Cleveland - Creative Circle Media Solutions
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Cleveland - Creative Circle Media Solutions
S U N DAY APRIL 26, 2015 160th YEAR • NO. 306 Inside Today Borrowing from HCI funds to be requested County officials to ask state AG for permission By BRIAN GRAVES Banner Staff Writer County Trustee Mike Smith and County Attorney Crystal Freiberg will travel to Nashville Tuesday in the next chapter of the county’s Healthy Community Initiative Fund. Smith and Freiberg will meet Orange and White The Tennessee Vols participated in their annual Orange and White game Saturday at Neyland Stadium. Walker Valley picks up a baseball win over No. 6-ranked Meigs County. Joe Cannon is (finally) back with a new Cannon’s Corner. Peyton Manning has made a large donation to the University of Tennessee. Walker Valley and Polk softball teams continue to rack up the wins. The Cleveland Country Club has hired a new head tennis professional. See Sports, Pages 17-21, 25 and 28. Spring swing Tips on everything from choosing paint colors to making home improvements on a budget might just inspire some to start swinging their hammers. See our special “Spring Home Improvement” section, Page 37- 46. Rymer scholars The finalists for Lee University’s prestigious Rymer Scholarships have been announced. Nine local high school students have so far made the cut. See People, Page 47. Work release A new work-release program in Bradley County is designed to reduce both prison costs and recidivism by encouraging inmates to be better prepared for life after prison. See Lifestyles, Page 29. Blood Assurance Blood Assurance, with a new location for its donor office in Cleveland, is planning a “Hero Week” and a grand re-opening celebration. See story, Page 6. Forecast The forecast calls for mostly cloudy skies with a slight chance of morning and early afternoon showers. Temperatures should be in the lower 70s. Temperatures tonight should dip to the mid to upper 40s. On Monday expect sunny skies a nd highs in the upper 60s and lower 70s. Index Business news .............................27 Church............................................5 Classified.................................56-65 Comics..........................................51 Editorials..................................22,23 Horoscope....................................51 Lifestyles .................................29-33 Obituaries.......................................2 Stocks...........................................25 Sports................................17-21, 25 TV Schedule............................52,53 Weather........................................15 Around Town Austin Lewis doing the most important job on the diamond ... Frankie Lowery showing off his texting skills ... Daniel Pennington enjoying an event with his wife ... Chip and Jane Chavis giving a friend a lift in style ... Dr. Carolyn Dirksen sharing well-wishes with those affected by earthquakes in Nepal. CLEVELAND, TN 66 PAGES • $1.00 with the state attorney general to get permission for the county to borrow $16 million from the fund over a 20-year period. The saga began on Oct. 1, 2005, when an agreement was reached between the Board of Trustees of the Bradley Memorial Hospital and Community Health Systems to sell the hospital’s assets for $76,500,000. The Bradley County Commission asserted a claim to control the use and disposition of the assets remaining after all of the hospital’s liabilities had been paid. The trustees and the Commission formed an agreement where $20 million of the sale proceeds would be deposited into an account controlled jointly by both parties. An agreement was reached in June 2006 by which the county would receive $15 million of the $20 million plus the interest earned from investments. On July 26, 2006, the board of directors of the United Way and the hospital trustees reached an agreement where the organization would invest, administer and disburse any funds left after the payment to Bradley County was made. State Attorney General Paul G. Summers said he would take no action opposing the settlement. The agreement, ratified by Chancellor Jerri S. Bryant, See HCI, Page 8 Whitaker receives national accolades CU warns of new scam in the area WVHS student wins entrepreneurship award By JOYANNA LOVE Banner Senior Staff Writer Scammers are finding new ways to try and get money through dishonest means. Cleveland Utilities was made aware late last week of a new scam in the area. Tim Henderson, Cleveland Utilities vice president of administrative services, said the newest scam involves a caller claiming they are a part of the Electric Power Board. “We just have limited information that we have gotten from this customer,” Henderson said. “But it was an accented voice posing to be an Electric Power Board. They are asking for monies that would go to provide funding for Cleveland Utilities fiber (optics) system.” CU has been exploring the possibility of offering fiber optic Internet service, but a decision on whether it will be offered is far from being made. Bart Borden, vice president of the Electric Division, said the utility has contracted with Uptown Services to conduct surveys to determine need for such services. “There is no part of that soliciting any funds,” Borden said. If the utility were to offer fiber optic Internet service, the system would be paid for through a bond issue, not private donations. CU would never call customers required the county seek requests for proposals from qualified investment firms and invest the $15 million plus interest “in such a manner as to generate a fair return on these monies.” A minimum of 15 percent of all interest earned annually was required to be invested in the principal so that “the time value of money does not erode the principal By CHRISTY ARMSTRONG Banner Staff Writer Banner photo, JOYANNA LOVE PUBLIX EMPLOYEES volunteer with community members to put up a fence around a community garden. Impact Cleveland and the Blythe-Oldfield Community Association have partnered to create a garden as a gathering place for the community. Partners come together to unite