not to mess it up against the .losing streak and experiencing interflorida won 12 our of 18 games over the course of lhe season against !he stntggling Cincinnati Bengals .
n11l problems.
1996 LINCOLN CONT.NENTAL 4 DR.
Braves. So, there is a modicul'l of justice 10 Ibis pl11yoff system.
'
Acconding to lhe oddsm11kers ""d
The Giants, who haven't been in
\18, auto., PS, PB, air, tilt, cruise, PW, PL, dual power memory
Another intcrestinc antidote is expansion. It's a fact tlult the National almost every Giants fan, Sunday's first place this late in a season since
sears, leather int. , P. moon roof, ibl sound system with cass., cast
alum. wheels, rractlon control, remote keyless
, rear
League expanded to 14 teams five years ago to even the leagues. After all, game at Giants Stadium is one New 1993, understand tha,t.
defroster. ONLY 15,000 miles. SHARP.
the American League has bad 14 reams since 1977.
York (S-3) should not lose.
In fact, this week has lieen almost
: It's ironic that the leagues are adding two new teams this year, one to each
Rookie coach Jim Fassel's team business as usual, with the exception
:league, bur the National League will now have 16 teams to lhe American's has won four straight, its longest win- of a few more !ele.vision crews
14. Yes, only basebell could introduce such logic to its game.
:· ExPansiOn means realignment to accommodate new. regional ri¥alries . - - - - $
.and travel schedules. In aduality, football could learn a lesion from baseball
.in this regard. 1 still don't see why Dallas and Arizona are in the NFC East,
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis p.m. in the P&amp;R office.
I .
•and Carolina and Atlanla fmd themselves in the West. .
Parks &amp; Recreation Department will
GALLIPOLIS- The 0.0. Mcin: In baseball, however, Kansas Ciry or Milwaukee willlea¥C the American sponsor Rinky-Dink basketball ror
'for the National League as a result of expansion. So baseball will go through students in grades 4-6 playing boys' tyre Park District will hold open practices ·for adult volleyball leagues
. two expansions and the American League will still have the same number of and girls' divisions.
fteams, but-it will now rrallthe National League by·twu franchises.
The games will begin in the last starting Monday from 7to 10 p.m.
1996 FORD EIPLOIII 4 Dl. 414 liT
: 1 guess that's another problem baseball will have to solve, 1and its seems weeks of December. Registration is · The practices will he open for that
V6,
auto.,
PS, PB, air; tilt, cruise, PW, PL. AMFM stereo cass.
:;that this can only be done through more expansion to make rhe leagues $25 per child. All children, regardless · three-hour period on Mondays and
w/CD
player,
P. moonroof, anti-lock brakes, leather int., all terrain
. ·
;equal. But, didn't tllcy do rhat io 1993? My, with expansion fees being so of whether they played in the 1996- Thursdays.
tires,
casl
alum
. wheels, !railer towing. luggage rack. LOADED .
For more infonnation, call OOM•high, there's money ro be made in lhese schemes of flawed logic. More 97 season or not. need to register.
LOW
MILES.
CLEAN.
.
:importantly, that seems to be rhe real purpose of all this expansion and fan
Registration can be done in the PD recreation program coondinator
:accommodation.
P&amp;R office, located on the second Terry Adams at 446-4612 (ext. 2S5).
' ......-, , ... Ph.D. liM II' 1111 lllilfi,IIF ol tillery ...... Unhl~ ol noor of the Gallipolis Municipal on weekdays from 8 a.m. to 3:30p.m.
-Ria -.An avid 18nolll11101111-lllda -mentaaalloiiGuarolto...- . Building at 518 Second Ave., on
111111- he Ia utalhot ol Gary, Ind., and agrat I o1-.. Ulllwnlly- wllloh weekdays from 8 a.m. to · 5 p.m.
:_
_. nadtra
11111\Mdllild Haraltr
IL
Evening registration will be available
will be available Monday from 6 to
8p.m .
·
The registration deadline is FriSalurday - 1-3 p.m.
RIO GRANDE - Here is this
day. Fonns received after the deadINSURANCE
Sunday, Nov. Z- 6-9 p.m.
week's schedule for events at the
line will get a $10 late fee.
University of Rio GrJndc's Lyne
For more information, call P&amp;R
Full nna ot
Home athlelk: events
director Brett Bostic at 441-0622.
Center.
lnaunnt:e l'nlclucta
1993 BUICK CENTURY 4 OR.
Volleyball vs.
Thesday Fitness ceatcr, cmnasium
• Flnanclll
V6,
auto
..
PS,
PB, a&lt;r, tilt, cruise, PW, PL, AM/FM stereo cass.,
Shawnee State at 7 p.m.
and racquetball courts
.
S.u1CII
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
rear
defroster,
LOW
MILES. LOCAL ONE OWNER. CLEAN.
Salurday- Soccer vs. Union at Parks &amp; Recreation Department will
Today - 5-9 p.m.
AGENCIES
Inc.
·
3 p.m.
MoDday- 6 a.m.- 10 p.m.
hold an organizational meeting for
Thciday- 6 il.m.- 10 p.m.
·
those interested in coaching RinkyNotes
Wednaday- 6 a.m.·IO p.m.
Dink basketball Monday at 7:30
Thursday- 6 ll'.m.-10 p.m.
• A Lyne Center inem~rship is
Friday- 6 a.m.-9 p.m.
required to usc the facilities. Faculty.
staff, studentS and udministration
Salurday- 1-6 p.m.
Dr. Dan Swenaon'a
Group S.mlnare
will be admitted with their ID cards.
Sunday, Nov. l - 5-9 p.m:
• Racquetball court reservations
'
·
cun
be made one day in advance by
Pool
culling
245-7495 or 1-H00-282-7201 .
IN Jusr 1WO HOURS WITH OUR wm,.,ou
Monday- 6-9 p.m,
• All guests must be accompanied
Thesday - 6-9 p.m.
•Become a Nonamokar
ONLY
Tonight!
hy a Lyne Center membelllhip holdWednesday - 6·9 p.m.
er ($2 fee).
Thursday -6-9 p.m.
•Withoutatreaaor
.
weight g•ln
. Friday '- 6-9 p.m.
•Experience hypnosla
plus tor auccassl

First downs: Waharna 16, Vinson:

MEIGS COUNTY

Left uncovered in questioning by
lawyer Alan Popkin of the St. Louis
Convention and Visitors Cotl\mission
was Tagliabue's off-color res~~se .
when told of the city's $130 ~1lhon
lawsuit.
That topic presumably will come
up laler in the trial with Taghabue
scheduled to testify in person for the
NFL. Like the many NFL owners
who have made videotape deposi;
tions in the trial, Tagliabue wasn't
compelled to come to St. Louis
because he lives · more than 100
miles away.

Marietta
Point Pleasant

(Young kick)

The more unlikely
is .likely to happen

Team statistics

You're Invited
to.The Annual

tnenr.

lowitrg a Bigik punt, the Tigers
took over at
own 28-yard line.
The drive stal
eight plays late
when sophomore defensive end CuiIcy Thomas IBC~ the Manetta quarterback for a t'\'o-yard loss at the
Point 21.
•
Point's opponunity came on its
next possession Jllld ft turned out to
be the final possession of the game.
Moving from their own 21 , the Big
Blacks advanced 10 the Marietta
eight, but a score was not needed and
the Blacks were' content 10 let the
clock run oltt rather than put another
- -~
score on the boan;r:
Defenst' v•ly sen 1·0 r (1'neback r
.
~ •
.
e
Mtke Jeffers tum~ tn a stellar per- .
formmce. Jeffers liad five solo taekles and assisted on eiglit others to lead
the shurout effort. Adam Campbell
. had a pair of solos and six assists in
addition to his fumble recovery. Mike
Roach had a soio stop and nine
assists, Culley Thomas had three
solos, including rhe sack, and an
assist. Matt Young had two solos and
four assists.
'
The stage is now set for the big
showdown next w~ek against Jackson. The game will close O~t the regular season for the .Big l3lacks with
the playoffs to begin an .a couple of
weeks.
''

,t ••

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

•

WRITTEN GUARANTEE
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1997 • 7-9 PM
......

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HOUDAV INN • GAWPOUS, OH
5n State Rt. 1 H.

Dr. D M ' - -

c.tlflrld tltphoiM ; I I

f'ot,_ infr&gt;mlllllon ... ,.II) UToZa1

DHS

Sem~t1i11 S

I

BRING AD FOR DI S COUNT Be s t 111 US

For those bumps, bruises and
sore muscles af~er playing some
backyard footbalf, .call the

HOLZER
HEALTH
HOTLINE

1911 FORD AEIOnAI WAGON ILT.

V6, auto.. PS, PB. air. tin, cruise, PW, PL, P. driver's seat,
premium AMIFM stereo cass., luggage raclc, digHal dash, rear
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1·800·462·5 25 5

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I

Speak to a RN, any day of the week 1• • 6 am until2 am
Please ask your physician about medications
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PllgeB8··

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11

Outdoors

·.

Along the River

Tourists find _
Hawaii's more rugged t~easures

World
Series'
.
resembles
tennis match
~

By LISA MARIN~W
HONOLULU
(AP)
Vacationers have long enjoyed
Hawaii's ~urf, sun, sand and rain·
bows. Now many are discovering
the rugged delights offered by the
slate's growing ecotourism industry.
The ecotourists may find scenic
pleasures on a rain forest hike, on a
demanding a trek into a volcano
crater or out at sea watching whales.
Ublike many vacationers, they want
to learn more about Hawaii's natural
gifts. They're not content to inerely
enjoy the beaches ofWaikiki.
"Sof\le people just ,want to say
they've seen a whale," says Dan
McSweeney, who runs· an adventun:
company 'that organizes expeditions
from the Big Island. His clients? .
'·People who want more than boat
rides , They want to learn some·
thing."
McSweeney has studied whales
for 30 years, particularly the pilot
whales off Hawaii's Kona coast. By
now he can identify entire whale
families and, in some cases, tell a
whale's life story.
Tourism is the state's main source
of income. And, in a rocky decade
with negligible growth, the travel
industry is relying .on McSweeney
and others like him to tap another
segment with more potential.
The number of visitors to Hawaii
fell from a record 6 .9 million
tourists in 1990 to 6. 1 million in
1993, according to the Hawaii
Visitors &amp; Convention Bureau .
Though business rebounded last
year with 6.8 million visitors, it
dipped again - roughly I percent

L\

:..._ during this year's first eight
months.
It's unclear how many ecotourists
visit the state. But the state
Depanment of Business, Economic
Development and Tourism estim~es
that tourists spent about $500 million on nature-oriented travel last
year. That's nearly S percent of the
Sll billion spent on all tourism in
1996.
"When you look at other sun-surf
destinations, the thing that sets us
apan is the culture and the scenery
and the environment," says Sue
Kanoho, executive director of the
visitors bureau on Kauai. The rural
island is a favorite of ecotourists,
who head into lush greenery and
gaze at waterfalls.
For decades on the island of
Oahu , tourists have climbed
Diamond Head, the dormant vplcano at the end of Honolulu's
Waikild beach, and snorkeled in
Hanauma Bay on the city's outskirts.
Now ecotourlsts seek out organized hikes and bird-watching, or
want information about local culture
and history, says Raymond S.
Tabata, vice president of the Hawaii
Ecotourism Association. The group
formed in 1995 to protect Hawaii's
environment and culture through
responsible travel. Its 150 members
include representatives of tour

groups, lodging and state ilgencief.
"They/ .aro looking for a linle
deeper e~p&lt;iriencc than just looking
at scenery," Tahatasays.
"The value in Hawaii is not in
building attractions. It's not in golf
courses," says Reece Olayvar,
owner and guide for Hike Hawaii on
Oahu . " The value js here already.
We have the history.~ have the
culture. We have the natural beau·
ty."
Olayvar is a physical education
teacher who spends weekends 'and
summers guiding nature hikes with
about si~ people. She heads beyond
Oahu's hotels and rollin~ surf,
instructing groups on native plants
and wildlife, plus history and cuiture. .
Her goal is tojmbue visitors with
respect for the land and enlist their
help in preserving Hawaii's
resources. Before a hike, for
instance,. Olayvar asks clients to
brush the soles ol'their shoes so they
don't carry foreign seeds into the
forest. She asks tfiem not to pick
flowers, not even leaves.
Avis Toochin of New York
recently took a tour with Olayvru-.
"!am not a hotel person, and I'm
not a beach person," Ms. Toochin
says. "I really wanted to see the
environment arid have a feel of what
the ecology was ami the geography
oftheisland. lwantedtosceitfirst-

. hand rather than in a zoo or a gar·
den."
Hawaii is struggling to protect its
eroding coaslline , declining fish
stock and damaged coral reefs. The
damage is a combination of natural
forces plus lax enforcement of rcgu lations and overuse of' limited
resources. Ecotourism's conscrvation ethic can help, says Mike
Wilson, director of the ·state
Department of Land and Natural
Resources.
By· contrast, he. says, the mass
tourism industry suggests that visi·
tors do what they like. 'But Wilson
conveys a different message.
"This is a fragile island state,"
he says. Tourists "can enjoy it and
learn about taking care of it.:'
Rob Pacheco, owner of Hawaii
Forest &amp; Trail on the Big.Island,
agreed. As he takes visitors hiking ·
around volcanoes and in the rain
forest, he points out native vegetation, rare birds and unusual insects.
Unfortunately, he says, ceotourism presents an inherent con·
flict, as humans traipse into delicate
forests and fields to admire and
learn about them.
" No matter what I do or what
~~tent I take to prevent it, I have. an
impact," Pacheco says.
But Wilson 's agency hopes to
address this, by heeling up the per·
milling process for commercial
tours operating on public lands.
"Approached in a manner that has
integrity." the director says. "ceotourism c!lll help us go from a s~ate
of declining resources to improving
them."

By Mli&lt;E LOP~E
.
Gannett News S rvlce
MIAMI e. end plainly is in sight for thi~ World Series ..
Everyone can see it; Except, pemaps, the ump1res.
It must be high t1me to settle thiS thmg.
The Aorida manager is growing cranky. His third baseman is 5taning to walk like Quasimodo. His pitchers are starting to wheeze.
.
Whichever guy Fidel Castro has ass1gned to block rad1? transm1s·
sions must be getting tired by now from turnmg knobs, makmg sure no
one in Cuba finds out that L1van Hernandez owns a Ferran.
The Cleveland bullpen has sprung a leak.
It has been scientifically proven that Marquis Grissom cannot get a
hit every World Series games he plays. And Sandy Alomar can't drive
in the winning run every time.he comes to the plate. .
The World Series. bouncmg from Flonda to Oh10 and back, has
begun to resemble treatment for a turned ankle. First heat, then cold,
then heat.
.
The competition has been more like a tennis match. First Florida
won. Then Cleveland. Then Florida. Then Cleveland. Then Florida.
The statistics sheet no longer computes. The Marlins' closer has two
saves. but a 12.00 ERA. Florida gave up 21 runs in three games in
Cleveland, and won two of them.
There have been 15 runs scored ·in the ninth inning, but none of the
ga mes have had particularly dramatic endings,
Both managers have .tdentified the Nielsen company as the true
enemy, and want television ratings ban~d as pornography.
. The umpires must have acquired some virus. Whichever one has a
sympton of hallucinating safe calls.
. .
.
.
They made mistakes in the last two mmngs Thursday wh1ch went, 10
chronological order, from bad to worse to awful.
The last was on Bip Roberts in the ninth.
Ken Kaiser - who usually moves on the field as if he is going
uphill and upwind - ruled. that Hernandez' foot missed tho bag as he
came over to take the toss from Jeff Conine. Even though every camera
angle. including the one from the blimp, could plainly see Roberts was
out.
Yes. Halloween is coming. It is time to have a winner.
(Continued from F-1))
And doesn't it look like ihe Marlins?
. but Nicmet had to chase a bad snap
You'd think so. They are 3-2 to the goQII. They ~re home. Only one and recovered at the Bowling Green
team in 29 years has been able to 'win Gam~s 6 and 7 on the road ard 33. Toledo got the ball back on the
'
sneak away with a World Series. That was Pittsburgh at Baltimore, 1n Bowling Green 49 .after a punt, and
1979.
·
on the first play Wallace threw a
Oh, by the way, that was the last time it snowed in a World Series.
short pass to Harris, who ran 40
Is Florida, without a professional championship since the Dolphins yards down the left sideline for the
in 1974. ready to boogie?
touchdown.
Do you serve white wine with snapper?
Harris rushed 29 times for !53By this time in a World Series, one team or another has begun to yards.
·
fh ·
h ood 1
ld
be
Wallace threw two scoring passes
show the unmistakable Signs o avmg t e g s. t wou seem to
to Mike Bilik in the first half,
the guys in. teal..
.
.
.
.
including a 23-yarder that tied it 14What w1th th1rd baseman Bobby Bontlla draggmg hts burnmg ham· 14
string all over the field.
. ·
.
·Wallace broke Toledo's record of
LINKFEST WINNERS - Jane Burger (centtr) and Jackie Knight
Or Darren ~aulton, on 35-year·old scarred knees that have pa1d for. four touchdown passes in a game,
(right)
were the winners of a recent golf tournament sponaored by
many surgeons vacauons. runnmg the bases hke Lou Brock.
shared by Chuck Ealey and Tim
Smith
Buick-Pontiac of Gallipolis. Presenting th1 trophlea waa
Or Moises Alou, coming of age as a true star.
'
Kubiak.
Smith Bulck·Pontlac. deallr Gr1g Smith.
Or Hernandez, who only has an entire country hanging over. his
Loville caught five passes. for
shoulder, when the authorities aren't looking.
130 yards:
• They _are starting to look like champions. Even if they don't look
like the Atlanta Braves, or any of the other teams manager Jim Leyland
said in his impassioned sbliloquy Thursday that he is sick of hearing
10 CO
about.
•
(Continued from B·l))
You know a man is upset when he uses'the word "puke" three times
in the same press conference.
.
to John Sparrow with five seconds
It has been an exhausting road from spring training, Leyland men· left in the first quarter.
tioned, e~plaining why there would be no Marlins' workout Friday.
Terry Taylor led rushing for
"We are going to play our 207th game of the season tonight," he said Wesleyan with 101 'yards on 12 carThursday. " And if we' re not ready by now, we' re in big trouble."
rries. Jaquillard ran for 164 yards in
This World Series· seldom has been pretty, but has nearly always 12 carries.
.Hurley completed seven of 10
been hard; between two teams who appeared to have drained themselves jusr getting here. Baseball by the gut, if not for the highlight passes for 181 yards . Miller comfilm. Whoever is left standing will have earned it, no matter what the pleted 19of 32 for 176 yards and
was intercepted twice. ·
ra~ings. Time to find out who.

r=========---.....,--,---:-:=-,--------,

Top 25 action ...

1

Oh •

..

and
local unstu

•

By JENNIFER RICHTER
Tlme•SentiDII Stefl ·
GALUPOUS -· The leaves are falling, the tern·
peratures are getting lower, the clocks are falling back
and soon children of all ages will he scurrying from
house to bouse for trick~or-treat. Something odd about
Halloween is that very few people know where and
when it started and exactly how the holiday came to
be an evening filled with ghosts, goblins and many ·
other scary Halloween figures.
Halloween, once a celebration of darkness and
death, has turned into a celebmtion with trick-or-treat·
ing, Jack-O· Lanterns and bobbing for apples. The
traditions date' back through the centuries from Celtic
tradition to mod.ern times.
·
Hletory
Nearly 2000 years ago, the Celts who lived in
northwestern Europe believed that October 31 was the
day the Lord of Death released the souls of the dead
upon the lands. The Celts, practicing the Druid reli·
gion, had a fire celebration called the Samhain or the
New Year of the Celts. The celebration was held to
recognize the end of the harvest season and the begin·
ning of the cold and dark winter.
, .... :•
In"the ycar";fo; the ltomans ~uered the Celts
and'took their tradition of Halloween with them.
Through the years, this celebration influenced the
Christian's All Hallow's Bve also celebrated on October 31. The Christian celebration of All Saints Day or
All Hallows Day follows on November L This day is
for Christians to honor all saints with a feast celebra·
lion.
PeoPle began to believe that in order for the spirits
of the dead to not harm them, they would have to
dress in ~stumes for their lives to be spared by evil
spirits from the beyond. This started the tradition of
dressing in costumes.
In Bngland, beggars would roam the streets singing
and begging for food. Some even tarried turnips,
potatoes or beets with distorted faces carved in them
to scare away the spirits as they worked their way
through the streets. This began the tradition of trick-

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Section

GALLIPOLIS - As scary ghosts and goblins
come out of the woodwork for yet another Happy Hal·
loween season, there are many safety tips for parents,
trick or treaters, homeowners and motorists that
should be followed to make' this yea('s celebration fun
yet safe.
·
The Gallipolis City Police Department, Gallia
County Sheriffs Office, and Child Care Resource Net·
work provide several helpful tips that should not be
· considered since safety is number one. In the county
several hundreds of children will be running around
their neighborhoods so any safety precautions should
be considered necessary.
Tlpl tor Trick-Or·Traate1'11
• Always take a flashlight
• Never walk on the street
• Cross the street at a corner or eroMwalk
• Never cross between parked ears
• Walk facing the oncoming traffic if there is no
sidewalk
•Always remove masks before crossing streets
• Be aware of cars that may he turning into or back·
ing out of jriveways
• Never trick or treat alone
• Never eat any candy that has not been checked by
parents
• Never go to a home that does not have a porch
light on
• Never go inside a stranger's house
_
• Always carry a quarter in case you need to call
home
• Stay lway from unfamiliar neighborhoods
• Never stray from the ·planned route
• Always be polite and say Thank You for treats
,
Tlpl for Pe1'11ntl ·
• Make sure all costumes are made of flame retar·
dent material

or-treating and as the turnip tradition came to
the United States the pumpkin began to he
used in its place.
Bobbing for apples was said to have once
been a marriage game to see who would
marry first the following year. Thio first
person to bob for an apple and come up
with it in their teeth would he the first to
marry, according to Ibis tradition.
As people immigrated to the United
States in the late 19th century, particu·
larly the irish, many of these traditions
came with them. Although many of
the traditions have changed to modern
times, the ancient celebration of the
night of the dead still remains.
Another tradition that began in
the United States is haunted houses
that have the spirits of the dead
linger and create a spooky feeling
as brave people move from room
to room.
LocaiEventa
In ~I~Iie,ollsJ !helre~sh Art
~y Is hosting the SiXth
Annual Haunted Manor. This
year's haunted house features
many attractions including:
two mazes • a maze through hay and a
black padded room, Uzzie Borden theme, witches,
hanging gallows, a guillotine room, tbc cannibalism
kitchen, headless children, tbe snake junsJe, the base·
ment's rat hll1!or and much more to ICII'C all who dare
to enter. The house will be open from 7 to 9 p.m.
through Halloween night.
In elementary schools, children dies. up in cos·
tumes and have parties to celebrate the spirits of the
dead. I~ the local schools, this celebration will he on
Friday, October 31. Trick -or· treating will be on
Thursday evening in Gallia, Meigs and pan of Mason
counties.
·
Times vary depending on location.

d
•··
'

.

.

tlmea.

.

• Always know the route your child intends on tak·
ing
·
• Check all candy before your child eats it and
thiow out items that are unwrapped ' or look suspi·
cious. If you find something in the candy, notify the
police so they can .check it out.

Tips for Homeowner~
•Malee sure your yard is clear of such things as ladders, hoses, dog hiashes and flower pots that a child
can trip over
• Try battery powered light for pumpkins rather
then open flame candles
• If you do use real candles, place the pumpkin
away from where trick-or-treaters will be walking
• Make sure your home is well lit for safety
Tlpe for Motorleta
• Drive slow all evening
.
• If you are out partying, choose a designated dri·
ver
Gallipolis City Police Chief Roger Bmndebe",Y
wants to remind trick-or·Ueaters that Halloween 1S
meant for children under the llie of 12 and that safety
is number one on trick-or-treat night. He added that
besides the above tips parents should alsq remember
to dress their children in lighter colors and even attach
reflective strips to the costume for safety. Biandehcr··

.

Hilloween, once a celebmlon of darkneH end deeth, hM turned Into • eel- . •
ebntlon with trick-or-treating, Jack..O· L.enterM end bobbing,for eppiH. The
tredltlone dllte beck through the centuries from Celtic tnldltlon to modem

• Place something reflective on the costumes
• Make sure costumes don't drag on the ground
• Use face paints instead of masks for better visibility
• Ma1ce sure your child has a flashlight
• Make sure your child knows where they can reach
you at all times
• Be clear on when you expect your child to be
home
• Make sure your child is familiar with the traffic
ru~

•

WHEN DECORATING FOR HALLOWEEN keep welkwlp ciHr Of any decoulllve bme. The
tlpe Included here help lnaure the sefety of children H they go from home to holM throughout Hello- evening.
Trick-or-treat for all Gallia County children will
ry would like to remind everyone that the police
department will be on patrol throughout the evening take place on Thursday, October 30 from S:30 to 6:30
p.m. In Meigs county, trick-or-treat will take place on
both on bike, in ears and foot patrol.
'It has hcen several years since we had a serious October 30 from 6 to 7 p.m. and in Point Pleuant on
·
accident on Halloween," said Brandeberry. "With the October 30 from 6 to 8 p.m.
The Point Pleasant trick-or-treat will include a
cooperation of the public we hope to continue that
good fortune.'
'
block party on Main Street.

�-

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$unday, October 28, 1H7

: ~Pa:ge~c;2~·,::.. :·~·~•:·::~,~"=··~·~-~~~~~~P~~:m~~:ro~y~·!~~ld:d:~:po~rt~·~G~~:III~po:l~l•~·~o:H~·~P~o~ln:t:P=~:·N~n~~~wv~~~~~~~~~~~Su~n~~=y~;~ac~=m~~~ra~,!1"~7

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,• ...•

Pomeroy • Middleport •G•lllpolll, OH • Point Ple•Nnt, 'flY

•

N? wardr~be, &lt;?r ·bookshelf, is complete
w1thout the necessary 'Little Black Dress'
B~ LISA FAYE KAPLAN

Mr. and Mrs, Del Gingerich

Golden anniversary
to be celebrated
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Del
Gingerich will be celebrating their
50th anniversary with an open house
·oon Sunday, November 9 from 2- 4
'p.m. at Grace United Methodist
..church.

Hosts for the event will be their
daughter, Patti, Charley Bodimer,
and their children Josh, Jessica, and
Jake.
The presence of friends and relatives will be sufficient gifts. .

Gallia Community Calendar
The Community Calendlr Ia pub-

lished as a tree nrvlce to non-

, profit groupe wlllhlng to

. announce meetings and special
.. events. The calendar Ia not
.. dallgnad to promote Slllaa or
funcf.ralaara of any type. Hamli
, •ra printed •• 1peca permits and
:= o t be guaranteed to Nn a
••
lllc number ol dlya.

-,

•
Sunday, October 26
•
'.' ADDISON - Rick Barcus to
:. preach al ~ddison Freewill ~aptist
· Church, 7.30 p.m.

...

;4
•••
•• GALLIPOLIS - Holter Medical

:center's Hcartline. educational and
. "inter¥tive cardiac support, French
: ~00 Room, 2 p.m. Speaker Dr. ·
:-Pcnc Abels, topic - Cardiomyopa·:lhy. Open to public, refreshments.

...

'• "

••

GALLIPOLIS - Loaves and
: Fishes meal. noon at St. Peter's
.:Episcopal Church, everyone wei: come.

GALLIPOLIS - Free flu shots at
Gallia County Senior Resource
Center by Gallia County Health
Department, 9 - II a.m. and I 2:30 p.IJl.
Thesday, October 28
GALLIPOLIS • Meet the candidates for Gallia County Schools
!loud of Education, apontoreol by,
"Teachers for'Quality Education"
committee,.at Gallia County Senior
Resource Center, 7 p.m. Refreshments provided by school P10's.
Open lo the public with question
and answer time. '

define herself se! apArt from the
G•nnett New1 Slrvlce
overly done costumes that came
Amy Holman Edelman says no before. It took a combination of
outfit is as versatile, ·alluring, easy facts- including the right time, the
and essential as the little black dress. right designer, and . the right black
So imagine the author's panic dress - to create an :immediate
when she couldn't fit into the new classic.' "
·
black number she had made for a.
Also, black evoked tile mystery,
"Today" show appearance to pro- naughtiness and "forbidden allure"
mote her new book, "The Lillie associated with young widows,
Black Dress" (Simon and Schuster: Edelman says, whose e~perienced
$30.)
sexuality was thought to simmer
"I had just had a baby (her sec· under her mourning clothes.
ond), and my bust looked huge,"
Through the years, the little black
Edelman says. "I thought, 'I can't dress has been a mainstay of day and
sit on national television WOIT)'ing evenmg wear.
about my boobs popping out.' "
(Except for the 1970s, when the
But WOIT)' is not what the fashion dress just about ·disappeared
icon is about. It's about confidence, because. Edelman says, "We lost
ease, a 'this-old-thing·~· nonchalance our minds." )
that makes a woman fcellikc a milHems have been raised and lowlion bucks.
crcd; waisl&lt; have come and gone:
"With a little red dress. you sec ncckloncs have climbed · and
t~e dress lim," says Edelman, 38,
plunged.
from Montclair. N.J . ·
But the little hlack dress's essen" A little black dress focuses tials have · stayed the same. It's
attention on the wearer. Audrey always black.
Hepburn puts on a linle black dress,
ll's always linlc, in the sense that
you think she .loo,ks amazing. The il never outshines its wearer. And it
dress comes second."
' a1ways makes a woman seem sexy.
A little black dress must .coat the
"A little black dress is all about
figure- any figure- casually.
how it makes a woman feel, ruther
. Think chocolate-dipped banana; than how much yardage is
thtnk Hepburn's midnight sheath in involved," says Edelman.
· "Breakfast at.Tiffany's."
Also, the lillie black dress is easy
"A little black dress is something lQ accessorize.
you must feel comfortable in," EdelPearls dress it down during the
man says. "Comfort is power."
&lt;day; a glinery bauble makes it a
Edelman's book traces the histo- smash after five.
ry and explains the immortality Of
Throw on a scarf for the office,
the little black dress, which, fldel- let the neck go bare for cocktails.
man writes, was plucked from
"It's easier for me to wear black
mourning closets and introduced as because I have the hose, shoes and
daywear by Gabriell.e "Coco" handbag that match," Edelman says.
Chane! in 1926.
"And black tends to make a woman
Vogue magazine predicted the lit· look . thinner, which isn't a bad
tie black dress would become a thing.''
"son of uniform for all women of
Black also hides some of the
taste."
.
unsightly signs of motherhood.
"You don't have to wotTY about
Chanel's drop-wj!.isted dress
falling just below the knee was plain tht baby drooling on it," she says.
but striking: dramatic but not frilly.
Which brings us back to Edelh !Jegan a f~hion revolution that man's "Today" show clothing
dU"eCted att~nuon to the woman, not dilemma, which she solved with a
the fabric or froufrou.
$29, year-o!d little black dress she
, The httle. black d~ess reflected · picked up at The Limited.
the gre~tly mcreased ompo~nee ?f
"I just threw a black jacket over
women m the scheme of thmgs m it." she says.
general," noted a Harper's B~ar
"A little black dress is a very
artocle back then.
democratic piece .. of clothing. If it's
"While s~ was ~ 'chattel' she not great fabric, · you can see the
had to wear ompressove and promt- workmanship isn't great in a lighter
nent clothes, so that me~ would nol color. With black, you can get away
overlook her altogether.
with more."
The little black dress. Edelman
writes, "'gave a woman room ·.to

10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Saturday
National Guard Armory
· Route 62 North

Point Pleasant, WV

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!"11'14. ~~ W ol!l ~on• lort fl ,\oil ·

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ENO - Public meeting at Eno
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speak on deregulation of electricity.
Refreshments served by grangers.
Public invited.

•••

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FAMILY PUcnCE

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tO ICCOUODITE TIIOSI WOBIII PEOPU,
•

GALLIPOLISAmy Jo gowns of silk shantung in varying
MIDDLEPORT -- Pamela Lynn girl.
Brumfield and David Joseph style. All wore jewelry that was
Zirkle,
ilaughter of Perry Zirkle and
Tim Durst served as best man for
Belville were united in marriage by identical. to the maid of honor and
Mr. and Mra. Jay Turley
stepdaughter
of
Joy
Zirkle
of
Nitro.
his
brother, and groomsmen were
Reverend Charles Stansberry on carried smaller versions of her bouW. Va., and James William Durst, Brent Zirkle, Kevin Venoy, Duane
August 30 at French City Baptist quet.
son
of Edward and Ruth Durst of Weber, and Todd Evans. Gabriel
The ·groom's tuxedo featured a
Church in Gallipolis.
were married on Oct. 4 PetTY Starcher, nephew of the bride
Middleport,
The bride is the daughter of Mr. double shawl collar and black vest.
at
the
Middleport
Church of Christ. was the ringbearer.
I
LANGSVILLE - · Lorena Lynn flower girl. She wore a burgundy &amp; Mrs. Roger Brumfield of Gallipo- The boutonniere consisted of one ice
AI Hartson, pastor, performed the
Music for the ceremony was pro' Oiler of Langsville, and Jay Wesley satin knee-length dress with white lis. The groom is the son of Mr. and pink rose ~nd one Lady Diana rose. double-ring ceremony.
vided
by Lisa Moody and David
Jeremy Belville, brother of the
Turley of Point Pleasant, W. Va. lace trim and carried a burgundy and Mrs. Roger Belville of Bidwell.
The
bride
is
the
granddaughter
of
Rinehan,
pianists. Lucinda RinehArt
The bride was given in marriage groom, served as best man. His Lennie Haptonstall of Middleport,
were united in marriage Sept. 6 at white basket of burgundy rose
sang
"Parents'
Prayer" and "In This
by her parents and escorted to the tuxedo matched that of the groom
, theTu-Endie-Wei Park in Point petals. ·
and the late Paul "Happy" Hapton- Very Room" as the groom's mother
She wore a halo of burgundy silk · alter by her father where she paused and his boutonniere was a single ice stall, and the late Perry and Ruth and bride's grandmother lighted the
Pleasant.
The bride is the daughter of R. rosettes in her hair, and a string before the ceremony to present both pink rose.
Groomsmen were Darin Smith, Zirkle. The groom is the grandson of ·candles preceding the lighting of the
Keith and GlQria Oiler, Langsville, pearls, pearl earrings, and bracelet, her mother and the groom's mother
with an embroidered handkerchief cousin of the groom; Randy Jack- Jim and Jackie Reed and Roland unity candle by the bride and groom.
, and the granddaughter of Ralph and gifts from the bride.
Durst and the late M;rry Durst.
.-. A reception was held at the FwnThe groom wore a black full coat and a single rose from her bouquet. son: Dustin Nunn; DJ Hamme; and
the late Elsie Oiler of Vinton and the
The
b
ride's
father
was
presented
ily Life Center in Middleport. Music
The double ring ceremony rea- Scott Hash, friend of the groom. All with a slide presentation of the for the reception was provided by
late Darrel and Mabel Goff of tuxedo with a white shin and black
bow tie and vest.
lured additional music performed by wore tuxedos and boutonnieres bride's childhood playing with her
Langsville.
Jared Stewart. The first dance was
He
wore
a
single
white
silk
rosepianist Chris Bullion. Charles Stans- identical to tbe best man's.
. The groom is the son of James
The mother of the bride wore a father and during that presentation, shared by the bride and her fathet to
and A. Jo Turley, Letart, and the bud boutonniere with white and gold betTY sang during the lighting of the
rose shantung suit. The mother of Bonnie ~mith sang "Because You "Butterfly Kisses." The bride dediunity candle.
: grandson of Freda and the late John ribbon. ·
Loved Me."
cated the theme song, "Green Acres"
Best man was Mike Octillion,
The bride .wore an ivory satin the groom wore a seafoam green
Turley of Hartford and Hollice and
.
Matron
of
honor
was
Michele
10 her husband.
the late Albert Thompson of Letart. Jackson. He wore a tuxedo identical princess style gown featuring a suit. Both wore corsages of Lady Sue Starcher, sister of the bride.
The groom is currently by UPS in
~
The double ring, outdoor ceremo- to the groom with a burgundy vest heavily beaded bodice full skirt and Diana roses.
Bridesmaids
were
Bridget
Hensley,
Athens
County. The bride · is
The fathers each wore black tuxe' ny was officiated by Jwnes Seddon and bow tie. His boutonniere was a a cathedral train. Her fingertip veil
Lynnelle
Smelser
and
Michelle
Casemployed
by the Meigs Local
single burgundy silk rosebud with mel a blusher veil in a cluster of dos and boutonnieres of Lady Diana setty, college friends, and Whitney School District The couple resides in
, of Gauley Bridge, W. Va.
pearls, beading and sequins pearl roses. The church and the reception Haptonstall, cousin of the bride. Middleport.
• · Pianist was Cindy McMillin, and white and gold ribbon.
'
Groomsmen
were
Randy
Parsons
and
diamond earrings a gift from her hall were filled with fresh and silk
' vocalists were Lois Eblin, Cindy
Emma
Rose
Perrin
was
the
flower
, McMillin, and Jeff McElroy. "The and Tracy Ball, both of Letart: father, and her aunt's Mikimoto flowers.
The doorWays and windows
Wind Beneath My Wings" ·was sung Kevin Oiler, Langsville, brother of pcaTis occenled the gown.
were
swagged with sumner blos- Carson anniversary noted
A large bouquet of Lady Diana
, as the mothers were seated by the the bride; James Turley, Letart,
• ushers, fuvis Hayman and Tale father of the groom; Travis Hayman, champagne roses, ice pink roses and soms. while the sills held candles
MIDDLEPORT-- Martin R. and
Fon Wayne, Ind., and Tate Hayman, ivy entwined with her mother's sii- surrounded by the same Oowers.
Hayman.
Shirley
Carson of 1713 S. A. Street,
ver cross pendant and chain was car- Candelabras aisle candles, pew ends
A white wooden gazebo and lat- Cutler, cousins of the groom.
Richmond,
Ind. celebrated their
and taole table tops were decorated
tice archway was decorated with - .They wore tuxedos identical to riedby the bride ..
42nd
anniversary
on Oct. 4.
Lori BruJOfield, sister of the with fresh blossoms and lace. Lightburgundy, mauve, and white minia- the groem and best man with bow
He
is
the
son
of
the late Guy R.
ties and vests in emerald green. bride, served as maid of honor. Her ed Boston fern and ficus trees com,. · ture silk roses, ivy and white bows.
and Mildred J. Carson of MiddleFerns on white pillars were used Their boutonnieres were single bur- floor leng.th gown of ivory and pleted the setting for the ceremony.
The reception was held ·at the port.
gundy silk rosebuds with mauve and seafoam green silk shantung was
beside the gazebo and archway.
Their children, Pam Watts of
accented by a strand of pearls and American Legion Post 23 in Point
:
Burgundy bows marked the fam- gold ribbon.
Muncie,
Ind ., Shari Kovach. Kyle
Darrel Goff, son of Delmas Goff pearl earrings given 10 her by the Pleasant. It featured an hors d'ocu • ily rows of seats.
and
Karren
Carson of Richmond ,
vres buffet prepared by Sue and
The bride .was escorted by her and Carol Goff. Langsville, and bride.
Ind. attended.
She carried a bouquet of ice pink Nina Barrick. friends of the groom.
father and brother, Kevin, and given cousin of the bride, was the ring
Martin is a consulting design
The wedding cake was decorated
roses accented by additional sumin marriage by her parents and bearer.
engineer
with Boeing Co. in Seattle,
He wore a tuxedo with burgundy mer blossoms and Queen Anne's with fresh flowers, topped with a
· brother.
Wash
.
The
couple plans a belated
smaller version of the bride's bouHer satin gown was fashioned ac.;essories and boutonniere, and lace.
trip through the New England states
Bridesmaids
were
Brandi quet and served with a champagne later this ·fall .
with a Queen Anne neckline, long carried a white heart-shaped satin
: beaded sleeves and bodice with a pillow bearing an engraved small Rollins, cousin of the bride; Kelly- toast.
After the reception, the newly
Jo Adkins; Mary Nunn: Tammy
' basque waistline and a heart-shaped gold heart.
The father of the bride wore a Coe; and Janecke Mowinckcl, weds departed for Cancun, Mexico.
• keyhole back.
.
black
tu~cdo with white bowtie and friends of the bride. Each wore floor The couple will reside in Cincinnati.
The elongated peplum back and
vest
and
a single silk white rose bou- · length ivory and seafoam green
cathedral train were accented with
embroidered lace, pearls and crystal tonniere.
Guests were registered by Cristy
sequins.
She wore a tiara headpiece with Turley, cousin of the groom, of HartGALLIPOLIS • Richard "Dick" Charles Lusher at the Fairfield
In The Lafayette Mall
a double pouf and fingertip veil and ford, and Chelsea Rollins. West Jef- and Mary Rose Lakin wolf be cele- Methodist Church .
, carried a cascade bouquet of bur- ferson.
. They have two grandchildren,
brating their 50th wedding anniverProgram
attendant
was
Vicki
' • gundy and white roses, mauve
sary on Sunday, November 2, from Melissa and Joel Elliott of Gallipo: • ·miniature roses, accented with deli- Goff, cousin of the bride, Monroe, 2 - 4 p.m. with an open house host- lis.
1
cate white iridescent ribbon, beads, Mich.
The couple requests no gifts.
ed by their daughter and son - in ·and ivy woven throughout with trailMrs. Oiler was in a burgundy lca- law, Becky and Mike Ellioll al their Cards and well wishes may be sent
lengh
dress while Mrs. Turley wore home, 902 Vanoc Road , Gallipolis.
ing ribbons.
to them at their home at 1183 JackThe bride wore a pearl and dia- a two-piece ensemble in mauve and
The couple were married on son Pike, Gallipolis.
mond necklace and pearl earrings, ivory. Both had silk rose co(sages.
October 18. 1947, by the Reverend
1
The wedding coordinators were
gifts from the groom, and a one·
carat diamond cluster ring belonging Connie and Leland Turley, aunt and
uncle of the groom. She also
, to her mother.
She carried two handkerchiefs, designed the floral bouquets and
one given to herby her late maternal other decorations for the wedding.
A reception was held at the
grandmother, Mabel Goff, and a
white one designed with her new American Legion Post 23 in Point
Pleasant.
' initials, L.L.T., on it.
"FREE ZONE"
The wedding colors were used in
A white lace sachet with blue rib-FREE Delivery •FREE Sol Up
bon, given to her by her mother, was the decorations which featured can·
•FREE Romovot of old un~a
•FREE 2nd YHr WtiTinty
.~;·, ·~
sewn to the seam of her wedding dies and trees with white lights, han•FREE monty from Fngklllre on
dled by the groom's mother, Jo Turgown for good luck.
Gotlory - · • monty bock to
NEWSHOWROOMAT114W.2NDST.
Matron of honor was Allison ley, and an aunt, Jenny Hayman.
The
three-tiered
fountain
cake
, Gannaway Barnett, Findley, and
:~ " .
"SERVING OHIO SINCE 1953"
bridesmaids were SheiT)' Seddon, was decorated with small burgundy
992-5335
_ "\ ~ · ,. .. ·- .· '1-·· .
YOUNG, OWNER
985D156I
• Gll"ley Bridge.)w:-Va. Lois Eblin, roses , had white pillars between the
Rtl~nd; T~Y Turle
Hunting- layers, and featured stairways to
· \ ~)'/~~
. ton, W-:'Ja., SISter Of ttie oom; two-tiered cakes al the side, and
Shawna Kitchen, West Jef~ son, another stairway leading to a siogle
and Michele Dill, Bowling reen, cake in front.
The groom's cake was a white
Ky., cousins of the bride. ~
:
The only factory
The matron of honor wore a bur- semi-truck with black trim and
authorized service
gundy empire-waisted, silk-like tea inscription.
Serving at the reception were
length dress with a rose pattern and
agent in the area for
Cathy Crow; Damia Hayman and
short sleeves.
all major brands. We
The empire waist was embroi- Tassica Hayman, cousins of the
are the "House of
dered with lrocheted roses scalloped groom, and Martha Friend, aunt of
: Experts" on appliance
around it. The bridesmaids dresses the groom.
The bride is employed by Smith
repair, sales &amp; service.
were identical to the matron of
&amp;
Associates
Accounting,
Pomeroy,
honor, in emerald green.
-Name Brand
They carried arm bouquets of as a staff accountant .
ProductsThe groom is employed by C.W.
white magnolias and lilies, accented
Frigidaire - Gallery
. , ;.:;
with small burgundy and mauve Snyder, Inc., Jackson, as an overCustom Kitchens. Best
~,-, . .f ·
lilies with gold coral and wore pearl the-road truck driver.
HEAT UP W111111DT CAIIIIIEIATES ~;;'- ••
After a honeymoon trip to Pigeon
necklaces and earrings, gifts from
warranty
in
the
nlllmAIRE 1 TAPI'AIIIIAII8E , 81 Uua··
Forge and Nashville, Tenn., the cou. the bride.
business
hands
Lindsey Grate, daughter of Ron ple resides in Point Pleasant.
down!
OHer 10011 Sapt••IMr 1•11owa•IMr 30, 1997
. and Becky Grate of Pomeroy. was
See back of rebate form or salesperson for details
WNI-fiiUTS

1

Sporoored by: ..... - .,
Mason County Extension Homemakers
Mason County Vo-Tech Food Service
GfWC Point Pleasant Junior Woman's Oub

GaYONI 'OR

ZIRKLE-DURST

:·OILE.R-TURLEY

November 8, 1997

.

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'

Handmade Holiday Treasures
Craft Show

•••

...

Mr. and Mrs. James Dur1t

BRUMFIELD-BELVILLE

RIO GRANDE - OP.Cn Gate
Garden Club, 7:30 p.m. at the home
of Pat Parsons. Program: "Trick or
Treat. the Pest We Meet."

CHESHIRE - Monthly meeting
KANAUGA- Worship scvicc at
of the Gallia County Board of MR Silver Memorial FWB Church,
DD. 5 p.m. at Guiding Hand
Rand Ave .. 6 p.m. with Rev. Dennis School.
' Parsons preaching.
REVIVALS
GALLIPOLIS - Revival at Bell
BIDWELL- Springfield Baptist
Chapel Church, 7 p.m. nightly
C~urch. 6 p.m. Keith Eblin preachOctober 26- November.2. Sundaying. Sharon Eblin singing.
Truman Johnson preaching. Monday - Rocky ~9ffers preaching. Gloryland Believers singing. Tuesday •
POPLAR RIDGE - Caudle
· Adkins preaching and Glory Land
Bill Greene preaching, Andrew
Grass singing at Poplar Ridge FWB Toops singing. Wednesday - TruChurch, 6 p.m.'
'
man Johnson preaching. Swick .
Family singing. Thursday - Rocky
GALLIPOLIS -Wade Webb to
Jeffers preaching. Tony a and Jared
Harber singing. Friday - Bill
preach at Faith Valley Church, 6
Greene preaching, Faithful Followp.m.
ers singing. Saturday - Truman .
Johnson preaching. Under The
GALLIPOLIS · Paint Creek
Blood singing. Sunday - Rocky JefBapiist Church to celebrate their
.
·
t 64th annivenary. Dinner to follow fcrs preaching.
; morning services, afternoon serGALLIPOLIS - Old fashion tent
• vices begin~ing at 2 p.m: with pas• tor of the Second Baptist Church in revival at Old Galli a School, locat' Frankfort.
·
ed on State Route 233. Services
begin Sunday at 2 p.m. Monday Moadar, October 27
Wednesday 7 p.m. nightly.
,

Mr. and Mrs. David Belville

I

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PageC4•, , , • ._..,

H.a1 •

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaHipolls, OH • Point PleaSint, WY

Sunday,~obtr28,1897

•

, .....,.-...Jhntbgt •Page C5

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point PleiMnt, WY

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Renee Hardy and Scott Barton

HARDY-BARTON
MIDDLEPORT - Renee Dawn
Hardy and Scott Anthony Barton
announce their engagement and
upcoming marriage.
She is the daughter of C. Nonnan
and Evelyn Hardy of Kitts Hill, and
the mother·of Morgan Hardy. He is
the son of Robert and Patricia Barton of Pomeroy, and the father ,of
Zachary Barton.
The bride elect is a 1988 graduate
of Symmes Valley High Sehool, and
a 1993 graduate of the University of
Rio Grande, with a bachelor's
degree in history. Sbe is currently

employed by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company in Gallipolis.
The prospective groom is a 1989
graduate of Meigs High School, and
attends Ohio University. He served
in the United States Air Force, and is
currently a member of the Ohio
National Guard.
The open ,~hurch wedding will be
November 29 at 2:30 p.m. at the
Middleport Church of the ,Nazarene.
A reception at the Meigs Senior
Center will immediately follow tbe
ceremony.

Chrlatl Mver- and MlchHI Thacker

Michelle McCoy and MlchHl Evan1

Temmy Petrick and Roger Cebulla

MY~RS-THACKER

MCCOY-EVANS

PATRICK-CEBULLA

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. •
Martha: J. Myers of Point Pleasant,
W.Va. announces the 'engagement
and forthcommg . marrtage of her
daughter, Chnsu Danelle, to E.
M•chael Tha~ker, son of Karen F.
ThackerofMtddleport.
The ceremony will take place on
November 8 at Good Shepherd
United Methodist Church, in Point
Pleasant, beginning at 5:30 p.m.
with Justin Moran officiating.

The bride to be is a 1995 graduate '
.
.
of Point Pleasant High School. She · SYRACUSE -- Barry and Carattended Marshall University and is olyn McCoy of Syracuse announce
currently employed as assistant the engagement and approaching
manager at Rite Aid in Point Pleas- wedding of their daughter, Michelle
ant.
Lynn, to Michael Dennis Evans, son
The groom is employed at Rock- of Denny and Linda Evans of
well Automation in Gallipolis. The Racine. .
custom of an open church wedding
The bride-elect is a 1996 graduwill be observed.

col)'lpetition Publishers ClearingBy KATHY ROBINSON
The Idaho Steteamen
house, which has sold subscriptions
Attention book and music lovers: A. online for a year nO-w.
vinual price war is brewing on the
- Meanwhile, Internet music
World Wide Web.
company CDnow is trying to hold
When it comes to shopping .on its ground against rising competithe Internet, nobody is fighting hard- tors. Tower Records and Music
er for the consumer dollar· 'than .Boulevand.
online sellers of books, magazines ·
Each site has to match rivals' disand music.
counl!!. The end winner is the conAnd the competition is just heat- sumer willing to make purchases
ing up as mega-rivals take to their online.
comers of cyberspace:
Some· sites require consumers to
Consider, for e~ample:
enter their credit-cand numbers on
- Barnet &amp;.Nobel, the world's secured Web sites to make purchlll·
infertility: about 40 percent are largest bookseller. .recently opened es.
Others allow customers to phone
attributed to women's reproductive an online .bookstore, presumably to
try
to
crush
web,based
seller
Amaor
fax
in their credit-card numbers.
problems, 40 percent to men's prob"'The biggest driver is going to be
lems, 10 percent to combined fac- zon.com. The company says its Web
site
will
offer
the
most
aggressive
prices,"
says analyst Patrick Keane
tor~. and another 10 percent are
pricing
anywhere.
of
research
firm Jupiter Communiine~plicable . Obstacles to fenility in
American
Family
Publishers
cations,
"It's
not a matter conve·
women include mechanical barriers,
such as scarring on the fallopian has begun selling discount maga- nience, because the next store is just
tubes or ovaries. honnonal imbal- zines on the Electronic Newsstand a click away."
Each online site is able to give
ances. and structural problems of the as a direct challenge to direct-mail
uterus or cervix. Causes in men cen~
ter around the production and matu'.
ration of sperm or in its ability td
move into the uterus.
One added anxiety for infertile
couples, especially those with sec... a little place by the road I
ondary fertility; who are often older
because they already have a child, is
UNIQUE GIFTS AND COLLECTIBLES
the
ticking-clock
syndrome.
•a fun place lo stop- a great place to shop"
Research shows fertility begins to
Dried Flower Baskets And Arrangements, Grapevine Wreaths
decline measurably at age 30, then
And Swags, Custom-made Hardwood Furniture, Refinished
dips sharply after 39 years of age
and again in tbe early 40s. To get
Antique -Furniture, Hand-crafted 100den Hobby Horses &amp;
help, you should consult a fertility
lbys, Antique Decor I.e. MUk Cans, Old Jars, ~hboards,
specialist - an obstetrician-gynecologist with a specialty in reproLanterns, Rain Barrels
. ductive endocrinology.
First steps usually include a general medical history, followed by a
hysterosalpingograni, which monitors the functions of the fallopian
tubes. The physician also will check
blood levels of important hormones
to determine if levels arc normal and
Cltler, .........,, Cofhe,
whether ovulation occurs.' For men.
INwl.. for 1 fllllrla• flawer Arn...IIHtl
the first visit usually includes a
41fD State ..... 6t2
........ Ollie 45710
semen analysis to check tbe number,
movement and shape of the sperm.
For 90 percent of all couples who
'
have trouble conceiving, a reason
for infertility can be identified. For
about a quarter of the couples. these
relatively simple tests indicate problems that can he corrected, often
through drugs, without high-tech
procedures or surgery.
A more serious prohlem requires
a more c~JlCnsivc treatment. such as
in vitro fertili1.ation IIVF). In this
procedure. ripe eggs are extracted
from the ovary, fertilit.cd in a special di5h and replaced in the uterus,
1hou1h success rates dcdinc sharply
for women over 411. Another tech
niquc is egg donation , in wh id1 an
CB&amp; from a donor, who has hccn
carefully 'screened , is irnplantC&lt;I in a
recipient whose eggs may no lon!!CI'
be viable. hut who can still carry a
fetus to term.
lllcsc days the gcxl&lt;l news for all
infertile patients is that infertility is
no longer a hopeless dia~no si s. If
couples persist in their quest. the
majority will get pregnant.

·
ate of Ohio University and is currently enrolled in the nursing program at Hocking College. Her fiance
is employed at PDK Consuuct, Inc.
The open church wedding will be
held on Saturday. Nov. 15, at4 p.m.
at the Racine United Methodist
Church.

consumers unique features, such as
electronic searches, music clips and
live author chats. But discounts

Carol Keen end James Walker

KEEN-WALKER
GALLIPOLIS • Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Keen of Sissonville, W.Va.,
announces the engagement and
upcoming maJriage of their daughter, Carol Dawn, to James B. Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs.James Howell Walker of Gallipolis.

. Orand Opening

Sunday, October 26, 1997
12:00 ·5:00 pm

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lJ'ope)s !furniture qa{ferits
an4£ifestyfe !furniture

CIVIL WAR Sfi"Tfl
OF GfiLLifl COO"TY
- UJODD .umoN-

·.

Our lradtUonal Santa Claus br.came
vastly popular durtng the lat.c 1800's.
Tilts early rendition depicts·him In a
1860's CIVIl War uniform carrytng gills
for the citizens of Gallt~ Co~nty.

·•
.,\

·,

'•

"Bandstand" located In lhe beautiful
park of Galltpolts was erected.about
1876. It ts on the National Register of
Historical Places .
Slernwheelers played a major role
durtng the 19th century ln the
development of Gallla county's
commerce and were a major mode of
transportation.

The Gallla County Civil War
· Santa Issued In 1997 follows the
· GalliJilOIIS Pere' Noel Issued In
1996. Both are limited edltlon
Santas exclusively offered by
Tope's Furniture Co., Inc.

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o.lllpolla, Ohio

By NANCI HELLMICH
brain.
USA TODAY
Serotonin is a substance found
! Two new prescription weight· throughout the body, especially in
loss drugs in the pipeline may offer blood platelets, the digestive tract
! hope: to desperate dieters . who are and the brain.
struggling with obesity.
In the brain, it's one of many neuBut the question is, will people rouansmitters that carry messages
trust them?
between nerve cells -like an elecSince tbe popular diet drugs fen- trically charged signal. It helpsregufluramine and dexfentluramine late appetite, hunger, breathing, the
~- (Redu~) were yanked off the market
immune system, sex and sleep, and
,_ a month aao, dieters have become it plays a role in depression, bulim·
' wary of diet drugs in general. The ia. migraines and a whole host of
· ; troqbled drugs were withdrawn other conditions.
'· because of a high incidence of heartWhen a nerve fires, there's an
valve defects among patients who electrical impulse that goes down
' took them. Both drugs increase the · the cell to the nerve ending. That
'rele!l!SC of the brain chemical sero- electrical impulse stimulates the
;: tonin to decrease appetite. and make release of serotonin, which is packpatients feel full.
aged like granules, into the synapse
How exactly will future prescrip- between the cells to communicate
'· tion diet drugs work? Will they tin- with other cells, said Richard Atkinker with brain chemistry the way son, an obesity researcher with the
fenlluramine and Redux did? Arc University of Wisconsin. He was
they potentially dangerous, too?
one of the nation's leading
The Food and Drug Administra- researchers of fen -phen, the drug
tion is now weighing approval of the combination of fenlluramine and
prescription drug sibutramine. to be phcntermine.
marketed as Meridia. It also acts on
After its work is done, much of
serotonin and another brain chemi- the serotonin goes back into the cells
cal to make patients feel full. but not to be used again.
in the same way as fenlluraminc and
Fenlluramine and Redux work t&gt;y
Redux.
, increasing the .release of serotonin
Another prescription drug in the from the cell and also blocking its
works, orlistal, doesn't work on "rcuptake," or return to the nerve
brain chemistry at all. but instead is cells, Atkinson said. The drugs allow
a fat blocker, preventing some fat more serotonin into the gap between
from being absorbed by the the nerve cells, and.tbey let the seraintestines.
tonm hnger longer 1n the synapseExactly how the diet drugs work the space between the cells- so the
is complex and not fully understood. serotonm has more t~me to a~t. The
The medications that were pulled ofT result IS a decrease m appetite and
the market are an uample ·of how feeling of fullness.
difficult it is to come up with a perThe drugs are powerful releasing
feet weight-loss pill.
agents, said John Fernstrom, profcsBoth fentlummine, given FDA sor of psychiatry and phannacology,
·approval in 1973, and Redux. University of Pittsburgh School of
approved in April 1996, have a Medicine. "They are not drugs to
major effect on serotonin in the fool around with."

&gt;

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GALUPOUS • Promoting Independence tor blind children
through 1he u1e of the long white cane wa1 the purpoae of the
walk - 1 ·thon held on Saturday, October 18, at the Galllpolla City
Park. It waa aponaorld by the Parent• of Blind Children of the
National Federation of the Blind of Ohio and the Southern Ohio
SuppOrt Group tor the II lind.
..
· .
The event we1 used •• a fund raiser. Proceed• from the event
will be used to support the cane bank, th• T.chnology Alntance
tor Blind Children, and . many other project• aupported by the
Southern Ohio Suport Group for the Blind.

: Will public feel safe using new
: weight - loss medication?

c......

Dr. Jemee A. Grlfo Ia ..-r

The bride and groom to be are
both employed by tbe Charleston
Area Medical Center in Chraleston,
W.Va., as registered nurses. A
December wedding is being
planned.

available only on the Internet sites
have been the primary draw for customers.

!Jl.vaifa6fe 'E'{cfusivefg

Spacial

rice end Gynecology end
Director of Reproductive
Endocrinology et New York
Unlvefllty School of Medicine.

....

.

Consumers can be the winners as online price wars· heat up

Secondary Infertility·:
The invisible problem
By . JAMES A. GRIFO, M.D.,
Ph.D.
New York Univenity School of
Medicine
'
A healthy, successful couple in their 30s, parents of an energetic 5year-old child, appear in the doctor's
office looking depressed and feeling
desperate. After trying unsuccessful• ly for nearly 2 years to have another
baby, they are slowly beginning to
accept they have a medical problem.
It"s called secondary infertility :
the inability to conceive a second
child after ~t least a year of sexual
relations without contraception. As
many as 1.4 million couples suffer
from the condition, one that can be
every bit as devastating as infcnility
the first time around. All couples
with fertility problems face a life crisis. They tend to put their lives on
hold. postponing important decisions, like changing jobs or going
back to school , considering but
rejecting adoption ·- all the time
thinking that pregnancy is around
the comer.
But couples with secondary
infertility have the added burden of
feeling guilty about their sadness
because they already hayc ·a child.
They feel they should l:x:&lt;'morc grateful about what life has given them,
that some of their anguish isn't legitimate. Adding to their misery is the
fact that those closest to them tend to
minimize their suffering. After all.
they do have one child.
As a result of these mixed emotions. couples with secondary infer·
tility may isolate themselves and
become lonely. Sometimes, they
cannot even communicate their
unhappiness with their partners
because each may react differently
to the crisis, so that marital tensions
grow.
An added concern for couples
with secondary infertility is their
relationship with their first child. As
parents, they feel helpless because
they cannot provide a sibling for the
child to play with. The older their
child gets, tbe more their anxiety
grows about tbe widening age aap
with potential siblings. Also, their
first child may become a victim of
overprotectiveness, triggered by
feelincs of inadequacy and the
prospect of never having another
child.
If couples have lu!d trouble conceiving their first child - as 50 percent of couples with secondary
infertility do- they also may dread
taking on the physical and financial
burdens of infertility treatments,
which they have already e.tperi·
enced once.
The causes of secondary infertility arc the same as those for primary

.

I

GALLIPOLIS - Kathleen Patrick
of Gallipolis, and Kenneth Patrick
Sr. announce the engagement and
upcoming wedding of their daughter
Tammy Anne, to Roger A. Cebulla,

son of Stanley and Victoria Cebulla.
The wedding will take place on
November 15 in Ocean City, Maryland .

These girls scouts earn
badges while doing time
By MELANIE BURNEY
Associated Press Writer
GLOUCESTER TOWNSHIP.
N.J. (AP)- The girls of Troop 681
aren't typical scouts who go door-todoor selling cookies. They're earning their badges while doing time.
. 1lJree times a' week, girls at the
maximum-security Camden County
Youth Center here meet for scouting
tailored to life behind bars. Their
troop is among a handful at juvenile
.detention centers throughout the
country, tbe latest attempt to take
scouting to nontraditional places.
"This isn't your everyday Girl
Scout troop," the center administra- .
tor's Mary Previte says. "But it's
what ocouting is all about. lt's about
encouraging every young lady to
blossom."
Similar troops have emerged at
detention centers in Fairfax and
Alexandria. Va.; Prince George's
County. Md., and Racine County.
Wis., says Ellen Christie Ach, a
scout spokeswoman in New York.
And programs e~ist, without the
bars. for girls at risk or on probation
in Atlanta and Akron. Ohio.
So far. at least 30 girls have
joined the New Jersey troop, which
gathered in May. (Authorities would
not release the names of these juveniles. Those girls quoted here, under
fictitious names, range from 14
years pld to 17 years old.)
Unlike their sisters on the outside. their scout's list of nays is long.
Can 't wear traditional Girl Scout
uniforms. Sashes pose a danger for
the suicidal. Don 't do crafts that
require scissors. Ditto. Can't use
candles during ceremonies. Matches
are forbidden.
The differences can be startling
. for those who know traditional
·scouting. Melissa advanced from
Brownie to Cadette over eight years
but, when her troubles with the law
began, she joined Troop 681 .
"It's not the same," she says.
"You don 't get to go camping or
nothing a normal scout will do. You
got to deal with it."
Volunteer troop leader Barbara
Seger uses creativity. "We try to do
everything but the camping," says
Seger. an administrative assistant at
the center."
Most troops have two leaders, but
Seger tackles the job alone. Without
dues froiJI the girls. she buys supplies -with her own money. Though
the troop doesn't have a flag or ban·
ner, it makes do.
"Everything you don't have, we
can figure out a way to compensate," says Susan Cole, public relations ·director for the ..Camden
County Council of Girl Seouts.
The detention center, sprawling
on a campus in this Camden suburb, houses some 50 boys and I0
girls. Girls gather for activities in
the unit's common area, where an

Mr. and Mra. Keith White

WAGNER-WHITE
RACINE -- Jackie Wagner and
Keith White were married in a ceremony at the Ml. Moriah Church of
God in Racine on Sept. 6.
The outdoor ceremony was per-

formed hy Robert Lawson , Jr. of
Rac ine hcforc SC I'cral famil y members and other gucm.
A reception was held at Siar Mill

orange banner proclaims: "A Great
Park in Racmc.
Life Doesn't Just Happen. It Must
Be Planned."
.-------.....,-------------.....,
At mandatory meetings. girls are
HERMANit by Jim Unger
introduced to simple principles:
honor, uust, respect, sisterhood. It's
n-Jt always easy. Just listen as one
meeting turns tense.
Back from court, Michelle is
upset about her case.
"Respect is just a word. People
ain't true to it," sbe yells. "I respect
some of my elders, but not all . ~'
Alanda tries to smooth things. "I
think you're upset now because you
just got some troubling news."
Most meetings are more sedate.
For example, join the badge ceremony where six airls rec:ently received
health and fitness badges.
To earn them, the girls met
I
national standards. "I do really
make them work for their badge,"
Seger says. ''It's a true achievement.'"

Before the ceremony, they completed 14 requirements: practiced
yoga. read about nutrition, reviewed
healthy recipes and discussed stress
management.
Earning badges can take five to
seven weeks - not easy at a detention center where girls might stay
overnight or eight months. Indeed,
at one point, the troop had only one
member who had earned more than
two badges.Then, an influx boosted
membership to nearly a dozen.
At the badge ceremony. Seger
draws groans when she distributes a
book on healthy eating. "What's
this, for a vegetarian?" one girl
rctons.
Another comes to Seger's
defense. "She didn't say y'all had to
be a vegetarian,"1iffany says. "She
just want you to see the book."
Then the girls eat the breakfast
they prepared - scrambled eggs .
and buttermilk pancakes - at a ·
table they decorated with yellow
chrysanthemums arranged in a pla&lt;tic bottle. No glass is allowed.
Forty-five minutes later. the
meeting ends as it began- with the
Girl Seoul promise. Forming a circle, th~ teenagers dutifully recite:
"On m honor, I will try: To serve
God an my country, To help people
at all times, And to live by the Girl
Scout Law."
And even though the girls each
received a badge and scout scarf.
they don't gello keep them . Sharp
points could carve tattoos or injure
others. Both go into files, to he
retrieved when the girls leave the
center.

·-----·
I
I
_C_Pioot_
LOSE :: 10 LIS.

1\t

.....

"H you help him with his homework, at least
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Crafts &amp;Antiques

SECOND AVE.
614 446-9020
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS (Acro11 from the City Park)

Open 7 Days A Week
10 To 6:00P.M. Mon.-Sat.; 12 to 5:00 Sundays

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Pomeroy • Mlddhtport • Gelllpoll•, OH • Point PleiNnt, WV

I •

,:Presbyterian Church
action. Included among the number
of casualties wu the commanding
officer of the 12th Ohio, Col. Lowe.
Chaplain Van Duersen conducted
at Batavia, Ohio, one of the largest
fimerals atw town has ever seen.
Van Duersen returned to the pulpit at
Gallipolis during the Civil War and
remained there until 1867. He
Served churches in Dtinois, but at
age 51 lost his voice and had to
·
retire from the ministry.
In the 1870's Rev. Wilson came
here from Yale and became quite
well known in Gallipolis but no! forhis preaching. Wilson had played
baseball at Yale and supposedly
introduced to Gallipolis the curve
ball.
When a group of locals were trying to recruit Wilson to be their
pitcher, he said he would consent
but only on the grounds that all the
players show up in church evely
Sunday.
In the early part of this century
the Presbyterian Church's pastor
Rev. Evans teamed with the minister
of the Baptist Church to reorganize
football in town. For a few years

In the over 180
year history ofthe
Gallipolis Presbyterian Church there
have been some interesting ministers.
Coming here in 1861 was Rev.
R.D. Van Duersen. This gentleman
had started out his career as a railroad engineer and had surveyed
quite a number of new lines in the
1850's. It was while in the employ of
: the 0 &amp; M Railroad, based in
~- Cincinnati, that he became interest• ed in the ministry.
~
He studied at the Presbyterian
· Seminary in Xenia and was assigned
'to Gallipolis as his first church in
: April of 1861 . In late August of
~ 1861 Van Duersen volunteered to
: become the chaplain for the 12th
'_ Ohio Volunteer Infantry.
It was on Sept. 10, 1861 , at the
Baule of Calnifex Ferry, West Virginia, that the 12th saw its first

By:
Dorothy
Sayre

where tables had been set up just
two weeks before, I observed huge,
graduated white rings on the lawn,
such as lines drawn on sports
fields.
. Not' seeing an official to inquire
.the meaning of the rings, I asked a
couple of tourists if they knew.
The tourists' guess was for the
Queen's helicopter to ·land. That
sounded plausible but when I saw a
guide moments later, I inquired.
She said it was for the archery
demonstration during the garden
· party. Imagining arrows falling
out of the sky, like in tbe movie
Braveheart, gave me goosebumps!
I wondered how nervous the people
seated nearest the circles had been.
Touring the palace rooms, open
to the public, was a moving experience. The mahogany dining table
where the royal family share their
meals is beautiful, but simple.
The uncovered table was polished to a lustrous sheen. Mary
Queen of Scots bed chamber and
her outer chamlier, where her secre. rary. David Rizzio, was murdered,
· were also open to viewing.
I spent one afternoon hiking

"Holyrood 1s a
house
of
many memo. -"
ries. Wars lia~e been plotted, daneing has lasted deep into the night,
murder has been done in its cham· · bers ... Now, all these things of clay
are mingled with the dust. ..but the
: stone palace has outlived these
changes." Robert Louis Stevenson,
1878.
,
Edinburgh Castle perches on a
'
ridge top overlooking Princes
•
Street and downtown (new town)
·'
Edinburgh. The ridge line slopes
; downward in an easterly direction
: along the street known as "The
;· i Royal Mile," (old town).
' · From the castle, the Royal Mile
• • is actually a /irr/e over one mile to
Her Majesty The Queen's official
residence in Scotland, The Palace
of Holy roodhouse.
.
The Abbey at Holyrood, next te the palace, was founded by David I
in 1128. The Kings of Scots had
been using the Abbey as a resi• . dence until 1501 when the palace
was started by James IV.
The Abbey roof collapsed in
1768, a few years after an auempted renovation of slate roofing. It
'
has never been repaired.
Today, many of the visible
Abbey ruins date back to the 13th
Century. (Paraphrased from the
Edinburgh pocket guide and palat:e
publication , 1997.)
My first visit inside_the palace
was this summer while attending
:
photo/journalism school in Scot• . land. The palace was my chosen
,
tppic for my class · mini-documcn•
tary.
I walked the Royal Mile numerous times in my quest for perfect
lighting and better angles of the
palace.
•
As I'd start the descent from the
•
castle, the Firth of Forth's blue
water could be seen. Soon, rd.
~ - glimpse the palace gates.
Open to the public nearly every
day of the year, except for two
weeks during the Queen's summer
visit in July, the. palace is an
impressive sight.
To me, it is more majestic in its
selling than Buckingham Palace. (I
can't imagine why the Queen only
spends two weeks in such a beautiful selling!)
While no photography is
allowed inside the palace, the
Abbey ruins and garden are open to
photographers. I spent one afternoon shooting the grounds.
The palace garden "with impeccable landscaping and an immense
variety of plants. shrubs ·and
trees ... golden evergreens, rhoda. dendrons, and blooming seasonal
t1owers, was lush elegance.
One of my favorite photographs
is of the palace gardener's collage
•
of yesteryear. The building now
•
houses a historic society.
My outdoors palai:e visit was
two weeks after the Queen had
been in residence. She had hosted
a garden party for 8,000 guests to
•
honor her royal archers.
: ,
In wandering the same grounds
•

· Poisonous, long-winged Heliconius butterflies of Latin America have relatively large brains
and sharp memories and can live
for several months, compared
with about 10 days for most butterflies.

s colorful

around 1906 to 1910 footblll wu gone
Wtllia as a missionary
banned from the Old French City and while there married an Ausdue to the hish numlier of deaths tralian girl. The Mquries wen: here
that had ~ulred during football around the turn of the CC!nlury: Rev.
gunes across the U.S.
Annentrout served the Presbyterian
In the 1890's the minister at Gal- churches in both Gallia and in~eigs
lipolis Presbyterian Church was a counties in the early part of the 20th
French Count. Rev. W.E.I. d'A!Jent centllry.
was born in England but was of
It was around 1906 that Rev.
French descent. His family had Arnentrout was convinced by B.C.
moved to Limerick, leland when Fox of Middleport to leave the mind'Argent was young. In his teens, istry and become vice president of
d'Argent ran away from home and the Middleport Bank. Rev. Annenbecame a seaman. in time he came trout' even invested his life savings
to Virginia which is where .he stud- in the bank( about $6000).
ied for- the ministry., During his stay
On September 28, 1906 the Midin Gallipolis, Count d'Argent proved dleport Bank failed lll!d since Mr.
to be a noted bicyclist.
Fox had absconded with most of the
By the way Gallipolis had one bank's liquid assets Armentrout was
other count in its history. He was Ed left to answer angry customers that
Oskey. The count's real name was day.
~
George Edward Kallus~Jski. His ·
William Holden, an old Middlegrandfather had been a Polish noble- port merchant and one of the bank's
mam in the 1800's but due to the biggest depositors, became so disPrussian takeover of Poland, he fled traughtthat he seized a revolver and
Poland, taking with him only his marched to the residence of Rev.
title.
Armentrout to seek revenge.
The Presbyterian Church had one
Fortunately for- Rev. Armentrout,
other minister who had lived in Ire- earlier that day he had been placed
land, Rev. Maguire. The latter had under arrest for bank fraud. Of the

· The Palace of Holyrood ·is
truly a breath-taking sight
above the palace on the hills of
Arthur's Seat which towers over
Edinburgh in the 640 acre Holyrood Park.
I photographed the palace from
high on a windy hill, with puffy
white clouds floating in a blue sky
while the waves on the Firth of
Forth sparkled in the sun. It was
incredibly beautiful.
Another afternoon I used my
telephoto lens from Calton Hill and
captured the palace from a different
directio~ . .
But, my favorite photos of the
stone "ho~se of many memories"
remain ones of the garden surrounding the magnificent structure.
Dorothy &amp;.yro ond IW hulblnd !ioofp,
t......tr ot llolgo Counry, moved INick
about lhrw ~,. ego end now rwlcle in a
hOUH toeing .... Ohio Rlvtr Juol -

s,.......

Lend an ear
LONDON (AP) -An armed connie! with one of the strangest names
oil&gt; recOrd wao the War of Jenkins'
Ear, begun in 1739 between Great
Britain and Spain. It soon widened
into the War of Austrian Succession
(1740-1748). In 1738, Capt. Robert
Jenkins told the House of Commons
how the Spanish had sacked his
ship in the West Indies and had cut
off his ear. He then displayed it to
the Members of Parliament. His
story was a factor in rousing antiSpanish indignation that led to the
outbreak of war.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Litrry Wright

5E.E. ~ I

'jo\J DtJSf
vi~

Sund1y, October 26, 1997

histo~

Andy, Barney, Floyd, and Aunt Bea.deliver life's little lessons
John think we could all do worse raise the babies and he learned about
By HOLUS L ENGLEY
than live by the simple, buman rules responsibility. ("If you break
Gannett Newt Sarvtc:.
Somewhere in the United States, of Mayberry they have distilled something, fiX II.")
·at almost any hour, the people of the from wiiiChing dozens of videotapes - · When Aunt Bee thought she was
happy, fictional little North Carolina of the show. The two have compiled holding back the social life of Andy
town of Mayberry are passing on "Life's Lc;ssons From Mayberry" and Opie, she invented a boyfriend
so that they wouldn't feel they had
30-year-old country wisdom to TV (Summit, $9 .99).
("It doesn't take much lo boost to hang around. Turns oul they just
viewers.
("Buy quality ... It's cheaper In the confidence or a friend who's liked being with her. ("Even wellintentioned lies get ·us into irouthe long run.'')
.
down.")
The Oszustowicz family lived in ble.")
"The'Andy Griffith Show" still airs
across the country, its eight years of Eldred, Pa., a t.own of 600, and _;Otis Campbell's sudden infatuaepisodes showing over and over in watched "The Andy Griffith Show" lion with painting reflected more
syndication since the show ended its every Monday night even though, enthusiasm than talent, but the Tayprime lime run Qn CBS in 1968.
says Len Oszusto~. "it was in lors hung his an on their walls.
Like only. one other network
. TV show ("I Love Lucy" ) it was
~-· No. I in the ratings when it fold''. ed. Unlike other comedies of its
~: era, it has never sunk from sight
::. or been sold to cable networks
such as Nick at Nite .or Comedy
Central.
The
show's
popularity
remains such that individual stations pa~ for it 37 years after
Andy (AndY Griffith), Opie
(Ron Howard), Aunt Bee
. (Frances Bavier), Barney (Don
Knolls), Floyd the Barber
(Howard McNear) and Otis (Hal
Smith) the lovable town· drunk
first appeared.
("Be careful when you do
.,
your thlnkln' ·wttb your
heart.")
Len Oszustowicz thinks he L - . . . . l - - '
kn~~s why.
.
.
Don Knotll, from left, al Barney Fife, Andy GrHflth as Andy Taylor
The faster our hves get gomg and Jim Naborl 81 Gomer Pyle from the "Andy Griffith Show."
•· the more complex and the more
•. convoluted they become," he
:: says, "I think the greater the need black and white and the sound was ("Treat gifts from tbe heart with
~: · and the desire to take a deep breath bad and there was snow all through extra care.")
]· an~ say, 'Man, oh, man what am I it."
Len Oszustowicz and his brother
;. . domg'?' and look back at models we
The lessons of small-towo lire knew the local barber the way Opie
! have for a little more sanity."
. were not lost in the bad TV recep- Taylor knew Floyd Lawson . "I
f
("Sometlma the hardest role tion:
never saw my mom pay for a hair1 , to play Is younelf.'')
- When Opie killed a mother cut, " he says. "I guess eventually
Oszustowicz and his brother robin with his slin~shot, he had to she'd drop by and pay. But we were
...

$11S,OOO deposited by r - - - - - :
the bank's customers,
all that was leflt was
$6000 in cash and stock
in the some Middlepon
factories, one of which
was also aboUt to close
'
its doors.
This
bank failure involving a
Presbyterian cleric was
panicuarly bad. for the
Middleport Methodist
Church. The Iauer had
invested $1800 in the
failed bank plus about
half of all the pledges
from
individuals
amounting to about
$10,000.
.The money had been
pledged toward a new
church. It was later discovered that Fox had
withdrawn all of · his
money from the bank two
Numbered among the mlnlatera who
days before it went under. have nrved the Gallipolis Preebyterlen
Stated the Gallipolis Tri- Church have been a count a Civil War
bune, "The Middleport chaplain, an englnHr, a IHt~k vice pr811·
Bank had been skinned to dM!t, a IHtaeball pitcher, a football coach,
the heels by a thief'.
and an Irishmen with an Australian wife.

