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nfl jerseys from china South Hamilton Mr. Donald E. Wood, of South Hamilton, passed away at home on Monday surrounded by his family, he was 81. Born in Blue Hill, Maine he was the son of the late Edmund and Nelle Wood. A retired carpenter by trade, Mr. Navy.??entucky Derby High School Horses John Clay's Blog John Clay's Columns Kentucky Speedway Louisville Cardinals Mark Story UK SportsBaseball Basketball  Men Basketball  Women ExCats  former Wildcats Football Game Archive John Clay's Blog John Clay's Columns Mark Story Next Cats: Recruiting Recruiting UK Photos UK Videos More UK Sports EntertainmentBar Guide Books Comics Games Contests Entertainment Videos Events Calendar Fashion Food Gaming Home Garden Living Movies Music Restaurants Rich Copley's Blog Snapped Party Pics Stage Dance TV DVDs Visual Arts OpinionEditorials Joel Pett Larry Dale Keeling Larry Webster Letters to the Editor OpEd Submit a Letter ObituariesObituary Stories Today's Obituaries Local DealsGrocery Coupons Local Coupons Local Ads Special Sections Store CircularsWhen Anna Trebunskaya and Jonathan Roberts began their ballroomdancing careers, primetime television shows and national theater tours weren't on their radars.Ballroom dancing had a following, but it was more a product of the past, when people used to get dressed up and practiced for their weekend entertainment.Roberts, 38, says, "Ten years ago, ballroom dancing was something your grandparents did. Now, there are so many kids dancing, and it's cool to dance."Trebunskaya, 32, agreed."Dancing was a part of life, but it was always background. Ballroom dancing in America has been around since the '50s and '60s, and it's always been a niche, microculture. But now it's more widespread, and when I tell people I'm a ballroom dancer, they immediately say, 'Oh, I know what that is. My favorite dance is the pasodoble.'"Trebunskaya doesn't have to tell too many people she is a ballroom dancer; millions already know because of her tenure on Dancing With the Stars.In her years on the ABC competition show, Trebunskaya has been paired with celebrities including boxing legend Sugar Ray Leonard and Queer Eye for the Straight Guy star Carson Kressley, their moves followed and critiqued by legions of fans who have made ballroom a popculture phenomenon.Trebunskaya and Roberts, her fellow Dancing With the Stars star, will lead the phenomenon onto the stage of the Lexington Opera House this weekend in Ballroom With a Twist, the touring production with dancers from Dancing With the Stars and the Fox counterpoint So You Think You Can Dance , which Roberts also has worked on, and American Idol competitors David Hernandez and Gina Glocksen.The show was conceived by another Stars regular, Louis Van Amstel."It's a fantastic show because it involves the best of what is on the reality TV shows, the most popular shows," Roberts says. "It ties together all the dance styles from ballroom to hip hop to salsa to tango to contemporary. So, it keeps it really interesting and a lot of fun."The celebrity competitors on Stars often overshadow their partners, who dance for a living, but Roberts and Trebunskaya said the big names and the variety of celebrities demonstrate a broad interest in ballroom, and that interest is taken up by the audience."You look at your football players," Roberts says. "When Donald Driver wins Dancing With the Stars, as a guy, you have no excuse not to dance," he says, referring to the Green Bay Packers star who won season 14 of the show with partner Peta Murgatroyd.Other NFL players to win the show are Dallas Cowboys star Emmitt Smith and the Pittsburgh Steelers' Hines Ward. Trebunskaya's partners have included Super Bowl champions Kurt Warner and Jerry Rice."That was phenomenal, to get a taste of their lives and what their talents were all about," she says. Even as trained athletes, she says, "They all think it's a walk in the park in the beginning you get a nice costume and dance with a pretty girl. Then they realize it's actually hard work."She and Roberts, who were married nine years before announcing in October that they were divorcing, like meeting and working with the celebs, but they also like the opportunity that Ballroom With a Twist provides for them to show their stuff as professional dancers, sans competition."It's nice to be a performer and dance and do something that you know you're good at, and give the joy to people who come and watch," Trebunskaya says.Roberts says, "You don't have to worry about getting the judges' attention. You just go out there and dance for the audience, and that's my favorite thing.".??ANGOR and BREWER Richard L. Jellison, 77, died May 6, 2009, with his family at his home. He was born July 13, 1931, in Bangor, the youngest child of Leroy and Abbie (Wilson) Jellison. His family, friends and business associates have lost a great man. Dick graduated from Bangor High School, Class of 1950. During his senior year of high school he began what was to be a career of 47 years in the wholesale electrical business. Always with Standard Electric, he rose from parttime stock boy to executive vice president and general manager. Under his leadership the company grew and prospered to become one of the larger independent electrical distributors in the Northeast. He was involved in every aspect of the business and when asked what he did for work, his happy reply would be, sell light bulbs. Dick enjoyed many years with the National Association of Electrical Distributors. He was involved in the following: East Side Little League, Bangor Junior Chamber of Commerce and the United Way. He was a member of Bangor Lions Club, Rising Virtue Lodge No. 10 AF AM of Bangor, Scottish Rite Bodies Valley of Bangor and Anah Shriners. Dick was an overseer at LucerneinMaine Corp. and enjoyed 25 summers at the lake. With all his old cronies, he was part of the Sabio Rum and Dumb Club. After retirement he took up golf and enjoyed 12 winters in Vero Beach, Fla., in the Heritage Plantation Leagues and summers in Maine with Eastern Maine Senior Golf Association. Dick was a JAFO. He is survived by the love of his life, his wife, Sharon (Folsom) Jellison; three sons, Richard Scott and Linda Jellison of Hermon, Earle Leroy and Deborah Jellison of Brewer and Roger Wayne Jellison of West Virginia and Anna Petrowski of Chicago; two daughters, Marcie and Edward Oechslie of Brewer and Stacey JellisonBurgoyne and her husband, Kevin Burgoyne, of Cumberland; 12 grandchildren, Amy and Jeff Millett of Levant, Candace and Shenon Parker of DoverFoxcroft, Aaron Scott Jellison of Hermon, Summer and Mathew Hart of Champaigne, Ill., Lauren Jellison of Rockland, Brandon Scott and Ugna of Boston, Lucas Fleming Jellison of State College, Pa., Kyle Richard and Molly Jellison of Woolwich, Kate (Oechslie) and Frank Sweetser of Worchester, Mass., Maggie Oechslie of Portland, Richard Bourgoyne and Samuel Emery Burgoyne of Cumberland; nine greatgrandchildren, Beau, Jake, Josiah, Vivian, Maliki and Ephrim Parker, Connery Hart, Emma Millett and Genevieve Sweetser; a sister, Elinor (Jellison) Perry of East Corinth; several cousins including Irene Jellison Adams of Holden; nieces, nephews and a loving extended family; and his beloved little dog, Shanny. He was predeceased by his brother, Maj. Air Force; a nephew, Donald Perry; and a niece, Judith Perry. Monday, May 11, at BrookingsSmith, 133 Center St., Bangor, with the Rev. Robert T. Carlson officiating and a Masonic memorial service will be conducted by the officers and members of Rising Virtue Lodge. Box 735, Bangor, ME 044020735.
 
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