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                  <text>Along the River

Inside

$1 oo

Morgan F,..,an
diiCU.... the
hardtst part
of acting

flllcing CtUIIT
SIII'ViVIS the

test of time

• Futured on Pls.t C1

t

Colorado says

HI: 60e

goodbye to

Low:40e

John Denver

Details on
pegeA2

Page C7 •

•

tmts·
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

1118

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant • October 19, 1997

Vol. 32, No. 36

No firm decision yet on new
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge location
By .JIM FREEMAN

nne• 1111thtel 118ft

POMEROY - Enp!JCCring COIIIultants m examin·
ing two prop;lllld aires for a new Pomeroy-Muon
Bridge... but no decision has been made yet.
The subject of tbc Pomeroy-Muon Bridge came up
twice last week, at the Middleport Village Council meet·
ing Monday night and at Tuesday's meeting of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce.
At both mcc:tinp, people reported aeeing surveyors
examining the Kerr's Run area near the junction of atale
Route 124 and U.S. 33 in Pomeroy and talking to property owners.
That site is one of two selected as a proapective site
for the replacement bridge along with the area ncar tbc

existing bridge.
The survey work has led some to believe the Illite has
already selected the Ken's Run site for the replacement
bridge •• contrary to the requests of community leaders
in Middleport, Mason, W.Va., and Pomeroy who want
the bridge to be placed near the existing bridge.
Not true, according to the Ohio Department of Transportation.
Sverdrup Associates Inc. of Columbus, the consultant
on the propoSed bridge replacement project, hu com·
pleted field investigations on the two feasible corridors
for a new structure, at Kerr's Run and in tbe vicinity of
the exi!lling.span, said ODOT District 10 spokeswoman
Nancy Pedigo.
~
.
The consultant has' now been authorized to begin

engineering work
necessary to draw
lines of possible
bridge
locallons
within those two
corridors. There can
be more than one
;.
line within a corri· L---~--'.:...:..-....:.....:.:_~----'---""~::.:.'--"""'=='-~-=........:.:..-..l
dor, po5sibly as
BRIDGE STUDY- Sverdrup AIIOCIIIII Inc. ol Columbue, the -.ultlnt on the~
many as five lines JI08Id bridge rap*'"'tnl·proJIC&gt;I, hu completed ftlld lnvullglllonl on the twa ......:
within· a corridor, ble corrldora for 1 rapiiC-nt to the Poiiiii'Oy-1111011 Brklfle.
·
Pedigo said.
parcels involved, environmental impacta which bsve
Once possible lines have been established, ODOT been identified, to determine which lines can be elimi,,
and the consultant will begin discussing the pros and naled and which wamnt further study, sbe said.
cons of each,· length, cost, numbers of riJbt-of-way
Continued on pege AI

.Jobless rates
for Ga_llia,. Meigs ~;
up in September~

· Dvar 3D
~

ta Ch•sa

Fra•

jootball

AS

·results

AS

hlghWIV• ~r · repalrs

lOW

GALLIPOLIS. - Clo.inp of
two state highways In Gallia
County llfC planned by the Ohio
Department of Transportation
District 10.
Stare Route 790 will be closed
the week of Oct. 27·31 at a bridge
approximately two miles we!ll of
the junction of SR 218, west of
Mercervllle. The District 10
bridge crew will replace tbc sin·
glc-span, &amp;!eel beam span with a
precast box culvert.
The official dctoun are atate
routes 218, 7, 141 and 775.
A one-day closure of SR 7 is
scheduled for Sunday, Oct. 26 at
the Cheshire railroad crossing, at
tbe request Q( the railroad, which
will replace tlit existing crossing
with a rubberized crossing.
District 10 spokesperson Nany
Pedigo said the railroad had ini·
tially requested a one-week clo·
sure, but ODOT and tbc railroad
concluded that one day will suf·
lice if only the ·rails m replaced
while the road is closed. The actu·
al rubber crossing will be
replaced under traffic.
Signs have already been post·
ed at the site wamin11 motorists of
.the closure.
The official detour will be SR
124 to Wilkesville, and SR 160 to
SR 735 to Gallipolis.

1918
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Good Mornin
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'

TIME - Glllllpolla went
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by the Glllllpalla Rllall
1111
County Chllm-

STEPPING
back to ... roota

o.w.

~fooclllld

1111 clty'a downtowJI. In

County

-lunctloil with the oblarvlllon of a.JIIpolll' loundlf111ln 1NO wn toura and ICIIvlty 11 the Our Houu
M-m, wtw. Karan Dlmpeey, ..,_, a ~t, or
voluntllr, demonlblled 1111 1111 or eeplmlng willet
In thld8p ol the Franch 100. Activity Ill Our Hou11
contlnuee Sunday from 10 Lm. until II p.m.

GAWPOUS- Unemployment in Gallia and Melp couaties ~:
in September, but "!as in line with a rise in the jobless rate reflected through- ·
out the state, the Ohio
Bureau of Employment I RPgional unemployment rates
Services reported.
~~-------~~-------Gallia County saw
unemployment jump 1.2 l:.iii,.M;jiO;
percent to .6.9 percent
over the August level of
S. 7 percent, according to
non-~asonally adjusted
figures. Out of an estimat·
...,..ed- labor~ force of 13,800 ~...,&lt;!
in Gallia, OBES said
1,000 people were with·
out jobs last month.
Meigs County's jobleasness for September
jumped 1.4 percent to 9.3
percent over Au11ust's
level of 7.9 percent,
OBES figures revealed.
Meigs' labor force is esti·
mated at 8,500, and the
aJency estimated 800
people· were out of work
for the month.
Throughout the imme·
diate area, increases in
unemployment were seen.
during
September,
according to OBES.
Athens County rose three·
tenths of a percent over its 1-.__.:.....::
August rate to 4.1 percent; Jackson, one-tenth of a percent to 6.0; Lawrence,
nine-tenths of a percent to 6.9; and Vinton, two-tenths of a percent to 8.S.
Meigs and Vinton were among eight counties with unemployment over 7
percent for Sep,tember, OBES found. The others included MoiJIII (9.7),
Scioto (9.2). Adams (8.8), and Monroe and Pike, each at 7.6.
Madison County led the eight counties with the lowest jobless rates in the
state at 2.2 percent.
·
·
Overall, tbe stale unemployment rate rose one-tenth of a percent to 4.4
percent in September, below the national rste of 4.9 for the month.
"Ohio's labor market reflected some of the usual volatility cxpei;ted in,
September, but it remains remarkably strong," OBES Administrator ~
R. Bowland said.
"Manufacturing and other goods-producing industries remained stable
this month," she added .

to turn ground on $5.4 million Bidwell-Porter sewer project ·

By KEVIN KELi.Y
Tlmll lantlnll 118ft

,

with us in this ceremony,"
Gallia County Commission·
BIDWEll. - After nearly two decades of er Harold Montgomery
wailing, residents in the Bidwell-Porter area sal"d .
'
will ace earth turned this ~k on a $S.4 mil·
A third phase has been
lion, multi-phase wastew&amp;~F facility improve· added to the project and It is
ment project that 16cal o!ftCials look to assist also slated for completion
development in Springtleljl"ownship.
by next November, Mont·
. A groundbrcaking ce1f.my is scheduled gomcry explained. The new
for Wednesday at 1 p.m. ~,the Mount Carmel sewer project is expected to
Baptist Church in Bidwell! jibe project's gen· serve around 390 people
erst contractor, Fields Ellcavating of Kitts when operational, be added.
Hill, will start workinJ oli !tie project phases,
Attempts to obtain funding for the project
expected to be complete b~ J'lov. 1, 1998.
-initially recommended by the Ohio Depsrt·
"Everyone is invited to 'l;ome out lind join ment of Health in 1978 - gained impetus
,

Funding has also been derived from tbc
after the county Health Department issued a
Ohio
Public Works Administration Uld tbe
ban on new sewage permits for construction in
Community Development Block Grant proBidwell-Porter in December 1991.
"The crux of this was that the EPA ordered gram.
the area to be scwered because the makeup of
The project comes at a time when Sprina·
the soil didn't function well for those kinds of . fl~ld Township's population has been incrcu-'
ing, and impetus to commercial development
systems," Montgomery said.
Several years of ·applications to funding is expected to be provided when tbe Gallla
agencies have paid off, rcsultil)g in full fund· County industrial park site off State Route 8..~
ing for tbe project. The bulk of the funding opens.
·
·
·
The state's approval of the Bidwell-Porter
just over $3 million- has come from the U.S.
Department of AJriculturc Rural Develop· project came at the end of 1996. Notice of tbc
mcnt Administrstion, which awarded 69 per· award from the RDA came in August, Uld the
cent of its funding as a grsnl and the remain· county received its notice to proceed with the
project on Sept. 25.
der as a loan.

'Unique' erosion abatement program underway
OPEl
MOI.·DL9·9

SAt9-6

By BRIAN .J. REED .
nmaa-S.ntlnel Stiff
POMEROY - A unique solution to road erosion is
being applied to several secondary rOads in Meigs County.
The gabion basket is named for the gabion grade of
stone that is used to fill it. The baskets arc piled atop one
another in various sizes, filled with tbe si•·inch stone
and placed along the roadside to secure it and prevent
crosioa.
.
Mike Dub! of the National Resources Conservation
Service, who worb through the Meigs County Soil and
Wlltcr Conservation District, said Friday that some SO
township and county roada will be secured to prevent
further erosion, moat of them with the baskets.
The prooesa bas been instituted to abate erosion prob·
lems that have occurred as the result of the six to eight

inches of rainfall that caused widespread damage in
March.
Workers from Regency Constn1ction Company of
Slidell, La., are on the job on Salisbury Township Road
27 (Long Hollow) installing the baskets. Regency will
do similar work in Bedford Township, and work will be
performed in Scipio, Columbia and Rutland Townships,
as well.
In addition to 11abion basket installation, crews will
also put in rip-wrap and sheet piling on some of the
roadways.
The contract for the work in Salisbury and Bedford
Townships was awarded at a cost of $287,000, and
county-wide, $1.8 million will be spent \m tbe erosion
abatemenl projects.
The projects arc federally funded through the Emer-

gency Watershed Progrsm of the NRCS, at no cost to
local governments. According to Salisbury Township
Trustee Ed Durst, this is a boon to the local townships
for two reasons,
"This helps us first by repairing the erosion that has
taken place &amp;)ready, • Durst said, "but also saves us in the
long run by preventing future erosion damage.•
The baskets, most of which will ultimately be cov·
ered with iioil, arc estimated to have a 30-ycar lifespan,
and arc coated with a special PVC coating to protect the
baskets against tbe acid mine water that is prevalent in
Meigs County's small streams.
.
An incidental benefit of the projects will be a consid·
crablc widcnin11 of the roadways allccted, in thai the
covering of the baskets will necessitate extension of the
berms.

FIWNG IIASK£TS. • M•e Duhl of the Nalurll

Aeaourc•• ConMrvlllon llrvle&gt;l 1nd llllabu,Y
Townlhlp Trullel Ed Durat - piCtured 001rl'llr1nl
with the crew from Regency c-u-uot1on cc:s
which 11 fllllnggablon beelilll on Long llollow
In Sal""ury Townlhlp.'

C

.•

I

'

'

�PageA2• .....,.-...-

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

Bus safety
enforcement
stepped up ·

OHIO WeJttwr
Suaclly, Oct. 19
AcaiWeathe,e forecast (or

oonditions and

MICH.

W. VA.

SuMy

PtCiou:tt

=

Fair conditions will last
:in area through Monday
.
.
By Tha A1soclatlld Pnt18
The remainder of the weekend wtll be dry and cooltn Ohio. .
H1gh temperatures on Sunday wtll range from the upper 50s tn the nonh
to the mid 60s in the south.
·
Lows wtll he tn the upper 30s to lower 40s. . .
Fair weather wtll continue through Monday wtth htghs of 55 to 65. Showers and cold~r temperatures are expected Tuesday and Wednesday.
No~al hoghs ar~ around 64 and normal l~ws are around 42.
Sunnse Sunday ts at 7:46a.m. and sunset IS at 6.46 p.m.
. . Weather forecast:
.
.
Sunday... Fog unttl mtd-momtng, then partly sunny. Htghs 60to 65. L1ght
.
nonh wmd. .
Sunday n1ght...Mostly clear. Lowun the lower 40s.
Monday...Panly cloudy. Htahs tn the mtd 60s.
Monday night .. .Mostly clear. Lows from lhe upper 30s to the lower 40s.
Extended forec;ast:
.
,
.
.
Tuesday ... Panly cloudy. A chance of spnnkles dunng the mght. Htghs on
the mid 60s.

Buckeve.
Rural's progress
T '
:outlined at annual meeting
I

RIO GRANDE - Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative's monthly
growth is greater than some cooperatives' annual growth, BREC Executive Vice President and General
Manager James J. Weaver noted dur-ing the annual member meeting Oct.
4 at Buckeye Hills Career Center.
BREC is adding approximately
700 new services a year and currently has 2,550 miles of line in its territory, Weaver said. B REC serves over
·16,500 customers in Athens, Gallii,
)ackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, ·
Ross, Scioto and Vinton counties.
· During his address to the mem. bers. Weaver discll$5Cd pendinl legislation to deregulate the utility iiidustry.
.
"The best way to ~redict the
future is to create it,". he said as he
outlined four areas BREC is addressing to prepare for the future:
• "First and foremost, we are
working to make our service better
)lnd more affordable," Weaver said.
• BREC reduced its peak demand in
j 996 and passed the resulting cost
'reduction on to its members. He
added that the cooperative has continued aggressive right-of-way and
maintenance programs. and has
attempted to notify consumers of
pending outages.
• The cooperative is "reconfirming
its roots ·in the community,'' Weaver
said. BREC has heen involved in the
School-to-Work program, completed
preliminary work to panicipate in the
MeGruff Crime Dog truck program,
and developed a stronger relalionship
with BHCC.
Due to th is commitment. BREC
received special recognition this year
from the Gallia County Chamber of
Commerce.
• The cooperative is "making a
case with our h:gislat01$that our con-

( IJSP!~

Published each Sunday. 125 Third .Ave.,
Ohio, by thl Ohio Valley PvblldiiiJ
Compinytaannen Co.. SiecGnd cl111 posuat
Oallipoli ~.

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,... • Go&amp;Upolis. Ohio •5631. EMm&lt;l u
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n. Auocilld Prest. llftd lht ~

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Sund8y,October19,1997

GALLIPOLIS - In recognition
of School Bus Safety Week, Oct. 1925, the Slate Highway Patrol is
reminding motorists of the special
challenges and laws related to school
bus safety.
Col. Kennelh B. Marshall, the
patrol . superintendent, said !hat
motorists have a unique responsibility when school buses aie on the road.
"If all safety laws are observed,"
he s~id. "we can avoid suffering the
tragedy of losing a child in a school
bus-related mishap."
Ohio law clearly outlines what drivers must do when the encounter a
school bus on the road, Marshall said.
The driver of a vehicle meeting or
ovenaking - from either direction
-a school bus stopped to receive or
discharge passengers must stop at
least I0 feet from the front or rear of
the bus, and shall not proceed until
the bus resumes motion, or.until signaled to do so by the bus driver. The
only exception is when the vehicle is
traveling in the opposite direction on
a four-lane highway.
"Most school bus fatalities occur
when children are outside the bus,"
Marshall added , "and 75 percent of
the fatalities involve children under
the age of9. For safety's sake, drivers
must resolve to exercise extreme caution in these siluations."
Failure .to observe school bus
safety laws can result in the suspen.sion of driving privileges.
· Locally, Sgt. Dale Ho.Jcomb of the
Gallia-Mcigs Post advised that in the
lasl year 18 passing school bus complaints have been investigated, with
nine citations issued. •
The patrol, along with the Gallia
and Meigs sheriff's departments, and
Gallipolis, Pomeroy and Middlepon
. police, will be jointly Slepping up
enforcement around school buses
and school zones.
''There can be no tolerance or
breaks when it comes to the safety of
1 ·1
" 1
ouorvschBooC.chntderetn;l'nHoccoommbseaid.

By CHA~LENE HOEFLICH
tern ofhealth services for Appalachian Ohio.
nmea Santlnalltaff
"This unique pannership will be an opponun ity to use the latest technolPOMEROY - A $600,000 grant to develop and coordinate a telcmcdi- ogy to serve more children in their home counties while forging a closer
cine project allowing greater access to psychiatric care for children in sev- alliance between physical and mental health pro fessions." said Rubin.
C)'al counties in southeastern Ohio - including Meigs and Gallia - has been
OU-COM, which is currently utilizing video conferenci ng technology pri:Swarded to area health care organizations.
marily for educational purposes, will see the first significant use of thi s tech~ The three-year grant, funded through the Health Resoul'j:es and Services nology to deliver medical care. This grant is believed to he the first appli·Administration Office of Rural Health Policy, has been given to the South- cation ,of this technology in rural Ohio.
:em Consortium for Children (SCC) in conjunction with the Ohio Universi- · "This collaboration," said Barbara Ross· Lee DO, OU-COM, "is pan of
~~ College of Osteopathic Medicine (OU-COM), Tri-County Mental Health our ongoing effons to strengthen relati onships with community health orga'lind Counseling, and Dr. Edward Lynam.
·
· nizations and is fundamental to our missio n of improving health care ser: : In addition to Meigs and Gallia, the project will serve children with psy- vices for vulnerable populations in the traditionally under served areas of
southeastern Ohio."
chiatric problems in Athens, Hocking, and Washington counties.
· The funds, according to Lee Rubin, executive director of the consonium,
The first phase of the project will be establishing video conferencing syswill increase direct access to psychiatric care for children, enbance educa- tems at Tri-County Mental Health and Counseling's offi ces in Athens Count ional opponunities for students and health professions, and expand the exist- ty.
i ng telecommunicalions infrastructure to develop a more fully integrated sysThe sec chairman said that thi s will all ow children who need mental

-Tri-County Briefs:- Flu vaccine
Evans joins Gallipolis ·legal firm
GALLIPOLIS -Margaret Evans, attorney at law, has joined the law
·offices of Douglas M. Cowles Co., LPA, in Gallipolis.
·
· A 1981 graduate of Gallia Academy High School and a 1984 grad~­
ate of Rio Grande College (University of Rio Grande), Evans taught m
public schools for six years before returning to school, where she obtain~d
a juris doctor degree from the University of Kentucky College of Law m
May 1993 .
From then until this month, Evans practiced as an associate with the
law firm of Huddleston, Bolen, Beatty,.Porter &amp; Copen in Huntington,
W.Va. She is licensed to practice law in Ohio and West Virginia.

READY FOR THE FESnVAL- Jolin EggJe. _
ton added lngredlllnts to the kettle of bean end
beef IOUp she helped prep~re for the flnt annu~
al Founders Day Fun Festival on Court Street
betwHn Second and Third avenuu Sllturd1y.
The f81tlval; celebnttlng the founding of Gil·
II polls 207 yura ago, was openlld with a greet·

lng tram Tommie Vlughn, prealclent of the Gal=
llpolls R""~ Merchants Association, an lnVO=
cation by Monelgnor William R. Myere of St
Louie Catholic Church, and 1 trumpet BOlo of
the national anthem by Vaughn 'a daughtar
Chrletina, e member of the Gallla Academy
High School Marching Band.

El Nino's impact on U.S. weather
prompts much misunderstanding
By DAVID JUDSON
Gannett Na- Service
WASHINGTON - El Nino, the
ocean-wanning condition in the
Pacific, has everyone from local
weathercastets to Vice President AI
Gore talking about preparing for disastrous weather and a devastating

aft~~:~~~ not here on the landing,

we' re here on the takeoff," Gore said
last week a1 an El Nino "summit" in
Los Angeles to draw attention to the
weathtir iuid to warn people about
what to expect this fall and winter.
But all the talk also has prompted
plenty ofmisundcntanding and some
near panic in some quaners. Here are
some down-to-eanh answers to many
questions being raised about El Nino
and what it could spawn:
QUESTION: The weather phenomenon dubbed "EI Nino" is t3king the rap for everything from
scrubbed golf gaines to airplane
crashes. But we've had El Ninos
before. If this is a recurring weather
pattern, what's all the fuss?
ANSWER: Well, a couple of
things are different from the last goround and what's changed is not just
the weather. First, some ·scientists
make a compelling argumenllhat this
year's El Nino - signaling wanner
ocean currents and temperatures
worldwide- may be the most severe
in ISO years. And secondly, everyone
is talking about it and making .Predictions.
Q: Are these worrisome predictions just hype and speculation?
A: Cenainly there's a bandwagon
effect, but it is safe to say something
is definitely up. El Nino, so named by

was established.
is the
first
intcrstale This
bank office
established
between Ohio and West Virginia. The
branch is temporarily located at 429
Viand St., Point Pleasant:
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. owns two
subsidiaries: Ohio Valley Bank.
pro~s
which operalcs nine offices in 9allia.
Jackson, Pike and Franklin counties
in Ohio and Mason County, W.Va.,
FAIRBORN (AP) -· The pilot of and Loan Central, which operates
a Harrier jet had lillie time to think two consumer finance company

the Peruvian
fishermen
whodiscovered
it 200 years
ago, is essentially
a
warm finger of water slt'etching from
the . coast of South America west
along the equator toward the center
of the Pacific Ocean. It's out there
again, with water temperatures up
seven degrees above nor'mal in many
places. That pool is bigger and
warmer than ever before. That suggests preparedness for wacky weather is in order, but it's also good to take

-Military
Harrier's crash

Weather forecasting is tricky at best. including !he first hurricane-free
Q: If El Nino is about wanning. August since 1961. One point of rctwhat then about that other frequent- erence is the last major El Nino pa(·
ly heard tcnn "global warming?" Are tern of 1982-83: it was blamed far
"EI Nino" and "global warming" the S13 billion in propeny and agricuisame thing? ·
tural damage worldwide and for
A: No, although 1he two fre- 2.500 deaths. mainly to nooding ip
quently are discussed together, par- South America.
ticularly with an international conQ: What preparations arc being
ference on global warming coming taken and what should one do?
up in December in" Japan. But El
A: Federal emergency officials
Nino is a recurring weather pattern have promised a vigil, dubbed "Prothat we've seen 28 times this centu- ject Impact" to move quickly with
ry. Global wanning. by contrast, disaster prevention assi stance and
refers to the trend worldwide toward relief if things get ~ough . Local offigenerally warmer temperatures, cials arc counseling common sense,
which a growing ~umber of scientists · such a.• clearing roof -gutters, checkblame on the burning of coal and fos- ing for cracks in retaining walls and
sil fuels. While links between the two checking that Oood insurance is paid
arc hotly debated, some scientists up. It's also wonh remembering th~t
argue the two phenomenon feed on there may be an upside: a wanfl
one another- the breadth of El Nino November in the N&lt;)nhern states
expanded by global warming and the means safer winter driving; a wet
Eanh's warming trend accelerated winter in California diminishes the
when El Nino puts in an appearani:e. evcr-prc.&lt;entthrcat of forest and grass
Q: So if we do get a whopper of fires next summer.
an El Nino this yea(, what to expect?
Q: So with all this discussion Of
A: All that can be said with cer- the weather. how serious to take thC
tainly is that the El Nino pattern, dire predictions of El Nino - at
which typically runs from fall global warming'
.
· ,
through the early part of winter,
A: The fact is' there is very littli:
means a wetter winter in California that we know for sure. Cenainly pru}
and the gulf state's and a.warmer and dent effons to prepare for El Nino a~
.drier one in the Northem slates and in order. Some dimntologists sec lht
Midwest. It has been blamed in the world changing only slightly from th~
past for drought in southern Africa one we inhabit now; olhers see ~
and Australia and nooding in South nightmare of crop failures, violent
America. Some scientists already are storms and nooded coasts if global
linking the spread of forest fires in wanning is occurring. However,
Asia and recent hurricanes buffeting many do agree that it will probably
Mexico to El Nino. El Nino has also be at least five years before scientists
been cited as the explanation for. know with cenainty the trend s in
calmer weather on the East Coast, place in the world's weather system:

ti'&gt;' FRENCH CITY MALL .J. ,' .·l,
~,
11
Crafts &amp; Antiques

. .

SECOND AVE.
614 44~9020
DOWNTOWN GALUPOUS (Acrou from the City Park)
Open 7 Days A Week
10 To 6:00P.M. Mon.-Sat.; 12 to 5:00 Sundays

o1~ffi~tlce~s~in:G:al~li~a~an~d~La=w:re:nc:·e~c:ou:n:·~p:r:ed:i:ct~io:n:s~w~it:h.:a~g:r:ai:n.o~f~sa;l;t.~:;;;:::
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takeoff.
calmly
directed
il into
when hisbul
aircraft
causht
fire just
aftera tics in southern Ohio. ·
cornfteld next to two interstate highways, an invesligator said.
" He new the airplane to an area
w~ it would not do any damage,"
said Manne Lt. Col. Steven Hawkins,
lead investigator. "He was looking
for a spot, and he found a good one."
Military investigators searched
the cornfield Friday For pans of 1he
jet, looking for clues to what brou1ht
the filhter down. They began mapping outlhe pattern of wreckage from
the fighter that disintegrated in a fire ball in western Ohio· on Thursday
seconds after the pilot ejected.
Hawkins said the plane's engine
would be taken apan and the remains
of the aircraft analyzed to try to determine what caused the crash, a process
that could take several months. The
wrecka1e is to be removed from the
area within five days.
The pilot auffered cuts and bruises. No one on the ground was injured.
"I think Capt. Steve Brooks did a
great job of savin1 not only himself
but possibly other potential casual tics:· said Hawkins.
The fighter crashed between Dayton and Springfield in an area pOpulated by farms and housing developments and crisscrossed by several
intersiatcs. The wreckage was 50 feet

clinics start
on Oct. 24

health services and who have often had to travel to receive them. to stay in
the ir home county while continuing to receive high-quality, professional psychi atric help.
. .
As a pan of the grant, the medical practice of Dr. Edward Lynam wtll hlfe
a psychiatric clinical nurse. who wi ll provide service at least one day per week
in each county.
.
Video conference tec hnology will all ow Ly nam to coordmatc treatment
with the nurse without the time and cost of trave ling to each si te.
The Southern Consortium for Children is funded in part by the Alcohol.
Drug Addiction, and Mental Health Services Board of Galli a, Jackson and
Me igs counties; the Athens·Hoc king-Vint on 3t7 Board; the Adams.
Lawrence . Scioto Board of Alcohol. Drug Addition and Mental Healt h Services; and the Washington County Mental Health and Recovery Board.
Add itional funding is provided by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Servoces AdmmiStrauon and
the Ohio Depanment of Mental Health.

Homecomin Queen____,

GALLIPOLIS - A special
influenza vaccine clinic has been
scheduled by the Gallia County
Health Department for Friday, Oct.
24from 9-11 a.m . and 1-6p.m. althe
Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds .
No appointments are necessary.
The
1997-98 flu vaccine will be
Immunizations slated for Oct. 23
administered
at no out-of-pocket
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallia County Health Department will provide
expense
to
Gallipolis
City and Galfree immunizations on Thursday, Oct. 23 from 4-6 p.m. in the counhouse
lobby.
.
· lia County residents. The 1997-98
vaccine protects against three strains
Children in need of immunizalions must be accompamed by a parent
of
influenza - NJohannesburg ,
and bring a current immunization record with them.
NNanchang
and B/Harbin.
The department reminded residents that flu vaccine will not he availDr.
Gerald
E. Vallee, health comable until Friday, Oct. 24 at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds .
mi ssioner, has recommended the vacSchool plans Veterans Day program
cine for people in the following catGALLIPOLIS -The annual Veterans Day program and poster conegories : 65 or older, those with
test at Washington Elementary School has been set for Friday, Nov. 7 at
chronic lung disease. heart disease,
2 p.m. in the school auditorium .
anemia, kidney disease. diabetes or
Veterans and the public are welcome.
asthma; those infected with HIV
(AIDS
virus); those receiving longBloodmobile to make Gallipolis stop
term steroid -treatment; and those
GALLIPOLIS -The American Red Cross Bloodmobile will be at St .
receiving cancer treatment with drugs
· 1 Peter 's Episcopal Church. 541 Second Ave .. Gallipolis, on Thursday, Oct.
or X-ray s.
23 from II :30 a.m. until 6 p.m.
People with the following condiAll blood types are requested during lhe bloodmobile's stop. For donation s should not take nu vaccine:
tion information. donors may call toll-free 1-800-GIVE LIFE.
those with severe allergy to eggs,
Thimerosol
or Gelatin; those who
Halloween party slated by chapter
·
Melissa Ramsburg daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ramsburg, was crowned
have ever had Guillain-Barre SynBIDWELL - The Harley Owners Group Gallipolis Chapter Halloween
the 1997 Meigs High 'school homecoming queen In ceremonies Friday night _on
drome; those with acute febrile illPany has been set for Saturday. Oct. 25 at the clubhouse, 1900 Prospect
ness; those with active neurological
Bob Roberts Field prior to the Meigs-Alexander game. She was escorted by M1ck
Church Road.
disorder
must
delay
vaccination
until
Barr.
·
The Toys for Tots Poker Run will meet at noon at the clubhouse. and
the
di
sease
stabilizes;
those
taking
the party, featuring a costume contest, hve band ~nd dancmg. begms at 7
treatment for cancer should check
p.m. A $10 donation or a toy of the same value ts requested. The group
with their physician.
has requested no stuffed toys. ·
.
Depending on vaccine availabiliFor more information. call Baxter's Harley Davtdson at446-6336, or
ty,
the pneumococcal vaccine may
the clubhouse at 446·4662 on the day of the pany.
RACINE - The Meigs County also charged with underage con- test was administered, the rcpon
also be offered at clinics this year at
City Board of Education to meet .
Sheriffs
Depanment arrested 18 peo- sumption, contributing to the delin- said. The juveniles were released in10
$6 per dose. This may be paid in cash
ple,
eight
of whom were jofveniles, quency of a minor and felony escape. the custody of their parents pending
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis City Board ._EducatiOn .wtil m~et
or may be billed to Medicare Part B.
in special session Wednesday, Oct. 22 at 7:30p . m~ the ~mmtstratove
Residents enrolled in Medicare Pan during the raid of a pafty on Yellow- Angela Atkins. · 19. Portland is the disposition of their cases. ·
charged with underage consumption
offices. 61 State St .. to consider the employment of an archncctural finn.
B are asked to bring their card with bush Road.
The gathering was underway on and contributing, as well as the
them so that the pneumonia and
Patrol tickets drivers in accidents
Friday
night on propeny owned by charge or criminal trespass ing. Jones
influenza vaccine may be billed at the
GALLIPOLIS -Citations were issued in three accidents investigatAmerican
Electric Power, according and Atkins were in the Gallia Countime of service.
ed Friday by the Gallia-Meigs Post &amp;f the State Highway Patrol.
The vaccine is recommended for to the sheriffs depanment. when the ty Ja1l on Saturday.
Troopers tickeled Joseph E. Brook~. 18, 14791 Hannan Trace Road.
Charles D. Johnson. 18, Letan,
persons as follows : 65 or older, 2-64 raid took place. The Racine Police
Crown City, for failure to yield following a two-vehicle crash on State
Sam
Rush. 19. Antiquity. Charles
Department
was
also
on
the
scene.
with chronic hean or lung disease.
Route 218 at 7:31a.m.
Freeman,
IS, Syracuse, Jamie Jones,
All
18
were
charged
with
criminal
diabetes, alcoholism, liver disease,
Brooks was backing a pickup truck from a privale driveway in Guyan
25.
Racine,
Kelly J. Powell , 2 1,
cerebrospinal fluid leaks. kidney dis- trespassing, and some were also
·Township when he collided with a car driven by Melva J. Saunders, 30.
ease or splenectomy, or those with charged with underage consumption Racine. and Jason E. Slater. Dark
9456 SR 218, Crown City, that was nonhbound on 218, accordong to the
and contributing to the delinquen cy Hollow. were all charged with crimHIV.
inal trespassing and contributing.
of
a minor.
repon.
.
•.
The health depanment has schedDamage to Saunders· car was moderate, and shght to the ptckup.
and
forfeited bonds. Powell and
Being held in the Meigs County
uled the following clinics for flu vac -· ·
Sandra J. Leach, 40, Jackson, was cited for failure to yield in a twoJail are Anthony &amp;oush, 20, who was Slater were also charged with pos·
cinations:
car accident on SR 160 at Holzer Medical Center at 3:05p.m. .
Friday, Oct. 24 - Gallia County also charged with DWI, driving under session of marijuana.
· Troopers said Leach pulled from the hospital driveway into the p~th
Five juveniles were charged with
Junior Fairgrounds, 9-11 a.m., 1-6 suspension. unsafe vehicle. reckle ss
of a nonhbound car driven by Kraig W. Lemley, 35, 610 Poner Road, Btdunderage
consumption after a breath
operati
on,
resi
sting
arrest
and
fel?ny
p.m. Nursing section closed at the
w~ll. and collided, causing slight damage to both vehicles.
escape, as well Thomas D. Adkms,
health department.
Craig A. Williams, 22, 5582 SR 141. Gallipolis, was cited for assured
Monday, Oct. 27 - Gallia Coun- 23. who is also charged with conclear distance and a window tint violation in a two-vehicle cra'h on County Senior Resource Center, 9- 11 a.m., tributin g. ·
ty Road 8 (Mitchell) at 4: I0 p.m.
Stephanie Jones. 18, Racine. IS
1-6 p.m. Limited nursing services
Troopers said Williams was nonhbound, 20 feet south ofCR 35. (Jackavailable at the health department.
son Pike) when he was unable to stop in time and struck the rear of a
Monday, Nov. 3 - Guy an Town- Meigs EMS runs
stopped pickup truck driven by Guy D. Hysell, 64. 32455 Hysell Run
ship Volunteer Fire Depanment, MerRoad, Pomeroy.
,
POMEROY- - Units of Meigs
cerville. 8:30-10:30 a.m.; Crown City
Hysell had stopped at the stop sign at Jac_ks_on P_ike at the time of t~e
Emergency
Services answered five
Village Hall , II a.m.- 12:30 p.m.;
crash. acwrding to the repon. Damage to Wtlhams pockup and Hysell s
Head Stan (old Clay Elementary . calls for assistance on Friday.
vehicle was slight.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
School), 2-3:30 p.m.
8:30a.m.,
Rocksrpings Rehabili Wednesday. Nov. 5 - Green
Two-car crash yields citation
tation
Center,
Dean Wiblin, Veterans
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City Police cited Guy E. Guinther II, 16. . Township Townhouse, Centenary, 2Memorial Hospital;
3:30 p.m.
. 699 SR 141 , Gallipolis. for failure to yield followong a two-car acctdcnt
9:21 a.m.. Eagle Ridge Road.
Thursday, Nov. 6 - VInton Vil Friday at the intersection of Vine Strc~t and Founh Avenue.
Raymond
Evans, Holzer Medical
lage Hall , 9-11 a.m.: Cheshire village
Officers said Guinther pulled from Founh onto Vone at 4:28p.m. and
Center;
offices, 1-3 p.m.
struck the right rear of a westbound car driven by Julie A. Smith. 31. 4119
12:10 p.m., Eagle Ridge Road.
· Thursday. Nov. 13 - Centerville
Addison Pike. Gallipoli s.
DeVore, VMH ;
Emma
Village
Hall,
8:30-10:30
a.m.;
Rio
Damage to Smith's car was moderate, and slight to the car driven by
2:
18
p.m., assisted by Pomeroy,
Grande Municipal Building. II :30
Guinther, according to the report.
U.S.
33,
automobil
e accident, Myrna
a.m.- 1 p.m.; Trinity Methodi st
Also cited by police between Friday and Saturday were Jaso~ D. CockChurch, Bidwcii-Poncr. 2-3:30 p.m. Linkous, VMH. Doris Bailey, refu sed
erham. 26. Williamson, W.Va., no operator's license, and ArchteO. MarMonday, Nov. 17 - Greenfield treatment, SusieAbbolt, refused treat-.
cum, 19. 69 Brook Drive. Gallipolis, failure todt splay valid rcgtslrauon.
Township Volunteer Fire Depart- ment.
RUTLAND
ment, Gallia, 8:30-10:30 a.m.; Cad5:52
p.m
.. Meigs Mine No. 2,
·mus Community Center, II a.m.- I
p.m.; Patriot Lodge Hall, 2-3:30 p.m. Greg Boneculler, Pleasant Valle y
.
: GALLIPOLIS - Belly Russell , her company is located..
Staning Tuesday, Oct. 28, flu Hospital.
The use of magnets for heahng has
CCR. wit present a seminar on magnetic therapy and herbal remedies at hcen practiced for thousands of years. shots will be available at the health
,IJse Herbs Inste!!'i, 33 Coun St., Gal- It was known to the ancient Egyp- depanrnent in the basement of the
lipolis, on Wednesday, Oct. 22 at 7:30 tians. and before them, the Chinese, counhouse on Tuesdays l!nd Friqays
Use Herbs Instead owner Nancy from 8- 11 :30 a.m. and 1-3:30 p.m.
p.m.
The Ohio Depanment of Health
Tawney
said. Now sc ience is catch. Russell. who has worked in alter· "Serving Southern Ohio for over 20 years"
has
advised that "the optimal time for
in
g
up
with
th.is
method
of
traditi
onhative health care for the past 16
organized
vaccination
campaigns
for
al
holistic
medicine,
she
added.
years, is~ _cenified registered renexMas tecto my Supp lies
Lift Chairs
The seminar is open to the public . · high risk groups is usually the periologist. Jndologtst and hcrbologost.
Cervica l Pillows
Wheelchairs
She has personally used magentJC For more information or re servations, od from mid-October through midTraction Equipme nt
call446-1616.
November."
Hospital Beds
therapy for the pasl 16 years.
Ten s Units &amp;
Shower Stools
· Russell starled her own company,
Bio-Magnetic World. five years ilgo.
Supplies
Grab Bars
ONE WEEK ONLY
and she travels throughout the counBack Suppo rts
Commo de Chairs
try presenting semin~rs and training
Knee, Ankl e Braces
Walking Aids
sessions on rnagneuc lherapy and
N ursing Su pplies
Diapers &amp; Chu x
herbal remedies. She hails from SaliSupport Hosiery
O stomy Supplies
na, Kan., where the home office of
First Aid Su pp lies
Diabetic Supplies
D ressings
Feeding Pumps

Raid .on Racine party nets 18 arrests

Seminar on magnetic therapy set

992·5829

17
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17 Terlyakl Salmon
17 Caribbean Mahl
17 Marinated Grilled
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------ ----

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

!

·Grant aids area children's access to psychiatric care

increases by 11%
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley
Bane Corp. has reponed an increase
in net income of II percent for both
the third quaner of 1997 and for the
year to date compared to the same
periods a year ago, according ·to
Chairman and ChiefExeculive Officer James L. Dailey.
OVB had net income of $935.6
thousand, during the third quarter,
comparqll to $840.000 during the
same period last year. Dailey atrributed the gain to a IOpercentincrease
in net interest income, which was up
$353.8 thousand. Net income for the
year to date increased $262.8 thousand (II percent) to $2,629.7 million.
compared to $2.366.9 million in the
same period in 1996.
Net income per share was 52 cents
for the third quaner, compared to 48
cents per share in the third quarter of
1996, an increase of 8 percent. Net
income per share, year to date, was
up II cents a share to S1.48, an
increase of 8 percent over the same
period last year. Cash dividends were
20 cents per share for the third quarter, compared to 19 cents in 1996.
Year-to-date cash dividends were 59
cents per share compared to 55 cents
a year logo.
.
Four month.&lt; ago, the first full-service office in Point Pleasant, W.Va.,

sumen should have equal footing
with industry to assure that the electric bill of a large manufacturing plant
is not lowered at the expense of the
small consumer:· Weaver said.
• BREC is also continually looking for new services that fit the cooperative 's business philosophy, are
profitable and benefil the customer,
he added.
In other activity, Kris Stanley,
BREC's vice president of accounting,
reported that kilowatt-hour sales
grawth for the cooperative grew for
the 12th strlight year. and average
monthly KWH usage for residential
consumers increased from 904
KWHs in 1995to 937 in 1996. ·
Stanley said BREC invested
approximately $4 million in its distribution plant and plans to continue
investing in order to increase service
and reliability. Early in 1997, BREC
passed the $50 million mark in total
investment.
The cooperative also paid over
S 1.4 million in taxes during 1996,
Stanley reponed.
In the reOIJanizational session
following the meeting, HQward G.
Lemon of Oak Hill was named president of the board of trustees, and
Nanette McGill of McAnhur was
named first vice president.
The meeting also featured a health
fair, craft show. displays by various
law enforcement agencies. the Galli a
County EMS, and trucks and equipment from BREC.

Sunday, October 19,1997

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THE MEDICAL SHOPPE1480 Jackson Pike

1-16-2206

.

Gallipolis, OH
'• ust Minutes m Holzer

'I ull h ·,.,.
1-1:00- I 1.&gt;-:!:!0h

•

�:commentary
·junbq ~imtJ• Jmthtd
'I.stllDIJshti In 1966
825 Third Avenue, G1lllpoll1, Ohio
814 448 2342 • FIX: 448 3008
111 Court Street. Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992·2158 • FIX: 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
Hoblrt WIIIOII Jr.
ExiCIIIIYe Editor

UU.. llllhfl edlfw .,. lft/c:Ome, They should lie .... lhan 300

- * All ,.,.,. - .ubJect to lldltlng and mu.t ,. 8/g~ and
Include addlllllllrld tMpltoM numbM. No unalgMd laltrml wiH
I» publt.had. ~ should I» In good lUte, addrtllli"ff
I•IIN. not penoMIIIIH.

~ Comments

from Bosnia

•
: By JOHN E. JACKSON 1
Editor's note - Pastor John E. Ja&lt;kson, Gallipolis, is pastor of the
Gallipolis Lutheran Chur&lt;h, and ohaplain of local veterans organiza. lions. He went on a&lt;tive duty with the U. S. Army earlier this year, and
; ~!!'rived in Bosnia in September. Rev. Jaokson shares his thoughts with
• tri-state residents in the following article.
: : My first sight of Bosnia was on September 8, from a small, round win·
: di&gt;w in a C-!30 air craft.
We landed at the Sarajevo Airporl and I began my nine month s here as
the Theater Chaplain for the Stabilization Force. The view was mucb as I
: expected. there were huge piles of rubble, about the size of a house, every: ~ere: with a very dirly. bedraggled old man digging around in the rubble.
• The airporl . which serves both the military and civilian is quite small-!
:wonder how it ever carried the traffic of the 1984
Winter Olympics. The runway is in good repair from all of the bombing
: and shelling, but the buildings . including the control tower are sh01 all to
pieces. My assistant, Staff Sergeant Joseph Berg, from Oklahoma, met me at
the airporl. helped me with my four duffel bags (at least my luggage is
; matching all olive drab green) and drove me to our base camp. It is called
; Hidza because it is located in a suburb of Sarajevo, just about live miles
:from the center of the city.
You really can nOI imagine the destruction. Yes, it looks like what you see
: on TV, the newspapers, and magazines; but you never get the full effect until
: you see it in person. It is just like what we went through with the flood-it
is one thing to see it on TV, a totally different thing to stand in the middle of
. Vinton and see everything covered with water. Building after building, home
: after home, roofless , with holes in the sides that a cow will lit -through;
· sOmetimes a car. The population of Sarajevo is approximately 300,000 about
· the size of Dayton. lma~ine Gallipolis with every roof in the town destroyed
. · by gunfire. When you drive down the famous sniper alley, to the south,
-jlosnia, is almost completely destroyed; to the north, Serbs, many buildings
.-are totally untouched. There are probably one hundred or more high rise
"apartments, the kind you see in Columbus, that were never bothered. The
'btber side, you see the same kind of buildings: one 'apartment may be
.):lestroyed by an artillery round. and vacant, while people arc trying to live
, in the apartment next to it. Many cars set around off the streets, inoperable,
because they have been shot full of holes or hit a mine.
: -· The countryside and landscape are beautiful. I try to imagine what it
. ~ooked like in 1984, probably the height of its glory. Throughout and in the
..,rban sprawl. you see agriculture - haystacks, gardens, farm animals: even
~ich cows being lead right down the side walk. Just out our front gate is a
,beautiful sight- a playground covered with children, usually playing soc·.:er with goats, cows. and horses rigllt on the lield with them.
7 That leads me to the value of being here~ I can not talk politics and all of
- _tloc issues about whether we should or should not be here- all.! can say i5
"Jhat now the children can play. Anytime people are stopped from killing each
other. a Godly act has been done. I have traveled all over Sarajevo, by car
"tlnd just today on an 18 mile road march . We traveled to Tuzla. a drive of
.Jlbout 60 miles.. visiting chaplains: and I feel entirely safe. much safer than
• many paris of Columbus. I helicve the media greatly exaggerate the present
~ s it~alion ; however. there is some unrc ~t due to the election process that is
· ~mng

on.

• This operation known as Stabilization Force, is a multinational operation.
J will try to write an explain that jn my next article. At present, let it suffice
.hy understanding the story of the Tower of Babel in Genesis ] I: 1-9. Here
'lluman kind goes against the will of God and are confused and have total di s:
· unity.
- In this exercise we are trying to do the will of God by keeping people
. f!"m killing each other, and God is bringing us together in unity (not a new
~orld order'). Here is a quote from History. "No language can describe adc- quately tbe condition of that large ponion of the Balkan Peninsula-Serbia,
llosnia,
· ~ Hercegovina and other provinces-political intrigues, constant rivalries, a
total absence of all public spirit...hatred of all races, animosities of rival religions and absence of any controlling power... nothing short of an army of
50,000 of the best troops would produce anything like order in these pans."
PM Diraeli August 1878 in the House of Lords SFOR presently has 36,000
troops representing at least 36 nations, doing this job of peace .
I welcome your letters. I will not be able to answer all of them. but!
.w1lltry to keep writing to the Times-Sentinel and New Life Lutheran monthly. "New Life Line." Especially, write the young men and women that you
know who are serving here, and other remote places separated from their
families. I would suggest that the paper tries to get a list of addresses. I have
not met any of them yet. but I am looking forward to it.
.
God's blessings, I miss you all and I sure miss home; but I am most
thankful to be call by God to this service.
CH (COL) Jackson John E.
HlclzaTer""'
SFOR Theater Chaplain Office
Operation Joint Guard
APOAE0f780

Letters to the editor'
1

.Urges no vot' on ISSUe 2

Dear editor,
Many people have probably seen the slick paid TV ads ·Supporting State
Issue 2. But the ads are , in my opinion, misleading. and they don't tell you
the whole story.
Actually, lhe Ohio Workers Compensation reform law undermines workers' rights in countless ways. For example. it will :
· a c1a1m
· rematns
· open .or
' payment of compensation
I- Reduce 1he ume
and medical benefits. 2·Reduce wage loss compensation . 3-Eiiminatc occupational diseases which could have beep caused by other exposures or conditions, such as carpal .tunnel syndromt!: 4-Eiiminate the diagnosi s of your
family doctor in detennining partial disability award s. 5--Prcvent consideration of a person's education or past work e•pericncc in permanent and total
awards and, 6-Make secret the injury, disease and accident ·inspection
records kept by the Division of Safety and Hygiene.
No one seeks to get injured at work. This new law is bad for Ohio's workIng families .
1·urge every voter to go to the polls on Tuesday, Nov. 4. and vote no on
State Issue 2 to make sure injured workers get the help and care they
deserve.
Siocercly.
Floyd E. Wright,
•
prtS'Ident,
AFSOME Local 1316,
Gallipolis

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

Ohio/W.Va.
Report targets guard in prison riot

OciOblf 111, 11187

Suncltly, October 19, 1997

Clinton uses eloquence to silence critics

By TONY SNOW
his stewardhis colleagues, ho~ever. The
Creators
Syncllclte
ship
led
the
NAACP J·ust sw1'tched gears. It
WASHINGTO
urged the U.S . Department of Labor
N -- Like most legal assault
White
Guys who care about the on Califor.
to fil~ c unfair labor practices findings
tSsueh, Bil_I Clinton gets all muddled nia's Proposiagamst the University of California.
up
w
en
11
comes
to
matters
of
raoe.
tion
209,
in
It aII eged I hat black graduate stuN
'd
0 ~rest ent has spokebon more perwhich more
dents wouldn't get their fair share of
son Y or movtng 1Y a ut the rav- than 5 million
jobs in the university system __
ages of discrimination, and none has California resbe
cause fewer blacks were applying
dare d say -- as he has -- that we idents voted
to Ihe universities. (Signilicantly,
a ugBhIto mend affirmative action.
to prevent the
'
Snow
1he. sc hoo1 system d tdn't
receive a ·
ut we · measure
words
single compta1'nt of racial bl'as 1·n
·
nd h by the government
deed s lhey msptre -- a t e Clinton from discriminating on the basis of adm 1·ss 1'ons.)
· d ff
h 1 ·
recor o ers overw e mtng evi- race, sex, religion, handicap or
Lee an d o. a1so suggested the
dence Ihat th e chie f executive uses national origin.
.
·Department
of Educatt'on throw out
h· 1
h
18 e oquence not to c ange the
Lee and his colleagues urged Cal- California's entrance criteria, which
world, but to shut up his critics.
ifornia courts to strike down the were based on such things as grades
His
d commission on· race, · measure, saying the explic1't ban on an d test scores. (Clint Bolick of the
. h .national
1
wh1c
tnc
u
·
'oor Jusuce
· notes that this
.
f es exactly zero conser- discrimination broke federal ant1·• 1nslltute
vat1ves
o
any
hue,
by
its
own
d.iscr
.
iminat.
i
on
law
and
the
proposi1
Le
d
d · · h d
Paces e an the NAACP Lega!
a miSl;tOn as one nothing. And uon s requtrement of equal protec- Defense f'l!nd bureaucracy ~1 odds
now, in the truest test of intentions, lion under the law violated the 14th
.h h
d
WII I e presi cnt's proposal for
'd · h
h
1
. ent's demand fo•• equal standard'tzed national achievement
t e prest ent as se ected his choice Amend.m
to· 'Ihead
the
Justice
Deparlment's
protection
under the law.
fests.)
.
· h d' ·· ·
CIVI -ng Is · IVISton.
These
assertions
prompted
the
'
These
appeals
say a lot about the
B'll L
L
The nommee, 1 ann ee. has Ninth Circuit Coun of Appeals, the orgamzatton
· · •s respect .or
' law: If at
8
f
h
spent
t e last 24
working most liberal circuit court inAm•rica,
lirst you don't succeed. look for a
f
hI oNAACP
L years
1 D
"~
or I e
ega
efense to remark that the NAACP crusade loophole. Federal agencies can make
Fund,.bdevoting
1 C the other
f Lsix years
· hto ".tests the integrity of our constitu- their own .rule"" wt'thout fear of
the l1 era enter ot aw m 1 e 110nal democracy" and ·to scold ·. ·•mmed'1atc ·rcvcrsa1 by couns. and
Public Interest.
"The 14th Amendment, lest we lose their renderings can ripple through
a Big-D
Democrat
who
the
forest for · the trees, does not workpia"es
He• isb ,.
·
11 d
' und homes· nat 1'onwt'dc.
doesn 1 e teve tn sma -d emocra- require what it barely permits.''
As a resu 1I, what be gtns
· as an unrccy. For example, the NAACP under
The setback didn't deter Lee and ported regulation can become the

c

M1rg1ret Lehew
Controller

•

P1geM

•

law of the land -- and can overrule
· 1 statutes and coun
congress10na
decrees.
Lee has a varied resume. He has
tried to force cities to continue racial
busing programs long after the systern s have become desegregated. He
d h
K
· d
d
argue I at a ansas JU ge shoul
retain the power to tell Kansas
City's schools how much they must
spend, and in which ways, to satisfy
h'ts own n0110ns
·
of equa1protectj on.
(The U.S. Supreme Court told the
judge to cease and desist, but only
after he had sa&lt;ldled the .:ity and its
suburbs with billions in expenses.)
He has supported the cause of
racially gerrymandered election districts. He has pushed "goals and
timetables" in such places as the Los
A 1 p 1 D
nge es o ICC epartment. And he
gen.erally has found discrimination
everywhere the numbers didn 't add
up .to his liking: To Lee, as to much
of I he nation's civil-rights gcrontocracy. "undcrrcprcscntation" is proof
· hable racism.
of 1ega11 Ypunos
It's hard not to look upon this
· · wn· hout.a Linoc of regret.
nommauon
Lee hails from a school• that looks
upon racism as a stain removable
·
·
· re•ularly
on1Y by heaungs
tmpartod
•
and briskly hy the couns. According
to his legal theory. actions don't
maner. Intentions don't mancr. Outreach doesn't count. Only mute statistics mancr. This bloodless
approach to civil rights has become
wearisome and old. and most Americans -- white and black -- have had
enough .
But not Bill Clinton. So now the
onus falls on Republicans, who
arcn 't exactly models of consistency
or courage . Bob Dole hid from
Proposition 209 during the 1996
campaign and House Speakl'r Newt
Gingrich hasn't shown any inclination to defend the idea that the fed eral government ought to outlaw all
discrimination.
Write Tony Snow, Creators
Syndicate, 5777 West Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los An1eles,
Calif. 90045.

MANSFIELD (AP) - The officer
-lired after last month's riot on death
row had problems following procedures according to evaluations he
received when he was a Richland
County jail officer, the News-Journal
reponed.
George Hayes Jr. spent nearly 10
years at the jail before resigning to
work at Mansfield Correctional Institution in April, the newspaper reported Friday.
Hayes was lired Oct. 3. An investigation determined that the riot starled Sept. 5 after Hayes did not handcuff an inmate through a slot in a d&lt;K&gt;r

Donations fail to meet
needs of food banks

They support the govern- r--..-rnent consistently, whereas
foreign investors do so
only if it is convenient for
them. 'The bottom Iine ;,
that there is a finite source
that is available to he borrowed, and using an excess
to fund government deht
reduces the amount available for business expansion
Weedy
and job creation.
A major problem with so much consumer debt
is that the average wage earner is also the biggest
provider for the government. Consider that only
about two percent of all Americans own their own
home debt-free. Credit card payments 'Often arc
the 'minimum monthly payment' and thi s means
perhaps an 18 percent interest rate on some cards
and a 15 to 20 year indebtedness.
Sad, is it not, that this is happening when economic activity is good? Many businesses and
individuals arc not prepared for a slowdown.
Sure, borrowing makes sense if you can horrow at
6 percent and invest in a business that could yield
12 percent. When a slowdown occurs the yield
may only he 2 perccill. We know families who·
were living on a five day per week job who. when
the economy picked up, began to -live on the
salary of a six day per week income. The job outlook improved and seven days per week income
resulted and the lifestyle again increased. No
money was saved. Mongagc payments were very
high. Then a nose dive in the economy came and
now the work week was once again li vc days. You
know the rest of the story.
Logic and common sense always tells us that it
is prudent to manage our money. When unprinci-·
pled people around us and on televi sion influence
us to their advantage, we arc the losers. When we
borrow mQney to pay the interest on a previous
loan, we know we arc in trouble. Our submission
to the 'instant gratification' advcni sing ignores
logic and common sense.
Is there any hope for any who have been

~·· ~

.. t~ .

Clyde, top, posed

Rescue of colleague
earns volunteer Ohio's
top firefighter award

meetings at
State,
the
Energy and
Commerce
Depanments
and conferred
with a staffer
at the National
Security
Council. But
he had a spouy
Spear
history of contacts with the CIA, and he had been
charged 'with embezzlement from a
Beirut bank. His appeals were thus
coolly received.
Undaunted. Tamraz began writing checks to the DCmocralic
National Comminec. Three hundred
thousand dollars later. he was
attending White House coffees and
actually got the chance to speak to
the president about. hi s pipeline •proJect.
Rewind the tape 13 years. I was
the editor and chief of staff for
investigative reponer Jack Ander-

caught up in this kind of'rat race'' If indebtedness
has wrecked your marriage. maybe not, if you
awakened too late. If you arc willing 10 change
your goals. and Jearn some simple money management techniques. then there is hope.
The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 carries a wide
variety of important tax changes that affect individuals and families . It was a hard fight just to
begin to limit government. hut here arc some of
the results: in 199H parent&gt; get a new tax credit
equal to $400 ($500 after 1998) for each qualifying dependent child under 17. Beginning in 1998.
more individuals will be abl e to make deductible
IRA contributions . Also. a spouse who isn 't a
retirement plan participant will he able to make a
deductible IRA mntrihution. even if the other
S!lOusc is a r~tircmcnt plan participant. The new
Rnth IRA will result in tax free dharihu1inns for
pay ~.:uts made &lt;.1ftcr live yl!:lrs on account nf .
anaining age 59 112. death. disability. or to pay for
certain first-time homebuycr expenses . Some
~rcak s phase out at ccnain high. adjusted gross

mcomcs.
.There arc twn clccti\IC Hue. t:rcdits for higher
education. HOPE credit of up to $1 ,500 a year per
student for qualilicd tuition raid during the tirst
two years. This credit is effective for post 1997
payments for rost 1997 education. tifctime
Learning Credit per ta&lt;rayer equal to 20 percent
of up to $5.000 of qualifying c.pcnscs is availahlc and arplics to posl June , 1998, expenses.
After 1997 individuals will be able to make annual nondeductible contributions of up to $500 per
hencliciary to an education IRA. After 1997,
penalty free distributions can he made from noneducation IRAs to pay for higher education
expenses.
·we all 'can hcnelit from learning good money
management principles, including cutting up the
credit cards or linding one with a bcllcr rate of
interest. Logic and common sense tells us we
must do it to win huck some control of our lives

sell U.S. anack helicopters to lniq.
He was also suspected of spying for
Britain in Greece.
The Anderson team quickly went
to work, and what we discovered
was nothing shorl of astoni shing.
Tsakos had enlisted the services of a
passel of American heavyweights,
jncluding a formL!r Navy s ccrct;~ry . a
formcr Anns Control and Disarmament Agency director. a former
Republican National Commiucc
member and a fonncr as sistant sec·
rctary of state.
Tsakos had al so hcfricndcd a
powerful United States senator with
a pristine reputation , Republican
Mark Hatfield of Oregon. who h;~d
wriucn a lcncr in suppon of the
pipeline project, had personally spoken to the president of Sudan ahnut
it and had arranged meet ings for
Tsakos.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper enterprise
Association.
1

r

Congratulations,
Bob Turner
Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy-Oids-GEO
has announced
that Larry Thaxton
has earned
Salesman of the
-Month for
September.

•

.
'

\
I

I

1616 Eastern Ave •..

Gallipolis, OH
446·3672

· Rash of gumball thefts grip Toledo
TOLEDO (AP) - Thieves who
broke into three banks weren '!looking to get into the vaults. They were
looking for the gumball machines.
The thieves apparently broke into
the gumball machines to get the
change inside the dispensers, police
said.
'
Seven machines in all have been
stolen or broken inlo at various businesses in the last three weeks.
A large [OCk was thrown through
a window at a Fifth Third ·Bank
branch early Wednesday morning.

The . thieves climbed through the
opening and swiped the bank's gum
ball machine.

Lottery results

Robert Weedy is a correspondent for the
Sunday Times-Sentinel.

son , and one day I got a tip that a
Greek wheeler-dealer nam.cd Basil
1'sakos was making the rounds in
Washington to tout an oil pipeline
project.
Tsakos wanted to build his crude
tube. across Africa, from Saudi Arabia to Cameroon, and he too thought
he needed American help. He hired a
fonn cr s pook and friend of CIA
director William Casey and, presto,
he was soon heing received in high
places.
I had ne ver heard of Bas il Tsakos,
so I turned to an old friend and one
of the most resource[ul people in
Washington, Greek journalist Elias
Demetracopoulos.
"I will sec what I can do," Elias
said of my Tsakos entreaty. A few
week s later, he laid a thick file on
my desk. It was the Greek govern ment' s compl ete and secret record of
its many invest igations or one Basil
Tsakos. He had been an international arms merchant . and was even
then. authorities believed, trying to

for a rules violation, said jail admi~
istrator Capt. Roger Pa&lt;ton.
The violation was not specified,
but evaluations show Hayes released
an inmate in May 1996 wben he wa$
not suppused to, did work for his pri~
vate business on county time and
twice brought a knife into an area
where weapons were prohibited, Paxton said. .
Paxton said the Ohio Department
of Rehabilitation and Correctioil
called about Hayes. but no one camt
to review his file.
:
Prison spokesman Joe Andrews
said the department does backgrouna
checks on prospective employees, hut
it often has to rely on people's war~ .

CLYDE (AP)- His brave rescue of a colleague during a deadly house
lire has earned a volunteer firefighter in this northern Ohio town the title of
Ohio firefighter of the year.
John Van Doren, 33, a carpenter and father of a newborn daughter, recently won the award from t~ Ohio State Firelighters' Association Inc.,
It's the second time the award has gone to someone in the 35-member
volunteer lire department, about 40 miles southeast of Toledo.
Van Doren was safely on a .ladder during the May I, 1996, fire when he
heard Firefighter Mark Gressm1n screaming for help,as he clung to the edge
of a hole in the home's crumbling roof. Instinctively, Van Doren eased himself onto the searing roof, got as close as he could and pulled Gressman out.
All just part of the job, Van Doren said.
"I never thought about it. I never gave it a second thought. In retrospect,
I still would have done it," he .told The Blade in a story publisbed Friday.
"I felt completely comfortable on the roof with Mark. I'm not nervous of
roors."
But to many people in Clyde, Van Doren is nothing less than a hero. The
lire, described as one of the most dangerous to fight in the city's history, killed
the home's residents, Richard Robbins , 81 , and his wife, Mary, 80.
"it was above and beyond the call of duty," said fire Chief David Moy er, who nominated Van Doren for the award . "But knowing John, it was just
something he would do."
Gressman, 42. an electrician at Whirlpool Corp., said he still feels uneasy
when he thinks about the fire. He had discovered Robbins' body in a bedroom of the bulJling home. A short time later, he and two other firefighters
climbed atop the house to vent smoke and heat through the roof.
Gressman recalled the roof feeling "spungy" as he fell backward and made
a seven-foot-wide hole in the roof.
Van Doren said he didn't e_xpect to receive so much auention for the rescue. ''Mark thanked me publicly and !thought that would be the end of it ."

Tamraz incident is eerily familiar
By Jo1eph Spear
During a 30-year career as a
Washington journalist, I' ve seen a
_ lot of, scand~ls come and go, and
now I m se~mg them. come around
agatn . 1d~n I know whether to laugh
because I ve ,got some experllsc or
c~ bccauS&lt; I m sw1ftly becommg a
reh c ·
. .
.
The Roger Tamraz tnctdent " a
case '" poml.
.
'r Surely you haven t forgotten
~m~a(;. a1ready. He ts the 57-ye~r­
0
e anese-Amcncan otl financter
who t~f~Uy ~old the Scna~e last
mont o "· e Orts to buy ht s way
mto··~he ~htte House to .lobby the
pres• ent .or help on a bustne&lt;s ven lure·
.
. .
h Tamraz wanted to build a p1peh~e
t at would transpon Casptan basm
crude oil across Azerbaijan, Armenia and Turkey to the Mediterranean
Sea. He felt he needed U.S. approval
to pull it off, and he hired an ex-CIA
stati on chief to help him open doors
in Washington. Tamraz attended

CINCINNATI (AP)- Homeless people were invited to a military-style
" stand down" for free haircuts, medical supplies and blankets Friday as food
bank representatives looked for ways to restock their cupboards.
The Greater Cincinnati Coalition for the Homeless planned a gospel music
festival Saturday to benefit the homeless.
It was all pari of a gathering of advocates from across the nation, including a meeting of the board of directors of the National Coalition for the Homeless.
.More than 60 representatives from food banks in 22 states met in Cincinnati on Thursday at the Central Region Association of Second Harvest Food
Banks' Fall Conference.
The need for food has increased 15 percent throughout tbe Midwest in
the past year, said Lisa Hamler Podolski, executive director of the Ohio Food
Policy &amp; Anti-Poverty Action Center.
She said much of the increase was due to welfare reform policies and
reduced di stribution of food stamps to single men and legal immigrants.
"No amount of private-sector response is going to fill a billion-dollar gap,"
she said. "No private-sector response is going to replace the government."
Many food banks already have been struggling with a decrease in contrjbutions because corporations that have been donating damaged goods now
are working to reduce the damage.
Mike Kremzer, vice president of the board of Cincinnati's FrceStore-FoodBank and vice president of customer service at Procter &amp; Gamble, said companies like P&amp;G and Kroger Co. are "working our you-know-whats off to
decrease damage."
He said finding ways for food banks to buy and package bulk products
themselves might help fill the void.
·
"Stand down" is a military term that describes the time when soldiers
returning from combat could recuperate. The event at the Drop Inn Center
was a chance for homeless people to take care of health and clothing needs
before winter sets in, organizers said.

with hl1 colleague Mark Gre11man laat .......tt at the Clyde firehouse. Van Doren was recantly namad the Ohio State Firefighter• Association Flraflghter of the Year. He w11 honored lor saving Grassman, 45, during 1 house flra on May 1, 1996. (AP)

Money management an important skill
By ROBERT WEEDY
· ·
.
I Since the love of money is the root of all evil,
our task is to be able to manage the use of money
to properly provide for ourselves and our family.
We hear a lot about how the federal government
is doing a poor job of managing the money we ·
send to them. The indebtedness now stands at five
trillion, three hundred twenty-three billion, six
hundred
eighty-five
million
dollars
($5,323.685 ,000,000). A substantial ponion of
thi$ is owned by foreign investors. In the early
'80s the government exceeded the amount that
could be loaned to it by the citizens.
But. has the American consumer been a good
example to the government? This can be
answered by the following : Consumer debt has
now exceeded the one trillion dollar mark at
$1.048.000,000.000. We arc constantly encouraging people to go into debt. credit cards are issued,
nay. almost forced upon people so they will spend
money they do not have. As we head towards a
cashless society we now have 'smarl cards' that
your retailer can use to place your dollars into his
account. Remcmher how people laughed when
prophecy proclaimed that the day would come
when buying and selling could not he done except
you had the 'mark' of the beast? Computer tracking has silenced that laughter because we sec fulfillment before our eyes.
Perhaps an analogy would be helpful in understanding the amount of money wear~ di scussing:
-- One million dollars in tightly bound $1 ,000
bills would he a stack four inches high.
--One billion dollars would be a stack 333 feet
high.
-- One trillion dollars would be a stack 63 .13
miles high.
These truly are numbers that 'blow our mind',
yet they are real.
Competition for money to borrow creates a
major dilemma in the economy. Expansion of
business is often dependent upon the ability to
borrow at a reasonable interest rate. Job creation
in a world marketplace is essential to a stable
economy. American workers must be protected.

before opening the door.
ment were left at his business Friday.
The inmate overpowered Hayes
His last evaluation with the sherand used his keys to release other iff's depanment in 1996 said he needinmates in one of five cell blocks that ed improvement in 10 areas, includhouse the prison's 174 death row ing safety practices, following
inmates. Inmates then overtook the instructions, quality of work , acceptremaining two guards in the cell ing responsibility and ani tude toward
block.
· his job.
The union representing prison
In 'the evaluation, Sgt. Betty Coopguards, Ohio Civil Service Employ- er wrote, Hayes "has knowledge of
ees Association Chapter 70 I0, has his job but fails to apply it."
&lt;aid Hayes was inexperienced and
Hayes received goori marks in
should not have been assigned to previous evaluations and was prodeath rnw.
· moted to sergeant in October 1987.
Hayes could nnl he reached for He was described as an "excellent
comment. Messages seeking com· worker, gets along with people,
always willing to learn."
He was demoted in August 1994

•

I

HA//owuo Sole.
By The 'Assocl•tad Preas
The following numbers were
Come illtO u;riud
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries :
. Statts Ctllular' riglrt
OHIO
Doublt )•our mirrutts
110w aud gtt tlo&lt;
Pick 3: 4-4-8
for 6 morrtlts.
pltorlt a11d calli11g
Pick'4: 4-4-1-0
Buckeye 5: 24-25-29-32-34
pla11 tlrat's just right
No Ohio Louery player came up
for rou. But lrurr)',
with the right live-number combination in Buckeye 5, so no one can ·
The,..~ ptoplt tAlk
our grtar Hallowwt
$; a mo11tlt off of vour
arQIJ1Ui
ht:rt•
claim the $100,000 prize. the lollery
dtals will Oil II' bt
ratt
plan.
announced Saturday.
nrou11d about ns lo11gSales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$365.404.
as tlo&lt; (a~c co/,vt/15.
The 120 Buckeye 5 game tickets .
wiih four of the numbers are each '
~fO prOClSSillg (tt.
worth $250. The 3,455 with three of
the numbers are each wonh $10. The
36,9:i3 with two of the numbers are
each worth $1 .
The Ohio Lottery . wjll pay out
$304,549.50 to winners in Friday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales in
Pick
3
Numbers
totaled
S I,434,295.50. In the other daily
game, Pick 4 Numbers players
\ll'it us on tnt lnltnttt at www.usc:c.com
wagered $413,845 and will share
otter requtrti 1 rttw 12~ con.raa. blfnltiCJ chlf9f\, 1.-:u. tolk Mid nttwM su rth.irqei Mit ~uded
$233,600.
Oltlt'f rutnaiOfiS IMI d\I"Jft 1M)' lfiPfy Sft ROff for det~il~ Ofr H l!lp!m Onobtr ]I , 19U
The jackpot for Saturday's Super
Lana drawing was $4 million:
~
till
J ak..
fllnl• ••
Ntw 8ast011
Abo, CalM ... vis11 OH Dl"'
s-tn Ohio Co!Mtunic-.
Souttlem Ohio eomn..nieotions
Southoon Oh~ Cornm&lt;ncllrons
Uniltd Slltfl Cllklllf
Unittd Stllll Celulor
WEST VIRGINIA
S ' -•s -•
Clouie Plm
H!lllop Cont"
New
Bosron Shiii&gt;PinQ Ctmor
WlloMan
lac1tioo•· Chi"&lt;Otht!,
Zono
Plm
Shot&gt;lling
Cent"
Daily 3: 3-8-1
62A Consumer Dnw ·
401 E. Hlfllll
2475 Scioto Troil
4010 RhOdes Ave.
1014 N. J.lri&lt;IQe $t
New Boston, Jacks
Daily 4: 1-0-P
·
656·5000
285-5001
215-5000
456·8722 or 18001824-7771
77S-4141
Cash 25: 1-9-1)-21 -22-24
,~------------------~~------~~----~~==~----------~

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�• hge A6 • _...,z.,, .'--.. •lal •

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

:Leland
E. 'Bill' Clonch
..

=Raymond E. Evans

Gallia County court news

'

Thefonowi~~":~:~reresotved

Jeanette R. Grimm

: . : NEW HAVEN,.W.Va. -Jeanelle R. Grimm, 77, New Haven. W.Va .. died
.{riday. Oct. 17, 1997 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·• • Born Feb. 13, 1920 in Racine, daughter of the late Earl Henry and Clara
: ~ae Boyd Grimm. she worked for the New Haven Porcelain Co. until the
:.ptant closed.
·
·
·::. She was a member of the Graham Baptist Church.
: ·:surviving are a niece, Claudia Wolfe of Pomeroy; a nephew, Jon DouJ!lJS Grimm of Letart, W.Va.; a sister-in-law, Helen Grimm of Letart; and
1'our aunts and several cousins.
:::: she was also preceded in death by her brother, Harry Grimm, in 1990.
: -• Services will be 1 p.m, Monday in the Middleport Chapel of the Fisher
. Il'uneral Home, with the Rev. William Hatfield officiating. Burial will be in
: ~ .Graham Cemetery, New Haven. Friends may call at the funeral home on
Monday from II a.m. until the time of the service.

I .
M. J 0 hns·
' on
s.;aura
_ .. _

;:.::CLIFI'ON, W.Va.- Laura M. Johnson, 87, Clifton, died Friday, Oct 17,
' 1997 in the Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Point Pleas· ant, W.Va.
,
Born July 10, 1910 in Clifton, daughter of the late Walter Curtis and Ethel
• Winifred Bumgarner Holland. she retired as a teacher in the Mason County
: Schools with 25 years of service.-:
She was a member of the Clifton United Methodist Church, where she
: ~ght Sunday School for rnany years, the Methodist Women Society and
...ilt!'Jiomemakcrs Club of Mason, W.Va.
!!~~ She was also preceded in death by her husband. Lester Clyde Johnson,
: on Aug. 24. 1985: and by a sJepgrandson. Jackie Rae Call. in 1976.
;
Surviving are a sister. Mary Elizabeth "Betty'' (Kenneth E.) Ault of Mar• ion; four stepdaughters, Margie A. Rickard and Joan Louise King, both of
: New Haven, Betty L. Call of Point Pleasant, and Donna Lee Gavin of Pinel- las Park, Fla.; two stepsons, Dennis William "Jack" Johnson of Metropolis.
lll., and Jimmie Ray Ohlinger of St. Petersburg. Fla.; andl2 stepgrandchil:· dren and a step-great-grandchild.
:
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in the Clifton United Methodist Church,
. ; with the Rev. Terry Alvarez officiating. Burial will be in the Graham Ceme: tery. Friends may call \It the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, from 6-9 p.m.
·• Sunday.
: -. The· body will lie in state in the church one hour prior to the service.

Johnson

POMEROY - Word has been received of the death of Michelle Johnson of Dayton, a native of Dixon, Calif.. on Saturday, Oct. 11, 1997, after
an extended illness.
She was the daughter of Dale Cufaude of Dixon.
.
Surviving in addition to her father are her husband, James Lee Johnson
of Dayton; a daughter and son, Dawn and Michael Long of Sacramento,
~ Cahf. : a brother, Lester Caufaude of Sacramento; her mother and father-in: law, Grace and lugger Johnson of Middleport; brothers-in-law and sisters:· on-law. Van and Marlene Johnson of Racine, Sandy and Neal Reid of Lima,
. and Karen and Keith Lisle of Warrior. Ala.; and several nieces, nephews and
: uncles.
.
:
Burial was Friday, Oct. 17, 1997 in Dixon, with calling hours in Beaver: creek. Ohio.

·:: Stella
L. Persons
. CHESTER- Stella Lucille Persons, 91, Columbus, l'ormerly of Chester,

·

in Gallipolis Municipal Court:
Gregorio Avreliano-Justo, 21 , no
address available, charged with driving under the influence, was fined
$450, three days in jail, thrc:e years of
probation and a 180-day driver's
license suspension; charged with no
operator's license, he was fined $100;
charged with no seathelt, case dismissed due to pleas on the other
charges.
0. John Bastiani, 39, 1261 State
Route 588, Gallipolis, charged with
DUI, was fined $450 and the coun
granted an appeal of the automatic
license suspension; charged with a
stop sign violation, case dismissed al
request of the prosecution.
•Thomas D. Hill, 36, 310 Johnson
Ridge Road, Gallipolis, charged with
resisting arrest, was fined $1 00;
charged with disonderly by intoxication,he was fined $100 and received
one year of probation; charged with
menacing, case dismissed due to
lack of evidence.
Nelson E. Dunlap, 20, 1910
Kriner Road, Gallipolis, charged with
underage consumption, was fined
$150, received a suspended 180-day
jail sentence and three years of probation, and was ordered to perform
80 hours of community service.
Joshua D. Truance, 20, 209 Sisson
Drive, Bidwell, charged with underage consumption, was fined $150.
received a suspended 30-day jail
sentence and two years of probation,
and was ordered to perform 80 hours

RACINE-. Raymond Earl Evans, 79, of Racine, died Friday, October
17, 1997 at Holzer Medical.Center.
He was born on May 3, 1918 in Chester, son of the late William Evans
and Nora Wallace Evans.
·
He was a retired pipefitter and farmer, and a veteran of World War II. He
was a member of tbe Drew Webster Post of the American Legion, the Tuppers Plains VFW and the Disabled American Veterans. He attended the Eagle
Ridge Community Church, where he was a Sunday School superintendent.
He is survived by his wife of 57 years, Ada Smith Evans; a daughter and
son-in-law, Marsha and Charles Frecker of Racine; a son and daughter-inlaw, Marlin and Debbie Evans of Racine; a son-in-law, Delbert Ulwson; four
sisters and brothers-in-law, Minnie and Wayne Pullins of Mineral City, Della and Bill Coleman of Reedsville, Ruth and Charles Long of East Liverpool, and Janet and Walter Lunger of East Liverpool;{hree brothers and sisters-in-law, Harold and Faye Evans of Long Bottom. Paul and Avanelle Evans
of Racine, and Norman and Kathryn Evans of Portland; a granddaughter and
her husband, Elizabeth and Scott Anderson of Racine; granddaughters, Adria
and Maria Frecker of Racine; a grandson and his wife. Timothy and Beth
Lawson of Middleport; and a grandson Samuel Evans of Racine; a great
granddaughter, Sarah Anderson of Racine; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his daughter, Eleanor
Lawson; a sister, Virginia Evans; and two brothers, Donald and William
Evans.
Services will be Monday, October 20, 1997 at 2 p.m. in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy, with the Rev. Robert Sanders officiating. Burial will follow in the Sutton Methodist Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home
on Sunday, October 19, 1997 from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

By RICHARD COLE
A11oclltecl Pr.ee WrH•r
SAN FRANCISCO- Makers of
the nation's most popular pain reliev.er will tell parents for the first time
through labels and ad~enising that
too much '!Yienol can hann their children.
1 Relatively small overdoses of
acetaminophen - 1)!lenol's active
ingredient- have been blamed for
liver damage and even deaths in children in the United States. The Associated Press first reponed the problem
last year.
Containers with new labeling for
infant Tylenol are scheduled to re'ach
stores in six to seven weeks, said Ron
Schmid, a spokesman for the manu·
·facturer, McNeil Consumer Products
Co.
Labels will caution that the contents are concentrated acetaminophen
and "taking more than the recommended dose ... could cause serious
health risks," Schmid said Friday.
Beginning next month, McNeil
will also !like out magazine ads to
inform parents about correct dosages.
A public service TV campaign is in
the works as well, Schmid said.
Deborah Regosin-Hodges, whose
14-month-old daughter Sophie underwent a partial liver transplant in 1994,
applauded the labeling change.
Sophie was accidentally overdosed
because her parents and physician
were unaware that grape-navored
infant '!Yienol is 3 112 times stronger
than children's 1)!lenol, according to
a lawsuit they filed against the doctor and McNeil,
"I was very excited, and pretty
surprised," Regosin-Hodges said of
the labeling changes. "If nothing ever
came out of this as far as our lawsuit

Larcy Jaques
BIDWELL- Larcy Jaques, 88, of Bidwell, died Friday, October 17, 1997
at Holzer Medical Center.
,
Born May 20, 1909 in Charleston, West Virginia, son of the late Frank
Jaques and Annabelle McKinney Jaques, he was a retired plater and farmer.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Arretta Lucille Wiseman Jaques,
and by two brothers and a sister.
Surviving are a son, Franklin "Pete" Jaques of Bidwell; three daughters,
Lucille Arretta "Sissy" Jaques of Dayton. Virginia ''Jenny" Jaques of Dayton, and May Fletcher of Dayton: five grandchildren and four great-grandchildren; a brother, David Jaques of Florida; a niece, Babette Stewart of Bidwell; and special friends. Sandy Spicer, and her son. Tim Spicer. of Dayton .
Services will be 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, October 21, 1997 in the Bethesda
Church. Burial will follow in the Bethesda Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home. Gallipolis, from 6-9 p.m. Mo~day,
October 20, 1997 .
The body will lie in state one hour prior to the services on Tuesday, October21, 1997.
WE WILL LOVE AND MISS YOU. DADDY.

the Ohio Court of Claims ruled the
university still needed to usc competitive bidding. The school awarded a no-bid contract to a Chicago finn

By DONNA ABU·NASR
AIIocl.tecl Pr.aa Wrlt•r
ARLINGTON, Va. -Ann Freeman came to Washington with her
father in 1918 to look at the monuments. On the streets of a capital at
war she saw a sight she'd neverseen:
women in uniforms.
She liked what she saw, went back
home to New York and enlisted in the
Navy as a yeoman.
On Saturday. she was back in
Washington, a guest of honor at a cer- _
emony to dedicate a monument at the
enuance to Arlington National Cemetery to her and hundreds of thousands
of her sisters in uniform.
"It's a dream," the 96-year-old
sailor said. "In our gender, we've got
everything now: In my time, this was
unthinkable."
\ Unde• leaden skies, government
and military leaders extolled the dedication to their country of the almost
2 million American servicewomen
past and present the $21.5 million

overseeing construction.

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

992·2588
VINTON
Gallla County Display Yard
155 Main St.

388 8603

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PUCnCE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

ofcommunityservice.
Gary W. Lambert II, 18, 1545
Sowards Ridge Road, Crown City,
charged with petty theft, was fined
S150, received a suspended 180-day
jail sentence and three years of probation, and was ordered to perform
80 hours of community service.
Percy D. Hutchinson, 37, 110
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, charged with
reckless operation, was fined $100.
Randy L. Parsons, 642 Fifth Ave.,
Gallipolis, charged with assault, was
fined $100, and received a suspended 30-day jail sentence and two
years of probation.
Jeremy A. Nichols, 20, 733

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lntu-ProdUCII
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(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT
(304) 675·1675

. AGENCIES Inc. ·

1111 Quickel 992·6677

.- d•ed Thursday. Oct. 16, 1997 on St. Anne's Hospital. Westerville.
· . Born May 30, 1906 in Ward. W.Va., she was a homemaker and a lay minISter.

.

.Surviving arc a daughter. Myrtle Elizabeth McClish of Akron; two sdns,
Denver ("1!lry Kay) Persons of Pomeroy. and Robert (Bronis) Persons of Gal; lipolis; and 15 grandchildren. and several great-grandchildren and great-great
• gfandchildren.
•
: : She was also preceded in dea\h by her husband, Elcherd Persons· and by
• two grandchildren.
&gt;
'
Arrangements will be announced.

;Joseph H. Sisson
POMEROY - Joseph Harmon Sisson, 83. Pomeroy, died Monday Oct
· '
·
: Born Nov. 19. 1913, son of the late George Bean and Jessie Gilmore Sis·son,'he was employed as a brick-mason, and was a 50-year member of the
Local No. 32.
. He was a member of Trinity Church in Pomeroy, Pomeroy Eastern Star
:No. 186 and a 50-year member of the Masonic Lodge. York Rite Bodies
.Chapter No. 80. Bosworth Council No. 46, Ohio Valley Commandery No.
:24 and the Ancient Accepted Scollish Rite, Valley of Columbus. He was also
~ former member of the Pomeroy Golf Club.
; , Surviving arc: his wife of60 years, Myrtle Seyfried Sisson; a son. George
·Roy (Shirley) Sisson of Pomeroy; a daughter, Carolyn (John) Teaford of
G~ster; five grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren; four sisters, Mabel
~ehael of Bradbury, Mary Roush and Pauline Hudson, both of Middleport,
Vesta Lamhen of Galion; a sister-in-law, Lucille Sisson of Ravenswood,
.W, Va.; and several nieces and nephews.
.,
'
'
•• He was also preceded tn death by hos brother, John Sisson.
: : Memorial services will be held at 1 p.m. Monday, Oct. 20, 1997 at the
:Beech Grove Cemetery, with the Rev. Roland Wildman officiating. There will
~ Do calling hours.
~ furangements are by the, Pomeroy Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home.

.:

:u. 1997 at his residence.

:ai\d

.

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Rutland, OH 45775

son Control Centers figures for 1996
show 31,511 children under 6 suffered inappropriate exposure to pediatric acetaminophen products. Most
needed no treatment, but there were
minor effects in 631 children, moderate - meaning requiring some
treatment- in 63, and life-threatening or pennaneni effects in six. There
were no fatalities last year, said association spokeswoman Rose Ann
Soloway.
San Francisco pediatrician John
Bolton has campaigned for years to
change Tylenol 's marketing and said
the tougher labels are a step in the
right direction.
"The vast majority of people
think that acetaminophen is a very
innocuous chemical and don't think
twice about using it four or five rimes
a day for a very minor fever," Bolton
said.
He fears that even with better
DEFENSE TEAM - Unebomber suspect
which Judge Garland Burrell Jr. said that the
labeling and a public service camTheodor• Kaczynakl'a attorneya, Judy Clarke .
prosecution could begin psychiatric testing on
paign, people will still fail to underKaczynski Oct. 25. (AP)
·
and Gary Sowltrda, left the federal courthouse
stand that concentrated infant-forIn Sacl'lllnento, Calif., after a hearing Friday in
mula Tylenol is suonger than children's formula.
. "I tested parents in my own office,
I even tested my own staff and said,
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) said traditional medical protocols ·
'Quick, which of these is suonger, "'
Bolton said. "And almost everyone A federal judge Friday ruled lhe gov- include audio recording. but not
ernment's psychiatric testing of videotaping. "There is absolutely no
handed me the wrong one."
· Regosin-Hodges said Sophie h~s Theodore Kaczynski can begin next need to videotape this." he said.
Both sides agreed that a one-way
so far remained free of major com- week, but reserved judgment on the
mirror
would be set up in the jail to
plications from her uansplant and number of doctors, the length of the
started pre-school this year. But she ·exam and whether it will be video- allow defense experts to monitor the
tests.
must still take immune system-sup- taped.
Kaczynski. 55. is accused in a tOU.S. District Judge Garland Burpressing drugs, and her mother
count
indictment of using bombs to
rell
Jr.
said
testing
of
the
man
accused
watches her closely for any signs of
kill
two
people in Sacramento a
of being 'the Unabomber can begin
complications.
"Every time Sophie gets a cold or Oct. 25, and that he would rule on the decade apan and injuring two others.
His' trial is scheduled to begin Nov.
a flu, I worry," said Regosin-Hodges. remaining issues by Wednesday.
12 in Sacramento.
Prosecutors
say
they
need
the
"No one will really ever know how
exams to prepare their case' against a
He also faces separate charges in
uagic it wa5."
·possible mental defect defense and New Jersey in the 1994 bombing
want two doctors and lengthy testing; death of an advertising executive. He
·the defense says only one psychiatrist has pleaded innocent to all charges.
Earlier in the day, defense attoris necessary and the tests should l&gt;e
neys said in documents that proseculimited.
Burrell also said he was inclined tors failed to justify seeking the
to reject the governmen['s request death penalty against Kaczynski.
Hardin, who also joined-the World that the testing be videotaped.
On Oct. 3, the U.S. attorney's
War I Navy in 1918 as a yeoman, said ., Federal prosecutor Robert Cleary office had told the coun the governthe memorial was long overdu~ .
said videotaping was necessary to ment would seek to execute KaczynDespite her frailty, the sailor stood ensure that the psychiatric tests were ski if he is convicted, saying he had
almost ramrod straight as she read conducted fairly and to recond "non- a "reckless· disregard for human
from a prepared statement, her voice verbal communication" that could be life" and "represents a continuing
fit\A)'"' 360 Second Av~
fading occasionally.
significant to the case. He did not danger to society no matter how he
~
446-0699
"When I served in the Navy elaborate.
spends the remainder of his days."
women were not even allowed to
Defense attorney Gary Sowards
vote. Now, women occupy important
offices," she said to cheers from the
thousands of servicewomen and others who attended the ceremony.
"In my 101 years oflivintr. I have
observed many wonderful achievements but none as important or as
meaningful as ... women ... taking
their rightful place in society," she
said.
Saturday ·s ceremony was the
' ' ,,
highlight of four days of events cel''
ebrating the Women in Military Ser'.
vice for America Memorial.
Organizers say they want the
1
monument to educate
Red, automatic, cassette, air,
Silver. auto .. air, tilt, clean,
· new tires.,ur~
low miles ..
'

Tests to proceed on Unabomber suspect

memorial honors. En.tertainers Kenny Rogers and Patti Austin paid specia! tribute with a song. And a commemorative postage stamp bearing
the faces of five servicewomen was
presented.
"The ... memorial is a living
reminder that we are all involved,
men and women, when it comes to
protecting America's ·security," said
President Clinton in a: videotaped
message.
"This knowledge was sometimes
slow -in coming," he added. "For
much of our history many.Americans
felt that a woman 's· place should he
closer to the home frontthan the front
lines. Still our women volunteered,
struggling for freedom all around the
world."
Frieda Hardin, a 101-year-old former sailor, sat with Freeman on the
dais in front of a reflecting pool, both
reminders of a day when women's
duties in the service were much
more limited.

MUSt SEE

Climate change
accord reached

Davls·Qulckel
Agency Inc.
Fulllne of

goes, I would just be happy if another child was saved."
The Food and Drug Administration's over-the-counter drug advisory committee in September recommended additional changes in labeling for acetaminophen, which is also
used in Anacin 3 and ·other painrelievers.
The FDA wants manufacturers to
explain correct dosages for children
under 2 years old, instead of using the
current language that simply directs
parents to consult their doctors. The
Port Washington, Pa.-based McNeil
company, a subsidiary of Johnson &amp;
Johnson, supports the changes,
Schmid said.
Critic• say that children and
infant's Tylenol comes in kid-pleasing flavors and is marketed as a safe
·alternative to aspirin and other pain
relievers. Consumers weren't told
that giving a child as liitle as twice
the proper dose over a period of time
could destroy their livers.
Overdoses are· all too easy. they .
say. Children like the taste and sneak
an exua swig. Or Dad doesn't know
Mom just gavo the baby Ty Ienol and
administers a second dose. Parents
confuse regular, extra-sucngth, children's and infant's fonnulas.
The changes announced by
McNeil come too late for Lacy Keele,
a 5-year-old award-winning batontwirler from Aorien, La.. who died of
liver damage after her mother acci·
dentally overdosed her with ExtraStrength Tylenol.
"It's about time," said Keele family attorney Oscar Shoenfelt IlL
"This is a victory. We want to get the
message out. Maybe it will prevent
some more overdoses.''
The American Association of Poi-

America gives military women their
due with unveiling of new monument

UC told to use competitive bidding

Hospital news

Nation/World
'I

Raymond Earl Evans

McClaskey Road, Vinton, charged
with underage consumption, was
fined $150, received a suspended
180-day jail sentence and two years
of probation. and was ordered to perform 80 hours of community service;
charged with disorderly conduct,
case dismissed at the request of prosecution; charged wi'th criminal damaging, case dismissed at request of
COLUMBUS (AP) --, A judge
prosecution.
has
ordered the University of CincinThe following have been directed
to appear at show-cause hearings in nati to follow·the state's competitive
municipal court on Thursday, Ocr. 23: bidding laws fur a $69 million conKenneth Adams, Charles Athey. ference center already being builL
If the decision is upheld, other
Craig Athey, Shannon R. Armstcnd,
Charlton K. Armstrong, Mark Ohio universities and state agencies
Arthurs, Coranna L. Atchinson, rnay have to do the same.
The university is using a leaseCourtney E. Baisden, Donald Baker.
purchase
law to build the conference
James Baker, Jeffrey A. Baker. Mary
center.
The
law allows universities
E. Baldwin, Russell J. Ballinger.
Robert M. Barks, Donald E. Barnes, and state agencies to finance projects
Angela R. Barry, Debbie R. , Barry, by leasing them from a third party.
But Judge Fred J. Shoemaker of
Mont C. Low,.Y, Christopher Rayl&gt;um
and Randy Ray Wilson.
Note: If the account has been paid
Veterans Memorial
prior to the court date, defendants not
Friday admissions - none.
need appear. Failure to neither pay or
Friday discharges- Mary Cathy
appear will result in a bench warrant
and/or cancellation of license.
Rice.
Common Pleas
The following cases have been
. filed in Gallia County Common Pleas
Court: ·
,
Divorce filed- Jennie G. Collins
from Robert D. Collins, both of Gallipolis.
Dissolution granted - Jo Ann
Shephend, 105 Ann Drive, Gallipolis,
and Jackie L. Shepherd, 11624 SR 7
South, Gallipolis.

I

BARILOCHE, Argentina (AP)Against a spectacular background of
snowcapped mountains, President
Clinton and Argentine President Carlos Menem agreed to global-warming ·
commitments Satunda~ that the Unit·
ed States hopes will be followed by
oiher developing counuies.
"We agree with the United States
when you say that a global problem
such as climate change requires a
global answer from all countries,"
Mencm said at a ceremony ncar the
shores of Nahucl lluapi Lake,
renowned for its crystalline water.
"This is clearly a global problem.
and we must all do our share," Clinton said .
Argentina agreed that developing
countries share with industrialized
nations the responsibility to abide by
specific · limits on heat-trapping
"greenhouse" gases. Other developing naiions have been reluctant to
i.Jnakc' such a commitment, and Clinrton was unable to wm such a pledge
trrom Venezuela or Brazil, the other
r counuies he visited in a week long
trip.
.
.
1
Argentina was the last stop, and
Clinton was Dying home after a
round of golf with Menem and two
Argentine professionals.
Clinton used the South American
journey to press his case that free
trade will create jobs and lift standands of living throughout the world.
He faces a tough battle at home to
win congressional approval of
enhanced authority to negotiate foreign trade deals.
· National Security Adviser Sandy
Berger proclaimed Clinton's trip a
success despite the absence of major
acconds. "What we're seeing here is,
.literally, a sea change in relations
between the United States and Latin
America," Berger said. "It didn'tjust
happen on this uip; it's been happening. But this trip, I think, reflects
it, accelerates it, encap~ulates it."

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•

ST. CATIIAR!NE, Ky. - A 30- , Center of the Federal Emergency
: · POMEROY- Leland Edward "Bill" Clonch, 65, Pomeroy, died Satur- year veteran of news and public rela- Management Agency in Lexington
4&amp;,. Oct. 18, 1997 at his residence, following an extended illness.
tions, and a native of Gallipolis, has 1during Oood relief and recovery
;•- Born Feb. 20, 1932 in Rutland, son of the late George Washington and been hired as director of communi- 1 efforts in Kentucky following. last
: Lavina Frances Newell Clonch, he was a construction laborer, and a mem- cations at Sr. Catharine College, a pri- March's flooding.
• ber of the United Laborers Local 83, Portsmouth.
vate two-year liberal arts college in
"I was very impressed by Bill
- Surviving are thrc:e daughters, Joyce (Michael) Hlad of Palatka, Aa., Lori Washington County near Springfield, Huston's ability to build education,
(Oianda) Daye of Greensboro, N.C., and Krista (Ted) Smith of Long Bot- Ky.
al opportunities for Kentuckians
tom· two sons, Dwaine (Sonia) Allen and John (Amanda) Clonch, both of
William R. "Bill" Griffin was while he was secretary of the Cabi· ·
Po~eroy; nine grandchildren; four brothers, Robert "Bob" Clonch of Mid- hired to head up communications net for Workforce Development,"
dleport. Paul Clonch of Logan, Clyde Clonch of Bremen, and Wilbert Clonch efforts at sec. effective Ocr. 13, . Griffin said.
of Hopkinsville, Ky.; six sisters, Margie McComas, Audrey Keese and Kath- President William D. Huston
"I know him to be a sincere, dedleen Clonch, all of Columbus, Alto Fish of Rutland, Maxine Richter of Illi- , announced.
icated and hard-working person who
nois, and Jean Goodwin of Morehead City, N.C.; and several meces and
"Mr. Griffin and I became has impressive development plans for
acquainted in the administration of St. Catharine College," he added,
nephews.
·
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Retha V. Clonch; a grand- Gov. Brereton C. Jones while he was "and I hope to be of help in commudaughter, Tamara Dawn Vance; and two sisters, Dorothy Demoskey and deputy press secretary and later exec- .nicating our efforts to Kentucky and
utive director of the office of com- the rest of the world."
Bessie Clouse. .
Services will be 1 p.m . Tuesday in the Birchfield Funeral Horne, Rutland, munications for the Cabinet for
Griffin is a 1975 graduate (cum
with the Rev. Les Hayman officiating. Burial will be in the Wells Cemetery, Human Resources," Huston said.
laude) of Marshall University, receiv: Hairisonville. Friends mav call at the funeral home from 5-9 p.m . Monday.
"I was very impressed by his ing a bachelor of ans degree in
expertise during those four years and broadcast journalism, with minors in
am very happy to have him here with speech and political science. He
us at St. Catharine to help maximize worked as a reporter and anchor at
RACINE- Raymond Earl Evans, 79, Racine, died Friday, Oct. 17, 1997 our mission message and gain even WSAZ-TV in Huntington, W.Va.,
in Holzer Medical Center.
greater public awareness of our edu- from 1970 untill975.
Born May 3, 1918 in Chester, son of the late William and Nora Wallace cational efforts," Huston added.
In the service, he graduated frorn
Evans. he was a retired pipefiuer and farmer, and a veteran of World War II.
Griffin began his career as a jour- the Defense Information School
He was a member of the Drew Webster Post of the American Legion, the nalist after joining the U.S. Navy in (basic military journalism) at Fon
Tuppers Plains VFW and the Disabled American Veterans. He attended the 1965, including a year as a Navy cor- Benjamin Harrison, Ind., in 1967
l!agle Ridge Community Church, where he was a Sunday School supenn- respondent . in Vietnam from 1968 before serving in Vietnam.
tendent.
untill969. He was a television jourHe is a 1964 graduate of Gallia
Surviving are his wife of 57 years, Ada Smith Evans; a daughter, Mar- nalist for 22 years following hisser- Academy High School and the son of
Sha (Charles) Frecker of Racine; a son, Marlin (Debbie) Evans of Racine; a vice, working from 1983 until 1991 the late John T. "Jack" Griffin, and
son-in-law. Delbert Lawson; four sisters, Minnie (Wayne) Pullins of Mine(- at Lexington's WKYT-TV before Eve Moore Griffin, who resides at
• 111 City, Della (Bill) Coleman of Reedsville, Ruth (Charles) Long of East joining the campaign to elect Jones 553 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
•.Civerpool, and Janel (Walter) Lunger of East Liverpool; four grandchildren governor, and then serving with his .
Griffin has resided and worked in: -ind a great-granddaughter; three brothers, Harold (Faye) Evans of Long Bot- .administration.
Kentucky since 1982. He is the
~om. PiiUI (Avanelle) Evans of Racine, and Norman (Kathryn) Evans of PonGriffin was also press secretary for father of two children, Kevin
:land; and several nieces and nephews.
the U.S. Senate campaign for Steve Michael, 18, and Allison Anne, 15, of
: He was also preceded in death by a daughter, Eleanor Lawson; a sister, Beshear in 1996 and a public affairs Asheville, N.C.
. 'Virginia Evans: and two brothers, Donald and William Evans.
specialist in the Joint lnfonnation
: : Services will be 2 p.m. Monday in the Ewing Funeral Home, with the Rev.
• Rohen Sanders officiating. Burial will be in the Suuon Methodist Cemetery.
• Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
·

·. M
: a"chelle

&amp;p

•

Oo-.r11,1117

Gallipolis native joins ----~ Obituaries----I
.,·:·:•·:~ ,,
staff at 2-year college
• .,. •• ·•• •rrr:
.:ItiiD•··••atlo
ar. . . ,....., lltn;[

.- .

•..

Sunday,October19,1997

Galipels,~

Or Toll Free l-800..446·0842
•

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

Sunday, October 19, 1997

Fuel efficiency stands still, ·as popularity of gas guzzlers grows
WASHINGTON (AP) - Auto,. mobile fuel e&lt;:onomy is running ,in
place.
. New-car fleets have not had any
noticeable fuel efficiency gains in a
·decade and new passenger vehicles
overall use more fuel now than they
did in the mid-l980s, government
figures show.
Despite talk of global warming
and energy conservation, motorists
- seeing cheap gasoline and a
robust economy- show little Interest in conserving wben it comes to
· their love affair with the automobile.
So far this year, American drivers
have burned record amounts of
gasoline, reaching a peak of 356
million gallons a day last July and
averaging 330 million gallons a day
over the first eight months, the highest ever, according to the federal
Energy Information Administration.
, Ed Murphy, an economist for the
American Petroleum Institute, . said
that represents about a I.7 percent
increase over 1996 and reflects the
general strength of the economy, as
well as relatively low fuel prices. ·
But gas guzzlers also are being
sold in the nation's auto showrooms
- especially spon utility vehicles,
minivans and small trucks, all of
which are subject to less-stringent
fuel economy requirements and usc
more fuel than most conventional
passenger cars.
The latest fuel mileage statistics
from the Environmental Protection
Agency for t998 models, released
this weekend, show fuel efficiency
at a standstill.
While a handful of small cars get ·
high~·cage, as they have every
ye , n' e of every 10 vehicles get
less an 30 miles per gallon and
nearly a fifth get less than 20 mpg.
Half of all sport utilities, minivans
and small trucks get less than 20
mpg and the rest are in the low 20s.
For the eighth lime in nine ,years,
Chevrolet's Geo Metro subcompact
was the biggest fuel miser, getting
46 mpg in combined city and highway driving. It was followed by two
\blkswagens - the Jetta and Passat- at 43 mpg.
The l.amborghini Diablo again
WIIS the biggest fuel bog, at 10 mpg
in city driving and 13 mpg on the
open road.
But critics of fuel economy
requirements said few people buy
either the most fuel-efficient or the
~~ fuel-bWJgry. Year after year the
cars on the EPA's top 10 economy
list account for less than 1 percent of
car sales, they say.

"The small high-mileage vehicles have very limited consumer
appeal," said Diane Steed, president
of the Coalition for Vehicle Choice,
a group that opposes federal fuel
efficiency standards. ·
More than two decades ago, Congress required that the average car
get 27.5 mpg and set the ceiling for
small trucks at 20.7 mpg. At the
time, trucks accounted for fewer
than one of every five vehicles on
the road. Today pickups, spon utilities and minivans - all officially
classified as light trucks -account
for nearly one of every two vehicles.
Their broad popularity has
caused overall fuel economy for all
new passenger vehicles to drop from
an average of 26.2 mpg a decade ago
to 24.9 mpg in 1996, while the average for new cars has remained fairly
constant at around 28 mpg, accord-

ing to the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration.
EPA officials ""Y the downward
trend shows every indication of conlinuing over the two latest model
years, although aggregate numbers
have not yet been determined for
1997 or 1998 models.
Meanwhile, they say, passenger
vehicles since the mid-1980s also
have, in the aggregate, become peppier and heavier. Average acceleration
from zero to 60 miles an hour has
been cut by nearly 2 seconds, while
passenger vehicles weigh on average
500 pounds more than they did in the
mid-1980s, according to EPA.
"We're turning the comer now,
so that cars that are going off the
road are more efficient than the ones
that are going on," said David
Hamilton, policy director of the
Alliance to Save Energy, a Washing-

.9Lcquisitions !fine Jewefrg ·
MIDDLEPORT • GALLIPOLIS

DIAMOND
SALE!
• SOLITAIRES
• DIAMOND TENNIS BRACELETS
• ANNIVERSARY BANDS

Round Diamonds • Marquise Diamonds • Pear Shaped Diamonds
Oval Diamonds • Princess tua Diamonds • EMerald Shaped
F•ll OPEN HOUSE - Please join us
from 5:00-7:00 PM Saturday October 25, 199L
CW,wiJJ.,~cele&amp;atintlk~amit~
oflk~~ a.s-wJta.s-tkp/4ManJ,~~

LAYAWAY· ONLY 10% DOWN!

OPEN

fk/uJ.u.te:

9:30·5, Dally
9:30-6 Monday
9:30·7:30 Friday

f4.cquisitions

'We- wou.U liJte- fo, ~""" IJ.m4,.UJU/t, 'JOU'~sard

Memorial Library 7 Spruce Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Music and light refreshments

Financing Available
Free Parking
Free Gift Wrapping

!fine Jewe{ry

TWO LOCATIONS

151 SECOND AVE., GAWPOUS 446-2842
91 MILL ST., MIDDLEPORT
992-8250

Member Jewelers
Board of Trade

1iiiHZJ•
Notifleatlon Is hereby given that a release of some $600,...,.,.00 worth of assets will be
oftered direct to the publle for a period of 6 hours this

·

MERCHANDISE WILL INCLUDE ALL
FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES
IN STOCK FOR THIS
NO DEALERS,PLEASE

NOrBING
RBI·D

",.HE BUCK .,.UPS ·HEBE"

PAYMENT BY CASH,
CHECK, VISA, MASTER
CARD, DISCOVER OR
APPROVED CREDIT
APPLICATION.

