Art before the horse
Transcription
Art before the horse
Braves take 2 of 3 in Milwaukee —1B THE DAILY CITIZEN Monday, July 27, 2009 • Dalton, Georgia • www.daltondailycitizen.com • 50 Cents 3 THINGS TO CHECK OUT ON THE INSIDE Plastic bags become purses. See page 7A Millions hanging up landlines to go wireless only. See page 8A Jimmie Johnson wins Allstate 400 in Indianapolis. See page 1B FROM TODAY’S FORUM “They talk about helping seniors, so why don’t they do something about the pharmaceutical companies charging us a hundred dollars for a little tube of medicine. That’s where our money goes — not for the health care but for the medicine.” “Somebody said the government is stupid. Politicians are very intelligent. Nobody can act that dumb for real.” See page 2A WEATHER Forecast: Scattered storms Today’s High: 86 Tonight’s Low: 67 Details, Page 12A INSIDE Classified..............6B Comics..................5B Crossword..............4B Dear Abby...................5B Horoscope...............4B Lottery..................3A Movies...................4B Obituaries.........10A Opinion................4A Sports......................1-3B 7 69847 00001 6 monster.com and THE DAILY CITIZEN Working Together! 706-272-7707 • 706-272-7703 Art before the horse BY MISTY WATSON [email protected] Derek Gray didn’t consider himself artistic. But when he began learning how to weld so he could fix farm equipment, he found his artistic side. One of Gray’s friends told him, “If you can weld horseshoes you can weld anything.” So Gray, the assistant superintendent at Fort Mountain State Park, learned to weld horseshoes into sculptures resembling cowboys. “Then I started welding other stuff out of horseshoes too,” said Gray, a 2001 graduate of Murray County High School. “It’s a good stress reliever. It’s like planting (a garden). You watch the sculpture grow in front of you.” Gray has been making his sculptures for friends and family for three years now. He has a flower that stands more than 5 feet tall, a butterfly and a dragonfly made from horseshoes and other metal pieces, such as spikes and nails. He makes “Welcome” signs, Christmas wreaths, snowmen, napkin holders and coat racks. Gray gets many of his ideas from images online. When a friend requested a “unique” sculpture, he looked for something not being welded with horseshoes. He wasn’t able to find a dragonfly so he decided to make one for her. But Gray says all horseshoe sculptures are “unique.” “I can build two or three of the same sculpture, but they all turn out looking different,” Gray said. “They all have a different shape. That’s what I like about them.” Most of the horseshoes are used as they are, without cutting. Though some projects, especially lettering, require more manipulation. Officials to choose ambulance service BY JAMIE JONES [email protected] More than 100 of the Lumiblades kits have been sold since Philips began offering them in April, the company says. Buyers are mostly using them for prototyping, and plan to order larger numbers of customized OLEDs when they are ready to go to production. Random International, a trio of London-based artists, used 1,024 Lumiblades to make an art installation called “You Fade to Light.” As people walk past the structure, which is 2.7 meters (9 feet) wide by 1.3 meters (4.25 feet) high, a camera and computer turn off the The Whitfield County Board of Commissioners has until a Sept. 30 deadline to pick a company to run its ambulance service, but one official believes it will happen sometime next month. Jeffrey Putnam, Whitfield County Emergency Management director, anticipates a decision from the five-man commission in midAugust. Putnam said he has reviewed documents from the five companies that submitted bids last month. The bid literature was quite extensive and detailed, taking up about 10 boxes. Putnam has prepared information on the top three companies and plans to give the information to county administrator Bob McLeod for review. Putnam declined to say which three companies made the cut, saying he wanted McLeod to have the information first. “It will be up to him as far as how long it takes to get it to the commissioners,” Putnam said. Commissioner Randy Waskul said he has not seen any of the bids yet —“I’ll leave that up to the professionals,” he said, referring to McLeod and Putnam working out the contract details — but he expects to have input in the final decision. “Like most everything, we’ll probably get information on the top three or four so we can go through them, possibly interview them,” Waskul said. “Something of this magnitude, we want to hear from their customers they have currently, I want to hear about their service, liability issues, etc. This is a big ticket item.” Earlier this spring, the board of commissioners put the county’s ambulance service out to bid for the first time. By competitively bidding the ambulance service, county officials believe they can save money. In May, commissioners extended the county’s contract with Whitfield EMS through Sept. 30 to allow more time to receive and review the bids. The county is paying Whitfield EMS $158,055 for the three-month extension. The county paid Whitfield EMS $632,220 and provided an $85,000 Type 3 ambulance for the fiscal year from July 2008 through June 30. Whitfield EMS has provided ambulance service for the county since 1986. ➣ See BRIGHT, 3A ➣ See AMBULANCE, 3A MISTY WATSON/THE DAILY CITIZEN Derek Gray explains how he welds horseshoes into sculptures, like this butterfly. Gray typically uses a standardsized horseshoe. Some of his sculptures use horseshoes made for ponies, which are smaller, and draft horses, which are larger. Friends donate the shoes to Gray after they have taken them off their horses. “I haven’t done it in a while, but I can make my own horseshoes,” he said. “It would probably take me two weeks to get it right, though.” Gray paints many of his pieces black, but he lets some of them rust. “I like the rustic look better than modern,” he said. His next project is a chair. “I haven’t quite mastered that in my mind yet,” Gray said. The chair will use 26 horseshoes, which is several more than most of his sculptures, he said. He used four on the butterfly and five on the flower. Philips lets bright idea out of lab TOBY STERLING Associated Press Writer AACHEN, Germany — Someday, our ceilings and walls might radiate light, illuminating indoor spaces as brightly and evenly as natural daylight. Though that possibility remains years off, the Dutch electronics company Philips is letting people tinker with the technology that would enable it. The world’s biggest lighting maker has begun selling do-ityourself kits with little glowing wafers called “Lumiblades.” They come in red, white, blue or green for anyone who wants to pay nearly $100 per square inch. It’s one of the first chances people outside research labs have had to get their hands on lights made from organic light emitting diodes, or OLEDs. The company’s aim is to get designers, architects and other creative types thinking about how these flat lights can be used, and to start collaborating on early products. General Electric Co., Siemens AG and Royal Philips Electronics NV, which are developing OLEDs, believe the technology will eventually be more efficient than traditional incandescent bulbs, energysaving compact fluorescent lights and even the LED lights just now reaching the market. OLEDs have a key advantage: AP PHOTO In the future, our homes may be lighted not by bulbs, but by light emanating in natural colors from luminous walls, windows and ceilings. They emit light evenly from a whole surface, rather than a single point. That eliminates the need for lampshades and other coverings that scatter light and protect eyes from glare. Creating light and then immediately shading it is an inefficient way of doing things, from an engineering standpoint. For now, the Lumiblades are just small, flat lights — interesting in and of themselves. “We believe that OLEDs have a lot to offer in terms of design, in terms of its beauty, in terms of light effects,” said Dietrich Bertram, who heads Philips’ OLED operations in Aachen, just across the border from Philips’ home country, the Netherlands. NEW! 1 off 75 off $ 00 OR 1325 W. Walnut Ave. • Dalton 706-217-2867 Fax: 706-217-2877 ANY MEDIUM sandwich ¢ ANY sMAll sandwich Offer expires 8/30/2009. Limit one coupon per person, per visit. Not valid with any other offer, Meal Deal, Combo Meal or Kid’s Meal. Good only with original coupon at the participating W. 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NORTH GEORGIA NEWSPAPER GROUP SERVING NORTHWEST GEORGIA & SOUTHEAST TENNESSEE Volume 47, Number 117 The Daily Citizen Monday, July 27, 2009 TODAY’S FORUM Editor’s note: Please keep your comments as brief as possible. Longer comments should be submitted as letters to the editor. If you include a name of a person or business, please spell it. Call (706) 272-7748 to reach Today’s Forum. “I was at a local grocery store and there were two ladies there together checking out in front of me. One paid for a lot of beer and some other things with a credit card. The other lady bought a bunch of meat and Cokes with food stamps. Looks to me like if they can afford beer they don’t need food stamps. Now I know why people who need help can’t get help.” “Obama extended the invitation Friday in phone calls to the two men as he sought to calm a national debate over racial profiling. He invited both to share a beer. Why beer? Could have been Coke or tea!” “They talk about helping seniors, so why don’t they do something about the pharmaceutical companies charging us a hundred dollars for a little tube of medicine. That’s where our money goes — not for the health care but for the medicine.” “I am taking donations for next season’s World Series of Poker. I’ll split my winnings with you. Please reply and I’ll call back and put my number in.” “You want to fix the economy? Cut the corporate greed between the politicians and business and cut the greed out on Wall Street.” “I went to the Salvation Army Food Bank to get food. They are open from 1-3:30. They didn’t call anyone back until 2:30. That’s crazy.” “Obama had a TV appearance the other night and he told more lies.” “My prayers are with the Morales family.” “Somebody said the government is stupid. Politicians are very intelligent. Nobody can act that dumb for real.” “The health care bill will devastate the economy and drive up the deficit even further?” “I am not rich and probably never will be but I have never understood why the president and the Democrats think the government should pay our way. We need to earn it on our own.” “My vote for the most neglected cemetery goes to the Hopewell Cemetery in Cohutta. It’s a disgrace.” “In reference to President Obama’s statement about the Cambridge police: The police need to remember that they are public servants, not public tyrants.” “When is 911 going to realize there is a town named Varnell?” “To the person who said if God wanted us on the moon he would have put us there: Does he think if God wanted us to fly, he would have given us wings and we wouldn’t have to build airplanes?” “Murray County, please leave the traffic enforcement up to the professionals at the Georgia State Patrol.” “Anyone who believes Hamilton Medical Center gives you great care has never been to a real hospital.” “This economy has everyone pinching pennies. Today I saw a stretch limo at Wendy’s.” “So if God wanted a man on the moon he would have put one there? Yesterday I went to Atlanta, does that mean that if God wanted me there, He would have put me there?” “We need a whole page of Bible verses dedicated to the Lord, After all, it’s his world.” Editor: There are publications with whole pages of Bible verses — they are called Bibles. “Obama was right about the police acting stupidly. Let someone try to stop you from going in your own house after showing proof of residency and see how you feel.” “Thanks Obama for standing up for the people. The police departments are sorry and at least you are looking out for us.” “The Whitfield County Sheriffs Department should be commended for the great job they did escorting a funeral procession from Dalton to the Westside area this week. The two deputies did a great job.” TODAY’S CITIZEN NAME: Casey Marie Cullinan AGE: 9 HOME: Cisco FAMILY: Bob, Janet, Josh and Casey SCHOOL: Woodlawn Elementary School PLAY: Soccer SHE SAID: “Always try your best.” LOTTERY WINNING NUMBERS – FOR JULY 26 Georgia: Evening Cash 3: 1-0-0, (For Cash 4 and Fantasy 5 numbers, visit www.georgialottery.com or call 1 (800) GA-LUCKY) Tennessee: Evening Cash 3: 8-7-6, Lucky Sum: 21; Cash 4: 8-5-5-5, Lucky Sum: 23 Ambulance: Choice soon ➣ Cont. from page 1A The new contract is expected to run to Dec. 31, 2012, with an option for two additional one-year terms. The winning bidder will provide at least five advanced life support ambulances for 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The county owns the eight ambulances Whitfield EMS currently uses. The five companies that submitted bids are: ■ American Medical Response of Georgia (operating out of LaGrange): $595,000. ■ Angel Emergency Medical Services (based in Catoosa County): $635,000. ■ Care Ambulance Service (headquartered in Montgomery, Ala.): Option 1 - $720,000; option 2 - $420,000; option 3 - $300,000. ■ Lifeguard Ambulance (based in Pensacola, Fla.): Option 1 - $578,000; option 2 $250,000. ■ Whitfield Emergency Medical Services (based in Dalton): Option 1 $1.25 million; option 2 $975,000; option 3 $658,800 plus one ambulance. Bright: Flat lights coming ➣ Cont. from page 1A lights on panels opposite the passers-by, mimicking their motion, like a giant monitor. “Having worked with the OLEDs, I see it as far more of a material than a light source,” said Hannes Kochs, one of the installation’s designers. The diffuse light cast by the OLED panels makes them “stunning, and utterly different” from other kinds of light, he said. Lumiblades run from about 70 euros ($100) for a small square to 500 euros ($700) for a piece the size of a mobile phone. The bigger the piece, the brighter it is. When switched off, Lumiblades resemble small mirrors, with an aluminum backing inside two glass plates. When switched on, a microscopic layer of organic material inside begins to emit light, and the Lumiblade glows. Only the faintest hint of warmth is perceptible. This technology is early stage. Philips isn’t trying to win prizes for presenta- tion of the kits, which are sold online and come only with a simple wire. (The Lumiblades have to be plugged in, though battery-powered OLEDs are possible.) “All the contents of this experience kit are engineering samples only and do not comply with existing lighting and safety norms,” a manual included in the box says. The company recommends buying a converter box and dimmers for an additional 70 euros to make sure users don’t “overdrive” their panels. OLEDs have no bulb to blow, but cranking up the juice makes the lights burn brighter, and then wear out quicker. When used at recommended currents, the lights in the kit are designed to last for 10,000 hours, at which point they will have faded to half of their original brightness. That compares with a life span of 1,000 hours for an incandescent bulb, and is about the same as the current generation of compact fluorescent lights. The company says it sees interest from artists, architects, jewelers and some industrial applications where very even lighting is necessary. Separately, Philips and other companies are working with vehicle makers on using OLEDs in display panels, where their thinness and coolness would be valuable. TVs with OLED-based displays are also starting to emerge. Philips eventually hopes to market window panes that are transparent during the day and emit light at night. Similarly, GE, which is developing cheap, flexible OLEDs encased in plastic, imagines a rollable, light-emitting window blind. Bertram says his personal dream has been the same since he started working on OLEDs many years ago: “I really want to see the sun rise on my ceiling, even if it’s dark and rainy outside.” Concerned about long hours of school for your kindergarten child? Consider Holly Creek Baptist Church We offer a half day program with great teacher to student ratio. Act fast! Our classes begin Aug. 10. We also have openings in the pk3 & pk4 classes. Ask about our Mother’s Morning Out program for children age 6 weeks - 3 years Please call 706-695-8522 or 706-695-2728 for registration info. E-mail [email protected] 100 W. Walnut Ave. Suite 54 Bryman’s Plaza North in Dalton 706-271-0848 Spas, Pedicures & Nails by Betty 3A 4A Monday, July 27, 2009 VIEWPOINTS THE DAILY CITIZEN Serving Northwest Georgia since 1847 William H. Bronson III Publisher Jimmy Espy Executive Editor Mark Pace Editor Emeritus Unsigned editorials represent the view of The Daily Citizen. Members of the newspaper’s editorial board are William Bronson, Jimmy Espy, Wes Chance and Victor Miller. Columns and letters to the editor are the opinions of the authors. LETTERS Less government, more freedom To the editor: I heard on the TV today that the reformed health care plan that President Obama is pushing would include funding for abortions. Abortions must never become a part of a mandated “health benefit” in our country. Congress must exclude abortion from any government coverage or taxpayer funded health plan. State objections to providing abortions will be overruled by federal statutes not specifically excepting abortions from what is publicly funded. I am against this government controlled health care plan. I do believe we need to make some changes in our health care, but having the government take control of it is not the answer. What the government gives, it also has the authority to take away. In other countries where the government handles health care, there are long waits to be seen and many people with diseases like cancer are too far advanced to be cured when they finally are seen. What has made America the great country that we are is because of our American system that is like no other country. We believe in liberty and the right to happiness as our God given rights. Before 1973, I could have put life, liberty and the right to happiness. But Roe vs. Wade, that gave us the right to legally kill the innocent unborn, says that not all Americans believe in the right to life. That was the beginning of our downfall in America. If only the American people could see what an error Roe vs. Wade was and correct it, how much more God would bless America. Abe Lincoln wrote “I shall try to correct errors when shown to be errors, and I shall adopt new views so fast as they shall appear to be true views.” America lost its moral compass when we decided we had the legal right to say “If you don’t want the baby in your womb, kill it.” We lost one of our God given rights, the right to life with Roe vs. Wade. Do we want to lose the second one, liberty, with the government controlling our lives? The dictionary defines liberty as “freedom to choose, not confined, free.” When the government tells us what doctor we can see and when or whether the procedure that our doctor says we need is absolutely neccessary, we are not a free people. The first 10 constitutional amendments, ratified in 1791, known as the Bill of Rights were designed to make sure the federal government would not abuse its great power. The federal government has already taken away many of these rights. For more than 200 years, our American system has worked well until recent years when some of our rights have been taken away. Our free enterprise system of equality of opportunity and of American individualism means there shall be no domination by any one or any group, whether it be business or political. Our conception of self-government is that only through liberty, freedom and equal opportunity will we have the initiative and the inventive spirit to make America the great country it can be. Economic freedom cannot be given up if we want to preserve our political freedom and our American way of life. When the government starts taking over our businesses and running our lives our world as we know it will be no more. It will increase corruption in government as if we don’t have enough already. It will undermine leadership and stifle initiative and invention. We must stand up as Americans and insist that our American way of life not be taken away from us. Cemeteries are full of Americans who have given their most precious gift, their life, to preserve our freedoms. We should say as honest Abe Lincoln said many years ago, “We are highly resolved that these dead shall not have died in vain; that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom; and that government of the people, by the people, for the people , shall not perish from the earth.” Helen L. Kizer Dalton WORDS OF WISDOM Bible Text: “When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they will not sweep over you. When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned; the flames will not set you ablaze. For I am the LORD, your God, the Holy One of Israel, your Savior ....” Isaiah 43:2-3 Thought for Today: “Diplomacy is the art of saying ’Nice doggie’ until you can find a rock.” Will Rogers American humorist (1879-1935) Wild, wet race Too much water makes for ruined basements and canceled baseball games. Too little of it might set the stage for good politics in next year’s gubernatorial race. A federal judge’s ruling this month will leave much of metro Atlanta dry three years from now if we can’t reach an agreement with Alabama and Florida on how to use Lake Lanier’s water. Without a new deal, Georgia’s take from the lake will revert to what it was in the 1970s, when Atlanta was much smaller than it is now. The prospects for a negotiated settlement appear grim. The ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Paul Magnuson throws the issue to Congress, where Georgia has 15 members compared with 36 from Florida and Alabama combined. Getting the rest of Congress to sign on to an equitable plan will be a tall task for our delegation. The three states’ governors are all Republicans, but that hasn’t yet yielded a settlement. This isn’t a partisan issue. And the likelihood that Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue can strike a deal with the other governors now, after the judge’s order has removed any leverage he might have had, is about as low as Lanier was during the recent drought. All three states will have new governors after the 2010 elections, and neither the current office holders nor their successors i n Alabama a n d Florida will be inclined to g i v e Georgia an i n c h . Relying too heavily Kyle on a deal Wingfield would be a mistake. All of which means Georgia voters, and particularly those in metro Atlanta, will be looking for answers from the numerous candidates vying to replace Perdue. We are 51 weeks away from the party primaries. Campaigns are still fleshing out their agendas. Of the 10 declared candidates, six Republicans and four Democrats, only three list a detailed policy agenda on a campaign Web site. Just two of the three mention water. This far out, policy detail can be mostly a function of how long a candidate’s been in the race, as well as political strategy. So I don’t put too much stock at this point in how much detail one campaign has versus another. In any case, no campaign has explained the crucial matter of how to pay for its ideas. What I will say is that the proposals out there so far include new reservoirs, conservation efforts and investing in technologies still in their infancy, such as water reuse and desalination. Cost will be key, since state revenues will probably still be smarting from the recession when the next governor takes office. Immediacy, too: More reservoirs would be nice to have right about now, but any new governor will be hardpressed to get a new series of dams approved by environmental authorities, planned, funded and built before another drought strikes. We’ll need additional options. More important for the way the gubernatorial race takes shape, water is one more issue that will be perceived by many people across the state as an “Atlanta problem” rather than a “Georgia problem.” The other is, of course, transportation. But neither of those issues is about only Atlanta and its future. And solving both will require, at the very least, the blessing of the governor and the Legislature. Making that case to voters well beyond I-285 will be difficult, no doubt. Atlanta is certainly an economic engine for the rest of Georgia, but an Atlanta-centric campaign may be problematic in a state where the rural vote still often acts as the tiebreaker. Good thing the candidates have 51 weeks to hone their message. They’ll need every hour. ■ Kyle Wingfield writes a twice-a-week column for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. THE DAILY CITIZEN TODAY IN HISTORY Today is Monday, July 27, the 208th day of 2009. There are 157 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On July 27, 1909, during the first official test of the U.S. Army’s first airplane, Orville Wright flew himself and a passenger, Lt. Frank Lahm, above Fort Myer, Va., for one hour and 12 minutes. On this date: In 1789, President George Washington signed a measure establishing the Department of Foreign Affairs, forerunner of the Department of State. In 1866, Cyrus W. Field finished laying out the first successful underwater telegraph cable between North America and Europe (a previous cable in 1858 burned out after only a few weeks of use). In 1974, the House Judiciary Committee voted 27-11 to adopt the first of three articles of impeachment against President Richard Nixon, charging he had personally engaged in a course of conduct designed to obstruct justice in the Watergate case. In 1996, terror struck the Atlanta Olympics as a pipe bomb exploded at Centennial Olympic Park, directly killing one person and injuring 111. (Antigovernment extremist Eric Rudolph later pleaded guilty to the bombing.) Ten years ago: The House approved President Bill Clinton’s one-year extension of normal trade with China. With Air Force Col. Eileen Collins at the controls, space shuttle Columbia returned to Earth, ending a five-day mission. Five years ago: Democrats assailed President George W. Bush’s handling of the Iraq war at their convention in Boston and painted a vivid portrait of John Kerry as a decorated Vietnam War hero. One year ago: A gunman went on a rampage at the Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church in Knoxville, killing two people and wounding six others. (Jim D. Adkisson later pleaded guilty to murder and attempted murder and was sentenced to life in prison without parole.) Today’s Birthdays: TV producer Norman Lear is 87. Actor Jerry Van Dyke is 78. Olympic gold medal figure skater Peggy Fleming is 61. Comedian Bill Engvall is 52. New York Yankees star Alex Rodriguez is 34. Paying a premium for insurance This week President Obama promised “the reforms we seek” will bring greater “inefficiencies to our health care system.” It was a slip of the tongue, but the Obama-inspired health care bill moving through the House of Representatives suggests the president accidentally told the truth. The bill, approved last week by two House committees, would spend much more than necessary to subsidize medical coverage for uninsured Americans while failing to deliver on Obama’s commitment to control health care costs. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates the legislation would cost $1.3 trillion during its first decade: $438 billion for Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program, $53 billion in tax credits for small businesses that offer health insurance to their employees, and $773 billion in subsidies for a government-administered “insurance exchange” in which people could choose among various health plans, including a newly created “public option.” One reason the tab is so high: The bill defines its target too broadly. U.S. Census Bureau data indicate that nearly 40 percent of the 46 million U.S. residents who were uninsured at some point in 2007 had annual household incomes of $50,000 or more. Another 23 percent or so were already covered by existing government programs or could have been. Instead of focusing on the minority who can’t afford insurance but are ineligible for taxpayer-funded health care, the House bill takes aim at “the uninsured” generally. By 2018, the CBO projects, the legislation would provide insurance to 37 million Americans who currently lack it, at a cost of $234 billion. That works out to about $6,300 a person for a year of coverage, which seems pretty pricey, especially Jacob since the total cost Sullum would be higher: People participating in the insurance exchange would be expected to pay part of their premiums. According to a December 2007 report from America’s Health Insurance Plans, the average annual premium for nongroup health insurance that year was about $2,600 for individual coverage and $5,800 for family coverage. The Census Bureau reports that three-quarters of uninsured Americans live in family households, which in the general population average three people each. Taking that into account, buying insurance for 37 million people in 2007 should have the cost around $78 billion, or a little more than $2,000 each. How much would it cost in 2018? Kaiser Family Foundation data on employer-provided health benefits (which tend to cost a lot more than policies purchased by individuals) indicate a recent premium growth rate of 5 percent a year, which would make $2,000 in 2007 about $3,400 in 2018, a little more than half what the House bill would spend to insure one person. Even if pre- miums double during the next decade (as they did during the last decade), simply buying insurance for 37 million people would still be about one-third cheaper than the subsidy scheme created by the House bill. Also keep in mind that government spending, especially on health care programs, tends to be much higher than anticipated. “When Medicare was launched in 1965,” note Cato Institute policy analysts Michael Tanner and Chris Edwards, “Part A was projected to cost $9 billion by 1990, but ended up costing $67 billion. When Medicaid’s special hospitals subsidy was added in 1987, it was supposed to cost $100 million annually, but it already cost $11 billion by 1992.” The subsidies championed by Obama would only aggravate the problem of runaway government spending on health care. “In the legislation that has been reported,” CBO Director Douglas Elmendorf told the Senate Budget Committee last week, “we do not see the sort of fundamental changes that would be necessary to reduce the trajectory of federal health spending by a significant amount. And on the contrary, the legislation significantly expands the federal responsibility for health care costs.” The bill does have a great name, though. In the spirit of the spending binge that Obama dubbed a New Era of Responsibility, it’s called America’s Affordable Health Choices Act. ■ Jacob Sullum is senior editor at Reason magazine, and his work appears in the new Reason anthology “Choice” (BenBella Books) ot Spectacular HSummer Sale THE DAILY CITIZEN Great for Wood Floors and Carpet 5 Oreck’s ALL NEW XL Little Hero Pet Vac will help!! On Sale for $99 Reg. $149 299 * Bagless Economical no replacement bags! * Ultra-portable and super powerful * Great for quick cleanups Problem pet hair on upholstery to hard to reach corners, crevices and crown moldings! * 3 ft. extension hose features suction control * Floor tool, 2-in-1 tool and two extension wands are included Now 50% OFF! 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Limited Time Half Price Offer: was: $ $ 599 Years FREE SERVICE Monday, July 27, 2009 REG. $125 3999 $ ORECK CORD-FREE IRON One Per Customer Trouble Breathing? Reduces Dust & Allergens Oreck • Dry-Cleans Carpets (No Water) Steam-It • Strips, Sands & Polishes Wood Floors FREE • Reduces Allergens By As Much As 70% Compared To Vacuuming Alone Buy One Air Purifier For Quick Pick Ups Try Oreck’s NEW GET ONE FREE Power Sweeper Buy the Oreck Tower and receive the Oreck Tabletop unit FREE! • Compact, Lightweight and Powerful ON SALE NOW FOR $99 REG. $150 All Cleaning Products 20% off REMOVES: • Ketchup • Soda • Pet Stains & Odors • Grease • Ink • Grass Stains Expires 7/31/09 “Hello Oreck Store, Goodbye Dirt.” David Oreck, Founder While supplies last. Better Hurry! Cannot be combined with any other offer. ORECK BAGS BUY 2 PACKS GET 1 FREE* VACUUM TUNE-UP SPECIAL *Free bags of lesser or equal value Expires 7/31/09 only $24.99 Reg. $39.99 Expires 7/31/09 www.oreckstore.com/Chattanooga 2009 Oreck Holdings, LLC, 1400 Salem Road, Cookville, TN 38506, All rights reserved. See participating store for details. Cannot be combined with any other offer CHATTANOOGA 7200 Shallowford Rd, at I-75 485-8897 CLEVELAND 566 Paul Huff Parkway 339-5600 30319361 6A THE DAILY CITIZEN Monday, July 27, 2009 GEORGIA Down to Business Ball knew the SCORE Ex-boxing champion Forrest killed in Ga. ATLANTA — Vernon Forrest, a former three-time champion who gained stardom when he became the first boxer to defeat “Sugar” Shane Mosley, was shot and killed during an apparent robbery in Atlanta, police said Sunday. Atlanta Police Sgt. Lisa Keyes said in an e-mail Sunday that Forrest, 38, was shot “multiple times in the back” Saturday night. Keyes said there are no suspects. Officials seek ID of drowning victim ATLANTA — Newton County officials are seeking the public’s help in identifying a man who drowned in the Alcovy River. Coroner Tommy Davis said a man’s body was pulled from the river Saturday afternoon. Atlanta councilman carjacked at gunpoint ATLANTA — An Atlanta city councilman is safe after being carjacked at gunpoint in northwest Atlanta. Atlanta police Sgt. Lisa Keyes said Councilman Ceasar Mitchell was carjacked at gunpoint early Sunday morning. 3 more teens charged in fundraiser theft MARIETTA — Three more Marietta teenagers have been arrested for allegedly helping a friend steal from young girls who were trying to raise money for their father’s struggling business. Cobb County police Sgt. Dana Pierce said Katie Leathers and Alexa Michalski, both 18, and an unnamed 16-year-old girl were charged Friday with being parties to a robbery. A high school cheerleader, 17-year-old Chelsea Steele, had been arrested earlier on charges of grabbing a cash box with $147 from the girls’ pool-side stand on July 3 and getting into a waiting car. —Associated Press AP PHOTO Astronauts Tom Marshburn, upper left, and Christopher Cassidy, seen just below Marshburn, mission specialists for STS-127, share duties on the fourth spacewalk of Endeavour’s current mission and its crew’s joint activities with the space station. NASA patches air-purifying system on space station CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — A space station air purifier was working again Sunday after it shut down at the worst possible time, when the on-board crowd had swollen to a record 13. The repair by flight controllers, albeit temporary, came as a relief to NASA. Even if the carbon dioxide-removal system had remained broken, shuttle Endeavour would not have had to undock early from the international space station, said flight director Brian Smith. But the system needs to work to support six station residents over the long term, he said. The machine for cleansing the station atmosphere, on the U.S. side of the sprawling outpost, failed Saturday when it got too hot and tripped a circuit breaker. Flight controllers managed to get the unit up and running again 8 1/2 hours later in manual mode. That means extra people are needed in Mission Control — six each day — to handle the approximately 50 computer commands that need to be sent up every few hours. Normally, the system runs automatically. Smith said engineers hopefully will come up with a software solution soon to have the system back in automatic. An air-cleansing system on the Russian side of the station is working fine. In addition, the station has about three weeks’ worth of canisters for removing the carbon dioxide exhaled by six crew members. The shuttle and its crew of seven will depart Tuesday, as originally planned. Before leaving, the shuttle astronauts have their fifth and final spacewalk to perform. During today’s spacewalk, Christopher Cassidy and Thomas Marshburn will rearrange some power cable hookups, fold down a piece of popped-up insulation on the station’s smaller, dexterous robotic arm, and install TV cameras on the brand new porch of Japan’s space station lab. On the Net: NASA: www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/m ain/index.html CELEBRATING 40 YEARS N ATION Wilson Insurance Agency is celebrating 40 years in the insurance business. Saving people up to 40% on auto, home, motorcycle and RV insurance. We have over 20 companies to choose from with low monthly payments. Come celebrate with us during the month of July. Register for door prizes. Come in and visit us at 912 E. Walnut Ave., Dalton. Call at (706) 278-0549 or visit our website at – www.wilsoninsurancedalton.com WILSON INSURANCE 912 E. Walnut Ave. 706-278-0549 Our experienced staff is ready to assist you. This communirow, Bi-Lo ty lost a fine man Charities is helping with the passing of provide groceries Earl Ball. Ball was to the American a local resident for Red Cross. Now more than 40 through Aug. 25, years, a businessBi-Lo shoppers can man who was also buy for $5 a speactive in civic cially marked groaffairs and politics. cery bag which Scoop Mr. Ball had many contain three comThornton accomplishments plete family-sized in is life and one of meals. The bags are the things I best then dropped off in remember him for was his a bin near the store work with SCORE (Service entrance. Contents include Core of Retired Executives) macaroni and cheese, beans, a group which offered its soup, spaghetti fixings and expertise to small business- tuna. The bags are available es, free of charge. Mr. Ball at any area Bi-Lo store. came to the newspaper ■■■ office regularly with SCORE-related information and took the job seriously. We talked several times about the local business scene and he was always a knowledgeable and gracious visitor. ■■■ There are bonuses and there are BONUSES! Teresa Moore of Dalton enjoyed one of the latter kind at the end of June, staying at the Atlantis resort on Paradise Island in the B&B Discount sales, in Bahamas, courtesy of her that big honking building longtime employer, Avon. across from West Yellow For the sixth straight Knife in Rocky Face, has year, Moore surpassed her been selling books for sevsales goals and earned the eral months without telling free trip. me. (No telling how many Moore worked at bargains I missed, but when Hamilton Medical Center I got in there this week there for 20 years before retiring were still several thousand to sell Avon products full to chose from.) time. She’s made her sales Hardbacks go for a buck goal all six years since and paperbacks for 50 cents. going full time. Not bad, not bad at all. “I’ve got a lot of friends There are many bestand know a lot of people selling authors featured, and that helps,” Moore said, including Larry McMurtry, in explaining her success. Len Deighton, David “But I really focus on visit- Weber, John LeCarre, ing business offices.” Patricia Cornwell, Bill Moore also was recog- O’Reilly, Elmore Leonard nized for selling more jew- and a wide array of genres elry than any other salesper- are represented. son in her division, which A book hound would includes more than 14,500 have a hard time sorting sales reps. through this pile and not ■■■ finding some keepers. For the second year in a Speaking of book stores, the Book Nook on North Hamilton Street downtown Dalton continues to give away one paperback to new customers. Veteran customers who send in new customers also qualify for a freebie. There’s an excellent selection of books at the store and the Cubbyhole Cafe, housed at the same location is fine place for lunch, Monday through Friday. ■■■ Art in Motion Performance Studios will have an open house and registration Aug. 1 and 8 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. to celebrate its grand opening. Various dance classes, including ballet, jazz, pointe, tap, modern and predance are available, as well as Mommy and Me, cheer, pre-gymnastics and gymnastics. Discounts are available for multiple siblings. Class availability is limited so early registration is recommended. The studio is at 3957 Cleveland Highway, Unit D in Dalton. For more information, including pricing, visit www.aimperformancestudios.com. ■■■ The new Dug Gap Day Care and Pre-School will host an open house at 702A Mineral Springs Road on Sunday, Aug. 2 from 3-5 p.m. For more information, call (706) 278-2557 or (706) 581-0449 ... Ribbon cuttings for new businesses in Chatsworth include Magnolia Family Medicine, 1115 Highway 76, Suite B on July 28 at 10 a.m., (706) 695-5500; and Sweet-N-Simple — a wedding and event planning business — at 522 H. Bond Road, but will have their ribbon cutting at the Chatsworth-Murray County Chamber of Commerce office at 126 N. Third Ave. on July 31 at 10 a.m., Call (706) 517-1776 for more information. The Daily Citizen Plastic bags become purses BY LAUREN PEEPLES Athens Banner-Herald DANIELSVILLE, Ga. — Like many women, Danielsville resident Bobbie Sue Bolmon happened upon a hobby to relieve stress and enjoy some creativity. Her hobby, while not necessarily unusual, does rely on some unique materials. Her handcreated handbags also lend support to recycling efforts by incorporating assorted plastic bags. Bolmon began creating the purses 20 years ago. “I use to watch the ’Crook & Chase’ show in the afternoons, and the lady would show how to create purses from plastic bags,” Bolmon said. “I started just to have something fun and relaxing to do. I still have the first beach bag I created from Bi-Lo bags.” Born in Elbert County, Bolmon’s family moved to Franklin County and was raised in Royston. “I grew up on a farm where Mom taught us to sew and make our own clothes,” Bolmon said. “We learned to take care of ourselves in every aspect.” Bolmon moved with her husband, Haley, to Madison County 43 years ago. “We bought a farm