community through garden By JOYANNA LOVE Banner Senior Staff Writer An empty lot that has never been built on is getting a look as a site for a community garden. The Blythe-Oldfield Community Association and Impact Cleveland have begun work to convert the vacant, grassy lot on 13th Street into a community garden. “Southview Baptist owned the lot, and they had hopes for it … but they ended up building a family center on the (sanctuary) property and didn’t need this anymore. They were looking to sell it and we were looking for a place for a community garden,” said Dustin Tommey of Impact Cleveland. A grant from Broad Street United Methodist Church allowed the Blythe-Oldfield Community Association and Impact Cleveland to purchase the property. “We identified a need. Residents wanted to have this, and we started putting a plan together to implement it,” Tommey said. Tommey said the lot was “awesome” for the project, because there are no trees on the property. The corner lot is also a good location because of the friendly neighbors who will “keep an eye on it,” he said. “We have several key resident leaders who are involved See GARDEN, Page 8 See CU, Page 12 A local high school student has won a national award for a business she runs when she is not at school. M a r a h Whitaker, a Walker Valley High School student, was Whitaker one of five Tennessee recipients and the only one in the area to receive the annual Young Entrepreneur Award from the National Federation of Independent Business’ Young Entrepreneur Foundation. The award gave her a $1,000 scholarship and, she said, the encouragement to continue doing something she loves — teaching music. “It’s the one thing that I have just always been passionate about,” Whitaker said. She runs Miss Marah’s Music, a music education business that currently has her teaching piano lessons to 10 children. The 18-year-old senior launched the business about a year ago after finding a love for teaching while showing her now 9-year-old brother, Joshua, how See WHITAKER, Page 12 Empowering Women fundraiser supports Boys & Girls Clubs By JOYANNA LOVE Banner Senior Staff Writer The Boys & Girls Clubs of Cleveland will honor local women leaders and raise funds during the fifth annual Empowering Women event May 7. New for this year will be the addition of an online auction. “We wanted to do something a little different this year,” said organizing committee member Margaret Schenck. “We wanted to highlight Empowering Women very early. We wanted to reach people — besides just those attending the gala — because we know we have a lot of supporters all over Tennessee. We hope to draw those in that way.” The online auction at www.32auctions.com/empoweringwomen features a number of items, including Atlanta Motor Speedway tickets, a bowie knife and sheath, electric grill, paintings, stained glass art, gift certificates and vacations trips. The online auction will be open until 8 p.m. the day of the event. Silent and live auctions will be held on a number of vacation and party packages, jewelry and gift packages. The annual Empowering Women awards will recognize a Empowering Woman of the Year, an Empowering Global Woman of the year and a Empowering Woman Youth of the Year as selected by an advisory team of See WOMEN, Page 8 Goal Academy celebrates its seniors By CHRISTY ARMSTRONG Banner Staff Writer Goal Academy, Bradley County Schools’ alternative school, recently devoted an entire day to celebrating the seniors who have overcome life’s challenges and will graduate with their high school diplomas in May. Senior Day took place on the school’s Sunset Drive campus Friday, and it was filled with opportunities for the school’s staff, students and guests to look back on the past and see what progress has been made. While the school’s senior class is on the small side with 28 students, Goal Academy is this year celebrating a 100 percent graduation rate. See GOAL, Page 12 Contributed photo SHERIFF ERIC WATSON observes as TBI Special Agent Philip Cicero leads Detective Zachary Pike in a tire track study. TBI holds training sessions for Bradley County CID By TONY EUBANK Banner Staff Writer The Bradley County Sherriff’s Office hosted the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation for a special training session for members of the BCSO Criminal Investigations Division. The first-of-its-kind training for the TBI and the BSCO, was held over a three-day period last week and covered an array of investigative topics and techniques. Banner photo, CHRISTY ARMSTRONG The classes, led by TBI special GOAL ACADEMY staff members place honor cords on the shoul- agents, were designed to bring ders of one of the school’s graduating seniors during the Senior Day the BCSO CID up to speed on celebration Friday while others display a celebratory sign. the latest technology and to widen the overall skill set of the local detectives. Sherriff Eric Watson stated that while the TBI hosts training all over the state at varying times every year, this is the first time the TBI has brought such a training directly to a law enforcement agency. The seminar consisted of several one-hour classes and hands-on training sessions that offered CID officers the opportunity to learn more about human trafficking, crime scene photography, interrogation techniques, how to data mine new technoloSee TBI, Page 12 2—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com OBITUARIES Deborah L. Bunch Deborah L. Bunch, 57, of Cleveland, died Saturday, April 25, 2015, at a Chattanooga hospital. Survivors and funeral arrangements will be announced by Ralph Buckner Funeral Home and Crematory. Jacquelene Burns Jacquelene Burns, 67, of Charleston, died Saturday, April 25, 2015. Survivors and arrangements will be announced by Companion Funeral Home. Sterling Allen Daubner Sterling Peebles Allen Daubner, 82, passed away on Monday, April 20, 2015, at a hospital in Orlando, Fla. She was born in Jackson, Miss. She was the only child of Sterling and Lillian Peebles. In 1954, she graduated from Sophie Newcomb, the women's college of Tulane University in New Orleans, La. While at Tulane, she met and married Robert L. Allen, MD, her husband of 31 years who passed away in 1986. She lived in Cleveland for four decades before moving to Florida. She is survived by daughters: Elizabeth Daubner, Catherine Allen and Deborah Fein; two sonsin-law: Michael Daubner and Douglas Fein; and her loving husband of 13 years, Drew Daubner of Maitland, Fla. Drew and Sterling enjoyed a special bond. He made her last years completely joyful. She will be sadly missed by all. Interment will be held in Cleveland. Arrangements have not been made at this time. Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral Home, Altamonte Springs, Fla., was in charge of arrangements. his parents: Traynor and Stella McDonald; sister, Mable Clark; and infant brother, Erskine McDonald. Survivors include his loving wife of 45 years, Mary McDonald; two sons: Chuck McDonald and Tommy McDonald and wife, Julie; three grandchildren: Chaz McDonald, Katey McDonald and Lige McDonald; one brother, T.J. McDonald and wife, Caroline; and three nephews: Joey McDonald, Jimmy McDonald and Erskine McDonald. There will be no service at this time. The family would like to express appreciation to Bradley Home Health and Hospice. Higgins Funeral Home is in charge of the arrangements. We invite you to send a message of condolence and view the McDonald family guestbook at www.higginsfuneral.com. Published at 1505 25th Street, NW (P.O. Box 3600) in Cleveland, TN 37320-3600, daily except Saturday and Christmas day by Cleveland Newspapers, Inc. Phone (423) 472-5041. We invite you to share your memories and condolences with the Moore family by visiting www.jimrushfuneralhomes.com. Stephen L. Crass Jim Bryant Editor & Publisher General Manager Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin herein. All rights of all other material herein are as reserved. ©2014 Cleveland Newspapers, Inc. R.C. Perry SUBSCRIPTION RATES R.C. Perry, 75, of Dayton, died Saturday, April 25, 2015. Survivors and arrangements will be announced by Companion Funeral Home. Publishser Reserves the Right to Change Rates Without Notice Print Only Carrier Collect Rate * 3 months 6 Months 1 Year By Carrier Home / Business Delivery By Mail inside Zip 307 By Mail outside Zip 307 in TN, GA By Mail Outside TN $20.00 $25.00 $38.00 $38.00 $38.00 $45.00 $55.00 $67.00 $75.00 $85.00 $105.00 $130.00 Print + E-Edition By Carrier Home / Business Delivery By Mail inside Zip 307 By Mail outside Zip 307 in TN, GA By Mail Outside TN $21.25 $26.25 $40.00 $40.50 $40.25 $47.25 $58.00 $71.00 $79.25 $90.50 $112.00 $137.00 E-Edition Only $21.00 $42.00 $84.00 Monthly $6.75 Daily $7.00 $2.00 Office Hours: Monday-Friday: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. • 423-472-5041 Tennessee Scholars efforts redirected Angela McMinn Angela Suzanne Douthitt McMinn, 38, of Cleveland, passed away Thursday evening, April 23, 2015, at SkyRidge Medical Center. A native and lifelong resident of Bradley County, she was employed at Signature Healthcare and was of the Christian faith. She touched the lives of everyone she met. She was preceded in death by her father, John Lee Douthitt. She is survived by her loving husband, Michael McMinn, of Cleveland; mother, Wanda Headrick Douthitt, of Cleveland; mother and father-in-law: Steve and Donna McMinn, of Cleveland; and brother-in-law, Vetrial M. Comeaux Josh McMinn and wife, Jennifer, Vetrial M. Comeaux, 95, of of Durham, N.C. Cleveland, passed away A celebration of her life will be Thursday, April 23, 2015. conducted at 4 p.m. Monday, She was born on Sept. 6, April 27, 2015, from the 1919, in Itawamba County, Miss. Wayne Gann Signature Healthcare Chapel. She was a member of the Wayne Gann, 66, of The family will visit with friends Peerless Road Church of God of Cleveland, died Saturday, April after the service. Prophecy and an honorary mem- 25, 2015. We invite you to visit the guestber of the Center for Biblical Survivors and arrangements book of Angela McMinn and send Leadership. will be announced by Companion a message of comfort to She loved sewing and flowers Funeral Home. www.grissomserenity.com. of all kinds, but her favorites were Grissom-Serenity Funeral roses. She loved cooking for her Home and Cremation Services, family and shopping and eating Mark S. Grissom, funeral direcwith her grandchildren. Nothing tor, is in charge of arrangements. could perk her up like her grandchildren. Her words were always kind and loving, and she was always willing to lend an ear. She was preceded in death by her husband, Eugene J. Comeaux; her parents: Bishop Henry M. Moxley and Georgia Lauderdale Moxley. She was the eldest and last surviving sibling of brothers: Ernest, Owen and Eugene Moxley; and her sister, Verdia Gooding. She is survived by her two daughters: Jeanette C. Rollins and Brenda C. Rollins and husband, John, of Cleveland; three grandchildren: Kenneth M. Rollins and wife, Amanda, of Cleveland, Crystal R. Black and husband, Dan, of Cleveland, and Vanessa R. Kimbril and husband, Charles (Chuck), of Kingsport; great-grandchildren: Kathryn, Vince and Connor Rollins, Chaz and Cooper Kimbril, Cydney and Nicholas Black, Ciara B. Lee and husband, Mike; one great-great- Russell E. Kelley grandchild, Ellie Lee; and several Russell E. Kelley, 61, a resident nieces and nephews. of Cleveland, passed away A Remembrance of Life serv- Thursday, April 23, 2015, at his ice will be held at 4 p.m. today, residence. Frank Moore April 26, 2015, at Peerless Road He was born and raised in Church of God of Prophecy with Cleveland and was employed by Frank Moore, 80, of Pastor Brian Sutton, Bishop Beaty Fertilizer as a salesman. Cleveland, passed away Adrain Varlock Sr. and Dr. Hector He was a member of Pine Hill Thursday, April 23, 2015, at his Ortiz officiating. Cumberland Presbyterian Church. home. The interment will follow at He enjoyed farming and loved to He was the son of the late Sunset Memorial Gardens. Gladys Irene Wright Moore and hunt on the family farm. The family will receive friends He was preceded in death by Elmer Moore. today from 2 until 4 p.m. at the his parents: Eugene and Mary Moore was also preceded in church. Frances