BACK

'

'

IllS IS All
IMPOIIAIII SITUATION AND WAIUNTS

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

'

~~~-• •_·_
-• ______ SUNDAY

Bridge
Continued from P-ae A1
The consultant bas also been
authorized to begin preliminary
writing of the environmental assessment of feasible alternatives (the
I!AFA), which is the precursor to the
final environmental document, she
added.
Once feiiSible lines within each
corridor have been narrowed down
to the best, a public meeting will be
scheduled. No date for that meeting
has been set at this time.
At a meeting, held in June at
Wahama High School in Mason,
businesspersons and community
leaders from Mason, Middleport and
Pomeroy made it clear they woUld
prefer any new bridge be built adjacent the existing span.
They are concerned that moving
the bridge would have a adverse
impact on business in the three communities. In .addition, they noted the
bridge serves as a flood route during
Ohio River floods and enables more
interaction between tbe communi·
tles• emergency services, fire depanmeots and law enforcement agencies.
1\vo areas were presented at the
June meeting as possible localions
for a new bridge: Site A which
includes the existing bridge and Site
B which includes the Kerr's
Run/Riverside Golf Course area.
Site A encompasses the area from
the Middleport corporation line to
the base of the eastern bridge
approach in Pomeroy on the Ohio
side, and from Clifton to around
Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouse in
Mason on the West Virginia side.
Site B extends from just cast of
the Kroger store to the base of Minersville Hill Road in Ohio and largely encompasses the area associated
with the Riverside Golf Course in
West Virginia and Kerr's Run in
Pomeroy.
'
Built in 1928, the PomeroyMason Bridge is one of four remaining Ohio River bridges owned by
Ohio. Under an agreement between ·
the two states, as the .spans are
replaced by Ohio, West Virginia will
take ownership with Ohio providing
its share of maintenance COliS.
The current schedule for bridge
replacement shows the preliminary
development study and final design
taking place until 2000. Right of
way acquisitiOn will take place in
2000 and 2001 with construction
beginning in 2001. Completion is
scheduled for the middle of 2004.

people are traveling more and pay- with galioline prices at 1973 levels
ing less attention to fuel e&lt;:onomy, · after inflation is taken into account

ton-based environmental group.
· Hamilton said it's no surprise

RD

D
AUTHORIZED REDUCTIONS AND
EVERYTHING UP TO

0.00

Bunk Bedo,
For Thoae Who Qualify'

On Purchases Of $599 or More.
C81h, Checks, VIsa, Master Card: and Dlacover
Also

Tlble•, Mlrrora,
Picture•, Ump•.

Mellreees.ta,a.r
Stoole, Bedroom,
Dining Room, Uvtng
Room, Appllencee &amp;
Electlonlc- All On
Sale Thla Sunday

PUBUCSALE,
NO DEALERS
PLEASE.
All Items SubJ89t to
Prior Sale Only et
Empire Furniture a.
Appliance

RECLINERS
Tuft:-.:1 bllck tKIInera, eolld fr•m•,
no ug conatructlon.

. . . . . 811NDAT

•u, TO 62" 011 SUHJAY"

•aa•.UNDAT

5 PIECE I!IEDIOOM SUIII
Paul Bunyon bed, nlte labl•, door cbat,
hutch mirror,

EVERYTHING ON SALE

2 fLOORS 0, BAIGAIRS
24 Cu. Ft- FIIIIDIIIE
IIFIIIIUIOI
Blactc flnl•tl, z yr. lull warranty, 'Pill ..t.

'88&amp;- FOI IHE PAll

.......,.ng, Qelloo

WING CHAIRS

Not$8911.95

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

FRIGIDAIRE GALLERY RANGE
2 yoor lull worranty. biKk ftntoh, omooth

'891

31" TV

'4,oaoOak. large.

•(OIOLU• COliER HUTCI
Not $7".85 ...........................

Rich vetvet bllck~uve-tHI, ~•ek &amp;

Noll1111111.115 ..................a ......,

'811

SWIYIL IOCIII IICLIIIIIS

IIPAII llfiiSIIATOI
aTAJITJIIfO AT

S. Carolina St. 17, Bethunc-Cookman 10
Sue Bennen al Chtu'leston Southern. canceled
TcnnesS~ee Tech :B. Tenn.-Martin l

SECTIONAL

ViiJanovn 40. Richmond 29
Virrinia 13. Oukt 10
W3ke Forest H. Marylnnd 17

Woffonll7. W. Carolina 7

Mldwett
Ball St. 37. Cent. Michigan 34 (OT) '

QUIIISUIPSOFA

Onake 28, Evansville 18
E. Illinois 30. Middle Tenn. 17

'IIMIIIIII"•

117
Not

tuiiiTioi-:t::;:'""

5

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Sb'lpu In pooloto by Slmmono.

Kansos St. 36. Texas A&amp;M 17
Miami, Ohio 45, Manhallll

FIIGIDIIIE WASIII &amp; DIYEI

Michi&amp;an 28. lowll 24
MiSiouri 37. Tcx:lS 29
N. Iowa H. You111slown St. 32

luPM" o•,.e+ty. 'I• h .p. motor, 12 OJ'CI........... 2·
••Y tumbl• drying, lnt•rior drum light. btll•noe
dry •y•t.m. White- Dr lllmand, 2 yr. full

..,i•

Not ta. ..tii ... Piu• F•ot. Rebttt•

Nebr:oskll 29, Texas Tech 0
Nom: D:une 20, Southern Cal t 7
Ohio St. 31, lndiina 0
Ohio 24, Bowlina o...n 0
Pllrdue 45. Wisconsin 20
SW Mi.-i St. 41. Ulinoio St 7
Toledo 41 , N. Illinois 14
Valponi10 19. Buller 17

'84

1n;:•~'~l8=1:~~============~

··.....

Soft Yet-wet cov•r. Comfort •t he b. .t. erown or

gr..n.

15 Cu. Ft.

"First Come First

NW Louisiltna 31. SW Texas St. 3

W. JIIinois 37, Indiana St. 3

W. Michi1an 50, Kent 27

br••• trim.

'Mr ........, Not f119U5 .................. a ......., . . .. .

"Pai()ES GOOD SUI'WDA.Y
8110llllS"

N. Carolino A&amp;T 7. MorgM St. 6

Comptot• llet.................l.,.....,. '14P

aEcultiiiiG
SOFA

SOfA • LOYUIII • Clllll

stand among op 5 VICtors

lUll IEDS

Son and durabte.
ToniAathOrMoto.Noi$M.Il5
....................
Not$1-.N
SU. . .:II

AIIIQUI IOU fOP DISI

O.k wtth IUded glall doorl.

Not $27911.815 ............... ,.,,.... 'II...

'84-

'148" ··~

College football scores

Novy blue otrlpo end print. Formol etyllng.

tnnoropr~nv mottreoo, muKI-co~or otrtpo.
8oo•e• ...
ehoot, •••••ertmtrror, ••• •••to, .... Not StW.tlti ............................
marble, o.lll flnlll"' .
SOfA Amlllh Creltomon by Smltlt Brotltoro
Not $ 13111~,~~5 •VNDAT
illll--

COIOLU TAIU &amp; 4 CKAIIS
NotMI8.815 ...........................

SOfA &amp; WING CHAIR

•ITNDAT

31"1148" table, Fonnlco lop, 1111 plno ftnlllh.

Oh ··o State beats Indl·ana 31-0

Mississippi 36. LSU 21

Nol $18911.815 ..........................., 18119"

5 PIECE BEDROOM SUITE

·

Miami blasts
Marshall 37-21

1 pc. pine wtth Zloom bunltiH.

•399•

Tribe, Marlins
snub baseball
by the numbers . :

By MIKE LOPRESTI
Gannett Newa Service
What are they doing here?
Make way for the Baltimore Orioles-Atlanta Braves
World Series. Brought to you by the Cleveland Indians
and Florida Marlins.
So much for baseball by the numbers. So much fbr
the logical idea that the best teams during the season
will show up in the World Series.
All that went out the win·
dow this week, and presumably
not the same one the guy from
ESPN reportedly used for a pot!)'
break.
The Orioles, who had 98
victories, lasted only one more
day than the Braves, who had
101.
And neither lasted as long as
they had planned. They are back
in civilian life now. these blues
brothers, wondering what went
wrong.
What is left arc two unexpected guests. They make
an unconventional twosome to be deciding a World
Series.
We hav e a wild card team from the National
League, And an Amcncan League team that lost more
games this season than the New York Mcls.
We not only have winds off Lake Eric, but breezes
wafting in from the Atlantic.
We have Cleveland, a team whose marquee mcludcs
SEPARATION of pigskin from receiver Is Browning during Saturday's Big Ten game In an ex-Dodger. an ex-Giant and a couple of ex-Braves.
what Ohio State defensive back Ahmed Columbus, Ohio, where .the 11th-ranked The last blow against Baltimore was struck by an exOXFORD, Ohio (AP)- Travis Prentice set a sin- Plummer practices on Indiana' a Tyrone Buckeyes won 31-0. (AP)
Blue Jay .
gle-season Miami of Ohio rushing record Saturday with
And we have Florida. a team whose marquee
four touchdowns and a career-high 203 yards, tying the
includes an CX·Piratc,anex·Expo. ancx·Rangcr.ane•game twice before•he put Miami ahead of !vlarshall for
Padre, a ex-Blue Jay and an ex-Cuban.
good in a 45·21 victory.
.
We have one team from Ohio. where the old people
Marshall's standout wide receiver, Randy Moss, had
from Florida live during the summer.
10 catches for 147 ·yards and one touchdown. He caught By RUSTY MILLER
Hoosiers go to 15th~rankcd Iowa.
yards against Penn State, took over
And one team from Florida, where the old people
a 41-yard pass from Chad Pennington with 2:01 left in
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Indiana mustered 35 yards on 32 for the first time midway through from Ohio Jive during the winter.
We have a franchise that has been in business in the
the 'first quarter to tie the game at 7-7 after Miami Clinton Wayne returned an intercep. rushes and totaled 179 yards, com- · the second quaner and didn't waste
linebacker Dustin Cohen intercepted a Pennington pass lion 38 yards for a touchdown and pared to Ohio State's 188 rushing any time, using just four plays to National League since 1993. And a franchise that has
·and returned it 28 yards to open the scoring.
II th-ranked Ohio State's defense and 244 passing yards for 432 total. cover 38 yards after Gary Berry had been in the American League since 1901 .
Moss had 166 all·purpose yards Saturday. He came never permitted l'ndiana inside the
With the victory.; Ohio State picked off a Jay Rodgers' pass and
We have a club that has waited 49 years since wininto ·the game with 44 catches for 856 ~ards and 16 Buckeye 30 in a 31-0 victory coach John Cooper moved.to 82-30- returned it 42 yards. Germaine hit ning it1 last World Series. And a club that waited only
touchdowns.
Saturday.
4 in his lOth season and into second both of his passes for 29 yards , . Jive years before getting in one.
Prentice's touchdowns tied the score 14-14 in the
The Buckeyes (6-1, 2·1 Big Ten) place in career victories at the including the 10-yard score to
We have one stadium built solely for baseball , in a
: second quarter and 21 -21 in the third quarter before he were coming off a 31-27 loss to top. school. Earle Bruce went 81-26-1 in Lumpkin for the touchdown.
Midwestern downtown. And another built mainly for
· scored on a 22-yard run 10 put Miami's RedHawks ranked Penn State.
nine seasons; the late Woody Hayes
Two plays later, Rodgers' looked football , in the middle of tropical coastal vegetation .
: ahead for good, 28-2 1. His final score came on a oneThe crowd groaned when it was was 205-61-IOfrom 1951-78.
right and threw with Wayne batting
We have inflamed populaces and crowds loud
announced Penn State came back
The Buckeyes staned slow!y. On the ball down and then rumbling the enough to win games and influence opponents.
:yard run with 1:58 remaining.
: Prentice, a sophomore from Louisville, Ky .. now has from a 15-3 deficit to win 16-15. the game's opening drive, they took 38 yards untouched to make it 21-0 Cleveland hasn't had an empty seat in years. Florida
, ·ts rushing touchdowns this season. He broke the record Michigan overcame a 21· 7 Iowa the ball to the Indiana 22 but at the half.
.
.
has sold more than 60.000 tickets for Game I, opening
lead to wm 28-24 and keepmg the Damian Gregory bl.ocked Stultz's
In the second half, Wiley took a up sections fonnerly filled by only Dan Marino.
·
: Bob Hitchens set in 1972 with 15.
· Pennington was intercepted four limes and Marshall Buckeyes no better than fifth in the 29-yard field goal attempt
handoff left then pulled up and
We have baseball fever in Akron and Euclid ~
· :lost all1hree of its fumble&amp; en route to its fim.Mid- ,..JI.ig Ten_.... _:,_,- ._,___, ..... ~_. ·~
•.A/4 ~~fen"". gi¥ml!&gt;·"'' 30 lobbed-"!' ei!ftt-,.....a...corj~ JIIIM'J""'' 'EtyfiaaiiifS"andusky.
' • ..
·
American Conference loss this season (3-1 in conferMichael Wiley ran for one touch- points a game stopped Ohio State on backup ttght end Steve Wtsmewskl. ·
And 'also in Pompano Bench and Coral Springs and
ence, 5-2 overali). ·Miami improved to 6-1 overall and do~n and passed for.another for the next drive, too, when Pepe
Stultz's field goal matched the Fon Lauderdale and Little Havana.
4-1 in conference.
Ohto State, wht.ch P!led up 432 Pearson was dropped by Aaron se~ond longest i~ O~o State history,
We have a Cleveland shonstop from Venezuela and
Miami quanerllack Sam Ricketts completed 10 of his yards of offens.~Dan Stultz set an Warnecke and Jabar Robinson for' a tymg Gary ~atrns ktck tn 1966. a Florida shonstop from Colombia. A Cleveland catcher
27 passes for 112 yards Saturday, putting the senior Ohio Stadium record with a 55-yard yard loss on fourth and I at the The longest tn school htstory ·was from the famous Alomar family and a Florida outfielder
field goal, tying the second-longest Indiana 24.
Tom Skladany's 59-yarder in 1975. from the famous Alou family .
over 5,000 passing yards for his eareer{S,014 yards).
Miami unveiled its new RedHawks logo on 'Saturday, ever by a Buckeye kicker.
After the Hoosiers were forced to Rich Spangler's 52-yarder against
We have two teams without viable MVP or Cy
replacing the old Redskins logo. The school set an attenJoe .Oermaine, part of Ohio punt again, Ohio State neede~ just Sou!hern Cal tn 1985 had been the Young candidates. A Cleveland team that finished ninth
dance record of 29,027 Saturday, breaking the 28,230 State's quarterback tandem with five plays to cover 46 yards. stadtum ~ord.
.
in its league in pitching. A Florida team that finished
mark set in 1983 when it dedicated Yager Stadium.
starter Stanley Jackson, flipped a 10- Jackson hit Dee Miller on a 19-yard·
Germame was 4-fo,r-10 pas.smg ninth in its league in hitting.
yard scoring toss to tight end John gain to set up Wiley's 18-yard for 36 yards wtth two mtercepuons.
We have two opportunistic teams of pluck, each
Lumpkin.
touchdown between big blocks by Pearso!' had 71 yards on 13 cames being outscored during six games in its league champiIndiana (1-6, 0-4 Big Ten) lost to Matt Keller and Steve Wisniewski.
and Wiley had 57 on five.
.
onship series. Each winning anyway, beating betterJackson finished 13-of-15 passRodgers was 8-for-21 passmg for known pitching staffs. and finding holes in the enemy
a ranked team for lhe fourth week in
a row, following defeats to No. 24 ing for 189 yards with no intercep· 73 yards and two interceptions, with defense.
E•t
Army 37, Rulp:ers 35
Wisconsin, Michigan and No. II tions.
backup Earl Haniford hitting 5-of-7
We have organizations who took enormous personBmwn 23, Rhode Island "
Gennaine, who passed for 378 for 71 yards Wtth one mtercept10n.
· nel gambles, and may now give out high-fives about
Michigan State. This week, the
Bucknelll6. Fordham 10
ConiiiUS 23, Alfred 20
Comell41, Lafayette 34 (2 O'T)
said bitter.goodbyes to
Lofton and
Oonmouth 2t. Y&lt;tk 7
Albert Belle, and only dtd beuer.
Fairfield 34. Marist 14
·
T
Florida spent a well-known bundle, and 1101 what &lt;it
GeorgetoWII, D.C. 33, lono 2
Harvard S2. Holy Cross 24
I
Hofmn 4S, Lehigh 38
Moille 62, Boston U. 29
.
m~ a World Senes wtth umque edges.
Massachusetts 26, Buffolo 20
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP)- Penn State a first down at the 154 yards rushing, dropped the ball
And if the baseball isn't good enough, you can
Miomi 4S. Boston Collcce 4-4 (2 OTl
Chris Snyder's fumble recovery set Gophers' six. Enis, who ran for 112 on a pitch and Snyder recovered at always tune in to~ where the floating strike zone has
Monmouth, NJ. 27, St. Francis. Pa. 7
Navy 42, VMI 7
up Curtis Enis' 10-yard touchdown yards. scored on the next play and the 10. Penn State went ahead on landed on any particularly night. Is home plale the size
Nor1hcastem 34. New Hampshire 19
run with 3:59 to play and No. I Penn State trailed only 15-10.
En is' second touchdown run on the . of a breadbox or a refrigerator tonight? This dc:pends, of
Penn 24, Columbia 7
Penn
State
escaped
with
a
16-15
Minnesota
immediately
turned
ensuing
snap.
.
course, on which umpire. And; possibly, the astrological
Penn Sr. 16. Minnesota IS
over
Minnesota
to
keep
alive
the
.ball
over
when
Cory
Sauter's
Minnesota
had
on~
last
chance
chans.
victory
·Princeton 31. Colzate 28
its hopes of a national champi· pass was intercepted by Dave but Sauter's founh-down pass at the
The Indians know something about October brinksSt.John's. NY 14. Duquesne It Syracuse 60, Temple 7
onship. .
Macklin at the Miimesota 34. The 40 eluded Tutu Atwell and Penn manship, good and bad. All four of their LCS victories
Towson 33, Raben Morris 30
The Nittany Lions (6'0, 3-0 Big Nittany Lions drove to a first-and- State ran out the clock.
were by one run. So were three of their defeats and two
Wagner 34. Cent Connecli\iut St . 23
, Ten) ttimed mistakes into the touch- goal but turned the ball over on . Penn State· won its lith straight of their victories in their 1995 World Series with
downs it needed in the founh q~ar- downs when Mike McQueary's pass despite a subpar day from Atlanta.
'
Soutlt
Alnbanw. St. 56. Prairie View 7
But if Cleveland has hard experience, Florida has
ter to overcome the 15-3 lead that skipped off 1he fingers of tight end McQueary, who threw for only 85
Appala&lt;hian St. 24. Georgia Southern 12
Minnesota
(2-5,
0·3)
built
on
field
Brad
Scioli
in
the
end
zone.
yards
and
had
two
passes
intercept·
home
this weekend. That apparently can be imponant.
Delaware 49. James Madison 27
52,
23,
32,
50
and
33
yards
But
Penn
State
got
another
break,
ed
and
lost
a
fumble.
The
team
that played the first two games at home has
goals
of
E. Kentucky 29. Mumy So. 8
by Adam Bailey .
. three plays later, when Minnesota
Lamanzer Williams blindsided won 10 of til&lt;~ last II World Series.
.
Aorida 24, Auburn I 0
Fummn 21. Cit::t.dcl 7
Minnesota' s Crawford Jordan turned the ball over again. Thomas McQueary, causing a fumble that
But whether that means anything now is arguabkl,
Hampton U. 9. Norfolk St. 2
was called for pass interference on a Hamner, who provided much of t.he Ben Mezera rocoverc~ at the 36. Nothing else on paper ha.• this month,
::
Howard U. 52. Morehouse 0
third-down pass to En is. giving offenstve spark for the Gophers wtth
(See TOP 25 on B-8)
•
Libeny 16. Virginia Union 8
Methodist 19. Davidson 16

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F...no St 20, Air Force 17
Montana St. 3I, CS Nonlllid.. 20
Wcl&gt;cr Sc. 16, Pon~ St. 7

Hot$216.95

5Utufll:ll

RIO GRANDE - A tough defeat
Friday night was followed by a sparkling
victorySaturdayfortheUniversityofRio
Grande volleyball squad.
Rio Grande ( 13- II, MOC 8-4) took
one game from Mid-Ohio Conference
leader Walsh before... uccumbing three
games to one in Friday's action at the
Newt Oliver Arena. Walsh (25· 7, MOC
J0-0) jumped out to a quick lead after
winning 15-7inthematehopener.
The Rcdwomen rebounded to win
game two of the match by a 15-12 count.

I

~nny

pai~~:·ther,theymakeacuriouspair,eapableorstag-

Rio Grande almost let a 13·3 lead dwindie before finally putting away the Lady
Cavs.
Walsh dominated the next two games,
winning by 15-2 and 15·5 margins.
Denise DeMange led Rio Grande with
l4 kills while Christina Cayton had 10
·and Rhianna Cheatham added seven.
Cayton had 26 digs to lead the team.
DeMange added 24 and Kristy Blubaugh
had 21. Cheatham and Courtney
McKinney had 13 digs apiece. Blubaugh
handed out 32 assists in the setback.

Saturday brought ahout a better result
for the Redwomcn as they handled
Malone fairly easily. Rio Grande swept
the. Lady Pioneers in three gamc.s.
. Brandi Sailor led the offenstve attack
wtth 12 ktlls, DeMangc added mnc and
Cayton, Cheatham and Blubaugh had stx
each.
.
Cayton agatn was the leader on
defense wtth 25 dtgs . DcMangc had 17.
Blubaugh added 16 and Cheatham
recorded 14.

Rio Grande now travels to seco.W
place Mt . Vernon Nazarene Tuesday for
a key MOC match· up. MVNC defcatl:d
the Redwomen tria match at the "Newt"
on Sep. 30.
.
The Redwomcn arc then tdle for .a
week before .~hey h.?'t Sha.wnce Stalt
Oct. 28 at the Newt.
.
Followtng the match wtth Shawnee
State, the Rcdwomen travel to Upland,
Ind . t~ parttct,rate on the Tayi&lt;K
Untvcrsuy lnvttattonal on Frtday, Oct. 31
and Saturday, Nov. L
'..,

GAHS harriers get three in top 10 in D-11 district meet
Adam Joseph Thomas (M) (18:S6.S4 ·60th):
Stante, (M) (19.:07 .9·67th); Newberry (RI
t9 : 13.9~ · 70th); Beha (M) (19:!l . ll·71stl :
Walker (G) ( 19:20.93· 76th): Collin Roush (M)
( 19:26.47. 78th); Fowble (R) (19 :31.08·81 st).
Stout (R) (20:07.86·97&lt;h); Adam Jason Thomas
(M) (20:09.68·981h); Well (M) (20:17A4·102nd):
Smiddie (M) (20 :21.11·104thl : Rocc (R)
Miami Trace (17:04 .0S); Jarvn. Wellston (20:22.86-IOSth); M. Mollohan (R) (23·12 8 I ·
I35th).
(17:10.77); Reynolds, Wam:n Local (17:13.8).
Girts' nee (91 ruMtn)
Otloer toc.ts: Baker (G) (17J3:27-18th); I
1
a..,.• nce(l.l6 I'WIII&lt;n)
Tu111. ~t::ores: Hillsboro 49, Circlevi.lle 56.
Davison (0) (1? :38 .53·2151): J. Mollohan (G)
Tea• scores: Waverly 35. Gallipolis 84, (17 :42.1S·2lth): Sjms (0) (1743 .S·26th): G•llipolll51, Logan Elm 124. Waverly 162.
Hillsboro 102, Circleville 128, Sheridan ISS. Parsons (0) (IB:22 .43·43rd): Holcomb (R) Sheridan 174, Wmen Local lSI. M1t~m1 Trace
116&lt;Ciain 1$8, Whoelersbur1 169, Miami Trocc (18:47.65·S6th); Taylor (Rl (18 ,S2l8·l7th); 213, Portsmouth 219. Alexander 254, Jackson
illS, Warren Local 216, l.ogan Elm 314,

RIO GRANDE - Here are some of
the results from Saturday's Division II
Southeast District cross country races
held on the University of Rio Grande
campus.
All runners will be listed by name,
school (for locals, G-Gallipolis, M-Meigs
and R-Rivcr Valley), time and where
appropriate, place.
•

\

,(

!the~ieveland

Rio volleyball team rebounds from loss to top Malone~;:·

Northwest 319, Rlnr ValloJ 334, Mt!lp 346,
Westfall 358, fairland 421 . New Lexin110n 4-43,
South Point 449, Ironton 45 I. Alexander S20.
Top 10: Dixon, Waverly (16:29.95):
Swisher, Gallipolis (16:30.6); Smith. Sheridan
(16;36,9 .); Clark, Waverly (16:37.46); Henry,
Hillsboro (16:41.42): Martin. Hillsboro
(16:41.99); Deck, Waverly (16:S7.66); Paisley,

I

•

B

Lopresti column

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Kareem Wilson threw two
touchdown passes and Te II Jones tied a school record
with three interceptions Sa rday, leading Ohio to a 240 victory over Bowling Gre n.
. Briati l:{uston added a
er-best 56-yard field goal,
· as Ohio (6-1 overall) won i fourth straight game and
moved to 4-0 in the Mid-Am 'can Conference for the
first time since 1968.
The victory, coupled with Miami of Ohio's 4S-21
decision over Marshall, leaves the Bobcats alone in first
place in the MAC East Division.
.
'
Bowling Green (3-S overall, 3-2 MAC East) got
inside the Ohio 20 four times but could not score.
The shutout was the second of the season for the
Bobcats and their sixth in the past two years. Ohio has
given up a combined 14 points in its last four games.
Each of Jones' three interceptions came in the first
half. Two of them led to scores.
· ·
Wilson hit Riz Buckman with a 40-yard touchdown
pass with less than two minutes gone to give Ohio a 7-0
lead.
Buckman scored on a three-yard run midway
through the quaner to make it 14-0.
Jones' first interception set up the Bobcats' next
touchdown, a 39-yard pass from.Wilson to Ewane Nanji
with eight seconds to play in the quarter.
Jones made his third interception of the half with
three seconds left, setting up Huston's 56-yard field
goal to give Ohio a 24-0 halftime lead.

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Sports

2S9.
Top 10: Hitchon . Miami Trace (18 :29.6);
Nohus, Galllpollo (18:51.2); Shue. Circleville
(19 :29): Mills, Hillsboro (19,41.6); Jockson.
Hill sboro ( 19:S6 . I); Hus.., Golllpollo
(l9:19.1); Austin. Circleville tlO :IB .S); Fast,
Logon Elm (20:33.1 ); Butcher, Warren Loc:at
(20:41.3): Martin, Hillsboro(20,4-4.1),
'
Othr louts : Fisco (0) (21 :02 .2· 1Sth):
Smith (G) (21 :07.2-18th); Vernon (G) (21:1S,]20th): A. Davison (G) (21 :46.l·27th); Ta&lt;:kcll
(G) (2U9.8-30&lt;h) ; Ashley Thomas (M)
(2l:l3 ,7·36th); Godwin (R) (22 :)4.1·J7th);
Arrowood (Rl (29:32 .7-84th); Burdeuc (M)
(31:00.7-88th).
(

�:Page 82 0 ~· nhg ·---~ lf.u1

Sunday,October19,1997

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

River ·v alley records 28-20 victory over Warren Local

.

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
season finale. The White Falcons concerned. The Warriors' running first quarter, totaled 56 in the first
Meanwhile, River Valley kept must of the first half But the ho~t
Tribune Stiff Writer
entered that game with a 5-4 record. attack, held to 29 net
in the half.
Warren on its half of the field for
(See RAIDERS on B-3)
CHESHIRE - Putting both
Before making their place in
hands on the football ... our defense history, today's Raiders had tough
keeps getting better... focus.
times to overcome.
· Those were some of the words
In the first quaner, the Warriors
River Valley head coach Merrill (4-4 &amp;: 1·4) cashed in on the first of
Triplett described how his Raiders four River Valley fumbles. Setting
took care of business in Friday up shop at the Raiders' 21-yard line,
night's Southeastern Ohio Athletic Warren needed seven plays and just
League football encounter against 2:44 to get fullback Todd Castin into
Warren Local at River Valley High the end zone from two yards out.
School, where the Raiders came Quarterback Jason Taylor's two·
from behind to record a historic 28- point conversion pass fell
20 victory.
incomplete .That forced Warren to
The contest was memorable for settle for a 6-0 lead.
the Raiders (3-4 overall &amp; 3-2 in the
''I'm proud of our defensive front
SEOAL) for the following reasons:
for getting better," said the elder
• It was the first time since 1994 Triplett of a front five (nusc guard
that the Raiders had won consecutive Nate Polcyn, tackles Gemgc Games
aames. That was the year River and Zach Stanley and ends Tim
Valley (Abe Haislop, David Kelley Wellington and Gahe Saunders) that
&amp;: co.) defeated Meigs and Athens kept the heat on Taylor li•r much of
(the latter was the Raiders' initial the contest.
SEOAL game) on Sept. 16 and 23.
Such llooding of Taylor's )'.1ssing
respectively.
view held the junior sigm~l-cullcr '"
• It was the first time River · fiv~ completions in nine altempts li•r
Valley defeated a learn thai en1ered 33 yards in the first half. He didn't
ihe game wi lh a winning record get 21 11f th11S.: until alkr the R;tiders
since Nov. 6, 1992. when the tooka 14-6.leadJccpinl&lt;&gt;lhescc·ond
inaugural team (Rob Canady. quarter.
Charles Peck, Aaron McCarty &amp;
Such contincment wasn't snlilary.
company) beat Wahama 14-0 in the at leas! as far as Tayl&lt;&gt;r

Area gridiron standings
w

Iwn

Jackson .................. 5
Point Pleasant .......4
Gallipolis ................J
River Valley ..........3
Logan ..................... 3
Warren Local ......... I
Athens .................... I
Marietta ....... ./'.........0

SEOAL

u

I..

lA

0 219
I 169
1 101

1 118
2 129
4 93
4 59
5 46

123
163
181
136

L

I

7
6
3
3
3
4
I
I

18

112
89
113

Owrull

w

2
5

.5
4
7
7

et:

fA

124
130
IM
193
101
89

5:!
160
156
166
217
212
322
223

l'f

fA

2NK
253

.Selected non-league teams

Iwn

.

.w.

.

I..

Sootbem...........................................................4
lronton ............................................. .................. 4

0
2
2
4
4
4

266
251
153
206
124
156

70
88
69
ISS
184
199

S011th GaUia,,,,~··•••••••••••••••••••Hooooooooooooo••••••••••••O

'

58

308

Lucasville Valley ...................... ....... .. ............... 8
Coal Grove ........................... .. ........................... 6
Wahama ...........................................................s
Meigs ............................................"''''''''''''"'''''4

8

Eastern .............................................................0

37

218

Ill!: lbm 2 auJU!a

Friday's scores

Point Pleasant 27, Gallipolis
13
River Valley 28, Warren
Local20
Athens 32, Marietta 10
Jackson 40, Logan 12
Meigs 56, Alexander 14
Trimble 46, Eastern 7
Miller 32, Southern 6
Burch (W.Va.) 58, South
Gallia 6
Buffalo-Putnam 28, Wahama
0
Rock Hill21, Coal Grove 16
Ironton 10, Belfry (Ky.) 9
Lucasville Valley 35, Oaf •
Hill 12

Friday:
Jackson
at
Gallipolis; Marietta at Point
Pleasant; River Valley at
Logan; Warren Local at Athens;
Ironton at
Portsmouth;
Lucasville Valley at Portsmouth
Notre Dame; Vinton County at
Meigs; Eastern at Miller; South
Gallia at Hannan; Waterford at
Southern; Win County at
Wahama.

""'*on

14" D - YMity Pacltqe
lncludest (Not Shown)

9"-

•l.COV2418A Vanity witt\ Drawers
• 1·25"' 1
o n - CUiuood Mar!jo T~
•1·24' II 30" Tri-V'Iew Me(lcine Cabinel

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way to hat he the dark
pilrh ot your hou'ol" in

SKYLIGHT.'"

On first down Mens lost four period.
Roush scored his second
yards to the Spartan three,- two
straight Roston passes fell touchdown of th·. night with 10:53
incomplete. On fourth down Rolston left in the first half when he went
went back into his end zone in punt over from a yard out. Davenport hit
formation , but the snap sailed over Chad Hanson for the extra points
his head and out of the end zone for giying Meigs a 23-0 advantage.
·a safety giving Meigs an 8-0 lead
Alexander aided by a 15 -yard
with 3:23 left.
roughmg penalty on Meigs put
Rolston's free kick was bobbled · together a Stx-play, 65-yard drive for
by Justin ~oush, the sophomore their first score. Metts went the final
finally found the handle and made a nine yards, Rolston's pass to Eric
great return taking it the distance 75 Gabriel for the extra points with 8:48
yards for the score. Roush started on left in the half made it a 23- 8
the far sideline, cut across the field contest.
breaking 1ackles along the way to the
Meigs then exploded for four
Marauder sideline. Roush then side touchdowns in the final 8:41 of the
stepped a Spartan tackler cut to the
center· of the field and left the

dc:~i~o:n

fl~icfer~ MVii1 ••• ~&lt;C~o~n•i~nu~ed~f~ro~m~B~-2l~---------------------battalion saw its first venture into the
Warriors' red-zone stall on downs.
The Raiders' third offensive series
:was killed by senior halfback
Jererlliah Triplett's fumble and
Warren defensive back Zach
Waggoner's quick recovery at the
Warriors' 29.
• Things changed for the Raiders
after safety Jeremy Webb
intercepted one of Taylor's passes
and returned it 19 yards to Warren's
-47. Quarterback J.B. Boso and
. fullback Justin Terry had nine-yard
-runs 'to open .the drive, River
: Valley's first of the second quarter.
: Two plays later, Jeremiah Triplett
nearly broke into the clear for n
touchdown on a second-down-andsix situation from Warren's 25.
Waggoner's dragdown tackle merely
held Jeremiah Triplett to a 20-yurd
run and pu! off the inevitable - a
five-yard touchdown run otT right
guard by Terry. The two-poinl
conversion run attempt by Boso was
short of the end zone, and the game
was tied at 6-6.
After Warren failed to move the
ball orr its own 25 on its next series.
River Valley used six minutes and
13 plays to drive 59 yards to the end
zone. Boso's one-yard t&lt;,Juchdown
run
preceded
senior
halfback/cornerback
Jimmy
Gilmore's two-point conversion run
that gave the Raiders a 14-6lead.
As the game went on, one thing
became apparent to the Raiders
about Warren's defensive intentions.
"Tiley (the Warriors) didn't care
about making the tackle'. so we
started putting both hands on the
football," said Merrill Triplett,
• whose troops didn't have a fumble
. after halftime.
In the third quarter. River Valley
· ballooned its· lead to 22-6 when
· Jeremiah Triplett's one-yard
touchdown run capped a six-play,
69-yard drive thai consumed 2:29.
One-, two- and three-minute
drives that rarely ventured beyond
· midrield were the norm for both
. clubs in the second half.
There were only four deviations
from !hat norm. The other three were
. . when Warren, starting from i1s own

49 in the last three minutes of ac1
lhree, saw Taylor's 49-yt\rd pass to
split end Dan Leslie- the 6-IC!Ol·l.
165-pound junior would have scored
had Gilmore not caught up to Leslie

RuiUcrs

sn~:kcd

Taylur

twi~:c

=

.

I~

more than for the NBA final - tinished with 28 points and got wild
cheers even for the unspectacular.
The Bulls were to take on European champion Olympiakos. 89·86
winners over Argentina's Atenas de
Cordoba in the other semifinal.
Olympiakos drew the spot on a fourpoint play by LithuanianArturas Karnishovas with 9.6 seconds remaining.

River Valley Raiders
Rushing- Gilmore 20-107, I
TD &amp; 2 con.; Triplett 15· 73 &amp; I TD;
Boso 5-71 &amp; I TO; Terry 11-29 &amp; I
TO; Stout 1-3
Passing- Boso 2-4. 31 yds. &amp; I
int.
Receiving - Bradbury 1-26;
Gilmore 1-5
Fumble reconries - Stanley !-

spacc · aJ.(c matcrialo.; thai c..:apturc
and channel ma)(tmum li~o:ht directly where needed .
Grt.'&lt;H tor dn.:ary n.mnHo , hallway'
and dvs4..' 1"' and more
Compar.c "&gt;olo11uhc with any

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'4-:C

the..·

ni~-:hl and day .

-cuo.no-

$285.00 +lox

and homecoming game at Bob Roberts Field.
The Marauders won 56-14 to get back int_o .500
country. (Times-~entinel photo by Dave Harris) .

r

I·

I
\

TRIPLETT SCORES - River Valley halfback
Jeremiah Triplett scores his touchdown from one
yard out in the third quarter of Friday night's
SEOAL game against Warren Local. Triplett's

score, whi'c h put the Raiders ahead 28-14 at the
time, helped push his team to its first win over
the Warriors in lour years. (Photo by Ron Caudill
' of River Valley Photography)

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• Cruise Control

'I'PC Fresh Start Fhlatlt'lllll

.

.

~ltlll't':Wdl'a~,..afrr'f' ·~nial 01~11111111.f ~If lll'lflk.,u n'f'dll-1111 out~ a rr"' ll~inl c:u'S. 'll ~lll'ltk•n':-; wm; t'J' ('Sh ~U~rl tl11:111!11tttf is I.~UI UIH'\'r f)
r;r.lrlrl ur 'iJnr••lllt'~lt ~ Ill." tr H::iC'tl.and thm•'s tiMn· au lnlll.ltt•ll•'lrr h ~lT~I SWt't ~1n:u~1tw, G~II-IU}IW·O.m Lt!d;t;\Und :R rur tKJt ·
Ttl(; t'rrsll Siurt nn:Jil111~ ~.ll'ttllt:ltr \lsi I Towl'c'tlrn O~tmlr~ hdl).lrL !ti~\ r ~uu a fn·sh ~WI1 un IlK' n.OO tua brlUT tt•num~~

CHARLES A. HALE

en

Country

328~

SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH 45631
446·4338

~lollda) • t'dda): Ml aat- !I p1n • t\&lt;Uunla):

!I am· 8 pm

Takel· 1111'l
( e~rl 132)~

Sttnftt): f11m • Kpm
• Ooubtl ~

"'*·

·a·.. doop-.

• - - ... podl, llctory pre-linlo/lod.

•

1991 CHEVY K1500 PICKUP 4X4 air, ps, pb, cruise, stereo, tilt.. ........................ $9,769
1995 CHEV K1500 PICKUP V6, 5 speed, 4X4 ............................................ ......... $14,900
1996 CHEVY S-10 BLAZER auto., V6, stereo,air,loaded ........ .. .... ......... :... ....... $18,650
1995 TOYOTA TACOMA 4X4 5 speed, ps, pb .......................... .................... $13,850
1994 GMC SIERRA PICKUP VB, auto .. air, tilt, cruise ...........................
... .. ... .. .... $13,820
.
.
1995 CHEVY C1500 PICKUP Ext. Cab, VB, tilt, cruise ........................................ $15,850
1996 CHEVY S-1 0 PICKUP ps, pb, stereo, auto .................................................$9,950
1996 CHEVY TAHOE VB, auto., all power, 4X4. 22.000 miles........ ............... $26,900
1990 GMC SAFARI VAN V6, auto., stereo, tilt. cruise ... ............................ .. .. .......... $7,995
1992 CHEVY ASTRO VAN Conversion, V6, loaded .. ... ...................... ........ ........$9,700
1994 MAZDA 84000 PICKUP 4X4, V-6, stereo, more ........ ................................ $11,500
1994 CHEVY 5·10 EXT. CAB auto., ps, pb, stereo ........................................... $10,975
1997 PONTIAC TRANSPORT V6, ps, pb, air, tilt, cruise .................. ................... $19,950
1995 FORD RANGER PICKUP stereo, 5 speed, more..........................................$7,595
Tax &amp; Tille Fees Not Included.

Tom Peden

General Contractor

II lll I I\ II . I l\1111 :Lt.! tllll · \1:2:2:: II · 1:2:2 (]/'ill

il
I

Interceptions caught- Webb
1-19; Donne! 1-7

T~

MedicineCalllllOl
• Oplional Light Kh
(LS24A)'3tl"

SHACKLING DEFENSE- Meigs defender Bil·
ly Soulsby (42) wraps up an unidentified Alexan·
der ballcarrier during Friday n~ght's Ohio Division

0

Wllh2Dooll

• 1· 24" r: 30" Tri-View

and

r;.1uscd mmc than a t'cw hurried
ihrows beyond the ones taken by
Wchh and Donnct.
This week's agend!l: River
at the Raiders' two - set Up Valley will head 10 1he Hocking hills
Caslin's one-yard touchdown run in to face the Logan Chieftains Friday .
the period's last minule. Taylor's Ouarter llllm
20
two-point conversion pass to Don Warren Local ........6 0 8 6
Morgan cut the Raiders' lead to a River Valley .........0 14 8 6 = 28
22-14 margin.
Half of the fourth quarter Scoring summary
remained when Gilmore's four-yard
touchdown run put the Gallians
Warren Local- Castin 2-yd.
ahead 28-14. The last six minutes run (pass failed), 8:27 I st qtr.
gave Warren three last chances 1o tie
River Valley - Terry 5-yd. run
th~ game.
(run failed), 8: 13 2nd q1r.
The Warriors used the first one to
River Valley - Boso 1-yd. run
showcase their passing skills. With (Gilmore run) :44 2nd qtr.
5:58 left, Taylor and Morgan
River Valley -Triplett 1-yd.
connected on a 70-yard pass play run (Gilmore run), 8:04 3rd qtr.
halted not by Gilmore or Triplett,
Warren Local- Caslin 1-yd.
considered by some to be· the run (Morgan pass from Taylor), :32
Raiders Oeetest defenders, but by 3rd qtr.
Saunders. one of the Raiders'
River Valley - Gilmore 4-yd .
strongest defenders and a gent who run (pass failed), 6:05 4th qtr.
ap_proximated Morgan in physique
Warren Local - Castin 13-yd.
(both six-foot seniors weigh between pass from Taylor (pass failed), 4:34
205 and 215 pounds).
4th qtr.
From the Raiders' six. Warren
was backed up to Rfver Valley's 13
by a sack by linebacker Jeremiah Team statistics
Donne! and a procedure penalty.
.w.L BY
From there, Taylor connected with Department
Fim
downs
.................
.....
8
13
Cas tin on a 13-yard touchdown pass
314
Total
yards
...................
214
play. Taylor's two-point conversion
pass fell incomplete, and Warren had Rushing au.-yds ....... 32-60 52-283
31
to settle for cutting River Valley 's Passing yds ............. .... . 154
2-4
Comp.-au
.................
11-24
lead to 28-20.
I
Taylor threw six more passes, of Interceptions thrown ...... .2
4-2
2-1
Fumbles-lost
................
which five fell incomplete. The other
8-76
Penalties-yds .......... ....8-75
was intercepted by Donne! (2:02).
2-49
5-166
Punts-yds
..................
River Valley never crossed
midfield in its last two possessions.
The Warriors, who statted their Ia.I $tatistic"lleaders
series at the Raiders' 46, moved
forward I 0 yards from their own 49
Warren Local Warriors
(an illegal substitution penalty put
Rushing - Caslin 12-44 &amp; 2
them· there) only because of a River TDs; Mayle 9-17 ,
Valley defensive holding penalty.
Passing- Taylor 11-24, 154
Bur Wellington sacked Taylor on a yds, I TO, I con. &amp; 2 int.
third-and-five situation to end the
Receiving - Leslie 4'- 63;
game.
Morgan 3-87, I con.; Mayle 2-(-14);
Each .team tallied five for-loss Caslin 1-13 &amp; I TO; Thompson 1-5
tackles. With anywhere from two to
Fumble recoveries - Waggoner
four linemen or linebackers in his 2:o
face for much of the game, the
Interceptions caught - Castin

• 1-25" r: 1ff 'M'Iile on

katurc"i ~upcr · r&lt;.: tlc:ct1VC ,

Meigs held a 36-K lead w1th 6:33
left.
Once again Metts fumbled on the
second pla y and St eve Thornton
picked up the loose ball and return~!l
it eight yards 10 the Sparlan 22. SIX
plays later Williams wem the final
five yard s for the score. The kick for
the extra points was blocked, but
Meigs held a 42-8 lead with 2:38
left.
.
A short Alexander punl gave
Meigs the ball with 56 seconds le(t
in the half at its own 32- yard line .
On fir st down Williams gained 16.
Bentley then picked up 26 to lhe
(See MARAUDERS on B-4l

added the extra 110ints to give Meigs
a 15-0 lead with 3:05 lefl in the

•1-cV82418A·V'anhy

radiant , natural lilo\ht.

half to make it a blow out. Matt
Williams scored three of the
touchdowns. Justin Roush returned
the ensuing kick 31 yards to the
Marauder 49 . Davenport then
hooked up with Bentley who broke
several tackles en route to a 51-yard
scoring play. Fowler's kick made it a
29-8 Meigs lead with 8:4lleft.
On the second play after the score
Metts fumbled and Bentley
recovered for Meigs at the Spartan
27. Bentley gained nine on first
down, Roush plowed for 15 more
before Matt Williams went the final
four yards for the score. F~wlcr once
again added the extra points and

Spartans reaching for air. Fowler

Incl......

It\ in~l"n1ou.., , patented

• ltt5lt1lls r11sify ;,

together a drive, but John Davidson
picked off a Lance Rolston pass and
returned it nine yards to the Meigs
35-yard line.
The Marauders quickly put
together an eight play, 65-yaod drive
for their first score. Matt Williams
went the final 20 yards with 4:56 left
in the period. The Marauders' extra
jXlint was no good because of a bad
snap.
Jeff Fowler's kickofl carried into
the end zone for a touchback. On the
Spartans Silcond play Dan Mctls
coughed up the football and Justin
Roush recovered for Meigs at the
Spartan 15. On first down Brad
Davenport hit Jeremidh Bentley for a
six-yard gai.n, hut Bentley fumbled
and Joe Tulodzicski recovered for
Alexander at their own seven.

14"1WoDoor
VllnhrPacltqe

.. kylight is the

MIRACLE

1S

By DAVE HARRIS
f·S Corre.pondent
POMEROY - Meigs jumped out
to a 49-8 halftime lead and costed to
a 56-14 win over Alexander in TVC
Ohio Division football action Friday
night at Bob Roberts Field.
The Marauders broke a four gllllle
losing streak with the win and evens
its record to 4-4 on the season and J.
2 in the Ohio Divisioh . Alexander
.drops to 2-6 and 0-3 overall.
The Marauders jumped out to a
I S-0 lead after one period, and
exploded for 34 second period points
to open up the big 41 point halftime
lead. Both teams played the second
and third teams the entire second
half.
Alexander won the to!l. ..~~d looked like they were ~g

A Solatu'hc

THE

d 111l-rt.:nc.:c

Meigs hammers Alexander 56-14 in homecoming bout

Basketball
PARIS (AP) - The Chicago
Bulls advanced to the finals of the
McDonald's Championship after an
89-82 victory over stubborn French
champions Paris-St. Gcnnain and
became the first NBA team in the 10; year history of the tournament to
• score under 100 points.
·
Michael Jordan, whose presence
has drawn 1,000 reporters to Paris-

• I.CVBI818A Vanily ..;th 2 Doo!o
' • t·1ff r: tT
'M'1111t c.uuec1 M1rt11t Top
• Hll"' 16' Singlo Door Medicine~
• Optt_onal Ugllt Kh jlSt8A) 134ft

Combination

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

. -------------Sports briefs----------;._- \

ta• 'IWo Door Vanltr .,.cltqe
lncludea:

SOLATUBE.

Sunday,~r19,1997

AI Pr..owntMI
IIIII TruckS Sold with A
M()n.·Frl.
Lhlled Po air Train w.rr.nty Except Where
9-8
Saturday FICIOry W.111tty Applies A1k Us About Our Wide Range
ol EXIIIIdld Service Plll1l.

9-4
Sunday 1·5

Tlx' I T111t

,_not lncludld. AIINbltta to diller.

II!!D AR!SII START?
lsbplcy • Slow CMt
•lit &lt;MI. We IIJ ..

.W.ttllelp!
Askldr.lnt

�l

~Page

Sunday,O~r19,1997

Sunday, Octo~r 1_
9, 1997

Pomer9y • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

84 ........... ·--·Jiadbul

Dean Smith: The
best in sports

Strong second half rush gives PPHS 27-13 win over GAHS
POINT PLEASANT - Gallipolis then the Big Blacks' size and experi- I 3 Southeastern Ohio League victobattled host Point Pleasant on even ence proved to be a big difference as ry over the visiting Blue Devils.
PPHS takes over second
terns for two periods Friday night, the West Virginians rallied for a 27-

The triumph left Coach Steve
Safford's lads all alone in second
place behind league-leading Jackson

'
. .

TURNING THE CORNER - Meigs tailback Matt Williams turns the
_corner on an Alexander defender during Friday night's homecom·
; : lng game in Pomeroy. The Marauders collected their fourth win of
:: · the year by posting a 56-14 victory. (Times-Sentinel photo by Dave
:: · Harris)

..

--------~-----­

"

':".:"Marauders win ...
. ,,

(Continued from B-3)

===:.;;,~

ROWNS PACES PPHS WIN • Point Plellt1811t quarterback Brent
rollins (8) plckl up a gain for Point Pleasant during Friday night's
27·13 homecoming victory over the Blue Devils at Sanders Memorill I Field. In pursuit are Gallipolis' Seth Davis (46) and Alex Saun·
ders (21 ). Rollins scored two touchdowns, and picked up 41 yards
In 13 trips for the wlnnera. He also blocked a GAHS field goal
attempt In the second period that sparked the West VIrginians.
(OVP photo by Jan Haddox).
·

______________..:.___

Meigs: Justin Roush 75 -yard
return of free kick, Fowler kick ,
3:05, Ist
Meigs: Justin Roush-one-yard
run, Davenport pass to Hanson,
10:53, 2nd
Alexander: Metts-nine-yard run ,
Rolston pass to Gabriel, 8:48. 2nd
Meigs: Davenport 51 -yard p~s s to
Bentley, kick no good, 8:41, 2nd
Meigs: William s- four-yard run ,
Fowler kick, 6:33, 2nd
Meigs : Williams-five -yard run,
kick blocked, 2:38, 2nd
Meigs: William s- 42-yard run,
Fowler kick, : 12 seconds 2nd
Meigs: Hill-one-yard run, Fowler
kick, I I :05 4th
.
win ."
Alexander: Uribe-eight-yard run ,
Meigs will host Vinton County
ne~t ·Week, while Ale~ander will run no good, 8:40 4th
host Wellston.
Quarter ll!tm
T~am statistics
Alexander ............0 · 8 0 6 = 14
Meigs ...... ..... ...... IS 34 0 7 = 56 Depadment
A1n ~
First downs .................. .'.. .7
18
Scoring summary
Rushing att.-yds . .... 47-188 52-396

Davl!nport was two of four in the
air for 57 yards. Both passes went to
Bentley. Dav idson and Ellis had
inlcn:cptions for Meigs.
Gabriel led Ale.ander with 53
yards in six carries, Metts added 51
in 18 carries. Rolston was 0 for 5
passing with an interception, Gabriel
threw an interception in his only
attempt.
"This was a good win for us, "
Marauder coach Mike Chancey said
after the game. "This was a good
example of what kind of kids we
have , they didn 't give up after
dropping four in a row . I'm . very
proud of ~hem , it was a good team

.. :. Ak ~ andcr ~" · yard line . Williams
.:: ' !hen hrolo..c free ami went -12 ymds
... , 1\lr t hi! ~ t..· ,) n:. R()lston dove for
:: William s at the gmtl line and
:· :.1-owcked the hall loose . Williams
:~rCI."l'I\' Cn: d in the end zone . Afll.!r
,. ~Fowler ' s &amp;:xtra poinl kick , Me igs
""\\'Cot into the locker room with a 49:: : S ud\"antac:c:.
: ' Rolston was hurt on the play and
: didn't return.
.. · The Spartans drove to the
.. . Marauder 10 in the third period. but
·· ::Oabriel's pass was tipped by Angelo
:•.::Rodrigue z and picked off by C.D.
: ::Ellis at the one-foot line. Meigs then
::· put together 14 play. 99-yard drive
• ·with John Hill goong the final yard
: for the score. Fowler added the kick
: to close out the Marauder scoring
.;; ~with II :05 left in the game.
;.. :: Alexander closed out the scoring
•·with 8:40 left in the game when
. ::Dusty Uribe went eight yards for the
:: · score. The extra points were no good
.:: and Meigs had posted the 56-14 win.
"
Williams led Meigs with 145
·:: yards in 12 carries. Roush added 73
.
.
::. in 10 carries. B.J. Kennedy , the 5- , Me_ogs: Juslon Rous~-20-yard run,
:- : foot-3, 115-pound spark plug. picked extra j)Oints no good-4.56, 1st
.. "'up 56 ards in three tries. Hill added
Meogs: Safety-bad snap out of the
in ly3 carries.
end zone on Ale&lt;ander punt attempt,
"
3:23, 1st

Passing yards .... ............... O
Total yards .......... .. ....... 188
Comp.-au ..................... 0-6
Interceptions thrown .... .. .2
Punts-yds .................. ..2-35
Fumbles ........................ 2-1
Penalties-yds ........... ... 5-43

57
453
2-4
0
3-88
4-4
1-15

Individual statistics
Rushing
MeigS&lt; Williams 12- 145 , Justin
Roush 10-73, Kennedy 3-56, Hill
13-50, Bentley 2-35. Thomas 5-22,
Colwell 1-9, Gilmore 4-4, Workman
1-3, Abbott I (-3)
Alexander: Gabriel 6-53 , Metts
18-51, Shaulis 9-35. Rolston 5-26,
Uribe 6-20, Davis 3-3,
Passing
Meigs: Davenport 2-4, 57 yards
Alexander: Rolston 0-5 &amp; I int.;
Gabriel 0- 1 &amp; I int.
Receiving
Meigs: Bentley 2-57
Alexander: NONE

•

with a 4-1conference mark. Overall,
PPHS improved to 6-2.
Coach Brent Saunders Blue Devils dropped into a three-way tie for
third place with Logan and River Valley with a 3•2 conference record.
Overall, the Blue Devils are 3-5.
Gallipolis rushed and passed for
208 yards in 26 plays from scrimmage during the f~rst two quarters of
play, and held the highly-favored Big
Blacl\s to a 13-13 halftime tie. GAHS
racked up eight first downs in the first
half.
Meanwhile, the GAHS defense
limited PPHS to 110 total yards in 27
plays, and the Big Blacks managed
just six first downs during the first 24
minute s.
It was a different story during the
fin al 24 minutes of play.
Rickard sparks PPHS
Sparked by the fine blocking the
huge PPH~ line and running of
senior fullb ck Jere.my Rickard.Point
Pleasant co rolled the ball and clock,
running 32 lays to the Blue Devils

19. The Big Blacks outscored GAHS
13-0, and totaled 164 yards rushing.
PPHS limited the Blue Devils to two
first downs and only 11 net yards
rushing and passing. in the second
half
GAHS defenders did a good job of
containing PPHS ace Dusty Higginbotham in the first half (9-64l but that
old Blue Devil nemesis, Brent
Rollins did most of the damage by
scoring once on a one-yard sneak and
again when he blocked a Jeremy Payton field goal attempt in the second
period. scooped up tl)e loose football
and galloped 75 yards to paydirt.
Once Rickard started lugging the
pigskin in the second half, that gave
the Big Blacks a three-pronged attack
and opened the gates for Hininbotham. who finished the night with
a ·game- leading 158 yards on 19 carries and two touchdowns.
Gallipolis stunned the Big Blacks
homecoming ,crowd by scoring first
during its second series of downs.
(See BIG BLACKS on B·S)

Statistics
pepartmant
g
ff
First downs ...... . 10
15
Yards rushing .... . 216 287
Lost rushing ....... 29 . 13
Net rushing ...... 187 274
Pass attempts . . . . . 15
5
Completions .. .... . . 3
o
Intercepted by . . . . . . 1
5
Yards passing .... . 34
0
Total yards ....... 221
274
Plays . ....... ... . 43
58
Return yards .... 9-67-0 11 -211-1
Fumbles .. .. ...... 1
3'
Lost fumbles . . . .... 0
0
Penalties .. .... .. 4-35 5-35
Punts . ........ 4-175 5-16.7
Individual rushing GAHS - Bodimer, 7-87·1 ;
Davis, 6-17-0; Mitchell, 7-78-1;
Payton, 7-(-13)-0; Painter, 1-180.0 . Totals 28-187·2.
PPHS - Higginbotham, 19158-2; Rickard , 16-79-0; Rollins .
13-41-1 ; Buskirk, 4 -(-5)-0;
Gilley, 1-0-0.Totals 53-274·3.
· Receiving •
GAHS - Craig, 2-23-0; Davis.
1-11 -0 . Totals 3·34.().
PPHS - None. Totals o-o-o.

Passing·
GAHS- Payton, 3-14-4-34-0
Craig , 0-1 -1-0-0. Totals 3·15·
5·34-0.
PPHS - Rollins 0-5-1-0-0.
Totals 0.5·1-o-O.
· Recovered fumbles GAHS - 0. Totals • 0
PPHS - None. Totals • 0.
Pass lntarceptlons •
GAHS- Craig, 1-15-0. Totals
1·15-0 .
PPHS - Buskirk, 2-19-0;
Hall, 3-55-0. Totals 5-74.0.
Punts • GAHS - Payton, 4175; (43.7)
PPHS • Hanning, 5-167
•
(33.3).
Scoring·
GAHS - Bodimer, 7 4-yard
run, 7 :57 first, Kick failed;
Mitchell, 11 -yard run, 0:29 second, Payton, kick.
PPHS - Rollins, 1-yard run,
0:32 first, Young, kick; Rollins,
75-yard return of blocked field
goal,- 7:43 second. kick blocked;
Higginbotham. 12-yard run, 4:00
third, Young, kick; Higginboth ·
am, 59-yard run, 10:34 fourth,
Young, kick.
Next games: Oct. 24 - Jackson at Gallipolis, Marietta at
Point Pleasant.

.·.::50

284 UPPER RIVER ROAD
GALUPOUS, OHIO 45631
446-9971

..,. '

..• .
~

~

'

"
•
"
..

Pre·Winter
S
ON
TRUCKS, 414'5 AND
SPORT UTILITIES
Huge Savings on these vehicles PLUS an
Extra Bonus for every buyer. $50.00 worth of
Food Coupons at the Golden Corral. If you
buy somewhere else then you will lose these
great savings •
W
SALE
.

$

1989 DODGE RAM 50 ........... $5495 3995
5 speed, 4 cyl., 4X4.
.. ,
•

19871SUZU EXT. CAB ........... $4995 s3995

: . 71,000 miles, 4X4, 5 speed, 4 cyl.

:: 1986 GMC SIERU..................$4995 '3995
5 speed, V-8, 4X4.

1992 FORD EXPLORER ...... s1o,soo s9995
"

SPORT, Loaded, 4X4.
'

$

~

1992 JEEP CHEROKEE ........... $6995 5495
5 speed, air, 6 cyl.

1994 GEO-TUCKER ...............$8995 •7995

1997 JEEP WRANGLER: Air, Stereo ..................... ... .......... .......................................... .... ....... .......... $14,988.00
1997 NISSAN SENTRA: GLE Pkg, loaded, Only 5500 Miles ..................................... ....... ..... .... ... ..... $13,988.00
1997 FORD CONVERSION VAN: Loaded, Only 4900 Miles ......... .................... ...... .. ....................... $18,988.00
1996 F150 SUPERCAB 4x4; Auto, XLT Pkg, Super Clean .. .. .... ..................... ..... ............ :................ $19,988.00
1996 EXPLOR~R AWD: VB, XLT Pkg, Leather, Moonroof.. .............................................. ....... .......... $23,988.00
1996 EXCORT LX: Sport Pkg, 2 Dr, Air, Spoiler, Low Miles ........................ .. .. ...... .......... ........... .......... $9,988.00
1996 FORD F150: XLT Pkg, Power Equipped, One 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 T9YOTA SUPERCAB 4x4: V6, Power Equipped, Alum. Wheels ............................... ............. $18,488.00
1995 EXPLORER SPORT: Power Equipped, Air, One Owner ........................... ...................... ... .. ... .. $17,988.00
1995 EAGLE TALON AWD: Turbo, Leather, Moonrool, CD, Loaded ........................ ........................ $13,988.00
1995 GRAND PRIX: 2 Dr, All Power Equipped, Only 22,000 Miles .............................................. ...... $13,988.00
1995 GRAND MARQUIS: GS Pkg, One Owner, Power .......... ......................................... ....... ............ $13,988.00
1994 OLDS CIERA: V6, All Power Equipment.. ......................................................................... ........... $8,988.00
• 1994 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE: Auto, Air, Power Equip ........................................... .. ..... :.. ..................$7,988.00
1994 AEROSTAR WAGON: Air, lilt, Cruise, Only 28,000 Miles ......... ............. .............................. .... $11,988.00
1994 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE: VB, Leather, Moonrool, Only 39K 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 GMC JIMMY: 2 Dr, Auto, Air, Alum. Wheels, Loaded With Equip ................. :................ ... .. ........$14,988.00
1994 FORD F150: 4x4, Long Bed Work Truck ..................................................................... ............... $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 EXPLORER: 4 Dr, Air, One Owner ................ ......... .... .......................................................... .. .... $10,988.00
1993 MERCURY TRACER WAGON: Auto, Air .............................. ............................. .. ...................... $3,988.00
1993 NISSAN 4x4: Short Bed, Bedliner, Stereo ............ ....................................................... .................$8,988.00
1993 FORD CONVERSION VAN: Full Power Equipped, One Owner .. ........ .. ... ............................... $11,988.00
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1992 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL: Leather, Loaded With Options ..... ........................................................ $7,988.00
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1991 PONTIAC LEMANS: Sunroof, Stereo, Only 69,000 Miles .......................................................... $2,988.00

.

'

I

Josh Bodimer took a handoff from
,. ·Payton, cut to his right, and raced 74
~ yards tQ give th~ Blue Devils a 6-0
,.
,. lead with 7:57 left in the quarter. Pay,. ton's kick from placement was,par;: tially blocked.
;:
Gamble pay• off
A gamble on fourth down set up
:. Point Pleasant's first score late in the
;: ftrsl period. PPHS picked up a first
•· down at mid-field on a fake punt for,.,. mation when Rollins took the snap
,. and gained two yards to the. GAHS
•. 47 .
Point Pleasant drove 56 yards in
12 plays, aided by a 20-yard penalty against GAHS. Rollins sneaked
over from the one with 32 seconds
, left. Mall Young kicked the point
, after to give PPHS a 7-6 advantage.
GAHS marched to Point Pleasant 's nine yard line in nine plays, but
the drive bogged down when Mike
Roach caught Payton behind for a
two-yard loss on a second down play.
A Blue Devil pass fell incomplete on
.. third down.
:: . Payton, with Heath Rothgeb hold.. ing, lined up for a 28-yard field goal
" attempt with 7:56 left in the half.
. Rollins broke through the Jefi side of
· the GAHS line, blocked the kick,
: picked it up on about the 25. and
: raced into the endzone to make it 13°
: 6 with 7:43 left in the half. Rothgeb.
· who played an outstanding defensi.ve
· game for the Gallians, almost caught
: Rollins at the six with a shoestring
tackle attempt, but Rollins eluded his
gallant effort. Seth Davis blocked
· Young's kick from placement. It was
. Rollins fifth straight TD against the
' Blue Devils over a two-year period.
GAHS ties score
After four possession changes,
GAHS took over on its own 20 with
3:36 left in the half. The Blue Devils put together perhaps their best sus. ·' ··· · . -·

tained drive to the 1997 campaign,
moving 80 yards in seven plays, to
knot the count at 13-all. Jeff Mitchell
scored from II yards out with 29 seconds left in thehalfto make it 13-12.
Payton's kick split the upri ghts to
knot the count. Big gainer in the dri.ye_ was a 45-yard scamper by
Mitchell.
Jimmy Hall's pass interception set
up the Big Blacks go-ahead score in
the third period. He returned it from
the PPHS 40 to the Blue Devil 44. It
took Point Pleasant eight plays to
score with Higginbotham scooting in
from 12 yards out on an option play '
at the 4:00 mark. Young 's kick made
it20-13.
Point Pleasant marched 86 yards
in seven plays for the .game's final
score. Higginbotham rambled the
final 59 with 10:34 remainin g and
Young split the uprights to make it
27-13.
Buskirk, Hall shine
Jamie Buskirk had two pass interceptions, and Jimmy Hall three to
pace Big Black defende rs. Point 's
pass defen se had been s~ spect most
of the season, but Friday night, it was
almost perfect. Payton finished the
game with just three completions in
14 attempts (four intercepted) . It
was his lowest output of the campaign. He was sacked four times.
Coach Safford felt the game's
turning point came when Rollins
blocked Payton's field goal attempt in
lthe second period. "That blocked
field goal and touchdown really
turned things around for us." Safford
said. "Do the math. that was a nine
point turnaround and it really gave us
a huge lift."
PPHS specialty teams picked up
221 yards on II returns. the most
Gallipolis has permitted all season .
The Gallians managed only 67 yards
on nine returns.

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1·77
EXIT 132
RIPLEY, WV
'

DELBARTON, W.Va. - Burch
got two touchdowns each from quarterback Brian Diamond and running
backs Nick Elia and Todd Jenkins
sc ored two touchdowns each in
Friday ni ght ' s footbaJJ contest with
the visiting South Oallia Rebels,
who lost 58-6.
Nick Elia had two first -half
touchdowns for Burch, which scored
on its first six drives, including all of
its five first-half possessions.
Meanwhile, South Oallia crossed
midfield only once in the first half
and three times in the game . The
fir st time occured in the second
quarter. when the Rebels traveled 67
yards to Burch's two-yard line in 13
plays. But the guests fumbled on a
fourth-and -two situation midway
through the period, and Burch rccov-

Big Blacks win ... (ContinuedfromB-4)

Auto., 49,000 miles, 4X4. ·
Auto., air, 4 Dr., 4X4.

Burch rolls past South Gallia 58-6

By SAM WILSON
11m• S1ntlnel CoiTISpoltdent
This past week I couldn 'l help but remember the
1992-93 college basketball season. I was crush~
when Alan Henderson hurt his knee, while my
dream of an NCAA championship for Indiana went
down \\Cith him.
Afterward, I watched North Carolina defeat Michigan in the final game
~f the tourn~~nt. Somehow, Ch~s Webber couldn't remember hqw many
time outs Mtchtgan had left, and, m the process, Dean Smith won his second
championship.
The two coaches in tbat game, Smith and Steve. Fisher, both left their
positious last week. Dean thought it was time to leave. Steve was told his
services were no longer required.
It's an interesting emotion on our behalf to see how Smith could with
such inte~ty and _class. deprive us of his much-desired presence. No one
wanted bun to rettre, even those Duke fans who hate North Carolina or
those, like John Thompson of Georgetown, who coached against him. '
I had always hoped Bob Knight could Jearn some manners from this
stately gentleman. After all, there has always been more to basketball than
winning. Smith, who won 879 games in 36 years, could win, and be both
civil and decent in the process.
. '
Smith personified tbe essence of being a truly good human being. Sports
needs people like him. More importantly, humanity does as well . Former
and present players, fans and admirers all felt a sense of sadness and loss
over his retirement. All of us reflected and wished we could be more like
hin'I._AII of us felt we were richer and better because of him. We were right!
Fisher, on the other hand, had no one, including himself, to mourn his dismissal at the Michigan press conference. After a series of embarrassing
episodes, including an independent study which found violations with his
program, Michigan's athletic director Tom Gross had had enough and
longed to move on to new pastures.
.
·
Here was the coach who vaulted to prominence by winning the national
championship as an interim coach in 1989. Here was the man who gave us
the "Fab Five," which made trash talking a way of life. Here was a man who
recruited talent from all over America that underachieved under his le'adership. Here is a man who ove15tayed his welcome, even though he led Michi·
gan to three title games in eight years.
Botb college programs will survive these changes. After all, Kentucky
has continued to win long after Adolph Rupp retired, Indiana has won three
championships after Branch McCracken, and UCLA finally won 20 years
after John Wooden left the game.
Smith will be eulogized and knighted. He spent a lifetime building something
wonderful in Carolina: first class human beings. Fisher, unfortunately, will be
just another asterisk among the modem coaching professionals, in which winning and lucrative shoe contracts have become the most important goals.
Dean Smith reminds us of all that is good and positive about sports. Just
like former Cincinnati Reds and current Orioles outfielder Eric Davis, who
defied the odds to return to baseball from ·cancer surgery. Isn't that a great
story7 Aren't all of us cheering for him71bese are men of character, and the
world needs more of them.
· '
•
In a world wllere even the sportswriters are now making headlines for
sexual improprieties, public indecency, aggravat~d disorderly conduct and
resisting arrest, it's nice to have individuals like Dean Smith and Eric Davis
restore our faith in ourselves.
Slm WIJ-., Ph.D; Is an · - • pofuaor of hlatory at lila Unlvarslty ol
Rio ~- An avid lin or allllporla - and 1 nNr manlac.ol follower of beaket·
, bell- he II 1 of Gary, Incl., IIIII I grsclulla or tncllane Unlverally- whlcll
lhould t.lt Nlldan -rtllng- _ , . 1111- (oncl Hooaler ilalrt) II.

GAHS-PPHS--facts, figures
Score by quarters:
Gallipolis . . . . 6 7 0 0 = 13
Pt. Pleasant .. 7 6 7 7 = 27

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

ered at its own two.
South Gallia got its lone touch~o wn in the third quarter, wh en
JUnoor quarterback Rufus Stanley
connected wnh fre shman receiver
Mickey Massie on a 68-yard pass
play.
Burch scored on nine of its 10
possessions.
This week's agenda: The Rebels
will play their last road game of the
year Friday near Ashton , W.Va .
against the Hannan Wildcats.
Quarter mlab
South Gallia ......... O 0 6 0 = 6
Burch ....... .......... J8 14 12 14 = 58

Scoring summary
Burch- Jenkins 11 -yd. run
(kick failed), 8:59 1st qtr.

Jackson pounds
Logan 40-12;.Athens
g~ts first win of 1997
By ODIE O'DONNELL
OVP Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - Who will stop
the Jackson Ironmen? This question
is the main topic of football conversation around the Southeastern Ohio
Athl etic League today following
Jackson 's thrashing of the Logan
Chieftains by a 40-12 score Friday
night.
Only the Gallipolis Blue Devils
and Point Pleasant Big Blacks stand
between the lronmen and their second consecutive undefeated league
championship. Jackson visits Gallipolis this week before closing the
season in Point Pleasant next week.
Point Pleasant remained in the hunt
Friday with a 27-13 victory over Gallia Academy and puts a 4-1 league
record on the field against Marietta
(0-5) this week.
River Valley bumped Warren
Local 28-20 and the Athens Bulldogs
· snapped a IS-game losing streak with
a 32-10 triumph over Marietta in Friday's contests.
jackson 40, Logan 12
At Jackson, senior tailback Shane
Wolford ran for 243 yards and scored
five touchdowns as the lronmen built
a 40-0 three quarter lead hefore substitutes were outscored by Logan 126 in the last 12 minutes.
Wolford has now rushed for 19
touchdowns and 1,059 yards in five
league games thus far. In eight games
his totals are 22 touchdowns and
I ,566 yards o,n 182 carries.
Jackson's first touchdown Friday
was set up when William Kanouse
pounced on a Chieftain fumble on the
LHS 37-yard line. Six plays later
Wolford bounced in from the eight
and Jay Blankenship kicked the first
of two extra points. In the second
period it was Wolford on a 34-yard
run and Blankenship made it 14-0 at
~~-

The Ironmen netted 350 yards
rushing on 54 tries, and quarterback
Ca&amp;ey Chamberlain completed four
of II passes for 70 yards. The Chieftains ran 26 times for 75 yards and
completed five of 20 passes for 46
yards. Chris Yates led Logan with 64
yards on 14 carries.
Quarter l2.lab
Logan
0-0-0-12= 12
Jackson
7-7-20-6=40

-·-

Athens 32, ~arietta 10
At Marietta, quanerback Nathan
White passed for three touchdowns
as the Bulldogs won their first
SEOAL contest since a 50-21 drubbing of Logan in 1995, a year in
which they also won at Marietta by
a 20- 16 score.
The Bulldogs has suffered through
15 consecutive losses since edging
Wellston by a 16· 13 in a non-league
game on Sept. 6, I996.
Athens grabbed a 20-0 lead Friday
when White fired a 14-yard pass to
Asa Eslocker, teamed with Matt
Weaver on a 25-yard strike, and Sean
Powell powered over from three
yards out, and then ran the two point
conversoon.
Mariett~ reduced the lead to 20-7
at halftime when quarterback Joe
Westbrook hit Darryl Simmons with
a 12-yard strike and Drew Gilmore
booted the extra point. Gilmore, one
of the league's most accurate kickers,
drilled a soccer style field goal kick
of 30 yards in the third period to
make it 20-10.
It was all Athens in the finafquarter when White connected with
Eslocker for the second time, a 16yard touchdown pass before Adam
·Martin's one-yard touchdown run
closed the scoring.
Led by Martin's 14 carries for 61
yards, the Bulldogs netted a 100-yard

UMESTONE
TOP SOIL
RIVER GRAVEL

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S1turd1y 7:30 am-12 noon

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446-2114 or 245-5316

Team statistics
Department
s.G l!Jmh
First downs ........ :............. 5
14
Total yards ...... ...... ....... t67
450
Rushing att. -yds....... 16-23 41 -392
Passing yds..... ............. 144
58
Comp.-au ............ .... ..8- 16
3-5
· Interceptions thrown ....... 1
0
Fumbles-lost .. .......... .. ..4-0
none

Penalties-yds.............. none

5-45

Statistical leaders
Burch
Rushing - Diamond 4- 126 &amp; 2
TDs; Jenkins 9-63 &amp; 2 TDs; Duty 574; N. Elia 8-3 1 &amp; I TD
Passing - Di amond 3-4, 58
yds.; Duty 0- 1
Receiving- Crum 2-50
Interceptions caught - Crum
1-37
South Gallia Rebels
Rushing - Stanl ey 3-l8 , T.
Sanders 1-7; Summers 1-3
Passing- Stanl ey 7- 15 , 136
yds., I TD &amp; I int. ; J. Sanders 1-1.8
yds.
Receiving - Marcu s 2-30 ;
Staton 2- 29; Massie 1-68 &amp; I TD;
Mumpower 1-11 , Shafer 1-8; Butler
1-2

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Jackson put 20 points on the
board in the third period on runs of
63 and four yards by Wolford plus a
58-yard pass interception return by
Jeff Malone. Iron men starters became
spectators following Wolford's ,five·
yard scoring blast with 5:53 remaing
in the game.
Logan 's scores came in the final
four minutes when Josh Wolfe
speared a 20-yard pass from Don
Cook and Chris Yates streaked 41
yards to paydirt.

season . White completed eight of 21
passes for 194 yards, fi~e of them to
· Eslocker for 100 yards.
The Tigers llnished with I 74
yards on the ground, led by Nathan
Swartz's 17 for 84 night and Joe
Westbrook completed eight of 18
passes for 82 Y•nl;'· with two intercepted by Athens.
Quarierllllllla
Athens
12-M-0-12=32
Marietta
0-7-3-0=10

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Work
WIDZNTIA£ • CQMJIUCIAL

Burch - N. Elia 11 -y d. run
(kick failed), 5:00 1st qtr.
Burrh- Diamond 21-yd. run
(run failed ), :04 I st qtr.
Burrh - N. Elia 7-yd. run (N.
Eha run), II :45 2nd qtr.
Bun:h - Martin 4-yd. run (ki ck
failed), :35 2nd qtr.
Burch - Diamond 69.-yd. run
(kick failed), II :31 3rd qtr.
Bun:h - Jenkins 4-yd. run (ruo
failed), 4:30 3rd qtr.
South Gallla - Massie 68-yd.
pass from Stanley (run failed) , 2:30
3rd qtr.
Bun:h - M. Elia 2-yd. run (run
failed), 8:32 4th qtr.
Burch -Jarrell 2-yd. run (B.
Jarrell run), I :39 4th qtr.

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

wv

Buffalo-Putnarn chal'k s up 28-0 win over No.9 Waharna t

Scoreboard
Football
NFL Week 8 continues
Today'ss:ames
AriiWIIil at Philildelphia. I p.m.
Cuolina II New Orleans, I p.m
Jacksonville 111 Dalltu, I p.m.
Ntv.&lt; EllglJmd 111 New York Jeu, I p.m.
San FrandKo a1 Atl.antA. I p.m.
S~nlc ~~St. louis, I p.m.
W.uhington at Tennessee, I p.m.
Denver at Oakland, 4 p.m.
Miam1111 Balrimore, 4 p.m.

New York Giants at Detroit. 4 p.m.
Pin5bur&amp;h 111 CINCINNATI. 4 p.m
Open date : Ch1cago, Green Blly. Minne~orn .
Tampt~ 8ay

Monday's game
Buffalo atlndianapoli5, 9 p.m.

Ohio H.S. scores
Friday's action
Akron Buchtel 46, Alcon Glll'field 0
Akron Hoban 28, Chagnn Falls University 12
Akron Kenmo~ 3~ . Akron Ellet 34 (On
Akron Manchester 29. Ouego 0
Akron Spring. 31. W. Branch 20
Akron St.V-St.M 21. Cle. VA-SJ 7
Alliance 5~. New Ptnladr:lphin 28
Amanda-Cienrcrtek 66, Fnirfield Union 0
Amelia 29, Cin. Western Hill s 0
Antwperp 2~ Wayne Trace 15

Arcanum 14, Twin ValleyS. 0
Archbold 41. Swamon 14
Arling10n 3, Libeny Benton 0
t\shland 43. l.Lxington 28
Ashland Crestview 4]. PlymoUih 27
Ashtabula ]4, Conneaut 14
Ashtabula Harbor 28. Painesville Riverside 25
Athen5 .l2. Marietta I 0
Avon H1gh 20. Lorrun Clenrview 6
Ayasv11le 42, Tinorn 21
Blll"bt:non 18. Stow 0
Bauavla 3~. New Richmond 29
Beallsville :'iO. Shenandoah 0
Bedford JJ, Lorain Southview 28
Bellaire42, Brooke, W.Va. 7
Bellefontaine 63. Spring Nonhwtsu:rn 19
Belk~· ue 59. Willa1tl 0
Berea .\3, N. Royahon 16
Be:dey l.\ Grandview 7
Big Wtalnut 49. Mount Vernon 0
Black River 41 , Loudonville 14
BlOom-CArroll 16. Circle,. Hie 7
Bluffton 15 . Ada 12
Bowling O~n 49, Rossford 6
Br..dford 40, Nnt1onal Trail6
Brecksville 20, Medma 14
Brooklyn 17. Beachwood 8
Brunswick 41 , Mi~ 22

•

=~~~~~?s~·and;~~ 1'

·• .

Bucyrus 59. Norwalk. IJ
.•
Cambridge 42, Coihoc:ton 31
: ' • Canal Winchester .10, Logan Elm.7
•
C:mfield 27. Salem 15
• Cednrville 40. Blanchester 0
Cdina 28. Van Wen 20
• Ct=nu:rville 49, Day. Wayne: 28
Chane] 27, Cle. Ca1hollc. 18
Chesapeake 21, Buffalo. W.Vn 13
Cheshire R1\ler Vnl. 28, Warttn Lo,ml20
Cin. Aiken 40. Cin. Taft 20
Cin. Anderson ]8. Cin. Oak Hills 15
Cin. Colerain 62, M1lford 17
Cin. Country Dt1y 34. Lockland I:.
Cin. Elder 16. Cin. Hughes 0
Cin. Glen Este 29. Cin. Turpin 27
... Cin. Harrison ;\4, Cin. Mt. He01lthy 14
... Cin. Hills Chr. 27. Landmark Cbr. 14
.. Cin. Indian Hill ]6, N. Bend Taylor 6
" Cin. La Salle31 . Cin. Woodward 13
Cin. Mackira 19. Cin. Deer Park 14
Cin. M~;Nicholas 29, Hamilton Badin 15
Cin. Princeton 24, Cm. Syciimore 6
• ., Cin. Purceii-Mtarinn 21. Cin. Bacon 6
• t Cin. Reading 38, Cin. Finneytown 6
Cin. St. Xavier 24. Louisville (Ky.) Triniry 6
Cin. Winu;m Woods 47. Cin. Nonhwest20
Cin. Withrow 21. Cin. Walnut Hills 18
Cin. Wyuming 41. Cin. Marieroont 11
Cle. Benedictine :'&gt;0. You. Mooney 2~ (2 OTJ
Cle. East 20. Cle. Collinwood 0
Cle. Easr Tech ~. Cle. RhfKfc:s 8
C&amp;e. Glenville: 5~. Cle. Lincoln-West H
Clc. Heighls 22. Lakewood 16
Cle. Mnnhall H. Oe Kennedy 14
Cle. St. Ignatius 34, Lakrwood St Edwll'd 6
Clear Fork 48. W. Holmes I:.
Clinton-Mauie 52. Gtcenevic:w 12
Cloverk!ar 14, Revere 9
Col. Ba:dlcrofl41 , Col. West 0
Col. Brookhaven 39. CoL Northland 28
Col DeSalts 29, Kettering Ahc:r 10
Co]. Easrmoor 14, Col. hxSepcndenceO
Col. Hanley 41, COl. Centcnnial29
Col. Marion Franklin 20, Col Whetstone 14
Cui. Mifllin 44. Col. Briggs 2~
Col Ready 24. Col. Academy 0
Col Walnut Ridge 28. Col . Linden-McKinley
• R
•
Col. W;~.uerson ~7. Day. Mc::wiQwdale D
.,
Columbiana 33, E. Pale.-ine 6
Columbiana Crestview 29.'l..telonia0
•
Columbu~ Grove 62. Lama Pmy 0
Cnph:y 17. On:t=nsburg Green 0
Covio~ton 14, Ansoma ()
Cro:stline ~7 . Colonel Crnwford 0
Crooksville J~. W. Muskingum 6
...
Cuyahoga F:1lls 18. Hudson 14
Cuyaho~l Hts. :-4. Lutheran W 18
•
Dahon 42, Nurw;~yne 0
Danl-lury 4-1. Ott01wa Hills )0
•
•
Day. Chaminade·Jullc-nne 49. D~y . Jdfenon

: 11

Day. Dunbar 28. Day. P:memm 8
Day. Nonhmlge ] I, Bellbrook 2R
Day. Oakwood 2H, M1ddlt1own M11dison 1
Defi~ -~8 . St . Marys U
OelphoJ Jeffl~rmn 20, Allen E. 7
Oelpho5 St. John's 28. Marion Local 0
..,
Detroit (Mich.) Cuumry D;~y ~6. Montpelier.?
..
Dover 33. Byetvill~ Meadowbroult M
Dublin SciOlo 14. "Thoma.~ Wonhinp.tnn 0
•
E. Camon ~~ . Connnon Val. 20
• "" E. Clinton I4, Cin.Summit7
'"
E. Koox 28, OanviUc: 12
"" ,... E. Liyc:rpool43. You . W1bon 6
Eastl:lke N. 2M. Marie Ht&amp;. 1
f.Mon ~I. Carli51e 0 ,
Edgcwoot.12H. Talawanda 20
EOOn ~~.Tekonsha. M1ch. 22
Elmwood 42. Northwood 14
Euclid -~ - Willou!!hby S. 0
•
Ever!!reen 21'1. Bryan 21
•
Fairl:1nd 4ti. S. Puint I K
1'7:uriL-:i~ 4K, .'iant.ly V;1l. l:'i

:
..
•
.,

:
..

•.
•

.•

Spriq. Sllawnee f)(). Urbano 0
Spriq. South 70, Sprina. Nont! 6
Springboro 17, Goshen B
Sl. Clainvillc 28, Onymont2l
S.. Henry 35. PnRwny 14
SleUbenviUe 28, Steuben~iUc C111h. 13
SlfllllJIYille 49. N. Ridge~ille 0
Sylva.nia Southview 36, Maumee 13 ~
Symmes Val. 38, Portsmouth None Dame 28
Tallmadge 20. Medina Hi&amp;hland 6
'
Teays Val . ~. Hnmilton fwp 0
T"umseh 21. S~ng. Northeanern 0
Tipp City 27. Makon-U nion 13
Tipp City Bethel 21. Tri-County N. 0
Tol. Rog-ers JO, Tol. Libbey 0
Tol. St Frnacil5:., Tol. BowsherO
Tol. St. Jotm 'a38. Tot Scot! J~
Tol. Stan 20. Tol. Catholic 0
Toronto 60. CurllhoKtJ Val. Chr. Acnd.' 7
Trimbl~: 46. Mc:t&amp;s Eastern 1
Triway 3~. Medina Buckeye 14
Troy~- Day. Nonhmont 21
Tuscarawas VaJ. 28. Tu~law 14
Union Loca14l , Shadyside 0
Uniornown Lab= 22. Massillon Ja~kso n 8
United 21. Southern Loc;,l7
Upper Arlin~lon 4l. Ol.c:mungy ~~
Ulicot 47. Lornlon I!I
VtJilt'y Forge 19. Mentor l4 ·
Valky View 47. Brookville 1
Vamlali:t·flullt"r B. W. Carrollton J
Vt'rm1lmn 20. Campbell-Memorial 6
Vcrs; Jillt'~ 5~ . Sprin~ Catholic 7
W. C~.~ tt!r LnkOfa E. 14. Fairfield 6
W Geauf:a 21. Cle Orange 14
W. Jcn"crwn ~I. Washington C.H. 2~
W. Ubcny Snlem 49. Missiuinnwa Val. 0
Wul$h Jesuit3~. Canton Carh. 0 .
Warrl!n Champion 47, Ashtabula Edgewood 20
Wam:n Kennedy 28. Gir.u-U 1
W alkin~ Mcmoriull8, DelawOlfeHnyes I~
Wayncsfidll 25, Ridgemont20
Wt!llin~tun ~.Oberlin 14
Wells'olille 40, Wht!eling (W.Va) Cemral 39
Wcstfall48. Zane Traer 24
Westl:tke -!I . Fairview 20
Wlll.&gt;t:lt=rsbur¥ 49, McDc:-rmo11 NW 20
Wi~kliffe JS. Ol~grin Falls ]7
Williamsburg 16. Ckrmont Nor1hens1ern 14
Windham 22. M11~adore 14
Wuo,.hnun: 20. Krms.a.11 L"'kotn 7
Wr11ldrid~ 27. Wn1crloo 8
WunhinJ!ton Kdboume Jl. Dublin Coffman 24
mTl
W)' ilfur&lt;.l 21. 011tano 1
Xcni:1 .~ 2, Fair horn 17
Yuu Boardman 4H. Auslintown-Firch 7
Y\lll. Chancy 16. You. Rayen 9
Y~IU. Liberty 2J.l.."'keview 6
l.otiiC5VJIIe 62. Col. E.;Jst 20

Hockey
NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlanllc Division

fum

ll' L I £11. lif !ib.

............ ..... b I 0 12 27
Pttiladel(lhia ...................... ~ J I II 2~
NewJersey
.......J J 0 (l 15
N . Y . I5Ianck~ ................... 2 2 2
6 16
N.Y. Rung1:rs ....
.. ..... I 2 4 6 I~
Fl ond;~ .......... ,................. 2 J I
:'i I ~
T:m1p..1 Bay ........................2 4 I 5 14
W ;~sh1ngton

D
22
16

1~ ,

~

2

4

17

I !1.

17
~2

8

11

20
20
JI

6

)9

25

Crntral DivWon

ll' L I la. lif G.\

Iwl

S!. Loui1 ...........................6
Dctro~t ............................... ~
O..llns ........ ,
........... ..4
Photnix ............................ 3
Toro111o .............................. 2
Ctucallo ..............................0

I
I
2
2
4
7

0
I
I
I
I
0

Paclfk: Dlvistoo
Colorado ......................... ·-~ I 2
Los A.ogeles ........... ....... ...... 2 .~ J
Anaheim .............
...... 2 2 2
Vancouver ......... ,
...... 2 3 I
Edmonlo_g ......................... 2 ~ I
SanJose .
.. ..... 2 ~ 0
Calgary ...
. .... 1 4 2

12 2.1

II 27
9 24

12
14
13

1

11

11

5
0

12
6

18
26

12 29
7 30

IK
21

6 10
5

13

12
1:11

.~

15

29

·4

17
Jtt

21
24

4

Friday's soores

Montre-al ~. fluffitlo I
Ottawn 4, New Jersc:y 2
Pittliburgh 4. Tn.mpb B;~y 1
St. Loui5 2. Chic:~.~o 0
Calgary 6. Colomdo ~ (0Tl
Boston 2, VancouverO
Los Anseles ~.Philadelphia I
Anaheim 2. Edmonton I ~

1991 DODGE DYNASTY 16925, V-6 eng.,

A/T, A/C, AII/FM..................................................................... $2995
1990 PONTIAC GRAND AM 16934, 4Dr., A/T, A/C,

Thev Plaved Sa!urdav

Carolina a1 fieiroi1. J p.m.
Wadlington .at Montrral, 7·m r.m.
T11.mpn. Bn.y nl New .lersty. 7:30p.m.
Dallas of Toronto. 7:JO p.m.
N.Y. Rangers tat St. Louis, 8:30p.m.
Boston at Calgary, 10:.' 0 p.m.

Today's games
Pi111burah at Aoridn., I p.m.
Buffalo nl Chicago, 3 p.m.
Colorado ot VIUICouver, 5 p.m.
Oallns nt Onawa. Y\0 p.m.
Edmomon at Los Angelfi, 8 r.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Anaheim. 8 p.m.
San Jose: at Phoeni~. 10 p.m.

Monday's games
Carolina nt N.Y. Rnngm, 7:30p.m.
S1. louis Ill Detroit. 7::\0p. ~. ~

Transactions
Baseball
Major League Baseball

MLB : Announced the resisnution of Gre~
Murphy. president Shd chid C:)(C4.:utive offic~·r ul
M LB Enterp,rises.
Amtrkan Lr11'"
BOSTON RED SOX : Activ:11eJ ~8 Tim
Nnehring from lht 60-day disi!blc:d l1s1 aDd LHP
Chris Hammond from the l~·dny di~nbled list.
MINNESOTA TWINS: Re-signed 18-0F
Jami~ Ogden. Re-signed LHP Travis Baptist. OF
Keith l.Lgrec a.nd OF J.J. Johnsun to minor-lea!!Ut'
contmcls.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS: Promoted Billy
Beane lo gc:nerul mannger.
·
SEAITLE MARlNERS: Claimed OF Decomb:. Conntr urr waiveD from the Detroit Tigers.
.
National Lf8&amp;ut
COLORADO ROCKIES: Announced resignation of Peter Durro, director of team trn.vel .
SAN DJroO PADRES: Exerds~d lheir 1998
colllr;a~;t option on INF Archi Cianfroc~o .

Basketball
National BUkdblll A.POCI•Iion
TORONTO RAPTORS: Released G Rowan
Barttu and C John Coker

BET

n.

AM/FM ...................................................................................$4595
19095 FORD MUSTANG GT 16924, Red, V-8 eng., cass., tilt,
cruise, PW, PL, sport wheels, leather seats ................... $13,995
1995 DODGE INTREPID 116919, Green, A/T, A/C, tilt, cruise,

cass., PW, PL.............................. :......................................$1 0,495
1995 DODGE SPIRIT 1169G1, Dark pewter, V-6 eng., A/C,
crulu, cassette ........... ;........................................................ $8995
1995 NISSAN SENTRA 116880, A/C, cassette, rear defroster,
balance .ol factory warranty ................................................$8599
1997 GEO METRO 1&amp;899, 17,000 miles, bal. olfactory
warranty,2 Dr., A/T, A/C, AM/FM ......................................... $8995
1994 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 116751, Red, AfT, A!C, cass.,
tilt, cruise, PW, PL................................................................$7995
1993 CHEV. CAVAUER R.S. 116896, 2 Dr., A/T, A/C, AM/FM,
dual mirrors, low mlles........................................................$6495
1995 FORD ASPIRE 1&amp;903, 26,00 miles, 4 Dr., A!C, cass., dual
mirrors ..................................................................................$6995
1994 MERCURY COUGAR XR7 116819, White, AfT, A/C, lilt,
cruise, PW, PL ......................................................................$9398
1995 OLDS CIERA CUTLASS 116867, V-6 eng., AfT, A/C,Iilt,
cruise, PW, PL ...................................................................... $8995
1994•FORD PROBE GT 116785, Red, A/T, AJC, Ill~ cruise, pow.
sunroof, PW, leather seats, sport wheels..........................$9995
1995 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX SE 1&amp;738, A/T, A!C, cass.,lllt,

cruise, PW, PL.•. ~............................................................... $10,495
1996 CHEV. BERETTA 116904, 32,000 miles, 2Dr., AfT, A!C,

cass., bal. of factory warranty ......................................... $10,562
1995 CHEV. LUMINA 116874, 40,000 miles, V-6 eng., AfT, A!C,
tilt, cruise, AM/FM ................................................................$9995
1995 CHEV. LUMINA LS. 116873, V-6 eng., A/T, A!C, lilt, cruise,
power windows, loeb and seat ...................................... $10,495
1996 PLYMOUTH NEON 116902, Red, 4Dr., A/T, A!C, sport
wheels, AMIFM .....................................................................$8995
1997 GEO METRO LSII6852, 14,000 miles, A/T, A!C, AM/FM,
Jlalance of factory warranty................................................ $9717
1996 HYUNDAI ELANTRA 1&amp;840, 24,000 miles, A/C, A{T,
casaatte, bal. of factory warranty ................,.....................:$9665
1993 SATURN 116865, White,A!C, tilt, AMJFM casseUe,
rear defroster ....................................................................... $7995
1993 CHRYSLE~ LEBARON CONY. 116780, AfT, AJC, cass., lilt,
V-6 eng., P. seat, PW, PL, cast wheels ............................... $8995
1995 DODGE INTREPID 116877, V-6 eng., A/T, A!C, PW, PL, lilt,

cruise, cassette.................................................................$10,995
1996 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX SE 16876, V-6 eng., AfT, AJC, tilt,

Off NFL MERCHANDISE
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SIZE

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175170R13
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95
~~~18

ing rivals. The loss was also the sec- turnovers. and 90 yards in penalties
ond in a row for the Mason County while accumulating 22 first downs
crew after coach Ed Cromley's and nearly 500 yards in total offense.
charges had reeled off five consecu- Six plays covered 26 yards or more
tive victories to begin the curient grid and four more snaps gained better
season. Buffalo Putnam kept its slim than 16 yards during the contesl as
playoff hopes alive with the victory !he Buffalo offense came up with the
as the Bisons evened !heir 1997 slate big play time anc;J again against the
at 4·4 on the year.
White Falcons.
Wahama ·struggled offensively
S91&gt;homore quarterback Michael
the evening while the Smith ran for 149 yards and two
defensive unit was sus- touchdowns in addition to throwing
ce~~~~. to the big play offense of for 142 yards to pace the devastating
B1
. The Bisons overcame three onslaugh! with senior running back
Jason Chapman adding 133 yards and
a SCO!'C on the ground for Buffalo.
Chris Tucker led the Bison receivers
with three catches for 70 yards while
Chad.1ucker caught two passes for
60 yards for veteran coach Vic Ferrari's team.
The White Falcons penetrated
Btson territory just four times in the
grid ouling with only one of those
four being considered a real scoring
threat. The Bend Area team drove to
the Bison 13-yard line midway
through the opening period but Josh
Craig pu! the heat on Falcon quar·
terback David Mitchell and Chad
Tucker picked off a Mitchell aerial in
the end zone to extinguish the WHS
scoring possibility.
.
Buffalo turned the Wahama
turnover into a IS-play, 88·yard drive that resulted in a two-yard touchdown
run by Smith to put the Bisons
GETTING AWAY from Buffalo-Putnam catendefs Ia the task of the
in
front
to stay with 7:41 remaining
moment for Weheme running back Chrle Roush (36) during Friday
nlght'e contaat In Buffalo, W.VL, Where the holt Bl1on1 won 28-0. , in the opening half.
Chapman added a 19·yard scoring

T·S Cornep Oi'lderit
BUFFALO, W.Va .. - Ninlh
ranked Wahama saw its 1997 pos!
season playoff expectations suffer a
severe blow Friday night when host
Buffalo Putnam dealt the Bend Area
!cam a disturbing 28-0 setback before
a large homecoming crowd at the
Putnam County school.
The White Falcons generated a
paltry 106 yards in total offense in
losing for the founh lime in the past
five meetings against their neighbor·_

WESTERN CONFERENCE

FeUcral Hockmj! .l4. Walerfor,J 0

Fmdlay 24. Toll Whilmcr 21
F1~her C:1th .\7. New Albany I~
Fon fry~ 26. C:.lldweiiO
r.:on Rl:o,:ovcry 2:1. MiMicr 0
l;r;~nk.lin 26. Day. S1el'lbms 14
hankhn His ..l6. Chi llicnlhc 3~
Frcdo:r~ekt11wn J4J. Buckeye Ct=nlrnl 12
fremnn1 lto ~s 12. Marnf~ell.l Sr. 6
fre10011t St. Jost:ph 49. N. B;~llink-.rt 7
•. Frontier 20. Tyk.'f, W.Vot. 1
... Ft. Rc~overy 1~. MirmerO
• Galion 17, Tiffin Columbian 6
- Ga.linn Nonhmtw 22. Moonl Gilead 0
Galloway We~tland 3~. Lltm:l!!iler 14
Geneva 24, Mallison U
Genua~~- Eastwood 0
Gib1iooburg .\6. Millbury Utke 6
Grnham ~6. Miami E 0 '
Gmnwillc :tK. Libeny Union 21
.. Greenville 14. Si\111\:y 6
.. Grove Cil)' 29. Groveport 13
Harmlion 17, Middletown 0
Hannibal River 55 . Bal'ni.."Jville K
Hardin Northern 21 , M1.'CombO
Hemlock Miller J2. R;~einc Southern 6
Hilliard O;tvison 41. Wcs~~:rYJik: S. 20
Hillsboro 41. Bethel· Tale 2~
Hillsdale JJ . .W. Salem Nnnhwellcm M
Hollnnd Spring. 3M. Amhony Wayne 7
Horewdi-Loudon 12. Carey 7
Hubbard 47, Brookftckl 6
Indian Creek J~. RJChmond Editon 21
Indian Utke :W. Tri:.d 22
lrunton 10, Belpre 9
Jockwn 40. Logan 12
JriTerson Ar~a 44, P.U~svillc H;~rvey ll
Jol)n(ilenn 21. Trt-ValkyO ,
Johnstown J4. luc4s .~
Jonathlln Alder~~ . Madi101t PllliRJ 6
Krn"on 20. Nordonia 7
Km1 RQOIC've11 7. Ravcnoo 6
Kenloo 22, Elida l.t
Kemon Rid&amp;c: 41 . Gmnon .:W
Keuerin&amp; Ftirmonl 45. Beuvercredr 25
Klrdlllftd 50. Bunon BerUhue 1
l.W!wood 32. Licking Val. 0
Ldlanon 28. Kinp 20
Leipsic l Cory·Raw1on 0
Liberty Center 28, WauiCOO n
Licking His.
Heath 26
Um~t Bath 22. Lmaa Shaw~ 21
Lnna St. ~. Lakota W 0
Usbon 62, Sc:bnng 0 .
Utde MilliYIJ .\I . NilrwCIOd 12
Lorain Ca1h. 57 , Marion Cn!h, 20
Louhvillt 21, Caru~ l Fulton NW 0

By GARY CLARK

2.~

17

Northeast 01,.1-sion

Oosmn ........ .. ,.................... ~ 3 0 10 24
011:1w.a .......................... ..4 2 2 10 23
Pittsburgh ........................ ... -J ~ 2 10 21
Monm:al. ..........
.. ....3 I 2
Buff:1l u.. ..
................2 4 2

-·-

Cwolina .............................. l

.

,.

_..