and raised cattle and chicken,” she said. “My husband was a truck driver, so a farm gave me ways to entertain my seven kids.” With five sons and two daughters, Bolmon has 16 grandchildren and 13 greatgrandchildren. “They keep me busy, but having a hobby that I enjoy and find relaxation with is an advantage,” Bolmon said. “Making the purses gives me something I can sit down at the end of the day and take a break with.” Since her husband passed away, Bolmon serves as a full-time caregiver. “I am usually always working on a purse, and it is a project that I am able to stop when I need to and return to when I can,” Bolmon said. “People usual- ly think it is hard to do, but it really is not.” The third of 11 children, Bolmon’s family always has sewn and crocheted. “My sisters all enjoy and take part in making things this way regularly,” she said. “One of my sisters even opened a little shop at the mall one time that included various handmade items she had created.” On average, Bolmon dedicates approximately six to seven hours on each creation. “It depends on the size,” she explained. “I tend to work on each purse a little at a time and come back to it, but overall it takes several hours to complete one.” This past spring, Bolmon completed Easter bags for the children in her family. “The bags take some time to complete. However, it’s not that difficult to learn,” she said. “I have used every type of bag, from the red ones that the Athens BannerHerald used to arrive in to loaf-bread bags. It also serves as a fun and creative way to recycle.” Bolmon’s sister-in-law Elena Hart of Danielsville describes Bolman as a wonderful and caring person. “She has many talents, including cooking, sewing, crocheting and gardening,” Hart said. “She is always willing to share those talents with others.” Hart admires Bolmon’s courage throughout her life. “She has been through some trying times, but always comes out on top,” Hart said. “She is not one to give up and is always ready and willing to help others. She has always been more like a sister to me than a sister-in-law.” Bolmon plans to continue creating shopping-bag purses for years to come. “People are always amazed by the creations,” she said. “Everyone has their own passion and enjoyment; mine is creating these bags. I honestly find it to be the most relaxing thing I can do, and I get so much enjoyment from it.” Take a walk on the mild side BY JENNIFER RIZZI Pittsburgh Post-Gazette On any given day around noon, you won’t likely find Dick Fisher sitting indoors. The 82-year-old prides himself on spending time outdoors at least once a day, usually for a brisk two-mile walk in Pittsburgh’s North Park. He walks the same path whether it’s July or January, and he’s done it for 15 years. “It’s become a habit,” he said. “I just don’t feel right if I don’t do it.” Fisher recognizes the benefits of outdoor activity at any stage in life, and attributes his strong physical condition to the daily 40-minute trek. “It’s my routine,” he said, adding that the exercise has helped him rebound from several surgeries. “I’m not out to break any distance or speed records, but it’s done my body a lot of good.” Fisher’s steady outdoor walking regimen is one that all seniors should try to emulate, according to Dr. Robert Palmer, clinical director of geriatric medicine at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. The simple habit of taking low-impact, daily walks can substantially increase seniors’ mental and physical health, he said. “When the weather is pleasant, going outdoors for even a brief walk is very therapeutic for cardiovascular effects and improving endurance,” he said. “It keeps circulation normal and helps cognition by preventing memory loss.” SHNS Safe exposure to sunlight on an outdoor trail can increase levels of Vitamin D, an additional health benefit. For some, Palmer said it might be feasible to incorporate more physically demanding activities like biking and swimming into an exercise plan: “They’re very good aerobic activities that can benefit the heart.” Seniors who want to increase physical endurance but feel unable to attempt such exertion can certainly reach their goal while walking, he said. They can improve strength and stamina by selecting more challeng- ing courses with slopes and hills. “Walking up and down hills strengthens leg and hip muscles and helps with better balance,” he said. “It’s something simple and doable — almost anyone can go for a walk.” Older, more arthritic seniors might be hesitant to hit the pavement if they suspect it might do their joints “more harm than good.” The actual effects, however, are quite the opposite. “Studies show that walking with arthritic knees reduces pain and need for medication,” Palmer said. “It also improves quality of life and mood.” Dan Bickel, park manager at Moraine State Park in Pittsburgh, recommends that seniors improve their technology skills along with exercise. In geocaching, which is quickly gaining popularity in outdoor circles, treasure-hunters follow a handheld global positioning system unit to find a prize stashed in a secret location. “Seniors get pretty proficient at using the GPS at the end of the program,” Bickel said. “It’s good for seniors whose kids buy them a GPS and they want to learn how to use it. County Sheriff’s Office with DUI, failure to maintain lane and driving too fast for conditions. ■ Thomas Wesley Odell, 38, 430 Old Federal Road S., Chatsworth, was charged Sunday by the Murray County Sheriff’s Office with terroristic threats and acts. ■ Logan David Waters Patterson, 19, 218 Oak St., Tunnel Hill, was charged Sunday by the Chatsworth Police Department with a taillight violation, underage consumption and DUI. Mexico police arrest 4 in US border agent death BY AND GILLIAN FLACCUS MARK STEVENSON Associated Press writers CHULA VISTA, Calif. — Police in Mexico have announced the arrests of four men in connection to the killing of a U.S. Border Patrol agent as their counterparts in the United States search hospitals for suspects possibly wounded in the first such shooting in more than a decade. The men detained in Mexico are allegedly part of an immigrant smuggling ring, and 21 people were found with them when police detained them and seized four guns near Tecate, Mexico, said Elias Alvarez Hernandez, coordinator of federal police in Baja California state. During a news conference Saturday, Mexico police did not say what evidence they had against the four, whom they identified as Jose Quintero Ruiz, 43, and his brother Jose Eugenio Quintero Ruiz, 49, and taxi drivers Jose Alfredo Camacho, 34 and Antonio Valladares, 57. Agent Robert Rosas was killed Thursday while responding alone to a suspected border incursion near Campo, a town in rugged, arid terrain in southeastern San Diego County. He was shot in the head and body and was dead when other agents arrived, said Keith Slotter, special agent in charge of the FBI’s San Diego bureau. Alvarez said that one of the suspects told police that a man detained Friday with a handgun had shot Rosas. Tecate police said Friday they had arrested 36-year-old Ernesto Parra Valenzuela near the crime scene with a Border Patrol-issued weapon after the shooting, according to the Los Angeles Times. The man, who was injured, was taken to a hospital, according to a news release. Federal investigators have said they notified hospitals on both sides of the border to be on alert for patients with suspicious or unexplained injuries. Investigators have said FRE blood evidence at the scene indicated at least one culprit and possibly others had serious injuries, perhaps by gunfire. They didn’t know how many shots were fired, if Rosas fired any shots himself, or how many guns were used. But FBI spokesman Darrell Foxworth told The Associated Press in an email late Saturday that he could not confirm or comment on any arrest reports. American officials have expressed concerns that the drug cartel battles plaguing Mexico could spill into the United States with the targeting of U.S. law enforcement officials. Slotter said investigators aren’t ruling out the possibility that Rosas was slain by drug smugglers or even human smugglers. Arturo Sarukhan, the Mexican ambassador to the United States, said Mexican law enforcement agencies are cooperating in the case. Rosas was the first Border Patrol agent to die in a shooting in more than a decade, according to The Officer Down Memorial Page Inc., which tracks fallen officers using information provided by law enforcement agencies. Another agent, Luis Aguilar, was intentionally run over by a fleeing man driving a drugladen Hummer in January 2008. Rosas, a three-year Border Patrol veteran, had a 2-year-old son and an 11month-old daughter, said Richard Barlow, acting chief patrol agent for the Border Patrol’s San Diego sector. Authorities could not confirm reports that he called for backup and then went ahead before anyone arrived, but said it isn’t unusual for agents to work alone along the border. The FBI is offering a $100,000 reward for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the killer or killers. On the Net: The Officer Down Memorial Page Inc.: www.odmp.org FRE E E Dalton Preschool Register Now Please call 706.278.0811 or 706.259.9074 505 Peidmont St. • Dalton Free Hearing Test This Week America’s Hearing Aid Centers 601-B Flemming St. – Dalton People Connecting People 706.226.3257 Brainerd / 4505 Brainerd Rd. / 423.622.1749 Hixson / 4841D Hixson Pk. / 423.875.2591 Cleveland / 1011 Keith St., Ste. 2 / 423.479.7356 Athens / 704 White St. / 423.744.0700 Ft. Oglethorpe / 2201 LaFayette Road / 706.858.0466 Rome / 4 Coosawatte Ave. / 706.291.2496 7A Now accepting applications for FREE Georgia Pre-K classes beginning August ‘09. Child must be 4 years of age on or before 9/1/09. We have certified teachers, state approved curriculum, free breakfast, lunch & snack. We offer free extended daycare until 4 pm; 4 to 6 pm based on your ability to pay. AREA ARRESTS ■ Audrey Lee Plank, 19, 11737 London Lane, Apison, Tenn., was charged Saturday by the Tunnel Hill Police Department with DUI and underage consumption. ■ Johnathan Travis Gray, 23, 1923 David Drive, Dalton, was charged Sunday by the Eton Police Department with DUI, failure to maintain lane and driving without insurance. ■ Kevin Eric Green, 27, 151 Emmaus Road, Epworth, was charged Sunday by the Whitfield PHOTO Dick Fisher, 82, takes his daily walk. The 82-year-old prides himself on spending time outdoors at least once a day, usually for a brisk two-mile walk. Monday, July 27, 2009 www.audibel.com Eddie Mantooth BC-HIS Board Certified Hearing Aid Specialist ® CARDS 90 Days No Interest 8A THE DAILY CITIZEN Monday, July 27, 2009 Americans going wireless-only BY GINA KIM Sacramento Bee Millions of cost-cutting Americans are asking: Ditch the landline phone and go completely wireless, or keep paying two bills for dependability and peace of mind? Many have already clipped the cord. Wireless-only households have surpassed those solely dependent on landlines, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which tracks the information. Still, some won’t give up on their landline with its comforting dial tone, whether out of laziness, safety concerns, sound quality, cell phone costs or simply tradition. “It’s a fixture in the house, kind of like the refrigerator,” said technology analyst Larry Magid. “It’s just there, it’s reliable, it’s wired and glued in place because of the cord, and there’s no meter on it.” There were 270 million cell phones in use in December 2008, the most ■ Hannah Athan of Dalton received a doctor of pharmacy degree from South University School of Pharmacy in June. ■ Adam H. Bailey was named to the dean’s list of academic honor at Oglethorpe University in Atlanta for the spring 2009 semester. His parents are Lanny and Cherie Bailey of Dalton. Students named to the dean’s list have at least a 3.5 grade point average and carry 12 or more credit hours for the semester. Bailey graduated magna cum laude in May with a bachelor of arts degree. ■ Several local students graduated from the Medical College of Georgia this spring. Receiving a doctor of physical therapy degree recent figure available from the CTIA-The Wireless Association trade group. That’s up from 110 million in 2000. It means 87 percent of Americans have a phone they take everywhere, the group found. More than 20 percent of households were wirelessonly in December, and another 15 percent said they took most calls on cell phones instead of landlines, according to the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics. Just 17 percent of households had a landline without a cell phone. “I have both a landline and a cell phone, and every time I pay that landline bill I wonder why,” said Stephen Blumberg, an NCHS senior scientist. Blumberg fell into tracking phone use in 2003, when the CDC realized that people giving up landlines could cause potential bias in the center’s health surveys, which are taken over the phone. The studies have found that home ownership, not age, is the biggest predictor of a wireless home. Renters are four times less likely to have a landline, Blumberg said. There were also health differences between those with and without landlines. Wireless-only adults are more likely to smoke, binge drink, go without health insurance and not wear a seat belt, according to Blumberg. The CDC doesn’t know why this is, but collects the information to mitigate distortion in surveys. “It may be as simple as persons who are wirelessonly are more likely to be out with friends, socializing outside the home,” Blumberg said. Wireless and telecom industry analyst Jeff Kagan doesn’t see the landline phone dying completely, just a transformation of the industry. Everything is becoming connected, he said, so that one day a person will be able to talk on a cell phone that will transfer seamlessly to a home phone when the user walks through the door, and even connect to the Internet and TV. There are already Internet-based phone calls with Skype and Vonage. “We’re moving in that direction in the next 10 to 20 years,” Kagan said. Businesses are letting go of landlines at a much slower pace than private phone customers, ensuring the job security of Jose Olagues, a telecom analyst for California State University, Sacramento. Landlines are generally cheaper than cell phones, Olagues said. And businesses need the dependability of phones that don’t cut out or run out of battery life. Still, the 35-year-old Olagues ditched his landline at home when AT&T started offering DSL broadband without a phone number last year. “I don’t think we had a phone plugged in for a year anyway,” Olagues said. “All we got was telemarketers.” There is something lost when people turn wireless, said Kevin Wehr, associate professor of sociology at Sacramento. Area codes no longer matter, people lose the safety of an electricityfree phone, and there is longing for the simpler times of the past — the ring tone on Wehr’s iPhone is the oldstyle telephone ring. “It punches some nostalgia buttons,” he said. “It sounds interesting and old school.” Dan Weiser, Web editor for the U.S. House of Representatives and former KCRA news director, canceled his landline this week. The unintended consequence is that the 51-year-old can no longer call his cell phone to figure out where he misplaced it. CLASS ACTS BOARD CERTIFIED FAMILY PRACTICE JAMES R. ZUPPA, M.D. Sports • School Physicals • Immunizations • Minor Emergencies Minor Skin Procedures • X-rays and Lab • Industrial Health Network Worker’s Compensation • Medical Review Officer (MRO) Drug Screen (DOT/Non DOT/Rapid) • Hair Testing Physical Exams (CDL/Pre-employment) • Health and Wellness FULL SERVICE PREVENTIVE CARE CONTRIBUTED 706-270-9989 PHOTO Adam Bailey, center, stands with his parents, Cherie and Lanny Baiiley. were Chatsworth resident Andrea Nicole Henry and Dalton resident Leanna Jane Dailey. Tara Faith Poteet of Dalton received a bachelor of science degree in nursing, and Pamela Richardson Miller of Tunnel Hill received a master’s degree in nursing. (CORNER OF N. CLEVELAND HWY. AND NORTH OAKS DR.) 102 North Oaks Drive • Dalton, GA 30721-8392 Need Energy? www.myefusjon.com/PrimaCare Read The Daily Citizen online ■ www.daltondailycitizen.com NORT H W ES T GEORGIA BUS INES S BULLET IN BOA RD Ballet Jazz Cheer Mommy & Me Pointe • Tap Dance Fit (18+) Private Instruction Modeling/Pageant Coaching Pre-Dance Modern Pre-Gym Gymnastics Due to demand - classes will have limited availability so hurry & register! Multiple sibling discount! Short Sessions Available! Visit the website for more complete information & pricing. www.aimperformancestudios.com Open House/Registration August 1 & 8 11:00 am - 3:00 pm Located: 3957 Cleveland Hwy. Unit D Dalton, GA 30721 Phone: 706-217-9740 e-mail: [email protected] Weekly Public Auction Every Thursday Night Doors open @ 5 pm Sale starts @ 7 PM • Featuring Glassware • • Antique Signs & Toys • Jewelry • CONCESSIONS AND COLD DRINKS • No Buyer’s Premium on Thurs. Nites Auto Auction Saturday, August 1st at 10.00 am Featuring Cars Trucks Scooters & ATV’s Where “U” always come first! GAL#AU003610 www.ultimateauctioncompany.com 190 TREADWELL RD. CHATSWORTH, GA 30705 RAIN OR SHINE!! CALL BILL RAPER 706-280-0890 THE DAILY CITIZEN North Georgia Farmers Market Canning & Freezing Time Homegrown Tomatoes Box $20.00 South Carolina Peaches (1/2 Bushel) Box $12.00 “Now Selling Wholesale to Restaurants” 1100 S. Thornton Ave. 310 Legion Drive 706-529-5055 706-278-6369 Place your business ad on this page every Monday, Thursday & Saturday for one low price! Call 706-217-6397 for more information. The Daily Citizen Monday, July 27, 2009 Compute: School systems battle with laptop issues BRIEFS Girl shot in head at wedding reception INDIANAPOLIS — Police say a 18-month-old girl was shot and critically injured during a wedding reception at an Indianapolis park. Two women also were wounded by gunfire. Police have not identified the child, who was struck in the head by a bullet Saturday night when a dispute at the wedding reception at Lawrence Community Park led to gunfire. The two women were shot in their legs. Lawrence Police Chief Paul Whitehead tells The Indianapolis Star three people have been arrested. AWOL zoo bird recaptured in park PHILADELPHIA — Philadelphia Zoo spokesman Bill Larson says a tropical bird that flew the coop two days ago was recaptured Saturday morning in the city’s Fairmount Park. The juvenile sun conure (CON’-yer) disappeared Thursday during the Festival of Flight bird show. Larson says the zoo’s animal department followed up more than 100 leads after putting out the word about bird, which is mostly yellow with a green tail. Scholar says he wants to ’move on’ BOSTON — Black Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. says he’s ready to move on from his arrest by a white police officer, hoping to use the encounter to improve fairness in the criminal justice system and saying “in the end, this is not about me at all.” After a phone call from President Barack Obama urging calm in the aftermath of his arrest last week, Gates said he would accept Obama’s invitation to the White House for a beer with him and Cambridge police Sgt. James Crowley. Iranian opposition requests memorial TEHRAN, Iran — Ali Reza Beheshti, the top aide to Iran’s opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi, told The Associated Press Sunday that his boss has requested permission from authorities to hold a memorial service for victims of post-election unrest. Mousavi signed the request with Mahdi Karroubi, the other reformist candidate in last month’s disputed presidential election. Police have said at least 20 people were killed in the post-election unrest. Pro-reform Web sites have reported families of slain protesters have been banned from mourning publicly. Private security may be used in Afghanistan WASHINGTON — U.S. military authorities in Afghanistan may hire a private contractor to provide around-the-clock security at dozens of bases and protect vehicle convoys moving throughout the country. The possibility of awarding a security contract comes as the Obama administration is sending thousands of more troops into Afghanistan to quell rising violence fueled by a resurgent Taliban. As the number of American forces grow over the next several months, so too does the demand to guard their outposts. —Associated Press Lifetime Investment! Kennedy J E W E L RY 2012 East Main St. (423) 629-4996 Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. (GIA) Graduate Gemologist on Staff www.kennedyjewelry.com 9A CONTRIBUTED PHOTOS On the left is an example of improper tree-pruning practices. The photo on the right shows rapid growth as a result of topping. Tree topping – why not? SUBMITTED BY THE WHITFIELD COUNTY EXTENSION OFFICE Pruning trees can be a beneficial maintenance practice if done correctly; it can lengthen the life of the tree, increase the landscape value of the home and reduce homeowner liability. However, improper pruning can increase disease, decay and pest problems which all lead to decreased life for the tree. Topping, also known as stubbing, dehorning and heading, destroys the shape