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MAUI NEI

Look and you will see. That's obvious, sounds like an agnostic sermon title but there's a strong suspicion too few actually do. Maui has many moods, most of them sublime. There's a reason the island is sought out by artists. First sight of the day: The bedroom window frames a ghostly landscape. An old rock wall casts a dark line. Panini rise from the shadow, their bristling fruit making fat fingers jutting from corpulent hands. Worn-out avocado trees stretch wraith-like limbs against a not-quite-gray sky. Mahina piha is still up. Stagger into the front room — damn this body-clenching flu. Cyrano skitters out of the way, only the movement and his white chest visible in the gloom. Sit in the first available chair. It faces a big window, seldom covered. The full moon sits just above Kealaloloa Ridge.


Quick-thinking duo help Canton woman escape blaze

Lynn Rodway had just sat down for coffee Friday at Peltiers Collision Center in Canton when Doug McKinney burst through the door and said Kathy Hilt's house was on fire.

Tom Kadinger, who was at Peltiers, figured that Hilt was sleeping because she works nights. So the men jumped in a pickup and drove to 400 N. West St. at 2 p.m.

Rodway honked the horn on the pickup. Kadinger hollered and banged on the front door until he pushed it in and found Hilt three steps away.

"Boy, we were abusive, kicking and beating the door," Rodway said. "(Kadinger) was about ready to break it."

Thick smoke consumed the home, Rodway said. Kadinger led her out and retrieved her cat on the sofa. Rodway used a knife to cut a leash on the kennel attached to the garage to get her dog, with flames leaping toward it from the porthole.


US Army Brigadier General John R. McQuigg of Wooster, Ohio

Wooster Daily Record, October 27, 1928 Famous Soldier Dies (his photo) John R. McQuigg ================= JOHN R. M'QUIGG NATIVE SON OF WOOSTER, DIES ________________ World War Hero; Long Prominent in Cleveland, Had Colorful Career. ________________________ Relatives and friends in Wooster learned this morning of the death, at Cleveland last night, of Brigadier General John R. McQuigg, a native son of Wayne county who had attained a place of much prominence in the military of the country, and who was national commander of the American Legion during 1925. Gen. McQuigg passed away at 11 p.m. at his home, 1901 Idlewood Ave., East Cleveland, following a year's illness. His death had been expected momentarily for three days. Gen. McQuigg lived in this community from the time of his birth Dec. 5, 1866 until 1891, at which time he went to Cleveland.


Church failed to adapt in new era

The immigrant church should have segued to a post-immigrant era with some ease. It did not. On the contrary, it imploded, collapsed from the inside. Conservative Catholics blame the Vatican Council and would like to repeal it, as would many of the curial cardinals who are more or less running the church. But you cannot repeal a council because fighting the Holy Spirit is even more difficult than fighting City Hall.

The Vatican Council changed the church. We had been taught that the church could not change, should not change and would not change. Then, it did change. Everything was now under question. Many of the structures of 19th century Catholicism collapsed, most notably the central role of hellfire and mortal sin to keep people in line. Many of the church's leaders thought the only way to end the chaos was to restore the old rules.


Police give tips to foil burglaries

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Pearson happy with first point

Saints were conceding a lot of needless free kick around the edge of their own box but were fortunate the delivery from Morris was so poor.

Pearson's side were too often just lumping the ball forward aimlessly and were showing little sign of much invention to break Scunthorpe down.

In fairness the home side were only a little better in what had been a very poor first half all round. But they were thrown a lifeline when they were awarded a penalty.

Saints couldn't quite get a corner clear and as Paterson tracked across the area with the ball Jhon Viafara brought him down.

On 40 minutes Crosby ran up to take the spot kick but Davis got down to his right to save it but the ball just came back out into the path of Crosby who made no mistake the second time round and made it 1-0.


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It's a shame how we have fallen, the days of Big Bob and Asaba seem a long way away, but football is like that so our turn will come again, remember we are only a small team, so we must get behind them now in there hour of need.

Gills forever

tony ellingham chatham, Wednesday, February 13, 2008

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