Herald-Citizen - Creative Circle Media Solutions
Transcription
Herald-Citizen - Creative Circle Media Solutions
Monday Herald-Citizen The Daily Newspaper of the Upper Cumberland 113th Year — No. 8 Weather Tonight Cookeville, Tennessee, January 11, 2016 Smithville man arrested after 125-mph chase, crash Tomorrow By TRACEY HACKETT that reached speeds up to 125 mph. Aubrey Glenn Rigsby, 36, of Bethel Road in Smithville, was arrested on ALGOOD — A Smithville man was multiple charges following the inciarrested on Saturday after taking Al- dent. good police officers on a 35-mile chase According to reports on file by AlHERALD-CITIZEN Staff 26º 14 Pages — 2 Sections • 50¢ 36º good Police Officer Johnny Cyrus, the incident began when he noticed the occupants of a black Pontiac Grand Am acting suspiciously as they pulled in to Taco Bell. “The four occupants hid their faces,” Officer Cyrus reports. A check on the vehicle’s registration showed that its owner had previously been convicted of robbery, and the man to whom the vehicle was registered reSee CHASE, Page 2 Complete forecast, Page 2 Sports Holding on Tech men holding onto first place in the OVC /B1 Buried treasure Sisters charged with hitting woman with car Local cavers stress cave care By LINDSAY McREYNOLDS By TRACEY HACKETT HERALD-CITIZEN Staff HERALD-CITIZEN Staff Local Veterans helped Group sells handcrafted pens to aid veterans /A6 Nation WHITE COUNTY — On private property owned by Lonnie Carr in White County, east of Highway 111, is a treasure beneath the wooded surface, formed by the Calfkiller River. At 38 discovered miles, Blue Spring Cave is the longest known cave in Tennessee, possibly the 9th longest in the United States. During Sunday’s chilly weather, Upper Cumberland Grotto President Natasha Moseley along with UCG members Chuck Sutherland, Brandon Phillips, Stephen Bryant and his daughter, Carrie Bryant allowed a member of the Herald-Citizen staff to tag along on the trip to the unique cave as an effort to emphasize the importance of caring for caves. The common backpacking mantra of “leave nothing but footprints” goes a step further with cavers. “We don’t even want footprints,” said Sutherland, an environmental science graduate student at Tennessee Tech, who wishes to pursue a doctorate in conservation. “In any other cave, there would be trash, cans everywhere,” Sutherland said. “You have to be a caver in good standing to even get in here,” Sutherland said of Chuck Sutherland COOKEVILLE — Two sisters were arrested on Saturday after reportedly threatening another woman with a knife and hitting her with a car. Ruth Milagros Melendez, 28, of Cookeville, and Adela Melendez, 22, of Jamestown, were both charged with aggravated assault and aggravated burglary in the incident. Cookeville Police Officer Glen Ramsey was dispatched to a possible disturbance at a Pine Avenue residence shortly before 9 p.m. on Saturday. When he arrived, he found that the Melendez sisters had fled from the scene, but prior to that, they had been there and banged on the door. “When the door was opened, the two sisters pushed their way in,” Officer Ramsey reports. Adela Melendez had reportedly been brandishing a kitchen knife upon her entry into the house and used it to threaten the resident there. The two women took the resident’s key fob holding both the house and car keys, then they ran back outside and got into a Silver Nissan car belonging to Ruth Melendez. Upper Cumberland Grotto President Natasha Moseley looks at rock formations in See CARE, Page 2 Cedar Ridge Crystal Cave in Marion County. See ASSAULT, Page 4 Union fees Supreme Court to hear public sector case /A10 Index Abby............................A6 Calendar......................A4 Crossword ...................A7 Living ..........................A6 Obituaries ...................A5 Buddy Chaffin Linda Fox Richard Lee Glenda Deweese Winnell Guinn Sports ..........................B1 Sudoku ........................A7 Weather ......................A2 Traffic stop leads to multiple charges after suspect runs By TRACEY HACKETT HERALD-CITIZEN Staff COOKEVILLE — A traffic violation led to the arrest of a Cookeville man on multiple charges on Saturday afternoon. Randall Casey Dewitte, 31, of Clay Avenue in Cookeville, was charged for various offenses in connection with the incident, include evading arrest, theft and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. According to reports by Cookeville Police Officer Heather Marshall, the incident began on West Broad Street when she noticed that the tag on a silver Toyota Solara was both expired and improperly displayed. “I conducted a traffic stop on the vehicle and identified the driver as Randall Dewitte,” she reports. The officer conducted an initial pat-down and initiated a records check of the man, which ultimately found that Dewitte had been driving on a revoked license. Dewitte’s license had reportedly been revoked in Putnam County for failure to pay fines. After the officer’s initial patdown, the man ran from her and was found later only a short distance away, behind some apartments on West See CHARGES, Page 2 Cold fish Ty Kernea | Herald-Citizen Brothers Michael Frost, left, and William Frost spend a cold morning fishing at Cane Creek Park. A-2 — HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Monday, January 11, 2016 LOCAL READER SERVICES Contact us: Address: 1300 Neal St. Cookeville, Tenn. Mailing Address: P.O. Box 2729 Cookeville TN 38502 WCTE to broadcast Tennessee General Assembly tomorrow UPPER CUMBERLAND — WCTE Upper Cumberland PBS, along with Tennessee’s other five public television stations, will present gavel-to-gavel coverage of the 109th Tennessee General Assembly beginning Tuesday, Jan. 12 at noon CST. The 2016 sessions will air Monday-Thursday throughout the legislative session on WCTE World (channel 22.2). The coverage, which is in partnership with the Tennessee General Assembly, offers citizens a chance to witness their Phone: 931-526-9715 Fax: 931-526-1209 elected representatives in action. In addition to floor sessions, selected committee meetings, where many of the big issues confronting the legislature are debated, will also air. Each week’s broadcast schedule will be set by the Tennessee Senate and House on Thursday of the previous week. Viewers can track updates to the schedule by visiting wcte.org. “The work of public television stations across this great state to bring our legislative proceedings into the living rooms of Tennesseans from Memphis to Mountain City is to be commended,” said Speaker Beth Harwell. “We appreciate their broadcast of state government, and their commitment to ensure the process is more transparent and more accessible to the public. “Efforts such as this are the very foundation of principles on which this country was founded.” This project is funded under an agreement with the Tennessee General Assembly with additional support from BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, AT&T, and by the following members of the Tennessee Credit Union League: Appalachian Community Federal Credit Union, Ascend Federal Credit Union, Bowater Employees Credit Union, Enrichment Federal Credit Union, First South Financial Credit Union, Kimberly Clark Credit Union, Memphis City Employees Credit Union, Tennessee Valley Federal Credit Union, Upper Cumberland Federal Credit Union and US Community Credit Union. 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The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to use for publication news printed in the Herald-Citizen. Ty Kernea | Herald-Citizen The Middle Tennessee Woodturners donated $1,360 to the Cookeville Disabled American Veterans, proceeds from the sale of handcrafted-wooden ballpoint pens. Presenting the donation, from left, are Kenneth Walker, outgoing president of the Middle Tennessee Woodturners; John Lucas, incoming president of the Middle Tennessee Woodturners; Larry Jackson, senior VP DAV 117; Art Piccirilli, treasurer of the Middle Tennessee Woodturners; Bob Hines, commander of the DAV 117; Tony Scionti Jr., adjuntant of the DAV 117; John Ward, junior vice president of the DAV; Ed Evans, sgt. at arms of the DAV 117. CARE: Cavers stress care, preservation of area caves From Page 1 the Blue Spring Cave. “This cave is in good condition because it has a good caretaker,” Sutherland said. “The landowner (Lonnie Carr) is a caver who cares deeply about this cave.” During Sunday’s tour of Blue Spring Cave, Sutherland pointed out a few places where forms in the cave had been damaged, such as a small area where the patina had been broken simply by someone stepping too hard or departing from the designated path built by volunteers. There were few areas of where formations had been broken, and Sutherland emphasized the importance of “floating” through the cave, touching as little as possible. “Don’t touch anything,” Sutherland, who has been in 237 unique caves, instructed the group. “Don’t break anything.” During Sunday’s tour, Stephen Bryant asked if there is an acceptable etiquette for building a fire in a cave. “Yeah, don’t,” Sutherland responded. Just as crushing the butterfly in Ray Bradbury’s short story, “The Sound of Thunder,” altered the future. Changes, intentional or not, to the structures of underground world leave a lasting effect as well in terms of broken formations that aren’t able to be repaired. “The reason we want to preserve it, if we don’t make it a priority, formations get broken,” Sutherland said. “We try to prioritize the preservation of the cave environment as much as possible. Every person has an impact. We try to minimize that as much as possible.” Moseley, who works as an elder abuse investigator for the State of Tennessee with A 10% chance of light snow after 3 a.m. Low around 26. SSW wind 5 to Mike DeLapp Editor & Publisher Roger Wells Advertising Director Keith McCormick Circulation Manager table.” Elmore noted that important cave discoveries have been made in recent years, including the majority of the miles within Blue Spring and Rumbling Falls, which carries some of the water from Fall Creek Falls under Spencer Mountain. “One thing people don’t realize is almost all cavers act as scientists,” Elmore said. “They’re always collecting information, pictures, hearsay. It’s a lot different from other sports. Lately, it’s been more about exploration for me.” Elmore said White County has more documented caves per square mile than anywhere in the world. “It takes 50 feet to document one,” said Elmore, who believes there are many more caves to be discovered. According to Moseley, Tennessee is home to more than 10,000 caves with new caves being discovered regularly. “Most caves are on private property, and we always encourage our members to develop a relationship with the landowner before entering a property.” The Upper Cumberland Grotto is an officially recognized member of the National Speleological Society, which consists of 10,000 members and 250 grottos or chapters nationwide. Membership in the UCG is $12 annually, and the group schedules numerous caving trips each year as well as provides public education on caring for caves and volunteers in cave clean up, watershed conservation and cave management. For more information about caving or cave conservation, contact the Upper Cumberland Grotto at NatashaMoseley02@hotmail.com or visit the group’s Facebook page. CHARGES: Traffic stop leads to charges From Page 1 Broad Street. An inventory of the vehicle Dewitte had been driving incident to his arrest uncovered a total of three firearms — two handguns and one shotgun. One of those handguns was found to be stolen. As a convicted felon, Dewitte is prohibited from owning and carrying any form of firearm. He was charged with improper display of registration, expired plates, driving on a revoked license, theft, evading arrest and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Dewitte was transported to the Putnam County Jail, where he was booked on a total bond of $7,000. He is expected to make his initial appearance in Putnam County General Sessions Court today. Weather Tonight Buddy Pearson Managing Editor Adult Protective Services, told the HeraldCitizen that mistreating caves can not only change the appearance of a cave, but also its ecology. “For us, caving is a recreational activity; however, for many animals, caves act as their homes.” Moseley said it’s common to see caves used as dumping areas. “Perhaps it’s the out of sight, out of mind mentality,” Moseley said. “Caves are also vandalized and even defaced as people have been known to take Speleothems as souvenirs. I have, on more than one occasion, come across these treasures for sale at flea markets or yard sales. Spray paint is also a huge issue in our area. Writing ‘John Doe was here,’ is not only unethical behavior but is also illegal behavior which is being closely monitored and reported to appropriate law enforcement agencies when found.” Cave vandalism can be reported to the Cave Vandalism Deterrence Commission at (502) 889-1236. The Upper Cumberland Grotto group encountered another caving group Sunday who was assisting The Discovery Channel in filming the cave, next to a ladder that leads to the original entrance of Blue Spring. Among that group was Clinton Elmore, a Cookeville native who’s now a graduate student geologist at East Tennessee State University, has been a member of the National Speleological Society since he was 12 years old, but has actually been in commercial caves since he was an infant. Elmore said more work really needs to be completed on Blue Spring. “The water hasn’t been dye traced yet,” Elmore said of Blue Spring Cave. “The Calfkiller River formed it under the water From Page 1 sembled the driver, Officer Cyrus notes. “After stopping the vehicle on West Main Street, the driver was identified as Aubrey Rigsby, who had a Florida nondriver’s identification,” the officer said. While the officer performed a records check, which ultimately found that Rigsby’s license had been suspended, the man drove away. “The subject fled in the Pontiac on South Highway 111 at speeds up to 125 mph,” Officer Cyrus reports. During the pursuit, the officer said he saw “the subject swerve onto the shoulder around vehicles and almost colliding with one.” The pursuit ended when the suspect vehicle crashed in White County. Reportedly, none of the occupants of the vehicle sustained serious injuries. Rigsby was charged with driving on a suspended license, evading arrest and reckless endangerment in the incident. He was transported to the Putnam County Jail, where he was booked on a total bond of $15,000. According to information on his arrest warrants, Rigsby’s initial appearance in Putnam County General Sessions Court is set for Feb. 8. 10 mph. Tuesday A 20% chance of snow. Gradually becoming mostly sunny. High near 36. Gusts as high as 20 mph. Tuesday Night Mostly clear. Low around 15. NW wind 5 to 10 mph. Wednesday Sunny. High near 35. WNW wind around 5 mph. Wednesday Night Thursday Night Mostly clear. Low around 24. SSW wind around 5 mph. Thursday Mostly sunny, High near 49. SSW wind 5 to 10 mph. Partly cloudy. Low around 34. South wind around 5 mph. Friday A 40% chance of rain. Mostly cloudy. High near 53. South wind 5 to 10 mph. Readings: Sunday’s high in Cookeville was 30, low 11. Sunday’s high in Monterey was 26, low 2, with a trace of snow. Almanac: Monday is the 11th day of the year with 355 remaining. The sun sets at 4:47 p.m. and will rise at 6:53 a.m. on Tuesday. The moon is a waxing crescent with 4% of the visible disc illuminated. HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Monday, January 11, 2016 — A3 STATE Knoxville group works to provide bicycles to everyone KNOXVILLE (AP) — Learning to ride a bike is a typical milestone for a child, but not every family is able to provide a bicycle for their children. KickStand, an all-volunteer collective, wants to make sure that every person who wants a bike has one to use. The volunteers at KickStand repair bikes that are donated to their nonprofit organization and distribute them to the community at no cost. Although they work on all sizes of bicycles, they most commonly restore children’s bikes. D DOUBLE OUBLE C COUPONS O U P O N S UP UP TTO O 50¢ 50¢ EEVERYDAY V E RY D AY “KickStand has distributed so many bikes in Knoxville we have lost count,” says volunteer and organizer Paul Laudeman. “It is easily in the hundreds just over the last year.” Located at 1323 N. Broadway behind the Fourth United Presbyterian Church at Glenwood, KickStand is at the heart of their community. Group members are closely involved with neighborhood events, like the recent Tour de Lights, and cooperate with churches and missions in the area. Working with local organizations like the Boys & Girls Clubs, Hope House, Bridge Refugee Services, Big Brothers Big Sisters and YWCA, they are able to ensure that the bikes and helmets end up in the hands of deserving children throughout Knoxville. “The Epilepsy Foundation is a great partner, because they donate bike helmets to us so we can give one to every child who gets a bike,” says Laudeman. The bikes that KickStand restores come from donations given by individuals, businesses and groups. Local bike shops, including the Fountain Quantity Rights Reserved. We Gladly Accept USDA Food Stamps & WIC Vouchers. Just Say s ’ o Le ((EXCLUDING E X C L U D I N G TTOBACCO OBACCO P PRODUCTS RODUCTS A AND N D SSOFT OFT D DRINKS) RINKS) Limit 2 Coupons On Same Item Per Customer Please City Pedaler and Greenlees, have donated bikes and parts to the organization. Nonprofit organizations like KARM, The Holiday Bureau, Here’s Hope Ministries and the Bike Elf have all been generous, as well as area businesses like Junk B Gone. “The great thing about Knoxville is how generous folks are,” says Laudeman. “These bikes, most of which would have ended up in the dump, are fixed by volunteers at our workshop.” Prices Good Thru Sunday, July 19th, 1998 s r r TM PRICES GOOD THRU SUNDAY, JANUARY 17TH, 2016 215 W. Spring St., Cookeville Phone 526-2992 Roxanne W WATER AT E R 1 $ 69 24 1/2 ltr. MEATS RE PPACKAGED ACKAGED MEATS ARE ARE FRESH FRESH CUT CUT DAILY DAILY - N O T PPRE Choice Beef - Boneless C CHICKEN HICKEN T TENDERS ENDERS BBOTTOM OTTOM RROUND OUND RROAST OAST 2 $ 69 69 1 lb. 2 $ 99 GROUND BEEF......................... 1 10 lb. bag 73% Lean - Family Pack lb. 1 $ 99 Large CANTALOUPES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . California HALOS............3..lb....bag ....... . 3 $ 99 Swiss Miss RIB EYE STEAKS..................... 10 pk. 8 lb. Value Pack lb. Value Pack Wampler $ 99 $ 59 1 lb. pkg. SAUSAGE............................... lb Indiana 1 lb. pkg 8 oz. 99 99 JUMBO EGGS COCOA.................................99 Dozen Charmin Basic TISSUE..................................$499 12 roll pack $ TOWELS......................... 4 8 roll pack 1 $ 29 29 1 Monterey $ 69 M MUSHROOMS U S H R O O M S BACON....................................... 2 $ 00 ¢ POTATOES......................4-. 1 $ 99 APPLES................................ 3 Grade “A” Fresh Choice Beef ¢ Bounty Basic P O R K CCHOPS PORK HOPS $ 79 79 $ 90 LEG QTRS.................... Fresh Fryer Mixed Grade “A” Fresh $ 99 1 29 29 Idaho Baker Tray Pack Red Or Golden Delicious 5 lb. bag Pillsbury Grand BISCUITS.........................................99 ¢ 8 ct. Wesson VEGETABLE OIL.......................2-$500 48 oz. Florida Natural ORANGE JUICE.......................