of the tree and impedes branch control. It doesn’t actually reduce the size of the tree; instead, the tree has to work harder to grow back and replace the lost leaf canopy. The leaves are required to manufacture food for the trunk and roots, especially in times of stress such as drought or freezing temperatures. This rapid growth won’t slow until the tree returns to its original size unless the health of the tree is compromised by poor pruning practices. To correctly prune a tree, look for the branch-bark ridge. This is found where the growing branch and expanding trunk come together in a corky or raised ridge. Once you find that, look on the bottom side of the branch where it joins the trunk. There should be a slight swelling there. From the ridge to this swelled area is called the “branch collar.” Rather than cutting flush against the tree or leaving a long stub, cut at the edge of the collar. Prune branches smaller than your thumb using hand clippers or a hand saw, carefully cutting at the edge of the collar without damaging it. Larger branches should be cut using the three-cut method. Make your first partial cut a few inches away from the branch collar to prevent bark tearing. For your second cut, move a short distance out from the first and remove the entire branch, reducing the weight so you can make your final pruning cut neatly. Start your third and final cut on the outside edge of the branchbark ridge and cut through to the outside edge of the branch collar. For more information on correct pruning practices, call Brenda Jackson at Whitfield County Extension, (706) 278-8207 or the Dalton City Arborist at the Department of Public Works, (706) 278-7077. School systems After using the all over the country netbook for four are wrestling with years, Billy has to the idea of requiring give it back and still students to have lapdoesn’t have a comtop computers in the puter. The school coming school year. system gets stuck Few recent issues with thousands of have caused more of crummy computers, a stir. most of which will James The battle comes be in lousy condition as the price of lapand too slow and old Derk tops plummets and to lease to another schools wrestle with kid. the increasing costs of textA better idea, I think, is to books and other materials. In offer students a great deal on my city, the school district “real” laptops and use the plans to charge parents $70 a schools’ incredible buying year to rent a “netbook,” a power to negotiate a great lesser-powered laptop, plus price. Some current laptops about $45 a year for insurance. have sold for $399; about the A student who already has same price as a netbook-type a laptop won’t be allowed to computer, with no bulk disuse it and must rent another count at all. After four years of one (duh) and still will have to payments (if needed), the kid rent textbooks. has a real computer that probSome other districts offer ably will take him a year or full-powered laptops that have two into college, if needed, or replaced textbooks. Costs for it can be passed down to a families range from nothing to younger sibling. more than $100 a year (tax As for using computers to rates often make up the differ- replace textbooks, I wish them ence). luck. My MBA program used Netbooks are popular for both “real” books and PDF their small size and light versions that cost half as weight, but they’re underpow- much. The first thing we all ered and less sturdy than a reg- did was take the PDF file to ular laptop. Kinko’s and have it printed School-issued laptops raise and bound. Granted, we were other issues. Some families all old fogey types in graduate have religious objections, school who were used to some simply don’t want the “real” books. And, certainly, Internet in their homes, period. the PDF file was handy when Others want to make sure the it came to searching the full Internet’s red-light portions are text. carefully filtered out, and no But the idea of “reading” filtering technology is 100 per- 125 pages of accounting on a cent effective. Even if a home laptop screen was just awful. doesn’t have Internet access, (Reading it in the first place chances are a neighbor’s will. was bad enough.) Let’s hope And Billy’s netbook will easily the new generation can get pick up the signal from that used to it. house, because odds are they James Derk owns haven’t turned on encryption CyberDads, a computeron their wireless router. repair firm. Facing ? E R U S O L C E R O F Chapter 13 Can Stop the Loss of Your Home F ULLER ULLER & MC CKAY K AY FREE Consultation (706) 275-0733 or call toll free (800) 842-6441 www.fullermckay.com 10A THE DAILY CITIZEN Monday, July 27 2009 OBITUARIES • Ernest J. Cronic, Rome • John M. Fuson, Rocky Face • John Dennis Gillian, Dalton • Richard Lee Keown, Tunnel Hill • Pauline ‘Suzie’ Mikel, Tunnel Hill • Nathan Rice, Chatsworth • Grace Stone Sarrels, Dalton • Robert Reed Turner, Gordon County Obituary notices are posted online at www.daltondailycitizen.com Ernest J. Cronic Ernest J. Cronic, age 59, of 213 Marshall Lane, Rome, died Saturday morning in a Rome hospital. Mr. Cronic was born Jan. 3, 1950 in Canton, Ga., a son of the late Dewitt and Edna Brookshire Cronic. A veteran of the U.S. Army, Mr. Cronic served in Vietnam, and prior to ill health he was associated with Shaw Industries in Dalton for 26 years. Besides his parents, Mr. Cronic was preceded in death by one brother, Johnny Cronic, and by two sisters, Billie Faye Cronic and Mrs. Nancy Cornette. Survivors include his fiance, Nancy Williams Payne; his stepchildren, Jody Williams and Brandy Williams, both of Rome; his stepmother, Mrs. Gladys Givens, of Resaca; three brothers, Dave Cronic, of Jasper, Glenn Cronic, of Carrollton, and Chris Cronic, of Dalton; and four sisters, Mrs. Linda Cook, of Taylorsville, Mrs. Connie Pendegrass, of Cedarown, Mrs. Cindy White, of Dalton, and Mrs. Angela Howard, of Tennessee. Funeral services for Mr. Ernest J. Cronic will be held Tuesday afternoon at 4 p.m. at John House’s Cave Spring Chapel Funeral Home with the Rev. John Vine officiating. Interment will follow in the Cave Spring Cemetery with military honors provided by the honor guard of the Shanklin-Attaway Post 5 of the American Legion. The family will receive friends at the funeral home today from 6 to 8 p.m. This announcement is courtesy of Ponders Funeral Home, 138 Melrose Drive, Dalton, GA. (706) 226-4002. Your selected independent funeral home. www.legacy.com John M. Fuson John McKeel Fuson, 57, of Rocky Face, passed away Saturday, July 26, 2009, at Quinton Memorial Health C a r e Center. He was preceded in death by his pare n t s , Fuson Homer Fuson and Westelle Bone Fuson. He attended Dalton Church of the Nazarene Survivors include his wife, Susan Louise Fuson of the residence; two daughters, Lindsay Fuson and Kelli Fuson, both of Dalton; sister, Kay Hampton of Waverly, Tenn. The funeral is today at 11 a.m. at the Westside Chapel of Julian Peeples Funeral Home with the Rev. Gary Mimbs officiating. Memorial contributions may be made to Kelli Fuson Education Fund, care of Gene and Tina Hannigan, 1104 Walston Ave., Apt. 104A, Dalton, GA 30720. Special thanks are extended to the staff of Hamilton Medical Center and Amedisys Home Health Care. Words of comfort maybe sent and the guest register signed at www.julianpeeples.com. Julian Peeples Funeral Home, Westside Chapel, Rocky Face, in charge of funeral arrangements. For more information, all 706272-9777. www.legacy.com John Dennis Gillian Mr. John Dennis Gillian, age 87, of Dalton, departed this life Sunday, July 26, 2009 at the local hospital. John was born Aug. 8, 1921in Catoosa County, a son of the Gillian J a m e s John and Fannie Jane Faucette Gillian. He was also preceded in death his wife, Virginia Lee Gillian; brothers, Thomas Lee Gillian, James Franklin Gillian, Sam Gillian; sisters, Lois Wallace and Dorothy Whaley. He was a member of Sheridan Avenue Assembley of God. He is survived by his sons and daughters in law, Vernon and Jeannie Gillian, Knoxville Tenn., Tex and Betty Gillian, Cohutta, Ricky Lane Gillian, Cohutta; daughters and son in law, Glenda Adams, Cohutta, LaGonda Gribble, Dalton, Joan Rymer, Chatsworth, Billie and Ronnie Phillips, Dalton, Sister Bessie Gates, Dalton; 18 grandchildren; 16 great-grandchildren and three great-great-grandchildren; numerous nieces and nephews. Services to celebrate the life of Mr. John Dennis Gillian will be held Tuesday at 4 p.m. at the Melrose Chapel of Ponders Funeral Home with the Revs. Jack Cornett and Junior Clayton officiating. He will be laid to rest at the West Hill Cemetery next to his wife. Pallbearers will be some of his grandsons. The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 6 until 9 p.m. today. Messages and condolences may be sent to the Gillian family at www.pondersfuneralhome.com. Arrangements by locally owned and operated, Ponders Funeral Homes, 138 Melrose Drive, Drive, Dalton, GA. 706-226-4002 Your selected independent funeral home. www.legacy.com Richard Lee Keown Richard Lee Keown, age 74, of Tunnel Hill, passed a w a y S u n d a y, July 26, 2009 at his residence. He was preceded in death by his parKeown e n t s , Luther and Mattie Lee Keown. Survivors include his wife of 52 years, Frances “Cricket” Keown, of the residence; daughter and son-inlaw, Sandra and Glen Thomas, of Rocky Face; sons and daughter-in-law, Stevin and Malinda Keown, of Chatsworth, and Dennis Keown and Scott Keown, both of Tunnel Hill; sisters and brothers-in-law, Ima Jean Wells, of Dalton, Janice and Mitch Harper, of Dalton, Debbie Dunn, of Dalton, Donna Collins, of Atlanta, and Larry and Tammie Keown, of Rocky Face; grandchildren, Shawna, Erica, Jeff and Monica, Private M.C. Matthew Keown, and MaKayla Lee Thomas and Jay and Matthew Ayers. The funeral service will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Westside Chapel of Julian Peeples Funeral Home with the Revs. Allen Robinson and Bill Castell officiating. Burial will be in Whitfield Memorial Gardens. The U.S. Marines will render military honors. A white dove release will conclude the service. The family will receive friends at the funeral home today from 5 to 9 p.m. An online guestbook can be signed at www.julianpeeples.com. Julian Peeples Funeral Home, Westside Chapel, Rocky Face is in charge of the funeral arrangements. www.legacy.com Pauline ‘Suzie’ Mikel Pauline “Suzie” Mikel, 71, of Tunnel Hill, passed away Friday, July 24, 2009, at Chatsworth Health Care Center. She was preceded in death by her husband, Winford E. Mikel; son, Anthony Thomas; father, Oscar Black; mother, Ruby Black; brothers, Oscar “Pete” Black and Truman Black. Survivors include her children, Kenny Lee Hooper of Tunnel Hill, Melvin Phillip and Trish Hooper of Dalton and Ricky and Brenda Hooper of Ringgold; sister, Nellie McClure of Tunnel Hill; brothers and sisters-in-law, Melvin “Jake” and Rebecca Black of Ringgold, Alvin “Buck” and Jurialean Black of Rocky Face; sister-in-law, Nora Black of Benton; grandchildren, Amy S. Martinez, Jammie R. Howard, Rachel Hooper, Felisha C. Hooper and Lydia F. Hooper; great grandchildren, Chasidi Miller, Madison, Victoria, Aydon and Cameron Martinez, Jessie J., Xavier and Kristen Howard; several nieces and nephews. The funeral is Monday at 2 p.m. at the Pleasant Grove Chapel of Julian Peeples Funeral Home with the Rev. Jeff Johnson and Chaplain J. Dwight Wilson officiating. Burial will be in United Memorial Gardens. A white dove release ceremony will conclude the service. The family will receive friends at the funeral home today from 5 until 9 p.m. Messages of comfort may be sent and the guest register signed at www.julianpeeples.com. Julian Peeples Funeral Home, Pleasant Grove Chapel, Dalton, is in charge of funeral arrangements. For more information, call 707259-7455. www.legacy.com Nathan Rice Mr. Nathan Rice, 34, of Chatsworth, passed away on July 23, 2009, at his home. He is preceded in death by his grandparents, Leonard and Cleo Rice and Irene and John Anderson. He is survived by his wife, Stephany Rice of Chatsworth; children, Destini Manis and Caleb Rice; brother, Kenneth (Ken) Rice of Chatsworth; mother and father James and Carol Rice; mother-in-law Sheila Manis, brother-in-law and sister-in-law Matthew and Ariel Manis; aunt, KaK; nieces and nephews; Carter Manis, Kenneth Ney and Drew Southers. Services are today at 2 p.m. in the chapel of Shawn Chapman Funeral Home with the Rev. Robert Richardson officiating. Interment will follow in Murray Memorial Gardens. The family received friends yesterday at Shawn Chapman Funeral Home. Arrangements made with integrity by Shawn Chapman Funeral Home and Crematory, Chatsworth. www.legacy.com Grace Stone Sarrels Mrs. Grace Stone Sarrels, 92, of Dalton, passed away, Sunday, July 26, 2009. At her request, she was cremated. A memorial service will take place at a later date. Words of comfort may sent to the family at www.lovefuneralhomega.com. Love Funeral Home, 1402 N. Thornton Ave., Dalton is in charge of arrangements. www.legacy.com Love Funeral Home Family Owned Since 1935 278-3313 Robert Reed Turner Mr. Robert Reed Turner, age 43, of the Hill City Community in Gordon County, departed this life Saturday evening, July 25, 2009 from injuries sustained in a motorcycle accident. Reed was born July 27, 1965 i n Whitfield C o u n t y. He was preceded in death Turner by his grandparents, Hubert Turner, Walter and Ethel Priest. Reed was a good husband, son, father and brother. He was a hard worker who was up at the crack of dawn and never missed or was late for work. He was employed at Sakai Company in Adairsville. He loved making a garden in the spring and sharing vegetables with neighbors. He was also an avid outdoorsman who loved to ride and raise horses and loved to ride his HarleyDavidson. He was a member of the Sugar Valley Baptist Church. He is survived by his loving wife of 20 years, Rita McGill Turner of the residence; children, Constance Turner, Walt Turner both of Hill City, Bret Turner of Calhoun; step-daughter and her husband, Kelly Crumbley and Thyrone Johnston of Resaca; parents, Robert and Linda Turner of Hill City; sister, Tammy Turner Thornton of Calhoun; brothers, Mark Turner and his wife, Melaine of Calhoun, Andy Turner and his wife, Evi of Hill City; grandmother, Mrs. Farris Watson of Resaca; several nieces, nephews, aunts, uncles and cousins. Services to celebrate the life of Mr. Robert Reed Turner will be held Tuesday 2 p.m. at the Hill City Baptist Church with the Rev. Kenny Sheriff officiating. He will be laid to rest at the Hill City Baptist Church Cemetery with Nate Thornton, Mitchell Turner, Matthew Turner, Michael Turner, Brian Turner, Chris Turner, Frankie Cantrell and Joe Baldwin serving as pallbearers. The family will receive friends at the Calhoun Chapel of Ponders Funeral Home on today from 5 until 9 p.m. Please visit our Web site at www.pondersfuneralhome.com to share words of comfort and memories with Reed’s family. Arrangements by locally owned and operated Calhoun Chapel of Ponders Funeral Home, 675 Jolley Road, Calhoun, Georgia. 706-6257577. Your selected independent funeral home. www.legacy.com IV tube chemical linked to preemie liver woes BY LINDSEY TANNER AP Medical Writer CHICAGO — A chemical used in many plastic products and already under scrutiny for potential health risks is suspected of raising the risk of liver problems in premature babies, according to a new study. The small study in a German hospital suggests a chemical known as a phthalate, used in some intravenous feeding bags and tubing, may raise preemies’ chances for liver damage. Rigorous research on phthalates’ effects in humans is lacking, and at least one expert found the German study unconvincing. There is no solid proof implicating the phthalate studied, DEHP. However, the researchers said their results show that hospitals treating newborns or preemies should turn to IV feeding equipment that doesn’t contain DEHP. Some hospitals in the U.S. already have switched. Premature babies’ livers are immature so they are already at risk for liver complications. They also are often fed intravenously, a practice already known to increase liver problems. The new study, published Monday in the journal Pediatrics, says one possible reason is DEHP. Animal studies suggest the phthalate chemical may cause various health risks including liver abnormalities and reproductive system damage. Phthalates (pronounced thowl-ates) are found in many products besides medical supplies — toys, vinyl flooring and cosmetics. They’re used to stabilize fragrances and make plastics flexible. Some countries and California have restricted their use. They are different from bisphenol-A, or BPA, a plastic-hardening chemical that also has raised health concerns and is found in food containers and other products. It’s no longer used in many baby bottles. In a 2002 phthalates advisory, the Food and Drug Administration recommended alternatives for patients Jewelry Connection (Located Next to The Ice Castle) 706.278.8113 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ $3.00 Watch Battery (with coupon) Limit 1 Per Customer Expires: July 31, 2009 most at risk from the chemical leeching out of plastic medical equipment, including sick infant boys because of possible damage to developing reproductive organs. The German study involved 30 mostly premature infants treated in a Mannheim intensive care unit before the hospital switched to feeding equipment without the chemical, and 46 infants treated there afterward. Serious liver problems involving reduced flow of bile, a digestive fluid produced by the liver, developed in 50 percent of the infants fed with the tubes containing DEHP versus just 13 percent of the other infants. The researchers took into account other factors that might contribute to liver problems, and the two groups were mostly similar. However, the chemical group was intravenously fed for an average of 26 days, four more days than the other infants. That is a limitation that could have skewed the results. But that alone “wouldn’t have accounted for the magnitude of the difference” between the groups, said Deborah CorySlechta, an environmental medicine professor at the University of Rochester medical school. “This is a pretty strong damnation of” phthalates, she said. “It needs to be replicated. But I still think this makes a very strong case for getting rid of these compounds” in infant intensive care units, she said. Edmund Crouch, a scientist who served with the Rochester professor on a National Research Council committee on phthalates risks, was skeptical and said the study doesn’t rule out other factors that might have caused liver problems. Steve Risotto of the American Chemistry Council, which represents chemical makers, also disputed the results and said the study “doesn’t show any direct cause and effect.” But Beth Lyman, a pediatric nutrition nurse at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, called the results intriguing. Her hospital switched to phthalatefree feeding systems more than a decade ago. Lyman said she’d noticed fewer liver problems in IV-fed infants since then, and that the study makes her wonder if the switch might have contributed. • • • • Digital Hearing Aids Diagnostic Hearing Evaluations Dizziness & Balance Testing • Assistive Listening Devices Do You Have ALLERGIES? We Have Effective Treatment Dalton Allergy Clinic Dalton Ear Nose & Throat Dalton 706.226.2142 Calhoun 706.629.5000 WIKIMEDIA COMMONS PHOTO Hear What You’ve Been Missing Dr. Denise R. Sheppard Audiologist Northwest Georgia Hearing Center 1436 Chattanooga Avenue, Dalton, GA 30720 706-279-EARS (3277) THE DAILY CITIZEN Monday, July 27 2009 Lauren Hooie Melody Palmer Stephanie Hernandez Jennifer Pacheco Robert Enck Maria Aldaba Taylor Behr Alan Panteleon Emmanuel Sosa Janet Gonzalez Reina Landaverde Tyler Bulloch Raven Brand Ashton Wong Bekah Houston Maria Ortiz Lauren Hooie A Weekly Art Show Provided This Week By Dalton Middle School 11A 12A THE DAILY CITIZEN Monday, July 27, 2009 Almanac -10s Dalton Temperature: High/low . . . . . . . . . . . 92°/72° Precipitation: 24 hrs. to 3 p.m. yest. . . 0.00" Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2009 Gainesville 82/67 RealFeel Temperature® The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature is an exclusive index of effective temperature based on eight weather factors. Shown is the highest values of the day. 99 92 89 95 96 97 97 77 81 July 28 Aug 5 Columbus 90/70 Albany 90/71 Aug 13 Aug 20 Dublin 91/68 Cordele 90/69 New Valdosta 91/71 Weather History On July 27, 1819, a hurricane devastated the Gulf Coast. At Bay St. Louis, Miss., only three houses were left standing, and six feet of water flooded the streets. Weather Trivia TM Q: What percent of t-storms in the U.S. spawn tornadoes? 