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CLINTON HERALD(USPS 118680) Published daily exceptSundays ByNewspaper Holding Inc.The Clinton Herald,221 Sixth Ave. SouthClinton, Iowa 52732Vol. 151, No. 169SUBSCRIPTION RATESBy carrier or motor route: $12 per month,$29.50 per three months, $54.50 per sixmonths, $102.50 per year. By mail withinClinton County: $108.50 per year; by mailwithin Jackson, Whiteside and Carrollcounties: $114.50 per year. In all otherzones: $150 per year. Periodical postagepaid at Clinton, Iowa 52732. Send alladdress changes to the Clinton Herald, Box2961, Clinton, Iowa 52733-2961.

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CMYK

Daily Record

ET CETERA2A | MONDAY, JULY 18, 2011 WWW.CLINTONHERALD.COM

He will work on a few ofthe shows and will helpwherever the companyneeds him.

Tommy fell in love with“The Drowsy Chaperone,”a couple of years ago and itis one of his favorites.

While Johnson is waitingto sing, Tommy offered herwords of encouragement.

He ran a statement aboutJohnson and the productionto the office to be readbefore the anthem. Tommygreeted Johnson withpraise after she finishedand they headed back to thetheater.

Once back at the theater,at 7 p.m., Tommy grabbedhis laptop and headedbackstage to talk to the castand crew. Set crew workedon some set pieces andsome more work was fin-ished later that night.

Tommy stopped to checkon the set, before goingbackstage into the dressingarea.

Backstage, actors sat toget their makeup done orgot into costume. Otherspracticed lines. A table wasfilled with various propsready to be used in theshow.

Opening up his laptop,Tommy went from personto person, talking abouttheir performance and giv-ing notes. He gave actors

tips on how to deliver theirlines. He talked to Johnsonabout the use of some ofher props, including a flaskshe pulls out during thefirst song.

By 7:30 p.m., the castand crew were not quiteready to start. Two of thecast members were tryingout a piece of the setting tosee if it worked correctly.Crew members attemptedto hang a mirror, while oth-ers cleaned up the stage.Tommy talked to different

crew members about dif-ferent pieces of the set andprops.

Near 8 p.m., everyonewas ready to start. Tommypicked a seat in the audi-ence to watch. Each nighthe tries to sit in a differentlocation.

On Wednesday, he wasseveral rows back on stagewith his laptop open so hecould take notes. After therehearsal, he gave his finalnotes before the showopened to the public.

SHOWBOATStory continued from 1A

Confusion hit whenChelsea presented themwith the signs they mademonths before. Eventuallythe confusion turned intorevelation. Daddy wascoming home.

Though the girls wereoverjoyed at seeing theirfather again, Chelsea sus-pects they haven’t forgot-ten their mother’s decep-tion.

“We’ll probably have totake a trip to the waterparksoon,” she said.

For Joseph, that won’tbe an issue. He is lookingforward to many things,including returning towork at ClintonEngineering. But spendingtime with his family ischief among them.

“I’ll definitely throw afew vacations with thefamily in,” Joseph said.

The Clinton welcome-home event was a result ofserendipity. While somesort of activity wasplanned, the fluid nature ofthe soldier’s schedulesmeant nothing could befinalized until the lastminute.

“The army is very secre-tive about when things aregoing to happen,” PaulWilliams, commander ofCamanche VFW Tallman-Lewis Post 9664, said. “Igot a phone call at 9 a.m.with the details.”

Williams said his VFWpost has adopted the localNational Guard Unit andhelps plan events for sol-diers and their families.They had a Christmasparty for the families lastyear, and are planning amore formal welcomehome party in September.

Williams said it isimportant to remember thefamilies of deployed sol-diers, as they often providethe will for one to serve.

“They worry moreabout their family backhome than they do aboutcombat situations,” hesaid. “I’m just proud theseguys are back and proudthey stepped up to defendAmerica.”

Williams added onemore thought, somethinghe tries to say to every sol-dier.

“Thank you.”

TROOPSStory continued from 1A

GrainsPrices quoted at 8 a.m.today; subject to fluctua-tion. Prices may vary slight-ly at county buying sta-tions. • ADM/Growmark: No. 2yellow corn Clinton $7.22.• County PIK price: Corn$7.20, beans $13.72, oats$2.96, winter wheat $7.17,and spring wheat $6.86.

LotteriesIOWASATURDAYEvening Pick 3: 1-5-3Evening Pick 4: 5-8-8-6$100,000 Cash Game: 9-11-16-29-33Hot Lotto: 3-16-17-20-21Hot Ball: 15Next Est. Jackpot: $1.36millionPowerball: 24-28-48-50-54Power Ball: 25; Power Play:3. Next est. Powerball jackpot:$76 millionSUNDAYEvening Pick 3: 1-7-3Evening Pick 4: 2-7-4-4

ILLINOISSATURDAYMidday Pick 3: 4-9-9Midday Pick 4: 9-5-6-3Evening Pick 3: 1-5-3Evening Pick 4: 5-8-8-6Little Lotto: 8-20-28-36-37Lotto: 6-7-11-47-50-52SUNDAYEvening Pick 3: 1-7-3Evening Pick 4: 2-7-4-4Little Lotto: 1-2-15-16-39Next Est. Lotto jackpot:$3.75 million

MEGA MILLIONSThe winning numbersselected in Friday’s drawingwere: 16-19-30-46-56:Mega Ball: 6.Next Est. Mega Millionsjackpot: $43 millionDrawing dates: July 15, 16 & 17, 2011.

