Fugitive from justice arrested in Mingo
Transcription
Fugitive from justice arrested in Mingo
log onto www.williamsondailynews.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls & more DAILY NEWS INSIDE WEATHER “In The Heart Of The Trillion Dollar Coalfields” Cloudy with thunderstorms later. High of 83. Low of 57 An Upward Look .... Page 4 SPORTS ONLINE Joey Fields to coach WV all-stars .... Page 7 Busy? Find us online, anytime at: williamsondailynews.com THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 Vol. 100, Number 76 50 cents daily Fugitive from justice arrested in Mingo Rachel Baldwin Staff Writer WILLIAMSON — Warrants for the arrest and extradition of a Tennessee resident who was wanted on felony charges from the Commonwealth of Kentucky were sent through to the Mingo County Sheriff ’s Department (MCSD) after the defendant was taken into custody by Deputy M.J. Miller, following a license check being conducted, at which time warrants were discovered that had been entered in the National Crime Information Center database. Gary Dent, 51, whose address is listed as Maryville, Tennessee, had failed to appear for a court hearing in Pike County District Court to answer charges of theft by deception (cold checks under $10,000). After conducting a traffic stop on a vehicle being operated by Dent, Deputy Miller was informed that active warrants were in force in both Kentucky and Missouri on the defendant and the Commonwealth State was willing to extradite. The Kentucky warrants also reads that on August 6, 2012, the affiant, Bennie Gooslin of Phelps, alleges that Dent intentionally sold him 8 tires for a sum of $700 that were knowingly defective but failed to present them as damaged goods, and also refused to return his money. Dent was transported to the Southwestern Regional Jail at Holden where he remains behind bars awaiting extradition back to Pike County. The defendant was arraigned on the fugitive from justice warrants by Mingo County Circuit Court Judge Michael Thornsbury. Mingo BOE looks at drug testing Julia Roberts Goad Staff Writer Photos by Rachel Baldwin | Daily News Pictured are students from the Williamson Christian School carrying the Child Abuse Awareness flag as they led a procession to the courthouse lawn where a special ceremony was held on Wednesday. The students were joined by DHHR workers, county officials and members of the Mingo County Sheriff’s Department including the new sheriff, Rosie Crum, who was appointed to fill the remainder of her late husband’s term. Child Abuse Awareness walk held Staff Writer WILLIAMSON — Crimes against children are not taken lightly in Mingo County, and a decent sized crowd gathered in Williamson on Wednesday to show their support for the welfare of area youth as they joined with employees of the WV Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR), students of the Williamson Christian School and county officials to participate in the annual Child Abuse Awareness Walk and flag raising. Reported cases of child abuse have increased over the past year, and speculation is that many cases remain undetected and unreported. Children die across the United States each and every day at the hands of adults who are often their parents, guardians or relatives. In 2012, several cases were in the spotlight in Mingo County that involved abuse and injury to local children, including Rachel Baldwin Staff Writer These young students from the Williamson Christian School are shown placing the stems of the Child Abuse Awareness pinwheels into the See WALK | 3 courthouse lawn. Delbarton ‘Makes it Shine’ today Cleanup and beautification efforts to take place nationwide Staff Writer DELBARTON — What do the sun and the Mountain State have in common? They’re both shining. Volunteers across the state are rallying to improve their local parks, public spaces, waterways, hiking trails, sidewalks and streets by participating in the Department of Environmental Protection’s “Make It Shine” statewide clean- up, taking place between April 1 - 14. The Delbarton Kiwanis Club will kick off its activities with a clean up today, April 11, at 6 p.m., from the Delbarton Kiwanis Park to the Compton Park. Delbarton’s “Make It Shine” activities are part of a larger national effort, Keep America Beautiful’s “Great American Cleanup,” which is expected to involve close to three million people. Activities will include beautifying parks and recreation ar- See TESTING | 3 Alleged shooter bought gun despite background check Rachel Baldwin Chad Abshire A committee of the Mingo County Board of Education that is working toward implementing a drug testing policy for students met and heard from a representative of a company that administers drug testing programs. The BOE began looking at implementing a drug testing policy earlier in the year with input from the STOP Coalition, a drug abuse education facility based in Gilbert. Although Mingo does not currently drug screen students, other area school systems, such as Pike and Logan Counties, have a drug testing policy in place. The BOE has looked at policies of other districts to begin to write a policy of its own. On hand for the committee were several administrators and educators from various Mingo schools as well as Chris Franz of Sport Safe Testing Service. Franz said his company was started by his father, who was a high school team physician. One of the team’s players was shot and killed in a drug deal, which spurred Franz to get involved. He authored a drug testing policy that made it to the Supreme Court. He eventually started the company, and now the company works with school districts across the country. His company has worked with Jackson, Putnam and Cabell Counties in West Virginia. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that public school systems can test students who participate in extracurricular activities, such as sports or band. Using other districts’ policies, the Mingo BOE is crafting a policy that will make student athletes eligible for random drug testing, as well as those who drive to eas, cleaning seashores and waterways, handling recycling collections, picking up litter and removing scrap tires, planting trees and conducting educational programs and litter-free events. Last year’s “Make It Shine” cleanup across West Virginia boasts results like 400,000 pounds of litter and debris being collected by more than 4,800 volunteers. Volunteers were also able to clean 88 miles of streams and 600 acres of parks. The West Virginia “Make It Shine” program is part of the Rehabilitation Environmental Action Plan initiative under the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection. All of West Virginia’s volunteer-driven cleanup programs fall under the Rehabilitation Environmental Action Plan (REAP- the Next Generation). For more information, or to volunteer, call 304 9530284. WILLIAMSON — C. Michael Sparks, Prosecuting Attorney for Mingo County, has released information that the gunman accused of killing Sheriff Eugene Crum after being in office for approximately three short months wasn’t allowed to possess a firearm, but said the defendant was still able to buy a gun from a local dealer, even though the dealer ran the required background check. “A breakdown in the reporting system enabled Tennis Melvin Maynard, of Ragland, to purchase a handgun,” stated Sparks. “This is an inexcusable delay.” While Sparks wouldn’t elaborate on why Maynard was barred from owning a gun or which business the gun was purchased from, Maynard’s father has went on record saying that his son had mental problems and had previously been institutionalized. A family member who spoke with the Daily News on Wednesday who asked to not be identified in the media said that several mental hygiene warrants had been taken out against Maynard when he experienced mental breakdowns that allegedly included episodes of explosive tempers, but due to HIPPA violations, this information has yet to be verified. Federal law prohibits the sale of firearms and ammunition to certain individuals with a history of mental illness. Maynard is accusing of shooting Sheriff Eugene Crum on April 3 in a downtown Williamson parking lot located at the corner of Harvey Street and 3rd Avenue while eating lunch in his official vehicle. The acSee SHOOTER | 3 In the story about the special judge appointed for the murder case involving Sheriff Eugene Crum, the name of the suspect should have read Tennis Maynard, not Tennis Hatfield. The Williamson Daily News apologizes for any confusion the error caused. 2 ■ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS Obituaries Calendar Charles Floyd Bowe Charles Floyd Bowe, 61 of Stone, Ky. passed away Sunday, April 7, 2013 at his home. Charles was born March 11, 1952 in Mingo County, WV the son of the late Herbert and Edna Alice Smith Bowe. He was also preceded in death by his brother, Marvin Scott and nephew, Michael Bowe Jr. He was a retired disabled American Veteran. He served twenty two years in the United States Marine Corps with two terms in Vietnam. He received the Purple Heart Medal for wounds he suffered in the Vietnam Conflict. He received several other medals and distinguished awards throughout his services to this great country he loved so much. He was very proud to be an American Veteran. He said, “Once a Marine Always a Marine!” He is survived by his son, Charlie Preston Bowe of Yuba City, California; three brothers, Michael (Nina) Bowe Sr. of Stone, Ky., Randy (Margaret) Scott of Borderland, WV and J. D. (Janet) Bowe of Columbus, Ohio; a sister, Ramona Bowe (Douglas) Hitchens of Blacklick, Ohio and a host of other family and friends. Funeral arrangements will be held Friday, April 12, 2013 at 11 AM in the R. E. Rogers Funeral Home Chapel with Bob Werntz officiating. Burial will follow in the Mountain View Memory Gardens, Huddy, Ky. with family and friends serving as pallbearers. Belfry Chapter #141 DAV will conduct Military Graveside Services. R. E. Rogers Funeral Home of Belfry. Visitation will be from 6 until 9 PM Thursday at the Funeral Home. www. rerogersfuneralhome.com. James G. Chafin James G. Chafin 59, of Williamson, WV passed away April 10, 2013 at the Williamson Memorial Hospital. He was born Nov. 15, 1953 at S. Williamson, KY the son of the late Betty Lou Stepp Chafin and is survived by his dad, James Chafin Sr. of Williamson. James was a heavy equipment operator. In addition to his father he is survived by a son, James Austin Chafin of Prestonsburg, KY, daughter, Alexis Chafin of Prestonsburg, Sister, Brenda Stanley of Turkey Creek, with whom he made his home with, Nephew, Steven (Marsha) Stanley, niece, Haven Salmons and great nephews, Austin Salmons and Justin Smith. Funeral services will be held Saturday April 13, 2013 at the Chafin Funeral Home Chapel at 1:00pm with Bro. Bill Smith officiating. Burial will follow in the Mt. View Memory Gardens at Huddy, KY. Visitation will be at the funeral home chapel Friday evening from 5:00pm to 7:00pm. Online condolences can be made at ChafinFuneralHome.Com April 11 The Williamson City Council will hold its first monthly meeting at 6 p.m. in the council chambers of city hall. The public is invited to attend. Nora Ferrell Nora Ferrell, 92, of Coal Mountain, died Tuesday, April 9, 2013. Born November 30, 1920, in Kentucky, she was the daughter of the late Henry and Martha Mays. Friends may gather with the family at the Coal Mountain Freewill Baptist Church at Coal Mountain on Friday, April 12 from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. with a special service at 7 p.m. Funeral services will be held at noon on Saturday, April 13, at the Coal Mountain Freewill Baptist Church. Burial will follow in Palm Memorial Gardens at Matheny. Mounts Funeral Home of Gilbert is in charge of arrangements. Pearline Nelson Reed Nannie Lee Evans Newsome Nannie Lee Evans Newsome, 87 of Lenore, WV passed away April 7, 2013 at the St. Marys Hospital in Huntington, WV. She was born April 17, 1925 at Holden, WV the daughter of the late Harrison and Amanda Vance Evans. Aunt Nannie loved her outdoor activities including her yard work and growing flowers. She also enjoyed walking and most of all playing her guitar and singing for the Lord. Aunt Nannie touched many lives and will be sadly missed. In addition to her parents she is also preceded in death by her husband, Arthur Newsome, sister, Hazel Smith, brothers, McClellan, Cullen, Earl, Wetzel, Archie, James and Okie Evans. She is survived by many nieces and nephews. Those special to her include Dorothy and Henry Preece with whom she made her home with and Jason Evans who constantly care for her. Funeral services will be held at the Wednesday April 10, 2013 at 11:00am at the Parsley Bottom Freewill Baptist at Lenore, WV with Rev. Mike Smith officiating. Burial will follow in the Gap Hollow Cemetery at Laurel Creek, WV. Visitation will be at the church after 5:00pm on Tuesday evening. Online condolences can be made at ChafinFuneralHome. Com Pearline Nelson Reed, 81, longtime resident of Turkey Creek, KY and a resident of Randleman, NC for the past 7 years, passed away Tuesday; April 9, 2013 at the Randolph Hospital in Asheboro, NC. Born April 13, 1931 in Pike County, KY; she was the daughter of the late James and Elizabeth White Nelson. In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in death by 2 brothers and 4 sisters. She was a homemaker. Survivors include 1 son G. Darrell Reed Jr. of New Jersey; 2 daughters Sherry McCoy and Jerusha Rene McCoy both of North Carolina; 10 grand- children and 17 great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday; April 13, 2013 at 11:00 A.M. from the Turkey Creek Old Regular Baptist Church with Elders of the Church officiating. Burial will follow in the Reed Cemetery at Turkey Creek, KY with family and friends serving as pallbearers. Visitation will be after 6:00 P.M. Thursday and Friday at the Turkey Creek Old Regular Baptist Church with a special service at 7:00 P.M. Friday evening. Online condolences may be left for the family by going to www.hatfieldfc. com. Arrangements have been entrusted to the Hatfield Funeral Chapel of Toler, KY. W.Va. Senate prioritizes broadband access over speed CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — A rare floor debate broke out in the West Virginia Senate over how a state committee should mete out future grants to improve broadband access. The Senate adopted an amendment Wednesday that tells the state’s broadband counsel to prioritize Internet access for everyone before considering upgrades for some communities. Sen. Robert Plymale said that access for all must come first. April 15 Crusade in the Mountains will hold a yard sale, hot dog sale and auction at the Belfry Volunteer Fire Department. The yard sale will begin at 10 a.m., the auction will be at 3 p.m. April 16 The Mingo County Democrat Women will meet at 6 p.m. at The Thoroughbred Steak House. Sherry Hatfield will be