$2 69 12 Pack 12 Oz. Cans 59 oz. 3 for for 2- 6 2- CCOCA O C A C COLA O L A and Coke products $ S Sunflour unflour Mixed-Pinto-Gt Northern Post Cereal Peter Pan 5 lb. bag 15 oz. 13-18 oz. Purity Premium $ 00 00 IICE C E CCREAM REAM 48 Oz. Tubs FFLOUR-MEAL LOUR-MEAL 1 6 Pk. Half Ltr. 4-$999 9 99 99 LUCKS BEANS HONEY BUNCHES OF OATS PEANUT BUTTER $ 00 00 $ 00 00 $ 99 99 $ 89 89 lb. 2- 1 2- 2- 5 2- 16 oz. 1 A4 — HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Monday, January 11, 2016 LOCAL/NATION Nation in Brief Call for supplies as standoff enters second week By RICK BOWMER Associated Press Playboy Mansion for sale but Hugh Hefner wants to stay put LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Playboy Mansion is up for sale but longtime resident Hugh Hefner wants to stay put. The West Los Angeles estate, the backdrop of many film shoots and wild parties, was listed on Monday for $200 million. Playboy Enterprises says the 5-acre property features 29 rooms, a home theater, wine cellar and a swimming pool with a cave-like grotto where Playboy bunnies partied with celebrities. The mansion also comes with a rare zoo license. As a condition of the sale, Playboy founder Hefner would get to continue living there as he has since the company bought the mansion 45 years ago for just over $1 million. Playboy CEO Scott Flanders says the sale would help the company “reinvest in the transformation of our business.” Teams to take bottled water to Flint homes FLINT, Mich. (AP) — Michigan State Police and other state employees will go door-to-door in Flint handing out bottled water, water testing kits and other resources to families affected by the city’s water crisis. The state said Sunday that the water resource teams will go into Flint neighborhoods beginning Tuesday. They also will distribute water filters and replacement cartridges. Officials announced Saturday that five city fire stations will serve as water resource sites for residents. Water drawn from the Flint River leached lead from old plumbing for months. Testing in October detected increased lead levels in residential water supplies and in children’s blood. Gov. Rick Snyder last week declared an emergency in Flint. Three liaison officers from the Federal Emergency Management Administration also are in Michigan to provide technical assistance to the state. Elusive dog finally captured after 559day team effort WATERBURY, Vt. (AP) — A Vermont dog who was the subject of a 559-day search after being spooked by a car accident is finally back home with his owners. Murphy the golden retriever had resisted the efforts of dozens of volunteers to find him. But he finally walked into a backyard trap in Waterbury set for the very purpose of capturing the cagey canine. Murphy had been missing since his owner — 25-year-old Kirstin Campbell of Morrisville — went off the road and struck a tree in Stowe June 29, 2014. The stunned dog ran off when he got out of the car. There have been sightings of Murphy in Waterbury Center and game cameras captured his image, but it wasn’t until Saturday night that the pooch was caught and reunited with Campbell. Federal judge dismisses naked violinist's claims PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — A federal judge has dismissed a nude protester’s claim that police violated his rights by arresting him while he played violin stark-naked outside the federal courthouse in Portland. Matthew T. Mglej of Hillsboro, Oregon, sued the Portland police and the county last January, seeking $1.1 million in damages. The 26-year-old was arrested for indecent exposure in May 2014. According to The Oregonian, the judge said Mglej’s nudity didn’t advance a specific message, so it wasn’t protected by either the First Amendment or the state constitution. BURNS, Ore. (AP) — The occupation of national wildlife area by a small, armed group upset over federal land policies stretched into its second week as the mother of the group’s leader asked supporters to send supplies - everything from warm blankets to coffee creamer. The group that seized the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Oregon’s high desert country on Jan. 2 planned no media briefings. It was quiet at the entrance to the refuge Sunday. The leader of the occupation, Ammon Bundy, has repeatedly rejected calls to leave buildings at the refuge despite pleas from the county sheriff, from many local residents and from Oregon’s governor, among others. He has said the group will leave when there is a plan to transfer control of federal land to locals. So far, the authorities have not moved in to remove Bundy’s group. Ammon Bundy is the son of rancher Cliven Bundy, who was involved in a 2014 Nevada standoff with the government over grazing rights. On Saturday, Ammon Bundy’s mother, Carol Bundy, sent an email to supporters asking them to send her son’s group supplies from a list of more than 80 items, including sleeping bags, wool socks, cigarettes, toiletries, food, coffee and “French Vanilla Creamer.” An Oregon state legislator met Rick Bowmer | AP Members of the FBI stand guard at the Burns Municipal Airport, Sunday. A small, armed group has been occupying a remote national wildlife refuge in Oregon since a week earlier to protest federal land use policies. with the group on Saturday, despite requests from local officials that he not do so. Rep. Dallas Heard, a Republican from Roseburg, talked with the group, The Oregonian re- ported. Heard’s legislative district is in western Oregon, outside the area where the standoff is occurring. Rep. Cliff Bentz, the Republican state representative whose district includes the wildlife refuge, told Heard not to come because it would be “inappropriate.” Harney County Judge Steven Grasty, another local official, says he too advised Bentz against the visit. Grasty said Bentz and five other out-of-state elected officials from Washington, Idaho and Nevada accompanied Heard. It wasn’t clear who the other elected officials were. UCHRA audit reflects improvements, but issues still exist By LAURA MILITANA HERALD-CITIZEN Staff COOKEVILLE — Since 2012, a number of improvements have been reported with the finances at the Upper Cumberland Human Resource Agency, according to the agency’s recent audit performed by Jobe, Hastings and Associates. It was noted by the auditors that in 2012, there were 15 findings. In 2015, that number has been reduced to two. One finding was partially corrected while the other was a repeated finding. “Improvements have been made to the reconciliation controls of the agency, and it appears that reconciliations are being performed for all cash accounts,” the audit, completed in late December 2015, said. “However, cash reconciliations do not appear to have been performed in a timely manner for one of the agency’s cash accounts, which led to difficulty reconciling accounts.” It is recommended that controls should be in place over cash to prevent the misstatement or misappropriation of cash. Cash could be misappropriated without it being discovered by management in a timely manner, auditors said. However, improvements should be made to timeliness and frequency of the reconciliation process. The bank reconciliations should be reviewed for accuracy and completeness on a timely basis and should include tests of mechanical accuracy and tracing items on the reconcilations to the relevant source documents. The composition of reconciling items should be determined and appropriate follow-up should occur. Agency officials said that for that one account, all efforts would be made to ensure this reconciliation is completed accurately and timely. All reconciliations are currently being completed accurately and timely. Another finding is related to payroll records. According to the audit, some of the agency employees’ salaries and wages that had been charged to more than one federal award, a federal award and a non-federal award or an indirect cost activity and a direct cost activity were not always properly supported by accurate personnel activity reports or equivalent documentation. Some employees are paid in advance of time worked and timesheets are completed in advance of time worked instead of an after the fact reflection of time worked. No internal controls have been designed by UCRHA to ensure that employees’ time charged to an activity is only for documented actual time worked. Controls should be designed to provide reasonable assurance that services charged to federal awards are in accordance with the applicable cost principles. Failure to adequately follow cost principles established in OMB Circular A-87 could result in forfeiture or reduction of federal funds awarded. Auditors recommend that the agency should design internal controls to ensure that costs charged to federal programs only include charges for an employee’s time actually worked on a particular activity. In addition, the agency should require employees whose time is charged to more than one federal award, a federal award and a non-federal award or an indirect cost activity and a direct cost activity to keep accurate records of their actual time worked on each program or activity in order to charge each grant the correct amount of costs. The agency responded by saying that all employees were paid in arrears by May 15, 2015. With all employees being paid behind, this will enable employees to record time worked accurately. Putnam Fire responds to two fires, one under investigation By TRACEY HACKETT HERALD-CITIZEN Staff PUTNAM COUNTY — The Putnam County Fire Department responded to fires at two different houses on Saturday. One of those fires resulted in a total loss, and the other was a kitchen fire with minimal damage. The first happened around 2:30 a.m. on Clemons Ridge Road. “When we arrived on the scene, the structure was already fully involved,” Chief Daryl Blair told the Herald-Citizen. In fact, much of the structure had already collapsed into the basement when firefighters arrived on the scene, he said. “We did what we could to try to get the flames put out and get it cooled down, but it was a total loss,” Chief Blair said. A total of seven firefighters re- sponded to that call. “They did a great job, working under the conditions they encountered,” he said. No one was at home when the call of the fire came in, and none of the responding firefighters were injured as they responded to the blaze. The possible cause of the fire is still under investigation today. According to property information, the house was an older structure that had been built more than 30 years ago. The other incident to which the fire department responded on Saturday was a kitchen fire. That call came in around 5:45 p.m. from a home on Edgewood Drive. “In that incident, a pot on the stove had caught fire. They were able to get in there quickly, remove the pot and get the flames put out,” Chief Blair said. The residents there had a smoke detector that alerted them to the blaze, he said. “Smoke detectors work,” the chief said. A total of 10 firefighters responded to that incident. “They did an outstanding job, and that residence sustained minimal damage,” Chief Blair said. No one was injured in that blaze either. ASSAULT: Sisters charged with striking woman with a car From Page 1 The officer reports that the woman had followed the two sisters out of the house, trying to get her keys back. “When the car started to move, she got onto the sidewalk, and the car being driven by Ruth [Melendez] came up on the sidewalk,” Officer Ramsey reports. That car struck the victim and knocked her to the ground. Although the victim was reportedly not seriously injured by that incident, the officer reports that she did sustain some scrapes and bruises. A witness told police that it appeared that the driver of the car had intentionally directed the vehicle toward the vic- tim before driving away. That vehicle was later stopped by Officer Dustin Hensley on Breeding Avenue. “The key fob with the car key and house key, which was taken from [the] residence was found in Ruth’s car,” Officer Ramsey reports. The two sisters were arrested. Each was charged with one count of aggravated assault and aggravated burglary. They were transported to the Putnam County Jail, where they were each booked on a total bond of $5,000. Their initial appearance in Putnam County General Sessions Court has been scheduled for Feb. 8. Community Calendar The Community Calendar is a daily list of announcements of one-time events hosted by nonprofit groups. To include your information, call 526-9715 and ask for the newsroom secretary, fax 5261209 or email bbs@heraldcitizen.com. Be sure to include your name and number as well as a time, date and location of the event. Jan. 12 CAREGIVER: The UCDD/Area Agency on Aging and Disability (AAAD) will hold its caregiver support group meeting on Tuesday from 10-11 a.m., at 1225 S. Willow Ave., Cookeville. The meeting is for anyone caring for another individual. There will be professional counseling available. For more info., call (931) 432-4111. Jan. 13 PRIMARY CARE: The Upper Cumberland Primary Care Project Board will meet on Wednesday at noon, at the U.C. Regional Health Center in Cookeville. BUFFALO VALLEY: The January birthday party at Buffalo Valley Community Center will be held on Wednesday. Soup and sandwich lunch will be provided by the library staff at noon. This is a potluck, so bring a dish and join us. For info., call 858-1403. JOB FAIR: United Way of Wilson County and the Upper Cumberland hosts White County job fair on Wednesday from 10 a.m.-2 p.m., at Sparta Civic Center, 514 Bockman Way, Sparta. Free for employers as well as the community. No registration necessary to attend. To reserve a table, contact Mistie Ragland at (931) 409-0386 or email at mistie@givetouwwc.org. Jan. 14 PEO: P.E.O. Chapter L will meet on Thursday at 10 a.m., at First Cumberland Presbyterian Church. Jan. 16 BOOK SIGNING: A book signing for Lisa D. Wheeler’s Christian children’s book, “The Angel Baby,” will be held from 1-3 p.m. at Poet’s Coffee at 230 E Broad St. in Cookeville. Jan. 18 HEAD START: The L.B.J.&C. Development Corporation Head Start Centers and the Central Office will be closed Monday in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Jan. 20 PEO: P.E.O. Chapter AO meets on Wednesday at 9:30 a.m., at First Tennessee Bank, 345 S. Jefferson, 4th floor. Jan. 21 TTU INTERNATIONAL: TTU’s International Friends is hosting its annual Hot Cider Social on Thursday, Jan. 21, from 5-7 p.m. in room 145 of Southwest Hall (200 West 10th Street, Cookeville). This event allows students from TTU’s international community to meet families and individuals from the local community. For more info.,contact Debbie Barnard at 931-349-0165 or dbarnard@tntech.edu. HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Monday, January 11, 2016 — A5 LOCAL/NATION Nation in Brief Ringling circus elephants to retire in May By TAMARA LUSH Dozens of Detroit schools close due to teacher protest DETROIT (AP) — A wave of teacher absences described by an activist as “rolling strikes” shut down more than half of Detroit’s 100 public schools Monday, keeping thousands of students at home as a so-called sick-out entered a second week. A handful of high schools were forced to close last week due to teachers calling in sick. But the action Monday was more dramatic as more teachers stayed home. The Detroit district with 46,000 students has been in turmoil, struggling with millions of dollars in debt, poor morale among staff and families that have other school choices for their kids. Gov. Rick Snyder, a Republican, wants to pay off the debt and spin off a new district, but he lacks support so far in the Legislature. There are no ongoing negotiations between teachers and schools, which are run by a Snyder-appointee, emergency manager Darnell Earley. “We understand and share their frustration,” Earley said in a statement, referring to teachers. But the absences make it “more challenging” to reach a political solution with state lawmakers in the Capitol, he said. A teacher and former union president, Steve Conn, said the shutdowns were “great.” He warned the district Sunday that parents needed to be notified about the “rolling strikes.” Associated Press ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — The Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus is ending its elephant acts a year and a half early, and will retire all of its touring elephants in May. The move comes amid increasing scrutiny on circus elephant acts with local governments passing “anti-circus” and “antielephant” ordinances in response to concerns over animal cruelty. The circus’s parent company, Feld Entertainment, told The Associated Press exclusively that all of the iconic elephants will be permanently retired to the company’s 200-acre Center for Elephant Conservation in central Florida. The company announced in March that it would retire the full herd to the center by 2018. But once officials began planning details, they realized “we could actually do this a lot sooner” because building the needed enclosures and spaces didn’t take as long as they originally thought, said Alana Feld, Ringling’s executive vice president and show producer. Eleven elephants currently tour with the circus. “They’ll be joining the rest of the herd,” Feld said. She’s part of the family that owns Feld Entertainment, which owns the largest herd of Asian elephants in North America. In addition to the elephants still touring, 29 of the animals are on the property now, and two are on breeding loans to zoos, Feld said. It costs about $65,000 yearly to care for each elephant, Feld said, and the company had to build new structures to house the retir- Wilfredo Lee | AP Asian elephants named April, left, and Luna, belonging to Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, interact in their enclosure outside the American Airlines Arena in Miami. ing elephants at the center, located between Orlando and Tampa. Elephant acts have been showcased by Ringling for more than a century and have often been featured on its posters. But because so many cities and counties have passed “anti-circus” and “anti-elephant” ordinances, it became difficult to By SHAWN MARSH Associated Press TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — A powder horn that some experts believe was used by Alexander Hamilton goes up for auction Monday on would have been his birthday. Hamilton, the nation’s first treasury sec- LOS ANGELES (AP) — Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck has recommended criminal charges against an officer who killed an unarmed homeless man in Venice. Beck tells the Los Angeles Times investigators concluded that Brendon Glenn was on his stomach, attempting to push himself off the ground, when Officer Clifford Proctor fired twice, hitting the 29-year-old in the back last May. Beck says he made his recommendation last month to Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey, who will ultimately decide whether to file charges. Proctor’s attorney says the officer saw Glenn reaching for his partner’s gun. Beck says after reviewing video, witness accounts and other evidence, investigators determined Glenn was not trying to take either Proctor’s gun or his partner’s weapon at the time of the shooting. Proctor’s partner told investigators he did not know why the officer opened fire. Buddy Chaffin MIAMI (AP) — A Saudi prisoner at the U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, who authorities said was a recruiter and fighter for alQaida has been sent back to his homeland, the Pentagon said Monday amid a wave of releases from the detention center. Muhammed Abd Al-Rahman Al-Shamrani was among the first prisoners taken to the U.S. base in Cuba when it opened in January 2002 to hold suspected enemy combatants. Carolina, also nixed wild or exotic animals from performing in the municipally owned, 7,600seat U.S. Cellular Center. Ringling’s new show will begin in July without the giant pachyderms. “We’re looking at a lot of new ways of doing things,” Feld said. She said the retired elephants at the CEC will also be part of can- cer research. Cancer is much less common in elephants than in humans, even though the big animals’ bodies have many more cells. That’s a paradox known among scientists, and now researchers think they may have an explanation — one they say might someday lead to new ways to protect people from cancer. Powder horn believed owned by Alexander Hamilton up for bid LAPD chief recommends charges for officer in Venice shooting Saudi prisoner at Guantanamo released after 14 years organize tours of three traveling circuses to 115 cities each year, Feld Entertainment CEO Kenneth Feld said last year. Fighting legislation in each jurisdiction is expensive, he said. Los Angeles and Oakland prohibited the use of bull-hooks by elephant trainers and handlers last April. The city of Asheville, North retary and one of the country’s Founding Fathers, is now the focus of a blockbuster hip-hop Broadway musical called “Hamilton.” The owner of the powder horn, a New Jersey dentist, hopes buzz from the show will help boost bids, which start at $10,000 at Sterling Associates in Closter, New Jersey. “It’s a symbol of hopes and aspirations, and it’s such a positive symbol of his future,” said Dr. Warren Richman, who hopes the winning bidder donates it to a museum. Richman acquired the horn from a patient in 1990 and spent years trying to document its authenticity and studying its etchings, which include a unicorn. A descendant, an arms appraiser and a forensic documents expert said they believe Hamilton used the engraved piece of cow horn to carry gunpowder. It is inscribed with his name and 1773, the year he entered what today is Columbia University. Obituaries COOKEVILLE — Funeral services for Buddy Chaffin, 79, of Cookeville, will be held at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 13, at Jefferson Avenue Church of Christ. Interment will be in Cookeville City Cemetery. The family will receive friends Mr. Chaffin from 5-8 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 12, and from 9 a.m. until time of services on Wednesday at the church, both days. Mr. Chaffin passed away on Sunday, Jan. 10, 2016, at his residence in Cookeville. Hooper-Huddleston & Horner Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements, (931) 526-6111. Smith of Baxter; two brothers, Roy Wayne (Louise) Cannon of Sparta and George Calvin (Treva) Cannon of Baxter; and a host of nieces and nephews. In addition to her father, she was preceded in death by her husband, Clifford Deweese; and two brothers, Houston Ray Cannon and Roger Lane Cannon. Pallbearers were Roy Cannon, Jr., George David Cannon, Joseph Ray Cannon, Danny Manus, Dillon Cannon and LC Manus. The family request donations to Presley Funeral Home to pay for funeral expenses in lieu of flowers. You may share your thoughts or send condolences to