Gray: Less than 1% in U.S. mark Memorial Day

S U N DAY
161st YEAR • No. 20
CLEVELAND, TN 52 PAGES • $1.00
MAY 24, 2015
Gray: Less than
1% in U.S. mark
Memorial Day
Inside Today
Polk County service
remembers the
nation’s veterans
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
Up on a pedestal
Cleveland High senior TJ
Parker found his way to the
TSSAA podium twice, while
some of his teammates joined
him during the Spring Fling’s
state track meet. The Lee
Flames have to settle for second
place again at NCCAA World
Series. Former Walker
Valley/Cleveland State standout
finds a new home. Bears out-kick
Blue Raiders in alumni pigskin
action. See Sports, Pages 17-21,
25-26 and 28.
Remembering War
Local World War II veteran
Jack Murphy, now 88, shares
what it was like joining the U.S.
Marine Corps at the tender age
of 16 and witnessing the Battle of
Peleliu, which claimed many
lives. See Lifestyles, Page 29.
Presidential Honors
Cleveland State Community
College has announced the students selected for its first class of
Presidential Honors Scholars.
The smart students will be in the
college’s new honors program
this fall. See inside, Page 45.
Fun on the Farm
Polk County 4-H students
recently enjoyed the 20th annual
Fun on the Farm Day event in
Benton, learning about everything from butter to bees. See
photos inside, Page 44.
Classic Revolution
Lake Forest Middle School’s
show choir, Revolution, recently
took New York’s music scene by
storm. The choir earned multiple
honors in the New York Music
Festival Big Apple Classic. See
People, Page 37.
Forecast
The forecast for today calls for
mostly sunny skies and highs in
the lower to mid 80s. Tonight’s
outlook calls for cloudy skies with
lows in the mid 60s. Memorial
day should be mostly cloudy with
a 30 percent chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs are
expected in the lower 80s.
Banner photo, LARRY C. BOWERS
DISABLED AMERICAN VETERANS Chapter 25 Commander Bill Gray walked among the flags,
crosses and monuments in front of the Polk County Courthouse in Benton Saturday, prior to his serving
as the featured speaker in the community’s Memorial Day service. In his presentation, Gray said he read
recently that less than 1 percent of Americans will be celebrating this year’s Memorial Day. He told those
participating Saturday, “You’re among the 1 percent.”
Board
may vote
after the
interviews
Jerry Barnes offering a “good
morning” smile for a friend ...
Tripp Hathcock showing off his
new UT Vols canvas shoes ...
Robert Bradney and daughter
Lily helping locate some keys ...
Martha Bartolo giving a cheerful
hello to neighbors on a beautiful
weekend morning ... Jerri Smith
supplying some cheery dialogue
on a Saturday morning ... Steven
Swiger kindly fixing a damaged
door.
SCOUTS take
a moment during
Memorial Day
Weekend to
reflect on the sacrifices military personel made for
their freedom.
Local Boy Scouts
placed U.S. flags
on the graves of
veterans. See
more photos,
Page 6.
By CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
Banner Staff Writer
The Bradley County Board of
Education could be choosing its
new director of schools as soon
as Tuesday night.
Board members will interview
two candidates for the position
Tuesday. The board has indicated it may vote on its choice that
night.
The two final candidates are
Dr. Linda Cash, assistant director of Tennessee’s Robertson
County Schools, and Dr. Bill
Heath, director of Lawrence
County Schools.
“I think either one will serve
our school system extremely
well,” 3rd
District
Board
Chairman Nicholas Lillios said
See BOARD, Page 12
Cash
Heath
Head Start commemorates 50th anniversary
Students and board members plant rose bushes
Special to the Banner
On May 18, 1965, President
Lyndon B. Johnson announced
Project Head Start from the
White House Rose Garden.
He made a commitment to
open a window of opportunity for
the nation’s most at-risk children
and their families. That summer,
an eight-week program was
launched, serving 500,000 atrisk children nationwide.
The program was a success,
and in 1966 Congress authorized
Head Start as a year-round pro-
gram. Today, Head Start has
served more than 32 million atrisk children nationally.
On May 18, Head Start programs across the country celebrated 50 years of opportunity
Head Start has provided by
planting rose bushes in front of
Head Start centers, at local
parks, or on city hall grounds.
In Cleveland and Bradley
County, rose bushes were planted in front of several centers. The
board of directors planted roses
at the administrative office. The
children also celebrated by creat-
ing roses as an arts and crafts
project.
Earlier this year, at the White
House Summit on Early
Education, President Obama
said, “Head Start is one of the
best investments we can make,
not just in a child’s future, but in
our country.”
Family Resource Agency has
been a part of this investment.
FRA currently provides Early
Head Start and Head Start services to more than 1,500 children
and their families in 50 locations.
These locations span over 10
Civil War historical marker
placement set for June 13
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
Around Town
See MEMORIAL, Page 12
Banner photo,
HOWARD PIERCE
County school
director may be
named Tuesday
Index
Business news ............................27
Church...........................................4
Classified................................46-52
Comics.........................................41
Editorials.................................22,23
Horoscope....................................41
Lifestyles ................................29-33
Obituaries.......................................2
Stocks..........................................25
Sports....................17-21, 25-26, 28
TV Schedule...........................42,43
Weather........................................15
Polk County got a jump on
surrounding
communities
Saturday morning with its 2015
Memorial Day service.
A moderate crowd of veterans
attended, along with a number of
Benton, Polk County and regional community leaders. The featured speaker was Disabled
American Veterans Commander
Bill Gray.
Polk County Executive Hoyt
Firestone, Polk County Veteran
Affairs Officer Ben Bright,
Benton Mayor Jerry Stephens
and Tennessee Rep. Dan Howell
were all part of the program.
The Polk County High School
chorus presented patriotic songs.
Gray provided an inspirational
and emotional talk as he and
others remembered the nation’s
veterans, especially those who
paid the supreme sacrifice for the
freedoms Americans enjoy.
“Freedom is not free,” Gray,
and others, emphasized.
Polk County High School’s
cheerleaders were nearby having
a car wash and bake sale, but
when the program began they
came across the street and
attended the patriotic service.
Gray, the commander of DAV
Chapter 25 in Cleveland, began
his talk with some disturbing
statistics.
“We no longer have any veterans from World War I, because
they’re all gone,” he said. “We’re
still lucky enough to have a few
veterans from World War II.”
There were a couple of these
veterans at the service.
“Somewhere in America today,
before the sun does down, a vet-
Bradley County was a land of
conflict during the Civil War.
There were pro-Union and proConfederate troops in the area,
with sympathizers for both
sides.
Due to these split sympathies
in southern Bradley County, the
area between the Union lines in
Cleveland and Confederate lines
in Dalton, Ga., was designated
as a “No Man’s Land” by some.
The historical significance of
this area will be recognized on
Saturday, June 13, when the
Tennessee State Historical
Commission will place a roadside marker at 7723 Dalton Pike.
This official dedication ceremony will take place at 2 p.m.,
and will be held at the site where
the marker is to be erected.
Jim Ogden, historian at
Chickamauga and Chattanooga
National Military Park, will serve
as keynote speaker. Bryan Reed,
chairman of the Humanities
Department at Cleveland State
Community College, will also
speak.
The marker, which former
Cleveland resident Tim McCoy is
sponsoring, commemorates a
distinctly difficult time in the
Civil War when part of Bradley
County lay between Union and
Confederate forces.
McCoy will also speak at the
ceremony, along with Melissa
Woody of the Cleveland-Bradley
County Chamber of Commerce;
Mary Ann Peckham of Polk
County and director of the
See MARKER, Page 13
counties in two states. There are
four counties in Tennessee —
Bradley, Polk, Meigs and McMinn
and six counties in Georgia —
Catoosa, Chattooga, Dade,
Murray, Walker and Whitfield.
“Quality early education
makes good economic sense,”
said James Anderson, chief executive officer of FRA.
“These children [who have
gone through the program] have
higher levels of verbal, math and
intellectual achievement. They
See HEAD START, Page 13
City’s building
permits show
April increase
By JOYANNA LOVE
Banner Senior Staff Writer
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
ABIGAIL BENTLEY, Polk County High School valedictorian
for the class of 2015, delivers her address during the school’s
graduation exercise Friday evening. See more photos, Page 8.
April brought an increase in
the value of building permits
approved in the city of Cleveland.
Although the number of permits was down to 24 from 35, the
estimated value of the projects
increased by $3 million over
March numbers.
The largest project receiving a
permit was the Preserve at
Hardwick, estimated to cost
$6.46 million. The apartment
complex will be a three-story
building with 80 units on North
Lee Highway.
This project was one of four
commercial building permits
See PERMITS, Page 12
2—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
OBITUARIES
To submit an obituary, have the funeral home or cremation society in charge of arrangements
e-mail the information to [email protected] and fax to 423-614-6529,
attention Obits.
Lamar and Judy Hooker, of Old
Fort, and Billy and Debbie
Hooker, of Cleveland; and several nieces and nephews.
The family will receive friends
this evening from 5 until 8 at the
Wildwood Avenue Chapel of the
Jim Rush Funeral Homes.
There will be no formal service.
The family requests that in lieu
of flowers donations be made to
a charity of your choice in honor
of Neil.
We encourage you to share
your memories and/or condolences with the family by going to
www.jimrushfuneralhomes.com.
(USPS 117-700)
Periodical Postage Paid at Cleveland, TN 37320-3600 Post Office
POSTMASTER: Send Address Changes to: Banner, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600
The family will receive friends
on Monday, from 4 to 8 p.m., at
the Companion Funeral Home,
2419 Georgetown Road in
Cleveland.
A graveside service is
planned for Tuesday, May 26,
2015, at 1:30 p.m. in the
Chattanooga
National
Cemetery and will conclude
with full military honors to honor
Fred’s service to our country.
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests that memorial donations be made to the local Toys
for Tots program in Fred’s memory.
You are encouraged to share
a memory of Fred and/or your
personal condolences with his
family by visiting his memorial
web page and guestbook at
www.companionfunerals.com.
Published at 1505 25th Street, NW (P.O. Box 3600)
in Cleveland, TN 37320-3600, daily except Saturday
and Christmas day by Cleveland Newspapers, Inc.
Phone (423) 472-5041.
Stephen L. Crass
Jim Bryant
Editor & Publisher
General Manager
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Alex Brown
Charles Alexander Brown, 33,
passed away Friday, May 22,
2015.
He was the oldest of four and
was born Sept. 1, 1982. He was
a resident of Bradley County and
the son of Lessie Bell Goldston
Barnett and Charles Edward
Brown, both of Cleveland, and
also the son of Claude and
Jewel Goldston, of Meigs
County, who raised him.
Alex, as he was called, was
raised in the church, attending
St. Elmo Church in Georgetown,
and openly professed his faith
recently with outreach ministry
through St. James Cumberland
Presbyterian
Church
in
Cleveland.
He was a graduate of Meigs
County High School, where he
was an amazing athlete and an
all-star football player. He loved
to fish and was very protective
and loving of his family.
He was preceded in death by
his grandparents: Lincoln and
Jeanette Goldston.
He leaves behind his mother
and stepfather: Lessie and
Antonio Barnett of Cleveland;
his father and stepmother:
Charles E. Brown and Donna
Martinez Brown; two brothers
and a sister: Anthony Brown,
Noah Brown and Jordan Brown;
other loved ones, including
aunts, uncles and many cousins;
and a very special friend, Taz
Belle, of Cleveland.
A memorial service will be
held Tuesday, May 26, 2015,
from 6 until 7 p.m. in the chapel
of M.D. Dotson & Sons Funeral
Home, with Pastor Larry Wilson
of North Cleveland Church of
God delivering the eulogy.
The family will receive friends
from 5 until 6 p.m Tuesday at the
funeral home.
Clyde Finley
Clyde Finley, 80, of Peachtree
City, Ga., passed away Friday,
May 15, 2015.
He was the owner of Finley’s
Florist in East Point, Ga., for 45
years and was retired from the
U.S. Army.
He was preceded in death by
his wife, Mary (Lou) Louise
Finley.
He is survived by his daughter, Holle Finley Bethune of
Peachtree City.
The funeral will be held
Friday, May 29, 2015, at 1 p.m.
in the chapel of Parrott Funeral
Home with Susan Rumble and
Patrick Finley officiating.
Interment and graveside service will be held in Cleveland on
Saturday, May 30, 2015, at 2:30
p.m.
The family will receive friends
Thursday, from 5 until 7 p.m.,
funeral home, 770-964-4800.
Those wishing may sign the
online guestbook at www.parrottfuneralhome.com.
The family is accepting flowers or donations to the charity of
your choice.
Local arrangements are
being handled by GrissomSerenity Funeral Home, Mark S.
Grissom funeral director.
Neil Hooker
Neil Hooker, 65, a resident of
Old Fort, passed away Friday,
May 22, 2015, at his home.
He was the son of the late
Rev. D.A. Hooker and Gladys Hill
Hooker.
He was a loving husband, dedicated father and doting grandfather.
He is survived by his wife,
Joann Hooker; daughters and
sons-in-law: Emily and Kenneth
Everett and Sara and Tim
Weaver, all of Old Fort; beloved
granddaughter, Lorelei Everett;
brothers and sisters-in-law:
Hattie T. Mulkey
Hattie T. Mulkey, 70, a resident
of
Benton,
passed
away
Thursday morning, May 21,
2015, at the family residence.
She was the daughter of the
late Smith Wacaster Sr. and Mary
Sue Goodman Wacaster. She
was also preceded in death by a
brother, Smith Wacaster Jr.
She was a retired short-order
cook and a member Ocoee
Baptist Church.
Survivors include her children:
Leroy Dawson of Benton, David
Dawson of Cleveland, Sue
Geren and Joann Smith, both of
Cleveland; five grandchildren; six
great-grandchildren; two greatgreat-grandchildren; and several
nieces and nephews.
A Remembrance of Life service will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday,
May 26, 2015, at the Wildwood
Avenue Chapel of the Jim Rush
Funeral Homes with the Rev.
Eddie Trentham officiating.
The interment will follow in the
Lee Cemetery.
The family will receive friends
Mike Lewis
Tuesday, from 10 a.m. until the 2
Mike Lewis, 61, of Cleveland, p.m. service time, at the funeral
passed away Friday, May 22, home.
2015, at his residence.
We encourage you to share
He was a member of the your memories and/or condoUnited Pentecostal Church.
lences with the family by going to
He was employed as a ware- www.jimrushfuneralhomes.com.
house associate at Eaton
Hydraulics. He loved boxing and
was a Golden Glove boxer who
trained many children in boxing.
He was preceded in death by
his father, Ralph Lopez Lewis;
mother, Frankie Combs Harris;
stepfather, Bud Harris; and sister, Sharon Nelson.
He is survived by his wife of
26 years, Geraldine Underwood
Lewis, of Cleveland; four children: Kim Waters and husband,
Gary, of Cleveland, Greg
Harness of Chattanooga, Leah
Kyle and husband, Scott, of
Cleveland, and Missy Long of
Evergreen, N.C.; five grandchildren: Tyler Waters, Calab Kyle,
Michael Posey, Hunter Posey,
all of Cleveland, and Dustin
Long of Evergreen, N.C.; one
sister, Florence Beavers and
husband,
Richard,
of
Birchwood; and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral will be conducted at 1
p.m. Monday, May 25, 2015, in
the chapel of Ralph Buckner
Funeral Home with the Rev.
William Robinson officiating.
Interment will follow at
McInturff
Cemetery
in Fred Price
Birchwood, with Adam Sutton,
Fred R. Price, 84, a resident
Jeff Yarber, Caleb Watson, Jerry of Cleveland for more than 38
Denton, Chris Stringer and years,
passed
away
on
James “Tooter” Cheatham serv- Wednesday morning, May 20,
ing as pallbearers.
2015, in a local hospital.
The family will receive friends
He was born on Feb. 28,
from 5 to 8 p.m. today at the 1931, in Newton, Miss. a son of
funeral home.
the late Calvert and Stella
We invite you to send a mes- Price.
sage of condolence and view
He was of the Protestant
the Lewis family guestbook at faith.
www.ralphbuckner.com.
He was a captain in the
United States Marine Corps,
who had retired after 30 years
of service. During his service
time, he was awarded National
Defense Service Medal with a
star, Korean Service Medal, UN
Service Medal, Vietnamese
Service Medal, Third Award
with star, Good Conduct Medal,
eight award with a Silver Star
Ruth Miller
Ruth Mann Miller, 91, a for- and two Bronze Stars, Army
mer resident of Bristol, Va., died Commendation Medal, the
Unit
Citation,
Saturday, May 16, 2015, at Presidential
Meritorious
Unit
Citation,
home in Cleveland.
Combat
Action
Ribbon
and sevShe was a member of the
eral other awards, ribbons and
Community Church at Bristol.
She is survived by her hus- citations.
He enjoyed woodworking and
band, Dr. James Miller of
Cleveland;
three
children: working in his garden.
In addition to his parents, he
James David Miller Jr. of
was
preceded in death by one
Charleston, W.Va., Diane Miller
Taylor of McDonald and son, Steven Price; and several
Malcolm Lee Miller of Aurora, siblings and their spouses: Nick
Ill.; four grandchildren; four and Thelma Price, Stony and
great-grandchildren; and sever- Lois Price, Dwight and Frances
Price, Virginia and Jimmy
al nieces and nephews.
A memorial service will be Trikosko, Helen and Tony
held for Garden Plaza residents Glaski and Ada and Sonny
and a private interment will fol- Johnson.
He leaves behind to cherish
low at the National Cemetery on
his memory his loving and
June 8, 2015.
Ralph Buckner Funeral Home devoted wife of 52 years, Freda
and Crematory is in charge of Chastain Price; two daughters:
Pamela Price and Tamela Price;
the arrangements.
one grandson and his wife,
Matthew and Amanda Price;
two great-grandchildren: Kinley
and Karson Price; numerous
nieces and nephews; and other
extended family members and
host of special friends.
Bradley L. Ray
Bradley L. Ray, 50, of Catoosa
County, Ga., passed away
Tuesday, May 19, 2015, at his
home.
He served six years in the U.S.
Marine Corps. He was a master
diver.
He was a member of Pathway
Baptist Church in Ooltewah.
He was loved by his family and
friends and will be greatly
missed.
He was preceded in death by
his parents: Melvin and Pauline
Ray; and his brother, Randall
Ray.
He is survived by his wife,
Melissa Ray; a sister, Nicole
Meeks; and several aunts and
uncles.
In lieu of flowers, donations
can be made to the family.
You are invited to share a personal memory of Bradley or your
condolences with his family at his
online memorial located at
www.companionfunerals.com.
Companion
Funeral
and
Cremation Service and the Cody
family are honored to assist the
Ray family with these arrangements.
James A. Rogers
James Anthony Rogers, 57, a
resident of Ooltewah, died at his
home on Wednesday, May 20,
2015.
Companion Funeral Home has
charge of his arrangements.
Jennifer Tucker
Jennifer Tucker, 54, a lifelong
resident of Cleveland, passed
away Thursday morning, May
21, 2015, at her home, due to a
sudden brain aneurism.
She was a very outdoorsy
person who loved anything that
consisted of her being outside
with family and friends. She
loved to fish, camp and hike.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, Bud Pierce Sr. and
Mamie Goode Beck; one brother, Chris Pierce; and father-inlaw, Robert Tucker Sr.
She is survived by her loving
husband, Robert Tucker II; children: Lisa (Jimmy) Johnson of
Ringgold, Ga., and Arnold
Voyles Jr. and stepdaughter,
Jessica
Tucker,
both
of
Cleveland;
mother-in-law,
Barbara Tucker; one brother,
Bud Pierce Jr. and wife, Tammy;
two sisters: Letha Gibson and
husband, Tom, and Tammy
Green and husband, Jerry, all of
Cleveland; two grandchildren:
Taylor and Rebecca Johnson, of
Ringgold, Ga.; and several
nieces, nephews and extended
family members.
The funeral will be held on
Tuesday, May 26, 2015, at 8
p.m.
at
Grissom-Serenity
Funeral Home Chapel, with the
Rev. Jerry Green and the Rev.
Bud Pierce Jr. officiating.
The family will receive friends
on Tuesday, from 6 until 8 p.m.,
at the funeral home.
We invite you to visit the
Tucker family page on our website www.grissomserenity.com
to leave a message of condolence or sign the register book.
Loma Williams
Tipton ‘Sherman’ Self
Tipton “Sherman” Self, 57, a
resident of Cleveland, passed
away Friday, May 22, 2015, at
the family residence.
He was the son of the late
Uless and Virginia Huggins Self.
He was also preceded in death
by his brothers: Jackie Anthony
Self and Howard Eugene
Johnson.
He was a self-employed
painter.
He is survived by his sisters:
Dyan King and Tammy Hodgson,
both of Cleveland, Lynn Callahan
of Charleston, Connie Mantooth
of Old Fort and Sandra Johnson
of Cleveland; his brothers: David
Johnson of McDonald, Jimmy
Johnson of Winter Garden, Fla.,
and Jerry Self of Cleveland; his
very special niece and her son:
Celia Self and Everett Self; and
several other nieces and
nephews.
A Remembrance of Life
Memorial service will be held at 4
p.m. Tuesday, May 26, 2015, at
the Wildwood Avenue Chapel of
the Jim Rush Funeral Homes
with the Rev. Daniel White officiating.
We encourage you to share
your memories and/or condolences with the family by going to
www.jimrushfuneralhomes.com.
The sweet, soft, gentle spirit
of Loma Mellie Stone Williams
has left us. She passed away
Thursday, May 21, 2015, at an
Etowah hospital as a result of a
four-wheeler accident.
Her family, friends, neighbors
and community will miss her terribly.
She had been married to
Frank Williams, her husband,
for nearly 65 years. She had
four children: Deborah, Dan,
Mark and Jeff, and their spouses, Terry Blair, Andi, Frances
and Kelly, who she loved as her
own children; her grandchildren:
Dustin, Savannah, Taylor, Toby,
Sadie, Kane and Maggie; and
her three great-grandchildren:
Laney, Lorelai, and Sawyer, who
added so much joy to her life.
She had special neighbors
who brought food (she loved to
eat!), checked on her and her
husband, dropped by for visits,
did chores for her and generally
enriched her life. The family
expresses its thanks to them.
She spent her last days doing
what she wanted. She went to
church, used her Mother’s Day
money shopping for new
clothes, attended her greatgranddaughter’s kindergarten
graduation, sat in her carport
talking with neighbors, gossiped
on the phone with her special
friends, planted her garden and
flower seeds, cleaned up her
yard and generally enjoyed her
life doing what she wanted to
do.
Her parents John O. and
Dovie Burris Stone; all her
brothers: Buck, Luther, Olice,
R.B. and Charlie; and sister,
Estelle Norris, have gone on,
except for her older sister, Theo
Yates, of Benton.
Her many nephews and
nieces appreciated her for her
sweetness.
She was born on Feb. 10,
1930, and grew up in Polk
County, working in the fields and
picking cotton.
She didn’t have a high school
education, but her impact is so
strong on her family and friends
that she changed many lives.
The funeral was conducted
Saturday, May 23, 2015, at
Higgins Funeral Home with the
Rev. Robby Hatcher officiating.
Interment will be at 2 p.m.
today in the Four Mile
Cemetery.
We invite you to send a message of condolence and view
the Williams family guestbook at
www.higginsfuneral.com.
George ‘Cowboy’ Wyatt
George “Cowboy” Wyatt, 78,
a resident of Riceville, passed
away Wednesday evening, May
20, 2015, in a Chattanooga
hospital.
He worked over 50 years in
radio and broadcasting. He had
one of the greatest radio voices
of anyone. He worked in
Corinth, Tupelo, Birmingham,
Huntsville,
Memphis,
Cleveland, Chattanooga and
Dayton.
He was a lifelong lover of
horses and enjoyed going to
horse shows all over. He loved
his music and had a passion for
life. He was a loving husband,
father and a great friend.
He was preceded in death by
his parents, Lewis F. Wyatt and
Georgia Mertise Staley Wyatt;
and one brother, Danny Wyatt.
He is survived by his loving
wife, Lynn Frye Wyatt, of
Riceville; children: Nick Wyatt
of Corinth, Miss., Marge Wyatt
(Bill) Droke of Corinth, Miss,
and Hank (Stacey) Wyatt of
Hendersonville; grandchildren:
John Droke of Corinth, Miss.,
Daniel Wyatt, Nash Wyatt, and
Abby Wyatt, of Hendersonville;
one brother, Henry (Roxie)
Wyatt, of Cleveland; one
nephew, Henry Wyatt II; and
three nieces: Jane Wyatt, Emily
Hartman, and Ann Harrison.
Funeral will be held at
Grissom
Serenity
Funeral
Home today, May 24, 2015, at 4
p.m. with Jim Hindman officiating.
The family will receive friends
at the funeral home from 1:30 to
4 p.m.
Interment will be at Tasso
Cemetery in Cleveland.
The family requests that in
honor of George “Cowboy”
Wyatt, you make any memorials
to the charity of your choice.
We invite you to visit our website at www.grissomserenity.com
to view the Wyatt family book or
send a message of condolence.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—3
In Memory of
LOTTERY NUMBERS
Tennessee
Friday
Cash 3 Evening: 9-9-0, Lucky
Sum: 18
Cash 3 Midday: 0-6-3, Lucky
Sum: 9
Cash 3 Morning: 6-0-9
Cash 4 Evening: 6-1-7-9,
Lucky Sum: 23
Cash 4 Midday: 2-1-9-8, Lucky
Sum: 20
Cash 4 Morning: 8-4-9-6
Mega Millions: 03-14-15-25Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE 48, Mega Ball: 8
GIRL SCOUT Troop 40949 generously donated the proceeds they made from their cookie stand this
Powerball estimated jackpot:
year to Habitat for Humanity of Cleveland. Back row, from left, are Girl Scout volunteer Dana Longest, $138 million
Josiah Vacheresse and Rick Smith of the local Habitat affiliate, and Girl Scout volunteer Estraya Laslie.
Front row, from left, are Girl Scouts Eva Laslie, Hannah Jones, Emmaline Hill, Brooke Jones, Deirdye
McKelvey, Natalyn Norwood, Anna Longest and Belle Wood.
THE FACULTY OF Donald P. Yates Primary School presented a “Change for a Change” donation to
Habitat for Humanity of Cleveland for the construction of the Walker home. Members of the Yates
Women Build are, from left, Ronda Phillips, Sandy Miller, Pam Trotter, team leader Dee Morris, principal
Carolyn Ingram, who is presenting the donation to Josiah Vacheresse and Rick Smith of Habitat for
Humanity of Cleveland; as well as Margie Ginn, Whitney McClure, Caitlyn Cagle, Kaye Rahn and
Malinda Burnette. Not available for the photo is Jennifer Moghaddam.
Congress passes 2-month
highway, transit aid extension
WASHINGTON
(AP)
—
Congress sent President Barack
Obama a bill to keep highway
and transit aid flowing to states
for another two months and prevent shutdown of summer construction projects.
The Senate approved the bill
by voice vote early Saturday; the
measure passed the House earlier in the week. Authority to
spend money from the federal
Highway Trust Fund, which
finances most aid to states, was
due to expire May 31.
It’s the 33rd time in more than
six years that Congress has
resorted to a temporary patch to
keep transportation programs
going, 12 bills specific to highway
and transit programs and 21
other more general measures
designed
to
keep
the
Transportation Department and
other government agencies open.
The repeated fixes are a reflection
of lawmakers’ continuing lack of
consensus on how to solve the
nation’s infrastructure financing
woes.
While Obama is expected to
sign the measure, White House
spokesman Josh Earnest urged
lawmakers to use the two
months to negotiate a long-term
bill
“After all, you hear regularly
from Republicans about the ...
economic benefits of certainty,”
Earnest said. “And in this case,
the economic benefits of certainty in terms of our infrastructure
investments would benefit the
job market and the economy in
communities all across the country.”
The uncertainty over whether
federal aid will be forthcoming
has cause several states to cancel or delay tens of millions of
dollars in construction projects
The trust fund relies on revenue from the federal 18.4-centsa-gallon gasoline and the 24.4cents-a-gallon diesel taxes, but
fuel taxes haven’t been increased
since 1993. Meanwhile, construction costs have risen and
the money the taxes bring in isn’t
enough to cover transportation
spending. Most lawmakers, however, are reluctant to raise the
gas tax, seeing that as unpopular
with voters.
Unable to find a politically
acceptable solution, Congress
has kept the trust fund teetering
on the edge of insolvency since
2008. The extension passed by
Congress would expire July 31,
when many lawmakers say they
expect to go through the same
exercise again.
Several top House and Senate
Republicans have indicated they
hope to find enough money to
put an end to the temporary
patches as part of a larger effort
to rewrite tax laws. But no bill
has yet been introduced and
broad tax legislation is notoriously difficult to pass even without the complication of finding a
transportation spending solution.
The White House earlier this
year proposed spending $478 billion over six years on transportation, a 45 percent increase over
current spending levels. The
administration proposes to make
up the gap between fuel tax revenue and spending with a onetime 14 percent tax on the estimated $2 trillion in untaxed
earnings that U.S. companies
have accumulated and parked
overseas. The tax is opposed by
industry. House lawmakers
introduce the bill this week, but
the measure has been ignored by
the GOP, which controls
Congress.
There is no shortage of other
proposals, including some with
bipartisan support. Reps. Reid
Ribble, R-Wis., Jim Renacci, ROhio, and Bill Pascrell, D-N.J.,
have introduced a bill that would
index fuel taxes so that they rise
with inflation and set up a bipartisan commission to find a longterm solution. Rep. John
Delaney, D-Md., has also proposed taxing U.S. companies’
foreign earnings, but at a lower,
Technical colleges get boost
from free tuition program
NASHVILLE (AP) — More than
9,000 Tennessee adults have
signed up for free technical college education under a new
statewide grant that covers
tuition.
WPLN-FM reports a program
called Tennessee Reconnect was
instituted by the state to help
citizens earn degrees. It also has
helped publicize the state’s 27
colleges of applied technology.
Students at technical colleges
earn certificates and degrees in
fields including welding, cosmetology and information technology.
Tennessee Board of Regents
Associate Vice-Chancellor Carol
Puryear says the program has
been successful for the schools,
which had been struggling to
achieve recognition among the
public.
Tennessee Reconnect’s executive director Mike Krause says
the tuition-free grant is ongoing.
GeorGia
Friday
All or Nothing Day: 02-05-0809-10-11-13-15-17-20-21-24
All or Nothing Evening: 01-0409-11-12-14-15-16-17-20-21-23
All or Nothing Morning: 01-0405-08-11-12-13-14-18-19-21-24
All or Nothing Night: 01-02-0408-13-14-15-17-19-20-21-24
Cash 3 Evening: 9-3-4
Cash 3 Midday: 2-6-1
Cash 4 Evening: 4-3-0-6
Cash 4 Midday: 5-7-2-3
Georgia FIVE Evening: 2-8-56-3
Georgia FIVE Midday: 6-7-6-73
Mega Millions: 03-14-15-2548, Mega Ball: 8
Megaplier: 5
Powerball estimated jackpot:
$138 million
saturday
All or Nothing Day: 01-02-038.75 percent rate, to pay for
transportation programs over six 04-06-09-10-13-17-18-19-22
years.
Green Mountain
Termite &
Pest Control
423-331-8461
You will never be forgotten,
although we are apart, you
will always and forever live
within our hearts.
Sadly missed by:
Buena, children &
grandchildren
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The Family of
Billy Whaley
Would like to say a special thank you
to Jim Rush Funeral Home for the
kindness and support shown during
our loss of a very special person.
The people that put themselves in
harms way on May 8, 2015 working
the wreck, firefighters, EMS,
policemen, and everyone that was
involved in the wreck.
Thanks to Kenneth Gardner, Scottie
Lyle & Johnny Hood for the special
comforting words of God. Greg Rush
for the release of the doves and a very
special song at the graveside. The
pallbearers and everyone that attended the service.
Thanks for the prayers, food, phone calls and love that was shown
to a most devoted husband, father, grandfather, great grandfather
and friend.
Love the Whaley Family
A Tradition of Service
Introducing J. Michael Watkins
Ralph Buckner Funeral Home & Crematory
(RBFH) is pleased to announce the addition of
J. Michael Watkins as their new Operations
Manager. Watkins, who has over 35 years of
experience as a business administrator,
operations director, and 25 years as a business
owner, will assist CEO, Ralph Buckner, Jr. in the
day-to-day operations of the funeral home.
Watkins will be involved in every area of
the Buckner businesses from employee
management to ensuring the continued quality
and service that RBFH families deserve. Buckner
J. Michael Watkins
Operations Manager
stated, “I want Michael to be involved in all
aspects of the business. As my businesses have
continued to grow, through the support of this
community, I have found that it has become
more difficult for me to oversee all of the daily
Funeral Home &
Crematory
• Fruit Trees • Shade Trees
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
saturday
Cash 3 Evening: 6-0-8, Lucky
Sum: 14
Cash 3 Midday: 3-0-0, Lucky
Sum: 3
Cash 3 Morning: 4-4-3
Cash 4 Evening: 2-4-0-6,
Lucky Sum: 12
Cash 4 Midday: 0-7-5-4, Lucky
Sum: 16
Cash 4 Morning: 4-6-4-9
Mega Millions estimated jackpot: $214 million
Powerball estimated jackpot:
$138 million
All or Nothing Evening: 01-0307-08-09-10-11-12-16-17-20-22
All or Nothing Morning: 01-0204-07-08-10-11-12-15-18-22-23
Cash 3 Evening: 9-5-3
Cash 3 Midday: 3-1-7
Cash 4 Midday: 1-8-8-6
Georgia FIVE Evening: 7-5-29-3
Georgia FIVE Midday: 2-5-8-72
Japanese Maples • Blueberries
(AP) — These state lotteries
were drawn over the weekend:
Neal
Herron
details of operating multiple businesses. With
the addition of Michael, I will now be free to
develop other business interests and know that
all the little details of day-to-day operations are
being handled.”
Watkins has already applied to become an
Apprentice Funeral Director with the ultimate
goal of achieving his Funeral Director’s license
in the near future.
472-1152 • ralphbuckner.com
4—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Basketball court constructed at Arnold Watson: Local law
Youth Basketball Allstars, partners plan more outdoor facilities
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
The Bradley County Youth
Basketball Allstars are teaming
with a number of partners to
improve outdoor recreational
facilities at all Cleveland and
Bradley County elementary
schools.
The organization’s coordinator, Bartlee Norton, and his
partner, Alphonzo Martin, initiated this project some time ago
when they constructed a new
basketball court at Bradley
County’s Taylor Elementary
School.
The project continued this
week with the dedication of a
second basketball court at
Cleveland’s Arnold Memorial
Elementary School.
“Our goal is to put one of
these facilities at every elementary school in the city and
county,” said Norton at
Thursday’s Arnold dedication.
The project will continue next
week with the start of a third
basketball court at Black Fox
Elementary in the county.
Arnold Principal Mike Chai
said the new facility is very welcomed at Arnold. It is placed at
the back of the school property,
away from the football field and
between Arnold and the nearby
Teen Learning Center.
Norton emphasized to those
in attendance that the kids
playing on this outdoor court
will go on to play in the youth
league, then later in middle
school and high school programs.
Cost of the construction of a
single basketball court runs
between $10,000 and $20,000.
It is paid by Bradley County
Youth Basketball Allstars and
its partners.
The organization raised
$5,173.84 for the Arnold facility. The Cleveland Rotary Club
donated an additional $4,500,
and there was in-kind assistance from Caldwell Paving and
Bradley Concrete. Volunteers
also assisted in the project.
Officials estimate the cost of
the Arnold basketball court was
around $15,000. This includes
planning, permits, landscaping
and all the incidentals that go
with such a project.
Norton said his organization
hopes to build at least two basketball courts each year.
Norton
conducted
Thursday’s ceremony, but was
joined by representatives of the
enforcement proactive
in anti-terrorism training
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner Staff Writer
Banner photo, lARRY C. BoWeRS
ARNolD MeMoRiAl eleMeNTARY students joined a number of community leaders this week
during the dedication of the new outdoor basketball court. The court was constructed by the Bradley
County Youth Basketball Allstars, with a donation from the Cleveland Rotary Club and other partners. Joining the students Thursday were, standing from left, Arnold Principal Mike Chai, Paul
Elrod, Johnathan Cantrell of Caldwell Paving, Deb Hart of Arnold School, Matthew Brown of the
Cleveland Rotary Club, Cleveland Director of Schools Dr. Martin Ringstaff, Tom Thomas, Bartlee
Norton of the Allstars, Pam Nelson, David Carroll, Cleveland Mayor Tom Rowland and Kirk Lambert
of Bradley Concrete.
Banner photo, lARRY C. BoWeRS
The BRADleY CoUNTY Youth Basketball Allstars donated more than $5,000 for the construction of a new outdoor basketball court at Arnold Memorial Elementary School. Participating in the
dedication this week were a number of Arnold students, as well as, standing from left, Kirk Lambert
of Bradley Concrete, Bartlee Norton of the basketball league, Johnathan Cantrell of Caldwell Paving,
Matthew Brown of the Cleveland Rotary Club and Arnold Principal Mike Chai.
Cleveland Rotary Club, city
government, Cleveland City
Schools, Johnathan Cantrell of
Caldwell Paving, Kirk Lambert
of Bradley Concrete and Arnold
School.
Several Arnold students
attended, bringing their basketballs along as if they were ready
to play on the new facility.
The Arnold court still has
some fill-in remaining, along
with some surrounding landscaping and touch-ups. It’ll be
ready for play this summer.
The College hill Alumni
Association presents 30-plus
framed historic photos to
Cleveland Parks and Recreation
Director Patti Petitt for display in
the College Hill Recreation
Center at 264 Berry St. N.E. On
hand for the presentation were,
from left, Malcolm Lang, Second
Vice President Avery Johnson,
Petitt, association President
Cornell Lang and First Vice
President Dr. Harry Johnson.
Sheriff Eric Watson said the
thought of potential terrorism is
a top concern, but it is something about which area law
enforcement is being proactive.
The sheriff’s remarks came
during an address as part of the
“Food for Thought” program at
the Cleveland/Bradley Chamber
of Commerce.
Watson made the comment
after he was asked if there was
any concern about public unrest
of the kind seen in Ferguson,
Mo.,
or,
more
recently,
Baltimore.
“We don’t see that problem
around here,” Watson said.
“When a situation happens, you
have to get hold of it and get the
truth out. Social media ... these
people outside watching and
videoing everything ... a lot of
times it’s a proven fact they just
get half the story, and just tell
half the story. You can’t believe
half of what you see and hear.”
Watson said he does not see
the recent national events as
being exclusively racial in
nature.
“You see in Baltimore an
African-American mayor and an
African-American police chief,”
he said. “That speaks for itself.”
Three of the six officers
involved in the Baltimore incident are African-American.
Watson said the BCSO has
employed more minorities in the
department during the last eight
months, “than has been probably in the last 10 years.”
He also emphasized the
department’s aggressive actions
in maintaining communications
with the community.
“We have close-knit relations,
and I know if we ever had a
problem or situation, the community would back us up on
any decision or action we’d have
to take,” he said.
That is when the sheriff talked
about terrorist organizations
such as ISIS.
“I’m not trying to be funny,
but I think it’s coming one day,”
Watson said. “With the local
nuclear plants nearby, Wacker
coming in with chemicals ...
these terrorists know they are
there, just like we know they are
there.”
Watson said law enforcement
must be prepared for that kind
of situation, as unimaginable as
it may be.
“Within the last few weeks,
myself, [CPD Interim Chief]
Mark Gibson and both SWAT
teams met, and we’re starting
training together,” he said.
“Why did I do that? Because
we want to be prepared for anything that happens. We’re going
to be prepared,” Watson said.
“We need to know each other’s
resources.
Cleveland
has
resources we don’t have and [the
Sheriff’s Office] has resources
they don’t have.”
“We have to come together,
because at the end of the day
we’re going to be working
together if something like that
ever happens in Bradley
County,” Watson said.
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5-25-15
5
-25-15
I SEE BY THE BANNER
The Cleveland Urban Area
Transit System will be closed on
Monday in observance of
Memorial Day.
_____
Decoration Day at Cofer
Cemetery in Meigs County will be
held today. The business meeting
will be at 1 p.m.
———
Volunteers are needed to help
clean up Beech Spring Cemetery
on No Pone Valley Road, east of
Charleston. If you can help, call
Estella Woods at 423-961-2134
or 423-961-4753.
———
The Board of Directors of the
Cleveland Bradley County Public
Library will meet Tuesday at 4
CHURCH ACTIVITIES
Robert Seaton will be the
speaker Tuesday at 7 a.m. for His
Hands Extended Devotional at
Garden Plaza, 3500 Keith St.
———
The Tasso Baptist Church
neighborhood block party will be
held Saturday, May 30, from 2
to 4 p.m. It will be held at 164
Old Charleston Road. Vacation
Bible School will be held
Monday, June 1, through
Friday, June 5, from 6:30 to
8:30 p.m. It is for ages 3 to 17
years.
———
The Bowling family will be at
South Cleveland Church of God
today at 10:30 a.m. The doors
will open at 9 a.m.
———
Sunrise Baptist Church, 2761
Spring Place Road S.E., will have
Homecoming with dinner and
singing today, starting at 10:30
a.m.
———
Revival services will begin at
New Liberty Baptist Church,
located on King Street off APD,
Sunday morning. Evangelist
Cody Zorn will be speaking.
p.m. at the library History Branch
at 833 Ocoee St.
———
There will be a joint meeting of
the building and finance committees of the Cleveland Bradley
County Public Library Tuesday at
3 p.m. at the History Branch of
the library at 833 Ocoee St.
———
Volunteer Energy Cooperative’s
customer service centers and the
corporate office will be closed
Monday in observance of
Memorial Day. The Dispatch
Center and on-call crews will be
available for trouble calls.
Greg Rush, Owner,
Licensed Funeral Director
Saluting Our
Men and Women
Who Fought for
Our Freedom.
We Never Want to
Forget Your
Sacrifice.
“It’s All About Life”
We’re online!
Check us out:
www.
cleveland
banner.com
www.jimrushfuneralhomes.com
North Ocoee Chapel: 423-476-6558
Wildwood Avenue Chapel: 423-472-4555
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—5
MainStreet plans First
Square concerts in June
Special to the Banner
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
MainStreet Cleveland’s 25th
Anniversary celebration continues with the announcement of its
June concert series.
The musical showcase is set to
take place every Thursday
evening in June, beginning at 7
p.m. at First Street Square.
Bring your lawn chair or blanket, or you can enjoy food and
drinks on the patios at Catch Bar
and Grill, Chattanooga Billiards
Club or Bonlife.
The concerts follow the Five
Points Farmers Market, which
opens at 3 p.m. each Thursday,
and is free to the public.
The scheduled performances
will feature alt-rock band No One
Special on June 4, country act
Cole Sitzlar and Home Brew on
June 11, The Boogiemen on June
POLK COUntY HIGH School
student Caleb Gargala is this
year’s and the school’s first
recipient of the Woodmen of the
World Chapter 16 annual History
Award. From left are Principal
Ronnie German, Caleb,
T S A PECIAL
Woodman W.W. Johnson,
Woodmen President Joyce
AY OR
Johnson and accepting the
school’s plaque is Barry Jenkins
Sherry McKinney, Carlton
of the History Department.
Walls, Tammy Cross and Doug
I ’
D
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
BRADLEY CEntRAL HIGH School student Zach Dunsmore was
honored as the recipient of this year’s History Award from Woodmen
of the World Chapter 16. Presenting the award is Woodmen member
W.W. Johnson.
S
F ...
leamon, who are celebrating
birthdays today ... Steve Price,
John Young and Tommy Hicks,
who all turn 48 years old today ...
Delaney Walker, who celebrated a
birthday on Saturday.
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business, residential and government areas of downtown
Cleveland, to preserve and protect the historic significance of
existing sites and to promote this
progress to the citizens and visitors of Cleveland.
For more information, visit
mainstreetcleveland.com or call
423-479-1000.
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Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
CLEVELAnD HIGH School student Maria Martinez is this year’s
recipient of the Woodmen of the World Chapter 16’s History Award.
Presenting the honor was Woodmen member Jeff Gregory.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
WALKER VALLEY HIGH SCHOOL student Mary Klepzig is the
recipient of the annual History Award, presented by the Woodmen of
the World Chapter 16. Representing Woodmen of the World is W.W.
Johnson.
Commodities to be
given out Thursday
The
Bradley-Cleveland
Community Service Agency
announces that commodities will
be available for distribution in
Bradley County on Thursday.
Eligible Bradley County residents may come in and pick up
their commodity allocations
under the USDA Temporary
Emergency Food Assistance
Program.
This shipment is scheduled to
be distributed at the BradleyCleveland community Services
Agency, 155 6th St. S.E., from 9
a.m. to noon or until supplies are
exhausted.
Appointments have been
scheduled for this distribution;
therefore, clients will be seen
according to the appointment
listed on the back of their yellowcard issued during the last distribution. New cards were issued in
October.
Applicants who wish to have
their commodities picked up for
them must send their authorized
representatives. If this person is
not available, they must send a
note authorizing the individual to
pick up their commodities.
Individuals who do not already
have yellow commodity cards
may come in after 1 p.m. and
pick-up any remaining commodities. They must bring the necessary information to prove eligibility.
Household categories which
are eligible to receive the com-
modities, are as follows: Food
Stamp recipient; Families First
(former AFDC program) recipients; SSI (Supplemental Security
Income) recipients; income not
exceeding the poverty guidelines;
public housing; and lIEAP (lowIncome
Energy
Assistance
Program) recipients.
Households may prove they
meet the criteria by bringing one
of the following documents of
proof: Food stamps — letter of
approval, identification card or
inert card that comes form
Stamps; Families First — letter
of approval and Families first
identification card; SSI — letter
of approval or letter form Social
Security; low-income household
— income information; Public
Housing — Address identification.
If a person is picking up the
commodities for someone else, a
note from the recipient must be
submitted he is to pick up the
commodities, and the recipient’s
eligibility documentation.
Each eligible household will re
ceive a predetermined amount of
each commodity as long as they
last.
Recipients are urged to bring
two grocery bags with them.
Households should remember
that misrepresentation of need,
or sale or exchange of USDA
commodities are prohibited and
could result in a fine, imprisonment or both.
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423-472-1152
6—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
GRAAB to offer
new 12-hour
DUI program
By TONY EUBANK
Banner Staff Writer
The GRAAB Coalition, a local
anti-drug organization, has
announced the new DUI school
program will begin in June.
The 12-hour class meets the
requirements set forth by the
state of Tennessee and utilizes
the Prime for Life curriculum.
The 12-hour accelerated class
is currently offered once a month.
Additional classes will be added
accordingly.
Anyone may take the course:
DUI offenders, underage offenders and others. Also, parents may
enroll their teenagers to give them
an understanding about the hazards of drinking and driving. Fees
for this school vary.
“Prime for Life is an alcohol and
drug awareness program for people of all ages,” noted GRAAB
Coalition Executive Director
Tanya Southerland. “It is
designed to gently, but powerfully
challenge common beliefs and
attitudes that directly contribute
to high-risk alcohol and drug
use.”
“The program goals are to
reduce the risk for health problems and impairment problems.
We, as trainers, were required to
take this class and see it from the
perspective of future participants.
There are some very powerful
moments contained within this
curriculum,” Southerland said.
The PFL program is based on
objective research from many
fields and is designed with
respect for the thousands of people who take this program each
year. It does not moralize or dictate.
PFL emphasizes changing participants’ perceptions of the risks
of drug and alcohol use and related attitudes and beliefs. Risk perception is altered through the
carefully timed presentation of
both logical reasoning and emotional experience.
Instructors use empathy and
collaboration to increase participants’ motivation to change
behavior to protect what they
value most in life. Participants
are guided in self-assessing their
level of progression toward or into
dependence or addiction.
PFL also assists participants in
developing a detailed plan for
successfully following through
with behavior change. Multimedia
presentations and extensively
guided discussion help motivate
participants to reduce their substance use or maintain low-risk
choices. Individual and group
activities are completed using
participant workbooks.
“Will this change a person’s
attitude and help them rethink
their choices that led them to this
point? Only time will tell,”
Southerland said. “We certainly
hope it makes a difference in the
lives of our participants and they
come away with a better understanding of effects these decisions
have.”
Southerland noted, “This curriculum can be adapted for those
under the age 18. Our coalition
can use this as part of our community outreach with our school
partners. The youth adaption of
this program is very similar to the
adult program.”
She added, “We want our youth
to understand the potential the
negative choices might have on
their loved ones, friends or in
some cases complete strangers.
Ultimately, we would like our
youth to never travel down a path
of addictive behaviors. We believe
this program will help them recognize the potential dangers and
avoid them all together.”
The first class is slated to begin
June 19 and run through the
June 20. Each class also has an
enrollment deadline to ensure
class enrollment is in compliance
with state licensure standards.
For more information on this or
other services available from the
GRAAB Coalition, call 423-4725800.
The GRAAB Coalition’s mission
is to bring together concerned
members and service providers of
the community to facilitate lowering the misuse of alcohol, tobacco
and other drugs, as well as other
addictive behaviors, in Bradley
and Polk Counties by providing
effective education, recovery and
support for youth, families and
the community.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
AREA Boy Scouts, Cub Scouts, Girl Scouts and Brownies made their way to area cemeteries to place
flags at the final resting spots of the brave men and women who had served in our nation’s military.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
JIMMY JOHNSON, commander of VFW Post 2598, provides an
abbreviated history of Memorial Day to local Boy Scouts Saturday
morning.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
AREA Boy Scouts, Cub Scouts, Girl Scouts and Brownies met at the Bradley County Courthouse
steps Saturday morning to pay their respects to the late military men and women. The scouts then made
their way to area cemeteries in order to place flags at the final resting spots of the brave men and
women.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
LANCE STEWART of Boy Scout Troop 3477 cleans around the
tombstone of Samuel Mincey, CO 8 of the Tennessee Calvary, prior
to placing a flag next to the officer’s grave.
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Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
BOY SCOUT Christian Batman of Troop 279
places a U.S. Flag at the grave marker of World War
II veteran U.S. Army Pfc. Clyde Tilson.
RUBEN WENTVEL, a Cub Scout in Pack
3279, places an American flag next to the
tombstone of World War II veteran Marshall
Owen, TEC 4 of the U.S. Army.
Ohio patrolman acquitted in 2
deaths amid 137-shot barrage
CLEVELAND (AP) — A white
patrolman who fired down
through the windshield of a suspect’s car at the end of a 137shot barrage that left the two
unarmed black occupants dead
was acquitted Saturday of criminal charges by a judge who said
he could not determine the
Cleveland officer alone fired the
fatal shots.
Michael Brelo, 31, put his
head in hands as the judge
issued a verdict followed by
angry, but peaceful, protests:
Outside the courthouse police
blocked furious protesters from
going inside while across the city
others held a mock funeral with
some carrying signs asking, “Will
I be next?”
The acquittal came at a time of
nationwide tension among police
and black citizens punctuated by
protests over deaths of black
suspects at the hands of white
officers — and following a determination by the U.S. Department
of Justice that Cleveland police
had a history of using excessive
force and violating civil rights.
Before issuing his verdict,
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Judge John P. O’Donnell reflected on the unrest. “In many
American places people are angry
with, mistrusting and fearful of
the police,” he said. “Citizens
think the men and women sworn
to protect and serve have violated
that oath or never meant it in the
first place.”
But O’Donnell said he would
not offer up Brelo to an angry
public if the evidence did not
merit a conviction.
“I will not sacrifice him to a
public frustrated by historical
mistreatment at the hands of
other officers,” O’Donnell said.
Brelo — who fired a total of 49
shots, including 15 while standing on the hood of the suspects’
vehicle — faced as many as 22
years in prison had the judge
convicted him of voluntary
manslaughter in the shooting
that happened after Timothy
Russell’s beat-up Chevy Malibu
backfired while speeding by
police headquarters.
Russell’s sister, Michelle
Russell, said she believed Brelo
would ultimately face justice.
“He’s not going to dodge this
just because he was acquitted,”
she said. “God will have the final
say.”
The U.S. Justice Department,
U.S. Attorney’s Office and the
FBI will review the testimony and
evidence and examine all available legal options, said Vanita
Gupta, head of the Justice
Department’s
Civil
Rights
Division.
After the verdict, sheriff’s
deputies stood in front of the
courthouse carrying clear shields
as protesters chanted “Hands up!
Don’t shoot!” — a rallying cry
linked to the death of 18-year-old
Michael Brown in Ferguson,
Missouri. One demonstrator
bowed his head, hands folded, in
front of the phalanx of deputies,
praying in silence.
About 200 people walked in a
mock funeral procession that
had already been planned to
mark six months since another
deadly shooting that sparked
anger in Cleveland: the killing of
Tamir Rice, a black 12-year-old
carrying a pellet gun who was
shot by a white rookie officer.
Protesters carried a black, plywood coffin and softly sang “I’m
going up yonder, we’re marching,
we’re marching.”
Some carried signs saying “I
Can’t Breathe” and “Freddie Gray
Lynched,” references to a pair of
deadly police encounters: the
chokehold death of Eric Garner
in New York City and the death of
a Baltimore man who suffered a
spinal injury while in custody.
The unusual timing of the verdict — a Saturday morning on a
holiday weekend — was intentional. The county’s top judge
said it was meant to prevent traffic issues downtown.
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—7
Sherry Holloway:
Chicken Combo $4.99 (M-F) 11:00-4:00
Limited Time Only
CSCC ‘very involved with service learning’
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
Sherry Holloway, coordinator
for Cleveland State Community
College’s service learning program, was the guest speaker at
Thursday’s Cleveland Kiwanis
Club luncheon at the Elks Lodge.
Kiwanian Bob Donaghy, this
month’s program chairman,
introduced the speaker.
Holloway is a Bryan College
graduate.
She opened her talk by saying
the school’s service learning program and the Kiwanis Club are
kindred souls.
“They both work with teaching
and learning children,” she said.
Holloway said service learning
projects are good, civic-minded
programs CSCC students need
for graduation.
“It gives them a sense of civil
and social responsibilities,” she
said. “They (the students) are
developing planning and problem-solving skills, with networking opportunities that are out
there.”
Holloway emphasized that
these community activities are
required by specific courses and
programs.
The coordinator of the programs then discussed each of the
opportunities which are available
to Cleveland State students.
The programs include Forestry,
Wildlife and Fisheries, which is
connected with the Tennessee
Wildlife Resource Agency. There
is also a program called PhotoVoice, the Free Store, the literacy
garden at Bradley County’s
Taylor Elementary School, the
nursing department, the college’s
Computer Repair Shop and Early
Childhood Education.
Holloway pointed out that the
programs have many partners in
the community, including The
Caring Place, the Boys and Girls
Clubs, Junior Achievement, The
Salvation Army, the United Way,
Family Promise and even the
Cleveland Kiwanis Club.
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Banner photo, LARRY C. BOWERS
ShERRY hOLLOWAY, right, was the guest speaker at Thursday’s Cleveland Kiwanis Club luncheon.
Holloway is coordinator of Cleveland State Community College’s Service Learning programs. She was
discussing the neat banners used to promote the programs with Kiwanis President Traci Hamilton and
program chairman Bob Donaghy.
She said she usually has a faculty member accompany her to
community meetings to assist in
explaining some of the specific
programs.
“Our faculty is very involved
with service learning,” she said.
She added that they are more
able to discussed the differences
of the programs.
“Many of our students continue with these programs after
they leave Cleveland State,” she
said.
She said some are hired to
continue with specific programs.
Holloway discussed a few of
the programs.
“The nursing department was
the first to embrace service learning,” she said, adding that it is
has been one of the more successful programs.
She said the Computer Repair
Shop provides free diagnostic
services for out-of-warranty computers and devices. She added
that the shop can make some
repairs if the owner provides
parts.
Kiwanis Club members were
very interested in the early childhood education program, which
sponsors the Dr. Seuss birthday
celebration each spring. The celebration had to be canceled this
year due to the fact instructor
Suzanne Wood had some health
issues.
The Dr. Seuss program is
expected to resume next spring.
The Kiwanis Club’s involvement is to purchase hundreds of
Dr. Seuss books, which are distributed to young students
attending the event. At last year’s
celebration, more than 1,000
students participated.
Several Kiwanis members at
the luncheon were impressed by
the banners which Holloway
used to promote the seven programs.
Other Kiwanis business:
— The club has released a list
of nominations for new officers.
The candidates will be voted on
at next week’s meeting.
— The Fitzgerald Foundation
has donated $1,000 to Kiwanis’
Eliminate Program, the global
effort
to
eliminate
maternal/neonatal tetanus. Dr.
Rodney Fitzgerald is a member of
the local Kiwanis Club.
— Pastor Ramon Torres provided his fellow club members
some information on Monday’s
Memorial Day holiday.
He said Memorial Day was
originally called Decoration Day
and was first held for fallen Civil
War veterans. He said the date
was selected because it is was
not a day of any one specific Civil
War Battle. It was first celebrated
in the state of New York in 1873.
He added that Tennessee honors the Confederate’s Civil War
dead on June 3, Jefferson Davis’
birthday.
Reuse the News
Recycle this newspaper
As
Seen
on PBS
Banner photo, BRIAN GRAVES
ThE BRADLEY COUNTY ShERIff’S OffICE was recently presented with a car to be used exclusively as part of its Alzheimer’s visitation program. The vehicle was donated to the BCSO by Quality
Correctional Health Care, which provides health care services to the Bradley County Justice Center. At
the request of family members, a senior assist officer will respond to a residence to take a photograph
of and collect information for the logbook that will describe a family member with Alzheimer’s disease.
From left are Commission Chairman Louie Alford, QCHC Chief Financial Officer Bron Bates, Sheriff Eric
Watson and Commission Vice Chairman Jeff Yarber.
Deputies arrest suspect in Florida car theft
By TONY EUBANK
Banner Staff Writer
Bradley County Sheriff’s Office
deputies were involved in a car
chase Friday evening.
The incident involved two men
traveling in a car reportedly
stolen in Florida.
According to police reports, the
pursuit traveled through the
20th Street and Tasso Lane area
and ended in the parking lot of
the Benton Pike Whirlpool plant.
Deputies were able to wedge
the stolen car with the individuals inside between two Bradley
County patrol units.
Once the chase came to a halt,
officers reportedly searched the
vehicle and discovered a loaded
firearm and open containers of
alcohol.
The two suspects were arrested and are currently being
detained at the Bradley County
jail.
Sheriff Eric Watson commended BCSO for an outstanding capture and extended a thank you to
Cleveland Police and Tennessee
Highway Patrol for their assistance.
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Contributed photo
BRADLEY COUNTY sheriff’s deputies, along with officers from the
Tennessee Highway Patrol and the Cleveland Police Department,
surround a stolen vehicle in the Benton Pike Whirlpool parking lot.
The car was stolen in Florida and made its way to Bradley County
before being recovered by deputies Friday evening.
The identities of the men are
not being released at this time.
The BCSO is currently working
with Florida law enforcement
officials in the ongoing the investigation into the stolen vehicle.
There is a very limited
availability, call today.
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First time guests only. Investment Advisory services
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8—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Free health clinic scheduled for July 11, 12 at Walker Valley
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
A Bradley County/Cleveland visit by the
Remote Area Medical Volunteer Corps will be
happening in the community later this summer.
This year’s health care opportunities are
scheduled for Saturday and Sunday, July 11
and 12, at Walker Valley High School on
Lauderdale Memorial Highway. Services and
treatments are on a first-come, first-served
basis.
Prospective patients will be coming from
throughout the region, across the state, and
even from outside the state. There will be hundreds applying for the free dental, vision and
medical services.
The doors will open at 6 a.m. July 11, but preliminary planning will begin several hours earli-
er on Friday. Many people will arrive on Friday
afternoon.
In the past, people have slept in their cars the
night before to guarantee a place in line.
There will be no pre-registration, but numbers
will be given out beginning at 3 a.m. on Saturday.
The earlier arrival of many seeking treatment and
services is because volunteers may not be able to
serve everyone.
These free services are provided by volunteer
licensed health professionals.
They include dental cleanings, fillings and
extractions. Vision treatment includes eye examinations and free eyeglasses. Medical services
include diabetic screenings and education, PAP
smears, Rapid Result HIV tests, Rapid Result
Hepatitis C tests, and mammograms (Saturday
only).
Remote Area Medical Volunteer Corps is a
4 local teachers
to be honored for
STEM teaching
Special to the Banner
Four Cleveland and Bradley
County teachers are among those
set to be honored by the
Chattanooga Public Education
Foundation and the Southeast
Tennessee STEM Innovation Hub
this week.
Teachers who have completed
a fellowship in STEM teaching
and best practices will be honored at an event on Tuesday at 3
p.m.
at
STEM
School
Chattanooga, located on the
Chattanooga State Community
College campus.
Cleveland
City
Schools’
Suzanne Gregory, a Cleveland
Middle School teacher, and E.L.
Ross Elementary’s Becca Cathell
will be honored. Ocoee Middle
School’s Dustin Fromm and Park
View
Elementary
School’s
Heather Hayes will represent
Bradley County Schools with
honors of their own.
The 27 public school educators
teaching kindergarten through
grade 12 represent nine school
districts in Southeast Tennessee.
The fellows have completed a
year-long professional development program, which includes
two summer workshops, quarterly seminars, a job shadow experience and community partner
project.
The fellowship is designed to
give teachers the tools to be leaders in STEM (science, technology,
engineering and math) education
in the region.
The following teachers were
part of the STEM Teaching
Fellows cohort for the 2014-15
year:
n Blount County Schools:
Heritage High – Robert Stewart;
n Bradley County Schools:
Ocoee Middle – Dustin Fromm
and Park View Elementary –
Heather Hayes;
n Cleveland City Schools:
Cleveland Middle – Suzanne
Gregory
and
E.L.
Ross
Elementary – Becca Cathell;
n Etowah City Schools:
Etowah City School – Debbie
Lennex;
n Hamilton County Schools:
Chattanooga School for Arts &
Sciences – Kristin Burrus,
Chattanooga School for the
Liberal Arts – Scott Rosenow,
Clifton Hills Elementary – Cristol
Kapp, East Hamilton Middle High
– David Manley, East Lake
Academy – Beverly HamiltonAdkins, Howard School – Andrew
Browning-Couch, Loftis Middle –
Ashley Reagan, Normal Park –
Erin Woodrow, Ooltewah Middle –
Angela Mullins, Orchard Knob
Elementary – Judy Bullington,
Red Bank Elementary – Alicia
Clevenger and Elisabeth Wilson,
Red Bank Middle – Kimberly
Elbakidze and Sequoyah High –
Stephen Tompkins;
n Loudon County Schools:
Eaton Elementary – Tarah
Karczewski, Fort Loudon Middle
– Joseph Davis, North Middle –
Anne Harvey and Philadelphia
Elementary – Angela BrightWhite;
n McMinn County Schools:
Rogers Creek Elementary –
Teresa Tallent;
n Polk County Schools: Copper
Basin High – Craig Green; and
n Sweetwater City Schools:
Brown Intermediate – Rebecca
McBride.
All kindergarten through 12th
grade public school teachers
from the Tennessee Valley region
are eligible to participate as
STEM Fellows.
The PEF is an advocate for the
region and Hamilton County
schools and its teachers, leaders
and students. For 25 years, it
has worked in partnership with
Hamilton County schools and
provide training, research, and
resources to teachers, principals,
and schools and has helped to
bring more than $70 million in
supplemental,
philanthropic
funding to the school system to
help achieve that mission. For
more information, visit pefchattanooga.org.
STEM is an innovative
approach to education focused
on giving students real-world
learning experiences in science,
technology, engineering and
math. The Southeast Tennessee
STEM Innovation Hub expands
STEM education for all students
in the region by uniting K-12
schools, colleges, nonprofits and
business partners in a cooperative effort to leverage resources
and give students educational
experiences that will prepare
them for the STEM job opportunities of the future. For more
information, visit gogetstem.org.
Rockford-based, nonprofit, volunteer, airborne
medical relief corps that provides free health care,
dental care, eye care, veterinary services, and technical and educational assistance to people in
remote areas of the United States, and around the
world.
RAM was founded in 1985 by Stan Brock, who
worked as an assistant to Marlin Perkins on
Mutual of Omaha's “Wild Kingdom” TV show.
The group originally confined its work to Third
World countries, but later shifted to the U.S.
According to RAM, the organization has provided
$33,079,038 worth of free health care to 357,368
patients with the help of 36,675 volunteers since
its inception. Approximately two-thirds of this total
was inthe United States.
According to Brock, local licensing requirements
for doctors in many states prevent his group from
bringing out-of-state doctors to areas where their
help is needed. Tennessee is the only state with an
"Open Borders To Doctors" law on its books.
Special exemptions have enabled RAM to hold a
few clinics outside the state of Tennessee. One of
these — in Wise, Va. — was the largest RAM clinic
held to date.
Held from July 25-27, 2008, the three-day clinic
had 1,584 volunteers who provided 5,475 treatments to 2,670 patients. The total value of care
provided at this single clinic equaled $1,725,418.
RAM is funded through donations and relies on
volunteers from the community, as well as professionals
including
physicians,
dentists,
optometrists, nurses, pilots and veterinarians to
provide care in the communities it visits.
One reason there is such a wide range of visitors
to the Bradley County event is such services, other
than insurance pay or private pay, are limited in
many areas.
POLK COUNTY GRADUATION
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
MEMBERS of the Polk County Board of
Education applaud as PCHS Principal Ronnie
German delivers the monetary numbers the graduating class of 2015 has earned toward their postsecondary educations.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
CHLOE CROSS, salutatorian for the Polk
County High School class of 2015, delivers her
address during the school’s graduation exercise
Friday evening.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
CONGRATULATIONS ARE GIvEN to the 2015 graduating class of Polk County High School. The
commencement ceremony was held Friday evening in the PCHS gymnasium.
Two people chained to
Shell ship north of Seattle
BELLINGHAM, Wash. (AP) —
Two people have chained themselves to a support ship that is
part of Royal Dutch Shell’s
exploratory oil drilling plans and
currently moored in Washington
state.
Eric Ross of the Backbone
Campaign said on Saturday
morning that Matt Fuller joined
student activist Chiara Rose in
suspending themselves from the
anchor chain of the Arctic
Challenger,
which
is
in
Bellingham Bay.
Rose suspended herself from
the ship with a climbing harness
on Friday night.
The Coast Guard cutter Osprey
spent the night monitoring Rose
but took no action, Petty Officer
3rd Class Katelyn Shearer said
Saturday morning. “We’re really
most concerned for her safety and
the safety of everyone involved,”
Shearer said.
Ross said both Rose and Fuller
are fine and are not being
harassed by the Coast Guard. But
he expressed concern for Rose’s
health and said she must be getting dehydrated and tired after
her night above the water.
Authorities spoke with the
woman and asked her to remove
herself. “There’s no plans right
now to do anything further,”
Shearer said.
The ship isn’t scheduled to
leave the port for several days.
Rob Lewis, a spokesman for the
Bellingham activists, said they are
protesting Shell’s plan for Arctic
drilling. He described the Arctic
Challenger as a savior vessel that
is used in the case of an oil leak,
but said activists doubt its effectiveness at preventing environmental disasters like the
Deepwater Horizon explosion in
the Gulf of Mexico.
He confirmed that the Coast
Guard was not interfering with
Rose, but they had impounded
the activists’ support vessels.
Protesters in Seattle have been
demonstrating against another
part of the Shell drilling fleet.
Dutch Shell is using Seattle’s seaport terminal to house a massive
floating drill rig, the Polar Pioneer.
Last weekend, hundreds of
activists in kayaks swarmed
Elliott Bay to protest Shell’s plans
to drill for oil in the Arctic. The
protest was dubbed the “Paddle in
Seattle.”
Those activists have also
expressed concern about the risk
of an oil spill in the remote Arctic
waters and the effect of Shell’s
operations on global warming.
BANNER PHOTO, HOWARD PIERCE
THE POLk COUNTy HIGH SCHOOL choir, “A Touch of Class,” sang a number of melodies that
included songs such as “Coles Song” from “Mr. Holland’s Opus” and “Lean on Me” by Bill Withers and
Alan Billingsley.
Mormon LGBT
group’s bid to
join parades
is denied
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — For
the second straight year, organizers of two of Utah’s most popular
parades have rejected a Mormon
LGBT group’s request to participate.
Organizers of the Days of ‘47
Parade in Salt Lake City and the
Freedom Festival Grand Parade
in Provo denied the bid by
Mormons Building Bridges to
take part.
Greg James, executive vice
president of the Days of ‘47, said
the parade committee’s decision
was based on its belief that
Mormons Building Bridges is an
advocacy group.
Rules for the July 24 parade
forbid advocacy of any kind,
“whether it’s a group you might
agree with or don’t agree with. We
don’t do anything that’s advocacy. This one is advocacy,” he told
The Salt Lake Tribune.
Organizers of the July 4 parade
in Provo did not immediately
respond to requests for comment
Saturday.
Both parades are operated by
private nonprofit foundations.
The Days of ‘47 parade commemorates the arrival of Mormon pioneers in the Salt Lake Valley.
Erika Munson, a co-founder of
Mormons Building Bridges, said
she believes her group’s message
of inclusion and love is consistent
with values espoused by the
Mormon church. She’s disappointed by the decisions.
Her group was founded in 2012
with the goal of improving relations between The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
and the gay community. The
grassroots group, which is not
directly affiliated with the church,
is nonpartisan.
“We were hoping that last year
we really got a conversation going
and that this year, a lot of the
unwillingness to look at the LGBT
community as part of our community would fall away,” Munson
told The Tribune.
“I’m afraid that the parade
committees for Days of ‘47 and
the Freedom Festival are isolated,
which is a shame. These need to
be parades for all of Utah,” she
added.
In line with the Days of ‘47
Parade’s theme of “Pioneers —
Forging a New Frontier,”
Mormons Building Bridges had
proposed a “Utah’s LGBT
Pioneers” entry. It would have
featured six LGBT leaders from
business, education and public
service riding in an antique convertible.
The group’s plans called for
military veterans who are gay or
transgender to march in the
Provo parade.
Just another birthday
for Detroit-area
woman — her 116th
INKSTER, Mich. (AP) — A
Detroit-area woman turned 116
Saturday, but she offers no secret
for a long life.
“There’s nothing I can do about
it,” Jeralean Talley of Inkster said
ahead of her birthday weekend.
Talley will celebrate her birthday twice, including a party on
Sunday at her church, New
Jerusalem Missionary Baptist.
The Gerontology Research Group
considers her to be the oldest
person in the world, based on
available records, followed by
Susannah Jones of Brooklyn,
New York, who turns 116 in July.
“You’re more likely to the win
the lottery than to reach this age,”
said Robert Young of Gerontology
Research.
Talley bowled until she was
104 and still likes to catch fish. A
daughter, Thelma Holloway, tells
the Detroit Free Press that her
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
GRADUATES of Polk County High School class of 2015 provide a standing ovation for principal mother still has a sharp mind.
She was born in Montrose,
Ronnie German as he concludes his commencement address during the school’s graduation Friday Georgia, in 1899 and moved to
evening.
Michigan in the 1930s.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—9
Las Vegas feels 4.8 quake 100 miles away DO YOU SNORE?
LAS VEGAS (AP) — A magnitude-4.8 earthquake struck a
rural area of southern Nevada
on Friday, shaking buildings
more than 100 miles away and
shutting down a busy Las Vegas
interchange as road-tripping
travelers were descending on Sin
City for Memorial Day weekend.
The U.S. Geological Survey
revised an earlier report that
pinned the magnitude of
Friday’s earthquake at 5.4.
The temblor hit at 11:47 a.m.
about 24 miles southwest of the
small town of Caliente, and most
of Southern Nevada felt it, along
with parts of Utah including St.
George and Cedar City, the
USGS said.
People took to social media to
report feeling the quake, but
those already on the Las Vegas
Strip appeared to take any shaking in stride, without any interruption to the gambling destination’s usual fun.
Caesars
Entertainment
Corp.’s 550-foot-tall High Roller
observation wheel was still taking riders on a slow spin after
officials
said
inspections
revealed everything had gone
according to the ride’s earthquake plan.
There were no immediate
reports of damage or disruptions at any of the casinohotels, but the Nevada Highway
Patrol reported damage to one of
the state’s busiest highway
ramps, near downtown Las
Vegas. The ramp from southbound U.S. 95 to Interstate 15,
part of the so-called Spaghetti
Bowl interchange, was shut
down while crews examined a
bridge joint that appeared to
shift.
The ramp reopened shortly
before 5 p.m. Friday after engineers determined it remained
structurally sound.
“The tremblor simply dislodged the protective rubber
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Workers insPect damage to a freeway ramp Friday in Las Vegas. The ramp leading to Interstate
15 was closed from damage after an earthquake that struck a rural area of southern Nevada.
encasing the bridge seam, making it look much worse than it
was in reality,” Nevada
Department of Transportation
engineer Mary Martini said in
an news release. “Meanwhile,
the ramps remain structurally
sound and safe for travel.”
Nevada is laced with faults
and ranks third in the nation
behind California and Alaska for
earthquake activity.