Group pays drug - addicted mother to have tuba/ligation
STANTON, Calif. (AP) - A
She said the group hope~ to
"I asked them; how do I get these
recovering drug addict who gave encourage drug-addicted men and · women to use birth control?" Harris
birth to five children hooked on women to practice birth control said. "I was told by many former
crack has undergone a tubal ligation while using the illicit substances.
drug addicts to pay them money.
in exchange for $200 from an anti drug group.
The 28-year-old woman, identified only as Sheila H., recently gave
birth to a sixth child, a boy.
The mother, who remained drugfree during the pregnancy, said she
hopes to raise her newborn.
Children Requiring a Caring
Kommunity, or CRACK. paid for
the surgery. Founder Barbara Harris
said that Sheila H. was the program's first participant. ·
. Her other five children were
taken from her at birth and placed in
foster homes.
Sheila H. has been in a substance-abuse program since the
early months of her latest pregnancy.
The program pays drug-addicted
mothers $50 if they choose to use
Norplant, a contraceptive implanted
in · the· arm or $20 if they choose
Depo Provera, a birth control injection effective for up to 12 weeks. It
pays $200 for the more pennanent
tubal ligation.
Hmis has adopted four of eight
drug-exposed children born to one
woman and lobbied for legislation to
make it a crime to give birth to a
drug-addicted baby.·

.

I
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·

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PORTLAND LOCATION

Apple Butter Will Be Available
.tfREE CORNBREAD' &amp; BEANS
COOlED OVER AN OPEN FIRE
Ire H•re A Lflrgt Selefllon of Holiday GH11

...us.

Ill OUI IIUcfiOI Of

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•TUIL
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PICK YOUR OWN TURNIPS 20 C lb.
LOCATED ON STATE ROUTE 124
ABOVE RITCHIE BRIDGE IN PORTLAND

843-5211
OPEN DAILY 9-6 SUNDAYS 12-6

"·
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''• ··
•'
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.,
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'•
•
''

REEDSVILLE - Eastern Local
HARTFORD. W.Va. - Revival
Levy
Commiuee meeting Monday, 6
at the Church of Christ in Christian
Union at Hartford beginning at 7 p .m. in.the high school cafeteria. All
p.m. nightly. Pastor Jim Hughes will interested in helping with the
conduct services Sunday and Mon- . upcoming levy are welcome to
day, and Donnie Blankenship of attend .
Minford, evangelist, Oct. 28 through
Nov. 2. Special singing each TUESDAY
RACINE - . Racine Area Comevening.
munity Organization, Tuesday, Star
MIDDLEPORT - Services ser- Mill Park. Potluck dinne.r at 6:30
vices, 10 a.m. Sunday at the Hobson p.m.
Christian Fellowship Church. spePOMEROY -Ladies Auxiliary.
cial speaker and music. Sunday, 7
_Drew
Webster Post 128, Tuesday, 2
p.m. Tabor Family of Columbus to

·i j

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SHOECAFE

t\1\.l JuOI\ ~a,
al\.l fl\1\•

Receive 15% OH
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Skilled Nursing Center
170 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis, OH 45631 ·

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we must earn the trust of our patients. And their families.
rOf the community we serve- your neighbors, friends
and family. It's what makes us different
... and makes you special.

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p.m. at the hall . Pecan sale and budThe Community Calendar is pub- · sing.
get to be discussed.
lished as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting MONDAY
• and special events. The calendar is
•• • not designed to promote sales or . · POMEROY - Southern Local
•• •
raisers of any type. Items are School District, board meeting, 7:30 :. ....,11111111111111111111111111111111111------------~-------------, fund
printed as space permits and cannot p.m. Letart Falls Elementary.
•• be guaranteed to run a specific num~.
r
~
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
... ber of days.
Club, Monday, I p.m. home of Joy
This store will close Friday at
Combs.
SUNDAY
7 pm and not re-open to the
POM£ROY - Meigs County
~ ••~· ;. ·~~ER6Y - -~eigs County
public unlill2 noon Sunday!
,,; Biker's Association to meet at park Veterans Service Commission, 7:30
p.m.
Monday
at
the
Veterans
Service
?· and ride at noon for a trash pickup
Office, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
~: : on adopted highway program.

..
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Nancy Tawney, Cortlfled Natural

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work. But you know. they do.
"Most people are only trying to
get you to do your very best work. I
know that sounds pollyana-ish, but
those are the basic messages of the
show.
"Andy never went away, which
is !think the remarkable thing. That
this show of morality and values
endured Vietnam and hippies and
whatever happened in the ' 80s an.d
the wildness of the '90s.
"II hasn't ever gone away."

This Friday, shuffle in to your Court Street
merch~nts in costume and WIN GREAT PRIZES!
USE HERBS INSTEAD
IJIICta
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lo.._o

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25TH

ready for the long faiL")
Both Oszustowicz brothers went on
to become lawyers. Len moved to
Arlington , Texas, where his Summit
Publishing Group published the new
book.
"My brother and I grew up , got
into business and the problems continually got more complex," he
says, "but the answers didn't - tell
the 1ruth. try hard, I'm going to do
my best. And those things sound
kind of silly and like they don't

Thi.s year, don't leave town for
HALLOWEEN••• Do th• "COURT STREET
SHUFFLE" in downtown Gallipolis!

r Meigs ..Community Calendar

CHECK THE WANT ADS FIRST!

Apple Butt•r Da,s

kids and we didn "t realize all those
things were going on.
"Someone in the neighborhood
would have a relative die and everybody would bring covered dishes.
Or someone would get sick and
there would be extra kids in the
house for a while.
"All those kinds of things I \hink
are the way a small town wraps
around people and takes care of each
other."
.
. ("Jump to conclusions, then .be ·

·.

•,

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Entertainment

adl

a.tlot I.Mig1J11114t, Expllnatlon, Argumenta lfld Retolutlon tor Amenclmenta to the Ohio Conlltttutlon Propo11d by the General Ammbly tnd Billiot l.angullg8, Expi8Mtlon8, Argumenta
tnd the Full Ttxt of Amtndmenll 10, tnd En1ctment1 of, Ohio Sllllltory Lft P1opo11d by Rtferendum PetHian lo bt Submlttlcl to the Votert II the Otntrll Eltcllon, Novtmbtr 4, 1187.

October ze, 111117

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

Mount Everest adventure sure ·to capture attention
phone numbers, so he could make that call to Scott's
couldn ' I beat.
There is only a brief slretch when Everest is consid- family."
Kruse had been the first to reach Camp III, at 24,000
ered safe to climb. That stretch was packed with people
feet. He fell asleep. When people woke 'him 24 hours
who had paid guides to lake them to the top.
with little in common.
Dale Kruse is a dentist from Colorado. Tall (6-foot-4)
"There was this very small window," says director later, he was into cerebral edema.
and sturdy, he's the first guy you'd choose for your bas· Raben Markowitz. "A lot of inexperienced climbers
" It is (like) coming out of general anesthesia," Kruse
says.
" You're just in such a cloud.
ketball team.
.were all going up at,the same time.
Beck Weathers was a Texas pathologist, Sandy Hill
"There were- people up there who truly did not · "You can 't really communi&lt;:ate; you don't really
Pittman a New York socialite, Doug Hanson a Seattle belong up there and, as a resull, put everyone else at kn ow what you' re saying or doing ...
postal worker.
.
risk."
" With cerebral edema, you can't walk a straight line ..
Guiding them were two men who were cons1dered ·
Pittman had promised good publicity. She brought You're walking like a drunkard, so it's very dangerous."
among the best. Rob Hall and ,Scott Fischer are at the satellite equipment and sent Internet transmissions from
For some people, that kicks in at a specific altitude.
core of "Into Thin Air: Death on Everest," at 9 p.m. Everest.
Fischer decided he had to get his frierul down.
(Eastern time) Sunday, Nov. 9, on ABC.
"Sandy Pittman was a prize for lhat world," Horton
So he "short-roped" Kruse, attaching him to a rope
"Scott was a very people-oriented person," Kruse says. "She was going to spout about it to everybody."
and pulling him down a steep ice wall.
recalls. "He was very charismatic; he was very into his
The Everest traffic jam was filled with people who
The rest was up to Kruse.
clients·...
had left others back home.
" It was an exhausting walk back to Camp II," he
"People were just naturally attracted to Scott. He v.:as
Hall's wife was in New Zealand,, waiting for their says. " All your enetgy is drained ... I just collapsed in
jusllike a magnet; they respected and looked up to h1rii'
daughter to be born. Kruse's wife was in Colorndo; she the snow every 25, 30 yards."
a lot."
also is a climber, but skipped Everest.
This cost Fischer time and energy, but a bigger prob-'
He also was an awesome climber, says Peter Horton,
" I never realized how -worried she was,~' Krusc.says. lem loomed.
who portrays him.
.
.
·
A Sherpa guide had been short-roping Pittman up
"He seemed to have a real need to make a mark in "She never lei it show."
That
worry
was
silent
and
deep.
Everest
- while hauling a reponed 80 pounds of her
this world, to get respect from fellow climbers ...
·transmitting
equipment.
·
"I've always been afraid I'd get that call at 3 a. m.,
" He had climbed Everest without oxygen. (But) he
Exhausted, he couldn't climb ahead to set the ropes.
was competing, to a degree, with Rob Hall to be THE saying something had happened to him," Terry Kruse
That
caused another two-hour delay.
"
says.
.
mountain guide."
"
I
did
get
a
call
at
3
but
it
was
Dale,
looking
for
Then
the
storm
encased
the
climbers.
Five
people,
Then Fischer and Hall met the combination they

By .KE HUGHES
Gannw ..... s.rvtc:•
Gathered at the base of Mount Everest were people

including Hill and Fischer, were killed. Others had dramatic rescues.
left for dead, Weathers somehow got.up and found
the camp. A perilous helicopter rescue saved some others.

1 To amend Secdon 9 of Article I of the Consdtadon of the

·

All of.this was recorded in vivid detail.
Jon Krakauer, whp is both a journalist and a veteran
climber, happened to be along for a magazine story.
Instead, he wrote a best-selling book, "Into Thin Air."
The movie is based on that book, with Christopher
McDonald playing Krakauer and narrating.
" He's very quiet, very understated/' McDonald says
of the man he plays. "He's one of the guy_s.
"I don't look much like Krakauer, actually. He's 5-9
and very tough; I'm 6-3. He's quite intense."
Krakauer reached the top of Everest and worked on
rescve efforts. Then his book proviiled a warning to people seeking an ultimate challenge.
Kruse returned to climbidg small mountains, sometimes with his teen sons. Would he tell them never to try
Everest?
·
.
"I'm going to let them make their own decisions," he
says'.
.
"(They) sec what I've done and what others have
done. They see that I've lost my best friend."

State of Oblo•
TO PROVIDE THAT A COURT MAY DENY BAIL TO A PERSON WHO IS CHARGED WITH A FELONY OFFENSE
WHERE THE PROOF IS EVIDENT OR THE PRESUMPTION
GREAT THAT THE PERSON COMMITTED THE ·OFF·ENSE
AND THE COURT~ DETERMINES THAT THE PERSON
POSES A SUBSTANTIAL RISK OF SERIOUS PHYSICAL
DANGER TO OTHERS.
TO REQUIRE THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO PASS LAWS
TO ESTABLISH STANDARDS TO DETERMINE WHETHER
A PERSON CHARGED WITH A FELONY OFFENSE POSES
A SUBSTANTIAL RISK OF SERIOUS PHYS.ICAL DANGER
TO OTHERS.
TO PROVIDE THAT A COURT MAY AT ANY TIME DETER·
MINE THE TYPE, AMOUNT, AND CONDITIONS OF BAIL
WHERE A PERSON IS CHARGED WITH ANY OFFENSE
FOR WHICH THE PERSON MAY BE INCARCERATED.

'Mike Hughft cover~ televlelon lor the Lansing
(Mich.) State Journal and Gannett NIIWII Service.

IF ADOPTED, THIS AMENDMENT SHALL TAKE EFFECT
ON JANUARY I, 1998.
'
A maJority yes vote Is aeceasary for passage.

From folk to country

Nanci Griffith cOmes full circle
BY STEPHEN MEASE
In 11 dlffrmlnt life, N11ncl Griffith might have
The Burlington F- Preu
ended up .aubblng the counter of a Woolworth's
When Nanci Griffith was first learning to play guitar
lind WOI!Mrlng wllllnl her next Job was goltJ9 to
watching "Folk Guitar" Saturday mornings on PBS,
COnHI from.
there were no such things as a compact discs. web sites,
Which explains a /IItle why she too~ the news
cable, or even oldies stations. There was just the music,
well this aummer when she heard that Wool·
often on a transistor AM radio with the Everly Brothers,
worth'• acrou the countly wt1re closing. "I was
devuflltfld," ttllld the 11/nger-songwrlter who has
Carolyn Hester or Buddy Holly and the Crickets sangs
made 11 Cll_, of writing 80IJ(I8 that celebrate the
playing on the tiny radios speaker.
loves and lo-s people file/In everyday lite. ·
hi the early 1960s, the music on Austin, Texas radio
Grlfrlth's "Love at the Five lllld Dime," from her
stations, where she grew up, didn't have to fit into a neat
1988 "OIHI Fair Summer Evening" told the story of
format in order to fmd a spot on the radio play list - it
• young coup/a meellng 11t the now•defunct
just had to be good. While rock 'n' roll and country predep8rtment store end their romance through the
dominated, you could also hear Nat King Cole's mellow
y•rs. "Fans hllve Nnt me so much memorabilia
tones follow a folk song ftom the Weavers on the radio.
ttom the stores over the years. Once In Reno, 1
"Without that open ear of radio then I would have never
_ , Into a lllors 11r1d Ht down at the lunch
counter. I mu.t hive loo~ed so forlorn that they
fQund my first love in folk music," Griffith says.
hended me •Job eppiiCII,tlon. 1 kepi It and hung It
That variety set the pattern for singer-songwriter
on my Willi," she lllugha.
Griffith's career. who in three decades of performing in
everything l'rom hanky-tonk clubs to great concert halls ambilious folk tribute album, "Other Voices, Other
in Europe has steadfastly refused to limit herself to one Rooms." She's played with the Chieftains, Roger Oalcategory of music making.
trey, Lyle Lovett, Bob Dylan, Hootie and The Blowfish
She is currently on tour with her Blue Moon Orches- among others. She enjoys superstar status in th e United
tra and The Crickets.
Kingdom and Ireland since her cover of Julie Golds
While primarily known as a folk artist on her 13 "From a Distance," became a number one hit there, five
albuma, tile 43-year-&lt;114 Orlftllla .11M mooed from 111 yeam.before Bette Mllller's ver.oion took off here.
early, folk club sound nUI'Iuled by her jNlrenrs when she
Joining her on tour this fall is The Crickets, Buddy
was a teen-ager, to electrified, country-rock and back to Holly's legendary band. Guitarist and vocalist Sonny
a personal folk style again. Along the way, she picked up Cunis, drummer J.I. Allison and bassist Joe Mauldin
five Grammy nominations, her first coming for "The bring the same warmth and fresh energy to the new
La.&lt;t ofthe True Believers" in 1986 and her first win (for album "Blue Roses" and 'tour that they bro ughl to
best contemporary folk performance) in 1993 for her Holly's seminal· rock ' n' roll recordings nearly 40 years

ago.
During Griffiths teen-age years, she often imitated
the style and sound of rockabilly, in panicular Buddy
Holly. In 1996, she contributed "Well All Right" with
the Crickets to the "Remembering Buddy Holly album '
and admitted to wanting to be a Cricket.
"It's overwhelming to work with them. We did two
weeks on the road with the Crickets to see how the show
will work, and it's just a joy to walk on the stage with
them. The audience is ju,st loving it," she says. Expect to
hear a rollicking version of Curtis "I Fought the Law,"
with Griff),lh and Curtis sharing vocals.
Griffith, known for taking the stage and staying out
there for more than two hours straight, says her concert
finally has an intermission because of the Crickets solos.
Fans who have followed Griffith's music over the
years never know quite what to expect with the release
of a new album. Early on, there was the sweet, simple
voice; then came a fuller band sound dubbed "follu!billy "; the country days when she signed with MCA
records; and most recently, a more honest, personal writing style that emetged on "Flyer."
Griffiths genre-defying voice, once described as "a
prairie girls," has mellowed over the years, becoming
"... softer and less vulnerable than it once was," she
observed. "You' could say it's older and wiaer."
Through the changes in voice and musical style, Griffith has managed to build a nearly fanatical base of
admirers. People who appreciate her anistry, find conti·
nuity in Griffiths ability to reach back to her early roots
for today's inspiration.
"That's what I admire so much about my fans. In 15

YES
NO

SHALL THE PRQPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

EXPLANATION OF STATE ISSUE 1
(AI prepared by the Oblo Ballot Board)
Section 9 of Article I of the-Ohio Constitution currently provides
that a person chatged with a capital (death penalty) offense is not entitled to bail where the proof is evident or the presumption is great that the
person committed the offense. This amendment would provide that in
addition, a person chatged with a non-capital felooy offense is ·not entitled to bail if that person poses a substantial risk of serious phy~ical danger to others including a victim or witness and the proof is evident or
prcoswnpl:ion great that the person committed the non-capital felony

Nancl Griffith
years of making albums, every album has been different.
Each one has traveled a different road for a different
sound. And you know, not one ·or my albums is more
popular lhan the other, but everyone defmitely has their
favorite,'' she says.
"Our audiences are real troupers. They know our
concerts are centered around the new album and come
ready to hear new music."
In the three years since "Flyer," Griffith h'15 11lso
been making music with a dozen or so of otller her
favorite folk and early rock arfi~s for \blume II of
"Other Voices, Other Rooms," due out early next year.
"This lime was easier since everyone knew what happened with lhe first one," she laughed. Shes also signed
a contract for an "Other Voices, Other Rooms" book
that will go behind the scenes of making lhe tribute
albums and be released with at the same time.

The General Assembly would be required to pass laws to establish
standards to determine whether a person charged with a non-&lt;:apital felony
offense poses a substantial risk of serious physical danger to others.
The amendment would provide that a court may at any time determine the ~. amount, atui cg~ditioOS of~il W~re.~ person is cha'l,ed
with any offense for which lhe person may lie incarcerated.

TV movie "Anmibelle's Wish."
, Hallmark Home Entertainment will
release the movie on home video
Oct. 21. It will air Nov. 30 on Fox.
"The. great thing about th at
movie is it's- associated with the
Make-a-Wish Foundation·," says
Travis. "Ralph Edwards Productions, who made the film, is going to
be making the wishes of 100 kids
across the country come true. It 's
quite a project. "
And in the midst of all this,
Travis has continued to tour, about
40 10 50 dates a year.
Sounds like all work and no play,
right?
"That's about the size of it until
the first of next year," he says,
laughing.
But 1998 sounds busy, too. Travis
said he hopes to finish the album by
spring, which is aboullhe time be' II
have to finish " Black Dog."
But no doubt Travis is happy to
have his recofding career back on
track. Being between iahels was
hard for him.
"Uke gain' through withdraw-

playing. It was kind of strange to go songs. That's been my experience
for so long withoul hearing anylhing working with him .."
In the meantime, Travis is touring
new."
Travis, who revived old-time the country with a revamped show.
"But no new songs," he says.
country music with his "new traditionalism" in 1985, has been an out- laughing. "Unfonunately. Not yet,
spoken critic of Nashville's country anyway."
But fans can hear his version of
music glut.
" ll's getting better," be says. Roger Miller's "King of fhe Road."
"That was really a well-received
"The quality of the music seems to
record,"
Travis says of the song,
be improving. Some of labels have
begun lo slow down signing .new which he cut for "Traveler," a
acts. That's good, because you reach movie produced by actor Bill Paxton. He ended up liking it so much,
a saturation point.
" When you have so many new he put it on his last Warner album,
artists coming out, there's not 1996's "Full Circle.''
"It's funny about that song. It's
enough air time to play .it all."
Oddly enough, James Stroud 111d
his mav~rick label Giant were often
accused of churning out sound-alike
hat acts.
\
"Everybody was caught up in the

got to be so big, everybody in the
music business was signing everyone to a label and making so much
money.
''And unfonunately, (Stroud) was
one of 'em. But he's also produced
al," says-Travis, 38. ur was listening lots of acts over the years. He's a
to the radio hearing my .older stuff great producer with a good ear for

&amp;/MARK KENNEDY

ing about the stupidity on both sides
. of the color line than maintaining
Chns Rock IS m a funny place, m any form of racial solid~rity.
Q&gt;Ore ways than one.
In Rock's world Louis Famkhan
The 31 -y~r~ld fo~er " Satur- is not the black M~ssiah.
day N1ght LIVe com1c has a sueThat's simply too laughable a
cessfol TV talk show, a raucous concept. That goes for Marion
album, two Emmys and~ seven-fig- Barry, too.
ure ,deal to appear m " Lethal
And Jesse Jackson.
Weapon 4.'' By all accounts, he's
" As far as I'm concerned 011r
rich; famous and healthy. That docs- leader doesn' t even have to be
n't mean he's content.
black," he writes. " Let's get Pat
As expected, race plays a pivotal Riley. He's led a lot of black men to
role in Rock 's first book, uRock championships. Maybe he can take
1'1111!" (Hyperion, $19.95). "I was us to the promised land.''
bpm a suspect," he grouses at one
So if you expected a spirited
point. At another, he atgues: " In this defense of crackhcads, midnight
CQjlntry, being white is like having basketball, welfare mothen or O.J.
' five dollars; being black is like Simpson, you've wandered into the
being fifty cents short. "
wrong part of town.
"There 's not a white person readRock is no Sinbad - perhaps
illl this book who would change white America's favorite black
pllces wilh me," Rock writes. comic - but he isn't Martin
"£vcn you white guys making min- Lawrence either.
imum wage ar~ going, 'Uh ub. I'm
All of which puts Rock in a funny
gOing to roll lhese white dice and place - a black comic who is as bitride this white thing a little longer. "' terly critical of much of black cuiYet for all the grumbling, Rock lure as he is of white America.
rom,ains an equal-opportunity
Part of the reason lies in Rock
hlimorist, more comfortable crack- himself, the smart man beneath the

fancy-free comedian. What w~uld
you call a man who is happily married, refuses to hit women, cheats
but is sorry is debt-free docsn 't
touch drug; and is good to his
mama1
The answer might be a little surprising: a nice, young black co nservative.

·

"-!-ted Preu WrliM

•

.-

•

2

AMENDED SUBSTITUT£ SENATE BILL NO. 45 amends Ohio'•
Workers' Compensation laws to make various changes in the
stnu:ture, payment, IIIII determlnatloa ol beneftls, to provide crlinlnal penalties for employers who lntendonally mlsclallll'y their
employees for workers' compen1adon purposes, to prohibit kick·
backs from health care providers under tbe Workers'
Compensation Law, to permit certain nonallorneys to represeat
parties In hearings before the Industrial Commission, to require
hearing oflkers to report suspected fraudulenlacdvlty, to prohibit
health care providers from receiving payments for false claims
under the Workers' Compensation Law, to except buildings and
land used for agricultural producdon from safety rules that apply
to workshops and factories, to change tbe deDnldon of occupa·
tlonal disease, to specify that records produced by an attorney In
connection with a workers' compen1atlon claim are the property or the claimant, to permit an employer to have an employee
excepted from the Workers' Compea1adon Laws for rtllglous rea·
1ons,lo provide tbat records kept by the.Divlslon or Safety_and
Hygiene are conOdentlal, to change tbe duradon of the continuIng jurisdiction of the Industrial Commission generally to Ove
years with speciOed exceptions for certain occupational diseases
or prosthedc device cues, to create the presumpdon concerning
alcohol or a controlled substance n the cause of an employee's
Injury, 10 limit recovery for aggravation of a preexl1tlng condl·
tlon, to reduce tlie number of weeks an employee can receive non·
working wage loss, and to make other changes In the Workers'
Compensation Law.

•

EVERY TUESDAT NIGHT
4 P.M.·9 P.M." ONLY

G.I.·JANE"
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:311

call today!

IF APPROVED, THESE AMENDMENTS AND ENACfMENTS
SHALL TAKE £FFECT IMMEDIATELY.
A majority yes vote Is necessary for pusap.

Point Pleasant, 'W. Va.
&amp;Rio
OH

56K INTERNET ACCESS

YES (To approve the law)
NO (To reject the law)

•Reliable service •Dedicated customer support
A1d Now •56K Internet Access
---..
1M our ,..,nc

•

REFERENDUM ON
AMENDED SUBSTITUTE SENATE BILL NO. 45
(Submitted by Referendum Petition)

SHALL AMENDED SUBSTITUTE SENATE BILL NO. 45
RELATIVE TO OHIO'S WORKERS' COMPENSATION
LAWS, PASSED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF OHIO,
APPROVED BY THE GOVERNOR, AND FILED IN THE
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE BE APPROVED?

OEMI MOORE IN

Come see
our large
display or

Believe it or not this disturbing scenario can and does occur in Ohio
because our judges do not have the discretion to withhold bail from
dangerous felons who may pose a danger to the public.

. • The bail system currently works to protect the community while
preserving imponant liberty rights.
.
• Local goverrunents are already burdened by seriously overcrowded jails.
• Innocent citizens may be incarcerated for long periods based on an
accusation alone, and at great personal cost.
The right of persons who are accused, not convicted, to post bail is
ingrained in Ohio's constitution. If someone accuses you of making
threats, imagine the difficulty of proving you arc not a dangerous person. Imagine how much more difficult it is to prove your innocence
from a jail cell.

Pr•sently in Ohio, all felons are entitled to bail (release from custody pending trial) unless they are charged with a death penalty
offense. Because bail is intended to keep a defendant from fleeing
the coun'sjurisdiction, a judge sets bail based on the likelihood that
the defendant will appear in court, not whether the defendant poses a Judges already protect the community by setting high bail for dangerous
threat of physical harm to the public.
criminals. When setting bail, judges now consider the character and past
record of the accused as well as the nature and circumstances of the '
Passage of Issue I will allow Ohio judges to deny bail to all danger- crime.
ous felons- keeping them off the streets and in jail where they can
do no further harm.
Issue I would add layers of bureaucracy at taxpayer expense. It would
force a bigger ponion of local taxes to be spent on buildings to hold the
Issue I would amend the Ohio Constil!'tion to allow a judge to deny accused, to hire staff, to pay for anomeys, and to hire more judges.
bail to any person chatged with a non-capital felony offense if that
Local governments already have loo little space to house convicted
person·poses a substantial risk of serious physical danger to the
criminals as well as those who are awaiting trial but can't make haiL
community and the proof is evident or presumption great that the
person committed the offense. The provision is designed to detain,
Issue I allows the General Assembly to set the standards for denying
and keep off the streets, those dangerous suspects who are prone to
baiL Therefore. these standards could change with each new legislature.
commit another felony offense if released on bail.
In federal coun, bail can be denied only for crimes of violence, drug
offenses, and repeat felons. Issue I permits bail denial for llllX felony.
Federal judges already have the ability to consider the 'dangerousincluding taking someone else's prescription medication or passing a
ness' of an offender when setting bail. Let's give the same discrctiun bad check for over $500.
to Ohio's judges. Vote Yes on Issue I.
Citizens concerned about saving tax dollars and preserving their fundamental, constitutional right to the presumption of innocence should vote
COMMITTEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT FOR
NO.
STATE ISSUE I
Senator Louis Blessing
Representative Jack Ford
COMMITTEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT AGAINST
Senator Bruce Johnson
Representative Jeff Jacobson
STATE ISSUE I
Senator Robert LaHa
Representative Jim Mason
Senator Linda J. Furney
Representative G. Daniel Metelsky
Senator Rhine MeLin
Senator Patrick Sweeney
ISSUE I
TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
(Amended House Joinl Rosolulion No. ~)
, Be il resolved by lbe General Assembly
of lhc State of Ohio, thr.e-fiftbs of the
memben elected to

~ch

house concurring

herein. !hat diere shall be submitted to 1he
elettofa ot the. .we tn me fftlftl'lll' pre·
scribed by ltw .. the aenenl ele&lt;:tion to be
held on November 4, 1997, a proposal1o

ARTICLE l

Scc1ion 9. All persons shall be boil1blc
by sufficient sureties. cN.cept for A PER·
SON WHO IS CHARGED WITH A copital afli
OFFEiNSE when: the proof is
evident..or the presumption great AND A
PERSON WHO IS CHARGED WITH A
FELONY WHERE THE PROOF IS EVI·
DENT OR THE PRESUMPTION GREAT
. Al\D WHO POSES A POTENT}AL SERIOUS PHYSICAL DANGER TO A VICTIM OF THE OFFENSE, TO 'A WITNESS
TO THE OFFENSE. OR TO ANY OTHER
PERSON OR TO THE COMMUNITY.
Excessive bail shall not be required; '""

excessive tines SHALL NOT BE imposed;

I

SHALL THE
PROPOSED LAW
BE APPROVED?

SHALL NOT BE infliclcd.
PROCEDURES AND STANDARDS
TO DETERMINE WHETHER A PERSON
WHO IS CHARGED WITH A FELONY
WHERE THE PROOF IS EVIDENT OR
THE PRESUMPTION GREAT POSES II
POTENTIAL SERIOUS PHYSICAL
DANGER TO A VICTIM OF THE
OFFENSE. TO A WITNESS TO THE
OFFENSE, Oil TO ANY OTHER .PERSON OR
THE COMMUNITY SHIIt.L
BE FIXED BY LAW.

ro

~tion 9 of Artitlc I o f the
Constitution of the Sr.1c of Ohio shall be

existing

repealed from thai effective datl.

SCHEDULE
Untillhc Gcncn.l Assembly enacts pro-

cedures and standards 10 dct:mnine whether

a pCi.on who is ctwpd with a f&lt;lony where
the proof is evident or the presumption peat
'P'Nel• poa~~ia1 terioulphy•ic:al danaer to

•vic:limor..

--.••-•itlt
or

offense. or 10 any ot~r

ptnan

10 1he

community, bail or the denial of bail shall
be dctcnnined as if the amendment of
EFFECTIVE DATE AND REPEAL
If adopted by a majority of lhc eketors · Section 9 of Article I of the: Constirution of
\loting on this amendment. the amendment lh&lt; S1a1c of Ohi~ had not been ldopted.
shall take eft'ecl on January I, 199R, and

REFERENDUM

~.

'

Book puts readers between Rock and a funny place

Issue I should be DEFEATED because it is unnecessary, costly, and
runs counter to the presumption of innocence until proven guilty.

.,.. AND cruel and unusual punishments

one of those songs that did extremely well in some areas, but got some
resislance from the guys in radio and
other areas. I was hoping it would be
a great record.·n
For those who. have never seen
Travis perform, think of someone
between Geotge Strait and Ganh
Brooks in performing style.
"We just go in, the guys and I,
and just really have a great time. We
joke with the audience and get them
to laugh some. So it's not just me
singing songs and that's all."

Family Night Is
Back•.• Only Better!

ARGUMENT AGAINST STATE ISSUE 1

Imagine that you or a loved one have just been brutally assaulted by
a violent felon whose intent was to do more than just inflict serious
bodily harm. Now imagine your horror as this criminal is released
on bail- free to roam the streets and finish the job he staned.

follows:

Your

same thing," Travis says. ueountry

Constitutional Amendment
•
(A.t submitted by HJR 5 of the General Assembly of Ohio)

amend Section 9 of Article I of thr
Constitutio~ of the State ofOhto to read 111

New tunes on the way from country star Randy Travis
ByA.J. FUCK
ten a couple of songs for the new
Tuceon Citizen
project.
It's been a while since country
"But it's hard finding the time to
star Randy Travis issued an album, write, n he says.
but that doesn't mean he's been
No kidding. He's able to record
siacking off.
now because "Black Dog," the film
Most recently; he was seen in the he was supposed to be working on in
Sleven Seagal movie "Fire Down Geotgia, was postponed. One of the
Below" and " Steel Chariots,"· a stars, Kevin Sorbo (of TV's "Hermovie pilot for the Fox network, cules" fame), develop~d . an
which aired in September.
aneurysm in his shoulder and had to
But the biggest news in his career back out.
has been a return to the recording
The film is on hold while other
studio. After parting with longtime actors consider the script.
hibel Warner Bros. last year, Travis
In the meantime, Travis will
was the first anist signed to the new appear in Francis Ford Coppola's
Dream Works Records Nashville "The Rainmaker," which will be out
label.
Nov. 23, and on HBO's "The Shoot"It's great to be back in the studio er,. sometime soon.
again," says Travis.
He already has completed filming
Production on his 13th album had a feature film called "Baby Genius~gun the night before with produces," a cable TV movie called "T-Ners James Stroud and Byron Gal- T," and a Dom DeLuise-directed
limore. Not only is the label a depar- feature film 'called "Boys Will Be
ture for Travis, but previously, Kyle Boys."
L.ehning had done all the producing
Travis will begin filming "Storm
on his albums.
of the Hean" starring Jon Voight
Although only a handful of songs before the end of the year for a 1998
has been chosen so far, Travis .said release.
they 'II go ahead and get those down
Plus, Travis narrated and played a
while they have a chance. He's writ- character in the animated Christmas

ARGUMENT FOR STATE ISSUE 1

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
(PropoHd by ResolaUon oftbe Gtaenl.AsHmbly of Oblo)

' STATE ISSUE 2
ARGUMENT AND EXPLANATION FOR
.• We.utge you to vote Y= to reform Ohio's Workers'
Compensation System.
Frequently unresponsive and adversarial, the system is known for
its waste, fraud, abuse and delays. As a result, Ohio's workers.
employers and taxpayers have been severely shortchanged.
Issue 2 will help prevent abuse, eliminate waste and crack down
on fraud making Ohio a better place to live. work, and operate a business.
Issue 2 reforms the syslem by making doctors more important
and lawyers less imponant.
Issue 2 will eliminate mandatory delays and provide prompt, full
payment of benefits to injured workers. Benefit levels are not cut.
Issue 2 will ensure that benefits go where they are supposed go injured workers and their families • not lawyers and CKpen Witnesses.
Issue 2 will encourage employees to return to work by emphasiz~
ing rehabilitation.
Issue 2 will save taxpayers dollars.
These reforms were passed by the General Assembly and signed
into law by Governor Gcotge Voinovich .
Major newspapers from all across Ohio endorsed the Workers•
Compensation reform bill.
The Cincinnati Enquirer says. Ohio's Workers' Compensation reform
bill would "'help injured workers and the state's economy:·
The Columbus Dispatch said, '"the bill would eliminate unnecessary delays in the payment of benefits."
The Youngstown Vindicator said, "the refonn package is
designed to en.d the waste, fll!ud and abuse that have undennined the
system."

The Canton Repository said, '"The (Workers' Compensation) legislation is not an assault on anyone eKCejlt those who would abuse the
system and try to use it to supplement their income."
- "-nd the Cleveland 1'1ain Dealer said, "'the reforms will remove
impractical disincentives to workers' timely return to their jobs after
injuries; they would dramatically increase the ease with which workers, especially pennanently injured workers, could collect benefits;
and they would remove unnecessary meddling by profit-seeking
lawyers:·
Vole .fa on li
COMMITTEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT
AND EXPLANATION FOR STATE ISSUE 2
Representatives Hodges, Corbin and Mead
Senaton Cupp, Gillmor and Nein

ARGUMENT AND EXPLANATION AGAINST STATE ISSUE 2
Vote II No on llsue 2
Senate Bill 45 Is tbe most destrucdve attack on Injured worken
In Ohio history. It destroys the safety net your family currently has
when you are injured on the job. Vo\e NO on Issue 2 to reject Senate
Bill45.
Senate Bill 45 is the founh law taking benefits from injured workers
and their fam.ilies passed since 1986. The $200,000,000 corporations
will reap yearly from Senate Bill 45 will be followed by future legislation taking even more. ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!

'

Senate Bill45 is devastating because it .lakcs Workers' Compensation .
benefits away from injured .workers. Some examples:

t/ Cuts in half the time a claim remains open for payment of compensation and medical benefits.
~ Reduces compensation for workers who suffer occupational diseases.

.I Discriminates against women by vinually eliminating !heir ability
to file successful claims for carpal tunnel syndrome and other
repetitive motion injuries, injuries common to women doing repetitive work.
'tl Reduces wage loss compensation.

.

'

.I Prohibits consideration of medical repons from treating doctors on
permanent panial impainnent awards. Compensation is based only
on the state doctor's repon. .
~ Denies permanent total compensation to seriously injured workers
who are unable to return to gainful employmclit due to their injury
by eliminating consideration of disability factors (education, work
experience, transferable skills) long deemed essential by Ohio
Supreme Coun decisions.
.I Creates secret records. Prohibirs' access to these state safety documents by workers whose claims may he affected.
Senate Bill 45 is unfair to injured workers. Corporate interests are
pushing for their $200,000,000 legislative giveaway. Don't let them
get away with it.
Protect yourself. Protect your ramlly.
Protect Ohio.
Vote ;I NO lnue 2
COMMITTEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT
AND EXPLANATION AGAINST STATE ISSUE 2
The Committu to Stop Corporate Attacks on Injured Workers.
William Burga, Co-chair
Warren Da•is, Co-Chair
Stephen E. Mindzak, Treasurer
Esther S. Weissman, S«retllry

•

'·'·

�TEXT OJ PROPOSlD LAW
(Ameotiod Subati- S&lt;oato B I No 45)
Be rt .....:IOOd by the Genml A...t&gt;ly

ofdlo Stile ofOhoo
Se&lt;IIOO I Tba 1«t 001 2913 48
12 412 12 4 21 ~ 4 21 ]5
36 4121 11 412 44 4121 47
6 412 67 4 2301 4 23012
4123 07 4 2325 412327
4123 14 4 23343 412315
4123."02, 4 2341 4 23412 4 23413
4123.4114, 4 234 6 41234 9 4 23 Sll
41lj.)ll, 4 23 52 4 23 S4 4121541
412356 4123 57 412158
412360 412361 4 23 62
4 2365 4 2365 4 23 66
412370 4 2380 4 21!2
4123 84 412385 4 23 90 4 23 9]
412 03 4 2706 and414 3ibe.......a.d
l!l&lt;lsecttons412 444 4 2 445 4123 06
23 5 and 4 2353 of the Rev sed COOt
enacted to read as fo lows
See 291348 (A) No peraon wrth pur
o defraud or knowing 1ha the persoo
fa ta ng a fraud sba I do any of the
ro ow ng
Rece e workers compcnsa on ben
dits o wh ch he person s not en ed
2 Milke or pmen or cause 10 be J!Uide
o pn: cnedafaseo m eadng aemen
w h he purpose to secure paymen ro
aoods or semccs rendered unde Chap er
4 21 4123 4 27 or4 J of heRe sed
Code or to secure workers ompensa on
benefiu

4) En e nto an agreemen o
o defraud the bureau o a se f.

onsp
nsunng

e:·;~~:~b~y ;maic~ ng o presen ng o cau

1

i[l
prescn ed a fa se a m for
woorkers'compensa on benefits
l) MAKE OR PRESENT OR CAUSE
BE MADE OR PRESENTED A FALSE
M SLEADING STATEMENT OR
nTI,PR MISREPRESENTATION CON
CEilNI~IG MANUAL CODES CLASS
FICATION OF EMPLOYEES PAYROLL
NUMBER OF PERSONNEL WHEN
iNFORI~Al'ION OF THAT NATURE IS
ECESSARY TO DETERM NE THE
WORKERS COMPENSATION
OR ASSESSMENT OWED
THE BUREAU BY AN EMPLOYER
6 SOL CIT OFFER OR RECEIVE
ANY REMUNERATION IN CASH OR N
K ND INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED
TO A KICKBACK OR REBATE N
CONNECTION W TH A REFERRAL FOR
THE FURNISHING OF GOODS ORSER
VICES FOR WHICH REIMBURSEMENT
MAY BE MADE PURSUANT TO
42 423 42 OR43
THE B.EVISED CODE D VISION
OF THIS SECTION DOES NOT
TO ANY CONTRACT TO PROSERVICES UNDER THE
~UI&lt;tAU " &gt; HEALTH CARE PARTNER
PROGRAM OR A QUALIFIED
PLAN ENTERED INTO
BETWEEN A MANAGED CARE ORGA
N ZAT ON AND AN ORGANIZATION
FORMED PURSUANT TO D V ,S_ION
AX4 OF SECT ON 4 23 29 OF THE
&amp;EY SEOCODE
7 ALTER FORGE OR CREATE A
WORKioRS'COMPENSAT ONCERTIFI
TO FALSELY SHOW CURRENT
CORRECT WORKERS COMPEN
&lt;AT'tnN COVERAGE
8 FA L TO SECURE OR MAINTAIN
WORKERS COMPENSATION COVER
AGEASREQUIREDBYCHAPTER4 2l
OF THE REVISED CODE
8) Whoever ola es th 1 sectiOn s
gu ty of workers compensa on fraud
EKcept u otherw se pro dcd. n h s d "
s1011 a o a on of hts sect on is a m sde
of the fint degree If the va ue oftlto
PREcMilJMS AND ASSESSMENTS
PURSUANT TO ACTIONS
DEliCRIIBEI) IN D VISION AJ(5 (7) OR
OFTHIS SECTION OR OF goods. se
property or money stolen s five hun
do ara o more and s less han fi e
housand dollan a Dill on of h 1 section
as a fe ony of he fifth dqrcc If the • ue
oftlto PREMIUMS AND ASSESSMENTS
UNPA D PURSUANT TO ACTIONS

~~;:~~D~IV~IS~~~N~(~AX~5

OR
goods se
fi e hou
dolln or men INI11Iea lhan ont hunthouJand dollan a VIOiaricn ofth 1 see
on s a fc ony of he fourth dearce f rbe
a ue of tlto PREMIUMS AND ASSESSUNPA D PURSUANT TO
AC1rtm&lt;S DESCR BED N D VIS ON
(7) OR (8 OF THIS SECTION OR
goods serv~ees property o money
s one hundred housand do Iars or

-

Code or a Jdf. _ , . anployu to mob
po)'ll*l 01 ~

b-

oompo!llltiOit "-ftll.
(5) Employment"...., putictpotlt1&amp; m

-

any trade, ooeupoltOII, businao - . "'
p«~fesatOG
for subtlan ai p alii
(6) Employ« employee and oe ~
1111\111111 employer" have the ..... mwunas
u n aect on 4123 01 of the Rev sod Code
(7) RemuneraiJOft ne udes bu s no
luruted to Wl@eS oonun KtonS.. rebllel, and
any other reward or cons den.t:wn
(8) 'Sta ement ndudes bu 11101 mted to any oral wntten e ectron c e ec
troll c mpu se or magnet c commun cal on
not11:e, letter memorandwn. r«&lt; p for pay
men n o ce accoun financ 1 statement,
ORb for semces a d agnos s prognos s
prescnpbOn. hosp ta mcd ca or denta
chart or other record and a compu cr p
en ed documen
(9) Records means any medtca profess ona financ11l o bus ness record rela
ng o the trea men o care of any penon
to goods o serv ces pro ided o any person
or o ra es pa d fo g()()(h or scrvtees pro-ded o any person or any record tho the
adm n a o of wo kers compensa on
requ re pursuan o rn c
0 Workers ompensa on benefits
means any :ompcnsa on o benefits payable
underChapter412 4 23 4 2 o 413
o the Re sed Code
See 4 2 21 (A) There s hereby en:
a ed the bureau of workers compensa on
wh h ha be adm n s ered by the adm n
stnto of worken eompeosahOn A person
appo n ed o the pos on of admm srrato
sha posses s gn fican managemcn expc
nence n effec e y manas ng an organ za
bon o organ za ons of subttan a s ze and
complex ty Before Sep embe
1998 he
go emo sba appo n the adm n tmto as
pro ded n sect on 2 03 of he Re sed
Code and the adm n stra or hal serve a he
pleasure of he go emo The go em or sha I
fix he adm n stra or s sa ary on the bass of
he adm n stra o s e~tper en e and he
adm n stra o s respons b es and du e
unde h schapte utd Ghojotof CHAPTERS
4 23 4 27 and 4 3 Of theRe sed Code
The go emor sba no appo n o he pos
on of adm n sta o any person who has or
whose spouse has gtven a conmbU1 on to the
campa gn comm nee of he go emor n an
amoun grea e han one thousand do an
dunng he IWo-yea pmod mmcd a e y preced ng the date of he appo ntmen of he
adm n strator After Augus 3 998 he
workers compensa on overs gh omm ss on sha appo n he adm n stf'aiO as proded nd son f)(9)ofsec on4 2 2
of he Re sed Code and the adm n strato
sha serve a he p easure of he overs sh
omm s.s on The o ers gh omm s on
ha tilt he adm n srra o s salary on h
bas s of the adm n s Tlto s expenence and
the adm n stra1or l"!::!ipons b hes and dubes
under h hapce and Chapters 4 23
4127 and 4 3 or heRe sed Cnde
The adm n tra o ha ho d no o her
pub c office and shal devote fu me o he
du es of adm n stra or Before entcnng
upon he du es of he offtce he adm n
b'8 orsha takeanoa hofofficeasrequ red
by seet1011s 3 22 and 3 23 of the Revised
Code and lha fi c n he office of he set

retary o

ta e a bond s gned by the adm n

sua10 and by sun:!)' sppro ed by he go
emo fo the sum or fifty bousand do Iars
payabae o he sta c ond 100ed upon he
fa hfu performance of he adm n stra or s
du es
(8 1bc adm mstra o s respons b c fo
the managcmen of he bureau of worters
compeniM on and fo he d scharge of a
adm n stn e duhcs mpo&amp;ed upon he
adm n strato n h chapte and Chapters
4 23 4 27 and4 3 oftheR sedCode
and n he d sctaarse hereof sha do a o
he fo ow ng
( Eilabl sh he overal adm n s ra c
po cy of he bureau o he purpose o h
clrapterondChaplm4 23 4 27 and4 3
of the Re sed Code and perfonn a acts
and ncR: se a I au hon es and powers d
ere onary and otherw e ha arc rcqu n.~ of
o vcs ed n he bureau o any of s emp oy
ees nth hapter and Chap cr.. 4 23 4 2
and 4 3 of he Rc !ed Code eKcep he
a' ! and he exe c se o au hor ty and power
lha requ red of and e: ed n he o e"' gh
omm ss on o 11e ndus a omm ss on
punuan to hose chap ers The reasurc of
sta t shall hono a wamm s gned by he
adm n traro o by one or more or he
adm n stra or s employees au hon ed by he
adm n s rator n wn ng o bca ng he fac
s m e 1 gna ure of he ldm ntttra or or such
emp oyec unde sec ons 4 23 42 and
4 2J 44 of he Re ocd Code
2 Emp oy d rcc and supav se al
mlp oyccs requ red n conncc on w h the
per ormance of he du cs ass gned o h
bureau by h s chaptc and Chap ers 4 23
4 2 and4) of heRe ocdCode and
may c tab sh Job as fi a 10n plan and
compc:nw on fo a I
ployees or he
bureau pro ided ha h S gran or IU honty
shall no be con rued as affect "I any
emp oyee for whom the a e emp oymen
rc a ona board hu ta ab shed an appropn
ate barp n ng un under sec on 4 1 06 of
he Re led Cod&lt; A I pos on• of employ
men n the bureau are n he c ass f~ c
RrY cc except hose emp oyees he adm n
strator may apporn o iCI"\fe a he tdrn n
s flo a pleasure n lhc unc ass fied
serv ee pursuan o sec on 24
of he
Rev ocd Code The adm n sua or 1hai fi• he
sa ana of employees he adm n s a o
appo n i o serve a he adm n ltra or s peasurc nc ud na he h cf opera na officer
staff phya c ans and o he sen or manaaemcnt penonne of rhc burtau
(3 Reorpn zc he work of he bu~au
ts
0111 departmen li and offices o he
ex en1 necessary to achte'IC the mos efrK cn1
pe forman« of ts funt:110ns and to ha end
may Clllbl sh chan&amp;c or aholsh pos JOOJ
and IIIJPI and ruu p dunea and n:spon
1 b 101 of every emp oyet of tho bu....,
A pmons employOII by he comm 11100 n
postt ooa tha after No embet ) 1989 en:
supervised and d rec:ted by !he adm n om
tor under th s .ec 10n are tramfmed o lhe
nthei mpeeovec ua tieal-bo
sub)C(t o reass anmcn and rec au ftcat on
of pos on and cornpensahon u he adm n
ltJ'IIOr dt!erm nea 10 be n the ntemt of
etriCJG1 adminllttlbon The avd aervJCC Rl
rua or Ill)' penon employed by the com
mtuiOII 1 not alf'ec ed by h11 ICICtlon

*

or
commwtOG wtlo 110 ujecl to Cltaptu
4 17 ofdlo Reviaod Code altoll rewoail or
dteir npta Utd boaefita
10 tbar d1lf*' u h .,._my exials 01 Ia heroafter a_.w and I10IItina m tbiacbapter or
Cbaptor 4121 Of the Reviaod COOt thall be
COI1II!Ued u el mmaq 011ntetferi111 w tb
Chopler 4 7 or the Reviaod Code or the
n1l111 and benefits ccnfem:d under Ira
chapter 10 pub oc emp oyeet or w any bar
pm nauo
(4) Pro de offices, oqu pmen "'''Pies,
ond other fae I es fo the bo..au. The
adm nllltraitor alao aha I pro de au table
office space mthe scr:vtce offices for the d sIne! hearing offiem. the staff heanog offi
a:rs and comm ss on employees as ~a~uest
td by lhe comm H on
(5) Prepon: and subm 1 o1he o ers gh
omm ss on nfonnahon the adm n stra o
cona den pel'tlnen o tl'le oven gh om
m ss on requ res toaethe w h the adm n
strator 1 m:ommenda tons n he form of
adm n slrl e rules fo lhe ad ce and con
sen or he o ers gh comm won fo c ass ficauons of oecupa ons o ndustnes for
prem urn ra es and contribu ons., o he
amoun to be cmi ed o the surp us fund
fo rules and systems of rating, rate re s ons
and men ra ng The adm n stra o ha
obta n preps ~ and subm any othe nfo
rna on he o crs gh omm ss on requ res
o he prompt and effie en d scharge of ts
du e!
6 Keep he ac.ooun s required by d
son A) of sec on 4123 34 of he Rev sed
Code and a other accounts and records nee

--pursuant

---ialt,
.
.
.
.
to-

mebt po IClCI which rec:optZ1:1 usual CUI-tomuy and lalOI1II&gt;It metbodsofpoyment

Provide·-

for eovored(b)

toreopmd

dona lhlm claimo.......,. b empio)'!l&lt;t

or the burtau
(c) Aud foe bi poymenta
(d) Imp omen a ptOSrll11 wutilize 10 dlo
maxunum exten pou ble e octron c data
proce&amp;SI.DI OQU pmen for Stonge of n(or
mahon to fac tate authonzanons of com
pensauon pi)'I!IC"ts for mod cal hoap tal
drug and nurs ns SCI'VICC$
(e) Perfonn other du euss gned 10 by
the adm rustra o
( 7) Appo n~ SS the adm n motor dater
m ncs necessary pane 1 to rev ew and
adv sc the adm ntstralo on d sputes anslDJ
o e a detemuna on ha a hca th care ser
cc or supply provided to a c aaman111 no1
covered under th 5 chapter o Chap er 4 23
of the Revised Code or s med ca y 1II1I1CC
essary If an nd v dua hea th care PfOV do
s n o ed n the d spu e he panel s11al
cons st of nd duals lt&lt;:ensed pursuan o
he same sect on of the Rev sed Code BS such
hea h care prov de
( 8) Punuan 10 sec 00 4 2365 or he
Re sed Co(ie appro e appl ca ons for the
fina sen emen of a m1 fo compensa on
o benefits u.nde lh s chapter and Chap en
4 21 4 27 and 4 3 of Ire Rov sed Code
as lhe adm n strato de ermmes appropna c
ex ep n rega d o the appl a ons of se f
nsunng emp oyers and he r emp&amp;oyees
9 Compywthsee on35 7 3ofhe
Re sed Code and except n regard o eon
trac s en e ed n o pursuan o the au hority
conta ned n sec on 4121 44 of he Rc sed
o he nfcrma on equ ed by ec on
Code camp y w th he compe ve b dd ng
4 23 9 of tho Rev sed Code
procedure se forth n die Rev sed Code fo
(7 Exerc se he n estmen powers e
all con ra ts n o wh ch he adm n stn o
ed n the admm tra or by see mn 4 23 44
en ers prov ded tha lhose contracts fa w th
of heRe sed Code n a cordance w h the
n he rype of contrac s and dol ar amounts
n cstmen ob cct es pb cs and en ena spe tied n he Re sed Code fo compe
esmb shed by tho oven Bitt eomm s on pur
e b dd ng and furthe p&lt;0 ded Ira hoae
suant o sechon 4 2 2 of he Re sed contrac s are no o hcrw se spec fica ly
Code The adm n ra o hall no engage n eKemp from he ompe
e b dd ng pro
any proh b ed n es men act v ty pee fled
edures con a ned n he Rev sed Code
by he o m gh comm ss on pursuan to
20 Adop " lh he ad ce and consc:n
d son (F)(6) of sec oo 412 2 or he
o he o ers gh omm s on ru es for he
Re sed Code AI bus ness shall be trans
operaoon of !he bureau NO RULE ADOPT
a ed 1 funds n es ed a warrants fo
ED BY THE ADMIN STRATOR SHALL
money drawn and paymen s made and a
BE CONSTRUED AS BARRING THE
ash and secun es and 01he propeny he d PART C PAT ON OF A PERSON WHO iS
n the name of the bureau o n the arne or NOT ADM TTED TO THE PRACT CE OF
ts nom nee pro ded ha nom nees are
LAW AS A REPRESENTATIVE OF A
authorized by he adm n uator sole y fo he PARTY FOR THE PURPOSES OF ANY
purpose of fac tat ng he trans e or secu
MATTER ARIS NG UNDER THIS CHAP
n es and restncted o he adm n srra or and TERANDCHAPTERS4123 4 27 AND
des gna ed employees
4 I) OF THE REVISED CODE PRO
8 Make oonlrllcts fo and uperv se the
V DED THAT THE REPRESENTAT VE
onstruct on of any pro ec or mpro emen
OF THE PARTY COMPL ES W TH
o the construe on o repa of bu d ng
RULES OF THE ADM N STRATOR
uncle the ontro or he bureau
(2 ) Prepa e and subm o the o ers gh
9 Purchase suppl cs matena equ p comm ss on nforma aon he adm n stra or
men and serv ccs make ontracts or oper
cons ders pert ncn o he o m gh om
a e and supenn end he e ephone o he
m son rcqu res ogether w h he adm n
e ecommun ca on and ompu e serv es
stn or s reeommenda ons n he form or
fo lhe use of the bureau and make con ra ts adm n s ra e rule o he ad ee and con
n connechon w h offi e rep odu on
en of he o ers gh oomm ss on fo he
fonns managemen pnn ng and o he se
hea h partnenh p prognm and he qua fied
ces
hca lh p an sys em as pro ded n sec wn
( 0 Sepant e y from he bodget th
42 44 42 44 and42 442ofrhc
ndusb'la omm ss on subm ts prepare and
Re sed Code
w.bm" to the d roctor of budac and man
C The adm n llrator w th the adv cc
agcmcnl a budge o each b enn urn The and on en of he sena e sha appo n a
budget subm tted shall nc ude cs ma es of ch cf opera ng officer who hu s gn fican
he costs and necessary expend rures of the eKpenencc n the field or workers com
bureau n lhe d scharge of any duty mposcd penul on nslll'inCC o o he s m 1 nsu
by aw as we as he cos s of fumuh n1 ancc ndUs ry eKpenence f the adm n s ra
office space o he d str c hearing officen
o does no possess such cx.penence The
staff heanng: officen and comm ss on ch ef opera ng officer ha not omm nee
cmp oycn Wlder d son D o th s SCCI on
he h e opera ng officer du es un I after
As prompcly as pos b c n he
he senate consen s to he ch cf opera ng
course of efficaen adm n strl on d~ office s appo nlmen The href opera ng
lra ze and reloc:a e such ofthepersonne 11nd
om e shal serve n the unc a s tied
ac
cs o he bureau as s appropna e o
erv cof he sac
he end ha be rece p n cs ga on de e
Sec 4 2 32 A) The rues o cnng
m na on and paymen of cia ms may be operahng procedure and ntena for dec s 011o
undenak n a o nca he p a or nJury or mak ng ha tllc adm n slra o of workers
he res dence of he c a man and fo tha pu
ompensa on lind he ndustna omm s on
pose es abl sh eg ona offices n u h are rcqu red o adopl punuan o sec on
pia e as he adm n s ra o con ders p op- 4 2 3 or he Re sed Code sha be upe capab e of d scharg ng as many of he p emcn eel w h opera ng manua sett ns
fun oru of he bureau u s pra ab e so fonh ht procdlun s eps n dela for pe
as o promo e p omp and effi en adm norm ng a h of he ass gned tasks of each
stra on n he process ng o a m A
sec on of the bureau of workers ompcn
acnve and nac e os me a ms files sa on and comm ss on The adm n mtur
sha be he d a he serv c offi e respon
and comm ssKln o n ly shal adop uch
b fo he am A amana he manuals No emp oyec may de a e f om
cia man s requcs ha be p o ded w h manual procedure w hou au ho ~ on of
n onna on by e cphone a o he oca on
heeconehc
o the file perta n ng o c a m Th adm n
8 Manua s sha set forth he procedure
s ra o sha ensure ha al scrv e offi c fo he ass gnmen and ransfcr o a m
emp oyees epor1 d rec y o h d rcc o fo
w h n sec on and be des gncd o p~ de
he serv ce offi e
perfot'1Tiance obJC cs and may requ rc
12) Pro de a wnttcn b ndcr on new o
emp oyecs o ceo d suffi en da a o rca
erase where he adm n stralo on! dm o wnably measure he effie cncy offunc ons
be n the best n eres of he n k The ..tm n
n a sec ons The bureau li d s on of
s rator o any o he penon authonzed by reacarch and sra s c shall perform penod-he adm n s ra or sha gram he binder upon
c cos etfecn eness analy c! wh h sha I be
ubm s on of a eques fo coverage by he made a a ab e o he: general assemb y he
employer A b nde s c:ffec vc for a pcnod go crnor and o he pubhc dunng norma
of h rty day from da c of ssuan c and
work ng hours
ncmrenewab e Payro reports and prem urn
C The bu eau and comm s on o n y
hargcs sha co n de w th the ffect da c shal de e op adop and use a pohc:y man
of h1 b nde
ual sen ng forth h gu de nes and bases fo
J Se standard fo he reasonab c and dec s on mak ng fo any dec s on wh h s
max mum.tlandl ng meofcla mspaymcn
he rcspons bi ty o he: bureau d smct hear
fund ons. ensure by ru cs the mpart al and
ng of1icers staff heanng offi ers o he
p omp rea men of a cia m and emp oy
comm 51 on Gu de oes sha be set forth n
er nsk a eoun s and establ sh a secure accu
the pol ey manual by he bureau and eom
ra e method of me 1tamp ng al ncom ng m ssron to he e~cen of the tttpec c uns
ma and documen s hand de vered o d c ons fo dec d ng a eu the ro ow "I
bureau emp oyee1
spec fie maners
4 Emmre ha a emp oyees or he
( , Reasonab e ambulance serv ccs
bu eau fo ow he orders and ru es of he
2 Re a 10nsh p of drugg o n ury
comm sa on as 'SU h orders and ru ea ela e
(3) Award ng ump-sum ad anees fo
o die comfl\ ss on s o era I ad ud atory pol
cred tors
cy mak ng and managtmcn du cs undc
(4) Award ng ump-sum ad an es fo
h 1 'hap c and Chapters 4123 4 2 and anomey s fees
4 3 of he Re sed Code
(~ P ac ng a c a mana. NCLUD NO A
(I 5 Ma age and opera e a data PfO
CLAMANT WHOSE EMPLOYER S A
cess ng syslem w h a common data bue for SELF INSURJNG EMPLOYER
no
he u e of both he bureau and he comrn s
rehab lal on
1 on and n consu ta KKI w h he comm
(6 Transfemng cosu of 1 ' am from
s on us ng e ectron dala process ng cqu p- emp oye costs o he llltu ory surp us fund
men sha I deve op 1 c a ms rack na ays
punUlJl oscc: on4123 343of heRe sed
em ha 1 suffic en to mon tor the 1t1tu1 of Code
• cia m a aoy time and thai SICJ appeals that
(7 Ul zaoon of ploys c an spec a s
have been filed aod ordm or daterm na 10111 reports
tha ha c been uued pursuan to sect on
(8 Determ n •1 the percentsae of per
41235 I o 412B 2of heRe sed Code
mancn part a • tll:l); a p II)
ne ud na the dates of such fil "II' and IMPAIRMENT IN ACCORDANCE W TH
THE MOST RECENT EDITION OF THE
( 6) Eooai&gt;l sit and mamtam a mod ea
AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIA
sect on wdb n the bureau The med c:al&amp;ee
TION S GUIDES TO THE EVALUATION
on aha do Ill or tho follow ng;
OF PERMANENT IMPAIRMENT
(a)Auo dloadmnatrotor neo1abilh
(9) DETERM NINO THE PERCENT
ng 1W1dard mod Cl fees appro mg med- AGE OF TEMPORARY partra d sab II)'
ICI) procedura and datemun na el 1 b I ty temporary total d sab i I)' v olat10111 of ape
ofthe.,.,._ pay
c fte safety n:qu mncntt an twlnl under

.........

and.......,._

RcviMd Code o a d - total-

iol' IMPAIRMENT
(D) 11oo

and

mp- poltc:JI &amp;llide .... and bues for
deeiaiona hlvolvbtt n:lmbttnanaal nehidina, but not .. ted w the lllj....,.
of mVOICel dlo redUCIIOil of JlO)'!IIOIIII for
futun: semees when an ntemal iWdit con
c udel; tha a health care provider was over.
po d or mproperly po1d for put aerviees
re mbunemen feel orothel'adJUShnentaiG
paymenls These po ey gu de1 ncs and
bases for dec awns, and any chaages to the
1111ide mea and bues, shall be act forth n 1
re mbunemen 'mlnua and prov der bul
ettns
Ne !her tho po tc:J1 llllldol na no the
bases set forth n there mbunemm manu
1 or prov der bu en111 refem:d o o th 1
d vts on 1 a Nle u defined n teet1011 9 0
of he Rev sed Code
(E) W th reapect 10 any detemunalion of
d sab I)' OR IMPAIRMENT wtda' Oropttr
4 23 of the Rev sed COOt when the phys
can makesade1eml.nal0fl bued.uponsta e
mcnts or nfonna on fUm slled by he
c a man o upon sub ect ve cv denu M
THE PHYSICIAN oha ~early ndicar. th s
fact n ioio THE P~YSICIAN S n:pon
(F The adm n suate aha publsh he
manua s and make op es of a manua s
ava lab e o ntereSicd part es a cos
Sec 4 2 14 (A The ndustna com
m ss on shall appo n a suffie en nu
of
d stnc heanng officers fo he p
of
heanng he matters s ed n d v s on
h s secl on Dis nct heanng offteerS are n
he c ass fled c serv ce of the sta e arc
fu me emp oyecs of he comm ss on and
ha I be per.10n adm ttcd o he praehce of
aw n 11 s s ate 0 stnc heanng offKers
shal no engage n any o her ac v ty ha
nterferes w th tho lid -11me ernplo)1111«1 by
he comm u on dunns norma work ng
hours
(B D s nc h anng oiTwcen ha ha e
ong na JUnsd c on on al of he ro ow ng
matters
I Determ na ons under sect on 4 23 S
of the Re sed Code
(2) All appea from a dec son of he
adm n s ra o of workers compensa on
undcrd 110n(B of sec on4 23 S ofthe
Re sed Code
(3) A othe on cs cd chums mancrs
unde h s chap e and Chapceq 4 23
4127 and4131 oflheRevsedCode exeep
hose maners o er wh ch 1taff hcanng om
cers ha c ong na JUnsd e on
(C) The adm n stra o of workers com
pensa on shall make av1.1l1b e o each d 5
nc heanng ofti er he fac cs and ass s
ance of bureau employees and rum &amp;h a 1
nforma on necessary lo lhe performance or
he d tnc hearing officer du cs
(Q) AD STRICT HEARING OfFICER
SHALL REPORT TO THE INSPECTION
D V SION OF THE BUREAU OF WORK
ERS COMPENSAT ON SUSPECTED
FRAUDULENT ACT V TY PERTAIN
NG TO THE OPERAT ON OF THE
WORKERS COMPENSAT ON SYSTEM
AND TS SEVERAL INSURANCE
FUNDS AS EV DENCED DUR NG ANY
HEARING N WHICH THE HEAR NG
OFF CER IS PRESENT OR AS EVI
,6ENCED BY ANY M~TeRIAL SUB
MITTEO FOR USE IN A llE!IR NG A
DISTRICT HEAR NG OFFICER SHALL
BE HELD HARMLESS FOR SUBMIT
T NG A REPORT UNDER TH S DIY
SION THE NSPECT ON 0 VIS ON
SHALL MAINTAIN IN CONF DENCE
THE IDENTITY OF ANY HEARING
OFF CER WHO SUBMITS A REPORT
UNDER TH S DIY SION
Sec 412 35 A The ndus na com
m ss on hal appo n staff hca ng om crs
o con d and dec de a maners spcr tied
n d son B, ofth s sec on A stafThca
ns officers are fu I me emp oyees of he
omm s on and sha be adm ned o he
pract ce o aw n th s 5 a e Staff heannJ
qffiter.i sha no engage n any o her nc v
y ha nc reres w h he ful me
employm n by he comm ss on dunng no
mal work ng hours
B E:te epta&amp;provded ndvson D
or h s sec on staff heanng officers ha c
onK na un!iid c on o hca and dec de he
ro ow ng matters
App a on fo pcnnancn o a ...
....,_ MPA RMENT awards pursuan o
cc on 412) 5R of he Rcvrsed Code
2 Appea 1 rom an orde or a d s nc:
eanng om c ssued under d " s on C of
occ on 412l 5 I of the Rev :d Code

mu (.., ef 811118~ 11 aa.n af lhl
Gall1anlinal
fit Re ews of sc lcmtn agrccmen
pursuan o sec on 4 23 6S of ht Re sed
Code Dec: s ons of lhe aff hcanna office
undc ha sec on arc tina and no appca
able o rhc comm ss on or to coun unde sec
on 4 2l 5 o 4 21 l 2 of he Rc "'d
Cod&lt;
C) The dec s on or a ~•tr heanna offi
cc uncle d 1 on (0 of sec: on 4 23 S
of he Rc IC'd Code he: dec 5:0n of he
comm !I on for he purpo!«:s of sec on
4 23 l 2 of he Revtsed Cod un "" he
comm Sl on hcan an appca under d ts on
(E of sec IM4 23 Silo he Rc !CdCode
0 Slaffhcaring offteen sha I hold hcllf
nga on al mancn referred o hem fo hear
ng Hcanng proccdub'C¥ h1 conform 10 the
ru cs rhc comm M on adop pursuan to m:
on 4 2 36 of he Rc ocd Cod&lt;
(fJ A STAFF HEARING OFF CER
SHALL REPORT TO THE INSPECT ON
DIY S ON OFTHE BUREAU OF WORK
ERS COMPENSAT ON SUSPECTED
FRAUDULENT ACT VITY PERTAIN
lNG TO THE OPERATION OF THE
WORKERS COMPENSAT ON SYSTEM
AND TS SEVERAL INSURANCE
FUNDS AS EVIDENCED DURING ANY
HEARJNG IN WHICH THE HEAR NG
OFFICER IS PRESENT OR AS EVI
DENCED BY ANY MATER AL SUB
MITTED FOR USE N A HEAR NO A
STAFF HEAR NG OFFICER SHALL BE
HELD HARMLESS FOR SUBMITT NG A
REPORT UNDER TH S DIVISION THE
INSPECTION DIVISION SHALL MAIN
•• Ill

~. ua~

OF ANY HEARING OFFICER
SUBMITS A REPORT UNDER THIS
DIVISION
See 4121 36 (A) The ndustn1l commlation obal adopt rules as to the cooduct
or ail hearinp bef... the eomm .. 011 and
ta ataft' and d stnct bearing officers and the
renderi111 of 1 dec ' on and lha.l fOCWI sw:h
ntln on manalfna. d rectltl(l. and otherwiae
ensunna 1 fa equ able and un fonn bar
rng proceM These rues slla I pro de for a
leal he follow ng stepS and procedur&lt;S
( Adoqua e no ce o a parties and
lhe~ representa ves o ensure ha no
ng Is eonducled u.n css a pan es have
opportun ty 10 be P""'n and o pr«en
dena: a n d _..
tiOni or n rebutta to lhc e\1 den'e o
menu or other pan n
(2) A pub e heanng
(3) Wnnm dec • ons
(4) Impartial '"'i1nmerot of
sond diotnct hearing ollicen ond ass gnmmt
appea a from a dectS on of the adrrlipisllrlor of worken oompensa on o a
hearing oftice oea ed a the ·conunission
serv ce office lhal s the closest naco8f'~Phic
prox m ty o he cia man s res denee
5) Publ ea on ora docket
6)Thesecunngof heattendancco
mony of w tnesse
7) Prehearing rules nc ud&gt;Jlg rules
a e o d sco e~ he ak ng of depos ons
and exchange of nfonna :on rclevan o a
c aam pno o he conduc of a heanng
8 The uance or orders by he
or staff heanng officer who renden he

'"IT

51011

NOTH NO N DIY SION 6) OF
SECTION SHALL BE CONSTRUED
BARR NG THE PART CIPA'T ON OF
PERSON WHO IS NOT ADMITTED
THE PRACTICE OF LAW AS A
SENTAT VE OF A PARTY FOR
PURPOSES OF ANY MATTER ARIISI'NIG
UNDER TH S CHAPTER
AND
CHAPTERS 4 23 4 27 AND 4 1 I
THEB,EV SED CODE PROVIDED THAT
THE REPRESENTAT VE OF THE PARTY
COMPL ES W TH RULES OF THE COM
M SS ON NO PERSON OTHER THAN
AN ATTORNEY WHO S ADMITTED
THE PRACT CE OF LAW MAY RENDER
ADV CE OR SERV CES N THE PREPA
RAT ON OR PRESENTAT ON OF A
CLAIM ARISING UNDER THIS CHAP
TER OR CHAPTER 4 23 4 27 OR 4 3
OF THE &amp;EV SED CODE FA FEE FOR
THE ADV C"E OR SERVICES S TO BE
RECEIVED FROM OR CHARGED
AGAINST THE PERSON HAYING THE
CLAIM
(B E ery dec son by a stiff or d stnct
heanng office o he comm ss on sha I be n
wn ngandconana ofrhefo owngeemcnts
( A one swa emcn of he order '"
..,ard
(2 A no a ona.~pro
as o appearance of pan es

""::!::

1 S gna ur&lt; of each
COMM SSION MEMBER or

Rev oed Code All diatnct and lilllr hetrin&amp;
oft'teer~ aitalltii1Ciqo the trtiolq COUtiCI
developed by dlo hetrin&amp; ollieer- the
- Of whlclt !he CXIm!IIIIIIOIUhaiJ poy Tho
comnu111011 aha make the hearina otlieer
11Wlllal and al revialOI'IIi l:hemo amiable lo
pub C II COIL
The COOIIIUIIIOO oball have the final
ll'llftllll manuala,
dove opo utd updates
Appoutta hearina admintatnto&lt; who
n tbe c asa fied c v l.emce ofthe
ond our.
suppon personnel fOI each hearina
adn&gt;inistrotr.-, wh ch suppott personne aball
under the dim: oupeMJ on of the hear
admm strator Tbe hearin&amp; adminl&amp;tro
sha do a I of the ro lo'MR8
(a All s the ......, 01011 n

enaurrna

u:~d~~~:=::::~~! ofticen
comply wrtb the
the hold "' or hearinl•

ti

ssuance of ordera under aecuon
oftheRevisedCode Forthatpur
each heanng adtltin strator r.lral prea month y n:po!t identify ng the starua
a c a ms n t1 office and dentil'ying
spec ficaliy tho c a ms which have not been
dec ded With n lhe tunc un tl set forth m
secoon4123l of he Rev sed Code The
comm ss on shall subm t an annual report
of al IUCh reports 10 the standing comm t
le&lt;l of the hoose or n:pn:senta ives and or
lhc Bille to wh h matters concern 11J wort:
ers compensa1 on are normally Rrcrm:l
(b) Prov de nfonna11011 10 request ng
part es or the repruentltlvta on the status
of the cia m
c) ISiueeompi anec: letten, upon a lind
ngofgood cause and wtlbouta funna bearng n al of lhe fo IQw ng araa
( D v a ons (B) and (C) of sect on
4 23 65 of the Rev sed Code
( ) Requests for the takin&amp; ofdepos bOltS

The llpldiaiilll aball wr11o ovai...-a of
mcdical-lepl prol&gt;laua- ...._..by
- - . ............ lite _ _

The d ....., ol admin lllllivo letVlees
upon oommillitlll
abali 1111p aucb
emp oy- too ulary achedole"""""""'
tate WJtb expatil&lt; roqwred oftbem
(6) Requn that pnor 10 any CIWIUIII
100 a phyaiCWI to whom a claiman •
referred for ClWIUliiiiOn rec:e VCI al nee:
CIAI')' :ned cal informat on n the c llm 6 e
about !he elaimln and • complete ....._.
11 to the purpoae of the exam 11111011.
(B) The commw1011 may ostab osb a
medical sectiOO wtth n tbe comm sa on o
perform the duties 111 gned 10 the eonums1 on under thu section
See 412144 (A) The admiNatratorof
worters compensttiOO aball o - the
rmplementatioo or the Ohio worll:en , _
peo11tron qual 6ed bealth plao sy~em as
establ lilted under sec on 4121 442 of the
Rev aod Code
(B) The adm n strato shall dtn:ct !he
mplementanon or 1he hea th ponnmbip
proaram adm n ttered by the bureau as set
fol1h n l«t on 4121 4-41 of the Rev sed
Code To mpl.-1 the hea th portnmh p
prosnm, the burtau
(I) Shai certtfy one or mono external
vendors 10 provide mod ca managemen
and oos contammen serv ces m the bel th
partnenh p PfOfll'UT' for a period of two
years beaiMrna on the da e of eerttf1&lt;a on
COitllllen wtb the llllndard!i eatob shed
undtl this sectiOn AND
(2) Mayn:eertJfy external vendon for an
odditionol period of two years . _ the Oi&lt;p
ratton of the certtlicanon set fonth m d
o on (BXI) or thiS IICCI!0J1141111

""'"ce

and comm st on pb)'l CWll
"'''' n~ ssuance of subpoenas
v) The gran ng or deny ng ofrequesu

C) Any vendor selected shall demon
strale aJ orthe fo

.~~~~~~·::::::..:::":!;:cum na

on the
exam nanon s conducted pno
to
heanng
nTake the rtecessary steps to ........ a
o proezed o a hearing when: the par
be
ad se the hearing admin stra
ha he e I m I nol ready fo a hearing
I) The comm sa on r.lrall perm any P&lt;f

:n

-and

JOn

d rec acces to nformation conta ned

n. e a:tron c data proc:css ng equ pmcnt
regard ng the slllUS of a claam n lhe hear
ng process The nfonnat:on sha nd:ca e
the nwnbe of days tha the cia m has been
n process, the nwnber of days the cia m has
been n 11 curm1 location and lhe number
of daY$ n the curren po n of dtc process
w thin hat oca on
(JX ) The -~-•iillll eomm SSIOil may
estab sh an a tema vc d spute reso unon
process for worken compenunon c:la ms
tha are wtlhrn lhe cot1UlUII on s unsdict on
unde Cbapten 4 21 4123 4127 and
4 3 of he Rev sed Code when the com
m ss on detenn nes tha such a process s
necessary Notw hs and ng sec ons
34 and 4 2 35 of the Rev sed Cod&lt;

3 The comm ss on !lha p epare
mon h y reports and subm hose rtports o
the go emor: he pres denl of lhc senate and
tile speake of he house ofrqwcsental: es
descnb na a of he fo ow DB
a) The names of each fac tao
cmp oyed under a persooal serv ce contrac
(b) The hour y amoun of money and the
o al amoun of money pa d o tach
fac a o
e The number of d sputa:! S&amp;UeS rnolvcd
ha mon h by each fac ts or.
(d) The number 'Of dee s1011S of each
fac a o tha were appea ed by • party
e A cert tical on by the comm ss on
ha he a ema c dspue resou on
process d d no de ay any heanng me nes
as .. forth n see 1011 4 2) 511 or he
Rev sed Code fo any d spuled ssue
(4) The omm ss on may adopt rues n
accordaneew thChapte 19 of the Revised
Code fo he adm n stra on of any a ema
ve d spu e resol on process tha he com.
m ss on es ab hcs

See 4 2 38 A) The ndu tna omm s
sron sha DO ALL OF THE FOLLOWING
( ) Imp emen a program of mpe nnel':
e"Ya ua on tra n ng fo s tafT phys c ans
(2 ssue a manual of comm ss on po
as o mpa nnen e a ua on so as to
n ease cons s ency of :ned ca rqKJI't!
NCLUDING BUT NOTLIMITED TO A
POL CV REQU RING THE USE OFTHE
MOST RECENT EDIT ON OF THE
a ~:~~~'(:
MEDICAL ASSOC A
T
GUIDES TO 'I'HE EVALUATION
PERMANENT IMPAIRMENT FOR
EVALUAT ON OF PERMANENT
PAFll'I~&gt;L IMPAIRMENT CLAIMS Th s
shall be ava lab e o he pub c a
but sha be pro ded free o al phys
who trea cia manu or to whom
::,:,;an: refetred for e aluattoa The

