SEEING GREEN School board sides with staff over teacher. 3A

School board sides with staff over teacher. 3A
SEEING GREEN
Stronger economy has not
translated into raises. 13A
Diamond stories
Maryville author explores
players’ faith in new book. 8A
YOUR LIFE. YOUR TIMES. SINCE 1883
SATURDAY
November 8, 2014
Judge at center
of culture war
Maryville, TN
thedailytimes.com
$1.00
Go big or go home
Bush appointee says voters
should decide gay marriage
BY DAN SEWELL
The Associated Press
CINCINNATI — Once
again, Judge Jeffrey S. Sutton was the unpredictable
man in the middle on a
major national issue.
The 2003 George W. Bush
appointee who stunned
some conservatives three
years ago by ruling in
favor of President Barack
Obama’s health care overhaul also wrote the majority opinion Thursday in a
2-1 decision by the 6th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals
that upheld anti-gay marriage laws in Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky and Tennessee.
Sutton wrote that such
a major social change
as redefining marriage
should be decided through
the political process, not
the courts.
He said it is better to have
change “in which the people, gay and straight alike,
become the heroes of their
own stories by meeting
each other not as adversaries in a court system but as
fellow citizens seeking to
resolve a new social issue
in a fair-minded way.”
The decision was at odds
with rulings by four other
federal appeals courts, creating a split that dramatically increases the likelihood the U.S. Supreme
Court will take up the
issue.
The 54-year-old Ohio
State University law school
graduate has a reputation
among lawyers and courtwatchers as a thoughtful
and thorough jurist whose
conservatism doesn’t automatically mean conservative rulings.
Sutton was the first
Republican-appointed fed-
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
JEFFREY SUTTON, THENPRESIDENT BUSH’S nominee for the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the 6th District, testifying during a
Jan. 29, 2003, meeting
on Capitol Hill.
SCOTT KELLER | THE DAILY TIMES
MARYVILLE’S JOEL HOPKINS (43) picks his way through the hole created by his linemen Friday during the Rebels’ first-round
playoff against Walker Valley at Maryville. READ OUR SPORTS SECTION FOR MORE PLAYOFF COVERAGE.
JEFFREY S. SUTTON
Maryville, Alcoa look
to live up to top billing
AGE: 54
EDUCATION: B.S. from
Williams College, J.D.
from Ohio State
University
APPOINTED: May 9, ’01
CONFIRMED: April 29, ’03
ASSUMED: May 5, ’03
BY MARCUS FITZSIMMONS
[email protected]
™<VnBVgg^V\ZF6#5A
eral appeals court judge to
give support to the Obama
health care overhaul.
“By most accounts, he’s
considered a conservative judge, yet he ruled
against us in the Obamacare case,” said Robert
J. Muise, attorney for the
American Freedom Law
Center. “I think it showed
he’s a judge of integrity in
the sense that he’s going to
rule on the way he thinks
the law is, not based on
what somebody thinks he
should rule.”
University of Richmond
law professor Carl Tobias said Thursday’s ruling
SEE JUDGE, 5A
The Tennessee Secondary Schools Athletics Association opened the final
playoffs under the Z Plan
by releasing its staff recommendations of the new
football regions under the
Super 32 plan being implemented next season. The
recommendation must be
approved Thursday by a
vote of the TSSAA Board of
Control in its regular meeting in Murfreesboro.
While Maryville and
Alcoa were living up to
their top rankings Friday
making quick work of the
No. 8 seeds they faced, and
MARK A. LARGE | THE DAILY TIMES Greenback rested during
JOHNSON COUNTY DEFENSIVE BACK SAMUEL ICENHOUR (23) tries its first round bye, many
to catch up with Alcoa wide receiver Brenden Teeter (85) schools and coaches were
during the two team’s game in the first round of the Class taking a look ahead the 2015
3A state playoffs Friday night at Goddard Field.
offseason.
Maryville and William
Blount were much as
expected in the Super 32
Region 1 which included
Dobyns-Bennett, Science
Hill, Jefferson County, Hardin Valley, Bradley Central
and Bearden.
Heritage was recommended for Region 2 of 5A where
the Mountaineers would be
one of six schools, including
Gibbs, Halls, Powell, Knox
West and South-Doyle. Seymour was placed in Region
1 of Class 4A, with Sullivan
Central, Sullivan East, Sullivan South, Greeneville,
Volunteer, Grainger and
Cherokee.
Alcoa was placed in
Region 2 of Class 3A with
York Institute in Jamestown, old familiar Christian Academy of Knoxville,
Kingston, Scott, McMinn
Central and Loudon.
TVA president could earn more than $1M extra in salary for 2014
The Associated Press
CHATTANOOGA — The Tennessee Valley Authority’s president and CEO could earn more
than $1 million extra this year.
The Chattanooga Times Free
Press reports the agency’s board
voted unanimously on Thurs-
day to raise Bill Johnson’s salary
and performance pay after the
60-year-old attorney met all of
TVA’s targets for 2014.
TVA nearly doubled its net
income, cut its debt, and got its
nuclear plants off the regulatory
watch list in the past year.
TVA Director Barbara Haskew
Blount Records . . . . 4A
Bridge . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4C
Classified . . . . . . . . . .1C
Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . 8B
60015602DT
BHSS
1617 East Broadway,
Maryville
865-982-8557
Crossword . . . . . . . . . 9B
Daily Calendar. . . . . 9A
Dear Abby . . . . . . . . 12A
Deaths . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A
of Chattanooga recommended
that Johnson’s $950,000 base
salary be raised 4.7 percent to
$995,000 and that the board boost
performance incentives and longevity.
It all adds up to more than $1 million extra in cash benefits Johnson
could earn in 2015 over this year’s
Horoscope . . . . . . . . 9B
Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8A
Lotteries . . . . . . . . . . 2A
Markets . . . . . .6A & 7A
Nation & World. . . 13A
Newsmakers . . . . . . 9B
Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . .1B
Sudoku . . . . . . . . . . . . 9B
Ask about our
pay. He is currently the nation’s
highest paid federal employee.
Johnson was paid a total compensation package in fiscal 2013
valued at $5.9 million in cash and
retirement benefits. TVA will
reveal details of what it paid its
top executives in fiscal 2014 in a
couple of weeks.
SEE TVA, 5A
Get The Daily Times sent to your
email box every day with a digital
subscription at TheDailyTimes.com.
Partly cloudy
and cooler
High 58 | Low 38
TVA Chairman Joe Ritch said
Johnson is still underpaid for his
performance. The former Progress Energy CEO was paid in
the bottom quartile of top utility CEOs in the private sector,
Ritch said, and TVA needs to pay
9B
Natalie McAmis, M.A.,
Paul Rook, M.S.,
John Berry, M.S., &
Beth Galloway, Au.D.
www.bhssinc.com
BLOUNT HEARING & SPEECH SERVICES, INC.
Genuine Care + Advanced Technology
2A | BLOUNT COUNTY
THE DAILY TIMES
www.thedailytimes.com
Saturday, November 8, 2014
BRIEFS
Womick will run
for House speaker
SUBMITTED PHOTO
STUDENTS RECEIVE VALUABLE EDUCATION while going through the youth recovery program at the Gateway Center. They were tasked
with memorizing countries and chose one to research to create a poster, which was displayed in the hallway.
United Way funds give hope for a better future
Financial education. Dental coverage. Access to
employment paying a living wage. Teen programs.
Preventative and treatment
programs for all forms of
abuse.
These are just a few of
the needs that rose to the
top when United Way of
Blount County reached out
to the community in 2013
by way of formal surveys
and conversations to determine both the observable
needs and the direction of
future funding.
Based off of this research,
the organization created
vision statements for its
three areas of focus —
health, education and
self-sufficiency. For example, one of the visions for
a healthy Blount County
population is one in which
residents are free of all
forms of substance, physical, mental/emotional and
sexual abuse. United Way
of Blount County, with the
help of its community partners, volunteers and donors,
is turning these visions into
reality every day.
Let’s take George, for
example. (Not his real
name.)
He was admitted into
treatment at Helen Ross
McNabb Center’s Gateway
Center earlier this year
because he was struggling
to remain abstinent from
substance abuse, mainly
LIVE UNITED
100%
90%
78.56% 80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
Goal: $2,014,000
To Date: $1,582,287
unitedwayblount.org
because of the anger issues
he dealt with that existed
as the gateway to his addiction. He wanted a future
and realized that his struggle with drugs would get in
the way of that future.
When he entered treatment, he was resistant to
open up to his therapist to
progress on his goals, but
during his stay, he made
a conscious decision that
the path he was taking
would return him to a life
of destruction and chaos.
So he made the healthy
choice to change not only
his surroundings, but his
attitude, too.
George fully invested
himself in the treatment
program, recognizing the
internal and external triggers to his anger, along with
ways to cope with this emotion in a healthy manner.
He also addressed relapse
prevention and how to
build his future free from
substance abuse. Along
the way, he participated in family therapy and
built a healthy relationship
with his family members
through several weekend
home passes and improved
communication.
With the support from
G a teway co u n s e l o rs ,
George studied and passed
his GED test, which was
one of his goals when he
entered treatment. Additionally, he completed the
Independent Living Skills
program, which educated
him on budgeting, social
skills and interviewing
skills. He set specific goals
for his future, one of which
was to attend college and
earn a degree.
George connected with
and confided in other peers
during his time in the program and said he felt it
would be difficult to leave
treatment because of the
friendships and connections he had made during
his time in the program. On
the day of his successful
exit from the program, he
was visibly and emotionally touched by his peers
and program staff during his
graduation ceremony.
So where is George now?
He has a part-time job and
attends college, where he
is majoring in business. He
even came back to speak at
one of the meetings at Gateway to encourage those who
were experiencing what
he had once gone through.
These clients have dreams
and aspirations of their
own, and with the help of
this United Way-funded
service, they’re given that
chance to succeed.
“Drugs can get into the
best of homes,” said Jennifer Perkins-Russell, service
coordinator at the Gateway
Center. “They can’t help
that they were born with
an addictive part of their
brain.”
George is an example of
United Way’s vision for
a healthy Blount County. And with your help, it
won’t stop there.
“Each dollar that is donated to United Way is helping
save a client’s life,” said Perkins-Russell. “The dollars
are like tools in the garden.
If we did not have these
tools, how do we expect
the garden to grow?”
For more information
on United Way of Blount
County, or to make a donation, please visit www.live
unitedblount.org or call
982-2251.
Lawmakers prep for judge selection change
The Associated Press
NASHVILLE — Gov. Bill Haslam
and fellow Republicans in the General Assembly are putting forward
plans for how to select Tennessee
Supreme Court justices under a constitutional amendment ratified by
voters this week.
Tuesday’s vote largely kept the current system in which appeals judges
are selected by the governor and then
stand for uncontested votes on whether to retain or replace them.
Supporters said the amendment was
necessary to clear up any lingering
controversy over whether the judicial selection method conflicted with
language in the state constitution that
said justices “shall be elected by the
qualified voters of the state.”
The ballot measure also added a new
provision under which the Legislature
can reject the governor’s appointments to the bench.
After the election Haslam issued
an executive order establishing a
new Governor’s Council for Judicial
Appointments. The 11-member council will vet applicants and present
THE DAILY TIMES
Blount County’s only daily newspaper,
serving our readers
since 1883.
Your Life. Your Times.
Vol. 71 No. 222
The Daily Times
(USPS# 332-320)
is published daily by
Blount County
Publishers LLC,
307 E. Harper Ave., Maryville,
TN, 37804. Periodical postage
paid at Maryville TN 37804.
Send correspondence to:
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Maryville, TN, 37802-9740
Haslam with a set of three finalists
to choose from.
The panel members will be selected
by the governor, a departure from
past practice, in which the speakers
of the House and Senate could also
appoint members. Lawmakers let that
system expire.
Meanwhile, Senate Judiciary Chairman Brian Kelsey, R-Germantown,
introduced legislation that would
establish a joint committee made up
of seven senators and seven House
members to consider gubernatorial
appointments.
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MURFREESBORO —
A state representative
who recently decried
fellow Republican Gov.
Bill Haslam a “traitor
to the party” says he
will run for speaker of
the state House next
month.
The Daily News Journal of Murfreesboro
reports that Rep. Rick
Womick plans to challenge Speaker Beth
Harwell of Nashville
when the House Republican Caucus elects its
leadership on Dec. 10.
Womick said current
leadership in the House
is too aligned with
Haslam on issues like
Common Core education standards and that
he would seek a more
independent course
from the executive
branch.
Suspect sought
in wife’s death
Three areas of focus
From United Way of Blount County
THIS WEEK IN HISTORY
SPRINGFIELD —
Authorities are searching for a Springfield
man they say admitted
killing his wife.
According to media
reports, a man who
identified himself as
Joseph Parker called 911
around 2:45 a.m. Friday
and said he had killed
his wife two days earlier.
When officers arrived
at the home, they found
From The Daily Times
on Nov. 2, 1989: Divers worked in the cold
water of Rockford
Quarry and in the dark,
searching for a clue in
the disappearance of a
Roane County teacher
whom it is believed to
have driven into the
water.
PUBLIC MEETING
Rockford
THE ROCKFORD CITY
COMMISSION will
meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Rockford
City Hall, 3719 Little
River Road, Rockford.
the body of 44-yearold Samantha Parker,
but her husband wasn’t
there.
The cause of death
has not been released.
However, authorities
have classified the case
a homicide.
The Tennessee Bureau
of Investigation is
assisting in the case.
The state added
45-year-old Joseph
Parker to the Tennessee’s Top Ten Most
Wanted list.
CORRECTION
An incorrect time was
given for a Veterans Day
event at Eagleton Middle
School on Page 2A of Friday’s edition of The Daily
Times. The event will take
place at 9 a.m. Monday.
Federal judge tosses
13 more drug cases
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A federal judge on Friday dismissed criminal indictments against 13 more
defendants in major drug
cases as authorities continued to investigate the
growing scandal of an FBI
agent accused of tampering with narcotics, firearms and other evidence
seized in the cases.
The action by U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton
came one day after prosecutors dropped charges
against 10 other defendants
— some already serving
lengthy prison sentences
— in related cases.
“This is pretty huge,”
said Carmen Hernandez, an attorney for one
of the defendants. “There
are people who have pled
guilty being released from
prison. The magnitude of
the tampering or wrongdoing must be pretty large.”
The agent being investigated is Matthew Lowry, 33,
according to his attorney,
Robert Bonsib.
“Agent Lowry is committed to assisting in the
investigation of this matter
and is making himself fully
available to the authorities to answer any and all
questions they have,” Bonsib said.
FBI officials have not
released the name of the
agent or details of the
alleged wrongdoing. The
Washington Post first identified Lowry as the accused
agent.
According to court
papers, the FBI notified
the U.S. Attorney’s Office
in Washington on Oct. 1
about possible misconduct
by an agent in the execution of a search warrant
on Nov. 20, 2013, at a residence and in a vehicle
belonging to one of the
co-defendants in Deale,
Md.
TENNESSEE LOTTERY NUMBERS
Cash 3 Evening
6-0-0, Lucky Sum: 6
(six, zero, zero; Lucky Sum:
six)
Cash 3 Midday
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(eight, eight, four; Lucky
Sum: twenty)
Cash 3 Morning
3-5-7
(three, five, seven)
Cash 4 Evening
5-1-2-8, Lucky Sum: 16
(five, one, two, eight; Lucky
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Mega Millions
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BLOUNT COUNTY | 3A
THE DAILY TIMES
Saturday, November 8, 2014
www.thedailytimes.com
BY MATTHEW STEWART
[email protected]
The Blount County Board
of Education has sided with
staff concerning dismissal charges for a tenured
teacher.
During Thursday’s meeting, board members voted that charges, if true,
brought against Everett
Learning Opportunity
Center’s Robert L. Davis
warrant termination. Since
May, the teacher has been
suspended.
Davis is suspended based
in part on charges of discussing personal issues
with students, dishonesty
with Principal Danny Galyon regarding phone usage
and requesting a student to
retrieve medication from
his vehicle. Director of
Schools Rob Britt has found
these charges amount to
unprofessional conduct.
Davis also allegedly failed
to enroll students in correct
classes and placed students
incorrectly in online learning modules. Britt has found
these charges amount to
incompetence.
The district further alleges
Davis has been noncompliant with two improvement
plans issued since October 2012 and noncompliant
with Employee Assistance
Program (EAP) recommendations issued this spring.
Britt has found these charges amount to insubordination.
Davis was suspended
without pay in September
2012 and transferred to
School board: If charges
true, dismissal is warranted
Everett Learning Opportunity Center from Heritage
High School. The teacher’s
suspension and subsequent
reassignment was based on
charges of neglect of duty,
including:
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tional requirements;
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manage students;
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events/meetings;
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]fi<e[f]:flij\\oXdj2
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es in PlanetHS for credit
recovery;
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obligations;
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grades;
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In November 2012, Davis
was issued a letter of reprimand due to his tardiness,
a direct violation of his
improvement plan. He is
currently suspended based
in part on charges of:
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report grades;
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deadlines prescribed by
Galyon;
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staffing protocols;
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permission;
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unattended.
Britt has found these
charges amount to neglect
of duty.
As a result of the board’s
action, Davis will be
informed of its decision
in writing. The teacher can
request a hearing before an
impartial hearing officer.
If Davis is dissatisfied
with the decision, he has
the right to appeal this decision to the school board. If
the teacher is dissatisfied
with the board’s decision,
he can appeal its decision
in Blount County Chancery Court.
tion, arguing his client
was unfamiliar with the
school’s procedures.
Davis has been “treated unfairly and discrimieXk\[X^X`ejkÈYpX[d`e$
istrators, Scrugham said.
“He’s the victim of several
years of increasingly hosk`c\XZk`fej%È
OTHER ACTION
In other action, the
school board approved:
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professional services associated with roof replacements at Middlesettlements Elementary and
Montvale Elementary;
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ton, Charles Finley and
Fred Goins to serve on a
joint Board of Education
ATTORNEY REQUESTS and Blount County Education Association SpeDELAY ON ACTION
Davis’ counsel, Richard cial Question Committee
T. Scrugham Jr., addressed for Collaborative Conferboard members regarding encing;
the charges.
› Xe[ `eZi\Xj`e^ k_\
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delay action until his cli- gif^iXdÊj]\\Yp,#\]]\Z$
ent can reconcile with the tive Jan. 1.
school district.
The early bird fee will
Davis is a 26-year educa- `eZi\Xj\]ifd*'kf*,
tor who has taught nearly g\in\\b#Xe[k_\g`Zb$lg
10 years in Blount Coun- iXk\n`cc`eZi\Xj\]ifd+'
ty, Scrugham said. He kf+,g\in\\b%
holds three postsecondary degrees and received
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counties prior to Blount
County.
Many of the district’s
claims are “minor, or
\oX^^\iXk\[#È _\ jX`[%
He claimed they were
the result of personality
conflicts and persecuDr. Woodrow W. Gwinn, Jr.
Abortion rights supporters want vote voided
the Tennessee Constitution
kfdXb\`k\Xj`\ikfi\jki`Zk
NASHVILLE — Oppo- abortions.
nents of Amendment 1 are
In a lawsuit filed Friday,
Xjb`e^X]\[\iXcal[^\kf plaintiffs claim that the state
void the vote that amended ignored the plain language
The Associated Press
of the constitution, which
says it can be amended by “a
majority of all the citizens
in the state voting for gov\iefi#mfk`e^`e%%%]XmfiÈf]
the amendment.
Owner & Director of Clinics
Doctor of Chiropractic
Road, Louisville, who was
traveling south on Miser
A 12-year-old boy was School Road.
hit by a vehicle this mornGfc`Z\ jX`[ ;lZb\kk
ing in Friendsville while swerved left in an attempt
trying to catch a school to avoid Jones, but he colbus, police said.
lided with her vehicle.
D a n i e l Ju s t i n Me l - The boy rolled onto the
linger Jones, Michelle hood of the car and slid
Drive, Louisville, was into the windshield.
jkilZbYpX)''.?fe[X
He was wearing a large
Civic at the intersection YXZbgXZb#n_`Z_Xcjf_`k
of Miser School Road the windshield, police
and Michelle Drive, said said.
Blount County Sheriff ’s
Afe\j nXj kXb\e Yp
F]] `Z\ jgfb\jnfdXe Rural/Metro Ambulance
Marian O’Briant.
Service to University of
The accident occurred Tennessee Medical CenXk-1,-X%d%XjAfe\jnXj ter. Police said he was
running to catch the released from the hospischool bus, O’Briant said. tal Friday afternoon.
Jones reportedly ran out
Police said speed was
in front of a Honda Civ- not a factor in the acciic driven by Melissa M. dent and no charges or
;lZb\kk#)-#D`j\iJkXk`fe citations were issued.
From Staff Reports
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Knoxville
1812 E Lamar Alexander Parkway
Maryville, TN 37804
3912 Highway 411
Madisonville, TN 37354
259 North Peters Road, Suite 101
Knoxville TN 37923
(865) 977-0916
(423) 442-4153
865-690-6898
Hablo Español (865) 696-8187
916 William Blount Dr. r
(at the corner of Morganton Rd)
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4A | BLOUNT COUNTY
THE DAILY TIMES
www.thedailytimes.com
Saturday, November 8, 2014
BLOUNT RECORDS
COURT RECORDS
Case filed Nov. 7 in Blount
County General Sessions
Court:
Autumn Brown vs. Quinn
Brown, divorce
™
Case filed Nov. 6 in the
Equity Division of Blount
County Circuit Court:
Angelia G. Richardson and
Kerry Eugene Richardson,
divorce
™
Cases filed Nov. 7 in the
Equity Division of Blount
County Circuit Court:
Geri Lynn Vanwinkle vs.
Chester Alan Vanwinkle,
divorce
™
™
™
Keith Waylan Sparks vs.
Teresa Gail Sparks, divorce
Ashley Nicole Radford
vs. Matthew Hank Radford,
divorce
™
Scott Randall Medley
vs. Candace Renee Medley,
divorce
Case filed Nov. 6 in Blount
County Probate Court:
Regarding: Jane Caroll
Hutsell, small estate
™
Case filed Nov. 7 in Blount
County Probate Court:
Regarding: Rebecca Sue
Libbey, estate
™
Case filed Nov. 3 in the Law
Division of Blount County
Circuit Court:
HPF Capital LLC, doing
business as Highpoint Funding, vs. Ricky Clark, petition to
transfer structured settlement payment rights
™
Case filed Nov. 7 in the Law
Division of Blount County
Circuit Court:
United Services Automobile
Association, as subrogee of
Davidta E. Blair vs. Richard
John Gilliam and Southeast
Tennessee Human Resource
Agency, damages
™
ARRESTS
™
Donald Lee Dustin Blevins,
24, Reagan Mill Road,
Maryville, was arrested by
Alcoa Police officers Nov. 7
on charges of theft less than
$500, criminal trespass,
violation of probation granted
after a felony conviction and
two counts of misdemeanor
failure to appear. He is being
held in lieu of $1,972 bond
pending 1:30 p.m. Monday
and Wednesday hearings
in Blount County General
Sessions Court, and without
bond pending a 9 a.m. Friday
hearing in Blount County
Circuit Court.
™
Jimmy Donald Green, 48,
Glover Road, Rockford, was
arrested by Blount County
Sheriff’s Office deputies Nov.
7 on a charge of violation of
probation granted after a
felony conviction. He is being
held without bond pending
a 9 a.m. Friday hearing in
Blount County Circuit Court.
™
Conner Thomas Jarnagin,
25, Knoxville, was arrested
by Alcoa Police officers Nov.
6 on a charge of theft less
than $500. He was released
on $500 bond pending a 1:30
p.m. Wednesday hearing in
Blount County General Sessions Court.
Arrested for contempt of
court:
Denny Michael Moore, 34,
Knoxville
™
CITATIONS
™
Tammy Marie Ogle, 39,
Watson Drive, Maryville, was
cited by Alcoa Police officers
on a charge of theft by
shoplifting at 1:04 p.m. Nov.
6 at Walmart, 1030 Hunters
Crossing Drive, Alcoa. She is
scheduled to appear at a 1:30
p.m. Dec. 3 hearing in Blount
County General Sessions
Court. She was also issued a
trespass order from Walmart.
THEFTS
Alcoa
An employee at Twin City
Nissan, 3247 Alcoa Highway,
Alcoa, reported at 9:58 a.m.
Nov. 6, that a license plate to
be used on company-owned
vehicles was either lost or
stolen from the dealership.
The plate was valued at $26.
™
Blount County
Susan L. Sawicki, Fontana
Avenue, Maryville, reported at
6:54 a.m. Nov. 6 that a package was apparently stolen
from her porch. Tracking on
the package showed it had
already been delivered. An
antique metal chair was also
taken from her porch. The
items were valued at $300.
™
™
Danny L. Williamson, Bruce
Street, Walland, reported at
10:14 a.m. Nov. 6 that someone kicked open a door of his
residence. He said that when
the door opened, the alarm
went off and the suspect
must have fled and did not
make entrance into the home.
Damage estimated at $700.
™
Hayden C. Bright, Wonderland Drive, Louisville, reported
at 3:52 a.m. Nov. 7 that he
awoke to find a Chevrolet
Impala in his driveway with
the headlights on. He and his
stepson confronted a male
and female in the vehicle,
who then sped away. Bright
noticed the driver-side door
of his Honda Civic, parked in
the driveway, was open. A
total of $540 was missing
from the vehicle. Bright said
the vehicle was locked.
Information contained
in Blount Records is
compiled from official
public records available
for inspection at city/
county governmental
and public safety
offices, as well as the
various judicial offices.
Births are provided by
area hospitals.
outside wall on one side of
the garage, and several rafters in the attic were charred.
There was also damage to
items stored in the attic. The
homeowner was identified
as Charles Long. No one was
injured. Firefighters cleared
the scene at 7:23 p.m.
OTHER REPORTS
Maryville
A manager at Food City,
2135 E. Broadway Ave.,
Maryville, reported at 1:55
p.m. Nov. 6 that a customer
attempted to pay for merchandise with a counterfeit
$20 bill. The customer said he
received the bill from a bank
in Alcoa. The bill was taken
and placed into evidence at
Maryville Police Department.
Legal options explained.
™
BIRTHS
University Of Tennessee
Hospital/Knoxville
Oct. 27
Matthew and Tiffany Davis,
Seymour, boy, Gannon Gary
Robert Davis
™
™
Jonathan and Sallie Barker,
Maryville, girl, Sallie Belle
Barker
Oct. 28
Allen Wood and Roma
Campbell, Maryville, girl,
Nikari Elise Wood
™
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Maryville
Jacqueline A. Weinstein, Atchley Apartments,
Maryville, reported at 1:06
a.m. Nov. 7 that her wallet
was stolen from her bedroom.
The wallet and contents were
valued at $1,300. Investigation is ongoing.
™
™
An employee at Shoe Dept.
Encore, 104 Foothills Mall
Drive, Maryville, reported at
11:08 a.m. Nov. 6 that a man
came in the store wearing
house shoes, put the house
shoes in the box for a pair
of Wolverine boots and then
wore the boots out of the
store without paying. The employee followed the man out
of the mall before the subject
fled in a vehicle. The boots
were valued at $95.
™
Blount County Clerk
Oct. 9
Joshua Norris Williamson,
26, and Meghan Michelle
Nash, 23, both of Maryville
™
Oct. 10
Daniel Bryant Cummings,
26, and Amy Nicole Snoderly,
28, both of Crofton Ky.
™
™
Robert Blake Wrinkle, 24,
and Megan Renee Lowery, 30,
both of Jacksonville, Fla.
™
Charles Anthony Martinez,
45, and Amy Lynne Campbell,
33, both of Maryville
™
Dennis Joseph Sarson, 39,
and Cynthia Ellen Kagarice,
50, both of Alcoa
™
Brandon Scott Smelcer, 22,
and Holly Renee Perry, 24,
both of Maryville
Deanna E. Hoods, Farmview Drive, Maryville, reported
at 6:40 p.m. Nov. 6 that
she discovered $8,000 cash
missing from a safe inside the
residence. Her husband, David
M. Hood, said he last saw the
money sometime around the
middle of September. There
were no signs of forced entry
to the residence and no other
items were missing. Legal
options explained.
™
FIRE
Coleman Joel Wright, 34,
and Marci Joann Bullock, 34,
both of Maryville
Blount County
Firefighters responded to
2132 Sentell Circle, Maryville,
at 5:44 p.m. Nov. 6 to a fire
in a detached garage. Seven
firefighters and three trucks
began arriving at 5:54 p.m.
and had the fire under control
by 5:58 p.m. Firefighters said
the fire started as a result of
a heating apparatus around
a doghouse located next to
the garage. There was minor
structural damage to the
™
DEATHS
REAVELY, MICHAEL, 51 , of
Maryville, died Friday, Oct.
31, 2014. Survivors include
mother, Wilma Reavely;
sister, Debbie Reavely. No
services are scheduled at
this time. Smith Funeral
and Cremation Service.
RECORDS POLICY
Michael Aaron Shrout, 22,
and Nattia Jane Brogdon, 22,
both of Rockford
™
Cody Scott Lane, 25 and
Christin Michelle Walker, 25,
both of Maryville
™
Brandon Seth Ballard, 27,
and Autumn Nicole Lutz, 26,
both of Blanchester, Ohio
™
Richard Phillip Henderson,
58, Lyman S.C., and Sharon
Lynne Cooper, 51, Friendsville
™
™
Jordan Tyler Weaver, 20,
and Rebecca Lynn Reagan,
20, both of Louisville
™
Barry William Haynes, 40,
Sevierville, and Jennifer
Darlene Hatcher, 40, Townsend
Oct. 13
Alec Tristan Holtzclaw, 27,
and Andrea Judith Savadelis,
26, both of Maryville
™
OBITUARY POLICY
ROACH, THOMAS J., 44, of
Maryville, died Thursday,
Nov. 6, 2014, at University of Tennessee Medical
Center. Arrangements are
incomplete and will be
announced by Smith Funeral and Cremation Service.
A funeral notice in The
Daily Times costs 55
cents per word plus $18
for a photo. The notice
will appear in both our
print and online editions.
For more information,
call 981-1166.
PAUL SANCYA | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
THIS AERIAL PHOTO taken July 17, 2013, shows the city of Detroit.
Judge OKs bankruptcy
exit plan for Detroit
BY ED WHITE
The Associated Press
DETROIT — A judge
cleared Detroit to emerge
from bankruptcy Friday,
approving a turnaround
plan that will require discipline after years of corruption, mismanagement
and an exodus of residents
brought this one-time
industrial powerhouse to
financial ruin.
“What happened in
Detroit must never happen
again,” Judge Steven Rhodes said in bringing the
case to a close a remarkably speedy 16 months
after Detroit — the cradle of the auto industry
— became the biggest city
in U.S. history to file for
bankruptcy.
The plan calls for cutting
retiree pensions by 4.5 percent, erasing $7 billion of
debt and spending $1.7 billion to demolish thousands
of blighted buildings, make
the city safer and improve
long-neglected basic services.
In signing off on the
plan, Rhodes made a fervent plea to residents who
expressed sorrow and
disgust about the city’s
woes.
“Move past your anger.
Move past it and join in the
work that is necessary to
fix this city,” he said. “Help
your city leaders do that.
It is your city.”
LETHAL COMBO
The Motor City was
brought down by a combination of factors, including misrule at City Hall, a
long decline in the auto
industry, and a flight to
the suburbs that caused
the population to plummet
to 688,000 from 1.2 million in 1980. The exodus
has turned entire neighborhoods into desolate,
boarded-up landscapes.
With more square miles
than Manhattan, Boston
and San Francisco combined, Detroit didn’t have
enough tax revenue to cover pensions, retiree health
insurance and buckets of
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
FEDERAL JUDGE STEVEN RHODES
closed Detroit’s bankruptcy in
16 months.
debt sold to keep the budget afloat.
“Detroit’s inability to
provide adequate municipal services runs deep and
has for years. It is inhumane and intolerable, and
it must be fixed,” the judge
said.
Rhodes praised decisions that settled the most
contentious issues in the
bankruptcy case, including a deal to prevent the
sell-off of world-class art
at the Detroit Institute of
Arts and a consensus that
prevented pension cuts
from getting even worse
for thousands of retirees.
He said the pension deal
“borders on the miraculous,” though he acknowledged the cuts could still
cause severe misfortune
for some.
MILESTONE
Politicians and civic leaders, including Michigan
Gov. Rick Snyder, hailed
Friday’s milestone. Museum leaders said it means
“there are good days ahead
for our city,” while Detroit
Regional Chamber President and CEO Sandy K.
Baruah declared Detroit
to be “on the cusp of a new
era and primed to reinvent itself in a way many
people did not think possible.”
“Exiting bankruptcy so
effectively and thoughtfully has wiped out decades
of mismanagement and
created a historic opportunity to move the city
without mortgaging its
future,” Baruah said.
The case concluded in
lightning speed by bankruptcy standards. The success was largely due to a
series of deals between
Detroit and major creditors, especially retirees
who agreed to accept smaller pension checks after the
judge said they had no protection under the Michigan
Constitution. Also, bond
insurers with more than $1
billion in claims dropped
their push to sell off art and
settled for much less.
It took more than two
years for a smaller city,
Stockton, California, to get
out of bankruptcy. San Bernardino, a Calif. city even
smaller than Stockton, is
still operating under Chapter 9 protection more than
two years after filing.
ALL OR NOTHING
Rhodes had to accept
Detroit’s remedy or reject
it in full, not pick pieces.
His appointed expert,
Martha “Marti” Kopacz of
Boston, said it was “skinny” but “feasible,” and she
linked any future success
to the skills of the mayor
and City Council and a
badly needed overhaul of
technology at City Hall.
The most unusual feature
of the plan is an $816 million pot of money funded
by the state, foundations,
philanthropists and the
Detroit Institute of Arts.
The money will forestall even deeper pension cuts and also avert
the sale of city-owned art
at the museum — a step
the judge warned “would
forfeit Detroit’s future.”
Mayor Mike Duggan, in
office less than a year, is
the fourth mayor since
2008, when Kwame Kilpatrick resigned in a scandal.
A dreadful debt deal under
Kilpatrick that locked
Detroit into a high interest rate when rates were
falling during the recession contributed to the
bankruptcy.
Half of all stars may lie outside galaxies
The Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The universe may be full of reclusive stars — not
washed-up Hollywood stars, but the kind
lurking deep in the cosmos.
Scientists reported Thursday that as
many as half of all stars may lie outside
galaxies.
Individually, these lonesome stars are too
faint to detect. But together, they create a
hazy background of fluctuating near-infrared light. A team of astronomers from the
U.S., Japan and Korea say the diffuse glow
appears to be from stars booted out of their
galaxies by mergers and collisions.
The measurements by Michael Zemcov
of the California Institute of Technology
and his colleagues were made on two suborbital rocket flights, launched in 2010 and
2012 from New Mexico, and validated by
NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope.
NASA program scientist Michael Garcia
said this diffuse glow between galaxies is
as bright as all the known galaxies combined, and is redefining galaxies.
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BLOUNT COUNTY | 5A
THE DAILY TIMES
Saturday, November 8, 2014
www.thedailytimes.com
What’s next for gay marriage?
The Associated Press
JEFF ROBERSON | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
REV. KATIE HOTZE-WILTON SIGNS a Missouri marriage license Wednesday after performing a marriage ceremony for April Dawn Breeden and her long-time partner Crystal Pearis at City Hall in
St. Louis.
JUDGE: Ruling aligns with conservatism
FROM 1A
again shows Sutton “tries to call them as
he sees them,” and demonstrates a belief
that “the voters and elected branches,
rather than unelected judges, should make
changes like marriage equality.”
During Aug. 6 arguments in Cincinnati,
in which the panel heard six cases from
four states in the biggest hearing of its
kind on the issue, Sutton’s questions and
comments made it apparent he would
be the swing vote, if not which way he
was headed.
Judge Deborah Cook, also a George W.
Bush appointee, appeared clearly in favor
of the states’ arguments, while Judge Martha Craig Daugherty, appointed by Democratic President Bill Clinton, insisted that
it is right for the courts to intervene when
people are being deprived of their constitutional right to equal treatment.
Some of Sutton’s questions signaled
his eventual ruling, as he asked attorneys for same-sex couples whether the
courts are the best place for legalizing
gay marriage.
“I would have thought the best way to
get respect and dignity is through the
democratic process,” Sutton said during
the arguments.
Sutton expressed a similar philosophy
in the 2011 health care ruling, concluding
Congress had the right to require people
to buy health insurance or face a penalty. He wrote that time would show the
strengths and weaknesses of the mandate,
“allowing the people’s political representatives, rather than their judges, to have
the primary say over its utility.”
Sutton, state solicitor for Ohio in the late
1990s when Republican George Voinovich
was governor, got his bachelor’s degree
from Williams College and his law degree
in 1990. He clerked for Supreme Court
Justices Lewis Powell and Antonin Scalia.