10s 20s 30s Tue. Hi/Lo/W 93/73/t 88/71/t 89/69/t 92/70/t 89/77/t 88/71/t 90/72/t 86/70/t Wed. Hi/Lo/W 94/73/pc 86/71/pc 85/70/pc 92/70/pc 90/76/pc 86/71/pc 90/74/pc 82/71/pc City La Grange Macon Marietta Newton Rome Savannah Sparta Valdosta 80s 90s 100s 110s Tue. Hi/Lo/W 88/68/t 94/72/t 87/69/t 93/73/t 93/71/t 92/74/t 90/71/t 94/71/t New York 87/73 Washington 88/73 Kansas City 92/70 El Paso 99/78 Houston 92/76 Miami 91/79 Brunswick 89/75 Today Hi/Lo/W 84/67/t 89/70/t 84/66/t 91/70/t 87/67/t 92/71/t 88/67/t 91/71/t Detroit 85/66 Atlanta 85/69 Savannah 92/71 Noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Key: W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice. Wed. Hi/Lo/W 87/70/pc 92/72/pc 85/70/pc 94/73/pc 89/71/pc 93/75/pc 89/71/pc 94/73/pc A: Only 1 percent. Hamilton Medical Center would like to welcome Dr. Ayo C. Makinde to its Medical Staff. Dr. Makinde is another example of why Hamilton is a regional leader in health care. W h i t e ’s P e d i a t r i c s 1575 Chattanooga Avenue Suite 1 Dalton, Georgia 30720 706.876.2130 70s Chicago 85/68 Los Angeles 86/66 Welcomes NOW ACCEPTING N E W PAT I E N T S: 60s Minneapolis 86/63 Hamilton Ayo C. Makinde, MD Pediatrics 50s San Francisco 73/56 Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Today City Hi/Lo/W Albany 90/71/t Atlanta 85/69/t Athens 84/67/t Augusta 91/68/t Brunswick 89/75/t College Park 85/69/t Columbus 90/70/t Gainesville 82/67/t 40s Billings 78/57 Augusta 91/68 Macon 89/70 Sunrise today ........... 6:46 a.m. Sunset tonight .......... 8:46 p.m. Last 0s Denver 90/55 Sun and Moon Full -0s Seattle 94/63 Athens 84/67 Atlanta 85/69 8 am 9 am 10 am 11 am Noon 1 pm 2 pm 3 pm 4 pm First National Weather for July 27, 2009 Georgia Weather Chattanooga through 3 p.m. yest. C E R T I F I C AT I O N S Board Eligible City Albany Anchorage Baltimore Billings Boise Buffalo Charlotte Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Today Hi/Lo/W 83/66/t 68/57/r 88/70/t 78/57/t 93/67/s 76/65/pc 88/70/t 81/50/t 85/68/pc 85/63/s 81/64/pc 90/74/t Tue. Hi/Lo/W 86/68/pc 72/56/s 88/70/t 71/52/pc 94/66/s 84/67/pc 90/70/t 71/50/t 84/64/t 88/69/pc 89/69/pc 92/75/t Wed. Hi/Lo/W 91/70/pc 72/59/pc 90/70/pc 73/52/pc 92/65/s 85/69/pc 90/70/pc 65/45/pc 78/60/pc 81/67/t 81/65/t 92/74/pc INTERNSHIP TRAINING Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons New York, NY hamiltonhealth.com • 706.272.6114 • Dalton, Georgia Tue. Hi/Lo/W 75/53/t 87/67/t 88/68/t 86/59/t 110/87/s 84/64/s 87/71/t 91/81/t 81/62/t 77/57/pc 88/77/t 88/76/t Wed. Hi/Lo/W 74/51/pc 81/62/pc 81/66/t 80/61/pc 105/83/s 82/64/s 84/73/t 91/81/t 75/60/pc 73/58/pc 90/77/t 88/74/pc Today City Hi/Lo/W Okla. City 92/70/pc Orlando 91/75/t Philadelphia 88/72/t Phoenix 111/89/s Pittsburgh 82/61/pc Portland, OR 101/65/s St. Louis 90/72/s S.L. City 92/64/pc San Fran. 73/56/pc San Diego 77/67/pc Seattle 94/63/s Wash., DC 88/73/t Tue. Hi/Lo/W 90/68/t 91/75/t 88/72/t 111/88/s 87/66/pc 102/65/s 91/68/t 88/63/s 70/56/pc 74/67/pc 96/63/s 89/73/t Wed. Hi/Lo/W 87/66/t 91/76/t 90/74/pc 108/86/s 84/64/pc 102/62/s 83/69/t 88/64/pc 69/56/pc 73/66/pc 95/60/s 89/73/pc S C H O O L D A Y S It doesn’t matter what their age, don’t they grow up fast? Jacob Alvarran Cayla Hughes Preserve this Kindergarten 6th Grade School: School: special day Brookwood Elementary Westside Middle Parents: Parents: for them Roy & Lleny Alvarran Wesley & Jennifer Hughes Wishing you the best Wow! on this new journey. as they head off Our baby has grown up! We love you! Good luck in Middle School! Mom, Dad & sister for their big day! 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We accept cash, checks, Visa, MasterCard, American Express & Discover B COMMENTARY SPORTS Monday, July 27, 2009 ● www.daltondailycitizen.com PRO BASEBALL: ATLANTA BRAVES Bats lead the way McCann, Kotchman, Johnson homer BY COLIN FLY Associated Press Writer AP PHOTO Mets outfielder Jeff Francoeur, who was traded by the Braves earlier this month, should walk away from baseball. Baseball not for Francoeur T he Atlanta Braves’ Frank Wren is one of the major league’s more creative general managers. Always thinking outside-the-box for ways to improve his team, he kept coming back to the same question in his head: “How can I put Jeff Francoeur in the best position to help us win?” Francoeur, the 25-year-old homegrown talent from Gwinnett County’s Parkview High, had been in steady decline the past two seasons with the Braves. He turned in his worst performance as a big leaguer last season, batting .239 with just 11 home runs in 155 games. 2009 wasn’t any better for him despite Adam showing promise Krohn in spring training. Through 82 games with Atlanta, his on-base percentage, .282, was worst among everyday outfielders in all of baseball. Wren was stumped for the answer to his question until finally, one day earlier this month, he started to chuckle. He had figured out the answer: Trade him within the division so the Braves can face a sub-.250 hitter 20 games a year. Just like that, Francoeur was off to the Mets. Now, it is possible Francoeur could respond like a true competitor and make the Braves pay for trading him. In 11 games with the Mets, he’s hitting .333 with two home runs. But so what if he’s off to a hot start with a new team? Is it time to put him on the cover of Sports Illustrated again? My point is his average will level out eventually, and the Mets will be stuck with the same undisciplined, incompetent hitter the Braves got rid of. So much in the way Wren was creative in making Francoeur better for the Braves by trading him, Francoeur must get creative in making himself a better professional athlete by trading sports. Francoeur should quit baseball right now. He’s still got four years of college eligibility remaining, so why not take up Clemson on its scholarship offer and start a career in football? Remember, Francoeur was a better football player than baseball player, and guided Parkview to back-to-back, undefeated state championship seasons in 2000 and 2001 as a defensive back/wide receiver. The only reason he didn’t become a Tiger is the Braves offered him a $2.2 million signing bonus out of high school. Think about it, the knock on Francoeur the baseball player is he’s too aggressive at the plate. He doesn’t have the patience to wait for a pitch he can hit. He just wants to hit now, hit hard and ➣ Please see KROHN, 2B MILWAUKEE — Derek Lowe began waving emphatically as soon as he saw where Jason Kendall’s shot was going. Lowe’s gestures to Nate McLouth were meaningless, but the center fielder made the play all the same. C a s e y Kotchman hit a three-run Lowe homer and McLouth made a pair of great catches in the sixth when Lowe began to tire, lifting the surging Atlanta Braves to a 10-2 win over the Milwaukee Brewers on Sunday. “I was waving him over there, I had the perfect angle of it,” Lowe said. “Maybe that’s why I got there,” joked McLouth, who won his first Gold Glove last season. “It was a good series. Coming in, all these games are big the rest of then season, but when there are teams that are right there in the wild card (race) with us and you have a chance to move ahead of a team or separate from teams, it makes them that much more important.” Atlanta and Milwaukee are certainly headed in opposite directions. The Braves have won eight of 11 since the All-Star break and even though they remain 6 1/2 games behind Philadelphia in the NL East. Kelly Johnson, who hit a tworun homer in the ninth in his first start since coming off the disabled list Thursday, said he can feel a difference over the time he was gone rehabbing his ailing right wrist. “Confidence. I think everybody’s really stepped up their confidence level, everybody’s been playing so good,” Johnson said. “It’s also like a swagger, it’s just a feeling being in the clubhouse. Everybody’s a little louder, having a little more fun. Things like that. You can really tell.” It’s no fun for Milwaukee, which fell to 7-14 in July and is fourth in the NL Central after starting the month with a twogame lead in the division. “We’re not pleasing a lot of people so we’ve got to figure out a way to get it going,” said Corey Hart, who hit a two-run homer in the sixth for the only runs off Lowe. Kotchman’s deep drive to right off Braden Looper in the sixth gave Atlanta a 5-0 lead and the Braves scored five times off Milwaukee’s bullpen, starting ➣ Please see BRAVES, 2B AUTO RACING: NASCAR SPRINT CUP AP PHOTO Atlanta Braves' Brian McCann hits a run-scoring double during the first inning of Sunday’s game against the Milwaukee Brewers in Milwaukee. McCann finished the day 3 for 4 . BOXING Forrest killed in ATL BY CHARLES ODUM Associated Press Writer AP PHOTO Jimmie Johnson heads into Turn 1 late in the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis on Sunday. Johnson won the race. Johnson wins again BY JENNA FRYER Associated Press Writer INDIANAPOLIS — Jimmie Johnson cashed in on the most expensive speeding ticket in NASCAR history, grabbing an improbable third victory at Indianapolis Motor Speedway when a penalty to Juan Pablo Montoya blew the race wide open. In a performance that mirrored his dominating Indianapolis 500 victory nine years ago, Montoya was in cruise control as he led 116 laps and built a 5-second lead over the competition. Then NASCAR flagged him for speeding on a routine pit stop with 35 laps remaining, and the driver became unglued. “I swear on my children and my wife that I was not speeding!” he shouted over his radio. “There is no way! Thank you NASCAR for screwing my day.” Crew chief Brian Pattie begged his driver to calm down and focus on salvaging a solid points day, to no avail. “Don’t tell me to relax, dude!” Montoya yelled. “We had this in ➣ Please see NASCAR, 2B ATLANTA — Vernon Forrest, a former three-time champion who gained stardom when he became the first boxer to defeat “Sugar” Shane Mosley, was shot to death during an apparent robbery in Atlanta, police said Sunday. Sgt. Lisa Keyes said in an e-mail Sunday that Forrest, 38, was Forrest shot several times in the back Saturday night, which an autopsy confirmed. Keyes said there are no suspects. “Vernon was one of the few decent people in boxing,” promoter Gary Shaw said. “I mean really decent. He cared about mentally challenged adults. He cared about kids. I just can’t believe it.” Fulton County medical examiner Michele Stauffenberg confirmed the case was a homicide and that the autopsy showed Forrest died from “multiple gunshot wounds involving the torso and thigh.” Keyes said a police report on the shooting was not immediately available. Forrest, a native of Augusta, Ga., who lived in Atlanta, was a member of the 1992 Olympic team. He also was a former IBF welterweight and two-time WBC junior middleweight champion with a 41-3 career record with 29 knockouts. “He was one of the most gracious and charitable fighters in boxing and he will be missed by the entire boxing community and all of his friends at HBO,” HBO Sports president Ross Greenburg told The Associated Press. Greenburg helped put on eight of Forrest’s fights. “Maybe Vernon’s lasting legacy will be for Americans everywhere to rise up and end this kind of senseless violence,” Greenburg said. Those who knew the fighter praised his role in launching the Destiny’s Child group homes in Atlanta, which work to provide homes for the mentally disabled. “It was truly his calling,” Forrest’s publicist, Kelly Swanson, said of his work with children. “When he wasn’t boxing, this was his full-time job. “When they would see him, they would just light up, and some of them couldn’t even talk. Vernon was very much involved. He’d have some of the kids over to his house on Sundays. They ➣ Please see KILLED, 2B PREP SPORTS: SOUTHEAST Keller resigns as Raiders’ baseball coach BY ADAM KROHN [email protected] Southeast baseball coach Jason Keller, who has led the Raiders the last seven seasons, is steppig down from his post, he told The Daily Citizen on Sunday. He’s leaving Southeast to be closer to his family in San Antonio. He will be an assistant coach at Uvalde High school, which about an hour west of San Antonio. Keller informed Raiders athletic director Scott Ramsey of his decision last Tuesday. “I always knew I wanted to go back home,” Keller said. “But it had to be the right time, the right opporW W W . tunity and the right fit. Uvalde has a rich baseball and football tradition, and go about three rounds deep into the state playoffs every year. The fact the school is close to home was a deal breaker for me.” Keller said he’ll be next in line for the head Keller baseball coaching job at Uvalde. Ramsey understood Keller’s need to be closer to home. “If I was living somewhere other than Georgia, I’d want to get back home too,” Ramsey said. “I totally understand where he’s coming from. He stayed here for seven years and we hate to lose him, but I’m extremely happy for him.” Keller took over as Raiders coach in 2003 and last year Southeast compiled a 10-15 overall record and 4-10 region record in its first year in 6-3A. Keller addressed his players Tuesday in a meeting at the school cafeteria. Raiders outfielder Tanner McCutchen, who will be a senior in 2009-10, said Keller was emotional while D A L T O N D A I L Y C I T I Z E N . C O M telling the players of his decision. “He loves all of us kids,” said McCutchen, who also quarterbacks the Raiders’ football team. “We’ve known him since we were little, so in a way it was like a dad leaving. But everyone is behind him 100 percent.” Keller is the third Raiders coach to resign in the last four months. In March, girls basketball coach Jeff McDonald resigned after four seasons for health reasons. In May, boys basketball coach Joey Bryson stepped down after just one season to accept the same position at Stephens County High School in Taccoa. 2B THE DAILY CITIZEN Monday, July 27, 2009 NASCAR: J.J. first back-to-back winner ➣ Continued from page 1B AP PHOTO Police say Vernon Forrest (left) has been shot and killed in an apparent robbery. Atlanta Police Sgt. Lisa Keyes said in an e-mail Sunday that Forrest may have been robbed and was shot "multiple times in the back" Saturday night in Atlanta. Killed: Robbed Sat. ➣ Continued from page 1B were part of his family.” Swanson said Forrest was not married and has one son, Vernon Jr. Inside the ring, Forrest was known for taking two wins over Mosley in 2002. On Sept. 13, 2008, Forrest reclaimed his WBC 154pound title by beating Sergio Mora in a rematch of a fight won by Mora. The win over Mora was Forrest’s last fight. He suffered a rib injury while training for an April fight against Jason LeHoullier, which was canceled, and Forrest had to vacate his title. Ken Hershman, vice president in charge of boxing at Showtime, which aired Forrest’s first fight with Mora, said Forrest was a popular fighter dedicated to his charity work. “He wasn’t looking for anything, he just did it because it was the right thing to do,” Hershman said. “Vernon was a young, vibrant guy coming to the end of his career. He still had a lot of life ahead of him.” There were tentative plans for a title fight against Sergio Martinez, perhaps in October, Shaw said. Plans for an August fight against Martinez were pushed back the rib injury. “Instead of being an Olympian, a two-time world champion, a guy who beat Shane Mosley twice, the guy who did some good for boxing — maybe his legacy will be for something else,” Shaw said. “Maybe boxing will finally get around the violence outside of the ring. Maybe Vernon’s name and legacy will be for that.” Forrest is the third prominent boxer to die this month. Former two-time champion Arturo Gatti, who retired in 2007, was found dead July 11 at a Brazilian resort. Gatti’s wife, Amanda Rodrigues, is being held as the prime suspect. Another former champion, Alexis Arguello, was found dead on July 1 at his home in Managua, Nicaragua. He was elected mayor of Nicaragua’s capital last year. “If the saying is bad things come in threes, hopefully we’re done with that for a long time to come,” Hershman said. “I hope that’s the case. I mean, ironically three great people, three great human beings, too. Not a good few months.” Forrest’s trainer, Buddy McGirt, also worked with Gatti. McGirt said Forrest planned to start training Aug. 1 for his next fight. “I just feel so bad. He has a son you know,” McGirt said. “Someone is going to be raised without a father because somebody wanted to rob someone.” GOLF the bag.” Indeed he did, but the penalty took him out of contention and relegated him to an 11th-place finish. Montoya, who had moved as high as sixth in the Sprint Cup standings as he ran out front, instead lost a spot and is now 10th in the race for the Chase for the championship. The difference in his paycheck was severe: Johnson earned $448,001 for the victory, while Montoya’s share of the purse was knocked down to $224,048. The performance was reminiscent of Montoya’s win in the 2000 Indy 500, when he led 167 of 200 laps in his first race at the storied track. His team celebrated his return Sunday with a retro paint scheme that duplicated that winning car, and as he clicked off lap after lap, it was deja vu for the Colombian driver. “I was cruise(ing). I was super fast,” a calmer Montoya said after the race. Too fast, actually. NASCAR said the electronic timing system caught Montoya twice exceeding the limit as he drove down pit road. “There’s nothing to prove wrong,” said Robin Pemberton, vice president of competition. “It’s about as simple math as you can use.” The penalty opened up the race for anyone else to claim, and overshadowed Johnson’s third win in the last four years at Indy. Johnson, who won for the third time this season, also became the first driver to win in consecutive seasons since Indy opened to NASCAR 16 years ago. Johnson wouldn’t speculate on if he would have won the race if Montoya had not been penalized. “I do know I have the trophy,” he offered. “I hate it for him. I know it is a story, Juan led so many laps, but when we come back and look at it two months from now the stat sheet is going to have a ’W’ next to my name. That’s all that matters.” Current points leader Tony Stewart, a two-time Brickyard winner who finished third, wasn’t sure anyone could beat Montoya. A victim of his own Indy heartbreak, Stewart could commiserate with Montoya’s disappointments. “He never really was challenged all day,” Stewart said. “He did a great job. I know what he’s feeling like — he’s got to be sick inside. He had the car, he had the talent to do it, he just made a mistake and it cost him.” Johnson had to hold off Hendrick Motorsports teammate Mark Martin to get it, though. After Montoya’s penalty, Martin moved into the lead for the restart with 24 laps to go and Johnson lined up on his outside. Johnson sailed to the front and pulled away, only to have to hold off Martin over a nerve-racking final five laps. Martin, who at 50 became the oldest polesitter in Indy’s 100 years, finished second and moved up two spots in the standings to ninth. “I would have liked to win it,” Martin said. “Just got beat by Superman.” It was a 1-2 finish for Rick Hendrick for the second straight race — Martin and Jeff Gordon led the way in Chicago two weeks ago — and gave the team owner his seventh victory in 16 visits to The Brickyard. “I still get chills when I walk down Gasoline Alley and see the grandstands on both sides of the track,” Hendrick said. Greg Biffle was third and followed by Brian Vickers and Kevin Harvick, who Braves: Lowe wins 10th game of season ➣ Continued from page 1B with Brian McCann’s solo homer in the seventh. Lowe (10-7) has been a main beneficiary of the added offense. In the veteran right-hander’s last four starts, he’s 3-0 with a 2.63 ERA and has allowed only two homers. He struck out three and forced 10 groundball outs before running into trouble in the sixth and needing McLouth to bail him out. “I went from the most part getting groundballs to what amounts to about 1,000 feet of two outs and a home run,” Lowe said. “The play of the game is clearly the Kendall ball. The inning really could’ve unraveled, but he makes a great play, we come back and a great win. Our offense has been phenomenal the whole second half.” Looper (9-5) had been the only Brewers starter succeeding, going 4-0 in his previous six appearances, but he gave up a first inning run on McCann’s two-out double and fell apart in the sixth. McCann walked with one out, Garret Anderson singled to put runners on the corners and Matt Diaz’s RBI single made it 2-0. Kotchman followed with his homer off Looper, who has allowed a major-league high 24 this season and left after the inning. “I was able to limit the damage most of the time until that last inning. Unfortunately, that threerun homer really hurt,” Looper said. McLouth, acquired from Pittsburgh for three players on June 3, made sure Milwaukee didn’t rally in the bottom of the inning. Ryan Braun singled with one out and McLouth made a leaping catch near the wall to save a run off a long drive by Prince Fielder. With two outs, Hart homered off Lowe, cutting it to 5-2, and J.J. Hardy and Jody Gerut hit consecutive singles, but McLouth saved two more runs when he tracked down Kendall’s deep drive to left-center field. McLouth had been playing shallow and shaded to right, needing a full sprint to make the grab. Krohn: Francoeur ➣ Continued from page 1B AP PHOTO Loren Roberts tees off on the first play off hole after the final round of the Senior British Open Championship at the Sunningdale golf course, in Sunningdale, England on Sunday. Roberts wins in play off