the speaker and explain the new fundraiser for the women’s shelter called Girl’s Night Out. She will also update us on ways we can help. All members are encouraged to attend, and bring someone with you. Anyone interested in joining please feel free to attend. There will also be a board meeting prior to the meeting at 5 p.m. for all office holders. April 18 Stone Heritage’s annual meeting will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the historic Red Robin building. Election of officers and board members will take place. All members are urged to attend. April 19 - 20 Metro Valley Gabriel Project and Williamson Church of God will sponsor a crib drive from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m. Contributions can be made locally at Williamson Church of God, with pickup service available. For more information, call 304-414-4MOM or 304235-2026. April 20 The Disabled American Veterans Chapter No. 141, Belfry, Ky., and its auxiliary, will have its regular monthly meeting at 2 p.m. at the Belfry, Ky., Courthouse. All members and Honorable Discharged Veterans and their are invited to attend. April 23 - 24 The Mingo Career Center will be holding GED testing for candidates who have pased the Official Practice Test. For more information, contact John Webb at 304-4753347 ext. 13. To register for Adult Basic Education to take the Official Practice Test, contact Mary Oliver at 304-475-2022 or email mingoabe@gmail. com. April 25 The Williamson City Council will hold its second monthly meeting at 6 p.m. in the council chambers of city hall. The public is invited to attend. April 28 The Tug Valley Choral Society will be performing “A Celebration of Spring” at Williamson Presbyterian Church at 4 Sen. Herb Snyder said that the amend- pm. ment would tie the council’s hands and make it give money to tiny communities April 29-30 rather than provide upgrades to more Mingo Central will be people. hosting the second anSnyder said that everyone in the state nual Mingo County Arts already has satellite access and providing broadband access to remote cabins or tiny communities was not cost effective. Plymale said that the council would prioritize access but would still make wise decisions concerning cost effectiveness. Your news ... Your newspaper Williamson Daily News Story idea or news tip? Call 235-4242 Alive! Program. Acts from each Mingo County School will perform for the public and an art gallery will be available for viewing. The art gallery will open at 5:30 pm with performances beginning at 6:30 pm both evenings. April 30 AARP safe driving classes will be held from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the Pike County Extension Office, 148 Trivette Dr., in Pikeville. Class size is limited. The cost is $12 for AARP members and $14 for non-members. Call the Extension Office at 432-2534 to register. May 21 AARP safe driving classes will be held from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the Pike County Extension Office, 148 Trivette Dr., in Pikeville. Class size is limited. The cost is $12 for AARP members and $14 for non-members. Call the Extension Office at 432-2534 to register. May 28 - 29 The Mingo Career Center will be holding GED testing for candidates who have pased the Official Practice Test. For more information, contact John Webb at 304-475-3347 ext. 13. To register for Adult Basic Education to take the Official Practice Test, contact Mary Oliver at 304-475-2022 or email [email protected] Ongoing Williamson Public Library preschool story hour is held every Wednesday at 11 a.m. For more information call the library at 304 235-6029. Starters Sports Restaurant and Lyrick Promotions, LTD., presents The Acoustic Guitar Revue, featuring live music each monday from 7:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. at Starters. A Circle of Parents meeting will be held on the third Thursday of each month at 1 p.m. at Logan Street First Baptist Church. Meetings offer anyone in a parenting role to participate in a group meeting to exchange ideas, share information, develop and practice new skills and more. Contact David Bell for more information at 304-443-3041. Mingo Extended Learning Center is accepting applications for our Practical Nursing Program for the Class of 2013-2014. Applicants must take and pass a pre-entrance exam to be considered for the program. Testing dates are March 5, April 9, and May 7. There is a $35 testing fee. For additional informaiton call 304 4753347 ext. 16 or 29. Mingo Extended Learning Center is accepting applicaitons for the Medical Office/Accounting Program for the fall program. For additional information contact Alichia Marsico at 304 475-3347, ext. 25. The Pike County Health Department is offering free diabetes management classes. There are various dates and times available including one Saturday during January 2013 at the Pike County Health Department. For more information, call Paula Compton at 606- 509-5503. Free diabetes self management classes are also offered to business and worksite wellness programs. Southside Elementary School will conduct a preschool story hour program for children between 2 and 4-years-old and not currently enrolled in school. For more information, call the school at 606-353-1284. Narcotics Anonymous meets Sunday at 3 p.m. and Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Harry L. Joyce Community Center. The West Virginia Army National Guard is taking applications for qualified applicants only. Applicants must be between the ages of 17 - 35 unless they have prior military service. No drug violations of felonies, meet height and weight requirements, be a high school graduate, or have completed the ninth-grade. We offer up to $50,000 student loan repayment, state and federal tuition assistance, medical, dental and life insurance and a part-time career with the opportunity to become full-time. For more information, call recruiter SSG Donna Smith at 3047 201-3196 or email her at donna. [email protected]. Workforce West Virginia will take all new unemployment claims at its office at 300 Prosperity Lane, Logan, between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Please arrive 30 minutes prior to complete an application. This does not affect the intenerate office in Williamson DHHR office on Wednesdays from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. The Parsley Freewill Baptist Food Panty will continue to provide USDA commodities. The pantry gives out the commodities once, monthly, on the fourth Thursday. Mingo Extended Learning Center (formerly Mingo Career and Technical Center) is currently accepting applications for the Medical Office Technology and Legal Office Technology programs for the 2012-2013 school term. For more information, call (304) 475-3347 ext. 25. Hatfield and McCoy Feud descendants are being sought for a special project by Leah Hatfield and Kim McCoy. Specifically, only direct descendants of the feud still carrying the last names of Hatfield or McCoy. Hatfields may contact Leah Hatfield at 843-5750594 or by email [email protected]. McCoys may contact Kim McCoy at 502-751-5200 or by email derby130@ insightbb.com. Operation Charity food pantry will distribute free USDA food from noon until 2 p.m. the last Friday of each month at the New Vision Assembly Church in Hatfield Bottom. Gov. loses latest bid to grow state reserves CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Lawmakers have again balked at increasing West Virginia’s already hefty emergency reserves. The House Finance Committee proposed a study Wednesday instead of advancing Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin’s bill on the topic. The governor has repeatedly sought to allow the state’s main reserve to grow until it equals 15 percent of general revenue spending. This Rainy Day fund receives surplus revenue and is now 13 percent of spending, or $565.4 million. That’s one of the best reserves among the states. Tomblin cites how Wall Street has rewarded West Virginia for setting aside funds by improving its ratings for issuing bonds. But critics argue that future surpluses should trigger tax cuts. General revenues have also faltered in recent months, and are expected to end the budget year June 30 in the red. WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 ■ 3 Nation An agency-by-agency guide to Obama’s 2014 budget WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama has proposed a $3.8 trillion budget for fiscal 2014 that aims to slash the deficit by a net $600 billion over 10 years, raise taxes and trim popular benefit programs, including Social Security and Medicare. The White House claims deficit reductions of $1.8 trillion, but Obama’s proposal would negate more than $1 trillion in automatic spending cuts that started in March. Those cuts average 5 percent for domestic agencies and 8 percent for the Defense Department this year. The agency-by-agency breakdown: —Agency: Agriculture Total Spending: $145.8 billion Percentage Change from 2013: 5.9 percent decrease Discretionary Spending: $21.5 billion Mandatory Spending: $124.4 billion Highlights: Similar to years past, Obama’s budget proposes savings by cutting farm subsidies. The proposal envisions a $37.8 billion reduction in the deficit by eliminating some subsidies that are paid directly to farmers, reducing government help for crop insurance and streamlining agricultural land conservation programs. The Obama administration says many of these subsidies can no longer be justified with the value of both crop and livestock production at all-time highs. Farm income is expected to increase 13.6 percent to $128.2 billion in 2013, the highest inflation-adjusted amount in 40 years. Obama and his Republican predecessor, President George W. Bush, have proposed similar cuts every year and Congress has largely ignored them. There is congressional momentum for eliminating some subsidies paid directly to farmers this year, though, as farm-state lawmakers search for ways to cut agricultural spending and pass a five-year farm bill. There is less appetite among lawmakers to cut crop insurance. The budget also would overhaul the way American food aid is sent abroad, a Hospital group says ‘alarm fatigue’ can be deadly Lindsey Tanner move largely anticipated by farm and food aid groups. The United States now donates much of its food aid by shipping food overseas, a process many groups say is inefficient. The budget would transfer the money used to ship the food to cash accounts at the United States Agency for International Development. The administration says that would help two million more people annually and save an estimated $500 million over 10 years. Farm and shipping groups are strongly opposed to the idea. The bulk of the USDA budget is dollars for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or food stamps, which are expected to cost around $80 billion in the 2014 budget year. Costs for the program have more than doubled during Obama’s presidency, driven by an ailing economy and an expansion of the benefit in 2009. Conservatives have called for cutting or overhauling food stamps, but the budget says the Obama administration strongly supports the current program “at a time of continued need.” AP Medical Writer CHICAGO — Constantly beeping alarms from devices that monitor the vital signs of the critically ill have “desensitized” hospital workers who sometimes ignore the noise, leading to at least two dozen deaths a year on average, a hospital accrediting group said Monday. And these cases are probably vastly underreported, said the Joint Commission in an alert to hospitals calling attention to the problem. The beeping devices include those that measure blood pressure and heart rate among other things. Some beep when there’s an emergency, and some beep when they’re not working. That can lead to noise fatigue and the delay in treating a patient can endanger lives, the accreditation commission says. Complicating the situation is the abundance of technology, with no standardization for what the beeps mean, said Dr. Ana McKee, the commission’s executive vice president and chief medical officer. The commission’s estimate of possible deaths related to the problem is considerably lower than the reports it found in a U.S. Food and drug Administration database. The FDA lists more than 500 deaths potentially linked with hospital alarms between January 2005 and June 2010. But that includes man- datory reports of malfunctions and in some cases the connection to a death is only tenuous. The commission’s own database reports 80 deaths and 13 severe injuries between January 2009 and June 2012. Hospitals voluntarily report these to the commission, which reviews them and in these cases determined there was a clear connection to the device, said McKee. There likely are far more problems than have been reported, partly because ignoring or misinterpreting an alarm may have set off a chain of events that led to an injury or death, she explained. But tracing back to that first oversight can be difficult, McKee said. Alarm-system events included patient falls, delays in treatment and medication errors that resulted in injury or death, the Joint Commission said. The most common factor was “alarm fatigue.” But other problems included misinterpreting alarm signals, too few staffers to respond to alarms, and equipment malfunctions. “With the proliferation of technology, alarms, and a lack of standardization,” it’s more challenging for doctors and nurses to respond adequately, McKee said. The commission said hospital leaders need to address the problem and train staffers in safe alarm management. From Front... Shooter Walk From Page 1 From Page 1 cused murderer is, according to law officials, expected to make a full recovery from gunshot wounds he sustained after crashing into a bridge in Delbarton during a police pursuit, in which he was shot after pulling a gun on the deputy. The murder weapon is said to have been a .40 caliber compact Glock handgun. Maynard faces charges of first degree murder in the death of Sheriff Crum and attempted murder of a deputy. At present time, the defendant remains a patient in the Cabell Huntington Hospital. (This article was contributed to by the Associated Press) one case that resulted in an 18 month-old boy suffering severe trauma that included head injuries, a lacerated liver and a fractured spleen. The child, who was allegedly beaten by his mother, was flown to Cabell Huntington Hospital where emergency measures had to be quickly taken to save his life. Mingo County’s Chief Magistrate Dallas Toler spoke with the Daily News about his feelings when he must rule on a case involving an abused child, and stated that nothing breaks his heart more than to read a criminal complaint about a juvenile being harmed at the hands of the very person they look to for love, security and protection. “Our children are a gift from God,” stated Toler. “There’s nothing in the world that means