The conservative Scalia a few years ago
called Sutton “one of the very best law
clerks I ever had.”
Bush nominated him to the federal bench
in 2001, but because of liberal opposition,
he wasn’t confirmed until 2003.
California Sen. Dianne Feinstein, was
one of only two Democrats to support his
appointment to the appeals court, praising
him as “bright, well-qualified.”
“I don’t think this man is going to be a
biased judge,” she said at the time.
One of his former 6th Circuit clerks,
Harvard Law School lecturer Leah Litman, said Sutton was tireless in working
out his opinions, spending countless hours
reading old rulings and seeking feedback
from clerks and colleagues on arguments
and counter-arguments.
“He really is everything you would want
a judge to be,” she said. “He made me
believe in the law.”
TVA: 2,000 jobs cut to hit savings target
FROM 1A
a competitive salary to keep
top talent.
“We could have hired
someone for less, but I don’t
think we’d be getting the
results that we are at TVA
if we had,” Ritch said.
U.S. Rep. John Duncan,
R-Knoxville, criticized
the increase through his
spokesman Patrick Newton, who said that “no one
in the federal government
should be earning more
than the president.”
TVA is the nation’s largest public utility, serving 9
million people in parts of
Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Kentucky, Georgia, North Carolina and
Virginia.
Johnson is leading an
effort to cut $500 million
in annual operating costs
at TVA by 2015. The agency
recently cut 2,000 jobs to
help achieve that target.
Virgin Galactic looks to resume tests in 2015
The Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.
— The space tourism company that suffered a tragic
setback when its experimental rocket-powered
spaceship broke apart over
the California desert could
resume test flights as early
as next summer if it can finish building a replacement
craft, its CEO says.
After more than two years
of work, it’s beginning to
look like a spaceship,
but Virgin Galactic CEO
George Whitesides said
there’s much more to be
done, from relatively simple things such as installing
windows to the more complex fitting of flight controls
and other wiring.
The ship — dubbed SpaceShipTwo Serial No. 2 —
will replace one that was
destroyed last week after its
feathering system that controls descent deployed pre-
maturely and aerodynamic
forces ripped it apart, killing the co-pilot and seriously injuring the pilot.
In the wake of the accident, workers have focused
on building the new ship.
“That’s provided some
solace to all of us, and I
think there’s sort of a therapeutic benefit to folks to be
able to put their energies
into constructive work,”
Whitesides told The Associated Press.
WASHINGTON — A
decision by a panel of federal judges to uphold anti-gay
marriage laws in four states
has created a split among
the nation’s appeals courts
and made it very likely that
the Supreme Court will
review the issue.
But it is unclear whether
the matter will reach the
justices in time for a decision in June.
Lawyers for same-sex
couples in Kentucky,
Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee said they plan to ask
the high court to reverse
Thursday’s 2-1 ruling from
a panel of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in
Cincinnati.
That court found that
nothing in the Constitution gives same-sex couples a right to marry.
It was the first time an
appellate court ruled in
favor of state bans since a
Supreme Court decision
struck part of the federal anti-gay marriage law.
Most courts have taken
that decision to mean
states cannot forbid samesex unions.
The Supreme Court is
under no obligation to
the take the case, but Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg
recently said a split among
the appellate courts would
make her court’s involvement likely.
Last month, before there
was such a division, the
justices turned away
appeals from five states
that sought to uphold
their bans, even though
same-sex plaintiffs who
won in the lower courts
also pressed the Supreme
Court to intervene.
The effect of the Supreme
Court’s denial, and a subsequent appeals court ruling in the West, was to permit same-sex marriage or
remove the legal underpinnings of state bans in nearly three dozen states.
Some essential things
to know about the gay
marriage movement and
where it’s headed:
WHEN WILL THE HIGH
COURT HEAR IT?
The biggest question
now appears to be one of
timing.
If both sides can file
their written arguments
by late December, the justices should have enough
time to schedule argument
in the spring and decide
the matter by late June.
The court usually fills
its calendar for the term
by mid-January, so if a
same-sex marriage case
is squeezed out, it would be
pushed back into the term
that begins next October.
An argument in the fall of
2015, and a likely decision
in the spring of 2016, could
make gay marriage more of
an issue in the 2016 presidential campaign.
Another issue for the
justices is which case to
take.
Federal judges in Kentucky and Michigan struck
down each state’s gay marriage ban. The cases from
Ohio and Tennessee were
more limited.
One other possibility
is Idaho, which lost its
case at the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in
San Francisco, and could
appeal that ruling to the
Supreme Court.
Idaho’s attorney general, Lawrence Wasden, said
the state intends to appeal,
“but we don’t have a firm
timeline for when that will
happen.”
WHY THE DIFFERENT
COURT RULINGS?
Federal appeals court
have no obligation to fall
in line with each other,
and indeed, disagreement
on important matters is a
major factor in Supreme
Court review.
The surprising thing has
been how one court after
another has lined up in support of gay marriage since
the Supreme Court’s June
2013 decision in Windsor v.
U.S. But that decision itself
divided the court 5 to 4, and
while support for samesex marriage has increased
dramatically, there is still
significant opposition.
Of course, Circuit Judge
Jeffrey Sutton made clear
in his ruling Thursday
that what he thinks about
same-sex marriage as a
policy matter is beside
the point.
Sutton wrote in his
majority opinion that lower courts remain bound
by a one-sentence decision dismissing a gay marriage case from Minnesota in 1972, even though
other courts have said the
decision no longer carries any force. He also
disagreed with the other
courts when he said judges should let the political process play out, not
impose their will through
judicial decree.
One last note on judges:
All the judges who have
voted to uphold anti-gay
marriage laws are Republican appointees. Rulings
striking down state bans
have been made by Democratic and Republican
appointees alike.
WHAT IS THE STATUS
OF OTHER CASES?
The 5th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in New
Orleans has scheduled
argument in January in
cases from Texas, where
a judge struck down the
state’s ban, and Louisiana, where the ban was
upheld.
Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi has asked
the 11th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals in Atlanta to
review a judge’s ruling that
state law limiting marriage
to a man and a woman is
unconstitutional.
Cases also are making
their way through courts
in five states covered by
the 8th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals in St. Louis that
do not permit same-sex
couples to marry. A state
judge and a federal judge
in Missouri have ruled in
favor of same-sex couples,
but those rulings do not
apply statewide.
THE TALLY
Same-sex marriage is
legal in 32 states, the District of Columbia and parts
of Missouri.
Kansas, Montana and
South Carolina are continuing their legal fight
against same-sex marriage,
despite rulings from federal appeals courts that
oversee those states that
concluded gay and lesbian
couples have the right to
marry.
Gay and lesbian couples
may not marry in Alabama,
Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, most of Missouri,
Montana, Nebraska, North
Dakota, Ohio, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee and Texas.
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Saturday, November 8, 2014
Money&Markets
+19.46
6-MO T-BILLS
.05%
q
-.01
30-YR T-BONDS
3.03%
CombinedStocks
q
-.07
CRUDE OIL
$78.65
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READ ABOUT THE KING OF ASSYRIA IN TODAY’S FEATURES FROM THE BIBLE. 10A
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2014
THE DAILY TIMES
Faith at home plate
JOY KIMBROUGH | THE DAILY TIMES
IT DOESN’T MATTER IF you are Catholic, Protestant or Jew, author Bryan Steverson says his book on baseball and faith contains elements from all walks of faith.
Maryville author gives different side to America’s pastime
BY MELANIE TUCKER
[email protected]
ABOUT THE BOOK
Bryan Steverson’s love of baseball
runs deeper than a set of cleats on a
soggy field and farther than a long
home run.
He’s one of five generations of his
family to play the game. He’s a baseball historian, a collector of baseball
memorabilia and now the author of
a second book on the game, called
“Baseball — A Special Gift from
God.” The book isn’t about his time
on the field or members of his family. Steverson, instead, has interviewed current and past players in
the big leagues and done painstaking research. One vein that
runs through the stories of Jackie
Robinson, Henry Aaron, Brett
Butler, Stan Musial, Roberto Clemente, Dale Murphy, Clayton
Kershaw and many others is one
of faith, this author said. Some
of the stories are widely known
while others are not.
Bryan Steverson’s latest book,
“Baseball — A Special Gift from
God,” was just released by Westbow
Press. It is available at Amazon.com,
barnesandnoble.com, and Westbow
Press. The book retails for $22.95.
more than 40 years he’s been pastor
at Bethel Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala.
Steverson has become good friends
with Greason, who is now 90. Steverson attended a ceremony in 2012
where Greason received the Congressional Gold Medal, the nation’s
highest civilian honor.
A SUNDAY VISIT
A HIGHER CALLING
Steverson tells the powerful story of The Rev. William Greason, who was a
high school baseball standout. He was inducted into
the Marines in 1943 and
landed on Iwo Jima in
1945.
Greeson had carried a small Bible with
him during the war.
He saw men dying
around him and
looked up toward
heaven to make
God a promise.
“If you get me
off this island,
whatever you
want me to do,
I’ll do it,” Steverson said
Greason
prayed.
Greason
went on
to pitch
BRYAN STEVERSON OF MARYVILLE shares one of the many stories in his new book “Baseball
— A Spiritual Gift from God.” Baseball weaves through five generations of his family. He
makes a connection to the pastime and elements of faith.
in the segregated Negro Leagues.
He became a Negro League AllStar with his fastballs and curves.
He played in the last Negro World
Series in 1948. Then, in 1954, his talent helped him become the first
black pitcher to become a Saint Louis Cardinal.
But that prayer uttered in the
throes of battle on Iwo Jima was to
be kept. Greason felt a call into the
ministry and he did just that. For
The Rev. Billy Sunday is referred
to as the precursor to evangelist
Billy Graham. Sunday played for the
Chicago White Stockings, where
he stayed for eight years. He then
moved on to the Pittsburgh Alleghenys and the Philadelphia Phillies.
But this outfielder also answered
a higher calling. It is estimated
that 100 million people heard him
preach.
He even made a visit to Maryville,
on Jan. 24, 1923, Steverson discovered and wrote in his book. The
Daily Times reported on it and said
2,500 people were in attendance.
The population of the city at that
time was only 3,739, Steverson says
in the book.
“How did they get that many people in there?” Steverson asked.
There are other players in the book
who made their faith their focus
while playing the game. Steverson
said Clayton Kershaw, a pitcher for
the Dodgers, is a modern day example of someone who uses his talent
for a greater good. He and his wife
work to help orphans in Africa.
“He is one of the best examples
of a man of God,” Steverson said.
“He has won baseball’s top awards,
SEE PASTIME, 12A
8A
FAITH | 9A
THE DAILY TIMES
Saturday, November 8, 2014
www.thedailytimes.com
DAILY CALENDAR
PLAYTIME
MARYVILLE FARMERS’ MARKET
PRESENTS THE “HOLLY DAYS”
MARKET: Last weekend’s
hard freeze brought the East
Tennessee growing season
to an end — which is pretty
convenient, since the final
Maryville Farmers’ Market
will take place from 9 a.m.
to 2 p.m. today. It’s not just
any old market day, not that
there are anything wrong
with those: It’s a beautiful
thing to see local farmers
and vendors lined up in tents
along Founders Square (beside Citizens Bank of Blount
County on East Broadway
Avenue), hawking barrels
and tubs and bins of fresh
produce, while live music
takes place on the stage area
a few yards away. It’s one
of our favorite things to do
on Saturday mornings: The
fellowship alone is worth the
visit, and you’re supporting
family farms in a way you just
can’t do at the grocery store.
So we heartily encourage
you to make one last trek to
the “Holly Days Market” this
weekend, which will feature
vendors selling the last produce of the season, as well
as a variety of handmade
crafts and edibles that make
for fantastic Christmas gifts.
And did we mention there
will be live music throughout
the duration? That lineup
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
THE FINAL MARYVILLE FARMERS’ MARKET, “Holly Days Market,” will take place from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. today.
includes Roscoe Morgan at 9
a.m., Maddie Carpenter at 11
a.m., John “The Gritte Fritter”
Dupree and Abigail Sinders
(“Grit and Ginger”) at noon
and Shady Banks at 1 p.m. It’s
free to just go and chat and
enjoy the songs.
CLASSES OFFERED
WOMEN’S SELF DEFENSE: A class is
being offered for women ages
13 and up on Monday nights,
from 7 to 8:30 at Alnwick
Community Center, 2146 Big
Springs Road in Maryville.
Instructor is Roy Shields. For
more information, visit www.
smokymountainselfdefense.
com or call 977-7837.
CLUBS,
ORGANIZATIONS
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR
UNIFORM SERVICES: Group
meets the third Tuesday of
each month at 11 a.m. at RJ’s
Courtyard on Airport Highway.
For more information, contact
retired Capt. Tom Teague at
789-5896 or retired Master
Sgt. Jim Watson at 389-1400.
BLOUNT COUNTY BEEKEEPERS
ASSOCIATION: Meets the second Monday of each month
except in September and
December, from 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. at the Blount County
Public Library, Sharon Lawson
Room. For more information, contact Dennis Barry,
president, at 414-2116 or
[email protected].
SELF HELP,
SUPPORT GROUPS
EDITOR’S NOTE: For a listing of
Alcoholics Anonymous, Al-
Anon and Al-Ateen meetings,
please see this section every
Wednesday.
UT HOSPICE ADULT GRIEF
SUPPORT GROUP: Meets the
first and third Tuesday of each
month from 5 to 6:30 p.m. at
the UT Hospice office, 2270
Sutherland Ave. in Knoxville.
A light supper is served. For
more information or to reserve
a spot, call Brenda Fletcher at
544-6277.
DIVORCE CARE: This weekly
divorce seminar and support
group meets from 6 to 8 p.m.
Wednesdays in Room 340 at
Monte Vista Baptist Church.
For more information, contact
the church at 982-6070 or
[email protected].
HAVEN HOUSE: Offers an adult
therapeutic support group and
a child therapeutic support
group on Mondays to victims
and survivors of domestic
abuse, facilitated by licensed
therapist. For more information, call the outreach office
at 983-6818. A 24-hour crisis
hotline is also available at
982-1087.
SMOKY MOUNTAIN CANCER
SUPPORT GROUP: An American
Cancer Society self-help group
providing support for people
with cancer, their families and
friends, meets at 6 p.m. the
first Monday of each month
at the First Presbyterian
Church in Sevierville. For more
information, call Alice Grady at
428-5834 or 1-800-ACS-2345.
HOPE FOR TODAY: A self-help
group providing support for
people with cancer, their
families and friends, meets
at 7 p.m. the first Monday of
each month at Piney Grove
Baptist Church in Maryville.
For more information, call
Director Frances Williamson at
982-7872.
CANCERNET FOR CANCER PATIENTS,
FAMILIES AND FRIENDS: Meets
at 7 p.m. the third Tuesday of
each month at the American
Cancer Society, 871 Weisgarber
Road, Knoxville. For information 1-800-ACS-2345.
AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY’S
LOOK GOOD ... FEEL BETTER:
Meets 10 a.m.-noon the first
Monday of each month at
the Blount Memorial Cancer
Center, Maryville. The program
teaches women cancer
patients techniques to help
restore their appearance and
self-image and also how to
deal with sociological side
effects experienced during
treatment. Light refreshments
served. For information or to
register for the free program,
call 980-4939.
COMPASSIONATE FRIENDS: Meets
at 6:30 p.m. the fourth
Monday of each month at
Blount Memorial Hospital
auditorium. This is a support
group for parents who have
experienced the loss of a child
of any age. For information,
call 386-4489 and leave
message.
Weinbaum, Blount County
veterans affairs service
director, will speak during
this part of the service that
also will feature a slide
show paying tribute to
those veterans who served
in the past.
PILGRIM TEMPLE MISSIONARY
BAPTIST CHURCH, 523 HOMER
AVE., ROCKFORD
SUNDAY: The congregation
and staff will celebrate
Pastor Dextor Mahone’s
13th pastoral anniversary.
Both Pastor Mahone and
his wife, Sheila Mahone,
will be honored at two
services. At 11 a.m. the Rev.
Billy Morrison, associate
minister of St. Paul Baptist
Church, Knoxville will
preach. The Rev. Terry Lynn
Jordan, pastor of Divine
Purpose Worship Center,
Maryville will speak at 3
p.m.
VILLAGE MISSIONARY BAPTIST
CHURCH, 117 MAIN ROAD,
EAGLETON VILLAGE,
MARYVILLE
SUNDAY: Old Timers Day and
a Thanksgiving service will
be held. The Dwight Waters
Singers will perform. Lunch
will follow the service.
GET THE WORD OUT
FALL FESTIVALS/
OLD TIMERS DAY
EAST WALLAND MISSIONARY
BAPTIST CHURCH, 720 E.
MILLERS COVE ROAD, WALLAND
TODAY: The women’s group
will conduct a Fall Festival
fundraiser from 9 a.m.-2
p.m. at Rocky Branch Community Center, 4632 Rocky
Branch Road, Walland. It will
include food, games and a
large rummage sale.
MARYVILLE FIRST UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH, 804
MONTVALE STATION ROAD,
MARYVILLE
SUNDAY: An Alternative Gift
Fair is set for 9 a.m.-2 p.m.
in Wesley Hall (gymnasium)
and nearby rooms. Gifts
available for purchase include those from Fair Trade
organizations, nonprofit
groups and from several
ministries from the church.
New this year, a “Trinkets
and Treasures” booth will
feature small antiques,
collectibles glassware and
Christmas decorations befitting the Sudan Women’s
Center.
PRAISE LUTHERAN CHURCH, 1850
BIG SPRINGS ROAD, MARYVILLE
SUNDAY: The church is hosting
a movie night and dessert
auction, showing “Facing the
Giants,” to help raise funds
for Thanksgiving meals for
Community Food Connection
of Blount County. Admission
is free and begins at 5 p.m.
Hamburgers, hot dogs and
drinks will be available for a
donation, and desserts available by a live auction. For
more information, call Pastor Derek Roberts, 977-5810
or log on to praiselutheran.
com.
FOOD
CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH, 100 S.
RANKIN ROAD, ALCOA
NOV. 22: The church will serve
a free community-wide
Thanksgiving Luncheon
from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Delivery
is available by calling the
church office at 982-8712
prior to Nov. 15.
FIRST UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH, 804 MONTVALE
STATION ROAD, MARYVILLE
NOV. 16: The church wide
Thanksgiving Dinner will begin at 6 p.m. Those attending are asked to bring side
dishes to share. To register,
call 983-1273 or logged on to
www.1stchurch.org.
FRIENDSVILLE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH, 204 E.
COLLEGE AVE., FRIENDSVILLE
TODAY: A chili cook-off and
fundraiser will be from 4-7
p.m. Admission is $10 per
person, and each person
attending may vote for the
best pot of chili.
PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH, 920
CHEROKEE ST., MARYVILLE
NOV. 16: A Thanksgiving dinner
will be served at 11:45 a.m.,
following the 10:45 a.m.
service.
PLEASANT HILL UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH, 503
PLEASANT HILL ROAD, MARYVILLE
SUNDAY: A potluck style
Harvest dinner will be served
following the 10:40 a.m.
worship service.
MUSIC
COLD SPRINGS COMMUNITY
CENTER, 616 COLD SPRINGS
ROAD, WALLAND
TODAY: Heaven’s Highway will
perform at a gospel singing
beginning at 6:30 p.m.
Hamburgers and hot dogs
will be available for purchase beginning at 5 p.m.
IN HIS PRESENCE CHURCH, 3725
SIX MILE ROAD, MARYVILLE
NOV. 16: The Kincaids will be
singing at 11 a.m. For more
information, log on to InHis
PresenceMaryville.com
GRAY RIDGE BAPTIST CHURCH, 2527
S. CARVER ROAD, MARYVILLE
SUNDAY: A special singing is
planned with the Kincaids at
6 p.m.
LONE OAK BAPTIST CHURCH, 831
W. LAMAR ALEXANDER
PARKWAY, MARYVILLE
SUNDAY: Gospelgrass from
Pikeville will sing at 10:30
a.m. A Fellowship Thanksgiving dinner will follow at
noon. For more information,
call Pastor Delbert Raines
at 556-1545.
MOUNT SINAI BAPTIST CHURCH,
1902 CREASON ROAD,
MARYVILLE
SUNDAY: Smoky Mountain
Pilgrims will sing at the 6
p.m. service.
OAKLAND BAPTIST CHURCH,
3501 OLD NILES FERRY ROAD,
MARYVILLE
SUNDAY: The Durdens will
sing beginning at 11 a.m.
PARKWAY BAPTIST CHURCH, 115
MCCARTER ROAD, TOWNSEND
TODAY: A singing will feature
the talents of Billy and Helen
Kirkland from Madisonville,
beginning at 6 p.m.
OTHER
CARPENTERS CAMPGROUND
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH,
3530 BEST ROAD, MARYVILLE
NOV. 15: The annual Christmas
Bazaar will be from 8 a.m.-2
p.m. at the church fellowship hall. Homemade baked
goods, candy, crafts, canned
fruits and vegetables, toys,
crafts, and handmade
Christmas decorations may
be purchased at the event.
Breakfast and lunch will be
served. The event is sponsored by the Carpenters
United Methodist Women,
and proceeds will go for
missions and UMW projects.
FOREST HILL BAPTIST CHURCH,
1850 FOREST HILL ROAD,
MARYVILLE
TODAY: The church will host its
annual rummage sale from 8
a.m. to 2 p.m. The proceeds
from the sale will go toward
youth missions.
MARYVILLE FIRST UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH, 804
MONTVALE STATION ROAD,
MARYVILLE
NOV. 12: Recovery at Maryville
is starting a new series,
Acceptance. A free dinner
will be served at 6 p.m., with
a worship service geared
to recovery will follow at 7
p.m. Small group discussions
begin at 8:10 p.m. Groups include Chemically Dependent
Men, Chemically Dependent
Women, Family Support,
separate Codependent
groups for men and women,
and an open share group.
For more information, call
Jackie North at 924-8026.
Recovery of Maryville is a part
of the Recovery at Cokesbury
network.
MT. LEBANON BAPTIST CHURCH,
3508 WILDWOOD ROAD,
MARYVILLE
TODAY: The church will host a
Children’s Consignment Sale
from 8 a.m. to noon. Many
items will be half price. There
will be children’s clothes,
infant to teens, shoes, baby
equipment, children’s CDs
and more.
SPECIAL SERVICES
ALCOA FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH,
819 GILBERT ST., ALCOA
SUNDAY: The church will observe Veterans Day with a
special worship serving beginning at 10:15 a.m. A free
lunch catered by Calhoun’s
will be held immediately
following the service. Veterans are encouraged but
not required to wear their
uniforms.
ALLEGHENY MISSIONARY
BAPTIST CHURCH, 3221
ALLEGHENY LOOP ROAD,
MARYVILLE
NOV. 11: A candlelight
ceremony is planned at 7
p.m. to honor Veterans Day
and to honor the memory
of loved ones buried in the
church ceremony. Candles
will be distributed with
any donations, and all
donations will go to the
Cemetery Fund. Refreshments will be served. In
case of rain the ceremony
will be held the following
day at 7 p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST CHURCH,
130 BETHLEHEM CHURCH
ROAD, MADISONVILLE
NOV. 26: The church’s 15th
annual Thanksgiving Eve
Service is planned for 7
p.m. The Primitive Quartet
will be special singing
guests. A light meal will
follow the service. No
ticket required. For more
information call 423-2537900.
IN HIS PRESENCE CHURCH, 3725
SIX MILE ROAD, MARYVILLE
SUNDAY: A “Soaking in God’s
Presence” youth service
will begin at 6 p.m.
EUSEBIA PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH, BURNETT STATION
ROAD, SEYMOUR
SUNDAY: The congregation
will pray for veterans and
for men and women presently in the military. Bearers of the flags and Eusebia
banner for the procession
will be veterans Tim Crawford, Ron Driesslein and
John Mechler.
KAGLEYS CHAPEL BAPTIST
CHURCH, 4301 SIX MILE ROAD,
MARYVILLE
SUNDAY: The congregation
will honor all veterans
attending the 10:30 a.m.
worship service. Nathan
10A | FAITH
THE DAILY TIMES
www.thedailytimes.com
Saturday, November 8, 2014
Recovery at Maryville, a Christ-centered,
biblically based program of recovery for
individuals and their family members who are
struggling with emotional distress and addictive issues. It is a safe place where you will
find caring people, just like yourself, to help
you deal with the hurts, habits and hang-ups
you face in order to get your life back.
205 Foothills Mall Dr, Maryville
865-984-2121
TN#255126
Full
Service
Property
Management
RentKnoxBlount.com
Every Wednesday Evening at
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Phone: 865-982-1273
www.RecoveryAtMaryville.com
Meal starts at 6:00PM,
Worship at 7:00PM
Small Group Activities at 8:10PM
All activities conclude around 8:45PM
Child care is available.
Season
Mar-Nov
ADVANCED CATALYST SYSTEMS
403 S. Union Grove Road
Friendsville, TN 37737
Just 5 1/2 miles from Foothills Mall off of Hwy 321
(Watch for the blue state directional signs)
37067460DT
Prescription Costs
Celebrating
our 35th
Season
Open
(865) 995-9245
Open Friday & Saturday 5:00-9:00
Getting You Down?
This devotional and directory is made possible by these
businesses who encourage all of us to attend worship services.
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
CEDAR POINT COMMUNITY
1225 William Blount Dr.
Maryville TN 37801
984-8896
SPRINGBROOK CHURCH
1873 N. Wright Rd.
Alcoa, 977-65541
BAPTIST
ALLEGHENY MISSIONARY
BAPTIST CHURCH
3221 Allegheny Loope Rd.
Maryville
ARMONA BAPTIST
2211 Louisville Rd.
Alcoa, 982-2607
CALL 865-982-8557
BEECH GROVE BAPTIST
1519 Topside Rd.
Louisville, 977-9315
Natalie McAmis, M.A.,
Paul Rook, M.S.,
John Berry, M.S., &
Beth Galloway, Au.D.
BETHEL BAPTIST
132 Bethel Church Rd.
Townsend, 448-6972
www.bhssinc.com
BETHEL BAPTIST
Hall Rd., Alcoa, 982-6391
BLOUNT HEARING & SPEECH SERVICES, INC.
Genuine Care + Advanced Technology
1617 East Broadway, Maryville, Tn
Bobby Beaty
Used Cars
327 County Farm Rd.
Friendsville, TN 37737
Bobby Beaty
(865) 984-4836
Cell (865) 567-5329
&#SPBEXBZ"WF.BSZWJMMF5/
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BUTLER’S WRECKER SERVICE
Servicing Your Towing & Recovery Needs
Light & Heavy Duty Towing
t24 HOUR SERVICEt
Your Hometown, Family Owned Service Since 1956
865-982-9346
Three Locations to Serve You
4726 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy
405 Home Ave., Maryville
773 East Lincoln Rd, Alcoa
MARK A. RUSSELL
(865) 982-4111
Cell: (865) 805-4115
Fax: (865) 983-2297
CATE-RUSSELL
INSURANCE
415 High Street
Maryville, TN 37804
[email protected]
MARBLE HILL MISSIONARY
BAPTIST
860 Marble Hill Rd.
Friendsville, 995-1799
PINEY GROVE MISSIONARY
BAPTIST
536 Blockhouse Rd.
Maryville, 983-7777
FOREST HILL BAPTIST
1850 Forest Hill Rd.
Maryville, 982-8632
MARYVILLE BAPTIST
TABERNACLE
1585 Mount Tabor Rd.
Maryville, 981-3909
PINEY LEVEL BAPTIST
3527 Piney Level Church
Rd. Maryville, 681-4422
FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST
3310 Old Niles Ferry Rd.
Maryville, 984-6707
MEADOWBROOK BAPTIST
Maryville, 984-8942
FRIENDSVILLE FIRST BAPTIST
403 N. Farnum St.
Friendsville, 995-2130
MEADOWBROOK
MISSIONARY BAPTIST
1104 McArthur Rd.
Maryville, 984-1374
GRANDVIEW BAPTIST
2208 Tuckaleechee Pike
Maryville, 982-8530
MEMORIAL BAPTIST
2342 Duncan Rd.
Maryville, 984-0465
FOOTHILLS WORSHIP
MINISTRY BAPTIST
3418 Sevierville Rd.
Maryville, 977-8455
GRAY RIDGE INDEPENDENT
BAPTIST
2527 S. Carver Rd.
Maryville, 982-2364
HARMONY BAPTIST
778 E. Lincoln Rd.
Maryville, 824-8329
BIRCHFIELD BAPTIST
4331 Calderwood Hwy.
Maryville, 856-6691
HARVEST FIELD BAPTIST
806 Blair Loop Rd.
Walland, 980-5763
BROADWAY BAPTIST
2329 E. Broadway Ave.
Maryville, 982-6012
HICKORY VALLEY BAPTIST
CHURCH
3920 W. Lamar Alex. Pkwy.,
Lenoir City
CALVARY BAPTIST
100 S. Rankin Rd.
Alcoa, 982-8712
CEDAR GROVE BAPTIST
5302 Nails Creek Rd.
Maryville, 983-0270
CENTENARY BAPTIST
814 Calderwood Hwy.
Maryville, 856-5657
CENTRAL POINT BAPTIST
3617 Central Point Road
Rockford, 865-984-8896
i/FFEB)"6- (JWFVTBDBMMw
PILGRIM TEMPLE BAPTIST
523 Homer Ave.
Rockford, 681-3135
BIBLE BAPTIST
305 N. 6th St.
Maryville, 984-1153
CENTRAL BAPTIST
962 Springbrook Rd.
Alcoa, 982-5663
t$BST-JHIU5SVDLTt.PUPSDZDMF4QFDJBMJTUTt)PVS3FDPWFSZ
MAPLE GROVE BAPTIST
3201 Carpenters Grade Rd.
Maryville, 681-2772
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
OF ALCOA
819 Gilbert St.
Alcoa, 982-2663
CHILHOWEE BAPTIST
1905 E. Broadway Ave.
Maryville, 981-2992
COLD SPRINGS BAPTIST
1226 Cold Springs Rd.
Walland, 982-3206
HIGH PRAISES BAPTIST
3440 W. Lamar Alex. Pkwy.
Friendsville, 995-0032
HILLCREST MISSIONARY
BAPTIST
3504 Laws Chapel Rd.
Maryville, 982-2697
HILLVIEW BAPTIST
2759 Mentor Rd.
Louisville, 977-1384
HOPEWELL BAPTIST
526 Hopewell Rd.
Maryville, 379-0277
IMMANUEL BAPTIST
4641 Morganton Rd.
Maryville, 856-2886
KAGLEY’S CHAPEL
4301 Six Mile Road
Maryville
DOTSON MEMORIAL BAPTIST
814 Dotson Memorial Rd.
Maryville, 984-9240
LAKEVIEW BAPTIST
4905 Old Knoxville Hwy.
Rockford, 579-0802
EAST ALCOA BAPTIST
152 N. Wright Rd.
Alcoa, 982-9551
LANIER OPEN BIBLE
BAPTIST
2940 Calderwood Hwy.
Maryville, 856-8622
EAST MARYVILLE BAPTIST
1150 Brown School Rd.
Maryville, 982-4960
EAST WALLAND BAPTIST
912 E. Miller’s Cove Rd.
Walland
EVERETT HILLS BAPTIST
401 S. Everett High Rd.
Maryville, 982-7890
ELLEJOY BAPTIST CHURCH
1290 Ellejoy Rd., Seymour
FAITH BAPTIST
3317 Old Knoxville Hwy.
Maryville, 984-0420
FELLOWSHIP BAPTIST
1102 Big Springs Rd.
Maryville, 681-2823
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
MARYVILLE
202 W. Lamar Alexander
Pkwy. Maryville, 982-5531
LAUREL BANK BAPTIST
211 County Farm Rd.
Friendsville, 984-9162
LAUREL VALLEY BAPTIST
1148 Laurel Road
Townsend, 448-8788
LIBERTY BAPTIST
6501 Howard School Rd.
Maryville, 856-8624
LITTLE RIVER FELLOWSHIP
1606 Carpenters
Campground Rd.
Maryville, 548-8662
LONE OAK BAPTIST
831 W. Lamar Alexander
Pkwy. Maryville, 977-0686
MADISON AVE. BAPTIST
1918 Madison Ave.
Maryville, 982-8785
ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SERVICES
ARCHITECT RON WILLIAMS
COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL PROJECTS
$1000 TO $1 MILLION
NEW CONSTRUCTION - ADDITIONS
RENOVATION - REMODELING
865-982-8742
865-406-4495
[email protected]
NEW LIFE MINISTRIES
CHRISTIAN CENTER
5939 U.S. Hwy. 411 S.
Maryville, 898-1799
15093051
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City Drug Co.
1612 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy.,
Maryville
865-982-7162
www.citydrugsco.com
Andy Long, Scott Jenkins & Jeremy Long
COMPLETE KITCHEN & BATH
cell: 865.755.4754
office: 865.681.0010
Johnny
fax: 865.681.0031
Settlemyre
PO Box 6471
4744 Kidd Street, Maryville TN
[email protected]
www.completekitchen-bath.com
7JTJUPVSDPNQMFUFTIPXSPPNtDBMMGPSZPVSBQQPJOUNFOU
PLEASANT GROVE BAPTIST
3736 Tuckaleechee Pike
Maryville, 977-1526
PLEASANT VIEW BAPTIST
487 Cochran St., Alcoa
PROSPECT BAPTIST
MILLERS COVE MISSIONARY 519 Prospect Rd.
BAPTIST
Walland, 984-4860
317 W. Millers Cove Rd.
Walland, 984-9349
RESCUE BAPTIST
1678 Munsey Hatcher Rd.
MONTE VISTA BAPTIST
Seymour, 380-6589
1735 Old Niles Ferry Rd.
Maryville, 982-6070
REST HAVEN BAPTIST
224 E. Watt St.
MORNING STAR BAPTIST
Alcoa, 983-2693
3412 E. Lamar Alexander
RIVERVIEW BAPTIST CHURCH
Pkwy. Maryville, 681-8732
3709 Sams Rd,
Rockford
MOTHER LOVE BAPTIST
3919 Wrights Ferry Rd.
ROCKFORD BAPTIST
Louisville, 970-7554
4104 Old Knoxville Hwy.
Rockford, 982-6805
MOUNT TABOR
MISSIONARY BAPTIST
1159 Middlesettlements Rd. ROCKY BRANCH
MISSIONARY BAPTIST
Maryville, 984-6126
4620 Cambridge Rd.
Walland, 977-4187
MOUNTAIN VIEW BAPTIST
601 S. Everett High Rd.
SAINT PETER PRIMITIVE
Maryville, 681-4528
BAPTIST
140 E. Howe St.
MT. CARMEL BAPTIST
Alcoa, 984-7275
CHURCH
910 Walker School Rd.
SIX MILE BAPTIST
Maryville, 984-5206
4337 Montvale Rd.
Maryville, 982-8821
MT. LEBANON BAPTIST
3508 Wildwood Rd.
SMOKY VIEW BAPTIST
Maryville, 681-8107
2201 W. Lamar Alex. Pkwy.
Maryville, 984-5101
MT. ZION MISSIONARY
BAPTIST CHURCH
SPRINGVIEW BAPTIST
608 Ed Davis Rd.
4220 U.S. Hwy. 411 S.
Maryville, 984-6976
Maryville, 982-2804
NEW HOPE BAPTIST
ST. JOHN BAPTIST
605 Dotson Memorial Rd.
306 Bessie Harvey Ave.
Maryville, 982-3414
Alcoa, 982-8021
NEW PROVIDENCE
THIRD STREET BAPTIST
PRIMITIVE BAPTIST
411 Third St., Maryville
2633 Six Mile Rd.
809-0105.