Kara Rutkin, a publicist in
southwest Las Vegas originally
from California, said she was
working in her second-story
office when she felt Friday’s
quake and five to 10 seconds of
shaking. Some colleagues were
new to the feeling.
“It’s not typical to have these
out here. That’s why it took
everyone a minute to process it,”
Rutkin said. “I think it was just
more an exciting thing to be part
of it — as exciting as an earthquake can be.”
A magnitude-6.0 quake that
struck near the northeast
Nevada town of Wells in 2008 is
the largest the state has experienced in more than 40 years,
said Mickey Cassar, a technician
at the Nevada Seismological
Laboratory at the University of
Nevada, Reno.
Friday’s quake was shallower
than most, about 3.8 kilometers
(2.4 miles) below the surface, he
said.
“The shallower an earthquake
occurs, the more shaking there
is and the farther away it is felt,”
he said.
Several aftershocks, from
magnitude 1.0 to 3.8, followed
the larger quake.
Jacqueline Spute, administrative assistant at the Moapa Band
of Paiutes reservation about 40
miles south of the quake’s epicenter, said the quake felt like
“slow-motion rocking.”
Band officials were checking
dams and infrastructure, but
there were no immediate reports
of damage, she said.
St. George Mayor Jon Pike
said he was at work at a health
insurance company, sitting at
his desk, when he felt the quake.
“It wasn’t a violent shaking,
but I definitely felt like someone
was just kind of pushing the
building like it was made out of
rubber or something,” he said.
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DC authorities: Ex-con had help in family’s slaying
WASHINGTON (AP) — An exconvict likely had help from others holding a family captive
inside their mansion for at least
18 hours, authorities said.
During their ordeal, the business executive and his wife told
others to stay away — even
ordering a pizza deliverer to
leave two pies at the door — as
they frantically arranged for
$40,000 in cash to be dropped
off at the home.
But once the money was left
on the seat of a red sports car in
the family’s garage, Daron
Dylon Wint struck and stabbed
Savvas Savopoulos, the CEO of
the American Iron Works company where he had once worked
as a welder, Wint’s charging
document said. At a court hearing Friday, Wint was ordered
held in jail on a murder charge.
Savopoulos’ wife, Amy, their
10-year-old son Philip and their
housekeeper Veralicia Figueroa
also were killed, and then the
house was set on fire with
matches and a flammable liquid.
The fire began on the queensized mattress where the boy’s
body was stabbed and burned,
authorities said.
Firefighters found the adults’
bodies in the next room.
Evidence shows the women suffered “blunt force and sharp
force trauma” before the $4.5
million mansion was set on fire.
Authorities linked what may
have been two different men to
Amy Savopoulos’ blue Porsche
911 the day of the killings. One,
“with short, well-groomed hair,”
was spotted driving erratically
away from the crime scene.
Another, wearing a dark hoodie,
was videotaped carrying a bucket near where the Porsche was
set on fire later that day.
The pizza gave Wint away. His
DNA was found on the crust of a
partially eaten slice of pepperoni, one of two pies ordered the
night of May 13 while the family
and the housekeeper were
“being held against their will,”
an affidavit said.
A woman believed to be Amy
Savopoulos paid for the pizzas
by credit card and told the delivery person to leave the food on
the porch, because she was
“nursing her sick child” and
would not come to the door, the
document says.
Wint, who was tracked down
by U.S. Marshals and arrested
Thursday night with two other
men and three women,
appeared in a white jumpsuit in
court Friday.
A court document said
authorities believe the killings
“required the presence and
assistance of more than one
person.” None of the people
detained with Wint were immediately charged with any crimes.
Wint is being represented by
Natalie Lawson, a public
defender. His defense argued
that authorities lack probable
cause, since a suspect seen
driving the Porsche had short
hair. Wanted posters issued
while Wint was a fugitive
showed him with long hair.
D.C. Superior Court Judge
Errol Arthur agreed with
Assistant U.S. Attorney Emily
Miller to deny bail, noting that
Wint was arrested with some of
the missing money, and that the
DNA from the pizza ties him to
the slayings.
U.S. Marshals and police had
tracked Wint to New York and
back before dozens of officers
swarmed a car and truck in the
nation’s capital, arresting the
whole group without a fight.
Wint’s record was cited as a
reason he should be held. He
was arrested three times for
assault in 2006 and 2007, serving a 10-month sentence in New
York, and then convicted of
assaulting a girlfriend in
Maryland in 2009.
In 2010, he pleaded guilty to
malicious destruction of property after he allegedly broke into a
woman’s apartment, stole a television, vandalized her car and
threatened to kill her infant
daughter. Also in 2010, Wint
was arrested carrying a 2-footlong machete and a BB pistol
outside the American Iron
Works
headquarters,
but
weapons charges were dropped
after he pleaded guilty to possessing an open container of
alcohol.
Acting District of Columbia
U.S. Attorney Vincent Cohen
said outside the courthouse
that prosecutors’ “work is not
done” and that they “intend to
unseal additional search warrants in the coming days.”
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10—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Organizers of
biker meeting
get proclamation
The Associated Press
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
DOWNTOWN CLEVELAND
was packed this weekend for the
May MainStreet Cruise-In. The
event is held the fourth Saturday
of each month. There is no entry
fee to exhibit a vehicle or attend
the cruise-in, and it is open to all
vehicles — antique, classic, muscle, street rods and special interest.
MainStreet
Cruise-In
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
DEBBIE DUGGAN and Janet
Newport take a peek inside this
Pontiac 8 while browsing through
the automobiles showcasing at
the MainStreet Cruise-In.
Days after a biker shootout at a
Texas restaurant, the same group
that organized the motorcyclists’
meeting that turned violent
received a proclamation from the
Waco City Council designating May
as “Motorcycle Safety and
Awareness Month.”
The council issued the proclamation Tuesday, two days after nine
people were killed in the shootout
at a Twin Peaks restaurant in
Waco. The proclamation was to be
presented to Steven Cochran on
behalf of the Confederation of
Clubs, which had organized the
Sunday biker meeting, but
Cochran decided not to attend the
City Council meeting, Waco City
Secretary Esmeralda Hudson said
Friday.
Cochran declined an interview
with The Associated Press on
Friday, but posted a picture of the
proclamation on his Facebook
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE page. In his post, he said he and
TENNESSEE CROCKETT, also known as Eugene Bain, showed Sandra Lynch accepted the proclaoff his eccentric Yamaha 650 during the MainStreet Cruise-In for the mation in absentia.
Lynch couldn’t attend because
month of May.
she is one of about 170 people who
were arrested after Sunday’s
shootout. She remains jailed on a
charge of engaging in organized
criminal activity.
Restaurant footage viewed by
The Associated Press shows the
shooting began after a confrontation between two rival gangs in the
eatery’s parking lot. Police said they
returned fire after being shot at.
Some bikers have complained
that police acted too hastily in making arrests and scooped up riders
who had nothing to do with the violence.
In his Facebook post, Cochran
praised Waco City Council members for their support of motorcycle
safety but complained about the
Waco Police Department’s characterization of the bikers at Sunday’s
meeting.
“I felt it was prudent to not have
a public display at the city counsel
meeting after all being hardened
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE gangsters according to the Waco PD
LARRY WOLFE shows off his 1955 Chevy Bel Air during the we didn’t want to put anyone in
MainStreet Cruise-In for the month of May.
harm’s way quite unlike the local
police department did at Twin
Peaks,” he wrote.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
INMAN STREET JAZZ BAND
set up and played just outside
The Spot restaurant on North
Ocoee Street for Saturday’s
MainStreet Cruise-In.
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
SCORPION OFFROAD CONCEPTS’ Sammy Reagan and Sonny
Pendergrass set up a tent for May’s MainStreet Cruise-In, providing
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE
RANDY CHRISTIAN takes a look inside this 1961 Corvette during
information on their company specializing in Jeep, Truck, 4x4 and
the MainStreet Cruise-In for May.
SUV aftermarket parts and accessories, along with installation.
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Freed from death row: ‘I refuse to give them my joy’
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — In
his first day free, after nearly 30
years on Alabama’s death row,
Ray Hinton said he kept asking a
question to his childhood friend.
“You just got to tell me we can
stay out tonight that we don’t
have to go in after an hour,”
Hinton said, referring to the hour
limit that inmates got on yard
time.
Hinton spent 28 years on
death row for two 1985 murders
that occurred during separate
robberies of fast-food restaurants
in Birmingham. He was set free
on April 3 after new ballistics
tests contradicted the only evidence — an analysis of crimescene bullets — used to convict
him decades ago.
In his first days off death row,
Hinton said he sometimes enjoys
just driving, relishing the freedom to simply move about as he
wants. He says he’s not angry,
crediting God for suppressing the
hatred that otherwise could
devour him “like a form of cancer.”
“I have too much to live for to
allow a bunch of cowards to take
my joy. I refuse to give them my
joy,” Hinton said.
“I’m at peace with myself. The
thing is, are they at peace? They
know what they did. They know
they lied 30 years ago. I feel that
every man that played a part in
sending me to prison, every man
or woman, whether the judges,
prosecutors, ballistic experts, or
witness, whoever — they will
answer to God. So I’m going to
enjoy my life the best I can,”
Hinton said.
Attorney Bryan Stevenson,
director of the Alabama-based
Equal Justice Initiative has called
it a case study in how poverty
and racial bias led to a wrongful
conviction.
Hinton was arrested for the two
1985 murders after a survivor at
a third robbery identified Hinton
in a photo lineup — even though
he was clocked in working at a
grocery store warehouse 15 miles
away. There were no fingerprints
or eyewitness testimony, but
prosecutors said at the time that
bullets found at the murder
scenes matched a .38-caliber
revolver that belonged to Hinton’s
mother.
His poorly funded defense
hired a one-eyed civil engineer
with little ballistics training to
rebut the state’s evidence. The
defense expert was obliterated on
cross-examination as he admitted he had trouble operating the
microscope.
Stevenson, who took up
Hinton’s case 16 years ago, said
an independent analysis showed
the bullets didn’t come from the
gun, and fought for years to get
the state to take another look at
the case.
A breakthrough only came
when the U.S. Supreme Court
ruled Hinton’s defense was so
deficient that it was unconstitutional. Prosecutors dropped plans
for a second trial when three
state forensic experts couldn’t
determine if any of the bullets
were fired through the revolver,
or even from the same gun.
“They took half my life and it’s
like they didn’t care. They were
willing to kill an innocent man,”
Hinton said.
“Thirty years ago, I had a judge
that stood up proudly and sentenced me to death. I had a prosecutor who couldn’t wait to get in
front of a camera and say that
they had took the worst killer off
the streets of Birmingham. But
come April 3, no judge was willing to say Mr. Hinton we apologize for the mistake that was
done. No D.A. was there to say we
apologize.”
During Hinton’s 28 years on
death row, dozens of inmates,
men he came to view as family,
were executed either by
Alabama’s “Yellow Mama” electric
chair or by lethal injection.
“The generator would kick in
when they pulled the switch. The
lights would dim on and off,”
Hinton said. Alabama for years
traditionally performed executions at midnight.
Five minutes after midnight,
the inmates would start banging
on the bars.
“We did that not knowing if the
condemned man had a family or
anybody back there in his support. We were just trying to let
him know that we were still with
him to the very end.”
He was arrested at age 29. He
turns 59 in June. When Hinton
went to death row, Ronald
Reagan was president. The technology of 2015 is “outrageous,”
he said.
After being released last
month, he got in a car equipped
with a GPS navigation device that
gave spoken directions.
“The lady said, ‘Turn left’ I
looked in the backseat and wanted to know where she was at,”
Hinton said, marveling at the
device.
After living decades mostly
alone in a prison cell, he has a
hard time with crowds. Friends
took him to a shopping mall, but
he had to leave almost immediately.
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—11
Senate clears White House-backed trade bill
WASHINGTON (AP) — In a victory for President Barack
Obama, the Senate passed
bipartisan legislation Friday
night to strengthen the administration’s hand in global trade
talks, clearing the way for a highly unpredictable summer showdown in the House.
The vote was 62-37 to give
Obama authority to complete
trade deals that Congress could
approve or reject, but not
change. A total of 48
Republicans supported the
measure, but only 14 of the
Senate’s 44 Democrats backed a
president of their own party on
legislation near the top of his
second-term agenda.
Obama hailed the vote in a
statement that said trade deals
“done right” are important to
“expanding opportunities for the
middle class, leveling the playing
field for American workers and
establishing rules for the global
economy that help our businesses grow and hire.”
Separate legislation to prevent
parts of the anti-terror USA
Patriot Act from lapsing on June
1 was caught in a post-midnight
showdown between a pair of
Kentuckians — Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell on the one
hand, and presidential hopeful
Rand Paul on the other.
McConnell favored renewal of
a program of bulk telephone collection by the National Security
Agency, while Paul was unyielding in opposition. “My filibuster
continues to end NSA illegal spying,” he tweeted.
By contrast, a two-month bill
to prevent a cutoff in federal
highway funding cleared with
ease as lawmakers covetously
eyed a weeklong vacation.
Senate passage of the trade bill
capped two weeks of tense votes
and near-death experiences for
legislation the administration
hopes will help complete an
agreement with Japan and 10
other countries in the Pacific
region.
McConnell, who was Obama’s
indispensable ally in passing the
bill, said it would create “new
opportunities for bigger paychecks, better jobs and a
stronger economy.
“The tools it contains will allow
us to knock down unfair foreign
trade barriers that discriminate
against American workers and
products stamped ‘Made in the
USA,’” he said.
A fierce fight is likely in the
House.
Speaker John Boehner supports the measure, and said in a
written
statement
that
Republicans will do their part to
pass it.
But in a challenge to Obama,
the Ohio Republican added that
“ultimately success will require
Democrats putting politics aside
and doing what’s best for the
country.”
Dozens
of
majority
Republicans currently oppose
the legislation, either out of ideological reasons or because they
are loath to enhance Obama’s
authority, especially at their own
expense.
And
Obama’s
fellow
Democrats show little inclination
to support legislation that much
of organized labor opposes.
In the run-up to a final Senate
vote, Democratic supporters of
the legislation were at pains to
lay to rest concerns that the legislation, like previous trade bills,
could be blamed for a steady loss
of jobs.
“The Senate now has the
opportunity to throw the 1990s
NAFTA playbook into the dust
bin of history,” said Sen. Ron
Wyden, D-Ore. He referred to the
North American Free Trade
Agreement, passed two decades
ago, and a symbol to this day,
fairly or not, of the loss of unemployment to a country with lax
worker safety laws and low
wages.
Like Obama, Wyden and others said this law had far stronger
protections built into it.
One final attempt to add
another one failed narrowly, 5148, a few hours before the bill
cleared.
It came on a proposal, by
Sens. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, who
supported the trade bill, and
Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., who
opposed it. They sought to made
allegations of currency manipulation subject to the same “dispute settlement procedures” as
other obligations under any
trade deal.
Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew
warned earlier that its approval
could cause Obama to veto the
legislation.
Portman, who was U.S. trade
representative under former
President George W. Bush,
scoffed at the threat. “I don’t
think so,” he said. “I think he
(Obama) understands the importance” of his ability to conclude
trade deals without congressional changes.
The bill also included $1.8 billion in retraining funds for
American workers who lose their
jobs as a result of exports. Sen.
Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., said the program duplicated other federal
efforts, but his attempt to strip
out the funds was defeated, 5335.
Allies on one bill, McConnell
and the White House were on different sides on the Patriot Act
legislation.
White House spokesman Josh
Earnest prodded the Senate to
accept a House-passed bill
renewing anti-terrorism programs due to expire June 1,
including a provision to eliminate
the National Security Agency’s
ability to collect mass telephone
records of Americans. Instead,
the material would remain with
phone companies, with government searches of the information
allowed by court order on a caseby-case basis.
But the bill was blocked on a
vote of 57-42, three shy of the 60
needed, and Paul then blocked
several bids by the majority
leader to pass short-term extensions of the current programs.
Finally, McConnell announced
the Senate would return on the
last day of the month — with
only hours to spare — to try and
resolve the issue.
The highway bill was the least
controversial of the three on the
Senate’s pre-vacation agenda,
but only because lawmakers
agreed in advance on a twomonth extension of the current
law. The House and Senate will
need to return to the issue this
summer.
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WE AT WCI WOULD LIKE TO WISH YOU AND YOUR
FAMILY A SAFE AND HAPPY HOLIDAY WEEKEND
AP Photo
A bird covered in oil flaps its wings at Refugio State Beach,
north of Goleta, Calif., Thursday. More than 7,700 gallons of oil has
been raked, skimmed and vacuumed from a spill that stretched
across 9 miles of California coast, just a fraction of the sticky, stinking
goo that escaped from a broken pipeline, officials said.
California oil spill harder to
clean up in choppy waters
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A 10square-mile oil slick off the
California coast is thinner than
a coat of paint and it’s becoming
harder to skim from choppy
waters, officials said as more
dead animals were discovered.
The combination of sunlight
and waves Friday helped evaporate and dissolve some of the oil
that blackened beaches and covered wildlife in thick goo after a
pipeline on shore leaked up to
105,000 gallons on the Santa
Barbara coast Tuesday.
Federal regulators ordered
Plains All American Pipeline to
drain the pipe that leaked, test
the metal in the damaged section of pipe, and complete a
series of steps before it can ask
to resume pumping oil through
the pipe to inland refineries.
“Before restarting operations,
we’re going to make sure they do
things right,” said Linda
Daugherty of the federal Pipeline
and Hazardous Materials Safety
Administration.
Investigators with the agency
are looking into the cause of the
spill and whether there was
something Plains should have
known about conditions in the
underground pipeline and factors that could have contributed
to the accident.
The spill is also being investigated by federal, state and local
prosecutors for possible violations of state and federal law.
The pipeline safety agency’s
corrective action order said the
10.6-mile line had recently been
inspected, but the results
weren’t known. Tests of the 2foot-diameter pipe in 2012 found
41 anomalies mostly due to
external corrosion, frequently
near welds, the agency said.
The company has said there
were no previous problems with
the pipe.
Plains said it could take weeks
or even months before investigators find what caused the disaster.
There’s no estimate to how
much damage the spill caused,
but a dead dolphin was found in
Santa Barbara Harbor and three
dead pelicans were recovered.
It’s not clear if the dolphin
found in the harbor, about 20
miles from the source of the
spill, died from exposure to oil,
said
Veterinarian
Michael
Ziccardi.
Two sea lions, an elephant
seal and six pelicans have been
rescued, said Ziccardi, director
of the Oiled Wildlife Care
Network.
Workers wearing yellow protective suits, rubber gloves and face
masks scrubbed pelicans with
toothbrushes in a soapy bath at
the International Bird Rescue in
the San Pedro section of Los
Angeles.
“Our goal is to get these birds
stabilized, to get them warm,
hydrated, comfortable and get
them washed as soon as possible
and then rehabilitated so they
can go back home,” Christine
Fiorello with the Oiled Wildlife
Care Network said in a video
interview with The Associated
Press.
The disaster, which led officials
to close Refugio and El Capitan
state beaches just before
Memorial Day weekend, was sure
to make more campers unhappy
as the state announced the popular parks and campgrounds
would be closed until June 4,
longer than originally announced.
Rough seas have made recovery efforts more difficult, and the
light sheen of oil was becoming
harder to skim off the surface,
said Rick McMichael, a Plains
representative.
Plains All American and its
subsidiaries operate 17,800
miles of crude oil and natural
gas pipelines across the country,
according to federal regulators.
Since 2006, four subsidiaries
of Plains All American have
reported at least 223 accidents
along their lines and been subject to 25 enforcement actions by
federal regulators.
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12—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Board
From Page 1
Banner photo, lArrY c. BOWerS
thiS tOMBStOne, placed at the end of the walkway in front of
Banner photo, lArrY c. BOWerS the Polk County Courthouse, was dedicated to Polk County veterans
MeMOriAl DAY SPeAKer Bill Gray, left, delivered his speech who served in the Korea, Vietnam and Persian Gulf conflicts.
and a personal testimony in front of the Polk County Courthouse in Memorial Day speaker and DAV Commander Bill Gray glanced at the
Benton Saturday. Listening to Gray were state Rep. Dan Howell, left, tombstone prior to his talk. He also mentioned that there are no
and Polk County Executive Hoyt Firestone.
World War I veterans still alive and few World War II survivors.
Memorial
From Page 1
eran will die,” the DAV commander emphasized.
Gray said statistics show that
less than 1 percent of Americans
will be celebrating Memorial Day
this year, the one day we pay
tribute to those who served in
our military and fought and died
for our freedoms.
“It’s a changing world,” Gray
told this reporter. “Many of our
young people do not know what
Memorial Day is all about.”
The DAV commander told a
story about a young Marine veteran he knew very well.
“This young man came from a
broken home,” he said. “He left
home and never returned.”
When the young man was 17,
he called his mother and asked if
she would sign for him to enlist
early in the U.S. Marine Corps.
“The only thing she said,” Gray
added, “was ‘maybe they’ll help
you to grow up and be a man.’”
The young man went through
basic training and went to
Vietnam when he reached his
18th birthday.
Seven days later, he was blown
up. He wasn’t killed, but very
severely injured.
The young Marine returned
stateside and went through more
than a year of surgeries and skin
grafts. He also lost an eye. His
mother visited him in the hospital one time only.
When he had recovered
enough to get out of the hospital,
he was destined to be discharged. He begged the military
to keep him in the service. It was
the only home he had ever
known.
He was released with $16 in
his pocket and had no home and
no where to go. But, he survived,
although he was disenchanted
with the military ... until he came
to Tennessee.
The young man made a career
for himself, had a family and
eventually joined DAV Chapter
25 in Cleveland. This membership was mainly due to the influence of a Cleveland neighbor who
was very active in local veteran
organizations. That man was the
late John Simmons.
Gray said it is very easy to tell
the story of the young Marine,
because he is that young Marine.
He said people tell him he does
not appear to have had such
serious injuries, that he does not
Banner photo, lArrY c. BOWerS
POlK cOuntY eXecutiVe Hoyt Firestone, at podium, spoke to the crowd during Saturday morning’s Memorial Day service in front of the Polk County Courthouse in Benton. Seated behind Firestone
were, from left, Benton Mayor Jerry Stephens, Tennessee Rep. Dan Howell and featured speaker and
DAV Chapter 25 Commander Bill Gray.
Banner photo, lArrY c. BOWerS
MAnY OF thOSe attending Saturday’s Memorial Day program in Benton bowed their heads in
solemn tribute as the Polk County High School Chorus sang a patriotic song. There was a moderate
turnout for this year’s first service in the area. Cleveland’s celebration will be Monday.
appear to be “170 percent disabled.”
“It’s not just on the outside;
it’s also on the inside,” he said.
Those attending Saturday’s
ceremony applauded Gray’s
story and his testimony about
himself.
They were relieved he is not
one of the names on the crosses
placed across the Polk County
Courthouse lawn. Those names
are for the Polk County veterans
who died while fighting for the
freedoms we all enjoy.
Gray said a Presidential
Executive Act was passed some
years ago, which designated a
time and a day when the nation’s
citizens were expected to stop
what they were doing, face to the
East (toward Arlington National
Cemetery) and say a prayer for
the nation’s war dead.
Gray asked those attending
Saturday’s program to do that
this Memorial Day.
He then acknowledged everyone who attended the program.
“You’re among this year’s 1 percent,” he said.
The Memorial Day speaker
also talked about the Vietnam
Conflict and how the fighting
began.
He also discussed a favorite
subject, the DAV. He pointed out
that every dollar donated to the
DAV is used for veterans. The
military organization is managed
entirely by volunteers, without
pay.
American Legion Post 81’s
Color Guard and former Prisoner
of War Bill Norwood had been
expected to attend Saturday’s
ceremony as they have in the
past.
Norwood and his group of
community-minded individuals
had a funeral ceremony for a veteran at the National Cemetery in
Chattanooga and could not make
both programs.
after the finalists announcement
May 11.
A draft of the new director’s
contract voted upon during that
meeting lists his or her start
date as June 1, less than a week
after the interviews.
Lillios has in the past said he
would like to see a new director
start by June so he or she would
have time to prepare for the new
school year in August.
During the meeting earlier
this month, he suggested the
board could recess to allow the
executive committee to discuss
contract negotiations before
having the board vote the same
night.
According to their resumes,
either Cash or Heath would be
able to put many years of teaching and administrative experience to work in Bradley County.
Cash describes herself as a
“visionary leader, bridge builder
and licensed educator/administrator with a doctorate degree
coupled with 28 years of experience instructing students and
teachers, securing resources
and implementing effective programs.”
Heath said he is “eager to
bring skills, expertise, enthusiasm for student learning and
business-like leadership to the
organization” and is “able to use
dynamic and diverse experiences in urban, suburban,
rural, private and public schools
to lead any educational institution on a journey to becoming
great.”
Before she was named
Robertson County’s assistant
director of schools in 2013,
Cash served as the assistant
dean of graduate education at
Union University from 2011 to
2012. Before that, she was the
principal of Station Camp
Elementary School in Gallatin
from 2008 to 2012 and of
Westmoreland Elementary in
Westmoreland from 2003 to
2008.
Her resume also lists experience dating back to 1984, having either taught or served as an
assistant principal on the elementary, middle and high
school levels in Alabama, South
Carolina and Tennessee.
Heath has been Lawrence
County’s director of schools
since 2007, according to his
resume.
Before taking on his current
job, he was a principal/headmaster with the Catholic
Diocese of Biloxi, Miss., school
system from 2001 to 2007.
He was also a principal in
Tennessee’s McNairy County
school system from 1997 to
2001 and served as both a
teacher and an assistant principal in Florida’s Broward County
Schools from 1986 to 1997.
He has also served as an
adjunct instructor at Middle
Tennessee State University
since 2000.
Heath boasts a bachelor of
science in secondary education
from the University of Tennessee
at Knoxville, a master’s degree
in education from Nova
Southeastern University and a
doctor of education degree in
educational leadership from
Sarasota University.
Cash’s resume said she
Permits
From Page 1
approved in April. Other projects
included two triplex units on
Fulbright Road and a restroom
for
the
Cleveland/Bradley
County Greenway.
Commercial permits brought
$15,280 in fees to the city.
Most of the projects approved
in April were for additions or
alterations to existing buildings.
According to the Development
and Engineering report, there
were 11 projects representing
close to $268,000 in value and
bringing in $1,559 revenue in
fees. Projects included residential
renovations and repairs as well
as a deck and a detached garage.
Interior renovations for businesses were approved for Wild
Onions on Stuart Road,
Prebiotics on Westland Drive and
Lendmark on Frontage Road.
Wild Onions is a family owned
and operated restaurant serving
“upscale sandwiches,” soups and
salads.
Cheryl Prince, who is handling
marketing, said her son Jeremy,
who trained professionally in
Chicago, is the chef.
“It’s different, but delicious,”
Prince said.
The name Wild Onions came
from the wild onions that grow
near the restaurant’s sign. The
restaurant will also feature a wild
onion side dish.
“Everything is handcrafted and
homemade, but it’s not like
grandma’s cooking,” Prince said.
The building needed some
exterior repairs and interior
redesign to be ready to open.
Prince described the style as
“rustic chic” with cedar wood
walls.
Nine residential permits were
approved for duplexes and single-family homes.
This was a decrease from 18
permits in March.
The April residential projects
represent $1.6 million in project
value and generated $6,584 in
fees for the city.
There were five land disturbance permits approved in April.
These permits generated $395 in
fee revenue.
earned a bachelor’s in health
and physical education from
Lander University, a master’s
degree in supervision and
administration from Tennessee
State University and a doctor of
education degree in leadership
and professional practice from
Trevecca Nazarene University.
The board had hired Wayne
Qualls of TEAMS Inc. to serve as
a consultant and facilitator in
the director search process.
Rather than narrowing down
the candidates through a series
of meetings and school visits as
some school systems have done,
Bradley County’s board chose to
narrow it down to two before any
public interviews were slated to
take place.
Lillios said Qualls had presented individual board members with candidates he had
found and asked the board
members to each have one-onone talks with candidates to see
whether or not they would
remain in the running.
It was done that way — oneon-one — to avoid violating open
meetings laws, Lillios said. He
added it also allowed Qualls to
recruit candidates who might be
interested in the director position, but might not want their
current employers to know.
That, the board chairman
added, allowed the board to
wind up with candidates “at a
higher level” in terms of their
experience and the titles they
have been able to hold.
“A lot of times, the people you
want are already employed,”
Lillios said.
While the final two candidates
come from other Tennessee
counties, he said three people
employed with Bradley County
Schools expressed interest in
becoming the director.
The search for a director
began following the board’s contract buyout of former director
Johnny McDaniel, who had originally been slated to continue in
the position until June 30,
2016.
The board bought out his contract in late February, after he
and the board both cited “differing opinions regarding how Mr.
McDaniel’s
administration
should operate the Bradley
County Schools.”
A provision in his contract for
unilateral termination without
cause meant the board would
have to continue to pay him a
monthly salary of $9,857, based
on an annual amount of
$118,285, and benefits through
the 2016 date or until he finds
“comparable employment” elsewhere.
The board is still paying his
salary, and it may soon be paying the salaries of two contracted directors of schools at the
same time — McDaniel and the
new director.
The board chose to omit the
buyout provision from the contract that will be offered to the
new director.
Instead, the board on May 11
voted on a new version of the
contract that includes a clause
that would allow the board to
demote the director.
The draft of the contract says
the board would be able to
“transfer” a director “to any
position within the system.”
Though he or she would still be
receiving the same salary and
benefits if demoted, the director
would be fired if he or she
refused to accept the transfer.
Things like the new director’s
salary and how long his or her
contract will be are still up in
the air, as the board plans to
negotiate those things with
whomever it selects.
Though McDaniel’s contract
was for four years, the board
has discussed the possibility of
making it a shorter duration.
“I would like to see the board
go with a three-year contract,”
2nd District board member Vicki
Beaty said.
Along with the potential for a
shorter contract duration, the
contract draft dictates the new
director may be required to conduct an annual strategic planning process in addition to being
evaluated by the board annually.
The board will be interviewing
the new director candidates on
Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. in the
board room of Bradley County
Schools’ central office off South
Lee Highway.
People do read
small ads.
You are reading
one now.
Call The Banner
472-5041
An ArchitecturAl rendering shows the proposed layout for the Preserve at Hardwick apartments.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—13
Head Start
From Page 1
are also less likely to be retained
in a grade and less likely to need
special services.”
“In addition,” Anderson continued, “these children are more
likely to be employed, be healthier physically, have higher
incomes and less likely to be on
welfare.”
Early Head Start and Head
Start provide so much more than
education. They build a strong
foundation on which a successful
life is built.
Early Head Start and Head
Start provide free physical, dental and eye exams as well as follow-up treatment as needed. It is
believed that if a child is not
healthy all the way around,
he/she cannot learn. So proper
health screenings and care are a
must early in the enrollment
process.
Children are also fed breakfast
and lunch each day along with
snacks to provide good nutrition,
another vital component to
learning.
Early Head Start provides prenatal services to pregnant
women and children up to 3
years old. Head Start provides
services to children 3 and 4 years
of age. Family Resource Agency
also provides Pre-K services,
which are state funded to children who are 4 and 5 years old.
“In short,” Anderson said, “We
build GREAT children.”
Family Resource Agency is
currently enrolling children for
the 2015-16 school year.
For more information, call
479-9339 or stop by the administrative office at 3680 Michigan
Ave. N.E. in Cleveland.
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — Two of
the most heavily used day-hiking
routes in Yellowstone and Grand
Teton national parks in northwest
Wyoming are closed for the time
being because of weather damage
and maintenance.
In Yellowstone, the iconic Brink
of the Lower Falls trail is closed in
the Grand Canyon of the
Yellowstone because of a mud and
rock slide that deposited a 7-by-8foot boulder on the route, effectively blocking the path.
In Grand Teton, the trail beyond
Hidden Falls to Inspiration Point
is closed and being rerouted so
crews can replace bridges over
Cascade Creek and rebuild the
rocky ledge trails and steps that
lead up to the popular Jenny Lake
overlook.
Work can’t begin to remove the
enormous rock on the Brink of the
Lower Falls trail in Yellowstone
because of wet weather,
Yellowstone spokeswoman Traci
Weaver said Thursday.
“It’s closed until further notice,”
she said, “until we get a drying
trend and are able to get in there
childRen FRom the Blythe Mayfield II Head Start/Pre-K class made rose pictures in honor of the and deal with it.”
Because of the trail’s location in
50th anniversary of Head Start.
the Yellowstone River canyon,
dynamiting the boulder would be
unsafe, Weaver told the Jackson
Hole News & Guide.
The Brink of the Lower Falls
trail, which leads hikers to a perch
right above the 308-foot waterfall,
may end up being rerouted, she
said.
The trail work on the west shore
Family ResouRce Agency board members and staff planted roses outside the administrative office
on Michigan Avenue on May 18 to mark the 50 years of the Head Start bill turning into law. From left are
Joe Adams, fiscal director; Alex Sandoval, board secretary/treasurer; Kelly Browand, board member,
Sherronda Thompson, Tennessee Head Start/Early Head Start/Pre-K director; Paula Bacon, Georgia
Head Start/Early Head Start/Pre-K director; David Carroll, board president; Art Rhodes, board member;
Shane Griffith, board president-elect; and James Anderson, chief executive officer.
childRen FRom the Blythe mayField iii Head Start/Pre-K class planted rose bushes outside
the Blythe Family Support Center to commemorate 50 years of Head Start.
Marker
From Page 1
Tennessee
Civil
War
Preservation Association; and
Sam Elliott, immediate past
chairman of the Tennessee
Historical Commission.
A local Boy Scout troop will
present the colors.
McCoy, when speaking with
the Banner this week, said he
was visiting Iceland at the time
of the call.
McCoy said during the Civil
War year 1863-64, military
forces of both sides were not the
only threat to local residents.
There were “lawless” individuals
in the area at the time.
The roadside historical marker, titled “Civil War ‘No Man’s
Land’” mentions the actions of
McCoy’s
great-great-greatgrandfather, Bradley County
pioneer settler Joseph Lusk II.
Lusk, who was 74 at the time,
defended his home and family
against a group who were
attempting to steal his few
remaining horses. The horses
were very important to the family and its ability to raise crops.
The sons were attached to the
Union Army.
Lusk was a well-known veteran who fought in the War of
1812.
He was an uncompromising
Union man, fearless in defense
of his political convictions and
property rights, and an excellent
rifleman. His courage and steadfastness had withstood numerous tests during the course of
hostilities in Bradley County.
Early in the war, the
of Jenny Lake in Grand Teton is
more of a long-term situation, and
the half-mile stretch leading up to
Inspiration Point will be closed for
“most of the hiking season,” according to the National Park Service.
Destinations up Cascade
Canyon are also affected.
County. She died in Bradley
County in 1858.
Lusk and his family moved
into the Red Hill Valley of
Bradley County, approximately
11 miles south of Cleveland. He
spent the remainder of his life
there. He died in 1873 and is
buried with his wife and father,
Joseph Lusk I, in the family plot
on the old homestead.
Lusk’s Union sympathies were
probably inherited from his
father, who came to Bradley
County to live with his son late
in life. The father was a
Revolutionary War hero.
Joseph Lusk I was an ordinance sergeant for Capt. John
Sevier. According to old military
records, he enrolled at Sycamore
Shoals on the Watauga River, in
North Carolina, under Lt.
George Hart.
The elder Lusk was promoted
to captain, marched against
Maj. Patrick Ferguson in 1780,
and fought in the decisive battle
of King’s Mountain.
After the war, he moved to
Western North Carolina, and
settled
near
present-day
Asheville, where his sons were
born. He and his wife are
believed to have had at least
three sons. All are buried on the
old Bradley County homestead.
Prior to moving in with his son
in South Bradley County, he
lived in McMinn County for
about 12 years. The elder Lusk
died on Aug. 15, 1839, about
two decades before the start of
the American Civil War.
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Confederate authorities of the
county issued orders to all
Union men to surrender their
firearms. A squad was sent to
Lusk’s home to take his guns,
but he showed so determined a
front they left rather hurriedly
without accomplishing their
errand.
When a band of guerrillas
raided his farm for the purpose
of taking his few remaining
horses, he killed one and put the
others to flight. They left the
horses and their dead companion.
This placed him in a dangerous position, as his opponents
were still in possession of the
surrounding country. A few
nights later a large party burned
his house and made a determined effort to find and kill him.
Shortly afterward, Union
forces moved in and he and his
family were protected.
During the War of 1812, Lusk
fought with the Tennessee
Militia, under the command of
Capt. John Hawkins, the namesake of Tennessee’s Hawkins
County.
Lusk was born on the old
Lusk homestead near the present site of Asheville, N.C., May
27, 1790, and lived there until
he was a young man.
He then came ito East
Tennessee, and on Oct. 28,
1812, he married Rebekah Igou.
She was the daughter of James
Igou, a pioneer resident of
Sullivan County. Her family later
moved to Pikeville in Bledsoe
©2014
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14—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
INTERNATIONAL BRIEFS Islamic State militants in Palmyra’s museum
Myanmar president signs off on
contested population law
YANGON, Myanmar (AP) —
Myanmar’s president has signed
off on a law requiring some mothers to space their children three
years apart despite objections by
a visiting senior U.S. diplomat
and rights activists, who worry it
could be used not only to repress
women, but also religious and
ethnic minorities.
The Population Control Health
Care Bill — drafted under pressure from hard-line Buddhist
monks with a staunchly antiMuslim agenda — was passed by
parliamentarians last month.
U.S. Deputy Secretary of State
Anthony Blinken said he warned
Myanmar leaders during face-toface talks last week about the
dangers of the bill. On Saturday,
hours after the diplomat left,
state-run media announced
President Thein Sein had signed
it into law.
As predominantly Buddhist
Myanmar started moving from
dictatorship to democracy four
years ago, newfound freedoms of
expression lifted the lid on deepseeded hatred for minority
Muslims — including Rohingya
Muslims now arriving on
Southeast Asian shores in crowded, rickety boats.
Many are fleeing persecution
and violence that has left up to
280 people dead and forced
another 140,000 from their
homes in western Rakhine state.
They are living under apartheidlike conditions in dusty, crowded
camps, with little access to education or adequate medical care.
They also have little freedom of
movement, having to pay hefty
bribes if they want to pass police
barricades, even for emergencies.
‘Bold’ Ireland votes to legalize
gay marriage in landslide
DUBLIN (AP) — Ireland’s citizens have voted in a landslide to
legalize gay marriage, electoral
officials announced Saturday —
a stunningly lopsided result that
illustrates what Catholic leaders
and rights activists alike called a
“social revolution.”
Friday’s referendum saw 62.1
percent of Irish voters say “yes”
to changing the nation’s constitution to define marriage as a
union between two people
regardless of their sex. Outside
Dublin Castle, watching the
results announcement in its cobblestoned courtyard, thousands
of gay rights activists cheered,
hugged and cried at the news.
“With today’s vote, we have disclosed who we are: a generous,
compassionate, bold and joyful
people,” Prime Minister Enda
Kenny proclaimed as he welcomed
the outcome. Beside him, Deputy
Prime Minister Joan Burton
declared the victory “a magical
moving moment, when the world’s
beating heart is in Ireland.”
Ireland is the first country to
approve gay marriage in a popular national vote. Nineteen other
countries, including most U.S.
states, have legalized the practice
through their legislatures and
courts.
The unexpectedly strong percentage of approval surprised
both sides. More than 1.2 million
Irish voters backed the “yes” side
to less than 750,000 voting “no.”
Only one of Ireland’s 43 constituencies recorded a narrow
“no” majority, Roscommon-South
Leitrim in the boggy midlands.
Analysts credited the “yes” side
with adeptly employing social
media to mobilize young, firsttime voters, tens of thousands of
whom voted for the first time
Friday. The “yes” campaign also
featured moving personal stories
from prominent Irish people —
either coming out as gays or
describing their hopes for gay
children — that helped convince
wavering voters to back equal
marriage rights.
Many questions in Mexico
cartel battle that killed 43
ECUANDUREO, Mexico (AP) —
The call for backup went out to
local police after 8 a.m. There
was a shootout underway at a
ranch in the western reaches of
Michoacan state and the federal
authorities needed help.
One patrolman said he sped
with his colleagues from a town
20 minutes away and arrived at
the scene Friday to see bullets flying and military and police helicopters hovering overhead in
what would become the deadliest
confrontation with suspected cartel members in recent memory.
“It looked like a battlefield,” the
officer said Saturday, insisting
that on anonymity like everyone
at the scene.
The bloodshed at the ranch left
42 suspected criminals dead.
One federal police officer died
while trying to aid a wounded
comrade, government officials
said.
Investigators and human
rights officials continued to work
Saturday at the scene, where
patrol cars of many agencies
could be seen parked, and police
guarded all entrances to the
property, even dirt paths lead
onto the 112-hectare (277-acre)
property known as Rancho de
Sol.
Photographs from the site
showed the bodies of men without shirts and some without
shoes strewn over the ranch, in
an area near the Michoacan border with Jalisco state that is a
stronghold of the Jalisco New
Generation cartel, one of the
most powerful and fastest-growing organized crime groups to
surface in recent years.
The bodies, some appearing to
lie with semi-automatic rifles, lay
in fields, next to farm equipment
and on a blood-stained patio
strewn with clothes, mattresses
and sleeping bags. Video of the
battle obtained by The Associated
Press showed federal police officers coming under fire.
Nigerian troops kill extremists
as militants slay villagers
YOLA, Nigeria (AP) — Nigerian
troops killed scores of Islamic
extremists and rescued 20
women and children from captivity even as reports came in
Saturday of Boko Haram fighters
slitting villagers’ throats and
chopping them to death.
That bolsters reports the
insurgents are running out of
ammunition and resorting to hitand-run assaults in the face of a
Nigerian offensive against their
last stronghold, a northeastern
forest.
“Despite continuous encounters with large numbers of land
mines which still litter the
Sambisa Forest, troops have
forged ahead with the ongoing
offensive operations as scores of
the terrorists died in the assault
on their bases on Friday,” said a
statement from Defense Ministry
spokesman Maj. Gen. Chris
Olukolade on Saturday night.
Four Boko Haram camps were
destroyed in the assault in which
one government soldier was
killed and 10 wounded by land
mines, he said. Many insurgent
weapons, including armored
cars, were destroyed.
Islamic State group radio claims
Saudi mosque suicide attack
CAIRO (AP) — The Islamic
State group claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing at a
Shiite mosque in Saudi Arabia,
warning that more “black days”
loom ahead in a direct challenge
to the rulers of the Sunni kingdom.
Friday’s attack was the kingdom’s deadliest militant assault
since a 2004 al-Qaida attack on
foreign worker compounds,
which sparked a massive Saudi
security
force
crackdown.
However, this Islamic State
attack in the village of al-Qudeeh
in the eastern Qatif region targeted Shiites, whom ultraconservatives in Saudi Arabia regularly
denounce as heretics.
The statement on the Islamic
State group’s al-Bayan radio station, read aloud Friday night and
posted Saturday morning to militant websites associated with the
extremists, identified the suicide
bomber as a Saudi citizen with
the nom de guerre Abu Amer alNajdi. The station also identified
the attack as being carried out by
a new Islamic State branch in
“Najd Province,” referring to the
historic region of the central
Arabian Peninsula home to the
Saudi capital, Riyadh.
The mosque attack killed at
least 21 people and wounded 81,
the official Saudi Press Agency
reported.
Joyful Burundi refugees leave
disease-stricken camp
LAKE TANGANYIKA, Tanzania
(AP) — Hundreds of women, many
with children strapped on their
backs alongside their few belongings, sing melodious tunes
expressing their joy as their small
boats approach the ferry M.V.
Liemba.
“We are thanking God for leaving Burundi. Now we are in
Tanzania we are safe,” the
women sing in Kirundi,
Burundi’s official language, after
they boarded the ferry.
They are among a group of
about 600 Burundi refugees evacuated by the U.N. refugee agency
Saturday from a makeshift
refugee camp at the fishing village
of Kagunga, Tanzania.
The small town has hosted
thousands of refugees crossing
over from Burundi and now has
been hit by a cholera outbreak.
The refugees are being taken to
Kigoma where they will be bused
further inland to Nyarugusu, a
camp with better facilities, said
Celine Schmitt, a spokeswoman
for the U.N refugee agency.
DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) —
Islamic State fighters broke into
the museum of Palmyra, though
a Syrian official said its artifacts
have been removed and are safe
while the U.S.-led coalition conducted airstrikes on the group’s
installations near the captured
ancient town — the first such
reported attack in the central
province of Homs.
The Department of Defense
said in a statement that U.S.-led
coalition aircraft had attacked an
IS position near Palmyra, which
goes by the modern name
Tadmur, destroying six anti-aircraft artillery systems and an
artillery piece.
The Islamic State group captured Palmyra on Wednesday,
raising concerns around the
world they would destroy priceless, 2,000-year-old temples,
tombs and colonnades located in
the town’s south.
The strikes would appear to
help the embattled forces of
forces of President Bashar Assad,
which have had a succession of
recent defeats to IS group and
other rebels. But experts and
archeologists said the airstrike,
coming days after the group
overwhelmed the city, was too little too late.
“It is like closing the doors
after the horses have bolted,”
said Amr Al-Azm, a former
Syrian antiquities official and
currently a professor at Shawnee
State University in Ohio.
A picture circulated on Twitter
accounts of Islamic State supporters showed the black flag
used by the extremists raised
over the town’s hilltop Islamicera castle, a structure hundreds
of years old. Al-Azm said the fact
that the castle dates back to an
Islamic civilization may protect it
from the kind of destruction IS
members have inflicted on preIslamic heritage sites such as the
ancient cities of Hatra and
Ninevah in Iraq.
The group says the ancient
relics promote idolatry, but, it
also maintains a lucrative business by excavating and selling
such artifacts on the black market, according to antiquities
authorities.
One activist in the city of
Palmyra, who goes by the name
of Khaled al-Homsi because of
security concerns, told The
Associated Press that the militants smashed a statue in the
museum’s foyer — a replica that
depicts ancient residents of
Palmyra.
Maamoun Abdulkarim, the
head of the Antiquities and
Museums
Department
in
Damascus, told the AP that militants entered the museum in the
town’s center Friday afternoon,
locked the doors and left behind
their own guards. He said that
the artifacts earlier had been
moved away to safety.
“We feel proud as all the museum’s contents were taken to safe
areas,” he told reporters. But
Abdulkarim warned that the
Islamic State group’s control of
the town remains a danger to its
archaeological sites.
Al-Azm said he doubts the
museum was totally emptied
because larger pieces would be
hard to move. He said the museum also contained at least two
mummies, and carvings from the
nearby tombs, mostly dating to
the 1st, 2nd and early 3rd century
Al-Azm said he fears that the
“real looting” will take place at
the site itself, adding that the
group will take its time to recruit
local antiquities experts to help
in running the illicit trade. But
he worried that the Temple of
Bel, the majestic structure in the
heart of this desert oasis, will
ultimately be destroyed.
“It is the poster child of an IS
cultural heritage atrocity,” he
said, saying the temple in later
years was used as a church and
has walls covered in frescos.
Al-Azm said the only way to
save the ancient site is by driving
the Islamic State group out of the
town.
So far, the IS militants have
been primarily concerned with
consolidating their control over
the city, conducting house-tohouse searches for government
soldiers and pro-government
militiamen and, in some cases,
publicly killing those that they
find, according to activists and
government officials. They have
also restored electricity partially
to the town, and urged government employees to return to
work.
On Saturday, commercial
trucks were allowed to travel to
the city of Raqqa in northern
Syria, the self-declared capital of
the IS group, and they returned
to Palmyra with fresh produce for
the city that has been besieged
by the fighting since May 13, alHomsi said. The group offered
the truck drivers free fuel, he
said.
The Defense Department
statement didn’t specify where
the strikes took place. Activists
said they heard of no airstrikes
in the immediate vicinity of the
town, but that the battles
between IS fighters and government forces have continued in a
mountainous area containing oil
fields northwest of the town.
Aymenn
al-Tamimi,
a
researcher of Islamic militant
groups, said the coalition
airstrikes technically represents
an intervention on behalf of
Assad’s regime to expel the
group, adding that similar
strikes in the northern province
of Deir al-Zour, where IS is
advancing on a major regime military base, can be also perceived
as such.
Salvadorans rejoice as slain archbishop beatified
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP) — Archbishop Oscar Romero
was beatified by Roman Catholic
officials Saturday in an emotional ceremony elevating the oncecontroversial cleric to the ranks
of the blessed 35 years after his
assassination.
Underneath a rainbow halo
ringing the sun, Cardinal Angelo
Amato, the prefect of the
Vatican’s saint-making office,
called on the crowd of some
260,000-plus to rejoice in a
“feast of peace, fraternity and
forgiveness.”
“Romero’s spirit remains alive
and gives comfort to the marginalized people of the world,”
Cardinal Amato said. “His preference for the poor was not ideological, but evangelical. His charity
extended to his persecutors.”
Beatification is the first step
toward possible canonization,
although many of those who
packed the Salvadoran capital’s
Savior of the World Plaza and the
surrounding streets already
credit Romero with miracles and
refer to him as “Saint Romero of
the Americas.
Worshippers from across the
nation, many of them bused in
from the countryside, held up
poster-size images of Romero
and carried white and yellow
flags of the Vatican.
“They can kill the prophet, but
not the voice of justice,” intoned
pilgrims from the Our Lady of the
Assumption parish in a San
Salvador suburb.
“His words will remain for eternity,” said Marlene Sanchez, 26.
In life, Romero was loved by
the poor, whom he defended passionately, and loathed by conservatives who considered him too
close to left-leaning movements
in the tumultuous years ahead of
El Salvador’s 1980-92 civil war.
The archbishop was shot
through the heart by a sniper
while celebrating Mass in a cancer hospital chapel on March 24,
1980. The day before, he had
delivered a strongly worded
admonition to the U.S.-backed
military to stop abusing civilians.
Those words were read aloud
Saturday: “I beg you, I beseech
you, I order you, in the name of
God, cease the repression.”
The trigger man has never
been identified, and no one has
been prosecuted for the killing.
Alleged paramilitary death squad
leader Roberto d’Aubuisson, who
was named by a U.N. truth commission after the war’s end as
the mastermind of the assassination, died in 1992 having maintained his innocence to the end.
Romero’s beatification was
held up for years by church politics until then-Pope Benedict XVI
“unblocked” the case in late
2012, after it was determined he
had not been an adherent of revolutionary liberation theology as
many claimed. Earlier this year,
Pope Francis declared that
Romero was martyred out of
hatred of his faith, clearing the
way for beatification.
Although Romero still has critics in El Salvador and the
church, Saturday’s ceremony
constitutes official approval of
his legacy. Representatives of the
conservative Arena political party
founded by d’Aubuisson were in
attendance, as was his son, an
Arena congressman also named
Roberto.
“The beatification ... is a cause
AP Photo
A solAr hAlo appears during the beatification ceremony for Roman Catholic Archbishop Oscar
Romero in San Salvador, El Salvador, Saturday. The solar halo is an optical phenomenon produced
when sunlight refracts through ice crystals in the atmosphere.
for great joy for Salvadorans and
for those of us who rejoice at the
example of the greatest children
of the church,” Francis said in a
statement. “Monsignor Romero,
who built peace from the
strength of love, gave testimony
of the faith with his life, committed to the very end.”
U.S. President Barack Obama,
who visited Romero’s tomb in
2011, called him “an inspiration
for people in El Salvador and
across the Americas.”
“He was a wise pastor and a
courageous man who persevered
in the face of opposition from
extremes on both sides,” Obama
said. “He fearlessly confronted
the evils he saw, guided by the
needs of his beloved pueblo, the
poor and oppressed people of El
Salvador.”
At the sun-kissed square in
west-central San Salvador, officials presented relics associated
with Romero including the shirt
he wore the day of his assassination. Many observers admired
the appearance of the solar halo,
an optical phenomenon produced when sunlight refracts
through ice crystals in the
atmosphere.
Officials closed off about 2
square miles (5 square kilometers) of streets nearby to accommodate the crush of pilgrims.
Among the crowd were many
young people who only learned
about Romero through the stories of their parents, grandparents and church officials.
“He influenced pastoral work
to put itself at the service of the
people,” said 24-year-old seminarian Carlos Zavala. “I’m
incredibly excited.”
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Woman found pushing dead
3-year-old son in swing
LA PLATA, Md. (AP) — A
woman was found in a Maryland
park pushing her dead toddler in
a swing, and authorities say she
may have been there all night.
Charles County Sheriff’s Office
said in a news release Friday that
police found the unidentified
woman in a park with her dead
3-year-old son in the town of La
Plata after receiving a call early
Friday morning. The release said
officers saw right away that the
toddler was dead, and that his
body showed no signs of trauma.
The sheriff’s office says the
child’s body was taken to a medical examiner for an autopsy and
the mother was taken to a hospital for a medical evaluation.
La Plata, a town of about 8,700
people, is located about 30 miles
southeast of Washington, D.C.
Fire on coastal Louisiana
oil platform extinguished
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A fire
that burned for more than a day
on an oil production platform off
Louisiana’s coast was extinguished early Saturday, the
Coast Guard said.
The fire was on a platform in
Breton Sound near environmentally delicate barrier islands off
the state’s southeast coast. It was
reported out around 6 a.m. after
firefighting crews boarded the
platform, Petty Officer Carlos
Vega said.
The fire had been reported at
2:50 a.m. Friday by an offshore
supply vessel that evacuated 28
workers.
No injuries were reported.
The Coast Guard reported that
a light sheen of oil near the site
appeared to be dissipating and
moving away from the Breton
National Wildlife Refuge on the
nearby barrier islands.
Vega said there were no
reports of oil reaching shore or
harming wildlife. Crews with
containment boom and skimmers remained on the scene
while cleanup and repair work
was underway. Authorities estimate that storage tanks on the
platform contain roughly 5,000
gallons of oil — well below the
platform’s storage capacity of
168,000 gallons.
Texas Petroleum Investment
Co., the owner and operator of
the platform, said Friday that a
compressor on the platform is
believed to have caught fire. The
cause was under investigation.
The platform, which was shut
down after the fire, is used to
gather some 90,000 gallons of oil
a day from a field of 50 to 60
wells in the area, David
Marguiles, spokesman for Texas
Petroleum Investment, said in a
Friday news release.
California governor pitches
amnesty on traffic debt for poor
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) —
Gov. Jerry Brown is proposing an
amnesty
program
for
Californians who can’t afford to
pay off spiraling traffic fines and
court penalties.
The push by the Democratic
governor spotlights growing concern among lawmakers and
court
administrators
that
California’s justice system is
profiting off minorities and lowincome residents.
Brown’s spokesman Evan
Westrup said the issue has
prompted discussions between
the state and U.S. Department of
Justice.
It’s not clear if the Justice
Department has launched an
inquiry into California’s court system. The department did not
return requests for comment, and
Westrup declined to provide details.
Advocates for the poor have
criticized California’s courts as a
pay-to-play system.
The state has suspended 4.8
million driver’s licenses since
2006 related to traffic fines. In
that same time, only 83,000
licenses have been reinstated.
California farmers agree to
drastically cut water use
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) —
California farmers who hold
some of the state’s strongest
water rights avoided the threat of
deep mandatory cuts when the
state accepted their proposal to
voluntarily reduce consumption
by 25 percent amid one of the
worst droughts on record.
Officials hope the deal agreed
upon on Friday will serve as a
model for more such agreements
with growers in the nation’s topproducing farm state, where agriculture accounts for 80 percent
of all water drawn from rivers,
streams and the ground.
“We’re in a drought unprecedented in our time. That’s calling
upon us to take unprecedented
action,” Felicia Marcus, chairwoman of the state Water
Resources Control Board, said in
announcing the agreement.
The rare concession from the
farmers is the latest indication of
the severity of the water shortage
in California, which is suffering
through its driest four years on
record.
California water law is built
around preserving the rights of
so-called senior rights holders —
farmers and others whose
acreage abuts rivers and streams,
or whose claims to water date
back a century or more, as far
back as Gold Rush days.
The offer potentially could
cover hundreds of farmers in the
delta of the Sacramento and San
Joaquin rivers, the heart of
California’s water system. About
25 percent of all California river
water runs through the delta,
according to the state’s
Department of Water Resources.
Some of the farmers made the
offer after state officials warned
they were days away from ordering the first cuts in more than 30
years to the senior water rights
holders’ allotments.
Missouri governor commute’s
man’s sentence for pot offenses
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) —
A Missouri man sentenced to life
without parole for marijuanarelated offenses is eligible for
parole Friday after Gov. Jay
Nixon commuted his sentence.
Nixon’s action means 62-yearold Jeff Mizanskey will be eligible
for parole immediately. Mizanskey
has served more than two decades
in prison after being sentenced
and convicted as a persistent drug
offender under a Missouri law
that’s since been changed.
His son, 37-year-old Chris
Mizanskey, said he was in awe at
the news and planned to go see
his father in the morning.
“It’s amazing,” Mizanskey said.
“To be able to talk to him, to be
able to sit here and have a conversation with him. To have my son
sit on his lap, for him to be a part
of his grandkid’s life, our lives, my
whole family. I mean really words
can’t even describe it.”
Jeff Mizanskey had two previous felony convictions for marijuana-related offenses when he
was sentenced in 1996 to life
without parole for a third felony
offense. At the time, the law
allowed a sentence of life without
parole for people with three
felony drug convictions and has
since been changed.
Police said Mizanskey conspired to sell 6 pounds of pot to a
dealer connected to Mexican
drug cartels. Nixon, a Democrat,
said in a statement that none of
the offenses were violent or
involved selling to children.
Mother pleads not guilty to
assaulting child on plane
HONOLULU (AP) — A mother
pleaded not guilty Friday to
charges that she physically and
verbally assaulted her 15-monthold daughter during an Alaska
Airlines flight from Anchorage,
Alaska, to Honolulu.
Samantha Leialoha Watanabe
allegedly cursed at the toddler,
smacked her in the back of the
head, pinched her and pulled out
bits of her hair during the May 3
flight. A passenger told the FBI
that Watanabe stuck a wad of
cash in the girl’s diaper, according to a criminal complaint filed
by the FBI.
Watanabe didn’t speak during
her arraignment Friday in federal
court in Honolulu. Her federal
public defender, Alexander
Silvert, declined to comment
after the hearing.
It’s not clear why Watanabe,
who lives in Hawaii, was traveling from Alaska.
A law enforcement officer who
was a passenger on the flight
said Watanabe cursed at the
child, telling her to shut up, the
court document said. He told the
FBI she hit the girl in the face
with a stuffed animal and
smacked her on the back of the
head so hard that the child’s
head snapped forward. The passenger “also observed Watanabe
pull bits of the child’s hair out
and pinch the child several times
while the child was crying,” the
document said.
It appeared that Watanabe was
under the influence of some type
of central nervous system stimulant, the passenger told the FBI.
As a condition of her release on
$10,000 bond, Watanabe must
enter a residential drug treatment program when space is
available, the judge said.
Naked man rescued after getting
stuck on Florida drawbridge
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP)
— Firefighters in Florida have
rescued a naked man trapped on
a raised drawbridge.
The South Florida Sun
Sentinel quoted witnesses as
saying the unidentified man was
walking across the Florida East
Coast Railway railroad bridge in
Fort Lauderdale on Friday morning when it began to rise, forcing
him to scamper to the top, about
100 feet up.
The man said he had been
swimming in the New River,
which flows under the bridge.
Officials from the Fort
Lauderdale
Fire
Rescue
Department said in a news
release that the height was too
much for their ladders, so two
rescue workers climbed the
remaining distance and secured
the man with a rope harness.
The bridge was then slowly lowered back down.
Police release surveillance video
in shooting investigation
OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) — Law
enforcement officials on Friday
released surveillance video from
a grocery store that is part of an
investigation of an officerinvolved shooting that wounded
two men who were suspected of
trying to steal beer.
The video released by the
Thurston County Sheriff’s Office
in Washington state shows two
young black men walking into a
store holding skateboards.
Olympia Police Department
spokeswoman Laura Wohl said in
an email that officials have confirmed “that the individuals in
the Safeway surveillance are the
two suspects who were shot.”
One is seen leaving with what
appears to be a case of beer.
When confronted by a store
employee, the man tosses it near
her and the case breaks, splattering liquid on the ground. The
man then runs away.
Olympia Officer Ryan Donald
was among those who responded
about 1 a.m. Thursday to a 911
call from the Safeway store,
which was released by Olympia
police on Friday. In that call, the
store worker says her hand was
hit when the case of beer was
thrown at her.
Donald reported he was being
assaulted with a skateboard
before the shooting that injured
Bryson Chaplin, 21, and Andre
Thompson, 24. Police, who originally identified the two as stepbrothers, said Friday they are
half brothers.
At a news conference
Thursday, Olympia Police Chief
Ronnie Roberts said that while
the suspects are black and the
officer is white, “There’s no indication to me that race was a factor in this case at all.”
Missouri suspect in killing
of woman, teen son is dead
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A
man accused of holding his former girlfriend captive in a crate
at their home in western
Missouri then fatally shooting
her and her teenage son, was
shot and killed Saturday,
authorities said.
Law enforcement officers killed
James Barton Horn Jr., 47, at a
state wildlife area in western
Missouri, south of Knob Noster,
Henry County Sheriff Kent
Oberkrom said.
Authorities have been searching for Horn since late April when
he was charged in the kidnapping of 46-year-old Sandra Kay
Sutton. Prosecutors said Sutton
told police that Horn kept her in
a wooden crate off-and-on for
four months at their home in
Sedalia, some 90 miles southeast
of Kansas City, Missouri.
Sutton and her 17-year-old
son, Zachary Wade Sutton, were
found dead Thursday at a relative’s home in Clinton, about 45
miles from Sedalia, where she
had moved after escaping the
home she had shared with Horn.
Oberkrom said officers found
Horn hiding in a closet in an
abandoned building at the J. N.
Turkey Kearn Memorial Wildlife
Area, about 70 miles southeast of
Kansas City. He said officers
were led to the area by a tip they
received Saturday morning.
When officers told him to surrender, Horn threatened the officers with a handgun, said Sgt.
Bill Lowe, spokesman for the
Missouri State Highway Patrol.
Lowe said it was unclear if Horn
fired his weapon.
Lowe said the investigation will
focus on matching the weapons
Horn had with him with evidence
taken from the scene of the
Suttons’ murders.
Horn’s death was a relief for
the community, Oberkrom said.
“A lot of folks are very scared of
this individual,” he said. “There’s
a huge amount of relief.
Police say Horn, a former
Marine, locked Sutton inside the
box whenever he was leaving the
house. The box — 100 inches
long, 48 inches wide and 52
inches tall — was kept in a bedroom and contained a bucket full
of urine and feces along, with
several layers of insulation,
padding and sleeping bags, and a
small air hole.
Sutton escaped April 30 and
ran to the home of a neighbor
who called police. Horn was gone
by the time police arrived.
Police on Friday announced a
$5,000 reward for information
leading to Horn’s arrest.
Horn served about three years
in prison in Tennessee in the
early 1990s in connection with a
kidnapping and sexual attack.
Records also show he pleaded
guilty in 1997 in Mississippi to
unlawfully kidnapping and
abducting his estranged wife. He
was sentenced in that case to 12
years and 11 months in prison,
plus five years supervised
release.
Federal prosecutors sought to
extend Horn’s prison sentence by
having him certified as a “sexually dangerous” person.
Navy says pilot safely ejected
when plane went off runway
SAN DIEGO (AP) — A Navy
pilot safely ejected into San Diego
Bay on Friday when a training jet
went off the end of a runway after
landing at Naval Air Station
North Island.
Boaters rescued the pilot from
the bay that separates the Navy
base in Coronado from downtown San Diego, the Navy said.
The pilot was taken by helicopter to University of California,
San Diego, Medical Center for
evaluation and was released.
The pilot was training for aircraft-landing qualifications in a
T-45C Goshawk when the crash
occurred. Lt. Reagan Lauritzen, a
Navy spokeswoman, said there
was no one else aboard.
The downed aircraft could be
seen in the bay’s shallow water,
barely offshore from the base.
The Navy was working to lift the
jet out of the water.
The cause was under investigation.
The T-45C Goshawk is a tandem-seat jet used to train Navy
and Marine Corps pilots. The
downed aircraft was assigned to
Training Squadron Nine, stationed in Meridian, Mississippi.
Officials: Probe faults truck
driver in fatal bus collision
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The
California Highway Patrol faulted
a semi-truck driver Friday for a
fiery head-on collision with a bus
that killed 10, but officials said
they still don’t know why his big
rig veered across an interstate
median and into oncoming traffic, killing five high school students on their way to visit a college and a couple who had just
gotten engaged.
The underlying cause of the
crash is the FedEx semi-truck
driver, Tim Evans, 32, “allowing
his vehicle to travel across the
median in an unsafe turning
movement,” Sgt. Nathan Parsons
said. “He could have fell asleep,
he could have had an undiagnosed medical condition. We’re
unable to prove either.”
The April 10, 2014, collision
occurred in Orland, about 100
miles north of Sacramento. The
dead were five high school students from the Los Angeles area,
three chaperones, and the drivers of the FedEx tractor-trailer
and the bus. The bus was full of
prospective Humboldt State
University students heading for a
campus visit, and two of the
chaperones had been planning
their wedding.
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015— 17
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Sports Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
[email protected]
NCCAA World Series runner-up again
Flames can’t ignite in final
CSCC photo
FULLY RECOVERED from a back injury, former Walker Valley
standout Caleb Longley had a great season for Cleveland State
Community College this spring and has accepted an offer to play for
East Tennessee State University.
Longley bounces
back; ETSU bound
By JOE CANNON
Banner Assistant Sports Editor
After an injury during his senior football season affected his
baseball future, a former Walker
Valley standout has bounced
back and is getting an opportunity to continue his diamond career
on the next level.
“After I hurt my back in football, I didn’t let it heal properly
and rushed back for my senior
baseball season, and that affected
my draft stock,” explained Caleb
Longley, who had been told by
several pro scouts he would be
taken in the 2013 Major League
Baseball First-Year Player Draft.
“Not getting selected (in the draft)
hurt, but it made me more determined to work hard and come
back strong.”
He’s done just that.
After red-shirting his freshman
year at Cleveland State, the 6foot-2, 195-pounder was ranked
among the leading hitters in the
National Junior College Athletic
Association Region VII this past
season and drew the attention of
several four-year programs.
“I talked to Tennessee, MTSU
(Middle Tennessee) and Lee, but I
took a visit to East Tennessee
State Thursday and fell in love
with it,” explained Longley who
was tied for third in the Region
VII stats in both home runs (14)
and RBI (53). “When they put
together an offer that will fully
cover my going there, I immediately said yes.”
“I didn’t know much about
ETSU before I went up there
(Johnson City), but they have a
strong program with some great
facilities, and I really liked the
coaches,” stated Longley, who
has three years of collegiate eligibility remaining. “They came
down to several of our games and
ended up signing Jimmy
Strickland (a former Tennessee
Vol who came to CSCC to play
this past season) as well.”
A Tennessee Baseball Coaches
Association Super Sophomore at
Walker Valley, Longley finished
his high school career with 105
hits, including 29 doubles, eight
home runs and 75 runs driven in.
Despite being hampered by his
back injury, Longley’s senior
numbers included a .379 batting
average, a .461 on base percentage and a .558 slugging percentage with eight doubles and a trio
of homers in his 36 hits. He also
had a .667 batting average with
runners in scoring position that
season.
See LONGLEY, Page 25
From Lee Sports Information
MASON, Ohio - The Lee
University fans waited and waited for the big hit that had ignited the Flames in five other wins
during the 2015 NCCAA World
Series.
The hit never came and neither did the big inning in the 62 loss to Fresno Pacific in
Saturday afternoon's championship battle at Prasco Park.
It marked the second straight
year that the Sunbirds defeated
the Flames in the NCCAA final.
Lee wraps up the 2015 season
with a 39-19-1 record. In its
final 19 games, the Flames posted an impressive 15-4 record.
After winning its pool, Lee
earned its shot at the national
crown with a convincing 6-1 victory over Palm Beach (Fla.)
Atlantic in Friday evening’s
semifinal round.
Fresno Pacific, another university headed for full compliance in the NCAA Division II
ranks next year, closed out the
season at 39-18-1.
Also a pool winner, the
Sunbirds earned the right to
face the Flames for the title by
scoring an exciting 4-3, 12inning victory over Oklahoma
Christian in Friday’s Final Four
round.
Unlike in the other five Series
wins earlier in the long week,
the Flames could never get their
engine running Saturday.
Siosi Poti, the only Flame
named to the all-tournament
team, singled to open the game
but was quickly erased when
Chris Adams drilled a line drive
at the Fresno third baseman. He
made a fine play and turned
right around to double off Poti
at first.
The Sunbirds jumped out to
the early lead. In the second
inning Preston Scott doubled off
the center-field wall and scored
on a single by Michael Hostetler.
The margin grew to 3-0 in the
third when Steven Lozier ripped
a two-run homer over the leftfield fence.
Lee cut the margin to 3-1 in
the fourth inning on a solo
homer by Ben Holland. The
Flames threatened to do even
more damage in the same frame
and had two men on base when
Andres Nelo's sinking line drive
Lee University photo
LEE UNIVERSITY'S Luke Toms, right, waits for the throw to second base as a Fresno Pacific player
dives into the bag during the NCCAA World Series championship game Saturday afternoon in Mason,
Ohio. Once again, the Flames had to settle for the runner-up trophy, as the Sunbirds defeated them in
the title game for the second straight year.
was snared by Sunbird left fielder Scott.
The California club salted a
victory away in the fifth when
they sent seven men to the plate
and scored three more runs,
building the margin to 6-1. The
big blow of the inning came on a
double by Hostetler and a RBI
single by Michael Tittle. Lee
pitching shut down Fresno for
the remaining three innings,
but the damage had already
been done.
The Flames scored their only
other run in the sixth. Luke
See FLAMES, Page 26
Blue Raider runners earn spot on Spring Fling podium
By SARALYN NORKUS
Banner Sports Writer
MURFREESBORO — TJ
Parker is no stranger to the grand
stage that is the TSSAA Spring
Fling track and field championships, especially after being a
part of Cleveland’s second place
4x100 meter relay team in 2014.
Parker can add two more trips
to the podium to his track and
field resume, a fifth-place medal
as this year’s 4x100 relay team
finished fifth and a seventh-place
medal for 300-meter hurdles.
“TJ is such a class act and has
been so much fun. For him to get
on the awards stand and, I suspect, break a school record in the
300 hurdles was just awesome,”
Cleveland coach Casey Price
commented.
Coming into his final event of
the boys’ track and field championships Friday evening, Parker
had one thing on his mind.
“I was just thinking that this
was the last race I would run as a
Cleveland Blue Raider. I wanted
to make sure that I left knowing
that I did some successful. I also
wanted to be up on that podium
more so for the younger guys, so
that they could see that it’s possible,” Parker explained.
The Raiders’ 4x100 team of
senior classmates Parker and
Stephen Cannon, as well as
freshmen Romeo Wykle and
Keegan Jones, were able to burn
up the track and run their best
race of the season with a time of
43.47. That time proved enough
to earn the team a fifth-place finish.
“We ran a really good race; in
fact, that is the best race we’ve
ran,”
Parker
declared.
“Obviously, we didn’t have the
Banner photo, SARALYN NORKUS
CLEVELAND SENIOR TJ Parker (right) hands off the baton to freshman Romeo Wykle during the 4x100 meter relay at the TSSAA Spring
Fling championships Friday in Murfreesboro.
same team as last year with
Keegan and Romeo coming in as
freshmen. They are very strong
and very fast though. I’m excited
to see what they can do next year
as leaders on the team.”
According to the rankings leading up to the state meet,
Cleveland’s 4x100 team was
ranked 12th. Those rankings
proved worthless once the starting gun went off.
“There were so many people, in
so many heats, that came out of
the ‘slow heat’ that made it onto
the award stand. In that 4x100,
the team ran awesome, but we
were behind Beech, and I
thought we were getting hammered. Then I heard their time
and Beech ended up finishing
third. Our two freshmen and two
seniors was a pretty good combination,” Price explained.
Youth may be the biggest story
coming out of Spring Fling, as
Cleveland saw a number of freshmen post impressive performances in Murfreesboro.
“Benjedi (Casseus) ran a personal best in the 110 hurdles. He
ran a 15.97, which is great for a
freshman,” Price stated. “Romeo
and Keegan also got fully indoctrinated.”
For Parker, it is reassuring to
know that the Raiders will be in
left in the rising sophomores’
capable hands.
“They know what it feels like
and understand what it feels like
to be at state. Now they have the
chance to take some of the
younger guys under their wing
like Stephen (Cannon), Eric
(Goodwin) and I have. They’ve got
a very good eighth-grade class
coming up. Cleveland will be very
young, but they are going to do
some very good things in many
sports,” Parker declared.
Earlier in the day, Jones finished 12th in the long jump with
a jump of 20 feet, 2.25 inches.
Casseus finished 14th in the 110
meter hurdles
Senior Isaiah Beaty just
missed out on a medal in the
high jump, finishing ninth after
clearing 6 feet. Beaty also came
in 13th in discus, with a throw of
121 feet, 1 inch.