SUNNINGDALE, England (AP) — Loren Roberts won his second Senior British Open title on Sunday, beating Mark McNulty on the third hole of a sudden death playoff. Fred Funk also took part in the playoff, but was eliminated on the first extra hole when he made par as Roberts and McNulty birdied. The remaining pair parred the second playoff hole before Roberts clinched victory with another par at the next hole. Greg Norman, the thirdround leader, missed birdie chances at the first three holes and double-bogeyed the 17th after driving into trees. Norman finished in a tie for sixth place, three strokes behind the leaders. Roberts, who won in 2006 at Turnberry, and Funk each shot a 67 in the final round. McNulty shot 64. Bernhard Langer (65) was fourth with Sam Torrance (67) fifth. Norman (71) and Larry Mize (68) were next. Canadian Open OAKVILLE, Ontario — Jason Dufner played six holes in 1 under to top the Canadian Open leaderboard before play was washed out because of the latest round of heavy rain and lightning, forcing the tournament to at least a fifth day. Dufner, the second-round leader after rounds of 68 and 63 on the saturated Glen Abbey course, had a onestroke lead over Anthony Kim and Jerry Kelly. Kim was 4 under after nine holes in the third round, and Kelly was 1 under through six. The players are scheduled to resume play at 7:30 a.m. Monday, the first time the tournament has gone past the weekend since 1988. PGA Tour officials still hope to complete four rounds in the event drenched by about 5 inches of rain in four days. Scott Verplank was two strokes back at 12 under along with Retief Goosen, Bob Estes, Peter Tomasulo and Michael Letzig. Evian Masters EVIAN-LES-BAINS, France— Ai Miyazato of Japan won the Evian Masters with a birdie on the first playoff hole, beating Sophie Gustafson of Sweden to clinch her first victory on the LPGA Tour. Miyazato steadied herself and sank a putt from about 6 feet after Gustafson had missed her birdie putt from the edge of the green. Miyazato shot a 3-under 69 and Gustafson had a 70 as both finished at 14-under 274. Gustafson had a chance to win it on the 18th, but her eagle putt stopped at the edge of the hole. grabbed his best finish in 15 races. Kasey Kahne was seventh and followed by David Reutimann, four-time Brickyard winner Gordon and Matt Kenseth. A cut tire caused Kyle Busch to finish 38th and drop out of contention for the Chase. The bad day cost him four spots in the standings. He is 14th with six races left to set the 12-driver Chase field. “I think it’s pretty selfexplanatory that we’re trying to fight for a spot in the Chase,” said Busch, a threetime winner this season. The tire problems that plagued last year’s race were never a factor, as Goodyear made good on its promise to find the right compound for one of the biggest races of the season. Goodyear’s product last year couldn’t last longer than 10-to-12 laps, and the tiremaker spent 11 months diligently correcting the problem. “Goodyear did a great job with the tires, that’s for sure,” said 15th-place finisher Carl Edwards. “I can’t imagine how much money they spent to come out here and make this a great race and a safe race for all of us.” knock the cover off the ball every time he’s at the plate. Call me crazy, but that sounds like a football player’s mentality to me. At 25 years of age, if he leaves for college football now, he’ll already be a more developed athlete than his peers on the football field. And he’s not too old that he couldn’t hang with the competition. If he can parlay his aggression and frustration on the diamond into hard hitting on the gridiron, he should make a very good football player. No doubt, he’d make a better football player than baseball player. Look at Chris Weinke. He played in the Toronto Blue Jays’ minor league organization for six years before accepting Florida State’s offer to play football. Not only did he compete at a high level despite being away from the game for so long, but he also won a Heisman Trophy and a national championship. And guess how old he was when he returned to football? 25 years old, same as Francoeur. If Francoeur walked away from baseball today, he will have already made about $7 million. So he’s come out on top from that perspective. Why not walk away from a game that you — at least from an outsider’s perspective — don’t appear to have the passion to want to play or get any better at and go do something you love to do? Can you imagine the hype surrounding Francoeur should he play college football? If he lived up to the hype, he’d be a lock for a first-round pick in the NFL draft. Or, if he didn’t want to go the college route, he could help the United Football League — which needs all the marketability it can muster — get off to a fast start. Go ahead, Frenchy. Your scouting report hasn’t changed since you got to the big leagues in 2005. You can keep converting those low and away breaking balls into double-play grounders while getting booed by 45,000 at Citi Field, or you can move on to your true calling. What are you waiting for? The gridiron is calling for you. Adam Krohn is a sports writer for The Daily Citizen. You can write him at [email protected] or follow him on twitter @adamkrohn. Read The Daily Citizen Online www.daltondailycitizen.com P Par a r tts s C City ity AUTO PARTS Manager’sSpecial 5 QUART SPECIAL 189 Each Parts City Conventional Motor Oil Aceite de motor convencional Parts City PCO 5-30 10-30 10-40 PRO BASEBALL: HALL OF FAME AP PHOTO Inductees Rickey Henderson, left, and Jim Rice laugh after taking the stage during a ceremony at the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., on Sunday. Rice waited 15 years to be voted in. Evans on Rice: Finally COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) — Jim Rice had one Hall of Fame endorsement a long time ago. The problem for Rice was, former teammate Dwight Evans doesn’t have a ballot. After 15 years of waiting, Rice was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday with Rickey Henderson and the late Joe Gordon. “I couldn’t be happier. He’s finally being recognized,” Evans, who played alongside Rice in the Boston Red Sox outfield during Rice’s entire career, said prior to the 3611 CHATTANOOGA ROAD TUNNEL HILL, GA 706-673-2302 ceremony. “I spent the entire 16 years with him. I think this is 10, 12 years too late.” Evans said he felt steroids helped keep Rice out of the Hall until his final year of eligibility. “Steroids played a lot in the escalation of the stats,” Evans said. “The stats are all padded. Finally, it’s been exposed the last two or three years. They said, ’This guy did it on his own and he should be recognized for it.’ I truly believe that’s what has happened here. It’s too late, but it’s happening.” Don’t worry about low CD interest rates Discover a sensible alternative – the safe, secure, tax-deferred benefits of fixed annuities. Your Modern Woodmen representative can help you choose the right product for you. Modern Woodmen of America offers financial products and fraternal benefits. Call today to learn more. *Must purchase a minium of 5 conventional motor oil quarts. Limit 2 cases. CARPENTERS AUTO PARTS “Unbelievable,” McCann said. “They’re game-saving catches. Getting him on our team is just such a big acquisition. He’s a Gold Glove center fielder. He’s got five tools. He can hurt in so many different ways.” NOTES: Braves LHP Mike Gonzalez pitched a clean seventh in his first appearance since taking a line drive off his forearm in Thursday’s game. ... Braves RF Ryan Church (elbow) was out, but hopes to return for the Florida series starting Tuesday after hurting himself swinging Saturday night. ... Braves RHP Tim Hudson (ligament replacement) is scheduled to make his third rehab start at Triple-A Gwinnett on Monday. modern-woodmen.org LOW0408 Donald L. Jones FICF, LUTCF 101 E. Crawford St. Suite 205 Dalton, GA30720 706-278-5725 [email protected] THE DAILY CITIZEN Monday, July 27, 2009 3B SCOREBOARD TELEVISION On Today MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 7 p.m. ESPN — L.A. Dodgers at St. Louis CYCLING Tour de France Sunday At Paris 21st (Final) Stage 101.9 miles from Montereau-Fault-Yonne to the Champs-Elysees in Paris 1. Mark Cavendish, Britain, Team Columbia-High Road, 4 hours, 2 minutes, 18 seconds. 2. Mark Renshaw, Australia, Team Columbia-High Road, same time. 3. Tyler Farrar, United States, Garmin-Slipstream, same time. 4. Gerald Ciolek, Germany, Team Milram, same time. 5. Yauheni Hutarovich, Belarus, Francaise des Jeux, same time. 6. Thor Hushovd, Norway, Cervelo Test Team, same time. 7. Jose Joaquin Rojas, Spain, Caisse d’Epargne, same time. 8. Marco Bandiera, Italy, Lampre-NGC, same time. 9. Daniele Bennati, Italy, Liquigas, same time. 10. William Bonnet, France, Bbox Bouygues Telecom, same time. 11. Lloyd Mondory, France, AG2R-La Mondiale, same time. 12. Geoffroy Lequatre, Agritubel, same time. 13. Nicolai Trussov, Russia, Team Katusha, same time. 14. Cyril Lemoine, France, Skil-Shimano, same time. 15. Leonardo Duque, Colombia, Cofidis, same time. 16. Sebastian Lang, Germany, Silence-Lotto, same time. 17. Matteo Tosatto, Italy, Quick Step, same time. 18. Steven de Jongh, Netherlands, Quick Step, same time. 19. Fabian Cancellara, Switzerland, Team Saxo Bank, same time. 20. Yukiya Arashiro, Japan, Bbox Bouygues Telecom, same time. Also 26. Andreas Kloeden, Germany, Astana, same time. 39. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy, Liquigas, same time. 44. Christian Vande Velde, United States, GarminSlipstream, same time. 55. Bradley Wiggins, Britain, Garmin-Slipstream, same time. 56. Frank Schleck, Luxembourg, Team Saxo Bank, same time. 62. Lance Armstrong, United States, Astana, same time. 63. Andy Schleck, Luxembourg, Team Saxo Bank, same time. 75. George Hincapie, United States, GarminSlipstream, same time. 97. Alberto Contador, Spain, Astana, same time. 141. David Zabriskie, United States, GarminSlipstream, 30 seconds behind. 149. Danny Pate, United States, GarminSlipstream, :44. Final Standings Individual 1. Alberto Contador, Spain, Astana, 85:48:35. 2. Andy Schleck, Luxembourg, Team Saxo Bank, 4:11. 3. Lance Armstrong, United States, Astana, 5:24. 4. Bradley Wiggins, Britain, Garmin-Slipstream, 6:01. 5. Frank Schleck, Luxembourg, Team Saxo Bank, 6:04. 6. Andreas Kloeden, Germany, Astana, 6:42. 7. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy, Liquigas, 7:35. 8. Christian Vande Velde, United States, GarminSlipstream, 12:04. 9. Roman Kreuziger, Czech Republic, Liquigas, 14:16. 10. Christophe Le Mevel, France, Francaise des Jeux, 14:25. 11. Mikel Astarloza, Spain, Euskaltel-Euskadi, 14:44. 12. Sandy Casar, France, Francaise des Jeux, 17:19. 13. Vladimir Karpets, Russia, Team Katusha, 18:34. 14. Rinaldo Nocentini, Italy, AG2R-La Mondiale, 20:45. 15. Jurgen Van Den Broeck, Belgium, SilenceLotto, 20:50. 16. Stephane Goubert, France, AG2R-La Mondiale, 22:29. 17. Carlos Sastre, Spain, Cervelo Test Team, 26:21. 18. Alexandre Botcharov, Russia, Team Katusha, 29:33. 19. George Hincapie, United States, Team Columbia-High Road, 33:27. 20. Sylvain Chavanel, France, Quick Step, 34:09. Also 77. David Zabriskie, United States, GarminSlipstream, 2:02:36. 141. Danny Pate, United States, GarminSlipstream, 3:32:39. 151. Tyler Farrar, United States, GarminSlipstream, 3:48:13. PRO BASEBALL MLB Glance NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB Philadelphia 56 40 .583 — Atlanta 51 48 .515 6 1/2 Florida 51 48 .515 6 1/2 New York 46 51 .474 10 1/2 Washington 30 68 .306 27 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 51 45 .531 — St. Louis 53 48 .525 1/2 Houston 50 48 .510 2 Milwaukee 49 49 .500 3 Cincinnati 44 53 .454 7 1/2 Pittsburgh 43 55 .439 9 West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 62 36 .633 — Colorado 54 44 .551 8 San Francisco 52 46 .531 10 Arizona 43 56 .434 19 1/2 San Diego 38 61 .384 24 1/2 ——— Sunday’s Games Washington 3, San Diego 2, 10 innings Philadelphia 9, St. Louis 2 Atlanta 10, Milwaukee 2 N.Y. Mets 8, Houston 3 Chicago Cubs 5, Cincinnati 2 Colorado 4, San Francisco 2 Florida 8, L.A. Dodgers 6 Arizona 9, Pittsburgh 0 Today’s Games L.A. Dodgers (Wolf 5-4) at St. Louis (C.Carpenter 8-3), 7:05 p.m. Colorado (Jimenez 7-9) at N.Y. Mets (O.Perez 2-3), 7:10 p.m. San Diego (Geer 1-6) at Cincinnati (H.Bailey 1-2), 7:10 p.m. Houston (W.Rodriguez 10-6) at Chicago Cubs (Zambrano 7-4), 8:05 p.m. Washington (Stammen 3-5) at Milwaukee (Suppan 5-7), 8:05 p.m. Philadelphia (Moyer 9-7) at Arizona (Garland 5-9), 9:40 p.m. Pittsburgh (Maholm 6-4) at San Francisco (Lincecum 10-3), 10:15 p.m. AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct New York 60 38 .612 Boston 57 40 .588 Tampa Bay 54 45 .545 Toronto 48 51 .485 Baltimore 42 55 .433 GB — 2 1/2 6 1/2 12 1/2 17 1/2 Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 52 44 .542 — Chicago 50 48 .510 3 Minnesota 49 50 .495 4 1/2 Cleveland 41 58 .414 12 1/2 Kansas City 38 59 .392 14 1/2 West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 58 39 .598 — Texas 54 42 .563 3 1/2 Seattle 51 47 .520 7 1/2 Oakland 41 56 .423 17 ——— Sunday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 7, Oakland 5 Toronto 5, Tampa Bay 1 Baltimore 6, Boston 2 Texas 7, Kansas City 2 Minnesota 10, L.A. Angels 1 Cleveland 12, Seattle 3 Chicago White Sox at Detroit, 8:05 p.m. Today’s Games Kansas City (Chen 0-5) at Baltimore (R.Hill 3-3), 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (A.Burnett 9-4) at Tampa Bay (J.Shields 6-6), 7:08 p.m. Oakland (Cahill 6-8) at Boston (Beckett 11-4), 7:10 p.m. Detroit (Galarraga 5-8) at Texas (Tom.Hunter 2-1), 8:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Danks 8-6) at Minnesota (Perkins 5-6), 8:10 p.m. Cleveland (Pavano 8-8) at L.A. Angels (J.Saunders 8-6), 10:05 p.m. Toronto (R.Romero 8-4) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 11-3), 10:10 p.m. AUTO RACING NASCAR Sprint Cup Allstate 400 at The Brickyard Results Sunday At Indianapolis Motor Speedway Indianapolis Lap length: 2.5 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (16) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 160 laps, 128 rating, 190 points, $448,001. 2. (1) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 160, 128.9, 175, $336,350. 3. (7) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 160, 114, 170, $314,573. 4. (12) Greg Biffle, Ford, 160, 108.4, 160, $282,000. 5. (6) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 160, 114.4, 160, $256,548. 6. (19) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 160, 94.3, 150, $246,253. 7. (8) Kasey Kahne, Dodge, 160, 98.6, 146, $234,548. 8. (5) David Reutimann, Toyota, 160, 98.8, 142, $220,848. 9. (22) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 160, 91.1, 138, $222,376. 10. (25) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 160, 80.8, 134, $225,065. 11. (2) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 160, 131.7, 140, $224,048. 12. (18) Joey Logano, Toyota, 160, 79, 127, $216,101. 13. (9) Reed Sorenson, Dodge, 160, 85.1, 124, $202,851. 14. (17) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 160, 80.4, 121, $190,979. 15. (41) Carl Edwards, Ford, 160, 70.7, 118, $209,406. 16. (21) David Stremme, Dodge, 160, 70.6, 115, $194,290. 17. (13) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 160, 69.8, 112, $195,115. 18. (10) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 160, 81.1, 109, $167,025. 19. (27) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 160, 63.8, 111, $177,525. 20. (33) AJ Allmendinger, Dodge, 160, 61.9, 103, $158,675. 21. (24) Jamie McMurray, Ford, 160, 57, 100, $164,125. 22. (11) Marcos Ambrose, Toyota, 160, 67.7, 97, $169,248. 23. (31) Bobby Labonte, Ford, 160, 53.3, 94, $182,454. 24. (29) David Ragan, Ford, 160, 56.2, 91, $160,425. 25. (38) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 159, 63.5, 88, $195,731. 26. (4) Bill Elliott, Ford, 159, 79.7, 85, $148,625. 27. (40) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 159, 51.7, 82, $164,375. 28. (32) Robby Gordon, Toyota, 159, 48.4, 79, $167,135. 29. (28) Paul Menard, Ford, 158, 41.2, 76, $177,781. 30. (37) David Gilliland, Chevrolet, 158, 41.9, 78, $144,850. 31. (26) Scott Speed, Toyota, 157, 42.1, 70, $155,898. 32. (35) John Andretti, Chevrolet, 156, 38.1, 67, $152,325. 33. (43) Terry Labonte, Toyota, 154, 33.5, 64, $144,025. 34. (14) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 144, 69.6, 61, $160,775. 35. (23) Michael Waltrip, Toyota, engine, 139, 47, 58, $150,525. 36. (3) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, engine, 127, 85.5, 55, $162,925. 37. (15) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge, 118, 62.4, 52, $161,110. 38. (20) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 112, 68.5, 49, $190,048. 39. (36) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 108, 27.1, 46, $142,125. 40. (42) Elliott Sadler, Dodge, 45, 27, 43, $150,050. 41. (39) Mike Skinner, Toyota, transmission, 35, 27.9, 40, $141,925. 42. (34) Dave Blaney, Toyota, brakes, 23, 30.8, 37, $141,825. 43. (30) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, brakes, 21, 30.4, 34, $142,216. Canadian Open Sunday At Glen Abbey Golf Club Oakville, Ontario Purse: $5.1 million Yardage: 7,253; Par: 72 Second Round Third-round play was suspended by lightning. No one finished the round Jason Dufner 68-63 — 131 -14 Anthony Kim 69-66 — 135 -13 Jerry Kelly 65-67 — 132 -13 Michael Letzig 69-67 — 136 -12 Retief Goosen 65-69 — 134 -12 Bob Estes 67-67 — 134 -12 Peter Tomasulo 65-68 — 133 -12 Scott Verplank 65-67 — 132 -12 Nationwide Tour Cox Classic Saturday At Champions Run Omaha, Neb. Purse: $725,000 Yardage: 7,165; Par 71 Third Round Rich Barcelo 69-62-68-65 — Tom Gillis 65-67-67-66 — Brent Delahoussaye 64-67-68-67 — J.J. Killeen 63-66-71-67 — Matt Every 62-68-70-68 — Michael Sim 66-65-67-70 — 264 265 266 267 268 268 -20 -19 -18 -17 -16 -16 Jonas Blixt Blake Adams 64-65-69-70 67-65-69-68 — 268 -16 — 269 -15 AP SPORTLIGHT July 27 1937 — The United States wins the Davis Cup by beating Britain four matches to one. 1954 — Chick Harbart beats Walter Burkemo 4 and 3 in the final round to win the PGA championship. 1969 — Betsy Rawls wins the LPGA championship by four strokes over Sue Berning and Carol Mann. 1973 — The Miami Dolphins beat the College AllStars 14-3 in Chicago. 1986 — Greg Lemond becomes the first American to win the Tour de France. LeMond’s teammate, Bernard Hinault of France, finishes second. 1986 — Pat Bradley sinks a 12-foot birdie putt on the first playoff hole to defeat hard-charging Japanese veteran Ayako Okamoto in the LPGA-du Maurier tournament. Bradley birdied five of the first six holes and finishes at 6-under 66 for a 72-hole total of 276. 1993 — Reggie Lewis, the 27-year-old Boston Celtics star who collapsed during a playoff game on April 29 from a heart ailment, dies after a light workout at the team’s practice facility at Brandeis University. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 145.882 mph. Time of Race: 2 hours, 44 minutes, 31 seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.400 seconds. Caution Flags: 3 for 14 laps. Lead Changes: 9 among 7 drivers. Lap Leaders: M.Martin 1-4; J.Montoya 5-30; T.Stewart 31-32; D.Gilliland 33; J.Montoya 34-92; C.Mears 93; J.Montoya 94-124; B.Vickers 125-126; M.Martin 127-136; J.Johnson 137-160. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): J.Montoya, 3 times for 116 laps; J.Johnson, 1 time for 24 laps; M.Martin, 2 times for 14 laps; T.Stewart, 1 time for 2 laps; B.Vickers, 1 time for 2 laps; C.Mears, 1 time for 1 lap; D.Gilliland, 1 time for 1 lap. Top 12 in Points: 1. T.Stewart, 3,054; 2. J.Johnson, 2,862; 3. J.Gordon, 2,847; 4. Ku.Busch, 2,608; 5. C.Edwards, 2,556; 6. D.Hamlin, 2,518; 7. R.Newman, 2,506; 8. K.Kahne, 2,482; 9. M.Martin, 2,471; 10. J.Montoya, 2,461; 11. G.Biffle, 2,445; 12. M.Kenseth, 2,429. GOLF Evian Masters Sunday At Evian Masters Golf Club Evian-les-Bains, France Purse: $3.25 million Yardage: 6,373; Par: 72 Final x-won on first playoff hole x-Ai Miyazato 69-66-70-69 — Sophie Gustafson 71-66-67-70 — Meena Lee 69-69-72-65 — Cristie Kerr 70-68-67-70 — Helen Alfredsson 70-69-68-70 — Paula Creamer 70-67-70-70 — Karrie Webb 69-69-68-71 — 274 274 275 275 277 277 277 -14 -14 -13 -13 -11 -11 -11 Senior British Open Sunday At Sunningdale Golf Club (Old Course) Sunningdale, England Purse: $2 million Yardage: 6,616; Par: 70 Final (x-won on third playoff hole) x-Loren Roberts 66-68-67-67 — 268 -12 Mark McNult 69-67-68-64 — 268 -12 Fred Funk 64-65-72-67 — 268 -12 Bernhard Langer 72-67-65-65 — 269 -11 Sam Torrance 67-65-71-67 — 270 -10 CYCLING APARTMENTS AND VACATION RENTALS Smith Rentals www.smithrentals.com AUTOMOTIVE North Georgia Toyota www.northgeorgiatoyota.com BANKING First Georgia Bank www.firstgabnk.com BUSINESS SERVICES A Total Resource www.exceptionalpeo.com COMPUTER SERVICES Advanced Computer Services www.advcompnet.com FINANCIAL PLANNING Wachovia Securities www.agedwards.com/fc/jr.fitch FLORISTS Barrett’s Flower Shop www.barrettsflowershop.com FUNERAL SERVICES Ponders Funeral Home www.pondersfuneralhome.com HEALTH & NUTRITION Allure Elite Medical Day Spa www.allure.spabeautyathome.com GBG Life and Health www.shopgbg.com/364443 AP PHOTO Tour de France winner Alberto Contador, second-placed Andy Schleck, left, and third-placed Lance Armstrong. Contador wins Tour PARIS (AP) — Alberto Contador won the Tour de France for a second time Wednesday, and Lance Armstrong capped his return to the race with an impressive third-place finish. Over nearly 3,500 kilometers and 21 stages of races over three weeks, Contador repelled many challenges in the mountains, excelled in the two time-trials — winning a pivotal race against the clock in the 18th stage — and won the first Alpine stage. Contador, the 2007 champion, also had to battle a rearguard action within his Astana team, where the comeback of Armstrong to the Tour after 3 1/2 years of retirement raised questions about who would be the team leader. Contador began the Tour on July 4 as the pre-race favorite. At only 26 years old, the Spaniard is already one of cycling’s greats, having won all three Grand Tours of France, Italy and Spain. He had to sit out last year because of a doping scandal at Astana that erupted before he joined. 