Louaville Aquinat 30, Akron Coventry 14
Loveland 34, Wilmmgron 6
Lt.lcasville Val U , Oak Hill 12
Mar~ 2-t, Huron 21
MAnon El&amp;iD 28, Marion River Val. 7
Marion Harding 21. M ansf~eld Madison 20
Manon Plew.nt I], Buckey~! Vol 7
MnrhftJIDII 33. CantonS. 6
Mlll"'tins Fmy71, Indian V!!l. 6
Marysville 21 , Whilehall7
MDSon 2~. Hamilton Ross 1
MnssiiiM Pmy 55, Wooster 8
Mnyfield 32, Lyndhurst_Brush 9
McOonllkt 2~. Lowellville 20
Mechanicsbur~:48, Yellow Springs()
Meigs ~6. Alcxamkr 14
Memor Lake: C111h. 41, flyria Cath. l~
Mi!!misburg ll Day. Carroll ,.,
Mid view 26. Keystone 0
Miller 32, Meig5 Southern 6
Millersport 15, Berne Union 6
Minerva 56, Carrolllon 1
Minford 28, Portsmouth W. 7
Mogadore F'teld 13, StreersborO 6
Mohnwk 21, Tiffin C:.lvrn 1'*- (2 OT)
Monroe Central 53. St. Mary1. W Vu. 7
Mocgan 21, May;ivillc 14
N. Can tun l~i. Canton GlenOak 0
N. College Hill 44, New Miami 14
N. Olmsted 17, Bay Villagd,
NeiJOnvillc:-York J9, W~llston 20
New Bremen 23. ColdwAIL'f 0
New L4.mdon 41: Mtlfllcton 12
New:.k '28. O:~hanna 0
'Newark Calh . 41. Col. St. Ch;Jrlt.'5 0
Newcomentown 68, Jewctt-Scin 0
Newton Falls 31. LaBrn.: 12
Ni~ s McKinley 16. Struthers 1.'
Nonhrid!!e 21. Cemcrbur(!. I~
Nooon 14. Wadswonh 0
Onk Harbor 20. Clydt 1
Obtrlin Firelands 21. Shdti~ld Brvok~u.k 0
Olmsted Foils 21. AvonUke' 17
Ore1nn Clny 26. Bt.&gt;dford. Mich 17
Omille J!i. Cn.ntOD Timken 12
Ottawa-Glandorf9. W~~opaknncm 7
PaitM Val. 25, Humin!lon Rus~ 0
Pandofa.Gilbo.a 54, Vunluc l .l
Plll'mj' 48. Warrensville: H
Pnmta Pndun. 32. Chnnlon ND-CL I~
Patrick Hervy 59, Dcha ft
Paulding 38, Spencerv1ll~· ~2
Perry 42. Middlt=fJdd Cardin;tl 0
Perrysburg 17. Syh·aniu Nur1hv1cw 1
Pickerington 28. WeitcrvJllt: N. 21(0Tl
Piketon 21 . A.lknn 20
Piqun 3~. Trotwood-M&lt;tdison 7
Pmnt (W.Va.) Plea~ant 27. G:111ipulis 1.1
Polund 28. Howland()
POf1smoulh W. Ml'C iain b
Por1smoulh E 19. Franklin Furn:IC(! Green 17
Preble Sbawnt'f! 21, Dix~ 6
Pym::uuning Val. -ll . Fairpor1 Harbor 0
Ravenna Sou1heas1 36. Garreus ... ill~ ILJ
Reynoldsburg ~5. Hilh:Jt"d Darby 7
Ri4.:hmoml Dnk Solltheastem 21. Uniuto IK
Richmood Hts . 30. Colun1bia 10
Ridgedale: ~2 . Cardington 14
River View 26. Philo 7
Riverdale J6. Upper Scioto Val. H
,, Riverside 43, FnirOOnks ~2
R"'k Hill 2 l, Coni Grov&lt;! 16
R"'ky Riv~r 27. Amherst I~
Rootstown 22. Cre~&gt;twood 14
S. Ctmrlest onSoud~astem 14. Waynesville 10
S. Rdn~c 26. Mi01:ral Rl~e 14
Sandusky 4~. FoiiOrin 0
Sandusky Perkin~ 62, Por1 Chnton 14
Seneca E. 11. Fostotia St . Wend:! in lK
Shelby 5~ . Upptr S~ndusky 22
Sheridan 42. New Lexinglon I ]
Sidney-Lehman ~4. flenjumin Logan 6 ·
' Solon~ I, Twinsburg 0
'
Spmta Highland 2K. N. Union 16
Spring _Kenton Ridge 41. Grecnon ~ 4

'
'Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Polnttleaaant, WV

Sunday,October19,1997

cruise, PW, Pl, power seat .............................................. $10,542
1996 MERCURY MYSTIQUE 116870, V-6 eng., Aff, A!C, cass.,
lilt, cruise, PW, PL .............................. ,.............................$10,680
1994 CHEV. CAMARO Z·281&amp;809, Red, T·lops, V-8 eng., A/C,
AfT, cass., lilt, cruise, 34,000 mlles ................................. $12,995
1995 CHRYSLER CIRRUS LXZ 116814, Green, A/T, AJC, tilt,
cruise, leather seats, power seat, sport wheels ....;........$11 ,995
1995 MITSUBISHI MIRAGE 116916, 4 Dr., A/T, AJC,
36,000 mlles........................................................:.................$8995
1990 PONTIAC GRAND AM 16937, 2 Dr., AfT, A!C, AM/FM
cass., spOrt wheels, tlh, cruise...........................................$4595

ftiCU
1990 NISSAN 116862, Automallc trans ................................$3995
1996 FORD RANGER XLT 116913, A!C, cassette, bed liner, bal.
of factory warranty, sport whaels .......................................$9220
1995 GMC SONOMA 1&amp;823, Red, sport wheels, bed liner,
cassene, A/C ........................................................................$9995
1996 CHEV. S.10 EXTRA CAB 116848, L.S.trim, A!C,
CD player, bed liner .....:.................................................... $12,995
1995 NISSAN 16923, 38,000 miles, bal. ol factory warranty,
AJC, cassette, sport wheels ................................................ $9650
1994 FORD RANGER 116928, Green, A/C, AM/FM cass., bed
liner, rear slider; spon wheels ............................................ $8500
1996 NISSAN KING CAB 16938, Black, A/T, A/C, cass., topper,
bed liner, rear flip seat, 19,000 miles, bal. of fact. warr.$12,995
414'1
1997 SUZUKI SIDEKICK 4X4 4DR 16931, 12,000 miles, bal. of
factory warranty, A/T, A/C, sport wheels.........................$14,995
1994 OLDS BRAVADA 4X4 4DR.I6930, Black, leather seats,
A/T, A!C, cass., cruise, PW, PL, sport wheels ................ $14,995
1996 CHEV. BLAZER 4X4 4DR. 116918, Green, AfT, cass., tilt,
cruise, P. windows ............................................................$17,750
1993 DODGE DAKOTA 4X4 CLU CAB 116860, Blue, V-6 eng.,
bed liner, sport wheels, rear bench seat.........................$11,995
1995 CHEV. BLAZER 4X4 4DR. #6887, While, AfT, A/C, tilt,
cruise, power windows, locks, sport wheels ................. $16, 105
1994 FORD EX~LORER 4X4 4DR. 116821, A/C, AfT,lilt, cruise,
cassette, sport wheels ..................................................... $15,588

·

Miller tallies 32-6 win over Southern
HEMLOCK - Miller's Heath
Howdyshell rushed for 224 yards;
exactly 50 yards more than
Southern's net team yardage, in lead, ing the Miller Falcons to a 32-6 tri·
umph over the Tornadoes Friday
night in Miller Stadium.
The Tri·Valley Conference victo- .
ry give Miller (6-2 overall) a league
mark of 3-0 in the Hocking Division
title race and insures the Falcons of
their first winning season in 17
years. In 1980 Miller was 6-4.
Howdyshell carried the ball 36
time·s in garnering his mass yardage,
and added a touchdown to go along
with two touchdown runs apiece
from David Riley and Andy Ark ley.
For the second straight game,
Southern (4-4-) let an opponent rush
for more than I 50 yards.
Although the game was close at
the half at 12-0, and w.S close until
the end' Of the !hird quaiter, Miller
was dominant between the goal
lines. Southern's young defensive
line somehow managed to keep
Miller out of the end zone on more
!han one occasion, but in the second

half the dyke broke and on came the
floodwaters.
Southern's offense spuuered to
107 yards rushing and 67 via Ia pass.
Miller crunched out a one-sided 195 offset in firs! downs and a 444-174
advantage in yardage.
The game stood scoreless until
the :028 mark of the first period. ·
Heath Howdyshell had a four-yard
run, the two·point conversion run
failed. and the score stood 6-0.
Moments taler, David Riley added a
t(uee yard run. The two-point conversion pass failed, and the score
remained 12-0 at the 10:17 mark.
That score stood to the half. ·
Andy Arkley added a five-yard
run and the run failed as the third
period drew to a close at the 2:53
mark with the score 18-0.
Riley then broke the camel's
back wilh a 35·yard run in the early
portions oLthe finafround; the hin
failed and al the 10:48 mark Miller
led 24-0. Riley finished the night a!
II carries for 5 I yards.
Sou!hern finally ' scored late in
the game when Jason Writesel

GLOUSTER - Trimble opened
up a 33-0 halftime lead to claim a
46-7 victory over !he Eastern Eagles
Friday night in an important TriValley Conference high school foot·
ball .contest in Glouster Stadium .
Trimble' is now 3-0 in the league and
·4·4 overall, while Eas1ern drops Lo
0-3 and 0-8.
" Trimble's Robbie Cooper erupted
for 147 yards on just nine carries,
collecting nearly all of Trimble's 208
yards rushing. Eastern's Josh Hager
led !he Eagles with a 15-53 night
and Adam Sanders was I0-42. Steve
·Durst compleled 4-15 passes for 56
yards and Sanders was 1-4 for 12
yards. Wes Sanders caughltwo passes for 32 yards to lead Eastern
receivers.
Trimble slruck early and often.
Josh McClelland collected a nineyard pass from Brady Trace to s!art
the onslaught. Jason Tippie. added
the two-poinl convcrseon ktck. AI
the 6:35 of the flrsl quarter, Trimble
Jed 7-0. Momcnls later. quarterback

Brady Trace added a one-yard run.
The lwo-point conversion kick
failed, and at the 2:36 mark of !he
inilial frame, Trimble led 13·0.
Trimble never eased up. taking
out its frustralions of a very tough,
fruiliess non-league sla!C on the
Eagles. Phil Faires c~ught a 37-yard
pass from Trace. and Tippie added
thekickfora20-0scoreatthe IO:IR
mark of the second frame . Less !han
two minutes later, Robbie Cooper
added a 16-yard run; lhe Tippie kick
followed and at Ihe 7:5 I mark
Trimble led 27·0.
Cooper caught a 54-yard pass
from Josh Limo. The run failed at
!he 3:52 mark and Trimble led 33-0
at the half.
Then to start lhe third, he added a
57-yard run with a Tippie kick at the
10:30 !ally with the score now 40-0.
Phil Faires caughl a 15-yard pass
from Trace. The kick failed. and a!
!he 8:56 of 1hc third quarter. Trimble
led 46-0.

-----Sports brlet·-----nis Championships. Australian Scott
Draper set up a semifinal encounter
againsl French Open champion Guslave Kuertcn of Brazil aflcr healing
Vincent Spadca 6-1. 6-3 to win the
Red Group.

Tennis
.
HONG -KONG (AP)
Boris
Becker of Germany defealed American Jona!han Slark 4-6. 6-4, 6-3 to
win the Gold Group and advance to
the semifinals of the Marlboro Ten-

IUS

1992 FULL SIZED FORD VAN CONVERSION 116927......... $8995
1995 FORD WINDSTA~ GL 1&amp;929, Red, V-6 eng., 7pass., A/T,

Buffalo· Putnam: Smith 2·yd. run
(run failed)
Buffalo-Pulnam: Chapman 19-yd.
run (Southworth pass to Smith)
Buffalo-Putnam: Smith 1-yd. run
(pass failed&gt;
Buffalo·Putnam: C. Tucker 1-yd.
run (Jividen pass from Smilh)

Game totals

First downs: Wahama: 5. BuffaioPutnam: 22
Yards rushing: Wahama: 30-85.
Buffalo-Putnam: 47-339
Yards passing: Wah am a: 21, Buffalo-Putnam: 152
Total yards: Wahama: 106, Buffalo-Putnam: 491
Passing: Wahama: 2-6. BuffaloPutnam: 7-18 ·
lntercep!ions/lhrown: Wahama: I.
Buffalo-Putnam: I
Fumbles/lost: Wahama: 4· 1. Buffalo-Putnam : 3-2

3-2~

Individual stats
Rushing
Wahama: Mitchell 14-52, Tennant
7-22, Roush 8-19, Russell 1(-8).
T01als: 30-85. Buffalo-Puenam: Srnil~
12-149. Chapman 20·133, Whittington 6-24, Jividen 4-23, Tucker 2-5.
Withrow 3-5. Totals: 47-339.
R..,eiving
Wahama: Cundiff 1-21. Lloyd tO. Buffalo·Putnam : Tucker 3-70.
Chad Tucker 2-60, Craig 1-12, Soulhworth 1"10. Totals: 7-152.
Passing
Wahama: Mitchell 1-4-2 l·INT.
Russell 1-2-0; Buffalo-Putnam :
Smith 6-16-142. Withrow 1-2-10.

..

GAHS golf team takes'
third in opening round
of D-11 state tournament
COLUMBUS- Following fitslround play Friday on the Ohio State
University 's ~carlet course. lhc GalliaAcademy golfteam stands in third
place behind Kc!tering Alter and
defending state champion Ironton for
schools in Division II.
The Ohio high school golf stale
champions in lhrce divisions were
crowned Saturday.

Scoring summary
Miller: Howdyshell, four·yard
run, run failed, :028,1sl, 6-0.
Miller: Riley three yard run, pass
failed, 10:17, 2nd, 12-0.
Miller: Arkley, five·yard run, run
failed, 2:53, 3rd, 18-0.
Miller: Riley, 35·yard run, run
failed. 10:48, 4th, 24-0.
Southern: Writesel, 13-yard pass
from Evans, pass failed, 6:38 4th,
24-6.
Miller: Arkley. 25-yard run.
Spencer run, 2:40, 4th, 32·6.

Penalt~s/Yds.:

Wahama:
Buffalo-Pulnam: 10-90
•
Punts/avg.: Wahama: 7-42.7. Butfalo-Putnam : 2-32.5 ·
Offensive plays: Wahama: 43.
Buffalo-Putnam: 67.

*THE

'·

I
I

In Friday's lirst round on the par72 Scarlet layout. Aaron Bickle led
Gallipolis with a 79. good for eighth
place behind Ironton 's Justm Collins,
the leader, who posted a 69.
Dayton Kettering Alter posted a
team score of 317. Behind them were
Ironton (3 19). Gallipolis 027), Lima
Shawnee 1'2R) and Dayton Oakwood
(334 ).

************ ****

i* BIBBEE MOTOR CO.!*
ST. RT. 7

COOLVILLE, OH.

**********************

Team statistics
Doa~artment

M

Slm.

First downs ...................... 5
19
Rushing yards ........24-107 57-346
Passing yards ................. 67
98
Total yards ................... l74
444
Comp.-au ...................6·16
5·9
Interceptions !hrown .. '..... !
0
Fumbles-no. lost .......... 2-2
2·1
Penallies-yds ..............4-42 Il -l 05
Punts-avg .................. .3·32
3·30

1994 PONTIAC GRAND AM 4 DR.
3.8 V·6. auto, white with black cloth interior. AC. stereo
cass., power. locks, tilt, cruise, rear defrost. LOCAL

Shaun Long broke !he shut-out Passing yllrds ................. 68
bid with a one-yard run and report- Total yards ................... l81
edly Stoive Du~t added the kick with Comp.-atl ................ .. .5-19
·Interceptions thrown ..... ..4
5: 19 left in the game.
This week's agenda: Eastern Fumbles-no. los\ ........... 2-1
goes to Hemlock Friday to face Penahies-yds ..............5·38
Punts-avg ................ 6-21.2
Miller.
Quarter l!!lllh
Eastern ................. O 0 0 7 = 7
Trimble .............. 13 20 13 0= 46

180
388
10-16
0
JC1
10-95
4·22

3.8 V6, auto, blue w/blue leather in!., AC, stereo cass.,
pwr. seats, windows, locks. mirrors, lilt, cruise, . rear
defrost. 89K miles. SHARP!

Scoring summary
Trimble: McClelland, nine-yard
pass from Trace, Tippie kick, 6:35,
Ist.
Trimble : Trace. one-yard run,
kick failed, 2:36, 1st
Trimble: Faires. 37-yard pass
from Trace. Tippie kick. 10: 18, 2nd
Trimble: Cooper. 16-yard run.
Tippie kick, 7:5 I, 2nd
. Trimble: Cooper, 54·yard pass
from Limo, run failed , 3:52, 2nd
Trimble: Cooper. 57·yard run,
Tippie kick. I0:30, 3rd
Trimble: Faires, I 5-yard pass
from Trace, kick failed. K:56. 3rd
Eastern: Long, one-yard run.
Dursl kick. 5: 19, 4th

1989 OLDSMOBILE TROF'EO

8 Regions • 8 Auctions
VACANT LAND

STATEWIDE - OHIO

Nov. 4 Jlflu Nov. 12
• All Sites &amp; Types ol Pirtlll
• All i'lqJorlios WM Sell
• Sellorileo!M$ ... Ri!;ll ~
Add 01 Delete P..,.ls

1990 CHEVROLET 5·1 0 BUZER 2 DR.
V-6, auto., gray with gray cloth interior, AC, stereo
cass, cruise, tilt. 68K MILES.

Team statistics
Department
E
I
17
Firsl downs ............... .... . 11
Rushing yards ........ 39-1 13 34-208

Auction Hctline:

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' .

caught a 13·yard pass from Jonathan
Evans. The two-poinl conversion
pass failed, and at the 6:38 mark
Miller led 24-6.
Andy Arkley got on the scoring
merry-go-round and added a 25·yard
run for the Falcons as the game
neared a close. Mike Spencer added
the conversion run and al the 2:40
mark, MHS led 32-6.
As Michael Ash goes, so do the
Tornadoes. Ash's early season sue·
cess spumed opponents to double-up
on the neet-foo!ed star. Despite
being picked on, Ash came close to
anO!her 100-yard game wilh six carries for 72 yards, while Adam
Cumings added a 10·30 night.
Soulhem's Evans was 5-14 passing for37 yards and Cumings was 12 for 30 yards. Anthony Riley was
5-9 for98 yards for Miller.
Jason Writesel caught two passes
for 43 yards. ·•
This week's agenda: Southern
will host Waterford Friday.
Quarter l!!lllh
Southern .................O 0 0 6 = 6
Miller. ....................6 6 6 14" 32

Scoring SUmmary

Trimble blasts winless Eastern 46-7

l _,_,
l
__ ..!!:..'!·.!~~~~·___ l ___~_:I~!!!~"!~~~~---J
Pt. Pleasant '75-3930

gallop in the third period with Smith
assing to Jusein Souehworth for the
two point conversion to give Buffa.
loa 14·0 advanlage before the Bisons
put the game away wilil a pair of
touchdowns in the final quaner.
Smith wen! in from a yard out on
the first play of the fourth period wieh
Chad Tucker adding a one-yard run
with 6:13 remaining to complete the
nights scoring activity. Smith tossed
another two poin! conversion to
Shannon Jividen following Tucker's
six pointer to give Buffalo its convincing 28-0 triumph .
Mitchell led Wahama offensively
wieh 52 yards rushing on 14 carries
with lhe Falcon senior signal caller
also completing one of four passes
for 21 yards. Senior punter Keith
Cundiff provided WHS with what
may have been the only brigh! spol
with Cundiff booting the ball seven
limes on the night for a 42.7-yard
average. Cundiff boomed ehree punts
for more than 50 yards and added two
more kicks that covered 40 yards
This week's agenda: The White
Falcons will try and reverse its pas!
two decisions when they return home
for a two-game stand against Vinson
and Wirt County before closing oul
the season al Winfield.
Buffalo Putnam will have an open
date next week before finishing out
the year at ~orne against Van and Tug
Valley.
Quarter l!!lab
Wahama
0'0·0-0=0
Buffalo-Putnam
0-6-8-14=28

SPIKES IN 1998 SEASON

RIVERSIDE GOLF CLUB

~

Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2

MASON, W. VA.
304·773·5354

1994 FORD F·ISO XL 2 WD
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Doc Hayman

-------1
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•

'

J

�I

Outdoors

C:
Along the River
Racing career survives the test ol time

October t •• 1117

Section

luridly, Octabar 18, 1111.

Tri-County Sport Shop offers
new products for fall hunters
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.John Burris, owner of Tri-County
Sport Shop near Point Pleasant,
recently pointed out some of the
new products available to hunters
this fall.
Quad limb bows including the.
Browning Ignitor are hot this year.
The Ignitor features a 65-80 percent
let -off at full draw while the
Jennings Buckmaster offers a 70
percent let-off.
For crossbow hunters , the
Browning Boss crossbow also fealures split limbs.
Several new broadheads are out
this year including the Thunder!tead
'Pro Model' with a nickle-plated tip
for durability and "bone crushing"
impact. The new offering also
include s a thicker blade and a
redesigned ferrule for truer flight .
Mechanical broadheads are also
popular including the Wasp JakHammer and Mechanical. They
offer less wind resistance in flight
but open on impact.
Muzzleloading hunters can use
new Pyrodex Pellets, preformed
loads of 50 grains each that simply
Remington cartridge. Burris Ia sporting a jacket drop down into the barrel. The pelconstructed of Saddle Cloth, a silent, water and lets come in boxes of I 00.
burr resistant material, In the new Realtraa Extra
The Kni8ht "disc" muzzleloading
Brown camouflage pattern.
rifle uses ignition caps held in .discs

NEW PRODUCTS - John Burris, owner of TrlCounty Sport Shop naar Point Plaaunt. W.Va., is
shown hera examining a Remington Model 700
bolt action rifle chambered In the all new .260

inserted into the bm:ch of the rifle.
Regular shotgun primers can also be
used as well as standard percussion
caps. In addition, CCI if offering a
new "magnum" cap this year.
In ammunition, new Winchester
Supreme Ballistic Tip ammo in .270
Winchester,
.30-06,
7mm
Remington Ma111~m and .300
Winchester Magnu':?Js being touted
for its rapid, controlled expansion in
thin skinned, lightly muscled animals such as whitetail deer.
The wOrd in hunting clothing1his
year is Saddle Cloth, a wind and
water resistant fabric that does not
fade or cau:h burrs.
In scents and calls, Lohman is
offering a push button, "touch tone"
deer call that makes any call rang-

Top 25 college football...

~

(Continued from B-1)
Bailey's 52-yarder gave Minnesota a
Green led a powerful Nebraska worst stan of the season, passed for
3-0 lead with 2:31 left in the first (6-0, 3-0 Big 12) rushing attack, as three touchdowns and ran for anothquarter.
the Comhuskers rolled up 400 yards er in a 28-24 comeback victory over
Hamner carried for 44 yards to on the day,just below their 401-yard Iowa.
spark a drive to the Penn State six, average.
·
Griese . whose three first -half
setting up Bailey 's 23-yarder.
Green, wilo carried 24 times, has interceptions put Michigan (6-0
Hamner contributed 37 yards as 2.873 yards during his career. His overall, 3-0 Big Ten) in a big hole,
Minnesota drove to the Penn State effort Saturday moved him from hit Jerame Tuman with the game.15 before stalling and Bailey's third seventh to fourth on Nebraska's winner from 2 yards out with 2:55
field goal made it 9-3.
career leaders list , passing Derek remaining.
Bailey ' s 50 -yarder gave the Brown, Lawrence Phillips and I.M.
Michigan's defense went into the
Gophers a 12-3 lead with 3:241eft in Hipp.
· game ranked first nationally , having
the third quarter.
Mike Rozier, the 1983 Heisman allowed just 5.2 points per game .
Minnesota squandered a chance Trophy winner, is the school 's top The Wolverines were second in total
to put the game out of reach minutes rusher. He gained 4,780 yards from defense at 211.8 yards per game.
later.
1981-83.
Tile Wolverines have yielded just
En is fumbled and Antoine
Texas Tech (3-3, 2-1) could do three field goals- including one to
Richard recovered at the Penn State little against a swarming the Hawkeyes (4-2, 1-2) - in the
~3 . Minnesota drove to the seven Cornhuskers defense . The Red second half. The Wolverines fin only to stall again . This time , Raiders finished with 127total yard~ ished with 389 yards, holding Iowa
Bailey's field goal attempt of 24 .and didn't reach 100 yards in total to 187. Michigan had a 21 -7 edge in
yards was blocked by Courtney offense until 3:24 was left in the first downs.
Brown.
thill! period. Texas Tech's first posMississippi 36, No.8 LSU 21
On the next play. McQueary ' s session ended with a missed field
At Baton Rouge, La., John Avery
pass was intercepted by Ben Mezera goal, but the Red Raiders did not ran for two touchdowns and Stewart
at the 20. Minnesota again failed to penetrate Nebraska territory again Patridge passed for two as
get into the end zone and settled for until the 11-minutc mark of the Mississippi posted a 36-21 upset of
Bailev' s school-record fifth field fourth period.
No. 8 LSU a week after the Tigers'
goal, this a 33-yarder.
No. 5 Michigan :ZS, No. lSiowa Z4 defeat of defending national champiNo. 2 Nebraska 29, Texas Ttth 0
At Ann Arbor, Mich., Michigan's on Florida.
At Lincoln, Neb., Ahman Green top-ranked defense overcame four
LSU (5,2, 3-2 Southeastern
ran for 178 yards and a touchdown - tumovers and poor special teams Conference) was noticeably flat
and the Cornhuskers • defense play to keep the No. 5. Wolverines after the emotional victory over toprecorded its first shutout of the sea- among the nation's unbeaten ranked Florida and Ole Miss (4-2, 2son on Saturday, a 29-0 win over Saturday.
2 Southeastern Conference) took
Texas Tech.
Brian Griese, overcoming his advantage. The Rebels shut out LSU

--------------""'!"-----•

I

~

.,

NASCAR EXHIBIT - Shown
Is the
Tide
RacingbyTeem'a'
above
NASCAR
Ford
driven
Ricky . .
Rudd, which waa on dlapltly m:
Eastman'• Foodland ator .. In
Galllpolla and Point Pleaaant
lilt weak. The Tide car w..
ahown far several houra mftt:h
atora to give NASCAA and Rudel
lana a closer view of the car.
With tha car In Galllpolle Ia
Foodland executive Kevin
Eutman {right) and Tom Gurley,
I promotional raprnentallva for
Your
the Mooraavllle, N.C.-baaed
team.

Vote
'

.

TONY L. BECK
Green Township
TRUSTEE

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St. Rt. 124. Rutland, OH 45775

Patridge hit Grant Heard for a 60yard touchdown with 10:29 le[t in
the founh quaner to put the Rebels
ahead 33-21.
Purdue 45, No. 24 WisConsin 20
At West Lafayette , Ind., Ed
Watson ran for three touchdowns
and Billy Dicken threw for three as
Purdue defeated No. 24 Wisconsin .
45-20 Saturday , extending its
longest winning streak since 1980 to
five games.
Purdue (5-I, 3-0 Big Ten) took
control early while accumulating
353 yards in the first half. Dicken,
who threw five touchdown passes
last week \O lie a school record,
completed two scoring strikes in the
first half as the Boilermakers built a
28-3 advantage.
Wisconsin (6-2, 3-1) was seeking
to win a seventh consecutive game
for the first time since 1912. The
victory gave Purdue five victories
for the first time since 1985. The
1994 team was officia,lly 5-4-2 after
a 42-20 loss to Michigan State was
reversed by ·a forfeit.

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RUTLAND

HOUDAY INN • GAWPOUS, OH
~·
State At. 7 N.

sn

""',.,.,. ~Hon &lt;011 (116) IIJT-zm

the younger Wolfe
'
said.
POMEROY - Teacher, coach, witter, friend. Scott
Mom Marilyn, a
Wolfe Is many things to many people, but the Late self-described
Model Champion from Racine, carries one common tomboy in her
thread from title to Iitle; he excels in everythins he younaei years, has
does.
. been known to keep
1Wo. times now, Wolfe has taken· home the Late the pavement hot
Model track championship at ·Skyline Speedway near
Racine to
. Stewart. The first timr. was in 19!13, his second year of P(!llletoy wl)ere llhe
racing. The most rectal clrampiondtip litlf.. ~ 1 r. ,!Ia~ :wdrkc(' hi , Ill¢
~aaon,
· ', · ' ('fomier ' Pom~roy
Many drivers come and go. Some are fast for a cou- National Bank for
pic years, then pass on lo oblivion. Some are fast while over 40 years.
they have money, but when 11 goes they go. Some are
Marilyn
once
dedlcatt;d to survival. Right now, Scott Wolfe's team aakt:d Hilton to drive
reigns u champi911s once again.
·
in a powder puff, but
Wolfe lakes·great pride in he facl that be has endured the patriarch of the
the test of time. He compares it to his coaching saying, family
insisted
"Good coaches endure the test of time. If you win your somethln~
was
first year, its always with SOf.eone else's team. If you wrong wuh his car,
last five years and are still winning, then you've sue- so Marilyn went to
eeeded. I've been fortunate enough to have fine spon- another driver and
sors and good help for many years. Uke in coaching. asked to drive his
success comes with teamwork.•
·
car. He agreed, and
Incidentally, Wolfe had nine winning varsity base- another racing legl!all,~~ at a small class •A' school, Eastern High · end was hom. ·
Si:hllol near Reedsville in Meigs County. There his
· ~It
chided,
teams won two league titles, two sectional titles, a dis- "t.!bm asked us how
trict runner-up, a district championship and a regional q did when she got
IN ACTtON _ R.:IM tltfwr Scolt Wotre poww. llri'OIIflh
runner-up.
.
.
ol'(, the track. You tum lhtN 111 rour.IO clalml:J:7 SJryi/M Sp••dWIIY
, ' Additionally, be has coached the Eastern girls' varsi- ·gQI\a realize now, Tract CtiMrrploMII/p In the
•• o1 O.Uipolla/Polnt
!f·-etballteam. His teams posted atleasl sectional mblll couldn~ reach pt111n Roclrlt Cha.-11 c.maro t11tt,. modi/IIOck car.
l'lliiiiCI'·"P honors ive yea,s in a row ani! became the tlllt.JICC!als·very well, WGife Mtd to CtWW cll'llllfl the IIJp apot 11vm 1118 ....ty 100
only Eastern team to reach the regional as part of Ohio's Dfd told her, 'you cat8 tlret eotnpel«&lt;lt tile track. (lnuf) Woltllun.d up w1tt1
"Sweet Sixteen." A Wolfe-coached team also won the · w~ really flying IW 1117 ch8mp/oiUIIrlp trophy.
Tri-Valley Conference tide, the school's first. Thai team " lady", you must
owns the school's winningest record at lli-5. He has h
been goin&amp;• at
a 460 Bia Block Chevy the
coached in the district for the past 17 years, winning I · . 1 35 miles an hou~. Mom drove again thoup and following week.
two "Coach of the Year" awards in baseball and two in . . . in second. She did a good job. Later that night, the
On Sept. 18, 1982, Wolfe's
basketball..
reihlar driver drove the car and his front wheel came greatest fears came to reality.
Wolfe stressed that he could not race if it were .not ojt 50 we always tease mom about runnin&amp; the wheels He was critioally injured in a
for his father, his crew and his friends, saying. "It's a o'ft' the car. •
race car.
team thing. Everyone docs a certain job and they do it
Scolt Wolfe's career began in nearly the same way.
Wolfe explained, "Dad's car
well. Max Eichinger, Ron Grate, Kevin Layne, Hilton The first car he drove was an ancient Ford/Mercury had so much power, alt I had
Wolfe Jr., my sponsors and my whole family won frame with a 1969 Chevrolet Chevcllc body. When be to do was halfthroltle iL Still!
championships this year.,J'm just lucky, cause I gel to went into the first tum for the first lime, the seat belts took a huge lead in the heat
drive."
were so rolten they broke and he toppled over on the race. On the last lap a slower
Uke coaching, Wolfe has indeed survived the test of floor boards of the car. For the feature, the ctew used car spun and the caution came
time, also having raced for the
duct tape to hold him in the seaL out to bunch up the field. I
past 17 seasons. He often takes
Wolfe added, "I wouldn't jumped into he lead aaain, but
· time from his race preparations lo
think of gettina in a race car in tum three I went in way too
accommodate autograph seekers,
under those conditions today. fast and drifted high. The seccir takes that extra moment l~ta
k
That was actually pretty stupid, ond place car dove under me
SIGNS AUTOGRAPHS - AIWaya one of the more
drlvar8 on
raclna with the fans. He a
·
but sometimes you J'ust want to and clipped my front wheel. 1 the racing circuit, Scott Wone lakel time out to
1utographe for young race fllna. Baaldea race track expoaure
rnakH hla car IVIIIeble ·
praise in a humble way, with,
do anything to race. •
·
was on t~. throttle hard to get for VII'IOUI -~~ to give hll apanaora mare exposure. Meellng people,
quiet "thank you" and the trade- '
In hiab school, Wolfe pn:tly back out m front, but appar- won. notll, 11 one of the grtllalt thrllilln racing.
mark smile. Always the trademark
much had made up his mind to cntly the steering box broke
.
,
·
smile.
become a race driver. !'le first and the steering wheel just spun a circle in my hands.• sonvtlle and Athens, have graced Wolfe s 1114 Rocket
,~Aijvinc:nativc,,Wolfcpiaed
- ~-_.. ....... , 1-1 "'""'oil.- forft!&amp;llyyears.,
'· ,_""''" '. Ci
~ . ~~· .""''."' ,_ Vi...,'
· tb\l .~litjve.aplrii il ~ne'il
be· at"aro~lOQ·:~ ... ,~,;Jto.hil an hard !Muhe
. Other sponsors . ~.. "!"!r'$ tao 10 qane, . t~l
Southern High School, another
the Torna- shoulder harness mount ripped out of the frame. The Htll and ~ns Farms !~ftd Greenhouses, U:tart, ~stan
small CJ- "A" school altins the
~foe!~ to a 17-2
their senior seat belt held but when the shoulder harness broke I Automotive, Darwtn; A, B,&amp;T Automottve and
Qblo Rlwr. There, Wolfe was a
year. .
stretched out like an accordion, then snapped back. My Whiske~ Trucking in Racine; ~ick an_d Shelly f~;iill~r;
three•spo!l !~IIerman, . already
"It was then I knew that rae- head hillhe roll cage and knocked me out.•
D&amp;M Pi~, Syracuse; .Browns ~adtator Scr;vtce tn
serving as a crewman on his dad's
ing was my only hope of chasing
During the next few hours, Wolfe was diagnosed Athen~; Zimmerman Auto Parts tn Nelsonvtlle; nd
race team during the· summer
a dream. At tryout camps, the with a bad concussion a broken tailbone and three Wolfe s Body Shop.
months of his high school yean.
scouts never let the players hit, compression fractures i~ his middle back. The prognoAssociate si:"ln~rs are ~llcr's Custom Bending in
Scott's dad Hiltim Wolfe ' Jr.,
tbey wanted lo see how fast you sis in.eluded a lenphy hospital tay, operations, a back Chester, ~arv~n Htli C!~tc Cars, f:arrl' and Dolly
known throughout the community
could run and what kind of arm brace and therapy.
·
Wolfe, Bn.nker s Trans~uss10n. tn Galitpo!ts, Da~e a.n~
as "Bi&amp; Fooz", rileed a hobby
you had. Guys like Ken Griffey
"The doctors said I'd be in the hospital or on my Ja,so~ Sham, Anderson s Furmture and Jtmmy One
stock and late model car for more
could run to first in four seconds back for six. months that first night at the hospital. I 0 Bnen.
• ·.
,·
.
.
than lS years. But the racing start' and it took me four days. 1 knew mean, there it was 11 plain as day, X-rays of my back
Wol,fc a~ded, If 11 weren t for the sponsorshtp,
ed for Wolfe much sooner. Wolfe's
the only way I could go fast was all crumpled up. Then the next day, what! call 'my mir- · couldn t do tt anymo~ O_ur spon~rs have bee~ great.
amily, including mother Marilyn,
in a race car.• ·
acle' came to pass.•
..
· Wolfe conclu~d, I like t~chtng ~ helpmg stuwere all involved with racing. at
. "Dad didn't encourage it
Wolfe said, "That day was a Sunday and 1 had been dents and people tn g~neral. ~ hke.meeu?g people~~ the
first as fans, then as drivers. Wolfe
though. At fint. He wanted me to put on a prayer chain. I know that the oulcome was a races and then other u~es .1 JUSI like betng alone.
attended his first race when he was
finish college and said if I was result of God's healing and the power of prayer.
'Yhe~ ask~d what he d hk~ to be ~membered fo~ he
either six or eight months old at
serious about racing I could gel Although I had 10 wear a back brace for a long time, I rephed, helptn~ people ~nd JUSI betng a good guy•.
Ohio Valley Speedway in Lubeek,
Ace my own car then. Only then. was back to work in two weeks We even came back to
Wolfe has mtxed emotions about the costs of racmgW.Va. ·
crewman Ron Grata
brt1k
Now,
he's
my
bil!llest
supporter.
win
the
Skyline
Championship
ihat
next
year.
•
"Ten
years ~go, it was strictly a hobby. Now its a busi1
Scolt said he learned how to from the action 11 111 conllmllflltll In fact, a coupl~ u~~ I p~ably
Since then, Wolfe's racing has had its ups and ness-hobby_.
count when he was two or three by what geara lnd tlrea to Nn on the car would have qutl, tf 11 wasn t for downs Often be had to drive cars that were outdated
One beheves that Wolfe forsees the final chapter on
using the numbers on the race In In upcoming -..:~nt. A lot of dad's,help and wanting to see me and h~avier ihan his competitors. Racing costs sky- his career as family and other co~itments ~ lo the
cars. "I knew all the names and work goaa Into p
g 1 race car race.
rocketed and cars became more cientific as a result of forefront. Currently, Wolfe has bwlt a followmg as a
numbers. Every driver was my during the - " IDd llkawlsa m1ny
Wolfe's first year was a technology and the computer age.
race reporter and columnist for Mid-American Autp
hero then."
.
fli111 chengn haft to made at the good one. He finished fifth in.
Wolfe said, "If I had $100,000 in my budget, I'd go a Racing News and free lance writer for other racing pub'After Dad watched races for triCk In a ahort period o1 ttllll.
points at Ohio Valley peedway · heck of a lot futer. Some guys have three, four, as many lications. When the driving ends, writing appears to be
years, he saw thai some drivers
~and although there wu no offi- as eight engines ready to go alall times. Mine has to last in his future •.
never, ever gol any better so he thought he'd race him- cial 'Rookie of the Year•, he was the highest ftnishing the whole year. Somctllltcs, I've finished second· when
What's in store for Wolfe·in his racing future as a driself. He bought an old, dilapidated 1955 Chevy with a rootle.
we rni&amp;)tt have won simply because if I stuck my car in ver? He hints that he'd like to try a sprint car sometime
squared off roll cage made of three-inch drill casing.
'Dial same ~ear though almost proved devastating. a hole thai wasn't there, we might crash out and not fin- before he quits racing and that if the right deal comell
The struts were made of log chaips, so to adjust the Wallie's Camara had come from 17th to ftfth at Atomic ish, plus I'd have to ftx the car. You go to win, but some- along he'd like to challenge the STARS traveling circuit.
caster you had to shorten the chain. The engine was a Spet!lway in Chillicothe, one September evening times bringing the car home in one piece is a victory. •
and vie for that club's 'Rookie of the Year" honors.
327. When we lore it down we found out il had acveral before losing oil pressure and eventually blowing up.
Wolfe was sc:tond in K-C Raceway J)oints (formerly
Is something bigger still a goal? "Well, yes, • Wolfe
ifferent types of pistons and at least four ditJerent Hilton told Scott he had done so well that tbe youngetll Atomic) in 1993 and has heen in the top ten there five replied, then paused, "but you have to be very lucky and
brands of rod bearings. But at least it was a race car," Wo~ could pilot the family lt41 Corvette, powered by of the last eight years. In 1996, Wolfe won the Earl Hill usually have a big sponsor already in hand. RealisticalMemorial race at Skyline. This past year ly, if good local drivers like Bob Adams Jr. and Delmas
'
- - - - - - - - - - - - ,. the team claimed fifth in the Bluegrass Conley haven't caught the eye$ of the big boys, then
Nationals al Arter County, Kentucky.
guys like myself won't either.•
Wolfe
is
helped
in
the
pits
by
Ron
Until then, Wolfe will just keep chasing the dream.
,.
Grate, Max Eichinger and Kevin Layne
with special assistance In 1997 from Teresa Evans. Often Dad Hilton returns the
favor of helping his liOn, reciprocating the
times when son helped dad.
Wolfe said, "My pit crew is great. We
try to make this a team effort. I try to &amp;et
their input on the setups. I'm a beller racer
when the whole crew's there because I can
focus on driving. They work hard and
although my name is on the trophy, they
are the champions."
In ·fact, one night in panicular won
the champlonllhip for the team. Wolfe lost
a transmission and drive shaft wben a
bearina wcnl out. Just as the feature was
solng on the track Eichinger and Grate
finished off the mechanical work as Wolfe
buckled in for a fifth place finillh.
WOlfe noted that racing people are
always good people •nd that e is a people
person. He said, "Ironically, Jerry Tolson
and Ed Venham loaned us the drive shaft ·
that night and it was them we beat in the
points race. That's what makes racing
fun ... the people.•
Besides his crew Wolfe praises his
CHECKS TIRE PRESSURE - Chlmplonlhlp
sponsors. Wolfe and bis brother inked a
crewman
Mu ,Eichlngar checlll the In p;rnut~
regional McDonald's deal almost ten
before
mounting
tht right rear tire on w=~
OLD nMES- Thil plctu,. ehowa aeomewtlat thinner, younger Scott Wott. beclt In 1113lfllr winning lila llrat years ago and the marriage has lasted the
McDonald'a
car.
nre
11 - of tht c
track champtonahlp at Skyline. Tod1y'a care.,. much mort aleek, are much llghttr lnd llktwlal mort lxpenalve. times. McDonald's Restaurants in Rio lllamtmta In Httlng upprweura
a dirt late model tor ulllmllW
Lata In the 1113 ae110n lata model• were lllowecl to Nn top wlng1.
Grande, Gallipolis, Point Pleasant, Ncl- performance.

from

Coats In: Brown, Orange, Hunter Orange Insets.

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Vote •nd Support is Appreefaud

ing from fawn bleats to big buck
grunts.
Hunters Specialties Scent-A-Way
eliminates human scent and now
smells like frcs_!lly dug earth. Scent
Shield "Fall Blend" also eliminates
human scent and smells like leaves
that have been turned over on the
ground.
In guns. Remington is offering
its popular Model 700 bolt-action
rifle and its lightweight Model 7 in
a new caliber, the .260 Remington.
The .260 is a short-action cartridge
based on the .308 Winchester case
and should prove ideal for hunting
West Virginia deer.
Mossberg is also offering ported
barrels, which reduce felt recoil, in
its deer !lnd turkey shotguns.

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No Credit, Slow Credit
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i~ the second half and outgained the
Tigers 488-391 .
Avery's five-yard run pulled Ole
Miss within a point but Steve
Lindsey's point-after sailed wide left
and LSU stayed ahead 21-20.
Herb Tyler was sacked and fumbled on LSU's next possession
Armegis Spearman recovered . Five
plays later, Patridge threw eight
yards 'to Alishma Alexander and the
Rebels were on top for good at 26-

•

•

1998 BUICK CENTURY

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•

I

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,

�Sunday, October 11, 1117
Sunday,Pctober19,1997

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

Couple to mark fifith anniversary
Mr. and Mra. George McCoy

~Golden

•

anniversary celebrated

: EAST LIVERPOOL .. George
•and Wilda Ours McCoy, formerly of
; Jbcine, were honored at a family
dinner on Aug. 23 in celebration of
·their 50th wedding anniversary.
; · It was hosted by their children
:and grandchildren at lhe West Point
:Nazarene Fellowship Hall in East
~Liverpool.
.
.
· The former Wilda I. Ours 1s lhe
' daughter of Kennelh and Edna Forepoan Ours. She married George A.
·McCoy, son of Philip and Anna
;Proffit McCoy on Sept. 23, 1947 in
:Pomeroy.

POMEROY -- Russell and fuani.ta Spencer of Pomeroy will be
observing their 50th wedding
anniversary on Sunday, Oct. 26.
Mr. and Mrs. Spencer were mar·
ried on Oct. 26, 1947 at Big Send.
W. Va.
the late Rev. W. C. McKibben.
have two

Regina Cooper of Morgantown, W.
Va .. and Julia Brown of South Carolina, and five grandchildren.
Mr. Spencer is the daughter of
Mrs. Edna Life of Reedsville and the
late Rev. Edmond Life. He is the son
of the late Dwight and Ella Spencer.

Before retiring in 1985, he was
employed at Consol Co. He served
with lhe U. S. Navy during World
War II.
Mrs. McCoy is a homemaker and
a member of the LaCroft Nazarene
by Bob Hoeflich
Church.
They are lhe parents of a daughnever.
ment
ter, Brenda Printy of Dallas, Texas;
Well-known Middleport resident, cleville area listed Mrs. Mildred
four sons, Philip of Wellsburg, W. 'Arthur Strauss, observed his 89th Beason as the daughter of Dr. Lewis
Va.; Kennelh and Stanley of East birthday on Oct. 16. Art is still • Thomas, Middleport, readers state
Liverpool; and Scott of Camas, growing those beautiful roses. He that Dr. Thomas and his wife, Susie,
Wash. They have II grandchildren, has 225 rose bushes in his garden had no children and Mrs. Beascn
and four great-grandchildren.
and of course, many of you are was a niece. The furnishings of both
familiar with lhe great Chrislmas the Thomas home and Dr. Thomas'
holiday decorations he places at his office were sold at the Circleville
S. Third Avenue residence.
sale. Incidentally, lhe Thomas home
is still' well preserved and stands at
Auracting auention in the win· the lop of Walnut St., in Middleport.
and wife Teresa Hander of Bidwell.
They have three grandparents, Erin dow of the Riverbend Arts Council A reader also reports that at one time
and Alan Shellington and Cody Center on North Second Ave., Mid· Dr. Thomas maintained an office on
dleport. i.s the .art work of Krista the oecond floor of wbat is today
Haner.
The couple resides on !last Bethel White, who Jives on South Second . referred to as ' the Friendly :tavern
Krista's the daughter of Mr. and structure.
Church Road in Gallipolis.
Mrs . David Yost and Mrs. Yost is the
former Teddy Marshall, fonnerly of
You might want to make a note
Middleport.
lhat Leona Myers will be observing
And speaking of windows. her 96th birthday on Oct. 25. \Cards
•••
Becky Nease Anderson has created will reach her at the Pomeroy Nurs· .
Monday, October 20
an attractive showing in Anderson's ing and Rehabilitation Center.
• ••
window in Pomeroy carrying out a 36759 Rock Springs Road,
GALLIPOLIS . Auditions for
Pomeroy.
Halloween theme.
pans in Dicken's "A Christmas
Carol" from 6 . 8 p.m. al Ariel The·
Two key administrative people
Quite an honor for Pomero)i's
atre. For information call Standella
will be retiring from Veterans Keith Ashley who was recently
Mundell at 367 ·0225.
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy this elected commander of the Ohio
month.
De~artment, Sons of Union Veterans
CENTERVILLE - Thurman
They are Scou Lucas, .administra- of the Civil War.
Grange 1416, 7:30p.m.
tor, and Doris A. Ihle, administrative
Keith is the first man in the Unitassistant. Together they have a com· ed States lo have served as both the
bined service of some 56 years in commander of a department of the
TUesday, Oc:tober 11
Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil
administration at the hospital.
You' re invited to a public War and a division of the Sons of
. RIO GRANDE· Buckeye Hills
fare well reception to be held from 2 Confederate Veterans. And, he is the
FFA alumni meeting, 7 p.m. in the
to 4 p.m. Friday, Oct. 24, in the hos· first man in Ohio to have se rvcd ·as
Ag. mechanics class room . Dues
pita! cafeteria. It will be one of the state leader of all three men's
will be collected and officers electthose informal drop in for a few societies which include Sons of the
ed. Refreshments served.
minutes things. MarJlarel Co..Si and American Revolution. the Society of
•••
the nutritional department of the the War of 1812 and the Sons of
GALLIPOLIS . Auditions for pans hospital will serve light refresh- Union Veterans of the Civil War.
m Dicken's "AChnstmas Carol"
ments. October 31 will be the final
1
from 6 · 8 p.m. at Ariel Theatre.
The pumpkin crop this year docs
·work day for both Scoll and Doris.
For information call Standella
seem ahundanl. Do~s anynnl.! ever
Mundell at 367·0225.
Although a public sale advertise- make a pic out of those things·.'

Beat of the Bend ...

:.Haners celebrate anniversary
GALLIPOLIS - James and Hilda
·Haner observed !heir 43 anniversary
·on September25.
~ Th:Y. are tlje, parenlli of ,two ciJil.dren - Diana · and husband, Lyle
Sbellington of Gallipolis,and Dennis

...

Sunday, Oc:tober 19
KANAUGA- Special worship
service at Silver Memorial FWB
Church, Rand Ave., 2 p.m. with
Rev. Arnold Skaggs preaching and
Willing Workers Choir singing.

•••

CROWN CITY- Youth night at
Victory Baptist Church with Denise
Bonecutlcr and family speaking, 7
p.m. Church youlh group will open
wilh devotional and sing.

•••

ADDISON - Rick Barcus to
preach a1 Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 7:30p.m.

The Gallia County : :
Health Department ·:
can think of 9 good.:
reasons to · .:
Immunize on time: ·:

CROWN CITY · Lisa Ellen
Houck and Charles Edward North
were married in a double ring cere· ·
mony at the Catlettsburg Church of
God in Catleusburg, Ky, on October
14.
The bride is the daughtcrof Den·
ver H. Houck and Wilma Maxine
Houck of Crown City. The groom is
the son of Ms. Jerry A. (Stanley)
North of Rodney. The ceremony was
performed by Rev. Thomas C.
Mullins.
The !llaid of honor was Ti~a
McCarty, niece of the bride. James
McCarty, nephew of the bride, was
·best man.
The bride is employed with
Rockwell Automation of Gallipolis
and the groom is self employed with
North's General Contractor of Bidwell.

Measles, Mumps, ·'
Diphtheria, Tetanus,
Hepatitis B, Rubella,
Spinal Meningitis,
Pertussis, Polio. ..

But VouOuly
, Need One.

Your baby's good health is ~
the best reason to ·
immunize early
and on time.

lmmuniz' On time. Your
Bally's Counting On You.·

CHECK THE
WANT ADS FIRST!

446·4612 Exi. 292 .

•••

GALLIPOLIS · Providence Bapti&amp;t Church on Buck Ridge will
observe !heir IS7lh anniversary.
Afternoon services at 3 p.m. with
Rev. Douglu Caner and congregation of First Baptist Church,
Burlingtoo.
.'

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Historical Society Board meeting, I
p.m. General meeting at society's
beadquanen, Betty Clarkson from
Bossard Memorial Library will
speak about the library's genealogical resources, 2:30 p.m.

•••

GLAMOUR
PHOTOGRAPHY

GALLIPOLIS - American
Legion AUxiliary Lafayette Unit27
meeting al Post Home. 7:30 p.m.

...

REVIVALS

Before

•••

Salem Baptist Church, in Gage,
BIDWELL - Keith Eblin preach·
will
present Nonn Arrington, Bibliing and Sharon Eblin singinl at
.
cal
dramatization,
Sunday October
Springfield Baptist Chun:h. 6 p.m.
19 - October 22. Sunday morning
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Chris- services at 10:30 a.m.. nightly services at 7 p.m.
tian Chun:h open house to mark
2Slh anniversary, 2 - 4 p.m. Tours,
Trinity Baptist Church in Rio
refreshments, door prize to be given
Grande
will host special meetings,
away.
October 20 -24, 7 p.m. nightly with
CROWN em - Don and Sher- Myron Guiler.
ry Swick will sing at Go:od HOJ!!=
Centenary United Christian
United Baptist Church, II a.m.
Chun:h revival. October 16 - 19
with Rev. Jack Holley and Rev.
CROWN em- John Pew,
Donnie
Johnson preaching nightly,
Bc:nny Ross and tbe Smith Creek
7
p.m.
Special
singing.
Singers will be at Good Hope Unit·
ed Baptist Church, 7 p.m.

.·-.
~

1. Complete Make-over

2. Hair Styling
3. Wardrobe and Accessories
4. Fashion Photo Session
5. 0118 (1) *Complimentary
8x10 Color Portran
Of courae - addHional portraite

may be purchased!
Major cradH carda accepled

...

•••

ONLY

Your Session
Includes

•••

'Comp1im11ro1ar pcxtraitls II 11ro1 pooo

BY APPOINTMENT ONLY, CAI:.L TODAY

SUMMER IMAGE

446-6959

Hair, Nail and Tanning Salon
Located near Haffelt'e Mill Outlet
•

•

(jift Certificates ~vaifa6/i

St. Rt. 160

. ~.

3.

$100 to $150?

•••

•••

commotion of drivers loading, and
stacks
of publications, was also
By:
' · ~·
clean.
Never have I seen such an
Dorothy
: :~:
enormous commercial building so
Sayre
fl~'
spotless.
~ :~·
After the tour, we were ushered
'!~~·
..
lo the cafeteria where the owner and
;::.. :
' During this another executive were holding a lea
; :~:
past summer in our honor. They, with our guides,
at Queen Mar- played "hoSts with tbe most" and
. .. .
&lt;;:-:
garet College served tea, coffee, orange juice, sev·
' :1io:Edinburgh, I had numerous occa- era! kinds of tea sandwiches (includ·
1·~jons to experience the kintlness and . ing a special chicken tikka), hot
. ::hospitality of the Scottish people.
sausage rolls, cookies, and savory
· : ~ However, I believe the supreme chips .
:-cordial occurrence .was between a
The food tasted w~nderful and
·'large publishing company and the made gluttons of us'all. Much ban:pbio University class of which I ter was exchanged between lhe
· : was a member.
Scots and us on the sausage rolls
·Each year when the School for cook's identity.
•Ytsual Communications from Ohio
I'm still not sure whether the
· : University studies abroad in Edin- executives had made the delicious
. ·burgh, they take a one-day field trip little appetizers, as they stated, or
~o \he largest independent publishnot; but they were mouth-watering.
. jng company in Scotland, D.C.
When asked how the owner and
'Thomson and Company, Limited, in employees accomplished much
Dundee.
work and entertained touring groups
. • The company has been in contin- so well, tbey.replied, "Ohio Univerloous business for 258 years and sity is the only group we do this for."
boasts several daily newspapers and I believe everyone in our class felt
The Scots Magazine among its pub-· humbled and very special at the
same time.
lications.
; After arriving at our Dundee desIt was a perfect lour, and a lovely
. Jination by train and taxi, we were tea, givim out of the friendship
· warmly greeted and taken 10 a con- between Scots and instructors from
lerence room. The owner, Mr. Alas- Ohio University.
: jair Thomson, provided .us with a
In Scotland. I felt warm with the
· ::brief company history and spoke of ac_quaintances of people who will
:·:his compa)ly 's current business vcn- remain on my friendship list for
. :lures. Two of Thomson's execu- notes, e-mail, and. hopefully, visits
::Jives, Blair Thomson, and Mike to Ohio. In the United States,
;·-Heggie . were assigned as our George was reading his surp'rise email.
· guides.
I know I speak for my entire
, -~ We started at the computer center.
;; I'd done my homework. Having class nnd instructors when I say that
·been in Scotland twice before, I was Scouish hospitality knnws no
· familiar with The Scots Magazine. · bounds, especially in a Dun'dcc pub..A recent copy of the magazine had lishing finn .
··· ,outed the company's worldwide
Dototllr So~ ani!""' h•lloncl Goorgo, •
tormer1y of Mtlgt County, moved back
internet postcard greetings.
ltN'II yun -eo II'ICf now rHide In •
·: As my husband George was in abOut
toeing 1110 Olllo Alvor jull below
"our U.S. home, I inquired about the 8~tcUH,
· iervice and was sOon composing a
· ~rief message 10 George!
: • While the tour was impressive
;,.ith instantaneous use of cameras to
· computers, and the ease of editing
· ~ia computers, the one thing that
. struck me throughout the tour was
• 1101 the technology, bullhe cleanli: iess of the plant!
,
; ; Even the printing room, with the
:9uge machines towering upward for
' llories. was immaculate.
: : The distribution dock with all the

·Why Pay

...

to

The 1925 Gallipolis football tum was the first Blue Devil unit
play In the .SEOAL. That ynr they beat rival Jackaon 6 .. 0. ThiS
year's game will be the 68th contaat between the two schools slncie
1925. It's all tied 31 -31 with five ties.
was in 1943 when the referees ruled
Jackson had recovered a Homer
Burton fumble even though Burton
was at loast three yards out of

Sandy Drummond, nutrition coordi·
nator, told the group that over
44,000 meals had been. prepared by
the kitchen staff so far this year,
including some 38,000 delivered
into the homes of seniors in all 15
townships in Gallia County.
Volunteer Coordinator Lucy Earwood cited over 568 hours of work
and chores perfonned by her group
in just the past three months.
Sharon Tackett presented members of the Gallia County advisory
council, who meet for the purpose of
recommending improvements in the
numerous services and activities
carried out by the center.
Other reports heard by the group
were given by Karen Gibson, on
senior day care; Buford Minnis on
chores; Gilben Craig on meal preparation; Gail Smith on outreach services; Debra _Bartels on transponalion; and Odie O'Donnell on public·
ity/socialization.
In her review of lhe previous 12
months involving care and service to

bounds when he loso 1he ball . The
referees later agreed wilh Gallipolis
that it was bad call. But the JacksoJ&gt;.
the 13·12 win stood nonetheless. :

Buy, 8811 or Trac:te,j
·

_,, In~

....

,:ct:AssiPIEDsf:

hundreds of Gallia County's elderly
Director Niday remarked " that
today. on the 24th annual meeting of
this membership, we served the first
meal out of our new kitchen facility
following over 18 months of fund
raising, construction, contributions,
and planning."
Niday informed the group that
planning is now underway to con·
vert the old kitchen into a pool
room, that a new handicapped accessible van has been approved for the
center, plans for serving evening
meals are underway, accounting proceedures have been upgraded, and
. the adult day care program may be
expanded to three days instead of
tbe current two day operation.
Rev. Luther Tracy gave the invo·
cation, Carol Dewitt handled \he
drawing for door prizes, and a finan·
cia! report was prepared by Dr.
Howard Greene for distribution to
the members.

is unbeatable .

..,.......

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23
NOON TO 8 P.M.

•••

Jimmy
Niday led Gallipolis on a last
minute 77 yard drive in six ·plays.
The Blue and White scored lhe TD
and lhe two point conversion and
gota 14-14 tie.
..
There have been some upsets. In
1952 Gene Slaughter got his first
win u Jackson coach upsetting Gallipolis 14-2. Slaughter had lost his
first three games as Jackson head
man. He lhen went on and won 4 I of
his next 47 games and four league
titles.
In 1956 Gallipolis beat Jackson
12-6the week lhatlhe Ironmen were
ranked 9lh in Ohio in the AP poll. In
1959 the Blue Devils upset Jackson
18- I 4 but lhe Ironmen still won the
league title that year.
Other interesting tidbits from the
senes would include: The 1946
game when neither team completed
a pass and only 2 were auempted. In
1987 lineman' David Walters picked
up a Jackson fumble and rambled
for 84 yards and am.
Then there was the Jackson kick
off by Fred Henry in 1939 that only
traveled five yards and was recovered by Jackson. After a 15 minute
argument Gallipolis was given the
ball. The most controversial game

I :....,

Treat yourself and discover the beauty in you with ...

Crown City Wesleyan Church
will hold revival services October
14 - 19 with Dr. Marlin HOlle. Dis·
trict Superintendent of the TenGALLIPOLIS - Musical drama
'Emmanuel' al Ariel tlleatre, 6 p.m. nessee DisU'ict
Tuesday · Saturday at 7:30 p.m..
Admission free, sponsored hy
Sunday, 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
!&gt;ower in the Blood Ministry.

t

••
.._

•••

GALLIPOLIS · Gallipolis Area
Christian Women's Club Octoberfest, noon at The Stowaway.

By ODIE O'DONNELL
OVP Correapondent
GALLIPOLIS--At the 24th annual meeting of the Gallia County
Council on Aging Thursday, members elected new council members,
voted to make II minor changes in
the by-laws/constitution, heard .
reports on 1997 services, and
planned goals for I 998.
A Iota! of 77 members attended
tlte luncheon meeting at the Gallia
County Senior Resource Center and
elected Lucy Earwood, Jpnnie Lou
· Gabrielli, and Jim Craft to three year
terms on lhe council. Craft was reelected while Earwood and Gabrielli succeed Joe Stiles and Ruth
Miller.
Director Jean Jlliday then intra·
NEW MEMBERS • NeWly alect.d Gallla County Council on Aging duced all staff coordinators, who
. mamber1 are from left, Jim Craft, Jonnla Lou Gabrlalll, and Lucy reviewed their areas of responsibili·
· .Earwood.
ty.
Terri Irons, home care coordina·
tor. repoo;ed that over 14,000 hours
of home care has been performed by
certified nursing assistants (CNA),'

.~

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...

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Elections held for new
aging council ·members

i(~:

•••

Have You Felt Beautiful Lately?

yards in 33 carries in 1976, Paul
Evans churned out 141 yards in
1960, and Gene Armstrong had 145
yards in 1962. Pete Neal scored 30
of Gallipolis' 37 points in lhe 1971
game.
In 1962 Jackson's Steve Harrison, starting his first varsity game at
quarterback, threw for almost 200
yards against the eventual SEOAL
champs.
Great ·defensive games in the
rivalry . would include the 1985
effort by Gallipolis in holding Jackson to 40 yards of offense. In 1939
the Jackson defense never allowed
Gallipolis past the Jackson 45. In
1950 Gallipolis had three goal line
stands late in lhe game to preserve a
14-14tie.
In 1978 Gallipolis slopped a two
point conversion try by the Ironmen
late in the game to preserve a I4-13
win. But probably last year's performance by Jackson in limiting lhe
Blue Devils to five yards total,
offense was the greatest feat in the
rivalry. There have been 28 shutouts
in the 67 games. Jackson's defense
has pitched 16 and Gallia. Academy
12.
The greatest comeback in ihe
series was probably in {973 when

fi~ Scottish ·hospLtality

...

VINTON · Huntington Grange
regular meeting at7:30 p.m.
Potluck.

broke open a tie game wilh five min·
utes left in the fourlh quarter wilh a
•
6S yard punt retum for a touchdown.
In I966 Bruce Smilh blocked a
Jackson punt setting up Rod
Gi~ey's sneak for lhe game's only
Since
the score. The 1980 game was won by
SEOAL began in Jackson after GallipoHs fumbled a
1925 the Jackson-Gallipolis football punt return. A deflected punt along
serU&gt;s is now even, 31-31 with five wid! a blocked FG. attempt and an
ties. Interestingly about one third of inq:rception helped Jackson win 17·
. all lhe contests have been decided 8 in 1984.
·
by lhe punting game.
In 1993 a fumbled punt Jed to a
Blocked punts returned for TDs 20-6 Gallipolis win. Matthews' long
accounted for the only points in both · return of a Gallipolis punt propelled
the 1925 and 1926 games as Gal- Jackson to a win in 1994. The 1995
lipolis won both times 6-0. In 1931 a · game. was decided when Jackson
pass off of a fake punt from Brothers fiambled a punt wilh lhree minutes
to Swanson led to the Gallipolis to go in the game. Gallipolis won
win. In 1938 Gallia Academy had 14-1 :t Other games have been lost
two punts blocked, one of which led by p&lt;ior punting.
.lo the only score.
There have been some great indiThe Blue Devils' defense was vidual performances in the game.
able to overcome three interceptions For Jackson one would include the
and eight fumbles but not the following rushing feats : Bill
blocked punt.
McDonald's 209 yards in 1946,
In 1941 Jackson pulled off the Butch Davis' 205 yards in 1964, .
statue of liberty from punt formation Marty Exline's 182 yards on 37 carfor the winning touchdown . In 1945 ries in 1989 and his I 89 yards on 34
Jackson blocked a punt for a touch- cames in 1990, Steve Humphreys'
down with only one minute to go in -179 yards in 1983, and 135 pound
the game. The Jronmen won 13-12. Steve Williams' 179 yards in. 1984.
In 1960 Gallipolis' Bill Conley Gallipolis' Gary Dabney had 176

HOUCK-NORTH

Gallia Community Calendar
Tilt Community Calenclllr 11 pub='
llahed u 1 free service to nonprofit groups wishing to
announce meeting• and 1peclal
ewnta. Tilt calendlr Ia not
dltlgnld to promote eales or
funcka!Mrl of any type. Hems
111 printed 11 ap~ee permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run •
apeclflc number of daya.

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

;Gallipolis-Jackson football in tied s9ries

Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. North

Mr. and Mrs. Rus1111 Spencer

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Put·Together A ·
Happy Holiday With
A Chris·t mas Club From
Peoples .National.
1998 Christmas Clubs are now available in
•
paymen~ plans of $20, S10, $5 and $2 a week.
You make 49 weekly payments and we make
the 50th and final payment for you.
Irs an easy_way to saveI
Those opening $5, S10 or $20 Clubs at
Peoples National will receive a fros~ed glass
votive candleholder. Its lovely glow is sure to put you in
the holiday spiritl But hurry - supplies are limitedl
pt. pleasant 674-1 000
mason 773-5514
new haven 882-21 ~5

II-*

Member FDIC

loan hotline 675-ASN'
customer service 675-5645
tellebanker 675-6961

A coupon book ia providad to record your paymantt. Automatic withdrawal from a deposit account is nat required.
Thera Ia 1 penalty equal to one payment tor eq withdrnral or fa~ure to campleta club. Fi"t wHkly payment due the
wMk ol October 20, 1997. Flnallnatallment paid at matldy.
.(

j'

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpoila, OH • Point Pleaunt, wv

Sunday,~ober19,1997

·

Sunday,Ckrtober19,1997

•

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,amballlm...-~ • Page CS

Pomeroy 1 Middleport 1 Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

Janet Byers awarded post graduate certificate

Mr. and Mra. William Burns

RIO GRANDE - A dean at the
University of Rio Grande arid Rip
Grande Community College has
earned another academic credential
in the field of nursing.
Janet M. Byers, Ph.D., R.N., was
recently awarded the Post Graduate
Certificate in Advanced Community
Health Nursing by the Allen and
' Donna Lansing School of Nursing's
Master of Science in Nursing Program at Bellarmine College in
Louisville, Kentucky.
Byers is the first student to graduate from the post grnduate certificate program implemented in 1995
by the dean of the Lansing School of .
Nprsing and faculty in the grnduate
nursing program at Bellarmine. The
program provides tbe opportunity
for nurses with earned master's
degrees to also earn the community
health nursing cenificate.
Byers, dean of the College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences and
administrator for the Holzer School
of Nursing at Rio Grande, stated that
one of her primary goals in earning
the post graudale certificate was to
better serve the university and the
Holzer School of Nursing as a consultant, resource person and instructor in the upper division course,
"Nursing in the Community." Byers
plans to ephance the curticulum of
the pre-RN-Iicensure associate
degree rulrsing program at Rio
Grande by adding more theory and
learning experiences in communitybased. community-focused care.
"Healthcare in general is ·in a
state of rapid transition with dramat- .
ic changes," said Byers. "The focus
of healthcare services is currently
shifting from acute care settings
(hospitals) ·to the community, especially the home. Nursing care also

Mr. and Mrs. Neal Manion

BRIGHT-BURNS LYONS-MANION
',./

.GATLINBURG, TENNESSEE GATLINBURG, TENNESSEE - Burns II of Rio Grande and An~a Amanda R. Lyons and Neal A. ManRachel S. Bright and William C. King of Rodney.
ion were united in maniage SeptemBums _were united in marriage Sep- r
The bride was escorted 1~ the ber 27 at the Sugarland Chnpel in
rcmher 27 at the Sugarland Chapel altar by her stepfather, and given in
Gatlinburg, Tenn. The double ring
in Gatlinburg, Tenn. in a double ring marriage by her parents.
ceremony was performed by Rev.
ceremony performed by Rev. Ray
Nicole Bright, daughter of the Ray Morris.
POMEROY -- Jennifer Denise dant wore earrings. a gifl of ,1hc Morris.
brid~ . was the newer girl.
The bride .is the daughter of Gary
Mora and Melvin Lee Massie, Jr. bride.
. The bride is the daughter of
The bride is a graduate of Rio and Pam Lyons of Bidwell. The
exchanged wedding vows in a cereThe newer girl wore a red dre&gt;S Pamela Lyons of Bidwell, and Jack Grande University and is employed
m,ony at the Chester United with puffed sleeves and full gathcrcq, Bright of Point Pleasant, W.Va. The by Holzer Clinic. The groom is gro'om is the son of Neal Manion of
Jackson and Marcella Browning or
~ethodistChurch on Sept:6.
skirt, accented with white lace trim, groom is the son of William C. . employed by Luigion's of Jackson.
Wellston.
The bride is the daughter of and carried a white basket with red
'
··'
Richard and Denise Mora of dried rose petals.
Pomeroy, and the groom is the son
Best man was Brian Mershon of
of Melvin and Toresa Massie, Jr. of Patriot, the ushers were Jason Mora.
Thurman.
brother of the bride, Pomeroy, and
The 3:30 p-.m. double-ring cere- Kevin Staten of Jackson. Groomsml)ny was performed by the Rev. men were Jimmy Massie of Gallipoearly," he says.
vale rooms, the Royal Ceremonial
Sl;lron Hausman following a pro- lis, Chris Metzger of Morehead, Ky.. By LARK BORDEN
. .
Diana's wedding dress was dis- Dress Collection and the rooms
8f!l'l of music by Susan Parsons, and Kevin Staten of Jackson. Kody Gannett News Service
Offict.als m charge of a $5 mtlh~n played tn the state apanments at where monarchs William and Mary ·
pianist, and soloists. Gerald Kelly Mershon of Patriot was the ring
remodeling proJect at London s Kensmgton Palace unttl 1992 when (1650-1702) held court. The state
wlie sang "Butterfly Kisses" and bearer.
Pa~ Eichinger who sang lire Lord's
The groom wore a black fuii- Kensmgton Palace, home of the late the pnncess had 11 removed for con- apartments also include important
Pri.yer during the ceremony.
dre ss tuxedo with white vest and tie. Dtana, Pnncess of Wales, say they servauon and because - accordmg art works from the Royal Collection,
lhcluded in the decorations was The best man , ring bearer and are wattmg for meetmgs :ovnh the to the dress's designers- her mari- including paintings by Tintorello
·
an aliar vase of of red roses and groomsmen were \attired· in black Spencer . famtly to deter:nme h~w tal ~roblems had becomJ: public ~nd and Van Dyke.
Drana
wrll
be
celebrated
m
exhtbtts
she
deemed
11
an
mappropnate
The
palace
closes
this month
white mums in memory of deceased tuxedos with red cummerbunds and
auracuon.
(October) and remains closed to the
family memben. Seven-bnnch can- ties1 while the father of the bride there.
David Becton, chief executive of
The dress is the ptopeny of the public until spring - the third condelabra adorned the altar and a unity WQril a black tuxedo with black
candle was lighted as a part of the cummerbund and tie. Each wore a the Historic Royal Palaces Agency, Spencer family and its ultimate des- sec.utive winter it has been closed
which manaaes operations ond • tmauon woll be theor decoston:
for renov.ations. Previously. public
ce..-y. Tulle and rosebuds deeo. sin@IJo ro11e boutonniere.
restoration
projects
at
Kensington,
Kenstngton
Palace
conSists
of
areas
of the palace "were frozen in
rated the pews.
The bride's mother wore a red
the
Tower
of
London,
Hampton
three
buildings
-the
private
"'grace
the
'60s."
according to Becton .
Given· in marriage by her parents brqcade dress while Mrs. Massie
and escorted by her father, the bride was in a black and silver ensemble. Court and Whitehall Palace, is visit- and favor" apartments once occu- Once renovated. "we expect it to be
\IJOre ·a white satin princess stylea - Both had corsages of red and white ing Colonial Williamsburg. Va., this · pied by Diana and still the residcnc.e a living museum of life at courtmonth to see if auractions there can of other members of the royal famr- . the costumes. how they were made
S~'!'n with short lace sleeves and
roses.
lace bodice overlay. The back feaA reception was held at Royal be interpreted for use in the palaces. ly : Queen Anne 's Orangery, an and how e\·eryCine wanted to come
Whil~ Kensington Palace is the
tnformal garden house open tor here to be presented at court; or to
wnid a diamond shaped keyhole Oak Resort. The bride's table fca&lt;)p.!hing with satin bunons and bow. tured a three-tiered fountain cake birthplace of Queen Victoria. refreshment and summer jazz con- present their qaughtcrs ...
B~cton also O\~rsc~s operations of
Embroidered organza trim embell- with two-tiered small cakes on "Diana is now more popular than certs; and the state apartments.
Victoria,"
Beetori
said
enroute
from
which
include
Queen
Victoria's
prithe
Tow~r of London. Hampton·
ished the train and also edged the either side, decorated l"ith small red
Washington,
D.C.,
to
Williamsburg.
(Jemline of the gown.
roses. Red and white carnations. rib; The bride wore a halo headpiece bons and English ivy completed the And any effort to make the public
accented with roselles and bow with table decor. Jackie Frost and Kristen areas or the remodeled palace a " living museum, will have to include
:0 finger-tip veil of tulle . The bridal Mershon served the cake.
her."
~semble was fashioned by her
Guests were registered by
Earl Spencer; Diana's brother,
grandmother, Judy Erchtnger. She Heather Well and Heather Mora.
The couple took a wedding trip to has proposed building a museum
wore a single pearl pear-sh~ped
necklace belonging ·to her great- Virginia Beach. They will reside at honorin g Diana near the family
estate in Ahhrop, about 70 miles
grandmother. Mrs. Polly Eichinger. Thurman.
The cascading bridal bouquet feaThe bride is a 1996 graduate of north of London. but Becton says
!Vred roses, red and white carna- Eastern high School She is enrolled talks with the Spencers will be held
lions, accented with pearls and lace. at the University of Rio Grande soon to dec~de what among Diana's
: The anendants were Jessica Karr, where she is majoring in elementary personal effects can be displayed at
l;,ong Bonom. mard of honor; and education. She works as a cashier at Ken sington Palace. "It's still too
~bbie Frost of Long Bonom . . Acorn Plaza Food! and, Oak Hill .
Melissa Dempsey of Chester, DarMassie is a 1991 graduate of
l~ne Doerr of Pomeroy, bridesmaids; South Western High School and is
Riley Nibert of Gallipolis, the employed at Bowman's Homecatc,
ilower glfl, and Ashley and · Juicy Jackson.
Qblin, cousins of the bride, acolytes.
Among 'the out-of-town guests
: . They wore e111bossed red satin, anending were Dianne Leach,
•
!lt'tncess-styled. tea length dre.,es grandmother of the bride, Eric Hola_&lt;;cented with back. lacing and nared lon, Harley Stalnaker, Marg~rct Trusl~eves. They camed colonial bouman, and Emily DeMaria.
quets of roses, red and white carnations, trimmed with lace. Each allenI I
Don't get stme by high prices'
•
•
Shop
tho
clossifitd
section.
•

.

The bride was escorted to the
altar by her father and given in marriage by her parent•. The bride's
niece. Nicole Bright. was the !lower
girl. ·
.
The bride is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School, and is
employed by Way Below i~ Gallipo- .
lis.
The groom is employed by Holzer Medical Center.
The couple resides in Rodney.

'@'@

attending a one-day seminar or conference will provide an individual
with sufficient updated or new
knowledge about a particular topic,"
said Byers. "While at other times it
may be imperative that a person
enroll in a more formal, long-tenn
program of coursework in order to
achieve desited competencies."
Byen is active in numerous nursing education and healthcare organizations in the state of Ohio and particularly in southeastern Ohio. She
has been a member of the Jackson
County
Health
Department's
"Healthy First Steps" Immunization
Coalition since its inception in 1996. "
"Healthy First Steps" is a pilot projeer in conjunction with the Ohio
Department of Health designed to
increase the immunization rates of
children in Jackson County. ,
In April of '96, Byers taught pregnant and parenting teens at Jackson,
Oak Hill and Wellston high schools
about the importance of up-to-dale
immunizations for children two
years old and younger.
The teens were enrolled in
the Graduation, Reality and DualRole Skills (GRADS) classes at
those schools. Her presentations
were a major part of one of the certificate program nursing courses in
the Belhiirnine program health promotion and Community action.
From 1989 to '92, she served on
lh~ Southeast Ohio Quadrant Commiuee of the Public Health Nursing
Service/Education Task Force of the
Ohio Department of Health.
At the present, Byers is a member
of Colleagues in Caring: Nursing
Workforce 2000, Southeast Ohio
Region Consortium, a Robert Wood
Johnson funded grant of the Ohiq
League for Nursing.

•
••

RECEIVES CERTIFICATE - Dr. Janet Byers, center, received her post-graduate certHicate In
Advanced Community Health Nursing from Dr. Suaan Hockenbllrger, right, dean of the Lanalng
Schaal of Nursing, Ballarmlne College, during 1 recent apeclal ceremony on the Bellannlne campua.
Dr. Margaret Miller, left, director of the master of science In nursing degree program and advl1or to
Byers, loakl on.
·
.
In addition to her newly earned
with. her husband, Dr. Robin R. their children Heather and Scan.
certificate from Bellarmine ; Byers is DY'"'• who is a local
and
a registered nurse having earned a·
bachelor of science in nursing
"magna cum l'aude" from St. John
College in Cleveland and a master
of science with a major in nursing
from Ohio State University.
She earned a Ph.D. in higher education administration from Ohio
University.
Byers, an employee at Rio
Grande since 1980 resides in Jack-

Post Office can't find
occupant at 1600
Pennsylvania Ave.

Now that Diana is 'more popular' than Queen Victoria,
Kenington remodelers want a palace fit for her memory

cy

has changed from a medical view of
healing the sick to an orientation
that prevents illnesses and promotes
health.
"Practice settings in which community health nurses are employed
include the home, a variety of clinics
and ambulatory care, schools, industry, homeless shelters, ·camps, hospice care, in addition to residential
programs and centers, such as retirement communities. assisted living
facilities and subacute rehabilitative
centers," sbe added.
According to Byers, the Bellarmine program was initiated in
hopes of educating more nurses with
advanced knowledge, research.
leadership, management and clinical
skills necessary in managing healthcare with individuals, families,
groups and communities.
Concepts such as community
action, p~imary health. care, health
promotion, health maintenance, disease prevention. home health care,
marketing and community education
were explored in detail.
Byers completed the program
over the past two years while still
employed full-time at Rio Grande.
She commuted froni her home near
Jackson to the Bellannine campus in
Louisville as well as to the off-campus site in As!iland, Kentucky.
She me/ clinical experience
practieum requirements through
working with practicing community
health nurses in Louisville and
Columbus as well as in Gallia, Jackson, Pike and Ross counties.
A proponent of life-long learning,
Byers is contantly involved in
acquring advanced knowledge and
new skills related to her professional and employment responsibilities.
"There are occasions when

ENFIELD. Conn. (AP) - Most .
schoolchildren know that President
Clinton lives at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
in Washington. Someone at the U.S.
Postal Service apparently does not.
Eleven-year-old
Christina

Coun Palace and Whitehall for an
agency founded in 1989 to combat
dwindling revenues from tQUrism
and reduced government funding for
the buildings' upkeep and rcstora-•
tion . Hampton Court had been seriously damaged in a 1986 fire . Thousands complained about the long
wait to enter the cramped Jewel
House at the Tower of London England's No. 1 tourist amaction.
The new Jewel House opened in
1994 and can accommodate 20,000
visitors each day.
Beeton also has introduced some
money-raising ventures at the Tower
of London - including ' expanded
gift shops and rctiling space for private events. (To rent space in the
Crown Jewels room. the cost is $75
per person. not including l.'atering
and labor. I

-

Reveruzzi's letter to "President of lhe

United States, Mr. William Clinton," at
that address came back to her this week
stamped: "Moved. Not Forwardable."
The Enfield girl printed the address
clearly but admilled..,he didn't post it
with a ZIP code. That \nay have been the
problem, a Postal Service spokesman
said.
White House spokesman Jon ·
Murchinson said leuers to the president
often arrive withoul even a street
address, "allhough it takes longer with·

out the ZIP code."

- ~~I

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TOPS to hold!
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CHESHIRE - TOPS #OH 1383,
Cheshire will hold an open house I
~(lmecoming on Monday; October
lp, from I0 -II a.m. at,the Cheshire
United Methodist Church. Weigh in will be from 8:30- 9:45a.m.
·: TOPS Club. Inc. was the first
major weight - loss organization in
the world.
: . It was founded in Milwaukee.
Wis. in, 1948 by Esther S. Manz,
-v)th the philosophy that those overweight should. "Take off pounds
sensibly."
The group help members obtain
weigh goals and diets. under the
guidance and safety of thetr personal physicians.
: Members attend weekly meeting,
aHd participate in games, skits,
59"8'· and exercise .
Past members arc welcome to
attend the open house. Perspective
members have their first visit free.
For more informatioh contact
Iinet Thomas at 367-0274.

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PomtJroy • Mldd.,_ • Gtilllpolla, OH • Point PieJNnt, WV

Sundey,Ckrtober19,1997

_
Qecoratrng tips for when you're single again
Jy BAIUIAkA MAYER

bars and shelving, to make the ~pace
go further.
for AP Special Feahlns
A set of attractive cardboard hatThe first thins Carol Weissman
Kunh did when her marriage broke boxes, available ready-made from
up was to buy a new mattress for the catalogs or covered as a do-it-yourmaster bedroom and a new set of self project, can hold hats, scarves,
handbags and sweaters on the
'sheets.
- Her sister Judith Weissman went shelves.
Kurth convened part of the bedeven further.. She redecorated, from
room into an exercise area and ·
soup to nuts.
.
.
Although the d1vorce rate IS advises clients to do the same.
"The spot where his old ratty
down slightly, with 4.3 divorces per
stood - often piled high with
chair
thousand of population in 1996 •
compared to 4.7 in 1990, quite few his clothes - is perfect for a new
people are still likely to be redeco- treadmill or exercise bike," the ·
designer says.
rating for one:
A tall wooden kitchen stool ,the
Approximately 43 percent of
111arriages will break up, says Dr. right height for a water bottle and
Raben Schoen, a researcher at Johns towel, painted to coordinate with the
Hopkins University and a specialist room, would be an inexpensive
in divorce statistics. And roughly 40 extra.
Kurth says she is working with a
-percent will end within two years.
· The real question, Kunh says, is number of women who are redeco"What can I do to get on with my rating after a divorce. It may be a
1ile and to tum a negative into a pos- sign of the times.
Here are some of her decorating
ijive?" She's an architect in Bed·
fprd. NY., who was divorced three tips:
-If
you
get custody of his bedyears ago.
room
desk,
tum
it into a vanity or
- Looking on the bright side. for
-one thing. "It can be therapeutic to makeup area by painting and coverredecorate when a relationship ing it with fabric. Top the desk with
a piece of glass or mirror cut to size.
'breaks up," she says.
And a perso~ turning spaces that Set it out with perfume bottles and
were his-and-hers into spaces that decorative boxes ftlled with cosmetare all hers has likely doubled her ics.
-The bathroom decor no longer
wardrobe space.
As rearranging is necessary any- has to have a masculine accent. Sew·
way, Kurth suggests installing orga- decorative borders onto existing
nizers such as wire-grid hanging towels. or buy new towels and

a

shower curtain in a femirline pattern.
Add small containers of dried flowers or fresh flowers and a candle or

Oetobtt 11, 1881

rwo.
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"In my experience,'' she says,

"it's the women who ask for decorating tips after a separation or
divorce or the breakup .of a relationship."

·An exercise area and acceasorlas, rear, occupy space that was a cluttered comer whet:~ a~chltect
Carol Welasrnan Kurth share.d this bedroom with her husband before their divorce. Now she has
rearranged the apace to h.e r advantage. .

Area pharmacists to offer free medicine checkups
GALLIPOLIS - Pharmacists admissions," said Paul Stackhouse,
from the Mid-Ohio Valley Pharma- R.Ph., medicine review coordinator,
cists Association will provide older "totally, some 3.15 million admisresidents with a (fee, personalized sions annually to long-tef'll care
checkup of their medicines 'on · facilities, costing some $14.4 bil. Wednesday, Oct. 22 from 10 a.m. lion."
Stackhouse added that "drug:until I p.m. at the Gallia County
related problems are also responsiSenior Resource Center.
The service is known as a ble for 8. 76 million hospital admissions annually at a cost of $4 7.4 bil"Brown Bag" medicine review.
. · "Improper medicine use ·causes lion. Clearly, there is a need to help
. about 25 percent of nursing home our citizens understand their med- ·

ications, help them stay independent
and avoid these outcomes."
During the medicine checkups,
local pharmacists will review each
medicine and discuss the patient's
medicine-taking routine. The con:
versation is p.rivate and confidential.
Pharmacists will check for proper
scheduling of medications as
ordered by the physician, . side
effects, possible drug interactions
and duplications.

"We look for problems which arc
easy to solve, but which can lead to
severe consequences for a patient's
health," Stackhouse said.
"For example, a patient may be
going to several doctors and each
one has ordered medication that may
interact with one another, or they
may be going to several pharmacies ··
and because of multiple labeling
with brand and generic names,
pat,ients may be taking too much of

the same drug," he added.
"Also, studies show that about
half of all medicines prescribed are
taken
incorrectly,
sometimes
because patients don't have complete instruclio'ns or don't understand why il is important to follow
them exactly," Stackhouse said.
·
Many people appreciate the
chance to get about 20 minutes of a
health professional's undivided
attention - free of charge. Partici·

.Workshop slated for O.A.G.C. gardeners
GALLIPOLIS -O.A.G.C Region
· ll fall meeting will be on Saturday,
, October 25 at the Grace United
. Methodist Church, in Gallipolis.
:Registration begins a 8:30a.m.
· 'There will be a momin&amp; coffee
' hour by the Gallia County clubs.
Sale tables will be set up, and the
. meeting will begin at 9: 15 a.m.

The business session ..;ill include
installation of new officers and presentation of awards from the state
convention. Margaret Trissolini will
have a program on dried flower pictures. .
.
The afternoon program wtll feature Kern Ackerman, known as the
''Gourd Man." He will be telling

about growing and crafting gourds,
and will have examples of his art.
The Gallia County women have
planned a luncheon menu of ham
loaf, scalloped ]POtatoes, green
beani, ·..aw, rolls • .oherbet, oookies,
tea, and coffee. The cost of the meeting is $11.50 per member. Send
money and reservations to Betty

from the Amercian Automobile
Association and is included in the
price of $119 double occupancy.
Triple occupancy is only $109 per
person while a single is $129 .
Those on the trip will check into
the Quality Inn Northwest, located
in Lexington. have dinner at Ryan's
Steak House before visiting the
Kentucky Horse Farm for Southern
Lights "Spectacular Sights on Holiday Nights." This. production is dedicated to man's relationship with the
horse and features live entertain-

:Meigs Community Calendar
The Community Calendar is pub; ,lished as a free service to non-profit
·groups wishing to announce flleeting
:and special events. The calendar is
·not designed to promote sales or
: fund raisers of any type. Items are
: printed as space permits and cannot
· be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.
SUNDAY
CARPENTER- Carpenter Baptist.Church, located on SR 143, Carpenter, homecoming Sunday. Dinner
at noon; afternoon program, I :30
p.m. with special singers, and Joe
: Gwinn of Gallipolis, speaker.

,.
l

POMEROY - Revival at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 212
West Main ST. Pomeroy. to continue
through Oct. 22. Sunday 10:30 and 7
p.m. and Monday. Tuesday, and
: Wednesday. 7 p.m. each evening.
: Speakers Neil Proudfoot, Sunday
· morning; Damon Slone, Sunday and
: Wednesday nights; Jimmy Tingler.
Monday; Wayne Caner, Tuesday.
Special music nightly.
•

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,
I

• RACINE - Homecoming at the
: Morning Star United Methodist
: Church, Sunday. Church. 9:50a.m.;
: Sunday school, II a.m.; basket din ner, 12:30 p.m.; afternoon program,
I:30 p.m. with special singing. Pastor. Dewayne Stutler.
POMEROY - Revival services,
United
Methodist
: Enterprise
:Church. Sunday through Tuesday, 7
:p.m. each evening. Rev. Mel
Franklin, guest speaker.

EAST MEIGS - Homecoming,
South Bethel New Testament
Church, Sunday, Silver Ridge. Sunday·school, 9 a.m.; worship service,'
10:10 a.m., carry-in dinner at noon; ·
afternoon services, I :30 p.m. Music
by Russ and the Gospel Tones,
Rejoice. and Joseph Richie.

ment, a movie, arts and craft booths,
and an array of holjday collectibles.
A highlight is the 2 112 mile drive
through the park that features
dozens of holiday decorations a'nd
lights.
On Saturday, Dec. 6, following a
continental breakfast the group ·will
tour several hotsc farms, the
Keeneland Race Center, Buckram
Oak, and then stop for lunch at the
Fayette Mall on the way. home to
Gallipolis.
A $50 deposit is required with

Wells by Tuesday, October 21.
Members are asked to bring a
copy of the 1997-98 program booklet to the meeting, and items for the
sales tables.
All money raised will stay in,
Region II for shares plants, dried
material, and containers.

CLASSIFIEDS!

TUPPERS' PLAINS - St. Paul
United Methodist Church, Tuppers ·
Plains. to observe homecoming Sunday. Worship, 10 a.m., carry-in dinner 12:30 p.m. afternoon song service, 2 p.m. with lim Blair and
Southern Gospelaircs.

-··-It

Cuckoo Clocks
All At

·20% Di~count

Brochures arc now available at the
center. Call 446-7000 between . 7
a.m. and 3 p.m. Monday through
r-Fr-ida-y._ . ; __ _ _ _

I

-~~~~~BY
I 1 ,ft

JEWELERS

~=4=2=2 SECOND AVE.

01.

The Ohio Valley Syrri hony
.I

*

. *

.David Langer and Rtchard Syracuse

I
f

*Saturday,
·
Oct. 25, 8 p.m.*

MONDAY
LETART - Letart ·Township
Trustees. 6 p.m. Monday. at the
office building.

The Morris &amp;.. Dorothy Haskins Ariel Theatre

l

RACINE - Raci ne Village
Council, Monday 7 p.m. municipal
building.

t

WEDNESDAY

smMFfE
$Ztlh: llalllfJIM

...._ •a•• ..,•

Adultl • ,.,..,.

"'""'"**r.Sl••...

W.•notl!liltio~

"1 Ill Mjoct

lmOIIS AIID lOWS
127 Mill BtrWt In Middleport
Seturdly, October 25
10:00 AM til 3:00 PM
If

•

By MIKE HUGHES
Gannett Nawe Service
Brainpower seems to congregate.
·packs together in some places
-from Odord to Silicon Valleyand ignores others.
. And early in the 19th century, it
concentrated in one small, stone
house. That was the parsonage ofthe
Rev. Patrick Bronte.
"It is arresting to think of that
spectacular family of writers, living
together," says "Masterpiece Theatre" head Rebecca Eaton.
"Creativity was raging in that
household, as was the tuberculosis ·
which would eventually kill QlOSt of
them before they reached 30."
Now iV has a Bronte battle. That
includes:
•Charlotte Bronte's "Jane Eyre,"
from 8-10:30 p.m., Oct. 19 on
cable's Arts and Entertainment.
Samantha Morton, just 19·when this

See Our large

a reservations which are being made
now. A full payment is required by
no ·later than November 5.

•• ,

1\llf&gt; .... l

&lt;

I•Pr

&gt;\(,II

1997

I'

*

To reserve tickets for the Oct. 25th performance of the Ohio Valley
Symphony. call Sheila Oehler, (614) 446-2582 after 4 p.m.
Tickets also available In Gallipolis at
Haskins-Tanner, 332 Second Ave.and
That Special Touch, 336 Second Ave_
Ray' fowler- Music Director and Conductor

*

Sponsored In part by McDon~ld's Restaurants

·
.

.

was
filmed,
stars; Ciaran
the..
recent
"Ivanhoe"
villain, Hinds,
plays Mr
Rochester.
•Anne Bronte's "'The''Tenant of
Wildfell Hill," on PBS' "Masterpiece Theatre." The film was originally Scheduled to open the same
night and conclude~ week later. In a
late change, PBS decided to avoid a
rJce-off; instead, the entire film will
run from 9-11:30 p.m., Oct. 26.
Then what about Emily Bronte? Her
"Wuthering Heights'' is being
filmed for "Masterpiece.''
In short, our 1V set is becoming
a big Bronte-saurus.
The films on the next two Sundays have much in common. Both ,
have:
•Small women with tiny -faces
and unflinching spirits.
•Large men with raging souls.
•Sprawling mansions,lilled with
· troubles.
The females are impressive.
"This woman starts off with
these wonderful ideals," said Tara
Fitzgerald, the "Wildfell" star.
H'fhen (she) is corrupted by this
very strong influence. But she finds
an incredible strength.''
And the men rage, especially in
these versions.
"(Director) Mike Barker ... was
keen on getting a very modern and
emotional approach," said Rupert
Graves, the "Wildfell" villain.
1
That's the same approach taken
by ·"Jane Eyre" director Robert
Young, Hinds said. "His pitch. on
Rochester was that he was a partiCUlarly passionate man.''
Then again, Brontes seemed to
always write about brilliant, crumbling men.
.
"These girls probably were mfluenced by their brother, Bran well,"
Fitzgerald said. "He was an alcoholic and a sort of disparate soul ...
"It's very interesting when you
see that he was probably the basis
for 'Wuthering Heights,' 'Jane Eyre'
and for 'Tenant.' Emily (in 'Wuther-

.,

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uC-.../IJ'-IJIII1111 • Page J7

ing Heights') looks at him as this annoyed or displeased. (He) worked
rather ..animalistic and passionate off his volcanic wrath by firing pis(force)."
tots out of the back dOQr."
Don't pin it all on Branwell,
The six children were quiet and
though. His parents reflect those orderly, Gaskell says, especially
same contrasts.
after their mother turned ill.
The Rev. Bronte was tall and
"Mrs. Bronte died in September,
forceful, wrote Elizabeth Gaskell, 1821. The lives of these. quiet chil-Charlotte's friend and biographer.
dren must have become .quieter and
"(Hi: had) a , powerful and lonelier still."
remarkable character, originating
So the children sank into words.
and pursuing a purpose in a resolute They read three newspapers and
and independent manner."
magazines; they wrote plays.
Born as a pure Irishman- on St.
"All our plays are very strange
Patrick's day, named Patrick, in ones," Charlotte wrote at 12. "Their
County Down - he shed his accent nature I need not write on paper, for
at Cambridge. Instead, he seemed to I think I shall always remember·
be a stoic pastor.
them."
He married a small, gentle
After the two eldest children
woman, Gaskell wrote. "(Her let- died, the four survivors clung
ters) arc full of tender grace of . together. "All were very clever,
expression and feminine modesty." original and utterly different,"
She was the calm one, Gaskell Gaskell wrote.
said; he was not.
Emily was the quiet one who

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October 19-25 • National Healthcare Quality Week

.Holzer .Medicai .Center salutes its
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in an effort to,better serve the community.
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•

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While he's on the subject, Freeman in ?is career: He feels typecast ~.a
also lets it be known that he doesn't godd guy, ironic since he played
like term "African-American."
such a menacing pimp in "Street
"I'm not an African. There ARE Smart," for which he got a supportAfrican-Americans here; they ' re ing actor Oscar nod in 1987.
.
from Ghana and Nigeria, Senegal,
He bla.mes that on the big studios
Cameroon, Sierra Leone. They can test-screening films and telling h\m
name the country that they 're from that his audience doesn 't want to.S:'ie
... first-generation, a lot of them him as a villain.
'
AFRICAN-Americans.
Freeman figures at least a couple
"If you want to give me an adjec- of other outlets exist if he wanls ' a
tiv", call me black. That's a Diaspo- meaty role as a heavy - indepenra. But do~ call me African. I'm an dent producers and the stage. !;!e
American. Long, long bloody bisto- also enjoys having a good ride on ~\s
ry," he says, "just like every other sail boat and his horses, which tie
American.
keeps on his Mississippi farm. '
"When I was a kid, we were colored.... Then we became Negro. ...
Then we became Afro, in the '60s,
Afro-American.... So this quest for
identity- it's like, No. I, misguided.
·"You can't miss ·me," he says,
laughing this time with a tinge of
ruefulness.
)
"This latest one, it just sets my
teeth on edge," he says. "I think it's
another one of those attempts to separate yourself."
He sees U.S. blacks acquiescing
to the newest term because the press
is supplanting the word "black"
with it. "Every time you look in the
paper (and) you read anything that
f· you are presently .a
refers to you it's going to be
'African-American' now. I'm walk- CELLULARONE customer and
ing around with this one-man cru- have thought about additional
sade saying, 'DON 'T CALL ME phgnes for family members or
your second vehicle, now is
'mAT!"'
While it was heady stuff when time' CELLULARONE has
.LW"" 1
Kael called him the best American activation, fB,Ef; phones, =="
evenings,
and
[l!£f;
weekend
actor in 1987, Freeman says he mancalling for a limited time so hurry
aged to keep the same hat size.
,
"I think it would have been head- in now! Here's how it works:
ier had I been 30 years old. I was 50
Sign up today for our 75, 15()1.gr
' and I had been doing this for a
lBO
minute plan and we -.:H!
w~ile," he says. It's wonderful to
hear something like that, "but you ~~~~~~. plan minutes - e·acJ&gt;
1
through December. PUiS,
have to really back away from stuff
will
give 1,000 off-peak
like that, because acting is ensemble ·
minutes
fB,Ef;
(evenings and
(work) .... The better I am, the more
weekends)
for
the
first
6 month:1.of
I have to thank whomever my partservice!
And
that's
not
ners are. It's not a one-man show."
Freeman - who received best customers who qualify, we C!l;;l
actor Oscar nominations for "Dri- actually give you a phone to use
ving Miss Daisy" (1989) and "The FREE as long as you have serviQi:
· Shawshank Redempt!on" (1994) :- with us! Now here's the prices:
. ,i
has only one complamt at th1s pomt

Bronte sisters vie for prime viewing

SIX IACCGIOUNDS
Two Chrlatn•aal
Fall leaves
Blue/gray
Black
White

POMEROY- Rev. Tad Cuckler,
Athens, will speak at the Carleton
Church, located off Peach Fo'rk
Road, Sunday, IO::l'O a.m. service.

MIDDLEPORT - Mi~dlcpon
Literary Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m.
home of Mrs. Richard Owen. Phyllis
Hackel! to review, "A Leiter of
Mary", a contemporary Sherlock
Holmes novel by Laurie King.

\

Sele1tlon 01

C!Ilpi.stmas$pmal
...... PMIJII

pants can ask questions and get personalized tips on remembering their
medicines, reducing or avoiding
medicine side effects, and ~afe medicine storage.
For those who cannot make the
review, the Mid-Ohio Valley Pharmacists have scheduled three other
locations, two on Saturday, Oct. 25.
Anyone wishing to attend those
reviews can ask about them when
call .

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

:Seniors bound for Kentucky
GALLIPOLIS - An overnight
lnp to the Kentucky horse parks, the
Southern Lights Holiday Festival,
. and the Lexington Mall is the fi 0 al
:trip of 1997 for Gallia County
· Senior Citizens.
The trip is scheduled for December 5-6 from the Gallia County
Senior Resource Center and
. includes visits, roundtrip motor:coach, hotel lodging for one night
:(including lug sgage handling), two
·meals, and admission to featured
attractions. Insurance for the trip is

Tl\ere'll be no shooting from the tion ofa children's story, "A Day No
hip; be's prepared to shoot from the · Pigs Would Die."
NEW YORK (AP) - Clad in
lip, though: Draw, par'ner.
"Makes me look very busy," he
monochromatic black, his slender 6What's the hardest part about act- says.
foot-2 frame lifted ·even taller by his
ing? "Getting jobs."
As with so many acton, there
Western boots, Morgan Freeman
Then he laughs at the blunt prag- was a time he wasn't so busy. After
s.aunters into the room like the badmatism of his own answer.
leaving the Air·Force and moyipg to
dest gunslinger this side of Dodge.
Freeman, who stars as a police Los Angeles to study acting, he
His dark eyes burrow deep,
detective and forensic psychologist scrabbled about on both the East and
assessing. Even without a six.-shootinvestigating serial kidnappings and West Coasts looking for work until
er and cowboy hat, he looks primed
murders in the new thriller" Kiss the finally breaking through on stage
Qirls," says he doesn't want to 30-plus years ago. (Freeman has
sound dismissive about it, but also earned three Obie awards for his offdoesn't want "to attach too much Broadway work, including "Driving
creative imponance to acting."
Miss Daisy," and one Tony nomina"Acting is merely an interpretive lion. And some Gen-Xers still
endeavor. I don't create anything. I remember him for his 1970s stint as
always have to have something to go Easy Reader on the old PBS series
by. I always have to have very "The Electric Company." )
strong input from someone else,
Do those long-ago struggles help
wbo has done the creating. The keep things in perspective?
writer creates; the person who has
"You betchem, Red Ryder," he
the idea and sits down and puts it on says.
the blank piece of paper- that's the
Uh-oh. There's enough of a pause
creator.... I certainly don't create to have you think he's Paladin after
character. I take that off the page. If all- then he bursts into laughter.
I created the Clharacter, it would be
Although Freeman thinks fondly
the same person every time out," he about his role in "Glory," the critisays, laughing.
cally acclaimed film about the
He even goes so far as to say that Union Army's first black regiment
he finds acting easy at this point.
during the Civil War, he sees his part
"I think I'm enough of a techni- as an abolitionist in "Amistad" as at
cian, as it were, not to have to"- he least matching that in his heart.
pauses to look mock-anguished With what he feels is 20/20 hind"plumb the depths of my soul."
sight about his own life at age 60. Anytime his works seems difli- Freeman doesn't think that racism ·
cult, he's in the wrong part, Freeman . has stopped him in his life, although
says, and people who think he can it may !lave been a factor in keeping
do any role are all wrong.
him out of the Strategic Air ComHe offers an example- "George mand, he says.
Washington"- and chuckles at the
"I don't care what you do. Whatvery notion of it.
ever obstacles you run into, it's easy
"Somebody said, 'You should do to say: 'You know, they wouldn't let
A~e Lincoln.' No, not !n a million
me. I wanted to, I tried, but I'm
years would I ever consider doing' black so ... ' "he says. "It's the easiAbe Lincoln. They say, 'Just do it as est copout. So, it's a little more difan exercise.' No! It's a travesty."
ficult! Boy! So what? Who's got it
Not that he needs the work, any- easy?"
way. He has three other movies
Does he think racial bias is used
coming out by early next year: as an excuse?
"Dark Rain" with Christian Slater,
"Yeah," he says, sighing. "Yeah,
" Deep Impact," about a meteor hit- I do.
ling Earth; and the highly anticipat"And I think that racism is not a
ed Steven Spielberg epic "Am is- one-way street. ... If I constantly tell
MORGAN FREEMAN stara ae a pollee detective and foranslc psy- tad," about a mutiny aboard a slave you that you're against me, pretty
chologl81 Investigating aerial kldnapplngl and murders In the naw ship crossing the Atlantic in 1839. soon you're going to say I don't
thriller "Kiuthe Girls."
Plus, he's set to direct a film adapta- want to get near this guy."
for a high noon showdown.
This image quickly melts away,
though, with a firm handshake and a
warm smile. And throughout a latemorning interview in a hotel suite,
he laughs easily. .
It's not Paladin reincarnate here;
it's the three-time Academy Award
nominee whom the celebrated film
critic Pauline Kael once crowned the
best American film actor.

~ PreM Writer

..

•

"

By DOUGLAS J. ROWE

t

...

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•

The hardest part of acting is 'getting jobs~ I

..

-Remove his medicines and toiletries from the medicine cabinet
and use the space for your own stuff.
-Eliminate reminders of the
relationship by removing framed
photos of the two of you.
Don't discard the photos; put
them in an album for the kids, or put
them away until it's no longer
painful to look at them.
Replace them with cheerful new
shots to celebrate a new life. Closeups of children, Triends, pets and
flowers are appealing; you can
enlarge and frame small snapshots.
-For a more ambitious project,
fix up the garage, as Kurth's ·sister
did.
.
She turned a messy area into a
neat and tidy one by getting rid of
excess tools and paraphernalia, buying new metal shelving to store what
she did need, and painting the floor
.and walls.
Kunh's ,tips emphasize things
that women can do. Men, too, will
be setting up their own place. But
they often wait until they make a
new relationship to refeather the
nest.

••

Entertainment

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�Page ca • ,

...,.,, ct.n-JhutWI

Sunday, O~tober 19, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Ple...nt, W'_{

John Denver's friends, family say goodbye
memorial service on speakers.
"I'm a real reluctant fan of his
music, but I was like magnetically
attracted to John Denver still," said
Randy Gallagher, a 46-year-old
Denver man whO had met the singer
on a ski chairlift at Aspen. "I can't
explain it. "
Denver, 53, was killed Sunday in
the crash of an experimental plane
he was flying in Monterey Bay,
Calif.
A large photo of Denver, clad in a
folksy leather jacket and blue jeans
stared down over a bank of lilies,
carnations, sunflowers and roses.
Through tears, friends and family
celebrated his life as his mother,
Enna. two-ex wives, Annie and ·cassandra, and three children, Zak,
Anna Kate and Jesse Belle, watched.
Some of his songs were played
- including " High Aight" - and
more than once speakers drew
laughter recalling the enthusiasm
that Denver, born Henry John
Deutschendorf Jr.. never lost.
"His music sprang from his feelings of love ...," said Hal Thau. Denver's longtime manager. "Most
importantly, his songs resonated
with the people:"

By ROBERT WELLER
Assodated Press Writer
AURORA, Colo. (AP) - It was
the kind of day he loved to sing
about: plenty of sunshine, the peaks
of the Rockies in sight, and lots of
family and good frionds around.
A standing room-only crowd
jammed the 2,000-seat Faith Presbyterian Church on Friday to remember John Denver as a performer
whose songs "sprang from his feelings of love."
Under a clear blue sky in 70~egree temperatures - the opening
day of Colorado's ski season more than I00 people stood outside
in this Denver suburb to listen to the

Denver's

optimistic

Chrystal Rhine smells a rosa
•• ehe welts to attend • memorIal 881VIce for singer John Den·
ver. Rhine is • friend of the Den·
ver family. .

ARGUMENT FOR STATE ISSUE I

To amend Secdon 9 of Article I ofthe Conatltudon ofthe
State of Oblo.
TO PROVIDE THAT ACOURT MAY DENY BAIL TO A PER·
SON WHO IS CHARGED WITH A FELONY . OFFENSE
WHERE THE PROOF IS EVIDENT OR THE PRESUMPTION
GREAT THAT THE PERSON COMMITTED THE OFFENSE
THE COURT ALSO DETERMINES THAT THE PERSON
POSES A SUBSTANTIAL RISK OF SERIOUS PHYSICAL
DANGER TO OTHERS.
TO REQUIRE THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO PASS LAWS
TO ESTABLISH STANDAIU&gt;S TO DETERMINE WHETHER
A PERSON CHARGED WITH A FELONY OFFENSE POSES
A SUBSTANTIAL RISK OF SERIOUS PHYSICAL 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.
ADOPTED, THIS AMENDMENT SHALL TAKE EFFECT
ON JANUARY I, 1998.
A majority yes vote Is necessary (or pas1age.

YES
Denver Broncos owner Pat Bowlen and wlla Anna Bell, leave • memorlalsarvlce for John Denver at the Faith Preabytharlan Church.
Deutschendorf's favorite stories of answering machine a week ago:
"This is God calling. Just want lo
her eldest son.
·
When younger brother Ron was wanted to see how you were doing/'
born, John ran around the neighbor- . Denver was heard to say, unable to
In recent
hood saying his brother had been restrain his laughter.
times his brother "was very excited,
ordered from a Sears catalog.
Ron Deutschendorf played a very happy. He'd had a couple of
message John had left on his rough years but things were staning

to come around," Deutschendorf cial potential, friends said.
"John struggled with his life.
said.
Two drunken-driving arrests and John had a lot of pain in his life,"
his second divorce had been a sort of said friend Tom Crum, choking back
tears.
epiphany, friends have said.
A few days ago he playeJ them a "We all have pain. It was real deep
newly written song that seemed for John. He was. more at home in
upbeat and may have had commer- the spirit than in the body,.'