Bean Kelley; and a death by his wife, Patsy Moore; The North Ocoee Street nephew, Richard Cranch. daughter, Wanda Moore; grandChapel of the Jim Rush Funeral He is survived by his wife, daughter, April Moore; sister, Homes has charge of the Wanda Trewitt Kelley, of Ada Moore; twin brother, Fred arrangements. Cleveland; two children: Joseph Moore; and brother, Cooney We encourage you to share Kelley and John Kelley and wife, Moore. your memories and/or condo- Anali, all of Cleveland; two sisters: He was the co-owner and lences with Comeaux’s family by Marilyn Kelley of Cleveland and operator of Housemovers Inc., going to www.jimrushfuneral- Nancy Cranch of Hendersonville; where he moved houses his homes.com. and one niece, Lori Cranch of entire life. He loved the outdoors, enjoying activities like Hendersonville. The funeral will be conducted at camping and boat riding, and 2 p.m. today, April 26, 2015, in the attended the Baptist church. Survivors include his daughchapel of Ralph Buckner Funeral Home with the Rev. Allen ters: Kathy Doss and her husLovelace and the Rev. Russ band, Bobby, and Anita Dixon, Samantha Bean and her husMaroon officiating. Interment will follow at Hilcrest band, Tom, all of Cleveland; Memorial Gardens with Dale sons: Michael Moore and his Jordan, Daryl Sliger, Dennis Ellis, wife, Brenda, and Bobby Moore Devon Fansler, James Rogers and Hershel Dover, all of stepson, Dean and Bobby Rogers serving as pall- Cleveland; Bishop, and his wife, Jane, of bearers. We invite you to send a mes- Cleveland; 11 grandchildren; BOSTON (AP) — A backpack sage of condolence and view the and 12 great-grandchildren. strap used by an Apollo 14 astro- Kelley family guestbook at A Remembrance of Life service will be held Monday, April naut as he moved around the www.ralphbuckner.com. 27, 2015, at 11 a.m. from the surface of the moon in 1971 has Wildwood Avenue Chapel of Jim sold at auction for nearly Rush Funeral Homes with the $42,000. Rev. Jim Hibbard officiating. Massachusetts-based RR Interment will follow in the Auction says the strap that Edgar Croft Chapel Cemetery in Mitchell brought back as a souCopperhill with Bobby Moore, venir of the mission fetched Hershel Dover, Michael Moore, $41,806 this week. The buyer’s Willis McDonald Jr., P.D. Doss, Steven Vaughn, identity was not disclosed. Willis “Hoop” McDonald, 78, a Bradley Dixon, Lynn Lawson Mitchell spent nearly 9½ hours lifelong resident of Benton, and Davis Doss serving as cason the lunar surface, where he passed away Friday, April 24, ketbearers. The family will receive friends left the life support backpack 2015, at his home. today from 4 until 7 p.m. at theHe was of the Baptist faith. before returning to Earth. He was preceded in death by funeral home. Backpack strap used by Apollo 14 moonwalker sells (USPS 117-700) Periodical Postage Paid at Cleveland, TN 37320-3600 Post Office POSTMASTER: Send Address Changes to: Banner, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600 Special to the Banner Shona Ross Shona Ross, 51, a resident of Ocoee, passed away on Friday morning, April 24, 2015, at her home surrounded by family. She was known for being a great wife, mom and granny and will be greatly missed by all who knew her. She leaves behind to cherish her memory her husband of 17 years, Michael Ross; and her children: Sherri Stevens, René (Justin) Goodman, Michaela Ross, Robert Ross and Micah Ross. She was the 10th child of 12 siblings and has five grandchildren. A funeral is planned for Tuesday, April 28, 2015, at 4 p.m. in the Cookson Creek Baptist Church Cemetery, located at 1686 Sand Mountain Road, Ocoee, TN 37361, with Brother Brian Whitmore officiating the service. Interment will follow t in the Cookson Creek Baptist Church Cemetery. The family will receive friends at the church on Monday night from 5 until 7. You are invited to share a personal memory of Shona or your condolences with her family at her online memorial located at www.companionfunerals.com. Companion Funeral and Cremation Service and the Cody family are honored to assist the Ross family with these arrangements. The Cleveland/Bradley Chamber of Commerce has coordinated a successful Tennessee Scholars program for many years in cooperation with the Bradley County and Cleveland City Schools System. After recent discussions with directors of schools and a representative of Cleveland State Community College, local leaders agree that May 2015 is the right time for the Chamber to discontinue offering this program in the community. “The implementation of Tennessee Promise, the more rigorous Tennessee graduation requirements and a change in Cleveland State’s distribution of scholarship funds make offering Tennessee Scholars both redundant in some areas and no longer effective for us in others,” Sherry Crye, coordinator of the Chamber’s Tennessee Scholars program, explained. Endorsed by the Tennessee Department of Education and the Tennessee Chamber of Commerce & Industry, the Tennessee Scholars program began in Bradley County Schools in 2005. The initial intent of the program was to encourage students to take more rigorous courses, especially in math, and to reach the middle 50 percent of students who were not likely to pursue post-secondary education, the Chamber spokersperson explained. The additional requirements to graduate as a Tennessee Scholar — 80 hours of volunteer service, 95-percent attendance over four years and no out-of-school suspensions — were included to instill a good work ethic, she added. “The Tennessee Scholars program is not a scholarship program, but graduates do have an opportunity to apply for scholarships at Cleveland State Community College, Lee University, Bryan College and Tennessee College of Applied Technology,” Crye said. “Graduating as a Tennessee Scholar is also an honor earned in high school that would be an asset for any scholarships applied for at any university.” To date, 1,707 students from Bradley Central, Cleveland and Walker Valley high schools and Tennessee Christian Preparatory School have graduated as certified Tennessee Scholars. “We are proud of all of these graduates and the