Coming into the state meet,
Cannon was ranked eighth in the
100-meter dash. A rough start
proved costly for the senior
though, as he finished 11th with
a time of 11.12.
“He had a terrible start coming
off the blocks. I knew right there,
especially at the state meet, that
two-tenths of a second can cost
you,” Price explained.
The Raiders’ 4x400 team of
Goodwin, Luke Stone, Cannon
and Jones closed out the night
with a time of 3:39.41, which
gave them a 16th place finish.
“Overall, it went pretty well,
and we did about what I expected,” the Cleveland coach commented.
Bradley Central sophomore Ty
Beavers was able to improve his
high jump performance when it
mattered. At the sectional,
Beavers cleared 5 feet, 8 inches,
while at the Spring Fling, he
improved to a height of 5 feet, 10
inches. That improvement
earned Beavers a 13th-place finish.
Bryce Nunnelly represented
Walker Valley in the 400-meter
dash. The sophomore improved
from his qualifying time of 52.64
and finished 16th with a time of
52.53 at the state meet.
18—Cleveland Daily Banner —Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
SEC agenda includes
transfers, satellite camps
Photo By Andrew Bruckse/Tennessee Athletics
THE TENNESSEE LADY VOLS celebrate after winning game three of the NCAA Super Regionals
between over No. 9 Florida State Seminoles at Sherri Parker Lee Stadium in Knoxville. The eighthranked Lady Vols will be making their fourth straight WCWS appearance.
Lady Vols punch ticket for WCWS
From UT Sports Information
KNOXVILLE — Eighth-ranked Tennessee punched
its ticket to the 2015 Women's College World Series
with a 2-1 victory over No. 9 Florida State on Friday
in Game 3 of the Knoxville Super Regional.
Tennessee will make its seventh appearance in the
Women's College World Series after previously making it to softball's grandest stage in 2005, 2006,
2007, 2010, 2012 and 2013. The Lady Vols have now
advanced in seven of their eight Super Regional
appearances and UT improves to 15-6 all-time in
Super Regional games.
The 2015 NCAA Women's College World Series will
be held at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium - OGE Energy
Field in Oklahoma City, May 28 to June 3. This is the
34th annual NCAA Division I Softball Championship
and the 25th time that Oklahoma City and ASA Hall
of Fame Stadium - OGE Energy Field will host this
premier college softball championship event.
Rainey Gaffin (17-3) dominated in the circle in
front of a packed house, fanning four over seven
strong innings with one run allowed. Gaffin outdueled Florida State ace and 2014 USA Softball
National Collegiate Player of the Year Lacey Waldrop
(28-7), who threw six frames with two runs allowed
and seven strikeouts.
Tennessee took a 1-0 lead in the first inning when
Megan Geer knocked an RBI double to right center
with one out. Geer sent a 1-1 pitch from FSU starter
Lacey Waldrop to the warning track, plating Gaffin
from second base.
The Lady Vols grew their lead to 2-0 in the bottom
of the fourth. With runners on first and second and
no outs, Shaliyah Geathers reached on a fielder's
choice and CJ McClain scored from third base after
FSU second baseman Ellie Cooper's throw home
sailed high.
The Seminoles got on the scoreboard in the top of
the fifth. With one out and a runner on third, Morgan
Klaevemann hit an RBI single to second base, plating
pinch hitter Victoria East from third base.
The seventh inning had everyone on the edge of
their seats. Gaffin struck out Victoria Daddis in an
eight-pitch at-bat. Then Gaffin sent Rylan Harvey
down swinging. Alex Kossoff kept the Seminoles alive
with a two-out single to second base but Gaffin shut
the door when induced a Morgan Klaevemann
groundout to second.
The Lady Vols bounced back from a 6-1 loss in
Game 2 earlier in the day. Friday's Game 3 win
marked the fourth time that Tennessee had bounced
back from a Game 2 loss with a Game 3 win to
advance to the Women's College World Series. UT
previously won Game 3 against Michigan in 2006,
against Hawai'i in 2006 and against Georgia in 2012.
Tennessee is making its fourth WCWS appearance
(2010, 2012, 2013, 2015) in the last six years and its
seventh in the last 11 years. All seven of UT's WCWS
berths have come under the direction of co-head
coaches Ralph Weekly and Karen Weekly.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — The
Southeastern Conference agenda
for spring meetings leans heavily
toward ensuring other leagues
don’t have any competitive advantage, either from satellite camps
or graduate transfers.
Coaches have grumbled about
outside competitors like Penn
State’s James Franklin and
Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh holding
football camps as guest coaches
in the SEC’s fertile recruiting territory.
It’s something the league
doesn’t allow its own coaches to
do elsewhere, though that’s subject to change if the SEC fails to
get the practice banned. Satellite
camps will be a hot topic when
the retiring Slive presides over his
final spring meetings next week in
Destin, Florida.
“We prefer our current legislation,” Commissioner Mike Slive
said Friday in an interview with
The Associated Press. “It gets
complex when that legislation is
not national legislation, so we
would like to see our rule become
national legislation. The real
question is if it doesn’t, what are
we going to do? That’ll be basically one of the primary subjects. I
don’t have an answer, but we
hope an answer will emerge out of
Destin.”
NCAA rules allow football programs to hold camps on their
campus, inside their state or
within a 50-mile radius of campus, but coaches can guest coach
at another school’s camp all the
way down to the high school level.
The SEC doesn’t want to concede a recruiting edge with a
practice also employed by Notre
Dame and Ohio State.
“We’ve tried to have a rule that
we think is sane and doesn’t
make it more intense than it
already is,” Slive said. “If the rest
of the country sees it differently,
we’re going to pay attention to
that.”
Also on the agenda will be the
SEC’s rule requiring schools to
seek waivers before accepting
graduate transfers for athletes
who have had significant off-thefield troubles.
It’s a subject that surfaced
when ex-Notre Dame quarterback
Everett Golson, who is from
South Carolina, was searching for
a new school. He considered several SEC schools before choosing
Florida State. The ACC has no
such restrictions.
“We had some general discussions with some of our institutions but we never had any formal
action taken by the league,” Slive
said of Golson’s recruitment.
Auburn athletic director Jay
Jacobs believes the policy on
graduate transfers needs to
change. He notes that no such
rule exists for undergraduates
with at least two years of eligibility
remaining, even when they’ve had
discipline problems.
“That doesn’t make any sense,”
Jacobs said. “It’s a double stan-
dard. We’re holding a group that
has proven that they can compete
academically at a high level (to a
higher standard) than a group
that we’re not sure about.”
Jacobs and Auburn will also
propose a rule counting statefunded scholarships against athletic totals for sports like baseball
and softball which typically have
to divvy up dollars to offer partial
scholarships.
“This is an unfair competitive
advantage,” Jacobs said.
Other topics Slive addressed
include:
—Paying full cost of attendance.
Alabama football coach Nick
Saban recently said that the
method could be “a nightmare”
where some schools manipulate
the numbers. Slive notes the
numbers are based on a federal
formula stemming from the Ed
O’Bannon lawsuit.
“We’re in an evolutionary period
and the end result is that everything isn’t necessarily going to be
the same for everybody,” Slive
said. “That’s a difficult concept for
them and it flies in the face of the
experience of our coaches and our
institutions for decades.
“The days of everything and
every rule being grounded in a
level playing field are gone.”
—His health after undergoing
treatment for prostate cancer as
well as back surgery.
See SEC, Page 25
Irving tests knee with brace
INDEPENDENCE, Ohio (AP) —
Kyrie Irving plopped down on a
courtside bench following a brisk
workout and two team trainers
quickly went to work adjusting
straps on his new knee brace.
The Cavaliers, completely in
command of the Eastern
Conference finals, may soon be
closer to full strength.
Irving made some cuts and
drives while wearing a brace on
his left knee Saturday and the
Cavs said the All-Star guard is
questionable for Sunday’s Game
3 against Atlanta. While Irving
remains iffy, he hasn’t been
ruled out and that’s an improvement after he sat out Friday
night as Cleveland took a 2-0
lead with a 94-82 win over the
hobbled Hawks.
Irving aggravated tendinitis
during Game 1, and after visiting
renowned surgeon Dr. James
Andrews on Friday in Florida,
the Cavs rested one of their
stars. Cavs coach David Blatt
said Irving’s status for Sunday
will be a medical decision and
won’t be affected by Cleveland’s
seeming stranglehold on the
series.
“If he’s able to play, then he’ll
play,” Blatt said. “He’s a big part
of the team, and this series is not
finished. But if he’s not able to
play, he won’t. That’s the determining factor.”
Meanwhile, the Hawks lost
starter Kyle Korver, their best
outside shooter, for the remainder of the postseason with a
severely sprained right ankle.
It’s another damaging blow to
the Hawks, the East’s top seed
who were soundly outclassed on
their home floor by LeBron
James and the Cavs. Not having
Korver makes things even
tougher.
“He’s a huge part of our leadership, our fabric, our fiber,”
coach Mike Budenholzer said
about Korver, injured while
scrambling for a loose ball in
Game 2.
Atlanta has already been
diminished by forward DeMarre
Carroll’s
sprained
knee.
Nicknamed the “Junkyard Dog,”
he was supposed to be the one to
keep James under control. But
through two games, the
Cleveland superstar has taken
the bite out of Carroll and dominated.
James came within one
rebound of a triple-double in
Game 2, when he once again
carried his team the way he has
throughout his career. With
Kevin Love out for the postseason following shoulder surgery
and Irving not himself, it’s fallen
on James to pick up the slack by
rebounding more, handling the
ball more, doing more of everything.
And, as is usually the case,
he’s delivered. James is averaging 30.5 points, 8.5 rebounds
and 8.5 assists in the series.
“There’s no doubt we have to
do a better job defending him,
both individually and as a team,”
Budenholzer said. “We’ve got to
do a better job taking away the
passing lanes, a better job arriving on the pass and a better job
contesting shots. That’s really
not any different than what it
was coming into the series. But
as you see it, experience it, feel
it, hopefully we’ll get better as
the series goes on.”
The Hawks are running out of
time, and history is not on their
side.
James has been up 2-0 in a
series 14 times and he has
closed out all 14.
Although the Cavs have the
Hawks on the ropes, James
knows
they’re
dangerous.
Cleveland’s two road wins have
See IRVING, Page 25
AP photo
SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE commissioner Mike Slive sits in his office during an interview
Friday in Birmingham, Ala. The Southeastern Conference agenda for its spring meetings leans heavily
toward ensuring other leagues don’t have any competitive advantages, whether it’s satellite camps or
rules restricting graduate transfers.
No decision yet on UAB football
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — UAB President Ray
Watts said he hasn’t made a decision on whether to
reinstate football, bowling and rifle.
Watts issued a statement Thursday saying that
he’s still talking with “various stakeholders within
the UAB community.” He said those meetings will
continue over the next week and he will make an
announcement by June 1.
UAB dropped the sports in December in a costcutting move. A study commissioned by the university indicates UAB would face an annual deficit of
about $3.2 million if those sports are brought back.
Alabama State Rep. Jack Williams said Thursday
UAB supporters have raised pledges of about $15
million if the football program is restored. A donor
was meeting with Watts to offer a $10 million guaranteed letter of credit toward a new stadium,
Williams said.
UAB’s National Alumni Society said in a statement
Thursday that it would contribute $500,000 over the
next five years if the sports are brought back. The
group said in a statement that the sports are “essential” to the university and cited a recent study commissioned by UAB.
“The report clearly shows that the programs are
feasible at a level that enables UAB to compete for CUSA championships and post season opportunities
with the current level of institutional support, combined with the public and private support that has
been and continues to be established by the Task
Force Fundraising Subcommittee,” the alumni association statement said. “Not only are the programs
financially viable with the combined institutional and
public/private support, they are vitally important to
current and prospective students, our faculty and
staff, and our community. Collectively, these sports
are financially supportable and they are essential.”
The Birmingham City Council has pledged $2.5
million over five years for UAB football if the program
is restored.
Wounded Hawks lose Korver for rest of playoffs
ATLANTA (AP) — Already facing a daunting task after losing
the first two games at home in
the Eastern Conference final, the
Atlanta Hawks were dealt another major blow Saturday when 3point specialist Kyle Korver was
ruled out for the rest of the playoffs because of a severely
sprained right ankle.
The guard was injured in
Game 2 while scrambling for a
loose ball. Cleveland’s Matthew
Dellavedova slammed into the
side of Korver’s ankle late in the
third quarter of the Cavaliers’
94-82 victory Friday night.
X-rays at Philips Arena were
negative, but a follow-up MRI
and examination at Peachtree
Orthopaedic Clinic confirmed a
severe high-ankle sprain. Korver
will be examined by a foot and
ankle specialist to determine the
best course of treatment, but
there’s no chance of him playing
again this postseason, the team
said.
“We will miss him,” Atlanta
coach Mike Budenholzer said.
“It’s very, very difficult for him
AP photo personally but more so for how
ATLANTA HAWKS guard Kyle Korver (26) walks off the court after much this team has done
being injured against the Cleveland Cavaliers during the second half together, how much he’s been a
in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference finals of the NBA playoffs, part of that. He’s a huge part of
our leadership, our fabric, our
Friday in Atlanta.
fiber.”
Budenholzer hasn’t decided
who will start Game 3 at
Cleveland on Sunday night. Kent
Bazemore seems the most likely
candidate, but he’s also the top
backup for small forward
DeMarre Carroll, who is dealing
with a sprained left knee. The
other guards on the roster are
little-used Shelvin Mack and
John Jenkins.
“Bazemore is obviously someone we’ll consider, who has the
potential to start,” the coach
said. “DeMarre and Bazemore
have played together. We usually
sub Baze in for Kyle early in the
first quarter, so they’ve played
together a fair amount. They’ll
play together more now, whether
Kent starts the game or not.”
The 34-year-old Korver was
selected for his first All-Star
Game this season and for much
of the year appeared on course
to become the first player in NBA
history to hit 90 percent of his
free throws, 50 percent of his
field goals and 50 percent of his
3-pointers.
But Korver slumped late in the
season, missing out in all three
categories. He continued to
struggle in the playoffs as
defenses clamped down, denying
him from many open looks.
Admittedly pressing to get off
shots, he was hitting just 39 percent from the field and averaging
11.1 points.
The Hawks already were dealing with Carroll’s ailing knee. He
was injured in the closing minutes of the series opener and had
to be helped off the court. While
he was able to start Game 2 (and
play more minutes than any
other Hawks player), he clearly
seemed to be favoring the knee
as he scored only six points.
Budenholzer said Carroll was
“still a little sore” but should definitely be able to go in the next
game, a must-win for the Hawks
if they’re to have any realistic
chance of coming back in the
best-of-seven series. No NBA
team has ever overcome a 0-3
deficit in the playoffs.
“I expect him to play. I expect
him to be good,” the coach said
of Carroll. “I don’t know that he
has a big impact on how we
decide who starts and who doesn’t start (in Korver’s place). But
obviously, him being healthy and
being able to play is pretty
important because Kyle will not
be able to play.”
Atlanta won’t get much sympathy from the Cavaliers.
Kevin Love is out for the playoffs with a shoulder injury and
Kyrie Irving has lingering knee
problems. The point guard didn’t
play in Game 2, but the
Cavaliers still romped behind
LeBron James’ 30 points.
Cleveland hasn’t said if Irving
will be able to play Sunday.
Korver is the second key
Atlanta player to sustain a season-ending injury. Forward
Thabo Sefolosha was hurt during an arrest outside a New York
City nightclub with a week to go
in the regular season. Sefolosha
maintains he did nothing wrong
and blames police for causing
his injuries.
“Injuries are such a big part of
our league and a big part of the
playoffs,” Budenholzer said.
“Everybody has to deal with
them, and we’re not any different. Of course, we’d like to have
everyone healthy and be at full
speed. That’s the ideal. But you
can’t spend too much time or
frustration thinking about it or
concerned about it.
“We’ve got to get our minds
right, get our minds focused. The
guys who are healthy need to get
ready to compete, ready to get
after it, and go play a basketball
game.”
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner —Sunday, May 24, 2015—19
Peterson, Braves sink Brewers
ATLANTA (AP) — Jace
Peterson’s single to left field
drove in Alberto Callaspo from
third base, lifting the Atlanta
Braves to a 3-2 win over the
Milwaukee Brewers in 11 innings
on Saturday.
Peterson hit the first pitch
from Brandon Kintzler (0-1)
toward the gap in left-center
field. Left fielder Ryan Braun and
center fielder Carlo Gomez didn’t
bother to field the ball as
Callaspo scored and Braves players raced out of the dugout to
swarm Peterson near second
base.
With one out in the 11th,
Kintzler
walked
Callaspo.
Andrelton Simmons’ sharply hit
grounder hit third-base umpire
Chad Fairchild and bounced into
left field. Runners advanced to
second and third on pinch-hitter
Eric Young Jr.’s grounder to
Kintzler.
Luis Avilan (2-0) pitched the
last 1 1/3 innings for Atlanta,
including getting a double-play
with runners at first and third to
end the 10th.
Gomez led off the inning with a
double to center field off Nick
Masset. Gomez moved to third on
Masset’s wild pitch to Gerardo
Parra. Masset struck out Parra
before giving an intentional walk
to Ryan Braun. Avilan came on
and got Adam Lind’s double-play
AP photo/David Goldman grounder to first base.
ATLANTA BRAVES' Jace Peterson, right, celebrates after hitting the game-winning single to score
Atlanta’s Shelby Miller and
teammate Alberto Callaspo, left, in the 11th inning of Saturday’s game against the Milwaukee Brewers Milwaukee’s Mike Fiers each
allowed two runs and seven hits.
in Atlanta. The Braves won 3-2.
Miller lasted six innings. Fiers
pitched five innings.
The Braves scored two runs in
the fifth on doubles by Miller,
Cameron Maybin and Freddie
Freeman.
Gomez doubled to lead off the
game and scored on Braun’s single. The Brewers made it 2-0
after Martin Maldonado’s single
drove in Aramis Ramirez in the
fourth.
Milwaukee blew a scoring
chance in the ninth. Jason Grilli
gave a two-out walk to pinch-hitter Jason Rogers. Luis Sardinas
singled to right field but was
thrown out at first. Simmons
took the cutoff throw from
Markakis toward third base and
quickly threw to first base, where
Freeman applied the tag as
Sardinas slid back too late.
Milwaukee left-hander Will
Smith allowed one hit in 1 2/3
innings in his first appearance
since being ejected for having a
foreign substance on his arm in
Thursday’s 10-1 loss to the
Braves. Smith, appealing his
eight-game suspension imposed
by Major League Baseball, struck
out the side in the eighth.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Brewers: Manager Craig
Counsel said RHP Wily Peralta,
who left Friday night’s win after
four innings due to tightness in
his left side, should make his
next scheduled start on
Wednesday against the Giants.
Counsel said the move was precautionary. ... Ramirez remained
Hamels, Phillies rough up Strasburg, snap Nats streak
WASHINGTON (AP) — Cole
Hamels said he wasn’t thinking
about a shutout as he kept
throwing zeroes against the
streaking Washington Nationals
on Saturday.
Hamels pitched eight sharp
innings, Ryan Howard homered
and the Philadelphia Phillies
roughed up Stephen Strasburg,
beating Washington 8-1 and ending the Nationals’ six-game winning streak.
“It’s a dangerous team, so
that’s the least of my worries,”
said Hamels, who had a shutout
going until giving up Ian
Desmond’s RBI double in the
eighth. “They can put up a run,
or runs, within seconds.”
Hamels (5-3) won his fourth
straight start, and has a 1.53
ERA during that stretch. He gave
up one run and five hits, striking
out five and walking one.
“Cole was just in control,”
manager Ryne Sandberg said.
“Very good attacking the zone.
Real good fastball. Mixed his
pitches well.”
Hamels hadn’t won four consecutive starts since a five-game
run in May 2012. He also
snapped his six-game winless
streak against the Nationals.
Strasburg (3-5) was chased
after 3 2/3 innings. He allowed
six runs and seven hits — over
his last three starts, he has been
tagged for 15 earned runs in 12
innings.
“Yeah,
it’s
frustrating,”
Strasburg said. “I’m not pitching
to my ability, but I’ve got to keep
grinding.”
Howard finished with three
hits and Maikel Franco had two
hits, including a homer, as
Philadelphia lost its second
straight.
Howard, who had an RBI double in the third inning, is now 10
for 26 (.385) with three homers
and five RBIs through six games
of Philadelphia’s 10-game trip.
“Just his the way he took the
at-bats, his approach, was the
vintage Ryan Howard I’ve grown
accustomed to seeing, especially
that home run that he hit,”
Hamels said.
Washington’s Bryce Harper
went 0 for 4 and slammed his bat
in disgust after striking out in
the ninth inning.
The Phillies got to Strasburg
for four runs in the third. A oneout double by Cesar Hernandez
put runners on second and third.
After Chase Utley’s grounder
scored Ben Revere, Howard lined
a double down the right-field
line, sending Hernandez home.
Strasburg quickly got ahead of
Franco, but the Phillies’ third
baseman hit an 0-2 fastball into
the right-center field seats, making it 4-0.
“They did a lot of damage with
two strikes,” manager Matt
Williams said. “He had a lot of
hitters at two strikes and
couldn’t put them away.”
Three Washington errors contributed to Strasburg’s exit in the
fourth when the Phillies added
two runs.
Howard homered to center off
reliever A.J. Cole to open the
fifth.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Nationals:
INF
Anthony
Rendon (oblique, left knee) took
full batting practice on the field
Fuld was credited with two
RBIs on his hit that was misplayed by center fielder Kevin
Kiermaier for the first error.
Catcher Rene Rivera got the second error after dropping
Kiermaier’s throw that allowed
the third run to score.
MARINERS 3, BLUE JAYS 2
TORONTO (AP) — Kyle Seager
homered, James Paxton earned
his first road win of the season
and Seattle beat Toronto.
Paxton (3-2) won his third
straight start, allowing two runs
and four hits in six innings. It
in the game after being hit by a
pitch on his left hand in the sixth.
Braves: LHP Alex Wood, who
was scratched due to a stomach
virus on Friday, worked out
before the game. Manager Fredi
Gonzalez said Wood may be
available in the bullpen on
Sunday “in case we get in one of
those crazy games.” Wood is
scheduled to start Wednesday at
the Los Angeles Dodgers. ... 3B
Chris Johnson (broken left hand)
may take batting practice with
the team at Turner Field on
Sunday as he prepares to begin a
rehab assignment with Triple-A
Gwinnett on Monday.
UP NEXT
Brewers: RHP Jimmy Nelson,
who snapped a four-game losing
streak with a win at Detroit on
Tuesday, will face the Braves for
the first time.
Braves: RHP Mile Foltynewicz
will make his fifth start, including his fourth at Turner Field,
where he is 2-1 despite a 6.46
ERA. He’ll face the Brewers for
the first time.
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AP photo
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES’ Ryan Howard hits a home run in the fifth inning against the Washington
Nationals in Saturday’s game at Nationals Park, in Washington. The Phillies snapped the Nationals’ sixgame winning streak with an 8-1 drubbing of Stephen Strasburg.
for the first time. Manager Matt
Williams said Rendon will play
simulated games in Viera,
Florida, beginning early next
week. ... Williams said OF Jayson
Werth (left wrist contusion) still
has swelling in the wrist and is
unable to swing a bat.
TANNER’S TIME
Washington RHP Tanner
Roark makes his first 2015 start
Monday in place of RHP Doug
Fister (forearm tightness), who’s
on the disabled list. Roark was
15-10 with a 2.85 ERA as a
starter in 2014, but has pitched
in relief this season. RHP Jordan
Zimmermann will start Tuesday
with an extra day of rest.
HEY, YOU MISSED ONE
Hernandez
lined
what
appeared to be an RBI double in
the sixth — scoring Revere from
first — but shortstop Desmond
threw back to first baseman
Ryan
Zimmerman
and
Hernandez was called out.
Hernandez had stumbled as he
approached first base and failed
to touch it. He did get credit for
an RBI.
UP NEXT
Phillies: RHP Aaron Harang (43, 1.82) hasn’t allowed an earned
run over 14 innings in his last
two starts. He’s 4-5 with a 3.16
ERA in 14 career starts against
Washington.
Nationals: RHP Gio Gonzalez
(3-2, 4.94) is coming off two nodecisions in which he’s allowed
11 earned runs in 10 innings.
He’s 6-5 with a 3.15 ERA in 13
starts against the Phillies.
ASTROS 3, TIGERS 2
DETROIT (AP) — Lance
McCullers got Ian Kinsler to
ground into a triple play in the
fifth inning, and the Houston
right-hander went on to earn his
first career victory Saturday,
leading the Astros over the
Detroit Tigers 3-2.
Detroit led 2-1 in the fifth and
had runners on first and second
when Kinsler hit a grounder to
third. Jonathan Villar stepped on
the bag and threw to second,
where Jose Altuve relayed the
ball to first.
It was Houston’s first triple
play since 2004, and the Astros
followed that up by scoring two
runs in the sixth to go ahead.
McCullers (1-0) allowed two
runs and six hits with six strikeouts over six innings in his second career start.
The Houston bullpen did not
allow a baserunner. Luke
Gregerson pitched the ninth for
his 11th save in 12 chances.
Kyle Lobstein (3-5) gave up
three runs in 5 2-3 innings.
INDIANS 2, REDS 1
CLEVELAND (AP) — After Reds
manager Bryan Price was ejected
before the first pitch, Corey
Kluber threw eight effective
innings and led Cleveland over
Cincinnati for its fifth straight
win.
The Reds lost their seasonhigh seventh in a row.
Price was tossed by umpire
Jim Reynolds after the exchange
of lineup cards. They got into a
lengthy argument that carried on
as the Indians took the field —
the dispute likely stemmed from
Friday night, when several Reds
were upset with plate umpire
Manny Gonzalez’s strike zone.
Kluber (2-5) worked around
constant trouble, but recorded
his third strong start in a row. He
allowed nine hits, struck out
seven and didn’t walk a batter.
Cody Allen pitched the ninth
for his ninth save.
Tony Cingrani (0-1) walked
Roberto Perez to start the eighth.
Following a force play, Jason
Kipnis lined a double to left-center that scored Michael Bourn.
RANGERS 15, YANKEES 4
NEW YORK (AP) — Shin-Soo
Choo hit a go-ahead single and a
three-run homer in a 10-run
third inning that chased CC
Sabathia from his shortest start
in six years, and Texas routed
reeling New York, which has lost
nine of its last 10 games.
Shoo and Prince Fielder each
had two hits in the third. Fielder
finished with three RBIs and hit
his third homer in a two games.
The Rangers, who rode a
seven-run third Friday to a 10-9
win, won their fourth straight
and sent the Yankees to their
fifth loss in a row.
Garrett Jones, a right fielder
and first baseman, relieved for
the Yankees. In the first pitching
appearance of his eight-season
big league career, he worked
around a walk and a hit batter to
get the final two outs of the
ninth.
Nick Martinez (4-0), who
pitched just 3 miles from Yankee
Stadium for Fordham, got the
win. Sabathia (2-6) allowed six
runs and seven hits in 2 1-3
innings.
PIRATES 8, METS 2
PITTSBURGH (AP) — A.J.
Burnett threw seven effective
innings to win his fourth straight
start and Pittsburgh handed New
York ace Matt Harvey the worst
loss of his career.
The anticipated showdown
between two of the top pitchers
in the National League never
materialized. Burnett (4-1)
allowed one run while striking
out a season-high 10 without a
walk.
Andrew McCutchen and Pedro
Alvarez homered and each drove
in two runs for the Pirates.
Harvey (5-2) lasted only four
innings, the shortest outing of
his career. He gave up a careerworst seven runs on six hits and
also threw two wild pitches,
matching the number he had all
of the 2013 season.
New York has dropped four of
its last five. Daniel Murphy had
two hits, and Ruben Tejada
homered for the Mets.
ATHELTICS 5, RAYS 0
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) —
Kendall Graveman gave up three
hits over six innings in his return
from the minors, Sam Fuld drove
in two runs and Oakland beat
Tampa Bay.
Graveman (2-2), recalled from
Triple-A Nashville to make the
start, struck out six and walked
two to help the A’s win for just
the third time in 17 games.
Oakland broke through for
four runs in the sixth. Xavier
Cedeno replaced Rays starter
Nathan Karns (3-2) with two outs
and gave up Eric Sogard’s RBI
single. After Mark Canha walked
to load the bases, three runs
scored on Fuld’s single that also
included two Tampa Bay errors.
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20—Cleveland Daily Banner —Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
SCOREBOARD
ON AIR
TV SportsWatch
Sunday, May 24
AUTO RACING
7:30 a.m.
NBC — Formula One, Grand Prix of Monaco
Noon
ABC — IndyCar, Indianapolis 500
6 p.m.
FOX — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Coca-Cola 600, at Concord,
N.C.
10 p.m.
ESPN2 — NHRA, Kansas Nationals, at Topeka (same-day
tape)
COLLEGE BASEBALL
1 p.m.
ESPN2 — Atlantic Coast Conference, championship, at
Durham, N.C.
FS1 — Big 12 Conference, championship, at Tulsa, Okla.
4:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — Southeastern Conference, championship, at
Hoover, Ala.
COLLEGE SOFTBALL
Noon
ESPN — NCAA, Division I playoffs, super regionals, Game 2,
Kentucky at Florida
3 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA, Division I playoffs, super regionals, Game 3,
Kentucky at Florida (if necessary)
5 p.m.
ESPN — NCAA, Division I playoffs, super regionals, Game 2,
Arizona at LSU
8 p.m.
ESPN2 — NCAA, Division I playoffs, super regionals, Game
3, Arizona at LSU (if necessary)
GOLF
7:30 a.m.
TGC — European PGA Tour, BMW PGA Championship, final
round, at Surrey, England
1 p.m.
TGC — PGA Tour, Crowne Plaza Invitational, final round, at
Fort Worth, Texas
2:30 p.m.
TGC — PGA of America, Senior PGA Championship, final
round, at French Lick, Ind.
3 p.m.
CBS — PGA Tour, Crowne Plaza Invitational, final round, at
Fort Worth, Texas
3:30 p.m.
NBC — PGA of America, Senior PGA Championship, final
round, at French Lick, Ind.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
2 p.m.
SPSO — Milwaukee at Atlanta
2 p.m.
MLB — Regional coverage, St. Louis at Kansas City or
Minnesota at Chicago White Sox
8 p.m.
ESPN — Texas at N.Y. Yankees
NBA
8:30 p.m.
TNT — Playoffs, conference finals, Game 3, Atlanta at
Cleveland
NHL
8 p.m.
NBCSN — Playoffs, conference finals, Game 5, Tampa Bay
at N.Y. Rangers
SOCCER
10 a.m.
BRAVO — Premier League, West Bromwich at Arsenal
CNBC — Premier League, Tottenham at Everton
E! — Premier League, Swansea City at Crystal Palace
ESQUIRE — Premier League, Burnley at Aston Villa
MSNBC — Premier League, Southampton at Manchester
City
NBC — Premier League, Manchester United at Hull City
NBCSN — Premier League, Sunderland at Chelsea
OXY — Premier League, Queens Park Rangers at Leicester
City
SYFY — Premier League, Liverpool at Stoke City
USA — Premier League, West Ham United at Newcastle
5 p.m.
FS1 — MLS, Philadelphia at New York
7 p.m.
FS1 — MLS, Orlando at San Jose
TENNIS
1 p.m.
NBC — French Open, first round, at Paris
5 a.m.
ESPN2 — French Open, first round, at Paris
BASKETBALL
NBA Playoff Glance
CONFERENCE FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Cleveland 2, Atlanta 0
Wednesday, May 20: Cleveland 97, Atlanta 89
Friday, May 22: Cleveland 94, Atlanta 82
Sunday, May 24: Atlanta at Cleveland, 8:30 p.m.
Tuesday, May 26: Atlanta at Cleveland, 8:30 p.m.
x-Thursday, May 28: Cleveland at Atlanta, 8:30 p.m.
x-Saturday, May 30: Atlanta at Cleveland, 8:30 p.m.
x-Monday, June 1: Cleveland at Atlanta, 8:30 p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Golden State 2, Houston 0
Tuesday, May 19: Golden State 110, Houston 106
Thursday, May 21: Golden State 99, Houston 98
Saturday, May 23: Golden State at Houston, after presstime
Monday, May 25: Golden State at Houston, 9 p.m.
x-Wednesday, May 27: Houston at Golden State, 9 p.m.
x-Friday, May 29: Golden State at Houston, 9 p.m.
x-Sunday, May 31: Houston at Golden State, 9 p.m.
BASEBALL
National League
East Division
W
L
Pct
GB
25
18
.581
—
24
20
.545
1½
21
21
.500
3½
19
26
.422
7
16
27
.372
9
Central Division
W
L
Pct
GB
St. Louis
27
15
.643
—
Chicago
23
18
.561
3½
Pittsburgh
20
22
.476
7
Cincinnati
18
24
.429
9
Milwaukee
16
28
.364
12
West Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Los Angeles
25
16
.610
—
San Francisco
24
18
.571
1½
Arizona
20
21
.488
5
San Diego
20
23
.465
6
Colorado
15
24
.385
9
Friday’s Games
Pittsburgh 4, N.Y. Mets 1
Washington 2, Philadelphia 1
Baltimore 8, Miami 5
Cleveland 7, Cincinnati 3
Milwaukee 11, Atlanta 0
San Francisco 11, Colorado 8
Kansas City 5, St. Louis 0
Arizona 5, Chicago Cubs 4, 13 innings
L.A. Dodgers 2, San Diego 1
Saturday’s Games
Pittsburgh 8, N.Y. Mets 2
Philadelphia 8, Washington 1
Cleveland 2, Cincinnati 1
Atlanta 3, Milwaukee 2, 11 innings
San Francisco at Colorado, 4:10 , 1st game
Baltimore at Miami, after presstime
St. Louis at Kansas City, after presstime
San Francisco at Colorado, after presstime, 2nd game
Chicago Cubs at Arizona, after presstime
San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, after presstime
Sunday’s Games
Baltimore (Mi.Gonzalez 5-2) at Miami (Koehler 2-3), 1:10
Cincinnati (R.Iglesias 1-0) at Cleveland (Bauer 3-1), 1:10
Milwaukee (Nelson 2-4) at Atlanta (Foltynewicz 2-1), 1:35
N.Y. Mets (Niese 3-4) at Pittsburgh (Liriano 1-4), 1:35
Philadelphia (Harang 4-3) at Washington (G.Gonzalez 3-2),
1:35
St. Louis (Wacha 6-0) at Kansas City (Ventura 3-3), 2:10
Chicago Cubs (Hammel 3-1) at Arizona (Hellickson 1-3), 4:10
San Diego (Shields 5-0) at L.A. Dodgers (Frias 3-1), 4:10
San Francisco (T.Hudson 2-3) at Colorado (Bettis 0-0), 4:10
Monday’s Games
Colorado at Cincinnati, 1:10
Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, 1:10
San Francisco at Milwaukee, 2:10
Washington at Chicago Cubs, 2:20
Arizona at St. Louis, 4:15
Miami at Pittsburgh, 7:05
Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, 8:10
San Diego at L.A. Angels, 9:05
Washington
New York
Atlanta
Philadelphia
Miami
NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERS
BATTING-DGordon, Miami, .386; AGonzalez, Los Angeles,
.347; Goldschmidt, Arizona, .331; Harper, Washington, .326;
LeMahieu, Colorado, .326; Pagan, San Francisco, .323;
MCarpenter, St. Louis, .322; YEscobar, Washington, .322.
RUNS-Harper, Washington, 38; Fowler, Chicago, 31;
Goldschmidt, Arizona, 31; Upton, San Diego, 30; MCarpenter,
St. Louis, 29; AGonzalez, Los Angeles, 29; Pollock, Arizona,
29; Simmons, Atlanta, 29.
RBI-Stanton, Miami, 40; Harper, Washington, 39;
Goldschmidt, Arizona, 35; Braun, Milwaukee, 33; AGonzalez,
Los Angeles, 32; Zimmerman, Washington, 31; Upton, San
Diego, 29.
HITS-DGordon, Miami, 66; AGonzalez, Los Angeles, 51;
Pagan, San Francisco, 51; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 50;
MCarpenter, St. Louis, 49; YEscobar, Washington, 49;
Hechavarria, Miami, 49; Inciarte, Arizona, 49.
DOUBLES-MCarpenter, St. Louis, 17; AGonzalez, Los
Angeles, 17; DeNorris, San Diego, 16; FFreeman, Atlanta, 15;
Tulowitzki, Colorado, 15; Duda, New York, 14; Desmond,
Washington, 13.
TRIPLES-Bourjos, St. Louis, 3; Fowler, Chicago, 3; Hamilton,
Cincinnati, 3; Pagan, San Francisco, 3; Realmuto, Miami, 3;
Revere, Philadelphia, 3; Trumbo, Arizona, 3.
HOME RUNS-Harper, Washington, 16; Frazier, Cincinnati,
12; Stanton, Miami, 12; Braun, Milwaukee, 11; Goldschmidt,
Arizona, 11; Pederson, Los Angeles, 11; Upton, San Diego,
11.
STOLEN BASES-Hamilton, Cincinnati, 17; DGordon, Miami,
16; Polanco, Pittsburgh, 12; Aoki, San Francisco, 10; Fowler,
Chicago, 10; Pollock, Arizona, 10; Revere, Philadelphia, 9;
Rizzo, Chicago, 9; Upton, San Diego, 9.
PITCHING-Wacha, St. Louis, 6-0; GCole, Pittsburgh, 6-2;
BColon, New York, 6-3; 8 tied at 5.
ERA-SMiller, Atlanta, 1.33; Burnett, Pittsburgh, 1.37; Greinke,
Los Angeles, 1.48; Scherzer, Washington, 1.67; Harang,
Philadelphia, 1.82; GCole, Pittsburgh, 2.05; Lincecum, San
Francisco, 2.08.
STRIKEOUTS-Shields, San Diego, 75; Kershaw, Los
Angeles, 73; Scherzer, Washington, 72; Hamels,
Philadelphia, 67; GCole, Pittsburgh, 63; Lynn, St. Louis, 62;
TRoss, San Diego, 62.
SAVES-Storen, Washington, 13; Rosenthal, St. Louis, 13;
Familia, New York, 13; Grilli, Atlanta, 12; Papelbon,
Philadelphia, 11; Casilla, San Francisco, 11; Kimbrel, San
Diego, 11.
American League
East Division
W
L
Pct
GB
24
20
.558
—
22
21
.512
2
19
20
.487
3
19
23
.452
4½
19
26
.422
6
Central Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Kansas City
27
14
.659
—
Detroit
26
18
.591
2½
Minnesota
24
18
.571
3½
Chicago
19
21
.475
7½
Cleveland
19
23
.452
8½
West Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Houston
28
16
.636
—
Los Angeles
22
20
.524
5
Seattle
20
22
.476
7
Texas
20
23
.465
7½
Oakland
15
30
.318
14
Friday’s Games
Texas 10, N.Y. Yankees 9
Seattle 4, Toronto 3
Detroit 6, Houston 2
Baltimore 8, Miami 5
Cleveland 7, Cincinnati 3
L.A. Angels 12, Boston 5
Tampa Bay 5, Oakland 2
Chicago White Sox 3, Minnesota 2
Kansas City 5, St. Louis 0
Saturday’s Games
Texas 15, N.Y. Yankees 4
Seattle 3, Toronto 2
Houston 3, Detroit 2
Cleveland 2, Cincinnati 1
Minnesota 4, Chicago White Sox 3
Oakland 5, Tampa Bay 0
Baltimore at Miami, after presstime
L.A. Angels at Boston, after presstime
St. Louis at Kansas City, after presstime
Sunday’s Games
Seattle (T.Walker 1-4) at Toronto (Aa.Sanchez 3-4), 1:07
Houston (R.Hernandez 2-3) at Detroit (An.Sanchez 3-5), 1:08
Baltimore (Mi.Gonzalez 5-2) at Miami (Koehler 2-3), 1:10
Cincinnati (R.Iglesias 1-0) at Cleveland (Bauer 3-1), 1:10
Oakland (Gray 4-2) at Tampa Bay (E.Ramirez 2-1), 1:10
L.A. Angels (Santiago 3-2) at Boston (Miley 3-4), 1:35
Minnesota (Gibson 3-3) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 2-4),
2:10
St. Louis (Wacha 6-0) at Kansas City (Ventura 3-3), 2:10
Texas (Gallardo 3-6) at N.Y. Yankees (Capuano 0-1), 8:05
Monday’s Games
Kansas City at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05
Houston at Baltimore, 1:35
Boston at Minnesota, 2:10
Detroit at Oakland, 4:05
Texas at Cleveland, 4:10
Chicago White Sox at Toronto, 7:07
Seattle at Tampa Bay, 7:10
San Diego at L.A. Angels, 9:05
Tampa Bay
New York
Baltimore
Boston
Toronto
AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS
BATTING-Paredes, Baltimore, .353; NCruz, Seattle, .352;
Fielder, Texas, .351; MiCabrera, Detroit, .342; Kipnis,
Cleveland, .341; Moustakas, Kansas City, .333; AJones,
Baltimore, .329.
RUNS-Trout, Los Angeles, 34; Donaldson, Toronto, 32;
Dozier, Minnesota, 32; Cain, Kansas City, 31; Kipnis,
Cleveland, 31; KMorales, Kansas City, 31; Bautista, Toronto,
29; NCruz, Seattle, 29; Ellsbury, New York, 29.
RBI-KMorales, Kansas City, 37; NCruz, Seattle, 34;
MiCabrera, Detroit, 31; Teixeira, New York, 31; Vogt, Oakland,
31; Encarnacion, Toronto, 30; Fielder, Texas, 30; Hosmer,
Kansas City, 30.
HITS-Fielder, Texas, 60; Kipnis, Cleveland, 59; NCruz,
Seattle, 57; MiCabrera, Detroit, 54; Altuve, Houston, 53;
Donaldson, Toronto, 52; Semien, Oakland, 52.
DOUBLES-Cespedes, Detroit, 15; KMorales, Kansas City, 15;
Brantley, Cleveland, 14; Beltran, New York, 12; Cano, Seattle,
12; Donaldson, Toronto, 12; Forsythe, Tampa Bay, 12.
TRIPLES-Orlando, Kansas City, 5; 10 tied at 3.
HOME RUNS-NCruz, Seattle, 17; Teixeira, New York, 13;
Encarnacion, Toronto, 11; Trout, Los Angeles, 11; MiCabrera,
Detroit, 10; HRamirez, Boston, 10; ARodriguez, New York, 10;
Valbuena, Houston, 10; Vogt, Oakland, 10.
STOLEN BASES-Altuve, Houston, 14; Ellsbury, New York,
14; Gardner, New York, 12; RDavis, Detroit, 11; DeShields,
Texas, 11; Springer, Houston, 10; Marisnick, Houston, 9.
PITCHING-FHernandez, Seattle, 7-1; Keuchel, Houston, 6-0;
Salazar, Cleveland, 5-1; MiGonzalez, Baltimore, 5-2; Simon,
Detroit, 5-2; Pineda, New York, 5-2; McHugh, Houston, 5-2;
Buehrle, Toronto, 5-4; Archer, Tampa Bay, 5-4; Carrasco,
Cleveland, 5-4.
ERA-Keuchel, Houston, 1.67; Gray, Oakland, 1.92;
NMartinez, Texas, 1.96; FHernandez, Seattle, 2.19; Santiago,
Los Angeles, 2.25; Archer, Tampa Bay, 2.40; Odorizzi, Tampa
Bay, 2.43.
STRIKEOUTS-Kluber, Cleveland, 83; Archer, Tampa Bay, 70;
FHernandez, Seattle, 63; Salazar, Cleveland, 60; Pineda,
New York, 59; Carrasco, Cleveland, 58; Buchholz, Boston, 58.
SAVES-Perkins, Minnesota, 16; Street, Los Angeles, 14;
AMiller, New York, 13; Boxberger, Tampa Bay, 13; Soria,
Detroit, 13; Rodney, Seattle, 12; Gregerson, Houston, 11.
GOLF
Crowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial Saturday
At Colonial Country Club
Fort Worth, Texas
Purse: $6.5 million
Yardage: 7,204; Par 70
Third Round
a-amateur
Kevin Na
64-66-69—199
Ian Poulter
65-67-68—200
Charley Hoffman
66-69-66—201
Chris Kirk
68-69-65—202
Brandt Snedeker
67-69-66—202
Rory Sabbatini
67-70-66—203
Kevin Kisner
67-69-67—203
George McNeill
65-69-69—203
Brian Harman
68-66-69—203
Adam Scott
72-66-66—204
Jordan Spieth
64-73-67—204
Jerry Kelly
67-70-67—204
Vijay Singh
69-66-69—204
Nick Taylor
68-68-68—204
Adam Hadwin
69-66-69—204
Boo Weekley
64-69-71—204
Tony Finau
67-72-66—205
Colt Knost
66-73-66—205
Graham DeLaet
70-68-67—205
Ben Martin
66-71-68—205
Shawn Stefani
67-69-69—205
Marc Leishman
66-69-70—205
Danny Lee
66-69-70—205
William McGirt
73-66-67—206
Zach Johnson
70-69-67—206
Fabian Gomez
70-69-67—206
Jason Bohn
69-69-68—206
Pat Perez
69-69-68—206
Kevin Streelman
71-69-66—206
Kevin Chappell
71-68-68—207
Daniel Summerhays
68-71-68—207
Scott Piercy
70-69-68—207
Robert Streb
71-68-68—207
Patrick Reed
70-69-68—207
Erik Compton
73-65-69—207
Russell Knox
71-67-69—207
Ryo Ishikawa
64-74-69—207
Scott Pinckney
70-70-67—207
Zac Blair
66-71-70—207
Jason Dufner
68-72-67—207
John Huh
70-68-70—208
Steve Flesch
71-69-68—208
Luke Guthrie
66-74-68—208
Bryce Molder
72-68-68—208
Jon Curran
68-72-68—208
Brendon Todd
70-67-71—208
a-Gunn Yang
67-70-71—208
Scott Langley
68-72-68—208
Steve Stricker
67-70-71—208
Scott Brown
70-71-67—208
Chesson Hadley
70-71-67—208
Geoff Ogilvy
69-70-70—209
Jim Herman
71-68-70—209
Hunter Mahan
67-71-71—209
Paul Casey
69-71-69—209
Cameron Tringale
68-70-71—209
Carlos Ortiz
70-70-69—209
Martin Laird
69-68-72—209
Billy Hurley III
70-70-69—209
Jhonattan Vegas
68-73-68—209
Martin Flores
72-69-68—209
Louis Oosthuizen
71-68-71—210
Jeff Overton
67-73-70—210
Brian Stuard
71-69-70—210
Jimmy Walker
72-66-72—210
Lucas Glover
70-71-69—210
David Hearn
66-75-69—210
Ben Crane
66-73-72—211
Whee Kim
72-68-71—211
Alex Prugh
72-69-70—211
Angel Cabrera
70-71-70—211
Andres Gonzales
68-73-70—211
David Lingmerth
71-70-70—211
-11
-10
-9
-8
-8
-7
-7
-7
-7
-6
-6
-6
-6
-6
-6
-6
-5
-5
-5
-5
-5
-5
-5
-4
-4
-4
-4
-4
-4
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
E
E
E
E
E
E
+1
+1
+1
+1
+1
+1
Champions Tour
Senior PGA Championship
Saturday
At French Lick Resort, The Pete Dye Course
French Lick, Ind.
Purse: $2.75 million
Yardage: 7,147; Par: 72
Third Round
Colin Montgomerie
72-69-70—211
Bernhard Langer
73-72-69—214
Scott Verplank
73-72-70—215
Esteban Toledo
74-68-73—215
Brian Henninger
74-67-74—215
Steve Jones
78-70-68—216
Sandy Lyle
75-71-70—216
Woody Austin
73-71-72—216
Ian Woosnam
76-73-68—217
Skip Kendall
74-72-71—217
Tom Pernice, Jr.
73-73-71—217
Paul Goydos
75-70-72—217
Jeff Maggert
76-73-69—218
Chien-Soon Lu
76-72-70—218
Jean Francois Remesy
72-72-74—218
Tom Lehman
73-67-78—218
Kevin Sutherland
75-74-70—219
Peter Senior
75-74-70—219
Olin Browne
79-69-71—219
Jerry Haas
73-74-72—219
Joe Durant
75-71-73—219
Joel Edwards
76-70-73—219
Massy Kuramoto
71-72-76—219
Jerry Smith
73-77-70—220
Kirk Triplett
76-74-70—220
Roger Chapman
79-70-71—220
Jesper Parnevik
78-71-71—220
Kiyoshi Murota
73-74-73—220
Jeff Sluman
74-73-73—220
Mark McNulty
77-74-70—221
Rocco Mediate
76-74-71—221
Michael Allen
76-72-73—221
-5
-2
-1
-1
-1
E
E
E
+1
+1
+1
+1
+2
+2
+2
+2
+3
+3
+3
+3
+3
+3
+3
+4
+4
+4
+4
+4
+4
+5
+5
+5
HOCKEY
NHL Playoff Glance
CONFERENCE FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Tampa Bay 2, N.Y. Rangers 2
Saturday, May 16: N.Y. Rangers 2, Tampa Bay 1
Monday, May 18: Tampa Bay 6, N.Y. Rangers 2
Wednesday, May 20: Tampa Bay 6, N.Y. Rangers 5, OT
Friday, May 22: N.Y. Rangers 5, Tampa Bay 1
Sunday, May 24: Tampa Bay at N.Y. Rangers 8 p.m.
Tuesday, May 26: N.Y. Rangers at Tampa Bay, 8 p.m.
x-Friday, May 29: Tampa Bay at N.Y. Rangers, 8 p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Anaheim 2, Chicago 1
Sunday, May 17: Anaheim 4, Chicago 1
Tuesday, May 19: Chicago 3, Anaheim 2, 3OT
Thursday, May 21: Anaheim 2, Chicago 1
Saturday, May 23: Anaheim at Chicago, after presstime
Monday, May 25: Chicago at Anaheim, 9 p.m.
x-Wednesday, May 27: Anaheim at Chicago, 8 p.m.
x-Saturday, May 30: Chicago at Anaheim 8 p.m.
INDY 500
Indy 500 Lineup
Sunday
At Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Indianapolis
Lap length: 2.5 miles
(Car number in parentheses)
1. (9) Scott Dixon, Chevrolet, 2:38.7579 (226.760 mph).
2. (1) Will Power, Chevrolet, 2:39.0458 (226.350).
3. (22) Simon Pagenaud, Chevrolet, 2:39.1900 (226.145).
4. (10) Tony Kanaan, Chevrolet, 2:39.6428 (225.503).
5. (3) Helio Castroneves, Chevrolet, 2:39.6439 (225.502).
6. (25) Justin Wilson, Honda, 2:39.8022 (225.279).
7. (11) Sebastien Bourdais, Chevrolet, 2:39.8626 (225.193).
8. (27) Marco Andretti, Honda, 2:39.8659 (225.189).
9. (21) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 2:39.8670 (225.187).
10. (6) JR Hildebrand, Chevrolet, 2:39.9297 (225.099).
11. (26) Carlos Munoz, Honda, 2:39.9703 (225.042).
12. (20) Ed Carpenter, Chevrolet, 2:40.0830 (224.883).
13. (32) Oriol Servia, Honda, 2:40.1585 (224.777).
14. (83) Charlie Kimball, Chevrolet, 2:40.1828 (224.743).
15. (2) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 2:40.2446 (224.657).
16. (28) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Honda, 2:40.3041 (224.573).
17. (15) Graham Rahal, Honda, 2:40.5064 (224.290).
18. (29) Simona de Silvestro, Honda, 2:40.8304 (223.838).
19. (7) James Jakes, Honda, 2:40.8651 (223.790).
20. (48) Alex Tagliani, Honda, 2:40.9140 (223.722).
21. (8) Sage Karam, Chevrolet, 2:41.0051 (223.595).
22. (43) Conor Daly, Honda, 2:41.0865 (223.482).
23. (24) Townsend Bell, Chevrolet, 2:41.1119 (223.447).
24. (14) Takuma Sato, Honda, 2:41.2718 (223.226).
25. (63) Pippa Mann, Honda, 2:41.3600 (223.104).
26. (98) Gabby Chaves, Honda, 2:41.4958 (222.916).
27. (17) Sebastian Saavedra, Chevrolet, 2:41.5086
(222.898).
28. (41) Jack Hawksworth, Honda, 2:40.9022 (223.738).
29. (4) Stefano Coletti, Chevrolet, 2:42.1617 (222.001).
30. (88) Bryan Clauson, Chevrolet, 2:42.6328 (221.358).
31. (5) a-Ryan Briscoe, Honda, 2:41.0602 (223.519).
32. (18) b-Tristan Vautier, Honda, 2:40.5473 (224.233).
33. (19) c-James Davison, Honda, 2:40.8960 (223.747).
a-substitute driver for James Hinchcliffe, who qualified car on
May 17.
b-replacement driver for Carlos Huertas, who qualified car on
May 17.
c-replacement driver for Tristan Vautier, who qualified car on
May 17.
NASCAR
NASCAR-Sprint Cup
Coca-Cola 600 Lineup
After Thursday qualifying; race Sunday
At Charlotte Motor Speedway
Concord, N.C.
Lap length: 1.5 miles
(Car number in parentheses)
1. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 194.252 mph.
2. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 192.836.
3. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 192.733.
4. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 192.226.
5. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 192.007.
6. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 191.884.
7. (55) David Ragan, Toyota, 191.625.
8. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 191.272.
9. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 191.266.
10. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 190.322.
11. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 189.833.
12. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 185.414.
13. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 191.727.
14. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 191.714.
15. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 191.686.
16. (21) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 191.666.
17. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 191.428.
18. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 191.354.
19. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 191.15.
20. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 190.954.
21. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 190.826.
22. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 190.597.
23. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 189.98.
24. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 183.711.
25. (95) Michael McDowell, Ford, 190.806.
26. (9) Sam Hornish Jr., Ford, 190.779.
27. (6) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 190.597.
28. (25) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 190.375.
29. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 190.181.
30. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 189.947.
31. (7) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 189.88.
32. (40) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 189.847.
33. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 189.673.
34. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 189.288.
35. (51) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 189.221.
36. (46) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 189.049.
37. (35) Cole Whitt, Ford, Owner Points.
38. (98) Josh Wise, Ford, Owner Points.
39. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, Owner Points.
40. (34) Brett Moffitt, Ford, Owner Points.
41. (23) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, Owner Points.
42. (83) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, Owner Points.
43. (33) Alex Kennedy, Chevrolet, Owner Points.
AP photo
TAMPA BAY Lightning goalie Ben Bishop, foreground, and defenseman Andrej Sustr (62), of the
Czech Republic, can’t stop a goal by New York Rangers left wing Rick Nash (61) during the third period
of Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals in the NHL Stanley Cup playoffs, Friday in Tampa, Fla. Nash
had two goals and an assist as the Rangers defeated the Lightning 5-1.
Bishop on spot after giving up 10 goals
NEW YORK (AP) — Take the spotlight off goaltender Henrik Lundqvist of the New York Rangers
in the Eastern Conference finals and put it on Ben
Bishop of the Tampa Bay Lightning.
If it sounds fickle, that’s the way it’s been for the
goaltenders in this series between two of the NHL’s
top-scoring teams.
Game 1 was tight checking. Two was a Lightning
blowout. Three was a shootout and the last one
Lundqvist stole for the Rangers with a 38-save performance in a 5-1 win that evened the series at 2all.
Lundqvist was special in Game 4 after giving up
12 goals in losing the previous two games.
Now the focus is on Bishop heading in Game 5 on
Sunday night at Madison Square Garden. The big
goaltender, who has a 10-2 career mark against the
Rangers, has given up 10 goals in the past two
games.
“I just don’t think you get here to this point in the
season and even into the playoffs without having a
goaltender, a guy that bails you out when you need
to be bailed out,” Lightning coach Jon Cooper said
Saturday. “Ben Bishop has bailed us out some
games. Have we bailed him out?
“Sure we have sometimes. But for the most part,
Bishop has been rock solid for us. Especially for a
kid that’s not played in an NHL playoff game before,
there is a brighter light on him, and all he’s done is
passed every test that gets sent his way. “
Like Rangers coach Alain Vigneault, Cooper had
no intention of switching goaltenders, calling the
suggestion “preposterous.”
Bishop didn’t play poorly in Game 4. The five
goals came on a breakaway by Rick Nash, a
rebound by Chris Kreider, a Keith Yandle shot that
went off a Lightning defender, and two power-play
goals, including Nash’s second on a rebound.
While not happy about giving up 10 goals in two
games, Bishop reacted much like Lundqvist after
his struggles. He planned to learn.
“You never want to give up 10 goals in two games,
but we did,” he said. “We’ll go back and look at it,
and adjust.”
NASCAR XFINITY
Hisense 300 Results
Saturday
At Charlotte Motor Speedway
Concord, N.C.
Lap length: 1.5 miles
(Start position in parentheses)
1. (1) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 200 laps, 150 rating, 0 points,
$70,854.
2. (4) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 200, 118, 0, $45,242.
3. (8) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 200, 113.5, 0, $35,150.
4. (15) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 200, 92.5, 40, $34,424.
5. (2) Darrell Wallace Jr., Ford, 200, 119.9, 40, $35,548.
6. (19) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 200, 96.4, 39, $29,090.
7. (9) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 200, 93.7, 37, $27,577.
8. (16) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 200, 99.6, 36, $27,640.
9. (11) Elliott Sadler, Ford, 200, 93, 35, $25,831.
10. (12) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 200, 85.5, 34, $25,997.
11. (14) Chris Buescher, Ford, 200, 82.3, 33, $24,514.
12. (10) Ryan Reed, Ford, 200, 80, 32, $23,983.
13. (24) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 200, 75.1, 31, $23,375.
14. (13) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 200, 100.2, 0, $16,895.
15. (7) Erik Jones, Toyota, 200, 92.3, 0, $23,170.
16. (18) Dakoda Armstrong, Ford, 200, 70.1, 28, $22,287.
17. (21) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 200, 67.6, 28, $22,060.
18. (17) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 199, 72.7, 26,
$21,832.
19. (6) Aric Almirola, Ford, 199, 74.5, 0, $15,806.
20. (3) Brian Scott, Chevrolet, 197, 88.1, 24, $22,255.
21. (25) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 196, 58.5, 23, $21,554.
22. (32) David Starr, Toyota, 196, 55.1, 22, $21,497.
23. (30) Blake Koch, Toyota, 196, 53.8, 21, $21,448.
24. (22) Ryan Sieg, Chevrolet, 195, 59.2, 20, $21,381.
25. (28) Chad Boat, Chevrolet, 194, 46.5, 0, $15,496.
26. (35) Jimmy Weller, Chevrolet, 193, 43.5, 18, $21,311.
27. (34) Kyle Fowler, Toyota, 192, 46.7, 0, $15,275.
28. (38) Peyton Sellers, Chevrolet, 192, 38, 16, $21,240.
29. (23) John Wes Townley, Chevrolet, 191, 56.3, 0, $21,194.
30. (36) Eric McClure, Toyota, 189, 33.8, 14, $21,449.
31. (20) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, engine, 187, 58.3, 13,
$21,113.
32. (39) Joey Gase, Chevrolet, 186, 29.7, 12, $21,067.
33. (5) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 183, 94.4, 0, $15,097.
34. (26) Cale Conley, Toyota, 146, 41.5, 10, $20,991.
35. (27) Harrison Rhodes, Chevrolet, transmission, 141, 46.9,
9, $20,957.
36. (37) Carl Long, Dodge, engine, 129, 32.1, 8, $19,499.
37. (33) B.J. McLeod, Chevrolet, fuel pump, 58, 28.3, 0,
$18,499.
38. (31) Jamie Dick, Chevrolet, accident, 45, 31.9, 6, $17,499.
39. (29) Timmy Hill, Toyota, electrical, 40, 34.7, 0, $10,499.
40. (40) Jeff Green, Toyota, vibration, 2, 29.2, 4, $9,499.
Race Statistics
Average Speed of Race Winner: 139.824 mph.
Time of Race: 2 hours, 8 minutes, 44 seconds.
Margin of Victory: 2.692 seconds.
Caution Flags: 3 for 22 laps.
Lead Changes: 9 among 7 drivers.
Lap Leaders: A.Dillon 1-98; D.Wallace Jr. 99; K.Kahne 100;
D.Suarez 101; L.Cassill 102-105; A.Dillon 106-111; K.Harvick
112-122; A.Dillon 123-166; D.Hamlin 167-185; A.Dillon 186200.
Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): A.Dillon, 4
times for 163 laps; D.Hamlin, 1 time for 19 laps; K.Harvick, 1
time for 11 laps; L.Cassill, 1 time for 4 laps; K.Kahne, 1 time
for 1 lap; D.Wallace Jr., 1 time for 1 lap; D.Suarez, 1 time for
1 lap.
Top 10 in Points: 1. C.Buescher, 368; 2. T.Dillon, 360; 3.
C.Elliott, 337; 4. D.Wallace Jr., 331; 5. B.Scott, 326; 6.
R.Smith, 320; 7. E.Sadler, 317; 8. R.Reed, 288; 9.
B.Gaughan, 283; 10. D.Suarez, 281.
TRANSACTIONS
Saturday’s Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Optioned RHP Tyler Wilson to
Norfolk (IL). Recalled RHP Oliver Drake from Norfolk.
BOSTON RED SOX — Optioned LHP Robbie Ross Jr. to
Pawtucket (IL). Recalled RHP Heath Hembree from
Pawtucket.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Placed OF Coco Crisp on the 15day DL, retroactive to May 20. Recalled RHP Kendall
Graveman from Nashville (PCL).
National League
COLORADO ROCKIES — Placed LHP Ken Roberts on the
15-day DL. Activated RHP Brooks Brown from the 15-day DL.
Added RHP David Hale to the active roster.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Placed C Yasmani Grandal on
the seven-day concussion DL. Recalled C Austin Barnes from
Oklahoma City (PCL).
MIAMI MARLINS — Placed RHPs Henderson Alvarez and
Mat Latos on the 15-day DL list, Latos retroactive to May 22.
Recalled RHP Andre Rienzo from New Orleans (PCL).
Selected the contract of RHP Vin Mazzaro from New Orleans.
SAN DIEGO PADRES — Claimed LHP Eury De La Rosa off
waivers from the L.A. Dodgers and optioned him to El Paso
(PCL). Transferred RHP Josh Johnson from the 15- to the 60day DL.
Despite the Rangers’ margin of victory, the
Lightning had the better of play at times, particularly in the second period. The game could easily
have been another shootout had Tampa Bay buried
its chances.
“Every game is a new game,” Rangers forward
Martin St. Louis said. “The stuff that might work in
Game 3 might not work in Game 4, and it comes
down to making good reads sometimes and look
sharper at other times in games. Depending on how
you’re reading the rush or reading the play, do you
pull back or do you jump in a lot?
“You really have to be aware of everything that’s
going on the ice and making the best move you
can.”
Not only did Lundqvist rebound in Game 4, the
Rangers also got big games from Nash and St.
Louis. A 42-goal scorer in the regular season, Nash
got his first two goals of the series on Friday and St.
Louis scored his first of the playoffs this season
after failing to convert several outstanding chances.
“It’s a struggle when you’re not scoring,” Nash
said Saturday. “I think it tests you mentally, it tests
you emotionally. But at the end of the day it’s not
about you, it’s about the team and anything you
can do to help the team win. If the team’s winning,
you’re obviously happy and smiling.”
The Rangers’ also have produced on the power
play, getting two extra-man goals in each of the past
three games. They are 6-for-13 during that span.
“I think we’ve just got to play better,” Lightning
defenseman Braydon Coburn said. “There are a lot
of aspects of the game that go into playing defense.
Obviously, our penalty kill, we’ve got to make sure
we shut them down and defensively we’ve got to
pick things up.”
NOTES: Six of the Rangers’ last 12 playoff series
have been tied 2-all, dating to the Eastern
Conference quarterfinals against Ottawa in 2012.
New York is 4-1 in those series. ...New York has
allowed two goals or fewer goals in 12 of 16 playoff
games this year. ...Lightning captain Steven
Stamkos has scored in three straight games and
five of his last six.
LOCAL NOTES
BASEBALL
BRADLEY BASEBALL SUMMER CAMP
Bradley Central will hold is annual summer baseball camp
June 1-3 at the McKenzie Baseball Complex. The daily sessions will run from 9 a.m. until noon. Registration will be held
at 8:30 a.m. on June 1. The camp is open to grades K-5. The
cost to attend in $60 per camper, with a family discount offered.
WALKER VALLEY BASEBALL CAMP
The Walker Valley baseball staff will hold their summer
camp at the Bradley County Industrial Park from 8 a.m. to 11
a.m. on June 1-4. The camp is open to ages 5-12 and all
campers will receive a free T-shirt. The cost to attend in $50
per camper. For more information contact Joe Shamblin at
364-6951 or Mike Turner at 595-2640.
CSCC SUMMER BASEBALL TOURNAMENTS
Cleveland State Community College will host a series of
summer baseball tournaments. Ages and dates are as follows:
14- and 13-under, June 20, 21 (enter by May 29). The cost for
this tournament is $475 and will be three games of pool play
and championship. For more information contact Jason Sewell
at Cleveland State Community College, (423) 614-8744 or visit
www.cscougars.com/information/camps.
CSCC CAMPS
Cleveland State Coach Mike Policastro will conduct the
following summer Baseball Camps: Youth Skills Camp, June
1-4 for ages 5 - 12. Camp hours are 9 a.m.-12 p.m. Campers
will participate in group instruction and participate in a game
each day. The cost is $80 and includes a camp T-shirt. Youth
Pitcher/Catcher Camp, June 8-10 from 9-11:30 a.m., and a
Youth Hitting Camp, June 22-24 from 9-11:30 a.m. Both camps
will be for ages 8-16. The camps will consist of advanced
instruction on the fundamentals of pitching, catching and hitting. The cost is $60 per session and includes a camp T-shirt.
There will be a $5 discount per camp registration if a participant registers for more than one of the camps. For registration
information, contact Mike Policastro at (423) 478-6219, or go
to:
http:
http://www.cscougars.com/sports/bsb/201415/CLEVELAND_STATE_2015_SUMMER_BASEBALL_CA
MP_SERIES_REGISTRATION_FORM.
LEE PROSPECT CAMP
Lee University be holding their 2015 Summer Prospect
Camp on June 22nd (Sessions 1 and 2) and June 23rd
(Session 3) at Olympic Field on the campus of Lee University.
The camp is open to all 2015 (unsigned seniors), 2016, 2017
and 2018 HS prospects.
Camp will be limited to 60 athletes in Session 1 and 2 and
80 athletes in Session 3. Session 1 is Monday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
with 8 a.m. registration. Session 2 is also Monday, from 4 p.m.
to 10 p.m. with 3 p.m. registration. Session 3 is Tuesday, 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. with 8 a.m. registration. Sessions are identical and
prospects should only sign up for one session.
Cost for each camper is $135 (work out at 1 position) or
$160 (work out at 2 positions). Video of your batting practice
and/or bullpen session can be recorded and e-mailed to you
for $25 per position. Coaches instructing at camp include former University of Tennessee assistant and current New York
Mets Special Assignment Scout Ash Lawson, and coaches
from MTSU, ETSU, University of Alabama-Birmingham,
Kennesaw State University and Lee University will be giving
hands-on coaching and game-instruction.
BASKETBALL
BEAR TRYOUTS
The Bradley Central boys basketball team will hold tryouts
for incoming freshmen interested in playing for the Bear program on May 28 at 6 p.m. at Jim Smiddy Arena.
CHS FRESHMAN TRYOUTS
The Cleveland Raiders and Lady Raiders will hold tryouts
for freshman boys basketball on May 26 at 10 a.m. and freshman girls on May 27 at 2:30 p.m. at the high school. To tryout,
you must have a physical and concussion form.
BEARETTES CAMP
The 2015 Bearettes Basketball Camp for ages 5-14 will
take place June 3-5 from 8:30 a.m.-12 p.m. at Jim Smiddy
Arena at BCHS. The camp will be instructed by Bearettes
coaches Jason Reuter, Katie Frazier, Amy Tinsley and the
Bearettes basketball team. The camp will focus on basketball
fundamentals. There will be camper awards and T-shirts for
each participant. The cost for the camp is $55 per person, $45
per person for campers attending two days. The gym will be
open for play each morning at 8:15 a.m. For more information,
contact Coach Reuter at 284-2135.
LADY RAIDER BASKETBALL CAMP
Cleveland will host their 2015 summer basketball camp for first
through eighth grade girls on June 1-3 from 8:30 a.m.-noon at
Cleveland Middle School. The camp will be instructed by Lady
Raiders coaches Mindy Kiser, Jamie Baird, Kari Jo Harris and
CMS coach Amy McGowan. Participants will receive individualized instruction and a camp T-shirt and certificate of completion. The cost for the camp is $50 and pre-registration is
encouraged. For more information contact Mindy Kiser at
[email protected].
MUSTANG BASKETBALL CAMP
The Walker Valley Mustang Summer Basketball Camp will be
held June 1-4 with daily sessions running from 9 a.m. until
noon. The cost is $50 per camper with a $10 sibling discount
available. Individaul and team competitions will be under the
direction of Walker Valley coaches and players. Improve your
ball handling, shooting, defense and overall level of play. For
more information contact coaches Will Campbell at 310-8411,
Dine Peterson at 458-0098 or Bob Williams at 829-6443.
BLUE RAIDER BASKETBALL CAMP
Cleveland’s summer basketball camp for boys ages 6-15
will be held on June 8-10 from 9 a.m.-noon at Cleveland
Middle School. The camp will focus on both fundamental and
team concepts. Campers will receive a free T-shirt and instruction from the Blue Raider coaches. The cost is $55 and there
is a brother rate of $85. Pre-register by May 25 and receive $5
off. For more information contact Jason McCowan at 423-6182708 or email at [email protected].
BEAR BASKETBALL CAMP
The 18th annual Bradley Central Bear basketball summer
camp will be held July 13-15 at Jim Smiddy Arena. Sessions
will run from 9 a.m. until noon each day. The cost is $50 per
camper. Registration forms can picked up in the BCHS main
office or printed off at www.bradleyathletics.org. For more information
contact
Coach
Chuck
Clark
at
[email protected], Coach Patrick Spangler at
[email protected], or Coach Drew German at
[email protected].
INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION
Individual basketball instruction for male and female elementary, middle school, high school and post graduate athletes is being offered by Cleveland State assistant men’s
coach L.J. Kilby. Coach Kilby brings 10 years of head coaching
experience as well as 30 years experience in junior college,
NAIA and NCAA Division I basketball. The cost is $25 per each
hour of instruction. For more information, contact coach Kilby
at (423)596-2515.
FOOTBALL
CAMP OF CHAMPIONS
Cleveland will hold a football camp for grades 3-8 from
July 13-16. For more information, contact Mike Connolly at
[email protected].
FISHING
CLEVELAND BASSMASTERS
The Cleveland Bassmasters meet the first Thursday of
each month at South Cleveland United Methodist Church at 7
p.m. Cleveland Bassmasters includes boaters and nonboaters and are associated with FLW. The club fishes and
holds tournament on Chickamauga Lake, Nickajack Lake,
Lake Guntersville, Lake Weiss, Watts Bar and Neely Henry.
Dues for the Bassmasters are $35 quarterly. Other fees
include $35 FLW joining fee, $8 insurance, $20 per year for
biggest largemouth or smallmouth bass and $15 for tournament largemouth or smallmouth prize. For more information,
contact Dewayne Lowe at (423)715-5772.
GOLF
OCOEE MIDDLE GOLF CAMP
Ocoee Middle School Golf Coach, Brian Patterson, will be
conducting a golf camp at Chatata Valley Golf Club, June 8-12
from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. The cost of the one week camp is $135.
For questions or more information please contact Brian
Patterson at [email protected]
JUNIOR GOLF CLINIC
The Bradley County Junior Golf Clinic will be held each
Monday in june at Cleveland Country Club. The clinic, for ages
5-17, will take place June 1, 8, 15, 22 and 29. Ages 5-10 will
go from 8-9:30 a.m. Ages 11-17 will go from 9:45-11:15 a.m.
There will be a final tournament July 13. All tournament participants must attend three of the five week instructional program
to be eligible to participate. For more information, contact
Cleveland Country Club at 321-2779.
LIVE WIDE OPEN TOURNAMENT
The Dustin Ledford Live Wide Open Golf Tournament will
tee off June 13 at 8 a.m. at Chatata Valley Golf Club.
Registration for the four-person, select shot tournament will
begin at 7:30. The cost is $50 per golfer and includes a goody
bag, T-Shirt and lunch from Shane’s Rib Shack. Prizes will be
awarded for closest to the pin, longest drive and straightest
drive on select holes. A new car from Toyota of Cleveland will
be awarded to a lucky golfer for a hole in one on the selected
hole. For more information, call 715-3157.