Bob Dylan continues to be superstar
with release of 'Time Out of Mind'
By Edna Gundersen

. reason, I am attracted to self- your creative powers.. when, people
destruction. I know that personal come up and interrupt your train of
SANTA MONICA, C~if._-. sacrifice bas a &amp;rea!: ok.lilll clo wi,lb tbouabL Tbey co••ider you ~&gt;Qm·
Heartache. The word literally and how we live or don't live our lives. pletely approachable. And you can't
figuratively defines Bob Dylan in
"These songs are not allegori- be rude to people, so basically you
.1997. Aftersurvivingalife-tbreaten- cal," Dylan stresses. "I have given shut yourself down. I know I do. I ·
ing cardiac infection, he is resuming that up. ... Philosophical dogma shut myself down when people
his storied career with a powerful doesn't interest me."
come up and want to shake my hand
album.about lost love and dwindling
Pop's most scrutinized yet or want to talk. That's just dead
hope.
inscrutable artist doesn't deny his time."
Time Out of Mind, in stores mercurial. nature or his disdain for
Dylan avoids the press, loathes
Tuesday, examines mortality and the labels of rebel, poet and prophet. photo sessions and steadily releases
heanbreak in II raw and potent Though he radically transformed records with scant promotion.
tracks. Though finished long before folk, rock and the singer/songwriter
Time contains his first batch of
Dylan was hospitalized. the lyrics genre in the '60s, he refuses to clone originals since 1990's Under the
carry added resonance in light of his seminal works and adopts a humble Red Sky. Since then, he has released
illness.
,
stance.
a boxed set of rarities, his third
Disciples will ruminate over lines
"I don't consider myself a song- greatest hits album, an MTV
like "When you think you've lost writer in the sense of Townes Van Unplugged, and two collections of
everything, you find yo~ can lose a Zandt or Randy Newman," he says. vintage folk and blues, 1992's Good
little more," "It's not dark yet but ''I'm not Paul Simon. I can't do that. as I Been to You and 1993's World
it's getting there" and "I was on My songs come out of folk music Gone Wrong.
anything but a roll."
and early rock 'n' roll, and that's it.
Making Time was a liberating
At 56, nearly four decades after I'm not a classical lyricist, I'm not a experience for Dylan, who can feel
his first public appearances, Dylan is meticulous lyricist. I don't write burdened by the weight of his legon a roll. A chorus of praise greets melodies that are clever or catchy. end. The classics he performs on
Time Out of Mind: A+ in Entertain- It's all very traditionally document- stage "are proven to be true and
ment Weekly, in Rolling Stone, "his ed."
strong, otherwise I couldn't sing
best sustained work since the midThe most influential songwriter them night after night," he says.
J970s," raves The New York Times. of modem times recognizes that his "It's not like I can eclipse that.
He's Newsweek's cover boy. · On mass appeal has waned.
"I'm not looking to do that, but
Saturday, he played for the pope. In
:Tm under the impression that to record new songs, they have to be .
December, he'll · become the first people aren't really paying attention in that arena, and that's why it took
rock star anointed a Kennedy Center to my records," he says. "I'm aware a long time. I was co11stantly thinkhonoree.
that I don't sell records like I did in ing, will these 'songs stand up to
Dylan, slim and natty in a black the '80s or the '70s, and that's OK as what I'm playing night after night?"
shirt, slacks and patent leather long as I can play, and the right
Dylan considers his early records
loafers, seems anything but morose crowd is going to come and see it roughly sketched prototypes that
during a rare interview. His clear properly. I don't follow what records later matured onstage. Produced by
blue eyes, ready smile and animated are at the top of the charts. I ceased Daniel Lanois last January in a
demeanor suggest good health and doing that a long, long time ago."
Miami studio, the new songs were
high spirits. He is quick to discourHe does, however, take notice of captured live with sidemen schooled
age analysts who'd dismantle hi~ rising son Jakob, whose band the in low-tech production. .
songs for clues about death and Wallflowers, No. 31 after 64 weeks
"This record is not a blueprint,"
despair.
on Billboard's chan, commerCially Dylan says. "This is it. This is the
"I don't think they should or outranks his dad's '90s outpul, .
way these songs should go, every
could be interpreted that way, if at
''I'm proud of his accomplish- single last one. This record went
all," he says, his back to a hotel win- ments," Dylan says , "He's still through evolutions. What you hear
dow that frames the. Pacific sunset. young, and he's come a long way in comes through that whole maze, that
"You can't interpret a H~nk a short time. I worried about him lahyrinth of fire that it takes to per·
Williams song. He's done the inter- when he started out. I just didn't · feet ihe arrangement and structure.
pretation and the performance, and want to see him get roughed up. This
"There is nothing .contemporary
that's it. Now it's for the listener to business can throw you into deep about it. There is no trickery. We
decide if it moves him or not. That's water."
went back to the way a primitive
something you don't even decide.
The murkiest depths? Celebrity. record was made, before the advent
That happens to you unconsciously. "It mortifies me to even think that I of technology. It's almost a revolu"I let the songs fly, and people am a celebrity," Dylan says. ''I'm tionary concept these days."
respond. Whether they make a valid not one, and I never want to be one.
The man who shocked the folk
interpretation or look at it with a I lead a very insular existence. It's. rank and file by plugging in now
false eye, I'm not concerned with different on stage. because those worries that high-watt noise is eradthat."
people look at me as a performer.
icating traditional American music.
Nor is the ferociously private
"By being a celebrity, you lo5e
"You see all this electricity
Dylan willing to expound on Time 's your anonymity. It short-circuits speaking, all this wizardry," he says.
tales of shattered romance, exceptio '
acknowledge that the songs are
drawn from personal experience.
"I can identify with other people
and situations, but I tend not to," he
says. "I would rather recall things
http:/fY!ww.e~:uekanet.com
from my own life, and I don ' t have
to force myself.... Just being in cer-

USA TODAY

'

•i

'
"

' .',.

••

r-------------------iiioi;.;..-.,;;,;;.,
local Internet ac·cess

"Pull out ,the plugs and probably
very few of these people could move
you, becau.. they can't play. They
are dominated by the electricity.
Guys like Elmore James played
acoustically and used electricjty so
they could be heard ·in a crowded
room. They weren't depending on
electricity to hide talent they didn't
have. I don't want a bunch of flaky
sounds. It's a deaa end."
Dylan was still sequencing Time
tracks when he was stricken with
chest pains in May. He was declared
fit after an initial medical exam.
"I accepted that, but the pain didn't go away," he says. " It was intoierable pain, where it affects yo~r
breathing every waiting moment."
He entered a hospital May 25 and
was diagnosed with pericarditis, a
swelling of the sac around the bean,
brought on by a fungal infection
called histoplasmosis. Dylan spent
si• weeks off his feet. His brush
with death brought delirium and
ennui but no spiritual revelations.
"I didn't have any philosophical,
profound thoughts," he says. "The
pain slopped me in my tracks and
fried my mind. I was so sick my
mind just blanked out. I'm getting
beuer; that's all I can say right
now."
The alignment of events this year
- his health scare, broad acclaim
for Time Out of" Mind, the papal
encounter - has magnified Dylan's
star power and fed an ongoing deification that he finds perplexing. In
1990, he received France's highest
cultural honor. 11Je next yeat, he got
Grammy's lifetime achievement
award. And in' 1992, an all-star con·
cert, pay-per-view and compilation
album toasted his 30th anniversary
as a recording anist.
Such honors "are unexpected and
unsolicited, and I'm not nonchalant
about it, because in some sense it
really does matter," he says. ''I'm
very appreciative."
But he 's leery of the hype.
Dozens of books are devoted to the
enigmatic troubadour. He doesn't
read them.
"I 'm not going to read a book
about myself," he says with a chuckle. "I mean, why? I'm with myself
enough. I· wake up every day and
I'm still me. It would be torture to
read about myself. I would rather
read about jln,&gt;body else but me."

lyrics). Dylan broods, "I wish someone would come and push back the
Review
RISING '[0 THE CHALLENG- clock for me." But for every somber
verse, there's a cinematic delour or a
ING TEST OF 'TIME'
stanling observation; they're capti·
By Edna Gundaraen
On Bob Dylan's Time Out of vating reminders that Dylan's muse
Mind (4 Stars out of four), ever)" and imagination . remain gloriously
thing is broken.
unbroken.
His first album of new material in
seven years finds Dylan exploring
mortality, heanbreak and isolation
with blunt sincerity. His voice, clear
and confident, is by turns nakedly
vulnerable and eerily stem, hovering
over a raw and spooky sonic landscape that entwines Howlin' Wolf,
Robert Johnson and David Lynch.
Tangled up in blues, this haunting &amp;.....,=~
masterpiece rivals the peaks in
·sTRI&lt;E ABLOWN Tlf: Will~
Dylan's rich and varied catalog, HGH I'IOCES. SHOP Tl£ CLASSF£DS,
attesting to the creative renaissance
of an artist still bent on defying
expectations and spuming trends.
The music's spontaneity, rough

edges and eanhy feel deliver an honest sound that's nearly extinct in cur- .
rent pop.
Eleven riveting and revealing
songs dwell on aging, regret and the
anguish of soured romance. Sentiments are stated with convincing
candor that conjures the palpable
presence of an unnamed woman
who .. destroyed me with a smile"
and "took a pan of me that I really
miss."
The malevole~t tone in Love Sick
turns to weary hurt in the wistful,
gospelized Tryin' to Get to Heaven
and bleeding despair in the aching
ballad Not Dark Yet.
Yet hope seeps into the swamp
rock'abilly of Dirt Road Blues and
bouncy piano boogie of 'Til I Fell in
Love With You. And patches of wit
brighten Time's desolate terrain:
"Don't know if I saw you if I would
kiss you or kill you," Dylan confesses in the woeful Standing in the
Doorway.
On Highlands, an absorbing 16
1/2-minute talking-blues saga (featuring only a third of the first-draft

environments

triggers

a

response in my brain, a certain feeling I want to articulate.. For some

Family Nighf 13

Back... Only Beueri
EYDY TUESDAY I~GitT
4 P.M.·9 P.M..:ONLY

NO

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

EXPLANATION OF STATE ISSUE I
(As prepared by the Ohio Ballot Board)
Section 9 of Article I of the Ohi~ Constitution currently provides
that a person charged with a capital (death penalty) offense is not entitled to bail where the proof is evident or the presumption is greanhat the
person committed the offense. This amendment would provide that in
addition, a person charged with a non-capital felony offense is not enti·
tied to bail if that person poses a substantial risk of serious physical danger to others including a victim or wimess and the proof is evident or
presumption great that the person committed the non-capital felony
offense.
The General Assembly would be required to pass laws to establish
standards to determine whether a person charged with a non-capital 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 type. amount, and conditions of.bail where a person is charged
be incarc'mlted..•
...,,,...., offense for which the person

may

-~

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

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 started.
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 important liberty rights.
• Local governments an: already burdened by seriously overcrowded jails.
.
• Innocent citiz.eljl. may be incarcerated for long periods based on an
accusation alone, and at great personal cost.
The right of persons who an: accused, not convieted, to post bail is
ingrained in Ohio's constitution. If someone accuses you o(making
threats, imagine the difficulty of proving you are not a dangerous person. Imagine how much more .difficult it is to prove your innocence
from a jail cell.

Prrsently 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 court's jurisdiction. 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
criminals. When setting bail, judges now consider the character and past
threat of physical hann to the public.
record of the accused as well as the nature and circumstances of the
.
.
I.
Passage of Issue I will allow Ohio judges to deny bail to all danger- cnme.
.
ous felons- keeping them off the streets and jn jail where they can
Issue I would add layers of bureaucracy at taxpayer expense. It would
do no further harm.
force a bigger portion of local taxes to be spent on buildings to hold the
Issue I would amend the Ohio Constitution to allow a judge to deny accused, to hire staff, to pay for attorneys, and to hire more judges.
Local governments already have too little space to house convicted
hail to any person charged with a non-capital felony offense if that
criminals as well as those who are awaiting trial but can't make bail.
person poses a substantial risk of serious physical danger to the
community and the proof is evident or presumption gre'at that the
Issue I allows the General Assembly to set the standards for denying
person committed the offense. The provision is designed to detain,
bail. Therefore, these standards could change with each new legislature. ,
and keep off the streets, those dangerous suspects who are prone to
In federal court, bail can be denied only for crimes of violence, drug
commit another felony offense; if released on bail.
offenses, and repeat felons. Issue I permits bail denial for~ felony.
including taking someone else's prescription medication or passing a
Federal judges already have the abiliry to consider the 'dangerousness' of an offender when setting bail. Let's give the same discretion bad check for over $500.
to Ohio's judges. Vote Yet 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 1
COMMITTEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT AGAINST
Senator Louis Blessing
Representative .Jack Ford
Senator Bruce Johnson
STATE ISSUE 1
Representative Jeff Jacobson
Representative d. Daniel Metelsky
Senator
Robert
Latta
Senator Linda J. Furney
Representative Jim Mason
Senator Rhine McLin
Senator Patrick Sweeney
ISSUE I
TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
(Amended House Joint Resolution No. S)
Be itJ&lt;solved by the Geneml Assembly
or the State of Ohio. three·fifths of the
members eleCted to each house concurring
herein. that lhere shill be submitted lo the
ele!:tyn o(Jbe "'~ in ~,.1110~ I!"'·
scribed by taw at the general election to be
held on November 4, 1997. a proposal 10
amend Section 9 of Arti&lt;:le I of the
ConSiitution of the State of Ohio to read a.~

existing St."Ction 9 of Article I of the
SHALL NOT BE inflicted.
ARTICLE l
PROCEDURES AND .STANDARDS Constitution of the State of Ohio 6hall be
Section 9. All persons shall be bailable
by sufficient sureties, except for A PER· TO DETERMINE WHETHER A PERSON repealed from that cfl'ectivc date'.
SON WHO IS CHARGED WITH A capi· WHO IS CHARGED WITH A FELONY
SCHEDULE
talaic tl! OFFENSE whert the proof is WHERE THE PROOF IS EVIDENT OR
Until
the
General
Assembly enacts pro-.
.;.,idcnt""' the presumption great AND A THE PRESUMPTION GREAT POSES A
ccdures
and
standards
to dctcnnine whether
PERSON WHO IS CHARGED WITH A POTENTIAL SERIOUS PHYSICAL
a
person
who
is
charpt
with a felony where
FELONY WHERE THE PROOF IS EVl· DANGER TO A VICTIM OF THE
the
proof
is
evident
or
the
presumption great
DENT OR THE PRESUMPTION GREAT OFFENSE. TO A WITNESS TO THE
J!O!fCS
a
potential
serious
physical
danger to
AND WHO POSES A POTENTIAL SERI· OFFENSE, OR TO ANY OTHER I'ER·
a
~ictim
of
the
offcnrc.
to
a
Witness
to the
SON
OR
TOT!iE
COMMUNITY
SHALL
0115 PHVSte11.~ DANGER TO A VIC·
offense.
or
to
any
other
person
or
to
the
BE
FIXED
BY
LAW.
TIM OF THE OFFENSE. TO A WITNESS
community.
bail
or
the
denial
of
bail
shall
TO TilE OFFENSE. OR TO ANY OTHER
be dctcnnined as 1f the: amendment of
EFFECTIVE DATE AND REPEAL
PERSON OR TO THE COMMUNITY
Section 9 of Anicle Iof the Constitution of
If
adopted
by
a
majority
ofth&lt;:
electors
E11.ccssive bail shall not be required; Mf
the
State: of Ohio had no1 been adopted.
vo1ing
on
this
amendment,
the
amcndm~:nt
excessive fines SHALL NOT BE imposed;
shall
take
effect
on
January
I.
199R.
and
..., AND cruel and unusual punishments.

REFERENDUM
2

REFERENDUM ON
AMENDED SUBSTITUTE S&amp;NATE BILL NO. 45
(Submitted by ReferenduiJI 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?
AMENDED SUBSTITUTE SENATE BILL NO. 45 amends Ohio's
Workers' Compensation laws to make various changes In the
stru'dure, paymeat, and detemilnation of benefits, to provide
lnal penalties ror employers who lnteatlonally misclasslry their
employees for workers' compensation purposes, to prohibit kick·
backs from health care providers under the Workers'
Compensadon Law, to permit cert1in non~ttorneys to represent
p1rtles In hearings before the Industrial Commission, to require
hearing officers to report suspected fraudulent acdvlty, to prohibit
health care providers from receiving payments for false claims
under the Workers' Compensation Law, to euept buildings and
land used for agricultural production from safety rules that apply
to workshops and factories, to change the definition or occupa·
tlonal disease, to specify that records produced by an attorney In
connection with a workers' compensation claim are the property of the claimant, to permit an employer to have an employee
enepted from the Workers' Compensation Laws for religious rnsons, to provide that records kept by th~ Division of Safety and
Hygiene are confidential, to change the dundon of the continuing jurisdiction of the Industrial Commission generally to five
years with specified exceptions for certain occupational diseases
or prollhetlc device cases, to create the presumption concerning
alcohol or a controlled substance as the cause of 1n employee's
Injury, to limit recovery for aggravation of a prenlltlng condition, to reduce the numberofweeksan employee can receive nonworking wage loss, and to make other chaages In the Workers'
Compensation L1w.

YES (To approve the
NO (To reject the law)
• WATER lAGS

Constitutional Amendment
(A.! $Ubmitted by HJR 5 of the General Ass4mbly of Ohio)

fo~lows:

IF A.PPIIO''ED. THESE AMENDMENTS AND ENACTMENTS
;,ru\LL TAKE EFFECT IMMEDIATELY.

with a smile.

tain

.PROPOSED.AMENDMENT TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
(Propoaed by Retol•~on' of the Gueral Auembly of Oblo)

music,

including hits "Rocky Mountain
High" and "Sunshine On My Shoulders," during the sometimes turbulent 1970s won him millions of fans
worldwide.
Fourteen of his albums went gold
and eight platinum, with more th·an a
million copies sold. "John Denver's
Greatest Hits" from 1973 is still one
of the .biggest-selling albums in the
history of RCA Records, with
worldwide sales of more than 10
million copies.
Author Jerry Jampolsky, who
· brought Denver's ashes back from
California, told one of Erma

Billiot laligulge, Explanitlorl, Arguments incl RHolutlon for
to the Ohio Conltltutlon Propaaad by the o.t1erel Aaeembly and Billiot Leng~~~ge, Expllllltlont, Argument*
and the Full Text of AmendiMnta ro, end Enectmenta of, Ohio Statutory Ulw PfCtiOIId by Refenlndum Plllltlon to be Submitted to the Voterllt the Generll Election, NoY••Iber 4, 111117.

SHALL THE
PROPOSED LAW
BE APPROVED?

ARGUMENT AND EXPLANATION FOR STATE ISSUE l

ARGUMENT AND EXPLANATION AGAINST STATE ISSUE l

We urge you to vote fis to refonn 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 system by making doctors more important
and lawyers less important.
Issue 2 will eliminate mandatory delays and provide prompt, full
payment of benefits to i)ljured 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 expert witnesses.
Issue 2 will encourage employees to return to work by emphasizing rehabilitation.
Issue 2 will save taxpayerS dollars.
.
These reforms were passed by the General Assembly and signed
into law by Governor George 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 thc:.paymcnt of benefits." '
. The Youngstown Vindicator said, "the reform package is
designed to end ihe waste, fraud and abuse that have undermined the
system."
· The Canton Repository said, "The (Workers' Compensation) legislation is not an assault on anyone except those who would abuse the
system and try to use it to supplement their income."
- i';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 permanently injured workers, could collect benefits ;
and they would remove unnecessary meddling by profit-seeking
lawyers."

Vote 'rl No 01 lss~e 2
Senate Bill 45 Is tbe most destrucdve attack on injured workers
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
Bill 45.

Vote Ji:.t on 2!
COMMITTEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT
AND EXPLANATION FOR STATE ISSUE l
Representatives Hodges, Corliin and Mead
Senators Cupp. Gillmor and Nein

·~

•I:EATOS
WI CAlli'• LOOP LOC WilY COYER$

HOUDAY POOLS INC.
1171 PIIDIIONr RD.

f.

Senate Bill 45 is the fourth law taking benefits from injured workers
and their families passed since 1986. The $200.000,000 corporations
will reap yearly from Senate Bill 45 will be followed by future legisla- ·
tion taking even more. ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!
Senate Bill 45 is devastating because it takes Workers' Compensation
benefits away from injured workers. Some examples:
~

Cuts in half the time a claim remains open for payment of com- .
. pensation and medical benefits.
'If Reduces compensation for workers who suffer occupational diseases.
,/ Discriminates against women by virtually eliminating their ability
to file successful claims for carpal tunnel syndrome and other
repetitive motion injuries, injuries com~on to women doing repeti·
tive work.

,/ Redu&lt;es wage loss compensation.
,/ Prohib.its consideration of medical reports from treating doctors on
permanent partial impairment awards. Compensation i~ based only
on the state doctor's report.
.I Denies permanent total compensation to seriously injured workers
who are unable to return to gainful employment due to their injury
by eliminating consideration of disability factors (education, work
experience, transferable skills) long deemed essential by Ohio
Supreme Court decisions.
,/ Creates secret records. Prohibits access 10 .these state safety documents by workers whose claims may be affected.
Senate Bill 45 is unfair to injured workers. Corporate interests an:
pushing for their 5200,000,000 legislative giveaway. Don't let them
get away with it.
Protect yourself. Protect your ramlly.
Proltcl Ohio.
Vote il NO lnue 2
COMMITTEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT
AND EXPLANATION AGAINST STATE ISSUE 2
The Committee to Stop Corporate Attacb on Injured Workers .
William Burga, Co-chair
Wamn Davis, Co-Chair
StePJren E. Mindzak, 'lrl!llSitrer
I
Esther S. Weissman, Secretary

..

�(Ameadod Subln1111t s-10 Bil No 45)
Be elll&lt;ted by the General Aaaembly
the SW&lt; of Oil o
Sec on I Thll - ona 2913 48
4 2 121 4 2132 4 2 34 4 2135
4 2 36 4 2 38 41214&lt;4 4 2147
;4111.01 , 4 2 67 4 23 0 4 23 032
23 033 4 23 07 4 2325 4 23 27
23 28 4 23 34 4 23343 4 2335
23352 4 234
4 234 2 4 234 3
234 4 4 234 6 4 234 9 4 235
235 2 4 2352 412354 4 2354
4 2356 4 23 5
4 23 58
4 23 60 4 23 6 4 2362
4 2365 4 2365 4 2366
4 23 70 4 2380 4 2382
4 23 85 4 23 90 4 2393
be: amended

Code or a aetr. aaunna emptoyor10 make
paymen or m m - for worken
compeaaanmbenefill
(l) Empoymen .....,.pamc pt1UI8 n
any ..... ocoupatooo, ...._......,. or
profea on
fo
subttan ~al
&amp;• nfu
rem~tton

(6) Emp oyer employee and 'se f
msunna employer" ha e die...,. meanw
u n sec on4 23 01 of the Rev oed Code
1 Remunera 10ft nc udes, bu s not
Inn ted 10 wop """""'""""' reboles and
11'1)' other reward or CORI.Iderallon

(8 "SU emcn

ned to, any ora

noludea, bu 1 not ""
'lrTittm

c cctrontc c ec

tron c mpulse o magnet commun a on
...... 1...... ...........tum. ""'e pi for pay
men n o ce a«ou.nt. fi nanc aJ statement,
ORb II fo serw:es a diagnos s.. propos 1
prescnp on hosp 11 med cal or d&lt;nll
chart o other record and a computer gen

... ted doc ........
9 Record5 means any
profess ona financ al or bus ness n::conJ n: It
ng o the nunnen or care of any person

medico'

10 goods or stf'YlCCS prov

ded o any person
n es paid for soods or semces prodod o any penon or aoy R&lt;Onl tha the

or

to

adm n stra or of worken compens. on
mJU m; pursuan to ru e

o

o set~ workers

compensa on

u
A e a s fy destroy concca o
e any record o documen thl s nee
o fu y establ oil the va idicy of any
fi ed WJih, or necessary 10 ..w.tish the

nanJt&lt; 11nd •va l;~ icy ohl goods and smnccs
wh h re mbursemen or paymen was
I receivool or s requested from the bureau of
worken compensa ton or a self. msunng
empoyerundcrChapter4 21 4123 4127
o 4 l of the Rev sed Code;

4 En er

nto

an agreemen or CODSpt

acy o dctfaud the burau or a Self. nsunng
mK ng or prcsenhng or CIUJng o be made or presented a false a m for

cornponsaboo benefirs
MAKE OR PRESENT OR CAUSE
TO BE MADE OR PRESENTED A FALSE
M SLEADING STATEMENT OR
OTHER M SREPRESENTAT ON CON
CERN NO MANUAL CODES CLASS
FICAT ON Of EMPLOYEES PAYROll
OR NUMBER OF PERSONNEL WHEN
NFORMAT ON OF THAT NATURE S
NECESSARY TO DETERM NE THE
ACTUAL WORKERS COMPENSAT ON
PREM UM OR ASSESSMENT OWED
TO THE BUREAU BY AN EMPLOYER
6 SOL C T OFFER. OR RECE VE
REMUNERAT ON IN CASH OR N
!Urm. IINLLUIJIN•u, tlU I NOT LIMITED
A K CKBACK OR REBATE IN
WITH A REFERRAl FOR
THEFURN SH NG OF GOODS ORSER
V CES FOR WH CH RE MBURSEMENT
MAY BE MADE PURSUANT TO
4 2 4 23 4 2 OR 4 3
OF THE REVISED !;ODE D V SON
(AX6 OF THIS SECTION DOES NOT
TO ANY CONTRACT TO PRO
VIDE SERY CES UNDER THE
BUREAU S HEALTH CARE PARTNER
SH P PROGRAM OR A QUALIF ED
HEALTH PLAN ENTERED INTO
BETWEEN A MANAGED CARE ORGA
N 1AT ON AND AN ORGAN ZAT ON
PURSUANT TO DIV ~ON
OF SECT ON 4 2329 OF THE
5)

ALTER FORGE OR CREATE A
WORKERS COMPENSATION CERTIFI
TO FALSELY SHOW CURRENT
CORRECT WORKERS COMPEN
SAT ON COVERAGE
8 FA l TO SECURF. OR MA NTA N
WU'I\11.1;1&lt;:&gt; COMPENSATION COVER
AS REQU RED BY CHAPTER 4123
THE REVISED CODE
B Whoe cr 10 ales h s sed on 5

0 Workers compcnsa on benefits
means any compensa on or benefits pay1b e
underChapter412 4 23 4 27 o 4131
of 1lie Rev sed Code
Sec 4 2 21 (A There s hertby re
a ed the bureau of workers compensa on
wh h shl be adrn n s erN by rhe adm n
Mrlto ofworken compensation A person
appo n ed o the pos on of adm n sb'alO
sha.l possess s gn fiCan managemen expc
nence n efTec \IC y managmg an organ za
tlon or organ za ons of substan a s ze and
eomp ex I)' Before September
998 he
JO emor shal appom the ldm n stra or as
pro ded n sect oo 2 OJ of he Rev sed
Code andW adm n strator sba I serve a he
p casurc of he go emor The go emo sha
fl the admm Sin or s gJary on the bas of
he acfm n stra o s expencn e and he

adm n strato

respons b

c and duttes

unde h chaple and~ CHAPTERS
4 23 4 17 and 4 3 orlbe Revised Code
Th go erne sha I no appo n o the po
on of adm n sta o any penon who has o
whose spouse has g vena contnbu 100 to the
ampa R" omm ttee of he go emo n an
amoun grea e han one thousand do ars
during lhe two-year penod mmed a e y pre
ced ng the date of he appo nrmen of he
admin stra or: Anc Augus 31 998 he
worken compcnsa on overs gh comm s
on sha appo n rhe adm n srn o as proded n d &amp;IOn FK9 of sec on 4 2 2
of he Re !fed Code and he adm n tnl o
ha serve at: he pleasu c of th(" o ers gh
omm s on The o crs gh omm ss on
ha fi he adm n stra o
a ary on he
ba of he adm n t ra o s expenencc and
the admin stra1or 8 respon1 bil tJcs and du es
under h
hapte and Chaprers 4 23
4 27 and 4 3 ofhe Re sed Code
The admnsrao ha hod noohe
pub office and shall devo e fiJ me o he
du es of adm n stra or Befort en e ng
upon he du e o he offtce h adm n stra o ha take an oa h of om e as requ red
by sect on 3 22 and 3 23 of he Re sed
Code and thal li e n :he Office of the sec
retary of s a e a bond s gncd by rhe adm n
s rator and by sure!)' appro ed by he go
m1or fo he urn of fifty housand do ars
payab c o he stale ond oned upon h
a hfu perfonnance of he adm n tra o
du ..
(8 The adtn n stra o s rapons bk o
he manascmcn of he bureau or wort rs
compensa on and fo he d schargc of a
adm n s ra e du teS m~d upon he
adm n s o n th
hapte and Chap ers
4 23 4 27 and41 I ofllie R sedCudc

II&lt; IUbJOCI 10 Chap&lt;er

4117 oftheReviaedCod01hall_,nal or
their riahll and -flu coaftmcl pursuan1
10 .....

cha!*r.. ..-uy """" ... " ......

aft« l!l&gt;lilldod and nothina m this chapter or
Chapter4123 ofdie Rev aed Code ohal be:
tonltNed u el nuna DB or nterfenng w th
Chapter 4 7 of me ReviJecl Code or the
ngh11 and benefill conferred under !hat
chaplor to pobl c emp ay0&lt;1 or 10 any bar
prun1 wu
(4)Pr&lt;&gt;vdeolfi&lt;OS eqwpmen~supp es
and other rc lrttes for lhe bureau The
adm n llri10 a so shall provide Ill table
office I))ICC m the serv ce offices for the dts
tnct hearing officen lhe 111ft' heanng offi
em. and conun ss on cmp o)'ecs as reqoes
ed by the comm ss on
(l) ~'~&lt;pare and aubm o the o ers gh
eomm u on nforma on the adm n tn o
considen penmen o the overs gh om
nuss on rcqu res. together w h the adm n
strata s m:ommendations n he form of
adm n srnt c ru es fo the adv cc and on
sent of he o ers gh comm ss on o las
s fi anons of occupa ons or ndustnes fo
pmn um l'IICS and ontnbu ons fo he
amoun to be credi ed o the surp fund
forruesandsy emsofra ng rate rev sons
and men ra ng The adm n strator hal
obta n prepa c and ubm any o h nro
ma on he o crs gh omm ss on requ res
or the promp and effi en d scharge of ts
du cs
6 Keep he a ounts requ ed by d
son A orsecton4 2334oftheR ed
Code and a other ac aunts and rec:ords nec-essary to he c:o cct on adm n stu on and
d tnbu on o he workers compc:nsa on
funds and sha ob a n he sta s a and
o he nfonna on equ ed by e on
4123 9 of the Re sed Code
7•Exert ~then estmen powcn es
ed n the admm s rator by sec on 4 23 44
of heRe sed Code n a cordance w h the
nvestmen obJech es pol es and n ena
es&amp;ab shed by the o ers gh comm ss on p
suan o sect on 4 2 2 of the Re sed
Code. The adm n s ra o ha no engage n
any proh b ed n es men act v ty pe tied
by he o ers gh omm ss on pursuan to
d
on F)(6 of sec on 4 2
he
Re sed Code A bu nes ha be trans
ac1ed, a fund n csted all warra ts fo
mo ey drawn and paymen made and a
cash and secu es and o her p openy he d
n he name of he bureau o n he arne o

onsttuct on o any p o ec or mp o men
o the ons rue: on o repa of bu d ngs
unde he o ro o the bureau
9) Purchase upp teS rna ena equ p
men and scrvtc:es make contrac: s Df ope
a e and upcr n end he e cphone o he
e ecommun ca on and ompu e rv e
fo he use of he bureau and make o tra
n onncc on w h offi c reprodu on
fonns managcmcn pnn ng and o he se
eo
0 Sepam e y fi om he budge he
ndusma comm ss on subm ts prepare and
5ubm to the d rec or of budget: and man
11emen a bUdge for ea h b enn um The
budget subm ned sha n ude es ma es o
he cos s and neassary upend urcs of he
bureau n he d scharge o any duty mposcd
by aw as wei as he os s of fum sh ng
office pa e to he d s c heanng offi ers
staff hcanng om trs and comm ss on
emp oyces under div stOn (D) o th sec on
As promJM y as poss b n h
ourse
effie en adrn n s ra on deccn
rahz andre ocate such of he penonnc and
a
es of th burca as s app opna e o
he end ha h rece p n es ga on dee
m na ton and paymen of c a ms may be
und rtaken a o nea he place or n ury o

or

he residence o he c a JlUUI and for tha pu

e ab h tg ona offices n u h
pa sas headmn5rao con den prop
e capable of di.SCharg ng as many of he
func on or he bureau as s prac ab e so
as o promote promp and efli en adm n
s ra on n he proces ng of a ms A
ac: e and nac ve os me c am files
po

or workcn ompensa on fraud
.. otherw .. """'ided • h • d
a oatlonof hssecton samsdt

fin degree rthevalueoroloo
PREM UMS AND ASSESSMENTS
UNPAID PURSUANT TO ACT ONS
DESCRIBED IN DIVIS ON (A)(3~ (7 OR
8 OF TH S SECT ON OR Of goods...,.
es property or money sto en

COIIIIIIiiiiOII

fi c hun

dred do Jan o more and s 1m han fi e
housand dol ars a 10 11 on or h !I sec on
a fe ony o he fifth degree If the a

PREMIUMS AND ASSESSMENTS
U~~~~B~P~URSUANT TO ACT ONS
D
N DIY SION (AXS 7 OR
TH S SECTION OR OF good se
or 'money Slokn s e houmorc and s css than one hun-

(C Upon appltea on o he go cmmen
ta body ha conduc ed he m csuga wn and

"':~.:~~~ ofl o a on ofth 1 mt on.lbc

C(

order he pcrJ()n who

1

on

ola 1011 o ply rhe 10 emrnenll
tJ ~ts of nvesnp n1 and prose
he ue These CO&amp;tl are n add 101'1
o pena ry pro ded n ht
Rev sed Code or any other sec on of aw
D) Th&lt; emc&lt;l es and penal es """' ded
teCUM art not Clt Ullvt rtmed CS and

"":~~~~and:!;do not pm:ludc he ... or any

01

c::tr c
remedy or pcna y o
ac 1\a t n vto If on o h11 ICdton
E A used n hat« on

or rcMbi tatiOft of a claimlnl for
WOI1ken' compenaarioe benefiu
(3) "Serv ces nc uda but o not I m
ed 10 any aerv ce """'ided by any hea lh """'ider 0 a cia man ror wonen -

sat oo beneflu AND ANY AND ALL SER
VICES PROVIDED BY THE BUREAU AS
PART OF WORKERS COMPENSATION
INSURANCE CGVERA!jE
4) 'Claim means any attempt 10 cause
an ndqiaida1 lh rd
wdh

-

(2 Emp oy d rec and uperv se at
emp oye requ red n conncc on w h the
pc: fonnan of he du
ass gned o h
bureau by h haprc and Chap1m 4 23
412 and 4 l of heRe sed Code and
may estab sh ob a ti 1 on p an and
ompcnsa on o a
p oy cs of he
bureau pro ded hi h 1 i"'R of au honty
5ha no be cons rued u 1ffcct na any
employee or whom he 5 1 e emp oymcn
ela ons board tw estab shed an 1ppropn
a e bargl n 111 un under sec1 on 4 1 06 of
the Re sed Code AI pos ""' of employ
mem n he bureau are n he cllll fted c
Kf'Vte:e c cept those employees he adm n
at ator may lppO n o ICfVe a he adm n
s n o s p easu t n he unc ISS fted
serv e pursuan o ~ee on 24 o he
Re ICd Cod&lt; The adm n Sin or ohal fi• the
5I anes of mp oyees he adm n s • or
lppO n 110 serve a he adm n stra or s plea
sure nc ud ng he ch c opera ng offi e
!I lrf phys IRI and 0 he ICftH) m&amp;na1e
men personne of he bu cau
3 Rcorpn zc he work of th b1J eau
t1 sec 10ns deplnmen 1 tnd ofi"K:cs o he
cx1en1 neteJNry o IChltVe rhc mosr effic:aen
performance of lti fund ons and 10 tha end
may esa.bl sh chanae or tbo 1h poa 10111
and . . an and ...... an dulles and mpon
• bi rtiCI or every employee of die bonau.
A pmons.....,..,yed b) he-., ....,. n
pot lObi ha after No embor3 1989 .,.
superv acd and d rec ed by he adm n 1 ,..
o under h s oec on 11&lt; ....,fened to he
burau n the mpect e claM llcalions bu
sub ec: o rau gnment and ree awfJUtaon
or po1 10n and compenaa oe u the adm n
ltn or determ nea to be n the mteres of
etlicientadmin- Thedv ..,..,. 111
tw or any penon employed by the comm - •,.. alreo1cd by ltoio-

2 Pro de a wnnen b ndcr on new co
erag;e where he adm n strl o cons dcrs o
be n the bcsl m eresl o the nsk The adm n
rato or any other penon au honZt' by
he adm n s ra or sha I gran he b ndc upon
ubm on of a eque o co erage by he
employe A b nder s ffcc
for a pc oct
o h rty day fi om da e o ssuanc:e and
oon enewab e Payml reports and pran urn
charge sha I o n de w h lhc effect e da c
o he b nder
3 S andard o he easonable and
max mum handl ng me of c a ms paymen
funct ons en ure by ru es the mparl al and
p ompt trca men of a a ms and cmp oy
er nsk aecount.J tnd C8tab sh a secure accu
ra e method of me stamp ng al ncom ng
ma and doc:umcn s hand de ered o
bureau employees
( 4l Ensure ha a employees o he
bureau fo low he arden and ru cs of he
comm u on 11 such orders and rue rcla e
o he tamm S!l on s o en ad ud atory po
y rnak na and managemen du s unde
th 1 chap&lt;e and Cbapttrs 4 23 4 2 and
413 of he Re sed Cnde
( ~) Manasc and oper1 e a data pro
ces1 ngsyste.m w h a common data base for
he use of both he bureau and th omm 1
1100 and n eonsu talOn w h he omm s
I on US RJ e OC:tron C data process g equ pmcnt,. lhal de e op • a ms rack ng sys
em ha asufficien to mon or he 1t1tu1 or
a claim II any Umo and !hat IIIII appeals that
ha e been fi ed and ordcn or delenninaiKlN
that ha e been ssued porsuan 0 ..
4 2B or4 23 S 2of heRe led Code
nc: I.Mims ht dales of Juch fl ngs and

..........
( 16) Elllb

sh and mamll n a

mod~&lt;al

led on fl'ithtn the bura.u The mcd ca ~

"'"' oha I do al or 1lie folloWin&amp;
(a Al.ltl rbe ldm n 1tmor n estab sh
•llllndanl mcdi&lt;a r... OIJIII'O'Img med
leal J&gt;I'II&lt;COilun:l and clet&lt;tm n na e pb I I)'
.:l~tlblro 1 ofthecompaWI~mpay

Vieo&amp;, and m-ahlo&amp; auidel- for pay
men pol e ct wbidl recopiZ.e IIIUI ...
tomar}' andNMOnablcmcthodaofpayment
fc;w coYCI'Od serv cet
(b) Provide a......... 10 rcapond toques.
ons ftom c anns eununen for cmployen
oflhebutoau
(c) Aud fee b I paymcnll
d) mp0111a1 apropm10UIIhZ&lt; tollie
nwnmum exltnl pou ble electron data
proceas Ill cqu pmcn for ston.ge of nfo
rna on to fie tate authorizat ons of com
pensahon paymenll for medical hoop ta
drug and nurs ng SCI'VICCI;
e Perfonn othe du es ass gnod 10 t by
the adm n stra o
7) Appo n as the adm n 111110r deter
m nes ne«sUI)' pane 8 to re ew and
ad se he admin strator on d spu 01 ans na
o e a detmn na 10n thai a hea th care aer

e o supply pro ided to a c a. man s not
o ecd unde h schapoo:ro Chapter4123
of the Rev sed Code or " med ca ly unnec
essary fan nd v dua hea th care provider
n o ed n he d spule the pane aha
ons s or nd v duals I censed pursuan o
he same sect on or the Rev sed Code as such
heahh care pro de
8) Pu..uant 0 sect on 4 2365 or me
Re ised Code approve appl ca 011J fo the
tina settlemcn of cia ms fo compensa on
o benefits und.e h s hapte 1nd Chap ers
4123 4 27 and4 3 oflhe Rev sed Code
as the adm n stra o detenn nes appmpna e
excep n regard to the app tel ons of sc f.
nsunng emp oyers and he emp oyees
9 Compywthscc on35 7 3of he
Rev sed Code and except n regard I) con
tra ts en e ed n o pqnuan o the aulhonty
onta ned n sec on 4 2 44 of he Re sed
Code comp y w th he compet e b dd ng
procedures se fonh n Jte Re sed Code ro
a c:on racts n o wh ch he ad:m n stra o
en ers pro dcd tha those contracts fll w lhn he type of contracts and do a amounts
spct tied n he Re sed Code for ompe
b dd ng and furthe pro ded ha those
on ra s a e no o hcrw se spec: fically
e emp from he compe e b dd ng proedu
on a ned" n he Rev sed Code
20 Adopt w h he ad ce and onsen
o he o ers gh omm on ru e for he
opera on o he bureau NO RULE ADOPT
ED BY THE ADMIN STRATOR SHAll
BE CONSTRUED AS BARR NG THE
PART C PAT ON OF A PERSON WHO IS
NOT ADM TTED TO THE PRACT CE OF
lAW AS A REPRESENTAT YE OF A
PARTY FOR THE PURPOSES OF ANY
MATTER ARISING UNDER TH S CHAP
TERAND!;HAPTERS4 23 4 27 AND
4 3 OF THE ll.EY SED !;ODE PRO
VIDEO THAT THE REPRESENTATIVE
OF THE PARTY COMPL ES WITH
RULES OF THE ADM N STRATOR
2 Preps e and subm to he o ers gh
omm ss on nforma on he adm n s ra o
on ders pert nen o he o crs gh com
m on requ res oge he w h he adm n
ra o 5 rccommenda ons, n he fonn o
adm n tra e rules fo he ad cc and con
sen of he o ers gh omm ss on fo he
hea h partnersh p program and h qual fied
hea th p an :iystem as proVIded n se IOnS
4 2 44 42 44 and 4 21442 of he
Re sed Code
(C) The adm n stra or w h the adv ce
and conscn of M sena e shal appo n a
h f opcral ng office who ha gn fican
pc encc n he field of workers com
pensa on nsurancc o 01he s m a n u
a c ndu ry x.penenc f he adm n ra
or does no possess such xpe ence The
h cf opera ng office sha no ommcn e
he h ef operahng offi er du es un after
he senate onsen s o he c:h e opera ng
office s appo n men The ch e opera ng
officer sha serve n he unc: ass fted
I
rvceof he ac
Sec 4 2 32 (A The rule o cnng
opera na procedure and en ma for dec: s on
mak ng ha he adm n na o of workers
ompensa on and he ndustna comm ss1011
are n:qu red o adop pursuan o sec on
4 2 3 of h Re sed Cndc shal be supplcmen cd w h opera ns manua sett na
forth he proc :dura steps n deta fo pe
fonn ng a h or he ass gned wks of each
sec on of he bureau of workers ompcn
sa on and omm ss on 1be adm n s ra or
and comm ss10n o n y sha I adopt suc:h
manua s No mployec may de a e from
manua p oc dui'C5 w hou au hon :a on of
heeconhc
8 Manua hal se Orth h procedure
fo he ass gnmen and ransfcr o cia ms
w h n sec on and be de gncd o pro de:
pcrfonnan e obJC e and may requ ro
mp oye s o ccord suffic en da a o rca
sonab 9 mea ure he efflcJCncy of furn.1 ons
n a ace ons The bueau11 d son of
research and s a s tcs sha pcrfonn penod
o effcc cness ana ~ wh ch ha be
made a a ab c o he genera assembly he
eo emor and o he pub c du ng norma
wort ng hours
C The bureau and omm ss on o n y
aha de e op adop and usc a po y man
ua sett ng orth h gu de nes and bases for
dec: s on mak na fo any dee a on wh ch 1
he rcspons b ty of he bureau d stnc hca
ng offi ers staff htanft(!: officers or h
eomm ss en Ou de ncs sh1 be set fo11h n
he pol cy manua by he bureau and com
ml! ontotheexen ofthcarrcspectveJunsd c ons fo decid na al ell h~ fo ow na

spec fie ma ers
( Reasonab e ambulance serv ces
2 Re 1 onsh p ofdN&amp;I o n ury
(J) Award ng ump- um ad an e for
cred ors
4 Award ns ump- urn ad ances for
a omey s ees
(l P "'ng a eta man INCLUD NG A
ClAIMANT WHOSE EMPLOYER S A
SELF INSURING EMPLOYER
no
rthab I Ia on
6 Transfcrr ng c:osiS of a c a m om
emp oye co ts o he !ltatu ory surp w fund
ponuan o oec on 4 23 343 or die Re sed
Code
(7) u .. .. or physic an opec: • st
reponl
(8) Determ

n ng lhe pereenlaJie of per
m1n80 pan a •Ill~ I t); 1 p a )
IMPAIRMENT fN ACCORDANCE W TH
THE MOST RECENT EDITION OF THE
AMERICAN MBD CAL ASSOCIA
TION S OUIDES TO THE EVALUATION
OF PERMANENT IMPAIRMENT
(9) DETERMIN NO THE PERCENT
AGE OF TEMPORARY pam• d sab Icy
temporary to1a d aabill)' v o a 10111 ohpe
Cl(l(: afely teqU rertWnta, In IWard under

Revbod Ccide. Alii dittricUndltltfheuiJit
ofticen lholllllllfaao the tninina couroa
developed by the J..tna olllccr lnlnet the
coot of which lbe .....,..loo oba1l poy'I'he
c:omnu11 on Jha mako the '-ina otlica
lllliii&lt;W and all rev I ONI theRto IVIIIIbleiO
pubhc a cost
Tho COIIIIIIIII oe lholl have the lblll
nght of approva over all traut oa manuals,
....,,_,, aoo other .-ilia the boorina otlitra ner deve ops and updatet
(2) Appo nla boorina adm IIIJtralo&lt; who
be: n the c Wlflod c v laerv ce of the
bureau serv ce otlice and auf

Reviaod Code and pet'lllliieDilOW-.
l'I'IMPAIRMENT
(D) '!'he- shall eatabliah adopt. and
mp ement policy auidel neo and baa for
dec I Onl tnVOIVIIIJ ,. .........,, oaues
nclud ng, bu not hm ted 10 the a d J of nvoM:eS the reduction of payment~ for
f\ature serv cea when an ntemal tudi eon
eludes tha a heo m care prov det- over
paid or mproperly paid for pot .......,
11 mbursemen fees or otba Ml ustmentsiO
payments These pol cy au de net and
bases for dec 1 ons. and any chaap to the
iUide nes Ond ....... shal be oet fonh m1
re mburscmen manual and provider but