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To Subscribe Call 706-217-6397 or visit: www.DaltonCitizen.com SCHOOLS Dalton Beauty College www.daltonbeautycollege.com SPEECH AND HEARING Looper Speech & Hearing www.loopershc.com TREE, LANDSCAPE, HARDSCAPE SERVICES Lanning Outdoor Services www.lanningoutdoors.com UTILITIES Dalton Utilities / Optilink www.dutil.com 4B THE DAILY CITIZEN Monday, July 27, 2009 CROSSWORD BRIDGE HOROSCOPE Famous hand Happy Birthday: You 22): Attentive and helpful have some wonderful ideas gestures will win you benebut, if all you do is talk about fits. Someone you meet will them, you will never get offer something worth things off the ground. You checking into. Develop a have to be willing to do the partnership that allows you work yourself. If you can to accomplish far more than stay on track and follow you can by yourself. 3 stars through with your plans the LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. rewards will be much better 22): Determination and than even you practicality will be imagined. This is a what counts. You year for progresowe it to yourself to sive action, take care of your advancement and own business. feeling proud. Your Think big and a numbers are 4, 10, moneymaking 17, 24, 35, 37, 41 opportunity will ARIES (March develop. A change 21-April 19): will give you the Refuse to let a perboost you need. 3 sonal problem dicstars Eugenia tate what you can SCORPIO accomplish. You (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Last may have to give a Size down and be little more time to less indulgent if home, money and relation- you want to get ahead. You ships but, with the right atti- have to budget your time and tude, you should be able to money in order to get your take care of business. 3 stars ideas and plans moving in a TAURUS (April 20-May positive direction. Face your 20): You don’t have to go it competition head on and alone today. Partner up with don’t back down. 3 stars someone who can compleSAGITTARIUS (Nov. ment your attributes and you 22-Dec. 21): Communicate, will have a winning combi- ask questions and go to the nation. Put your energy into source in order to find out all developing your own ideas you need to know to get your and projects. 3 stars plans underway. If you jump GEMINI (May 21-June from one thing to another, 20): You only have to make you will fall short of your a couple of adjustments to expectations. 4 stars come out on top. Your good CAPRICORN (Dec. 22fortune coupled with the Jan. 19): Your focus should support you are given will be on professional and finanlead to a winning combina- cial gains. Put an end to any tion. Don’t let someone’s messy, personal issues. jealousy trip you up or cause Productivity is what counts you to fall short. 5 stars and anyone trying to stop CANCER (June 21-July you can expect a negative 22): If you don’t get what’s response. 2 stars going on, ask questions. You AQUARIUS (Jan. 20can’t possibly fix what’s Feb. 18): You’ll be fortunate, wrong if you don’t under- no matter what you do and stand the situation. good things will come from Emotional problems brought an unexpected source. A on by an older relative or friend will be there to back someone wanting to meddle you if you need help and in your affairs must be sti- encourage you to follow fled. 2 stars through with your plans. 5 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): stars You’ll take the people who PISCES (Feb. 19-March know you best off guard 20): A financial proposal with your serious, no-non- will be exactly what you sense attitude. Just because need to pursue something you are willing to go the dis- you’ve always wanted to do. tance and do your best does- An encounter with someone n’t mean you should let oth- who can complement your ers take advantage of your plans and your personal life industrious attitude. 4 stars will develop through unusual VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. circumstances. 3 stars D e c l a r e r ’s principal concern is to make the contract. In attempting to meet this goal, he does not pay much attention to overtricks, but instead bends his efforts to fulfilling his primary assignment. Consider this classic case from a rubberbridge game many years ago. West led a club, and South, Harold Ogust, won East’s jack with the queen. Ogust saw that he could make the contract easily if he cashed the K-Q of spades and the suit proved to be divided 3-2. But he also realized that if the spades were divided 4-1, he would be in serious trouble and would probably be defeated. Unwilling to stake his all on a 3-2 spade division, Ogust devised a method of play that would give him a chance to make the contract even if the spades did not break. At trick two, he cashed the spade king, then continued with the queen. When West followed with the eight, Ogust overtook the queen with the ace. This extraordinary play had solid reasoning behind it. If East had followed to the spade, the plan was to continue the suit and thus establish dummy’s remaining three spades to assure nine tricks. But when East showed out on the second spade, Ogust was able to substitute the alternate line of play he had reserved in case the spades were not 3-2. He led dummy’s ten of diamonds. It did not matter whether East covered with the queen or not. Ogust could not be prevented from winning four diamond tricks eventually, and he wound up making three notrump. If he had cashed the K-Q of spades initially, Ogust would have been defeated. His play of overtaking the queen could have cost him a trick or two if the spades had been divided normally, but the overtake gave him a better chance to make the contract. Tomorrow: Disposing of a hot potato. CRYPTOQUIP TO YOUR GOOD HEALTH In myasthenia, nervemuscle connection is lost DEAR DR. ease, one in which DONOHUE: I a person’s immune would be most system turns grateful if you against its own would explain body. In this case, myasthenia gravis. it turns against My cousin has it. I muscle receptors, grew up with her. with muscle weakShe lived next door ness as the result. to us, and we were Symptoms and still are like sisdepend on which Paul G. ters. Her husband muscles are affectcalled to tell me Donohue ed. When it’s eye about her and this muscles, double illness. He didn’t vision results, give many details, but he because the eyes cannot stay left me with the impression in alignment. Eyelids often that she would end up crip- droop. Speech can become pled. Is that the case? Is unintelligible, and swallowthere no treatment? — L.C. ing difficult. Arms can’t do what they used to do. These ANSWER: That’s not weakness spells fluctuate, the case. It’s highly unlikely and the symptoms disappear that your cousin will be for a time, only to come crippled at all. Many treat- back. ments exist for this illness. With the passage of time “Myasthenia” (MY-uh- and without treatment, STHEE-knee-uh) literally symptoms worsen and means “muscle weakness.” become more persistent. Muscles move only when Myasthenia doesn’t have they get a signal from a cure medicine. But it has nerves. The signal is a chem- several effective control ical messenger with the medicines. I’ll mention only name acetylcholine. The one, Mestinon. Many others chemical has to swim across exist. Mestinon provides a small gap between nerve more acetylcholine. Quite and muscle, and then land often, the thymus gland — a on what’s called a receptor, a mystery gland in the upper landing dock. In myasthenia, chest — is removed, and the landing dock is cluttered symptoms usually improve. with antibodies, and the Your cousin and her husacetylcholine cannot land. band ought to contact the The muscle doesn’t contract. Myasthenia Gravis Antibodies come from the immune system, so myasthenia is an autoimmune dis® DLP Digital Cinema in all Auditoriums CARMIKE 12 WALNUT SQUARE MALL • 706-226-0625 DEAR DR. DONOHUE: Since my gallbladder was removed, I have been troubled with diarrhea. My surgeon told me it would get better. It isn’t; it’s getting worse. What can be done? — R.C. ANSWER: Somewhere between 5 percent and 10 percent of patients develop diarrhea after gallbladder surgery. The cause is believed to be an outpouring of bile acids into the intestine. They speed up the passage of undigested food through the tract. Treatment with medicines that tie up bile acids often puts an end to this problem. Questran (cholestyramine) is one example; Colestid (colestipol) is another. You should let your surgeon know that your diarrhea hasn’t gone away. DEAR DR. DONOHUE: Every morning upon wakening, I take my temperature. It’s always on the low side, around 97 (36.1 C). Is this an indication of illness? — N.N. ASK THE DOCTOR Dr. Donohue regrets that he is unable to answer individual letters, but he will incorporate them in his column whenever possible. Readers may write him or request an order form of available health newsletters at P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. ANSWER: Why are you doing this? It’s an unhealthy compulsion. You’re going to drive yourself crazy with this morning ritual. Normal body temperature of 98.6 (37 C) really isn’t normal. There’s a wide range of temperatures among humans. Furthermore, temperature changes throughout the day and night. It’s higher when we are active, and drops when we rest. In the earlymorning hours, it hits a low — around 97. In the late afternoon, it’s at its highest, 99.3 (37.4). And even those values should not be taken as immutable. Your temperature reading by itself is not an indication of any illness. That you have no other symptoms should put your mind at ease. MATT HAMILTON/The Daily Citizen Lisha Williams leans in to hug her father Robert Brown as her mother Mary looks on Saturday night at the Emery Center. Friends and family “boasted and roasted” Brown, a retired Emery Street and Dalton High educator and local actor who also was honored for his service to the Emery Center and being a mentor. The Browns watch their granddaughter, Lindsay Williams, as she dances during the event. CHATSWORTH 505 GI Maddox PKWY 706-695-6011 (DRIVE THRU) • DALTON ® PLEASE CALL THEATRE OR VISIT US ONLINE FOR MOVIES AND SHOWTIMES www.carmike.com ALL FEATURES INCLUDE PRE-FEATURE CONTENT Foundation of America at 800-541-5454 for current information, treatment and direction to local chapters of the foundation. Bob Brown ‘broasted’ 5 ONLY $ EACH CHEESE OR PEPPERONI Original Round Carry Out Plus Tax 1501 E. Walnut Ave 706-270-0123 (DRIVE THRU) • DALTON 1267 Cleveland Hwy. 706-277-0041 Available for a limited time at participating locations. Prices may vary. ©2008 LCE, Inc. 15193_nm The Daily Citizen Monday, July 27, 2009 5B DEAR ABBY ■ MUTTS Mom fears burning bridges in day care exit interview ■ WIZARD OF ID ■ CATHY ■ GARFIELD DEAR ABBY: My husband and I ing with her. Be kind, calm and nonhave decided to take our son out of the confrontational, and do not tell her day care where he has been for the past how to run her business. Explain that six months. It’s a small center, run by a you are seeking other options for your woman, “Joni,” who serves as director son because she has been preoccupied and lead teacher. She started the serand seems not to have enough time to vice two years ago and manages a staff address your parental concerns. Say of about 12. you understand how complicated it is Joni is the reason we are leaving. running a business even in the best of She seems incredibly stressed out all times, but as much as you like her, the time. She is curt with us when we your first responsibility must be to Jeanne talk and has been too harried to discuss your child. Period. our concerns over our boy’s care. She Phillips appears to be more preoccupied with DEAR ABBY: I am a college stufinances than the quality of care she is dent with a gender-neutral name. I providing. One of our favorite teachers just quit, often need to exchange e-mails with people and she confided that it was because of the dif- who have never met me, and I am frequently ficulty she had working with Joni. assumed to be male when I am, in fact, female. Because we told Joni we are going, she has Is there a polite way to correct this in my requested an “exit interview” to discuss what return e-mails? Or should I not let people know didn’t work for us. I am hesitant about it. If we they have made a mistake until they meet me in let her know the impact her stress is having on person? — Z.W., CAMBRIDGE, MASS. the quality of service she provides, she might be able to hire an administrator and make improveDEAR Z.W.: A sure way to let people know ments. On the other hand, she may take offense. they have made an incorrect assumption would Our community is small, so we will see her be to sign your return e-mail “Ms. Z.W.” around, and because there are few child care centers, we may need to go back to this one Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, someday. Should we be frank with her or let it also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was foundgo? — MIDWEST MOM ed by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box DEAR MIDWEST MOM: Have the meet- 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. ■ HOCUS FOCUS ■ SNUFFY SMITH ■ PEANUTS ■ HAGAR THE HORRIBLE ■ ROSE IS ROSE ■ FOR BETTER OR WORSE ■ ZITS ■ BLONDIE ■ BABY BLUES ■ BEETLE BAILEY ■ FAMILY CIRCUS ■ TUNDRA ■ CLOSE TO HOME 6B THE DAILY CITIZEN Monday, July 27, 2009 FINANCIAL 254 Money to Lend Low Rates, Affordable Payments. CASH LOANS COMPANY 706-278-7600 Subject to our liberal credit policies EMPLOYMENT 310 General American Mats is looking for a product development and marketing person for door mats and rugs. The successful candidate should have experience in this field. Salary will commensurate with your experience. Call Mike Brown at 706-876-0058 or send resumes to 706-217-6917. Or email resumes to: [email protected] CAGLE’S FARMS, INC. is now accepting resumes for a Hatchery Supervisor. Candidates must possess agriculture experience, DOT (Department of Transportation) Regulation Experience, Communication Skills, Computer Skills, and Organizational Skills. Bi-Lingual is a plus, but is not required. Candidates must have a High School Diploma. A College Degree is a plus, but is not required. Submit resumes to [email protected]. FUN JOB!!! C.E.B., Inc. now hiring 18-23+ sharp guys & girls to work and travel. Travel expenses paid in full. Sign on Bonus. Fun outgoing personality a must. We train. 1-866-9184795 Wood Sample Supervisor needed. Experience and references required. Send responses to: [email protected] 320 Trucking Opportunities 502 Free Pets Free to good homes only. 4 kittens. 8 weeks old. Back & White and dark Charcoal. 706217-9310 Free to a good home w/ fenced yard. Rescued handsome black Lab mix, male. 1 yr. old neutered & has shots. Great w/ kids & other animals. 706-694-3728 or 706-260-1897 Full bloodied male Boxer free to a good home. Great w/ kids. Needs plenty of room to room. 706-275-0023 ask for Brittany 706-264-5871. ITEMS FOR SALE 611 Land & Lots CORNER LOTS ONLY $19,900!! See lot numbers: 30, 31, 96, 138 GREYSTONE SUBDIVISION In City of Chatsworth KERRY OR SUE HIX 706-695-6431 706-217-5550 706-270-2433 Misc. Items For Sale 2 Tickets to Tennessee VS. Ohio! Saturday, September 26, 2009. Time: TBA Neyland Stadium Section: JJ Row: 23 Seat: 32 & 33 $60. ea. 706-581-1471 Disney / Beach area. 7 day, 6 night stay. With 2 Disney tickets. Paid $750. Sell for $249. Good for 1 year. 706-241-4144 704 704 Land & Lots *Street Lights *Garbage Svs *In City of Chatsworth * Sewer *Underground Utilities Lot # 40,41,42,43,44, 49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56,99 GREYSTONE SUBDIVISION In City of Chatsworth KERRY OR SUE HIX 706-695-6431 706-217-5550 706-270-2433 Land for sale, 5-10 acre tracts in Westside area. Call 706-2178335. Before Your Sale "Prepare to start early. Collectors and antique dealers like to show up early in the morning "Spruce up. If your sale is in the garage, clean it out and sweep. If it’s outside, mow the lawn. "Gather lots of shopping bags. Most people underestimate how many they will need. ""To place an ad in the Yard Sale Section of this newspaper: Call Jennifer 706-272-7703 or Laura 706-272-7707 PETS/LIVESTOCK 501 Pets for Sale EXOTIC BIRD FAIR Forest Park GA Atlanta State Farmers Market I-75 , exit 237. Aug. 1st & 2nd Admission $5 423-240-8423 www.birdfairs.net BEAUTIFUL LOTS AVAILABLE $16,900 - $19,900 Chatsworth - Hwy 76 to Duvall Rd. end of Duvall Rd. Subd is on the left. GREYSTONE SUBDIVISION KERRY OR SUE HIX 706-695-6431, 706-217-5550 or 706-270-2433 LOTS ONLY $16,900 CORNER & CREEK LOTS $19,900 Investors & builders multiple lot discounts. GREYSTONE SUBDIVISION In City of Chatsworth KERRY OR SUE HIX 706-695-6431 706-217-5550 706-270-2433 BANK FINANCING WITH APPROVED CREDIT Investors & Builders multiple lot discount! OVERSIZED LOTS Lot #46 & 47 ONLY $19,900 GREYSTONE SUBDIVISION KERRY OR SUE HIX 706-6956431, 706-217-5550 or 706-270-2433 705 Look for the solution to today’s Sudoku Puzzle on page 7B of the classifieds. 705 Homes For Sale MOUNTAIN VIEWS!! Mill Creek border lots & Corner lots still available! ONLY $19,900 GREYSTONE SUBDIVISION KERRY OR SUE HIX 706-695-6431, 706-217-5550 706-270-2433 728 Commercial Rental Homes For Sale No Credit Check. Owner Financing. Rent to Own or Lease Purchase. STOP RENTING TODAY MOVE IN TOMORROW!!!! Don Babb 706-463-2333 or 706-397-2087 [email protected] or Mark Burnett 706-529-5901 DALTON. 4906 Muse Rd. 2 BR 1 BA fixer upper, 2 acres. $74,000, $1,000 dn. as low as $650 month. 315 Foster 2 BR 1 BA fenced yard, $79,900, $1,000 dn as low as $550 month CHATSWORTH 3887 Maple Grove Rd. Brick home, 3 BR 2 BA $115,000 $5,000 dn, as low as $850 mon WESTSIDE 3038 Hurricane Rd. 2 BR 1 BA. $69,900, $1,000 dn, $615 mon TUNNEL HILL 2898 Dogwood 2 BR 1 BA, $69,900, $1000 dn. $595 mon. COHUTTA 373 Wolfe St. 4 BR 2 BA, $85,000, w/ $1,000 dn. as low as $650 month. 1216 Percheron Drive in Mountain Oak Estates. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Formal living room, eat-in kitchen. Northwest school district. $159,000. Chatsworth’s Newest and Nicest Subdivision! GREYSTONE SUBDIVISION In City of Chatsworth KERRY OR SUE HIX 706-695-6431 706-217-5550 706-270-2433 GREYSTONE SUBDIVISION In City of Chatsworth KERRY OR SUE HIX 706-695-6431 706-217-5550 706-270-2433 $8,000 TAX REFUND!! LOTS AVAILABLE GREYSTONE SUBDIVISION From Hwy 411 N, turn left at red light at Cowboys store, subd. on rt. KERRY OR SUE HIX 706-695-6431, 706-217-5550 706-270-2433 YARD SALES TIP OF THE DAY ONLY $16,900!! See lot numbers: 6,7,8,9,10,11,18,21,22,26,32,33,35,3 6,37,45,48,92,93,94,97,98,100,101,1 02,120,121,123,135 $2,000Dn. Starting at $700/mo. OWNER FINANCING. Several 3Bd/2 Ba. homes in Whitfield & Murray Remodeled, very nice. Owner/Broker706-529-0650 (including telephone & cable) **Truck Driver Training** Low Cost Opportunity. Get your professional career started today. 706-624-9461. Land & Lots Creek Lots for only $19,900 These lots border Mill Creek GREYSTONE SUBDIVISION KERRY OR SUE HIX 706-695-6431, 706-217-5550 or 706270-2433 Beautiful Land For Sale. Beaverdale Community. One 5+ acre tract left. Owner financing available. For information call Kevin 706-2178335 704 *302 S. Thornton 5,500 SF, includes utilities, between Newspaper office & Bank of Am. 6.5 ACRES!! 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, kitchen, living room. 178 Red Oak Way. Chatsworth. $55,000 Call 706-6029304 or 706-618-9896 726 Commercial Buildings *19,000 sq.ft. - 2105 E. Walnut Ave. Retail space, Next to Hobby Lobby, across from Mall. *97,000 sq. ft., 454 Hwy 225 (Bretlin) *Retail space - Dalton Place Shop. Ctr. 2518 Cleveland Hwy. 1200, 1400, 44,000 SF avail. 706-279-1380 Wkdys 9-5:30 727 Commercial Propeties *1515 Abutment Rd. 10,000 sq. ft. includes utilities. Many sizes or suites. 1.3 mi. S. of Walnut *Camelot Bldg, Near I-75. 1514 W. Walnut Ave. Between Long John Silvers & Burger King. 5,500 S/F. 706-279-1380 wkdys 9-5:30. 31,000 sq ft. Masonry building, 4 loading docks & offices. 1 block off 4 lane Abutment Rd. on Callahan Rd. 706-226-6245 Crown Mill Village Lofts Office Space Available 730 sq. ft. $700 all utilities included Call today! 