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Drug arrests nab 17 suspects
by JEFF LESTER • News Editor
Jun 20, 2013 | 126 views | 0 0 comments | 12 12 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Police on Monday launched a roundup of 28 people facing a variety of drug charges, with 17 people arrested as of Tuesday afternoon. All suspects live in Big Stone Gap or Appalachia. The arrests are being coordinated by the Southwest Virginia Drug Task Force, Virginia State Police, the Wise County Sheriff’s Office and Big Stone Gap police, according to officer Clint Johnson. Among the results of the arrests so far, Johnson said Tuesday, is the seizure of 44 hydrocodone pills, 19 oxycodone pills and more than $3,900 in cash from two addresses. Those arrested as of Tuesday afternoon and the charges against them include: • Hadley Ray Bozzell, 71, 3814 Rockland Rd., Appalachia: Three counts of distributing a Schedule III drug. • Estel Walter Cooper Jr., 55, 20 W. Fourth St., N, Big Stone Gap: One count of distributing a Schedule III drug. • William Dale Cooper, 51, 20 W. Fourth St., N, Big Stone Gap: Two counts of distributing a Schedule III drug. • Keith L. Fields, 56, 308 King St., Appalachia: Possession of crack cocaine; possession of marijuana. • Marlina Andrea Floyd, 30, and Dewey Dewayne Harris, 28, 3439 East Stone Gap Rd., Big Stone Gap: Two counts each of distributing a Schedule III drug; one count each of child endangerment. • Donald Edward Hennsey, 60, 206 E. Fifth St., Apt. 4, Big Stone Gap: Four counts of distributing crack cocaine; two counts of distributing within 1,000 feet of a school zone; possession of a Schedule IV and a Schedule III drug. • Glenn Wade Lytle, 57, 308 Shawnee Ave., Big Stone Gap: Two counts of distributing a Schedule III drug. • Ernest Lynn Mullins, 49, 149 Second Ave., Big Stone Gap: Three counts of distributing a Schedule III drug. • Joshua Patrick Palmer, 26, 10 W. 12th St. S, Big Stone Gap: Distribution of marijuana. • Curtis Wayne Poole, 61, 1437 Derby Rd., Appalachia: Two counts of distributing a Schedule III drug. • Danielle Marshalle Pruitt, 40, Green Acres Trailer Court, Big Stone Gap: Two counts of distributing a Schedule III drug; one count of child endangerment. • Melissa Mae Reece, 47, Deer Run Rd., Big Stone Gap: One count of distributing a Schedule II drug; two counts of distributing a Schedule III drug. • Roy Jake Reece, 48, Deer Run Rd., Big Stone Gap: One count of distributing a Schedule III drug. • Michael James Stevens, 50, 203 E. Fifth St., Apt. 2, Big Stone Gap: Three counts of distributing a Schedule III drug. • James Matthew Stout, 36, 508 Inman Rd., Appalachia: Four counts of distributing marijuana; one count of child endangerment. • Audrea Augusta Woodward, 45, 1421 Shelby Ave. W, Big Stone Gap: One count of distributing a Schedule II drug; two counts of distributing a Schedule III drug.