more to me than my boys, I would lay down my life for my kids. I cannot wrap my hand around why anyone would ever hurt their own flesh and blood…children are the only innocent thing left in this world. I encourage everyone to join together as Mingo County Testing From Page 1 school. Testing of students who are in career and technical programs (CTE) such as welding, ProStart culinary and restaurant training and carpentry is also under consideration. Dreama Dempsey with the BOE said Mingo’s drug testing policy would not be punitive. “We will not be trapping or punishing students who test positive,” Dempsey said. “We, under the law, cannot let the procedure affect them academically. We want to deter drug use. We will give students the information and education they need.” Franz presented different types of tests that can be used to screen for drugs, including a urine screen, saliva swab and hair sample. Costs of these test can vary from as little as $3 to as much as $29. Most tests screen for nine drugs, amphetamines, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, cocaine, marijuana, methadone, opiate, phencyclidine, propoxyphene, and alcohol. But, he said, the key to ensuring accuracy to any testing to to eliminate, as much as possible, human error. “Once a student’s screen comes up positive, that test goes straight to a lab,” Franz said. “There are two samples taken, and one is kept in case future tests are needed. But, with a lab, there is no question of an error.” He said the next step in the process, if that sample does show drug use, is review by a medical review officer, who can determine whether the student was fights these crimes against those too young to defend themselves.” Following the walk, which ended at the lawn of the Mingo County Courthouse, the child abuse awareness flag was raised and a moment of silence was observed for those children who did not survive their battle with abuse. The students who participated in the walk placed blue and silver pinwheels in the ground as a symbol of Child Abuse Awareness Month. A special pinwheel had been created in memory of Sheriff Eugene Crum, who was shot and killed on April 5, and was placed in the courthouse lawn by Rosie Crum, Eugene’s widow, who now serves as sheriff. Rosie was joined in the walk and flag ceremony by her son, daughter-in-law and grandsons. Tonya Webb, one of the organizers of the DHHR event took a moment to voice her appreciation of the former sheriff and of the many years he supported their cause. “Mingo County lost a Photos by Rachel Baldwin | Daily News great man, and we lost a The Child Abuse Awareness flag was added to the Mingo strong advocate against County Courthouse flagpole, in observance and in memory of the children who have suffered abuse at the hands of another. child abuse,” said Webb. using a drug that has been prescribed for him, or factor in other circumstances. Then the company contacts the parents, then the school system. He said Sport Safe has safeguards to prevent compromise of the entire process, including the way students are chosen for testing, how the school is notified when testing will take place, and ways of avoiding substitution, in which a substance is used for a test other than the student’s urine. Some districts choose to lower the cost of testing by using their own personnel, such as a school nurse, for collection instead of having Sport Safe collectors conduct the screening. When that is the case, the company trains the collectors. Members of the BOE had concerns such as how to include CTE students in the pool of those screened, whether students who were 18 years old would have to have parental consent to undergo a drug screen and what process Franz recommended for those who tested positive. Franz gave the committee a sample of a drug testing policy that has been used in a different district. He suggested the BOE consider some of the aspects of that plan when they write their own. Dempsey said the committee is taking the information presented by Franz under consideration, and will meet again in May. She said the Board plans to have a policy in place by the beginning of the fall Employees of the Mingo County Sheriff’s Department and other county offices gathered around Rosie Crum, the widow of athletic season, in August Sheriff Eugene Crum, who has been appointed to fill the vacancy left by his death. Also pictured are members of Crum’s im2013. mediate family. 4 ■ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS Editorial On tax day, consider the hidden costs of war David Elliot Syndicated Columnist April 15 isn’t just Tax Day. It’s also known as the Global Day of Action on Military Spending. People around the world mark the occasion by protesting the vast resources allocated to militaries, often at the cost of human needs. According to a new report issued by the National Priorities Project, of every tax dollar the federal government collects, 26.5 cents goes to the Pentagon one way or another. By comparison, a single penny goes to science, 1.4 cents to transportation, 2.1 cents to energy and the environment, and 3.5 cents to education. That means of every tax dollar, just 8 cents gets channeled into those four important categories. Combined, it’s less than one third of the total revenue the Pentagon absorbs. One notable reason the Pentagon soaks up so much of our federal budget is its exorbitant weapon systems. Take the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. A decade after parts manufacturing for this boondoggle first began, it’s still not deployed. Experts say that by the time it’s been operable for a few decades, the F-35 will have cost us somewhere in the neighborhood of $1.5 trillion to build, fix, maintain, and fix again. There are many hidden Pentagon costs as well. Did you know that the government spends $40 billion each year caring for our veterans and their surviving family members? A recent Associated Press investigative report revealed just how much we are paying for wars fought generations ago — and foreshadows how much we will still be paying generations from now. Remarkably, we still pay out benefits to family members of World War I veterans. In a few isolated cases, family members of veterans of the Spanish-American War and Civil War are still collecting payments too. The benefits Uncle Sam pays out to Vietnam veterans continue to rise, even though that conflict ended some four decades ago. Today we pay $22 billion a year to these vets and their families. By comparison, we pay a little more than half of that, $12 billion annually, to veterans and their family members who served in either of the Iraq conflicts or Afghanistan. The Vietnam War (and World War II, for that matter) serves as a warning when we try to assess not just the current but the future expenses tied to the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts. World War II ended 68 years ago, yet it continues to cost taxpayers $5 billion a year. The cost of the benefits paid to its veterans didn’t peak until 1991, the AP reported. Remarkably, the Vietnam War’s costs, unlike those for World War II, are still rising. The benefits paid to its veterans and their family members stand at $270 billion since 1970. Using World War II and Vietnam as yardsticks, we can probably expect the government-paid health care costs of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq to rise for another four decades or so before they peak, probably between 2050 and 2060. We’ve already paid more than $50 billion since 2003. No one denies that our veterans and their family members deserve it. We put them in harm’s way and they fought and sacrificed their limbs — and all too often their lives. These benefits aren’t Pentagon pork. They’re a cost of war. This Tax Day, knowing that a quarter of the money we are paying to the federal government will go to the Pentagon, we should be aware of this cost of war — wars past, wars present, and wars still to be fought. For many reasons, we should stop waging so many wars. And we should demand that we stop paying for the things we can’t afford — such as obsolete and antiquated weapons systems — so that we can afford the things we need. That includes health care and survivors benefits for those who have sacrificed. Williamson Daily News Community News Sports Scores Editorials Church Events Breaking News YOUR NEWSPAPER Story idea or news tip? Call 235-4242 WHITT, Circulation DREW MARTIN, Advertising Mgr. JENNIFER JAMES, Advertising Mgr. CHADJOSH BYERS, Editor Mgr. 12 Weeks ... $87.50 26 Weeks ... $175.00 PO BOX 1660 Williamson, WV 25661 ■ An Upward Look For if ye do these things “Wherefore the rather, brethren, give diligence to make your calling and election sure: for if ye do these things, ye shall never fall.” (2 Peter 1:10) In his letter to the believers, Peter reminded them of the great and precious promises Jesus had made to them in scripture that are their because of their calling to faith in Christ. They are called away from the corruption of the world to conformity with Christ, and Peter urges them to progress by forging a chain of eight Christian virtues form faith to love. (1:57) If a believer does not transform profession into practice he becomes spiritually useless, perverting the purpose for which he was called. (1:8-11) When we acmeasure, they cept Christ as will keep us our Lord and from being inSavior through effective, and faith other unproductive qualities in in our knowlour lies should edge of our be added. We Lord Jesus should purChrist. If any sue Christian one does not virtue, knowlhave them, edge, temperPeter says he ance, patience, is nearsighted godliness, and blind, and brotherly kindhas forgotten Mae Stallard ness, and love. that he has As we read been cleansed about the qualfrom his past ities that identify us when sins. we accept Christ we must We are encouraged to be examine our lies and de- all the more eager to make termine if we have grown our calling and election spiritually in the different sure. For if we do these areas Peter mentioned. things, we will never fall, If we possess those and we will receive a rich qualities in increasing welcome into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Help us to be faithful to our calling Lord Jesus. Poem: The Lord Jesus made to us many promises, If we are faithful to Him, And those who are obedient, Will receive the welcome He promised to them. So help us heavenly Father, To make our calling and election sure, And one day we will be with Him, Happy, safe, and secure. Dear Lord, we praise you for your precious promises to always be with us. For Christ’s sake. Amen. Who pays for Social Security and Medicare? Jack Stevenson For the Daily News Legions of politicians and commentators tell us that Social Security and Medicare are unsustainable because these “entitlements” will become too expensive. Both programs are financed by taxes that are deducted from our paychecks. During each of the past 29 years, Social Security tax collections exceeded the amount paid to Social Security beneficiaries. Those excess collections are paid into the Social Security Trust Fund, and that fund is managed by the U.S. Treasury. Figures given by Mattea Kramer et al in A People’s Guide to the Federal Budget indicate that Social Security has on deposit in the Treasury about 2.8 trillion dollars. Each payday, 6.2 percent of your wage or salary is deducted for Social Security. Your employer also contributes 6.2 percent for a total 12.4 percent tax to pay for your future Social Security benefits. Medicare was not so well planned. Only 1.45 percent of your wage or salary is deducted as a tax to support Medicare. Your employer contributes another 1.45 percent for a total tax of 2.9 percent to meet your future Medicare needs. That amount of tax is not sufficient to fund the program. Sixty percent of lifetime medical costs occur after age 65. If we want the Medicare program to succeed in the future, we will have to pay a higher tax rate to support it. Social Security and Medicare are established by titles of U.S. law and are called “entitlements.” However, from a practical viewpoint, we are “entitled” to Social Security and Medicare if we are willing to pay the taxes necessary to support the programs. If we are not willing to pay the taxes during our working years, these programs will be curtailed in some manner. Beyond paying taxes, we must address the rising cost of health care. Much of that must be accomplished by government and by health care managers. However, many of us can help reduce the “preventable” health care costs—those eating, drinking, smoking, and addictive drug use habits that cause so many problems. WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 ■ 5 Nation Obama budget: Spending cuts, higher smokers’ taxes Andrew Taylor Jim Kuhnhenn The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Mixing modest curbs on spending with tax increases reviled by Republicans, President Barack Obama proposed a $3.8 trillion budget on Wednesday that would raise taxes on smokers and wealthy Americans and trim Social Security benefits for millions. Obama’s 2014 blueprint combines a $242 billion infusion of new spending for road and rail projects, early education and jobs initiatives — all favored by Democrats — with longer-term savings from programs including Medicare and the military. It promises at least a start in cutting huge annual federal deficits. The president pitched his plan as a good-faith offer to his GOP rivals since it incorporates a proposal he made to Republicans in December that wasn’t radically different from a GOP plan drafted by House Speaker John Boehner. But it follows January’s bitterly fought 10-year, $600 billion-plus tax increase that has stiffened GOP resolve against further tax hikes. “I have already met Republicans more than halfway, so in the coming days and weeks I hope that Republicans will come forward and demonstrate that they’re really as serious about the deficit and debt as they claim to be,” Obama said. He was having a dozen Senate Republicans to the White House for dinner Wednesday evening in hopes of building a dialogue on the budget and other topics. After four years of trillion-dollar-plus deficits in his first term, Obama’s plan projects a $973 billion deficit for the current budget year and red ink of $744 billion for the 2014 fiscal year starting in October. By 2016, the deficit is seen as dropping below 3 percent of the size of the economy, a level that many economists say is manageable. Obama cast his budget as a compromise offer that would bridge differences between Republicans and their desire for reducing government spending and Democrats who want more revenue from taxpayers. But it’s difficult to overstate the gulf between Obama and the conservatives who are in the GOP driver’s seat in Congress. While the budget proposal will not prompt any immediate congressional action, it will probably surface this summer