upport personnel for each hearin&amp;

~~~::~~d;~~=:'.:.::;:llhal

etns
N01 her lhc pol ey swd&lt; nes nor the
bases set forth n the reunbursemen manu-al or pro ider bu letinl id'ened o D th s

d son un&gt;eaadefmedm-on 1901
or me Rev sed Code
(E) W lh r.spoct 10 any determ nanon of
d sobi tyOR IMPAIRMENTunderChap&lt;er
4123 of he Rev ICd Code wben the phySI
Uii1 makes a clet&lt;tmU1811011 based upon 11110ments o nforma on 1\&amp;m shod by he
a man or upon subJect ve ev dence M
THE PHYS ClAN shal clearly ndicottth s
fact milia THE PHYSICIAN S report
(F) The adm n stnilor oha I publ oh the
manuals and make cop e1 of all manuals
a a able 10 Lnterested p111 es a cos
Sec 4 ll 34 (A) '!'he ndustna com
m ss on h1 appo n a suffic en numbe of
d stnct hearing of!'~tm for tho purpose or
hc1nn1 he malton ued n dlvis on (B) of
h s sectiOn D stnc hearing officers are n
the class tied c v I serv ce of the a111 c: a~
u I me emp oyees of he comm u on and
shal be: penons adm ned o he practice of
aw n h 5 Sla e D ltlid hnnng officers
shal no engage: n any omer lc: \1 ty ha
nrerfen:s With rhei fu !-time employmon by
he comm 11 on dunng nonnal work ng
hours
(B) D Mnc heanna of!'iCen shal ha ,
on1 na Jur sd c on on all of he fol ow ng
mauers
(I Dctcnn na ons under sect on 4 23 l7
of the Re sed Code
(2) A appeals from a d" son o he
adm n sera o of workers compensa on
undcTd son(B ofsec on4235llofhe
Rc sed Cnde
(3) A o her oon es ed a ms mancrs
under hts hap e and Chap en 4 23
4 17 and 4 3I of the Re sed Code execp
hose matters o e which staffhcanng of'fi
cers ha e ong na unsd c on
(C The adm n slra or or workers com
pcnsat on ha make 1 a ab e 10 etch d 1
nc heanng office he fac I teS and ass 5
ance of bureau emp oyees and fum sh a
nforma 10n necessary o he performance of
he d stn hcanng officer s du cs
Ull A DISTRICT HEAR NG O~F CER
SHALL REPORT TO THE NSPECT ON
DIVIS ON OF THE BUREAU OF WORK
ERS COMPENSAT ON SUSPECTED
FRAUDULENT ACTIVITY PERTA N
lNG TO THE OPERATION OF T E
WORKERS COMPENSAT ON SYSTEM
AND ITS SEVERAL INSURANCE
FUNDS AS EV DENCED DURING ANY
HEARING N WHICH THE HEAR NG
OFFICER S PRESENT OR AS EY
DENCED BY ANY MATER AL SUB
MITTED FOR USE IN A HEAR NG A
D STR CT HEARING OFFICER SHA~L
BE HELD HARMLESS FOR SUBM T
T NO ll REPORT UNDER THIS D VI
S ON THE INSPECTION DIY SION
SHALL MA NTAIN IN CONFIDENCE
THE DENT TV OF ANY HEAR NG
OFFICER WHO SUBM TS A REPORT
UNDER TH S DIY SION
Sec 4 2 3~ A The ndus na com
m 11 tan ha appo n staff hcanng offi n;
o on d and dec: de a rna en. spec fi ed
nd son 8 ofm SICC on A lsulfhca
ng offiCerS are fu I rne employees of he
omm on and sha be adm ned to he
prac co awn hss1c Satfheann&amp;
officers hall no engage n any o he ac v
y ha nef'eea w h he ful me
emp oym n by he onan u on during oor
rna work ng hours
CB EKcept as pro ded n d \1 ' on 0
of h s sec on staff hear ng otr'tecn ha e
onlC na unsd c tOn o heir tnd d« de he
fo low ng matters
(I) Appl cat ono fo pcnnancn ota 4io~ IMPAIRMENT awards pu11uan u
cc 10n 4 23 SR of he Re St.'CI Code
(2) Appea s from an orde of ads nc
heanng oiTICcr ssued undc d
on C o
liCe 10n 4 23 S
of he Re sed Code
(3) App ICa IOnS for add nona awards r..
o • on of a ttpec: fi safe 'I rule of he
1dm n 111ra or of workers compcng on
pursuan o Sec on 35 of An c I of he
OhoC0111

cornmiissic&gt;n sb1l subm an annua report
such n&gt;ports 10 the stand ng comm
o he house of representa et and of
s a e to wh ch matters concern ng work
componsat on arc DOI'IIIai!Y referred
(b) ProVIde nronnatiOn to requel ng
pa11neoor the representatives on the status
SIOII

NOTHING IN DIY S ON 6) OF THIS
SECT ON SHALl BE CONSTRUED AS
DAM NO THE PARTICIPAT ON OF A
PERSON WHO IS NOT ADMITTED TO
THE PRACT CE 0F LAW AS A REPRE
SENTAT YE OF A PARTY fOR THE
PURPOSES OF ANY MATTER ARIS NG
UNDER TH S CHAPTER
CHAPTERS 4 23 4127 AND 4 3 OF
THE&amp;EY SED!;ODE PROVIDED
THE REPRESENTATIVE OF THE PARTY
COMPL ES W TH RULES Of THE COM
M SS ON NO PERSON OTHER THAN
AN ATTORNEY WHO SADM TTEDTO
THEPRACT CEOFLAWMAY RENDER
ADY CE OR SERV CES N THE PREPA
RAT ON OR PRESENTAT ON OF A
Clll M ARISING UNDER TH S CHAP
TERORCHAPTER4 23 4 27 OR4131
OFTHE &amp;EY SED CODE FA fEE FOR
THE ADVICE OR SERVICES IS TO
RECE YEO FROM OR
AGA NST THE PERSON HAVING
ClAM
B Every dec SIOn by a lllf or
heanng office or he comm ss on ha
wn ng and conta n at of rh fo ow ng
menlS

a of the fo lowma areas
D v s ons (8) and (C) or -

opeclalilll thai! write cvaluatiooa of
....Jical-lepl prob.......... -...-by

other bearina CUIIIIIift1 or the commlaaloe
The ditector ol admin slrotivo .....upon comm..loo 111 icc shall ua an aucb
employoea to 111lary achadule c:ommenau
.... With expertise noqulrod of them
(6) Requ re that prior 10 ony ....,...
100 I pby10 1D to Whom I claiman S
referred for exutliMbon rece Yell 1 I fteC.
easary mediCI mfonna on n tbe claim fi e
about the Cfaiilllll and I complete statcmen
• 10 the porpoac of die ClWII nation
(B) The COIDIIIIIIIOD may eoubf sb a
med caJ sect OD w th n lhe comm uaon o
perform the dut cs 111 gnod o the COIIIJII os on under th a sect on
Sec 412 44 (A)Theadmnstratorof
worltm compensauoe lhal ovence the
mp ementa on of the Ohio workers corn
pensa on q111 fied health plan syatem 11
ctllblahed under sec on 41214&lt;42 of the
ReVIied Code
(B) The adm n sm o ohall dii'OCI die
mplementauon of the hea th partnenbip
program adm n slered by lhe butoau u set
forth n - on 412 44 of the Rev sed
Code To mp emont the hea th partnersh p
program. the bureau
(I) Shall cen fy one or more external
endon to pmv de med ca lDIJIIBeR1Cn
and cos con11 amen sent ce1 n the hea th
partDmh p projl'&amp;ll1 for • pmod or two
yean beg nmng on the da e of ceruftca on.
cona sten w m he standanls ettab shed
under tho sect on AND
(2) May reccmfy external vendors ror an
additional period or two yean upon the e.p
rat on of the ccrt fica on &amp;c forth n d
• on (8)(1) ofth s occ ontellli

on

...J.o' I or the Re ood Code
( ) Requests ror chc Iakins of deposit OilS

and comm ss on phys c ans
The ssuance of subpoenal
The gran ng or deny ns of reques s

c a mants
2) Ab ty o accept a ccmmon onna
ofmed a b data nan e cctron c fash on
from any pro der who wiShes to subm
mediCI b II data n ha form
3) A eompu ersyatem able 10 hand edie
olume of medical b Is and w npcu o
us om ze tha system o lhe bureau s needs
and o be: opera ed by die vcndo s s alf
bureau staff. o some comb na on of both
staffs
4) A prescnpl on drug sys em where
phannac cs on a statew de bas s ha e access
to the el a b I ty and pnc ng. a a d scountcd a e of a presc:nphon drugs
S A rack ng ys em o record al tele
phone ca Is from cia manta and pro ders
....ant oa the SIIIW of subm lted mod a
b s so as o be ab e o tnlek each nqu ry
6 lla a process ns capac I)' 10 · a I of he bu eau s med cal b I process ng
or a cast ha part or he process ng wh h
lhe burau anongea 10 de ep e

n he cum:n po n of the proces~
ha oca on
The ..,...... comm n on m1y
esti1bli•ih an altema ve d spuiC rao u 100
for workers oompenunon c a m1
are W1 hm the comm 11 on 1 ur:sdaettor:
Chapters 4 2 4 23 4 27 and
of he Rev sed Code when he om
m:::~~:;dcte~
tha
1
1
n1
No w hstand ng ICC ons
34and4 2 3SoftheRe sedCode

nn nes

such process

th~:~::~::~!:~;!~penonal~
indivtdua.ls who are q111

vi

because of the educa on and cxpe
o ac as fat ta on n the omm s
a emanve d spute rae unon process.
2) The pan., usc of the alrerna e d s
rcsolu on process 5 o untary and
I'Cqllires lhe agreemcn oral """"" 81)' pa
The U!IC of the al emil vc d spu e res
process docs no a er the ghts o
obliplions of he paniCS nor docs delay
me nes se forth n sec: on 4 23 5
Re sed Cnde

7) Cap~t t)' o store retneve amy sun

u ale and mode n a relaJ: onal mode a of
he deta ed med ell bllldoto ao ha snaly
s s can be ptr(ormcd n a anety of ways
and 10 that he bum.u and tJ go em ng
au hority etn make nformed deciS ons
(8 Wide anel)' of softwarc programs
whtch tran a e medica erm no ogy n o
standard codes and wh ch ,.veal r a
pro der s man putt na he procedures
codes commonly Cl ed unbund ng
9) NeeeiSII'Y profesa onal staff 10 con
due a am n mwn au horiDtlons fo rea

ompu e y em
wh ch supports su h ac 1y and mea ures
he ou cornea and he sa naa
( 0 Managemen expenence and nex
bloy obeabc oreac quckly o hcnc&lt;ds
of he bureau n the Ci&amp;Se o requ red hanse
n federa o sta e requ rcments
(D)Th&lt;adm n stratormay I rru fn:edom
of cho e of heal h care pro der o upp
er by requ nng beg nn w h he penod
oetfonh nd s oniBX )or(2)or h ""
on ha c a man s shall pay an appropn
a e ou -of. p an co-pay ror sel«: ng a mcd
a pro de no w h n he hea th par1ne
sh p rrogram as prov ded for nth s set on

•a

(E

41
J

I&amp;GRian

l 11 JIUFRUaR1

I pp g
4 lh1 snptJillla 1af1ha
u"JfiaaiJIR ar aeu1:Aea1:en 11t nl bAh :n
A: :HEIR tY)tl~ •• ti~ af1l::aan1u:a
11'1 The adm n sm o shal .,tab h and
ope a e 1 bureau of workers corqpensa on
hca h are da a program The adm n srra
to may contraC:I w h he Oh o hea h iU'C
data cen e fo such purpose The adm n
so. o shal dcve op reponma requ rements.
from 11 emp oyees emp oycrs and med ca
pro den med ca endon and p ans ht
part c pa e n he work rs ompcnsa aon
ysem Theadm n s ra o shall do a or he
ro ow ng
U I ze he co ec ed da a o measure
and perform companson ana yse o os s
qi.IB t)' appropna. enessofmed ca care and
ctToc eness of mcd a arc de e cd by
a componen s of he wo kers ompensa
on sys em
2 Comp e da a to support a
es of
he sc « ed cndor o vcndon and o mea
sure he ou comes and sa ngs of he bea h
pannersh p program
(3) Pub! sh and ropon comp ed dota o
he go ernor he opeaker of he house of
rcprescnuh es and 1lie presidcn of he sen• eon he firs day of each anuary and u y
the ......... ofOIIICOIIIOI and IOV oaaohhc
healm pannenh p proanm and 1lie qual fted
health p an S)'l ern The 111m ..... or aha
pro ec the confiden ial oy ofall propnewy
pn nadaa
~ Any rthabi tanon fac I)' he
bureau open es s e KJ.blc for nclus on n
die Oh o workers compcilllllOn qua fied

.... Re ews or sc lcm n agrccmcn
pu,.uan o !\CC on 4 23 6~ of he Re sed
Code [)c(: s ons of he tafT hcanna offi e
unde ha sec on arc fina and no appca
It: e to the com n ss on o o ourt urKJe sec
on 4 235 or 4 23512 oflhc R &lt;Cd
Code
fC The dec son of a salfhe1nng ofli
cerundcd sonDofsccon42351
of he Re sed Code he dee s on of he
comm 11 on fo he JXI~ of 5Ct W&gt;n
4 23 ~ 2 of he Re sed Cod un
h
eomm s on hetn an appcall!fldcr d ston
EofiCCIK&gt;n41235 ofhcRc &lt;CdCodc
(0 Staff hearing officcn sha hold hear
ngs on a rna crs refcned o h ~ fo hear
ns Heanng procedures sha conform o the
ru es the comm 55LOn adopl puBL.IBn o ~
on 4 2136 of heRe sed Code
I.J;J A STAFf HEAR NG OFFICER
SHALL RF.PORT TO THE INSPECTION
D VIS ON OFTHE BUREAU OF WORK
ERS COMPENSATION SUSPECTED
FRAUDULEI'IT ACTIVITY PERTA N
lNG TO THE OPERAT ON Of THE
WORKERS COMPENSAT ON SYSTEM
AND ITS SEVERAL NSURANCE
FUNDS AS EVIDENCED DURING ANY
HEARING N WHICH THE HEARING
OFFICER S PRESENT OR AS EV
DENCED BY ANY MATER Al SUB
MITTED FOR USE N A HEARING A
STAFF HEI\RINO OFFICER SHAll BE
HELD HARMLESS FOR SUBM mNG A
REPORT UNDER THIS DIY S ON THE
INSPECTION DIVISION SHALL MAIN

\

•

die ..... "'""' u other
providoon within health """' plooa ex die pro-

proflllli

aram
lWlai)ln . . - . - do the state or WI Ibn the wbero oo CJUI flod health plan
or 111 inadeqlllte number of prov dell w tJi.
IR tho hcallb ponnenhip pro..... QIS~ the
admmimllor oba1l perm! employeea to 111&lt;
a nonplan o nonpropm health care
provider and ahal pay the provider for die
!leMCCI or IUJ!Il cs """'idod to or on behalf
or lil employee for an m wy ..-occupational
dioeac tha 1 eompenllble under th 1
cbaplero Chap&lt;er4 23 4 27 or4 3 of
the Rev ICd Code on a fee ~ehedu e the
adm rusm10 adopts
tll(H) No cen fied health care provukr
shJ charge usess o o herw ae ltcempf to
co oct from an employee, employer a man
aged care OlplllZI son, or tbe bureau any
amoun for co ered sctY ces o supplies tha
IS n cxceaa of tbe a lowed amoun paid by
a managed Cll1! organ zanon the bureau o
• qual flc4 hca h p an
~The admin slnltor Jhall penn any
employer or group or emp oym who agree
o abide by the ru es adopted under lh a sec
on&gt;ndacctiorrs412144 and4 2 442of
die Reviaed Code 10 proVide la'V CCI 0 suppi cs 10 o oo behalf of an employee ro an
n ury or occ:upa onal d sease tha s com
penaab e uncle th s chap e o Chap e
4 23 4 2 o 413 ofthe Re sed Code
throuah qua fied healh pans oflhe Oh o
wo ken compensa on qua fled hea tb
p an S)'ltem pumiiO 10 sec non 4121 442 or
lhe Rev sed Code o througb the hea lh pan,..
nenh p program pu suan o sec on
4 2144 ofllieRe sedCode Noamoun
pa d under the qua fled hcahh p an sys1em
punuao o - on 4 2 442 of the Rev sed
Code by an employer who s a sta e fund
emp oye ha be charged o he emp oy
e s cxpcnence or othcrw se be used n
men ral ng o determ n ng the sk of tha
emp oye fo lhe purpose ofthepaymen of
p erruums uncle th s ehaplc and f he
emp oyer s a sc: f nsunng employer he
cmp oye ha not n ude tha amoun n
the pa d compcnaa on the emp oyer repons
under sec on 4 2335 of he Re sed Code
Sec 4 2 444 (A) NO HEALTH CARE
PROV DER MANAGED CARE ORGA
N ZATION OR OWNER OF A HEALTH
CARE PROVIDER OR MANAGED
CARE
ORGAN ZATION
SHAll
OBTAIN OR ATTEMPT TO OBTAIN
PAYMENTS BY DECEPT ON UNDER
CHAPTER4 2 4 23 4 27 OR4 3
OF THE &amp;EY)SED CODE TO WH CH
THE HEALTH CARE PROVIDER. MAN
!iGED CARE ORGANIZAT ON OR
OWNER S NOT ENTITLED UNDER
RULES OF THE BUREAU OF WORK
ERS COMPENSAT ON ADOPTED PUR
SUANT TO SECTIONS 4 2 441 AND
412 442 OF THE &amp;EY SED CODE
(II) ANY HEALTH CARE PROVIDER
MANAGED CARE ORGAN ZATION
OR OWNER THAT VIOLATES DIYI
SON (A)OFTH S SECTION SL ABLE
N ADDITION TO ANY OTHER PENAL
TIES PROVIDED BY LAW FOR ALL OF
THE FOLLOW NG PENALTIES
(I) PAYMENT OF INTEREST ON
THE AMOUNT OF THE EXCESS PAY
MENTSATTHEMAX MUM NTEREST
RATE ALLOWABLE FOR REAL ESTATE
MORTGAGES UNDER SECT ON
343 01 OF THE ll.EYISED CODE THE
INTEREST SHALL BE CALCULATED
FROM THE DATE THE PAYMENT WAS
MADE TO THE OWNER HEALTH
CARE PROVIDER OR MANAGED
CARE OROANIZAT ON THROUGH
THE DATE UPON WHICH REPAYMENT
S MADE TO THE BUREAU OR THE
SELF fNSUR NG EMPLOYER
(2) PAYMENT OF AN AMOUNT
EQUAL TO THREE TIMES THE
AMOUNT Of ANY EXCESS PAYMENTS
(3) UPON PROOF OF A SPECIFIC
NTENT OF THE HEALTH CARE
PROV DER MANAGED CARE ORGA
N ZAT ON OR OWNER TO DEFRAUD
PAYMENT OF A SUM OF NOT LESS
THAN F YE THOUSAND DOLLARS
AND NOT MORE THAN TEN THOU
SAND IJOLLARS FOR EACH ACT OF
DECEPT ON
4 AlL REASONABLE AND NEC
ESSARY EXPENSES THAT THE COURT
DETERM NES HAVE BEEN NCURRED
BY THE BUREAU OR THE SELF
NSUR NG EMPLOYER N THE
ENFORCEMENT OF TH S SECT ON
ALL MONEYS COLLECTED BY
THE BUREAU PURSUANT TO TH S
SECT ON SHALl BE DEPOSITED INTO
THE STATE NSURANCE FUND CRE
ATED N SECTION 4 23 30 OF THE
ll.EV SED CODE AlL MON[YS COL
LECTED BY A SELF NSUR NG
EMPLOYER PURSUANT TO THIS SEC
ON SHALl BE AWARDED TO THE
SELF INSUR NG EMPLOYER
l:X N ADD TON TO THE MON
ETARY PENALT ES PROV OED N
D Y SION Ill OF TH S SECT ON AND
EXCEPT AS PROVIDED IN D V S ON
C 3 OF THIS SECT ON THE ~DM N
ISTRATOR MAY TERMINATE OR A
PERIOD NOT TO EXCEED F VE YEARS
FROM THE DATE OF CONY CTION
PLEA OF GU LTV OR JUDGMENT
ENTRY ANY AGREEMENT IETWEEN
THE BUREAU AND A HEA TH CARE
PROV DER OR MANAG 0 CARE
ORGAN ZAT ON OR TS 0 INER AND
CEASE RE MBURSEMENt TO THAT
PROVIDER ORGAN ZA ION OR
OWNERFORSERV CES REIIDERED F
ANY OF THE FOLLOWING APPLY
(a THE HEALTH CARE FROY DER
MANAGED CARE ORGA ZAT ON
{)R ITS OWNER OR AN OFF CER
AUTHOR ZED AGENT ASSOCIATE
MANAGER OR EMPLOYEE OF A
PROV DER QR ORGAN ZATION S
CONVICTED OF OR PlEADS GU LTV
TO A VIOLAT ON OF SECTIONS
29 348 OR 29233 TO 292336 OF THE
8.EV SED CODE
(b) 1 HERE EXISTS AN ENTRY OF
JUDGMENT AGAINST THE HEALTH
CARE PROVIDER MANAGED CARE
ORGAN 1ATION OR TS OWNER OR
AN OFF CER AUTHORIZED AGENT
ASSOCIATE MANAGER. OR EMPLOY
EE OF A PROVIDER OR ORGAN11A
TION AND PROOF OF THE SPEC F C
NTENT OF THE HEALTH CARE
PROY DER. MANAGED CARE ORGA
NIZATION OR OWNER TO DEFRAUD

SUANT TO THIS SECTION
W THERE EXISTS AN ENTJ.Y OF
1UOOMENT AGAINST THE HEAlTH
CARE PROVIDER, MANAGED CARE
ORGANJZATJON OR TS OWNER, OR
AN OFF CER. AllllfORIZED AGENT
ASSOCIATE MANAGER. OR EMPLOY
EE OF A PROVIDER OR ORGANIZA
TION IN A CIVIL ACTION BROUGHT
PURSUANT TO SECTIONS 29233 TO
2923 36 OF THE &amp;JlYISED CODE
(2) NO HEALTII CARE PROVIDER
OR MANAGED CARE ORGANIZATION
THAT HAS HAD ITS AGREEMENT
WITH AND REIMBURSEMENT FROM
THE BUREAU TERMINATED BY THE
ADMINISTRATOR PURSUANT TO
DIVISION (C)( I) OF TIUS SECTION OR
AN OWNER OFFICER. AUTHORIZED
AGENT ASSOCIATE MANAGER, OR
EMPLOYEE OF TIIAT HEALTH CARE
PROVIDER OR MANAGED CARE
ORGANIZATION SHALL DO ANY OF
THE FOLLOWING
(A) D RECTLY PROV DE SERV CES
TO ANY OTHER BUREAU PROVIDER
OR HAVE AN OWNERSH P NTEREST
IN A PROVIDER OF SERVICES THAT
FURNISHES SERY CES TO ANY
OTIIER BUREAU PROVIDER
(b) ARRANGE FOR. RENDER. OR
ORDER SERVICES FOR CLA MANTS
DURING THE PER OD THAT THE
AGREEMENT OF THE HEALTH CARE
PROV DER. MANAGED CARE ORGA
N ZAT ON OR ITS OWNER IS TERMI
NATED AS DESCRIBED fN DIVISION
(C)( ) OF THIS SECTION
W RECEIVE REIMBURSEMENT N
THE FORM OF DIRECT PAYMENTS
FROM THE BUREAU OR IND RECT
PAYMENTS OF BUREAU FUNDS IN
THE FORM OF SALARIES SHARED
FEES CONTRACTS KICKBACKS OR
REBATES FROM OR THROUGH ANY
PARTICIPATING PROVIDER
(3) THE ADMINISTRATOR SHALL
NOT TERMINATE THE AGREEMENT
OR REIMBURSEMENT IF TilE HEALTH
CARE PROVIDER MANAGED CARE
ORGAN 1ATION OR OWNER DEMON
STRATES THAT THE PROV DER
ORGANIZATION OR OWNER DID NOT
Dl RECTlY OR INDIRECTLY SANC
T ON THE ACTION OF THE AUTHO
RIZED AGENT ASSOCIATE MANAG
ER OR EMPLOYEE THAT RESULTED
IN THE CONVICT ON PLEA OF
QUILTY OR ENTRY OF JUDGMENT AS
DESCR BED IN D V S ON (I:;)( I) OF
THIS. SECT ON
4) NOTHING IN D VISION (!;) OF
TH S SECT ON PROHIB TS AN
OWNER OFF CER AUTHOR ZED
AGENT ASSOCIATE MANAGER OR
EMPLOYEE OF A HEALTH CARE
PROY DER OR MANAGED CARE
ORGANIZATION FROM ENTERING
NTO AN AGREEMENT W TH Tf E
BUREAU IF THE PROVIDER ORGA
N ZAT ON
OWNER
OFFICER
AUTHOR ZED AGENT ASSOC ATE
MANAGER
OR
EMPLOYEE
DEMONSTRATES ABSENCE OF
KNOWLEDGE OF THE ACT ON OF
THE HEALTH CARE PROV DER OR
MANAGED CARE ORGAN ZATION
WITH WH CH THAT IND V DUAL OR
ORGAN ZAT ON WAS FORMERLY
ASSOCIATED THAT RESULTED N A
CONY CTION PLEA OF GU LTV OR
ENTRY
OF
UDGMENT
AS
DESCRIBED N D V SION CX OF
TH S SECT ON
Q THEATTORNEYGENERALMAY
BR NG AN ACTION ON BEH,LF OF
THE STATE AND A SELF INSUR NG
EMPLOYER MAY BRING AN ACTION
ON ITS OWN BEHALF TO ENFORCE
TH S SECT ON IN ANY COURT OF
COMPETENT JUR SDICTION THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL MAY SETTLE
OR COMPROM SE ANY ACTION
BROUGHT UNDER THIS SECTION
W THT IEAPPROYALOFTHE ADM N
STRATOR
NOTW THSTAND NG ANY OTHER
LAW PROV D NG ASHORTER PER OD
OF L M TATIONS THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OR A SELF INSUR NG
EMPLOYER MAY BR NG AN ACTION
TO ENFORCE THIS SECT ON AT ANY
T ME W THIN SIX YEARS AFTER THE
CONDUCT N VIOLATION OF THIS
SECT ON TERMINATES
E) THE AYAILAB l TV OF REME
D ES UNDER TH S SECTION AND SEC
TIONS29 348AND292 3 T0292336
OF THE &amp;EV SED CODE FOR RECOV
ERING BENEFITS PAID ON BEHALF
OF CLA MANTS FOR MEDICAL ASSIS
TANCE DOES NOT LIM T THE
AUTHORITY OF THE BUREAU OR A
SELF NSURING EMPLOYER TO
RECOVER EXCESS PAYMENTS MADE
TO AN OWNER HEALTH CARE
PROY DER OR MANAGED CARE
ORGAN 1AT ON UNDER STATE AND
FEDF.RAllAW
(f AS USED IN THIS SECT ON
DECEPT ON MEANS ACT NO
WITH ACTUAL KNOWLEDGE OF N
DEl BERATE IGNORANCE OF OR
RECKLESS D SREGARD OF THE
TRUTH OR FALS TV OF ANY REPRE
SENTAT ON OR NFORMAT ON IN
ORDER TO DECE VE ANOTHER OR
CAUSE ANOTHER TO BE DECE VED BY
MEANS OF ANY OF THE FOLLOWING
a A FALSE OR MISLEAD NG
REPRESENTAT ON
b THE W THHOLD NG OF
NFORMATION
t; THE PREVENT NO OF ANOTH
ER FROM ACQU RING IN FORMAT ON
ANY OTHER CONDUCT ACT
OR OMISSION THAT CREATES CON
FIRMS OR PERPETUATES A FALSE
MPRESS ON AS TO A FACT THE
LAW THEVALUEOFSOMETH NO OR
A PERSON S STATE OF MIND
EXCEPT AS PROVIDED N DIY
S ON (Jl)(3 OF TH S SECT ON FOR
PURPOSES OF Til S SECT ON PROOF
OF SPECIF C NTENT TO DEFRAUD S
NOT REQU RED IN ORDER TO SHOW
THAl' AN OWNER HEALTH CARE
PROY DER OR MANAGED CARE
ORGAN ZAT ON IS ENGAGING NOR
HAS ENGAGED IN DECEPT ON
i) 'OWNER MEANS ANY PERSON
HAYING AT LEAST A F YE PER CENT
OWNERSHIP NTEREST N A HEALTH
CARE PROVIDER OR MANAGED

a

Sec 41214&lt;45 EACHHEAL'IliCARE
PROVIDER AND MANAGED CARE
ORGANIZATION SHALL MAKE AT
LEAST ONE COPY Of AN EIIIPLOY
EE S MEDICAL RECORDS AND THE
REPORT OF THE EMPLOYEE S TREAT
lNG OR CONSULTING PHYSICIAN
AVAILABLE TO THE EMPLOYEE OR
THE EMPLOYEE S REPRESENTATIVE
UPON REQUEST AT A CHARGE NOT
TO EXCEED FIFTEEN CENTS PER
PRINTED PAGE
Sec 4 2 47 (A) Noemp oyerlhall oale a apoc lie safe!)' n&gt;le adopted by he
adm n stntor of worken compensa on
pursuan to sed:on 4 2 l of he Rc sed
Code or an at of he general assemb y o
protect the .., hcallb and safe!)' or
employees punuan to Sect on 35 of Amclc
I Oh o COOIIIU on Cbap&lt;er 4 67 of the
Rev sed Code and ru es and otanda d•
adopted-UNDER THAT CHAP
TER are no1 the ru es or cnac:rmen referred
o n lh s d s on and shall not be con d
ered as u h for purpo~e~ of h a sec on
FOR PURPOSES OF TH S SECT ON A
SPECIFIC SAFETY RULE OF THE
ADMIN STRATOR THAT REFERS TO OR
S INTERPRETED AS APPlY NG TO
WORKSHOPS AND FACTORIES SHALl
NOT APPLYTOBU lDINGSORSTRUC
TURES USED FOR AGRICULTURAL
PRODUCT ON OR TO ANY OF THE
F XTURES MACH NERY EQU PMENT
TOOLS OR DEVICES UT L ZED IN
THOSE BU lD NGS OR STRUCTURES
AS USED IN TH S DIVISION AGRI
CULTURAL PRODUCTION MEANS
OPERATIONS UPON FARM PREMISES
NCLUDING THE PlANTING CULT!
VATING PRODUCING GROWING JAR
VESTING DRY NG AND STORING OF
AGR CULTURAL OR HORTICULTURAL
COMMODITIES AND PREPARATION
FOR MARKET OF THOSE COMMODI
T ES ON FARM PREM SES THE RAtS
lNG OFL VESTOCK FOR FOOD PROD
UCTS OR RAC NG PURPOSES AND
POULTRY ON FARM PREMISES AND
ANY WORK PERFORMED NC DENT
TO OR N CONNECTION W TH THOSE
FARM OPE RAT ONS AGRICULTURAL
PRODUCTION DOES NOT NCLUDE
THE COMMERC Al PROCESS NG
PACK NG DRY NG STOR NG OR CAN
N NG OF THOSE COMMOO TIES FOR
MARKET OR COMMERC AL TIMBER
HARVESTING BY AN NDEPENDENT
CONTRACTOR
B) If a scalfhearii18oflicer n the coune
of ilia THE HEAR NG OFFICER S ddcom na on of a a m fo an add ona award
unde Se on J~ of Artee I Oho
Cons u on find he emp oye gu y or
oa ng d son A ofths sec on he
olioll THE HEARING OFF CER n add
on o any award pa d o he a man
SHALL ssuc an order o he emp oyer o
ortet he o a on w th n the penod of
m e - - F XED BY THE HEAR NO
OFF CER Fo any v o a on occumna
w th n twenty fou man hs of the as lOla 10n the .W heanft(!: officer sha assess
aga n he cmp oyer a c I penalty n an
amoun Iii THE HEAR NG OFFICER
detenn nes up o a max mum of fifty thou
sand do an fo ea h o I bon n fix na the
exac pena ty he Ml+l hcanng offi er sha I
base tM THE dec s on upon he s JC of he
mploye as meuurcd by me numhe of
employees assets and earn ngs o he
employe
C) An emp oyer d ssa afied w lh he
mpo on o a
I pena 'I pursuan o
d s on B of h s sec on may appeal the
tlllft" heanng office s d" s on f the ::om
m s on refuses o hear he appeal under
d son (E of sec on 4 235 of the
Re sed Code o a dec ston or he com
m smn f he omm ss on hears he appca
unde ha d v s on o a coun of common
pleas pursuan o he Ru es o C v
Procedure An appeal opera ~ o s 1y the
paymen of the fine pend nalhe appca
D Th adm n ra o ha depos all
penal es col cc c&lt;l pursuan o h $«1 on
n the occ:upa ona SM.fety oan program fund
stab hed pl11'5U8n o sec on 412 48 of
h Re sod Code
1.J;J NYEST GATIVE REPORTS OF
V OlATIONS OF SPECIF C SAFETY
RULES SHALL BE AVA LADLE TO
THE EMPLOYER THAT S THE SUB
ECT OF AN NYEST GAT ON AND A
CLAIMANT THAT IS
N URED
BECA SE OF AN ALLEGED VIOLA
T ON THATIS THE SUBJECT OFTHAT
NV EST GAT ON
Sec 4 2 61 LAJ The adm
"tor of
workers ompensa on w th he ad cc and
onscn or the workers ompenu on o cr
gh cornm LIS on shal adop rules.
NCLUDING RULES DESCRIBED IN
D Y SION II OF THIS SECT ON akc
mea u c and make xpc d urcs a tt T IE
ADM N STRATOR deem necc sacy o ad
a mants who ha usla ned ompcn ab
n ncs o ncurred ompcnsab occ:upa
ona d seas s pursuan o Chapter 4 23
4 2 0&lt;4 3 of h RcvsedCndc o
rcum owoko oa s n essenngo
rcmo ng any resu ng hand cap
!.ll.l THE ADMIN STRATOR SHALL
ADOPT RULES UNDER TH S SECTION
ESTABLISH NG CR TERIA GOVERN
NO DETERM NAT ONS REGARDING
THE PROY SION OF RE lAB l TATION
SERVICES COUNSEl NO OR TRAIN
NO TO EMPLOYEES OF BOTH STATE
FUNDANDSELF NSURING EMPLOY
ERS THE NDUSTR Al COM MISS ON
SHALL ESTABLISH RULES REGARD
NG A HEAR NG PROCEDURF. TO
GOVERN DISPUTES BETWEEN A
CLA MANT AND A SELF NSUR NG
EMPLOYER REGilRD NO THE PROV
S ON OF REHAB l TAT ON SERV CES
COUNSELING OR TRAIN NG
Sec 4 2 67 The adm n a o o
wortten compensa lOll w h h ad tct and
conscn ofthe workers ompcnY on over
gh romm SSJOn 1h1 adop ru
A For the cncoW1ogcmcnt o rccm
ploymen or a man &amp; who ha e ucce
fu y completed prescnbcd rehsb 11 on
programs by paymenl from the Ul]l u fund
• abl shed by see ion 4 23 34 o he
Re sed Code to cmplo'jers who employ o
reemp oy rhe 1 manta The penod o pen
odS or payments Sha not CKteed
rnon hs n the agrega e unless he adm n
s ra oro lito THE ADMINISTRATOR S
des g:nce deten;n rtClL lha the c a man w
be: benefited by an ex ensiO&lt;l of paymeoli

establ shmen und a
on Tll o
express o mp ed ora o wn en
ng a ens and m non househo d worken
who earn one hundred xry do ars
n euh n any calendar quar1er from a
g e househo d and asua workers wh&lt;&gt; eaom
one hund cd xty do Iars o mo e n
n any a cnda quanc rom a
emplbyer or
bound by any u h con
trKI ofh reo by any othe wntten conrract
o pay n o he sta c nsunmcc fund he pre
m urn pro dcd by h hapte
E ery pcr.wn who perfonns abor o
pro de serv c:es pursuan o a ons 1'\1 on
conra asdefined nsec on4 2379orhe

cmp oym n con ra o agrccmcn
E cry person n he sc:rv 1l llny ndC
pcndcn contracto or subcon rae m who hi!

a d o pay n o he a e nsurance fund
he amoun of prrm urn d enn ned and
filled by he adm n rator o workers
compensa on for h penon emp oymen

ofa hurch n hcc

or 8!' soc a
esco mn

'l'"
b Any office o a fam y arm orpo..
ra 10n OR
&gt; AN NOV DUAL WHO S GNS
THE WA YER AND AFf DAY T PRO
V DED FOR N SECTION 4 23 l OF
THE REV SED CODE PROVIDED
THAT THE ADM NISTRATOR HAS

�OI!AHTIID A

TIGN

TO

THE INDIVIDUALS
EMPLOYER UNDER THAT SECTION
. .y elect 10 IIICiudo U 10
lhil cl&gt;oplac ""! per1011
fioollhe def!nitioll
employee
10 diru100 (AK2) of l h i l -

or

~ I I ~p ICie

pro-

fimily rum ...,.,....,., IUCb
may elect o mclucle u on
1hil chaplet sny IDCII&gt;ol'sudl pn.Wp, 111o -or~~~o 101e
proprielonh p or the ofticen of the fun ly
form corponll&lt;ln.Jn the evml oi'ID election,
the employ" aballserve upon 1he bweou of
worken compcnaatJOn wntten notice nam
p&lt;n001 to be covered, me ude such
emp oyce s remuoeranon for pmn um pur
JIO"" m Ill futun: psyroll report1 JDd no
penon exc: uded from the dcfin tiOD of
employee ptUIUll! 10 d v sooo (A)(2) of
oectlon propnetor or shal be
deemed an employee w dun th 1 div s on
lhe employer has served such nol ce
for nfonnltlona pwposes on y he
shall pr&lt;scnbe 111&lt;h language as
'..,.,.;don appropnale oo such of ts fonru
cons den appropna e

o adv se

cmp oycrs of the r ngh to elect o n udc
as an employee w th n this chapter a sole
propnctliT any member of a plltll&lt;llh p he
officers of a fam ly fum corpora on or a
person exe uded from he detil'l on of
emplOyee underdiVIS on (A)(2Xa ofth s
secnon that they should check sny heolth
JDd d sob ty nsunnce policy or other fonn
of health snd d sabil ty plan o contrac~
presen y covenng them, or the purchase of
wb ch they may be cons dering. o de!C!'
m ne whctbe such poiK:y plan o contrac
exc udes bencfi s fo ness o n IllY lhll
they m p have e ec ed o have co m:d by
compcnsai!On
(8

Emp oye

means

(I) The scate nctudins state hosp ta s.
county mun c pal corponuon own
schoo d stnc~ snd hosp ta owned by

po

tea

subd v s on Of subd

VJS

ons othe

the state
(2) Every person finn. and pn a c cor

pora on,. nc udma any pub c seMcc cor
ponhon. ha (a) has nserv ceoneormore
emp oyecs n::gularly n he same bus ness o
n o abou the same establishmen under
•Y contrKt of hue express or mplted. o"
o wnnat, o (b) s bound by any auch con
tractofh reorby anyodtcr...mttencontract.
10 pay mto the nsunncc fund the p~&lt;m urns
proVlded by th s chapter
A sutb employers are SUbJCC to th S
Any member of a firm or assoc11
who regularly performs manua abor
or abou a mmc faclor)l o o her tslab-nclud ng a houacllold establ sh
shill be cons dercd an cmp oyee n
detc:nn;ning whether such person finn or
pnvlte COJp(H'I on. o publ c serv e co
porat on has m ts scrv cc. one or more
emp oyeeo snd 1he O&lt;nployer shd report the
dcnved from such labor o the
as pal1 of the payrol of such
emplloyO&lt;, lllld such member shall themJpon
ed to all the benefits of an emp oy
(C) InJury ncllldca my 111Jwy whether
ICCidental means Of ace

clenlll u1 chtltiCier ~lid,...,~ rocaved n the
o! snd ansma ou of the nJured
:r~:~·s employmen Injury does not

( ) P,ychiame cond oons e•cept wher&lt;

~:::::::ansen from

an mJury•

IMPAIRMENT o d •b I ty

~~!:":~by the - 1 cleterioration
••

an orpn. or pa11 or 1he body
(3) lnjwy IMPAIRMENT or d llhil ty
incumd n vo unlary puticlpWon n an
~on or fitncas
f the employee IIJIS I WIIVer or
employee s riaht 10 compen11 on or
hon.r... under th a chapter pnor to enpa
ma n 1he recreatiOn or fitneu ecnv ry
(4) A CONDITION IMPAIRMENT
OR DISEASE PROCESS THAT PRE
EXISTED AN INJURY UNLESS THAT
CONDITION OR
IS SUBSTANT ALLY
OR THAT D SEASE
SUBSTANTIALLY ACCELBY AN INJURY AS DOCU
MENTED BY OBJECTIVE CLINICAL
FINDINGS AND TEST RESULTS AND
SUBJECTIVE COMPLAINTS WITHOUT
THESE FINDINGS AND RESULTS ARE
INSUffiCIENT TD ESTABLISH ACOM
PENSABLE INJURY AS DESCRIBED IN
(C)(4) OF THIS SECTION
(S) INJURY IMPAIRMENT OR DISRESULTING FROM CUMU
-'~~- - ' REPETITIVE TRAUMA
(D) "Ch ld nclucles a posthumous
1 child leplly adopted pnor to 1he

{F) "'ccupotionaJ diseuc means a d10-

NOT INCLUDE ANY OF THE FOLLOWlNO
{I) A DISEASE OR CONDmON TD
WHICH THE OENERAL PUBLIC IS
EXPOSE!l OUTSIDE OF EMPLOY
MENT ABSENT A SHOWING BY A
PREPONDERANCE Of THE EVI
DENCE, THAT TilE DISEASE OR CON
DITION IS CIIARACTERIST C OF OR
PECULIAR TO A PARTICULAR INDUS
TRIAL PROCESS TRADE, OR OCCU
PATION
(2) A DISEASE OR CONDITION
THAT WOULD HAVE ARISEN WITH
OUT THE OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE
(3) A DISEASE OR CONDITION
THAT RESULTS FROM AGGRAVATION
OF A PRE-EXISTING DISEASE CON
DITION OR DISEASE PROCESS
(4) A DISEASE OR CONDITION
CAUSED PRIMARILY BY THE NAT
URAL DETERIORATION OF THE TIS.
SUE ORGANS OR OTHER PARTS OF
THE BODY
S) PSYCHIATRIC CONDITIONS
EXCEPT WHERE THE CONDITIONS
HAVE ARISEN FROM AN OCCUPA
TIONAL DISEASE
(G) Se &gt; nsunng emplOye meons
any of the fo ow ng ca egones of emp oy
ers f granted the pnv egc of payma com
pcnsanon lllld benefits diJOCtly under ICCIKMI
4123 35 of !he ReVIsed Code
(I) Any employer men oned n d vss on
B)(2 ofth s sect on;
(2) A boanl of county hospital tnwees
(3) A pubhdy owned un I ty
Sec 4 23 0)2 E cry emCfi!OIICY man
ascmen worker tiltM w th respe&lt;: 10 lhe
porfonnancc ofhio THE WORKER S duties
a s - AN emerzcncy managemcn wori&lt;
er SHALL be m the emplo)'ftentofdlo state
or po bcalsubd v s on fo purposes of sec:
ons 4 23 0 to 4 23 94 of the Rev sed
Code and every emergency management
worker o m case of death ltia THE
EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT WORK
ER S dependents shaJ be enbt ed 10 the ben
e6ts payable on accoun of total d aab1 ty
OR IMPAIRMENT oss of member or
death as accorded by sucb sections o
employees covered by t40 THEIR provt
s1011s No poymen fo soch d 11b hty OR
IMPAIRMENT loss of member o death
shal be made uoless a clacm s filed wtth
n one year of the dale of the aec dental
nJUry caus ng the total d 11b I ty OR
IMPAIRMENT IOSi of member or death
lfan nJurycam atiedwthn....._..
THAT onc-..)'Cif pcnnd and the cia man sol&gt;lt:IJUOII ly d~es, hio THE EMERGENCY
MANAGEMENT WORKER S clepenclents
hal tile any death c a m based on such
nJury w rh n s x months after dte death or
be forever barred
Sec 4 23 033 Any eme1Jency man
a1emen worker who suffers an ace dental
n wy wh lc petfonn ng emergency man
•Iemen duues u defined hetc n, shall be
compcnaa ed for any otal d 11b l ty
MPAIRMENT orlossofmembcrJDdhio
THE WORKER S clepcndents shall be
compensated for any cleslh resu ttn&amp; from
auch an tlJUry oo the same baa s u prov d
ed for worlcc:n Clll(!loy= and dlow clepcn
denb undeuec:boni412J 01 o 4 23 94of
tbt Rev sed Cocle
11us secbon than not apply n the cue
of any pmon who " otherw sc entt led,
uncle llediOns 4123 0 to 4123 94 or the
Rev sed Code 10 m:e ve workcn compenslhOn benefits for such ace denta DJW')'
or clesth
Sec 4 23 061 ANY RECORDS
FILES PLEADINOS OR IlOCUtdENTS
GENERATED BY A CLAIMANT S
ATTORNEY WITH RESPECT TO A
CLIENT IN A WORKERS COMPENSA
TION CLAIM ARE THE PROPERTY OF
THAT CLIENT UPON THE CLIENT S
REQUEST THE ATTORNEY SHALL
CONVEY TO THE CLIENT COPIES OF
ALL RECORDS FILES PLEADINOS
AND DOCUMENTS RELATING TO THE
CLIENT S WORKERS COMPENSA
TION CLAIM NO LATER THAN FIF
TEEN DAYS AFTER THE CLIENT S
REQUEST
Sec 4 23 07 The adm n stra o of the
burau ofworken compensa on shall prepare and fum oh blank forms of spphcat on
for bencfi1s or compensa .an from lhe state
nourance fund, rq&gt;oru of nJury d sabil ty
IMPAIRMENT or occu.,. ona disease
no11cco o employen and employees proofs
of nJwy d seaS&lt; d oab I ty IMPAIR
MENT or death proofs of med ca 11 en
datcc and hosp tal and nun ng care and
proofs of emp ()yment and Wlge eam1np.
and other necessary bbiOks JDd shall prov.SC mhioTHE ADMINISTRATOR Srula
for tha pn!JJ11111hOO and d stnbution so that
hey may be read ly ova able JDd so prepored tba he fum sh ng of nformanon
rcqu red of any penon w th rcspeet to any
sspec of a cloun shal not be de syed by 1
rcqu rement that · - W i t h n:apect to
ano&lt;her upec1 of IUCh clatm shal be fus
n shod on 1he form by he same or lltiOther
penon Insured employers shill keep on
hand I suffieoenl supply or lOCh b anks
Sec 4 23 S (AI AN EMPLOYER
WHO IS A MEMBER OF A RECOG
JIIIZED RELIGIOUS SECT OR DIVISION
OF A RECOGNIZED RELIOIOUS SECT
AND WHO IS AN ADHERENT OF
ESTABLISHED TENETS OR TEACH
JNGS OF THAT SECT OR DIVIS ON BY
REASON OF WHICH THE EMPLOYER
IS CONSCIENTIOUSLY OPPOSED TO
ACCEPTANCE OF THE BENEFITS OF
ANY PUBLIC OR PRIVATE INSURANCE
THAT MAKES PAYMENTS N THE
EVENT OF DEATH DISABILITY
IMPAIRMENT OLD AGE OR RETIRE
MENT OR MAKES PAYMENTS
TOWARD THE COST OF OR PROVIDES
SERVICES FOR MEDICAL BILLS
INCLUDING THE BENEFITS Of ANY
INSURANCE SYSTEM ESTABLISHED
BY THE SOCIAL SECURITY ~CT 42
lJSC~ 301 ET SEQ MAY APPLY TO
THE ADMINISTRATOR OF WORKERS
COMPENSATION ]'0 BE EXCEPTED
FROM PAYMENT OF PREMIUMS AND
OTHER CHARGES ASSESSED UNDER
THIS CHAPTER AND CHAPTER 4121
OF THE &amp;£VISED !;;ODE WITH
RESPECT TO OR IF THE EMPLOYER IS
A SELF INSURING EMPLOYER. FROM
PAYMENT OF DIRECT COMPENSA
TION AND BENEFITS TO AND ASSESSMENTS REQUlltED BY 1111S CHAPTER

!:ODE ON ACCOUNT 01! AN INDIVJD..
UAL WHO MEET$ THE REQUIR£.
MENTSOF11US SECTION THE APPLI
CATION SHALL Be ON FORMS PRO.
VIDEO BY THE BIJRJ!AU OF WORK
ERS COMI'ENSATION WHICH FORMS
MAY BE THOSE USED BY OR SIMILAJl
TO THOSE USED BY THE INTERNAL
REVENUE SERVICE FOR THE PUR
POSE OF GRANTlNG AN EXEMPTION
FROM THE PAYMENT OF SOCIAL
SECURITY TAXES UNDER 26lJ.S C A
1402(&amp;) OF THE INTERNAL &amp;EVENUE
!:ODE, AND SHALL INCLUDE A WRIT
TEN WAIVER. SIGNED BY THE INDI
VIDUAL TO BE EXCEPTED OF ALL
THE BENEFITS AND COMPENSATION
PROVIDED FOR IN THIS CHAPTER
ANDCHAPTER4121 OF THE&amp;EVISED
toDE
THE APPLICATION ALSO SHALL
INCLUDE AFFIDAVITS SIGNED BY
THE EMPLOYER AND THAT INDIVIJ&gt;.
UAL THAT THE EMPLOYER AND THE
INDIVIDUAL ARE MEMBERS OF A
RECOONIZED RELIOIOUS SECT OR
DIVISION OF A RECOONIZBD RELI
GIOUS SECT AND ARE ADHERENTS
OF ESTABLISHED TENETS OR TEACH
!NOS OF THAT SECT OR DIVISION BY
REASON OF WHICH THE EMPLOYER
AND THE INDIVIDUAL ARE CONSCI
ENTIOUSLY OPPOSED TO ACCEP
TANCE OF THE BENEFITS OF ANY
PUBLIC OR PRIVATE INSURANCE
THAT MAKES PAYMENTS IN TilE
EVENT OF DEATH DISABILITY
IMPAIRMENT OLD AGE OR RETIRE
MENT OR MAKES PAYMENTS
TOWARD THE COST OF OR PRO
VIDES SERVICES FOR MEDICAL
BILLS INCLUDING THE BENEFITS
OF ANY INSURANCE SYSTEM ESTAB
LISHED BY THE "SSCIAL SECURITY
~CT 42lJ S C-4. 301 ET SEQ IF THE
INDIVIDUAL IS A MINOR THE
GUARDIAN OF THE MINOR SHALL
COMPLETE THE WAIVER AND AFFI
DAVIT REQUIRED BY THIS DIVISION
(II) THE ADMINISTRATOR SHALL
GRANT THE WAIVER AND EXCEP
TION TD THE EMPLOYER FOR A PAR
TICULAR INDIVIDUAL IF THE
ADMINISTRATOR FINDS THAT THE
EMPLOYER AND THE IND VIDUAL
ARE MEMBERS OF A SECT OR DfVI
SION HAVING THE ESTABLISHED
TENETS OR TEACHINGS DESCRIBED
IN DIVISION ~ OF THIS SECTlON
THAT IT IS THE PRACTICE AND HAS
BEEN FOR A SUBSTANTIAL NUMBER
OF YEARS FOR MEMBERS OF THAT
SECT OR DIVISION OF THAT SECT TD
MAKE PROVISION FOR THEIR DEPEN
DENT MEMBERS WHICH IN THE
ADMINISTRATOR S JUDOMENT IS
REASONABLE IN VIEW OF THEIR
OENERAL LEVEL bF HIRING AND
THAT THAT SECT OR DfVISION OF
THAT SECT HAS BEEN IN EXISTENCE
AT ALL TIMES SINCE )lECEMBER 31
9SO
(C) A WAIVER AND EXCEPTION
UNDER DIVISION (II) OF THIS SEC
TION IS EFFECTIVE ON THE DATE
THE ADMINISTRATOR ORANTS THE
WAIVER AND EXCEPTION AN
EMPLOYER WHO COMPLIES WITH
THIS CHAI"TT!!t AND THI! !Ml'LOY
ER S EMPLOYEES WITH RESPECT
TO AN INDIVIDUAL FOR WHOM THE
ADMINISTRATOR GRANTS THE
WAIVER AND EXCEPTION ARE ENTI
TLED AS TO THAT INDIVIDUAL AND
AS TO ALL INJURIES AND OCCUPA
TIONAL DISEASES OF THAT NDI
VIDUAL THAT OCCURRED PRIOR TD
THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE WAIV
ER AND EXCEmON TO THE PRO.
TECTIONS OF SECTIONS 4123 74 AND
4123 741 OF THE B.EVISED CODE ON
AND AFTER THE EFFECTfVE DATE OF
THE WAIVER AND EXCEPTION THE
EMPLOYER IS NOT LIABLE FOR 1 HE
PAYMENT OF ANY PREMIUMS OR
OTHER CHAROES ASSESSED UNDER
THISCHAPTERORCHAPTER4121 OF
THE REVISED !;;ODE OR IF THE INDI
VIDUAL IS A SELF INSURINO
EMPLOYER THE EMPLOYER IS NOT
L ABLE FOR THE PAYMENT OF ANY
COMPENSATION OR BENEFITS
DIRECTLY OR OTHER CHAROES
ASSESSED UNDER THIS CHAPTER OR
CHAPTER 4 21 OF THE REVISED
CODE IN REGARD TO THAT INDI
VIDUAL S CONSIDERED A COM
PLYINO EMPLOYER UNDER THOSE
CHAPTERS AND THE EMfLOYER
AND THE EMPLOYER S EMPLOYEES
ARE ENTITLED TO THE PROTEC
TIONS OF SECTIONS 4123 74 AND
4123 74 OF THE &amp;£VISED CODE AS
TO THAT INDIVIDUAL AND AS TO
INJURIES AND OCCUPATIONAL DIS
EASES OF THAT INDIVIDUAL THAT
OCCUR ON AND AFTER THE EFFEC
TIVE DATE OF THE WAIVER AND
EXCEPTION
Q A WAIVER AND EXCEPTION
GRANTED IN REOARD TO A SPECIF
IC ND VIDUAL IS VALID FOR ALL
FUTURE YEARS UNLESS THE ADMIN
JSTRATOR DETERMINES THAT THE
EMPLOYER INDIVIDUAL OR SECT
OR D VISION CEASES TO MEET THE
REQUIREMENTS OF THIS SECTION IF
THE ADMINISTRATOR MAKES THIS
DETERMfNATION THE EMPLOYER IS
L ABLE FOR THE PAYMENT OF PRE
MIUMS ANO OTHER CHAROES
ASSESSED UNDER lliiS CHAPTER
ANDCHAPTER412 OFTHEI\EVISED
CODE OR F THE INDIVIDUAL IS A
SELF INSURING EMPLOYER THE
EMPLOYER IS LIABLE FOR THE PAY
MENT OF COMPENSATION AND BEN
EFITS DIRECTLY AND OTHER
CHAROES ASSESSED UNDER THOSE
CHAPTERS IN REOARD TO THAT
INDIVIDUAL FOR ALL JNJUiliES AND
OCCUPATIONAL DISEASES OF THAT
INDIVIDUAL THAT OCCUR ON AND
AFTER THE DATE OF THE ADMIN IS
TRATOR S DETERMINATION AND
THE INDIVIDUAL IS ENTITLED TO
ALL QF THE BENEFITS AND COM
PENSATION PROVIDED IN THOSE
CHAPTERS FOR AN INJURY OR 0CCU
PATIONAL DISEASE THAT OCCURS
ON OR AFTER THE DATE Of THE
ADMINISTRATOR S DETERMINA
TION
Sec 4123 25 (A) No employer sball

or..-............,..tbo-OR
CLASSIFICATION ofpayrollllpCNilVhich
1he - - ..... tbla cboplor b WboMrviololol tbladi..- siJall be lllblo
to tho -•FOR UP TO tell timeolhe
of die ~ ill BETWEEN
THE - - paid aod 1be 1he
employer alltJt&amp;ld have paid. TilE ADMIN
ISTRATDit OF WORKERS COMPENSATION WITH THE ADVICE AND
CONSENT OF THE WORXERS COM
PENSATION OVERSIOHT COMMIS
SION SHALL ADOPT RULES IN
ACCORDANCE WITH OIAPTER 119
OF THE &amp;£VISED toDE FOR THE
ASSESSMENT OF A FINE OR PENAL
TY AGAINST AN EMPLOYER FOR A
VIOLA110N OF 1HIS DIVISION The Ita
b I ty to 1he 11110 under IIIia divt1 on t11a11
MAY be cofulted m a c vii ttcbon m 1he
name or die Illite JDd Ill sums 00 lecbd
under this- shall be poid ... theftmd
{B) No aelf."""""'' employer ohall
m ....,.-~~~o .-..t ofpud""""""
UDOO poid b)i IUCb employer for p11p01C0
oft h e - psuvlded under this choptcr JDd Cbapler 4121 of the Revnecl Code
11 required by secnon 4123 3&lt; of the
Revtsed Code Whoever VIOl- th s d VI
s on s liable to the rrta1e n an amount

n""'""""

asoeueclbydlo~

............. ADMINISTRATOR pur
suut todivtltOII~ofiCCtion412J 352
of the Reviled Code or UP TO ten -lhe
amoun of the difference betweert the
uscumen1 paid and the ltiiOWI of the
-thatabould have'-' plld-.
- . - The liab I ty to 1he alate under th 1
d VII on may be enforted m a c v I act on
n the name or 1he atate JDd all swns col
lected utlder th 1 div 11011 shall be psKl n10
the sci~ .......,. .......,.,, fund created
punuutto div sooo (I) of accoon 412J 35
of the Reviled Code
See 4123 21 lnfonnanon oonta ned m
he annual -..nt proVIded for m ICCitOn
4123 26 of the Reviled Code JDd aucb other
nformanon u may be fumiahod to the
bure~u of workers compenaa on by
employers n putiUin&lt;e of that oectlon tt
OR AS THE BUREAU DEVELOPS OR
CREATES AND RECORDS KEPT BY
THE DIVISION OF SAFETY AND
HYOIENE PERTAININO TO WORK
PLACE INJURIES AND ILLNESSES OR
OCCUPATIONAL
SAFETY AND
HEALTH CONDITIONS IN SPECIFIC
WORKPLACES INCLUDINO BUT NOT
LIMITED TO INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE
REPORTS ERGONOMIC SURVEY
REPORTS
TEAM
APPROACH
REPORTS SAFETY CONSULTANT
REPORTS ACCIDENT INVESTIGA
TION REPORTS LOSS CONTROL
ANALYSIS REPORTS AND ILLNESS
AND INJURY DATA PERTAINING TO
SPECIFIC WORKPLACES ARE for the
exclus ve use and nfonnat10n of the bureau
m the d~~&lt;huJ!e of ts ofi"IC a duttes JDd
shall not be open to the pubhe nor be uaed
n any court n •Y action or proceed na
pending there;n unless the bwau sa party
to 1he act on or proceedins bul the nror
mlhnn contained n 1he alatemenl may be
bbubted JDd pobllhod by the bwau nata
tlshcal fonn for the uae and nformanon or
other state dopariinents ind the public No
penon n 1he employ of the bureau except
hooc who .,. authorized by the ldrn n ollltor of worken compenut on shall
d vulge any nformal on seeured by loiM
THE PERSON whtle n the employ of the
bumu m n:apect to the tnmacttons property clo m files, recon!s, or popcn of the
bW&lt;Iu or n '""""' to the bus ness or
mechan cal chem cal or other ndustnal
proceu of any company firm corporation
penon pannenh p or pohhc
unl ty to Ill)' penon other than he adm n
strator or to 1he supcno of soch crop oy
ce of the bweau
NOIWl.-ngthen:stncoons ~
by th lsectiOO, the pemor select or alandna comm ttea of the general usembly the
aud tor or stale the attorney aenen1 or their
des gnees. punuam to he authority grant
ed n th schapter JDd Chapter 4 2 of the
Re sed Code tm.y eum ne any records
c a m fila or papers n possesa on of he
ndustnal commm on or he bureau They
doo 110 bound by th&lt; pnv leae that attach
estothesepopcn
The odm n ..,. or sball rq&gt;ort to he
director or hUI'MI1 stf'Vteel or to the COUll
I)' d rector of human serv ccs the name
address Md -.x: aJ secunly number or other
dent fation number of any penon re«~v
ng workers COOipeDI&amp; on whose name or
sec al secuncy number or other idennflca
bOn number • the 11me u that or • penon
rcqu rod by 1001111 or ch d suppon enforcemen sgcncy to prov do soppon psymems
10 I teclpiOIIIOf publ C 1U stan« snd whole
name s subm ned to the ldrn n ltrl or by
the d n&gt;Ctor under on s 0 36 or die
RCY sed Code 11le admm stra or a 10 ahall
nform the dtiOCIOf or the amoun ol' wori&lt;
"' ~ pad to the pmon dur
naouch period ulhe d rector spec fics
w lh n fourteen days after rece v ns
from the d redOr of human serv (ZS a I st
of the Mme&amp; JDd ICClalaccunty numbc:n of
tee p,., a of pabl c wtalanc&lt; pwauan to
sect on S 0 I 181 of the Revtoed Code the
adm n atratot lhlll nfonn the aud o of
&amp;ta e of the name cum:nt o mos ccen
address and toe al secunty number of each
person rtecl'l na workas compensa1011
punuant to th s chapler whose name IUld
soc a secunty number an: he same as lha
of a person whose name or soc: al secunry
number wu subm ned by the d rec o The
adm n lb'ltor also ohall nform the aud tor
of Ill e or the amoun or wortcn com
pensa on poKl to the person during such
penod u the d """" spec fies
The bureau and .. employees caccpt fus
pusposea ol' fismuhln&amp; die aud or of state
With •n f o - rcqu rod by h 1 sec on.
shsll pmerve tbt confiden s ty of rec p
ento of pubhc Ullltllt&lt;e n cornpl ancc w lh
d VIJHIIl (A) or sectiOn liOI lSI of the
R"" led Code
For 1he ~ orlbialectiOO publtc
us ,.,. mcdiCII IUtltlnee prov clod duouJh die med;ed _,.... pro.,.m cosablilhod under lectJon S II 01 of
die J«v;aed Code aid to dependent ch ldlen
p ovtded under Cbapter 5107 or the
Revised Coda, « diaab II)' us 1tancc pro' clod under Clloptor S115 of 1he Rev led
C&lt;lde.

_-.u...,.

..

ooctlflliolltl ..... lilal .. -

by lsit THE
I!MPLOYI!R I - ' - Ill tltoCOWieof

. - . . . at -

their.....,_

llld .......... I n dl)'l•-of-.tdissbililyORIMPAIR
MENT W.dllss a _.. a11or tcq11UU1C
ma.tadpor• ~or~ tltorcfrom,
JDd In lbe.-or~ d;..or
dellh

~

Within ... -

-

aequtn~~~""""'"cJao or or~ ol' or

clobh from • '*"JJIIlmal ....... or of a
tqJOOt "' die cqt~oyer or die oocupat'-1
~or

cleslb, a ...,... _,shall be
mada ia ~ to tlto ....... or workers

- - - blltlb to Itt procurod
fioo1 lite bun.tlbrthatll"''** The rq&gt;ort
ahall -lite llline JDd natuno at the ""'
,_ or tbo etll(llo)'et 1he - . of Ilia
THE EMPLOYI!R SCltabl~ or place
ofwodt.dlo-. addrcu, na11n Ulddunobnn or OC&lt;UplliOn or the mJured, d sablal,
IMPAIRED or cloceased anployer: and the
time, 1he - . and the . _ of mjwy
occupational eli-. or cleslb, JDd auch
other mr01111a11011 II I .....- by the

-

The employer aball pvea oopy nf each

tuM""''

tqiOit to tho - · H . _ or hio

THE EMPLOYEE S
dipendcnb
No employer ahall ..tlue onqlcct o
maD any ...,... -"&lt;d by lhia ~ect~on
Each day that an employer fttilo o file a
rq&gt;ort lllqllirecl by this ICCIIOO _,tutelan
addidoul day withm the ttmo potiod JIIVOII
10 a elttiiMm bylhe 'I'JIIlcable- of I m
fus tlta lhna ofaeloim looood on the
mJury or~ d i - (II'O'Iicled that
a faihle to file I rq&gt;ort shall not extend the
app1 cable ltiiUie or u.._
for ,.,..
than two-~,.....
Soc 4123 l4 The admi0111tn10 of
worbn compllliMKin n the exert se of
the powtll ad diacntion confaml upon
loiM 111E ADMINISTRATOR In sectiOn
4123 29 ofdlo Revised Code !hall fi• JDd
matntlin. -lhe odvtct: JDd ""'*"'of the
wottara
oveniJitl oomm,
1100. fer .cb clus or occopaiJOIJ or incluo
try tbo tnw. poaaible ratea of pmn um
-WJthlhemsm-ata solvent
Jtate I1IW'InCe fund and the c:rat on and
11111nt1n1nee of 1 I'IIUOIIIble surplus tfter
1he paymcn ortapimate clams for nJU'Y
&lt;&gt;ecupalioool ~ snd death lhatloo THE
ADMINISTRATOR authori- 10 1x: paid
from the ..... fund far""' bene
fit or njtnd. d'-&lt;1, and he clependcn ,
of k lied employees. In establ all na ,. eo.
the odm n 10'1tor !hall take mtoaccoun the
.-yof.,....na"'fti.-moncy ""
II de Ill tbepmnliJm poyment ....,ny fUnd
to CCMf ony clefauho m pmn Ulll obl11
tona Theadminillrltorshall-..ved of
the follow na requ mncnts n flJ. ng lhc
nttcs of pramum for the n!lb of OCCUPfiiOI'II
or-es
(A) Ho THE ADMINISTRATOR shall
keep aa - • _ , oflhe money paKl
n pmn ums by each of the aeveral cluses
of occupaliON or industnes and 1he looses
on account of tnJun-. occupatoooal diaease
JDd cleslh of ..,ployees ther\lo( and 1110
keep .. ofdlo money t=ived from
each ndivitMl employer JDd tho amount of
loaco IIICUINd optnatlhe , _ O!AIIVICe
fund..,- of m1unca. occupa ooal
d l - JDd doath ordlo emp~.,... of the
employer
(B) Ten percent of the money pad mo
tbt IIIIUIIIICO fund shall be ICI asKlc
fo the cration of • surplus unbl the su
plua amounb to the sum or one: hundred
lhoullnd dollan. after wh ch , _ when
evernecoaaary tn lhejudpent orthe adm n

_.lion

--"""'""""

.fund,-a.............
- no&lt; exceed ng ftve per een of
all the money poicl toto the atato .......,.,
fund lllall be credited ~ die &amp;lllplus fund
A.....-or'-ic.-alhallbe.-..,..
ally .., the ftlll day of July
Nonvn- na uy pro¥11.., of the
law to lite C11t1111rJ. one: hundred otpty days
after the eff«::lve elate on wh ch aol~ nou
n1 cmp\oyert fill! nay Olec:t uodlrd VIS 00
(D)ofiOCtim412166oftheRcvlaedCode
to directly poy r... rehab I tat on cxpenaes
the ldrn nts..... shal calculate tho defic:
f any n the por1tOn of IUtpiUI fund tba I
used for n:nnbunemcn to lei~ msunng
employers ro. an ...,..... other than handcapped re mbu.nemcnt under JtCt on
4123 l43 of the Rev aed Cocle W thou
....... 10 whether • aelf nsunna employer
mskcadleelco:tion - d V s100{D)ol'aec
ton 412166 of he Reviled Code the
adminialrator tllall ....., all self 1nsunng
employen t b t - loo THE ADMINISTRATOR -..unes _.....,. Ill reduce
the delkrit over 1 period not to ai:OCd five
yeonft&lt;om~

-QCI'OBER2Q..I!il Aflotlhe nl a
U!leUIIWII the .tmtn sb'ltor ftvm t me o
1 me may determ ne whether the surp us
fUnd hu soch 1 defic t lnd may wess a
,.1&gt; nsunna emplorm who partt&lt; ps ed n
the porl1011 or the surplus fund duriiiJ th
acm.l of lhc dcficil and who duringlha
time period have no&lt; made he elec on
undcrdivllton(D)or.......,412166of he
Reviaed Code 1 h e -loo THE ADMIN
ISTRATOR-.... .-.wy to Jeduce
tbt delle I
ofbuic rates shall be ill....,
dant:&lt;o wtth tho oldest fous of 1he lut fi ••
calendar yeon ordte comb ned accident and
occuplt onal d 1e11e expcncnce of the
adm nilltltor n dM: adrh nratmion of h s
chapter as shown by 1hc accounts kep as
prov clod n th 1 sect on EXCLUDfNG
THE EXPERIENCE OF EMPLOYERS
THAT ARE NO LONGER ACTIVE IF
THE ADMINISTRATOR DETF.ItM NES
THAT THE INCLUS ON Of THOSE
EMPLOYERS WOULD HAVE A SIO
N FICANTNEOATIVEIMPACTONTHE
REMAINDER OF THE EMPLOYERS IN
A PARTICULAR MANUAL CLASSIFI
CATION lltdlheadm n stntorlhal adopl
ruin, wtlh die •Ice snd of he

oveniJitl """""iNion .,.....,.. - ...

s ona tlte object or wh ch !hall be to make
an oquitabl&lt; d-tion ofloaco IIIIOng the
several &lt;:luic:s of rx:cupat on or ndustry
whtch rola lhall be ...,... n dto;r sppl
Clbon

..,.Y

{C) The~ may
tba
fonn of n1101 Oy-. wh ch .. THE
ADMINISTRATOR finds 1 boot caleulll
ed 10 mens me or ndividually lilt the nak
more cqu tably predicated upon 1he bu 1 of
II individul industriaJ .,....,. ond occupa - ' d expcnence and may
_.,,... and -ulate acci&lt;lora pmen

and - - Nles oontrollilllhe """"

l)lllem. wWch rula lllall _ . e to each

.,.._, .........

rialr: lbe basic pnoc: pies of wnrbn com

s:::::

(D) The admiDllb'ltor from the money

paid ..... the lllte ........,. fUnd.l
uide mto an account ol'lhe atate In
fund tilled a pn:m um poymeot secunt)l
auffic- money 10 pay ror any pr&lt;~~niUIIOS
due from ao employer JDd uncollected
uo n ....,. of 1he employer 1 prom um
accunty dcpoaH
The fUnd shaD be n the custody
......,., or ala e All nvcstmel1t ..,,;"111
or the fund shall be c1epoa ted o the f\Jnd
D lbuncrncnb from the fund ohall b&lt; made
by the bureau of workm compenut on
upon order or 1he adm n srrator to he sta c
naunnce fund The ... orthe mon&lt;ys he d
by the pmn urn paymen IIOC\Inty fund 1
restricted o mmbunemen to the state:
nsuranc:e fund of premnuns due and unool

lee eel n eJ.ets~ of an ~~;~:.::::
sec:unty dcpos t The moneys
tho prenuum paymen oocunty fund sha I
mamtained w dtout n:prd to or
upon any Olhct fund Th 1 sccnon does
pm&lt;ent the dcpoa 1or inve~ilmcr1t ofthe pre·
msum payment oecunty fund wtth
other fund cmted by th s chapter bu
pn:m um paymcn secunty f\Jnd ;uepa~:ate
JDd diat net for every Olher purpose and
strict accowttms hereof aha I be
• ned
(E) The ldm n otrator may gran
counts on pmn urn rates for employen
meet e lher of the follow ng requ rementJ
( I) Have no ncurred a
DJury for one year or more and who

Any employer who adv 101 1he
of work&lt;:n compcnsa110t1 pnor)0
tba....,.....,.. of an DJury or occupabond - that I baa D b employ I haodi
Ll cnb~ m dJc e:vcn tbc
to a cleumnnabon under
1hil '"""""'" Any employa who fails to ...
ry the bureau but sppl co fora c1eterm na
tiorl under th &amp; ICC DD s enutled o • deter
DUIJit on f the bureau find&amp; tha there wu
good cause for he failure o g ve DOtJce of
the employment of 1he haodicapped employ
ee The bureau annua ly shall requ re
employen to file an nven ory of curren
handicapped employees
An emp oyctshall file an appl catKJn fo
a determ na on w th lhe bureau or eommw on m he same manner u other ela ms
An app ca oo only may be made D cascs
- I N WHICH 1 handicapped employ
ee o hio THE HAND CAPPED EMPLOY
EE S dcpcnclents cia m O! tt ARE n:cc v
ng an award of compensation u a mul of
1D nJwy OCCURRING or AN occupa110118
-.,.....-FIRST

D~~~~~~~~ BY A LICENSED PHYSI

i

C

or after he date on wh ch d VIS on
of this secbon fill mcluded he hand

ta n an employee safety ·~;::,or~~:
lar organ za on o make

napcc:t OIU\ of lhe workplace
(2} Succes!lfu y comp ete a loss
vcnrion of
-u::presc:~:n~bcd:,~
:~·::~
tendcnt
the d;
and conch~e cd by he d v 110n o by
other person approved by the su~erintcn·
den
F)( I) In de enn n na the premtum
for the conatruc on odustry the adn,;nistnto shal ctlculate he employe"
uma bued upon the sctual rcmune:rat;,,.
con1uucnon ndustry employees
fi'om coniii'IICt on ndustry employers
vided tha he amoun of :~.~~':'.,~'.~~·~~:~
adm n stn o uaes n ea cu lhnB
m ums sha I not exceed an avc:,.ae week:ly
wage equs o one hundrod fifty pc cen
he atatewide IVerage weekly
defined n d v son (C) of sectton ... J.o&lt;
of he R011 led Code
(2)Dvoon(FX )ofthssec onshal
not be construed as affect ng the manner n
wh ch bcncfiu 10 a cla man are awarded
under th 1 chapter
(3) Asuoed n d vo10n (f) of h s sec
on con1truction ndustry ncludes any
act v ty perform;cd n conncc on w h the
ercc on al e111non repe rcpiKemcn
rmova lOI'I nsullat on or demol bon of any
bu ld ns SO'Uc ure h ghway or bridge
See 4 23 34~ Th • SCCtlon shal be con
strued berally to he end tho emp oyen
shallb&lt;encoun&amp;ed ocmployandrctan n
!be r employmcn hand capped emp oyecs
u defined m th !I sect on
(A) AJ uoed In lh11 lectK&gt;n
capped employee means an em1•lo)"ce
who ium &lt;ted" tho subJect to
tcal or men II m~ nnent, or both wh•clh&lt;:r
congerutl o due o an DJUT)' or di!lease
such charac er ha the mpa nncn const
lUtes a hand cap n obta n na employmen
or would conlit tu e a hand cap n obtBin ng
rcemp oymen f he employee should
become unemployed JDd whole handicap 11
due oanyofthe fol owmgd seueaoreon

1

d t ...

( ) Ep 'I"Y
(2) Dlsbetcs
(3) Card sc d oeasc
(4) Anbrit.
(l) Amputa ed fon eg, arm or hand
(6) Lo11 or. gh of one or both eyes
a pan aI loss of uncomc ed ~ 1 on of
1han seventy five pe cen b lateral y
(7) ReUdual d sab II)' OR IMPAIR
MENT from pol omye s
(8) Cen:bra pa sy
(9) Mul pic sc c:roo s
( 01 Pal1c nson • d scase
( I) Ccn:bra vascula ace clent
( 2) Tubertulos s
( 3)Sicoss
( 4) Psycho neuru c d sab I y OR
IMPAIRMENT fo ow ng treatment n
rccogn zed med cal or menta nsllu on
( S) Hemoph Ita;
( 6) Chron c ostcomye !I
( 7) Ankylos I OfJO nts
(18 Hype nsul n sm
( 9) Mu1eular dystroph es
(20) Aneno-IC eros s
(2 ) Thrornbo-phleb •
(22) Vancose ve ns
(23) Card ovucular pu monary o n:s
p ra ory d scascs of a fire fighle o po ce
office emp oycd by a mun c pal corpora
on or ownsh p ss a regu ar membe of
awfully cons tutcd po ce departmen
fire depastmcn
(24)Coal""""" pncumo&lt;ornos s corn
monly referred o as b ack ung d sease
(2S)Dssb yORIMPAIRMENTw h
respcc: to wh~eh an nd dual has com
p cted a ehab tB on program
purauan osec ons4 2 6 o412169
he Rev sed Code

to tho ftmd m any montlt other than 11111111)'
or July Instead, the aemlaooual pronuutal
ohall be paid by thole empoyers fromto nme upon tho
of the respeo
ve period&amp; for which pa)'ftenta into 1he
fund have been made by them
The adm oiatniiOr sball adopt 111lca to
penn employers to make pcriodlc pay
menu of 1he semiannual prenuUIIl due uncler
Ibis divta on The rules ohal melucle provt
s ons for the ......_,t ortntcrest cbaqJes.
whetc appropnatc JDd for the - . . . t
ofpcnahsea wben 111 employer fa laiO maJ&lt;e
nmo y prem um poymen11 An employer
who t moly pays tho amounb due under th S
divt!l on sent led o al of liM: benefits and
protec: ons ofth schap er Upon recetpt of
payment the bureau mmed ately shall
ma I a rcce p1 or certificate to the employ
er cer~~l"y ng thai psymcn hu been made
wh ch rece pt 1 pnma facae ev dence of
payment Workers compcnsa1t0n coverase
uncle th s ehapler cont nucs untoterruptcd
upon mc1y rece~p of paymenl under lh a
d v !I on
Every employer menuoned m d VIS on
(B)( ) of sectmn 4123 0 of the Rev sed
Code exeept boardi of county hosp tal
tr'U$ ees tN are self 1nsunng employers
unde th s se&lt;hon shall comply w th sec
hons4 233810412341 Uld4 2348ofthe
Rev sed Code n regard o the contribuhon
of moocys to he pub I c msurancc fund
(8) ProvKled, that employers menooned
n d v son (8)(2) ofsectmn 4123 01 of the
Rev led Code boardi of county hospital
tntS ces, and publ ely own&lt;d uttl nes who
w I ab de by the rules of the adm n Jtrator
and who m•y beof!luffic en financ alab I
ty o render certa n he paymen of com
pensal on o n urcd employees or he
dcpcndenb ofk lied cmp oyees and 1he fur
n shmg of med cal surgacal nun ng and
hosp ta auen on and servwes and med
c nes and funera expenses equa to o
grea e than s prov ded for n sect ons
412352 4 2355 o 4 2362 and 4123 64
o 4 23 67 of the Rev led Code and who
do not des re 10 nsure the paymen thereof
o ndemn fy lhcmsc ves aga ns loss sus
ta ned by tiled rec payment thereof. upon
a find ng of such fac s by the adm n sttator
may be granted he pnv lege o pay nd
Vldua y compensation and fum sh med cal
surg ca nurs n1 and hosp tal scrvJCell and
atten on and funera expenses d rectly o
•Jured employees o the dependents of
k lted employees, thereby bemg gntnted sta
tus as a self. nsunng emp oyer: The adm n
stra or may charge emp oyers boards of
ounty hasp tal trustees or pub c y owned
u I es who apply fo the status as a self
nsunng emp oye a reasonab e appl cat on
fee o ovtr he bureau s costs n cOMe&lt;::
on w th process ng and mak na a de er
m nu. on w h respec o an appbcation A
emp oyers granted such !ltarus shall derMn
stra e suffic en financ a and adm n stra ve
ab I ty o assure lhat a I obi ga ons under
h s sec on are promptly me The adm n
straiOI' sha deny the pnv ege where he
employer s unab e o demonstrale the
employer s ab ty top ompl y meet a he
obhga IOns mposed on he employe by th s
section The adm n strator sha I consider bu
s not m ed o the fo low ng fac ors.
where app cable n de erm n ng he
emp oye s ab I ty o mee all of the ob a
auons mposed on he emp oyer by h s sec
I on
( ) Th~ emp oyer employs a m n mum
err five hundred employees n lh s s a e
2) The employer has opera ed n th •
ta e fo a m n mwn of two years, prov dcd
ha an employe who has purchased
ae&lt;Ju ltd, or otbcrw "' succeeded to the opcr
a on of a bus ness or any pen therwf. s
ua cd n th s sla e ha has opemled for a
leas two yean n h s s ale also shall qua

""PI""""

ry

lhaU ""'be roquu&lt;d o psy any amounts nto
surp us fund and may no rece e any
or crcd from ha fund on accoun
sec on Thee ec on made under h s
d;v;s;o,n s rre~ocab e

s no appea ab c o cour1 unde !ie&lt;:l on
of he Rev sed Code
Sec 4 23 3l (A) Excep as prov dcd n
se&lt;: on every employe men oncd n
d;v;s;on BX2) of sec mn 4 23 OJ of he
Rev sed Code and e ery pub c y owned
u I ty shall pay !lm1 annual y n he month
January and Ju y n o he sta e nsuranc:e
fund he amoun of annua prcm urn he
of workers compensa on
faxes fo he: employmen o occupa on of
he employe he amoun of wh ch prem
um o be pad by each emp oyer o be dee
m ned by he c ass fica ons ru es and ra es
made and publ shed by ht adm n strator
The employer sha I pay liem annua y a ru
he sum of money n o he s 11 c nsurancc
fund as may be as ena ned o be due from
he emp oyc by app y ng he rues of he
adm n stra o and a !'fCC p o ccr1 fica e cer
fy ng ha paymen has been made sha be
rna l~immed a e y o he emp oye hy he
burcaJ&gt; of wo ken compensa on fhc
rece p o ccrt fica e s pnma face e den e
of he paymcn of he prcm um
The bureau of workers oompensa. on
sha ve fy w h he 5CCre ary of sta c he
ex s en c o a orpora ons and organ za
ons mak ng app ca on for wo kers com
pensa on co erage and shall requ re e ery
!luch app ca on to nclude he employtr s
federal den fica on numbc
An employe as defined n d 1011
(8X2l of sec on 4 23 0 of he Rev sed
who hll.'l conllac ed w h a subcon
trac or a I able fo he unpa d prem um due
from any 1Ubcontrac o w rh respec o ha
pan of the payroll of he subcontra o tha
! for work pe fonned pursuan o he con
rae w h he emp oye
0 son A) of sec on 4123 35 of ht
Rev sed Code pro d ng fo he paymen of
prcm uma stm anrtua 'i does nor app y 0
any employe who wu a subscnber o he
s11te nsurancc: fund pno lO January

3) Where the cmp oyer pre ous y con
tnbu cd o the s a c nsurancc fund or s a
successor emp oyt as defined by bureau
rues he amoun of lle buy-ool as defined
by bureau rules
(4) The suffic ency of he emp oyc 5
assets oca ed n h s s a e o nsurc he
employe s so vency n pay ng compensa
on d rcc ly
5) The finai\C a ecords documen s
and da a cen fied by a ccrt fied pub c
accountan necessary o p ov de he
emp oye full financ a d sc osure The
records documcn s and data nc ude bu
are not m ted o ba ance sheets and prof
and o s h s ory fo lhc curren yeu and
prev ou fou yean
6) The cmp oyer so giU1 za onal pan
fo he adm n s rat on of he worke s com
pensat on law
(7) The c:mp oyer s proposed pan o
nfonn emp oyces of he change from a stale
fund nsurer o a sc f nsunng emp oye he
procedures he employe w fo low u a
sc f nsunng emp oye and he emp oyees
ngh 9 o compcnsa on and benefits and
8) The employer has e the an accoun
n a financ al ns utmn n lh s sta c o f
he tmployer ma nta ns ;~n accoun w h 1
financ a ns tu on ou s de h s s a e
ensures that wo kers compensat on checks
arc drawn rrom he same lilCCOun as payro
checks o the emp oyer clearly nd cates ha
poymen w be houored by a financ a ns
uton n hsslac

stra o sha no gran he s arus of se f.
nsungg emp oyer 10 any pub c employer
o he han pub c y owned u It es afld
boards of CClunty hosp a rustees
(C The adm n stra ot sha requ re a
surety bond from at se f: nsunna emp oy
ers ssucd pursuan o set on -t 23 351 of
he Re sed Code ha s suffic en o com
pe or securt o nJured employees or o he
dcpcoden s of employe&lt;s k ed he pay
men of compcnsa on and expenses wh ch
shal n no even be ess han ha pa d o
fum shed ou of he st&amp; e nsun.nce fund n
s m ar cases o nJurcd cmp oyces o o
dependenu
k ed emp oyees whose
employers contnhu e to the fUnd except

or

llnl&lt;:tioo projeCt,

sull'ered tho loss ol' a hand, ann,
le1.
or eye pnor to 1he mJwy for wb ch com
pcnaatton lito be paid. JDd ~
fm 1he lou of any other of the memben u
1he result of any nJury auatained m die
coune ofJDdano naou of tho employee a
cmploymcn~ the compenaa!IOD to be psMI
by tho aelf llllllfllll employa a lcm ted to
the d;.ab II)' OR IMPAIRMENT IUifcred
m the IUboequent mJwy addibonal eorn
peDIIIJOn. fany to be pa~d by the""-'
out ofdlo surplus......,. by ICCtion 4123 34
of the Rmoed Code
(D) In add on to the rcquuementa of
this section the adm n slrator shall make
and publ sh ru ea govern ng the manner of
making appbcatton snd the nature JDd extellt
of the proofrcqu red to JUStify a finding of
fac by tbt ldrn n strato as to anullms the
status of a se f, nsunng employer wh ch
rules shall be general n the applicaltOn
one of wh ch rules shall pn&gt;v de tba all self
nsunng anp oyers shall pay nto the sta e
msuranoe fimd such amounts as are reqwred
to be cred ted to the surplus fund m d v s10n
(B)oracct on4123 34 of the Rev sed Code
Employe" shdloec:un: d roct y 1iom the
bure.u central officC!I appbcauon fonns
upon wb ch the bureau shal stamp 1 des
gnatmg numbc Prior to subm as on of an
application, an emp oyer sha make ava I
able o he bureau and he bureau shall
rev ew the nformation descnbed n d VI
s ons (B)( I) o (8) of th s secuon An
employer shal li c the comp etcd app ca
on forms w lh an applica 10n fee. wh1eh
sha eo "the cosh of process ng the sppl
caboll as establ shed by the admm strato
by ru e w th the bureau a eu n nety days
pno 10 he eff'ee ve date of the emp oye s
new starus as 1 se f. nsunng employe The
app ca on fonn s no deemed complete
un a he requ red nforma on s attached
here o The bureau shal on y accep appl
cat ons hal conra n he equ red nfonna
non
(E) The bureau sha rt ew completed
app ca tonS w th n a reasonable t me If lhe
bureau dc:tenn nes to gran an emp oyer the
status as a self nsunng emp oyer the bureau
sha I ssue a sla emen conta n ng u find
ngs of fac ha s prepared by he bWWI
snd • gned by the adm n slra or If the
bureau detenn nes not o gran the sla us as
a se f nsunng employe he bureau shall
no fy the employer of the detenn na on and
requ re the emp oyer o contmue o pay ts
fu I prem urn n o he ta e n urance fund
The adm n !ltrato a so shall adop ru es
establ sh ng am n mum evel of performance
as a cntcnon for gran na: and rna nta n ng the
slatusasasef nsunngempoye andfixng
tlme m s beyond wh ch fa ure of he se f
nsunng emp oye to pro de for he neces
sary med cal exam nat ons and eva uatlons
may no de ay a dec s on on a clajm
(F) The adm n stra o sha 1 adopl rues
stttl"8 forth procedures ror aud I ng the program of sci~ nsunns emp oyers The bun:au
shal conduc he aud UJMln a random bas s
o whenever he bureau lw grounds for
bel ev ng ha an emp oyer s no n ful
omp anc:e w th bureau rules o h s chaper
The adm n stra or sha mon o he pro
grams conducted by sci~ nsunng employ
ers o ensure omp ance w th bureau
equ remen s and fo ha purpose. sha I
dcve op and ssue o se f nsur ng emp oy
ers standard zed fonns fo use by the
employer n a asp« s of he emp oyers
duect compensaltoo program and for rq&gt;ort
ng of nfonna on o the bureau
The bureau shal recc ve and transm o
the employer all compla nts concern ns any
self. nSW1ng employer In the cue of a comP a n aga nst a sc f. nsWlng emp oye he
admm strator shal hand e he comp a n
hraugh the self. nsurance d v s on of he
bureau The bureau shall rna n a n a fi e by
emp oye of • comp a n s n:ce ved ha
re a e o he cmp oye The bureau sha
eva ua e each compla nt and take appropn
aeacton
The adm n stra o sha I adop as a ru c
a proh b 1 on aga ns any self. nsu ng
emp oye from harass ng dism ss ng o
otherw se d sc p n 111 any cmp oyee mak
ng a compla nt whiCh rule shal prov de for
a financ al penalty o be ev ed by he
adm n stralo payable by he offend ns
emp oyer
(G) Fo hepurposcofmak nsde crm
na ons as o whether 10 gran status as a sc f.
nsunng emp oye he adm n !ltra o may
ubscnbe o and pay fo a creel report ns:
serv ce ha offers financ al and o he bu
ness nfonna on abou nd v dual cmp oy
crs The cos s n conne on w h the
bureau subscnp on o nd dua repons
from he servtce abou an app cant may be
nc uded n he 1pp ca oa fee charged
emp oycrs unde th s sec on
(H) The adm n tra o notw bs and ng
o he pro sons of h s chap er may penn
a se f nsunng emp oye o resume paymcn
ofprem ums o the sta e nsurance fund w h
appropna e c cd mod ficat ons o he
emp oye s bas c prtm um rare as such ra e
s de enn ned pursuan o sec on 4 23 29
of he Re sed Code
( ) On he firs day of Ju y of each yea
he adm n 5 ra or shall calculale sepa.ra e y
each se r nsunng emp oye s asscssmcn s
fo he safe y and hyg enc fund adm n s
tra vecostspursuan osochon4123 342of
he Rev led Code and fo the port on of he
5Urp us fund unde d son 8) of se on
4123 34 of he Re sed Code ha s no used
fo hand capped rc mbursemen on he ba s
or he pa d compcnsa100 annbu able o he
ndii dua se r nsunng emp oyeraccord ng
o hcrolowngcacua on
( The o al asscssmen aga n a se f
nsur ng emp oyers as a c ass fo each fund
and fo he adm n strar e cos s fo he yea
ha he •sscssmen 5be ng made as de er
m ned by he adm n stra o d v ded by he
ota amoun of pa: d compensat10n fo he
preVIous ca enda year attnbutable o a
amenable self nsunng employers
(2) Mul py the quoten n dvson
( )(I) of h s sec on by he o al amoun of
po d compensaltoo for he pre ous ca endar
)'CII' tha s attributable o the nd v dua sc f.
nsuniiJ employer ror whom he assessmen
IS be ng dtlerm ned Each oelf "'""ng
employer shal psy he ~SSC~WCn tba
csults from lh 1 calcuiBI on unless the
a.ssessmen resu tlng from th s ca cu • on
f1l s below a m n mum uaessment wh ch
m n mum usesamenl the adm n stra or lhaJ
de enn ne on lhe fif'll day or Ju y of csacb
year w h the adv~ee and consent of he

oft m
e~ent. the self. DIUJllll
employer aha I pay the miolmwn -

1

men
In dderminin11be lotlliiDOIIDI due for
thetotal..........,tapmatdlse~

DIUt1lll
employers u a claao for each fund JDd 1he
admlniatnUvc weumen~ 1he admini10'1
tor shall,...... propon onately !be total for
&lt;achfundsnd........,.,.bytheamoun of
II10DC)' m lbe IC f msurance aueumeru fund
as of the date of the computa on of the

.......,..,

The ldrn n lb'ltor sha I calculate the
.........., for the poruon of the swp us
fUnd undc d V I on (B) orsce On 4 23 34
of !he Rev sed Code that s uaed ro hand
capped reunbonemeot m the wn~ner
uaetforth ndivsons(l){l)and{2 fths
section cxcep dul the adm n strator ha
calcu ate the otaii!JCUmen for th 1 po
on oftbc surp us fwwl only on lhe baS s or
thooe self msunna employerl tba retam par
be paiJOn n the handicapped mmbunemen
program JDd the n&lt;Uv dull 1&lt; ~ nsunng
employer a propomon ofplld compcnaabon
lha I be ca cuJatcd only fo thoae se f n ur
ng cmploycn who mam partie pibon m the
hand capped n: mburscment program The
adm n ltrl.tor u the adm n stralor deter
m nes appropna e may detenn ne he otal
assessmen fo the hand apped pon on of
he surplus fund n accordance w th sound
actuanal pnncaples
The adm n strato sha ca eulate the
asscssmen fo he port on of the surp us
fund under d v • on (B) of sec on 4123 34
or the Rev sed Code that undO&lt;d v son (D)
or sechon 4 2 66 of the Rev sed Code
used fo rehab I tahon costs n the same
manner as se forth n d v s ons (l)( ) and
(2) of th 1 secbon cx&lt;ep tba the adm n s
tmiDr shal calculate the total wessmcn for
th ! pol1 on of the surplus fund only on he
bus of those self nsunng employers who
have not made the election o make pay
lywtderd v Slon(D)oflec on
4 66 of the Re\ led Code JDd an nd
v
self. nsunng employe 1 propon on
of pa d compcnsa on only for thooe sc f
nsunng employers who have no made ha
e ee on
An employer who no onge s a se f
n5unns employe n th s sta e or who no
Ionge s opera ng n th 5 slate sha I con
hnue o pay assessmen s fo adm n stranve
cos sand for he port on of he surp us fund
unde diV15 on (B) Of ICCtiOII 4 23 34 Of he
Re sed Code that: s not used fo hand
capped ,. mbursemcn based upon ps d
compensa on attnbutab c to cia ms ha
occurred wh le he employer was a self
nsu gempoye w hnthiSsae
J There IS hen:by CIOIIed n the s ate Jrea
sury the se f msurance assessment fund A
n estmen earn ngs of q.e fund she I be
depos ed n the und The •dm n smt:o sha
usc he money n he se f nsurance assess
men lUnd on y fo adm n stn e costs as
spec fied n 1100 on 4123 341 of the Rev sed
Code
(K E ery self nsunng cmp oye sha
cert fy n affidaVJ fonn sub ect o lhe pena
ty fo perjury o he bureau he amount of
the self nsunng emp oye pa d compen
sat on for the prcv ous ca enda yea In
epon ng pa d compensa on pa d fo he
prev ous year a se r. nsunng emp oyer sha
exc ude fl om lhe Iota amoun of patd com
pensa on any re mbursemen he employ
e rece ve! n he prcv ous ca end1 yea
from he surplus fund pursuan o sec on
4 23 512 of the Rev sed Cnde for any pa d
compensa on The self nsunng employer
a so shal exc ude from the pa d compen
sal on reponed any amoun recovered under
scctJOD 4 23 93
the Rev sed Code and
any amoon ha s de enn ned no o ha e
been payab e o () on beha f of a cia man
n any tina adm n stra c o ud c al proceeding The self nsWlng emp oye shall
exc ude such amounbl fi om he pa d com
penD on reponed n he repon ng pcnod
subsequen o the date the determ na on s
made The adm n stra o sha I adop N es.
n a cordan e w lh Ch11p er 9 of lhc:
Rev sed Code es a6 sh ng the da c by
wh ch se f. nsur ng emp oyers mus subm
su h nfonna on and lhe amoun of he
assessments pro ded fo n d s on ( ) o
h s sec on fo emp oycrs who have betn
gran ed se f. nsunng ! atus w h n he las
ca cnda yea
The adm n s m o sha n ude any
asstssmen tha rema ns unpaid for prevtOU!
assessment penods n he ca cu a on and
co Icc on of any assessments due under h s
d 5ono dvson( )ofthssec on
LAs used n hsscc on pad com
pensa 10n means a amounts pad by a 8e f
nsunng employe fo
ng rna n enance
benefits a amoun s fo ompcnsat on pa d
pursuan () sec ons 412 63 4 2 67
4 23 56 4 23 l7 4 23 l8 4 2359
4 23 60 and 4 23 64 of he Rc sed Code
a I amounts pa d as wage n I cu of uch
ompcnsat on a amoun s pa d n I eu of
such compensa on unde a nonoccupa on
a occ den and s &lt;kness program fu y fund
ed by he se f msunng emp oyer and all
amoun s pa d by • sc f. nsunng emp oye
fo a o a on of a spec fie safety s andard
pursuan o Sec on 35 of A.r1 c e II Oh.o
ConSI tuhon and sec on 4 2 47 of he
Re sed Code
M Shou d any sect on of h s chap e
01 Chop e 4 2 of the Rc 1&lt;d Code p o~ d ng fo sc f nsu ng employm assess
men based upon compensa on pa d be
dte: ared un ons tu ona by a fi na dec s on
of any court hen ha sec 10n of the
Re sed Code de&lt;: a ed un :ons ut ona
ha re en ba k o he sec on n ex ence
pno to No ember 3 989 prov d ng for
a sessmen s based upon plY o
(N The adm n Slrl o may gran a se f
nsunng emp oyer he pnv lege o s.e f
nsure a constnJc on projecl en1ered n o by
these f nsunng emp oye that s scheduled
fm completion w th n stx years after the date
he proJect begms and he otal cos of
wh b s es ma cd to exceed one hundred
m II on do ars The adm n stra o may
wa e such os and nmc en ma and gran
a se f. ruunng employer the pnl( teac o
self tlii.U'e a c001tnac:tton pro: cc: reaardless
of he me needed to compleec the con
str\lc JOn proJetl ud provided thai he cost
of he construcuon proJect 1 esnma ed to
e•eced fifty m I on do m A se f nounng
emp oyer who desua o se r nsure a con
strucuon project shal 1ubm t to the admm
sO'I or an app cat on I st n1 he datea the
COflilrucbOn proJect 1 scheduled to be&amp; n
snd end, the cat mated cos of the con

mee

or

con._..

coo- whole employees.,. to be sel~
naured by lbe ,.If llliW'I"I employer the
proVIIIOill of I safety J)roiJ'Uil tba I
tpectfieolly cles;pc:d for the CODIII'IIC on
project, JDd aiW&lt;ment u to whether a col
lccttve borpllUJI8..,...... govenun11he
nlhta,dulia Uldob BlbWIIofc:ocbofthe
poitid. to die .......... w th retpect to the
OOilltnJetJOtl pro.J&lt;C! ex ab bcrwcen the
self cuunng employer JDd a obor orpn
zatton
A selr-msunna employer may app y o
se f nsure the emp oyees of e he.r of the
fo low ng
(I) All contncton and subcontncton
who perform labOr or wort o prov de ma.tena 1 fo the conarruc1 on pro ec
{2) A I conO'Icton and a the ldrn n s
tttto s d scree on a substantial number of
all the subcontracton wbo perfonn abor o
work o prov de matenals for lhe consuuc
on proJec
Upon approva of the app ca on lhe
adm n stra\or shal ma:i::c fica e gran
ng the pnv ege to se nsurt the con
strucuon JX'O: ect to the
ns\U'lng emp oy
e The certificate shaJ conta n he name of
the sc f. nsunng emp oye and the name
address and elephone number of the se f.
nsunng emp oye srepresenta es who are
respons ble fo adm n stenng workers com
pensa on c a ms for the onstruct on pro
cc The self nsunng cmp oye sha pos
he emfica e n a consp cuous place a he
s te of the constructiOn pro ec
The adm n ibatOr sha rna nta n a n::cord
of the contrac ors and subcontrac ors whose
employees are co ered undc he cen fi ate
ssued o the se f nsu cd emp oyc A self
nsur ng emp oyer mmed att )' sha no
f) the admin stra o when any contrac o o
subconttBctor s added o e m na ed fi om
nclus oo under he en. fica e
Upon appro a of he apphcat on he
se f nsunng employer s respons be lor he
adm n stra on and paymen of a c a ms
unde h s chapte and Chap e 4 2 of he
Re sed Code for he employee!~ of he con
trac or and subcontrac ors cu ercd under he
cert fica e who rece ve n unes o a e k ed
n the course of and ans ng ou or emp oy
men on the construct on pro ec o who
COl1 rae an occupa ona d scasc: n h
cou~ o emp oymen on rhe cons rue on
proJet Fo purposes of h s hap e and
Chapler4 2 o he Rev sed Code a c 1m
ha s adm n s ered and pa d n accordance
w h ths dvson s consdercd a cam
aga nst these f. nsunng employer sed n
he cen fica e A coot ac o or subcon rae
o ncluded undc the ccn fica e sha
report o the self n unng emp oye I s ed n
he cert fl a e a c a mSlha anse undc h s
chapter and Chapte 4 2 of the Re sed
Code n connect on w h he cons ru on
pmJec fo wh ch he ccrt fica e s sued
A se f. nsunng employe who compl cs
w hthsdvson sent cd o hcprocc
ons p ov ded unde h s chapte and
Chapte 4 21 of th~ Rev sed Code w h
respect o he emp oyccs of he con rae ors
and subcon ractors covered unde a ccrt fi
cae ssuedunder hsdv1onfo deaho
RJunes ha anse ou of o de:a h n unc
or occupa tonal d seucs ha ansc n he
course of lhose employees emp oymcn on
lha construe on proJe&lt;: as f he employ
ccs were employees of he ~e f n u ng
cmp oyer p o dcd ha he sc f. nsu ng
emp oye a so comphes w h h s se on
No employee of he contra ors and subcon rae ors co e ed unde a ccrt fica c
ssued unde h s d v ston shall be ons d
cred the emp oyec of he se f nsunng
employe I s cd n ha certifiCate fo any
purposes other than h s chapter and Chap er
4 2 of he Rev sed Code Noth ng n h
d v oon g~ves a self nsunng emp oyer
au hority 10 control he means manne o
method ofemp oymen oflhc emp oyces of
he contrac1ors and subconlractors co ered
undc a cen licatc ssued undc h s d v on
The ontrac on and subcon ac ors
nc uded under a cert ficatc ssucd Wldc h s
d v s on a e enl cd o lhc: protec ons proded unde h s chap e and Chap cr 4 2
of he Rev sed Code w h respect 10 1he on
rae o s or subcon rae o s emp oyecs who
are emp oyed on he cons ru on prnJec
wh ch s the sub ec of he cert fica e fo
dcalh o njunes tha anse ou of. o dea h
n unc:s o occupa 00111 d &amp;eases ha a sc
n he ourse of hose: emp oyecs emp oy
men on ha construe on proJec
The con rae o s and ubcon a ors
ncludcd under a cer1 fica e ssued under h
d v son shall den fy n he payro
rcco d he cmp oye who arc ons dered
he emp oyees of he sc f. nsur ng cmp oy
c s cd n tha crt fica e fo purpo~s of
ths haptc and Chape 4121 o he
Re sed Code and he amoun hal ho e
employees earned fo cmploymen on he
construe on pro cc ha IS he sub ec of ha
cert fica e Now hs and ns any p o s10n
o he con rary undc h chap cr and
Cha~e 4 2
of he Rev sed Code he
adm n stra o sha c c udc h payrol ha
s reported fo employees who arc cons d
ered he emp oyee of h self nsunng
employer sted n ha ccn fica c and ha
he emp oyees earned fo cmp oymen on
lhc cons rue on pro ec lha s lhc sub cc
of ha cert fica e when de enn n ng ho e
con ractors or ubcon rae ors prem um o
assessments rcqu red under h s haptc and
Chapte 4 2 of heRe sed Code A'"'
nsunnx emp oyer ssucd a ccrt fi a undc
h s d v s on shall nclud&lt;: n h amoun of
p1 d ompensa on
report pursuan o
d v son K) of h s sec 101)1 he amoun of
pa d compensa 01'\Jhw,eutlnsunng employ
er pad pursuan o h sd son fo he pre
Ol&amp;S a coda yea
Nothn&amp; n hsd son ha b&lt;: Dn
s rued as al enng he nghlS of employee
under h s chap er and Chapce: 4 2 of he
Rev sed Code as hose ngh s ex skd pno
o tlu dfseh; s Jsts sf tins a::s: J
t
SEPTEMBER .U. li!2D Noth ng n h
d v s on shal be cons rued u al cnng he
nahts devolved under ICC ons 2)0l 31 and
4123 82oftheRc sed Code" hosengh 5
ex s cd pnor to tha II
L t1 J II .SEPTEMBER lll226
As UJed n th 5 d vts on pn egc o
self. nsure 1 construct on pro; ctt mean
pnv ege o pay ind dl.Lil y compensa on
and o fum sh med al sura cal nurs ng
and hasp tal servtces and anen on and
fimenJ expenses dlfliC ly om un::d employ
ces or the depcndenb of k led employ«&lt;
(0) A aelf nsunna employer whole
sppiCIIOO IJ1111edunderd IOO(N)of

1ooal10be
... JDd euron:emen of the safety
tba 1 spec fied y cles gned for 1he
StniCIIOO project that I the IUbjec:t
sppcaooo
A self nsunna employer wboie
cation 1 gran ed
1ect10n sbal employ an ornbudspcnon
the conslnl&lt;t on proJect that 11 the subJect
of the sppl caboo The ombudspcr!on sha I
ha e expenence: n worken compenut OD
01 1he coniii'UC on ndustry or ho h The
ornbudspmon •ha petform all or the fol
low ng du cs
) Commun ca e w h and prov de
nfonna on o emp oyces who are nJu ed
n the coune o( o whoae DJUI')' anae1 ou
of emp oymen on he construe on prQ ec
or who on raa an occupa onal d sease
he course of emp oymen on the consttuc
on prOJect
2 lnves gate the status of a c a m upon
the request of an emp oyce o do so
(3) Prov de nfonna on to cJ.;ma,Dts,
lh rd party adm n s ratol'i emp oyers
other persons o us s those penon• n
CCI ng the nghts unde th s chapter
Chapter 412 of he Rev sed Code
A se f, nsur ng emp oye whose
cit on s granted unde d v son "'" •' ''"''
sccuon shall pos !he nsmeofthe safejy profess ona and he ombudsperson and nstruc
ons fo con ac ng he safely profess onal
and he ombudsperson n a consp euous
p ace a the $ e of the const:ruct on project
(P) The adm n strato may cons de al
of he fo ow ng when dec dms whether to
gran a self. nsunng employe the pnv ege
o se f nsu e a con true on proJec u proded under d 1 on (N of h s sec on
( ) Whe he he se nsunng
has an organ za ona p an for he ldn1inistra on of the workc s compcnsa on law
(2) Whether he safety program that s
spec fica y des gncd fo rhc construct on
proJec: pro des fo he safety of employ
ees emp oyed on h cons rue on pi"O: ect,
s app ab e to a I conlrat ors and subcon
ra or..; who perfonn abo o work o prov de matenals for h on rue on pro ec
and has a componen au e y ra n ng
gram ha compl es w h slandard adO)&gt;Icd
pursuan o the "Occupa ana Safety
Hea th Ac of 970 114 Sta 590
USC A 6l and pro des fo cont;numg
managcmen and cmp oyce n o vement
3 Whe he ,gran ng he pn cge
se f. nsure he ons rue on projec
educe he cos s of h con!truC on pro ec
4 Whe he he se f nsunng emp oye
has cmp oyed an ombudsperson u rtqu red
unde dvson O)of hssec on
S Whe her he sc f nsunng emp oye
has suffic en sure y o secure he
c a ms for wh ch he sclf nsunng emp oyc
wou d be respons b e runuan o he gnm
ng of the pnv lege o sc r nsurc 1 construe
on pro.JCC under d v s10n N ofth sectton
Sec 4 23 352 A There s hereby ere-a ed h self nsunng employers eva ua tan
board cons s ng of hrcc members The
member or he ndus nal comm 5S on
rcsen ng he pub
ha be a mcmbe
he sel nsunng
and sha I serve ex ofli
CHA RPERSON The
appo n the n:ma n ng tvio m&lt;:ml&gt;en 'w;tt, the
ad ce and conscn o he senale One
be hdllx:
an c assoc a 1011 and one membe sha
a represen a oflabor Not more lhan
of he hrcc: mcmbcn o he board may
of he same po ca party
or he two members ong nally appo n
ed by he go emo pursuan to h s sec on
one sha I serve •n n a enn of two years
and one an n a enn of fou years
Thereafter crms ofoffi ~of the two mcm
hers an: fo fou years each erm end ng
he same dac a:. he o gna dae
appo n men Any mtmbc appo n ed o
aofvacancy
to h~:~~~:,~:~
he ermoccumng
fo wh ch pno
M THE
p edeccsso wa appo n cd sha
fo th rL"mB nde o u h enn Any mem
be sha con nuc n ollkc subScqutn
exp ra on da &lt; of hio THE MEMBER S
enn un M A ucccssor takes office o
un a pc od of s x y days has e apsed
wh che~er oc urs tirs A acancy n an
uncxp red crm sha be fi ed n the same
manne u he ong na appo ntmcn The
go cmo may remo e any member pursuant
o JiCC on 3 OS of theRe sed Code
The: board mcmbe wM also s a mem
ber of he comm S5 on sha I rcce ve no add
ona compcnsa on bu sha be re mbuned
fo ac ual and nc c ary expenses n the per
formance ofltia THE MEMBER S du es AS
A MEMBER OF THE BOARD The two
cma n ng members o he boa d sha 1
n::ce e pc d em compenga on tixcd pu
suan od v son ofscc on 124 IS of he
Rc sed Code and a ua and necessary
expenses nc:urrcd n he performance of he
du es
For adm n s ra e purposes he board
s a part of h¢ bu eau of wo kers com
pensa on and the bureau ha fum sh the
boa d w h necessary om c space staff: and
suppl cs The board sha meet as requ red
by he adm n 5 ra or of wo keno compcn
sa on
B) n add on o he grounds s cd n
sec on 4 23 3l of he Re S&lt;:d Code pc
anng ocn c a o bcn~g anted he sa
u as a sc f n u ng cmp oyc he ground
upon wh ch he adm n s ra o may ASSESS
A F NE OR PENALTY AOA NST OR
c okc o cfus o Nncw he SELF
INSUR NG sa u - O F A SELF
INSUR NG EMPLOYER NCLUDE fa
urC o comp y w h any ru ct or orders
he adm n stra oro o pay on nbu ons o
he sc: f. nsunns emp oycrs guanm y fund
csab hcd by sec on 4123Jl of he
Re sed Code con nued fa lure o ti c mcd
teal reports bcAnng upon he nJury o he
c a man and fa urc u pay compensa on
or bcncfils- n acconiance w th law In a meY manne A dcficN:ney n any of the
ground sed n lh s d son s uffic en
o us fy ~ adm n ra. or s ASSESS
MENT OF A F NE OR PENALTY
AGAINST
A
SELF INSUR NG
EMPLOYER OR THE rc oca on o
r(:fust.l o renew lhc emp oyer s 111. us as a
sc r nsunng em11 oyc THE ADM NIS
TRATOR OR THE ADM N STRATOR S
DES GNEE, SHALL HOLO A HEARING
AFTER NOTICE TO THE SELF NSUR
lNG EMPLOYER OF THE HEAR NO
BEFORE ASSESSING A FINE OR
PENALTY AGAINST A SELF INSUR

�i

--nbilledllldcndllodtolllt dio- UCEHSI!D PHYSICIAN, doe -llloall
.... · relief Mel- by- oolilydoe......,.. .... tbt....,..,.ofdle
1101 412l412 or the Rmlld Cade '1111
-lrlloom-.-Japoovided
~ 111111 determine doe rata for
by any ......,. or releoommunicatioa tie
claaa"' die-...,.,.. u Ill THE
proYidiq tie ialormltioo shall pro.
ADMINISTI!.ATOR ftaca die,_....... 'ride- wrillcodoe of tie ~
_
_,to-412329ofllle todoe--..10-(E)orRMoocl Coc1o.
noa 412314 ol' die lrYiaool Code The
(C) For a aolf·llllllnDI employer. lilt , ,_.oftieml'otmalioooawtitiat:orifby
-.or~· __..,..aballpay
omotlood or to~ tho won.
to employeelwho ... portidpiDtS . . . - . .... wrillcatioo, .... t h a - by tho buroatt
lea or tie ..... ormJIII)I, uy ....... due
........ .. applieolioe for...,..
to the putiCiplllll under -on 4123jl4
4123 14 or 4123115
of doe R&lt;Yilod Cade and •n bill tho sell· or die JloviMd Coclo provided drat the ..,..
"""""' omployor, sennannually, ror all eli- of diYlSlOII (E) o r - 412314 of
IIIIOWlll poi&lt;lro a pemctpont
the Roviood Code IPPIY 10 mt'onutoon pro.
Sec 4123412 Fortherelloforpenons ..&lt;IN by a method oftol....,....,icatoon
who .,. ........-1J and totally o1iaa111M Uporl IOOeipt or • claim, the - . aloall
!MPAJREDuthomultofmJIIIJI&lt;Wthe claa-t or doc daiJII 11111bor
- • " ' the ooune orlho.. employment .,...,... IDd the clai-'s npt to ..,...
111111 who Ill .-rvtnl -'"n' compoftll- - I n the - " ' i or I Cllml or to
.... whoch II payable to them by V1l'tUt or oloct .. ..,....._ If tho ........
and under the laws ofth11 JtiiC m amoun&amp;a. ..._dill: a dailn ll~ 10 be 1 comdleiOQJofwhoclo,wheftcombine&lt;lwitltd• pensable loot tome clailn, doe-. shall
llbolity -liD rteooved _ . , to die IIOtlfy t h e - 111111 the cmployer or the
Social Security Act 10 loso lhan duet hon· amloloillly or rehabol11a11011 ........_ No
drool fony rwo doll.,. per ...nh ldJUJtod
- . or iM1111nal ....,,_ employee
.....11y os provided on oliYitron (B) or.oo- litall directly or indiroctly convoy any mfor·
loon412l 62 of the Revooed Codo,lhtrt II l'llhOftiD doropl1011 oflbio npt This..,..
hcNby creoled a _ . . lUnd to be !mown 11011 shall m ao ""Y abropre rhe bumtu's

ADN'IIil$.
'WITH THI ADVICB AND
COIISI!Jrr OF 1111 WOIWiiiS' COMPENSATION OVWIOIIT COMMIS.
SION, SHALL ADoPT RULES IN
IICCORDA)ICE WITH CIW'TER 119
OF THE J,EVISEO l:QDE FOR THE
ASSESSMENT OF A FINE OR PENALTY
UNDER TillS SECTlON AGAINST II
SELF·INiUIUNG EMPLOYER ALL
SUMS COLLECTED UNDER THIS DIVI·
SION 5HALl BE PAID INTO THE SEI.f·
INSUitANCE ASSI!SSNINT FUND CU.
ATED PURSUANT TO DIVI$10N Ul OF
4113 15 OF THE &amp;liVISED

.,_..IIIII«oth••

u the di_.,led worken' rehtf fUnd, whtch

respca.tbility 10 11d and 111111 1 tiiUDIRIID

fund llhallconsllt of doe sumo thll ... rome 10 ome ap-aled by tho .......
.... mbly and l1llde avaolllblo to the order
of the bureau ofworke11' compensatioo to
c:arry our the ohJO&lt;Is ond or....
roons412H12ro •m418 or the Revotod
Code Tloe fund shall be on lhe wstody or
&amp;he treuum- of tht state Disbu.rsemenll
ftom the fund shall be made hy tho bureau
to those pmoos entitled to pollocopatc
therein IJid ID amounts to CKh pu1K:ipanl:
OS 11 provodcd m scctollft 4123414 of tho
Revitod Code All tn\'Cirmenr eunonp of
the fimd shall be aedotcd 10 the fund
Sec 412]413 To bo ohgoble to porto&lt;·
rpareon-THEDISABLEDWORKERS'
RELIEF fund 1 pamcopanr must be per.
mancntly and k&gt;tllly IMPIIIRED
aOO be recewmg worken' compensation
payntC!Ilts, the total of whtch when combined wtth disab&amp;hty beneftu rece1vod pur·
,..,.to'RiaTHESocoaiSecurily Act oslus
thaa titre&lt; hundred forty·IWO dollars per
moathadp.d IUiliiJaily as provided on dovr11on (B) of-~12362 ortht Revolld
Code
Sec 4123414 Each penonclctemnoed
ell8'blc;_..tosecnon412341lofthe
Reviled Code, 10 panocopareon the doubled
workers' rthef fund IS entnled to rece1ve
payments, WithoUt appiM:allon, from the
llmcl ofa monthly IIIIIOUIII equal tO tho less•
er of the d1ffereRCe betWeen three hundred
forty-two dollars, adJusted annually pursUint to dtv1s1on (8) of section •123 62 of
the Reviled Coclo.IDd
(oi;(Al Tloe IIIIOUIIt loe THE PERSON ~
....,..... per montlo ulhe dolllbilllyly bener111 award pursuant ro The Soc1tl
Securiry Act, or
tadJ The llfllOWit Ill THE PERSON 11
rtecmng monthly under the worlt&lt;n'""""
pa1IIIIHlll ia1os for,.........andiOUI-.
....,IMPAIRMENT lndotamoamasuch
d~o ~'&amp;'tiC- llrollbca........, tho 1111011111 or sud! parnclpanr's
compensation whiCh thall hive been com~

A

EMPLOYER MAY
THE ADMINISTRATOR S
ASSESS,ME!IIT OF A FINE OR PENALAOAINST A SELF-INSURING
tMPUJlt:ll. &lt;JK THE REVOCATION OF
REFUSAL TO UNEVI THE SELFSTATUS OF A SELf·INSUR·
EMPLOYER UND£11 THIS SEC·
'WITHIN THIRTY DAYS AFTER
RECIEIPT Of NOTICE OF THE FINE,
PENAu·y, REVOCATION, OR RENEWREFUSAL, TO THE SELF-INSURING
EVALUATION BOARD
FlUNG OF AN APPEAL SHALL
STAY THE
ADMINISTRATOR'S
AFTER a '-iiii&lt;ONiuctcd pur•
suant 10 Cboplet 119 or die levited Coclo
ond the nola of

dot-.--...,.

mUIOd the pn&gt;vl- or 412364 of the Reviled Code Such pay·
mentl shall be mtde monthly dunng the
~ 1n whach such pu1tctpant ll penna·
ninoly and ~ly -IMPAIRED
Sec 4123416 The ldmm1stral0r of
worters' compcnsalton sholl promptly
"'JJil'" o r - _ . _ _ . . . . . . . . . .

'

IMIIk"l'•-

.....,.... .

dolllnorjiiYIOII.- .... Iobc-11011
anouolly llwlioch ~-h......
orlllio-wtooch
. , . - a n - no_.,.lhan tloe
the adlll•ntiU'Itor attmatea 10. be:
--rylo cany
the
wlncb thc 11 lnied
tht - - the ...... produced by the

out- -•lOr

II 1101 oufllcMor IOcany ... sud!

the .........., _...,
- - ...... tho·- proclucod
araulooro_...,..,..._,.
412344 or the Rcoiood Coote
- · l l b c l n i e d ..........
follow ... . . - ...
(I) Pri- ftololmoployolo,w:op~telr­
, _ , .,.. July or
yeor ,... .,... J11111111t or lilt ,... •
1111"~.

Countoallllllu'"l-~

lhertm, ....,. .....,. """"""lhat ... ·•

employe,._.,. J1nual')' of
year upon gross payrolls or lilt ,...
twelve months,
(3) The state as •• e~~ployer-••
,...oat), Apn~ July. uri &lt;&gt;&lt;to«r of eaclo
upon grnss payrolls ol' lhe prc&lt;Nifta

........

Amovntl utetiNlll 1ft

auordlnoe W1dr

--s
·- ----·

thll ....... llhall ilc collected ...... •h
_.bod ,. ruiel the - ....

...........

,...*'! ......... _...Mallloe ..... ..
O&gt;doc _ . . _..... rtlioffirM.,...
by_,.. 4123AI2 or tho l!.nolld Codt.
Tloeadonloi-alooll-lo)'Nie~- of. ernplayen wtdlln divlli01111
) to()) ofthu- lad llhalldotar:
-clauao•O&gt;fairly-·
llw: 001t1 of
(M _ . , . . .
'" ' "'-"""' 4123411 of die lle¥iJool Coote
(Bl F• all IIJ...,.. an4 do•blln,..
oraf'ler lanllll)' I. 1981. AND
ALL INJURIES. IMPIIIRMENTS,
DISABILITIES ARISING ON OR
.,.,,,..THEEI'FECnVEDATEOfTHIS
. . . . . .. f•doe

ca'IJ'"'

..

10 4123Ail ofdoe

a...-

Codo.llloalllny

-...-~~~~ · · ­

, . - QllloddolllnofiiO)II'OI~ ad'*
..... '
,
II) ror .... . .....

_

..._"' ,, , ..... e' &gt;=a-.
• oli•
(AX I) to (l) or ... wllidt wiU . , . - • no

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

:

: : : ; lo .. I
)10 corry ... ad
fordoeporiod , . _ . . _

lllniool.

...

~-

. . .... ...

7

v

~

• • ..._ __ -

...

the firma or • cilim ond to ....... the
clllmont of the claunant's nl)hos Ulldor ohe
low
Thlednntultrltot ofworken' compa....... aloall ...... all claims ond •n-bp·

IIOnltothe..._aervoceoffico:fnorn•lnch
........... and ............... may be
JMdc JDOII exptd&amp;ttoualy
Tilt - - shall ln\'Citlpte the flctl
..,._.,.an mJIIIJI oroccupatioroaldileuo
and IICCI'IIID such facts In whilever minna'll-appropnareandmayobtainstare·
menra or the employee, employer, attendoDJ
plrylic:oan, IDd wo......,. 10 whalever man·
ner 11 most oppropnatc
(B)(I) Except u piOVIdcd In div01oon
(B)(2) ofthll aecnon, 10 clarrns other lhan
th-In whoch the employer 11 a oclf·rnsurmg employer, tf the adnnntiiTitor deter~
m111e1 underdJYISton (A) of this 1ttt1on that
1 cllunant 11 or 11 not enbtled to an award
of compensabon or-.,., ohe admm11·
1ro1or aloalloOIUO an
........,._.,.. no Iller thon twenty·
eollltl days after tho ,....,ng of die nolocc
underdovo&amp;MHI (A) ofllns *"""• pnnng
or don)'lng the pi)'IIICIII of the compensahOIIor-fira.orbothaso&amp;_..,.,ateto
the cloomant Nllt'Nothstandong the tome
hm1tabon specafied 1n thl$ d1vis1on for lhe
ISSUinte Of an orde~ If I medical exammaa
toon of the claunant IS '"'!~Ired by stltutc,
the acbmn1strator promptly shall schedule
the cl11mant for that exanuftlt10n and shall
issue an order no later than twenty-c1aht
daysafterll&gt;CCiptofthe reportofdoeeummatooo The admm11ttator llhallnortfY tho
cloomanr IDd the employer of lhe clumanr
and the1r ~1ve rcpraentati¥ea m wni'"' or tloc 1lllUre of rhe Ofllcr and the
unounll or c:cmpensanon and bene fir pay, _ rn•ol...t The lll1ployer or cloomant
may ..,..I the on1or p1111111111110 dl'luoon
(C)orlloia- witlom f-tlays after
doe doro or the receipt or the order The
employer and claimant may waovo, on wnt·
ma.lheir nahti to an appeal under lhtS d•v•-

"'*'·-

-

(2) Notwithstanding the tome: llmouroon
spec1fted m diVISion (8)( I) of rhts sectiOn
for the ISSuance of an order, 1f lhc employ·
er certtfies a claom for payrncnl or com·
pmu.nonorbenefill,orboth,toacll1mant,
and the admonootnror hos completed the
onVCSIIpltOn of doe claom, the payment of
batefitl or compensauon. or both, u J&amp;
appfOplll:te, ahall commence upon the later
-, _
.~EL F·1fN!~ RimeoNO -~~~~~ ar of the dat&lt; of the ccnoficuoon or compie·'"""
r- -~ 0
ttonoftbc uwcst1pt1on and ISsuance: of the
all ,.,_ 10 wllom the employor 11 pay· order by tbe adntoniSiriiOr, provodcd that tho
... - · cornpcnutoon on IICOOtUit or admrnollftiOr shallosauo the order no later
_....t and MUI oOiiaoWiiljo IMPAIR· dtM tho nOM llnMIItoon tpeeofiod on dovnoon
MENT IDd the evoolence "IP«IInl sud! (BX I) ofllros aectton
pmoDI 11 the ldmlnllb'ltor reasonably
(3) If an appeal 11 made under diVISIOn
docmsii&lt;CCIIIIjl6detemnnedteelolobolo- (B~ofthll IOCIIOII.the admon10·
lj or any such pmon 10 panocopate m the
lllltor ohall fooward lhe clarm folo IO lhe
dallbled workers' rtl1effund The supcrm· appropnate d1stnct heanng oft"lCel' wnh1n
tcndent of ln&amp;uran&lt;:c shall promptly requ1re seven days o(the appeal to c:omtst«&lt; claims
of each lftllniiCe company wh~eh 11 orp· Olher than stile fund clamu the ldrrnmt·
ftlred CM' lic'tnled to do busn.eu In lhtllllle trltof shall forward the cla1m w11h1n seven
ancl wtntb hu 11 any tlfllC wntten workers' days of the ldm1mstrator s n:cc1pt of the
compensation n11urance 1n thas stale alike cl11m to the commtSJIDn, wh1ch shall rtftr
vmfied h• llld hke evtdence m:petttq
the cla1m to an appropnate d11tn" hcanna
pcrsortl to whom the IAIUrlfttC COfnpltUCI
off.ur fur I heari.ns In 8CCOrdancc Wldl diVI•
lit Pl)'ln~-· ootnpCtlllltiOII under lite
1110t1 (C) ofthu SCCIUMI
Otno workers' compenaahon laws IDd coo·
(C) If an employer or clannant umely
lrO&lt;ISof..........., m.....,...lhertof. and lilt appeals doe ordcroftheadmonostrator ollSIICd
wperiftttnderU Of lftSUI'IftCC Shill promptly
under d!VIIIOR (8) o( th11 IICCIIOn Or In the
b'SitSIIUI Ill IIICh lilt$ and ovi*nct to the
case of other conleslod claoms other than
........ of ...tom' &lt;ompeotaloon luoy fimd claiml, tho COIIIIIUUIOII shallr&lt;fer
cillllllftJ lhe n .... 10 pamcopare on
the tloom to an approprwc dlltlict lteonnt
tho l\on41111)' file 11io AN apphcatiOII there- otr...., KCO!dtng to ruieloht .....,...,...
for ...... the - u and shall be accorded I
adopts under-10114121 l6 or doe Rcvooed
hearinJ t...._
Code The doSIIt&lt;l hcarina officer shall nollSec 4123 419 The asaessmen1 rate
fy the pan1e1 and thc1r respect1ve.represen·
carablishcd l"'(""nroo sectoon4123411 or uuvcs of tho tome and place oflhe hearing.
the Revised COde !IUb,ect to the hm1t1 se1
The d111nc:t hcaTIIIJ off'ICCf 1._11 hold a
rorth m that S«tton &amp;hall M adeqUite to
hearina on a d1sputcd 1aue or cla1m vmhm
prvvi4e the omounrs carimoled 11 ~
forty-five days after tho r.lonaor rhe appeal
by the adallnlltfltor of workcn compcnw*rthlldiVISion and tuue adectllon w1th·
llhOn 10 carry DUI the pi'O'II510ftl ofJCCtiOftl
1n aevcn dlyt after holdln&amp; the hearing The
4123412104123418 oflhc RO'VosedCade, dislrict htoring oft'oc:c:t'shall ooury ohepanocs
Md 1n ldd1f10ft ID pnn11de money1 to mm· 1nd dlc1r respective rtpraenlltives 1n wnt·
buno&lt;lhe -i~&lt;'~onuc lUnd for""""Y'
1111 ol'the order Any parry mayappaolan
.,...,n.todby Secr100lofH 8 No I ill
'-&lt;lor- undcrthoa divo11011 pu11111111 10
ol dot 103rd ......1 ~ ar by rha • 11Mt1011 !D) or thoa
willron 104tllandiUCCC&lt;ldorc....,.._•ror tkyasfler.....,.orrheOftler.....,thlldovoOR IMPAIRED ....... ttlid
When the lldoln10111l moneys are 1\'lllable
(D) Upon the tomely filong or 111 appeal
•• - e or pan for the pu._ or-... of lhe order or the dostnct hcarin&amp; officer
tho
lhe do""""' of i&gt;udiOI - ialuod under dovtiiOII (C)&lt;&gt;Woos secnon, the
a n d - *llccmfy tho"""""" 10
corlrnt...,.. shall refer the cia om file to an
thebureauorworten• ~uon wh1ch ~lie ltaft'heari•J offteer KCOrd1ng
llhallrhe..._ CIUIO tloc moneys to bcpoid ro 111 nrloo adopted under sccroon 412136
ro lhe aen&lt;nl r&lt;11mue fund r,... the do.. of the RmoedCade Tloeotall'htoringolli·
ablcd workcn ,.hef fund cxcq&gt;o lhat any ccr shall hold a hcui"l withoo rorry.five
amounts due because of rhe ICitt'l obhp· da)'laftcr lhe film&amp; of an oii(Jpeal under th11
t1on u an employer pursuant to ..::tiorl diY111011 and 111ue 1 dceiaion wtthtn ~nen
4 12HIIofohtl!.e~~iJooiCadeand110tplltl
days 111rr holdioa lho hearin1 under thiS
10 doedisabledwori&lt;C&lt;1' micfllmclshall bo
divilioo Tlot..a''-"'aoft\ceoshallnolrdcductcd fnorn aoy sud! ..,.....,_,
f)' doe portiaa IOIIIhoir ._.,., ..,._..
Sec 412) 511 (A) W'otltio .... days rab'l• oo wm;q or 11io THE STAFF
after recctpt or •Y claim under litis o:llap- HEARING OmCER'S orc1e&lt; Any party
w:r, tile .._. of WOIUn' COli4*0Wbon may appeal• order 1uued under th11 d1n·
lhiJI...eifYdllt I
.llllll . . wyiD,.
liOa . .IIWIOclmlioi(E)ofthiUKtiOD
of doe rl I
or doc - o f tho claioo
r - cilyl 111rr ,_.. of the
.... o(. . . . .
If doe...... _
.... tliviaioft.

1111 0 111

-oon

,.,,m,.......,l

-ut

......,rhanirl

(E) U,...lloc ftlma ora rimcly ...,..,.r
thoonlcrofthe•lr._..oftlcoriNuod
--(D)ordtls-ooo,tlotctltftm-oraclao.,-llllll'ltoari,.om-,

• lhln t1oe
-ortcl "'""
liofir.
iodocaton1 that 111 IIIJtlrY HAS
OCCUI!.Jlfl) or AN ooet ~ oaal diaoale
11111 •
J • t
kit
111ATitl)'lleoooq
'I
-

t'
• ....,.or.. - - . - . ...u, au•
.-dtla....
_,..
wllll_,....,..

... o-""""'-.:..111

•

~ l r

•

~ioioiOOor
........docidel to ....... ljlpOil, ....
"'""""""*or doe dloi&amp;Dafetllllllf'-ing

j ftlcer ....1 notify die and their
._.n. ..,._u.., In wrltloa or the
timo IDd ploco of the'*"""

Tloe COIDmll·
- otballllold die .............. forty.fi..
days otw 11oc fihnc ol'tho- o r - '
1114, willtia -..cJo,t aftortba ooaclaa100
orthe-...dle -lhlililluerll
onlor ........ DXMIIfyina,O&lt;-..Ihe
oli-.. (D) ofrh11 set. _ ·-iuioeotball-1\rdle palltea
and their "''*dvt ,..._...., m wnronaorthelllda:lflllt-ortheclaopted lllff htorin&amp; ot!lcer dotCIDUIIet not
ro ._tho appeal, within foumm days after
the BUna or the 11011ee or appeal, the com«the clalfoatod
cor shall laue m ortkr to that diOct and-·
f; doc polloea 1011 tloclr rapoctlve ...,......
ua-ln wrltiDa of that onlet
Except • otlomoioo ptO&gt;Idod on th11
chapter and Qapran 4121 , 41~7. and
4131 or the Reviled Cade, any pany 11111y
lfiPOII an onlorlsauotl under dlit divuoon
to the court punuentto Mct1011412).S 12 or
the l!.moed Cade wrrhm amty days ofter
ret:Oipt of the order, subjcd IOthe llmrtllionl

onlar-.....,
m-..

•1111'-.. om-

.......... t" ...........

(P) Evlt')l notoce of an appeal from IR
ord« luued under dovosoons (B), (C), (D),
and(E)ofthissecbOOshallsiiiOthe...,..
of doc claomonr ond employer, the numher
of the clonll, the date of the det:11oon
appealed from, and rho f'act that doe -1·
lant . _ . . ...... rro.,
(0) All oftho foil....., ajlply 10 tha pro.
o:eedinp under diVIIIOIII (C), (0), and (E)
ofthoasoctron
(I) The parties shall.,..- promptly
and wllhoul connn.-.s excopr for JOOd

......

(2) The partros, on aood mth, ohall
eogap m the free exchange of mformation
........,to tht cia om pnor ro die oondut:t of
a helrina accordong to tlto rulea the commwoon adopb uitdcr secroon 4121 36 ofrhe
Rev1sed Code,
(3) The admlnos110tor lSI party and may
appMr and Plf'IICipate at all adm1n1strahve
proceedmp on behalfof the state msurance
fund However, 1n cues an which the
employer 11 represented, the admonoltrator
aloall neither present IIJIIIIlll111 nor ontroduce leltlmony that 11 aanulltive to that
presented or rnlroduced hy the employer or
tht employer's repr&lt;seolltove The admm·
olttMor may file a n - ' under rhos...,.
bon on behalf of the 1111e 1nsunncc fund,
how&lt;vcr, ..c:epron..,.. ansma under sec·
11011 412H43 of the Revotod Code, the
:tdnunlstrllor only may appeal questions of
law or 1nucs of ffaud when lbe employer
appcan 1n person or by ~lave
(H) Except as proVIded mdiVI!IOO(J) of
thas sec11on, paymentl of compensatiOn to
a cl11mant or on bchllf of 1 cla1maru as a
result or any order osauod under th11 ehapter altall"""""'""' upon doe whcr of the
followmg
(I) Fourteen days after the dare the
adn\lnlltrltor IHUCS 111 order underdavd&amp;on
(B) of thas sectiOn, unless that order IS
~

(2) The dlto when tho elllployer h..
Wllvcd the naht ik) appeal a detiBtOn ISSued

under div11ton (B) of th1s sect1on,
(3) lfoo appcalohn onlerhu been filed
I.IIWiila' "'Is a6cfkm fJ/1 to I COUff Undet' IIC·
110114123 512 orlht RevoiOdCode, lhe Ollj)l•
tabon of the time hm1tat1ons for the fihng
of an appeal of an order,
(4) 'Roo lWENTY -ONE DAYS AFTER
THE date or
by doe employer of an
onler of I district helrini officer, I suiT
hearina: otlla!r, or the industrill QMnmiiSIOI1
ooaued undor4ovllooo(C), CD). or(E) ofrh11

,...,pr

sedton

SUANT TO DIVISION (A) OF SECTION
4123 57 OF THE J,EVISED CODE. to the
court or COI1IIIIOil pleu or tie county In
which die •&lt;VIIIJI wu inlllcted or m whtch
lhe COIItnlctofemploymoat w• ndelfdle
Injury occurred outliclc the or 10 ...,ich
the oootnoct or employmaorw• modoordle
exposure oa:IUI'tld -ide tho 1r no
oommon pleu coutl huJunadiction ror the
pwpooeaofanappoalbylhcuacortheJunadictiOIIIIroqutren~~~~~~ clacribed 101bio divtsoon, lilt -llano may ust the ....,. pro.
VlltODI Ul the R.Wes or CIVIl Pmccc:hn 10
vest Junldichon 10 a cpurt 1f the claim 11
ror an occupatoonal doscaae .... appulllhall
bo 10 the cowt of common ploaa or the county 1n whtch the exposure whtch caused the
d,..... occlll'red. Like oppca1 may be 1a1con
11om an order of a stall' hearing olliccrllllde
under diVIIIOD (D) ofocctron 4123.Sii Of
doe lle¥olld Code liom whoch the commitsoon lou rtfwed to hear an appeal The
appallantaloall filethenollcoorappul wrth
• eow1 of common pleas w1thm 11xty days
after the dare or the recctpl of the order
appealed liom or the date of O&lt;Ccopt of the
order ofthe oomm1ss1on refusmg10 hear an
appeal of a saatr beaM&amp; officer's dec111on
under dOVIOIOfl (D) ofsection 4123 Sll of
the R.tv1sed Code The fihng of the nonce
or the appeal w1th the coun 11 the only act
roquored to perfect the appeal
If an atnon hu been commenced tn a
coun or 1 county other than a coon of a
county havms JUnsrbctiOil over the 1e11on.
doe court, upon noroco by any paoty or upon
1t:1. own mottOn, shall triDifer the ac110n tQ
a court of 1 ~unty havmgJWlsdlcnon
Notwithstanding anythiDJ 10 lilt contrary
m this section, •fthe &lt;:ornm1111011 dctemunes
undeuectron412l522 of tho Revised Code
that an employee. employer, or the1r rcspec.
ave tepraentllhvea have not received writ•
ten notiCe of an order or dec111on wh1ch 11
appealable 10 a court under thas sect1on and
wh1ch grants rehef pursuant to sechon
4123522 of the ReVIsed Code, the pany
granled the relief has soxry days from
recerpt ofrhe order under scc:t10n 4123 52:!
of the R.Msed Code to file a notice of appeal
under dus S«taon
{8} The notlc;:c or appeal shall state the:
names of the cl11mant and the employer. the
number of lhe c:la1m the date of the order
appeolod from, and the racttharlhc oppcllant appeals lhcn:liom
The adnuntStrator, the cl11mtnt. and the
employer shall be ptrttes to the appeal and
the court, upon the apphc:allon of the com·
mtss1on, shall make the commiSsion a
party The admonunroror shall norofy ohe
employer that. ofIll THE EMPLOYER raols
to bocome an active party to the appeal,._
the admm1stmtor may act on behalf of the
employer and the r&lt;sults oflhc aPI"'" I eould
have an adverse effect upon the employer's
prenuum rates
(C~ The attorney genenl or onr or mort
ofllio THE ATTORNEY GENERAL S .,.,,_
lints or spcaal COUIIiOI dnognatod by IMwt
THE IITTORNEY GENERAL shall ..,.._
sent the adm1mstra1or and the commass1on
- - IF the aotomoy aenml orloit
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL'S dcsognaood
usuAants or spectal counsel are absent. the
adm1111suator or the COIMIISStonshall select
one or more of lhe attorneys 1n the employ
oflhe admmiStratoror the commJSSII)ft as hie
THE ADMINISTRATOR'S ATTORM!Y ar
rte THE COMMISSION S allomcy on oh&lt;
appeal Any attorney so employed shall con·
unuc hit THE representation dunng tht
ento.. penrod or lhc oppcal and on all hear
msalhercof exc;:cpt where the c:ontm~ed representation becomes 1mprac11CII
(D) Upon nxeopt or notice of appeal the
clert or tourts shall prov1de notlc:e to all par·
IICS who are appcllca and to the comm1ss1on
The d11m&amp;nl tiiMl Within thirTy days
after the filma of ~he nouce of appeal,
SHALL file a penhon contllnmg a :;latcment of fawo:t.s m ordnwy and conc1sc lan-BUF show1ng a cause or acuon to pertiC·
1pate or to cont1nuc to part1c1pate tn the fund
and scttms forth the bu111 for the Junsdn:·
11on of the coon over the actaon Funher
plead1n8' shall be had m accordance w11h
the Rules of Cwd Procedure provulcd that
SCfVICC of summons on such pet1t1on shall
1101 he requrred The clcrl. ofthecounupon recc1pt thereof SHALL transmit by
c:crt1fi~'&lt;1 mad a copy thereof to each par1y
named mthe nol1cc of appeal other than the
cla1mant Any party may file wuh the c:krk
pnor to the tnal of the action a depos1t1on
of any ph)'Kitlln Ween •n accordance wtlh
the provis1ons of the Rc'111K!id Code, wh1ch
dcpos1t1oo may be read 1n the tnal of the
acnon even though 1he physician 1s a rc111·
denl of or sl.lbJectto scrn:e m dtc county
m which tho hill 11 had The bureau of
workers' compensation shall pay the cost or
the dcpos1110n filed In COUrt and of COPICI
ofohe dcpoootoon for cadt party from the "'r·
plus fund and charge the c;:osts thereof
agatnsl the unsuccessful J)llrty af the
cla1manl's nght to partiCipate or commue 10
par1ic1pa1e 1s finally sustamed or established
m the appeal In the c~entthc dcpos111on 1s
lakvrt and lilcd the phys1c11n whose dcpo..
511101'1 IS taken 1s not rcqun-cd to rel'pond to
any subpoena 1ssued mthe- tnal ofttu: acuon
The court. or lhe JUf)l under thl! mstru~IIOns
of the coun, 1f a JUry 1s dcmandt:d shall
dctertrnne the nght of the c;:!amJant to par·
IIC:t(JI1C or 10 cont1nue to pllttctpatc 1n lhe
llmcl upon the O'Voclencc odduced It lhc hearIDI of the ac:tton
(E) The court shall certify ns OOc1SIOR lO
the commas..•non and the certificate !hall be
entered m rhc records ofthc court Appeals
from the Judgment are governed by the taw

(I) No medical benefits payable undor
th11 chapter or Chapter 4121, 4127 , or
4131 or doc Revoled Code are payshle unrol
the carloct ofthe rollowonl
(I) The date orrhe ouuancc of the ,..II'
heanng ollieer'• onlor underdiVIIIOD (0) o(
thll section,
(2) The dale of the final aclmamstratJve
or Judicial dctmrtmat1011
(J) Upon doc finaladrltm11nr"c or Jud•·
caal dctmmnauon, 1f a cla1mant li found to
have rece1vcd compe:nsit1011 to wh1c:h the
clamllnt was not ent1tled the claunant's
employer, ofuelf·onsunng employer, or the
bureau, shall withhold fnorn any amount to
whach the clalmall becomes cntnled pu.r·
suant to any cf11m, put, pracnt or fUtu~.
underChaprer4121,4123 ,4121,or4131
or the RO'Vooed Code lhe amount to whrch
the cla1mant wu not cnt1tlod punuant to the
followmg mtena
(I) No wilhholdong for the
twel~~e
weelts or leiDponty totll do. .llly polllllronpunuenii0-4123 S6ortlro
Revooed Code ahall be noado,
(2) Fony per cent of allawaiOs'or com·
pensanon paod pursuanr to scclrono4123 S6
and 4123 S7 or the Rovooed Code, unrolrhe
amount OVerpaid II refunded,
(3) Twcrtty-five per cent or ony compcnsanon paodpursuanrrosecroon 4123 S8
ofrhe Reviroed Code unlol the IIIIOUIIt ovorpaidrsrefunded;
(4) If, pw5uant to an appeal under set·
uon4123512 orthe lle¥itedCode, the COUll
of appeals or the aupmno cou~ rever~CS the
aUowance of the clann, then no amount of
aD) t....,...lion wdl .. Withheld
(It) Ira Mafrbeariololll..,orthe commllllon fula to tNut 1 doc:11t01t or the c:ommllltOfl falls to rtf'use 10 hear u appeal
w1lhilllhc hme periods nqual'tld by th1s secbon, l)lyments to a clairnllw shall OCIIC until
the stall' heanna officer or comm1sst0n
IHUH a dec111on or hears the 1ppeal, unlcS5
appln:ablc IO lhc appeal of CIVIl aCtiOnS
the fa1IW't: was due to the fault or negiCC1 of
(F) The cost of any lcsal procec(hng.o;
the employer or the employer agrees that the authonzcd by th1 s section mcludmM an
payments should conunuc for a kms,er pen
attorney's fee to the cl11mant 's attorney to
od ofhmc
be fixed by the trial JUdge ~d upon the
(L) Ex.cepl as prov1ded an secuon effort expended. an the event the clllmant'4123 522 orthe Revooed Code. no appeal 11 naht to parll,lpatc or to conhnuc to part1c
nmoly filed under tlo11 -ion unloso th•
Ipale 10 the fund li establ1&amp;hcd upon the final
appeal 11 filed With doc n11111iomus oot ronh determination of an appeal, shall be tilled
In tbll ICI:bOft.
ap~ast the employer or the comm1ss1on 1f
(M) No penon who" not .. employee
the: commiSSIOn or the adrmmstrltor rather
of tbe burau or comnu1110n or wbo 11 not
than the employer contested the nshl of the
by law JIYift ~c:ca&amp; to the contenll of 1
cla1mant to partic:1p1te m the fund The attor
,-.file shall have a file 11 doe ·s ney's fee Mall no1 exceed rwenty. five hunpoamdon
drool dolllll
Set. 41lH12 (/\)Thee- or the
(G) lrthe findong or the coun or the ver
employer IDII)' appal an oi&lt;ler of doe ooolua- diCI of the JUlY II 1D favor or tM cla1mant 5
trial comm- made ....ler diYiaiOII (E) or nght to partacipllc 10 lhc fund, the comm1s
MCIIOII4123morlhellcvioedCadeon .. y 110r1 and the adnumsntor shall thereafter
diiCIM ..... other proc:eed 1n the matter of the cia 1m u 1f the
...... I lr..,•oorhomontofdtaalooh- J........,,,.,. tho deco11011ofthe commoaty DR IMPAilMENT. DR PERCE!IrrAGE Jton. subject 10 the power of mod1ficat10n

nnr

"'l"'J., ..............

(H) An appeal 1iom an order
undordivlsooo(E)ofoect1011412l Sll ofthe
Revotod Code orony actoon filed mcourt on
a cue tn wh1cb an award of c;:ompenulion
hos been mode oltaU not otay the pa)'IIICIIt
of .....,.....lion under the oward or pay·
men I of compcnsabOn foroubtequcnl pen·
oda of total doaabdlly OR IMPAIRMENT
dunng doe pendency or the appeal If, on
final admim&amp;tnttve or JudiCial acuon. tt is
determined that pi)'IIICIIts of compensation
or benofill, or hoth, madelo or on behalf of
a claunant should not have b«n made, the
amount thereof shall be chqod to the sur·
plus fund under div111011 (B) of section
4123 34 of tht Revised Code In the event
the employer 1s a state nsk, the amount shall
not be charged 10 the employer '1 expenmo:o
In the event the employer 111 self·msurmg
employer, the self·msunng employer shall
deduct the amounl from the patd compcn·
,.,.., he 1&lt;p0nsro rl&gt;e adminisrraror unrdCI'
dov11oon (K) of SCCioon 4123 )S of lhc
Revitod Code 1111 actoono ond proceedongs
under th1s sect1on which IIJe lhe subJect
an appeal to the: court of common pleu
the court of appeals shall be preferred
all other c1v11 actions except clec'tton caus
cs. uretpccll'le of pos1t10n on the calendar
Th1s 8ed.1on applies to all deciSions
the commllslon or the admm1strator
No•embcr 2, 19S9, and all claoms
lhere&amp;ftet""' governed by
4123 511
and 4123 512 ofohc Revosed Code
Any acuon pendtng 1n common
counor •ny odter coun on January I,
under thoa occt1011" governed by fortncr :iCC·
toons 4123 Sl4, 4123515, 4123 516,
4123 519 and scctoon 4123522 of
R.,tsed Code
Sec 4123 l2 'RM!Aiill EXCEPT
OTHERWISE PROVIDED IN THIS
TION, THE Jun!Khcuon of the tndustnal
commtss1on and the authonty
l&amp;trator of workers compensation
eac;:h caac IS contmumg and the comm1ssaon
may make such nlO(hficat1on orchanse wnh
respect to rormer findmgs or orders
~~-In 1tsopm1on IS JUStified
!lie EXCEPT AS PROVIDED IN
SIONS lA), (.II) AND(!:) OF THIS
TION, THE COMMISSION

THE PI!IUOD dF THE IIUIISAL 01.
OBSTilUCTION. AND JoiOCOMPI!NSA·

-on•

~ORTHEDATEOF

FIRST DIAGNOSIS OF AN OCCUPA·
TIONAL DISEASE. UNLESS COM PEN·
SATION UNDER SECTION 4123 S6 OF
THEB.EVISED!;ODE, WAGES IN LIEU
OF THAT COMPENSATION IN A MAN
NER THAT SATISFIES THE REQUIREMENTS Of Sf£TION 412384 OF THE
REVISED CODE, COMPENSATION
UNDER DIVISION (fl) OF SECTION
4123 57 OR SECTION 4123 SK OR
4123 59 OF THE REVISED CODE, OR
MEDICAL BENEFITS HAVE BEEN
PAID, IN WHICH EVENT, IN CASES IN
WHICH COMPENSATION OR WAGES
IN LIEU OF THAT COMPENSATION
HAS BEEN PIIID UNDER SECTION
4123 56 0F THEREVISED!:ODE, OR IN
CASES IN WHICH COMPENSATION
HAS ~EEN PAID UNDER DIVISION lB.)
OF SECTION 412357 OR «t' To.n.., I
4123 5R OR 412359 OF THE RE\IISE:O
CODE. TilE COMMISSION MAY
MAKE A MODIFICATION, CHANGE.
FINDING OR AWARD IN A CLAIM
WITH RESPECT TO
DEPENDENCY, OR MEDICAL
FITS WITHIN FIVE YEARS AFTER
DATF. Of THE LAST PIIYMENT
COMPENSATION UNDER SECTION
4123 lb. WAGES IN LIEU OF
COMPENSATION, OR COMPENSATION
UNDER DIVISION CBI OF SECTION
412357 OR SECTION 412358 OR
4123 59 Of THE REVISED !:ODE
12 ) THE COMMISSION MAY MAKE
A MODIFICATION, CHANGE, FINDING OR AWARD IN ANY CLAIM WITH
RESPECT TO MEDICAL BENEFITS
WITHIN FIVE YEARS AFTER THE
DAr~ OF THE LAST TREATMENT FOR
WHICH MEDICAL BENEFITS HAVE
BEEN PAID OR ORDERED TO BE PAID
IBl IN ALL CASES FOR A CLAIM
INVOLVING AN OCCUPATIONAL DIS
EASE DESCRIBED IN DIVISIONS CA)
THROUGH CMJ OF SECTION 412.168
OF THE REVISEO !;DOE OR OTHER
OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE THAT
RESULTS FROM EXPOSURE TO
FIBROSIS-PRODUCING OR
DUSTS. FUMF.S MISTS
GASES, OR LIQUIDS, OR
TOXIC MATERIALS OR A COIMBINA·
TION OF TIIOSF., THE JURISDICTION
OF THE COMMISSION AND
AUTHORITY OF THE ADMINISTRATOR OVER EACH CASE IS CONTI NU·
lNG PURSUANT TO DIVISION (a) OF
THIS SECTION, EXCEPT THAT THE
JURISDICTION TO MAKE A MODifl·
CATION, CHANGE FINDI NG OR
AWARD IN THE CLAIM WITH
RESPECT '1'0 COM
DEPENDENCY OR MEDI CAL
FITS MAY EXTEND BEYOND
TIME LIMITATIONS CONTAINED IN
THAT DIVISION, UP TO A MAXIMUM
OF SIX MONTHS AFTER THE DATE AN
EMPLOYEE FIRST BECOMES TOTAL·
LY DISABLED liS A RESULT OF
OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE THAT

...

MAIU! A MODIFICATION,
CIIJINGE, FINDING, OR ~WAI!.D IN
CLAIM ONLY WITH RESPECT
MEDICAL BENEPITS liND COM·
~~~~~0~ UNDEI!. DIVISION (A) OP
Sl
4123 56 OF THE &amp;£VISED
SUBJECT TO THE LIMITATION
ii£siCiuBED IN DIVISION (C)(3) OF
SECTION
(2) THIS DIVISION APPLIES ONLY
A CLAIM' INVOLVING AN
EMPLOYEE TO WHOM EITHER OF
THE FOLLOWING APPLIES·
(I) THE EMPLOYEE HAS A PROS.
THETJC DEVICE THAT WAS PROVIDED UNDER AN ALLOWED CLAIM
UNDER THIS CHAPTER OR CHAPTER
4121 ,4127 ,OR~Ill OFTHE&amp;EVISED
AND THE EMPLOYEE'S PHYSI·
DETERMINES THAT THE PROS.
mniTI&lt;' DEVICE NEEDS TO BE
REI'LA•CEO• OR REPAIRED,
01) THE EMPLOYEE'S PHYSICIAN
THAT AN EMPLOYEE
REQUIRE A PROSTHETIC
D~~~~:( OR THE I!.EPLACEMENT OR
Rl
OF AN EXISTING PROSTHET·
DEVICE AS A DIRECT RESULT OF
ALLOWED CONDITION IN A
CUUM UNDER THIS CHAPTER OR
!Ji.'IPTI!R 4121 , 4127 , OR 4131 OF
J,EVISED C,ODE, REGARDLESS
WHEN THAT CLAIM VIAS

TION SUBSEQUENTLY SHALL BE
AWARDED 1'01. ANY PERIOD OF SUS.
PENSION
Sec 4123 54 Evt11Y ettrp1oyoo, who Ia
iljured ........ Ill oc:cupalional
- . ... tllttlopmdoatsof_.....,..,_
oo who Ia kolled, or olioa a the .-h of an
~rional d i - _ ........ In ....
....,.. or employment. .,...,._. ouch
mJIIIJI hos occurnd orOCC\Ipltlonal discaae
ltaabeen ............ providoddoe .........
not
(A) Purpoaely oelf·onfticted: or
(B)
by the employee llcons
1
JntoKi~ 01' undar the influence of ICOR•
!lOlled lllblllace not proa&lt;ribod by I phyll·
Clift when the mtoxlcotion or being under
tbolnfluonceordoec:ooiiOIIedoubauncenol
.,._;bod by. phyait:ilrt- doe proxlmlllc

ea..,.

'"'III'Y· .. -....

or ....
to """""'·
lllherdiractly liomllio THE EMPLOYEE'S
aclf·•- employer • provided m ,...
- 412l ]5 or t h e - Cade, or from
t h e - m - fimtl, doe.....,..........
for loa ollltlined on tiCCOUnt or the ''1JIIIJI,
occupali&lt;)nlldiaeue,. or death, and the med·
ocal, n,..., and hoapriiiiiOIVICCI ond mod·
lcoiiCI, and tht IIIIOWII or f'unerlol expenses
on .... or deoth. u ... provided by thll
chap~«

AN EMPLOYER MAY REQUEST liN
EMPLOYEE WHO SUSTAINS AN
INJURY TO SUBMIT TO A CHEMICAL
TEST OR II TEST OF THE EMPLOY·
EE'S BLOOD, BREATH, OR URINE IF
THE EMPLOYER HAS REASON TO
BELIEVE THIIT THE EMPLOYEE'S
INJURY VIAS THE RESULT OF BEING
INTOXICATED OR UNDER THE IN FLU·
ENCE OF A CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE NOT PRESCRIBED FOR USE
IN THE EMPLOYEE'S SYSTEM BY
THE EMPLOYEE'S PHYSICIAN IF THE
EMPLOYEE SUBMITS TO THAT TEST,
(3) COMPENSATION UNDER DIVI·
THE EMPLOYER SHALL PAY FOR THE
(A) OF SECTION 4123 S60FTHE
&amp;EIIISEID !:ODE ALLOWED LINDER COST OF THE TEST FOR THE PUR·
DIVISION SHALL BE FOR A POSE OF THIS DIVISION, IF THE
EMPLOYEE, THROUGH II CHEMICAL
PERIOD NOT TO EXCEED NINE
MONTHS AFTER THE DIITE OF THE TEST OR A TEST OF THE EMPLOY·
EE 'S BLOOD, BREIITH. OR URINE
PROVISION,IMPLANTING, AFFIXING,
REPAIR, OR REPLACEMENT OF THE ADMINISTERED 'WITHIN A REASON·
PROSTHETIC DEVICE PROVIDED ABLE TIME AFTER THE OCCURRENCEOF THE EMPLOYEE' S INJURY,
PURSUANT TO THIS DIVISION.
IS DETERMINED TO HAVE AN ALCO(4) THE ADMINISTRATOR SHALL
HOL CONTENT EQUAL TO OR IN
ADOPT RULES ESTABUSHING A PRO.
EXCESS OF THIIT SPECIFIED IN SEC·
CEDURE TO ENSURE THAT AN
EMPLOYEE'S PHYSICIAN MAKES TION 4SII 19 OF THE REVISED CODE
THE DETERMINATION DESCRIBED IN OR HAVE A CONTROLLED SUB·
DIVISION (C)(2)(b) OF THIS SECTION STANCE NOT PRESCRIBED FOR USE
IN THE EMPLOYEE'S SYSTEM BY
IN A TIMELY MANNER AND THAT
THE DETERMINATION IS RECORDED THE EMPLOYEE'S PHYSICIAN, IT IS A
REBUTTABLE PRESUMPTION THAT
AND FILED IN THE EMPLOYEE'S
THE
EMPLOYEE WAS INTOXICATED
CLAIM FILE IN II TIMELY MANNER.
OR
UNDER
THE INFLUENCE OF THE
(S) FOR PURPOSES OF DIVISION (0
OF TillS SECTION, "PROSTHETIC CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE AND
THAT THE INTOXICATION OR BEING
DEVICE" MEANS AN INTERNAL OR
UNDER THE INFLUENCE IS THE
EX1rERI~AL ARTIFICIAL PART PRO.
PROXIMATE CAUSE OF THE INJURY
VIDEO TO AN EMPLOYEE THA'I' SUBliN EMPLOYEE'S REF1JSAL TO SUBFOR A MISSING OR RECON·
LIMB OR JOINT OF THE
MIT TO, OR RELEASE OR EXECUTE~
RELEASE OF THE RESULTS OF, II
(D) UNLESS WRITTEN NOTICE HAS
CHEMlCIIL TEST OR A TEST OF THE
GIVEN AS PROVIDED IN SEC·
EMPLOYEE'S BLOOD. BREATH, OR
4123114 OR 412385 OF THE
URINE IS ADMISSIBLE AS EVIDENCE
REIIISE:D !:ODE, THE COMMISSION
OF THE EMPLOYEE'S INTOXICATION
·~~~MAKE ('10 MODIFICATION.
OR lll!II'IO UNDER THE INFLUENCE
C1
FINDING, OR AWARD THAT OF A CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE NOT
AW•UliS COMPENSATION FOR A PRESCRIBED FOR THE EMPLOYEE'S
PERIOD IN EXCESS OF TWO
USE IN THE EMPLOYEE'S SYSTEM BY
Ttc~•asPRIOR TO THE DATE OF FIL·- -THE EMPLOYEE'S PHYSICIIIN AT
AN APPLICATION FOR THAT ANY .HEARING PURSUANT TO SEC·
Tboa- does 1101 TION 4i2BII OFTHE&amp;EVISEOl:QDE
the npt or 1 claimant 10 . _ ,
TO DETERMINE THE ALLOWANCE
....,,..............,tiOIIItfilmaofany OFTHEEMPLOYEE'SCLA!MANDON
IPIIhCat~ IF the applrca·
ANY APPEAL TO COURT PURSUANT
11 filed wothon the nnoc hmn provided
TO SECTION 4123 512 OF THE
thos sccroon
REVISED !:ODE
W) Tbos scctoon does not
lhe
IF liN INJURY DESCRIBED IN DIVI·

:

=~E!~~=:n:~~;·;~:~~
by any •PIIh·

whoch hos
filed w1th the c:ommw1on after June
I, 1932, and pnor 10 the oxprrolloo or tit&lt;
opplllcal&gt;le pmod but m ,..pcct 10 whoch no
has been.,...... .. dcaictl dunna lhe
opplicotblo period
l.fl The ComtniiiiOII hy gcnenoi
MAY provide ror the datnoctoon of
fila of cua "'wbic:h no further act1on ma)
taltcn
The: commauiOI'J aad ldrnintth'ltor of
woriU..' compcniiiiOII eadt by ....
rul01, MAY provide for the retentiOn
dcttNct100 of all other m:ordlm then
or under lhc:tr conttol punuant
IIOt:hOn 121 211 and sect101111 149-34 10
14936 orthe Revised Code The bu,..uDf

compcnunoa

nil)'

purchbe or

.... roquored equopmcnr for the det:UIIICIII
retentKIIl medii. II determined netCSIU)I10
preserve the records Photoaraphs.
mtcropholoanpht, nuerofilm, films. or
duect document rerenuon med1a
properly identofiod. have the same
u riot onaonal roconl and may be
offered 1n hke manner and may be receiVed
u eovido- on any cowt wlotrt ohe onaonol
rteord could have been ontroduccd
1m AS USED IN DIVISION (to) OF
THIS SECTION "MEDICAL BENEFITS"
MEANS PAYMENTS TO, OR ON
BEHALF OF AN EMPLOYEE FOR A
HOSPITAL BILL MEDICAL BILL FOR
A LICENSED PHYSICIAN OR HOSPI·
TAL. AN ORTHOPEDIC OR PROS·
DEVICE. OR A PRESCRIP·
MEDICATION
Sec 4123 531 THE ADMINISTRA·
OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION
THE INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION
ANY EMPLOYEE

c~~~~~~~;T~H~~E RIOHT TO RECEIVE

0

TO SUBMIT TO A

REHABILITATION
If THE PERSON 'WHO
THE EVALUATION REC·
A VOCIITIONAL REHA·
PLAN FOR THE EMPLOY·
THE EMPLOYEE SHALL COMPLY
THE REHABILITATION PLAN
IF AN EMPLOYEE REFUSES TO
TO ANY VOCIITION'AL

i ;~~~~i~1~:~
PURSUANT
EVALUATION
TO THIS
OR OBSTRUCTS THE EVALII.O:TION THE EMPLOYEE'S RIGHT
TO HAVE THE EMPLOYEE'S CLAIM
FOil. COMPENSATION CONSIDERED.
IF THE CLAIM IS PENDINO BEFORE
THE BUREAU OR COMMIIISION, OR
TO RECEIVE ANY PAYMENT FOR
COMPENSATION THAT HAS BBEN

SION
(C)(4l OFCODE
SECTION
412301
OF
THE REVISED
OCCURS,
COMPENSATION AND MEDICAL BENE·
FITS ARE PAYABLE ONLY FOR THE
IMPIIIRMENT OR DISABILITY THAT
RESULTS FROM THE SUBSTANTIAL
WORSENING OF THE PRE-EXISTING
CONDITION OR IMPIIIRMENT OR THE
SUBSTANTIAL ACCELERATION OF
THE DISEASE PROCESS NO COMPENSATION OR BENEFITS ARE
PAYABLE BECAUSE OF THE PRE·
EXISTING CONDITION IMPAIRMENT,
OR DISEASE PROCESS ONCE THAT
CONDITION. IMPAIRMENT. OR DIS·
EASE PROCESS HAS RETURNED TO A
LEVEL THAT WOULD HAVE EXISTED
WITHOUT THE INJURY
Whenever With ~spcct 10 1n employee
of an employer who 11 IUbJect to and has
complied With lhiS Chapter then: II pDSSI•
bihty of conflact w11h respect to the apphca·
uon of workers' compensation law1 because
the conii'ICf or empiOymerll 18 enlend Into
and all m 501IIe port ton af the work 11 or 11
10 ilc pcrfonncd on a ....e ortlltel other lhao
Ohoo, ohc employer IDd ohe employee may
&amp;&amp;ftC tO be bound by the laWI Of lh1s Stile
or by the laws of some other llalc: m whiCh
all or some pon10n of the work of the
employee rsro be performed The a.,..mcm
shall be on wntma and aholl be filed wllh the
bureauofworkcrt' c:ompcnat1on w1th1n ten
days after It II Cli:CCUtcd and shtiJ retnalft 1R
f(lrce unultennu\lttd or moc:hfted b)laarce·
mcnl or the panoes somoluly filed If ohe
as,rctmental to be bound by the law11 ofth1s
lllleand doecmployerhascompiicd Wllh th11
ckaptcr. then the employee 11 c:nutlcd 10 com-pensauon and benefits rc""rdlcu of when!'
the niJury oo;urs or the disease 11 ~tract
ed and the nshts of the employee: and M
THE EMPLQYF.F. 'S depcndenrs ~ndcr the
laws of 1h1s state arc the cx.ciUIIVC remedy
.,amat the employer on account of InJury,
d1!1C8K'. or death m thl: coune of and ansm&amp;
ouo ofloitTHE EMPLOYEE S employment
1r ohe ~Bf&lt;Cm&lt;nt Is oo be bound by the laws
or another state and the employer hu com.
phcd wnh the law1 of that sta\c, lhe nghll of
ohe employee and loit THE EMPLOYEE'S
dcpmdenta under the laws of that Slate are
the exclus1ve remedy 1p1nst the employer
on IICCOWit of lnpl()'. dtiCUC 01' dcalh mthe
counc: of and ansana out of Me THE
EMPLOYEE'S employment wnhout rtprd
to the place wborc lhe ''1IIIIJI wu susuoned
or tht d1acac coatncted
lfMtycmployccDI'IoitTHE EMPLOYEE'S dcpendenoa II&lt; aWII'Ikd ...toen'
WII4'CI..IIon benefits or recover damapa
tho employer under the Iowa or ........
er - · the ltiiOWII awarded or ....,..,.cred.
'Nitetlter poi&lt;! or 10 • poi&lt;! on fuhiR •-II·

..