the family by visiting www.presleyfuneralhome.com. Pastors Fabron Nicholson and Ron Phillips officiated at the services. Professional services provided by Presley Funeral Home in Cookeville, (931) 528-1044. Glenda Irene Deweese COOKEVILLE — Funeral services for Glenda Irene Deweese, 56, of Baxter, were held at 11 a.m. today, Monday, Jan. 11, from the chapel of Presley Funeral Home in Cookeville. Interment followed in Pleasant View Cemetery. Glenda Irene Deweese passed away early on Mrs. Deweese Friday morning, Jan. 8, 2016, at her home following a brief illness. She was born on Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1959, in Cookeville to Jewell Marin Dunn Cannon and the late George Ray Cannon. Glenda will always be remembered as the family clown and would make everyone laugh. She is survived by her mother, Jewell Marin Dunn Cannon of Baxter; a sister, Betty Sue (Troy) Linda Fox COOKEVILLE — Graveside services for Linda Fox, 75, of Baxter, will be held at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 13, at Shipley Cemetery in Cookeville. The family will receive friends from 5-8 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 12, at Presley Funeral Home in Cookeville. Ms. Fox passed away on Saturday, Jan. 9, 2016, at her home in Baxter. Presley Funeral Home in Cookeville is in charge of arrangements, (931) 528-1044. Richard “Rick” C. Lee COOKEVILLE — A memorial service for Richard “Rick” C. Lee, 68, of Cookeville, will be held at 4 p.m. today, Monday, Jan. 11, at Heavenly Host Lutheran Church of Cookeville. Pastor Andrew Mr. Lee Smith will officiate. Visitation will follow the service. A second memorial service will be held at a later date in Oklahoma with Pastor Alan Fox officiating. Richard “Rick” C. Lee passed away peacefully in his sleep on Thursday, Dec. 31, 2015, after enduring numerous health problems. He was born March 23, 1947, at the Navajo Ordnance Depot in Flagstaff, Ariz., to the late Avery W. and E. Marie (Woodworth) Cabbiness. His family soon moved to Oklahoma. As a child, he was adopted by Roy Stewart, and a few years later by John R. Lee, when his mother remarried. Rick attended Putnam City High School in Oklahoma City. He married Pamela Streck in 1964 and had three sons. Rick enlisted in the Marine Corps and served 3 ½ tours in Vietnam as an officer. Rick enjoyed his work as a firefighter for Warr Acres, Okla., for several years, and also owned and operated Richard’s Gun Shop in Oklahoma. He was later employed by American Impacts, and then by BAF Industries, setting up programs for polishing and restoring vehicle exteriors. Later, he worked a short time for Safety-Kleen in Oklahoma City. Rick married Regina Anne (Swingen) Lee on his birthday in 1984. He followed Regina to Tennessee in 1993, when she accepted a job as faculty librarian at Tennessee Technological University. He was a member of Heavenly Host Lutheran Church in Cookeville, Tenn. Rick continued to do leatherwork for many years at home. Enjoying the outdoors with camping, hunting, canoeing, fishing and hiking were some of his passions. After experiencing many health issues and mobility difficulties, he enjoyed traveling, and watching wildlife, especially the birds in his backyard. He was comforted and loved by his Husky dog for the past 12 years. Survivors include his wife of the home; three sons and their families, Michael Brandon (Shannon) Lee, Andrew John Lee I, and Richard Martin (Elke) Lee, all of Oklahoma; four grandchildren of Oklahoma, Tyler Jacob (Amanda) Lee, Andrew John “AJ” Lee, Chandler Louis Lee and Rebecca Elaine Lee; one great-grandson, Kayden Michael Lee; a sister, Sherry Raina Park; a nephew, Michael Allen Park of Oklahoma; an aunt, Wanda Ann “Jenna” Brajdic of Miami; and two stepnieces, Christina Townsend and Alesha Powers. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by two infant grandchildren, Bradley Martin Lee and Victoria Lee; his uncles, Allen Woodworth, Clarence Woodworth and Wilbur Orville (Delores) Woodworth; and an aunt, Edith (Billy) Woods. A special thank you to Home Instead Senior Care, especially Kelly Lachenmeyer for her outstanding care. In lieu of flowers, please consider one of the following memorials: Cookeville-Putnam County Animal Shelter; Heavenly Host Lutheran Church; or Home Instead Senior Care Foundation. Crest Lawn Funeral Home-Cremation Center in Cookeville is in Wills, Living Trusts & Estate Planning Planning now may save $1000ʼs later Dale Bohannon, Attorney ➟ 115 South Dixie Ave., Cookeville, TN 526-7868 charge of arrangements, (931) 526-6384. To sign the online guest book and leave the family a message, please visit www.crestlawnmemorial.com. Winnell Guinn COOKEVILLE — Funeral services for Winnell Guinn, 86, of Bloomington Springs, will be held at 4 p.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 13, at Presley Funeral Home in Cookeville. Burial will be in Michigan at a later date. Mr. Guinn passed away on Sunday, Jan. 10, 2016, in Cookeville. Presley Funeral Home in Cookeville is in charge of arrangements, (931) 528-1044. The Herald-Citizen No. 1 in local news Call 526-9715 to subscribe Features: • Sani Rinse • Pro Scrub Model# KUDS30IXSS THE Appliance Mart 749 S. Jefferson 528-6467 FULL LINE OF KITCHENAID APPLIANCES “WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL” Herald-Citizen LIVING Monday, January 11, 2016 Husband who uncovers wife’s affair is unsure how to cope D EAR ABBY: Thirty years ago when I was an Army officer, my wife “went crazy.” She had an affair and wound up getting pregnant. When I got out of the Army, she saw the man one time more before we moved and got pregnant again! We had a child together later. When I found out my eldest son didn’t have the correct blood type, I confronted her and she admitted it. I then had all my children tested and realized only the last one is mine. I love the other two as well Dear as my son, Abby and I would not destroy his or the other boys’ lives. My wife and I had counseling and it helped some. The problem is, Abigail I feel like Van Buren my life has been destroyed and I don’t know what to do. — COUNSELING HELPED ... BUT DEAR C.H.B.: I assume you and your wife had joint counseling after you learned about her repeated infidelities. While your faith in women may have been shaken, your life has not been “destroyed.” Feeling as you do, it’s time for you to PRIVATELY discuss your feelings with another licensed mental health professional. After that, you will be better equipped to rationally decide how to move forward. DEAR ABBY: My sister-inlaw is getting married soon. Originally, she asked my 4-yearold daughter, “Emma,” to be her flower girl. Emma was very excited. A few weeks ago, I asked when my daughter needed to be fitted for her dress. My sister-inlaw then informed me they had chosen my niece to be the flower girl the day after she asked Emma. No one ever mentioned it to us. It was left to me to tell my daughter, and she was devastated. She still cries about it. I am holding in so much anger and hurt that I have been avoiding the family so there won’t be any fighting close to the “big day.” Am I wrong to be upset with my sister-in-law and mother-in-law for excluding my little girl and not telling her themselves? — MIFFED IN ALABAMA DEAR MIFFED: No, you’re not. The way it was handled was extremely insensitive. Your sister-in-law owes you an explanation for what happened and your daughter an apology. DEAR ABBY: I will be receiving some money from a court settlement soon. Only five friends were true friends and stood by me. They assisted me during the two years I was totally destitute. They all know I’m involved in a lawsuit and that I will receive compensation. My question is, should I tell them how much I’m getting? I don’t like to lie, but the idea of revealing my monetary status makes me uncomfortable. I never promised any of them money, so that’s not an issue. I will cheerfully compensate them all for their loyalty in ongoing daily ways. What should I do or say when they ask how much I received? I don’t want to be perceived as rude. — UNCERTAIN IN THE SOUTH DEAR UNCERTAIN: The amount you will be receiving is really nobody’s business. It would not be rude to say that you’d prefer not to discuss it because it makes you uncomfortable, and change the subject. 6 Iconic singer David Bowie dies at 69 By MESFIN FEKADU AP Music Writer NEW YORK (AP) — David Bowie, the other-worldly musician who broke pop and rock boundaries with his creative musicianship, nonconformity, striking visuals and a genre-spanning persona he christened Ziggy Stardust, died of cancer Sunday. He was 69 and had just released a new album. Bowie, whose hits included “Fame,” “Heroes” and “Let’s Dance,” died “peacefully” and was surrounded by family, representative Steve Martin said early Monday. The singer had fought cancer for 18 months. Long before alter egos and wild outfits became commonplace in pop, Bowie set the music world on its ear with the release of the 1972 album, “The Rise of Ziggy Stardust and Spiders from Mars,” which introduced one of music’s most famous personas. Ziggy Stardust was a concept album that imagined a genre-bending rock star from outer space trying to make his way in the music world. Bowie The persona — the red-headed, eyeliner wearing Stardust — would become an enduring part of his legacy, and a touchstone for the way entertainers packaged themselves for years to come. Bowie turned 69 on Friday, the same day as he released a new album called “Blackstar.” “While many of you will share in this loss, we ask that you respect the family’s privacy during their time of grief,” said a statement issued via his social media accounts. No more details were provided. The singer, who was born David Jones in London, came of age in the glam rock era of the early 1970s. He had a striking androgynous look in his early days and was known for changing his appearance and sounds. After Ziggy Stardust, the stuttering rock sound of “Changes” gave way to the disco soul of “Young Americans,” co-written with John Lennon, to a droning collaboration with Brian Eno in Berlin that produced “Heroes.” He had some of his biggest successes in the early 1980s with the bombastic “Let’s Dance,” and a massive American tour. Another one of his definitive songs was “Under Pressure,” which he recorded with Queen; Vanilla Ice would years later infamously use the song’s hook for his much maligned smash “Ice Ice Baby.” “My entire career, I’ve only really worked with the same subject matter,” Bowie told The Associated Press in a 2002 interview. “The trousers may change, but the actual words and subjects I’ve always chosen to write with are things to do with isolation, abandonment, fear and anxiety — all of the high points of one’s life.” At a concert for rescue workers after the 2001 World Trade Center attacks, his performance of “Heroes” was a highlight. “What I’m most proud of is that I can’t help but notice that I’ve affected the vocabulary of pop music. For me, frankly, as an artist, that’s the most satisfying thing for the ego.” Bowie was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996. ‘Martian,’ ‘Revenant’ get awards boost By LINDSEY BAHR AP Film Writers BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — The 73rd annual Golden Globes had a few curveballs up its sleeves, and the biggest ones weren’t even from acerbic host Ricky Gervais, who kept the show alive with his biting quips and takedowns of the business that the awards were celebrating. But, instead of just being another booze-soaked, starry year at the Beverly Hilton Hotel, Sunday’s bleep-filled ceremony also gave a boost to two films that have been lingering on the edges of an undefined award season — the crowd-pleasing space romp “The Martian” and the brutal frontier epic “The Revenant,” mere days before the Academy Award nominees are revealed. Alejandro Inarritu’s “The Revenant” won awards in the drama category for best picture and best actor for star Leonardo DiCaprio, who seems to be on a path to an Oscar for his portrayal of the 1820s fur trapper Hugh Glass. Inarritu, whose “Birdman” swept the Oscars last year, also beat out “The Martian’s” Ridley Scott for the best director award. “The Martian” did win best comedy film and best actor in a comedy for star Matt Damon. The dubious placement of “The Martian” in the comedy category was a running joke throughout the evening — even Scott questioned it as he walked on stage to accept the best picture award. But a win is a win, and although this awards season is far from predetermined, neither “The Martian” nor “The Revenant” were considered real frontrunners, especially against nominees like “Spotlight,” “Carol,” “Mad Max: Fury Road,” and “The Big Short.” “Spotlight,” the fact-based drama about The Boston Globe’s investigation into sex abuses in the Catholic Church has been the one favorite throughout the season in both critics and guild awards. While it is considered a lock for a Best Picture nomination on Thursday, the film apparently did not win the favor of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association and received no awards on Sunday. Adam McKay’s star-studded financial collapse comedy “The Big Short” also walked away empty handed, despite some rising awards momentum lately with recent Producers Guild and Writers Guild nominations. Critics darlings “Carol” and “Mad Max: Fury Road” were surprisingly shut out as well. But all will come into focus on Thurs- AP Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, left, and Leonardo DiCaprio pose in the press room with the award for best motion picture - drama for “The Revenant” at the 73rd annual Golden Globe Awards Sunday. day when Oscar nominees are announced. Voting for Oscar nominations closed on Friday, but the campaigning won’t end until the actual ceremony on Feb. 28. Any added momentum helps, even if Gervais joked at the start of the show that the award is “a bit of metal that some confused old journalist wanted to give you to meet you in person and take a selfie.” Gervais’ snark aside, the Golden Globes have worked for years to shed an image of eccentric selections made by a group of little-known international journalists. The Globes have instead grown into one of the most popular award show broadcasts of the year, thanks to increasingly credible nominees, its trademark relaxed atmosphere and its unique position as a major awards show that honors both film and television. Despite some outliers in the nominee ranks, the film acting awards went to a more expected lot. Jennifer Lawrence won best actress in a comedy for “Joy,” her third Golden Globe win for a David O. Russell film, who she thanked effusively in her speech. She also beat out her friend Amy Schumer in the category. “She’s gonna be fine,” Lawrence said backstage. “She’s funny and hilarious and will win many things.” In what is probably the year’s most competitive category, best actress in a drama, Brie Larson won out over Cate Blanchett (“Carol”) and Saoirse Ronan (“Brooklyn”) for her affecting performance as a woman in captivity in “Room.” Last year’s winner Julianne Moore (“Still Alice”) went on to win the Oscar as well. Awards race dark horse “Steve Jobs” also got some love on Sunday with wins for Kate Winslet, for best supporting actress, and Aaron Sorkin, for the screenplay. Sylvester Stallone knocked out some heavyweight competition, too, in the supporting actor category with a win for “Creed,” beating out Idris Elba (“Beasts of No Nation”), Michael Shannon (“99 Homes”), Mark Rylance (“Bridge of Spies”), and Paul Dano (“Love & Mercy”). The crowd greeted his win with a standing ovation. “I want to thank my imaginary friend Rocky Balboa for being the best friend I ever had,” said Stallone, whose only other Golden Globes nod was also for portraying the Italian Stallion in “Rocky.” Despite some diversity in the nominee ranks, the film acting awards were still won exclusively by Caucasians, rousing some worry that the Oscars may follow suit despite increased scrutiny after last year’s #OscarsSoWhite criticisms. Best foreign language film went to Hungary’s Laszlo Nemes’ “Son of Saul,” a harrowing view of life inside Auschwitz, and best animated film went to Pixar’s acclaimed “Inside Out.” The big television winners included USA’s “Mr. Robot,” Taraji P. Henson for “Empire” and Jon Hamm for “Mad Men.” ‘Star Wars’ tops DiCaprio in ‘Revenant’ to stay No. 1 By RYAN NAKASHIMA AP Business Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) — “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” stayed on top of the North American box office for the fourth straight weekend, beating out Leonardo DiCaprio in “The Revenant,” and becoming the third-largest grossing movie in the world ever. According to studio estimates Sunday, the adventures of Rey, Finn and stalwarts from the previous “Star Wars” films raked in $41.6 million in the U.S. and Canada and $104.3 million overseas, led by a record-breaking opening in China. Disney distribution Executive Vice President Dave Hollis said the expected $53 million debut weekend in China was “spectacular” given the film is the first “Star Wars” episode many Chinese people have ever seen. “We’re very encouraged,” he said. In the U.S. and Canada, it is the biggest movie ever and the first to pass $800 million with $812 million so far. Its global total now stands at $1.73 billion, according to The Walt Disney Co., passing “Jurassic World,” with $1.67 billion. The film now has in its sights No. 2 “Titanic,” with its $2.2 billion box office haul in 1997-98, and No. 1 “Avatar,” from 2009-2010 at $2.8 billion. Its place as the all-time biggest movie is by no means assured, according to Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst with Rentrak. “Avatar” had a smaller opening but kept ringing cash registers through awards season, something that won’t be clear for “Star Wars” until the Golden Globes on Sunday night and Oscar nominations on Thursday. “I don’t think it’s necessarily predestined,” Dergarabedian said. “That’s a big number. It’s a tough number to get to. I think $2 billion is in the cards but if any movie has that potential (to be No. 1), it would certainly be ‘The Force Awakens.’” “The Revenant,” a gritty R-rated movie directed by Alejandro Inarritu about an 1820s frontiersman who gets mauled by a bear, blasted through expectations of about $25 million in its first weekend of wide release with a $38 million haul, following limited showings in New York and Los Angeles in December. Already buzzing for Oscars in categories like best director and best actor, 20th Century Fox’s domestic distribution chief Chris Aronson said “The Revenant” surprisingly brought in mainstream audiences despite its attimes graphic material. “It’s very graphic, it’s very real,” Aronson said. “You watch this and you’re going to feel cold.” Having the film open wide well after “Star Wars” was released gave it room to breathe, he said. “Now I think there’s a specialness to this film that might have been lost earlier.” Of the Top 10 films this weekend, only Focus Features’ “The Forest” was in theaters for the first time over the weekend, coming in fourth at $13.1 million. Focus president of distribution Jim Orr said the horror film topped expec- tations. It put “Game of Thrones” star Natalie Dormer in a forest at the base of Mount Fuji renowned for suicides. The film found a younger audience skewing female that is typical of most horror films, but saw a bump Saturday from Friday, which is unusual and which Orr credited to good word of mouth. “Hopefully that will help it leg out better than the genre normally does,” he said. Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Rentrak. 1. “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” $41.6 million. 2. “The Revenant,” $38 million. 3. “Daddy’s Home,” $15 million. 4. “The Forest,” $13.1 million. 5. “Sisters,” $7.2 million. 6. “The Hateful Eight,” $6.4 million. 7. “The Big Short,” $6.3 million. 8. “Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Road Chip,” $5.5 million. 9. “Joy,” $4.5 million. 10. “Concussion,” $3.1 million. HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Monday, January 11, 2016 — A7 ENTERTAINMENT Dilbert Peanuts Snuffy Smith Shoe For Better or For Worse Zits The Born Loser Garfield Frank & Ernest Arlo & Janis Horoscope Tuesday, January 12, 2016 Put your knowledge and expertise to work for you in order to move ahead this year. Don’t let anyone sidetrack you when the focus should be on you and what you want to achieve. Tunnel vision and a little force will go a long way. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Put in extra hours if it will help you complete something that could make a difference to you professionally or financially. An unexpected change in a rela- tionship will be beneficial. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — Focus your attention on dealing with a concern you have or making a needed change to an important relationship. Once you’ve put your worries to rest, you can celebrate. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — Don’t share personal information with anyone. An innovative investment will be offered and should be considered. Someone you have worked with in the past will have something for you. Sudoku ARIES (March 21Speak up about your April 19) — A change feelings. It’s not OK to to your appearance or let someone take adan update to your skills vantage of you or railor education will pay road you into doing off. Romance is on the things you don’t want rise and a day trip will to do. bring good results. CANCER (June 21TAURUS (April 20July 22) — Let your May 20) — Express imagination take your plans and check charge, especially out your options. Inter- Eugenia when making changes views and meetings at home or in the workLast with experts will help place. A property inyou make a decision vestment looks that will promote gain. Refuse to promising. give in to guilt tactics and emo- LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — tional manipulation. Make a point to wheel and deal GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — until you get what you want. If World Almanac Databank Monday, January 11, 2016 TODAY’S HISTORY: In 1861, Alabama declared its secession from the Union. In 1908, President Theodore Roosevelt declared the Grand Canyon a national monument. In 1964, the U.S. surgeon general issued the first U.S. government report concluding that smoking could be hazardous to health. In 2003, departing Illinois Gov. George Ryan commuted the sentences of an unprecedented 156 death row inmates. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS: Alexander Hamilton (1755/571804), U.S. statesman; Ezra Cornell (1807-1874), businessman/philanthropist; William James (1842-1910), philosopher/psychologist; Rod Taylor (1930-2015), actor; Jean Chretien (1934- ), Canadian politician; Naomi Judd (1946- ), singer-songwriter; Mary J. Blige (1971- ), singer-songwriter; Amanda Peet (1972- ), actress. TODAY’S FACT: Alexander Hamilton was born to a poor family on the Caribbean island of Nevis. Conflicting sets of records leave it unclear whether he was born in 1755 or 1757. TODAY’S SPORTS: In 1973, Major League Baseball owners voted in approval of a 10th lineup position for American League rosters, allowing a “designated pinch-hitter” to bat for the pitcher while allowing the pitcher to stay in the game. Lottery Sunday Cash 3 Evening 7-4-8 Cash 4 Evening 3-3-0-5 Saturday Cash 3 Evening 0-4-0 Cash 3 Midday 7-6-6 Cash 3 Morning 5-2-6 Cash 4 Evening 1-0-0-6 Cash 4 Midday 8-3-1-2 Cash 4 Morning 7-3-6-3 Hot Lotto 01-11-37-43-44, Hot Ball 12 Est. jackpot: $1.25 million Powerball 16-19-32-34-57 Powerball 13, Power Play 3 Est. jackpot: $1.30 billion you desire a change, do whatever it takes to make it happen. Romance is highlighted. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Take down your barriers and have fun. If you let your friends and colleagues discover your sense of humor, it will be much easier to close deals and ask for favors. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Approach certain concerns carefully. An opponent will be harsh if you want to alter the way you do things. Reverse psychology will help you achieve your goal. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — A mental, physical or emotional challenge will motivate you to do something constructive. A new project that allows you to use your creative skills will lead to something good. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — You may feel adventurous, but you must be cautious if you don’t want to face injury or interference from someone in charge. Follow the rules to avoid being reprimanded. Crossword A8 — HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Monday, January 11, 2016 NATION/WORLD World in Brief EU foreign policy chief says Iran sanctions to end soon PRAGUE (AP) — The European Union foreign policy chief says she expects the economic sanctions against Iran to be lifted soon. Iran and world powers led by the U.S. agreed to a landmark nuclear deal to limit Tehran’s enrichment of uranium in exchange for lifting economic sanctions. Iran has always denied seeking nuclear arms. Speaking to reporters in Prague Monday, Federica Mogherini says there was no date set yet but that “the implementation of the agreement is proceeding well.” Mogherini says it is necessary that all steps agreed have to be “properly done,” including the work of the International Atomic Energy Agency. But after consulting recently the foreign ministers of Iran and the United States she believes “things are going well” and the sanctions might be lifted “rather soon.” Russia's ruble slumps on first day of trading after holiday MOSCOW (AP) — The Russian ruble fell sharply on its first day of trading after a ten-day holiday period, as a drop in the price of oil cast a shadow across the energy-exporting economy. The national currency dropped by nearly 2 percent half an hour into trading, to 76.1 rubles, as the Moscow exchange resumed trading in foreign exchange for the first time since Dec. 31. The price of oil, the backbone of the Russian economy, has declined over the past week amid fears about a slowdown in China’s growth. Russia has also been hit by economic sanctions that Western nations imposed following the 2014 annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea. The sharp decline in the price of oil, now trading at 12-year lows at $34 per barrel for Brent crude, will likely cause a drain on Russia’s reserves and push the government to cut down on expenses. Russia has based its budget this year on an average oil price of $50 per barrel and Finance Minister Anton Siluanov indicated last month that the government is prepared for cuts if crude were to fall to $30. Hunter in Zimbabwe cancels lion hunt raffle after protests JOHANNESBURG (AP) — A professional hunter in Zimbabwe has canceled a plan to raffle a lion hunt at a hunters’ convention in the United States, following protests from activists. Martin Nel said he is scrapping the raffle in which he hoped to sell 100 raffle tickets for $1,500 each in Las Vegas next month. LionAid, a group based in Britain, had expressed shock at the proposal, which focused attention on the heated debate about whether hunting hurts already vulnerable species, or can help them by raising funds for conservation. In a statement this month, Nel said the raffle winner could also have chosen to have a lion collared for research, and that the project was designed to raise funds for conservation studies at Zimbabwe’s Bubye Valley Conservancy. The conservancy defended its record, saying cattle ranchers had wiped out lions, rhinos, elephants and other wildlife in the area decades ago. Established in 1994, the conservancy reintroduced lions in 1999 and today has a population of nearly 500 as well as a significant number of endangered black rhinos, it said. Court to hear public sector union fees case WASHINGTON (AP) — A Supreme Court dispute over public-sector union fees could sap the finances of organized labor and further erode the power of the nation’s labor movement. The justices hear arguments Monday in a case that challenges the right of public-employee unions to collect fees from teachers, firefighters and other state and local government workers who choose not to become members. A group of California public school teachers claims that such mandatory fees violate the First Amendment rights of workers who disagree with the union’s positions. Their lawsuit against the California Teachers Association seeks to overturn a nearly four-decade-old Supreme Court precedent that allows public unions to collect “fair share” fees from non-members to help cover the costs of collective bargaining. The Supreme Court ruled in the 1977 case, Abood v. Detroit Board of Education, that states can require non-members to pay the fees as long as the money doesn’t go to political causes. The court said the arrangement prevents non-members from becoming “free riders” who get all the benefits of union bargaining and grievance procedures without paying for it. But the high court has raised serious doubts about the rationale of Abood in two recent cases. It has stopped short of overturning it both times, but four justices joined a 2014 opinion by Justice Samuel Alito that called Abood “questionable.” Alito said it is now harder to draw the line between collective bargaining and political ends. AP Rebecca Friedrichs, a veteran Orange County, Calif., public school teacher, poses for a portrait. The Supreme Curt will hear arguments in a California case brought by a group of public school teachers who claim such mandatory fees violate the First Amendment rights of workers who disagree with the union’s positions. The California teachers argue that unions have become more political over time. They say even a push for higher salaries and pension benefits raises political questions about the best use of tax dollars for cash-strapped localities. The unions argue that the First Amendment applies differently to public employees performing their jobs. They assert that the state has a strong interest in promoting efficiency and avoiding costly workplace disruptions by designating the union as the exclusive bargaining representative for work- ers. The case also threatens to unravel thousands of contracts around the country that were negotiated relying on the fourdecade-old system. A federal district court ruled against the teachers, saying the outcome was clear under Abood. China, U.S. seek roadmap to peace ISLAMABAD (AP) — As the battlefield losses in Afghanistan mount and entire swaths of the country that cost hundreds of U.S.-led coalition and Afghan military lives to secure slip back into Taliban hands, four counties — Pakistan, Afghanistan, China and the United States — are meeting Monday in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad to try to craft a plan for peace in the warshattered country. But analysts and participants alike say that while there are four countries talking, much of the hope for progress toward peace rests with Pakistan — which is accused of harboring some of the fiercest factions of the Taliban, including the Haqqani group, a U.S.-declared terrorist organization. Pakistan says its influence over the Taliban is overrated. “Even at the best of times they (Taliban) didn’t listen to us,” the Pakistani prime minister’s special adviser on foreign affairs Sartaj Aziz told The Associated Press. “Look at Bamiyan,” he said, referring to the Taliban’s destruction in the summer of 2001 of some of the world’s most precious statues of Buddha. The Taliban blew up the statues, ignoring the roars of dissent, including from Pakistan. Aziz was to address the open- Press Information Department via AP, File Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, shakes hands with Pakistan’s army chief Gen. Raheel Sharif, at Nur Khan airbase in Islamabad, Pakistan. ing of the summit in remarks that were to be carried live on the government-owned Pakistan Television. He refused to say whether Pakistan was in possession of a list of Taliban representatives who are prepared to enter into peace negotiations. The presence of such a list was announced Sunday by Javid Faisal, deputy spokesman for Afghanistan’s Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah. Imtiaz Gul, whose Center for Research and Security Studies has delved deeply into the Afghan conflict and Pakistan’s decades-old involvement, says Pakistan does have significant leverage with the Taliban. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. Half the states already have right-to-work laws banning mandatory fees, but most members of public-employee unions are concentrated in states that don’t, including California, New York and Illinois. Mao statue removed BEIJING (AP) — A village in central China has demolished a statue of the country’s founder, Mao Zedong, after images of the structure covered in gold paint and looming 37 meters (120 feet) high over farmland attracted heated social media discussion. The project, reportedly financed by entrepreneurs, cost $460,000 and was near completion last week when it was nixed by local officials who apparently were embarrassed by the public scrutiny. The People’s Daily, the official Communist Party newspaper, said the statue may have lacked approval from cultural management authorities, though it also cited an official as saying that did not appear to be the reason. Since his death in 1976, Mao has been revered as a founding father. But he has also and blamed for political turmoil and disastrous economic policies that claimed millions of lives. Mexico begins extradition proceedings against drug lord MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico began the process of extraditing drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman to the United States, two days after the famed fugitive was recaptured following a dramatic, months-long hunt featuring movies stars, sewer escapes and bloody shootouts. Officials warned that the process could take a long time as Guzman’s lawyers file legal appeals and maneuver to keep their client in Mexico, where he has already escaped from maximum security prisons twice. On Sunday, agents formally notified Guzman that he was wanted in the United States. In a statement, the Attorney General’s Office said Mexican agents assigned to the international police agency Interpol served two arrest warrants to the drug lord, who is being held at the Altiplano prison following his capture by Mexican marines on Friday. Guzman’s defense now has three days to present arguments against extradition and 20 days to present supporting evidence, beyond the plethora of other appeals they have already started filing. Guzman’s powerful Sinaloa cartel smuggles multiton shipments of cocaine and marijuana as well as manufacturing and transporting methamphetamines and heroin, mostly to the U.S. He is wanted in various U.S. states and his July escape deeply embarrassed the government of President Enrique Pena Nieto and strained ties between the countries. Guzman’s attorney Juan Pablo Badillo has said the defense has already filed six motions to challenge extradition requests. Badillo said that his client shouldn’t be extradited to the U.S. because “our country must respect national sovereignty, the sovereignty of its institutions to impart justice.” Rolling Stone faces criticism over ‘El Chapo’ interview By HILLEL ITALIE AP National Writer NEW YORK (AP) — It was a big scoop, and one Rolling Stone may well regret. The magazine made stunning news over the weekend by revealing that actor Sean Penn landed a rare interview last fall with the notorious drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman while Guzman was on the run after escaping through a tunnel from a maximum-security Mexican prison. Guzman was recaptured Friday in Mexico after a shootout that killed five of his associates and wounded one marine. Penn’s long and often rambling essay, widely Penn mocked on social media, included comments from Guzman on everything from his childhood to his thoughts on the drug trade. It also raised questions of ethics and judgment, namely whether Penn should have met secretly with one of the world’s most-wanted fugitives, whether the actor crossed the line by giving Guzman approval over the article before it was published, and whether Penn trivialized El Chapo’s murderous past by asking him such questions as “Do you have any dreams?” and “If you could change the world, would you?” A Rolling Stone spokeswoman did not immediately return requests for comment. Penn’s story ran nine months after Rolling Stone retracted its discredited story about a gang rape at a fraternity party at the University of Virginia. The magazine was strongly criticized for relying too strongly on the account of the alleged victim and failing to carry out basic fact-checking. It is being sued for tens of millions of dollars by the fraternity, former frat members and a university administrator. Herald-Citizen SPORTS Monday, January 11, 2016 B No. 12 Lady Vols breeze past Auburn By STEVE MEGARGEE AP Sports Writer KNOXVILLE (AP) — Tennessee bounced back from adversity by delivering one of its best performances of the season to cap an emotional week that had its coach fighting back tears D i a m o n d DeShields had 25 points, seven assists and six rebounds Sunday as No. 12 Tennessee regained its shooting touch in a 79-52 blowout of Auburn. The victory came three days after the Lady Volunteers had lost at home to Florida. They did it on a reunion weekend that brought about 50 former Lady Vols and former coach Pat Summitt to Thompson-Boling Arena. Former Lady Vols Candace Parker, Michelle Marciniak, Glory Johnson and Isabelle Harrison attended prac- tice Saturday and offered the current team words of encouragement. “It was special, I’ll be honest with you,” Tennessee coach Holly Warlick said as her eyes got watery. “It was special. When you struggle and you’re around people who are positive, they’re incredible. They’re why we do what we do. They’re why I’m here. They’re why I have this opportunity. Coach Summitt was there. I’m sorry I’m emotional. “I understand it’s a privilege and an honor for me to coach this team. And I think our kids understand it’s a privilege to wear that uniform.” Tennessee (11-4, 2-1 SEC) followed up its worst shooting performance of the season with its best. After shooting 29.3 percent (24 of 82) Thursday against Florida, the Lady Volunteers shot 59.6 percent (34 of 57) on Sunday. Tennessee’s players watched film of the Florida game and provided their own scouting reports of what they’d done wrong. They corrected their mistakes Sunday by working the ball inside instead of firing away from 3-point range, where they’ve struggled all season. Tennessee has made just 23.3 percent of its 3-point attempts and entered Sunday ranked 334th out of 344 Division I teams in that category. “We’ve kind of just accepted that that’s not what we’re great at,” DeShields said. “We’ve got capable shooters indeed, but we really were just pounding the ball inside and just pushing tempo and trying to get good paint points, paint shots.” Bashaara Graves, who shot 2 of 13 against Florida, was 8 of 9 against Auburn and scored 18 points. Mercedes Russell had 10 points and 13 rebounds. Tra’Cee Tanner had 12 points Saul Young, Knoxville News Sentinel | AP and 10 rebounds for Auburn (115, 1-2).The Lady Vols outscored Tennessee’s Bashaara Graves is defended by Auburn players, from left, Brandy Montgomery, Jessica Jones, and Jazmine Jones during a game in Knoxville on Sunday. See LADY VOLS, Page B2 Tennessee defeated Auburn 79-52. TENNESSEE TECH Robinson adds two school records at Temple Invitational On a roll TTU Sports Information COOKEVILLE — With her name already listed on two school marks in the Tennessee Tech women’s track & field record book, freshman Na’Asha Robinson added two more Sunday at the Ed Temple Invitational at Tennessee State University. Tech finished the day with three school records and three first place finishers. In addition to the records, Tech student-athletes broke three personal best marks and established a handful of PR numbers in their first competition in several events. Track and “We had a great meet with Field some stellar performances,” said second-year coach Wayne Angel. “I was very pleased with the ladies today. They were very competitive. We came back from the holidays in good shape. Robinson broke school records in the 55m and 200m events. “Na’Asha Robinson was the star today,” Angel said. “She was truly on a mission.” The rookie from Huntsville, Ala., obliterated the previous, 12-year-old record of 7.28 seconds in the 55-meter dash, recording a time of 7.06 seconds in her qualifying heat. In the finals, she ran another time that beat the previous mark but was a fraction slower than her new record as she placed second overall with a time of 7.22 seconds. The previous 55m record of 7.28 seconds was set in 2004 by Bethany Burney at the Sewanee Invitational. In the 200m dash, Robinson roared around the track in 24.95 seconds to claim first place. It broke a month-old record of 25.51 set by teammate Jaydean Joseph at Vanderbilt. A month ago at Vanderbilt, Robinson set the school record at 400m and was part of Tech’s record-breaking effort in the 4x400 relay. The third school record to be rewritten came in the triple jump as Raven Smith soared 38 feet, 10.75 inches. That eclipsed the school standard of 38 feet, 1.5 inches set last year by Chelsea Mills at East Tennessee. Two other Golden Eagles earned first place finishes Sunday. Junior Sarah Brandt won the mile run, putting up a time of 5:10.18 in her first competition at that distance. The other individual win came at 400m when D’Airrien Jackson won the race with a time of 56.49 seconds in her first try at that distance. Tech had three PR efforts on the track and one in field events. Senior Brittany McGee ran her fastest time ever at 55m, posting a time of 7.69 seconds in her qualifying heat. Sophomore Madison Stremler also posted a personal best mark, recording a time of 2:19.42 while placing second in the meet in the 800m race. A third PR time came in the 5,000m run, as Lera McNamara finished third on the team in 19:56.48. The other broken PR came in the weight throw, when Makayla Kington got off a toss See TRACK, Page B2 Thomas Corhern | Herald-Citizen Tennessee Tech’s Ryan Martin goes up for a layup during last week’s win at Murray State. The Golden Eagles enter this week in the top spot in the Ohio Valley Conference standings with a 4-0 record. Golden Eagles holding on to first in OVC By THOMAS CORHERN HERALD-CITIZEN Assistant Sports Editor COOKEVILLE — 4-0. After last season’s effort, to believe that the Tennessee Tech men’s basketball team could open up the 2015-16 campaign like this might have seemed a little unbelievable. But the Golden Eagles this season just seem to keep finding ways to make the unbelievable reality. After back-to-back wins at Murray State and Austin Peay — both places that the Tech men haven’t had much luck at in past seasons, the Golden Eagles are riding pretty high. With four wins and no losses, the Men’s Golden Eagles Basketball technically stand in first in the Ohio Valley Conference, a half-game over Tennessee State and Belmont, who are both 3-0. The downside — the Tigers and the Bruins are both in the OVC East Division with the Golden Eagles. Tech gets back in action this week as the Golden Eagles travel to UT Martin (9-8, 1-1 OVC) on Wednesday, then return to the Hooper Eblen Center on Saturday as Tech hosts Southeast Missouri (2-14, 0-4 OVC). Torrance Rowe enters the week averaging 17.8 points a game, while Ryan Martin stands at 14.1 points a game and Aleksa Jugovic averages 10.4 points. Martin is averaging 7.6 rebounds a game, while Anthony Morse is bringing down 6.7 rebounds per contest. The Skyhawks certainly aren’t a slouch opponent. UT Martin opened up OVC play with a good 78-70 win over Eastern Kentucky in Richmond, then fell on Saturday with a 64-58 loss in Morehead State to wrap up the Death Valley trip. The loss to the Eagles broke a seven-game winning streak for the See MEN, Page B2 B2 — HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Monday, January 11, 2016 SPORTS LADY VOLS: Travels to Arkansas on Thursday From Page B1 Auburn 48-26 in the paint and 22-0 in fast-break points. “We weren’t defending,” Auburn coach Terri Williams-Flournoy said. TIP-INS Auburn: Brandy Montgomery scored nine points in the first quarter but had just two points the rest of the way. She shot 3 of 7 in the first quarter and 1 of 6 afterward. Tennessee: Senior Nia Moore entered the game with 4:22 left for her first appearance since Nov. 23. The reserve center had missed Tennessee’s last 10 games with a rib injury. QUOTABLE “There was a (large) amount of love and positiveness with them,” Warlick said on the support from former Lady Vols. “There wasn’t, ‘What are y’all doing? What aren’t you doing? Why aren’t you doing this?’ They were like, ‘Just keep plugging along and plowing away.’ For them to do that and give us the energy and strength we need as a staff, me personally (and) as a team, you can’t put a price on it.” KEY STATS Tennessee improved its home record to 8-3. The Lady Vols haven’t lost more than three home games in a season since 198283. ... Tennessee’s .596 field-goal percentage was its best since a .622 performance against Arkansas on Jan. 30, 2014. UP NEXT Auburn: Hosts Alabama on Thursday. Tennessee: At Arkansas on Thursday. ’Bama on verge of unprecedented run, with Clemson in the way By RALPH D. RUSSO AP College Football Writer SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Regardless of the outcome of Monday night’s College Football Playoff championship game between No. 1 Clemson and No. 2 Alabama, a case can be made that no team in the history of the sport has had a better run than the Crimson Tide under coach Nick Saban. If Alabama beats the Tigers to win a fourth national title in seven seasons, the argument may be settled. There was talk early in the season after Alabama lost to Mississippi that the Tide dynasty was in decline. Now Alabama (13-1) is one victory away from an unprecedented achievement. The Tide can become just the third school in college football’s poll era, dating back to the creation of The Associated Press media poll in 1936, to win four championships in a 10-year span. Notre Dame won four in seven seasons from 1943-49, but big-time college football is hardly comparable now to then. Those Fighting Irish didn’t play in bowl games and never needed more than nine victories to be the best in the country. Miami won four championships in nine seasons (198391), but none of those teams had to play more than 12 games. Alabama’s four championships under Saban, who took over in 2007, have all come in at least 13-game seasons. “I mean, it’s incredible,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said Sunday during a news conference with Saban. Swinney heaped so much praise on his counterpart during the halfhour session with reporters that Saban looked a little uncomfortable. “Coach Saban, what he’s done, I mean, he’s one of the greatest coaches that ever coached the game,” Swinney said. Saban also has a BCS title from his time at LSU, giving him four overall. Only former Alabama coach Bear Bryant with six has more. “This is the first one I’ve sniffed as a coach, and he’s going for his fifth,” said Swinney, who is in his eighth season at Clemson. “It’s incredible.” Clemson has one national Thomas Corhern | Herald-Citizen Tennessee Tech’s Torrance Rowe leads the Golden Eagles in scoring as Tech holds on to first place in the Ohio Valley Conference. MEN: Southeast Missouri comes to Cookeville on Saturday From Page B1 Chris Carlson | AP Alabama head coach Nick Saban speaks during a news conference for the NCAA college football playoff championship game on Sunday in Glendale, Ariz. championship to its credit. Behind Danny Ford, an Alabama native and former Tide player for Bryant, the Tigers won the title in 1981 by beating favored Nebraska in the Orange Bowl. The Tigers are back on the biggest stage and again being led by an Alabaman and former Tide player. Swinney grew up near Birmingham and played for Alabama when Gene Stallings was the coach in the early 1990s. He was on the Tide team that won a national championship in 1992, upsetting Miami in the Sugar Bowl. Alabama then went through a long dry spell until Saban arrived. “People will say, well, anybody can go win at Alabama,” Swinney said. “Not everybody can coach a great team. Not everybody can coach a great player, and I think he has a gift to be able to do that.” Under Swinney, the Tigers have won at least 10 games each of the last five seasons, just like Alabama. And Clemson has its own shot at history: If the Tigers win the national title, they would become the first team to achieve a 15-0 season. “We want to be a program that is competing at this level on a consistent basis and I think to do that, you’ve got to be a top10, top-15 type program year in and year out,” Swinney said. Alabama has been even better than that. Since going 7-6 in Saban’s first season, the Tide is 97-12 and has never finished out of the final AP top 10. No surprise: Saban has not been part of the legacy talk this week. Pondering his place in history won’t help his players Monday night at University of Phoenix Stadium. “I owe them as the leader of the organization,” Saban said. “I owe them our best as coaches and people who can support them to give them the best opportunity to be successful in the next challenge that they have. “So I’ve got no time to think about that stuff.” Some other things to know about the second College Football Playoff national championship game. DESHAUN FOOTBALL If Clemson is going to beat Alabama and break down a ferocious Alabama defense, Heisman Trophy finalist Deshaun Watson will lead the way. The sophomore is the most talented quarterback Alabama has faced and he poses a threat running and passing. Watson set the Atlantic Coast Conference mark for total offense with 4,731 yards, 1,032 of those coming on the ground. Dual-threat quarterbacks give most defenses trouble and Alabama is no exception. Watson said in preparation for the Tide, he watched Alabama’s loss to Johnny Manziel and Texas A&M in 2012. Watson ran for a career-best 145 yards in Clemson’s 37-17 Orange Bowl semifinal victory against Oklahoma. HEISMAN HENRY The Crimson Tide used Heisman Trophy winner Derrick Henry, who has set Southeastern Conference records for rushing yards (2,061) and touchdowns (25), as a complimentary part of its offense in beating Michigan State 38-0 in the Cotton Bowl. Henry had 20 carries for 75 yards. Don’t be surprised if the Tide goes back to a heavy dose of Henry, who carried 90 times combined in the final two regular season games, to help control the clock and keep the ball away from Watson and Clemson’s up-tempo spread offense. HOLD THE LINE Alabama’s defensive line is the best and deepest in college football, led by All-American A’Shawn Robinson. The line has helped the Tide lead the nation with 50 sacks. Clemson has some talented defensive linemen, too, though not quite as many as Alabama. That depth could be tested because All-America defensive end Shaq Lawson sprained his knee against Oklahoma and missed most of the Orange Bowl. He is expected to play, but how much? And how effective will he be? Jeff Davis has been there, done that for Clemson By RICHARD ROSENBLATT AP Sports Writer PHOENIX (AP) — Back then, it was Tom Osborne’s mighty Nebraska Cornhuskers. On Monday night, it’s Nick Saban’s Alabama Crimson Tide. Once again, here comes Clemson looking for a national championship. And once again, the Tigers have to knock off one of college football’s most storied programs. And once again, they are unbeaten but still underdogs. Jeff Davis remembers the feeling. A Clemson linebacker who spearheaded the Tigers’ 22-15 win over the Huskers in the 1982 Orange Bowl, Davis is still around. He’s a player adviser for coach Dabo Swinney, and his sons, J.D. and Judah, are on the team. “We knew we were getting ready to shock the world,” Davis said this week in happily recalling the ‘82 Orange Bowl. “We came in with a chip on our shoulder. The market out there didn’t give us much of a chance against Nebraska, and 34 years later we’re still in a similar situation.” Davis is fine with the perception that Clemson remains the “little engine who could.” Probably because it’s true. Nebraska went on to win four AP national titles and remained a powerhouse for years after. Alabama is looking for its 10th AP national title, and is in the midst of a dynasty under coach Nick Saban. Davis gets it. At Clemson, the players embrace the underdog role. In fact, they thrive on it. “We did not fear Nebraska,” Davis said. “But people thought for some reason we couldn’t tackle like they could and we couldn’t run like they could. I think we’re looking at some of the same things right now.” It wasn’t long before the Huskers realized they weren’t playing pushovers. First offensive series for Nebraska, said Davis. “I’ll never forget the look of shock on their faces on the first series,” Davis said. “Wow! These boys can play! It’s something you can sense from the beginning. I won’t ever forget it.” After falling behind 7-3, Clemson scored 19 straight points and then held off Nebraska over the final nine minutes. For Tim Bourret, finishing his 38th year in Clemson’s sports information department, it was a nail-biter until the very end. “Not until the last play, when a long pass was batted down at the 10-yard line,” Bourret said. “After we knocked it away, I said, ‘Holy cow! Is this really happening?’” This time around, Bourret says the Tigers are getting the attention they deserve, albeit not as much as Alabama. “This team has gotten a lot more respect than the ‘81 team,” he said. “That team was four years removed from 18 years of not going to a bowl.” Davis believes Clemson is ready to step up and win title No. 2. “We shocked the world before,” he said, “and we’re ready to do it again.” Skyhawks, who have also taken losses to Texas Tech (68-49), Mississippi State (76-51), Florida International (69-62) and Oklahoma State (91-57). Twymond Howard leads the Skyhawks with 13.4 points and 7.3 rebounds per game, while Myles Taylor (10.8 ppg), Alex Anderson (10.7 ppg) and Jacolby Mobley (10.3 ppg) are all averaging double-figure scoring. The Redhawks, however, have had a tough go so far. SEMO picked up victories over Missouri State and Harris-Stowe to get into the win columns, but the Redhawks have since lost four straight in OVC play with a 92-82 loss to Belmont, a 72-66 defeat by Tennessee State, a 9669 loss at Morehead State and an 88-69 loss at Eastern Kentucky. Southeast Missouri hosts Jacksonville State on Wednesday before coming to the Eblen Center on Saturday. Antonious Cleveland is leading the Redhawks with 13.9 points and 6.7 rebounds per game, followed by Isiah Jones (11.0 ppg) and Joel Angus III (10.2 ppg). TRACK: Will compete at Vanderbilt this weekend From Page B1 of 27 feet, 3.75 inches in placing fifth. The Golden Eagles return to the Vanderbilt indoor facility next Saturday for their next action, competing in the Vanderbilt Invitational. “We will continue to build on the momentum from this meet and get ready for Vanderbilt this coming week,” Angel said. Tech results Event (school record before Sunday) Mile Run (5:06.53) Brandt, Sarah, 5:10.18 Storms, Jenna, 5:25.87 Griffin, Molly, 6:12.01 55 Meter Dash (:07.28) Robinson, NaAsha, 7.06q O’Neal, Morgan, 7.57 McGee, Brittany, 7.69 55 Meter Dash Finals Robinson, NaAsha, 7.22 400 Meter Dash (:55.08) Jackson, D’Airien, 56.49 Joseph, Jaydean, 58.96 800 Meter Run (2:15.28) Stremler, Madison, 2:19.42 Brandt, Sarah, 2:22.01 Retano, Andrea, 2:32.72 200 Meter Dash (:25.21) Robinson, NaAsha, 24.95 Jackson, D’Airien, 25.79 Hymon, Tiara, 26.46 5000 Meter Run (17:36.63) Murray, Purity, 17:46.19 Bezuidenhout, Sonel, 19:18.31 McNamara, Lera, 19:56.48 4x400 Meter Relay Tennessee Tech ‘A’, 3:51.39 1) Robinson, NaAsha 2) Jackson, D’Airien 3) Joseph, Jaydean 4) Hymon, Tiara 3 Tennessee Tech ‘B’, 4:12.49 1) Stremler, Madison 2) Retano, Andrea 3) Brandt, Sarah 4) Griffin, Molly 3 Tennessee Tech ‘C’, 4:26.76 1) McGee, Brittany 2) O’Neal, Morgan 3) Hymon, Tiara 4) Griffin, Molly High Jump (5’7”) Drummond, NaScottisha, 4-10 Driscoll, Christina,NH Long Jump (17’5.5”) Smith, Raven, 17-01.25 Robinson, Eshe ,FOUL Shot Put (43’1”) Kington, Makayla, 33-04.50 Robinson, Eshe, 31-02.00 Driscoll, Christina, 2706.75 Weight Throw (54’ 11.25”) Kington, Makayla, 37-03.75 Triple Jump Smith, Raven, 38-10.25 Drummond, NaScottisha, 35-03.75 Reggie Ragland is the (smiling) face of Alabama’s defense By JOHN ZENOR AP Sports Writer SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Reggie Ragland stands out on Alabama’s defense when the spotlight’s on. He’s usually the one smiling. The All-America linebacker is the guy cracking jokes and reciting lines from his favorite movies at practice, the happy-go-lucky star on a team that often seems to mirror coach Nick Saban’s sternly stoic, all-business demeanor. Ragland is the (smiling) face of the Crimson Tide’s defense going into Monday night’s national championship game against Clemson. “I’m enjoying this moment and opportunity that I get,” he said. “Not a lot of people get this experience. So why not have fun with it?” Most teammates and coaches looked all business when they stepped into a packed room for campus media day last week. Not Ragland, who burst through the door with a wide grin and a “How y’all doing?” He’s not just the class cutup who can get away with calling coach Nick Saban “Nicholas,” but also one of the best players on the nation’s top-rated defense. Ragland returned for his senior season instead of turning pro for the chance to graduate, fulfilling a promise to his mother when he got his consumer affairs degree in December. He moved into the play calling role for Alabama’s defense and became a unanimous All-American. Ragland’s 97 tackles are 33 more than the Tide’s No. 2 tackler, fellow linebacker Reuben Foster. He was a Butkus Award finalist. No wonder Ragland is smiling. “It’s been great,” he said. “I’ve got something I can fall back on in my future, and hopefully I helped my stock. I really came back to get my degree and play with these guys. You don’t get too many moments like this.” HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Monday, January 11, 2016 — B3 SPORTS The intricacies of what goes into a college football play By JOHN MARSHALL AP College Football Writer TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Rich Rodriguez hears it all the time. He could be at the grocery store, gas station, a restaurant and inevitably someone will come up to him with a suggestion for a play or a new scheme. The Arizona coach always listens graciously, tells them he’ll take it under consideration, goes on his way. “It’s nice that they’re interested, but I ain’t going to listen to it,” he said. Perhaps more than any other sport, football is the one fans seem to think they could coach if given the chance. There’s even a name for it: Monday Morning Quarterback. In reality, it may be the most difficult, filled with so many variables it would make fans’ heads spin if they saw everything that really goes into it. And the more pressure-packed the game, like Monday night’s national championship between Alabama and Clemson, the harder it gets. “The game is far more intricate than most fans realize,” Rodriguez said. “When you have 22 people on the field and all have a particular assignment and to run a scheme, unless you’re in the dayto-day operations of it, you really have no idea what goes into every particular play.” To demonstrate the difficulty of coaching football, Rodriguez agreed to break down a single play from the 2014 season: Austin Hill’s 92-yard touchdown catch on the first play of the second half in Arizona’s season-opening 58-13 win over UNLV. —Quarterback Anu Solomon calls out the formation in the huddle and tags the play as one of Arizona’s various run/pass options so the linemen don’t run too far down the field in case it’s a pass. The Wildcats line up two receivers to each side and running back Nick Wilson to the right of Solomon. UNLV sets up with four down linemen, a linebacker in the middle and another player on the right just outside the box, the Andres Leighton, File | AP In this Dec. 19, 2015, file photo, Arizona head coach Rich Rodriguez encourages his players during a timeout in the second half of the New Mexico Bowl against New Mexico in Albuquerque, N.M. Rodriguez hears it all the time. He could be at the grocery store, gas station, a restaurant and inevitably someone will come up to him with a suggestion for a play or a new scheme. area between the offensive tackles that runs about seven yards deep. Two defensive backs are close to the line of scrimmage on each side and three players are about eight yards deep. On the snap, Arizona’s five linemen zone block to the left, as if it were a running play. Each picks up a player to block, but they leave the left defensive end to roam free. This is by design. The defensive end is the first read for the quarterback in the zone read offense Rodriguez created 20 years ago at Glenville State and still uses today. “In the typical zone, the guy who will be unblocked is the defensive end, so in a sense you gain a guy,” Rodriguez said “By having the quarterback read him, he in a sense blocks him. Instead of playing 11 on 10, you’re playing 11 on 11. They’ve got to defend everybody.” Solomon has to make a split-second decision after the snap on the defensive end. If he charges up the field like a pass rusher, Solomon will hand off to Wilson. If the end squeezes in, as the UNLV player did on this particular play, Solomon will fake the handoff and take off to the right. Solomon’s next read also comes immediately. After getting past the defensive end, he has to determine if the interior defensive back is coming up to stop the run or will defend the pass. The defensive back charges, so Solomon knows his best option is to throw. “He could gain three yards there, but I’d rather score a touchdown,” Rodriguez said. In the early days of Rodriguez’s zone read offense, he would send the slot receiver flared out to the right on a bubble screen whenever the inside defensive back charged in to stop the run. The slot receiver would catch the ball while running parallel to the line of scrimmage as the outside receiver blocks the other defensive back. Over the years, defenses started sending a safety charging up the field to blow up the bubble screen, so Rodriguez and other zone-read coaches had to adapt. One adjustment was to not throw the ball to the inside receiver and have him run around the outside receiver and up the rail (sideline). In this case, Arizona had a play call for the inside receiver to flare out in a bubble screen, but instead of blocking for DaVonte Neal, Hill faked the block and ran a slant. Throwing off-balance — something Arizona’s quarterbacks practice repeatedly — Solomon hits Hill in stride, just in front of the safety. Hill breaks a tackle and takes off, winning a foot race with the rest of UNLV’s defense for the long touchdown. The play ran to perfection but it’s not always that easy. Maybe next time the defense changes formation, breaks its tendencies, comes up with a new wrinkle, like