1

7

OWIIIJ

( ) Amn1ernenta and n:rmbonmrent
.......,.....tv1tb a oubotanoal numbet of the
med ca prorcss one and pbannacy
prov den cum:ntiy being uu zed by
claimanta
(2) Abi ty o accept a common fonnot
or mod cal b II datt n ut e ectronoc fsah on
fi'om any prov der who w shes to subnnt
medical b II data n that f'onn
(3) A eompu ersyotem ab eto handle the
V(l ume of med ca1 b Is and w i1 npess 10
eustomtZt that system to dlo bureau s needs
and o be operated by the vendor s staff.
bureau s at[ o some comb na on of both
staffs
4) A pmcnpt on dNg system whmo
plwmae es on a statewide bas shave ac&lt;ess
to tho el 1 b I ty and pnc 11(1. at a d scoun
ed n c of a prcscnpt on drugs
5) A traddng system o record a tee
phone ca s from elannaniJ and pro den
n:pnl ng the status of subm nod med col
b I a so as to be able to track eoch nqu ry
(6) Otttt procesa ng capac ty to absorb
ail of he bo..au a medical b I process na
or I eost hal pan of lhe process Ill WhiCh
tho burtau arranges to delegate
(7) Capoc I)' 10 store retneve amy sun
u • e and model n • relatiOnal mode a of
he deta ed mod cal b II data so Ira analy
SJS can be perfonned n a vanety o ways
and so tha he bureau and rs govern ng
authonty can make nformcd dec s ons
(8) Wide vanery of software programs
wh ch translate med cal enn nology n o
standar!f eodea and wh ch reval I a
pro der ' man pu al ng he procedures
codes commonly called unbuttd ng
(9) Nece8SU)' profess ona staff 10 con
duct. a a mm mum authorizations for tmll
men mcd cal necess ty u zal on re ew
concurrcnl revieW pos ul 1JI :on re ew
and have the anendan compu er sy! em
wh ch supports suc:b act f)' and mcasu cs
he ou comes and he sav ngs
0 Managemen expenencc and flex.
b ty o be ab e o reac qu ck y lo he needs
of he bureau n lhc em of requ red hange
n federal o sta e requ rcmcnls
D) The adm n stra o may I m freedom
of ho ee ofhea h care PfO de o supp
er by requ nng beg nn ns w h the penod
sctfonh ndVJson(B)( or 2)ofhssec:
on tbal c a man s sha PlY 1n appropn
ate ou -of plan co-pay fo selectmg a med
cal provide not w h n he heal h panner
sh p program u prov dcd for n thas sec on
(E)

lscl 18 IIU lllf) d; b I I If Milllllllh piM

sp '" "''"'"• llipiiilt ea efllla
a It; CIS 0 I lfiulat••U:u1htn
.., :m n (8Jt U ar (a) ef 1h:e • 111111
+lOt The adm n atra o sha eslab hand
opera e a bureau ofworlc.en compensa on
hea h care data program The adm n tra
or may c:ontrac w h he Oh o hea h care
da a cen er ror such purposes The adm n
•ua o sha de cop report ng requ remc:niS
rrom a employees cmp ayers and mcd a
providera med cal endor.l and p ans ha
part c pa e n he worktn compensa on
ys em The adm n stm o shan do a of he
fol ow na
( ) U ze lit col ec ed da a o :ncasu~
and perfonn oompanson analyses or cos s
qua t)' appropna eness of med ca care. and
effec veneas of med ca ,. e de ve cd by
a componen s of the workcn compcnsa
on sys em
(2 Comp edala osupportac
esof
he selccled 'lendo or ondors and to measure the ou come1 and sa np of he heallh
partnersh p program
(3) Pub sh and n:pon comp led dara o
IH! governor he apeoker or he house or
repramlahves and the praidcn oflhe senale on the fim day of eaelt January and July
the measwes of out:coma and avmp oflhe
hea th pannenltip propm and dlo quai lied
bea th p ut system The admin stro or •hall
prot« the conlidenlla I)' of all propnetary
pnc ng data
EQljl.\ Any n:hab litation fae ty he
""'- operote1 ts el11b e for meluo on n
the Ohoo worbn compensolion qua fled
lllllhlll p

under the ...... u otlte&lt;
providon witltit1 beal1b cera Ill- ortba proo

......MQliD .... -ide

the ........ witll-

.. dto- where oo qual fled beaith plan
or an inadequate number of prov dara w tfo.
m dlo helltb parlllmbip propom exlat, the
ldmin- obal pemu employoca to uaa
1 nonplan o nonpropam hal h Clrt
provider and r.lrall poy !he PfOV det for the
set\'l(lel or suppl a provided to or on behalf
or an employee for ao rnjury or oocupotional
diseuo tha s compensable under th 1
chaptel'orCbapter4123 4127 or4 1 or
the Rev sed Code on a fee schedu e the
admin~&amp;trotor adopts
jljQI) No eemfied health em prov der
shall cltargo ......, or otherwise attempt 10
co oct from., employee ~ anwtlled can: orpniZihOO, or tho bureau any
amount for co cred serv cea or suppltcS tha
s n excess or be allowed amoun poid by
a managed COR orpniZI- the bun:au. or
a qua fled hea 1h pian
~Thoadmmutratorabal perm any
employer or IIOUP of empioyera who 111ft
to ab de by the"' ea adopted onder th s secoonmdseehons412 44 and4 21442of
!he Revised Code to provide I&lt;IV1CeO or Slippi .. to 0 on beha r or an employee for an
DJUI')' o occupatlona d &amp;ease thai 1 com
penaab e unde th s chap er o Chapter
4 23 4127 or413 oftheRevsedCod&lt;
tltroup qua fiod health p ana of the Oh o
work.crs compensahon qual fled Ilea tb
plutsystem punuan to~ 4 21 442 or
the Revtsed COOt or tltrougb the health part
nenh p program pursu1n 10 KCt on
4 21 44 of the Rev sed COOt No amount
po d under dlo qual fied health p an syspursuan o -oon 4121 442 of tho Rev sed
Code by an employe who s a 1tate fund
emp oye sha be charged to the emp oy
er expencnce or othcrw se be used n
men rabng o determ n ng the nsk of lhat
emp oye fo the purpose of he paymen of
pronuuma unde th s chapter and I the
emp oye IS a se f. nsunng employer the
emp oyer ha no nclude tha amoun n
the po d eompensat on tho ernp oyer repons
under sectiOn 4 2335 of the Rev sed Code
See. 4 2 444 (A) NO HEALTH CARE
PROVIDER. MANAGED CARE ORGA
NIZATION OR OWNER OF A HEALTH
CARE PROVIDER OR MANAGED
CARE ORGANIZATION SHALL
OBTAIN OR ATTEMPT TO OBTAIN
PAYMENTS BY DECEPTION UNDER
CHAPTER 4 2 4 23 4127 OR 4 3i
OF THE JLEVISED CODE TO WHICH
THE HEALTH CARE PROVIDER. MAN
AGED CARE ORGAN ZATION OR
OWNER IS NOT ENtiTLED UNDER
RULES OF THE BUREAU OF WORK
ERS COMPENSAT ON ADOPTED PUR
SUANT TO SECT ONS 4 2 441 AND
4 21 442 OF THE B,EVISED CODE
(ll) ANY HEALTH CARE PROVIDER
MANAGED CARE ORGAN ZATION
OR OWNER THAT VIOLATES DIVI
SION (A) OF THIS SECTION IS LIABLE
IN ADDITION TO ANY OTHER PENAL
TIES PROV DED BY LAW FOR ALL OF
THE FOLLOWING PENALTIES
) PAYMENT OF INTEREST ON
THE AMOUNT OF THE EXCESS PAY
MENTS ATTHE MAX MUM INTEREST
RATE ALLOWABLE FOR REAL ESTATE
MORTGAGES UNDER SECTION
1343 0 OF THE KEY SED CODE THE
INTEREST SHALL BE CALCULATED
FROM THE DATE THE PAYMENT WAS
MADE TO THE OWNER HEALTH
CARE PROV DER OR MANAGED
CARE ORGAN ZATION THROUGH
THE DATE UPON WH CH REPAYMENT
iS MADE TO THE BUREAU OR THE
SELF INSURJNG EMPLOYER
2) PAYMENT OF AN AMOUNT
EQUAL TO THREE T MES THE
AMOUNT OF ANY EXCESS PAYMENTS
(3) UPON PROOF OF A SPECIFIC
INTENT OF THE HEALTH CARE
PROV DER MANAGED CARE ORGA
N ZATION OR OWNER TO DEFRAUD
PAYMENT OF A SUM OF NOT LESS
THAN F VE THOUSAND DOLLARS
AND NOT MORE THAN TEN THOU
SAND DOLLARS FOR EACH ACT OF
DECEPTON
(4) ALL REASON ~BLE AND NEC
ESSARY EXPENSES THAT THE COURT
DETERMINES HAVE BEEN NCURRED
BY THE BUREAU OR THE SELF
NSURING EMPLOYER IN THE
ENFORCEMENT OF TH S SECT ON
ALL MONEYS COLLECTED BY
THE BUREAU PURSUANT TO THIS
SECT ON SHALL BE DEPOS TED NTO
THE STATE INSURANCE FUND CRE
ATED N SECT ON 4 2330 OF THE
&amp;EVISED CODE ALL MON£YS COL
LECTED BY A SELF NSUR NG
EMPLOYER PURSUANT TO TH S SEC
TON SHALL BE AWARDED TO THE
SELF NSURING EMPLOYER
CX N ADD T ON TO THE MON
ETARY PENALTIES PROVIDED N
DIVIS ON (ll OF TH S SECTION AND
EXCEPT AS PROVIDED N D V S ON
!:X3 OF THIS SECT ON THE ~DM N
ISTRATOR MAY TERM NATE &lt;OR A
PERIOD NOT TO EXCEED F VE YEARS
FROM THE DATE OF CONY CTION
PLEA OF GU LTY OR JUDGMENT
ENTI\Y ANY AGREEMENT IETWEEN
THE BUREAU AND A HEA TH CARE
PROV DER OR MANAG D CARE
ORGANIZATION OR TS 0 INER AND
CEASE RE MBURSEMENT TO THAT
PROVIDER ORGANIZAl ON OR
OWNER-FOR SERVICES REi IDERED F
ANY OF THE FOLLOW NG APPLY
(i) THE HEALTH CARE FROVIDER
MANAGED CARE ORGA IZATION
OR TS OWNER OR AN OFFICER
AUtHORIZED AGENT ASSOCIATE
MANAGER OR EMPLOYEE OF A
PROVIDER OR ORGANIZAT ON IS
CONVICTED OF OR PLEADS GUILTY
TO A V OLAT ON OF SECT ONS
291HB OR 2923 3 TO 292) 36 OF THE
&amp;EVISED CODE
(II) THERE EXISTS AN ENTRY OF
JUOOMENT AGAINST THE HEALTH
CARE PROVIDER MANAGED CARE
ORGANIZATION OR ITS OWNER, OR
AN OFFICER. AUTHORIZED AGENT
ASSOCIATE, MANAGER, OR EMPLOY
EE OF A PROVIDER OR ORGANIZA
TION AND PROOF OF THE SPECIFIC
INTENT OF THE HEALTH CARE
PROVIDER, MANAGED CARE ORGA
NIZATION OR OWNER TO DEFRAUD

IUANT TO THII ftCTION
(&amp;) TH lUi IXIITI AN BNnY OF
JIJDOMIIIT At1AIWtf TIIB HIALTH
CAtui PIOVIN • MANAOID CAl!
OROANIZAt " tJII. ITI DWNI!A, OR
AN OP,.CU AU'I'HOIIZID AOI!Nl:
ASSDCIA'I'l!, MAJIIAOE-. 01 BMl'l.OY
EB OP A P~OVIDU. Ol OIOANIZ(&lt;
TION IN II CIVIl. ~CTION BROUGHT
PURSUANT TO SI!CTIONS 292331 TO
2923 36 OF THE &amp;£VISED CODE
(2) NO H!W.TH CARE PROVIDER
OR MANAGED CARE 0ROANIZA110N
THAT HAS HAD ITS AGREEMENT
WITH AND RE MBURSEMENT FROM
THE BUREAU TERMINATED BY THE
ADMINISTRATOR PURSUANT TO
DIVISION (Q( ) OF THIS SECTION OR
AN OWNER OFFICER. AUTHORIZED
AGENT ASSOCIATE MANAGER, OR
EMPLOYEE OF THAT HEALTH CARE
PROVIDER OR MANAGED CARE
ORGANIZATION SHALL DO ANY OF
THE FOLLOWING
(I) DIRECTLY PROV DE SERVICES
TO ANY OTHER BUREAU PROVIDER
OR HAVE AN OWNERSHIP INTEREST
IN A PROVIDER OF SERVICES THAT
FURNISHES SERVICES TO ANY
OTHER BUREAU PROVIDER
(b) ARRANGE FOR. RENDER. OR
ORDER SERVICES FOR CLAIMANTS
DURING THE PERIOD THAT THE
AGREEMENT OF THE HEALTH CARE
PROVIDER, MANAGED CARE ORGA
NIZATION OR ITS OWNER IS TERM!
NATED AS DESCRIBED IN DIVIS ON
(Q( ) OF THIS SECTION
~ RECEIVE REIMBURSEMENT IN
THE FORM OF DIRECT PAYMENTS
FROM THE BUREAU OR INDIRECT
PAYMENTS OF BUREAU FUNDS IN
THE FORM OF SALARJES SHARED
FEES CONTRACTS KICKBACKS OR
REBATES FROM OR THROUGH ANY
PARTICIPATING PROVIDER
(3 THE ADMINISTRATOR SHALL
NOT TERM NATE THE AGREEMENT
OR REIMBURSEMENT IF THE HEALTH
CARE PROVIDER MANAGED CARE
ORGAN ZATION OR OWNER DEMON
STRATES THAT THE PROVIDER
ORGANIZATION OR OWNER DID NOT
D RECTLY OR INDIRECTLY SANC
TION THE IICTION OF THE AUTHORjZED AGENT ASSOC ATE MANAG
ER OR EMPLOYEE THAT RESULTED
IN THE CONVICTION PLEA OF
GUILTY OR ENTRY OF JUDGMENT AS
DESCRIBED IN DIVIS ON (C)( I) OF
THIS SECTION
(4 NOTHING IN DIVISION (C OF
THIS SECTION PROHIBITS AN
OWNER OFFICER AUTHOR ZED
AGENT ASSOCIATE MANAGER OR
EMPLOYEE OF A HEALTH CARE
PROVIDER OR MANAGED CARE
ORGANIZATION FROM ENTER NG
NTO AN AGREEMENT WITH THE
BUREAU F THE PROVIDER ORGA
NIZATION
OWNER
OFFICER
AUTHOR ZED AGENT ASSOC ATE
MANAGER
OR
EMPLOYEE
DEMONSTRATES ABSENCE OF
KNOWLEDGE OF THE ACT DN OF
THE HEALTH CARE PROVIDER OR
MANAGED CARE ORGANIZAT ON
W TH WHICH THAT IND VIDUAL OR
ORGAN ZATION WAS FORMERLY
ASSOC ATED THAT RESULTED N A
CONVICT ON PLEA OF GUILTY OR
ENTRY
OF
JUDGMENT
AS
DESCRIBED N D V S ON CX OF
THIS SECTION
([! THEATTORNEYGENERALMAY
BRING AN ACTION ON BEH ~LF OF
THE STATE AND A SELF NSUR NG
EMPLOYER MAY OR NG AN ACTION
ON ITS OWN BEHALF TO F.NFORCE
TH S SECT ON IN ANY COURT OF
COMPETENT JURISDICT ON THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL MAY SETTLE
OR COMPROMISE ANY ACTION
BROUGHT UNDER THIS SECTION
WITH THE APPROVAL OF THE ADM N
ISTRATOR
NOTW THSTAND NG ANY OTHER
LAW PROVIDING A SHORTER PER OD
OF L MITAT ONS THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OR A SELF NSUR NG
EMPLOYER MAY BR NG AN ACT ON
TO ENFORCE THIS SECTION AT ANY
TIME WITH N SIX YEARS AFTER THE
CONDUCT N VIOLAT ON OF THIS
SECTION TERMINATES
(j;) THE AVA LAB L TY OF REME
DES UNDER TH S SECT ON AND SEC
T ONS291J 48 AND292131 T02923 36
OF THE B,EV SED CODE FOR RECOV
ER NG BENEFITS PA D ON BEHALF
OF CLAIMANTS FOR MEDICAL ASS sTANCE DOES NOT L MIT THE
AUTHOR TY OF THE BUREAU OR A
SELF NSUR NG EMPLOYER TO
RECOVER EXCESS PAYMENTS MADE
TO AN OWNER HEALTH CARE
PROV DER OR MANAGED CARE
ORGANIZATION UNDER STATE AND
FEDF.RAL LAW
E AS USED IN THIS SECT ON
I) DECEPTION MEANS ACT NG
W TH ACTUAL KNOWLEDGE OF N
DEL BERATE IGNORANCE OF OR
RECKLESS DISREGARD OF THE
TRUTH OR FALSITY OF ANY REPRE
SENTATION OR NFORMATION N
ORDER TO DECEIVE ANOTHER OR
CAUSE ANOTHER TO BE DECE YEO 8Y
MEANS OF ANY OF THE FOLLOW NG
1 A FALSE OR MISLEADING
REPRESENTATION
b) THE WITHHOLD NG OF
NFORMATON
&gt; THE PREVENT NG OF ANOTH
ER FROM ACQU RING INFORM AT ON
~) ANY OTHER CONDUCT ACT
OR OM SS ON THAT CREATES CON
FIRMS OR PERPETUATES A FALSE
MPRESS ON AS TO A FACT THE
LAW THE VALUE OF SOMETHING OR
A PERSON S STATE OF MIND
EXCEPT AS PROVIDED N D VI
S ON (ll)(3 OF TH S SECT ON FOR
PURPOSES OF TH S SECT ON PROOF
OF SPECIFIC NTENT TO DEFRAUD IS
NOT REQU RED IN ORDER TO SHOW
THAT AN OWNER HEALTH CARE
PROVIDER OR MANAGED CARE
ORGANIZAT ON IS ENGAGING N OR
HAS ENGAGED IN DECEPTION
(2) 'OWNER MEANS ANY PERSON
HAYING AT LEAST A F VE PER CENT
OWNERSHIP INTEREST IN A HEALTH
CARE PROVIDER OR MANAGED

iOiPiiriiii ...~

Soc 4121445 EACH HEALTH CARE -•!Mntma ,._JlO)'!nenll . .
PROVIDER AND MANAGED CARE .... JNI1UIIII t o - 412161 ofdlo
ORG~NIZATION SHALL MAKE AT
Reviood Code 10 !he ela ..., who com
LEAST ONE COPY OF AN EMPLOY
pletes a rdlabil ta110n lnUUDI propam and
EE S MEDICAL RECORDS AND THE ~U1111 10 employment, but who aufi'CB I
REI'ORT OF 11IE EMPIDYEE S TREAT
w•F lOP compared o he waee
lNG OR CONSULTING PHYSIC AN ela mant- reccivmaal dlo tunc or lftJUI)'
AVAILABLE TO THE EMPLOYEE OR Payment~ per Wid. shal be suty s x
THE EMPLOYEE S REPRESENTATIVE two-dlildapereen oflhed trermee I
UPON REQUEST AT A CHIIRGE NOT between !he do mant 1 wccl:ly wage
TG EXCEED FWTEEN CENTS PER hmc: of Tl)ury and the weekly wqr: n;;:~
PRINTED PAGE
while employed, up 10 a mu mum P'
Sec 412147 (A)Noemplo)ulhai .,.
per wccl: equal o tho o1a ewide
latt a speer fie safety ru e adopted by !he wccl:ly wqe The po)'I!IC"U may
adm rustncor of worken c:ompensat 01'1 for
pursoan to ,...,.. 4121 3 of the Rev oed but sha be rocluced by he
Code or an ac of lhe genera as:wmbly to number of weeks n wh ch the
protect the ves, healrh and safety of recava payment~ pur&amp;uan 10
ernployoes punuan tGSocl100l5 of Allicle !liKe ofoect1011 4 23 56 of he
I Oh o C.,.tllution Cbapter 4167 of tho Code
Rev sed Cod&lt; and rules and standards
(Q PROVIDING INCENT YES
adopted ......... UNDER THAT CHAr
EMPLOYERS TO REEMPLOY
TER are no the rules or cnKtment refm'Cd
EMPLOYEES WHO HAVEt; ~~ii~~~~
o m th s d v s on and shall not be eons:id
FULLY COMPLETED PI
ered as such for putpoJCS of lh s tiC on
REHABILITATION PROGRAMS
FOR PURPOSES OF TH S SEcnON A INCENTIVES MAY INCLUDE
SPECIFIC SAFETY RULE OF THE ARE NOT LIM TED TO A,;·;~&lt;;:~;
ADMINISTRATOR THAT REFERS TOOR TIVE RATING PLANS AND 0
IS INTERPRETED AS APPLYING TO REDUCTION PLANS
WORKSHOPS AND FACTORJES SHALL
See 4123 0 As used nth schapter:
NDT APPLY TO BUILDINGS OR STRUc(AX ) Employ« means
TURES USED FOR AORICULTURAL
(I) Every persoo n the WVIC&lt; of the
PRODUCTION OR TO ANY OF THE sta c or of any county munJC pa corpora
F XTURES MACHINERY EQUIPMENT
tJon townsh p o achoo d stnct herem
TOOLS OR DEY CES UT L ZED IN
nc ud ng regula membcn of awfu y con
THOSE BU LDINGS OR STRUCTURES
s bated pol cc:: and fire departments
AS USED IN THIS DIVISioN AGRI
mun c pal corpora ons and ownsh. ps
CULTURAL PRODUCT ON MEANS whether poid o volunteer and wh&lt;~ever
OPERATIONS UPON FARM PREMISES
serv q: w h n he sta e or on
NCLUDING THE PLANTING CULTI
ass gnmen outJ de hereof and c
VATING PRODUCING GROWING t AR
officm of boards of educa on undc
VEST NG DRYIIIG AND STOR NG OF appo n men o oontnct o
AGRICULTURAL OR HORTICULTURAL
mp ed oral o wnnen
COMMOD T ES AND PREPARAT ON c ected offi al of he state o of any
FOR MARKET OF THOSE COMMODI
ty muniC pa corpora on or town h p
T ES ON FARM PREMISES THE RA S- member.; of board of cduca on
ING OF LIVESTOCK, FOR FOOD PRODb Every person n the sm·ICe.or
UCTS OR RAC NG PURPOSES AND penon finn o pn a c arpora 10n
POULTRY ON FARM PREMISES AND
ng any pub c serviCe corporaoon tha
ANY WORK PERFORMED NC DENT emp oy1 one or more persons regula y
TO OR IN CONNECT ON W TH THOSE
he same bus ne s or n o abou he
FARM OPERATIONS AGR CULTURAL estabhthmen under 111y contra of
PRODUCT ON DOES NOT INCLUDE expms o mpiied oral or wntten
THE COMMERCIAL PROCESSING
nc oiiCMiftd """""' 11ouodoold woolkm
PACKING DRYING STORING OR CAN. who..., one lrundmh &lt;I)' dol ian
NING OF THOSE COMMOD T ES FOR
a cash n any calendar quarter ftom a
MARKiT OR COMMERC AL TIMIIER g e househo d olld cosuai worken wh&lt;&gt; ..,,.
HARVESTING BY AN NDEPENDENT one hundred s l'Y do ars o more n
CONTRACTOR
n any calcnda q~&amp;&amp;rtc fi om a
(8)1fualrhearingollieeJ nth&lt;......, employer or ( ) bound by any such
ofltio THE HEARING OFFICER S dater
tnoc ofh r&lt; or by sny •other wriiten conlnct,
m na1 on of a cia m fo an add onal award
o pay n o he ta c n ul'llnce fund he
under Sec on 3:5 of Art c e I Oh o m urn pro dcd by h s chapte
Cons tu on finds he emp oyer gu ty of
c E ery peoon who perfonns abo o
vaolat ng d 1 oo A) of th s seettoo Ito pro des serv cc pursuan o a on rue1 on
ohail THE HEARJNG OFFICER m add
contnct,udefined niCCtlon4 2379ofthe
boll o any award paid to the c: a mam
Re iscd Code f 1 eas en of he o ow
SHALL uuc an order 10 he employer to
ng n cna app y
COi'n!e
he olabon w th n the penGd of
( The peraon s n:qwred o eomp y w th
bme Ito-liMo FIXED BY THE HEARING
nstnK: 10ns from h o he on ract ng
OFFICER For any violat1011 occumn1 party regard ng he manner or method
w th n twenty fou mon1hs of lht as v10o
perf'onn ng SCf\1 ces
Ia on he lltiiJ hearina officer ohal uses•
( The penon roqu red by he
aga ns he employer a e v pena ty n an
contract ng party ro ha c part.cular ra n ng:
amoun Ito THE HEARING OFFICER
( ) The person • servi&lt;CS an: int&lt;:gntdetenn nea up to a max nun or fi fly thou
cd nto the rcau • func: on ng or the
sand do ars ro each v o a on In tilt ng he
contracnng pany
met penal!)' the-hearinaoiT.,.,.Jhali
The~s~o~IWI~c&lt;ffitM
bascilio THEdoc:ia&gt;OG upon !he ....,of the -,.,_.tiy
cmp oye B5 measured by the numbc of
The person h red superv sed
employees assets and cam ngs of the pa d by the o he on ract ng party
employer
) A conn ng rca onshp
C) An emp oyer d 1$11 sfied w h he
between he perJOn and he o he ccntr&gt;etmpos on o a
I penal y pursuan o
"K party ha o cmpla es con nu ng
d Vts on (8) of 1r s sect on may appeal the recumna: work c en f the wo k s not
II04f bearing officer s dec o on f dlo com
m s on refuses to hear the appca under
d son (E) of I&lt;CI1011 4 23511 of he
RevtliCd Code o a dec lton o the COfTb
m ss on f he comm ss on hean lhe appca
unde hal d v s on. o a coun of '""mon
p eas pursuan o he Rules of C v
Procedure An appea opera es o stay the
pa)'!nen of the flne peod na the appe.a

1

'":::Z

...

D) The adm n stra o shal depos •I

peRil es coJICCied pursuan o h s sect:on
n dlo oa:upationai safety oan program fund
es ab shed pUI'Iuan o sec1 on 4 2 48 or
he Rev sed Cod&lt;
(fJ NVEST GATIVE REPORTS OF
VIOLATIONS OF SPECIF C SAFETY
RULES SHALL BE AVAILABLE TO
THE EMPLOYER THAT IS THE SUB
JECT OF AN INVESTIGATION AND A
CLAIMANT THAT IS INJURED
BECAUSE OF AN ALLEGED VOLA
TIONTHAT STHESUBJECTOFTHAT
NVESTIGAT ON
Sec 4 2 6 IA}Thcadmnsraotof
wori&lt;m contpCIISO oon w rh he advrce and
eonscn ofthcwodm compenilhORO'Ict
s gh comm talOn shall adop rules
INCLUD NG RULES DESCR BED IN
DIY SiON B OF THIS SECT ON akc
mea urc and make c~~:pcnd u es a .t T IG
ADM NISTRATORdccm nccCSSBI)'IOBd
a mams who ha e u a ned compensable
n uncs or ncum:d compens.hle occups
onal d seascs pu11uan o Chap e: 4 23
4 27 o 4 31 of he Rev sed Code o
re um o work or o ass s n essen ng or
remov ng any resu ma handteap
till THE ADM NISTRATOR SHALL
ADOPT RULES UNDER THIS SECT ON
ESTABLISHING CRITERIA GOVERN
NO DETERM NATIONS REGARDING
THE PROVIS ON OF REHABILITAT ON
SERVICES COUNSELING OR TRAIN
NG TO EMPLOYEES OF BOTH STATF.
FUND AND SELF INSUR NG EMPLOY
ERS THE INDUSTRIAL COMM SS ON
SHALL ESTABL SH RULES REGARD
NG A HEARING PROCEDURE TO
GOVERN D SPUTES BETWEEN A.
CLAIMANT AND A SELF NSUR NG
EMPLOYER RWARDING THE PROV
SION OF REHABIUTAT ON SERV CES
COUNSEL NG OR TRA NING
Sec 4 2 67 The ltdm n n1 or o
woricers tompCT'IY ton .. h he ad'IK:C and
onsen of he workcn compensa on o crgh comm ss10n lha adopl ru :s
A) For the encourqemcm o recm
p oymen of cla man s who ha c suctess
u y camp ~ed prcscnbed rehab ta tOn
prolf'III1S by paymen from tho surp us fund
esrabl shed by sec on 4 23 34 of lh&lt;:
Rev sed Code o emp oyen who emp oy or
reemploy the c a mants The pmod or pen
ads of payments sha no eKcctd s •
months n the awcsa c un ess he adm n
'""or or ioio THE ADM NISTRATOR S
des- dererm nes tha he e a mam w I
be bettef!W by an exteltStOD of payments

Th peNOn docs not make h
cs a a abl o the gcn ra pub
K x The o her contrac ng pany has
ngh o d .marge he flC"""
XK The person has he ngh o nd
rcla 10nsh pw h hco hereon rae ngP~rty
w thou ncumng ab I ty pursuan o an
cmp oymcn con 111c or 8£fCCrncn
E ~ penon n he SCtV cc of any ndepcndcn ontntctor or subc:'onln:clor who his
fa cd o pay n o the sla e nsul'llnce fund
h amoun of rm-m um dctcrm ned and
fixt(! by he adm nastra or of workers
compcnsa on fo he penon s cmp oymen
o occupa tOO o (a sc (. nsunng employer has a led o pay ompensa on
cfi d rcc y o he mployc:
nJured
o he d penden s of he emp oyer k
mployccs 1 rcqu red b sect on 4
o he ~ sed Cod hal he con dcred
he mp oycc of he person who has
K

SCf\1

ryOf
b Any offi cr
ra on OR
' AN IND V DUAL WHO S GNS
THE WA VER AND AFFIOA.V T PROVIDED FOR N SECTION 412) 5 OF
THE B,EVISED CODE PROVIDED
THAT THE AD~ NISTRATOR HAS

�from die deftnibon of employee
purauant to diVISIOn (AX2 of thu sothDD.
If an employer 1 1 pll1netsh p aole pro~P or fundy farm eorporahDII, 1110h
emp oyer may elec o ntlude as an
employee w lhm this chaplet any nu:m
ber of such portncnlop die owoer oftbe 110le
propn-.h p or the officers of the family
farm ccupon.non In the e"Yen ofIll e ectJon.
the employer shll serve opon tbe buroau of
worken compensattOn wnnen no tee namng he penons o be co mel n ude such
employee s rcmu.nerawn fo prem um pwJIIl""S n • fu .... payro reports and no
person exc uded from the dcfin tlon of
employee pursuao to d on (AX2 of
th s section propneto o partner sba I be
deemed an emp oyee wtth n th s di s on
urn the emp oyer has served uch notace
Fo nformahona purposes on y he
bomu sha prea&lt;nbe such llnauage as
cons den appropna e on such of ts fonns
as
ons den appropnate o ad se
employers of the ngh o e ec to n ude
as an employee w th nth s chapter a so e
propneto snymemberofapannershp he
offi en of a fam y fann corpora on o a
person ex hided from the defin on o
employee underdi son AX2)(a o th
ec on hal hey hould heck any hea th
and d sabil ty 111SU1111ce po cy or other fonn
of health and d sab ty p an o ontra
presently co enng them o the purchase a
wh ch hey may be cons dermg o detc
m ne whether such po y plan o ontnl
benefits fo I ness o n ury tha
mgh ha eeeced aha eo eredby
wm·kers' compensahon
8 Emp oyer' means
The late nc ud ng sta e hosp tal

c:x.tept where
have aniiCII fiom sn n ry •
MPA RMENT o d sab ty
caUJiCd 1mmanly by tbe n-. detenoraUOn
ssuc., an organ, 0 part or he body
3) nJIIIY MPAIRMENT o d sabi ty
ltlCUJTed n va unwy parnclpl1 on n an
cmp oyer sponsored recreatiOn o titnes
f he employee s gns a wa e o
emp oyce nght to ompensat on o
heru,fit• under th hap er pno o e gag
n he recreation o runes ac ry
4) A COND TON MPA RMENT
DISEASE PROCESS THAT PRE
EX STEO AN NJURY UNLESS THAT
PRE EXISTING COND TON OR
IMPA RMENT IS SUBSTANTIALLY
WORSENED OR THAT D SEASE
PROCESS S SUBSTANTIALLY ACCEL
ERATED BY AN N URY AS DOCU
MENTEO BY OBJECT VE CL N CAL
AND TEST RESULTS AND
AND RESULTS ARE
ESTABL SH A COM
'"'"'''-"L.•INJURY AS DESCRIBED IN
DIVISIO•N (.CX4 OF TH S SECT ON
5 IN URY MPAIRMENT OR D S.
RESULTING FROM CUMU
OR REPET T VE TRAUMA
'Ch d ncludcs a posthumou
cn"'""'"'a h d ega yadopredpnortothe
nury
E Fam y fann orporauon means a
corpora ... founded for die purpose of f..,.,.
ng agncu tura and n wh h he maJOTity
of he 0 DgliOCk 1hedbyand hemaJO
ty of he stockholden an: persons or he
spouse of person! related o cath other Wlthfourth degrte ofk nsh p accord nato
ru es of the
aw and at eas one or

INl;LUVtr&lt;V A D SEASE OR CONOI
THAT RESULTS FROM A CUMU
.A:IIIV"- OR REPETIT VE TRAUMA
IS CONTRACTED IN THE
I:UIUJ&lt;:•r. OF EMPLOYMENT THAT
W&gt;ULlrS IN DAMAGE OR HARM TO
PHYSICAL STRUCTURE OF THE
AND THAT IS DUE TO CAUSES
CONDIT ONS THAT ARE CHAR
OF OR PEt:ULIAR TO A
PAJrm ·m .AKINDUSTRlAL PROCESS
OR
OCCUPATION

NOT INCWD£ ANY OP THE FOLLOWING
( ) A DISEASE OR CONDITION TO
WH CH THE GENERAL PUBLIC IS
EXPOSED 'OUTSIDE OF EMPLOY
MENT ABSENT A SHOWING BY A
PREPONDERANCE OF THE EV
DENCE, THAT THE DISEASE OR CON
D TION IS CIIARACTERJST C OF OR
PECULIAR TOA PARTICULAR INDUS
TRIAL PROCESS TRADE OR OCCU
PATION
(2) A D SEASE OR COND TION
111AT WOULD HAVE ARISEN W TH
OUT THE OCCUPATIONAL EXPO
SURE
(3) A D SEASE OR CONDITION
THAT RESULTS FROM AGORAVAT ON
OF A PRE EXIST NG DISEASE CON
D TION OR D SEASE PROCESS
(4) A D SEASE OR CONDITION
CAUSED PRIMARILY BY THE NAT
URAL DETERIORAT ON OF THE S
SUE ORGANS OR OTHER PARTS OF
THE BODY
S PSYCH ATR C COND T ONS
EXCEPT WHERE THE CONDITIONS
HAVE ARISEN FROM AN OCCUPA
T ONAL D SEASE
0) Se r nsunng employer means
any of the o owtng a egones of employ
ers f granted the pn ege o pay ng com
pensanon and benefits direc y under sed:IOD
4 2335 of he Re ocd Code
) Any emp yer men oned n d s on
BX2 ofthsse on
2 A board o ounty hosp ta b'UStees
3 A pub ly owned u ty
Sec 4 23 032 E ery emergen y man
agemen we kcr MeM w th rcspec:: to the
perfonnance fllioTHEWORKER Sdunes
u wM AN mergen y managemen work
e SHALL ben heemp ymen ofthestatc
or pol a ubd
on fo purposes of sec
""' 4 23 01 o 4 23 94 of he Re sed
Code and e ery emerge y manapmen
work.e o n case o dea h. M THE
EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT WORK
ER S dependents shal be enn ed o tbe beo
ts payab e ac oun o total d ub ty
OR IM~AIRMENT loss o membe o
dea h a accorded by u h sechon o
employee overed by Mo THE R proVJ
on No paymen fo su h d sab ty OR
MPA RMENT oss of member or death
ha bemadeunessacam sfiedwthn one year o he: da e of lhc ac:c dental
n ury au ng he ota d sab ty OR
IMPA RMENT oss of member o death
I an nury amlSfiledwthn....,...
HAT onc-_year pmod and the olaimont subsequen ly de llio THE EMERGENCY
MANAGEMENT WORKER S dependentli
hall fi e any death c a m based on such
n ury wt h n s ~ months afte he death o
be oreve barred
Sec 4 23 033 Any emergency man
agemen worke who suffers an ace denta
DJUry wh e perfonn ng emergency man
agemen du es as defined here n sha be
ompensa ed fo any ota d sab I ty
IMPA RMENT or oss of member and llio
THE WORKER S dependents sha be
ompensa ed o any death resu tmg from
suth an n ury on he same bas s as pro d
ed for worken emp oy&lt;os and thei depen
dents unde sec ons 4 23 0 o 4123 94 or
the Rev;..! Code
Thu; SCIChon sha oo app y n lhe ue
o any person who otherw se en tied
de soc ons4 230 o4 2394of he
Rev sed Code 10 rece
workers com
pensa on benefits fo such ace deoll:l U1 ury
0 death
Se
4 23 06
ANY RECORDS
F LES PLEAD NOS OR DOCUMENTS
GENERATED BY A CLAII\IANT S
ATTORNEY W TH RESPECT TO A
CLIENT N AWORKERS COMPENSA
T ON CLAIM ARE THE PROPERTY OF
THAT CL ENT UPON THE CLIENT S
REQUEST THE ATTORNEY SHALL
CONVEY TO THE CLIENT COPIES OF
ALL RECORDS FILES PLEADINGS
AND DOCUMENTS RELATING TO THE
CL ENT S WORKERS COMPENSA
T ON CLAIM NO LATER THAN FIF
TEEN DAYS AFTER THE CLIENTS
REQUEST
Sec 4 23 0 The adm n strator of the
bureau of workers compenu on shal prepare and fum sh b ank onns ofapp at on
o benefits or ompe:nsa ion from he s a e
n&amp;urance fund reports of nJury d sabil ty
MPA RMENT or occupt ona disease
non es to employers and employees proo
of n ury d scasc d sab ty MPA R
MENT or dea h proo s o med al atten
dance and hospita and nun ng a e and
Pf'09 s of cmp oymen and wage earn ngs
and other necessary blanks and sha prOvide nllioTHEADMINISTRATOR Srules
or he preparahon and d nb\1 em iD tha
hey may be read y a a ab e and so pre
pared ha he fum sh ng of nfonna on
requ red of any person wt h respect to any
aspcc of a cia m sha no be de aycd by a
requ mnen tha nfonna on w th res~ to
ano he liSped o such Ia m sha be fur
n shed on the fonn by he same o ano he
penon n ured emp oyers ha k ep on
hand a suffiC en 1upp y of su h blanks
Sec 4 2 l A AN EMPLOYER
WHO S A MEMBER OF A RECOG
N ZED REL G OUS SECT OR D V SION
OF A RECOGNIZED REL G OUS SECT
AND WHO S AN ADHERENT OF
ESTABLISHED TENETS OR TEACH
NGS OF THAT SECT OR D VIS ON BY
REASON OF WH CH THE EMPLOYER
S CONSCIENTIOUSLY OPPOSED TO
ACCEPTANCE OF THE BENEF TS OF
ANY PUBL COR PRIVATE NSURANCE
THAT MAKES PAYMENTS N THE
EVENT OF DEATH D SAD LITY
IMPA RMENT OLD AGE OR RET RE
MENT OR MAKES PAYMENTS
TOWARD THE COST OF OR PROV DES
SERVICES FOR MED CAL 8 LLS
INCLUDING THE BENEF TS OF ANY
INSURANCE SYSTEM ESTABL SHED
BY THE SOCIAL ,iECUR TY ACT 42
li!IC.A 30 ET SEQ MAY APPLY TO
THE ADMIN STRATOR OF WORKERS
COMPENSAT ON TO BE EXCEPTED
FROM PAYMENT OF PREMIUMS AND
OTHER CHARGES ASSESSED UNDER
TH S CHAPTER AND CHAPTER 4 2
OF THE REVISED CODE WITH
RESPECT TO OR IF THE EMPLOYER S
A SELF NSURINO EMPLOYER, FROM
PAYMENT OF D RECT COMPENSA
T ON AND BENEfiTS TO AND ASSESS.
MENTS REQUIRED BY TH S CHAPTER

ON ACCOUNT OF AN INDIVIJ&gt;..
UAL WHO MEETS THE REQUIRE
MENTS OF THIS SECilON THE APPLI
CATION SHALL BE ON FORMS PROVIDEO BY THE BUREAU OF WORK
ERS COMPENSATfON WHICH FORMS
MAY BE THOSE USED BY OR SIMILAR
TO THOSE USED BY THE INTERNAL
REVENUE SERV CE FOR THE PUR
POSE OF GRANTING AN EXEMPTION
FROM THE PAYMENT OF SOCIAL
SECURITY TAXES UNDER 26 .\!!I C. A402(&amp;) OF THE INTERNAL .B,EVENUE
J:OOE AND SHALL INCLUDE A WRIT
TEN WAIVER, SIGNED BY THE INDI
V DUAL TO BE EXCEPTED OF ALL
THE BENEFITS AND COMPENSATION
PROV OED FOR IN TH S CHAPTER
AND CHAPTER 4 2 OF THE REVISED
C.ODE
THE APPL CATION ALSO SHALL
INCLUDE AFF DAV TS SIGNED BY
THE EMPLOYER AND THAT INOIV J&gt;..
UAL Ti!AT THE EMPLOYER AND THE
INDIVIDUAL ARE MEMBERS OF A
RECOON ZED REL G OUS SECT OR
D VIS ON OF A RECOGNIZED REL
G OUS SECT AND ARE ADHERENTS
OF ESTABL SHED TENETS OR TEACH
INGS OF THAT SECT OR D VIS ON BY
REASON OF WH CH THE EMPLOYER
AND THE INDIVIDUAL ARE CONSC
ENTIOUSLY OPPOSED TO ACCEP
TANCE OF THE BENEF TS OF ANY
PUBL C OR PRIVATE INSURANCE
THAT MAKES PAYMENTS IN TilE
EVENT OF DEATH D SAD LITY
MPA RMENT OLD AGE OR RETIRE
MENT OR MAKES PAYMENTS
TOWARD THE COST OF OR PRO
V DES SERV CES FOR MEDICAL
B LLS NCLUD NG THE BENEF TS
OF ANY INSURANCE SYSTEM ESTAD
LISHED BY THE 'SOCIAL SECURITY
ACT 42ll!IC.A30 ETSEQIFTHE
ND V DUAL S A M NOR THE
GUARD AN OF THE MINOR SHALL
COMPLETE THE WA VER AND AFF
DAV T REQUIRED BY TH S DIVIS ON
(Jl) THE ADMINISTRATOR SHALL
GRANT THE WAIVER AND EXCEP
T ON TO THE EMPLOYER FORA PAR
T CULAR NO V DUAL IF THE
ADMINISTRATOR F NOS THAT THE
EMPLOYER AND THE NO V DUAL
ARE MEMBERS OF A SECT OR DIV
S ON HAVING THE ESTABL SHED
TENETS OR TEACHINGS DESCRIBED
IN D VIS ON (d) OF TH S SECTION
THAT IT S THE PRACT CE AND HAS
BEEN FOR A SUBSTANTIAL NUMilER
OF YEARS FOR MEMBERS OF THAT
SECT OR 0 VIS ON OF THAT SECT TO
MAKE PROV SION FOR THEIR DEPEN
DENT MEMBERS WH CH IN THE
ADMIN STRATOR S UDGMENT S
REASONABLE N VIEW OF THEIR
GENERAL LEVEL OF HIRING AND
THAT THAT SECT OR D VIS ON OF
THAT SECT HAS BEEN IN EX STENCE
AT ALL TIMES SINCE JlECEMBER 3
950
Q A WA VER AND EXCEPT ON
UNDER D VISION (ll OF TH S SEC
T ON IS EFFECT VE ON THE DATE
THE ADM N STRATOR GRANTS THE
WA VER AND EXCEPT ON AN
EMPLOYER WHO COMPLIES WITH
TH S CHAPTER AND THE EMPLOY
ER S EMPLOYEES W TH RESPECT
TO AN INDIVIDUAL FOR WHOM THE
ADMINISTRATOR GRANTS THE
WAIVER AND EXCEPT ON ARE ENT
TLED AS TO THATINDIV DUAL AND
AS TO ALL NJURIES AND OC€UPA
TIONAL DISEASES OF THAT IND
VIDUAL THAT OCCURRED PRIOR TO
THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE WA V
ER AND EXCEPTION TO THE PROTECT ONS OF SECilONS 4 23 74 AND
4123 74 OF THE &amp;EV SED CODE ON
AND AFTER THE EFFECT VE DATE OF
THE WA VER AND EXCEPTION THE
EMPLOYER IS NOT LIABLE FOR 1 HE
PAYMENT OF ANY PREM UMS OR
OTHER CHARGES ASSESSED UNDER
THISCHAPTERORC.HAPTER4 2 OF
THE &amp;EV SED CODE OR IF THE IND
V DUAL IS A SELF NSURING
EMPLOYER THE EMPLOYER IS NOT
L ABLE FORT IE PAYMENT OF ANY
COMPENSATION OR BENEFITS
DIRECTLY OR OTHER CHARGES
ASSESSED UNDER TH S CHAPTER OR
CHAPTER 412 OF THE REVISED
CODE N REGARD TO THAT NO
VIDUAL S CONSIDERED A COM
PLY NG EMPLOYER UNDER THOSE
CHAPTERS AND THE EMPLOYER
AND THE EMPLOYER S EMPLOYEES
ARE ENT TLEO TO THE PROTEC
TONS OF SECT ONS 4123 4 AND
4 23 74 OF THE REV SED CODE, AS
TO THAT INDIV DUAL AND AS TO
NJUR ES AND OCCUPAT ONAL D S
EASES OF THAT NO VIDUAL THAT
OCCUR ON AND AFTER THE EFFEC
T VE DATE OF THE WAIVER AND
EXCEPT ON
[! A WAIVER AND EXCEPTION
GRANTED IN REGARD TO A SPECIF
C ND V DUAL S VAL D FOR ALL
FUTURE YEARS UNLESS THE ADM N
STRATOR DETERM NES THAT THE
EMPLOYER ND V DUAL. OR SECT
OR D V SION CEASES TO MEET THE
REQU REMEJ'ITS OF THIS SECT ON F
THE ADM NISTRATOR MAKES THIS
DETERMINAT ON THE EMPLOYER IS
LIABLE FOR THE PAYMENT OF PRE
M UMS AND OTHER CHARGES
ASSESSED UNDER TillS CHAPTER
AND CHAPTER 4 2 OF THE REVISED
CODE OR F THE INDIV DUAL S A
SELF NSUR NG EMPLOYER THE
EMPLOYER S L ABLE FOR THE PAY
MENT OF COMPENSAT ON AND BEN
EFTS DIRECTLY AND OTHER
CHARGES ASSESSED UNDER THOSE
CHAPTERS IN REGARD TO THAT
INDIVIDUAL FOR ALL INJURES AND
OCCUPATIONAL D SEASES OF THAT
NDIVIDUAL THAT OCCUR ON AND
AfTER THE DATE OF THE ADMINIS.
TRATOR S DETERMINAT ON AND
THE INDIV DUAL IS ENTITLED TO
ALL OF THE BENEFITS AND COM
PEN SATION PROVIDED IN THOSE
CHAI'TERS FOR AN INJURY OR OCCU
PATIONAL 0 SEASE THAT OCCURS
ON OR AFTER THE DATE OF THE
ADM NISTRATOR S OETERM NA
TION
Sec 4 2325 (A No omp oyer sha

ofWGtcn_tbe_OR
CLASSIFICATION of poyroll- which
tbe pronuum under this chapter a buod.
Whoeverviolateo this diVJaiOII ahaU bo !Iaiiie
to die lfate "' FOR UP TO ten omes tbe
ltiiOIIII of lhe diff...,ce ,. BETWEEN
THE pmn wn poid .... tbe t11t10UD1 tbe
emp oyer shou d have paid ntE ADMIN
STRATOR OF WORKERS COMPEN
SATION WITH THE ADVICE AND
CONSENT OF THE WORKERS COM
PENSATION OVERSIGHT COMMIS
SION SHALL ADOPT RULES IN
ACCORDANCE WITH CHAPTER 19
OF THE &amp;EVISEO CODE FOR THE
ASSESSMENT OF A FINE OR PENAL
TY AGAINST AN EMPLOYER FOR A
V OLATION OF TH S D VISION The 11
b ty o the sta e under th s d VIS on lhltM
MAY be enforced n a c VI action n the
name of he sta e and a sums col ccted
Wider tbis d VJIIOII shal be paid U\10 tbe nsurarJcc fund
8) No ae r: nsunng emp oyer sha
m srcpresent the amoua of paid compen
sa on paid by such emp oyer for purposes
of the usessments provided Wider this chape and Chapler 412 of the Rev sod Code
as required by sect on 4 23 3 of the
Re iscd Code Whocnr vaolates th s d va
Slon s I able 10 the state n an amoun
assossodbythe~

--ADMINISTRATOR po
suan o d vs on iGl(ll) of sectton 4 23352
o he Rev sedCodeo UPTOtennmesthe
amoun o the d ffcrence between the
asses&amp;men pi d and the antOW1 or the
.......... tha obould ha e been pi d ....
-

The ab I ty to the &amp;tate under h s
d s on may be enforced m a c
acnon
n the name of he sta e and a sums co

ected onder th s div s on sball be pa d nto
he self. nsurance assessmen fund created
pursuan to div 110n (J) of section 4 23 35
of the Re sed Code
See 4 23 27 lnformanon conta ned m
the annual statemen provtdcd fo n secbon
4 2316 oftbe Rcviocd Code and su h otbe
nfonnauon u may be fum tlhed to he
bureau of workers ompensa on by
emp oyers n pursuance of hat sec on. tt
OR AS THE BUREAU DEVELOPS OR
CREATES AND RECORDS KEPT BY
THE DIVISION OF SAFETY AND
HYO ENE PERTA NINO TO WORK
PLACE INJURIES AND ILLNESSES OR
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND
HEALTH CONDITIONS IN SPEC F C
WORKPLACES INCLUDING BUT NOT
LIMITED TO NDUSTRIAL HYGIENE
REPORTS ERGONOM C SURVEY
REPORTS
TEAM
APPROACH
REPORTS SAFETY CONSULTANT
REPORTS ACC DENT NVEST GA
T ON REPORTS LOSS CONTROL
ANALYSIS REPORTS AND ILLNESS
AND INJURY DATA PERTA NINO TO
SPEC FIC WORKPLACES ARE fo the
ext us e \lSC and nforma on o the bureau
n the d schargc of
offi a dut e and
ha I not be open o the pubhc nor be used
n any court n any acbon or p occed ng
pend ng here n un ess the bureau s a party
0 the 8 on 0 proceed na bu the nfo
rna on onta ned n the ta emen may be
tabulated and pobl shed by tbe bureau n stahlli&lt;:ol form for tbe 110!' and nfonnarioo of
()the ta c depanmen s and he pub e No
penon n the emp oy of the bureau ex.cep
hose who aro au honzed hy the adm nt~­
ra or of wo kers om~nsa on shall
d u ae any nfonna on sceurcd by M
THE PERSON wh c n he emp oy of the
bureau n respec o he transaenons prop
erty cia m files records o popers of he
bureau or n respec to the bus ness o
mechan cal themJC:a o othe ndus na
proc:ess of any company finn orporabon
person assoc a 10n partnersh p o pub c
u I ty o any penon 01hcr han he adm n
ra or o o the supenor of such emp oy
eeoftbebmeau
Notwithstand ng he restnct ons mposed
by th s section he governor scla: or stand
ng comm nces of the general assemb y he
aud torotsta e the attorney general o thea
des gnccs pursuan o he au honty gran
ed n h s chap er and Chap er 4 2 of he
Re sed Code may ex.am nc any records
a m fi t$ o papen n posse s10n of he
ndustnal comm ss on o the bureau They
a $(1 are bound by the pn ege hll anach
es o the&amp;e papers
The adm n srrator shall repon to he
d ec or of human serv es o o the oun
ty d rcc: o o human serv ccs he name
address and soc a secunty number o othe
den fica on numbe ofany person rece v
ng workers compensa on whose name o
soc al secumy nu.mbe o a1her den fica
bon numbe 1 he same u ha of a person
requ red hy a court o h d support enfon:emen aa:cru:y o pro de support payments
10 a recrpaen of pubiK" as stance and whose
name s subm ned o the adm n str.a or by
he d rec o unde 'ec an S 0 36 of he
Rev sed Code The adm ntstra or also sh1l
nform he d rcc o of the arnoun of work
ers tompenu on pa d o he pmon du
ng su h penod as the d redo spec fies
W h n fourteen days afte rece~v ng
from the d rector of human serv es s
ofthe names and soc a scwnty numbers of
rec p en s of pL&amp;bl ass stance pursuan o
sec1 on S 0 IR of the Re sed Code he
adm n strato shal nfonn the aud o of
sll. e of lhe name c:urren o mos recen
addrcs and aoe a secunty numbe of each
person rete na workers eompensa on
pwwan to th s chap e who:ae name and
soc a aecu rty numbc sre he 511me u ha
of a person whose name o soc a secunty
number was subm ned by the d reclOr Th
admm smto also shaJ nform the aud ro
of sta e of the amoun of worken com
perilS oo pa d to the penon tlunng such
penod as he d rec or spec lies
The burau ond ts employee&amp;, except for
purposes of fum 1h ng he: aud tor of sta e
WI h nfonnonon requ red by this lOCI on,
sha I presenre the confiden 1 ty of rec p
ents of pub te au stance n compl ance w th
d VIS on A) of socuon 5 0 8 of the
Rev sod Code
For hepurpo!Ciofth.iucc on pub
II! Jlance mean• med al ass stance pro..
v ded through the med cal us stance program estab shed under sechon S 0 o
the Rev sed Code aid o dependen h ldrcJ&gt;
pro ded unde Chap e SI 07 of he
ReVIsed Code. or d sab ty us •-e proded Wider Chapter 5 I5 of the Rev sed
Code

*

I......

- tJhal keep
and
occupoliooal d i - fotal or otherwise,
reoe ved or controcted by llio THE
EMPLOYER S employees In tbe eoune of
their employmea and reoultM 1ft dayaor'"""' of- diaobility6R IMPAIR
MENT W thin a week after acqu n111
ltnowledae of an nJury o death therefrom,
and n lhe even of OOCIIpllimal diseue or
death dterefiom, Within ooe week after
acqum"'l know edae of or d agn&lt;ms of o
death from an occupatiooal diseue o of 1
roport to tbe employer of the occopatiooal
di...,. or dead! 1 repon thereof aha I be
made n wnq o the bureau of worken
compensa 1011 opon b ankl to be procured
from the buroau for that JIU!I'OSO The report
slllll state the name and nature of the b111
ness of the emp oyet the loca on of hit
THE EMPLOYER'S estab shmen or place
ofwork.the!llllll oddn:ss natur.anddura
on of occupa on of the n ured d sab ed
MPAIREO o deceaocd employee aod tbe
nme the IIIIUre and the oouse ~r RJIII)I
occupahOnol disease or death aod auch
other nfOrtRahon ,. • required hy the
bureau
The employer sha I 11ve 1 copy of each
repon to the emp oyoe concerns o Mt
THE EMPLOYEE S tiUtV vlng dependenb
No employer aha I refuse o neglc:c o
make any report requ red hy th s secnon
Each day ba anompoyerfa s ofilea
repon required by t h t s - constitutes an
add onal day w th n he me pe od g ven
to oolaiman by the appl cab e tatute ofluntations fa he ti ng at a c 11m based on the
n my or occupo onol dtSeUe pro ded tha
a fa ure to file a report shall not extend he
appl cab e statute of lim ta ons for more
than two add tiona years
Set 4 23 34 The adm n a rator of
workers compensat on n he exerc se of
he powen and d scretton onferred upon
!Moo THE ADMINISTRATOR n soc on
4123 29 of he Rev sed Code aha found
ma nta n, with lhe ad tee llfKI ooMCR of he
workers compensahon o ers ght comm !I
s on for each tlass of oceupabon or ndu1
try he owes possib e IIICS of pmn urn
consmen w th the rna ntenanee of a so en
111 e nsurancc fund and the ern on and
rna nten11nce of a reasonab e surp us after
the paymen oflegi ma e cia ms fo n ury
occupanonal dii&lt;UC aod dealh tha ho THE
ADMIN STRATOR authonzes o be pa d
from he state nsu.rance und for he bene
fi of n ured diseased and he dependcn s
of k led emp oyees n cstab h ng ra es
the adm n stmo sha lake n o ac oun he
nec:ess ry of ensunng suffi en money s set
aside n the pmn urn p&amp;)'llten sccunty fund
o co e any defau ts n pn:m urn ob ga
ons The adm n stnto shall ob!lerve a of
he fol ow ng requ rcmcn s n flx ng h
ra es ofprem um for the nsks of occupa ons
o ndustnes
(A We fHE ADMIN STRATOR sha
keep an actura e acc:oun ofthe money pa d
n pmn urns by each of the several e 8S&amp;e
o oc upabons o ndustnes and he osscs
on aecoun of n unea. occupa anal d sease
and dea h of emp oyees hereof and a so
keep sn account of tbe money rec~:~ ed from
each nd vadua employer and he amoun of
osses ncurred aga ns lhe s a e nsurance
fund on ac:count of nJuncs oc upa ona
d i - and death of lhc emp · - of tbe
cmpoye
(B Ten per cen of he money pa d nto
he sta e nsurante fund sha be set as d
for he crea on of a surp us un he sur
p us amounts o the sum of one hundred
housand dol ara after wh h bme when
evernecossary n the Judgment of the adm n
strator to guarantee a solvent stale nsurancc
fund, a sum not "ceed ng five pet o:en of
a he money pa d n o he ta e nsurancc
fund hal be ered ed o he IWJllus fund
A rev s on of bas c rates shal be made ann
a yon he fill dayofJuy
Notwlthstand ng any pro s on of the
law to the contra!): one bundred e ghty days
afte he effect e da eon wh ch se f nsur
ng employers firs may e ec under d v s on
D of sec 10n 4 21 66 of the Re sed Code
o d re&lt;: y pay fo rehab ta on expenses
he adm n sl.ra o hall Cl ula th defi
f any n he pon10n of surp us fund ha s
wed fo re mburscmcn to se r. nsunng
emp oycrs fo a expenses othe than hand
capped e mbunemen unde et on
4 23 343 of he Re sed Code W thou
regard o whe he a sc f nsunng emp oye
makes thee ecnonunderd son D ofsoc
on 412 66 of he Re sod Code the
adm nrstra or sha I assess a se r nsunng
emp oyen he an10unlho THE ADM NIS
TRATOR de enn nes necessary o reduce
he defic ove a period no to ex ecd fi c
yean f r o m -OCTOBER :111. .L22l Aftc the n 1
assessmen he adm n stra o from me o
me, may de enn ne wheth the surplus
fund has such a defic and may assess a
self nsunng emp oyen who paniC pared n
tbe port on or the surplus fund dunng th
accrua of he defic and who dunng lha
nne penod ha e no made he e ec on
und~ d v ston (D o sectNlll4 2 66 of h
Rev sed Code heamounrhoTHEADM N
ISTRATOR determ nes necessary to reduce
tbe defio
Re ~ons ofbutc rates sha be n accor
dante w h be o des fou o the ast fi c
ca endar years of the comb ned ac den and
occupa ona d seasc expcnen e of the
adm n lb'l or n the adm n s ra on of thiS
chaptc as shown by he aecoun s kept a:
p o dcd n h s sec on EXCLUD NO
THE EXPER ENCE OF EMPLOYERS
THAT ARE NO LONGER ACT VE F
THE ADM N STRATOR DETERMINES
THAT THE NCLUS ON OF THOSE
EMPLOYERS WOULD HAVE A S G
NIF CANT NEGAT VE MPACTON THE
REMAINDER OF THE EMPLOYERS N
A PART CULAR MANUAL CLASS Fl
CAT ON and he adm n
ha odopt
na es w h he ad tee and consen of the
oven gh comm ss1011 govern ng J1 e re
s on1 he obJCC of wh h sill be o malce
sn equ tab e d stnbu oo of osses amoog 1h
ac era classes of occupa on o ndus ry
whM:h ru el sbal be sencra n he app
canon
C) The adm n stlllo may app y tha
fonn or ra ng sy em wh ch ho THE
ADM NISTRATOR finds s bes ca cu a
ed omen rate or nd dua y f1 e he nsk
more equ tobly prediCt ed upon the bas so
s nd dual intlustnoii&lt;C den and oc u
pa on&amp; d seasc upenence and may
CllCO!JBKC and sumu ate ace den ~ tn-

""tor

to tbe t\md muy month other thaa J!IDIIII')'
or Ju y lnalad, tbe -~~~~ JINIIIIWIII
slllll he paid by d!ooe employm from-

and oqu table 111la eontrolh,. die
ayatem, wb ch ru es siiJU COOI&lt;r\'O to
rill&lt; lhe bul&lt;: pnnaples of wortera

to nDJe upon tbe exp nnoo of the respecve penods f« which poyrneotJ mto the
fund bave boeti made by !hem
The odmioistDtor siiJU adopt tu es to
perm employer&gt; 10 llllke periodic; pay

~bon IDSW'IIICC

(0) The admm slllto&lt; from the mooey
po d nto tbe 110 e nsunnce fund, shall aet
as de n10 an accoun of the state ms~~rate
fund htled 1 pmn uin po)men secunty fund
ouflio eo money to pay for any pmn urns
due from an employer and uncol ectod tha
are in excess of the emp oyer • prem wn
IOCWlty deposn
The fund shal be n the custody of the
treuUrer of sta e A nvestmen cammgs
of lhe fund sha be depO&amp; ted o the fund
Disbunements from the fund aha be made
by he bureau o workers compensa on
upon orde of the adm n n.tor to he state
nsurancc fund The use of the moneys he d
by he pmn urn paymen aecunty fund •
restnc ed to re mbW'Semen o he srate
nsW'In&lt;:e fund of prem urns due and unco
cc ed n excess of an emp oye prem urn
secunty dcpos The moneys
the pronuum poymen secunty lUnd shall
mamta ned w thou regard to or
upon any othe fund Th s secnon does
prt en thedepos o n estmentof~10ore·
m u.m paymen sccunty fund w h
othe fund erca ed by h s chap e bu
prerruum paymen sec:unty fund s sepanote
and dis nee for every o he purpose and
!tnct accoun ns hcteof sha be
taned
(E) The adm n tra or may gron

~~g::~::~

counts
urnfol
rates
i
meet eonheprem
of the
ow ng
( )Haeoo ncumda
DJUl')' fo one year a more and
ra n an m1ployee safety comm ttee o s m
lar organ zac on or make period c !W.fcty
napers on• of lhe woikplaee
2) Successfi.a y camp etc a oss pre
ven on prollfU11 preset bed by the oupenn
enden of the d Aon or safety and hyg ene
and oonducted by he d sJOn o by any
othe persoo appro ed hy the supmnten
den
FXI In determ n ng the prem um ra e1
fo the tonatruct on ndusrry he adm n s
trato shall cak:ula e he cmp ayers prem
ums based upon the actual mnunerabOn
oonstnlc on ndustry employees rece e
fi om construcnon ndu try emp oyers proded tha he amoun of remunCI'I on he
adm n stra o uses n ca cu a ng the
m ums shal no ex. eed an average
wage eqUal o one hundred fifty per
the statew de a eragt week y wage as
defined n d s100 C of secuon 4 23 62
of tho Rev sed Cod
2) D son F)( ) oflh s sec on shal
no be onsln.led as affec ng the manne n
wh ch benefi s o a a man art awarded
unde h &amp; chapcer
3JAsused nd son(f)ofthts&amp;ec-

s rued hera y o he end tha emiliO)'!'"
ha be encourap:d o employ andre a n
he cmplo)men hand capped ernployoes
as defined n lh s sect on
A) As used n th s sec: on

capped employee mcans~;,.:an~
WhO saffi ctedw ho SIJ

0 ::·~:

ons
Ep lepsy
2 Di1bc es
3 Card ac:: d scasc
4) Arthn
5) Amputs ed foo leg, ann or hand
6) Loss of s gh of one or oo"oe)•es '"
a pan11lloss of uncorrecled s oo nr "'"~
han se enty fi e pe cen b latera y;
7 Res dual d lib I ty OR MPA R
MENT from pohomyel s
8) Cerebra pa sy
9 Mult p e sc ero
0 Park nson d sease

mems oftbetiOIIIIIMuolpmniumtlueunder

misaioo mthe same nwmcr as othert auns
An app ca on on y may be made n enses
IN WHICH a hand capped employ
ee or llioTHE HANDICAPPED EMPLOY
EE S dependents c a m o oo ARE rtee
ng an award of (;()lllpensa on as a resul of
an m ury OCCURRING 0&lt; AN occupobona
dseose ~FIRST
DIAGNOSED BY A L CENSED PHYS
ClAN on or afterthedateon wh ch d son
(A) ofth s sectlon fin m&lt;luded he hand
cap of suth employee
(D The c Jturnstanccs under and the man
ne n whlCh an apportiOIIJDed under th s sec
lion sha be made m AS FOLLOWS
(I Whenever a hand capped employee
s n wed. IMPAIRED o disab ed or d cs
• the resu of an n u.ry o occupa onal disease SUSII ned m he course of and ans ng
THE EMPLOYEE S employmen
h s sta e and the adm n stra o awards
oompcnsa on the efo and when appears
o the sa sfac on o the adm n strata tha
he n ury o oc upa ona d sease o the
death resu na herefrom would no ha e
occurred bu fo the pre--ex. shng phys ca o
menta mpa nncn of he hand tapped
emp oyee al compensa on and benefits
payab e on ac:coun of he d sab I ty
IMPA RMENT o death sha I be pad from
the SWJl "' fund
2) Whene e a hand capped employee
nJured, MPAIRED o d sab ed o d c
a resu of an n ury o occupa on a d s
and tbe adm n Jtrato finds hat he
o oc upatJona d&amp;SCase wou d ha e
su.sta ned o utTered w thou regard to
emp oyee spre-e s ng mpa nnen bu
he resu ng MPAIRMENT d sab
or death was cau~ 11 eas n part

1

·~~~:~;,::::~
~ ofthe
IMPAemployee
RMENT

•;

pre
he

the emp oyee s pre--ex sbng ~
MPA RMENT and he amount found shal
be charged o he statu ory surplus fund
I E) The benefits snd prov s ons of h s
sec on apply on y o employers who ha c
QJITlP cd w th th thapter e he hrough
nsuran e w th the sta e fund or as a self
nsunng emp oyer
(F No employe .._... m any year
SHALL rece e redi unde h s sec on n
amout1 greater than die pmn wnho THE
EMPLOYER pad a sta e fund emp oye
greater dam llio THE EMPLOYER S
assessmen fa self. nsunng emp oye
(G Sef nsunng emp oycrs- fo aU
198 for om
pensabon and benefits unde h s sec on
MAY pay he ompensa on and benefits
d rec ly o he employee or the emp oyee s
dependents fsuch an employer chooses to
pay compensa on and benefi s d rec ly M
THE EMPLOYER sholre&lt;e e no money
o tred rom he urp us fund o he pay
men unde h sec on no ha he THE
EMPLOYER be cqu ed o pay any
amounts n o the surp us fund lha o herw se
wou d be assessed fo hand tapped re m
bursemen fo c a ms made afte January
987 .WMfe IF a se f nsunng emp oy
e e s o pay fo tompenaa on and ben
pursuan o th s sec on M THE
ha I BSSume respons b ty o
cornpensation and benefits ansmg ou of
made pno o January
98 and
sball 11&lt;&gt;t be reqwred o pay any 1n10unts mto
surplus fund and may no rta: e any
or cn:d fram ha fund on a oun

tbis divis on The rules shall mclude prov
• or11 focthe-ofiDieteJt cltllJiea,
wheno appmpnate and for tbe .....smart
ofpena bOJ when., employer fo 1 to make
hmely prem urn poyments AD employer
who time y paya the amounts due under th s
di • on fa ent ed 10 a of he benefits and
protectiOns of b s chapter Upon rece pt of
paymen~ the bureau mmediately shal
ma a rece!pt or certifi ate o the emp oy
er cer1 fyllll that poymen hu been made
wh ch rece pt s pnma fa.c e ev dcnce of
paymen Workers compcosa DD co erage
unde tb s hapter conhnues unm errupted
upoo t me y rece p of paymen under tbis
d son
E ery emp oye mentioned n d v s on
(B)(I) of IOCI!oo 4 23 0 of the Rev ocd
Code ex ep1 boards of county hosp ta
trus ecs that are ae f nsunng emp oyen
unde th s sccuoo shill comply w th sec
bona4 2338to412341 and412348oflhe
Rev sed Code n regard a the contnbut on
of moneys to he pub nsurancc fund
(B) Pro ided. ha emp oyen mennoned
ndvstOn(B)(l)ofsoc on4 230 ofthe
Rev sed Code, boards of county hosp tal
trustees and publ tly owned uh es: who
w ab de by tbe rules of !he odmi~tStra!Ot'
and who may be of suffic ent financ a abil
ty o reode certain he paymen of corn
pensa on
n ured emp oyee o he
depe~~dentliofk edernp oyees ind the fur
n sh ng of mecbcal surg ca nursm1 and
hasp ta atten on and serv es and med
nes and funera expenses equal to o
grea e than s provided fo n sett ons
4123 S2 4 23 S5 o4 23 62 and4 23 64
o 4 23 6 of the Re sed Code and who
do no des e o msure he paymen thereof
o ndemn fy hemse cs ai8Jns oss sus
a ned by he d rec paymen thereof. upon
11 find ng of such facts b:y he adm n stra o
may be granted he pn ege o pay nd
dually ompensanon and fum sh med col
surg ca nurs ng and hasp ta scrv ces and
atten on and funera expen es d rect y o
n wed cmp oyees o he dependents of
~ ed ernp oyees thereby being granted sta
tus as a self. n unng emp oyc The adm n
tra o may harge employers boards of
ounty hosp a trustees or pub y owned
I es who app y fo the status as a se f.
n unng emp oye a reasonab e app a on
fee o co e he bureau s osts n onnec
on w th process ng and mak ng a de cr
m 011 on w h respet to an app ca on A
emp oyeri gmn ed such tatus ha demon
stra e suffi en flnanc al and adm n srra e
ab ty to as ure ha a obi ga ons under
th s sec on art promp y met The adm n
stra o sha deny the prl ege where he
emp oyer
unable o demonstra e the
cmp OY.e ab I ry o promp y mee a he
ob ga ons mposed on he emp o)'er by th s
section The adm n strator sha I conSider bu
s no m ted o hi follow ng fa ors
whee app abe n deermnng he
employer ab ty o meat •I of the obi a
a ons riiP,(lSed on he emp oyer by th s sec
on
(I) The employer emp oys a m n mum
af fi vc hundred emp oyees m h s s ate
(2) The emp oye has opm ed n th s
tate fo a m n mum of two years pro ded
ha an emp oye who has purchased
acqu red. or mherw se sil ceeded 10 the oper
a on of a bus ness a any pan hereof. s
ua ed n h sta e tha has opera cd for a
eas twO 'firs n hssae a so ha qua
fy
(3)Wh retheemp yerpre ou ycon
tnbu cd o he s a c nsurancc fund or s a
succmo employe as defined by bureau
rules he amoun of he buy-ou as defined
by bureau ru es
(4 The tlic ency of he emp oye s
assets oca ed n h s a e o nsure he
employe so en y n pay ng compc:n a
ond ecly
S The finan a ecords documcn s
and da a terllfled by a en fled pub &lt;
accoun an necessary o p o de he
employe fu financ a d s~ o un: The
records documen s snd data n ude bu
are no m ed to balan sheet and prof.
and oss h s ory fo he urrcn y a and
pre ous ou years
( 6 The employer organ za o a p an
for he adm n tra on of he workers com
pe:nsa on aw
7 The emp oyer s proposed p an o
nfonn emp oyees of the change from a tate
fund n!ure o a se f nsunng employe he
procedures he employer w I fo ow ftS a
self: nsunng emp oye and he employees
ngh s o ompensa on and benefi and
(8) The emp oyer has e he an accoun
n a finantlll nst uno n h
ae o f
he emp oye ma nta ns an accoun w h a
financa n u on ousdc hs sac

tra o sh1 no gran he status o se f.
n unng emp oye o any pub emp oye
o he han publ y owned u es and
boards of counry hasp alln.lstets
C Th ldm n stra or shal rcqu re a
urety bond rom all se f nsunng emp oy
ers sued pursuan o 5ect on 4 23 3S of
the Re sed Code ha
uffic en o cornpe o ~n ored emp oyees o o the
depe~~dents of emp oyeea k led, he pay
m n of compensa on and ex.pen es wh h
shal n noe en bees han ha pado
fum shed ou of the sta e nsurance fund n
sun lac cases to n wed employees or to
dependents or k. ed employees whoae
emp oy&lt;n contribute o the fund, ex opt

.....,..,.. wbolllt
of I baud, 11m, root, lOS.

or "&gt;"' pnor 10 the IDJIII)I for wb ch com
pclllltiOO 11 10 be poid. and thereafter auf
fen dte loN of any otber of tbe mcmben u
tbe mult or ..y mJIII)I auatailied • tbe
coune of and ans Dl ou of the emp oyee s
employment, dte compeiiiiUOD 10 be plld
hy the ldf. IDIIUUII employer II lurutod to
die disab I ty OR IMPAIRMENT suffered
m the subsequen n wy add bona com
pensahon r any to be paid hy !he buroau
oot oftbe SUJP us CIOltod hy aec11011 4 23 J.4
oflhe Rtv1sed Code
(0) In add UOn to the reqwrements of
th 1 sec on the adm ntstrator sbal make
and pub sh rules go em ng the manner of
mokinj app ICillon and tbe...,.. and extent
of the proof requ red to uallfy a findma of
fac by die admioistr&amp;M u to graqtlllg he
status of a se f nsW1ng emp oyer: wh h
ru es hal be general n the~ applies on
one ofwhich rules sill prov de tha II ,. f
nsunng employen sba pay uno the &amp;tate
........,.. fund sud! amounts u are required
to be credited to die surp us fund n d lS on
(B of secbon 4 23 34 of the Re ocd Code
Emp oyen shill secured roct y from the
bureau central offices app cation forms
upon wbich the bureau sha stamp 11 des
gna ns nwnbcr Prior to subm ss on of an
lpplica on an emp oyer sha I make avad
lh e to the bureau and the bureau sha
re ew the nformat on descnbed m d VI
s10ns B)() o 8 of ths soc oo An
emp oyer aha I fi e the camp eted app ca
on forms w th an app cation fee., wh ch
shall coer hecostaofprocess ngtheappl
ca on as establ shed by the adm nlStra o
by rule w th the bomu a eas n oety days
pno otheeffcc cdaeoftheempoye
new status as a e f. n unng employe The

app canon form s no deemed complete
un I a the required nformanon s attached

hereto The bureau sha only ac&lt;epl appl
ca ons tha conta n the rcqu red nforma
Mn

(E The bureau hal re ew completed
app ca ons w th n a reasonab e me f he
bureau de erm nes to gran an emp oyer he
status as a se f. nsunng emp oyer the bureau
shal ssuc a statcm n onta n ng ts find
ngs of foe ha s prepared by he bureau
and s gned by the adm n stra o If tbe
bureau determmcs no o grant he status as
a se f. nsunng emp oyer he bu eau sha I
no fY heemp oyerofthedetenn rWlon and
requll't the emp oye o con nue o pay s
full prem um nto the state nsurance fund.
The ldm n sb'a o a so ha adopt ru es
establ sh na: a nun mum e el ofpcrfonnance
as a cntenon for gran ng and rna nta n ng the
sratus as a self. n unng emp oye and fix ng
me I m ts beyond wh ch fa urt of he sel~
nsunng emp oye to pro de for the neces
sary med a exam na ons aod evalua 10ns
may notdeay adec11 on on a am
(F) The adm n 5I a o sha adop ru es
senmg fonh procedum for aud hng the program ofsc f. nsunngemp ayers The bureau
sbal condoc he aud upon a random bas s
o whene cr the bureau has grounds o
bee ng ha an empoye s no n ful
omphancc w th bureau ru es o h s hap.
er
The adm n stra o sha mon tor the programs tonduc ed by se f. nsunng emp oy
ers o en urc omp an e w th bureau
requ nments utd fo h.. purpoae sh-'
develop and ssue to self nsunng emp oy
ers standard zed fonns fo use by he
employer n a aspec s of the employers
d..a compensation prollfU11 and ro roper!
ng of nfonnat on o the bureau
The bureau hal rece e and transm o
the emp oyer all comp a n s concern ng any
self. nsunng emp oyer n the case ofa eom
p a nc ap ns a se ( nsunng emp oyer he
adm ntstrato sha hand c the comp a n
hrough he self nsurancc d s on of he
bureau The bureau ha I m• nta n a fi e by
emp oye of al complam s rece ved ha
re a e o he emp oyer The bureau sha
e alua e ea h comp a n and take appropn
aeae1on
The adm n stra o sha adop as a ru e
a proh b on aga ns any se nsu ng
emp oye from harass ng d sm ss ng o
o herw se d sc p n ng any employee mak
ngacompan wh hruesha. pro defo
a financ al pena ry o be le ed by he
adm n s rata payab e by ht offend ng
employe
G Fo he purpo eo mak ng de enn
na oo as o whether o gran tatus as a self
n unng emp oye h adm n tra o may
subscnbe o and pay fa 8 rtd repon ng
scrv e ha offers financ 8 and o he bu
ne nfonna on abou nd dua emp oy
crs The DflS n onnec on w h he
bureau ubScnp on o nd dua reports
from he serv ce abou an app an may be
nc uded n he app a on ee barged
emp oycrs under h s sec on
(H The adm n tra o now hs and ng
o he pro s ons of h chapter may penn
a se f. nsunng emp oyer o resume paymen
o prcm ums o th sta e nsurance fund w h
appropna e ed mod fita ons o he
emp oye bas pn:m urn rate as such rate
de enn ned pursuan o sec on 4 23 29
of he Rev ed Code
( ) On he firs day of u y of each year
he admm straiO sha I ca cu t e separa ely
each e f n unng emp oye as es men
fo he safety and hyg en fund adm n s
tra e osts pun an to sec on 4 23 342 of
heRe sed Code and fo he pon on of he
urp u fund und d s on 8 of ec on
4 23 4o h R sed Code ha sno used
o hand apped re mbursement on he bas
o he pa d ompcn a on artnbu ab e o he
ncffi dua se f. nsunng emp oyen ord ng
o hefo owng a ua on
( 1bc ota a scssmen aga n a se
nsu ng emp oyer.i a II.! or ta h fund
and fo the adm n tra e os s fo he yea
ha heasesm n bengmad asdee
m ned by he odm n tra o d dcd hy he
ota amoun or paid tompcnsa on o the
pre ou calendar yea attnbutab e o a
amenab e se r. nsunng tmp ayers
2 Mill ply he qoo en n d
on
X )of bssecM&gt;nby he oa anoun of
paid tompensa on for he preVJOus a mdac

r

year tha

lS attnbutab e

to the ndi dua se f

nsunng emp oyer for whom he assessmenl
s be ng detenn ned Each se t ••W1118
emp oyer sha pay the assesamen that
results from th a cu a on un ess he
assessmen resu hng from b s calculation
fa s be ow a m n mum asseumen wh h

m n mum ISICSSmen lht ldm n Sin or shal
detmn ne on the line day of Ju y of each
year w tb he ad Jc:e and consen of he

