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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page B4

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
B4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Time: 08-11-2007 22:48 User: lhack PubDate: 08-12-2007 Zone: KY Page Name: 4 Color: Htapbnta B4 I SUNDAY, AUGUST 12, 2007 I THE COURIER-JOURNAL METRO I UfV Lugar, Nunn going to Moscow Replacement Windows Double Hung NOTES FROM WASHINGTON James R. Carroll Premium Quality FULL WARRANTY INCLUDES: ALL PAWS, ALL LABOR. INCLUDING CLASS BREAKAGE, FOR A LIFETIME. (502) 295-6831 Double Pane ANY SITE UP T0 101 UNITED INCHES TIRED OF YOUR ACNE? Dr. Mark Jackson is seeking participants 12 years of age or older who have moderate to severe facial acne, to participate in a 16-week study to evaluate a topical medication for the treatment of facial acne.

All eligible participants receive: All seven clinic visits relating to the study at no cost All study medication provided at no cost Monetary compensation up to $21 0 for your participation TO RECEIVE MORE INFORMATION REGARDING THIS CLINICAL RESEARCH STUDY, PLEASE CONTACT THE RESEARCH DEPARTMENT AT: (502) 583-7546 OPTION 6 and history from St. John's University. "She was the foundation of our family's happiness and achievements," Secretary Chao said. Speaking at the FOP Chao is scheduled to address the Fraternal Order of Police's 58th Biennial Conference and Exhibition in Louisville tomorrow. She is slated to speak during the opening ceremonies at the Kentucky International Convention Center.

Myanmar bill signed President Bush has signed legislation sponsored by McConnell and Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif, renewing economic sanctions against the military regime in Myanmar, formerly known as Burma. The law keeps the sanctions in place until the junta takes real steps toward reconciliation with political opponents and ethnic minorities and towards ending political oppression, including the imprisonment of prisoners of conscience such as Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi. ARC adds Ky. counties The Appalachian Regional Commission was established to aid economic development in 13 states in the Appalachian region, including parts of Kentucky.

The House recently approved the addition of some counties to the area served by the commission, including three in Kentucky: Metcalfe, Nicholas and The counties were added in legislation that provides $463 million for the commission through fiscal 2011. A similar Senate measure provides $511 million, so differences in the amounts will have to be worked out in conference committee. Time travel With the exception of last Thursday afternoon and evening, when the arrival of His Lordship, soccer star David Beckham of the Los Angeles Galaxy, tied up the freeways near Robert F. Kennedy Stadium, the departure of Congress (and, off-and-on, President Bush) is an opportunity to go back in time, traffic-wise. It's not just the 435 members of the House and Senate leaving town that makes this 19th-cCentury city flow again.

It's also the corresponding abandonment of the capital by attendant aides, lobbyists, association representatives, government employees and, yes, even journalists that returns the streets and highways here to a volume of vehicles we can date to someplace, I imagine, around 1965. Now, we should note the opposite effect to the east, where the towns along the Maryland and Delaware coasts are frequently grid-locked and the blame, if you look at the license plates and dealer stickers closely, can confidently be placed on who else? all those people from the Washington area. Reporter James R. Carroll can be reached at (202) 906-8141. It's safe to assume that if and when Sen.

Richard Lugar, and former Sen. Sam Nunn, nail down that Nobel Peace Prize, there will be one heck of a party. In the meantime, the pair will be celebrated in Moscow later this month as their program for the destruction of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons in the former Soviet Union celebrates 15 years. The Nunn-Lugar program has rid the Earth of thousands of weapons, and for that the two men have been mentioned as Nobel contenders several times. Lugar and Nunn will go to Russia during the last week of the month to mark their program's milestone and to check on progress at some weapons destruction and storage sites at Shchuchye and Mayak.

On Aug. 27 the pair will speak at the celebration of another landmark: the 200th anniversary of diplomatic relations between the United States and Russia. The event will be at the American ambassador's residence in Moscow, followed the next day by a roundtable on the state of relations now. The weapons destruction program will be celebrated at a Moscow gathering on Aug. 29.

Chao's mother mourned Labor Secretary Elaine Chao was not with her husband, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, at the Fancy Farm political picnic because her mother had died. Ruth Mulan Chu Chao, 77, S00001S1 1 91 died in New York Aug. 2 after a seven-year fight against lymphoma. Secretary Chao said in a statement that in watching their mother battle her disease, "my sisters and I have learned a great deal about bravery in the face of great physical suffering, determination to make the best of life, and selfless, unconditional love for others. Our mother is the reason we are who we are today." The elder Chao was born in China and resettled in Taiwan, where she met James S.C.

Chao and they had three daughters, including the future labor secretary. Secretary Chao's father came to the United States in 1958 to seek a new life for his family, and they joined him after three years apart. Three more daughters were born in the United States. After hard beginnings, James Chao established what would become a successful shipping and trading company. When the family matriarch arrived here, she spoke no English.

But years later, at age 51, she returned to school and earned a master's degree in Asian literature One-on-one Behavior Physician Care Modification Safe and Walk-in hours and effective medicines Free Parking KentuckianaMoms.com Henderson man killed in mine fall MEDICAID ATTORNEY Bernard M. Faller (502) 581-1111 www.kyelderlaw.com Support i Doing The Salvation Army Goods" through a Life Income Plan such as a Charitable Gift Annuity Depending on Age and Circumstances you could qualify for a rate from Ashmore was a project engineer with Frontier-Kemper Constructors, according to an obituary provided to The Messenger by Tomblinson Funeral Home Slaughters-Hanson Chapel in Slaughters, Ky. He was born in Madison-ville and was a 2001 graduate of Webster County High School and a 2006 graduate of the University of Evansville, receiving a bachelor's degree in civil engineering. Besides the three deaths, no one else was injured in the accident, said George Zugel, director of safety and health for Frontier-Kemper. The open-top bucket was somehow "upset" inside the shaft as it was descending and the three men fell to the bottom, Zugel said.

He said he did not know what caused the bucket to shift. Officials from the Indiana Department of Labor and the Indiana Bureau of Mines were investigating, Labor Department spokesman Sean Keefer said Friday. The mine, owned by Tulsa, Okla. -based Alliance Resource Partners, is about 30 miles north of Evansville. Indiana accident claimed 3 lives Associated Press PRINCETON, Ind.

A Western Kentuckian was one of three men who fell from a construction bucket Friday, plunging 500 feet to their deaths in an airshaft being built at a coal mine, the Gibson County coroner said. Jarred A. Ashmore, 23, of Henderson, Ky; Christopher Todd Richardson, 38, of Cedar Bluff, and Daniel McFadden, 66, of Greybull, all died from multiple blunt impact trauma consistent with the fall, Coroner Richard Hickrod said yesterday after conducting autopsies. Hickrod said he did not know whether all three men worked for Frontier-Kemper Constructors the company building the 550-foot vertical ventilation shaft at the Gibson County Coal mine in southwestern Indiana. A phone recording at Frontier-Kemper in Evansville said its offices were closed yesterday.

Call us today at 1-877-647-8575 Email us: KTplannedgivinguss.salvationarmy.org or Send this coupon for more information to The Salvation Army Planned Giving Department P. O. Box 2229, Louisville, KY 40201 i i ir i in i Vinyl Windows Name DOB DOB Take 1-65 north into Indiana to exit 6A, Clark Maritime exit east. Go 2-12 miles to State Road 62 east Spouse exit Go north approx 5 miles. America's Window showroom is on the left side of the road.

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