paths they have taken after high school to prepare themselves for our local workforce,” said Crye, who also serves as director of workforce development. The Chamber’s involvement in education programs for area students continues to focus on meeting the growing demands local industries face in finding skilled labor, Crye said. “It is vital that our schools prepare students for post-secondary life whether that is a university, a community college, technical school or the workforce,” Crye concluded. OMS plans out-of-zone enrollment April 27-May 15 Special to the Banner To submit an obituary, have the funeral home or cremation society in charge of arrangements email the information to obituaries@clevelandbanner.com and fax to 423614-6529, attention Obits. Ocoee Middle School Principal Ron Spangler and his staff have a challenging task ahead in determining enrollment for the 2015-16 school year. Ocoee Middle administrators have announced enrollment for out-of-zone students will be conducted April 27 through May 15. Parents can register their children in the Ocoee Middle School office between 8:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Following this registration process, Spangler and his staff will determine the status of out-of-zone applications for the coming year. Acceptance for these students will be based on space availability at Ocoee Middle. LOTTERY NUMBERS (AP) — These state lotteries were drawn over the weekend: Sum: 23 Cash 4 Morning: 6-2-8-5 Tennessee Friday Cash 3 Evening: 1-0-0, Lucky Sum: 1 Cash 3 Midday: 5-8-8, Lucky Sum: 21 Cash 3 Morning: 7-0-5 Cash 4 Evening: 2-7-4-7, Lucky Sum: 20 Cash 4 Midday: 5-4-6-5, Lucky Sum: 20 Cash 4 Morning: 1-7-9-9 Mega Millions: 24-25-29-4767, Mega Ball: 4; Megaplier: 4 Tennessee Cash: 06-15-25-3133, Bonus: 2 GeorGia Friday All or Nothing Day: 04-06-0810-11-12-13-14-17-22-23-24 All or Nothing Evening: 01-0204-08-09-13-15-17-18-19-21-24 All or Nothing Morning: 01-0203-05-07-08-14-15-16-18-21-22 All or Nothing Night: 01-02-0305-10-11-16-17-18-19-20-23 Cash 3 Evening: 5-8-7 Cash 3 Midday: 2-4-3 Cash 4 Evening: 1-3-1-6 Cash 4 Midday: 0-6-7-0 Fantasy 5: 07-11-21-28-38 Estimated jackpot: $206,000 Georgia FIVE Evening: 5-9-13-8 Georgia FIVE Midday: 1-3-4-43 Mega Millions: 24-25-29-4767, Mega Ball: 4 Estimated jackpot: $74 million Megaplier: 4 Powerball estimated jackpot: $50 million saturday Cash 3 Evening: 1-5-5, Lucky Sum: 11 Cash 3 Midday: 3-4-0, Lucky Sum: 7 Cash 3 Morning: 3-8-9 Cash 4 Evening: 0-9-3-7, Lucky Sum: 19 Cash 4 Midday: 2-6-9-6, Lucky saturday All or Nothing Day: 01-02-0406-09-13-15-16-17-19-20-21 All or Nothing Evening: 01-0204-05-06-10-11-13-15-16-18-23 All or Nothing Morning: 01-0203-04-05-06-09-13-18-21-22-24 Cash 3 Evening: 4-8-4 Cash 3 Midday: 2-6-7 Cash 4 Midday: 8-3-3-8 Georgia FIVE Evening: 2-1-97-1 Georgia FIVE Midday: 0-5-8-62 IT’S A SPECIAL DAY FOR... Penny Callihan, Whitney Gill, Kendra Gray, Angie Kyker, Connie Riddle, Danielle Seals and Amber Wilson, who are celebrating birthdays today ... Sonny Hicks, who turns 70 today. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—3 Cleveland Dental Contributed photo VINDIMA GIRL SALON and Boutique was host recently to an event raising funds for The House That Mercy Built. Salon owner Machelle McCulley invited nine women from the safe haven to the salon and boutique for a day of shopping. Each was given a $25 certificate to use for shopping. McCulley said the women shared testimonies and experiences with the salon’s staff. Cleveland Dental would like to announce the addition of Dr. Daniel Cosby to our staff. ‘Operation Babylift’ kids, soldiers reunite 40 years later HOLMDEL, N.J. (AP) — With the Viet Cong making their final push toward taking Saigon in April 1975, the fate of thousands of Vietnamese orphans was uncertain until President Gerald Ford ordered remaining forces to evacuate the children. Forty years after the final flight of Operation Babylift left Vietnam, 20 evacuees and their adopted families gathered Saturday for a reunion along with some of the servicemen who took part in the rescue. “Operation Babylift is one of the few great things to come from the Vietnam tragedy,” said Lana Mae Noone, organizer of the event staged at the New Jersey Vietnam Veterans Memorial. Noone also is the founder of the website Vietnam Babylift, which aims to connect adoptees, their families and veterans involved with the mission. In all, 2,547 children were rescued and adopted by families in the United States and allied countries. Noone, 68, of Garden City, New York, adopted her two daughters — Heather and Jennifer — after they were among the last children evacuated to the United States. Heather developed pneumonia on her way Cleveland Dental has been treating patients in the Cleveland Area for over 40 years and we look forward to Dr. Cosby joining our team. We are accepting new patients, please call 423.479.6005. to America, and died in May 1975. “I promised her I would make sure babylift would never be forgotten,” Noone said. Dressed in a black ao dai, a traditional Vietnamese silk dress, Leah Heslin, 42, said she looked forward to meeting other adult adoptees who, like her, were raised in America but find interest in their Vietnamese heritage. “It’s been very exciting, very anxious. I’m kind of nervous,” said Heslin, who attended with her adoptive mother, Carole Heslin, 72. “It brings it back to home a little bit.” Participants dedicated a plaque inscribed with the names of 138 children, volunteers and soldiers who perished when their C-5A Galaxy crashed while headed to Clark Air Base in the Philippines. Greg Gmerek, a medic for the 9th Air Evac Squadron, survived the crash. “Mud was flying at me and I went flying around all over the place” recalled Gmerek, who was not strapped in because all the seats were strapped with two children a piece. “We just started getting the babies out as best we could.” Gmerek said he broke six ribs and had a partially collapsed lung from the crash. “I thought about them all the time,” Gmerek said of the children. Kim Lan Duong said she was orphaned in the streets of Saigon before being flown to Detroit dur- ing