Maryville, 977-9073
MOUNTAIN MEADOW
MISSIONARY BAPTIST
1518 Lambert Rd.
Greenback, 573-9684
TUCKALEECHEE CHAPEL
BAPTIST
2550 Tuckaleechee Pike
Maryville, 681-1124
OAKLAND BAPTIST
3501 Old Niles Ferry
Maryville, 254-8596
UNION GROVE BAPTIST
2217 Big Gully Rd.
Maryville, 856-8170
OAK STREET BAPTIST
218 Oakdale St.
Maryville, 984-5070
UNITY BAPTIST
803 Howard Jones Rd.
Maryville, 982-8280
OAKVIEW BAPTIST
2704 Ellejoy Rd.
Walland, 977-6822
VICTORY BAPTIST
1025 Montvale Rd.
Maryville, 982-2461
OLD BALLARDS CHAPEL
BAPTIST
1905 E. Old Topside Rd.
Louisville,TN 898-0480
VILLAGE MISSIONARY
BAPTIST
117 Main Rd.
Maryville, 983-4154
PILGRIM MISSIONARY
BAPTIST
920 Cherokee St.
Maryville, 681-2899
WEST MARYVILLE BAPTIST
810 W. Lamar Alex. Pkwy.
Maryville, 982-1490
DONNA B. WALKER, CPA
ACCOUNTING & TAX SERVICE
PHONE (865) 984-5019
FAX (865) 681-4525
email: [email protected]
website: www.dbwalkercpa.com
402 S. Washington, Maryville, TN 37804
Voted Best Home Cookin’ in Town
Restaurant
766 E. Lincoln Rd.
Maryville, TN 37804
865-984-7117
Open 6 Days / Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner,
Closed on Sunday
Alternative Gift Fair 2014
Sunday, November 9th
9:00 am - 2:00 pm
804 Montvale Station Rd.
Across from Maryville
Junior High School
www.1stchurchevents.org
excellence guaranteed
FOSTER’S AUTO BODY
Phone (865) 982-5614
3416 E. Lamar Alexander Parkway
FAX # (865) 681-7099
Maryville, TN 37804
[email protected]
Kingdom Kare
Child Development Center
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1833 Wright Rd., Alcoa - NOW OPEN!
2114 E. Broadway, Maryville
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www.kingdomkare.com
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email: [email protected]
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233-3323
GENERAL CONTRACTOR - 865-977-1905
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FAITH | 11A
THE DAILY TIMES
Saturday, November 8, 2014
www.thedailytimes.com
builders, inc.
865.983.0059
WILDWOOD BAPTIST
4705 Porter Circle
Maryville, 977-6650
[email protected]
www.landmbuilders.net
WOODLAND BAPTIST
2229 Little Best Rd.
Maryville, 681-9252
412 Howard Jones Rd, Maryville, TN 37801
ZIONS CHAPEL BAPTIST
3334 Zion Chapel Rd.
Louisville, 982-1941
CATHOLIC
OUR LADY OF FATIMA
860 Louisville Rd.
Alcoa, 982-3672
ST. FRANCIS CATHOLIC
7719 River Rd.
Townsend, 448-6070
CHRISTIAN
BLOUNT CHRISTIAN
323 Partnership Pkwy.
Maryville, 681-2799
LOWE’S DRUG AND
HEALTH CARE
For All Your Pharmacy
and
Medical Equipment Needs
1536 E. Broadway Ave.
FIRST CHRISTIAN
400 S. Court St.
Maryville, 983-1281
LOUISVILLE CHRISTIAN
2826 Topside Rd.
Louisville, 233-3830
MEADOWBROOK CHRISTIAN
2332 Grove St.
Maryville, 982-8241
982-3020
NEW LIFE MINISTRIES
CHRISTIAN
4729 U.S. Highway 411 S.
Maryville, 856-0333
OUTREACH CHRISTIAN
920 Calderwood Hwy.
Maryville, 984-1808
PARKWAY CHRISTIAN
FELLOWSHIP
2505 Old Niles Ferry Rd.
Maryville, 681-2253
UNITY CHRISTIAN
721 S. Everett High Rd.
Maryville, 981-2033
MILLER FUNERAL
HOME
“The Business That Service Built”
Pre-Arrangement Funeral Planning
www.millerfuneralhome.org
915 W. BROADWAY
65061817
982-6041
CLEANAIRCOMFORT.COM
Financial Representative
321 Ellis Ave., Maryville TN
Ph. 865-982-4644
[email protected]
Life and Retirement Planning
Ask Us About Health Insurance &
401(k) and 403(b) Options!
865-977-4500
©
2009 Molly Maid, Inc. Each franchise independently owned and operated.
mollymaid.com
“Fueling the American Spirit at
locally-owned Mr. Gas Marathon.”
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EPISCOPAL
ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL
314 W. Broadway Ave.
Maryville, 983-3512
SYCAMORE TREE UMC
1830 Clydesdale St.
Maryville, 983-4161
BRIGHT HOPE TABERNACLE
1017 Doll Ave.
Maryville, 984-9527
TUCKALCHEE UMC
7322 Old Tuckaleechee Rd.
Townsend, 448-2463
BUILDING FOR CHRIST
MINISTRIES
Maryville, 679-1611
UNION GROVE UMC
1151 Lane Dr.
Friendsville, 368-7118
CHURCH OF COVE
934 Cavern Rd.
Townsend, 448-6521
WALLAND UMC
309 E. Millers Cove Rd.
Walland, 738-3243
CHURCH OF THE COVE
642 Wears Valley Rd.
Townsend, 448-1929
WILLIAMSON CHAPEL UMC
1331 Williamson Chapel Rd.
Maryville, 982-4516
CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST
308 S. Long Hollow Rd
Maryville, 556-6886
CHURCH ON THE ROCK
(Full Gospel)
Vernie Lee Rd, Friendsville
FULL GOSPEL CHRISTIAN
FELLOWSHIP
3364 Centennial Church Rd.
Maryville, 983-7798
LAMPLIGHT FULL GOSPEL
602 McCammon Ave.
Maryville, 982-5475
NEW HOPE FULL-GOSPEL
123 W. Broadway Ave.
Maryville, 982-2045
CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST
706 Amerine Rd.
Maryville, 984-6390
UNITY FULL GOSPEL
129 Memorial Dr.
Maryville, 982-2512
UNITY GOSPEL
3025 Piney Level Rd.
Maryville, 984-7144
NAZARENE
JEHOVAH’S
WITNESSES
EMMANUEL CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE
1015 N. Union Grove Rd.
Friendsville, 995-0777
JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES
KINGDOM HALL
1202 Middlesettlements Rd.
Maryville, 984-7351
FIRST CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE
1610 E. Broadway Ave.
Maryville, 983-3141
KINGDOM HALL OF
JEHOVAH WITNESSES
4836 E. Lamar Alex. Pkwy.
Walland, 981-8835
LUTHERAN
PENTECOSTAL
UNITED PENTECOSTAL
904 Lincoln Rd.
Maryville, 977-8182
CHURCH OF CHRIST OF
MARYVILLE
611 Sherwood Dr.
Maryville, 983-0370
WORD OF LIFE LUTHERAN
(NALC) 627 Smithview Dr.,
Maryville
982-3457
EASTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST
2543 Sevierville Rd.
Maryville, 681-1800
METHODIST
NELSON CHAPEL CHURCH
OF CHRIST
5039 Six Mile Rd. S.W.
Maryville, 983-4972
SMOKY MOUNTAIN
CHURCH OF CHRIST
2206 Montvale Rd.
Maryville, 984-4708
CHURCH OF GOD
ALCOA-MARYVILLE
2615 E. Lamar Alex. Pkwy.
Maryville, 983-6921
CHURCH OF GOD OF
MARYVILLE
311 McNabb Place
Maryville, 982-5441
FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
1614 Venice Ave.
Maryville, 977-8224
FRONTLINE CHURCH
OF GOD
701 Front St.
Maryville, 681-2107
GREEN MEADOW
CHURCH OF GOD
610 W. Hunt Rd.
Alcoa, 982-9447
MOUNT ZION CHURCH OF
GOD HOLINESS
137 Steele St.
Alcoa, 984-3440
MOUNTAIN VIEW CHURCH
OF GOD
1638 Blockhouse Rd.
Maryville, 977-4006
BAKERS CREEK
PRESBYTERIAN
5501 9 Mile Rd.
Maryville, 856-5297
BIG SPRING
PRESBYTERIAN
115 Meadow Rd.
Friendsville, 995-9220
ALCOA FIRST UNITED
METHODIST
617 Gilbert St.
Alcoa, 982-5551
CLARK’S GROVE
CUMBERLAND
PRESBYERIAN
3137 Old Knoxville Hwy.
Maryville, 982-5280
BROADWAY UNITED
METHODIST
309 E. Broadway Ave.
Maryville, 982-6192
CLOVER HILL
PRESBYTERIAN
809 Clover Hill Rd.
Maryville, 983-8431
CARPENTERS UNITED
METHODIST
3530 Best Rd.
Maryville, 983-8419
EUSEBIA PRESBYTERIAN
Sevierville Rd. at
Burnett Stat.
Seymour, 982-6332
FAIRVIEW UNITED
METHODIST
2508 Old Niles Ferry Rd.
Maryville, 983-2080
FIRST CUMBERLAND
PRESBYTERIAN
1301 E. Broadway Ave.
Maryville, 982-7860
FIRST UNITED METHODIST
804 Montvale Station Rd.
Maryville, 982-1273
GREENBACK FIRST
PRESBYTERIAN
6790 Morganton Rd.
Greenback, 856-3922
FRIENDSVILLE BIBLE
METHODIST
108 N. Farnum St.
Friendsville, 995-2125
HOUSTON MEMORIAL
PRESBYTERIAN
813 Front St., Maryville
254-5341
FRIENDSVILLE UNITED
METHODIST
204 E. College Ave.
Friendsville, 995-9150
HIGHLAND PRESBYTERIAN
721 E. Lamar Alex. Pkwy.
Maryville, 982-9272
GREEN MEADOW UNITED
METHODIST
1633 Louisville Rd.
Alcoa, 982-5800
SMOKY MOUNTAIN
PRESBYTERIAN P.C.A.
3715 E. Lamar Alex. Pkwy.
Maryville, 983-9019
IMMANUEL UNITED
METHODIST
2349 Mentor Rd.
Louisville, 983-5889
NEW PROVIDENCE
PRESBYTERIAN
703 W. Broadway Ave.
Maryville, 983-0182
LOGANS CHAPEL UNITED
METHODIST
4626 Logans Chapel Loop
Maryville, 983-3011
MEADOW UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
1322 Cloyds Creek Rd.
Greenback, 982-4516
MIDDLESETTLEMENTS
UMC
2729 Middlesettlements Rd.
Maryville, 982-4799
MT. ZION AME ZION
1543 E. Old Topside Rd.
Louisville, 980-9023
OAKLAND UMC
234 Trignia Rd.
Greenback, 856-2710
NEW VISIONS COMMUNITY
CHURCH OF GOD
5141 U.S. Hwy. 411 S.
Maryville, 856-0059
PECKS MEMORIAL UMC
2438 Wilkinson Pike
Maryville, 984-2510
RIO SOUTH
228 Calderwood Hwy.
Maryville, 983-9141
PLEASANT HILL UMC
503 Pleasant Hill Rd.
Maryville, 983-9235
SAINTS MEMORIAL
CHURCH OF GOD IN
CHRIST
501 McGinley St.
Maryville, 977-8593
ST. JOHN UMC
2201 E. Broadway Ave.
Maryville, 983-2290
Choices
2921 Sevierville Rd.
Maryville, 984-3720
UNITARIAN
UNIVERSALIST
Locally Owned &
Serving East Tennessee Since 1996
FAIRPARK WESLEYAN
1509 Jefferson Ave.
Maryville, 981-9033
FAITHWAY IN
JESUS’ NAME
476 Sevierville Rd.,
Maryville
www.RogerLNewmanCompany.com
1029 Ross Dr., Maryville, TN 37803
865.983.2992
www.standardaero.com
FAMILY HOUSE OF PRAYER
256 Badgett St.
Alcoa, 977-6302
FIRST APOSTOLIC CHURCH
OF MARYVILLE
1723 William Blount Dr.
Maryville, 865-982-4901
FRIENDSVILLE FRIENDS
(QUAKERS) CHURCH
503 W. Hill Ave.
Friendsville, 995-9145
GOOD NEWS CENTER
3589 W. Lamar Alexander
Pkwy.
Friendsville, 995-9145
RALPH VOWELL
Agent
Support Your Local
Salvation Army!
303 Foothills Mall Dr.
Across from Maryville Post Office
Maryville, TN 37801
Bus. (865) 982-3911
Fax. (865) 984-0999
“Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.”®
GRACE COMMUNITY
115 E. Harper Ave.
Maryville, 984-0116
GRACE MEMORIAL
504 E. Lincoln Rd.
Alcoa, 983-2470
HOUSE OF GOD KEITH
DOMION
164 Badgett St.
Alcoa, 379-8124
IMPACT FELLOWSHIP
474 Ellis Ave.
Maryville, 984-4001
LIONHEART FELLOWSHIP
3222 Wrights Ferry Rd.
Louisville, 984-0302
2411 E. Broadway Ave. Maryville
983-1621
Open M-F 7:30-5:30pm &
Sat 7:30-Noon
TED’S BROADWAY BP
SUPER SERVICE STATION
We Pump Your Gas For You!
Top of the Line Mechanic
t)POFTUt'BJSt8PSL(VBSBOUFFE
MARYVILLE FRIEND’S
2044 Sequoyah Ave.
Maryville, 984-7999
t0JM$IBOHFTt#SBLF4FSWJDFt5JSF3FQBJS3FQMBDFNFOU
&OHJOF5SBOTNJTTJPO4XBQ0VU
t8FTFMMHPPEVTFEUJSFTVQJODMVEFTNPVOUJOHCBMBODJOH
MARYVILLE PILGRIM
HOLINESS
610 Rule St.
Maryville, 983-9337
&#SPBEXBZ"WFt.BSZWJMMF
Ted McKee - Owner
865-981-5742
NEW LIFE OUTREACH
2026 Lansdowne Lane
Maryville, 983-2681
NEW LIFE OUTREACH
3750 Old Knoxville Hwy.
Rockford, 984-3671
2209 Blount Avenue
Knoxville, Tennessee 37920
RIVER OAKS COMMUNITY
1220 Brown School Rd.
Maryville, 980-9088
SHEPHERD’S GLORY
7195 Old Tuckaleechee Rd.
Townsend, TN
THE LORD’S TABERNACLE
5059 Light Pink Rd.
Louisville, TN
UPPER ROOM CHURCH
419 South Farnum Road
Friendsville, 599-7925
USA CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST
2322 E. Broadway Ave.
Maryville, 977-0071
FOOTHILLS UNITARIAN
UNIVERSALIST
FELLOWSHIP
702 Burchfield Street
Maryville, 888-545-3883
Licensed
Bonded
Insured
865-970-7777
CROSSWAY COMMUNITY
CHURCH
1821 W. Broadway
Maryville, 207-7970
RIVER LIFE WORLD
OUTREACH
1412 E. Broadway Ave.
Maryville, 977-6626
SEVENTH-DAY
ADVENTIST
Join us after Church for lunch...
3749 Airport Highway | Alcoa, TN 37701
CROSSWAY CHRISTIAN
CENTER
2114 E. Broadway Ave.
Maryville, 681-7200
PRESBYTERIAN VICTORIAN
704 Regent Ct.
Maryville, 681-7984
TRINITY PRESBYTERIAN
130 Eagleton Rd.
Maryville, 982-6932
LUNCH!
CROSSROAD COMMUNITY
1102 Montvale Stat. Rd.
Maryville, 379-6400
RIVER-LIFE WORLD
OUTREACH
523 W. Lamar Alex. Pkwy.
Maryville, 980-0742
SANDY SPRING
PRESBYTERIAN
1201 Montvale Stat. Rd.
Maryville, 681-3622
6.99
CORNERSTONE
FELLOWSHIP
1338 Louisville Rd.
Alcoa, 681-2809
PINE GROVE
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
4800 Highway 95 South
Greenback, 856-6671
ROBISON CHAPEL
CUMBERLAND
PRESBYTERIAN
177 W. Howe St.
Alcoa, 984-1233
MOUNT PLEASANT AME
ZION
3664 Grade Rd.
Rockford, 977-1082
Personal Care
931 Louisville Rd
Alcoa, TN 37701
Phone: 984-8154
MORMON
CHURCH OF CHRIST
MARYVILLE CHURCH OF
CHRIST
611 Sherwood Dr.
Maryville, 983-0945
ANCHOR OF HOPE
TABERNACLE
110 N. Everett High Rd.
Maryville, 894-9325
ST. PAUL AME ZION
401 W. Broadway Ave.
Maryville, 984-5364
GOSPEL
$
OTHER
BLOUNT BIBLE
MINISTRIES
3229 Clover Hill Ridge Rd.
Maryville, 983-3658
PRESBYTERIAN
HERITAGE CHURCH
OF GOD
Maryville, 681-6389
LOUISVILLE CHURCH
OF GOD
2824 W. Old Topside Rd.
Louisville, 983-1054
FOOD MART
ST. PAUL AME
810 N. Hall Rd.
Alcoa, 984-5855
TOWNSEND CHURCH
OF GOD
323 Webb Rd.
Townsend, 448-9612
SAINT PAUL LUTHERAN
429 Sandy Springs Rd.
Maryville, 982-4285
FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
1716 Westside Dr.
Maryville, 977-8224
Call for a free, in-home consultation
and estimate.
ST. MARK’S UMC
3359 Louisville Rd.
Louisville, 977-6128
FREEDOM TO WORSHIP
2006 East Broadway
Maryville, TN
CHURCH OF GOD
Stephen Wigley, FIC
TOPSIDE CHURCH
OF GOD
226 Topside Rd.
Louisville, 983-7028
PRAISE LUTHERAN
1850 Big Springs Rd
Maryville, 977-5810
VINEYARD CHRISTIAN
COMMUNITY
1126 William Blount Dr.
Maryville, 379-1384
MOUNTAIN VIEW CHURCH
OF CHRIST
3102 Six Mile Rd.
Maryville, 982-6967
865-982-5133
HOME OF THE
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865-719-4183
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12A | FAITH
THE DAILY TIMES
www.thedailytimes.com
Saturday, November 8, 2014
PASTIME: Book also covers players with disabilities Disagreement leaves
teen seeing red
FROM 8A
including two Cy Youngs. He is living out his faith by helping orphans
in Africa. That’s being a role model
for young people.”
Mariano Rivera is another player
Steverson loves to talk and write
about. The former relief pitcher for
the New York Yankees got the nickname ‘The Sandman’ for his lightsout pitching. The Panama native has
done work to help impoverished
families in this country.
BEATING THE ODDS
This book isn’t just about players
who make their faith known. Steverson has chapters on disabilities that
tell the stories of players missing
a limb, an eye or who are deaf and
yet they still excel. He writes about
players who because of their small
stature never should have reached
the heights they did. One example is
Jose Altuve of the Houston Astros,
who stands a mere 5’5” tall. He ended the 2014 season with the highest
batting average, .341. Each story has
a relevant Bible passage.
Dodgers pitcher Sandy Koufax
was of the Jewish faith and would
never play on days of religious significance, Steverson said. “He was
the best pitcher in all of baseball. He
was supposed to pitch Game 1 in the
World Series in 1965 in Minneapolis.
It fell on Yom Kippur. Guess where
he was — in the synagogue.”
Steverson said “Baseball — A Special Gift from God,” isn’t a book he’s
written for Protestants, Catholics or
Jews. “Faith transcends all of them,”
he said. “This book is ecumenical.
It’s faith and it can be found in baseball, photography, gardening and
anything else you do.”
From the mundane to the magnificent.
FIELDS OF DREAMS
This author hopes baseball lovers
will want to dip into these pages.
Coaches will identify with the stories shared. Church leaders will
find the scripture references interesting and useful. And there are
tons of inspirational messages anyone can relate to.
There is a chapter called Unforgivable. The scandalous Black Sox
of the 1919 World Series and Cincinnati’s Pete Rose being banned from
JOY KIMBROUGH | THE DAILY TIMES
BRYAN STEVERSON HOLDS A COPY of his latest book “Baseball — A Special Gift from
God,” as he stands in front of a baseball painting done by his granddaughter. Baseball has a long tradition in this family.
baseball are discussed there. The
last chapter in the book is on numbers, specifically the No. 3. There
are three strikes to an out, three
outs to an inning, three outfielders,
three bases, Steverson points out.
“How many children did Noah
have — three,” Steverson said.
“How many days was Jonah in the
belly of the whale — three. How
many hung on the cross — three.
And He arose after three days.”
There are several other significant
threes Steverson writes in the book.
You can read about Babe Ruth and
the scripture that hung over his bed,
the life of faith of Atlanta Brave Dale
Murphy, about the only woman in
the Baseball Hall of Fame. There is
something about each one that can
be connected to faith, Steverson
said.
“In God’s world, what does matter?” he said. “Faith.”
Steverson believes Rabbi Harold
Kushner got it right when he made
an analogy between life and baseball. He is quoted as saying “Life is
not a trap set for us by God, so that
He can condemn us for failing. Life
is not a spelling bee, where no matter how many words you have gotten
right, if you make one mistake you
are disqualified. Life is more like a
baseball season, where even the best
team loses one-third of its games and
even the worst team has its days of
brilliance.”
BRIEFS
Presbyterian church
to open playground
Highland Presbyterian
Church in Maryville is
opening its new community playground. A
service of dedication
and ribbon cutting will
take place during the
10:30 a.m. worship service Sunday.
The playground is
handicap accessible
and includes a pavilion
for picnics. Following
the sermon, the congregation will go to the
playground for the dedication, closing hymn
and playtime. Highland is located at 721 E.
Lamar Alexander Parkway. The community is
invited to this special
service.
CASA holding free
luncheon Nov. 21
CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates)
of the Tennessee Heartland will hold a free luncheon from 11:30 a.m.
to 1 p.m. Friday, Nov. 21,
at Forest Hill Baptist
Church in Maryville.
State Sen. Doug Overbey will be the keynote
speaker. He will talk
about how we can come
together as a community and protect our children.
Those who wish to
attend should RSVP to
[email protected].
Information on CISV
to be presented
Youth, ages 10 to 18, and
parents who are interested in international
travel, cultural education
and global friendship
opportunities are invited
to attend information
and activity sessions at
upcoming Fun Days:
›Jle[Xp#Efm%(-#)kf
4 p.m. at Central United
Methodist Church at 201
E. Third Ave., Knoxville
›Jle[Xp#Efm%)*#)
to 4 p.m., also at Central United Methodist
Church.
Children’s International Summer Village
is a global organization
dedicated to promoting
peace through friendship
based on acceptance and
understanding. Since
1965, the Smoky Mountain chapter of CISV has
given hundreds of East
Tennesseans the opportunity to experience the
excitement and enrichment of cultural diversity. For more information,
visit www.smokymt
ncisv.org or call 475-5775.
Appalachian Trail
chaplain to speak
David Smith, 70, a
member of Cokesbury United Methodist Church in Knoxville,
has completed his 2,100
mile hike of the Appalachian Trail as chaplain
to those on the Trail.
If you have hiked or
dreamed of hiking this
ultimate in hiking experiences, you will want to
make your reservation
to have a trail meal with
Smith and hear of his
adventures on Wednesday, Nov. 12, at Broadway United Methodist
Church.
Chef Shawn Banks will
prepare a three course
trail meal consisting of
Forager’s Soup, a light
vegetable broth with
onions, wild mushrooms
and rice; an entree Hobo
Backpack with choice of
chicken or beef and fall
root vegetables. Dessert
will be the hiker’s favorite of toasted s’mores
brownies.
The meal is $12 for
adults and $6 for children. It begins at 6 p.m.
with the program at 6:30
p.m. Reservations may
be made by calling the
church at 982-6192 by
noon on Monday.
Bonita Williamson
in concert Friday
Bonita Williamson,
from Atlanta, will be
in concert for A Ladies
Night of Worship at 7
p.m. Friday, Nov. 14, at
Mt. Lebanon Baptist
Church, 3508 Wildwood
Road, Maryville. This is
a free event but a love
offering will be taken.
Williamson’s music and
heart allows her to transcend denominational
and ethnic lines. She
loves to travel and share
her gift, creating an environment for renewal.
St. George to present
Christmas Market
The Ladies’ Philoptochos Society of St.
George Greek Orthodox
Church will present the
second annual St. Nicholas Christmas Market on
Saturday, Nov. 15, from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Sunday, Nov. 16, from noon
to 5 p.m.
It will be held in the
church hall, 4070 Kingston Pike, Knoxville, and
vendors will include
crafts, jewelry, candles,
make-up, loucoumades
and much more.
This year, a bake
sale will feature limited amounts of freshly-
baked baklava and koulourakia (twisted sugar
cookies); and a lunch of
Greek salad and tiropita
(Greek cheese pie) will
be available for $5.
Proceeds from this
event will benefit local
charities.
DEAR ABBY: I’m 17 and my
mom won’t let me dye my
hair! Earlier this year she
finally let me color it red,
which I have wanted for
years. I went blonde for
my sister’s wedding, but
I’m naturally blonde and
I don’t like it because it’s
boring. A ton of people
compliment me on my
hair, but I don’t care what
people think, I just want
to be me and not anyone
else.
So, my mom is being
too controlling. She says I
have to stay blonde until I
can pay for it myself, and
I don’t have a job. My parents are very strict and I
would never be allowed
to get a tattoo, but I want
my red hair back. How do
I go about convincing her
that no matter how much
people love the blonde, I
don’t like it and I want a
change? — NATURAL BLONDE
IN PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR NATURAL BLONDE:
When a person changes hair color more than
twice in one year, it can
seriously damage the
hair. Also, red is the
hardest color to keep up
because it tends to oxidize and turn “brassy.” (I
am speaking from experience.) It can also be
expensive.
If you want to “go red”
once you’re working and
can afford it, you can
make your own decision.
But in the meantime, listen to your mother —
she’s looking out for your
interests.
DEAR ABBY: I am a woman
in my 20s and finishing
up two degrees at university. I am an only child,
and my mother is one of
the youngest among 10
siblings, so I have many
cousins.
I have always been the
“good one,” the one who
is responsible, not addicted to drugs and who has a
promising future. Because
of this, my childless aunts
and uncles and those with
irresponsible children
have looked to me for
moral support and guidance during their golden
years. Many of them are
now in their 60s.
Abby, I already have to
take care of my parents as
DEAR
ABBY
they grow older. This
stress as an only child and
the “responsible cousin”
weighs heavily on me.
What would you advise?
— THE GOOD ONE
DEAR GOOD ONE: Recognize
what your limitations are
and pace yourself accordingly. As you start your
professional life and,
eventually, your own family, it’s important that you
not allow yourself to be
spread so thin you make
yourself sick.
Your first responsibility must be to yourself,
your immediate family
and your parents. If looking out for your aunts and
uncles becomes more
time- and energy-consuming than you can handle, consider enlisting the
help of a social worker.
DEAR ABBY: During meals,
my girlfriend uses her
fingers to push the food
on her plate onto her
fork. She does it not only
when we’re at home —
just the two of us — but
also out in public at restaurants. This can’t be
proper manners, can it?
How can I get her to stop
without upsetting her?
Or am I better off not
bringing up the subject?
— UNCERTAIN IN SAN
FRANCISCO
DEAR UNCERTAIN: What
your girlfriend is doing
is considered poor table
manners. Because she’s
having trouble maneuvering her food onto her
fork, suggest to her that
she should do what some
Europeans do — push it
onto the fork using the
blade of her knife.
CONTACT DEAR ABBY at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.
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NATION&WORLD | 13A
THE DAILY TIMES
Saturday, November 8, 2014
www.thedailytimes.com
Immigration
dispute erupts at
White House lunch
BY NEDRA PICKLER
AND ERICA WERNER
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A
White House lunch aiming
for cooperation boiled into
a fresh dispute with newly
empowered Republicans
over immigration reform
Friday, with GOP leaders
warning President Barack
Obama to his face not to
take unilateral action. The
president stood unflinchingly by his plan to act.
Republicans attending
the postelection lunch at
Obama’s invitation said they
asked him for more time to
work on legislation, but the
president said his patience
was running out. He underscored his intent to act on
his own by the end of the
year if they don’t approve
legislation to ease deportations before then and send
it to him to sign.
The Republicans’
approach, three days after
they resoundingly won control of the Senate in midterm elections, “seemed
to fall on deaf ears,” Sen.
John Cornyn of Texas said
in a telephone interview.
“The president instead of
being contrite or saying in
effect to America, ‘I hear
you,’ as a result of the referendum on his policies that
drove this last election, he
seems unmoved and even
defiant.”
“I don’t know why he
would want to sabotage his
last two years as president
by doing something this
provocative,” said Cornyn.
Senate Republican Leader
Mitch McConnell earlier
this week said the president’s stance was “like waving a red flag in front of a
bull.”
Obama press secretary
Josh Earnest said there
was no reason that executive action on immigration should kill opportunities for the president and
Republicans to find common ground.
“I could stand up here
and say Republicans to
vote once again for the 50th
time to repeal the Affordable Care Act, that that’s
playing with fire or waving
a red flag in front of a bull.
I’m not really sure what that
means,” Earnest said.
The White House said
that Obama laid out three
areas where he and Congress could work together
before the end of the year
— emergency funding to
combat the Ebola outbreak,
approval of a federal budget
and quick action on spending to fight the Islamic State
militant group.
House Speaker John
Boehner’s office said he
told Obama he was ready
to work with the president
on a new authorization for
military force against the
IS group if the president
worked to build bipartisan support. The White
House announced soon
after lunch ended that the
U.S. was sending as many as
1,500 more troops to Iraq to
serve as advisers, trainers
and security personnel as
part of the mission. Obama
is also asking Congress for
more than $5 billion to help
fund the fight.
Friday’s two-hour meeting was tense at times,
according to a senior
House Republican aide.
Senate Democratic leader
Harry Reid, about to lose
his grip on the upper chamber, barely said a word, the
aide said. The aide was not
authorized to describe the
back-and-forth publicly by
name and spoke only on
condition of anonymity.
VA chief: 1,000 workers
face disciplinary action
BY MATTHEW DALY
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The
Veterans Affairs Department is considering disciplinary action against more
than 1,000 employees as it
struggles to correct systemic problems that led to
long wait times for veterans
seeking health care and falsification of records to cover up delays, VA Secretary
Robert McDonald said.
In an interview with the
CBS News program “60
Minutes,” McDonald said
the VA is taking “aggressive, expeditious disciplinary action, consistent with
the law” against more than
1,000 of its 315,000 employees.
McDonald said the disciplinary report given to the
Veterans Affairs committees in the House and the
Senate “has about 35 names
on it. I’ve got another report
that has over 1,000” names,
McDonald said.
The interview with “60
Minutes” will be broadcast
on Sunday. An excerpt aired
Friday on the “CBS Evening
News.”
McDonald’s comments
represent a departure from
his previous public remarks.
At a news conference
Thursday, he said the VA
has proposed disciplinary
action — up to an including
firing — against more than
40 employees nationwide
since June. Those cases are
all related to a scandal over
long patient wait times and
manipulation of records to
hide the delays.
At an appearance Friday
at the National Press Club,
McDonald said the VA has
taken or is considering
disciplinary action against
5,600 employees over the
past year, although aides
later clarified that most
of those actions were not
related to the health-care
scandal.
“We are very serious
about making sure that we
hold people accountable,”
McDonald said.
The VA has been under
intense scrutiny since a
whistleblower reported
that dozens of veterans
may have died while awaiting treatment at the Phoenix VA hospital, and that
appointment records were
falsified. Since then problems have been revealed at
VA health care sites across
the country.
The scandal led to the
ouster of former VA Secretary Eric Shinseki and to
a new law making it easier for veterans to get VApaid care from local doctors. The agency has been
overwhelmed by the influx
of veterans from wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan, the
aging of Vietnam War veterans and expanded eligibility for benefits as a result of
exposure to Agent Orange
and other problems.
Some Republican lawmakers have criticized the
VA for moving too slowly
to fire managers involved
in covering up wait times
and other problems.
But McDonald said the
agency is moving as fast as
it legally can. All VA firings
are subject to review by an
administrative judge.
“We’ve got to make it
stick,” McDonald told CBS.
“We propose the action, the
judge rules and the individual has a time to appeal.”
What the VA is “most
concerned about is caring
for veterans. So if someone has violated our values
and we think has done bad
things, we move them out,”
McDonald said.
LYNNE SLADKY | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SHANTEL HOWARD, 29, OF MIAMI (RIGHT), makes an appointment for a job interview with Calvin Klein employee Melina Mikhalices
(left) after submitting her resume during an Oct. 28 job fair at Dolphin Mall, in Miami.
Greener pastures?
Hiring provides little boost to wages ... yet
BY CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON — Healthy job
growth in the United States has
reached a level of consistency unseen
in nearly two decades.
In the same week that voters signaled discontent with the U.S. economy, the government issued a report
that showed employers have added
at least 200,000 jobs for nine straight
months — the longest such stretch
since 1995.
Combine it with an unemployment
rate that has slid to 5.8 percent — the
lowest since 2008 — and the picture
that emerged Friday was of a job
market gaining increasing distance
from the recession that officially
ended nearly 51⁄2 years ago.
The job gain for October was a
solid 214,000, on top of a combined
31,000 more in August and September than the government had previously estimated.
The steady improvement contrasts
with the struggles of economies
overseas, a key reason the Federal
Reserve is withdrawing its stimulus
just as other central banks ramp up
theirs. This week, for example, the
European Central Bank opened the
DAVE
SARGENT
door wider for further help for a
eurozone economy that may be on
the brink of another recession.
The U.S. job market is hardly without its own weaknesses. Americans’
average hourly pay rose only slightly
last month, a negative note in an otherwise solid report. Stagnant wages
have been a chronic weakness in
the job market since the recession
ended.
Voters listed the economy as their
top concern in Tuesday’s elections,
and the sluggish pace of pay growth
was a likely factor. Average hourly
pay rose 3 cents in October to $24.57.
That’s just 2 percent above the average wage 12 months earlier and barely
ahead of a 1.7 percent inflation rate.
Some economists say, though, that
they’re seeing early signs of rising
pay, especially as more jobs emerge
in higher-paying sectors. If so, more
workers could begin to enjoy thicker paychecks in coming months. A
broad measure of pay and fringe
benefits, which captures bonus pay
that the jobs report’s gauges miss,
has risen in the past six months at
its fastest pace since 2008.
“We think that there is plenty of
evidence to suggest that ... wage
growth is accelerating,” said Paul
HOME DELIVERY
OVER 16 YEARS
“This job is a
great way to earn
extra money.”
Ashworth, an economist at Capital
Economics.
The U.S. unemployment rate fell
in October even as more Americans
began looking for work. That suggests that more out-of-work people
were encouraged by the brightening
jobs picture.
“This was a great month for the
American labor market,” said James
Marple, an economist at TD Bank.
“The U.S. job engine is not just chugging along, it is gaining speed.”
Pay gains in some industries are
outpacing the national average. For
workers in the hotel, restaurant and
entertainment industry, hourly pay
has risen 3.5 percent in the past year.
Retail pay has risen 2.6 percent. So
has construction pay.
And hiring has increased in middle- and higher-paying industries, a
change from earlier in the recovery
when job creation. Job gains have
picked up in construction, manufacturing, professional and business
services, and government.
Sophia Koropeckyj, an economist
at Moody’s Analytics, calculates that
34 percent of jobs gained in the JulySeptember quarter were in midpaying industries, up from just 21
percent a year ago.
Dave moved to the
beautiful Smoky
Mountains from
Simpsonville, SC.
He is married to
Jan, and they have
3 children. Before
retiring Dave was a
commercial artist;
now he enjoys art and
writing as a hobby.
$( %"""" "( %' %$ (#"""
#$ !( %" $"!" &% "#%# $
"%$ $($# 14A | NATION&WORLD
THE DAILY TIMES
www.thedailytimes.com
Saturday, November 8, 2014
US military mission
Obama authorizes 1,500 more troops for Iraq
BY LOLITA C. BALDOR
The Associated Press
WA S H I N GTO N
—
President Barack Obama
authorized on Friday a
broad expansion of the
U.S. military mission in
Iraq that could boost the
total number of American
troops there to 3,100 and
spread advisory teams and
trainers across the country,
including into Anbar province where fighting with
Islamic State militants has
been fierce.
The president’s decision
to escalate the U.S. effort
in Iraq comes just three
days after midterm elections that were bruising
for Democrats and amid
persistent arguments that
more U.S. troops are needed to bolster the struggling
Iraqi forces. In particular, the Iraqi government,
members of Congress
and others have called for
troops in Anbar in western Iraq, where extremists have been slaughtering men, women and children.
MORE TROOPS
Obama authorized the
Pentagon to send up to
1,500 more troops to Iraq,
adding to the 1,600 previously allowed. There
are currently about 1,400
there.
The plans are all contingent on Congress approving his nearly $5.6 billion
request to fund the expanded mission. The troops will
not be able to deploy until
legislation passes and the
president signs it.
Congress hopes to complete the defense policy bill
in the postelection, pre-
EVAN VUCCI | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA SPEAKS to the media before a meeting with his cabinet members Friday in the White House Cabinet
Room in Washington.
holiday session and will
consider the Iraq funding
along with the administration’s request for billions
more for military operations overseas. Lawmakers are still pressing the
White House for additional
details on how the money
would be spent.
Rear Adm. John Kirby, the
Pentagon press secretary,
said the military will set
up several sites across Iraq
to train nine Iraqi Army
brigades and three peshmerga brigades, which are
made up of Iraqi Kurdish
forces. The military will
also establish two operations centers where small
advisory teams can work
with Iraqi forces at the
headquarters and brigade
levels.
