County signs jail contract - Elizabethton Star Online Archives
Transcription
County signs jail contract - Elizabethton Star Online Archives
50 CENTS DAILY Vol. 78 • No. 131 TUESDAY June 3, 2008 Good Afternoon from County considering preventive health program for employees By Steve Burwick STAR Staff sburwick@starhq.com Rev. Harold Mains Elizabethton Highlights Summer Reading Program Begins Page 2 Sports Little League Action Page 7 Weather Low tonight 64 88 High tomorrow Carter County is considering a medical prevention program for employees, to promote a healthier lifestyle as well as saving the county money. Carrie Seeley, business health regional manager for Mountain States Health Alliance, spoke to the County Financial Management Committee about the program, which involves periodic health-risk assessments for participating employees. Finance Director Jerome Kitchens said that his wife participates in a similar plan as an employee of the city of Johnson City. “The whole goal is to identify problems early and address them quickly before they develop into large problems,” said Kitchens. “If employees participate in the program, they get their insurance at one rate, and if they don’t participate they get a higher rate.” Seeley said Johnson City has a diabetes management program with a fulltime Registered Nurse and a dietitian on site. “These services are available to their employees,” said Seeley. “They have to do a health-risk assessment which consists of a fingerstick and blood work, which is your cholesterol, glucose, lipid panel, trigycerides, all those important numbers.” People with more than two or three risk factors including high cholesterol, high blood pressure or smoking, or those with a high body-mass index, must meet educational requirements. “At all the businesses we work with, we are finding the same things: You’re going to have about 10 percent that are diabetic, and you’re going to have a certain percentage that are borderline diabetics or have risk factors that are going to lead to pre-diabetes,” said Seeley. “The education really works. We’re seeing an impact on the numbers.” Seeley said a successful program would have a higher initial cost but returns on the investment would show up after the second or third year. “You want people who have pre-diabetes to see their physician and get their medications so that you don’t have a diabetic, because a full-blown diabetic who is not compliant is going to cost the county a lot more than someone who is compliant, and is taking their medications the way they are supposed to be and seeing their physician regularly. It’s the same way with blood pressure and cholesterol, which can lead to heart disease. You want healthy, productive employees, whether it’s on your time, from eight to five, or at midnight.” Seeley said the town of Joneborough has had a small-scale program for three years, with a parttime nurse available for health risk assessments. She said several area businesses have programs as well, but added that the assessments alone are not cost-effective without the educational component. “If you put every employee through a healthrisk assessment and that’s all you do, then you’re throwing that money away because there’s if no intervention, no education and no incentive, the employees are not likely to follow up. When you put education and intervention in place, we’ve seen positive success rates,” Seeley explained. The City of Asheville, N, C., started the Asheville Project in 1996 to provide Index Obituaries Jess W. Arwood Hampton Willard C. Elliott Roan Mountain Maxine J. Franklin Pensacola, Fla. T.J. Hale Jr. Elizabethton James L. Morton Elizabethton County signs jail contract from staff reports Carter County signed a contract with Blaine Construction Company Friday afternoon to build a 300-bed jail on the current site, adjacent to the current jail facility. County Mayor Johnny Holder said he, County Attorney Keith Bowers and Finance Director Jerome Kitchens worked on details of the $24.2 million contract all day Friday, signing it late that afternoon. Kitchens outlined several changes that were made before the contract was signed. “If the contract is not done within the specified number of days, there’s a penalty clause in there that (the contractor) would pay $500 per day for liquidated damages, and we asked that they increase that to Discuss health services bids Sheriff Chris Mathes (left) and Chief Deputy Ron Street (right) look over bids for providing the jail with health services at Monday evening’s Law Enforcement Committee meeting. Committee debates health services for jail inmates By Nathan Baker STAR STAFF nbaker@starhq.com A former teacher’s aide at Cloudland High School pleaded guilty Monday in Carter County Criminal Court of having an inappropriate telephone conversation with a 15-year-old student. Patty Jo Singleton was convicted of solicitation of a minor during her appearance before Judge Lynn Bown. Singleton is eligible for judicial diversion since she had not previously been convicted of a felony. Under the provision, Single- n See SINGLETON, 14 n See HEALTH, 14 n See PROGRAM, 14 Former teacher’s aide pleads guilty, gets diversion on charge of solicitation $1,000,” said Kitchens. This clause protects the county in the event of delays other than from weatherrelated factors. The contract still has a 640-day time limit. “They will have to repair any damage to asphalt that they do during the construction,” said Kitchens, who added that the date of the reimbursement request was changed from the first of the month to the 20th, and the contract date was changed to Friday. Payments must be made by the fifth of each month. During a reconvened meeting April 27, the Carter County Commission voted 15-3 to approve the contract. Holder said construction should begin within 10 days. Photo by Larry N. Souders County Commissioners discussed cost-effective options for providing prisoners of the jail with healthcare at Monday evening’s Law Enforcement, Rules and Bylaws, Health and Welfare and Grounds and Maintenance Committee Meeting. The seven Commissioners, along with Sheriff Chris Mathes and Chief Deputy Ron Street, received four bids in response to a request for a proposal to provide the inmates with necessary health services, such as dental and medical care. The lowest bid for a year of service was made by Old Town General Medicine at $345,000. Dr. Daniel From Staff Reports Obituaries.. ................. 4 Editorials....................... 5 Sports...........................7 Stock..........................11 Classified................... 12 Weather.....................14 H Home Loans www.starhq.com Photo by Larry N. Souders Dr. Paul explains services Dr. Daniel Paul explains the services he is currently providing, and those included in his bid, for inmate health care at Monday evening’s Law Enforcement meeting. WRRWA proceeds with alternate water plans By Steve Burwick STAR Staff sburwick@starhq.com Following a series of political battles that have threatened the very existence of the Watauga River Regional Water Authority, engineers are now moving ahead with plans to alleviate emergency water needs in the Siam community and to provide a water source for the residents of Fish Springs and Little Milligan. David Reece, engineer with Jordan, Jones and Goulding (JJ&G), provided an update on the proposed water treatment plant near the Watauga River and the intake on Wilbur Lake. “We met with TVA on behalf of Siam (Utility) and the Water Authority to get an emergency intake on Wilbur Lake,” said Reece. “They’ve come back to us with a request for information that Siam has been getting together. We will be meeting again to work out the process and get that done. The intake size has changed and the pipeline size has changed, so we’ve priced that again and put together a revised plan.” Reece said the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation had already approved withdrawal of three million gallons a day from Wilbur Lake as well as providing an aquatic resource alteration permit. He said TDEC approval was the main hurdle, and that minor details will now be worked out with TVA. Reece added that raw water could be supplied to Siam from the Wilbur intake if needed, once the pipeline is laid. The Siam filter plant is still experiencing occasional turbidity with one of two pumps running following the incident in late April, necessitating the continued purchase of water from the city of Elizabethton. Ardin “Kayo” Gentry, Siam’s representative on the WRRWA board, said if the water is supplied continuously from Elizabethton, the cost is close to $1,000 a day. “The goal is to get something done very quickly if we can for Siam, to HAPPY VALLEY CREDIT UNION 210 East C Street • Elizabethton, TN 37643 • 423-542-6078 • www.hvcu-tn.net We give back everyday to our members & community we serve, by providing competitive rates on loans and higher returns on deposit accounts. You can trust the products and services offered to you by HVCU. We want what’s best for our members in making purchases, financing homes, saving money and planning for the future. Our services have expanded as the needs of our members have changed. Serving our Members & Community for 75 years get them back in business on a regular, reliable basis — not depending on the wells going up and down, not depending on the city when the city doesn’t have water during the summertime — that’s what our goal is here,” said Reece. Gary Tysinger, engineer with Tysinger, Hampton and Partners, spoke on the alternative water supply plan for the Fish Springs area. A test well is to be drilled near the site of the proposed water tank. “It was identified as the largest aquifer up there, and we felt like we could tap it in about 600 feet,” said Tysinger, who explained that an n See WRRWA, 14 Page 2 - STAR - TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2008 Library’s summer reading program starts today By Ashley Rader STAR Staff acarden@starhq.com Visitors to the Elizabethton Carter-County Public Library should prepare for a “Starship Adventure” as the library launches its 2008 Summer Reading Program. When entering the library’s children’s reading area, patrons will think they have entered another world as the library is decorated to follow the state-planned theme of “Starship Adventure @ Your Library.” Stars, moons, planets, spaceships and aliens adorn the walls and windows. Also many books about space and space themes have been put on display. However, participants in the program are not required to only read space-themed books as a part of the program. “They can read any books that they want to,” said Children’s Librarian Ashlee Williams. “It can be books they check out here at the library or ones they read at home.” The summer reading program is designed to encourage “recreational reading” in kids of all ages. Williams said children from infant to middle school age frequently participate in the program. It is also a way for students to keep up their reading skills while on summer break from school and to introduce children to the library who may have never been there before. “This lets them see that reading can be fun and not just something they have to do for school,” Williams said. “It encourages reading for pleasure.” The library will be hosting the first Tuesday session of the program today at 10:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. There will be a session every Tuesday at these times during June and July. During these sessions, children can register for the program and receive their registration pack which includes a book bag, pencil, bookmark and sticker. Participants will track the books they have read or have had read to them throughout the summer. However, participants in the reading program do not have to register during the first session. Interested readers can sign up for the program at any point during the summer. Every Tuesday during June and July, the program will have a special session at the library at 10:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. that will feature a special guest who will speak to the children. Today, the Community Arts Center will perform a sneak preview of their version of “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” that will be a part of the Covered Bridge Celebra- tion. On June 10, the Mr. Bill and Bodie show will be at the library and on June 17th, Franklin Tae Kwon Do will do a presentation and teach the children some moves. On June 24, Ranger Jacob Young from Roan Mountain State Park will bring various reptiles and amphibians to show the children and will present an informational program. In July, the Elizabethton Twins and Rookie as well as Ronald McDonald will make appearances at the reading program. Also, children’s book illustrator Gary Shepard will speak. Shepard is the illustrator of “Green Corn Tamales.” He currently lives in Arizona but is originally from the area. Williams said the library tries to use local businesses and individuals when preparing for and selecting the special speakers for the programs. “We try to do things so that if the kids are really interested in them the parents could follow up on it by taking them to a Twins game or by taking them to the Roan Mountain park,” she said. On the last Tuesday in July, the library will host its finale celebration at Edwards Island Park. The participants will receive their reading logs and a certificate from Governor Phil Bredesen recognizing them for finishing the program. There will be a reader’s parade from the library to the park. At the park, the children will participate in carnival games and snacks. The Elizabethton Women’s Club will help with the finale and with registering readers. This year, the local McDonald’s donated $1,000 to the reading program. These funds were used to purchase the registration packs and the snacks and supplies for the finale. Williams estimates the library will register 400 to 600 people in the reading program. This does not include readers that take part in the program off-site. Williams noted several day care centers and summer programs participate in the program and keep up with the reading records on their own. The number that participates in the off-site program varies depending on the activities that are being held in each location. In addition to the summer reading program, the library will continue to hold preschool story time. The year-round preschool story time is usually held on Tuesday and Wednesday throughout the year. With the start of the summer reading program, the preschool story time will be moved to Wednesdays at 10:30 a.m. During June, preschool readers will have a day “down on the farm,” will celebrate third annual Library Bubble Day and dairy month and will be “clownin’ around.” Photo by Eveleigh Stewart The Elizabethton Carter County Public Library will kick off its summer reading program today. Children’s Librarian Ashlee Williams and Logan and Lydia Bradley survey the selection of books that match the “Starship Adventure @ Your Library” theme. Logan and Lydia will probably be participating in the program. Logan said he likes to read, especially adventure and sports books. Former Tennessee senators Frist and Thompson stump for McCain NASHVILLE (AP) — Two former Tennessee senators who once had presidential ambitions for 2008 were consigned to warming up the crowd Monday at a campaign rally for Republican Sen. John McCain. Former Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist and former Sen. Fred Thompson spoke before McCain addressed the crowd at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium, former home of the Grand Ole Opry. In his first public appearance in Tennessee since abandoning his presidential bid in January, Thompson emphasized McCain’s national security credentials. “This is the man who should be the leader of our country, and with your help he will be,” Thompson said in his introduction of the Arizona senator. One woman in the audience drew loud applause for reminding McCain that Tennessee voters prevented Al Gore from becoming president when he failed to win his home state in 2000 — and for proposing that he HEARING LOSS HURTS! CALL Dr. Daniel R. Schumaier & Assoc. Audiologists 106 E. Watauga Ave. Johnson City 928-5771 www.schumaieraudiogotist.com select Thompson as a running mate. “I kind of get the impression that if he were the candidate I wouldn’t have to spend a lot of time in Tennessee,” said McCain, who lost Tennessee’s primary to former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee. Tennessee’s prominence in the presidential campaign dropped off after Thompson’s campaign got a late start and failed to capitalize on early buzz that he was the only Reagan-style conservative in the race. Frist pulled himself out of contention in late 2006. He told The Associated Press last year that he recognized that his close affiliation with the unpopular Bush administration made a presidential bid unlikely to succeed. Thompson played down his vice presidential chances after clearing a throng of autograph and photo seekers following the event. “That’s not in the cards for me,” he said. On the campaign bus from the airport to the event, Thompson offered McCain the use of the red pickup truck that he drove around the state to connect with voters when he ran for the Senate in 1994. But he had a warning for McCain: “It won’t run.” Frist said he has no hard feelings about supporting another candidate. He says he can now go home to his family after the event instead of living on the campaign trail. “I told my wife I’ll be home at 9:30 tonight and don’t have to worry about anything,” Frist said. “So for me, this is perfect.” McCain doesn’t think his primary loss to Huckabee, a former Baptist preacher who galvanized many religious conservatives, would affect the outcome of the general election. “I don’t think that’s a huge problem,” McCain told reporters. “I think our party is generally united, I think we have to energize them and give them reasons to get actively involved in the campaign.” Glory Bound Baptist Church sets old-fashioned bazaar Glory Bound Baptist Church, Lynn Valley, will host an old-fashioned church bazaar at 300 W. Mill St., Elizabethton, on Saturday, June 7, from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. The event will feature a bake sale, games for the kids, cake walks, raffles and a concession stand. Available at the concession stand will be barbecue, hot dogs, chips, drinks and homemade desserts. For more information, call 213-0335. Summer Bash Dance will be held Saturday The Elizabethton VFW will host a Summer Bash Dance on Saturday, June 7, featuring Southern and Classic Rock and a mix of country and today’s hits provided by The Second Shift Band & Hazardous Levels with D J Hazardous. The event is open to the public. Doors open at 8:30 p.m. There is a $5 cover charge. WATCH The dollars pile up when you advertise in the PHONE 542-4151 STAR - TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2008 - Page 3 ‘Disaster fatigue’ leads to drop in giving NEW YORK (AP) — The numbers are almost too large to fathom, so many Americans stop trying. As bodies pile up in disaster after global disaster, even the most sympathetic souls can turn away. Charities know this as “donor fatigue,” but it might be more accurately described as disaster fatigue — the sense that these events are never-ending, uncontrollable and overwhelming. Experts say it is one reason Americans have contributed relatively little so far to victims of the Myanmar cyclone and China’s earthquake. What to include in disaster kit If you don’t have a disaster kit, take time today to make one. If you do have one, go through it to make sure you haven’t “borrowed” any items from it, and to make sure supplies are still fresh. What to include: — Water (at least a gallon daily per person for three to seven days) — Nonperishable packages or canned food (enough for three to seven days) — Manual can opener — Paper plates and plastic utensils — Rain gear, waterproof shoes — Bedding — First aid kit, including prescription drugs — Toiletries and personal hygiene items — Extra eye glasses, contact lenses and supplies — Flashlight with extra batteries — Battery-operated radio — Tool kit — Plastic bucket with tight lid — Traditional corded telephone (in case electricity is lost) — Cash (ATMs might not be working after a storm) — Pet care items, including leashes and carriers — Fire extinguisher — Matches in a waterproof container — Garbage bags, paper towels and toilet paper — Disinfectant — Household chlorine bleach — Plastic sheeting/tarps — Copies of important documents, including wills, insurance policies, contracts, deeds, stocks and bonds, passports, Social Security cards, immunization records, bank account and credit card numbers, inventory of valuable household goods, important telephone numbers, family records and medical records. Keep them in a waterproof bag. — Special items for infants, elderly, or disabled family members. — Toys, games and books for the kids — Written instructions on how to turn off electricity, gas and water if authorities advise it Ironically, the more bad news there is, the less likely people may be to give. “Hearing about too many disasters makes some people not give at all, when they would have if it had been just one disaster,” says Michal Ann Strahilevitz, who teaches marketing at Golden Gate University and specializes in the factors at play in charitable giving. Compared with disasters like the Asian tsunami and Hurricane Katrina, those in China and Myanmar have generated just a trickle of aid. As of Friday, Americans had given about $12.1 million to charities for Myanmar, according to the Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University. The group said on Monday that it was too soon to count contributions to China. A number of factors may be at play in the slow American response, including a lack of sympathy for the repressive governments involved, doubts about whether aid will get through, and an inclination to save pennies because of shaky economic times at home. But Americans may have also been influenced by the quick succession of monumental catastrophes in two distant lands. At least 130,000 people are dead or missing in the Myanmar cyclone, and more than 34,000 in China’s earthquake. “For the vast number of Americans, if they just gave to some disaster far away and then another disaster happens, in their mind that’s clumped as ‘faraway disaster,’” Strahilevitz says. “So they will feel, ‘I just gave to a faraway disaster.’” This problem came up after the 2004 Asian tsunami, an event that brought an avalanche of $1.92 billion in charity from the United States, according to the Giving USA Foundation. Hurricane Katrina eight months later generated even more, $5.3 billion. But then fatigue seemed to set in. The earthquake in Pakistan that killed nearly 80,000 people generated just $150 million from Americans. And the Guatemala mudslide shortly thereafter that killed at least 800 was virtually forgotten. If one disaster can be galvanizing, several in a row can be paralyzing. “It’s too much pain, too much tragedy for someone to process, and so we tend to pull ourselves away from it and either close off from it out of psychological defense, or it overwhelms us,” says Cynthia Edwards, a professor of psychology at Meredith College in Raleigh, N.C. A string of tragedies can also make potential donors feel nervous about their own safety, making them less likely to give. That could be especially troubling now for Americans, many of whom are worried about their jobs and rising food and gas prices. It’s too soon to judge the effects of the economic downturn on giving, says Del Martin, chair of the Giving USA Foundation, although early figures show that donations rose in 2007. In general, people tend to give to causes closer to home. In 2006, Americans gave more than $295 billion to charity, but less than 4 percent of that went overseas. One thing that may make people give to foreign causes is their personal connection to a region, either by knowing someone there or hearing an individual’s story, Strahilevitz says. That’s something that’s difficult when unpopular governments are involved, or media access is restricted, as in Myanmar. Lurma Rackley, spokes- woman for CARE USA, is heartened that Americans are giving to Myanmar at all, considering the lack of images from the disaster. “There’s always concern that the tragedy is going to be forgotten,” Rackley says. CARE USA, World Vision and Mercy Corps all say giving for Myanmar is on pace to match the amount given after the Pakistan earthquake, although the Myanmar death toll appears to be far bigger. That’s partly because of concerns about whether aid will reach the intended recipients, with reports that Myanmar’s military government may be confiscating the aid or diverting it away from those most in need. That’s part of why Dave Morris, 34, has yet to open his checkbook — he’s not sure he could really help. Morris aims to give 10 percent of his income to causes such as public radio, the Red Cross and breast cancer. But the engineer from Ypsilanti, Mich., hasn’t given to the relief efforts in Myanmar and China, in part because the world’s problems seem impossibly large. “If you thought about at this very second the num- ber of people who were suffering and dying, I could dedicate all my resources to that and yet it would be a drop in the bucket,” he says. Still, experts in the field are optimistic that Americans may still come through for victims of these disasters. The Giving USA Foundation says companies are pledging relief funds for China, perhaps because so many do business there. “I think we may also see a surge of donations for the China relief effort because of people’s frustrations with the Myanmar government’s resistance to the aid effort there,” says Gerard Jacobs, director of the Disaster Mental Health Institute at University of South Dakota. Jacobs was in Bangkok working with the Asian Disaster Preparedness Center when the cyclone struck Myanmar, and he got word of the earthquake while in a meeting about helping governments in the region to respond to victims’ psychological needs. “People may feel a sense of relief that the China earthquake presents a situation where the public can genuinely make a difference,” he says. ABINGDON, Va. — You’re invited! Barter Theatre will celebrate 75 years with a free Birthday Bash on Saturday, June 7, from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on Stonewall Square across from Barter Theatre. When you see the giant birthday cake, you’ve found the party! It’s a community birthday celebration for the entire family with games and activities for kids including an obstacle course, puppet making, paint-a-set, photo booth, an art station and other games, entertainment and demonstrations by Barter professionals. Food City will provide hot dogs, chips and drinks to the first 500 people and the Food City Kids Club will provide each child who attends with a treat bag. In addition to the youth activities, the Abingdon Police Department will be on hand as well as the Abingdon Fire Department (with one of their trucks) and the Washington County Sheriff’s Department with the Children Identity Program. The Rotary Club of Abing- don and Johnston Memorial Hospital will also be sponsoring booths. Other important partners include the Town of Abingdon and the William King Regional Arts Center. The State Theatre of Virginia, the world famous Barter Theatre is celebrating its 75th anniversary season of producing professional non-profit theatre in the Appalachian Region. Known for outstanding musicals, comedies, dramas, new and Appalachian works and award-winning educational programming, Barter Theatre, Barter Stage II and The Barter Players present programs several times a week, and patrons can see up to five shows in two days in beautiful downtown Abingdon. Don’t miss a moment in Barter’s yearlong celebration! The 75th Anniversary is sponsored by Alpha Natural Resources, Eastman Credit Union, Highlands Community Services, Strongwell, Wellmont Health System, Jim and Kay Bunn, Henry and Flora Joy and Stephen and Barbara Morris. Barter Theatre celebrates 75 years with birthday bash Elizabethton Farmer’s Market will return for second year The Elizabethton Farmer’s Market will return for another season on Saturday, June 7. Shoppers can find a variety of home-grown fruits and vegetables as well as canned goods, breads, jellies, sweets and handmade crafts. The market will be open every Saturday from 9 a.m. until noon in the parking lot at Farm Bureau Insurance, located at the corner of Elk and Lynn Avenues. Anyone wanting to bring locally produced items to sell is welcome. For more information, call Susan Carter at 543-5083 or e-mail her at susaneileen818@yahoo.com. Shirley’s HOME COOKING Citizens Police Academy graduates Graduation was held on May 20 for the latest class completing the Carter County Citizens Police Academy. The class celebrated with a party. The Citizens Police Academy offers enrollees the chance to learn what deputies do each and every day on the job and how citizens can protect themselves in the event of crime or accident. Pictured are class members who include William Grover, Bill Clawson, Kevin Arnold, Charles VonCannon, Ron McCloud, Marion Grover, Judy Clawson, Frank VonCannon, Cornelia Everett, Karen Meadows, Charlotte Caudill, Jennifer Holly, Linda Sturm, Jacqueline Tellez, Patricia Duffed, Rebecca Pierce, Pearl Fletcher, Kay Millsaps, Rebecca Ford, Walter Everett, along with Sheriff Chris Mathes, Constable Willie Mathes and Chief Deputy Ron Street. A new class will be held in the fall. “The windows are fabulous! The installation was very professional, and the crew was very courteous. Thank you for a wonderful job!” ~ J. Hall, Johnson City Think Green . . . Save Green! Closed l ria Memo Day 6 Months Same as Cash!