RUNNING
DIXON DASH
The fifth annual John Dixon Dash 5K run/walk and 1-mile
fun run will take place May 30 at Gee Creek Campground in
Benton. The 1-mile fun run will go at 9 a.m. followed by the 5K
at 10. The cost is $20 if preregistered by May 14 or $25 the day
of the race. All proceed benefit the Polk County High School
cross country teams. Registration forms may be picked up at
Polk County High School or the Benton IGA. For more information or to register online, email Travis Carroll at [email protected] or call (423)299-0078.
SOFTBALL
WVHS SOFTBALL CAMP
The Walker Valley Lady Mustangs Softball Camp will be
held June 1-3, 2015 at Larry Haney Field on the campus of
Walker Valley High School. Sessions will run daily from 9
a.m.- noon for upcoming second-fifth graders and from 1-4
p.m. for upcoming sixth-eighth graders. Fundamental hitting, pitching, fielding, and catching instruction will be taught
by Walker Valley coaches and Lady Mustang players. The
cost of the camp is $50 and will include a free T-shirt. For
more information, please contact Coach Lauren Limburg at
[email protected] or (423)336-1383.
LADY RAIDER SOFTBALL CAMP
Cleveland will hold a softball camp for rising 5th-8th
graders from July 27-30. For more information, contact Kari
Jo Harris at [email protected].
CSCC CAMP
Cleveland State Softball Coach Katie Willingham will
conduct a Youth Softball Skills Camp, June 15-17 for ages
5-14. Camp hours will be 9 a.m.-noon. Campers will participate in group instruction and fundamental drills. Campers
will be divided by age and ability during games and group
activities. The cost for the camp is $55 and includes a camp
T-shirt. A discount will be given for siblings or teams with five
or more participants. To register online, visit
h t t p : / / w w w. c s c o u g a r s . c o m / s p o r t s / s b a l l / 2 0 1 4 15/CSCC_Lady_Cougars_Softball_Camp_2015__Registration_Form.
WVHS SOFTBALL TRYOUTS
Tryouts for the 2015-2016 Walker Valley Lady Mustangs
Softball team will be held July 13 and July 20 from 5-6:30
p.m. at Larry Haney Field on the campus of Walker Valley
High School. Any young ladies interested in playing for
Walker Valley need to be at one of these dates. Participants
must bring proof of having passed a physical to participate.
For more information, contact Coach Lauren Limburg at
[email protected] or (423)336-1383.
OMS SOFTBALL TRYOUTS
Tryouts for the 2015 Ocoee Middle School Lady Colts
Softball team will be held July 13 and July 20 from 6:30-8:30
p.m. at Larry Haney Field on the campus of Walker Valley
High School. Tryouts are closed, parents are welcome to
pick up their daughter at 8:30 pm. Any young ladies interested in playing for Ocoee Middle need to be at one of these
dates. Participants must bring proof of having passed a
physical to participate. For more information, contact Coach
April Richards at [email protected] or
(423)476-0630.
SOCCER
CLEVELAND SUMMER SOCCER CAMP
The Cleveland High School and Middle School coaches
will hold a soccer camp May 26-29 from 9 a.m.-noon at the
Greater Cleveland Soccer Complex. Campers will receive
individualized instruction in various areas of the game and
will also participate in competitive games/contests. All
campers will receive a certificate of completion and camp Tshirt. The cost to attend is $75. For more information, contact Andy Byrd at 423-595-3986
LEE SOCCER CAMP
Coach Paul Furey, the 2014 NCCAA National Coach of
the Year and his coaching staff, will conduct the 2015 Lee
Soccer Camp June 22-26 on the campus of Lee University.
The camp is for youngsters ages 5-14. For more camp information, contract the Lee Soccer office at (423)614-8158.
TENNIS
KAY MCDANIEL CLINIC
Only 20 places remain of the 400 spots for the 2015 Kay
McDaniel Tennis Clinic for girls and boys ages 6-13 to be
held June 1-5 at Lee University. Entries will be accepted on
a first-come-first-served basis. The clinic will he headed by
former women’s tennis pro Kay McDaniel and will cover all
skill levels. There is no cost for the clinic. Girls sessions will
run from 8-10 a.m. and boys sessions will go from 10:30
a.m.-12:30 p.m. Athletes may register at kaymcdanieltennisclinics.com.
VOLLEYBALL
BCHS TRYOUTS
Bradley Central High School will be holding volleyball
tryouts for girls in grades 9-12 May 27 from 5-7:30 p.m. and
June 1, 2 from 5-7:30 p.m. Players should wear practice
clothes, knee pads and comfortable shoes. A current sports
physical is required. For more information, contact Christie
McElhaney at (423)309-8760.
LADY RAIDER VOLLEYBALL CAMP
Cleveland will hold a volleyball camp for grade 4-8 from
June 8-10 from 5-8 p.m. at Cleveland Middle School. The
cost is $45 for early registration or $50 the first day of camp.
Light concessions will be available. For more information,
contact Trish Flowers at [email protected]. or
call (423)478-1113.
WATER POLO
WATER POLO TEAM
Girls and boys in grades 8-12 interested in playing high
school water polo are invited to contact Tim Davis at [email protected].
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner —Sunday, May 24, 2015—21
Na regains sole lead at Colonial
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) —
The last time Kevin Na took the
lead into the final round of a
tournament, he faltered badly.
For Ian Poulter, though he
laughs about it, there is that
anonymous survey of PGA Tour
players
done
by
Sports
Illustrated where he and Rickie
Fowler tied as the most overrated
player on tour.
Na and Poulter both have a
chance to change perceptions at
Colonial.
With a birdie on the 17th hole
Saturday, after the pair played
from almost the same spot, Na
regained the outright lead for a
one-stroke advantage over
Poulter going into the final round
at a very damp Hogan’s Alley.
“When it comes to crunch
time, you’ve got to trust your
stroke and just stay in the
moment,” Na said when asked
about a chance for his second
PGA Tour victory Sunday.
At The Players Championship
three years ago, Na led after 54
holes before closing with a 76. He
shared the second-round leading
there this month before Fowler’s
victory that Poulter eluded to this
week.
“Rickie went out there and
obviously made amends,” Poulter
said, referring to the SI survey.
Na shot a 1-under 69 on
Saturday, a round that included
a couple of bogeys, to reach 11under 199. Poulter had a 68.
Poulter made a 30-foot birdie
putt on No. 7 for a share of the
lead at 10 under. He was still
part of the lead after a sand save
at No. 9, where he blasted to 6
feet from a bunker to save par.
But he dropped out of a lead
after starting the back nine with
a four-putt double bogey from 16
feet at No. 10. A 3-footer on his
third putt doing a U-turn around
the cup without going in, though
he got one of those strokes back
with a 6-foot birdie putt at the
635-yard 11th.
Poulter got even again with a
32-foot birdie putt at No. 15, the
same hole Na two-putted from 6
feet after his approach missed
the green.
“Pleased with how I played,
just a little mishap there on 10,”
Poulter said. “It didn’t break, and
then a few more putts it took to
get in the hole.”
AP photo
KEVIN NA, right, lines up a putt on the 18th hole with his caddie Kenny Harms looking on during the
third round of the Colonial golf tournament, Saturday in Fort Worth, Texas.
With their golf balls close to
each other on the 17th green,
Poulter had a 15-foot birdie try
that slid by the hole. But Na then
made his 14-footer after watching no break in Poulter’s putt.
“I trusted my read, a little outside right and it turned nicely
into the hole,” Na said. “It was
nice because I was under par
going into the last hole.”
With the leaders teeing off at
9:10 a.m., and playing in threesomes instead of the normal
weekend twosomes, play was
completed about 2 p.m.
Saturday. That was about 3 1/2
hours earlier than usual for a
weekend round for Colonial leaders.
PGA Tour officials moved up
play because of the threat of
severe afternoon storms. There
were overcast and muggy conditions, with some light rain but no
delays. Heavy rain was forecast
overnight and into Sunday, with
plans again for threesomes and
early tee times off both Nos. 1
and 10 for the final round.
Charley Hoffman has third at
9 under after a 66. Chris Kirk, a
two-time PGA Tour winner last
season, had a 65 for the best
round of the day and was tied for
fourth at 8 under with Brandt
Snedeker (66).
Defending champion Adam
Scott carded his second consecutive 66 since an opening 72. He
was tied for 10th at 6 under in a
group that included Jordan
Spieth, the 21-year-old Masters
champion from Dallas playing
the first of consecutive weeks at
home in North Texas.
Spieth, the first-round coleader after a 64, followed his
second-round 73 with a 67.
George McNeill got off to a fast
See NA, Page 25
Montgomerie leads Senior PGA
FRENCH LICK, Ind. (AP) — Colin
Montgomerie was long considered one of the
best players in golf who had never won a
major championship.
As a senior, he has said no more.
Montgomerie shot a 2-under 70 on
Saturday on The Pete Dye Course at French
Lick Resort to take a three-shot lead into the
final round of the Senior PGA Championship.
At 5-under 211, the 51-year-old Scot was
in position to win his third senior major
championship in a year. He won the Senior
PGA last year at Harbor Shores in Michigan,
and took the U.S. Senior Open in July in
Oklahoma.
“It was frustrating to come to these championships and walk off with the runner-ups’
medal,” Montgomerie said. “I’ve done that five
times. You try your damnedest and you come
up a shot light.
“I’m more relaxed now. I’m more relaxed
than I was. My temperament is more consis-
tent and I think that’s helping. I’m enjoying it,
I really am. I’m a great believer that if you
enjoy something, you’re usually quite good at
it.”
Bernhard Langer, a four-time winner in
senior majors, was second after a 68. He
eagled the 415-yard, par-4 eighth hole and
closed with consecutive birdies after a bogey
at the par-5 16th.
Montgomerie and Langer will play in the
final twosome Sunday, just like they did last
year at Harbor Shores, when Montgomerie
shot a 65 and won by four.
Scott Verplank, Esteban Toledo and Brian
Henninger were tied for third at 1 under.
Verplank shot 70, Toledo 73, and Henninger
74.
Henninger made a triple bogey on the 16th
to drop out of a share of the lead. His second
shot on the 539-yard hole darted right, into
deep, deep rough and he had to declare his
ball lost.
Second-round leader Tom Lehman had a
79 to drop into a tie for 13th at 2 over.
“I just didn’t make them,” said Lehman,
who had three three-putts and 34 putts in all.
Langer was fortified by his birdie-birdie finish, but he wondered what might have been
after hitting a wedge from 80 yards over the
green at 16 and making bogey and missing a
couple short putts.
“I had two of the worst lip-outs ever in my
life,” Langer said. “On No. 3, I hit a putt that
went in on the left, went all the way around
and came back out this way. So it went 460
degrees.”
Thirty of the 76 players who made the cut
shot par or better on a sunny Saturday with
a tricky wind. Eleven players go into the final
round within six shots of Montgomerie.
“I am where I am. I would rather be leading
by eight, but I’m not,” said one of them,
See MONTGOMERIE, Page 25
Andretti family brushes off so-called Indy curse
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The
roar rose from the crowd with the
simple introduction of one of the
Indianapolis 500’s all-time stars.
“The great Mario Andretti!”
With that, thousands of fans
before Friday’s final race practice
stood at Indianapolis Motor
Speedway and went wild for the
patriarch of one of racing’s most
storied families.
Some, with a deep appreciation of Indy’s history, chanted his
name. But as “Mario! Mario!”
filled pockets at the speedway, it
was easy to wonder if he was recognized as much for what his
family symbolized in failure at
Indy more than his Hall of Fame
career loaded with more than
100 victories.
The Andretti name has long
been known at Indy as much for
a curse than for championships.
The Andretti Curse is one of
the most infamous curses in
sports, up on the leaderboard
with The Curse of The Bambino
and Chicago’s billy goat. The socalled curse is as much a part of
Indy’s lore as the singing of
“Back Home Again in Indiana”
and a pork tenderloin sandwich.
Must be tough coming to Indy
with that kind of legacy, right
Mario?
“We always look forward to it
like you cannot imagine,” he
said.
The Andrettis brush aside talk
of curses or bad luck, even
though Mario’s 1969 victory is
the lone one for a family driver.
There have been crashes,
mechanical ills and just about
every kind of fateful twist to keep
either from winning the world’s
richest and most prestigious
race.
Mario’s son, Michael, had it
the worst, leading 431 laps in 16
career starts without ever getting
the chance to swig that championship milk.
Marco Andretti, a third-generation driver, is 0 for 9 in “The
Greatest Spectacle in Racing.”
“I think we’ve been blessed,
man,” Marco said. “We’ve had a
ton of podiums, a ton of runnerup finishes as a family and we’re
not done. I don’t think we’re
cursed.”
And Michael Andretti has
reaped the spoils of team ownership, winning with Dan Wheldon
(2005) and Dario Franchitti
(2007). He’s the reigning series
owner champion after Ryan
Hunter-Reay captured the
checkered flag last season for
Andretti Autosport.
Really now, that’s a curse?
“Sounds like he’s struggling,”
Marco cracked.
With IndyCar starved for
attention outside of May for
something more than misfortune, an Andretti in Victory Lane
could help ignite casual fan
interest. Danicamania is so
2005. How does Marcomania
sound?
“It would mean the world to me
and the family,” Marco said. “I
think it would be great for the
fans as well to bring an Andretti
back. And an American.”
Hunter-Reay’s victory was the
first for an American since Sam
Hornish Jr. in 2006.
The Hornish win — and Marco
loss — still stings for Andretti.
Marco was a rookie in 2006
and nearly needed just one
chance to win the race his father
couldn’t during a lengthy career.
He surged to the lead in the closing laps — passing his father, of
all people.
Hornish got around Michael
and quickly closed Marco’s seemingly insurmountable gap.
Hornish roared back on the final
trip around the 2 1/2-mile oval,
putting himself in perfect position off the final turn to blow by
Andretti coming down the long
straightaway.
Hornish won by a little more
than a car length — just 0.064
seconds, and Marco and Michael
settled for second and third.
Curses that day likely only
came out of their mouths for
being foiled again.
“My rookie year, I was criticized for being mad about second,” Marco said.
Michael’s best finish was second. Mario, who retired after the
1994 season, won just once in 28
starts.
The Andretti curse always
reminds racing aficionados of an
Indy 500 joke: The four most
famous words in racing aren’t
“Gentlemen, start your engines.”
They are “Andretti is slowing
down.”
In 1992, Michael had the best
car but fell out of contention
when he inexplicably lost fuel
pressure late in the race. In
1995, he bumped into a wall
even though nobody was near
him.
Jeff Andretti, Mario’s youngest
son, suffered a violent head-on
crash in the 1992 race and broke
both legs. Marco said it was hard
not to think of that wreck after
the frightening crash last week at
practice that ended James
Hinchcliffe’s season.
“I look at the Hinch thing, I
don’t look at our careers as being
cursed,” Marco said. “My uncle
took a huge hit, don’t get me
wrong and ended his career, but
he’s alive and he’s with us.”
The family refuses to dwell on
the negatives and all the times
they’ve come tantalizingly close
to tasting that milk.
“We’re very vested in what’s
going on here,” Mario said. “We’re
honored to have that opportunity. This place has meant so
much to our family in general. As
far as we’re concerned, it
couldn’t be any better.”
AP photo
AUSTIN DILLON celebrates in Victory Lane after winning the
NASCAR Xfinity series race at Charlotte Motor Speedway in
Concord, N.C., Saturday.
Dillon wins Xfinity race
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) — Austin
Dillon’s driving was good.
His celebration might have
been even better.
Dillon reveled in his first win at
his home track Saturday with
head-first slide into the infield
grass at Charlotte Motor
Speedway. The 25-year-old Dillon
passed Denny Hamlin with 15
laps remaining and went on to his
second Xfinity Series victory of
the season.
“I stuck (the slide) pretty good,”
joked Austin, a former baseball
player who played in the Little
League World Series.
Dillon started on the pole and
had the fastest car all day, leading the first 98 laps and 163 of
200 overall.
Hamlin finished second, nearly
3 seconds behind Dillon.
Kasey Kahne was third, followed by Regan Smith and Xfinity
Series regular Darrell Wallace Jr.
“I didn’t want to get out of this
car (because) it drove so good,”
Dillon said.
Points leader Chris Buescher
was 11th, but was never in contention for the lead. He maintained a 4-point lead over Ty
Dillon, who finished seventh.
It was Dillon’s fourth career
series victory. He has seven topfive finishes in nine Xfinity starts
this season.
Dillon also won this year at Las
Vegas after leading 183 of 200
laps.
Dillon simply couldn’t be
caught when his No. 33 Chevrolet
had clean air.
He would regularly stretch his
lead to more than four seconds
during long stretches of green flag
racing in the first half of the race.
“I thought it was pretty much a
battle for second place all day,”
Hamlin said. “He had an exceptionally strong car.”
Even Clint Bowyer, who was
working as a Fox Sports analyst,
seemed a little bored with Dillon
extending his lead late in the
race, remarking, “I don’t know
about you guys, but I would like
to see a caution right now.”
With 34 laps to go, Bowyer got
his wish.
On a restart, things got interesting as Hamlin took the outside
line and passed Dillon to take the
lead for the first time and Kahne
boxed out Dillon to take over second place.
“I was just messing with my
grandpa, I knew it would make
his heart skip a beat,” Dillon
joked as he looked over at car
owner Richard Childress.
Dillon didn’t flinch after falling
to third.
He would pass Kahne with 23
laps to go and started to take aim
at Hamlin.
He took his shot with 15 laps to
go, blowing by Hamlin on the low
side of the track amid lap traffic
and quickly pulled away and
cruised to the win. Hamlin said
he wanted to stay on the low line,
but when lap car Peyton Sellers
stayed at the bottom of the track
he was forced to go high.
“When (Hamlin) went up to the
top (of the track), I said, ‘Here is
my shot,’” Dillon said.
Childress joked that when
Dillon went to pass “I just held on
to my adult beverage.”
Kyle Larson, last year’s winner,
headed behind the wall midway
through the race after his No. 4
Chevrolet sustained a broken
rear shock mount. He finished
33rd.
It was another tough weekend
for Jamie Dick when his engine
blew up on turn one 48 laps into
the race, causing smoke to engulf
is car and sending car spinning
down the track and into the wall.
Dick wasn’t injured in the crash
but it took some time to clean up
the oil left on the track leaving
the race under caution for 12
laps.
At the last race in Iowa, Dick
received a scare when a tungsten
weight flew out of the back of
Ross Chastain’s car and punctured Dick’s front windshield,
raising further safety concerns
from drivers.
Brian Scott was running near
the top before being penalized for
speeding on pit row and being
sent to the back of the field.
The top four Xfinity regulars
from Saturday’s race — Wallace,
Regan Smith, Ty Dillon and
Daniel Suarez — will battle for
$100,000 in the Dash for Cash
next week at Dover..
Hamlin confident in Charlotte double
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) — Denny Hamlin’s
not sure he could be more confident coming
into the Coca-Cola 600 with how he has performed the past two weeks at Charlotte Motor
Speedway.
Hamlin, the winner of the All-Star race last
week at the track, held the lead late in the
Xfinity Series event Saturday before getting
passed by winner Austin Dillon and taking
second.
The big prize, though, comes Sunday night
in NASCAR’s longest race — and Hamlin
believes he has as strong a chance as anyone
to finish on top.
Hamlin will start fifth Sunday, one of three
Joe Gibbs Racing cars opening in the top five.
Matt Kenseth sits on the pole and Carl
Edwards is third. Hamlin said that’s a strong
indication he’ll have a machine ready to compete at the end.
“I don’t feel like there’s anything I can do to
drive harder or better,” he said. “You’ve got to
hope you’ve got a fast car.”
Hamlin had the fastest car at the end last
weekend, working his way out front after a
quick final pit stop to pull away from Kevin
Harvick in the final 10-lap dash. No one has
swept both Charlotte weekends since Kurt
Busch did it in 2010.
“Last week was a great week and on
Thursday, Matt (Kenseth) getting the poll was
AP photo
DENNY HAMLIN climbs into his car
before practice for Sunday’s NASCAR
Coca-Cola 600 Sprint Cup series race at
Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord,
N.C., Saturday.
a good sign as well,” Hamlin said. “So I’m
pretty excited about tomorrow’s race.”
Hamlin is eager to chase the championship
he missed out on year ago after finishing
third in the Sprint Cup series behind winner
Kevin Harvick. Hamlin took care of qualifying
for this year’s playoff with his win at
Martinsville in March.
“There’s some things about my car I wish I
could change,” he said. “But that’s the tough
part of NASCAR racing is that you’ve got to
tune it and get the car handling as good as it
can.”
The issue all teams face at Charlotte are
changing conditions. Sunshine and heat
when the race starts around 6 p.m., darkness and cooler temperatures about five
hours later when racing for the checkered
flag.
“It’s going to be a very, very big challenge to
be good at both,” Hamlin said.
Hamlin likes how his crews have handled
things at Charlotte so far. Hit pit crew posted
a sub-11 second stop late in the All-Star race
that was instrumental in the victory. In the
Xfinity race, Hamlin fell as far as 21st before
rallying — with the help of NASCAR rescinding a crew penalty after reviewing video —
back to the top. He moved into the lead off a
late restart, but could not hold off Dillon’s
stronger car.
The good thing, Hamlin said, was the work
his crew did in improving the car’s handling
and power as the race went on.
If that happens Sunday, Hamlin’s got the
driving part covered.
“As far as confidence is concerned, I’m as
confident as ever,” he said. “I think our
organization is starting to turn the corner
and, hopefully, we get some good results this
weekend and from here on out.”
22—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
Editorials
“If your contribution has been vital, there will always be somebody to pick up where
you left off, and that will be your claim to immortality.”
— Walter Gropius, German-American architect (1883-1969)
Leadercast a valuable
gift from PCL, Chamber
T
wo of the most quoted
leaders in America —
when speaking on the
subject of leadership — are
iconic voices from the world of
sports.
Sadly, one is no longer with
us. Vince Lombardi, legendary head coach of the
Green Bay Packers from
those glory days of the 1960s,
is credited with pointing to the
birth of leaders. Such birth is
not through biological means,
but by hard work and by listening to the wisdom and
sage advice of those who
have taken the reins of leadership before.
The late Lombardi said it
best.
“Leaders are made, they
are not born,” the Packers
helmsman once said. “They
are made by hard effort, which
is the price which all of us
must pay to achieve any goal
that is worthwhile.”
Some might prefer an alternative metaphor, one that
strikes fear into the squeamish yet a sense of challenge
into the fearless. It is best recognized as, “... No pain, no
gain.”
For just a four-word expression, its meaning can be
debated among the most
articulate of orators for days
on end.
On a more contemporary
note, another oft-quoted
leader is retired University of
Tennessee Lady Vols head
coach Pat Summitt.
The eight-time NCAA
national champion, who might
still be coaching today were it
not for the diagnosis of early
onset Alzheimer’s, is also a
believer in the building of
leaders.
Like Lombardi, she believes
they are not born. Like
Lombardi, she says they are
made. In some cases, they
are self-made. In some cases,
they are the love child of past
leaders and life’s experiences.
In all cases, the muchrespected Lady Vols coach
feels, they are the product of
someone’s training and dedication ... whether it is by their
own devices or a mentor’s.
Like the NFL coach, she
says it best ... as she did in
January 2009, in an article
published in “Success” magazine and later posted to its
popular website. It was written
by someone who understands
the value of leaders and the
relevance of leadership —
Don Yaeger, a four-time New
York Times best-selling
author, longtime Sports
Illustrated writer and awardwinning motivational speaker.
In Yaeger’s interview, he
quotes the UT coach as saying, “I’ve been known to say,
winners aren’t born, they’re
self-made. They’re made that
way by setting goals every
day. Players who come to our
program, they really don’t
understand what they individually have to invest.”
Later in the face-to-face with
Yaeger, she states, “If you
always put more into getting
ready for a game — or a business meeting — than you’ll
need, then no game or meeting will ever overwhelm you. I
want our team to not just be
physically more prepared than
their opponents ... I want them
to be mentally stronger, too.
Those are life lessons.”
And in one other segment,
the demanding — and everso-successful leader —
stressed, “There are a lot of
parallels between basketball
and corporate America. Both
sides know you only win if you
have a great team. Little is
accomplished with only one
talented player. And to build a
great team people have to
understand their roles and
you have to understand the
importance of eliminating confusion.”
In short, to be a great leader
means making personal sacrifice, communicating your
expectations and using mistakes as lessons learned.
All of this points to an
incredible opportunity in our
own Cleveland and Bradley
County community that has
just completed its third year.
Called Leadercast, this oneday phenomenon features
one goal: Build great leaders
and do it by learning from the
experiences of great leaders.
Since
its
inception,
Leadercast has assembled
massive crowds of 300 to 350
at each sitting. It doesn’t
come by accident. It comes
from a recognition by area
businesses, organizations,
nonprofits, churches, civic
groups, education and government that to succeed they
must share a commonality:
Leadership.
Two entities that have led
the Leadercast campaign as
equal partners with like ideas
on building the future are
People for Care & Learning
and the Cleveland/Bradley
Chamber of Commerce.
In our community, both are
respected names.
PCL, under the leadership
of Executive Director Fred
Garmon who says his nonprofit is in the business of
building leaders, is best recognized for its work in “Build A
City” in Cambodia, as well as
a long string of local community-service projects. Most
recently, PCL has been directly involved in the continued
addition of amenities on the
Cleveland/Bradley County
Greenway, and other local initiatives.
The Chamber of Commerce
... well, we cannot begin to list
the number of community
achievements, and opportunities, made possible by the
organization’s diverse programming, hard-working staff
and its fleet of dedicated volunteers.
Great leaders like Vince
Lombardi and Pat Summitt
would be far too humble to
call themselves great leaders.
So, we do it for them.
But they would be among the
first to point to the need for
leadership, no matter the
endeavor — whether it is the
accountable operation of a
business or the difference-making capacities of a nonprofit.
It is appropriate this year’s
Leadercast came with the
theme, “The Brave Ones.”
Hosted in the beautiful facilities of the First Baptist Church
of Cleveland, the daylong
seminar pointed to a shared
trait among successful leaders — courage, the kind of
courage required to take risk.
Our community is fortunate
to have leadership-building
organizations that don’t lack
in courage.
We thank the leaders at
PCL and the Chamber for
fathering new leaders in our
hometown through their hard
work on bringing Leadercast.
“The Brave Ones” brought a
powerful message. Though it
doesn’t seem possible, we
suspect that power will be
exceeded by what lies ahead
in Leadercast 2016.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Graduations bring reminders
One is the bittersweet tone of class reunions
Graduations are a popular subject this
time of year. The focus is often on high
school commencements, but there are also
colleges and universities, graduate schools,
middle schools and primary schools.
Even pre-schoolers get to celebrate a
graduation. I guess it’s training for all those
graduations ahead.
What do you remember about your high
school graduation? Was it fun, or did you
do things you now regret?
If you used bad judgment at the time,
there is a means of intervention. It’s called
“class reunion.” I’ve got another intervention
just ahead in June.
My Maryville High school graduating class
of 1959 previously held our reunions at the
end of the year, but since have switched to
a summertime celebration each year.
Perhaps it’s because our bones handle
warm weather better than cold.
Each year the reunion changes a little.
There is always elation to see old classmates, but it is also a time of sadness to
realize we have lost others over the preceding 12 months.
Some of the losses are anticipated, with
illness and disease, but others are unanticipated and create an even deeper sense of
loss.
Perhaps the greatest sadness is the fact
that some of our classmates are unable to
enjoy quality of life as we get deeper and
deeper into old age. The onset of dementia
and Alzheimer’s has struck several members of my senior class, and their visible
loss is also a loss for the rest of us.
Many of us have suffered through such
losses in our immediate families, but we’re
also suffering these losses in our high
school community.
It brings great sadness to us as we realize
several can’t function as they previously
did. The former athletes no longer have
their agility and strength, many have developed frailness and physical deficiencies,
LOOKing BACK
Larry Bowers
Banner
Staff Writer
some with quick minds are no longer very
quick, and memories have faded for others.
Our class reunion has added a Fridaynight event, to go with the usual Saturday
lunch. On Friday evenings we scheduled a
trip to Townsend, in the foothills of the
Great Smoky Mountains. We have a meal,
enjoy some music and sit around and discuss “the old days.”
This added day of celebration has become
the most relaxing of the reunion weekend.
On Saturday, we’ll attend a modest lunch
at Green Meadow Country Club, a place
where I have very fond memories. Green
Meadow is the site of many golf tournaments in which I participated, but also
tournaments I covered as a sports writer.
Much of my mentoring in golf was at the
country club.
In the last few years the luncheon has
been at the high school, where we’ve toured
our old school and viewed all the changes.
We even visited with the football coach who
talked about his program. Maryville High
has become a dynasty in Tennessee, and
one of the most followed prep programs in
the nation.
The school’s football program was not
enviable in our high school days. Even now
we talk about our losses, not our victories.
Most of our discussions on reunion weekend are about those old days, and what
happened to our classmates through the
years.
Several of my classmates reached fame
and fortune. Others were successful in
many ways, and leave generations behind
them.
I and my classmates were fortunate to
grow up during a time when there were
tremendous opportunities for success.
Today’s technological society is a different
world altogether, than the hands-on world
we faced more than five decades ago.
My senior class included several attorneys, journalists (such as myself) and some
who have published other works. There
were engineers, salesmen, judges, publishers, professional athletes, scientists, and
even three or four who worked with NASA
during the time of the nation’s space
exploits.
Some of my closest classmates have
passed away. One lived near my boyhood
home as we were growing up, and we even
ran away from home together when we
where high school sophomores (but that’s
another story).
This classmate served four years in the
Navy, worked as an engineer in the
Caribbean for RCA, then went to work for
NASA. He later returned to school for his
law degree and became an attorney for
NASA. He died from cancer just a few years
ago.
Another close classmate came to the
Banner to visit me recently from Atlanta,
and we’ll continue our relationship at this
year’s reunion.
We’ll probably talk about graduation, but
it won’t be the one we had 56 years ago. My
grandson graduated from Maryville this
year, and two granddaughters will get their
diplomas next spring.
Graduations are a cycle of continuance. I
hope I’ll spin around for a few more, at least
to see all my grandkids walk across the
stage.
———
(About the writer: Larry Bowers is a staff
writer, and three-time past editor, at the
Cleveland Daily Banner. Email him at
[email protected].)
ANNIE’S
MAILBOX
Progress is being made on both
ends of the growing Greenway!
Since the Cleveland/Bradley
County Greenway was conceived,
its point of beginning or terminus
on the south end has always been
the Village Green Town Center, at
the corner of Inman and Keith
streets. To the north, it’s the
Hiwassee River. For both of these
directions, the final landing place
is yet to be determined.
Coincidentally, there is current
progress at both the north and
south locations.
At the south point, there is
already a passage under Inman
Street. The 8-foot wide sidewalk
was installed several years ago
when the Tennessee Department
of Transportation widened Inman
Street at that location. However,
there are no plans at this time to
connect that passage to the
Village Green. Instead, progress
is being made to establish a
Greenway connection on the
northwest corner of Inman and
Keith.
With the recent uncovering of
the original spring of the historic
Taylor’s Place, there have been
some discussions about extending the Greenway to this location
near the heart of downtown
Cleveland.
To get from the current southern terminus at Willow Street to
Inman — what has been officially
declared Phase VI of the
Greenway — there is also
progress. Several easements
along Brown Avenue have been
granted by property owners This
will allow an extension across
Keeping it
green
Cameron
Fisher
Cleveland/Bradley
Greenway Board
Willow Street, and along Mouse
Creek for approximately 300
yards. At the corner of Inman and
Keith, negotiations are underway
to incorporate the Greenway in
the future development of retail
space on the property.
At the north end of Bradley
County, Greenway progress is
developing in the city of
Charleston. Over a year ago a
grant was received to incorporate
an “interpretive” Greenway from
the Hiwassee River to a central
Charleston city park. This terminus (or beginning point) is one of
three possible landing points at
the Hiwassee. If the Greenway
were to continue to follow the
banks of Mouse Creek, it would
land at the Hiwassee near the
massive Wacker plant.
Another branch of Mouse
Creek could take the Greenway
near Walker Valley High School,
providing a needed connection.
The third is the Charleston connection, which, at this time,
appears to be the direction the
Greenway will be developing.
In the meantime, there are a lot
of potential directions the
Greenway could go in between
Charleston and the Greenway’s
(EDITOR’S NOTE: The Banner welcomes letters to the editor. The
guidelines call for letters to be in good taste and no more than 300
words. Some minor editing, not affecting the meaning, may be
required. All letters must include the author’s signature, address
and a telephone number for confirmation. Since letters must have
a signature, they cannot be emailed. Letters reflect the opinion of
the writer. Letters may be sent to Letters to the Editor, Cleveland
Daily Banner, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600.)
stopping point a fifth of a mile
north of Mohawk Drive. What
have been relatively easy easements to obtain for phases one
through five, the next phases of
development will require a bit
more conversations with property
owners.
The vision for 13-plus miles of
Greenway from the Village Green
to the Hiwassee River is achievable, but not without the enthusiastic support of owners along the
way. The more of these owners
who come forward in support of
our Greenway, the faster we can
make it to the visionary goal for
Cleveland and Bradley County!
———
Online: www.cbcgreenway.com
Facebook: The Greenway
Dear Annie: I am a communication skills consultant. I disagree with your response to
“Beaucoup Baffled,” who received
an invitation to an overseas wedding and wanted to know
whether she could bring a friend.
You suggested a rather cryptic
response (”I’m not sure I’m up to
making such a long journey by
myself”) in the hope that the
future bride would understand
the hidden meaning. Why not
just ask a simple question, such
as “Would it be OK if I brought
my boyfriend?” — Blainville,
Quebec
Dear Quebec: We understand
your objection, but it is wrong to
put the bride in a position where
she could feel obligated to invite
an extra person. She may not
have the room or the budget to do
so. She even may have intended
to introduce her traveling friend
to a nice French guy. By saying
that one is not up to making the
trip alone, it gives the bride the
option of including the extra person without backing her into a
corner or forcing her to be
unkind.
———
(About the writers: Annie’s
Mailbox is written by Kathy
Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please email your questions
to
[email protected], or
write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o
Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd St.,
Hermosa Beach CA 90254. You
can also find Annie on Facebook
at Facebook.com/AskAnnies. To
find out more about Annie’s
Mailbox and read features by
other Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.)
Cleveland Daily Banner
– Established in 1854 –
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Stephen L. Crass
GENERAL MANAGER
Jim Bryant
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Herb Lacy
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Joyce Taylor
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Rick Norton
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Gwen Swiger
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William Wright
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Richard Roberts
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Jack Bennett
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Sheena Meyer
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Richard Yarber
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www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner —Sunday, May 24, 2015—23
Giving voice to unspoken casualties of war
“And I’m proud to be an American,
where at least I know I’m free. And I
won’t forget the men who died, who gave
that right to me.”
— Lee Greenwood
Country musician
From, “God Bless The USA” (1984)
———
Of all the agony ever put into words
over the casualties of war, the one that
still rings in my ears and tears at my
heart as the most telling came ironically enough from the imagination of two
Hollywood screenwriters.
Maybe Philip Kaufman and Sonia
Chernus had some rare insight into
raw emotion when they adapted a 1973
novel by Forrest Carter about one soldier’s quest to avenge the murders of
his wife and son by a renegade band of
pro-Union militia in post-Civil War
Missouri.
Their 1976 American Western was
titled “The Outlaw Josey Wales,” a film
classic that was selected 20 years later
for preservation in the National Film
Registry of the Library of Congress.
Directed by and starring the legendary
Clint Eastwood, one of the movie’s final
lines cut the deepest — as spoken
straight from the empty heart of a wayward and broken warrior whose pain
seemed eternal.
Facing the scars of destiny at movie’s
end, a bleeding but forgiving Wales told
his bounty-hunting pursuer Captain
Fletcher, “I guess we all died a little in
that damn war.”
Please excuse the expletive. Deleting
it would have meant surrendering the
movie’s deep-seated message.
It’s how Josey Wales felt. He was
tired of death. He was tired of dying. He
was tired of chasing both. This old soldier needed to accept what was lost.
This weary gladiator needed to move
on. Life awaited.
Quoting from a mythical Hollywood
character seems wrong when pondering
InKSPoTS
Rick Norton
Assoc. Editor
Adapted from original
printing: May 25, 2014
the meaning of Memorial Day. After all,
this somber observance honors the
memory of real soldiers — real men
and real women who die in real wars;
real families who feel real pain. All are
the real casualties of real wars.
Yet, I still find myself returning to
those words, “I guess we all died a little
in that damn war.”
No doubt, the Civil War was mercilessly real. Brother fought brother in a
four-year bloodbath that split families,
tested allegiances and ripped at the
heart of a nation. Likely, the long and
hurtful fight took its toll on thousands
whose names might as well have been
Josey Wales. All were soldiers. Many
died. Some did not.
It is for the dead, and in a sad and
tragic way for the dying, that we
observe Memorial Day.
I’ve written about it before. I will
write of it again ... and not just on
Memorial Day or Veterans Day or Flag
Day or Armed Forces Day, but on any
day of a year’s vast in between when
the memory of an American soldier
plays upon my conscience.
Yes, Memorial Day is intended for the
entombed, the buried ... those who did
not return from distant battlefields. It
is for the fallen heroes of war, those
whose loss came to us like a dagger in
the night.
But I am also reminded of words
from Argentine writer Jose Narosky.
His is a sentiment of deepest pain yet
truest understanding about the casualties of military conflict, “In war, there
are no unwounded soldiers.”
And that’s when visions of my father
are most real.
Dad fought in World War II as an aircraft mechanic and soldier in the old
Army Air Corps.
I had not been born when Dad
shipped overseas, but I am told he was
a good man. Joining hundreds of thousands of other U.S. troops, my father’s
mission was the same as his brothers
in arms — to end the tyranny of a
murderous dictator named Hitler and
the grey-helmeted henchmen who
adhered to his every order of genocide.
Dad was a good man when he left.
Dad was a good man when he came
back. But, Dad was a changed man ...
as I was later to learn.
I cannot speak to all the details. And
I will not speak of them. I know only
what I learned secondhand and thirdhand years later, and what I observed
as his son, his third born. I was the
baby. As a boy I worshipped him. As a
teen I forgot how to love him. As a man
I regret that breach in trust.
Like many American soldiers
returning from the great war, Dad
chose not to speak of it; at least, not
to us kids. Mom knew a little, but
most of what she knew she did not
share. Her silence came in respect for
her troubled husband, my tormented
father.
I never knew my dad before the war.
My birth came a decade later. But even
a child can pick up on key words,
knowing mannerisms, sad eyes and
awkward silence. Each was an unspoken code for off limits to open discussion.
We were occasionally reminded by
Mom not to ask questions about “...
that war.” She understood why. I did
not. And I did not ask.
But this I think I know of my father’s
time in World War II. He served somewhere in Northern Italy. Although his
role came as a mechanic, I am told he
was assigned a gun. I am told he may
have been forced to use that gun. I suspect he probably did. Sometimes a
man’s eyes tell more than they see.
At war’s end he was reportedly
aboard a ship sailing for Japan when
the Enola Gay etched her mark on a
people’s history. Whether the atomic
bombs saved his life, and in so doing
granted me life, I will never know.
Hundreds of thousands died. But a war
ended.
My dad earned a couple medals
although I don’t know what kind. To
this day, I think they remain in the
safekeeping of my older brother.
I know very little else ... except this.
Like too many noble American soldiers, Dad faced his demons upon his
return to the States. Mom blamed most
on the war. I cannot say with conviction. I could only observe. And I
observed quietly.
Perhaps one day I will write about
those demons. Perhaps I will do it
openly, without fear, without doubt ... I
will know then that to write of it is in
fact to honor the man who gave me life
and who offered me love. It will also
serve to condemn the futility of war and
the ravages of death that lie in its
wake. But that day is not today, nor is
it tomorrow nor the day after.
Though I didn’t know how to say it,
especially as an adolescent, I loved my
Dad. I loved him too dearly to disrespect his memory. As a man, I know
this now. As a child, I too often spoke
as a child.
I don’t know if Dad ever saw that
Clint Eastwood classic. If he had, I
believe he might have found comfort in
those words of Josey Wales. He might
even have repeated them, minus the
swearing if we kids were within hearing
distance.
Truth is, a part of my dad did die in
that war. A part of any soldier dies in
war. It isn’t something you see. It isn’t
something you hear. It’s something you
feel.
It doesn’t make them bad men. It
doesn’t make them damaged men. It
just makes them changed men.
Memorial Day is not intended for
these old soldiers. They lived. And if I
were to be so bold as to question the
fairness, my dad would have been the
first to temper my tongue and to calm
my emotions.
“That’s enough son,” Dad would caution me, his words gentle but his tone
firm. “Those men who died ... they gave
everything. They can no longer talk to
their sons. They can no longer be with
their families. They are due every ounce
of respect we can give them.”
“Yes sir,” I would now agree ... 50
years later. “But Dad, you gave a lot,
too ... more than most people will ever
know.”
“But son, I came back,” he would
remind me.
“Yes Dad, you did,” I would manage,
my eyes beginning to sting. “But you
left something behind ... in the middle
of that battlefield, in the twilight of that
war. And you never got it back.”
Memorial Day is for the dead. It is a
tribute to the memories of all who did
not return.
But it doesn’t mean I can’t think of
my dad on Monday. Because I will. And
I will thank Josey Wales — real or
imagined — for putting into words what
so many just like him have earned the
right to say.
“I guess we all died a little in that
damn war.”
———
(About the writer: Rick Norton is an
associate editor at the Cleveland Daily
Banner. Email him at [email protected].)
Summer’s coming: Revisit, rewind
This Week in hisTory and rediscover history at Red Clay
From the pages of The Banner
The following items were compiled by the Cleveland Bradley County Public Library from old issues of the
Cleveland Daily Banner and its forerunners, the Cleveland Banner, the Journal, and the Journal and Banner.
May 25, 1964
Memorial Day 1964
Memorial Day services were held on Saturday,
May 30, with veteran groups at the YMCA, and
with Frank Cummings as master of ceremonies.
The Rev. Robert L. Langford, who was pastor
of First Methodist Church and a former U.S.
Navy chaplain, opened the ceremonies at 9 a.m.
with prayer. W.B. Parks made remarks from an
address made to West Point cadets by Gen.
Douglas MacArthur.
Later, the flag was raised while trumpeter Abe
Lillard played the Star Spangled Banner. There
was a salute to war dead by a National Guard
firing squad, and “Taps” was sounded by a
bugler.
Members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars,
American Legion, DAV, and Boy Scouts took part
in placing the flags on graves of deceased servicemen at the request of coordinator Col. A.L.
Bullard.
———
May 26, 1964
Uptown area studied
At the request of Charles Beasley, former
Chamber of Commerce manager, TVA's Bernard
Zelner met with a group of Cleveland men to
study revitalization, beautification, parking and
traffic of the downtown area of Cleveland.
The meeting was organized through the
Chamber of Commerce with Walter Abel and J.D.
Harshbarger as co-chairmen, and Paul Davis as
president. It was the third such meeting.
Zelner emphasized that TVA was there solely
in an advisory capacity. He went to highly recommend a detailed economic study, and a planning organization formed which would and could
make long-range plans.
Traffic and parking dominated the conversations. One of the speakers noted that with the
completion of the Interstate Highway System,
patterns of travel would change and cities should
make plans not to integrate traffic flow into and
around their shopping districts.
Parking for uptown shoppers was discussed at
length. The city government was commended for
providing several free parking areas, and also for
enforcing the two-hour limit — while it had also
hurt to some extent.
Another facet of uptown parking discussed
was all-day parkers. Walter Abel commented that
some weeks back the police department had
made a two-day survey and found that 278 cars
parked at parking meter spaces all day. It was
recommended that employers urge their employees to park in free lots, rather than in front of
their own stores.
Concerning the meters, it was pointed out that
the city's income from them ran about $35,000
annually and the money was used to pay for
twice-weekly garbage pick-up in the city.
It was noted that the number of cars would
increase in the years to come, and that traffic
flow in Cleveland was in need of study and
improvement.
A sketch of a proposed new Merchants Bank
building on the southwest corner of Ocoee and
First streets N.W. was shown to the group, however, bank officials stated plans were not definite
at that time.
Carl Armstrong, manager of the Chamber,
estimated that as more and more property owners and store owners make improvements, this
in itself would encourage others to do the same.
———
May 30, 1964
An editorial by
C.L. McAlister
Today the nation will pause to honor by word
and deed those who have given their lives in
America's defense.
Gen. John A. Logan inaugurated the first official observance of Memorial Day in 1868 with this
pledge: "If other eyes grow dull and other hands
shake, and other hearts grow cold in the solemn
trust, ours shall keep it well so long as the light of
warmth, the warmth of life, remain to us."
Previous visitors to the
Cherokee Council Grounds at
Red Clay State Historic Park
may not recognize the upgraded and rejuvenated face of Red
Clay.
With the Cherokee people’s
Tri-Council resolution to support Red Clay’s Cherokee
Heritage Festival and to make
it a truly authentic event, the
park has been rejuvenated and
now features more quality
Cherokee activities that accurately portray the Cherokee
people’s customs, lifestyle and
beliefs.
This summer, Red Clay will
offer their first Junior Ranger
Summer camp.
From July 27-30, some 35
young people (ages 8-14) will
have the opportunity to learn
about Cherokee history and
culture, first aid, water ecology, camping, edible plants,
astronomy, reptiles, birds of
prey, invasive plants, Cherokee
weapons and many other topics. This camp will have a
small fee for each child and
registration will begin in midJune. Please call the park
office for more information.
During the summer, Red
Clay will also continue the
annual Cherokee Concert that
will feature Cherokee artists
with original and traditional
music. The free concert will be
held June 20 at 6 p.m.
The 7 Clan Mask carving by
John Grant of Cherokee, N.C.,
is completed and is a wonderful example of the local community partnership with Red
Clay. The basis for the project
occurred when the large tree
was struck by lightning and
had to be removed.
Red Clay
CoRneR
Jane
Switzer
Red Clay State Park
Park Ranger
In conjunction with the
artist, Red Clay’s Park Manager
Erin Medley came up with the
idea for the carving since the
tree had seven protruding
stumps from the base. After
securing community and grant
support from the Tennessee
Arts Commission, the
Cleveland/Bradley County
Chamber of Commerce, Rick
and Ramona Bird of Cherokee,
N.C., and the Friends of Red
Clay, the project was completed and remains a highlight of
every guest’s visit.
Red Clay is improving at a
rapid pace.
For example, the Council
House replica benches were in
need of replacement, and the
timbers were donated by Shane
Bickford of Bledsoe County
from his family sawmill.
Visitors will be happy to know
that there are now seven
benches in place of the six that
were removed. The seven
benches represent the seven
Cherokee Clans that would
have been traditionally represented in the Council House.
The new Tulip Poplar benches are installed and ready for
park programs and tours.
The park is also renovating
parts of the James F. Corn
Interpretive Center at Red Clay
with the assistance of Dr.
Carroll Van West, Tennessee
State historian and professor
at Middle Tennessee State
University. New exhibits and
reorganization will occur as a
result of this partnership with
local Chamber of Commerce
Vice President Melissa Woody
and Dr. Van West.
There are numerous projects
and renovations happening
every week at Red Clay with
the help of local partners and
generous donors. We look forward to updating you on the
progress and hope you’ll be
there to see all the improvements!
The park is also proud to
announce the historic gathering of the three federally recognized Cherokee Tribes meeting
at Red Clay for the first time
prior to Removal. This TriCouncil meeting will be enormously significant and we are
honored to play a part in
Cherokee history. Dates have
been tentatively scheduled for
late August 2015 and we will
keep you posted as we are able
about this historic event.
Other events and projects
will be announced via the park
Facebook page and through
Red Clay’s website.
Our annual program schedule is available for pickup at
the park office.
Please feel free to call the
Park Visitor Center with any
questions or comments. We
welcome all suggestions and
feedback.
Thank you for the opportunity to serve.
———
(About the writer: Jane
Switzer is a park ranger at Red
Clay State Historic Park.
Contact
her
at
[email protected].)
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
SkyRidge
is praised
by patient
To The Editor:
Let’s talk about SkyRidge Medical
Center and all the great staff
employed there. And especially, I’d
like to focus on Stephanie Austin who
is in charge of marketing at the hospital.
She is an outstanding person who
will help you if you call or go see her
about any problem you may have with
the hospital. She will try her best to
fix that problem as soon as possible,
and she will work with you closely
until it is done. She puts forth every
effort, and uses every possible means
that she can, to help you work with
the hospital on your needs, whatever
they might be.
Stephanie is a wonderful, and an
outstanding, hospital employee ... not
just to me but anyone who has had
the occasion to work with her. I’m
sure other people, as well as her fellow employees at SkyRidge, feel the
same.
Another point I would like to make
is a recognition of the hospital’s full
staff: Nurses, practitioners, lab techs,
radiologists ... everyone. They are all
very professional.
If I may, I would like to point out
one more employee whose sense of
care and professionalism stood out
one night when I went to SkyRidge
during an illness. I only knew her as
“Nikita,” but she was there for me and
she was very, very professional in how
she did her work and the words she
used in caring for me. She was very
kind and understanding, and I’m convinced she got me through that night.
And the doctors there are just as
great as the rest of the staff.
Thank you to you all for what you
did to help me.
— Eula “Twiggy” Casteel
Cleveland
Senators
thanked for
911 support
To The Editor:
I want to thank state Sens. Todd
Gardenhire and Mike Bell for leadership
that has resulted in the passage of significant legislation to secure the lifesaving 911 service for the citizens of
Bradley County, and all Tennesseans.
Historic reforms were made to update
our laws, bringing fairness and stability
to 911 funding, and structural reform to
the state oversight body. This enables
us to continue having the best telecommunications technology, and to maintain a professional staff that provides
the highest quality response to those in
need.
The 911 Center in Bradley County
received over 185,732 calls for emergency assistance in 2014, which was an
increase of 13.8 percent over the 2013
total. Trends in 2015 show the call volume steadily rising again.
Sens. Gardenhire and Bell understand the importance to public safety by
having a solid 911 system. They continue to provide leadership in improving
our laws.
On behalf of the Cleveland-BradleyCharleston 911 board of directors, I
thank them.
— Danny Lawson
Director, EMS
911 Board Chairman
Pay raises
for firemen
supported
To The Editor:
I think the money the Bradley County
Commission has voted to pay our county firemen is a good start in building our
county’s fire department.
This is a good figure in order to retain
our firemen.
These are professional firefighters who
train and are ready to put their lives on
the line any time. It doesn’t matter if it’s
day or night. They are professionals and
they deserve the best and the most our
taxpayers can pay! [However], a poor
person living on a fixed income should
be exempt from paying county taxes.
I have lived 12 miles [outside the city]
for 40 years and I have helped fight for
our county to get its own fire department.
I [don’t] appreciate the county commissioner who didn’t show up to vote
and give us our contract back from the
city. I live in the 4th District and I don’t
appreciate your views on paying our firemen a decent salary. These firemen have
to live in the real world and cannot work
for the same as they were being paid.
As for other county departments, I
don’t care if they get raises or not. They
are already established.
Also, Mr. [Troy] Maney should take all
the money he was offered!
— Martha L. Pritchett
Cleveland
24—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
The SPCA of Bradley County,
participated in its Adopt-a-thon
event sponsored by the
PetSmart store on Gunbarrel
Road in Chattanooga the weekend of May 15-17. It was a
great weekend for the SPCA,
with seven adoptions.
PetSmart hosted the event and
volunteers helped with transportation of animals to and from
the event and provided assistance with the adoption process.
Shown are new owners of some
of the pets adopted during the
event.
TiTAn, a 2-year-old
Staffordshire terrier mix, was
owner-surrendered with his sister Bella when their owners
could not take them when they
moved. Titan was adopted 17
days later at the PetSmart
Adopt-a-thon by Holly and Tony
De Lorenzo.
dr. bArT bAin, who travels throughout a wide region in his fully equipped, mobile veterinary unit,
discusses the healing progress of this sweet little dog, who he has treated for a leg injury, with veterinary
technician Amy Sporandale.
Bloat is ‘a medical emergency’
By Sue LittLe
Large and giant breeds of dogs are most commonly afflicted with life-threatening bloat, which
actually refers to two conditions in which the
canine’s stomach fills with air or food and then
twists around itself like a flipped over hammock,
explained Dr. Bart Bain, the “visiting pet vet.”
Bloat can be “a quick killer with the afflicted
dog’s inability to belch or breathe or vomit, causing the dog to go into shock as gas and fluid get
trapped in its closed-off stomach,” he said.
“Some signs that a dog is afflicted with bloat
may be: vomiting, a distended abdomen, lethargy,
an inability to keep food down, obvious discomfort and walking stiff-legged.
“Later signs may include: rapid heart rate,
weakness and collapse. If you have even the
slightest concern that bloat is a problem, rush
your dog to a veterinary hospital immediately.
“One hour or sometimes even less is the time
limit you have to get life-saving veterinary intervention for an afflicted dog.
“Becoming aware of what may be the early
signs of impending bloat and then getting immediate veterinary treatment are keys to saving a
dog’s life,” Bain noted.
What dogs are most prone to bloating?
Great Danes, Great Pyrenees, bloodhounds and
other deep-chested, large and giant breeds of
dogs are at highest risk.
“Bloodhounds top the list of those I’ve treated
for this condition,” he said, adding that it is
“unusual for small dogs to be afflicted.”
Dogs that have suffered from bloat are “at high
risk for repeated episodes but with preventive
surgery involving a veterinary tacking procedure,
further episodes can be prevented,” he said.
Other measures recommended by Bain to prevent bloating include “feeding three or four small
meals a day rather than one or two large meals;
not feeding new foods; not letting the dog drink
much water before or after a meal; and avoiding
brisk exercise on a full stomach.”
By abiding by these easy measures, we can
greatly reduce the chances of our dogs becoming
afflicted with life-threatening bloat and keep
them for what we hope will be long, healthy and
happy lives as our beloved four-legged family
members.
Paws up this week to Clara Ruth Campbell;
Jim Maney; Amy Davis; Irene Clark; the Kennedy
family; Rachel Perry; and all who rescued a pet
with the assurance of providing a long, wonderful
life in a forever home.
Call me with your pet and wildlife stories, 7285414; or write to: E.S.P. Inc., P.O. Box 4864,
Cleveland, TN 37320.
Louie is a sweet, 9-year-old orange-and-white
tabby kitty hoping for a new forever home. He is
available for adoption now at the municipal
Cleveland Animal Shelter, 360 Hill St. Shelter
hours are weekdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and
Saturdays, 10 a.m. to noon. The shelter will be
closed Monday for the Memorial Day holiday.
roCky, a 2-year-old Rottweiler/Lab mix, was
surrendered by his owner. Rocky's stay at the
SPCA shelter was short, as he was adopted four
days later by Sarah Schorle at the PetSmart Adopta-thon.
biLLy is a handsome, 3-year-old brown-andwhite dog who would love to have a new home
where he can be an indoor companion and an outdoor hiking buddy, said Roy Wilbanks, animal control officer. Many fine pets are always available for
adoption.
SoPhie, a 1-year-old chihuahua/dachshund
mix, was surrendered by a Good Samaritan who
rescued her from being hit by a car. She was
adopted nine days later at the PetSmart Adopt-athon by Fred Anderson.
SAbrinA, a shepherd/collie mix, was surrendered to the SPCA after being rescued from a
neglectful situation. She was adopted at the
PetSmart Adopt-a-thon 22 days later by Tiffany
and Tim Oxford.
roo, a 7-month-old shepherd mix, above left,
was owner-surrendered with playmate Pixie. Roo
was adopted five days later by James Simms at
the PetSmart Adopt-a-thon.
Luke, a 4-month-old heeler/basset mix, was
surrendered to the SPCA of Bradley County by
his owner. He was a resident of the shelter for 18
days before being adopted by Stephanie Kulik at
the Adopt-a-thon event.
When edWArd roberTS saw Steudie on
the Ark’s Petfinder.com site, he and Vickie drove
from Ten Mile to meet her. They had recently lost
a canine companion to cancer. They were looking
for a friend for their remaining dog Bo. After
reviewing Steudie’s veterinary records and completing an adoption contract, the group were off to
Petco with “Think Adoption First” coupons.
When normA Puckett saw Steudie, a
“Chiweenie,” on the Ark’s Facebook page, she
came to visit. However, Steudie had already been
adopted. However, Puckett met Belle, a 5-year-old
Chihuahua. After a walk, the two bonded and
Puckett decided Belle would be a great companion
for her senior Great Dane. After reviewing Belle’s
veterinary records and completing an adoption contract, the
two were off to Petco with the
“Think Adoption First” coupons.
bLAke hoWArd had been
preparing to adopt a canine
companion for several months.
He visited the Ark looking for a
healthy puppy.
Charlotte
Howard, Blake’s grandmother,
accompanied him. Mylo, a Jack
Russell terrier, bonded with
Blake. After a review of veterinary records, Charlotte Howard
arranged the adoption and Mylo
joined the family.
Pixie, an 18-month-old dachshund/beagle mix, was owner surrendered with playmate Roo,
when their owners were moving
and could not take their pets to
their new residence. Pixie was
adopted six days later by Mary
Ann Fant at the Adopt-a-thon.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—25
SEC
Na
From Page 18
From Page 21
“I’m feeling better than I’ve felt
in a very long time,” said Slive. He
is in “a quiet period” for treatment
before his next doctor’s visit.
—New rules in college basketball reducing the shot clock from
35 to 30 seconds and expanding
the arc for block and charge calls
from 3 to 4 feet. The changes still
must be approved by the NCAA’s
Playing
Rules
Oversight
Committee.
Slive was “very much in favor”
of both rules. “I think we need
some more offense in college basketball,” he said. “I think these
rules are good for the game. I’m
glad that the rules makers are
paying attention to the game.
These two steps are in the right
direction.”
start, with four birdies on the
first six holes, matching Na at 10
under after the second-round
leader had already given back the
stroke he earned with his 16-foot
birdie putt at No. 3.
Na had a bogey at No. 5, the
par 4 along the Trinity River that
is the hardest hole on the
course. Na hit a tee shot into the
hazard and had to take a penalty
drop.
McNeill, playing in the group
directly ahead of Na, rolled in a
16-foot birdie putt at No. 5 and
an 11-footer at No. 6 to get to 10
under. But McNeill hit his drive
at No. 12 into the rough and
wound up with the first of three
bogeys in five holes. He was 7
under after a 69.
Montgomerie
SPRING FLING
From Page 21
Verplank, who has struggled with
injuries over his two Champions
Tour seasons.
Verplank and the rest can by
comforted by the severity of the
Course. Things can happen fast
on it. They happened fast
Saturday.
Langer holed a 7-iron from 162
yards for his eagle at No. 8.
A few minutes later and a few
groups behind, Lehman threeputted No. 6 for a bogey. One
group ahead, Toledo halfshanked his tee shot into the
pond alongside the par-3 seventh
green and made double bogey.
Then Lehman missed the green
at No. 7 and made another
bogey.
Suddenly, Langer, Lehman,
Toledo and Montgomerie were
tied for the lead at 2 under.
Anything can happen on a course
as severe as Dye’s treeless,
windswept hilltop monster.
“There’s a potential double
around every corner here,” said
Montgomerie, who had a lone
bogey Saturday. “Long day ahead
tomorrow. There’s a seven-mile
walk, and the emotions will go up
and down like a roller coaster.”
you whenever you decide to
come back, whenever you’re
ready physically and mentally to
come back.’”
MOVING
PIECES:
Budenholzer said he hasn’t
decided who will start in place of
Korver. One option is Kent
Bazemore, who raised some eyebrows after Game 2 when he
said, “I still think we’re the better
team. We just haven’t shown it
yet.”
PEACEMAKER: James urged
Cleveland residents to remain
calm and channel any anger in a
positive way after a judge acquitted a while police office of
manslaughter charges following
the 2012 shooting deaths of two
unarmed blacks.
“Violence is not the answer,”
he said. “For the city of
Cleveland, let’s use our excitement or whatever passion that
we have for our sport for the
game tomorrow night, bring it
tomorrow night.”
James made similar comments following racially-charged
cases in Ferguson, Missouri, and
New York. But this one hits close
to home, and James believes he
and the Cavs can help the healing process.
“It doesn’t matter what city it
is, something that’s going
through a city that’s very traumatic, traumatizing or anything
of that case, I think sports is the
biggest healers in helping the
city out,” he said.
head coach from 1975-81 and
then again from 1986-93, including the Cougars’ national runnerup run in 1980.
“Even though dad quit coaching here (1993) before I was born
(1995), he would always take me
to the games,” the younger
Longley remarked. “It has always
been a dream of mine to play for
Cleveland State. I appreciated
Coach Poly giving me the chance
to do so.”
Having been mainly a first
baseman in high school and for
the Cougars, one of the reasons
he chose ETSU was the opportunity to transition into playing in
the outfield as well.
“Several of the (pro) scouts
have told me they really like my
hitting, but it is extremely tough
to make it exclusively as a first
baseman. They suggested I try to
play some outfield as well,” stated
the former gridiron Mustang wide
receiver. “The San Francisco
Giants scout has me rated as a
five-star hitter, but said I need to
be more versatile defensively.”
“Coach (Tony) Skole (at ETSU)
wants me to come in and hit in
the middle of their lineup and
play both first and the outfield,”
Longley explained. “That’s one of
the big reasons I want to go there.
The Southern Conference is a
good league that has sent a lot of
players to pro ball. I’m going to
keep working hard and hopefully
get noticed and get an opportunity to do that myself.”
After being a Walker Valley
Graduate of Distinction with a
3.8 grade point average, Longley
continued his classroom success
at CSCC, repeatedly making the
dean’s list and honor rolls each
semester. He had also participated in the dual enrollment program, taking college courses
while still in high school.
MONEY RATES
CURRENCIES
Irving
From Page 18
not given James any sense of
security.
“We’re just as desperate as we
were in Game 1 and Game 2,” he
said.
The Hawks, though, are more
distressed.
TALK THE TALK: James was
wired with a microphone in
Game 2 and was heard telling
Irving, “I told you I got your
back, G” after Cleveland’s win.
James explained what he
meant.
“I told him before the game,”
James said. “‘That’s why we’re a
team. That’s why it’s next man
up. And that’s what I’m here for
and I got your back in whatever
decision that you decide to make
and know that we’re ready for
Longley
From Page 17
“I played in pain that year
(2013 at WVHS), and when I was
still having trouble that fall at
Cleveland State, Coach (Mike)
Policastro shut me down,” related
Longley. “I didn’t play my freshman year but was able to let the
injury heal completely and then
get back into the weight room
and batting cage and work my
way back.”
The results speak for themselves, as he hit at a .335 clip this
spring for the Cougars, plus had
a .392 on base percentage, a .682
slugging percentage, nine doubles and scored 36 runs to go
with his numerous round-trippers and “ribbies.”
“I really enjoyed playing for
Coach Poly (Policastro). He
helped me a lot and was able to
Banner photo, SARALYN NORKUS help me get over my injury and to
THE 4x100 mETER RELAY team of Romeo Wykle, Stephen Cannon, TJ Parker and Keegan Jones get back to have a great year,”
gave Cleveland their first trip to the podium in the boys’ track and field championships. The team finished commented Longley, whose dad,
Steve, was the Cleveland State
fifth overall with a time of 43.47.
THE MARKET IN REVIEW
DAILY NASDAQ
Nasdaq composite
5,120
Close: 5,089.36
Change: -1.43 (flat)
5,020
DAILY DOW JONES
4,920
5,100
10 DAYS
18,360
Close: 18,232.02
Change: -53.72 (-0.3%)
18,140
17,920
18,400
5,000
10 DAYS
17,600
4,800
4,700
Name
17,200
4,600
D
J
F
M
STOCK MARKET INDEXES
52-Week
High
Low
Name
18,351.36 15,855.12 Dow Industrials
9,310.22 7,700.57 Dow Transportation
657.17
524.82 Dow Utilities
11,254.87 9,886.08 NYSE Composite
5,119.83 4,075.70 Nasdaq Composite
938.44
814.14 S&P 100
2,134.72 1,820.66 S&P 500
1,545.79 1,269.45 S&P MidCap
22,536.78 19,160.13 Wilshire 5000
1,278.63 1,040.47 Russell 2000
Last
18,232.02
8,482.31
588.13
11,197.69
5,089.36
934.08
2,126.06
1,541.56
22,449.83
1,252.22
A
Net
Chg
%Chg
-53.72
-.29
-68.97
-.81
-1.09
-.19
-41.98
-.37
-1.43
-.03
-2.72
-.29
-4.76
-.22
-1.23
-.08
-45.72
-.20
-4.52
-.36
M
YTD
%Chg
+2.29
-7.19
-4.85
+3.31
+7.46
+2.83
+3.26
+6.14
+3.60
+3.95
MARKET SUMMARY - NYSE AND NASDAQ
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
Autobytel 17.95 +4.30 +31.5
ReWalkR n 13.35 +2.29 +20.7
Oncothyr
3.01 +.50 +19.9
Frischs
33.69 +5.57 +19.8
Ctrip.com 84.63 +12.64 +17.6
Achaogen 6.81 +.89 +15.0
CallularBio 35.64 +4.51 +14.5
YoukuTud 30.75 +3.78 +14.0
eHiCarSv n 15.99 +1.91 +13.6
E-CDang 10.71 +1.17 +12.3
EaglRkEn 2.74 +.29 +11.8
LincEdSv
2.32 +.22 +10.5
Cellectis n 34.00 +3.20 +10.4
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
ChinaInfo
3.80 -1.10 -22.4
ChShngd rs 3.15 -.85 -21.3
Viggle
2.46 -.63 -20.4
Otonomy n 24.86 -6.19 -19.9
Aeropostl
2.19 -.40 -15.4
BcoBrades s 8.80 -1.45 -14.1
OrionEngy 2.23 -.33 -12.9
Cyclacel pf 6.14 -.88 -12.5
MYOS
4.33 -.50 -10.4
PwSBMetL 16.62 -1.83 -9.9
ProDvrsty 2.58 -.28 -9.8
Jumei Intl 25.40 -2.63 -9.4
Tillys
13.17 -1.36 -9.4
12-mo
%Chg
+9.79
+6.21
+10.13
+4.83
+21.59
+10.86
+11.87
+12.55
+11.56
+11.19
ACTIVES ($1 OR MORE)
Name
Vol (00s) Last Chg
S&P500ETF 488460 212.99 -.51
BkofAm
455508 16.75 +.02
Apple Inc s 443582 132.54 +1.15
iShEMkts 366275 42.74 +.14
Oncothyr 326939 3.01 +.50
CSVLgCrde 316111 3.52 -.13
HewlettP
280770 34.76 +.93
iShBrazil
274075 34.20 -1.03
Petrobras 273339 9.15 -.34
B iPVixST 268213 18.68 +.03
iShChinaLC 262081 51.34 +1.50
iShJapan 261998 13.28 -.03
AT&T Inc 261504 34.71 -.36
16,800
Name
D
J
5.4
...
4.0
1.6
2.7
1.2
...
3.2
2.5
...
...
...
4.2
3.0
1.6
3.9
3.3
1.8
2.1
4.0
1.1
M
A
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
Div Yld PE Last
AT&T Inc 1.88
Alibaba n
...
Ambev
.24
Apple Inc s 2.08
BB&T Cp 1.08
BkofAm
.20
B iPVixST
...
CocaCola 1.32
CocaCE 1.12
CmtyHlt
...
CSVLgNGs ...
CSVLgCrde ...
DukeEngy 3.18
Eaton
2.20
FstHorizon .24
FordM
.60
GenElec
.92
HewlettP
.64
HomeDp 2.36
iShBrazil 1.38
iShJapan
.15
F
32
59
...
16
14
25
...
26
17
22
...
...
19
19
17
20
...
14
23
...
...
34.71
93.27
6.06
132.54
39.41
16.75
18.68
41.21
44.80
53.78
2.58
3.52
76.05
73.09
14.73
15.27
27.68
34.76
112.16
34.20
13.28
YTD
Chg %Chg
-.36 +3.3
-.61 -10.3
-.10
-1.8
+1.15 +20.1
-.15 +1.3
+.02
-6.4
+.03 -40.7
-.02
-2.4
-.49 +1.3
+.36
-.3
-.25 -35.2
-.13 -28.0
-.11
-9.0
-.31 +7.5
-.03 +8.5
-.24
-1.5
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-6.5
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Name
Div Yld PE Last
iShChinaLC1.04
iShEMkts .88
iShR2K
1.59
Kroger
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Lowes
.92
Microsoft 1.24
NorflkSo 2.36
Olin
.80
Oncothyr
...
PaneraBrd ...
Petrobras
...
PrimaBio h ...
RegionsFn .24
S&P500ETF3.94
Scotts
1.80
SouthnCo 2.17
SunTrst
.96
Target
2.08
UtdCmBks .20
WalMart 1.96
Whrlpl
3.60
2.0
2.1
1.3
1.0
1.3
2.6
2.5
2.7
...
...
...
...
2.3
1.8
2.8
5.0
2.2
2.6
1.1
2.6
1.9
...
...
...
22
25
19
15
26
...
29
...
...
14
...
25
18
13
...
17
15
23
Pvs Wk
51.34
42.74
124.43
74.42
69.54
46.90
95.53
29.70
3.01
185.21
9.15
3.15
10.22
212.99
63.80
43.23
42.90
79.29
19.03
75.86
192.01
M
YTD
Chg %Chg
+1.50
+.14
-.54
+.37
+.82
-.52
-1.58
-.74
+.50
-.50
-.34
+.10
-.02
-.51
-.72
-.15
...
-.10
-.12
-.25
-.04
+23.4
+8.8
+4.0
+15.9
+1.1
+1.0
-12.8
+30.4
+58.4
+6.0
+25.3
+370.1
-3.2
+3.6
+2.4
-12.0
+2.4
+4.5
+.5
-11.7
-.9
Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards.
lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at
least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt =
Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b = Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d = Deferred sales charge,
or redemption fee. f = front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s
net asset value. s = fund split shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution during the week.
Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
Australia
Britain
Canada
Euro
Japan
Mexico
Switzerlnd
Day Ago
1.2667
1.5672
1.2204
.8982
120.97
15.2320
.9353
Total Assets
Total Return/Rank
Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year
Pct Min Init
Load
Invt
British pound expressed in U.S. dollars. All others
show dollar in foreign currency.
MUTUAL FUNDS
American Funds AmBalA m
American Funds CapIncBuA m
American Funds CpWldGrIA m
American Funds EurPacGrA m
American Funds FnInvA m
American Funds GrthAmA m
American Funds IncAmerA m
American Funds InvCoAmA m
American Funds NewPerspA m
American Funds WAMutInvA m
Dodge & Cox Income
Dodge & Cox IntlStk
Dodge & Cox Stock
Fidelity Contra
Fidelity ContraK
Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg
FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m
Harbor IntlInstl
T Rowe Price GrowStk
Vanguard 500Adml
Vanguard HltCrAdml
Vanguard IntlStkIdxAdm
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Vanguard STGradeAd
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MA
IH
WS
FG
LB
LG
MA
LB
WS
LV
CI
FB
LV
LG
LG
LB
CA
FB
LG
LB
SH
FB
MI
LG
CS
TE
TG
CI
FB
LB
LB
MA
LV
48,529
72,714
57,707
31,780
45,368
75,765
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149,662
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36,477
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33,999
31,275
35,384
58,559
60,687
123,238
122,709
67,479
33,211
25.20
61.53
49.10
52.28
54.21
45.76
22.06
38.31
39.51
41.68
13.80
45.93
184.83
103.24
103.20
75.22
2.43
73.23
56.83
196.65
98.89
28.67
14.05
110.88
10.70
29.57
17.25
10.81
17.14
53.67
53.64
69.00
68.67
+0.4
+0.5
+0.8
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+0.8
+0.3
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-0.3
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0.0
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NA
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MAKING SENSE OF INVESTING
230
N. Ocoee St.
476-9143
1596 Clingan
Ridge Dr.
476-0162
2080 Chambliss
Ave. NW, Suite 1
472-6814
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
5.75
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
4.25
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
NL
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
2,500
2,500
2,500
2,500
0
10,000
1,000
50,000
2,500
10,000
50,000
10,000
50,000
50,000
50,000
1,000
1,000
10,000
3,000
10,000
3,000
50,000
50,000
CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, CS -Short-Term Bond, FB -Foreign Large Blend, IB -World Bond,
IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend,
MI -Muni National Intermediate, SH -Health, TE -Target Date 2016-2020, TG -Target Date 2021-2025,WS -World Stock, Total
Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%,
E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.
www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC
Edward Jones
Pvs Day
1.2789
1.5481
1.2301
.9081
121.53
15.2854
.9433
Prime Rate
3.25
3.25
Discount Rate
0.75
0.75
Federal Funds Rate
.00-.25 .00-.25
Treasuries
1.56
1.46
5-year
2.22
2.15
10-year
2.990
30-year
Gold (troy oz.,NY Merc spot)
Silver (troy oz., NY Merc spot)$1204.30 $1225.50
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Last
3858 Candies
Creek Ln.
Suite C
476-3320
112 Stuart Rd. NE,
Farmland Corner
476-4325
1053 Peerless
Crossing
339-2885
26—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Flames
From Page 17
Lee University photo
Lee UNIVeRSITY’S Ben Holland watches his home run leave
Prasco Park Saturday during the NCCAA World Series championship game in Mason, Ohio.