when Republicans are expected to demand additional reductions in the deficit in exchange for increasing the nation’s borrowing authority. Obama claims $1.8 trillion in deficit savings over the coming decade, but the budget tables show the savings are actually $1.4 trillion. And $1.2 trillion of that is devoted to reversing automatic, across-the-board spending cuts required because of Washington’s inability to follow up a 2011 budget pact with further deficit action. “This is worse than a status quo budget,” said House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis. He said it has about $1 trillion in new taxes, $1 trillion in new spending with deficit reduction of only $119 billion over 10 years under GOP math that sorts through questionable interpretations employed by the White House. For instance, Obama claims $167 billion in lower war costs — money the administration never intended to spend — and uses that “savings” for road projects and other undertakings it bills as jobs initiatives. The real cuts include $400 billion scrubbed from health care programs like Medicare over the coming decade, including cuts in payments to drug companies and higher Medicare premiums for people who are better off. The administration would modestly cut the annual operating budgets for both the Pentagon and domestic agencies while reprising ideas like higher Transportation Security Administration fees on airline tickets, the end of Saturday mail delivery and higher pension contributions for federal workers. “He does deserve some credit for some incremental entitlement reforms,” said Boehner, R-Ohio. “But I would hope that he would not hold hostage these modest reforms for his demand for bigger tax hikes. Listen, why don’t we do what we can agree to do?” No panic despite missile test Evacuation may bog down traffic Jean H. Lee The Associated Press PYONGYANG, North Korea — As the world braced for a provocative missile launch by North Korea, with newscasts worldwide playing up tensions on the Korean Peninsula, the center of the storm was strangely calm. The focus in Pyongyang on Wednesday was less on preparing for war and more on beautifying the capital ahead of the nation’s biggest holiday: the April 15 birthday of the nation’s founder, Kim Il Sung. Soldiers put down their rifles to blanket the barren ground with sod and students picked up shovels to help plant trees. But the impoverished, tightly controlled nation that has historically used major holidays to draw the world’s attention by showing off its military power could well mark the occasion by testing a missile designed to strike U.S. military installations in Japan and Guam. South Korea’s foreign minister said the prospect of a medium-range missile launch is “considerably high.” North Korean officials have not announced plans to launch a missile in defiance of U.N. Security Council resolutions barring Pyongyang from nuclear and missile activity. But they have told foreign diplo- mats in Pyongyang that they will not be able to guarantee their safety starting Wednesday and urged tourists in South Korea to take cover, warning that a nuclear war is imminent. Most diplomats and foreign residents in both capitals appeared to be staying put. The European Union said there was no need for member states to evacuate or relocate their diplomatic missions, but it called on North Korea to “refrain from further provocative declarations or action.” The threats are largely seen as rhetoric and an attempt by North Korea to scare foreigners into pressing their governments to pressure Washington and Seoul to change their policies toward Pyongyang, as well as to boost the military credentials of its young leader, Kim Jong Un. North Korea does not have diplomatic relations with the U.S. and South Korea, its foes during the Korean War of the 1950s, and has pushed for a peace treaty to replace a 60-year-old armistice. On the streets of Pyongyang, there was no sense of panic. Downtown, schoolchildren marched toward statues of the two late leaders, Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il, dragging brooms to sweep the hilltop plaza where they tower over Pyongyang. Women with coats thrown over traditional dresses rushed through the spring chill after leaving a rehearsal for a dance planned for Kim Il Sung’s birthday celebrations. At the base of Mansu Hill, a group of young people held a small rally to pledge their loyalty to Kim Jong Un and to sing the Kim ode, “We Will Defend the Marshal With Our Lives.” Kim Un Chol, the 40-year-old head of a political unit at Pyongyang’s tobacco factory, said he had been discharged from the military but was willing to re-enlist if war breaks out. He said North Koreans were resolute. “The people of Pyongyang are confident. They know we can win any war,” he told The Associated Press. “We now have nuclear weapons. So you won’t see any worry on people’s faces, even if the situation is tense.” Kim Jong Il elevated the military’s role during his 17-year rule under a policy of “military first,” and the government devotes a significant chunk of its annual budget to defense. Human rights groups say the massive spending on the military and on development of missile and nuclear technology comes at the expense of most of its 24 million people. Twothirds face chronic food shortages, according to the World Food Program. Post office not eliminating Saturday mail Pauline Jelinek The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The financially beleaguered Postal Service backpedaled on its plan to end Saturday mail delivery, conceding Wednesday that its gamble to compel congressional approval had failed. With limited options for saving money, the governing board said the agency should reopen negotiations with unions to lower labor costs and consider raising mail prices. Yet the board also said it’s not possible for the Postal Service to meet its goals for reduced spending without altering the delivery schedule. Delaying “responsible changes,” the board said, only makes it more likely that the Postal Service “may become a burden” to taxpayers. Congressional reaction was mixed, mirroring differences that have stalled a needed postal overhaul for some time. Some lawmakers had urged the agency to forge ahead with its plan, while others had said it lacked the legal authority to do so. The Postal Service said in February that it planned to switch to five-day-aweek deliveries beginning in August for everything except packages as a way to hold down losses. That announcement was risky. The agency was asking Congress to drop from spending legislation the longtime ban on five-dayonly delivery. Congress did not do that when it passed a spending measure last month. “By including restrictive language … Congress has prohibited implementation of a new national delivery schedule for mail and package,” according to the board. Disappointed but not wanting to disregard the law, the board directed the Postal Service to delay putting in place the new delivery schedule until Congress passes legislation that gives the agency “the authority to implement a financially appropriate and responsible delivery schedule.” The board made the decision in a closed meeting Tuesday. “This is good news for rural communities, businesses, seniors, veterans and others who depend on consistent and timely delivery of the mail,” said Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. The Associated Press TAMPA, Fla. — Joshua and Sharyn Hakken seemed to have a charmed life, doting on their two young boys, buying a comfortable home and building successful careers as engineers. It all derailed last year when police in Louisiana found the family inside a hotel room with drugs, weapons and promises from the parents to take “a journey to the Armageddon.” The couple is now jailed on charges they kidnapped the boys from their grandparents in Florida and sailed to Cuba on a boat called “Salty” to elude U.S. authorities. The family arrived in Florida early Wednesday morning, accompanied by federal, state and local authorities after being handed over by Cuban officials. Four-year-old Cole and 2-year-old Chase are now with their grandparents, and their parents are in jail, closing a bizarre ordeal that began with an Amber Alert and ended with diplomatic intervention. Friends of the couple said the family seemed happy and had no marital problems. “This is a train that went completely off the tracks, and I don’t have any explanation for how it can go off the track that badly basically in a year and a half. It’s very bizarre,” said Darrell Hanecki, who employed Sharyn Hakken for nearly a decade at Hanecki Consulting Engineers. Hanecki said she was an easygoing and relaxed employee who worked from the home they owned in sunny Tampa so she could spend more time with the kids. AP National Writer Regulators and congressional investigators clashed Wednesday over a new report warning that in the event of an accident at a nuclear plant, panicking residents from outside the official evacuation zone might jam the roads and prevent others from escaping. The report by the Government Accountability Office, which acts as the investigative arm of Congress, challenges a three-decade-old fundamental of emergency planning around American nuclear power plants: that preparations for evacuation should focus on people who live within 10 miles of the site. The GAO found that people living beyond the official 10-mile evacuation zone might be so frightened by the prospect of spreading radiation that they would flee of their own accord, clog roads, and delay the escape of others. The investigators said regulators have never properly studied how many people beyond 10 miles would make their own decisions to take flight, prompting what is called a “shadow evacuation.” As a result, the GAO report says, “evacuation time estimates may not accurately consider the impact of shadow evacuations.” However, Neil Sheehan, a spokesman for the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission, shot back in an email statement: “We disagree with the view that evacuations cannot be safely carried out.” The investigation was requested by four U.S. senators: Democrats Barbara Boxer of California, Robert P. Casey Jr. of Pennsylvania and Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island, and independent Bernard Sanders of Vermont. They asked for the report in 2011 in response to an Associated Press investigative series reporting weaknesses in community planning for nuclear accidents, including the likelihood of surprisingly large shadow evacuations. In an interview Wednesday, Casey said the report suggests that “we need to do more to ensure that these residents who live outside of the 10-mile radius have access to and understand evacuation procedures.” He said legislation may be needed but gave no details. But GOP Rep. Darrell Issa of California, chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, bemoaned the decision to back away from a “delivery schedule that polling indicates the American people understand and support.” Postal officials said that to restore the service to long-term financial stability, the agency must have the flexibility to reduce costs and come up with new revenues. “It is not possible for the Postal Service to meet significant cost reduction goals without changing its delivery schedule — any rational analysis of our current financial condition and business options leads Kantele Franko to this conclusion,” the The Associated Press board statement said. BERGHOLZ, Ohio — Bare feet and work boots shuffle on the wooden floor of the Amish schoolhouse as the children settle into tight rows of scuffed metal desks across the room from their parents — the men on one set of benches, women on another, some cradling younger children. They have gathered to celebrate the end of school, but no She brought the boys into the office a few one claps or cheers. The only voices raised are those of the times to show them off to her colleagues. students as they begin singing, the melodies rising and dip“The kids were really well-behaved. ping like the surrounding hills. A warm breeze carries the From everything I could tell, she was religious lyrics, mostly in German, through open windows a great mom. Her kids were definitely and over the fields where families will mingle afterward. her priority,” Hanecki said. The ceremony is typically in late April, but this school He said Sharyn Hakken was pragmatic year was cut short to allow some youngsters a few more and responsible, graduating from the Uni- days of family time before their parents leave for federal versity of South Florida in 2008. She oc- prison. casionally gave advice to Hanecki’s daugh“It’s a happy day on the outside, but not on the inside. ter, an aspiring engineer, and encouraged On the inside, a lot of times we’re crying, but we have to her to stay in school and finish her degree. keep our spirits up for the children’s sake,” said Martha She resigned in 2011, saying it was Mullet. too difficult to juggle work with carHer husband, Sam Mullet Sr., is the group’s leader and ing for an infant and toddler. is among nine men already behind bars on hate crime conSharyn Hakken’s husband, Joshua, victions for hair- and beard-cutting attacks against fellow also seemed to show few signs of trou- Amish. He was sentenced to 15 years, the longest term of ble. He attended the U.S. Air Force the 16 defendants. Academy from 1996 to 1998 but did Seven aren’t yet in prison. Come Friday, five of them not graduate, according to academy — four women and one more man — from this tight-knit spokesman Sgt. Vann Miller, who de- group in rural eastern Ohio will enter the prison system in various states. clined to provide further details. US couple jailed for fleeing with kids Kelli Kennedy Mike Schneider Jeff Donn Amish gather before prison terms 6 ■ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS State Tomblin signs Rahall: President’s budget a ‘mixed bag’ wide-ranging education bill Chad Abshire Staff Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Rep. Nick Rahall (D-W.Va.) released a statement Wednesday regarding President Barack Obama’s budget request for the fiscal year 2014. “The President’s proposed budget is a mixed bag – some very good proposals; some purely awful,” Rahall said. “While I strongly support the investments for vital infrastructure so necessary to building our economy, I cannot endorse any budget that undercuts Social Security and Medicare, as this one does.” Rahall said that both social security and medicare “have their own set of challenges and they ought to be dealt with separately from the overall budget,” and that they shouldn’t be “used as piggy banks to offset some fanciful grand bargain, as the President proposes in his budget.” “Seniors, many on fixed incomes, have a moral claim on the benefits they have earned over a lifetime of paying into Social Security and Medicare; those obligations must be