River StagesMONDAYLaCrosse, Wis. 8.27 up .48Dubuque Dam 11 8.61 down .21 Dubuque 10.90 down .21Bellevue 9.82 down .23Fulton, Ill. 9.28 down .27Railroad Bridge 10.83 down .77Camanche 12.26 down .18LeClaire 6.71 down .16Rock Island, Ill. 9.19 down .15Muscatine 9.40 down .23Keithsburg, Ill. 9.93 down .16Burlington 11.38 down .19Keokuk 8.95 up .22L/D 13 Pool: 14.25 up .02L/D 13 Tail: 9.28 down .27Water Temp. 80L/D 15 Pool: 18.38 down .14L/D 15 Tail: 9.19 down .15L/D 16 Pool: 10.71 up .49L/D 16 Tail: 7.68 down .26Maquoketa River 11.79 up .08Wapsipinicon River 6.02 down .10Rock River, Ill. 5.68 down .20

HospitalMERCY NORTH HOSPITALNo admissions reported.

BirthMERCY NORTH HOSPITALDOYLEAlan and Melissa Doyle ofClinton, a daughter, KayleeRae Ann, born July 14.Grandparents are Carl andVicki Brunson and TerryDoyle, all of Clinton.

Relief coordinator forMystery Church, RodneyRambo, told McClung thatCEFC volunteers wouldmake up one crew andwould work on one site at atime. However, sites canchange hour-to-hour andday-to-day as there is need.

“Flexibility is a 100 per-cent requirement,”McClung said following aphone conversation withRambo last Tuesday. “Hetold me what tools that weneed to bring. Must-needsare sledge hammers, wheelbarrows, chainsaws, handsaws, and any type of clean-up tool that you can thinkof, like brooms, mops,rakes, all that. And he saidthere are needs for sledgehammers, for chainsawsand handsaws that theywould like for us to donate.I said we can do that.”

In the weeks prior to thetrip, members of CEFCgave personal funds to puttoward the purchase of toolsthat could be given toMystery Church.

“Hopefully we can givemoney to the churchbecause I’m sure they havea benevolence fund and 100percent goes back to thecommunity,” said McClung

of any funds remaining afterthe purchase of supplies.

In addition, the churchreceived equipment dona-tions from area businesses.

“We had two contractorsin the Quad Cities donatesafety equipment, gloves,safety glasses, coolers foraround the neck, sweatbands, things of thatnature,” Ketelsen said.

According to informationreleased by Mystery

Church, approximately2,000 buildings, whichequals 25 percent of the city,were destroyed and an addi-tional 6,000 buildings weredamaged. The quantity ofdebris needing to beremoved is “equivalent to afootball field stacked 200feet higher than the EmpireState Building,” estimatesMystery Church.

CEFC volunteers are alsoanticipating extreme work-ing conditions, as the fore-cast for the week is display-ing temperatures in the 100-degree range with an exces-sive heat warning.

“We’re all going to bevery careful, making sure

we’re staying very hydrat-ed, staying out of the sun asbest we can, or (using) sun-screen, and that type ofthing,” Reed said. “We havemembers of the group whodo have some medical train-ing who will be assisting inthat.”

The group will return toClinton on Saturday andwill host a debriefing at the9:30 a.m. church serviceSunday, Aug. 7, at CEFC.

“I’m going to have (vol-unteers) give a re-cap...withvideo and photos,”McClung said. “We’ll shareat that time with the churchour experiences from theJoplin trip.”

JOPLINStory continued from 1A

Members of Clinton Evangelical Free Church’s Joplin, Mo., relief team gathered atthe church this morning prior to their departure. The team will assist with demo-lition and debris removal during the week. ELISE LOYOLA/CLINTON HERALD

ON THE NETFollow the group’s journey

every day only at

www.clintonherald.com Leads sought onhit and run crash

STERLING, Ill. — TheWhiteside CountySheriff’s Office is request-ing the public’s assistanceon a hit and run crashinvolving a pedestrian.

At 8:49 p.m. July 7, a15-year-old male waswalking with his motheralong Woodlawn Road,near Pinewood Drive inSterling. A westboundvehicle struck the juve-nile, knocking him down.The driver did not stop,continuing west onWoodlawn Road. Thejuvenile was taken toCGH Medical Center forn o n - l i f e - t h r e a t e n i n ginjuries.

The vehicle wasdescribed as dark in color.Anyone with informationis asked to call theWhiteside CountySheriff’s Office at (815)-772-4044 or the WhitesideCounty Crime Stoppers at(815)-625-STOP (7867).

TUESDAY:Mostly sunny with a 30 percent chance ofshowers and thunderstorms. High in the mid 90s. Heatindex readings to 115.TUESDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. Low in the mid 70s.WEDNESDAY: Sunny. High in the mid 90s. Heatindex readings to 110.WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Low in the mid70s.

YesterdayOfficial High 95Official Low 72Precipitation 0

TodayHigh one year ago 88Low one year ago 73All-time high 100, 1930All-time low 51, 1911, ’24

Normal high 86Normal low 65Precip. for month .55Normal precip. for month 3.69Precip. for year 16.02Normal precip. for year 19.96Sunrise: 5:44Sunset: 8:32

In Clinton

Today’s local weather TODAY:Mostly sunny. High in the mid 90s. Heat index to 113. TONIGHT: Low in the upper 70s.

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