* • Any Size! • White • Double Hung • Installed! READY Mixed Concrete “Providing quality products and unmatched service” Residential • Commercial Industrial THURSDAY NIGHT FISH FRY June 5th • 5 pm - 8 pm All You Can Eat! Featuring: Skillet fried white fish, skin-on fries, corn muffin hush puppies, slaw, dessert and drink for only $10.00 3266 Hwy. 321, Hampton, TN 37658 Celebrating 25 Years of Serving Johnson City From Vintage From Vintage Computerized Batching • Fibermesh Concrete • Colors To Contemporary (and everything in between) ENGAGEMENT RINGS Member of Home Builders Assoc. Johnson City, Kingsport, Bristol Member Associated General Contractors of America 30-50% OFF WEDDING & ANNIVERSARY BANDS 30-50% OFF State Certified Technicians 538-8172 4650 Hwy. 11-E Bluff City, TN • Fax 438-1165 *Some Restrictions Apply To Contemporary TELL US WE WERE IN THE ELIZABETHTON STAR FOR SPECIAL PRICING GIA Certified Johnson City Crossing (Next to Old Navy) • 610-1202 10-6 Mon. -Sat. CLOSED SUNDAY L AYA W AY S A C C E P T E D 12 Months Same As Cash Page 4 - STAR - TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2008 Obituaries Townie J. “T.J.” Hale Jr. Townie Jeter “T.J.” Hale Jr., 67, 896 Jordan Road, Elizabethton, died Sunday, June 1, 2008, at his residence after ten years of chronic illnesses. A native of Carter County, he was the son of the late Townie Jeter Hale Sr. and Hazel Pauline Sproles Hale. Mr. Hale attended Elizabethton City Schools through the tenth grade, graduating from Riverside Military Academy in 1959 where he was a part of the color guard. He attended Milligan College and the University of Tennessee at Memphis. He worked at Hales Drug Store and Independent Life Insurance Company before 25 years with the Tennessee Department of Transportation Engineering and Construction. He retired in 2001 due to health problems which continued until his death. Mr. Hale was a member of Zion Baptist Church. One of his hobbies was dancing, having won a State DeMolay dance competition. He also enjoyed working in the yard, motorcycle riding and his collection of trains. He was an avid University of Tennessee fan. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a son, Townie Jeter Hale III. Survivors include his wife of 45 years, Phyllis Whittemore Hale, of the home; a daughter, Holli Anna Hale Fair and her husband Sean, Elizabethton; a granddaughter, Haley Noel Fair, Elizabethton; a special exchange student “daughter,” Betsy Duarte Shepard and her husband Gary, Tucson, Ariz.; a sister-in-law, Marcia Seehorn and her husband J.B.; two brothers-in-law, Louis • Anderson Walker, 26, 321 Wade Bulla Road, Watauga, was arrested Saturday afternoon by Elizabethton Police Department Ptl. Curtis Bullock and charged with criminal trespassing. • Clarence Story, 37, 141 Garrison Hollow Road, Elizabethton, was arrested Sunday afternoon by EPD Ptl. Shane Darling and charged with driving on a revoked license, violation of the financial responsibility law and failure to maintain control of a vehicle. • Richard Grindstaff, 41, Pick 3 For June 2, 2008 3-8-5 (Evening) Pick 4 For June 2, 2008 9-2-0-0 (Evening) Lotto 5 For June 2, 2008 03-10-29-33-34 Powerball For May 31, 2008 03-09-14-17-25 Powerball # 08 Whittemore and his wife Donna and Benny Whittemore. His pet cat, Britches, two grand-cats, Jingles and Snickers, extended members of the Hale and Sproles families and friends too numerous to name also survive. Funeral services for Mr. Hale will be conducted at 7 p.m. Tuesday, June 3, in the Sunset Chapel of Hathaway-Percy Funeral Home with Rev. Jerry McCoury officiating. Honorary pastor will be Rev. C.W. Snodgrass. Music will be under the direction of Jerry and Jason Barnett. The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 5 to 7 p.m. Tuesday or at the residence, 896 Jordan Road, Elizabethton, at other times. Graveside services and interment will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday, June 4, at Happy Valley Memorial Park with Mr. Kenneth Bewley, minister, officiating. Active pallbearers will be Warren Riggs, Louis Whittemore Sr., Benny Whittemore, Jimmy Ferguson, Sean Fair, Louis Whittemore Jr. and Benjamin Whittemore. Special friends are Melissa Elsea, Eric Cole, Odel Sawyer, Josh and Imogene Allen, Jerry and Sharon Barnett, Glen Hypes, Troy Sproviero, Betty and Winston McElveen, Marie Asbury, Larry Coleman, Johnny Wagner, Betty and Denver Anderson, Alfred Fair, Jobelle and Gayle Hood, R.V. Brown, Clyde Hodge, Lawrence Hodge, former employees of Hales Drug Store, fellow employees of Tennessee Department of Transportation (Elizabethton office), Dr. Toney Haley, Dr. Christina Hutchins and all members of the Elizabethton High School Class of 1958. Everyone will meet at the funeral home at 10:15 a.m. Wednesday to go in procession to the cemetery. Online condolences and memories may be shared with the family and viewed by visiting www.hathawaypercy.com. Arrangements for the Hale family have been entrusted to Hathaway-Percy Funeral Home. Willard C. Elliott Willard C. Elliott, 87, 154 A.E. Miller Road, Roan Mountain, passed away Sunday, June 1, 2008, at Roan Highlands Nursing Center. A native of Avery County, N.C., he was a son of the late Frank and Renee Hopson Elliott and had lived in Carter County for the past 68 years. Mr. Elliott was a farmer and construction worker. He was a member of the Morgan Chapel Free Will Baptist Church. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a sister. Survivors include his wife, Myrtle M. Elliott; three daughters and sonsin-law, IvaLee and Bruce Dingler, Summerville, S.C., Bernies Shipley Lewis and Charlie Lewis, Jonesborough, and Helen and Timothy Reed, Goose Creek, S.C.; his stepgrandchildren, Doug and Debbie Goines, Linda Rogers, Laura Dingler, Chandler Reed and Bruce and Jenna Dingler; his grandchildren, Johnathan Shipley, Kenneth Reed and Kee Reed; eight greatgrandchildren; one greatgreat-grandson; three sisters, Mary Will Moss, Mina Shepherd and Jeanette Rowan; and a brother, Jack Elliott. Funeral services for Mr. Elliott will be conducted at 8 p.m. Tuesday, June 3, at Memorial Funeral Chapel with the Rev. Tull Oaks and the Rev. Gary Whitehead officiating. Graveside services and interment will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday, June 4, in the Captain Nelson Cemetery. Active pallbearers, who are requested to assemble at the funeral home at 1:15 p.m. Wednesday, will be Scotty Pritchard, Doug Pritchard, Stevie Pritchard, Danny Elliott, Jackie Elliott, Buck Freeman and Danny Blevins. Honorary pallbearers will be Johnny Elliott, John Wrenn, Richard Miller, Zane Teague, Jack Ingram, Dean Smith and Terry Hyder. The family will receive friends from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. Friends may also call at the residence. In lieu of flowers memorials may be made to the Morgan Chapel Free Will Baptist Church. Family and friends will assemble at the funeral home at 1:15 p.m. Wednes- day to go to the cemetery. Condolences to the Elliott family may be e-mailed to mfc@chartertn.net. Memorial Funeral Chapel is in charge of arrangements. Jess W. Arwood Jess Willard Arwood, 88, of Hampton, passed away Sunday, June 1, 2008, at his residence. A native of Carter County, he was a son of the late Francis and Mary Ellen Arnett Arwood. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Arwood operated a paint and body shop. He served in the United States Army in Company F, 12th Infantry, during World War II. He was wounded in Hurtgen Forest Germany and was the recipient of the camp medal Combat Infantryman Badge, Good Conduct Medal, the Bronze Star and the Purple Heart. He was a member of the Hampton First Baptist Church. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, Minnie Lee Whisenhunt Arwood, in 2002; a son, Larry Allen Arwood; a granddaughter, Amy Katherine Arwood; and a sister, Nell Tolley Campbell. Survivors include three daughters and sons-in-law, Sue and George Hickman, Nashville, Joan and Bobby Morgan and Sherry and Billy Smith, all of Hampton; a son and daughter-in-law, Roger and Ermine Arwood, Elizabethton; nine grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren and four greatgreat-grandchildren. Memorial services for Mr. Arwood will be conducted at 7 p.m. Thursday, June 5, at Memorial Funeral Chapel with Pastor Jim Murray officiating. Honorary pallbearers will be his grandsons, B.J. Smith, Jeffery Brumitt, David Arwood and Lucas Arwood. The family will receive friends from 6 to 7 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home. Friends may also call at the residence. In lieu of flowers memorials may be made to the Library Fund, Hampton High School, 766 First Avenue, Hampton, TN 37658. It was his wish to be cremated. The family would like to express a special “thank you” to Dr. Lynn Pillinger & Staff at the Internal Medicine at James H. Quillen VA Medical Center and Adventa Hospice. Condolences to the Arwood family may be e-mailed to mfc@chartertn. net. Memorial Funeral Chapel is in charge of arrangements. Maxine J. Franklin 1920-2008 PENSACOLA, Fla. — Maxine J. Franklin, 88, passed away Saturday, May 31, 2008. Granny never met a stranger and felt it her life’s calling to feed anyone who ever crossed her doorstep. Granny was retired from Sacred Heart Hospital after many years of taking care of everyone from babies to doctors. She loved working in her garden and in the yard and everyone enjoyed the results. She was a founding member of Gulf Coast Christian Church, Pensacola. She was preceded in death by her husband, E.F. “Bud” Franklin, her parents, Harve and Eathel Jenkins, and brothers, Burl and Marshall Jenkins. Granny is survived by her loving son, Buddy Franklin and his wife, Sharon; grandson, Wayne Franklin and his wife, Sherry; granddaughter, Sherri Franklin and her fiancé, Kirk Abrams; grandson, Fred Franklin; the grandchildren’s mother, Jane Franklin; great-grandson, David Franklin; stepgrandchildren, Bobby Stewart, Shannon Stewart and his wife, Melissa; and stepgreat-grandchildren, Silas and Nessa Stewart, all of the greater Pensacola Bay area; and brother, Finley Jenkins, Elizabethton, Tenn. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday, June 4, at Harper-Morris Memorial Chapel. The family will receive friends starting at 1 p.m. Pallbearers will be Wayne Franklin, Fred Franklin, Shannon Stewart, Kirk Abrams, Gerald Morrison and Roy Lay. Harper-Morris Memorial Chapel, 2276 Airport Road, Pensacola, Fla., (850) 478-3202, is in charge of ar- Police Beats 173 Deloach Road, Elizabethton, was arrested early Monday morning by EPD Ptl. Matt Croy and charged with DUI and violation of the implied consent law. He is scheduled to appear in General Sessions Court on June 6. • Randall Todd Johnson, 46, 148 Rock Quarry Road, Roan Mountain, was arrested Friday morning by Carter County Sheriff’s Department Dep. Dennis Brown and charged with driving on a revoked license (second offense) and violation of the light law. • Teresa Ann Yates, 43, 110 Bethany Lane, Erwin, was arrested Friday afternoon by CCSD Dep. Mike Townsend and charged with failure to appear in court. • Heather Lorraine Taylor, 23, 189 Chambers Hollow Road, Elizabethton, was arrested Friday afternoon by CCSD Dep. Derrick Hamm on a warrant charging her with violation of probation. • Jared Leigh Pack, 31, 402-1/2 Pine St., Johnson City, was arrested Friday afternoon by CCSD Dep. Derrick Hamm on a warrant charging him with violation of probation. • Carlos Antonio Cox, 32, + A Livingston Hearing Aid Service s&REE(EARING4EST s(EARING!ID3ALES 3ERVICE s$AY4RIAL0ERIOD s!LL(EARING!IDS'UARANTEED Sally Livingston - Lic. Hearing Aid Dispenser serving with 25 years of dedicated service 709 E. Elk Ave. 543-9109 Batteries $2.50 Per Pack 128 Snowbird Lane, Elizabethton, was arrested Friday afternoon by CCSD Sgt. Kenny Cornett on a capias charging him with failure to appear on fishing without a license charge. • Justin Adam Gouge, 25, 80 Jones Road, Erwin, was arrested Friday night by CCSD Dep. David Ryan and charged with driving without a license. • John Brent Carpenter, 31, 180 Goshen Valley Road, Church Hill, was arrested Friday night by CCSD on a warrant charging him with stalking under domestic violence. • Stacy Gene Oliver, 29, 171 Bare Branch Road, Roan Mountain, was arrested Friday night by CCSD Dep. David Peters on a capias issued by Criminal Court. • Michael Lynn Simerly, 37, 440 Tiger Creek Road, Roan Mountain, was arrested Friday night by CCSD Dep. David Peters on a warrant charging him with assault under domestic violence. • Bruce Allen Aldridge, 31, 837 Portsmouth Ave., Bristol, Va., was arrested early Saturday morning by CCSD Lt. Harvey Guess and charged with theft under $500. • Anthony Lynn Hensley, 32, 111 Peach Tree Lane, Johnson City, was arrested early Saturday morning by CCSD Lt. Harvey Guess and charged with theft under $500. • Michael Channing Perkins, 22, 614 Old Highway 143, Roan Mountain, was arrested early Saturday morning by CCSD Sgt. Eric Buck and charged with DUI. He is scheduled to appear in General Sessions Court on June 17. • Phillip R. Potter, 25, 205 Willow St., Roan Mountain, was arrested early Saturday morning by CCSD Lt. Harvey Guess and charged with DUI and violation of the implied consent law. • Frankie James Arnold, 32, 1512 E. Holston Ave., Johnson City, was arrested Saturday afternoon by CCSD Dep. Shannon Winters on a warrant charging him with violation of probation. • Patricia G. Grayson, 35, 212 Reese St., Kingsport, was arrested Saturday evening by CCSD Lt. Patrick Johnson and charged with DUI (fifth offense), violation of the habitual motor offender law and violation of the implied consent law. She is scheduled to appear in General Sessions Court on June 9. • Rachel Sue Campbell, 32, 802 Highway 91, Elizabethton, was arrested Saturday night by CCSD Sgt. Eric Buck and charged with possession of drug paraphernalia. She is scheduled to appear in General Sessions Court on June 17. • William Michael Oxentine, 34, 441 Old Butler Road, Mountain City, was arrested Saturday night by CCSD Dep. Richard Barnett and charged with two counts of possession of a Schedule II controlled narcotic, illegal possession of a weapon and possession of drug paraphernalia. He is scheduled to appear in General Sessions Court on June 17. • Debra Rebecca Newberry, 51, 463 Sugar Hollow Road, Jonesborough, was arrested Saturday night by CCSD Dep. David Peters and charged with DUI. She is scheduled to appear in General Sessions Court on June 9. • Heather Michelle Eller, 26, 5655 Highway 67, Mountain City, was arrested Saturday night by CCSD Dep. Richard Barnett and charged with filing a false report. She is scheduled to appear in General Sessions Court on June 17. • Shawna Rogers, 26, 116 Palms Lane, Elizabethton, was arrested Saturday night by CCSD Dep. Richard Barnett and charged with assault under domestic violence. She is scheduled to appear in General Sessions Court on June 9. • Luis Osozra, 22, Greenwood Drive, Johnson City, was arrested early Sunday morning by CCSD Sgt. Eric Buck and charged with public intoxication. He is scheduled to appear in General Sessions Court on June 17. • Cindy Marie Tester, 36, 154 Sarah Annie Drive, Johnson City, was arrested early Sunday morning by CCSD Dep. David Peters on a warrant charging her with violation of probation. • Dean Walter Mackie, 45, 826 Mulberry St., Elizabethton, was arrested Sunday afternoon by CCSD Lt. Patrick S. Johnson and charged with driving on a revoked license and violation of the financial responsibility law. • James McArthur Shank, 47, 109 Pinnacle Drive, Elizabethton, was arrested Sunday evening by CCSD Sgt. Eric Buck and charged with resisting arrest and possession of a Schedule IV controlled narcotic. He was also rangements. James L. Morton James L. Morton, 63, of Elizabethton, died Sunday, June 1, 2008, at his residence. A native of Carter County, he was a son of the late James Henry and Irene Nave Morton. Mr. Morton was a retired sheet metal worker. He served in the United States Army during the Vietnam Conflict. He was a member of Watauga Masonic Lodge No. 622 and a member of the Valley Forge Free Will Baptist Church. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a sister, Charlotte Street. Survivors include his wife, Judy Crawford Morton; two daughters, Melissa Williams and Anna Stover, both of Elizabethton; four grandchildren; seven sisters, Louise Ingram, Carolyn Lyons and Ruthie Lovelace, all of Elizabethton, Marion Hulse, Jonesborough, Monnie Williams, Watauga, Joyce Norman, Milligan, and Ivalee Beamer, Sutton, W.Va.; and three brothers, Cecil Morton, Bristol, Tenn., Charles Morton and James Nave, both of Elizabethton. Several nieces and nephews also survive. Graveside services for Mr. Morton will be conducted at 11 a.m. Thursday, June 5, at Mountain Home National Cemetery with the Rev. Randy Johnson officiating. Interment will follow the service. Active pallbearers, who are requested to assemble at the funeral home at 10:15 a.m. Thursday, will be Cecil Morton, Charles Morton, Buster Lyons, Terry Lovelace, John Norman and Carl Williams. Military graveside honors will be provided by the VFW Post No. 2166 and the Tennessee National Guard. Friends may call at the residence. Family and friends will assemble at the funeral home at 10:15 a.m. Thursday to go to the cemetery. Condolences to the Morton family may be e-mailed to mfc@chartertn.net. Memorial Funeral Chapel is in charge of arrangements. served with warrants charging him with violation of probation and failure to appear and pay fines and court costs. • Phillip Michael Krol, 25, 330 Race St., Apt. 3, Elizabethton, was arrested Sunday night by CCSD Dep. Shane Watson on a warrant charging him with violation of probation. • Sherri Yvonne Finley, 31, 2140 W. G St., Elizabethton, was arrested Sunday night by CCSD Lt. Harvey Guess on a federal indictment charging her with conspiracy to distribute and possession with the intent to distribute 500 grams or more of methamphetamine, conspiracy to manufacture 500 grams or more of methamphetamine and possession of equipment, chemicals, products and materials which may be used to manufacture methamphetamine. • Raymond Keith Tipton, 42, 2407 Park Ave., Johnson City, was arrested Sunday night by CCSD Dep. Chad Grindstaff and charged with DUI and driving on a suspended license (third offense). He is scheduled to appear in General Sessions Court on June 9. • Ronald Gene Small, 44, 1818 McEwen St., Mountain City, was arrested early Monday morning on a warrant charging him with introduction of contraband into a penal facility. • Anderson Walker, 26, 189 Chambers Hollow Road, Elizabethton, was arrested Monday morning by CCSD Sgt. T. Lowe on a capias charging him with failure to appear on shoplifting charges. STAR - TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2008 - Page 5 Opinion Supreme Court rules for worker After a string of decisions that sided with corporate interests, the U.S. Supreme Court has handed workers a pair of clearcut victories. In particular, the court has sent notice to employers that retaliating against workers who complain about discrimination can trigger litigation. That probably strikes most people as only fair and logical. But in 2007, when the court considered a pay discrimination suit filed by Lilly Ledbetter, a factory supervisor, it ruled that her case should have been dismissed because it did not precisely track the applicable statute. While defensible — the ruling in effect challenged Congress to amend the law if it desired a different outcome — that result puzzled some commentators, who noted that other courts and administrative agencies had upheld almost identical suits. Last week, the court took a more expansive position. The key case involved a suit brought by the black assistant manager of a Cracker Barrel restaurant in Illinois. Hedrick Humphries claimed that he had been fired after complaining that another manager made racist remarks and that a waitress had been fired because she was black. Humphries cited an 1866 law passed to protect freed slaves from discrimination. The law makes no explicit reference to retaliation for complaining about bias — a point emphasized by the restaurant chain’s attorneys. But this time, a 7-2 majority — including Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito, both appointed by President Bush — noted that the court had previously recognized retaliation as a violation of both the Reconstruction-era law and later civilrights legislation. Writing for the majority, Justice Stephen Breyer said there was no reason to overturn this “well-embedded” concept. In last Tuesday’s other decision, a 6-3 majority — Roberts joined Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas in dissent this time — ruled that federal workers enjoy the same protections and remedies as those in the private sector. The case involved an allegation of retaliation against a postal worker in Puerto Rico who had complained about age discrimination. These rulings should make workers more comfortable reporting discrimination and exercising their rights in court. Not only do they reflect common sense, they also show an understanding of how bias operates in the workplace that many felt was missing from the Ledbetter ruling. —Cleveland (Ohio) Plain Dealer Bush’s cult of deception “Clearly,” McClellan says, “I had allowed myself to be deceived.” They say that every president gets the psychoanalyst he deserves. And every Hamlet gets his Rosencrantz. So, now comes Scott McClellan, once the most loyal of the Texas Bushies, to reveal “What Happened,” as the title of his book promises, to turn W. from a genial, humble, bipartisan good ol’ boy to a delusional, disconnected, arrogant, ideological flop. Although his analytical skills are extremely limited, the former White House press secretary - Secret Service code name Matrix - takes a stab at illuminating Junior’s bumpy and improbable boomerang journey from family black sheep and famous screw-up back to family black sheep and famous screw-up. How did W. start out wanting to restore honor and dignity to the White House and end up scraping all the honor and dignity off the White House? It turns out that our president is a one-man refutation of Malcolm Gladwell’s best seller “Blink,” about the value of trusting your gut. Every gut instinct he had was wildly off the mark and hideously damaging to all concerned. It seems that if you trust your gut without ever feeding your gut any facts or news or contrary opinions, if you keep your gut on a steady diet of grandiosity, ignorance, sycophants, and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, those snap decisions can be ruinous. We already know what happened, but it feels good to hear Scott say it. His conscience was spurred by hurt feelings. In Washington, it is rarely the geopolitical or human consequences that cause people to turn on leaders behaving immorally. The town is far more narcissistic and practical than that. The people who should be sounding the alarm for democracy’s sake, and the sake of all the young Americans losing lives and limbs, get truly outraged only when they are played for fools and fall guys, when their own reputations are at stake. It was not the fake casus belli that made Colin Powell’s blood boil. What really got Powell disgusted was that W. and Dick Cheney