honored,” Rahall said. “This budget has some bright spots, but it also is deeply flawed.” Lawrence Messina The Associated Press MTV cancels ‘BUCKWILD’ after star’s death Vicki Smith The Associated Press MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — MTV said Wednesday it is canceling its West Virginia-based reality TV show “BUCKWILD” a week after the accidental death of 21-year-old star Shain Gandee. Network spokesman Jake Urbanski confirmed the news, saying it was “not an easy decision.” “But given Shain’s tragic passing and essential presence on the show, we felt it was not appropriate to continue without him,” the network said. “Instead, we are working on a meaningful way to pay tribute to his memory on our air and privately.” On Sunday, MTV will air a special, “BUCKWILD: WV to the NYC,” which was shot before second-season filming had begun. The network said Shain’s parents, Dale and Loretta Gandee, support the move. Gandee and two others were found dead of carbon monoxide poisoning on April 1. Gandee’s SUV was stuck in a mud pit near his home in Sissonville, its tail pipe submerged. That could have allowed the invisible gas to fill the vehicle’s cabin. Gandee, his 48-year-old uncle, David Gandee, and 27-year-old friend Donald Robert Myers had last been seen leaving a bar at 3 a.m. March 31. Friends and family searched all day for them, and authorities issued a missing-persons report the following day. The Gandees were buried Sunday after a joint memorial service in Charleston that drew hundreds of friends, family and fans. Cameras were not allowed inside the Charleston Municipal Auditorium or at the private family burial in Thaxton Cemetery. Shain Gandee, nicknamed “Gandee Candy” by fans, was a breakout star of the show that followed the antics of young friends enjoying their wild country lifestyle. Season one was filmed last year, mostly around Sissonville and Charleston. Gandee favored four-wheelers, pickups and SUVs over cellphones and computers, and “mudding,” or off-road driving, was one of his favorite pastimes. It was no coincidence some mourners arrived in mud-splattered trucks. Shooting was underway on season two at the time of Gandee’s death, but MTV said film crews were not with him over Easter weekend and hadn’t filmed him since earlier that week. MTV said the half-hour series in the old “Jersey Shore” time slot was pulling in an average of 3 million viewers per episode since its premiere and was the No. 1 original cable series on Thursday nights among 12- to 34-year-olds. Some fans reacted angrily to the decision on social media, launching a campaign to keep the show alive using the hash tag (hash)KeepBuckwildForShain on Twitter. Cast member Cara Parrish was also among those objecting. “I think MTV should show reality. Losing Shain broke all our hearts,” Parrish tweeted. Although the idea of filming without Gandee “hurts me clear through my soul,” she wrote, “the thought of turning our backs on his dreams is worse.” But many others, including some at Gandee’s funeral, said the show just wouldn’t have been the same without him. The network issued a statement from Loretta and Dale Gandee, thanking fans for their thoughts and prayers. “We have truly felt all the love and know that Shain is resting peacefully,” they said. “Shain was an incredible, outgoing and positive person who was loved by whoever he met. We are honored that we were able to let the world see what a wonderful son we had.” Shain Gandee was the third BUCKWILD cast member to make unwanted headlines. Last month, 24-year-old Salwa Amin was sent back to jail for violating the terms of her bond following a February arrest on drug charges. She is facing two counts of drug possession with intent to deliver and remained behind bars without bond on Wednesday. State Police say a multi-agency task force arrested Amin and two other people at a Summersville residence after receiving a tip from an informant. A search found oxycodone pills, heroin and $3,000 in cash. Another cast mate, Michael Douglas Burford, was charged in February with driving under the influence. Some detractors, including U.S. Sen. and former West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin, had publicly worried about the show and its cast before the first episode aired. Manchin asked MTV to cancel the show, telling the network’s president that it would profit from the “poor decisions of our youth” and that it played to ugly, inaccurate stereotypes about the people of West Virginia. Bail bondsmen attack pretrial release bill David Gutman The Associated Press CHARLESTON, W.Va. — West Virginia bail bondsmen oppose a pretrial release bill that they say would cut into their business and reduce accountability for people who flee while awaiting trial, but the bill’s supporters say it addresses those who bondsmen aren’t serving and is part of the state’s larger effort to reduce jail crowding. The bill would let counties create supervised release programs for inmates awaiting trial. All pretrial releases would be at the discretion of a judge or magistrate. The court would rely on standard risk assessment tests and would be advised by a local committee of prosecutors, law enforcement and defense attorneys. The bill’s supporters said that people are languishing in county jails while they await trial because they cannot afford bail. It costs counties $49 per day to house an inmate in a regional jail. For people released before trial, counties would have to pay the courts $7 a day in supervision fees. Regional jails in West Virginia are dangerously overcrowded. There are currently 1,700 prisoners who should be in state prisons but are being kept in regional jails because there is no room. The House is expected to vote Friday on a wideranging bill that would attempt to halt growth in the state’s critically overcrowded prisons. Carl Reynolds, senior legal and policy advisor at the Council of State Governments, conducted the nine-month study that became the basis for that bill. Reynolds said the pretrial release bill would work well with the broader prisons bill. He said they are conceptually linked and both require similar risk assessment evaluations for people in jails and prisons. At a public hearing Wednesday, bail bondsmen said that they are account- able for people out on bail but that no one would be held accountable for people let out on pretrial release programs. Bill Garvin, the president of the West Virginia Surety Bail Bond Agents Association, said that bail bondsmen travel the country to track down absconders. He said he currently was pursuing a case in Hawaii. The bill arose out of pretrial release pilot programs that have been operating in five counties. Jim Lee, the chief probation officer in Brooke County, said that in the three years of their pilot program every person showed up for his or her court date. Gov’s purchasing, state reserves bills die CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Proposals to change West Virginia purchasing rules and increase its emergency reserves won’t pass this legislative session. The House Finance Committee decided to request studies of both topics Wednesday instead of advancing bills from Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin’s agenda. The governor wanted to end the practice known as secondary bidding. That measure also sought to require annual training for top executive branch officials on purchasing rules. The other bill renewed Tomblin’s push to enlarge the state’s main Rainy Day fund. It now equals 13 percent of general revenue spending. The governor wanted that level raised to 15 percent. The demise of these two measures follows Tuesday’s rejection of his proposal to weigh how pending legislation might affect jobs. The House Judiciary Committee voted it down after numerous amendments. W.Va. House bill bars excluding gays from juries CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Gays and lesbians could no longer be excluded from serving on juries, under a bill passed by the West Virginia House Judiciary Committee. The bill passed Wednes- day would include sexual orientation among the factors that courts cannot use to exclude jurors. Currently courts cannot ban jurors based on race, color, religion, sex, nation of origin, economic status or disability. Del. Stephen Skinner offered the sexual orientation amendment to a bill that concerned disqualifying jurors who have been convicted of felonies. The amendment passed 17-6 over Republican opposition. Earlier this session Skinner sponsored a bill that would have barred housing and employment discrimination based on sexual orientation. That bill stalled because of limited support. CHARLESTON, W.Va. — West Virginia counties will soon have more leeway when hiring educators and scheduling 180 days of student learning each year, after Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin on Wednesday signed wide-ranging public schools legislation that topped his agenda this session. The measure, which takes effect June 30, also offers loan forgiveness to teachers who commit to critical-need subject and geographic areas. It will repay nationally certified teachers when they renew that status. It also furthers Tomblin’s goals of ensuring high school seniors are ready for college or career training, and that third-graders are reading at grade level by the end of that year. “Its changes are real, and it will improve the lives of our kids,” Tomblin, a Democrat, told the crowd in his Capitol reception room before the signing. “It focuses not only on quantity but the quality of time that our children spend in the classroom.” The bill followed an in-depth audit that questioned West Virginia’s low-ranking student achievement scores, given the billions of dollars it devotes annually to public schools. Tomblin’s response heeded its recommendation that factors besides seniority should help steer teacher hiring and transfers. The bill also limits non-instruction time while allowing counties to adjust for snow days to meet the state-required 180 days. The audit found that none of the 55 county’s school districts met that mandate during the year it studied. But groups representing teachers and school workers persuaded lawmakers to scale back those parts of the bill. They also had language removed that would have offered temporary licenses to participants in the national Teach for America program. The measure instead sets up a study of alternative ways to grant teaching certificates. Leaders of these groups joined Tomblin and top legislators at the podium Wednesday. Senate President Jeff Kessler, D-Marshall, singled the groups out for applause. “No one got everything that they wanted, but everyone got something that they wanted,” said Christine Campbell, incoming president of the American Federation of Teachers-West Virginia. Wednesday’s ceremony also featured officials from business groups that rallied behind Tomblin’s effort. Brenda Nichols Harper, a lawyer for the state Chamber of Commerce, praised the governor for making the issue this session’s top priority. “We will be at the table from here on out on education. We want a great workforce,” said Janet Vineyard, chairwoman of the West Virginia Business and Industry Council. The audit found the state education system rigid with a top-heavy bureaucracy and laws “detailed to the extreme.” That prompted lawmakers to amend Tomblin’s measure so that the Department of Education trims personnel spending by 5 percent in each of the next two years. The resulting cut for the proposed 2013-2014 budget is estimated at $850,000. Promising to go further, Tomblin has enlisted the state Board of Education while issuing executive orders to pursue additional changes. “This bill is a huge step in the right direction, but I want to emphasize that it’s just the beginning,” the governor said. Dale Lee, president of the West Virginia Education Association, told the audience he hoped that meant teacher pay raises, tackling child poverty and giving educators more time to collaborate. Lawmakers are, meanwhile, pursuing additional measures before their session ends Saturday. The Senate Education Committee, for instance, advanced a House-passed bill Tuesday that repeals 26 sections of state law targeted by the audit. That measure also devotes funding to local-level educator training — teachers now routinely travel to Charleston for that — and for digital-age learning tools. And the state board has budgeted $1.6 million to hire 16 staffers to provide county-based professional development through the Regional Education Resource Agencies, President Wade Linger announced at the signing. The bill targets third-grade reading partly by requiring all 55 counties to offer full-day education to 4-year-olds five days a week, while providing for the necessary staff. The readiness provisions require schools to test high school juniors and then offer remedial classes to those who need it when they’re seniors. The classroom hiring changes put seniority alongside 10 other criteria including relevant specialized training and past evaluations. County school boards can weigh each factor as they choose, unless an already-employed teacher is among the applicants. All criteria are then given equal weight except faculty senate and principal recommendations, which count double. An applicant who wins both recommendations as well as the county superintendent’s is guaranteed the job. “This bill is an example of what government can do when everybody sits down and works together on one common goal: what’s best for our children. We did that,” said House Speaker Rick Thompson, a Wayne County Democrat. Forced-sterilization law faces repeal CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — A unanimous West Virginia Legislature has voted to repeal a law that had allowed for involuntary sterilizations. The Senate agreed to send Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin a Housepassed measure striking down the statute on Tuesday. The law allowed forced sterilization of people deemed mentally incompetent. State officials say it was applied regularly in the 1920s and ’30s. But science has debunked views held then that human traits considered defective could be eliminated through sterilization. Officials say West Virginia’s law hadn’t been used since the 1950s. They also believe it may be the last such law among the states. WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 ■ 7 DAILY NEWS Sports THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 Joey Fields to coach WV all-stars Kyle Lovern Sports Editor RED JACKET — Last year’s head coach of the West Virginia all-stars in the annual Hatfield & McCoy Senior All-Star game, Joey Fields, will return to try to get another win for the Mountain State. “I am super excited about having the opportunity to coach in the game once again,” Fields said. “The Senior Bowl is a great way to kick-off the upcoming football season.” “But for me as a