Operation Babylift, where she was adopted and raised by her single mother and grandmother, Sandy and Violet Howard. “To be able to see adult adoptees, it warms their hearts to see us grown up,” said Duong, 43, who now lives in Dallas. “They still call us kids and that’s OK.” 22 Northside Lane • Crossville, TN 38557 www.mtnfarm.com • (931) 484-3589 We Are A Full Line Authorized Case IH, Cub Cadet, New Holland, Mahindra Kuhn, Woods & Rhino Farm Equipment Dealer EQUIPMENT SERVICE PARTS We also offer direct shipping of parts and equipment for all your needs. Contact Us Today! Public boarding school — the way to solve educational ills? BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Buffalo’s chronically struggling school system is considering an idea gaining momentum in other cities: public boarding schools that put roundthe-clock attention on students and away from such daunting problems as poverty, troubled homes and truancy. Supporters say such a dramatic step is necessary to get some students into an atmosphere that promotes learning, and worth the costs, estimated at $20,000 to $25,000 per student per year. “We have teachers and union leaders telling us, ‘The problem is with the homes; these kids are in dysfunctional homes,’” said Buffalo school board member Carl Paladino. He envisions a charter boarding school in Buffalo where students as young as first or second grade would be assured proper meals, uniforms, after-school tutoring and activities. It’s one of a pair of boarding school proposals that have been floated in the city, where only 53 percent of students graduate in four years, English and math proficiency hover 20 points below the state average, and a majority of public schools are considered by the state to be failing. Around 80 percent of students meet federal guidelines for free and reduced lunch. “We are not hitting various measures set by the state or ourselves,” said Tanika Shedrick, a former charter school dean who is trying to open the state’s first public boarding high school in Buffalo. “Our students are leaving school not prepared for college.” Her charter Buffalo Institute of Growth would supplement a college-style academic schedule with life skills and social activities that would keep students on campus seven days a week, with the goal of sending 100 percent of graduates to college or a vocational program. “We want to make sure we’re there every step of the way,” said Shedrick, who plans to submit a charter school application to the state this year. She estimates the per-student cost at $20,000 to $25,000 per year, to be paid for with public funding and fundraising. New York’s traditional charter school allocation is about $12,000 per student. Both proposals in Buffalo would be subject to state approval. About 115,000 students board at private schools in the United States, federal statistics show, in a tradition that predates the Revolutionary War, but the idea of public boarding schools is relatively new. The Washington, D.C.-based SEED Foundation opened its first public boarding school for poor and academically at-risk students in 1998 and followed up with a school in Baltimore in 2008 and Miami in 2014. A fourth school is in the works in Ohio at the request of the state’s Department of Education. The model, in which students in grades six through 12 return home for weekends, required changes in state laws. The idea has been discussed in cities including Detroit and Niagara Falls, as well. Advocates say the high price is the biggest obstacle. “Even I have to admit, in the short run it’s expensive,” SEED Foundation co-founder Eric Adler said. “That’s an argument for not doing it. I don’t think it’s a good argument, but it’s a valid argument.” Adler continued: “Not every child needs this, but there are many who do, and without it, they wouldn’t have much of a shot.” Tasha Poulson found SEED and its 90-plus percent graduation rate while researching schools after seeing her daughter, who had excelled in elementary school, begin to lose ground upon entering one of Washington’s public middle schools. “It was horrible,” Poulson said. “I knew that I had to get her out of that school, and there wasn’t another school that I saw as a fit for my daughter.” But she hesitated at the thought of her sixthgrader living away from home. In the end, Poulson decided it would give her daughter the independence and confidence she would need to go to college. She visits frequently and also attends events such as poetry nights that welcome parents. Her daughter is headed for North Carolina Central University next year, and a niece and son now attend the SEED school as well. A Buffalo Board of Education committee is looking at Paladino’s proposal to explore a SEED school. While SEED’s Adler acknowledged the annual per-pupil cost is high in the short term, he said it pays off with successful, taxpaying citizens down the line. Add making a difference to your bucket list. As you age and consider what really matters in life, isn’t your true lasting legacy more about what you did for others than for yourself? We help you create memories that enlighten, encourage, surprise and even transform those who matter to you. So ask yourself: How will you be remembered? For more information, visit RalphBuckner.com 3000 Ralph Buckner Boulevard, NE Cleveland, TN 37311 423-472-1152 4—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Belk donates almost $5,000 to Prospect Elementary School By CHRISTY ARMSTRONG Banner Staff Writer Banner photo, LARRY C. BOWERS SCOUTING OFFICIALS from the Cherokee Council and Ocoee District of the Boys Scouts of America visited the Cleveland Kiwanis Club luncheon at the Elks Lodge on Thursday. Former Scouts met with the officials following the program including, from left, Hugh Walker, Kiwanis Lt. Gov. and program chairman Chris Newton, Shannon Ward of the Scouts, Bubba Smith, Ramone Torres, Adrian Hackett of the Scouts, and Larry Carpenter. Kiwanis Club gets update on Boy Scouting opportunities By LARRY C. BOWERS Banner Staff Writer Cleveland Kiwanis Club members received an update on Scouting in Southeast Tennessee at this