Toms singled as did Nate
Wierzgac. Toms tallied on a onebase hit by Josh Tate. All totaled
Lee had 11 hits just like the
Sunbirds but they never could
put more than two hits together
in the same inning.
Nelo finished with three hits.
Wierzgac, Toms and Tate banged
out two singles.
Dustin Lawson was one of five
pitchers for the Flames. He started and gave up five hits and
three earned runs. Jacob Potts
also allowed five hits and three
earned runs. Grayson Bailey and
Ridge Ackerman finally slowed
the Sunbird hitting attack.
Josh Medeles was the starting
and winning pitcher for Fresno.
In 6 1/3 innings, he scattered 10
hits and gave up two earned
runs. Medeles was bailed out of
a jam in the seventh inning by
reliever Drew Merlo. The lefty
worked 2 2/3 innings, giving up
a single hit and striking out
three Flames.
“I thought we played well
today," said coach Mark Brew.
"We had some opportunities (10
runner left on base), but my hats
off to Fresno as they made several big plays to squelch any
rally that we got going.
"Overall I'm really proud of
this group. To think we were 2015 at one time and to finish the
way we did is a credit to each
player. This senior class really
pulled this team together and
battled the last third of the year.
It's hard to have perspective
after an emotional game like
today, but our guys have accomplished a lot for our program
and helped us navigate to the
NCAA Division II process. It's a
great group of guys, and I am
excited to see what they can
accomplish in the future,"
praised Coach Brew.
NCCAA Semifinal
Friday evening
FLAMES 6, SAILFISH 1
Holland launched a two-run
double in the first inning, and
Trent Hill pitched a complete
nine-inning game in leading Lee
to a convincing 6-1 victory over
Palm Beach Atlantic on Friday
evening at Prasco Park.
As they have in most of the
World Series wins, the Flames
got off to a quick start in the first
inning.
Adams and Nelo walked, and
Holland made the Sailfish pay
when he launched a double off
the 395 mark in center field.
Holland finished the afternoon
with another double in the sixth
inning and drove in two more
runs with a single in the seventh.
The most exciting play of the
game occurred in the third
inning thanks to the daring
base-running of Poti. He reached
first on a single, stole second and
went to third on a wild pitch. To
the delight of the large crowd in
attendance, Poti suddenly went
streaking for the plate and surprised everyone by stealing home
and giving the Flames a 3-0 lead.
"I had no idea he was going to
steal home," admitted Coach
Brew, who was coaching third
base. "This is the type of aggressive baseball our team is playing
right now. They are very loose
and seem to be having a lot of
fun."
With Hill keeping the Palm
Beach bats in check, the Flames
increased the margin to 4-0 in
the sixth inning after Holland's
double. He scored on a wild
pitch. Two insurance runs were
posted in the seventh as the lead
grew to 6-0. Tate walked and Poti
followed with his second hit of
the game. Holland grabbed the
spotlight again when he knocked
in both runners with a one-base
hit.
The Flames finished with eight
hits. Adams joined the hit parade
with a double, and MJ Brown
joined Wierzgac with Lee's other
hits.
Hill threw a season high 135
pitches. He allowed five hits, one
earned run, struck out four and
walked six. Palm Beach scored
its only run off the left-hander in
the ninth inning when Jason
Webb was hit by a pitch and later
scored on a single by Ryan
Johnson.
"Trent gave us our second
straight complete game," noted
Brew. "Going into the final
against Fresno, this is the best
situation our pitching staff has
been in during several of our
teams search for a national
championship. We've got a lot of
arms available, but we also know
that Fresno has an outstanding
overall club. We are excited
about the opportunity to be playing a NCAA Division II caliber
team."
Clock ticks, but fortune smiles
for Federer at French Open
PARIS (AP) — There are two
distinct sounds when Roger
Federer graces the courts of
Roland Garros. One is the pop of
backhands and forehands kicking up puffs of red clay. The
other, getting ever louder, is the
scratchy tick of life’s clock.
At age 33, with 34 bearing
down in August, time is increasingly the enemy to Federer’s
quest to add to his already
record haul of Grand Slam titles.
The count climbed to 17 with
his seventh win at Wimbledon in
2012, when he was still a young
30-year-old. Then, abruptly, it
stopped. In Federer’s golden
spell from 2004-2009, there were
24 Grand Slam finals. Federer
played in 20 of them, winning
14. But since his 2012
Wimbledon win against Andy
Murray, just one of the 10 subsequent Grand Slam finals featured the Swiss: an epic five-setter lost to Novak Djokovic last
year.
Of all places for Federer to
prove that he still has another
major title in him, Roland Garros
would seem the least favorable.
The slow red dust blunts
nuances of his game so effective
on other, faster surfaces. Having
one of the sharpest tactical
minds and best right hands tennis has ever seen were never
quite enough for Federer at the
only major he’s not won multiple
times. He needed a sprinkling of
luck, too. Federer’s only victory
at the French Open, in five
finals, came in 2009 against
Robin Soderling, who did him
the favor of taking “King of Clay”
Rafael Nadal out of the picture in
the fourth round.
Good fortune, in the shape of
Maria Sharapova’s fingers, is
smiling on Federer again this
year. The defending women’s
champion, called upon to pluck
out the seeded men’s names in
Friday’s draw, delivered a road
map that could hardly be more
favorable for Federer.
Sixth-seeded Nadal and thirdseeded Murray were both drawn
in the half of top-seeded
Djokovic. That means secondseeded Federer would only have
to play, at most, one of those
infernal three who beat him at
the semifinal or final stage of
majors in 2013 and 2014. And
such a blockbuster match could
only happen in the June 7 final,
if Federer gets that far.
“There is a chance to go very
deep,” he acknowledged. “How
deep remains to be seen depending on the level of play.”
Federer opens his 62nd consecutive Grand Slam campaign,
extending his record, on Sunday
against a qualifier. In the
women’s championship, last
year’s losing finalist Simona
Halep, seeded three, opens
against Evgeniya Rodina, ranked
91. The 2008 champion Ana
Ivanovic
plays
Yaroslava
Shvedova, quarterfinalist in
2010 and 2012.
Federer has a relatively easylooking path until the fourth
round, where he could meet
13th-seeded Gael Monfils before
a potential quarterfinal against
his Davis Cup Swiss teammate
Stan Wawrinka, seeded eight. In
the semifinals, a possible meeting with either Japan’s Kei
Nishikori, seeded five, or fourthseeded Tomas Berdych looms.
But all that is just on paper.
The end, in the Wimbledon second round in 2013, of Federer’s
astounding streak of 36 Grand
Slam quarterfinals or better
punctured the idea that he’s
assured a place in the second
week of a major tournament.
Roland Garros last year ended in
the fourth round for Federer,
with a five-set loss to Ernests
Gulbis. The Latvian, ranked 25,
is in Federer’s section of the
draw again this year.
“There (are) a lot of good players out there that want to win
the tournament that can win the
tournament. Others that are
dangerous on the day,” Federer
noted. “Whether it’s in semis or
in the finals, if you lose, you lose
at one point or another, and
that’s not funny. So my objective
is to not lose.”
Nadal’s seeding dropped lower
than ever at Roland Garros this
time, leaving him vulnerable in
the draw, after the nine-time
champion endured his worst
season on clay in 10 years. The
14-time Grand Slam champion
enters the tournament with five
losses in 2015 on the surface
where he used to be superhuman, accumulating a 66-1
record at Roland Garros.
Federer has been playing
excellent tennis and has a 25-5
record in 2015. On clay, he lost a
final in Rome to Djokovic after
claiming an 85th career title in
Istanbul. His previously aching
back is now old history.
“I feel like I have had a great
last 12 months,” Federer said.
“I’ve just got to make sure I
adjust my game according to the
playing conditions here, and
then we will see how far it takes
me.”
After his Rome final, Federer
returned to Switzerland for a
family break before touching
base with coach Stefan Edberg,
the former player who has been
instrumental in adjustments to
Federer’s game following a
below-par 2013.
“2013 cost me a lot of energy,”
Federer said. “We now have a
good momentum; 2014 and
2015 have been good. I feel
much better. But that doesn’t
mean anything when it comes to
results.”
Time will be the judge of that.
AP photo
RogeR FedeReR returns the ball to Tomas Berdych, of Czech Republic, during a quarterfinal match
at the Italian Open in Rome. Federer will be competing in the 2015 French Open which gets underway
today.
US delegation to visit IOC next
week for talks on Boston bid
Lee University photo
Lee UNIVeRSITY’S Andres Nelo rapped out a trio hits in Saturday’s NCCAA World Series championship game, but the Flames couldn’t cash in, falling to Fresno Pacific 6-2 for the second straight year.
Nats
From Page 19
was his first road win since last
Sept. 2 at Oakland. He’d gone 03 with a 5.30 ERA in his previous
six outings away from home.
Tom Wilhelmsen pitched the
seventh, Carson Smith worked
the eighth and Fernando Rodney
finished for his 12th save.
The slumping Blue Jays lost
for the 11th time in 14 games
and fell to 2-10 in one-run decisions. They’ve lost sixth straight
one-run games.
Mark Buehrle (5-4) gave up
three runs and five hits in 7 1-3
innings.
TWINS 4, WHITE SOX 3
CHICAGO (AP) — Torii Hunter
homered, Trevor May pitched
seven strong innings and
Minnesota defeated Chicago.
May (3-3) allowed three runs
and six hits. He struck out nine
and didn’t allow a walk.
Hunter and Eduardo Nunez
tagged White Sox starter Chris
Sale (3-2) for solo home runs in
the second inning. It was
Hunter’s seventh of the season
and Nunez’s first.
Twins closer Glen Perkins
pitched a scoreless ninth for his
major league-leading 16th save
in 16 chances. Perkins struck
out Tyler Flowers looking to end
the game, leaving runners at first
and second.
Sale was roughed up early but
pitched eight innings. He gave up
four runs, three earned, and five
hits. He struck out 10 and
allowed one walk.
LONDON (AP) — Boston and
U.S. Olympic leaders will travel
to Switzerland next week to
sound out the IOC about their
struggling candidacy for the
2024 Summer Games amid a
leadership shake-up at the top
of the bid.
The high-level American delegation will be at IOC headquarters
in
Lausanne,
Switzerland, next Wednesday
and Thursday as part of the
new “invitation phase” for
Olympic bid cities, U.S.
Olympic
Committee
spokesman Patrick Sandusky
said Friday.
The Boston delegation will
be headed by Steve Pagliuca,
the Boston Celtics co-owner
who took over as bid leader on
Thursday, replacing construction magnate John Fish.
Among others scheduled to go
to Lausanne are bid CEO Rich
Davey, vice chairman Roger
Crandall and chief operating
officer Erin Murphy.
The U.S. Olympic Committee
team will include chairman
Larry Probst, CEO Scott
Blackmun and chief bid officer
Chris Sullivan. Board member
Angela Ruggiero may also
attend. She and Probst are
also IOC members.
The U.S. officials will meet
with an International Olympic
Committee group headed by
Christophe Dubi, the executive
director for the Olympic
Games.
The talks come amid continuing uncertainty over the
future of the Boston bid, which
has been dogged by local opposition, political wrangling and
low public support ratings.
Ruggiero said at a hearing in
Boston on Monday that the
USOC was still vetting the bid
and there was “no guarantee”
the city would be put forward
as the U.S. candidate. That
fueled more speculation that
Boston could be dumped in
favor of Los Angeles — which
hosted the Olympics in 1932
and 1984 — before the Sept.
15 deadline for submission of
bids to the IOC.
The USOC has repeatedly
reiterated support for Boston
and said there was no truth to
rumors and reports that it is
considering other options.
The USOC chose Boston as
its candidate city in January
over Los Angeles, San
Francisco and Washington.
The U.S., which mounted
failed bids for the 2012
Olympics (New York) and 2016
(Chicago), hasn’t hosted the
Summer Games since 1996 in
Atlanta.
Stung by polls showing support for their candidacy at
below 50 percent, Boston officials have decided to put the
bid to a statewide referendum
in November 2016, halfway
through the race.
Rome
and
Hamburg,
Germany, are also declared
bidders. Paris and Budapest,
Hungary, are expected to enter
the race soon. The IOC will
select the host city in 2017.
German and Hungarian officials have already visited
Lausanne for the invitation
phase. French officials are due
on June 3, and Italians the following month.
The invitation phase was
introduced as part of IOC
President Thomas Bach’s
“Olympic Agenda 2020” reform
program
approved
in
December. It’s designed to
bring more flexibility to the
process and make bidding and
hosting less expensive. The
IOC is also encouraging the
use of existing and temporary
venues as much as possible.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—27
SUNDAY
Business
Larry Bowers
Business writer
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
[email protected]
Church should not be ‘pushy’
Dear Dave,
My wife and I go to a small
church where we tithe. The
church is continually asking for
contributions to other charities
and causes, and we don’t have the
money to give to them all while
we’re sticking to our budget and
getting out of debt.
The worst part is that we get
pretty aggressive pushback when
we say no. What can we do?
— Michael
Dear Michael,
I don’t react well to that kind of
pushback. I would probably be
nice a couple of times, but after
that my response might sound
something like, “Mind your own
business.”
Seriously, I’d probably be a little
gentler than that. But basically
when it reaches that point, they’re
saying, “I want your money.” And
that’s really over the top. If it goes
even further, and it becomes a
question of you “digging deep” or
not having enough faith, I might
get un-gentle in a hurry.
Your first job is to provide for
your family and take care of those
kinds of responsibilities — which
is a very scriptural stance. Once
you’ve done that, then you’ll hopefully have the financial ability to
move beyond tithes and into offerings, which are completely different concepts.
Latest list
for Athens
Bancshares
Special to the Banner
Athens
Bancshares
Corporation, the holding company
for
Athens
Federal
Community
Bank,
has
announced its financial results
for the three months which
ended March 31.
The Company's net income for
the three months was $592,000
or $0.33 per diluted share, compared to net income of $660,000
or $0.37 per diluted share for the
same period in 2014.
Net interest income after provision for loan losses increased
$2,000, or 0.09 percent, to $2.9
million for the three months compared to $2.9 million for the three
months ended March 31, 2014.
Interest income increased
$14,000 when comparing the two
periods as the average balance of
interest earning assets increased
from $277.5 million for the same
three months to $282.1 million
for the comparable period in
2015.
Dave Says
Dave
Ramsey
Tithes are first fruits off the top,
while offerings are from surplus meaning that you and your family
are doing well financially.
Another thing to consider is
this: Does this church turn every
impulse they have into pressure to
donate or buy something, because
they didn’t plan for this kind of
stuff in the church budget?
I’d start having a problem with
the leadership if this turned out to
be the case, because it’s a sign
they’re not planning and leading
well.
Hopefully, you can explain to
these folks the reason why you
can’t contribute to additional
things at the moment and they’ll
understand. If not, and it were me
in your shoes, I think I’d have to
find another church.
— Dave
Stick with mutual funds
Dear Dave,
I’ve been following your plan,
and I have my emergency fund in
place and am investing in mutual
funds. Recently, a financial planner recommended bonds to me.
What is your opinion on this?
— Becky
Dear Becky,
I don’t recommend bonds at all
right now. I’m not a fan of them,
and I don’t own any. The bond
market is almost as volatile as the
stock market, and it doesn’t pay
nearly as much on average.
On top of all that, bond prices
work at an inverse of interest
rates. In other words, as interest
rates rise, bond prices go down.
Long-term interest rates are still
really low. If you were to buy a
bunch of bonds right now, and
interest rates went up even one
percent, you could lose a lot!
I recommend mutual funds and
good growth stock mutual funds.
There are always some bonds
mixed in with a growth and
income fund, and I’m not opposed
to that to some degree, but it’s not
my favorite.
So, if I were ever going to buy
bonds - and I’m not going to - it
definitely wouldn’t be right now. It
doesn’t take much of a move in
interest rates for bond prices to go
down dramatically.
Banner photo, LARRY C. BOWERS
CLEVELAND’S SISSY FIGLESTHAHLER gave her personal testimony at this week’s dedication of the new Blood Assurance donor center in Village Green. She suffered an embolism following the birth of her fourth son, and would probably have died if not for 20 units of blood
from the hospital and Blood Assurance. “Twenty people gave blood that saved my life,” she said. “I urge you to become a donor.” She was
joined by her husband, Andy, and sons, Andrew, Jack, Peter and Patrick.
Blood Assurance drive continues Monday
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
Monday may be a holiday, but
it’s also a continuation of the
Memorial Day-themed blood
drive by Blood Assurance.
This week, the nonprofit agency
dedicated its new donor center in
Village Green. The donor center
was recently moved from the
Keith Street location it had occupied for more than 25 years.
Thursday afternoon’s ceremony also marked the dedication of
the Howard H. Kuhns Jr. community room, named for one of
the blood agency’s longtime, and
greatest, supporters. His family
was in attendance, as were a
number of community leaders.
The ongoing blood drive is to
honor local veterans who have
served in the United States military.
For each donation received
through Memorial Day, Blood
Assurance will donate $1 to various American Legion organizations across the region.
Donors will also receive a customized backpack and will be
entered into a drawing to win a
pair of Garth Brooks concert
tickets.
The organization encourages
the community to make a lifesaving donation in honor of a friend
or family member who has
served in the United States military.
According to an American
Legion
spokesperson,
the
agency’s mission is to serve veterans, service members and
communities. The organization
currently has about 2.4 million
members in 14,000 posts world-
Banner photo, LARRY C. BOWERS
THE LATE HOWARD H. KUHNS JR. was honored this week when the community room at the new
Blood Assurance donor center was named in his honor for all the support he gave the non-profit agency.
Surrounding the dedication plaque in the new community room are Kuhns’ sons, from left, Tim, Jim, Ron,
and his grandson, Wesley, a Lee University student.
wide.
“This Memorial Day, we want
to honor the legacies of those
who risked their lives serving our
country. We hope donors will
consider serving their communities by making a donation in
honor of the men and women
who gave the ultimate sacrifice
for others,” said Charlie Callari,
vice president of marketing and
donor recruitment for Blood
Assurance.
“All of the donations we receive
will not only help save lives
across the region, they will be
matched with a $1 donation to a
local American Legion organization,” Callari emphasized.
Over 540 volunteer blood
donors are needed every day in
order to adequately supply the
demand of local hospitals. Just
one donation can save up to
three lives across the region.
“The veterans we pause to
remember on Memorial Day are
the patriots who left their homes
and families when their country
call, said Gordon Mikitka,
department of Tennessee public
relations chairman for the
American Legion organization.
“They gave their last full measure of devotion in defense of our
freedom. The American Legion is
committed to keeping the memory of their sacrifices alive for generations to come. This blood
drive will help us in keeping their
memories alive,” Mikitka added.
To be eligible to donate blood,
you must be at least 17 years old
(16 years old with parental consent), weigh 110 pounds or more
and be in good health. Donors
are asked to drink plenty of fluids - avoiding caffeine - and eat a
meal that is rich in iron prior to
donating.
For more information on Blood
Assurance, donating blood or
hosting a blood drive, please visit
www.bloodassurance.org or call
1-800-962-0628.
Blood Assurance is a non-profit, full-service regional blood center serving 51 counties and more
than 75 health care facilities in
Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama,
North Carolina and Virginia.
It was Founded in 1972 as a
joint effort of the ChattanoogaHamilton
County
Medical
Society, the Chattanooga Area
Hospital Council, and the
Chattanooga Jaycees, the mission of Blood Assurance is to
provide a safe and adequate supply of blood and blood components to every area patient in
need.
Contributed photo
Contributed photo
MEMBERS OF THE RIVER Counties Association of Realtors from Cleveland were among 8,500
others from across the nation in Washington D.C. recently for a legislative meeting and Trade Expo.
The River Counties realtors above include, from left, Max Phillips, Cathy McCracken, Tara Hampton,
Kelli Paul, and Taylor Phillips. The realtors had a chance to meet face-to-face with decision makers
to hear why certain issues can and would affect the real estate industry.
Contributed photo
TENNESSEE SEN. BOB CORKER is shown with visiting realtors from the River Counties
Association in Cleveland, from Greater Chattanooga, and from across the state in Washington D.C.
recently. The Realtors were in the nation’s capitol for a legislative meeting and a Trade Expo.
THE CLEVELAND-BRADLEY Chamber of Commerce celebrated a ribbon cutting for TRP Partners
recently. Cutting the ribbon is Linda Maddox, chief financial officer, and Chris Rosser, branch manager.
Also pictured are Cleveland Mayor Tom Rowland, Chamber Ambassadors and staff. TRP Partners offers
flexible staffing services for company needs. They offer a temp-to-hire and a direct permanent program.
TRP Partners will staff seasonal, professional, project- and shift-oriented positions. Visit their location on
25th Street, or call 423-478-8787 for additional information.
Watkins joins Buckner operation
Special to the Banner
Ralph Buckner Funeral Home
& Crematory has announced the
addition of J. Michael Watkins as
their new Operations Manager.
Watkins, who has over 35 years
of experience as a business
administrator,
operations
director, and 25
years as a business owner, will
assist
CEO
Ralph Buckner
Jr. in the dayto-day operations of the
funeral home.
“I am very
Watkins
pleased that
Michael has agreed to join my
organization. In recent years I
have been looking for the right
person to fill the need I have for an
operations manager,” Buckner
said. “Not only will Michael be a
great asset for me at RBFH, but he
will also oversee Higgins Funeral
Home,
BridgeMaker
Grief
Support, and also work closely
with Chari (Buckner) at Faithful
Friends Pet Crematory and
Funeral Home. I’m looking forward to Michael doing great
things.”
Watkins began his career in the
80’s with Merrill Lynch as a stockbroker based out of the
Chattanooga offices. He then
moved to Westmore Church of
God as the Comptroller/Business
Administrator, and for just over
the past four years has been the
Operations Director for Habitat for
Humanity.
Watkins will be involved in
every aspect of the Buckner businesses from employee management to ensuring the continued
quality and service that RBFH
families deserve.
Buckner stated, “I want Michael
to be involved in all aspects of the
business. As my businesses have
continued to grow, through the
support of this community, I have
found that it has become more difficult for me to oversee all of the
daily details of operating multiple
businesses. With the addition of
Michael, I will be free to develop
other business interests and know
that all the little details of day-today operations are being handled.”
When asked about why he took
this job, Watkins stated, “I have
often thought about being a
funeral director. I have seen how,
the really good funeral directors,
approach it as a ministry, not as a
job. Being a funeral director, helping people, fits who I am.
When Watkins is not working,
he enjoys running and has ran
one marathon and several half
marathons in his running career.
He also enjoys golf, and loves to
travel. Watkins is married to
Denise Watkins and has a son,
John Watkins, a daughter, Jaclyn
Gallaher, a son-in-law, Brian
Gallaher, and two grandchildren,
Sean and Katelyn.
28—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Armenta kicks Bears past Blue Raider alum
By JOE CANNON
Banner Assistant Sports Editor
With the TSSAA crowning state
champions in five sports, the
NBA, NHL playoffs and MLB regular season in full swing, plus Lee
University playing for a NCCAA
national title, it’s no wonder
Friday night’s football game
turned into a soccer match.
For the second straight year,
former gridiron standouts from
Bradley Central and Cleveland
High took the Bear Stadium field
for a time of fun and fundraising,
but in the end the game’s only
scores came from the feet of a pair
of soccer stars.
The left foot of Miguel Armenta,
a 2004 BCHS graduate and current Bear soccer coach, booted a
37-yard field goal with 100 ticks
left on the clock to lift the hosts to
a 6-3 victory and bragging rights
for another year over their old
archrivals. The Bears also won
last year’s first meeting by a 2621 tally.
The second annual BradleyCleveland Alumni Game, played
before an estimated crowd of
around 1,500 fans, provided
plenty of defensive action while
the offenses were held to a combined 185 yards and no touchdowns.
The Black-and-Gold defense
was led by former all-state defensive end Tucker Bolton (a 2011
graduate), linebackers Dewaun
Massengill (2011), Trey Mayse
(2005) and LJ Goodridge (2013),
plus the father-and-son duo of
Tim (1988) and Bradley Colbaugh
(2011). They made nine tackles
for loss, plus held the former Blue
Raiders to just three first downs
and 56 yards of total offense.
The Bears caused a trio of
turnovers with Triston Lowe
(2009) recovering a fumble in the
third quarter, plus Nathan
Centers picking off a Raider pass
with 2:50 left in the contest to set
up the game-winning field goal.
Bradley capped the victory with
Goodridge causing a fumble that
Jesse Loscudo (2007) recovered
on the Raider 8-yard line on the
game’s next-to-last play.
On the other side of the ball,
quarterback Timmy Lynn (2008)
directed the Bear offense, completing 6-of-14 passes for 74
yards, including a pair for 25 and
22 yards to Dee Crisp (2014).
Former all-stater Blake Morris
(2001) led the rushing attack with
11 carries for 27 yards, while
Bryan Stewart (2004) gained 17
yards on a trio of rushes.
The Raider defense held
Bradley to 129 yards of total
offense with standouts like
Banner photo, LYNNAE ROBERTS
BRADLEY CENTRAL defender Robert Bartolameolli (8) stops Cleveland High ball carrier CJ Bryant
near the Blue Raider sideline during Friday night’s second annual Bradley-Cleveland Alumni Football
Game at Bear Stadium.
Banner photo, LYNNAE ROBERTS
BRADLEY CENTRAL linebacker LJ Goodridge (23) wraps up Cleveland High quarterback Tez Davis
for a sack during first-half action during the second annual Bradley-Cleveland Alumni Football Game
Friday evening at Bear Stadium. The Bears won the game by a 6-3 margin.
Vincent Sharp (1987), Lonnie
White (1995), Reed Allison (2013),
CJ Bryant (2013) and Justin
Berry (2007) leading the way.
The “Boys in Blue” also came
away with a pair of takeaways —
fumble recoveries by White and
Leroy Bowerman (2007). Berry
forced the first turnover when he
hit Lynn just before he could get
off a pass.
Cleveland’s main offensive
threat came from Terrell Parks
(2010), who gained 44 yards on a
half dozen carries, including the
game’s longest gain on a 30-yard
scramble, but he was also
trapped behind the line on five
other carries for minus 27 yards.
Bryant had four carries for 13
yards.
Bradley’s two scores came on
Armenta field goals — a 28-yarder
to cap the first Bear offensive possession and the game winner with
1:20 on the game clock. He also
came up just short on a 47-yard
attempt after an almost eightminute, 57-yard drive to open the
second half.
The Blue Raider points also
came from a soccer standout as
Javier Rocha (2008) booted a 27yard field goal to tie the game with
5:35 left in the opening half.
"Its great to get that second
win, but what’s really important
is getting these alumni back down
the Bearwalk to compete together
against their crosstown rival once
more," stated Matt Moody, head
coach of the Bear alumni team.
"Our defense was really flying
around. We have a lot great defensive players who come back and
really take pride in defending the
Bears Den. They're a fun group to
coach," stated Coach Todd
Stevison.
"It was a hard-fought game,
and no one was seriously hurt, so
it was a good night of football," a
pleased Bradley head coach
Damon Floyd stated.
"We would really like to thank
Insurance Incorporated for sponsoring this year’s Alumni Game.
They really came through to help
raise some needed funds for both
programs. I would also like to
thank all the players and parents
who helped out. I would especially like to thank Coach Moody for
really taking initiative and spearheading this event and making it
a success. He really spent a lot of
time putting things together on
and off the field," an appreciative
Coach Floyd boasted.
After paying the game’s
expenses, the event’s proceeds
are divided equally between the
Bradley and Cleveland football
programs.
GAME SUMMARY
Cleveland 0 3 0 0 — 3
Bradley Central 3 0 0 3 — 6
First Quarter
BC — Miguel Armenta 28-yd field goal, 6:27
Second Quarter
C — Javier Rocha 27-yard field, 5:35
Fourth Quarter
BC — Armenta 37-yd run (run failed), 1:20
Team stats
C BC
First downs
3
9
Rushes-yards
25-51
31-55
Passing yards
5
74
Total yards
56
129
Comp-Att-Int
3-11-1 6-14-0
Punts -Ave.
4-36.0 4-36.0
Fumbles-Lost
4-2
4-2
Penalties
11-81
5-50
Individual stats
Rushing: Terrell Parks 11-17; CJ Bryant 4-13;
Kevin Wilford 1-9; Demetrius Fields 1-9;
Desmond Davis 1-3; Tez Davis 2-2; Justin Berry
2-2; Preston Scoggins 1-1; Monte Scotton 1-0;
Nakerson Rogers 1- -5 (C); Blake Morris 11-27;
Bryan Stewart 3-17; Brandon Coffell 2-10;
Dewaun Massengill 3-7; Timmy Lynn 1-1; Shiloh
Lindsey 5-1; Lamar Thompson 1- -2; Deonte
Lindsey 4- -6 (BC).
Passing: Preston Scoggins 2-8-0 11; Terrell
Parks 1-3-1 5; Tez Davis 0-1 (C); Timmy Lynn 614-0 74 (BC).
Receiving: BJ Davis 1-7; Monte Scotton 1-5;
Jeremy Simpson 1-4 (C); Dee Crisp 2-47; Blake
Morris 1-15; Shiloh Lindsey 2-7; Deonte Lindsey
1-5 (BC).
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www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—29
SUNDAY
LifestyLes
William Wright
Lifestyles Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
[email protected]
WWII veteran is proof of a great generation
tion of being a valued worker.
Murphy, however, had greater
aspirations than being a hard
When Jack Murphy and his worker at an orphanage. The 16peers sit at their “Table of year-old was determined to enter
Wisdom” in Hardee’s on 25th the fighting forces of World War II
Street in Cleveland, discussing as a soldier ready for battle.
and resolving world affairs with
“I wanted to join the Marine
solutions that seem to escape Corps and I ran off from
today’s political leaders, the 88- Bachman,” Murphy said. “The
year-old war veteran is also matron in charge of us wouldn’t
mindful of their reputation as the let me go. She had signed to let
greatest generation ever pro- two or three other fellows go who
duced.
didn’t work as hard as I did. She
After all, Murphy was eager to said, ‘You’re not old enough.
fight in World War II at the tender You’re only 16.’ But I knew that
age of 16. He worked hard, sur- another boy was only 16 and she
vived the war, raised a family, signed for him.”
served his community, joined the
After getting word that the milSons of the American Revolution itary was recruiting in Blue
and traced his lineage back to Ridge, Ga., Murphy made his
one of the foundway across the
ing fathers of
state line and
Tennessee.
showed
his
Today, his menown tactical
“He told me if I
tal faculties are
skills.
joined the
as sharp as
“I couldn’t
Marines I’d be
they were in his
volunteer
wishing I was
prime and he is
because
I
proud to say he
back up there at
didn’t have a
is no stranger
birth certifiBachman milking
to adversity.
cate, so I
those
cows.”
—
Murphy said
signed up for
Jack Murphy
he was a child
the
draft,”
of divorce durM u r p h y
ing the Great
revealed.
Depression era
“Nobody would
of the 1930s in the mining sec- sign for me. So I told them I was
tion of North Carolina. His oldest 18 and let them draft me.”
brother had severe hearing probMurphy was taken to Fort
lems and was sent to a special Oglethorpe, Ga., where he was
school for the deaf to learn sign examined, approved and given
language. His other brother and his choice of military service.
sister were sent to Bachman
“I took my papers and gave
Memorial Home for Children in them to a Marine recruiter. He
Bradley County, now Bachman looked at me and saw I was nothAcademy.
ing but a punk and told me to
Murphy, at age 4, was too take my papers to a Navy
young for Bachman. So he lived recruiter. I told him ‘I don’t want
with his grandparents early on. to join the Navy.’ He asked me
His grandfather, Alan Styles, was did I really want to join the
a doctor for the Cherokee Indians Marine Corps. I said, ‘Yes!’ He
in the Snowbird Mountains of said, ‘Well brother, you’ll get it!’
North Carolina. According to
And I got it.”
Murphy, before his grandfather
Murphy confessed he got more
died, he took Murphy’s oldest
than
he ever bargained for when
brother and Murphy, now age 6,
he
was
sent to the Battle of
and placed them both in
Bachman with their brother and Peleliu, considered one of the
sister. The fragmented family most brutal, bloodiest fights the
that was shattered by divorce U.S. military encountered during
would at least be together again World War II.
“Peleliu was so bloody they
as siblings.
didn’t
want people to know much
Looking back on his life at
Bachman, Murphy admits, about it,” said Murphy, who
“Bachman was the best place owns several books and videos
you could be at the time. If you dedicated to World War II and
knew what it was like back in the that particular battle. Murphy
mountains
during
the said he was in the 11th
Depression days — there was Regiment, 75th Artillery and was
nothing else like it around. The among the many Marines who
people that got to come in there stormed the area on ships. As
had to consider themselves the landing crafts approached
lucky. You got the best training the beaches, the Japanese let
that you could get in this part of loose with heavy artillery fire.
“They knocked so many of
the country as far as I was conthem out on the beach the first
cerned, and it still is.”
Over the next decade, Murphy day — about 18 out of 24 were
said he learned many skills, knocked out — we couldn’t even
including the importance of get a ramp out there. I floated
good, hard work like milking out there in the water in a
cows and attending to daunting Higgins Boat all day — then that
chores on a regular basis. Unlike night we tied in on a gasoline
many youths, Murphy was self- barge and it floated in on the
disciplined which brought his beach.”
best work ethic to the fore. The
According to Murphy, at dawn
harder the job, the harder he a Japanese soldier with a 75 mm
worked, giving him the reputa- howitzer gun took aim and
By WILLIAM WRIGHT
Lifestyles Editor
ClASS of 1956 of
Bradley Central High School
will have its reunion on Oct.
3 at Henry and Glenda Neil’s
cabin in McDonald. Those
interested in helping with
plans are invited to meet at
Hardee’s on North Keith
Street at 6 p.m. on June 16.
(Please note change of year
from the notice in the May 17
Lifestyles.)
ThE Polk CouNTy
Historical and Genealogical
Society meets today at 2 p.m.
at the First Baptist Church of
Benton. Walter Presswood
will be the speaker and will
offer information about
antique items. The community is invited to attend and
help celebrate the 20th
anniversary.
ThE uNiTEd Club will
have its luncheon meeting at
11:30 a.m. at the Golden
Corral Tuesday. Guest speaker will be Bertha McAllister.
The meetings are open to the
public. For information on
the United Club, call Martha
Bostic at 479-9207.
AT ThE libRARy
— Today, come see the film
“Annie” at 1:30 p.m. On
Tuesday, Night at the Movies
will be showing the final
movie in the Hobbit trilogy,
“Battle of the Five Armies.”
This will begin 15 minutes
earlier than normally, so be
sure to arrive by 6:15 p.m.
Popcorn provided.
— The Scholastic Book
Fair is coming to the library
this week — beginning on
Tuesday and going through
June 2. Stop in the
Children’s Room during regular business hours to shop.
All items are “buy one, get
one free.” Proceeds go
towards purchasing Easy,
Juvenile and Young Adult
materials as well as supporting children, tween and teen
programming.
— The summer reading
program during June and
July will fit the themes:
“Every Hero Has a Story,” for
children, “Unmask” for teens,
and “Out of the Ordinary” for
adults. Sign-up, which is
required to participate, has
begun, so don’t wait. Call
today. This can be done,
also, online through the
library’s website or just by
stopping by.
— On Tuesdays and
Fridays at 10:30 a.m., Ms.
Keisha leads a preschool
story time. On Thursdays at
10:30 a.m. Ms. Lauren reads
babies the interactive stories
at Baby Bookworms and on
Saturdays Ms. Abby leads a
family story time at 2 p.m.
All of these include a unique
craft for your child to create.
— Zumba is offered every
Tuesday and Thursday morning at 8:05 a.m.
Quilters and wannabees are invited to join The
Cherokee Blossom Quilt
Guild, which meets each
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at
North Cleveland Baptist
Church. Its mission is to
teach, preserve history and
love quilts.
ChRiSTiAN ClASSiCS
ChoiR meets for rehearsal
each Tuesday from 5 to 6:30
p.m. at the Pentecostal
Theological Seminary Chapel.
For more information or to
become a member, email
Daniel Petty at [email protected], or call
903-530-3017.
EDITOR’S NOTE: To submit
announcements to be included
in Around Cleveland, email
information by Wednesday for
Sunday publication in the
Lifestyles section to
[email protected].
banner photo, williaM wriGHt
JaCK MurPHY, 88, served in the U.S. Marine Corps during World War II at the age of 16. Married
53 years, he helped raise a family, worked in community service with the Cleveland Police for 12 years,
worked 25 years for TVA and is currently enjoying socializing with friends in the Sons of the American
Revolution as well as a coed club, local friends and family. Below, Murphy is seen using a DaVinci
Enhanced Vision magnifier, an electronic desktop magnifier to help individuals with low vision or other
visual impairments to see clearly. He said he still enjoys reading, researching and learning.
opened up on them. The Marines
suffered an estimated 1,100
casualties on D-Day, with
around 200 dead and 900
wounded. Murphy said he heard
the words of his older brother
who also joined the war echoing
in his ear. His brother had
warned him to join the Army and
not join the Marines because it
was too dangerous and he’d
surely get himself killed.
“He told me if I joined the
Marines I’d be wishing I was
back up there at Bachman milking those cows,” Murphy admitted. “I thought about that when I
was on Peleliu being shot at. I did
wish I was back at Bachman.”
Temperatures remained about
115 degrees and the Marines
soon suffered high casualties
from heat exhaustion. As casualties mounted, Japanese snipers
began taking aim at stretcher
bearers. Unspeakable images of
a kamikaze pilot crashing his
plane into a U.S. ammunition
ship, soldiers — friends and foes
— dying all around amid explosions and a barrage of bullets flying everywhere took Murphy to
the depths of both fear and
courage, discipline and determination to survive.
Like other U.S. Marines,
Murphy dug in and fought, fol-
lowing orders, until more and
more U.S. troops saw victory
after victory and one gritty
teenage boy saw himself become
a man. In total the 1st Division
suffered more than 6,500 casualties during their month on
Peleliu, more than a third of the
entire division. According to
Military History Online, the
American assault on Peleliu in
the Palau Islands had the highest casualty rate of any amphibious invasion in the entire war in
the Pacific.
Murphy said his training and
ability to follow orders played a
major role in his survival of that
momentous battle that saw
courageous American troops
finally win out. After the war was
over, Murphy said he went to
China from October 1945 to
February 1946 on a special mission.
“We were the law. We had
about 2 million Japanese that
had been in China since 1937
and we were sending them
home,” he said. “We had to get
them out of China and send
them back to Japan.”
See VETERAN, Page 30
banner photo, williaM wriGHt
tHe table OF wisdOM,
formed by U.S. veterans of
World War II and the Korean
War, meet several mornings
at Hardees on 25th Street in
Cleveland. Front row sitting
left to right are Everett “Red”
Harris, 85, U.S. Army; Jack
Murphy, 88, U.S. Marines;
and Bill Whitmire, 83, U.S.
Air Force. Back left standing
are Parnell Carter, 89, U.S.
Navy; Lee Wright, 74, local
pastor for 48 years; Charles
Beatty, 81, U.S. Army
Reserves; and Roy Pierce,
84, U.S. Air Force.
30—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Family works
By Rob Coombs
ID. Min. Ph.D.
Speaking on baggage
Struggling with baggage at the
airport can be quite daunting.
It’s amazing what we believe
we must take with us for a few
days away from home — toiletries, enough clothes to safely
handle any possible weather situation, several pairs of shoes,
sweaters, jackets, coats and
bathing suits — just to get us
started.
If you’re like me, my notebook
computer has become like an
appendage. I simply don’t go anywhere without it. I just might get
inspired and inspiration and a
keyboard are now inseparable. Of
course, travel without books and
articles and a camera just doesn’t
happen for me. We all have what
we feel we must have, and therefore must take. No wonder we
come back from our trips
exhausted after lugging all our
baggage around. Upon return, we
can quickly unpack our stuff,
putting it wherever it’s supposed
to go and then store away our
luggage for the next trip. What a
relief!
At least there is an end to our
trip baggage. Unfortunately, the
emotional baggage we carry isn’t
nearly as easy to unload. Most of
us find ourselves carrying far too
much baggage from emotional
issues and crises in our past.
This leaves us feeling unduly
stressed, frustrated and downright tired.
To illustrate this reality, in the
college classroom I select the
smallest female (for greatest
effect) and have her stand before
the class. Then I hand her a book
bag (every student in class has
one) and ask her to put it on her
back. As soon as she does, I
quickly fetch another bag and
have her add that bag to her back
also. And then one more for good
measure. When she is carrying
all she can on her back, I begin
loading up her sides and then her
front with more bags. With so
many bags, even walking
becomes cumbersome and laborsome.
The class laughs. I respond to
their laughter by grabbing a
trench coat from one of the bigger
guys and then attempt to cover
her bags so she won’t look quite
so silly. A few begin to feel a little
sorry for her.
Picking up on their sympathy,
I ask one of the guys to join her
at the front of the classroom.
“Why don’t you give her a hug?
She is suffering under the load
and maybe a hug is exactly what
she needs.”
Of course, when he tries to hug
her, he can’t really get near her.
There’s just too much baggage.
“What can she do?” I ask the
class.
The answer seems all too obvious as they all chime in, “Get rid
of the bags.”
“It’s too much.”
“Can’t you see, she’s in pain?”
Getting rid of book bags is simple. Getting rid of emotional baggage isn’t. I’m not sure you can. I
still carry some emotional baggage even from childhood. But
I’m no longer weighted down.
Most of my baggage I store away,
sort of like the storage compartments where we store stuff we
really don’t need anymore but
aren’t sure what to do with it. I do
carry the key with me at all
times.
Even though I no longer need
the stored baggage, I still want
access to it. It’s a part of me and
carrying it helped shape who I
am, good and bad. So sometimes I still go through it,
remember what I learned from
each particular piece of emotional baggage, and say a prayer
of thanksgiving that I’m not still
carrying it. Doing this helps me
remember the weight of what I
carried and how the baggage
blocked my connections with
others, which helps me in my
resolve not to take the bag out of
storage only to put it on my
back again.
Are you carrying too much
baggage? Are you beginning to
falter under the load? Is there so
much baggage that others can’t
get close to you? If so, check out
a good place to store it away. If
you need help, don’t hesitate to
ask. Carrying too much baggage
is a killer.
New headstone dedicated
at Civil War soldier’s grave
TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) — For
some reason, John E. Wilkins carried a pocket notebook and pen,
writing down his experiences as a
Union soldier, day after day, from
the onset of the Civil War until its
conclusion.
His service helped preserve a
nation. His decision to keep a diary
preserved history.
Wilkins, himself, deserves to be
remembered. And he will be.
Nearly 150 years after he documented the war’s final chapter, a
new headstone at Wilkins’ grave
was dedicated during a noon ceremony at Woodlawn Cemetery
Saturday in Terre Haute, his
hometown. The “amateur historian” who researched the life of a
clerk-turned-soldier told Wilkins’
story at a lecture Friday night in
the Vigo County Public Library.
“I love this story,” said Mark
Meyer, who spoke on “John E.
Wilkins, Ready and Able: A
Hoosier’s Civil War” from 6 to 8
p.m. Friday in Rooms A, B and C
of the library.
Civil War diaries by soldiers
were not uncommon. A diary such
as Wilkins’ was rare, though,
because it chronicles the entire
course of the war, right down to
the aftermath of President
Abraham Lincoln’s assassination,
the
Tribune-Star
reported
(http://bit.ly/1ztCtg2 ). Wilkins’
words also give an unvarnished
view of the combat.
Wilkins wrote daily entries during the war in field diaries, small
pocket notebooks.
Only one of his field diaries survives; it is kept at the Allen County
library, said Jane Gastineau, its
Lincoln librarian. Nonetheless, in
1911 — months before he died at
age 75 — Wilkins transcribed all
four years of his wartime notes
into his “Civil War Diary,” and that
hardbound compilation now highlights the Fort Wayne library’s
Lincoln-era documents.
Meyer started reading it a year
and a half ago. “I just got
wrapped up in his diary,” he said
Tuesday, “and by him.”
Wilkins was a 25-year-old Vigo
County deputy clerk and Terre
Haute volunteer firefighter at the
brink of the Civil War. His military
service began as a member of the
Vigo Guards, Indiana’s most highly regarded militia, in the late
1850s. That militia offered its services to the U.S. Army before the
war — most likely the first in the
country to do so, Meyer explained.
Wilkins wound up serving under
memorable Union leaders, from an
initial three-month stint in Col.
Lew Wallace’s 11th Indiana
Regiment (nicknamed “Wallace’s
Zouaves”) to suiting up for Gens.
William T. Sherman and Ulysses
S. Grant. Wilkins fought on 24 different battlefields, including
Shiloh, Fort Donelson and Red
River. He climbed to the rank of
lieutenant, and became an adjutant (a commander’s assistant).
Throughout, he wrote about
what he saw. With access to the
leaders, Wilkins presented a
unique perspective of the war.
“There’s a certain depth to his
diary, where he had more information than a regular soldier would
have,” Meyer said. Yet, Wilkins
served in the trenches. Thus, his
descriptions of the fighting are
vivid. That includes the Battle of
Fort Donelson in 1862 at
Tennessee. For Grant and the
Union, the victory was pivotal. And
bloody.
Wilkins “has some pretty graphic detail of that battle,” Meyer said.
At Fort Donelson, Union soldiers
slept in the February cold without
blankets. In his diary, Wilkins
“talked about marching in mud up
to his knees and slept in tents with
an inch or two of water,” Meyer
added. “It’s pretty amazing.”
“The best parts of the diary are
the ones that talk about what the
daily life of a soldier was then,”
Meyer continued. “It was something I can’t imagine enduring for
even a week.”
When Lincoln died April 15,
1865, of an assassin’s bullet,
Wilkins’ diary reflected the soldiers’ stunned grief “and how
everybody was so angry that they
were so close to victory when
Lincoln’s life was taken,” Meyer
said. Wilkins had enlisted for duty
because “he was very intent on
preserving the Union,” Meyer said.
“Our country was close to falling
apart, and if he and others had not
done what they did, hard telling
what this country would be today.”
“Always remembering our past
and our history is one of the most
important things we can do,”
Kesner said.
Veteran
From Page 29
In 1947 Murphy moved to
Cleveland and married the love of
his life, Betty Sue Wooden, in
1952. The couple had three
daughters and a son in contrast
to Murphy’s own parents who
had three sons and a daughter.
That’s where the similarity of
Murphy and his parents ends.
Murphy stuck with his wife and
children for better or for worse, in
sickness and in health, and said
he never once regretted the
choices he made in the name of
love.
Murphy, a family man at
heart, worked 25 years for the
Tennessee Valley Authority,
building power generating facilities. He continued his community service, working with the
Cleveland Police Department for
12 years, escorting funerals,
unlocking and jump starting
cars as well as performing other
civic duties until his wife had a
stroke that paralyzed her left
side.
He loved, honored and cherished her until she passed away
after 53 years of marriage.
Appreciating what it means both
as a child and as an adult to have
family and to lose family, Murphy
said the thing that keeps him
going is his own children and
grandchildren.
“I have to keep them straight,”
he said. “I still walk the line. I’d
like for them to do the same and
that’s what keeps me going.”
Raised as an orphan, adopted
by Uncle Sam and esteemed as a
family patriarch, Murphy’s life
has come full circle as a man who
faced adversity, fulfilled his obligations and learned a lot from
life’s experiences.
That, in itself, may have
earned him a seat at the fanciful
“Table of Wisdom.” But it also
adds to his credentials as a man
born into what’s been called the
greatest generation in history.
Banner photo, WILLIAM
WRIGHT
WORLD WAR II
veteran Jack
Murphy is living
proof of a generation that worked
hard, fought hard,
was resilient and
reliable when it
came to doing what
was needed to be
done to stand up to
global tyranny from
the forces of evil.
Murphy said he still
enjoys discussing
history, being with
family and friends,
and tracing his family roots, which he
said go back to the
founding fathers of
Tennessee.
In online era, chefs face scorn, raves of the amateur critic
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The
online reviews had filtered in,
and they weren’t good: The
restaurant Mark Cammarano
had invested nearly all of his
mother’s retirement money in
got just two stars.
So the FYI Network — known
for gimmicky reality TV shows
like “Married at First Sight” —
offered to step in with “Say it to
My Face,” a new show in which
he would meet some of those
naysayers face-to-face and confront what they had to say. Then,
with the help of two-star chefs,
he could try to change their
opinions. Cammarano took the
gamble.
But gathered in Cammarano’s
family-style restaurant in the
Los Angeles suburb of Simi
Valley, things got testy, quickly.
“I had an arugula and steak
salad,” said Ryan Carrillo, a
reality TV personality and artistic roller skating champion
who’d dined at the restaurant.
“It was literally one of the worst
things I have ever ordered in my
life. The steak was raw. The
quality of the meat was very
low.”
“Do you know what carpaccio
is?” Cammarano shot back. “It’s
raw meat, right?”
“Correct,” Carrillo said. “I said
the quality of the meat was low
so I couldn’t eat it. Of course the
meat was raw.”
Cammarano crossed his arms
and looked down, frustration
running through his grim but
muted expression.
The plot might have seemed
perfectly crafted to reel in viewers, but it also hit on a real tension in the food world. Online
blogs and user-generated sites
like Instagram and Yelp let every
customer be a critic — meaning
one undercooked dish or forgot-
ten drink can quickly show up
online for all the world to see. As
newspapers trim their staffs —
including expensive restaurant
critics — and millennials flock to
online-only reviews, the amateur
critic has, in many ways, taken
center stage. And that is changing not just the chef-critic
dynamic, but the entire restaurant-customer relationship.
Digitally savvy chefs have
found ways to build their brands
online — chef and food TV star
Anthony Bourdain has more
Twitter followers than the British
monarchy. But for those who are
just starting or have no online
presence at all, one bad review
can indeed be searing. A working
paper by Harvard University
business administration professor Michael Luca found a onestar increase on Yelp brings
restaurants a 5 to 9 percent
increase in revenue, and that
independent restaurants benefit
most.
“This suggests that online
consumer reviews substitute for
more traditional forms of reputation,” the study concluded.
To be certain, the bona fide
newspaper restaurant critic
commands clout. Their numbers, however, have been dwindling. Food sections have shrunk
and several notable reviewers
laid-off. Meanwhile, the number
of blogs dedicated to food has
risen exponentially. By one estimate, there were more than
18,000 in 2013.
“Increasingly,
newspapers
don’t want to spend the money,”
said Ruth Reichl, a James Beard
award-winning critic and author.
“Serious reviews have to be balanced and fair which online
reviews aren’t. Every restaurant
has its good days and bad days.
Serious critics go a number of
AP photo
IN THIS PHOTO provided by FYI Network, FYI’s “Say It To My
Face!” co-host Anthony Dispensa, center, speaks with Mark
Cammarano, left, owner and chef of Cammarano’s American Fusion
restaurant in Simi Valley, Calif., with other staff from the restaurant.
The traditional restaurant review is being drowned out by a chorus of
Instagram photos, Yelp rants and blog posts on each and any dinner
served. In “Say It To My Face!” chefs and online critics hash it out,
opening a fiery debate on new media’s role in a restaurant’s success.
times to make sure they are getting a fair picture.”
Amanda Hesser, former food
editor of The New York Times
Magazine and co-founder of
Food52, an online hub for cooks,
said readers have traditionally
looked to the newspaper and
magazine reviews for validation
in their decision of where to
dine, but also for reading pleasure. Readers enjoy what the
reviewer has to say and might
identify with the sensitivities of a
particular critic. In light of the
ongoing shift, she said the “reading for pleasure aspect” has
become much more important.
“The utility aspect of a review
kind of maybe matters less
because user-generated reviews
exist,” she said.
If there’s any doubt that
restaurants still closely watch
what the newspaper critic writes,
one need only look to Texas,
where a group of chefs revolted
against a Dallas Morning News
critic last year by refusing to let
her pay for meals when she visited to review their restaurants —
hoping, in turn, that she would
be unable to write about them at
all. Chefs accused her of running
an errant star-system which
they said confused customers by
making it difficult to distinguish
between fine dining and taco
stands.
Sal Jafar II, co-owner of Proof
+ Pantry, which started the
revolt, said, “It’s a little dangerous for a person to have that
much power.”
CANNES WATCH: Portman eschews politics, Mara’s fashion coup
CANNES, France (AP) — The
first week of the Cannes Film
Festival came to an end this
weekend with plenty of buzz.
Natalie Portman talked about
why her new film in Israel is not
political, there was an honor for
Jane Fonda and a big deal for
Tom Ford.
And then there was also
Sylvester Stallone, making news
outside of the festival.
The Associated Press’ journalists were on hand, capturing all
the details:
———
ROONEY MARA TAKES TOP
BILLING ON RED CARPET:
Rooney Mara scored a fashion
coup at the “Carol” premiere in a
diaphanous white gown that
upstaged her more famous costar Cate Blanchett.
Thirty-year-old Mara plays
opposite Blanchett in the captivating lesbian drama and wowed
crowds Sunday with her simple,
yet elegant silk dress with delicate halter neck and white make
up.
Blanchett looked typically ravishing, arm in arm with director
Todd Haynes.
But the 46-year-old star’s
shoulderless bustier dress came
over a tad busy with clashing
blue prints and huge proportions
in the train that ushers needed
to help her with.
———
PORTMAN STAYS
APOLITICAL (IN FILM)
Natalie Portman’s directorial
debut, “A Tale of Love and
Darkness,” is set around the
time of the formation of Israel,
but the Oscar-winning actress
says it doesn’t have a political
agenda.
The film, adapted from an
autobiographical novel by Amos
Oz, premiered over the weekend
at the Cannes Film Festival. It
AP photo
ACTRESS Rooney Mara departs following the screening of the film Carol at the 68th international film
festival, Cannes, southern France, May 17.
charts the birth of the state and
a boy’s initiation into the realities
of disappointment and death.
“I think the movie is very much
about this very particular, specific family story. Of course, it happens at a crazy moment in history, which I think is a big sort of
weight on their backs. It’s sort of
a pressure cooker for the family,
but there’s not really a political
agenda behind it,” said Portman
in an interview with The
Associated Press on Sunday.
“(Amos) Oz became one of
Israel’s leading peace advocates,
so it’s not the most controversial,
I suppose, of political aspects to
the film.”
The Israeli-born Portman also
wrote the screenplay and stars in
the Hebrew-language feature as
the boy’s mother Fania, a cultured and imaginative woman
whose dreams can’t withstand
grinding everyday reality.
For Portman, making the film
in Hebrew was imperative.
“The language is so important
to the story and such an important character,” she said.
“Someone said to me once,
‘Americans always want to make
foreign movies and have French
characters or Spanish characters
speak English, but with a French
accent or Spanish accent and it’s
so silly.’ Could you imagine making a movie about George
Washington in French and having him have an American accent
in French?”
Portman’s film is playing as a
special screening outside of the
main competition at Cannes. It’s
gotten a lukewarm response
from critics, but at the premiere,
it received a standing ovation.
—
By
Zara
Eldridge,
http://www.twitter.com/zarayounis
———
LAW GETS RELIGION:
Jude Law is the new pope.
The British actor will play the
fictional Pope Pius XIII in “The
Young Pope,” a miniseries directed by Italian filmmaker Paolo
Sorrentino.
The series — a co-production
of HBO, Sky and France’s Canal
Plus — was announced Sunday
in Cannes, where Sorrentino’s
film “Youth” is competing for the
Palme d’Or. Filming is due to
begin this summer.
Law will play Lenny Belardo,
who is thrust into the role of
pope and must grapple with his
faith and the powerful structures
of the church.
Sorrentino, who will co-write
the eight-part series, said it
would explore “the inner struggle
between the huge responsibility
of the Head of the Catholic
Church and the miseries of the
simple man that fate (or the Holy
Spirit) chose as pontiff.”
—By
Jill
Lawless,
http://Twitter.com/JillLawless
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—31
LIBRARY CORNER
See ‘Annie’ at 1:30
today at the library
The library will be closed where food, games and activMonday in observance of ities will be enjoyed by all.
Children will have special
Memorial Day.
The HOT Pick for this week programs all throughout
is “An Invisible Thread” by every week. Teens will meet
Laura Schroff. Discover what every Friday and Saturday
happens when a busy New night after the library’s reguYork advertising executive lar business hours. The
adopts a young disadvan- adults will have unique proon
alternating
taged youth. This old grams
Chinese Proverb details it Sundays and Mondays and a
night
every
well: An invisible tread con- movie
nects those who are destined Wednesday. The teen proto meet, regardless of time, gram starts with a bang at
place and circumstance. The the Cosplay Prom on June
thread may stretch or tangle, 13 from 7 to 11 p.m. Come
but it will never break. dressed as your favorite villain or hero
Check it out
from
any
today in the
fantasy litNon-Fiction
Sheriff I.I. Smith
erature,
section.
c o m i c ,
Today,
was killed by moonmovie
or
come
see
shiners in 1922, the
video game.
the
film
only Bradley County
This event is
“Annie” at
sheriff to die in the
sponsored
1:30 p.m.
line of duty.
by the Teen
T h i s
Advisory
Tuesday,
Group
and
Night at the
Movies will be showing the registration is required to
final movie in the Hobbit tril- participate.
There will be a four-part
ogy, “Battle of the Five
Armies.” This will begin 15 Microsoft Excel course
minutes earlier than normal, Tuesday through Friday from
so be sure to arrive by 6:15 3 to 5 p.m. The class will
begin with the basics of
p.m. Popcorn provided.
The Scholastic Book Fair Excel so be sure to sign up
is coming to the library this for all four if you need to
from
scratch.
week — beginning on start
Tuesday and going through Registration is required and
June 2. Stop in the there are only 11 spots availChildren’s Room during reg- able. Call or stop by the Nonular business hours to shop. Fiction Desk to reserve your
All items are “buy one, get spot today.
The History Branch is curone free.” Proceeds go toward
purchasing Easy, Juvenile rently undergoing work to
and Young Adult materials preserve its beauty and hisas well as supporting chil- tory. Unfortunately, that
dren, tween and teen pro- work has forced the branch
to temporarily close the
gramming.
Some would say summer is wheelchair accessible ramp.
already here. Before it offi- Once all other work is comcially gets here, head over to pleted a new ramp will be
the library for the summer installed. The library thanks
reading program serving all you for your patience and
ages during June and July. understanding.
The Lions’ Club of
Programming will fit the
themes: “Every Hero Has a Cleveland is collecting used
Story,”
for
children, prescription eyeglasses to
“Unmask” for teens, and “Out distribute to individuals
of the Ordinary” for adults. throughout our community.
Sign-up, which is required to If you have some that you
participate, has begun, so can donate, it will go a long
don’t wait, call today. This way to make Cleveland a betcan also be done online ter place for all. There is a
through the library’s website box at the Circulation Desk
where you can drop them off.
or just by stopping by.
For more information on
The excitement kicks off
with a huge party for every- the library and its services,
one on June 6 at 2 p.m. visit clevelandlibrary.org.
Parenting
Take the mad out of money with these tips
NEW YORK (AP) — As a financial planner, Jeff Motske has
spent 26 years helping couples
navigate one of their most contentious and emotional issues:
money.
The investing of it. The saving
of it. The spending of it.
Finances can be a big, breakuplevel deal at any stage of a relationship. That’s why Motske
believes more people need to
know each other intimately —
financially speaking — before
walking down the aisle.
“Both people need to be
involved in the finances,
whether they like it or not,” he
said in a recent interview.
“There’s so much hiding. Hiding
of debt. Hiding of spending.”
Motske, in Orange County,
California, has rounded up
anecdotes, interviews and tips
in a new book, “The Couple’s
Guide
to
Financial
Compatibility,” out in March
from Da Capo Lifelong Books:
—AP: How widespread is the
problem of couples not communicating openly and honestly
about money?
Motske: It’s a huge problem.
Many couples choose not to talk
about money, versus all the
other sensitive topics, and if you
don’t talk about it, you’re more
than likely going to start fighting. It leads to really stressful
relationships.
Financial discord is among
the largest causes of divorce.
One study says couples who
fight about finances once a week
are 37 percent more likely to get
divorced than couples who
rarely argue about finances.
Those who fight daily are 69
percent more likely to get
divorced compared to couples
who rarely fight about money.
AP: Tell me about your War of
the Wallets Quiz. Why did you
create it and what should be the
goal of taking it?
Motske: The quiz is the door
opener to start communicating
and solving problems. There are
a lot of different areas of life
that couples never even think
about.
A great one I had recently was
a couple came in that had been
married for 20 years and one of
the questions on the quiz is
about elder care, if all of a sudden mom couldn’t take care of
herself any more. One spouse
said, ‘That’s easy. Mom would
move in with us’ and the other
spouse said, ‘No way that’s happening.’
Another huge one on the quiz
is retirement. Most couples
Hints from Heloise
Donation gets stamp
of approval
Dear Heloise: My sister-inlaw is trying to clear her home of
clutter and has been saving
USED POSTAGE STAMPS to
donate to charity. We were wondering if you have any information about doing this. We will
watch in the Omaha (Neb.)
World-Herald for your response.
Thank you. — Sharon W.,
Omaha, Neb.
Sharon, what a kind thing to
do! There are a lot of my readers
who do the very same. The
American Philatelic Society
would be happy to take your
donation. Its mission, among
other goals, is to promote stamp
collecting and education.
Some hints for your donation:
The APS accepts both canceled
and mint stamps. You may cut
the stamps from the envelopes,
but do not cut off the perforations. Mail your stamps to:
American Philatelic Society
Attn: Development Office
100 Match Factory Place
Bellefonte, PA 16823
Check out the website
(www.stamps.org) to learn more
about what the APS does through
meetings, seminars and learning
opportunities for kids. The site is
easy to navigate and just filled
with fabulous-looking stamps! —
Heloise
No flying trash
Dear Heloise: When a
garbage truck picks up and flips
a large trash receptacle, loose
garbage flies everywhere, making
a mess. Multiply that by all the
containers, and it creates a monster mess!
Please encourage people to
BAG their garbage before throwing it into a big bin, and avoid
throwing loose garbage into the
bin. Small acts can lead to huge
results. — Dave G., Kihei, Maui,
Hawaii
Aloha, David! It is a Catch-22
situation. Yes, putting garbage in
a bag first will keep trash from
flying around. Yes, it will help
keep things neat. However, plastic garbage bags may NOT break
down in a landfill. Having lived in
Hawaii as a young girl, I know
how beautiful it is, so of course I
want to help. You can buy
biodegradable bags, and that’s
an upside. Read labels carefully.
Many of these bags say they are
compostable in a certified commercial or municipal compost
AP Photo
THIS BOOK cover image released by Da Capo Lifelong Books
shows “The Couple’s Guide to Financial Compatibility: Avoid Fights,
About Spending and Saving; Build a Happy and Secure Future
Together,” by Jeff Motske.
can’t even agree on what date
they want to retire let alone talk
about what retirement looks
like.
AP: What’s the biggest mistake couples make in not planning their financial futures?
Motske: It’s the savings versus
spending
battle.
Unfortunately
too
many
Americans have huge debt problems. About $1,500 is the average per household outstanding
credit card balance for those in
debt. Student loan debt is
prevalent. In most cases spending is more unconscious than
conscious because they don’t
track their expenses. They don’t
have a budget. Seventy percent
of American households don’t
have a budget.
Look at your credit card statements and use three different
highlighters. Use one color to
highlight all of your necessities
like gas, groceries. The second
color is the like-to-have type
category and that’s more of your
BANNER
BABIES
Amy and Andy Burgess of
Ocoee announce the birth of
Colten Andrew, their 20 3/4ElIzABETH inch, 8-pound, 5-ounce son, on
14, 2015, at SkyRidge
in San Antonio May
Medical Center. Grandparents are
sent in a picGary and LaVonda Hysinger of
ture of her
Cleveland and Bonnie Burgess of
curious cat,
Ocoee.
Mr. Kitty, sit———
BANNER
POLICY:
Birth
ting in the box
her new com- announcements cannot be
puter came in. accepted by email or fax due to
Sometimes the legal considerations. Submitted
information must be on an official
box is more
form and accompanied by photo
fun than
ID. There is a $10 charge to
what’s inside! include additional information
such as deceased grandparents
or family members other than siblings and living grandparents.
(Announcements including a
photo must go through paid
advertising.) Forms are available
at the Banner for babies not born
at SkyRidge Medical Center. Call
the Banner for more information
facility, which means if they at 472-5041.
get in with the regular trash and
end up in a landfill, they will not
biodegrade. — Heloise
Nice ice
Dear Heloise: I took a job as a
camp nurse years ago. There
were lots of young girls coming to
the infirmary for treatment of
insect stings, bites, etc.
I kept a cupcake pan filled
with water in the freezer. It was
so easy to put one “cube” in a
plastic bag. I applied it to the
affected area, and the girls went
on their way. Just the right size,
and great for pain and swelling.
— Loretta J., R.N., Nanticoke, Pa.
(c)2015 by King Features Syndicate Inc.
entertainment and gym memberships. The final category is
what I call the stupid, frivolous
expenses.
It’s shocking how many people start coloring their credit
card statements with that last
category because credit cards
are an emotional swipe and it’s
done. That has helped couples a
lot. That one exercise gets couples to see their conscious and
unconscious spending.
AP: In what ways do couples
not fight fair about money?
What’s your best advice for
staying on the right track?
Motske: It’s where one person
feels like they can splurge
because they got this big bonus
and it’s kind of a power, controltype issue, and the other one
resents that deeply but doesn’t
say anything and it builds up.
Many couples have a mental
financial scoreboard and they
keep
hurting
themselves
because it builds and builds
and builds.
I was just reading a report the
other day. Experian had a marriage survey out and this is really strange to me: It said the
average guy will spend $1,231
before discussing it with their
spouse and the average woman
will spend $396. That is a huge
disconnect, that there should be
that big of a disparity in a relationship.
They just don’t work together
a lot of the time. Once a month
go on a financial date night,
where you can sit down and
openly discuss your goals. You’ll
be amazed how it can transform
a relationship. Get it all out on
the table in a safe environment.
AP: How do you suggest
teaching kids about money so
they can avoid friction later with
life partners?
Motske: Your kids watch you
and how you spend money. The
earlier you start teaching them
about money and saving and
spending and credit cards, the
better off they’re going to be.
Just giving them money all the
time isn’t going to get that done.
One person I interviewed for
the book doesn’t use allowance
but uses a job board, where the
kids apply for certain jobs and
get paid for that at the end of
the week. If they don’t apply,
they don’t get paid. I think it’s
cool to think of it that way. If
you think of it from an employment perspective they’re going
to start to understand how to
apply for things, how a paycheck works.
Allow them to make decisions
rather than just handing over
entitlements.
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32—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
FOOD
rides
Judge not by smell the awesomeness that is fish sauce
By AARTI SEQUEIRA
Associated Press
I’m pretty sure that if I let you
sniff some fish sauce, it would be
pretty hard to convince you to
cook with it. No, the potent, nighon acrid scent is not this beloved
sauce’s most seductive asset.
And funnily enough, it’s not
even its flavor (at least not on its
own) that would win you over. It’s
what happens when you dribble a
little fish sauce into stir-fries, curries, marinades, even salad dressings. Suddenly, your dish takes
on a depth of flavor you hadn’t
previously detected, a complexity
that you can’t quite put your finger on, a strong punch of meatiness without tasting meaty.
And that pungent aroma? You
won’t be able to detect it. But you
won’t want to go without this precious bottle of fish sauce again.
It’s a rather ego-less ingredient
in that way; fish sauce is not at its
best on its own. But my, what a
team player. And it’s that ability,
to transform its fellow co-habitants into something better than
In celebrATIOn of the 60th anniversary of their wedding, Walter they were before, that has won the
and Barbara Peterson were honored by their friends and family hearts of cooks throughout
recently at a reception held at First Lutheran Church. The Petersons Southeast Asia, from Thailand
and Vietnam to Indonesia.
married on May 14, 1955, in Lakeview, Michigan.
It’s incredible what just two
ingredients, anchovies and salt —
the building blocks of fish sauce
— can transform into when left to
their own devices for a few
months. Indeed, this kind of fish
sauce is actually related to modern day Worcestershire sauce,
which also is a fermented
anchovy-based sauce.
Use it as you would soy sauce,
—Forms are available at the Banner for wedding and engageto amp up the umami-ness of
ment stories. Please type or print information. The Banner is not
whatever you happen to be whipresponsible for errors due to illegible writing. Errors in content
ping up for dinner. Just one hint:
Happy anniversary
Banner bridal
policy outlined
must be reported within three days of publication. (Article will be
reprinted if error was the fault of the Banner staff.) A typo is not considered an error in content.
—There is no charge for engagement, wedding or party stories if received by set deadlines. Only two shower or party photographs will be published.
—Good quality photographs which are no larger than 5x7 are
preferred. However, quality is more important than size. Photos
should be picked up within 30 days following publication. Pictures
will be returned by mail only if self-addressed, stamped envelope is
provided. The Banner is not responsible for loss or damage to pictures.
—Banner editors reserve the right to refuse any photograph
which is not, in their opinion, of good quality for reproduction.
—In order for a wedding story to be published in the Banner,
information and photograph for an engagement or wedding for
Sunday publication must be submitted by Wednesday noon
the week before desired publication date. A charge will be
made for wedding stories not published within 90 days after the
ceremony. Deadlines are firm.
—Banner editors also reserve the right to edit any information provided to conform to the newspaper’s requirements and
Associated Press style.
AP Photo
THIS PHOTO shows Vietnamese style skirt steak with asparagus
and scalliions in Concord, N.H.
Balance out all that saltiness with
just a dash of brown sugar and a
good squeeze of lime juice, as I do
in my Vietnamese-style skirt
steak. You don’t have to make an
Asian-style marinade either. I’ve
made a great one using fish
sauce, balsamic vinegar, honey
and garlic.
Vietnamese-Style
Skirt Steak With Asparagus
And Scallions
You’ll find fish sauce in the
Asian or international section of
just about any grocer.
Start to finish: 45 minutes (20
minutes active)
Servings: 4
3 tablespoons fish sauce
1/4 cup lime juice
1 teaspoon minced garlic
1 teaspoon minced ginger
2 teaspoons brown sugar
1 pound skirt steak
1 large bunch thin asparagus,
trimmed
2 bunches scallions, bottoms
trimmed
Sunflower or canola oil
Kosher salt and ground black
pepper
In a large zip-close plastic bag,
mix together the fish sauce, lime
juice, garlic, ginger and brown
sugar. Taste for seasoning, adding
more sugar or lime juice if the
marinade is too salty. Place the
skirt steak in the marinade, making sure it’s well covered. Seal the
bag and set aside on the counter
for 30 minutes.
Meanwhile, prepare a grill for
direct medium-high heat.
Toss the asparagus and scallions with a little sunflower oil,
salt and pepper. Set aside. After
30 minutes, remove the steak
from the marinade and place on a
paper towel-lined plate to remove
excess marinade.
Using an oil-soaked paper towel
held with tongs, oil the grill grates.
Set the steak on the grill and cook
for 3 minutes, depending on the
thickness of the meat, until a good
charred crust develops on the
underside. Flip and cook for
another 2 minutes, or until a meat
thermometer inserted into the
thickest part of the meat registers
125 F. Transfer the steak to a
warm plate, tent lightly with foil
and allow to rest 5 to 10 minutes.
Meanwhile, place the asparagus and scallions on the grill and
cook the scallions for 2 to 3 minutes, or until slightly wilted, and
the asparagus for 5 to 7 minutes,
or until very lightly browned.
Slice the steak across the grain
and serve over the grilled vegetables, with a fresh squeeze of lime
juice, if desired.
Nutrition information per serving: 300 calories; 130 calories
from fat (43 percent of total calories); 14 g fat (4 g saturated; 0 g
trans fats); 80 mg cholesterol;
1,250 mg sodium; 15 g carbohydrate; 5 g fiber; 7 g sugar; 30 g
protein.
Getting to the core of the matter! Eat your pineapple cores!
By MELISSA D’ ARABIAN
Associated Press
Eating fresh pineapple always
reminds me of balmy vacation
nights in Hawaii. And since
pineapples run a few bucks a
pop, buying them frequently
translates into considerable savings when compared to an actual
trip to Hawaii, particularly when
you’re carting along four girls, as
I would be. Admittedly, the
pineapple is a tad less exotic...
Still, it’s a great sweet summer
treat.
Pineapple gets its unmistakable sweetness from natural sugars, of course, but this tropical
fruit also is a fantastic source of
vitamin C and fiber. But here’s
another thing to get excited
about: Pineapples are packed
with protein-tenderizing enzymes
that can do very cool things in
the kitchen.
For example, these enzymes
prevent gelatin from gelling. So
step away from the aspics and
gelatin salads if you are using
fresh raw pineapple. But those
same enzymes can work wonders
in marinades. That is, so long as
you don’t let the meat linger too
long in the pineapple juice.
About 20 minutes is plenty for
most meats.
The problem with pineapple
(not counting loose gelatin) is
that we routinely toss about 25
percent of our fruit when we
throw out the core! Admittedly,
the core is more fibrous than the
rest of the pineapple. But as an
avid snacker of the pineapple
core, I think this issue is minor.