I 00. D which event, the 1Cif. DIUIIDI
employer shaD pay tbe MUIJJIIIUD ....,._
men
In determin1111 tbe totaiiiiJOUD due for
the IOta - o p l n J t ollse ~ mounna
emp oyen u a clw for each fund and tbe
admintstnllve aueument, lhe admiruiU'I
tor shill reduoe proport1001tely the total for
cachfundand.........., hytbeamoun of
"-Ymtbesef_urance_,., fund
as of the date of the compota1 on of the

....umeo

lhecontractorl
cootracton
employeeo are to be so !
iNured hy the setf UIIUnDI employer tbe
proviS Drll of a safety proarom that s
tlpeC fiCIIIy del &amp;ned for die coostruc 10n
~ ect,. aod a~tatetnen u to whether a to
lective barpining &amp;lf"'m&lt;n governmg the
riahta.duneo and obi gahODJofeachoftbe
plltiOJ ta1he ogroemen "' th mpect to the
construct oo proJect ex tts between the
se ! maunng ernp oyer and 1 labo organ
za ton
A &amp;ell OIIUUII ernp oyer may app y 1e

The adm n straiOr shll ca eulate lhe
se f. IDiute the employees of c her o the
asaessmen for lhe pornon of he SUIJ' Ul
fo owns
fund under d VIS oa B of secuon 4 23 34
) A contractors and 1ubcontra tors
of the Re sed Code tha s used o hand
who perform labor o work or pro de mateicapped re mbursemcn n the same manner na 1 fo tbe construe on p o e&lt;:
u set forth md v s 001 (I)( ) and 2 oftbis
2) AI contrllctora and, a the adm nli
m on ex.eept ha the admuustta or &amp;hal
tntor s d sc:rctlon a substan a numbe of
talcu ate the Iota usessmen fo thi1 po
II lhe subcontracton who perform labor o
on of the swp us fund on yon the bass of work or pro de ma cna s fo the onslrue
tho.. se t tnaW1118 omp oycn lha mam po
on pro ec
c pat100 n the handioapped mmbw-scmen
Upon approva of the app ca on he
program and the ndi dua se r. nsunng admm strator shal rna a crt fic:ate gran
emp oyer 1 proportion of paid compensa on
ng the pn ege to se f. nsurc the oon
sha I be calculauxl only for hose se r. n ur
struc:tron pro; ec o these (. nsunng emp oy
ng aq&gt;loyen who retain paruc panon on the e The terhfi ate shall conta n he name of
hand capped re mbunemen p OllfU11 The
he se f nsunng employer and the name
adm rustra o aa the admm stra o deter
addres and e ephone numbe of the se f.
m nes appropnalc may dctenn ne the tocal
nsunng emp oyer s R:prcscntab e who are
asscssmen fo the handicapped pon on of respons b e fo admim.slcring workers com
he surp us fund n a cordance w h sound pen ation tlwm fo he onstru on proactuana pnnc1p es
JCC The e nsunng emp oye sha pos
The adm n stnto shal a u a e the the en fica e n a on ptcuous p a e a he
asses men for the portiOn of the surp us
te of the onstru on prq ea
fundonderd v son(B)of-4 23 34
Th adm n strator ha I mamta n a record
of the Rev sed Code tha undetdiviS on (0
of the contra tors and ubcontractors whose
ofsec on 4 2 66 of the Rev sed Code s employee are o ered nde he crt fi ate
used fo rehab tation costs n the same
ss cd o the se f n urcd mp oye A se
manne as set farth n d s ons IX and
n unng emp oye mmed a ely ha no
2 of tb s section exccp tha the adm n s
fy he ad.mm stra o when an on a o o
rrator sha calculale the otal asaessmeru for subcontra o s added
th s portion of the surplus fund on y on the
bas s of those sc f nsunng emp ayers who
ha e not made the e ect on to make pay
mentsdrectyunde dvtson(D)ofsec on
4 2 66 of he RC\ sed Code and an nd
v duaJ se f nsunng employe s proport on
of pa d tompensat on on y fo hose self.
n unng employcn who ha e not made tha
e ec: on
An employer wbo no onger s a self.
nsunng emp oyer n th s state o who no
onge s opera ng n h state sha I on
nue to pay as.sessmcn o adm n strahve
costs and o he pun on of he .surp us fund
undetd son B oftJeC on412334oftbe
Re sed Code that s no used for hand
apped ,. mbunement based upon pa d
ompcnsu. on attnbutable o a ms ha
oC urred wh le the emp oye was a self.
n u gemploye w hn hssrae
Ther&lt; • hereby crutod n the state""
sury lhe so ~ nsurance assessment fund. A
n esbnen eammgs of he fund sha be
depos ed n the fund. The adm n sttator sha
usc he money n he se f nsurance assess
men fund only for adm n stra e osts as
spec fted n sect on 4 23 34 of he Rev sod
Code
K E ery se f n unng emp oye sha
cert fy n affida fonn SUbJCC 0 he pena
ry fo pet']Ury o he bureau he amoun of
the se f. nsunng cmp oyer s pa d ompcn
sa on for the p ev ous a endar year n
n:pon ng pa: d ompcnsa on pa d fo the
prevtous yea a self. n unng emp oyer sha I
exc ude from the ota lmOUn orpa d om
pensa on any re mbursemen he emp oy
e rece es n he pre ous a enda yea
from he surplus fund pursuan o sect on
4 23 5 2 of the Re sed Code fo aoy p11d
compensa on The se f nsunng emp oyer
a so sha exclude frCJm he pa d ompen
ered he emp oyec of he sc f n nng
sa on reported any amoun recovered under emp oye s ed n ha en fita e o any
sect on 4 23 93 of the Re sed Code and
purpoBCS o her than h s hapter and Chapter
any amoun ha s detenn ned no o ha c 4 21 o the Re sed Code Noth ng n h
d on 1 cs a se f n&amp;W'Ing ernp oyer
been payab e o o on beha f o 11 a man
n any fins adm n stra c o ud c a pro
au honry o ontro the means man e o
eed ng The se f nsunng employer sha I me hodofemp oymen oftheemp oyce of
exc ude such amounts ftom he pa d oom
the oontrac on and subcontrac1ors covered
pensahon reported n he report ng penod under a crt licate ssucd under th s d KMI
subsequcn o he date the determ na on as
The on rae ors and subcon ra ors
made The adm n stra o sha I adop rules
ncluded under a ccr1 ti ate ued umte th
n a cordance w th Chapter 19 of the d swn a e cnt cd to he pro ec: ons pro
Rev sod Code estab shing he da e by
ded unde h schapte and Chap er 4 2
wh h se f nsunng emp ayers mus subm
oftheRe sedCodew hrcspcd o he on
su h nfonna on and he amoun of the
rac:to ()I subc-ontra or emp oyec who
a es ments pro ded fo n d
on I of are emp oyed an the onstruct on pro ec
h sec on fo employers who ha e been
wh ch s he sub ec of the tcrt fica fa
sran ed elf: nsunng arus w h n be as
dca h o RJUnes that anse ou of. o dea h
calcnda yea
nJunes o oc:cupat ona d seases ha ansc
The adm n stra (I sha n ude any
n h oune of hose emp oyees employ
assessmcn tha rema n unpa. d for prev ous
men on tha tonstnl&lt;: on pro; ee
asses men penods the a cula on and
Th con ra o and ubcon a ors
tollec on o any assessments due under h s
nc uded under a certtfica e ssued under lh
d ston or d VIS on of h section
d s on sha I den fy n h payru
l A used n dus sec on pa d om
rc&lt;:o d he employee who arc ons dercd
pensat on means a amounl5 paid by a self
he emp oyces of he se f. nsunng empl.o)'
nsunng employe fo
ng rna n cnance e I ed n ha crt fita e fo purpose f
benefi a amoun o ompensa on pa d
h hapter and Chap e 4 2 o he
pursuan o sec on 4 2 63 4 2 67
Re se&lt;l Code and he amoun thai ho e
4 2 56 4 23 57 4 23 58 4 23 59
employees earned for mp oymen on th
con trucuon pro cct tha s he ub ec of ha
all amoun pa d as wages n I cu o su h
ccrt fi a e Notw hstand ng any pro on
o he tontrary unde h hap er and
tompen a on aJ smoun s pa d m eu of
su h compensa on unde a nonoa::upa 1011- Chap er 4 2 of he Rev sed Code he
sdm n ra o hal ex udc he payro ha
al ac iden snd s ckness propm fully fund
reported for emp oyees who arc cons d
~ by he e f nsunng employer and a
ered he emp oyees of he se f. n unng
amounts pa d by a se f. nsunng cmp oye
fo a ola on o • spec fie safe y standard employe s ed n tba ccn fi a and hs
pursuan o Sec on 3S of Art de
Oh o
he cmp oyc:cs earned for empluymen on
he consnucnon pro ec tha i he sub cc
Con nmon and sec on 4 2 o4.7 of he
o ha crt fica e wh n detenn n ng hose
Re sed Code
on ractors or ubcontrac on prem urn or
M Shou d any set on of h hap e
o Chapte 4 2 of he Re sed Code pro- assessm nts requ red nd th hapt and
Chape 4 2 o heRe edCode A f
d ng o sc f n unng emp ~rs asses
nd
men s ba d upon ompcnsa on pa d be
dec ared untons tut ona by a tina dec on
of any court then lha sc on of he
Re sed Code dec a ed un ;on tu ona
ha re crt back o he sec on n
en
pno o No ember
989 proVId ng fo
a se!smcn s based upon payro
N The adm n stra o may gran a se f.
n unng emp oyer the pn lege o se f
nsure a tonstnlct on pro: ect en ered no by
tbe sel~ m unng cmp oye ha s sched ed
for omplet1011 With n stx yean after he date
tbe pru ec bell n~ arid he ota o of
wh~th s es 11111 ed o ex. ced one hundred
m on do ars The adm n sm. o may
wa e such cos and me en ena and grnn
a sc nsunna emp oyer the p es: o
se f nsure 11 onstru on proJet regard ess
of he me needed o c:omp ete the on
struct on pro ec and pro ided tha he """
of he constnK:tiOn pro eel 1 ea rna ed o
exceed fifty m on do an A sc f. nsunng
emp oyer who des res o self n urc a on
Sb'UCtJOn ~ cct sha subm o the adm n
1tnto an appl cauoo sung tbe dates the
COOSiructlon proJCC I ..heduJed 0 beg D
and end, tbe cot mated ""' of the coo

uona to
for lbr ~:::
noo and enfon:emeru oftbe asfety
tha 11 tlpeC ficol y del &amp;ned for the
ltruci&lt;Oft pro ect that II the IUb)ett Of tbe
appcallon
A se (. msunn1 emp oyer wbote app
a on s granted under di ll on N of th s
IOCIIOIIIha I employ an ombudapentm for
the t:on.ttruct on prO; ect tha 1 tbe sub ect
oftbe app ca on The ombudsperson shall
ba c expenence II\ worken compensallOD
o he construe on ndUitry o both The
ombudsperson sha perform a of the fo
ow ng du es
Commun ae w hand po de
nfonna on o emp oyces who are n ured
n the ourse o or whose n ury anses ou
o emp oymen on he construct on pro cct
o who on ract an occupa ona d scasc n
he oun of emp oymen on he OOMtrue
onpoec
2 nves ga e the tatus of a a m upon
the equcs of an emp oycc o do so
3 Pro de nforma on to a.nnants
th rd party adm n ators emp oyers
othe person o ass s those person n pro
tee na the ngh unde th s chap e
Chlpte 4 2 o he Rev ocd Code

�•

I

:~~~ro RENEW AN l!MPLOY·

oolilio--

..

ER'S STATUS All A IIIU.fNSIJlJNO
EMPLOYER, '!1oo
l&gt;llt
ASSESS A FINI! Ol PI!HALTY
AGAINST
A
SILP·INSUliNO
'tMrL~JT~~ OR mob or """' ..
ren&lt;!W ''" ....,...,.. M I otlfADMINJI.
Wl'tH Til£ ADVICil AND
CO~ISEIIT OF THE WORJ(£kS' CQN.
PENSATIOI'I OVERSJ(IHT COMIIIIS. ·
SIQN, sHALL AOOn' RUU!S IN
ACCORDANCE WITH ClfAPTER 119.
TI-lE REVISED l:QDB FOR THE
ASS. ESSMBl~T OF A FII\IE OR PENALTY
UNDER THIS SECTION AGAINST A
SELF- INSURING EMPLO'I'ER. ALL
SUMS COU.ECTED UNI&gt;I!R 11!1S DIVI·
SION SHALL BE PAID INTO THE SELl·
INSURANCE ASSESSi.rurff'U)II)CU.
ArED PURSUAIIT TO DIVISION (l) OP
SECllON 4123.35 01 THE &amp;£VISED
COOE
iC)

•

...

4
2
UCEMSIDPIIYSICIAN,Ihl-lllloll hlltlllt ..... ....:................. SUANT10DIVISION(A)OfSBCTION ~byl&lt;oelio• l:!J.S 0i'dioJIO;~Oed
obletl-an' ralief-.t ....... ~- ~tlte...,.. lbt.....,_llftbt . . , . _ . , .... .....,.. . . ~ 4123.570PTHEI!.EVISED~DI!,tothe
(H) An~ 11om ttl order luuod
"'"'412JA1Zof doo llmoltl Code.
~ lttloclafttnatliolllo _...,.
ot!looo . . afy tbt paditt ... tWr ...., of........., pleoa of the -.y in Ulldordlvitlon(E)of-4123.511 oflhc
the,_ t'at tiy ., aoeGod of M~ tho · . _ r i v e - - ill wriiiDc of !he whith !he iDJwy -lallietod or Itt wbieb Reviled Code or any tehon filed m cowt in
M THi ,.._........., tbt ittlormttioo
tlmo ... pltco of the._.., 1loo _..,
thtOOIIIIICiofomploymoot-lllldliftho a ease 18 wbieb an award of cornpenaalion
AONINISTJti\TOR!Ix.tlte,_lbr,.. --~tltb6 ~ ttialleMIIboldtbtbeorina . . . facty·ftw it1liiiY _ _ Ihc_or .. wbieb hu- made slloU not ttay the J&gt;IY'DCnl
• ...,_ , . . _ . . Million 412J.29 of tlooi .... ...,..,.......... (l).r- dl)'l tiler tb6 filiD&amp; of . . notice of "'peoh ~ •thecotlll'tCI of ~WMiiOide tfllle ' of OOIIIpOIIIIIim Ulldor !he award or poy·
~Code.
•: •tile 4123 14 of the llori... Code Tho ~ . .... within doyt tiler dlo COIIChllioe • • IXpOIW't OOCIIII'tlt( OUtside !he - · If.., ' niona of - l i o n for subsequent
(C) F« t otlf......... ........,.,, tb6 , , Wtielptttllhtlllfttmtolitoito"''itiot.orifb ~ oftllo-._ttoc_ .... _ill ', _,pleoa_.btjuril4itlioafortho ,; odt oftoDI dilablhty OR IMI'AIIlMI!N
ofworlten' ~ ttlotll [01)' '. 1 ..... of te~ the writ- order ~modii'Ji!'.,«IOVIIIIII&amp;tlto ~of•appoaJ bylhc•oflhcjuri"' eluting the pendetiCy of !he appeal. If, m
to entp1eyees w11o . . plllielptotl ...... ~ tMl vaiftetlllcol,_. dtel&gt;lltite ~lite ....... • ordor laouetl tinder tljvbion (D) of this _. ' dittiontl ~ daaibed in dols div;. • final tdmitotstrativa or Judietala&lt;bon tt
1esa oflht ... of faVuay,aoy- &lt;1M ~; ..,.. bo to ttppl-lbr...,..
11011. '!looootlllllilliotl.ull Dillify the pltliel •• 1100, the tppellanl may uae the veouo,...: dotaminod that
'
10 dtepomclplllll tlllller-.., 4123.414. ......... --~I~Mot4123.8.1 ' ...tiliairlllpOCiive~vtt m writ· ~ vi-,. the Ruleo ofCivU l'roc:edut1tto or
madotooron
. ofdlelaviMtiCodolllll thall bill the self.. ol'tbt brilafCado proritlod llottllle- onallfdte-. lfthe_......,dte..... val)llfltdic:toon .. a court. If the claim Is • • clttmant should not have been made,
ll1lllnlll -Ioyer, -•omoally, Cor oU • didontoftllviJien (E) or.-4123114 el' ipated tttaft'
ollloer doMnnina not for an OCCII[)IIIional diaeue the appeol shall t111101111l th....,r abtll be &lt;lwved to the
11110111111 paid 10 a partieoplld
tilt Re¥ised Code ll'tiY 10 lnfctnnttioo pro.
1D t- the appeal, wothioa f""""'" days after
be to thetouat of c:ommon plou of the""'"" plus fund under divo11oo (B) of
Sec:. 4123.412. ForthoRiiefofpertOIII ¥idad by olllllhod ofte'-'tlw:otion. !he lllittoftho- ofappeol, the com· t)' tn which 1M ..poourewhieh eou&amp;ed tho 4123.34 of the Revtsed Code In the
wllo ... ....,-y IIIII totally ......,. U,O. notipl of a - . tht ...,_ ttlloll •~ • !he~
ofti. · tlil-. oa:urood. Lllte appotlllll)' be taken the employer" a state ntk, the amount
IMPAIRED•dlo-of•JWY•~ ' ...._ lbt cla-p( tlte clllm llilltbor ......... iauoaoordariDtlooldtct...SOOii- ' &amp;omaoordorofulllflletrinaeftlc:ermadt
-iotloo-ofdleir~ 1:• lllfltoed
rift'
~. lytllopaatitt,o-ltboir._,av.
unclertlivioieo (D) oftteCtion 4123.511 of lnthoeventtheetnployertSt
11111 ~ .,.....,...-... 1:001poo.... ' .....,..in tho -loa of a claim« to • 111M1 ia waidtlaofthal ord.-.
· !he RevilodCode &amp;omwloidttho commit- · employer, tho oclf·mlllrins
- whidl itt fOYible tv""'* by Yittuo ef' - oa ............. lftloc ...,_ ...,.)',' • ~ • ........,. (IIWVklod ill tWa aioo llu rofiosed to " - on ~ Tho deducl the amowot from lhe
tatllllderdlolawtofthii-'"IIIIOUIIII, .: ,..dataelaimtJ~IOiocuOIII· ': : tlott!tW 1tD&lt;1 ~ 4121~ 4127. and ' ........ abollfilelho:MIIt:tofappeolwtdo satioohereptllbtotho
dtetotalofwlliclt, wbeocoa*ootlwilh.U. ,..-. loiiiiiDII c:loim, !he..._ •A 4131. ofthta...... Code.aoy petty mey t -of01111111011pleu witbiutxtydtys dm110n (K) of aectM&gt;n 4123 35 of
tbilrty ...,_ , _.... (llllllltllt U! dlo ootlfy tba •loionut tatltloc .,.loycufllle '• tp[llll an . - ittlued . - , thlt 4irisioll after dte date of the
of the oroJer Rcvited Code. Allacrions and proceedtngs
Soeill Security Ad 11leu 111811- lluo-) ovaitol&gt;lltty of.....,,_ No tothtQIIIrt......,.ttoMCIIon41U 512of appotlerl &amp;om qrthe date ofiOCOIJll of !he 1 uncieTthitt teCtion which are the subject
dae&lt;l l'arty·,_ dollaro per month ad~ or ~ ....-uioo 0111ployoo • the ltm.o.t Code wltbto auty do)ls after . order of die conurusswn Rfuslna 10 hear ao ao appllllto the cowl of oommon pleas or
"'**ly • fii"Vided on dtvtlloo (B) of- , . altalldlltctly 01 indireGly -'"Y tOY iaforo. ..' leoeipl ofthemler, subjecttethe llmiloli.- _ , of a lljllf hearing oBiter's deciSion the court of _.Is shall be J'l'efmod over
-4123 62 ofthe RcvitedCode, thorotl '' • _ia......,.41ftbitnPt- 1\ls- t-"*ftalllot-.
llllllerdi•iai011 (D) of~on 4123.511 of allothercr&gt;tlacttonoe•cept electtonca•"
loenloy erctll4 a.....,.... fuodm be lrnowl ' ' ....1 m .. ""Y tliaople tho lowau'a
If') Every noti&lt;c of an appeol &amp;om an the Revosed Code. The films of the notoee . et, lft&lt;S(IeCtove of posit ton on the calendar.

-lboll--ito Go--•

pnmi-ftllillotl_.andlltdiDdoo-.

n.

olloll,.. ·

-.a

......_..

Ia-

IIIII'....,

,..._t

,...,pt

and(l)orth .. -.sltallllltothontrn&lt;l requrrecltoperfcctthe~
oftbtelai-tto4employer, tloc
If an actton lw been~ in a
ol•dlt ellilll, the doll of dot
" COIIIt oft COIIIIt)' other than a coun ofa
of the butcallofworltm' _ . ; . . , .,
1IMt odmuustrttotlll'•orken'-..... appe0tM 11om, IIIII tho fact that tho oppel- COIUit)' haviD&amp;Jwisdltloon over the actton,
· cury ..,, tba objlctltnd .....,.... o f - ' - •n ._all oltilnlud inwalip- IIIII ......... - · ·
tho eoun. upon nottce by any party or upon
, n- 4123 41lto4ll3 4llofdie ~i- -•tllebinaoaorvioooi!Wollomwllith'
(9jAIIIfthelllllttwiliirwfytv . . pro. • ito ewn -ton, sholltrMtf• the Khonto
A Code The llutd alooll Ito m the Cllllody of 1.. . . . . . . . . tn4 -iltlhon lillY be ~ ~ tlllller divilloroa (C),{D). and (E) • 1 COUll of a &lt;011111)' htvtnajuriadtelton
EMPLOYER MAY the a-11m of the ttate Disbunonlattl mado ..pedtUOIIIIy.
, ofthiuectioo:
,
llolwithalaodingonydrinatotho"""tnr)'
APPEAL rHE ADMINISTRA101l'S ' from tho fimd shill be made by tho llwuu
The buretlu lball iltvattpll die foclo
(I) Tho poltiCa thoU ptvceed promptly • tnthio-ofthecommiutondetermines
ASSESSMENT OF A FINE OR PENAL· to those per10111 eohtled 10 ptrttcopliO ' _,"'IMtnJIDllor ............ 4 i - IDd wltbout - - ex'\IJ&gt;I for flOOd uoder ttCCtoon4123.S22ofthe Revised~
fY AGAINST A SELF· INSURING
th.,.n IIIII to _,IS 10eacb ptrtklpaet, and-· such fl&lt;ll on........,.,."*"' thatt11 ....1oyee,employcr,orthelrraijloo"""n'&gt;""'· OR THE f\6VOCATION or: as os provtded m aecttOO 4123 414 or dot oer11-~ ttnd may olaio-.
(2) Tho parties, on eoe4 liith, thai!
Uvo _..,.,,_ h.a.e not ....,.ed wail•
REFUSAL TO RENEW THE SELF·
Revtsed Code All mvestment etmtnp of ' _,.ofthoemployeo,employer, tlltendina ...... ill !he fiee exclunge ofmfenatUOR , lell IIOitee of an order or deellien which is
INS u RINGi ST,~niS Of A SELF·INSUil· the fulod thtll ba credik:d to tha fund
' ph,......, IIIII w t - ta .....,...r man· Rlevlnt to the claim priorlo the OOIIdllct of appealable to a_. under this secnon and
EMPLOYER UNDER THIS SEC.
S.C 4123413 To toe elipblem pallie- ' nOI itt-~IL
t hearing-~ to the rulea the com· whith groniS rehef punutnl 10 sectiOn
WITHIN n!IITY DAYS AFTER tptletnoai&lt;ITHE OISABLEDWORKElS'
(BXI) E~eept • provided m division totlltonttdoptlllllllertee110114lll.36ofthe 4123.322 of the Revised Code. the party
REC: Efi•T OF NOTICE OF THE FINE. RELIEF fund. t partocopant mua1 be,.,.. (IM2)oftlaitti0Ciion,lncltiau01herthul Reviled Code;
granted the Rhef has ot•t)' dtya tiom
REVOCitTION, OR RENEW. """"""Yond totally -IMPAJREO illwhieh tho .......yertltoclf·mu·
(3)Thetdmtnlltlltoltttptrtyandmay ....,,ptofthoorderundersecuon4123.s2Z
1\LKCI' v&gt;~L.10 THE SELF-INSURING
aod be ,.... • .,. workera' ~,.. 118 tlllployer, If tho ldmlntltlltOt doter• IIIII parltctpate II ollldmint-tve ofthe Revised Code to filet nottee of appeal
i·MPLOYERS EVALUATION BOARD
paymen11, !he """' of which, when ..,... ...... .-,dtvittoo (A)oftblt- tbot ·' ,.-;npoo behalfofthettate i........,. under thts section
E FI~INO Of AN APPEAL SHALL
btne4 wtth dilllltihty benefitstOCC"'ed JIUI'• • a cia~ tt or IS not~ to u awonl , ftuld.· However, on ...., in which the
(B) The no&lt;ite ofappealahalllllte the
THE
ADMINISTRATOR'S .-to'illoTHESocitiSecurityMIIIest• ~ llf~ orltooefill.lbt tdmmit- , employeriu.-tN. tho tdmintltlltor oamaofthecl....,.tandtheemployer,the
vKv&lt;,K. AFTERa~naaoncluctedpou· than tloi'IC hundred forty-two dolltn per,• .. ahall • - ltiGNtt, _ . . . , ' llltll netther p...m
' ..,...,...of tile elttm,thedt.. ofllleonler
to Chapter 119 of tho ll&lt;vtsed Code mooth adjlllted _,.lly sa provided •
lollr - lwenl)&lt;-,i -lltltinony that II - t i v e to doat ' 1 -led from, and 1M ftel that tho appeJ..
fuodtlloiiCOIIIIJioftht_tlW . . IIom ' dte ftlina of a claim and to advile the'
11m1 10 time appropn.orecl by the gaeral' • ellilitlat of the el-'s nghlllllldor !he
• usembly and llltde available to the order :1ow.

•'

•

a.-Oft

.....,_nor'"""'

avo.: ' .....,.._,..,.. '\"

the comma511 on or the tdm&lt;ntSII'Itor
November 2. 1959, and all c111ms
lhcretfter.,.fiOVtmedbyttCCtoortJ4113 511
and 4123.512 of !he Revtsed Code
Any actton pendms m eommon
courtora.,.othereounon
uncieTthto seo:tion "gov.:med b)' fonnersee·
lions 4123 514, 4ttJ,&gt;tl&gt;. 4,W,:Ho,
4123.519 aod !CCIIOII 4123.522 of
Revtsed Code
S.C. 4123 52. -IA!LU EXCEPT
OTHERWISE PROVIDED IN THIS
TION, THE J~risdi&lt;tion of the tndustnal
commisstort IIIII the authont)' of tho admtn·
.,...,r of worker.' compensatton
ead!eucts-hoomg.andlhcoomnussooo
maymakeiUChrrod&lt;ficattonorchangewtth
mpect to former findongs or orders
- - . ..,,n 111 optnion ts JUSIIfied
Ne ElCCEPT AS PROVIDED IN DIVI·
SIONS (4), (Jl), AND lCl OF THIS SEC·
TION, THE COMMISSION SHALL
MAKE NO modtficatton "'·change
..,, fondtng. or award tn ANY CLAIM

"""(B) o f - - 4123 62 of the Rtvitef , lipt do)ls after tha -ill&amp; of 1111 lllllleo .,-..1 o r i n - b)' tileempleyeror " luuppealo tberellom
WITH ~~E.~E~E§~§
Code
•. ..., divl&amp;iqo (A) ofJIIit MOtion, .........: tho _l.,..'a ............. The tllmln-", Tho admin1S11'810r, the eltt,...~ and the ' .............., to
Sec:. 4123.414 Etelo penon dotomunM • tlenyiq tho pl)'IIICtll of tba c:omjlellsa· ,_,.. maY file on appeal under thitt- employer shall be perneo to tho appeal and dependency, or MEDICAL
lltfllbic. puiSIItllt to socbon4123.41l ~~ ; hOII«,-fill. or INilll M 11 ~to'!-· tioa oa behtlt-of tho ltMt in...,_ ftmd; ' , the COIII't, upon the applicatiOn of the com· '• • FIVE Y""'" from the
Revised Codo, to porllelpllltn tho
llw c:llimlnt. -illttlandtng tho ttme" - . . , , exeeplitt- .,.,.. under- mnatoo, ahlll tnalte tho comatossoon a •
workers' rehef fund 11 entilleol to ,_.e limttttiaa IJioCofied tnthia divi01ort b- the - •123.343 o( 1M R..tsed Code,1he party. The tdminllllltor olloll Mttfy tloc
payments, without appliellioo, fi:om the,.'·, ~ of an onler, ih mediealnami,.. ' adlniniltllloronly may appeafques110ns of. employer th.a~ Iflit THE EMPLOYER fail•
t\lt1d of a monthly_, •
to tho lett- , 110ft of the elatmtt&gt;t 11 requirotl by SWUte, law or iuues of fraud when !he e01ployer 10 become an teltve party to the appeal,er of the difference between three huttdred ' dte adrtli111ttrator promptly thalltdoedule. appan rn penon or b)' repraentotrve.
the admtniStlltor may act ou behalf of lhc
forty-two dollon, adjusted onnuolly pur· 1M claimant for that .-inatton IIIII shall·
(H) Elcopt u provided tn dtviSooo (I) of employ• and the resul13 of the appeal could
...., to divoston (B) oflectton 4123 62 of M onler no IOier than twenty...,tpt
lhll leCltOII, payroenll of oompensablln to ,..,..n "'""""effect upon the employer'•
' the li'Yisell Code, and
.._
'
_.,. afterreccipl ofthertportoflhe uam- a ta.nant Gl'iln bchah' of a elan'nlrn u • •I
~,prem1um
met.
~ Tloe tiiiOitlllllo THE PERSON ill · te11t0n Tho trlminillltr« lllall notify !he ' -~ oi aoy oroJer luued Willer th11 chap- :·
(C) The auomey general or one or more
rocetVIIliiJIIfmoothUihcdtsabihty ........ ' cltianonl and the ~of the...,_ , ter alllll-e upon tho eorl"' of the ' ..,.TH~AlTORNEY OENERAL'SIN• •
ly beneflll award p11n11111t to Tho Sociol tatldllir,.,.._...,...._v.,mwn~ following.
tanto or,.,ecill.......,l dtsipated bySocurily ACI; or
., ' 11tJ! of tba ...... o( tho onler and the I•' (I) F...,... dlyt tlllr the dot• the THE ATroRNEY GENERAL ...I I _
f~KB)tbe tmount M THE PERSON i1
IIIJGYntl of eompeatarion llld benefit peyatmlmstrator itMiesu orderunderdiv•lioll sent the admmiSbltor and the commtsston.
receovt.,monthly.....,.theworten'..,. -iavolved. The.....,...orcltl"""' • (I) fll.-lftlion,
onler It - - I F the attontcy ....,.1 or llit
pen1111011._ for pe1t11tn111t .... total....
maj, appeal !he ordei' puiiUIAt 10 divioiotf ..,.u.l;
, THE ATroRNEY GENERAL'S dettpttetl
~AFFIRM
til lllo·dole whoo doo -.,Ioyer he$ .1 __,. or spec:ttl . _ I .,. aboent, the
OR VACATE THE ASSWMENT Of A " oltililp IMPfdRMENT. lo...,.,..... llidl'&lt; : ~jltiloitt ........ wilhtll ~ 41ytlftor .,
FINE OR PENALTY AGAINST A SELf. ' d~t........,..._be_r' ......... the...,.•plOflbt'-· h.o '•• lrii&gt;Wthelllfttll&gt;•. .lih......,isloed ' ttlno"""-orthe"""""i....,sllollselect
u rectlvtft8 the &amp;ft'IO!Jflt of such purictpBnt•s
employer ud clainalll'lll.y w11ve, an wntundet di"'•on (B) of tins seat•on;
one or ~ of the attorneys tn the employ
INSURING EMPLOYER BY MAJORITY
THE BOAII.D.IF THE ADMJN. whith thall have beel\......
m.. their ri&amp;htJto .. !IPPPi tlllllerthtJ dtVI·
(3) lf110~ p[an order hat locen filed of the tdmtn""""" or the ~moon tshit
muted under the provunou of 1«11on sion
..underthJssectiorl~to 'acouft ~under~-· TH£)AbMINISTRATOR\ SA:
fiNEYor
ISTRAlrOR DECID£5 TO REVOKE OR
412364
of
the
Rcvtsed
Code
S~h
P"Y·
(2)
NotWtthataoding
thotomelimotattoo
II&lt;N\4123
!llofthelevosedCode,lhceapo·
Ill
THE
COMMISSION'S
altomcy
m the
REFUSE TO RENEW THE EMPLOY·
men
II
shall
be
made
monthly
dunns
tho
spec:ofied
in
dtvillon
(8)(1)
of
1h11
seetion
ratloa
of
the
lime
limitattons
for
the
fihhg
IIJIPCfl
1\ny
"1'omey
so
employed
shall
&lt;on·
ER'S STATUS AS A SELF-INSURING
~nod
rn
wbtch
such
parttctpsnt
IS
pen~~~for
tho
iuuance
of
an
'
!
ftlet.
if
the
employ·
of
on
.
1
of
ttl
oroler,
11nue
11it
THE
represenllbon
durina
the
tMrLlJYt,K.THE BOAII.D'S DECIS!eN
nently
ond
totally-IMPAIRED
cr
Cllllfiet
1
claim
t'at
..
yment
of""""
j4):rii01WENTY.ONE
DAYS
AfTER
enure
period
of
tho
appeal
and
mall
hear·
OR THE DATE OF
TO AFFIRM THE ADMINISTRATOR'S
See
4123416
The
Ollnlinlslbtor
of
,.......orbeod'lll,o/lttlodl,toac:laimaotl,
!'
THidotcof-iplbytheemployarofon
tnatlherwfexceptwheoelhcox•otmued"'P"
FIRST
DIAGNOSIS
OF
AN OCCUPA·
DECISION SHAll BE BY UNANIMOUS
1
worken'
compenlllton
oh.all
JlniiiiPIIY,
Jliod
!N'W..,.;atrttalf;ltoo
c:eonplolid
ilott
ardl{~.
o
tliotrict
hearina
~ll'tcer,
a
lltl'f
_
.
.
.
,
becomcstmpnctieal
TIONAL
DISEASE.
UNLESS
COM PEN·
VOTE
(O)Upon....,ptofnottceofappealtbo SA110N UNDER SECTION 4123.56 OF
Sec 4123411. (A) fOr 1M putp10t of requtRofeach......_........ ~ ilawollipdooot'the-,,thepa,.....tof hotirioJ[ ..... ortho_i_tll""'
,ca•yin!t o•t """'"- 4121.412 U! 4123 418 ~::::::::::;::::~.-~ ;' bndllo or .............. &lt;YI - · u iO istued . .divniaoiC),(D),or(E)oflhis derkofcounsohallprovidenottcetoallpar· THEREVISED!;ODE. WAGES IN LIEU
.,propnatt, ohollcomtilence upon thelale1' ICCI&gt;OI1
llet who are appellees and to lhe eommtMton
OF THAT COMPENSATION IN A MAN·
Remed Code, the odmm"""tor of ,.;
._.
SELF-INSURING
EMPi.oYEk
a
'
·of
tbi
tlale
of
tho
ccmfleolion
ot
(I)
No
modieal
beneflll
p.yable
uncieT
The
cllt-1
·
wtthin
thirty
day:&lt;
NER THAT SATISFI&amp;S THE REQUIRE·
compenlllim. widt !he ad•ice""' ·
venlied litlofdte-and ...._of,' lioltoillle~uolt-of~ dua diopter or Chapter 4121., 4127, or after the fihna of the nottee of appeal, ·, MENTS OF SF.CTION 412384 OF THE
to whom tho eonploy&lt;r 11 P'JI' } _.h)' the tdmint ...... (llll'lideol lhlllho 4131. ofdol lttvtoed Code tit payable until SHALL file a pen- eontaintng t SIOI&lt;&gt; ' B.EVISED !;ODE, COMPENSATION
commiSSion, shall levy n UICS&amp;ment o11 ' ment of foclo in ordinary ttnd eonetse lin- UNDER DIVISION Uil OF SECTION
all employmOI t - ilhtlctlt fwo ntJ worlten' conopenlttlOn o n - ef ?............... lhtll i -·lhe onler,no ltter " the CMiterofthe folloiOins·
permanent _. lOIII ........, IMPAIR~' dttldM.timoltmitttioftlpeeifiOiftodlvosion
&lt;!J Tho date ofthetSstltnet of !he stall' guaae -mga e~use ofl&lt;tloo to partiC- , 412l.57 OR SECTION 412318 OR
not to exceed ten c:eniS per one l'lundred
heanngolf'tcer'uxderunclerdtVIIIOO(D)of • tpateortDo:anttnuetoporttetptletnthefuod 4123 59 OF THF. REVISED !;ODE, OR
1 ofpayrollsuch-toloc........,.. MENT and tho evt- reopeeiiiiJ IUdl , (l)(i)oflhlaoecrion
panona
u
the
tdnuniantor,
(l}
If
aa
appeal
ts,made
under
div11ron
th11
secllotl;
and ICittng fbllh the lw" for lhc JomsdK&gt;
MEDICAL BENEFITS HAVE BEEN
an:.:::! for eoch employer poup lislcd on
decant IICCIIII'l' te ddaminethe eltgiltjli.: (I~ of thiS -""'· tile admm,..
(2) The- of the final admtrusnou.e tion of the &lt;01111 ov&lt;r the aearon Funher PAID. IN WHICH EVENT. IN CASES IN
di
(AXI)to(3)ofduueelton.whith
or jlltlicitl detennmaoon
pleadmgo shall be had •n accordance wtth
WHICH COMPENSATION OR WAGES
wtll produce an arnowll. no gretner than die" ty of aoy IUCh penon 1D portiCiptiO in """ t111Dr ahtll forwanl the clotm file "' the
appropria~ dtstnct hearing ofl'oecr wtthin ·.
(1) Upon the final tdmtntllrattve or JUdt· the Ruleo ofCMI Procedun:, provtdcd that IN LIEU OF THAT COMPENSATION
the admmlSintDr !Simatel Ia be ditttbled wodt:en' relief liold. Tho_.;,,
- t of tlllllllftCC shall promptly reqw"' ' IeVen dlyt oftht appeal.ln contealedclaomo cool deaenmnatton, tf 1 clatt111nt " found to savtee of lllllldiOns on suoh petttton shall
HAS REEN PAID UNDER SECTION
nccesaary to cany OUI 1uch scc:tlons for the
pcnod for wh1ch the ancurpent ts levied. ofCKII .....,.company whieb 11 orp· otloor tbto ttate fund claims, the admtntS· have received compentllton ID wh&lt;eh !he notberequllod. Theelerkofthecoun-. 4123 560FTHE.B.EVISEDCODE,OR IN
In tlte event the tmOWII produced by tho nized or licensed to do busmeu tn thos tt1tc . _ thlll forward thlclltm wtthtn seven claimant was not entitled, the elaimtor'a •pon RlC&lt;tpt thereof, SHALL transmit b)' CASES IN WHICH COMPENSATION
IIIII wllith lw at any time wnnea workm' days of the tdmimstrator's n:ceipt of the, employer,ofa self·tnsunngemployer, or the cet1tfted marla copy thereof' to each party HAS BEEN PAID UNDER DIVISION (B)
assessl'nt:nt l'l not suffictcnt Ul catty GUIIUCh
compensation tnturiiiCe In thiS 11110 a lilt• ~lotm to the .....issoon. whtch shill refer bureau. olloll wothbold tiom '"Y amount to named m the nottc&lt; of-al other than the OF SF.CTION 4123.57 OR SECTION
th.; addltDm.l IIIIOUnt neccaary
t h o - producal vmlied bst and hke "'idenee mpectl.. ' • tloc cloim 10 on apprqoritrt dtlln&lt;t he.orina whtcb !he claimant .....,_ et1tttled pur· cltttotnl Any potty may file wltb Ihe clerlt 4123 5R OK 4123.59 OF THE REVISED
reauhoftnvattnlltl,_po_to : , . . _ 10 whom !he moiUIIICC companoeo,, oftloarforalotarinatn_.....,withdivt· llltnliOanyclttm, poll, .......... or futo~n, pnor to the trial of the ICtton a dcpooiuon (;;ODE, TilE COMMISSION MAY ONLY
treplytiiJI-.s'oomper~~~toontlllllertho
oion (C) ofth11 seetioa.
underChtpter4121 ,4123.,4127.,or4131
oftny phy•ic&lt;an tsken tn aceordtnce with MAKE A MODIFICATION, CHANGE.
4123.44 of the .lleYilod Code
Ohtoworkm'
&lt;ompensa-IIWI
IIIII""'•
(C)
If
111
employer
or
ellnnant
ttmelt:
of
tho
Re.lsed
Code,
the
tiiiOUnt
to
whiCh
the provtsioas of the Revtsed Code. whteh FINDING. OR AWARD IN A CLAIM
As.....,.,tl 111111 be IMe&lt;l t«&lt;&lt;fdieeiD
t11e11
ofiiiSIIIIIIICC
m
mpect
lhmof;
INII!Ie
..,..,,
lhcorderofthe
administrator
issued
the
clttmont
wos
not
entttled
poorsusnt
to
11Mt
deposttton
may be read tn the tnal of the WITH R&amp;SPECT TO COMPENSATION,
the followma schedule.
(I) Private fund Clip~ exccpl,.lf· , -ntaodent ofinsunnee shill pmmpolJ , ....... dtVIIIOII (8) of this section or tn the following cntena
actton even tltouah the plty11ctan "a"""' , DEPENDENCY, OR MEDICAL BENE·
(I) No withholdtns t'at the
dent of or subJeCI to"""'""' on the e&lt;Hmty FITS WITHIN FIVE YEARS AFTER THE
,insurinR employcn-ta1Uutry ttnd)uly of 11'1111t1111all1110h Iiiii IIIII evidenco to tho eose ot otlocr ...-ad claims other lhan
in wlloch the trial ts had The bul'l!llll of DATE OF THE LAST PAYMENT OF
yur upo11 &amp;fOil payroiiJ of !he~ ....... of worker.' &lt;OIIIjllllltiiOII Air/ .fuod~lsimo.the«iilllliltianollollrefer weob of temporary toDl diubihJy
peraoo &lt;-ina !he nJiht 10 paliciptle • ' dte~;., .,., opptllft'itle dtllriotbeorint: pensitioapunoant10aectton4123 ~.,.,.. workers' c:ompensMionshallpaydoecostof COMPENSATION UNDER SECTION
SIX m&lt;lfldloi;
121 Counttesond .. tng4ialrielomploy- the flllldmoy filetoioAN appiiCttionthere- ollicer occordina to rules the eommisaion ' , Reviled Code abollloc made;
,:;. the depostlion filed tn court and of copies 4123.56, WAGES IN LIEU OF THitT
therem, except County 'hospitals thJt are
for wtth the b,...u and thtll be aceonled a adopts ullder SCChOit 4121 36 o(the Reviacd
(2) Forty per cent of all awards of com·
ofthe depostiiOn for each party from the sur· COMP~NSATION, OR COMPENSATION
seiiCin!iUritog employet~-~n January of hearinathereon
Code ThedtsOICibetrinJoCiicershallnott· penstlooopatdpunuontiO!K!CIIons412316 plus fund and charge the costs thereof UNDER DIVISION (i!J OF SECTION
year upon SIO!I paytolls of the pre·
S.C 4123419 The assessment rate fy the partte&amp;and thetr respecttve represen· and 4123 57 of !he Revosed Code, unttllhe aga&lt;nst the unsuccessful party tf the 412357 OR SECTION 412358 OR
twelve monthi,
eat1bhihed pursuant to sec11on 4123 41 I of tnves oflhe t11ne and place of the heanng
amoun~ overpead IS refunded,
clannant's nght topan1c1petc or,;:onunuc to 4123 S9 OF THE REVISED CODE
(J) The 1statc u aa employer-In
the Rcvosed Code, subjeet to the lmnts oet
the dtstn&lt;t hetrin1 officer oholl hold a
(l) Twenty-five per eent of any com· portietpate" finally sustailled or established
t2 1THE COMMISSION MAY MAKE
Jamtary,, Apnl, July, ttnd Oct...., of eacb
forth '" that sect&lt;on, shall be adequate to hetrin1 on a dtsptlted t-or elatm within pensthon patd punotntiO SO&lt;Iton 4123 58
tn lhe appeal In the event the deposttton "
A MODIFICATION, CHANGE, FINO.
year upon 8fOU payrollt of the preeedtns pmv&lt;!le the amounts estomaled as nccestory fony.five days allot tho fihna of !he """'' of the R.. tsed Code unttl the amo~nt over· taken and filod. the phystctan wltoS&lt; depo- lNG, OR AWARD IN ANY CLAIM WITH
three monttu
by the administrator of worken' &lt;Otnpen- under thtadtVISton aod tnue a dOCIIion "tth· poMI 11 ,.ftuoded;
sttton is taken 11 not requued to n::&lt;pond to RESPECT TO MEDICAL BENEFITS
Amoun~ usessed in accordance w1th
stttOOID'*'YOUIIheprovwonsof...ttOM tDin•dayufter holding the ......... The
(4) If, pun111n1 tD an appetluoder sec· anysubpoenatssuedtnthctritloftheactton
WITHIN FIVE YEARS AFTER
th1s secuOI'I shall bt callcx:lcd from cac:h
4123.412to4123 418 ofthe RevtsedCode, di- '-"ttoflicerllltll noli()' !he partie! t~or~412BI2oflhc RevioedCodo, the court Theooull. or the Jury uoderthe rnstructtont DATE OF THE
employer u preacnbcd 11'1 rule. the ldmm- lllllm tddtlton to provide IIIOIIe)'l to ,..,... 1114 lhctr ~npet:~~ve ..,.....ranves in writ• ,, of ltPPIIls or lbe iupntme
the of the court, tf a jUI')' 11 dcmooded, shall
WHICH MEDI&lt;:AL BENEFITS HAVE
1Strator idopU
bune the genml revenue fund for IROoe)'t' i.. oi the order. Ally ,...,. may l(tplal an ' allowance of' the &lt;iatm, 111m rio amount of determone the nght of the clamoanf 1D par• BEEN PAID OR ORDEREO roBE
The moneytderivtd &amp;om t h e - -tledbySeet..,2ofH8 No 1131 -t....J...WdomolivtMOOpurlllllltto • to~r'......-;.a..;Utoewitbhekl
; h•ipateortoCOIIItnuetDptrtocopatetnthe
(J) IN ALL CASES FOR 1\ 1..~1\IM
pnwtded fur m thto tc&lt;hOn thtllloc crodttotl of the ID3r&lt;l general wemltly or h)' tho di""i,n IPI of th11 wtthtn rc.- '
(K) lh staffheari.. olf'tUr or the com· fund upo11 the.evtdenee adduced at the beer· INVOLVING AN OCCUPATIONAL
to the d1Siblcd workcn· 1'tl1cf hind cmted 104thand -tnUenoflll aioembha for , dtyoaftor!IICCipl oftheonleruoder thitdtVI• mtuion lillttotuuetdcctstonorthc com- rna of the action
EASE DESCRIBED IN DIVISIONS
section 4123 412 of 1he Rc~ued Code
dtsabled OR IMPAIRED worken' ,.lief. 11011.
m1t11011 foilo to Rfuso to bear an appeal
(E) The coun shlllcentf)' tis doc&lt;S&lt;ort to THROUGH IMl OF SECTION 4 ~~~=
The tdmtMtrator olloll-hoh by nile elas- When !he tddlloonal moneys an: a'llilablr
(D) Upon !he hmely fthRJ of ttl _ , wltbia the ttme penoda requtred by thiS sec· the comm,..,on and the ocrtoficatc sholl bc' OF THE REVISED l:QDE OR 0
s1fic:a110ns of employen wnhm davtiiOflt on whole or pan for the purpoae of tnaltlng of 1M order of 1M dttt#icl heari.. nft'tUr bon, ply.- to a clatlfttlll JMII ..... until entered tn the reconl!l of the coun. Appeals OCCUPATIONAL Dl SEASE
1) to of thtuecuon and shall deter· the rcnnl&gt;ursemenl, the dtreetor of budtet - -uncletdivitttOn(C).-:tlnueetioll, the the 111ft' betrins ollleer or c:omml11ion tiom theJudamcntan: govcmed by the l~w
RESULTS FROM EXPOSURE
min~'""" fbr eochcla!loo u ID f1&lt;rly app&lt;&gt;r·
and manaaement shill cmtlythe tllllllllllllo cam....,oo olloll refer tloc eloom file to an tiiUet adcciaion or bean tho appeal, unless tpJ&gt;hcable to the appeal ofotvtlaettons
FIBROSIS·PRODUCING OR
the co11ts of eanyma; out sect10n1
the bureau ofwariu:rs' ClllllpCIURitoo whith _
... tttatr hetrin&amp; olf'teer accordtna the lillwo wadue to the fault ornqlect of
CF) The cost of any legal procccdmgs DUSTS, FUMF.S, MISTS. VAI'ORS.
'"' """ '2 to 4123 418 of the Re.&lt;sed Code
thalltbereupooca..,.lhernoneysiObepaid to ttl mica ttloprecl under 10011014121.36 lhccmploycrortheemployeragreesthttthe autltortzod by thiS section. rncludma an GltSES, OR LIQUIDS. OR
(B) For all tn)unet and dtSibihttet to the general revenue fund from the dia- oflhe lkeYieedCode. The 11talfheann1 off"t-- paymetltaahouldoonllnue for a Jongerrcn· attorney's fee to tho cla1mant's auonte)' to TOXIC MATERIALS, ORR ~A~~~~~~~~
O&lt;Currina on or after January I, 1987. AND ob!e&lt;l workm' rehof fimd except tlW Ill)' cer llhtll bold t ltellina withtR forty·fivo od of It me
be: foxed by the mal Judge, basod upon the
TION OF THOSE, THE II
ALL INIURI£5, IMPAIRMENTS, amounllduebeeauleofthetllte'oobhp· ' doytaft«thefilrnaofan...,........,thll
{L) Escept u provtded in sec11on effortespended,tntheevcnuheclonnMt's OF THE COMMISSION AND
DISABILITI&amp;S 'ARISING ON OR t.., u tn employer purlllllll to tliviaiee ...S- t do&lt;itian within .._ 4123 522 oftht Reviled Code, oo appeal tl ritfot to putleipliO or IO continue to panie· AUTHORITY OF THE At~:~~:'!~~~~:
A&gt; '' tKTHE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THIS
4123 411 of !he R.,.tsedC.......
days ofter holtllttltba ....... tlldlr tltW , tialoly llletl....., dlit oect1on unleu tho
.,..lnlho:Am&lt;lilesttblttheduponlheflotl TOR OVER EACH CASE IS
ltMIEN'DMIENT. !he adnrin-. f,.. the todtedilttbleolworkm ' relieffuDthltollbo ' •divllloa.'lloo~oilkoroholliiOII· ~~ lfpeolit fllldwilllthe-lilllilltel forlb dotetmiulion of an appeal, thlll be taxod lNG PURSUANT TO DIVISION (AI
Jlllfll&lt;&gt;S&lt;tOf'*'YtqOUI-i001412) 412 deductadllommytuchroi.....,_.,
I'Jtlocpertiu_.their.......,.,._... to!Wttptnlltileemployorotthecomrmssron tf THIS SECTION. EXCEPT THAT
123 418 of the Rcvilod ~. tbalii"'Y
See. 4123111 (A) Wtthin _., dtya tttiva ta wntina of ltit THE STAFF
(M) No panoo who 11 not an Cll)piO)IOC
tlte oonomtulon or the tdomntstrator rather
JURISDICTION TO MAKE A MOOIF'I·
...........t apmst all employm st a J1k tiler receipt of 111y clotm uoder tlttt chapHEARINO OFFICER'S order Aay party of doe- or commisaion or wllo 11 no1 than theemployerconre.tedthe nght ~fthe CATION, CHANGE, FINDING , OR
hundred ~ltnolpayroll. IU&lt;brtle ter, t h e - of worken' .........-;.. tlltf_..,oralotilaueolundertbil4ivo· by law aJven ac:ccu to the coorents of a clotmanttoporlleipatetnthefund Theanor· AWARD IN THE CLAIM WITH
t to41vi-(£Jofdlitt.aioe , flllml ftlulloll bavu file t11 tlte paroon's oay't f"' aboll 1101 esceod lwanty·fiveh,.._ RESPECT TO COMPENSATION,
be dermttnad
ror duai· lhlll•oufy tba ela- and tho etnplo,et _ , _
of !he clan•- of !he receipt of tht &lt;ltito wimilt fbuitoen do)ls dor rocoipl of the ~
ton. •
dred 4DIIIra.
DEPENDENCY, OR MEDICAL BENE.
(AMI)
andoflhcfoctoollqedlberoin.lfthe...,_ orderW!derthildivition.
lloo.4123.Sl2.(A)Thecl1tmtntortho
(G)lfthefindmsofthccotlrtorlbe•et· FITS MAY EXTEND BEYOND THE
whith will prodtice an tn10o1111 no ICCCIVCI !rom a penon other than tho
(E)UpanlhcfiltRJoflllnooly-lof aaploywmty-lanold&lt;. .ftheotldus- dtotofthejurytsmfavorofthocla&lt;mant's TIME LIMITATIONS CONTAINED
111811 11&lt;1 IIIIIDtllll the odmoni- cW...writtanor.............., inl'or· !he"'*' of !he ttat'f'-in1 o11k:er illued trialcommi- made ...... divo- (E)of nglot 10 partlctpate m the fimd, the commo•· THAT DIVISION, UP TO A MAXII~UI~
10 be n1 :
y to carry out aucll . .indietlina tbot an iDJUI')' HAS tlllllerdivition (Dj ofdoiueeuoo, lhcoom· IOCiion4123 Sll oftlocRcvisodCodc:lnany siOD and tlte tdmimstrator mall then:after OF SIX MONTHS AFTER THE DATE
lorwhithdte- OCCURRED or AN occt~Jlllionll tJ;.. tlliotlaleorat*niprtdlllffltellinaollk:er. ioJUIY or OCC'Ipltioaol dloeue cue, other proceed tn the maneroftho claim u tithe EMPLOYEE FIRST BECOMES tVII\L·
ooWtoll'ofdte
ltill ... tltaiiH '
-·
IOthe-oftlittbih· joodpoattworelhcdcct-oftheoommtt- LY DISABLED AS It RESULT OF
PI!RCENTAGE slctll.lllbjcct to tloc- of modoftcat1011 OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE THAT IS
the rulesoftht"-......_..,.

di.-

..,._that

_,le-

....o..iy'•;.

tf,........

*:•

COlli!,..,.,...

1

I&gt;Ilt...

. . . .._..J. __......... ........ .,.. "'

.1'

. . ....... ""'

(
I

r

c:nditedm
anyiWWof............. orbooolitiiMtle 11!1S DfVISION. A CLAIM IS DEEMED AUOWI!D C0Norr10Ji Oil roNIOI·
to the~ orltit THE EMPLOYEE'S CONTESTED IF THE SELF-INSURING 110NS IN THE EMPLOYEE'S Q.AIM,
tlependeats by tho-. ,
EMPLOYER PAILS EITHER 10 CEJm. ... Till! 'EMPlOYE£ ... IIICeM _ _ _ lilly_ ... _ . . , . . _
If., employoe it t naidool of a A11o
FY OR CONTEST THE CLAIM wmtiN
other tbiD tbt1- 11111it inJurod Wider !he SEVENTY, ftVE DAYS AFTER MAK· of ltit THE DIFFERENCE BETWUN
~~:~~~!~FORACUUM
wootm' ...,_uoollw or IUDiltr Iowa lNG THE FIRST PAYMJ!l'IT OF COM·
THE EMPLOYEE'S AVERAOE ""'*iY
IN DIVISION (0(2) OF
PENSA110N
UNDER
THIS
DIVISION
of
a
alate
other
tbto
thtl-,
tho
employ·
w... loaaXTTHE TIMEOfmEINJ\JkY
SECTlON, THE .JUJUSDIC110N OF
ee
lllllltitTHE
EMPLOYEE'Sdopeadenll
TO
AN
EMPlOYEE
OR
DATE OF DISEASE AND illl!
COMMISSION AND THE
.,. no1 entitled to oooei.e ........,_or
(2) PAYMENT OF COMPENSATION
&amp;arnmtDI~'V OF THE ADMINISTRA·
EMPLOYEE'S PRESENT EARNINGS
benefito t11111er tbit cbtptor, on IOCOWit of FOR AU CLAIMS FOR TEMPORARY
OVER EAOI CASE IS OONTINU·
""'10the_..
........ - ·
ly.....
(
mJury, dloeaae, or dcoduruiag out of or In
DISABILITY DTHliR THAN THOSE
EXCEPT THAT THE COMMISSION
the coune of employment whtle temportr·
DESCRIBED IN DIVISION (B)(I) OF - T H E PAYMENTS MAY CON·
MAKE A MODIFICATION,
oly wothtn this and the ri&amp;hll of the THIS SECTION, thai! be for a duntion
TINUE FOR UP 10 A MAXIMUM OF
CI!J,NOE, FINDING, OR AWARD IN
not.
employee IIIII 11it i'HE EMPLOYEE'S based IIJ)CIII tho modieal n:porll of the ....... TWO HUNDRED WEEKS, BUT THE
THAT CLAIM ONLY WITH RESPECT
mg phyoician Ir!he employer clilputes the PAYMENTS SHALL BE REDUCED BY
(A) Purposely oclf·inflleled; or .
dependento under the llwa oftho other title
10 MEDICAL BENEfiTS AND COM·
(B) Coused b)' tho ,employee bemg are the ekCiust.e remedy aptnal tile attend"'l physteit11'1 report, poymen11 may THE CORRE5PQNDING NUMBER OF
PENSATION UNDER DIVISION (A) OF
Jfttoxicalt:d or under the mRuence of aeonemployer on accoWJt of the IDJllrY• d110Ue, be unnilwed only upo11 applu:atioa ttn&lt;1 WEEKS IN WHiCH THE EMPLOYEE
412356 OF THE REVISED
~ocarina by a dislrt&lt;t '-inl ollk:er por1111111
trolled ttUbltance not pmenbed by 1 phytt· 01' deatlt
,
RECE~ PAYMENTS PURSUANT10
SUBJECT TO THE UMITATION
Compensation or benefits are not Jo dovoaoon (C) of oecaon 4123 511 of the
DES:CRJBED IN DIVISION (0(3) OF caan where lbe intoxicltion or bc1n1 under
tho tnfluencc of the COOI!OIIed oubttance 001 payable "' a claol!llllt dunng tho penod of Revited Code. Pt)'IMW thall cootinue THE REVISED !:ODE.
SECTION
prescnbodby a phyttellll wu tho proxia-. confmement of the cltimlot in ony ...., or pel1dina the determinah'"' of the l!llller,
(2) If AN EMPLOYEE IN A CUUM
(2) THIS DIVISION APPLIES ONLY
cause
of the lDJW')', 11 entitled to receive, federal comcuonal 11\11iNtlon wbcther in ........... plymetlt tthtll not be made for the ALLOWED UNDER THIS CHAPTER
A CL:AIM INVOLVING AN
period •hen '"Y employee hat totumed to SUFFERS A WAGE LOSS AS A DIRECT
etther diloCIIy &amp;omllit THE EMPLOYEE'S
thts or any other state for o:anvtclton ofvtt&gt;EMPLOYEE TO WHOM EITHER OF
wodt:,
when 111 employee'ttratuoa pltyst· RESULT OF BI!II\IO UNABLE TO FIND
aelf·tnaurina
employer
tt
pmvided
m
...,.
Iaof
any
s1o1e
..fedenl
cnmrnolllw.
FOLLOWING APPLIES
CWI
Mt
made a wrdteo llttemenl that the
uon
4123.3S
of
tho
Reviled
Code,
or
fi:om
See
4123
541
.
.
.
.
_
_
I
F
any
EMPLOYMENT CONSISTENT WITH
(I) THE EMPLOYEE HAS A PROS.
employee
•
C1J11b1e
of
.-rung
to
hit
THE
!he
title
,....,_.
t\ltld,
the
COitlpelllllion
pefiOft
who
11
eatided
to,...,
..
bonefitl
for
THE
EMPLOYEE'S PHYSICAL CAPA· 111 fHE lEPORT OF tHE MJ!DICAL
DEVICE THAT WAS PROVI()..
EMPLOYEE'S
formerposttion
of
employ.
for
loA
tustoined
on
"""""nt
of
the
tnjury,
TtMPORARY
total
disability
OR
PER·
BILITIES
RESUL11NO FROM THE ; EXAMINATION SHALL CONTAIN A
ED UNDER AN ALLOWED CLAIM
men~
when
work
within
the
phystal
ctpa·
EMPLOYEE'S
INJURY OR OCCUPA· STATEMENT OF TH~ EXAMINER'S
occupational
di
......
orcleoth,
and
the
mcdM~.NENT
TOTAL
IMPAIRMENT.
lou
of
UNDI!R THIS CHAPTER OR l:HAPTER
bibtteS
of
the
emplOyee
is
made
a'lllltble
teal,
nunc.
and
hospital
servoceo
and
modmember,
or
death
throu&amp;h
the
application
of
TIONAL
DISEASE,
TilE EMPLOYEE FINDING ON THE EMPLOYEE'S PER·
41ZI., 4127., OR4131. OF THE REVISED
tomes, IIIII the amount offuneralespenses section 4123 033 of the Rcvited Code, by tho employer or onodoer employer, or SHALL RECEIVE CO!IPENSATION AT CENTAOE OF PERMANENT PAR'IlAL
AND THE EMPLOYEE'S PHYSI•
in tae of deatb, as are provided by this reeeaves, in connection wilb the nyury &amp;lY~ when the employee hat reacbed the maxo· SIXTY ·SIX AND TWQ..THIRDS PElt IMPAIRMENT R£S1JL1JNG FROM
ClAN DETERMINES THAT THE PROS·
cltapter
tng noe to such entltlemen~ beneftll under mum medictlllllpiOVement. - I F the CENTOFTHEDIFFERENCEBETWEEN ·ALLOWED &lt;;bNOITlO"S IN
THETIC DEVICE NEEDS 10 BE
R!CENT
AN EMPLOYER MAY REQUEST AN an 11&lt;! of consrest or federal program P"t' employee 11 eapable ofwork tltbVtt)l but hit THE EMPLOYEE'S AVBRAOI! WEEKLY CUUM UNPER tilE
REPLACED OR REPAIRED;
EMPLOYEE WHO SUSTAINS AN
vtdmg benefits for ctvtldefense workcn and THE EMPLOYEE'S employer is unable 1D
(JJ) THE EMPLOYEE'S PHYSICIAN
WAGE
AT THE
OF THE
INIUII.Y
DATE
OF TIME
DISEASE
AND
'tHE
INJURY TO SUBMIT TO A CHEMICAL thetr surv&lt;vors, the benefill payable heretm· olfer 1ttiM THE EMPLOYEE any employ· OR
DETERMINES THAT AN EMPLOYEE
WILL REQUIRE A PROSTHETIC T&amp;ST OR A TEST OF THE EMPLOY· clet,shallbeledueedtnproporttontDthebcn· ment, tho employee thall res11ter with the EMPLOYEE'S PRESENT EAltNINGS,
NOT TO EXCEED THE STATEWIDE , IMPAIRMENT
DEVICE, OR THE REPLACEMENT OR EE'S BLOOD, BREATH, OR URINE If efill tOC&lt;tved unclet such other 801 or pro- bureau of employment servt~ea, wht'h
thallusittlhcemployee on findingswtable AVERAGE WEEKLY WAGE THE PAY· JtEliORT OF THE .Ntii~ICI\L J:J(I\Mll·
THE EMPLOYEk HAS REASON TO sram
AN EXISTING PROSTHET·
MENTSMAYCONTINUEFORUPTOA NA110N. THE ADMINISTRATOR
BELIEVE THAT THE EMPLOYUE'S
Sec. 4123 55. No compensationahtllloc employroent 'Rot
DEVICE AS A DIRECT R&amp;SULT OF
(l) THE temunttioo of temporary total
ALLOWED CONDITION IN A INJURY WAS lllll R&amp;SULT Of BEING allowed for tlte fi11t week after an tnJWJ' is
MAXIMUM OF TWENTY .SIX WEEKS, • WORkERS' COMPEII$ATION~~~~~
"disabdrty, whelloer b)' order or odoerwtoe. HOWEVER, AN EMP~OYEE IN A , MAKE A TENTATIVEORDI!R
INTOXICATED
OR
UNDER
THE
INFLU·
rccetved
or
occupauonal
dtseose
t,;~~~~UND.~ ER THIS CHAPTER OR
does not preclude the commencement of CLAIMALLOWEDUNDERTHISCHAP· THAT THE EMPLOYEE'S
ENCE OF A CONTROLLED SUB· MIS FiRST DIAGNOSED and no com·
C
4121, 4127, OR 4131 OF
tempOnl')' tDtaldiatbilrty at another pomt in
TER MAY RECEIVE COMPENSATION AGE OF PERMANENT PAIITIAL
STANCE
NOT
PRESCRIBED
FOR
USE
pensauon
shall
be
allowed
for
the
finl
week
&amp;EVISED l:QDE, REGARDL&amp;SS
lime
if
the
employee
•aa•n
becomes
tern.
UNDER DIVISION (!:)(2) OF THIS SEC· IMPAI)thiENT IS THE SAME PER·
IN
THE
EMPLOYEE'S
SYSTEM
BY
of
Iotti
dtSabihty
OR
IMPAIRMENT,
WHEN THAT CLAIM WAS
1
porarily
totally
disabled
TION
FOR UP TO A MAXIMUM OF CENTAOE SHOWN BY
THE
EMPLOYEE'S
PHYSICIAN
IF
THE
whcnevent
may
occur,
unless
and
unttl
the
ALLOWED.
W
IF
A
DISTRICT
HEARJNG
OFF!·
EMPLOYEE
SUBMITS
TO,
THAT
TEST,
employeetatotally-DISABLEOOR
(3) COMPENSA110N UNDER DIVI·
fifTY. TWO WEEKS IF, AT ANY tiME OF THE MEDICA~~~J~:~:~
THE EMPLOYER SHALL PAY FOR THE
IMPAIRED for a connnuous period of two CER, STAFF HEARING OFFICER. OR DURING THE PERIOD IN WHICH THE UNLESS THE
SION (A) OF SECTION 4123 36 OF THE
~'MPLOYEE IS RECEIVING COMPEN·
DETERMINES THAT THE
RE1{1SED ~ODE ALLOWED UNDER COST OF THE TEST. FOR THE PUR· weeks or more, tn whoch event COitlpelltt· THE INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION
DETEilMINES,
BASED
UPON
THE
EVI·
SATION
UNDER
DIVISION
(!:)(2)
OF
CLEARLY
IS ERRONEOUS
POSE
OF
THIS
DIVISION,
IF
THE
non
for
the
lint
week
of
total
ditabtltty
OR
THIS DIVISION SHALL BE FOR A
THIS
SECTION,
THE
BENEFIT
P£RIOD
ADhiiNISTRATOit
DENCE.
THAT
AN
EMPLOYEE
WAS
EMPLOYEE,
THROUGH
A
CHEMICAL
IMPAIRMENT,
whenever
tt
lw
occurred,
PERIOD NOT TO EXCEED NINE
MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE TEST OR A TEST OF THE EMPLOY· shallbeJIIId,madditomotoaoyotherweek· NOT ENTITLED PURSUANT TO THIS
FOR UNEMPLOYMENT IS IN EXTEN· •• 'T!JE !!Ei'ORTJ~~~~~~
EE'S BLOOD, BREATH. OR URINE ly bcnefill wb1&lt;b are due, &lt;~nmediately fol· CHAPTER ORt;;HAP'TER 4121 .. 4127., Oil SION PURSUANT TO SECTION 4141.301 NllOIJS. TljE
PR{JOVtSIION.IMPLAN1'JNG,AFFIXING,
4131 OF THE B.EVISED !;ODE 10 OFTHEB.liVISEDCODE.NEITHERTHE 'tD~AtD THE
~~~~~~~OR~;REPLACEMENT OF THE ADMINISTERED WITHIN A REASON· lowmg the second week of total distbtltty RECEIVE TEMPORARY 10TAL DIS· FILING OF A REQUEST FOR NOR THE OLE fH~
FOR
ABLE
TIME
AFTER
THE
OCCUR·
OR
IMPAIRMENT.
Therethall
be
no
wait·
••
DEVICE PROVIDED
RENCE OF THE ~MPLOYEE'S INJURY,
mg penod tn t:OIUIC&lt;tton wtth the disburse· ABILITY COMPENSATION PRIOR 10 RECEIPT OF COMPENSATION PUR· EXAhii~~N BY THE
PU,tsUJINT TO THIS DIVISION
ION, AND
IS DETERMINED 10 HAVE AN ALCO· ments pmvtdetl by secboo 4123.66 of the THE DATE OF THE HEARING IN WinCH SUANT TO DIVISION (!;)(2) OF THIS MEDiCAL S
(4) THE ADMINISTRATOR SHALL
THAT DETERMINATION IS MADE, THE SECTION SHALL AFFECT AN EMPlOY· TENTA'I'IV ORI&gt;ER THAT rtn&lt;u&gt;
HOL CONTENT EQUAL 10 OR IN
Revised Code
ESTABLISHING A PRQ..
EXCESS Of THAT SPECIFIED IN SEC·
Sec: 4123 56 (A) Except as pmvided in HEARING OFFICER OR THE COMMIS· EE'S APPLICATION FOR COMPENSA· THAT THE EMPLOYEE'S PERCENT·
TO ENSURE THAT AN
TION 4511 19 OF THEJiliVISEDl:QDE divtSoon ~ ofthts KCtion, tn !he case SION SHALL DECLARE AN OVERPAY· TION PROVIDED UNDER SECTION AGE OF PERMANENT PARTIAL
EMPLOYEE'S PHYSICIAN MAKES
IMPAIRMENT IS THE SAME
MENT EFFECTIVE FROM THE D...TE 4123S80F-THE&amp;EVISED!;ODE
OR HAVE A CONTROLLED SUB· oftempoiV)' dosabthty, an employee thai!
DESCRIBED IN
(l)
THE
NUMBER
OF
WEEKS
OF
CENTAGE
SHOWN BY THE SE&lt;:ONID
THE
EMPLOYEE
WAS
NOT
ENTITLED
STANCE NOT PRESCRIBED FOR USE n:cetve stlt)'·Sil ind two-thtrds per cent of
DIVISION (C)(2l()z) OF THIS SECTION
TO
RECEIVE
THAT
COMPENSATION.
IF
WAGE
LOSS
PAYABLE
TO
AN
MEDICAL
EXAMINATION
REPORT
IN A TIMELY MANNER AND THAT IN THE EMPLOYEE'S SYSTEM BY loit THE EMPLOYEE'S average woekly
THE
EMPlOYER
PAYS
PREMIUMS
10
EMPLOYEE
UNDER
OIVISIONS
lCX
I
I
W
The
-...ltr
ohall
ltottly
DETERMINATION IS RECORDED THE EMPLOYEE'S PHYSICIAN. IT IS A wage so long os IUCh dtstbtlity 11 10141, 001
AND
(2)
OP
THIS
SEC110N
SHALL
the
and
their
THE
STATE
INSURANCE
FUND,
THE
REBUTTABLE PRESUMPTION THAT to exceed a maxnown amount of weekly
A'ND FILED IN THE EMPLOYEE'S
THE EMPLOYEE WAS IN10XICATED ..._ compenstlton whtch 15 eq•al to the AMOUNT OF THE OVERPAYMENT NOT EXCEED 1WO HUNDRED WEEKS
CLAIM FILE IN A TIMELY MANNER.
(3)FOR PURPOSES OF DIVISION (l:) OR UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF THE statewicle averqe weekly waae as defined SHALL NOT BE CHARGED TO THE IN THE AGGREGATE.
(4) AS USED IN THIS DIVISION, ·
in dovtsion (C) of IOC!ton 4123.62 of the EMPLOYER'S EXPERIENCE. IF THE
OF THIS SECTION, "PROSTHETIC CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE AND
EMPLOYER
IS
A
SELF-INSURING
"DATE
OF DISEASE" MEANS THE
'I'
HAT
THE
INTOXICATION
OR
BEING
Revtsed
Code,
and
not
less
than
a
mmtmum
DEVICE" MEANS AN INTERNAL OR
EMPLOYER,
THE
SELF-INSURING
DATE
AN
OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE IS
UNDER
THE
INFLUENCE
IS
THE
amount
of
compensatiOn
whiCh
t'
eqoal
to
EXTERNAL ARTIFICIAL PART PRQ..
FIRST
DIAGNOSED
BY A LICENSED
EMPLOYER
SHALL
DEDUCT
THE
PROXIMATE
CAUSE
OF
THE
INJURY.
thnty-thrce
and
one-third
per
cent
of
the
VIDEO 10 AN EMPLOYEE THAT SUB·
AMOUNT
Of
THE
OVERPAYMENT
PHYSICIAN,
OR
FOR
AN OCCUPA·
AN
EMPLOYEE'S
REFUSAL
TO
SUB·
statl:Wide
avenge
weekly
wap
as
defined
STJTUTES FOR A MISSING OR RECON·
FROM
THE
PAID
COMPENSATION
IT
TIONAL
DISEASE
DESCRIBEO
IN DIVI·
MITTO,ORRELEASEOREXECUTEA
in
dtviston
(C)
of!CCIIOn
4123.62
of
tile
LIMB OR JOINT OF THE
REPORTS TO THE ADMINISTRATOR SIONS (d) THROUGH (AAJ OF SF.C·
RELEASE OF THE RESULTS OF, A Revtsed Code unless the employee's waae
WJ UNLESS WRf11EN NOTICE HAS CHEMICAL TEST OR A TEST OF THE IS less than thtrty·th,.. and one·thtrd per UNDER DIVISION 00 OF SECTION TION 4113.680FTHE&amp;EVISEDCODE.
O!VEN AS PROVIDED IN SEC· EMPLOYEE'S BLOOD, BREATH, OR cent of the mintmum ststewtde avenge 4123.35 OF THE &amp;EVISED ~ODE THE OR OTHER OCCUP.\TIONAL DISEASf.
4123 84 OR 4123.85 OF THE URINE IS ADMISSIBLE AS EVIDENCE weekly waae, tn whK:h "'ent lit THE SELF-INSURING EMPLOYER OR THE THAT R&amp;SULTS FROM EXPOSURE 10
OR
BUREAU, AS APPROPRIATE, SHALL
REVIS.ED l:QDE, THE COMMISSION
OF THE EMPLOYEE'S INTOXICATION
EMPLOYEE shall n:cetve compensabon
S~~~~MAKE NO MODIFICATIO~.
OR' BEIN(; UNDER THE INFLUENCE eq110l 10 lolo THI&gt; EMPLOYilE'S t\oll WITHHOLD THI! AMOUNT OF THE DUSTS,
C
FINDINO,ORAWARDTHAT OFACONTROLLEDSUBSTANCENOT wages, provodetl that for the first twelve OVERPAYMENT FROM ANY AMOUNT · OASES,
A\IIARDS COMPENSATION FOR A PRESCRIBED FOR THE EMPLOYEE'S weebof-ldisabthtytheemployceohali TO WHICH THE EMPLOYEE BECOMES TOXIC MATERIALS, OR A
PERIOD IN EXC&amp;SS OF TWO USE IN THE EMPLOYEE'S SYSTEM BY
recetve oeventy-IWo per cent of llit THFJ ENTITLED UNDER ANY CLAIM PAST, TION OF THOSE. THE DATE THAT THE
VE,,Rs PRIOR 10 lliE DATE OF FIJ...- -THE EMPLOYEE'S PHYSICIAN AT
EMPLOYEE'S Ml weekly wage, but nof PRESENT, OR FUTURE UNDER EMPLOYEE FIRST MISSES WORX AS A
RESULT OF THE OCCUPATIONAL DIS..
FOR THAT ANY 'HEARING PVRSUANT TO SEC· 1D esceed a nwumum amount of weekly !;HAPTER 4121, 4123,4127, OR 4131.
OF
THE
JlliYISED
!:ODE
PURSUANT
TO
EASE.
COMPIEN!;ATION Tbu soctton doesiiOI TION4123 Sll OFTHEB.EVISED!;ODE compen•toon whoch 11 equal to thele~In tho ..et~t on anptoyec
atf&lt;!CI tibe riaJII of a claimant 10 c:ompentt- TO DETERMINE THE ALLOWANCE of the statewnle avet~~~e weekly wage as DIVISION (j)OF SECTION 4123.511 OF
norucmoingttubtequentiOthe fihng of any OF THE EMP(OYEE'SCLAIM AND ON defined m dtvision (C) of sectoon 4123.62 THE REVISED CODE.
prof.state
.tonal
"""'" .OR
..
iae dotniciled
1.1) After two hundred weeks of tempo. .-. thiS
11diiobled
IMPAIR.EII
u
such appltcatl~ IF the apphct· ANY APPEAL 10 COURT PURSUANT oflho:RcvtsedCodeoronehundtedpercent
ORDER
non " filod wothtn the time hmtt provodetl TO SECTION 4123 512 OF THE of the employee's nel take home weekly IV)' total diJtbiltty bertefitl, the-., med· n:suk of an tlljuiy cir .....,.......,
teal
sectton
shall
scltedttl&lt;
tho
!he
toaal
omount
of
payments
mtldo
under
a
•.J.INO
!ARTY
S ~:~~~
in this sectton
&amp;£VISED l:QDE
wage
EMPLOYEE for ttl exarntnahon for on contlllel of hiR or collecdve btopin011 IF ANOBIECTIONTOTHET
I.E) Tlus section doea not deprive the
If AN INJURY OES&lt;.'RIBED IN DIY!· ...,.,._..
commtuimofnscontinuingjurisdtcttonto SION (CX4) OF SECTION 4123 01 OF
AS USED IN THIS DIVISION, "NET eva!uat&lt;on tD detemune whether or no1 the asreementto the employee during a pened ORDER IS WOT Fll.f:D IY A PARTY
ofdtsabtlttyOR IMPAIRMENT ttdeemed ,TifF. DEIIDLI~E ;~ABLISHED
,ddtorminetho q - ntsed by any applt· THE REVISED !:;ODE OCCURS. COM· TAKE HOME WEEKLY WAGE" 1\lEANS temponrydillb&lt;hty btobeoomepermanent
for modifoeatoon ofaward whtch bt PENSATION AND MEDICAL BENE· THE AMOUNT OBTAINED BY DIVI().. A self-tnsunng employer shall norifjl the an advanced poyroen1 of compens~tooo &lt; DIVISION 1~4) t)F 'THIS
filed wtth the oommiSSionafter June FITS ARE PAYABLE ONLY FOR THE
lNG AN EMPLOYEE'S TOTAL REMU· bureau ofworkora' cotnpeiiiiiiOII nnmedt· poyoble uoder-101114123.56to 4123.58 ,, THE-ORDER ~ES FINAL.
1, 1932. and pnor m the esptratoon oflloe IMPAIRMENT OR DISABILITY THAT
NERATION, AS DEFINED IN SECTION oaely after payment of two btmdrtd weeks of the Re.tacdCode. Theempl.,...shollbe , , W If t!oO ~the emplo)er,
applicattle penod bul in ,..poet to which no RESULTS FROM THE SUBSTANTIAL
4141 Dl OF THE &amp;EVISED !:ODE, PAID of temporary total disability ond ,....-that ,.,mbursed the IOtthmount oft he tdvoneed thllt ~~..,. ttnly IJO!tfj
btobeenfl'lldedordeniedduringthe WORSENING OF THE PRE·EXISTING TO OR EARNED BY THE EMPLOYEE the ......., of workers' compensa-schcttlo payroents 0111 of ttlY award of Clllllpinsation ~).....,._ of Ill'~ to the
appllieablepenod
CONDITION OR IMPAIRMENT OR THE
DURING THE FIRST FOUR OF THE ule t h e - EMPLOYEE for 1111Ch ao made pu11uant to secbons 4123.56 to ",t.~ &lt;GtiJor, £1TH~~PAIIn', Wl'fHIIN
4123S8oftheR""!sedc:o.t..
',•'?!~ DAYI
• •'J111!(f) The commoBSton ...,., by senerel SUBSTANTIAL ACCELERATION OF LAST FIVE COMPLETED CALENDAR exanunatton
W What the employee 11awtrded com·
t91f.E)If til ~ ....,... ~ '"'QFi tii.Jl&lt;Kl ~ "'
I'T OF
ntln, MAY provide for !he destnlct.., of THE DISEASE PROCESS NO COM·
QUARTERS WHICH IMMEDIATELY
fileoofcue&amp;tnwhiehnoMtheriCIIonmay
PENSATION OR BENEFITS ARE PRECEDE THE FIRST DAY OF THE pensaboo for "'mporaty total dtsabtht)' for IV)' toDl disability ltonefits ~todivl· ~~~.- WHICifi!VE!t IIi
PAYABLE BECAUSE OF THE PRE· EMPLOYEE'SENTITLEMENTTOBEN· a period forwhtch llo THEEMPLOYEE bt StOll (A) of thii -ion IIIII .O.:tol ....,rit)' \f lolA~ REQUE,ST AN~
nt comm1111011 aDd ldtlllnillrltor of EXISTING CONDITION, IMPAIRMENT, EFITS UNDER THIS DIVISION, BY THE reeetved bcnefos underCIItpter 4141. ofthe Rlttanenl beftefill punut111 to !he "Soeoal ' :nON 'BY THE BUREAU
worlten' compensation,oaclo-. by acn· OR DISEASE PROCESS. ONCE THAT NUMBER Of WEEKS DURING WHICH RevtscdCode,thebut&lt;auofworkeB'eom· Securily Act," the weekly benefit IITIOIIflt SECTION THE PAltrY
ml rules. MAY provide for the retention CONDITION. IMPAIRMENT, OR DIS· THE EMPLOYEE WAS PAID OR pensalton shall pay an 11110un1 equal to the under divtsion (A) ofthts seclloo tbtll not THAT I!XAMINATION
and deatrucllon of aU other recorda m the1r EASE PROCESS HAS RETURNED TO A EltRNED REMUNERATION DURING amount recetved from the award to the exceed stlt)'.." and two-thirds per c:erll of COST OF TIIXT E/(AMINATION. UPON
LEVEL THAT WOULD HAVE EXISTEO THOSE FOUR QUARTERS. LESS THE bureau of employment setv,... and the the stttewtdc average weekly waae O&amp; · THATREQUEST.THEBUREAU
posseas1on or under their conrrol punuanl
AMOUNT OF LOCAL. STATE. AND admtntSirllor OF THE BUREAU of dofinod tn doviJIOfl (C) of .....,n 412362 SCHEDULE THE EMPLOYEE
to ...... 121 211 a n d - 14934 10 WITHOUT THE INJURY
Whenever,
wnh
....,..,t
to
an
employee
FEDERAL
INCOME TAXES DEDUCT·
149 36ofthe Revosod Code The bu1011u of
employmcnue,_
creditthetoamount
Code
• BY THE BUREA(I
to the accounts of theshall
employers
whose of the
(flRovtsed
THE COMMENCEMENt
OF THE ,.,
of
an
employer
who
ts
subject
to
and
has
ED
FOR
EACH
SUCH WEEK
workers' compensation may pun;:huc or
(J!Mil IF THE PAYMENT OF COM· acCililnts the payment nf benefits was PAYMENT OF COMPENSATION UNDER &gt;!&gt; Atl:
rent reqwnod equopment for the dociiiiiCIII comphe&lt;l wttb thiS chapter. there" pont·
b&lt;hty
ofcoofltct
wtth
,.spect
tD
the
apph&lt;a·
PENSATION
FOR TEMPORARY DIS· charged or" cJwseable to the extent ot wu DIVISION (JI) OF THIS SECTION SHALL ' Of: THIS
retentiOn media, as detemnned tteCCSIIU)' 10
' NOT CONS11TUTE A RECOGNITION 'f;~ TltE'FIR~T .MEiDH:AL; Ellio!~INATIION
non
of
workers'
compensation
laws
because
ABILITY
IS
COMMENCED VOLUN· chall!ed or is challJCIIblc
prescl'\'e the recorda Photographs.
(1)11
any
eompeosatlon
under
thiS
sec·
BY A SELF-INSURING EMPLOYER OF '.'• IIPPLY 10 A SUBSEQUENT MEDICAL
miCrophotographs, microfilm, films. or the conii'ICt of employmenlts entered tnlo TARILY BY A SELF-INSURING
tton
has
been
patd
for
the
oame
period
or
A
CLAIM OROF ACONDmON IN THE · EXAMINATION REQUESTED PUR·
other direct document ~enllon med11, and all or some ponton of the work 11 or ts EMPLOYER, PAYMENTS OF COMPEN·
penods
for
whtch
temporary
nonoecupaCLAIM
AS COMPENSABLE. BUT SUANT 10 DIVISION &lt;AJ(5) OF THIS
properly 1dennflcd, have the same tobeperfoour.dtnutat&lt;orstttesotherthan SATION SHALL BE CONTINUED AT
ttOnalacctdentandstcknesstnsunnccllor
SHALL
DO
NO MORE THAN SATISFY .. SECTION THEBUREAIJ~Hi\J.L, 51i!ND .
u the ongtnol ...:ord and may be Oh&lt;a, the emplol'"r and the employee may THE DISCRETION OF THE SELF·
h
1recn
patd
poorsuanllo
an
ms•nnce
pol·
THE
REQUIREMENTS
OF SECTION A COPY Of THE REPORT OF THE
15
agree to be bound by the laws oflhts state iNSURING EMPLOYER WHEN ASELF·
1n hke tn1nner 1nd may be received
tey
or
program
to
wluch
the
employer
lw
4123.114
OF
THE
B.EVISEDl:ODE
MEDICAL EXAMINATION 10 THE
or by the laws of some other stat&lt; tn whtch
INSURING EMPLOYER MAKES ITS
tt e:vld&lt;""e tn any court where the onamal
madetheenureeontnbutlonorpaymeelfor
Sec:
4123
57.
~
EMPLOYEE,
THE EMPLOYER, AND
all or some portion of the work of the FIRST PAYMENT OF COMPENSATION
,..,,ordeould have been mlroduced.
pmvodtng
insurance
or
under
a
nonoceupo·
.
~,THEIR
REI'ItESENfATIVES
1m AS USED IN DIVISION (4) OF employee 11 to be perfooncd Thcagr&lt;ement TO AN EMPLOYEE UNDER THIS I&gt;! VI· ttonal acoidenl IIIII atckiiCSS program fully
WJ.) Exoopltt pmviiled oq DIVISION
l!PQN THE flll.lNO OF AN OB.IEC·
shall be tn wntrtlaandshall be filed W&lt;th tho SION. THE SELF-INSU!\INO EMPLOY·
~~~~:CT~~~;"MEDICAL
BENEFITS" bu...,u ofworken' Comfl"'l"'bon w&lt;thm ten
funded
by
the
employer,
compenSihon
(aK21
OF
thttsechOII,
Mt
earl""
thtll
fO&lt;I)I
,)"TJON
TO THE ~ATIVE OIUlER
ER SHALL NOTIFY THE EMPLOYEE, IN
M
PAYMENTS TO, OR ON
patd
under
thts
seo:tton
forthe
penodor
pen·
weekttller
the
dale
oftetminau011
oftloc
hit·
'
UPON
THE CO~LETION OF
BEHALF OF. AN EMPLOYEE FOR A days after tt 11 executed and shall remam m WRITING. OF ALL OF THE FOLLOW·
odsshall
be
paid
only
10
tltc
extent
by
whtch
est
periodofpoymerolluoder
section4123
Sli
'MEDICAL
EXAMINATION t&lt;~IJUt:~
lNG
HOSPITAL BILL, MEDICAL BILL FOR forte umll ternunate&lt;l or modofted by agree·
tltc
payment
or
payments
cseeeds
the
ofthe
Revtsed
Code,
or
notcarber
tlotl1
forty
liD
PURSUANT
TO I&gt;!VISION (A)(S
{l) THAT THE SELF-INSURING
A LICENSED PHYSICIAN OR HOSPI· ment of tbe parties stmollrly filed. If the
amountofthenonoccupattonal
rnsuranceor
weeks
after
theof
the
IIIJUfY
o
r
"
THIS
SECTION,
WHICHEVER
EMPLOYER VOLUNTARILY HAS
TAL, AN ORTHOPEDIC OR PROS· agreement rs to be bound by tho laws of thts
program
paid
or
poytble
Offset
of
the
com·
THE
DATE
OF
FIRST
DIAONQ..
LA'J'U.
stateondtheemployerhatieompliedwtth
thts
COMMENCED
THE
PltYMENTS,
THETIC DEVICE. OR A PRESCRIP·
pensauan shall be made ooly upon the pnor SIS of an oeeupobooal
BY A )rio!Ueoling ofr10er wllo slloll!ltlt 'the tljl)&gt;lli·
cltaplcr,tbenthecmployecllcnutledtoeom·
()!) THAT THE SELF-INSURING
TION MEDICATION.
order of the bureau of work.cl'!'i • ccmpensa~ LICENSED PHYSICIAN 1n the absente of CMion'for hearing w1th wtinen nottccs 10
pensation
and
benefits
regardless
of
where
EMPLOYER
MAY
TERMINATE
THE
S.C 4 123 131 THE ADMINISTRA·
PAYMENTS AT ANY TIME.
OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION the IRJUr)' occurs or 1~ disease 11 contractuon or 1ndu.,1nal commtss1on or agreement payments
under section
4123.56
of the ~n~....,.§~od~pcr!&lt;O~~n;'§~§~§§~
Rcvtsed Code,.._
AN employee
ml)' fik: an
e&lt;1
and
the
nahts
of
the
employee
and
11it
-(')THAT THE EMPLOUE HAS A of the claun~nt
THE INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION
apphcarion wtth the bui'Clu of workers· comRIGHT TO A HEARING ON THE
MAY REQUIRE ANY EMPLOYEE THE EMPLOYEE'S dependents under the
pensation for the determi11aUon of the pcrlaws of th1s stale IIIC the nclus1vc remedy
EMPLOYEE·s CLAIM.
C~~~~~;:A~TH~E~RIGHT TO RECEIVE aga&lt;nSI the employer on aceot~nt of tnJUI')',
centap
ofloii THE EMPLOYEE'S pentll· AT THE HEARING, THE
(d) If THE EMPLOYEE'S CLAIM
C
T9 SUBMIT TO A
nentpartiti~IMPAIRMENTrtoull·
TRICT
HEARING OFFICER
VOCATIONAL
REHABILITATION dt&gt;eiS&lt;,ordcRih tn the couneoflndanstng THAT IS THE SUBJECT OF THE P&lt;!tY·
ms
tiom
11ot
AN
•n1ury
or
occupattonal
dtS·
SHALL
MAK£ A 'FINDING AS
MENTS COMMENCED UNDER THIS '
EVALUATION. If THE PERSON WHO outofllitTHEEMPLOYEE'Semployment
ease
WH£THER
AN'\' Of 'tHE FOLLOW'IN&lt;l
C~::~~~ THE EVALUATION REC· If the aiV"'ment 11 to be bound by the laws DIVISION IS DETERMINED TO BE
(l)
AN
EMPLOYEE
MAY
FI~E
THE
HAS
OCCUflkEO:
0
A VOCATIONAL REHA· ofanolhet ollte aod the employer 1w com· VALID, THAT ANY COMPENSitTION
APPLICATION SPECIFIED IN DIVI~JON . ,, '";\ ~ THE iuJU;Au MElliCAL
BILITATION PLAN FOR THE EMPLOY· pliedwtththelawsofthal,....,thenghtsof TO W!IICH THE EMPLOYEE IS OR
(A)(
II OF THIS SECTION WI1'HOU:r ·,~ !lAm&gt; l'f$.IIIPO!tr, AT
EE, THE EMPLOYEE SHALL COMPLY the employee ondloit THE EMPlOYEE'S BECOMES ENTITLED UNDER THIS
WArtiNO
FORTY WEEKS WkEJII ••J4. r f't'li, oN'
dependentS under the laws of that sllte are SECTION FOR THAT CLAIM SHALL BE
WITH THE REHABILITATION PLAN
''
EITHEROFTHEFOU.OWINOOCCURS
Auo~JN111i¢\.Alltl;
IF AN EMPLOY~E REFUSES TO tbe exclu11ve remedy apons1 the employer OFFSET BY THE PAYMENTS THE
(&amp;)
THE
RECEIPT
Of
PAYMENTS
. &lt;JII 1'fiB IURU.\1 MEIII&lt;:AL
ltiiR
li¥11"1
d
II
faa
4&amp;1
I
4
1111
lht
SUBMIT TO ANY VOCATIONAL oo account oftnJUI')'. dttctte, or de.tth tn the EMPLOYEE RECEIVES FROM THE
UNDER
DIVISION
(AI
Of'
SECTION
TroN
"'ILED TO CONIIDI!. ALL
1
UU
ef
I
I;
e
..
f
Ja
til
11
I
I
REHABILITATION
EVALUATION eou"" of and 1rtama out of 1M THE SELF-INSURING EMPLOYER UNDER
4113.56
OF
THE
&amp;£VI$ED
!;ODE
IS
THEAU.OWEO~IN
t11111
J1J
111J
Jlr
111h
nda
nl
SCHEDULED PURSUANT TO THIS EMPLOYEE'S empl.,.menl wttboul n:ganl THIS DIVISION
(II) "'ftm (ClJj IF u employee m 1 TERMINATED BY A HEARING OFPI· ti..AIM:
A SELF-INSURING EMPLOYER
SECTION OR OBSTRUCTS THE EVAL· 1D the place wbete the mJury wa sustained
cla~m
allowed \lnder th11 chapter suft"en a CBR BECAUSE THE EMPLOYEE HAS
(S) TilE BUREAU ~~~~~:;~~~~:;;
EITHER SHALL CERTIFY OR CON·
UATION, THE EMPLOYEE'S RIGHT or the dtowe o:antrtcted
REACHED
MAXIMUM
MEDICAL
TION'S
EXAMINER WAS
wage
loss
u
a
DIRECT
....
rt
of
rotum•na
lhnyemployeeotiMTHEEMPLOY· TEST THE CLAIM FOR WHICH IT
10 HAVE THE EMPLOYEE'S CLAIM
IMPROVEI'ENT.
AGAINST
THE EMPLOYE!\ 01!
to
employment
other
than
1M
THE
VOLUNTARILY IS MAKING PAY·
FOR COMPENSATION CONSIDERED, EE'S dependents are awarded worken'
()!)
THE
RECEIPT
OF
BENEFITS
EMPLOYEE;
EMPLOYEE'S
former
posuron
of
employ·
IF THE CLAIM IS PENDING BEFORE compensauon benefdl or ....,ver dtmaaes MENTS UNDER THIS DIVISION WITH·
UNDER DIVISION (AI OF SECTION
(d) THE BUREAU MEDICAL
THE BUREAU DR COMMiiiSION, OR !rom the employer under lhcltwt ofanoth· IN SEVENTY ·fiVE DAYS AFTER THE ment 11M 1 null af~JifliMIMIIII tilul
;I
;
1
e
t mlh DUE fro A
4123.56
OF
THE
IS
110N
FAll F!J:D~TO;~~~~
er
state,
the
amount
awarded
or
IOCO\Iercd,
SELF-INSURING
EMPLOYER
MAKES
10 RECEIVE ANY PAYMENT FOR
LIMITAnON
IN
the
clainm's
phyll&lt;OI
TERMINATED
tl
""'"'•
whether
p11d
or
to
be
paod
tn
fulttft
tnllllll·
THE
FIRST
PAYMENT
OF
COMPEN·
COMPENSATION THAT HAS BEEN