running stunts so new players fill the various gaps. To combat this, Rodriguez and his coaches have a variety of play combinations and are constantly adapting. Using the same formation, Arizona could have the outside receiver run a curl or a stop-and-go instead of a slant. Maybe the Wildcats flip the play, have the receivers on the left run a bubble screen, up the rail or a slant. Arizona also could run the same exact play to the right, but throw back to the left to receivers who are running any number of route combinations instead of serving as decoys. Sometimes the read for the quarterback isn’t the defensive end, but a linebacker or defensive back. “That’s what the chess match is,” Rodriguez said. Alabama’s Nick Saban and Clemson’s Dabo Swinney will take their turn on the board (field) Monday night, a national championship on the line. Spieth opens the new year in style with win at Kapalua KAPALUA, Hawaii (AP) — The view from the top looks as spectacular as ever for Jordan Spieth. He was standing in the 18th fairway Sunday at Kapalua, his victory in the Hyundai Tournament of Champions easily secured, when his thoughts were interrupted by a comment from caddie Michael Greller: “Way to make a statement.” The statement was nearly as big as his eightshot victory. Coming off a year that Spieth knows will be tough to match — the Masters, U.S. Open, five wins, the FedEx Cup — the 22-year-old Texan backed up his sage comment at the start of the week that 2016 wasn’t about an encore because that would mean the show was over. It’s not. Spieth crushed the winners-only field by closing with a 6-under 67 to become only the second player in PGA Tour history to finish a 72-hole tournament at 30-under par or lower. An 8-foot birdie on the final hole put him at 30-under 262, one short of the record Ernie Els set at Kapalua in 2003. SCOREBOARD ■ On Television Monday, Jan. 11 COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6:30 p.m. CBSSN — Bucknell at Lehigh COLLEGE FOOTBALL 7:30 p.m. ESPN — College Football Playoff, championship, Alabama vs. Clemson, at Glendale, Ariz. (also on ESPN2, ESPNU, ESPNEWS, ESPN Classic and SEC Network) ■ College Football Championship Winners College Football Championship Jan. 12, 2015 — Ohio St. 42, Oregon 20 BCS National Championship Jan. 6, 2014 — Florida St. 34, Auburn 31 Jan. 7, 2013 — Alabama 42, Notre Dame 14 Jan. 9, 2012 — Alabama 21, LSU 0 Jan. 10, 2011 — Auburn 22, Oregon 19 Jan. 7, 2010 — Alabama 37, Texas 21 Jan. 8, 2009 — Florida 24, Oklahoma 14 Jan. 7, 2008 — LSU 38, Ohio State 24 Jan. 8, 2007 — Florida 41, Ohio State 14 BCS Championship Jan. 4, 2006 Rose Bowl — Texas 41, Southern Cal-x 38 Jan. 1, 2005 Orange Bowl — Southern Cal-x 55, Oklahoma 19 Jan. 4, 2004 Sugar Bowl — LSU 21, Oklahoma 14 Jan. 3, 2003 Fiesta Bowl — Ohio St. 31, Miami 24, 2OT Jan. 3, 2002 Rose Bowl — Miami 37, Nebraska 14 Jan. 3, 2001 Orange Bowl — Oklahoma 13, Florida St. 2 Jan. 4, 2000 Sugar Bowl — Florida St. 46, Virginia Tech 29 Jan. 4, 1999 Fiesta Bowl — Tennessee 23, Florida St. 16 x-participation vacated ■ College Basketball Men’s scores EAST Michigan St. 92, Penn St. 65 Richmond 93, Fordham 82 Saint Joseph’s 72, Rhode Island 67 SOUTH Cincinnati 54, South Florida 51 Clemson 66, Louisville 62 Tulsa 81, Tulane 67 Wake Forest 77, NC State 74 MIDWEST Illinois 84, Purdue 70 Indiana 85, Ohio St. 60 Oakland 86, Ill.-Chicago 61 VCU 72, Saint Louis 56 Valparaiso 92, Detroit 74 Villanova 60, Butler 55 SOUTHWEST SMU 88, UCF 73 FAR WEST Oregon 71, Stanford 58 Women’s scores EAST Boston College 73, Yale 60 Delaware 59, Northeastern 52 Duquesne 55, Fordham 40 Iona 79, Canisius 56 Monmouth (NJ) 60, Marist 52 NC State 78, Pittsburgh 76, 3OT Niagara 67, Rider 57 Siena 60, Manhattan 59 St. Bonaventure 66, UMass 41 St. Peter’s 56, Fairfield 46 Syracuse 60, Virginia Tech 39 Temple 74, Cincinnati 51 UNC Wilmington 52, Towson 49 Xavier 62, Providence 54 SOUTH Abilene Christian 71, Nicholls St. 68 Drexel 67, William & Mary 50 Florida 85, Mississippi 65 Florida St. 75, Georgia Tech 69 George Mason 79, La Salle 70 Hofstra 62, Coll. of Charleston 58 James Madison 81, Elon 76, OT Kentucky 64, Georgia 53 Louisville 65, Duke 48 Miami 83, Clemson 49 Mississippi St. 80, Arkansas 55 Saint Joseph’s 66, VCU 63 Saint Louis 79, Davidson 50 South Carolina 83, Missouri 58 Tennessee 79, Auburn 52 Texas A&M 53, LSU 35 Tulane 75, UCF 54 Tulsa 65, Memphis 59 UConn 75, South Florida 59 Vanderbilt 54, Alabama 48 Virginia 52, Wake Forest 50 MIDWEST Creighton 77, Butler 49 Drake 87, Wichita St. 56 Evansville 62, Bradley 46 George Washington 62, Dayton 61 Indiana St. 63, Illinois St. 56 Loyola of Chicago 69, S. Illinois 68, OT Marquette 87, Georgetown 72 Maryland 76, Iowa 56 Michigan 93, Minnesota 86 Michigan St. 74, Northwestern 51 N. Iowa 65, Missouri St. 60 Nebraska 73, Illinois 57 Notre Dame 88, North Carolina 54 Ohio St. 90, Rutgers 78 Purdue 63, Indiana 53 Villanova 64, DePaul 60 Wisconsin 82, Penn St. 62 SOUTHWEST Oklahoma 68, Kansas St. 58 Rice 100, North Texas 97, 3OT SMU 50, Houston 48 UTEP 62, UAB 54 FAR WEST Arizona St. 63, Washington St. 45 Oregon St. 59, Oregon 45 Southern Cal 71, UCLA 68 Stanford 71, Colorado 56 Utah 84, California 79 Washington 63, Arizona 47 ■ National Football League NFL Playoffs Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 9 Kansas City 30, Houston 0 Pittsburgh 18, Cincinnati 16 Sunday, Jan. 10 Seattle 10, Minnesota 9 Green Bay 35, Washington 18 Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 16 Kansas City at New England, 4:35 (CBS) Green Bay at Arizona, 8:15 p.m. (NBC) Sunday, Jan. 17 Seattle at Carolina, 1:05 p.m. (FOX) Pittsburgh at Denver, 4:30 p.m. (CBS) Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 24 AFC, 3:05 p.m. (CBS) NFC, 6:40 p.m. (FOX) Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 31 At Honolulu Team Rice vs. Team Irvin, 7 p.m. (ESPN) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 7 At Santa Clara, Calif. TBD, 6:30 p.m. (CBS) ■ National Basketball Association Standings and schedule All Times EST EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Toronto 24 15 .615 — Boston 19 18 .514 4 New York 19 20 .487 5 Brooklyn 10 27 .270 13 Philadelphia 4 36 .100 20½ Southeast Division Atlanta 23 15 .605 — Miami 22 15 .595 ½ Orlando 20 18 .526 3 Charlotte 17 20 .459 5½ Washington 16 19 .457 5½ Central Division Cleveland 26 9 .743 — Chicago 22 13 .629 4 Detroit 21 16 .568 6 Indiana 21 16 .568 6 Milwaukee 15 24 .385 13 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB San Antonio 32 6 .842 — Dallas 22 16 .579 10 Memphis 21 18 .538 11½ Houston 19 19 .500 13 New Orleans 11 25 .306 20 Northwest Division Oklahoma City 26 12 .684 — Utah 17 20 .459 8½ Portland 16 24 .400 11 Denver 14 24 .368 12 Minnesota 12 26 .316 14 Pacific Division Golden State 35 2 .946 — L.A. Clippers 25 13 .658 10½ Sacramento 15 22 .405 20 Phoenix 13 26 .333 23 L.A. Lakers 8 31 .205 28 Sunday’s Games L.A. Clippers 114, New Orleans 111, OT Dallas 93, Minnesota 87 Memphis 101, Boston 98 Cleveland 95, Philadelphia 85 Houston 107, Indiana 103, OT New York 100, Milwaukee 88 Denver 95, Charlotte 92 Portland 115, Oklahoma City 110 Utah 86, L.A. Lakers 74 Monday’s Games San Antonio at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m. Washington at Chicago, 8 p.m. Miami at Golden State, 10:30 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Phoenix at Indiana, 7 p.m. San Antonio at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Boston at New York, 7:30 p.m. Oklahoma City at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Chicago at Milwaukee, 8 p.m. Houston at Memphis, 8 p.m. Cleveland at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. New Orleans at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Milwaukee at Washington, 7 p.m. Atlanta at Charlotte, 7 p.m. New York at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m. Minnesota at Houston, 8 p.m. Dallas at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m. Indiana at Boston, 8 p.m. Golden State at Denver, 9 p.m. New Orleans at Sacramento, 10 p.m. Utah at Portland, 10 p.m. Miami at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m. ■ National Hockey League Standings and schedule All Times EST EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 42 26 12 4 56 116 89 42 22 13 7 51 105 108 43 23 17 3 49 122 107 40 21 14 5 47 123 108 42 21 17 4 46 107 102 43 20 17 6 46 119 131 40 16 17 7 39 104 112 42 16 22 4 36 97 115 Metropolitan Division Washington 42 32 7 3 67 139 90 N.Y. Rangers 41 22 14 5 49 121 109 N.Y. Islanders42 22 15 5 49 114 107 New Jersey 43 21 17 5 47 97 102 Pittsburgh 41 20 16 5 45 97 100 Philadelphia 40 18 15 7 43 91 108 Carolina 43 18 18 7 43 102 118 Columbus 43 15 24 4 34 109 139 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Dallas 44 29 11 4 62 149 116 Chicago 44 27 13 4 58 126 104 St. Louis 45 24 14 7 55 111 112 Minnesota 42 22 12 8 52 111 99 Nashville 42 19 16 7 45 107 115 Colorado 43 21 19 3 45 125 123 Winnipeg 42 19 20 3 41 111 121 Pacific Division Los Angeles 41 26 12 3 55 108 90 Arizona 41 21 16 4 46 116 125 Vancouver 42 16 16 10 42 102 118 Anaheim 41 17 17 7 41 78 99 San Jose 39 19 18 2 40 109 108 Calgary 40 19 19 2 40 105 124 Edmonton 43 17 23 3 37 105 127 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Sunday’s Games Buffalo 4, Winnipeg 2 Washington 7, Ottawa 1 Chicago 6, Colorado 3 New Jersey 2, Minnesota 1 Detroit 2, Anaheim 1 Florida 2, Edmonton 1 Monday’s Games Boston at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m. San Jose at Calgary, 9 p.m. Florida at Vancouver, 10 p.m. Detroit at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Columbus at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m. Pittsburgh at Carolina, 7 p.m. New Jersey at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Buffalo at Minnesota, 8 p.m. San Jose at Winnipeg, 8 p.m. Nashville at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. Tampa Bay at Colorado, 9 p.m. Edmonton at Arizona, 9 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Columbus at Toronto, 7 p.m. Boston at Philadelphia, 8 p.m. Florida at Calgary, 9:30 p.m. Ottawa at Anaheim, 10 p.m. Florida Detroit Montreal Boston Tampa Bay Ottawa Toronto Buffalo ■ Golf Tournament of Champions Sunday At Kapalua Resort, The Plantation Course Kapalua, Hawaii Purse: $5.9 million Yardage: 7,452; Par 73 Final Jordan Spieth 66-64-65-67—262 -30 Patrick Reed 65-69-67-69—270 -22 Brandt Snedeker 67-72-65-67—271 -21 Brooks Koepka 69-68-63-71—271 -21 Rickie Fowler 69-67-69-67—272 -20 Padraig Harrington 70-68-70-67—275 -17 Peter Malnati 71-66-69-69—275 -17 Fabian Gomez 68-66-70-71—275 -17 Kevin Kisner 69-65-71-71—276 -16 Jason Day 70-73-69-65—277 -15 Bubba Watson 69-68-73-67—277 -15 Dustin Johnson 73-67-68-69—277 -15 Steven Bowditch Jimmy Walker Smylie Kaufman Danny Lee David Lingmerth Troy Merritt Emiliano Grillo Bill Haas Zach Johnson Alex Cejka Justin Thomas Scott Piercy Chris Kirk J.B. Holmes Russell Knox Matt Every Graeme McDowell Davis Love III J.J. Henry James Hahn 69-67-69-72—277 70-71-64-72—277 70-69-71-68—278 67-68-71-72—278 71-71-66-70—278 75-68-70-67—280 71-73-70-66—280 71-69-70-70—280 75-69-70-67—281 72-72-69-68—281 70-73-69-69—281 71-69-72-71—283 70-71-70-72—283 67-76-68-72—283 71-72-69-72—284 70-68-78-71—287 75-70-72-71—288 75-72-71-70—288 77-74-73-71—295 76-76-74-69—295 -15 -15 -14 -14 -14 -12 -12 -12 -11 -11 -11 -9 -9 -9 -8 -5 -4 -4 +3 +3 ■ Transactions Sunday BASEBALL National League CINCINNATI REDS — Agreed to terms with RHPs Pedro Villarreal and Ryan Mattheus on minor league contracts. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association BROOKLYN NETS — Fired coach Lionel Hollins. Reassigned general manager Billy King. Named assistant coach Tony Brown interim head coach. FOOTBALL National Football League BUFFALO BILLS — Signed general manager Doug Whaley to a three-year contract extension. Named Rob Ryan assistant head coach/defense. DETROIT LIONS — Named Ernie Accorsi special adviser to the team president. HOCKEY National Hockey League BUFFALO SABRES — Recalled F Justin Kea from Elmira (ECHL) to Rochester (AHL). DALLAS STARS — Reassigned C Radek Faksa to Texas (AHL). PITTSBURGH PENGUINS — Recalled F Matia Marcantuoni and D Harrison Ruopp from Wheeling (ECHL) to WilkesBarre/Scranton (AHL). American Hockey League GRAND RAPIDS GRIFFINS — Signed F A.J. Jenks to a professional tryout agreement. HERSHEY BEARS — Returned F Cam Reid to Reading (ECHL). PROVIDENCE BRUINS — Assigned F Eric Neiley to Atlanta (ECHL). ROCHESTER AMERICANS — Recalled F Matt Garbowsky from Elmira (ECHL). WILKES-BARRE/SCRANTON PENGUINS — Assigned Fs John McCarron and Patrick McGrath to Wheeling (ECHL). ECHL BRAMPTON BEAST — Released G McIntyre Reamey. Signed G Cody Rosen. CINCINNATI CYCLONES — Released F Connor Toomey. IDAHO STEELHEADS — Released G Doug Melvin as emergency backup. RAPID CITY RUSH — Signed F Tyler Scofield. COLLEGE PENN STATE — Promoted assistant head coach, co-defensive coordinator and linebackers coach Brent Pry to associate head football coach and defensive coordinator. Added assistant head coach to defensive recruiting coordinator and cornerbacks coach Terry Smith’s title. Added run game coordinator to defensive line coach Sean Spencer’s duties. UNLV — Announced the resignation of men’s basketball coach Dave Rice. Named men’s associate head basketball coach Todd Simon interim coach. ■ Today in Sports Jan. 11 1970 — The AFL wins its second straight Super Bowl as the Kansas City Chiefs beat the Minnesota Vikings 23-7 behind Len Dawson’s superb quarterbacking and Jan Stenerud’s three field goals. 1973 — The American League adopts the designated hitter rule. 1981 — Jim Plunkett completes 14 of 18 passes for 261 yards and two touchdowns to lead the Oakland Raiders to 34-27 victory over the San Diego Chargers for the AFC title. The Raiders are the first AFC wild-card team to advance to the Super Bowl. 1984 — The Denver Nuggets beats the San Antonio Spurs 163-155 in the highest scoring regulation-length NBA game. 1987 — Denver’s John Elway leads the Broncos to a 23-20 overtime victory over the Cleveland Browns to win the AFC Championship. Elway caps a 15-play, 98-yard march with a 5-yard TD pass to Mark Jackson to tie the game with 37 seconds remaining. Rich Karlis kicks a 33-yard field goal in overtime to give Denver the win. 1992 — Kristi Yamaguchi, runner-up the previous three years, wins her first title in the U.S. Figure Skating Championships. Christopher Bowman, the 1989 U.S. champion, wins the men’s title. 1998 — Lleyton Hewitt, an Australian high school student ranked 550th, wins the Australian Men’s Hardcourt Championship to become the lowest-ranked player to win an ATP Tour event. 2004 — Detroit allows 100 points for the first time this season, but the Pistons were still able to outlast Dallas 115-102. Detroit has its NBArecord streak of not allowing 100 points snapped at 38 games, including 36 this season. 2009 — Philadelphia, led by Donovan McNabb, eliminates the New York Giants 23-11 to reach the NFC title game for the fifth time in eight seasons. This is the first game in NFL history to finish 23-11. 2014 — LeGarrette Blount rushes for 166 yards and four touchdown as the New England beats Indianapolis 43-22 to advance to their third consecutive AFC championship game. Blount joins Ricky Watters, who had five touchdowns for San Francisco on Jan. 15, 1994, as the only players with four or more in a playoff game. 2014 — Gracie Gold wins her first U.S. figure skating title and 15-year-old Polina Edmunds finishes second. Charlie White and Meryl Davis win a record sixth straight U.S. ice dance title — one more than American ice dance pioneers Tanith Belbin and Ben Agosto. 2014 — Alex Rodriguez is dealt the most severe punishment in the history of baseball’s drug agreement when arbitrator Fredric Horowitz rules the New York Yankees third baseman is suspended for the entire 2014 season as a result of a drug investigation by Major League Baseball. The decision cuts the suspension issued Aug. 5, 2013 by baseball Commissioner Bud Selig from 211 games. 2015 — Roger Federer beats the up-and-coming Milos Raonic 6-4, 6-7 (2), 6-4 to register his 1,000th career match and win the Brisbane International. Federer is the third player to win 1,000 times on the men’s professional tour’ joining Jimmy Connors (1,253) and Ivan Lendl (1,071). 2015 — Green Bay rallies from an 8-point deficit as Aaron Rodgers throws two secondhalf touchdowns to beat Dallas 26-21 in an NFC divisional-round playoff. The Packers, helped immensely by a video reversal with 4:06 remaining, go undefeated at Lambeau Field this season. Dez Bryant’s leaping catch at the Packers 1 on fourth-and-2 is reversed by referee Gene Steratore after Green Bay challenges. Instead of first-and-goal for Dallas, the ball goes to the Packers. B4 — HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Monday, January 11, 2016 001 Legals NOTICE TO CONSULTANT ENGINEERS REGARDING A REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS January 8, 2016 The City of Cookeville Tennessee, an Equal Opportunity, Affirmative Action Employer, seeks to retain the services of a professional consultant engineering firm to provide services related to the design of approximately 7,605 feet of 5’ sidewalks along the north side of State Route 24/US 70/East Spring Street, from East Broad Street to Old Kentucky Road/Neal Street; Carlen Drive, from SR 24 to Avery Trace Middle School; and Raider Drive, from SR 24 to the Avery Trace Middle School parking lot. This project is funded in part by a Multi Modal Access Grant through the Tennessee Department of Transportation. The project shall be accomplished in accordance with the requirements of the Local Government Guidelines of the TDOT Local Program Development Office, and all federal and state laws, rules and policies appertaining to the project and its funding source. The professional consultant engineering consulting firm and all sub-consultants must be on TDOT’s pre-approved list. The primary consultant and any sub-consultants expected to do work exceeding an estimated One Hundred Thousand Dollars in fee must have unlimited status. Responsibilities of the professional consultant engineering firm include, but are not limited to: • Complete project management in accordance with the Local Government Guidelines of TDOT’s Local Program Development Office (Project time frame is from beginning of design until TDOT concurrence in intent to award is received. CEI services are not included) • Provide field survey services of the project area • Provide engineering design services to prepare bid/construction documents for the construction of the project • Prepare itemized estimate of probable cost using TDOT item numbers • Prepare project specifications and bid documents • Prepare bid notice • Prepare bid advertisement • Permit submittal for review and approval to TDOT • Utility submittal for review and approval to TDOT • Hold Prebid Conference • Assist City in evaluation of bids and recommendation for contract award • Secure TDOT concurrence in intent to award • Any other services needed to complete the design, right-ofway, and bidding for construction of the project. 001 Legals 2. Capacity of the firm to perform the work, including any specialized services. 3. Description of how the firm would execute the project. 4. Past record or performance on contracts with the City of Cookeville or other governmental agencies and private industry with respect to such factors as control of cost, quality of work, and the ability to meet schedules. 5. Familiarity with details of the project. 6. Qualifications of the firm to subcontract any portion of work and the percentage of total project subcontractor shall perform. 7. Location of firm’s office that will administer project. 8. Experience with grant funded projects. 9. Qualification and availability of staff. 10. Evaluations on prior projects with TDOT and other clients, if available. 11. Size of project. 12. Amount of work under contract with TDOT and other clients. 13. Knowledge of TDOT requirements Evaluation proceedings will be conducted within the established guidelines regarding equal employment opportunity and nondiscriminatory action based upon the grounds of race, color, sex, creed or national origin. Interested certified Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) firms as well as other minority-owned and women-owned firms are encouraged to respond to all advertisements by the City of Cookeville. For information on DBE certification, please contact Mr. Ross Webb at (615)2531067 or Ross.H.Webb@tn.gov Details and instructions for DBE certification can be found at the following website: http://www.tn.gov/tdot/topic/smallbusiness Questions and requests for additional information should be directed Greg Brown, Public Works Director-City of Cookeville, (931) 520-5247 or gbrown@cookeville-tn.org 1/11 005 Public Notices Some secrets need to be shared. SEXUAL ASSAULT it's not your fault! The factors that will be considered in evaluation of proposals are: 130 Tree Service/Related 215 0 FIRST CARPET CARE 0 TOM'S CARPET CLEANING ++ 25YRS EXP++ LIC'D++ + PUTNAM GUARANTEED + ALLEN'S TREE SERVICE Stump grinding, tree removal, topping.Lic'd/Ins'd. Roger Allen owner, 537-6493 / 979-6493 Weekly Job Fairs and Hiring Events! 