Solving for the extra fiber is quite
AP Photo
THIS PHOTO shows a pineapple core ceviche recipe in Concord,
N.H.
simple: Cut the core down to
smaller pieces (think tiny dice or
thin slices), or cook it to soften.
For example, you could slice
the core thinly into coins for easy
snacking. You also could grill the
coins and drizzle them with
honey. Or dice the core, saute it
in just a splash of oil, then spoon
over Greek yogurt for a dessert.
Or pickle cubes of the core with
hot water, vinegar, sugar and
maybe a pinch of red pepper
flakes.
In this recipe, I take the core of
a pineapple and pair it with citrus juice and shrimp to make a
summertime classic — ceviche.
The acid and enzymes in the
pineapple essentially “cook” the
raw shrimp, but you also can use
cooked shrimp or fish, if you prefer. If so, you can reduce the
marinating time to about 15 min-
utes.
—PINEAPPLE CORE CEVICHE
Start to finish: 1 hour and 15
minutes
Servings: 6
1 pound raw shrimp, any size,
shelled and deveined, cut into
1/4-inch pieces
1/2 cup lime juice
1/2 cup orange juice
1/3 cup finely chopped
pineapple core (or the core of one
large pineapple)
1/2 small sweet onion, finely
diced
2 serrano or jalapeno chilies,
finely diced (for less heat, remove
the seeds)
2 teaspoons grated fresh ginger (optional)
1 medium avocado, halved,
pitted and chopped
1/3 cup chopped fresh cilantro
Kosher salt and ground black
pepper
Small butter lettuce leaves, to
serve
Sliced radishes, to serve
Lime wedges, to serve
In a large bowl, combine the
shrimp, lime juice and orange
juice. Toss well, then refrigerate.
For a tender ceviche, marinate
for 30 minutes. For a firmer texture, let marinate for 1 to 2
hours.
Once the shrimp has marinated, drain and discard the juice.
Return the shrimp to the bowl
and add the chopped pineapple
core, onion, chilies, ginger (if
using), avocado and cilantro.
Toss well, then season with salt
and pepper. Serve immediately
with butter lettuce leaves (to use
as wraps and cups). Offer sliced
radishes and lime wedges on the
side as toppings.
The dish can be prepared
ahead. To do so, cover tightly
after draining and tossing with
the onion and pepper, then
refrigerate. About 30 minutes
before serving, add the avocado
and cilantro.
Nutrition information per serving: 130 calories; 50 calories
from fat (38 percent of total calories); 6 g fat (1 g saturated; 0 g
trans fats); 95 mg cholesterol;
510 mg sodium; 10 g carbohydrate; 3 g fiber; 4 g sugar; 12 g
protein.
———
Food Network star Melissa
d’Arabian is an expert on healthy
eating on a budget. She is the
author
of
the
cookbook,
“Supermarket
Healthy.”
http://www.melissadarabian.ne
School’s almost out, so it’s time to get schooled on burgers
By Elizabeth Karmel
Associate Press
As food goes, it’s hard to imagine anything more American —
and that more perfectly captures
summer — than a great grilled
hamburger.
Trouble is, as much as we love
a great burger, we’re not always
all that great at making them.
That’s because there is more to
making burgers than serving
time at the grill. But if you master
a few easy tips and techniques,
you can produce burgers that will
blow you away. And the good
news is that almost everything
can be done in advance.
Let’s start with the meat. If you
want a rich, juicy burger, you
have to use ground meat that has
some natural fat. Ground chuck
is the most common choice. The
chuck is ground from the beef
shoulder and has enough natural
fat to give your burger a rich,
moist flavor.
You can use 100 percent
chuck, or you can do what I do
and use a combination of ground
sirloin and ground chuck.
If you buy quality, freshly
ground meat, a little salt and
pepper is all you need to season a
burger. But to enhance the beefiness, I also like to add a dash of
dry mustard powder and a bit of
Worcestershire sauce.
Now let’s talk about mixing
and forming the meat. It’s important that you not overwork the
meat. The more your work the
mix, the tougher and drier the
burgers will be.
To form the patties, it’s best to
loosely scoop up a 1/3-pound
mound of the meat mixture, then
gently pat it into a patty. When
you are happy with the shape,
make a depression in the center
with your finger. This depression
is the key to a perfect patty.
Now, the cooking. Burgers
should be cooked directly over
medium to medium-high heat.
They should take 8 to 10 minutes
total, 4 to 5 minutes per side.
And please resist the urge to
mash the burgers down with the
spatula. This just causes all the
yummy juices to leak out. Also,
only turn the burger once
halfway through the cooking
time, after about 4 minutes.
BEST BASIC BURGER
You can make this burger with
all ground chuck or a combination of chuck and sirloin. My
“house burger” is a mixture of
chuck and sirloin enhanced by
Worcestershire sauce and dry
mustard, which make the burgers taste meatier. You also can
prep the burgers up to a day
ahead and keep them refrigerated
until ready to grill.
Start to finish: 20 minutes
Servings: 6
1 pound ground chuck
1 pound ground sirloin
1 tablespoon Worcestershire
sauce
1 teaspoon Coleman’s Mustard
powder
Kosher salt and ground black
pepper
Olive oil
Buns, to serve
Condiments and toppings, as
desired
Heat the grill to medium.
In a large bowl, combine the
chuck, sirloin, Worcestershire,
mustard powder, 1/2 teaspoon
salt and 1/2 teaspoon pepper.
Use a fork to carefully and gently
mix just until well combined. Do
not overmix.
Gently divide the meat into 6
mounds, then shape each into a
patty. Use your thumb to create
an indentation in the center of
each patty. Lightly brush each
patty all over with olive oil.
Make sure your grill’s cooking
grate is clean of all debris. Add
the burgers and grill until the
meat is no longer pink, 8 to 10
minutes, turning once halfway
through grilling time. If making
cheeseburgers, top each burger
with cheese after you turn it. Let
the burgers rest about 5 minutes
then serve on buns with condiments and toppings as desired.
Nutrition information per serving: 410 calories; 190 calories
from fat (46 percent of total calories); 21 g fat (7 g saturated; 1 g
trans fats); 100 mg cholesterol;
500 mg sodium; 22 g carbohydrate; 1 g fiber; 3 g sugar; 34 g
protein.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—33
ADK program features
HUGS leader Violet Lee
Young widows speak out
on managing grief, support
NEW YORK (AP) — Nine days
after her husband died unexpectedly, Sheryl Sandberg took to
Facebook to describe her return
to the sidelines for her daughter’s
soccer game. There, a grandmother who had been widowed
prematurely years earlier offered
her a chair.
It was a small but telling gesture that touched dozens of
younger widows like Sandberg,
who at 45 has two small children
to raise in “this terrible, terrible
club that no one wants to join,”
as one of her sympathetic
Facebook commenters put it.
Grief need never be compared,
but the “club” that is the
Facebook exec’s new normal
includes members who feel set
apart from older counterparts
navigating the deaths of spouses
much later in life.
Party invitations dwindle.
Bereavement groups confuse and
annoy both sides as older and
younger grievers are thrown
together. What about dating?
What about sex? What about
money and careers and managing
the emotional toll on the kids?
“Some of the older widows
would say things like, ‘Well, you
have your whole life ahead of you.
What do you have to worry
about?’ We feel so out of sync.
Suddenly we’re the ones thrown
out in the cold and our lives have
been turned upside down,” said
Becky Aikman, who was 49 when
her husband died of cancer.
Aikman tried a traditional loss
group for widows, finding herself
set apart from the 70- and 80year-old somethings. She was
kicked out after challenging the
facilitator’s approach and jokingly dubbed herself the “misfit
widow,” eventually seeking out
five other young widows like herself to share a year’s adventures
for a book, “Saturday Night
Widows.”
At 60, Aikman said she and the
ladies remain great friends.
Linda Feinberg was a therapist
years
ago
in
Andover,
Massachusetts, when she met a
young widow at a pool. They both
had 3-year-olds and her new
friend described similar treatment when she sought support:
“They said to her, ‘You’re young
and beautiful. What are you
doing here? You’re going to get
married again and be happy,’”
recalled Feinberg, who went on to
form a network of loss groups for
young widows and write a book,
“I’m Grieving as Fast as I Can:
How Young Widows and
Widowers Can Cope and Heal.”
“There’s much more lack of
acceptance of young widowed
people than there is for middle
age or older widowed people,”
Feinberg said. “Society expects
people to lose their spouses as
they age. They don’t expect young
widowed people and they find it
very, very scary.”
Alpha Delta Kappa’s May program featured Violet Lee as guest
speaker. Lee, a high school student, is the leader of Cleveland
HUGS. (Help Us Give Something).
HUGS was started in 2012 as a
chapter of Tennessee HUGS,
which was founded as an organization whose mission was to collect shoes of those in need. Since
that time, the local organization’s
mission and purpose have
extended to include collecting all
types of items which could benefit the less fortunate and to serve
as a supporter of nonprofit
organizations, such as Relay for
Life, ROCK (Raising Our Celiac
Kids), and Be the Match bone
marrow registry.
Lee shared with the membership she has always had a heart
to help others and became even
more inspired to work in the
community after her family’s
home was destroyed in the 2011
tornadoes. The assistance given
to her family motivated her to
start an organization which could
“pay it forward.”
Lee is a young lady of extraordinary passion and talent, evidenced by the knowledge she
conveyed regarding altruistic
opportunities and her involvement in them. Alpha Delta Kappa
was honored to learn of the positive difference being made by this
exemplary teenager and her supportive family.
For
information
about
Cleveland HUGS, visit clevelandhugs.weebly.com or Facebook at
facebook.com/ClevelandHUGS.
Contributed photo
AlPhA TheTA members, for May’s Altrustic project, made a generous donation to The Caring Place, as shown by Betsy Gilbert to
help support the local SAC-PAK program.
Contributed photo
VioleT lee, left, guest speaker for the May program of Alpha Delta
Kappa, was presented flowers by Julie Mitchell, right, the Alpha
Theta president. Miss Lee is the leader of Cleveland HUGS, whose
mission includes giving to the less fortunate and serving as supporter
to other nonprofit organizations.
Slow and steady biking Idaho’s remote Weiser River Trail
NEW MEADOWS, Idaho (AP) —
No matter how speedily things are
moving in the outside world, the
pace is slow and steady on central
Idaho’s Weiser River Trail, a converted rail bed that runs 85 miles
(137 kilometers) between two
small towns in one of this state’s
most beautiful areas.
The trail takes travelers
through forest, orchards, ranchland, and then, in the southern
portion, through spectacular
sagebrush canyons with black
lava cliffs.
I rode the trail with my family,
starting at the upper end, about
2,000 vertical feet (600 meters)
above the endpoint in Weiser. (It
would be all uphill if you went in
the other direction.)
The Pacific & Idaho Northern
railroad company, or P&IN,
blazed the trail through the landscape around the turn of the 19th
century, reaching the small town
of Council in 1901, according to a
recent history of the area by Dale
Fisk, the editor of the local Adams
County Record newspaper.
The railroad was built to take
travelers between the city of
Boise and the four small towns of
Weiser, Midvale, Council and
Cambridge. It carried Gold Rush
fortune-hunters up to the mountains, and took copper ore from
the mountain’s mines back to the
city.
Things are a little quieter
around the trail these days.
Union Pacific deeded the right-of-
AP photo
This PhoTo provided by Anne Wallace Allen shows her and her
husband, Eric Allen, on one of many bicycle bridges on the Weiser
River Trail in central Idaho.
way to the nonprofit group
Friends of the Weiser River Trail
in August 1997, and the Friends
have worked hard to maintain
the rail bed for runners, walkers,
hunters and bikers.
Signs of recent bear traffic are
everywhere. When we traveled
the wide, graded path last fall, we
ran into few other humans - just
a quartet of bow-hunters on bicycles who were scoping out the
territory, and some apple-pickers
checking out the harvest.
Friends who rode it in late
September met cowboys herding
cattle down the trail.
Starting at the upper end of
the trail, the trail gets off to an
unprepossessing start on an
unmarked dirt road just off
Highway 95 near the small town
of New Meadows. It quickly
enters the woods, passing over
streams on exquisite trestle
bridges that have been remade
for bicyclists.
The trail passes by the
Tamarack Lumber Mill and its
colossal log yard before heading
away from the road.
Riding the Weiser River Trail is
serene, but it isn’t easy. The
Friends group uses a mechanical
roller to flatten the terrain, but
they can’t pave it; not only do they
not have the money, but some of
their most fervent supporters ride
horses on it. So for bikers, the
terrain is packed dirt, soft enough
to slow progress, and is occasionally studded with rocks. Cattle
gates cause frequent stops.
But the beauty and surprises of
traveling so far from roads more
than make up for the labor of riding the bumps.
Around Fruitvale, the trail was
lined with overloaded apple trees.
A local man who was collecting
apples told us the trees were from
Fruitvale’s days as a minor
orchard area.
The enticing thing about the
Weiser River Trail is that it travels
to places few people ever get to
see, through river valleys that
look almost untouched by
humans, through cattle pastures
where the animals and green
trees appear recently washed by
the rain.
It also runs deep into Owyhee
canyonlands, through miles of
roadless area where birds of prey,
elk, mule deer and bear shelter. If
you have time to stop and fish the
Weiser for a while, all the better.
Tasso Baptist Church
Neighborhood Block Party
Saturday May 30 • 2:00-4:00pm
Vacation Bible School
6:30 - 8:30pm
Ages 3-17
“Come Grow With Us”
164 Old Charleston Rd. Cleveland
Kids! Take part in our
“DAD, you are the BEST because” contest.
The contest is open to children 12 years old
and younger. This is how you can enter:
1. Use the form below and get your mom, dad, grandparents or teacher to help
you tell us why you feel your dad is the best. you can even bring in a photo of
your dad. (Photos can be picked up after June 14th).
2. Bring the form into our office by Tuesday, June 2nd or mail by May 29th.
(1505 25th Street NW / Mail: P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320).
3. We will have a drawing for special Father’s Day Prizes to include a $25 Gift
Certificate from The Village Bake Shop, $25 Gift Card from The Town Squire,
$50 Gift Certificate from Cleveland Plywood.
4. We will also be printing some of the letters in the Father’s Day Special Section
in the Cleveland Daily Banner on Sunday, June 14th.
Child’s Name:
Age:
Mom’s Name:
Person Helping Child Fill Out Form:
Contact Information: Phone:
Email:
Contributed photo
sTudenTs of Westmore Music Academy presented their annual spring recital on May 16 in the sanctuary of Westmore Church of God. The students performed in piano, voice and instrumental music.
You are the BEST Because
Westmore Academy holds spring recital
Students of Westmore Music
Academy presented their annual
spring recital on May 16 in the
sanctuary of Westmore Church
of God.
The program featured the students of Rita Ready, Judy
Warrington, Vera Voznyuk and
Hannah Daulton.
A variety of pieces were performed as well as vocal selections.
Those performing on the
piano were Lane Estrada, Emily
Powers, Mattie Moore, Brayden
Maness, Olivia Odom, Evie
Mazzolini, Lily Grace Deas,
Nicholas John, Lexi McKenzie,
Krisha Sidella, Nishta Sidella,
Addy Bot, Elisha Davis, Ximena
Zanello, Kevin Mendez, Kayley
Mendez, Miles Olson, Alma
Smith, Hannah Nation, Andrew
Gross, Brannon Smith and
Sophia John.
Violin solos were played by
Alayna Itson, Elijah McCready,
Esther Brantley and Kyla
Richardson.
Vocal performances were
given by Hallie Wielfaert and
Kimi Peltier.
Westmore Academy offers private instruction in voice, piano,
violin and guitar, as well as
other instruments.
Kindermusik for children,
ages newborn to 7, is also
offered, with teacher Dee
Lancaster.
Summer lessons are currently
being taught. The fall semester
will begin in August.
For more information about
the academy, contact the academy director, Rita Ready, at 5999789, or email [email protected].
Love,
First Name Only
34—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
HealtH
SUNDAY
Gwen Swiger
Associate Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
[email protected]
Study: Hospitals vary
widely in how hard they
try to save preemies
By MARILYNN MARCHIONE
AP Chief Medical Writer
AP Photo
In thIs MAy 6, 2010 file photo, a radiologist uses a magnifying glass to check mammograms for breast cancer in Los Angeles.
Screening for cancer has gotten more complicated in recent years with evolving guidelines that sometimes conflict. Now a doctors’
group aims to ease some confusion and encourage more discussion of testing’s pros and cons, with what it calls advice on “highvalue screening” for five types of tumors.
Cancer screening confusion
Doctors’ group hopes to offer guidance
WASHINGTON (AP) —
Mammograms at 40 or 50?
Every year or every other
year? What’s the best colon
check?
Screening for cancer has
gotten more complicated in
recent years with evolving
guidelines that sometimes
conflict. Now a doctors’ group
aims to ease some confusion
— and encourage more discussion of testing’s pros and
cons — with what it calls
advice on “high-value screening” for five types of tumors.
Too often, even the doctors
who order those tests aren’t
sure of the latest recommendations, said Dr. Wayne J.
Riley, president of the
American College of
Physicians, which published
the advice Monday in the
journal Annals of Internal
Medicine.
“We want to make sure that
folks get the right test at the
right time for the right conditions,” Riley said. “We also
want our physician colleagues to try to avoid the
customary, knee-jerk reaction
to just test without having
some sort of dialogue” about
the right choice for each
patient.
So the ACP, internal medicine specialists, reviewed
leading cancer screening
guidelines to find the least
intensive testing strategies
with the broadest expert consensus.
Dr. Richard Wender of the
American Cancer Society said
even though it disagrees on
some specifics, emphasizing
areas of agreement is valuable, a starting point for
those doctor-patient conversations.
Cancer screening is a balance to ensure the people
who will benefit most get
checked while not over-testing. After all, there are potential harms including false
alarms that spark unneeded
extra testing, and sometimes
detection of tumors too small
and slow-growing to be lifethreatening.
On the other hand, the
Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention reported this
month that too few people
who clearly should be getting
screened for certain cancers
are. For example, 58 percent
of people ages 50 to 75 had
been recently checked for colorectal cancer; the government goal is 70.5 percent.
The American College of
Physicians’ advice:
BREAST CANCER
The American Cancer
Society has long recommended annual mammograms
starting at age 40. The U.S.
Preventive Services Task
Force, which advises the government, says to get mammograms every other year from
age 50 to 74, and says starting at age 40 brings little
benefit but should be a personal choice if women are
told the pros and cons.
The ACP sided with the
task force’s approach, saying
even experts who prefer
mammograms at 40 agree
that women should be fully
informed of the pros and
cons to help them decide for
themselves.
Routine screening isn’t for
30-somethings, and more
expensive MRI scans aren’t
for screening average-risk
women, yet the ACP said doctors sometimes order both.
COLORECTAL CANCER
Colonoscopies, which allow
doctors to see precancerous
growths in the colon, get the
most attention. But the ACP
advised people ages 50 to 74 to
choose from equally good
screening choices: a stool test
every year; a colonoscopy every
10 years; a sigmoidoscopy,
which views the lower colon,
every five years; or a combination of a stool test every three
years and a sigmoidoscopy
every five years.
The ACP said 60 percent of
adults have colonoscopies
more frequently than needed,
adding no medical value but
lots of cost.
CERVICAL CANCER
Screening choices vary by
age. The ACP found widespread support for a Pap test
every three years starting at
age 21. Starting at age 30,
women may choose a combination of Pap and a test for
the HPV virus that causes
cervical cancer, a combination that lets them go five
years between tests.
There’s little value in continuing to test women older
than 65 if they were properly
screened and had no problems; and HPV tests aren’t
recommended before age 30
because HPV is so common
in younger women.
PROSTATE CANCER
PSA blood tests are highly
controversial, with some
groups recommending against
them and others saying men
should get them only after a
discussion of the pros and
cons. The ACP’s advice:
Doctors should tell men ages
50 to 69 about the pros and
cons, and order the test for
those who then request it.
A third of men having PSA
testing don’t recall even being
told the test was ordered, the
ACP said.
OVARIAN CANCER
The new review found leading medical groups all recommend against blood tests and
pelvic or ultrasound exams to
screen for ovarian cancer in
average-risk women. While
this cancer often has spread
by the time it’s discovered,
there is no proven screening
test for it.
They weigh as little as a pound
yet force some of the toughest
choices in all of medicine.
Extremely premature babies face
big differences in how hard hospitals try to save them, a study
finds.
It is the first major look in the
U.S. at how preemies fare according to the care they get.
There was a wide range — some
hospitals always gave active treatment to the youngest preemies as
opposed to just comfort care, but
others never did. Researchers had
no information on how parental
wishes affected the decisions versus hospital policy, but said that
probably was not the main factor
because differences in care from
one place to another were so large.
Parents need to know that “the
hospital that you go to might
determine what happens to your
baby,” although many parents are
not in a position to shop around
when they find themselves in
these emergency situations, said
one study leader, Dr. Edward Bell
of the University of Iowa.
They also should be given better
information on survival odds —
not just by gestational age but
also by what happens if active
care is given, said another study
leader, medical student Matthew
Rysavy.
“A doctor might say ‘no 22-week
infant has ever survived,’” but that
might mask the fact that doctors
there don’t try, because they don’t
consider such babies viable, he
said.
Trying is not always the right
thing to do, and could just prolong
dying, independent experts said.
Survival odds are influenced by
many factors besides care, such
as whether the baby is a twin, and
even gender — girls tend to fare
better.
“We just seem to be resuscitating more and more tinier babies,
and there are consequences,” said
Dr. Jonathan Muraskas, a neonatologist at Loyola University
Medical Center in Maywood,
Illinois.
Despite medical advances, the
rates of cerebral palsy, blindness,
deafness, asthma and other major
problems have not changed much,
he said.
“How low do we go and what are
the implications?” he said.
The study is in Thursday’s New
England Journal of Medicine.
About 12,000 babies each year
in the United States are born
between 22 and 25 weeks gestation. A full-term pregnancy is
about 40 weeks.
Tundi and Nate Brady faced
this twice, with different outcomes, when she went into labor
with twins around 23 weeks into
her pregnancy at University of
Iowa Hospitals and Clinics. When
the first twin was born, “it was
very clear” that doctors did not
think she would survive, so the
couple declined life support and
the baby died 20 minutes later,
Tundi Brady said.
But then her labor stopped and
she was able to go another week
until her son, Dexter, was born
weighing about a pound. Doctors
estimated he would have a 40 percent chance of surviving and a 70
percent chance of disability if he
did.
“That was good enough for us,”
so they chose aggressive treatment, she said. He spent five
months in a neonatal intensive
care unit and is now a healthy
5½-year-old.
“We were so lucky,” she said.
The study involved nearly 5,000
babies born before 27 weeks gestation at 24 hospitals in a
research group run by the
National Institutes of Health
between April 2006 and March
2011.
Researchers looked at rates of
comfort care versus active treatment, such as breathing
machines, feeding tubes or heart
resuscitation. Active treatment
was given to 22 percent of babies
born at 22 weeks, 72 percent of
those at 23 weeks and nearly all
beyond that.
Survival rates were higher for
the actively treated babies — 23
percent versus 5 percent for all
babies in the study born at 22
weeks, and 33 percent versus 24
percent for those born at 23
weeks.
Survival without severe impairment also was higher with treatment: 15 percent versus 3 percent
at 22 weeks, and 25 percent versus 18 percent at 23 weeks.
Four hospitals never actively
treated babies at 22 weeks, but
five other hospitals always did.
Hospitals’ actions had “a dramatic influence” on how infants
fared, Dr. Neil Marlow of
University College London commented in the journal.
Study: Severe vision loss is
most common in the South
NEW YORK (AP) — Health officials say bad eyesight in the U.S.
is most common in the South.
A new report found the South
was home to three-quarters of
the U.S. counties with the highest prevalence of severe vision
loss.
The South also has higher
rates of poverty, diabetes and
chronic disease. Health officials
believe those problems are all
related to the vision loss.
The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention released
the report Thursday. Overall,
about 3 percent of people had
severe vision loss. The highest
rate was from Owsley County,
Kentucky, which surpassed 18
percent.
The study is the CDC’s first
county-level assessment of blindness and severe vision loss. It’s
based on millions of U.S. Census
Bureau survey responses from
2009 through 2013.
—Online:
CDC
report:
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr
Study: Fewer kids have severe mental problems; more are getting help
By MARILYNN MARCHIONE
AP Chief Medical Writer
Contrary to public perception
and horrific cases that make
headlines, serious mental problems are declining among the
nation’s youth, and there has
been a big rise in how many are
getting help, a new study finds.
The study is mostly good
news: More children and teens
are taking mental health medicines than ever before, but more
also are getting therapy, not
just pills. The biggest rise in
treatment rates has been among
the most troubled kids.
“There’s a concern out there
that a lot of children and adolescents are receiving mental
health treatments, particularly
medications, that they don’t
need,” especially for conditions
such as attention deficit hyper-
activity disorder, said the
study’s leader, Dr. Mark Olfson,
a psychiatrist at Columbia
University Medical Center and
the New York State Psychiatric
Institute.
Instead, the results suggest
“that at least in some ways,
we’re moving in the right direction,” by getting help to kids
who need it most, he said.
The dark cloud: More than
half of severely troubled kids get
no help at all.
The study used nationwide
surveys done by the federal
Agency for Healthcare Research
and Quality over three periods
from 1996 to 2012, covering
more than 53,000 youths ages 6
to 17. Results are in Thursday’s
New England Journal of
Medicine.
Some highlights, which compare the first survey to the most
recent one:
SEVERE MENTAL
PROBLEMS DECLINING
The percentage of youths with
serious impairments dropped
from 13 percent to 11 percent.
“There’s a public perception
that there are more and more
kids who have these disorders,
and the new report challenges
that,” Olfson said. Other
research has found drops in
rates of binge drinking and
dropping out of school, so the
new study “does fit with other
trends,” he said.
MORE ARE GETTING CARE
Use of any outpatient mental
health service rose from 9 percent to 13 percent. The rise was
greatest for severely troubled
kids, and went from 26 percent
to 44 percent — from 1.56 million annually to 2.28 million.
Among kids with less or no
impairment, the portion getting
treatment went from about 7
percent to nearly 10 percent, or
from about 2.74 million kids a
year to 4.19 million.
MEDICATION USE IS UP
The use of any mental health
drug rose from about 6 percent
to 9 percent. Among youths
with severe problems, medication use went from 18 percent to
32 percent. Among the rest —
mild or no problems — it went
from 4 percent to 6 percent.
Some people complain, “Oh
my goodness, these poor little
children are on these powerful
drugs,” said Dr. Gabrielle
Carlson, a child and adolescent
psychiatrist at Stony Brook
University School of Medicine
on New York’s Long Island. “But
most of the kids offered these
drugs have big, powerful problems,” and the real issue is finding more effective drugs and
getting more kids the help they
need, she said.
NOT JUST PILLS
The percentage of youths getting therapy rose from 4 percent
to 6 percent. That may reflect
more access to care in general:
Other research shows that medical visits of all kinds rose for
these age groups over that time.
THE ADHD SITUATION
Use of stimulants such as
methylphenidate, sold as Ritalin
and other brands, rose from 4
percent of youths to 6.6 percent. These drugs are often
given for ADHD, which affects
more than 1 in 10 children,
according to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
MANY KIDS GET NO HELP
About 56 percent of youths
with serious troubles were not
in care.
“There’s
a
tremendous
amount of unmet need,” said
Dr. Brady Case, a child psychiatrist at Bradley Hospital in East
Providence, Rhode Island. It’s
possible that one reason serious
impairment rates are falling “is
that treatment is working” for
those who get it, he said.
—O n l i n e : S t u d y :
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/
10.1056/NEJMsa1413512
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Recycle this newspaper
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015— 35
SUNDAY
Campus
Christy Armstrong
Staff writer
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
[email protected]
BCHS VocalMotion celebrates wins, looks to next year
Special to the Banner
Tuesday night, Bradley Central
High School show choir
VocalMotion members and parents met to begin preparing for
the 2015-16 year.
They began the meeting by
reflecting on their success from
this past season and by recognizing the sponsors and grant
donors whose contributions
made their success possible.
The show the students performed this year was titled
“Prodigal,” which presents a
modern twist to the biblical story
of the Prodigal Son.
VocalMotion is directed by
Katie Philips with choreography
by Jeremiah Pritchard, theatrical
direction by Lindsey Bell, music
arrangements by Mason Brown
and technical direction by Nolen
Goins.
During the 2015 season, the
students received the following
honors in competition:
n Montgomery Capital Classic
— second place in large mixed
division and seventh place overall;
n Albertville Diamond Classic
— second place in large mixed
division and third overall;
n Belmont Music City Show
Shoppe — first place overall, Best
Female Soloist Keely Maynard
and Best Vocals, Grand
Champions; and
n Georgia Vocal Invitational —
first place in large mixed division,
second place overall and Best
Female Soloist Keely Maynard.
At the meeting, Philips first
recognized the Allied Arts
Council of the Cleveland/Bradley
Chamber of Commerce for their
Arts in Education Grant, which
covered expenses for the group’s
music arrangements and a work
session with the arranger, Mason
Brown.
Secondly, she recognized Ryan
Shults of Hardee's and J&S
Restaurants for their numerous
donations throughout the year.
Lastly, she recognized George
Gray of Allstate Insurance for his
numerous financial contributions to the choir.
BRADLEY CENTRAL High School show choir VocalMotion celebrates being named Grand Champions in the Belmont Music City Show
For each presentation, she Shoppe competition this year. The choir and its leadership are already making plans for next year. explained that the groups'
award-winning success would
not have been possible without
the support of these organizations.
As they prepare for the next
year, organizers are excited about
MUSIC
a new show with hopes to push ARRANGER Mason
the program to the next level in Brown, center, works
competition and community with Bradley Central
service.
High School’s
To do so, they are currently
VocalMotion choir on
looking for additional corporate
sponsors to support their efforts. some new music. His
visit was funded by
Interested businesses can contact
Philips
at an Arts in Education
grant. [email protected].
MOTHERS and kindergarten students enjoy tea and cookies during the Mother’s Day tea at North Lee Elementary. Principal Nat
Akiona read the book “Love You Forever” by Robert Munsch, and
each student escorted his or her mom to a classroom for a special
gift presentation. VALLEY VIEW ELEMENTARY recently held its DARE graduation with help from Bradley County Sheriff Eric Watson. Parents and family
members were on hand as Valley View students completed the challenging 10-week program that teaches them how to handle peer pressure and stay away from illegal drugs, tobacco and alcohol. "I attend as many of the graduations as possible because ... these students
have a great spirit and great excitement for life that just makes you feel good," Watson said. “Thanks to Principal Corey Limburg, School
Resource Officer Kammy McCullough, DARE Instructor Deputy Russ Henry and all those who pitched in quickly to make DARE happen this
school year." The school’s DARE essay winners were Jessica Ledford and Chloe Davis.
KINDERGARTENERS at North Lee Elementary School get ready to present their mothers with special
gifts and roses during the Mother’s Day tea at the school. Klibisz to spend year in Germany
Special to the Banner
Adam Klibisz, a rising junior at
Cleveland High School, was one
of only 50 students from the
Southeastern United States and
Puerto Rico to be awarded a prestigious
Congress-Bundestag
Youth Exchange Scholarship for
the 2015-16 academic year.
As a CBYX scholar, he will
spend the upcoming school year
in Germany living with a local
host family, taking classes at a
local high school and participating in a three-week language and
cultural immersion camp to gain
a better understanding of
German culture, language and
everyday life.
Klibisz will also have the
opportunity to visit the German
Bundestag [parliament], meet
with German and American government officials and explore the
country through numerous
excursions to nearby cities, historical sites and more.
The Council on International
Educational Exchange each year
awards approximately 50 highly
motivated high school students
with a full academic scholarship
to live and study in Germany
through the Congress-Bundestag
Youth Exchange program, which
was created to strengthen ties
between Germany and the U.S.
through citizen diplomacy.
Each scholarship is awarded
following a highly competitive
process based on academic
records, demonstrated leadership, essays, teacher recommen-
dations and a personal interview.
Since its inception in 1983, the
program — which is jointly funded by the U.S. Congress and the
German Bundestag — has
awarded more than 22,000
scholarships to students from all
over the U.S. who wish to expand
their global perspectives. Many
students who complete the program go on to study at top colleges and universities.
Students who would like more
information about CBYX and the
2016-17 application process can
visit www.ciee.org/cb or call 800448-9944. German language
skills are not required to apply.
To learn more about hosting
an exchange student coming to
Cleveland for the next school
year, visit www.ciee.org/host.
PREPARING for this year’s TCAP tests, students at Black Fox Elementary took part in a "Hit the
Buzzer First" game show which had them answering practice questions in a battle of the classes. “While
the activity was great fun, it also promoted testing readiness,” Principal Kim Fisher said. Here, two classes get ready to compete. ARTISTIC STUDENTS at Michigan
Avenue Elementary
School learned about
Vincent Van Gogh’s
famous “The Starry
Night” painting.
Students made their
own versions using
the Chattanooga skyline as a model.
Clockwise, from left,
are Jaicy Olivas,
Chase Carroll, Abby
Bennett, teacher
Taylor Lambert,
Tatyana Thompson,
Rachel Turner, Addy
Bot and Maddie
Morris. 36—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—37
PeoPle
Sheriff’s
Office
eric Watson
Bradley County
Sheriff
Memorial Day
Memorial Day is a day
away, on Monday, May 25.
Memorial Day is always
thought of as the day vacation season kicks off
— stores have big summer
sales and schools are usually closing for the year.
Memorial Day is a day off
from work, barbecues with
friends, relaxing at home,
going to the lake or river.
What could be more fun
than a day of boating, skiing
or fishing? A lot of people
will have this same idea
— and whether you are an
experienced boater, novice
or beginner, there are rules,
and laws, that must be followed on the water — just
like on the roadway — to
keep people safe!
Bradley County Sheriff’s
Office has Boat Patrol officers on the waterways to
make your boating experience safe and pleasant this
Memorial Day weekend. In
years prior, the primary
problems have been reckless operation and safety
violations. One of the great
things about driving a boat
is that there is no speed
limit … unless you are in a
no-wake zone or your speed
poses reckless operation.
The types of safety violations the Boat Patrol is on
the lookout for are the types
that could mean life or
death: Do you have enough
life jackets? Are they the
right type of life jacket?
Does your boat need a fire
extinguisher? And then
there’s the BUI — boating
under the influence; a sure
way to ruin your weekend.
Here are a few more hints
to help you enjoy your time
on the water: If you were
born after Jan. 1, 1989, you
must have a Boaters
Operators License to legally
drive a boat. Everyone
under the age of 13 must
wear a life jacket at all times
if the vessel is underway.
See WATSON, Page 38
SUNDAY
Gwen Swiger
Associate Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
[email protected]
LFMS Revolution
takes top honors
at Big Apple Classic
Revolution, Lake Forest Middle School’s show choir, recently returned after a competing in the
New York Music Festival Big Apple Classic. Revolution took first place in Show Choir and Grand
Champion Junior Choral. Macdie Lewis took Best Solo in a show and Jennah Pritchard took Best
Solo Dancer in a Show. Revolution is under the direction of Jeremiah Pritchard. During the trip to New
York, the choir made a stop in Washington, D.C., where they sang at the National Holocaust Museum.
They also visited the Lincoln Memorial, Vietnam Wall, Arlington National Cemetery and other national
landmarks. While in New York, the choir sang at St. Bartholomew’s Church, visited Liberty State Park,
9/11 Memorial Plaza and National Sept. 11 Memorial Museum. They also visited Battery Park,
Rockefeller Center, Chinatown and Little Italy and a Broadway production of “Wicked.” Photos courtesy
of Lynn Rice.
Caylor, Lee receive
Wacker scholarships
CHARLESTON — Two $1,000
Wacker Science Award scholarships were presented at Walker
Valley High School. The recipients were Jordan Caylor and Ira
Lee III.
“These two individuals most
impressed us with their drive,
determination and commitment
to go above and beyond,” said Dr.
Konrad Bachhuber, vice president and site manager at Wacker
Polysilicon North America. “Their
accomplishments are inspiring,
and we were pleased to recognize
them with this award.”
Free Potter, engineer and quality manager at the company’s site
in Charleston, presented the
scholarship to Caylor and Lee at
the school’s senior night.
In addition to the scholarships,
See WACKER, Page 40
Memorial Physicians Answer
Your Questions
Mark Kelley, M.D.,
medical director of
surgical oncology,
CHI Memorial Rees
Skillern Cancer
Institute
Q: What is melanoma skin cancer?
A: Melanoma is a cancer that begins in the melanocytes.
Because most of these cells still make melanin, melanoma
tumors are often brown or black. But this is not always the case,
and melanomas can also have no color. Melanoma most often
starts on the trunk of fair-skinned men and on the lower legs of
fair-skinned women, but it can start in other places, too. Having
dark skin lowers the risk of melanoma. But it does not mean that
a person with dark skin will never get melanoma.
Melanoma can almost always be cured in its early stages. But it is
likely to spread to other parts of the body if it is not caught early.
Melanoma is much less common than basal cell and squamous
cell skin cancers, but it is far more serious.
Q: Who gets melanoma skin cancer?
A: Skin cancer is the most common of all cancers. Melanoma
accounts for less than 5% of skin cancer cases. But it causes most
skin cancer deaths. Overall, the lifetime risk of getting melanoma is
about 1 in 50 for whites, 1 in 1,000 for blacks, 1 in 200 for Hispanics.
Q: What are the risk factors of melanoma?
A: The following are risk factors associated with Melanoma:
UV (ultraviolet) light, Moles, Fair Skin, Family history of melanoma,
Past history of melanoma, Weakened immune systems, Age, Gender,
Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP)
Q: What can a woman do to decrease her risk of getting
melanoma cancer?
A: Most skin cancer can be prevented especially by preventative
measures such as:
• Limit UV exposure
• Protect your skin with clothing
• Wear a hat
• Use sunscreen & wear sunglasses
• Stay in the shade
• Protect children
• Avoid other sources of UV light
• Check for abnormal moles and have them removed
• Genetic counseling and testing
For more information on Melanoma
or related conditions visit us at memorial.org.
HOME BUILDERS
Follow us on
Watch us on
@InspireHealth • Follow us on
/MemorialChattanooga
@FutureMemorial
*This information was provided by the American Cancer Society, Inc.
38—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Griffith receives
Lee’s Excellence
in Teaching Award
Frazier to lead
two MAD
cheer camps
Jessica Frazier, head cheerleading coach at Lee University,
will be conducting two cheer
camps at Momentum Academy
Dance.
Frazier, originally from Texas,
was a gymnast for eight years and
cheerleader for seven years. She
was an All-Star Competitive
Cheerleader
competing
for
Crusader
All-Stars
from
Southlake, Texas, for four years.
She is a member of The
Fellowship
of
Christian
Cheerleaders.
Frazier has been the head
coach at Lee University for five
years. This past year, she took
her Lee cheer squad to compete in
the National Cheer Competitions
at UCA & at
CCA Nationals.
At
CCA
Nationals Lee
University
Cheerleaders
won the National Championship
and
placed
fifth
place at UCA
Nationals.
Frazier
She graduated from Lee University in 2010
with her bachelor's and received
her master's in 2013 in school
counseling. She is presently
employed by Hamilton County
Schools. She is married to Jared
Frazier.
She has organized, staffed and
directed cheerleading camps for
the last nine years. She has
taught all over the U.S. plus in
Czech Republic and Costa Rica.
She was also an instructor at Top
Flight Gymnastics Center in
Texas. She has been teaching
tumbling for the last 11 years
between Texas and Tennessee,
which she calls home now.
She also works as an advance
tumbling coach at MAD with their
award winning MAD Company.
She will also be working with
Cleveland High cheerleaders at
Lee this season.
Frazier can break down all
aspects to tumbling and cheerleading and able to show the
skills to cheerleaders.
She is a positive role model and
dedicated to ensuring her students learn the proper technique
in an safe environment.
Beginning Cheer camp is June
8 through 12 and Advance Cheer
is June 15 through 19.
Additional classes she will be
offering this summer will be
beginning and advance tumbling
classes, which will be three-week
sessions twice a week. One session is June 1 through 19 and
one is July 6 through 24.
She will be conducting a flexibility and conditioning class
which would be great for any
cheerleader or dancer. Class are
limited, so make sure you sign up
to hold your spot.
For more information, please
email [email protected], call
423-339-2008 or come by
Momentum Academy Dance at
125 Inman Street for more information.
MAD is also offering additional
dance camps this summer for
ages 2 1/2 through advance
dancers.
MILITARY
NEWS
Timothy R. Baize
Air Force Airman 1st Class
Timothy R. Baize graduated from
basic military training at Joint
Base San Antonio-Lackland, San
Antonio, Texas.
The airman completed an
intensive, eight-week program
that included training in military
discipline and studies, Air Force
core values, physical fitness, and
basic warfare principles and
skills.
Airmen who complete basic
training earn four credits toward
an associate in applied science
degree through the Community
College of the Air Force.
Baize is the son of Pauline M.
Schleif of Cleveland.
He is a 2015 graduate of
Kadena High School, New York
City, N.Y.
People do read
small ads.
You are reading
one now.
Call The Banner
472-5041
Dr. Shane Griffith, associate to make difficult, quantitative
professor of business, has been concepts clear.”
selected as the winner of Lee
A Lee alum, Griffith worked as
University’s 2015 Excellence in an actuarial analyst for six years
Teaching Award.
before returning to his alma
The Excellence Awards are the mater in 2002 to teach. Griffith
highest honors presented
regularly teaches manto Lee faculty members
agement science, interand recognize advising,
national financial manscholarship and teaching.
agement, and business
The oldest award and
modeling. In 2009, he
considered to be superior
won Lee’s Excellence in
among the three is
Advising Award.
Excellence in Teaching,
Griffith also serves as
the winner of this award
director for Lee’s master
BoB gEoRgE, left, awarded supplemental applications to members Ronald J. Bullard, center, and is chosen by a special
of business administraStan Evans, right. Each opens a patriot line that may be used by a prospective member of the SAR or committee which includes
tion program. In addirepresentatives of six diftion, he serves on the
DAR.
Griffith
ferent academic departboard of directors for a
ments.
local nonprofit organization and
“Dr. Griffith’s excellence in the is a member of the institutional
classroom is only exceeded by his review board for a local hospital.
passion and care for students,”
Griffith is married to Alison
On May 14, the Col. Benjamin
said Dr. DeWayne Thompson, and they have two daughters,
Cleveland Chapter of the Sons of
chair of Lee’s business depart- Lily and Ella Kate. He enjoys
the American Revolution held its
ment.
camping, fishing, hiking, and
regular meeting at the Elks Club.
“One student said of Griffith, running.
President Bob George called the
‘He trusts us with difficult mateLee President Dr. Paul Conn
meeting to order. The Invocation
rial.’ His deserved reputation for recognized Griffith for this honor
was given by Chaplain Joe White,
excellence stems from his ability during spring commencement.
followed by the Pledge of
Allegiance to the U.S. flag led by
Sam Allen, the pledge to the
Tennessee flag led by Shawn
Pritchett, and the pledge to the
SAR flag led by Phil Newman.
From Page 37
Among the visitors were
Makenzie White, daughter of
Jet skis can only be operated from report an incident, call dispatch at
chaplain Joe White, and prospecdawn until dusk. You must wear a 728-7311 or use your marine
tive members Larry Wallace, Jay
life jacket while operating or riding radio to call for help.
Smith and Roger Crittenden.
on personal watercrafts (like jet
Whatever you end up doing, I
Supplemental
applications
skis).
wish
you a very pleasant Memorial
were awarded to Ronald J.
Our
officers
are
out
there
for
Day
…
the day of remembrance for
Bullard and Stan Evans. Each
your
safety.
those
who
have died in service of
supplemental application opens
If you need help or want to the United States of America.
up a line that can be used by a
new prospective member of the
SAR or Daughters of the American
Revolution.
JoHN CLINES gave a report
Second vice president Jerry
to the Col. Benjamin Cleveland
Venable announced he was not
Chapter of the Sons of the
having a program this month, a
American Revolution on recent
discussion on “Who are You, and
activities of the Color Guard.
Where do You Come From?”
This title represents one of the
initiatives of current national SAR
President General Lindsey Brock
to develop a national SAR database for biographies and lineage
on patriots of the NOSER members.
JERRY VENABLE led the
This program is looking for
discussion
on “Who are You,
each chapter to submit biograand
Where
do You Come
phies of 20 percent of the chapter
From?”
membership.
Since the Col. Benjamin
BAgwoRmS make a tiny pinecone-like “bag” from their
Cleveland Chapter is the largest
own spit and evergreen needles and hang off the branches.
chapter in the Tennessee society,
with 196 members, that would need for Color Guard-related is sponsored by the Department
From the County
require 39 to 40 biographies from materials.
Agent’s Desk
of Defense, reported on the every
the chapter.
Clines requested the chapter successful event on March 30 at
Venable passed out forms to the allot funds to purchase Color Morristown. This was a joint
By Patrick Sweatt
TSU Extension Agent
membership to sign up for this Guard materials such as flags, DAR/SAR event.
Bradley County Agriculture
Like most people, I really
program with only two weeks poles and bases.
Evans stated he was the coorand Natural Resources
like to eat. Unfortunately, in
until the deadline.
He said the Color Guard has dinator for the Tennessee Society
the business of cooperative
With his initiative maybe the gotten really popular in the past SAR, and for three months had
extension, our meal times can
chapter can rise from the 10 biog- few years, and is basically the developed the SAR side.
be unpredictable — we end insecticide that is perfect for
raphies sent in at present, to 40 unofficial symbol for the
Those from the Col. Benjamin
up eating in our cars on the caterpillar-type insects in
which is needed by the chapter.
Cleveland Chapter who particiTennessee Society SAR.
way to calls, standing over their feeding stage and is
It is visualized this new dataIt’s what people think about pated were Evans as SAR coordiour desks as we dash into the what we recommend for early
base would be accessed by any- now when the name of the Sons nator and one of the speakers,
office, or if we’re lucky, we summer bagworm control.
one searching for a Revolutionary of the American Revolution is David Davis as writer and photogfind ourselves at a lunch
For folks who are leery of
War Patriot in one of the biogra- mentioned.
rapher, John Clines as commandmeeting
at
a
meat-and-three.
spraying
an insecticide of any
phies, with genealogical informaHe requested $600 from the er of the Tennessee Society Color
That said, there are plenty kind, I like to point out that
tion in the biographies to assist general treasury, made a motion Guard, with James Stone, Claude
of common pests out there Bt is registered for organic
the search.
to this effect and received a sec- Hardison, Sam Allen and Jim
that eat at fairly predictable production. While it is a natuJohn Clines, commander of the ond.
McKinney serving in the Color
times of the year, which rally occurring bacteria, it is
local Tanasi River Brigade, and
During
the
discussion Guard.
makes them easy to control. highly effective at controlling
secretary of the chapter, reported Immediated Past State President
Evans stated this was the first
Take for instance, bagworms. feeding caterpillars and
on recent Color Guard activities. Claude Hardison stated there 50th anniversary Vietnam War
Bagworms are tiny worms worms.
During the past few weeks, was some money left over from Commemorative program by DAR
that often live on evergreen
So who else is out to dinner
there was a grave dedication at the recent state convention and or SAR in Tennessee. He stated it
shrubs and trees like cypress, these days?
White Pines, near Dandridge. gave $200 of it for this cause. The was also the first one in the SAR
juniper and cedar. They are
Another pest that I have
Then a week later the 50th motion on the floor was carried Southern District (Tennessee,
notable
because
in
their
seen
feeding heavily in recent
Anniversary Vietnam War event ,and the chapter will provide Mississippi,
Alabama
and
reproductive stage, they build weeks is the flea beetle — a
near Morristown was held, and $600, for the Color Guard needs. Louisiana).
a tiny pinecone-like “bag” jumping beetle that makes
this past weekend an event at This is in addition to the other
President
Bob
George
from their own spit and ever- tiny shot-like holes and blisMartin’s Station in Virginia, near $200 from the past state conven- announced the next meeting will
green needles and hang off ters on plants in the
Cumberland Gap.
be held on June 11.
tion.
the branches like destructive Solanacae family (eggplants,
He mentioned the wonderful
He then proceeded to close the
Evans, who is the state and
little Christmas ornaments.
potatoes, peppers, tomatoes).
publicity gained by the Tennessee regional chairman of the 50th meeting, with Ron Ricketts leadIn
low
numbers,
they
are
Bt doesn’t work especially
Society Guard units performing in anniversary
Vietnam
War ing the recessional, and Chaplain
not a serious problem. (You well on these pests, but carthese events. But there is a great Commemorative program which Joe White giving the benediction.
can just pick the bags off in baryl-based
insecticides
the fall.) However, in serious (Sevin) are very effective at
infestations they can dramat- controlling flea beetles, proically impact the health of the vided that it is sprayed on
WASHINGTON
(AP)
— statement overbroad and mis- biggest U.S. tobacco company,
tree. This can be tricky, non-blooming plants- you
America’s largest tobacco compa- leading. But government lawyers Philip Morris USA; No. 2 cigarette
because once you see them in don’t want to hurt any pollinies must inform consumers that argued that the language was maker, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco
their little bags, they are nators.
cigarettes were designed to meant to provide context for the Co., owned by Winston-Salem,
mostly impervious to insectiFor farmers and gardeners
increase addiction, but not that public.
North Carolina-based Reynolds
cides.
who
don’t like to spray anythey lied to the public about the
The appeals court ruled that American Inc.; and No. 3 cigarette
So how can they be con- thing, exclusionary methods
dangers of smoking, a federal the language must focus on pre- maker Lorillard Inc., based in
trolled?
like Re-Mae row covers are
appeals court ruled on Friday.
venting future violations, not past Greensboro, North Carolina.
Just like I keep an eye on very effective at discouraging
The ruling from the U.S. Court misconduct. Writing for the threeIn
1999,
the
Justice
my watch for supper time, flea beetle damage, provided
of Appeals for the District of judge panel, Judge David Tatel Department filed a lawsuit that
bagworms are on a schedule. they are put out early enough.
Columbia Circuit is a partial win said the preamble language in the alleged the tobacco companies
The first week of June is when
There are often multiple
for cigarette makers in the long- ads about past deception went violated racketeering laws by conthey go out to eat. If you go to options for controlling pests
running legal fight that began in beyond the remedies allowed spiring to deceive the public
a juniper shrub that had bag- in gardens and landscapes,
the Clinton administration in under federal racketeering laws.
about the health consequences
worms in the fall and look but it often takes paying
1999. In this latest round, the
But Tatel said other language and addictiveness of smoking cigclosely, it is likely that you attention to when they are
companies objected to running in the ads that stated the compa- arettes. After hearing testimony
will see tiny, brown twig-look- feeding to make the most
court-ordered advertisements nies intentionally designed ciga- from 162 witnesses over nine
ing structures at the end of impact.
that would have branded them- rettes with enough nicotine “to months, U.S. District Judge
the branches.
Any time you choose to use
selves as liars.
create and sustain addiction” was Gladys Kessler found in 2006 that
These are the immature an insecticide, be sure to fully
The ads would have begun with within the bounds of the law. The the companies had engaged in a
bagworms that are out feed- read the label to protect you,
a preamble statement that the appeals court also approved massive fraud campaign.
ing and storing up energy for your family and the local bee
companies “deliberately deceived statements that said the compaThe judge ordered the compatheir next bag-building population.
the American public.” The ads nies “intentionally designed ciga- nies to take out ads addressing
escapade. This is the perfect
If you think that you have
stem from a 2006 court ruling rettes to make them more addic- the negative health effects of
time to interrupt their dinner. some insects enjoying a meal
ordering the companies to admit tive.”
smoking, nicotine manipulation,
Bacillus thuringiensis (or in your yard or garden, give
they had lied for decades about
The companies in the case the health impact of secondhand
Bt for short) is a bacterial us a call at (423) 728 7001.
the dangers of smoking.
include Richmond, Virginia-based smoke and the truth about “light”
SAR discusses patriot biographies
Watson
Interrupting
dinner
Tobacco firms get partial win over claims on smoking effects
The companies called that
Altria Group Inc., owner of the
and “low-tar” brands.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—39
3 from Bradley County graduate from
Chattanooga State summa cum laude
CHATTANOOGA
—
Chattanooga State Community
College’s interim president, Dr.
Fannie Hewlett, opened the 2015
Hats Off to Excellence Awards
with a warm welcome, followed
by a presentation of the
President’s Award, the most
prestigious award on campus.
Nominees are personally
reviewed and selected by the
Chattanooga State president.
This year’s recipients were Devon
Langley of Evensville and Raven
Sutton of Chattanooga.
Dr. Kimberly McCormick,
provost and vice president for
Academic Affairs, recognized the
Summa Cum Laude students
who have completed at least 40
hours of coursework and maintained a summa cum laude grade
point average.
Bradley County students
included Shawn Michael Joseph
Carlton, John Arlin Goins and
Joseph A. Young.
Hamilton County Collegiate
High School at Chattanooga
State named Hannah Faith
Ledford and Collin Maurice
Vandewalle as its Class of 2015
co-valedictorians. Hannah plans
to attend Bryan College and is
the recipient of the Bryan College
Presidential
Scholarship.
Salutatorian is Halle Louise
Camilleri. All three students hail
from the greater Chattanooga
area.
Brianna Fears, one of the winners at the 2015 Chattanooga
State Talent Show, performed
two musical presentations.
Each academic division of the
college named one student of
excellence who stood out among
the rest.
Business
&
Information
Technologies: Courtney Brooke
Cantrell, Hixson; Engineering
Technology: Jeff Blackwell,
Hixson; Humanities & Fine Arts:
Lindsey
Grace
Stickrod,
Kingston;
Mathematics
&
Sciences: Emily Marie McElroy,
Chattanooga; Nursing & Allied
Health, Radiologic Technology:
Katelyn Kibble, Ooltewah; and
Social & Behavioral Sciences:
Brittany M. Moore, Chattanooga.
The
Associated
General
BELLEFOUNTE BAPTIST AWANA Grand Prix winners for
design were, from left, Zane Forshee, first; Ty Allen, third;
and Grayson Evans, second.
BELLEFOUNTE BAPTIST AWANA Grand Prix winners for
speed were, from left, Stella Murray, first; Trevor Walker, second; and Grayson Evans, third.
Contractor Student Chapter
Club and their adviser, assistant
professor of civil and construction engineering technology,
Caitlin Moffitt, won Club of the
Year and Club Advisor of the
Year.
This is the third year in a row
that AGC has won this award.
AGC supports the mission to
“lead and improve the professional construction industry with
Skill,
Integrity,
and
Responsibility” through promoting these values in coursework,
club activities, the work done at
Chattanooga State and in the
surrounding community.
Debbie Waggoner, a former
counselor who passed away in
1995 from cancer at age 43, left
an indelible impression upon the
campus because of her commitment to students. So much so
that an award, the Debbie
Waggoner Above and Beyond
Award, was named after her.
Pam Lee, unit secretary in the
Center for Academic Success and
a 25-plus year Chattanooga State
employee, won the award this
year.
“Pam is a hard worker with a
positive attitude and strong work
ethic. She is known for remaining calm under pressure, treating
people with dignity and respect,
and possesses a strong ability to
empathize with our students who
are dealing with many struggles
in life,” stated Marsha GoolsebyBarker, director of Educational
Planning and Advising.
Eye of the Tiger Awards are
presented to students for outstanding contributions to the
student life of Chattanooga State
and/or to the community, or to
students who have achieved academic success against seemingly
insurmountable odds. This year’s
recipients included Sara Walker
and Heidi Tinklenberg of Hixson
with Brittany Potter and Kenzie
Conley of Dayton.
Community Awards are given
in special recognition to individuals or entities within the community that have performed a special service for Chattanooga
State. 2015 awards were presented to Inpatient Housing at
CADAS; Dr. Becky Howard, principal, and Gina Nowell, teacher,
Battlefield Elementary School;
Geoff Rhodes, principal, and Jon
Atman, P.E. teacher, Battlefield
Primary School; Dr. Mike
Johnson, president Chattanooga
Area Dental Society, and
Tennessee American Water
Company, sponsor of the
Elementary Science Olympiad.
To explore opportunities for
students, or to enroll at
Chattanooga State, call 423-6974404, visit the main campus at
4501 Amnicola Highway or click
on www.chattanoogastate.edu.
ShErry hOLLOWAy, the Service Learning coordinator at Cleveland State Community College, as
well as Donna Brogdon, the co-director of the Advance Business Program and assistant professor of
Business, were guest speakers at the Civitan Club meeting. They discussed the goals and expansion of
service-based learning in our community across seven disciplines. The positive effects are not only for
the recipients but also for the student. From left are Brenda Richardson, Georgia Gann, Jeff Cocks,
Donna Brogdon, Sherry Holloway, Ann Marie Brewer and Jerry McGaha.
Electric car
rebates restart
NASHVILLE (AP) — The
Tennessee
Department
of
Environment and Conservation
is restarting a rebate program
for electric car buyers.
WPLN-FM reports the state
had $682,000 left two years ago
after shutting down the subsidies, which were approved five
years ago under former Gov.
Phil Bredesen. The funds have
remained unspent.
The station reports that
instead of finding another use
for the money, the state agency
decided to begin giving out
rebates again.
Beginning in June, those who
purchase electric cars would be
eligible for a $2,500 rebate while
hybrid car-buyers would be eligible for $1,500.
Program manager Molly
Cripps said there were various
reasons to offer the subsidies
even with the market growth for
electric cars.
Cleveland’s Newest Restaurant!
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472-5041
Completely Redesigned Web Page
www.clevelandbanner.com
EmILy PETrO of the Young Lawyers Division of the Tennessee Bar Association recently spoke at the
Bradley County Bar Association monthly meeting in May. She is shown with upcoming Bradley County
Bar President Jerry Hoffer, left, and outgoing Bradley County Bar President Ashley Ownby, right.
Here come the judges as ‘AGT’
returns for its 10th season
NEW YORK (AP) — “They keep
telling people it’s the 10th
anniversary. But it’s the fourth
season, as far as I’m concerned,”
says Howard Stern, who joined
“America’s Got Talent” as a judge
in 2012.
That’s what you’d expect
Howard to say.
But quickly he adds that with
“AGT” launching what everyone
but Stern would consider its
10th season (Tuesday at 8 p.m.
EDT on NBC), he’s having a ball
with fellow judges Howie Mandel,
Heidi Klum and Mel B.
“I may be the most important
judge in the history of the world,
but secretly I’ll tell you, I’m glad
they’re there,” he confides during
a recent interview.
Everyone remembers the
uproar when Stern was brought
aboard this family-friendly talent
competition: Wasn’t he a legendary “shock jock,” a bad-boy
superstar on SiriusXM Radio
who would say anything to get a
reaction?
Maybe, but Stern, now 61,
thought he would make an ideal
judge, that his long show-biz
career (wasn’t he the King of All
Media?) would serve him well in
evaluating each act. More to the
point: He was already a big “AGT”
fan.
“It helps when it isn’t just a
paycheck for a judge, when they
were a fan of the show even
before they were getting paid to
be on it,” says Jason Raff, an
executive producer of “AGT”
since its premiere in June 2006.
“It’s a hard show to judge,” he
says, noting its lack of any rules
— any type of act with any number of performers of any age is
welcome.
Like Stern, Mandel was an
“AGT” devotee before he joined
the judges’ panel in 2010.
“I watched every episode for
the four years before that,”
Mandel says. “Whatever you see
me saying and doing is what I
was doing from the couch in my
living room, in my underpants,
before. Now I have the best seat
in the house.”
And though he has to wear
pants, “the show provides them,”
he says with a laugh.
If the judges are having a good
time, host Nick Cannon is having
a blast.
“I figure I’m the guy who’s having the most fun,” says Cannon,
the “AGT” ringmaster since 2009.
“It’s the best summer job ever,
even though there’s a lot of
responsibility.”
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40—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
REGIONAL BRIEFS
Scott County officer accused of
shooting youth with BB gun
ONEIDA (AP) — A lieutenant in
the Scott County Sheriff’s Office is
accused of shooting a BB gun at
children playing volleyball at a
church.
WVLT-TV reports three young
people were hit with BBs while
playing outside the Oneida
Church of God on Wednesday
night.
The investigating officer noted
several red welts on their backs,
legs and calves.
Witnesses said the shooter fired
from a porch of a trailer next to
the volleyball field. That was the
home of Lt. Michael Wilson.
The investigating officer said
Wilson appeared to be intoxicated. Wilson told the officer he
didn’t shoot the BB gun, but he
owned one lying on the front
porch.
Wilson is charged with assault
and has been placed on administrative leave. A phone number
listed for Wilson was not working.
Study finds Youth Villages
program helps after foster care
NASHVILLE (AP) — A recent
study found a Tennessee program
helped to make life better for a
group of foster children who aged
out of state care — something
never before documented by
researchers.
The
Tennessean
reports
Memphis-based Youth Villages
offered services to former foster
children that included weekly
counselling on many aspects of
daily life. Those young adults had
higher incomes, more stable
housing, better economic wellbeing and some health improvements.
The study by MDRC compared
the lives of 1,300 young people
from 2010 through 2012. Since
then, the Tennessee Department
of Children’s Services and Youth
Villages has agreed to split a $6
million cost to offer assistance to
all of Tennessee’s aging out foster
youth. That 2013 agreement
made Tennessee the first state to
offer aid universally.
Former Memphis clerk pleads
guilty to embezzling fines
MEMPHIS (AP) — A former
Memphis deputy court clerk has
pleaded guilty to embezzling more
than $24,000 in traffic fines.
The Commercial Appeal reports
Tammy Brooks-Carpenter was
arrested last fall. She was
accused of targeting Hispanic
people who made payments in
cash.
According to the indictment,
Brooks-Carpenter would take
payments and enter them into the
system while the traffic-violator
was present. But then she would
void the payment and enter a
smaller amount. She would pocket the difference, embezzling
$24,011 during a recent 12month period.
Her victims later received
notices that they owed money to
the city, even though they had
paid in full.
She faces up to 10 years in
prison and a fine of as much as
$250,000.
Sentencing is Aug. 21.
Woman pleads guilty to forging
former lawmaker’s will
MEMPHIS (AP) — Prosecutors
say a former Memphis Fire
Department chief has pleaded
guilty to forging what she claimed
was the will of former state Rep.
Ulysses Jones.
The Shelby County district
attorney’s office says Sandra
Evette Richards was sentenced to
eight years’ probation after pleading guilty Wednesday to charges
of forgery over $60,000, tampering with or fabricating evidence,
and aggravated perjury.
She also must pay back nearly
$24,000 for litigation costs
incurred by Jones’ children, who
successfully contested the forged
will. Jones, who also was a battalion chief with the fire department,
died in 2010.
A judge ruled the will submitted by Richards was a forgery.
She had testified she was Jones’
fiancee and that she had helped
him write the will, which left the
bulk of his $100,000 estate to her.
TBI arrests more than dozen in
human trafficking operation
NASHVILLE (AP) — The
Tennessee
Bureau
of
Investigation says it placed fake
ads for prostitutes and arrested
about a dozen people this week as
part of an operation to better
understand human trafficking in
the state.
The eight ads ran for an average of about five hours and got
111 contacts, TBI Special AgentIn-Charge Margie Quin said at a
Friday news conference.
The johns arrested ran the
gamut from a man with a long
criminal record who was carrying
a razor blade on a stick in his
pants to a pastor who was about
to become a father.
Earlier this week, Gov. Bill
Haslam signed a bill giving TBI
jurisdiction over investigations of
human trafficking. The legislature
earlier approved funding for four
special TBI agents who will be
dedicated to investigating trafficking. They also will train local law
enforcement officers to recognize
and combat trafficking.
Quin said trafficking occurs
when anyone under 18 years old
engages in a commercial sex act.
It also occurs when someone over
18 engages in a commercial sex
act through fraud or coercion.
“This will be an uphill battle,
because what we’re really doing in
Tennessee is changing the conversation about human trafficking,” Quinn said. “It’s like domestic violence or drunk driving
decades ago. What was once
never discussed in public is now a
worthwhile cause.”
Tennessee restarting rebates
for electric vehicles
NASHVILLE (AP) — The
Tennessee
Department
of
Environment and Conservation is
restarting a rebate program for
electric car buyers.
WPLN-FM reports the state
had $682,000 left two years ago
after shutting down the subsidies,
which were approved five years
ago under former Gov. Phil
Bredesen. The funds have
remained unspent.
The station reports that instead
of finding another use for the
money, the state agency decided
to begin giving out rebates again.
Beginning in June, those who
purchase electric cars would be
eligible for a $2,500 rebate while
hybrid car-buyers would be eligible for $1,500.
Program manager Molly Cripps
said there were various reasons to
offer the subsidies even with the
market growth for electric cars.
“I mean, air quality is one piece,
certainly,” she said. “It is also to
support not just Nissan, but any
manufacturers of whether it be an
electric vehicle or more sustainable transportation.”
The state originally set aside
$2.5 million for rebates and
issued 727 over a time period of
about two years.
The same terms that applied
then apply now. Car buyers must
live in Tennessee and purchase
the vehicle at a dealership in the
state.
Fire officials probing blaze at
Gwinnett shopping center
PEACHTREE CORNERS, Ga.
(AP) — Authorities are investigating a fire that heavily damaged a
shopping center in Gwinnett
County.
County fire officials say they
had to use three ladder trucks to
begin dousing a large blaze at a
shopping center in Peachtree
Corners Friday night.
Officials said in a statement
that one business in the shopping
center was open at the time of the
fire, and all occupants were evacuated from the building without
any injuries.
Fire officials say the blaze likely
started on the shopping center’s
roof, but the cause of the blaze is
unclear
Ga. officials launching child
vehicle safety campaign
ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia child
welfare officials are launching a
campaign meant to raise awareness of the dangers of leaving
children in unattended vehicles.
The Georgia Department of
Early Care and Learning is
launching the Look Again campaign Wednesday with an event at
the state Capitol.
The gathering at 1:30 p.m. is
expected to feature Gov. Nathan
Deal, first lady Sandra Deal,
Department of Early Care and
Learning Commissioner Amy
Jacobs and others.
Suspected Jacksonville bus
shooter arrested in Georgia
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) —
Authorities say a teenager suspected of shooting two girls on a
school bus in Jacksonville last
week has been arrested in
Georgia.
The Liberty County Sheriff’s
Office reports that the 16-yearold boy was suffering from an
accidental gunshot wound to the
thigh when deputies arrested
him Thursday near Hinesville,
Georgia. The area is about 40
miles southwest of Savannah.
The Jacksonville Sheriff’s
Office reports that the suspect
and two other teenagers got into
an argument last week with two
teens who were on the bus. The
argument was over another person who died previously. As the
bus pulled away, at least three
shots were fired, hitting two 16year-old girls who weren’t
involved in the argument. Their
injuries were not life-threatening.
The Florida Times-Union
reports that the teen suspect
faces two counts of attempted
murder and one count of throwing a deadly missile.
Death of middle Georgia
girl ruled homicide
MACON, Ga. (AP) — Authorities
say the death of a 4-year-old girl
who was found with the cord to a
set of blinds wrapped around her
neck has been ruled a homicide.
News media outlets quote Bibb
County Coroner Leon Jones as
saying Friday that Carlene Jane
Rigby died of asphyxia by strangulation. Rigby was found dead in
her bedroom March 22.
Wacker aWard recipients from Walker Valley High School are Jordan Caylor and Ira Lee. The preBibb County Sheriff’s Lt. Sean
DeFoe was quoted by the senter from Wacker was Free Potter.
Telegraph of Macon as saying no
arrests have been made and the
girl’s death remains under investigation.
Georgia trooper shoots traveler
after speeding stop
TIFTON, Ga. (AP) — A traffic
stop on a south Georgia freeway
Friday morning ended with a
state trooper shooting a passenger after getting into a confrontation with him as the driver was
being taken into custody.
The shooting happened just
after 11 a.m. near Tifton in south
Georgia, Georgia Bureau of
Investigation
spokeswoman
Sherry Lang said.
A trooper stopped the car the
couple were riding in for speeding.
The trooper ran the driver’s name
through a database and learned
that her license was suspended,
said GBI Special Agent In Charge
J.T. Ricketson.
“While he was taking her into
custody and dealing with that, he
ended up in a confrontation with
the male passenger,” Ricketson
said.
The trooper fired a single gunshot that hit the passenger, who
was taken away by ambulance,
according to Lang, who said the
man appeared to have been shot
in his upper body. He was treated
at a hospital for a non-life-threatening injury and taken into custody, Ricketson said.
The man “was taking over operation of the vehicle,” before the
shot was fired, Ricketson said. He
said he could not say whether the
man had gotten out of the car,
and it was unclear whether the
confrontation with the trooper
was a physical one.
Ricketson added that the trooper’s patrol car was equipped with
a dashboard camera and the GBI
has audio of the encounter.
Ricketson said he had not yet
seen the video and could not say
when it or the audio would be
released.
The identities of the man and
driver haven’t been released.
Ricketson said the couple were
headed north when they were
stopped. The car they were riding
in had Tennessee plates.
N.C. woman pleads guilty to DWI
after running over infant
GRAHAM, N.C. (AP) — A 28year-old Burlington woman will
serve at least 17 months in prison
for fatally injuring a 10-month-old
baby by running over her in a
hospital parking lot.
The Times-News of Burlington
reports that Stormie Vancil pleaded guilty to driving while impaired
for hitting Melissa Flynn and her
baby Aubrey outside Alamance
Regional Medical Center in April
2014.
Prosecutors say Flynn was
pushing Aubrey in a stroller when
Vancil’s car ran over the child.
Flynn was critically injured but
has recovered.
A blood test showed Vancil had
several prescription drugs in her
system, including oxycodone.
A judge sentenced her to 14 to
26 months with 415 day’s credit
for time served. Prosecutors say
she’ll remain imprisoned for several more months before being
released for nine months of
supervision.
Plane that crashed in Perry
County came from Georgia
HAZARD, Ky. (AP) — The
Federal Aviation Administration
says the small plane that crashed
in Perry County on Thursday was
coming from Grovetown, Georgia.
The plane’s destination was
Hazard. It crashed into trees near
a rural road outside of Hazard at
about 7 p.m. on Thursday. The
accident site is about two miles
from Hazard’s Wendell Ford
Airport.
The pilot was the only person
on board and died in the crash of
the single engine Grumman AA5
aircraft.
The National Transportation
Safety Board is in charge of the
investigation and will determine
the likely cause. The agency is
expected to release preliminary
findings in about 10 days.
Wacker
From Page 37
both students received a plaque
and a copy of the CRC Handbook
of Chemistry and Physics by
William M. Haynes (editor). Each
receives eligibility for an internship at Wacker Polysilicon North
America during their junior or
senior years at college as part of
this award.
Caylor plans to study engineering at Tennessee Technological
University and Lee plans to study
engineering at the University of
Tennessee.
“It is our goal with the Wacker
Science Award to support and
encourage students who demonstrate a strong aptitude and passion for science,” added
Bachhuber.
The Wacker Science Award is a
$1,000 scholarship, applied
directly to college tuition, for the
most eligible student who submitted an essay which best answered
the following question: “Why do
you wish to pursue science or
engineering after high school?”
Wacker Science Award eligibility and requirements can be
found online at www.wacker.
com/science-award.
Since June 2009 — before the
company broke ground on its site
in Charleston — Wacker
Polysilicon has awarded scholarships each year to high school
seniors in Bradley County.
To date, the company has provided a total of $22,000 in local
scholarships.
Wacker Polysilicon is a global
leader in the production of hyperpure polycrystalline silicon.
Polysilicon is used throughout
the semiconductor industry and
in the growing photovoltaics sector.
Bradley County lawyers to provide free
wills for emergency first responders
The Tennessee Bar Association
Young Lawyers Division, in conjunction with several local attorneys, will be drafting free wills and
other basic estate planning documents for Bradley County firefighters, police officers, paramedics/EMT’s and their spouses
on May 30, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
The event, which is being held
at the Bradley-Cleveland Senior
Activity Center, is presented in
cooperation with the national
Wills for Heroes Foundation.
The Wills for Heroes program
provides free wills and other basic
estate planning documents to
emergency first responders and
their families. It has been the primary public service project of the
Tennessee Bar Association Young
Lawyers Division for the last six
years.
To date, the program has served
almost 2,000 first responders in
Tennessee, and more than 900
lawyers have volunteered their
time to the program. Nationwide,
more than 7,000 emergency first
responders have been helped.
To sign up for the service, first
responders should contact Emily
Petro, TBA YLD District 4
Representative,
emilyepetro@
gmail.com.
In addition, witnesses and
notaries are still needed to assist
throughout the day. Anyone interested in volunteering as a witness
or notary may also email [email protected] to volunteer.
The TBA is the largest professional association in Tennessee
with more than 12,000 members.
Founded in 1881, the TBA provides opportunities for continuing
legal education, professional
development and public service.
The TBA's dedication to serving
the state's legal community is evidenced by its membership roll,
which represents the entire spectrum of legal practice: plaintiff and
defense lawyers, corporate coun-
sel, judges, prosecutors, public
defenders, government lawyers
and legal services attorneys.