D

•

THE Pl!IUOI) OF THE REf\ISAL OR
OBSTRucnON, AND NOCOMPI!NSA·
110N SUBSEQUI!JorTLY SHALL BE
AWAIU&gt;ED FOR ANY PERIODOP SlJS.
PENSION.
See. 4 12l.S4. Every 1111ployee, who 11
lnjuood or wbo ID occupalional
~IIIII !he .............. ofCKIIemploy•
· .. who II ktllotl, or dies • the ....,It of on
occupational diteate contntcrecl on tho
courae of emplo)'DICIII. wllemer tuch
injury bt ~ or oecupationtl dtseue
btl been eootrteted, prowidod 1M ume were

~·~~[)IT~IO~N~Dt~THI5~~~~*~

-.Ioyer.

~i!~~~r~:~

A"40~H~;E~R~M~E~DitA~~L~ffi~;;

di,.,,.

CCJkoJTJON•

f,-_, ' ~
I

•

I

�EMPLOYEE RESULTING FROM 11IE
INJURY OR OCCUPATIONAL DISI!ASI!
HAS SO PROGRESSED AS TO HAVE
INCREASED 1liE PERCENTAGE OF
PERMANENT PARTIAL IMPAIRMENI'.
IMPAIItMENT;
W 1liE TENTATIVE ORDER PRO. ALL PROVISIONS OF THJS DIVISION
VIDES FOR 1liE PAYMENT OF COM· APPLICABLE TO AN ORIGINAL
PENSATION UNDER A CIRCUM· APPUCATION APPLY TO !ON APPLISTANCE IN WIUCH TIIAT COMPEN· CATION FOR SUBSEQUENT DETERSA110N IS BAIUtED BY THIS SECTION MINATION. THE DECISION OF A DISTRICT HEARING OFFICER ON AN
~ OTIIER PROVISION OF LAW.
EMPLOYEE'S APPLICATION FILED
UNDER DIVISION (A)( I), (2), AND (6)
OF THIS SECTION IS FINAL.
(7) NOTWITHSTANDING DIVISIONS
(A)(3) THROUGH (6) OF THIS SECTION,
TilE DETERMINATION OF AN
EMPLOYEE'S PUCENTAGE OF PERMANENT PARTIAL IMPAIRMENT
SHALL BE MADE IN ACCORDANCE
WITH DMSION (A)(7) OF TillS SECTION, UPON 1liE WRJ'ITEN AGREEMENT BY AN EMPLOYEE AND
EMPLOYER TO UTILIZE THE ALTER·
NATIVE METIIOD OF DETERMINATION PROVIDED IN DIVISION (A)(7)
OF THIS SECTION WmtiN SEVEN
DAYS AFTER RECEIPT OF THE WRIT·
TEN AGREEMENT, THE ADMINISTRATOR SHALL ASSIGN A PHYSICIAN FROM THE IMPAIRMENT EVALUATION PANEL WJTIIIN TilE BUREAU
MEDICAL SECTION TO CONDUCT A
MEDICAL EXAMINATION OF THE
EMPLOYEE AND SEND WRITTEN
NOTICE TO THE EMPLOYEE AND .
EMPLOYER OF THAT ASSIGNMENT.
TilE EMPLOYEE AND EMPLOYER
EACH SHALL SELECT A PHYSICIAN
FROM TilE IMPAIRMENT EVALUA·
IF THE DIS- TION PANEL WHO SHALL SERVE AS
HEARING OFFICER FINDS ONE CONSULTANTS TO TilE ASSIGNED
TilE SITUATIONS DESCRIBED IN PHYSICIAN If TilE EMPLOYEE OR
DIVISION (A)(S)(J), (b), W OR (JI) OF EMPLOYER OBJECTS TO THE
TillS SECTION, THE DISTRICT HEAR- ASSIGNED PHYSICIAN'S DETEitMIING OFFICER SHALL ISSUE AN ORDER NATION
REJECTING TilE REPORT OF TilE MEDWITHIN TWENTY-ONE DAYS
AFTER
ASSIGNMENT, THE ASSIGNED
ICAL EXAMINATION AND REQUIR·
lNG TilE BUREAU MEDICAL SECTION
PHYSICIAN SHALL CONDUCT A MEDTO PERFORM ANEW MEDICAL EXAM- ICAL EXAMINATION OF THE
INATION ALL PROVISIONS OF TillS EMPLOYEE AND PROVIDE TO THE
DIVISION APPLICABLE TO TilE FIRST ADMINISTRATOR A REPORT OF THE
MEDICAL EXAMINATION AND TilE MEDICAL EXAMINATION STATING
DETERMINATION OF TilE PERCENT- TilE EMPLOYEE'S PERCENTAGE OF
AGE OF PERMANENT PARTIAL PERMANENT PARTIAL IMPAIRMENT
IMPAIRMENT APPLY TO ANY SUBSE- RESULTING FROM THE ALLOWED
OIIIONT ' MEDICAL EXAMINATION
CONDITIONS IN TilE CLAIM UNDER
TIIAT IS ORDERED UNDER THIS DIVI- THE MOST RECENT EDITION OF THE
SION IF THE DISTRICT HEARING OFFJ.
AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIACU
FINDS
THE SITUATION TION'S GUIDES TO TilE EVALUATION
DESCRIBED IN DIVISION (A)(S)W OF OF PERMANENT IMPAIRMENT. IMME·
SECTION, THE DISTRICT HEAR- DIATELY UPON RECEIPT OF THE
ING OFFICER SHALL ISSUE AN ORDER REPORT, THE ADMINISTRATOR
TilE APPLICATION. IF THE SHALL SEND A COPY OF THE REPOR:T
rn&lt;·nur-r HEARING OFFJCU FINDS TO THE EMPLOYEE AND EMPLOYER.
OF
THE
SITUATIONS
WITHIN TWENTY-ONE DAYS
DESCRIIIEDIN DIVISION (A)(S)(J), (b), AFTER RECEIPT Of THE REPORT, AN
W, (d). OR (s) OF TillS SECTION, TilE EMPLOYEE OR EMPLOYER MAY
DISTRICT HEARING OFFICER SHALL SEND WRITTEN NOTICE TO THE
ISSUE AN ORDER FINDING THAT TilE ADMINISTRATOR OBJECTING TO THE
EMPLOYEE'S PERCENTAGE OF PER- REPORT. IF A WRITTEN NOTICE OF
MANENT PARTIAL IMPAIRMENT IS OBJECTION
IS NOT TIMELY
SAME PERCENTAGE SHOWN BY RECEIVED, TilE ASSIGNED PHYSIEITHER THE FIRST OR ANY SUBSE- CIAN ' S DETERMINATION OF THE
BUREAU MEDICAL EXAMI- PERCENTAGE OF PERMANENT PARNA1'10N REPORT.
TIAL IMPAIRMENT OF AN EMPLOYEE
(6) AN omployoe ,.y file an oppl,.,... IS FINAL, tiOTWITIISTANDINO SEC- ,
riee for a
dclcnnination of lhe TION 4123 m OF TIIE.BEVISEDJ:;ODE.
EMPLOYEE'S per- IF A WRITTEN NOTICE Of OBJECTION
IMPAIRMENT. NO IS TIMELY RECEIVED, THE ADMINISA~~;~~:r~:g~ FOR SUBSEQUENT TRATOR SHALL PROVIDE A COPY OF
PI
DETERMINATIONS"ON 'OlE ASSIGNED PHYSICIAN'S REPORT
SAME CLAIM FOR INJURY OR TO THE CONSULTING PHYSIOANS
DISEASE SHALL BE SELECTED BY TilE EMPLOYEE AND
UNLESS SUPPOR:TED BY EMPLO't'ER. WITHIN SEVEN DAYS
SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE OF NEW AFTER RECEIPT OF THE OBJECTION.
WITHIN TWENTY-ONE DAYS
AND CHANGED CIRCUMSTANCES
DEVELOPING SINCE TilE TIME OF AFTER RECEII'I' OF THE REPOR:T,
THE LAST DETEitMINATION. I f - so BOTH CONSULTING PHYSICIANS
is filed UNDER DIVISION SHALL CONFER WITII THE ASSIGNED
PHYSIOAN AND ~OINTLY, ON THE
BASIS OF THE OPINION OF A MAJORITY OF THE PHYSICIANS, ISSUE A
FINAL REPORT STATING THE
EMPLOYEE'S PERCENTAGE OF PERMANENT PARTIAL IMPAIRM~NT
RESULTING FROM THE ALLOWED
CONDITIONS IN TilE CLAIM UNOER
THE MOST RECENT EDITION OF THE
AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION'S GUIDES TO TilE EVALUATION
'oF PERMANENT IMPAIRMENT.
WITHIN FOURTEEN DAYS AFTER
RECEIPT OF THE FINAL REPORT, THE
ADMINISTRATOR SHALL SEND A
' COPY OFTHE FINAL REPORT TO THE
EMPLOYEE
AND
EMPLOYER .
NOTWITHSTANDING
SECTION
4123.SII OFTHEREVISED!;ODE, THE
PERCENTAGE OF PERMANENT PAR·
TEAL IMPAIRMENT OF AN EMPLOYEE
STATED IN THE FINAL REPORT
ISSUED PURSUANT TO DIVISION
(A~7) OF TillS SECTION IS FINAL.
W COIIIJ'Oftllrioo poyoble under liMo
d1vi11on lAl OF THIS SECTION a&lt;eruea
and II po)'lble 10 lho anployee frnrn the dote
ofl.ul payment o f _ . , ., or, in cues
when: no pmoious compensation bu poid. fi'om the dole of the injury or, FOR
OCCUPATIONAL DISEASES, the dote of
---~---.,.e-diaclle.

I
THE APPLI·
AS THOUGH IT WAS AN
APPLICATION FOR TilE
DETERMINATION OF TilE PERCENT·
AGE OF PERMANENT PARTIAL
IMPAIRMENT IN NO INSTANCE
SHALL THE FORMER AWARD BE
MODIFIED UNLESS IT IS FOUND
fl()M IICEI)ICIIL (lit CLINICAL FIND-

THE EMPLOYEE SHALL RECEIVE
SIXTY-SIX AND TWO.THIRDS PER
CENT OF THE EMPLOYEE'S AVERAGE
WEEKLY WAGE, BUT NOT MORE
THAN A MAXIMUM OF . THIRTY·
TIIREE AND ONE-THIRD PER CENT
OF THE STATEWIDE AVERAGE WEEKLY WAGE AS DEFINED IN DIVISION
(!;) OF SECTION 4123 62 OF THE
~VISED (ODE. PER WEEK REGARD- LESS OF THE AVERAGE WEEKLY
WAGE FOR THE NUMBER OF WEEKS
, TIIAT EQUALS THE PERCENTAGE OF
TWO HUNDRED WEEKS. If THE PERCENTAGE OF THE PERMANENT
IMPAIRMENT OF THE EMPLOYEE
EQUALS OR EXCEEDS NINETY PER
CENT, COMPENSATION FOR PERMANENT PARTIAL IMPAIRMENT SHALL
BE PAID FOR TWO HUNDRED WEEKS.
NO AWARD SHALL BE MADE UNDER
DIVISION (A) OF THIS SECTION
BASED UPON A PERCENTAGE OF
IMPAIRMENT TIIAT, WHEN TAKJ!N ·
WITH ALL OTHER PERCENTAGES OF
PERMANENT IMPAIRMI!NT, EliCEI!DS
ONE
HUNDRED
PER
CENT.
NOTWITHSTANDINO DIVISION (II) OF
SECTION 4123.SII OF TilE B.EVISED
!;ODE, THE BUREAU Oil A SELF·
INSUltiNG EMPLOYER SHALL PAY A
PERMANENT PARTIAL IMPAIItMI!NI'

AfTER THE DAl1! ON WHICH AN

ORDI!It PIXINO THE EMPLOYEE'S
PERCENTAGE OF PERMANENT PAll·
TIAL IMPAIRMI!NT III!COM£S FINAL.
AS USED IN THIS DIVISION, "DATE
OF DISEASE" MI!A)fS TilE DATE AN
, OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE IS P1RST
DIAGNOSED BY A UCENSED PHYSICIAN, OR FOil AN OCCUPATIONAL
DISEASE DESCRIBED IN DIVISIONS
(A) THROUGH (AA) OF SECTION
412l.fi8 OF 1liE REVISED CODE OR
OTHER OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE
TIIAT RESULTS FROM E(POSURE TO
FIBROSIS-PRODUCING OR TOXIC
DUSTS, FUMES, MISTS, VAPORS,
OASES, OR LIQUIDS, OR OTIIER
TOXIC MATERIALS, OR A COMBINATION OF THOSE, 1liE DATE TIIAT TilE
EMPLOYEE FIRST MISSES WORK AS A
RESULT OF THE OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE.
(2) When .. owonl Ullder . . division
lAl OF THIS SECTION haa modo
jllio£10 lhodoolll ofm employee, o11._;,1
inalallmollla IOCCIUCd or 10 occroe """"' the
provioloos of tho •wont .. payable 10 lho
awvivilla apwae, or ifU.... io no IIII'Yivlq
- · lu the dopoodoDI cbildrea of lho
employee, ond irtbere.,. no childralourvivia&amp; tben 10 olhcr dopel&gt;dents u the
adminiolrotor dotenninea.
(B) In &lt;1101 included iD tho folknvinB
schc:dule lho compen~~~rioo poyoble peT
week 10 the employee is the -ide averIF weoldy ..... II dofu&gt;od m division (C)
ofoec:tioo4123.62 of tho Revised Codo per
week and shall continue duri1111ho periods
provided iD tho followinlschedulo·
For tho lou of 1 - · sixty """·
For the lou of a firsl finger, commonly
called indos flllgoT, thirty-five w..U.
For the lou of 1 IOCOIId fi•IOI'· thiny

....u.

Foe tho lou of a tbinl fin..,, twomy
weeks.
For lho lou of a founh finler, cornmonly
known u the lillie finpr, fifteen weelca.
The !011 of a aecoocl, or dialal, pbolonp:
of the lbwnb is considered equolro the lms
of ooe half of NCb thumb: lho lou of more
than ooe half of ouch Utumb io coosidmd
equal 10 the lou of tho wbole thumb.
The lou of the thin!, or dillll, ~
Of IDY f-11 COIIIidaod equolfD tho lOll
of one-thin! of lho finaor.
The lou of the middle, or second, pha·
lingo of IDY finger is considonod oquol1o
the lou of two-thirds oflho fi"'er.
The lou ofmore than lho middle and distal pholqoa of 111y fiDIOI' is co,.idored
eqUlllu tho losa of tho whdlo fiaJICr. In no
cue nlllho IIIIOWit roceived for ...... than
one finJICr exceed lho amount provided 1n
tbis ICbedulc for lbe IOU of I hand.
For tho !011 of the IOOiacarpll bone
(bonos of lho palm) for lho corrapondina
thumb, or finam, odd ten W..U., the number of weob under this divmoo.
For ankylooia (Ioiii stdliless of) or oontract\lns (due 1o scan or injuries) whtch
malcoa any of the fingm. thumbs, or pans
of either uaoleu, the 111110 ntnber of
....Uapply 10 the memben or pans tbmof u given for lhe IOSilhnof.
If lho claimant h.u aulfered tbe lou of
....., or more fill&amp;en by lltqiUtllion or ankylosis and tho norure 'of !lit TilE

CLAIMANT'S ~ m the..,...
of wbicb tho cloimonl - -Ina lithe
ume of tbo 11\iury or occupotionll d i - ia
aud!lbollbe bandic:a!&gt; ... --.,IMPAIRMENT I&lt;IUIIinl fi'om lho lou offingm. or
lou of ... of f i - ex.- tho normal
handialp or ~ IMPAIRMENT
raulli"' fi'om tbo looa of linpn. or loaa of
... of r._...... - - may lake
tbol rtc:1 inlo considenlion and inc,....lho
awonl of compenaorion accordinaly, but the
1wonl modo oball not exceed the amount of
compenu110n for lou of a hand
for tho lou of a hand, one hunclr«&lt;aevOIII)'·five weeks.
For the lou of an onn, two hundred
twenty-five weeks.

For the lou of 1 pwroo, thiny weeks.
Forlho lou ofoneoftbolooaotber lhon
the pw 100, ton woclca.
The loss of111010 than two-thitda of any
too " c:onsidaod equal 10 lho lou of lho
wboletoo.
The lou of lesa than two-thinla of~
toe 11 considered no loll, except u to the
grat toe: the lou of lho IIJ:OII roe up 10 the
•nterphalaol'll joml is co-equal to lho lou
of ooo-holf of tho pw too; the losa of the
p:at toe beyond the inlll:pMiangaiJOmt i1
CDI)sidaod equal 10 tho loss of tho whole
great toe.
For the lou of a foot. one hundRd fifty
woeb.
for the lou ofo lq, two hundmi....U.
For the lou or lho 11ght of 1n eye, one
hundred twenty-five week~
For the pormanenl pul11llosa of siahl of
an eye, the portion of one hundml IWOIII)'fi~c wecb u the administnuor in each case
detcnninoa. bued the .,........,, of
vis1011 ICIUIIIy !oat • a mull of tho injwy
or occu.pm:k»naa disease. but. m no case shall
on awln! of compcnsalion be modo for 1011
than twenty-fiVe per cent lou of u - ed vision. "Lou of uncorrected vision"
means the pcrcentqe of VJsion Ktually IO!It

.u the resuh orrhe injury or occ:upuional dtloue
For thopmnanenund IOiallouofhearmaof one ear, twenty-five weeks; but in no
cue shill an award of compensation be
modo for leu lhon permanonl and tollllofhearina of one ear.
• 'for the pormanent-llou ofhearini, one hundred twenty-five weeb: bul,
OKCeplpurtUIDI 10 the next pro&lt;edina parll·
poph, m no cue aboll ao owonl of componaelion be modo for leu than permanent
and total lou ofheorina.
I~ CliO 10 IRJwy orocoupolionol di10111
mulu in aerloua toc:ial or disfigurement which either impein or may in the
illlule impair tho opportUniliea 10 eocure or
roiiiD omploymotll, lho ~ shall
l,!llb an awonl of COII1polllllion u il TilE
ADMINISTRATOR doeml proper and
eqooilable, iD - o f doe- of tho clitftawww, lnd aot to aceed u. IUIJ'I of
ftvo llu rl - . _ Far tho of

llllkiDa lba-.1, it .. not.-iolwbclhor

tbe etitplo)ee ia piniWiy emplo)ed Ill MIY
occupotloo or !ride • tho tiRo oflho oclatiniltnlor't d suiwduu.
Whoa •IWIId ........ diviaiao baa
10 .... of•llllploy• Ill - " ' ' - ' ' - -..cl or 10

--prior

- - - lho ,..,;riiici•
oball be pa)'lblo rolho 1U1'YiviQa- or
iflhere ia aoiUrviviq - . 1 0 doe dapoadonl cbildroa of the emplo)'OO lliCI i f . . DO audJ cbilcha, than .. audJ dapoa-Ulbe.........._dolmaiaea.
Wbea .. .,...toyeo lill....a.cl tho loll
ofa_.....by-.bulao.W..Sbao

- . - ... -~~~norprior.,w

THEEMPLOYEE'S _ _ t h e _
toroballmob on awonl in~ with
thio divilioa far lho lou wbic:h aball be
payable 1o the aurvivillc -·or lftboni
is no aurviviq 10 doe dopondont
cbildmi oflhoemployeo aod iftbere are no
ouch chllcRo, then fDIUdi clependoma u the
~ dolerminea.
(C) Compenutioo for partial ~
IMPAIRMENTUIIderdivioloos (A) oncl (B)
of this -uoo ia in odditioo to lho oom~poidtho~.....,_ .. __
tion 412J.S6 of doe Reviled Codo. A
doimonl may roceivo ..._...noo Ullder
divilioaa (A) aod (B) of Ibis teclioo. NO
EMPLOYEE MAY RECEIVE COMPENSATION UNDER DIVISION (A) OF THIS
SECTION OR RECEIVE A MEDICAL
EXAMINATION PROVIDED FOR BY
THIS SECTION DURING THE TIME IN
W1UCH THAT EMPLOYE~ IS RECEIVING COMPENSATION UNDER SECTION 4123.S8 OF 11IE ~VISED !;ODE
IN ANY CLAIM OR IS RECEIVING
COMPENSATION UNDER SECTION
4123.S6 OF TljE REVISED l:ODE ON
1liE SAME CLAIM IN WHICH THE
EMPLOYE~ IS SEEKING COMPENSATIO)'f UNDER THIS SECTION. THE
EMPLOYEE SHALL LIST ON THE
APPLICATION SPECifiED IN DIVISIONS (A)(I) AND (2) OF THIS SECTION THE CLAIM NUMBERS OF ALL
OTHER CLAIMS FOR WHICH THE
EMPLOYEE IS A CLAIMANT.
In ollcUnlrisma under divilion (8) of
this section, if it is determiHd by lit)' ooe
of the followin1: (I) tho.........., clinic 11
Univemty holpltal. Ohio awe unl-ity;
(2) the -~illlion ...... commiaaion;
(3)
cl1nic pn:ocribina physician approved ~ lho admini!llniOr or w
TilE ADMINISTRATOR'S deaipee, dllt
an InJured or ...... IMPAIRED employee 11 in need of an artificial appliance, or in
need of • rq&gt;lir tbem&gt;f, rogonlleu of
wbotbor the appltanct or ita repair will be
aomceoble m the vocolionol ldiabilltalion
of the ••jured employee, and reprdl,.. of
- t h e employee bu ......,...IOOI'Ciil
ever apin ret\11'11 to ~ pinl\il employmea~ tho bureau aboll poy the cOol of Ute
artificial1pphance or its repa1r out of the
surplus Ci'OCiCed ~ division (B) of Jeclion
4123.34 of the Revised Code.
In thole &lt;1101 when: 1 rehabililal1011 aorvic:a comrnUion recommendation thlt an
injunod or-IMPAIRED employee is
in nood of an onific•ll appliance would...,.
fliCI with lhoir Ollie ploD, adopled (IIUIUIIIt
10 the "Rebabililation Acl of 1973," 87 Sill.
3SS, 29 UrS.C.A. 701, the adnunisb'ltor or
liio TilE ADMINISTRATOR'S deaipee or
the bureau may obtain • recommendation
from an amputee chn1c or prescribmc
phyuc:ian that they delermme oppropnote.
(D) If an employa: - - ....,._ rnu.s applicorion tbr a finding
and
IS
FOUND TO HAVE coni!OC!ed sillcoaia u
defmed m diviaion (X), or CGOI m~non'

on _.... or

pneWilOCOIIIiolltll deflaed m divi1ion (V).

or llbeltoli1 • defined 1n-divil1• (AA) of
section 412l.61 of lho Reviled Code, and
IT IS FOUND thai 1 dtonF of auch
employee's occupation io medically odviaoble ill order 1o doc..UO subelantially further .......,..,,ilico dull, lilbeolos, or cool
dust ond if the employee, after the findini,
haa changed or shall cbange liio THE
EMPLOYEE'S oc:oup11t0n 10 an occupllioo
in which the uposure to silic1 du1t,
asbestos, or coal dust is substantially
doc:rtued,~

the employee SHALL RECEIVE an IIOOUnl
&lt;qUliiO fifty pel' cent of tho statewide aver·
qe weekly wage per ...,k for • penod of
thtny weeks, commenclna u of tho dole of
tho diaoootinuance or chanp. and tbr • pen.
od of one hundnid wed&lt;• 1mmedillely following the expirarioo .of tho period of 1h1r·
ty w o e b . . . _ _ _ , the
employee SHALL RECEIVE,II•ty·51X and
two-thirds per cent of the lou of wqea
rtOUhini-Y ond aoldy fi'om the chanac
of OCtU(lllion but not 10 exceed o -imum
of an amount equollo fifty per cent of lhc
lllleWido • ....., weekly woge per week.
No 111eh employee is emilled to receive
more than one •llowancc on account of dascontinuance of employment or change of
occupation and benefita ahall..,... for any
period durin&amp; which the employee is
employed in an occupation in which the
~IO~hcadust.~ or coal dull
is not subatantially less than the e~posure
in the occupation m which he THE
EMPLOYEE - fonnorly employed or for
ony pcnod duriDJ which tho employee may
be ~1tlcd to ret:eJVC compensation or bcnofil5 under aecrioo 4123 68 of tho Revised
Code on acc:ount of disability fi'om silicalis. asbcstosi1. or coal minm • pneurnoco-.
niOIII. An award for chanp or occupation
for a coal miner who has c:ontracted coal
miners' pneumoconiosis may be gnntcd
under th11 diVIsion even thoush M THE
COAL MINER conlinuea w employment
w•lh the....,. employer, aoloo1 u !lit THE
COAL MINER'S employment subsequent
10 the change is such that !lit THE COAL
MINER'S expoauno lei coal duat is subSIImially doc• od and a change of occupouon is conirted by the claimant u per-

------~MEDICAL

and olhcr
bencfita SHALL BE PAID TO THE
EMPLOYEE In Wltb IOCiion
412l.66 of tho Revised Code.
(E) If a fisa fig! I FIREFIGHTER or
police olftccr makes application for a findin&amp; and lho odmini.- fincla tbolht THE
FIREFIGHTER OR POLICE OFFICER hoa
coo........S aaudiov-wor and pulmonary
m-e u defined in divio1011 (W) of eocrioo 4123.68 oflbe Revised Code, and dllt
a chooie oflho •• FJ '' FIRiiFIGHT·
ER'S ,.pollco ofticer'aoccupolioa Ia mod-

ically IIi -lei doct
11110iol1y bdior - · 10 llnDke, IOxi&lt;
cbaniical - . 1111 ...... IOJ&lt;ic
._IIICI if ... I 1 lgl FIRiiPIOHT•
ER. or potioo · aflor lho fiaclill, hoa

..... ar-... ...

0«:1 pli011 lo M

iowltiditbe-10-.
lollio -c:ltomical ftnoo, .........ic:

-1

'*"""

oballollow 10 .... . . _ . . FfRE.
FIOHTEitorpolico
equal

olllcor•-

10 lilly , . -

.,. weekly w..... defiaod in divilion
o f - 412l.62 oflho R&lt;Wod

......-

of ... ·....etly.,.,. per wool&lt; for • period of thir- vided .......... dllt if lho
ty woeb, COiiililiiiCiaa u oflho - o f tho injury roceivtd or OCC1IIIIIioul
........... !bra period tint~ after IIIIUII)' I, 1976,
of ...ny-ftvo ....U immediolloly followpoymoat io sixty~·-=
·~;~~::
Ina doe oxpirodorl of tho period of lliirty ..-y
pcr-oflhomnpw
....Uiho ~-allow lho ... 10 ftceed o muilmd ._.... ........
..... FIREFIGHTER or ,PDiioe olllcer weetly c:ompa~~~tion which is equoliO
lixly-aix and two-thinllpcrcom oflho lou --weeklywqeu
of wqee ICIUhiq directly and aolely fi'om in division (C) of -oon 4123.62 of
tho chaqe of occupolion bul noiiO exceed Revised Code: provided dllt when
IIDIXimum of an IIDiiUDI equil 1u fifty per cllii'Diftt is receivina total disability
c:ealofthe -ide
per - _ No 111Ch ~ FIRE- dooth the wholly dependent poraon
FIGHTER or police oftic:er is enUded 10 hie for lho IDIXimum - b o o
receive .... tbaa ooelllowool:eoo- vided fOI' .. thio eeotion. When:
ofdilcontinuanc:e of employment or chana&lt; than ooo poraon who is wholly dependent
of oceupllion and beoellll shall cease for otlllelime oflho doalh oflho employee. tho
~ period . . . . wbicb lho ...........
admin'- of worl&lt;on' ...._..;...
FIREFIGHTER or police officer Is -~_..,. .... weekly 1111101111t
employed m .. oceupllion in which· tho of COt1ipolillrioo payable Ullder this section
. . _ . 10 ....... !OXic cbomicol ....... '!'- doporldonl ponoril • ~-i.ded
fumoa, and other IOxic vopon ia not 1111&gt;- •n dt.iol«l (D) ofdiis sc:clion.
llllllially leuthontho ........ in lhooa:u(I)The
palion in wliic:hha 1liE FIREFIGHTER OR rioo shall continue fi'om tho dote
POLICE OFFICER.,.. fonaotly ....loyed of on tqjured. IMPAIRED, or di ..bled
or tbr •Y period durincwhic:h tho.._ employee untillho dootb or mnamoge
• FIREFIGHTER or poliCe offiCer may be such dopel&gt;dent spoute. If tho dopo...,nl
entitted to receive compenution or benefltl
spouae mnarrics, • amount
unda-IOCiioo412l.68 oflho Revised Code yean ofcompenaation benefits 11 tb&lt; woeekon IIOCOIIIII of disabilitY fi'om a conliovu- ly amount determined to be opphcable
cular and puiiiiOIIII)' di10110. The odmiaia- and bl,;"' poid IO tho depondonl
•Iiiii
lrltor IJIIY accord lei the ........ FIRE- be paid in a lump oum 10 111Ch opouse
FIGHTER or police oftic:er medicol and ' no ~ compen111..n shall be paid
olhor bencfib in ICCOrdsnce with acclion such spouse.
4123.66 of the Reviled Codo.
(2) That portion o~~~.::r::;::~;
(FI An order iuued Ullder DIVISION ed in divllion (B) ofdiis
10 wholly depondenl penona other than
(Ji), (.Q), OR~ OF t h i s - II -~
able punuam 10 -uoo 4123.Sil of the
opouao shall cootinue fi'om ~ '!le:~==
Revixd Code but ia not l(lpoliable 1u court of 111 •nj'!""'. IMPAIRED, or
under eoction 4123.SI2 of tho Revised employer: 10 a dopondeni u of the dole
Code.
'
death, odJcr than I tpOUIO. II lho
Sec. 4123.$8. (A)Incueaofpermanent amount determined 10 be applicable
10111 ~IMPAIRMENT, the employ- being poid lo such depondonlolhcrlhan
ee shall receive an award to continue unlil spouse, until ha THE DEPENDENT:
hit dcmh in the amount of 1illty·11ill and two(a) Reochea oiglneen years of 111•;
thirds per cent of !lit THE EMPLOYEE'S
(b) If pursuing 1 filii time
average weekly.,..._ bul, ellcepl u oilier- propm wh1k enrolled 1n an accredited eduwise provided iD diviaioo (8) ofthilsecliOn. cation~ I inatilullon and program, reacheJ
not more than a mu:1mum amount of rwerny-five years of age;
weekly · cbmponaelion which ia equal to
(cllf menlllly or physically inc:apoc:~
siXry-aix and two-thirds per cent of lho lalCd fi'om havina any e~mmp. is no
ataleWido average weekly wage u defined longer so uapacitated.
in division (C) of section 412l62 of tho
(C) lftberoorepanly dcpendc:nt poraons
ReviiCd Code, nor not ksl than 1 minimum a11hc lime of the death
amount of weekly oomponootion whtch io is llllty-a•x and two-Utirdl per com of the
equal fD fifty per cent of the alalewido over- cmployoe 's average weekly wage, not
age weekly wage 11 defined m divilion (C) exceed 1ixty·11a and two--thirds per eenl
of IOCIIoo 4123.62 of the Rovtsed Cnde, the s11tcwidc avcrqe weekly woge u
ta~lcsstheemployee'oavcrqeweekly waac
defined in diVISion (C) of acction 4123.62
io 1011 tbon fifty per com of the statewide of the Revised Code. and shall continue
averqe weekly waae 11 the time of the
lAJUry, in which event .. THE EMPLOY- dctaminea
EE shall receive cpmpensation in an amount
(D) The fol~wina: peraonuU&lt; p~resW1ned
equal fD w THE EMPLOYEE'S avenge 1o be wholly dcpondont for their
weekly wqe. PERMANENT TOTAL upon • dcccucd employee.
IMPAIRMENT MEANS THAT THE
(I) A survivfng 1pouse who wu
PHYSICAL OR MENTAL LIMITATIONS with the employee It the time of death ot
THAT DIRECTLY RESULT FROM THE surviving spouse who was aepllltCd
ALLOWED CONDITIONS l iN THE the emploY&lt;' II the 11mc of dootb bec.i•uoe
EMPLOYEE'S CLAIM OR CLAIMS of the aggrasion of ehc employee;
PREVENT THE ~MPLOYEE FROM
(2) A child under the qe of eighteen
ENGAGING IN SUSTAINED REMU- yean. or twenty-five yean ifponu•nto
NERATIVE EMPLOYMENT. A STAFF lime educolionol'*""""' while emolled
HEI)RING OFFICER MAY CONSIDER an ~ iduc::atianal iftllitution
AN EMPLOYEE'S.J.OE INDI:TEitMIN'- '' prosrani, 01 over llllltl THAT ase If
ING WHETHER THE EMPLOYEE IS cally or mentally incapacitated from
PREVENTED FROM ENGAGING IN ina, upon only the one parent who 11
SUSTAINED
REI\IUNERATIVE lribuling 11101'0 than ono-half of the
EMPLOYMENT OR FROM ACQUIRING for 111&lt;h child and with whom l1o
THE CAPACITY TO ENGAGE IN SUs- CHILD 11.living al the tnnene~o~ftbo:;:::.::
TAINED REMUNERATIVE EMPLOY- such r-n:nt. or for whose m
MENT THROUGH TRAINING, REHA- P...,.t was kplly liable 11 !» •lime• of IOio
BILITATION , EDUCATION, OR OTHER THE PARENT'S death.
SIMILAR EFFORTS, SUBJECT TO
II " presumed that thOr. is lllftlciont
BOTH OF THE FOLLOWING:
dependency to entitle a surviving
(I) AN EMPLOYEE IS NOT ENTI- p~rcnt or survi'r'1ng natural parents,
TLED TO COMPENSATION FOR PER- and share ahke, with whom the ~~::
MANENT TOTAL IMPAIRMENT WHEN wulivinsat the time ofM death, tr
THE EMPLOYEE 'S AGE IS THE PRI- mm1mumawardof ..... AT
&lt;TI&lt;~v•
MARY REASON THAT THE EMPLOY- thou51nd dollm
EE IS PREVENTED FROM ENGAGING
The adminisb'ator may take mlo
IN OR FROM ACQUIRING TilE CAPAC· sidcntton any Circumstances which, at
ITY TO ENGAGE IN SUSTAINED l•mc of the dCrilh of the decedcn~
R~MUNERATIVEEMPLOYME~
Indicate prospective dependency on lhe
(2~ A STAFF HEARING OFFICER
of the cla1mant and potent11lsupport on
MAY DETERMINE WHETHER AN pan oflhe docodent No penon shall be
EMrLOYEE IS ENTITLED TO COMPEN- sidered a prospective dependent
SATION FOR PERMANENT TOTI\L auch """"" ia a member of the family
IMPAIRMENT WHEN THE EMPLOY- lho clcccuod employee: and bean 10
EE'S AGE IS A REASON, BUT NOT TilE THE DECEDENT tho rtlllion of~•rvi•,inl
PRIMARY REASON, THAT THE spouse, linc:1l descendanl, ancestor,
EMPLOYEE IS PREVENTED FROM brother. or sister The 10t1l award for any
ENGAGING IN OR FROM ACQUIRING Ill pro!lpecliYC clcpcndc:ncy lei all
THE CAPACITY TO ENGAGE IN SUS· .;l•nmnts, except 10 a natural parent or
TAINED REMUNERATIVE EMPLOY- ural ponmts ofthe doccaacd, shall not
MENT.
FIVE thousand dollan 10 be
•
(BI In the event the weekly
tioned among them 11 tho adnlinioilrltoor
contpelllltion amount when combined w1th
orders.
In all otherca,ses, lhe question,,..__
disability benofil5 roccivcd punuoniiO the
Social Security Act is less -the - i d e
dc:nc:y, 1n whole or in port, shall be
•venae weekly wqe as defined in division mined in accordance with the faru in
(C) of section 4123.62 of the Revised Code. particular cue exislmg 1t
then the maximum amount of wectly com· InJury resulting m the deMh
pcnution shill be the slalewidc average ce, but ... person shall be
weekly WIJC II defined In division (C) or dependent unless such person is a
S«tion412l62 oftho RovilodCode. Atony of the family oflho dooooscd employee,
time lhiiiOCialaccunty diaabilil)' bencfns bean 10 hiM THE DECEDENT the
tmniule or are reduced. the workm' oom· of survl'r'ins spoUJe, lineal dc:so:end~n~
pcnu.tion award shall be recompuled 10 pay ancestor, ., bmlhcr. . or siscer.
the maximum amount permitted under this
(E) An ord•~ iauod by~::::;,
d1viaton.
tor uDder this 8CCtion is appeallble
(C) The lou or loss ofuae ofbulh hands 10 sec:llona 4123SII 10 """ ·' "
or both arms, or bolh feet or both legs, or Revised Code
borh eyes, or of any two thereof. consri1u1es
Sec 4123.60. !Alllenofita in case
10111 and permanent ~ IMPAIR· dCIIh shall be: poid 10 IUCh one or ...,.
MENT,Io be compensated aoconling lo this Che dependents of tho decedent, for the bensection. Compenu.tion payable under this
efit of~llthe clepondems u lho odm•n,.tnsection (or permanen1 lofal ........, tor of workera' cornpenlllion detemnncs.
IMPAIRMENT 11 in addition 10 bencfil5 The tdminislrator m1y appor11on the benepayable Under dl'r'IIIOn (8) or sectiOn fits •mona the dependents m such manner
4123 S7 of the Revised Code
15 ha THE ADMINISTRATOR deems jUJI
Sec 4123 S9. 1n cue on injury 10 or an IIMI equi11blc. Poymcnt to a dependent suboccuplhonal dtacase contrac:led by an sequent in nght may be made, if the adminemployee ....,.. loio THE EMPLOYEE'S lllrator deem1tt proper, and opel'ltellO dis·
deeth, bencfill nil be in tho &amp;mourn ond ciwxc: all other claims therefor. The depento the poraono followina:
clcnll or poraon 10 whom bencfita an:
(A) If there 110 oo dependents, the dil· shall opply tho same 10 the uao of tile sevbonomenta 11om the 1111e 1nauronce fund is eral bencfH:ianes lhe...,f eccordins
limited 10 the eapense~ provided for in sec~ ....,.clive clair115 UlpllPthe dleccilontfor oouprioo 4123.66 oflho Revised Codo.
pon, in compHance wnh the finding
(B) If lho!e . . wholly dopon"'-'111 per- dn'Octionofthe odminillrllor.
..,. .... lime oflho - . .... - l y PlY"
In all - . of death where tho
denll arc a surviving 1p0111e llld one
mont lllixl)l-lill ... ..
lho._-ly...,.,buloalleie- dliklma, It IS tuffiC:;em for die IW1fiVii&gt;R
llplJIIII 10 apply 10 the aclminislrllor
• ............. llftOIIIIt of - l y
comper 1 lion which it equef tO liX'Y-tix behalfoflho lpl)UIOIIId minor children
and two-diilda per cent of the -'do .,.... - I l l tho dcpondonll ..
· - - y w • udoftned indiviaion 1 paardian or next fiiend of such
(C)of-4l:IJ.62ofthoRevisodCodo, depaidolila shall apply.
and 11111 in any...., looo than a minimum
In Ill whoJC an owonl had
wlllch Ia made oo .....,. of ICiii!JoriiY DIISA.IIIU:

._....tly...,.

,p.,....

-era·

-of

-"'weekly-...-..

~~==~~~::~.-~

.....