used him, tapping into his credibility to sell their trumped-up war; that George Tenet failed to help him scrub his U.N. speech of all Cheney’s garbage; and that W. showed him the door so the more malleable Condi could have his job. Tenet was privately worried about a war buildup not backed up by CIA facts, but he only publicly sounded the alarm years later in a lucrative memoir fueled by payback, after Condi and Cheney tried to cast him as the fall guy on WMD. McClellan did not realize the value of a favorite maxim - “The truth shall set you free” - until he was hung out to dry by his bosses in the Valerie Plame affair, repeating the lies Karl Rove and Scooter Libby brazenly told him about not being the leakers. “Clearly,” McClellan says, sounding like the breast-heaving heroine of a Victorian romance, “I had allowed myself to be deceived.” He felt “something fall out of me into the abyss.” And that was before “the breaking point,” when he learned the worst about his idol - that the president who had denounced leaks about his warrantless surveillance program, who had promised to fire anyone leaking classified information about Plame, was himself the one who authorized Cheney to let Scooter leak part of the secret National Intelligence Estimate. “Yeah, I did,” Bush told his sap of a press secretary on Air Force One. His tone, the stunned McClellan said, was “as if discussing something no more important than a baseball score.” He recalled the first time that he had begun to suspect that W. might be just another dissembling pol: when he overheard his boss, during his 2000 bid, ludicrously telling a supporter that he couldn’t remember, from his wild partying days, if he had tried cocaine. “He isn’t the kind of person to flat-out lie,” McClellan said, but added, “I was witnessing Bush convincing himself to believe something that probably was not true.” He’d see a lot more of it over the next six years before Bush tearfully booted him out. W.’s dwindling cadre hit back hard. In Stockholm, Sweden, Condi - labeled “sometimes too accommodating” by the author - scoffed: “The president was very clear about the reasons for going to war.” She’s right. He was very clear about it being because of WMD. Then he was very clear about it being to rid the world of a tyrant. Then he was very clear about it being to spread democracy. When that didn’t work out, he was very clear about it being that we can’t leave because we can’t leave. He was always wrong, but always very clear. - Florence (Ala.) Times Daily To Comment To submit letters to the editor please send to: Elizabethton Star, Box 1960, Elizabethton, TN 37644-1960; or send letters by e-mail to webmaster@starhq.com. All letters must include name, address and phone number for verification purposes. Letters must be limited to 300 or fewer words. How do you spell f-r-a-u-d? Fraud: “deceit, trickery or breach of confidence, perpetrated for profit or to gain some unfair or dishonest advantage.” The HBO movie “Recount” tells the story from the Democratic Party point of view that the 2000 presidential election was imCal properly won Thomas by George W. Bush because of the trickery of his fellow Republicans and the Supreme Court. That has been shown to be untrue by no less a source than the reliably liberal and pro-Democratic New York Times, but facts rarely influence propaganda. Here’s a better example of fraud straight from the donkey’s mouth that you can bet will never be told on film. It comes courtesy of 12-term Congressman Paul Kanjorski. During a town meeting last August in his Pennsylvania district, Rep. Kanjorski made a remarkable statement about the 2006 election in which Democrats recaptured the majority. Rep. Kanjorski acknowledged that he and his fellow Democrats “sort of stretched the facts” about their intention to end the war in Iraq and bring American troops home. A video of his remarks, now on YouTube, shows Kanjorski explaining that Democrats pushed the rhetoric about the war “as far as we can to the end of the fleet — didn’t say it, but we implied it — that if we won the congressional elections we could stop the war.” Democrats also promised to bring down gas prices if they won a majority. That worked out well, didn’t it? “Now anybody who’s a good student of government,” continued Kanjorski in a condescending manner, “would know it wasn’t true.” I wonder how nonstudents of government felt about that insult? “But you know,” he said, “the temptation to want to win back the Congress — we sort of stretched the facts.” Kanjorski would have done well to reflect on that part of the Lord’s Prayer that asks that we not be led into temptation. Many politicians “stretch the facts” at some point in their careers, but this was more than that. While Republicans do the same thing on another level — like campaigning for spending cuts and then outspending Democrats when they become a majority — what Kanjorski has admitted to is outright fraud. Those who don’t believe in the war, which in- cludes some Republicans, had a right to believe that if they cast their votes for Democrats in the 2006 election, a Democratic congressional majority would end the war. Instead, while huffing and puffing about it, Democrats have continued to approve funds for Iraq and Afghanistan, attaching numerous pet pork projects. Pork covers a multitude of sins. Some Democrats have made their careers by lying about Republicans and their attempts at necessary reforms of Social Security. My Democratic friend, Bob Beckel, likes to tell the story of his mother who lived in Florida and called him after seeing campaign commercials, which he produced, that claimed Republicans were about to eliminate Social Security. Beckel says he told her, “Mom, don’t worry about it. You vote for Democrats on Tuesday and come Wednesday your Social Security will be back.” Kanjorski has taken cynicism about Washington and politicians to a new and lower level. No wonder the disapproval rating of Congress is higher than it is for President Bush — 76 percent disapprove of this Democratic Congress, according to both the latest Quinnipiac and Gallup surveys; 67 percent disapprove of President Bush. Readers Forum Reader: Deciding on a career is among most important decisions in life Editor: At this time of the year, many high school seniors are considering their choice of a profession or trade, for which to prepare themselves. Will their vocation require college, technical school, or a trade school? I hope they will not automatically opt for college when they have no idea why they are there. I would like to recommend they prepare for a vocation that will have them looking forward to going to work on Monday morning, and not dread it. I will also suggest they contemplate a skill which will make a contribution to their fellow man. My purpose in this small essay is to appeal to them that they not underestimate the value of so-called menial labor. For the purpose of illustrating this point, let’s compare A. with B. A. An Astronaut with NASA or, B. Working to maintain the water supply to homes and businesses. Have you ever had your water cut off? A. A technician maintaining the Internet connection with your computer or, B. Electricians keeping the power lines in good repair to homes and businesses. Have you ever been without electricity for a few days, or even for a few hours? A. A lawyer with the ability to write and argue a lawsuit in court, or B. A plumber. Have you ever found yourself with leaky pipes or a busted water heater at the most inopportune time? A. An executive officer with a chain of supermarkets or department stores, or B. A truck driver who delivers the goods. Do we really understand what would happen if all the trucks came to a stop? A. An honorable Senator or Congressman, or, B. A member of the U.S. military who preserves our defense. Let me offer one more horrible scenario to imagine. Picture a huge stinking mountain of garbage in front of every home in your community, because there was nobody to pick it up and haul it away. I would also like to give recognition to another profession. I have been hospitalized for surgery a couple of times in recent years and was very impressed by the compassion of the nurses, (male and female), and by the medical technicians, while I was in intensive care and recovery. And actually, I believe some of them were angels. So, my final poignant and pithy statement is, do not discount the value of any skill and vocation to our society, culture and way of life. James Chambers Elizabethton www.starhq.com Elizabethton STAR Independently Owned and Operated (USPS -172-900) Published each afternoon, except Saturday, and on Sunday morning the STAR is pledged to a policy of service to progressive people, promotion of beneficial objectives and support of the community while reserving the right to objective comment on all its affairs. Publication Office is at 300 Sycamore St., Elizabethton, Tenn. TN 37643. Periodical postage paid at Elizabethton, Tennessee. Served by The Associated Press. POSTMASTER: Send address change to Elizabethton Star, P.O. Box 1960, Elizabethton, TN 37644-1960. r (Printed on recycle paper) Where we began … How to reach us Elizabethton Star............................542-4151 Fax ................................................542-2004 Classified........................................542-1530 Circulation.......................................542-1540 Advertising.................................... 542-4151 Photography................................. 542-1542 Sports........................................... 542-1545 Star Printing.................................. 542-1543 Subscription rates 1 year Home-delivery 3 months 6 months Daily/ Sun.…………$23…………$42…………$80 Seniors 60 & older….$21…………$40…………$76 Military/Student……$21…………$40…………$76 Sunday only……….$18………….$36…………$72 Newsstand Price: Daily, 50 cents; Sunday, $1.50 Rates by Mail: 3 months 6 months 1 year Daily/Sun.…………$32………… $64…………$125 Military/Student……$28…………$54…………$108 Sunday only………..$22…………$44…………$78 (Must be paid in advance. No refunds) Circulation Department………542-1540 The history of the Elizabethton STAR traces back to the Mountaineer, established in 1864. The Mountaineer was the first newspaper in Upper East Tennessee, changing hands and names numerous times over the years. On Oct. 1, 1955, Frank Robinson was named publisher. He purchased the paper in 1977. Frank Robinson Publisher frobinson@starhq.com Harvey Prichard Associate Publisher hprichard@starhq.com Nathan C. Goodwin Executive V. President ngoodwin@starhq.com Delaney Scalf Operations Manager dscalf@starhq.com Rozella Hardin Editor rhardin@starhq.com Kathy Scalf Circulation Manager kscalf@starhq.com Page 6 - STAR - TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2008 Dear Abby Daughter gains both weight and guilt after mother’s death DEAR ABBY: Before her death, I promised my mother that I would not get fat like her. Now I’m finding it hard to keep that promise. Ever since we lost Mama, I have slowly gained a little each year. I have tried to lose, but all I do is look at food and I gain. If this keeps up I’ll become the size my mother was. Does that mean I failed her because I broke my promise? I feel so guilty. Please help me. — JUST LIKE MY MAMA IN TEXAS DEAR LIKE MAMA: The answer is no, so stop feeling guilty. Guilt has nothing to do with it. It’s common for people to gain weight after 30, and I can confirm from personal experience that it doesn’t happen because anyone “looks” at food. Weight gain is a form of banking. If we deposit more money in our saving account than we spend, we have a large savings account. On the other hand, if we spend more than save, the account dwindles. It’s the same with weight. Eat more calories than we burn, the result is a fat weknow-what. To “spend” calories rather than wearing them, a change in diet and a program of regular exercise are necessary. Also, people don’t necessarily eat because they are hungry. Some overindulge for emotional reasons. I recently received a letter that could be of help to you. Read on: DEAR ABBY: I am alive because, in one of your columns, you provided the contact information for Overeaters Anonymous. I wrote to the address listed and, within days, received a friendly note offering support. Like many others with an overeating problem, I waited more than two years before going to my first meeting. But that meeting changed my life. I have been in recovery from compulsive eating for 32 years. My life today is better than I could have ever imagined. There are about 6,500 Overeaters Anonymous (OA) groups in 75 countries. Patterned after the 12-step program of Alcoholics Anonymous, they offer recovery from compulsive eating. Because today obesity, with all its attendant health problems, is acknowledged as an epidemic, I hope you will again mention OA to your readers. Fellow sufferers and their physicians are sometimes resorting to drastic measures to help them lose weight. My life was saved thanks to this program and the fact your mentioned it. Thank you. — DONNA S. IN TEXAS DEAR DONNA S.: Thank YOU for the timely reminder that for weight loss, a support group can make the difference between success and failure. Overeaters Anonymous is listed in many telephone books and also on the Internet at www.oa.org. It charges no dues or fees, and no membership lists are kept. There is no shaming, no weighing in and no embarrassment. Everyone meets on common ground and is welcomed with open arms into a fellowship of women and men who all share the same problem. The only requirement for membership is the desire to stop eating compulsively. ————— DEAR ABBY: Do you think a person can be taught “common sense,” or is it something you are born with? — CURIOUS DEAR CURIOUS: Common sense is something a person is born with. I have heard from many people with professional degrees, but no common sense. ————— Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www. DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. ————— For an excellent guide to becoming a better conversationalist and a more attractive person, order “How to Be Popular.” Send a business-size, self-addressed envelope, plus check or money order for $6 (U.S. funds only) to: Dear Abby Popularity Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage is included.) Grandfather Mountain will host first Rhododendron Ramble GRANDFATHER MOUNTAIN, N.C. — In celebration of the flamboyant red Catawba rhododendron, Grandfather Mountain is presenting the first ever Remarkable Rhododendron Ramble June 2-15. Grandfather’s staff naturalists can’t wait to share their enthusiasm for the showy rose-lavender blossoms. To honor the storied shrub they’ve planned guided walks and other special programs designed to enlighten guests on the history, botany and lore of the showy flowers. “Guests are so interested when they see the rhododendron in bloom,” said Naturalist Katie Christenbury. “They see the hybrids used in landscaping, but this is one of the few places that the native Rhododendron catawbiense grow in abundance.” Roan Mountain, located 20 miles to the west of Grandfather, has the world’s largest population of the native rhododendron, but the major difference between Roan and Grandfather is that plants on Roan grow mostly at the same elevation and above 5,000 feet. That makes for a spectacular show when they all bloom at once, but the trade off is that the flowers do not open until late in June and can only be enjoyed during a relatively short window of time. At Grandfather the Catawba rhododendron blooms at successive elevations throughout the month of June. It first appears at overlooks near the entrance to the park early in Tom Wolfe’s Woodcarving Shop moved to new location on Grandfather Mountain GRANDFATHER MOUNTAIN, N.C. — A whole new window of opportunity has opened for Tom Wolfe, the pre-eminent character carver whose shop has been located in the Visitors Center next to Grandfather Mountain’s Mile High Swinging Bridge for several years. Because the 1960s-era Top Shop was demolished this spring to make room for the construction of a new Visitors Center, Wolfe’s craft shop was packed up and moved to a new location near the base of the mountain. “At first I wasn’t too sure about the move,” Wolfe said. “Now that I am in my new location, I really like the change. The new location is definitely a better environment for me to do my thing.” Wolfe said that being located beside the Woods Walk Picnic Area is much quieter and slow-paced. He also commented that he could be open to the public more often, not having to be concerned about the weather conditions at the top of the mountain. The new space shines a whole new light to what Wolfe can do around the shop. With a more “rustic shop,” Wolfe said that he Tom Wolfe in his new woodcarving shop at Grandfather Mountain. has high hopes for expanding the size of pieces that he sells at Grandfather Mountain. His talent allows him to make carvings large and small, so he hopes to set up a demonstration area outside of the shop where guests can watch him work on larger pieces made to be displayed outside while the smaller pieces will be on display inside. Wolfe, who lives near Boone, N.C., has recently released his 50th howto-carve book. Published world-wide, the newest is titled “Carving Santas for Today.” In this publication with 340 photographs, readers are taken through a step-by-step carving process. Wolfe’s books instruct beginners on how to get started from a block of wood as well as encouraging experienced carvers to try new techniques in carving. He is currently working on three more publications that will be released at a later date. For more information on Grandfather Mountain and its showcasing of Appalachian Mountain heritage visit www.grandfather.com or call (800) 468-7325. Farmers, community of eaters bond at picnic COLLEGE GROVE (AP) — The potluck lunch at Delvin Farms was more than just a weekend get-together. The picnic on Memorial Day weekend was a celebration of “community supported agriculture,” or CSA, that JACKSON (AP) — A wet spring in West Tennessee has links consumers with the local farmers that grow their raised farmers’ hopes of a good crop season. James and Steve Lewis farm 6,000 acres in Madison and food. “It’s just a perfect marHaywood counties. riage of the farm to the comThey had no harvest on about 70 percent of it last year munity,” said Cindy Delvin, because of drought. who has been farming since James Lewis said the losses were as bad as he’d seen 1970 with husband Hank. and he’s been farming since 1972. National Weather Service observer William Brantley “You get to meet people and said this year is on track with 2004, which proved to be the build the community around the farm.” wettest in Bemis since 1948. The Delvins are going into Records show more than 33 inches of rain have fallen in their eighth year with the Jackson since Jan. 1, compared with 16 inches by the end CSA, which requires memof May 2007. bers to pay upfront for their University of Tennessee extension agent Tracey Sullivan said wet fields in the region have slowed planting, but food. Customers then receive produce from the farm farmers feel like they’re in better shape this spring. from May to October. CSAs have taken off in popularity across the state as the demand for organic, locally grown produce has increased. Last year the Delvins had about 300 customers; this year, they’re sold out for the summer at 540 customers, many of whom showed up for the family’s annual spring picnic on the 95-acre Williamson County farm. Rainy spring is relief to farmers hit by drought the month and arrives at the high peaks near the Mile High Swinging Bridge before the Fourth of July. The wide range of elevations means guests have a longer window of opportunity to see rhododendron blooming on Grandfather. Naturalists will present a slide program in the theater on rainy days, but they hope to take guests out onto the mountain to see and touch the rhododendron in their natural habitat on days when the weather is cooperative. The purple-pink flowers will be the starting place for the conversation, but the well-informed guides look forward to seeing what different directions their guests’ questions might take them. “There is a lot of history associated with this plant,” explained Christenbury. “In 1789 the great French explorer Andre Michaux journeyed up the Catawba River from Charlotte and became the first to collect the red rhododendron in bloom on Roan Mountain. Five years later in 1794, Michaux hiked to the top of Grandfather Mountain and broke into song believing he had reached the highest point in the Americas. It is neat to see the way all these little threads of history weave together here on Grandfather Mountain.” All programs and guided walks offered as part of the Remarkable Rhododendron Ramble are included in the price of admission. For more information, visit on the Web at www.grandfather.com or call 1-800-468-7325. “You feel like part of a community,” said customer Bruce Curry, who visited the farm with wife Kara. “Even though we live 20, 30 minutes away, we still feel part of it.” The Currys are in their second year with the Delvins and estimate they’re saving about $10 to $15 a week on their grocery bill. The South Nashville couple has also cut down their trips to restaurants from twice a week to twice a month. CSA members pay for their food in advance and receive a box of produce every week or every other week, depending on their “subscription.” The boxes contain anything from kale to cantaloupe, from squash to arugula. This week, customers were raving about strawberries. “They tasted like candy,” said Leanne Hoeffler of Nolensville. A weekly program costs $700 at Delvin Farms; receiving produce twice a month costs $450. Delvin Farms is USDA Certified Organic, meaning that among other requirements, the Delvins do not use man-made pesticides or herbicides. “In organic production, you’re managing the soil so the soil takes care of the crops,” Hank said. “When the soil is right the plants fight the insects and diseases themselves.” The Delvins’ business has grown so quickly that Hank’s son, Hank Delvin Jr., quit his job as an environmental consultant in Massachusetts last year and moved his family back to the farm. “Five hundred was kind of our max until we could regroup and see how much we could grow,” Delvin Jr. said. “With 95 acres, you can produce a lot of food. You could support 1,500 if you needed or wanted to.” The Delvins also sell to some retailers such as Whole Foods, as well as farmers markets. They keep in contact with their customers, writing newsletters and providing recipes for the season’s crops. Events like the picnic, the Delvins say, further strengthen the relationship between farms and their customers. “You’ve got a face on the product,” Delvin Jr. said. “When you’re picking that stuff in the field and you’re delivering that box of produce, you know where it’s going. It’s pretty satisfying.” Blue Plum Festival will open June 6 in Johnson City Johnson City will host the annual Blue Plum Festival June 6-8. Fine arts and crafts will be on view and for sale. Also, there will be plenty of music, ranging from folk, country and bluegress, to indie and Celtic. New this year is Jazz Stage outside Nelson Fine Art Center on Main Street from 1 to 8 p.m. Friday and 1 to 7 p.m. Saturday. The Main Stage lineup begins at 3 p.m. Friday and 2 p.m. Saturday. Bands include The Half Runners, Sigean, Roan Mountain Hilltoppers, Wayne Henderson, Doc Watson, Ozone Rangers, Malcolm Holcombe, Town Mountain, Broken Valley Road Show, Scott Miller and the Commonwealth and The Subdudes. Behind Union Pharmacy TUESDAY Index June 3, 2008 Scoreboard • 8 Travis Henry • 8 Little League Briefs • 9 Sports Editor Wes Holtsclaw Phone (423) 542-4151 E- Mail sports@starhq.com Fax (423) 542-2004 www.starhq.com H 314 Rogosin Drive HOURS: Mon-Fri 8:00 am - 6:00 pm Sat 8:00 am - 2:00 pm (423) 542-8929 Pittsburgh stays alive in NHL Finals with thrilling 3OT win DETROIT (AP) — Not so fast Motor City. The Detroit Red Wings’ road to the Stanley Cup has another stop to make. Against all odds, the Pittsburgh Penguins stayed alive in the Stanley Cup finals with a 4-3 victory in Game 5 that ended on Petr Sykora’s goal 9:57 into the third overtime Monday night. With Jiri Hudler serving a 4-minute penalty for highsticking, Sykora wound up in the right circle and ripped a drive past Chris Osgood to end the marathon that lasted 4 1/2 hours. The series heads back to Pittsburgh for Game 6 on Wednesday night. “We have a great thing going right now. We just wanted to win this game tonight,” Sykora said. “We didn’t really look ahead. Now we’re going back home. We’ve got nothing to lose. We know what we have to do and hopefully we can bring it back here to Detroit.” The Red Wings, who fell to 9-2 at home in the postseason, gave the Penguins their first loss in Pittsburgh on Saturday in Game 4 to set up their championship chances. Early on, a Penguins’ win in this one seemed likely after they scored twice in the first period and carried a 2-1 lead into the third. However, the Red Wings tied it on Pavel Datsyuk’s power-play goal at 6:43 and went ahead for the first time 2:40 later when Brian Rafalski scored. The party was on in the final minute. Penguins goalie Marc-Andre Fleury was on the bench, the Pittsburgh net was empty and the seconds ticked down toward Detroit’s fourth Stanley Cup championship in 11 seasons. Maxime Talbot put the fans back into their seats when he saved the Penguins’ season with a second whack of the puck at the left post with 34.3 seconds left in regulation. Fleury kept them alive with a brilliant 55-save effort, including 24 in overtime. Now, the treasured trophy will go back into its crate and head to Pennsylvania where the Red Wings will have another shot at their 11th title in franchise history. Sykora’s goal ended the fifth-longest game in Stanley Cup finals history. The second assist went to defen- seman Sergei Gonchar, who missed the first two overtime periods after crashing headfirst into the end boards in the second period. Gonchar took the ice to help Pittsburgh’s struggling power play. “The game was so long. I wanted to help our guys,” Gonchar said. “I started feeling better at the end of the second overtime, so I thought there was a chance. Anyway I could help, I had to come back, so the goal was wait until the power play. They put me on the ice for the power play and we scored.” ’Pacman’ can join Dallas workouts, T.O. gets new deal IRVING, Texas (AP) — Adam “Pacman” Jones can join the Dallas Cowboys for everything but the regular season — for