The TBA YLD is known for its
active and enthusiastic support
for public and legal service projects in the state. It coordinates the
high school mock trial competition, presents law-related education curriculum to Tennessee students, organizes a statewide public service day each year and provides free legal services to the
public through a variety of events.
The
Wills
for
Heroes
Foundation, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit
organization, works nationwide
with local partners to provide free
wills and other estate planning
documents to America’s first
responders, including police officers, firefighters and paramedics.
Since November 2001, the Wills
for Heroes program has provided
more than 7,000 estate planning
documents nationwide. Learn
more at www.willsforheroes.org.
NY judge: Release
testimony by
Rosenberg brother
in 1950s spy case
NEW YORK (AP) — A judge has
ordered the unsealing of key grand
jury testimony from 1950 that may
give new fuel to suspicions that
Ethel Rosenberg was unjustly convicted of espionage and put to
death for conspiring to give nuclear
secrets to the Soviet Union.
In his ruling this week, U.S.
District Judge Alvin Hellerstein
noted that the testimony of
Rosenberg’s
brother,
David
Greenglass, was crucial to the case
and that he claimed in interviews
that prosecutors pressured him
into falsely testifying against his
sister.
The judge said the testimony
could be unsealed now because
Greenglass died last year at 92. The
government could still appeal the
ruling.
“The requested records are critical pieces of an important moment
in our nation’s history,” Hellerstein
wrote. “The time for the public to
guess what they contain should
end.”
In what was called the crime of
the century, Ethel and her husband, Julius, were convicted of
espionage conspiracy and executed
in 1953. The sentencing judge
blamed their treason for the Korean
War and the deaths of at least
50,000 people.
Greenglass was the star government witness at the 1951 trial, testifying that he had given the couple
data obtained through his wartime
job as an Army machinist at the Los
Alamos, New Mexico, headquarters
of the top-secret Manhattan Project
to build the atomic bomb.
He said he saw his older sister
transcribing the information on a
portable typewriter at the
Rosenbergs’ New York apartment in
1945. That testimony proved crucial in convicting Ethel along with
her husband.
SUNDAY,
JUNE 21
#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad
Dad (dad’s name if desired), you are the
greatest! Thanks for all you do! Your names(s).
#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad
#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad
Daddy, Happy Father’s Day! We love you!
Your names(s).
#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad#1Dad
It’s as easy as 1-2-3
1) Write your special message below.
2) Count the words in your message (minimum 12
words). Multiply by 25¢ per word.
3) Enclose check, money order, Visa, Discover,
American Express or Mastercard number. All messages
must be prepaid.
4) Add $1.95 for each row of flowers.
5) Deadline is June 17 at 4:30 p.m.
Message:
Name:
Address:
City:
Credit Card:
CC Expiraton:
Phone:
Zip:
E-mail or bring your message to:
Father’s Day Tribute
Cleveland Daily Banner
P.O. Box 3600
Cleveland, TN 37320
Phone: (423) 472-5041
Fax: (423) 476-1046
[email protected]
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—41
tina’s Groove
CROSSWORD
By Eugene Sheffer
Baby Blues
Blondie
ASTROLOGY
SUNDAY, MAY 24, 2015
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY:
Joey Logano, 25; Mark Ballas, 29; John
C. Reilly, 50; Bob Dylan, 74.
Happy Birthday: Work for your own
benefit, not that of others. You'll be taken
advantage of if you are too quick to offer
assistance. Do whatever it takes to stay
on a path that will help you reach your
goals. Use your energy wisely. You can
make progress if you upgrade your surroundings to suit your current interests.
A home-based business looks promising. Your numbers are 2, 8, 21, 24, 32,
37, 45.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Apply for
positions that will allow you to use your
skills. Your ability to strategize financially
and budget wisely will buy you the freedom to enjoy some of life's pleasures.
Entertainment or travel plans can be
made. Expand your interests.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Be moderate in all your dealings. Whether you
are investing, planning a trip or looking at
purchasing a big-ticket item, try to stay
within your means. Don't let a romantic
relationship put you into debt. Protect
your assets.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Make
alterations that will add to your convenience, happiness and future possibilities.
Indulge in something that will allow you to
turn your skills into a business venture.
Using your home as your workplace will
be to your advantage.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Focus
only on what you have control over. Work
at presenting your skills in a unique manner that will draw attention. Believe in
yourself and what you can do, and other
people will as well.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Don't overload
your plate and try to do everything on
your own. You'll get plenty of help if you
Snuffy Smith
Hagar the Horrible
Dilbert
By Eugenia Last
reach out to those you know can contribute to your plan. You've got what it
takes to excel.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Spending
time with someone you love will ease the
pressure you've been feeling at work due
to people putting demands on you. Take
a moment to relax and enjoy doing
something special with the people who
love and support you the most.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Do whatever you enjoy doing most and you will
excel. Don't let an unreliable source or
unpredictable individual slow you down.
Do your own thing and avoid interference. A change in your personal life will
give you a new lease on life.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Refuse
to let situations get blown out of proportion. Focus on love, aesthetics and making your surroundings comfortable. Make
plans to enjoy time with someone special
and you will have a satisfying and productive day. An unexpected change will
improve your life.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Don't jump into a deal too fast. Making
sure you can afford the fare before you
sign on the dotted line will spare you
unnecessary stress. Someone will offer
you false information. Do your research.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Take
time out to be with the people you love. A
little nurturing will help you avoid trouble.
Romance looks promising, so plan
something special for two. A nostalgic
conversation with someone will bring you
closer together.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You've
got good ideas and an expressive way of
explaining your plans. Discussions with a
partner or loved one will lead to a healthier and overall better living arrangement.
The changes you make now will help you
secure your next position.
Contract Bridge
by Steve Becker
Garfield
Beetle Bailey
Dennis the Menace
By Ned Classics
By Conrad Day
See
Answer on
Page 50
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Inconsistency will be your downfall. Avoid
anyone who is trying to lead you astray or
take over what you want to accomplish
yourself. Don't argue, just do the best you
can. Romance will ease your stress.
Birthday Baby: You are sensitive,
charming and convincing. You are confident and outgoing.
MONDAY, MAY 25, 2015
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY:
Aly Raisman, 21; Demetri Martin, 42;
Octavia Spencer, 45; Mike Myers, 52.
Happy Birthday: Before you begin
to make changes, question your
motives. Doing something to avoid a
situation is not the answer. Face any
dispute you have this year head-on so
that you can put it behind you. Honesty
will be required if you want to move forward successfully. Use your intelligence and versatility to make things
happen. Your numbers are 3, 16, 20,
28, 33, 42, 45.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Don't
waste time. Take care of any unfinished
business so the coast is clear to start
working on projects that interest you
more. A chance to do something different
is on the horizon. A professional or volunteer position will lead to something worthwhile.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Get
involved, be a participant and do your
best to help others. Offering your time will
lead to experience and knowledge, but
making a cash donation might not be the
most responsible thing to do at this time.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Concentrate on what needs to be done.
Letting your emotions get involved will
lead to hurt feelings and a lack of productivity. Keep your situation in perspective
and do what you can. Don't let anyone
take advantage of you.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Go
where the action is. Make positive
changes in your community. A personal
improvement will lift your spirits and put
you in the spotlight. Show off your attributes and what you have to offer. Love is
on the rise.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Pursue whatever will lead to a new you and a better
future. Get involved in a cause you feel
strongly about and you will end up in a
position that can lead to greater popularity and leadership. Don't give in to emotional manipulation.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Finding a
solution to a problem at work or at home
will reveal who is on your side and who
isn't. Begin questioning motives if you
want to eliminate what stands between
you and victory. Participation will be fruitful.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
Communication, education and clearing
up any misunderstandings will lead to
positive changes. If someone pushes or
pressures you, walk away. Look out for
your best interests. Don't let a physical or
emotional situation overpower you or
lead you in the wrong direction.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Go over
your plans and look for any improvements you can make to ensure a successful journey. Whether you are taking
a trip, signing up for a learning experience or making personal changes,
preparation will be key in getting the
results you want.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Discipline and patience will be necessary
when dealing with friends and relatives.
Listen to what's being said, but don't give
in to an emotional threat. Stand your
ground and carry on doing things you
find more enjoyable.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Partnerships will be problematic. Don't
force your will on others. If you take over
or try to control a situation, you will be
accused of meddling. For optimum
results, do the best job possible and let
others do as they please.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Fix up
your surroundings. Doing the work yourself will save you money and give you a
sense of accomplishment. A partnership
will take a positive turn and result in helping you fulfill one of your dreams.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Easy
does it. You will be misinterpreted and
face a backlash of complaints if you
aren't careful. Focus on personal
improvements, not on trying to change
others. Working by yourself will give you
a sense of satisfaction and keep you out
of trouble.
Birthday Baby: You are talkative,
sensitive and impulsive. You are intelligent and strong-minded.
42—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
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SPIKE
COM
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WRCBNBC
WELFTBN
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USA
FX
ESPN
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FSTN
SEC
GOLF
FS1
SPSO
WEA
CNBC
MSNBC
CNN
HDLN
FNC
HIST
TRUTV
A&E
DISC
NGC
TRAV
FOOD
HGTV
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FAM
DISN
NICK
TOON
TVLND
AMC
TCM
HALL
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BRAVO
SYFY
SPIKE
COM
MTV
VH1
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BET
SCIENCE
CSPAN2
EWTN
WPXA ION
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Formula One Racing Monaco Grand Prix. (N) ’ (Live) Å
English Premier League Soccer
Premier League Goal Zone 2015 French Open Tennis First Round. (N) ’ (Live) Å
Golf
Jon Falwell Dr. Tony Ev Live-Passion! Touch Lives Franklin
Turning Point Walk in the Winning Walk Prince
Carpenter
Liberate
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PowerPoint It Is Written Pathway
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Unity
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Music City
Gaither Gospel Hour ’
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Fabric of ... Good News In Touch W/Charles Stanley Perry Stone Watch
Paid Program Key of David Red Bank Baptist Church
Young Icons Animal Adv Sunday
›› “National Treasure” (2004, Adventure) Nicolas Cage, Diane Kruger.
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Cat in the Hat Wild Kratts Super Why! McLaughlin Washington The Lincoln Awards
Performance at White House National Memorial Day Concert ’ Å
Dr. J. Merritt Creflo Dollar Jack Graham Franklin
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Jewish Jesus Kerry Shook Israel News Love Worth Kennedy
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Charlie Rose McLaughlin Antiques Roadshow Å
Chattanooga Makers “Women in War” ’
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Paid Program ››› “The Aviator” (2004, Biography) Leonardo DiCaprio, Cate Blanchett. Å
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Face/Nation Church
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Paid Program Paid Program Bull Riding PBR Last Cowboy Standing. From Las Vegas.
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Sundays With Carolyn & Dan “Dyson” Featuring Dyson.
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Washington Journal Live call-in program with officials. (N) ’ (Live)
Newsmakers ’
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Address
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Electronics Memorial Week Solutions on the Go (N)
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Rich Kids of Rich Kids of ››› “Bridesmaids” (2011) Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph.
American Ninja Warrior ’
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American Ninja Warrior Three brand-new obstacles. Å
In Touch W/Charles Stanley Amazing
Jeremiah
Joel Osteen Perricone MD “My Nanny’s Secret” (2009, Crime Drama) Haylie Duff. Å
›› “The Perfect Nanny” (2000) Tracy Nelson. Å
“The Nightmare Nanny” (2013) Ashley Scott. Å
Paid Program Paid Program Shaun T’s
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Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou
Married
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Friends ’
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›› “Bedtime Stories” (2008) Adam Sandler, Keri Russell.
› “Mr. Deeds” (2002) Adam Sandler, Winona Ryder. (DVS) › “Billy Madison” (1995) Adam Sandler, Darren McGavin.
Law & Order “Harvest” ’
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Law & Order Å (DVS)
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››› “War of the Worlds” (2005) Tom Cruise, Miranda Otto. Å (DVS)
John Carter
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program NCIS “Recruited” ’ Å
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NCIS “Freedom” ’ Å
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Ellen Å
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
››› “Life of Pi” (2012, Adventure) Suraj Sharma, Irrfan Khan, Tabu.
››› “Avatar” (2009) Sam Worthington. A former Marine falls in love with a native of a lush alien world.
Zombieland
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Outside Lines Reporters
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College Softball NCAA Tournament -- Florida vs. Kentucky. SportsCenter (N) Å
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I Love Lucy I Love Lucy The Middle
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Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls “Be My Valentine” (2013, Romance) William Baldwin. Å
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(6:30) ›› “Bachelorette” (2012) ’
›› “Warm Bodies” (2013) Nicholas Hoult. ’
›› “She’s the Man” (2006) Amanda Bynes. A student poses as her twin brother. ’
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VH1, Music The Buzz Re The 20 ’ (Part 1 of 2)
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Nellyville Å
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› “Alex Cross” (2012, Action) Tyler Perry, Matthew Fox. Å
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MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters Å
MythBusters Å
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
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››› “The Client” (1994) Susan Sarandon, Tommy Lee Jones. ’
›› “The Bone Collector” (1999) ’
The 7D
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Good Eats
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·El horno
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El Chavo
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Videos Asom. Fútbol Inglés Hull City AFC vs Manchester United FC. (N)
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Tras la Verdad
Hotel Todo Incluido
“Okey Mister Pancho” (1981) María Elena Velasco.
República Deportiva (N)
F1 Pre-Race Premier Lg. Premier Pre
Premier League Live (N)
English Premier League Soccer
Premier League Goal Zone (N) ’ (Live)
Premier
Formula One Racing Monaco Grand Prix.
Mystery ER “Painful Truth”
Mystery ER ’ Å
Mystery ER ’ Å
Monsters Inside Me Å
Monsters Inside Me Å
Monsters Inside Me Å
Monsters Inside Me Å
Monsters Inside Me Å
Monsters Inside Me Å
4:30
5 PM
MAY 24, 2015
5:30
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
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9:30
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12 AM
12:30
(3:30) Golf Senior PGA Championship, Final Round. (N)
News
Nightly News Dateline NBC The murder of Michelle O’Keefe. ’ Å
A.D. The Bible Continues (N) (:01) American Odyssey (N) News
Scandal ’ Å
Castle Å
John Hagee Marriage
Bal. Living
Greg Dickow T.D. Jakes
Joyce Meyer Lead the Way Blessed Life Joel Osteen Kerry Shook K. Copeland Creflo Dollar ››› “The Passion of the Christ” (2004) Jim Caviezel, Monica Bellucci.
Bless Lord
Perry Stone Around Town God’s Light Around Town
Prayer Time Unity
Bluegrass
Westmore Church of God
Dugger Mt.
Nashville
WTNB Sports
Westmore Church of God
Country Music Today
Black College Quiz Show ’ Anger
Anger
Access Hollywood (N) Å
The Closer Å
The Good Wife ’ Å
Bones “A Boy in the Tree”
FOX61 First Mike & Molly Mike & Molly How I Met
How I Met
The Office ’
Above and Beyond Å
Omaha Beach: Honor
Weekend
Rick Steves Masterpiece Classic Å
National Memorial Day Concert (N) Å
National Memorial Day Concert ’ Å
Performance at White House The Lincoln Awards
Paid Program Keith Moore D. Jeremiah Ankerberg
Jeffress
F.K. Price
T.D. Jakes
Power/ Living Rejoice in the Lord
Ankerberg
Michael
Rod Parsley Green Room Hal Lindsey End of Age Franklin
The Blessed
World of X
21 Day Fix
Turbo Lift
Outdoorsman News
World News Funniest Home Videos
500 Questions ’ Å
Fresh-Boat
Fresh-Boat
Castle “Meme Is Murder” ’
News
(:35) Ring of Honor Wrestling Outdoorsman
Secrets of the Dead ’
Weekend
Charlie Rose Performance at White House The Lincoln Awards
National Memorial Day Concert (N) Å
National Memorial Day Concert ’ Å
Independent Lens “1971” ’ Å
Gathering
Hollywood
Paid Program Pursuit of
Pre-Race
NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup Series: Coca-Cola 600. From Charlotte Motor Speedway in Charlotte, N.C. (N) ’ (Live)
Seinfeld ’
The Good Wife ’ Å
Blue Bloods “Growing Boys”
PGA Tour Golf
Paid Program CBS News
60 Minutes (N) ’ Å
Undercover Boss ’ Å
Madam Secretary ’ Å
Battle Creek ’ Å
News
Joel Osteen Face/Nation Free TV!
Denim & Co.
Oil Cosmetics
Total Gym Experience
Tempur-Pedic Sleep System A Host of Beauty Favorites Susan Graver Style
Oil Cosmetics
Outdoor Living
Washington This Week ’
Washington This Week ’
Newsmakers ’
Address
Address
Q & A “Michael Witmore” ’
British House of Commons Road to the White House ’ Q & A ’
British House of Commons
(2:30) “The Sixth Sense”
›› “National Treasure” (2004) Nicolas Cage, Diane Kruger. Å
›› “National Treasure: Book of Secrets” (2007) Nicolas Cage. Å
Salem “Dead Birds” (N)
Salem “Dead Birds” Å
Salem “Dead Birds” Å
Keith Urban Guitar
Keith Urban Guitar
King Baby Jewelry (N)
NUTRiBULLET Rx (N)
Electronics Memorial Week Keith Urban Guitar
Keith Urban Guitar
Keith Urban Guitar
Home Solutions (N)
(2:00) ››› “Bridesmaids” Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
Rich Kids of Beverly Hills
Kardashian
Kardashian
American Ninja Warrior “Miami Qualifying” ’ Å
American Ninja Warrior “Denver Qualifying” ’ Å
American Ninja Warrior The finals course in Venice, Calif.
American Ninja Warrior “Dallas Finals” ’ Å
American Ninja Warrior ’
“A Nanny’s Revenge” (2012) Jodi Lyn O’Keefe. Å
“Nanny Cam” (2014) Laura Allen, India Eisley. Å
“Kidnapped: The Hannah Anderson Story” (2015) Å
Lizzie Borden Chronicles
Lizzie Borden Chronicles
“Kidnapped: Hannah”
Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou The Willis Family “Mama”
The Willis Family ’ Å
The Willis Family ’ Å
The Willis Family “Mama”
The Willis Family ’ Å
›› “Happy Gilmore” (1996, Comedy) Adam Sandler.
› “Big Daddy” (1999, Comedy) Adam Sandler. (DVS)
›› “The Longest Yard” (2005) Adam Sandler, Chris Rock. (DVS)
›› “The Longest Yard” (2005) Adam Sandler, Chris Rock. (DVS)
(3:30) ›› “John Carter” (2012) Taylor Kitsch. Å (DVS)
“Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief”
NBA Tip-Off NBA Basketball Atlanta Hawks at Cleveland Cavaliers. (N) (Live) Å
Inside the NBA (N) Å
The Last Ship “El Toro”
NCIS “One Last Score” ’
NCIS ’ Å (DVS)
NCIS “Tell-All” ’
NCIS “Two-Faced” ’
(:02) NCIS “Dead Reflection” (:02) NCIS “Baltimore” ’
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
(12:02) NCIS “Recruited” ’
(3:30) ››› “Zombieland” (2009, Comedy)
› “Grown Ups” (2010, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Chris Rock.
›› “Ted” (2012, Comedy) Mark Wahlberg, Mila Kunis.
›› “Ted” (2012, Comedy) Mark Wahlberg, Mila Kunis.
College Softball
College Softball NCAA Tournament -- LSU vs. Arizona. (N)
Sunday Night Countdown
MLB Baseball Texas Rangers at New York Yankees. (N) (Live)
SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
SportsCenter
NCAA Update College Baseball SEC Tournament, Final: Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
NCAA Update College Softball NCAA Tournament -- Arizona vs. LSU. (N)
NHRA Drag Racing Kansas Nationals. From Topeka, Kan. (N Same-day Tape) Å
MLB Baseball Braves Live! Braves Live! Driven
Bull Riding Championship.
World Poker
World Poker
PowerShares Champions Series Tennis
World Poker
MLB Baseball
SEC Now (N) Women’s College Gymnastics SEC Championships.
College Golf College Golf SEC Now (N) College Track and Field SEC Outdoor Championship.
SEC Now (N) (Live)
College Baseball SEC Tournament, Final: Teams TBA.
European PGA Tour Golf
Golf Central (N) (Live)
PGA Tour Golf Crowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial, Final Round. From Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas.
Golf Central
PGA Golf
NASCAR RaceDay (N) Å
MLS Soccer Philadelphia Union at New York Red Bulls. (N)
MLS Soccer Orlando City SC at San Jose Earthquakes. (N) (Live) Å
Garbage
The Ultimate Fighter Å
FOX Sports Live (N) Å
NASCAR V.L. FOX Sports
Lacrosse
XTERRA Adv. XTERRA USA Championship Best of World Class Boxing Boxing From Feb. 18, 2012.
College Track and Field From Ames, Iowa.
Future Phen. Hawks Live! Golf America Boxing 30 ’
Highway Thru Hell
Highway Thru Hell
Highway Thru Hell
Fat Guys in the Woods
Fat Guys in the Woods
Fat Guys in the Woods
Prospectors “Topaz Envy”
Prospectors “Jackpot!”
Prospectors
Ninja!
Paid Program WEN Hair
Paid Program Bobby Rydell Bob Dylan
The Filthy
On Money
The Profit
The Profit “Progress Report” The Profit “SJC Drums”
Consumed: The Real
Consumed: The Real
Caught on Camera
Caught on Camera
Extreme Caught on Camera: The 100th Episode!
Caught on Camera (N)
Locked Up Abroad
Locked Up Abroad
Lockup Tampa
Lockup Tampa
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
Anthony Bourdain Parts
Anthony Bourdain Parts
Anthony Bourdain Parts
High Profits
High Profits “Hazard Pay”
High Profits “Caitlin’s Law”
CNN Newsroom
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File CNN Newsroom
Anthony Bourdain Parts
Anthony Bourdain Parts
Anthony Bourdain Parts
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File
America’s News HQ
MediaBuzz
Fox News Sunday
FOX Report (N)
Legends & Lies: Real West Legends & Lies: Real West Legends & Lies: Real West Legends & Lies: Real West Legends & Lies: Real West
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Avenging the Alamo
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers truTV Top Funniest
truTV Top Funniest
Fake Off
(:01) truTV Top Funniest
(12:02) truTV Top Funniest
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds “Parasite”
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds “The Fight”
Criminal Minds ’ Å
Criminal Minds ’ Å
(:01) Criminal Minds Å
(12:01) Criminal Minds Å
Naked and Afraid ’ Å
Naked and Afraid ’ Å
Naked and Afraid ’ Å
Naked and Afraid ’ Å
Naked and Afraid ’ Å
Naked and Afraid: Uncensored “Uncensored” (N) Å
Naked and Afraid ’ Å
Naked and Afraid ’ Å
Surviving Alcatraz
Alcatraz: Living Hell
Explorer “Inside Death Row” Wicked Tuna
Wicked Tuna
Wicked Tuna (N)
(:06) Alaska Bush Pilots (N) (:06) Wicked Tuna
(12:06) Alaska Bush Pilots
101 Amazing Thrills (N)
101 Amazing Thrills (N)
101 Amazing Thrills (N)
101 Amazing Thrills (N)
The Layover with Bourdain Bourdain: No Reservations No Reservations (N) Å
Breaking Borders (N) Å
Bourdain: No Reservations
Chopped “Chopped, Again!” Chopped “Chocolate Rush!” Spring Baking Championship Guy’s Grocery Games
Guy’s Grocery Games (N)
Spring Baking Championship Cutthroat Kitchen (N)
Cutthroat Kitchen
Spring Baking Championship
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Lakefront
Lakefront
Caribbean
Caribbean
Island Life
Island Life
Hunters
Hunters Int’l Caribbean
Caribbean
Man-Eating Super Croc ’
Devoured: Super Snake
Man-Eating Zombie Cats ’ Megalodon: The Extended Cut ’
The Cannibal in the Jungle (N) ’
(:05) The Cannibal in the Jungle ’
(3:30) “Dr. Seuss’ Horton Hears a Who!”
››› “Rio” (2011, Comedy) Voices of Anne Hathaway.
››› “Kung Fu Panda” (2008) Voices of Jack Black.
››› “The Goonies” (1985, Adventure) Sean Astin, Josh Brolin.
Joel Osteen Dr. Jeremiah
I Didn’t Do It I Didn’t Do It Dog
Dog
Jessie Å
Jessie Å
Girl Meets
Girl Meets
Austin & Ally Austin & Ally Austin & Ally Austin & Ally Dog With a Blog Å
I Didn’t Do It Girl Meets
Good-Charlie Good-Charlie
“The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie” ’
SpongeBob Breadwinners SpongeBob Harvey Beaks Sanjay, Craig Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Friends ’
(:36) Friends The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air
Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball
Gumball
Gumball
Gumball
King of Hill King of Hill Jack
Cleveland
Cleveland
Family Guy Family Guy China, IL
Aqua
Unsupervised
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Raymond
Raymond
King
King
King
King
Friends
(:40) Friends
›› “Rambo III” (1988, Action) Sylvester Stallone. ‘R’ Å
››› “First Blood” (1982) Sylvester Stallone. ‘R’ Å
›› “Rambo: First Blood Part II” (1985, Action) ‘R’ Å
›› “Rambo III” (1988, Action) Sylvester Stallone. ‘R’ Å
››› “A Walk in the Sun” (1946) Dana Andrews. Å
››› “The Steel Helmet” (1951, War) Gene Evans.
›› “Men in War” (1957, War) Robert Ryan, Aldo Ray.
›››› “M*A*S*H” (1970) Donald Sutherland. Å
(12:15) “The Big Parade”
(3:00) “Chance at Romance” “So You Said Yes” (2015) Kellie Martin, Chad Willett. Å
››› “The Wish List” (2010) Jennifer Esposito. Å
“Love by the Book” (2014, Romance) Leah Renee. Å
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
Snapped “Mindy Dodd”
Snapped “Social Media”
Snapped “Marissa Devault”
Snapped “Ana Trujillo”
Snapped: Killer Couples
Snapped: Killer Couples (N) Snapped “Wendy Cobb”
Snapped “Julia Phillips”
Snapped: Killer Couples
Rich Kids of Rich Kids of Rich Kids of Housewives/Atl.
Housewives/Atl.
Housewives/Atl.
The Real Housewives of Atlanta
Housewives/Atl.
Rich Kids of Beverly Hills (N) Housewives/Atl.
Beautiful
››› “28 Weeks Later” (2007, Horror) Robert Carlyle.
›› “Underworld” (2003, Horror) Kate Beckinsale, Scott Speedman.
›› “Jumanji” (1995) Robin Williams, Bonnie Hunt.
› “The Happening” (2008) Mark Wahlberg.
Bar Rescue (:34) Bar Rescue ’
(:40) Bar Rescue “Critters and Quitters” ’
(6:46) Bar Rescue ’
(7:53) Bar Rescue ’
(8:59) Bar Rescue ’
Bar Rescue ’
(:13) Bar Rescue “Loose Lips Loose Tips”
Bar Rescue
(3:02) ›› “The Rocker” (2008) Å
(:40) Gabriel Iglesias: Hot and Fluffy Å
(6:48) Gabriel Iglesias: Aloha Fluffy Å
Gabriel Iglesias: I’m Not Fat Gabriel Iglesias: Hot/Fluffy Gabriel Iglesias: Aloha Fluffy Å
Gabriel Iglesias: I’m Not Fat
(:15) ›› “Step Up Revolution” (2012, Drama) Ryan Guzman, Kathryn McCormick. ’
(:02) ›› “Warm Bodies” (2013) Nicholas Hoult. ’
(:05) ›› “Step Up” (2006, Musical) Channing Tatum, Jenna Dewan. ’
(:35) ›› “Step Up Revolution” (2012) ’
(3:55) Love & Hip Hop ’
Love & Hip Hop ’
Love & Hip Hop ’
Love & Hip Hop ’
Love & Hip Hop ’
Love & Hip Hop “Red Alert” Love & Hip Hop ’
Love & Hip Hop ’
Love & Hip Hop ’
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
›› “Con Air” (1997) Nicolas Cage, John Cusack. Å
The Game ’ The Game ’ The Game ’ The Game ’ Å
The Game ’ The Game ’ The Game ’ The Game ’ Å
›› “Lottery Ticket” (2010) Bow Wow. A young man wins a multimillion-dollar prize. Å
Peter Popoff Inspiration
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
MythBusters ’ Å
Cornel West Book-A Higher Form of Killing
Book-The Story
Book-Capital Dames
Book TV ’
Constitution After Words ’
Ashley’s War (:45) Barry Eichengreen on Hall of Mirrors After Words ’
Catechism
Fields-Faith The Church Genesis
Catholics
Crossing
World Over Live
Sunday Night Prime (N)
Grandparents Holy Rosary St. Joan of Arc
Life on the Rock
Sunday Mass Å
(2:30) “The Bone Collector” ››› “Men of Honor” (2000, Drama) Robert De Niro, Cuba Gooding Jr. ’
›› “Constantine” (2005, Fantasy) Keanu Reeves, Rachel Weisz. ’
›› “The Bone Collector” (1999) Denzel Washington, Angelina Jolie. ’
Doctor Who Lab Rats
Lab Rats
Lab Rats: Bionic Island
Lab Rats
Lab Rats
Lab Rats
Lab Rats
Lab Rats
Star-For.
Star-For.
Star-For.
Star-For.
Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb Ultimate
Ultimate
Idiotest Å
Idiotest Å
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Baggage
Baggage
Baggage
Baggage ’
Unique Eats Unique
Cupcake Wars “LA Kings”
Donut
Donut
Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Tia Mowry
Tia Mowry
Suppers
Suppers
Tiffani’s
Tiffani’s
Carnival Eats Unwrap2.0
Tia Mowry
Tia Mowry
CSI: Miami ’ Å
CSI: Miami “Innocent” Å
CSI: Miami “Cop Killer” ’
CSI: Miami “Recoil” Å
CSI: Miami “10-7” ’ Å
CSI: Miami “Prey” ’ Å
CSI: Miami ’ Å
CSI: Miami ’ Å
CSI: Miami “Innocent” Å
Va Por Tí
XH Derbez
XH Derbez
XH Derbez
Vecinos
Vecinos
Vecinos
Vecinos
Vecinos
María
María
“Verano Peligroso” (1991) Alejandra Guzmán, Omar Fierro.
“Live Free or Die Hard” (SS) Noticiero Tel. Videos Asom. ››› “Brave” (2012) Voices of Kevin McKidd. ’ (SS)
La Voz Kids (N) ’ (SS)
Suelta La Sopa Extra (N) ’ T. Telemundo Videos Asom. “La Sorpresa” (2008) ’
P. Luche
Noticiero
(4:50) Aquí y Ahora (N)
(5:50) Me Pongo de Pie (N)
Fútbol Mexicano Primera División
Sal y Pimienta
P. Luche
Noticiero
República Deportiva
Formula One Racing
F1 Extra (N) GP2 Champ. Series
DRIVE ’
NHL Live (N) ’ (Live)
NHL Hockey Tampa Bay Lightning at New York Rangers. (N) (Live)
NHL Overtime (N) ’ (Live)
The Men in Blazers Show
Monsters Inside Me Å
Diagnose Me ’ Å
Diagnose Me ’ Å
Diagnose Me ’ Å
Diagnose Me ’ Å
Diagnose Me ’ Å
Diagnose Me ’ Å
Diagnose Me ’ Å
Diagnose Me ’ Å
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Legal View With Ashleigh
Wolf
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Parking Wars Parking Wars Dog
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Big Cat Diary Big Cat Diary The Crocodile Hunter
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Gilmore Girls
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Reba
Reba
Chuggington Mickey
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SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob PAW Patrol PAW Patrol Wallykazam! Team Umiz. Team Umiz. Bubble
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Blaze
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Pokémon: XY Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball
Gumball
Movie
Tom & Jerry Sonic Boom Gumball
Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Regular Show Regular Show
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program 3’s Company 3’s Company (:12) Three’s Company
Gilligan’s Isle Gilligan’s Isle Gilligan’s Isle Gunsmoke
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Gunsmoke
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Bonanza
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Skincare
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(6:45) Movie (:45) Movie
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I Love Lucy I Love Lucy Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Home & Family
Home & Family
Little House on the Prairie Little House on the Prairie
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My Wife-Kids My Wife-Kids My Wife-Kids My Wife-Kids Varied Programs
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Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Fresh Prince The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air Varied Programs
VH1 Plus Music
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CMT Music
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(:40) The Dukes of Hazzard
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St. Michael
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The 7D
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Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb Doraemon
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Not My Mama Kelsey’s Ess. Extra Virgin Extra Virgin Every/Italian Every/Italian Varied Programs
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Will & Grace Will & Grace Will & Grace Will & Grace Will & Grace Will & Grace
Primero Noticias
Carita de Ángel
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El Chavo
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María Mercedes
Mujer Casos de Vida Real
Un Nuevo Día
Decisiones
Una Maid en Manhattan
El Clon
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·Despierta América!
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A Baby Story A Baby Story Birth Day
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Dr. G: Medical Examiner
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Monsters Inside Me
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4:30
5 PM
MAY 25, 2015
5:30
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
11 PM
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12 AM
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The Ellen DeGeneres Show Live at 5:00 Live at 5:30 News
Nightly News Entertainment Inside Edition American Ninja Warrior “Venice Qualifying” ’ Å
The Island “Man Up” Å
News
Tonight Show-J. Fallon
Seth Meyers
John Hagee Jewish Jesus “Last Ounce of Courage” (2012, Drama) Marshall Teague. Rodriguez
Potters
Trinity Family End of Age Franklin
J. Duplantis Praise the Lord Å
Joel Osteen Perry Stone
Around Town
WTNB Today
Body
Southern-Fit Deals Around Town
Country Fix Nashville Un Around Town
WTNB Sports
Adrenalin Rush Wrestling
Country Music Today
Judge Mathis ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly The Middle
The Middle
“Memorial Day” (2011, Action) Jonathan Bennett. ’
TMZ (N) ’
Hollywood
Married
Paid Program Anger
Paid Program
Curious
Wild Kratts Arthur ’ (EI) Odd Squad PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Georgia Trav. Georgia Trav. Antiques Roadshow (N)
The Homefront America’s military families. (N) ’ Å
Super Skyscrapers Å
Cool Spaces! ’ Å
Mission
Bill Winston Love a Child 700 Club
Hour of Sal Creflo Dollar Perry Stone John Hagee Rod Parsley Joni Lamb
Marcus and Joni
J. Duplantis Joni Lamb
Kenneth W. K. Copeland Life Today
Joyce Meyer
Dr. Phil ’ Å
News
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World News Wheel
Jeopardy! (N) 500 Questions (N) ’ Å
The Bachelorette Laila Ali teaches the men to box. (N) ’
News
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live ’ (:37) Nightline
Wild Kratts Wild Kratts Curious
Curious
World News Business Rpt. PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å
Antiques Roadshow (N)
The Homefront America’s military families. (N) ’ Å
A Gathering of Heroes ’
Charlie Rose (N) ’ Å
Name Game Name Game Family Feud Family Feud Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Big Bang
Big Bang
MasterChef Cooks present their signature dishes. ’
FOX61 First Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Cleveland
Paid Program The Office ’
The Dr. Oz Show ’ Å
Judge Judy Judge Judy News 12 at 6 CBS News
Prime News Andy Griffith 2 Broke Girls Mike & Molly Scorpion ’ Å
(9:59) NCIS: Los Angeles
News
(:35) The Mentalist ’ Å
Corden
Computer Shop
Denim & Co.
Outdoor Living
LOGO by Lori Goldstein
Isaac Mizrahi Live
PM Style with Shawn Killinger Fashion, fun and friends.
Computers & Tablets
National Memorial Day
(:15) Digital Future (N) ’
(:31) Recovering Wasted Food (N) ’
National Memorial Day
Lee Zeldin
Mark Takai
Coleman
George W. Bush Presidency and Wars
Capitol Hill
Blue Bloods ’ Å
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Funniest Home Videos
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How I Met
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Clever Solutions (N)
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Electronics Memorial Week The Monday Night Show (N) The Monday Night Show (N) Memorial Day Weekend Fnl Memorial Day Weekend Fnl Memorial Day Weekend Fnl Robert Irvine: Kitchen
Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
Kardashian
Rich Kids of Beverly Hills
American Ninja Warrior ’
American Ninja Warrior “USA vs. the World” Teams from the U.S., Japan and Europe.
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
Parks
The Soup
The Soup
› “Jumper” (2008)
(3:00) ›› “The Last Song” ›› “Two Weeks Notice” (2002) Sandra Bullock. Å
›› “Made of Honor” (2008) Patrick Dempsey. Å
“Grace of Monaco” (2014) Nicole Kidman. Premiere. Å
(:02) ›› “Made of Honor” (2008) Patrick Dempsey. Å
The Little Couple ’ Å
The Little Couple ’ Å
The Little Couple ’ Å
The Little Couple ’ Å
The Little Couple ’ Å
The Little Couple ’ Å
The Little Couple ’ Å
The Little Couple ’ Å
The Little Couple ’ Å
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Friends ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld ’
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Big Bang
Big Bang
Conan
The Office ’ Conan
The Last Ship “SOS” Å
The Last Ship Å
The Last Ship “Trials”
The Last Ship Å
Castle “Recoil” ’
Castle “Reality Star Struck”
Bones ’ Å
Bones “The Turn in the Urn” Law & Order “C.O.D.” ’
CSI: Crime Scene
CSI: Crime Scene
CSI: Crime Scene
CSI: Crime Scene
WWE Monday Night RAW Countdown to the Elimination Chamber. (N) ’ (Live) Å
(:05) ›› “Faster” (2010, Action) Dwayne Johnson.
How I Met
How I Met
Two Men
Two Men
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly ››› “Captain America: The First Avenger” (2011, Action) Chris Evans.
››› “Captain America: The First Avenger” (2011, Action) Chris Evans.
MLB Baseball Detroit Tigers at Oakland Athletics. From O.co Coliseum in Oakland, Calif.
SportsCenter (N) Å
NBA Countdown (N) (Live)
NBA Basketball Golden State Warriors at Houston Rockets. (N) Å
SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
His & Hers Å
Olbermann
You Herd Me SportsCenter (N) Å
30 for 30 Å
30 for 30 Å
Baseball Tonight (N) Å
SportsCenter SportsNation Baseball Tonight (N) Å
MLB Baseball Arizona Diamondbacks at St. Louis Cardinals. (N) (Live)
Postgame
The Panel
The Panel
The Panel
The Panel
The Panel
Driven
World Poker
UFC Reloaded
Best/Paul Finebaum
Best of The Paul Finebaum Show
SEC Now (N)
College Baseball SEC Tournament, Final: Teams TBA.
SEC Storied
SEC Storied
College Golf NCAA Women’s Golf Championship, Individual Stroke Play. (N) (Live)
Golf Central (N) (Live)
College Golf NCAA Women’s Golf Championship, Individual Stroke Play.
Golf Central
College Golf
Golf Patriot Championship.
America’s Pregame (N) (Live) NASCAR Race Hub (N) (Live) MLB Whiparound (N) Å
Rudy & Neal Pure Sports Boxing Golden Boy: Eric Hunter vs. Antonio Escalante.
FOX Sports Live (N) Å
Notorious
Notorious
Boxing
Trackside Live
Braves Live! Pregame (N)
MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves at Los Angeles Dodgers. (N Subject to Blackout) (Live)
Braves Live! Braves Live! MLB Baseball
Coast Guard Alaska
Coast Guard Alaska
Coast Guard Alaska
Coast Guard Alaska
HMS Bounty Rescue
Coast Guard Alaska
Coast Guard Alaska
Coast Guard Alaska
Coast Guard Alaska
The Profit “SJC Drums”
Consumed: The Real
Consumed: The Real
Shark Tank ’ Å
Shark Tank ’ Å
The Profit “Progress Report” The Profit
The Profit
Consumed: The Real
NOW With Alex Wagner (N) The Ed Show (N)
PoliticsNation (N)
Hardball Chris Matthews
All In With Chris Hayes (N) The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word
All In With Chris Hayes
The Rachel Maddow Show
The Lead With Jake Tapper The Situation Room (N)
Anthony Bourdain Parts
Anthony Bourdain Parts
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Anthony Bourdain Parts
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CNN Newsroom
50 States/50 Keywords
Keywords
Keywords
The Situation Room
Anthony Bourdain Parts
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Anthony Bourdain Parts
Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File
Your World With Neil Cavuto The Five (N)
Special Report
Deadly Affair: Pamela Smart Did You Know That Special The Kelly File (N)
The Tangled Clinton Web
Did You Know That Special The Kelly File
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Texas Rising The Texas Rangers battle for revenge. (N)
(:07) Texas Rising The Texas Rangers battle for revenge.
Barmageddon
Barmageddon
Barmageddon
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
Barmageddon (N)
(:01) Barmageddon
Carbonaro
Carbonaro
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 ’ Å
The First 48 “Safe House”
The First 48 ’ Å
(:01) The First 48 ’ Å
(:02) The First 48 ’ Å
(12:01) The First 48 Å
Street Outlaws ’ Å
Street Outlaws Å
Street Outlaws Å
Street Outlaws: Full Throttle “Not So Big Easy” (N) Å
Street Outlaws (N) ’ Å
Fast N’ Loud: Demolition
Street Outlaws ’ Å
Street Outlaws: Full Throttle
Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero
Driving America The impact of the automobile on America.
StarTalk “Jimmy Carter” (N) Driving America
Bizarre Foods America
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Time Trav.
Time Trav.
Bizarre Foods America
Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Chopped
Chopped
Chopped
Chopped
Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Guilty Pleas. Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives
Hunters
Hunters
Hunters
Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Tiny House Love It or List It Å
Love It or List It Å
Hunters
Hunters Int’l A Sale of Two Cities (N)
Love It or List It Å
River Monsters ’ Å
River Monsters ’ Å
River Monsters Boat attack killed over 200 people. Å
River Monsters Search for the greatest river monster. (N)
(:05) The Last Alaskans ’
(:05) River Monsters Search for the greatest river monster.
›› “Burlesque” (2010, Drama) Cher, Christina Aguilera, Eric Dane.
››› “Mean Girls” (2004, Comedy) Lindsay Lohan.
››› “Pitch Perfect” (2012) Anna Kendrick, Skylar Astin, Rebel Wilson.
The 700 Club ’ Å
Boy Meets... Boy Meets...
Girl Meets
Girl Meets
Girl Meets
Dog With a Blog Å
K.C. Under. K.C. Under. K.C. Under. ››› “Despicable Me” (2010) ‘PG’ Å
Mickey
Austin & Ally Girl Meets
I Didn’t Do It Liv & Maddie Good-Charlie Good-Charlie
The Thundermans ’ Å
Thundermans Henry Danger Henry Danger Henry Danger Genie in a Bikini (N) Å
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Friends ’
(:36) Friends The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air
“Diary-Dog Day”
›› “Escape From Planet Earth” (2013) Premiere.
Teen Titans Teen Titans King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland
Burgers
Amer. Dad
Amer. Dad
Family Guy Family Guy Chicken
Aqua Teen
Cleveland
Cleveland
(:12) Hot in Cleveland Å
Cleveland
Cleveland
Cleveland
Cleveland
(:12) Hot in Cleveland “Pilot” Raymond
Raymond
King
King
King
King
Friends ’
(:40) Friends
(2:00) ›››› “Saving Private Ryan” (1998) Tom Hanks.
›››› “Saving Private Ryan” (1998) Tom Hanks. U.S. troops look for a missing comrade during World War II. ‘R’
TURN: Washington’s Spies TURN: Washington’s Spies “Saving Private Ryan” ‘R’
(2:45) ››› “The Dirty Dozen” (1967)
››› “Kelly’s Heroes” (1970) Clint Eastwood, Telly Savalas. Å (DVS)
››› “Battleground” (1949) Van Johnson. Å (DVS)
(:15) ›››› “Patton” (1970, Biography) George C. Scott, Karl Malden. Å
“Day for Thanks-Walton”
›› “A Wedding on Walton’s Mountain” (1982) Å
›› “A Walton Wedding” (1995) Richard Thomas. Å
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
Prancing
Prancing
Prancing
Prancing
›› “Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde” (2003)
(:10) ›› “Legally Blonde” (2001) Reese Witherspoon.
(:15) ›› “Legally Blonde” (2001) Reese Witherspoon, Luke Wilson.
Legally Bld 2
Southern Charm
Shahs of Sunset
Shahs of Sunset
Shahs of Sunset
Shahs of Sunset
Shahs of Sunset (N)
Southern Charm
(:15) Shahs of Sunset
(12:15) Southern Charm
Defiance Å
Defiance
Defiance “Doll Parts”
Defiance
Defiance “I Almost Prayed”
›› “Doom” (2005, Science Fiction) The Rock, Karl Urban.
›› “Pathfinder” (2007) Karl Urban.
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
›› “2 Fast 2 Furious” (2003, Action) Paul Walker, Tyrese. ’
›› Dredd
Drunk History Drunk History (:15) Drunk History “Boston” Drunk History Drunk History South Park South Park South Park South Park “Imaginationland: The Trilogy”
Archer Å
Archer Å
Daily Show Nightly Show At Midnight South Park
(3:40) Teen Mom ’ Å
(4:50) Teen Mom ’ Å
Teen Mom “The F Bomb”
Teen Mom ’ Å
Teen Mom “Mom vs. Mom”
Teen Mom “Boiling Point”
Teen Mom “Let’s Face It” Matt’s intentions.
True Life “I Hate My Butt”
Teen Mom ’
Love & Hip Hop ’
Love & Hip Hop “All Heart”
Love & Hip Hop ’
Love & Hip Hop ’
Love & Hip Hop Yandy and Mendeecees marry. (N) ’ (Live) Love & Hip Hop Yandy and Mendeecees marry. ’
Love & Hip Hop ’
Friday Night Lights Å
Friday Night Lights Å
Friday Night Lights Å
Friday Night Lights Å
›› “The Replacements” (2000) Keanu Reeves, Gene Hackman. Å
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Real Husbands of Hollywood Husbands
Husbands
Husbands
Real Husbands of Hollywood Husbands
Husbands
Real Husbands of Hollywood Husbands
Husbands
Real Husbands of Hollywood Husbands
The Wendy Williams Show
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
How/Made
Impossible Engineering ’
Impossible Engineering ’
Impossible Engineering (N) Impossible Engineering ’
Impossible Engineering ’
(3:00) In Depth Walter Isaacson discusses his life. ’
Book-Preparing for Contact Lemmon on Ashley’s War
Capitol Hill
After Words “Peter Slevin”
Lives and Public Image of the First Ladies Hissing Cousins
(11:58) After Words ’
With Jesus Catholic
Truth in Heart Bookmark
EWTN News Chartres
Daily Mass - Olam
The Journey Home
EWTN News Holy Rosary World Over Live
Symbolon
Women of
Military Services Mass
Blue Bloods “Chinatown” ’ Blue Bloods “Re-Do” Å
Blue Bloods “After Hours”
Blue Bloods “Little Fish” ’
Blue Bloods “Family Ties”
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods ’ Å
Blue Bloods “Dedication” ’ Blue Bloods ’ Å
Kirby Buckets Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Doctor Who “New Earth” ’
Penn Zero
Penn Zero
Star-For.
Star-For.
Lab Rats
Lab Rats
Doctor Who “New Earth” ’
Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Star-Rebels Star-For.
Deal-No Deal Deal-No Deal Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Newlywed
Newlywed
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud
Man Fire
Man Fire
Man Fire
Man Fire
Man Fire
Man Fire
Man Fire Food
Best Thing
Best Thing
Unique
Unwrapped Unwrap2.0
Unwrap2.0
Good Eats
Good Eats
Best Thing
Best Thing
CSI: Miami “By the Book”
CSI: Miami ’ Å
CSI: Miami ’ Å
CSI: Miami “Long Gone” ’
CSI: Miami “Crowned” ’
CSI: Miami “Friendly Fire”
CSI: Miami ’ Å
CSI: Miami “By the Book”
CSI: Miami ’ Å
Noticiero Con Paola Rojas Amy... de la Mochila Azul
P. Luchetón P. Luchetón P. Luchetón P. Luchetón P. Luchetón P. Luchetón P. Luchetón P. Luchetón P. Luchetón P. Luchetón Par de Ases Noticiero Con Joaquin
Noticias
María Celeste
Caso Cerrado Caso Cerrado Videos Asom. Noticiero
Caso Cerrado: Edición
Avenida Brasil “Capítulo 35” Tierra de Reyes (N) (SS)
El Señor de los Cielos (N)
Al Rojo Vivo Titulares
Tierra de Reyes ’ (SS)
El Gordo y la Flaca (N)
Primer Impacto (N) (SS)
P. Luche
Noticiero Uni. La Sombra del Pasado (N) Amores con Trampa (N)
Lo Imperdonable
Que te Perdone
Impacto
Noticiero Uni Contacto Deportivo (N)
Lunkerville
NASCAR
NASCAR America (N) Å
Pro Football Talk (N) ’ (Live) To Be Announced
NHL Live (N) ’ (Live)
NHL Hockey Chicago Blackhawks at Anaheim Ducks. (N) (Live)
The Men in Blazers Show
Premier
Hoarding: Buried Alive
Hoarding: Buried Alive
Hoarding: Buried Alive
Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
Born Schizophrenic: Jani’s Born Schizophrenic
Kids with Tourettes (N) ’
Born Schizophrenic: Jani’s Born Schizophrenic
44—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Polk 4-Hers Go
Down on the Farm
What vegetable grows underground?
What meat do you get from
pigs?
Why are bees important?
These are question fourthgraders learned by attending
Polk County's 20th annual Fun
on the Farm Day May 6 at the
Polk County 4-H Showbarn in
Benton. The event was coordinated by the Polk County U.T.
Extension. Fourth graders from
South Polk and Benton
Elementary attended the daylong event. Students moved
through eight exhibits including
beef animals, soils and gardening demonstrations, a farm tractor and machinery, dairy cows
and butter making, as well as
Farm Snacks, fabric and weaving, and Bees. Fun on the Farm
Day gave students an understanding of farm life and farm
products. The coordinators of
the Farm Day would like to say
thanks to all who helped make
Fun on the Farm Day a big success: Polk County Soil and Water
Conservation, Polk County
Health Dept., NRCS, Ocoee
Region Bee Keepers Association,
Ricky Hutson, Clarence McClure,
Kim and Judy Frady, Phyllis
Narus and R&M Yarns, Joel and
Keri Cox, Sanders and Becky
Whaley, Bill Trew and Polk
County 4-H members. Farm Day
was fully sponsored by the Polk
County Farm Bureau. Pictured
are highlights of the Farm Day.
Open
Hous
e
TODA
2-4 p Y
.
.m .
Photos courtesy of greg Paxton
Circus accused of violating
law in treatment of elephants
ST. LOUIS (AP) — A circus violated an animal welfare law by
allowing three elephants to briefly
get loose in Missouri and watering
them too close to a Pennsylvania
show’s public area where a child
managed to pose for a photo
behind one of them, a federal
agency alleges in a complaint.
The U.S. Department of
Agriculture, in the April 28 complaint, alleges that during a March
2014 fundraiser circus sponsored
by Moolah Shriners in the St.
Louis suburb of St. Charles, Royal
Hanneford Circus encouraged
crowd noise that included audience members stomping on metal
bleachers, spooking three elephants being led from the arena to
their enclosure.
Those animals — Kelly, Viola
and Isa — briefly got loose on the
arena’s lot where vehicles of circus
employees and Shriners were
parked, according to published
reports at the time. The USDA
alleges in the complaint by its
inspection service that one elephant that made its way between
two trailers sustained scrapes and
cuts while another had superficial
lacerations.
Three weeks later in Altoona,
Pennsylvania, the USDA said,
handlers of those elephants
wrongly stopped to water the animals in a publicly accessible area
while leading the animals from the
performance area to their enclosure. An adult photographed a
child standing behind the waterdrinking elephants, violating federal regulations mandating sufficient distance or barriers between
the animals and the public.
The USDA’s complaint, which
alleges both incidents constitute
willful violations of the federal
Animal Welfare Act, names the
Florida-based Royal Hanneford
Circus and the Carson & Barnes
Circus, the Hugo, Oklahoma,
business that leased the elephants to Royal Hanneford.
Messages left with both interests
Friday were not immediately
returned.
The complaint does not mention
the Moolah organization.
The USDA’s website shows that
companies cited in such complaints may seek a hearing by a
federal administrative law judge,
though the possible penalties
weren’t
immediately
clear.
Messages left with a USDA
spokeswoman and the attorney
who filed the complaint, Colleen
Carroll, also weren’t returned.
The complaint comes at a time
of increased scrutiny of elephants in public displays such
as circuses. Last month, San
Francisco supervisors approved
a ban of performances of wild
animals or starring them in
movies, joining dozens of other
places that frown upon using
bears and big cats, elephants
and monkeys for human entertainment.
Concern over the treatment of
elephants has grown so much
that Feld Entertainment, the parent company of Ringling Bros.
and Barnum & Bailey circus,
announced in March it would
phase out elephant acts by 2018.
The People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals “is asking
families everywhere to stay away
from all circuses that use animals,” Delcianna Winders, the
PETA Foundation’s deputy general
counsel, said in a statement
Thursday reacting to the USDA
complaint.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—45
Cleveland State names Presidential Honors Scholars
Cleveland State Community
College recently named its first
class of Presidential Honors
Scholarships.
The Presidential Honors
Scholarship is a merit-based
scholarship for the top high
school graduates who attend
CSCC.
Students must be accepted
into the CSCC Honors Program
and will also participate in a
Presidential Leadership Program.
The
Presidential
Honors
Scholarship is designed to assist
students with books and other
educational expenses, such as
non-mandatory fees.
The minimum requirements
include:
n 3.5 High School GPA or 24
minimum ACT score (or comparable SAT scores)
n Must enroll in at least 15
credit hours each semester
n Must be accepted into the
Honors Program.
“These are some of the brightest students in our area,” stated
Kimberly Wills, financial aid /
scholarship counselor.
“Their recommendations were
great. Many have been through
our dual enrollment program,
and our recruiters speak well of
them. I’m thrilled that they chose
Cleveland State and that we can
continue to challenge them academically with our Honors program and help further develop
their leadership skills.”
There were 14 students selected as Presidential Scholars at
Cleveland State. The students
and the high schools they attended are as follows:
Cleveland High School —
Brittany
Arnold,
June
Goonetilleke and Haven Wright
Walker Valley High School —
Sean Conway, Jonah Jenkins
and Jaclyn Griffith.
Polk County High School —
Lauren Passmore,
Haley Pell
and Jordan Craig.
McMinn Central High School
— Hunter Torbett.
McMinn County High School
— Alicia Long.
Sale Creek High School —
Clairee Hammonds and Hayli
Radtke
Bearden High School —
Rachael Goodson.
Wills stated, “Restructuring
our scholarship program to meet
the needs of Tennessee Promise
and adult learners was a challenging but important project. I
think our scholarship programs
reflect our commitment to make
college accessible to our community. The students selected to
receive the Presidential Honors
Scholarship reflect well on the
schools that prepared them, and
we look forward to their involvement on campus.”
For more information on scholarships at Cleveland State
Community College, visit the
website at www.clevelandstatecc.edu.
Brittany
Arnold is a
graduate of
Cleveland
H i g h
School,
where she
was
involved in
National
H o n o r
Society,
Anchor
C l u b ,
Chorus, Show Choir, Science
National Honor Society and a
member of the softball team.
She does volunteer work for
Habitat for Humanity. She plans
to major in pre-physical therapy
at Cleveland State.
“I chose Cleveland State for
many reasons. It is close to
home. I was interested in the
softball program. I absolutely
loved my dual enrollment classes.”
June Goonetilleke graduated
from Cleveland High School
where she was involved in
Interact, Key Club, HOSA, EAA,
Beta Club and Anchor Club.
Haven Wright is a graduate of
Cleveland High School, where
she was involved with both the
Anchor Club and the Environmental Awareness Association.
She also
volunteered
several
hours
at
the public
library.
Because of
her interest
in art, she
has decided
to major in
art therapy.
“I really
like
the
idea of staying in Cleveland. I
haven’t lived here my whole life. I
think the area is really nice. I
have a little sister, and I didn’t
want to move far away. She is in
middle school, so she is at that
age where things are changing. It
would be good if I was closer for
a bit.”
Sean Conway, a graduate of
Walker Valley High School, was
involved
with
basketball,
National
Honor
Society,
Tennessee Scholars, National
English
Honors
Society,
Oceanography
Club and
Beta Club.
He plans
to come to
Cleveland
State and
major in
engineer ing.
“I can’t wait to learn all I can
about engineering. I’m not sure
about what type of engineering
that I’m going into. I’m stuck
between chemical engineering
and mechanical. There are a lot
of opportunities for chemical
around here, especially with
Wacker opening up here, but I’ve
always been interested in
mechanical. I’ve got a decision to
make!”
Jonah
Jenkins is
a graduate
of Walker
Valley High
School,
where he is
involved in
the Opport u n i t y
Service
Group, a
Bible study
group that
is mainly focused on community
outreach.
He has also done a lot of work
through a homeless shelter and
another organization called Feed
My Starving Children, where they
were able to package food for
needy children overseas.
Jenkins is a youth leader at
Candies Creek Baptist Church.
“Obviously the Tennessee
Promise was a huge factor that
led me to Cleveland State, but I
also know people that came here
that really liked it that influenced
me, as well. They told me how
much they benefited from CSCC.
So, it just seemed like the best
step for me to come to CSCC first
before transferring to Belmont
where I plan to major in sound
engineering.”
Jaclyn Griffith was the salutatorian at Walker Valley High
School.
She was
involved in
basketball,
H O S A ,
Circle of
Champions
a
n
d
Tennessee
Scholars.
She also
volunteers
in Candy
Clark’s
class
at
North Lee Elementary School.
She plans to attend Cleveland
State and follow in her mother’s
footsteps by majoring in nursing.
“I like Cleveland State for
many reasons. I really enjoyed
Coach Lumpkin, the basketball
coach. It is extremely close to
home, so it is convenient for me,
and I had taken dual enrollment
classes through CSCC and really
liked them, so it was a good fit for
me. I am really looking forward to
the whole college experience.”
Lauren Passmore is a graduate of Polk County High School.
She was involved in Student
Council, senior officer, officer in
Future Teachers of America,
Future Business Leaders of
America, Prom Committee, Beta
Club, Golf
Team and
was
an
Honors
Graduate.
Pasmore
volunteers
at the Polk
County
Food Bank
and
the
P o l k
County
Baptist
Association. She plans to come to
Cleveland State and pursue a
degree in engineering.
“I am looking forward to both
the Honor’s program and leadership activities the most. I’ve
heard really great things about
them!”
Haley Pell is a graduate of
Polk County High School. She
was involved in National Honor
Society, Club 21, Pep Club, soccer, and cheerleading. She also
volunteers
with the
Girls
in
Action
program
at
First
Baptist
Church in
Benton
and
is
assistant
Sunday
School
teacher for the Pre-K class.
Pell plans to attend Cleveland
State and major in education.
“I like that Cleveland State is
close to home. With Tennessee
Promise, it was the best place for
me. I am looking forward to a
new experience.”
Jordan Craig is a graduate of
Polk County High School.
He was
involved in
Club 21,
Beta Club
and FCA.
He
also
enjoys volunteering
at the Salv a t i o n
Army and
the Caring
Place.
He plans
to attend Cleveland State and
major in pre-med.
“I think Cleveland State will be
a good start on my education! My
mom went to CSCC, and it is a
good school. I also have a lot of
friends at Cleveland State.
I really enjoyed high school,
but I am looking forward to a
change.”
Hunter
Torbett is a
graduate of
McMinn
Central
High School
He was
involved in
Interact,
B a n d ,
Central
Harmony,
tennis and Yearbook Staff. He
also volunteers at the Englewood
Public Library, where he volunteered 160 hours this past year.
“The thing I like most about
Cleveland State is being able to
live at home and maintain friendships instead of going off to
school and not knowing anyone.”
Alicia Long, a graduate of
McMinn County High School,
served as a math tutor five days
a week and was heavily involved
in softball. Long plans to major
in pre-occupational therapy and
then transfer to the
University
of Tennessee
at
Chattan o o g a
(UTC).
“I took
dual enrollment classes through
CSCC, and
I
really
liked dual enrollment. I like the
smaller class sizes, and if I have
a question I can just raise my
hand and ask. I won’t get lost in
a huge crowd of people.”
Clairee Hammonds is a graduate of Sale Creek High Schoo,
where she was involved in
National Honor Society, Student
Council treasurer, treasurer of
her class. She is also a tutor.
She volunteers at McKamey
Animal Center. Hammonds plans
on attendi
n
g
Cleveland
State and
majoring in
accounting.
“I
am
looking forward to the
change and
being on
my own. I
am
also
really looking forward to the Honor’s
Program. It will be other people
like me, and I think it will help
me transition to a four-year institution.”
Hayli Radtke, a graduate of
Sale Creek High School, was the
salutatorian.
She was also involved in the
National Honor Society, FCA,
Student Council, the Volleyball
and the Soccer teams. She plans
to attend Cleveland State and
major in nursing.
“Cleveland State has a great
nursing program, and my mom
went here for nursing, so that is
what led me here. It is close to
where I live, so I am able to stay
at home. I am really excited
about the nursing program
because it is a step toward my
future and my career. Right now,
I am really interested in being an
ER nurse, but I am open to diff e r e n t
things.
I
also know
that during
nursing
school, you
get to try
different
things, and
I want to go
into
that
open-minded.”
Rachael Goodson is a graduate of Bearden High School
where she was involved in Cross
Country, Chorus, Band and
Softball. She will be playing softball at Cleveland State in the fall
and is still undecided about her
major, but is considering many
science-related fields, including
biology, veterinary medicine and
marine biology.
“I was so
excited to
receive this
scholarship.
I
always love
a
challenge, so
having to
do many
hours of
volunteer
work and
honors
coursework — that is going to be
a fun challenge. I love honors
classes.”
We’re online!
Check us out:
www.
cleveland
banner.com
PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY JUNE 6th 10:30 A.M.
Stinnett Road Cleveland, TN. 37323
89.12+/- 89.12+/- ACRES
ACRES
OFFERED IN TRACTS
OR AS A WHOLE
Selling As
Whole
Or
Separate
*Wooded *Pasture *Partial Fenced
Directions: APD 40, Left onto Spring Place Road, Go Approximately
3 Miles, Right on Stinnett Road, Watch for Auction Signs
Drenching rains green pastures,
bode well for herd expansion
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) —
Drenching rains that recently
soaked the Great Plains have
brought welcomed moisture to
areas still recovering from
droughts, greening pastures as
ranchers begin the annual rite of
moving cattle to the nation’s summer grazing lands.
Ranchers in Kansas and elsewhere in cattle country are still
trying to rebuild herds that were
decimated in the 2012 and 2013
droughts, when they sold off
much of their livestock because of
shriveled pastures and skyrocketing hay prices. But in the past
month, ranchers have benefited
from inches of rain: Parts of
Oklahoma and Texas averaged
between 400 and 500 percent of
its normal rainfall, and central
Kansas saw 125 percent of what’s
normal, according to MDA
Weather Services agricultural
meteorologist Don Keeney.
“Nationally, range and pasture
conditions are notably improved
from last year and other recent
periods of drought throughout the
U.S.,” Kansas State University
Extension beef specialist Glynn
Tonsor said, adding that it means
beef cow herds will expand as
planned.
That’s good news for consumers, who are seeing record
retail beef prices— averaging
$6.08 a pound for the all-fresh
beef, according to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, 14
percent higher than it was a year
ago. Current prices are a result of
a double whammy: tighter beef
supplies because of cutbacks in
herds during the drought and
fewer calves going to the slaughterhouse now as ranchers restock
herds.
The expansion is reflected in
the last official count in January
that showed the nation’s cattle
herd was up by 600,000 head
compared to a year ago — which
means more calves are being born
this year.
“We are expanding the herd
very quickly right now,” said Kevin
Good, a market analyst with
industry-tracking
group
CattleFax, “And so we will have
more beef supplies on the market
by 2016.”
His assessment is based on two
important indicators. First, the
number of heifers being slaughtered is down between 7 and 8
percent, reflecting that ranchers
are keeping their young female
calves rather than marketing
them. Secondly, slaughter numbers are down 17 percent, an indication fewer animals are going to
market than during the drought
years.
Those dynamics all come back
to the drought’s lingering effects
that ranchers are now watching
dissipate as lush pasture grasses
replace the stunted stubble of dry
years past. Pastures in the Great
Plains of Kansas and Nebraska
are in better shape than a year
ago, according to the latest data
by National Agricultural Statistics
Service, as are the southern
Plains of Oklahoma and Texas.
Kansas cattleman Ken Grecian
sold off during the recent
droughts about a third of his cattle herd that had once numbered
350. But last year’s summer rains
encouraged him to begin rebuilding, and he added about 55
heifers this year that’d been kept
from his calf crop.
CALL THE AUCTIONEERS FOR INFORMATION
Johnny
Lewis
423-618-9505
TAL#2085
Joe
Stepp
423-618-9270
TAL# 2570
OFFICE: Cleveland 423-473-9545
For More Information Go To:
www.auctionzip.com Enter ID #9164 or #11937
EMAIL US AT: [email protected] or [email protected]
CRYE-LEIKE AUCTIONS FIRM #1473 TBL #5052 TAL #5500
GCL #ACNR002328 GAL #AUNR002981
REAL ESTATE TERMS: SALE #1 A non-refundable deposit of $5,000 PER Tract will be required on the day of
the sale. Funds are accepted in the form of a Cashier’s, Personal or Business check Payable to Crye-Leike
Realtors. Closings shall take place no later than 30 days after the auction. BUYER’ S PREMIUM: 10% Buyers
Premium will apply to Successful Bidder’s High Bid. Lead Base Paint Inspection Under title X the purchaser of a
single family residence built before 1978 has a maximum of 10 days to inspect the property for the presence of lead
base paint. The period of inspection is 10 days prior to the auction. All bidders must sign a waiver of the 10 day
post inspection period. Disclaimer: All property sells AS IS, WHERE IS, with no warranties either written or
implied. All information included herein was derived from sources believed to be correct, but is not guaranteed.
Any announcements made the day of the sale by the auctioneer take precedence over any other statements either
written or oral.
46—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Hillary Clinton given
sensitive info on
private email account
O’Malley to
campaign in
Iowa after
announcement
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) —
Once he announces his presidential decision, Martin O’Malley will
waste no time in getting himself
to Iowa.
O’Malley will campaign in the
leadoff caucus state on May 30,
the same day he makes an
announcement in Baltimore
about whether he will seek the
Democratic presidential nomination. A Democrat with knowledge
of O’Malley’s travel plans, who
spoke on condition of anonymity
so as not to pre-empt the formal
announcement, said O’Malley
would appear in Davenport in the
afternoon and Des Moines at
night.
If he runs for
the nomination, as his
travel
plans
strongly suggest he will,
O’Malley will
join
former
Secretary
of
State Hillary
R o d h a m
O’Malley
Clinton
and
Vermont Sen.
Bernie Sanders as the major candidates in the race for the
Democratic nomination.
The former Maryland governor
has made several visits to the
early caucus state this year, has
two paid staffers on the ground
and plans to add more. He also
invested heavily in Iowa last year,
making four trips to the state and
putting 14 staffers to work on
state campaigns.
During a visit earlier this year,
O’Malley said Iowa Democrats
needed to get to know him. He
said that at a certain point, “the
race quickly narrows between the
once inevitable front-runner and
the new and unknown candidate
who emerges to offer a more compelling alternative.”
Walker pledges
pre-emptive
preventive strikes
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) —
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker is
doubling down on his promises of
pre-emptive strikes to prevent
what he says are certain future
attacks on American soil.
As he prepares for a likely 2016 presidential
run,
Walker told a
multistate
Republican
gathering in
Oklahoma on
Thursday that
he’s convinced
“radical Islamic
Walker
terrorists” are
planning to attack the U.S.
Walker offered no evidence for
his claims at the Southern
Republican
Leadership
Conference. He also didn’t say
who most threatens the United
States or what military actions
he’d authorize in response.
As a governor, Walker has no
access to intelligence briefings
like those available to President
Barack Obama and certain congressional leaders.
Still, Walker said, “It’s not if
another attempt is made on
American soil, it is when.” He
said he’d “take the fight to them
before they take the fight to us”
and that struggle would be protracted.
The sentiments aren’t new for
Walker but he is speaking in
more hawkish terms after his
recent visit to Israel, as he tries to
stand out among several governors and former governors running for the Republican nomination without tangible foreign policy experience.
Walker said his private conversations with Israelis, from Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
and military leaders to soldiers
and civilians, revealed that all
feel perpetually threatened. He
avoided the news media in Israel.
“They feel every day like we felt
after 9/11,” he said, “and they
feel like they don’t have an ally in
the United States, at least not in
the president of the United
States.”
Walker’s pre-emption talk
comes as Republican candidates
grapple with the question of
whether President George W.
Bush was right to invade Iraq in
2003, absent proof that Saddam
Hussein had weapons of mass
destruction — a leading rationale
for the war. Walker has not said
explicitly that Bush was wrong,
but he joined other White House
hopefuls who said they would not
have authorized the war knowing
what is now known.
AP Photo
New Jersey Gov. chris Christie waves to
the audience after speaking at the Southern
Republican Leadership Conference in Oklahoma
City, Friday.
AP Photo
Former FloriDA Gov. Jeb Bush speaks at
the Southern Republican Leadership Conference
in Oklahoma City, Friday
Bush and Christie rise
in defense of Patriot Act
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) —
Likely Republican presidential
contenders Jeb Bush and Chris
Christie on Friday heartily
endorsed the Patriot Act and the
permission it gives the government to collect phone records in
bulk, mocking those who deride
the intelligence overhaul passed
after the Sept. 11 attacks as an
encroachment on civil liberties.
“There is ample evidence that
the Patriot Act has been a tool to
keep us safe, ample evidence,”
Bush said at the Southern
Republican
Leadership
Conference. “There is no evidence of anyone’s civil liberties
being violated because of it.”
Christie, who served as a U.S.
attorney before being elected
New Jersey governor, told the
same crowd that the Patriot Act
helped him as a prosecutor to
win convictions of defendants
tied to the 2001 attacks. “I’m the
only person in this national conversation at the moment who
has used the Patriot Act, signed
off on it and convicted terrorists
because of it,” he said.
The forceful defense of the law
came as Congress struggled to
meet a deadline to renew or
replace a portion of the law
known as Section 215, which
allows the National Security
Agency to collect phone records
in bulk and the FBI to obtain a
wide range of records that agents
deem relevant to terrorism investigations.
Earlier this week, Christie said
law-abiding citizens had nothing
to fear from such surveillance
efforts, while at multiple cam-
paign stops, Bush said the law,
signed by his brother, former
President George W. Bush, is
necessary to “protect the homeland,” adding that an extension
of Section 215 “is definitely part
of a comprehensive strategy for
foreign policy.”
“I do know, because I’ve
checked with a lot of people
inside and outside of government, that there’s no evidence,
not a shred of evidence, of violations of civil liberties because of
the Patriot Act,” Bush told
reporters in Salem, New
Hampshire, on Thursday.
In oversight reports issued
since at least 2003, the Justice
Department inspector general
has identified dozens of incidents it blamed on the FBI in
which demands issued under a
separate section of the Patriot
Act were unauthorized or
improper.
In some cases, the FBI
obtained records for phone numbers no longer used by targets of
its investigations or permission
to conduct the investigations
had already lapsed. Some of the
FBI violations were deemed “willful and intentional,” according to
internal FBI records.
An analysis issued Thursday by
the Justice Department’s inspector general found that FBI agents
testified that the law contains
valuable investigative tools, but
noted agents “did not identify any
major case developments” that
came from using Section 215.
The Privacy and Civil Liberties
Oversight Board, an independent
bipartisan agency, declared
NSA’s phone records collections
program illegal in 2014, and a
federal court of appeals reached
the same conclusion earlier this
month.
“It’s not an accurate statement
to say the Section 215 programs
haven’t violated rights,” said
Neema Singh Guliani of the
American Civil Liberties Union,
which challenged the NSA phone
records sweeps in court. “They’ve
had an enormous effect on privacy ... in a way that weakened our
protections against government
gaining information about innocent people.”
Among Republican senators
opposed to allowing the NSA to
continue to gather phone records
in bulk are two other GOP White
House hopefuls, Sens. Rand
Paul and Ted Cruz. They argue
the act makes it too easy for
intelligence agencies and law
enforcement to violate citizens’
constitutional rights with no
consequences.
Paul spent 10 hours making
that case Wednesday on the
Senate floor, where he blasted
the law as “the most unpatriotic
of acts” and criticized those calling for its renewal. While
Christie and Bush didn’t cite
Paul or Cruz by name, their comments Friday about the law were
aimed their way.
“These same folks who are
criticizing this now will be the
same people who will stand on
Capitol Hill if there’s another
attack on America and interrogate a CIA director or the FBI
and ask them why they didn’t
connect the dots,” Christie said.