Kirby said one of those
centers will be in Anbar
province, where U.S. troops
fought al-Qaida extremists
in brutal fighting in 2004
to 2007, costing more than
1,000 American lives and
9,000 Iraqi lives, mainly
in the cities of Fallujah and
Ramadi.
NIE
He added that the U.S.
also is considering training
of some of the Sunni tribes.
In 2007, Sunni Arab tribes
in Anbar joined forces with
Americans — in what was
called the Anbar Awakening — and dealt a blow
against the insurgents that
many credit with turning
the tide in that conflict.
MORE SUPPORTIVE
The new Iraqi leaders
have pledged to be more
supportive of the Sunni
tribes than the previous
Shiite government was,
although Kirby said it’s
unclear whether the Baghdad government will provide them with weapons.
Kirby said the expansion
was based on a request
from the Iraqi officials, the
U.S. military’s assessment
of Iraqi military progress
and as part of a campaign
plan “to defend key areas
and go on the offensive
against the Islamic State
of Iraq and the Levant,”
another name for IS.
The U.S. troops will not
be in combat roles but will
train Iraqi forces in protected locations around
the country. Until now,
U.S. troops have largely
been confined to Baghdad and Irbil, including
two operations centers in
those cities. Of the 1,500
troops, Kirby said that
about 630 would be used
for the advisory teams,
including support and
security forces, and the
rest would be for the training mission. Troops could
begin deploying as soon
as this month, if Congress
approves the funding,
but it will take a couple
months to get the training
sites ready, and the actual
training will take six to
seven months.
The funding request followed a meeting among
Obama and congressional
leaders on Friday, which
included a military briefing. Of the approximately $5 billion for the Pentagon, about $3.4 billion
would support ongoing
operations and strikes
on the Islamic State, and
$1.6 billion would support
the training and equipping
mission for the Iraqis. The
remainder is State Department funding to support
diplomatic efforts.
BRIEFS
Holder aims
vulgarity at critics
graves last year, authorities said Friday. Charles
“Chase” Merritt, 57, of
Homeland made a brief
court appearance on
four counts of murder
in the deaths of Joseph
McStay, 40, his wife,
Summer, 43, and their
sons, 4-year-old Gianni
and 3-year-old Joseph.
Merritt did not enter a
plea and was due back
in court next week. He
has previous felony convictions for grand theft
and burglary in Los
Angeles County, court
records show.
His attorney, Robert
Ponce, did not immediately return a call or
email.
WASHINGTON —
Newly released emails
show Attorney General Eric Holder saying
that Justice Department
prosecutors who were
critical of the department’s handling of the
fallout of the Fast and
Furious gun-walking
scandal could “kiss my
ass.”
Fast and Furious was
a botched effort by
the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives to track firearms across the Southwest border. It led to
congressional investigations and turnover within the ATF and Justice
Department.
The Justice Department provided the
emails to the House’s
oversight committee.
The Associated Press
obtained them on Friday.
UN report says Iran
nuke probe stalled
VIENNA — The U.N.
nuclear agency said Friday that its attempts
to probe allegations
that Tehran worked on
nuclear weapons were
deadlocked — a finding that all but rules out
hopes of full nuclear
deal between six world
powers and Iran by the
Nov. 24 target date.
Iran agreed in February to work with the
International Atomic
Energy Agency, in what
was seen as a test of
Tehran’s professed new
willingness to reduce
tensions over its nuclear
program.
Associate charged in
slaying of family
SAN BERNARDINO,
Calif. — Prosecutors
filed murder charges
against a business associate of a California man
who had been missing since 2010 with his
wife and two young
sons until their bodies
were found in desert
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not playoff possibilities. 5B
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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2014
THE DAILY TIMES
1B
Maryville shakes off slow start
6A FIRST ROUND
BY DARGAN SOUTHARD
[email protected]
MARYVILLE 48, Walker Valley 0
The start carried some unfamiliar elements for the defending
Class 6A champs.
A red-zone fumble abruptly
halted the first offensive possession. Four plays later — after
Maryville’s defense forced an
apparent three-and-out — the
Rebels were tagged with a roughing the kicker penalty to keep a
Walker Valley drive afloat.
“It was a bit of a wakeup call,”
Rebels senior quarterback Tyler
SCOTT KELLER | THE DAILY TIMES Vaught said.
MARYVILLE’S TYLER VAUGHT (1) goes to his knees to haul in a touchdown pass
But Maryville, as its done countwith Walker Valley’s Brice Gibson (5) turning too late to get a hand in Friday less times in recent years, sideduring the first round of the 6A TSSAA playoffs at Maryville.
stepped those early obstacles
Greenback’s Hanley
determined to be
in that 50 percent
BY JOHN BRICE
and rebounded with authority,
blowing past Walker Valley en
route to a 48-0 win Friday night
at Jim Renfro Field.
With the win, the Rebels (110) advance out of the postseason’s opening round for an 18th
consecutive season and will host
No. 4 seed Sevier County (8-3)
next Friday at 7 p.m. The Smoky
Bears advanced to the second
round with a 28-20 victory over
fifth-seeded Hardin Valley Academy.
“The further you go in this, the
better teams you’ll play,” said
Maryville head coach George
Quarles, whose Rebels beat Sevier County, 38-3, on Sept. 26 and
also ended the Smoky Bears 2013
season with a 56-14 win in the 6A
quarterfinals.
“And those kinds of starts will
come back and bite you.”
Once the early cobwebs were
removed, though, the Maryville
offense returned to vintage form,
marching down the field with
relative ease against a wobbly
Walker Valley (5-6) squad.
On possession No. 2, Joel Hopkins carried the final 31 yards,
capping off the drive with an
8-yard touchdown scamper that
SEE MARYVILLE, 7B
Just for starters
BYE WEEK
[email protected]
The news would have
been tough to digest
for any athlete. But a
three-sport standout
like Greenback’s Tanner
Hanley?
Almost too difficult
to hear a doctor, even
before Hanley’s 2013
season had begun, tell
the Cherokees’ two-way
gridiron star that he
might not ever play football again. The diagnosis of a Lisfranc fracture
would require surgically
implanting screws, grueling rehab and no guarantees.
A coin flip outcome.
Maybe. Maybe not.
Except Hanley’s father,
Brian, had an immediate
message as the family
left the doctor’s office.
“It’s just one of those
things, I guess it was
really hard to hear
whenever I first got the
news,” Hanley, who also
Greenback earned
itself a No. 1 seed and
a first round bye in the
1A Playoffs. The Cherokees face Sunbright
in the second round
next week.
plays basketball and
baseball, told The Daily
Times. “My dad looked
at me whenever we
were in the car, and they
had told me there was a
50-50 chance I wouldn’t
play again, he just
looked at me and I really
remember what he said:
Which side do you want
to be on? Which side
do you want to flip the
scale towards?
“And I would think
about that, and it definitely helped me get
through recovery.”
Greenback coach Jason
Hicks, who’s guided
SEE HANLEY, 6B
MARK A. LARGE | THE DAILY TIMES
ALCOA RUNNING BACK MALIK SALTER (33) runs the ball through Johnson County defenders during Friday night’s 3A first-round
playoff game at Alcoa High School.
Alcoa runs past Johnson County in round one
3A FIRST ROUND
BY BRADLEY K. STRINGFIELD
[email protected]
Turnovers still causing
trouble for Tyndall’s Vols
BY GRANT RAMEY
UP NEXT
[email protected]
KNOXVILLE — Donnie
Tyndall’s biggest takeaway
from his Tennessee basketball team’s first exhibition game was the same
thing the first-year Vols
basketball coach has been
preaching since the start
of practice.
“Certainly, No. 1, I hope to
limit our turnovers,” Tyndall said Thursday afternoon at Pratt Pavilion.
“That can be an Achilles
heel for us if we don’t do
a better job improving in
that area.”
The Vols had 18 turnovers in an 80-62 win over
Pikeville Monday night at
Thompson-Boling Arena,
a game that was competitive in the first half before
Tyndall’s team eventually managed to pull away
down the stretch.
“The biggest thing is that
we didn’t do a very good
AT
LENOIR-RHYNE
AT VOLS (EXHIB.)
WHEN: 7 p.m. Today
TICKETS: $5
RADIO: Vol Network
TV: SEC Network+
job of taking care of the
basketball,” Tyndall said,
“particularly early in the
game.”
The goal is black and
white before every game
when it comes to just how
much turnovers should be
limited, whether it be an
NAIA opponent like Pikeville or tonight’s opponent,
Division II Lenoir-Rhyne,
the second and final exhibition game for the Vols
that tips off at 7 p.m. at
Thompson-Boling Arena.
“We have to be a 2-1 ratio
assist to turnover,” Robert
SEE VOLS, 3B
5 Points
No Credit
Check!
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Maryville, Tennessee 37804
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Blount County Owned! In Business over 10 years!
In 1988, when current
Johnson County head
coach Don Kerley was the
starting quarterback for
the Longhorns, Alcoa was
on the winning side of a
15-6 second-round playoff
match-up.
Johnson County arrived
at Goddard Field with a different Kerley under center
Friday night, but the result
was still the same as the
Tornadoes defeated Johnson County 62-14 in the first
round of the 3A playoffs.
“You just have to take it
one at a time,” Alcoa head
coach Gary Rankin said.
“It was rewarding to get a
lot of kids playing time. A
lot of kids got touches and
contributed. I thought we
played pretty clean overall.”
The win comes on
Rankin’s 24th straight
playoff appearance, and
the veteran skipper dug
into his back of tricks early
against the Longhorns. On
just the second play of the
game, quarterback Mitchell
McClurg connected with
Keishaun Johnson behind
the line of scrimmage, giving the wideout the option
ALCOA 62,
Johnson County 14
ALCOA WIDE RECEIVER AYDEN GIST (5) tries to push his way
through Johnson County defenders during Friday night’s 3A
first-round playoff game at Alcoa High School.
of throwing.
Johnson found Brenden
Teeter behind the Johnson
County secondary and con-
nected for the 57-yard opening score.
“We had been practicing that play for a while,”
Teeter said. “(Rankin) told
us we would probably run
it tonight. I knew I would
be wide open for a touchdown.”
It didn’t take the Tornadoes (10-1) long before
getting another chance to
score.
Johnson County quarterback Warren Kerley’s first
pass was intercepted by
Alcoa’s Yohana Koko and
returned to the Longhorn
45, but just as quickly as
the Tornadoes took the ball
back, they gave it away.
On the next series quarterback Jaylen Myers dropped
back to throw a screen
pass to his left, but Longhorn cornerback Dakota
Wright stepped in front of
the intended receiver and
took the pass 55 yards in the
opposite direction to tie the
game at 7-7.
“That kid made a great
play,” Rankin said. “He
probably made as good of
a play as I’ve seen all year.
Give him credit. He broke
on that ball, and it was a
SEE ALCOA, 6B
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2B | SPORTS
THE DAILY TIMES
www.thedailytimes.com
OF — Mike Trout, Los Angeles (3)
C — Yan Gomes, Cleveland (1)
DH — Victor Martinez, Detroit (2)
ON THE SCHEDULE
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
1:30 p.m. — Christopher Newport University at Maryville College
COLLEGE SOCCER
USA South Championships
Smith River Sports Complex, Martinsville, Va.
Men’s final
2 p.m. — No. 5 Maryville vs. No. 2 Covenant
Women’s final
5 p.m. — No. 4 Maryville vs. No. 3 Methodist
COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL
USA South Tournament
at Patrick Henry Community College, Martinsville, Va.
Noon — No. 1 South-Maryville vs. No. 2 North-Averett
2 p.m. — No. 1 North-Meredith vs. No. 2 South-Covenant
6 p.m. — Championship
MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
7 p.m. — Lenoir-Rhyne at Vols (exhib.), SEC
THE SPORTS PAGE
IC
R
SA
14
70A
M
TY’S SPORTS
OUN
VO
E
BL
O
“The Sports Page” is live from 10
a.m. to noon today at Barley’s in
downtown Maryville with hosts Mike
S
ORT
P
Edwards, Donnie Moore and Charlie
S
The AGE
Puleo. Take part in the show by
P
[email protected],
TU
C
RD
WB
AY follow the show @chas45puleo or like
10AM
it on Facebook. Out of town, the show
streams on www.truthradio.tv.
TRIVIA: Win a free round of golf at Lambert Acres Golf Course
or a free Oil Change at Autopro Tires and Service by being the
first correct answer to call in during the trivia segment. 3810948.
THIS WEEK:
™ The Blackwood Insurance Maryville College Sports Report with
2014 USA SOUTH Volleyball Coach of the Year Kandis Schram
and head football coach Mike Rader.
™ The newest members of the Blount County Athletic Hall of
Fame: Maryville’s Sarah Fekete Bailey and Alcoa’s Clayton
Bledsoe will be live at Barley’s.
™ Presentation of the Herman Ramsey Memorial Award and
the Paul Gilley Memorial Award for Sportsmanship to Greenback High School and Maryville Middle School Football Teams.
Coaches Jason Hicks and Jay Malone will be on hand.
Live at 10 a.m. on WBCR 1470 AM.
TC
UN
ON THE AIR
AUTO RACING
Formula One, at Sao Paulo
12:30 p.m. ........... Brazil Grand Prix qualifying ...............................NBCSN
NASCAR, at Avondale, Ariz.
4 p.m. .................. Nationwide Series, DAV 200 ............................... ESPN
BOXING
Light heavyweights, at Bethlehem, Pa.
8:30 p.m. ............ Vasily Lepikhin vs. Jackson Junior ....................NBCSN
..................................................Welterweights, at Atlantic City, N.J.
10:45 p.m............ Sadam Ali vs. Luis Carlos Abregu ........................ HBO
IBF/WBA/WBO light heavyweight titles, at Atlantic City, N.J.
10:45 p.m............ Bernard Hopkins vs. Sergey Kovalev ................... HBO
GOLF
2 p.m. .................. PGA Tour, Sanderson Farms Championship ....... TGC
10 p.m. ................ PGA Tour-WGC, HSBC Champions ........................ TGC
NBA
9 p.m. .................. Boston at Chicago .................................................. WGN
SOCCER
Premier League
7:40 a.m. ............ Chelsea at Liverpool ...........................................NBCSN
10 a.m. ................ Leicester City at Southampton ........................NBCSN
12:30 p.m. ........... Manchester City at Queens Park ...........................NBC
MLS Playoffs, conference semifinals
2:30 p.m. ............ New York at D.C. United ..........................................NBC
™ College football schedule and odds on 4B.
25 YEARS AGO FROM TIMES HISTORY
From the Nov. 8, 1989, edition of The Daily Times: The
American Volleyball Coaches Association named Maryville
College volleyball coach Kandis Schram the 1989 Division III
Coach of the Year in the South Region. The award was based
on nominations from the association’s seven different regions.
ODDS
GLANTZ-CULVER LINE
NFL
Tomorrow
FAVORITE ....... OPEN .. TODAY .O/U ...UNDERDOG
Dallas ....................7 ....... 7 ...... (451⁄2) ... J’ville-x
at Detroit ..............2 .....21⁄2.... (431⁄2) ...... Miami
Kansas City ...........1 ..... 11⁄2 .... (411⁄2) atBuffalo
at N. Orleans ... 31⁄2 .....51⁄2.... (49) ....San Fran.
at Baltimore ......10 .....91⁄2 ... (44) . Tennessee
Pittsburgh ....... 21⁄2 ....... 4...... (46). at N.Y. Jets
Atlanta ............+11⁄2 .....21⁄2.... (46)... at Tampa
Denver .............101⁄2 .......11 ..... (491⁄2) ... at Oak.
at Arizona .........71⁄2 .....61⁄2 ... (43) ......St. Louis
at Seattle .........71⁄2 ....... 9...... (441⁄2) N.Y. Gnts
at Green Bay ........7 ..... 71⁄2.... (531⁄2)...Chicago
Monday
at Phil. .............. 51⁄2 .....61⁄2 ... (48)......Carolina
x-at London
NBA
FAVORITE ..............LINE.... O/U ..........UNDERDOG
at L.A. Clippers........ 5 ... (208).........Portland
Washington .........41⁄2 ... (188)........at Indiana
at Atlanta ................. 6 ... (193) .........New York
at Miami ................ 71⁄2 ... (204) ......Minnesota
at Chicago ................ 9 ... (1941⁄2) ........ Boston
at Houston ............... 5 ... (204) .Golden State
Memphis ...............41⁄2 ... (1861⁄2) .......... at Mil.
at San Antonio....61⁄2 ... (198)...New Orleans
NHL
FAVORITE ..............LINE.... UNDERDOG .........LINE
Calgary .................-120 ... at Florida .........+100
Pittsburgh ..........-320 ... at Buffalo ....... +250
at Toronto ............-110 ... N.Y. Rangers ......-110
at Montreal .........-145 ... Minnesota ........+125
at Ottawa ............-130 ... Winnipeg .......... +110
at Philadelphia .. -135 ... Colorado ........... +115
Tampa Bay ..........-155 ... at Columbus.....+135
at Washington ...-155 ... Carolina .............+135
at St. Louis ..........-170 ... Nashville .......... +150
at Dallas ...............-115 ... San Jose ............ -105
N.Y. Islanders ......-130 ... at Arizona ......... +110
at Los Angeles ...-145 ... Vancouver ........+125
AUTO RACING
NASCAR-SPRINT CUP
QUICKEN LOANS RACE FOR HEROES
500 LINEUP
After Friday qualifying; race Sunday
At Phoenix International Raceway
Avondale, Ariz.
Lap length: 1 miles
(Car number in parentheses)
1. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 142.113 mph.
2. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 142.079.
3. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevy, 141.995.
4. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 141.794.
5. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 141.794.
6. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 141.771.
7. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevy, 141.665.
8. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevy, 141.321.
9. (55) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 141.287.
10. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevy, 141.188.
11. (27) Paul Menard, Chevy, 140.889.
12. (13) Casey Mears, Chevy, 139.746.
13. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 140.488.
14. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Chevy, 140.411.
15. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevy, 140.356.
16. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevy, 140.285.
17. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 140.192.
18. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 140.187.
19. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevy, 140.16.
20. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevy, 140.127.
21. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 140.045.
22. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevy, 139.969.
23. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 139.958.
24. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevy, 139.746.
25. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevy, 139.697.
26. (33) Ty Dillon, Chevy, 139.432.
27. (51) Justin Allgaier, Chevy, 139.394.
28. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 139.34.
29. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevy, 139.195.
30. (7) Michael Annett, Chevy, 139.104.
31. (95) Michael McDowell, Ford, 138.873.
32. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevy, 138.851.
33. (36) Reed Sorenson, Chevy, 138.691.
34. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 138.307.
35. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 138.281.
36. (98) Josh Wise, Chevy, 137.942.
37. (23) Alex Bowman, Toyota, Pts.
38. (40) Landon Cassill, Chevy, Pts.
39. (37) Mike Bliss, Chevy, Pts.
40. (26) Cole Whitt, Toyota, Pts.
41. (83) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, Pts.
42. (32) Joey Gase, Ford, Pts.
43. (66) Mike Wallace, Toyota, Pts.
Failed to Qualify
44. (75) Clay Rogers, Chevy, 137.31.
BASEBALL
MLB
2014 SILVER SLUGGER TEAM
Selected by major league coaches and
managers (career total in parentheses)
American League
1B — Jose Abreu, Chicago (1)
2B — Jose Altuve, Houston (1)
3B — Adrian Beltre, Texas (4)
SS — Alexei Ramirez, Chicago (2)
OF — Jose Bautista, Toronto (3)
OF — Michael Brantley, Cleveland (1)
National League
1B — Adrian Gonzalez, Los Angeles (2)
2B — Neil Walker, Pittsburgh (1)
3B — Anthony Rendon, Washington (1)
SS — Ian Desmond, Washington (3)
OF — Andrew McCutchen, Pittsburgh (3)
OF — Giancarlo Stanton, Miami (1)
OF — Justin Upton, Atlanta (2)
C — Buster Posey, San Francisco (2)
P — Madison Bumgarner, San Francisco (1)
BASKETBALL
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L
Pct
GB
1
2
3
4
6
.833
.600
.400
.333
.000
—
11⁄2
21⁄2
3
5
W
L
Pct
GB
Washington
Miami
Charlotte
Orlando
Atlanta
Central Division
4
3
3
2
1
2
2
3
4
3
.667
.600
.500
.333
.250
—
1⁄2
1
2
2
W
L
Pct
GB
Chicago
Detroit
Milwaukee
Cleveland
Indiana
5
2
2
1
1
1
3
4
3
5
.833
.400
.333
.250
.167
—
21⁄2
3
3
4
Toronto
5
Brooklyn
3
Boston
2
New York
2
Philadelphia
0
Southeast Division
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W
L
Pct
GB
0
0
2
2
2
1.000
1.000
.600
.500
.500
—
—
21⁄2
3
3
W
L
Pct
GB
3
2
2
1
1
2
3
3
3
5
.600
.400
.400
.250
.167
—
1
1
11⁄2
21⁄2
W
L
Pct
GB
4
4
3
3
0
0
1
2
2
5
1.000
.800
.600
.600
.000
—
1⁄2
11⁄2
11⁄2
41⁄2
Memphis
6
Houston
6
Dallas
3
San Antonio
2
New Orleans
2
Northwest Division
Portland
Utah
Minnesota
Denver
Oklahoma City
Pacific Division
Golden State
Sacramento
Phoenix
L.A. Clippers
L.A. Lakers
Thursday
Houston 98, San Antonio 81
Portland 108, Dallas 87
Friday
Chicago 118, Philadelphia 115
Orlando 112, Minnesota 103, OT
Charlotte 122, Atlanta 119,2OT
Toronto 103, Washington 84
Detroit 98, Milwaukee 95
Boston 101, Indiana 98
Brooklyn 110, New York 99
Memphis 91, Oklahoma City 89
Sacramento at Phoenix, late
Dallas at Utah, late
Cleveland at Denver, late
Today
Portland at L.A. Clippers, 3:30 p.m.
Washington at Indiana, 7 p.m.
New York at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Miami, 7:30 p.m.
Boston at Chicago, 8 p.m.
Golden State at Houston, 8 p.m.
Memphis at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m.
New Orleans at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
Sunday
Orlando at Brooklyn, 3:30 p.m.
Utah at Detroit, 6 p.m.
Sacramento at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m.
Philadelphia at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Miami at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.
Golden State at Phoenix, 8 p.m.
Denver at Portland, 9 p.m.
Charlotte at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.
GRIZZLIES 91, THUNDER 89
MEMPHIS (91)
Allen 4-7 0-0 9, Randolph 6-16 4-4 16, Gasol
4-11 0-0 8, Conley 7-14 3-4 20, Lee 5-8 4-5 17,
Carter 3-9 1-2 8, Leuer 1-4 0-0 2, Pondexter
0-2 2-2 2, Koufos 2-5 0-0 4, Udrih 2-5 0-0 5.
Totals 34-81 14-17 91.
OKLAHOMA CITY (89)
Thomas 1-3 1-2 3, Ibaka 6-15 0-1 16, S.Adams
6-9 1-2 13, Jackson 9-20 0-1 22, Lamb 8-15
0-1 17, Telfair 5-11 1-2 13, Collison 1-3 0-2 3,
Perkins 1-3 0-0 2, Smith 0-0 0-0 0. Totals
37-79 3-11 89.
Memphis
22 27 17 25 — 91
Oklahoma City 19 21 22 27 — 89
3-Point Goals—Memphis 9-18 (Lee 3-3,
Conley 3-4, Allen 1-2, Udrih 1-3, Carter 1-4,
Pondexter 0-2), Oklahoma City 12-25 (Ibaka
4-7, Jackson 4-7, Telfair 2-4, Collison 1-1,
Lamb 1-6). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—
Memphis 43 (Gasol 9), Oklahoma City
57 (S.Adams 11). Assists—Memphis 21
(Conley 5), Oklahoma City 16 (Jackson 8).
Total Fouls—Memphis 14, Oklahoma City
18. Technicals—Oklahoma City defensive
three second. A—18,203 (18,203).
GOLF
WGC HSBC CHAMPIONS
PAR SCORES
Friday
At Sheshan International Golf Club
Shanghai
Purse: $8.5 million
Yardage: 7,261; Par: 72
Second Round
Graeme McDowell
67-67 —134
Ian Poulter
70-67 — 137
Bubba Watson
71-67 —138
Hiroshi Iwata
73-65 —138
Tim Clark
69-70 —139
Kevin Na
71-68 —139
Jonas Blixt
71-68 —139
Rickie Fowler
69-70 —139
Thorbjorn Olesen
72-68 —140
Louis Oosthuizen
70-70 —140
Martin Kaymer
69-72 — 141
J.B.Holmes
70-71 — 141
Henrik Stenson
70-71 — 141
Oliver Wilson
71-70 — 141
Alexander Levy
74-68 —142
Jimmy Walker
73-69 —142
Dawie Van der Walt
70-72 —142
Jason Dufner
72-70 —142
Hunter Mahan
74-68 —142
Adam Scott
70-72 —142
Marc Leishman
72-71 —143
Brandt Snedeker
69-74 —143
Chris Kirk
69-74 —143
Justin Rose
72-71 —143
Lee Westwood
70-73 —143
Hideki Matsuyama
74-69 —143
Hyung-Sung Kim
70-74 —144
Bill Haas
70-74 —144
Marcel Siem
72-72 —144
Ernie Els
74-70 —144
Tommy Fleetwood
69-75 —144
Jordan Spieth
70-74 —144
Anirban Lahiri
74-70 —144
Stephen Gallacher
72-72 —144
Ashun Wu
74-70 —144
Patrick Reed
71-73 —144
Ryan Moore
74-71 —145
Jaco van Zyl
70-75 —145
Keegan Bradley
72-73 —145
Brendon Todd
71-74 —145
George Coetzee
72-73 —145
-10
-7
-6
-6
-5
-5
-5
-5
-4
-4
-3
-3
-3
-3
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
+1
+1
+1
+1
+1
Hennie Otto
Ryan Palmer
John Senden
Russell Henley
Darren Fichardt
Luke Donald
Sergio Garcia
Thomas Bjorn
Matt Every
Shane Lowry
Marc Warren
Thongchai Jaidee
Hao-Tong Li
Pablo Larrazabal
Gary Woodland
Joost Luiten
Jamie Donaldson
Lianwei Zhang
Ze-Cheng Dou
Wen-Chong Liang
Kevin Streelman
Mu Hu
Felipe Aguilar
Charl Schwartzel
Scott Stallings
Matt Jones
Mikko Ilonen
David Lipsky
Michael Hendry
Jason Knutzon
Victor Dubuisson
Miguel Angel Jimenez
Yoshitaka Takeya
Antonio Lascuna
Billy Horschel
Jin Jeong
Brody Ninyette
Saturday, November 8, 2014
74-72
74-72
73-73
71-75
74-72
74-72
74-72
72-75
75-72
78-69
75-72
71-76
75-72
75-72
73-75
77-71
71-77
73-76
76-73
75-74
77-72
78-71
76-74
74-76
74-76
75-76
75-76
78-73
76-75
78-74
76-77
78-75
77-78
76-79
80-77
85-79
86-90
—146 +2
—146 +2
—146 +2
—146 +2
—146 +2
—146 +2
—146 +2
— 147 +3
— 147 +3
— 147 +3
— 147 +3
— 147 +3
— 147 +3
— 147 +3
—148 +4
—148 +4
—148 +4
—149 +5
—149 +5
—149 +5
—149 +5
—149 +5
—150 +6
—150 +6
—150 +6
— 151 +7
— 151 +7
— 151 +7
— 151 +7
—152 +8
—153 +9
—153 +9
—155 +11
—155 +11
— 157 +13
—164 +20
—176 +32
SANDERSON FARMS
CHAMPIONSHIP
PAR SCORES
-6
-6
-6
F
16
F
HOCKEY
NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Tampa Bay 13 9 3 1
Montreal
14 9 4 1
Detroit
14 7 3 4
Boston
15 9 6 0
Ottawa
12 7 3 2
Toronto
13 6 5 2
Florida
11 4 3 4
Buffalo
15 3 10 2
Metropolitan Division
19
19
18
18
16
14
12
8
47
33
37
43
34
37
16
19
34
41
33
35
27
35
24
48
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Pittsburgh
N.Y. Islanders
N.Y. Rangers
Philadelphia
New Jersey
Washington
Carolina
Columbus
12
13
12
13
14
12
12
13
9
8
6
6
6
4
4
4
2
5
4
5
6
5
6
8
1
0
2
2
2
3
2
1
19
16
14
14
14
11
10
9
49
41
34
41
38
38
28
32
26
42
38
40
45
37
39
44
SCORE
THRU
-10
-10
-8
-7
-7
-6
-6
-6
-6
F
F
F
F
F
F
15
F
F
Hamlin
wins
Phoenix
pole
BY JENNA FRYER
AP Auto Racing Writer
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
St. Louis
13
Nashville
13
Winnipeg
14
Chicago
13
Minnesota
12
Colorado
15
Dallas
13
Pacific Division
9
8
7
7
7
4
4
3
3
5
5
5
6
5
1
2
2
1
0
5
4
19
18
16
15
14
13
12
34
33
28
34
36
37
37
26
27
31
23
25
46
45
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Friday
At The Country Club of Jackson
Jackson, Miss.
Purse: $4 million
Yardage: 7,354; Par: 72
Partial Second Round
15 players failed to complete the round
a-amateur
David Toms
68-66 —134 -10
John Rollins
68-66 —134 -10
Nick Taylor
67-69 —136 -8
Tom Gillis
69-68 — 137 -7
Robert Streb
67-70 — 137 -7
William McGirt
68-70 —138 -6
Shawn Stefani
70-68 —138 -6
Lucas Glover
71-67 —138 -6
Vaughn Taylor
72-66 —138 -6
Boo Weekley
70-68 —138 -6
Charlie Wi
68-71 —139 -5
Padraig Harrington
70-69 —139 -5
Garrett Osborn
70-69 —139 -5
Jason Kokrak
69-70 —139 -5
Michael Thompson
71-68 —139 -5
Jason Bohn
68-71 —139 -5
John Huh
70-70 —140 -4
Charles Howell III
71-69 —140 -4
Tom Hoge
70-70 —140 -4
Will Wilcox
69-71 —140 -4
Tim Petrovic
71-69 —140 -4
Jason Gore
70-70 —140 -4
Danny Lee
72-68 —140 -4
Mark Wilson
71-69 —140 -4
Charley Hoffman
70-70 —140 -4
Daniel Summerhays
72-68 —140 -4
Josh Teater
70-70 —140 -4
Carlos Sainz Jr
70-70 —140 -4
Jim Herman
69-71 —140 -4
Ben Curtis
68-73 — 141 -3
Greg Owen
72-69 — 141 -3
Heath Slocum
69-72 — 141 -3
J.J. Henry
72-69 — 141 -3
Chris Smith
72-69 — 141 -3
David Hearn
69-72 — 141 -3
Daniel Berger
70-71 — 141 -3
Andrew Loupe
72-69 — 141 -3
Andrew Putnam
69-72 — 141 -3
Sean O’Hair
70-71 — 141 -3
Ben Martin
71-70 — 141 -3
Kyle Reifers
71-70 — 141 -3
John Peterson
69-72 — 141 -3
Andres Gonzales
68-73 — 141 -3
Roberto Castro
72-70 —142 -2
Scott McCarron
73-69 —142 -2
Nicholas Thompson
70-72 —142 -2
Max Homa
72-70 —142 -2
Adam Hadwin
70-72 —142 -2
Jonathan Byrd
72-70 —142 -2
Russell Knox
72-70 —142 -2
Rod Pampling
74-68 —142 -2
Brendan Steele
69-73 —142 -2
Blayne Barber
71-71 —142 -2
Greg Chalmers
71-72 —143 -1
Bo Van Pelt
71-72 —143 -1
Derek Fathauer
73-70 —143 -1
Michael Block
71-72 —143 -1
Jim Renner
71-72 —143 -1
John Daly
71-72 —143 -1
Woody Austin
70-73 —143 -1
Jerry Kelly
70-73 —143 -1
Carl Pettersson
72-71 —143 -1
Justin Hicks
72-71 —143 -1
Jonathan Randolph
71-72 —143 -1
Sung Joon Park
72-71 —143 -1
Johnson Wagner
72-72 —144 E
Trevor Immelman
75-69 —144 E
Billy Mayfair
74-70 —144 E
Troy Matteson
73-71 —144 E
Steve Wheatcroft
76-68 —144 E
Zack Sucher
69-75 —144 E
Eric Axley
71-73 —144 E
Martin Flores
72-72 —144 E
Alex Cejka
70-74 —144 E
John Merrick
71-73 —144 E
Kyle Stanley
70-74 —144 E
Ken Duke
73-72 —145 +1
D.A. Points
71-74 —145 +1
Lee Janzen
69-76 —145 +1
Zachary Blair
72-73 —145 +1
Matt Fast
73-72 —145 +1
Craig Kanada
72-73 —145 +1
Tony Finau
73-72 —145 +1
Cameron Smith
72-73 —145 +1
Whee Kim
75-70 —145 +1
Glen Day
72-73 —145 +1
Martin Laird
76-69 —145 +1
Steve Flesch
75-71 —146 +2
Joe Durant
74-72 —146 +2
Troy Merritt
73-73 —146 +2
Jon Curran
72-74 —146 +2
Bobby Wyatt
71-75 —146 +2
Steven Alker
73-73 —146 +2
Scott Brown
71-75 —146 +2
Tim Herron
74-73 — 147 +3
Andrew Svoboda
75-72 — 147 +3
Chad Campbell
73-74 — 147 +3
Nick Watney
74-73 — 147 +3
Scott Piercy
72-75 — 147 +3
Chris DiMarco
73-74 — 147 +3
David Duval
68-79 — 147 +3
Hudson Swafford
74-73 — 147 +3
Tommy Gainey
73-74 — 147 +3
Y.E. Yang
72-75 — 147 +3
James Hahn
74-73 — 147 +3
Cameron Beckman
75-73 —148 +4
Matt Bettencourt
73-75 —148 +4
Roger Sloan
74-75 —149 +5
Colt Knost
73-76 —149 +5
Derek Ernst
77-73 —150 +6
Ryan Armour
76-74 —150 +6
Bill Lunde
78-73 — 151 +7
Jake Younan
71-81 —152 +8
a-Camden Backel
74-78 —152 +8
Dicky Pride
75-77 —152 +8
Phil Schmitt
76-79 —155 +11
Kevin Kisner
74-WD
Leaderboard
David Toms
John Rollins
Nick Taylor
Tom Gillis
Robert Streb
Vaughn Taylor
Fabian Gomez
Lucas Glover
Shawn Stefani
Boo Weekley
Oscar Fraustro
William McGirt
Anaheim
14 10 3
Vancouver
14 10 4
Calgary
15 8 5
Los Angeles 14 7 4
San Jose
14 7 5
Arizona
12 5 6
Edmonton
14 5 8
NOTE: Two points for a
overtime loss.
1
21
0 20
2 18
3 17
2 16
1
11
1
11
win, one
38 27
46 38
43 37
32 29
43 38
31 44
35 50
point for
LATE THURSDAY
PREDATORS 3, STARS 2
0
0
2
1
1
1
— 3
— 2
First Period—None.
Second Period—1, Nashville, C.Smith 5 (Roy,
Ellis), 4:10 (pp). 2, Nashville, Forsberg 5
(Josi, Ekholm), 13:57 (pp). 3, Dallas, Daley
5, 16:26.
Third Period—4, Dallas, Eaves 2 (Seguin,
Roussel), 7:23. 5, Nashville, Cullen 1 (Roy,
Ekholm), 13:47.
Shots on Goal—Nashville 11-15-7—33. Dallas
10-12-13—35.
Goalies—Nashville, Rinne. Dallas, Lehtonen.
A—17,054 (18,532). T—2:31.
SOCCER
ENGLISH PREMIER LEAGUE
GP W D L
Denny
Hamlin
The Joe Gibbs Racing driver will start
on the inside of row
1 on Sunday.
Thursday
Pittsburgh 4, Winnipeg 3, SO
Colorado 4, Toronto 3, SO
N.Y. Islanders 2, Los Angeles 1, SO
Boston 5, Edmonton 2
Philadelphia 4, Florida 1
Ottawa 3, Minnesota 0
Tampa Bay 5, Calgary 2
St. Louis 4, New Jersey 3
Nashville 3, Dallas 2
Vancouver 3, San Jose 2
Friday
Edmonton 3, Buffalo 2
Carolina 3, Columbus 2, OT
Detroit 4, New Jersey 2
Washington at Chicago, late
Arizona at Anaheim, late
Today
Calgary at Florida, 3 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at Montreal, 7 p.m.
Winnipeg at Ottawa, 7 p.m.
Colorado at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Columbus, 7 p.m.
Carolina at Washington, 8 p.m.