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Telling story is the key: Strang reflects on ‘Trail’ drama
by GLENN GANNAWAY • Post News Editor
Jun 20, 2013 | 14 views | 0 0 comments | 12 12 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Deborah Strang works with Katie Marshall (left) and Torie Adams, who will play Helen Hale and the maid Marie in this summer’s ‘Trail of the Lonesome Pine.’ PHOTO BY GLENN GANNAWAY. <a href="/pages/submit_photo_reprint">Click Here</a> to order photo reprints
Deborah Strang works with Katie Marshall (left) and Torie Adams, who will play Helen Hale and the maid Marie in this summer’s ‘Trail of the Lonesome Pine.’ PHOTO BY GLENN GANNAWAY. Click Here to order photo reprints
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Stage and screen adaptions of books often stray far from the original, but John Fox Jr.’s Trail of the Lonesome Pine has been a touchstone for Deborah Strang. Strang is artistic director for the 50th season of the outdoor drama based on Fox’s 1908 novel. The season begins Friday, June 21, with the musical pre-show at 7:15 p.m. and the outdoor drama at 8 p.m. After a professional career in theater and in movies and TV spanning four decades, Strang still recalls the “beautiful and magical” first years of the outdoor drama. And as she’s prepared her volunteer cast for opening night since rehearsals began three weeks ago, Strang has often returned to the novel for guidance. “I love the story,” Strang said in a recent interview at the outdoor drama’s Jerome Street office. “I love the book, and I think that’s the biggest key for me. I just finished reading it for the second time in the last couple of months, so whenever I’m in doubt about something, I go back to the book.” Actors have the same responsibility as novelists, only in a different medium. One of Strang’s first “notes” to her outdoor drama cast on the first day of rehearsal was to tell the story. The actor’s voice is one of the things that makes live theater unique and vital. “When it’s film or TV, it’s the director telling the story with editing . . . but on stage, it’s all about the actor telling the story and communicating with the audience,” Strang said. “These things I didn’t know when I was young; it was all about feeling. That’s why it’s important for any of us on stage speaking to communicate with the other actors. To not let the character consume the story, but to let the language consume the story.” “Sometimes if you get involved in developing a character, you forget that you’re telling the story,” Strang said. “Or if your character gets so emotional they can’t say the lines and the audience can’t hear what they’re saying, then the story is lost, so it’s all about communication as far as I’m concerned. The language tells the story through the character.” Strang has done extensive film and TV work, with credits including “Grey’s Anatomy,” “Castle,” “Cold Case,” “Close to Home,” “Carnivale,” the “X-Files,” “Deep Space Nine,” “Kiss the Girls,” “Things To Do In Denver,” “Eagle Eye” with Shia LaBeouf, and just recently “Body of Proof” on ABC. She can also be heard as the voice of Aunt May in the animated series “The Spectacular Spider-Man.” But she counts her long association with A Noise Within, a classical repertory theater company, as her greatest professional success. She has been a resident artist with A Noise Within for the past 20 years, performing in more than 60 productions including Ma Joad in “The Grapes of Wrath,” Queen Margaret in “Richard III,” Mrs. Alving in “Ghosts,” Gertrude in “Hamlet,” Paulina in “The Winter’s Tale,” Maxine in “The Night of the Iguana,” the Nurse in “Romeo and Juliet,” Amanda Wingfield in “The Glass Menagerie,” Mrs. Antrobus in “The Skin of Our Teeth,” Regina in “Little Foxes,” and as Titania in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” in a co-production with the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the famed Hollywood Bowl. Also at A Noise Within, Strang has co-directed Moliere’s “The Learned Ladies” on the main stage as well as productions of “Comedy of Errors” and “Twelfth Night” for the Summer With Shakespeare teen program. She currently teaches an Acting Shakespeare course and coaches the Interns in the A.N.W. Conservatory, conducts frequent master acting workshops and a Shakespeare Intensive Class for educators. “What I would find most successful about my career is the fact that I am a member of this really incredible theater company. We do seven shows a year, and they rotate. We put up three shows, then alternate them every couple of nights. So I can be playing two or three characters at a time in different shows,” Strang said, adding that she typically performs in three or four plays a year. In addition to her acting, directing and teaching, Strang manages the box office. “What’s so interesting is that it’s not so dissimilar to what I learned right here,” she said. “It’s a community of people putting on a show and trying to communicate with an audience.” “Film and TV is well paying and very exciting,” Strang said. “I’ve