706.218.7404 Office space for lease. Available Now! 1400 sq. ft. suite and 2,500 sf. suite. 800 College Dr. 706-226-6245 8:30a-5:00p Office: 2700 S.F. Excellent condition. 1143 E. Walnut Ave. Call: 706-581-1037 815 E. Walnut Ave. Fmrly AAMCO Trans. Best Traffic location. Equip & complete office. 706-279-1380 wkdys 95:30 Restaurants for rent: *410 S. Hamilton (fmrly Bailey’s Diner) Incl. equipment $3,495 mo. *801 E. Walnut Ave. Barrett Marketplace $2995/Mo. $2000 dp. (fmrly El Taco) fully furnished. 706-279-1380 wkdys 9-5:30 Office on Thornton Ave. and Retail bldg on Glenwood Ave. for rent. 6000 & 4800 sq. ft. Call 706-278-9687 Retail and Office Space for Lease. Walnut Ave. + other locations 706-278-1566 The Daily Photo Call: 706-5290410 Lease purchase. 3 br, 1 ba. 4047 Nottingham Dr. Dalton, Ga. Fenced Yard, central heating/air, screened in porch. $75,000. $2000/down, $550/ month. Call 423-580-3469 leave msg. small ads BIG DEALS Call the Classifieds 217-NEWS Rosie and Joyce of Chatsworth, GA To submit your photo, email photo, name and city to: [email protected] THE DAILY CITIZEN RENTAL HOUSING 751 Apartments $115/wk. 1bd, new carpet & paint, close to hospital. Also 1 & 2 bd S. 41 Hwy. Power, water & cable furn’d. Deposit Required. 1st week 1/2 price. Denise 706-463-1598 or En Español 706-463-0945. 1 STORY completely furn. effic. Cable TV, phone, microwave, kitc. supplies, linens, utilities furniture North Tibbs Road. $149/weekly, 278-7189. 1 STORY, 1 bedroom, low utility bills. Water furnished, washer/ dryer connection, utility room, attic storage. N. Tibbs Rd. (706)278-7189 1, 2, & 3 Bd Apt’s - Starting at $125/week. Power, water, cable furnished. For details. 706-463-0672, 706-463-0671 & Español 706-463-0945 1130/1132 Burleyson $485mon $240dep. 2BR 1BA. *707-2 Lance 2BR 1.5BA $525/mo., $260 dep. Newly remodeled, 2 weeks free w/1 yr. lease. 706279-1380 wkdy 9-5:30 1st month, 1/2 off! 2 bd, 1 ba, w/d hookup, c/h/a. Power, water, & cable furnished. Close to downtown. $175/wk or $650/ mo. $200/dep. 706-581-4615 2 bdrm apt. off Cleveland Hwy, Remodeled, all new appliances & carpet. $450/mo., $200/dep. 706-695-4029 - 706-618-3866. 2 bedroom 1 bath. Patio, ceiling fan, c/h/a, W/D hook-up, water furnished. $375 month, $150 deposit.No pets. 706-695-3288. 3 bdrm 2 ba apt. 1/4 mile rom Hospital Hardwood, jacuzzi tub, walk-in closet. $700 mon $250 dep No Pets! 706-313-9636 A SWEET DEAL FOR YOU!! Well maintained. Convenient location! Call PARK CANYON APTS 706-226-6054 Email: [email protected] AMAZING SPECIAL THIS WEEK! Super Deluxe Townhome 2 Bedroom, 1 1/2 bath huge closets, pool w/ cabana. BEST DEAL IN DALTON BEST LOCATION TRUE LUXURY 706-279-1801 City west near Creative Arts Guild. 2bd 2ba, CHA, WD conn. Lease, references req’d $550 mon $300 dep. 706-463-3171 DIVE INTO SUMMER SAVINGS! Large 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. Call Today Chalet Valley Apartment Homes 706226-6424 Motel Rooms For Rent: S. Dixie Hwy. 41. Standard - $95/wk. Lg.$125/$135wk. Dep.= 2 wks. rent. Furnished + TV, basic cable, private phone. 706-2791380 wkdys 9-5:30 MOVE RIGHT IN, 1 & 2 BD efficiency apts, furnished, all util’s, w/d furnished, TV, In Chats., & Dalton, near hospital. 706-313-1733 or 313-5411 SMITH RENTALS Apartment Rentals 706-278-4209 www.smithrentals.com 1, 2, and 3 BR Apartments Locally Vacation Rentals - Great Rates Pigeon Forge, Tennessee Daytona Beach, Flordia STAY LODGE Effic. Apt. with kitchen. Furn w/all utilities. Laundry fac., basic cable. Private phones furn. Starting at $129.99/wk plus tax Suite Deals 1BR $175.00 per week. Call 706-278-0700 STAYLODGE - WILLOWDALE MOVE IN SPECIAL 1st Week $100.00 706-278-0700 UNDERWOOD LODGE Furnished Efficiency with kitchenette. All Utilities & Cable!! Laundry Facility Available. Move In Specials $70-$90 for first week! 706-226-4651 752 752 Homes For Rent $ Simple Management Services LLC 706-508-4370 Over 40 Homes With Pictures to Choose From On Our Website At: www.picksimple.com RENT TO OWN ***EFUSJON meeting every Tuesday @ 7:30 at Corner Stone Bar and Grill**** **DALTON –404 Cedar St.t. 2BR/1BA $625 a Mth and $1000 Down **COHUTTA – 3/2 285 Wheeler Dam Road $583 a Mth & $1000 Down HAS A LAKE!!!!! **DALTON – Bear Creek 3BR/1.5BA $800 a Mth and $1000 Down **DALTON – 3/2 Doublewide 610 Crystal View Court $775 a Mth & $1000 Down **DALTON – 3/2 Doublewide 437 Frontier Trail$710 a Mth & $1000 Down FOR RENT **DALTON 5TH AVE APARTMENS 1BR/1BA$375 a Mth. & $375 Deposit 2BR/1BA $425 a Mth. & $425 Deposit 3BR/1BA $600 a Mth. &$600 deposit. **DALTON 212 W Ezzard Ave 2BR/1 BA $395 a Mtn. **DALTON 1010 Foster St. 3BR/1BA $130 a Wk & $300 deposit. **DALTON 706 W Dug Gap 3/1 $550 a Mth & $225 Deposit **DALTON 133 Timbervale 3/2 $675 a Mth and $600 Deposit. Tired of Being a Landlord? Our Property Management Company Manages Over 130 Units in Northwest Georgia. Let Us Help You Today! Call NOW!! 805 Buses Silver Eagle 318 Jimmy. 9 speed, RR. 2 coleman roof air and heat units. 7000 watt generator. Was Bluegrass bus. Road ready. $15,000. Call: 706277-1724 806 Domestic Autos 1999 Ford Taurus SE, tan. Good condition, new tires, great a/c, recent oil change. Everything works and has had regular maintenance. Clear title. $2,300 OBO. Call 706-537-0849 to schedule time to see. 1999 Oldsmobile Intrigue. 6 cyl. 100,000 miles. Blue. Runs good, good tires, interior in good cond. New trans. $4,900. OBO. Call 706-428-2491 807 Import Autos 1992 BMW 525i Black, Runs Good, Needs some work, A/C, CD player, 151,654 miles Tan Leather Int., Asking-$8000 706-270-9663 2 bedroom 1 bath, kitchen with appliances. Nice lot #11. Birch off of 41 South. $400 month. Call 706-278-9687 4 BR 2.5 BA, living room w/fireplace, double garage, corner lot eat in kitchen. Rent $950, $500 dep. Grassdale Rd. Call 770-434-4177. NGEMC area, *3 bdrm. $575 month. $350 dep. Cable & water furnished. *1 bd $140 wk. utilities furnished. 706-694-8010 1998 MB 500 SL Convertible. Sport Package. Both tops. White w/ gray leather/ Books & records. Low miles. Good condition. Reduced to $14,950. Will accept trades. Phone 706264-1932 Secluded Townhouse 2 bd, 1.5 bath. Off Hwy 2 between Dalton & Ringgold. No pets. $400/mo., $250/dep. 706-581-2062. Summer Special 2 week FREE w/ 1 yr. lease - Sweetwater Rd. 3 BR 2 BA, $145wk, $290dep. So. end of Murray Co off Hwy 225 S 1/2 + acre lots, beautiful country setting. Several to choose from. Sweetwater Rd., 2005 BMW M3 Cabriolet, 36k miles, 6 sp., still under factory warranty, carbon black on black, Harman/Kardon sound, navigation, heated seats, xenon headlights, garage kept, one owner, asking $43,000. Call: 706-260-1673 Chatsworth Hwy. 225 Fm Chats Hwy. Take Hwy 225 S 13 mi. Fm Calhoun, take Hwy 225 N, 6 mi past Elks Golf Course, 1 mi N. of 4-way at Nickelsville. 706-279- 1380 wkdys 9-5:30 753 Condos For Rent 2br, 2.5 ba Condo in Dalton city. Great location. All fees included. $750/mo. Call 706-397-9987 or 706-264-2976 LEASE PURCHASE 2 BR 2 BA condo in Chatsworth. Call: 706-217-8335 758 Duplex For Rent 2 bedroom Duplex Hwy 225 N. Appliances washer/ dryer hookup. $350/mo., $200/dep. 706-581-2062 MOBILE HOMES 778 807 Reduced. 2006 Honda Accord EXL. Like new. Gray. Full warranty. 41 k miles. Loaded. Leather seats, XM radio, sunroof, 34mpg. Like new. Great Cond. Must sell! No tax! $16,499. obo. 706-614-7719 809 Looks like new! Gorgeous 2005 BMW 525I Sedan with 66,000 miles. Silver ext. Gray int., 4DR, Automatic, 6 Cylinder engine. Pre-OwnedPre Certified, Still under Warranty, Sirius Satellite Radio. Asking: $27,000. Call: 706-2718699 Trucks 1977 Fruehauf 40ft. Dry Van trailer, Tandem sliding axle, roll down door $1,000. 1992 Peterbilt model 379 truck tractor, Conv. sleeper cab, Caterpillar 400-hp Diesel engine, Eaton 10-speed trans., Tandem axle 965 K. miles indicated $6,000 FIRM. Brenner insultated tank trailer, 6500 gallon capacity, 3 compartment $9,500 1973 Fruehauf Insulated tank trailer, 2 compartment, 304 s/s construction 47K lb. Max GVW $9,500. 1994 Kenworth Truck tractor, Conv. sleeper cab, Tandem Axle, Trans. - 10 speed Eaton engine - Caterpillar 3406, 1,094,807 miles - $6,000 2001 Ford Taurus SES, A/T, P/S, ABS, P/W, P/L, P/Driver Seat, AM/FM, 6 CD changer, white, charcoal cloth int., new tires, 140,200 miles. Great car! $2,600. Call Scott 706-278-1884 812Sport Utility Vehicle 2005 Buick Rendezvous Good condition. 80K miles. 26mpg. Great running car. Price reduced $10,600. Call: 706-6948065 2005 GMC Envoy SLT. Loaded with every option available. 47K miles, 1-owner, garage kept, non smoker, $12,000. Call 706-2808268 2006 Toyota 4 Runner SR5 4WD. 4.0 6 cyl. Like new. One owner n/s middle aged accountant. Garaged. Panasonic XM w/IPOD controls. Black w/grey interior, roof rack, sunroof, cargo cover, hitch & tow pkg, 17” alloys, Husky mats, no dings or wrecks, 65,000 hwy miles. Sell for NADA of $20,875. 706-280-3182 Utility Trailers Mobile Concession stand (log cabin), great for carnival or fair, completely self contained, AC, Espresso cart, $15,000. Call: 706-581-4122 for details. 812Sport Utility Vehicle 2003 Grand Cherokee Laredo Jeep. 2 wd. Local, one owner. Well maintained, Good gas mileage. Silver. $7,900. Call 706-280-7170 851 7B Boats 2005 Yamaha Waverunner(s) 160 HP High Output Motors Adult Ridden/Fresh water Very Low Hours $6500 each with extras 706-313-4295. 856 Motorcycles & Bikes 2006 CBR 600 F4I, blue. 5,300 miles, jardine slip on pipe. 2 years warranty remaining. Never been laid down. Excellent condition. $5,.400 or best offer. Call: 706-508-3955 2009 Piaggio- Vespa Scooter 250. 70 mpg, 85 mph. 3 yr warranty, touring case. $4,600.00. Call 706-980-2674 Great on Gas! 2003 Suzuki Savage 650. Runs great! Original owner. Low miles, like new, always garage kept. Teal green. Windshield, saddle bags included. Just Reduced to $2,500 OBO. 706-275-7035. Like new. 2004 Explorer. V8 engine with 3rd row seat. Well maintained. Many extras. Only $9,500. Call: 706-280-1431 2006 GMC 16 ft box truck Yellow. 6.0 V8 Unleaded engine w/ 300 hp. Auto. Transmission, A/C, ABS brakes, Power Steering, 2 Bucket Seats, AM/FM radio, 10 ft loading ramp w’ 1000lb capacity. Mileage ranging from 40,000 – 75,000 miles. Sale price is $12,000 $14000. Only method of payment accepted is certified check or money order. Sorry no financing Contact Josh Hall @ Penske, Day- 706-277-9477, Night- 423-304-6669 Monday, July 27, 2009 2004 Eddie Bauer Limited Edition Ford Explorer. $12,500 OBO. 82,300 miles. Health Issues Force Sale. 4WD. Fully Loaded. Single Owner. Excellent condition. Black/tan exterior; tan interior. Leather seats. Contact 706-260-0283. 2003 F-250, 4 door- crew cab. , diesel, 103k miles. 4x4. Automatic, Excellent condition. Asking $16,500. 706-264-7883 or 706-629-4000. 811 2005 Super Charged Mini Cooper. 6 speed. Convertible. Premium Sport Package. One owner, 40,000 miles, Harmon/Kardon parking sensors, cruise control, auto air. Price $21,000. Call: 706-313-1119. Import Autos RECREATION 851 Boats JUST LIKE NEW!! 2006 FLHXI Harley Davidson Street Glide, vivid black, full Rinehart exhaust, passenger detachable back rest, AM/FM radio & CD player, security system, garage kept, only 4,300 miles. Please call 706-581-3516. LEGAL NOTICES 901 2001 21’ Bullet Bass Boat. 225 Optimax. $15,500. $14,500. Call: 706-226-2161 Public Notices PUBLIC NOTICE The Board of Trustees of the City of Dalton Employee Pension Plan will hold their Regular Meeting on Tuesday, July 28, 2009 at 3:00 p.m. in the Council Chambers of City Hall. The Public is invited to attend. 07/27 Administrative Assistant needed for well established Dalton company. Qualified applicant must have excellent written and oral communication skills, knowledge of Microsoft Word, the ability to create Excel Spreadsheets and an understanding of AS400 Computer System. Applicant must be able to work with little supervision, meet scheduled goals and prioritize work duties. Previous Carpet Customer Service experience is also preferred. Send resumes to Blind Box U-10 c/o The Daily Citizen PO Box 1167 • Dalton GA 30722 Mobile Homes For Rent **1 or 2 bedroom. Small, quiet, well maintained park. $260 up. Westside. 706-280-1035 1 & 2 bdrm mobile homes & Apartments in Whitfield & Murray Co. $85 per week & up. Utilities furnished. 706-278-4048 2 WEEKS FREE! 2 & 3 BD homes, many w/ hdwd floors. Large lots & private pond. Pets welcome. Carbondale area. Water/garbage service included $120/wk. 706-383-8123 Connector 3 / I-75 area. 2 bedroom, 1 bath house. Washer/ dryer, covered porch. $100/wk. Call Leo 678-641-9685 Move in SPECIAL- 1st Week FREE! 3 bd 2 ba. 14x70 sgwide 968A Beaverdale Rd. Quiet. Water, lawn maint. furnished, CHA, hrdwd, refrig & stove. $120 wk, $200 dep. No Pets 706-2716718 Owner Finance: Lease purchase or rent. 3 bd 2 ba, doublewide on 1 acre. New carpet & paint. Starting at $550 mon. Good area in Chatsworth Steve 706270-1342 Got Stuff? If you’ve outgrown your hard drive, given up your golf game, ditched your diamond, stored your stereo or garaged your guitar... Don’t Stash it - Cash it! Sell it in the classifieds Call Us! 706-272-7703 or 706-272-7707 TRANSPORTATION 801 Antiques & Classics Homes For Rent 3 BR 1 BA 1309 Coogler $160 wk, $320 dep. 706-279-1380 wkdys 9-5:30 3 bedroom Duplex off Cleveland Hwy, Williams Rd., 502 Palin View Dr. $500/mo, $250/dep. Appliances, & washer/ dryer hookup. 706-581-2062 1976 Chevy Impala, 4-door, good condition & clean. Everything original, PS, PB, upholstery good. 70,010 actual miles. Auto, 350 eng. Kept covered. $4,000 Firm. 706-226-1224. The Daily Citizen www.daltondailycitizen.com Fast Cash. Good as Gold. Run your ad. Mark it sold. 8B THE DAILY CITIZEN Monday, July 27, 2009 Reach over 39,150 readers for around $4.00 per day! Call for details 706-272-7703 or 706-272-7707 SERVICE DIRECTORY FOR ALL YOUR HEATING AND AIR NEEDS CALL: Short Stop Heating & Air 706-278-0074 706-965-9018 423-991-7652 Mini-Warehouse/Storage Accurate ClimateControlled Storage. 1515 Abutment Rd. BELOW MARKET PRICES SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY Construction Home Repair Landscaping Pressure Washing Tree Service J&M Power Digging Top Soil Dozer Track Hoe Back Hoe Dump Truck Lots cleared Footings Drive Ways Rock (hauled) Septic Tanks Field Lines Fill Dirt 706-217-9531 706-275-0578 CALL: 706-279-1380 weekdays 9-5:30 Automotive Are you tired of looking at those junk cars ( buses, dumptrucks) in your yard? We can solve your problem! You call, we haul.. also scrap metal! Jim and Sondra Lockhart home: 706-694-8675 cell: 423-400-1302 J & S Salvage and Towing Carpentry CARPENTRY A-1 Handyman Remodeling & Repairs All types of home repairs 25 years experience. 'Bathroom 'Carpentry 'Floors 'Painting 'Electric & Plumbing 'Kitchen 'Doors 'Windows Small or Large We do it all Terry Hammontree 706-463-0816 Cleaning Services P & K JANITORIAL Basic Office Cleaning #Daily #Weekly #Monthly Rates 'Commercial 'Dr. Offices, 'Banks 'Churches, Etc. Licensed & Insured FOR A FREE ESTIMATE Call Krista 706-264-9276 [email protected] **Home Repair** New window and door installation Bath and kitchen remodels Electrical & plumbing repairs Decks COMPLETE HOME REPAIR WITH TOTAL CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 35 Years Experience Call Dave @ 706-537-1549 $$$$$$$$$$$$$ Available 24 hours a day #Lighted #Fenced #Smoke Detectors #Sprinkler System #Clean #Dry #Safe #Pest Control 10x10 - $79/mo. 10x15 - $109/mo. $$$$$$$$$$$$$ Home Improvement DOC’S HOME REPAIR & REMODELING *Ceramic Tile *Decks *Textured Ceilings *Additions *Flooring *Custom Building *Roof Repairs Free Estimates “NO JOB TOO SMALL” 20 Years Experience References Provided Tim Dockery Cell: (706) 264-6918 HOMESTYLES The Professionals for all your home remodeling and repairs. 'Room Additions 'Decks 'All types of siding 'Windows 'Home repairs 'Drywall 'Painting 'Ceramic tile floors & counters 'Hardwood Floors & laminates 'Garages For Free Estimates Terry L. Scrivner Cell Phone 706-260-1284 Home Repair ***Are you tired of sloppy work, no shows, & overcharging? We specialize in quality work, dependability, reasonable rates AAA DALTON REPAIRS & IMPROVEMENTS for your Langford Brothers Construction Residential & Commercial %All Types Masonry Work %Remodeling %Decks $Painting %Plumbing & Wiring %All Types of Home & Commercial Care Over 40 Years Experience Locally owned & operated Free Estimates Fully Insured No job to small or big!! 706-280-0961 Landscaping AAA Lawn Care & Landscaping Mowing & Trimming Weekly, Bi-Weekly, or 1 Time No Contract Required Mowing, rimming, Blowing Edging, Fertilizing, Pressure Washing, Plant / Flower installs, Shrub Trimming, Mulch, Trash and Debris Removal w/ Dump Truck, Tree Planting, Trimming, and Pruning, Lot Clearing, Decks Storage Buildings & Bobcat Work. Fully Insured, Free Estimates AAA Lawn Care & Landscaping Call 706.280.9557 C & M LANDSCAPING COMMERCIAL RESIDENTIAL Professional Quality Service, At the best price in town! home & commercial repairs & improvements. Plumbing, Electrical, Carpentry, Painting, Roofing, Floor Replacement, Handyman Work, Remodels & much more! "MOWING "TRIMMING "MULCHING "PLANTING "WEED REMOVAL "LEAF GATHERING "GUTTER CLEANING "PRESSURE WASHING AND MUCH MORE receives compliments from past customers. No one needs to be overcharged in this economy. Free, detailed estimates sent out or delivered quickly. We can also be found in the Yellow Pages under Home Improvements. ** Free Estimates **Insured AAA DALTON REPAIRS & IMPROVEMENTS Call Mike 706-280-2357 All Your Lawn Care & Landscaping Needs FREE ESTIMATES We trim trees too close to your house! 'Cement Driveways 'Mowing 'Trimming 'Blowing 'Edging 'Fertilizing 'Plant & Flower installs 'Shrub Trimming 'Mulch 'Pea Gravel & Rock installs 'Cut trees 'Tree planting & Trimming, 'Lot Clearing, 'Decks 'Storage Building Tree Service All Phases: Brick, Block, Stone, Cement, & Stucco. No job too small! I’ll beat any local job. FREE ESTIMATES Call 226-6963 or 706-280-1341 Painting ALL PRO PAINTING REMODELING & ROOFING 27 years experience. Reasonable Rates. Free Estimates No job to big or small! Also, Mobile Home Repairs Call For Big Discounts! 706-971-3079 706-428-1773 T&M Painting and Remodeling )Painting )Roofing )Textured Ceilings )Sheet rock )Additions )Decks & Porches )Plumbing )Electrical Big or samll. No job turned down. Free estimates. 40 years expereince. Will beat any price. Pressure Washing Work, and more Call Michael For Your Free Estimate GUESS LANDSCAPING Cell: 706-280-4250 $ Exterior /Gutters Cleaning $ROOF CLEANING (Black streak removal, algae removal) Masonry C.W. MASONRY cmlandscapedalton.webs.com 'Mowing 'Mulching 'Trimming 'Seeding 'Gutter Cleaning 'Pressure Washing 'Painting 'Handyman Residential & Commercial $Houses/ Mobile Homes $ Concrete Cleaning $Vinyl/ Brick/ Masonite $ Prep for Painting $ Mold Removal $References Available FREE ESTIMATES Call Scott 706-264-9482 706-271-7160 or 706-229-0555 ESCAPE YARDWORK! ELROD’S PRESSURE WASHING 706-618-6708 706-483-9641 Call Cameron Cox 706-581-9656 If You’d Rather Be Relaxing, Leave the Yard Work to Us! IN THE CLASSIFIEDS! MUNGUIA LANDSCAPING D % Sims % Inc Precision Pressure Washing Commercial & Residential Fully Insured North Georgia’s Largest & Most Reliable 13 years of Service Houses/Driveways Decks /Fencing Oven Exhaust Hoods NFPA Certified Fleet Services Don Sims 706-264-4617 Lanning’s Outdoor Services Complete Tree Service Stump Grinding,Bobcat Service Decorative Landscape Edging & Concrete Curbs Concrete Acrylic Overlay and Acid Stains www.lanningoutdoors.com Free Estimates. Cell:706-260-6169 (leave message) ***DALTON*** TREE SERVICE INC. Stump Grinding %24 Hour Emergency Service Free Estimates Insured ($2,000,000 liability) %Hazardous Tree Removal Complete Tree Service/ Crane Portable Remote Control Stump Grinding. “Large or Small we grind them all for less” “Total Tree Care” From Top to Bottom! 23 Yrs. Experience 706-218-8733 Act Before the Next Storm A & A TREE SERVICE, LLC & STUMP GRINDING Insured - $1 Million Liability &Trees Pruned &Bucket Truck and Chipper &Removal & Clean-up &Experienced Hazardous Tree Removal &Lot Clearing FREE ESTIMATES 706-260-9573 COLLINS TREE SERVICE Crane Service. No Job Too Small, No Tree Too Tall! Stump Grinding Specializing In Dangerous Tree Removal. Full Equipment: Fully Insured - Free Estimates Darren Lanning Insured/Owner Firewood For Sale 706-217-9966 Larry’s Trees To Dirt Full Line of Equip. Available. Complete Tree Removal Service. including Hazardous & Dangerous Storm Clean-Up Lot & Land Clearing Stump Grinding, Any Size, Any Where Firewood For Sale FULLY INSURED FREE ESTIMATES 706-581-3870 Years of Expereince Whitfield EvergreenArborist 1037 Keith Mill Rd. Dalton, Ga 30720 “CUTTING DOWN YOUR WORRIES” “All Types of Tree Work” Free Estimates Fully Insured 20 years experience with climbing & bucket truck stump removal Firewood For Sale Phone 706-275-7017 Cell 706-463-6108 Windows WINDOW WORKS! New Vinyl Replacement Windows Decks Carpentry ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED. $FREE ESTIMATE$ $ Call: 259-3792 706-483-6496 Our Windows Qualify for 30% Stimulus Rebate For More Information “Jesus Loves You - John 3:16 Call David at 706-264-1284