proceu doaclribed

induced by lho cumulorive clroct or expoED TO AN I!MPLOYill! PURSUANT TO TION, AND A SECOND WIUTTEN cwmtt aiped n:leoae lho
wbicb the dotlllitiori or on oocupal
ure 10 heal, lho itthalolion of....,.,., toxic
NOTICE
WITHIN
POR:f'{-FIVI!
DAYS
.......... ...,.w lloluco. _ . . THIS CHAI"'U POR ANY PERIOD OF
toeordo. and n:porta when requeAOd by.... tiona! is _ _.. - · 10
AFT!R
THE
FIRST
NOTICE
IS
SENT,
IF
employer.
Tho
1IJDIIIoyoi
promptly
oball
prothit
cbaplr:r
EVEN
dJouah
it
is
oa1
~fiTIMI! IN WHICII 1liE I!MPl.OYEB IS
pa~.......SIIIddueiOibo· chemical " " - and other fDlUC 1111&gt;IIIDCCI in lho per{.......,. of Ilia
ENROLLED AS A FULL- Oil I'AIIT· 1liE EMPLOYER DOES NOT RESPOND vido CO(HOI of Ill medical informodoo. cally liated ia thit -'oft.
duty~ a praumption, wliicb may
TO THE FIRST NOTICE. IP 11IE rooon!s, and n:porta 10 doe ........ and 1u the
SCHEDULE
dorlllilfllctory proof boo- modo TIMI! STIJDI!NT IN A PUBLIC Oil PRI·
be refiDed by .m.-lvo evidence,
EMPLOYER FAILS TO RESPOND TO claimantorliiolliECLAIMANT'Sn:pre[leacriplion o f - or injwy aod
VATE
COLLEGE
OR
UNIVEitSITY,
IUCb.IC1ioa, NAY ...W or poy
OC&lt;1Imll
iD the......, of and lrilint out
THE
NOTICE
WmtiN
SIXTY
DAYS
aenlalivo
upon
....-.
doocriptloo
of
procou:
INCLUDINO
A
TECHNICAL
COLLEGE
boJaaoe ofsuobaW..S1o ..,of
1iio
TIIEIR
omploymail. For lho pwpooe
AFTER
RECEIPT
OF
THE
NOTICE,
OR
(C)
If,
without
aood
cauae,
on
employ(A)
Anthru:
Handlin1
of
wool,
hair,
dejleadonla of
or for • · CREATED PUI.SUANT TO !;JIAPTER
this section. ............
renclerod oo ......,. oflho loot iiiD\os 3357. OF THJi J,EVISED !;ODE OR A IF TilE CLAIM THAT IS THE SUBJECT ee refllaoa 10 oubmit 10 ~- brittlea, hides. and okinl.
any rcplor member or • lowlullv
(B) Giandm : Cireof~oquine.,imol
or death of _ . THAT docedool. u lho COMMUNITY COLLEOE AS DEFINED OF TilE AGREEMENT NO LONGER scheduled Ullder thia1JC51fon o r - 10
cons"luled
fire ~t of 1 mU11icipoal
REMAINS
IN
THE
ACCIDENT
OR
release
or
execute
a
releue
fur
any
medical
JUfl'erina
fmm
glanden;
lwJdling
caraa
of
IN
SECTION
llS4.01
OF
THE
REVISED
odnUnitlrii&lt;Jrdet&lt;rmiao&amp;in-witll
COfJ?Oillrlon or townshtp, whether p11d or
OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE EXPERI- mfotmaboo,"""""' or Jq10rt tbal is required such onimol.
cirtumstances iD eodl- cue. If the !;ODE.
(C) Lead poiaonio1: Any industnal volunteer, and ..poll« officer" means any
(B)
lint day ofiiDIIIIY, the cur- ENCE OF THI! EMPLOYER, THE 10 be n:loased under Utia ocction 1nd
dooede1Jot wciUid have -lawfully entitled
have applied for an owonllllho lime of real mllimum iilliilthly benefit ......... AGREEMENT NEED NOT CONTAIN involvea an iuue pertinent to tbc condition proceu U'lvolvinJ: the UIC of lead or tts rqulor member of a lowllllly
pohco deportment of a municipal corpon'
provnlod in ICCiiona 4123.412, 412l.41l, 1liE EMPLOYER'S SIONATUIIE. AN alleaed in the claim, !lit THE EMPLOY- po&lt;ponti0111 or compoundl.
OiodcoCil. tho adminiatntor- after sallluon, lOwnship or county, whctbcr pflid
(D) Mc:muy poiaoolnJ: Any indUJbiol
rtc:lorvoroof 10 warnot ., owonl and pay· and 412l.414 oflho Reviled Code in injury aareement need not be aipted by ... AN EE'S riahiiO have !lit THE claim for comMAY awonl and pay an -~ not cues shall be adjusted based oo tbo Uailed employer-.....,.. WHO it ao tooecr ponlllioo or bencfita cooaldeted. ifw THE proce11 mvolvinllho ... of mercury or ib volunteer.
Thia choptercloca not entitle • 4ioooliglltexoeodiol tho ...._uoo wbicb lho doco- Stlloa . - o f lll&gt;or'l llllionol COO• doias buaincu in aia TillS STATE. If a claim is pendi"' before lho admiai.-, pnpan11001 or comp&gt;undl.
.,
FIREFIGHTER.
or pol•co ot!icer,
(E) Pbotpborouo poiaoniDJ: Any •nduamiaht have ...,.ived, bul tbr w TilE sumer price index. The pen:cnlqe iiiCIOUO slate fund employer or an employee of 1110h THE commiu•on. or a district or lilllfbeorTilE
FIREFIGHTER'S
OR POLICE
in lho - oflivittc .... tho index llpre an employer haa 1101 filed 1n applicatioo tbr in&amp; officer, or lu receive any payment for trill process involvinc the use of phospho:.lhopo'riod
pioriO
CER'S
dopendon11
10
componaer•on.
componJIIion
01'
benefita
pmoiously
JI'IDI·
rous
or
its
prepomiona
or
compounds
tb
uf w deeth, 10 ouch of lho dopen- for lho tint day of Seplomber of lho pce- I final aottlemaJI under tbio divilion. lho
ICII trcl.tmenl, or
of
(F) ArsoniC poi-.. Airy industrial
of tho -~ or for .viceo ren- oodili&amp; yOIIr llld ... lint day of Seplomher odnUeillrllor 101y file ., oppliCIIion on eel, ia lltlpolldod duri"' tho ponod of
expenaea
for
disability,
refusal
proceu:
involvtng
lbe
use
of
ltlei1JC
or
ita
oo ICOOWII oflho 1111 i l l - or doolll of tho yw precediq dllt )'W shall be behalfof lho employer or lho employoe, pro(D) No bureau or c:ommiuion employ- pr&lt;porlliona or oompouodo.
death from 1 eudiovi.SCular,
of ouch doceden~ u lho odmlnillntOr doter· IJIPiied 1u doe moxinnunl in efl'eet oo lho vided that tl(e adminillrltor live&amp; Mtice or
rt1p1r1tory di!IOII&lt;, unleu the
ee
shall
alter
any
med•col
Jq10rt
obtained
(G)
Poiaooi111
by
benzol
or
by
nitrothe
fllinc
10
tho
employer
IIIII
the
employmi001 iaacconlance with thee....,._ procedina thirty-ftnl day of December to
FIREFIGHTER
or police officer haa
from
1
health
care
providet
tho
burelu
or
tlorivatiY&lt;S
and
amido-dorivatiY&lt;S
of
benzol
ee
and
lothe
reprcseolabveofrec:ood
oftbe
...,h IUCb cue, but ouch paymenta IDlY oblainlho lnerOMe in the coat ofhvilla durooounisaionhaaaelectedorcauaeorrequest
(dmnro-benzol,
anilm,
and
olhm):
Airy
sub)octiO
DIJUftOUS
expoiUl&lt; 10
employer
and
of
tho
omployoo
immediatatnjdlltye«.
in CUCII in which 1pplicalioa
the
heallh
eare
provider
10
alter
or
change
industnal
process
tnvolvinl
the
UJe
ofbenroxie-·
c:lienncol
furnoa. IIMI other
ly
ilji011
the
filina
An
applicotion
filed
~
In
dotenninina
tho
increue
inlho
maxcompensation wu made in the rnumer
substances
in
1M
THE
a
report
The
bureau
and
commission
shalt
zol
or
nitro-derivatives
or
arnido--derivahves
.
Ute
adminiatntor
shill
COtlllin
all
of
lho
by tbll
the lifetime inonn benefits for any;- after 1972, the
buo oholl be the notioool COIISumer price mfonnat1on and sipatum required of an make~ request tbr clarificclrion of 1 heelth of benzol or ns (ll&lt;(llfltiooa or compounds. OR POLICE OFFICER'S employment 1ft
th11 1t11c preccd•na liio TilE disablement
(H) Po•soninJ by guoline, benzme,
yearaftorthedeathof- i • on the tint clay of September of the employer or 1111 employee wbo IIleo en appli- care provider's rtpOrt in wriring and aholl
OR
IMPAIRMENT, some portion of which
provide
1
copy
of
lhe
request
to
the
affect·
naphtha.
or
other
volatile
petroleum
prod·
cation
under
this
d1vision
Every
self.imur·
pro&lt;edina:yar.
Tloeinmueinthe
index
for
•njwed, IMPAIRED, or diaobled per• lho applicable twdvo-.-b period shall be io1 employer that onions into • finolaolllo- ed partica and their repi'elenlalivca at the ucts: Any industrial proem tnvolving the h11 been 1fter January I , 1967, except u
pro\'ided in d1vision (E) of section 4123 .,
111e of paohne, benzine, nophtha, or other
dolermined ...s nu be divided by the- menl agreement with an employee aboll time of making the request.
An order i~ by tho of
the Revised Code.
Sec.
412l.66.
(A)(IJ
In
addition.,
the
volatile
petroleum
products.
maal,
w1th1n
seven
ct.ys
of
exeeurina
lhe
used.
The
.........,
percen~qe
nil
be
l h i a - DIVISION io appUiable
Compensation on ICCOUnt of cardiovu·
compenulioo
provided
for
m
this
chapter,
(I)
P01511i11Dg
by
carboo
bisulphide.
Any
_
.
,
,,
o
copy
oflho
agreement
to
tho
applied
10
the
cxiltina
1111Ximums
1o
arrive
purliUID'IIO toctiooe 4123.511 of the Revised
culor,
pulmonlry, or
admin..- and the employee'•...,....... the adminillntorofwcfters' compensahOn indulbial proces.s tnvolv1ng the use of carbon
but is hot ~ 10 ooun Ullder 11 the new rnuimums..
~
FIREFIGHTERS IIMI
(C)Efl'eetivoiiDIIIIY I, 1974,andoach lahve. The adnumstraror shall place the 'ihall diabune and pay from lho alate insur- bitulphide or ns prq&gt;aranoos or compounds
oec:tion 412l.SI2 of the Revised Code.
ollken
ancc
fUnd
lho
IIIIOIUIII
tbr
medicol,
nurse,
(I)
Poi100m1
by
wood
alcohol:
Any
filii day of IIIIUII)' tholclfter, tho cwmtt ~t into tbe claimant'• file
(Ill THE DEATH OF A CLAIMANT
WHO IS ENTITLED TO PAYMENT muimum weekly benefit .,.....Ia provid- · (B) Except as provided in divisions (C) and boopilal .vlcea and mtdicme 11 ht •ndusmal procas •nvolving tho uao of por11Y lOIII disability, pormonentiOIII
a11i1i1!o IMPAIRMENT, or death. in accorUNDER A SETTLEMENT AGREED TO ed in occtiopo 4l:IJ.56, 41ll.S8, and and (D) of th11 oec:tion. a lllllement .,..oct THE ADMINISTRATOR deemo proper, wood alcohol or'" (1l&lt;(llflllons
dance With S«t1oo 4123.56. 4123 58, or
and,
in
case
dcllh
ensues
from
the
mjury
or
(K)
Infection
or1nnammation
orlhe
skm
EFFECTIVE IN ACCORDANCE 4123.59, mel divisloo(B) ofoec:tioo 4123.S7 10 under tbis section IS bindin(! lt(IOn all par412l.S9 oflho Revised Code. MediCI!, hosocc:upiiiOIIII
diaeue,
ha
THE
ADMIN
ISon
conlact
surfaces
dueiO
o•l•.
cunins
comSECTION 412l.6S OF THE of tho Revised Code aboll be adjusted hasod ties themo and as to items. injuries. and
pital, and nurs1ng expenses arc payable in
TRATOR
shall
diobunc
and
pay
from
tho
•
pounds
or
lubricanl5,
dull,
liqu1ds,
fumc:1
,
RE'IISED l:qDE DOES NOT ABATE on the 1ncreue or dec:rcue in tltc statewide occupolioool di....., 10 which tho llllleaccoolonce
With this chopter. Compensalion,
fund
reuonable
funcnl
expenses
in
an
gases.
or
vapon.
Any_.
.
.
1ndustnal
process
menlappliea.
SETTLEMENT. PAYMENT OF avenge woekly wage.
medical,
hosp1tal,
and nun•ha expenses are
11110unt
Involving
the
handling
or
usc
of
oils.,
cut(C)
No
1111101110111
agreed
10
under
divi"Statewide avenge weekly wage"
SHALL BE MADE
plflble
only
m
the
event of such dJSabtli ..
EQUAL
TO
FIVE
THOUSAND
dollon
OR
rina
compounds
or
lubricants.
or
involvmg
sion
(A)
ofthl8
oec:tioo
or
agreed
10
by
1
self·
THE DEPENDENTS OF THE DECE· ....,.. the ovmge -'ely 011rt1inp of Ill
ty,IMPAIRMENT,ordoeth
THI!
TOTAL
COST
OF
THE
FUNERAL.
contact
witb
dust,
liquids,
fumes.
gases.
or
insuring
anploycr
lnd
the
·
self~insuri.ng
OR. IF THERE ARE NO DEPEN- workcn m Oh1o employment subject fD
m e1ght yean after the last injurious eKpo-nRim; TO THE CLAIMANT'S ESTATE. Chaplcr4141 . oflho RevioodCodo 11 deter- employer's employee shall lake effect unril WHICHEVER IS LESS. The bureau of vopors.
sure;
provided that suc:h eight-year hmill.workcn'
compensation
1ball
reirnbuBC
(L)
Epithehon
cancer
or
ulccrat10n
of
the
thirty
days
after
tho
adnumatntor
opprov,.
Sec. 4123.61. The ov...,. weekly wage mined 11 of lho first dey of Sqilcmber for
tiOn does not apply lo d1S1bihty. IMPAIR·
anyone,
whether
dependent.
volunteer.
or
sk1n
or
of
the
corneal
surface
o(the
eye
due
the
settlement
for
state
fund
employees
and
on injured employee 11 the time of tho the four full colendarq- ..-.tho
fii11 day of July of each yeor, by tho admin· omployen, or oller tho self-insuri111 employ- otherwise, who ..,. the funeral expcniCS of 10 carbon. p1tch, tu, or tany compounds· MENT, or death from expo'""' - : : :
the basis upon iotriiOI' of the bunop of employment sor- " and employee sign lhc fino! IOIIloment any employee whooc: dailh.....,.. fi'om any llandli111 or induslrialuao of carbon, pnch, after January 1, 1976. In lhe aent ·
followmg conllnuous total d1sabiliry
lluring the th111)'-&lt;loy penod. the mjwy or oe&lt;upotiollll di10110 11 provided or tany compounds.
which to compute beoellta. FOR OCCU· vi&lt;es.
m this section. The adminilttator may
(M) Compressed 1ir 1llness Any •ndus- IMPAIRMENT commem:mg w1thm
The - i d e averoge weekly """e 10 employer. employee, or admintltntor, for
PATIONAL DISEASE CLAIMS, THE
years after the last IRJunous eaposure. the
AVIERAoOE WEEKLY WAGE AT TilE be used for tho~ of oompen- sute '1\md aottlemen15, and the employer or adopl rules, with the ad¥ic:c and consent of mal process carried on in compressed atr.
rcquiremem or death Wllhin eight )'CifS after
(N) Carl&gt;on dtc•&lt;ide poisoning· Any
OF DISEASE IS THE BASIS aalion for lillY Ol1i(iloyee who .-ins 1ft employee, for aolf-mtunng aottlornenb, the wotbrs' compensation ovmight comWHICH TO COMPUTE BENE- inJwy, ...... WHO DIES, ex who con- 1111y withdraw consent to OR MAY mi111on, with rapect to fumishin1 medical, process 1nvolviftB the evolution or rtSultmg the last mJunous eaposure does
Th1s chapter does 001 entitle
OBJECT TO the settl""""t by en employ· nunc, and hoap11al service and medicine 10 in the """P' of carbon dwxulc
tracts on occup~lionol diaeue WITH A
•
FIREFIGHTER
or pohcc officer. or
injured,
IMPAIRED,
or
disabled
employee&amp;
(0)
BIMI
or
zinc
poioonmg
Any
proccs&gt;
DATE OF DISEASE THAT ARISES dur· er providing written notice 10 tho emplliyTilE
depe!ulencsOF
A FIREFIGHTER OR
entitled
thereto.
and
for
the
p~yment
there·
involvins
lhc
manuracturc.
founding,
or
ing the subacquenl celendar year beaiMing er's employee ond the admin111ntor or by
POLICE
OFFICER,
to
compenllrioa, medfor.
In
cue
an
injury
or
industrial
accident
refining
of
bran
or
the
melting
or
smelting
w1th lho lint day of J...,.ry, shall be lho an employee providing written nobce to the
Ical.
hospital.
and
nursms
upenses.
that
injures
an
employee
also
cautet
dam·
of
zinc.
employee's employer and tho admin•mllor,
slllcWidc ovcrqe weekly wage 10 determent
of
funeral
expenses
for disability,
op
to
the
employee's
ey111111111,
arrifietol
(P)
Monganesc
dioxide
poisoni118:
Any
mined u of !he prior first cloy ofSepMinber or by the admiftistrltor providins written
IMPAIRMENT.
or
death
due
to a
teeth
or
other
dent\111:,
or
hearing
aid,
or
m
process
1nvolvina
lhe
pinding
or
m1lbng
of
adjusted 10 lho next higher even multiple of nohco 10 tho state fUnd employer and
vascular,
pulmonary.
or
resprratory
1
the
event
an
mjury
or
occupational
disease
manganese
diox1de
or
lhe
escape
of
man-employoo.
one dollar.
m
the
event
of
fa1lure
or
om1ssion
on
the
pll't
makes
1t
neccuary
or
ad.,.isable
to
replace,
gancse
dioxide
dust.
. (D) AI tho lime of............ 10 any final
Aoy C. .ge in benefit IIIIOUIIII il effc:cof
tho
MHigiJiar FIREFIGHTER or police
repair,
or
adjUII
!be
same.
the
burelu
shall
(Q)
Radium
poiooning·
Any
industnal
aott'-"'
oareement
under
division
(A)
of
llYI with nspect 10 inJuria IUitlined. occu..
parioool di..-. ~ IIMI dollho Una section or apeemcrn between • self: disbul$e and pay • reuonable amount to proceu involvina the use of rad•um .and officer truthfully to state, when seekmg
other nwboachve substlnces m lummous employment, the place, dw.tion •.00 nature
octuning · durin1 the calendar you for 1.....-ing employer and lho aolf-inaurina repair or replace the same.
of prev1ous employment 1n answer to an
W
IF
THE
AOMINISTRATOR
potnl
employer's
employee,
IN
CASES
IN
whiCh a d j - io modo.
.
(R)Tenosynovititandprqililellarbuni- •nqu•ryiOido by tho employer.
WHICH ONE OR MORE PARTIES TO DETERMINES THAT IT IS IN THE
In -.miniDJiho dtonge in tho IDIXi•
Befort: awarthng compcnsahon for
EMPLOYEE'S
BEST
INTEREST
TO
tis:
Primuy ICOOOynovitis chanctorirod by
THE
AGREEMENT
ARE
UNREPREmum benolill for my )'W after 197&amp;, the
ability.
IMPAIRMENT, or
SENTED, the adminiatnlor, for IIIIC 1\ind RECEIVE HEALTH CARE IN THE a passive offusiOft or c:repilua miO the ten:::~a:for
all~
mn,otll)l
-shall be t h e - * ......., weekly settlements, and the aelf-i111wing employ- I!MPLOYEE 'S HOME, THE ADMINIS- don dieoth of the lbor or ex1&lt;11sor mus- diVlSlOD, tht adminiStrator shall rcrer
shall be based • provided foi ...,. on lho filii
of September of tho
er, ror self-insuring settlements. immedl· TRATOR SHALL DISBURSE Al4D PAY clea of the hand, duero tiequc:ntly r&lt;pot•· cla1m to • qualified me~hcal spectlhst for
IMPAIRMEKT claims. precetling year.
u.ammabqn and recommendatwn
In death, permanent toll! ~
AS USED IN TillS DIVISION, "DATE lloly shall send a copy of tho a.,.......t to FROM THE STATE INSURAIIICE FUND, 11ve 1110110111 or v1brotiolll. or prq~~~tc:llat
....... 10 the d - a , the.....,. of dia·
CLAIMS1permanent par- OF' DIS!!.liSE" MEANS TilE · DA'I'E AN the indulrrial commi11ion who 1h111111ign OR THE EMPLOYEE'S SELF-INSUR- bunihs due 10 cooti- abillty
OR IMPAIRMENT. the CII1IO
JNG
EMPLOYER,
AS
APPROPRIATE.
(S)
Chrome
ulceration
of
the
skin
or
~ IMPAIRMENT claima, and
OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE IS FIRST tho ma1tc:r 10 a staff hearing officer. The s1111'
dealh,
and
other med1cal qucsttons
SHALL
PAY
THE
AMOUNTS
NECES·
..
sal
passages:
Any
mdustrlll
procds
hearina officer shall determine~ withtn the
~:=~~~~o~f~eommao cloima, tho DIAGNOSED BY A LICENSED PHYSI- time
nected
with
lhc cla1m A_...., FIRESARY
FOR
IN-HOME
HEALTH
CARE,
Involving
1hc
usc
of
or
d1rc&lt;l
contact
Wilh
limitations speeJfaed in division (C) or
or the docedent'sa- wook- ClAN, OR FOR AN OCCUPATIONAL
FIGHTER
or
poliCe offiW shall submit to
INCLUDING
THE
COST
OF
SERVICES
chromic
acid
or
bichromatos
oflmmonoum.
procedi"' the injury or- .OIS~E · DESCRIBED IN DIVISIONS th1s section. whether the settlement agru..
such
cxammatums.
1ncludmg climcallnd x·
NECESSARY
ON
A
CONTINUOUS
potassium.
or
sodiW11
or
their
prq~~~rllions
.
A:::.CI~~ (4) THitOUOH (M) OF SECTION menttsorllnot~
ray eummat10ns, as the
BASIS,
UP
TO
AND
INCLUOING
(T)
PotasSium
cyamclc
po15omng
Any
,.
OF di...., ...... 11 lho weekly 4123.68 OF TilE ~VISED tODE, OR -CLEARLY UNFAIR. If tho Iliff hear·
1ng ofticer cletemnnes within that t1me pen- TWENTY-FOUR HOURS A DAY, PRO- industri1l pmcoss 1nvolvmg the u10 of or requires. In 1he event that a
upon which ctlllipetilllio shall be OTHER OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE
FIREFIGHTER or police offioc:errtf••scs
. In ucorllining the avenge ...,kly THAT RESULTS FROM EXPOSURE TO od tbat the aerdemem ._....., is clouly VIDEO THAT THE ESTIMATED COST dn..ct _,with potassium cyamde
subm1t
to CJtlmlnatlons, mcluchng
(UI Sulphur d10•iclc poisomng Any
unf11r, the staff hoanng offiCer shall iSIUC OF THAT IN-HOME HEALTH CARE
for tho year pmoious 10 lho inj~ or FIBROSIS, PRODUCINO OR TOXIC
and
•
·
111¥
ex.~mmahons, after notice
DOES NOT EXCEED THE ESTIMATED •ndustnel process 1ft which sulphur diOxide
dole
DUSTS. FUMES , MISTS, VAPORS, on on1or dJIIIpprovi"'lho settlement agreerht
adminiSfrltor.
or m the event lh1t
OF di...., ....... any penod of GASES, OR LIQUIDS, OR OTIIER TOXIC ment. If the mffhearing officer dclcmunos COST OF RECEIVING THE NECES- gas is evolved by the expansion of liquid
cl11mant
for
compenwron
for death
"';:!:':.:"~ due 10 siclmeu, industrial MATERIALS. OR A COMBINATION OF that the Jettlemcnl agreement is not clearly SARY HEALTH CARE OUTSIDE OF sulphur d10xide
lh1s
diV1S10f1
farls
to
produce
(VI Berylliosis Beryllios" II1CIII5 a diS·
do
smko, lockout. or olhcr caUJe TIIDSE, THE DATE Til AT THE EMPLOY· unfair or failt 10 act within those rime hm· THE EMPLOYEE'S HOME. A DETERAents and pcmnts. after nottee from
MINATION
MADE
UNDER
DIVISION
...,ofthelunpcouaedbybreothingberyi1ta,
the
.et~1emcnl
is
lf'pro'Yed.
the employ.. '&amp; conlrOl nil be EE FIRST MISSES WORK AS A RESULT
administrator,
50 that suc:h autopsy
(E) A ..Uiemcnl enlcrcd infO under this (A)(2) OF TillS SECTION IS APPEAL- lium in the form of dust dr fumes. produc·
oliminau.cl.
OF TilE OCCUPAnONAL DISEASE.
rfltion
and
tests
may be performed, lhen all
In cues when: there ""' opec1al cirSec. 4123.64. (A) The adminiatrator of section 11'11)' pertain to one or more claims ABLE PURSUANT TO SECTION ing characteri51ic changes '"tho lungs and
ngh15
for
compensation
on: forfcnc:d
CIDIIIIaloc:"underwhtchtheovenge-k- wodcm' compenulion, unda- opec111 cir- of a claimanl, or one or more parts of 1 4123.511 OFTHEB.EVISED!;ODE BUT demonstrated by x-ray commotion, by
IS NOT APPEALABLE TO COURT biOpSy or by autopsy.
ly wage cannot jUIIIy be detcnnined by CUIIIJIItiCel, llld when the •me il doomed claim, or tbe compensation or benefiu per·
UNDER SECTION 4123.512 OF THE
Thischepler00e51101enlllleanemploy- and the elpenle!i of eummat10n and
tainang
to
either,
or
any
combination
there·
applyi"' this oec:tioo, tho odministrahW of advisable for tho pu111010 of rendering the
B.EVISED
!;ODE.
ee
or
!lit TilE EMPLOYEE'S dopcndenta shall be paid, 1ftheclllm ~allowed,
workcn' componaaboa, in ddormininalho mjilied,IMPAIRED, or disabled employee of. pro\1ded that nothina an dns sect10n shall
tllley
(B)(
I)
If
an
omployer
or
1
wolfon:
plan
10
compensation,
medic• I lmitmenl. or oft he cxpenaoa oflho claim.
be mterpreted 10 require a claimant to enter
.avorqo weekly wqe m 111&lt;h caa, shall finllieW relief or for lho purpose of furshall
be
plicl
f"!"'
the
surpiUl
fUnd.
haS
provided
10
or
on
behalf
of
an
employ·
payment
of
funeral
expenses
for
drYbihry.,
method u wiU onob1e 1iiM THE
therinallit THE EMPLOYEE'S JChobll•ll· 1nto 1 Httlemcnl apmcnt for every claim
(X) Silicosis: S1hC011S means a d"S&lt;Il"'
ADIIIINISTIRATOR 11ode -~~ jusllco lion, IDly commute poymems of com pen- that hubeen filed w1th lhe bureau of work· ee any benefits or compensa1ion for 1n IMPAIRMENT. or death from berylliosis of the lungs camed
sil•e1
mJury
or
occupational
d1scae
and
that
unless
the
employee
has
been
subjected
to
tho clai1011ta, PROVIDED THAT TilE
1111on or beoefita 10 ooe or more lump-sum en' compensation by tkal cla1mant under
{SIItcOn
dioxide)
I
tnjury
or
occup~llonal
d1~ta~e
11
dctemtined
1njurious
exposure
to
bcryll1um
dust
or
Chaptcr4121 , 412l.4127 , or4131 oflhe
SHALL
NOT payments
compomoblc under thiS chapter. tho employ- fwnoo m 1iio THE EMPLOYEE'S employ- d1slnbuled lhrouglllflc lungs and ClcmiOII·
Rcv1sed Code:.
THE AVERAGE WEEKLY
(B) The odminiotrator shall adopt rul,.
(f) A aottlomcnt entered mlo under thiS er or a welfare plan may request lhal t1w: ment m th1s state prcccd1ng Me THE stnted by Jt-ray ex1mma1ion, by biopsy
FOR OR COMPENSATION
which ad forth lho policy for owanlinglump
'
seetion is no1 IJ)pelllble under i«hon admimslnilor rtimbunc the employer or EMPLOYEE'S d•soblemonl OR IMPAIR- by IUfopsy.
AV.•ARDED TO A CLAIMANT PUR- sum poymenl5. The rula shall:
(Y)Coal
minen'
pneumoconiosiS:
(I) Enwnerole lho allowable porpoaet 412l.Sll or4123.S 12 oflho Revised Code. welfare plan for the amounlthe employer MENT and only m the event of such d1J. m1ners· pneumocontolil,
sw&lt;N·tTO THIS CHAPTER f1)R ANY
(lil FOR PURPOSES OF DETER- or welfare plan paid lo or on behalf oflhe 1bihty, IMPAIRMENT,"' dooth rtoultmg
PERIOD OF TIME IN WHICH TilE for poymcnll and the cooditiona tbr makrercncd to u "bleck luna disease,"
MINING
WHETHER A PARTY IS employee m compenY!hon or benefits. T1le Within eight )'CII'S 1fter ilhe last mJunous
CLII.IM.~NliS ENROLLED AS A FULL·
ina such owanto:
ms
from woriun&amp; m the coal mine industrv
UNREPRESENTED AS SPECIFIED IN admmislnilor nil rennburae lho tmiploycr ..,.....; provided ..... IU&lt;h e;p-ycar limOR PART·TIME STUDENT IN A PUBLIC
(2) Enumenle lho -imum reduction
and italiondooanoupplyiOdillbility.IMPAIR- and
DIVISION (Q) OF TillS SECTION, A or welfare plan for the
to exposure to~~:,"::~::!,:~
ORPRIVATECOLLEOEOR UNIVERSI- in~ ollowoble;
dust, ..,., clcmonlrftled by ....~
benefits
po1d
if,
11
tho lime the employer or
MENT,
or
death
fi'om
expoaurt
oc:currln1
PARTY
IS
CONSIDERED
REPRESENTTY, INCLUDING A TECHNICAL COL(l) s - t h e - nee·
ED ONLY IF TilE PARTY HAS TilE SER· welfare plan provide!~ the bcnefltl or com· after January I, 1976 In the e'tcnt of death lion, biopsy, au109SY or other medical
LEGE · CREATED PURSUANT TO · 01111Y 10 IWCilll I~ payment:
pensation to or on behalf of employee, the followmg coollnUOUJ IOtll disabihty OR clm1cal teas.
CHAPTER 33S7. OF THE REVISED
. (4) RequiR that all clte&lt;ka in&lt;lode the VICES OF ONE OF THE FOLLOWING
injury
or occuporional disease had not been IMPAIRMENT commencing wilhon eight
OR A COMMUNITY COLLEGE clai.-••payee, exccptwbactheeheck PERSONS:
EMPLOYEE'S
detemunod
to be compensable under this yean after the last mJunoul exposure. the ocorllit
(I) AN ATI'ORNEY ADMITTED TO
DEFINED IN SECTION 33S4.01 OF IS for the poymenl of llllomey's fon m
to
eompensanon.
·mediul
chapter
and
1fthe
employee
wu
no1
receiv·
ft!Quireme:nt
of
dealh
wilhin
e1aht
years
1fter
REVISED !;ODE.
ICCOidonce with oection 4121.06 of the TilE PRACTICE OF LAW IN THIS STATE:
ing
eompens~tion
or
bendiiS
under
thiS
the
lui
InJurious
exposure
does
not
apply.
(2) A OULY AUTHORIZED REPRE·
A DETERMINATION MADE BY THE Revised Code, in whtch cue the onorney
IMPAIRMENT, or dCIIh from
Before awardma compcn•rion for pu·
ADIIIINIISTRAl'OR UNDER THIS SEC- shall he nomod u the only pay« on lho SENTATIVE OF AN EMPLOYEE ORGA- chapter for lhat inJury or occuparionll d1s..
asbestosiS, OI'COII minen'
ouo.
The
admimltrllor
shall
rtimbunc
the
ual
or
lOIII
diSolnhtyOR
IMPAIRMENT
or
NIZATION RECOGNIZED BY THE
unleu the employee has been subJect 10
n,~~~~::~~;~·~~B~~
PURSUANT TO check:
&lt;I
4123.SII OF THE REVISED
(S)Requirtol\tlly.,_leledandc:urmil EMPLOYER FOR COLLECTIVE BAR- employer or wolfm plan m tho amount dllt deadl due 10 beryllios11,1ho admm111n1or of uuunout exposure to stlka dust (sd..:on
the administtator would haw: p11d to or on
workers' compenAtion shall rerer lhe cla1m
GAINING PURPOSES:
BUT IT IS NOT APPEALABLE apphCIIion tncllldinJIIOIII)I and 101!: and
behalf
of
tho
employee
under
lh11
cllaplcr
10
o quohfied modicol opec••hst for oum•- 4io•ide~ ubestos, or coal dust m ""THE
(3) A PERSON REGULARLY
COUR:T UNDER SECTIQN 4123.Sil
(6) Spoc:i!i' procedurcs to make a
EMPLOYEE'S emrloyment in this SIBle
lf
the
injury
or
occupational
diteUC
ori&amp;l·
nation
and recommendation widl reaard to
ENGAGED IN THE BUSINESS OF Pj!.OTHE REVISED !;ODE.
claimant owaro oflho teduct1011 in amount
procedtng
w THE diaoblcmcnt OR
VIDINO WORKERS' COMPENSATION· nolly would hove been determined com· thedi~lhoextontoflhodillbilityOR
AS USED IN THIS SECTION, "DATE of compeMIIiorl which will .......
IMPAIRMENT,
oomc por11011 oh~icho h.u
penaablo under this chxpm. lfthe employ- · IMPAIRMENT, the nature of the diaabih·
DISEASE" MEANS THE DATE AN
(C)An"'*"oftheodm•nllliiiOI'IUued REI:ATED SERVICES TO EMPLOYERS:
been
after
Ol:lober
12, 194S.
(4) AN EMPLOYEE OF THE SELF· er is 1 merit-rated employer, lho odm•nia- ty OR IMPAIRMENT, whelher ,..,.,_.
OOCUP'ATIIONIIL DISEASE IS FIRST under lhio- is
~ lu
INSURING EMPLOYER WHOSE JOB lntor ohall adjUII the 1111011nt of pmn1um or -.porory, tbo ._of dollll, and olhcr
DIAGNOSED BY A LICENSED PHYSI- 41:1l.m of tile llcvited Codo but
OUTIE~
OR RESPONSIBILITIES ftftt due fnlm tho omployer occonlina .,.... modical quail'"" IX1II110Cied with lho claim.
OR FOR AN OCCUPATIONAL io not ._loblt 10 court . - , . 10C11011
Compensation on tcc:ount of
INCLUDE
PARTICIPATION IN THE amount the adminilllltor poya tho employ- An employee aholl oubmil 10 IIUCh exam~
DISEASE DESCRIBED IN DIVISIONS 4123.SI2 oflho Reviood Code.
asbestosis, or coal mmm '
cr.
The
tdnnmstraror
shall
adopt
rules.
in
nanona.
Including
clinicll
and
•·ray
nam·
(4) THROUGH (AA) OF SECTION
Sec. 4123.63. (A) A lllle fund employ- ADMINISTRATION OF THE SELF·
ac:conlonccwithChlpl&lt;f 119 oflho Revised •niiHIIII,Mihoodmin.-orrequila. ln t,hc lf'C payable 011ly 10 rhe evmt
412~ 68 OF THE ~VISED CODE OR
01'orlhoemployeeofoudunemployer1111y INSURING EMPLOYER'S .WORKERS'
10111 disability, pertiiiiiCIM 10111
Cnde, 10 unplernont thiS dim1011.
event dllt an employoo refuael 10 lllbmitiO
OTHER OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE file Ml applicolion with lho odmlni- of COMPENSATION PROGRAM .
IMPAIRMENT, or death, in
(2)
AI
used
in
thia
division.
"welfare
oxamillllloos,
iadudin&amp;
clifticol
and
Sec. 4123 .651. (A) The employer of I
TIIAT RESULTS FROM EXPOSURE TO workers' con_.rion for ..,..,... of a
wiiii!ICCIIOns 4123.56. 4123.Sll. and 412l.S9
plan"
hu
the
11me
maaina
u
1n
div1S1on
exam1Mrioftl.
tfter
notice
tom
rhe
Hmm-.
FIBROSIS-PRODUCING Oil TOXIC
finollclllemet)t of a claim under this chap- clainwit who 11 injured, IMPAIRED, or dioof the Revised Code. Med~t~l , hospital, 1nd
111r0tor, or 1n lho event thatl clain11n1 for
DUSTS, FUMES. MISTS, VAPORS, tcr. The "'ll'licohon ohall include the lillie- abled in the eoune of M THE . (II of29 U.S.C.A. 1002.
nul'1ing cxpcn!ICii an: pl)'lble1n ICCordance
Sec.
4123
68.
Every
employee
who
11
oorn(1C1111Uon
for
dootb
du&lt;
10
berylliosis
GASES, OR LIQUIDS, OR OTHER TOXIC mont-~ AND EXCEl'!' AS 0111- CLAIMANT'S employment may requin:,
wnh th1s chapter Compcnsatioo, mccbcal,
MATERIALS. OR A COMBINATION OF ERWISE PROVIDED IN THIS DIVI- without tho approval of the admtnilllltoror disabled OR IMPAIRED because of tho foilatoproducc.......,.....-andpor· hosp1t1l . snd nurstna eapcnsos ~
contraction
of
111
oc;cupetional
dl!eae
or
the
nuts,
after
notice
from
the
1dnunistrator,
so
TIIOSE, THE DATE THAT TilE SION, he llpted by the oloimant ond 1he incluMrial commission. that the clamllnl
onl) tn the C:'o'Cnt of such di511biloity,
thet such 11110p1y cuminolion and lOlls may
CLAIMANT FIRST MISSES WORK AS A employer, and clearly Ill tbrtb the circum- be examined by a physic ion of tho employ- dependent of 111 employee whose death "
IMPAIRMENT, or death IOIUirin&amp; within
Clltled
by
oo
..
.
,
.
.
d.-.
il
enribe
pa
IOrmed,
...,
Ill
ripu
for
componer'a choice one time upon any IIIUC ISICft·
RESULT OF TilE OCCUPATIONAL DIS- - b y , _ &lt;Jiwllidilbe fWO(IOIIXhot·
ci1ht
yean after the Lui injuriout exposure,
lled
10
doe
compenaatioe
provided
by
lllion
.
.
fortl:iled.
The
r
rMble
comII doonlocll I ollie aod iltoldtt ~ ed by the eJ1191oyoe or a phyliciaa of lho
EASE.
provided
tbaltUch ·-~limitation­
lion&amp;
412l.SS
10
4l:IJ
.59
...
4lll.66
of
the
penution
of
IUclt
apecillilr
and
the.....,...
Scc.4123.6l. (A)Ifitll-iobadlhll ~ea ..... 10 lho...,. of the l&lt;ltlemtnt employee'• choice or which It 10 be con·
not apply 10 d•aab•lity, IMPAIRMENT,
Rev~sed
Code
1111hjc&lt;t
10
lho
morlitlcotioru
ea
of
txlllilnlbonl
and
leSU
shall
be
paid,
an injured.. IMPAIRED, or W
employ· IJIRement •a: · iJ i list ••· A aidered by the commiuioo. Any tUnher
death oc:c:um111 all&lt;r January I, 1976,
of ouch qe and experience when CLAIMANT MAY FILE AN APPLICA- req110111 fiJr medical OIWillftllionS nil be relati"' to ~ d i - contained iftho claim it allowed, u pott of the expons- further provided that such eilht·year
in this chapter. An"'*" oflho admintlln· aofthecllllft, otberwioe IIIey shall be poid
.tnJU""" IMPAIRED. or dioobled 11 thai TION FORAN AGREEMENT WTfHOUT made to lhe tommiui&lt;:Jn which shall con·
tor
iauod Ullder lhia il -lable ftvatlho surpl111 fund.
condiliooo w THE AN EMPLOYD'S SIGNATURE. IF A aider mel rule oo the requai.•Tba employr.:;:;~~.~:'~ ubatoois- .
Pnr-I0-4123.sll
...
412l..!ll
(W)C.di&lt;iiiiCUlor, pol!l-y, or..,.. In tile event •
iniCLAIMANT I'JLII AN ACIIt£EMENT rtoltallpoytbo10111 disability OR IMPAIRMENT
oflho Revised Codo
pirotory d i - iiiC11rRCI by 1\ra F;
WITHOUT AN IMPLOYI!lt'S SIGNA- tiuoct liy the employ&lt;r.
The followin1 d ' - 11&lt; ....,,.,........ FIREFIGHTERS or police oftic:ers follow- menc1n1 ..1thm ets,ht years •ftcr the
(B)Thehlnouof-n' WI4 •·
TURE. AND TilE EMPLOYER STILL IS
ri'"' oball ...,... 1 form for lho . . - of 11 d i - mc1 C&lt;llllpdlilble .. tuciJ wheli ina expooure 10 beet. 111101:c, aoxic - . injUI10WI-. the '"''"oire~nontof,doalth
DOING BUSINESS IN 11IIS STATE, TilE
Within eiahl yoen oll&lt;r the 1111 injuriouo
-~....
.....
. tho-·-~f ~colt\aneaandolhcriOl&lt;icouliollncea :
ADMINISTRATORSHALLSENDWitiT- modical infonnotloo. toeordo, and n:porta
cu...yee m - - ·
-·
.........
-not apply.
reap~
rellbve to the aMUa nee ·ry for lbe the employment in wbich IUCh ~ Aoy
TEN NOTICE OF THE APPLICATION
FIREFIGHTTO 1liE EMPLOYER IMNilDIATELY odmin- of 1 claim Ullder thit diop- .,.. ...raolmd duo 10 t h e - of~ lory eli-. of I •• lgl