now. Commissioner Roger Goodell said Monday he would decide by Sept. 1 whether to fully end Jones’ suspension, which wiped out the entire 2007 season when he was with the Tennessee Titans. The Cowboys play their opener Sept. 7 in Cleveland. “Commissioner Goodell told Jones that his continued participation in the NFL depends on demonstrating that he can conduct himself in a lawful and reliable manner,” the league wrote in a statement. “Jones will be expected to continue the personal conduct program established for him by the NFL and the Cowboys and to avoid further adverse involvement with law enforcement.” Getting Pacman back for so long, so soon is good news for Dallas. Hours later, the club had more reason to celebrate, agreeing to a three-year contract extension with receiver Terrell Owens that’s worth about $27 million, accord- ing to a person close to the negotiations who requested anonymity because the deal hadn’t been announced. Jones could be in action as soon as Tuesday, the team’s next organized practice. Jones was an elite cornerback and kick returner in his first two seasons with the Tennessee Titans, but an accumulation of arrests and legal problems — including his connection to a shooting at a Las Vegas strip club — led to his suspension without pay on April 10, 2007. More trouble followed, including felony charges related to the strip club shooting, which left a bouncer paralyzed. Recent revelations include extortion payments to the alleged shooter, whom Jones helped police apprehend, and a $20,000 debt repaid to a Las Vegas Photo by Larry N. Souders casino after a felony theft Summers-Taylor’s Weston Colbaugh cranks one of his two home runs against CDSS in Carter County warrant was threatened. All told, he’s been arrest- American Little League action Monday. Despite Colbaugh’s big night, CDSS pulled out the win. ed six times and has been involved in 12 incidents requiring police intervention since being drafted. The Cowboys traded draft picks for Jones in April n See PACMAN JONES, 9 By Tim Chambers STAR STAFF tchambers@starhq.com Photo by Larry N. Souders Pizza Inn’s Haley Phillips connects for a single against EPD during n See CARTER COUNTY LL, 9 Elizabethton National Little League softball tournament action on Monday. By Ben Davis Star Staff bdavis@starhq.com Behind a walk-off gamewinning RBI single by Abbie Booher, Pizza Inn beat EPD 3-2 on Monday in the semi-finals of the Elizabethton National Little League softball tournament. Booher’s sharp liner to left-centerfield came in the bottom of the seventh inning and scored Emily Kiser to propel Pizza Inn into this Saturday’s championship game. “Abbie came through with a big hit,” said Pizza Inn coach Rick Walters. “She did great.” Lindsay Cunningham pitcher threw five innings to get the win for Pizza Inn. She allowed just three hits while striking out eleven batters. “Lindsey Cunningham pitched a great game,” Coach Walters noted. “That was a big key right there.” Cunningham used her bat to give Pizza Inn a 2-0 lead in the bottom of the first with a two-run single n See PIZZA INN, 9 n See STANLEY CUP, 8 Big Brown touches hearts as Belmont nears NEW YORK (AP) — Somewhere out there, a little girl named Lucy has fallen in love with Big Brown. “Dear Big Brown,” she scrawled in purple crayon on a note taped to the colt’s stall. “I heard you were feeling down. Get better soon and win the Triple Crown. Love, Lucy. XOXO.” In brown crayon, she drew a picture of the horse. She also put a real Band-Aid on the spot near his cracked left front hoof. The warm and fuzzy feelings generated by the Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner, however, don’t necessarily extend to his owners and trainer Rick Dutrow Jr., a slick group of New Yorkers who surely didn’t come from Central Casting. “Definitely not,” a smiling Michael Iavarone said, standing outside Big Brown’s barn on Monday. While Big Brown aims at completing the Triple Crown by winning the Belmont Stakes on Saturday, Iavarone and his partner Richard Schiavo, co-presidents of IEAH Stables, want to raise $100 million and turn the business into a hedge fund whose assets are thoroughbreds. Only investors with $500,000 or more can sign up. The IEAH Web site describes Iavarone as “a highprofile investment banker on Wall Street.” With his slicked-backed hair, pricey suits and year-round tan, he certainly looks the part and definitely stands out when he drops in for a visit to the barn. But Iavarone has acknowledged that his Wall Street career consisted of selling penny stocks for brokerage firms and that recently ringing the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange was his first visit there. “We’ve all done things in our past that come back to bite us when you leave it exposed and I did,” Iavarone said. “I’ve gotten very thickPhoto by Larry N. Souders skinned. The only downside After stepping on third for a force out CDSS third baseman of it is it takes away from Brandon Lynch fires a throw to first in hopes of completing a n See BIG BROWN, 9 double play. CDSS advances to CCALL Tournament semi-finals A young CDSS squad has grown leaps and bounds since the start of the Carter County American Little League baseball season. On Monday night they matured some more after surviving a mammoth game from Weston Colbaugh to knock off Summers Taylor 13-6 to remain in the hunt for the tournament championship. Tonight at 6 p.m. they’ll battle Elizabethton Federal at Jim Ensor Field with a trip to the championship game on the line. “We didn’t look too strong on paper at the start of the season but these kids have worked hard to get where they’re at,” said CDSS manager Eric Haun. “Tonight we came out and hit the ball well and Ty (Robinson) settled down after that first inning and pitched a great game.” While Colbaugh was Pizza Inn heading to softball title game That unit finally clicked on its fifth chance — including two in overtime — after converting only twice in 17 chances during the first four games. Road teams have won 10 of the past 12 overtime games in the finals and are 15-4 since 1990. Marian Hossa and Adam Hall put the Penguins in that position by scoring 6:04 apart in the first. Darren Helm cut Detroit’s deficit in half in the second, and the raucous home crowd was primed Sharapova upset by Dinara Safina at French Open PARIS (AP) — Maria Sharapova did not go quietly. No, her departure from the French Open was filled with sound and fury: her stroke-accompanying shrieks, her self-loathing shouts between points and the spectators’ hearty boos and high-pitched whistles that ushered the No. 1-seeded woman to the exit. One point from reaching the quarterfinals at the only Grand Slam tournament she’s never won, Sharapova allowed every bit of a significant lead slip away Monday and collapsed to a 6-7 (6), 7-6 (5), 6-2 defeat against No. 13 Dinara Safina. “Oh, I was angry,” Sharapova said. “I was angry for making unforced errors, for not taking some of those balls and just ripping them.” Her fourth-round departure was the most startling development on a day that included this footnote: The last U.S. man or woman playing singles at Roland Garros, 88th-ranked Robby Ginepri, was eliminated 7-6 (4), 6-3, 6-1 by No. 24 Fernando Gonzalez of Chile. “A five-hour ’grindfest’ would have favored me a little bit more,” said Ginepri, 0-5 at the French Open before this year. “I tried to end the points too quickly.” Gonzalez now faces No. 1 Roger Federer in the quarterfinals in a rematch of the 2007 Australian Open final that Federer won for one of his 12 Grand Slam titles. No. 5 David Ferrer will meet Gael Monfils in another quarterfinal. Rounding out the rough showing for Americans in Paris, the top-seeded men’s doubles team of twins Bob and Mike Bryan was upset by Pablo Cuevas of Uruguay and Luis Horna of Peru 6-3, 5-7, 7-6 (1) in a quarterfinal that ended in a downpour — and with a bit of rancor. When the teams switched sides during the third-set tiebreaker, Cuevas cel- ebrated his duo’s 5-1 lead by leaping over the net. So the Bryans didn’t shake his hand when the match finished. The U.S. Davis Cup doubles pair was more disturbed by the country’s overall showing on clay. “I guess we were holding the flag there at the end,” Mike Bryan said. “We’ll suit it up at Wimbledon and see how it goes.” Sharapova figured it wouldn’t take long to get over Monday’s setback and start focusing on the All England Club, where she won her first Grand Slam title in 2004 at age 17. n See FRENCH OPEN, 9 Page 8 - STAR - TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2008 MLB Caps Orioles 6, Red Sox 3 BALTIMORE (AP) — Adam Jones broke a tie with a three-run double in the eighth inning, and the Baltimore Orioles overcame another home run by Manny Ramirez to beat the Boston Red Sox 6-3 on Monday night, avoiding a four-game sweep. Baltimore blew a 2-0 lead, then rallied with a four-run eighth against Hideki Okajima (1-1). After a sacrifice fly by Kevin Millar tied it, the Orioles loaded the bases with two outs for Jones, lined a shot off the left-field wall. Ramirez homered in a third consecutive game to reach 502 for his career, two behind Eddie Murray for 23rd place in baseball history. The last time Ramirez homered in three straight games was May 22-24, 2006. He also hit a single off Jim Johnson (1-2) to put the go-ahead run in scoring position in the eighth for Mike Lowell, who delivered an RBI single for a 3-2 lead. Twins 6, Yankees 5 MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Delmon Young had three doubles and three RBIs and Joe Mauer hit his long-awaited first homer of the season to lead Minnesota past New York Yankees. Young’s breakout performance at the plate comes after a rough first two months in Minnesota. He entered the game hitting .264 with no homers and just 15 RBIs after coming over in a trade from Tampa Bay. The 22-year-old had RBI-doubles in the second and sixth innings before giving the Twins the lead for good with another two-bagger off Kyle Farnsworth (0-2) that scored Michael Cuddyer in the eighth. Joe Nathan picked up his 15th save in 16 chances and Matt Guerrier (3-1) pitched 1 2-3 innings of scoreless relief for the win. Alex Rodriguez homered and drove in two runs. Indians 13, Rangers 9 ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Casey Blake homered twice and matched a career high with seven RBIs before Ben Francisco hit a tiebreaking two-run homer to power Cleveland past Texas. Francisco’s homer in the seventh came on the first pitch by reliever Joaquin Benoit, breaking an 8-8 tie after the Indians had blown a five-run lead. Blake hit two-run homers in the second and third innings, then added a three-run double in the fourth that made it 8-3. Josh Hamilton homered in his third straight game for Texas. The two-run shot was his AL-best 16th and increased his majors-leading RBI total to 65 in his 58 games. Masa Kobayashi (3-2) allowed a hit and a run with three strikeouts in 1 2-3 innings. Eddie Guardado (0-1) started the seventh and gave up a one-out single to No. 9 hitter Asdrubal Cabrera. Angels 4, Mariners 2 SEATTLE (AP) — Ervin Santana gave up two runs in 7 2-3 innings to lead Los Angeles past Seattle. After beating Detroit with his third career complete game last week, Santana (8-2) nearly bested himself against Seattle. He gave up six hits and struck out three, and didn’t face a three-ball count on a batter until two outs in the seventh inning. Casey Kotchman ripped three singles, Robb Quinlan had a pair of base hits and an RBI and the trio scored three of the Angels’ four runs. Jarrod Washburn (2-7) lost his third straight decision and has just one win since the second week of the season. Athletics 3, Tigers 2 OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Bobby Crosby hit an RBI single in the ninth inning to lift Oakland. Kurt Suzuki led off the ninth with a sharp single off Francisco Cruceta (0-3) and went to second on Jack Hannahan’s sacrifice. He scored easily as Crosby’s hit traveled to the wall in right-center field. Crosby doubled in his first two at bats before grounding out and hitting into a double play. Huston Street (1-1) pitched a scoreless inning to earn the victory as the A’s won for the sixth time in their last eight at home. The Tigers dropped to 4-12 on the road since sweeping the Yankees in New York in early May. Phillies 5, Reds 4 PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Ken Griffey Jr. remained one shy of 600 home runs after getting the night off, but Philadelphia’s Chase Utley hit his major league-leading 21st homer to help the Phillies beat the Cincinnati Reds 5-4 on Monday night. Utley went deep for the fifth straight game, tying a club record he shares with Dick Allen, Mike Schmidt and Bobby Abreu. Utley also homered in five consecutive games earlier this season. Pedro Feliz and Chris Coste also connected for the NL East-leading Phillies. Rookie sensation Jay Bruce and Edwin Encarnacion went deep for the Reds. Bruce had two hits in his first three atbats, making him 15-for-25 overall. The last player to have at least 15 hits in his first 25 major league at-bats was Chris C. Jones of the Reds in 1991, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. Bruce finished 2-for-4. Kyle Kendrick (5-2) gave up four runs and five hits in 5 1-3 innings for the win. Reds starter Bronson Arroyo (4-5) allowed five runs and 10 hits in 4 1-3 innings. Braves 7, Marlins 5 ATLANTA (AP) — John Smoltz blew a save in his return to the mound as a closer, but Yunel Escobar picked him up with the first game-ending homer of his career, a two-run shot in the 10th inning to lift the Braves over Florida. Pitching in relief for the first time since 2004, Smoltz came on in the ninth with a 4-3 lead. The Marlins were down to their last out when Jeremy Hermida drove in two runs with a single. But Jeff Francoeur hustled home on a wild pitch in the bottom half to get Smoltz off the hook, and Escobar won it in the 10th with a drive that bounced off the top of the wall in right center and into the seats. In the 10th, Logan Kensing (3-1) walked Kelly Johnson, then surrendered Escobar’s fifth homer of the season. Will Ohman (2-0) earned the win with a scoreless top half of the 10th. Pirates 5, Cardinals 4 ST. LOUIS (AP) — Jason Michaels hit a tying pinch-hit grand slam in the seventh and Jason Bay drove in the winning run an inning later as the Pirates rallied past the Cardinals. Michaels, batting for Raul Chavez, hit his first home run of the season on the first pitch he saw from starter Adam Wainwright (5-3). The two-out blast landed in the Pirates’ bullpen and was just the second hit of the inning. It was his first homer with the Pirates and his first since hitting one against Texas on Aug. 1, 2007, while with Cleveland. Franquelis Osoria (3-1) allowed two hits in 1 2-3 innings to earn the victory. Matt Capps pitched the ninth to remain perfect in 11 save opportunities. Brewers 4, Diamondbacks 3 MILWAUKEE (AP) — Prince Fielder homered to leadoff the eighth and helped scratch across another run with an unlikely steal of third to lift the Brewers over the Diamondbacks. Fielder, who went 3-for-4, drove a fastball by Arizona reliever Doug Slaten (0-2) deep to left-center field where it bounced off a stadium support just below a “Vote Brewers” All-Star banner to give Milwaukee its first lead, 4-3. It was Fielder’s third homer in the last four games and ninth this year. The Brewers have won fourth in a row. But pinch hitter Augie Ojeda popped out and Stephen Drew struck out looking for Torres’ sixth save. Brewers reliever Guillermo Mota (2-3) earned the win with a perfect eighth. Salomon Torres survived a shaky ninth to earn his sixth save. Cubs 7, Padres 6 SAN DIEGO (AP) — Carlos Zambrano was as animated as he was good, helping Chicago to its eighth straight win with a victory over San Diego. Zambrano (8-1) allowed three runs in the first inning before settling down. He legged out three hits to tie his career-high and raise his average to .366. He hit a standup RBI triple that tied the game in the fourth, his third career triple. The best team in baseball, the Cubs (3721) held on to win the opener of a sevengame swing through San Diego and Los Angeles. They were coming off a 7-0 stretch at Wrigley Field, their first unbeaten homestand of at least six games since 1970. It’s their first eight-game winning streak since 2001, when they won 12 straight between May 19-June 2. After playing 17 of 23 at Wrigley, the Cubs began a stretch in which they play 23 of 32 on the road, where they have lost five straight series. Dodgers 8, Rockies 2 LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jeff Kent, Andre Ethier and Matt Kemp hit home runs, Derek Lowe pitched eight strong innings for his first win in more than five weeks, and the Dodgers handed the Rockies their eighth straight loss. Lowe (3-5) allowed a run and five hits, striking out three and walking one to get his first victory in eight starts since April 23. The Rockies, who lost their 13th straight on the road, were missing left fielder Matt Holliday, right fielder Brad Hawpe and shortstop Troy Tulowitzki — who combined for 89 home runs and 352 RBIs and batted a cumulative .308 last season. Greg Reynolds (0-3) pitched five innings, allowing six runs and seven hits including Kent’s sixth homer and Ethier’s fifth. Giants 10, Mets 2 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Brian Horwitz hit the first home run of his career with a two-run shot in the Giants’ six-run first and Ray Durham also drove in three runs to help San Francisco beat the sluggish New York. Randy Winn also homered with a leadoff drive in the first, when Aaron Rowand doubled to extend his hitting streak to 10 games. Durham hit a two-run double in the initial inning as the Giants knocked New York starter Oliver Perez (4-4) out after he got only one out, staking Giants starter Jonathan Sanchez to a comfortable cushion. The Mets, who had won five of six, sure played like they were tired. After a night game Sunday back home at Shea Stadium, the team arrived in the Bay Area behind schedule, landing around 4:30 a.m. and getting settled into the team hotel an hour later. MLB Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING—Hamilton, Texas, .331; HMatsui, New York, .328; Kotchman, Los Angeles, .324; Ordonez, Detroit, .322; Mauer, Minnesota, .319; Bradley, Texas, .317; Kinsler, Texas, .305; Upton, Tampa Bay, .305; Youkilis, Boston, .305. RUNS—Kinsler, Texas, 48; MiYoung, Texas, 44; Hamilton, Texas, 42; Ellsbury, Boston, 41; Crawford, Tampa Bay, 39; ISuzuki, Seattle, 39; Youkilis, Boston, 37. RBI—Hamilton, Texas, 65; Quentin, Chicago, 48; Ortiz, Boston, 43; Morneau, Minnesota, 42; MRamirez, Boston, 39; JGuillen, Kansas City, 38; DaMurphy, Texas, 37; Ordonez, Detroit, 37; EBrown, Oakland, 37; Ibanez, Seattle, 37. HITS—Hamilton, Texas, 79; Kinsler, Texas, 73; MiYoung, Texas, 71; Pedroia, Boston, 69; JoLopez, Seattle, 69; ISuzuki, Seattle, 69; Ordonez, Detroit, 69. DOUBLES—DaMurphy, Texas, 19; Crosby, Oakland, 19; JGuillen, Kansas City, 19; Damon, New York, 17; Pedroia, Boston, 16; JoLopez, Seattle, 16; Youkilis, Boston, 16; Hamilton, Texas, 16; Bradley, Texas, 16; CGuillen, Detroit, 16. TRIPLES—DYoung, Minnesota, 4; BRoberts, Baltimore, 4; 10 are tied with 3. HOME RUNS—Hamilton, Texas, 16; Quentin, Chicago, 14; Beltre, Seattle, 13; Ortiz, Boston, 13; MRamirez, Boston, 12; Sizemore, Cleveland, 11; Peralta, Cleveland, 11; Giambi, New York, 11. STOLEN BASES—Ellsbury, Boston, 27; ISuzuki, Seattle, 24; CaGomez, Minnesota, 17; Upton, Tampa Bay, 17; BRoberts, Baltimore, 16; Kinsler, Texas, 15; Crawford, Tampa Bay, 15. PITCHING (8 Decisions)—Matsuzaka, Boston, 8-0, 1.000, 2.53; CLee, Cleveland, 8-1, .889, 1.87; Litsch, Toronto, 7-1, .875, 3.18; Saunders, Los Angeles, 8-2, .800, 2.76; ESantana, Los Angeles, 8-2, .800, 3.02; Padilla, Texas, 7-2, .778, 3.67; Wang, New York, 6-2, .750, 4.14; LiHernandez, Minnesota, 6-2, .750, 4.81. STRIKEOUTS—JVazquez, Chicago, 77; Beckett, Boston, 75; Sabathia, Cleveland, 74; Burnett, Toronto, 73; Halladay, Toronto, 71; FHernandez, Seattle, 69; Marcum, Toronto, 67; ESantana, Los Angeles, 67. SAVES—FRodriguez, Los Angeles, 22; Sherrill, Baltimore, 18; Papelbon, Boston, 16; Nathan, Minnesota, 15; MRivera, New York, 15; Jenks, Chicago, 14; Percival, Tampa Bay, 14. NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING—CJones, Atlanta, .407; Berkman, Houston, .385; Pujols, St. Louis, .366; Rowand, San Francisco, .342; BMolina, San Francisco, .332; Theriot, Chicago, .325; Nady, Pittsburgh, .322. RUNS—Berkman, Houston, 57; Utley, Philadelphia, 48; McLouth, Pittsburgh, 47; HRamirez, Florida, 44; Uggla, Florida, 43; Bay, Pittsburgh, 43; Tejada, Houston, 43; DLee, Chicago, 43. RBI—AdGonzalez, San Diego, 54; Utley, Philadelphia, 52; Berkman, Houston, 47; CaLee, Houston, 46; Nady, Pittsburgh, 45; Howard, Philadelphia, 43; 5 are tied with 42. HITS—CJones, Atlanta, 83; Berkman, Houston, 80; Pujols, St. Louis, 75; Tejada, Houston, 73; Utley, Philadelphia, 72; CGuzman, Washington, 72; Braun, Milwaukee, 70; AdGonzalez, San Diego, 70; DLee, Chicago, 70. DOUBLES—Uggla, Florida, 21; Berkman, Houston, 21; Soto, Chicago, 19; McCann, Atlanta, 19; McLouth, Pittsburgh, 18; JCastillo, San Francisco, 18; Nady, Pittsburgh, 18; CGuzman, Washington, 18. TRIPLES—FLewis, San Francisco, 6; SDrew, Arizona, 5; CJackson, Arizona, 5; JReyes, New York, 5; Velez, San Francisco, 4; Upton, Arizona, 4; BPhillips, Cincinnati, 4. HOME RUNS—Utley, Philadelphia, 21; AdGonzalez, San Diego, 17; Berkman, Houston, 17; Uggla, Florida, 16; Braun, Milwaukee, 15; Howard, Philadelphia, 15; Dunn, Cincinnati, 15. STOLEN BASES—Bourn, Houston, 24; Pierre, Los Angeles, 21; Taveras, Colorado, 20; JReyes, New York, 18; HRamirez, Florida, 13; KMatsui, Houston, 12; Victorino, Philadelphia, 12. PITCHING (8 Decisions)—Zambrano, Chicago, 8-1, .889, 2.51; Lincecum, San Francisco, 7-1, .875, 2.23; Webb, Arizona, 10-2, .833, 2.69; Volquez, Cincinnati, 7-2, .778, 1.46; Dempster, Chicago, 7-2, .778, 2.75; Cook, Colorado, 7-3, .700, 3.36; Hendrickson, Florida, 7-3, .700, 5.26; JSantana, New York, 7-3, .700, 3.20. STRIKEOUTS—Volquez, Cincinnati, 83; Lincecum, San Francisco, 78; Harang, Cincinnati, 74; Webb, Arizona, 72; JSanchez, San Francisco, 71; Billingsley, Los Angeles, 71; JSantana, New York, 71. SAVES—BWilson, San Francisco, 16; Valverde, Houston, 15; KWood, Chicago, 15; Lidge, Philadelphia, 14; Lyon, Arizona, 12; Rauch, Washington, 12; 5 are tied with 11. NCAA Tourney Caps Stanford 9, Pepperdine 7 STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — Sean Ratliff hit a pair of home runs, including a go-ahead grand slam, and Stanford overcame an early four-run deficit to beat Pepperdine 9-7 on Monday to win its regional. Jason Castro hit a key two-run double for the Cardinal (37-22), who won four consecutive elimination games to advance to a Super Regional against the winner of the Fullerton regional. Chase d’Arnaud had three hits, including two home runs, and drove in four runs for the Waves (38-21), who lost their third straight regional championship game. Drew Storen (4-3) pitched four innings in relief to earn his second win of the regional. Storen gave up two runs on three hits with a walk and two strikeouts. Tyler Hess (4-1) walked a batter ahead of Ratliff’s grand slam. Fresno State 5, San Diego 1 LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) — Gavin Hedstrom had three hits to help Fresno State win the Long Beach regional. Fresno State (40-28), the Western Athletic Conference champions and No. 4 seed, will play Arizona Sate in the first super regional in school history next weekend. San Diego (44-17) was ranked sixth in the nation. Holden Sprague (4-2) gave up one run and five hits over five and 1-3 innings for Fresno State. Brandon Burke came on in relief and earned his 11th save of the year. Hedstrom hit a tiebreaking, two-run single in the bottom of the fifth off Sammy Solis (3-2) to give the Bulldogs a 2-1 lead. Texas A&M 13, Houston 5 COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) — Kyle Colligan hit two home runs to lead Texas A&M to the regional title and a game against Rice in the weekend’s super regional. Colligan put the Aggies (46-17), up in the first inning with a solo shot, and had a two-run drive during a seven-run second that put Texas A&M up 8-2. Darby Brown hit a solo shot and a threerun double in the inning. Rice (45-13) beat A&M in last year’s super regional, taking two games from the Aggies. Kyle Thebeau (6-4) allowed two runs on six hits in four innings. Ty Stuckey (3-4) allowed three hits and four earned runs before he was relieved after failing to record an out in the second inning for Houston (42-24). Georgia 18, Georgia Tech 6 ATHENS, Ga. (AP) — Matt Olson went 5-for-6 with three RBIs and Rich Poythress hit a two-run homer to help Georgia advance to an NCAA Super Regional. The Bulldogs (39-22-1) will host North Carolina State, a 2-1 winner Sunday over South Carolina, in an NCAA Super Regional this weekend. Alex McRee (6-1) entered the game in the first after Bulldogs starter Justin Grimm failed to retire a batter. Pitching the next four full innings, McRee allowed four hits, two runs — one earned — with one walk and five strikeouts. Brandon Cumpton (2-1), the Jackets’ second pitcher, allowed five hits, two walks and five runs — three earned — with no strikeouts. Georgia Tech (41-21) ended a difficult year that included the heroin-related death of pitcher Michael Hutts on April 11. Florida State 16, Tulane 7 TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Tyler Holt went 5-for-6 and Dennis Guinn capped a six-run fourth inning with a three-run double to help the Seminoles eliminate the Green Wave (39-22-1) and advance to a super regional for the first time since 2005. It was the 19th time Florida State won its region, though the Seminoles had to win four straight elimination games to do it after opening the tournament with a loss to Bucknell. Tulane’s Shooter Hunt (9-4) gave up six runs, though only two were earned, on six hits and a run-scoring wild pitch. Pitching on two days’ rest, he was relieved with two outs in the fourth inning. A fielding error by center fielder Anthony Scelfo with two outs in the inning and the score 2-0 opened the door for Florida State to score on Jack Rye’s single and Guinn’s bases-clearing double. Matt Fairel (11-2) allowed four runs on seven hits in 5 2-3 innings. Jason Stidham drove in four runs for the Seminoles (52-11), who will host the Shockers on Friday. The game was delayed 49 minutes by lightning. BASKETBall NBA Playoff Glance CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7) Eastern Conference Boston 4, Detroit 2 Tuesday, May 20: Boston 88, Detroit 79 Thursday, May 22: Detroit 103, Boston 97 Saturday, May 24: Boston 94, Detroit 80 Monday, May 26: Detroit 94, Boston 75 Wednesday, May 28: Boston 106, Detroit 102 Friday, May 30: Boston 89, Detroit 81 Western Conference L.A. Lakers 4, San Antonio 1 Wednesday, May 21: L.A. Lakers 89, San Antonio 85 Friday, May 23: L.A. Lakers 101, San Antonio 71 Sunday, May 25: San Antonio 103, L.A. Lakers 84 Tuesday, May 27: L.A. Lakers 93, San Antonio 91 Thursday, May 29: L.A. Lakers 100, San Antonio 92 NBA FINALS (Best-of-7) Boston vs. L.A. Lakers Thursday, June 5: L.A. Lakers at Boston, 9 p.m. Sunday, June 8: L.A. Lakers at Boston, 9 p.m. Tuesday, June 10: Boston at L.A. Lakers, 9 p.m. Thursday, June 12: Boston at L.A. Lakers, 9 p.m. Sunday, June 15: Boston at L.A. Lakers, 9 p.m., if necessary Tuesday, June 17: L.A. Lakers at Boston, 9 p.m., if necessary Thursday, June 19: L.A. Lakers at Boston, 9 p.m., if necessary SPORTS BRIEFS Nashville seeks to host women’s Final 4 NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Nashville has submitted a bid to host the NCAA Women’s Final Four between 2012 and 2016. The bid was turned in Monday by the Ohio Valley Conference, based in suburban Brentwood, and the Nashville Sports Council. The groups offered to hold the event for one year between 2012 and 2016 at the Sommet Center, also home of the NHL’s Nashville Predators. Local officials said the NCAA expected 13 bids, with the winner chosen in November. SIAC fires commissioner following internal audit TUCKER, Ga. (AP) — The Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference has fired its commissioner, William E. Lide, after an audit cited him with financial mismanagement, the league announced Monday. Tuskegee University President Benjamin E. Payton, who is chairman of the SIAC’s Council of Presidents, said in a statement that the council voted to fire Lide after suspending him with pay in April. Payton said Lide’s termination was effective May 31. The statement said a recent internal audit found numerous irregularities, including alleged mishandling of conference finances and failure to inform conference leaders of the league’s “real financial challenges.” An attempt to reach Lide by phone was not immediately successful. Payton said the council named George Mategakis, a current member of the SIAC staff, as interim commissioner while it seeks a permanent successor to Lide. The conference, based in Tucker, Ga., has 13 member schools competing in Division II. Lide, who became commissioner of the SIAC in 2003, previously served as athletic director of the University of Central Arkansas. He holds a doctorate from Ohio State University, where he was a graduate assistant under football coach Woody Hayes. TRANSACTIONS Monday’s Deals BASEBALL American League CLEVELAND INDIANS—Recalled RHP Tom Mastny from Buffalo (IL). Optioned INF Michael Aubrey to Buffalo. TEXAS RANGERS—Recalled LHP A.J. Murray from Oklahoma (PCL). Placed RHP Vicente Padilla on the bereavement list. National League ATLANTA BRAVES—Activated RHP John Smoltz from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Phil Stockman to Richmond (IL). FLORIDA MARLINS—Extended the contract of Stan Meek, scouting director, through 2011. NEW YORK METS—Agreed to terms with OF Raul Gonzalez on a minor league contract. SAN DIEGO PADRES—Activated LHP Justin Hampson from the 15-day DL. Sent LHP Sean Henn outright to Portland (PCL). SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS—Activated LHP Erick Threets from the 15-day DL and designated him for assignment. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association ORLANDO MAGIC—Signed Otis Smith, general manager, and Dave Twardzik, assistant general manager, to contract extensions. FOOTBALL National Football League NFL—Announced Dallas CB Adam “Pacman” Jones may participate in workouts, training camps and exhibition games. CHICAGO BEARS—Signed S Craig Steltz to a four-year contract. DENVER BRONCOS—Released RB Travis Henry. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS—Signed WR Craphonso Thorpe. Waived WR Derrek Richards. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS—Signed OL Oliver Ross. NEW YORK GIANTS—Signed DE Renaldo Wynn. Placed LB Keith O’Neil on the reserve-retired list. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS—Signed OT Alan Reuber. WASHINGTON REDSKINS—Signed S Stuart Schweigert. HOCKEY National Hockey League NEW YORK ISLANDERS—Signed RW Tim Jackman to a one-year contract. NEW YORK RANGERS—Agreed to terms with F Tomas Zaborsky. OTTAWA SENATORS—Signed C Peter Regin to a multiyear contract. PITTSBURGH PENGUINS—Recalled D Alex Goligoski from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (AHL). TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING—Re-signed D Alexandre Picard to a multiyear contract. Signed D Kevin Quick to a multiyear contract. COLLEGE ATLANTIC 10 CONFERENCE—Named Bernadette McGlade commissioner. SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE— Named Kentucky president Dr. Lee Todd, Jr., president of the executive committee; Florida president Dr. J. Bernard Machen vice president; Arkansas faculty rep Howard Brill secretary; and Mississippi chancellor Dr. Robert Khayat, Alabama athletic director Mal Moore, South Carolina faculty rep Dr. Bill Bearden and Georgia senior woman administrator Carla Williams committee members. SOUTHERN INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETIC CONFERENCE—Fired Dr. William E. Lide, commissioner. Named George Mategakis interim commissioner. CALENDAR BASKETBALL • Coach Kenneth Chambers and Unaka Lady Rangers staff will have it’s 8th annual basketball camp beginning, Monday, June 2nd, through Friday, June 6th. The camp times will be 9 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. with check-in on Monday at 8:30 a.m. The cost of the camp will be $45.00 per player or $80.00 for two family siblings. Chambers will be assisted by former all-state player and now Lady Ranger assistant Rusty Chambers, along with Hunter Elementary basketball coach Chris Collins. The staff will stress fundamentals, shooting, footwork, and passing along with offensive and defensive skills. All campers will go through Lady Rangers Fundamental Factory which allows kids to compete against other campers in basic fundamental basketball. All campers will receive a soft drink each day along with a T-Shirt. Several trophy awards will be given at the conclusion on Friday. For more information contact Coach Chambers at 543-1845. • ETSU Lady Bucs Basketball camps will take place June 2-5 and June 23-26. The day camp will be conducted inside ETSU’s Memorial Center and is intended for children in grades 3-12. There is a $175 cost per camper and each participant receives a free ETSU camp t-shirt, season pass for Lady Buccaneer games and an ETSU camp basketball. Camp begins at 9 a.m. and lasts until 4 p.m., except on the first day as registration takes place at 8:30 a.m. on the west side of Memorial Center. Lunch will be provided for each camper during the sessions. For more information, call (423) 439-5330. • Applications are now being evaluated for the Ten Star All-Star Summer Basket- ball Camp. The camp is by invitation only. Boys and Girls ages 10-19 are eligible to apply. Past participants include: Michael Jordan, Tim Duncan, Vince Carter, Jerry Stackhouse, Grant Hill and Antawn Jamison. Players from 50 states and 10 foreign countries attended the 2007 camp. College basketball scholarships are possible for players selected to the AllAmerican Team. For more information call 704-373-0873. • Murry Bartow’s Buccaneer Basketball Camp at Memorial Center. $135 per camper, 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.. Boys 5-14, June 16-19 and July 14-17. Call 4394207. • Milligan College Camps, July 14-18, July 21-23, at Steve Lacy Fieldhouse. First camp is five days. Boys and girls, 8-14, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Monday-Thursday, and 9 a.m.-noon on Friday. Costs $149. The second camp is three days. Boys and girls, 8-14, 9 a.m.-noon MondayThursday. Costs $74. Call 461-8783. FOOTBALL • The 6th annual Jason Witten Football Camp will be held on Sat., June 21, on Dave Rider Field at Brown Childress Stadium in Elizabethton. The camp is hosted by former Elizabethton Cyclone, University of Tennessee All-American, and current All-Pro Dallas Cowboy Jason Witten. It will also feature other active NFL players, former and current Tennessee football players, as well as notable high school coaches and other players from the collegiate level. The camp, which has been attended by more than 2,500 kids since its inception six years ago, is open to all youngsters ages 7 through 18. An autograph session will also be provided for the campers. Session one will be held from 9 am until noon that day and will be for ages 7-12. Session two will be for ages 13-18 and will last from 1:30-4:30 p.m. The camp is free for those who register on or before June 7. Registration is now available online at Witten’s official website, www.jasonwitten82.com. GOLF • Citizens Bank and the Tri-Cities Lifestyle Center are pleased to present the Doe River Gorge Golf Challenge on Monday, June 16, 2008 at the beautiful Ridges Golf & Country Club. The Doe River Gorge Golf Challenge will feature 18 holes of golf for teams of four players competing in a select shot format. Men’s, women’s, and mixed teams are welcome to complete at one of the most prestigious and exciting courses in the area. Skills competition during the tournament will include prizes for the longest drive, and special prizes for closest to the pin. Check-in time is at 10 am and shot gun start at 11 am. Lunch will be provided on course by Gardner’s Paint Service. An awards banquet will be catered by The Firehouse Restaurant immediately after the tournament. For sponsorship and registration information, please contact Ken or Stephanie at Doe River Gorge: 423-725-4010, email: ken@doerivergorge.com, or online at www.doerivergorge.com. SOCCER • ETSU Soccer is hosting the Buccaneer Soccer School for Girls Day Camp and Elite and Team Camp. The Boys and Girls Day Camp will be hosted June 2-5 and run from 9 a.m.-noon. This camp is available for boys and girls ages 5-12. The Girls Elite and Team Camp is a residential camp that will be hosted July 1317. This camp is available for girls only ages 13-18. To receive a brochure or for more information contact ETSU at 423439-4295 or e-mail us at wsoccer@etsu. edu. VOLLEYBALL • Volleyball Tryouts for Elizabethton High School will be held July 7th and 8th from 9:30AM - 12 noon both days. No prior playing experience is necessary. Any girl who will be a student at EHS during the 2008-2009 school year is allowed to participate. Any questions should be directed to Leslee Bradley at the high school. • Buccaneer Camps. Team July 17-20, Individual July 20-23, All Skills July 2425. Call 439-4259, or devine@etsu.edu. SPORTSCAST Television Tuesday NCAA Softball 8 p.m. -- (ESPN2) Game 2 of the bestof -three Championship Series in Oklahoma City WNBA 10:30 p.m. -- (ESPN2) Washington at Phoenix Broncos release former Vol RB Henry DENVER (AP) — The Denver Broncos released running back Travis Henry on Monday, saying his commitment to the team was in question. The Broncos signed the former Tennessee Titan and Volunteer to a five-year, $22.5 million contract in March 2007. He was hampered by injuries in his only season in Denver, rushing for 691 yards on 167 carries with four touchdowns. Henry injured a hamstring while running 100yard sprints late last month. The NFL told him in September he had failed a test for marijuana and would be suspended for a year, but he challenged the test and the punishment and won. Before joining the Broncos, the former University of Tennessee star played for the Titans and the Buffalo Bills. “We did not feel his commitment to the Broncos was enough to warrant a spot on this football team,” coach Mike Shanahan said in a written statement. “Although Travis has the ability to be one of the top running backs in the NFL, we have to make decisions that are in the best interests of our organization and its goal of winning a Super Bowl.” Stanley Cup n Continued from 7 to carry the Red Wings home in the third. Datsyuk struck for the tying goal 22 seconds after Tyler Kennedy went off for hooking, the Red Wings’ first power-play goal in four chances on the night. By then, the chants of “We Want the Cup” filled the old rink. Penguins coach Michel Therrien called his timeout with 11:41 remaining, but it would have been helpful just 1:04 later when Rafalski put the Penguins on the brink of elimination. Johan Franzen sent a pass out front to Rafalski, who skated in from the right point and ripped a drive through a crowd in the crease and into the net. It was Ra- falski’s third goal of the playoffs. The bubbly was certainly on ice when Talbot — the extra skater on for Fleury — tied it. Hossa swept a pass from the corner that bounced off Osgood’s left leg and came to Talbot. With a second jab, he got the puck through. The Penguins bench erupted in celebration as Red Wings players skated slowly as they realized how close they had come. The Red Wings outshot the Penguins 13-2 in the first overtime and kept the puck in the Pittsburgh end for most of it. Detroit, however, took the only penalty but killed it off without much difficulty. Fleury knocked aside Datsyuk’s drive 6 1/2 minutes into overtime and then fought off a rebound try by Valtteri Filppula. Tomas Holmstrom, who returned from a one-game absence caused by an injured hamstring, got the puck while he was alone in the slot only to have his spin-o-rama attempt kept out by the Penguins’ 23-yearold netminder. Pittsburgh’s best early overtime chance came from Evgeni Malkin, the MVP finalist, who earned the first assist on the winning goal for his first point in the series. Malkin took a pass from Jarkko Ruutu as he came off the bench and fired a drive from the right circle that bounced off Osgood’s arm before he gloved it. Each team received a power play in the second overtime, and both penalties came in the offensive zone. Pittsburgh earned its second goalie interference penalty after regulation when Dan Cleary drove hard to the net and bumped Fleury near the right post. The Red Wings failed to get a shot on Fleury after Sykora hooked Niklas Kronwall in front of the Detroit net following a scoring chance. Fleury remained sharp and made 20 saves through two overtimes. He kept his cool even after losing sight of the puck, which popped over him and landed on top of the net. With Joe Louis Arena decked out in red and ready to rock, the Penguins drained the juice out of the old rink in the first period. Hall’s goal was particularly deflating because the puck was shot into the net by Kronwall with 5:19 left in the period. Detroit seemed poised to end the series on home ice, where the Red Wings outscored the Penguins a combined 7-0 in the first two games of the series. But just as they did in the Western Conference finals against Dallas, the Presidents’ Trophy winners dropped Game 5 with a chance to wrap things up. STAR - TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2008 - Page 9 Davis recycling, Greg’s Pizza get ENLL wins From Staff Reports Anthony Ward threw a two-hitter and struck out 14 batters to lead Davis Recycling to a 9-0 win over Valley Forge Auction on Monday evening. Ward also hit a two-run home run for Davis Recycling while Jeb Davis also had a homer. Tyler Lee was 2 for 2 at the plate for the winners while Eli Hyder was 2 for 3 with three RBI. Zach Hyder and Chris Lanthorn also had hits. Eli Osborne and Andrew Byers had the lone hits for VFA. Mathew Reynolds suffered the loss on the mound. Greg’s Pizza 12, Burgie Drug 2 Hunter Hodges was 3 for 3 at the plate with two RBI and also got the win on the mound as Greg’s Pizza beat Burgie Drug 12-2. Jake Guinn was also 3 for 3 for Greg’s Pizza while Gabriel Treadway was 2 for 2. Colton Elliot and Colton Albracht, who had a triple, were each 2 for 3. Ben Goulds and Isaac Sturgill were each 1 for 2. For Burgie Drug, Forrest Hall was 2 for 2 with a double while Leo Yates and Wesley Price were each 1 for 2 with and Andrew White, Austin Millsaps and Caleb Jones each added a hit. Millsaps, whose hit was a triple, also turned a double play in the field. Price took the loss on the mound. Big Brown n Continued from 7 Photo by Larry N. Souders Summers-Taylor’s Dillon Lowe slides safely into second base against CDSS on Monday. Carter County LL n Continued from 7 tearing it up at the plate for the “RoadGraders” Dakota Grubb was hotter than a two-dollar pistol for the “Outlaws.” CDSS grabbed a 3-0 lead after their first at bat. Brandon Lynch led off with a triple then Sage Haun reached on an infield hit. Ty Robinson walked to load the bases. Tristan Robinson brought home one run with a groundout while two more would score on a ground rule double from Grubb. It didn’t take long for Summers to tie the game after getting a pair of leadoff walks to Garrett Taylor and Dakota Campbell. Colbaugh sent a fastball well over the right center field fence to tie the game at 3-3. Both Grubb and Colbaugh had a hand in tying the game back at 4-4 in the third. Grubb double then scored on a triple to right field by Josh Potter. A base hit by Landon Grindstaff and a groundout from Colbaugh would knot the score for the final time. CDSS pushed across a quartet of runs during the fourth frame. Ty Robinson bounced a double over the fence while his brother Tristan crushed a base hit off the center field fence. A tworun double by Grubb and singles from Jordan Seaboch and Potter would extend the CDSS advantage at 8-4. The young “Outlaws” continued their hot bats by plating three more during the fifth. Three base hits from Ty Robinson, Tristan Robinson and Grubb scored a pair of runs then Seaboch brought home another with a triple. Once again Summers tried to battle back as Grindstaff singled then Colbaugh connected for this second home run and sixth RBI to whittle the CDSS lead down at 11-6. But base hits by the Robinson boys and Grubb in the final frame would be more than enough to seal the deal for CDSS. Ty Robinson picked up the win striking out 10 batters with relief help from Grubb. Grindstaff suffered the loss. Taylor pitched well in a relief role for Summers Taylor. Grubb had a monster game going 5-5 with six RBI’s and four doubles. Tristan and Ty Robinson added three hits each while Potter, Seaboch and Lynch contributed two each. Colbaugh was 3-4 with a pair of home runs and six RBI’s for Summers Taylor. Grindstaff chipped in with two hits to round out the five collected by the “RoadGraders.” Haun praised his team for their efforts. “I am really proud of our kids for the way they battled in this thing. I know they’ll come out and give it their best on against Elizabethton Federal.” Pizza Inn n Continued from 7 that scored Booher and Haley Phillips, who had both drew walks. EPD cut it to 2-1 in the top of the second when Madison Boles tripled and then scored on a grounder by Mackenzie Davis. The game was tied at 2-2 after Boles plated Krisley Roberts with an RBI single in the fourth. EPD’s Kassie Roberts put on an impressive pitching performance despite taking the loss. Roberts went the distance and fanned twelve batters, including the first three hitters of the fifth, while allowing just three hits. Boles was 2-3 for EPD while Kennedy Richardson and Roberts were each 1-2. Cunningham, Booher and Phillips each finished 1-2 for Pizza Inn. “All year we’ve talked about teamwork, and that’s what happened tonight,” Coach Walters said of his squad. “The girls played together as a team. We had good pitching and they made good plays in the field. They all did a great job.” With the loss, EPD will now face the winner of last night’s late contest between G.H. Reynolds and Big John’s in a Thursday evening semi-final contest. The winner of that game will square off with Pizza Inn in the championship on Saturday. If Pizza Inn falls in the first game of the championship series, another contest will be played on Monday evening. her cheeks, exhaled loudly, and replied, “I mean, it’s not easy.” So who could have been surprised that she wasted two set points at 6-4 in the first tiebreaker? After blowing the second set point, she spiked her racket precisely the way Marat does, drawing a warning from the chair umpire. “I’m not the girl to keep all the emotions I have inside,” Safina said. “I guess I have to pay lots of fines because that’s the way I am.” She now faces No. 7 Elena Dementieva, the 2004 French Open finalist who beat No. 11 Vera Zvonareva 6-4, 1-6, 6-2 in another allRussian match Monday. Two other women’s matches were suspended because of darkness. No. 4 Svetlana Kuznetsova, the 2004 U.S. Open champion, led No. 16 Victoria Azarenka 6-2, 2-2, while Petra Kvitova and Kaia Kanepi, two unseeded players, split two sets. For Sharapova, things really began to fall apart when she served while trailing 3-2 in the third set. At 15-love, Safina’s forehand landed near a line, and Sharapova missed a backhand. Sharapova asked the chair umpire to check the mark from Safina’s shot, drawing scattered noise from the crowd, and the call stood. On the next point, Sharapova botched a sitter and put a forehand into the net — drawing cheers, generally considered a breach of etiquette among tennis spectators. Another short ball came at 15-30, and perhaps wary of another miscue, Sharapova sent it back cautiously, allowing Safina to pound a forehand. That prompted a scream from Sharapova. As play proceeded, her yells became louder and louder as she berated herself, at least once with colorful language. “You sometimes get a little too negative on yourself,” Sharapova said. After erasing three break points in that game, Sharapova netted two forehands in a row, ceding the break. Now it was Safina’s turn to let it out: She raised a fist and bellowed. A match in which she was playing from so far behind for so long was now in her control, and she did not let go, collecting 10 of the final 12 points — including Sharapova’s seventh double-fault of the match, 43rd of the tournament. French Open n Continued from 7 With last month’s retirement of top-ranked Justine Henin, and last week’s losses by Venus and Serena Williams, Sharapova appeared to have a clearerthan-usual path to success at the clay-court major. She was one of only two women with a Slam title to her credit among the final 16 players, but will have to wait for another year in Paris. “I came very close,” Sharapova said. She led 5-2 in the second set, and went up 40-30 while serving for the match at 5-3. But Safina erased that chance with a backhand winner, and eventually broke when Sharapova missed a forehand. In the ensuing tiebreaker, Sharapova took a 5-2 lead, but Safina claimed five straight points. “It can go in the wrong direction really fast,” Sharapova said. “It just started going that way.” Until now, Safina was best known for being the kid sister of Marat Safin, who won the 2000 U.S. Open and 2005 Australian Open. She shares his broad shoulders and short temper, but thus far had not displayed quite as much talent or taste for the big stage, never advancing beyond the quarterfinals at a major. Even after beating Sharapova, she didn’t exactly display bravado. Asked whether she could win the title, Safina puffed where the story is and that’s Big Brown. He has the last say and he’ll tackle that issue on Saturday.” The sheiks, princes and Kentucky blue bloods who dominate racing typically make their money in other businesses and spend it pursuing the sport. But Iavarone and Schiavo, who own IEAH Stables, are using racing as a way to make their millions, along with minority owner Paul Pompa Jr., who owns a Brooklyn trucking company and who named Big Brown after one of his biggest clients — United Parcel Service. That makes them different than owners like the late Paul Mellon and William T. Young, who could afford to run their horses beyond their 3-year-old seasons because their incomes weren’t dependent on purse money or breeding rights. Dutrow’s bombast in a sport where blame and jealousy run neck-and-neck has ticked off some people. Others praise his candidness. The trainer gets bashed in online racing forums, where he’s been called a cheat who has no concern for his horses. He’s got a rap sheet, too, getting suspended for repeated medication violations and his own drug use. He talks about how he loves to party with “his people.” “If we were making a movie,” about Big Brown and his Triple Crown adventure, “we may not cast Richard Dutrow,” Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas said. Yet, there he is, center stage with his undefeated horse. Dutrow has already said that Big Brown winning the Belmont is “a foregone conclusion.” “Some people kind of root for a guy that’s a little mouthy like that and other people certainly don’t like it,” said trainer David Hofmans, whose Touch Gold spoiled Silver Charm’s 1997 Triple Crown bid. “He is controversial in all aspects of the game.” Others have rallied to Dutrow’s defense, rebuking fellow fans who bring up his admitted cocaine and marijuana use. “Why people do not like me is not important to me. I got enough people that like me out there, too, you know,” Dutrow said. “They just do not know me. They are just reading about what they have been writing about me and some of it is true, some of it just does not add up to a whole lot. It does not bother me.” The one thing he’s been right about is his horse, who has backed up Dutrow’s bravado with easy victories in the Derby and Preakness. “He’s just talking the way we would in a tack room amongst each other. He’s a typical guy that grew up around the backside. All he knows is horses,” trainer Bob Baffert said. “He’s got a right to talk because he does have the best horse.” Like Baffert, Lukas credits Dutrow for having done “a very good job getting Big Brown to this point.” “Whether you like his brassiness, his history, he’s in the middle of the arena and it’s his to lose,” he said. Smarty Jones and Funny Cide, the last two horses to make Triple Crown bids, were feel-good national stories in part because of their names, humble breeding and the regular Joes who owned and trained them. In 2004, Smarty Jones came out of tiny Philadelphia Park and carried the hopes of that city’s beleaguered sports fans on his back. A true “Horse of the People,” he went into the Belmont Stakes with a 9-0 record, including victories in the Kentucky Derby and Preakness. There were “Smarty Parties” each time he