Nashville at St. Louis, 8 p.m.
San Jose at Dallas, 8 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Arizona, 8 p.m.
Vancouver at Los Angeles, 10 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Tampa Bay at Detroit, 6 p.m.
Edmonton at N.Y. Rangers, 6 p.m.
Toronto at Ottawa, 6 p.m.
San Jose at Chicago, 7 p.m.
Vancouver at Anaheim, 9 p.m.
Nashville
Dallas
AVONDALE, Ariz. — With
their title hopes on the line,
most of the championship
contenders delivered Friday with strong qualifying
runs at Phoenix International Raceway.
Denny Hamlin led five
Chase for the Sprint Cup
championship drivers in the
qualifying session, turning a
lap at 142.113 mph to put his
GF GA Pts
Chelsea
10 8 2 0 26 10 26
Southampton
10 7 1 2 21 5 22
Manchester City 10 6 2 2 20 10 20
Arsenal
10 4 5 1 18 11 17
West Ham
10 5 2 3 19 14 17
Swansea
10 4 3 3 13 10 15
Liverpool
10 4 2 4 13 13 14
Tottenham
10 4 2 4 13 14 14
Everton
10 3 4 3 19 17 13
Manchester United 10 3 4 3 16 14 13
West Brom
10 3 4 3 13 13 13
Newcastle
10 3 4 3 11 15 13
Stoke
10 3 3 4 10 12 12
Hull City
10 2 5 3 13 14 11
Sunderland
10 2 5 3 11 18 11
Aston Villa
10 3 1 6 5 16 10
Crystal Palace
10 2 3 5 14 19 9
Leicester City
10 2 3 5 11 16 9
Q. Park Rangers 10 2 1 7 9 20 7
Burnley
10 0 4 6 5 19 4
Saturday, Nov. 1
Newcastle 1, Liverpool 0
Arsenal 3, Burnley 0
Chelsea 2, Queens Park Rangers 1
Everton 0, Swansea 0
Hull City 0, Southampton 1
Leicester City 0, West Brom 1
Stoke 2, West Ham 2
Sunday, Nov. 2
Manchester City 1, Manchester United 0
Aston Villa 1, Tottenham 2
Monday, Nov. 3
Crystal Palace 1, Sunderland 3
Today
Liverpool vs. Chelsea, 1245 GMT
Burnley vs. Hull City, 1500 GMT
Man. United vs. Crystal Palace, 1500 GMT
Southampton vs. Leicester City, 1500 GMT
West Ham vs. Aston Villa, 1500 GMT
Q. Park Rangers vs. Man. City, 1730 GMT
Sunday
Sunderland vs. Everton, 1330 GMT
Tottenham vs. Stoke, 1330 GMT
West Brom vs. Newcastle, 1330 GMT
Swansea vs. Arsenal, 1600 GMT
MLS PLAYOFFS
KNOCKOUT ROUND
Eastern Conference
Oct. 30: New York 2, Sporting Kansas City 1
Western Conference
Oct 29: FC Dallas 2, Vancouver 1
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
Eastern Conference
New England 1, Columbus 0
Leg 1 — Nov. 1: New England 4, Columbus 2
Leg 2 — Sunday: at New England, 5 p.m.
New York 1, D.C. United 0
Leg 1 — Sunday: New York 2, D.C. United 0
Leg 2 — Today: at D.C. United, 2:30 p.m.
Western Conference
LA Galaxy 0, Real Salt Lake 0
Leg 1 — Nov. 1: LA Galaxy 0, Real Salt Lake 0
Leg 2 — Sunday: at LA Galaxy, 7:30 p.m.
Seattle vs. FC Dallas
Leg 1 — Nov. 2: Seattle 1, FC Dallas 1
Leg 2 — Monday: at Seattle, 10:30 p.m.
Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing
in the top starting spot for
Sunday’s race.
Six of the eight drivers
competing for a shot at
the title qualified in the top
seven. Only Carl Edwards
(13th) and Ryan Newman
(20th) failed to crack the
top 10 in qualifying.
All of them are vying for
the four spots in next week’s
championship race at
Homestead-Miami Speedway. Hamlin is in decent
shape: He’s tied with Joey
Logano for the points lead
and only needs to finish 11th
or better Sunday to make
the finale.
He won’t be conservative.
“I think the competition
level is just too close and
tight to be able to think you
are going to coast to an 11thplace finish,” Hamlin said.
“You’ve got to go all-out on
every single lap. We have to
go out there and perform on
a high level or else we aren’t
going to make it. There are
too many other cars for us
to think that we are just
going to ride around and
take a spot.”
Qualifying right behind
Hamlin were Brad Keselowski and Kevin Harvick.
Harvick shoved Keselowski from behind into a scrum
following last week’s race
at Texas. It ignited a brawl
between Keselowski, Jeff
Gordon and their teams and
both drivers were bloodied.
But, both have a lot at stake
on Sunday: Keselowski is
seventh and Harvick eighth
in the Chase field, and both
have the mentality that they
must win Sunday to make
it to Homestead.
“This is a good track for
us to come to, confidence
wise,” said Harvick, who
qualified third. “We’ll see
how the weekend plays out.
You are either going to hit
a walk-off, or just race next
week.”
Harvick has won three of
the last four races at Phoenix, including the last two
November races. He won
here in the spring for his
first victory with StewartHaas Racing.
Keselowski, a six-time
winner this season, has
already proved once he can
step up in must-win situations. He staved off elimination in the second round
of the Chase by winning at
Talladega.
“I know I probably need
to win the race,” Keselowski
said. “Technically, I don’t
have to win this race, but
the probabilities are that
I do. You know if you win,
you’re in, and that’s the
great thing about this system and we have a great
shot at it, for sure.”
Keselowski believed his
Team Penske Ford was only
good enough Friday to finish second or third, and that
Harvick has the field covered. Harvick doesn’t think
his advantage over his rivals
will last.
SPORTS | 3B
THE DAILY TIMES
Saturday, November 8, 2014
www.thedailytimes.com
MC men upset top seed, advance to today’s soccer championship
[email protected]
A dominant defense helped
the No. 5 seeded Maryville
College Scots pull a second
upset Friday and advance to
the USA South men’s soccer
finals, knocking off the topseeded Greensboro Pride,
2-0, in Martinsville, Va.
Throughout the season,
Greensboro piled up seven shutouts against 10 conference opponents, but
Maryville becomes the
first USA South team to
shutout the regular season
champions. The Scots win
is Maryville’s second upset
of the conference tournament, as they ousted the No.
4 seed Methodist, 2-1 in the
quarterfinals.
“The defense was phenomenal,” Maryville head
coach Pepe Fernandez said.
“They probably had the most
complete forward in the conference. He was Player of
the Year — 6-foot-4 — and
he can run past you. Our
two center backs (Thomas
Palmer and Alex Waddell)
were phenomenal. We didn’t
break down, and we didn’t
let them get any looks.”
Junior Jon Taylor picked
up his first shutout of the
season in the 2-0 win.
Maryville scored first during the 21st minute off an
assist by Sean Yoder. Yoder was coming down the
far side of the field, giving
the ball up to an attacking
Randy Reichenberger. He
found the back of the net
off a header, as Maryville
led 1-0. The Scots score
again during the 43rd minute. Thomas Palmer found
the back of the net during
a penalty kick. Greensboro
goalie Logan Rohde got a
hand on the ball, but it was
able to trickle into the goal
for a 2-nil Maryville lead.
“We were able to weather
the storm,” Fernandez said.
“We played with the wind
the first half. We had about
a 15 mph wind here. We took
advantage of it the first half,
and we just had to hold on
the second half.”
Maryville advances to play
Covenant in today’s championship.
Freshmen holding court
All-American Okafor leads list of impact newcomers
BY STEPHEN HAWKINS
MC WOMEN 1, NO. 1 MEREDITH 0:
The Maryville College Lady
Scots soccer team advanced
to the USA South Athletic
Conference finals with a 1-0
upset shutout victory over
No.1 seeded Meredith College on Friday. Maryville
College freshman forward
Kirsten Alcorn attempted
a cross at the 40th minute of the first half but a
stiff wind carried the pass
attempt past the USA South
Rookie of the Year and Meredith goalkeeper Jaisa Loch
to give the Lady Scots a lead
they made stand up for a
spot in today’s conference
title game.
VOLLEYBALL: The top-seeded Maryville College volleyball team used a dozen kills
by sophomore Abrianna
Jones to advance in the USA
Athletic Conference Tournament with a 25-13, 25-13,
and 25-19, During the match,
Abrianna Jones connected at a .550 pace with her
12 kills. The Scots advance
to today’s noon semifinal
against the north division’s
No. 2 seed Averett.
McDowell, Poulter
in familiar spot
at HSBC Champions
AP Basketball Writer
Kentucky got to the national championship game last season with five
freshman starters.
Kansas and Duke were also bolstered by players who made smooth
transitions from high school to college, and now are in the NBA.
No longer is it a surprise to see freshmen having an immediate impact in
college basketball. Here are a few
of the many expected to do so this
season:
JAHLIL OKAFOR, DUKE: The 6-foot-11,
270-pound forward from Chicago has
already made a big impression, getting selected as a preseason AP AllAmerican before his first game for
the Blue Devils. Okafor got to Duke
with a wide wingspan, good footwork
and an NBA-ready body after averaging 24 points and 11.3 rebounds as a
senior. The MVP of the McDonald’s
All-American game could become the
first Blue Devils center since Elton
Brand to lead the team in scoring.
Coach Mike Krzyzewski calls Okafor
“a dominant player.”
STANLEY JOHNSON, ARIZONA: Johnson
is the only player in California history to be part of four consecutive
upper-division high school state titles,
and last season averaged 25 points
and nine rebounds a game to become
California’s Mr. Basketball. The 6-7
forward took a polished game and
incredible athleticism to Arizona, and
appears ready to play at a high level
right away like athletic freshman and
now-NBA forward Aaron Gordon did
last season for the Wildcats.
KARL-ANTHONY TOWNS AND TREY LYLES,
KENTUCKY: Three of the freshmen who
started the national championship seven months ago returned for another
season, but new freshmen Towns and
Lyles provide more length and depth
in the middle with a pair of 7-footers
already in place (Willie Cauley-Stein
and Dakari Johnson). The 6-11 Towns,
a three-time All-State player in New
Jersey, and 6-10 Lyles, whose made
the game-winning free throw in his
final prep game to clinch an Indiana
state title, both averaged more than
20 points and about 13 rebounds a
game as high school seniors.
MYLES TURNER, TEXAS: An elite shotblocker who can also step out and
shoot 3-pointers, the 6-11 Turner is
expected to be a huge boost to an
experienced lineup that returns all five
starters from a 24-win team that made
it to an NCAA tournament but hasn’t
been to the Final Four since 2003. He
averaged 18 points, 12 rebounds and
nearly seven blocks a game as a prep
senior. Turner and Kansas forward
BY DOUG FERGUSON
AP Golf Writer
GERRY BROOME | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DUKE’S JAHLIL OKAFOR DRIVES to the basket in front of Rasheed Sulaimon as the team
kicks off its season in a scrimmage Oct. 25 during Countdown to Craziness at Cameron
Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C. The 6-foot-11, 270-pound forward from Chicago has
already made a big impression, getting selected as a preseason AP All-American before
his first game for the Blue Devils.
Cliff Alexander shared the Big 12 preseason nod as the league’s freshmen
of the year.
RASHAD VAUGHN, UNLV: Shooting guard
Vaughn is a high-scoring player with
skills and work ethic that steps onto a
team with no returning starters. The
6-6 guard from Golden Valley, Minnesota, is actually staying local since
he had moved to attend a Nevada prep
school his senior season. Runnin’ Rebels coach Dave Rice believes Vaughn
has a chance to be a special player at
UNLV. Vaughn averaged 19.9 points,
4.5 rebounds. 4.9 assists and 2.2 steals
a game as a prep senior.
ISAIAH WHITEHEAD, SETON HALL: The
6-4 shooting guard from Brooklyn
stayed closed to home to play collegiately, and was tabbed the preseason Big East rookie of the year.
Whitehead, named Mr. New York
Basketball last season, brings a swagger back to a Seton Hall program that
has been to the NCAA tournament
only three times since P.J. Carlesimo
led the Pirates to six appearances
from 1988-94, including a one-point
loss to Michigan in the 1989 national
championship game.
VOLS: New faces have nine turnovers, just four assists
FROM 1B
Hubbs said this week. “So
it’s two assists for every
turnover.”
The Vols had 18 turnovers
to 17 assists against Pikeville.
“It’s always a point of
emphasis,” guard Kevin
Punter said. “(Tyndall)
preaches that all the time
in practice. If you want to
win, at any level, especially
like this, you can’t turn the
ball over.
“A lot of them were
unforced (against Pikeville). When you have
unforced turnovers you
can’t really expect to win
the game.”
Senior Josh Richardson, Tennessee’s makeshift point guard, had a
team-high three turnovers
against Pikeville. But he
also had five assists and
15 points. Hubbs had four
assists to two turnovers, to
go with eight points.
Newcomers, the majority of the Vols’ patchwork
roster, accounted for nine
of the 18 turnovers and just
four of the 17 assists.
“I think a few guys were a
little nervous,” Punter said.
“So a lot of guys tend to get
sped up a little bit. I think
as the game went on, guys
slowed down, including
myself.”
Turnovers has consistently been the first word out
of Tyndall’s mouth when
talking about where his
team needs to improve. And
credit the Vols, Punter said,
because it was much, much
worse this time a month
ago.
“When practice f irst
started, it used to be a lot
of turnovers,” he said. “Just
because people weren’t
used to the system, just getting the hang of things. I
think since then it’s cleaned
up a lot, even with us having
18 turnovers last game.”
NUMBER CRUNCH: The Vols
utilized 10 of 11 players for
double-digit minutes in the
opener against Pikeville, a
number Tyndall said has to
shrink before Friday’s regular-season opener against
Virginia Commonwealth
in the Veterans Classic at
Alumni Hall in Annapolis,
Md.
“I’m in a dilemma because
I have 11 guys who are practicing the right way,” Tyndall said. “I have 11 guys who
are coachable and working hard. So many guys are
basically even that it’s hard
to make a decision so you
want to give them all an
opportunity.”
Richardson (31 minutes),
Punter (24), Hubbs (24),
Moore (23), Derek Reese
(19) and Detrick Mostella
(18) all played at least 18
minutes. Jabari McGhee,
Dominic Woodson, Willie Carmichael and Devon
B a u l k m a n a l l p l aye d
between 11-15 minutes.
Those numbers will
continue against LenoirRhyne.
“Guys are going to get a
chance to play and prove
themselves,” Tyndall said.
“When you get to VCU
you’re going to probably
need to shorten that rotation a little bit.”
INJURY REPORT: Tyndall
said Devon Baulkman likely
won’t play against LenoirRhyne after he “tweaked his
shoulder” against Pikeville.
Tyndall described it as “a
little bit of an injury.” Senior
guard Ian Chiles is also still
sidelined with an injury.
FOLLOW @GRANTRAMEY on
Twitter for more from Daily
Times sports writer Grant
Ramey.
SHANGHAI — The
HSBC Champions has a
familiar look to Graeme
McDowell, with a few
exceptions.
He goes into the weekend
at Sheshan International
in contention for a World
Golf Championship, with
Ian Poulter and a big-hitting American alongside.
Only, now, the American
is Masters champion Bubba Watson — not Dustin
Johnson, who overpowered the course on his way
to victory last year.
And at least this time,
McDowell has the lead.
McDowell leaned on a
hot putter to carry him to
another 5-under 67 on Friday. That gave him a threeshot lead over Poulter, with
Watson and Hiroshi Iwata
of Japan right behind.
Tournament organizers might be missing the
presence of Johnson, the
defending champion who
is on a “voluntary leave”
for what he described as
personal challenges. Just
don’t count McDowell
among them, especially
not the way Johnson set
the tournament record at
24-under 264.
“He looked unbeatable
last year the way he played
this golf course,” McDowell said. “But we’ve got a
fairly decent replacement
in Bubba, who in his own
way has got the same kind
of talents as Dustin, the
way he drives it and the
short game. In many ways,
it’s a very similar scenario — myself and Poults
against the long-hitting
American.”
McDowell saved par
when he had to and strung
together back-to-back
birdies early and late in his
round to reach 10-under
134.
Poulter and Watson
showed that a deficit can
be made up quickly, particularly on the dynamic
finishing holes at Sheshan
International.
Watson was seven shots
behind when he made
birdie on the par-5 14th,
and he was just getting
warmed up. He blasted a
drive just through the end
of the fairway on the 487yard 15th hole and hit gap
wedge to 8 feet for birdie
on the 15th. He chipped
in twice for birdie on the
next two holes, and had
a simple up-and-down
on the par-5 18th to end
his round of 67 with five
straight birdies.
“Hit some good shots but
couldn’t make some putts.
Hit some bad shots and
made some putts,” Watson said. “It was a great
last five holes.”
Poulter was five shots
out of the lead when he
birdied four of the last five
holes — he made par on
the par-3 17th — for a 67
that put him three shots
back.
Toms, Rollins share lead
at PGA Sanderson Farms
BY DAVID BRANDT
AP Sports Writer
JACKSON, Miss. —
David Toms admits his initial idea for the weekend
was to catch a little live college football action down
in Baton Rouge, La., on Saturday night when Alabama
faces his beloved LSU.
Two rounds of excellent
golf at the Country Club of
Jackson might have thrown
a wrench in those plans.
Toms and John Rollins
each shot a 6-under 66 on
Friday to share the secondround lead in the Sanderson
Farms Championship.
“I had great intentions to
(go to LSU), but after today,
I guess I might have too late
of a tee time,” Toms said,
smiling.
The 47-year-old Toms —
a 13-time PGA Tour winner who played at LSU
— is playing some of his
best golf in years and was
bogey-free through the first
two rounds. He hasn’t won
since 2011 at Colonial.
A patient approach and
a hot putter have put him
in contention in his past
two tournaments. He has
made just two bogeys over
his past 90 holes, dating to
the second round of the
McGladrey Classic two
weeks ago where he tied
for 14th.
“Just to play well is what
excites me,” Toms said.
“You never know, when you
hang around on the leaderboard a little bit, every
once in a while you’re able
to get one.”
Rollins had eight birdies
and two bogeys to share the
lead with Toms. He won
the last of his three tour
titles in 2009 and finished
177th on the money list last
season.
“To get off to that kind of
start is always great, birdieing the first three, birdied
four out of the first five, and
really just kind of helped
me relax a little bit and just
kind of get in the rhythm of
the round,” Rollins said. “I
hit the ball well, made some
good putts and put myself
in a good position.”
Toms and Rollins were at
10-under 134.
Canada’s Nick Taylor was
two strokes back after a 69.
Robert Streb, the McGladrey winner, was tied with
Tom Gillis, three strokes
back. Gillis had a 68, and
Streb shot 70.
Play was suspended
because of darkness with
15 players unable to finish. First-round leader
Sebastian Cappelen was
3 over for the round and
4 under overall with two
holes left.
The course was slightly damp for Thursday’s
opening round after overnight rain, but a full day of
sunshine and wind dried
the course and made the
greens much faster.
4B | SPORTS
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Saturday, November 8, 2014
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Noon .......................... Presbyterian at Mississippi ..........................SEC
Noon .......................... Baylor at Oklahoma .......................................FS1
3:30 p.m. ................... Notre Dame at Arizona St. ......................... ABC
3:30 p.m. .................. Texas A&M at Auburn .................................. CBS
3:30 p.m. .................. Michigan at Northwestern..................... ESPN2
3:30 p.m. .................. Tulane at Houston...................................ESPNU
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3:30 p.m. .................. Penn at Princeton ....................................NBCSN
4 p.m. ......................... Tennessee-Martin at Mississippi St. ..........SEC
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TENNESSEE COACH BUTCH JONES celebrates with his team Nov. 1 after defeating South Carolina in Columbia, S.C. Tennessee won,
45-42.
After ‘resiliency rewarded’ Vols developing youth
BY GRANT RAMEY
[email protected]
KNOXVILLE — Only nine names
on Tennessee’s 70-player travel roster
had been to South Carolina’s WilliamsBrice Stadium before last week’s 45-42
overtime win.
Butch Jones stressed that fact multiple times this week, going as far as
saying after practice Tuesday that he
didn’t “think people truly understand
what this team accomplished Saturday night.”
What Tennessee (4-5, 1-4 SEC) accomplished, obviously, was erasing a 14-point
South Carolina lead in the final two minutes before winning in overtime.
But perspective is a two-way street —
never too high, never too low — and it
starts with the head coach.
“It was a great win for us,” Jones said
Wednesday. “Victory No. 4. But that’s
it now. You move on. We live in a weekto-week season. Praise and blame, it’s
all the same.
“So again, it’s going back and really
challenging our football team to correct our deficiencies.”
While spending the bye week finding
ways to right wrongs, the Vols looked
to develop depth in the back half of
the two-deep.
“We have a lot of improvement to
make, especially in terms of communication,” Jones said. “We gave up some
big plays, and a lot of it stemmed initially from the initial communication.
We have to work to be better in the
special teams game.”
Only one starter — tight end Ethan
Wolf — was on the practice field Tuesday, as Jones let his starters rehab bumps
and bruises while using practice time
to concentrate more on developing
youth.
Tennessee’s defense — the “overachieving” unit that carried the load
for the Vols in the first seven games
— has shown the most obvious signs
of wearing down from lack of depth.
The Vols gave up 625 yards to South
Carolina, by far a season-high, just a
week removed from giving up 469 yards
against Alabama.
The Vols went from 16th in the country in total defense entering the Ole
Miss game on Oct. 18th to 54th nationally entering the bye week three weeks
later.
‘Right now our biggest
deficiency in our football
program is overall depth.
So it’s an opportunity to
give individuals a chance
to prove themselves ...
that they can help
us down the stretch
run here.’
Butch Jones
Tennessee football coach
“Right now our biggest deficiency in
our football program is overall depth,”
Jones said. “So it’s an opportunity to give
individuals a chance to prove themselves, put their identity on video that
they can help us down the stretch run
here.”
Case in point: senior defensive tackle
Jordan Williams, who played “80-something snaps” against South Carolina.
“We need to get more of a rotation on
defense,” Jones said. “So again, we have
to have some individuals step up.”
But as much as South Carolina may
have exposed a tired defense, the final
score allowed the positive takeaways to
far outweigh the negative for a football
program that badly needed some return
on investment.
“I talked about their resiliency was
finally rewarded,” Jones said. “You can
talk about it all the time, but after a
while they need some evidence. They
received some evidence Saturday night.
They were rewarded for their resiliency
and their perseverance.”
Tennessee trailed by 13 in the second
half at Oklahoma. The Vols lost by 24.
They jumped out to a 10-0 lead at Georgia, but saw the lead evaporate in a 35-32
loss. They led Florida 9-0 in the fourth
quarter before a collapse in the final 10
minutes allowed the Gators to escape
Knoxville with a 1-point win.
That’s why the South Carolina win
— the dramatic, last-minute fashion,
especially — won’t soon lose it’s perspective.
EAST
TEAM
SEC
ALL
Missouri
Georgia
Florida
Kentucky
South Carolina
Tennessee
Vanderbilt
4-1
4-2
3-3
2-4
2-5
1-4
0-5
7-2
6-2
4-3
5-4
4-5
4-5
3-6
WEST
TEAM
SEC
ALL
Mississippi St.
Alabama
Auburn
Ole Miss
LSU
Texas A&M
Arkansas
5-0
4-1
4-1
4-2
3-2
2-3
0-5
8-0
7-1
7-1
7-2
7-2
6-3
4-5
“You look at, it will be a point of contention for many years to come (that)
out of our 70-individual travel squad,
61 of them had never been to South
Carolina before,” Jones said. “So you
look at all these youngsters playing,
this again will be a teaching moment
for many years to come about playing
all the way to the end.”
A point of contention for the youth on
this roster, the players with more games
in front of them than behind them in the
Butch Jones rebuilding project.
For the few veterans on roster it was a
first. Before South Carolina, the Vols had
not won a true road game outside the
states of Tennessee or Kentucky since
2007 — a 33-21 win over Mississippi
State in Starkville, Miss., that came 2,577
days and three head coaches before Saturday’s win over the Gamecocks.
“It’s really hard to believe that this is
their first airplane win in four years,”
Jones said. “They had never been a part
of winning on the road with an airplane
trip, which I can’t even fathom that
being at the University of Tennessee.
“Again, a lot of great things moving
forward,” he added, again finding perspective. “Now, what do we make of it?
We’re going to be faced with a very, very
talented, very physical, very determined
Kentucky team coming in here.
“What do we do with it and how do we
take advantage of this bye week?”
FOR AN UNABRIDGED VERSION of the story, visit thedailytimes.com.
T.D.A. 381
C-N looks to keep
playoff hopes alive
[email protected]
UP NEXT
No. 24 Carson-Newman’s playoff hopes
hinge on a win today
with a roadtrip to Setzler Field and Newberry.
The Eagles (6-2, 4-1 South
Atlantic Conference)
need to win out to have
a shot at making a third
straight trip to postseason play. Losses by West
Georgia and Valdosta
State in the season’s final
two weeks would also aid
the Eagles’ cause.
Carson-Newman head
football coach Ken Sparks
said that the Eagles can’t
focus on either their loss
last week to No. 3 LenoirRhyne or what other
teams are doing in Super
Region II.
“We just need to talk
about the next ballgame
a n d m a ke s u re t h a t
we’re not doing stinkin’
thinkin’,” Sparks said.
“We can’t not focus all
our energy and efforts
on Newberry. We know
they’re a very capable
team. So we try to concentrate our efforts on
today so we’re not in
trouble tomorrow.”
Newberry (4-5, 2-4
SAC) is coming off a
playoff appearance in
2013, a playoff appearance which the Eagles
ended at Burke-Tarr Stadium with a 37-27 win.
NO. 24 CARSONNEWMAN
AT NEWBERRY
WHEN: 2 p.m. Today
RADIO: 620AM,
106.3FM
It marked the second
time that the Eagles had
defeated Newberry that
year.
“The outcome of those
ballgames doesn’t have
anything to do with the
outcome of this ballga m e,” S pa rk s sa i d .
“Except that it might give
them a bit of a mental
edge to where they are
more fired up to play
us.”
The one constant for
the Wolves this year has
been good defense. The
Wolves lead the country
in pass defense at 120
yards per game. Newberry became just the second
program in the country
in any division to keep
a team from completing
a pass when it accomplished that feat last week
against Brevard.
The Wolves run defense
is no slouch either, allowing 166 yards per game.
At 285 yards of total
offense, the Wolves rank
seventh in the country in
total offense allowed.
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at Auburn ......... 20 .....23 .....(681⁄2)..TX A&M
Alabama ..............6 ....61⁄2 ....(451⁄2) .....at LSU
at Oklahoma ......4 ....51⁄2 ....(72) ......... Baylor
at Florida St. .191⁄2 .....20.....(551⁄2) ...Virginia
at W. Ky. ...........71⁄2 ......8 ......(70) ...........UTEP
at Oregon St. ..71⁄2 ......8 ......(61) .....Wash. St.
Air Force .......... 61⁄2 ....51⁄2 ....(57) ......at UNLV
at S. Diego St. ....21 ..... 21 .....(57) ...........Idaho
Marshall ........ 241⁄2 ...251⁄2...(621⁄2)at S.Miss.
FAU........................4 ......3 ......(55) .at N. Texas
Ga. Southern .... 10 .....14 .....(611⁄2) .. at TX St.
at Arizona .......... 16 ..... 17 .....(701⁄2) Colorado
Boise St. ..............17 .....19 .....(611⁄2) .....at N.M.
at Colo. St. .....161⁄2 .....18 .....(561⁄2).... Hawaii
at Michigan St. ...2 ....31⁄2 ....(551⁄2) .. Ohio St.
La.-Laf. ...........161⁄2 ...161⁄2 ...(651⁄2) atN.M.St.
at Arizona St.......2 ....21⁄2 ....(60) ..... N. Dame
Oregon ............ 91⁄2 ....81⁄2....(60) .......at Utah
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Eagleton Middle School would like to invite the Blount County
community to a special Veteran’s Day program to be held Monday,
November 10, 2014, at 9 a.m. in the gym. The presentation will include
music by the EMS Chorus and Band, speaker Ken Catledge from The
Modern Woodsman, and much more. All Veterans that attend will be
recognized. Please join us as we celebrate those who fight and have fought
for our freedom. Special seating available for veterans. Please let us know
when you arrive if you are a veteran so we can seat you accordingly.
A $50 participant fee includes:
t Uniform
t 8 games with weekly practices
t Complimentary team photo
t Complimentary basketball camp conducted
by William Blount Coach Kevin Windle and
William Blount players (This alone costs
more than $50)
t A complimentary ticket to a William Blount
High School and Maryville College basketball
game for each participant
t Paid Referees
Question: How is this different from Upward?
Answer: Both leagues would heavily emphasize the gospel and
encourage a positive Christian atmosphere. However, we differ in
our approach to creating modifications for players. There are no
modifications. Games are played with standard basketball rules.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2014
THE DAILY TIMES | 5B
Looking back to play ahead
USA SOUTH
Chris Newport
Maryville
Huntingdon
Methodist
NC Wesleyan
Greensboro
LaGrange
Averett
Ferrum
USAC
6-1
5-1
4-2
4-2
3-3
2-4
2-5
1-5
1-5
ALL
6-3
6-2
5-3
5-3
4-4
2-6
4-5
2-6
2-6
LAST WEEK
Averett 31, Methodist 21
Maryville 42, NC Wesleyan 28
Greensboro 19, Ferrum 17
CNU 45, LaGrange 26
Bye: Huntingdon
THIS WEEK
CNU at Maryville
Averett at Huntingdon
NC Wesleyan at Greensboro
Methodist at Ferrum
Bye: LaGrange
NEXT WEEK
Maryville at Methodist
Greensboro at Averett
Ferrum at LaGrange
Huntingdon at NC Wesleyan
Bye: Chris. Newport
WHAT HAPPENED
SCOTT KELLER | THE DAILY TIMES
MARYVILLE COLLEGE’S KENT MINOR (57) fights through a block to plug the hole as the rest of the Scot’s defense converges on North Carolina Wesleyan’s Jacques Alston (4) Nov. 1 at Maryville College.
Scots try to maintain routine despite implications, hoopla
BY MARCUS FITZSIMMONS
ON THE CAPTAINS
[email protected]
Coach: Matt Kelchner (14th)
90-47 (71-16 USAC)
CAPTAINS 6-3 (6-1)
S6 Salisbury
S13 at Hampden-Sydney
S18 at NC Wesleyan
S27 Methodist
O4 Ferrum
O11 at Huntingdon
O18 at Averett
O25 Greensboro
N1
LaGrange
N8 at Maryville
L
32-41
L
30-35
W
31-28
W 51-48(2OT)
W
21-19
L
31-51
W
38-7
W
45-31
W
45-26
1:30 Today
SERIES
Christopher Newport University leads
the all-time series with Maryville College,
7-2, with all those victories coming under
Kelchner, the only coach CNU has known.
Mike Rader is 1-1 against the Captains,
losing at home in his first season, 45-31,
and winning at POMOCO Stadium, 30-17,
last year.
STAT LEADERS
PASSING
CNU
Marcus Morrast 125-208-2039-18-7
A Robinson 15-28-117-2-0
MC
Evan Pittenger 82-152-874-6-6
Nick Myers 8-11-97-2-1
RUSHING
CNU
Marcus Morast 136car, 676yds, 9TD
Daquan Davis 146-642 8TDs
A Robinson 33-165 1 TD
MC
Trenton Shuler 149-872 11TD
Evan Pittenger 92-487 9TD
Eddie Brock 64-369 4TD
RECEIVING
CNU
Rudy Rudolph 61 rec, 1227yds, 7TD
Taylor Loudon 17-232 4TD
Daquan Davis 18-158 4TD
MC
Ed Johnson 26-291 3TD
Maurice Walker 20-209 1TD
Anzelo Scullark 10-165 2TD
Forget all the conference title implications and playoff scenarios surrounding Christopher Newport’s 1:30
p.m. visit today to Maryville College.
Forget it’s the last time the Captains
will sail down from Newport News,
Va. before they tack north to change
conferences next season. Forget the
impact on the Scot record book if they
prevail this afternoon.
Maryville’s focus hardly changes
week-to-week. It’s still win this test to
win this practice to win this day to win
this week.
What needs to be remembered is the
pivotal moments at the start of 2012
when head coach Mike Rader was a
candidate for the job and the decisions made then by a group of freshman with all of a semester’s worth of
college experience under their belts.
A group that will be making its Senior
Day walks onto Honaker Field today to
be recognized but could in many cases
have walked off that field in 2012 and
never returned.
“This senior class though I didn’t
recruit them, they were second semester freshman when I got here, I feel like
these are my guys. All my guys are my
guys but I remember a lot of these guys
as freshman from the hiring process,”
Rader said. “Going in front of the player panel when they were firing questions at me, there’s some of them in
particular I remember those faces sitting in that crowd.
“It’s crazy how fast this has gone.”
Some members of that class did leave
but most bought into Rader’s way and
stayed to be key parts of back-to-back
USA South titles with the opportunity
for a third sitting on the field today.
If there’s one thing those seniors can
attest to it’s that Rader has been constant in his message of being the best
at little things to the point game days
are another day, no matter the opponent.
“We think about today and when Saturday comes its another day we get up
and think about then,” Rader said. “We
try to constantly move forward and not
look forward,
“It’s another ballgame against another
quality opponent. It’s been that way
all season. It’s very much business as
usual. We want to come out and the
biggest thing, just like every other so
called big game we’ve been in, is to
execute the game plan. Whoever exe-
09.06
09.13
09.20
09.27
10.04
10.11
10.18
11.01
11.08
11.15
Berry
W
41-14
Emory & Henry L
13-14
at Averett*
W
40-17
Huntingdon*
L
21-35
LaGrange*
W
48-17
at Ferrum*
W
23-13
at Greensboro* W
39-14
NC Wesleyan* W
42-28
Chris. Newport*
1:30 p.m.
at Methodist*
1 p.m.
*USA South opponent
cutes the best is going to get the victory.”
CHEMISTRY: The Scots have bee settling
in to an identity that still runs first
but picks its spots to throw it deep on
offense with a defense that rotates constantly to get big plays from fresh legs.
It wasn’t a magic moment but the team
has found its confidence in October in
the wake of losses to both schools that
put an L on MC last season as well —
Emory & Henry and Huntingdon.
“About midseason, after the Huntingdon loss, it really started happening,” Rader said. “Anytime you get beat
you critically analyze everything in
your organization and put it under the
microscope because you’re trying to
figure out what went wrong and what
you can do better. You’re always fighting for that chemistry. That’s an everyday process we encourage and work on
constantly not just a moment.”
UNDER THE LIGHTS: Unlike soccer
and baseball, Honaker Field remains
without field lights since they
were removed during the stadium’s
improvement that removed the old
wooden stands. It isn’t a direct impact
to fans with most USA South games
starting in the afternoons, but it can
impact the practice schedule as the
days get shorter and the visibility time
window after classes end shrinks.
“You have to be pretty resourceful
when daylight savings gets you,” Rader
said in an odd half light somewhat illuminating Honaker on Wednesday evening.
The team has been using the baseball lights that back up to the visiting
stands and worked under the partial
light offered by their side and backcast.
“We’ve been doing it the last few
years under the baseball lights,” Rader
explained. “I don’t remember exactly
how it started but it works.”
The conference title race cleared up
a little more than expected Nov. 1.
Maryville knocked off N.C. Wesleyan to
take the Battling Bishops out of the title
hunt with their third loss. Just like Huntingdon two weeks earlier, which was
upset by LaGrange via a forth quarter
turnover, Methodist picked up its second loss last week. The Monarchs had
three interceptions and lost two fumbles
as Averett — who had been winless in
USAC play — pulled the stunner.
IF THE CAPTAINS WIN
Then Christopher Newport exits the USA
South with an outright title and gets the
conference’s automatic qualifier for the
playoffs. CNU heads to the Capital Conference next season but the Captains
from Newport News, Va. have their bye
the final week of the season and would
be only one-loss team standing. With
some of the wackiness that the NCAA
has announced then rescinded regarding
the AQs this year, its anybody’s guess
if the conference would get its first atlarge bu the Vegas line would be heavily
against.
The Captains have won three outright
titles (2001, 2008, 2011) and had a
share of six others (2002, 2003, 2004,
2006, 2010, 2012) over their 13 seasons
under the USA flag, making them the
winningest team in that span.
IF THE FIGHTING SCOTS WIN
Then Maryville has a shot at doing
something only CNU and NC Wesleyan
have ever accomplished — an outright
title. The USAC crown has been shared
in eight of the 13 seasons but the Scots
would the only one-loss team with one
game to go. But ...