349-2288 Same day service/Saturdays 108 Concrete,Masonry BELLIS! CONCRETE Complete Concrete Work Slabs, driveways, bsmts, sidewalks Stamped & colored concrete, acid staining, exposed aggregate. FARLEY TREE SERVICE Trimming & Removal. Free Est. Lic'd/Ins'd. All wk guaranteed (931)520-0114, cell 239-6184 135 Serving Cookeville Area Since 1997 Licensed, insured. Drug free workplace. 858-6240 / 528-6240 Yard Work/Related RHETT BUTLER's LAWN CARE Mowing, Landscaping, Mulching, Yard Maintenance Call local cell 544-3303 Employment Opp. Call or stop by today to find out who is hiring! 565-C S. Jefferson Ave. (931) 520-8789 COOKEVILLE CONCRETE Driveways, slabs, all types of stamped concrete, all types of CITY OF COOKEVILLE metal bldgs. 20% disc to all Sr PUBLIC WORKS DEPT Citizens. Winter time special. LAWN MOWING: Gutter cleanTRUCK DRIVER II 40 yrs exp. Lic/Ins. (931) 284-8663 ing, light hauling. odd jobs, re- The City of Cookeville, Public move old barns & buildings, garcleaning. Free Est, Reason- Works Department is accepting 110 Construction Work age able rates. 432-0863 / 510-4040 applications for the position of Truck Driver II. A valid TennessBOB'S Construction: Specializ- M O W I N G , L A N D S C A P I N G , ee Driver’s License and CDL are ing in concrete, brick/block, addi- Pressure Washing, hauling, required. Work is performed in tions, remodels, hardwood/tile, cleaning, odd jobs. Free Est. operating an automated sideloading sanitation truck in the roofing, building packages, and Call 265-5775 collection and disposal of residall your construction needs. ential refuse; may also drive and Lic'd/Ins'd. Quality Work • Affordoperate a front-loading sanitaable Prices 931-319-6107. tion truck. Requires physical FREE Est., experienced B&B ROOFING strength, must be able to safely Low rates, great work. Roof Repairs & Replacements. operate sanitation vehicle in all Mowing. Home Repairs & Remodeling, Comm/Res. Lic'd/Ins'd. Free Est. 931-432-2494 or 931-261-4629 weather conditions for extended periods, and work a flexible Call (931)526-6557 WOULD LIKE to do yard work schedule, (Tues – Sat) Pay Call ALL TYPES of Backhoe Work, range $28,766 - $43,160 DOE. (931)650-1005 All types of Water lines, Footers; Applications/resumes must be all types of Basement Water received by 4:30 pm Monday, AFFORDABLE LAWN CARE Proofing; Top soil, Field Dirt deJanuary 25, 2016. Send to: City Make Appt. (931)260-1659 livered. (931)252-1486, 510-0696 Lic'd/Ins'd - FREE ESTIMATES of Cookeville, HR Department, PO Box 998, Cookeville, TN LINDE CONSTRUCTION DODSON LAWN CARE! 38503-0998 or email Roofing, siding, doors, painting, • Commercial - Residential jobs@cookeville-tn.org. EOE remodeling, garages, decks, • Mowing porches. All work guaranteed. COMPUTER STORE seeks im• Landscaping Over 50 yrs exp. 931-319-0395 mediate position for IT Profes• Sod sional. Must have networking & FLATT CONSTRUCTION For • Seed & Aerate computer repair experience. all your building needs. Any • Mulch Salary + bonuses to the right home repair, plumbing, garages, • Fertilize candidate. Email resume to decks, porches, siding, roofing, 15 years experience. compugeeks@live.com additions.(931)265-5687 Use Commercial Equipment Call (931) 260-8646 Cookeville Call Center 120 Painting/Wallpaper Account Representative Wanted BUSHHOGGING Competitive Pay, Will Train GARDEN TILLING PAINTING/ STAINING / P. Email resume to jobs@foxcollecReasonable Rates, Exp!d WASH, window screens, tion.com (931) 261-7871 Plumb., Elec., Storm Doors. 38 Cookeville Regional Medical yrs exp. Exc. Ref's. Call David, BUSHHOGGING Center seeking 931-445-3796 or 265-0639. YARD MAN FREE ESTIMATES BUDGET PAINTING CO. (931) 510-8505 Int/Ext Painting & Log/Deck Staining, Power Wash Vinyl, 140 Other Driveways. FREE EST. Lic./Ins. Call 931-525-6482 "JACKSON'S MOVING SERVICE" KERBY PAINTING CHECK OUT MY WORK Go to www.kerbypainting.com Ask for Mike (931) 979-3122 121 Pest Control Full-Time Benefits Specialist The successful candidate will assist with monthly benefit meetings, reconcile audits, process Need to move? We have the 20' benefits as well as serve as liaisbox truck & men to do the job. No on between medical center, bestress for you & your furniture. Ref's nefit carriers, and employees. Avail. Call for free Est. 931-268-9102 High school diploma or equivalent required; Degree in business or related field preferred. Two to three years’ experience in Human Resources or related field required with experience in benefits preferred. Apply online at: www.crmchealth.org E.O.E. (931)526-5197 • 1-800-707-5197 The construction of approximately 7,605 feet of 5’ sidewalks along the north side of State Route 24/US 70/East Spring 025 Special Notices Street, from East Broad Street to Old Kentucky Road/Neal Street; FOR YOUR Carlen Drive, from SR 24 to CONVENIENCE Avery Trace Middle School; and Raider Drive, from SR 24 to the Avery Trace Middle School park- The Herald Citizen has installed ing lot. Installation of a minimum an after hours drop box for 2’ grass buffer strip, curb and ! Circulation Dept. payments gutter (45 mph speed limit sec- ! Classified Dept. payments tion only), crosswalks, neces- ! Letters to the Editor sary storm water drainage im- ! Community News Bulletin provements, relocation and re- ! I Like to Know Questions placement of guard rail as ne- ! News & Sports Info & Photos cessary, and the construction of YOUR LOCAL NEWS SOURCE retaining walls as needed. Prequalification procedures, example letter of interest, list of pre-qualified firms and certified DBEs, TDOT’s standard procurement policy, and additional information can be found at this i n t e r n e t a d d r e s s www.tdot.state.tn.us/consultantinfo.htm. Cleaning For confidential help or information, call Scope of Work The sealed Statements of Qualifications must be submitted to Mike Davidson, City Manager, no later the 2:00 pm local time on February 4, 2016. Provide five copies of the Statement of Qualifications. Any statements received after this time will not be considered. Do not include any proposed fees. The statements of qualifications shall indicate the scope of services to be completed by any sub-consultants. 105 Herald-Citizen 1300 Neal Street Cookeville, TN 38501 050 Lost and Found FOUND DOG. Plunk Whitson / Pippin Rd area. Dark brown young male (not fixed) possibly a flat- coated retriever. Friendly energetic looks well taken care of. Please call 526-9988 ALL STAR PEST CONTROL OF TENNESSEE Complete Termite Service Lic'd/Ins‚'d. Bonded. All work guaranteed Free Estimates. MARTY KELLY 931-526-8550 Charter # 4252 125 Home Renovation BOULDIN HOME REPAIR & REMODELING. Plumbing, electrical, painting, dry wall, bathroom & kitchen remodels. Carpentry work. 30 yrs exp. Free Est. 239-6061 REPLACEMENT WINDOWS & DOORS. Call today for free inhome Est. Serving Mid. TN for 12 years. 931-Windows ROOFING SALE: Intsalled as low as $1.80 SF. Owens Corning Lifetime Warranty. Offered for a limited time. Gentry Construction, Lic/Ins 931-261-4911 127 Sheetrock,Drywall LOST: NECKLACES w/ Heart LUNA'S DRYWALL Shaped Diamond, Cross W/Dia- Sheetrock Work: Hang, finish, monds. Probably lost on East touch up. No job too big/small. side of town. Please call 931- Insured. 931-212-6899 267-7659 053 Auctions BAILLIE LIQUIDATORS Online Auctions Mon-Fri We carry a wide variety of supplies from craftsman tools to kitchen supplies & more! 931-858-7225 www.blauctionz.com 1. Specialized experience and 103 Auto Svc. & Repair technical competence of the firm (including a joint venture or asJ &A AUTO SERVICE sociation) with the type work requested. Firm should have de- Great service at discount prices! TOWING AVAILABLE signed at least two similar 931-260-6459 projects in the past 6 years. 130 Tree Service/Related OLD TIMERS TREE SERVICE 4 generations of tree care. Specialize in dangerous tree removal. Grind stumps. Lic/Ins. T. Bowman 537-2466;260-5655 M & M TREE SERVICE We trim, top & remove trees. Also stump removal. Free Est. Lic/Ins Call 432-4382 or 260-6304 EVERGREEN TREE service We top, trim, prune & remove trees. Jeff Burchett & Shawn Roberson. Satisfaction guaranteed Fully Ins'd (931)319-1199, 261-8870 GANTT'S AUTO TRIM & UPHOLSTERY Complete Auto and Boat Interiors. Owner Wayne Gantt 931-372-7606 DISABLED? Having trouble getting your social security or VA disability? We can help! Call Disability Consulting @ 877-453-9151 210 Child/Elder Care DIRECT SUPPORT STAFF needed for residential home. Apply in person at 723 W. Jackson St. Must have experience, references and pass drug test. F/T Veterinary Asst to handle animals, do janitoral work, assist vet w/examinations, perform other tasks as needed. Must be polite, work well w/people & animals. Hrs: Saturdays. Send re- sume PO Box 3084, Ckvl, TN 38502 I WOULD like to house clean FULL TIME front desk/receptionor sit with elderly people part- ist needed for busy real estate time. 931-252-3893, 372-2540. office. Responsibilities include: answering phones, greeting cliWOULD LIKE TO SIT ents, scheduling appointments with the elderly and general office duties. Hours Call Mary @ (931)319-3538 are 8am - 5pm Monday through Friday. Send resume to:BOX 215 Employment Opp. 1141, H-C P.O. Box 2729, Cookeville, TN 38502-2729 AG. MECHANIC & SERVICE FULL TIME Janitorial Worker WRITER NEEDED in Ckvl area needed, 2nd shift, Must have own tools, exp. ne$9 hr .starting wage. Holiday, vacessary. Apply in person at cation pay, and retirement plan. Hix Brothers Tractor Pre-employment drug screen 1801 S Jefferson, Cookeville and back ground check AUTO TECHNICIAN required.apply in person at 110 Locally owned business looking W. Main St. Algood, Tn. or onfor Exp'd Tire Tech & Oil Change line at advancedcleaning.com Tech. MUST BE honest, dependable, have positive attitude FULL TIME Receptionist needed & have own tools. Uniforms for busy dental office please provided & Benefits. Open Mon send resume to Hintz & Oakley thru Fri - NO Weekends. Inform- Family Dentistry 120 W Jackson ation received will be kept con- St or fax to 526-5459 fidential. Apply in person or send resume to: Doc's Auto & Tire, 233 KID KUNTRY is seeking an energetic flexible child care W. Broad St, Ckvl,TN 38501. teacher. Must be willing to work SUBCONTRACTOR: Above in the kitchen. HS Diploma Req. Ground Pool Installer CDA training pref. Email resume to kidkuntrypreschool@gmail.com Pool & Spa Depot of Ckvl, TN is looking for Exp'd subcontractors LOOKING FOR a PT cashier. for above ground pool installa- 24.5 hours a week & work every tions for the 2015 season. Sub- Sunday. Self Motivated. Must contractor must provide their have reliable transportation, & own worker's compensation, li- working knowledge of comability insurance, & equipment. puters. Apply at 452 W. Broad. Position is FT & weekends are req'd. Excellent pay & career op- LOVING FAMILY needing careportunity. Please apply in per- g i v e r f o r s w e e t l a d y w i t h son at 1470 Interstate Dr, Ckvl, Alzheimers. $11 - $13 per hr. no TN 38501 or send resume to exp. required please email: pwt3732@yahoo.com jsullivan@poolandspadepot.com Cookeville office opened in 1987 by Arnold E. Lefkovitz ALL TYPES OF BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 • • • More than 35 years of experience filing tens of thousands of bankruptcies. • STOP Garnishments • STOP Foreclosures • STOP Repossessions • STOP Debt Harassment ADOPTIONS DIVORCE CHILD CUSTODY WILLS & PROBATE 312-A East Broad St., Cookeville Serving Cookeville & the Entire Upper Cumberland Area 528-5297 www.lefkovitz.com We are a debt relief agency. We help people file for relief. © 2014 Lefkovitz & Lefkovitz HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Monday, January 11, 2016 — B5 215 Employment Opp. MAMMA ROSA's accepting applications for cooks & dishwasher/prep persons. P/T afternoon & evening hours. Also for Servers, some P/T day & evening. Apply in person. Manager/Personal Asst needed for gowing residential home. Experience & references req'd. Must have valid TN drivers license & pass drug test. Email resume to meaningfulopportunity@gmail.com ONE HOUR MARTINIZING/ CITY BOY TUXEDOS is looking for a part time CSR to join our winning team. The ideal candidate has experience working with customers in a retail environment, knowledge of computers, and the ability to learn new processes and procedures. Flexible hours, high school diploma /GED is required. Interested parties should send their resume to: cityboytuxedos@gmail.com or stop 55 North Walnut Ave, Ckvl to fill out an application. P/T Night Auditor/Guest Representative needed, Saturday & Sunday 7PM-7AM, flexible hours. Computer exp. req'd. Apply in person Red Roof Inn, Ckvl. No ph. calls pls QUALITY TECHNICIANS-CMM Programmer/Second Shift Flexial is THE growth company in bellows related products, displacing the largest and most entrenched bellows companies on the world's most significant programs. We have an immediate need for experienced QA TechniciansCMM Programmer on second shift. These team members support manufacturing through dimensional, visual, metallurgical, and receiving inspections. They have advanced quality skills and experience with most gages and metrology tools. These are fulltime positions with benefits. Hourly rates $17.00 - $25.00 depending on experience and skill set We are excited about our growth and are in need of self-starters and big thinkers. Visit us at www.flexial.com. If you think you have what it takes to be a contributing player in our fast paced productive environment we’d love to hear from you! Email your resume to hr@flexial.com or in person at 1483 Gould Drive, Cookeville – No Phone Calls Please. 7 TEMPORARY Farm Workers Needed. Rodney Malchow Cookeville, TN. Perform all duties of Straw/Hay & Fruit/Vegetable Production; including seeding, planting, spraying, irrigating, harvesting, storing, & packaging; and other alternative work. Employment Dates: 03/11/2016 – 10/21/2016. $10.85/hr. Piece rates may be offered. Worker guaranteed 3/4 of contract hours. Tools provided at no cost. Free housing provided to noncommuting workers. Transportation & subsistence reimbursed when 50% of contract is met. Random drug testing may be done after hire at employer’s expense. Apply for this job at the nearest Tennessee Career Center or call 615-253-6706 and reference job order TN417933. SAFE HARBOR Marinas has an opeing for a Marina Manager at our Eagle Cove location on Dale Hollow Lake. 2 yrs of marina management preferred. Competitive compensation pkg incl Health Ins & 401k. Send resume to Layne Wilson at lwilson@shmarinas.com 15 TRUCK DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED! Learn to drive for US Xpress now! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Earn $750 per week Local CDL Training! Training Grant Available! 1-888-407-5159 LEGITIMATE JOB placement firms that work to fill specific positions cannot charge an upfront fee. For free information about avoiding employment service scams, write to the Federal Trade Commission, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20580, or you can go online to http://www.fraud.org/. This message is a public service of the Herald-Citizen & Regional Buyers Guide. 241 Health Care Emp. Busy Family Practice is looking for a motivated leader to be our Practice Manager. The successful candidate will work directly with three physicians to manage all clinical and clerical staff at our practice. This is a full-time, salaried position with benefits including paid time off, holiday pay, health insurance and 401(k) with employer match. Previous medical office or hospital and management experience required. Previous clinical experience is preferred. Send resume to BOX 1145, H-C P.O. Box 2729, Ckvl, TN 38502-2729 COOK-PART TIME: Morningside Assisted Living is accepting applications for a PT cook, 2 days/week, Noon-8 p.m. Must have previous exp. preferably in the healthcare setting & be able to work some weekends & holidays. Apply in person at 1010 East Spring Street, Cookeville 283 Trucking Emp. CDL DRIVER: Class A OTR w/good record needed. Flexible time out & routes. For more info, call business hrs: 615-390-2787 290 Schools/Instruction NO HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA NEEDED. How often do you see that? Putnam County Adult High School can show you a way to complete the credits you missed when you were in school before. Flexible schedule -- days or evenings. Individualized study. Possible credit for work or armed services training. Relaxed atmosphere. Free. If you are between 18 and 118 and want information about registering, call 528-8685. This could be your year to graduate. If you can dream it, you can do it. 315 Financial Services IT'S ILLEGAL for companies doing business by phone to promise you a loan and ask you to pay for it before they deliver. For free information about avoiding advance fee loan scams, write to the Federal Trade Commission, Washington, D.C., 20580 or call the National Fraud Information Center, 1-800-876-7060. This message is a public service of the Herald-Citizen & Regional Buyers Guide. FEDERAL LAW allows you to correct your credit report for free. For more information about credit repair scams, write to the Federal Trade Commission, Washington, D.C., 20580 or call the National Fraud Information Center, 1-800-876-7060. This message is a public service of the Herald-Citizen & Regional Buyers Guide. 410 Cycles & ATVs 2007 HARLEY DAVIDSON DYNA Super Glide, garage kept, alarm system, lots of chrome. $9,500. (931)528-0348 / 260-0405 425 Autos for Sale 1994 LEXUS ES 300: Pearl White/tan leather, heated seats, 157,000 mi. Needs a few minor repairs I have reduced price for that $2,700. Call (931)544-0909 430 Trucks For Sale 1995 CHEVY Silverado Extended Cab. New transmission, truck needs minor work. $1,500 obo. Call (931)303-2011 505 Misc. Wanted WANTED OLD APPLIANCES & JUNK - WILL PICK UP CALL 931-510-4138 510 Misc. For Sale 100 GAL Aluminum Transfer Tank. Diamond plate L-shaped tank accommodates tool box. Filler caps on both sides. Outlet on bottom allows direct plumbing into fuel system. Heavy duty brackets added for stability. $400. Call (931)260-9155 2pc brown sectional sofa microfiber $400 obo; Kenmore Almond frig side-by-side w/icemaker $200 obo. (931)854-9063 FREE WOOD SKIDS Available at the rear of the Herald-Citizen 1300 Neal Street, Cookeville, TN. 38501 HAVING A HARD TIME SEEING the print in your favorite Newspaper, Magazine or Bible or ever had trouble reading the telephone directory or a map? 510 Misc. For Sale SINGLE BED for sale $150. Serta Perfect Sleeper, mattress, foundation and frame. Like new. 1 1/2 years old. 931-268-4577 515 You MUST go to your city’s business office to obtain a permit. City of Algood 215 W Main St. Algood, TN or City of Cookeville 45 E. Broad Street Cookeville, TN LARGE BUILDING full of antique glassware & dishes. Call Janice in Jamestown at 931-879-9139. 540 Firewood/Stoves 705 Wanted To Rent Equal Housing Opportunity PUBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Tennessee Human Rights Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, familial status or national origin, handicap/disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal Housing Opportunity, M/F. Herald-Citizen & Regional Buyers Guide 1300 Neal St., Cookeville, TN 931-526-9715 (FAX) 526-1209 715 Rooms for Rent STAR MOTOR INN Weekly, starting at $180 free internet, frig, guest laundry, movie rentals. Pet Friendly Construction Crews welcome. 526-9511 720 Apts/Duplex For Rent ONLY $3.25 EA. PLUS TAX 1, 2, 3 & 4 BR APTS / HOUSES NEW $280 - $800 GET ONE TODAY!! ! Start Seeing ! Start Reading Herald-Citizen 1300 Neal Street Cookeville, TN. 38501 931-526-9715 WHY NOT SUBSCRIBE TODAY? NEW SAFE Step Walk in Tub. Does not fit my physical needs. 28 x 51. It is installed will need to be removed. Bought 12-12-15. Is fully loaded, jets back & frontChromotherapy-Heated etc. Works fine but will not transfer warranty to new owner. $6,000 plus you have to remove from home. Call Donna 931-260-1167 NORDIC TRACK Elliptical, slightly used, loaded, bluetooth, tv, the works. $700 OBO. 5265103 Cable, Water/Appl's Furnished OVER 100 LOCATIONS Kids Welcome; Some Pets in Designated Apts. Open Mon - Fri SOARD PROPERTIES 526-1988 Storage units available 1BR APT in Monterey. No pets. Stove, frig, W/D HU, plus deposit. Call 839-3406. 2BR, 1BA. Stove, refrig, DW, CH/A, cable pd. $360/mo. Small pets OK!! Call 526-1988. 267 E. 13th St: 3BR, 2BA Townhouse. $725/mo. 528-7468, 2614080, 260-6868 www.crownrentalproperties.com 2BR 1.5BA TH: S. Jefferson & 111. No pets. Appl‚s. $475/mo + dep. (931) 261-4832 2BR 1BA Duplex Sparta @ O'Connor Rd. W/D HU. CHA Small pets ok. $445/mo $425/dep. (931)265-7507 2BR Townhouse W/D HU, CHA, appls, water furn'd. $480 w/ref (931)520-2600. APTS for RENT in Rickman Call Randall (931)261-7184 Capshaw Area. Upscale condo in residential neighborhood. 3BR, 2BA, walk-in closets, fireQUEEN SZ sleigh bed/BR set place, hdwd & tile flrs, W/D HU, $325; Twin BR set $300; Nice 2c gar, great storage. No pets. & chair $125. Lots more! $1250/mo. 528-2356, 239-6937 283 Trucking Emp. couch (931)854-0645, 644-5937 Gray Hunter Arms: 2BR, 1BA. DRIVERS WANTED. 