week’s luncheon at the Elks Lodge. Adrian Hackett and Shannon Ward of the Cherokee Area Council and Ocoee District of the Boys Scouts of America were the guests. They acknowledged Kiwanis’ work with children organizations, and provided “a little bit” of information on Scouting. “Our goal,” said Hackett, “is to instill values and ethics in young people. We try to make a huge impact on kids.” Hackett said members of the Boy Scouts do some wonderful things. He told a story of a young man from Chattanooga, Lucas Masingo, who spent a whole (or gap) year in South America working with school groups. During his second semester, he worked entirely in Costa Rica, where he had traveled with his lacrosse team. “I get to see these stories on a regular basis,” said Hackett. “The kids learn to give something back.” Hackett said the Boy Scouts are very involved in activities in Cleveland and Bradley County. “We’ve launched a cooperative program (the Ardor Program) with Cleveland’s Boys and Girls Clubs,” he said. “This is a program where we find young men and enroll them in a manhood class.” “It is important to have a caring, male father figure in a young boy’s life,” Hackett emphasized in focusing on one aspect of the program. Hackett said he grew up in Scouting, and for years directed Boy Scout camps in New York and New Jersey. “We served wealthy and poor communities.” He told another story from one of the camps, which had a 90-acre lake. He said a Boy Scout Troop from the inner-city came to the camp one summer, and marveled at the lake. “One of the kids, a big kid, walked out on the dock and asked me how deep the lake was and if I could swim,” Hackett Said. “When I told him the lake was about seven feet, and yes, I could swim. “He jumped right in, and went straight to the bottom,” Hackett said. “He stayed there and looked up at me, until he realized he could no longer breathe. I then helped him out and asked why he did that.” He told Hackett the rest of the Troop needed to know that we would pull them out if they had trouble, and they wouldn’t drown. “I don’t know if that was insane or brilliant,” said Hackett. The Scout leader said the inner- city Troop came down to the lake every day during their stay, and took swimming lessons. He said some took their test over and over, (because they knew they wouldn’t drown). The visitors Thursday pointed out that the Ocoee District has 653 kids in 22 different units, separated in Cub and Boy Scout troops. Hackett said one of the highlights of Scouting is starting Explorer Posts at regional businesses. Scouting now has a Venturing Program, which is a spin-off from the Explorers. The Scouts conduct several programs in the region. They place a flag on every veteran’s grave on Flag Day. Charleston has a Flag Instruction Day. There’s the Ocoee Raft Race where kids make their own rafts, a chapel service after the Raft Race, flag retirement services, a Winter Camporee, the Pinewood Derby, and visits to the Cherokee National Forest. In closing, Hackett repeated an old saying which he themed to Scouting: “It’s easier to build strong children, than repair a broken man.” After his talk, Hackett was asked about the expense of becoming a Boy Scout. He said the membership fee is $24 per year, but the overall expense would probably be between $200 and $300 for the year. Greenway Community Services Day planned at park May 9 By JOYANNA LOVE Banner Senior Staff Writer Habitat for Humanity, Blood Assurance, the Cleveland/Bradley Health Department, ANDOR, (an outreach of the Boys & Girls Club for at-risk boys), The Refuge, American Red Cross, Cleveland EMS, Cleveland Police Department, CASA of Cleveland, the Cleveland Bradley County Public Library, Durkee Road Clinic and Unity Center. Organizations interested in participating should contact Reynolds at 423-618-9157. Friends of the Greenway was formed last year to raise finds to make the “Sitting Tall” (aka the Big Yellow Chair) sculpture a permanent fixture. It serves “to promote and publicize the Cleveland/Bradley County Greenway to generate awareness, goodwill, and support for the enrichment of our community,’ according to Reynolds. The committee sponsored a pumpkin-painting day on the Greenway last October as its first community event. I SEE BY THE BANNER The Bradley County Republican Party will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m., in the Bradley County Courthouse Commission meeting room. The guest speaker will be State Rep. Kevin Brooks. The topic will be the ongoing conversation concerning a property tax increase in Bradley County. Banner photo, CHRISTY ARMSTRONG PROSPECT ELEMENTARY SCHOOL Principal Steve Montgomery, right, accepts a nearly $5,000 donation from Chris Manning, the manager of the local Belk department store. Employees raised money for the school by inviting customers to donate. $5,000 “would buy a lot of cameras.” The school and the department store formed a relationship when store employees participated in the United Way of Bradley County’s Day of Action. When it had to choose a beneficiary for “Angel Days,” Belk selected the school where employees had volunteered to do landscaping and painting work and participated in a craft project with children. “We were just so blessed,” Montgomery said. He also expressed his thankfulness for the customers who chose to give. “I think that’s a testament to the community. The community that we live in — they’re so will- Mother’s Day is May 10th One Hundred Years of Growing Excellence 3355 S. LEE HWY. 472-1842 • F R U I T T R E E S • O R N A M E N TA L S • FLOWERING BUSHES • PERENNIALS • ANNUALS Make Your Selection For Mom Now! Help Us Show Our Appreciation for Larry’s Years of Hard Work and Dedication! Southern Heritage Bank invites our many friends and customers to join us in celebrating Larry McSpadden’s Retirement! Please help us thank Larry for his many years of exceptional commitment to Southern Heritage Bank and our Expect a Difference service! Larry McSpadden, Vice President - Business Development Wednesday, April 29, 2015 Main Banking Office 3020 Keith Street NW 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. 