Maryville still has that season finale
against Methodist and quarterback Max
Reiber. Mad Max and his Comeback Kids
rarely seem to be too far behind and
— if they regroup to knock off Ferrum
today — would be playing for their own
share of the title that would come by
defeating MC to create a four-way tie
among two-loss teams atop the standings, assuming Huntingdon also wins
out.
Good through
Nov. 16th, 2014
with this coupon
*General states
pricing. Sale prices do
not include applicable
state/local taxes or
recycling fees.
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applicable state/local taxes or recycling fees.
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Ph. 865-984-9875
/ Fax: 865-984-7858
6B | SPORTS
THE DAILY TIMES
www.thedailytimes.com
Saturday, November 8, 2014
ALCOA: Coach
sees room to
get better
HOW THE TORNADOES SCORED
JC
A
ALCOA 62, JOHNSON COUNTY 14
7
7
0
0
28
20
7
7
— 14
— 62
FIRST QUARTER
A 11:03 — Brenden Teeter 57 pass from Keishaun
Johnson (Augustine Posada kick)
Two plays | 69yds | :50
Mitchell McClurg took a shotgun snap, threw laterally to Keishaun Johnson who was split wide left and
Johnson threw down the field to a wide open Brenden Teeter, who went 57 yards for the game’s opening
touchdown. | Tornadoes, 7-0
FROM 1B
JC 10:22 — Dakota Wright 55 interception return
(Austin Kurtz kick)
Johnson County defensive back Dakota Wright broke in
front of a Jaylen Miller pass on Alcoa’s second possession and had nothing but green turf in front of him. |
Tornadoes 7, Longhorns 7
MARK A. LARGE | THE DAILY TIMES
A 9:42 — Caleb Woody 12 pass from Mitchell
McClurg (Posada kick) Three plays | 57yds | :33
Alcoa got back on track with a 12-yard touchdown pass
from Mitchell McClurg to receiver Caleb Woody, capping a drive that saw Woody run for 24 yards on first
down, Braxton Dockery run for 21 yards and Woody
cap the drive in the end zone. | Tornadoes, 14-7
ALCOA WIDE RECEIVER CALEB WOODY (10) runs the ball past Johnson County defenders during
the first round of the Class 3A playoffs Friday night at Goddard Field.
Alcoa offense shows off weapons
BY GRANT RAMEY
A 8:24 — Teeter 73 pass from Jaylen Miller (Posada kick) One play | 73yds | :13
Alcoa padded the lead, stretching it to two possessions
for the first time with Teeter’s 73-yard touchdown
grab from Miller. Johnson County went three-and-out
after the Woody touchdown and Miller found Teeter
across the middle. The lanky receiver outran the Johnson County defensive backs from there, making it a
14-point game 73 yards later. | Tornadoes, 21-7
A 2:00 — Karim Shereef 7 run (Posada kick)
Four plays | 30yds | 1:41
Karim Shereef scored the first of his two touchdowns
on the night on a 7-yard run, capping a 30-yard drive
that was set up by a long punt return from Dustin
Clabough. Jaquez Tyson ran for 14 on first down, nine
on the next two snaps and Shereef finished it on
third-and-1 from the JC 7-yard line. | Tornadoes, 28-7
SECOND QUARTER
A 11:03 — Keishaun Johnson 1 run (Posada kick)
Seven plays | 52yds | 2:15
Keishaun Johnson pulled in what looked like a 20-yard
touchdown pass from Jaylen Miller on second-and-5
from the JC 27, but the senior receiver was ruled out at
the 1. No matter. Johnson ran in for the 1-yard score on
the following play to give Alcoa a 28-point lead early
in the second quarter. | Tornadoes, 35-7
A 9:32 — Jaquez Tyson 32 run (Posada kick)
Three plays | 28yds | :59
Jaquez Tyson finally found the end zone with just
under 10 minutes left in the second quarter, running
in from 32 yards out to give Alcoa a 35-point lead.
Johnson County couldn’t field the ensuing kickoff and
Tyson went to work from there. Alcoa took possession at the 28 and backed up to the 35 after a holding penalty. Two plays later Tyson was in the end zone
untouched. | Tornadoes, 42-7
A 4:06 — Malik Salter 11 run (Posada kick failed)
Four plays | 63yds | 1:45
Sophomore fullback Malik Salter and junior running
back Karim Shereef did all the heavy lifting on Alcoa’s
final scoring drive of the first half. Shereef ran for 26
yards on first down, Salter ran for 4 on the next play,
then Shereef ripped off 22 more. That set up the Tornadoes up at the 11-yard line and Salter finished it off
from there. | Tornadoes, 48-7
JC 3:15 — Greg Roark 26 pass from Warren Kerley
(Kurtz kick) Three plays | 66yds | :45
Credit Johnson County for not rolling over. Quarterback
Warren Kerley found receiver Greg Roark from 26 yards
out for the Longhorns’ second and final score. Johnson
County gained 16, 24 and 26 yards on the three-play
scoring drive. | Tornadoes, 48-14
THIRD QUARTER
A 8:21 — Shereef 48 run (Jackson Richards kick)
Four plays | 54yds | 1:48
Karim Sheeref capped off his 107-yard night with an
electrifying 48-yard touchdown run early in the third
quarter, stopping and starting along the Alcoa sideline while stepping out of tackles and making multiple
defenders miss. | Tornadoes, 55-14
FOURTH QUARTER
A 3:20 — Jack Warwick 66 run (Richards kick)
Seven plays | 81yds | 5:09
Jack Warwick capped the game’s scoring with a
66-yard touchdown run. | Tornadoes, 62-14
Total Yards
Att-Rushing
Passing
C-A-I
JC
174
32-81
93
7-18-2
A
554
32-378
176
5-9-1
— Grant Ramey @GrantRamey
TSSAA PROPOSED REGIONS
Class 1A: Region 1
Cloudland, Concord Christian, Greenback, Hancock
County, Unaka
Class 3A: Region 2
Alcoa, Alvin C. York Institute, Christian Academy of
Knoxville, Kingston, Loudon, McMinn Central, Scott
Class 4A: Region 1
Cherokee, Grainger, Greeneville, Seymour, Sullivan Central, Sullivan East, Sullivan South, Volunteer
Class 5A: Region 2
Gibbs, Heritage, Knox Halls, Powell, South-Doyle, West
Class 6A: Region 1
Bearden, Bradley Central, Dobyns Bennett, Hardin Valley Academy, Jefferson County, Maryville, Science HillWilliam Blount
The proposed football classification for the 2015 and 16
seasons can be found here: http://tssaa.org/footballregion-alignment-recommendations-2015-2016/
[email protected]
To put into context just how many
cylinders Alcoa was running on Friday night, Jaquez Tyson didn’t need to
score until there were nine minutes, 32
seconds left in the first half. And even
then, he was the seventh Tornado to
account for a touchdown.
Tyson’s 32-yard run to the pylon put
Alcoa, already on cruise control, up
42-7 early in the second quarter. It was
just a glimpse of the Tornadoes’ offensive explosiveness, which Friday night
included five different players running
for touchdowns, three different passers throwing for scores and two different receivers combing for three more
touchdowns.
Ask Alcoa coach Gary Rankin about
the weapons for his top-seeded and 10-1
Tornadoes and he just starts rattling off
jersey numbers.
“No. 30, No. 1, 85, there’s a lot of weapons to get the ball out there to,” Rankin
said, referencing receivers Dustin
Clabough, Keishaun Johnson and Brenden Teeter, respectively. “Some of them,
ball security isn’t as good as we’d like,
but for a 3A school we feel like we’ve
got some weapons to get it to.”
Tyson’s run came after Teeter caught
two passes for 130 yards and two touchdowns. It came after Johnson, Mitchell
McClurg and Jaylen Miller each threw
touchdown passes. And it came after
Caleb Woody added a third Alcoa touchdown reception.
As much as Tyson’s stats jump off the
page — he ran 185 times in 10 regularseason games for 1,492 yards and 25
touchdowns — Alcoa’s offense has many
more weapons at its disposal than just
the bowling ball of a senior running
back, who needed just six carries and
69 yards while the Tornadoes rolled
up 554 yards of total offense and nine
touchdowns.
“Numerous,” a relatively fresh Tyson
said after the game, describing Alcoa’s
playmakers. “We definitely have depth,
at least three players at every posi-
tion, that are going to produce every
night.”
Rankin showed that off on the second
play from scrimmage.
McClurg took a shotgun snap, threw
laterally to Johnson lined up wide left,
who then uncorked a tight spiral down
field to a wide open Teeter for a 57-yard
touchdown and a 7-0 lead.
Later it was Woody, he of multiple
touchdowns called back by penalty
this season, on the receiving end of
a 12-yard pass from McClurg. Teeter
added a 73-yard touchdown catch before
the first quarter was out, this one from
Miller, the backup quarterback who
spent his sophomore season alternating possessions with McClurg, Alcoa’s
senior starter.
“We all contributed tonight,” McClurg
said. “Think we had somewhere near
10 people touch the ball. That’s big for
the offense. There’s no real predictability.”
Karim Shereef, Alcoa’s running back
of the Tyson-less future, had a 7-yard
touchdown run in the first half and a
48-yard bob-and-weave touchdown run
early in the third quarter. He finished
the night with 107 yards on six carries,
the only back in Alcoa’s offense to go
over 100 yards while the Tornadoes ran
for 378 as a team.
Johnson (1 yard) and sophomore fullback Malik Salter (11 yards) had touchdown runs in the first half. Jack Warwick
added a 66-yard touchdown run in the
fourth quarter.
It was so many weapons by night’s end
that Rankin struggled to name them
all.
“That was part of our game plan, to get
a lot of people some touches,” Rankin
said. “We got some people that can
do some things with the ball. Woody
and Clabough and Teeter and Braxton
(Dockery) and Keishaun. And our young
fullback (Salter) is a good runner. He
doesn’t get a lot of carries right now
because he’s so young.
“And 26, our backup tailback,” Rankin
added, making sure not to leave anyone
out, “is pretty electrifying at times.”
great play on their part to
tie it up.”
The mistake didn’t stall the
Tornadoes for long.
Alcoa’s quarterback duo of
Myers and McClurg each added one passing touchdown a
piece in the first quarter —
McClurg to Caleb Woody and
Myers to Teeter.
One person who wasn’t
making plays in the first half
was Tornadoes running back
Jaquez Tyson.
Tyson, who was on the field
most of the first quarter, has
anchored Alcoa’s rushing
attack all season, but that
wasn’t the case against the
Longhorns (4-7).
Two weeks ago against
Maplewood, Tyson spent
the second half on the sideline nursing a bone bruise.
However, the following week
Tyson spent a cold, rainy Halloween night pillaging the
Catholic defense, rushing for
194 yards and three touchdowns on 43 attempts.
“We just wanted to get
some other people involved,”
Rankin said.
The senior tailback was
limited to carrying the ball
four times in the first quarter,
including a fumble inside the
Longhorn 15-yard line.
Karim Shereef, who made
the most of Tyson’s limited
play, scampered in from seven yards for his first of two
touchdowns following the
Tyson fumble.
While the Tornadoes avoided the turnover, Johnson
County’s mistakes continued to add up.
Down 35-7 early in the second quarter, the Longhorns
coughed up the ball following
another Alcoa touchdown.
On the ensuing drive, Tyson
finally made his presence
felt, carrying the ball three
straight times before ending the drive with a 32-yard
score.
The Tornadoes outscored
the Longhorns, 14-0, in the
second half, but Rankin
said there is still room for
improvement.
“I’m not real happy with the
way we’re blocking up front
at times,” he said. “I don’t
think we’re physical enough,
that’s one thing we’re going
to have to bear down on and
demand out of our kids, but
the physicality of our line has
to be better.”
HANLEY: Good things happening for hard-working athlete
FROM 1B
the program to an opening-round
playoff bye this week and also garnered national television exposure for the Greenback community,
hasn’t forgotten the day that Hanley
relayed the doctor’s message. Nor
has Hicks forgotten what he knew
about Hanley even then.
“Tanner was extremely upset,
he hugs me, he’s emotional and he
told me the doctor told him there
was a 50-50 chance he would never
play again,” Hicks shared. “He was
one of those kids, where I felt like
if the doctor told him it was a 50-50
chance, he’d be in the 50 percent
that made it back.
“Two days later he’s in our weight
room lifting before he’s even had
surgery.”
Hanley never stopped lifting. In
fact, upper-body workouts were
all the Greenback senior could
do through a major portion of the
recovery process. Hanley had to
utilize crutches and could not put
weight on the foot for six months.
“A lot of the rehab was water therapy. I was just doing a lot of swimming, cardio in the water. Just trying
slowly to work my way back,” Hanley said. “I couldn’t put any weight
on my foot. It definitely made things
really difficult. I played three sports.
It wasn’t just like I missed football. I love competing. Love playing
sports. Going from one extreme to
playing all the time to the other was
frustrating at times, but I was able
to still lift weights. (The desire to
compete again) helped me a lot to
get through.”
To say Hanley is merely competing would be like suggesting Peyton Manning only screams “Omaha!” Hanley has amassed 67 tackles, including four for losses, and
SCOTT KELLER | THE DAILY TIMES
GREENBACK’S TANNER HANLEY (3) tackles a Coalfield runner earlier this season. The
senior has been a force on the field for the Cherokees after rehabbing from a potentially career-ending injury.
grabbed a 34-yard pick-six interception. He’s tallied 200 rushing yards,
133 receiving yards and owns offensive touchdowns via land and air.
Moreover, he’s been a beacon in
the proud Greenback football community.
“To me Greenback really is a
special place for a lot of different
reasons. This community is really tight,” Hicks said. “Mr. Casteel
(Greenback principal Mike Casteel)
said to me everything in our community revolves around Greenback
football. One thing I’ve noticed,
and I don’t exactly know the reason
why, a lot of kids don’t understand
that if I work and work hard, good
things come. There’s so much apathy in our society now, I think a lot
of kids feel like a lot should be given
to them.
“Tanner isn’t like that, and it originates from his family. They’re real-
ly just a great family, and Tanner’s
been taught when you work hard,
good things happen.”
For Hanley, there never was any
other option.
“It was a huge motivator for me.
Just thinking about coming back
and getting to compete and play
with all my buddies,” he said. “That
really pushed me every day. There
would be bad days now and then;
we all have bad days sometimes.
And I’d go in for rehab, and maybe
I wouldn’t feel like swimming in
the pool or running in the pool. But
when it would get hard, I’d close my
eyes and picture myself running a
touchdown, making a big tackle this
season.
“Thinking about that and getting to do what I love again is what
helped me get through.”
It was a coin-flip. Hanley never
had a chance of losing the toss.
SPORTS | 7B
THE DAILY TIMES
Saturday, November 8, 2014
www.thedailytimes.com
HOW THE REBELS SCORED
NO. 1 MARYVILLE RED REBELS 48,
NO. 8 WALKER VALLEY MUSTANGS 0
WV
Rebels
0
20
0
14
0
14
0
0
—0
— 48
Gaining the experience
FIRST QUARTER
M 5:44 — Joel Hopkins 7 run (Luke Orren kick)
Seven plays | 52yds | 2:16
Maryville twice forced a three-and-out, the first
negated be a late hit flag as Walker valley netted
eight yards on eight snaps. Dylan Shinsky grabbed 4
then 11 with a jitterbug up the middle. Hopkins went
wide right for 8 then again for 15 behind a block from
Bryce Miller.. |REBELS, 7-0
M (2:43) — Austin Ensley 26 run (Kick fail)
Six plays | 64yds | 1:52
Ensley took his first snaps under center and hit Tillery
on passes of 8 and 17. Shinsky picked up 15 on firstand-15 to set up Ensley to make the read option call.
The sophomore sprinted for the visiting corner of the
cedars and dove for the pylon. |REBELS, 13-0
M (:37) — Tyler Vaught 24 pass from Ensley (Orren
kick) Three plays | 53yds |:53
The Mustangs only first down in the first was on a
flag and Maryville turned another three-and-out into
points. Burgess broke loose for 22, dragging a pair of
defenders along the way. The senior shouldered up
the middle for seven more. Ensley had all day to drop
a bomb into the home corner and let Vaught win the
chicken fight with the safety for a scoring reception for
the starting quarterback..|REBELS, 20-0
SECOND QUARTER
M (4:58) — Kelby Brock 37 pass from Ensley (Orren
kick) Six plays | 51 yds | 2:06
The Rebels followed up their ownly punt of the half by
going back to Burgess, who racked up 12 more. Brock
held on tp a screen for five and Maryville rolled the
dice on fourth-and-8. Brock shook off the corner at
the 25 on a grab that only he could make for the first
but also found a clear path to the Don Story Athletic
Center. |REBELS, 27-0
M (1:47) — Vaught 18 run (Orren kick)
Four plays | 34yds | 1:22
Vaught read the option and followed the line for nine.
Shinsky ran for 13 and Burgess went for five more before
Vaught read the same seam for 18.|REBELS, 34-0
THIRD QUARTER
M (7:33) — Vaught 8 run (Orren kick)
Five plays | 37yds | 1:59
Burgess rumbled for nine and Hopkins jetted around
for a dozen more to set up three consecutive carries
by Vaught. The senior rolled left on the last one, head
faked the look to throw and went in untouched to
grab the M on the fence and press the button to start
the ever-running mercy clock. | REBELS, 41-0
M (3:05) — Isaiah Cobb 13 run (Justin Pearson kick)
Four plays | 31 yds | 2:21
The mercy clock brought on the soap opera as the Rebels’ young and restless found the field. Michael Hall
bulldozed up the gut for 12. Cobb got his first carry
for three. Hall went once more for short yards and
then Cobb, turned, twisted but didn’t stretch. After a
fumble cost him his first TD last week, the freshman
tucked it for six this time.| REBELS, 48-0
— Marcus Fitzsimmons @TDT_Marcus
First Downs
Rush-Yds
Passing
Cmp-Att-Int
Plays-Off
Punts-Avg
Third Down
Fourth Down
WV
9
28-9
106
15-27-0
55-115
7-32.5
1-13
1-3
M
25
43-334
172
8-14-0
57-506
1-39
2-5
1-2
PASSING — WV: Noah Davis 6-10-80-0-0; Kolten Gibson 9-16-2-0-0; Josh Jones 0-1-0-0-0 REBELS: Austin
Ensley 5-6-90-2-0, Tyler Vaught 2-7-17-0-0; Kyle Cunningham 1-1-65-0-0
RUSHING — WV: Avery Jones 4-21, Donell Armour
4-17, Alex King 9-13, Josj Jones 4-8, Bryce Nunnelly 1-2,
David Thompson 1-(-42), Kolten Gibson 5-(-10). REBELS: Jaylen Burgess 10-83, Tyler Vaught 8-58, Joel
Hopkins 5-56, Dylan Shinsky 6-44, Isaiah Cobb 3-34,
Michael Hall 5-24, Austin Ensley 2-23, Brian Tillery 1-11.
RECEIVING— WV: Tucker Mendenhall 2-35, Bryce Nunnelly 3-22, Zach Eslinger 1-18, Alex King 4-16, Josh
Jones 2-11, Cooper Melton 1-4. REBELS: Isaiah Cobb
1-65, Kelby Brock 3-46, Brian Tillery 3-37, Tyler Vaught
1-24.
— Stats by Ken Main, 94.3 FM
ROAD TO COOKEVILLE
CLASS 1A
CLASS 4A
Quad 1
First Round, Friday
No. 1 Greenback bye
No. 4 Sunbright 42, No. 5 Oakdale 28
No. 3 Coalfield 8, No. 6 Harriman 6
No. 2 Cloudland bye
Second Round, Nov. 14
No. 4 Sunbright at No. 1 Greenback
No. 3 Coalfield at No. 2 Cloudland
Quad 1
First Round, Friday
No. 1 Fulton 55, No. 8 Scott 0
No. 4 Catholic 24, No. 5 Elizabethton 17
No. 3 Greeneville 42, No. 6 Carter 3
No. 2 Sull South 56, No. 7 Sull East 0
Second Round, Nov. 14
No. 4 Catholic at No. 1 Fulton
No. 3 Greeneville at No. 2 Sull South
CLASS 5A
CLASS 2A
Quad 1
First Round, Friday
No. 1 Oneida bye
No. 5 Rockwood 24, No. 4 Boyd Buchanan 21
No. 3 Grace 35, No. 6 Meigs County 23
No. 2 Hampton bye
Second Round, Nov. 14
No. 5 Rockwoodat No. 1 Oneida
No. 3 Grace Chr. at No. 2 Hampton
Quad 1
First Round, Friday
No. 1 South-Doyle 32, No. 8 Gibbs 21
No. 4 Campbell County 26, No. 5 Mo.
West 25
No. 6 Tennessee 41, No. 3 Anderson
County 24
No. 2 Knox West 46, No. 7 Knox Central 0
Second Round, Nov. 14
No. 4 Campbell County at No. 1
South-Doyle
No. 6 Tennessee at No. 2 Knox West
CLASS 3A
CLASS 6A
Quad 1
First Round, Friday
No. 1 Alcoa 62, No. 8 Johnson County 14
No. 4 Gatlinburg-Pittman 52, No. 5
Sweetwater 23
No. 3 Pigeon Forge 49, No. 6 West
Greene 6
No. 7 CAK 42, No. 2 Chuckey-Doak 6
Second Round
No. 4 Gatlinburg-Pittman at No. 1
Alcoa
No. 7 CAK at No. 3 Pigeon Forge
Quad 1
First Round, Friday
No. 1 Maryville 48, No. 8 Walker Valley 0
No. 4 Sevier County 28, No. 5 Hardin
Valley 20
No. 3 Dobyns-Bennett 35, No. 6 Mo
East 31
No. 2 Science Hill 59, No. 7 Bradley
Central 47
Second Round, Nov. 14
No. 4 Sevier Count at No. 1 Maryville
No. 3 Dobyns-Bennett at No. 2 Science Hill
SCOTT KELLER | THE DAILY TIMES
MARYVILLE SOPHOMORE QUARTERBACK AUSTIN ENSLEY stretches out for the pylon to finish a 26-yard scoring run Friday in the first
round of the Class 6A playoffs at Jim Renfro Field in Maryville.
Rebels continue to build depth for future in playoffs
BY MARCUS FITZSIMMONS
[email protected]
Maryville was looking for nine yards
to run out the clock on its first round
shutout win over Walker Valley Friday.
The Rebels got a whole lot more.
Kyle Cunningham, one of five quarterbacks Maryville used in the game,
put a screen on the money to freshman
back Isaiah Cobb. With a little razzle
dazzle and misdirection, Cobb picked
up the first and kept motoring up the
home side line of Shields Stadium all
the way to the 10, netting 65 yards and
the longest offensive play of the night
for Maryville.
The Rebels (11-0) didn’t have to snap
it again as the horn sounded on the 48-0
win, but the fans who stayed got a good
glimpse of what the future holds for
Maryville with sophomores and freshman starting to make their marks.
“It was just a screen on third-and-9.
They just kept blitzing there, and we
didn’t have much running room. So
I said let’s just throw one out there,”
Maryville coach George Quarles said
of the play. “It wasn’t to throw it deep
or anything, just get a first down. But
Isaiah’s the kind of guy who can take
a short throw and turn it into a long
play.”
Cobb and sophomore Michael Hall
helped Maryville run out the clock, put
up a final score and turn the light on a
group of underclassman that includes
quarterback Austin Ensley and middle
linebacker T.D. Blackmon.
“Isaiah Cobb and Michael Hall, a
freshman and a sophomore, both those
guys played well and the future is looking good there in the backfield,” Quarles said. “They’re not too far from playing. They have something a little bit
different than the other guys do right
now. Michael is just big and strong.
Isaiah has a little burst. Anytime you’re
young boys can get points on the board
that’s a good sign for the future.”
Cobb put his first score of the season
in the books with 3:05 to play in the
third quarter on a 13-yard run where
the freshman had the ball in a death
grip. Against Farragut and William
Blount earlier this season, the freshman’s chance to score turned into
fumbles into the end zone for touchbacks. This time, Cobb wasn’t taking
any chances.
“Yes sir, I’ve been wrapping it tighter,” Cobb said. “It’s something special.
Not a lot of freshman get to have the
playoff experience, I’m very lucky and
grateful for it.”
The Rebels also got exactly what
defensive coordinator Jim Gaylor likes
to see, a goose egg on the scoreboard
and a lot of names on the tackle column. Walker Valley picked up half of
its 106 yards of offense on a 74-yard
drive in the fourth quarter against the
Rebels’ second and third lines.
“We’ve been fortunate to get some
leads where these younger guys can get
some playing time. That’s important
to us,” Gaylor told The Daily Times.
“Sometimes it’s frustrating when the
other team’s best players are in there
against junior varsity defense basically.
They keep working at it and those guys
do a great job each week running the
scout team so they’ve earned the right
to play in these situations.”
Junior Michael Hodge was credited
with recovering the Mustang fumble
inside the Maryville 5 that ended the
threat and preserved the shutout, but a
lot of Rebels got to see the field in the
second half defensive stands.
“It was good this week because we
did talk about it with them at halftime
about ‘when you get in there’ because
we lost the shutout in this situation last
week,” Gaylor said. “It was fortunate
they put the ball on the ground at the
end of that one and we recovered it to
preserve it. It really makes the defense
feel really good, there’s just something
about having a zero up there.
“It’s always good to get the young
guys in, We’ve given up a couple shutouts doing it bu in the long run its a
sacrifice you want to make because it
makes us better down the road.”
MARYVILLE: Ensley finds Vaught early for receiving TD
FROM 1B
handed Maryville a 7-0
advantage with 5:44 remaining in the first quarter.
“That gave us a little bit of
insight on what we needed
to be doing,” Vaught said,
“and then we got the job
done like we usually do.”
As has been the case in
recent weeks, Quarles then
made a move under center as quarterback Austin Ensley (5 of 6 passing,
90 yards) took over the
reins on Maryville’s third
drive.
The signal-calling switch
up, though, brought little
change in offensive productivity.
After finding junior wide
receiver Brian Tillery on a
pair of first down connections, Ensley turned to his
legs for the final 26 yards.
On first-and-10, the sophomore quarterback rolled
out left and slithered away
from pressure before wiggling his way to the end
zone for his fourth rushing
score of the season.
On the night, Ensley
(two carries, 23 yards) and
Vaught (eight carries, 58
yards) combined to outrush the entire Walker Valley team, which mustered
just 61 yards on the ground
before factoring in sacks.
“We’ve got to have a
threat there at quarterback,” Quarles told The
Daily Times. “It’s like
having an extra blocker,
so Tyler and Austin can
both run it. Tyler’s a little
bit faster I think, a little
bit more explosive. But
Austin’s not a bad runner
either, so that was good
to see. That just helps our
running game when those
guys get involved.”
Ensley remained under
center on the Rebels’ ensuing drive.
But on the frigid November night, Vaught certainly wasn’t left out in the
cold.
On second down, Ensley
went for it all. The pass
was lobbed high towards
the cedar trees as a blackclad pass-catcher lurked
in the back corner of the
end zone.
Only the target wasn’t
Tillery. Or wide receiver
Kelby Brock. Or one of the
countless Maryville running backs looking to contribute through the air.
$
It was Vaught, who corralled the 24-yard score to
ive Maryville a 20-0 lead
late in the first quarter.
“It was just a play that
the coaches have designed
— kind of a jump-up ball,”
said Vaught, who primarily played wide receiver
in 2013 but didn’t have a
touchdown reception this
season until Friday night.
“He under threw it a little
bit, but he made a good
ball. And I made a good
play. It just worked out for
the best.”
After Vaught added two
rushing touchdowns —
the last of which came
midway through the third
quarter and resulted in a
running clock — it was
time for a glimpse at the
future.
Freshman running back
Isaiah Cobb — the nephew
of former Alcoa standout
and current Green Bay
Packer Randall Cobb —
finished off the damage
with a 13-yard score late
in third quarter, the first
touchdown of his varsity
career.
“It was special,” Vaught
said of Cobb’s milestone.
“Everybody on the sidelines was going crazy.”
115
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Saturday, November 8, 2014
NATION&WORLD | 9B
THE DAILY TIMES
Saturday, November 8, 2014
www.thedailytimes.com
Today
Sunday
Partly cloudy
Partly cloudy
Light wind
Monday
Sunny
Wednesday
Tuesday
Partly cloudy
Chance
showers
!.$!,-2-.!(-) +,!%+%..%*)"*,!-."*,)**).* 2!(+!,./,!*'*,) -,!.* 24-+,! %.! $%#$-
Billings
62/40
H
H
San
Francisco
75/57
Los
Angeles
83/59
H
H
Washington D.C.
54/41
Juneau
43/32
" !
'())+(
&'())+(
&#
(&%*
Honolulu
81/70
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1075'
$!,*&!!
1002'
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1710'
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Miami
83/67
**"&%(/
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HOROSCOPE
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for
Saturday, Nov. 8, 2014:
This year you seem to be a very
different person from the one
your close loved ones know. You
become much more open and
trusting. You still might choose to
discuss heavy, bottom-line issues,
but ultimately there is newfound
sociability in you.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
★★★★ You seem to be filled
with ideas that please an older
relative. This person relates best
on a one-on-one level with you,
and he or she appreciates that
special time.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
★★★ You will want to try a different approach with a money
matter or when doing some shopping. You recently might have
decided that spending less would
be more beneficial or efficient.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
★★★★★ You could have a conflict with someone involving the
nature of your plans. You might
want to spread your wings, but this
person seems more interested in
some one-on-one time.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
★★★ Allow greater give-andtake between you and a loved
one, as this person will want to
hear more of your opinions. At
this moment, you might decide
to read a book or watch a movie
at home because you need some
downtime.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
★★★★ You are likely to head
toward your friends with a goal
in mind. Your ability to get past a
problem is noteworthy. Once you
see your pals, you might discover
that the world seems to revolve
around them.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
★★★★ You could be extra tense
about a situation that surrounds
your personal life. Be willing to
walk away from a problem to enjoy
a child or loved one.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
★★★★★ Reach out to someone
at a distance, and make a point
of catching up on his or her news.
Investigate alternative pastimes
that would delight both of you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
★★★★ You might want to head
in a new direction and touch base
with a loved one. You would love
this person’s company on a day
trip to a favorite spot.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
★★★★ You can’t seem to
restrain your adventurous personality, nor would anyone want you
to. You tend to draw an interesting circle of people toward you,
whether you’re at a party or just
having lunch with friends.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
★★★ You might have been putting off some work or a project.
Now is the time to start working
on it, as long as you can discipline
your social personality.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
★★★★★ You have a way of
evoking the wild child in nearly
everyone you meet. Your ability to
give others permission to reveal
themselves will be clear.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
★★★★★ Your personality melts boundaries, and it also
allows others to be themselves.
You might choose to spend a relaxing day at home with family.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
&/ &$&((&"*/
"&. "&.
Atlanta
63/40/pc 65/44/pc
Atlantic City
52/40/pc 56/37/pc
Baltimore
53/40/pc 54/38/pc
Birmingham
65/40/pc
64/37/s
Boston
47/41/pc 52/39/pc
Charleston, SC 67/46/pc 68/45/pc
Charlotte
59/42/pc 62/38/pc
Chicago
44/31/r 49/37/pc
Cincinnati
51/31/cd 52/37/pc
Dallas
66/42/pc 72/50/pc
Denver
67/38/s 71/42/pc
Destin
65/50/pc 69/50/pc
Houston
72/49/pc
70/54/s
&/
"*/
"&.
Jacksonville
71/54/pc
Las Vegas
80/56/s
Los Angeles
83/59/s
Louisville, KY
55/35/pc
Miami
83/67/sh
Myrtle Beach
64/48/pc
New Orleans
67/50/pc
New York City 47/42/pc
Orlando
78/60/sh
Philadelphia
52/41/pc
Raleigh
58/43/pc
San Francisco
73/56/s
St. Louis
50/34/pc
Washington, DC 54/41/pc
&$&((&"&.
69/49/sh
79/56/s
77/56/s
53/37/pc
81/70/ts
66/48/pc
68/50/s
56/44/pc
74/58/ts
54/40/pc
64/38/pc
73/56/s
60/41/pc
56/38/pc
$!+*''!)-!-*)$-!) ! !+*,.-0%'',!-/(!)!1.-+,%)#
*/,!,%$!'%''!,
''!,#2-.$() %)/-((/)*'*#2
GOOD
"%&##+*%* Ozone
&/ good
7:04 a.m. 5:33 p.m.
7:15 p.m. 8:39 a.m.
Nov. 14 Nov. 22 Nov. 29 Dec. 6
Last
New
First
Full
Q t
Q t
Trivia Fun by Wilson Casey
What are those plastic strips that can be used as handcuffs called? Strap-straints, Plasticuffs,
Backflips, Flex-cuffs
Most of the peanuts consumed in the U.S. are in what form?
Roasted, Chick fil-A sandwiches, Peanut butter, Boiled
What’s a style of Southern rap featuring repetitive chants? Gangsta, Bling, Crunk, Glide
More teasers? Comments? [email protected] — See answers below Sudoku
The Search is Over for
Catering and Tailgating
865.240.2600
527 W. BROADWAY AVE, MARYVILLE, TN 37801
www.deadendbbq.com
CRYPTOQUOTE
A cold front will move over the state
today, producing some cloudiness and
cooler temperatures west.
&/ &$&((&"*/
"&. "&.
Bristol
57/34/pc 54/33/pc
Chattanooga
61/41/pc 57/36/pc
Crossville
56/34/pc 55/35/pc
Gatlinburg
57/36/pc 57/33/pc
Jackson
58/32/pc
57/37/s
Johnson City
55/34/pc 54/33/pc
Kingsport
55/36/pc 54/33/pc
Knoxville
58/38/pc 57/35/pc
Memphis
59/37/pc
58/42/s
Nashville
60/35/pc 59/38/pc
+((%* !(
,# !% 1050.2'
0.3'
961.7'
0.8'
1665.0'
1.5'
812.2'
0.3'
1494.0'
1.7'
794.6'
0.2'
1005.0'
0.4'
'
0'
)
)
)
)
)
)
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)
)
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Key: 10!.$!,-/-/))2","%,++,.'2'*/ 2''*/ 2$3$3!"#"*#-$-$*0!,-,,%) 3 ,%33'!
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..%-.%-,!.$,*/#$
(2!-.!, 2
&**)* 94° at San Bernardino, CA
&&#)* 12° at Mt. Washington, NH
($
(&%*
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 6 p.m.................... 0.00"
Month-to-date................................. 0.26"
Normal month-to-date.................. 0.80"
Year-to-date................................... 35.59"
Normal year-to-date..................... 40.15"
H
H
Atlanta
63/40
Houston
72/49
Anchorage
36/27
HUMIDITY
+(.* 2 56%
Kansas City
50/33
DFW
Metroplex
66/42
offthemark
New York
47/42
Detroit
49/30
Chicago
44/31
Denver
67/38
! %)#--*"+(2!-.!, 2
TEMPERATURES
!-.!, 2$%#$'*0 50°/42°
Normal high/low........................ 64°/42°
Record high.............................. 79° (1996)
Record low................................ 21° (1967)
5838 5733 6343 61 39 51 34
Minn. St. Paul
38/30
NEWSMAKERS
James Earl Jones
happy to receive
Voice Icon Award
NEW YORK — Darth
Vader, Mufasa, and even
the tagline for a certain
24-hour news network
helped
made
James
Earl Jones
one of the
most recognizable
voices on
the planet
James Earl
and soon
Jones
the recipient of the
first Voice Icon Award.
But according to the
actor, there was a period when he didn’t do
much speaking. As a
child he suffered from a
severe stutter, and went
through a period where
he refused to speak at
all.
Once speaking, Jones
attributes his teacher
for providing valuable
advice that would carry
him throughout his long
career.
“I was 16 or 17, and
my teacher said, ‘You
remember yourself
speaking as a child,
you’re now hearing
yourself as an adult,
don’t get impressed
with it. Don’t listen to it,
because you can fall in
love with the melodious
of it. If you listen to it,
then nobody else will,’”
he said.
Sentencing set for
Brown’s bodyguard
WASHINGTON — A
judge who convicted
singer Chris Brown’s
bodyguard of punching
a man outside a Washington hotel last year
has set a new sentencing
date in the case.
Christopher Hollosy
is set to be sentenced
Dec. 16. During a hearing Friday, D.C. Superior Court Judge Patricia Wynn also said she
would consider his attorney’s request that the
conviction be thrown
out or for a new trial.
Both Hollosy and
Brown were arrested
after the incident in 2013.
Hollosy told police he
punched the man after
he tried to enter Brown’s
tour bus. But the man
said Brown and Hollosy
punched him when he
tried to get in a photo
with Brown.