ran, kids wrote to him, and small-time trainer John Servis, little-known jockey Stewart Elliott and ailing owner Roy Chapman became favorites for handling their fame with humility and class, even after Smarty was beaten in the Belmont. The year before, Funny Cide became the first gelding to challenge for the Triple Crown as New York’s hometown horse. Another “Horse of the People,” he was trained by journeyman Barclay Tagg and purchased for $75,000, a downright bargain in this business. His owners were a group of friends from upstate who traveled to the races in yellow school buses. The gelding’s homespun story inspired a cottage industry of souvenirs and even his own beer. He hasn’t gone away, either. Funny Cide works as Tagg’s stable pony, accompanying horses to the Belmont track for their workouts. No chance Big Brown will do the same after his racing days end. His owners inked a $50 million breeding deal for him at Three Chimneys Farm in Kentucky, where Smarty Jones resides. “If Bill Gates owned him, he’d probably run until he’s 4,” Lukas said. “But you can’t blame these guys. They’re investors.” Pacman Jones n Continued from 7 and gave him a restructured contract that minimizes their risk. The trade includes contingency plans if Jones never plays for Dallas. Jones and Goodell met in Atlanta on May 21, and Jones apparently said enough to help his case. It’s also possible the commissioner is counting on the Cowboys and their player development staff to keep him in check. The team helped Tank Johnson return from a similar suspension last season and has successfully dealt with other troubled players. “This limited reinstatement is a step in the process,” Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said. “Adam is aware of the things that need to be done in order to take the next step.” Pacman Jones moved to Dallas recently and already has been hanging out with teammates and working out in the area. He’s also started bonding with Johnson, both knowing they are down to their last chance with the NFL. “The important thing is getting him here and getting him acclimated,” Johnson said. “I have told him you are a good kid, we know you and we’re look- ing forward to having you on the team and we’re excited about you proving everybody wrong.” The Cowboys could use another good cornerback, but they’re not hanging their hopes on Jones, having spent a first-round pick on Michael Jenkins. Jenkins and fellow first-rounder Felix Jones also can handle kick returns if Pacman isn’t around — or even if he is. Basically, the team isn’t getting its hopes up, considering Pacman’s availability a bonus. “If (Pacman) can come out and help us here, great,” said linebacker Bradie James, the defensive captain last season. “But if he doesn’t, we’ve got enough guys to make it happen.” Jerry Jones has even talked about using Pacman as an extra wide receiver. That’s fine by Owens, who expects Pacman to be committed to staying out of trouble. “I think now with a year out of football, he has to really put his life and career in perspective,” Owens said. “I haven’t seen him play offense. Obviously he has some return skills. Any time you can get a guy like him to get their hands on the ball, it’s going to help your offense.” Terence Newman, the team’s top cornerback, is looking forward to the help, too. “We’re all waiting for him to get here. The sooner the better,” Newman said. “It will definitely be a little shock when he gets back because the speed of the game is what you’re not used to. You can play basketball, can do a lot of things, but you can never simulate going against a receiver, pressing a guy and having a guy run full speed at you.” Secondary coach Dave Campo expects Jones to adapt quickly. Campo figures the biggest obstacle will be learning Dallas’ terminology. Jones wasn’t allowed to have a playbook while banned from the facility. “Pretty much, coverage is coverage,” Campo said. “I’ve looked at some tape of him and I’ve put a couple tapes together for him when he comes in to show him some stuff. But I saw him up close and personal in Jacksonville. He beat us single-handedly in a game ... so I know him pretty well.” Page 10 - STAR - TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2008 Annie Sally Forth Dick Tracey Dilbert Zits Garfield Hi and Lois Blondie Peanuts Snuffy Smith On The Lighter Side By: Eugene Sheffer In the year ahead, a number of your biggest successes will occur through situations where you can act independently. Although you’ll do well with some partnership arrangements, you’ll still do better on your own. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Projects and ventures you originate and/or take direct control over will be more successful than you may anticipate at this time. Don’t be afraid to tackle bigger-than-life situations. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Whether you realize it or not, it would do a world of good to express your deepest fears and innermost feelings to someone you trust. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Organizations or group functions could hold a special appeal at this time, perhaps because your instincts are telling you that something good could develop through these contacts. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be on the outlook for something positive to develop where work or career is concerned. Good things could happen, but you must be mentally prepared to act on them when they do. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Knowledge or experiences can be put to use in ways that will better your standing in the workplace, community or group involvements. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You could be invited to join an endeavor that involves a number of people who are on the verge of starting something significant, owing in part to the intelligence and courage of one or two of the participants. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Although you’ve always been a joiner, a partnership at this time could turn out to be quite different — and far more rewarding CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) Do not be afraid to elevate your sights and take on goals or objectives that you thought were always beyond your scope. You’re far more capable of achieving big things than you think. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Go out of your way to cultivate a couple of new friends. Those friendships you develop at this time could become far more meaningful in your life than you can imagine. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Today might have you reflecting upon many of the new people, ideas or activities you’ve been exposed to lately, which is a good thing. ARIES (March 21-April 19) Beginning today, some favorable shifts could start to take place in several areas of your life. Even though the opportunities will be there, you will have to recognize. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You are entering a brandnew cycle that could prove to be exceptionally beneficial to you materially. Don’t sit on things, because it would be a waste not to do your part. WHAT’S ON TONIGHT Donald Duck Crossword Fun For Tuesday June 3, 2008 Henry Cryptoquip Mickey Mouse A Look at the Stars STAR - TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2008 - Page 11 Community Calendar TUESDAY, JUNE 3 • The Watauga Association of Genealogists will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Johnson City Public Library, 100 W. Millard St. The program will be presented by Donna C. Briggs, Margaret W. Hougland and Betty Jane Hylton. The program will be “Beyond the Census, Part I,” which is designed to aid researchers seeking more information beyond the population censuses. Anyone interested in genealogy is welcome to attend. For more information, please contact Glenn Stroup at 753-7896. • The Elizabethton Area Chapter No. 1434 AARP will be having a regular monthly meeting at 2 p.m. in the fellowship hall of First United Methodist Church on E Street. After the business meeting, an interesting program will be presented by Tracey Kendall with the Alzheimer’s Association, who will talk about what every person should know about normal aging versus memory loss. Refreshments will be served. All members and anyone interested in becoming a member are invited to attend. • Watauga Post No. 49 of the American Legion and Ladies Auxiliary will have their regular monthly meeting at the Post Home on Watauga Avenue. Dinner will be at 6 p.m., with business meetings to follow. All members are urged to attend. Any eligible veteran and their spouse interested in becoming a member are invited. • The Carter County Amateur Radio Association (CCARA) will hold its monthly business and information sharing meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the Elizabethton Municipal Airport meeting room. For more information about the organization, visit the CCARA Web site at www.kf4zqa.com, or call Jerry Lake, CCARA President, 725-2662, or Mike Otis, Vice President, 474-3946. • The Green Pastures Group of Alcoholics Anonymous will meet at 8 p.m. in the Conference Room at Crossroads, 413 East Elk Ave., Elizabethton. • Al-Anon “Free to Be Me” meeting will be held at the Watauga Association of Baptists office, across from Elizabethton Lumber, from 6-7 p.m. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4 • The Carter County Republican Women will meet at noon in the Winford Floyd Center of First Freewill Baptist Church, Second Street, Elizabethton. Guest speaker will be State Representative Kent Williams. All members and any woman interested in joining are encouraged to attend. THURSDAY, JUNE 5 • Old Dogs-New Tricks will be playing at the State Street Mural in Bristol from 7-10 p.m. Admission is free. The band will be introducing their newest CD, “I Believe in Angels.” Bring a lounge chair and plan to have a good time. • The Roan Mountain 12-Step Group of Alcoholics Anonymous will meet at 7 p.m. at Magill Presbyterian Church, 296 Highway 143, Roan Mountain. FRIDAY, JUNE 6 • The Green Pastures Group of Alcoholics Anonymous will meet at 8 p.m. in the Conference Room at Crossroads, 413 East Elk Ave., Elizabethton. SATURDAY, JUNE 7 • The Elizabethton VFW will host a Summer Bash Dance featuring Southern and Classic Rock and a mix of country and today’s hits provided by The Second Shift Band & Hazardous Levels with D J Hazardous. The event is open to the public. Doors open at 8:30 p.m. There is a $5 cover charge. • The Elizabethton Farmer’s Market will return for another season. Shoppers can find a variety of home-grown fruits and vegetables as well as canned goods, breads, jellies, sweet and handmade crafts. The market is open every Saturday from 9 a.m. until noon in the parking lot at Farm Bureau Insurance, located at the corner of Elk and Lynn Avenues. Anyone wanting to bring locally produced items to sell is welcome. For more information, call Susan Carter at 543-5083 or e-mail her at susaneileen818@yahoo.com. • The Isaacs Whitehead Family Reunion will be held at noon at the Little Doe Freewill Baptist Church Fellowship Hall. Those attending are asked to bring a covered dish. For more information, call Joyce at 543-4653 and leave a message. Chemo, radiation up next for Sen. Kennedy DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — Sen. Edward M. Kennedy was recovering Tuesday at Duke University Medical Center, a day after undergoing risky surgery that experts said was designed to reduce his brain tumor and give chemotherapy and radiation treatments a chance to work. The 76-year-old senator was expected to stay at the North Carolina hospital for about a week before returning home to Massachusetts for further treatment. In the following days, Kennedy will probably be given drugs to prevent brain swelling and seizures, which are possible complications of the surgery. The senator will also be closely watched for bleeding and blood clots, because strokes are also a risk, though they are uncommon. “After a brief recuperation, he will begin targeted radiation at Massachusetts General Hospital and chemotherapy treatment,” his doctor, Dr. Allan Friedman, said in a statement following Monday’s procedure. “I hope that everyone will join us in praying for Sen. Kennedy to have an uneventful and robust recovery.” Doctors gave few details about the surgery, and did not say how much was removed. The procedure lasted about 3 1/2 hours, and when he emerged, a family spokeswoman said he told his wife, Vicki, that he felt “like a million bucks.” The sole surviving son of America’s most glamorous and tragic political family was diagnosed last month with a malignant glioma, an often lethal type of brain tumor discovered in about 9,000 Americans a year. Details about Kennedy’s exact type of tumor have not been disclosed, but some cancer specialists have said it is a glioblastoma multiforme — an especially deadly and tough-to-remove type — because other kinds are more common in younger people. Cutting a tumor down to size — or “debulking” it — is extremely delicate because of the risk of harming healthy brain tissue that governs movement and speech. But Friedman, who is the top neurosurgeon at Duke and an internationally known tumor surgeon, said Kennedy should not experience any permanent neurological effects. Median survival for glioblastomas is 12 to 15 months, but the range is wide, said Dr. Mark Gilbert, a brain tumor expert at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. The outlook for patients with malignant gliomas is poor, and depends on what type of glioma a patient has. Me- dian survival for patients with moderately severe ones is three to five years, and less than a year for those with the most severe type. Doctors have not revealed Kennedy’s treatment plan, but typical radiation treatment is five days a week for a month, using 3D imaging techniques that narrowly deliver the beams to the tumor, affecting as little surrounding tissue as possible. Kennedy also likely will receive the chemotherapy drug Temodar during and after radiation. It can cause typical chemo side effects — nausea, vomiting and fatigue — but treatments are much better for these than even a few years ago, doctors stressed. He also may be treated with Avastin, a newer targeted drug to deprive the tumor of its blood supply, though this is still experimental as initial treatment, rather than after patients have relapsed. Monday’s operation “spells nothing but hope,” Dr. John Sampson, associate deputy director of Duke’s brain tumor center, said from Chicago, where he was attending a conference of 30,000 cancer specialists. “What we’re seeing with the surgery and this conference is that there’s hope for patients with this kind of cancer.” Texas sect children reunited with parents SAN ANGELO, Texas (AP) — Jennetta Jessop fought back tears when she was reunited with her 5-year-old son, two months after the state raided her polygamist sect’s ranch and took away her children. “I just love my children so much,” said Jessop, who picked up her son Monday at a Fort Worth shelter and had four other children to collect. “This is the happiest day of my life.” Parents took 129 of the roughly 430 children in foster care on Monday after a judge signed an order clearing the children to leave with their parents, bowing to a state Supreme Court ruling that the seizure was not justified. Child welfare officials expected many of the remaining children to go home Tuesday as parents traveled across the sprawling state to foster facilities where the children were scattered. Amid the parents’ joy, a church elder announced what he called a clarifica- tion in sect policy aimed at keeping such a seizure from ever happening again: Future marriages would only involve sect members who were of legal age. “The church will counsel families that they neither request nor consent to any underage marriages,” Willie Jessop said late Monday, reading from a statement at the ranch in Eldorado. Many sect members have the same last name but may or may not be related. Willie Jessop said the church has been widely misunderstood and insisted marriages within the church have always been consensual. He would not say whether marriages of underage minors had taken place in the past but said the sect as a whole should not be punished for the misdeeds of a few. Judge Barbara Walther’s order requires the parents to stay in Texas, to attend parenting classes and to allow the children to be ex- amined as part of any abuse investigation. But it does not put restrictions on the children’s fathers, require the parents to renounce polygamy or force them to leave the Yearning For Zion Ranch run by the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, a breakaway sect of the Mormon church. Child Protective Services removed all the children from the ranch after an April 3 raid prompted by calls to a domestic abuse hotline that purportedly came from a 16-year-old mother who was being abused by her middle-age husband. The calls are now being investigated as a hoax, but authorities contended all the children were at risk because church teachings pushed underage girls into marriage and sex. The church has denied any children were abused, and members have said they are being persecuted for their religion, which believes polygamy brings glo- rification in heaven. Marleigh Meisner, a spokeswoman for the childprotection agency, said authorities still have concerns about the children’s safety, and the investigation into possible abuse would continue. The Supreme Court last week affirmed an appeals court ruling that found the agency overreached by putting all the sect children, including infants and boys, in foster care. The high court and the appeals court rejected the state’s argument that all the children were in immediate danger from what it said was sexual abuse of teenage girls at the ranch and the grooming of boys to become perpetrators. The Third Court of Appeals ruled that the state failed to show that any more than five of the teenage girls were being sexually abused, and had offered no evidence of sexual or physical abuse against the other children. FOR INFORMATION ON STOCKS, BONDS, MUTUAL FUNDS, CDs, AND IRAs CALL US. TOCK EPORT R 337 E. Elk Ave. Edward Jones 543-7848 Financial Advisor THE MARKET IN REVIEW STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS " GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last ;WXR6IJMR 1ELERKV8 %PSR97% ,SPP]'T 8IWSVS 4EXVMSX'R 1EWWI])R .EFMP 'IRXIVPMRI *VSRXMIV3MP Chg %Chg " AMEX GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last 1I\GS)R *MIPH4RX 8VEZIP'XVW 7IERIVK][X 7EQW3 +R 4EVR]E %Q3 + 4]VEQMH3MP 'QTPPRXR]E 'LIRMIVI)R Chg %Chg " NASDAQ GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last 6S]EPI)R -2<-RG[X %Q)P8IGL %GSVHE8L %ZERX-QVW 'LMR')HYR 4SOIV8IO 7]RXL)RR %FMSQIH &VMK)\T Chg %Chg LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last Chg %Chg ,EVVMW'SVT 7MQGIVI4L -(8'T' +VETL4OK 2EZMSW[X 1EKRIXIO ;WXR%PPM& ;EVRIV1YW /VMWT/VQ 8LIVEKIR LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last Chg %Chg %IVSGRXV] 'LMRE7LIRR 7XITLER'S 1MRVEH 0E^/ET %Q&MPXVX 4VSXEPM\ 2XLR8GL 4,'-RG 8ERH]0XLV LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last Chg %Chg 4EPQ,,Q -'3+PF% /SLPFIVK 1%44LR 8VERWGEX 'QX]&G2: 7IVZMH]RI 1IVYIPS1 )YVS&RGWL 8VYQT)RX MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Name Vol (00) Last Chg 74(6 74*RGP M7L6/R]E 4V97L555 74)RK] 4V97L7 4 M7L.ETRR]E 4VS97L3+ 4VS9PX555 M7L)1OXR]E MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Name Vol (00) Last Chg 74(6 74*RGP M7L6/R]E 4V97L555 74)RK] 4V97L7 4 M7L.ETRR]E 4VS97L3+ 4VS9PX555 M7L)1OXR]E Name Vol (00) ;EGLSZME 'MXMKVT +IR)PIG 4JM^IV 0ILQER&V &OSJ%Q *SVH1 .41SVK'L +R1SXV )\\SR1FP Last DIARY %HZERGIH (IGPMRIH 9RGLERKIH 8SXEPMWWYIW 2I[,MKLW 2I[0S[W :SPYQI Chg 543-1181 www.edwardjones.com Member New York Stock Exchange, Inc and Securities Investor Protection Corporation David Wortman AAMS NYSE 401 Hudson Drive DIARY %HZERGIH (IGPMRIH 9RGLERKIH 8SXEPMWWYIW 2I[,MKLW 2I[0S[W :SPYQI DIARY %HZERGIH (IGPMRIH 9RGLERKIH 8SXEPMWWYIW 2I[,MKLW 2I[0S[W :SPYQI Name Ex %16 %8 8-RG %PXVMEW %Q-RXP+T %QKIR %RLIYWV %TTPI-RG %8137 &440' &OSJ%Q &SIMRK '7< 'LIZVSR 'MWGS 'MXMKVT 'SGE'P 'SQGEWX 'SQGWTGP ':6(W 'SRI\ERXL 'RX[H*R (EMQPIV (IPP-RG (MWRI] (S['LQ )1''T )EWX'LQ )/SHEO )QIVWSR)P )\\SR1FP *WX,SVM^SR *PIIX)R *SVH1 +IR)PIG +R1SXV +PE\S7/PR ,IMR^ ,I[PIXX4 ,SQI(T ,SR[PP-RXP M7L.ETRR]E M7L6/R]E -RXIP -&1 .41SVK'L .SLR.R /IPPSKK /IRRIQXPW 07--RHW YTD Div Yld PE Last Chg %Chg 2= 2= 2= 2= 2EWH 2= 2EWH 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2EWH 2= 2= 2EWH 2EWH 2= 2EWH 2= 2= 2EWH 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= %QI\ %QI\ 2EWH 2= 2= 2= 2= 2= 2EWH Name Ex Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants.Gainers and Losers must be worth at least $2 to be listed in tables at left. Most Actives must be worth at least $1. Volume in hundreds of shares. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial. Financial Advisor DAILY DOW JONES YTD Div Yld PE Last Chg %Chg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urt Alexander CFP® 52-Week High Low STOCK MARKET INDEXES Name (S[-RHYWXVMEPW (S[8VERWTSVXEXMSR (S[9XMPMXMIW 2=7)'SQTSWMXI %QI\1EVOIX:EPYI 2EWHEU'SQTSWMXI 7 4 7 41MH'ET 6YWWIPP ;MPWLMVI Last Net Chg %Chg YTD %Chg 12-mo %Chg MUTUAL FUNDS Total Assets Name Obj ($Mlns) %QIVMGER*YRHW+VS[%QIV%Q 0+ %QIVMGER*YRHW-RG%QIV%Q 1% %QIVMGER*YRHW-RZ'S%Q%Q 0: %QIVMGER*YRHW;%1YX-RZ%Q 0: *MHIPMX]'SRXVE 0+ *MHIPMX]1EKIPPER 0+ 3TTIRLIMQIV(MWGSZIV%Q 7+ 4YXREQ+VS[-RG%Q 0: 4YXREQ:S]EKIV%Q 0+ :ERKYEVH;RHWV 0: NAV Total Return/Rank 4-wk 12-mo 5-year & % ) % % ' & ( % % & ' % ' ) ) ( ) ) ( Pct Min Init Load Invt 20 20 20 CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, ES -Europe Stock, FB -Foreign Large Blend, FG -Foreign LargeGrowth, FV -Foreign Large Value, IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MV Mid-Cap Value, SH -Specialty-heath, WS -World Stock, Total Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar. Page 12 - STAR - TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2008 All parents struggle with kid spending By LEANNE ITALIE Associated Press Parents in all income brackets have the shaky economy on their minds, but in this spendy era of the $900 baby stroller and the ultra-birthday party, are they resisting the urge to splurge on their kids? Many acknowledge there’s a blur between “necessities” and “luxuries” for their young ones as prices soar for everything from gas to milk. “There’s definitely pressure to buy. There’s more consuming and more competition,” said stay-at-home mom Juliet EwingKwan, who recently had her third child. “So much of it is about products. Even my husband knows who has the expensive stroller, who spent the money.” Ewing-Kwan dumped her pricey Bugaboo stroller to get around her New York City neighborhood with her newborn, opting for a lighter and cheaper jogger, but extracurricular Italian lessons, music class and yoga aren’t on the chopping block for her 6-yearold daughter and her 3-year-old son. “We do it for ourselves and we do it for our kids,” said Ewing-Kwan, 39, whose husband works for a Wall Street investment firm. “Those things are really important when applying to middle schools and to make them well-rounded individuals. And they love them.” Fretting the economy is a national parental pastime these days in an age when preschool can mean a $25,000 hit and summer camps can top $7,000. A middle-income family with a child born last year should expect to spend $204,060 on food, shelter, clothing, education and other necessities through age 17, according to an annual government survey. Taking into account inflation, the amount rises to $269,040, with variations for geographic location. That’s far more than the $25,230 in 1960 dollars parents were up against the first year the survey was conducted. Some parents will always be able to afford designer-wear for toddlers and fancy cell phones for grade-schoolers, but more average earners are scaling back, said Susan Smith Kuczmarski, a lecturer on family life and author of two books. “Nowadays, given the economy, most parents are not spending lavishly,” said Kuczmarski, who lives in Chicago and has three sons. Some might “indulge education,” as she did with private school for her kids, while doing without structured play activities or fancy toys. “Parents have lost touch with the notion that joy comes from bonding, being together and having fun, creative experiences,” she said. “Parents simply forget to step back and decide what’s important.” Stacy Francis, 33, the owner of a financial consulting firm just off Wall Street, has a Bugaboo, but she bought it on eBay for 2-yearold Sebastian. Rather than shop hipster tot boutiques in her lower Manhattan neighborhood, she heads to her hometown near Ann Arbor, Mich., to buy her son’s clothes. While she doesn’t chase the Joneses, Francis understands the pull, recalling a black tie backyard birthday bash her family attended for a 4-year-old complete with tuxedoed waiters passing trays of hors d’oeuvres and Dom Perignon. There were roaming clowns, a popcorn circus wagon and an inflatable moonwalk, climbing wall and obstacle course for the kids. “I think we just assume if this is what our friends are doing, the people that are part of our lives, our colleagues, well that sounds pretty reasonable,” she said. “As a parent you can definitely get carried away and start to believe that the amount of money you spend on your child, the clothes they’re wearing, the activities they do, show how much you love them.” Melissa Ford, a 29-year-old stay-at-home mom in Midlothian, Va., with two boys and a third child on the way, says she catches herself thinking her children “need” whatever her friends’ children have. But she skips getting together with mom friends for rompand-roll gym class. “We romp and roll at the park,” she said. “I’ve never heard someone say I really wish my mom would have gotten me that Barbie. I hear people saying I wish that my mom and dad had been home more or listened to me more or that I felt more loved.” For some parents, thoughts of their own childhoods bubble up when it comes to money. Meri Rogers, who lives in the southwest Missouri town of Webb City, has three boys and a girl. Sophia, 6, is a budding Hannah Montana fan with exactly one Miley Cyrus item to her name, a “girls rule” necklace. The thought of piling on the Miley or spending big for Hannah concert tickets that went earlier this year for $350 and more doesn’t enter into Rogers’ parenting equation. Rogers, 38, grew up on a 180-acre farm not far from her town, her family of five and nine foster kids living off their garden, and the cattle and pigs they raised for slaughter. “I distinctly remember having one pair of pants for most of a school year and being thankful they were white because that way I could match them with different shirts,” she said. Rogers is content to live off her husband’s $50,000-a-year salary as the controller for an electric company as they whittle down thousands in debt. Growing up as she did, it’s hard for her to hear her kids beg for things at the checkout line or complain about coming up short in other material ways, like not being able to participate in expensive sports leagues. “Our basic theory is you’re not put on this earth to collect as much crap as you can before you die. We do very simple things for the birthdays and they seem to accept it,” said Rogers, who tries for teachable moments with her kids on money issues without “making them feel guilty for having desires.” They attend free or low cost concerts and other cultural offerings around town and seek out discounts at the local skate park and gymnastics spot. They go to the library up the street once a week and buy store brands when grocery shopping. They rotate extracurricular activities. “I don’t want to begrudge them everything that they want. It’s a balancing act. I was raised so poor and never, ever would I have asked for anything silly or expensive. My oldest was fussing the other day over his ice cream being wrong in the cup or something and it just threw me back. I was like, ‘Don’t you even ...’” Jennifer Witteborg’s dad hung sheetrock and drywall for a living across the country from Rogers in San Diego. Her mom stayed home with Witteborg and her eight brothers and sisters. Now a 49-year-old mother of five, Witteborg lives in tiny Rixeyville, Va., with her husband and two high school kids still left at home. “Last year and this year, my younger daughter’s prom dresses were purchased at the local thrift shop for $10 plus tax. Luckily she’s cool about doing that kind of thing,” she said. Witteborg gives her kids $30 or $40 in cash for Christmas so they can shop the after-holiday sales and get “more bang for their buck.” The couple pulled the plug on volleyball camp for their youngest daughter this summer because of the expense and renovated their kitchen and first-floor bathroom themselves last year ahead of a graduation party for one of their sons. Said Witteborg: “At 3 a.m., my son Alan looked up from hammering the subflooring in the kitchen and asked, ‘Haven’t you heard of child labor laws?’ I laughed and said, ‘You’re 18, get back to work. Discovery astronauts do first spacewalk today HOUSTON (AP) — Shuttle Discovery’s astronauts geared up for the first spacewalk of their mission Tuesday and the installation of Japan’s giant lab to the international space station. The two spacecraft linked up Monday, and the 10 space travelers immediately got ready to tackle their first big job. Discovery’s designated spacewalkers, Michael Fossum and Ronald Garan Jr., will prep the $1 billion lab, Star word rates: 15 WORDS OR LESS 1 DAY - $4.75 2 DAYS - $7.00 6 DAYS - $10.00 PUBLIC NOTICES ********** ******** ******* ELIZABETHTON STAR Newspaper tubes are the Property of the Elizabethton STAR and are used for the delivery of our product. Any unauthorized use of Elizabethton STAR newspaper tubes for distribution of any material will result in a minimum $300 charge to the responsible party. ELIZABETHTON STAR ********** ********** ***** 3 ARTICLES LOST & FOUND DACHSHUND, long hair female, red piebald, white front, legs, tail. Kaylee. Very shy. Lost in vicinity of west Elizabethton, heading southeast. Call with location if seen. (423)292-2085. LOST orange cat, approx. 2yrs. old, Charity Hill Rd., Elizabethton. Family pet. Please call 512-0949. 5 SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS BUSINESS FOR SALE, Labels II Consignment Shop, 545 East Elk Avenue, contact for information (423)547-0221 CASH for your gold. Need money for your vacation & gas? Pay top dollar. 342-8373. WANT to buy blackberries and black raspberries, black walnuts. (423)542-3285. 6 GOODS TO EAT & SELL SCOTT’S STRAWBERRIES for sale in the Elk Crossing (Old Bemberg Center), and off Hwy. 107 Unicoi. Call 423-743-7511, 423-929-1021 named Kibo — Japanese for hope — for installation. Later in the day, astronauts working from inside will use a robot arm to lift the bus-size lab from the shuttle and anchor it to the station. Kibo, at 37 feet long, is bigger than the U.S. and European labs already attached to the space station. The spacewalkers also will try out some cleaning methods on a jammed solar rotating joint that has ham- 542-1530 6 GOODS TO EAT & SELL STRAWBERRIES and peaches, Davis Girls Peach Shed, Hwy. 19E, Roan Mountain. 10 HELP WANTED GENERAL $500 SIGN-ON Bonus! Travel, Travel, Travel!!! Seeking 5 sharp guys or girls to join our young minded, hip-hop, rock-n-roll bluejean environment. Travel to CA, FL, HI and other US Cities! Jan 888- 361-1526. AVON, EARN extra cash. Only $10.00 to start. (423)741-5461, Melissa. EARN over $200.00 per month easily by donating Plasma. Call Plasma Biological Services @ 926-3169 HOME from trip help needed. High school, college girl. Do not call unless dependable. 423-926-6902. ATTENTION! DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED! Excellent pay plus great benefits as a first year driver with Werner. No experience needed! 15 day CDL training by C.D.I., 6201 Epps Mill Rd., Murfreesboro, TN. Get your career in gear! 1-888-892-7364 PAINTERS Well-Established Paint Contractor Seeking Experienced Painters For more info call 423-928-8351 RICHARDSON BUILDERS is hiring people experienced in the construction of metal buildings and people experienced in concrete formwork. Please apply in person at 145 Judge Don Lewis Boulevard, Suite 1 Elizabethton, TN 37643 (423)542-3400. SWITCHBOARD operator needed. For more information call Teresa at Grindstaff’s Monday-Friday, 8a.m.2p.m. 423) 542-2187. 11 PROFESSIONAL HELP WANTED IMMEDIATE OPENING RESTAURANT GENERAL MANAGER EXPERIENCED IN CATERING AND SPECIAL EVENTS SEND RESUME TO 423-547-5960 pered energy production at the space station since last fall, and help remove a 50-foot inspection boom from the orbiting complex. Discovery didn’t have enough room for an inspection boom; Kibo filled the entire payload bay. So the last shuttle crew left one behind at the space station in March. The astronauts will use the boom next week to check Discovery’s wings and nose cap for any dam- age that could endanger them during re-entry. Imagery experts, in the meantime, are poring over the 302 digital pictures that the space station crew took of Discovery’s belly right before the docking. About five pieces of foam insulation broke off Discovery’s external fuel tank during liftoff, but are not believed to have caused any damage. NASA, meanwhile, is investigating the worst launch pad damage in 27 years of space shuttle flight. A large section of the flame trench — 20 feet by 75 feet — broke apart, and chunks of the large heat-resistant fire bricks and concrete mortar were scattered all the way past the chainlink fence 1,800 feet away. The fence was damaged in places. None of the debris appeared to hit Discovery, said LeRoy Cain, chairman of the mission management Classifieds 11 PROFESSIONAL HELP WANTED 15 SERVICES OFFERED LPN or Medical Assistant needed for physician’s office: Send resume to: PO Box 640, Elizabethton, TN 37644. Exotic Landscape & Lawn Care. Match or beat most bids. FREE estimate. Call Brett 741-2925. POST Office Now Hiring! Avg. Pay $20/hr, $57K/yr. Includes Fed Ben, OT. Placed by adSource, Not aff w/USPS who hires. 1-866-533-3807. HAUL gravel for driveways, dirt for sale, also backhoe work of any kind. Call 423-542-2909. POSTAL JOBS $17.89 to $28.27hr., now hiring. For application and free government job info, call American Asso. of Labor. 1-913-599-8226, 24hrs. emp. serv. 15 SERVICES OFFERED **AMPED ELECTRIC state certified, new, old construction, panel upgrades, repairs, troubleshooting, reasonable rates, (423)768-3838, (423)957-9220. *Attic Insulation blown-in, energy savings guaranteed. All fiberglass, Free estimates, 423-389-2559, 423-542-3963 leave message. *Handy Andy Home Improvements: Interior, exterior, pressure washing, painting, gutter cleaning. (423) 543-1979, (423) 895-0071 BRIAN’S STORAGE BUILDINGS! For sale. Display lot in Hunter on Hwy. 91. Financing available. 647-1084. BACKHOE front loader, septic systems, field lines, land cleared, basements. Demolition. Affordable. 22yrs. experience. 542-3002. COMPLETE kitchen and bath remodeling. Call Bulldog Plumbing. State license. Insured. (423)725-2517. CONCRETE: Form & pour walls, flatwork, footings. Large & small. 423-768-2793 or 423-768-4474. ELIZABETHTON:Construction, Trackhoe, backhoe, frontloader, landcleared, site work septic systems, dirt, shale for sale. (423)547-0408, 895-0499. HOMES & MOBILE HOME IMPROVEMENTS. Additions, sunrooms, textured ceilings, porches, carports, garages. Work guaranteed. (423)542-9483 INSTALL finished hardwood floors, ceramic tile, block and rock, call Shane @ (423)213-1176 or (423)542-3924. JLJ HOME IMPROVEMENT, remodeling, room additions & vinyl siding. Licensed & Insured. 423-543-2101. KY CONSTRUCTION All types of excavation and demolition. Dirt and shale for sale. Specializing in finish grade work. Keith Younce (423)-341-7782 or (423)543-2816. KYTE Brother’s Paving. New construction, add on, patching, rock hauled, driveway grading, Bobcat service. (423)547-9668. Nixon’s Lawn & Tree Trimming Service. Plus we do odd jobs. FREE ESTIMATES. Call 423-542-8514. PAINTING interior, exterior, minor carpentry and repair. 20yrs. experience. FREE ESTIMATES. William Richardson 423-474-3216. POWER WASHING and painting, Clean out garages and basements. 25 years experience, free estimates, (423)647-6575. ROOFING, siding, deck work, over 25 years experience. Call anytime (423)895-3609 TIRED of your maid Service not meeting your needs fully at home, and paying those high prices. Need some extra help around the house. Laundry, cleaning out closets or just straightening up. Call Maid In Heaven. (423) 512-2507. 15 SERVICES OFFERED RETIRED Carpenter seeks small renovation and home repair projects. Reasonable, honest, dependable. (423) 213-7540, (423)542-2600. WILL DO HOUSECLEANING and alternations or any sewing needs. (423)342-7855 WILL sit with elderly or baby sit, any hours. (423)335-0273. 19 BUILDINGS SALE/RENT STEEL ARCH BUILDINGS ! Made in USA. Great for workshop or garage. Huge savings on canceled orders! 25’x34’ & 30’x54’. First Come-First Served! 866-352-0469. 20 ARTICLES FOR SALE N-L Appliance Parts. Kenmore, Whirlpool, GE washers, dryers, stove, refrigerator parts, In shop repairs only. Appliances are checked out free when brought in with no obligations. 547-9123. NEW HIVES AND NEW SWARMS HONEYBEES. (423)542-4475, (423)612-0132 USED Kenmore washer and gas dryer. Good condition. $200. for both. 543-8939. 21 ARTICLES W/PHOTO 134-A & R-12 air conditioner machines, Cornwell Top tool box, small hand tools. (423)213-7175. ADULT 2 seater go-cart 150cc Maxxam forward/reverse, bought new, $2,000. Wood swing set $100 (423)542-3778 4 person hot tub $500.; total gym $75.; 4 lug rims with tires. 1951/60/15 $75.; 150 gal. water barrel $75.; treadmill $50. (423)542-0258, leave msg. if no answer. CHERRY china cabinet table with the extender, 6 chairs. $800 (423)542-8896, (423)213-8545. CLOCK HOBBYIST selling serviced antique mantle clocks $150. up, service and repair available. (423)474-4375, (423)213-7205. DINING room table with 6 chairs, hutch, solid wood. $500, (423)542-2845. HAY and straw for sale. Square bails, good quality hay, (423)543-6583, (423)213-0248 leave message. HONEY BEE’S and equipment, fiberglass tomato sticks, rail’s, rod’s, and other tubing. (423)538-7696. MURRAY Riding Mower 46” deck, 20HP, one owner. 423-543-4285 after 4:30p.m. LINE AD DEADLINES 928-4151 25 PETS & SUPPLIES 2 LAB FEMALE MIXED PUPPIES TO GIVE AWAY, HELP WITH SPAYING 7 WEEKS OLD. (423)957-6612. ADORABLE CKC Miniature Schnauzer puppies. salt and pepper. Shots, wormed, groomed. $350, 423-753-8224. FOR ADOPTION: Husky Mix male dog. Very gentle. Will vaccinate and neuter. 423-542-8930 or 423-342-6333. Found white & brown male bird dog, neutered on Short Coal Chute Road. 423-542-9098. FREE KITTENS. 423-725-3815. 29 TOWNHOUSES CONDOS FOR SALE/RENT 20 ARTICLES FOR SALE DIXIE BUILDING SYSTEMS For all your building needs ranging from carports to post frame buildings. Any size or colors available. Call today (423)538-7842 23 YARD SALES AUCTION. Every Monday & Thursday nights at 6:30p.m. Across from KFC in Piney Flats. Tools, household goods, antiques, misc. Call Dixie Design Gallery, Auctioneer Joe Eller, License #2752. Firm #2665. 957-1166. HUGE yard sale, Wednesday through Saturday 8:00a.m.-? Hwy. 91, across from Dollar General Store. PERSONAL PROPERTY DOWNSIZING SALE, JUNE 7TH, 6:00P.M., HWY. 11-W AUCTION HOUSE, KINGSPORT 50+ Pieces of Fenton, old clocks, Smith glass, Antique Furniture, tools, riding mower, Craftsman tool, oak porch rockers and patio set, round front buffet w/ball & claw feet, McCoy Cookie jars and glassware, Case knives, too much to list. firm #4921, (423)306-1225. team. The flame trench — dating back to the 1960s Apollo era and designed to deflect the exhaust of the booster rockets — is inspected regularly and undergoes periodic repair, Cain said. NASA does not need to use the pad again until the next shuttle launch in October. That mission — the final trip to the Hubble Space Telescope — should not be delayed as a result of the damage, Cain said. 2BR, 2-1/2BA condo new development, garage, private, wooded area, located 19E. $650mth., dep. 423-538-9481, 423-340-2309. CHARMING Condo on Max Jett Road, 2BR, 1 1/2 BA, no pets, References required. (423)342-4237 30 ROOMS FOR RENT LARGE room with private bath and entrance. Fully furnished plus utilities. Monthly. (423)542-4475, (423)612-0132. 31 APARTMENT FOR RENT **ALL Real Estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. ”Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians; F SA OR LE MONDAY------------FRIDAY 2:00 P.M. TUESDAY-------------MONDAY 2:00 P.M. WEDNESDAY--------TUESDAY 2:00 P.M. THURSDAY------WEDNESDAY 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY------------THURSDAY 2:00 P.M. SUNDAY---------------FRIDAY 2:00 P.M. 31 APARTMENT FOR RENT 31 APARTMENT FOR RENT pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD Toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The Toll-free telephone number for the Hearing Impaired is: 1-800-927-9275 1BR, very private, utilities, cable included. 400mth. +dep. 423-538-9481, 423-3402309. 1BR, stove, refrigerator, washer, dryer furnished, no smokers or pets. $300. month, $150. deposit. (423)542-6667. 1BR, stove, refrigerator, water, garbage pickup furnished, mini-blinds. Call (423)542-9200. 2BR between JC and Elizabethton, appliances, water, trash included. No pets, $330month, $200deposit (423)543-7677. 2BR duplex, W/D, appliances. 127 Hopson Rd., Central Community. $400. month plus deposit. (423)725-2770, 612-2847. BRISTOL APTS 431 West G Street Upstairs 3BR, 1BA, $400. month, $200. deposit. Utilities can be included. 2BR, storage building, W/D hook-up, no pets, $400 month, $300 deposit. references, credit check, (423)542-2918. 2BR, 1BA. $390.-$415. month. Security deposit $390.-$415. Airport Apartments. Call 423-547-2871, NETRP & sales. 2BR, APT. 2BA, Keenburg Community. 423-542-8376. 2BR, upstairs, private entrance, near Save-A-Lot, stove, refrigerator, No pets, $400. month, $100. deposit. 423-213-5606. 915 North Sycamore Street, like new, 2BR, with dining room, has deck on back facing Watauga River in town. Stove, refrigerator furnished, W/D hookup with bar and kitchen. $450month, $400deposit. (423)542-5726. BRISTOL APTS 431 West G Street (2 units)Upstairs, 2BR, 1BA, $350. month, $200. deposit. Utilities can be included. BROWNLOW APTS 425 West G Street Groundfloor 2BR, 1BA, $375. month, $200. deposit, washer/dryer hookup, Utilities can be included. 542-8493, 956-0068, before 5 p.m. BROWNLOW APTS 425 West G Street Groundfloor, 2BR, 1BA, $375. month, $200. deposit, Washer/dryer hookup, Utilities can be included 542-8493 956-0068 BEFORE 5 pm HAMPTON: Downstairs, 1BR, W/D hook-up. $315. month, equal deposit. John S. Brookshire Real Estate. (423)543-6765. MILLIGAN - Detached apt. with porch. Blinds, appliances, water, garbage furnished, $400.month $200.deposit. 423-928-1673 New Apartments 2BR, Stateline Rd. Stove, refrigerator, WD, CH&A. No Pets. $450.mo. $400.dep. 423-542-8172 VARIETY of 1BR and 2BR apartments available. Rent: $250month & up. Call Manager. 423-547-2871. 32 HOUSES FOR RENT 2BR, 2 1/2BA, 2 car garage, CH&A, W/D hook-up. no smoking or pets. Water included. References preferred. $850 month plus deposit. 423-725-4251. 2ND AVENUE, HAMPTON, 2BR, 1BA, CH&A,. No pets, no smoking. $500month, $500deposit (423)543-8602, (423)747-7286. STAR - TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2008 - Page 13 Star word rates: 15 WORDS OR LESS 1 DAY - $4.75 2 DAYS - $7.00 6 DAYS - $10.00 32 HOUSES FOR RENT 3BR, 1BA, brick, refrigerator, stove, W/D hook ups. No smoking/ pets. $625.month plus deposit. (423)542-4597. 3BR, 1BA, Unaka School District, large lot, no pets, references and deposit required. $550month (423)213-8172 3BR, fireplace, large livingroom, No pets. Appliances, washer, dryer furnished. $550. month, $550. deposit. (423)725-4792. ASSORTMENT of rentals: Farm, brick, frame, pets, rent to own, furnished and unfurnished. 282-6486. GOLF Course Acres. 4BR, 2.5BAS, 2 car garage. Kitchen with appliances, LR, DR, huge finished basement. Screened-in back patio. Storage bldg. $1000month. Deposit 423-957-6451 Remodeled 517 S. Lynn 2BR, 1BA, CH&A, W/D hookup, appliances, hardwood. $550. month, 423677-6502 STONEY CREEK AREA: 2BR, 1BA. $350.mth., $350.dep. Rent & deposit required. One year lease. (423)677-8262. 33 MOBILE HOME FOR RENT 12X60 mobile home. Bob Little Rd. 2BR, good condition. $335. month + deposit. (423)542-8683, 647-3778. 16’ wide, nice private lot, 2BR, 2BA, washer/ dryer $410month, $400deposit, No pets. (423)542-2798, (423)957-0600 3BR, 2BA & 2BR, 1BA, Happy Valley area. References, deposit, appliances. 423257-2106, 423543-2651. RENT TO OWN remodeled 28x70 Clayton 3BR, 2BA on 1/2 acre lot upper Stoney Creek. $2000 down with owner financing $700 month 423-943-3418 or 423-895-0678 35 TOWNHOUSES W/PHOTO 542-1530 38 LOTS FOR SALE Great building lot in Quail Hollow Subdivision. 1.06 acres. 423-542-4751. Classifieds 43 HOUSES W/PHOTO Watauga Lake. Beautiful lake front lot, lays well. 423-768-3350. 40 LOTS FOR RENT MOBILE home lot for rent. Milligan. $135. month, $100. deposit. (423)342-4237. 42 HOUSES FOR SALE 3BR, 2FBA, full size basement, garage, 1 acre land. 12 minutes from Bristol Speedway. (423)647-1169. 43 HOUSES W/PHOTO 115 HAMILTON Gorgeous one level with lots of upscale touches. Cathedral ceiling, Beautiful custom kitchen, expansive tile work. Split bedroom plan. Oversized 2 car garage. Long range Mountain and Valley views. 3BD/2BA. Must see. $169,900 169 GREENBRIAR HAMPTON 1.4 acres, nice private setting on this 2BR, 1BA home. Very well maintained. Many updates. Large growth trees surrounding the area. carport. $59,900. RUSS SWANAY REALTY 543-5741 Almost 3 acres of level park like land. Gazebo. Detached 2 Car Carport. 4 BR, 3BA and 2 kitchens. 2,382 sf. $134,900 RUSS SWANAY REALTY 423-543-5741 RUSS SWANAY REALTY 543-5741 315 COTTAGE AVE. 122 RUNION Affordable, close in, yet in quiet country location. Immaculately maintained. 2BD/1BA. CH&A. Carport. New metal roof, heat pump, and water heater. Large lot is completely fenced. Move in condition w/stove, refrigerator, washer and dryer. $79,900 RUSS SWANAY REALTY 543-5741 3BR, 1BA on 1/2 acre, CH&A, nice location, large lot, carport, large utility room, front porch, hardwood floors and carpet. $78,000. (423)543-3821 540 JOBE RD West End. Beautiful re_finished oak flooring, 2 fps, newer roof. Attached garage. 3BD/1BA. CH&A. $112,000 Daniel Price Century 21 Whitehead Woodson 725-4000 Penny Century 21 Whitehead Woodson 725-4000 36 LAND FOR SALE 5 acres, newly remodeled mobile home. Large decks, outbuilding. Hwy. 19E. Still at $56,000. (423)895-1159. WANTED 6+acre. Secluded with stream, pond, etc. 3BRs, 2BA house, preferably with basement. Carter, Johnson, Bluff City, Greene Co. area. Call (423)743-7451, leave message. 37 LAND W/PHOTO FOR SALE 126 CLAY LITTLE ROAD 3BR brick, 1 1/2 baths, living room, kitchen, dining room, double garage, CH&A, central vac., carport, 1/2 acre. $149,000 (423)542-8869 604 PARKWAY WEST END Large family home is not a drive by. Completely updated custom kitchen. 3 or 4BD/2BA, huge laundry. Upstairs is new w/private study, bath & huge master or large media room. New plumbing, wiring, and architectural roof. Concrete basement. Garage. Carport. $167,500 RUSS SWANAY REALTY 423-543-5741 OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 2:00PM-4:00PM 612 North Roan Street Elizabethton $119,000 0 Walnut Mountain "Getting Away" takes on new meaning with this 23.45 acre parcel. If you like to watch the sun rise this place is for you. $139,900 . Century 21 Whitehead Woodson Daniel Price 725-4000 TBD Dennis Cove Build your dream home on this nice building lot on Dennis Cove $17,000. Penny Century 21 Whitehead Woodson 725-4000 134 CAMELOT DR. HOWARD’S LANDING One of the nicest homes on the market. Gorgeous level lot. Great Room with hardwood flooring and fireplace. Custom kitchen with huge bar and abundance of cabinets and ceramic tile flooring. Huge media room. Garage. Oversized rooms. This home is a must see. $189,900. mls 264229 RUSS SWANAY REALTY 543-5741 Call Shar Saidla Realty Executives 423-895-0430 direct / 423-952-0226 office or visit this home at Shar's website www. happyhearth.biz. PIERCETOWN ROAD WATAUGA LIKE LIVING! TUCKED AWAY IN A PEACEFUL COVE. CLOSE TO COVE RIDGE MARINA. BEAUTIFUL MOUNTAIN VIEWS. BLUE RIDGE PROPERTIES 282-5182 SHERYL GARLAND 895-1690 SEVERAL COMMERCIAL LOTS AVAILABLE C21WHITEHEAD JONATHAN FULMER 543-4663 44 MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE 14x70 2BR, 2BA, 100x175 lot, shingle roof, paved driveway, 2 outbuildings and carport, (423)647-4812. 928-4151 PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICES ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS EAST TENNESSEE RAILROAD AUTHORITY 2007-2008 Track Rehabilitation Project ders is particularly called to the requirements as to conditions of employment to be observed and minimum wage rates to be paid under the contract. tured or un-matured, against the Estate of Anna White Wolfe are required to file the same with the Clerk and Master of the above Court within four (4) months from the date of the first publication of this Notice; otherwise, their claims will be forever barred. All persons indebted to the above Estate must come forward and make proper settlement with the undersigned at once. This the 22nd day of May, 2008. and make proper settlement with the undersigned at once. This the 30th day of May, 2008 PUBLIC NOTICE Separate sealed bids for the 2007-2008 Fiscal Year Track Rehabilitation Project on the East Tennessee Railway will be received by the East Tennessee Railroad Authority, at the office of Mr. Johnny Holder, Carter County Mayor, Carter County Courthouse, 801 Elk Avenue, Elizabethton, Tennessee, 37643, until 1:00 P.M. (eastern standard time zone) on Thursday the 19th day of June 2008, and then at said office publicly opened and read aloud. The work by Contractor will consist of furnishing all supervision, transportation, specified material, tools, equipment and labor necessary to complete the proposed track rehabilitation work, including rail laying, replacement of rail and ties, and grade crossing work as per the Project Documents, including, but not limited to the Plans and Specifications. This project is funded under an agreement with the Department of Transportation. The Information for bidders and other Project Documents may be ordered from the office of Crouch Engineering, P.C., 428 Wilson Pike Circle, Brentwood, TN 37027, (615) 791-0630. A non-refundable Plan fee in the amount of $100.00 will be required for each set of Plans and Project Documents sent to Contractors and/or suppliers. The owner reserves the right to waive any informalities or to reject any or all of the bids. Award of the bid is contingent upon availability of funds. Each bidder must deposit with his bid, security in the amount, form and subject to the conditions provided in the Information for Bidders. No Bidder may withdraw his bid within 120 days from bid opening. Attention of bid- Time limit - work will be completed within 120 calendar days from the date of written notice to proceed. Liquidated Damages: A penalty of $250 per calendar day will be assessed to the Contractor for each day beyond the stated time limits until the project is 100% complete. Bidders must be licensed general Contractors to perform the type construction herein described as required by the Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 62, Chapter 6, Section 62-6-119. A copy of the law is attached to the project Documents. A job showing will not be held, but interested parties may contact the Railroad General Manager, Mr. Keith Holley, to review the job site, located at the East Tennessee Railway, Legion Street, P.O. Box 1479, Johnson City, TN 37601 (423-928-3721). Hon. Bill Armstrong, Chairman EAST TENNESSEE RAILROAD AUTHORITY 6/3 IN THE CHANCERY COURT, PROBATE DIVISION OF CARTER COUNTY, AT ELIZABETHTON, TENNESSEE NOTICE TO CREDITORS per §TCA 30-2-306 PROBATE NO. P080056 ESTATE OF ANNA WHITE WOLFE DECEASED Notice is hereby given that on the 22nd day of May, 2008, Letters of Administration, in respect to the Estate of Anna White Wolfe deceased, were issued to the undersigned by the Chancery Court Clerk and Master, Probate Division, of Carter County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, ma- Teresa Wolfe McClain Administratrix Deceased: Anna White Wolfe Walter Lee Davis Attorney Joyce Ann Gentry Administratrix Deceased: Ralph Christopher Gentry Regina Shepherd Attorney Melissa Moreland Clerk and Master 6/3, 6/10 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, FOR CARTER COUNTY, AT ELIZABETHTON, TENNESSEE DEBBIE HONEYCUTT PRICE, PLAINTIFF, Civil Action No. C10838 vs. Melissa Moreland Clerk and Master 5/27, 6/3 IN THE CHANCERY COURT, PROBATE DIVISION OF CARTER COUNTY, AT ELIZABETHTON, TENNESSEE NOTICE TO CREDITORS per §TCA 30-2-306 PROBATE NO. P080057 ESTATE OF RALPH CHRISTOPHER GENTRY DECEASED Notice is hereby given that on the 30th day of May, 2008, Letters of Administration, in respect to the Estate of Ralph Christopher Gentry deceased, were issued to the undersigned by the Chancery Court Clerk and Master, Probate Division, of Carter County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the Estate of Ralph Christopher Gentry are required to file the same with the Clerk and Master of the above Court within four (4) months from the date of the first publication of this Notice; otherwise, their claims will be forever barred. All persons indebted to the above Estate must come forward SUE GOODWIN, JOANN NORRIS and GLEN HILMON, Defendents, NOTICE OF PARTITION SALE DEFENDENT We, Goodwin-Street Auction Company, in obedience to an Order of Circuit Court, for Carter County, at Elizabethton, Tennessee, in the above styled cause, the real properties in said Order will be sold on Saturday, June 28, 2008, at 10:30 a.m. at Railroad Grade Rd., 3rd Civil District of Carter County, Roan Mountain, Tennessee, will sell to the highest and best bidder, the real property of the late Herman Honeycutt and Velma Honeycutt that is recorded in Deed Book 453, Page 55, Map 84, Parcel 30.06, consisting of 5.41 acres with improvements (mobile home). Sale will be made with ten (10%) down on day of sale with the remainder paid on or before thirty (30) days of confirmation of sale. Sale is subject to confirmation by the Circuit Court. This the 2nd day of June, 2008 The Budget Committee of the Carter County Commission will hold a Public Hearing on Certified Tax Rate on June 16, 2008 at 6:00 p.m., in the 2nd Floor Courtroom of the Carter County Courthouse, 801 East Elk Avenue. Bill Armstrong, Chairman 6/03 NON-RESIDENT NOTICE IN THE CHANCERY COURT, PROBATE DIVISION, AT ELIZABETHTON, CARTER COUNTY, TENNESSEE IN RE: ESTATE OF RONDAL DWIGHT NAVE BY: PATRICK WILLIAM NAVE, ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF RONDAL DWIGHT NAVE, AND CHRISTOPHER LEE NAVE Plaintiffs VS BRIAN G. NAVE Defendant CIVIL ACTION NO. P070140 In this cause, it appearing from the Original Plantiff’s bill, which is sworn to, that the Defendant, Brian G. Nave, address unknown, it is ordered by me that publication be made for four successive weeks, as required by law, in the Elizabethton Star, a newspaper published in Elizabethton, Tennessee, in said County, notifying said Defendant to appear before our said Chancery Court, at the Courthouse, 801 East Elk Avenue, Elizabethton, within thirty (30) days after this notice has been published for four successive weeks in said newspaper, and make answer to said complaint, or the allegations thereof will be taken for confessed and this cause will be set for hearing ex parte as to the Defendant, Brian G. Nave. This 15th day of May, 2008. CLERK AND MASTER 5/20, 5/27, 6/3, 6/10 Jimmy D. Street Goodwin-Street Auction Company 6/3, 6/10, 6/17 55 BOATS FOR SALE 1980 36’ Gibson house boat, sleeps 5, Owner is caretaker and desires to sell. 895-2446. 