coach, what I enjoy the most is the relationships you build with the players and coaches,” Fields added. “Coach (Yogi) Kinder has continued to do a great job over the years with the game. We had a great group of guys last year. I expect the same with this group - Hady Ford, Josh Sammons and Chase Moore will be my assistants. They did a great job for me last year.” Fields is also assisting Kinder with the Mingo Central Miners. The game was moved to Harless Stadium last season for the first time. It had previously been played at Matewan High School. Fields said he will get his players from Mingo, Wayne, Logan, Wyoming and McDowell Counties. The Kentucky squad, which will be coached by former UK star David Jones, will get their roster from eastern Kentucky counties including Pike, Martin, Floyd and Johnson. Several players from local schools such as Belfry, Mingo Central, Phelps, Pike Central, Tug Valley and Sheldon Clark are expected to play this summer. West Virginia rolled over the Kentucky squad 37-12, as Logan graduate Joe Street rushed for four touchdowns and was named the Mountain State’s offensive MVP in last year’s game. Kentucky coach David Jones, who coached in the game back in 2011, says he hopes to turn the table on the West Virginia allstars this summer. Jone’s team won that season and he plans to have a more competitive Bluegrass squad come August 3. The 18th annual all-star game will played on Saturday, August 3 at 8 p.m. Kyle Lovern is the sports editor for the Williamson Daily News. Comments or story ideas can be sent to [email protected] or [email protected] Kyle Lovern | Daily News Joey Fields will once again coach the W.Va. senior all-stars in the annual Hatfield-McCoy Bowl this summer. Fields is also an assistant coach for Mingo Central’s Yogi Kinder. Fields coached the Mountain State squad to a win last year. WV-KY All-Star game scheduled at Mingo Central Kyle Lovern Sports Editor These three Tug Valley seniors will be playing in the Scott Brown Memorial Classic in Beckley this Saturday. The Class A all-stars will play against the Class AA senior all-stars. Pictured, left to right, Aaron Muncy, Mikey Newsome and Austin Brewer. Several of the state’s top players will be participating in the event. Three in Beckley all-star game Kyle Lovern Sports Editor BECKLEY — Coach Garland “Rabbit” Thompson and three of his players from the Tug Valley Panther state championship squad will be participating in the annual Scott Brown Memorial Classic this Saturday at Beckley. Thompson will coach the Class A squad against the Class AA team. Panther seniors Austin Brewer, Mikey Newsome and Aaron Muncy were also selected to play on the Class A squad. The game will be played at the Beckley-Raleigh County Convention Center and the two rosters are loaded with talent. After the first game, which starts at 4 p.m., a game featuring national talent will be played. One of those teams will have four players who have signed with WVU and another player, Donte Grantham, who is being recruited by the Mountaineers and other D-1 schools. Between the two Class A and AA teams, there will be six firstteam all-staters. There are also several secondNull of Sissonville. team, third-team Robert C. Byrd’s and honorable menBill Bennett, who tion selections. led his squad to Joining the Tug the Class AA semiValley players on finals this season, the Class A all-star will coach the Class squad are Keith AA team. Mullins of Greater The national Beckley Christian, game, which will Colby Ennis and feature four WVU Josh Martin of signees - Devin WilGreenbrier West. liams, Elijah MaAll three played con, Brandon Watagainst Tug Valley kins and Nathan Tug Valley Coach Garland Adrian - playing this season. Others on “Rabbit” Thompson will be on the same team, Thompson’s squad coaching the Class A all-stars will begin at 6 p.m. will be Cody White in Beckley this Saturday. In between the two of Meadow Bridge, games, there will be Zach Casto of Charleston Cathoa dunk contest and 3-point shootlic, and Jake Grimmett of Midland ing contest. Trail. Tickets are available at the The Class AA team will have Beckley-Raleigh County ConvenBrett Morris of Webster County, Travon Horton, Devante Waites tion Center box office, by calling and Shaquille Washington all of the Convention Center at 1-888695-0888 or online at www.beckFairmont Senior, Tyler Sprouse of Bridgeport, leyconventioncenter.com. Brett Bowling of Wyoming East, Kyle Lovern is the sports editor for the WilShane Greco of Independence, liamson Daily News. Comments or story Iziah Hill of Robert C. Byrd, Josh ideas can be sent to klovern@williamsondaiGanoe of James Monroe and Zack lynews.com or [email protected] The first annual WV-KY Senior All-star basketball game is being planned for Saturday, May 4, at Mingo Central High School. The game is being sponsored by Consul Energy. There will be two games, one for the gals and one for the guys. The girl’s contest will be held first, followed by a dunk contest and 3-point competition and then the boy’s game. Rosters are currently being filled for both squads. Several top-notch players from southern West Virginia and eastern Kentucky are expected to play. The coaches for the teams have been selected. Frankie Smith, current coach for Sheldon Clark High School, will coach the boys’ team, while Clay Campbell, current coach for Pike Central Lady Hawks, will coach the girl’s squad for the Bluegrass State. For the Mountain State squad, Nick Cabell of Scott High School will coach the boys’ team, while David Hanshaw and Julius “Boo” Hatcher will call the shots for the girl’s squad. “Some of the best talent from southern West Virginia and eastern Kentucky will be featured,” said Steve Cook, an officer for the MCHS Basketball Boosters Club. “There will be some college coaches at the games scouting and we encourage everyone to come out and support this event.” A large crowd is expected for the games and competitions. Organizers are hoping to make this an annual event. Mingo Central head basketball coach Brad Napier is one of the directors of the senior all-star games. Kyle Lovern | Daily News Austin Banks (4) of Mingo Central will be one of the senior all-stars who will be playing in the first annual WV-KY all-star game which will be held at Mingo Central. Several top-notch seniors will be participating in the even. There will be a girls game and a boys game. In between the two games there will be a dunk contest and 3-point shooting competition. Duty leads Belfry Pirates past Pike Central Kyle Lovern Sports Editor GOODY, Ky. — The Belfry Pirates got three shutout innings from southpaw Joey Duty in relief and came from behind to defeat district rival Pike Central 4-3 Monday night at Massey Energy Field. The Hawks scored first in the 2nd inning when Blake Clark led off with walk, advanced on passed ball and then scored on single by DH Hunter Clark. Dylan Wright then singled for PCHS. In the 4th inning the Hawk’s Hunter Clark led off with walk, then Cameron Hamilton walked with one out, and both scored on single to left by Wes Pugh as the visitors took a 3-0 lead. Belfry scored two runs in the bottom of the 4th inning. With one out, Zack Francisco walked, Duty singled, pinch hitter Garrett Fannin walked to load bases. Francisco scored on sac fly by Caleb Stanley. Duty then scored on single to left field by Madison Ghormley. In the 5th inning, Belfry’s Keaton Taylor led off with a walk and then stole 2nd base. He advanced to third on an error by the catcher. Reed Williamson was then hit by a pitch for second time in game. With one out, Taylor and Williamson each scored on wild pitches as the Pirates took the lead 4-0. Duty got the win on the mound in relief of Taylor. He had four strikeouts in three innings and only issued one walk and gave up one hit. Mac Justice took the loss for the Hawks. Belfry, coached by Michael Hagy, is now 4-6 on the season, while Pike Central dropped to 7-5. The Pirates were scheduled to host Phelps today (Thursday), weather permitting. Score by innings: PC (7-5)…0 1 0 2 0 0 0 - 3 5 3 BHS (4-6)…0 0 0 2 2 0 x - 4 2 2 WP: Duty, 4 K’s, 1 BB; 1 H; LP: Mac Justice Kyle Lovern | Daily News Belfry head baseball coach Michael Hagy is shown talking to his pitcher, catcher and infielders during a mound conference Monday night against Pike Central. The Pirates came from behind to beat the Hawks 4-3. an infant under the age (18) eighteen years. Case No.: 13-D-177 8 ■ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 ORDER On this day came Petitioner Nancy Helbert, otherwise known as Xavier Olguin, pro se, and moved the Court to allow him/her to file his/her Petition Name Change of Minor pursuant to West Virginia Code 48-25-101, et seq.. Cards club Reds, Westbrook throws shutout R.B. Fallstrom AP Sports Writer ST. LOUIS — Jake Westbrook pitched a five-hit shutout and the St. Louis Cardinals backed him with four home runs Wednesday in routing the Cincinnati Reds 10-0. Jon Jay, Carlos Beltran and Matt Adams homered in a span of seven at-bats off Homer Bailey as the Cardinals took two of three from the NL Central champions. Matt Carpenter added a two-run homer on a fourhit day. Adams homered for the second straight game and added an RBI double and walk. The Cardinals have dominated the Reds at home the last decade, losing just three of 28 series with two splits. Westbrook (1-1) threw his fourth career shutout, walking four and striking out three. Westbrook pitched his first shutout since Aug. 9, 2006, against the Angels when he was with Cleveland, and this was his 15th career complete game. He held the Reds hitless in six at-bats with runners in scoring position, and contributed his 11th career RBI with a single in the seventh for St. Louis’ final run. Bailey (1-1) had gone 23 straight shutout innings — including his no-hitter against Pittsburgh last season — before the Cardi- ■ nals broke open a scoreless game with four runs with two outs in the fifth. Bailey was charged with seven runs in five-plus innings and dropped to 3-8 with a 5.52 ERA against the Cardinals, including 0-4 with a 6.93 ERA at Busch Stadium. The Cardinals advanced only two runners into scoring position in the first four innings and Bailey got two quick outs to start the fifth before running into trouble against the top of the lineup. St. Louis scored 10 runs on 11 hits in the fifth, sixth and seventh off Bailey, Logan Ondrusek and Alfredo Simon. Jay’s second homer just cleared center fielder ShinSoo Choo’s leaping attempt at the wall. Carpenter followed with a single and Matt Holliday hit an RBI double, prompting a visit from pitching coach Bryan Price. Beltran then hit his first homer of the season on to make it 4-0. Adams hit a two-run homer in the sixth off Bailey. Carpenter’s two-run shot homer three batters later made it 8-0. NOTES: Jay has 19 career homers, six of them against the Reds. … Choo was 0 for 2 with a walk and hit by pitch to end a fourgame streak of two hits each game. … Cincinnati’s Todd Frazier was 0 for 11 in the series after opening the season with a six-game RBI streak. It is ORDERED that a hearing on the matter and things set forth in said Petition shall be heard in open Court on the 16th day of May, 2013 at 9:30 a.m. before the Honorable Thompson, Judge of the Family Court of Mingo County, West Virginia. LEGALS LEGALS PUBLIC NOTICE OF BLASTING OPERATIONS Notice is hereby given that Central Appalachia Mining, LLC, P.O. Box 1169, Pikeville, KY 41502 intends to conduct blasting activities on surface mine Permit No, S500811 located approximately 3.5 miles northeast of Edgarton in Magnolia District of Mingo County, West Virginia. Blasting activities will not be conducted at times other than those announced in the blasting schedule except in the event of an emergency situation where rain, lightening, or other atmospheric conditions, or operator or public safety requires unscheduled detonations. Blasting will be conducted between the hours of sunrise and sunset every day (except Sundays) between April 21, 2013 and April 20, 2014. Ten minutes prior to and immediately after each blast, all access to the specific area will be safeguarded from unauthorized entry. The warning signal prior to each blast shall be from an air horn, audible to at least one half mile from the blast. The warning will be given three (3) minutes prior to detonation and will consist of three (3) short blasts of five (5) seconds duration with five (5) seconds between each blast. The all clear signal shall be one long blast from an air horn, of twenty (20) seconds duration. Blasting shall be conducted in such a way so as to prevent adverse impacts to the public or the environment. IN THE FAMILY COURT OF MINGO COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA 4:11 Sports Briefs Louisville’s Russ Smith leaving for NBA LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Junior guard Russ Smith will leave Louisville early to enter the NBA draft, according to his father. Russ Smith Sr. said the Cardinals’ leading scorer “did it all” during a college career that culminated with Louisville’s 82-76 victory over Michigan on Monday night for the NCAA championship. That title, two Big East crowns and an all-conference first-team selection this season completes a resume he said made it easy for his son to move on to the next level. Smith’s father said his son will announce his decision in the next week. The 6-foot-1 Smith averaged 18.7 points this season, including 22.3 in six NCAA tournament games. But he struggled in the Cardinals’ title-clinching victory, missing 13 of 16 shots and finishing with nine points. Jayhawks’ McLemore declares for NBA draft LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The hardest decision of Ben McLemore’s life turned out to be no question at all. Kansas coach Bill Self made sure of it. The talented guard announced Tuesday that he will enter the NBA draft after perhaps the most successful season by a freshman in the school’s proud basketball history. And just in case he thought twice about passing up professional riches, Self was ready to shove him out the door. The second-team All-American is expected to be a lottery pick in June after breaking the Jayhawks’ freshman scoring record held by Danny Manning. McLemore averaged nearly 16 points for a team that went 31-6 and won a share of its ninth straight Big 12 championship. Reds place Marshall on DL with tendinitis ST. LOUIS (AP) — Cincinnati Reds left-hander Sean Marshall, who’s been bothered for several weeks by left shoulder tendinitis, has been placed on the 15-day disabled list. The move was made retroactive to Monday, and righthander Logan Ondrusek was recalled from Double-A Pensacola and was expected to arrive in time for Wednesday’s game against the Cardinals. Marshall has appeared in one game, working a scoreless inning. Ondrusek had a 7.59 ERA in 10 spring training appearances and was optioned to Pensacola the day before the opener. In three appearances in the minors, he allowed one hit in 2 1/3 scoreless innings. Visit us online at www.williamsondailynews.com Entered this 8th day of April, 2013. The Honorable Miki Thompson 4:11,18 Nancy Helbert, Parent and Petitioner as PARENT of Xavier Olguin an infant under the age (18) eighteen years. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT Notice is hereby given that Coal-Mac, Inc. dba Phoenix Coal-Mac Mining, Inc., P.O. Box 1050, 22 Mine Road Harless Wood Industrial Park, Holden, WV 25625 (304) 792-8400 surface mine permit number S-5021-08 situated in the Lee and Island Creek Districts of Mingo and Logan Counties, WV, approximately 2.5 miles north of Ragland, WV will be conducting blasting activities in accordance with all State and Federal Laws as approved by the Department of Environmental Protection. Blasting activities will be conducted between sunrise to sunset, Monday through Saturday during April 21, 2013 through April 20, 2014. No blasting will be conducted on Sundays. Ten minutes prior to and immediately after each blast, all access to the specific area will be safeguarded from unauthorized entry. The warning signal prior to each blast shall be from a siren audible to at least one mile from the blast. The warning will be given three (3) minutes prior to detonation and will consist of three (3) short signals of five (5) seconds duration with five (5) seconds between each signal. The "ALL CLEAR" signal shall consist of one (1) long warning signal to twenty (20) seconds duration from a siren. Blasting shall be conducted in such a way so as to prevent adverse impacts to the public or the environment. Blasting activities will not be conducted at times other than those announced in the blasting schedule except in the event of an emergency situation where rain, lightening, or other atmospheric conditions, or operator or public safety requires unscheduled detonations. 4:11 Case No.: 13-D-177 ORDER On this day came Petitioner Nancy Helbert, otherwise known as Xavier Olguin, pro se, and moved the Court to allow him/her to file his/her Petition Name Change of Minor pursuant to West Virginia Code 48-25-101, et seq.. It is ORDERED that a hearing on the matter and things set forth in said Petition shall be heard in open Court on the 16th day of May, 2013 at 9:30 a.m. before the Honorable Thompson, Judge of the Family Court of Mingo County, West Virginia. It is further ORDERED that Petitioner shall publish notice of the time and place for the petition for Change of Name in a Class I legal advertisement in compliance with Article three, Chapter fifty-nine of West Virginia Code. Said publication shall take place at least ten days before the scheduled hearing in this matter and shall contain a provision that the hearing may be rescheduled without further notice of publication. Petitioner is also ORDERED to bring proof of such publication to the hearing in this matter. Entered this 8th day of April, 2013. Miscellaneous The Honorable Miki Thompson NATIONAL MARKETPLACE 4:11,18 Are You Still Paying Too Much For Your Medications? Make the Switch to Dish Today and Save up to 50% You can save up to 90% when you fill your prescriptions at our Canadian and International Pharmacy Service. rice Our P Celecoxib* $58.00 Generic equivalent of CelebrexTM. Generic price for 200mg x 100 compared to Celebrex $437.58 TM Zeller leaving Indiana for NBA BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — Indiana’s Cody Zeller is expected to announce his future plans Wednesday afternoon. The university has called a 4 p.m. news conference and the 7-foot sophomore center may be leaning toward turning pro this year after skipping last year’s draft to return to school and chase a national championship. Teammate Victor Oladipo, a 6-foot-5 junior, announced he was leaving for the NBA on Tuesday. Zeller opened this season as a preseason favorite for national player of the year. He wound up leading the Hoosiers in scoring (16.5 points) and rebounding (8.1), was a second-team All-American and is projected to be a top 10 pick in June’s draft. Zeller’s older two brothers, Luke and Tyler, also have played in the NBA this season. It is further ORDERED that Petitioner shall publish notice of the time and place for the petition for Change of Name in a Class I legal advertisement in compliance with Article three, Chapter fifty-nine of West Virginia Code. Said publication shall take place at least ten days before the scheduled hearing in this matter and shall contain a provision that the hearing may be rescheduled without further notice of publication. Petitioner is also ORDERED to bring proof of such publication to the hearing in this matter. LEGALS Typical US brand price for 200mg x 100 Get An Extra $10 Off & Free Shipping On Your 1st Order! Promotiona Packages l starting at only ... Call the number below and save an additional $10 plus get free shipping on your first prescription order with Canada Drug Center. Expires March 31, 2013. Offer is valid for prescription orders only and can not be used in conjunction with any other offers. Order Now! 1-800-341-2398 Use code 10FREE to receive this special offer. 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Any reason is good enough to find its way into the Classifieds' greetings and happy ads. Call 304-235-4242, ext 27 for more information. EMPLOYMENT We’ll Repair Your Computer Through The Internet! ✔ WE CAN SAVE YOU THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS ANNOUNCEMENTS Happy Ads / Birthday / Anniversary Call Now and Ask How! ✔ WE CAN GET YOU OUT OF DEBT QUICKLY for your FREE consultation CALL mo. For 3 months. Over $10,000 in credit card bills? Can’t make the minimum payments? Not a high-priced consolidation loan or one of those consumer credit counseling programs PREMIUM MOVIE CHANNELS* Coal-Mac Mining, Inc., P.O. Box 1050, 22 Mine Road Harless Wood Industrial Park, Holden, WV 25625 (304) 792-8400 surface mine permit number S-5021-08DAILY situatedNEWS in WILLIAMSON the Lee and Island Creek Districts of Mingo and Logan Counties, WV, approximately 2.5 miles north of Ragland, WV will be conducting blasting activities in accordance with all State and Federal Laws as approved by the Department of Environmental Protection. Blasting activities will be conducted between sunrise to sunset, Monday through Saturday during April 21, 2013 through April 20, 2014. No blasting will be conducted on Sundays. Ten minutes prior to and immediately after each blast, all access to the specific area will be safeguarded from unauthorized entry. The warning signal prior to each blast shall be from a siren audible to at least one mile from the blast. The warning will be given three (3) minutes prior to detonation and will consist of three (3) short signals of five (5) seconds duration with five (5) seconds between each signal. The "ALL CLEAR" signal shall consist of one (1) long warning signal to twenty (20) seconds duration from a siren. Blasting shall be conducted in such a wayLEGALS so as to prevent adverse impacts to the public or the environment. Blasting activities will not be conducted at times other than those announced in the blasting schedule except in the event of an emergency situation where rain, lightening, or other atmospheric conditions, or operator or public safety requires unscheduled detonations. 4:11 LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT Notice is hereby given that Coal-Mac, Inc. dba Phoenix Coal-Mac Mining, Inc., P.O. Box 1050, 22 Mine Road Harless Wood Industrial Park, Holden, WV 25625 (304) 792-8400 surface mine permit number S-5023-99 situated in the Lee and Island Creek Districts of Mingo and Logan Counties, WV, approximately 2.5 miles northeast of Ragland, WV will be conducting blasting activities in accordance with all State and Federal Laws as approved by the Department of Environmental Protection. Blasting activities will be conducted between sunrise to sunset, Monday through Saturday during April 21, 2013 through April 20, 2014. No blasting will be conducted on Sundays. Ten minutes prior to and immediately after each blast, all access to the specific area will be safeguarded from unauthorized entry. The warning signal prior to each blast shall be from a siren audible to at least one mile from the blast. The warning will be given three (3) minutes prior to detonation and will consist of three (3) short signals of five (5) seconds duration with five (5) seconds between each signal. The "ALL CLEAR" signal shall consist of one (1) long warning signal to twenty (20) seconds duration from a siren. Blasting shall be conducted in such a way so as to prevent adverse impacts to the public or the environment. Blasting activities will not be conducted at times other than those announced in the blasting schedule except in the event of an emergency situation where rain, lightening, or other atmospheric conditions, or operator or public safety requires unscheduled detonations. 4:11 Mention Code: MB Great Outside Sales Position OPEN! Great career opportunity with a growing company is available for the right person. If you are self-motivated, energetic, customer service oriented and enjoy selling then this is the career for you. Sales experience and knowledge of internet is a plus. This sales area includes but not limited to Williamson, Belfry and Pikeville. This come with an above average compensation plan with full benefits. 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A partner could be quite the opposite. You might not be sure what to do. Listen to this person’s woes, but don’t enable him or her. If you are single, you become very possessive when relating to a specific person. Is it you, or is it the other party? Remember, you cannot change anyone. If you are attached, the two of you juggle your finances fairly well. You will reach your mutual goal in the near future. TAURUS is stubborn. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Follow your intuition. A moneymaking idea of yours might have tremendous value. Try it out on several trusted friends who will take turns playing devil’s advocate. You want their feedback, even if it is negative. You can make adjustments later. Tonight: Indulge a little. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH A friend who might be artistic or just unreliable might play a significant role in what goes on. Remain confident, and don’t lose sight of your goals. A partner or an associate pushes you hard and could become controlling. Is this jealousy? Tonight: You make the call. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH Understand that something is going on behind the scenes. You might fear the worst, but try to remain optimistic. You easily can balance a situation. A partner might be uptight about money. A change in how you handle funds could relax this person. Tonight: Get some R and R. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHHH You might be questioning what is happening within your immediate circle. Friends surround you, and they seem to support you. A creative venture or a matter involving a loved one could go south. Know that this, too, will change. Tonight: Where the fun is. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Others observe you a little too closely for your comfort. You might wonder if you could do something offbeat without being noticed. Let go of a controlling situation. The only way to win is to not play. A family member’s negativity could irritate you. Tonight: A force to be dealt with. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Keep reaching out to someone at a distance — you need to speak to this person. Avoid all assumptions until you do. Someone could seem aloof, but this behavior is not intentional; he or she is preoccupied with something else. Tonight: Wherever there is good music. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You discover the power of two. You often push very hard to achieve certain results. If you teamed up with someone, the process would be easier and just as successful, if not more successful. Use care with spending, and count your change. Tonight: Talk and visit with friends. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You might want to try something different. You also might not be sure which way to go with a loved one. Please note your detachment. People certainly will not react the same way they would if you were your usual smiling self. Tonight: Go with a friend’s suggestion. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Stay level-headed and focused. You could be amazed at what you can accomplish while others dillydally around. Be more expressive and open with a co-worker or close friend. You will see a different side emerge in this person as a result. Tonight: Squeeze in some exercise. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHHH Your creativity emerges, and it attracts many people. Your interest in a situation allows greater give-and-take. If a friend cops an attitude, ignore his or her unpleasant mood. Share a great idea with a friend, get some feedback and then go for it. Tonight: Play the night away. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH If you could work from home, would you? You just might get an opportunity to try this out. If you are OK having no one but yourself around, it just might work. A boss or an older friend seems off-kilter. Reach out to this person to find out what’s going on. Tonight: Order in. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Make and return calls in the morning. A message initially could disappoint you, but in the long run, it will give you the space to do what you want. A family member lets you know how much he or she adores you. Enjoy the moment. Tonight: Out and about at a favorite haunt. Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet at www.jacquelinebigar.com. 10 ■ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 2013 WILLIAMSON DAILY NEWS Nation Technology stocks rise sharply Bin Laden raid Steve Rothwell AP Markets Writer NEW YORK — Technology stocks roared back Wednesday, driving the Standard & Poor’s 500 and Dow Jones industrial average to record highs. The industry has lagged the broader market this year, but surged after network communication company Adtran reported earnings that were double what Wall Street analysts expected. That boosted optimism that businesses will increase spending on technology equipment. Chipmakers Micron and Intel jumped, as did other network equipment makers like Cisco and JDS Uniphase. Stocks were also up on an optimistic reading of the Federal Reserve Bank’s latest minutes. Technology stocks rose 1.8 percent, the most of the 10 industry groups in the S&P. That’s a big change from tech’s weak performance this year. The group is up just 4.7 percent, trailing the S&P’s gain of 11.3 percent. “Tech has performed so poorly, it’s oversold and warrants some interest here,” said Scott Wren, a senior equity strategist at Wells Fargo Advisors. “If the economy continues to improve there is going to be some capital spending.” The stock market is reversing course from last week, when inves- tors’ confidence fell because of an unexpectedly poor report on the U.S. job market and other signs that the economy slowed in March. The Dow Jones industrial average jumped 128.78 points, or 0.9 percent, to 14,802.24. It was the third straight gain for the bluechip index and its biggest one-day rise in a month. The Dow surged in the first three months of the year and is still up 13 percent in 2013. The Nasdaq composite, which is heavily weighted with technology stocks, had the biggest percentage gain of the three main indexes Wednesday, rising 59.39 points, or 1.8 percent, to 3,297.25 The S&P rose 19.12 points, or 1.2 percent, to 1,587.73. Investors are seeing positive news in the minutes from the Federal Reserve’s latest meeting, which were released Wednesday. The minutes revealed that policy makers are becoming more confident that the U.S. economy can grow without the help of the bank’s stimulus program, said Brian Gendreau, a market strategist at Cetera Financial Group. Many Fed members indicated they want to slow and eventually end the central bank’s bond-buying program before the end of the year, as long as the job market and economy show sustained improvement. The $85 billion in monthly bond purchases has kept interest rates extremely low, with the goal of encouraging borrowing and spending. “The idea that the Fed thinks that we are closer to the restoration of normality might be positive for the market,” said Gendreau. Among stocks making big moves, Facebook rose 98 cents, or 3.7 percent, to $27.57 after General Motors said it would start running ads on the social network site. Adtran rose $2.75, or 14 percent, to $22.46, and JDS Uniphase rose 64 cents, or 4.8 percent, to $13.98. Hospital stocks fell heavily after Deutsche Bank lowered its recommendation on the companies because their prices have risen so much that they no longer offer good value. Private hospitals have surged over the past year in anticipation that health care spending will increase following the introduction of Obama’s health care plan. Health Management Associates plunged $2.06, or 16 percent, to $10.53. Tenet Healthcare fell $2.38, or 5.5 percent, to $41.14 and Community Health Systems dropped $1.65, or 3.8 percent, to $42.26. Bond yields fell as investors moved money out of safe U.S. government debt and into riskier assets. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 1.81 percent from 1.75 percent late Tuesday. Weiner says he may run for NYC mayor Jennifer Peltz The Associated Press NEW YORK — A bold comeback attempt or the height of chutzpah? In what could be the start of one of the most intriguing second acts in American politics, Anthony Weiner, the congressman who tweeted himself out of a job two years ago with a photo of his bulging underpants, is considering jumping into the New York City mayor’s race. The Brooklyn Democrat said in a New York Times Magazine story posted online Wednesday that he realizes he would be an underdog, but he wants to “ask people to give me a second chance.” “I do recognize, to some degree, it’s now or maybe never for me,” Weiner, 48, said in a long and highly personal profile that he clearly hoped would be the start of his rehabilitation. But are voters ready to forgive? Will they at least stop giggling long enough to hear what he has to say? Political analysts say Weiner would face a steep climb to get past his past, but his political skills, his rich reserve of campaign money and the dynamics of a crowded Democratic primary could make him a player, if not a clear winner, in the contest this fall to succeed Michael Bloomberg as mayor of the nation’s largest city. Known as a congressman for his in-your-face style, he could punch up the forums and debates. And he certainly doesn’t lack for name recognition, for better or worse. “He’d be a real candidate,” said Maurice “Mickey” Carroll, director of Quinnipiac University’s polling institute. “His pluses are known. His minuses are known.” But Weiner’s problem could be less about what he exposed than about his attempts to cover it up. “People will say, ‘Why should we trust him again? He lied to us before — he’ll lie to us again,’” said veteran New York Democratic political consultant George Arzt, who isn’t working with any candidates in the mayoral race. Weiner’s downfall came in 2011 after a photo of a man’s underwear-clad crotch appeared on his Twitter account. The seven-term congressman first claimed his account had been hacked. Then he denied sending the picture but told reporters he couldn’t say for certain whether it was a photo of him. As more pictures surfaced, including one of Weiner posing shirtless in his congressional office, the married congressman was forced to come clean and acknowledged exchanging inappropriate messages with several women, though he said he never met any of them. He resigned within weeks. If not the biggest scandal in U.S. politics, it was perhaps one of the most cringeworthy. Weiner and his wife, Huma Abedin, a longtime aide to former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, said they sought the magazine interview to show voters he is a changed man: He entered therapy soon after the scandal broke and has spent most of his time as caregiver to the couple’s 13-month-old son, Jordan. Abedin told the Times she struggled to forgive her husband. “I did spend a lot of time saying and thinking: ‘I. Don’t. Under. Stand.’ And it took a long time to be able to sit on a couch next to Anthony and say, ‘OK, I understand and I forgive,’” she said. Americans have proved willing to forgive politicians many misdeeds. Former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, who turned “hiking the Appalachian Trail” into a euphemism for an affair, is on the road to redemption, having won the Republican nomination for his old seat in Congress. Other Democratic candidates greeted the prospect of a Weiner candidacy with restraint Wednesday, with several saying they would welcome him to the contest. City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, who has led the Democratic pack in polling, said only that Weiner’s decision was up to him and his family. If Weiner gets into the race, he would have a campaign fund of more than $4.3 million and the possibility of nearly $1.5 million more in public matching funds. With several Democrats vying for the nomination, it’s far from clear that any of them could emerge with the 40 percent needed to avoid a runoff. Some observers think Weiner could at least make it to the second round. His candidacy could prove a headache for both the Democratic Party and his rivals. “His issue becomes the issue — it will begin to overshadow aspects of this race,” said Democratic former state Assemblyman Michael Benjamin, now a political consultant. “And it brings up the quality of Democrats who are running for public office” to an electorate already cynical about politicians, he said. For some voters, Weiner would be asking too much. “He isn’t a very smart guy, based on what he did. He can be swayed to do the wrong thing,” said Dave Smith, a construction worker. But advertising worker Ben Calarossi said he would vote for Weiner: “We all have social problems. We’re all sinners.” member can be WikiLeaks witness David Dishneau The Associated Press FORT MEADE, Md. — A military judge cleared the way Wednesday for a member of the team that raided Osama bin Laden’s compound to testify at the trial of an Army private charged in a massive leak of U.S. secrets to the WikiLeaks website. Col. Denise Lind ruled for the prosecution during a court-martial pretrial hearing for Pfc. Bradley Manning at Fort Meade, near Baltimore. Prosecutors say the witness, presumably a Navy SEAL, collected digital evidence showing that the al-Qaida leader requested and received from an associate some of the documents Manning has acknowledged sending to WikiLeaks. Defense attorneys had argued that proof of receipt wasn’t relevant to whether Manning aided the enemy, the most serious charge he faces, punishable by life imprisonment. The judge disagreed. “The government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the intelligence is given to and received by the enemy,” Lind said. The ruling means prosecutors can call the witness during the “merits,” or main, phase of the trial. They otherwise could have used his testimony only for sentencing purposes. The witness has been publicly identified only as “John Doe” and as a Defense Department “operator,” a designation given to SEALs. Prosecutors say he participated with SEAL Team Six in their May 2011 assault on the compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, in which the terrorist leader was killed. His testimony would help establish a chain of custody for the evidence from its recovery to its analysis by a computer expert. Lind ruled later in the hearing that John Doe must testify in civilian clothing and “light disguise” in a closed session at an alternate, secure location to prevent disclosure of his identity or details of the mission. The disguise cannot obscure his demeanor, body movements and facial reactions. Lind said the trial also would be closed during the entire testimony of three other unidentified “special” prosecution witnesses who will discuss classified information. It might be closed during part of the testimony of 24 other government witnesses to prevent release of classified information, she said. The judge ordered a closed pretrial hearing May 7-8 to test alternatives to closing large portions of the trial. A sample witness will testify, using code words, redacted documents and unclassified summaries to avoid disclosing government secrets. Lind will then decide whether such a system would work at trial. Earlier Wednesday, Lind denied a government motion seeking to lower the bar for convicting Manning of violating the federal Espionage Act. He is charged with eight counts of that offense. Lind ruled, contrary to the motion, that prosecutors must prove Manning had reason to believe that the information he leaked could hurt the United States or help a foreign nation. Lind released written copies of the day’s first two rulings to reporters. It was the first time since she got the case in February 2012 that she has made her written orders publicly available. The lack of contemporaneous public access to rulings and motions is being challenged in the military appeals courts by the Center for Constitutional Rights, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and several left-leaning pundits and publications, with support from 30 news organizations, including The Associated Press. In February, the military began releasing Lind’s older rulings amid numerous Freedom of Information Act requests. Her written rulings on Wednesday were distributed by a military attorney who said Lind released them partly because neither the prosecution nor the defense objected. The hearing ended Wednesday. Manning pleaded guilty in February to lesser versions of some of the 22 charges he faces. Prosecutors have said they still intend to prove him guilty of the all the original charges. His trial is scheduled to start June 3 at Fort Meade. It could last for 12 weeks. Federal budget cuts ground Air Force aircraft Brock Vergakis The Associated Press NORFOLK, Va. — A top general says federal budget cuts that will ground one-third of the U.S. Air Force’s active-duty force of combat planes including fighters and bombers means “accepting the risk that combat airpower may not be ready to respond immediately to new contingencies as they occur.” Gen. Mike Hostage, commander of Air Combat Command at Joint Base Langley-Eustis in Virginia, issued the warning Tuesday as the Pentagon braces for more effects of the automatic spending cuts triggered by the lack of a budget agreement in Washington. Hostage said that only the units preparing to deploy to major oper- ations, such as the war in Afghanistan, will remain mission-ready. Other units would stand down on a rotating basis, he added. The Air Force didn’t immediately release a list of the specific units and bases that would be affected, but it said it would cover some fighters like F-16 Fighting Falcons and F-22 Raptors, and some airborne warning and control aircraft in the U.S., Europe and the Pacific. The Air Force says, on average, aircrews “lose currency” to fly combat commissions within 90 to 120 days of not flying. It generally takes 60 to 90 days to train the crews to mission-ready status. Returning grounded units to be ready for missions will require additional funds beyond Air Combat Command’s normal budget, according to Air Force officials. The “stand down” will remain in effect for the remainder of fiscal year 2013 barring any changes to funding. “Even a six-month stand down of units will have significant longterm, multi-year impacts on our operational readiness,” Air Combat Command spokesman Maj. Brandon Lingle wrote in an email to The Associated Press. The Department of Defense overall faces a $487 billion reduction in projected spending over the next decade and possibly tens of billions more as tea partyers and other fiscal conservatives embrace automatic spending cuts as the best means to reduce the government’s trillion-dollar deficit. On Wednesday, when President Barack Obama submits his fiscal year 2014 budget, the Pentagon blueprint is expected to include requests for two rounds of domestic base closings in 2015 and 2017, a pay raise of only 1 percent for military personnel and a revival of last year’s plan to increase health care fees and implement new ones, according to several defense analysts. On Monday, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said another huge concern is the uncontrollable cost the Defense Department is paying for health care and other benefits. He said money spent on that is not being used on preparing pilots for missions and troops for combat. The greatest fiscal threat to the military is not declining budgets, Hagel warned, but rather “the growing imbalance in where that money is being spent internally.” For affected units, the Air Force says it will shift its focus to ground training. That includes the use of flight simulators and academic training to maintain basic skills and aircraft knowledge, Lingle said. Aircraft maintainers plan to clear up as much of a backlog of scheduled inspections and maintenance that budgets allow. On the same day, the Navy confirmed that the Blue Angels aerobatic team would be cancelling the rest of its season. Tom Frosch, the Blue Angels lead pilot and team commander, announced the news late Tuesday at the team’s Pensacola Naval Air Station headquarters while standing in front of the one of the iconic blue-and-gold jets. Frosch said the news marks the first time since the Korean War that the team would not make the air show rounds.