worked with some incredible people, such as Morgan Freeman, and great directors, and I always enjoy it while I’m doing it. But what happens in film and television is you are frequently type cast — they like to know exactly who you are and cast you as that.” As a film character actor, Strang often draws the “crazy” or distraught woman part. “If I know an audition is for a screaming person, I can pretty well book that,” she said. “As a stage person, I’m not afraid to try something really bold. On the other hand, if I get called in to do a normal person, I’m not usually going to get cast in that.” Especially if she’s competing against “name” lead actors, whose fame brings a higher viewership. “There are choices in choosing a life as an actor,” Strang reflected. “A very small, small percentage of people who are actors are the wealthy ones. I think the average income in the Screen Actors’ Guild from film and television is probably $3,000-$5,000 a year from your film and TV. Anybody making more than that is doing really, really well.” Actors depend on other things, such as doing voice overs, teaching, recording audio books and performing in commercials. “I don’t know of anybody who has a more interesting life than I do,” Strang said. “I wake up every day pretty excited about the day in front of me. I’m never bored.” Strang counts travels, spending time with friends and hiking among the joys of her life. “And I get to do really fantastic plays with really great actors for audiences whose lives might be changed,” she said. “I just did ‘Grapes of Wrath,’ and audiences were so moved every night.” But as a professional actor, Strang enjoys escaping from work to travel, hike and catch up with her family. “I try to tell young actors this too: it’s really important that you have a life; that you travel, that you fall in love, that you have your heart broken, that you read, that you study other things. If an interesting door opens, walk through it — you can always come back and act. But if your life is consumed by the next (acting) part, you’re not going to have a life.” The volunteer efforts that make the outdoor drama possible continue to impress Strang. “One of the interesting things about this play is everybody does have a life,” she said. “Everybody’s got their job that they go to, so they have this full life they bring with them every night. I think it makes them more interesting people,” she said.
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Mine denied: Ison Rock decision affirmed
by GLENN GANNAWAY • Post News Editor
Jun 20, 2013 | 59 views | 0 0 comments | 33 33 recommendations | email to a friend | print
The Virginia Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy last week affirmed its decision to administratively disapprove A&G Coal Co.’s permit application to mine Ison Rock Ridge. Randy R. Casey, director of DMME’s Division of Mined Land Reclamation, cited A&G’s failure to submit the required fees, performance bond and affidavits in affirming DMLR’s Feb. 14 decision to deny the permit application, according to a letter to coal operator Jim Justice. A&G can request a formal public hearing. The company can also submit another application for the proposed mine. The decision to leave the Feb. 14 denial unchanged follows a May 8 informal public hearing that was attended by both A&G representatives and about a dozen people who have opposed the proposed surface mine on environmental grounds. In addition to paying the fees and bonds, A&G would have to resolve outstanding violations in other states before a permit would be issued, DMME official Gavin Bledsoe said after that meeting. State agencies such as DMME can access companies’ cessation orders through the federal Office of Surface Mining’s Applicant Violator System. BACKGROUND A&G’s permit application was first submitted in late March 2007. The company applied to mine an area from the northwest end of Appalachia town limits to points above Andover and Inman, between Route 160 to the south and Route 78 and Derby Road to the east and north. Following 14 application reviews and a couple of conferences as well as exchanges of letters, DMME technically approved the application in May 2010, contingent on the company paying the fees and bond and submitting affidavits. In October 2012, DMME wrote to Justice, operator of A&G parent company Southern Coal, informing him that the application would be denied if the bonds and fees were not received by DMLR by Nov. 1. The agency received a letter that day asking to delay the decision so A&G could have adequate time to remedy violator issues. On Feb. 6, A&G emailed DMLR requesting a week to pay the bond and fees, a request DMLR granted. The administrative denial followed on Feb. 14. According to a DMME report, A&G requested a reversal of the decision the same day, citing that DMLR had not satisfied the federal Environmental Protection Agency’s objections to the application, nor was the agency pursuing resolution of those objections. DMLR responded that EPA did not file a formal specific objection to the draft permit in time.