10B |
THE DAILY TIMES
www.thedailytimes.com
Saturday, November 8, 2014
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Only
15,695
‘08 CHEVY
SUBURBAN
1500 LS
Only
16,995
$
‘10 CHEVY
SILVERADO
Loaded, Chrome
Wheels, Only 62k Miles
#133144
Running Boards, Tow Pkg,
#181041
4x4, Crew Cab, Z71,
Loaded, 18-Inch Wheels
#160618
Only
Only
Only
20,995
$
$
21,995
25,895
$
Only
13,495
$
‘12 TOYOTA
PRIUS
Loaded, Only 17k Miles
#501338
$
Only
16,995
‘09 JEEP
WRANGLER
UNLIMITED
SAHARA
Nav, Hardtop, Lifted
#726826
$
Only
25,995
Only
13,995
$
‘07 GMC
YUKON SLT
4x4, Sunroof, 2nd
Bucket, DVD, 20-Inch
Wheels
#354824
Only
17,780
$
‘13 CHEVY
SILVERADO
1500
4x4, Ext Cab,
Power Drivers Seat
#355085
Only
29,995
$
Only
13,995
$
‘00 NISSAN
FRONTIER SE
‘06 JEEP
LIBERTY
V-6, 4 Door, Alloy, Power
Locks/Power Windows
#381245
4x4, Limited, Diesel,
Loaded
#145861
‘06 FORD
EXPEDITION
EDDIE BAUER
4x4, Sunroof,
DVD,Leather, 127k Miles
#A88342
Only
Only
17,995
$
‘13 FORD
F-150 STX
Super Cab, 4x4, 13k
Miles, Alloy Wheels,
Running Boards
#F57055
Only
29,995
$
$
Only
8,495
‘11 04 GMC
YUKON SLT
4x4, 2nd Row Buckets,
Bose Stereo, 123k Miles
#302875
Only
10,995
$
‘14 JEEP
COMPASS
‘07 CADILLAC
CTS
$
Loaded, Only 32k Miles
#523966
Only
11,495
Leather, Dual Power &
Heated Seats,
Only 30k Miles
#165090
Only
13,995
$
‘11 JEEP
GRAND
CHEROKEE
‘08 JEEP
WRANGLER
4X4 LIMITED
Loaded, Only 58k Miles
#591611
4-Door, Loaded
#518322
$
‘10 GMC
TERRAIN SLT
Sunroof, Leather,
Luggage Rack, 89k
Miles #298360
Only
7,995
$
Only
18,995
$
‘15 CHEVY
CORVETTE
Navigation,
only 300 miles
#?03638
Sport, Hard Top, Lifted,
Auto, 15k Miles
#235489
Only
38,995
Only
19,995
$
‘14 JEEP
WRANGLER
UNLIMITED
$
14,995
Only
68,995
$
Saturday, November 8, 2014
THE DAILY TIMES |thedailytimes.com/classifieds
CLASSIFIEDS | 1C
2C | CLASSIFIEDS
THE DAILY TIMES | thedailytimes.com/classifieds
Public Notices
Maryville
General Help Wanted
NOTICE OF BIDS
CHILDREN'S CONSIGNMENT SALE
at Mt. Lebanon Baptist Church, 3508
Wildwood Rd, Maryville. Friday, 69pm & Saturday, 8am-noon to benefit
Relay for Life. Lots of great quality
children's items at great prices. Cash
only! More information available at
MLBCTN.org.
LAWN & LANDSCAPE help needed.
Must have exp., transportation & DL.
Drug free, pay DOE. 995-2815 or
582-5411
Blount Co., TN is accepting sealed
bids for Ice Cream Products. Bid No.
2014-2315 will be received until 1:30
p.m. November 24, 2014 and will be
opened publicly. For a copy of the bid
call 865-273-5740, or go to
www.blounttn.org/purchasing/select.asp and register online.
This invitation is made November 7,
2014, in accordance with TCA 5-14101 et. seq. Blount Co. Govt. 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. 2000d).
_________________________
Teresa Johnson, CPPB
November 8, 2014
NOTICE TO SEEK TITLE
2002 Kawasaki KLR650
VIN# JKAKLEA142DA00324
Any person(s) holding any claim to this
vehicle should contact Chad Buck via
certified mail, return receipt requested,
at 1426 Ratledge Rd., Friendsville, TN
37737 no later than 10 days from the
date of this notice.
November 8 & 15, 2014
Lost and Found
MISSING PET?
Be sure to check with the
local animal shelter.
Maryville Animal Shelter
865-681-2241
Blount County Animal Shelter
865-980-6244
Of Interest
PLEASE CHECK YOUR AD
for errors the FIRST DAY it
appears in print. Our paper will not
be liable for incorrect ads after the
first day of publication. You may
request a proof of your ad be sent
to you by fax or email before
it prints to correct any errors.
Deadline for Corrections:
Noon 1 day prior to publication.
865-981-1170
Classified hours are:
Monday-Friday 8am-5pm
Garage / Yard Sales
CHURCH SALE
Forest Hill Baptist, 1850 Forest Hill
Road (corner of Montvale and Forest Hill.) Clothing for children, men,
and women; furniture; kitchenware;
baby items; home decor; more.
Lunch offered at a low price. No
early birds please. November 8
(Saturday only) 8am-2pm.
GARAGE SALE Corner or Princeton
& Morganton Rd. ½ mile from mall.
Saturday only, 8am-4pm.
GARAGE SALE
Saturday, 8am-12pm
Multiple Homes
Ross Springs Neighborhood
HUGE SALE
Tons of toys, dishes, furniture, Christmas decor, name brand adult and
kids clothes, and lots more. Everything must go. 406 Sherwood Dr.
Saturday only, 8am-?
MOVING SALE
2116 Scarlet Rose Court. Clothing,
furniture, cookware, electronics, antiques & much more! Friday, 8am2pm & Saturday, 8am-2pm (everything goes ½ price at noon).
MULTI-FAMILY YARD SALE
1005 Clover Dove Circle, 37737. Saturday, 8am-?
MULTIPLE FAMILIES
Two garages full of great clothes,
toys, antiques, collectibles, kitchen
items, dishes and much more! Houston Springs Rd. Wyndsong Subdivision. Morganton at Salem Rd. follow
signs. Friday and Saturday 8am-?
SUBDIVISION SALE
Highlands of Maryville off Old Glory
Rd. Saturday, 8am-3pm.
Alcoa
YARD SALE 249 Sanderson St. Saturday only, 9am-2pm.
MARYVILLE COUPLE needs housekeeper. Approx. 2 days per week.
Dusting, vacuuming, ironing, etc.
Successful candidate will have at
least 2 years experience. For interview, call 865-984-7756, M-F, 6-8pm.
NOW HIRING Part-time Cleaners.
Bckgrd chk., drug testing. Great environment, can work into FT. 556-0459.
Medical / Dental
ACTIVITIES ASSISTANT
Deadline:
NOON 1 day prior to
publication.
Call 981-1170 for pricing or
place your ad online at
www.thedailytimes.com
Garage / Yard Sales
Maryville
1407 PARKSIDE DRIVE Saturday,
7:30am-? Furniture, tools.
1602 ERIN DR. Saturday, 7:30am12:30am. Multi-Family Sale! Clothes,
books, HH items & decor.
1828 WESTCLIFF DR. Furniture, HH
items, women's clothing, shoes,
linens, dec. items – all seasons, costume jewelry. Saturday, 8am-1pm.
2327 MITCHELL AVE., take Wildwood Rd. & follow signs. 10 Family
Christmas Sale! Nov. 7-Nov. 15, 9-?
2330 SEVIERVILLE RD. Nov. 8th,
8am-noon. Furniture, clothes & much
more.
4019 GLENMORE DR. Saturday,
9am-3pm. Toys, Legos, twin bed,
TVs, organ, young men's clothes,
weight bench, weights, books, VHS
movies, pool table & much more.
SPACIOUS LAKESIDE LIVING! 2BR
Garden Style Apts., off Alcoa Hwy.
New Saltwater pool, Basketball &
Tennis courts, dock for fishing. Call
for more details. 865-982-9678.
SASSAFRAS & CO. and
COUNTRY CUBBARD
Grand Opening & Holiday Open
House. Saturday, 10am-5pm.
Antiques, designer clothing, jewelry,
primitives, pottery, rugs, lamps, artwork, furniture, lots and lots of Christmas decor. 2940 Topside Rd.
Friendsville
612 Crawford St.
Maryville, TN 37804
(865) 981-1004
www.maryvillerentalproperties.com
Mobile/ManufacturedHome Lots
546 LONGHOLLOW RD (MH)
2Bd, 1Ba $500/mo., $500 dep.
LOT FOR RENT Maximum size,
14x60. Garbage pick up included.
No outside pets. $150/mo. 982-5222
3030 ELLEJOY RD (MH)
3Bd, 2Ba $675/mo., $675 dep.
MOBILE HOME LOTS $200
www.edgeotownmhc.com
Or 865-719-1467
2617 MIDDLESETTLEMENTS RD
2Bd, 1Ba $750/mo., $750 dep.
Condominium Rental
Mobile Manufactured
Home Rentals
528 FRANCE LANE (HOUSE)
3Bd, 1Ba $875/mo., $875 dep.
3902 HWY 411 SOUTH (HOUSE)
2Bd, 1Ba $700/mo., $700 dep.
2BR, 1.5BA, City of Maryville,
W/D Connection, CH/A.
Please call 865-977-5489.
2717 JEFFERSON ST (HSE) KNOX
3Bd, 1Ba $800/mo., $800 dep.
3012 MARVIN CIR (HOUSE)
3Bd, 2Ba $1150/mo., $1150 dep.
CONDO – Conveniently located, City
of Maryville. 2 story, 2 BR, 2.5 BA,
$830 mo; Security Deposit negotiable.
Call 865-982-3427.
Houses For Rent
Commercial
COMMERCIAL WAREHOUSE
Commercial property, City of
Maryville, .65 acres. Powered drive
thru overhead doors. Electrical up
to code. Square ft. 5,000 plus,
Rubber roof, loading dock. 900 Sevierville Road. Maryville, TN 37803.
$195,000 Contact: (865) 292-5056
PT CARE FOR SENIORS Background
checks. Blount and surrounding counties. 865-558-8431 or rescare.com
EOE/M/F/D/V
Houses For Sale
3BR/2 BA Double Wide $5000
down (Why rent when you can
own). Owner Finance with monthly
payments.
ALL BRICK RANCHER 3Bd, 2Ba, 2
half baths. Granite counter tops. Hardwood & tile throughout. $309,900 Call
Blake Rickels with Keller Williams at
865-207-4283
3BR/2BA “Great Community
near Walmart” $3,000 down &
own it in 5 yrs.
Technical
LOUDON COUNTY BUSINESS is
now taking resumes for full and parttime CNC machinists. Requirements
include: programming & set-up skills,
technical certification, and 3-5 years'
experience. Experience with Mazak
machines a plus. Compensation will
be related to experience. Drug testing
is required. Mail resume to Blind Box
“M” c/o The Daily Times, PO Box
9740, Maryville, TN 37802.
1365 REMSEN STREET Alcoa
schools! 3 BR, 2 bath totally remodeled home! 1746 sq ft. $975/mo. Call
Bill Mclain with Realty Executives at
865-454-1451 or 865-983-0011
1936 HUGHES LOOP RD 3Bd, 2Ba,
fully refurbished. $950/mo. Plus deposit. No pets. 865-984-7495
**YOU CAN Rent It or YOU CAN Buy
It!** “WE FINANCE” Regardless of
Credit! Many Available 865-696-2571
2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, with Basement on Landau (off 321). $750/mo.
Meadowland Property Mgmt & Realty
865-970-4476
2 BR, Section 8 welcome. No pets.
$550 per month. 865-405-1327
2 or 3 BR, $400-$550 mo.
Rent to own, Friendsville.
No pets. Call 865-995-2825.
SEYMOUR BEAUTY!
Apartment / Duplexes
2 Acres and wooded lot. FULL
BRICK 2-Story BASEMENT with 4
BR + 4.5 BA + BONUS. 615 Sunrise Trail, Seymour TN, MLS #
900665 . $400,000.
Carrie Dougherty, Realtor, e-Pro
Realty Executives Associates
865-693-3232 or 865-804-0998
2BD, 1BA, 2002 Sevierville Rd. CH/A,
W/D conn., gar., basement. $700 mo.,
$500 dep. No pets. 982-6446
2BR IN TOWN. References required,
$600 mo., $500 dam. dep. Call 865363-1085.
2BR, 2BA 1200 SF, appliances, CH/A,
water & lawn care furnished. $700/mo.
+ dep. No pets. Call 865-363-8847.
$34.99 DAILY; $150 WEEKLY; $549
(4) weeks., 1 person. Budget Inn,
865-251-2525 or 865-300-2855.
$345 - $450 GREAT VALUE,
RIVERSIDE MANOR, Alcoa Hwy.
865-970-2267 1, 2 & 3 BR's
riversidemanorapts.com
2319 SHAWN DR., Green Valley Subd.
4BR, 2BA, laundry room, den, large
back deck. $1000 mo. plus dep. Call
865-856-5577.
[email protected]
2BR, 1BA east Maryville, clean, carport, fenced yard, CH/A. $650 mo. +
$650 sec. dep. Call 865-983-6543.
3724 MIZER STATION Sat., 8am-?
Vintage jewelry, old children's books,
antiques, glassware, clothes, records,
free stereo, HH items, Nascar, Evenflow stroller, baby girl items, wood
work & crafts, some furn. & tools.
www.carriedougherty.com
3 BR, Section 8 welcome. No pets.
$650 per month. 865-405-1327
Lots & Acreage
3 LOTS, 6809 Holiday Dr., Top of the
World. Water and electricity available,
$15,000. Call 513-240-7107.
1 & 2 BR, C/H/A, W/D conn., ref's &
lease, no pets. Starting at $375/mo.
+ dep. 1258 Upton, Alcoa. 982-6446
UNITIA & GILBERT LN. Community
Sale, Sat., 8am-2pm. Tools, clothing,
stump grinder & other misc. items.
1-2 BR APTS.
$325-$395, No Dogs.
865-977-4300
3BR, 2BA DW on private lot. No pets,
no smoking. $700 mo., $700 dep. Call
865-980-0094 or 865-254-9170.
3BR, 2BA, 1 car garage. 1501 Irwin
Ave. $725 mo. Call 865-984-9139.
Vacation / Time Share
MOBILE HOME PARK located off
Hwy 411 S. 2 & 3 BR Mobile Homes.
$400-$500 month. Call 865-856-0639.
3BR, 2BA, Mtn. view near Heritage,
full basement. No pets, no smoking.
$950 mo. + dep. Call 865-679-8947.
TIME SHARE – Virginia Beach, 11th
week. Best offer over 1K. Call 865724-4047.
RENT TO OWN - 2BR, 1BA, 14x60
mobile home. 124 Zina Ln. $490 mo.
+ down payment. Call 865-982-1516.
THE DAILY TIMES
861 N. UNION GROVE RD. Friday &
Saturday, 9am-? Multi-Family Sale!
Books, clothes, household items &
more.
1
Voted #
2011
THE DAILY TIMES
THE DAILY TIMES
2013
Auto Dealer
1BR DUPLEX between mall & airport.
$500/mo., includes electric & water.
No pets. Call or text 865-640-6656.
‘10 Toyota Prius
‘07 Honda CR-V
‘06 Toyota Tundra
50mpg, 1 Owner, 79k Miles
22mpg, All Wheel Drive, 83k Miles
2014
‘04 Toyota Tacoma
Adult Care
3308 WILKINSON PIKE, next to Hill's
Market. Fri. & Sat., 8am-? Inside and
out in parking lot. Lots of stuff.
903 COURT ST. Saturday, Nov. 8 th,
8am-5pm. Furniture & much more.
House Cleaning
930 SUGARWOOD DRIVE Saturday,
9am-2pm. HUGE Downsizing Sale.
Garage, lawn, auto, hardware & tools,
paint supplies, Mantis tiller, Weber grill,
deck box, home decor, kitchen, bedding, vintage linens, books, crafts, yarn,
picture frames, Christmas, body/hair
care, furniture, office/school supplies.
HOUSE CLEANING – Honest and
dependable. Reasonable rates. Call
865-243-1241.
EXCELLENT CONDITION Victorian
furniture & other antique items. Saturday, 9am-3pm. 4106 Legends Way,
Royal Oaks, Maryville. 938-1945
MARYVILLE CITY – 1BR apts starting at $375. Clean, safe, 7 close to
everything. No pets. 865-272-9809 or
[email protected].
Rockford
FOR 10 YEARS, our trained,
bonded and insured CAREGivers
have provided home care services
for local seniors. Call us.
Home Instead 865-273-2178.
DAVENPORT RD. Saturday, 8am4pm. 3 Family Inside/Outside Sale!
Furn., exercise, books & much more.
Houses For Rent
RE/MAX FIRST
Shannondale of Maryville Health Care
and Assisted Living Center is searching for an Activities Assistant. The
ideal candidate must have experience
in the Health Care and Assisted Living setting, have a creative mind and
enjoy working with the elderly. We offer an excellent benefit package. Apply in person at 805 Shannondale
Way, Maryville, TN. EOE
Louisville
Garage/Yard Sales
Apartment / Duplexes
PROFESSIONAL CLEANING Monday-Friday, days only. Paid weekly.
West Knox. location. 865-670-0025
SEEKING BIVOCATIONAL Director
of Music. Mail resume to Springview
Baptist Church, Attention: Music Committee, 4220 US Highway 411 S,
Maryville, TN. 37801.
Saturday, November 8, 2014
General Help Wanted
FOOD MICROBIOLOGY LAB seeking seasonal lab tech. Biology, microbiology or food science background
required. Lab experience desired.
PCR experience desirable. Send resume to fax (865) 573-7298 or email
[email protected].
1BR, CH/A, stove & refrigerator, carpet. Quiet, off E. Broadway. $395 mo.
Call 865-982-0921.
3BR, 1BA, upstairs. $675 mo., $350
dep. Housing approved. Call 865-9825482.
Stock photo
$
$
13,849*/ $245mo.
#M12381
$
‘09 Honda Accord
‘11 Hyundai Elantra
Low Miles, Loaded
GLS Edition, 58k Miles, 38MPG
13,849*/ $241mo. $12,849*/ $241mo.
#M12369
‘07 Honda Ridgeline
4x4, Leather, Sunroof
TROTWOOD FARMS
$13,941*/ $233mo.
#M12326
‘03 Toyota Tacoma
LOCATED ON MONTVALE AND FARRIS
ROAD, TROTWOOD FARMS OFFERS
LARGE ESTATE SIZED HOMESITES WITHIN
THE CITY OF MARYVILLE.
Crew Cab, 4x4, Michelin Tires
$
14,985*/ $260mo.
#M12384
‘10 Jeep Wrangler
#M12383
12,731*/ $233mo.
Hard Top, 4x4, Automatic
$
‘07 Dodge Caliber
6speed, Loaded
Automatic, Great MPG
6,943*/$147mo.
‘08 Ford Focus
‘03 Toyota Sienna
4x4, Lifted, V6
#M12374
#M12382
‘98 Toyota Tacoma
7,849*/ $178mo.
4x4, AC, Automatic
$
$
#M12367
‘05 Honda Accord
4cyl, Sunroof, Great MPG
5,982*/ $142mo.
$7,849*/ $182mo.
‘07 Jeep Wrangler
‘06 Jeep Wrangler
#M12332
1 Owner, New Tires
$
18,849*/ $289mo.
V6, Local Vehicle
‘03 Jeep Grand Cherokee
‘02 Jeep Liberty
#M12356
‘07 Jeep Wrangler Sahara
#M12247
9,946*/ $170mo.
#M12227
5,984*/ $142mo.
$
Leather, Power, Loaded
$
14,849*/ $249mo
Great MPG, 90k Miles
#M12375
$
49k Miles, Leather, Loaded
$
‘08 Hyun. Santa Fe ‘02 Toyota 4Runner
4x4, Crew Cab, Automatic
$
10,994*/ $201mo.
#M12363
#M12378
#M12366
4x4 Crew Cab, Camper Top
$7,863*/ $182mo.
$
#M12357
‘07 Infiniti G35
‘00 Nissan Frontier
‘10 Hyundai Genesis
36k Miles
21,849*/ $340mo
12,849*/ $245mo. $4,981*/ $135mo.
#M12368
‘02 Ford F150
‘12 Ford Fiesta
$
TRD, V6, 4x4
$
t1
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8 spacious homesites ranging in size from
BDSFUPNPSFUIBOBDSFT
+/- 1 acre to more than +/- 2.5 acres
t6Upscale
QTDBMFDPNNVOJUZXJUIQSPUFDUJWF
community with protective
DPWFOBOUT
covenants
t#FBVUJGVMUJNFMFTTTUSFFUMJHIUT
Beautiful antiquated street lights
t4JEFXBMLTPOCPUITJEFTPGUIFTUSFFU
Sidewalks on both sides of the street
t6OEFSHSPVOEVUJMJUJFT
Under ground utilities
15,941*/ $251mo.
#M12389
#M12342
Grayson Apartments in Alcoa.
2 BR, $595 mo., 3 BR, $695 mo.
W/D hook-ups, limited + $30.
Housing accepted. Move in Special, Earn $150. 865-982-3427
Crew Cab, 4x4, Good Miles
$
OVER 30 VEHICLES UNDER 10 GRAND!
CITY OF MARYVILLE, 1BR above
commercial bldg. Walking distance to
shopping & dining. References &
background check. $400 mo, $400
sec. dep. Call 865-983-8516 between
10am-6pm, Mon-Sat.
FOREST HILL APARTMENTS
2 BR $525, $300 dep. No pets.
Call 865-740-1745
14,985*/ $255mo.
#M12349
Low Miles, 4x4, Auto, Hard Top
4,946*/ $135mo.
#M12372
$
19,995*/ $298 mo.
75k Miles, 3” Lift 6speed
$
#M12359
‘00 Nissan Maxima
14,941*/ $258mo
#M12305
‘02 Jeep Liberty
‘01 Jeep Wrangler
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
John Trotter, Owner / Agent
John Trotter
(865) 567-4250
[email protected]
Lifted, 4x4 5speed,
4x4, New Tires, Leather
$
4,930*/ $135mo.
#M12380
$
6,985*/ $148mo.
#M12292
Automatic, V6
$
4x4, Automatic, AC
3,849*/ $125mo.
#M12254
$
4,929*/ $135mo.
#M12387
Auto, Huge Lift, VOLS!
$
10,749*/ $210mo.
#M12355
*Plus Tax, Title & License
(865) 379-9993
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ZZZWURWWHUDQGFRPSDQ\FRP
2509 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy, Maryville
“One Mile past Blount Memorial Hospital, on 321 North”
www.autosolutionstn.com
!"$#
%!$! & Mobile Manufactured
Home Rentals
Antiques
Tune In To
WHY RENT when you can own?
Small down payment, no banks.
2BR/1BA in Walland. 865-548-2021
TRADIN' TREASURES
on AM 1470
Saturdays
9am to 10am
To Hear YOUR Ad!
Mobile/Manufactured
Home Sales
2012 NEW 28X72 4BR, 2BA (Must be
moved.) $39,900. ALSO A SPECIAL
ON A 3BR, 2BA, garage, shop at 1017
Ridgeview Dr. $79,000 865-386-7451
JACQUE'S WHISTLE STOP
ANTIQUES
VINTAGE AVONDALE MILK CRATE
Early 60's. $10 865-313-0949
Appliances
KENMORE WASHER & DRYER
Matching set. $250 865-255-7491
Antiques
M&D APPLIANCE Paying $20-$30.
Kenmore, Whirlpool, Roper Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Fridges.
Steve 253-6172 or Ernie 659-9198.
ANCHOR CLOTHES RINGER on
wood 2 tub stand. $90 865-856-3921
IRON GREASE PRESS Dated 1876-
REFRIGERATOR in good condition,
$100. Call 865-518-1260.
83. $75 865-856-3921
Furniture
Jewelry
RAINBOW VACUUM, works perfectly. Includes all the original cleaning
tools that came with vacuum even a
carpet shampooer, $250. Call 865742-0535.
9” TV WITH VCR, Broksonic. $15
OBO. Working condition. Ideal for
dorm or camper. 865-336-6399,
please don't hang up. Must sell immediately.
CHINA CABINET, cherry finish, Federalist style, $650 obo. Call 865-3863868.
MARQUEE DIAMOND Engagement
Ring with 12 Princess diamonds on
each side, TDW 1.5 w/platinum, size
4½, $2500. Call 865-982-6679.
WASHER & DRYER $150 865-6404759
WHIRLPOOL DRYER, white, works
great, $125. Call 865-363-8085.
Building Materials
Total Liquidation Sale
Downtown Friendsville
865-696-8970
I BUY OLDER
MOBILE HOMES
Any size, age considered.
Call 865-207-8825
Electronics
STACK WASHER & DRYER
Whirlpool, nice condition. $300 865640-4759
IRON POT BELLY STOVE 36” tall.
$175 865-856-3921
3BR, 2BA, 80x16, all appl. Convenient to Knox, Blount & UT. $12,500
Call 865-207-8825.
Appliances
DECORATIVE CHAIR Solid wood
folding chair, hand painted bird houses & flowers. Holds up to 300 lbs.
$15 865-719-9606
BROTHER FAX Machine 560, never
used, purchased at Office Depot, $40.
Call 865-573-5346.
Clothing
Firewood
LADIES GOLF SHOES Footjoy Terrains, size 9M, never worn. $50 865983-4430
SEASONED FIREWOOD Oak & Hickory. $60 per rick, delivered. 865-3062430, leave message if no answer.
MEN'S LEATHER COAT, XL, black,
new. $400 at Belk, asking $50. Call
865-661-1052.
Furniture
Electronics
2 FIVE DRAWER Chests, $125 for
both. Call 865-363-8085.
RYOBI CHAINSAW, 20” chainsaw
w/case, used twice, $150. Call 865573-5346.
LARGE SOFA, olive green, very
good condition. Must sell, firm price,
$175. Call 865-306-0678.
OPEN FACE Cellphone, $16. Call
865-336-6399. Must sell immediately.
TV AND STAND, older model TV and
black TV cabinet, works great. Free to
pick up. Call 865-548-5680.
2 FOLDING BENCHES Hard plastic.
$25 865-977-0617
DROP LEAF TABLE Antique, seats10. Mahogany. Sturdy but needs
some refinishing. $95 865-214-7899
CANON INKJET ALL-IN-ONE Printer
(print, copy, fax or scan), model number MP 530. Excellent condition. $50
865-983-4430
2 NEW ATRIUM 8900 series Replacement Windows. Still in package,
34¾” W x 31¼” H. Coat $485, take
$225. Call 865-360-7446.
Lawn & Garden
SMALL OUTDOOR GRILL Paid
$249, asking $75. 865-977-0617
Lawn Equipment
MAPLE PEDESTAL round table & 4
chairs with small china hutch. All for
$250. Call 865-363-8085.
RAVEN SPRAYER, 25 gal. wand,
cart, battery operated. $150 865-9812643
TELL CITY BEAUTIFUL, maple Dining Room suite. Table with 2 leaves
and 6 chairs, matching china cabinet.
Like new $1200. Call 865-805-5884.
Medical Supplies
HOSPITAL BED Electric, used 11
days. $225 865-776-2679
VINTAGE UPHOLSTERED Armchair
with footstool. $65. 865-983-4430
LIFT CHAIR Used 4 years. Neutral
color. Original price $1300, asking
$450. 865-983-6345
Good Things
To Eat
Miscellaneous
APPLE STACK CAKE, Turtle Cake,
German Chocolate Cake & Red Velvet Cake. Call 865-448-6417.
COLOR TV with remote. 15 inch, 2 ROCKING CHAIRS Excellent conperfect condition. $20 865-313-0949
dition. $30 each. 865-977-0617
(2) WOOD SPLITTING WEDGES Fair
condition. $25 for both. 865-680-6945
BOYD'S BEARS, Barbie Collectibles.
Excellent condition, make reasonable
offer. Call 865-724-4047.
CERAMIC HEATER, natural gas.
Heats two small/one large room, $30.
Call 865-573-5346.
COMFORTER SET Full size, great
condition. Comforter, 2 shams, 4 toss
pillows. Burgundy, tan & olive green.
$25 865-719-9606
FOR SALE high speed, Dot Matrix
Printers by GENICOM for information
processing, distribution networks.
business computing systems, mail
processing, bar codes, labels, and
forms.
Model 4840e: Out of working order;
good for parts $65
Model 5000 Series 500 LPM printer.
Out of working order; good for parts
$75. Greeneville, Tennessee, 423359-3151 or 423-359-3172.
GLASS SWAG LAMP with chain,
$40. Call 865-680-6945.
LARGE ORIENTAL RUG $50 865382-2886
NICE DISHES 10 tea cups & saucers.
Perfect, white with blue design. $15
865-981-2643
OVAL BRAIDED RUG 5x7 with
matching 21x35 oval rug. Good condition. Pet/smoke free home. $40
865-719-9606
Monday, November 10, 2014
PANASONIC COLOR TELEVISION
27", with manual. Works great. $50
OBO a 865-681-4198
QUALITY & NEW Christmas items!
Decorated and lighted trees and
wreaths, feather trees, feather wreaths
and other excellent misc. Christmas
decor.
STONEWARE 8 bowls & small/large
plates. Nautical White, perfect. $40
865-981-2643
I-DEAL AUTO SALES AGAIN
WE GIVE YOU MORE FOR LESS
64)8:4065)t
VISIT US ONLINE AT
OPEN 8-7pm M-Saturday
Sunday 12-5:30pm
Ask for Chris
or Brian
CALL TODAY!!
WWW.IDEALAUTOSALESONLINE.COM
$"34t536$,4t4674t7"/4
8&#6:$"34
8&#6:536$,4
93 Honda Accord
07 Chrysler Sebring
08 Chevy HHR
06 Lexus ES 300
08 Honda Civic
08 Chevy Malibu
08 Volkswagen Jetta
5 Speed, Air #7299
Auto, PL-PW, Air #7205
Auto, PL-PW, 65k
Leather, PL-PW, Air, Sunroof
Auto, PL-PW, Air
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 137k Miles,
Local Trade #7172
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 76k, Sunroof #7009
$2 ,4 95
$2,995
$10,995
$5 ,9 95
$7,995
#7133
$9 ,9 95
$10,995
07 Chevy Impala SS
07 Nissan Maxima
10 Toyota Corolla
Auto, Power Sunroof, Leather
Auto, Air, Sunroof, Leather, PL-PW
Auto, 61k, PL-PW
#6981
#6760
#7098
$13,495
$1 1,9 95
$14,995
01 Dodge Ram Ext Cab
07 Chevy Avalanche LT
Auto, 4 Door, PL-PW, Air #7140
$18,995
04 Dodge Ram
Reg Cab, Long Bed, 4x4
$8 ,9 9 5
$1 7, 99 5
$10,995
5 Speed, Air
$8 ,9 9 5
$10,995
07 Toyota Tacoma
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 86k, SR5, 4x4, Local
Trade #7185
$2 1, 9 9 5
$22,995
05 Hyundai Tucson
4x4, Auto, Leather, Sunroof, Air #7191
$6 ,9 95
$7,995
#7127
2wd, PL-PW, Air
$13,995
#7208
$1 2 ,9 95
09 Honda Accord
07 Chrysler 300-C
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 52k
85k, Leather, PL-PW, Sunroof, 5.7
#7183
$15,995
05 Ford F150 Ext Cab
10 Dodge Dakota Crew Cab
112k, 4x4, Automatic #7028
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Big Horn #7121
$14,995
$1 3 ,9 9 5
#7100
$1 3, 99 5
$15,995
4x4, Local Trade #7308
$1 4 ,9 95
Auto, 2WD #7084
$15,995
$1 1,9 95
02 Ford Ranger Ext Cab
$6 ,9 95
$7,995
04 Ford F350 Dually
Crew Cab
06 Ford F150
Crew Cab
$1 4 ,4 9 5
$15,995
#7096
$1 4 ,5 0 0
2 Wheel Drive, 5 Speed, Air #7182
$1 4 ,9 95
$15,995
97 Olds Bravada
04 Ford Explorer
05 Ford Explorer XLT
Local Trade
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW
4x4, Auto, Local Trade
$2 3, 99 5
07 Chevy Tahoe LTZ
$1 4 ,9 95
$26,995
05 Toyota Highlander
Auto, Air, Sunroof, 3rd Row #7041
$7 ,9 95 $11,995
4 Wheel Drive, PL-PW, Air, 4x4 #7128
$0,000
08 Honda CR-V
$11,995
Auto, PL-PW, Air
$1 0, 99 5 $12,995
$1 0, 99 5 $12,995
14k, PL-PW, Air, Must See #7209
05 GMC Yukon
$1 4 ,4 95
$11,995
$1 0, 99 5
12 Chevy Silverado Ext Cab
4x4, 122k, Auto, V8, Third Row Seat #7064
$15,995
$9 ,9 9 5
$9 ,9 95
07 Honda Accord
Leather, PL-PW, Air, 4x4 #7199
$25,995
Leather, Auto, PL-PW #7265
#7114
#7042
07 Ford F150 Crew Cab
06 Chrysler Pacifica
$8,995
$1 2 ,9 95
$13,495
04 Chevy 2500
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air #7052
$9,995
$1 2 ,9 95
#7014
$1 0, 99 5
09 Kia Sportage EX
Auto, Leather, Power Sunroof #7146
$15,495
$1 4 ,9 95
$2 5 ,9 9 5
#7265
$2,995
06 Mercury Mariner
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 72k Miles #6954
$12,995
$1 1, 4 95
06 Lexus Rx 330
Auto, Leather, Sunroof, PL-PW #7142
$16,995
All prices include $250.00 doc fee. Not included TT&L.
$1 5 ,9 95
$1 ,9 95
$5,995
#6848
$4 ,9 95
08 Nissan Pathfinder
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 117k, 2WD
$12,995
#7267
$1 1, 99 5
07 Acura MDX
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 96k Miles
$0,000
#7094
$1 6, 99 5
Not Actual Colors Shown in pictures above.
$6,995
#7227
$5 ,9 95
09 Hyundai Santa Fe
Auto, 74k, Air #7039
$14,995
$1 3, 99 5
08 Hyundai Entourage
Auto, PL-PW, Air, Third Seat #7011
$11,995
$1 0 ,9 9 5
4C | CLASSIFIEDS
THE DAILY TIMES | thedailytimes.com/classifieds
Saturday, November 8, 2014
Sporting Goods
Daily Bridge Club
Hay, Feed, Grain
FOOSEBALL GAME TABLE Like
new. $50 865-382-2886
Human eraser
SKATEBOARD Kryptonics.
865-313-0949
By FRANK STEWART
Tribune Content Agency
$10
Want To Buy
Cy the Cynic says that whoever
invented the eraser had the human
race sized up pretty well. But when
you’re declarer, you’re stuck with
your plays to the first few tricks. You
can’t go back and erase them.
Today’s West led a trump against
six spades. (Many players would
have opened 2NT as South, but the
contract would have been the same.)
South drew trumps and tried a diamond finesse with the queen, a play
that deserved to erase his chances —
and did. West took the king, and
though South could run the clubs to
discard a heart, he had a heart to lose.
doubles, and the next player passes.
What do you say?
ANSWER: To double and impel
you to respond at the four level, your
partner has a hand worth at least 19
points. You have two options: to pass
for penalty or to try 3NT. Pass if the
opponents are vulnerable. If not, bid
3NT. You can expect to win at least
nine tricks at notrump easily.
South dealer
Both sides vulnerable
NORTH
K 7 6 2
Q 6 5
9 7
A Q 9 5
TWO CHANCES
All I can say about South’s play is
that it needed a bottle of liquid paper.
South gave himself one chance when
two were there. After he draws
trumps, he must lead a low heart
toward dummy’s queen. When West
has the king, South later runs the
clubs to pitch his queen of diamonds,
making six.
If East had the king of hearts,
South would still be alive. He could
discard a heart on the clubs and
finesse in diamonds.
DAILY QUESTION
You hold: K 7 6 2 Q 6 5
9 7 A Q 9 5. The dealer, at your
left, opens three spades. Your partner
WEST
10 9 8
K J 7
K 10 6 5 2
10 6
PAYING CASH
CABLE'S RECYCLING
Mon-Fri. 9a-5:30p & Sat, 9a-3p
*Cans .60/lb., *Batteries $10/$13
*Computer Towers $2 ea.,*Alum. .45/lb.
*Scrap Metal $7/$8. Now Buying Gift
Cards, Cell Phones & Catalytic conv.
865-556-8812 Or 865-556-8845
WE BUY Used Furniture, Antiques,
Estates. Hall's Furniture & Auction
865-983-1598 or 865-983-2465
EAST
5
10 9 8 4
J 8 4 3
8 7 3 2
Domestic Pets
East
Pass
Farm Equipment /
Supplies
Opening lead — 10
BEAUTIFUL MANDOLIN F Style,
Has serial # but no name. Includes
square hardshell case. Brand new,
never played. $225 865-233-2123
Musical Instruments
ARTISAN LAP STEEL Serial
#056703. 3 legs, made around 2008.