18 mos WHRILPOOL WASHER & DRY- P e a c e f u l , c a b l e / w a t e r p d . flatbed experience. CDL license. ER - in good running condition. $ 5 9 5 / m o . 5 2 8 - 1 4 4 1 . www.grayhunterarmsapartments.com Home weekends. 931-686-2977 $100. Call 423-356-1251 730 Mobile Homes/Rent FOR RENT 1 , 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts, Houses. Many locations FALCON REALTY, 528-2158 falconrealtycookeville.com CYPRESS CREEK APTS Leasing 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Apts Security Deposit only $250! 600 W. 8th Street • Cookeville 931-372-1605 - EHO* FURN'D 2BR, 1.5BA Condo. Located close to TTU/Hosp. H20 incl'd. $850/mo. (931)267-4607 In town country setting. Secluded 2BR, 1BA 1200 SF Apt. All appls, W/D HU, No SMK/pets.Utilities incl'd. Ref/Cr.Ck. req. $825/mo. Eve: 931-858-1080 lve msg. 126 3rd Ave N., Baxter, TN TOTALLY FURNISHED 2BR, 1.5BA Condo. Located close to TTU/Hosp. $850/mo.includes maintenance fee and water bill for more info. please call (931)267-4607 Comm & Indus/Rent 1BR HOUSE, Monterey. AC, 10TH ST: Medical Office/Retail. stove, frig, DW. 450/mo + dep. Park Village Shopping Ctr. 1600 (931)265-2397 SF. $1200/mo. (931)265-3545 5000 SF Restaurant for lease in 2.5BR, 2BA - 217 Sewell St, Livingston. Call 931-256-5635. Baxter. $600 first & last, will neg. dep. Call (931)284-8663 3BR 2 full baths across the street from TTU campus!W/D & yard maintenance furnished. Total renovation, nice!! $900 Month + dep. NO PETS NO SMOKING, (931)265 -0083 Northgate Business Park: 4800 SF Ground level & 3000 SF Suite avail. 261-7903 3BR 2BA, full bsmnt, in Colonial E s t b e h i n d t h e m a n s i o n . COMMERCIAL / OFFICE / Re$950/mo.Lease req‚d. leave tail / Storage. 10,000 SF avail. in Livingston. Plenty of parking, msg. 644-3582 loading dock, etc. 931-256-5635 3BR 2BA like new. Lrg yard, desirable location, no pets. $875/mo, $875/dep 615-566-6497 3BR, 1BA: CHA, stove, frig, DW, micro, new cabinets, laundry rm, carport. Near Prescott School. No pets $750, $500/dep. 528-8816. 4BR, 2.5BA. Frig, stove top, MIXED FIREWOOD $30/rick W/D HU. $825/mo + dep. No U pick up pets. Call 372-2059. Walk to TTU. 2BR, 1.5BA $500 Call (931)854-0645, 644-5937 + dep, no pets. Lrg 4BR, 2.5BA 4BR/2BA, Monterey, Arts & OAK FIREWOOD $1000 + dep W/D HU on both Craft home, wood floors, FP, $65/rick delivered screened porch, great yard. (931)261-1711 Call 931-808-5347 $750+dep. Rent or Buy. 931725 SEASONED FIREWOOD - Oak, Houses For Rent 265-2397 Maple, Locust. $50/Rick, In BRICK RANCH 3/1.5. No Town PU, You Haul 931-267-6024 1, 2, 3, & 4 BR Houses & Apts smoking/pets. Dep, ref's req'd. $800/mo. Call (931)260-3800. Starting at $325/mo or 545 Pets & Supplies $81.25/wk . Pets OK. NOTTINGHAM DR: 3BR, 2 Bth, Stevens Realty LLC garage, $850/mo, $800 dep., 1 866-806-3815 O/A LOOKING FOR A PET? Adopt yr lease. Call Claudia, Asset www.stevensrentals.com your new best friend! Prop. Svcs. o/a 520-4724 Visit us online at www.aarf- "We Now Offer Weekly Rentals" facebook.com/ASSET.properites tn.com to see all of our rescued dogs, cats, puppies and kittens! Meet the dogs and cats for adoption at our adoption events call, email or visit our website for our event schedule. All pets are fully vetted and already fixed. A.A.R.F. is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, no-kill animal rescue/foster organization run by volunteers. Please be part of the solution to end animal overpopulation - spay or neuter your pets. A.A.R.F. (All About Rescue and Fixin' Inc.) 931-260-8018 (voicemail only) • www.aarf-tn.com BLUE PITS 5wks, check photos on FB under Tamra Chavis Animated Profile. If interested call 931-349-0185. Not Registered Deluxe Framed MAGNIFYING SHEET Houses For Rent 740 PLANNING A YARD SALE??? Live within the city limits of Algood or Cookeville? 725 1396 GIBBONS Rd: 3BR, 2BA, 2BR 1BA in town, water/appls 2000 SF, 2c garage. $1075/mo. furn'd. NO PETS. $300/mo + dep. Ref's req'd. (931)260-2032 (931)528-7468, 260-6868 www.crownrentalproperties.com Garage/Yard Sales 1009 BROWN AVE. 2BR 1.5BA $525/mth Appls furn'd, WD/HU. No pets. (931)239-6937 133A EASTGATE Dr: 3BR, 2.5BA townhouse in Ridgecrest, 1400 SF, garage. $850/mo. (931) 528-7468, 260-6868. www.crownrentalproperties.com Now Available 720 Apts/Duplex For Rent OFFICE / RETAIL SPACES Locations on S. Jefferson $395-$850. 979-5550 825 Homes For Sale 3914 Hilltop Dr 3/2 brick nice neighborhood excellent location 2c gar 1766 SF upstairs & 1300 basement $209,000. 319-6381 3BR, 2BA, 139 Anderson St, Sparta. $89,500. $500 finders fee if sold. See zillow website for photos. 931-808-7452 840 Lots & Acreage LOT 4 SALE: Hawkins Hill S/D, .48 acres $16,000. Buffalo Valley Rd just off Hawkins Crawford. Call (931)432-1092. B6 — HERALD-CITIZEN, Cookeville, Tenn. — www.herald-citizen.com — Monday, January 11, 2016 SPORTS Steelers pull out dramatic win over Bengals By WILL GRAVES AP Sports Writer CINCINNATI (AP) — Ben Roethlisberger couldn’t throw. Antonio Brown couldn’t stand without help. And in the end, it didn’t matter. The Pittsburgh Steelers are heading to Denver after the Cincinnati Bengals did what they always seem to do this time of year: they imploded. Spectacularly. Chris Boswell kicked a 35-yard field goal with 14 seconds remaining as Pittsburgh somehow pulled out an 18-16 victory in an — really, just pick whatever synonym for “ugly” that works — AFC wildcard game Saturday night. Pittsburgh (11-6) moved into field goal position thanks to consecutive 15-yard penalties on the Bengals, one on linebacker Vontaze Burfict and another on cornerback Adam Jones. Burfict dropped his shoulder and hit a defenseless Brown in the helmet as the All-Pro receiver came across the middle, and Jones lost his cool after getting into with Steelers assistant coach Joey Porter when Porter came onto the field as Brown was being tended to by trainers. Boswell drilled his fourth field goal of the game on the next snap to give the Steelers their first playoff victory since the 2010 AFC championship. “We won the game, that’s all that matters,” Roethlisberger said. Pittsburgh bolted off the field without so much as shaking hands while the Bengals vented their frustration after easily the most painful of their eighth straight postseason losses. Jones took to Instagram calling out Porter, a post Jones later deleted. Cincinnati might want to do the same after somehow losing despite rallying from a 15-point deficit to have the lead and the in Pittsburgh territory and the lead with 1:30 to go. Then the Bengals turned into ... the Bengals. Hill was stripped of the ball by Ryan Shazier while trying to run out the clock. The Steelers recovered at the Pittsburgh 9 and Roethlisberger and his aching right shoulder returned for a last-gasp drive. Unable to pass with any real authority, he still managed to get the Steelers near midfield with 22 seconds to go when he threw high to Brown in Cincinnati territory. “It’s hard to put into words,” said Hill. “Words don’t do anything at this point. It’s on me. I take full blame for it.” He had plenty of help from two of his volatile John Minchillo | AP Cincinnati Bengals’ Vontaze Burfict (55) runs into Pittsburgh Steelers’ Antonio Brown (84) during the second half Saturday in Cincinnati. Pittsburgh won 18-16. Burfict was called for a penalty on the play. teammates, both with a history of questionable decision-making. Burfict, whose sack of Roethlisberger sent the quarterback to the locker room, lowered his shoulder as Brown landed. The volatile linebacker earned a personal foul. Jones compounded the problem when he lost his cool while jawing with Porter, easily putting Boswell within field goal range after Cincinnati’s eighth — and final — flag of a ghastly night that ended with an unthinkable collapse. “We destructed on ourselves,” Bengals coach Marvin Lewis said. Pretty much. Roethlisberger finished 18 of 31 for 229 yards and a touchdown in rainy conditions. Jordan Todman and Fitzgerald Toussaint combined for 123 yards rushing filling in for injured DeAngelo Williams. Brown caught seven passes for 119 yards but was also diagnosed with a concussion. Still, that production didn’t look like it would be enough. AJ McCarron put together an improbable Seahawks survive Vikings By DAVE CAMPBELL AP Pro Football Writer MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Russell Wilson and the Seattle Seahawks needed more than three quarters to warm up at Minnesota, their quest to avenge last year’s Super Bowl loss nearly frozen before it began. The Vikings, after gritting through this grind-it-out wildcard round playoff game, booted their chance to beat the two-time defending NFC champions. Blair Walsh’s 27-yard field goal try into the frigid wind hooked left with 22 seconds remaining, handing the Seahawks a 10-9 victory over the stunned Vikings on a Sunday in below-zero weather that tied for the third-coldest NFL game on record. “A lot of people would’ve folded up and said, ‘That’s it,’ but we’ve got a team full of fighters,” Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman said. The Seahawks (11-6) didn’t score until Russell Wilson’s short touchdown pass to Doug Baldwin early in the fourth quarter. Then, a fumble by Adrian Peterson for the Vikings on the next possession set up a field goal by Steven Hauschka. The Vikings (11-6) took the ball for the deciding drive with 1:42 left at their 39 and, aided by a pass interference penalty on Kam Chancellor, drove deep into Seattle’s territory. After draining the clock for the seemingly inevitable win, Walsh simply missed the winner after making all three of his earlier attempts. “That’s called grace,” Chancellor said. “That’s all it is.” Seattle will play next weekend at Carolina, where the Panthers had a first-round bye in balmy mid-50s weather. “I think we were fortunate that we got the win,” Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said. “A lot of those times, guys make those kicks. There’s a high percentage that they make them, but you’ve still got to do it.” Walsh didn’t hide. Holder Jeff Locke had the laces turned in, not out, but there were no excuses to be made. “You’re confident, but you never think that you have it or take it for granted,” Walsh said, subdued with glassy eyes in the locker room afterward. “I just didn’t put a swing on it that comeback after Martavis Bryant’s somersaulting touchdown grab gave the Steelers a 15-0 lead heading into the final quarter. Cincinnati (12-5) ripped off 16 straight points, the last six on a 25-yard strike from McCarron to A.J. Green that put the Bengals in front. They missed the 2-point conversion but had seized momentum completely, something that seemed near impossible after running back Gio Bernard was knocked unconscious by Shazier and fumbled late in the third quarter, a hit that seemed to ratchet up a game that was already contentious all the way to the edge ... and maybe beyond. When Burfict intercepted Landry Jones on Pittsburgh’s possession after Green’s score, Cincinnati and Lewis appeared ready to end the sixth-longest postseason drought in NFL history. And just as suddenly as it appeared, the Bengals’ resolve vanished. Hill had the ball tucked in his left arm when Shazier somehow clawed it out as Cincinnati tried to bleed the clock and the Steelers recovered at the Pittsburgh 9 with 1:23 left. Just enough time for Roethlisberger — with a hefty assist from the Bengals — to send the Steelers to Denver and a rematch with the Broncos, whom Pittsburgh beat 34-27 on Dec. 20 with Brock Osweiler at quarterback instead of Peyton Manning. “There’s no quit in this team,” Roethlisberger said. Another long winter looms in Cincinnati. The Bengals controlled the AFC North, easily winning their fourth division title under Lewis even with QB Andy Dalton breaking his right thumb during a loss to Pittsburgh on Dec. 13. Yet all a dozen wins did was set them up for a third showdown with their longtime tormentor in an increasingly acidic rivalry. Pittsburgh survived a bumpy four months that included significant injuries to Roethlisberger, running back Le’Veon Bell, center Maurkice Pouncey and left tackle Kelvin Beachum. The Steelers needed a win in Cleveland and a Buffalo upset of the Jets on the final Sunday to make the playoffs for a second straight year. A trip to Cincinnati hardly seemed a problem: The Steelers have lost in Paul Brown Stadium only three times since it opened in 2000, a sea of Terrible Towels turning the Bengals’ home into Heinz Field West. It served as the launching point of a Super Bowl run in 2005. Both teams pledged to be on their best behavior with so much at stake, and for a while tempers were kept largely in check. There were no pregame fisticuffs this time — unlike Pittsburgh’s previous visit — thanks in part to assistant coaches on both sides creating a black-clad DMZ at midfield. The first personal foul penalty came from an unlikely source, Pittsburgh Hall of Fame offensive line coach Mike Munchak, flagged for grabbing Reggie Nelson’s hair after the safety found himself mixing it up with a couple of Steelers after pushing Todman out of bounds. McCarron, so effective while replacing Dalton, could do little. The Bengals managed just 56 yards of total offense yet trailed just 6-0 as the Steelers and the league’s third-ranked offense could muster only a pair of Boswell field goals. As the game proceeded, it got more testy, nearly out of control in the fourth quarter. And it cost the Bengals dearly. “It was a really emotional game, I’m not surprised,” Shazier said. “They seen the dam breaking and their emotions got to them.” After slow start, Rodgers, Packers overwhelm Redskins By HOWARD FENDRICH AP Pro Football Writer Nam Y. Huh | AP Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll celebrates with wide receiver Doug Baldwin (89) Sunday in Minneapolis. would be acceptable by anybody’s standards.” Huddled around sideline heaters and wearing huge capes on the shaded side of the stadium, the Seahawks were subdued themselves for much of the game. Trailing 9-0 at the 13minute mark, Wilson nearly took a huge loss on first down when he fumbled a shotgun snap he wasn’t ready for. But the guy Vikings coach Mike Zimmer called “Houdini” during the week darted right, dodged a sack and found Tyler Lockett wide open for a 35-yard completion to set up the score to Baldwin. “Just tried to extend the play,” said Wilson, who went 13 for 26 for 142 yards. “Find a way.” Chancellor, who ripped the ball away from Peterson that Ahtyba Rubin recovered, missed a tackle on tight end Kyle Rudolph’s 24-yard reception that let the Vikings advance to the 18 with 1:26 left. But Peterson’s next three carries left the Vikings a yard short of the first down. Walsh, whose third kick was nearly blocked by Sherman, jogged out for the defining moment. And the Seahawks were suddenly celebrating an improbable win, not unlike their rally past Green Bay in the NFC championship game last year. “It’s a chip shot,” Zimmer said. “He’s got to make it.” The Seahawks left their last visit to Minnesota with a 38-7 victory, pure domination on both sides of the ball that left no doubt that Dec. 6 afternoon they’d be a legitimate contender to reach their third straight Super Bowl even without the ear-splitting advantage of their home by the bay at CenturyLink Field. For all their skills, experience and swagger, though, the combination of these conditions and a well-prepared, embarrassedby-the-previous-performance Vikings team proved to be quite the challenge. This was a fittingly frigid finish for Minnesota’s two-year stint outdoors at the University of Minnesota’s TCF Bank Stadium during construction of the new covered downtown stadium. For the first au naturel postseason game here since the NFC championship game in 1976, the grizzled coach of that team, Bud Grant, served as an honorary captain. He strolled out for the coin flip in a Vikings cap and a purple short-sleeved polo shirt, looking ready for a round of golf. The 88-year-old Grant got a roar of approval from the crowd, most of which was dressed in as many layers as those purple replica jerseys would allow. The announcement of the minus-25 degree wind chill factor a few minutes later drew an equally loud cheer. Every mistake and break was magnified in a game like this, and the Vikings benefited for the majority of the first three quarters. Punter Jon Ryan had to pick up a low snap on Seattle’s first possession and, avoiding a potential block, tried to run up the middle before being upended by Jason Trusnik well shy of the first down. Ryan landed on his face, breaking and bloodying his nose, and the Vikings turned the shortened field into their first field goal. Wilson, who led the NFL in passer rating after racking up a remarkable 24 touchdown passes with only one interception over the last seven games, was essentially reduced to a scrambler in the deep freeze. LANDOVER, Md. (AP) — For Aaron Rodgers and the rest of the Green Bay Packers’ offense, the first quarter of their playoff game Sunday looked quite similar to the stagnant way their regular season wound down. Not a lot of progress. Not a lot of points. Not a lot of fun. Rodgers opened the NFC wildcard game against the Washington Redskins by going 1 for 8, and the Packers’ first four drives went: punt, safety, punt, punt. They gained all of 11 yards heading into the second period, and they trailed by double digits. And then, spurred by using the hurry-up approach he loves, Rodgers played like a two-time NFL MVP. Drawing defensive penalties with quick snaps, making adjustments at the line of scrimmage, and running the show the way few QBs can, Rodgers threw for a pair of TDs while Eddie Lacy and James Starks each ran for a score, and Green Bay came back to overwhelm the NFC East champion Redskins 35-18. “We got the tempo up, and they couldn’t keep up,” said Rodgers, who finished 21 for 36 for 210 yards and no turnovers. “We became a snowball, kind of going downhill, and it was tough for us to stop.” That was missing while the Packers were losing their final two games and six of their last 10 after a 6-0 start, letting the NFC North title slip away. And it was missing early Sunday, when Washington grabbed an 11-0 lead. “I talked a lot the last couple weeks about being able to turn it on, and a lot of you probably thought that was lip service,” Rodgers told reporters. “But we just needed a game like this to get our mojo back and get our confidence going. I said this week that it just takes one. It just takes one performance to get us going back in the right direction and believing that we can make a run.” Green Bay (11-6) will play at the No. 2 seed Arizona Cardinals on Saturday night. It’s a rematch of a Week 16 game that Arizona dominated 38-8. “The main thing is everybody Mark Tenally | AP Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (12) celebrates after running back Eddie Lacy scored during the second half against the Washington Redskins in Landover, Md., Sunday just needs to realize the taste they had in their mouth last time,” Packers receiver James Jones said. In the other NFC game next weekend, the No. 1 seed Carolina Panthers will host the wildcard Seattle Seahawks on Sunday. With the Packers and Seahawks joining the AFC’s Pittsburgh Steelers and Kansas City Chiefs, it’s the first time road teams went 4-0 in the wild-card round under the current NFL playoff format, which started in 1990. Washington (9-8) had won four games in a row, but its season ends without a single victory over a team that finished with a winning record. “I mean, it’s a little sick feeling any time you lose a game at the end of the year, not matter when it is,” Washington’s Jay Gruden said after his first playoff game as an NFL head coach. “The opportunities we had out there today — it makes you ill.” His quarterback, Kirk Cousins, made his first playoff start after a breakthrough season and was 29 for 46 for 329 yards. He threw for one touchdown, ran for another, lost one fumble and was sacked six times. Rodgers smirked when asked about chatter in the Washington area about which QB folks would want for the next five years. “We don’t really care about any of the expectations, whether talking about picking Kirk over myself or talking about how everybody expected us to lose this game,” Rodgers said. “We don’t care about those opinions out there.” He spoke about his team staying confident despite being down 11-0. Asked where that self-belief came from, Rodgers replied: “‘Cause we’ve been there, done that.” Sure have — unlike the Redskins, last-place finishers six of the past eight seasons. “They made adjustments and we didn’t,” Washington nose tackle Terrance Knighton said. “That’s why they’ve won championships — and that’s who their quarterback is.” Indeed, Rodgers, the 2011 Super Bowl MVP, turned things around in the second quarter, twice catching Washington with too many men on the field. He went 5 for 6 for 68 yards on a drive that ended with a 12-yard TD pass to Randall Cobb. When he hit Davante Adams for a 10yard touchdown that gave the Packers a 17-11 halftime lead, Rodgers danced a little jig and threw some fist pumps.
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