-anyowwc~or............,..on beaofilomade
todoe....,..,..orloitTHE EMPLOYEE'S
dcpcndoata by .... ' " - "
1r .. .....,..,.. ta 1 mldoat or • 1111e
otherlhln thll ..... and Ia ioswed under tho
worlt&lt;n' ....._ooa low ar auntlarlawt
or a ..... other lhan rhll ...... the employoeudloitTHEEMPLOYEE'Sdepeadonla
..........dod 10 . -... ~.,
...,.fill under th11 chapter, on IICCOIIDI or
IOJIIIJI, discaae, or deatb ...,.., our or or In
the......., of employmeat whole tomporor·
tly wothon th11 !Ute and the nJ!hts or the
employee ond llio THE EMPLOYEE'S
dependo:ma Ulldor the laWJ of the other stare
ue the excluaiVe remedy ag111aat the
employer oniK.'COWlt of the IDJUry. d1~
ordcath
~
Compenaauon or bcnefitl a..re not
payable 10 I Claillllllt
Ill the penod of
oonfmcment of the c:launant 1n any lta1e or
fcdcnl conoctionli IDIIIIIIIIOD whetha 1ft
this or any other sure fOI' eonvrCIIOII of voolanoo or any state or federal cnmonollow.
Sec 41llS41 - l f a n y
person who 11 cmotlod to....,,. bcndira for
TEMPORARY 10111 dolabo~ry OR PER·
M1.NENT TOTAL IMPAIRMENT. loa of
member, or death lhroul)h the applrcat""' of
soctron 4123 033 of the Rcvooed Code,
recetves. tn connectiOn with lhe lftJUfY pv.
mg nac 10 such enntt.....,~ -fill under
an oct of conamo or fodenl ptop1111 provicllns benefils for c1val defense worten and
thoir IIII&lt;VIVOIS, the -fill payable ........
..... shall be roduo:ed on.,..__ lOIII&lt; ben·
cfita recc1ved under &amp;UCb other act or pro-J!IIlll
Soc 412355 Nocompcnllbonllhallbe
allowed for the finl week after an InJUry 11
fCCelved Or OCCUpiiiiODal diSCISC .........
ool IS FIRST DIAGNOSED and no com·
pcnoanon shall be allowed for the fint week
of toul d11aboltry OR IMPAIRMENT,
whenever tt may occur. unless and until &amp;he
employee 11 tolllly- DISABLED OR
IMPAIRED for a cont1nuoua period of two
weeks or more, 1n whiCh event compensa·
non for the float week oftoUI disabohty OR
IMPAIRMENT, whenever 11 has occurred,
aloallbc paod, on addohiMI to any other_....
ly bcncfill wbocb ue due, ommed111ely fol·
low••• the ....... week or total disabohly
OR IMPAIRMENT Tlrcro shall be 110 watl·
mg period m connc:cnon w1th the disburse·
10ents provtdcd by aecnon 4123 66 oflhe
Rovooed Code
Soc 412156 (A)Exccptasprovodcdm
dJVISJOII tDM.El of th1s ICCtiM. In the taSC
or tcmpol'll)l dosabdol), an employee shall
reCeiVe &amp;txty·stx. and two-thirds per cent of
Ilia THE EMPLOYEE'S average weekly
wage 10 long u such d111hlltty IS total, not
to exceed a max1mum amount of weekly
compcnullc:tn wh1ch 11 equal to the
statewide avenge: weekly wage a&amp; defined
1n diVIstoa. (C) of scc;:t1on 4123 62 of the
lle¥ooed Code. and nor lea than a mrnomum
amOWII or c:ompalllhOD WhiCh II equal to
thnly·thm: and onc-thord per o:ont or lhe
statewide average weekly wage as defined
•• divisoon (C) or section 412362 or the
Rev1&amp;ed Code unleu the employee's wage
IS leu than th1rty·three and one--third per
cen1 of the mm1mum statewide average
weekly wage, tn wh1ch event M THE"
EMPLOYEE shall n:coovo compenSibon
equal to Ilia THE EMPLOYEE'S IIIII
waaes. provtdod that for the first twelve
woclts oftolll do~ollly the employee aloall
rece1ve aeventy.two per cent of ltil THE
EMPLOYEE'S full _...ly -.bur nor
to aceed a mu.imum amount of weekly
contpenaal1011 wh~h II oqUII to the ieua'
or tht statcWode avenge weekly wage as
defined m dov11oon (C) ofscctoon 4123.62
of the lle¥ol0d Code llf one hundred per cent
of the employee !I ne1 ~ home weekly

wqc
....._..
AS USED IN THIS DIVISION, "NET
TIIIU! HOME WEEKLY WAGE" MEANS
THE AMOUNT OBTAINED BY DIVID·
lNG AN EMPLOYEE'S TOTAL REMU·
NERATION, AS DEFINED IN SECTION
4141 01 OF THE REVISED CODE, PIIID
TO OR EARNED BY THE EMPLOYEE
DURING THE FIRST fOUR OF THE
LAST FIVE COMPLETED CALENDAR
QUIIRTERS WHICH IMMEDIATELY
PRECEDE THE fiRST DAY Of THE
EMPLOYEE'S ENTITLEMENT TO BEN·
EFITS UNDER THIS DIVISION BY THE
NUMBER OF WEEKS DURING WHICH
THE EMPLOYEE WAS PAID OR
EARNED REMUNERATION DURING
THOSE FOUR QUARTERS, LESS THE
IIMOUNT OF LOCIIL STATE AND
FEDERAL INCOME TAXES DEDUCT·
ED FOR EACH SUCH WEEK
W~ I) IF THE PAYMENT OF COM
PENSATION FOR TEMPORARY DIS
ABILITY IS COMMENCED VOLUN ·
TARILY BY A SELF!INSURING
EMPLOYER, PAYMENTS OF COM PEN ·
SATION SHIILL BE CONTINUED liT
THE DiSCRETION OF THE SELF·
INSURING EMPLOYER WHEN A SELF·
INSURING EMPLOYER MAKES ITS
FIRST PAYMENT OF COMPENSATION
TO AN EMPLOYEE UNDER THIS DIVI·
SION THE SELF-INSURING EMPLOY·
ER SHALL NOTIFY THE EMPLOYEE IN
'WRITING OF ALL OF THE FOLLOW
lNG
(&amp;) THAT THE SELF-INSURING
EMPLOYER VOLUNTARILY HAS
COMMENCED THE PAYMENTS
Cbl THIIT THE SELF·INSURING
EMPLOYER MAY TERMINATE THE
PAYMENTS AT ANY TIME,
- I') THAT THE EMPLOI'.EE HAS A
RIGHT TO A HEARING ON THE
EMPLOYEE'S CLAIM,
(Jj) IF THE EMPLOYEE'S CLAIM
THAT IS THE SUBJECT OF THE P~Y
MENTS COMMENCED LINDER THIS
DIVISION IS DETERMINED TO BE
VALID, THAT ANY COMPENSATION
TO WHICH THE EMPLOYEE IS OR
BECOMES ENTITLED UNDER THIS
SECTION FOR THAT CLAIM SHALL BE
OFFSET BY THE PAYMENTS THE
EMPLOYEE RECEIVES FROid THE
SELF·INSURING EMPLOYER UNDER
THIS DIVISION
A SELF· INSURING EMPLOYER
EITHER SHALL CERTIFY OR CON ·
TEST THE CLAIM FOR WHICH IT
VOLUNTARILY IS MAKINO PAY·
MENTS UNDER THIS DIVISION WITH·
IN SEVENTY · FIVE DAYS AFTER THE
SELF-INSUltiNG EMPLOYER MAKES
THE FIRST PAYMENT Of COMPEN-

THIS DMSION A CLAIM IS DEENEO
CONTESTED If THE SELP·INSURINO
EMPLOYER FIIILS EITHER. TO CERTI·
FY OR CONTEST THE CLAIM V1TTH1N
SEVENTY-FIVE DAYS AFTER MAKING THE FIRST PAYMENT OF COM·
PENSATION UNDER THIS DIVISION
TO AN EMPLOYEE
(2) PAYMENT Of COMPENSATION
FOR ALL CLAIMS FOR TEMPORARY
DISABILITY OTHER THAN THOSE
DESCRIBED IN DIVISION (11)(1) OF
THIS SECTION, aloall he far a ....uon
based upon the medical_.. or the wftd.
ong phyaocoan If the employer diapulcl the
attondma phyao&lt;llll 'a report. pa,..- may
be terminllod only upon appl- IDd
helrioa by adlalrictltoarin1 oftlcor....,_
to dovuoon (C) o r - 4121511 or tloc
a..iaed Cade Plyrnemo llhall O:OOtiniiO
~ tht -.rullltion of die matter,
however, paymenraloall .... he mode rorthe
period v.itao any 0111ploycc hos murneol 10
work, when 111 employee's ......... phyao·
coan has mode a wnltal lllremmt lbal the
employee oacapable of....,.lllllo 11io THE
EMPLOYEE'S rormcrpoomon of employ·
ment. when worlt wolhrn the physocalcapabihtlOI of lhe employee 11 made avulsble
by the employer or another employtl', or
what the employee has -heel doe muomum medical omprovemcnr - I F the
employee 11 capable of wort ICIIY&gt;t)l bulloit
THE EMPLOYEE'S employcros unable to
offer._ THE EMPLOYEE any cmploymcnt, the employee shall re&amp;illcr with doe
bureau or employmenl IOMCCS, whoch
shallua~~t the employee m fmding awlable
Ol]lploymcnl 'Ria
Ill THE rcrmonauon orrempomy 10111
dosabihty, whether hy order or orhorwrso,
does ,.. preclude the eommencemmt or
remponory -1 diaabillly at another poonl m
tome rf the cmployee apm becomes ltm·
poranly totally ditlblod
W IF A DISTRICT HEARING OFFICER, STAFF HEARING OFFICER, OR
THE INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION
DETERMINES, BASED UPON THE EVI·
DENCE, THAT AN EMPLOYEE VIAS
NOT EN'JTI1.ED PURS\JANT TO THIS
CIIAPTERORDW'TER4121,4127 ,OR
4131 OF THE REVISED CODE TO
RECEIVE TEMPORARY TOTIIL DISABILITY COMPENSATION PRIOR TO
THE DATE OF THE HEARING IN WHICH
THAT DETERMINATION IS MADE, THE
HEARING OFFICER OR THE COMMIS·
SION SHALL DECLARE AN OVERPAYMENT EFFECTlVE FROM THE DATE
THE EMPLOYEE VIAS NOT ENTITLED
TO RECEIVE THAT COMPENSATION IF
THE EMPLOYER PAYS PREMIUMS TO
THE STATE INSURANCE FUND, THE
AMOUNT OF THE OVERPAYMENT
SHALL NOT BE CHARGED TO THE
EMPLOYER'S EXPERIENCE IF THE
EMPLOYER IS II SELF-INSURING
EMPLOYER, THE SELF·INSURINO
EMPLOYER SHALL DEDUCT THE
AMOUNT OF THE OVERPAYMENT
FROM THE PAID COMPENSATION IT
REPORTS TO THE ADMINISTRATOR
UNDER DIVISION (K) OF SECTION
4123 35 OF THE J,EVISED CODE THE
SELF·INSURING EMPLOYER OR THE
BUREIIU. AS APPROPRIATE. SHALL
WITHHOLD THE AMOUNT OF TH6
OVERPAYMENT FROM ANY IIMOUNT
TO WHICH THE EMPLOYEE BECOMES
ENTITLED UNDER ANY CLAIM PIIST,
PRESENT, OR FUTURE UNDER
CHAPTER 4121,4123,4127 . OR 4131
OF THE &amp;£VISED CODE PURSUANT TO
DIVISION (l) OF SECTION 4123511 OF
THE REVISED !:ODE
U) After two hundred weeks of-....
moyiOQJ disability bt:nefill,lhe ........ med·
ocol sce11011 ahaU schedule rho EMPLOYEE ror an oumolllloon for an
evaluabOn to dctcrmme whether or ootthc
...........,. disabiloly has become pcnnancnl
A sclf·oMunng employer shall notrfy doe
bureau of workers compensation tmmcda·
ately after paymenl of lWo hundred weelr.s
orrempomy 1011) disabollly and roqucallhat
doe bureau or worl&lt;m' compensa11011 ached·
ulo t h e - EMPLOYEE for such an
exammabon

i6l When lheomployoeos awarded com
penuuon for rem~ lOtti disabthry for
a period for whochlll THE EMPLOYEE has
..... vcd-frtsundcrChapter4141 orlhe
Rev1sed Code, the bureau of woritcn com·
pensauon shall pi)' an amount equal to the
amount rece~ved from the award to the
bureau of employment services and the
admlntslrator OF THE . BUREAU oF
cmploymcnt8tn'lcet shtll credll the amount
to the ac~ntl of the employers 10 whose
accounts the paymtnt (If bcnttill wn
charged or 11 chargeable 10 the extent 11 was
cha'l!od or os chargeable
Qllf any compenlllton under 1h1s sec·
hon has been pt1d for the same period or
penods for whiCh temporary nonocc;:upa
uonal ac:c1dent and stc:kntsa msurancc IS or
ha.~ been pa1d punuant to an 1nsunnce poJ.
tcy or proanm to wh1ch the employer hu
made lhc: ent1n: c:onb"ibut1on or p1yment for
provadmg 1nsunncc or under a nonocc:upa·
roonal accidenoiDd 11ckness prosnm lillly
funded by the employer ~ompenut1on
pud under th1s scctum for the pcnod or pen
ods shall be paid only to the extent by wh1ch
the paymen1 or ptyments exceeds the
amount of the nono«upauonalmsurance or
proJ!IIlll paod or payable Offset of the compensation shall be made only upon the rmor
order of the bureau of workers' compcnsa·
t10n or ntdustnal comml~t~lon or ..,ecment
of tt»e clannant

.......,_.._Tht_u

MEDICII~;~~J~:E~~~

NEOU~~~A~~i~~~~~~~~;'

11-

1

we

If I I;
I ld f J
I
JJJ Ill I (IIIII~ I It nil
(iiJ \\'lla a ~ If an employee an a
claom allowed Wider thoa chapter sufl'etl 1
waaelou u a DIRECT rauh or'"""'""~
ro cmploymcno Other than 1oit THE
EMPLOYEE'S t'ormor poortton or employ·
ment • • a ru1111fl c
· t taft •
11
11 1 1 1 n~ DUE TO A
LIMITATION IN the clannant'l ~

,lis•••

Ul AN EMPLOYEE MAY FILE TH~
APPLICATION SPECIFIED IN DIVISION
(A)( I) OF THIS SECTION WITHOUT
WAITING FORTY WEEKS WHEN
EITHER OF THE FOLLOWING OCCURS
(I) THE RECEIPT OF PAYMENTS
UNDER DIVISION (A) OF SECTION
4123 56 OF THE REVISED !:ODE IS
TERMINATED BY A HEARING OFFI·
CER BECAUSE THE EMPLOYEE HAS
REACHED MAXIMUM MEDICAL
IMPROVEMENT
(b) THE RECEIPT OF BENEFITS
UNDEI!. DIVISION (A) OF SECTION
4123 S6 OF THE REVISED l:QDE IS
TERAUNATED
BECAUSE
THE

"

I

I

I\'.

-·lixly. . . .

ncnlpartui~IMPAIRMENTr&lt;&gt;ull·
maliom the AN 111JWY or occ:upational dis-

IR Ulll

f

ALLOWI!D CONDITION DR CONDI· ..clAN CllmriES 'l1lAT THI:I!MPLOY•
TIONS IN THE EMPLOYEB'I CLAIM, m! HAS ~ MAXIMUM
loe THE EMPLOYEE shall ,_,.. ...,_ l !CAL IMPROVEMI!N!
IWOo4biadll**'
ll) ................... IP!IiiOitiOIII
or loit THE DIFFWNCE BETWI!EN J,JNI&gt;EI. DIVISION (A)(I) Oi (2)
THE EMPLOYEE'S AVERAGE W1lllldy THIS SliCTION, die ..._ sball - - A T 1lfE TIME OF THE INJURY
or die 'I'J'Iicalioo 10 rha
OR DATE OF DISEASE AND THE
ordoc
EMPLOYEE' S PRESENT EAI!.NINOS
IIOtiOexceodtie-·--· VIDEO IN DIVISION (A)(7) OF
ly .....
SECTION IS CHOSEN, ahallodrec.. le tile
THE PAYMENTS MAY CON· employee .... medical ..-.on
TINUE FOR UP TO A MAXIMUM OF
lWO HUNDRED WEEKS, BUT THE ,ICIIII I oopy of the ....... or the meoilic:al
PAYMENTS SHALL BE REDUCED BY eXIIIIilllion to
• lilt
THE CORRESPONDING NUMBER OF
WEEKS IN WHICH THE EMPLOYEE
RECEIVESPAYMENTSPURSUANTTO
DIVISION (II) OF SECTlON 4121 670F
THE REVISED CODE
(2) IF AN EMPLOYEE IN A CLAIM
ALLOWED UNDER THIS CHAPTER
SUFFERS A WAOE LOSS AS A DIRECT
RESULT OF BEING UNABLE TO FIND
EMPLOYMENT CONSISTENT 'WITH
THE EMPLOYEE'S PHYSICAL CAPII· ... THE REPORT
THE
BILITIES RESULTING FROM THE EXAMINATION SHALL CONTAIN
EMPLOYEE'S INJURY OR OCCUPA· STATEMENT OF THE ElU•MO~ER'S
TIONAL DISEASE, THE EMPLOYEE FINDING ON THE EMPLOYEE'S PER·
SHALL RECEIVE COMPENSATION AT CENTAOE OF PERMANENT PARTIAL
SIXTY·SIX AND TWO·THIIDS PER IMPAIRMENT RESULTING FROM
CENT OF THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ALLOWED CONDITIONS IN THE
THE EMPLOYEE'S AVEI!.AOE WEEKLY CLAIM UNDER. THE MOST RECENT
WIIOE AT THE TIME OF THE INJURY EDITION OF THE AMERICAN MEDOR DATE OF DISEASE AND THE ICAL ASSOCIATION'S GLIDES TO THE
EMPLOYEE'S PRESENT EARNINGS,
EVALUATION OF R~~:~~:~
NOT TO EXCEED THE S1ATEWIDE IMPAIRMENT AFTER
AVERAGE WEEKLY 'WAGE 111E PAY· I!.EPORT OF THE loiSDICAL EXJI.MI·
MENTS MAY CONTINUE FOR UP TO A NATION. THE IIDMINISTRATOR
MAXIMUM OF TWE!IITY ·SIX WEEKS,
'WORKERS'
COMPENSATIONr:~~~r~~
HOWEVER, AN EMPLOYEE IN A MAKE
A TENTATIVE
ORDER
CLAIM ALLOWED UNDER THIS CHAP- THAT THE EMPLOYEE'S
TER MAY RECEIVE COMPENSIITION AGE OF PERMANENT
UNDER DIVISION (C,)(2) OF THIS SEC· IMPAIRMENT IS THE SAME
TION FOR UP TO A MAXIMUM OF C£NTAOE SHOWN BY THE REP&lt;JRT
f'IFTY·TWO 'WEEKS IF, AT ANY TIME
THE THE
DURING THE PERIOD IN 'WHICH THE OF
UNLESS
EMPLOYEE IS RECEIVING COMPEN· DETERMINES THAT THE
SATION UNDER DIVISION (C,)(2) Of CLEARLY IS ERRONEOUS
THIS SECTION, THE BENEFIT PERIOD ADMINISTRATOR
FOR UNEMPLOYMENT IS IN EXTEN- THE REPORT CLEARLY IS
SION PURSUANT TO SECTION 4141.:!01
OFTHE&amp;EVISEDC:ODE NEITHER THE DISREOIIRD THE REPORT.
FILING OF A REQUEST FOR NOR THE ULE THE EMPLOYF.I! FOR ANOTHER
RECEIPT OF COMPENSATION PUR- EXAMINIITION BY THE BUREAU
SUANT TO DIVISION (C,)(2l OF THIS MEDICAL SECTION, AND ISSUE A
SECTION SHALL AFFECT AN EMPLOY· TENTATIVE ORDER THAT FINDS
EE'S APPLICATION FOR COMPENSA- THAT THE EMPLOYEE'S PER.CENT·
TION PROVIDED UNDER SECTION AGE OF PERMANENT
4123 58 OF THE REVISED CODE.
IMPAIRMENT IS THE SAME PER·
(3) THE NUMBER OF WEEKS OF CENTAGE SHOWN BY THE
WAGE LOSS PAYABLE TO AN
MEDICAL EXAMINATION REPOI!.T
W The admonostraror llhall _ ,
EMPLOYEE UNDER DIVISIONS &lt;CX I)
AND (2) OF THIS SECTION SHALL employco, the employer, and their
NOT EXCEED TWO HUNDRED 'WEEKS IOiitlllvea. on wnbna. of the tenlltlvo
IN THE AGGREGATE
IIIII of doe porto01' npl to roqiiOII 1
(4) AS USED IN THIS DIVISION
mil"DATE OF DISEASE' MEANS THE
DATE liN OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE IS
FIRST DIAGNOSED BY II LICENSED
PHYSICIAN, OR FOR liN OCCUPA
TIONAL DISEASE DESCRIBED IN DIVI·
SIONS (tol THROUGH (.M) OF SEC·
TION 41l3680FTfiE&amp;EVISEDl:QDE.
OR OTHER OCCUPATIONIIL DISEASE
THAT RESULTS FROM EXPOSURE TO ...._WITHIN FOUI!.TEEN
FIBROSIS·PRODUCINO OR TOXIC AFTER RECEIPT OF THE TO.ITU'IVO
DUSTS, FUMES. MISTS VAPORS. ORDER. THE EMPLOYEE.
GASES. OR LIQUIDS. OR OTHER EMPLOYER, OR THEIR REP'REliENITA·
TOXIC MATERIALS, OR A COMBINA- TIVES, MAY FILE WITH ~~,:~~;~~
TION OF THOSE. THE DIITE THAT THE AN OBJECTION TO THE '
EMPLOYEE FIRST MISSES WORK. AS II ORDER THE OPPOSING PARTY
RESULT OF THE OCCUPIITIONAL DIS. BE SERVED BY THE FILING •u•rv
WITH A COPY OF THE OBJECTION
EASE
~ I" doe evertl an cmployec of 1
THE TENTATIVE ORDER NOTo ~~~:;
prof.,.....l aporto froachosc domit:tled 10 THAN THE DIIY OF FILING PR
thoa Sllters disabled OR IMPIIIRED 11 the MAJLINGOFTHEOBJECTIONTOTHE
TENTATIVE ORDER TO THE OPPQS.
mull of an IOJUIY or occuplhOnll d1sr:ac.
doe lOIII omount of pa)'IIICIIb made under • JNG PIIRTY CONSTITUTES SERVICE
conrract or ho .. or collecrovc bupinollj If ANOBJECTIONTOTHETENTIITIVE
ORDER IS NOT FILED BY A PARTY BY
~nt lo doe employee durins • period
THE DEADLINE ESTABLISHED BY
or do•bihry OR IMPAIRMENT
an ..,.anced payment of .....,.....,... DIVISION CAM4) OF THIS SECTION,
payable under secroons 412l S6 to 4123 58 THE ORDER BECOMES FINAL
oft he Revosed Code The employer sholl be
LU If lhe employee, the employ«
n:1mbuncd the total amount oflhe advanced thear rcprcscntatJvcs llmely not1fy
paymc:n11 out of any owlrd or compcntiiMXO ldm1n1Sira!or of an obp11on to the
madt purauanl to sectt0111 4123 S6 to live order, EITHER PARTY, Wl'r"'"'
4123 S8 oflhe Revotod Code
fOURTEEN DAYS AFTER THE
*9M.Ellf an mnpkJyee rcce1vr:s tmnpo- OF FILING OR OF RECEIPT OF
1'11)110111 disabihlj bcncf'llll....-10 dO VI• ' OBJECTION, WHICHEVER IS '-"'""';
soon (A) oflh11 sccroon and oocoal,...unry MAY REQUEST
moremcnl bencfill punuanl to the "Socoal TION BY THE BUREAu
Secunty Acl, .. lliM: weeki)' benefit amount
SECTION TH~ ~RTY
under diVI!MM (A) ofthil SCCIIOII shall not THAT EXAMINATION SHIILL PAY
exceed SIXty•IIX and IWO:-IhlrdS per ter'll Of ~ COST OF THAT
the statewide I\ICitiiC weekly WI&amp;C U
THAT REQ\JEST, THE BUREAU~"'""'
defined IR diVIJIOD (C) or section 4123 62 SCHEDULE THF. EMPLOYEE
ANOTHER MEDICAL
of the Revosed Code
lfl THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE BY THE BUREAU
PAYMENT OF COMPENSATION UNDER ALL PROVISIONS OF DIVISION
DIVISION (ll)OF THIS SECTION SHIILL OF THIS SECTION APPLICABLE
THE FIRST MEDICAL
NOT CONSTITUTE A RECoGNITION
BY A SELF-INSURING EMPLOYER OF APPLY TO A SUBSEQUENT MHliO•L
A CLAIM OR OF A CONDITION IN THE EXAMINATION REQUESTED
CLAIM AS COMPENSABLE BUT SUANT TO DIVISION (AJC5) OF
SHALL DO NO MORE tHAN SATISFY
SECTION THE BURF.AIJ SHALL
THE REQUIREMENTS OF SECTION
A COPY OF THE REPORT OF
4123114 OF THE &amp;EVISED !:ODE
MEDICAL EXAMINATION TO
Soc 412357 _ _ . . , . . _ EMPLOYEE. THE EMPLOYER,
, THEIR REPI!.ESENTATIVES
Wl,l Except 11 provided on DIVISION
UPON THE FILING OF AN OBJIEC·
(AM2) OF thtl secroon, not carloer than forty TION TO THE TENTATIVE ORDER
UPON THE COMPLETION OF
weeks after the: dateoftcnnmallon of the lit·
es1 period or payments under ""'''"" 412J S6
MEDICAL EXAMIN&lt;IA~~T..I~o::N~~:;~r ~~~F
ED PURSUANT TO I)
of the Revosed Code, or nor carherlhan forty
weeks after the dale Of the InJUry Of' . . . . THIS SECTION WHICHEVER
-THE DATE OF FIRST DIAGNOLATER. !he manershall be ,.f'mod 10
SIS of an OCCupiiHMIIII d1~easc BY A
tn&lt;:t hcuin&amp; ofTK:Cr
LICENSED PHYSICIAN m the"""""" or cat lOR for hctrin&amp; w11h wnncn notices to all
paymenll under ICCIIOO 412356 of the
lnlcrcsted pc:tliOnS.
Rovoaed Code, till AN cmployoc may file an
appiiC&amp;bOn With the bursu of worker.;' com
pensatiOil for lhe dcfcmUniUOII Of the pL.T
ccntqe of !oil TH~ EMPLOYEE'S penna·

1111 II

I

5

AT THE HEAI!.ING, THE DIS·
TRICT HEARING OFFICER
SHALL MAF.E A FINDING AS
WHETHER ANY OF THE FOLLOWIN(J
HAS OCCURRED
(IJ THE BURF.AU MEDICAL SEC·
IJ'ION BASED ITS REPORT, AT
ol iN PART, ON CONDITIONS
ALLOWED IN TH E CLAIM,
01) THE BUREAU MEDICAL SEC
TION FAILED TO CONSIDEI\ ALL
THE ALLOWED CONDITIONS IN
CLAIM,
W THE BUI!.EAU MEDICAL
TION'S EXAMINER
AGAINST THE EMPLOYER OR
EMPLOYEE;
(II) THE BUREAU MEDICAL SEC·
1ION FAILED TO PROPERLY APPLY
1'H&amp; MOST RECENT EDITION Of

�-'

-

-

....m.a-..