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Smith headed to Bluefield
Jun 20, 2013 | 0 views | 0 0 comments | 13 13 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Submitted photo
Submitted photo
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Recent Union graduate Tasha Smith recently signed a letter of intent to continue her softball career at Bluefield College. Those pictured include, front row, left to right, Bill Smith, Tasha Smith and Karen Bower. Back row, left to right, Union assistant coach Williams, Union assistant coach Heith Reynolds, Bluefield coach Randy Fielder and Union head coach Kory Bostic.
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Changing times lead to chapter’s demise
by GLENN GANNAWAY • Post News Editor
Jun 20, 2013 | 9 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Janet Hampton, president of the Mountain Empire chapter of the International Association of Administrative Professionals, says changes in the economy and technology contributed to the decision to disband the chapter.
Janet Hampton, president of the Mountain Empire chapter of the International Association of Administrative Professionals, says changes in the economy and technology contributed to the decision to disband the chapter.
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After 38 years, Janet Hampton and Emma Lawson bid farewell to the Mountain Empire chapter of the International Association of Administrative Professionals. Hampton and Lawson were the only two active members of the chapter, which disbanded in April. The chapter fell by the wayside in part due to changes in the world of work. The many friendships and know-how she gained over the years left Hampton near tears as she discussed the demise of the chaper, which once boasted 60 to 70 members from across Planning District I, Wise, Lee and Scott counties and the city of Norton. Lately, membership has fallen so much that Hampton and Lawson have traded the offices of president and treasurer back and forth. “The bylaws stipulate that if you have a president, secretary and treasurer, you can stay in existence,” Hampton said. For years and years and years, Emma was president and I was secretary-treasurer and then we switched.” “If I hadn’t joined when I did, I really don’t think I would have gone to college and gotten my degree,” said Hampton, administrative assistant for care coordination and guardianship programs at Mountain Empire Older Citizens. When Hampton joined, the IAAP had the name National Secretaries Association and later became the Professional Secretaries International. The Mountain Empire chapter was affected by normal attrition and changes in the economy and technology. “Some of them died; some moved away,” Hampton said of the membership. “Over the years it kept dwindling down, dwindling down.” “It broke my heart to make that decision,” Hampton said, “but me and Emma just couldn’t keep it up. Two people can’t make an organization. But we did for many, many years.” Efforts to stir interest included a seminar last year for which the two sent out emails and snail mail as well as advertsing in the newspapers and on radio. “And we had two people to register,” Hampton said. “I just told Emma then, well this really tells me I think it’s time to think about disbanding.” When Lawson asked if she was sure about the decision, the two decided to soldier on through 2012. “She said if you want to keep it, I’ll stay right here with you,” Hampton said. “We have tried so hard to get members, and nobody seems interested. So we made the decision to go ahead and disband.” The chapter sent in the required forms to national offices in Kansas and turned over all its minutes and other paperwork to the president of the regional division. Economic and workplace changes sucked the strength out of the Mountain Empire chapter. At one time, Hampton said, the organization had 12 to 15 members from Mountain Empire Community College and another 30 from Westmoreland Coal, which shut down its Big Stone Gap offices in 1995. Members came from Lonesome Pine Hospital and from such coal-related businesses as Central Supply. Workplace change was reflected in the association’s name changes. “When it went from the National Secretaries Assocation and then to Professional Secretaries International to the International Association of Administrative Professional, they took a poll and very few people had the title of secretary,” Hampton said. “It was administrative assistant, executive assistant or something like that.” “Back in the ‘70s, you didn’t have computers; it was typewriters. “I’m sure the internet was around somewhere, but not here,” Hampton said. “there were no iPads, no iPhones, no electronic communication that way.” “When I started with Westmoreland, of course we had copy machines, but we still had stencils,” Hampton recalled with a chuckle. “Oh my gosh, over the years you’ve just seen everything progress and progress and progress. I got my degree at the college in associate of applied science with a major in secretarial science. Now secretarial science is called administrative technology — it doesn’t even have the word secretary in it any more.”
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