Archives show Hillary Clinton
OK’d tax breaks for nonprofits
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — In
the Clinton administration’s final
months, then-First Lady Hillary
Rodham Clinton took an active
role in White House efforts to give
tax breaks to private foundations
and wealthy charity donors at the
same time that the William J.
Clinton Foundation was soliciting
donations for her husband’s presidential library, Clinton-era documents show.
Memos archived in the Clinton
Library show that Hillary Clinton
endorsed the administration’s legislative push for the tax reductions and unveiled the proposals
to influential nonprofit representatives during a conference call in
January 2000, three months after
she and President Bill Clinton
hosted charity leaders for a conference on philanthropy at the
White House.
The blurred lines between the
tax reductions proposed by the
Clinton administration in 2000
and the Clinton Library’s
fundraising were an early foreshadowing of the potential ethics
concerns that have flared around
the Clintons’ courting of corporate
and foreign donors for their family
charity as she launched her campaign for the 2016 Democratic
presidential nomination.
White House documents
reviewed by The Associated Press
show Hillary and Bill Clinton kept
close tabs on the development of
proposed tax breaks to reduce
and simplify an excise tax on private foundations’ investments and
allow more deductions for charitable donations of appreciated property to wealthy donors. An interagency task force set up by Bill
Clinton designed those tax breaks
along with a provision to offer
deductions to middle-class taxpayers who did not itemize their
returns. Federal officials estimated the full plan would cost the
U.S. government $14 billion in
lost tax payments over a decade.
In a January 2000 memo to
Hillary Clinton from senior aides,
plans for a “philanthropy tax initiative roll-out” showed her
scrawled approval, “HRC” and
“OK.” The document, marked with
the archive stamp “HRC handwriting,” indicated her endorsement of
the tax package. The Clinton
White House included the proposed tax breaks in its final budget in February 2000, but they did
not survive the Republican-led
Congress.
“Without your leadership, none
of these proposals would have
been included in the tax package,”
three aides wrote to Hillary
Clinton in the memo, days before
she led a private conference call
outlining the plan to private foundation and nonprofit leaders.
Federal law does not prevent
fundraising by a presidential
library during a president’s term.
But in directly pushing the legislation while the Clinton Library was
aggressively seeking donations,
Hillary and Bill Clinton’s altruistic
support for philanthropy overlapped with their interests in promoting their White House years
and in knitting ties with philanthropic leaders. Hundreds of
pages of documents contain no
evidence that anyone in the
Clinton administration warned
anyone about potential ethics
concerns or sought to minimize
the White House’s active role in
the legislation.
“The theme here for the
Clintons is a characteristic ambiguity of doing good and at the
same time doing well by themselves,” said Lawrence Jacobs,
director of the Center for the
Study of Politics and Governance
at the Hubert H. Humphrey
School at the University of
Minnesota. Jacobs said the
Clinton administration could have
relied on a federal commission to
decide tax plans or publicly supported changes but not specific
legislation.
Spokesmen for Hillary Clinton’s
campaign and the Clinton
Foundation declined to comment,
deferring to the former president’s
office.
A spokesman for Bill Clinton’s
office said his administration was
not trying to incentivize giving to
the foundation, but instead was
spurred by a 1997 presidential
humanities committee that urged
tax breaks for charities to aid
American cultural institutions.
Bruce Reed, Bill Clinton’s chief
domestic policy adviser at the
time, also responded Thursday
that the former president “wanted
to give a break to working people
for putting a few more dollars in
the plate at the church. Not for
any other far-fetched reason.”
The tax changes would have
indirectly helped the Clinton
Foundation — as well as many
other U.S. charities — by freeing
nonprofits’ investments and donations that otherwise would have
gone into tax payments. A reduction of the excise tax would have
boosted the assets of private foundations. Higher deductions for
appreciated investments and
property would have also aided
the Clinton Foundation, which
accepts non-cash gifts. In 2010,
for example, the charity declared
more than $5 million in donated
securities on its federal tax
returns.
Months before proposing the
tax breaks, Clinton White House
officials began courting leaders
from some of the nation’s most
influential charities in advance of
a planned White House conference to celebrate American philanthropy at the turn of the millennium.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Former
Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton received information on her private email
account about the deadly attack
on U.S. diplomatic facilities in
Benghazi that was later classified
“secret” at the request of the FBI,
according to documents released
Friday, underscoring lingering
questions about how responsibly
she handled sensitive information on a home server.
The nearly 900 pages of her
correspondence released by the
State Department also contained
several messages that were
deemed sensitive but unclassified, detailed her daily schedule
and contained information —
censored in the documents as
released — about the CIA that
the government is barred from
publicly disclosing.
Taken together, the correspondence provides examples of material considered to be sensitive
that Clinton, the front-runner for
the 2016 Democratic presidential
nomination, received on the
account run out of her home. She
has said the private server had
“numerous safeguards.”
Clinton’s decision while secretary of state to opt out of a State
Department email account has
become a political problem for
her, as the Republican-led House
committee investigating the
Benghazi attacks has used the
disclosures of her email usage to
paint her as secretive and above
standard scrutiny.
Clinton, campaigning in New
Hampshire, said Friday she was
aware that the FBI now wanted
some of the email to be classified,
“but that doesn’t change the fact
all of the information in the
emails was handled appropriately.”
Asked if she was concerned it
was on a private server, she
replied, “No.”
State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said, “It was
not classified at the time. The
occurrence
of
subsequent
upgrade does not mean anyone
did anything wrong.”
It’s not clear if Clinton’s
“homebrew” computer system
used encryption software to communicate securely with government email services. That would
have protected her communications from the prying eyes of foreign spies, hackers, or anyone
interested on the Internet.
Last year, Clinton gave the
State Department 55,000 pages
of emails that she said pertained
to her work as secretary sent
from her personal address. Only
messages related to the 2012
attacks on the U.S. diplomatic
post in Benghazi, Libya, that
killed four Americans, including
U.S. Ambassador Christopher
Stevens, were released by the
department on Friday. The 296
emails had already been turned
over to the House Benghazi committee.
A Nov. 18, 2012, message
about arrests in Libya was not
classified at the time, meaning no
laws were violated, but was
upgraded from “unclassified” to
“secret” on Friday at the request
of the FBI to redact information
that could contain information
damaging to national security or
foreign relations.
Twenty-three words were
redacted from the message,
which detailed reports of arrests
in Libya of people who might
have connections to the attack,
Harf said.
The redacted portion appears
to relate to people who provided
information about the alleged
suspects to the Libyans. That
part of the email had been categorized by the State Department
as “NOFORN,” meaning that foreign nationals weren’t allowed to
read it, including close U.S.
allies.
The message, originally from
Bill Roebuck, then director of the
AP Photo
DemocrAtic presidential
candidate Hillary Rodham
Clinton speaks to child care
workers during a visit to the
Center For New Horizons
Wednesday in Chicago.
Office of Maghreb Affairs, was
forwarded to Clinton by her
deputy chief of staff, Jake
Sullivan, with the comment: “fyi.”
No other redactions were made
to the collection of Benghazirelated emails for classification
reasons, officials said. They
added
that
the
Justice
Department had not raised classification concerns about the
now-redacted 1 1/2 lines in the
Nov. 18 email when the documents were turned over to the
Benghazi committee. The committee retains an unredacted
copy of the email, the officials
said.
Committee chairman Trey
Gowdy, R-S.C., said that the
released emails were incomplete,
adding that it “strains credibility”
to view them as a thorough
record of Clinton’s tenure.
Clinton also appeared to send
and receive protected information about the CIA, which was
withheld on Friday because the
State Department said federal
law prevented its disclosure. The
department did not offer a
detailed description of what it
was withholding, such as a name
or other sensitive information.
A number of the messages
were marked with codes indicating that the information had
been censored for reasons related
to the U.S. intelligence community, law enforcement or personal
privacy — a process that happened after they’d already been
circulated through Clinton’s
home server.
Much of the correspondence
concerned the mundane matters
of high-level government service,
press clippings, speech drafts,
and coordination of calls with
other top officials as well as chitchat about shopping between
Clinton and top aide Huma
Abedin.
“What a wonderful, strong and
moving statement by your boss,”
Christian Brose, a top adviser to
Sen. John McCain, writes in an
email to Sullivan, forwarded to
Clinton just after Stevens’ death.
“Please tell her how much Sen.
McCain appreciated it. Me too.”
There are repeated warnings
of the unrest in Libya, though
Clinton has said she was never
personally involved in questions
of security in Benghazi before
the attack. One message
describes a one-day trip by
Stevens in March 2011 to “get a
sense of the situation on the
ground” and prepare for a 30day stay in the future. A request
for Defense Department support
was made, the email adds, but
no approval had yet been
received. Stevens was killed in
Benghazi on Sept. 11, 2012.
As early as April 2011, Clinton
was forwarded a message sent to
her staff that the situation in the
country had worsened to the
point “where Stevens is considering departure from Benghazi,”
The
email
was
marked
“Importance: High.”
2016 prospect Rand Paul in
new book: GOP can change
WASHINGTON
(AP)
— minorities fray to the point that it
Republican presidential candi- is near beyond repair.”
date Rand Paul reaches
The 52-year-old Paul
out in his most direct
has made reaching out to
way yet to African
racial minorities a cenAmericans in a new
terpiece of his political
book that highlights his
brand as he embarks on
libertarian policies on
his 2016 presidential
government
surveilcampaign.
lance, the economy and
More than a decade
criminal justice reform.
has passed since a
The Kentucky senator
Republican won a presiwrites in “Taking a
dential contest, due in
Stand: Moving Beyond
part to the GOP’s strugRand
Partisan Politics to Unite
gle with minority voters,
America” that his party “has let who have overwhelmingly favored
the bond it once enjoyed with Democrats in recent years.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—47
Vermont town’s famous floating
bridge reopens with fanfare
DENVER (AP) — They’re ubiquitous in Asia, swarming the
bustling streets of Bangkok, New
Delhi and Beijing.
Now, a company that manufactures tuk-tuks — the threewheeled motorized rickshaws
that have moved the masses for
more than a century and go by
many other names in Asia, Africa
and Latin America — aims to
make inroads in the United
States.
The Tuk Tuk Factory, based in
Amsterdam, has signed a licensing agreement with Denverbased eTuk USA to allow the
company to manufacture and
sell an electric version of the
vehicle.
The company’s founders hope
the eco-friendly vehicles, a far
cry from the loud, pollutionspewing versions common in
Asia and South America, will
become the next hip mode of
transportation
for
urban
dwellers and tourists across the
country.
It’s too soon to know if
Americans will embrace tuktuks, but Michael Fox, director
of sales and marketing for eTuk
USA, says the company has been
selling the vehicles to individuals, marketing companies and
food vendors for $16,950 to
$25,000, depending on how they
are customized.
The three partners’ other company, eTuk Denver, launched a
call-and-demand shuttle service
in downtown Denver after receiving approval from the Colorado
Public Utilities Commission,
which regulates for-hire transportation services.
The service is the latest to
enter an increasingly crowded
field of transportation options
that includes pedicabs, ride-hailing services such as Uber and
Lyft, and golf-cart taxis.
Fox is banking on the tuktuk’s open-air design to help it
stand out.
“When you look at a golf cart
and you look at a tuk-tuk, which
has more curb appeal?” he
asked.
But like ride-hailing services,
the tuk-tuk has faced some
pushback from a handful of cab
companies and other shuttle
operators and raised concerns
about the vehicles’ safety.
Terry Bote, a commission
spokesman, said several cab and
shuttle companies were successful in restricting where the tuktuks can operate, what types,
how many vehicles can be used
and how many passengers each
can carry.
The tuk-tuks operate mostly
in a restricted downtown area
and are banned from providing
scheduled service to the nearby
Denver Broncos football stadium, a lucrative destination for
the competition.
But even with the restrictions,
Fox said his service can complement Denver’s bus and light rail
systems.
He noted the “last-mile concept,” a term that has been used
by urban planners to describe
the difficulty of getting people
from places like a railway station
or a bus depot to their final destination.
The concept originally applied
to suburban areas, but also is
relevant when studying how people complete their trips in downtown areas, said Carolyn
McAndrews, an assistant professor of design and planning at the
University of Colorado Denver.
“Everybody has the last-mile
problem, and they solve that
problem by walking or we drive
our cars,” she said.
But McAndrews also said the
market is ripe for new modes of
transportation like tuk-tuks to
close that gap.
She points to a 2012 study in
New Jersey that says “last-mile”
shuttles are playing an increasingly important role in connect-
ing people and jobs to rail transit, especially because of the
decentralization of jobs and
homes in most cities over the
past few decades.
“To be competitive with cars,
you have to make the point-topoint as convenient as possible,”
she said.
And it seems like Colorado’s
Legislature agrees.
Because tuk-tuks are classified as motorcycles by the U.S.
Department of Transportation,
drivers would have had to wear
eye protection and get a motorcycle endorsement for the
license. Anyone under 18 also
would have had to wear a helmet.
But state Rep. Paul Rosenthal
said such requirements for vehicles that travel short distances
at low speeds don’t make sense,
especially for a shuttle service.
“Say you have four kids. They
would have to go find a helmet or
have them on hand to do that,”
he said. “It becomes cumbersome.”
On May 4, the Legislature
passed Rosenthal’s bill to strip
those requirements for 3-wheeled
motorcycles with a windshield,
seatbelts and a top speed of 25
mph. Each shuttle model also
has undergone a standard commercial vehicle inspection to
make sure it complies with federal safety standards.
Still, most states heavily regulate three-wheeled vehicles
because of what some say is the
potential for serious accidents.
Sherry Williams, who chairs a
committee
of
independent
researchers on motorcycle safety,
said helmets should be required
and passengers need to be aware
of the possible danger in the
event of an accident, even at slow
speeds.
“Most motorcycle accidents
occur under 30 mph, and many
of them are fatal. This is a serious issue,” she said.
Mississippi hospital whistleblower
gets $3.5 million in settlement
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — A former employee of a Mississippi
hospital is getting almost $3.5
million as part of a string of settlements where 18 hospitals in seven
states have agreed to pay $20.4
million over allegations they broke
federal law by receiving Medicare
reimbursements for psychiatric
services that were not “medically
reasonable or necessary.”
Ryan Ladner worked for
Allegiance Health Management at
what’s now Merit Health Wesley in
Hattiesburg when his lawyer says
Ladner saw illegal billing.
As the person who brought the
fraud to the attention of the federal government, Ladner is getting
17 percent of the settlement
amounts. None of the hospitals
admit liability in their settlements.
However, LifePoint Hospitals selfreported the practices to the U.S.
Department of Health and Human
Services in 2011.
Settlement documents indicate
Ladner has been pursuing a
whistleblower lawsuit in federal
court in Arkansas since 2010
against Allegiance, which is based
in Shreveport, La. The case
remains under seal, though.
Whistleblower actions under the
False Claims Act are filed under
seal with the private plaintiff seeking to recover money on behalf of
the federal government.
The plaintiff, called a relator,
sends the lawsuit and a statement
to federal authorities, who must
decide whether to intervene or
not. Cases can remain sealed for
years while the government investigates, if a judge agrees. It’s
unclear if the government intends
to intervene against Allegiance.
Lawyers for Ladner and Allegiance
declined to confirm that the suit
exists.
Allegiance denies wrongdoing
and still operates outpatient therapy programs at 17 locations in
five states, according to its website.
“Allegiance remains confident
that the outpatient psychiatric
services provided in the IOPs
managed or operated by
Allegiance were medically necessary and appropriate as has been
confirmed by various government
contractors and agencies on multiple occasions through audits,
surveys and other inquiries,” the
company’s lawyer, Michael
Schulze, wrote in a statement.
Cliff Johnson, Ladner’s lawyer,
said Ladner was hired by
Allegiance to serve as program
director for its Inspirations outpatient psychotherapy service at
what was then called Wesley
Medical Center in Hattiesburg.
Ladner got the job even though
his previous background was in
mortgage lending, Johnson said.
“My client is a smart man who
takes seriously the responsibilities he’s given,” Johnson said. “As
responsible people do, he
attempted to educate himself
about the legal requirements for
billing services provided at
Inspirations and the type of
patients who qualify for such
services.”
The settlements indicate
Allegiance would perform the
therapy, the hospitals would bill
for it, and Allegiance would get
either a share of what they collected or a flat fee. The federal
government contends the therapy
wasn’t eligible for federal reimbursement for one of several reasons — the patient’s condition
didn’t qualify, the treatments
weren’t provided according to an
individual treatment plan, patient
progress wasn’t adequately
tracked, or the therapy was “primarily recreational or diversional
in nature, and was not therapeutic.
AP Photo
A worker does some final work on a one-lane floating bridge
on Route 65 across Sunset Lake in Brookfield, Vt. The $2.4 million
project to rebuild the wooden floating bridge, believed to be the only
one of its kind in the country, reopens this weekend after being
closed for seven years after its floatation system failed.
they do the ice cutting,” he said.
“It’s really important here for
the little town of Brookfield, one of
the few communities that does not
have a main street that’s paved,”
he added. “It’s still dirt and it’s
going to continue that way.”
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59403 | EOE/M/F/V/D
AP Photo
A worker checks the roof on an electric Tuk-Tuk being prepared for export at the Denver eTuk
factory in northeast Denver. The Tuk Tuk Factory, based in Amsterdam, has signed a licensing agreement with Denver-based eTuk USA to allow the company to manufacture and sell an electric version of
the vehicle. The company’s founders hope the eco-friendly vehicles, a far cry from the loud, pollutionspewing versions common in Asia and South America, will become the next hip mode of transportation
for urban dwellers and tourists across the country.
BROOKFIELD, Vt. (AP) — A tiny
Vermont town’s famous wooden
floating bridge — believed to be the
only one of its kind in the country
— has been rebuilt and is reopening this weekend with fanfare
including a parade with a bagpiper,
high school marching band, oxen
team, horses, and antique cars
crossing the new span Saturday.
Just not all at once.
The Brookfield bridge on Route
65 — a state highway that is
unpaved through the village — has
been closed for seven years after its
floatation system started to fail,
causing it to be partially submerged.
Residents are excited about having the one-lane bridge across
Sunset Lake opened again to vehicles and pedestrians as summer
approaches in the community of
1,200, where historic homes dot
the landscape along the picturesque water. The bridge has now
been replaced seven times and the
parade will be staggered to avoid,
for the time being at least, an
eighth.
“We’re just thrilled to see it
open,” said Jane Doerfer, owner of
the Green Trails Inn, across the
street from the bridge, which often
gets business from tourists who
come to see the bridge and then
decide to stay overnight.
She lost a lot business when the
bridge closed but said she would
rather focus on the good news that
the new bridge is complete. “Let’s
just concentrate on we now have a
bridge where we can hear the children laughing as they jump off the
bridge and things like that.”
The first floating bridge was built
in 1820, by townspeople who
strapped together logs on the top of
the frozen lake, after a man
drowned walking across the ice,
said Perry Kacik, chairman of the
Brookfield
Floating
Bridge
Celebration Committee. When the
ice melted, a crude floating bridge
was left behind.
As the bridge was rebuilt over the
last nearly two centuries, technology improved. In the last bridge
water started to leak into the barrels beneath the decking and
waterlog the foam inside them
causing the bridge to sink slightly
to the point where there was often a
puddle of water in the middle of it,
Kacik said. If vehicles were traveling too fast they risked splashing
pedestrians walking across the
318-foot-long bridge on its elevated
sidewalks.
The new bridge is made of pontoons and is completely above
water. The $2.4 million project was
covered by 80 percent federal funds
and 20 percent state funding.
There are two other floating
bridges in Washington state,
thought they are much larger and
not wooden, according to Jennifer
Fitch, a structures project manager
with the Vermont Transportation
Agency. The new Brookfield bridge
is designed to last 100 years and
has widened sidewalks.
“We made sure that this new
bridge provides access to everybody,” Fitch said.
The celebration will also include
food vendors, music, speeches by
the governor and U.S. Rep. Peter
Welch as well as a dance in the
evening. On Sunday, The Flowting
Bridge Band will perform and area
farms will be open for tours.
The bridge is “very important” to
the community, said Orange
County sheriff Bill Bohnyak, a
member of the celebration committee.
“Number one: It is a state highway so people use it on a regular
basis. And many, many people in
our community and the surrounding central Vermont come here to
fish, swim and in the winter time
48—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
TLC pulls Duggar family series
amid reports of misconduct
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — TLC
pulled the reality series “19 Kids
and Counting” from its schedule
on Friday, a move that follows
reports of sexual misconduct allegations against one of the stars,
Josh Duggar, stemming from when
he was a juvenile.
In a statement, the channel said
it was “deeply saddened and troubled by this heartbreaking situation, and our thoughts and prayers
are with the family and victims at
this difficult time.” The statement
didn’t elaborate.
Also Friday, Arkansas police
said they had destroyed a record
outlining a nearly decade-old
investigation into Duggar, a day
after the 27-year-old resigned his
role with a prominent conservative
Christian group amid reports
about the allegations.
The
Northwest
Arkansas
Democrat-Gazette, which obtained
the offense report before its
destruction, reports Duggar was
accused of fondling five girls in
2002 and 2003. Duggar issued an
apology Thursday on Facebook for
unspecified bad behavior as a
youth and resigned his role as
executive director for FRC Action,
the tax-exempt legislative action
arm of the Washington-based
Family Research Council.
“I would do anything to go back
to those teen years and take different actions,” Duggar wrote. “In
my life today, I am so very thankful for God’s grace, mercy and
redemption.”
No charges were filed against
Duggar, and the report says investigators concluded the statute of
limitations had passed, according
to the newspaper.
Duggar appears on the TLC reality show “19 Kids and Counting,”
which stars his family. He is the
oldest of Jim Bob and Michelle
Duggar’s 19 children.
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BRADLEY COUNTY 911
EMERGENCY
COMMUNICATIONS DISTRICT
POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
TELECOMMUNICATOR
The Bradley County 911 Emergency Communications District is
accepting applications from qualified individuals interested in a
career as Telecommunicator in the 911 Emergency
Communications Center. Qualified applicants will possess a
high school education or GED equivalent. Previous experience
in a Police or Fire environment is recommended, preferably in
Dispatcher or related duties. Ability to react promptly and effectively in emergency situations and to deal courteously and professionally with the general public and other emergency personnel is essential. Computer data entry skills are required. Testing
will be conducted for skills in data entry, reading and listening
comprehension, abstract reasoning, and situational judgement.
Applicants will be subject to a background investigation.
Psychological and physical examination, including visual and
hearing acuity and drug screen will be conducted after conditional offer of employment. The position will require shift work,
and weekend and holiday duty. Employees of the
Communications Center are required to reside within 30 miles
of the Center. New employees residing outside the 30 mile
limit will have 6 months to relocate within the 30 mile limit.
MAJOR ACTIVITIES of the position are answering 911 emergency and administrative phone lines, directing calls to proper
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Applications may be obtained by contacting the Bradley County
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www.clevelandtn.gov. Applications must be submitted to the
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by mail should be sent to the 911 Center, 1555 Guthrie Dr. NW,
Cleveland, TN 37311. Application deadline for the next testing
session will be 5:00 p.m., Monday, June 1st, 2015. The next
basic skills testing dates are scheduled for June 8th and 9th,
2015. Applicant orientation will be held on June 4th at 6pm. All
applicants will be contacted with information as to time and
location for the orientation and basic skills testing. The Bradley
County 911 Emergency Communications District is an equal
opportunity employer.
TLC didn’t address whether its
popular show would return.
Springdale Police began investigating Duggar in 2006 when officers were alerted to a letter containing the allegations that was
found in a book lent by a family
friend to someone else.
The report, originally published
by tabloid In Touch Weekly, states
that a member of Harpo Studios,
the producer of Oprah Winfrey’s
then show, received an email containing the allegations before the
family was set to appear in 2006.
The tipster warned producers
against allowing the Duggars on
the show and studio staff members
faxed a copy of the email to
Arkansas State Police.
Springdale Police spokesman
Scott Lewis said Judge Stacey
Zimmerman ordered the 2006
offense report destroyed Thursday.
“The judge ordered us yesterday
to expunge that record,” Lewis
said, adding that similar records
are typically kept indefinitely. “As
far as the Springdale Police
Department is concerned this
report doesn’t exist.”
Neither Duggar nor his father, a
former state representative,
returned calls seeking comment.
Several Arkansas Republicans
have rallied behind the Duggar
family, which is still engaged in
state politics. Jim Bob and
Michelle Duggar attended the kickoff event earlier this month for
Republican presidential candidate
Mike Huckabee, who supported
the family in a Facebook post on
Friday.
“Those who have enjoyed revealing this long ago sins in order to
discredit the Duggar family have
actually revealed their own insensitive bloodthirst, for there was no
consideration of the fact that the
victims wanted this to be left in the
past and ultimately a judge had
the information on file destroyednot to protect Josh, but the innocent victims,” Huckabee wrote.
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1. Classified Ad Policy
eRRORS nOT the fault of the advertiser which clearly reduce the
value of the advertisement should be
corrected the first day. Then, one
corrected insertion will be made
without charge, if the advertiser calls
before 3pm the afternoon the error
appears. The Cleveland daily
BanneR assumes no responsibility
for errors after the first corrected insertion. The Publisher reserves the
right to revise or reject, at his option,
any advertisement he deems objectionable either in subject or phraseology or which he may deem detrimental to his business. deadline for
classified ads: Tuesday through Friday is 2pm for business ads and
3pm for personal ads the day before
ad is to run. Sunday deadline is
11am Friday for business ads and
12 noon Friday for personal ads.
Monday deadline is Friday 4pm. all
corrections must be made by deadline day before ad runs. visa/Mastercard/discover/american express are
accepted. Cleveland daily Banner..... 472-5041
2. Special Notices
ClASSIfIED
ADvERTISEmENTS
at Your Convenience!
24 Hours A Day!
Email your AD to us!
[email protected]
or fax to 423-476-1046
include the following information:
• name with address
& phone number
• Person to contact if a business
• Requested start date
& classification
• We will contact you for prepayment. We accept visa, Mastercard,
discover, and american express
• if you are a billing customer,
please confirm your current billing
address.
Deadline for ads:
2pm Monday for Tuesday ad
2pm Tuesday for Wednesday ad
2pm Wednesday for Thursday ad
2pm Thursday for Friday ad
11am Friday for Sunday ad
4pm Friday for Monday ad
For Personal assistance
Call 423-472-5041
Cleveland daily BanneR
Classified Department
***SPECIAl BONUS***
All Ads Are Published On Our
Website At No Additional Cost!
SChOlaRShiPS guaRanTeed or
your money back! Beware of scholarship “guarantees.” Before you pay
for a search service, get the refund
policy in writing. Call the Federal
Trade
Commission
at
1-877-FTC-helP to learn how to
avoid scholarship scams. a message from Cleveland daily Banner
and the FTC. Or visit our Web site at
www.ftc.gov
5. lost And found
lOST yOuR pet? Check daily at the
Cleveland animal Shelter, 360 hill
Street.
7. Personals
al-anOn OFFeRS help for families
of alcoholics. For meeting information call 423-284-1612.
Etowah Skilled Nursing
Flexible hours/5 days per week
Interested applicants apply online at
www.StarrRegional.com
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[email protected]
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AD
'
A company that’s been improving the quality of life for the
intellectually disabled in our community for 39 years is
now hiring for the following positions:
DIRECT CARE STAFF AND LPN’S/RN’S
PAY FOR DIRECT CARE
STARTING AT $8.50 PER HOUR
Applications may picked up at our Main Office at
764 Old Chattanooga Pike, Cleveland, Tennessee 37311
Background check, valid driver’s license
and drug screen required. EOE
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
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INDUSTRIAL OPENINGS – ALL SHIFTS
$
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• Print Press Operator $DOE
$
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• General Labor $7.25-9.00
• Warehouse Must be able to lift 50lbs $10.00
$
$
• Delivery Drivers Prefer F-Endorsement $9.00
$
$
• Wood Shop/Assembly $10.00
• Blueprint Layout $DOE Direct Hire
$
$
• Steel Fabricator Estimator $DOE Direct Hire
$
$
• Gutter Installers $DOE Direct Hire
• Maintenance Electrical Tech $DOE
$
$
• Hotel Housekeepers $7.50
$
$
CLERICAL / PROFESSIONAL OPENINGS
$
$
• Collection Clerks $8.50 + Incentives & Bonuses
• Bilingual Medical Collector $9.00
$
$
• Bilingual Receptionist $8.50-9.00
$
$
• Office Assistant $10.00
• Paralegal/Admin $DOE
$
$
Submit
Resumes
to
[email protected]
$
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APPLY TODAY
$
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109 Interstate Drive NW, Cleveland TN
$
$
Call 423-790-5254
Right Time Right Place, LLC is an equal opportunity employer.
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www.clevelandbanner.com
30. Help Wanted - Full Time
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—49
30. Help Wanted - Full Time
Class a Drivers needed! Cleveland based company needing regional drivers with Class- A endorsements, home most every
night, paid vacation, holiday pay,
quarterly safety bonuses, 2 years
over the road experience required.
Contactusat423-559-0771.
ClevelanD CounTry CluB
Isnowacceptingapplicationsfor
•Clubhouse Maintenance– HVAC,
plumbingandelectricalexperience
and/orcertificationpreferred.
•Musthaveowntransportation,valid
driver’slicense,andprovide
reliablereferences.
Drugscreenrequired.
Please e-mail resumes to Jill at
[email protected]
Cookeville regional
Medical Center
seeking
Full- time & Prn
resPiraTory THeraPisTs
Thispositionisresponsibleforprovidingprofessionalrespiratorycare
throughassessment,clinicaljudgement, treatment and instruction to
any population group in need. The
positionisalsoresponsibleforprovidingcertaincardiacanddiagnostic procedures that will assist in
providing quality care to the patient.
DelIVeRy TRuCk Driver Positionsavailable
•Competitivepay
•loadpay
•extradeliverypay
•$500monthlysafety/
performancebonus
•Dailyopportunitiesforextra
bonus
•Weeklydirectdeposit
•ModernfleetofCascadia
Tractors
30. Help Wanted - Full Time
30. Help Wanted - Full Time
46. storage space For rent
Hiring exeCuTive Housekeeping, Housekeepers and laundry.
apply within, Hampton inn, 4355
Frontage road.
STARS INCORPORATeD, hiring
Personal Assistant, beginning wage
$8.Call423-447-2590,ext#1.
TRAVelODGe: FRONT desk clerk
needed, computer experience preferred. Apply 156 James Asbury
Drive.I-75,exit27.
WAITeR/ WAITReSS wanted, full/
part- time. experience helpful. Also
kitchen help needed for Ocoee.ApplyinPerson.Gondolier,3300North
keithStreet.
TeMPSAFeSTORAGe
ClimateControlled
&Outsideunits
Downtownlocation
&GeorgetownRoad
614-4111
HVAC INSTAllATION Helper: Residential and commercial, duct, piping
and electrical work. Good pay and
benefits.Thinpersonpreferred.Also
needHighQualitySubcontractoroccasionally. Pick up application at
MechanicalSystems8905Hiwassee
Street,Charleston.
insiDe sales
PosiTion availaBle
Friendlynopressuresalesenvironment. Monday- Friday hours with
consistent pay. Apply in person.
BestBuyMetals.1652SleeHwy,
Cleveland.423-728-3336.
Requirements:
•ClassACDl
•Abletooperateforklift(willing
tolearn)
lOCAl FuRNITuRe manufacturer
looking for experienced upholsterers
and seamstresses, also general laborers.Pleasecall423-478-2672.
Ifinterestedorformoreinformation
call
423-338-0583
or
931-409-1015, Office hours Monday-Friday7am-4pm.
lOOkING FOR a Full Time, local,
energeticleasingConsultanttoJoin
ourTeam.experienceisRequired.
emailResumesto:
[email protected]
DRIVeRS: NeeD a change? More
home time this summer? 60k + per
year. Full benefit package + bonuses. CDl-A, 1 year experience
855-454-0392.
MAINTeNANCe POSITION, must
liveonproperty.Pleaseapplyinperson Whitewater lodge 2500 Pointe
South Se Cleveland. Background
checkrequired.
33. Business opportunities
invesTigaTe BeFore
you invesT!
Always a good policy, especially for
business opportunities and franchise. Call TN Division of consumer
Affairsat(800)342-8385ortheFederal Trade Commission at (877)
FTC-HelP for free information. Or
visitourWebsiteatwww.ftc.gov
PROCeSS MeDICAl claims from
home?Chancesareyouwon’tmake
any money. Find out how to spot a
medical billing scam. Call the FederalTradeCommission,
1-877-FTC-HelP.
Amessagefrom
Cleveland Daily Banner and the
Federal Trade Commission. Or visit
ourWebsiteatwww.ftc.gov
34. Money To lend
MAINTeNANCe TeCHNICIAN -
*FIRST loanfree*
Property Management Affordable
$200-$1000
housing
community
is
seeking
a
full
Seemanagerfordetails.
The successful candidate holds a
time
Maintenance
Technician.
Medi423-476-5770
currentnationalcredentialforRegcal and dental are paid. To apply,
istered Respiratory Therapist
NeeD CA$H fast but can’t get a
pleasevisit:
(RRT) through the National Board
loan?Don’tpayforthepromiseofa
forRespiratoryCare(NBRC)anda eARNTHOuSAND$ from home. Be https://home.eease.adp.com/reloan. Call the Federal Trade Comcurrent Tennessee Registered careful of work-at-home schemes. cruit/?id=10901761
Hidden costs can add up, and re- MeCHANIC NeeDeD. Must have missionat1-877-FTC-HelPtolearn
RespiratoryTherapistlicense.
quirements may be unrealistic. experienceinRemoveandReplace, how to spot advance-fee loan
scams. A message from Cleveland
Hospital experience with medical/ learn how to avoid work-at-home engine and transmission removal. Daily Banner and the FTC. Or visit
surgical and critical care patients scams.CalltheFederalTradeCom- CallJoey423-244-5817.
ourWebsiteatwww.ftc.gov
mission. 1-877-FTC-HelP. A mespreferred.
sage from Cleveland Daily Banner MeCHaniC/ equiPMenT Tech40. general services offered
andtheFTC.OrvisitourWebsiteat nician- local company is looking
apply at
for reliable, detail- oriented individ* AAA House PAINTING: Interior-
www.ftc.gov
www.crmchealth.org
ualtomaintainandrepairalltypes exterior, Pressure Washing, FRee
FOSTeR PAReNTS needed for of rental equipment. Hours are estimates,
References.
e. o. e.
Monday-Friday. 423-284-9652.
Camelot. Contact Chris & Amanda 7:30am-5:30pm
Mustbeabletofollowdetailedver423-668-8503formoreinformation
Cookeville regional
balandwritteninstructions,havea BOBCAT FOR Rent or Hire with
Medical Center
Fuel MART, TOM'S :Third/ second cleandrivingrecordandbeableto trencher or brush cutter, mini excavator with thumb, tractor loader with
seeking a
Shift, verifiable references. Apply passadrugtestandcriminalbackboxscrape
or
bushhog.
Director of Practice operations
anyFuelMart.
groundcheck.Competitivepaydependent on experience. Interested 423-478-2724.
This position is responsible for FullTIMe clinicalassistantneeded persons should complete an appliBOX TRAIleRS, 40' goose neck
for busy orthopedic practice. experimanagingdailyoperationsofmulticationformatBradleyRentals,336 trailer, dump trailer, towable grill for
ence preferred. email resume' to: GroveAvenueSW,Cleveland.
plephysicianpractices.
rent.423-478-2724.
[email protected].
A Bachelor’s Degree in Business
MeDICAl ASSISTANT Needed: A HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
GROWING BeDDING company well established Cleveland Office
CoMPleTe laWnCare
Administration or related field reCommercial and residential
quiredorHighSchoolDiplomawith basedinClevelandlookingforade- looking for experienced individual in
livery driver, must have an F- en- the following areas: Phlebotomy, Inlandscaping, aerating and over
equivalentworkexperience.
dorsement. Work every other Satur- jections, and ekG’S and the ability seeding
mowing,
trimming,
day.Pleasenophonecalls,applyat toworkinafastpaced,pleasantenmulching, pressure washing, yard
Five years of managerial experience in a multi physician practice 2401 Georgetown Road, 10am-5pm vironment.Pleasesubmitresumeto: clean-up,leafservice.
oremailresumeto:
licensed and insured.
officesettingisrequired.
[email protected]
[email protected].
Free estimates
NOWHIRING fullandparttimeGrill
very reliable
Candidate must have the ability to
HIRING DIeSel Detroit Mechanic, Cooks at Willie's Deli. Apply in peroffering the Best rates in Town!
successfully lead, manage, overCall saylors outdoor services
see, develop and evaluate the Great Pay! Cleveland, local busi- son at Willie's Deli, 7701 North lee
ness.423-595-8922.
Highway, between 9am-11am, or
423-432-7167
work of staff across multiple prac2pm-4pm,
Monday-
Friday. HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
tices.
AIR
CONDITIONING
Technician
423-336-8008
apply on-line with
needed immediately, $12- $18
salary requirements at
DANNy'S TRee SeRVICe: ShrubnoW Hiring!
hourly
to
start
based
on
experience.
www.crmchealth.org
bery planting. Tree removal. Senior
Only
qualified
need
apply.
e. o. e.
discount,
Military
Discount.
423-504-7740.
423-244-6676.
eXTReMe MAINTeNANCe Home/
Mobile Home Commercial, residential, Painting (interior/ exterior).
Decks, plumbing, electrical, roofing,
siding, all work! 30 years experiManpowerInClevelandisnowhirence.
Free
estimates.
ingforthefollowingpositions
423-331-7045.
•Assemblers
•CollectionsCustomerService
Reps
•ForkliftDrivers
LEGAL PUBLICATION
•Generallabor
Advertisement for Bid
•WarehouseWorkers
DRy WAll Hanger 5 years experience.MustPassdrugTestandhave
owntoolsandtransportation.$17.25
hour for work in Chattanooga. Call
423-322-7003or865-323-7428.
Legal
Publications
“The Cleveland City School System will accept bids
for replacement of the exterior concrete walks at
the entrance to E.L. Ross Elementary School, 4340
Mouse Creek Road NW, Cleveland, Tennessee until
10:00 a.m., Wednesday, June 3, 2015 at the Central Office of the School System, 4300 Mouse Creek
Road NW, Cleveland, Tennessee 37312. Bidders
may obtain one set of bid documents from the Architect: Associated Architectural Services, 301
Keith Street SW, Suite 215, Cleveland, Tennessee
37311. (423)476-5612.”
May 20, 24, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
Notice of Bid
The City of Cleveland, Board of Education is seeking bids on the following:
Replacement of carpet with tile and carpet tiles in
the halls, offices, entrances, and some classrooms
at the Teen Learning Center.
Bid specifications may be obtained
Hal Taylor or Susan Shelton at the
Schools Maintenance Building, 4300
Road, Cleveland, TN 37312, or
472-9576.
by contacting
Cleveland City
Mouse Creek
calling (423)
Bids are to be opened on Thursday, June 11, 2015
at 10:00am in the Administrative Office Building,
4300 Mouse Creek Road NW, Cleveland, TN 37312.
May 20, 24, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
INVITATION TO BID
1.Cleveland Utilities, (Owner) will receive sealed
lump sum proposals from qualified, licensed contractors for all labor and materials to complete the
work in accordance with the Contract Documents
entitled, Cleveland Utilities Window Replacement
as prepared by Rardin & Carroll Architects, 6105
Preservation Drive, Suite A, Chattanooga, Tennessee 37416-3638. Telephone: (423) 894-3242 FAX
(423) 894- 2839.
2.This is a rebidding of a previous bid due to the
need to reduce the scope of the project. The scope
of the project includes the removal and replacement of 11 existing windows with thermally broken
storefront framing with 1” insulated glazing. The
project will also include any required associated repairs to the finishes adjacent to the windows to
match to the existing finishes due to the window
replacement. The project location is 2435 Guthrie
Avenue, Cleveland, Tennessee.
3. Bids will be received until Thursday, June 18th,
2015 at 3:00 PM at Cleveland Utilities in the conference room of the Tom Wheeler Building at which
time all bids will be opened publicly and read aloud.
4.All bidders are encouraged to review on site the
building and existing conditions for proper bid
preparation. There will not be a pre-bid meeting.
5.Revised drawings and specifications may be requested from the Architect at (423)-894-3242. 6.No
bid may be withdrawn for a period of thirty (30)
days after the time and date of opening of bids.
7.Cleveland Utilities reserves the right to reject any
and all bids, and to waive technicalities and informalities in the bidding.
8.Cleveland Utilities does not discriminate based
on race, color or national origin in federal or state
sponsored programs, pursuant to Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. 2000 d).
May 24, 25, 26, 2015
aPPly online aT
WWW.ManPoWerJoBs.CoM
or Call 423-709-8796
For an aPPoinTMenT
FlAG DAy is Sunday June 14th.
Father's Day is Sunday June 21st
Create your memorable image
with:
SeWING JOBS, 8- 80 age doesn't
G.e.NorkusPhotography
matter if you love to sew and can
[email protected]
handleanindustrialwalkingfootma423-464-5015
chine. Come join our working family.
Call John 478-5555 for an interview
CuB'S lAWNCARe: Spring and
appointment.
Summer lawncare, mowing, weed
SOuTHeASTeRN CONTAINeR, eating, trimming, yard clean- up.
Senior discounts. Free estimates.
INC. We are a progressive manufacturer of PeT beverage bottles, Pleasecall423-336-5984.
supplying the Coca- Cola bottling R & J Complete lawn Care:
system on the east Coast and in 423-469-5753or423-472-0442.
the Midwest. We are currently hiring for our Cleveland, TN location. TOP CuT lawn Care- Professional
MAINTeNANCe
MeCHANIC Service, Affordable Prices. Credit
BlOW MOlDING Night Shift CardsAccepted.423-593-9634
7pm–7:30am. The successful can45. vacation rentals
didatemustbeaself-motivatedindividual preferably with blow mold2 BeDROOM, 2 bath cabin, Pigeon
ingand/orothermanufacturingexForge.423-605-8300.
perience. Other skills include: •
2 RIVeRS CAMPING: RV Park,
Fundamental knowledge of production machinery troubleshooting/ Cabin Rentals, directly on the river
repair • understanding of PlC at junction of Hiwassee and Ocoee
Rivers.423-338-7208.
logic • electrical/ Hydraulic/ Pneumatic/ Welding Skills • Willingness BeAR PAW COTTAGeS- 2, 3 bedto work a flexible schedule and rooms, $75- $85. Mountains, fireovertime • Good communication place,serenity.423-476–8480.
skills/ team player • Good computer skills– Windows & eXCel •
46. storage space For rent
Reliable work history • Values personal safety, quality, & efficiency. CAlFee'SMINI Warehouseforrent:
Georgetown Pike, Spring Place
excellentopportunitywithcompetiRoad and Highway 64. Call
tivepayandbenefits.ApplyinPerson at 555 Industrial Dr SW, 476–2777.
Cleveland,TNorapplyattheyour GRAND OPeNING specials! Clevelocal employment Security Comland Storage Center and RV Parkmission location. eQuAl OPPORing, formerly the Bowling Factory,
TuNITy/ AFFIRMATIVe ACTION 5375
North
lee
Highway
eMPlOyeR
423-665-9830.
Medical, Dental & Technical Careers
NOW ENROLLING
We specialize in 7 of the
fastest growing career paths!
So that your education
leads to a career!
*Medical Assisting, AAS
*Medical Office
Administration, AAS
*Practical Nursing
*Dental Assisting, AAS
*Criminal Justice, AAS
*Computer Networking, AAS
*Cosmetology
Day or Night Courses
Financial Aid
For Those That Qualify
423-305-7781
2 Chattanooga Locations
Eastgate 5600 Brainerd Rd
Hixson 248 Northgate
Mall Drive
www.chattanoogacollege.edu
FB, Twitter, Text#423-896-1996
Academy of
Allied Health
Careers,
Chattanooga,TN
ARE YOU TIRED
OF WORKING
IN A
DEAD END JOB?
AAHC has helped
thousands of people begin
a fun and rewarding
career in the medical field.
our courses can be
completed in as little as 9
weeks at a fraction of the
cost of other schools.
Call to learn more.
423-499-4999
www.aahctn.com
Executive Director
Habitat for Humanity of
Cleveland
Habitat for Humanity of Cleveland is seeking an energetic
multi-dimensional leader to manage a progressive Christianbased non-profit organization dedicated to providing
affordable homeownership for low-income families and
individuals in Bradley County, Tennessee.
The successful candidate must have demonstrated skills in
building community partnerships and coalitions, volunteer
management, fiscal management and resource development,
leadership skills and oral and written communications.
Knowledge of construction fundamentals a plus.
Applicants should possess a four-year college degree in
Business, Non-profit Management or a related field. Must be
available for evening and weekend meetings and events.
Please send a letter of interest by June 1 addressing previously
identified skills, salary requirements and a resume to:
[email protected]
What you’re looking for..
Hamilton Medical Center, a
282-bed regional acute-care
hospital that offers major medical,
surgical and diagnostic services,
including accredited stroke and
chest pain centers, has been
serving the health care needs of
northwest Georgia communities
since 1921. If patient centered care and customer satisfaction is
what drives you, we encourage you to apply with us today.
Registered Nurses
Up to $5000 Sign-On Bonus
Available With Experience!
Critical Care
Emergency Department
Medical/Surgical
Surgery
In addition to a robust array of traditional benefits such as healthcare,
dental care and retirement, Hamilton offers a wide range of other
benefits to attract, support and reward the skilled associates that
help Hamilton remain a premier health care organization. For
inquiries, please call Human Resources at 706.272.6145. For
information on additional career opportunities or to apply online,
visit us at www.hamiltonhealth.com
An Equal Opportunity Employer
50—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
Answer to
Sudoku Puzzle on
Page 41
www.clevelandbanner.com
47. Business Property For
Rent
$750- $995: Office and storage
space combined, 20x 35 storage,
perfect for contractors, plumbers,
etc.
$695: 1,770 square foot commercial
property, formerly leased as restaurant and an office. Good location.
Call Dennis, PROVISION REAL ESTATE & PROPERTY MANAGEMENT LLC. 423-240-0231.
OFFICE/ RETAIL- Star Vue Square
7,000 square feet, $4,000 monthly.
Owner/ Agent 423-987-9232.
48. Office Space For Rent
LOOKING FOR
AN AFFORDABLE
PLACE TO LIVE
Are You 62 Years or Older?
• Conveniently Located
• Activities Provided
• Utilities Included in Rent
North Cleveland
Towers
Call (423) 479-9639
1200 Magnolia Ave. NE • Cleveland, TN 37311
Accepting
Applications For
1 Bedroom Apartments
$500.00 Per Month*
*Income Restrictions Apply
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
North Cleveland Towers does not discriminate on the basis of
handicapped status in the admission or access to, or treatment or
employment in its federally assisted programs and activities.
MOVE
IN!
600 SqUARE feet, multiple office,
$350 monthly, very convenient,
423-991-4984.
NORTH KEITH Street: First month
free rent with acceptable application
and paid deposit. Owner/ Agent
STONY
BROOKS
REALTY
423-479-4514.
OFFice/ Retail Space available,
short and long term lease. Several
locations, priced from $300 up. Call
Jones Properties 423-472-4000 or
www.jonesproperties.biz.
SMALL OFFICE with bathroom and
10x 16 storage with roll up door.
Central heat/ air, located off North
Lee Highway at 24 Hour Storage.
$450 monthly, includes all utilities.
Call 423-595-2891.
49. apartments For Rent
$1,800: 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, fully
furnished, utilities paid. contact
Jones Properties 423-472-4000 or
visit our website at
www.jonesproperties.biz.
$375: 1 Bedroom, 1 bath, hardwood
floors, includes water.
PROVISION REAL ESTATE &
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT LLC.
423-693-0301
$450: 1 Bedroom, 1 bath ground
level apartment. contact Jones
Properties
423-472-4000
or
www.jonesproperties.biz.
$760: 3 bedroom, newer townhouse.
2 bath, appliances furnished including washer/ dryer. In quiet area. No
pets. $400 deposit. 423-595-2935.
NEED TO BUY, SELL, TRADE OR
RENT? USE CLASSIFIED ADS.
THEY WORK! CLEVELAND DAILY
BANNER, 472-5041.
2&3 Bedroom Apartments
2 Full Baths
W/D Connections
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
FOREST
GROVE
APARTMENTS
WHCF
2350 Blackburn Rd. SE
Cleveland, TN 37311
479-7362
HIWASSEE RIVERFRONT
Lot 6 Riverpoint Dr. Charleston
Gorgeous
Hiwassee
Riverfront lot that
is cleared and
ready to build
your dream home.
Cleared and level
2.63 acres with
120’ of waterfront
where you can build a dock with approval of TVA. Community
Boat launch is also available. Beautiful and peaceful
neighborhood
with views of the
mountains & the
river, yet only 22
minutes from
Bradley Square
Mall. Check it out
today!
5913 Main St, Suite 107
Ooltewah, TN 37363
Office 423-238-5440
Fax 423-847-4054
Laverne Copenhaver
ABR®, e-PRO®, CDPE
Affiliate Broker. Licensed in TN and GA
423-240-1086
www.lavernecopenhaver.com
PRODUCTION ENGINEER
Lonza (formerly Arch Chemicals) in Charleston, Tennessee is now
accepting applications for a Production Engineer. Primary
responsibilities include supervising all activities in the calcium
hypochlorite manufacturing process. This position is responsible
for production, safety, and quality activities as well as ensuring the
maintenance scheduling for repair work and outages are properly
scheduled and managed. This position is a key safety role and
provides leadership to process operators in good manufacturing
practices. In addition, this position ensures operators are properly
trained and certified.
Minimum Qualifications: Bachelor of Science in Chemical
Engineering or Mechanical Engineering with minimum 5-7 years of
relevant work experience in chemical plant operations; additional
experience in or exposure to Project/Process Engineering, Human
Resources and/or EHS positions are also beneficial; knowledge
and ability to use the plant SAP system to track trends and costs
is a plus; Proficiency in MS Word, Excel, and PowerPoint; ability to
interpret financial data to discern patterns and trends in order to
logically analyze capital resources and fixed costs is required;
position responsibilities require proficiency in managing human
resources as well as having organizational, problem solving, and
prioritization skills; knowledge of business management,
manufacturing and chemical processes is a must.
Qualified candidates should apply online at www.lonza.com
(Careers/Available Jobs/US Opportunities & search for the Key
Word “Charleston”). Resumes must be received no later than
June 7, 2015.
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/Disability/Veterans
49. apartments For Rent
53. Houses For Rent
59. Mobile Homes For Sale
$950: 2 bedroom, 2 full bath, one
level, screened porch, close to
Wacker. contact Jones Properties
423-472-4000 or
www.jonesproperties.biz.
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, $625 monthly,
$475 deposit. 423-605-8300.
KiSS YOUR laNDlORD GOODBYe! A deed is all you need to get
your new home. For information call
339-0076.
3 BEDROOM, 1 bath, $795 monthly,
$400 deposit. 423-605-8300.
3 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, water and
sewer furnished. Off 25th Street.
$775 monthly. 600 or better credit
score required. 423-472-1474.
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal Fair Housing
Act of 1968 and the Tennessee Human Rights Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the law. Our
readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal Housing Opportunity, M/F.
1 BEDROOM efficiency on Ocoee,
half block from Lee. Has kitchen and
bedroom/ living room combo, hardwood floors. New paint. $450
monthly, includes all utilities. No
pets/ smoking. 423-595-2891.
1 BEDROOM, 1 bath, no steps,
stove, refrigerator, water furnished.
NW Cleveland. No pets, references
required. $380 monthly, $200 deposit 423-244-1616.
1 BEDROOM, 1 bath, stove, refrigerator, water furnished, central heat/
air, NW Cleveland. No pets, references required. $380 monthly, $200
deposit. 423-244-1616.
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath. $500 monthly,
$300 security deposit, water included. No smoking, No Pets. 12
month
lease.
423-303-8426,
423-584-2603.
3672 OAKCREST Avenue NW, 1
bedroom, 1 bath, $420 monthly,
$420 deposit.
1513 Blount Avenue #1, 1 bedroom,
1 bath, $410 monthly, $410 deposit.
285 Hillview Drive, 2 bedrooms, 1.5
bath, $545 monthly, $545 deposit.
No pets.
Burris Properties 423-478-3050.
BlYtHeWOOD- SteePlecHaSe
aPaRtMeNtS- 1 Bedroom with
utilities furnished ($369- $559); 2
Bedroom ($429- $599). Appliances
furnished; duplexes. 423-472–7788.
CLEVELAND 2 or 3 bedroom, 2 1/2
bath, New Castle Drive,
Luxury
Townhouse. Available June 1st.
$850
and
$950
a
month.
423-618-0823
CLEVELAND SUMMIT Apartments
Rent is based on income for persons
62 or older, handicapped or disabled. We have immediate openings. Equal Housing Opportunity 44
Inman Street 479-3005
DUPLEx, LYLES Road, off Highway
64: 2 Bedroom, 2 bath, eat- in
kitchen, laundry room. No pets/
smoking. $650 Monthly, $650 deposit, 423-618-4580.
GREAT LOCATION near YMCA.
Rare Opening, quiet area. 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath townhouse. Washer/
dryer hookups. Immaculate inside
and out! No smoking, No pets. $565
monthly. Please call 423-618-1374.
LUxURY
TOWNHOME:
$755
monthly, 2 bedrooms 1.5 baths;
$795 2 bedrooms 2.5 baths. Both
Available end of May. 423-595-1943
woodridgecleveland.com
DUPLEx, ExCELLENT condition,
Old Tasso Place. 2 Bedroom, 2
bath, garage, large back yard,
kitchen, dining area, living room. No
smoking, no pets. $775 monthly,
$775 Deposit. 423-605-8456.
ONE BEDROOM, country setting
$435 monthly, water included, no
pets. STONY BROOKS REALTY
Owner/ Agent 423-479-4514.
TOWNHOUSE- 2 bedroom, 1.5
bath, fireplace, washer/ dryer included. No pets. 423-284-8828.
TOWNHOUSE: 2 bedroom, 1.5
bath, central heat/ air, washer/ dryer
connections, stove and refrigerator
furnished, NW Cleveland. No pets.
References required. $460 monthly,
$200 deposit. 423-244-1616.
TOWNHOUSE: 2 bedroom, 1.5
bath, central heat/ air, washer/ dryer
connections,
stove,
refrigerator,
dishwasher and water furnished, NW
Cleveland. No pets. References required. $550 monthly, $200 deposit.
423-244-1616.
50. Mobile Homes For Rent
$495: 3 Bedroom, 1 bath, new paint,
vinyl floors
$550: 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, new paint,
new vinyl flooring.
Includes water. PROVISION REAL
ESTATE & PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, LLC 423-693-0301.
$400 AND up. 2 and 3 bedrooms.
Apply at 645 Old Chattanooga Pike,
Cleveland 423-790-7141.
2, BEDROOMS for rent, great location. Weekly or monthly $250 deposit. 423-617-4505.
COLLEGETOWN
MOBILE
ESTATES: Two bedrooms nice and
clean. 472–6555.
52. Sleeping Rooms
$129 PLUS tax weekly special, 1
person with ad, HBO/ ESPN.
423-728–4551.
53. Houses For Rent
$1,195: 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, 1,700
square feet, new paint, basement,
garage, NW. PROVISION REAL ESTATE AND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, LLC 423-693-0301.
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal Fair Housing
Act of 1968 and the Tennessee Human Rights Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the law. Our
readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal Housing Opportunity, M/F.
3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, water and
sewer furnished. Off 25th Street.
$650 monthly. 600 or better credit
score required. 423-472-1474.
THREE BEDROOMS, two baths,
county schools, $1,150 monthly.
Possible lease/ option to buy.
Owner/ Agent STONY BROOKS
REALTY 423-479-4514.
54. lots For Sale
LENDERS AVAILABLE for 0 down
home loans. Call for details.
423-337-5992.
LOOKING TO update your old
home! Use your trade as a down
payment on a new one! Come see
us today. 423-337-5992.
MOBILE HOME for sale, must be
moved. 28 by 56 double wide 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, spacious,
$12,500, 423-650-2765 Cleveland
TN.
MOVE IN READY REPOS! 3 and 4
bedrooms. Lots to choose from.
423-337-5992.
OCOEE HILLS, lots 52 and 53, .67
acres each. $22,000 each. Call Ron
Kubala at 941-416-9999.
MOVE IN ready REPOS. EZ! Call to
apply! 423-351-7786.
56. Houses For Sale
2006 HARLEY Davidson, V-rod,
VRSCR, New battery, 6,400 miles.
Like New! Extras. 423-339-0157.
3 BEDROOM, 1.5 bath, extra lot,
fenced
yard,
$124,900.
423-605-8300.
3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, bonus room,
2,100 square feet, $219,000. Call
423-413-4661.
4 BEDROOM, 3.5 bath, wrap
around front porch, big back deck,
2,600 square foot/ plus 1,300
square foot unfinished basement, 5
acres (up to 25 acres available),
fruit trees, creek, barn, and carpet
allowance,
$276,000.
423-432-1525.
“atteNtiON ReNteRS”
PURcHaSe YOUR
HOMe tODaY
tHiS PROGRaM OFFeRS
“NO” DOWN PaYMeNt
tO Get QUaliFieD
call MY cell 423-593-1508
HeRB lacY
aFFiliate BROKeR
ceNtURY 21
1St cHOice RealtORS
2075 OcOee St
cleVelaND, tN 37311
[email protected]
478-2332
APARTMENTS &
HOMES FOR RENT
423-476-5518
Online Rental Payment Available
ASK ABOUT SELECT “SPECIALS”
www.bender-realty.com
or come by office
425 25th Street
63. Motorcycles and Bikes
64. Recreational Vehicles
KEYSTONE CHALLENGER 2006
29TRL, 5th Wheel, 3 slides, $18,500
Call 423-790-5223
66. auto Parts
2013 F150 parts: New grill, new front
bumper, used back bumper all tuxedo
black.
$500
for
all.
865-318-9580.
72. cars For Sale
LLOYD'S USED CARS
5526 Waterlevel Highway
Cleveland 423-476-5681
Don't pay high for your next car! Financing available or cash talks! Warranties, history reports: 2005 Chevy
Trailblazer, 2004 Chevy Trailblazer
4x 4, 2004 Chevy Blazer 4x 4, 2007
Pontiac Torrent SUV, 2004 Jeep
Grand Cherokee.
CHRYLSER CONVERTIBLE, Excellent condition, One owner. Priced
when seen 423-618-8579.
JUNK CARS, wrecked cars, trucks,
vans, SUVs. Cash paid, free pick up.
423-240-1334.
It’s A Great Day At
CHEROKEE HILLS...
2, 3, and 4 Bedroom Apartments
with 2 full baths, fully equipped
kitchen, washer/dryer hook-ups,
lots of closet space, swimming
pool, picnic area and playground.
Family Housing For Everyone!
Cherokee Hills
Apartments
Call Today! (423) 559-0800
2020 Bates Pike
2 Bedroom $545
3 Bedroom $595
4 Bedroom $645
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
Need to sell your home, land or other property?
Receive a cash offer in 48 hours!
CLEVELAND 2 bedroom, 2 baths.
Spacious split- level. Near shopping.
Granite counters. Ceramic cooktop.
Unfinished basement. Walk-in closets. Laminate flooring. New windows. Central air. Brick/ vinyl siding.
Large yard. Hot tub. Septic. Beautifully
restored!
$115,000
Call
1-423-299-2810
HIWASSEE RIVER, 3 bedrooms, 3
baths, Custom, Granite tops, Hardwood flooring, Boat dock, 4 car garage, outside fireplace, 1 acre. Riverbend. 423-336-9682.
NeW ON the Market.
3450 Crown Colony Drive. Shaded
hill top lot near Cleveland Middle
School. 3 Bedrooms, 2.5 baths, colonial, 2868 square feet, 9 large
rooms, 2 car garage, screened
porch. Well maintained, $208,000.
Phone 423-614-4628 for appointment.
TWO REMODELED homes: 3 Bedrooms, 2- 2.5 baths, decks, basements, garages, city or county.
Lease with option to buy. Owner/
agent, STONY BROOKS REALTY
423-479-4514.
59. Mobile Homes For Sale
HUGE SELECTION of REPO homes
in your area. Over 50 available and
moving fast. Call now before they're
gone. 423-351-7786.
JUSt liKe NeW!
Double wide
home with acreage. $500 deposit.
Owner financing available. Call
339-0076.
No Real Estate Fees
Avoid Foreclosure
Close in 5-7 Days Sell Inherited Property
423.299.5311
www.southeastlandtrust.com
PRIME COMMERCIAL
LOT AVAILABLE
on Frontage Road at Exit 27 directly across
from the Target at Cleveland Towne Center.
Approximate 2 acres, asking $295k.
Contact Max Finkle with
RE/MAX Commercial Realtors
at 423-987-9232 cell
201 Cherokee Blvd., Suite 101
Chattanooga, TN 37405
423-756-5700 Office
Email: [email protected]
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015—51
RIVER COUNTIES
ASSOCIATION
of REALTORS®
“REALTORS® Serving People”
Serving Bradley, Bledsoe, McMinn, Meigs, Polk & Rhea Counties
Our Mission Statement:
“Enhancing, promoting, and protecting the private property rights in our
communities, and the business interests of our REALTOR® members.”
Finding and choosing the right Realtor, financing and home
If you are thinking about purchasing a new home, there are
some steps that will help make
your selection process easier,
according to The River Counties
Association of Realtors.
These steps include:
Tips for selecting
a Realtor®
Your real estate professional
should be:
n Knowledgeable about the
communities of interest to you.
n Aware of the complicated
local and state requirements
affecting your transaction.
n Effective in multi-party, faceto-face negotiations.
n Highly-trained, with access to
programs for continued learning
and additional certifications.
n Technology-focused.
n Supported by professional
legal counsel.
Financing
Most real estate professionals
and mortgage lenders recommend
pre-qualifying for a loan before
selecting a home to purchase.
This process will help you:
n Determine the price range
you can afford.
n Understand the types of loans
for which you qualify.
n Determine what your monthly payment will be.
n Estimate the down payment
and closing costs.
The Loan Process
Your sales associate will help
you to select a mortgage lender.
Once you have made your decision, these are the steps of the
process:
n Application — All pertinent
documentation is obtained. Fees
and down payments are discussed, and the borrower will
receive a Good Faith Estimate
(GFE) and a Truth-in-lending
statement (TIL), itemizing the
rates and associated costs for the
loan.
You will be asked to provide
certain documents to your lender
in order that your loan can be
processed in a timely manner.
n Loan Submission — Once all
the necessary documentation is
in, your completed file is submitted to a lender for approval.
n Loan Approval (Underwriting)
— Loan approval, or underwriting, generally takes 24 to 72
hours. All parties are notified of
the approval and any loan conditions that must be received before
the loan can close.
n Closing — Once all parties
have signed the loan documents,
they are returned to the lender. If
all the forms have been properly
executed, the lender sends the
loan funds by wire transfer. At
this point, the borrower finishes
the loan process and actually
buys the house.
Finding and choosing
the right home
Based on criteria that you and
your sales associate establish
together, your associate will help
you find the perfect home.
There are many factors to consider in selecting a property,
including location, bedroom and
bath count, schools and amenities.
Your sales associate will apply
their extensive community knowledge and professional resources
to research available properties,
and show you the homes that best
meet your needs.
If you find a property that interests you through the Internet or
your own research, let your sales
associate know so that a showing
can be arranged.
As you view different properties, your criteria may change.
Open and direct communication
with your sales associate is a key
element of a successful property
search.
Making an offer
Once you have found the
home that you wish to purchase,
your sales associate will apply
their professional training and
do all the necessary research to
help you structure an effective
offer.
This is where your sales associate's negotiation skills come into
play.
When an offer is made, the seller will have the option of accepting, rejecting or counter-offering.
Your sales associate will negotiate
the best possible terms for you.
Your sales associate will draft
the purchase agreement, advising
you of protective contingencies,
customary practices, and local
regulations.
Home warranty, title and
escrow arrangements will be
detailed in the offer. Although
your sales associate will give you
advice and information, it is your
decision as to the exact price and
terms that you wish to offer.
Managing the Escrow
When the purchase agreement
is accepted and signed by all parties, your sales associate will open
escrow for you and your earnest
money will be deposited. The
escrow is a neutral third party
that will receive, hold, and distribute all funds associated with your
transaction.
Removing contingencies
Prior to closing escrow, all of
the contingencies of the Purchase
Agreement must be met. Your
sales associate will coordinate this
process.
Typical contingencies include:
n Approval of the Seller’s
Property Disclosure Statement.
n Approval of the preliminary
title report.
n Loan approval, including an
appraisal of the property.
n Physical inspections of the
property.
n Pest inspection and certification.
n Acquisition of homeowner's
insurance.
OPEN HOUSE TODAY 2-4 PM
287 HIDDEN
OAKS TRAIL
$199,900
Talk To
Tammy
today for all the
details at
423/595-1319.
Move In Ready ---This spacious
completely
remodeled
ranch style home includes 4 bedrooms, 2 1⁄2 baths,
formal dining room, wood fireplace, new roof, new
paint, flooring, fixtures, in-ground pool that has new
liner and pump, and just too many improvements to
list, home sits in a marvelous neighborhood, priced to
move at only $199,900
Directions: North Lee Highway to right on Hickory
Hills Drive, right on Brushwood Court, home straight
ahead on Hidden Oaks Trail.
Tammy
Davis
595-1319
OPEN HOUSE TODAY 2-4
OPEN HOUSE TODAY 2-4 PM
EQUAL HOUSING
423-790-3086
7431 Frontage Rd. $379,900
Looking for privacy near town? 20 acres, brick
home, separate apt., barn, fenced. Priced below
appraisal. Owner wants offer! MLS#: 20151271
Directions: Paul Huff, north Frontage, home on Judy & Larry Allen
left 2 drives past Gable Dr.
240-8613
OPPORTUNITY
1101
COOKDALE
TRAIL
$133,900
OPEN
TODAY
2-4PM
3525 Ozark Street $159,000
4 Bedroom,3 bath home in a convenient location. Close to I-75 and restaurants. Nice outdoor deck
for summer time barbecuing. Come on out and look at this home or call Chip to set up a showing.
DIRECTIONS: From 25th Street go northtoward Cleveland Middle School, on Hwy 60/Georgetown
Rd turn left on Eveningside Drive , then turn on Ozark Street. Home is on the right.
Kristi Branham
MLO ID #500887, Loan Originator
JANINE
P.O. Box 4730 • Cleveland, TN 37320
Phone: 423-310-1161
Fax: 423-476-0060
[email protected]
MARKIETTA
MUNCK,
YSIDRO
Move in ready &
Buyer’s Agent Broker/Owner
convenient
in(423) 310-1966 (423) 504-6980
town 3BR 2BA
1950 sq ft home with basement on corner lot. Light and bright, open floor plan.
Exterior features side load garage, and loads of shade trees and back deck for
entertaining! MLS #: 20152520
Directions: Exit 27 take right at top of ramp onto Paul Huff. Take right onto Peerless,
to right onto Cookdale Trl NW. Home is on Southeast corner. SOP
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
650 25th St. N.W.
Suite 300
Cleveland, TN 37312
(423) 303-1200
Joe Womac
MLO ID #500886, Loan Originator
Each Keller Williams office is
independently owned & operated
P.O. Box 4730 • Cleveland, TN 37320
Phone: 423-596-2131
Fax: 423-476-0060
[email protected]
Listing Agent:
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
Hosting Agent
Gena Faulk
423-716-2810
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
423-584-1131
TODAY 2-4 PM
OPEN HOUSE 2-4 PM OPEN HOUSE
!
OPEN HOUSE TODAY 2-4 PM
J
This is an Entertainer’s Fantasy come true... All on one level. This
marvelous 3 bedroom, 4.5 bath manor is move-in ready. With approx.
3,990 sq. ft. of open floorplan, a sparkling gourmet kitchen and a Daniel Keener
Agent
20x38 in-ground sports pool, it’s an entertaining paradise. All Hosting
423-310-5706
bedrooms have separate baths. Screened porch/covered patio over
looks pool and private backyard. Basement offers double rec room, bath and
workshop. For a taste of good old-fashioned Southern hospitality...Come See Today!
MLS #: 20151793
Directions: North I-75 to Exit #20. Turn right APD #40 to Highway #64 Exit. Turn right
Highway #64. Turn left Minnis Road. Turn right Benton Pike. Turn right Old Parksville
Road. Turn left Hickory Crest Drive. Bear left Meadow Wood Circle. Home on left.
Re
ed
LINDA
KAYLOR
331-6161
Max Phillips
Listing Agent
423-596-7173
181 MEADOW WOOD CIRCLE NE $379,900
t
us
c
du
132 COUNTY ROAD 781 $339,900
155 HAM DRIVE NE $135,900
TAKE ME HOME COUNTRY ROADS... to this newly remodeled home located in a rural setting
with rocking chair front porch. Brand new roof, brand new stainless steel kitchen appliances,
fresh paint throughout. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, new carpet upstairs, cherry laminate in living
room and owner’s suite, new block laminate in kitchen & dining room, separate laundry room.
Nice level lot in a cul-de-sac with mature trees. Available for Rural Development Loan with
100% financing to qualified buyers. Come by today and take a LOOK! MLS#20152879.
Directions: E on 25th St., SE on APD 40, Exit onto Hwy 64 E toward the mountains, travel 5-6
miles & look for Outland Expedition sign on the left and turn the next road to the left onto
Chestuee Rd., about 1 mile, L onto York Rd., R onto Ham Dr., home on left.
Joe Womac
MLO ID #500886, Loan Originator
P.O. Box 4730 • Cleveland, TN 37320
Phone: 423-596-2131
Fax: 423-476-0060
[email protected]
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
In
Ground
Pool
Beautiful 3 bedroom 2.5 bath Custom-built Log Home
with wrap-around covered porch. Very private 3.5 acre
lot. Gated entry, secluded and totally fenced with
large in-ground swimming pool. Great floor plan,
mountain stone fireplace, large bedrooms, super
pantry, big kitchen, new stainless steel appliances,
gorgeous tongue and groove ceilings, hardwood
floors, ceramic tile, large basement/workshop and
much, much more. Must see! MLS#: 20145979
Directions: North Lee Hwy to right on Hwy 163. Go 8.9
miles, turn left on County Road 781. Home is on the CHIP PHILLIPS
right.
423-715-2105
52—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, May 24, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Event
TAKE A PAYMENT HOLIDAY NO PAYMENT ON PURCHASES
’TIL AUGUST(1))
NOW - MAY 31st
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Sale
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Veh
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2015 TRAVERSE
SALE PRICE
0
,
0
1
$
TO
P
U
E
V
!
E
S
SA
O
O
CH
O
T
2
1
$
35,190*
Co
Only $530 Per Mo
84 Months w/
$0 Down**(1)
MSRP $41,400 $2,960 in Incentives
enttiv
i es / Stk.#
Stk
t # 150462
15
5046
4 2
2015 EQUINOX LS
2015 CRUZE LTZ
SALE PRICE
SALE
PRICE
ALE
EP
RICE
$
$
*
21,105
*
21,598
Only $329 Per Mo
84 Months w/
$0 Down**(1)
Only $338 Per Mo
84 Months w/
$0 Down**(1)
MSRP $25,410 $3812 in Incentivess Stk.
Stk
tk.
k. # 150299
150
0299
029
MSRP $26,105 / Includes $3915
3915
5 Incentives
Incen
ntiv
nt
ives
ess / Stk.#
Stk
k # 150141
15014
41
SHOP ONLINE 24/7 AT DONLEDFORD.COM
2015 IMPALA 2LT
$
2015 SILVERADO DBL CAB
*
28,904
LEASE PRICE
$
SALE PRICE
MO
O((2)2)
295/
39 Mos 10k Per
Year Lease
$3,308 Due at Signing
ng
Only $438 Per Mo
84 Months w/
$0 Down**(1)
Stk.# 150202
2014 SPARK
2015 MALIBU 1LT
SALE PRICE
SALE PRICE
$
13,706*
$
Only $210 Per Mo
84 Months w/
$0 Down**(1)
Only $299 Per Mo
84 Months w/
$0 Down**(1)
MSRP $15,820 / Stk.# 140520(3)
MSRP $24,575 / $3496 in Incentives
15
ntives / Stk.#
Stk
tk.#
# 150219
50
0219
2015 CORVETTE
CONVERTIBLE
TE
E CO
ONVERTIB
BLE
2014 SONIC
SALE PRICE
$
19,358*
LEASE PRICE
*
$
14,806
MO
M
O(2(2))
1,063/
Only $228 Per M
Mo
o
84 Months w/
$0 Down**(1)
39 Mos 10k Per
Year Lease
$1,635 Due at Signing
g
Includes $2960 in Incentives / MSRP $19,485 / Stk.# 150231 (3)
MSRP $66,475/Stk.# 150276
4595 North Lee Hwy, Cleveland
Mon-Fri 9a-7p | Sat 9a-5p | Sun Closed
(423) 709-8846
Shop Online 24/7 at www.DonLedford.com
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We’ve Got You Covered!
PRICE? We’ll BEAT it!
PAYMENT? We’ll LOWER it!
CHOICE? We’ll HAVE it!
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