Includes chording bar & gig bag.
$100 865-233-2123
MUST SELL
1986 Ebony Kawai upright Piano
with bench. Excellent condition.
$750 OBO 865-803-8123
18 FOOT SAIL BOAT with two-person sleeper cockpit. Includes good
sail, 4hp, 4 stroke Yamaha outboard
& trailer. $1200 865-323-8093
Automotive Parts /
Accessories
$3000
$2000
JUNKERS &
CLUNKERS!
We buy scrap cars.
HIGHEST price
paid in East TN!
WE ALSO BUY
YOUR OLD
CLUNKER!
865-856-4590
TIRE & WHEEL 2007 BMW SUV.
Tire of no value. $25 865-776-2679
TIRES & WHEELS Set of 4
P235/70R16, GMC. $200 865-6404759
JUNK CARS
Autos - Domestic
Call for best
CASH offer.
04 CHEVY IMPALA, looks & runs like
new. All options, 96,000 mi., $8000.
Call 865-380-9755.
Free Pick up!
865-216-5052
DON'T GET PLAYED
GET PAID!
Midland Plaza
TOY STORY TABLE lamp & hanging
stocking, $20 for both. Call 865-9818846.
Boats & Supplies
2 TON FLOOR JACK, $30. 865-6806945
(C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Musical Instruments
PREMIUM BERMUDA HAY, square
bales, $6 each. Call 423-506-7203.
FREE TIRES 17”, 18”, & 20”. While
they last. Call 865-268-5596.
PONTIAC G6
Used 2007 clean, no mechanical
problems, 119,000 miles, sun roof,
black paint. $4,300. 865-379-8044
Autos - Imports
West
North
Pass
3
All Pass
Miscellaneous
Just Cut - HAY ROLLS, $25 ea.,
Square bales, $3/bale & Construction
Hay, $3/bale. Call 865-235-2357.
You Know Better
CHIHUAHUA'S
Registered,
dewormed, vaccinated, M & F, short hair,
all colors, small. $100 & up. Some less
than 3.5 lbs grown. 865-232-8243
SOUTH
A Q J 4 3
A 3 2
A Q
K J 4
South
1
6
TERRY'S FURNITURE & AUCTION
A Family Tradition since 1958
We are a consignment auction,
accepting new consignments daily!
We buy antiques, used furniture,
glassware & estates.
(865) 681-7228 or (865) 973-4577
TFL# 2485
5X6 HAY ROLLS, $25 per roll. Good
cow & horse hay. Call 865-856-3689.
Automotive Parts /
Accessories
Musical Instruments
Tractor Parts,
Accessories &
Farm Antiques
984-6385
NO JUNK OR SCRAP
Don't play with the
little $$$
CASH FOR BROKEN, damaged guitars for parts. Gibson, Martin, Yamaha,
others. Ask for Dale, 865-307-6530.
PARROT FULL SIZE FIDDLE Hardshell case & 2 bows. $125 865-2332123
Buying Repairable or
Runable Autos.
Deal with the
CULTIPACKER HAS DOUBLE
rollers, excellent condition, $3500.
Call 865-856-3689.
BIGGER $$$
865-237-2773
100 PLUS cars $5,995 or less.
DougJustus.com New location:
Airport Motor Mall.
2001 VW BEETLE 54,000 miles, new
tires, automatic, good condition.
$5500 865-898-0855
LOCAL, 1 OWNER, 07 Nissan Sentra
S, 2.0, very clean, 181,000 mi.,
$4400. Call 865-742-3013.
watersmotorsinc.com
3019 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy.
A short drive to Waters Motors
will save you money!
Trucks - Domestic
1979 CHEVY PICKUP Short bed, 350
engine, great work truck. $3000 obo
865-983-4073 or 865-387-1694
Air Conditioning
Excavating
Home Improvements
Lawn Maintenance
Plumbing
Tree Services
SUTTON'S AIR COMFORT
FARMERS EXCAVATING
SLANSKY BUILDERS
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
(865) 983-6144
STAN'S LAWN CARE
*Aerating *Seeding *Fertilizing
Service *Fall Leaf Pickup *Mulching
865-679-7550
SANDS PLUMBING
*Decks *Screen/Sun Rooms
*Kitchens *Bathrooms *Flooring
*ADA compliant and Custom
Tile Showers
*Small Projects Welcomed!
No money down. FREE Estimates
Family owned and operated in
Blount Co. since 2001.
TN Contractor, licensed, & insured
to $1,000,000.
Call now to speak to a live person.
Legal Services
ARBORSCAPES TREE SERVICE
Over 26 yrs exp. Hazardous
Tree removal, Pruning, Trimming.
Lic. & Ins. Give Us A Call.
865-679-7540
LAW OFFICE OF GENA LEWIS
Criminal Defense. Flat fees for General
Sessions Court, $750-$3500.
Call 865-268-9911 for an appointment.
www.slanskybuilders.com
BRICK/BLOCK MASON
Its Fall! Service & Sales of most
name brands. Also, Mobile Home
parts and some mixed matches.
R-22 equipment.
Call us for questions.
Call 865-216-5028.
TENNAIR – 1 HEATING/AIR
Fast, reliable service. Installations.
Professional duct cleaning.
We service all brands.
865-983-1384 or 865-995-9660
Car Wash /
Detailing
AUTO CLEAN & SHINE
Complete Auto Clean-up
10% off full detail with this Ad.
™LVming ™7uffing ™Hhining
™+time Readers Choice Linner
™777 Accredited
Teds Auto Detailing
2532 E. Broadway Ave
865-982-3600, owner Ted McKee
Cleaning Services
MAID 2 SHINE
CLEANING SERVICE
™8VW^ns™GZciVa=dbZs
™8ondos ™;orZXadsugZs
™6eVgibZcis ™IownhousZh
™Dff^XZh™8]jgX]Zh
™CZl8dchigjXi^dc™=dVgY^ng
LZXVn iV`Z XVgZ of 6LL
your XaZVc^ng cZZYs.
A^ghi8aZVc^cg or 9ZZe 8aZVc^cg.
;gZZ Esi^bViZs
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Give us a call today!
865-254-4690
Concrete Services
BILL'S CONCRETE SERVICE
Grade, Form, Pour, Finish,
30 Years Experience
Bill Correll 865-856-8632
BRIAN OWNBY CONCRETE
865-765-8387
Commercial & Residential,
Stamped Concrete, Driveways,
Patios, Slabs, Garages &
Basements, Form & Finish, Tearout
& Replace. Quality work by an experienced finisher.
*Bobcat *Backhoe *Tractor
*Bushhog *Dump Truck
*Tree/Stump Removal
No Job Too Small, Reasonable
Rates, Licensed & Insured
865-661-2565 or 865-705-5403
MURPHY'S BOBCAT
Your complete excavating
and hauling company.
No job too big or small.
Free estimates.
Licensed & Insured.
865-389-7231
Landscaping
Fencing
RC CALDWELL & SON
The Fence Specialist
™6luminum Fence
™Galvanized and Vinyl Coated
Chain Link Fence
™Kinyl Picket and
Privacy Fence
865-850-1289
WWW.FENCEPROS.COM
Hair Care
CALL SANDRA F.TEFFETELLER
at Hair Studio for your fall hairstyle,
cut & color. $5 off if you mention ad.
865-643-0133
Handy Man
1. HONEY DO HANDYMAN
™Painting ™Pressure Washing ™Odd
Jobs™Light Carpentrn™Landscaping
Free Estimates, Gutter Cleaning.
Army Vet. Call Mike at 865-724-6817
20 YEARS MAINTENANCE EXP.
No Job Too Small!
Free Estimates, Vietnam Vet.
865-388-0029
ONE MAN HANDYMAN
Painting, flooring, baths, kitchens &
more. Very experienced, take pride in
workmanship. Call 865-320-7267.
Home Improvements
PROGREEN
Aeration, Over Seeding
& Slice Seeding.
™CZlaVlchfrdbhZZYhdY
™AVcYhXVeZh9Zsi\cZY>cstVaaZY
™IribS]VeZVcYbjaXhic\
™7jhhhoggic\AdiXaZVg^cg
CALL FOR ALL YOUR LAWN
AND LANDSCAPING NEEDS
Family Owned & Operated
Comm./Res., Lic. & Ins.
865-982-5946
Lawn Maintenance
AFFORDABLE LAWN SERVICE Mowing, Trimming, Mulching. Leaf clean-up
& any other lawn care services needed.
Free Estimates. Call 865-455-4014
BLOUNT LAWN SERVICE, LLC
Free estimates
Licensed and insured
All lawn care
All landscape
(865)805-4572 or 805-1147
www.blountlawnservice.com
FALL CLEAN-UP!
Leaves, shrubs, grass.
Whatever you don't want to do.
Call Chris 865-556-6026.
FULL SERVICE LAWN CARE,
LLC. Licensed & Insured,
Free Estimates.
Trust us for all your
lawn care needs.
STORY CONCRETE
Form, grade and finish, driveways,
slabs, parking lots, etc. 25 plus
years' experience. 865-977-4373
*HELP IS A PHONE CALL AWAY
Carpentry, screening, painting,
plumbing, pressure washing
& miscellaneous repairs.
Honesty & Integrity, Lic. & Ins.
Drywall
The Handi-Helper
865-681-8298
ALL DRYWALL REPAIRS,
patching, finish, texturing. Small
jobs OK. Rocky Top Drywall
865-335-4877 or 865-771-0812
American Owned LIBERTY CONST.
Specializing in Insurance Claims.
*Painting *Remodeling *Ceiling & Wall
Repair. Call 865-242-7370. Lic. & Ins.
™;VaaLeaf8aean-up
™Holiday Lighting
™PreshjgZWashin\
™Landscaping
865-661-6872 or 865-414-4510
In print and online.
KENNY'S HOME REPAIR
& REMODELING
Rob's Lawn &
Handyman Service
Call 981-1160
to subscribe
Painting, drywall, tile, flooring, all
carpentry & much more. Quality
work, reliable contractor. Lic. & Ins.
Call 865-268-9854.
Located in Friendsville, TN
Call Taylor or Josh
865-776-5791 or 865-776-7328
[email protected]
JETT LAWN CARE
Free Estimates,
No Job Is Too Small
Call Rob or Randy
865-255-8699 or 865-304-7413
Masonry
All Types Brick Work & Repair
Quick, Professional Service
35 Years Experience
Christian Ethics
Licensed & References Available.
™;geeEstimaiZh™9gaicCleaning
™6aaHobZRepaigh
™ResidentialCommZgcial
™LicensZYInsugZY™Call')$7
865-209-5195
Pressure Washing
M3 PRESSURE WASHING
™Roofh™Siding
™Drivewayh™Parkic\Lots
FrZZestimates,Lic.Ins.
SPECIALIZING IN LOW-PRESSURE SOFT WASH!
ChrihMars]865-253-3075
!! BUBBA'S !!
TREE & STUMP REMOVAL
Licensed and Insured.
Proudly serving Blount
County for 20 yrs.
Specializing in all types
of tree work.
No tree too tall, No limb
too small, We do it all!
Local References.
24 hr. Emergency Service
Please Call 865-216-7474
Remodeling
865-977-1422
Miscellaneous
BUILD DECKS & Remodeling 40 yrs. exp. All work guaranteed.
No money up front. Terry Morton
865-661-1015 & 865-984-5059.
DEWAYNE'S TREE SERVICE
Take downs, trimming, all types of
tree work. 24 hour emergency service. Free estimates. 865-681-6861
ROBERT BREHM REMODELING,
PAINTING AND PLUMBING.
40 years' experience. References.
Licensed and Insured. 865-556-1738.
GOT STUMPS?
MURPHY'S
BOBCAT
Fill dirt and gravel. Year round
dry topsoil. Mushroom Compost
by scoop or dump truck load.
865-389-7231
Painting
COLONIAL PAINTING
& WATERPROOFING
ROCKY TOP BUILDING
& REMODELING
Painting, Doors/Windows, Honey-Do
List, Drywall, Siding, Trim Work, Fixtures. Licensed & Insured 254-3455
Roofing
™Hmall $5 and up
™Bedium $25 and up
™AVg\Z$40 and up
Job minimum $50.
865-984-8815
JIM'S TREE SERVICE
and LANDSCAPING
ABOVE ALL ROOFING
All types of roofing. All work guaranteed. References available. Licensed & insured. 865-321-3532
™Igee gZmoval
™8lean up™Ig^mm^cg
™;^gewood
;gee Esi^mates, Ins. & Ref.
865-233-4212 or 865-209-3864
PAINTING & PRESSURE WASHING
Interior/Exterior. Hollis Morton & Son.
100+ years combined experience.
865-984-3329 or 865-332-9168
As low as Zero % Financing
available on all home
improvements.
Free Estimates! Call 865-233-5888
Petree Arbor Local Tree Service
Its Pruning Season. We have 2
Certified Arborist on staff to help you.
We have Workers Comp...Do they?
865-980-1820
PAINTING – Interior & Exterior,
Pressure Washing. 40 yrs. exp.
Terry Morton 865-661-1015
or 865-984-5059.
“Roof it right. Call Jim White!”
JIM WHITE BUILDERS INC.
PREMIERE
TREE SERVICE
Interior, exterior, residential, commercial. Quality, creative, affordable, solutions for your home and
business needs. 30 years exp.
Free Estimates. US Navy Vet.
Ken Bear ™ 865-982-8840
DORAN PAINTING
Call now for our "Winter Interior" &
"Doran Painting for a day" specials!
(865) 233 - 3791
Doranpainting.net
Paving
SEALCOATING
™Driveways
™Parkin\Lots
™HoiRubberized
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865-719-2340
**2014 Reader's Choice
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Owens Corning Preferred Contractor
License # 42429 Since 1999
™Windowh™Painting ™Insulation
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865-977-0769 JimWhiteBuilders.com
TERRY MORTON
™Hhingles ™Betal Roofing
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Free Estimates
38 yrs. experience
References on request.
Over 25 Years Experience
*Hazardous Tree Removal
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24 Hour Emergency Service
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
865-661-1015 or 865-984-5059
865-306-2430
Siding
FIND IT!!! SELL IT!!!
AFFORDABLE SIDING
AND GUTTERING
Call James Stinnett
at 865-977-9092
Whatever you need...
THE DAILY TIMES
Classifieds can help!
Saturday, November 8, 2014
CLASSIFIEDS | 5C
THE DAILY TIMES |thedailytimes.com/classifieds
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THE DAILY TIMES | thedailytimes.com/classifieds
Saturday, November 8, 2014
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$500 off lowest advertised price!
Limited time only.
Guaranteed financing!
Don’t delay! Sale ends 11/14/14
EAST LOCATION:
2313 E. LAMAR ALEXANDER PKWY., MARYVILLE
08 CHEVROLET AVALANCHE LTZ
4X4, NAVI, SUNROOF,
HEATED SEATS,
MANY EXTRAS.
ONLY
WEST LOCATION:
1712 W BROADWAY AVE, MARYVILLE
2006 FORD F250
SUPER DUTY XLT
LIFTED! NEW TIRES! DIESEL POWER!!!
ONLY 55K MILES!!!!!!
UNDER
$450/MO
WAC
10 MINI COOPER
$392/MO
09 HONDA PILOT EX-L
11 JEEP WRANGLER UNLIMITED WILLYS
LOW LOW
PAYMENTS!!!
ROCKSTAR
WHEELS! 4X4.
MUST SEE!
$269/MO
$397/MO
WAC
WAC
3RD ROW, MANY
EXTRAS, LOCAL
TRADE
01 FORD EXPLORER SPORT TRAC 08 TOYOTA TUNDRA SR5
$2768 LESS
THAN BOOK
08 FORD F150 LIMITED
$5,995
$14,495
V8 AUTOMATIC,
ONLY 70K
MILES!!!
ONLY
95 FORD RANGER
DOUBLE
CAB 169K
MILES, BED
COVER
10 FORD
MUSTANG GT
4X4, SUNROOF,
BEDCOVER, 1OWNER,
BOUGHT AND SERVICED
LOCALLY
$366/MO
2WD,
168K,
CLEAN
CARFAX!
$349/MO
WAC
2005 HUMMER H2
WAC
4X4,
4DR,
AUTO
LEATHER
LOADED
ZERO DOWN!
09 NISSAN ALTIMA
05 TOYOTA TACOMA DOUBLE CAB
$364/MO
$15,995
WAC
07 CHEVROLET
AVALANCHE
76K MILES, GOVT
SERVICED
$5,995
4 CYL, GAS SAVER,
1 OWNER
$225 /MO
THOUSANDS BELOW BOOK!!!
07 TOYOTA FJ
01 CHEVY BLAZER XTREME
2004 JEEP
WRANGLER
TRD 4X4
RECENTLY
REDUCED
$3,995
12 TOYOTA COROLLA S
LOW MILES, WHY
BUY NEW?
$13,875
$2,000
06 FORD F250 LARIAT
$2,000
4X4, NEW TIRES,
LEATHER, LOADED LESS THAN BOOK
WAC *Based of 3.69% with approved credit. Term subject to credit approval.
07 FORD FOCUS
1 OWNER, NEEDS
A NEW OWNER
$17,900
WAC
MUST SEE! 108K MILES,
LIKE NEW!
$11,995
2007 HONDA ELEMENT SC
$5,995
07 ACURA TL
128K MILES
ALLOY
WHEELS,
RARE FIND!
3.2L V6 LEATHER
LOADED, BLACK
ON BLACK!
$258/MO
$249/MO
WAC
Search for
Hepperly Auto Sales
WAC
* Pre-titled cash price plus all applicable Local & State Taxes & Fees. $119 a month based on
05 Buick Rendezvous W.A.C. ALL PAYMENTS PENDING APPROVED CREDIT.
View Us Online 24/7 at WWW.HEPPAUTO.COM
Saturday, November 8, 2014
CLASSIFIEDS | 7C
THE DAILY TIMES |thedailytimes.com/classifieds
TTWIN
WIN
R
RUC
U
C
T
K
CCITY
ITY
C
CENTER
ENTER
LOCATED AT TWIN CITY MAZDA
ON THE AIRPORT MOTOR MILE
865-980-2287
865-980-2287
“ E a s t Te n n e s s ee ’s Tr u c k S h o p p i n g Ce n te r ”
865-970-2668
USED FORD TRUCK
SEE OUR INVENTORY 24/7 ONLINE
USED FORD TRUCK
@ w w w. t w i n c i t y t r u c k c e n t e r. c o m HEADQUARTERS!!
HEADQUARTERS
You Are Welcome To Drive Through And Look At Our Inventory!
$25,973
2012 CHEVY SILVERADO 1500 LT
2WD, ExCab, Only 19K Miles!! #CZ327413B
$26,982
$29,966
2008 CHEVY SILVERADO 1500 LT CREW
4X4, Only 42K Miles!! #8G312632B
2011 CHEVY SILVERADO 3500HD CREW
4X4, 167WB #BF181249B
$18,755
$19,778
$43,723
2010 FORD F-150 STX 4X4
Supercab #AFB83396M
2013 FORD F-150 PLATINUM 4X4
SuperCrew #DFC25125E
$16,982
$36,948
$33,949
2010 FORD F-250 SD LARIAT
4X4 Crew Cab #AEA57036N
2005 FORD F-150 4X4 SUPERCAB
Diesel #5EB13719B
2008 FORD F-350 SUPER DUTY 4X4
Crew Cab, Only 56K Miles!! #8EA26335E
$20,966
$6,880
$15,955
2009 NISSAN FRONTIER SE
Only 70K Miles!! #9C420246E
2013 RAM 1500 TRADESMAN
2WD, Only 15K Miles!! #DG507325E
2005 GMC SAVANA CUTAWAY VAN
139WB #51911878N
$39,966
$29,874
2011 TOYOTA TACOMA 4X4 DOUBLE CAB
Only 21K Miles!! #BM074609E
$11,981
2004 TOYOTA TUNDRA SR5
Double Cab, V8 #4S440104M
2012 TOYOTA TUNDRA LIMITED 4X4
5.7L V8 CrewMax #CX229546E
$22,844
$19,943
2003 GMC SIERRA 3500 SLT
4X4, 167WB #3F118064B
2010 FORD F-150 XL SUPERCREW
2WD, Only 55K Miles!! #AFB22985E
$28,555
2011 FORD F-150 XL 4X4
SuperCrew #BKD40290E
2012 NISSAN TITAN PRO-4X 4X4 CREW
Only 27K Miles!! #CN318614E
$30,881
$34,957
2008 FORD F-350 SUPER DUTY 4X4
Crew Cab, Only 78K Miles!! #8EB36658E
2010 FORD F-150 KING RANCH 4X4
SuperCrew, Only 38K Miles!! #AKE23034E
*All prices include $499 doc fee plus TTL. MPG based on www.fueleconomy.gov
WE’LL
BUY
YOUR
SEE OUR INVENTORY 24/7 ONLINE
@ w w w. t w i n c i t y t r u c k c e n t e r. c o m
865-980-2287
865-970-2668
TRUCK!
R
RUC
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T
TTWIN
WIN CCITY
ITY CENTER
CENTER K
"E a s t Te n n e s s e e 's Tr u c k S h o p p i n g C e n te r "
*All prices include $499 doc fee plus TTL. MPG based on www.fueleconomy.gov
8C | CLASSIFIEDS
THE DAILY TIMES | thedailytimes.com/classifieds
Saturday, November 8, 2014
(865)
233-2697 (865) 233-2796 2123 Highway 411 South., Maryville, TN
t8FTU#SPBEXBZ.BSZWJMMF5/
DEAL
AUTO
SALES
VETERANS DAY
Ask for
lana or Nick
WE GIVE YOU MORE FOR LESS
H O N O R I N G
A L L
W H O
VISIT OUR WEB SITE AT
OPEN 8-7pm M-Saturday
Sunday 12-5:30pm
WE BUY TRUCKS
WWW.IDEALAUTOSALESONLINE.COM
TRUCKS
WE BUY CARS
S E R V E D
MANAGERS SPECIAL
01 Dodge Ram
Ext Cab
5 speed, Air, 90k, 4x4
07 Mazda Sport
Truck
#7197
Auto, 87k, 2WD #7132
Auto, PL-PW, Air, Local Trade
Auto, 4x4, Local Trade #7290
#7046
$ 4 ,9 9 5 $6,995
$5,995
99 Dodge Dakota
00 Dodge Dakota
Crew Cab
$ 6 ,4 9 5
$7 ,9 9 5
$8,995
$9 ,9 9 5 $11,995
$11,995
05 Chevy Colorado 05 Chevy Silverado
Crew Cab
Ext Cab, 2WD, PL-PW
03 Ford F150 Ext Cab
Camper Top, Auto, 101k,
2wd, Running Boards #7081
Auto, PL-PW, 4x4, Local
Trade #7317
$1 0 ,9 9 5
$11,995
$9 ,9 9 5
#6837
$1 0 ,9 9 5
$12,995
05 Chevy Silverado 2500
06 Chevy Silverado
Crew Cab, Auto, PL-PW,
4x4, Air #7307
Reg Cab, Auto, PL-PW,
Air, 84k, 2WD #7244
$1 1, 4 9 5
$12,995
$13,995
$1 2 ,4 9 5
MANAGERS SPECIAL
Auto, 2wd, 81k, Air,
PL-PW #7264
$1 2 ,9 9 5 $15,995
09 Dodge Ram Crew
Cab
04 Chevy Silverado
2500
$1 6 ,9 9 5
$1 6 ,9 9 5
5.7, Auto, PL-PW, 4x4, Local
Trade #7242
$17,995
$17,995
08 Dodge Ram Crew Cab
Auto, V8, PL-PW, 4x4, 5.7
Hemi, Leather #7277
$20,995
$1 3 ,5 0 0
$15,995
Auto, Powerstroke Diesel, 4x4,
New Tires #7305
$1 6 ,9 9 5
$17,995
07 Toyota Tacoma
07 Ford F250 Ext Cab
4x4, PL-PW, Air, Local Trade,
SR5, 86k, Auto #7185
4x4, PL-PW, 6 Speed, Power Stroke
Diesel #7309
$2 1, 9 9 5
$23,995
$1 9 ,9 9 5
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Local
Trade #7316
06 Ford F250
Superduty Ext Cab
Auto, 4x4, Leather, PL-PW,
8.1, Air, Crew Cab #7263
04 Ford Superduty
F350 Crewcab
04 Dodge Ram
Crew Cab SLT
Auto, 5.9 Diesel, 4x4 #7131
91k, Auto, 2WD #7255
$1 2 ,9 9 5 $14,995
$13,995
01 Dodge Ram
2500 Ext Cab
11 Ford F-150 Long
Bed Reg Cab
04 Dodge Ram
$2 1, 9 9 5
$22,995
5 Speed, 2wd, PL-PW,
Air #7182
$1 4 ,9 9 5 $15,995
06 Ford F150
04 Toyota Tundra
Crew Cab Limited
$18,995
07 Ford F150
Crew Cab FX4
Auto, 77k, Pl-PW, Air,
4 cyl, Local Trade
$6,995
05 Volkswagen Beetle
Convertible
5 Speed, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 121k
#7287
$5 ,9 95
$8,995
#7235
$7 ,4 95
Auto, PL-PW, 2wd, Air,
Leather, 68k, 4.7L #7196
$2 4 ,9 9 5
$26,995
04 Ford F350 Crew Cab
Powerstroke Diesel, Auto, PL-PW,
Air, 4x4, Leather #7280
$1 8 ,4 9 5
14 Dodge Ram Crew
Cab 1500
08 Dodge Ram Crew
Cab 2500
$26,995
#7178
$1 8 ,9 9 5
$19,995
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, 4k, Lift Kit,
Chrome Rockstar Wheels #7270
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 109k, 4x4
$2 4 ,9 9 5
#7028
07 Ford Explorer Trac
$19,995
$2 4 ,9 9 5
05 Ford F150 Lariat
$1 5 ,9 9 5
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, Leather,
Sunroof, 87K #7166
$3 4 ,9 9 5
$35,995
CARS
WE GIVE YOU MORE FOR LESS
03 Mitsubishi Eclipse GS
12 Dodge Ram Crew
Cab SLT
Leather, PL-PW, Air, 4x4,
Navigation, Sunroof #7199
$25,995
$1 7, 99 5
$18,995
4x4, Auto, 122k
$1 5 ,9 9 5 $16,995
$1 4 ,9 9 5 $16,995
Auto, Leather, V8, 4x4,
Sunroof #7315
$1 7 ,9 9 5
05 Ford F150
Sport
Auto, 5 cyl, PL-PW, Air,
4x4, Z71, 122k, Power
Sunroof #7027
4x4, PL-PW, Air #7121
$1 3 ,9 9 5 $15,995
Auto, 111k, PL-PW, Air, 4x4,
Crew Cab #6953
06 Chevy Colorado
10 Dodge Dakota
Crew Cab
Crew Cab, Auto, 135k, 4x4,
Leather, Air, PL-PW #7092
$16,995
06 Ford F150 Crew
Cab
76k, 4x4, PL-PW, Air #7295
$20,995
$1 9 ,9 9 5
11 Dodge Ram Crew
Cab 2500
Diesel Turbo Big Horn, 87k,
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4 #7162
$39,995
$3 5 ,9 9 5
LOW, LOW RATES
09 Chrysler PT Cruiser
Touring
04 Volvo S560 TL
07 Ford Fusion
99 Mercedes SL 500
08 Ford Focus SES
Auto, PL-PW, Air
#C9999
#7159
Leather, Auto, PL-PW,
2 Door #7236
Auto, 126k, PL-PW
Auto, PL-PW, Air #7083
Auto, Leather, PL-PW
$7 ,9 95
$9,995
$9,995
$7 ,9 95
$8 ,2 50
$9,995
#7086
$8 ,9 95
$9,995
$10,995
$8 ,9 95
MANAGERS SPECIAL
08 Nissan Altima
08 Chevy Malibu
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 106k, Local
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Local
Trade #7232
#7246
$9 ,9 95
$10,995
73k, Auto, PL-PW, Air,
Local Trade #7312
Auto, 68k, Leather, Pl-PW, Air
Trade #7172
$9 ,9 95
$10,995
10 Chevy Impala LT
05 Ford 500 Limited
$9 ,9 95
$10,995
$1 0, 99 5
$11,995
10 Dodge Avenger
07 Cadillac DTS
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 84k,
4 cyl #7289
08 Honda Civic
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 87K
Auto, 96k, PL-PW
#6871
$1 0, 99 5
$11,995
$12,495
#7042
$1 0, 99 5
$1 0, 99 5
$12,995
MANAGERS SPECIAL
08 Buick Lacrosse
Auto, PL-PW, Air, Leather
#7254
$1 1, 4 95
$12,995
11 Chevy HHR
09 Toyota Camry XLE
06 Chevy Monte Carlo SS
04 BMW 745i
Auto, 4 cyl, PL-PW, Air, 78k
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 129k
Auto. PL-PW, Air, Leather, 88k
Leather, PL-PW, Air, 91k
#7030
$12,995
#7260
$1 0, 99 5
$12,995
10 Dodge Charger
07 Chrysler 300-C
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 62k
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Navigation,
85K #7100
#7249
$1 4 ,9 95
$15,995
08 Audi A4 2.0T
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air
#7211
$1 4 ,9 95
$16,995
#7313
$4,995
03 BMW X5 AWD
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air,
Power Sunroof, 3.0, Extra clean
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air #7191
$3 ,9 9 5
$7 ,4 9 5
$8,495
$13,995
$1 2 ,4 95
#7284
$1 2 ,9 95
$13,995
08 Toyota Avalon Limited
04 Chevy Corvette
Auto, PL-PW, Air, Leather, Power
Sunroof #3232
46k, PL-PW, Air, Black Leather,
6-Speed #C1122
$1 8, 99 5
Auto, 4 cyl, PL-PW,
Air, 34k
$2 3, 99 5
$24,995
$13,995
#7214
$9,995
#c9595
$8 ,9 9 5
06 Ford Explorer
Auto, Leather, V8, PL-PW,
4x4, Air, Third Seat #7302
$9 ,9 9 5
$10,995
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 79k, V6
#7080
$1 2 ,9 95 $14,995
55k, Leather, Sunroof
#7276
25k, Auto, PL-PW, Leather #C7777
$3 1, 99 5
$32,995
03 Chevy Tahoe
03 Chevy Tahoe
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Local Trade
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air
#7217
#7253
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air,
New Tires, Local Trade #7298
$8,995
$31,995
$9,995
$8 ,9 9 5
06 Jeep Grand
Cherokee Laredo
Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air,
6 cyl #7291
$9 ,9 9 5
$10,995
$11,995
07 Ford Explorer XLT
05 Chevy Tahoe Z71
08 Honda CRV
10 Ford Escape
07 Chevy Tahoe
Auto, Leather, 4x4, Third Seat,
DVD, Power Sunroof #7089
08 Ford Explorer
V6, Auto, PL-PW, Air,
4x4 #7200
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 2WD
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 94k
Auto, Eddie Bauer, 3rd Row, 2wd
#7208
#7198
Auto, Leather, 3rd Seat, 4x4,
PL-PW, Air #7128
$1 0 ,9 9 5
$11,995
$1 1, 9 9 5
$12,995
$1 2 ,9 95
$13,995
$14,995
$1 3 ,9 9 5
$1 3 ,9 9 5
$15,995
$15,995
$1 4 ,9 9 5
#7195
$15,995
$1 0 ,9 9 5
07 Jeep Wrangler
05 Ford Expedition
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 4x4
#7283
$2 9, 99 5
SLASHED PRICES
05 Mercury Mariner
$8 ,4 9 5
$1 3, 99 5
10 Chevy Camaro SS
ZL427
09 Mercedes CL 550
SUVs & VANS
05 Hyundai Tucson
2 Door, Auto, 4x4
#7054
$1 6, 4 95 $19,995
$16,995
LOW, LOW RATES
95 Chevy Tahoe
$1 1, 99 5
08 Chevy Malibu LTZ
10 Nissan Sentra
$1 4 ,9 9 5
2 Wheel Drive, Ulimited
4 Door #7234
$18,995
$1 7, 99 5
MANAGERS SPECIAL
05 Porsche Cayenne
07 Jeep Wrangler
Auto, Leather, PL-PW-PS,
12 Jeep Liberty
6 Speed, Leather, 86k
51k, PL-PW, 4x4, Air
Power Sunroof, 93k, V6 #c6767
#c4444
#7777
$1 7 ,9 9 5
$19,995
$20,995
$1 8, 99 5
$21,995
$2 0 ,9 9 5
07 Chevy Tahoe LT
10 Nissan Murano
07 Jeep Wrangler
07 Yukon Denali XL
06 Dodge Grand Caravan
Auto, PL-PW, Air, Third Seat,
Leather, 4x4, CD #7259
58k, PL-PW, Air, Leather,
Local Trade #7241
4-Door, 6-Speed,
Sahara Hard Top #C1133
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air,
Third Seat, DVD #C3131
Auto, Stow & Go Seats,
PL-PW, Air, 75k #6670
$22,995
$2 0 ,9 9 5
$23,995
$2 1, 4 9 5
$22,995
$2 1, 9 9 5
$2 1, 9 9 5
$23,995
$8,995
$6 ,9 9 5
MANAGERS SPECIAL
06 Dodge Grand Caravan
08 Nissan Quest
Auto, 68k, PL-PW, Local Trade
Auto, PL-PW, Air, Third Seat, 48k
Auto, PL-PW, Air, 92k,
Local Trade
#7174
#6635
#7161
$8,495
$7 ,4 9 5
$9,995
$8 ,9 9 5
$13,995
$1 2 ,9 9 5
10 Chrysler Town &
Country
Auto, 3rd Seat, PL-PW, Air #7294
$14,995
$1 3 ,9 9 5
All prices include $250.00 doc fee. Not included TT&L.
07 Honda Odyssey EXL
DVD, Leather, Captain Chairs,
Power Sunroof, PL-PW, Air, Third
Seat #7147
$16,995
$1 4 ,4 9 5
09 Chrysler Town
& Country
Leather, PL-PW, Air Captain Chairs,
77k #7148
$18,995
Not Actual Colors Shown in pictures above.
$1 7 ,9 9 5
09 Honda Odyssey EXL
Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Power
Sunroof, Power Doors & Hatch, 82k,
DVD #7017
$18,995
$1 7 ,9 9 5
45026149DT
05 Kia Sedona
Saturday, November 8, 2014
CLASSIFIEDS | 9C
THE DAILY TIMES |thedailytimes.com/classifieds
*$+# !-,(*#.!1'(0.#%%!
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Mon. - Sat. 8:30a - 9p / Sun 1-6p
IF IT
DRIVES,
ITS WORTH
LOT
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WE NEED
$5500
ON ANY NEW
IN STOCK
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PAYMENTS
UNTIL 2015*
†
AVAILABLE*†
‘14 Ford Focus SE ‘14 C-Max Hybrid SE ‘14 Ford Fusion SE ‘15 Ford Taurus SEL
#FS3011
MSRP $22,935
- $2,725 TR Discount
- $2,500 Rebate
- $1,000 FMCC
$16,710
$22,715
‘14 Ford Edge SE
$25,950
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$27,225
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$20,805
$26,515
‘14 Ford F-150
‘15 Ford Explorer
#FT4143
- $2,275 TR Discount
- $1,500 Retail Cash
$28,785
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$30,205
#EG1619A
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All Power, Alloy Wheels,
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MSRP $33,980
$500 STX Discount
$1,000 Retail Cash
$1,000 FMCC
$1,500 Retail Bonus
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- $2,685 TR Discount
- $3,000 Retail Cash
- $1,500 FMCC
MSRP $32,335
-
#TA1253
MSRP $33,685
$2,450 TR Discount
$2,000 Retail Cash
$500 Retail Bonus
$1,000 FMCC
#EC2543
MSRP $30,640
- $1,500 Customer Cash
- $500 FMCC
- $500 Bonus Cash
$2,610 TR Discount
$2,500 Retail Cash
$500 Retail Bonus
$500 FMCC
-
‘14 Ford Escape S
#Q59977
MSRP $32,060
-
42 / 37 MPG
#FU2410
MSRP $26,555
#CM1052
MSRP $27,385
- $2,170 TR Discount
- $1,500 Retail Cash
- $1,000 FMCC
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Prices include $595 customer service fee. Customer pays Tax, Title & License. Stated Payments based on 72 Mos. at 2.99% w/ $1,000 down. *WAC. Prices good through 11-14-14.
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$5,500 goes toward any new car, truck or suv on the premises. Cannot be combined with any other offers.
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10C | CLASSIFIEDS
THE DAILY TIMES | thedailytimes.com/classifieds
Saturday, November 8, 2014
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