1233 DENNIS COVE RD Custom-built mountain retreat Log home! This handcrafted home has fantastic views. $215,000 3319 Martindale Drive/Johnson City $195,000 ALL NEW kitchen, baths, heat pump, gorgeous hardwood floors. Spacious 3 Bd/2 Ba 1,576 sq ft. 2-car garage. in Elizabethton, located near WalMart and Lowes and behind Applebees, Exceptional location for a new business. 152 BERYL BLEVINGS ROAD PICTURE PERFECT LIVING AND LOW MAINTAINANCE TOO! $83,900 ONE-STORY LIVING IN THE PERFECT NEIGHBORHOOD! 2902 HIGHWAY 91 RUSS SWANAY REALTY (423)543-5741 1BR 1 1/2 BA CONDO. 43 HOUSES W/PHOTO LINE AD DEADLINES MONDAY------------FRIDAY 2:00 P.M. TUESDAY-------------MONDAY 2:00 P.M. WEDNESDAY--------TUESDAY 2:00 P.M. THURSDAY------WEDNESDAY 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY------------THURSDAY 2:00 P.M. SUNDAY---------------FRIDAY 2:00 P.M. VERY PRIVATE BACKYARD, FRUIT TREES AND FISH POND! Elizabethton City Schools 1,544 sq.ft., 4BRS, 2BAs, Spacious eat-in kitchen. Enclosed 2-car carport. 2 workshops. Gas Heat Pump. Some hardwood flooring. New roof with architectural shingles. MLS#248056. Realty Executives 423-952-0226 Shar Saidla 423-895-0430 61 CAMPERS & RV’S 1994 NU-WA Hitchhiker, Premier 34’, 5th wheel, slideout, self-contained. Can deliver. Asking $7,500 O.B.O. (941)716-3856. PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE OF A REGULAR SESSION OF THE CARTER COUNTY COMMISSION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to all members of the Carter County Commission, to all residents of the County of Carter, Tennessee, and to all persons interested, that the Regular Session of the Carter County Commission will be held Monday, June 16, 2008, 10:00 a.m., Main Courtroom, Carter County Courthouse, 801 E. Elk Avenue, Elizabethton, Tennessee. Agenda • Call to Order • Roll Call • Opening Prayer • Pledge of Allegiance • Resolution Honoring Ray Smith, Manager Elizabethton Twins • Don Hurst, Carter County Tomorrow • Public Comments • Recognition of Elected Officials/Guests • Acceptance of Minutes from Previous Meeting • Notaries/Bonds • Schedules of Property Added To and Deleted From County Tax Rolls • C o m m i t t e e Reports/Recommendations • Commissioner Comments • Adjourn All matters that may be normally considered may be taken up and acted on at such meetings. Johnny Holder, County Chairman Carter County, Tennessee 6/3 Announcements/Notices DIVORCE WITHOUT CHILDREN $95.00, Divorce with Children $95.00. With Free name change documents (wife only) and marital settlement agreement. Fast, easy and professional. Call 1-888-789-0198. Apts for Rent 5BD 3BA HOME ONLY $350/mo! 3bd 2ba Home only $299/mo! 5%dn, 20yrs @ 8%apr! For Listings & Info 800-482-9704 FORECLOSURES 1- 4 BD from $199/ mo! Buy a 4bd 2ba Home only $300/mo! 4%dn, 20yrs @ 8%apr! For Listings & Info 800-482-9704 Business Opportunities ALL CASH CANDY ROUTE Do you earn $800 in a day? Your own local candy route. Includes 30 Machines and Candy All for $9,995. 1-888-745-3351 Help Wanted SECRET SHOPPERS NEEDED FOR Store Evaluations. Get Paid to Shop and Rate Local Stores, Restaurants & Theaters. Flexible Hours, Training Provided. 1-800-585-9024 ext. 6993 MECHANICS: UP TO $20,000 bonus. Keep the Army National Guard Rolling. Fix Humvees, Strykers, etc. Expand your skills through career training. Be a Soldier. 1-800-GO-GUARD.com/mechanic Help Wanted - Drivers GUARANTEED WEEKLY SETTLEMENT CHECK. Join Wil-Trans Lease Operator Program. Get the Benefits of Being a Lease Operator without any of the Risk. 888-229-8715. Must be 23. ATTN DRIVERS. OTR SOLO & Team Drivers. 1 year w/Class A CDL. Raise every 6 months. Home every week. 1-800-6849140 ext. 2 www.biggexpress.com O W N E R O P E R AT O R S WA N T E D FOR regional runs. NC-SC-GA-TN. Earn $125,000 per year plus bonus. 100% no-touch, home every weekend. Commodity Express 800-763-0166 Ext. 112. Complete application @ www.commodityexpress.net DRIVERS: FRESH START SIGN- On Bonus 35-42 cpm Earn over $1000 weekly Excellent Bene�ts Need CDL-A & 3 mos recent OTR 800-635-8669 DRIVER- CDL-A. THE GRASS is Greener at PTL. Students with CDL Welcome excellent training Co. Drivers Earn up to 46¢pm Owner Operators Earn 1.35¢pm 22yrs of age, 12mos OTR. No Forced Northeast! Co. Drivers call: 800-8480405 O.Operators call: 877-774-3533 www.ptl-inc.com DRIVERS- COMPETITIVE PAY, GREAT Home Time, Van and Flatbed Fleets. Accepting Recent Grads. 23 YO, 1yr OTR, CDL-A. Smithway Motor Xpress 888-6197607 www.smxc.com DRIVERS- HOME WEEKENDS & Great Pay! Company/Lease Purchase available. Pd. vacation, premium bene�ts & more! CDL-A & 3 mos. experience req’d. Call (800) 441-4271 x TN-100. DRIVERS- FLATBED & REEFER Average $1.46-$1.49/Mile paid to truck all miles Excellent Network, Late Model Equipment, 401k, Blue Cross Insurance 800-771-6318 www.primeinc.com DRIVER CLASS A-CDL- COMPANY Drivers, Stu. Grads, Owners Ops. Excellent Pay, Medical Ins., 401(k), Rider Program, Tuition Reimbursement for Students. Star Transportation 888-670-5960 www.startransportation.com QUIT LONG- HAUL, RUN regional and Have It All! $.45/Mile. Home most weekends! Bene�ts! Stability for peace of mind! Heartland Express 1-800-441-4953 www.heartlandexpress.com DRIVER- MESILLA VALLEY TRANSPORT looking for top quality OTR Drivers. Good Equipment; Good Pay; Good Hometime. Minimum 2 years OTR. Call Mike/Joy 888-637-4552 or 615-627-5117. COME DRIVE WITH US Heartland Transportation Inc. $.36/Mile on All Miles Plus Bene�ts 2006 and Newer Equipment 53’ Reefers 48 States, For More Information Call Lisa (800) 237-1768 Home/Building Supplies BUY DIRECT OLD TIMER Log & Supply Kiln-Dried Logs, Beams, Tongue-Groove, Hardwood Flooring, Log Siding, Trim & Moldings Contact Brandon Cook 1-800467-3006 www.oldtimerloghomes.com Homes for Rent **FORECLOSURES/ BANK REPOS** 3BD 2ba $219/mo or $25,500! 5%dn, 20yrs @ 8% For Listings 800-546-3120 ext. S139 5BD 3BA HOME ONLY $350/mo! 3bd 2ba Home only $299/mo! 5%dn, 20yrs @ 8%apr! For Listings & Info 800-482-9704 FORECLOSURES 1- 4 BD from $199/ mo! Buy a 4bd 2ba Home only $300/mo! 4%dn, 20yrs @ 8%apr! For Listings & Info 800-482-9704 Homes for Sale AFFORDABLE 1-4BD HOMES FROM $199/mo! 3bd Home only $375/mo! Bank Repos & Foreclosures! For Listings 800-482-9704 4BD 2BA BANK REPO only $36,000! Payments from $199/mo! More 1-4bd from $15k! 5%dn, 20yrs @ 8%apr! For Listings/Info 800-482-9704 Lake Property TENN LAKE SALE! 1+ Acre Lake Access $19,900 w/ Free boat slips. New! Gently sloping acreage, beautifully wooded, private bass lake. Gorgeous unspoiled setting- no crowds, no noise. Or, 3.5 acre lakefront $49,900. Must see. Excellent low rate �nancing. Call now 1-888-792-5253, x 1868 TN Land & Lakes NORRIS LAKE ACCESS BARGAIN! Only $24,900. Free Boat Slips. Beautifully wooded acreage on TN’s most spectacular recreational lake. Prime dockable lakefront available. Excellent �nancing. Call now 1-866-685-2562, x 1864. TN Land & Lakes Land For Sale ACREAGE IN SUMNER COUNTY. 11 . 9 3 l e v e l a c r e s w i t h C u s t o m www.153branhammillrd.com 7 private Acres Homes in Hendersonville TN. www.1040huntslane.com Cindy Sample 615-479-6114 Coldwell Banker Lakeside 615-824-5920 Miscellaneous ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE FROM Home. *Medical *Business *Paralegal, *Computers, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if quali�ed. Call 866-8582121, www.CenturaOnline.com CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING WORKS! ONE call & your 25 word ad will appear in 86 Tennessee newspapers for $265 or 28 East TN newspapers for $115. Call this newspaper’s classi�ed advertising dept. or go to www.tnpress.com. Vacation Properties DESTIN DISCOUNTS! DESTIN, FL B e s t s e l e c t i o n o n o r o ff b e a c h . 2- Bedrooms from $120 per night. Holiday Isle Properties Call 1-800-8375102. www.holidayisle.net Page 14 - STAR - TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2008 MEDICAL CARE LLC Program Flu Shots Available Now! $25 (Cash) Elizabethton - 1900 W. Elk Avenue (423) 543-2584 • Mon - Fri: 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. Saturday: 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. Johnson City - 401 E. Main Street (I-26 Exit 32) (423) 929-2584 • Mon - Fri: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Sat: 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. Hampton • 437 Highway 321 (423) 725-5062 • Mon - Fri: 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. www.medicalcarellc.com “Medical Care with a Heart.” AccuWeather 5-Day Forecast for Elizabethton National Weather for June 3, 2008 ® TODAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY -10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Seattle 59/48 Billings 67/44 A t-storm around in the p.m. Mostly cloudy, a t-storm; warm 84° Mostly sunny and very warm 64° 89° 65° 88° 64° An afternoon t-storm possible 87° Partly sunny and very warm 62° 85° 63° Bristol Almanac RealFeel Temp UV Index Today Statistics are through 6 p.m. yest. The patented RealFeel Temperature® is AccuWeather’s exclusive index of the effects of temperature, wind, humidity, sunshine, precipitation and elevation on the human body. Shown are the highest values for each day. 8 a.m. .............................................. 2 Noon ............................................... 7 4 p.m. .............................................. 4 Temperature: High yesterday ........................ 81° Low yesterday ......................... 59° Precipitation: Today ........................................... 87° Wednesday .................................. 92° Thursday ...................................... 95° Friday ........................................... 94° Saturday ....................................... 92° 24 hrs. ending 6 p.m. yest. ... 0.09" AccuWeather.com 0-2: 3-5: 6-7: Low Moderate High 8-10: 11+: Very High Extreme The higher the AccuWeather UV IndexTM number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2008 Tennessee Weather Union City 92/70 Camden 91/71 Murfreesboro 89/68 Waynesboro Chattanooga 89/69 92/70 Memphis 96/75 The State Sunrise today ....................... 6:12 a.m. Sunset tonight ...................... 8:42 p.m. Moonrise today ................... 5:35 a.m. Moonset today .................... 9:09 p.m. City Athens Bristol Chattanooga Clarksville Cleveland Cookeville Crossville Erwin Franklin Greeneville Johnson City Moon Phases New First Full Last June 3 June 10 June 18 June 26 Hi 89 84 89 93 88 88 84 85 90 88 84 Today Lo W 66 t 63 t 69 t 70 pc 67 t 67 t 67 t 62 t 72 pc 64 t 63 t Hi 91 87 91 90 91 89 87 88 94 91 87 Knoxville 86/70 Wed. Lo W 68 t 63 t 69 t 69 pc 68 t 68 t 66 t 63 t 70 pc 63 t 63 t Denver 78/51 Hi 89 92 94 90 86 94 91 92 92 85 92 Washington 84/64 New York 83/64 Kansas City 88/66 Los Angeles 76/59 Atlanta 90/73 El Paso 101/74 Houston 96/77 Cold front Warm front Stationary front Miami 88/78 Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities. The Nation Today City Hi Lo W Kingsport 86 65 t Knoxville 86 70 t Memphis 96 75 pc Morristown 88 66 t Mountain City 82 61 t Nashville 90 72 t Newport 88 66 t Oak Ridge 88 69 t Pigeon Forge 88 70 t Roan Mtn. 81 60 t Sevierville 88 70 t Chicago 72/55 Areas of showers and potentially damaging thunderstorms will stretch through the southern Great Lakes, the Midwest and central and northern Plains today. Much of the South will be hot and humid. Some rain will fall in the Northwest. Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Sun and Moon San Francisco 65/53 Detroit 70/58 National Summary Elizabethton 84/64 Nashville 90/72 Minneapolis 64/49 Wed. Lo W 65 t 69 t 75 s 66 t 65 t 70 t 67 t 69 t 68 t 63 t 68 t Today City Hi Lo W Atlanta 90 73 t Boston 82 60 s Charleston, SC 86 68 pc Charlotte 88 65 pc Chicago 72 55 t Cincinnati 86 68 t Dallas 96 77 s Denver 78 51 pc Honolulu 87 74 pc Kansas City 88 66 t Los Angeles 76 59 pc New York City 83 64 s Orlando 92 72 t Phoenix 102 75 s Seattle 59 48 r Wash., DC 84 64 pc Wed. Hi Lo W 89 72 t 75 58 t 90 72 pc 90 69 pc 73 63 t 88 68 t 94 78 s 74 45 c 87 74 s 86 71 pc 72 60 pc 79 64 t 92 73 t 102 75 s 61 48 pc 86 70 t The World City Acapulco Amsterdam Barcelona Beijing Berlin Dublin Hong Kong Jerusalem London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Paris Rome Seoul Singapore Today Hi Lo W 91 77 pc 72 57 sh 70 60 sh 75 63 pc 88 65 pc 61 46 pc 84 77 t 80 59 s 68 55 pc 76 52 c 81 55 s 68 54 pc 67 54 c 73 57 sh 75 55 t 89 77 t Hi 89 70 69 78 83 59 82 84 64 75 82 62 70 75 71 86 Wed. Lo W 76 t 58 c 60 c 63 pc 61 s 48 r 78 r 62 s 52 s 54 sh 51 s 51 c 53 pc 56 pc 58 t 77 t Legend: W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice. ELIZABETHTON ELECTRIC DEPARTMENT 542-1111 (After Hours - Emergency) Interested in TVA Electric Heat Pump Financing? CALL: 542-1100 Health n Continued from 1 Paul, the current provider of medical services for the prison was the next lowest at $360,000, followed by Advanced Correctional Healthcare at $392,577 and Southern Health Partnership at $444,300. Commissioner Jo Ann Blankenship voiced concern with Old Town, represented at the meeting by owner Christine Kinley, because of the lack of a medical doctor attached to the bid. “We fought long and hard to get the medical care to the level that we have it,” Blankenship said. “In the nine years that I’ve been on the commission I’ve been a big advocate for the medical care for our prisoners. There’s no physician; I wish the physician could have been here to talk to us.” Kinley, who currently provides health services to the Johnson City Detention Center, assured her that as a pre-assessment nurse, she was qualified to handle the everyday medical services of the jail and her company retains a medical doctor on call 24 hours a day to deal with any unusual situations that might arise. Dr. Paul, addressed the Committee to warn them that signing a medical contract without an actual MD’s name attached would leave the county and the sheriff open to lawsuits, which would negate any savings made with a less expensive plan. “I’ve been on call for the Carter County Jail since Sheriff Mathes called me after the last provider backed out of a contract,” he said. “I’m on call 24 hours a day, seven days a week. I spend an average of three to four hours per week in-house, and I’m usually on the phone an additional four to five hours per week. State law says a medical doctor has to be on call 24 hours a day to meet state requirements.” Mathes countered Paul’s statement with a list of problems he is currently having with the health services being provided. “There are several things I have met with Dr. Paul about, including keeping LPNs on staff — that has not been done; I’ve had to deal with EMTs, CNAs and medical assistants,” he said. “Another thing is getting personnel files on everyone that comes in there. I need fingerprints, photographs and so forth. One of his staff members was a former inmate in the jail and was allowed to hand out medication. I expect cooperation. I want it done and I want it done right.” Dr. Norman Johnson, representing Advanced Correctional Healthcare, noted the sheriff’s concerns and vowed to give him the final say in safety matters. “What the sheriff was talking about gets to the issue of control within the facility,” he said. “Jails are by nature a secure facility. All of our employees must adhere to the guidelines of the sheriff. The first thing I did was hand the sheriff the personnel files of all our employees. He ultimately controls what goes on in this facility.” Johnson further explained to the Committee that if his company is selected, a local doctor would be sought to run the program within the jail, and licensed nurses would be on staff to dispense medications. After lengthy discussion on the topic, the Commit- tee unanimously approved a motion to call the three lowest bidders before the full Commission on July 21 to give a short presentation and hold a vote on a finalized contract. In the Rules and Bylaws portion of the meeting, Commissioner Steve Lowrance made a proposal to decrease the number of Commisioners from 24 to 9. “I think the people of Carter County Deserve a whole lot better than what they’ve been getting from us,” he said. “Some members just want to run for power and authority, and that’s not a good reason to run.” Lowrance noted a petition circulating throughout the county asking for a reduction in the number of commissioners. He advocated putting the matter on the next ballot and letting the voters of Carter County decide the fate of the Commission. “I know if we reduce it to nine, 15 of us might not be back, but it’s not about getting re-elected it’s about serving the people,” he said. Police say a county man and woman were arrested Saturday night when a search of their vehicle yielded narcotics, drugcooking equipment and a loaded handgun. According to Carter County Sheriff’s Department Dep. Richard Barnett, 34-year-old William Michael Oxentine, 441 Old Butler Road, Mountain City, and 26-year-old Heather Michelle Eller, 5655 Highway 67, were pulled over at about 9:30 p.m. at a scenic overlook on Highway 321 by Tennessee Constable Bobby Trivette. Trivette noticed the rear window of the silver Mazda 626 they were riding in was broken out and contacted the Sheriff’s Department for assistance. When Barnett arrived on the scene, he saw a loaded each county department for a fuel-savings proposal, along with the number of vehicles and distance traveled by each vehicle that is taken home by employees. Pearman also proposed a feasibility study on a regular transit bus route from Elizabethton to Johnson City. They also discussed the possibility of bidding on smaller police cruisers such as Chevy Impalas as a cost-saving measure. JoAnn Blankenship said she had been asked several times about the county’s purchase of used vehicles and other equipment. She said the practice of buying used products from private individuals or businesses without having to bid on them is legal as long as records are kept and the price falls within 10 percent of the documented price range. WRRWA n Continued from 1 aquifer is located based on geological maps that show fault lines, rock and various soil types. A test well is then drilled to verify the location. “This will allow us to get water, which will be sufficient to supply the citizens that signed up,” he said. “That system has an expansion capabilitiy of over 1,500 customers, but until we get some supplemental water we won’t be able to take care of that many. We can take care of approximately 500 folks. About 225 households have signed up, and we have potential for another 200.” Although the plan is not the same as the original plan for supplying the lakeside communities with drinking water, 200 gallons per minute is the targeted amount for those customers. Tysinger said the funding agencies will require an updated preliminary engineering report. “We’ve already met with all the funding agents involved in this — First Tennessee Development and Rural Development, and they agree that we can do this,” he said, adding that if the test well is successful, it will be upgraded to a permanent well. A second well would also be drilled, as well as a possible treatment plant near the tank site. Tysinger said no lines would be needed from Hampton to Fish Springs, which means that still-pending U.S. Forest Service permits may not be needed for the project to continue. “This was our third choice, but it’s still a viable option. We’re going to take advantage of it,” said Tysinger. “This will be at least a short-term solution for the people that need it the most, which we made a commitment to do,” said WRRWA Attorney Tom McKee. “They raised the money on their own.” WRRWA Director Michael Hughes updated the board on the repair of two recent line breaks in the North Elizabethton District. He said that district’s new tank should be completed during the summer. After the Carter County Commission voted 19-2 for a resolution to allow Hampton and First Utilities to withdraw from the WRRWA in May, it is certain that Hampton will withdraw; a decision by First Utility is still up in the air. If both utilities opt out, as did the city of Elizabethton last year, that will leave Siam, South Elizabethton and North Elizabethton as the only remaining districts with representation on the board. The number of connections potentially served by the Authority will have dropped from almost 19,000 with the city on board, to about 3,800. The board approved payments to JJ&G for services rendered in the months of March and April, as well as Consolidated Pipe and Supply for work done in the North Elizabethton District. Singleton n Continued from 1 ton was sentenced to two years of probation with the possibility of dismissal and her record will be cleared if she successfully complies with the terms of probation. She was also fined $50 and court costs. Under Tennessee law, solicitation of a minor is a Class E felony. Singleton could have received a senEller was also arrested tence of one to six years in and charged with filing a prison. false report. At no time was the juThe two are scheduled to venile under the direct suappear in General Sessions pervision of Singleton. SinCourt on June 17 to answer gleton’s charge was based the charges. County couple arrested on drugs, weapons charges By Nathan Baker STAR STAFF nbaker@starhq.com n Continued from 1 education and personal oversight for employees with chronic health problems such as diabetes, asthma, hypertension, and high cholesterol. Pharmacists developed patient care services in their community pharmacies. Employees, retirees, and dependents with diabetes soon experienced improved blood sugar levels, lower total health care costs, fewer sick days and increased satisfaction with their pharmacist’s services. Kitchens said the county’s investment for a oneyear contract would be about $16,000, with risk assessments provided every six months or annually. The committee also discussed ways of cutting costs, especially in light of higher fuel prices. Jerry Pearman introduced a motion to ask upon a telephone conversation between her and the youth which was overheard by his aunt while he was visiting in her home. The conversation was recorded by the aunt and the tape turned over to the Carter County Sheriff’s Department. Singleton was indicted by a Carter County Grand Jury in January 2007 and suspended without pay from her job with the Carter County School System. However, she later resigned. .25-caliber Lorcin handgun Oxentine was placed unin the vehicle and asked der arrest and charged with for and received permis- two counts of possession sion to search the vehicle of a Schedule II controlled from Oxentine, who was narcotic, possession of drug the driver. paraphernalia and illegal During the search, Bar- possession of a weapon. nett reported finding a long plastic case near the weapon containing nine syringes and a small glass bottle filled with a substance which tested positive for morphine. He also stated that he found a backpack in the vehicle belonging to Oxentine with a small plastic baggy inside containing a white substance that tested positive for cocaine. While searching the trunk of the vehicle, Barnett said he found two plastic cases with a propane bottle, cooker and oil inside. Barnett’s report states that while questioning the suspects, Oxentine dePhoto by Eveleigh Stewart nied ownership of the gun. West Elk Avenue accident Eller originally claimed the weapon was hers, but later Traffic came to a crawl around noon Monday on West Elk Avenue as police, rescue, and fire units were on the scene of a three said she was not the owner. vehicle accident in front of Title Max. Three people were sent to the hospital with neck pain.