EMPLOYEE RESUL11NO fltOM THE AFTEI THE DATE ON WHICH AN
lllellllo ..,.., .. lite
INJURY OR OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE ORDER FIXINO 1111! . EMPI.OYEI!'S
ifdtonianoiUIVtVUii-lllthe...,...
HAS SO PROGRESSED AS TO HAVE PERCENTAGI! OF PEilMANENT PAR• dUirkOI! or the t111p1oyoo IDII if.._
INCRBASED 1111! PERCENTAGE OF TIAL IMPAIRIGNT 1111C0NES FINAL 1ft . . IUdl chiltha, lbeo 10 IUdl .......
PERMANENT PAimAL IMPAIRMENT.
AS USED IN 11llS DIVIS10N, "DATE deolalllllt---~
_ _ ......,.. _ _ the loll
U) 1liE TENTATIVE ORDER PRO- ALL PROVISIONS OF 1111S DMSION OF DISEASE" MEANS 11iE DATE AN
VIDES FOR 1liE PAYMENT OF COM- APPLICABLE TO AN ORIGINAL OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE IS FllST
ofa . . . . .b y - . ... nononlhal
PENSATION UNDER A CIRCUM- APPLICATION APPLY TO AN APPLI· DIAGNOSED BY A UCENSED PHYSIlberoof prior to lria
STANCE IN WHICH '!HAT COMPEN- CATION FOR SUBSEQUENT DETER- CIAN, OR POl AN OCCUPATIONAL lreca ......... TME EMP!.OYEE'Sdcadt,lbe arlatitrianSATION IS BAitRED BY 1111S SECTION MINATION THE DECISION OF A 015- DISEASE DI!SCRIBI!D IN DMSIONS
lorlllellmalreanonlill ......... widr
01liER PROVISION OF LAW
TIUCT HEAitiNG OFFICI!Il ON AN (A) THROUGH (AA) OF SECTION
l1oia diriaioa "" lbe lou obllll be
4123.61 OF 1liE JLI!VISED 1;0DE OR poyablo"' lbe IIII'Ymnl-•..-It then:
EMPLOYE~E
'S APPLICATION -FILED
UNDER 01 ION (A)( I~ (2), AND (6) OTHER OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE
ia DO lllmVU!I lo lbe depcadeot
OF THIS S
ON IS FINAL.
THAT RESULTS fltOM EXPOSURE TO ehildlarofllro~andiftben:anno
(7) NO'IW
TANDING DMSIONS FIBROSIS-PRODUCING OR TOXIC
IUCb c:bikbrr, lbeo to IUCb dcpentlcrrlo •lbe
(A)(3) THROUGH (6) OF nus SECilON, DUSTS, FUMES, MISTS, VAPORS, tldmini- detennloes.
THE DETERMINATION OF AN GASES, OR LIQUIDS, OR OTHER
(C) Contpellllbon for partial ~
EMPLOYEE'S PERCENTAGE OF PER· TOXIC MATERIALS, OR A COMBINAIMPAIRMENT lttldordivillolla (A) 1D11 (B)
MANEN1" PARTIAL IMPAIRMENT TIONOFTI!OSE, THEDATETHATTHE of tbia -.on Ia ill addilico 1o the comSHALL BE MADE IN ACCORDANCE
EMPLOYEE FIRST MISSES WORK AS A pcrtlllim paid lbe Clll(llofec...-to ....
WITH DMSION (A)(7) OF 1111S SEC· RESULT OF 1liE OCCUPATIONAL DIS- lion 4123.56 or the Reviled Code. A
TION, UPON 1111! WRI1TEN AGREE- EASE.
daimM1 may,..,.... Cllltt[!&lt;llllli lttldor
MENT BY AN EMPLOvtE AND
(2}Whcrr .. lwvd utider ... division
diviliooa (A) and (B) of this IOCiion. NO
EMPLOYER TO unLIZE TilE ALTER- {A) OF nus SECTION hal 1reca 1D111e EMPLOYEE MAY UCEIVE COMPENNATIVE METHOD OF DETERMINA- prior to lbe dcalh ofan anployec,llll U11pAic1 SATION UNDER DIVISION (A) OF THIS
TION PROVIDED IN DIVISION (A)(7) tnstallmonllaecnred .. "'....,. UD!Iorthe
SECilON OR RECEIVE A MEDICAL
OF THIS SECTION WITHIN SEVEN prt&gt;vioiorta of the award are payable to lbe
EXAMINATION PROVIDED FOR BY
DAYS AFTER RECEIPT OF TilE WRIT· IIIMYIOII[&gt;OIIJO, orrflbmo rs no survivilla TillS SECTION DURING 1liE TIME IN
TEN AGREEMENT, THE ADMINI5- apouae, lo the dcperrdart children of lbe WHICH THAT EMPLOYEE IS RE('EJV.
TRATOR SHALL ASSIGN A PHYSI- employee, and rftben:.,. no chrldreD surlNG COMPENSATION UNDER SECCIAN FROM THE IMPAIRMENT EVAL- vivm)l. then to other dcpendcnll .. tbe TION 4123.51 OF llll!&amp;EVISEDCODE
UATION PANEL WITI!IN 1liE BUREAU admtrultrltor determines.
IN ANY CLAIM OR IS RECEIVING
MEDICAL SECTION TO CONDUCT A
(B) In cues mcludod ill lbe followrna COMPENSATION· UNDER SECTION
MEDICAL EXAMINATION OF THE
ochcdule lite &lt;ontpCDIIIion payable per 4123 56 OF 11iE REVISED CODE ON
EMPLOYEE AND SEND WRIITEN
week to the employee 111be "*"'ide....-. THE SAME CLAIM IN WIDCH THE
NOTICE TO THE EMPLOYEE AND 18&lt; weekly- .. defined 1ft divtsion (C) EMPLOYEE IS SEEKING COMPENSAEMPLOYER Oj:..'!'HAT ASSIGNMENT. of section 4123 62 oftbe Revised Code per TION UNDER THIS SECTION. THE
THE EMPLI"J'EE AND EMPLOYER week and lhllll........, duriDI tbe penodt EMPLOYEE SHALL LIST ON THE
EACH SHALL SELECT A PHYSICIAN provided m lbe followm, ocbedule·
APPLICATION SPECIFIED IN DIVIFROM TilE IMPAIRMENT EVALUAFor the lou of • thmnb, sony weeb
SIONS (A)( I) AND (2) OF THIS SECIF THE DIS- TION PANEL WHO SHALL SERVE AS
Few the loss of •lilllftnacr, c - y TION THE CLAIM NUMBERS OF ALL
TRJCT HEARING OFFICER FINDS ONE CONSULTANTS TO THE ASSIGNED clllled rndex finger, thiny-five w..U.
OTHER CLAIMS FOR WHICH THE
THE SITUATIONS DESCRIBED IN PHYSICIAN IF THE EMPLOYEE OR
For tbe loss of • finger, thiny EMPLOYEE IS A CLAIMANT.
DIVISION (A)(l)(a), 01). W OR (d) OF EMPLOYER OBJECTS TO THE -ks.
In Ill Wei arisin1 under divrttorr (B) of
SECTION, THE DISTRICT HEAR- ASSIGNED PHYSICIAN'S DETERMIFor the loss of o thin1 fmger, lwenly lh11 secriotl, rf il is dettnained by any one
AN ORDER NATION
weeki.
ofdte followma; (I) lbe amputae clinic.,
REPORT OF THE MEDWITHIN TWENTY-ONE DAYS
For the loil of• fourth fi.,., commonly Unrvenily hoopillll, Ohro tllle univmlly;
EXAMINATION AND REQUIR- AFTER ASSIGNMENT, 1liE ASSIGNED ltnown u !he httlc fingor, flftoen weeks.
(2) the t&lt;ltlllrrhlalion acrvicca commtiiiO!I;
THE BUREAU MEDICAL SECTION PHYSICIAN SHALL CONDUCT A MEDThe loa of• second, or distal, phlllqc (3) an unprrtae clinic or p,..cribiiiJ ph)'lt•
TO PERFORM A NEW MEDICAL EXAM- IC' AL EXAMINATION OF THE of the thumb it considered equ111 to lbe loss
cran II[I[II'OVOd by the atlmrni- cw llio
INATION ALL PROVISIONS OF THIS EMPLOYEE AND PROVIDE TO THE of one half of ouch llntmb, the loss of moro
1liE ADMINISTRATOR'S deargnee, thai
DIVISION APPLICABLE TO THE fiRST ADMINISTRATOR A REPORT OF THE dwr one half of ouch thumb io couidmd
anti\Jured or-IMPAIRED employMEDICAL EXAMINATION AND TilE MEDICAL EXAMINATION STATING equallo the loss of the wbolethumb.
ee 11 ill need nf an antfrc:ittlapphonco, or ill
OF THE PERCENT- THE EMPLOYEE'S PERCENTAGE OF
The 1oao of the third, or distal, p1ra1onp: need of • RpAtr tbcreof, repnlle~~ of
Of PERMANENT PARTIAL PERMANENT PARTIAL IMPAIRMENT of ..Y tiDger 11 OODitdcrotl equll1 to tbe lou
wbether the applilrroc or its repair will be
~~~~!~I~ APPLY TO ANY SUBSE- RESULTING FROM THE ALLOWED of one-third of the finger.
oervrc:eable rn lbe \IOCIIionll1 rehabillwrorr
o
MEDICAL EXAMINATION CONDITIONS IN THE CLAIM UNDER
The 1011 oflbe mrddlc, or second, pha- of the injured employee, and reprdleu of
IS ORDERED UNDER THIS DIVI- THE MOST RECENT EDITION OF TilE lanse of aoy finger rs considcnod equal to
whedrerlbe employee 1ru n:ttrmcd to or can
IF THE DISTRICT HEARING OFFI- AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIA· the lou of lwo-thirda of the linger
ever lipiD return lo any pinful employCER
FINDS THE
SITUATION TION'SGUIDES TO TilE EVALUATION
The lou ofnron:lhon the mic1d1e and dis- men~ the burau sball pay lbe cost of the
D£SCRIBED IN DIVISION (A)(l)(l) OF OF PERMANENT IMPAIRMEN'J: IMME- Ill phalangea of any finaer 11 comrdcred
.-tificitJ applilnce or itS repatr out or the
SECTION, THE DISTRICT HEAR- DIATELY UPON RECEIPT Of THE equal to the loss of the whole finger. In no
OFFICER SHALL ISSUE AN ORDER RE~ORT, THE ADMINISTRATOR cue shall the amount r=ived for morodten surplus crealed by di•i•ion (8) of IOCiion
4123.34 of the Revrsed Code
no•1Ytt.lr. THE APPLICATION IF THE SHALL SEND A COPY OF THE REPOIIT one finger exceed the amount providod 1n
I n - cuea where a t&lt;ltlllrrlillrlion serDIS:fRK:T HEARING OFfiCER FINDS TO THE EMPLOvtE AND EMPLOYER
this ocbedulc for the loss of a band.
vica commiuioa recommendaJ:1on th11111
OF
THE
SITUATIONS
WITHIN TWENTY-ONE DAYS
For the lou of tbe me~acarpt~l bone injured or4illlrior!IMPAIRED employee is
'DESCRIIaEO IN DMSION (A)(l)(a), (li),
AFTER RECEIPT OFTHE REPORT, AN (bones of the polm) for the correspoodina m aeed of an artificial appliance would conW. (d), OR W OF THIS SECTION, THE EMPLOYEE OR EMPLOYER MAY thumb, or ftngera, add ten weeks to lbe nwn- ftrct wrth their-. plan,lldopled pursuan1
HEARING OFFICER SHALL SEND WRITTEN NOTICE TO THE
ber of weeb under this divr11orr
to the "RdultihlabOn Act of 1973," 87 Slat
AN ORDER FINDING TI!AT TilE ADMINISll!ATOR OBJECilNG TO THE
For ankyloo11 (-lstifthess of) or con·
355,29 U,S.C.A. 701, the admrnistrttD&lt; or
PERCENTAGE OF PER·
REPORT IF A WRITIEN NOTICE OF tnctwos (due to scan or inJuries) which lrio TilE ADMINISTRATOR'S deaiane&lt; or
MANE~IT PARTIAL IMPAIRMENT IS
OBJECTION IS NOT TIMELY makes ony of lbe fingm. dtumba. or paru the bureau may obtain a n:c:ommmdat1on
SAME PERCENTAGE SHOWN BY
RECEIVED, THE ASSIGNED PHYSI- of either useless. Ute same number of from an amputee clin1c or pracnb1ng
TilE FIRST OR ANY SUBSE- CIAN'S DETERMINATION OF THE -ks apply to the mcrrrbera or par11 therepb)'I!Ctan l1ru IIley determine appropriale.
nr ",.,.. BUREAU MEDICAL EXAMI- PERCENTAGE OF PERMANENT PAR- of .. srvcn for the 1oao lhmof.
(0) If an employee~
N OTTON REPORT
TIAL IMPAIRMENT OF AN EMPLOYEE
If the claimaol hat suffered tbe IIBI of ...,..,.. nrll1t:es apphcai!On for • findrn&amp;
IS FINAL, N01WITHSTANDING SEC- IWO or more fineen by ampu!alion or anlry- and
..
IS
TION 4123.511 OF TilE &amp;EVISED CODE. loals ..d 1fte nollrr&lt; ·or 111tr ' THE FOUND TO HAVI! ~ jili'r!oSls ..
IF A WRITIEN NOTICE OF OBJECTION CLAIMANT'S employment in die C01U1&lt; deflttcd ul diviSiorr (X), or enlll minora'
IS TIMELY RECEIVED, THE ADMINIS- of which the elai!ltlltl wu worl:illa •• the pncu1110t'011iosis u defined tn dtVIIton (Y).
TRATOR SHALL PROVIDE A COPY OF time of the 111iury orOCC1Iptllionrll di...,. rs orubetlotiludetined m dw11ton (AA) of
tHE ASSIGNED PHYSICIAN'S REPORT ouch dtll the
IMPAIR- 1ectr0n 4123.61ofthe IIA!vrlled Code, and
TO THE CONSULTING PHYSICIANS
MENT raultiiiJ from the lou offingera. Of IT IS FOUND dtet • chan1c of such
SELECTED BY THE EMPLOYEE AND 1oao of use of fingera. . - tbe nont111l employee's occupation is meclically adviSEMPLOYER, WITHIN SEVEN DAYS
handtcap or ~ IMPAIRMENT able in order 10 decrcue '"bolantilllly furAFTER RECEIPT OF TilE OBJECTION. !CIUitillg liorn the loss offin&amp;&lt;rs, or 1oao of therexpoourotouhcadust,..-.,orcoal
WITHIN TWENTY-ONE DAYS
uae nf n.,en, the aclmint,._ 1011y lake dust and rfthe employee, after- the finding.
AFTER RECEIPT OF THE REPORT,
dte1 foci mro eonsidentticin and ,.....,.lbe hat chanJOCI or shall chanae ltio THE
BOTH CONSULTING PHYSICIANS
owardof~ronAOcOitlr!IJiy,lrullbe
EMPLOYEE'SOCCI!piiiO!Itoanor:cuplhoo
SHALL CONFER WITH TilE ASSIGNED award made slutll not exceed tbe omount of tn wh1ch the exposure to silic. dust,
PHYSICIAN AND JOINTLY, ON THE competlllllion for lou of • hand.
asbestos, or toal dult is substanttally
BASIS OFTHE OPINION QF A MAJOR.
For tbe lou ofa band. one hundred sev- decreased,~
ITY OF THE PHYSICIANS, ISSUE A enty· five weeki:
the employee SHALL RECEIVE 1111amounr
FINAL REPORT STATING THE
For the loss of an ann, two hundred equal to fifty per cent of the Slalc:Wide averEMPLOYEE'S PERCENTAGE OF PER· twenly·five weeks.
•&amp;• weekly wage per week for • period of
MANENT PARTIAL IMPAIRMENT
For lhe lou of a grat toe,llurty weeks
thury wedcs. commencins u of lire dale of
RESULTING FROM TilE ALLOWED
For lbe loss of one of!he roes other !ban the disrontt.....,. or cW.C, and fora periCONDITIONS IN TilE CLAIM UNDER the od of one hundrod weeks immedillely foltoe, ten weeki.
THE MOST RECENT EDITION OF THE
The lou of more lhon two-thirds of any
lowrng tbe cxpirauon of the period oflhrrAMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIA- toe 11 CO!tlideted equll1 to tbe loss of 1he ry weekl.........__,the
TION'S GUIDES TO THE EVALUATION whole toe
anployee SHALL RECEIVE st&lt;ly-six and
OF PERMANENT IMPAIRMENT.
The lou of leu !ban two-thirda of 1111y two-thirds per cent of the loss of waaea
WITHIN , FOURTEEN DAYS AFTER toe 11 considered no k:Jss, except u to the resuhina ditoctly and solely from lhe ChanJC
RECEIPTOFTI!EFINAL REPORT, THE grut toe; the loss oftbe .,.., toe up 10 the ofoc:cuplbOn but not to exceed • nwnmum
ADMINISTRATOR SHALL SEND A lftletpltalanaclll joinlll co-equal to the lou of on • ...,., equaiiO fifty per &lt;enl of the
COPY OF THE FINAL REPORT TO THE of one-half of the toe, the lou or the llattWide ....... weekly WIJC per week.
EMPLOYES
AND
EMPLOYER. -toe beyond the inr~lanpiJOtftlll No such employee 11 entttlod to Rt"C~Ye
NOTWITHSTANDING
SECTION tonlldcred equal to the loss of tbe whole more than one allowance on JCCOUnt of dis4123 511 OFTHEREVISED(;ODE, THE gtaltoe.
r:onlinuancc of employment or dtancc of
PERCENTAGE OF PERMANENT PARFor the lo.. of a foot, one hundred fifty
occupation IDd beneflllahall ceue for any
TIAL IMPAIRMENT OF AN EMPLOYEE weeki.
penod dunna whrch lhe employee rs
STATED IN THE FINAL REPORT
For tbe lo..ofa leg.rwo hundred weeks. employed 1n an oc:c:uptt1on in which the
ISSUED PURSUANT TO DIVISION
For che lou of the 11&amp;ht of m eye. one t:J&lt;poour&lt; to silica dust. abeatoo, orcoolcbl
(AX7l OF THIS SECTION IS FINAL.
hundred twenly-five weeks
• IS not sublllnhally leso lhon the ••posure
W Compensation payable under lhitt
For the pmnanent ponrallou of SIP I or an che oc:c:upahon tn wh1~~:h ._ THE
drvts101t lAl OF THIS SECTION acerues an eye, lite portion of one hundred twcnly·
EMPLOYEE wu fonncrly employed or for
and IS payllble IO the employee fiorn lbe dtle five wteb • the ldnuntstrator 1n each cue any period durin1 which the employee mtly
of last Pl}'lncnt of cornpenllbOn, or, 1n cases dctmnt!ICI, bued . _ lite perccnuge of be cntlllcd lo rec:ctve compensation or benwhere no Pl't\'IOUI compenaauon ha been
VISion Ktui.IJ)' k)ll II I mull Of the Injury efit. under -•orr 4123 68 of the Reviled
poid, from the date of lbe mJury or, FOR or occupar1001l diJCISC. bu~ rn no cuelhllll
Cndc orr of disabihry from silieoOCCUPATIONAL DISEASES, the elate of an award of cornpcttJAiton be made for less
"'· ubestosta. or eot~l m1nen' ~moco­
dilcue. than IWtnty·five per cent loss of unc:onect~ moslt An award for c:hanp or oc:~~:upalton
THE EMPLOYEE SHALL RECEIVE cd vttion ''lou of uncorrected v111on" ror a coal mmer who has c:ontraceed coal
SIXTY-SIX AND TWO-THIRDS PER IROiftl the peroenllge of VISion IC!UAIIy loot miners" pneumoconiosis may be granted
CENT OF THE EMPLOYEE'S AVERAGE . u the result ofthe IDJUI')' oroccupattonal dis- under th11 division even lhouah lro THE
WEEKLY WAGE, BUT NOT MORE
COAL MINI!Il conltnualtio omployment
THAN A MAXIMUM OF THIRTY.
For lbe permanent and rorall011 of hearwrth lbe wnc employer, solons ultio THE
THREE AND ONE-THIRD PER CENT ins of one ear. twenty-five weeki, but in no COAL MINER'S employmen1 subsequent
OF TilE STATEWIDE AVERAGE WEEK- cue shall an award of compcttiOiion be to the chana&lt; is IIU&lt;h 1hat llio THE COAL
LY WAGE AS DEFINED IN DIVISION
made for l. . l h o n - and - I lou
MINER'S exposure 10 coll1 d1111 11 subICl OF SECTION 4123 62 OF THE of hcuin1 of one ear
lllnlill11y and a chanJC of occuP.EVISEDCODE, PER WEEK REOAilD- - · Tor lbe pcrrnanatt arrcholallou of hear~ u oemfied by lbe claimant 11 perLESS OF THE AVERAGE WEEKLY
ina. ...puma
lwenly-five · bul,
~~----~~~­
WAGE FOR TilE NUMBER OF WEEKS exccpl
to the rat procedrq para- .
. . _ , _ MEDICAL IDd other
TI!AT EQUALS TilE PERCENTAGE OF IP"[[It, in no - Jholl aa of com. benefi!l SHALL BE PAID TO THE
TWO HUNDRED WEEKS. IF TilE PER- penMtlon be made for leu !ban ~ EMPLOYEE 1ft .:c:ordance With ICCtlOP
CENTAGE OF THE PERMANENT and rorallou of~...
4123.66 of the Revioed Code
IMPAIRMENT OF THE EMPLOYEE
In- a illjury or or:cvpallonlll(E) If • RIO RJI 1 FIREFIGHTER or
EQUALS OR EXCEEDS NINETY PER rnulll ia ....,. facial
disfipn- poltce ofliccr mokcs apphcaltOn for • find.
CENT, COMPENSATION FOR PERMA- mctll which eilber impain cw miry in tbe ina and the lldmini- linda dtetlro THE
NENT PARTIAL IMPAIRMENT SHALL llrtule inlpair the OIJpoiiUttilieo 10 ....,. or FIREFIOHTER OR POLICE OFFICER haJ
BE PAID mR TWO tlliNDRED WEEKS. .._., anploy-,lbe lllltniaillrAwlhall onror- a curliov-.lar and pulmonary
NO AWARD SHALL BE MADE UNDER mab • llWIId of c:empeawtat a it lliE d - 11 defined in dlvr11011 (W) of secDIVISION (A) OF THIS SECTION ADMINISTRATOR denta and riorr 4123 61 of lbe Reviled Code, and 1hat
BASED UPON A PERCENTAGE OF equ~ rn view Mille _.. of the dia- a~. . . ofebelbaft;' 'IFJREFIGHT·
IMPAIRMENT TI!AT, WHEN TAKEN 11...-, and ... to excoerl die ..... of ER'Scwpolioo ofliccr'a_..,...... ra modWITH ALL OTHER PllRCENTAOES OF ftve hnm' dollln. for dlt purpoae of
ically lil1vilablc in on1or to deer
PERMANENT IMPAIRMENT, EXCEEDS
- - . . . IWI!d, it ia ...- - lllartlill1ly - . . , . , . . . . " ' - · _.,
ONE
HUNDRED
PER
CENT
lbe a:pl.,.. il pinllrlly ~ed ia ..,. Clwmicll1 ft-. and ocher toxic
NOTWITHSTANDING DIVISION QI)OF or:cupodoa o r - •lbe limo or the......,. ...... aod tflbe lu 'II FlllEPIOHT·
SECTION m3 S II OF 1liE B,EVISED iltrMot' t .... . "•
ER. or police omo., aftor lbe finclina. hat
CODE, THE BUREAU Oil A SELF• 2 , or chlnpl • oco.,... m an
- - thia division hal
INSURING EMPLOYEl SHALL PAY A - --p r i..
_.,..... ia wlrichthe-IOJntOkc,
o r to lbe- arm cmp~oy.
PERMANENT PARnAI. IMPAIRMENT • Ill ..... itolll- - . d .. to - . - , chernicll1 ftrmos.IDII olberiOllrc

om"""

handicap..--..,.

-

or-

'

f

illniOr shall.UO.. to the ........ FIJU!.
FIGHTiiR or police om..., -01[!111
lo lilly pol"- of lbe .......
.....tly wap por woelt for • period oflhirry weeb, .........,rna u oflbe dta oflbe
diJcoalin.- .. clranp,llld for. period
of oevemy-ftve wecb immodialely follow••• 1be expira!i.., of lbe period of lhirly
tbe l!dminialnlor shall allow lite . .
. . . . FIREFIOHTER or police officer
lixly-aix and two-lbink per cerrl oflbe lou
of-naco roau1tin&amp; ditoctly urd aolely from
the eJranac of OCCUptllion bul no1 to exceed
• muimum of.. IIIDOWit equal to fifty per
&lt;enlofthe stalewide •vmse weekly wage
per week. No lllclr 4irMitMw FIREFIOHTI!Il or police ofticer ia enhtlcd to
m:ave more than ooe allowanee oa ICCOUnt
' of discontinuance of ernp1oymcrrt or dtar1JC
or OCCUptllion and lratefi11 lhal1 .-. for
111y period cluriq whicb the .......,..
FIREFIGHTER or police officer is
empiO)'ed rn an oc:cupolion ill which the
OlJ'OI'I1t to smolre, to&lt;ic: cbemiCOI
firrnea, and other llllUC vapors II !1!11 lltb- l l y lessdwr the~ in llteoccu)IIDDn in which lro 1liE FIREFlGHTER OR
POLICE OFFICER wu fonnerly employed
or for any period cluriq which the~
., fiREFIGHTER or polrcc officer may be
entitled to m:etve C0D1pen1ation or benefiu
Undcrl&lt;dron 4123.61ofthe Revised Cndc
on accoont of disability liorn • canliovucuJ.IIrtd puilnoJwy dr,_ The Jdministrttor may accord to the .......... FIRE·
FIGHTER or polrce oftieer medrcal and
other benefits In ecconiance With ICctton
4123.66 of the Reviled Code.
(F) An order iuued under DIVISION
(JI), (.Q), OR (E) OF lh11
Is oppeal·
able punuan1 1o section 4123.511 of the
IIA!vrlled Cndc bul is !1!11 api&gt;eaiablelo coun
under sectiOft 4123 512 of tbe R.. toed
Cndc
Sec.4123.58 (A)lncueaofpermanenl
10101~ IMPAIRMENT, the employee shall n::t"etve an award co continue until
Mt death in the amount orsaxty-stx ind rwolhirds per cent of ltio THE EMPLOYEE'S
averaae weekly wase, but, tiiCe)IIU otherWilt provided 111 division (B)ofthts secbon.
not more than a IIIIXImum am6un1 of
weekly compensatiorr which is equal 10
lll!ly·ll• and two-thirda per cent of the
llllewidc ....... weekly was• u defined
rn div11ion (C) of seclron 412362 of the
Revised Code, aor not less than 1 m1nimum
amount of weekly COmpensabon whteh 11
equal to fifty per c:entofthe llai&lt;Wide averIF weekly wage u defined m diVISIOn (C)
of sectton 4123.62 of the Reviled Cndc,
uniCII the employee's svmae weekly WIJC
ia ICOI titan fifty per cent of the slalewrdc
average weekly wage ac the lime of the
injury, in whrch evcntlroTI!E EMPLOYEE shall Reeivc compenuuon in an amoun1
cq111llo lrio TilE EMPLOYEE"S ovmae
weekly waae PERMANENT TOTAL
IMPAIRMENT MEANS THAT TilE
PHYSICAL OR MENTAL LIMITATIONS
THAT DIRECTLY RESULT FROM TilE
ALLOWED CONDITIONS IN THE
EMPLOYEE'S CLAIM OR CLAIMS
PREVENT THE EMPLOYEE FROM
ENGAGING IN SUSTAINED REMUNERATIVE EMPLOYMENT. A STAFF
HEARING OFFICER MAY CONSIDER
AN EMPLOYEE'S A&lt;lE IN DETERMINING WHETHER THE EMPLOYEE IS
PREVENTED FROM ENGAGING IN
SUSTAINED
REMUNERATIVE
EMPLOYMENT OR FROM ACQUIRING
THE CAPACITY TO ENGAGE IN SUSTAINED REMUNERATIVE EMPLOYMENT THROUGH TRAINING, REHA·
BILITATION. EDUCATION, OR OTI!ER
SIMILAR EFFORTS, SUBJECT TO
BOTH OF THE FOLLOWING·
(I) AN EMPLOYEE IS NOT ENTI- ·
TLED TO COMPENSATION FOR PERMANENT TOTAL IMPAIRMENT WHEN
THE EMPLOYEE'S AGE IS THE PRI·
MARY REASON THAT TilE EMPLOYEE IS PREVENTED FROM ENGAGING
IN OR FROM ACQUIRING THE CAPACITY TO ENGAGE IN SUSTAINED
REMUNERATIVE EMPLOYMENT;
(2) A STAFF HEARING OFFICER
MAY DETERMINE WHETHER AN
EMrLOYEE IS ENTITLED TO COMPENSATION FOR PERMANENT TOTAL
IMPAIRMENT WHEN THE EMPLOYEE'S AGE IS A REASON, BUT NOT TilE
PRIMARY REASON, THAT THE
EMPLOYEE IS PREVENTED FROM
ENGAGING IN OR FROM ACQUIRING
THE CAPACITY TO ENGAGE IN SUSTAINED REMUNERATIVE EMPLOYMENT
(B) In the even! the weekly workers'
oompenut1011 amount when combined with
disability benefits rr:cerved JIIU'Uiftllo the
Socral Securily Act IS lcJIIhon the siii&lt;Widc
aYCri&amp;C Weeki)' WBF U defined In diVISIOft
(C)of:rcction412l62 of thO Revrsed Cndc,
then the maximum IIJ'K)Unt of weekly com·
pcnsa~on shall be lhe slllcwrde a•mgo
weclcly waae u defined m d1vist0n (C) of
scouoo4123 62 of the RevisedCndc At any
time rhat social secunty d1Sib11ity benefits
temunate or are reduced. the workers' com·
pc:natiOn award shall be Jl!!Computed 10 pay
the max1mum amount perminod under thts

-ron

dJVIIlQn

(C) The loss orloJS ofuseofbuth hands
or both anns, or both fc:et or both l~~:gs. or
both cya, or of any two thereof, constitutes
to&lt;al ond pennanent ~ IMPAIRMENT, to becompcnllled accordmalolhio
sectiOn Compen•lion payable under this
secuon for permanent total ~
IMPAIRMENT is rn addirion to benefill
payable under dtviston {8) of sec:t1on
4123 l7 of lhe Rovroed Code.
Sec 412] 59 In cue an InJury to or an
Ot"CUpatlon•l diacue contracted by 1n
employ« cau..,ltio THE EMPLOYEE'S
death, benefill olrall be in the amount and
to the pet10III folloWiftJ.
(A) If there .-. no dcpertdonls, the disbunements from the state rrtSUI"'nCe fund it
hmited to lhc: e!llpemes provtded for in seclion 4123.66 of lite Revised Cndc.
(B) If lbmo .-. wMIIy dependent perIOOIIIIbe lmiC ofthedcadt,lbe - l y payment iii!XIy-&lt;bt and two-dtirda per carl of
the • - . - l y · butnol toc.....J
a maximum au 1 amount or weekly
_ . . . which ii _, "' I!JIIy....
IDd rwo-dlirdl per .... of the - i d e
...,.... weekly
u defined rn diVIsion
(C)of...rlan 4123.62 oflbe Revroed Code,
and not in aoy evart 1eaa lhon 1 minimum
af-ly ~ whtclr II

w•

... weKiy •110 u deftaed rn divilioa. (C)
of IOCiion 4123 .62 of lbe Rrlvilod
reprdlooaofthe--.........t~ywap; pro­

vided bowover,lbat tflbe- il
IDJury .-rvecl or .....,.uoo.I ·
filii dia&amp;nooed after 11111111)' I, 1976,
weekly paymern illl&lt;ly-Jix IDil
10 exceed a mu.unum
w~y~wn•m•r~w

stotewidca..,...weeklyw•ll
rn division (C) of -ion 4123.62 of tbe
Revised Code, provided lhat when 111y
cla...o is ....,iving to1111 diaabdtly OR
IMPAIRMENT..._......., a! the
death the wholly dependent penon 11 elraible for dte murmtan cornpcnutron provitlod r.. in lhia-..._
!ban one penon who is wholly
altberimeoflltedealbofthe
lldmittialntor of worlcers ',
shall ~y oppolltOn
of compensation payable
- t h e dcpendcnlpcnona.
mdivision (D) or thiS-ron.
( I) The payment u provided in thia
bOn lhall conrinuc from the dale of
of an iOJured. IMPAIRED, or disabled
employee unrd the death or rcmmrage
such dcpenclan1 I)IOUie. If the
lpoUIC' remurics, an amount equal to
years ofcompenaalion benefiu 01 t!o w'oekly ....., determined IO be applicable
andbeitfl
be pt1d in a lump tum to such spouae
no
eotnpatlllion
lhllll be paid
/II!Chfurther
_
_

":~:;",;;~~~:::::-::::..~

(2)d1visaon (8) of this section
eel in
lo wholly dependcnl penono other titan
apousc J!rall conthMre from the elate o~:
of 111 injured, IMPAIRED, or di
employee to • dcpcndenl u of the clale
death, other titan a spouse, ol the weekly
amount determined 1o be applicable and
betiiJ pard to such dependem odta lhon o
spouse, until Ira THE DEPENDENT
(a) Reaches &lt;iahtcen yean of •ae:
(b) If p11numg • fulllimene~::i:::
prosram while enrolled in an ac
cati0111l instiruuon and prD1f1111,
rwen1y-flve yeara of age,
(c) rf menllllly or physically i!ICIJ&gt;ACibltcd from hav•ng any eaminp. 11
longer .. i!ICI!JI'ICillled.
(C) lflhere •~ partly dependent
or the lime of the dealh the weekly p&amp;)'!lnent
Ill .!IIXty·IIX and ~thirds pel' tent
employcc'1 avcrqe weekly wage, DOt
exceed SIXty•IIX and two-thtt'ds
the statewide 1vcrage weekly w•se aa
definod m drviSron (C) of secrron 4123.62
of the Rcv1scd Code. and ahall concmue
su~~:h lime &amp;~the ldmtmsetacor m each cue
determines.
(0) The followrn&amp; persons ore pmumcd
to be wholly dependcnl for therr support
upon a deceased employee:
(I) A surv1vtng 1pouc who wu hv1n1
wilh the employe.:- at the 11me of death or a
surv1v1ng spouse who was sep&amp;l'lted from
lhc employee 11 the time of death r--., .. ~
of the aggression oflhc employee,

under~:the: ~age:o~f~:~5E

(2)orAIWCnly-five
ehrld
yoars.
tnne edt.ational procram
an accrodiled etlucationa1 inllitution
program, or over t11i4 THAT age ""''"''cally or mcntall)' mcapac:ttatcd from
•na. upon only the one parent who 1
lnbutm&amp; mon:: than one-half of the
for !uch ch1ld and with whom M

CHILD 11l1vtng It the h::~~~
such parent. or for whose
parvnt wu lcglllly hable 01
THE PARENT'S dcallr.
lt Is prtsumc:d that there it suflicicnt
dependency lo entitle a surviv1ng hlltunl
pll'C'nl or SUTVIVInl flltunl partnta. share
and share ahkc, with whom the: decedent
WIS living allbc Cunc ofMtdiCBth,IO I 101111
mmrmum award o f - AT LEAST FIVE
thougnd dol11n1

The administrator may take tnto consick:ration any cucumstanccs whic:h, at the
tune of the dcalh of lhe decoden~ elea~y
mchcatc prospcc1ive dependency on the pu1
orthc clannant and potentialsuppon on the
port of the clccodcnt No penon slutll be considcted a prospective dependent
SUCh penon IJ I member Of the
i

dcccalled"7c~.~~~~~~c:.l:and::l&gt;ean:';~"':i~=

the
THED
spouse, lmeal descendant, ancestor.
brother. or Sister The toll I award for any
all pto!lpcctiVO dependency to oil
cl11mants, except to a natur~l parent or
unl porents oflhe clocc:aod, sball nol
FIVE thouliA!Id dollm to be
Ironed amona them U the adn&gt;inilllnl'"
onlen
In all other cues, thc:quest1on ofd&lt;penckmc:y, in whole or m ptrt, shall be
mtncd in accordlnce wnh the fac:ts 1n each
particular cue cxinms: at the ttme of
rnjury n:sullingrn lhc death of such employee, but no penon shall be CONtdcrotl
dapendcnt unless such person 11 a monrber
of the fomrly of the dcceaaod employee,
bears 1&lt;11riM THE DECEDENT the r&lt;laoon
of surv1vmg spoU$C, hncal desc:endanl,
ancestor, • brother. or Siller
(E) An order iS!ued by the adminisll'lltor under dusscchon 11 appea!''blep..,ruartl
to setiiORS 4123 S II to
Rev1scd Code

Sec 4123 60 lAl Benefils In death •hall be pard lo tuclr one or more
lhe dependents oflhc decodent, for the
cfit
Df all
the dependcn:u:th~eE~::
tor of
workers'
compe:nsatton
The adminiStrator may
fill among the dependents m such
u Ira THE ADMINISTRATOR deernsj•lll
and equ11ablc Payment to a dependent
sequent tn right m1y be made, tfthe
1s1rator deems 1t propc:r, and opentet
ehlr)[e Ill other clarmslhcn:for Ill&lt;: de[,.._

dents ur person to whom benefita an:
shall apply the ,.... to the usc of the
eral beneflci1ne:s thereof ICCOrding to
Rlptctive clalftiS upon the~~ for support, m cornphance wrlh the flndiiiJ and
dn-ec:tton of the admmistrmor
In all . _ of death where lbe tlcpen.
dena_, IIIIMviiiJ - - OIIO(l'tt. . .
childJcn, n il suffrcienl for the 1111'1li¥irr&amp;,
spouoo 10 apply to the admrnil1rtlur
behalf of lite lljii!UICIIrtd millorctuldrar
cues whmlllllbe dependenu an:
• Ju..-dilll or ne&lt;~ fiicnc1 of ouch
depeodenlllhall apply.
In all cua when: 10 IWird hid
mttde on account of lempotll) DISABILJ.

1

Ctreumllaacel 10 eliCit . . . c:ue. If the
deccdeint would have beat lawfully errbded
for an sward at tbe lime of
ltio •leatl~o !he adrmnistralor...,. after 111.,.
fllelory proof to WIUfttll an award and JNIY·
MAY owm! and pay on.....,., not
Ol!COOiiiiiJ the COI!IJ~OD whicb lbe tleee•
den! mighl bave .-rved, but for lrio THE
DECEDENT'S c1eatb. b the period ~or to
dte clare of ltio clealh. to such of dte depenof the decedent, or for ICMCCI ,...
on acr:oua1 of lite last d!Mu or death
of~JCh&lt;lr:co~, u theadarini..-dcterill aceorclance with lite cin:unutlnt:ea
each such cue, lrul such p11ymen11 may
made only .. ..,.. rn which application
compensation wu made in the manner
by th11 dtaplcr, durin&amp; the lifetime

or within one yeoraftcr the death o f illj....J.IMPAIRED, ..-diubled perAn order wued by the Jdrninnrtrator
lhra- DMSION 11 appellllble
put'IIIIIDtto-4123 511 oftheR&lt;Yised
but 111 no1 appetlallle ro coon Wider
4123.512 of the Rmsed Code.
!JillliE DEATH OF A CLAIMANT
IS ENTitLED TO PAYMENT
UNIJER A SETTLEMENT AGREED TO
EFFECTIVE IN ACCORDANCE
SECTION 4123.65 OF THE
B,E1(1SE!D J:ODI; DOES NOT ABATE
SETTLEMENT. PAYMENT OF
THAT SETTLEMENT S11ALI, BE MADE
TO THE DEPENDENTS OF THE DECEDENT OR, IF THERE ARE NO DEPENDEN'I$, TO TilE CLAIMANT'S ESTATE
Sec.4123 61. TheavCI'IJCweeklywaac
tnJured employee al the bme of the
. lite lruil upon
to compute benefill. FOR OCCUPA1'1miAL DISEASE CLAIMS. THE
1\VIOK!'&gt;Uc WEEKLY WAGE AT TilE
OF DISEASE IS THE BASIS
WHICH TO COMPUTE BENE·

ED TO AN I!MPLOYBE P\JRSUANT TO
THIS CHAPTI!R FOR ANY PERIOD OF
TIME IN WHICH 1111! EMPLOYEE IS
ENII.OIJ.ED AS A fULL. OR PART·
TIMI! STUDENT IN A PUBIJC OR PRJ.
VATE CO!LI!GE OR UNIVERSITY,
INCWDINO A TECHNICAL COLLEGE
CREATED PURSUANT TO CIAPTI!Il
JlS7 OF THE REVISED t.ODE OR A
COMMUNITY COLLEGE AS DEFINED
IN SECTION 33,. 01 OF 11iE JLI!VISED
CODE.
(B) On cach filii clay of laartMy,lbe curr=t muimum rnondt1y benelil .......,
provided m ICidions 4123.412, 4123.413,
and 4123.414 oflbe Revised Code in injury
COIIOSihall be tldJutled bued orr dte Untied
s..... depanrnent or labor'• .......~ ....
surnorpnoeinclea. The_..,. inmue
m the COli of liYIOIUIIDI lbe Index fiJ!U!'
for tbe first clay of Seplombea- of the precediiiJ year and lbe filii day ofSeplombeaof lbe year pm:odina dtet year shall be
applied to tbe moxirnuata in et'tect orr the
procedinJ thirty-ftrll day of Det:omber "'
olrllio tbe...,..... ill the cool ofhYiftl dur•111 dtet year.
In detcrmrnina the rnaoue ill the !!Ill!•
imum benefill for any year after 1972, lbe
bue shall be tbe nolional corrsumer price
rndex orr the firot clay of Seplember of the
procedina year. Tiro lt1CRIIC rn the rnde• for
lbe applicable twclvc·monlh pennd lhall be
delennlned and shall be divided by lbe bate
IIICd. The resultills pen:entqe shall be
apphed to the cxlltlna: maximums to amve
at the new muunuml.
(C) Effective January I, 1974, and each
firot clay or 111!1111)' ~. tbe eumn1
muunum weekly batefrt ltDOUI!!I provided in scctrons 4123.56, 412H8, and
4123 59,anddivision(B)of-4123 57
of tbe Revised Code lhllll be JdJUIIed bued
on &amp;be 1nc:reut or decrale an the ltlleW1de
avenac weekly waae.
"S101ewide avmgc weekly wage"
means the.....,. weekly eaminp of Ill
worbn rn Olno employmatt tubje&lt;l lo
Otap;er4141 oflbeRovioedCodeudelermiaed • of the firtt clay of Scpoember for
the r- full clllenclarqUITiet1 precedrng the
filii clay of Jitly of each year, by lbe admintstrator of lhe bun:au ·of employment lei'·

......

The staleWtde avmse weekly w..e to
be used for lbe determitllllton of compensatron for ony employee who JUstaint an
rnjury....... WHO DIES, or who contracll an ocr:upationlll dt...,. WITI! A
In...., of1etttponty -1 drsabdily the
DATE OF DISEASE '!HAT ARISES durlhe fil'll rwelve weeks for iRBihc sublcquent c:alendar year beammng
eornpetllllbon 11 payable aball be with tbe filii day of Janllll')', oball be the
on the full weekly WI8C of the Slllewtde avena&lt; weekly Wl80 10 dcler•
lhe time of the
or at the mmed •oflbe prior fint day ofSeptember
DATE Jdjusted to lbe next hrgher even mullrple of
di!easeltosiM, when a
one dollu
place of employmenl
wortina
Any chan&amp;c rn bencfiiiiiOOWIISII&lt;ffec.
time in order co d1v1de work among tlve With re.pect to mJunea IUitained, occu"::l:~:ulbebweauofworlcers'cornparional dileaseo contracted, and dea1ha
p
shall take lhal fact mto consider- occuniJra during the calenclar year for
abon when detcrmrnmg the w... for the wht&lt;h adJUttmenlll made.
fint rwelve weeks o( lempOAI)' tota.l dtlIn dderminins the change m the nwuobiltly
mum batcfits for 111y year oftot 1978, the
Cornpensai!Oft for Ill funber temporary bate shall be tbe Jlllt'Nide average weekly
roraldiiJbrhly lhall be buod .. providod for w..e on the firot clay of September of the
pcmranerll-.., IMPAIRMENT cloimo
preccdrng year.
In dealh, permanenl tolal ~
AS USED IN TillS DIVISION, "DATE
IMPAIRMENT CLAIMS, permanent par- OF DISEASE" MEANS THE DATE AN
- . . , . IMPAIRMENT clalftll, and OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE IS FIRST
impr11rmen11 of ummp clauttJ, the DIAGNOSED BY A LICENSED PHYSIc.inroJnfaor the decedcnfs •-..• week- ClAN, OR FOR AN OCCUPATIONAL
lywopfortheyearprecedingthetnjuryor- .OIS~E DESCRIBED IN DIVISIONS
AT the clale~ (A) THROUGH (AA) OF SECTION
paliiMI OF dr,.... 1ro1iro 111be weekly
4123.61 OF TilE REVISED CODE, OR
wage upon whrch compctlllbon shall be OTHER OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE
bued In uccmirnng the avenge weekly THAT RESULTS FROM EXPOSURE TO
wop for the year JIRVIOUI to tbe iDJUtytor FIBROSIS-PRODUCING OR TOXIC
lhe elate
DUSTS, FUMES, MISTS, VAPORS,
OF di..... Jrosi-, any period of GASES, OR LIQUIDS, OR OTI!ER TOXIC
unemployment due 10 11elmcss, industnol
MATERIALS, OR A COMBINATIQN OF
dept&lt;ssron, stnke, lockoul. or orber cause TI!OSE, TI!EDATETI!ATTI!EEMPLOYbcyonrl the employee's coni!VI shall be
EE FIRST MISSES WORK AS A RESULT
climmated
OF THE OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE
In eues where there . . '!P""'al Cit·
Sec. 4123 64. (A) The adminiolntor of
cumslaneet Wider whtch lhe ovcraac week· worl:ert' compcftlllion, under special crrly waae llll!ftOI JUS!Iy be ddcnmned by CWNIIIICCI, and when the sune is deemed
applying this section. the ldministnlor of edvtsable for che purposr of rendtrins the
worke11' compensation. rn delennining the Injured, IMPAIRED, or drJObled employee
avmse weekly wage ttl IUCh Clltl, shall fitrAACial relief or for the purpose of fursuch mctltnd u wiU enable hiM THE theri11JitioTI!EEMPLOYEE'Srchabdtla·
t1on, may commute payments of c:ompcnTHE saaion or benefits 10 one or more l~sum
SHALL
NOT paymen!l
(B) The adminr1!111tor ohall adopt rules
THE AVERAGE WEEKLY
FOR OR COMPENSATION whrch lei forth lbe polrcy lbr awanhng lump
AWARIJED TO A CLAIMANT PUR- !Aim payments The NICI lhall
(I) Enurnenr1e the allowable purposes
OIIJ&gt;NT TO THIS CHAPTER FOR ANY
for
payments and the eondit1001 for mak·
PERIOD OF TIME IN WHICH THE
mg
such
award&amp;,
CLIIIM•'NT IS ENROLLED AS A FULL(2) &amp;umente the rnax•mwn reduct1on
PART-TIME STUDENT IN A PUBLIC
rn cornpen~~tionllllowoblc;
PRIVATE COLLEGE OR UNIVERSI(3) Enumerate the docllm&lt;ntalion necINCLUDING A TECHNICAL COL-CREATED PURSUANT TO euary to award 1 lump-lUI!! paymcnl;
(4) Requr~ tlulllll chocks mr:ludc the
3357 OF THE REVISED
OR A COMMUNITY COLLEGE clamunt 11 1 poy&lt;;e, tlc:cplwhm the cheek
DEFINED IN SECTION 3354.01 OF 11 for the payment of 1111omcy'o fees m
accordance With JOCtiOft 4123 06 of the
THEREVIIS ED CODE
A DETERMINATION MADE BY THE Rn'llled Code, 1ft whtch cue the attomey
ADMINISTRATOR UNDER THIS SEC- shall be named .. the only payee on the
IS APPEALABLE PURSUANT TO check;
(l) RcqurR • fully complcled and cutrenl
SECTION 4123511 OF THE REVISED
BUT IT IS NOT APPEALABLE apphcatton mcludiRJ notary and seal, and
(6) Specrfy procedun:s to mw a
TO COURT UNDER SECTION 4123.512
clatmant aware of the rechlctton in amount
OF THE REVISED CODE
AS USED IN THIS SECTION, "DATE of ..,mpensaiiO!\ whrc:h wrll occur.
(C) An order of the Jdmrntst!1110r iNuccl
OF DISEASE" MEANS THE DATE AN
OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE IS FIRST under tlus sect1on ,,....,_..... .,....... to
DIAGNOSED BY A LICENSED PHYSI- seclion4123551ofthe ReviiCdCodebul
CIAN. OR FOR AN OCCUPATIONAL 11 001 appealable to coun under section
DISEASE DESCRIBED IN DIVISIONS 4123.512 of the Revrsed Code.
Sec 4123 65 (A) A btC fund employ(A) THROUGH (AA) OF SECTION
412368 OF THE REVISED CODE OR er or the employecofsuclt an employer nuy
OTHER OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE file.., application wilh the atlmmr....- or
THAT RESULTS fltOM EXPOSURE TO worlcen' compe!IIIIIO!\ for .......,..1 of a
final setllcment of 1 cia 1m under thts ~hlp­
FIBROSIS-PRODUCING OR TOXIC
OUSTS, FUMES. MISTS. VAPORS, ter The spphCIIIorr olrall mr:ludc lbe aenleGASES. OR LIQUIDS, OR OTHER TOXIC menl aareemen~ AND EXCEPT AS OTHMATERIALS, OR A COMBINATION OF ERWISE PROVIDED IN THIS DIVI·
THOSE, THE DATE THAT THE SION. be 11gned by the elanriant and
CLAIMANT FIRST MISSES WORK AS A employer, and clearly aet forth the ein:umRESULT OF lHE OCCUPATIONAL DIS. IW!C&lt;I by......, ofwhlcb the poopoood aetdcmcnt 11 deanod dcairlblr and lhlllbe parEASE
the aetdenenl
Sec. 4123.62. (A) Ifit il Clllblisltod dtel tiel ..... to the Ierma
ltllnJute&lt;l.l":fl'AIRED, cw disabled employ- tgreemcnt ps · J d It a ••· A
wu or 1uch IJe and expenence W,hen CLAIMANT MAY FILE AN APPLICAm)ute&lt;l. IMPAIRED, or drublcd u 1hat TION FOR AN AGREEMENT WITHOUT
natural coDchttons INI THE AN EMPLOYER'S SIGNATURE. IF A
EMPLOYEE'S . . _ worr1d beexpocltld to CLAIMANT FILES AN AGREEMENT
tncn:ue. the admintiD'Itor of workera' WITHOUT AN EMPLOYI!Il'S SIGNATURE, AND TilE EMPLOYER STILL IS
c::;:~: ~ma~yEMPLOYEE'SaCO!llidcr dtet foci m DOING BUSINESS IN THIS STATE, TilE
01
weekly wop. EXCEPT THAT TilE ADMINISTRATOR SHALL SEND WRITADMINISTRATOR SHALL NOT TEN NOTICE OF 1liE APPLICATION
ADJUST THE AYERAOE WEEKLY TO THE EMPLOYER IMMEDIATELY

.~D!!I~~~:~~~~~~~:';;~~4

or

1

TION, AND A SECOND WRI'ITEN
NOTICE wm!IN FOR'IY.f!VE DAYS
AFTER 11il! FIRST NOTICE IS SENT, IF
1liE EMPLOYER DOES NOT RESPOND
TO THE FIRST NOTICE IF THE
EMPLOYER FAILS TO RESPOND TO
11iE NOTICE WITHIN SIXTY DAYS
AFTER RECEIPT OF 1liE NOTICE, OR
IF 1liE CLAIM 111AT IS TilE SUBJECT
OF 11iE AGREEMENT NO LONGER
REMAINS IN THE ACCIDENT OR
OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE EXPERI·
ENCE OF THE EMPLOYER. THE
AGREEMENT NEED NOT CONTAIN
1liE EMPLOYER'S SIGNATUIIE. AN
agreemem need no1 be oipied by too AN
cmployer-~WHO 11 no 1otrpr
doilla busrness mlllro. THIS STATE. If a
s111e lirnd employer or 111 employee of such
an employer hat 001 filed 111 applir:alioo for
a fural settlematl under thil diVIIion, the
adminr-lor may file .. application ,..
behalfoflbe employer or the employee. proVIded dtet dte lldmittillnlor &amp;!VCI nolice of
the filing II! the anploycr and the employee otid to tbe -ladveofroconlo(tbe
employer llrtd of the employee rmnsedily upon the filma. An applrcsuon filed by
the edttunisttator shall contain all of the
mfonnat10n and 11gn1ture1 required of an
employer or an employee who files an appli·
cation under thtl diVISion. Every self·inaur·
mg employer tha1 entcn. into 1 final aetllcment agreement w1th an , employee shall
matt, widnn te\'cn da)'l or executtnl the
agreement, a copy of lhe ogrmnenllo the
adnun1strator and the employee'• representative. The administrallor shall piece the
agreement mlO tbc claunut's file.
(B) Except as provided in div11rons (C)
ond (D) of lh11 _,on, 1 settlement oped
to under this sccuon 11 bindrng upon all parties thereto and as to items, 1njunu, and
occupatronol drseues to wh11:h the settlemenl applies
(C) No settlement agrtecl to under diviston (A) ofth11 section or A(lleed to by a self•nsunna: employer and the self-1nsunng
employer's employee shall take effect until
lhnty days after the adnunlltrator approves
the oettlcment for swelirnd employees and
aqrloycrs, or after the self-ursunng employer and employee sagn the final settlement
_ . , During the thr!ly-clay pennd, the
employer. employee. or ldnunasrrator, rnr
stale fund settlcmenls. and the employer or
employee, for self·trllunq settlements,
may withdraw consent to OR MAY
OBJECT TO the sealement by an employ·
er providing wnnen nota~~:e 10 the employ·
er's employee and the admmastrator or by
an employee providing wntten notice to the
employee's employer and the odmitn!llrltor,
or by the adm1rustntor provtdins wntten
nonce to the state fund employer and
employee.
(D) AI tbe timeora.,......tio any final
settlemenl_.l under drv111011 (A) of
th•s section or agreement between • selfInsuring employer and the self-msunng
employer's employee, IN CASES IN
WHICH ONE OR MORE PARTIES TO
THE AGREEMENT ARE UNREPRESENTED. the adrmnistrator, for state rund
settlements, and the self-rnounna employer, for self-msunng settlements, unmech·
alcly shall send a copy of lbe agrcemcnt lo
the mduatrial eomm1uaon who shall aaatgn
the matter to a staffhearing officer The staff
hearing otrrcer slutll delermtne, widnn lhe
time hnntation1 spcc:tfied m dlv11ton (C) of
thts section, whether the settlement agrecmenttsorisnot~

liM CLEARLY UNFAIR lftbe llaffhearma officer detmmnes wnhm that time penad that the settlement agreement 11 c:le.rly
unfatr, the sl8ff hcanns officer shall1uue
an order di,.pprovrng the settlcmcrtt agroementlfthe Jlaffhcuing officcrdeterminea
thac the settlement agreement 11 noc clearly
unfatr or fads to act w1thm those hme hmt!S. lhe settlement agroemcnr IS opproved
(E) A scttlemcnl enlered rnto 101der lh11
sectwn may pertam to one or more cla1ms
of 1 claimant,. or one or more parts or a
claim. or the compen11non or benefits ptr·
taming to e1ther, or any combm111on thereof, provided thai oothtnB m thiS »et:bon shall
be interpreted to requtre a claimant to enter
mto • settlement agreement for every claim
dtel has been filed wrlh the burau of worken' compensa11on by that cl.tunanl under
Cbap&lt;er4121 ,4123 , 4127 ,or4131 ofthe
Revroed Code
(F) A settlemenlenlered mto under thiS
sechon 1s not appeallble under secCton
4123 511 or41ll S12 of !he Revrsed Code
1m FOR PURPOSES OF DETERMINING WHETHER A PARTY IS
UNREPRESENTED AS SPECIFIED IN
DIVISION (Jl) OF THIS SECTION, A
PARTY IS CONSIDERED REPRESENTEDONLY IFTHE PARTY HAS THE SER·
VICES OF ONE OF THE FOLLOWING
PERSONS·
(I) AN ATIORNEY ADMITIED TO
TilE PRACTICE OF LAW IN THIS STATE;
(2) A DULY AUTHORIZED REPRESENTATIVE OF AN EMPLOYEE ORGANIZATION RECOGNIZED BY THE
EMPLOYER FOR COLLECTIVE BARGAINING PURPOSES,
(3) A PERSON REGULARLY
ENGAGED IN THE BUSINESS OF PROVIDING WORKERS' COMPENSATION·
REI:ATED SERVICES TO EMPLOYERS,
(4) AN EMPLOYEE OF THE SELF·
INSURING EMPLOYER WHOSE JOB
DUTIES OR RESPONSIBILITIES
INCLUDE PARTICIPATION IN THE
ADMINISTRATION OF TilE SELFINSURING EMPLOYER 'S.WORKERS'
COMPENSATION PROGRAM
Sec 4123.651. (A) The anployer of •
ciaunant who 11 in.Jute&lt;l, IMPAIRED, 0(1111al&gt;led rn !he course of ltio THE
CLAIMANT'S employmenl may ~urrt,
without the approval oftht adnuruatntoror
the tnduatriaJ commluMJn, that the datmant
be ••amined by a pbysician orlhe employer's c:hotQC one ttmc upon any tssue asserted by the cmp1oyec or • pbyo11:r.. of the
employee 'a choke or which 11 to be considered by the cornmrNton Any Nttber
requall for medical ••amrnaltons shall be
made to the c:ommtuJOn which shall consider and rule on the ~uat The employerllltll pay lbecoaofony cum.......,rnitiared by tbc employer.
(B) The burau of worl:cn' tioa shall "'-" • form for lbe nolctuo of
medi1:11l rnformMioa, recotda, and _repoftl
nolalive to the iuuei - . . y for lbe
aclmi- of 1 cloim llftllar this chap-

r

...

crm:ntJiped
-.rda, and ........ wheo ' - - ' b y lbe
ernployu Tiro &lt;rlll*&gt;yer pnllllpl1y obllll proVIde r;opica of Ill medical rnfonnalioa,
n&gt;r:ardl,andreportltotheburau aodto the
claimant orllio THE CLAIMANT'S reproICI!!Oiive . _ IOC[UCJl
(C) If, wi1bou1 ped ....._ ., employee Rfules to IUbmil to any examination
achcdulcd under tbia oection or ret1taea to
re1eue or.....,. • rc1eue for any medi~:~~l
mfonnalioo, rot:or&lt;1, or rqm dtllu required
to be released under Ch11 ICCfiOn ud
involves an iuue pcmnent to tbe condition
alleged rn the eloim.ltio 1liE EMPLOYEE'S riaht lo baveltio TilE clorm for...,_
penulion or benefill CO!IJidcred, rflrio TilE
claim 11 pcndina before the admi-.
THE commiuioa, or • dittrict or llaffhearina oft"~. or to receave aoy payment for
COtltpatlllion or benefill previously aruned, 11 auapendec1 duriiiJ the pennd of

Rfusal
(D) No bumu or comm111ron employee obllll Iller any medical report -ned
from 1 heallh care provider tbe bu-. or
commiSsion hat aelected or cause or t&lt;qUest
the health care provrdd lo ll1tcr or change
a report. Tbe bureau and c:ommt!lsion lhall
make any......,. for clari6canon of a helllth
care provider's report rn wrihng and lhall
provide • copy of the ~uesl 1o the affecled part1es and thetr representatives 11 lhe
time of making the request
Sec. 4123.66 (A)(JJ In addition to the
compcnsabon provtded for In dus chlpler,
the adm•nistmor ofwortcrs' compensatt&lt;m
ahall drsbune and poy from the . - msuranc:e ftmd the amounts for medical, nurse,
and hospillll IIC!VI&lt;CS and medicrne u lro
TilE ADMINISTRATOR deema proper,
and, tn cue deeth ensues l'rnm the mJury or
ocoupatiorrlll diaeuc,lro THE ADMINISTRATOR sltllll disbune and pay from dte
fund reuonable funeral cxpensea m an
amount

EQUAL TO fiVE THOUSAND doll or&gt; OR
THE TOTAL COST OF THE FUNERAL.
WHICHEVER IS LESS The bureau of
worken' compensabon shall re1mbune
anyone. whether clependent, volunteer, or
odterwrse, who pays the funeral expenses of
any employee- death..,... from ony
InJury or occupauonal d1sase u provided
1n thiS secnon The admintstrator may
adopt rules, with the adVICC and consent of
the worten' eompcnsalion overs1aht com-mission, with respec::t to fum1shma me.:hcal,
nune, and hospital service and medtcine to
mJured. IMPAIRED, or disabled employeeo
entitled thereto, and for the payment therefor. In cue an InJUry or 1ndustrialacc1dent
that injures an employee also causea damaae to the employee's eyeal....,, mific11l
teeth or other denture, or hearing atd. or m
the event an mJuty or occupalional d1sease
make~ it necessary or advtsable to replace,
replltr, or JdJUII the oame. the bwuu lholl
disburse and pay 1 nuonable amount to
repatr or RP)ace the same
(2) IF THE ADMINISTRATOR
DETERMINES THAT IT IS IN THE
EMPLOYEE'S BEST INTEREST TO
RECEIVE HEALTH CARE IN THE
EMPLOYEE'S HOME, TilE ADMINI5TRATOR SHALL DISBURSE AND PAY
FROM THE STATE INSURANCE FUND.
OR THE EMPLOYEE'S SELF·INSIJR·
lNG EMPLOYER, AS APPROPRIATE,
SHALL PAY THE AMOUNTS NECESSARY FOR IN-HOME HEALTH CARE.
INCLUDING THE COST OF SERVICES
NECESSARY ON A CONTINUOUS
BASIS, UP TO AND INCLUDING
TWENTY-FOUR HOURS A DAY. PRO·
VIDEO THAT THE ESTIMATED COST
OF THAT IN-HOME HEALTH CARE
DOES NOT EXCEED TilE ESTIMATED
COST OF RECEIVING THE NECESSARY HEALTH CARE OUTSIDE OF
THE EMPLOYEE'S HOME A DETER·
MINATION MADE UNDER DIVISION
(AJ(2) OF THIS SECTION IS APrEAL·
ABLE PURSUANT TO SECTION
4123 SII OFTHE REVISED J:()DE BUT
IS NOT APPEALABLE TO COURT
UNDER SECTION 4123 ll2 OF THE
.REVISED CODE
(B)(I) If an employer or • welfm: plan
lw provided to or on behllfohn employee any benefits or compensation for an
mJwy or otcuplttOflll dmue and thai
inJury or ~taooal d1sca5e ts detemuned
compensable under thiS chapter. the employer or 1 wei fare plan may requm th1t lhe
admtmstrator retmburse the employer or
welfare pl.an for the unount tfie employer
or welfare plan pa1d to or on behalf of the
employee in compensanon or benefits The
admtnt&amp;trator shall retmbune the employer
or welfare plan ror the compensahOn and
bCn.r.. _paid rf, at the bme the employer or
welfare plan provrdco the lrenefl!l or compensation to or on behllf of employee, the
rnJury or occupational diaeue had not been
dctcrmlttcd to be compensable under lhrs
chapter and ifthe employee wu not...., ...
rng cornpetii!IIIOR or betlefits under this
chapter for dtet rnJUty or occupaltOnlll drsease 1be admamstiBior shalt mmburse the
employer or welfare plan m the unount that
lhe administrator would have p11d 10 or on
behalf of the employee under lh11 chapter
If the lftjUry 01' OICCuplliOOBI dlsea&amp;e 0081nlll)' would have been detenmncd compensable under this chapter, If the employer IS I D'ICilt•J'Ited employer, the admtntS•
tralor shall adJUSC the amount of prenuum
next due fiom the employer accordmg to lhe
amount the admtDIIttlltor p1ys the employer The echmnurtrator shall adopl Ntes. in
aceorclance"wrtha..ptcr 119. of the Revised
Code, to Implement th11 division.
(2) As UJOd in this drvision, "welfare
plan" has the same D1CIDIOJ U in diVII;on
(l ) of29 U S.C.A. I002.
Sec 4123 68 Every employer: who 11
drsabled OR IMPAIRED becauae of the
contracttoo. of an oc:cupatiDNII disease ot the
depend~r&gt;l of an employee wltoae dealh IS
caused by an occupatioall dt~e~ae, 1s enbded to lbe CIOIIIpllllllio providod by ....
lioos 4123.5511!4123.59and4123.66 of the
Revrsed Code lltbjcct to the modtf!CI!IO!IS
rolating to oc:cupotionll1 di....., conwned
rn thll cbapot!&lt; An onlcr oftbe adminiS!ntor tiiUed under tbia IOCitOD II appealable
punutll!l•-4123 m anr14123.512
oftbe Revioed Code.
The IOIIowil!t- 110 OCCI!pllion111 d i - and cornpcrtllble II IUCb when
eoo- by .. -Ioyer: m the ooune of
the employtnem ia wltich such employee
wu _ .... IDII .... k&gt; lbe ttMUre of ..y

. ..
-

•

•

dOICriiiid .........otion. ,, dilellt

whicb -

lbe dellalilioa of on lioul ...... il .....,.....,le ......... "'
Ibis chopbor EVEIIIIIoqll k ilaot I!IOCtficolly lillocl ill tbia SCHEDULE
Deacriplioo of or mJury and
dcocriplion o f -(A) Amtnx· Hltldlilla of wool, hair,
brilllel. hides. and lkilla.
(B) Oloadal: Care or ony equmo onrmal
IR.dfmng from glanden, halldhna CIIQII or
I!UCb lllimol
(CJ Lead poiJonillg: fuly indusmlll
mVOIYUlS tbe use of lead Of IIi
pr&lt;pmtioos or cornpounda.
(D) Memll)l porsonmg: Any rndllllnal
illvol'lilla tbe use of rnaoury "' ''-'
preparations or cornpounda.
(E) Pbosphoruua pcniOIIilla-Any inclualrilllprocess invoiVInJ the ""' of phoaphoI'OUI or 111 prtpOlllionl 11t compounds
(F) Anenrc po11011101- Any rndustnlll
proceu mvoiYUIJ tbe use of II'ICIIIC: or stl
pn:poqiiOIIIOt" compounds.

(G) PoiiMilla by benzol or by nnroderivlbveaand llllido-&lt;lerivllrves of benzol
(drrutto-benzol, arulrn, and olhen). Any
andustnal processmvolv1ng the uu ofben·
zol or niuo-dcrivatives or amklo-derivahVeB
of benzol or ns prepan11001 or compounds
(H) PorsooiiiJ by psohne, ben:une,
naphtha, or other volallle petroleum products: Any inclustrial procea mvolvm1 the
use of psohne. benzine, 111phlha, or other
volallle petroleum producls.
(I) PotiOIIIIIJ by Cllboa brsulplude Any
mdusbUI process mvolvtng the use of carbon
brsulpllide or ns prq&gt;arauons or compounds

(J) PoiJonmg by wood al&lt;obol Any
mdllStnal process mvolvmg the usc of
wood alcohol or ats prqJU~IlOns

(K) lnf«tton or illftammauon of the skrn
on contact surfaces due to oils. cuttmg compounds or lubricants, dust, hquids. fu~.
gases, or vapon. Ally mdustnal process
involvmg lhe handhng or use of osls, cutring compounds or lubricants, or snvolving
contact w1th dust, hqusds. fumes. gases, or
vapors.
(L) Eptthehon cancer or ulccnhon of the
sk1n or of the corneal surface ofthe eye due
to cubon. p1tch. tar, or tarry compounds
llandlmg or mdustnll use of carbon, p1tch.
or tarry compounds
(M) Cornpmsed arr Illness· Any rndu,_
tnal process earned on m compressed atr.
(N) Cl!bon dro•ide porsomng. Any
process 1nvolvmg the evolution or resultmg
In the escape or carbon dioxide
(0) 8rm or ZIOC po110111ng Any process
mvo1Vln8 the manufacture. founding. or
refinmg of brass or the mehmg or smelting
of zmc.
(P) Manganese dioxtde potson1ng Any
process tnVolV1RIIhc 8J1rnbns or m11J10g Of
manganese d1ox1dc or lhc estape of man.gancsc dioxide dust.
Radmm p01sontng Any lnduS!"al
process mvolvmg the use of rachum and
other rl'hoactlVe substantes m lum1nous
patnt
(R) Tenosynovilis and prepalellar bunlbs. Primary tenosynovitiS charactenz.ed by
a passtve effus1on or ~;repltus mto the tendon sheath of the flexor or extensor muscles of the hand, due to frequently repetitiVe motions or vibnuons, or prepatellar
bursitis due to conhnued ~ssure
(S) Cluome ulceratton of the skm or
nasal passages Any mdustr•l process
tnvol'&lt;lmg the usc of or direct contact w1th
chromiC acrd or b~ehromates of1mmontum.
potassnan, or sod1um or the1r preperattons
(T} Pc:Jtasstum cyan1dc po150nmg Any
tndusmal process tnvolvtng the use of or
d1rect contact With potustum cyanide
(U) Sulphur dtoxuJe ~&gt;ISODing Any
tndustnal pnx:css m wh1ch :sulpttur diOXIde
gas 111 evolved by the expansion of hqutd
sulphur dioxide.
(V) Beryl hom. Bcrylhos1~ means a dis·
..,. of the lungs caused by btellhtiiJ berylhum in the form of duSI or fumes. produc108 charactensuc changes m tt.e lungs and
demonstnted by K-ray e.ununauon. by
bropsy or by autopsy
Thl! chapter does not entllle an employee or 1tio THE EMPLOYEE'S dependents
to com~sat1on, mcd1cal trettment, or
payment of funeral expenses for d1sabilny.
IMPAIRMENT. or dealh from bet)llhos"
wrless the employee lw been subjected to
mJunous exposure to beryll1um dust or
fumes m ltio THE EMPLOYEE'S employment 1n rh1s 5tate precedmg Me THE
EMPLOYEE'S disablement OR IMPAIRMENT and only m the ~em of such dlsobilrly,IMPAIRMENT. or death resuhrng
within eight years after lhe last lnJUOOUS
exposure, provided that such c1ght-ycar ltmtiii!On doel no1 apply 10 dtsabthty,IMPAIRMENT. or death from expoiUI'e occumna
after January I, 1976 In the evenl of death
following continuous total d111b1hty OR
IMPAIRMENT commcncmg w1thm etghl
years 1fter the last IDJUROUS exposure, the
rt!C)lliremcn1. ofcbth wtdun etsht yean after
the Jut inj\mOUS C.lpoiUR docs ftDI apply
Before award1ng compensation for parlrlll or tolll drsabrhty OR IMPAIRMENT or
clealh dueiO bet)llhoors.lbe admtnr!llrltD&lt; of
workers' compensation shall refer the daim
to a qualified med1cal spec:•hst for examlnltton and recommendation with regard Ill
the dt-11, the ....... or the drsobrhry OR
IMPAIRMENT, the •IU~ of the drubrh•
ry OR IMPAIRMENT, whetber pennii!Otll
or 1emporary. the cause of delth, and other
medrclll questions connotted wllh the elaim
An employee shall submit to such exam1·
naooru, uM:Iudtng ehmcal and :H iy ~~:xam­
lnlhON. as dte ldmin1srrator requ1res In the
event that an employee refuses 10 submn to
exumnations, n.:tuchna: chnKJI and x-ny
enmtnahons. after nonce fi'Oin the admm·
111r1tor, or 1n the event that a clanNnl for
compen11tton for death due to berylliosis
fads to prodllce neceuary consen!l and per.
m1bi, after not1ce from the edrmm&amp;trator. so
tNt such autopay eumlftllicn and'te5l5 may
be perfornred, then all nahll for compenaiiO!\ . . fomtlad. The -able compen- ohur:h ~rst and lite expenses of cxamitttlliorra and !CstJ olrall be paid,
rflbe claim 11 allowed. u port ofthe eq&gt;ent·
a ofthe clarm, otherNioe IIley shall be paid
from tho surplus fimd.
(W) CutlioVM&lt;Uiar, pulmorwy, or ....
puotory d i - rncuned by fin fill 1
FIREFIGHTJiRS or polrc:e ol!ic:cn fr&gt;llowIIIJ . _ 01 heat, smoke, toxrc pocs,
chemiclll tirmes and other toxic...,..._
fuly canliov...,war, pulmonary, or raplrt·
tory dioeue of a liN fie!
FIREFIGHT-

co•

ioduccd by lbe cumulalive ell'ecr .r ·-"
.... lo beal.-the illhalalion of smoke,
..... fumel and-"'""' 1111&gt;IIORCCJ m tbe pcrfortniDCC of ltio THEIR
dury"COIIIIitulela pterumplioo. which IMY
be nofuted by lllllrmalive ..-,lhallllcb

of~and~~~~~~~

occumd
m thccoune
ltioTI!EIRcmp~-

thii i&lt;Ciron, ~

...... lily ,...~or member of •• ~~x~

constttuted fire department of a m
corporation or 10wnsh1p, whether
volwrreer, and "poiiC&lt; officer"
~JUiat member of 1 lrtwfully ~::
poltee r:1eputment of 1 muruc1pal
taon, 1ownsh1p or county, whether p1ud
voluneeer
Th11 chapter doeo not entitle ,,.,,._.,.
., FIREFIGHTiiR, or police officer,
THE FIREFIGHTER'S
CER·s dcpcndcnu to cornpcn/11111011,
teal tre.tment, or payment of
&lt;&lt;petliCI for disabiilly,lMPAIRMENT.
death from 1 canbovucu~Jf, pulmonery, or
r&lt;Spirorory dtSCISt, unlca the
FIREFIGHTER or police otrrcer hat been
lubjiCI to lnJWlOW CXJK'I'R to hell.
toxiC pses, chemiCI.I fumes., and other toxic
substances m Mt lliE
OR POLICE OFFICER'S
lh11 state prt&lt;edmg ltio THE

-•••.
•

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has been after January I ,

provided rn drvrsion (E) ofsecrion •112'!.57
of tbe Reviled Cndc
Cornpenaallon on KCOUnt of cm!iovAI~'
cular, pulmonary, or rapntory dtSCIICI
~ FIREFIGHTiiRS and pohce
officers is pa)'lble only 1n me event of tern·
potlll)' 10111 diSObt hly, pentlllft&lt;l!l tOial •
...,. IMPAIRMENT, ..- dealh, rn accordance w1th acct.1on 4t23 S6, 4123 .58, or
4123 59ofdte Revised Cndc. Medtc~l,lto5p1ral, and nun1ng expenses 1ft pay1ble in
accotclanoo wrththistbapler. C.......,.IOO,
medic:al, hosp1tal, and nunmg expenses ue
payable only m ttie event of such dublh·
ly,IMPAIRMENT. or death ~suiting withIn e1ght yean after the Jut mjunous e~
sure; prov1ded that such eaght-year hmlll·
11on does not apply to dt!IBbihty.
MENT. or death from
oec'urrit&gt;B
after- J1111uary I, 1976. In the event c•f ck2th
f~llow1ng ~;onlmuous total d1ub1hty
IMPAIRMENT commencmg w1thm
yean after the last Injurious exposure,
reqwrement of death wtthin ctghl years
the lasl tnjUOOUS Cll.po&amp;ure does not apply.
Th1s chaptcJ does not enltlle 1 ~
• FIREFIGHTER or poiiCC officer. or ltio
THEdependeniSOF A FIREFIGHTER OR
POLICE OFFICER. to compensatron, med·

""J'J"'"

real, hoipilal, --:::;:::.•l:'~~ft~~:
ment of funenl CXpense:!l for
IMPAIRMENT. or death due to 1
vascular, pulmonary. or t&lt;Silitl'lory diseue
an the event of failure or onnsston on the
of the
officer truthfully to .!llatc, when
employment, lhe place. duranon.and
of JJRVIOUS employment In IIISWet' tO
mqutry made by the employer
Before awardins compen1111on for dlsab&lt;hly,IMPAIRMENT, or dealh under this
dtVlSIDn. the ldl'lllnl5trator shall reb
cl11m to a quahficd mediCal spec1ahst
examinatiOn and rccommendauon
regard to the dllgiiOSII, the extent of
abrhty OR IMPAIRMENT, lhe cause
death, and otltt:r medrclll questionS
nected w1th the cla1m A ........... ~
FIGHTER or pol1cc officer shall submn
such ex1minat1ons. mcluding cit meal and xray eummatmns. at:~ th~~: ad~=::
rcqmn:s In the event tblt a
Fl REFIGHT Elf"' police otTrcer r&lt;fuses to
submll to exam1nat1ons. uacluchng chntcll
and lH~ exammat1ons. after notice from
the admm1strator. or m the event lha1 a
claimant for compensAtion for death under
thts d1VISKII1 f11ls 10 produec necessary coo"""' and pennrls. after .!JOlt&lt;&lt; from the
admm1strator, so that such aut&lt;.,.v .,..,.;. ·
nauon and tests may be performed, 1hcn all
nahL&lt; for eornpensalton ar&lt; f&lt;Jtf011ed
rcuonable compc...llotl of such spc&lt;:iali!ils
and the expenses of eummatton and
shalt bepa1d. 1flheclatm ts allowed. u
oft he
shall be pard fn&gt;m the surplus fund.
{X} S11tc:Os1s S1hto1ts means a
of the lungs caused by btathrng silica dl~t
(51hcondtbxlde) produc1ng fibrous
d11tnbuted lhrough the lungs and
strated by x-ray exam malton, by biopsy
by autopsy
(Y)CnalpneumoconiOSIS,
muoen' ~=~~::~;:~I
referred to u "black luna drseaae."'
1n1 from woriung en the: coal m111e indu.rry
and due to exposure to the '7~~~::~~~
dust, and demonstnted by x-ny
uon, biopsy, IUIOp!ly or Dlhcr med1c1l
chn~tal tests
ThiS
does
entitle:::~
« or ltio THE EMPLOYEE'S
to compensatiOn, medtcal trearment,
piymenl of fWtefll expenses for 1
IMPAIRMENT, or dealh from
asbestosiS, or ~~:oal mn1ers'
unlcJI lhe employee lw been subject
tnJunous exposure to s1hc:a duSI I
diOXIde ). asbestos, or coal ckutl m Me
EMPLOYEE'S employment in th11
precedrng ltio THE dr,.blemcnr
IMPAIRMENT. some portron orwhrch
been after October 12, 1945.
vided m d1vts1011 (E~ of sccbon 4123 S7
the Revrsed Code.
CompensatiOn on .ccount of
ubc:stom. or coal m111m •
are payable ooly m the cvenl
total d1sabdny, permanenl total
IMPAIRMENT, or dealh, rn aocorclance
with 50Citons412l 56.4123 58.and41 23 59
ofthe Rev1sed Cl.lde Medical, hospital, and
n'IT'SIRHexpenses &amp;rC pa) abk IM ~'Of'dance
with lhiS cluptcr CODfJICIISaloon, mcdrc:al,
hospital, and nursma expenses arc
onl) m the event of such di~rbil'i ty,
IMPAIRMENT, or death resui!IIIJ
ertht years after the IIMiftJUriouo ..posure,
providod dtll sue1t .. gh&lt;-ycw hmr.,uon doeo
not opply lo drsabrhly, IMPAIRMENT,
death ocarmna after Janllll')' I, 1976, and
further provided thai such &lt;iahi·)'W lrmolollondoeonotapply to any as~tostos;s.,_
In lbe CV&lt;f!,l of dernh
to1al diubrlny OR IMPAIRMENT
mencms wtttun l!lght years after tht
lnJUI10US n.posure. the
wrthin etaht yem after the lUI ini•1riol11
exposure doel no! apply
ThiS dtapterdoel not enhtle an employ-

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•

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•

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mtners'

chapter not

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...... that
(A) All employee wbo "blinctmay ...,ve
the """J''JlSilS !hot may duo liot
TO n!E EMPLOYEE for IDJuty. IMPAIR·
MENT. or dtaablltty m cases where the

tn)uty.IMPAIRMENT. or d11olnfity moy be
directly caUO!d by or due to loio ll!AT bhn&lt;J.
employment an answer to
made by die employer

1n

W _ _..., WHEN compcnsat""'

REQUESTED

disabthty. IMPAIR

or death due to sdacos1s, asbesto-

coal nunen pneumocoo•os•s.. the

adrniniiS!notor a!* I ufu MAY DETER
MINE WHETHER THERE IS SUFFI
LIKELIHOOD THAT ANY OF
nlt1&lt;1' DISEASES EXISTS CAUSES
DISABILITY OR IMPAIRMENT OR
DEATH TO WARRANT

~:~~N~'~ cla1m to a qualified med·
1cal spc&lt;:tahst for examusauon and recom
mendahoo walh rcprd to the d•agnos•s the

ofdrsabrhty OR IMPAIRMENT the

'::~~:tr.:':~ and other medtcal questaons
c~

w1th the cla1m IN NO EVENT

SHALL COMPENSATION FOR DIS
IMPAIRMENT OR DEATH
DUE TO SILICOSIS ASBESTOSIS OR
MINERS PNEUMOCONIOSIS
AWARDED WITHOUT THE CLAIM
8EIING REFERRED TO A QUALIFIED
MEDICAL SPECIALIST FOR THAT
EXAMINATION AND RECOMMENDA
An employee shall subm1t to such
e.~~:.ammat1ons

mcludmg clm•cal and ll ray

as the adnunastraror reqUires
In the event that an employee refuses to subto exammanons mcludmg cllmcal and
enmmauons after nouce from the
1
mthe event that a cla•mant

compensanon for death due to sJhc:os•s
or coal mmers pneumocomos•s
and per
after notiCe
commiSSI(In so
such au1opsy exammat1on and tests may
performed then all nghts for compcn

are forfeited The reasonable com
pensallon of su\.:h spec1ahst and the expcns
cs of cxammat1ons and tests shall be patd
tf the clatm 1s allowed as a part of the
expenses of the datm otheNtse they $hall
be pa1d from the swplus fund
(Z) Ratbanon 1llness Any tndustnal
process mvolvmg the use of radtoaciiVC:
matenals
Cla1ms for tompensat1on and benefits
to radtauon Illness arc payable only m
the event death. IMPAIRMENT. or d1s
1 &lt;K:turred wtthm etght years after the
last mjunous exposure provided that such
eight·)'ear llmnatiOil does not apply to dts
, IMPAIRMENT. or death ITom exposure occumng after January I 1916 In the
of death followmg contmuous diS

OR IMPAIRMENT wh"h &lt;om
w1th10 e1ght years of the last lnJU
the requ1rement of death
e1gh1 years after the las1 IOJUOOUS
e11.:posure does not apply
(AA) AsbestOSIS AsbestosiS means a
disease caused by mhalahOn or mgesuon of
asbestos demonstrated by x ray examma
tlon btopsy autopsy, or other objecnve
medn:al or chmcal tests
e~tposure.

All condttmns restnct1ons hm1tataons
and other provtstOnSofthts secuon. w11h ref
erence to the payment of compensation or
benefits on account of siliCOSIS or coal mm·

ers pneumocornosiS apply to the payment
of compensation or benefirs on account of
any other octupat!Onal daseasc of t~
ptramry tract resultmg from mJunous exposum; to dust
The refusal to produce th~ necessary
consents and pcrmttl for autopsy examma
taon and tcstmg shall not resultm forfCiture
Of compensation pn:rvtded the adminiStratOr
finds that such refUsal was the result ofbona
fide reh&amp;'JOOS conviCtions or teachmp W

the claamant for compen~tton
adho:r&lt;d pnor to the death of ohe decedent
Sci: 4123 70 No &lt;ompensatoon shall be
on ErCcount of dt!iibdny.IMPAIR
MENT. or death from dostue suffered by
an employee who at the ttme of entenng
anto the cmpk&gt;yment from whach the d1scase
11 clanned to have resulted wtllfully and
_..,t-THE EMPLOY
u not havmg prev1ously iUffered from
d1seue Compensation shall not be

account ofboth tnjlll)' and disexcept when the d1sabdtty OR
IMPAIRMENT IS caused by a d1sc:asc and
tnJury m wh1ch event the admmtstrator
workers compensauon may appon1on
the paymen1 of compensatiOn provided for
m sections 4123 56 to 4123 59 of the
Rev1scd Code between the funds as m ""

ADMINISTRATOR S

JUdgm~nt

~"" .J"" and proper

If 1n employee 1s suffenng from both

sc and an IRJUI) and the
:::::::::d~:•sea:detcrmme
wh1ch IS caus

,

on11oio THE EMPLOYEE S do,.bolny OR
IMPAIRMENT the admtRIIfT'Itorshall pay
compensanon therefor from the proper

fund
Compcnsallon fCH" I~ sustamed on
account of occupational d1scasc by an
employee mentioned m diVIIIOI'I(Al(l, of
sectton4123 01 of the Rev1scd Cock or the
dependenb of su&lt;h employee shoJI be paod
from the (und provided for In SC.CIIODS

4123 38 to 4123 41 and 4123 4~ of the
Rcv11ed Code
Compt11satwn for loss su11tamed on
account of a dtseuc by an employee men
ttoned In diYIIIIOR (A)(2) ofstetlon 4123 01

of die Revooed Cod&lt;. or the dependents of
the employee shall be poid from lhe Ot:&lt;u
pauonal dJICUC fund or by the employer of
die employee tftbe enll'k&gt;Yer 111 orolf rnsur
1ns m1ployer

Soc 4123 80 No otpUment by on
~or:tow11veloioTHE EMPLOYEES

ness The admm1strator of wortcn' ~·
pensat1011, wnh the ad'r'lce and consent of the
workers compcnllhOD ovenaght comm11
5100 may adopt and enforce NICS aovtmiDJ
the employment of such persons and the
mspecllon of their places of employment
(8) Ao employee watv&lt; loio THE
EMPLOYEE S nghts to compensataon or
benefits as authonzed pursuant to divas1on

(C)(3) of se&lt;twn 4123 OJ OR SECTION
lliW of lhe Revroed Code
No agra:meot by an employee to pay
any pomon oflhe pmmwn pard by loio THE
EMPLOYEE S employer onto lhe stale
IRIUl'IIKC fund IS vahd

S.. 4123 82 (A) All oontraets and
agreements are v01d whach undertake to
tndemnify or msure an employer apmst
loss or habality for the payment of com
peosauon to workers or theardependents for
death InJury or octupauonal d1sease occa·
stoned m the course of the workers employ
ment or whtch provtde thai the 1nsurer shall
pay the compensation or wh1ch mdemn1f)'
the employer agamst damages when the
mjury d1sease or death anses from lhe rail
ure to comply With any lawful requu"Cment
for the protection of the hves heahh and
safety of employees or when the same 11
occasmned by lhew11lful act oflhe employ

er or any of 1oio THE EMPLOYER S offi
cen or agents or by whiCh 11 IS agreed that
the msurer shall pay any such damages No
hcense or authonry to enter mco any such
agreements or 1ssuc any such pohc1es of
msurance shall be granted or 1ssued by any
pubhc autbonty m th1s state Any corpont
uon orgamzed or adlmncd under the laws
of th1s state to transact habd1ty msurance as
defined m section 3929 0 I of tht; Rev1sed
Code may by amendment of tts arhcles of
mcorporahon or b)l ongmal an1c\es ofmror
porahon provade therem for the authonty
and purpose to make msurance m states ter
nl01'1es. dasmets and counties other than the
state of Oh1o and an the state of Oh1o 1n
respett of contracts pe:nmtted by dmston
(B) of 1h1s sectmn mdemmfymg employ
ers agamst loss or ltatnhty for pa)IJJlent of
compe:nsat1on to workers and employees
and then dependents for death lnJUI)' or
occupatiOnal d1scasc oceastoned m the
course ofthe employment and to msure and
andemmfy employers agamst loss expense
and babiltty by nskofbod1ly IRJUIY or death
by acc1dent d1sabaltty IMPAIRMENT.
Sickness or dtscasc suffered by workers and
employees for wh1ch the employer may be
hablc or has assumed habtlny
(B) Notwnhstanchng d1v1s1on (A)ofth1s
sectton
(I) No contract because of that diVIiton
ts v01d wh1ch undertakes to mdcmmfy a
self. msunng employer agamst all or pan of
such employer s loss m e~ceu of at least
fifty thousand dolla~ from any one drsaslerorcventansmgoutoftheempioyersha
bthty under th1s chapter: but no ansurance
corporation thMl darcctly or mdt~tly
SHALL represent an emplo);er m the set
tlemenl adJudteanon de1erm1nauon
allowance or payment of cla1ms The
supenntendent of msurance shall enforce
this proh1b1t1on by such d1sc1phnary orders
directed ap1nst the offenchng msurance cor
porat1on as the supc:nntendent of 1nsurance
decms appropnate m the c1rcumstarn.u and
the admm1stratorofworkers compcmatmn
shall enforce th1s proh1b111on by such d1s
ctplnwy orders d1rected aaa•nst the offend
mg employer as the admm1strator deems
appropnate 1n the Circumstances whteh
orders may tnclude revocation of the msur
ancc corporat1on s nght to enter anto tndcm
nltycontractsandrevocattonofthccmploy

Olllploy or u employer, provided. - ·er, doll die fi1n1ir1IW&gt;a oiiiiiCI&gt; sholl
not:

CODibtutt • .J't'COIIUhOa of a claim •
~-but lhalldo !10 .............

tsfy the roquuemeats of IIIli MCtioa;
(b)~orbCIIolitshow:beeil

poid or ftlmilbed ecjuaJ tD or.,...... !bon 11
provided for IIIICCIIOIII4123 52 4123 55

to4Il.l62 and4Il.l64tD4Il367orlhe
RCYiood Code. PROVIDED ll!AT 111E
PAYMENT OR FURNISHING OF n!E
COMPENSATION OR BENEFITS
SHALL NOT CONSTITUTE A RECOG
NITION OF ACLAIM OR ANY CONDI
TION IN ACLAIM AS COMPENSABLE
THAT PAYMENT. THAT COMPENSA·
TION OR THOSE BENEFITS SHALL
00 NO MORE THAN SATISFY THE
REQUIREMENTS OF THIS SECTION
(4) Wnnen notiCe of death bu b&lt;co
&amp;1VCO to die ~tnmlWOO 01' bureau
(B) The bwoau shall pro"'de pnnted
nonces quonng m full diVISMm {A) of lh1s
sect1on. and every self·msunna employer
shall post lnd JlliUitam 11 all !UDel one or
more of the nolla:s m consptcuous places
on the worlcshop or places of employment
(C) The COmMISSion has conttnutng
Junsd"tton ao oct fol1b m occ:tton 4123 S2
of the Re\'.{sed Code over a cla1m which
meets theJ requ111:ment of thts sectton,
mcludmg JunsdiCtlon to award compensa
uon or benefits for loss or tmpatnnent of
bodily functiOns developmg m a part or parts
of the body not specafied pursuant to dtvt

srt&gt;tj (AX I) ofthrs se&lt;:t1011, tflhe oommos
s1on finds that lhe losS or ampallment of bod
tly fum'taons
.
was due to and a resuh of or
a res1dual of the InJury to one or the parts
of the body set fortb m the wntten not1ce
filed pursuant to diVISion (A)(I) ofth1s sec

uon
cla1m pcndmg before the
admtmstnto~ the commiSSion, or a court on
(0) Any

December II 196 7, m wh1ch the remedy IS
affected by thts sectwn as govemed by rhts

s«hon
(E) Notwlthstandmg the requarement
that the noltce required to be g1ven to the

bureau commtsston or employer under lhts
sect1on 111 to be m wntmg. the bureau may
accept assagn a clatm number and process
a notace provtdcd by any method ofrelecom
mum calion lmme&lt;hately upon recc1pt of the
telctommwucatcd notice the bureau &amp;hall
send a wntten notice to the employer of the
bureau s recetpt of the tclecommun1catcd
notice W1thm fifteen days after rece1pt of
the no1tcc the employer _,. m wntmg
either MAY vcnfyornot venfy the telccom
mumcated nobce If the bureau does not
rccc:ave the wntten notification from the
employer or rece1vcs a wnnen nottficotaon
venfytng the telecommunacared not1ce wnh
m such t1me pcnod. the clatm ts validly filed
and such telccommumcatcd notice tolls the
Statute Of hmltarJons IR regard tO the C(atm
tiled and ts cons~etered to meet the requare·
mcnts of wnnen not ace required by thts sec
hon
{f) As used tn davts1on (A)(3Kb) ofth1s
scc:tton benefits means paymenu b)l a
self msunng employer to or on behalf of
an employee for a hospttal b1\l a mecbcal
btl! to a licensed physte1an or hospital or
an orthopediC or prosthetic dcvtce
Sec 4123 85 In all casesoroccupat1onal
dJteH&amp;.ordealh~ft'DIIII~

disease cla1ms for compensanon or bene
fits are forever barred unless wnhm two
yean atlar tha :bulnld; tba te tha ~ISKll
' g 1IIF ll
I I g p 4 1I
Mit 1 •••••m 1 JRt~l after FIRST dtagnoSIK of the occupational d1scase by a licensed
phys1caan or wtthm two years after death
occurs apphcatmn 1s made to the mdustn
al comm1sston or the bureau of workers
compensation or to the employer tfM THE
EMPLOYER 15 a self msunng employer
Sec 4123 90 LAl Tht ......_ADMIN
ISTRATOR of workers compensatiOO
1 Aalltll
11
1WORKERS COM

er s st&gt;tus as a self onsunng employer

PENSATION HEARING OFFICERS or

(2) The adm1n1strator may enter mto a
contract of mdemn1ty wllh any such

any other PERSON OR body constnUied by
the s~tutcs ofthas state or any court ofthts
state m awmbng compensa11on to the
dependents of employees or others kallcd
m QtM THIS STATE shall not make any
dtsenmmalaon agamst the wWewt SUR
VIVING SPOUSES &lt;hrld!&lt;:n or other
dependentt who restdc 1n a forc1gn country
TheW.... ADMINJSTRATOR Jtm a a
MtMt HEARING OFFICER or any other
board.. PERSON. or coun 1n dctcrm1ntng
the amount of compensation to be pa1d to
the dependents of k.1Jicd employees shall
JliiY 10 the ahen dependents restdlnl!J tn for
ctgn countnes the same benefils 1110 those
dependents restdmg m thrs litate
W No employer shall d1schargc
demote reassign or take any pumtave
acuon agamst any employee because the
employee filed a datm or msututcd pur~
sued. or testified m any proc:ccdmgs under
tha I .tun IIM.IIl•ttu 111t THIS

employer upon such terms payment of such
prem1um and for such amount and fonn of
mdemmty as the admmutrator detcmuncs
and the admmastratOt' may procure rtamur

anc:e of the hobohty of the publre and pn
vale funda under th1s chapter. or any part of
the habllrty m mpett of e1ther or bolh of
the funds upon such tenns and premmms
or other payments from the fund or fund~
as the admamstrator dee~~r.~ prudent m the
ma1menance of a solvent fund or funds from
year to year When makmg the findmg of
fact wh1ch the admmtstrator 1s rcqu1rcd by
section 4123 35 of th~o: R\:VJsod Code to
make w1th respt.-ct In the financial ab1hty of
an employer no contract of 1ndcm01ty or
the ab1hty of the employer to procure such
a contract shall be: comudcrcd as mcrcas-mg the financlalub1hty of the employer
Sec 4123 R4 (A) In all cases of!RJUI)'

ordc:aoh da•msforcompensatoonO&lt;bene
fits for the speo1fic pan or pan• ofth&lt; body
IRJUred shall be fon:vcrbam:d unless., w1th
m two years after 1hc InJUry or death
(1) Wntttn notacc ot the spcc1fic part or
parts of the body clam.ed to have been
InJUred has been made to the mdustnal com
m1ss1on or the bureau ot workers compcn
581\on
(2) The employer wnh knowltdJC of a
C\lnned c;ompcnsablc tnjury or OC'CUpai!On
al daK&amp;Se has pa1d wages m heu of com
pensanon for lotal d1sabihty OR IMPAIR
MENT
{3) In the evmt the employer 1s a stlf.
tmunn&amp; employer one: of the foUowmg hu
occurred
(a) Wnnen not tee of the spmfiC pan or
pons of 1he body d11med to have he&lt;n
IDJUJCd lw been pven to the cornmiHIOn
or bureau or \he employer has fum1shcd

non...._. .......,.. _.....,
ud

DO

liCIIbn J!)aJI

.. - - or DII!Jioo

tainod l1lllea die anployer bas ....,..,.
wntton- of a cJolmed YioJatioo of IIIli
JIOIII'IPI&gt; withla the 111110ty days iomodi
ately foiJowina the dildlarJe, tlc&gt;nocioa.
reoa....,..,., or punitiYe OCIIoa llkeft
Set: 4123 93 AI used tn KCIIODI

412393and4ll.J9JioftbeRmsedCocle
(A) "CIIimoaf' tnea111 o penon who 11

poytlble -

-.

la'm-. or

_...., ITom -~ provldod that

tftilecloimool._ twerlty-IIJt weeb«..,..
of employment With a tubloqaeot employ
er or 01l1ploffn wbo m not poyrna hiDI o
peaaioa o r - alloWOD&lt;C, thea IUCh
or ..........,, poymeots shall not
roduce die benetib po)'lhle for die week,
nJ proyided filrther dooloo benefits shall
be chaiJed to tile acoounl of the
employer wbo 11 J'I)'UII the penaton, but
•-IU&lt;It benefib shall be c:harJed tD tbe

ell~tble lo recoave o::oaiiiN"iiWbon or$dutuahzzd: account except: as prov1ded 1n

w-

benefita under this chaplor or
4121,4127 or4131 ofthcReviled
,
mcludtngany depeodcnt or penon
eh11b1hty II the muit of on tn)ury to or
oceupauonol di- of another penon
(8) "StltUtooy oubroaee" meou tbe
admmtltrltor of the burtau of wodr.en'
&lt;empelllltton, osclf·m"""'' employer, or
Ill employer tbol ..... _
for tile dboct JIOYmenl of medicol ICMCel JIUIIUinl to dtYIston~of.......,412144ofdleReviled

Code

(C) ""Subrogolod amotmta" 1111:1ude. but

bmtted to, the following:
(I) Amounu oecovenble from ony thttd
pony. no&lt;wttlutandinglll)llinn.....,. by the
th1rd pazty concemmg1ta rapon~~bihty to
make paymenb meases 1nvoiYOD1 wodr.en
eompensahon under Chapter 4121 , 4123 ,
4127. or 4131 of the Reviled Code;
(2) Amnun10 recoverable from a
an: 1101

claamant !I Insurer 10 eonnec:tiOI'I w1th under·
msured or uomsuml motornl coverage,
notw11hstandins any hmatauon contamcd 1n

Chople&lt; 3937 of 1he Re•1oed ~.
(3) Amounts that 1 claimant would be
ent1tled to recover from a pohtlcalsubdavr
s1on notw1thstandmg any hm1tahons contaonod on Chapter 2744 of the Revooed

Code
(D) Third party meana an md1v1dual,
pnvate 1nsurcr pubhc or pmace em1ty, or
pubhc or pnvate program that1s or may be
hable to make payments to a person wnh
out regard to any statutory duty conta.med
m th1s chapter or Qtapter 4121 • 4127 or

413 I of me Revooed Cnde
S.. 4127 03 Evecy work·oelrefemploy
cc who suatams an IDJW)' and the depcndentsofsuchasarek1lled lnrhe,ourseo(
and ans1ng our ofemplqyment. ~ 11111 t ar
-WHEREVER THAT mJuty or death
occurs except when such mJury or death 11
caused by wdlful misconduct or Intent tO

bnng about sU&lt;h InJUry or dealh. or when
the use of mtox.acating liquors or drugs 1s the
prox1mate cause of such mJury Ql' di:ath 111
enutlcd to rcceave our orlhe publiC work·
relief employees compenNtlon fund, com
rensat10n death benefil$. mec:hcal nurse
and hospital servtces, mediCine and funeral eKpenscs for loss sustan\ed on account
ofsuch IRJUf)' or death as 1s prov1ded for
by Chapter4123 of the Revised Code
Except as provided 1n secll004127 06of
the Revised Code no compcnsauon shall be
patd from the work n:hef employees com
pensatton fund for or on accoun1 of any ternporaf) d1sabliny or part1al Auatullt)
IMPAIRMENT CJ~;cc:pt that tn the cases
Included 1ft the scrooule of loss of specifiC
members or stgtll 5CJ forth 1n sect1on
4123 S7 of the Rev1sed Code the d1saball·
tyORIMPAIRMENTtsdeemcdtocontan
ue for the penodi mi:ntmncd for each of

w,_

YIIIOn(BXI)(b)or-4141 241 ofdle
viled Code tfthe &lt;llnman!l sepontion
fromdleemployerw•di!qualol'yingunder
dovtston(DX2Xo)of!ICCtlon414129oflhe
Reviled Code
(4) Remunmlioa m the fonn of tiCJll
rorion or tenn,_ poy poid to on ....,Joy.
ee II the time of 1oio THE EMPLOYEE'S
seponlion from employmen~
(5) Vocaaon poy or allow"""' poyablc
underlheletlnoofolabor.....,.gementcon.
tnoct or IIi"'" knt, or other contnetofh,..
wll1ch poyments are allocated 10 deaognot
od weeka

lfpoymen!a under t1111 drvtsron""' pa1d
with mpect to • month thea die omount of
ranuneration deemed to be rcce1ved w1th
mpect to any week duri.. IU&lt;It month shall

be computed by multoplyr 01 '"'h monthly
amount bytwelYOond dlvid1111dle product
by filly two lf!hm "110 deaoiJllltoo of the
penod wnh respect to wtuch payments lOan
IIMhvidual are made under th 1s sect1on then
an amount equal to such indtv1dual s nor·
mal weeldy w•BC shall be attnbuted to and
deemed pard wotb IOIP«I to die forst and
each succeechna week rollowmg M THE
EMPLOYEE S sepanhon or termination
from the 'employment of me employer
makmg the payment unol 111&lt;h 1111011nt so
pa1d 11 eXhausted
lf~fitl for any week when reduced
as prov1ded 1n thts d1vis1on, reauh tn an
amount not a muhtple of one dollar such
henefitslhall be rounded to the next lower
muluple of one dollar
"ny poymenl allocated by 1he employ
er or the odmoiUStrotor of the l&gt;lm:au of
employment serv1'es to weeks under d1v1
s1on(AMI) (4) or(S)ofth1ssecl!onshall
be deemed to be remuneration for the pur

posesofestabhshongoquahtymgweekond

(D) NotwathSiand1ng any othcrprovtslon
m this chapter bcncfil!l othcrwasc payable
shall not be reduced by payments rhat wert
mldc to an mdtvulual on or after August I
1991 pul'luant 10 1be Nataonal Dcfcn~
Aonhonrauon Act for Foseal Yean 1992 ond

MENTothCTthanthatresultrngfroml.,sof
amemberorsoghtortot&gt;lorpanoaiiOSllof
use of 1 !11C111b!:r. an rnJur&lt;d work rehef
employee shall he paod dor&lt;etly out of the
f\rnd from wh"h the employee w" recel•·
rng rehef the 11111oun!S requu&lt;d to m«t lhe
budgetaryneal,oflhe....,loyeeandlorotn!E
EMPLOYEESdcpeoden!Ji.andmllrcman
nerdc:tennonedbyohepenonougeneyhav
rngeonlrolo•erorsuper;tsrooofthefund
Whenallofthefundsforn:hefpurpos
eswh1chareavaJiabletoanycmpklyerarc

exhausted orwhcn,dosabiluyORIMPAJR
MENT u a result of the tnJUf)' 1s conunu·
ous beyond a pcnod of SIX monlhs the
InJUred work relief employee shall be com
pensatcd for temporary DISABILITY and
ponoal.llol!oltt, JMPAIRMENTo,.ofthe

ployment compensation law of the Untied
Stat~

1993

Pubh&lt; Low 102 190 lOS Stal
1194 1396 IOUSCA 1174a 117~ 1nlhc
form of voluntary separatiOn tncenuvc pay
mentsand spec1al scpanhon pay
Sect ton 2 That Cllttillna

section~

2913 411 4121 121 4121 32 4121 14
412135 412136 4121 3M 412144
412147 412161 412167 412301
4121 032 4123 OJ3 4123 07 4123 25
4123 21 4123 28, 4123 34 4123 343
412335 4123 352 4123411 4123412
4123413 4123414 4123416 4123419
4123 SJJ 412HI2 4123 52 4123 S4
41235&lt;41 4123S5 4123S6. 412357
41235M 4123 59 412360 4123 M
412362 412364 412365 41l36SI
412366 41236K 412370 4123KO
4123112 4123 K4 4123jt5 4123 90
41239' 412703 ~12706 and414131 of
the Rcvt~K.-d Code arc hereby rcpcalccJ
~ton l 1A) F.xccpt: as provtdcd m
d1vunon (8) of thts sc:clton the provuuons

of th1s &amp;cl apply to all cla1ms pursuant to
Choplen4121 4123 4127 and4131 of

public work relief employees compcnsa
Uon fund by the bureau of workers com-pcn51Uon an Ihe same manner and amount
as 11 provided 1n secuons 4127 01 to

the Rcv1sed Code ansmg on and after the
effective date of thts act
(9) The followma: apply to all clatms
pursuant to Chaptcn 4121 -4123. 4127

4127 14 of me RCYtscd Codcfor other drs·

and 4131 of the Re•oscd Code pcndmg on

CHAPTER OR CHAPTER 4126 4127
OR 4Ill OFTHE J!,EVISEDC,ODE for on
tnjury or occupalaonal ducasc wh1th
occurred 1n the course of and ans.ng out of
1M employment w1th that employer ltrwr

ab1htteS A.Np IMPAIRMENTS
Sec 4141 31 (A) Benefits odterwtsc

the effective date ofth1s act
0) The provtslon 1n dtVI~Ion (8)( I) of

payable for any week shall be r&lt;duced by

...tt

lows

'"''uon 4123 l6 of the Revoscd (ode a&lt;
amended by th1s act. altowmg an employer
to voluntanly commence payment of com
pcnianon for temporary d1sab1IUy

AN empi~Jyee AFFECTED BY A VIO
LATION OF TI-llS DIVISION may file an
action 1n the COURT OF common pleas
__.of the county of such employment 1n
WhiCh the rehcfwhte:h may be 8WUed shaJI
be ltrmtcd to n:mstah:mcnt With back pay
1hhe ICIIOIIIS based upon dascharge or an
award for wages lost 1f based upon dtmottoo reua1gnment, orpuniiiYc actiOn taken
off5el by eammgs subsequent to da~tharge
dcmouon reau•gnment,,..puntuve acuon
taken and payments rcc:ttYed punuant to
se&lt;:hon 4123 56 IIIII Chapter 4141 of me
Reviled Code plu. reuonable attorney
fees The acnon ....._IS forwer barred

I

1.

•

'
•

the amount of remuneration a clatmant
receiVes With respect to such week as fol

(II Remuneration m heuofnoncc
(2) Compensation for wage loss under
dtvlston ~of scctton 4123 56 of lhc
Revrscd Code or 1cmporary pan1al d1sab1l
uy under the workers compensation law of
any state or under a s1m1lar law of the Un1tcd
States
(3) Except as prov1ded 1n sceuon

4141 312oftheRevoscdCode paymc:n!Son
the form of retuement., ..or penJJOn
allowances under a plan wholly financed by
an employer whtch payments are pa1d
eo!her d•-ly hy the employer or rndrrect·
ly through a trust, UUiulty tnsmance fund.

or under an

lft!IUnmcc

contncc whether

4121 4123 4127 and4131 oftheRmoed
Code tn address1ngoccupattonal d1seues that
anoe on !hose professoons The •tudy shall
spec1fi~lly melude latent occupational d1s
cases The Adm1n1strator shall repon the
mulls of the study to the Speaker of the
House df Represcn&amp;auves and the President
of the Senate no later than July I 1998
Scctmn 7 The Admamstrator
Workcn Compensation shell sNdy
quahty thoroughness and adequacy of
medtcal exammataons conducted by
Bure11u ofWorkers Compensation s
mmg
ph:,::•;:,
of
employees
for =~~:::;:~~~::\:~~~
ees percentage ofpcnnanent part1al
ment The study shallanclude an evallu,Biir•n
of the fees charged by those phystcllns
Adm1n1strator shall repon the results
study to the Speaker ol the House
Rcprescntatwes and the Pres1dcnt of
Senate no later lhan July I 1998
Sect1on MThe Adman1strator of Wolters

Compcnsallon shall study the effect
allowmg pubhc anployt."TS that meet the en
tena for bcmg granted the status. ofsclf.msur
mg empi~Jyers pursuant to scct1on 4123 3S
of the Rev1sc:d Code to become self msur
ma employers and of allowmg
employcn that employ less !han five: hundr&lt;:d
employ~ but that othcrw1sc meet all the
tcna for bcml!JIJI'Inted the
I
mg employers to fonn pools for the onun""'
of paym~ compensatiOn and benefits

msunng cmploy~o.'l'!i and

OR IMPAIRMENT Is deemed to conttnue
for such proportion of the pcnod filed for
the total lou of a member as the adnunli·
trator of workers compensation finds that
the actual phys1cal dJ!iibll11y OR IMPAIR

MeNT b&lt;aruo the total loss of'""h mem

4123 OJ ofthe RevooedCode 11&lt;!101 mtend·
ed and shall not be construed os altmna •
firefiahter 1 or pol tee ofi"K!CI' s nshJs to IXllll-pcnutwn punuant to diVISIOn (W) of ICC
uon 4123 68 of ohe Revooed Code os tbooe
nahts eKisted on the effective date of thiS
act by VIrtue of statute adrmntstrat1ve rule
or JUdiCial dectsaon or a combmauon
SllfUtCS Nics Of dectSIORS
Socuon 6 The Admmtstrator ofWorkm
Compensallon shall sn1dy lhe anc1dence
occupanonal dtseases tn the health care professions, u rhe Admtmslrator dctcmunes
ncuswy and the adequaty or ChapleTS

apprupnateagcncyofsuchotherstatcorof
the United Smtes finlllly dctcrmtncJ that he

"'Joek of-lhon be IXIMidered on unem·

(2)Thcprov!SIDn!ndivlsJOnfCM2)ofiCC
lion 4123 S6 of the Remed Code us amend
cd by th1s act allowmg an employee to lilll
an tppl•catton for and receiVe wage IOAs com
pensauon punuant to thtl diVISIOn wathout
atfcctmg the empi())U: s apphcat1on for ;&gt;cr
manent total1mpa1nncnt compensatiOn
(3, The provtston 1n dlv111on (A) ofsc..-c

Section

ment. billing, or f'als1ric:atron occurrina on
or aller die efre&lt;tl'le doto ofth11 act
Section 5 The 111\Cndments to 1he defi·
n!ltOD of "occ:upotiooal doseose" made by
dus .et cont.1nr.d tn diVISion (f) of section

Chapters4121.4121 4127 and4131
the Revtsed Code directly cather collecllvc
ly as 1 group or by ca~h employer mdavtdu

sueh In t!!ao .,...... tn the InJury results 1n the total or pan1alloss
of usc of any s~h member tile dtubdtty

ben
All compensation payable under thl!i
chapter shall be pa1d on the basts of com
putatzon prov1dcd for 1n th1s chapter
Sec 4127 06 Ounng ~ods of temporaryd1sab1htyandpartJal J t lil) IMPAIR

of !be ReYiood Code apply tD any ovapoy·

a benefit year underd!Yt510118(0)( l)and (R)
of sectiOn 4141 01 orthe Revascd Code
(81 Bencfib poyoble for any - k shall
not be reduced by the amount of rcmunm
11011 a clazmant recc1YCS w1th reaped to such
week m the fonn or dnll or reserve pay
m:e1\'od by a memllcr of the Ohto national
guard or the armed fortes rcsm e for atten
dance at 1 reaul•ly scheduled dnll or meet
ana.
(C) No benefits shall be paid for any
week wnh respect to wh1ch or a pan of
wh1ch an md1v1dual has n:cctvod or 11 seck
mg unemployment benefits under an uncm
ploymcnt compensauon Jaw of any other
1tate or of the United States provided the
dliquahficatums shall not apply tf the

ts not entitled to such unemployment ben
efibi A law of the Umted Stah."l prov1d1ng
any payment of any type and many
amounts for penodl of unemployment due

.

ally The Admm1strutor shall repon
results of the study to the Speaker of
House of Reprtscnlattvcs and the Pre!iid&lt;ont
of the Senate no later than October 31
Section 9 The Admm1strator
Workers Compensation shall study
uonal rehabth1allon as 11 rclalcs to a"iii!i••K
Injured employees return to work As
of the study the Admm1strator shall
me the relat10ndup ~-tween the Bureau
Workers Compens"t1on the lndoJStri,al

Comm1ss1on

managed

care "~;:~~~:~~:;

certified under th~: Health
Progmm or a Qualified Health Plan

ISiiiSIIng InJured employ~ return to
In IKid1tlon the Adm1mstrator shall
the current
Commtmon
changes to thcsc rulc1
purposes of VCK'attonal rchab1htai10n
rctummg InJUred employees to work
Adm1n1strator sh11ll rcpon the
s1udy lo the Governor the Speaker of
House ol Rcprcst.'Tilahvcs the Prcstdent
the Senate the Chairperson of the Hou"e cof'
Representatives Commer\.:C and
Comm11tcc und the Chanpc:rson of
Si::natc lnsuran~c (ommen:e and
Commtttcc w11hm one year aflcrthee,feo.,
uve dale ofth1o,; acl
Scc110n I0 Sec lion 4 t 23 54 of
Rcva~d COOc as &lt;llnl.'lldcd by th1s act docs
not abndge and JOha\1 not be construt.-d as
abrrdgmg .-ny r1ghts o! ertiploycn or
~:mployccs under fcdcral or state law
respect lo drug testang 1n 1he workplace

OFFICE OF THE SE&lt;:RE'TARY
OF STATE OF OHIO
I Bob Tat\ Sc'Cretal)' of Stale
hereby eertrfy that the foregomg os lhe
full text ot the consututtonal amend
ment proposed by the General
Assembly and filed on ohe office of the

lundlly, Oclaller1t, 1817

Costly mistakes to avoid

r--Area farm/business
Receives certification

'

Receives award

Angus delegates named

erance may change over ume

Therefore, ot os helpfuiio penodocal
ly rev1ew your portfoho to ensure
your holdmgs are not too aggresSive
for your current appeltte
Chas10g hot' 10vestments and
llmmg the market Everyone wants
to own wmntng stocks Bot !heres a
couple of problems w1th tlus thmk
mg Ftrst most mvestors buy wm
mng sJocks long after Ihese secun·
Ues have enJoyed thelf boggest gams
and are selhng at lofty pnces Addt
uonally, the dec1s1on to purchase
these w10ners tends Jobean emo
uonal chmce based on Jhe tmpulse
to • stnke 1t nch • By suckmg wnh

your program and rema1mng d1sc1
pllned, you will be more hkely J_o
reach your financ1al goals
Not doversofymg Someone once
saod 1f you put all your eggs 10 one
basket, you d better Wttch that basket carefully Heres betler ad voce
Spread your eggs among many bas
kets In domg so. the pos1t1ve performance of one mvestment may offset
the negauve results of another
Accordmg to many research
resources, dJverstfymg your mvest

ments among vanous asset classes,
referred Io as asset allocatiOn
accounts for more than 90 pcrcenl of
portfolio perfonnance An 10vest·
ment professoonal can help you to
find the nght mox of stocks, bonds
and cash to help you reach your
goals
Not e.pectmg Ihe unexpected
Ltfe has a funny way of hitting us
woth tinancoal surpnses penod1cally
Keep money salted away to meet
expenses assoc.ated w1th these sur
pnses It Will
save you the task of havmg Ia
alter your tinanc1al hfe when they
occur
Fa1hng to reahze Its more than
plasuc We hve 1n a world of cred1t
cards and debot cards Soon, many
cash purchases wdl be replaced by
so-called smart cards Don t forget

that plastic IS money 10 d1sgmse
Fa~llng to do so wtll result 1n spend·
10g more than you think
Underestomat10g the ompact of
mflat1on lnflauon, the annual
10crease 10 the cost of hv10g, can
have a SJgmticant effect on your
long tenn tinanc1al plans If your
assets are not grow10g faster than
the 10flatoon rate, your money loses
purchasmg power. and the lonier
you lose purchasmg power the more
of an ompact 10flauon can have on
your standard of liVIng
Paymg too much 10 taxes That
old saw about death and taxes sun
r10gs true, but who says you have to
pay more 10 Jaxes than you should?
Be aware of the tax advantages
ava~lable due to the recent change 10
tax legiSlaiton and the vanous strategies that you can employ to help
lower your tax babtbty
An mvestment professional can
help you to desogn omplement and
momtor your mvestmenl program to
avOJd these pitfalls He or she can
analyze your personal financml SJiu
alton and develop a total tinanc1al
plan to help secure your short- and
long tenn financoal goals - no mat
Ier what your current financoal sltua·
uon Contact your mvestment pro
fessoonal today Jo scoedule a portfo
ho rev1ew

Gallia County Fair Board elects officers for 1998

PRESENTED AWARD • AEP'a Charlaa A. Ebetlno, Jr., (left)
rec:elvaa the NMA'a 'Chalnntln'a Award for Excellence In Mining
Education' from Douglaa Yearley, NMA chairman, during tha
organlZIItlon'a recent convention.

Awards presented
LANCASTER · The Nat10nal
M1010g Assoc1a1ton (NMA) present
ed Amencan Electric Power s Fuel
Supply Department (AEP) wolh one
of liS first "Chrunnan's Awards for
E•cellence 10 M1010g Education
dunng ots Mmmg Convenlton 97
held recently
NMA Chrunnan Douglas C Year·
ley, preSJdeni and CEO of Phelps
Dodge Corporauon, recogmzed
AEP"s Educalton Outreach Program
10 the coal category
The NMA 10111ated the annual
award program Jo recogmze out
standmg efforts of Its members to
educate our natton's students abou1
the Importance of coal and mmerals
to SOCiety
We ve worked hard over the past
decade to estabhsh relatoonshops w1th
schools 10 the areas of our m10mg
operaltons and to reach out Jo teach·
ers throughout our serv1ce tern tory,
sa1d Charles A Ebetlno, Jr AEP
senwr voce prestdent fuel supply
Our objecuves have been Jo budd
awareness and understand10g of the

coal m1010g, transponauon and electnc ut1hty mdustnes
AEP s Fuel Supply Department
operates undergrounsJ. coal mmes
near West L1beny W Va (Windsor
Coal Company). and W1lkesvolle
(Southern OhiO Coal Company) It
also owns a surface m10e at Cum·
berland (Cenlral Ohoo Coal Com·
pany), a R1ver Transportahon DJVt·
s1on at Lakin, W Va , a coal transload·
mg tenn10al at Metropolis, Ill (Cook
Coal Tennmal), and a coal prepara
uon
plant near Conesv11le,
(Conesvtlle Coal Preparation Com·
pany)
The company s Education Out
reach Program 10cludes energy
workshops for teachers, education
maJenals about coal and the envo
ronment, Adopt A School programs,
m1m-grants for classroom teachers
facd1ty lours and educational v1deos
on coal m1010g and land reclamauon
More than 600 teachers have paruc
tpated 10 the workshops and, 10 turn,
have taught more Ihan 41,000 students

poncnls und opponents of the amend
mcnt as prcscnbcd by law
The forcgomg also contams the full
text of the statutory amendments and

enactments proposed by the Gencnal
Assembly and submottcd to the

year tenn
Program Chaonnan Jeuy Deel
reponed that Darnn Norwood "
already under contract for next year s
event and negouatoons are underway
to stgn Karen Peck and Mtchael
Peterson He also noted that bog ume
wresthng IS bemg booked at thiS time
McCalla led a doscusSJon on ha
bdtty 10surance for actiVIties on the
frurgrounds thai are not sponsored by
the board He c1ted the recent use of
an area of the park1ng lot by Ihe Galbpobs Soccer Assocoatoon and ma10
stage practice by vanous baton
tworhng groups He reported that
Attorney Dav1d Evans IS revtew10g
all of the legal aspects of these acttv
oues and woll have a full report pre
pared for the November meeung
Bob Howard, superviSor of the
monthly flea markets at the falf
grounds, reported thai gross rece1pts
for last week's event totaled $10,535
He reponed that s~&lt; flea markets have
earned $55,165 Ihus far w1th one

By ODIE O'DONNELL
OVP Correapondent
GALLIPOLIS · ElectiOn of officers, prellmtnary plans for the 1998
Galha County Jumor Frur, and the
swear10g 10 of board members hoghhghted Thursday's meet10g of the
Galha County Jumor Fa1r Board
The entire slate of last year s offi·
cers was returned 10 Jhe electoon,
10clud10g President M1ke McCalla,
V1ce Presulent Bob Howard Secretary Tim MasSie, and Treasurer Skip
Meadows Followmg nom10atoons,
the enlue slate was elected by a vote
of acclamation
Five board members rece1ved the
oalh of office from AsSistant Treasurer Kathryn MasSJe pnor to the
busmess meet10g Johnny Payne of
Vmton IS the only new dorector of the
Galba County Aaneultural Society
and was JOined by mcumbents Bob
Howard, Rob Mass1e, Rodney Alder
man, and Eugene Elhott All five
were elected dunng the annual meet
mg last month and will serve a three

more regular event 10 November, plus
the Chrisanas Bazaar that has already
sold out all diSplay spaces 10 three
bmldmgs for the spectal December
sale
The board also addressed some
of Jhe maJOr repaor or replacement of
water and sewer hoes bu1ldmg
upkeep and voted to remodellhe cur
rent upstairs fau board office pr10r to
ne&lt;t year s event Members were told
that the fish10g pond at the rear of the
grounds os scheduled for demolluon
and members of the Galha County
Conservatton Club have volunteered
to remove aiiJish for restocking elsewhere before the pond IS dra~ned
The board Ihen voted several
changes regard10g livestock and
e&lt;htbtts for the 1998 faor W1th the
faor scheduled to run from Monday
Aug 3 through Saturday, Aug 8 all
exh1b1tors are requested to bnng m
theu tack (anyth10g except animals)
on Saturday Aug I and have ot m the
proper locatoon
All steers must be checked m by

6 p m on Sunday, Aug 2 woth the
we1gh 10 startmg at 6 30 p m that
day All other projects 10 bvestock, 4
H exhtbtts church exhobns and com
merc1al exhibits must be completely
10 place by 8 p m on Sunday, Aug
2
A change 10 the previOUS Sunday
e•empuon because of those w1th spe
ctal rellg10us behefs has been reset
Those who cannot labor on Sunday
for vanous reasons have to be rendy
by Saturday mght Aug I, 10stead of
•
the pnor Monday date
Galha County 4-H Agent Fred
Deel reponed that ear tags have
been ordered and wdl be ava~lable for
the tmtoal steer wetgh-m at the fairgrounds on Saturday, Dec 13 All
steers w11l be we1ghed that day
between 7 am and 2 pm
Due to 1he res1gnauon of Bryn·
na Butler as the adult adviSor for the
youth board, the names of several
posSible replacements are under cons•derahon

Grazing twilight tour slated for Oct. 27
By JENNIFER L BYRNES
GALLIPOLIS
On Monday,
October 27, Galha County Extension
wdl sponsor the last 10 a senes of
Graz10g Twthght Toui'S lhat have
been conducted on Southern Ohio thiS
year The tour will take place on the
farm of J1m and Jan Burleson, which
os located on Memlt Rood 10 R10
Grande at the end of Buckeye Htlls
Road
A walking tour wtll begm aJ 3 30
p m and then the wagons wdlload at
appro&lt;~mately 4 p m for a more tn·
depth v1ew of Ihe farm 'The program
w1ll10clude several dofferent speakers from both Galha County and the
surround10g counues J1m Burleson
wdl dJScuss the h1SIOJY of the farm
and the pnnc1ples of hJS operatiOn
PartiCipants wdl have the opportunity to voew forage and cover crop
demonstration plols mcludmg two
vaneJoes of rye, one var1ety of wheat,
and one var1ety of barley Jackson

County ExtensiOn Agent nave Sam
pies w1ll doscuss the beneftts of
annual rye as a forage Accord10g to
Samples, rye wdl come oul of tl s dor
mancy pcnod earher than other small
grruns allow10g for earher grazmg,
usually by late wmter or early sprmg
Producers who decode to seed l)'e
for graz10g purposes should consod·
er the hkellhood of wet wealher dur
10g the grazmg penod and should
plan to rotate the rye paddock sever·
alttmes Jo prevenl catJie damage Io
the field 'The demonstration plots on
the tour Will show 2 of the most h1gh
y1eld10g rye vanettes, Aroostook and
Pastar Other stops on the tour wdl
mclude d1scuss1ons aboutihe ·water
10g systems, forage ava~labthty and
rotatoona] system The tour will con
elude JUSt before dark at approXJ
mately 5 15 p m aJ which tome light
refreshments wtll be served Thos
tour IS open to any mteresJed party

and cattle producers who are mler
ested m rotauonal graz10g are espe
c1ally encouraged to altend
For more 10fonnauon, please callihe
OSU ExtensiOn office at 614-446·
7007
AGNEWS
TOBACCO
PRODUCERS
GreaJiurn out at the Pride In· Tobac
co Assocoauon annual banquet last
week •• thank you to all those who
altended A remmder to producers
who are approved to receo ve grant
money for cunng structures please
bnng your certoticauon fonns to Ihe
E&lt;tens10n office as soon as possoble
Those recea vmg money on tobacco
cunng structures must first have thetr
structure mspected by Ihe county ag
agenJ, and Jhe form must then be
SJgned by the agent, and the Farm
Bureau coordmator Do not Walt
unul the lasi m10ute, as thiS process
may take several days Jo complete

'The Farm Bureau must have the com
pleted cert1ficauon fonns by October
31
CATILE PRODUCERS If you
have not treated your cattle for grubs
and are plann10g to do so keep m
mmd that November I 1s the rule of
thumb deadline for safe treatment
The most effecuve t1me to kill grubs
m pnor to thiS date Due to the hfe
cycle of the grub and us locauon on
the antmal after November I, treat•
ment With 10secucodes after thJS date
may cause a toxoc reacuon
HOMEOWNERS: Aggravated
by Lady Beelles? They are looking
for a place to over w10ter, thus we can
e.pect act1v1ty for the next couple of
weeks For more mfonnauon call the
ExtensiOn office and requesl a Facl
Sheet
Jennifer L. Byrnes is Gallla
County's extensiOJl agent In acri·
cultun and natural resources.

Watch out for slow moving farm vehicles

by referendum pctltton pursuant

uon 4123 S7 as omended by thos acl have hereunto subscnbcd my name
tiiQWID&amp;.J_n employee to file...AD..Jp,P-hcatwo ..- afllxed.Jn)'..Offu:iaLscal-at
for the dctcnnmatton of the pcrccntaac of Oh10 thos 21st day of Augusl 1997
the employee s permanent parual ampa1r
m&lt;nl oller the &lt;mployec hu reached max·
Bob Tat\
1mum mediCaltmproyement
SECRETARY OF STATE
Section .. The pcnalt1es prowaded form

year to mono
tor
your
progress and
make
any
adjustments
needed
Fallmg to
detenn1ne a
nsk profile
Risk IS the
of
Smith
amount
volattllty
you're w1lhng to accept when on vest
mg When you know your nsk level
you can focus on mvestments that tit
your needs and avood mappropnate
mvestments for your tinancoal Sltua
tlon Keep 10 mmd thai your nsk tol

By K. RYAN SMrrH
Adveat, Inc.
GALLIPOLIS • What does 11 take
to ach1eve your long-term financ1al
goals? Most people beheve 11 s Simply a matter of makmg wellmfonned 10vestment deciSions
CHESHIRE· Earl F Mayo, Mamtenance Mechan1c-B at the Oh1o
However. secunng your financial
Valley Eleclnc Corporation s Kyger Creek Plant, recently receJVed h1s
future also reqUJres an acute sensoann1versary award for 30 yeW'S of servoce to the company, as announced
llvny to certam pnfalls whoch can
by Ralph E Amburgey, Plan! Manager
knock an mvesJment program off
Mayo JOmed OVEC on October 2, 1967, as a Laborer 10 the LallOI'-..1 track
Department In 1972 he transferred to the Mamtenance Department
Followmg IS a hst of some comas a Mruntenance Helper Dunng that same year, he advanced to Mammon mistakes to be aware of when
tenance Mechanoc·C, and 10 1973 he was promoted to Ma10tenance
mvest10g and some checks and balMechamc B Mayo and h1s wtfe, Vada, and grandson (Jamd), res1de
ances you can use to help you reach
m B1dwell
your goals
Not havmg a sound plan lmagme
havmg a certam amount of t1me to
GALLIPOLIS ·One Galha County delegate and two alternate del·
Iravel from pomt A to pomt B
egates have been named for the I 14th annual mee110g of Ihe Amen
Wiihout a plan, you could waste a
can Angus Assoctalton Nov 17m Loutsvolle, Ky
lot of ume trymg to get to your des·
Paul F Htll. Bidwell, wtll serve as the delegate He IS one of 315
unatoon The same concepl apphes
Angus breeders who have bee elected by fellow members m theor state
to mvesung Wnhout a sound tinanIo serve as a state representative at the annual meeting
coal plan, you could waste a lot of
Alternales are Neenah Kay Holl, B1dwell. and Tom F Woodward
ume and money trymg to get to
Ill, Galhpohs
where you want to be
To avood thos p1Ifall, consoder
working woth an mvestment professoonal to help you to clearly define
your mvestment objecuves Put your
goals on wntmg and use your wntten
plan as a financ1al road map to
keep you on course Meet w1th your
mvestment e•ecutlve a! least once a

POMEROY - Stephame Renee Ouo, daughter of Ron and Joyce
H1ll of Pomeroy, and Mtke Otto of Texas, has passed her certoficatJOn
e&lt;ammatoon and IS now a Certified Medocal Assistant She graduat·
ed fonn the medtcal ass1sung program at Hocktng College tn Nelsonville

Secretary of State pursuant lo Anrelc
XVI. Sc'Ctoon I of !he Conshlutoon
the Stale of Ohto logether w1th the bal
lol langua~e and e•planatoon ccn1fied
lo me by the Oh1o Ballot Board and
arguments submitted to me by the pro

Art1cle II Sectoon l(c) of
Constllutlon of lhc State of
together wuh the ballot language
ufic-d lo me by the Ohto Ballot
and explanations and arguments
mtttcd to me by the proponents
opponents of the amendments
' as prcscnbcd by law
enactments
IN TESTIMONY WHERFFORE

D

By HALKNEEN
POMEROY • Corn and soybeans
are matunng benetiumg from thJS
fall seasons sunny and dry weather
The combines and graJn wagons w1ll
be traveling the roads 10 complete the
harvest before bad weather sels 1n So
drovers, look out for slower movmg
fann vehocles espec~ally at dawn and
dusk N011ce the slow movmg veht
cle s1gns (SMV), large triangular
BUSINESs-- "Chelcle Comba·Bratton Is pictured with
phosphorescent oran&amp;eemblems on
some of the pumpkins sold at CCK, Inc., a new convenience store
the back of equopmenl A new proand building materials outlet In Cheatar. The atore Ia owned by
gram enutled, FARM- Fewer AccoBill Pullin•
dents woth Reflectove Matenal was
launched thJS fall to help reduce the
number of rural farm relaJed crashes
In the last five years, Ohto has 2523
fann related h1ghway accu!ents 842
persons InJUred and 33 deaths
The FARM program JS emphastZ
CHESTER A new busmess m beddmg plants 10 the spnng Custom mg mcreased cqmpmenJ vtsobthty
Chesler offers a w1de array of mer· sawmg IS also planned
through mcreased use of reflective
chand1se, rangmg from truck acces
Also mcluded IS carry-ou1 beer, matenals and med1a e.posure 10
soncs and buddmg matenals to con
soft dnnks and tobacco Hot dogs non-farm dnvers concermng the
vemence tlems
wtlh homemade sauce and sausage problem In addmon to 1he famthar
CCK Inc IS located at 36371 sandwtches are also avaolablc and the orange SMV sogn and equ1pment
State Roule 7 and os owned by B1ll s1ore locaJcd at the fomtcr Shake hghts, yellow reflecttve patches wtll
Pooler
Shop location has a dnve through be placed aJ the s1de corners and red
The opcrallon offers pretreated Window for convemcnce
&amp; orange reflec11ve patches woll be
lumber. bwldmg and roofing metal
Accordmg tQ Chelcte Combs mstalled on the rear corners of eqUipmulch, sawdust and landscapmg Bralton the store manager the store ment So be careful when you
matenals hydrauhc hoses, fillings ts open from 7 am lo 7 p m Mon approach farm equtpment on the
and hardware, and Leer truck caps day lhrough Thursday, 7 to I0 on Fn roads a few seconds of delay IS not
hners and other truck accessor101
day and 7 to II on Salurday
worih an accodent or IDJUry
The slore woll carry a full hne of

Greenhouse operators, are you
mterested m controlling msects usmg
growth regulators or dec1dmg wh1ch
fenthzer Jo use woJh thJS years sod
mox? Take tame to attend the Fourth
Annual Aonculture Reg10nal Semi·
oar on October 23 slartmg al 7 p m
at Vugtl H1ll &amp; Sons Creenhouses
49072 Stale Route 338, Racme, Oh1o

Th1s years presenters are Richard
Lmdqu1st, Ohoo State UmversJty
Entomologost Specoahsl and Roben
McMahon OSU s Agnculwre Tech
meal Institute Aorlcolture 10structor
The senes of regiOnal schools are
be10g sponsored by Oh10 State Uno
vers1ty and Ohoo Aonsts Foundauon
AdmtsSJon ts free Gtve our office a

~

-

-

New business in Chester
offers array of merchandise

call, 992 66961fyou have any ques
toons

I

Keep your lawn healthy by rak10g
the fallen leaves Heavy leaf cover or
malted leaves can cause your lawn to
qmckly dechne Bare spots m the
lawn wJII quockly allow weeds to
Continued on D-Z

f

I

~--t

i
'

THIRD QUARTER WINNERS· Wlnnera of the
Ohio Valley Publllhlng Com()llny'a third quar·
ter Employes Recognition Awarda were
1nnounced Thuradly. Robert Wingett, OVP
publllher, left, prasented 1warda to Crlatl
Hemphill, bookkeeper, Ohio Valley Publlah lng;
Jan Ia Veazey, compoalng, Point Plalsent Reg-

later, and Pam Caldwell, lldvartlalng, Point
Pleaunt Reglater. Margarat Finnicum, right, Ia
chalnnan of the com()llny'a dtv.ralty commh·
tee Rear - J11on Mayas, mallroom, Ohio Vallay Publl1hlng; Rob Shinn, pnlalman, Ohio Valley Publllhlng, and Brian Read, adhorlll, ThtJ
Dally Sentinel, Porneroy·Middlaport.

I
I

•

\

'

'

j

'

'

�•

Sunday, October 19, 1991

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

•

Conservation reserve program
slgnup announced for Gallla

The House of the week

Florida g~owth slows with fewer retirees arriving

MIAMI (AP) - A decline in
GAlliPOLIS • The 16th signup · tion of soil erosion, water quality n:tirees is likely the biggest reason ror
for the Conservation Reserve Pm- improvement, tree plantings, wildlife a mwnatic slowdown in Florida's
. pam. (CRP) will becin October 14 habitat benefits, air quality, priority population growth during the 1990s,
and end November 14, 1997. Crop- w-.a and cost benefits,
state demographers say.
No existing CRP contract will be
. land offeml for CRP must meet one
The number of residents increased
extended. Acreage upiring Septem- by 13.6 percent from 1990 to 1997,
· of these criteria.
. I. Meet highly erodible land ber 30, 1997 must be bid in this sign- compared with a growli) rate of 32 .7
up to continue into 1998. This percent from 1980 to 1990 and as
Rquirements.
acreage
will compete with all other much as 43.5 percent in the 1970s.
2. Have evidence of scour erosion.
3. Be identified as a cropped wet- bid acreage. A Town Hall meeting· according to new figures from the
will be held October 23, at 7 p.ni. at University of Florida's Bureau of
land.
.
the
Piketon Research and Extension Economic and Business Research.
4. Acreage associated to a nonCenter.
Take SR 32 to Shyville RD
' cropped wetland.
Although Florida's growth rate
Additionally cropland must have 2 miles east of Piketon. Also there slowed, the increase was still impresbeen planted to an agricultural com- will be a Public Meeting at the FSA sive compared with the nation overmodity in two of the last five crop Office Nov. 4. at 10 a.m.
all. U.S. Census figures show the
The Gallia-Lawrcnec FSA is a national average population growth
years.
Acreage bid must have been United States Department of Agri- was 6.7 percent from 1990 to 1996.
-- owned or operated for at least one culture Office located in the C.H.
The state gained more than
' year. Maximum acceptable bid rates ·McKenzie Agricultural Center at Ill 288,000 new residents through births
. ~ based on soi I type and will be cal- Jackson Pike, Room 1571 , Gallipo- and people moving in through the 12
culated prior to submission of a bid. lis, Ohio. Phone 446-8686 or 1-888- months that ended April I.
Bids will be ranked and accepted 211 -1626 (Toll free in 614 area
That pushed the stale's population
based on the amount of environmen- od
tO 14.7 million in 1997, more than
ial benefit oblained for enrolling the c e).
double what it was in 1970, when it
acreage. This criteria includes reducwas 6.7 million . Florida was the
fourth most-populous state in 1995
based on census data after California.
Texas and New York.
University demographer June
GALLIPOLIS - Teresa Woods, 1995 when she began as a nursing
assistant.
She
WJI~
a
RN
supervisor
registered
Nogle said trackers don't have «act
nurse
at prior to her promotion. .
figures on the number of retiree s
Woods obtained her associates moving in.
Arbors at Gal" But right now there's a whole lot
lipohs, has degree in nursing at the University
Rio
Grande.
She
is
currently
purof
fewer 65-year-olds than there used to
been pvomoted to assistant suing her bachelors degree at URG. be in the population as a whole ." she
Woods is an active member of said.
director of
Trinity Wesleyan Church in Oak
nursing.
All Florida counties grew in popHill
.
She
is
the
daughter
of
Weldon
Woods has
ulation over the 6 1/2-year period, the
been with the and D6nna Woods, also of Oak Hill . data show.
Retirees have driven most of Flacompany smce
gler County 's growth and continue to
flock to the oceanside stretch
between St. Augustine and Daytona
Beach, said Kenneth Koch, the counGALLIPOLIS - Ron Toler, Gal- Silver Peak qualifiers, the top 200 ty's planning director.
agents who earned at least
lipolis, has
"We' re adding about 2,500 to
$275,000 in pain annual commisachieved top
3,000 people a year. which is a ~ood
sionable premium between July I, healthy growth rate, " Koch said.
: honors in the
1~95 and June 30, 1997. Silver
·: 1995-1997
"But it's still very manageable. We're
qualifiers were invited to
Peak
; qualifying
attend the Silver Peak convention,
.. period with
held in Sydney, Australia, Sept. 12' Security Life
19. Golden s·ummit qualifiers were
of
Denver
Continued from D·l
invited
to travel to the Hayman
Insurance
Island Reson on the Great Barrier sprout this fall and next spring . Most
Company.
TOLER
grasses can continue to grow
Reed of Australia for an additional
Toler has
throughout the fall season even after
been named to the list of Golden three days.
Toler's other achievements
Summit qualifiers, the top 60 Secua couple of hard frosts. Gra.&lt;&gt; leaves
rity Life agents who earned at least include the top producer award in continue to absorb light and trans$600,000 in paid annual commis- January, 1997. and top producer form water, minerals and carbon
sionable premium between July I, runnerup award in February, 1997. dioxide through photosynthesis into
He has been affiliated with Security carbohydrates and sugars. These
1995, and June 30, 1997.
plant food sources are used to develAs one of the first's top agents, Life since 1993.
Toler was also named to the list of
op extensive root systems and arc
stored for later use hy the plant in the
winter. Leaves on top of a lawn
reduce the amount of light reaching
GALLIPOLIS- The Jackson Soil tive writing of grant proposals.
the grass blades and if too thick they
.
. .
.
.
be may even suffocate the grass plants.
.. Water Consel'lallon Dtstnct ts
Regtstrauon and payment must
R k ff th 1
"'
..
C
a eo
e caves a11 casl once a
sponsoringagrantwnungworkshop · rece1ved by November 14 .. ontact
k 1'f ott ·
kl A 'd k
· entided "The Effective Grant Writer the Jackson SWCD at (614) 286- · wee · n . wtee wee Y· vot ra_ •
· I" to be held November 18-20.. at the 5208 for complete detans, cost ofthe mg them tn the streets as they wtll
OSU Area Extension on SR 93 south workshop and registration in forma- clog up the storm drams. Burnmg
f he Oh'
lion. The workshop is 0 n 10 anyone leaves creates a problem, too, as you
S.
·. ~~leyac~ca'.":~~i.:. Dev~~ wanting to find out mo~ about writ- pollute the atr . and destroy a great
ing effective "rant proposals.
source of Dr¥antc matter For your gar0
. opment will present lhe l hrce- day
dens. Cons1der creatmg your own
: ~orlcshop and cover topics on effeccompost using )eaves as a carbohydrate source. You will be amazed at
how much better your landscape
plants grow with a lillie compost
· placed around them. For more information on creating a compost bin call
our office and ask for our bulletin
CDFS-132. CompostingAt Home.
region's watermen.
By GEORGE ANTHAN
Hal Kneen is the Meigs County
The 0.. Moln11 Rtglater
The situation has devastated the
Agricultural &amp; Natural Resources
WASHINGTON - Pollution of commercially important seafood
Agent, The Ohio State University
the Chesapeake Bay and the business in this area.
Extension.
Pocomoke, Chicamacomico and
. · · RIIJ'Pahannock rivers in Maryland
:· and Virginia by a toxic microbe
; linked to manure from the region's
-Fut, euy Installation
: massive chicken operations repreoGoes directly over old root
' sents a warning to all of agriculture
tWon't Nit or corrode
·
: -and especially to the big hog prooReduce&amp; nolle
. ducers - that much more severe
environmental restrictions are' on thj:
.Provide~ acldld lnlulallon
.way.
ot.lllllme lmlted warranty
The situation is bringing to a head
the long-standing concern that agriculture, as the largest uncontrolled
: remaining source of water pollution,
48"X1r
: should be brought under the regula.
_ (2U lq. Fl.l
lory umbrella of the Clean Water Act,
WHITE "'IAAWN "RED
BLACK
and quickly.
"GRAY
GREEN
TAN
III.UE
The washing of nitrogen and
,N STOCK COLOA8
phosphorus from farm fields into
~~.-·-~~~: streams and ground water supplies in
· the Chesapeake Bay region lends
· emphasis tQ agriculture's exemption
from the act as a glariRg loophole in
the nation's envii'Oilmental controls,
especially as huge factory fanns
proliferating.

:Woods promoted recently

Toler earns top honors

Watch out ...

•Grant workshop started

:.Will agricultural
runoff be regulated?

ROOFING SALE

'

not being overrun."
ond slowest-growing county on a perNew roads, hospitals and golf centage basis over the period since
courses are changing the character of the 1990 census. In terms of sheer
the county, Koch said.
numbetJS Dade has added more resiIn the ea[ly 1980s, Aagler only dents than all but two counties had about 10,000 people and il5 econ- Broward and Palm Beach.
.
omy relied mostly on agriculture.
States similar in size to Florida
Koch said. Since the development in like New York ( 1.1 percent) and Calthe mid-1980s of the planned Palm ifornia (7 .1 percent) grew much less.
Coast community, which targets Florida grew at about the same rate
retirees, the county has grown more as Texas, which grew at 12.6 percent
than four-fold .
from 1990 to 1996, according to the
"We're making that transatton census bureau. Nevada had the
from rural to urban," he said.
fastest-growing population at 33.4
Aagler's estimated population for percent.
1997 was 41.190. That's still a far cry
The slight slowdown in the numfrom the state's most populous coun- ber of new Florida residents, includty. Dade County has nearly 2.1 mil- ing people moving in and people
lion residents.
being born, may be a lull before
Dade, at 6.9 percent, was the sec- another binge in people coming in as

baby boomers retire.
·
The first of the 76 milli on people
born bet ween World War II and 19~
will tum 55 in 2000.
According to the Census Bureau,
Florida is still tops in the nation ~a
retirement destination, ahead of C~l­
ifomia and Arizona.
.While Florida's growth in the
1990s has been slower than in the
'70s and '80s, the number of n~w
Florida residents has edged up a bit
in the last couple of years, owing
panly 10 the end of a recession tHat
mired the state's economy in the e~r­
ly pan of this decade , Nogle said.
The university"s populltion numbers are the official figures used to
determine how much state funding
cities and counties receive.

weeks is expected to more than meet
roasters needs during the cold weather months when coffee consumption
is at its peak.
U.S. inventories, at 2.294 million
bags. now stand 42 percent above last
year 's tight inventories. and U.S.
roasters this year arc not competing
heavily with their European counterpans to secure supplies, said analyst
Judith Ganes at Merrill Lynch.
The anticipation of new supplies,
expected to arrive as much as five
weeks earlier than previously thought
from some countries. helped market
panicipants shrug off the threat of a
weekend Colombian truck drivers '
strike.
Colombia is the world's secondlargest 'producer behind Brazil, but

there is lillie coffee available at the
moment for expon, analysts said.
That means the strike would havo to
last a week or more to have :an
impact.
Arabica coffee for December
delivery fell 6.95 cents to $1.50 a
pound on the Coffee. ·sugar dnd
Cocoa Exchange in New York, the
lowest since Feb. 5.
Crude oil futures prices ten
sharply on the New York Mercanlile
Exchange. erasing strong gains ~ar­
licr in the session. after the Stale
Department announced it had helped
broker a cease-lire to end a wee~ of
heavy fighting between feuding K:urdish factions in Iraq.
'

ACROSS
1 Lessens
6 Be aware of
10 Sacks
14 Acquires
18 Juice-filled frUit
20 Neck part
2t Work on a
manuscript

22 Surrounded by
24 Sends, as payment
25 Currie~s partner
26 Nimbus
27 More active
29 Planting need ·
30 Restaurant
32 A beverage
34 Postern
./
36 Bridge
37 Overhead'rails
38 Burrowirig animal

39 Make careful
investigation
41 Twosome
43 Upperclassmen:
abbr.
44 Caliber
45 Agony
47 Hold
49 ·Special ability
52 Kind of tennis
SJ Unhearing
55 Parts ol some plants
59 Emissal)'
60 Most recent
62 Beast of burden
64 Plant life of a region
65 Grona
66 Beast ot burden
67 "lillie Women"
name

69 Tax erg. letters
71 Eastem European
72 Mineral
73 Paramour
74 Tallahassee's St.
75 Put right
77 Employ'
78 ·Andes animal
80 Cronkite and
Pidgeon
82 Pressed

DOWN

The operators of these facilities
increasingly arc desperate to get rid
of the tons of'manure they generate.
Nearby crop land literally is overloaded with this natural fenilizer.
An Agriculture Department-sponsored study shows, for example, that
the 200 million ch~kens prodU«d
annually in Delaware's Sunex County produce enouah waste to fill3,700
jumbo box cars, not that hauling it
away by train would be economicaJ.
The Environmental Protection
A1ency says more than half of the
2 ()()() watersheds have moderate-IDwater quality problems, with
fer1iliz.er and pesticide-loaded runoff
from farm f~elds among the chief
•
COIIa:ibutors.
.
1
The microbe in the Chesapeake
reJrion is Pfiesteria pisci~ida. which
sickens and kills fish and has been
linked to illness among some of lhe

•

85 Chimney dirt
87 Salver
86 Harbor towns
89 Topics
90 One that schemes
92 Therefore
93 Notable lime
94 Not flexible
96 Hear~ng organ
97 Burning

1 Sicker

81 Go wrong
83 Grampus

2 Spinn1ng 'round

B4 Auto trim

3 Calls
4 Oklahoma city
5 Mil. rank
6 Dagger
7 Wheel hub
8 Unclose. poetically
9 Certain pqputar

85 Of the backbone
86 Ancient
89 Male singing voice
9t SeiZe
92 - -and·mi!Jhly
95 Something sticky
97 Come to be
98 Actuality
100 Art movement
101 Bntish gun
103 Ceases
105 Publish
106 Stupid
107 - the hatchet
109 Chair part
1tt Type o! music
113 Midday

99 Asner and Sullivan

102 Stem joint
104 Mother superior
105 Writing flUid
106 Rugged rocks 1 '"
107 Unruly child
108 Portents
110 War goo
112 Fortify with vitamins
114 Napped leather ·
1t5 Blush
117 Endure
119 Oven
120 NBA's Michael121 First king of Israel
t23 Intention
· 125 Horse
126 Viper
129 Sapling
13t Merits
132 Church service
133 Govt. org.
136 Burden
138 Lots and lots
140 Besprinkle
141 Make sound
recordings
142 Haul
143 Chest of drawers
145 Word with test
14 7 Wading bird
t49 Drive forward
151 Happen again
152 African ruler
153 Friar
154 Montana's capital
155 libertine
156 Stewart and Steiger
157 Peepers
156 Concerns

movies

'

10 Acted
11 City in Oklahoma
12 Overlay with gold
·13 Crouch
14 An archangel
15 Australian bird
16 Pitch
t7 Cuts
19 Man on a date
23 Toolhed wheel
28 Hosp. worf&lt;ers
31 Pub dnnk
33 Shade free
35 Hard wood
38 NWstale
39 Round wood rod
40 Foe
42 Coral ridge
44 Part ol n.b.
45 Spud
46 Type of cross
48 Buddies
49 Mexican lood

culture medium
51 Sensible
52 Crippled
54 Not substantial
56 J01ned up willingly
57 Rubs out
58 Rescued
60 Molten rock
61 Lofty
63 Before, poetically
66 Enters: 2 wds.
68 Make a difference
70 Hidden shooters
73 Kind of printer
74 Make plump
75 Macaw genus
76 Humming sound
79 On the - (fleeing)
50

114 Male children

1t 6 Furtherlhe
development ol
1t 8 Merchants
120 Husband of Mal)'
122 The lion
124 Quid - quo
125 Soft food
126 Priest's vestment
127 like vineg,ar
128 K•lchen gadget
130 Stage direction
132 Hides
133 Escapade
134 Peace goddess
135 Book of maps
137 Ten: prefix
139 Japanese wrestling
141 Fork part
142 Soft dnnk flavor
144 Diving b1rd

146 Command
t48 Youngster
t 50 Chronicle: abbr.

4351 ST. RT. 110 GAWPOUS, OH
Mon.-Fri.

kitchen, breakfast room,
sun room, game room, three bedrooms, two and .o ne half baths
and a utility room, totaling 2,840
square feet or living opace. The
blueprints offer an option ror
another bedroom on the upper
floor in place of the game room.
This plan includes a standard
b~semenl, crawlspace or slab
foundaUon, and 2x4 exlerior wall

G-70
BEYOND TilE PORCH, the foyer preoenll oev.,.al option• to arrivlnl lUella: the llvln1 room to the len, a hallway ahead to the
kitchen or a atalrwa;r to the upper Door. The U-ohaped kitchen Ia
r.Mtrally lo~ated, and oervlceo both the formal dlnlnf! room and the
'' , the L.. ,,.,_
l •eakfu..- uuok. A utiUty ruum II nearby.l.' .•ubh
IUt nook lead out to the aua room, which oll'en acceu to the twocar 11ai'I&amp;C and a large aton11e area. The upper Door hu a game
room betw~n two nice-alzed bedroomo, with an option ror another
bedroom lo place or the pme room.

8-5; Sat. 1-12

. '

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page B-7

framing. The two-car garage and
storage provide Mt square feel or
add1Uona1 space.
(For &lt;1 more deiDiled, IC&lt;J~d pl&lt;Jn
qf lhil hoU5e, including guides to
; .• timalin,g cusls andflu.allcin~.
send $4 lo HoU5t qf lhe Week, P.O.
Boz IJ62, New York, N.Y. IOJI6IJ62. Be Jure to Include IM pl&lt;ln
number.

Homes: Questions and answers
By POPULAR MECHANICS
you'll have to do a little light scrub- '1 square inch of peeled paint chips
For AP Special Feature1
bing with a mild household detergent. and bring them to a paint store that
Q: I recently installed a central
To save steps, buy a hose-end offers computer color matching.
Q: Please advise on the problem
heating system in my home. The old brush (aboul $10), found in automoheaters, measuring 20-by-60 inches, tive stores and general retail outlets. with a building that has two coats of
are mounted back-to-back in the With this tool , you can wet, 'itrub and oil-base paint and needs painting. I
wall between rooms. Removing these rinse- all from pne position. Just stan would like to change to a water base
units will leave a huge pass-through at the top and work down, doing paint. Would this idea be possible? I
between rooms. I want to frame out roughly 8 feet at a time. Some hose- intend to perform this work myself.
the openings arid repair the walls so end brushes even feature detergent
A: According to the . technical
the patch won't be noticeable. Should wells, which feed soap into the brush department at Benjamin Moore Paint,
I use lath and plaster, or should I try along with the water.
there is no reason that prevents you
to make a flush patch with easier to
Washing also highlights those · from spreading latex over oil-based
handle wallboard?
areas that need to be touched up with paint. In fact, you can go back and
A: If you want a perfectly smooth paint. As the water dries, it causes forth between latex and oil. Howevwall, you should cover the entire wall loose paint to curl out, which yields · cr. the wall surfaces must be proper- from corner to corner- with wall- a more effective scraping.
ly prepared before painting.
board. It's very difficult to achieve
When the water dries, use a paint
The surfaces must be clean, free of
perfection with a patch. Depending scraper to loosen and remove all dirt and grease spots and should not
on how light strikes the wall, you will loose paint in the area. Then_,to fcath- be excessively chalked. A good way
sec ripple shadows at the patched er the edges of the remaining paint, to ensure proper surface preparation
sand the surface with a medium-grit is to have the walls power washed.
joints.
But, if you intend to hang pictures paper and a sanding block.
The wash water also usually contains
on this wall or cover it with a textured
For best results, prime the spots additives to kill mildew. Priming the
paint or wallpaper, patching would be · where the paint has come off, using surface is not necessary if the surface
adequate. Because of the size of the a quality exterior primer. If the is in good condition. That is, there arc
opening, filling it with wallboard primer you use has an oil or alkyd no peeling sections or blisters. If there
would be best.
base, and your finish paint has a latex arc, those sections should be scraped
Q: The outside of our clapboand- base, use a small brush to touch up and spot primed . You can then apply
sided home is beginning to look · the primer. With a small brush, you one coat of a good quality house
dingy, and there are some areas won't need to worry about paintmg paint; although two coats would be
where 'the paint is starting to peel. oil over latex. ·
·better. A good quality paint, applied
What's the best way to freshen up the
When the primer has dried, applf correctly. should last six to seven
exterior appearance without having to the topcoat with a touch-up hrush. years.
do a complete repaint job?
Remember that the paint on ·the
~- A:_ Qften, . ~imply washinL!l'"-d_ h(Juse may have faded slightly, so
To submit a question, write to
spot-painting will bring back that keep the paintCil area small. Any uiS- --popularMi'chanics, 'Reader S'er·
freshly painted look, and for a frac- crepancy in color will be Jess notice- vice Btireau, 224 W. 57111 St., New
tion of ihe price of rcpa·inting. The able on a smaller seal~ .
·
York, N. Y.· l0019. The most interfirst step is to wash the siding. SimIf you would like to go the touch· . esting questions will be aRSWered in
ply hosing it down won't do•. nor will up route, but ~ave no~e of the origi- a future column.
using a power washer. Ltke 11 or not, nal patnt, don t despa1r. Just salvage

I

'

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Featurea
Although built to last by those
who came before us, old house foundations are vulnerable to the wear and
tear of time and the elements. The
key to preserving and maintaining
these brick and stone walls is periodic
inspection to prevent small problems
from growing into big ones. The usual maintenance is repainting the
joints between the old brick or stone.
Your first line of defense against
foundation problems is keeping the
exterior of these old brick or stone
walls in good condition . The integrity of the lime monar joints must be
maintained to prevent water penetration.lf-water does get inside, the normal freeze-thaw cycle will cause the
masonry to move and crack and
allow even more moisture in. Also,
it's best to keep all plant materials at
least 16 inches from the face of the

I

wall to prevent problems that can be
caused by the roots.
Most homeowners arc aware if
there are any ~as where bricks,
stone or mortar arc missing, chipped
or cra~ked . Obviously, .situations
where there's been a major loss of
material demands that the building be
shored up before the repair work is
done. This is not a do-it-you~self pro·
ject. But repainting patches of
masonry, although labor intensive, is
something an old-house owner can
tackle with a great deal of success.
You should also check the interior, walls and ceilings of your house
for signs of cracking in the plaster or
drywall. Allho~gh some cracking is
nonnal - usually it's a result of cyclical movement in the soil or shrinkage
of the materials themselves - wide
gaps where you can stick your finger
or a ruler are another story. If you
note these or any other major move-

mcnt of the walls, it's time to get
some professional advice from a
contractor or structural engineer
before you begin any masonry work.
· There·s ·a major difference
between the way restoration masonry work is done and what's commonly done in new masonry work
today. and that's the type of monar
that is used. Too often. ponland
cement monar mix is used to repaint
old joints that were originally lime
mortared.
You must keep the materials compatible, and old lime monar and new
cement mortar just don't mtx. The .
latter is much harder than the original. Therefore, cement mortar can
cause cracking and spalling of the
brick and stone because the ~tronger
material shrinks or moves at a different rate than the original lime mor-

•

f

I•
•
'

1

tar.
1

j

BULLETIN BOARD

Glass
Most windows today come wit~ a
double-pane glass for energy efficiency, which means you can do
away with storm windows. Some
windows are triple- or even _quadruple-glazed to reduce heat flow significantly.
Other options make glass even
more efficient:
The practice of multiplying panes
to increase efficiency is often augmented by the usc of low-E (for emissivity) glass.

.

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY
SELECTION OF
LANE ACTION
RECLINERS
ROCKERS, WALL
HUGGERS, CHAISE
LOUNGE RECLINERS
$250.$425
FREE DELIVERY
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Mon. thru Sat. 9-5; Ph. 446-0322
3 Miles Out Bulaville Pike

COKE
$4.9924pk
No Limit
Bounty Bundle Pack
$9.89
Charmin Bundle Pack
$6.50
Oak Swings $99.00
Just arrived over 40 varieties
Bulk Candies Cement Lawn
Ornaments 20% off Fall
Mums 5/$10
Ohio Valley Supermarkets
Warehouse
Acrosa from Ga!!ia Co. Fatrgroun~s
446-6174

5Tans
$5.00

By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS . Style
For AP Special Feature•
Buy a window that's the same
Rain, sun, heat and cold - not to Slyle as the old one, to maintain the
mention thousands of openings and character of the house. One of the
closings. eventually cause windows most common types is a doubleto fail. When nonnal maintenance 'hung, one-over-one window. Anethcan no longer keep tbem running er common type is the casement winsmoothly, it's time to install replace- dow, which swings outward like a
ments.
door.
Shop for replacements at home Materials
centers, lumberyards and window
Replacement' windows can be
specialty stores. Professional instal- wood, wood clad in vinyl or alulation may be included in the cost.
minum, all-vinyl, or all-aluminum.
Here 's a checklist to simplify . Each has its own particular advanyour choice
, tages.

I

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR
Houra:

D

~~~~.a-~rn~~: a~~~~~

Replace old windows to ·create new outlook

We carry Reclever Hitches, Fifth Wheel Hitches,
BaH Mounts, and many other accesories for yovr
NEW and OLD cars and trucks.

(814) 446-1044

·-·

"*'*" •.

FOIIHE FIRST OlE HURDlED ·
CUnOMERS·WE HIVE FREE
IISTILLATIOIIll

.;nous

........

'··'f;J~tt;f~!1rl§lfl,l!i~:l

SPECIAL SALE 011 ALL
HIJCHES Ill·STOCK--

I

- --....

BO Court

"-' • Page 03

Inspection key to guarding against ·
old house foundation problems

PO~RC~H~,::==r:==

DIMIIIC

84 Pursue

, 1 c-..~

'·

dormen Jive curb appeal to
AN EXPANSIVE COVERED FRONT
the exterior or lhlo home.
rious private both hao lwfn walka lot since the exterior realures 8
By BRUCE A. NATHAN ·
Iars• front porch, shuttered win- . in closets, an oval tub and FrenchAP Newafeatum
With its pair of Oreplaceo, ~unny dow• and a trio or dormers. The door' access to the front porch.
The other fireplace lo In the Jivhome hu a generous 2,840
living ~pace!\ and superb ma8ler
Ing
room which features French
square
feel
orllvlng
area.
suite, Plan G-70, by llomeSt)'IM
1ha1 open to the front
doors
The
master
suite
ha•
one
or
the
Uf.~lgner~ Network, 18 a~ warm
ond inviting nn the Inside as ll Is r!replaces, and offers French porch. The adjoining dining room
nn the outside. And, that'• saying doors to a rear @Orden. The luxu- includes an elegant bow window
that will brighten any meal.
Upper Level
The U-shaped kitchen and the
spacious breakfast room overlook
---· ----a sun room - an Ideal spot to
relax on a bright winter day. A
half-bath and a utfllty room are
nearby the kitchen.
The blueprin;s for this home
provide
for·a choice of three bedII O'llf'l'
rooms on the upper floor or two
bedrooms separated by a game

SUNDAY PUZZLER

~ SOUTHERN STATES

Overloadod

•

room.

••••
$1'149* .

are

Magnificent exterior
matched by interior

Coffee falls to eight-month low on ample supply picture .
By CLIFF EDWARDS
AP Business Writer
Coffee futures prices fell to an
eight-month low Friday ahead of coffee harvests in Central America,
Colombia and Mexico that will
replenish gourmet-bean inventories
for the peak consumption period.
On other markets, crude futures
tumbled in late trading on repons
about a cease-fire among Iraqi rebel
groups that could ease Middle Eastern tensions. Soybeans tumbled
under harvesting pressure and con- .
cern about a halt in expons to Japan.
While the U.S . Green Coffee
Association earlier this week reponed a sharp decline in available supplies, the arrival of newly harvested
beans from Latin America in coming

~ ..

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

Sunday,~r18,1997

...,

(week ulimited}

Summer
Image
Hair, Nails and Tanning Salon
near Haflells Mill Outlet
St. Rt. 160
446·6959

25% to 50% off
A selecl group of .
WOMENS SHOES
70 colors &amp; styles to chooSe
from

HARDWAY'S SHOE
HARBOUR
33B 2nd Ave Gallipolis
Across from the city park

THE. CANDLE COMPANY
"we make scents"
NEW SCENTS:
Gingerbread
Fresh Peaches
Hot Fudge
Homemade Vanilla Ice Cream
FREE Votive
wilh $5 purchase
SHIRLEY ARROWOOD
BEARS
available for adoption
now through Oct. 25
M-F 10:00 til 6;00
Sat 10:00 'til 4:00
1591 SR 160, Gallipolis
(614} 446-1603

~ashington

Elementary
"School Spirit"

Jacket Sale!
Mon, Oct 21Mon, Nov. 3
Sample jackets for
size try-on at the
school during the
date above
AMVETS
108 Uberty Street
Kanauga, Ohio
Phone 446-9051
7:30-10:30 pm
· Hoe-Down, Two-Step, Clogging
2nd Sat of the month- Adams
County Pickers
3rd Sat. of the month·

Country Grass
4th Sat. of the monthUberty Mounlaineers
BINGO
Wed. &amp; Thurs. 7:00-1 0:00 pm

Country Line Dance Lesson's
every Friday Night at 7:00 pm
with Jamie &amp; Debbie Moore.
Eve one Welcome

ARTS &amp; CRAFTS
SHOW

OPEN HOUSE
Overbrook Center

RT. 7
PIZZA EXPRESS
992-9200
. Large 16",

3 Item $9.99

Subs, Salads, Lasagna,
Spaghetti, Bread Sticks,
Hot Wings or
Cheese Sticks:

WE

DELIVER!!

Congratulations
Bob Evans Blue
Ribbon Winner
Eloise Drenner
of Weaving stitch
and her stitch
weavers!

Middleport, Oh 45760
Saturday, October 25, 1997
10:00 a.m.· 4:00p.m.
Arts and Crafts by Area
Craftsmen Free Tablespace
Available
For more information, please
conlact Mike Crites
at Overbrook Cenler at
61 4~992-6472
between 9-4 M-F

HUNTERS SAFETY uuun'"'
Oct. 25 &amp; 26 Noon to 5 pm
Registeration required.
Call Noreen Saunders
446-4612

Spaghetti Dinner
&amp;Auction

446-2342 or 992-2156

FOR MORE INFORMATION

I
''

South Gallia Boosters
October 21st
Meal from 6 to 8 pm
$3 .00
Auctjon from 8 to 10 pm
Singing &amp; Entertainment
Everyone Welcome
Presbyterian CounlfY Store
51 State Street Gallipolis, Ohio
Friday, October 24
Country Store
10:00 am - 7:00 pm
Lunch 11:00 am-1:00pm
Supper 5:00pm-7:00pm
Chicken &amp; Noodles, Hot Dogs
&amp; Cole Slaw, Apple Dumplings
Ice cream &amp; Drinks
Eat in or take out

Nails By
Teresa

,.

p'

•

1

·'

Lissa's Riverview
Salon of Beauty

Offering a full set
of acryllic nails
Reg. $45.00

Now $25.00
thru the end of October
Call 446·4660
for an appt.

I

,,I

A Hillbilly Halloween
Fall Festival
Saturday, October 25 6:00 pm
.Southwestern Elemenlaiy
School
Food, Games, Joy Jump
Jumping Tent, Costume Judging,
Pumpkin Decora1ing Contest.
Raffles, Win a 2 night stay at the
Stone Manor Bed &amp; Breakfast &amp;
more. Auction, Royally
Recognition Lo1s, Lasts more!l
I would like to thank
aU of my customers and
friends . Thanks for all of
your business and
friendship that you all
have given me in the
past BY&gt; years.
Thank You So Much,
Jana Baker

Soup Supper
Thursday,
October 23rd
5 pm at Thurman
Grange Hall in
Centerville
Soup, Hot Dogs, Pie,
Cake, Coffee, Soft
Drinks

i

T.J.
16¢
Alladdin

J

I·

I

'"

'
'1

i

i

�Page 04. ,_.., ........