::=
:
doe_,_

On-

""""''"led

~~~~~=~

reap--,

_..,.1.

l

•Y

~

•areemm•

olho"'"'·"'

..,.,_.lion

due

poyrnontoffunc:role•pcnoes

.,..loble

.-..y

1.._,.

tation-

or..,. ...........

con--., an

-

·..,._,or

•

'•

-. -

--••
•
•
•

••

-..
•
•
•
•

..

�and
ex-. or ptlyment of l\mmol
expeiiiCI for dlaabih~ IMPAIRMENT "'

"' compenJIIion, modieal, Jx.pital,.
Dlltllfli

dul: o s1hcot11. ubeltoiil or coal
..,;,...,.'ptiCIIItiOCOIIIOBR ntheeventolthe
or cmtiiKMl on the part of the

when
::~::~:~~to
the plato, .....
duraboo,
and!OCkins
nature
previOUS employment n .nswer 10 a
made by !be employer

--·
eompetllltton
REQUESTEO
for11/liEN
disab hty
IMPAIR
or death due to s hcos1s ubestoor coal mmers pncumoco11101 s 1hc
adininistnllor ahall dar MAY DETER

WHETHER THERE IS SUFFI
LIKELIHOOD THAT ANY OF
TUo'« DISEASES EXISTS CAUSES
OR IMPAIRMENT OR
DEATH TO WARRANT

except d1lt
(A) An employee who 11 blinollllly watve
the ............. that may become dua liiM

TO THE EMPLOYEE f0&lt; tnJwy IMPAIR
MENT or d sabil ty m _ , whole the
IIJ"'Y IMPAIRMENT or disabi~ty may be
directly caused by or due toliiolliATbl nd
.... The admltllltrator or wortcn com
penunoa, With the adv ce and &lt;OtiSC!It of the
workm compenw1on oven aht commll

' on

D\1)'

adopt and enforce rules govern ng

the employment of sucn penon! Mid the
tnspecuon of their places of employment
(B) An employee may wave hit THE

EMPLOYEE S nshts to compensa on o
benefits as authonzed punuan o d v S10n

(CX3) of sect on 4123 01 OR SECTION
iUlJ.1 of the Revised Code
No agrc:emau by an employee to pay
aoy pornon of the prem um pa1d byltio THE

EMPLOYEE S employer nto the

state

nsurance fund s val d
Sec 4123 82 (A) All controcts and
aSJCCmenl$ Ire VOid Wh Ch un4ertake tO
indc:mn fy or nswe an employer IJIIRSI
loss or I 1b I ty for the payment of com
pensauon to workers or the r dependents for
death njury or occupauonal d scase oeca
s oned m the course of the workers employ
ment. or wh ch pro't' de that the nsurer shall
pay the compensa on Df wh ch ndemn fy
the employer aga nst damages when the
nJury d scasc or death anses from the fa I
ure to comply w th any lawful requ ement
for the prolec on of he !1vc:s hea lh and
safety of emplo)'ees or when he same s
occas oned by thew llful act oftheemp oy

er or any of hio THE EMPLOYER~ offi

Cia ms for compensalton and benefiiS
1o radiation llness ue payable only n

event death. IMPAIRMENT o d 1
occurred w th n e ght years after the
11JunOUs exposure prov1ded that such
eighl·)&gt;ear hm tanon does nor apply to d s
abiliity.IMPIIIRioiE~IT, ordeioth llun expo.
sure occumn1 after Januar) I 1976 In the
evenl of death rollow ng cont nuous d sabd

ty OR IMPAIRMENT wh ch com

menecd w th n c ghl )leaB of the ast nJu
nous exposure: the requ reme:nt of death
w 1h n c: ght yean afte the last nJunous
expo:ISure does no&lt; apply
(AA) A..sbestos1s Asbestos s means a
di•=' .,.,!sed by nhalat on or tngesl on of
asbestos demonstrated by x ny examina
tlon b opsy autopsy or other object ve
mediCal or cl n cal letts
All cond lions resblc:t ons I m at ons
other proVWIODi of dril secuon. wUb n:f.
ro he pt~yment of compenAbon or
benefitsonaccountofathcos sorCGII m n
ers pneumocon os s apply to the payment
of compensation or bcnetiiS on IeCount of
any other occupa1101111 d seue of llnapnrory trKt mrulbng from nJurtOI.lS exposum to duM
The refusal to ptoduce the necessary
and pcmntl for autopsy exam na
and
rc&amp;Lih n forfeiture
provuled the admmlStrator
refusal was the resull of bona
rehs ou1 conv C1 ons or 1e1eh1ngs to
whtch lhe clamaant for compensat on
adhered pnor to the death of the decC&lt;Ient
Soc .. 12370 Nocompensahonshallbe

cers or agents or by wh ch s agreed that
the nsurer shall pay any such damages No
I cense or authonty to enter nto &amp;n)l such
agreements or ssw: any such po c cs of
nsurance shall be granted or ssued b)' an)'
publac authonty m th s state Any corpora
1011 organ zed or adm ttcd under the laws
ofth s sta e to lnlnsact I ab hty nsurance as
defined n sect on 3929 0 I of the Rev1scd
Code may by amendmen of s an cles of
mcorporal on or by ong nal an c es of ncor
porat on prov de here n fo the 1ulhonty
and purpose to make nsurancc n states tcr
ntoncs d stnciS and counties other than lhc
sla e of Oh o and n the state of Oh1o n
respect of eontrac s pennmed by d1v1s1on
(8) of lh s sect on ndemn fy ng employ
crs agams loss or abthty for payment of
compensa on 10 workers and employees
and lhe r dependents for death nJUI)' or
occupat onal d seasc occastoned n the
course of the employment and to nsure and
n~emn fy employers a1a nst loss expc.,.!lSC
and hab hty by nsk of bod ly nJUI) or death

by ace den

d sob I ty

IMPAIRMENT

s ckneas or d sease suffered by work.en and
employees for wh ch he employe may be
I able: or has assumed I ablllt)'
(8) Notw thstand ng d VIS on (A)ofth s
sect1on
(I) No contract because of ha d v a on
s vo d wh ch undertakes to ndemn fy a
self. msunng employer aga nst all o part of
such cmplo)'er s loss n e~tcess of at leas
fifty thousand dollan from any one d sas
cr o event ans1ng out ofthc employer s I 1
b I ty unde lb s chap er but no nsurance
corporat on tMM d rec ly or nd1rectly
SHALL represent an employer n the set
tlemenl adJUdlcat on de1erm n111on
allowance or paymen1 of cia ms The
sbperin endent of nsurance shal enfon:e
hts proh b on by such d !It pi nary onlenl

directed aptnSt the offcndtng nsurance cor

porahon as the: supcnntcndenl of nsuranec
deema appropnatc an the c: n:urnstancet and
lheadm n stralorofworkcrs w;ompensal on
shall enforce th 1 proh b t op b)' &amp;UCh d s
c1pl nil)' orders d1rtetcd ag1 nsl the ofTerMJ
ng employer as the adm1n1s1rator deems
appropnate n the c n;umstanc:es wh ch
orders may nc:lude re't'ocat on of the nsur
ancc corporation s nJhl o en er n o ndcm
mty contracts and re't'ocauon of the cmplo)'
er s status as a self. nsunns employer
(2) The admmnnrator may enter nto •
awlmlc:clonaccountofdtuh hty IMPAIR
contract
of ndemnny w th any such
or death liom d scu&lt; suffered by
employer
upon
such terms payment of such
employee who arlhe t me of entcnng
prem
um
and
for
such amoun and ronn of
inu&gt;tll&lt;: emJ&gt;IollfiiC"'Ilun wh~&lt;h the d1seue
ndemn 1y as the adrn n stra or dcterm ncs
• cla1med 10
mulled w llfully and
and he adm n strator rna)' procure re nsu
falsely represented~THE EMPLOY
EE as no hav na pre't' ously suffered from ance of the llabd ty of he publ r and pn
ouch d seue Compen"" on shall not be nte funds under th s chapter o any part of
he hab I )' n ~ped of c thcr o bolh of
aw•trdcd
on account orbolh IRJUI) and d !'iO
1
the funds upon such erms and prem urns
eKeept when he d sab I t)' OR
or othe paymcniS from the fund or funds
IMI~AIIIMI;NT IS couocd by • d Jeasc and
as the admm stra or deems prudent n the
mJUI')' n whtch ewnt the lldm n strator
workers compenur on may apport on ma ntenance of a solvent fund o funds from
yea to year When mak ng he nd ng of
compenllt on prov ded fo
4123 56 o 4123 59 of the fac wh ch 1he adm n mator s rcqu red by
sect on 4123 35 of he R v sed Code to
Code between the funds as m M
ADMINISTRATOR S JUd¥ment make w h respctllo the financ a ab I ty of
an employer: no contract of ndcmn ty or
JUst and proper
he ab lsy of lhe employe o p ocurc 5uch
If an employee 1 su1Tenn8 from boch
:;::~,~;; and an IRJUI) and th(: a contract. shall be cons dcrcd as ncrcas
can detcnn DC WhiCh S CIUS
ng lhe fi nane a ab y or h mplo)'cr
Sec 4123 &amp;4 (A) In all cases of nJury
'"8 Ilia TilE EMPLOYEE S d sob Itt) OR
or
dearh
cia ms for compcnsa oo or ben~;
IMPAIRMENT the adm n stn o ahall pay
fi s ro the spec; fK: part o parts of the body
thcrefo from the prope
nJured shall be fo~ver barred un css w h
n rwo )ICirs. after he nJUf)' or dea.h
Compcn111Jon for loss wsta ned on
(I)Wnttenno cot hcspccficparto
eccounr of oca;:upat on1l d scasc by an
employee rncnt oned n d VIS on (A)( I) or parts of the body cia mcd to haVe been
nJured has been made o he ndustnal com
secbon4123 01 of heRe..,. sed Code orlhe
dependents of IUCh employee shal be patd m ss on or he bUreau ol work :n compcn
from the fund prov dcd fur n sect ons sahon
(2) ~ employe w lh knowledge of a
41233S to 41234 ond 41234M of the
cia med compcnsabh: nJury or occupat1gn...
ReviaedCode
Compensanon for loss sus a ned on al d scase has I" d wagl:ll n I cu of com
penutton for otal d sab I ty OR IMPAIR
accounl of 1 d1SC11C by an employee men
110ned nd va on (AX2) of sect on 4123 01 MENT
(3) In lhe event he employe 111 setr
of the R"' sod Code or the dependents of
nsunns emplo)ler one oft he followmg hu
the employee shall be poid from he occu
pononol disaae fund or by the employer of occurred
(a) Wnnen not ce ofthc spec ftt part OJ
the employee flbeemptoyer ouelftnsur
parts of the body clanncd to have been
ma employer
Se&lt; 4123 80 No ~&amp;~cement by an mJured hu been g~ven o M comm1ss on
&lt;lltf&gt;loy•.,towOiveltioTHE EMPLOYEES or bureau or the emplo)lcr has fum 1hed

:

--

employ of ID eonplo~ pcoviclod, ......,.
et d1lt !be filmilbiaa of IUCb -~ llhaU
not COOibtute a secop1bc. of a claim u

"""V"......., bulllhall do no mon: thon ut
11fy !be JOC!Uuemetltl ofthiJJOCttOn

m-

(b) C&lt;&gt;mpetult1011or beoefits ha.. bCcn
paid or filrnisbed equal to or......,. thon 11

ror

4123 52 412355
and 4123 64 to 4123 67 of the
Revti!Cd Code PROVIDED THAT THE
PAYMENT OR FURNISHING OF THE
COMPENSATION OR BENEFITS
SHALL NOT CONSTITIJTE A RECOO
NITION OF A CLAIM OR ANY CONDI
TION IN ACLAIM AS COMPENSABLE
THAT PAYMENT TljAT COMPENSA
TION OR THOSE BENEFITS SHALL
DO NO MORE THAN SATISFY THE
REQUIREMENTS OF THIS SECTION
(4) Wnncn nonce of dc:tth has bCcn
g ven 10 the eonun u10n or bureau
(B) The bureau shall pro\'tdc pnnted
pro"'ded

to 4123 62

not1ccs quotmg n full d1v 110n (A) of th 1
sectaon and every self. nsunns employe
shall post and mamta n at all t mes one o

more of the notiCes m conspacuous places

n the workshop or plocea of employment
(C) The oomm ss pn has con nums

Junsdl&lt;t on u set fonli n sect on 4123 52
of the Rev sed Code over a cia m wh cb
meets the requ rement of llus sect on
nclud ns JUnsd ct on o award compensa

uon or benefits for loss or mpa rment of
bod ly lim&lt;IIOns developtn8 n a pan or pam
of he body no spec1fied punuant to d v
son (A)( I) of h s sect on 1flhe comm1,.
son finds that the loss or mpaonnent ofboddy funct ons was due lo and a result of or
a n::s1dual of the nJury to one of the parts

of the body set fonh n 1hc wnnen not cc
filed pursuant to d v1s on (A)( I) ofth s s«
I on.
(D) Any cla1m pend ng before he
adm n strator the comm ss on or acoun on
Qecember II I%7 n wh cb the remedy s
affected by th s sect on s governed by th1s
sect on

(E) NOIW tlutlnding the requ remen

that the nobce requ red to be: a ven o the
bureau eommiSSIOO. or employer under th 5
sect on s to be n wnt ng the bureau may
accept ass gn a c a m number and process
a no ce prov dcd by any method of el«om
mun cat on lmmcdWely upon rcce p1 oftlu:
telccommumcated not ce the bureau Shall
send a wntten nonce to the employer of1he
bureau 5 rece pt of the telec:ommun catcd
not cc: W h n fifteen days after recerp of
the not ce the employer ~ n wnnng
ether MAY venfyornot 'f'enfy the elccom
mun cated not ce If the bureau does not
rece ve the wnnen notlficat on from the
employer or rece ves a wntten no .tical on
venfy ng the telecommumcated not ce w th
m such 1 me per od lhe cia m s validly fi cd
and such e ecommun ca cd no ce to s the
tatu e of I m ta ons n regard to the cia m
filed and s cons dcred to meet he rcqu rc
ments of wntlen not ce rtq111red by th1s sec

ton
(F)Asused ndvson(AX3Xb)oftbs
secnon benefi1s means paymen s by a
self. nsunng employer to or on behalf of
an employee for a hosp tal b 11 a med ca
b 11 to a I censed phys can o hasp tal o
an onhoped~e or pros betic device
Sec 4123 85 lnalleasesofoccupatonal
d sease. or death resuhtng from occupational
d scase cia ms for compensa 1on or bene
fils arc forever bam:d unless wlthm two
yean I'll altt J • Its *ste lil1 J
lag 1n l l
llgp;Ja•d
1111 1
11111 Wilt tltltfter FIRST d11gno
~ ~ofthooccupat:onald seuebya I cen~
phys~e an or w thm two years afte death
occurs appl cat on s made to the ndustn
al comm ss on o he bureau of workers
compensat on or to the ~mploycr1fM THE
EMPLOYER 1s a self msunng employe

po)'llllollp(lll
into.-y followiol the ttioeMrae.-

..

_...,.,- W4Jioymeal. IJIO•icled d1lt

,...,..,...t.,._.,«JM11bv•-tUea.

1flbecw-hoo~ ....Uormon:

IJid no odion may be - - or main!lined unlea the employor bat toeetved
wntten 0011ee of a c - violotioD ofIIIia
panaroph WlthtD !be IUlld)' •
immedi
ately fullowin8 the diacJwao, domodoo.
...,..,....., or puruuve acrion taken

of employlaa• widt a aubooquent employ
er or emp1oytts wllo ..., 1101 J!OYUII hiD! 1
_.,. or 1Ctiiou"".r allowouce, then lltCb
penliOII
J!Oymaltl abaJI not
!be benefitl poyable ror !be - .
ODd provided ftanher d1lt 110 - f i l l ahall
tlimall«beclwJOdtotheltCCOUIIiofthe
employer who t1 po)'UII the pens1oo but
tltlleitd aucb benefitl ohall be c:fwJed to the

Se&lt; 412393 Aa uud •n ICC11ont
4123 93 and4123 931oflbe RcviiOdCode
(A) "Cia 01101" means a penoo who 11
el g ble to rece ve compenutJ.on or mcdk:al
benefits under th 1 chapter or Chapter

or-

mutualized IICCOWll except as prov ded n

4121 4127 or4lll oftheReviaedCode
ncludmg any dependent or peraon whooe
el Jtbil ty s the resuk of"" mJwy to or
occupattonal dlaeue of IUIOiher peraon
(B) "Statutory ou!Jroiee mat11 the
adm DtStrator of the bureau of wocbts
compensation a oel~ nsunns employer ilr
sn employer that contitiCtl forlbetliroct pay
ment of medicaiS&lt;r\'te&lt;s punuant to diVI
s onii!U}ofoechon4121 44oflbeRevlaed

dimtoa(B)(I)(b)of-4141241 oflbe
Revti!Cd Code fthe clamant• oepanuon
liom the employer wu disqualtfy rli under
dt\'tlt1Xt(D)(2XaJofseellon414129oftbe
Revti!Cd Code
(4) llcmunentiOft n form of oepa
rlhOitortennnanonpoypaidtoanernploy
ce 11 the hme of Ilia THE EMPLOYEE 6
...,....... liom employment
(5) V...t on pay or allowance payable
undcrlbetmnlohlaw ~con-

Code

trac1 or llletlikiill. or other contmct of h1re

Subrogated amounts" tnelode but
the followma
(I) Amounts recoverable 1iom any third
pany notw tlutlnd ng ooy I mltoliOtiB by !be

whiCh..,.,_.,. allocated to des Jlllll!
ed weeks
lfpaymenta under thts dtv lton.,. pa d
wtth mpa:t to 1 month then the amount of

th rd party concern ng ns telpOI'lllbllny 10

remuneration deemed to be rcce ved w th

cia mant s nsum n connedlon w thunder
msured or un nsural molonst coven1e
notwlthstandmg any hm ration cont:t ned n
Chapter 3937 of the Rev ICd Code

period wnh respect to whiCh p~ymentt to an
1nd1v dual are made under this sed1on then
an II'IIOUnt equal to sw::h Dd1vidual 1 nor

(C)

are not hm•ted to

me

make payments tn cues tnvolvtna work~ respect to lily week during auch month ahall
compensat on under Chapter 4121 412f, he computed by mubtpl)'ms ouch monthly
4127 or 4131 of the Rev•ICd Code
amount by twelve and d Yld ng the product
(2) Amounts «covenble from a by fifty two lfthere onodct pat onofthe

(3) Amounts that a clannant would be

mal weekly wage shall be attnbutcd to and
deemed pad With IOip&lt;Ct to !be firtt and

entlled to n:co'f'CT from. pol tiCB.I subdiVI
s on notw thstand ng any hm tahons ron-

each succeeding week follow ns . . THE

ta ned n Chap er 2744 of the Revti!Cd

from \h• employment of me employer

Code
(D) Tiurd party means an nd1v dual
pn't'ate msurcr pubI c or pmate ent ty or
publ c or pnvate program thai IS or may be
I able to make payments to a person w11h
ou regard to any statutory duty conta ned

maluna the payment until such unount so
patd s exhausted
If befk:fits for any week when reduced
as prov1ded m, th1s d VIS on result n an
amounl not a mult1ple of one dollar such
henents shill be rounded to the next lowe

n tntScbaperorChapter4121 4127 or
413 I of the Revti!Cd Code

multpleofonedollar
Any poymcnt olloc.oted by the employ

Sec 4127 03 Every work-rei ef employ
ee who susta ns an -uury and the depen
dents of such u are k lied 1n chc course of
and ansm1 out of employment. hi a 11 t :a

cr or lhc.: lldmiRIStntOr or the burcau of
employment serv~ees to weeks under d ..,.
s1on (A)( I) (.. ) or (S) oflh s sect on shall
be deemed to be mnuiiCIIIt on for he pur

-WHEREVER THAT nJwy or death

pooesofcstabhshtngaquahfy ngweckand

occurs except when such nJury or death 11

1

caui!Cd by Willful msconduct 0&lt; tntent to

of sect ton 4141 01 of the Rev sed Code

EMPLpYEE S sepllltion or

term

nation

bencfil yearunderd VIIIORI (0)(1 )and (Rl

bnna about such IDJUI) or death or when
the usc of mlox.K:al ng hquors or~ s thr
proxmlale cause of such RJW)' or dcarh s
en tied to rece ve out of the publiC work
rehef employees compcnuhOn fund com
!ltnsat on dealh benefits mcd cal nurse
and hosp tal serv ces med c nc and funer
al expenses. fo oss su11a1ned on account
of such nJury o dcatn as IS prov dcd fo
by Chapter 4123 of the Re'f' sed Code
Exceptasprovded nsectKM1412706of
he Revtsed Code no compmsatton ahall be
pa d from the work rei ef employees com
pensat on fund for or on account of any tcmpo ary d sab I ty o part1al d h I I)
IMPAIRMENT excepl that n the cases
ncluded n rhe schedule of IOH of spec fie
members or s ght set forth n sect on
4123 57 of the Rev sed Code the: d sab I

week w11h respect to wh ch or a part of
whchantndvdualhurecevedor tseck
ng unemployment benefits undc an uncm
ployment compcnsat on law of any othc
stale or of the Umle4i Slates pro"' dcd I he
d 5qual ficat1ons !!hall not apply f lht
appropn11e agency of such other state or of
the Un ted States finally determ nc&amp; that he
11 not entitled to such unemploymc:nl ben
efits A law of the Un ted States pro1t dtng

ty OR IMPAIRMENT s deemed to conttn

any poyment of any type and

ue for the penods mcnt oned for each of
such cases n that Reetion In east~ where
the RJury results n the total or ~rt alloss
of ute of an~ such member the d11b I ty
OR IMPAIRMENT s deemed to coot nuc
for such propon10n of he penod fixed for
the total loss of a member as 1hc adnoun s
tn.lor of worken eompensahon finds that

amounts for period&amp; of unemployment due

the actual phys~&lt;ol d1sab I ty OR IMrAIR
MENT bears to 1he otalloss of such mcm
hers

All compensaton payable undc:r th•

(8) Bencfill payable for any week shall

not be reduced by the amount of rcmunera
1 on 1 cl11mant rece vet w1th teJPed to such

week m the fonn of drill or rescnoe pay
reee1ved by a member of the Oh o natmnal
JUird o the lli'TnCd forces n:sel'\'e for Iuten
dance a 1 reaularly scheduled drill or meet
ng

(C) No benefits sholl be pod fo any

m

any

tolldtofwortlhaDbecontk:k:retanunem
ploymcnt compensatiOn law of the Umtcd
States
(DINotw hstond nganyorberprovs on
n th s chapter benefits othcrw sc pa)lablc
shall not be rcdl.leed by PI~ men s lhal were
mack: to an ndavuiual on or after August 1
1991 pumw~t to "The Nattonal DcfeniiC
Audaorizauon Act for F seal Years 19921Uld

1993 P.ubiiC Law 102 190 105 Sta
139413% IOUSCA 1174all7~ nthe

ISTRAIDR of workers compensat on
td IBirlll UWIIIIIUltll WORKERS COM

chapter shall be pad on the bass of com
putat on prov ded fo n th s ehaptc
Sec 4 27 06 Dunng penods of tempo.
rarydsabiltyandp111al~tl... thl!fiMPAIR

PENSATION fiEARING OFFICERS o
any otne PERSON OR body constttuted by

MENTothcrthan natresultngfrumlossof

4 2135 412136 412138 412144

amcmbero sgh MlotalorJJIInallossof

412147

usc of a membe• an •Jured workrelef
ernploycesbalbepaddn:c:tlyoutof be
fund from wh ch the employee WIS rec:eiV
ngrele( heamountsrequitd omce he
budsetaryneedsoftheemployeeiDdltiolllE
EMPLOYEE Sdepcndcnt1 and n he manncrdetermnedhy hepmonorascncynav
ngcontrolovc orsupervsonofthefund
When al of the funds for rei ef PIIIJ&gt;OS"

4123032 4123033 412307 412325
412327 412328 412334 4123343
412135 4123 3S2 4123 411 4 23 412
4123413 412341~ 4123416 41'3419
4123 511 4123 Sl2 412352 4123 54
4123 541 4123 55 4123 56 4123 57
4123SK 4123S9 412160 412361
412362 412364 412365 4123651
4123 6h 4I23 6K 412370 412JRO

Sec 412390

(A) The-

ADMIN

he statu cs of h s sta e o any coun oflh s
s a c 1n award ng compensa on to he
dependen s of employees o o hers k lied
n QhM THIS STATE shall no make any
d:scnm nat on agams1 the ..W.W. SUR

VIVING SPOUSES cb ldren or othe
dcpendenu who res de n a fore gn country

The- ADMINISTRATOR
- HEARING OFFICER o any o her
board PERSON or court n dcterm n ng
he amoun of compensallon o be pa d o
he dependents of k lied employees shall
pay to the ahcn dependents res d ng n for
e gn countnes he same benefits as to those
~cpcndents res d ng n th li 5tate
LB.l No employer shall d &amp;ehargc
dcm01c rcass gn. or take any pun ll'f'e
act on aga nst any emplo)'CC becauae the
employee filed a eta m or nst tutcd pu
sued or testified n any proceed ngs unde
the ukan lllf1,111111111i 111 THIS

CHAPTER OR CHAPTER 4126 4 27
OR 4131 OfTHE &amp;EVISED (ODE foron
njury or occupational d1seasc wh1ch
occurred n the course o£ and ans ng ou of
Me employmenl w th that cmplo)'c 4tw!J

-

AN employee AFFECTED BY A VIO
LATION OF TillS DIVISION DIIY file an

act1011 1n the COURT OF common pleas
__..of the county of such employment n
wh ch the rei efwh ch may be gran ed shall
be I mlted to rem5lltcmenl w h back pay
1f- act on s based upon d scharge or 1n
award for wages lost f bued upon demo
1on rcass gnment o pwul 'f'e ac on taken
offset by earn ngs subscquen to d scha.rge
demot on reau1gnment 01-pun 1'lie acllon
taken and pa.ymenes recc 'ted pursuant 1o
sect on 412356 and Cbopter 4141 of the

Re\'ti!Cd Code plut reason~ble anomey
fee&gt; The act on tlooll-lloiS forever barred

•

fonn of voluntary scperatton nccnu'f'e pay
ments artd spec al separatiOn pa)l

Sccuon 2 That ex sung sect on
29134K 4121121 4121 ]2 412134
412161

4123H2

exhausted orwhen.d sab1l tyOR IMPAIR

4 2J 91 4127 03 4127 06 and4141 31 of

MENT aa a resul of the nJUfY 1s conunu
ous beyond a per od or sJx months the
OJUrcd work rehefcmploycc shall be com
pensatcd for temporary DISABILITY and
pan al ~~~~••hi!IIMPAJRMENToulofthe
publ c work re ef employees compensa
on fund by he burellu of worbrs com
pensatKm n the same manner and amount

tht: Rev sed Code arc hereby repealed
S\.'C1 on 3 (A) Except as prov dcd n
d v slOP (8) of th1s sect on lht prov" ons
of th1s act apply 10 all da1ms pursuant o
Chaptera4121 4123 4127 and4131 of
lhe Rcv1sed Code ansm1 on and after the
effect 'f'C date of th !i. .-ct
(8) The follow ng apply to all c a mt~

prov ded n sect ons 4127 01 to

4123KS

412301

eswhchareava ableloanycmployerarc

as •

41231W

412167

412390

pur&gt;uantto Chaplefll4121 4123 4127

4127 14 of the Rev sed Code for other d 5ab I ties AND IMPA RMENTS

and 4131 of the Rev sed Code pend ng on
lhc effect \IC da c oflh s act

S.:.: 414131 (A) Bcnefllll otberwi"'
payable for any week shall be reduced by

(I)TheproviSon ndviSon(BMIJof
SC&lt;l on 4123 56 of the Rev sed Code •

he amount of rcmui'ICflt on a ell mant
rcce ves w th respecl o such wee~ as fol
lows
(I) Remunerat on n 1eu of not ce
(2) Compcnsa on for wage loss under
diV s on !9KQ of sect on 4123 56 of Inc
Rev sed Code or tcmpo ..ry pan al d ubll
ly under the worken compensat on law of
an)' stateorundera s m Jar law of the Un ted
Slates
(3) EKcept as p ov ded n sect on

amended by th1s act allow ngan employer
to 'f'oluntanly commence pa)'mcnt of com
pcnsa on fol"lcmporary d1sab hty
(2) Thcprov litOn tnd v ston({ M:2l of sec
tono412JS6oflheReviscdCodc z amend

4141312oftheRevlcdCode payments n
he form of ret remcnt or pens on
allowanees under a plan wholly fi111nced by
an employer which payments arc pa d
c thcr dueclly by 1he employer or ndirea
I)' through 1 trust IMUity mAII'IIl« fund
or under an Insurance -contncl whether

ollow•~t~an employee to fll
an 1ppl calion for and re&lt;:c1vc w1ge lo.ll!~ com

ed by th ' oct

pensat on pun.uant 10 that d v s on w thou
na the cmptoyce a appl ca on fo :1Cr
manent &amp;ocal mpi!umenl compcnset1011
(3) The provtston tn dlvt,Ston (A) of SCI.!
ton 412357 u amc:nderl by tbts act
allow ng 1n employee to file an appl cat on
for the dctenmnat on of the: pcrcenlagc of
the employee s pc::rmanent pan al mpa1r
ment after 1hc employee has ruched max
unum mcdaul1mprovement
Sect on 4 The pcnalt cs prov ded for n
aft"~

of !be Rmi!Cd Code apply to 11ny O'VetJIIY•,
men~ bill ns. or fills ficatton oceumns on
or after the elfectove dote ofth s 8Ci
Section 5 The omendmenta to the defl
n bon of occ:upabonal d !leaSe made by
th I act con111ned tn d v s on {F) of sect1on
412! 01 of the Rev sed Code sre not tntend
ed end ahall not be construed as altenng a
flrefiahtor 1 or pol a: olf- 1 nshts oCOtDpenlltion pursuant to d V ston {W) of

on 412368 of the Rev sed Code as
nghtt ex&amp;~ ed on the effect ve date or
ael b)l ..,. rtue of s atule adm n strat ve rule
or JudiC al dec s on o a comb na ton
slllules mles or dec s1on•
Sect on 6 The Adm n strator ofWorken
Compen58 on sha I s udy the nc dencc
occupatiOnal d 5C8SC!IIR the health care
fnsmns as he Adm n 1 rator
necessary and he adequtcy of

4121 4123 4127 and4131
Code in oddmsi••g oocupotKMIBI diseases that
anse n hose profess ons The study
spec fically nclude latr:nt occupat onal

eases The Adm n sttator shall repon
rcsul s of he sludy o he Speake of
House ofRepresentali'ves and 1he Pru1ide1nt
of he Scna e no later han July I 1998
Sect on 7 The Adm n strator
Wo ke-rs Compensa on shall s udy
qualty thoroughness and adequacy of
med~e:al exammanons ~onduc ed by
Bureau ofWorkc s Compcnsat on !i
mmg phys c ans who conduct exam nat ons
of employees for a dctcnn nabon of employ
ecs percentage ofpcrmaneo pan a mpa r
ment Th~ s udy shal ncludc an evaluatiOn
orthe fees charged by those phys c ans. The
Adm n strator shall report he results of the
s udy o the Speake of he House
Rcprescn anvcs and he Pres den of the
Senate no latt.r than July
998
Sect on 8 The Adm n stra o of Workers
Compc:nsalton '\ha s udy he effcc1
allowmg pubhc employers hat meet the en
lena for be ng gran cd the status of se f msur
ng cmp O)'ers pursuan to sec on 4 23 35
of the Rev sed Coile o be orne self nsu
ng emplo)lers and of a low ng publ c
employers hat emp O)' css than five.: hundred
:mployecs bu ha olhcrw sc mcc al the en
cna for he ng gran ed he s1a1u of sr f nsu
ng emp CJycrs. o form poo s fo 1he purpose
of pay ng coR\f'l(n~t on and bcnefils

ChaptciS 4121 4 21 4127 and 4131
he Rev sed Coded rcc y
ly as a group o by a h employer nd v1du
all)' The Adm n stra or sha I port
CSt Its of he s udy o h Speake of
House of Reprcscntal vc and he
of he Scna c no a er him Oc obc 31
Workers Compcnssu on shall study
onal rehab I tallon as relates to assisting
nJurcd emplo)'ct:: re urn 10 work As
of he sud)' he Adm n s ra1or shall
ne the rclar onsh p bc.-twcen the Bu eau
Workc s Compcnsa on he

c

Comm ss on manae,rcd ca o~~~~:::·~~;'
cc:n tied under he Heal h
Program or a Qual ficd Health Plan
nsunng em~OY.,:rli. and othe s ate ag~n&lt;iclS
aSti st ng njun:d mployee:r. rc urn ICl work
In add I on 1hc Adm n s rator shal ev1cw
the current ulcs of lhe Ou cau and
Comm as on perta n ng to vocat onal ehu
b I Ill on and f neccsswy shall recommend
changes to these ru es lo betler ~fftttua c the
purposes of \IOCa nnl rehab I a ion n
e urn ng njurcd cmployc1..-s to work The
Adm n stra or shall report the resu s of the
study tu he Govcnll the Speaker of lhc
House of Rcprcscnta IVC the Pres den
he Sena c 1hc Cha rptrson of he House
Repres n a veli Commerce and labo
( omm teet" and he (ha rperson of the
Sen~ c n urancc ( ommcn:c and Labor
Comm nee w th non yea after he cffcc
IVe cia Of th IICt
Sect on 0 SC\: on 4 23 54 f he
Rev sed Code ~ amend d by 1h ~ ac docs
not abr dge and shall n he ons rued as
ab adg ng any r ghrs o cmp oycrs o
employe under fi d ral or sa c aw w1th
c peel drug csl ng n he workp ace

OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STATE OF OHIO

I Bob Taft Se-cretary of State do
hereby cert fy that the forego ng s the
full text of the c::onst tul onal amend
mcnl proposed by the General

Assembly and file-d n the office oflhc
Secrclary of Stale pursuant to Art ele
XVI 5&lt;.-ct on I of the Constttulton
the State of Oh o together wtlh tne bal
lot langua@e and cxplanat on cert fied
to me by the Oht&lt; Ballot Board and
arguments submttted to me by the pro
poncnts and opponents of the amt..and
mcnt asp cscnbcd by law

The forego ng al o conta ns the full
text uf the latutory amendments
enactment propo cd by the General
Asscmb y and ubm ttcd to the ballot
by referendum pet I on pursuant to

Arttclc II Scclton I(c) of the
Consl tul on 1&gt;f the Slalc of Oh o
together w th the ballot language eer
uficd to me by the Oh o Ballot Board
and cxplanat on and arguments sub
m ned 10 me by lhc proponents and
opponcn s of the amendments and
enactments a prcscr bed by law

IN TESTIMONY WfiEREFORE I
have hereunto ubscnbcd my name and
affixed my offic al seal at Columbus

Oh o th s 21sl day of August 1997
Bob Tall
SECRETARY OF STATE

Section

Sunday.~r2S,1tl7

Farming proves to be a stressful business
LAFAYEITE Ind (AP)- Amencan fanners are a slressed out lot
worrymg aboul the weather market pnctng government mtervent10n and
money a study concludes
Chris Hurt, a professor of agncultural economtcs at Purdue Umverst
ty satd lhe study of more lhan 2 000 fanners by DuPonl Agncultural
Products pamts a f01rly accurate ptcture
ThiS IS a busmess that ts very stressful both ttme wtse and uncer
taJnty wtse Hurt satd Dunng certatn ttmes of lhe year II s stressful
because of outStde 10lluences they have no control over
Fred Ret chert who grows corn and soybeans south of Lafayette Ind
notes weather could be a btg problem tn any year
II JUSt takes a certam amount of ram to r01se a crop and a certatn
amount of heat he satd It s a concern but what do you do? How do
you change the wealher?
The btggest weather slory m recent monlhs has been El Nmo the

NEW OWNERSHIP Monty and Paule Hart era the naw own
er1 of Hart s Kountry Kitchen In Recine The couple hal redec
oretad the Inside of the restaurant and offer homemade plea and
homeetyle cooking Hours are 6 e m to 7 p m Monday through
Saturdey and 7 a m to 3 p m Sunday The restaurant reopened
under their ownership on Oct 17 Mrs Hart Is shown here nrvlng customers from Raven1wood W Va The phone number at
the restaurant Is 949-10011

AEP's Young named to
NWC Board of Directrors
LANCAST
ER
Ron L
Young manag
mg dtreclor of
lransportatton
for Amencan
Eleclnc Power
has
(AEP)
been elecled to
a three year
YOUNG
term on the
Nattonal Walerways Conferenc~
(NWC) Board of Dtrectors
The NWC represenls vanous
ntercsJs Ihat use the nalton s waler
ways Leaders of nearly 400 buSI
nesses 1ndustr1es cooperatives
slate and local pubhc agenctcs uttli
1es ports and termmals act vely
pantctpate n the conference Young
represenls shtppcrs on the board
AEP lransporls and recetves
more than 30 mtllton Ions of coal
and related producls on the Ohto
Kanawha and Monongahela r vers
Young IS responstble for coal dehv
ones by barge and ratl lo lhe AEP
System power planls He also man
ages the company s neet of 3 900
ratlcars 11 towboals and 500
barges

In addltton he oversees the oper
attons of Cook Coal Tenntnal a coal
transloadmg factlity located on the
Ohw Rtver near Metropolis Ill and
AEP's Rtver Transportatton DIVI
ston at Lakm W Va Youngs AEP
System career began m 1973 at
Southern Ohto Coal Company s
Metgs No I mme He held vanous
poSitions IJI accounttna and human
resources pnor to bemg named gen
eral manager at Cook Coal 'renmnal
10 1989 He was promoled to hiS
current postlton m 1993
A veteran of lhe U S Atr Force
Young attamed the rank of staff
sergeant and served one year m Vtet
nam He holds an assoctale s degree
m accounting and a bachelors
degree 1n management from Ohtc
Untverstty
Young IS a member of lhe Amer
tcan Waterways Organ1zatton
serves on transportatiOn comm1Uees
for the Naltonal Mmtng Assoc atmn
and the Western Coal Transportatton
Assoctatton and parltctpalcs on lhe
board of dtrectors of the Weslern
Coal Counctl

Looking toward the future
By JAY CALDWELL
GALLIPOLIS Raptd changes
lakmg place tn the mvestment
world
loday
w ll undoubled
ly affect your
financtal plans
More than ever
your
needs
requtre the spe
ctal
attention
lhat an mvest
ment
profes
Caldwell
wnal prov des
Fmanctal plann ng can benefil
you whether you re J~SI start ng oul
m your career and want to create an
mves1men1 plan for the fulurc or •f
you re neanng ret rement and need
lo determme what your mcome and
estate planmng needs w II be afler
you rettre The real adv~nlage of lhe
fmanctal plannmg process IS thai
we prepare plan thai ts un quely
y urs ba cd on 1hc data gathered
from you Your nvestmcnt profes
s nal wtl
• Hdp you cslabl sh your finan
c al bjccuvcs Th may nclude
quant ty ng tnd v dual fthanctal
goal m d liar tcr ns tdcnltfy ng
dcfmnc nvcstmcnt lnnc frames
pnor 1 z ng your obJeCI vcs and
exa n n 1 g those bjectJvcs wrth n
f y ur ava lable
the c ntcxt
c ourcc
•Gather tl c approprtate nfor na

ndtvtdual and f1m ly financ al sta
1u nsk lolerancc I fcslylc and
heallh
• Pra&lt;:css and a 1alyze the mfor

mal on gathered ThiS may mclude
a rev1ew of your exnung msurance
pohctes wtlls trust agreemenls or
olher legal documents It may also
mclude documenttng your financtal
sttuatton
mcludmg
tncome
expenses slrenglhs and weakness
es
• Recommend a comprehensive
financtal plan latlored to your spe
cJfic needs AI thts patnt your
financtal planner wtll tdenufy the
most appropnate products and
stralegtes 10 help you work toward
your obJectives
• lmplemenl lhe plan that you
and your financtal planner deem
appropnale Your financtal planner
can be a valuable resource m help
mg you oblam the produc1s needed
to carry oul your plan
• Monnor and modtfy the plan
ThiS IS espectally tmportanl tf Ihere
arc any changes m your fi nanc~al
goals tax laws economtc condt
t10ns and/or available mvestment
producls or lechn ques that could
fleet you
You can have your financial plan
c cated al a cost thai wtll be afford
able for ndtvtduals and famtlics
al kc whelher For a plan 10 fund a
childs educatton or for a more com
prd et s ve plan that mcorporatcs
ncome lax retirement and estate
plan mg
(Jay Caldwell Is an Investment
execullve for The Oh10 Company
at 441 S«ond Ave Gallipolis a
member NYSE and SIPC)

Complaints go unanswered

I

'

weather pattern that warms lhe walers of the Pactfic and causes weather
problems all over the globe
The El Ntno talk ts bnngmg up a lot of bad memones for us sa d
Randy Mtller a corn soybean and popcorn farmer tn Brookston Ind
The last ttme we had an mtense El Nmo was 1983 and •t made a pret
ty dtsaslrous crop for us
Gram pnces have been faJrly constant for the last few years and corn
has remaJned around $2 50 a bushel
The pnce of gram and good vtable markets for gram ts a btg con
cern Another would be the h'1!h cost of machmery Retchert satd
Personally because I m a small farmer I have to buy used machmes
Btg fanners have 1o buy !he btg machmery to keep up They keep con
unutng to tncrease year after year - the cost of seed feruhzer and
mach10ery
Hurt also noted that fanners have walched land values chmb the pasl

10 years maktng tl dtfficuh for those who want to expand
In lndtana for example land that IS constdered top quahly yteldmg
149 bushels of com per acre has been pnced at $2 S49 an acre an
mcrease of $275 from 1996 Average land productng 122 bushels of com
per acre went up $232 to $1 997 Poor land whtch ytelds around 94
bushels mcreased $190 lo $1 493
There IS a destre for moSI fanners to acqutre more land Hurt satd
When lhere ts a s1rong demand and hmtted supply pnces shoot up
pretty dramattcally Many farm familtes would hke to buy the land tf II
was avatlable Even at the currenl pnces many famthes hke to buy more
land tf they could
Nol thai fanners are complatmng 100 much Miller saJd mosl enJOY
what lhey do because of thetr freedom and mdependence
Fanners put up wtth qutte a bu to be a fanner he satd But lhere s
lhe freedom of what you wanllo do and when you want 10 do II

Gallia S&amp;WCD board ,candidates are named

ll n 1 akc nLo con tlcratton your

I

D

WASHINGTON (AP) - Despne
promtses of acuon lhe Agr cullure
Deparlment IS falling fu[\her bch nd
m addressmg a h~cklog of almosl
I 000 complamls allegmg goverh
menl dtscr mmau n ug t n l black

fanners
The number ol unresolved com
plamls mosl nvolvtng government
loans and foreclosures mushroomed
from 530 n January to 984 as of
August - an mcrea e of R6 pcrcenl

By LOIS M SNYDER,
District Program
Admlnl1trator,
Gallla Soli and Water
Conservation District
GALUPOLIS Four landowners
m Galha County are candtdates for
two postllons to be filled on lhe Gal
ha SWCD Board of supervtsors The
electton wtll take place dunng the
annual meeung and annual awards
banquet on Thursday November 6 7
p m at Buckeye Hills Career Center
A bnef b•ography oft the candtdates
follows
Lynn Angell and her husband Btll
hve at 387 Ha7.el Rtdge road tn Eure
ka They have four chtldren Brad1e
Age 10 Katthn Age 8 Btll Joe and
Cory Ralph Age 3 They have 117
acres wh1ch they presently raiSe
tobacco a few sheep and a couple
cows Lynn ts a certtfied pubhc
accountant m which she operates an

office m Galhpohs Wellston and
Rtpley She IS a member of lhe
Amencan Instnute of Certtfied Pub
he Accountanls Galha County Oul
reach Cenler Board smce 1996 Gal
lia County Red Cross Board smce
1994 Galha County Emergency
Planmng Agency member Since
1994 hfettme member FFAAlumm
hfettme member Ohto Slate Umver
stty Alumm Galha County Frtday
Mornmg Planntng Sesston and a
member of the Galhpolts City School
Board smce 1994
Mtke Dames wtfe Sherry and
daughler Megan hve on an 82 5 acre
farm m Ohto Township Mtke ratses
tobacco cattle and horses He has
been self employed for 13 years as a
general conlractor Currently he has
been workmg wtth the sot I and water
diStnCt through Radtan lnternattonal
m the research and promotton of
FGD a clean coal by product pro

duced locally at AEP s Gavm Plan I
Thts by product s bemg used by
local fanners m lhe conslrucuon of
slab lized feedlots
J m Howard and wtfe Merle hve
on a 400 acre fann m Raccoon
Township Jtm raiSes beef hogs
sheep corn tobacco and hay They
have 1wo grown chtldren Shart a
local school leacher and Chns who
works for a steel company m C10cm
nau He has served on the sml and
water board for the past stx years and
ts lhe current chatnnan He s FSA
cha nnan of the community commit
lee and has been appotnted by lhe
secretary of agnculture lo the mar
ketmg quota review committee
Robert MasSte and w fe Connte
hve m Spnngfield Townshtp on a 205
acre farm and rents an add twnal 1110
acres Rob ra1ses com tobacco hay
beef cows and hogs
They have four chtldren all at

home Rob h as served as a member
of the Sml and Water Board for thi:
past ntne years and IS the current v~
chatnnanlfiscal agenl Rob ts also a
member of the Galha Counly Agn.
cultural Soctety and the Fang
Bureau of whtch he ts the public
affatrs officer He IS a hfeume mem.
ber of the Galha Academy FF~
Alumm and a member of the F1.,.
Bapttst Church of Galhpohs In addt
!ton to fanmng Rob works al
Canntchael s Farm and Lawn
Local offictals are promObng G~
Ita County Agnculture at the banquet,
Tickels for the banquet are $7 •f
purchased m advance or $10 81 tbe
door If at all posstble please purchase
you ltckets by November 4 1997 If
you are unable lo attend and wtsh to
vole come m or contact the an oflj
ctal at lhe S&amp;WCD office at Ill
Jackson Ptke Sutte 1569 Galhpobs
Ohto 45631 (614)446 8687

It's not too late to plant spring bulbs
ByHALKNEEN
POMEROY
Fall IS qutckly
becommg wmler but 11 IS nol too late
to plant hardy spnng bulbs Daffodils
tuhps hyacmths crocus and llltes
need to planted now m order for thetr
beauty to be enJOYed next spnng
Bulbs planted 10 the fall grow ex ten
stve root systems to support lhe
bloom and leaf growth created tn the
Sprtng
Where should you plant your
bulbs? Ptck a well dramed Sile lhal
has plenty of orgame matter and a pH
of 6 to 7 To maxJmtze the longevlly
of the plants the bulbs need to be
planted m a sunny well draJned loca
uon so 1hey can create another bulb
for lhe followmg yea&lt; Planhng under
deciduous Jrees (lrees that lose thetr
leaves each fall) wtll allow suffictenl
sunlight m the spnng for most plants
10 mature and form another bulb daf
fodtls early llowenng tulips (Tn
umph Parrot Foslerana types) cro
cus Stbenan squtll wmdtlowers and
snowdrops do well under such con
d11tons Later bloom•ng tulips (Dar

wm L1ly and Couage types hltes)
and Frtltllana need more sun to
develop nexl years bulbs Scauer
your planungs so that you can extend
thetr bloommg season North fac ng
slopes wtll bloom ten to fourteen
days later than a southern or western
exposed slope
How should you plant your bulbs?
Mass plantmgs ellher formal or nat
ural work beuer than smgle hne
rows Clump bulbs m groups of five
seven or larger numbers Allow etght
to twelve 10ches between bulbs so the
bulbs can multtple m the future
years The general rule IS to planl
bulbs wtth lhe pomted end up Cov
er the bulb wtth sml three to lour
umes the depth of the bulb 1e a daf
fodtl bulb two mches m hetghl should
be covered wtth SIX to etght mches of
sod Waler your bulbs after plantmg
especmlly the first fall season to
ensure good root development An
10ch or two of mulch over the plant
mg wtll extend the roottng ttme for
lhe bulb The mulch 10sulates lhe

wann fall sml from the commg wm
ter weather Mark your planttng so
thai you don t acctdentally dtg lhem
up when crealmg a new spnng flower
bed
If you have problems wnh mtce
ch pmunks or squtrrels plant daf
fod Is and hyac nths as they are not
eaten by lhese creatures Most other
bulbs are qu te edtble In small num
bers you can p)ant more edJble bulbs
m l/2 to 3/4 meh hardware mesh Wire
boxes
How should you care for lhe bulbs
10 the Spnng? Keep the areas weed
free f posStble After the bulbs
bloon ferttltze w th a low ntlrogen
but htgher potash and phosphorus fer
ttlizer ltke 5 10 10 or 6 24 24 al two
pounds per I00 square feet Make
sure to prevent seed heads from
develop ng as they pull plant slrength
from bulb product on Allow Fol age
to mature naturally don 1cut otT or ue
up green le ves afler bloom ng or
bulb produclton wt II be greally
reduced

Constdenng landscapmg your
yard? Improve your gardemng efforts
by allendmg an Advanced Master
Gardener Workshop on Landscapm'g
bemg held on October 30 from 7 9
p m atlhe Alhens County Exlenston
Office The mght s program has lhree
parts Baste Landscape Prepara
uon Nattve Ohto Trees for Your
Landscape The Whys and Whys
Nots and SelectlnJ the R.isbt
Shrubs for Your LandJcape Speak
ers mclude Rebecca Wood Inslnlctor
at Hocking College and Hal Kneen
Metgs County Agncultural Agent
ThiS Jomt Athens!Metgs Counues
Oh10 State Untverstty Extenston program ts open lo the public at no
charge The Athens Counly Extens1011
office ts located nexl to the Athens
Fatrgrounds at 280 Wesl Unoon
Stree~ Athens

Htll Kneen is the Melp County
Agricultural &amp; Natunl ROSilllrea
Agent, The Ohto Stl!te Unlvenlty
Exteru11on

Cow condition important for production efficiency
By JENNIFER BYRNES
GALLIPOLIS In order to matn
taJn future productiVIty and reproductiOn beef cows regardless of age
need to be fed to maJntaJn average or
slightly beuer body condttton
Accordmg to Ike Eller of Virg101a
Tech lhe ttme of weantng and sell
mg fall feeder calves IS also a good
hme to evaluate lhe body condtt1on
ofthe cows After weanmg cows are
tradtttonally at mtd geslalton and
energy requ•rements are allhetr low
est For cows that are faller than they
need to be thts IS a good ttme to feed
the low quahly roughage These
over condtttoned cows can afford to
loose some wetghl dunng lhiS ttme

penod wtthoot affectmg rebreedmg
The thtnner cows wtll need extra
energy to gel lhetr condtt on up lo
average or stghlly beuer
Evaluattng cows for lhetr body
comhlton s accompltshed through
the use of the Body Condmon Score
(BCS) System Accord ng lo Dave
Mang one th s sy&lt;lem descnbes the
degree of falness on a numencal
range of I to 9 w th I bemg too lh n
and 9 bemg exccsstvely fal
II IS more pract cal for producers
to group the r cows by 1hose ammals
scor10g thtn (I 4) moderale (5
7) or fal (8 9) Accord ng to Dr
DE Eversole of Vtrgtma Tech
cows sconng I and 2 are cmac ated

Hawks open tattoo
business in Gallia
GALLIPOLIS
Shawn Hawks has
opened a new taltoo
busmcss at 7 Ptne
Street m Gallipolis
Hawks
Tanoo
began operations on
Tuesday Oct 22
Hours of opera
tton Will be from I p m unit I 8 p m
Monday through Thursday and 3

p m unll 10 p m on Fnday and Sal
urdays
Hawks has Four years expcnence
m the latloo f eld He has worked
prevtously at Zeke s Tanoo shop
pnor to mtl lary servtce and a1 Sud
den Sam s Tanoo sho1 n Mtddle
port
Hawks has rcceJvel.l an excellent
ratmg from lhe Gall a County
Heallh Department

wtth eaStly v s ble bone slruclure and
lhe shoulder nbs back hooks and
pms are sharp to lhe touch BCS 3 ts
character zed by Jhe beg nnmgs offal
over lhe lo n back and forenb
however lhc backbone s sttll htghly
vtstble Back fat here 1s esumated
anywhere from 04 10 08 mehes of
12th nb fat Wtth a BCS 4 the
forenbs are not not ceable hul I tS
conStdercd borderline and for our
purposes these ammals should be
grouped With 1he overly thm cows
Opttmum condttton for rebreedmg ts
BCS 5 7 wh ch ranges tn characler
sues from 12 and 13th nbs nol hemg
VISible to a score of 7 where the ends
of the sp nous process can only be
fell wtth finn pressure and abundanl
tat cover etthcr stde of the latl head
BCS of 8 and 9 are tdent tied by the
ammal exhtbttmg anywhere from a
smooth blocky appearance 10 bone
structure too d fficult to feel Inti head
he ng huned n fal and mobtl typos
Stbly tmputrcd By usmg the evalua
tJOn character st cs th n moderate
and fat based on the numer cal
Body Condtt on Score System pro
iluce scan cas ly feed htgher qualtly
feed tuffs 10 thm cows and the
lover qu thly lo (at cow
Also keep tn mmd thai firsl calf
he fers w II as a rule need more fOQd
energy than the average cow even If
they are

n moderate cond1t1on

how lo Body Condtlton Score your
canle or the nutrlbonal requtremenls
of beef cows and first caltbetfcrs,
please call the OSU Extenston office
al 614446-7007
Area asncultural news

CAITLE DAIRY SHEEP
PRODUCERS Come oul to the
Graztng Twthght Tour on Monda)'
afternoon Oct 27 from 3 30.5 IS
p m at Jtm and Jao Burleson s Farm
localed on Memn Road m Thunnan,
Ohto Take Buckeye Htlls Road
approxtmately 3 mtles where 11
becomes Memtt Road wbtch ~
ends al the Burleson Farm SpeakeiJI
mclude Jtm Burleson on wat...
source developmenl and htstory ol'
the farm and Ed Vollborn graz~nt
leader on legume regeneration and
extendtng lhe grazmg season a~
ExtensiOn Agents Dave Sample~
dtscusStng ex1end10g the grazmg ~
son wtlh forage rye Cluis Penrose oa
paslure spectes and d1versny a~
Jenmfer Byrnes on pasture stockptl~
quahty fescue and orchard gmss 1be
tour wtll conclode JUSt before daJi
and hght refreshments wtll be serve4
TOBACCO PRODUCERS If
you are approved to recetve gralll
money from the Fann Incoml
Improvement Commtttee for tobacc~
cunng slructures please bring your
completed Signed certtficalton f011115
to the ExtenSion office on Monday,
Ocl 27 Your structures Will need 10
mspecled by lhe county agncultunil
agent and then the form must ~
stgned by the agent and the county s
Fam1 Bureau representaltve 1be
agenl wtll only be avatlable for
mspecttng and stgnmg unltl Oct 29
and lhc deadline to have the forms
ma led s Oct 30
Jenmfer L Byrnes Is Gelllt
County s extension qent In earl•
culture and natunl reapu...,.,_

Rc ncmber hat I rst calf hetfe s are
sill gtnwmg tl c t elves and wtll
GALLIPO
A naltVe of Galllpol s Dr need that extra cne gy througl the
calv ng season as well as the next
LIS
Dr
,~~~~:~~a·~ ts the son of Mr and Mrs breed ng season to keep u1., a pro
Chnstopher B
)
Wtlcoxon Gall pol s To
Wtlcoxon
qualify for lhe doc lor of chtropracltc ducuvc body condttton By takmg the
recetved
htS
degree Dr Wtlcoxon completed t me now to assess th-.: condition or
chtropracttc
five academ c years of profcsstonal your cow herd you may r prove
feed resource managemc t herd
siUdy al the college
degree durtng
the
October
Dr Wtlcoxon ts also a graduate health re( rodu I ve perf m ance
1997
com
of Galha Academy Htgh School and and calf wean n&amp;- we ghls on your
Wilcoxon
mencement
auended the Un vers y of Rto fam1 For more tnfonnauon alx ut
exerc ses at Palmer College of Cht
Grande He plans 10 make h s home
Dumped harvested grain remains on ground
m Galhpolts where he wtll open a
ropracuc Davenport Iowa
WASHINGTON (AP) - Bumper ground and now a ratl car shorta~
Palmer College IS the foundmg pracltce all he beg nmng f the year
harvests n several fann stale have IS keeptng 11 there
college of lhe chtropracuc profes
forced clcvalo s 10 dump gram on lhc
SIOfl

Dr. Wilcoxon receives degree

I

�:. Page D2 • ~ •
•

a.._.., u

The House
of the week
.

·Rickenbacker gro~ing as international cargo airp«;»rt
COLUMBUS (AP) - Rieken·
backer ln~mtational Airport is watching its cargo air business take ofT as
it sheds its miliwy past.
Gone are most of the barracks that
once housed the Tuskegee Ainnen,
the first group of black niers 10 JefVe
'in combat for the United Slllll:s.
The size of the military base, orig·
inally called Lockbourne Army Air
Base, bas shrunk from 4.400 acres to
about 330 acres.
Military planes that once
• sc~M~I~ed across the skies are now
retired and tied down outside
hangars. their mission over.
Planes still leave at all hours of the
night, but they no longer carry
bombs. They've gone commerciaL
Only the name "Rickenbacker"
remains as a testament to the mili·
tary 's presence in central Ohio. The
announcement that the base would be
built dates back to Dec. 8, 1941 the day after the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor.
The base was renamed in 1973 to
honor World War I "ace of aces"
Eddie Rickenbacker. a Columbus
native. The flyer is credited with
shooting down 26 enemy planes.
· Today, Rickenbacker is an inter·
nationai cargo airpon that handles
: millions of pounds in cargo- more
: than 147 million pounds in 1996. The
: airpon and its surrounding iildustri·
al park are responsible for more than
6,000 jobs with an economic impact
of $400 million a year, said Bruce
Miller, director of the Rickenbacker
Pon Authority.
" In 1990, I saw a repon that an
airpon that just moved cargo and not
passengers couldn't ntak.e it," he said.
"Today, we're proof that wasn't

nati/NtwdiCiil Kentucky International Airport.
Rickenbtlcker has offered 75 acres
lo DHL, the world's largest international shipper with $4.biUion in revenue in 1996. That could create an
lldditional 1.300 jobs. In an attempt
to lure DHL, Franklin County Com.
missioners this month wrote off a
$65.2 million loan it gave the airpon.
Backers say it's a good investment
''If they get a hub here. this place
will explode," said Eric Hensley,
Rickenbacker operations coordinatiX'.
A new hub would make up for the
loss of the Flying Tigers. 1lle cargo
shipper's $76 million, 274,000square foot cargo terminal built there
in 1985 was closed when Federal
E~press bollf!htthe company in 1988.
Federal Express now uses the termi·
nal for storage.
Miller said the pon authority
hopes its foreign trade zone status
will continue to anract businesses to
its industrial park.
Because the area is considered to
be outside of U.S. Customs territory,
businesses can bring in foreign and'
domestic goods without paying tra·
ditional tariffs.
The foreign trade ZQne anracted
several businesses· to Rieken backer's
industrial park, including a 2.1-mil·
lion square foot Spiegel/Eddie Bauer
distribution facility.
"Rickenbacker is atlractive to
businesses because of the free trade
zone and easy access to the airport,"
Miller said. "Businesses can get
their merchandise quickly and with
few problems."

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday,October28,1997

SUnday, October 26, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

1 •

'

•

A breath of fresh air

The city's U.S. Customs service townships, the S,OQO.acre aiJpon and
The pon authority wanls to add itary's presence.
has its headquaners at Rickenhacl:er, industrial park is sunounded mostly another runway 10 allow for dual
"The military pays about 60 per·
which means agenls can clear catgo by farmland and a few residential . appror.ches and build a highway, cent of all airport operations," he
at any lime- a plus since most ~ar­ areas. Plans include expandin&amp; in10 a Rickenbacker Parkway, west of the said. "Their share goes down every
go planes ny in the middle of the 25,0QO.acre airport that han&lt;ues both airport.
year a.&lt; we get more business. We're
· night.
passengers and cargo.
It also plans to phase out the mil- not self-sufficient yet so they'll stay."
Other governme111 activity -real
and fictitiO!lS- continues at the old
base.
Filmmakers sho!, a scene from this
summer's action adventure movie
"Air Force One" there. The airpon
doubled for Ramstein Air Base, Germany, and its hangars and lower were
featured.
•
The real Air Force One, the plane By POPULAR MECHANICS
opposite' a finished surface, don '1 an¥1c will cause the line to waver.
President Clinton uses, also uses the For AP Special F1111uret
pick nails directly out of the hox . All
.. Spreading glue can be messy
airport's two parallel 12,000-foot
The big difference between some· too often, over- and under-size nail' . work. Plastic applicators designed to
runways 10 practice landings and one who's really handy around the will be mixed in with those nf prnp· apply auto body Iiller make it easy
takeoffs. Hensley said the pilots pre- home and shop and one who is not
er size even in a brand-new box. An and neal. They spread wood glue over
fer to use Rickenbacker over nearby . lies in knowing how to solve minor
' oversize nail could break through the wide area.• quickly. The (cathercd
Pon Columbus International Airport problems quickly and effectively.
good surface. Spread a few nails on edge lays on glue smoothly. What's
because it has few noise restrictions
Here are some tips that can help your workbench and then select the more, cleanup is literally a snap. Let
and security risks.
you out of a tight spot:
good ones from among them. Wrong the glue dry on the applicator and
Rickenbacker has only two run·
··Need to bore a hole in wood for sizes, uncut points and other defects then flex it to pop off the hardened
ways- compared with Pon Colum· which you do not have the correct
will show up: In a random sampling, glue. Auto stores sell these applica· .
bus' three runways - but it is the · diameter spade bit? You can easily
we found five out of I 3 from one box tors in sets of three for about $2.
nation's third longest airfield. Its make one from the next larger size
were oversize or defective.
•• When foharpening the teeth of a
extensive noise buffer allows any bit. Adjust the tool rest on a bench
.. Drawing a stJ:aight line parallel hand or circular saw blade, smoke
type of aircraft to land - from a grinder to maintain the same angle as
IO the· edge of a board without hav- · them with a candle. Pass the flame
700,0IJO.pound Evergreen Interna- the edge of the bit. C!lfefully align
ing the pef1Cil slip becomes simple if quickly along the edge of the blade
tional Airways 747to a 1,5QO.pound, marking tapes on the bit to guide the
you file a tiny nick in the blade edge sp the smoke blackens the teeth. Do
Cessna 152.
grinding. Grind slowly, taking a lit· of your combination square. 'file the not pause in any one place to avoid
MiUer said the pon authority is tie ofT each side and laking care not V' notch in the center of the blade end overheating and possibly drawing the
buying nearby land 10 maintain that to overheat the bit and drawing the
just deep enough to keep the pencil temper from the steel: As you file
noise buffer and for future develop· temper from the steel. When it gets
point fro~ slipping as you move the each tooth, the contrast between
ment.
hot to the touch. dip it in water to cool square along the board. When mark· ·shiny and smoked steel shows your
"South of us is farmland, and · it. Bore trial holes in scrap wood to ing, hold the pencil at an angle with progress ..
we're looking to keep it that way." he check progress and gel a perfect fit.
the point leaning toward the square.
said. "Farmers don't complain about
.. When nailing from the side Keep it steady because changing the
noise but residences do."
Located in two
counties and four
co

GALLIPOLIS • Area FSA Com· spouse whose name is on the deed is
minces are a vital link in the effective eligible to take pan in any FSA pro·
administration of farm programs gram. Since a lot of wives' names are
locally. Area committees are respon· not listed on our records, we urge you
sible for carrying out programs .in to cal I the office and provide the FSA
accordance with regulations, nation- with your name and social security
al and stale policies, procedures, and number so officials can add you to
instructions.
their name and address file.
·
For additional information you
To ensure farmer understanding
and wide program participation, com- may contact the office or your local
mittees must see that county office commiuee representative who are
operations are farmer oriented and Tom Woodward, Dennis Murdock.
that farmers receive good service' Jim Burleson, Evereu Justice, and
,The election of good fanners is Paul Butler.
important 10 ALL fannen.
The Gallia-L.awrence FHA office
By CINDY JENKINS,
WHO .SHOULD VOTE? Farm is located · in the C. H. Me Kenzie
Olatrict Fornter,
owners, operators, tenants and share Agricultural Center at Ill Jackson
Gallia SAWCD
croppers oflegal voting age can vote · Pike. Room 1571. Gallipolis, phone
GALLIPOLIS • Sometimes, as a if they are eligible to take pan in any
446-8686 or 1-888-211-162~ (Toll
forester, there comes a lime when one FSA program. ~ny land owner's free in 6-1 area code),
must stop and smell the roses. Except

.What is
a forest?

in the forest, one will probably be . . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
smelling spicebush (Lindera ben·
zoa), wintergreen from the black
birch (Betula lenta), and the wonder·
ful woody smell of the whole forest
ecosystem.
Not to mention the animal king·
dam, which is full of. wonderful
species such as the cavity dwelling ·
black capped chickadee, Eastern box
tunic, and white tailed deer.
What is a forest? A forest is a corn·
We carry Reclever Hitches, Fifth Wheel Hitches,
bination of trees. other plants, insects,
· wildlife. soil. water. air. and people.
Ball Mounts, and many other accesories for your
No matter whether we li•c in the
NEW and OLD cars and trucks.
county, the suburbs, or the city. we
come in contact with forests every
day.
If you don't privately own a forest.
Ohio has 19 State Forests. 14 Nature
Preserves, and unknown to many
people, the Wayne National Forest
Gallia Coutitians can reach one of the
most beautiful state nature preserves
in the stale 'with just a 45 inutc dri4359 ST. RT. 180 GAWPOLIS, OH
ve. Lake Katherine State Nature
Preserve is just west of Jackson on
(614) 446-1044
Hours: Mon.·Frl. 8-5; Sat. 8-12
Beaver Pike, and north on Lake
Katherine Road. II has topography of
100\ cliffs. Salt Creek and its riparian wnc acres and acres of upland
· • oak, and a beautiful Lake.
· To the north ofGallia County into
Hocking County is Hocking Hills
Stale Park, Old Man's Cave, Ash
Cave, and Conkle's Hollow. A won·
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
derful way !O spend a Saturday
exploring the carved hills and caves
of Mother Nature and it is less than
an hour and o'ne half away.
And last but not least is the Wayne
National Forest located right here in
Gallia County! There is over 14,000
.
acres of The Wayne in Galli a Coun·
ly. It is used by ·campers, hikers,
hunters, horseback riders etc .. Witli·
•
• in the confines of the forest you will
, find rare and endangered plants along
. • with the more commonly found ones,
many different forest types, such as
, oak-hickory, beech-maple, oak·pine,
•, ·and pure stands of yellow poplar, oak,
·; ~ etc.
·
! Our neighboring counties of Jack·
! son, Vinton, and Lawrence also have
~ some acreage within their boundaries.
•
So lake a hike in the .woods, ste
.. how many plant and animal species
:: you can identify. This is one of the
· : most beautiful times of the year
' · when the leaves are really starting to
, : show those hidden reds, oranges, and
; yellows.
END OF OCI'OBER
: For more information on any of
, • the above mentioned areas·. call
; • Cindy Jenkins, District Forester at
• 446-8687 or stop by the C. H.
~ _ McKenzie Ag Center at II I Jackson

SPECIAl SAll 01 All
HIJCIIES Ill SJOCI

'

FOi THE FIRST 0111 HUIDRED
CUSTOMERS WE HAVE FREE
IIISTALUTIOIIUI

.

I

I

I

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

ACROSS

1 Where Santiago is
6 Helps in wrongdoing
t I Added liqoor to
16 Animal skins
21 Take hasy
22 Kind of boom
23 Escape
24 Greek meeting
.place
25 Excuse
26 "We're off - - the
Wizard'
27 Savory jelly
28 Pink color
29 Brewed beverage
30 onoman
32 Unexpected
obstacle

bar
36 Insect egg
37 Ceases
39 Giveand41 Genuine
43 "Much - About
Nothing"
44 Hankerings
45 Thespians
48 Penny
50 Tickle Me - (doll)
52 Edible root
55 Breakfast fare
57 Fly high
59 Smooth, in music
63 Change lor lhe
better
64 Irregular
66 "Insurance" against
llals: 2 wds.

34 Kind of

68 Firearms

69 Two perlormers
70 Lummox
72 Antlered animals
73 Abbr. in business
74 Rough ealoulation:
abbr.
75 Landing place
76 Residences
78 Sight organ
79 Flat·lopped hill
80 Agoing down
82 Failure

83 Pitchers

85 P~rson in power
86 Un1led

DOWN

87 SmaU dog, lor short
86

1 Item for packing
Actress Hayes
3 Work by Homer
.4 Chemist's
worlcroom. for short
5 Go OUI
6 Off the right pall1
7 Accountant's cousin

·-a boyr

2

89 Use a spade
90 Adozen dozen
93 'rreal with respect
95 All - - sudden
96 Frankenstein's

creatioo

100 Floating platform
101 Animalfriend
102 Automaton
104 CoStly Iabrie
1OS Writer Levin
106 Perform
107 Oren in finery

8 Print measures

9 Cravats

10 Odor
1t "20,000 - Under
the Sea•
. 12 Hirt and Pacir)O
ta Recipe l)l8ai!Ures
14 Minnesota city
15 Time period
16 Fill a suitcase
17 The"''
18 Actor Greene
19 Instruct ·
20 Adds seasoning lo •
31 The Beehive Stale
33 Circle part
35 Place tor higher
teaming
36 Whirls
40 Rye fungus
42 Baseball's Slaughter
44 Berra of baseball
46 Drug leners
47 MiL rank
49 Pals
51 New Vorl&lt; team
52 Stormed
53 Divert
54 Fender mishaps
56 Tolerated
58 Appraisers
rite in "The
mpest"
ut
tertainment
award
64 Animal fat
65 Sweet potato
67 Sunbeams
69 Eal
71 What's charged
75 Writing implements
76 Temperamenl
77 Rapid

· 109 Oty. o! eggs

110 Picl&lt;le flavoring
111 Heavenly body
112 Ingrained
115 Tum into
117 Rental conlract
118 Actor Borgnine
119 Mr. Cassini
121 Moist
122 Temporary
replacement
123 Cook in juices
125 Saucy
127 Where Brussels is
129 Stave
132 Seize
134 Passed away
136 Word wit~ control
137 Strikebreaker
141 Acted as a guide ·
142 Ford 111allailed
144 Wanton look
146 Small monkey
148 Black cuckoo
149 Eschew
151 Folklore creature
153 Yellow fruit
155 Young cod
157 Boldness
158 Weird
159 Pollute
160 Animal with antlers
161 Unripe
162 Horse
163 Accumulate
164 Parts of shoes

Pike, Suite 1569.

.·

I

ALS0••••40 USED TUCTORS
IN STOCK
I

•

•

IEET

'lOUR

IIATat

1.Q00.2111·12•S. Exll78tl,

Aleuncler ......,
School Dltllrfct, be 18 yeare

IUln., Must Be 18 Yrt. Serv-U

olllge end over.

30 Announcerna1ts

&amp;1-5-&amp;030.

l Jomel E. Buill. Wil No1 Be flo.
apontlble For Anw Debts Other
Thon My OWn.

c....., orformtroopalling

No t.lndng, llahlng

.on 111o old

MAKE IT AIUii..
USE WANT ADS. .:.' ·
AHANDY
TOOl -.

•

•

COLUMNS, unusual wln1dow
country-otyle home.
By BRUCE A. NATHAN
AP Ne... reatur..
With Its dl•tlnctlve country
styling, plan G· 75, by HomeStyles
Oeslsners Network, brings •
breath or fresh air Into any neighborhood. It hu 1,795 square reel
or living space:

dol"l{l!cnd!IUn.suJob the exterior oftbfl channln«
The Inviting wraparound porch
is an Ideal spot ror a sunny summer afternoon.
Inside, the Foyer Is brightened by
a striking elliptical transom window above the f'ront door.
The adjacent forrt)al dining
room has decorative cblumna and

~

t---""----~3---1

a D-rool, 4-inch stepped ceiling.
Bright and airy, the well·
desl11ned kitchen Includes a
pantry, a windowed sink and a
breakFast oove with access to the
side porch.
An 11-rootstepP"d ceiling Is featured In the great room, where B
fireplace Is the local pint. Two
sets or sliding glass doon open to
a covered back porch.
Topped by an 11-foot eeUins, the
lush master bedroom has a vorl·
ely of highlights: twin walk-In

Giveaway

.

/1''·

I

1--------1u
r

/1\

,

I

~

_,,
,,....

......... Q.I

11'--o'lt

G·73

For AP Special Features
Smoke detectors have saved thousands of lives. They are essential
safety measures in every house.
Types or detec;tors
Smoke detectors can have either
ionization or photoelectric sensors.
Because each'type of sensor responds
more quickly to a different kind of
fire, the best protection is a detector
that uses both.
Ionization detectors contain a tiny
amount of shielded radioaclive malerial that emits a small amount of radi·
ation that's detected by a sensor.
Smoke blocks 1hc radiation from
reaching the sensor, tripping the
alarm.
Photoelectric detectors usc a small
light beam shining on a light-scnsi·
live photocell. An alarm sounds
whenever smoke panicles interrupt
the light beam. The light bulb producing the beam must he replaced
about every three years.
An ionization unit responds faster
to quick-burning fires with little
smoke, such as from paper, wood and
fat They are recommended for work
areas and furnace rooms. A photo·
electric model, which is less susccp·
tible to false alarms from normal
kitchen fumes, reacts more quickly to
slow-burning fires, such as smolder·

house has more lhan nne story.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
MATIRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
Regular ...... ,........ ,.. ,..... ,..... $85
Firm ................................... $95
Extra Firm ........................ $105
Queen Size Sets .... $295 &amp; Up
King Size SBis ........ $350 &amp; Up
Bunk Mattress .......... $48 &amp; Up
Bed Frames ...... $25·$35- $50
Water Bed Replacement
Mon. 111ru Sat 9·5 p.m.
3 miles out Bulavllle Pike

:t~Hl~!-&amp;!~b~itld:~n;t~a•J:&lt;~~,:&lt;

Oesign G-75 has a Foyer, great
room, dining room, kitchen,
breakfast area, three bedrooms,
two Full baths and a laundry
room, totallns 1,795 aquare reel
orllvlng space. This plan Includes
a standard basement, crawlspace
or slab foundation, and ~x4 exte·
rior wall Framing. The two-car .
garage and utility room add 471
square reel of additional space.
provides 779 square (eel when
Rnished.

7 Pine St.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Call for an appt.
388·0442
Free PVH Speech &amp;
Language Screenings
Thursday, October 30, 1997,
3 p.m. to 5 p.m.

For children ages 2 and up
Children's Clinic (2801
Jackson Ave.)

vents. windows and doors.

To install a battery-operated unit,
usc the screw~ and anchors that
come with it. Position the base bracket on the wall or ceiling and mark the
screw locations with a penciL Drill
holes for the anchors and insert
them. Then screw the bracket to the
anchors. After installing the battery.
place lhc smoke detector over the
brackel and snap or twist it into place.
Testing and cleaning
Test smoke detectors monlhly and
replace the baueries annually on a
specific date. such as Halloween.
Some units can be tested by shinin~
a flashlight on a sensor. On most,
however. you push ·a button on the ·
detector to lest it. If there is no lest ·
bunon, hold a lighlcd candle 6 inch·
es below the detector. If the alarm
doesn't sound. hlow out the candle
and let smoke drift into lhe unit. If il
still docsn'l sound. check the hauery
or circuit.
Dust can reduce a detector's scn-

Install detectors in the middle or
the ceiling. ifpossihle, allc.,st4 inch·

sitivily. ll's a g&lt;MKl idea to gently vue·
uum the dctcc.:tors usin~ a wund

cs away from any wall . Dctcl:tors cnn

;;lltachmcnt uhuut once a month. A
..Jctct;tor in a dusty laundry mom nr

also be mounted high on walls. (i to
12 inches !rum the ceiling. Avoid
areas, such us corners or ut 9ntls of'
hallways, where air - and smoke· do
not circulate very welL Also keep
smoke detectnrs away from drufls ul

By POPULAR MECH4NICS
For AP Special Features

workshop especially needs frcqucnl
dean in g.
Never dis&lt;.:11nncl:l a smoke d!!h!L:tor. If nuisam:c al:mns. sut.:h :1s from
cooking. arc a prohlcm. ,,:onsiUcr
rclm.:ating the lktcctor.

Q: How can I get paint 10 stick to
the high-traffic areas on our concrete
front porch'?
A: Today's epoxy, polyurethane
and acrylic paints wear much better
than oil and alkyd paints on concrete.
Before applying a water-resistant
paint, clean and roughen the surt'ace.
Use a trisodium phosphate soluuon or
strong detergent to scrub the floor.
Sanding with coarse emery paper
may be required to give the old surface a roush texture f...- good pamt
bonding. Test-paint a small area to
make sure the new paint will adhere.
Q: Our wood floor makes all kinds
of annoying squeaks when we walk
across it. Is there some way the floor
can be tightened up with shims to
quiet it down?
A: Many times, what we call floor
squeaks are only noises, and have

nothing to do with squeaking iloors.
Plumbing pipes and heating ducts can
pop and crackle, even " squeak" as
we walk across the floor.
The easiest way 10 find any noise
source is to have someone walk
across the floor while you listen care·
Mly below. Noises thai seem to come
from heating duct locations can be
traced down and eliminated by loos·
ening brackets that connect the heat·
ing duels to the underside of floor
joists 10 provide a son of shock
absorber between the two units.
Check pipe locations where Y·
shaped pipe hangers suppon water or
gas pipes hung beneath the n~or
joists. Joists that flex when they re
walked on can rub against pipes or
ducts and create a noise, or ducts Ihat
are tied tightly to joists can make a
~Junking noise or "tin-can" when
they bend. Adjust p1pe hangers to
relieve the noise.

&amp; AHectlonale, Hat Never Been
Oultlde, Gt ..7•2-2901 .
12 Combination desk &amp; chairs.

30H75-15511.
.4 Kittens, 2 maie1, 2 females ,

Bwka old, liuar trained, bll)ckl
white, brown/White, dger striped,
1 all gray. 8-S month old oa11.

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

Install smoke detectors
in the ho-me for fire safety
ing mattresses and upholstery. Wired
plug·in or battery
In new homes, many loc,al codes
require a 120-volt smoke-dclection
system wired directly into a· circuit
and installed at the time of construe·
tion. Another type can be 'plugged
into an electrical receptacle. With I he
plug-in type. use a receptacle that is
not controlled by a wall switch. Both
types have an indicator light that tells
you that the detector is receiving
power. Either type should have al&gt;attery backup in case of power failure.
In existing homes, the widely
available battery-operated units arc
easy to install and give good prolection when the batteries arc tested regularly. Select a mndcl that hccps ·
when it needs a new battery.
Installation
One smoke detector is not enough
for most homes. You should have al
least one in each bedroom or adjoin·
ing hallway, one on each noor ir your

Unusual Markinga, Verw Lovable

BULLETIN BOARD

A S!DELIGHTED DOOR leads Inside !rom ll!e covered lh&gt;nl porch.
(For a more detoUed, scaled plan
The ro7er 11 dlltlnsuflhed l'rom the formal dlniDI! room b7 a series
of rounded columns. The IIJ'Cat room Ia the center or the home, and · qf this haute, indudins guides 10
t.ttimating 'costs nnd financing,
provldea door nreessl• •h~ llvo-car sam~· The kitchen and brr.ok·
send $4 to Hause qf ~~ Wuk, P. 0.
1M;,l area lt ju.:;t step• uwil,,. The sleep•~&lt;~~ \lUarters an 1rouped
tosether on the other side of the home. The master bedroom Ia ollu· Box IJ62, New York, N.Y. 10116·
ated to the rear of the two secondary bedroom• for prlvac7 and tJ62. Be •ure ID ·incltule lhe plan
quiet. Tile lliundry room Is located near the bedrooma.
.
number.

By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS

Old, U.

Wilh 1/ory

Free 5 Puppies: Mi,.ed Bread.
To Good Homol. l1 .. 258-lli47

An upper-floor bonus room
"'-IG" OVERAU

llo~

5 While

0525.

i[q\f~) Q;,i'j,i'f't~ll'Ql!illffil
TIU cU GAIAGI
21'· ••,. 11"-D"

elacli

7 Week Old Black L•b Pup'Y, 2
Female Cats, 2 Kittens, 614·245-

master bath that has a circular
spa tub with a glass-block wall.
Two secondary bedrooms share
another lull bath. The foremost
bedroom Includes a 12-foot vault·
ed ceiling.
Additional living space can be
made anllabl~ by makin&amp; the
upper floor Into a home omce,
hobby room or another bedroom.

........'.:!~::?:.~. .t~::.~~L-~~~=-~~-:.... ---------·-······· ~--------

Trained,

304-882-3557.

closets, a bayed siWns area and a

. . . . . . . Q.l

8011111 SPACI

~.Ill

dem o1

I Fomo1o Kitton: •

Q

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page B-:4

Uutt Be 11 Yrt. Sllfv·U, 111·

......,,.~

Term of election will lie lor
tHI • 2000. Thr" to be
elected for lhe 3 yeer torm.

Homes: Questions and answers

PRitES i\BE GOOD UNTIL 1'10.:

Hard Cllol...? Ltt
A Poychlc Help. Ju11 Call HIOO.
3211-1045, Ext &amp;011, t:I.IIIIUin.,

Do Yo• Hove

40

*

9 -·· 231
1-MF240·2WD
3.-MF 240 • 4 WD
1-MF 1230
2-MF 261
2-MF 213
1-MF 383

Pei'IOIIIII

e•s ,.,..

Tht Albtny lndependtnt

79 Makes .laces for the
camera
81 Price
82 -Quixote
84 Letter after zeta
85 Skater's place
87 Edible tuber
89 Rag or paper
90 A+ or B-. e.g.
91 Speedy car
92 Many times
93 Queen of the Greek
gods
94 Staft
95 Percolated
96 Distance measure
97 Giantgod
98 Rubout
99 Scarcer
101 Make believe
103 Hope or Dylan
104 Dunderlleads
107 Helper. abbr.
108 Dog's cry
110 Rounded roofs
111 Lines of stilclies
113 Destructive insect
114 Act
116 Taxi
117 Ferrigno or Gehrig
f20 Cooked a certain
way
122 Raise up
124 Squanders
126 Golf ball stand
t 28 Tiny flashes of light
129 "In" talk
130 Crowbar
131 Love
133 Flat cap
135 TV's Burlce
136 Holiday song
139 Win by-140 Wails
142 Perlecl place
143 Body of knowledge
145 Paper quant1ly
147 Relatives of ologies
ISO "- Gol a Secret"
f52 Untruth
154 Farrow offilms
I sG Bill and -

SPECIAL PRICES ON
Al.l. NEW MF TRAC?rORS
IN STOCK

Seerel8ry et ,.... (7) ciiYI

Agriculture Society
Dorlt H. Mace, Secretary
(101 t2, 19, 21 3TC

Jim's F•rm Equipment
2150
EISTERIIVE.

Meee, 2011 Rtynolcl'a Ave.,
Albany, Ohio. Petlflo..
muat ba flied wl1h the

bel"" elecllan.
C.ndtd8tn muat ,..,. •

•

airpon

Miami. The air targo specialist flies
twice a week to Hong Kong and
• serves I00 cities.
Rickenback.er also is a finalist to
land a DHL Worldwide Express hub.
The cargo company has outgrown the
35 acres il has at the Greater Cine in·

005

tic:UI for
the Albllny lndapandtnt
Agriculture So$1y, be reli-

SUNDA'Y PUZZLER

·Gallia FSA Committee
Southern Air Transpon was
impressed enough with the
that it moved ils headquarters from elections are important

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

AtHJOIJtJC!: rAI:N l S

Public Notice
P.UiioM CM lie obllllned
from Bee.....,ry Doria H.

V10IId

How to solve minor problems
in the home and i_
n the shop

true.''

I

•

_Pif?C_S can alsn make noises when
they expand from hoi w:li~r. contract
from cold water. or vihralc or ham·
mer from high walcr pressure. Foam
pipe insulation can he used to cush·
ion the pipe and muzzle c~pansi0n or
pressure noises. The insulation will
also help prevent condensation from
forming on the pipes which can
cause puddles Oln basement noors. Or,
use insulation to separate pipes from
each other, to avoid noise from pipes
rubbing against each other.
Q: My existing concrete patio is
cracked badly and I plan to replace it.
How far apan should control joints be
spaced?
A: Control joints· spaces between
one section·of concrete and the adja· ·
cent sections · relieve stresses in con·
crete thai result from expansion and
contraction with changing tempera·
turc. They should be spaced a mui·
mum of 10 feet apan.

.'

can (304) 675·5250 for an
appointment
Walk-ins Welcome
Bidweii·Porter Elementary
Fall Carnival
Sat-Nov 1
6:00 pm-9:00 pm
Haunted Hallway
Games &amp; Activities
Cafeteria Opens at 5:30 pm
Auction Starts 8:00 pm
For Sale 1994 Brandywine
Mobile Home. 14x72.
Secluded private lot on rented
property. 1 1/2 miles fr'om
G_allipolis 446·3764
Now.at Head/Quarters
Full time for her customers
convenience
Fran Workman.
Tue, Wed, Thur &amp; Sat
Call for an appoint, today.
446·2673

Bring this ad-in and receive
$5.00 of Chemical Service.
Also ask about our student
specials. Also manicures.

French City Press, Inc.
423 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Oh 45631
is now under the new
management of Joseph
A. Rose. He has been
co-owner for 8 years and.
has been with the
company for over 32
years. It's business as
usual here at French
City Press, so for all of
your printing needs, give
us a call at446·4383.

Holzer Medical
Center's Heartline,
an educational and
interactive cardiac
support group meets
Sunday, October 26,
2 p.m., French 500
Room
SPEAKER:
Dr. Gene Ables
TOPIC:
Cardiomyopathy
Open to the public
Refreshments

PVH Open House
The Grand Opening of
the Office of
Robert Tayengco, M.D.
(Old Post Office)
11 North Second Streei
Mason, 1/1111
Saturday, October 25th,
1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Public Is Invited

Style Station
Hair Salon
Opening Soon
Now Hiring
Hair Dresser and Nail
Technician
A new salon in a
prime location.
Call 446-2753 or
675·3568 for
interview.
AMVETS
1DB Uberty Streel
Kanauga, Ohio ·
Phone 446-9051 1
7:30·1 0:30 pm
Hoe·Down, Two-Step, Clogging
2nd Sal of the month· Adams
County Pickers
3rd Sat. of the month·
Country Grass
4th Sat. of the month·
Liberty Mountaineers
BINGO
Wed. &amp; Thurs. 7:00.10:00 pm
Country Line Dance Lesson's
avery Friday Night at 7:00 pm
with Jamie &amp; Debbie Moore .
Eve one Welcome

BOOTS
Alllealher Western Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
Engineer .......... ...... .. ......$49.00
Wellington ....... ........... ....$49.00
Loggers ........ .......... .. .... $5()-55 '
Harness .............. .. .... ..... $59.00
Carolina-Georgia· H&amp;H
Insulated. Safely. Gortex

SWAIN FURNITURE .

Specialty Floral ·
Arrangements
for all occasions
Wedding· Hospital·
Sympathy· Homes
Name your own price.
Call Jurrie Reynolds ·
.
I
at 446-9741

Meet the Gallia

County School
Board Candidates
Tues., Oct. 28, 7:00
Senior Citizens
Building, Jackson Pike
Sponsored by Teachers
for Quality Education

Victims of
Domestic
Violence!
Do you need a
victim advocate to
assist you at court?
Call 446-6752 or
1
Beanie Baby Haven!
Need any Beanies
Current &amp; retired.
Call 614-388-8185
Auto Insurance Monthly Payments
Problems with your driving record ;
OUI's, Speeding lickels, Same
Day SR·22's issued. No prior
insurance, Canceled. No Problem.
Let us be your one stop
Auto Insurance Provider.
Call for a quote.
446·7400

OILER'S DEER SHOP
S.R. 325, Langsville OH
Open Now &amp; Will Be Open
During The Bow &amp; Regular
Deer Season

446-2342 or 992-2156

FOR MORE INFORMATION

�Page 04• ..............~ .
40

GIVIIWiy

~ WWitld

110

--c.

Pomeroy •

CHILD CARE·Worklng couple
aoka onorgo~• &amp; nporioncocl
lady tG care lor nowborn ·In our
s-.OidF• homo during tnt dar. Sond In·
malo, Spoyocl, Front Po"' Do· qulry I - - D: P.O.'IIoa.%34
-.t. ... o.... Milia- No 1111'-d, wv 252112. Atlotoncot
Ott&gt;or P.ll. Houool&gt;roko. 8U· ~
4··?.,11 .......1351

110 LOIIIIId Found

Computer Uteri Needed. Work
own Hro., I20K To 150K m. 1,

-7118X1173.

LOST: SmoU - I l l Torrior
mla malo dog In FllltrjiCk oroo. ~oo~tologlll Noodocl, Gaur,
31Mo87HeQO.
anloocl Wogoo, Paid VauUon,
Frao CEU Hour, FUll &amp; 1'1rrt Want:
70
Yard Sale
td Otllor Bonellralndudod, 114-

========1448-72117.
GllllpOIII

'

Domino'• Plzra Now AccepUng
Appilcallono At: GaHipolla I Po,

&amp; VIcinity

moroy.ApplylnPoraon.

ALtL 'Yani..._IIUII
le PMII M AdWIMI.
AEtptH:J.•p.m.

Domino'• Pizza-Now hiring all
paaltiont, Pt. Ptelaanl area,
must bt 11yr1. old. 3U-175-

IIro....
......... ..
51158.
................
tdltlon ·2:00p.m.
DRIVERI
,....,_llorldoiltdltlon
Toke Tho NOll Slop, locome
::-::-'~10~:00-:--L:-m._Stt-:-unlorl&lt;-::~:=-l An Owner /Operator. W• Ar·
llovlnt Sale: Sotu,..., Oct 18111. ron1e horythlnt: Plocomonl
Sal Oct 251h. S.l. NOY
, ttt With A Reputable Frtlghl Co.,
111

Gerfilld Ave., In Brick Belide

lneuranoe, Antf Tructl Finane·

lng. NO MONEY DOWNI BAD
flrot Cturcll 01 Clod, U:OO Tl 5:00 CREDIT, No Problem. Claao
-P.-:11.=:---:::7':'::---:-:--:-::-·I·A• COL, llln. 1 Yr.. OTR. Call
IAI.E
SALE
SAJ.E
•--3n-3tot.
Soturdor Nov. 1, 1G87 Tho Cru, Eorn ulnl mon-lor Chrlotmoo.
(Our aTo 12 Ynr Oldo)
.,
Aro Having A Rummage, Boko, 101 Avon, c:aii814·848-IIDOO.

-0.

And Crah Sill. This WiU Be Held

At Our Church Holt Bolrlnd Tho
Flrll Church 01 God On Garllotd
Avenue. The Hours Art 0 A.M .

Ta 8 P.M.
SALE

1ALE

1AL1

Pornaroy,
Mldcllapon

&amp; VIcinity

AI Yanl lalollllual Bo Paid In

·-··· o -• t:GQ.... ••·
-

--·

dar
Hloro t~o od lo to nrn,
llnday a Mo•tlar edition•

,.,. Frldaz.

80

Auction

IIIII Flea Market
Wederneyeta Aucllon Service,
Qollpol' Otllo &amp;14-3N-2720.

AnENTION VENDORS: Indoor
Ou- lt.DO Open
E-yday. Crawlotd'o Flea Mar·
Splc:o 15.00

ket, Henderson, WV. 30ot-875·

5404.

•
•

Rt 2-33 (Cnll-) Ron Prtc.

Ilia load ol quollty ,_ morchan·
dllt lot CIVIItmal. E¥111 Ctalta·

man tools 1 porcelaln dolf1. Ed

-11130.

310 HDrriM tor Sill
320 Mobile Homes
1.1 ............ BrtcltAancll.l
lor Sill
~~ DtiTTICII
.
. - ...
a
11211111w. a FP. CA.
LP G" City Wltor, ltU,aao Now1tNI4alO.._.......,
I'CI8ITION AVAUILI
Rtqulrad To be A - 01 A 81 ......., ..
lnolurloo I maniho FREE lot - .
Stall Awvvocl Couroo Of Trainlndudto lklrdno. doluJI allpe
Ina That Ha• Been App~ecl Br
and lotup. Ontr 1117.01 por
Tho ADA, long Torm Coro Eo·
monlll ..... 11075- Cllll:
porlencoAPkla.-...,_A
hooumo itl Conlldonco To Ad·
NEW 1 - HOliES 2 I 3 lEO.
-llalot, Ct.A 4211, CICI GolllpoROOMS. IIH down, 1111/mo.
llt
Dolr
Tribune,
125
Third
ruo, Golllpollo. OH _ ,
FFIEE DELIVERY I lETUP. 3042138 MndoWbrook Dr.. lbocl,
Poatal Joba 3 Pali~on• Avail, roomo.
2ballla. living room, rln- New 21x110 I or 4 boclreom.
·
No
Eaporlence
N-.ary,
lne
room.
lamiiJ room. 2car oo· 138.H5. FrH dolhrory. 1:1100·
For lnlormatlon, Call 100·111, ,_, loncoclln
bod&lt; yard, 1,100
1311, En3112.
oq. II. 304-175-31121.
SALES: looking b' ••a•llc Pll'~ 3 ·4 Boclracrmo, Optlonol Family Ookwood 21•11 3 bodroom, 2
eon ., Hit rtplKemtnt window• Room, CA, 2 Balhl, In-Ground both, olllrUng at 1111 per mo.
Cal1-1-e777.
and dooro. Exporlonce itl Hlltng Pool.
Noor Hoaplral I OaUtpollo.
and .-¥no pooltirtd. Atptr 11 $73,000.81-173.
Quo lily Window Sylltma. 110
Caurt Strttl, Pomeroy. Ohio 4 -oom Spilt Loval Willi &amp;coO
457118.
Sq. Ft. lncluilinO FuH Booomont
Willi 2 ear OOrogt, oaa Hoo~ 2
So- .. tMr down old build- lllioa
From Gallpolo On Bulavlllo
Ing &amp; haul oway, call alter 4pm Pile, On
1 112 Aore Flot Lo~ City
W410kdoyo, anrumo .,..konda,
~SM.ooo.eu 111 ~814-882-23511.
477 LoGrando Blvd., NowiJ flo.
TEXU REFINERY CORP. modeled Ranch Home, GrHn
Nteda M•ture Peraon Now In Schoola, Mull SHI I14·4C8,
GALLIPOLIS Aroo. Aouardilll 2421Ca1Arytino.
01 Training, Wrho 8. C. flopldno,
Dopt $-45831, Bo• 711, Fl. Approx. 2 Aerts, Sourwtattrn
Wort\ TX 71101-11711.
School Dli!Wicl On Road. 3
Bodroom' 2 Bollia. Largo Uvtng

Help Wlntld

110

-715-••-em.

VACANCY: Cook ~t!IOGIUQ~•:
H.S. Diploma IG4&gt;, Quanftw

a..go.

Po•••••

Furniture repair, refinish and tH•
........ 1110 ....... order&amp;. Ohio

auclion
urvlce. Llcanaed
IISI,Ohlo I Welt Virginia, 304·

Pllilllpo. 614·G82-1578.

full time auctlonHr, complete Mull Atoo Bo Sklllod In Tno Optralion 01 Varlaut Computer
SofiWare Program• Such AI
• 773-57850r3CW-773-5447.
Windowo 15, Micrv..h Word, AI· ·
duo Pogomokor And Omnl Pogo.
90 Wllllld to Buy
A Prolooolonol And PooltiYO AW.

Valloy Atlinlahlng Shop, larry batho, large lr/dr combo, kl111r
COtl'ila Will\ wortring lp. Utlity room,

r•
lrlg011tor, dllh waohor, and 001·
coma• equipped with 1to¥e,

George• Partable S.wmlll, doll't
haul your loa• to the nil ju~l Cllll

bego ilopoaal, olr, - ...
oorauo ond otorogo bulldtne
,,

eluded, privacr fence In bac:k,
aplll rail In front, lwo porches,
81 4-848:11004.
Older home wllh new

-PI-

liE~ HEAI.TN AGENCY

WI Aro Plollo.ocl to Announce To
·Tho Galllpollo Aroo, Tno Growtll
Air Condltlonoro. Color T.V.'a, 01 Our Agoncr. WI Are Looking
VCR'o. Aloo Ju'* Coro, 114·251· For A DediCII ..d, Q...atilied Peroon To Holp Prornota Tho Ouaii!J

Non~Worklno Walher, Drwert,

210

Business
Opportunity

Stovta, RefrioeraiOrt, frHZetS,

Known For
Wan11d: Standing Timber Or' Thraughout Tho Areo.
Care

Wt

Are

· Chipped Wood, 114·311-818&amp;,
: Or814-38&amp;-1747.
PEDS. NURSE

.,.... - - Ellllliilr ICO
• Will Virghala, Oh5o llcenMI
Atqulrad.

SOWN PAYPHONEII
S2.000- Potrrnilal Prcfira
40 locaiHHrallk:.SIIIo

1-80Q.724-1730En totlU.

impro~e~

monto. 3br, 1 both, on 1 boouUiul
acre. city wa10t, hloli 1 dry, con-lonlto Alplay, na.....a
Pt. PlllotnL 158,800. 304·814·
2478.

s,,..
new

ThrH bedroom hou11 In
CUll, balement, garage,
window~.

dedli lnd .. rema•llfll

lnaldo, 814·742·11145, 114-1112,
1111.
Throa boclroom houoo, I luH
betha, tuM beumonvoaroga,
laroo bultcllno. povoc1 drf-.
114-1*8127 or :JCW.e7&amp;:4578.

mtlll 11perience. S.ncl rtaume

allot 7:30pm.
Clun Late Model C1ra Or to: P.O. Boo 488 Pt. Pluaant,
wv
2S!Ii0.
Trucks, 1HD Madill Or Newer,
Will haul junk or 1tUh - · $351
Smith Buk:k Pontiac, 1100 Eaal·
7
-~ Rollablo, and Pr-'&gt;lo pickup load. 304oe !&gt;!035.
Poroon To Holp Lay Corpot. wInFINANCIAL
J l O'a Aula PJrta. Buring U.lC.MI (&amp;14) 3U80e2
-77$-503:l
- · ' "· Soiling
porll. 3Qol.
'

320 Mobile Homes

====tor=Sa=la=~~
I '112 Schull Llmllod Edlion. 14•10,

1

MON.&amp; WED.
·6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST

$900.00
$50.00 OR MORE
PER GAME

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

'

1er lwei Sooial Worker, CDun- Ohio Based Trucking Company
Hiot. or Porchologill tliQIIrlo to looking For OTA Drlvoro. Singlo

be llconood. At 1oatt ono y- o1 On Toom Drlvt&lt;' Mull Bo Over
· OJporlonco In Individual and 25 Yoaro Old With 2 Yoora Ex·
lamltr illotapy. StilrJ range 11 r.rlonu And Good IIVR; All
121.000 • 127,000. For mort In- qulpmont to Lata llodol Con·
.. farmatton. wrlle Aclion Youth wentlonal Traclare With Reeter.

' !=aro, Inc. PO •o• 510 Rtptoy, W••".!T.. Pay, Health lnauronco
WV 25271 or caU 1·100·DS.I~+-~h;-~~~-~·~137;-tlk;;~-1277. Cloling Illite It Oct :11 .
h.!an AlcruitnMt

rAJ

114 311

IMI35.

14170 With Expendo I Bod,

Card of Tllenkl

everyone for their
help

in

during the illness
i'OUtlil -n•r 11omo1. Jol,.
Chill Cornalllk, 2rnlln II ,_,
Ill naithbor, trallt lor Al\"1 I
walkl.,. Aloo tooklna lot r •.,.

llkar (prot.r man &amp; wllo), lroa
21ro-. lumtohod homo or wlll
noooclali. hoi gordon. -lclor
wood hilt, lie, carpotlng. 304·
1711:2818.

passing

of

MOiher,

Lettie

&amp;

our

L.

McCain.
Sons- N(mnan, Gale
&amp; families

-·012.

In Memory

CHARLES W. KING
SR.
3/6/32· 10/26196
A year has come and
gone now since you

passed away.
.T he pain I feel in my
heart

will

never fade

away. We spent our
lives together,

We

loved each other so.
million

A

limes I've

thought of him,

a

times I've

If

love could
have

died. In life I loved
him

so, In death I love

t8CI3, Ceniurr Bravo t4JI70, 3

Bldrooma, 2 Full Batha, Cennl
Ail Willi Hoot ~ Par Oh OniJ,

heart to lose him, but

fdou Maae 9t.
Newlywea!
Happy 30th
']ay!
[ove. /dOJAr Wife.
[orenCI.Mom. DCid &amp;
'rCimmLJ. (jloria. Keith
&amp;Kevin

Oiacount Mabile Home Parts &amp;
Acce11ori11, Yln~l Skinlng

$28U5, Anchoro $5.00, Awn·
Professional
lnga, Doors, Windows. Plumbing
SUpplln, WaiM HooiMo. FurnacServices
es. fiberglau Steps. Call euHARTS IIASONARY • Block, 448·8418 - · Supply. 13111
bt~ &amp; SIDnl WOtk. 30 )'Nil ex- Sollord School Rd, Coiilpollo,
Ol1lo.

885-3581 alter 1:00pm, ,.. job to
Ooublowlde Dloplayo "lluot Go .
omol or D BIG. -.2011
.EOE.
..... 11.000. 3CW-738:3408.
Pl'ryolclan Sorvle~o Nttdod For Ll•lnglton'a baaemtnt Wlltr·
3:3114:30 P.M.
~ Houra A Day, Mollrt&lt;ly Type Multi.Contor Ptonnlng Agoncr. proolino, all b•nmtnt repairs Ooublowldo On land.l250 0..
, Nlwqd, Rtllt'MA~, lt4--•d· Contract Position Of Approx· done, rr. . lltllnlltl, Ufetime poolt AtquQd. SCW.T.Ie-7285.
lmottly 3 ·10 Hourt Por Wook. guaran111. 1Orrs on job IXptrl·
· 111311.
.Froo olr, ho aklr~ 14xl0 3 lioclDay And Evening Houro Avail·
room, 11 , 0~5/down, 1111/mo,
.Caahl« I Coolr. Bring Roaurna ablo For Qyn E"mo And Birth - - scw.e~~145.
Col ·-1-1777.
To: Llldt John'o
284J Stllo Control StrYi- STI e- For
REAL ESTATE
•-141.~.-·•· llalo And Femolo. Ewallont
Froo air, lroo aklr~ 11•111 9 or •
Opportunltr For Added Income.
bodroom 11.35Gidown, $2111/mo.
·eaatlrit • llovlo E - Produc; Mocllcat Degrae Willi Trolnlrlg
Col1_t ..n7.
..n T-o. Film Sludlo, 114· And Eaporlonca In Or-gy. 310 ltornH for Slla
1!13 Ill
llcanoocl To Proctlco In Ohlti.
Kltwood 121i41. 2 Bt d ...., ,
Seneltlve To Women's laauee. GOV'T FORECLOSED Hom11 Cord
.... 14.000. 814-:14~
1IDI Practk:e UrtHr PllnnH hr- from ~nie1 On t1 Delinquent
· C..W-IMJIIII
lt 1'1-~
oml!oodFoclt&lt;atlonOIAmortca Tax, Rtpo'a, REO'&amp;. Your Area Largo -lion ol uotd lromu 2
Toll F•tt (1) 100·211·1000 e.i or 3 llld100mo. Storq at t2185.
• Early Clillrlllood. Special Edu· Standardo And Guldallnn H
·2&amp;14 For Cu...,. Ullingl.
Quick dtiiYory. Call IU·385..cotlon, or Proaclraol Handl, OSHA And CLIA Roqulromonra:
ceppoc1 dogr- prolorrad. Plarr, Undor Superylalon 01 Agency Home In country wllh 38 acrn 111121.
. .rdlnato, lrnplomont and _,. OW.... And Clrlol Opei- only '1 )'llfl old, whh two btd:
LOT LOCATORS. Coli 304·755..,, eortr lnt....,.lon oorvtcM •~no Olllcar. lond Rttumo And roomo. living nrom. lor doYotopmontollr detarocl Throo EmptoriMftt Rotor-• ullily room, oa.go bulliling.ball\
with 5518.
. , _ - · 11 3 ,_. In clllld To: Plannocl perontllood 01 cellar, one car garage. Locattd MUST SELL Mr loto, your gaitl.
car• center. Sond rooumo to : loullloaot Ohio, 388 Richland on BoNey Run fWd. lilr on 3boclrllom &amp; 2 both, ctou to
P.O. Boo 15441, HunlinQton, WV A111., Ailrono. OH 45101. EOE 1 lelt.
Prlctd at 170,000, call 81C· town. Aok lor Frank 304· 7557181.
25701 1i1'0r:l.3t.EOE.
I~E,;.,IP._.- - - - - - - 384-20117oret..--. ·

'*'

a

he did not go alone. A
pan of me went with
him when God wok

po~~,et-&amp;161.

Two Hdraom ttllltr In Racine,
114112 1118.

Two boclroo.n traitor"" New Lima

The family of Neptunus "Rex" Kuhn would
like to express their sincere thanks and appre·

Ad Cllll814-7•2- ....... , _
.•
·~ ~~ r••

440

Aa-.

Apartments
for Rant

Month, Rtltrtnces

Callll14) 448-2101

Nice 2bf, rtferenc.. &amp; dtpollt,
... poll. 31Mo875-5112.

I Boclloom Apertmont On Firat
Avonut, Oalllpolla, $25~/Mo.,

Newton, 6th Floor Neurology Nurses, Nurses
at Riverside/Grand Hospice, VFW Post
#4464, American Legion #27 and Pallbearers.

1 Bodroom Ground Floor, Noar
~~
E-m-•
~-, ~ 01
_..,.,..,
_..,
.... IIOMI r--.
Wllooii·Up. Air, 1211Wo., +Utililin, Depoolt a leaao Req. No
Ftto. 814....,2857.

special thanks to Rev. Charles Lusher for
his consoling words, the Willis Funeral Home

2 Bodroom In Galllpollo, 150 112
Gropo Srroot, $250/Mo., Only
Wa•Fumilhtd.l14-3811-170&amp;.
2 bedroom, furnlahtcl, garage
apa.rlm•nt In Clifton, 1250/mo.

Twin RNer1 Tower, now accepltng
applications for 1br. HUD IUblld·

you did to console our hearts during the
death of our beloved son, special friend and
brother.

Special thanks to Riverside/Grant

~ollopooit.et..-,1078.

for all the help ad kindness extended to our
family.

piuo dopoollSCW-77.1-5140.
2bdrm. apll.. total olactrlc, ap·
pllancao lurrtllllod, laundry room
lacllili"' ctoM " ochootln Appllcetiono avalilblo at: VUiaga

Hazel Kuhn, Patricia Tweecl,

&amp; family,
Alan Kuhn &amp;

Donna l.,Jley, Charles Kuhn

Bill Kuhn &amp;

Green Apt1. 14D or Clllet•·DD2-

110

Public

'

;;".l'"c.:J

Sale and Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION

PEARL H.
10/21/1979
WILMA E. ELLIOTI ll/13/1919,4/26/1997

Rt,

588

Antiques, collectibles, furniture, glassware,
household
items,
misc.
SOMETHING
DIFFERENT EVERY WEEK!
Auctioneer: Lealie Lemley

614-388-9443 or
614-245-9868 Auction Barn
."*Salas Every Friday Night at 6:30 P.M,
"'Second Friday Night Each Month Is
Our Antique Sale! ·

You have.!ought many baulcs 10 reach the top ol the
mounlam.
You fough~ long and hard. You have reached !he lop~ now
rest.
God saw that you were getJinglircd, ;md a cure was not to

be .
So He Put His arms around you and

whispered ..come lo

·

With tearful eyes w~ watched you suffer, and suw you rude
away.

v4tt

I'BIN'S WAIEHOUSE
2230 HONEYSUCIILE WIE, WEllSTON. OHIO
1-614:384:3645

+"PROFESSIONAL~~- -=-==
TRUCK DRIVER
TRAINING

II·] ~!

I

,-,·h2"'1

I \I

T/,,. Dnw11 of
- Opportuniry

FAU YUD WI. SAVIll&amp; IUCISII CASH AlfD CAII't NO lllUIIIS

~&gt;2 Ill ... hit!

'''II \Ill lllllt~&gt;h,~""l'

Mld·Ohio Valley rruck driver
llo~lnina
ts licensed by lhe Ohio
ol Highway Safely as a
Driver Tramlng School.
program Is accrediled by the Qbig_
and ttle

Although we loved you dearly, we could nol make you stay.
A golden heart stopped beating, hard working hands to rest.
God broke our bearts to prove to us, He only takes the best.
Sadly Missed and Loved by Your Family
In Memory

In .Mtmory ofWalter "'Bob " Co11cfi ·
wfio passed away one year ago today,
October z6, 1996.
We miss you so mucfi, and pray every day;
'11iat 9or1 up in lieavtn, Will sfiow us tfie way.
Jit'~nows wfien our liearts are acliing;
Jie ~nows liow mucli ovt can bear.
:He'll wal~ btsidt us, '11ieltad us by tfie lionel;
:No mantr fiow litavy our burdens. Jie stems lo
understand.
Wt lovt you,
Sadly missed by: Isabelle;Janice, :Mi~t, 'David and
amanda; 'Bob and Xartn; 'Ron, 9foria , Steplianit and
Jtrtmy; 'RicR.;}tjf, Sopliia, :Heatlier and }ertmy;
}tnnifrr, Joe and ]oty.

B.C. S., with over 50 locations In Southeastern Ohio.
currently has 3 part-time opanings In two of our
programs in. Gallla and Meigs Counlies. The posHions
are:
1) Meigs: 8 am· 8 pm Sat/Sun;
2) Meigs: 8 pm.a am, Sal/Sun;
3) Gallla: 11 pm- 8:30am. Thurs; 10:30 pm·8:30
am, Fri; 8:30 pm, 9 am, Sal;
.
We are searching for compassionate professionals
with .a team vision and a desire to teach parsonal and
community skills to Individuals with mental
relardatlon/developmenlal dlsabllitlea. The work
environment Is Informal and rewarding . The .
requirements sre: high ·school diplomatGEri, vslld
Ohio driver's license and three years good ' driving
experience. B.C.S. offers comprehensive training In
the fteld of MR/DD. Interested applicants need to
specify position of Interest and send resume to:
Buckeye Communlly SetVices
P.O. Box 604 Jackson, OH 45640
All appllcstlons must be postmarked by 10/29/97/
Equal Oppottunily Employer
•

I

1. Wood·Beams· 10', 14', 16'1all, to 12'1o 48'1oog. Example
10'lc46'· $20.00
2. Spruce Beams· 14' ·IB' Io 20' to 30'tong. 1 3/41hick. $1.00
per lin. ft .
3. Glulam Beama, 12'·15'·16" lo 6'1o 20'1ong. 3 1/21hlck
$1.00 per Wn ft. (gariQe door headers).
4. Rim board plus madelrom O.S.B. 1 1/Bihlck 9'·and 16' wide
12'to 24' 1ong. Price e&gt;tmpte· 12'· $2.00, 24·$4.00
5. Prlmegreywoodaldlng, mede~om O.S.B. 8'wlde 16'1ong
12.50 ea.
6. Short length I Beams, 8'·10'·12' .2SC per lin. ft.
7. 5/11' and 3/4' x 4'x8' O.S.B.· $8.95 aa. 50 pes. or up $7.95
ea. Sq. and T.G. edge.
e. Painted metal roofing and aiding, 38" wide lengths, tram 4' to
30' 29 guaga- $39.95 aq. 26 guage $45.00 aq. 21rallor toads.
9. Over 5000' pcs. of paneling and.tlla board In slack. 3000 pea
on display. From 3/8thick ootid oak to 5/32 mlndy board. 12to
15 pellerns ol bath paneling. Prlcaa from 5132 Autumn Oak
mlndy board $2.98 ea. 10 3/IJ Goldan Oak all Oak wood $24.95.
10. t/4'x4'x8' unflnlshad Luan plywood· $9.95.
11 . l/4'x4'ldl'temperod hardboard undetlayment $8.95 ea. ·
.12. Also have 1/4' oak and birch unllnishod plywood. Lowest
prices In town.
13. 48' Aluminum level. Rag. $8.95. Now $4.98 ea.
14. Foam lnsuletlon board 4'x8' 3/8' 1111ck $2.50 ea 1/2'-$4.98
3/4'-$5.98 ea. 50 pc lift 50¢ lift 50¢ o1l per pc. Foil on one side.
1s. WhReliberglass balh tuba. Reg. $89.96 now $59.95. No
Retums.
16. 4' ond 5' Acrylic and flbergtaassnowers $99.95. Bone only.
1r. White and colored tub ollowers $168.95.
18.
from $399.95 to $1495.95. Corner wltlrlpools
$995.00
19. WhH8, wall hung ialll1oryl, 20'&gt;&lt;111". Aeg. $39.95 Now
$9.95.
20. Pedoolalla\l~orys. Rag. $89.95 Now $19.95
21 .Mbced co1ono pedesal ialrllorya. Rag. $69.95 Now $13.95
22. Bldals In 3 coklrs Rag. $89.95 Now $19.95
23. 1 pc. commodee Rag. $199.95 Now $99.95
24. 2 pc. cornmode8 Rag. $69.95 to $89.95. Now $49.9510
$89.95. Mlxmotched colort. $39.95 ea.
25. EXIerlor llinyl plastic ohuUers. Several size and colOra. Save
hall.
28. 50 lb. boX pallll no111. Reg. $29.95 Now $8.95.
27. Nuroery llock 1reoo and ahruba 45'!1. on rag. prlc:el.
28. S'ldl' tlnoluern rugs, Reg. $19.95 Now $7.95 or 2 tor·$15.00.

Wht"'""''

Boo11 Br )loclwlnt. Chippewa,
Rocky, Tony larno. Guaran~ Prieto At -

Colo, Qal.

lipoiiL

Framing Nailer 1200, Aooftng
Nailor 1300, New 11.1 8trotglu
Troad I 'Lug Rim 130 lt14)4.4113nt
FurniUI'I Olllco Equipmont. Gym
Equlpmon~ Lolllllic. llllmo In
lotto Amounll itl Barn, For 1
Prtr:e, Cl!oaptlluot Bur ,., ., ..

$45. Cal lor lnlormaion. .,,_
30N.

Draoolng tablo, bebr bod, car
otll, llrolltr, awing, ploy pon.
3CW-&amp;75-4641.

Duolhtrm uprlal!l oil hootor wlllr

jockl~ ............... 270

golon

441-1012.

.. ilnll.t100, .........7112.
F~IWood lor oalo. All llarclwoad.
1311ull olD plu lood, apli1, riO:
..... , ...... 301112!2511.

Grubb'o Pia,., ...... I rapairL
Problomo? Noocl Tunocl? Colt tiro

Fl;awood Sotoonocl H . - .
Dollvorod Or Plc:tc~Up, 114·2111:

pilnD Dr. l14 ttl 1521

1031.

Public Sale •nd Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
BIDWELL AUCTION HOUSE
TUESDAY, OCT. 21, 7:00 P.M.
For Nrly conalgnment phone 367:04111,387,7802,
3• 0451. Open Tuelday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. lor
consignment•.
Antiques, collectibles &amp; glassware, old lounlain pans,
chairs, saws, old tools, new tools, Christmas merchandise.
AucnONEER, C. M. STANLEY
Apprentice Auctioneer, Lllrry Sexton
Floor Menlgtr, Cliff Rhode1

AUCTION
Friday, 7:00 October 31
As seen on lhe Shop at Home channels 20"
Toshiba Multimedia Monitors, VCRs, 35 mm
cameras, camcorders. compU1er system, exercise
equipment, cookware , train sets, glider rockers,
marble top sinks, quilts, collector dolls, lighting
systems . (overhead) florescent lights, computer
desks, jukebox wtrecords, Christmas items.George Foreman grills, stereo ststems. small
. appliances, vacuum cleaner~ . cordless phones,
rugs, tools, lots of other miscellaneous toa
numerovs to list. Accepting consignments up to
Sale Day . More Information (614) 446·3228 after ~
p.m.
Beech'• Market and Auction Houn
Stale Route 160, 3 miles north of Route 35
. We accept MasterCard, Visa, Checks and cash

Propane Oa1 ,Water Heater 40

Check out our Gu Unvontod
Heaters (Nalur~~l or· Propane).

Srartlng ot $184.85. Wt 1110

have Buck Stove Brand of Ga1
lnatant Fireplace. Paint Plua

ANTIQUE OR COLLEOIBLE AUOION
ISAAC'S AUOION HOUSE
VINTON, OHIO

-304-175-4084.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1997, 7:00P.M.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, JOG,.
1:00PM
11 W. Center Street

Maaon, W,V.
Due to loss of husband and Illness we wHI sell
chattels at auction of Bessy Coif.
1991 Geo Metro, several old dolls, Chatty Cathy
Doll, 19 cubiC deep freeze. 2 gas oook stoves,
trash compactor, 2 relrlgeratora, file cabinet,
curtains, new orienlal rug, cotfee table, small
rotatiller, 2 chain saws, weed eater, riding mower,
Commercial Uncoln Welder, 20 ton cflaln fall,
power tools, tool boxes w/lools. Amp meter. voK
meter, lots &amp; lots of jars, bucket of BoltB~Nuta etc,
C:Ciamps, log chains, CB equipment, torches,
gauges, hoses, glassware, pots-pans, kitchen
Hems, what nots, 2 out bUildings full of tools &amp; mise
other Hems to numerous to mention.

#386 Auctioneer L.E. Neal
· UcenHCI • Bonclad • ln1urad
• 304-675 6325
Not Rnponalbla FQr Accidents or Lou of
Property,

"SH NNI for the Dul"
Public Sale and Auction

Public Auction

of Rio Granda.

Help Wantecl

-

-lor

Tlll1 11 only • brief, pertl•l llltlllfl due to
lldvanlalng dHdltnea.

(old Rt, 35), jult south

Public Sale and Auction

I

M-F Hra. 1G-4.

FRIDAY, OCT. 31 I 6:30 P.M.
LEMLEY'S AUCTION BARN
8580 St,

Black Tonneau Topper Willi
Frarno Eacollont Condl~on, For
Short Wldo Bod Truck. 114-448:

aalo, Studio Mutor 8trokeo
la10'1 and reoutor ., ........ lor
11". 1 hiYe fie tanulno ...,.
- 125:
lot..._. t30: lpo&gt; 110:
....
Sir· 120; BtioCki~r 125; PoorMit'

Octlblf 25 ' 26 .

Saturday 8 am- 6 pm Sunday 10 am- 4 pm
410 Hldgewoocl Drlv• Galllpolle, Ohio
Dining Table &amp; Buffet. freezer. living room suite,
small appliances, breakfast lounge, wrought iron
porch fum, lawn mower &amp; tools, glasses &amp;
liners, antiques
Entire household to be sold

Gollon, UMd Lno Than 1 Yoor,
$125; 814-388-1100.

Klnga Motel Low•ll R•••• In

W. King, Jr. Daughter:

~-o\\10

Orllllflo MDIII 11.&amp;-.a•d·4712,

TDSIIU114-UI C"'39

Rooms

Public Sale and Auction

Sandra, Son: Charles
Susan Reeves

· Aou117Soutlr,er-Citf
Oponf.G, SoU Sun
Ultd Fvrnlturo StGro, 130 Bull·
vlllo Pike, Cornlllall Good Bodo
1150: Doli!' Bacia 14&amp;: Youlll Bod
120: Playpono 115; Sbollor II:
lltlk Cono 15: 81cycloo 110: Eltctrlc Rango •75; Auto Waohor
*75: Couchot, Tabtoo, Antiquo

lzod apt. lor oldertr and handl·
c:oppod. EOH 3CW-875&lt;MI78.
450
Fumlshacl

The Gallipolis Township Trustee• (Galli•
Co.) will hold 1 Public Auction Novambar 1,
1997 et 10:30 a.m. EST at the T-n•hlp
Gal'llgelocetacl st 111 Uberty Ave., Galllpolll,
Ohio 45631 (Keneuga, Ohio) for (1) 1986
Ford Model F-379
Serial
No.
2FDK37H9GCA82507 w/dump body, Monroe
·hydraulic 1preader end 9' Western 1now
plow. The truck c•n be Inspected It
Southeastern Equipment Co., 228 St. Rt. 7
NOI'th, Galllpolle, Oh, The Board of Trustees
r~rvas the right to reject any or ell bld1.
By Order of thl Board of Tru•t•• of
Galllpoll~ Townehlp
Jamas R. Allan; Clark

Lila Jones
Kroger of Gallipolis
The Gingerbread House
Siders Jewelers
Bob's Market
Big Bear
Hallmark
Fantastic Sarns
Haskins and Tanner
Bemadipes
Brunicardi
Thomas Do~lt Center
Coaches O&gt;rner
The Candle O&gt;mpany
Paul Dlvica Jewelers
Kroaor of Ponte:IOY
Ftani:is Florist
O'Dell Lumbct
Super America ol Pomeroy
The Shoe Calc
J.R. Valentines
Marathon Station
Foodland ol Pomeroy
Bill and MiMic Thorton
Middleport Flower Shop
Western Auto
Kings Hardware
Foreman and AbhoU
Bunons and Bows
Mill street Books
Dan's Boot Shop
Acquisitions
Middleport Trophic• and Tee's Tope's Furniture
The Medical Shop
,
Burger King
Kentucky Fried Chicken
Crow's
Taco Bell
Go-Man
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Chapman Shoes
Super America or Gallipolis R&amp;G Feed and Supply
Quality Farm &amp; Fleet ol Jackson
Fruth Pharmacy of Middlepon Keith Oiler
Pepsi O&gt;mpany
Eagles of Pomeroy
. Eagles Nest ol Jackson
Millies Restaurant
McCiures
R&amp;C Jewelers
Ohio River Bear
Knights Dept. Store
Stow·Away
Locker 219
Salem Center Grange
K·Mart
Kroger of Jackson
Gloria Oiler
Lumber
Ponderosa
Swishr:rand Lohse
Powell's
Walman
Bob Evans
Fabric

Sadly missed, Wife,

ap:r:ca·

371!. EOH.
Town, Nowtr Remodolod, HBO,
Furnllllod Elllcl- Share Bolli, Clnomax, Showtlmo a Dlonoy.
St801Mo.. Utillln Pold,I07 Soc· WMkiY Ra.,, Or MontiiiJ Rallo.
ond A'"'"'· GaiNpotlo. 814-441- Conltrucllon Workora Walcome
0573, Ahtr 7P.M.
814-441~5&amp;Q8, 814-4ol1·5187.

'rhe SCilern Center Elementar11 woula like to sa11
"'fhaniis · for the donatiorts our school received for
OJAr ]all jestival. Wewoula like to thank a few
people for their time and donations. Without the
help from Ci/1 of LJOU our ]Ci/1 ]estival wouldn't hCive
been a success.

Don*- .......

- O l d - Cordion. 11541, dull blo-wheel puq~, hnllr, cor~
al for Mit water u11, over M50
81........o388.
lnvoolocl, Mitior 12U. 814·7423802.

lltonle Bablt ttavon Notd Any
VI,. S-t Callll4·448-7388, Boonlo'a CUrrant Or Attlrocl CaU
114-311&amp;-8185.
.1 · -·
Rolrl•trolor,
Woohor, 0Nor,
Baanio Babloo. Poo01 Boar And
•
.,
Voion•no For Solo, Col 814-441·
- · vcR. 8t4-251-t231.
1793 Willi Boot Ollor 1lr 1C121/117.
IIIVER8DEWIIOLESAI.E
:Ill
114
·
Clolllln'l:8 Montllo To 4 T,
Bunk Bodo Comp. 1225: Sot. I Bora
Sholl, Avan oUectablts, Elec·
Choi' 1241: 4 Counoy Pint Talrlt, ~lc Razoro, Punch Bowl, Milk
Bonch 13 Chaltal235: 7 Pc. Olaoa Sorvlno Trayo I Cupa,
Coclar BA 1788: Ook Curio COb. Saw Hortlt, lniUIItOfl, PatiO
11110: Pollot)', Melllcan Blonklra. llahta,
Toto Bogo, Frooranco
-..o, Etc.
Crbcka, &amp; Othor Mloc. AI Prl&lt;:ocl

·-&amp;17- ...,0
-:--=Quat:

88311111orlpm.

Waaherl~ d•rer•. relrigeratora,
rangtl. ~kaggs AppUances, 78

Nflr Poner 2

Hospital, Dr. Michael Meagher, Dr. Mellar
Davis, Dr. Mark Crnkovich, Dr. Herbert

• 1 and 2 btdroom ·--o. lur·
.,._,._..
nllllod ond unlumlohocl, oacurltr
. dapolit required, no poll, 8U·
002·2211.

er

""'tlmadla

-~lui -·ftnlolr
I Plaalc laollc Tllllro.
ohall, holdo 11110 COo: aloo Wloo c-.
300
Thru
l,ooa Goltona Aon
tape• Dr CIIIIUtl. B,.nd new,
a11ombly rtqulrocl. RoiiiH prtc. Evona Enllrprtooo, . - . 011
1300, liking 1150. Cd 114-IIIZ.

~~~c~4~41~IXIIIO~~~~~~:· I.:,G~oo""'o~u~s~E~D~A~P~P~LI~A-::N~c=es

OLD ASH VILLAGE APART,
MENTS. Now ...opting
tiona. Ntwtr ronovatocl. bod·
rooma. Laundromat I ptar
d
1 h 1i 1r 1 tor
:.,.~ E~ 30:"'1112
111 ~Small Ellcloncy Aportmonl Living
- . , 11oc1room Cornlrlnod, Klld&gt;an 1 a..,, Fumlohtd. Dowr IIi'•
UriLI14 44112102
Tara Townhauae Apartmtntl,
Varr Spoclouo, ~ Btdroorna, 2
Ftooro. CA. 1 112 Balli. FuUy Car·
potocl, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Stort $350/Mo. No Poll,
LaoH Pluo SKurlty Dopolit flo.
qulrod. 114·448·3-481, &amp;14-~8:
0101.

ciafion for the food, flowers, cards, or whatev-

him home.

In Memory

me.''

torRent

rnobllo homo, ,. Modorn 1 Bedroom Aportmtnt,

Tlvoo -

e 1 c-..jhalbw! • Page 05
PubliC Sale and Auction

s.: - · - ·

any way

,

Apertmanll

.... - . ......,&amp;7.

!!!~~ 0:."~:.:: ~~,·~~~-0.:. ~

~ wish to thank

him still. It broke my

230

pet'llnte, riiiGNblt ,.til. 3CM-

Gllpoh.

'IWo bedroom 11ouao ond ono -map ~r••ln Mtdiloror~
81+11124171.

HUJ!AIS

never would

1983 H-ock 14x80 AI Elor:trlc,
2 Bodroomo, Malor Appilonct,
8,000 Nogotlablt, 814-448·5281,
Or 81 ..448-3318 Aftor 8 Aak For

S17,700, Or Anum• Payment,
Available lmrnedlaltly, 8, 4·245113e8

WI)' ·By Phone. Fnendly Lotn,

nm-::..!':;;
2• •

an. ~··~-~~~~,1~1C~C~C!I~2~1C~G~.~---~ ~~=··=1=14&amp;:=::::::::::::;

(IIC 1112-4178).

have saved him, he

•4.

·,

hoUII.
bJ bJ
buror. E-1111•
Aolrlng 1440
,....,._
WriWcal Paul PoriOr, t10 lAM:
craot on.o. 1ontc1. sc

11171 Kirkwood 12x80 S2,300,

INOTICEI
!1188 Schult, 3 boclroomo, 2
110 .._,WIIItld
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. bllhl, ClftUIIIir, vinyl lidlng,
CONTRACT OCCUPATIONAL recommend&amp; that ,-ou do bull· lhlngled roof, 2 dtcka, barn
THERAPIST
IIOoiNCERSa
ntll wilh people r-ou knaw, and building. 304-175-1275.
~ Ol1ra Chr!tt"'*o caoh. Cd • Wo11 Vlrglnlo, Ohio Ltc.naoo NOT to ..nd moner through the
an.r epm - m Sot 3114:175- Aoqulrtd.
mail unlil you have lnvntfgaltd 1H7 1hl0 Floe-od 3 Bod·
rho olloring.
rooms. 2 Baltlt, Garden Tub,
Fireplace,
S10ve, Refrlgera10r,
AVON I AH Arooo I Shlrlay PHYSICAL T N -:
FREE
Dithw11her, Hnl Pump, Take
__... '304-175-1421.
• Welt Vlrgi~Ma, Ohio llcenHt
CASH
o.w Pl)ll•• 114-245-0388.
Atqulrad.
GRANTS I
ACTION YOUTH CARE, INC, lo
Collgo. Sc:holalohlpo.
1187 Model Slnolewidaa Mull
aooklne a Clilld 1 t.mtty Thoro· Platao Call , ..D0-4&amp;1-«134.
8ulint11. Mldk:li BiiiL
Go.Sovolt.OOO,SCW.~.
plot lot ow Pt Ploalltll arM ol· 1.,,;,:.:_;.:;:.,;,::.:,..=_;..::::.,;,___
N...,Atpoy,
: llct. Applicant mull be a Mat· MEDICAL RECQROI CODER
1at nm.
E·Z Fl..nclng 2
CaiToJFtao
. tora lovoi Social worker, Coun· POSITION AVAILABLE • Com·
Or
3 Bod&lt;ooma Around $200 Por
1-800-211-9000
EnG2814.
aetor. Paycho'oglst or R.N. eUgl· petltive Salary And Exceptional
llo.,IIIJ0.251-50l0.
ble lo be llctnMd. Salarr- 11 Fringe Bentfll Pl'kao• • full· PERSON WANTED To OWn And
t2S.aGO to $27,000. AIIHII o,.. TirM, Flo.tblo Houro. ART, RRA Operate Retail Cane!)' Shop In ATTENTION Flrot Tlmt Buyoro,
y•r of 11perience in indWidual OR CCS. One v... Experience .. GALLIPOLIS Area. low inYOII· aptcial government backed
·ond tomllr tnoropy. Plouo ,.. ICD·U·CM And CPH Coding, rMnl. For Information Call Urt. mortgiQII &amp;Y~ilablt for 1 limited
apond bf 11ndlng reaumea to : Good Commt.tnicatJon IOraanlzatime. Apply by phone 304·755·
AcliDn -.,th C.rt 217 81h SlrHt. tlon /lnttr·Ptlraonal Skl81 At· Burdrarl'a Gourrnat Canc:fr' Campa· 55111.
ny, Fort Wort\ TX 81NI32·111W2.
; PL WV 255541 or cal 1· qulred.
CullOm Buill Doublewidll Over
111-4113,2417. E.O.E. Cloalng
da•la0Ct.31.
PtHH s.f.d AHulhi"To Holzer
VENDING: Not Got RICh Oulckl 250 A'Yailable OptJons, You Pick
Clinic~ Human Relation• Oeparl·
Thlt lo Prollrablo, Solid Simple. The Floor Pian, You ConltOI Tht
•ACTION YOUTH CARE, INC. II men~ 110 Jock- Pli&lt;a: Galllpollo. Freo Brod1u.._IIOO..f20..4353.
Prl~ . Thounnds L111 Than
· oMklne Clrlld I FamiiJ Thoro· Ohio 45&amp;31 · 1582: Fu To &amp;14·
Olfier CustOm Buill Homes. Fac·
ploto lot our Spenctt, PL Ploao· 4&lt;18·5532: Or Coil &amp;14-448:5188. 220 Money to Loan
10ry Oireca, No Middleman. 304·
7311-34011.
on~ and w.,.. County aru ol· LE;;;quai~~:.;,:;.;.:;:;,:..:;E';-m~plo::'"'=·:___
. lli:oo. Applcanll muot be a M.,. 1;
NEED A LOAN? AppiJ Tho Eoor

llobr--

' ' " " ' COIOfH concrete biMiri

million

a.,..,

I

IOf.....

•

Unlmprovocl
11o11a
County
(lillmt&lt;or):
·
....
ocrnloCalld on .,.aida 11o1r1nr1

BINGO

614-3811-i188, Or 114-381H1747.

-.

I

. . . , . . . . . . ., •

cried .

ment Secured &amp; Quicklro At·

o Willno To Soo Aduk PI-

I

a

Middleport • Galllpolla, OH e Point Plea..nt, WV

--·

Arw. II 1141
Acrto. ldaol For lloomoa IAport,
z

440

Pomeroy •

,.~~~=~~~~-I Buy or Hit. Rlvo•lno Andquoo,
itetplllt racrmo with oooklnt. 1124 E. llaln kHI. on At 124,
Houra: M.T.W. 10:00
1111 llo!lllo Willi Porclloa. a Fumllhod 1 120 Fourlll Alto lllilor •r,•e on rlvar. All Porno&lt;or.
a.m. • 1:00 p.m., ......,. 1 :DO •
IIIII ODlN. 8ctn1c Vi1w On Reo- Awllul, A 'I; II , 121M'a:.. U. hOOkrtllll. Cal altlr 2:00p.m., 1:00 p.m. l14•g82:2528. RUII
C- Nflt ~On CO.. Ideo Pold, 114-441-111173, AIIM 1 104:77a-ai1.-WV.
Ill Road. 13101Uo., Dlo- P.ll.
count AYIHablo, 114·171·102 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 4eO Space for Rant
Allor I.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACI(SON Mobile homo lito avollablo bet, 540 MllctllantOUI
2 1 s boclroom mobllo homoo ESTATES, 52 Woo-ad Drive Marchlndlla
Atllona and Pomoror, call
-•1 800
from 1210 to 13114. Wlik • lhop
I~::-=-:::===~:-::-~
1"""'
• .._, wator and I movloo. Coli 114~441·2111. ., , 31111 11111.
I Eloc•tc Furnoco 1315: 1 Dal
Equal-.~.
Fu.- 100.000 BTU 11110, 114t.1E
RCHAtlDISE
2 Bodrom M~bllo Homo For· I;;,:~..;;.;,;;.::..;:;;;.;.._;=::-~:­
ue-.t-281.QODI.
-·
nlohod, Ra"oon crao~, Noar Elllclencr ApartmOn~ Cloao To
2cutNtnoola.-raoodOOfllll.
Cora 1280/Mo., Ptuo Dtpoolt Walmart Conllructlon Workero 510
Household
llon,12110, 114-118N0117.
Goods
··~-81+448:2515.
2 Wood I Coal Burning Stovel
2 llldroom TaUor, Aeloronce R• FOR RINT: C Room Upatalra
qu1roc1. No Para. 123&amp; Atm.- Apartment • Newly Romodolod 5 Plooo l.llrlnQ Room Sulll, 11 sa, ICing I Konol-d: 4•• Alum!,
num Picture Window, et•·241tncltrdod, 1200 ctopooll avallablo kltch011, Now Carpet And Point, 814-441:1348.
5135.
Now Cal (114)381-GI2
AIIIHIItln Flrlrl ~ Gu-., Apptlancea:
Racondltlonad
largo Boclroom. CloM To O....
Woilhoro. Dryoro,
Relri· 30 PooDle Wontocl To LOll UP
oo Day Guarantllf to 10 PoUNDS In Tho Nllllll
For - Wooded
llolrllo Hornt.
Nee, , troncea Requtrod,
Oopoolt
eluded
Lot, Bidwell
CanAnd
SooRo~
AI , ratora,
ronch City Maytag, I14·H8· Daya, All Natu,.., Or. Rtcorif·
11or11r I25Mio., 114-441.0720.
1403 Eaotorn Avo .. Oalllpollo.
mondocl, Guaranlllod. Cll Tracy
IU HI 4&amp;14.
7715.
'
AII14-441:111G. ,_ SoirQIII
- . _ F o r Ron! O n Eloclrlc rangalovtn &amp; lrolllroo
Lo~ No Pall. RaloreriCio 1 o.p. - · lvtng. 1 and 2 llldroom ralrtoorator oxcetlanl condition. • KerDMM Por.ble HMIIrl 2
1
11, 114-317-na.
opor.._. at Vlllap Manor ond
Rtveroldo Aportrninlo In MlddiO: 1175ea. or 1121 lor bolll. 304· Ft Td ItO Eaclr, &amp;14-3811-1371.
Rouoh Rontli to riow accopdne pon. From t-1304 • Col114, I'II-18M.
rental appllcatlona. 304· 773, H2·50e4. Equot Houolng Oppor, Frlgldalro BuHt In Dlthwaohor 1 75 QOion .... -lurn ..... door
blo otand, oompltto III·UP,
11844.
tunlllo&amp;

Plantzlubl-"lon.

rnant e

October 21, 1997

420 lloblll HomM
torRent

: I Adlol~lota,
Nu-. 1 Thnt I On
Or.

aiding, alrlnglo root, mony uuu.
304-713-52311 or 11-2·3458.

Jomlo.

•-100-n1.at•1-

410 HoUI&amp;I tor Rant

Loll For -

30 AMouncements

thrH bedroom, twa balhl, latll
-trir:, 2 112 ... hoot pormp, vlnJI

- AAA OREEllltcl CARDSPotoniai$45K Plf 4110K FT No
Selling, Accounll Provldod. Strv·
leo Local Storeo. 11.850 lnvoot·

Oimtd.

ttou.. for Rant

Moat ... To

Maaon- Modular home on 100/
100 lot, 11\roa boclroom, two lull

1
••

E f.!PLOYMENT
SERVICES

410

-5. -· lnqulrlol Orttr..

304-4175-1857.
tudo Ia A Mull. Submit RHume
Cornplell Houllhold Or Eoraltll To:
·
P&lt;VIollional T•oo Strvlco, Sor.,.o
Any Type 01 Furniture, Applianc·
Removal, Free Eslim11111 In·
Galli COUrtr Chamllor
1uranc., Bldwtl, Oh6o. 81 ....388"' Antlquo'o. EIA:. A1ao ~ioal
OICormwca
hbleii1'-3'1-272D.
8&amp;18. 814-367:1010.
'
1eS•~~­
Gallipoil, otio 45&amp;11
Abaolu• Top OoUor: All U.S. Sit·
SerMor IShul Ina, Need Help Ill
etcu805111
ver And Gakl Caint, Proaf1111,
WJJ Help With Payi1Q BIIO. Chock
Dllrnondo. Anllquo ~. Gold GtnttaJ NurWon CentMS 11 CUr- Book Blllncing. Shopping_ Ot
Ringo, Pr•t830 U.S. Currency, rtnrly Looking For Enthusllltic Wta-. Aolor-o. Col Ello,
Stilling. Etc. Acquloiio,. JoMtry And hpttltrn:ocl lndlvldualo For 114-388-8142.
• II.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 SKond A Mew Store In The Galllpalia
Glllll ' •no.-:llol2.
Areo (Onio vaner Piau). Ploooa Tu10rtnt: Oradto 1:12 (MA:OSU)
Call 814·448·4335 (8:00·1 :0~
Coil
1-1188:287·0338 (EliL 405).
Anfquoo. top prlcta pol4. AI-·
P.M.)
,,. Anttquoo•.Pomoror. Ohio. Hardymon TNcklna Sotking Driv·
Ruaa Moore owner. 014·882· If Wilh Clll11 A COL Haz-Yat &amp; Will Clean HouaH And OHicllt
2521.
TraUor Endor-1 Noodocl, Ap- Phono Day a: 1 U·C41~08&amp;0,
Evenings: &amp;1•·1111.&amp;1-0210. Good
· Antlquea: ,.. 11om too larp or too ply At Bur~lo Oil Co. .ny. Mo11r f'll'-ttiiCII.
dar
Thnt
Fridly,
a
A.M.
To
5
P.M.
tmall. Al10 ntatll, appral~ala.
rellniahlng, custom orders, 114- HooUng &amp; AIC lno11111or w/lhut WiU do oldtriJ ..,. dar or nigh~
good reterenc:ea. 30..·175-2347

~-

350 LOll • ·Ac:nlga

Sunday,

Room, With Fireplace, Delached

22--

SkiUt. Mu't l Bt Crtadvt, Arllcu-

em,.,.,..,..,....., r

Sunday,Ckrtober21,1997

Approcla!a,
Elderly woman wan11 peraon ID cooking bockground, Eaporlonco Owner Will Conolder Financing,
working will\ Children. Contact: &amp;14~78-11887.
ivo tn homo lor ...,, ..., help will\ cooking, poroonal cart, Gallla .Jackoon ·VInton JVSD,
desire one wllh no tamilt, non- 814·245-~. EoL 201 lor oppil· Brick, Ranch Family Homo. 1. 7
Acrtt Just Mlnutll From Galli·
amoker &amp; dotl not uu 1k:ohol, caion.llntllrw· 1113.117 EEO
polio.
Qalllpollo City Schoolo, 3
i"eferencaa required, P.O. Boa Worohouoo Gonorol Strvtc.. LO·
BR. DR, FR With FP, 2 Batlla,
1172, Aihlno, 01\ 45101.
col Atlltno Co. Hoi Fun Timo Po· New: Roof, IHaat Pump. 11 .. ·4.e&amp;oltion. Cla11 'A• COL Roqulrod: 7002.
Mill e.,. Atcllirad. 111r1g, 11a1n1.
~==~
A Ptuo. Stnd Anumoo Ontr Br BUY HOII~S AS LOW AS
Smoke tr.o And Drug Fteo
Friday, October 31, tG87 To Hr. 14,000 , -s Bclrm.. Locol Gow't. a
Enviw&gt;~••
Mgr., 8CII 2SHI, Franklin Furnace, Bank Repo'a Coil 1·800·522·
Challonglng And R-rdlng Ca, OH45e2ii.EOEII/FoON.
2730, X 17011.
...11~~~ Our ....
·
COUNTRY HOllE
IOtmtnt Training rogram. We Wookond band otlkl vocallll
Ato Snklng An tntotlloant, Ca· and bellllt mull havo llporl·
ONtACRES,
rtlf ·Orltnlld Penon Who 11
ICDTlOWN, OHIO.
onctandbe--.OUtgoing And llkao To Bo Chal, .... 70'1 Rodl wlllllodo(a Clitia- t Mile1 frDm ProciOVIIIe, 3,•oo
lengocl. cacollent Trolnlng Pro, liM Conto......,.,:C-1 114-187· Sq. FL Living Ar01, 2 Story, 3
gram, Bonelita, And Advan••· 3785oret ........
Borlroomo. 2 112 Botllo. Fitllohod
Remodeled 3 Bedroom Howat
rnent Potential. Call Dlarw. Burns
Boamont Flroplace, llko NIIW, 4
With Booomont In Coun~y. City
At81 ..~187.
180 Wantacno Do
Yoara Old 1175,000, 814·843·
.. No Poll, l4110111o., 114·
2824, Or 014-&amp;43-2522.
QaiUa Ce.: Gallpolo. ~~o~...,r.
ANY ODD JOBS: hiMior poin&gt;
lng, lhrubt &amp; wtldl lrlmmed, For Solo 135,000, Two Bodroom lroodRd.,10-IIMiof~
Slloa 111.000, Or
landacaping, tldtwalka edg.ct, Houae, New Wlndowl, Ntw Sid- Pond
NOW U4,000. Frlondly
town Clrt, tiC. Call BIN 304-175- Ing, All New Kitchen Will Take
RldiiO
10
&amp;.5 Aot•
7112.
Trado-ln Or Holp With Down Pay· oo 17,500- Or 18114,000,
Acroo 111,000.
EncYil"' Director Po•ltlon
mont, 114·3117·11o003, f'lulnll No: County Wal8r. T..n1 Run, Last
Carponor Work New Buijdng Or 1.atJ0.3Q5.2337, 15111.
AvallabioOnoi1D -110.000.
Tht Gallla County Chambor 01 Remodeling Over 20 Yeara E•·
perlence
From
The
Ground
Up,
Goorgoa
Crook
Road,
3
Bod,
Commerce to itl 01 An E•·
ecullwt OirtciCW To Manage And 81..-.:17011.
roomo, 2 Batho, large Living Call For Froo llapo + Owner F~
SUpervi11 The Daitr Operattona
Room, Large Kllchen, Family nondna Into. TaM 1011. 011 lla1lil
01 Tne Chamber Olfico. Oualifitd Child Cart By The Hour Dey Or Room, Baoornon~ 2 Car Garage, Prton On Caolr ........l
Applicant Will Bo Dollil Orlonrad Week, Loving Environment. Age largo Outbuilding, 2 Rtntli Mo·
And
Supervisory, Or· Approptlata A.ctlvlllal, Eaalarn bile Homo' 1 Acre Lot IIJL et 4,
ganiz1t1onal And Fltcal Planning - - . 81..-.:1138.

Rick Pear10n Auction Company. 1111 And Oecltlvt. Applicant

8824571.

'

Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea..nt, WV

Sat. Nov. 1, 11197

10:00 a.m.
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Mullen have sold their home In Middleport
and are moving to Fla. for retirement, so will sell from
their 3 sloty &amp; basement home. h will be moved to
Meigs Co. Falrgrqund on St. Rt. 7 north of Pomeroy,
Ohio. Bring chair. Dress for weather. Will be held
Inside building.
Antique or Collectors Items
Round 54" oak tsble w/ padeslat, 4 oak sial back
chairs, beveled mirror, small buffet, walnul Victorian
parlor stand, oak gate leg table,4 solid back plank
chairs, black walnut china csblnet made by Earl
Cross, mahogany library table, arm chair, oak stand,
phonograph stand w/ claw &amp; ball feet, dresser, high
boy chest, walnut Victorian parlor chelr, chest, foot
stool, oak wash stand, school desk, trunks,
Moosehead b - wooden case, art deeD ash tray,
wooden cigar box, rolling pin, large wood desk, misc.
wood chairs, 1112 stone jar, two lid monkey stove, oil
lamps, lots. of good brass nems, case XlOC knife,
Westmoreland basket, marble &amp; crystal vases,
approx. 40 pieces Imperial glass, end of day carmel
slag 11600-146·352·46H59~158·720~506, tulip satin
glass globe, setVice for 12 Hablland china. mllk glass
&amp; crystal dishes, Ironstone wash bowl &amp; pi': cher, red
carnival, lead crystal &amp; marble Items. tear drop crystal
lamps, 3 white chickens, stone masc•n tongs,
Pomeroy Bend picture, picture frames, stra ght razors
&amp; boxes, Bay Roush chief of Pomeroy P &gt;lice hand
cuffs. 1940's bedroom suile, floor lamp "'' Victorian
shede, Duncsn F~e gval stand, Vasoline 1 ishes and
lots, lots more.
- -Memol'llbllla
Approx. 1,000 hardback books, many fits! edition
printing, 1929 to date, hsrdback American Harnage &amp;
Horizons, color slides • Indy 500 &amp; midget races in
Meigs &amp; Athens Co. prior to 1970, World War II Air
Corp. Silk Escape Maps • Navlgalor's computer
whool, ETO yank, Union Jack &amp; Star &amp; Stripes,
Overcoat, Italian dagger, 100+ Civil War reprin1S of
Frank Leslie &amp; Harpers Weekly. Lots of politics! mem·
orabllla. You have to see to believe!
MI1Ctfi111180UI
Sears seK propelled mower, Aida reel to reel recorder,
Teckner receiver &amp; tapes, Amana 14 green refrlgera,
tor, Hardwick green electric range, 22 Remington 581
rifle w/ clip, tots &amp; lOts of big band albums, end stands

&amp;more
Owners • Mr. &amp; Mrs. Oon Mullan

Dan Smith - Auctioneer. Ohto 11344
Wllilam Moodlap~ugh Appl'lntlca n381
cslh
Positive tD
RelfMhmentl
I

Wicker tsble &amp; cabinet, drop·leaf table, washboard,
crocks &amp; jugs, WW ll pl,ctures, old pictures, Wards
butter chum, 6 leg table, pink. green &amp; clear
depression, McCoy, Hager, Rogers silver plate items,
kraut cutter, hand stitched q~llt top &amp; quHI, pipa bed ..
dresser, postcards, old jewelty, milk bottles, skillets,
advertising Hems, plus much more.

Attention ln118slors Who Are Not Afraid Of A Utile
Workll Located on Fifth Avenue, this property offers
a main home wHh 3 BAs, 2 baths, LR, FR. large eat,
In kitchen and part. basement. The smaller home
offers LR , eaHn kitchen~ 1 BR &amp; 1 bath. With this
location, you would never have to wbrry about
finding a tenaht. Owner motivated to sell· Reduced
Prtc:e to $39,900. ~

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.

AUcnONEER, FINIS "IKE" ISAAC

(614) 446-3644

;J

. Phone: 814-311-8370 1nd 388 8880
Ucentted 1nd 8ondld Ohio 13728
Terme: C•h or Approved Check
Not ReipOnelble for Accidents or Lost fleme
· Mine, Yours 1nd Ours Antique 1nd CollectlbiH
Shop, next door to the Auction HouH.
to
Pill
Public Sale and Auction

ANTIQUE &amp;
COLLECTIBL
AUCTION·
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1,1997

10:00A.M.

L.ocltldlt tile Auction Centll' on

.W. VII.

Rt: 33 In llll10n,

FURNITURE, Vety unusual calVed oak side board
w/beveled glass doors must seell Good early pine
jelly cupboard dovetail case, beautiful early calVed
lsble w/dogs &amp;birds, early 2 pc. stepback cupboard,
24 pane prlmHive cupboard, early step back pewter
cupboard, early 2 pc book esse secretary, fancy
pump organ.round 1able·8 chairs &amp; matching setVer,
early Burl walnut chesl w/lurned legs, early primHive
desk, 2·3 door Ice box, 6 lin pie safe, drop leaf table
w/fancy legs. 2 oak wardrobes, Viet &amp; oak dressers,
4 pc mah. pineapple poster BR suite w.shield mirror,
4 pc. walnut BR suRe w.slelglt bed, table top Victrola
&amp; others, art desk mint cond., slant front desk,
highboy wtrnlrror, round oak lable clawfeet, set of 8
oak press back chairs, square oak table claw &amp; ball
feel, pressed back rocker, Iron &amp; brass table &amp;
chairs, church paw, 1800's sola, lilt top wash stand, 2
walnut chair w/cstVed basket of flowers. early Winsor
chair, iron &amp; brass bed, solid cherry candle holder,
school desk, 5 1/2 foot show case, early wagon
Shelield coaster &amp; more.
GLASSWARE· Flo blue plate, wedge wood platter,
stemware Gennan plates &amp; bowls, Depression glass,
J.R. Germany bowl, Japanese tea set, glass baskets,
salt &amp; peppar shal&lt;ers, hand painted nippon, sev.
pieces art glass, Fenton- Eparn carnival stretched
glass, Louise pipar pes, 1963, 1984 &amp; 1988 baskets,
WitHe hobnail, head vases, cookie jar squirrel on log
cracking nuts, green Ink well, Goebel W. Germ111ns
Ceramic dog slalues, onyx desk set, 3 pes. Weller,
Hull, McCoy, Weller lamp base, copper luster m·ug,
Spring Hill milk bottle, blue cannlng jars, A.P.
Donaghho Parkersburg, W.V. stone jar &amp; more.
COLLECTIBLES. Big Little Books, Walt Disney,
Comic Book, Gene Autty Wastern home movie, Old
slides, park shelter print signed, railroad locomotive
prints, 1905 Picasso Lady &amp; Baby prinl, oval frames,
tapastry, 45 star flag in frame, Currier &amp; lves silver
war picture &amp; others, Dale Evans doll outfit, tobacco
tins, just suits, Red J &amp; others, adv. tins, premium
sa~ines &amp; olher, csndy adv. boxes, good selection of
clocks, Seth Thomas , 'School house, brass fan,
clock w/cupid. mini German, column manlle clock
w/porcllen dial, 1893 World Fair &amp; Ohio State fair
papar weights, early baskets, old ice cream dippar,
Mr. Peanut tin dishes, glass churn, 8'x4' 1932 Coca
Cola sign, view master wtcards, lunch boxes, Zerro,
Strawberty Shortcake &amp; The Dark Crystal, Toy fire
chief csr, battery oparated dog, Kenner Easy Bake
Oven In original box, character dolls, metal horse
marked mortens studio, old hats, revolving photo
album Robinson 1865, cane signed, Salem cigarette
thelmometer, adv. lin 'Eal yeas1 foam", A.M.!'. Fire
engine pedal car, Texaco gas signs. Blue Crown
Spark Plug sign, brass bucket, kettle &amp; spltton,
scales, Iron skilleta, coal hod 2 cast Iron yard urns.
old radio statiOfl calendars late 40's·50's, old house
shutters &amp; more.
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: Another good qualily
suction. Something for everyone donl miss this one.

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. 166
Mason, W.VA.

Residence: 304~773~5785
AuctioA Center 304·773·5447
Tenns: Cash or Check w/10
Not Responsible For Accidents or LOss of Property

SYRACUSE· This house must sell-sell!
Corner lot. 3 , Br, kitchen, bath, LR,
basement. Now Reduced to

,.

.. .
STAHLY OLDER HOME IN

cny

C~se

to Downtown Stores. Had E&gt;&lt;cellent care, in top
condition. 3 Bedrooms, 11/3 baths, kitchen , dining room ,
living room, utility room . foyer and TV room . Full
Basement. Block Garage With automatic opener.
Concrete Driveway. First time on market WON 'T LAST
LONG - PHONE TODAY.
t765

PHOHE 446-9539

WIL.US LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 4*-!1539

LEADINGHAM RIAL ESTATE

LOT-SPRING VALLEY
SUBDIVISION
One
Fishing, Boating, Hunting. or
just relaxing In your own ~
&amp; Clmplite approx. 1 mlles from
Gallipolis, overlooking Blue
Lake &amp; Raccoon Creek. we Are
Now Going To Sell Tl'us
campsite &amp; C1mper. Buy 11 Now
And Be Prepared For Sprt ng
1997. SM It Now. P11one Today

-

tot 1ppro111 .
City wete r, city

large

101 'x1 71 ',

sewer, natural gaa, electric , all

are availatH at this lot Prepare
NOW to build your dlftm home
in this pleasant. quier and nice
subdivisiOn just 11 snon distance
out of Gall tpolts. Lot 1111.

Realtor ow~ ·

1731

COUNTRY- 1UCRES M OR L
Uke new Inside &amp; out. built 6 years lQO. lmmec:ulate ctean. Vou'tt
teet an atmosphere of openneu ana complete tranquillity a1 you
YiiW tt\e scenic rotllng countryside from the living room &amp;dining
room of mit 3 bedlooms, r~~nch styte home. Share our enthulialm
1ncl IH this 1~ A. of WOOdtarld, Pasture land, &amp; Homesite for
youraoll. Nice 24'•40'
&amp; Wortcsllop, Pond. 20'1124'. SIOillge
bklg. Thora's """"' Coil Now I7S3

Ga-

PHONE 446-9539
WILUS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 44&amp;-95311

LUDINGHAM REAL ESTATE

•

�•

Sunday, October 26, 1997

PageD6·~·

: Sunday, October 2~, 1997

Nice Soilo, C......... Klnf lize
-·
BedoSolid
Will
Nanreaa
&amp; Futlll.o
BDx Sprklat.
O.k Hutch. IU·$7t-f720 AP• Wltt&lt;llnt Specill: 3/4 aoa PSI lllaoll 11M c- Hoond PuP'
t21.05 Per 100; 1" 200 PSI pioo, I ......... llloll, E TERtPJI.
U7.00 Per 100; A" Brill COm. - . , t100. •

~

.,.....73.

ro'lt'i~o;N~a~:"~iir~~~~~~~~~~~~d
Solon
Ia, «nnb,~tallt
dockM.
d..t. . , ...
-·.~-.
- · fnnlllloclt mollt; oholl
Whirlpool Jlcuzzt _ . 4-S pooo 1 - - . ...., • gol ••oooa.
..........

""""'-

'"

550

Building
Supplies

Retri-tor I St... StJ 11 Cu.
Ft 30 lndl E - Almond t325, Bloclt, bride. -

11-1-Q.IIol.

Aackford Foagait Punch 200
Amp. I 3 W1Y 8oJ&lt; With 15" SuiJ.
$425, Far AI 080 81Uitl-2ll!il.

...,... Wind·
owo, llnlllo, IIC. C l - Wlntlfl,
Rio Grandt, OH Call 114·2455121.

5110 . Pita for Slit

Rugor Redhowk ._.., . 7112"
barrel 1400. Rem. 11·17 12oa.
auto, high giOII 1450. 1885
uonle Carlo S. S. 454 tnalnt.
axe running condillon. •4.500.
Colallar !ipn. 3QH7S.5331i.

AKC black I ran miniature Da·
- · bom ti-1U7, Yflf'/ pilytul
p~p_py, nHdt a lo¥1ng home,
11225. 11•7Q.3102.

Stove, Automatic Control Temp.

1137·2733.

AKC Coclolt SptJitl pupo, 3m01
olcl, 3 fema111, 2 ~lcklwhlte,
Stll lgnltlno Ouadra Fl.. Fotlltt 1bull, 1150•. had ohoto. 304·

Like Now SI.OOO, Attor 5, 814·
25H444.

et•• ,..

A O.....m Shop ·Pet Groomlnt.
fMIVrllll 'IJ.~tll. Don
....... .,.
CIMitRd.

1113.=-----

1
:31M:.;.;
..:;,71-:;_;;
J10k RUIMII Ttrrllr 17 lolontho
Old
WNit Had AI Sholo.
Sjlopd..11D, 81WIH71!4.

r.m.te

Ktnntl rtductton· AKC Root•·
ttred Dolmotlon pupplta and
tldulla, oU brtd IDr ..._...,~
~ IN, prlctd Ill .I ll, 114740.3"2
Purt Bred Siberian Huoky Pup.
pita, Alrtady Bttn Wormtd I
Sholl, t1oo con Ahtr 5:00 114·
258 ltt4

570

IIUIICII
lnstrumlntl

I'MH.I Sllf'PIII S
S IIVLS fOCK

111 oFarm Equipment
For ooJ• VAC CIM Willi S point
hitch luah hoi~U1 50, VIctor
BIIY, 114 81&amp; 42-40

Hydraulic oll·lo..ll price In

.......... ,_

-.\lint"" ... """'"" ......

-~-

Sicltr'oEqitlf-•31M-175-7421.

446-6806

~lB'~.

Unuau11 Opportunity ·All 3 propertiM hive bien
I'ICIUCid for quick Nil, at 1111111 1n otrw. VLS

AKC Dobormon Puflllltl, .100
Eoch. All Colo&lt;t. 114-441·Het
Dlw or 114-2118-11113 Ahtr I pm

LOG HOMES

home tbio year!

ro.· you.

Fotto•••
FREE Color Clloloo

Friday, ltlofn.4pm. lloHt~Z-3125.

p1oo, 1

Tror Built TuftY Tlllor, Ll&lt;t New: N
Gogo llodtl Rollrood 3x7 Ft.
Har19ing Board Roady To Run 5
Eng1n01, 13 Ca(l, Tflnolarmer
Etc. 814-245-8432.

814-448-1741.
;:;:-::-:-:--:-:-:--:-AKC Roolor- labrtdor pupo,
two llltctc molls. tlllhott. -.good 1omi1J
2412.

Old, Ctl Anylmo,

doll..,.._.

must to see. Quality
throughout.

Winding CroN Raid• Cora MNI &amp;

m8fii I

4 City Loll· Could oo,ll..:d..a&amp;t
home
or
some
•no
properties as duplexea.

Real Eltltt General

Farm Land being sold into 1018 of 2
to 5 scree. Select what you need.
l!lood road frontage.

Pleasant Hill Rd. Flat to rolling and
some wooded lots . Some
restrictions. Only 4 Remain.
t 5,()()0-25,000 Price range.
One acre more or less on Fairfield·
Centenary Rd. Green Twp. $14,500

12111 IN THE CITY. 3
bodroomo, 1 1/2 both, nice dock,
heated I
pool, Golla ooo

Sherr! L. Hart ............ 74Z.1357

l&lt;llthleen M. Cleland 99~191

Office ..........................992-2.259

12t20 NE't/ ON THE
MARKETit Clay Twp, 3
bedrooms, 1 .bath nice patio

-no on 1.1137 acre nv'l, COME
AND TAKE ALOOKI Coli Cara.
12121 NEW LISTING
RIVERFRONT PROPERTY AT
IT'S BEST, lovoty Indeed Is thto
3 bedroom 1 112 bath 1mme wtth
large family roam whh walk out
de&lt;:k, 2 car garage on tovely
river tot. St20.800 eon Wilma tor

wlcathedtal ceUingt, batcony

at&gt;ovo tho LR, W/ICJt ttropllct,
f&lt;IUIP kit .. bretkftlt rm W/boJ

t1g11t tllduroo.
car t1laCt1td gar.
· -2 thr!JUgllout.attiC ltOf'lgl, ICrHntd back
porch. much mort. roct tho
homo il molntonanctJ tree. Coli
\II.S 385·18211 5148,000

·--~·

12122 LOVELY aUI~DINO
LOTS, ready to build on. On
State Route 180 close to Holzer
Medical Cenllf. S7500.DO each
lot or- $20,000.00 tor ·Ill, can

Wilma tor lull-lis.
12112 141 acre• of Urnberll!lnd
·In Jaot!;aon County, $145,000

=

call Wilma.

WOOD
BEilLTI',
INC
32 LOCUST mEET, GALUPOUS, OHIO 45631

, _ 2 building toto In
Proctorville, -ready ro build n,
houtet all around.
Rio Grande er11, 105
acre• wlttl 2 houaea, owner will
also apll1 property, 45 acre1,
135.000

. · Alan C. Wood. Brolter - ~23
Ken Mot!Jan, Brolter • +16-087t
Tim Watson 256-6t02
.lalnall8 Moore. · 256-1745
Palrlcia Roet ~
81.......10Mot1.0814 tOM
l!!.r

-

, _ OWNER WANTS SOLO,
3 bedroom ranch on 1 acta more
or leu, on State Route 218just
3 miles off Sl. Rt. 7.
n . l Middleport area, 3
bldroom, 1 112 bath complelly

remodeded. great
Wilma.

rnRM from Gallipolis, offers 3
Br's , anached garage, lull

Whit a 0.1, Two hamel for

the Price or One. Moln 1181210 3 Br'o, 1 t/2 botho, full
btmt. smaller houte hal 2
Br"s. c;oukl bl rental or gunr
l1oult. tee'o.

-on

wHI)
vinyl aiding, 2 btdroomo, kltt:llen, living room,
1 balh, lo18 ol clooelspoce, laundry room wHh
washer and dryer, F.A.N.G. heat/C.A., New
roof, carpel/vinyl ftoorlng. Garden space. Real
Nice Home. Stove and Ral. also go with the
home. ASKING 138,500

1 ~cliME· I COMFORTABLE COUNTRY
Located Juot out ol Chealer. 1 Story
1•
Frame with alum. aiding, shingle roof, 2-3
bedrooms, bath, newer front end back
C&lt;Mired porclleo. FuN basement. 3 car garage
and a 30' x 38' pole building. Both have
elaettlc and cement llooro. Approx. 2.9!1 HI!MLOCK GROVE AREA· A place inthe
acreo . TPC water. Bottle gao F.A. heal.
Eaotern School District. IIIMEDIATI Country. 5 acreo, Slacked pond, 26'x32' pole
1
POB8E8810NIJ A8KlNG $84,500

=:!~:t'~ f,;c';~;~eC:: ~o:Or;.~~· ~

bedrooms and o dock r:Ner looking the pond.
Equipped kitchen and satellhe dillh. ~you
pMCe tnd q•lot??? HERE IT 1811 ASKINO
1116.000

1140 IN-GROUND HOUlE
S.R. 160. HOI_,
aoctionod orr to two tMng untto.
cculd ~be conYOrlld bOd&lt;
to one dwelling. two M.H. -

NEW USnNG- NEAR CHEITERfTUPPERB
PLAINS- Localld In Riggi Crllt SubdivisiOn.
Very Mil kept 1 floor Ranch Homo. FHIUr.. 3
bedrooms, 2 bathe, ahach•d 2 car gerage.
Total -olec. wllh C.A., paved strset and
driveway, front porch and rear deck. largo
crawl apace lhst could be convorted to 1
baaemllt1 t • Nlco Iandocap•ng·
wondtrlul
naighborhood. ASKING ...1110

upa. tiO'a

1141 TlJio Ranoh tllytohal htd tome up-dlllt.
Nower ol&lt;llno. _ , root. ·ptuo

u olloro khchon oppttoncoo, 3
Br'l, ~ Dlthl. tocatlld In R.V.
-

-.c:t. MO'o.

11U· OLDER 2 ITDRY
110111, .... 7 """"" toto! and
;noo oq. ft. ot living opaco,
pertial bamt, 11verel our
building• localtd on thlt

,. . A521:185101.

Nice Br1ct&lt; Home

-tdonoquho-of!tra.
4 Br'l, 3 bolhl. full thot • ~Ptf1ialtY
· lo.ecl
dock,
car lllrtOt,
wootloy

lmaalne 1 1,112 aq. ~. Ho'" with 4
bedroor)'ll, 2 blthl, llmlly room with
woodbumlng flreplaco, kitchen and dlnl!!ll
room. Spacloua living room. A 21' • 28
cement
C1f11011,
lmlglnll
30' X 40'
-n
t floor
and electric.
Allpoll
on barn
two
acnt1 a1 "level" ground 111ong a hard top road
Wllh two wattf IIPI. NOWII lmagitlllhl COlt
to build all 1111tll The Rullty Is you can own NEW UlnNG· MIDDLEPORT· Two Story
1 friCtion 111 ~ 0011 cauae 1111 Briclt llullnetl Building. Has newor roof wtth
lnttfeat and wanl8 thll
tloora. Gas opace heattfl. 2
i ~~~1iDi~c'iio
"AGAIN" BOlTOM
tooma downslalra with 4
•
upotairl. A8KINQ ...,000

I:=::~~wood

NI!W UBnNG· MIDOL!PORT· one Floor
Frame Houae with 2·4 bedrooms and 1
N.G.FA heat and unit air conditioner.
baHment, cable IVIIillble. On a paved 11reet,

bod&lt; ytlfll.

-

Qroot SHo lor

Home. Lot being
100oc80. Col tor

·

11012 4 Btdroom, 2.5 bolr., 2
...
· 1.
- ....... ptiiJ Hoyt
• .....
12174 Slddnioft Rd. 4 bodroonl.
2 balh homo 1.5 otory Coli PIIIJ

Henry E. Cleland Jr ..992-l259

..•

low mslnltnlnce. ASKING 128,8110

t -

I

I

bu~.

call

'

,

111811 Chevy

BorOtt.,

4 CJIIndlr, 5

•peed, AJC, lmlfm CIIHttl,
13000.114-002-5437 ...... !ipn.

12101 SlciUdld building lol:, 3

acres more or 11111, road on
property, easy access, on Slate

I

1

'

441-1-.

1

11185 Sttum SC2 Automatic. Air,

)

I : Crulte, AMIFM Caolttlt, Trunk
Robot. .12,000 Col Altlr SP.IL
!"' .• (St'rlouo
lnqulrltl Only I) 114·
441-4015.

•uao.

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER

ranch on St Rt. 850, clOse to 35

bvoass
OWNER WANTS SOLD
NOW. bring us an otrer on tnls 3
blclroom. 2 baths on thiJiver.

....

.....,J

,, '

~....,.,

IIIII •I 11134

•

Sit on your front porch and watch the ~loots come around ·
the band. This 5 bedroom home Is looking tor a family to fil H
up. BeautHul woodwork, fireplace, aild a. basement. .Come
see this one. It could be lht home Ill your dreams: 148,500
.,

OCCUPANCY. Juar waiting for
you ro move into, 3 bedroOm 2
bathl on 1 acre more or 1111 on

EAST MAIN ST.• A 2 story home with 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms,
one bath, and a nice front sitting porch with a great view ol
the Ohio River. Could t!e commarcialsne . $28,1110
POMEROY· A 1 112 story 3 ·bedroom home with lull
basement. There Is a beautiful stone flreptace In living room,
and a NGFA furnace. The bedroom upstairs is very largo,
attic hu blown lnoolallon, and hOme has a large front porch.
Very Allordable II $28,500
CHECK THIS ONE OUTI RAINBOW RIDGE: 16 acres with
at least two NICE building 8Mta. One currently hu a mobile
nome on n. 12 x 12 ahed stays. All tor just 522,000 .

condit-.

POMEROY· llaln St• A commercial building with 2,000 eq. ft.
and 3 apartments above that waa remodeled recantly and
hes newer lumacao. The upatalra rtt1ts lor $800 a month and
the downstairs is leased on a long term lease. $51.000

or

'

lor a mobile home. Hu a water tap. road and a dozed sHe In
back ola wooded lOt. Each 110,000

MIDDLEPORT· Approx. 5.S41 acres of land with appro•. 2
acres tailry level and cleared and grassy. ~real building she
In town and II secluded. $25,000

12117 LEVEL LOT I Ac rn/1
utllhlll avolltbll, Ciarlo Choptl
Rd. 113,000 VLS 441-aeoe/38e·
8828.

executive siYie , 3 bedroom, 2
1/2 bahta, largo dect. across

back of home. lovtlv Florida

Art

""""·

12112 Rl&lt;i Orondo trtt , 3
acree with 2 mobHe hornet and
pad for •nother mobile home,
largo ~.'~.'o&amp;eat lnvott~t
=·'tiitnd now, 2 bedroom

'"'h

nOJMIIJ'8 a trailer for the river bank or lor thai
home tht is 10x4D that Is

I

mobile hOme
gtll and
central
air, owner Wllnla
a d..t,
chick thiiOUt.

12114 G,_ Twp. 3 bedroom
r~nch wfttl lovely landtcapecl
yard, 1car S70,800
11034 10 ecru m/1 of prime
davelopment land close to
freeway and Still Aou11 .
Exctlltnt ror development or
commorctat uoo. $t55 ,000
120311 WHAT II IIAAGArNt 4·5
Bedroom. Bnck home with 2 lull
blthS, 3 loti. Patty Hays 448·
3884.
111037 Vacont land 73.5 M nv1

STATE ROUTE 114· Look! We have two parcels ol land,
each has 5 acreo lor you to build your dream. home or to U!JI

VLS 3118-18211 $54,000

Stato Routo 554.

12110 Crown City 1r11,

JMDEH HOLLOW RIJ. Approx. 211 acres ol v.ICant wooded
l.a.nll'dlt'.
aaeludld and hal free gas and royaMies. Hu
., 11 ~~~al1n
~ . ••• nnn

4 bedroom bl·level ·~lth many
with pool table/ping
eKtras
car
storage building, buck
pong table
equipfl'l(l and Is ready
stove, and 2 baths.
lor you to move into. Mtl,tKID

12011 NEW 11196 Sunohlno 18' x
80' Outollnding molile homeI dtCk, IPtCIII cablnata,
wlndowa, and buill·ln music
center, 3 BR, 2 bothl, bolutllu
tree 11 ac. rn/1. Clott co rown.

•",

Ranch
at the
ol Rio · Grande. 3
bati1r0011no. 2 lull baths, dining
room or
I room. Lots ol
lrull trees,
ya~d . Leos
than 2aaoo. 1 tor complete

205 North Second Ave.

t'e.

HPirl&amp;

IIIVIIW&lt;• Approx. 3 acres with a 2
. equipped kttchen , newHr roof. double tronl
and dryer. SZI,IIIO

area.
11601.

1121110 NEW USnNCI VACANT lOt
wi1h water tap on Bull Run Rd.
COli now tor more lntormatlon.

$42,000. Call Palty Hayo 446·
3884.

~------------------~------~
T

wooded setting.

naJural~

$11 2,500. lle10

wtth

OWfl

with

DOTTIE TURNER, 8roktr..........................t82-5112
JERRY 8PRADUNG .................................. 841-2131
CHARMELE BPRADUNO........................... MII-2131
BETTY JO COWNS •.••••....•.•...........•...•..•••.tl2·2383
IRENOA JEFFEAS.....................................II2·7275
OFFICE ........................................................ 912·2111

.......... .. "'";_,
'TREE·SY .

-

ATMOSPHERE!
Cool evening breezes flow
acrotia llle front porch ot this 2
year old ranch home. 3
bedrooms , 3 baths, rio
shortage ol cabinet spaca In
this kitchen, living room. family
room, basement, 3 acres,
detached 24' x 32' garage. Let
us shoW ~to you. 11138

NEW LIBTINGI VACANT
LOT· Situated at SR 588,
Green Township, being
approx. 2.38 acres , county
water available . Wooded.

'liM

CITY

LOCATION! $49, 000
VInyl Sided 1 Story Thai Has
Living Room, . Kitchen-, 2
Bedrooms, Bath &amp; Laundry,

t

iioni100iOOiiiiii'i11

Start here. You'll

a now

hallie . ot

construction, comfortable

lhis 1 1i2 atofy
on an .8 acre lot.
with

flreptace, eat·ln

4

living 1nd 1 beautiful sening ts
bedrooms and 2 car garage are a
you'll finl:l wnen ~ view t111 s lOWly few of the amenities that are sure
2 story colonial home. Formal.entry to please. Priced to sell at ·
with rorma1. living room and dining $64,900. 1500
room with beaut1ful wood floor.
Large· family style kitchen open to ~
.
family room with gas 101 fireplace, •
bedrooma and 2 1/2 balha plus the
conw11•a o' an UJW;airl: iMindfy
I
J

'

.

····~
r1e.l

warn to call home. Call Carolyn for
your private viBWing.1103
ILocki01Q

1121112 PRICE 18 RIGHT $37,800
3 BR. 1 both, oun pOrch &amp; front
porch, goraoo. lumoce w/alr
loneed yard. VLS
12012 LOCATED ON 8R 110
Oldtr 2 oty. 4 bodmnn, I both, 3
acr11 mtf plus a large bam:
$35,000 Coli VLS 388-8t12f1441..
5508.
11011 Commerc111 lldg. 02
Olive St. Corner location. 1880
IQ. ft. good roof. Owner will sell

t -.seo.ooo

Ifi ll

Martha Smith .. ................................. 379·26!11
Cheryl Lemly ... ............ :......... ........... 742·3171
Dana Alha.........................................379-9209
Kenneth Amsbary ............................. 245· 58SS

.......Morro""'--"'"'

.

Inventory or IMidlng

.

446·4618

Judy DeWitt ............................... !lo\1-0262
J, Merrjll Cartcr .........................379-2184
Tammie DeWitt......................... 245-0022

dining area, large FA with
fireplace insert. Oversized 2 car
attached garage, 2 horse slall
bam, large worilshop, storage
i&gt;JIIatng, fenced prnpotty. A
hidden treasure lodged In a

IIXIICUTMI4 - . 2 111 bollia,

···c

12102 OWNER WILL PAY
CLOSING COSTS, 3 btdroom

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101 · ~·

!:JJ
Crtdlt Probtomo? Wo Cln Htlp.
Eooy Bonk Financing For Uttd
Veltlclll. No Turn Dow no, Coil
Vlckit, 814 4te 2107. •

YOUf'l... when
nouse your hOme. Beii.Jtiful brictt
ranch lOcated on 8 6 acres, ""'·
ot1e&lt;s 4 BRo. 2 112 boths, tormtl
LA &amp; OR. tamlty li1e kitChen wltll

formal LR, w/gas log stone

VIrginia 38H82II ue

I

DAVE PARSONS· (Gallia Co. Ollke Manager) 446-1529
FRANCES TAYLOR (Sales Assoda1el446·3305
JASON PARSON !Sales Associate) 992-1069

r:~~
PRICE REDUCTION! SUCH
A PRETTY SETTING ..
SUPER LOCATION that is
really convenient to grocery &amp;
more. Roomy ranch style
home that hoe 3 baclroomo, 2
lull ~till. loytf, living room.
dining room, knchen , lamlly
1oom &amp; much 'more call lor
more lnfonnatlonl 1851

1

Route 218.

DALE E.TAYLOR (Brokarl992-5333

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

Ext.M388

12001 RAIIBI.INO TR~LEVEL
PERFECT
FOR
THE

-

VLS

SOUTHERN GALLIA·
25 acras- Hunter's
Paradise, mobile home, septic system. Priced
Right $27,500

4
1880 Citation 21 FL RV Air, Ex· ) 8:;1~
·:::1111=2.:
·29::111.:·;__ _ _ __
81
=~tion, Slllpl Sl•. "" Roger's Plumbing Str¥ict, Ell·
perlenced. Fru Ealimatea, Call
Selfl14 31118101.
t HI Dutchman, turnoco, rotrig· AlrM ~ Gt4·446-85etl.
tratGr, IE, IG&amp;dtd. IIIUml klan.
840 E~caland
1880 HondO $00 lour tru, llllft no down _..31M ..7S.5522.
clrlvo, ocod cond., u .ooo. 304·
Refrigeration
elS-311ll
t8W7 Dutchman 22 Ft. T•a·A·
Lono. FuiiJ Equlppod, Fotld
Of" commercial wiring,
. 18&amp;2 Kawoiaki 4x4 lltyou Exctl- .15.000. Alltlng .11.500, Col For R"lden11al
new aervlce or repairs. Mat t8f Ullnt Condhlon,
814·448· More lnbrmo-011. l14·37t-2578, canaed
electrician. Ridenou;
4053.
814-3111-8581 .
Elactrlcll, WV000308 , 30.t-875·

e-mail ua for Information on our llstlnga:
~ blgbend@Burekanet.com

'

CARS FOR tiOOI Trucko, booto.
4-whlltoro, 1110101 · lurnl·
.CUI'I, 14tctronk:' cornpu11111 etc.
bJ FBI, IRS, DEA. Available 10ur
area now. C:aii1·800..513·,.34S 1

" " Comoro v... 5 SpiOd, NAJ
FM Cautn•. Forrtat Glttn,
70.000 Mill. ...IIH Allor 11. 114-

•

fireplace. Formtl DR. very nice
aya U8 488• .
cablnata In the ldrchen. Huge
12113 3 to • bldroam brick entertllt;:J rm, muter BR lt
•....,.,.,.. 4500 oq. ft.
lloml. 2 lull Dltho, 2 C::.P;~'la·· ctt; Patty Hayo
, diCk i1 thl rear, 2 car garage, •
te.
M.L
ltvol
llwn. FREE GAS.
Irick ranch w!llnilhld
artie. • bedrooms. 2 batha, Coil VIrginia tor an lfltJ(Jintmon!.
front oorch. $59,800. Call
Patty Htyo 44&amp;-3884.
12112 VACANT LAND 13 Ac.
12181 3 IR &amp; 2 1/2 b.lth. 2 car MIL In Morgan Twp. Excellent
aHIChtd garlgt, W/WOfkShOp, Bulldtna Slit. Ctoude Oonleil
Shea 24xl!4 wort&lt;onop building 4411-1808. $18,000
W/Oioctrlc a Phno. Patty Hsyo446' 12881 4 BEDROOM 2 ~ot~
3884.
double wkla on 6 ecru MIL In
12004 Vlcont t..ntl1 .13 .. m/1 Morgan lWp 12 x 11 enclosed
REDUCED TO $14,500 Coli Potty bock porch. Format dining room
plus a nlc:e eat·ln kilchen. N.
Hoyo-3884
•
11013- 4 bodroomo, 2 112 batho, $311,000 IIIII one wNI not lUI long.
lovltlv kitchen w/eat In brHkfast Call Claude Daniell for
area, formal dining rm, sunken appobllment at 4.48-8806 or 446·
living rm, w/flreplace, lamUy rm, 71101. Oile&lt;.
new furnace, attached 2 cr 12181 171 ACRES MIL tn
.aarage, a01achtd 2 car garaga, Morgan Twp. Lott ot ltnced lh
rnground pool &amp; pool house, pasture land and ma.ny 1crn of
lovelv treed yard w/gazebo, deck good hunting and/or . camping
!'lreas. Several excattem building
In the rear, fencedd!,~d . $185,000
12117.COMMEA
illn. Rural water, For a ·Look·
BUII.DINOS I APARTMENTS TO Soo' Coli Ctauce at 44S l8 or
.
RENT Lot to 1111 cara etc. 4411-7808.
buiUdlngs can be uaad for b(lat 111187 lf7 MiU Creol&lt;. Good ......
storage. Great location on Of home. 3 bodrmt, h!l,LQ. Nt·JO
Bula.!Ue Rd. VLS
~t. t both, deep let. v"" $38,800
m11 IUSINESS ONLY PET lt73 PRIME DEVELDPIIIHT
&amp;HOP Equipment 6 1n11entory. LAND 117 ""· MIL Clou 10
Shopping ctr. location. Relced - . . &amp; holpltal. Otd- and
born. Gallla Cc. VLS
•
~~ke new 3,14 bedrm, ranch 12111 NEW HOME 50 M mil.
home, lively LR , huge klr, barn, greenhouse, lovely new 'a
W/cabineta galore , finished BR,. LR, kll, uUiity rm, 2 CIM'
baSement, 2 car garage. $92,000 tlllached gtJrage, Out Crown Chf
VlS .
way. Coli VLS tor tocotlon &amp; prtee.
I20:M e,.ceptlonally aman ranch. 388·8826 or Uti tl8()6.
·
3 bedrm, oak cabinet• In alg. kit., 11013· LUXURY
HOII!t
1 t/2 bathl, 8 oc. nvt. \11.5
combinelng elegance w/modern
12117 Gr11t Uvlng In a 3800 sq. convenl•nce 4JS BRa, 3 b1ths
ft. ranch w/flnlshld baeement. 2 1ormol DR Qrtll rm w/WBFP, flrst
112 botho, (2) tlroplacto. kit. a ftoor MBA hot Jub ook Clblntlo In
great rm. combo. 2 car QII'IQe. kiU:hln, brooktut .... $175,000
101 ...~
a pond 1 Y'" old.

12110 All brick ranch 3 bedrm, 1
1/2 baths, full basement, 1 car
a~hlld gar. 1 ec. m/1, HUOO

~-- 1
ot ·~·• mpoovo·

mtnts, call B.D. Coflstructlon ,

1788.

·

in Green Twp, Reduced to

,;;.;........ ~

•

1870 Starcra~. 23', lurnlohed &amp;
HII contolntd, Mtdno lor 4 yro., F
· 1
.700, 11-7-411G5.
or ony repa ,.

BULAVILLE PIKE· 3 BR brick r.a nch , newly
carpeted , spacious. large kitc hen . many
cabinets. $89,000

Real Eatate General

Main Olllce · 388·8826
· 958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, OhiO 45614

.

1131 .Ill TOWN LOCAnON·

448·11445 For Mnlnlorntltlon.

Own1r Went1 A Serlaue Ofllr1.3 acres of flat lawn w/ lot of
landscaping. Workshop
&amp;
greenhouse. 3 BR ranch. Living
room w/WOOdbumer. Priced to sell.

Vacant.

Motorcycles
'80 HorleJ 113 Sportotor, llllrp,
1,000 rnllu, 18000 080, 114·
Flvt tot1-41 1800 lnWnottonal 742-7200,814-742-2876.
ltUcltt. DT 4et tntlne wl 12 I
1411. Jtfrlgaolltll'- wflhom'al 1083 FLHT H-D Pollee Sjltclol,
Kitg wtlil.3ti4-IINIII4.
Elctlont Ccndldon, Eo..ol Muot
IIH "-ep ChtrGklt, 18,500
Mlill With A 38,000 Milo Wtr·
rtnty, Can lie Soon At 1583 St.
~ ISO, Galllpollo, Oltlo. (Toltr I

38060 MI. Union Road Pomeroy Meigs County but Alexander Schools.
2 year old cedar sided, spectacular great room/Vaulted ceillng.Call Crls 1·448·
6604.
If your are thinking of a career in real estate the ERA TEAM is the one for you! Call
the office to find out
the ERA TEAM is the noe to be with.

Only 1· 1 1/2 mllll from HoiDr
Hoiplllll. 3 Br, beautHul home only
3 years old. Thls home has H all. A

74Q

730 Vlnl &amp; ~WDI

IA-6013 P1g1vllle Grocery Great Opportunity Has two rentals or you could 111'8 In
one and rent the other lor more Income. 6·day a weak carry-out/most stock and
equipment lor the right price.call Shaula 992·5054.

111114- 14 X 72 Brandywine Molllle)
Home. 2 Bedroom. 2 bath,
secluded private lot.

77115.

Mlddllport, Ohio
4 bedroom starter home with potential. Convenient location to downtown, banks,
post office. Call Shaula 99215054

IA~123

AKC Rtglllored 801111 Hcund,
Puppy.
AKC Reglllortd
~kltllrt Puppy, tiL, Sholl Ond
Wormtd. (814) 317.7705
AKC RfOII- Dtlmotlon Pup.

1137· PRICE REOUCEDI Thil
Rancll homo hal on oeoy core
lawn, one car garage, aprox.
1040 oq . ~. ot llvlno opaoo,
-onS.R.7scuth.

7215.

Own your own cave and springl 7 acres m/1 almost mldwy between Athens and
Pomeroy. Call Shaula 992·5054

AKC Roo Rot-ller pupploo,
T.V. Stl •75; Ninttndo With tallo docktd, dtclo.. rtrnOvod,
Gtrnlt, AttachniOitto, t75, 114- llmotoo·S150 malti·S100. MaJ
256-1125""'!Oiiale. 311«7f&gt;4074.

-·-··

1-614-448-6604

tfA-eo89 40486 SR 33 Shldl, Ohio

Col TODAY t-IOtl-711-4151

1131 RANCH HOME ~td
on 218, located approx_. 1bc

Cris Milligan. REALTOR@

1liS Utrcury Grand Uarqula,
Aultlmltic, 302, Y·l, ·Rtmonulactured Engine Has L111 Thin
40,000 llllto, Full ""'""'· Aluminum Wtitolo, Shtrp Cor, •1,450:
1890 Dodgt Cuavon, Autor!lltic.
2.5l, 4 CYI .. 25 MPG, ~ Roll-·
abto Vohlcle, 13.450, It ~·44e·

MIDDLEPORT· S. R. 124· 3 Br, split entry,
family room, nice yard, 2 1/2 car garage . owner
anxlus 10 sell . Jusl $63,000

Fttnch City Maytag , 814-448·

•s.soo.

and some work. Central air and newer furnace. Some thermal
windows. Call Shaula 992·5054.

Mooae

Tho PomoroJ Thrift Shop. now
buying Levi juno oniJ, mtn'o,
womon'l tnd cltikhn'o, tloo lttlt
glrlo drtiHI, tors. doill tnd IIJd.
alar car oeata, Tuooday thfougfl

Appliance Fotrto And Strvlce: All
N1me Btandl Over 25 Ytlfl El·
perlence All Work Guarantud,

1185 Arlll 118,000 Millo U50;
1 - - 44,000 Mltoo te&amp;o;
11180 Flhh Avenue 71 ,000 111111
814-441-7413.
.

to sell . Needs TLC

P.O. Box614

a.

GALLIA· S. R. 2~
4 Br ranch , fenced in y ard,
2 car garage, 5 minutes .lrom town, Country
salting, underground drainage system , heat
pump.

.

tA-e124 9 Ublrty Lan1 Pomeroy One bedroom home that could be more. Prletld

Dept. GDT,

AKC Ala Gc*Mn Aa:aalaar• pup-.
lwkl old, lhot1 &amp; wormed,
moln·Saoa. 11mo11o •225. 304-

w-

.

lobtlllled 1175. Call (814) 448·
0870 Or 1·80().287-057S. Rooora
Watorproolilg.

Toltr lnouranct) Or Call 814·

Structures, Inc,

1-800-458-9990

992-5054
11-e120 2119 Fifth SlrHI

MIDDLEPOR"T • "Exclusive" Baautllul Vicl orlan
Styel Home, very, very well kapt. Fanta stic
woodwork I Great IOClition . Mus! See $82,500

LO&lt;l a1 reftrenctt lurnrshld. E&amp;·

••ooo;
IICiiltnl badJtS, ntld mOIOfl,

114-002-«&lt;tll

Home

BASEMENT
WAlERPROOFINO
Unconditional tilllim1 guarantH.

1114 Otdo Cutioao Clorra, tsOO;
1118 Pond10 Grand Am,

488 Richland Avenue
Athens, Ohio 45701
1-614-593-3333
Shaula LaudermiU, REALTOR@

Whitt T1n fnteriDr,
114-448-1021.
'

IA-eol5 3BOe7 SucceN Roed Long Bot1om Small hme or hunting cabin with
~~es m~. close to Forked Run boat dock and the Ohio River. Call Shaula 992·

Appalaehlan Log

WOlFFT--

'

•

Improvements

toDD. 814-2511-!125.

ERA Martin and Associates

leader in the log home
luduotry for over 15
ycnn. · Choot~e ,Crom over
70 otandard Jaodelo or
we 'II Cuttmn dctiMn oue

810

1184 JD Ford Good CondiUon.

'J

•

.,

Ripley, WV 25271

L&lt;&gt;oo11ar01111

=

. Air,
...100T·

OW. 45769

SERVICES

1177 Corvette, 350 AutamatiG,

'

.

in dooitn aro • r- .r
rcaaona why
ramiUeo will lluild a

intor~nation.

il2tG7 UKE NIW- Wonderfun oil
brtck ranch ~ opoclouo,
hugo """"' throughout loll of kh.
co61noto, LR, 2 lull botho, 3
bodrmo, lull b.loomont, FREE
GAS. lg. goraoo. 15 to 20 oc. m/1.
Very vary prfvatt VLS 4tl tiOI

•

••••rty,

61.tt2-SIU

can- Excoltnt CondiUon. Aloo 1Ua 314 Ton Ford
Truck Extended C1b, Camper
Equip., All F01 .12,000; Equip·
menr Trllller With Tandem A•l•
N00 814-31H532 Allor • P.M.

Comfort, eoave~eacc,

STORAGE TANKS 8.000 Odon
Uprtoh~ Ron E..,. Enttrpril.-137.as:&amp;
TanN.Homo
llrt DIRECT and SAVEl
COIIII*dir£.4 ton• Unill
ffoml1•.oo

Eltlte General

2721. 2111 St.

Colry Lkl

Cllcrgy
clf'icicncy,
durabUity ond flexlbWty

Call or write fur more

. .--Olio,
.•

Real

Log
Sll·ucturca ha1 beon D

Cl/~~au. ~ Q/,J .

Grlln/

Etr com, t2.7S lulllll ot
abte; orchtird ar••• hit, r
btlol 115. tqUift ....... ,, , ~
t2;014-tleWII$1, e1•1112-7.

Appalachloa

WARM UP: Hlgll Elllt:ltncy No"·
raJ And LP Gu Furnocto, Ult- MIJonfo.\' IIY &amp;
dmo Wlfflnty On Heal E'"'-'
or. "It 'lbu Don, Coil Uo Wt 'Both
Loter Fret Eotlmottll Add.Qn
-1 Pumpo Only Slltilty ........
Call Uo TodtJ. 11i7 II 'llle
Twonl}' Stvtnth Yoer ' In Tho
Hettlno ' Cooling -1114ue 8308.1.aoo.201-40111.
,

840 . HI)' •

Motor Homea

100 lb. ...... 01 ......... _.,.,
hoy, taoy aCCIII. coli oi.aol8!&amp;1 .

IU 111 DDt.

f

pJe, redWood panela. •PI cover, ee~u~-~~~a~ll7~.=~.::..~::.:=
uood only 25 lmoo. Clll bo uood lnolde or outolde, olwoyo u&amp;ed ~ -aid, iln.

lnolde. Sellouo lnqulroo Onlyl
$2,
750. 311«75-&lt;1314.
Old boiiO. radiatOr hltterl wltll
Wood Or COol H•llng s- For
brau '*'gl. IU 182 1511
Soli, $100, 8U·370-2720 AJ,
Mu1lcal lnstrumena CaMe. Air lERIP.IL
Cotdlllllll. e1..-0101.
Ztnllll 25' Floor Model tv. •360
080; lllnlaturt Plnchtr AKC
Rogiltortd, IINIItilul Doe. 1400,
ll4-24s.a&amp;

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.-..-.1 e-....-...bwl •Page 07

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780 campers •
DALE E. TlYLOI 1El1n

Roolotenod Hollllln 8uM, Looo=~or Ught Strvlct. 114·

7-0NAKC-IWhlle

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

ONE OF THE BElT VIEW
.OF GALUA COUNTY from
this lovely spacious newer
home. 2 story with lull
basement, 5·6 bedrooms,
living room , kitchen &amp; lots
more approx. 3,000 sq. ft. ot
living space plus lull
basement , large spacious
rooms. 40 ' x 44 ' metal
building, pond , fencing and
approx. 18 acres mn. Very
well constructed. Want space

AFFORDABLE! $44,900
city schools, raised ra"ch
with 4 bedrooms. 2 bathe,
approx. 1.8 acre lot,
purchase with 3
I Country· NeighbOrhood
exclusive brick rancn Is

lkitated on Butil Mor1oo in rna bast

worlds: quiet. peacerut) Po1mp,..d
but only a minute from~~~~~~~

one out, approx. t09 acres

then let us shOw the home 10 more or less, complete with

you. H-47

. a 1 1/2 story home that
offers &amp;lot of living space , 4
bedrooms, living room, klrge
ki1chen and more. Pond,
barn, corn crib and mise, .
sheds . Call today tor
complete listing. This one
COUNTRY JEWELl Lovely won't last to long. 11845

well maintained fk
a beautifully
kitchen, 3 beclrooms, 21owr1ers.
very nice living room and
Also Includes partial
screened In porch
Rearing on a
k&gt;t.$144 . ~

spacious home that Is the

right size for a large family or
those who just like extra
space . 6 bedrooms, tcyer,
formal living room, dining
room , kitchen, laundry &amp;
m9rs . Remodeled wj th
newer carpet, furnace &amp; roof.

Paved drive , 5 acres m/1,
largo barn . 1929
IN TOWN ... 111 Vinton Court
$47,000 One floor plan ranch
with 3 bedrooms, living room
&amp; dining room combination.
Kitchen &amp; bath . 1 car
attached garage. Flat c1ty lot
1M2

easy to
bedroom ran ch.
Kitchen &amp; dining room
combination , living room ,
den. 1 car attached garage.
Nice sized lot wNenced·in
bock lawn. More. 1911

NICE LEVEL
LOT
Oversized garage &amp; Mobile
home! 3 bedr.oom mobile
Nice Fronl Porch. House Haa
home in good condition . 2
Had Up~atlng . Handy
baths, open living room &amp;
Location! I 938
.
kitchen. Over 1.6 acres. Call
145,000 COMFORTABLE to 'l(iew11155
RANCH
HOME
with
2
BRs,
LOCATION SAYS IT ALLI
Vary well maintained brick l.A, DR, Kit, FA , carport and LOOKING FOR SOME
.I m 1)1&lt;1 d i a t e NICE PASTURE LAND?
ranch home that has elbow gar age .
possession.
18118
Over 71 acres with lots ol
room. Easy to maintain lawn.
3 bedrooms. 2 112 baths, living RIVER LOT· .982 Acre m/1 road frontage on two roads.
room, dining room, rec. room, well water (co. available) &amp; Coun1y wa1er available.
tract ol land.
kitchen, 2 car attached electric.
Plus
block Exceptional
Could be divided easy Into
garage. lt2t
basement. 3 electric hook· smaller
uacts. Pond. fencing
ups. Lot has been surveyed.
&amp;
mineral
rights included.
RIVER LOT· . .603 acres. Owner wanls soldl1114t
11142
Counly water and electric.
Nice lot tor MH or just lor .11 ACRES approx. compl~te
w1th water tap, wooded,
recreation. 1050
cleared off site lor mobile
home or ~oust. Call today.
Cheshire Twp. 1859

MEIGS COUNTY
Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
1282 DUSKY STREET,
TAKE AOVANTAGE DF SYRACUSE.
Aluminum
THIS
E XCI!LLENT sided one story nome that
OPPORTUNITY. Wt are has 2 bedrooms, beth, living
offering two restaurants l or room. dining room, kitchen,
sale . one In Syracuse and FA electric IUmac:eJcontral
one
in
Middleport . air conditioning, attached
Everything io sol up ready carport Rear porch. NICe.
lor a new owner, building, $45,000.00 11141
equipment and Inventory
Included In oale price. Both 471 5t EAGLE RIDGE
currently In operation and ROADI Aluminum Sided 1
there Is even room lo 1/2 atory nome. living room,
over
sized
oxpond tho hours it. you kitchen.
want. Toke a lOOk 11 being dotachtd 2 car garage. FA
your own basel Call Charyl electric lumace. Additional
mobile home hook-up. H58
lodayi iiDI

LOTS &amp; LAND
3 Bulldk1g Lola· Located m a nice country Bl.rno&amp;phere 10 milea from town. 3 building loll rangmg from
St 1,500 ID$19,900. Nice silas. Several good places lor a pond. 1123
t .e Acru on the Edga of Town- Loe&amp;IBd jutl outside the c1ty Umits. this land othn a homesite with
s11roundlnQ lanct. Urili11es are available ~ Iced at $29,000 1204

21 Actn. mJI, IOCaled on Clay ChaDel Road offers a pad for a doubl9wlde. Water tap on the ptOpetty.

Prietd at tzs.ooo. nos
Tht ~adawe. Thl S*'fe&lt;:t ~ to butld your ~m nome. Aeatl'ic:ted 5 ~~ere lots offer proltCtiOn from
external innutOCes. Large sll:e aRowt tor elbOw room while still having neighbOrs. Btautltul rolling Galtll
County moadows and wood Iota proVJdo aeatt"let•c value, Gr;en schOOl;."'Two paved Sli'HII wttl'l cul-desaca. F»rices vary, C.ll for 'more informallon . Only 3 left 1230
Lot located )uala few m•nutes to town. Mobile home pAd on proper!)!, nalurltl gas IJ'4ilabte, water
available. \,.ot lize II .ee: .ere,""' $8,500 1300
11 ecru on Ctay ·cnaiJif Rold ot10t0 ti00Uti11.t view and homooile. Extenst.e ctozer _.his been doni.
Orivtway l\lral Wlllf IVIKII~. Pficl&lt;ll1 $36,000

V~e~~nt

nos

lB.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC. ~
"""'"
( 614) 446-3644
.

!ill..,.,.

E-Mail Address : wiseman@zoomnet.net

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI - 446-9555
Loret.. McDade • 446-7729

C1rolyn W111dr • 441·1007

Sonny G1mes 446-2707

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 27,1997

Publllhlng Compeny

A Gannet~ Co. Newlpaper

'Three area residents killed in Saturday wreck

~,855

POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. Three area residents were killed in a
two vehicle accident Saturday
evening on S.R. 2, in Apple Grove,
according Ia a spokesman for the
Point Pleasant Detachment- West
Virginia State Police. Two others
remain in a Huntington hospital.

Coroner I;lr. Bret Morgan exam·
The state ,police spokesman said
Paula A. Fetty Wroten, 28, her
son, Edward 'Eddie' Wroten Jr., 12, Paula A. Wroten, driving a 1993 ined Paula Wroten and Tylor Fetty
and 'I)ilor Jo Fe(ty, three weeks, died Chevrolet Beretta, was traveling · after the accident.
No autopsies were perfonned.
in the 6:56 p.m. accident. Melissa F. north on S.R. 2 and Erik M. Burd, 27,
Surd,
wbo was driving a 1992
of
Huntington
was
traveling
south
Feuy, 27, of Point Pleasant and
Shirley A. Fetty, 54, of Point Pleas- when Surd attempted to tum left into International truck, owned by Arrow
ant remain in Cabell Huntington Apple Grove Man, crossing into Industries of Parkersburg, was cited
Wroten's path.
·
for failure to tum .with reasonable
Hospital.

safety.
.
The Wrotens are survived by husband and father, Edward M. Wroten,
Sr. Paula was a cashier at Paul's
Ei.xon and member of the Loyal
Order of the Moose 731, Point Pleas·
ant. Their funeral service will he
Wednesday, October 29, at I :30 p.m .

at Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home,
Point Pleasant.
Fetty is survived by her parents,
Brian and Missy Fetty of Letart.
Funeral arrangements are under the
direction of Foglesong Fun~ral
Home, Mason.
A state police spokesman said the
accident is still under investigation.

'Crowning jewel' of Pomeroy
revitalization project dedicated

Nft,CHROMI

BUMPERpJ]'ILT..CRUISE

&amp;'MUCH MUAEII

USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS

.

"

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel NIWI Stiff
The "crowning jewel" of
Pomeroy's Downtown Revitalization
Project; the Riverfront Amphitheater,
was dedicated during a brief ceremony on the structure Saturday after·
noon.

ts IUIUM IOAT .

, 18 n.~~.UTER·LX, MEACRUISER ENQINE

WITH '""'LER.

Sftft99

SUPER NICE BOAT ..................IIOW. 77

96 CliO. TAIIOI4 DIICII414 Lr

LEATHER, BRICKYARD 400 EDITION, AUTO.,
AIR, 350 ENG., LOADED,

~N,iv~a1~~~~:.~.~;..

'29,317

DEMONSTRAnON - Karen Lambert and Terri Mlckeah of the
Ohio Stltl Highway Patrol visited students at Chester Elementary Scflool with Carol, 1 ap8clelly-tnllned German Shepherd who.
worklln drug enforcement The offlcera' preaenlltlon concluded Drug FI'1Mt Ohio Week actlvHiea tit Cheater. The observance
took
throughout ~he cou~ ~·t - k .

pre

""' .

u~s. industry ·i s lookind'

toward China as lucrative
nuclear power market
"
WASHINGTON (AP) - The power reactors as much as $60 bil-

AUTO., DUAL AIR, P/SEAT,

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UTILITY liT
.5 TAHOES
3 EXPLORERS
2 SUBURBANS 16 S-1 0 BLAZERS
54 RUNNERS
3 JIMMYS
6 GRAND
2 TRACKERS
CHEROKEES 1· BRONCO
4 CHEROKEES 1 PASSPORT
2 WRANGLERS 1 AMIGO

u.s. nuclear industry, which has not
sold a power plant in this country in
24 years, is looking to China and a
potential $60 billion bonanza that
could be a path to a long·lerm
revival.
Intense lobbying to open the Chi·
na market for U.S. reaclor builders
may pay off this week when Pres'i·
dent Clinton meets wilh Chinese
President Jiang Zemin at a· White
House summit. The two leaders hope
to sign an agreement to open China's
civilian nuclear market.
Nowhere in the world will the
need for energy in the coming
decades he greater than in China,
.which envisions building hundreds of
power plants- including as many as
I SO nuclear reactors- over the next
40 years to meet .the skyrocketing
electricity needs of its 1.2 billio.n people.
"A great deal of. that business
could come to the United States."
said Robert Newman. head of nuclear
programs at ABB Inc., one of the
country's leading reactor builders. He
estimates the China markcl for new
.

-

at

lion over lhc nex11wo decades.
The U.S. nuclear industry has
been lobbying franlically with the
administration and Congress, arguing
that U.S. companies shoultl be
allowed 10 cpmpelc with France,
C~nada and even Russia for China's
burgeoning reactor market.
·
American and Chinese negotiators
resolved some key concerns last
week, but .Secrclary of State
Madeleine Albright said Sunday that
a final dec'i sion rests with Clinton.
U.S . companies are barred from
selling nuclear technology to China
until the Chinese government gives
assurances il will slop helping other
countries ~ particularly Iran and
Pakistan - in developing their
nuclear programs, and possibly
diverting teChnology to weapons.
Congress a dozen years ago
agreed to allow civiiian·nuclear technology sales to China but required
that the president certify China's
commitment to nonproliferation . It is
this certification thai Jiang is seeking
as pan .of his upcoming visit.
Continued on page 3

Group to probe Reno's
refusal to seek prosecutor
WASHINGTON (AP)- lnlensi·
fying his scrutiny of the Justice
Department in the campaign finance
probe, the Senate Judiciary Commiltee chainnan says an upcoming hearing will focus on why Allomey General Janet Reno is not seeking
appointment of an independent coun·
sel.
'"There are polilical advisers
advising her upon whom she is rely·
ing, I think, to the detriment of our
country," Sen. Orrin Hatch, R·Utah.
said on "Fox News Sunday." "We
are going to have a hearing in the
near future and determine who in the
world is advising her. "
Hatch added that "we have people dawn there" in the Justice Department "who are polilical appointees
who are really guiding her in this
matter."
Responding to criticism from
Republicans earlier this month, Reno
said she will not be stampeded by
"politics or pressure" into applying
for a court-appointed independent
counsel, but is prepared to seek one
if evidence emerges 10 walTant it. She

M PI.YIIOUIII VOYIGII

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•

says her Jusliee Department task
force is working diligently to build a
solid case by traditional bouom-up
investigation .
While Halch zeroed in on the Jus·
tice Department probe. Scns. Fred
Thompson. R-Tenn .. and John Glenn.
D-Ohio. differed on the fund -raising
investigation by their Government
AfTairs Com mince. which ends Dec.
31.
Senate hearings have been "large·
ly an opportunity lost," Glenn, the
commiuee's ranking Democrat, said
on NBC 's '" Meet the Press."
"If we 're just to continue with try·
1
ing to see how much blood we can let
out of bemocrats and how much we
can wound Democrats and not make
it bipartisan, I'm for ending it as
quick as we can end this thing,"
Glenn said . "I think we had the
opportunity 10 make this bipartisan"
and "clean up the whole system."
Separately, Glenn said he will not
object if his colleagues ask President
Clinton to respond to wriuen ques·
tions. Clinton has turned down the
commiuee's invitation to testify.

•
(

About 50 people attended the cer·
emony marked by the introduction of
Donald Kronenberger of Marieua,
Ga., who donated $100,000 toward
construction of the amphitheater in
memory of his parents, the late Donald and Naomi Johnson Kronenberger.
The 163-foot-long amphitheater,
built by Banks Construction of
Pomeroy,, includes seating, a walk·
ing/stage area, chain railing, tiedowns large enough for large river
boats and extends more than 17 feet
out into the tlvet stfpported. . steel
[-beams.
' ·•
'
·
· Kronenberger, an attorne~ _;,ith
the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
who until recently had been referred
to a' an "as-yet unnamed benefactor",
was the son of Donald and Naomi
Johnson Kronenberger who died of
accidental carbon monoxide poison·
ing on June 13. 1992, in Akron . .
The late Mrs. Kronenberger was a
former Pomeroy resident, aucndcd
Trinity Church in Pomeroy. and is
survived locally by her brother.
Theron Johnson of Letart Township.
The late Mr. Kronenberger was a

PLI'Q~IE PRESENTAnON ·The VIllage of
Pomeroy w11 pr111nted 1 plaque Saturday
afternoon by Cliff Eckatrand of the Ohio
Departmlnt of Development llllrking the ded-

retired vice-president and treasurer of
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. of
Akron.
i
A plaque was installed at the
amphitheater Thursday afternoon
Pomeroy Councilmen George Wright
and John Musser bearing the inscrip·
lion "Dedicated to the memory of
Donald and Na9mi Johnson Kronen·

berger."
Kronenberger said he wanted to
support something that would he a
lasting memorial to his parents, and
that the amphitheater project seemed
to be a perfccl mccling between the
town's needs and his wishes.
Although Kronenberger never
resided in Meigs County, he recalled

summertime visits to the area, to his
grandmother's home in Racine and to
the family farm in Letart Falls as a
youth.
"My (Meigs County) roots run
deep on my maternal side," he said.
"I am pleased to honor my parents'
memory in such a lasting way."
&lt;;oolinued on page 3

Heartbreak:

It's 49 years and ·counting for Indian fans
By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
A11oclated Press Writer
CLEVELAND - The city has
polished its comeback image but its
beloved Indians just can't get over the
hump.
When it comes to World Series
frustration, it's 49 years and counting
for the Indians. Thomas Dewey still
looked like a sure hellO heal Prcsi·
dent Harry Truman the last time the
Indians won the Series in 1948.
The Indians made it back to the
Series in 1954, losing to the New
York Giants in four straight games,
but not again until 1995. when they
lost to the Atlanta Braves in six
games.
.
"I didn't cry." admitted Joan Hin·
klc. 34, of suburban Lyndhurst. who
watched the game with hundreds of

other fans at Pclc &amp; Dewey's Planet.
" sports bar outside the center field
wall of Jacobs Field.
"II seems like the city of Cleveland can't get a break. It's a shame
thai a team that hasn't won in 49
years loses to a team that's 5 years old
-that's what hurts the most :•
Cleveland's 3-21oss in II innings
to the upstart Florida Marlins was
greeted by yelps, moans nod profanity at bai.&lt; across town. Then the
refrain began. "Next year," and "Go
Cavs." meaning the city's National.
Basketball Association team. and
finally, "Browns '99," lhc city's
future replacement football team.
About 400 doehard fans showed
up at the airport early this morning to
greet the team on its return home.

The players waved 10 the crowd a&lt;
they deplaned and manager Mike
Hargrove and several team members
went over to the fence and cxchang~
high-fives with fans.
·
The fans were upbeat despite their
•
disappointment.
""Even though they lost lhey did
wonderful," said Carol Brophy of
Akron .
'"Next year they' re going to he
really good," said Leo Sanche/. of
Lorain. " We have faith io these
~uys."

No Cleveland sports learn ha&lt; won

a major title since the 1964 Browns
won the NFL championship. The
Browns skipped town in 1995 for
Baltimore, where they arc now
known as the Ravens and arc still

witbout a Super Bowl berth.
The Indians Game ?loss, the postmidnight end of the game and a
heavy downpour as it ended com·
bined to keep the after-game hoopla
subdued. Most fans who watched the
game away from home took off
immediately after the game. ' a few
honking their horns downtown. Not
many people were around 10 hear.
Clevclarid rx&gt;licc said this morning
there were no maJt&gt;r problems . Exira
police were ready to take up security positions around Jacobs Field if the
Indians won, but the sidewalks leading around the ballpark were empty
after the game.
The city will gel a chance to honor the Indians with a parade and ral·
ly in downtown Cleveland on Tues. day.

1996 killing ieads to Youngstown-area mob
probe
.
" CLEVELAND (AP) - Ernie
The investigation is wide-ranging,
Biondillo drove along his usual route but one of the primary targets is clear:
to work last summer when he came Leoine " Lenny" Slrollo, a Canfield
upon a car with its hood.s:aiscd.
man who authorities say is a member
The block-long, one-way street of the Pittsburgh La Cosa Nostra
with vacant lots and old houses cast family and the boss of organized
of downtown Youngstown is so nar· crime in the Mahoning Valley, The
row that Biondillo could not maneu· Plain Dealer reported Sunday.
ver his Cadillac around the other car.
Strollo. 66, and his Cleveland
Before he could back up, another car lawyer, Orville Stifel, declined to
hOKed him in from behind.
comment On the investigation, The
Two men weaiing ski masks and Plain Dealer reported. Strollo sug·
carrying shotguns rushed toward gested in an interview with the
Biondillo, spraying his car with nine Youngstown Vindicator in January
or 1'0 rounds of deer slugs and pellets. that he is the victim of a vcndeua by
One of the attackers reache$1 into the an overzealous FBI agent.
car and pulled a ring - wi!h the ini·
Strollo could not be reached by
tials " EB" spelled out in small dia· telephone for comment Sunday. He
moods - from Biondillo's finger.
does not have a listed phone numc~r
The June 3, 1996, killing of in the Youngstown area. A message
Biondillo, owner of a vending · seeking Stifel 's comment was left
machine company, is one of the pri- Sunday with an answering service
mary areas of focus ofthe most inten- that took a call placed to his law
sive investigation of organized crime office.
activities in the Youngstown area in
Biondillo's killers stalked him for
at least IS years.
more than a year before he was killed,

r'

·.

Qccording to an affidavit filed last rounding organi1.cd crime in this city
month by FBI Agent Robcn G. Kro- with a lengthy mob history.
Internal Revenue Service and FBI
ner Jr.
So far, two Youngstown men have agcnls searched Strollo's h9mc in
been charged in Biondillo 's death. . January, seizing financial and gam·
George Wilkins. 24, pleaded guilty to bling records, noppy disks, a stun
a federal charge nf commiiting mur- gun and a slot machine, according to
der to further a racketeering enter- search warrant records filed in U.S.
prise. No sentencing date has been District Coun in Akron .
The FBI last year dispatched sevSCI.
Cleveland Blair, 25, was arrested eral agents from its Cleveland office
on a warrant charging him with the to Youngstown to assist i!' the invcs·
same cl'ime last monlh and was in the ligation and has a~ked its headquar·
custody of federal marshals awaiting ttrs in Washington for roore agents,
indictment.
according to Van Harp, the agent in
Wilkins and Blair did the shooting charge of the FBI in northern Ohio.
while two other men drove the cars.
"There's a substantial opportuni·
according to Kroner's affidavit.
ty to have a definite impact on the
Kroner wrote thai the diamond organized crime problem in .
ring with the initials '-'EB " taken Youngstown and the Maboning Valfrom Biondillo's finger moments ley," H3Jll said.
after he was shot was pawned by
At the same time, the FBI is invcsc
Wilkins earlier this year at a jewelry ligating other unrelated fraud and
store in Pittsburgh.
public-corruption matters, includina
In the lasl nine months, there has a review of the financial dealings of
been a Ourry of public aclivity sur- the Mahonin~ Valley Sanitary Dis·
trict.

.

..
•
•

•
,
•

•
•

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"

•

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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="29007">
              <text>October 26, 1997</text>
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    <tag tagId="456">
      <name>caldwell</name>
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    <tag tagId="564">
      <name>holley</name>
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    <tag tagId="982">
      <name>keeney</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="814">
      <name>knapp</name>
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    <tag tagId="394">
      <name>leport</name>
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    <tag tagId="736">
      <name>neal</name>
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    <tag tagId="1899">
      <name>pennington</name>
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    <tag tagId="440">
      <name>skidmore</name>
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    <tag tagId="5">
      <name>thomas</name>
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