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH .• Point Pleaunt, wv

•

Meadows: The new Ame~ican garden
POUND RIDGE, N Y (AP) M oss has gradually crept over a shaded edge of our lawn I used 10 dig It
oul and reseed w11h grass, bul now
I'm leltmg ollake over In a small way
I' m onvolved on the " new Amencan
garden "
Do I wanl to go further and sian
a meadow? Here m the woodsy
Northeast thai means work Lovmg
on counlry acreage, I have plenly of
room for expenmentmg, but do I
have the dedocatoon and stamona?
As Slevoe Danoels says on her
" Wold Lawn Handbook" (jusl published by Macmollan on paperback)

··creatmg a meadow does not mean
JUSI d1sconunumg to mow, nor does
11 mean rhat yard chores wrll end

As so many Amen can s have
fruslratmgly doscovered," she adds,
&lt;~ you

cannot create a meadow by
sowmg an area with a maxture of
wl)dflowers alone For the lon g
renn, perennoal planung 1ha1 mosl
people have on mond when lhey pl ant

a meadow you must mclude three to

four spec1cs of nauvc grasses along
wuh rhe woldtlowcrs
If you plant
a m1x that conlams only wold !lowers
you Will do con stant hallie wo lh
weeds and nonnat1 ve grasses and you
woll need 10 O\crsced at lcasl every
olher year
And I got anolhcr sobc nng
appra"al on Taylor s Moster Guodc
10 Gardcnong (Houghton Molllon)
\\l) h.: h

\\arns

cntH.:mg p1ctures

that

and promoses, offered by vanous
brands of 'canned' meadows are, al
hesl somphstJc '
In lhe Eas1em woodlands 11 says
'a meadowllke m1x of nauve grass
es and herbaceous planls may quock
ly colonoze a cleared area, bul after a
few years 11 woll have goven way 10
brambl es and fas1-growmg trees such
as red cedar j\fwnlammg a meadow
garden on such an area requores reg
ular mtervenlo on to forestall the nal
ural course of evenrs You' ll need to
mow, bum or pull out undcso rabl e
planrs by hand
Thus forewarned, why would an
Eastern gardener want a meadow,
anyway ?
Only on lhe Great Plarns and the
Western mountams do we find truly
prololypocal long I O'ed meadows
Bu11here are pluses for domg 11 here
Asode from lhe beauty of a wold·
nower landscape meadow growong
ISecologically attract1ve It reduces or
cllmonates the use of symheuc fertol·
ozers and dangerous pesll co dcs and
herbocodes and fumes from gasohne
propelled mowers II henefits woldhfc

and consen es water
I m partly on the w ay there
already because I don I use chemocals
on rhe lawns Dandeloons aj uga and,
I confess crabgrass gro w at woll It's
a far cry from the \ elvety spreads of

suburbia whose mtense c hcm1cal
mamte nancc bothers ecolog osts (I eat

1.;,~~;:,;,;;;;.;:;.;.;:.,=.:!.,_

I al so use a batrery-propelled
mower on some areas, lhus reducmg
fumes Apparently our ecology os
faorly sound for we 've nouced no
depleuon of hees, butterflies, brrds,
loads, grass snakes or earthwonns
Bull don' t have lhe scenoc beauty of
a woldtlower field
Dauntmg as ol may he to fulfill, lhe
' new garden" vosoon stays wrth me
and I'm plannong ro Sian a uny mead
O\\ as a lnal Readrng S1cv1e Danoels
goves me a good odea of problems, for
she oncludes lhe expenences of gardeners around lhe counrry
I find I'm on the nght track w11h
my moss because ol's " on a Site wnh
large, mature shade lrees, plenty of
moos1ure dunng the growmg season
and acod so1l " Somethong I dodn 't
know I II have to pull out any blades
of grass and other plants lhat show up
and al so keep lhe mossy patch
cleared of dead leaves m the fall
For lhe embryonoc meadow, I ve
chosen a sunny, 10-by-10 foot spot m
the center of a lawn Followmg
dorecllons I II carefully erad1ca1e all
the exoslong vegetatoon there, trlllhe
sool this fall and seed wnh nauve
wold flowers and grasses m lhe spnng
(Danoel s' book mclude s hsts of plants
thai are suo table for every part of lhe
counory)
I II g1 vc 11 a couple of years and
of ot prospers and I m up 10 I he work
Ill sp read ot

Growing Companl•a And We

Promo• Fn&gt;m Wlflln Ollt&gt;ot1unl~·• "'' Bolli Locol And ·Nauon-

-1'1110 VACATION

J ,I D'o Aulll Porta Bu•ln• aal·
• •
VIQt~ctot Selling portL 90471'S-~

Non Working Walhor, Drrora,
SID.... R...lgoratora, Frt1ZII'I,
Air Conclltlonoro, Color TV 'o,
VCR'a, Also Junk C1t1, 114-258·
1231
EMPLOYr.lENT
SERVICES

Tho Narlon·o largtot Prlvoltlr
1o Stt~no An e-gollc,

p=

OHtr A Comblnadon 01 Mo._
-~ SaJoa, And
Acdvlly. Advancomon111
At We
lvo Ont 01 Tho Nalion'a Ftoltll

-

de CISIOn

Wesly now works half days
wolh three olher brokers on the Wcs
theomer Group managong about $500
molloon for Fern s Baker Watts Inc He
also appears on radoo and televos oon

twtce a day to answer caiJ m ques

uons
Sonce age '6!))he has wntten a
tWICe- weekl y finltncoal advocc col
umn for The Sun of Balumorc He
al so appears as a guest panch st on
' Wall S1ree1 Week wolh Lou&lt;S
Rukeyser "
He has more energy than any·
body I know,' saod Mark Dyer
semor voce presodent of Fern s Bak
er ' He's always cheery deloghlful
Always thonkmg of odeas
On hrs call·m shows Weslheomer
rakes every questoon sen ously no
matler how much money IS Involved

Donlll" Proftr Sharing" COIK

Public

Public Notice

APPLY AT
M LUMBER COMIWIY

valulllona, 11 eatabllahod
lor lax year 1H7, mutt be
modo In accordonce with
Soctlon 571519 of lho Ohio
lltvltttf Code. Thoae
complalnll muot bo lllod on
h will be

manner provided by Section
571519 of the Ohio Revleed
Codt.
Nancy Parker Campbell
Malgo County Audllor

have boen rtviHd
and and
valuatlont
complotod
ara open ror public In1poction tn lho olftco or tho
llolgl County Aud~or,
Socon&lt;l Floor, Courthouao,
Second Stroot, Pomeroy,
Ohlc 4117811
Complalnll agalnal tho

thobeCounty
and mutt
111td In
Aud~or 1 Offici
on or beloNiho 31tt day of •
March, 1991 All complaint•
lllod with the County
Audllor will bo hoard by the
Boafd or Rovl1lon In the

Public Notice
Pellllona can be obtained
from Stertlary Dorio H
Maca, 2081 Reynold 1 Ave ,
Albonr, Ohio
Pttlllono
mutt bo flltcl wllh tht
Socrotary at lout (7) dayo

~~~~1~1'1'1~1~1~
19, 20, 21, 1otc

An Equal Opporrunlry Employar

IIJI'OV
Drug Froo E - 1
ACCOUNTING
ASSISTANT
Akzo Nobel II One OF The
Worldl L•adlng Companltl In
Stltcltd Arlll Of ChtmiCIII,
Coalinga, Heallhcare Producta
And fibera Yore Than 70,000
People In Over 10 Counultt

Mal&lt;a Up Tho Akzo Nobel WDtk·
farce.

Wt Have An Opening In Our

Galllpollo Ferry, WV Offoce For
Accounttn~

Astlt,blnt We
Required Prav•oua Experience

And /Or Educaroon Tho Suc·
coosful Candldalt Should Havo 5
Years Experience In The Areaa
Of Accou ntlng, Accounts Pay
able And Flnanclll Data Entry 1

Proceaa•ng t..asoclate'a Degree
Or Equal Required Bachelor'•

DtgrooAPiuL

PloaM Send Rooumt To

Human Rtaourcao Dtpt.
AKZONOBEL
CHEIICALS,INC.
P.O.IIo.x 1121

SIIIOFb.2
Gallipollo Fony WV 25515

btforo aloctlon
Candidate• mull llavt a
valid mambeNhlp tlckat lor
tho Albany ln&lt;lapandont
Agriculture Socloty, be rtll·
donll of Alaxancler Local
School Olllrlct, be 1a ytoro
or ago and over.
Tonm ololtcllon wilt be lor
1998 • 20110 Th,.. to be
olocttd lor 1ht 3 y•r term
The Albany Independent
Agriculture Socllly
Oorla H. Moc:a, Secretory
(10) 12, 19,
3TC

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Roltrenct 5715.17
Ohio Rovlald Codo
Tho Molgo County Board
ol llovlolon 1111 comploltd
11a w«k or equalization Tha
1IX rotumo lor lax yoar IH7

lh•l ;~~:~:~=~by

JDB@MI.UUSER.COU

EOEM'FION

28

Avon II ·S 18/Hr, No Door ·To •
Door, Quick Calh, Fun I RalaJ
lng, 1 - 1 - 0 «

AVON • Sl -$20 /Hr No Door To

Door Quick Caahl •Banuu•• 1100-21114138

AVON SELLS IT9ELFI
A,.,.go 18-llllil'&lt; blntlilll
Workplace- flrri~ ~- Flelll~· hoo.nl No ~111-tQO.
742 me. (1t1Jd.l
Babylltter needed In Muon
area 2 children Mon Frl 304m-gt55 afltr 5pm

Carpenter• I laborers Far local

_,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...-+---------+......;--------..j.-,...,........................j Gallopollo
Job Top Pay Exptrl·
once Only Nlld Apply """"8
MHJOUrjCEf.1ENTS

005

40

Giveaway

90

Wanted to

1D42En2111

Buy

Computer Users Needed Work

Stand1ng limbef or pulp wood lor
ciMr cut. contact Greg 11 eu

Personals

Own Hro , $20K To $50K /Yr 1
800-3ol&amp;-7186 X11 73.

Do 'rllu

[I.IQ.3015,

CoamotalogJtl Needed Gaur-

... . ,.

Chopped Wood, 114·388-8181,
Or 11C-a.D7C7

Wanltd Standing Timber Or

anteed Wages, Paid Vacation,
Free CEU Hour, Full &amp; Part Want

Havo Hard Cholcoo? Lot
A Poycl'ic Holp Jull CaM 1 II00:12t-10CS, Extll017 sng Ilion.
Uuat Be 18 Yr• Sltrv U 11a

30

Ut-12•1 Ext 1258, 12 gg Per
Min Muar So 18 Yoaro, Sorv U Puppies Half Collie, Halt Shep
pard. Sholl, I w..ka Old
(11C)3118-0157 Col Aflor. pm
IIEET
10UII
To good homo only femat. Wtl·
IIATQI
maran« .cyr1 okJ spayed, great
1----·12CS. Ellt g7111 $21111 Wfkldl hOUH broken 304 773
/Min, Mull So 18 Yro Sorv U 5017L-mosaago

11HoiU434

The fam•ly of
Dorothy Meeks w11hes
to expreu the&amp;r thanks

MON. &amp; WED.

ar~d

apprectatron for
the flower., food and
con1oling word. dur.ng

6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST

, . 111143'

60 Lost and Found

A'[riNTION HAIRITYLIST Gtl
y.., Ohio SlOtt houro will Jo·
....., Kur &amp; Kun. Monclar Oct
2~ 1117 •10 OD por porson caM
J~t IU·CCI Ull or 114

our bereavement We

at.o want ro thank the
mun.tler, unsen and
the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home
MAY COD BLESS
YOUAH

$800.00
$50.00 OR MORE

.....oa••

Giveaway

Wesley "Hauter" Meeks
Jeannette, 1im and boy•
Darlene, Greg and family

PER GAME

BEECH GROVE

....

-72e7

Card of Thank•

BINGO

Meel Vour Compilnlon 1 100

31tJ Announcements

Anno!lncementa

ed Oohor Bonolill Included 11""

Cmdy, Dean and Amber

lniolllrl long-hiiNd llrwnlwhloa
klllln, - - - . lnlldt ..~

HIS half IS qettmq
frosty
He fiqhts the "!3att:le
the !3ulqe·
He loves those Little
Debbie Cakes anci
tencls to overmclulqe
He s plaguecl With
mcl1gest1on ancl a
pam or two from
li[tmq
D1agnos1s'-'1orty
Sync/rome·- ana a
WaiStline that IS
shi{t1ng 1
'[he fight song of Oh1o
Stare will cCIIAse h1s
pulse to quiCken He s
founcl the cure for
claiiiJ stress m a
barn w1th a !3ant11
chicken
We WISh him Happy
/31Ythclay ana all the
1011 that clay can
bnng Ma11 h1s heart
be ftlleci w1th sonq
but PLEIISE cion t
askhim ..HE
M 9(jH'[ 59Ny
(Heaven torb1ciQ
llnybocly know a
goocl cloctor"
card

of Ttlanka

The famoly of
Ceorgw
Barnett
wrohes to thank all o
theor froends a"d
neighbors who were
so helpful and carong
durmg the rllness and
death of their loved
one Durtns a ll.me
l,ke thu we realc:e

how much our Jroends
mean to 111 espectally
the members of the
llockory Holt. Church
of Chnsl, ';A uut1e "
Vera, Joe and 1 heda,
Karen, Ru&amp;s, Kay
and b11l, Dove , Amy
Baker the rJurse from
Home Health Care,
and the "angel&amp;" from

Hosp1ce
DPbboP,
Shetla, Kathy, C111d)
and Dana We rJPPdPcl
each and t•rwry QIIP u
you and you were
always there for us. A
specwl rlormks w Jo•
Hosk.ns unci M1kP
Putman of Wh&lt;t es
Funeral 1/ornP for
tl II fl.
ar r a"8'"H
conducung such a
beauliful servt ce We
deeply apprectaU all
the praye rs, CCireds,
flowert , lhe numerous

--~-

d .. hes of food unci
mo.r of all the lov1r1g
and
thoughtful
fn e ndohop
ancl
•upport gwen to the
family.
Your kindneu woll
alway s
be
remembered
Clarence, Ron &amp;
Carol, Roger, Robyn
&amp; Mike, Steven &amp;
AIIUon, Mtehael and
Brittany

•

Earn 11 000 WHkly SlUffing EnYelopet At Home. Srart Now Na
Exporoenco Fru Suppllt' Info
No Obllga tion Send LSASE To
ACE, Dept 1351 Box 5131 Dla
monel Bar, CA 011115
Eam extra money lor Chrlaln'lu,
Ill! Avon, cal 114-84a-GOQG
Equll Opponuniry
Emc&gt;ioyorlot/FJDIV
Smoi&lt;a l'rH And Drug Froo
Erwlronrnont

Challenging And Rowardlng Co
reer Avallaflla Through Our Wan
agernent Tralnlna Program We

Are Seeking An

to Carat Ulller, Director of

lnlelligan~

Ca-

nut Far more lnfarmallon call

IJdt needed Competill\lt ularr

Apply in peraon at Point Piauant Nuralng &amp; Re~abllltallan
Center, Soalt Rouro 12. Plllnr
Plaaaan~ WV EOE.

IC P:O Box 1QQ Jackaon OH

•se.o

Experienced detaller In Pt
Pteuant artL Call e14-423-8581
Alk farEnc

EJperiancad Hair Dreasar wi lh
Cl•enlelt Wanted For Bulf New

Solon [81•) "1-1880

Buolnno. Mtdic:llllila.

~ol=
1·100-218-9000
En a. 281&lt;1.
Local Vending Rourt For Solo
Earn Big 1. lluol Soil Call Now,

HO Accredlltd Willi Commondo·

PERSON WANTED To Own And
Oporaro Rooall Candy Shop In
Strvlng 1talf/ cook• nuded lor GALLIPOLIS Area Low lnvootfull-limo po~•on. pick up appllct mtnl For lnformarlon Call Mro
Uon, Tho Cool S~ SR 7, Cool Burdan'e Cindy Compo..... i'oro'tlor'fl, TX817-332 grg2,
ullt.

And 01Ytrlt Clltlaad, And A

SOmoono To Cltort HouM &amp; Iron 220 Money to Loan
- , _ 11H41 41111
NEED A LOAN? Apply Tho Eaoy
Timber Culler Noedod at•a82 War ·Br Phone Friendly Loan,
7•55 Call Berwon 7 Pll To tO e14 3811 0135.
P.ll Onlr
230 Professional
WANTED Caahlor oxporlence
Sarvlces
, _ . , . 304-895 3803.

RtllabiiUation For A D1varae
Cl~antelt Athena Pt'tysical Thera
py Specializes In A Manuel I
Hondo On T1oono17t Approach.

WANTED Window linter In Pt
Pteaunt ar• 151-'-423-0581 Ask

HARTS IIASONARY • Block,
brick &amp; a10n0 work, 30 ynra ox

Athena Phyllcal Tht,.Pr Ofltro

Wltktnd bind letkl YOOIIill

895-3581 afror a:QOpm, no job .,
- o r 1&gt; BIG WV-o21208

and banlar. mull havt experi
onco and bt opon minded Rooll
art 7rto Rock wllll _,., Clvlo~n Con10mporory Call 114 817
37115 or S1oJ.II4i-30111.

livlng11on 1 butment waterproofing, aU buement repalr1
done, fret asllmates, lifetime
guarentet 10yra an job experl

perlence rea1anablt rate1 30-'·

far Eric.

Tap Salarte• And Benefita Pack-

ages For Our Clinician• Athena
Phy~col Therapy It lOctled On

Tho SanNo Of The Seen~ Hock
lng River Alhena, Ohio Alllono

In
Ia A Safe Un•vertltV' CommurUt)'

Growing Rehab Team In South-

tallern OhJOI Como 1111&lt;8 Worley
Toll Frtt At 1 888 207 g701 Or

180

Wanted TD Do

Ron I, U ,000 Down f121/Mo ,
Yaura In 5 Yeara N•r Tuppara
Plalno, Btol 5 Acrto Building
Sltto On K-ugh ·Follrod Rd.
.14.000Ea

3000

1887 SchUIIZ 1•x70, 3br, lolaI
LP goo t..tor,
tltclrlc, now c:orpot,
l aaltiiJoa dah,
good cond Aoklng ,11,200
304-77.1-51111
1g88 ClariOn 1•x10 3br, 1 balll,
hoal pump tlovt I now rolrlg·
tf&amp;IDr, good cond 112,500 neg

,.0:

Bedroom• 2 Full 8alht. Cenral

only 1 yoaro old wllh two bod·
rooma, living room. kiiChan bofl,
ullllry _,, troregt building, will
collar, ono car garage Localod
on Sllltr Run Rood, Btl houM on
ion Priced ol 170,000, colll1""
3fM.20G7 or 11H&lt;Ifl.:!ll38.

County. preferably Ue1g1 local

5561

wapm,

time Apply by phone 304.755· School Dillrict. 11 ...11112 5053 al

Olocoonl Mobllt Homo P1111 I
Accoooorlto, Vlnfl Skirring
ugg GS, Anchoro U 00, Awn·
lnga, Oooro, Wlndowa, Plumbing
Suppllt' Waror Htotora, FurnacOidor home wllh new Improve· to, llbtrgluo Sttpa, Call 114·
mtnll. 3br, 1 btlh. on 1 btouUIItl 440·0.11 Btnntl'e SuPJ&gt;I~ 13G1
acrt, clly woltr, high I dry, con- Salford School Rd. Ciilllpollo,
vanilnl to Rlplty RavaniWOOd l
Ohio.
Pt Ploaoonl $Sg,gQD 30 ... 8U
2•78.
frH 11r, frH oklr~ 14x70 3 bod
room, 11,055/down. t1111etmo
Rulland 2020· largo, 5 roomo, Cal1.-1-tm
balh garago. 2 1o1a Jan Gollloo
Rtalt~. Jan Gett111 Broker Cl FrM air. lrH aklrt, 1ex10 3 or 4
Sltphanlo Thomao King, 01C· bedroom lt ,3501d-., 12111/mo
11112-7
Call tiOIHIIII-tm
Slltt Routt 1•3, Pomtnrr 2000
4 btdooomo, 2 bollia, iatgo buill-In
kiiChan, 2 car gtl8gt, 1 aero mil.
Jan Goaleo Roalry Jan Gonloa,
~~~r~~~r'nle Thomae

Lorge otltctlon of uood homtL 2

or 3 bodroorna. Sratung ar •ms

Oulck delivery Call 114·315·
11121

l~::o::;'I';;L,.,oc=~o~ro~R"'s~c'".""u~s~o4-·~7s~s

Thrtt bedroom ha1.1•• In Syr•·
cuoe baoomenr, garago, new Mobile Homa, 2 Garogtt, lor,
dick and all romodtlod 81 ...258-1741.
lnoldl, 81 ... 742·1a.S. 114·g82· Mobile Homo 3 Acral, Httl
1118.
Pump, Vinyl Siding, 150 Airline

w1.-.

1 1 A&lt;lo Rlvorlront 8rlc:k Ranch 3
Btdroomt, 2 112 Bollia, 2 FP, CA,

White Frame, 3 Bedrooma 1 112
Bathe, Laundryo Room, Porch

down, parment of •18ot 41 per
month Clll1·800-481-7e71 , uk

'112 Schult Llmlled Edition, 1•x10,

NEW 1g81 HOliES 2 &amp; 3 BED
ROOMS $G85 down. l1g51mo
FREE DELIVERY &amp; SETUP. 904
755-!5885.
Now 28110 3 or 4 bod room
sag,us Froo dollvory 1 800
:111:.1:..:41::7.:.:n::_~--':":"'-Now otCiional homoa, No monor
_ , cal HIOD 101 71171 Ilk far

2 Bedroom brl&lt;k In Maoon, 2
lolL Call304-7f3.5121.

1;:::..:::..::::..:.;..:..:;::::;~-­

WHk, loving Environmanl, Age

1:..:;:;__ _ _ _ _..,.,.__

Appropriate Activllltl Eastern
A..,... Arta, 614-441-3131

4 Bedroom Sptitl....al W1th 5400

3 8tdroomo, 1 112 Borho, Fin·
lehed Walk·OUI Buemonr, AI·
rachod Dock, Corpor~ Clrr
Schoola, Corwtnltnl To Glllopolla
IHoopllal OA·•41-CUID Ahtr 0
Child Care By Tho Hour Oar Or P.M
Sq Fr Including Full Baaornonl

paii••••DniJ

bock Dack Flroplaco O.k Clbl far Milt
noll. Carpor~ 5 lAIIta Soulll Of Now 1gge 14x70 lhrtt bldroom.
Gllllpolla, Ph 114-448-0035 Ad- lncludoo 1 monll'll FREE lot rant
dilioniii 1 5Ac:tel~
lncludtl akWtlng, d•luxe 111p1
320 MoblltHdi1ils
and IIIUP Only $117 08 ror
for Sale
= 7~107&amp; down Col 1
three bedroom. two bltha tolll
_ . , 2 1/2 IOn - pu1J111, vinyl

oldlng ohlngr.

roo~

monw •no.

3Q.4.l73-!ial., ,,....2.,.5&amp;

1g71 Kirkwood 12x1G $2:100,
Wolh 2 Car Garage, Gu Hea~ 2
For anw ropaoro or 11omt 1 - Mllto From Galllpolio On BulavUt. 11...3811-8188. Or 11+38llo8747
mtnt• call a 0 Conltruc:tlon. Pikl On 1 112 Acre Flat Lot City
187&amp; 12170 Fltttwood 3 Bod·
114-11112 2117i
Schoolo, SGC 000 ,11oJ.o1411-o3110
rooms. 1 112 Bollia, Undtrplnr1ng.

EXECUnVE DIRECTOR POSinON AVAILABLE
The Galha County Chamber of Commerce rs m
need of ·an Execut1ve 01rector to manage and
superv1se the da1ly operations of the Chamber
olfoce Qualified applicant Will be detailed onented
and possess supervisory, orgamzattonal and fiscal
plannong sk1lls Must be creatove, artoculale and
dec1s1ve Applicant must also be skilled on lhe
operal1on of vanous computer software programs
such as Window 95, Microsoft Word, Aldus
Pagemaker and Omm Page A professional and
posot1ve attitude IS a must Deadhne for apphcat1on
1s Oct 22,1997 Submit resume to
Galha County Ch11mber of Commerce
16 State Street, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614) 446 0596

In Memory of
In Memory

William Fred Smith Sr

In Memory
Ralph Reynolds
10/ 19/82
The memory IS a
rambow
It's a specral bndge
Across lhe years,
And 11s made
of golden sunshrne
and 1ts m1xed
w11h sliver tears
The memory's colored
wrlh specral momenls
and wtth a faith
Thai only grows,
It 's always mce
when the heart
remembers
the specr alumes
that 11 knows
Loved and m1ssed
Helen, your stslers and
fam1hes

who pas~ed away
Oct 19, 1991
God looked around
h1s garden and found
an emply space He
looked upon earth
and saw your tued
face He closed your
eychds and whispered
" Peace Be Thrne"l It

SUNRISE HEALTHCARE, INC.

broke our hearls to
lose

you, but you

Occupational Therapist - Full Time Must

d1dn't go alone For
pari of us wen1 wuh

be licensed as COTA or LOTR 1n the State
of Oh10

you the day God
called you home
Sadly m1ssed by
w1fe, Ellen, and Son,
Frd Jr

A M1mmum

of 1 year expenence

prov1dmg OT serv1ces reqwred (preferably

tn

a

psych1atnc or

genatnc settmg)

Serv1ces to provtde m a

10-bed lnpat1ent

Umt and a Partial Hosp1tahzat1on Program

Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal

45769
(614) 992·21 04, ext 236
(61 992·2916

_.Eomero.yr OhiO

g rat~dm 9lher,

JOANN EDWARDS ,
who l•ft 1u vn Ocwber 19, 1993
Four years have past sonce you departed,
Leavmg dreams shallered, loves brokenhearted
Pam has been replaced by sweel memory,
Of lhc precrous years you spenl wolh me
I know you are reslmg m God 's lovmg care,
A halo crowntng your golden haor
Wmgs of an angel you ' re weartng on hogh,
A pnceless reward for hav mg lo doe
Our granddaughler, Ca111, has grown 10 he,
A beauuful flower, sponted and free
She asks of "Nanna" often, as we vosot your grave,
I fill her Wllh slones, memones she' ll save
At lwohghl when lhe day rs done,
And a beauu ful sky sees lhe se ltmg su n
Rest easy, heavenl y angel, knowmg you' ll be,
In our hearts forever, a swee1 memory

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Lovmg Hu sband, Srd Edwards,
Son and Granddaughter,

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h2!ll'f'til
l''i"

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2 Btclroom HouM. 3e Chilltcot.t
Road Deposit, Rtlertntel No
Pall, 11oH46-2C18
2 Bldroomt. 2 Bath Hunw. Slllat

Twa bedroom house with Jlov•

and refr igerator depoll1 r~lrt4

I;"".:..:ln;;;lldo:::;p::.:;:..:
tii, 0:..:1"".:..:::118:.:2..:-30i0;.:_-,-

Year round countt~ hamel 1aina
Ch1• f Carn1talk 2mlltl 10 n..,-.
Ridgt ll4-251-1w
• s t nelghbqr, tretll for ATV 1 I
walking Alao looking for &amp;
3 Bedroom houat In Mt Alto taker (prefer man I Wlft). lret
Catll1~2833.
2bedroam lurnlahed home or wil
negouate has garden, elactriclor
3 Btdroom Houat located On waod heal, IIC: carpeung 30o4218, County School 0Latnct $350 576-ZU&amp;

ad on 20 Ac:r.. On Sawarda

car•

Plu&amp; Dapoa11. No Pets, 1514-268

1a711

420

Mobile Homes

3 bodroom s•oo1mo Dopoalo 1...,,...,..,_......:lo.:..:..r.;.R.:..:e:..:n:..:t-::=~

Count)! W111r Teen• Run, Lilt

112x60 rwo bedroom 1300 a
30+17$o«S78Mavt mtaugt
3 Bedroom. Uvlllg Room, Den, 2 month plus raferancaa call 114-

For aale 1 acre on Osborne

ed. Rtlertncll DtpollL No 3 Bedroom Mabile Homt 11•·
ptll, 30oH11i-51l2.
3f!8.ll781

Balho Garden Tub WIW Carpot .7:..:•:;2.:;27:..:1;:;C_ _ _ _ _ __
1
laundry Room Beautllul 3 pm
2 1 3 bedroom mobile hom•••
Call For FrH Wapi + Owner Fl- l:pm. (11•1"&amp;- 1&lt;0011
$2DO·S300 otwtr Wiler and
lllnCina lnlo. Take 1011. Off Ullld
Nlct 3 bldroom lrtshly dlcolll· 1truto=::;lncl:=:u::odad.=.,:l:;1:.""::11112::.,:2::;11:..:7;__
PrictoOnCiohPurt:hutol

Ontl10- $10,1100

Stflllln Pllmoroy, CIJII1• e.g.

320e or e14-842381

RENTALS
I--------~~-410 Houaes lor Rent
1 5 Acroa Wlltcllonal homo,
QrHr Rd Call Sollllf'llllo Rtllry
:J0.4-t75-3090 or 304-t7S-3431
IBR. Dul&gt;lax Loctltd on 5lh Avo.
No Pollll275 Pluo Ullllly and
Dopoolt[B1C)4CI-11103
2210
2 Bedroom Hou11 In Gelhpolil,

Dopooii/Rtftrtnco, $235/llo
11•~1130

Public Sale and Auction

PENN'S WAREHOUSE
2230 HONEYSUCKLE LANE, WELLSTON, OHIO

1-614-314-3645
FAll YARD SAU. SAYIIIG IUCISII CASH AND CAllY, 110 RETURNS
1 Wood·Boams-10", 14", 16" lall,lo 12 to 48 long Example
t o·x48' $20 00
2 Spruce Beams· 14" ·t6" 10 20 10 30 long 1 3/41hock $1 00
perhn ft
3 Glulam Beams, 12' 15" 16" lo 8 lo 20 long J 1/2 thock
$1 oo per lin ft (garage door headers)
4 Aim board plus made from 0 5 B 1 1/B thlrk 9' and 16" wode
12 to 24 long Proce example·12 $2 00 24·$4 00
5 Prime grey wood siding made ~om 0 5 B 8" wode 16 long
S250ea
8 Shott lengrh I Beamo 8 ·10 ·12 25e per ion ft
1 516" and 3/4" x 4 J(8 0 S B • $8 95 ea 50 pes or up $795
ea Sq and TG edge
8 Palnled lnelal roofing and sldong, 38' wode lengths from 4 lo
30 29 guage $39 95 sq 26 guage $45 00 sq 2 traolor loads
9 Over 5000 pes of paneling and tile board In stock 3000 pes
on display From 3/Bihlck solid oak lo 5/32 mlndy board 12 to
15 petterns of both penellng Prices ~om 5/32 Aulumn Oal&lt;
mlndy board $2 99 ea 10 318 Golden Oak all Oak wood $24 95
10 1/4.x4'x8 unfinoshad Luan plywood 59 95
11 1/4'x4 x8' 1emperad hardboard unde~eyment $8 95 ea
12 Also have 1W oak and borch unlonoshed plywood Lowesl
pnces 1n town
13 48" Aluminum level Reg $8 95 Now $4 98 ea

14 Foam lnsulallon board 4 x8 3/8' thick 52 50 ea 1/Z' $4 98
3/4' 55 98 oa 50 pc lift soc loft 50¢ off par pc FQLI on one side
15 While flberglaas bath tubs Reg $99 98 now $59 95 No
Returns
18 4 and 5 Acryloc and fiberglass shoWers $99 95 Bone only
17 White and colored tub showers S169 95
18 Whl~poolslrom $399 95 to $1495 95 Corner whirlpools
$995 00
19 While, wall hung lavllorys 20"xl B" Reg $39 95 Now
$995
20 Padestallavllorys Reg $69 95 Now $19 95
2t Mbcad colors pedesallavlrorys Reg $69 95 Now $13 95
22 Bldels In 3 colors Reg $69 95 Now $19 95
23 1 pc commodes Reg $199 95 Now SG9 95
24 2 pc commodes Reg $69 95 10 $89 95 Now $49 95 to
$69 95 M,.malchad COlors $39 95 ea
25 Exlenorvoioylplasrocshullers Severalsozeandcolors Save
hall
26 50 lb box pelet nails Reg $28 95 Now S6 95
27 Nursery slock trees and shrubs 45% off reg pnces
28 6 x9 ll~oluem rugs Reg St 9 95 Now $7 95 or 2 for S 15 oo

(ph)

r

I

One S bedroom home and orw 2 3 Bedroom Trtlller 3 Uilaa From
btdroom lnllltr 01C.fi2-211111
Galllpollo On 588 1300/Mo,
Ponrvy. 1 ., 2
houao •150 Dopoolt Ror.roncoa, 01""
rtftrtnctl I dtpoait required 448-38711
11•-11112·511811.
3br 2 balh. partially lufnlohtd. no
Small1br houae 1410 Lew11 Sl pats., relerencel required, 13001"

IPI'""""'

$300/mo + $100/depollt 81~

...a.1G30

deposit $300/mo. CaunlrJ' Itt·

•ng

30&lt;1-875-4410.

Small 2 o.Graom House 1n Eure Mason 3 bedroom trailer t2D51
ka Deposit. References Requ1rtd mo Reference• and dapoalt
CJIIttd. 304-675-1183.
l27snn.,cana1 ...3&amp;1-2580

r•

ThrH bedroom mobile home, no
polL D1• ~i2 5858

1:::~::.:;;,:,;:.;,;;;..:.::::....___

2 Bodroom Homo 1D Evano
Holghro, Galllpoloo 814 UI-

•

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Public Sale and Auction

I.

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, October 25, 1997
10:00 a.m.
Bernard Fultz and Maxone Pnce have sold theor homes
and are selling part of theor personal property &amp;
household furnoshongs Localed at lhe home of Max1na
Pnce 55331 St Rl 124 ·Portland Ohoo
"HOUSEHOLD"
Gobson 18 cu It refrogerator couches rocker,
recliners Maylag washer Kenmore dryer, Magoc Choef
elect range large slereo, couch table end &amp; coffee
lables large wood desk upnte deep freeze lamps,
pictures m1rror s, chrome breaklasl set w/d vac, and
lots more
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS'
Brass lamp ton waler can full sel Nortokoa chona
dishes, wocker hogh chaor mo lk cans cholds rocker
folding chairs, scales Tom Thumb cash regosl9r H
choef toy slave doll bed, Holly Hobboe puzzle cabonet
baSe legal form cabonet, large wood desk
w~ypewnter fold down table on moddle of desk, trundle
day bed complete, trunk, glass baby bottle New York
clothong house garmet bags 112 drop leaf labia, apple
peeler 011 llghls cherry p1tter, wood olloce chaor, moners
donner bucket Pnnce Albert can Dazy churn wood
lop &amp; organ, upnte plano, oval poclure frame and lois
more
"AUTO"
1988 L T 0 LX Crown Voctona
"EQUIPMENT &amp; ECT"
J D 8' wheel dose JD pull dose 3 PI Flaol mower for
garden tractor Loncoln welder scaffllng 1 H P power
router Sears lndustnal doe gronder tool sel &amp; ect
" MISC"
3 speed Western Flyer gorls bocycle Taro elec tnmer,
charcoat gnlls Redwood pocnoc lable &amp; benches,
luggage, foldong table, humodof1ers, sleds, metal f1le
cabinet new oce tea maker, coffee makers Lucote
salad maker food gnnder 11 x 22 servong tray w/5
compartmenl set, elec labia lop gn~ portable sewong
machone nbbon bow maker, lots of Tupparware,
moxers. plus lois &amp; lois of mosc electnc appliances
Cash
Posotove ID
Refreshmenls
Den Smith Auctioneer Ohio 11344 W VA 11515
Wilham Moodospaugh • Apprenttce Ohoo #7386
"Not responsoble for accodenls or loss of proparty"
Real Eatate General

.
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Public Sale and Auction

'

''

Bidwell Auction Houae Oct. 21 • 7pm
For Early Cons1gnments phone
367-&lt;)416 367-7902 388-0458
Open Tuesday from 10 00 am to 5 00 pm lor
cons1gnments

Antiq'Ues· Collectibles • Glassware
Tools· Christmas Merchandise
AuCtioneer em Stanley
Apprentice Auctioneer Larry Saxton
Public Sale and Auction

IN TOWN ESTATE SA'.£
Odoller 25 &amp; 26
Saturday 8 am- 6 pm Sunday 10 am· 4 pm
410 Htclgewood Drive- Galllpolll, Ohio
D1mng Table &amp; Buffet, freezer, liv1ng room swte,
small appliances, breakfast lounge, wrought 1ron
porch fum, lawn mower &amp; tools, glasses &amp;
liners, ant1ques
Ent1re household to be sold

Umt Adm1mstrator

In Memory of our lu•loved wifv, mother, and

Ooltla Co.· Galipol~!!:l'hbor·
hood Rd., 10 Aato
LII\Otl
Sir. ,,g,IIOO, Or 22 Acrto Willi
Pond NOW 12•.ooo fflondly
Rldoo 10 Acrto .14,000, I 5 Acr·
tal7,500 Or 11 Acroo 111,000,

2 BtdrOflm Hou .., 15 Mlt.o
Soulll On RouiO 7, Dopooi~ ...... t32Mio 01UCHg11
I:8:.:1::"".11112::::2:;:
: 178.:.:__ _ __ _

PUBUC AUCTION

Please send or fax resume to
Susan Elliott, AN , BSN

lrt Memory

Acrea 11e 000, County W•ttr
Drtnlll•. Ch•apar Than Lot

41 o Houltl tor Rent
•
Two
btdtoom hau11 and ont ..
btdroom _......,,In~~~~

410 Houltl for Rent

:~=~~===··=·=~==28=1=t======J;E=~==============~I· I~======================::::::::::~I:::::::::::::::::~~~~:::::::::-·

Help wanted

Public Sale and Auction
In Memory

furriiUra and appllancn, air can-

mortgagn aallaW. lor 1 Umlt8d

31 o Homes lor Sate

ANY ODD .1081· ExiOrlof paint·
tng, ohrobo &amp; - d l orlmmod,
landacaplng, oldowalko tdgod,
'""" coro ... can BIU :104.e751112.

110

Take Dtllvory In Sept No Paymonl Until Doc 1117 100·251·
1070
Uoed 2 l a bedraom mobile
homM, caM 1-800· 400·7171 aok
l·lot::..:Citrlo.:::;__ _ _ _ __
Very nlco "18G4" Doatiny brand
l'lrll modollnlllor. vary apaelout
Cal3f:M.e7&amp;-3000..
excelltnt condition uatd 111r~ litlgg3, Cenrury Bravo 1•x70, 3 de lully equlppad wllh very nlco

good cond 110.500 :104·175· Rapoo

MUST SELL My looo, rour gain.
3bldroom 1 2 barh, cloll ro
town Aok far Frank :104·755·
7181
Now Ur70, 3 bedroom, UOD

5711

tn Memory

·-Big""
Ulnt 100-251·
&amp;010. Col Ctod-

t•xas 2br, 1 bdo,

largo building, paved drive-war
81...1M8-3127 or3Qol-t75-4575.
Tri Ltvol 4br, In ground pool bt&gt;
wttn Middle echool and High
1811 000 30oH75-tSIS.

Utlo Oachllhund, 3 Dochohund· LP Gao, Clry Waoer. 1185 000
nix pupploo, 11 C-8112
81 ........1198

Co11-1.em

All Willi Htol Pu1J111, Pay Off Dnt dlllonod, oncludoa very lovaly
BUY HDMEI AS LOW At 117,700, Or Allumo Poymenl, covored fronl porch, 2 year old
14,1100 1 -&amp;llclml, LJoco1 GortL 1 Avtllablt -alaly, ll&lt;l-24 15- IIOIIGt buoldlng, voryllvablt, on
Bank Ropo'o Call 1·800·522· D3BI
nice ploco of proparry In Ohio
2130, X11011
-10 - ' " " can juormovo
19114 Sullln Doluxt 14x72 Raody riahlln. can loll on land contract
COUNlRY HOllE
To Move lniO AI Locol Pat!&lt;. Ro- 30oi-27S-3301
ON I ACRES.
frlgoraiOr, Ronp, Eloctrlo Htal l ~A.,..:..:_;.:.:.;;__ _ _ __
ICOI IOWN1 CHID.
Pump. 10112 Deck, Call Afler I
W NTED family to mova Into
a Wllea From PraciDvllla, 3,400 P:t.l e 14 -4"1 3IS3 Leave UH- 3btdroom 2Hth mobile home
Sq Ft Living Arto, 2 Story, 3 oago
Cll30&lt;1-755-55111
Bodrooma, 2 112 Btlllo, Flnllhld
330 F
1o Sal
Btaman~ Flteplaco, Llkl Naw, • 18g7 1h80 Fltorwood 3 Btd·
&amp;nnl r
e
Yoaro Old 111&amp;,000 8U·I43· roomo, 2 Btrho, Garden Tub, wolll panllon would 11&lt;8 10
2112C,Or01._2522.
Flroplaco, srovo, Roklgoraror, buy farm on land conltlc~ amall
For Salt 135,000, 1Wo Bodroom Dlohwaohor, Hoar Pump, Takt _, poymtnl, at..w.z BD38.
4
HouM, - . Wlnrlowo, Now Sid· OVtr Poymt/111. Ol&lt;l-2 5-0388
Wonted 10 buf· farm In Gallla or
lng, All Now Kllchon Will Tak• 111 Tlmo Buyoro E z Flnonclng 2 lltl•a CounN, $30,000 10
Tllldtoln Or Htlp With Down Pay· Or 3 Bodroomo Around 1200 Per •- •000
.:1.. 738- 5t 52
rnon1. 014-317-GoJOS, Paging NO Mo., aoo 251 1070
ow,
llllgt ~
1.SOO.S85-2337 1&amp;11
'
2 Bodroomo, 2 Barho, Garden 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
GOV'T FORECLOSED Homto Tub, Excollonr Condlrlon, On A.
ffom Pannlto On,, Dtllnquonr Prlvaro Ronred Lo~ Groen Tw~ Ltvollor on llroodwoy In lliddl•
Tax, Rtpo'a, REO'o Your Aroa (81•)-148-:1164 Col Aflor 4 pm.
pol\ 11,500 01 ...11112-tB&amp;B lavt
Toll FrH (1) IOQ.2t811000 Ext
mosaagoWno.,_
H-2114foi'Cu.-l.lotlngo.
ATIENTION FlroiTimo Buyora,
1peclal government Hckad Wlnled to buy acteagt In MIIQI
Home In countt~ wilh 38 &amp;Crtl.

-Land

114-1'111-IIT.I

Mlllfa Co. Nlct Roling
Troclo , 1f Acroo •11,000 Or 5

tG82 ~

Au.d, VlniOn, 11-4 211 17U Ap-

REAL ESTATE

Buslneu
ll'a lnlng

140

107$ Mldwoy Oou- 20'151'
• b d
3 Badtooml, 1 Baf\ Good Cordr 0 akwood 21•11 oil 1 roam, 2
11on, Phono 114-2M-11411
balh, ollrUng 11 1108 per mo

Thttt bedroom hau.., 2 full
baths full butmenUgaraga,

.... 30C.o75-21•S.

Window IMtalltr ••td•d- II·
porianco required. Roply lo Quilty Window S~atem1, 110 Court
llll'ltt. Ponrvy, Ohio 457111.

And An E.caltent Place To RIIIM
Children CorM Jo.n The F111"r

but not
In lovmg memory of
Hugh Bearhs who
departed thos IHe
Oct 18th 1990
Sadly mossed by w1fe
Louose, son Ron
daughter and So·n·il1·1aowl
Carol and Barroe Phillio.sl
Granddaughlers Jill
Michelle and He!ttheorl

675-1333

Collogt. Scholarahlp&amp;

W.otom llodlcol Strvlcoa, JCA· 800-350-8313.

II You Looking For A Poaltlve
Work Experlance A Challenging

-

992-2156

FREE
CASH
OR ANTS I

IUMIDII

Fu Your Reaume To 114 SA•
5207 EMA ~L upcrahabOirog

446-2342

mall until you have lnvaatig~~tad

lilt ollorlng

lion,

Equll Opporrunlry

Dopondoblt Dltatl Mocllan·
lc WI Own Toolo Btnofila Provld
ed Sind Rtoumo To MECHAN

...8)1).771-3141 ...

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recammend1 that you da bullness wllh people yau know, and
NOT 10 11nd money thraupt~ the

AN'o START Ill lmmodltlt
Need Full Or Pall Time Prlvaro
Dury Or Facllry Slallng. Roqulrat
t Yair Mlnl..,m Vlnl Or Hoapl...
Ctll For Appolnlmd

Pan·timt Houoei&lt;Hplngll.aundry

Phyolcal Thel8plll And Full Tlma

Ex~

lllmtd.

E--

8t• gg2 6472 or comtln and fill
ouo an IP!lliCIDOn

Occupational Therap11t Our
Team Provides A Comprthena•v•
flnterdllclplmary Approach To

Emc&gt;loyor lot/FIDIV

men! Stcurtd &amp; Outckly R•

tltll')',

.....lnod .. -k 1111 oohifla ond aloo bt ollglblt far a ~gn-on bo

ment Potential Call Diana Burna

Smol&lt;a Fret And Drug Froo
Environment

Guldellntl,

1'111111 Joba No Exporlonco NocFull Bonelli, Appllcotion,
lnfarmollon Call Sunday Frlcloy 1
1100-1142s.31En8080

far STNA'o You will be

Great Commumty To Live In,
reer Orlen1ed Person Who 11 Athena Phyalcal Therapy 11
Ouogolng And llklo To So Chal· Your Anawerl Athen• Phytlcal
langed Excellent Training Pro- Thtrepy Outpatlenl Clinic Is
gram Benefits, And Advance Currently Seeking A Full Time

AIII4-286-CI87

And

Standards

OSHA And OLIA Roqulttmtnlo
Under Suptrvlalon Of Agency
Mactlcal Ooroctor And Chief Opoo·
allng Olf~tr Stnd RtiUmt And
Thru Emplorment Ralaranc••
To Planned parenthood Of
Souohoaor Ohio aga Richland
Avo Athtno, OH C570 1 EOE I
ESP.

Ovtrbrook Center hat pert Ume
po~oono

Opportunity

Conlrol StrvlctL STI Ellflll For .. OWN PAYPHONEI U
Boll1 IIIII Mel Fomalo Exctlltnl S160K Yearlr Pori Groat Sileo
Opponuniay Fot Added lncorM
Avlll Call Nowl1~70
Medical DtQrtt With Training
lMHrl.
And Eltptfltnca In Gwnecology
Llctnatd To Practice In Ohio.
- AAA GfiDlWQ CARDSSen1ltlve To Woman'• lnuea. I'Dianllal ICSK Pff -$11 OK FT No
Practice Under Planned Par- Soling, kcounll Pmldtd Sorv
enthood Fedaratlon Of America leo Loclll S10111 sa,g50 lrNoll·

~' w

EOE

Buelness

•bre For Gyn Examt And Birth

John a", Second Avonuo, lllddlo·
-· ~ ..

114-l'f8.4008or801).127o0431

SEE· JOHN KOPYICIANSKI
THURS,OCT:nAD

EMAIL ADDRESS:

Public Not1ce

Con1rac1 Pllolllon Of Appro•·
lmattly 3 10 Houro Ptr WHk 21 0
Day And Evonlng Houro Avail·

amplovmanr at Chao •L•nle

WiHAZMAT &amp; 8llonlhl
Rocont OTR Experlonct
CALL DAVE OR LISA

If You Are A High School Graduatt [Some Collogt Proltrrod) And
Hove APllollw Mmlng Aal~dt

JACKSON, OH

Public Notlr::e

For Driver~

Co~ Training Propn

An

Muld·Ctnler Planning Aaancr

Special Pro1J11m' 307 8111 St, Pt
Pleuanr wv 25550 30C-t75
oi5CO tllt 2801 fax 30ol-t75-722e
NHd a ladlta To Stll Avon Call
114 448 3358.
Now ac:cepling applications lor

-RIDER PROGRAM
AllliC EXPAEU
It
Ohio I Lotaeol Ro~lgetattd
Clfrilt And Ia lDoldng

• Llltlnourara

• -au.

IUrM

-.401K

Slllong C-llon 123,1100 •
sze,1100 Hoapllallzadon

2200 IIJY AVENUE

an d os always reassunng
Recenlly he lold voewers that a
stock mvestment of JUSI $25 a monlh
would be worth $28,000 m 25 years
wolh 9 percent annual mterest
Start young slart small,' he
sa1d
In Weslheomer 's latesl effort to
reach out 10 1he greal stock-buyrng
public he has dosulled lhe expenence
of hos father and homself onlo lhe
book " Generahon of Wealth Tome
Tested Rules for Worry Free Invest
rng ' 10 be published on October
I learned a lot !rom my dad "
Wes lheomer saod ' lnvesl for lhe
long pull, try to ognore short 1erm
markel fluc1ua110n s never buy on
margon •
He saod one of the reason s he does
nol fear a repeal of the 1929 crash os
lhat margon requorements are hogher
In the '20s people could buy stock
wllhJUSI 10 percent down

Fvrnhuro ropalr, rofinllh and ,...
-tlon, ........... ONo 4 Bodloom Flinch, LR DR, Kitr:hVatltr Reflnlohlng Shtp, Larry en, 1 112 Bath1, Utillt~ Room,
1.100 Sq Fr 213 Acre, Fenced
Ptill1po, 11+112-8678.
'llrd CA. Eitct /Gao Hoe~ Palll
work lrrqular houra Including
wooktndt Tatk Include 111111 &amp; GKrpo Porllblt Sowmlll, don1 ot, I!UOO. 11""37t-2eel
marlltrlng, public rtllllona, pnob- hiiJI rour 1oao ., "' nilt full coU • Bedroom, 2 a1or~ house wlfun
lom IOivlng, budatt manop· -JS.1115}.
beatmant. epprox 1 acra. 1 112
..... fund rolling and -,Piing.
Hth, LR, DR, enc:loltd porch,
Paat txperlano. In Bo~ Scat.ttl
double gara11• w/carport, cha in
holplul Muot be roaulr Qrlonlld
link tenet, locettd an Chtatnut
and able to t1oa1 wllll ,..,. ttak. LS Cloanlne Strvlcoa: Light Ridge 11 Juncdon of Rr 2 l Rr
For lnlonnollon cal -IIZI 3401 Houaoklorllnl. WotkiY. -~. 17 304-Ss-3178.
Dr llf1d reeurne • Tft.Siate Ar• Trua-lliy, 'thorough, Rollablt,
CouncN, liSA. 733 Stvtnlh Avo- - . . . _ Col Laura, 81•-3117· Approx 2 Acre1, Sautwllttrn
rue, Honngron. wv 211101.
'Iss.
School Dlolrlcr On Povod Rood ~
Bodroomo, 2 Btlho Largo UVIng
W1A houl junk ., lrloh _ , ~ Floom, Willi Flrtplaco. Derachod
pickup lood. 904-tlS-5035.
Phpldan RoctulGaroga, Mull Sot To Approclatt,
Owner Will Conoldtr Financing,
'
Phyllclan Sarvlcto Ntlded For
FlrJANCIAL
81oh1'1N887

-nom

.uEDICALA&gt;ENTAL

350 Loti &amp; Acl'llg8

ExteuiM poollion with Boya
Scoull of Amorlca In Galli(lolll.
Ohio - . Oullllcadona lnckodt
Bochtloo • Dtgroo, wllllnor*o 10

c..... !*=r!!!l

Mlndtd T..,. 01 Playera. CM Entr)' Ltwl Uanag~tm~nt Polidonl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point PleaN;;nt~,~WV~::::::;:::==~~:=::~,~il11b~~~~tl;;~an~-~~=::'"~P;:a~ge~D5~,

•

W~TbDo

180

Help Wlnttcl

110

liON-ON_.,.,

OWnad Building llattrlal Rolallet

the dandel1 ons m season )

a 'cry pcrsuas1vc guy
If turns out to h a~Je hec n a good

Shl~oy

M

Octogenarian stockbroker stays the course
BALTIMORE (AP) - Back m
1919 a 1ccn age Julius Wes1heomer
\\atched lortuncs \anrsh as he
' hal ked up slock pnces on a black
board for hos father a broker dunng
thC worst market crash m ho story
I saw people m 1ears, saod
Westheomer now an 81 -year·old
srockbroker who bnngs 1he wo sdom
of years lo lhe market
Those years stretch back to 1916
w)ten hos father sraned selling slacks
Westhetmer followed on hos footsteps
ai age 35 after servong as prcsodenl of
a doscount department slore m Ballo·
more owned by hos uncles
Westhe1mer was not happy m lhe
' rag buso ness as he called 11, and
r~sogned to go 10 work at a brokerage
for $12 000 a year
I d been makong $40 000 ' he
swd 'Bull could nol use some of my
talents I'm a good public speaker, a
good salesman I wntc well and I' m

Help Wanted

AVON I All Aroaa I
Sj&gt;oaro, 304-t75-1o1211

Sunday,October19,1997

~~~~~~==~w=t;~~:t--~·1~1~o:]HM~~~w.M~~~::
•110 HtlpWinttd
110 HelpWanttcl
o.....l Nuutdon Ctnlorl 11 C..r·
DI!CKIIANDS
Domlno'o Plzzo-Now hiring 111 ronol' Lookln• For Enthuolalllc
120,1100 Par.,.,
pooltlono, Pt Ploaaant oroa,
• ~-•• 1 F
mull be tl•ro old :10c.e7l· Mel xporlenold ·-NUll
or
Tho Ohio River Com_panr Hao &amp;eM.
'
A Now Storo In Tho Galllpollo
Current Oponlngo For DKk·
Artl (Ohio Vllltr PllziJ PIhindi Ablt To Work A 30 ()Qo
DMr
Cll1.-.287-o331(En«&lt;l)
OIV 30 Dip OllllellldUie. &lt;:wool-.n - Dftvorl
diiM Mull- A HNVJ Llllor
YOUOESERIIETtEIIEST
I Nlld .._,pi~. Eam
~ Or Prior DocldoV Ex· Slarllng pay, homo limo l bOno- 2 To 5I( Monlllo, Tolll Training l
pooiot- -Good Ro.loi•- fill available w~!l. + 110 touch Support From Homo, Not MLM
From Provlouo Employoro, And froigh~ oollgntd equipment rou Call Now. 2 11in. UOIIIQO 1-800·
So Able To Paoa A Comprthon- can lako homo, full- ~ me rider 322-tlll En 7W
llvt CompaftW Phyolctl Willi A
dirocl dtpoll1, _ , . If m:u waniiD .. kl monoy, are
Drut /Alcohol ScNtn Al1 Candl· dlopaleh, 111011110 l much mort
Ill
k ha d nd llkl 10
diiM llutr Havo A Yllld C..rranr Now Hiring Co Solo drlvor 0 &amp; w ng 10 wor
r '•
Dr!Wfe LletnM And Mull Hovo huobancllwllo toamol EOE, Mil', help olhtre, wo "'"Y havo a job
kW1f1 Thom.
for you Local rooldtnt Exctllonr
COL (A) w/Hazllal required. Coli Income polllbllltlto and Home
1-lld Clndldatoa =c.... Boyd 1-800 220·2C21 CARDIN· CHico ~lining lor I&gt;OfiOill otltcl·
Al FREIGHT Alto contracllng ed Mull have a pleaalng per
To Tho TRAVEL LODO , MOD -o-10r11
•- Ill
RouoaiO Eaotln Hunlnglor\ wv :;;::::..;:.::~;;.::·;;.::_____ oonallly and - w ong lo moor
AI I DO A M On Woanoodoy, CrivaR .flollltd
lllo public No '"""..,.. . _
Oolobtr 22, 1QD7, For A Cornpa..
11,1100
oary For mort lnlormadon, call
ny Prutnlldon And lnrtrvlow. NEW Pay Packagal Monlhlr a. Clay Rontr 11304-175-e010, or
So Prepared To Spend 2 • 4 nuo Program! Nttd COL A 1 1 moll roaumo ro 2413 Jackaon
Houro Willi Ua CANDIDATII Moa OTA ECKIIIIItr 100 111· j:fwt.::.::•:.:,PI.:..:..;PI::'"::"::"':..WV;;.;..25:::;&amp;&amp;::0;__
WITHOUT A VALID DRIVER'I 1131, Owner Oporetoro Aloo
., __ Co Public Schoolo
WLL
NOT
81
..
TIR-~~\'d~l'~:a~mo~_:__:_:_..:.....:__;_
· Nuroo (RN~ Full dmo
••n•~
RtgloiOrod
Ott.wl
In the Maton -Wahama area
An Equal....._.,....,.,_,__
l2,000.0011aoo0n......
lluot ba llconoed In rht Slltt of
...,.,..._.., ~ •.,...,..
(OHIO 0....1
WV, approvod Medicaid Pr9vl·
HOllE EVERY 7 •ID IIAY8
dH Exporltnce In Tracheooto·
REGIONAL DPPOR'IIJNil1E8
mr and ootomy care, conlrlcltd
MY UPlO 31 CPM
ltfVittl Plaau und or lax ra-

110

•

Sunday, October 19, 1897

HUTCHINSON AUaiON INC.
ANTLQUE AUOION _
SUNDAY, OCT. 26 at 11 :00 a.m.
Furnlture-Pottery-Longabarger
ALBANY, OHIO
Take US 50 &amp; 32 eleven miles west of Athens,
Oh1o and ex1t onto 50 west towards McArthur
Auction Is quarter mile on left s1gns posted
Walnut VIet pes to Include knockdown armoire,
center drop marble top dresser, bed wtcarv1ng,
center drop mahog dresser, calVed secretary
bookcase, other dressers, washstands w/lowel
bars, 40 Pes of pottery 10 1nclude Roseville, Weller,
Hull,van Brlggle and others A&amp;W doll, fenton,
carnival and other glass, LDngaberger to Include 96
Chnstmas combos wntds. 97 patriOt, employee
Christmas 92 through 96, com and laundry and
others Vary bnef listing see Oct 20 AntiQue Week
Terms Cash or check w/poslt1ve 10 Food
available
Auct1oneer mark Hutchinson 614·698-6706
Ucensed adn Bonded 1n Ohio
Partner Frank Hutchinson 614-592·4349

Thursday October 23, 1997 at 7:00 p.m.
General Store Going Out of Business

SYRACUSE-

ThiS house must sell-sell!

Corner lot

3

Br,

kitchen , bath,

basement Now Reduced to

LA,

$37

All New Merchendlee
Full soze Cannon Comforters Baskets, Cannon
Bedspreads Queen soze comforters, quo~ed bed
spreads, twon, lots of saw1ng 11ems lots of hght bulbs
dosh towels, col lamps umbrellas, boxes of m1sc
screws, fireplace matcheS, lots of m1sc candles ..
scented and unscented wooden expandable racks,
purses, kitchen utensils, birthday candles baby
bottles, fire logs, charcoal, slorage conlatners, baby
toloon baby powder shav1ng creams, dental floss,
toothbrushes razors, mens socks, men's boxer
shorts, after shave, afghans, figuronas, loolhpaste,
pols and pans, mops, brooms. skollels table cloths
knole sets, kotchen sonk sels, BBQ utensils, lndoan
blankets deodoranls, wondshiald wopers wlndshoeld
fluids oca trays trash begs rubber gloves, ool
treatment Dura mot cleansong, handkercheifs shaH
loner, pollutant, lots of blankels, drover way markels
gas lreatmant paint rollers and pans sure gel
kerosene lamps, lots of automo11ve supphes desk
lamps, baby oil petroleum jelly baby blankets, baby
clothes, thermometers laundry datergenls, lots of
claanong supply, mise tool!f shoes bows cosmetiC
bags, m1sc school supphe, ammonoa cleaners,
readong glasses, 6 pc balh sets wond chomes
magnets. dusting powder, pad locks, flip ftops,
hp Ice, condHoonar shampoo buckets, h
1pray, cold cups shaH racks. wrapping
paper, moac cards , nylon bags, cotton
bells, teddy bears, gift begs,
perfumed soap plush stulfell anima
Iota of Maybelhne cosmetics, lots of
Max Factor CosmetiCs, lots Cover
Gorl cosmetlcs,many hems not
llllled

LOTS OF GIFTS FOR CHRISTMAS
Eats
Cash
PositiVe 10
Martin Wedemeyer AuctiOneer
Uc 3516

1114-371-2720
Not responsible for accident
or loss of property

Sealed lllda will ba received until 12.00 noon
on the 27th day or October, 1997, lor the reaf
estate located at 744 Second Avenue, Galltpolla,
Ohto, being the upper hall or City Lot 32B, more
particularly described tn V 234, p 43, Deed
Racorde of Gallla County, Ohio. Seld real estate Ia
owned lly tho Estate ol Efta G. Folden, dece..ed.
Each bid ehould be mailed by cartlllad mall to
Gayland Bueh, Executor, 9B Oak Drive, Galltpolla,
OH 45631 .
EXECUTOR RESERVES THE RIGHT TO
REJECT ANY AND ALL BIDS
Blda will be opened and tabulated 11 12 00
noon on tho 29th day of October, 1897, and the
eucceaatul bidder notified
The rear eetate, Including all atructuraa, may
be \oewed on the 20th day of October, 1H7,
between the houre of 1·00 p.m and S:oo p m ., and
on the 2'1h day or October, 1887, betwnn the
hours of 1:00 p m. and &amp;·OO p m.
GAYLAND BUSH,
Executor of the Eatate of
Ella G Folden, daceaaed

•

I

�•

~oy • MlddJeport • Galllpolll, OH e Point Pleaaant, WV

-540 Mllctlllnloul

&amp;10

Merchllldlle
I' SaiOIIIII dloh, can buy proaroma. e manlhl old, 1300: Nolde Troo llklor, 11111, IIHI2·
1321 .

~N~
and 2 iltdroom - - ....
and unlurnlatwd, s.a~rity
depcslt requ lrtd. no pelt, t1.t.
182·2218.
1 Btdroam Ground Floor, Near

Cintrno. E..,...;.ot Gal HtiL 01
W Hook Up. IIi&lt;, S2e8/llo.. • UtiliJill, Depoalt &amp; lea•• Rtq. No
l'Otl.l1 ........2057
1 btdtoom. un~mlohod, oloM "

·-

•

• • Jbdrm. IPII, lOIII oloctrlo, .,.
: ' llfltncH lurnllhod. laundty room
• locititlel. cio10 to IIChOol In _ ,
• ~ppiiCitrona avaUablt 11: Vl"l~
: Dt•n Apta. ,.. or catl 81•·8112·
• _1711 EOH.

MERCHANDISE

510

HousehOld
Goods

Plonaln Groot
Or 8111 Ofltr.

LapTop 388 Compotor, 120 Mo~.
Windowo 3.1, DOS 1.2 wllh CaN
1350 LNvtlloougo (11()2541817

BHnlt Boblto For Sola 11 11 ...
2ol5-!5332.

woo Amount 01 Furniture, And

• 3 s.droom Apartment. 838 Stcond Avenue, Call Wh i1e' l Painl

Town. 814-448-2580.

Furnohad Elfioency Share Bath,
'160/Mo , Ulihtits Paid, 807 Sec-.. ond Av.nue, Galllpol11, 814-441• 0513. Alter 7 P.M

Good Rol~gorator For Sale, et ...
Builtin Olahwa1har, Prapane
oW6-1N2.
'
Gas Water Heater 40 Gallon,
• Furnished 1 Bedroom 920 Fourlh GOOD USED APPLIANCES Used Leu Than 1 Year, $125:
Avtnue, Galh~ia. S28S'Mo, Uti~ Waahera. dryttl, retrlgttatort, 81 ,......, , oo
illtl Paid, 614·441.0573, All..- 7 ron~•· Ski~~· Applloncto, 71
P.ll
V1ne Street, CaD 8111&amp;· 44G·7'a, Bunk bed a. llko now 1225 Tan·
dr, 1000 computer w/monllor &amp;
1~t8834al
d oc $300 30(·875·(1 35 after
Batch St , llod&lt;lopor~ 2bodroom
furn1al'ltd ap(, Ullllnas paid ~· Refrigerator, Wa~Mr, Dryer, 5pm.
po111 &amp; reference• 304-882· Fraazor. VCR.I14-25e-1231.
Chock ouf our Gu Vtntod Hill·
2Se8.
oro (NIIurol or Propane) StarDng
RIVERSIDE IM40LESALI
BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTS AT
114-211 •••
at $184 as We 111o have Buck
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Stove Brand of Gal Instant Fir•
ESTATES, 52 Wootwood Drl.a Bunk S.do Corllll.l225; Solo I place Paint Plu1 Hardwlrt 304·
~om $280 to 133( Walk ., ohop Clwlr $248: • Country Pint Tabla,
875-408-4
&amp; mow1... Call 814-11&amp;48·2588 Bench l 3 Chalro 1235; 7 Pc
Cedar BR 1711, Ook Curio Cob. Complato ott •o polll~ ata...,.
E&lt;I'Oi Houiiii'IO Opporturoty.
1150, Ponary, llaxk:an Bfankola. of Elvia PrHiay 2 booko Rod&lt; I
FOR RENT: ( Room Upolllrt lncl- Etc.
Roll Rhythm I Bfuoo, 125 lor oil,
- Apaflment • Newly Remodeled
c:ooh cny 304-812-2(38
• kitchen, Now Carpol And Paint,
Routo7 South. c,_ City
Concrtta I Plu~c Stp~c Tonka,
AI Ulitloo P.old ElCtfll Gal HtiL
Opan ~5, Sol&amp; Sun
300 Thru 2,000 Galiano Ron
large Bedroom, CloM To Oown-_lllwn. S300/llo, Dapolll l4f'IJ Rtf. Uttd Furnlturo Stort. 130 Bull· Evans Enltrprlatl, Jacklon, OH
arenctl Raqulrtcl, Can See At vlllo Pika, Complato Good Bodo 1-800-537·1403 E~lern Awe, GallipoUI, St50: Baby Bodo liS, 'll&gt;ulh Bad
814-.f.46...514
120: Playpono 115, Strollor II: Couch I malehlng ctlalr, brown
Molk Cant IS: Bfcycloo ItO: EIIC- plaid, wood trim, good cond
Graclouo liVIng. t and 2 bedroom trlc Range H5: Auto Waahor lt25 304-1175-3000 or 30.._885apartmentl II VIIIIQI Manor and $75, Couchel, Tablel, Antique 3121.
Rlvoroldo Apartmonll In lllddlt- Dreaaars, Morel 814· 441·•4782,
Oondru11 "Stuclo• 8x10 cards tor
porl From 1236-1304 . Call II+ M.fHIS.IQ.&lt;I.
aale, Studio Matter Strakea
112 501• Equtl Houalng Oppor·
8x10's
and rtgular size card• for
tunlMlo I hovo th' following Boanlo
520
Sporting
Babl11 lor 18la: Patti~ S30, QuakLa~ 3br unlurnlohtd IPL HUO
Goods
trt· 125, Happy· 130: Spol· 150,
a&lt;:coplod, dapo~l roqulrocll2501
Sly· $20 , Blackla· 125, Paanut·
lTG 30HS75-7783.
10 lbo. Solo Com Bow 3 Powtr 1145. Call lor lnlor..tlon, 11(-8(~.
Large unfurnished 3 bedroom T-.opo Sigh~ Rtloldlng Outfit 30118
-unent wolh oara~. $275 p~o Several flitl, 114-38WOIII.
Dump truck load ol cut up fire
oacun~. 114-992·5331
llarUn Cougar Spood filii Bow wood lor ula, II(.Q02.322Q
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment, ,Hard cam•. TM Hunter Rest
• 11"-'46-0310
Stabilizer, Quiv., I 18 EatiGn Empire Corcho vendtU gas
Arrows, Set Up For Relnst, heater, S panel , excellent condl·
· llur Porter 2 Bedrooms, 1350 2yro, old 1200 Call altar Bpm. .... $250, 814-7(2·2251
MtNUh, Rtfartnctl and Otpotll 304-875-t..a
Cll(ltl)..a-28Ct
FirNOod for ult All hardwood
135
full alzo plu load, opll~ do·
Nice 2br, rtlltftnces &amp; depoalt, Now 1100 Remington LT, 20
lilolrad
&amp;304-1182·2556.
no po11. 304-175-5tl2
o•uge, $510, new S&amp;W, model
111111,
357
mopm,
11425:
Rtrring.
Flrewoo&lt;l
Season•d
Hantwood,
Tara Townhouae Apartmentt,
ton 878, 12 a•uoe, $350; new Dallvorod Or Plck·Up, 814-251·
Very Spac:laua, 2 Bedroom•, 2 llorlln
Floort, CA, I 112 11m. Fully eo.. liS. 22 rlflt, It tO; 81(·882· 1031.
pttod, Adult Pool l Baby Pool,
Grubb'o Plano· tuning I ropalra.
PoUa, Start 1350/llo. Na Poll,
Problamo? Naod Tuned? Colllho
Antiques
lNM Plul _ . , Dopoolt Rt- 530
plano Or et-..!125
11+448·3481, 114-+tl· Bur or tell. AlverlrNI Antiqu11,
r:o_t.~~=------l''2' E. lloln Stroot. on Rt.12(, Nlot Sofoo, Compltto King Slza
1111n - . T-. - _..,.. Pomeroy Houro II T W 1o·oo Waterbeda, Full Slza Biela Wilh
oppllcodont for till HUD oubafoj: Lm 0&gt; e:OO p.m., SUnday UIO 11 Yaureaa &amp; Bo• Sprlnat. Solid
lzod apt faf oldtrly ond hondl· e·oo P m. 114·112· 2521, Ruu Oak Hutch, 11(·371-2720 AF·
TEReP.II.
cappocl. EOH 304-17~78.
-·
JET
=r.o.:.'-:btd:-7r-...
-m-7ru-rn-:lo-:htd-:--,,.-,..·l540 MisCellaneous
• AERATION IIOTORS
1111n11n lllcldloport 12001mo. p1uo
Merchandise
RtpUtd, N• I Rabulk In SII&gt;Ok.
ltaa dopotl~ you per aoo and
Metric, w P1f .,.,.
1 Elootrlc Furnocal3~5. 1 Goo Coli Ron e..., l.a-53745211.
1t4-flfl2.7101 fl1lm.lpm.
Funwo tOO,IIIIO BTU 11110. 114111 - . I-IOQ.2iii.QOIII
450
Furnished
ROOinl
2 Pc. lMr9 Room Sol SUI
/Pink Flo..ro, 1125, 3 llontho
Klnga Motel Loweat Rlltea In Old 114-..l-3t03 Or Aftot 3 Pll
Town, Nawlf Romodtfod, HBO, 11• Ulftk'O
-c........ Showtlmo a Oionoy. 275 Gollon Fual Oil Tonk, .,,.
.Wfltltjr Rotot. Or llonthlw RollO, 441-t~ .

tlfH·

Mite Marchondloa, 11(·4U·
t052.

t 1~7· Ia Tho

Ytor In Tho
Buolntool lt4-

448 a:me, 1· D-281-00D&amp;.

STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Gallor
Uprlgh~ Ron Evona Enttrprlot~
Jodcoon, OtiQ. HIOO·S37-i52L

Lennox Dual Fuel Furnaca Fuel
Oil With Eloclrio Naot Pump. 250

550

Oak dining It~ lablt wflh •
cholro, elllo loti, king tlzo bod,
whi• and~ holdboonf, dtluxt
manreaa and box aprlng1, excel-

Block, brick,
ptpoa, wlndowo, llnltlo, ott. Cloudo Wlntoro
Rio Granda, OH Call IU·2.S:
5121

0o1on Tank. eu

ue 381'1

lent condllion, maple vanity wilh

mlnor;l14-l85-35$15.

Building

Supplies

-or

560 Pets for sale

Ona Pair ol tO' 'MTX Truck
Sptakaro Brand Now Aoklng
1235; MTX 2(0 Amp 1100
(et()245-ll7fill
Ou"n Slzo Watorbed WISidt
Rollo, Excolonl Condition. S50.oo.
2-Cabbaga Kaybotrd C1111, Air
Coodii!W. 81.....0-8100.

3 Auotrollan Shaphtfd~ 1 month
old, I2S MCh. OIH42-33114 afttr

Tho Pomoror Thrllt S~OP·

A Groom Shop ·Ptl Grooming.

0010

12xt2 dog kannal, S100, nltda

-down, 111 11112 5112.

eprn.
7 Wttk Old AKC Black &amp; Whlll
l"'liWWgtu. 114-~

buying Levi jeana only, men's, F111urlng Hydro Bath. Don
worren'a and chlldrtn't. IIIlO Unie Shettl. 373 G.orge1 CrHiri Rd
gl~o dra11t~ 10 doRa and Uld· 614 Ill 0231 .
dl It car Hit&amp;, ueaday through AKC Cocker Spaniel pupa,
Friday, 101nHpm. 814-092 3725,
black/white, bulf, t»onde.twhlte.

r,·

w-

R~lottrod

AKC

Pt~ 5

11U4-874t.

Dolrnodon Put&gt;Old, eoN Anyllrno.

Btaullful AKC Rtgloltrtd Rot·

lwtller puppies, lwkl old, lalla

docked, dtclaws remand,
wormed . e ftmaltl 1250 ... 3
...... · - 304-175-«l7ol.
Btoudlul Rot torrltr pupa, $200
Iamott, 1150 molt, vtt chocked,

I-

GrNI Dalto On Now John O..o
Compect Utlity Tractoro: JD 7J070
2( HP 4 WD ltiiWMo. + Tu:
170 28 HP • WO 1258/Mo • •
Tox, JO i70 33 HP • WD 1~111
llo , • Tu, JO 1010 38 HP • WO
I:J2Il,t,lo , • Tax.

JD Skid Steer Loader Financing
At Low Ao 7 5% JO Gotoro 7.8%
Financing: JO Lawn Tractoro No
lntoraot No Payment TIIIMOICh
'VI Or 7 ~% Financing Wllh 10'11&lt;
Down Payment Carmlchaol'o
Farm &amp; Lawn Galllpollo, Ohio I ·
1110 59.. t11t,6t4-(ol6-2412

Black &amp; Tan Coon Hound Pupplo~ I Montho, Sho" Exoollont
October Now Hollln&lt;l Yaklt 8o... $100, ~7-G85-U73.
nann 1% Financing for 3e
Full Blood Sablo Collie Pup• 150 montho. NH H2 T Hayblno
11-15 IIH(I-1083
se .ooo NH .ea 8' Hayblno
$8,700. NH 182 ~· Dalullt Hay·
Kannel rtducllan- AKC Real•· bone $G,OOO NH 130 Spreader
tered Oalma11an pupplea and t'2BU 1•,500 NH t.S Sl&gt;(oodtr
ldulto, Ill b&lt;trllor temperamont. 177BU $(.700. NH t55 Sprtocltr
cl1omjllon Uno. !&gt;&lt;lead to 111. 8t4- 2
t7BU l5,&lt;100 AU ford nt11rl I
7•~
hay &amp; loraoa lor 1ho monlh 01 ()o.
t% fiilonc:inQ lor 31 man~
Wanted: Regialered cl'tocolale/ black Lab Retnwar to tweed With 3% for .a, 5"' for eo. Kttltrt
Servlco Cantor St. RL 17 Point
flmola.30H7S.~
Pltount I Ripley Rd. 30(·81153874.
570
Musical
Instruments

Ultd TrooiO~
ft For 41 llo~
Wllh 10'11&lt; Down Payment: IIF
285 10 HP l2111111o.; l&lt;ilboll 10
HP ( WD 1311/llo.; JO 7lO C..
pod I203JIIo.; 11111 Dfooounll
TM Yoar On Now JoM Dooro
Hoy Eq~lprnont 2 .JO 210 Ofolt
lloworo IM80: Wa Stack JD
Combine Porto: HU 1
TranlpGIII 11,150: Wt Btl John
O..o, Bulh ~. lloyrolh Alia·
oro, HIS Equlpmont Sto Ua FiJr
Your Uoad Equipment Naodo
Farm &amp; law, Golllpo11t. Ohio t-IQO.IIoi-1111,114-2(t2.
1.;;;..:.:;.:;__ _ _ _ __
640 Hay &amp; Grain
~~~~-=~~~~~~
~~
Ell corn. 12 75 bulhtl or nogalable: orchord gran hoy, round
balnl15, oquoro boll~ 11.210&gt;
12: 81(.Qg2-3153, 114-112-2«7.

710 Aqtos for Sill

610

or

aa..

Ia Hay $2.50 Bolt, Round BalM
IZJ,Itu.&amp;-1012.
I 'Ht=y.-R:-o-u.;.nd;..llo..:.;;lt::.l_l_20_._2_nd_C_U_I·
tlng oquart bola 1:!.50 311(-175lid or 30•·571-211( Colofttr

l·g~pm.~:-:--:-....,-.,.--::---:--:­
Oota Hoy for Salt, Round Balta,
Groat F• Hor111, Dollvery Aval~
obit, 111 Each.l14-317-755ol.

OHIO 45631
Allen C Wood, llroker · ~4523
Ken Morgan 446-0971
Tim watson 256-6t02
Jeanette Moore . 25E 1745
Patnaa Ross ~
814-446-1066 or 1-800 894 1088
Ull

-

1141 This Ranch Style Home
has had some up-dates, newer
siding newer roof, plus It offera
kitchen appliances 3 Br'a, 2
baths, located in A V school
diStrict $40'1

LOG HOMES

·-~
. I ~~~;

Real

11~2

114-182-ee:M
toK

has been a
leader m the log home
indnury fur over IS
years. Choo!'c from ovc1

70 atandard 1nmlcls ur
we "11 c ustom (lesign one

1138 IN TOWN LOCATION·

•

What a Deal, Two homes 1or
the Pnce of One Main House

18~3 Eagle Vlolon TSI 3 5 Liter
• Engine, 74,500 Mtlll, Clean Car,
18,000, 814-258-6382.

•

hal21o 3 Bra t 1/2 baths. full
bsmt smaller house has 2 appolntrroent,

1103 Ford Uuatang Convtfllblt
Alr, Autonw.•c. Cru1N, AU Power.
low Yll... Excellent Condition,

Br s could be rentlll or guest

house SSO's

ro. you

•• sa.eoo. et4--7473.
t9a3

Call m · wr1tc fu1· mol'c

UAJELY OLQEB HOME IN CITY

Ripley, WV 25271

MOllE 446•9539

1-800-458-9990

WIWS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 44&amp;-9539

Grand Am SE 2

--·

Now Tlfeo And

Bro~to.

'

••.

Dept. GDT,

L.ARGE COUNTRY HOME . 10 ROOM HOME
FEATURES A FIREPL.ACE IN THE UVING ROOM
AND FAMILY ROOM FORMAL DINING, L.ARGE
EAT-IN KITCHEN BASEMENT 2 CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE PLUS ADDITIONAL 24'X20' GARAGE
APPROX. ONE ACRE.

lmnonvaments
,.. •
IIASEIIENT
WATERPROOFING
Unc:onditiOnll WIIUmt 9uoran1H.

C&amp;C Gonoral Hamo lllfll·
tentnot· Paln~na. vinyl a~.
c:orponuy, · Wlndowl. llolhl,
mobllo hOmo rand _._ fl&gt;&lt;
he ttdmotf col Cho~ 114·1a2·

rabilohod 1875 Coli (It'll.~~
0870 Or 1-100·287.0571.
long, olr, ate. Exclllam oondlllon, Wltor1&gt;&lt;001in0
114-812...7( ... 304-773-5535.

·.~
140 El-riCIIand
....
-•
Refrigeration
Resktendll or cammerc:ll.l wWIRa.
new ....,a or repalra. Mas•~

Local references turn1shed. El· 1;83=2'1::.._ _ _ _ _ _ _....;...

1885 Wlldarna11 camper, 21 '

1g17 Dutchman 22 Fl. Tag-A·
Long, Fully Equipped, Paid
.tS,IIOO, Alkintl $11,1500, Col F•
llort lnlormollon, 11(·3N-2571,
614-31111-116111.

AppUance Pllrtl And SetviCII: ~

Name Brw.nda Owtr 25 Years Ea· cenaed electrician R1d.nhr
parl•nc:e All Work Guarant•ed, Electrical , WV000305, 30(.. 71·
Frtnc:h Cit»" Maytag, e14· •41!S· 1788
77115

National Realtor Survey· Most
popular home ts a 2 story w/a lg
porch or wrap around and a lovely
entry Thts home Is th1s and much
more Only minutes from Holzer
Hosp1tal Lg flat yard and beautiful
deck Shown by appt
Winding Croll Road• Cora-Mill
Pleasant Hill Rd. Flat to rolling
some wooded
lots
Some
restrtct1ons Only 4 Rema1n 15,000·
25,000 Pnce range

One acre more or less on Fairfield·
Centenary Ad Green Twp $14,500

What's Most Important To Your Fam1ly?
Is being close to town where the kids can walk to school
Important? How about having 4 8Rs, 3 112 baths, 2 family
rooms and a screened lnporch so everyone can have
their space? Does buytng a home rn great condition wnh
a brick exterior for low matntenance have any appeal? If
you answered yes to all o1 these questiOns, call us We
have just ltsted the perfect house lor you and your family.
$149.900 1213

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(614) 446-3644

4 City Lot• · Could butld a mce
home or some tnvestment
properties as duplexes
Farm land bemg sold 1nto lots of :
2 to 5 acres Select what you nee!!
Good road frontage

e-mail us for Information on our listings:
blgbend@eurekanet.com

B~ND

BIG

!B

REALTY, INC.

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101 ~

RUSSEtL D. WOOD, BROKER
446-4618
441.0262
Judy DeWitt
..
..... 379-2184
J Merrill Carter ....
... 245-0022
Tammie DeWitt ..

·... . '

" ' •'

-....
-:--

.

-

Marth~ Smuh
Cheryl Lemly
Dana Atha ,.... ,................ .
Kenneth Amsbary

.379-2651
742-JIU ,
.
379-9209,
. .. .. 245 -5855&lt;

:i

•

!

-

ANXIOUS!
OWNERS
LOWERED THE PRICE OF
THIS HOME TO S5e,500.001
All ready to move 1nto th1s

roomy but C02Y 3 bedroom 2
bath 11ome Neet &amp; clean Noce
garage
allachod
by
breezeway

and detached

Ideal for lhe hobby
Call today for
You will be

NOT JUST A HOME FOR AFFORDABLE!
YOU
$51,900.00 You get 31 acres BET.. $30,000.00 Cozy 011i
more or less wtth th1s one 3
story home that is just a '-'
bedrooms, 2 baths, laundry m.nutas of town N1ce Sh"P
room, liv ing room dmmg wrth attached carport!
area &amp; kitchen Front &amp; rear Immediate Possessl&lt;ml
decka Pnvate, excellent
1957
voewl11981

11(2· OLDER 2 STOfiY
HOME, has 7 rooms 10111 and
2600 sq rt of 11\llng space

•

ae\leral out walking

to
partial bsmt
s~uated
on
38
x
117
lOt
bulld.ngs located on this

205 North Second Ave.
OH

82xt8S tot

Henry E. Cleland Jt ..992-2.259

New Downtown LISting Must see

to apprec!ate!l 3 BA horne· 1 BR
on flrat floor 2 full baths, living
room and family room Eat-In

Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-2357

kitchen w1th dinlnQ area acreaned
In porch Part1al basemen1 for good
storage House Is in QOO(I
conc11110n Grape Street $59,900

Kathleen M. Oeland 992-6191
Office ..........................992-2.259

1201

12100 ON THE OHIO RIVER. 2
bedrooms. 2 bath 2 car garage
on 1 5 acre m/1Call Cara
12~1t IN THE CITY. 3
bedrooms 1 1f2 bath, nice rjeck
heated lnground pool, Gotta see
fhll onal Call Care
12120 NEW ON THE
IIARKETII Clay Twp . 3

MfODLEPORT· Ase you wanting lo move lmo town? Here'a
you a home A 1 112 story home wtth 3 bedrooms and 2
baths Home comes totally equopped (Refrigerator, stove,
dishwasher, disposal, washer &amp; dryer), and 11 decorated
nicely The master bedroom Is very LARGE and there Is a
room you can use for a fam1ly room or an office $55,000

ENJOY AL THE FALL
COLORS from the 45 acres
more or less ol woodland thai
comes With th1s Immaculate bl·
level homo 2 Full baths. large
walk·tn closet off master

POMEROY· Are you looking for that older home thet has the
big rooms? Here 11 Is, the horne has spacious llvmg room.
dining room, largo master bedroom. sunroom, and deck ThiS
house has just been painted and a heal pump put In this
summer Has 3 bedrooms, fireplace, and full basement.
$35,000

large

large hv1ng room w1th bUilt-In bookshelves. d1n1ng room ,

a beaullful
1
bedrooms and
of your oa11ml!nl.
12810

Crown

City

Also a garage apartment thai Is
thai you could rent and pey

1re1,

e,;ecut1ve style 3 be&lt;lroom 2 1/2
bahts. large deck across baCk of
hOme, lovely Florida room
12112 Rio Grande area 3 acres
with 2 mob1le homes and pad tor
another mob1le home, large
G~~8&amp; great ln\lestment property,

SYRACUSE· Gorgeous 2
double lot Th1s Majestic Home ~~~~~~~
rooms. 2 baths. FA N G plus ~
new
sh1ngle roof. flroplace, appliances thoroughly
carpeted Paved driveway. Also tncludes lrame
garage wnh upllalrs storage area Home Is
very well maintained and ofters full basement
and an abundance of closef/srorage areas
MUST SEE TO APPRECIATEII Call For
Appoolnllment To SEE This Oneil ASKING

12821
NEW LISTING ,
RIVERFRONT PROPERTY AT
IT'S BEST, lovely mdeed 11 rhls
3 bedroom 1 1/2 bath home w1th
large family room with walk out
deck 2 car garage on lovely
rtwr lot, $120,900 Call W1lma for
a lrivate showing

12122 LOVELY BUILDING
LOTS, ready to build on On
State Route 160 dose to Holzer
Medical CentM $7500.00 each
lot or 120.000 00 for all, can
Wilma for run dellill
12HZ 145 IC:t'el Of tlmbertancl
In Jackaon County $t4S ooo

12881

2 building loti In

ProctOr\lllle, ready lo build n,
lovely houses an around

mobile home with gas heat and
central a1r, owner wants a deal,
check thi sout

12114 Green Twp 3 bedroom
ranch with lo\lely landscaped yard,
1 car garage $79,900
11034 10 acrta mil of prime

1

50 Aero• of vacant property on Rowesville Ad on Gallla
County, Hand dug and dnlled wells , on site Electrtc available.
15 acre hayfleld some tomber Very secluded $45,000

development land clOse to freeway
and State Route EKcellent for
development or commercial use

LAGOON RD.· A 1 112 story home with aluminum siding
Has 2·3 bedroomn, two car
and a good sized yard A
full basemet11and &lt;
porch $21,000

$1S5,000
12031 WHAT A BAROAIN I ( 5
Bedroom Bnck home with 2 full
baths 3 lots Patty Hays 446·
381l4
12037 Vecanlllnd 73 5 Ac mJI In

Green Twp Reduced to $42 000
Call Patty HavPJ 446 3884
11012 4 Bedroom, 2 5 baths, 2

12117 Alo Grandt aree 105
car attached garage patty Hays
acrea with 2 houses owner will «6·3864
al•o IPIJt DlOperty, 45 _acres,.
12874 Sktdmore Rd 4 bedroom,
$35 000
112M OWNER WANTS SOLD, 2 bath home 1 5 story Call Patty
3 bedroom ranch on 1 acre more ays 446 4884
or Ina, on Slate Route 218 just 12883 3 to 4 bedroom brick
home 2 full baths 2 car garage,
3 miles off St At 7

OR. 1 MILE FROM 0 0 . MAC PARK. NEARLY NEW,
EXCELLENT CONDITION 14 X 70, 2 BR, KITCHEN
APPLIANCES, CiA, NICE LEVEL, RENTED LOT.

LEADING
RD· Want a place to start a garage
business? We have a very large garage woth approx 4 acres
m~ You could even put a home there, also $35,000

12113 Br1nd n•w. 2 bedroom

r"'...
m/1
8100

mn

Comfortable ranch thai hiUi
charm Appro• 2 acres
IN TOWN· 111 Vinton Court detached garage wll~
$47,000 00 One floor plan carport Home offers "3
ranch With 3 bedrooms, liVIng bedrooms, 2 full balM:
room &amp; dmmg room hv1ng room , formal dml"'b
combination Kolchen &amp; bath area, nice b1g kttchen wrtFi
car auached garage. Flat plenty ol cabtnet space ~
lot 1912
dishwasher
lmmed 1ate
possessoont $51 900 00
1143

BARN- vory well
constructed, cement floor, 6oft for
storage kitchen, heat, 8 Ac nYt
Great for old cars or boat
stripping VlS

attached garage, w/workshop,

Shed 24x24 workshOp building
w/electrlc &amp; Pnne Patty Hay&amp; 4463684
REDUCED TO $14,500 Call Pany

I

Hays 446·3884

112181 ( BEDROOM 2 bath
double w1de on I!S acres m/1 1n
Mor"an Twp 12 11 16 enclosed

MAIN STREET· A one story 11oma that II treohly pelnted
Inside and out and hal 2 bedrooms , equipped kiiChl"·
washer, &amp; dryer. Has a d1mng room, a lront sitting porch, nice
carpet throughout , and a storage bldg Out of the flood area
l21,fiOD

bac:k porch Formal dining room

pluia a nice eat·ln k•lchen
12118 Naw Uatlng on Fo.,.rth

A- 3 Br, 1 1/2 bath, LR OR, full

bsmt central A/C patio, heated
lnground pool, tanc•d In lawn

bedroom, 2 bathS on the river

SELL

ID

YOU MUST SEE THIS ONEil
can Cara
11CI8 SURPRISINGLY LOW
PRICE Last lot on Lakev1ew Cl
Located where only the best is
" ood enough 2 348 ac mil

. ... \10~ ·

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(614) 446-3644

FIBHEA ST· Almost an acre tot with lots of lrontage Could
have 2·3 building or mobile home lites Has older home !hat
needs to be tom down $11,000

E-Mail Address: w1seman@zoomnet.net

DOmE TURNE!J, Broker..........................ee2-5892
JERRY SPRADUNQ .................................. 114.2131
CHARMELE SPRADUNG ...........................II4.2131

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI - 446-9555

SUbJect to restr ictive covenant s

VLS 448 6806 $2t 500

LoRita McDade • 446-7729

; 'r

' Carolyn Wasch • 441·1007

Sonny Garnes 446-2707

I

'

Has newer cabtnets
A lull basement and carport

MULBERRY AVENUE· A 3 story buold1ng lhal could be 3·4
apartments Has had some remodeling on a couple ol the
levels Has a great rental potentoal Aleo haa a new storage
building and newer windows on the 3rd story 1140,000

1200ot Vac:anl L.llnd 1 13 ac m/1

=
OWNER WANTS SOLD
NOW, bring us an orrer on th1a 3

~:~:~··,;d~:l~n~l1~n~g

room , ullhty
and paneling
118,000

Pany &gt;lays 446 3884
12ti1 3 BR &amp; 2 112 bath, 2 car

ranch on St Rt 850 ctoae to 35

DON'T THROW MONEY
AWAY IN RENT! When you
could spend your money
$37,500.001 Georges Creek
Road· 3 bedroom home that
has easy to malntam lawn and
large detached garage 1925
CHURFtlLLY COZYI Put
down rools In lhls eeay to love
3 bedroom ranch Kitchen &amp;
dtntng room combination.
llvtng room. d•n . 1 car
attached garagr N1ce Sllld
lot w/lenced·m back lawn
More. l911

NICE LEVEL LOT, oversized
garage &amp; Mob1le homel 3
bedroom mobile home m
good condttlon. 2 baths,
open hv1ng room &amp; kitchen
Over 1 6 acres call to vlewl
111511

ti.

-.~

.

II.
"

•

...,~.·

.

ONE Of A FEW 11omes lhet
11 ott~ated close 18
Galhpolos Make this one
yours' Well matnta1ned bri~
ranch that has 2 1/2 baths~
3 bedrooms , rec room-;
living room, d 1nlng room
attacMed 2

CITY
L 0 C A llONf
$49,000 00 Vinyl Stded 1
Story Thai Has Living Room,
Kitchen. 2 bedrooms. bath &amp;
laundly Ntce front porch .
House 'has had updating
Handy locafoonl1935
LOOKING FOR SOME NICE
PASTURE LAND? Over 71
acres with lots of road

lronlage on two roads
County water ava1lable
Exceptional tract of land
Could be d1vtded easy hno

... .•
I/II!P.

carAa:ge an(j

so much more'

.......,.

ONE OF THE BEST
OF GAWA COUNTY frtm;
thos lovely spacious newen
home 2 story with lullj
basement, 5·6 bedrooms,
llvmg room , kitchen &amp; lotS:
more approx 3,000 sq n or.
hv1ng space plus fu ll•
basemem Large spacoouS:
rooms, 40' x 4:4 ' metah
butldlng pond. lenclng an&lt;f,
approx 18 acres m/1 Very,
well constructed Wamt
space lhen let us show th1sl
11ome to you 1947
1

'

smaller tracts pond , fenc1ng RIVER LOT· 9B2 Acre mtl•
&amp; mmeral nghts Included . well water (co available) 8!
11M2
electric
Plus bl ock.
basement
3
electnc hook-:
LOTI Ready for a mob1le ups lot has been surveylld ,
hamel Appro x. 1 acra
Owner wants sold 1949
•
cornplete w1th water &amp;
LOCATION SAYS IT ALU electric
Paved Road
Very well maontalned brick Cheshire Twp 1980
11
ACRES
approx .l
complete wllh water tap
ranch home that has elbow
Wooded , cleared off sole foro
room Easy to mamt81n lawn GIGANTIC
PRICE
3 bedrooms , 2 1/2 baths, living REDUCTION! OWNERS mobtle home or house Call :
room, dtnlng room. rec room . LOWERED PRICE $10,0001 today Cheshrre Twp 195l ,
kitchen , 2 car attached NEW PRICE $84,100.00
RIVER LOT· 603 acrtls :
garage 1128
Ranch style home sotuated at County water and electr..: ,
the edge of Rto Grande. 3
Nice lot lor MH or J4st fQr;
AFFORDABLE! ~ .900 00 · bedrooms , 2 full baths , r8Cfeation 1150
J
coty schoofa. rataed ranch wnh din1ng room or fam1ty room
Lots ol fruttlrees mea yard
4 bedroome. 2 baths garage
approx 1 6 acre lot, could less than 2 acres Call for
purchase woth 3 addttlonal complete Hshngt 1934
acres 1944

$45,000 COMFORTA8Ui
RANCH HOME With 2 BRs,
LR , OR, kol, FR, carport and
garage
Immediate
possession 11M

. •'

.

covered front porc h $!59 900 Call

12102 OWNER WILL PAY
CLOBIHG COSTS, 3 bedroom

kttchen wnh alnum doors fhat
load to rear deck, enached 3
car garage &amp; mare Let us
show II to youl 1133

'·

I
••
.., •

12111 Brick ranch wtflnttl'led
altlc 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,

THIS HOME HAS ESSENTIAL FEATURES MOST
NEEDED FOR COMFORTABLE LIVING AT
CONSERVATIVE COST SPACIOUS LIVING ROOM,
:J BEDROOMS , EAT· IN KITCHEN . UTILITY
ROOM . GAS FORCED 'AIR FURN~,_c ENTRAL
AIR COND .CARPORT.. FEftcED
BACK
YARD CONVENIENT LOCATION PRICED TO

roomw1th

•

~UGE

city schools Patty Hays 446·38&amp;4

BEAUTIFUL L.AND ...OVER 300 ACRES LOCATED
NEAR
WAYNE
NATIONAL
FOREST
AREA PRODUCTIIVE FARM , DUDE RANCH OR A
TERRIFIC PL.ACE TO LIVE AND ENJOY THE
GREAT OUTDOORS . 3 BEDROOM HOME , 3
BARNS, OTHER OUTBUILDINGS. POND,
TOBACCO BASE. THERE ARE VERY FEW FARMS
"f.HJS SIZE ON THE MARKI:t DO NOT MISS OUT
.oN THIS ONE!

!lv1ng

woodburnmg f1replace, mea

POMEROY· Heres a 2 story homo that haa 3 bedrooms 2
baths and a large hvmg room Also there ts a 2 car garage
and a lull basement There IS also a large front porch that you
could sot and watch lraftoc go by 125,000
MIDOLEPORT· Lookong for a place to buy, but !honk you
afford the monthly payment• Here s a 3 bedroom homo

bedrooms 1 bath nice patio
setting on 1 037 acre m/1 COME

AND TAKE A LOOKI Can Cara

,.

."

....

Real Estate General

New Jilting· 1988· 14 X 7Q Motlliii'l
Home 3 Brs , 1 1/2 Baths, deck
on a rented lot. All you have to do I
move In
Fairfield • Centenary Rd.
3
bedroom home setting on 1 3 acres
of nice flat lawn w~ots of plants &amp;
flowers Lg front porch and 1
deck area m the back. Priced 70's

bedrooms, formal d1n1ng area,

TWO GREAT LOCATIONS EAST BETHEL CHURCH
RD. VERY NICE 14 X 70, 3 BR/2 BATH ON
RENTED LOT. READY TO MOVE INTO. ALL ELEC.
C A ,APPLIANCES AND F/P. $14,000

'

R~

Home

810

v, -. ...

446-3644

Real Estate General

call Wilma

••

Improvements ••

UBI Rongtr 373V If' tZ ·Z•V New gil tanks, 1 ton truck
Trolling llotor, 150 XP Evlnrude whtolo I racllotora D &amp; A Aulo,
Rlplty, WV. 30(· 372·3~33 or t·
Ou-.1. M.IDO. 114-11112·2770.
I00-2T.t-1i1321.
J
lfiH ........ Z212 Slalah, 22ft,
-boo, 8.L
hrs, 790
campers •
whh eatraa, very aharp. ' ' 7,000
Motor Homes
nogotllblo 30(·112·31(5 oltor

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE. INC.

Amor.

REAL ESTATE

25LOCUSTST.-GAUUPOUS

446-3636

$5,000
REDUCTION
Comfortable Uvlng On the River
Th1s very ntce ranch home offers a great vtew of the
river spacious floor plan allows comfortable living wtth
3 BAs, 2 1/2 baths. family room w1th fireplace, llvtng
room. dintng erea and eat· ln kllchen Basement has a
second famtly room and workshop Also tncludes a
Flonda room and 3 car garage $134,9001131

Racing Wheell, 1 Own•r. e1~~&amp;·

Appalachian Lo~
Structures, Inc.
P.O. Box 614

Pon~oo

Dooro. 4 Cyllndtr, Auto, AIC, Till
Whtal. PIMor Locfra. CD Player,

infur•natiun.

Close to Downtown Stores, Had Excellent care, In top
condition 3 Bedrooms. 1'1• baths, knchen, dlning·raom,
living room , utlhly room , foyer and TV room Full
Basement Block Garage with automatic opener
Concrete Driveway Flrsl 11me on market WON T LAST
LONG - PHONE TODAY
li785

Home

Auto Parts •
ACCIIIOI'ItS

Lumina. 3 t muld·port, V-e

, auiOnwlic. lllr, tilt, cruiH. trnlfm
• atareo ca11at1a, nica, 13895,

Structures

y
Realty
Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, 44&amp; 3383

tell To:r:JII Plck ·Ut2 WD, 5 1181 Jttp Charokoo, 11,100
C
$ 000 080 llllto With A 38,000 IIIIo Wtr·
~.e112. 01/tr,
' ronty, Can 8o Soon At 1543 SL

Q--'

7&amp;0

1738, 8tHSI-t252

'

81.....,.-, .,,....,..167.

:10 Paoplo Wanted To LOll UP
TO 30 PoUNDI In Tho Next 30
lllaoplne roomo with cooking. Doyo, All Natural, Dr Rteom·
Alto trailer apact on river. All mondld, Guaramold. Coli Tracy
hoo~·UPL Coli altar 2.00 p m ,
Atll-1·11182. Frat Sln1IIIL
-773-Y51, -W'l

-Ita

, for Sala

n-•t

bomc this year!

Appulaclaan

750 Boat1 • Motora

Pans

Hav For Sato· Squora 81101 Alfll·

Hydraulic oll-loweal prlct In
town Venl frH OBI l'ltallrl, propone &amp; notural gas, on oala nCM
Slder'a Equlfll1*t 304-175-7(21

&amp;4-WDe

1881 Cuotom 30 uUIIIJ bod, 455 1115 H - 300 ( Whotlw (x(,
raor ond, p~ 114418-21!!5.
pb. l•.ooo nog Coli 30H 75· tOU Joop Choroktt 4x4 Rod,
:31=DO-::D·- - ----.---...--12t.IIIIO lllltt. ltt.eaa. 814-251, . Ford Fltnfll' 304-1112-3273.
1738.114-254-1252.
Wltllfl (27

Cruise, AUIFM Caueua, Trunk
Roltoot, lt2,000 Col Aller I P.ll.

23)2.

32

Htlvy Duty Hoyfortc 3 Point Hitch,
8t4-441-1083

720 Truclll tor Sale

sale

110, GoUipolll, ~ (Tolar &amp; 5pm.
t088 Dodgo Dakoll v... Au· Tolor lnouranca) Or Coli II(· llult oalll 18111 Spectrum beta
t 1e1 Buick Summaroat, •550,
"made, AC, Rod Long Bad With ..a-SforMOI'tln,.,_don.
boat with Uve well, Motor Guide
11HII2·5521
(Sorlouo lnqulrlao Onlyl) 114trolling mator, 25 hcu.. Uetcury,
~~':~~;:.• Whoolo, 13.ooo, 740 Motorcycles
-40t5
trailer and cover, just like new,
1D87 Pl~mouth Rallenl Station
$.4500 or taka over payment,
Waoon. Coii81HIS.U183.
18~8 Whlll Chavy lumina, Fully 1881 V·l Ro~or XLT oxttndod 1882 Honda 850 Firat I.SQ
Loaded With tg,ooo Ulloa cab w/lopper, 111,800 mlln, T-lti614-2•S.~
$tt9 month, ciii114-88S.3471
11818ulck LeSabr!l Good Con- lt2,100,81' ......1187
good condition. U ,OOO 30 H 75- 18888 Hondo 300 Fourvax. lhoh 760 Auto
&amp;
dldon, Whlta, 3800 ~nglno, Good
7~ ... 304-17$.(875.
Gao Mlloa~o, $3.000 CIBO, 114- CARS FOR StOOl Trucko. boall,
drlvo, good condition. Aoklng
Accessories
387-068A
4 whHitra. motor homaa, furnl· Lincoln 225 Wlldtr Utility TraDer 12.500. 30ol-l75-3113111or 5pm.
lura, ellclfonlca, computtra etc
Budget Prlct Tran1miuiona.
1888 Ford Touru' cruiM. Ul~ olr, by FBI, IRS, OEA. Avtlfobla your t:.:::·P.c;:n Sam. et•·"t·IHt 1~83 Fot Boy, Extro'o 11 ,750,
Uood IRabullt, All Typeo, Ovor
814-211&amp;5 8078, Le1v• Menage
anvfm 1tereo c:a11ttte, maroon, area now. Call 1·1G0· 513·4343
10,000 Tran1ml11ions, Acce11
axcollant oondldon, 12(~5. 114- Ext. 5-13111
Rod Davi Take 011 Uni~ ~· Serlouolnqulrin Orlr
Ramanullctured Main Shalll For
lloc 10 Speld, Fullar Trono,l14- t~~ 5 Polaril SCrambftr &lt;100 lXI. Slanderd Transmission AU
ll2-lfl2(.
1880 ·1180 Carl For ItGall
Typoo. lt4-2(5-51177
812·73t8
13.500 304-175-5tR
1GII Ford Tompo, 81,11110 lllln,
SoiZid And Sold
11,500, Nlct Cor, Cllall, 114-44LocalyThlo .....,_
730 Vans &amp; 4-WDS
ms Hondo xRea, Llkl Now,
181t
TrtiCko. 41~0. Etc.
11500,
Coli (It•) ..a...Ut Alter
t.a-522·2730, X 3101.
1881 F- 150 Ford 414, Excellent
1889 Ford Tampa. two door, two
Condotlon, Atki n~ 12,500, Open ·~"'"
owner•, full 1lzed apart, badr Credit PI'Dbltma? We Can Help To Olforo, 614·2(5-4758.
Real Estste General
good, otrong an~lno, 8rlctd to Eur, Bonk flnonclno For Uood
lOll· $1000, woth C ployor, Veh cleo, No T•rn Downo. Call 1082 Jtop CJ7 lorado, monr IX·
11200, 11 ...H~30glltovt ""'" Vlcfolo. au ua 211111.
traa, good condition, eu-UD·
-oroollofttr S:30pm.
Salzod Cart From 1175. Poroch• 3007.
1880 Buick LoSobra mint concfl· II, Cadllloco, Chovyo. BMW' I,
tlon, c:~~n be Ntn al 38 Hudton Corvttttl Alao Jeepa, 4 WD'a.
St., Mlddlapor~ 011, 8t+Gll2-\t03.
Your Area. Toll frta t ·100·211· tt1811 GMC Solari Cuotom, S4.~50
1000 Ext. A·28U For Current 11......._'222
tOUt Blazer (XI Taho Packa~a
t880 Oldo Cutlau Suproma. Lloting~
Loaded, Standard, LNihor Stlto.
U dC
Rl 12 3 1111
Rod 18fack, Sharp! Excopbonolly
8"
CD, 69K, Excellanl Condition Upton H
• •
•• Weii·Uitinlained, Have All Serv~
$~500. 114--14!-4222
South of Loon, WV . Finoncln~ lea Rooorda Since Purchued,
Elegant In
.
Avollablt. 3QI.-458.t089
114-4-11-01157, 8t4-......o852
Yet
very
liveable
Entertain
In
very
tasteful
1881 Cavalier 5 Speod, 7g,ooo
hvtng and d1nlng roorps or k1ck back and relax In the
lloloo, S2.S50. 18Be CIVIIIor RIS Volkswogon Rail Buggy, Very 1~81 Chtvroltt G·20 Converolon
comfortable lamlly room with huge stone fireplace
87,000 lltlao, 12.750, 1117 Corti- Sharp. Very Fall Conolallnt 111 Van, V·l Vortex englna. $8,500.
ca St.•~s. Cook llotoro, IU· PlacoWinnor, PoddlaTiroo, Do·
gracious home lets you do both With ease There's a
.....0103
lorto Carb., Buo Trant lulla, Too Coii30H7S.5t~
beautiful kitchen for the famtly chef. as well as, a private
Much To llall $3,500, 814·441· 1GD4 J11p Cherokee country,
screened lnporch for eventng enjoyment And the master
.. Hlit Gao Metro, automatic 1110.
auto. ~~&amp;xi!&amp;, ~~&amp;dr, new tires &amp; bat·
bedroom has on oof the most outstanding baths we've
• tranomlulon, lt800 ; combut·
li'UckS for Sale
terr. oil power, hitch 301·6751; IIOntef IIOklf' IIOYe, good COOdl• 720
6428.
seen. Located on a beautifully landscaped lot with lots of
mature hardwoods and
Close to town and hospital.
lion,
$100,
I1H'2·2B52.
t878
GMC
Pick·
Up
•
Now
Trona·
1""5
Ch
t
k
I
b
112
•
• Tlroo.
l Bod In Folr ••
tv 'I rue ' ex ca •
I
Br.ka
T
• 1991 hunderblrd, red, ounroo, •
~
ton, •x• - · brulh guard, bod
new Michelin tlrtl, 3 8 V8 :SO.· Condlt1on. 250 nglna. Runs Unar, topper, am-fm cauene,
4
675-5698
Good, S700, Call 814·448·11&amp;51 , great cond, 11,000 mllea.
.6t'::•·::"'::.:3::.703=-------1115,500 304-7J'3.5t78.
1882 Chry•ler LeBaron Corwert- abla Red, v 8 Auto, Good Condl·
don, $5,200, ceo. 111113 22• Conveuable While, V-8 , Auto, Good
Condl~on. $8,750, 080 814-254·

Cot-•

WOOB
BEilLTI', INC
LOCUST STREET, GALUPOUS,

farm Equipment

Autos for

1880 Chtvy lloMbu otadon "'II" na• Chovy Cavolltr, 5 apood,
an, runo ~ood , I550. ll(·iiZ· two door, 45,300 mlltl, aaklng
- ·
812150, 81 ....... 31141.
:,:=~..
:;;;..=c-.m-a_r_o"'F:-o-r..,Po,-rt-a"'Go,-od"' lt~0511onto Carlo - . lnlhlr
....... n
083.
lnttrfor. gold padtaf10, apoll_,,
JWll, e1..,..1· 1
"· under wtrranty, exc. aond
1~81 Plymouth Horizon, good 114,1500.304-175-23(2.
condition, 11515, call114·2(7· tll5 s... rn SC2, Automatic. Air,

Kimball pltnD wfbench, exc

FARr,1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

71 0

Jludag11!t-·,mtbul • Page D?

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

Sunday,October19r1997

&amp;10 FJ!Irf Equipment

oond. *·175-847ol.

New Idea 110 Corn Pickert
Two :.. 112 x 82" vinyl replace· lt511oa.304-~7-2133
~."a 114·370·2268, 61(·3711·
men1 wlndowa; bicycle carrier, e AKC Cocker Spanlela 2 Adults L~;;;;;;;ii;i;iiili;;iliiiiiiiiiiij~
room OlliiPICt hooter, 811·112· •125 Pair or 175 Each 114·251· II
51~
Wallrllne Special. 3&lt;( 200 PSI AKC Garman Shophord PUI&gt;t21.85 Per 100, 1• 200 PSI plea,1 male, 1 female, 11 wka
Comfm·t. convenience,
U700I'or100;AIIBraiiCOm·
old
tat~
1
&amp;
·•
$200
,,,,,.
0 r ''Y
_ _. Rlingo in Stock
••D • worm~.
I n
crfltl c n c y,
,...-on
a •30.._67H6311
•
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES 1=:.:::::..::.::::::=:;_ _ _ _ _ lo.lul'oLilill• ,m,J ncxib1hty
Jadclon, Olio, 1-800-53H528
AKC Roo Mln·Pino, ohow linn,
IXC temperament, had lhDII,
d~sign arc d £ew of the
Wood Ot Coal H•dng Stcwe For mother on premises $350 304·
reason s why 2,000
Salo, 1100, BH·378·2720 AF· 871H415aftor3pm
TEA I P.M.
ralntlica will htuld a log

ond-. I-:-===.;.-"':":==:.:.;-=-

Conlb'uctlon Warker1 Welcome

loatt• Free E1dmat111 Acld·On
S l - Hi~htr.

HOlt PUrlllll Only
Call Uo Today.
Twonty Seventh
HOlling I Coollnu

Farm Equipment

)!odgtr IIINgi wlaon. IOOd condtloit,- tlroo, lt~2Q7.

R IS Fumftun

. . .,·-.--lw

-tmont.

• lii2.fi042.

o- II HP 11-, EIIC.

lllllt Eltc. Ull, 31" 0ec1t, E~
- . WV
ltnt Con41Uon, "10; Hllloboro
Buy, Sol. Toad~
llttal Flllllo&lt;l, 1 1/2 Fl Wit~
Uttd I Anllqllto
Goa11nec:k And H.D. AM• Hlach
Funlue.
I FL U11MIJ Trailer UOO, 2 Wind- 1450: H.D. Ford I Ft. Orodor
30+7J'3.15341.
ow Air Condl~onoro Both 1.000
Blade, Can Pul Cyllndtra On Rockford Fu~oll Punch 200
0111Ct ~ 1200 Sq. FL Doyo: BTU It 50 FOt Both, Stora Fuol Sldoo, E.C.i1450, lloi4711-27M.
Amp. I 3 Way Box Wolh 15" Sub.
11(·:117·7U4, E-lngo 11(· Oil Furr'IICI '1450, 11~ • •11.
King Coal Or Wood With Thor· 1425.ForAUOBOitu.&amp;-35e
......m,,
I P11Co W.lnul Dining Room Su·
T - l o l - l o r - I n Gall- lie, I Plec• CoYah, Ore1Nr, Now; I I SocMono Of Trfplo Wol Slm SomorvUit'o Army Comou.
polio Forry. wottr ond noh ln- Dropeo. ~ o- llllnclo, ., ........ Pipe, 175 Galton .fuol Oil Tonk, flogo by Sandyvlllt Poll Ofllco.
Good Condition, 114-251·1018, Noon-5prn. fri·Sun. Smalllndl·
...-. 304-ll'H335 .. 31M-875- 1731
Aftot 5 P.M. Evarir9L
vidual t q t i - 304-2J'3.5e55.
&lt;1071.
Aluminum Diamond Plated Tool
Trailer apace tor rent In ApDII Box For Dadolllola 1 Ucl 1125 King Slzt Wavolou Wattrbto WARII UP: High Efldtnoy NaiiJ.
orovo. wv. Wlltor I ~biOI fur· Firm: 11111'1 l.Hihtr JocUI Slzt With Draw.,,. Cherry Ortntr 1 ral And LP G11 FurnacH, Llr.·
Uke Now 175: Brown /Whitt Mirror: Ook Baby Bad lllanrn~ limo Wlrr01ny On Heat EXdlang·
-304-511-ac2.
- . , SUllO, 110; 11.._. Altor 5~. ltu.&amp;-31128.
tr ,, You Dan, Cllll Uo Wt Bolh

hoopitol. -7~78.

2 boclloom
utill~tl fur·
rllhod, txctpl ttlophont. 201 s.
. 4111, lllddltport, Oh, Polly 114-

John

...

Sunday, October 19, 1997

BEm JO COWNS...................................812·23t3
BRENDA JEFFERS .....................................ee2·7275
OFFICE ........................................................IIII2·2888

'
r

MEIGS COUNTY
Cheryl Lemley

742-3171

.,

n4 Main SI!'M11n RutllncJ.
Remodeled 1 112 story 11ome,
living room wrlh alnum doors
that leads to a covered deck,
kJis

of cabinet

space

1n

kitchen, 3 bedrooms, d1r&gt;ng
room Immediate possess1on 1282
SYRACUSE.
Alum1nlltl'!
$29,500 00 1136
sided one story home t!Wt
471 5I
EAGLE
RIDGE has 2 bedrOOm&amp;, bath, IIVIQ'O
ROADt Aluminum Sided I I 12 room. d1nlng roam. khchan,
story home, liVIng room, FA electnc furnace/centril
kitchen. over SIZed delached arr condttlonlng, altochell
2 car garage FA electriC carpor1 Rear porch Nicll
rurnace Add1110nll mobile $45 ,000 00 IM1
home hOok·UP 1551

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