423-473-7980 SouthernHeritageBank.com www.westwoodlife.org Sunday, May 3, 2015 ing to give back,” Montgomery said. “Some of the customers who gave may not even have a child at Prospect.” Manning said the store is currently preparing for another charitable effort, its annual Charity Sale on May 2. Any local nonprofit organization can pick up free tickets for the sale, and customers with tickets are entitled to special discounts. Organizations are instructed to sell the tickets for $5 each, and they can keep 100 percent of the proceeds. Manning said many don’t know the tickets are free to the organizations, and the local store is encouraging more organizations to arrange to pick up tickets by calling 423-478-6300. Open House Celebration Worship Ministry Friends of the Greenway is teaming up with organizations in the community to host the linear park’s first Community Services Day. The event will be held on Saturday, May 9, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Agencies that serve the community will have tents set up along the Cleveland/Bradley County Greenway to provide fun activities. “We can highlight the fact that this is a linear park and at the same time tell the community all of the wonderful resources we have. We have a lot of wonderful community resources that nobody knows about,” said coordinator Missy Reynolds. “Our goal is for them to know more about them.” The rain date for the Greenway party is Monday, May 11, from 4 to 7 p.m. Family Cornerstones will be providing face painting. The Signal Center tent will have a container of birdseed for children to scoop and pour just like sand. "It's just a better alternative in an outdoor event than sand," said Monica Stone from Signal Centers. The flocks of the Greenway may get an early treat if some falls on the ground. Later, the birdseed can be utilized in birdfeeders. “Raj Yogimitra of Greenway Down Dog Yoga Community will lead participants in a yoga session. Kids of all ages will have the chance to put their hands and feet in watercolors and create yoga works of art on a large sheet,” Reynolds said. The GRAAB Coalition will have an exercise with a straw where children will feel similar effects to how a person who smokes has difficulty breathing, said Kelli Auberry. Jessica Moore of Family Promise said the organization plans on having a duct-tape bracelet making station. Several other organizations are still working on plans for their tents at the event. These include Cleveland’s Belk department store recently donated thousands of dollars to a local school. Manager Chris Manning recently presented Prospect Elementary School Principal Steve Montgomery with a check for $4,960.86. Manning said the money was raised by the store during the “Angel Days” sale during the most recent holiday shopping season. Each Belk location chose a charitable cause to support, and cashiers asked customers making purchases whether or not they wanted to donate. “This is one of the largest checks we’ve presented,” Manning said. Since the donation Belk gave was the result of their customers’ giving, the manager said those who shopped and gave deserve all the credit for the donation. He said the store just helped facilitate the giving. Montgomery said the donation will help the school make improvements to the security of Prospect Elementary’s campus. “We’re always trying to upgrade our safety,” he said. The school has a safety committee of teachers and staff who regularly discuss those upgrades. Montgomery said the money will go into a designated fund its members will use for the improvements. Among the items on the committee’s wishlist are new security cameras. He said the nearly 6:00 P.M. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—5 Sheriff issues scam warning; Suspects in check theft sought Tim Akins named as county deputy trustee Special to the Banner Bradley County Trustee Mike Smith has announced the promotion of Tim Akins to deputy trustee. Akins will be directly responsible for trustee support services and special projects. He will also be assisting Chief Deputy Trustee David Swallows in managing collections and numerous programs offered by the trustee’s office. “Tim has proven he has the ability to professionally manage different processes while maintaining the highest level of customer service,” Smith said. “Tim’s ability to manage major projects, staying within budget and meeting schedule restraints has proven to be invaluable. Tim’s promotion is well deserved.” Prior to joining the trustee’s office, Akins was employed by Eaton Corporation and M&M/Mars. He and his wife, Joy, have two daughters, Morgan and Madison. Hunter SHamblin poses with Trustee Mike Smith. Shamblin joins Trustee’s office as student intern Special to the Banner Bradley County Trustee Mike Smith has announced Hunter Shamblin is assisting the trustee’s office as a student intern. Shamblin is a student at Walker Valley High School. He is assisting the collection clerks and trustee in gathering information requested by residents and other governmental offices in addition to performing other duties. “Hunter is an intelligent young man who has an interest in gov- ernment operations,” Smith said. “His interest in local, state and national events will prepare him to serve Bradley County well in some capacity after he completes his education. I am proud to know we have local youth like Hunter comprising our future leadership.” Shamblin is involved in numerous activities at Walker Valley High, including being a member of the baseball team. He is the son of Joe and Erica Shamblin and the brother of Trapper. Lee’s Opera Theatre to perform at 3 today Lee University’s Opera Theatre will present various scenes from well-known operas on today at 3 p.m. in Squires Recital Hall, located in Lee’s Humanities Center. The program will include scenes from “Die Fledermaus,” “Don Pasquale” and “Così fan tutte,” among others. Opera Theatre began in the spring of 1998 as a workshop and has quickly grown into a production organization performing fully staged operas from both standard and less traditional repertoire. This free, nonticketed event is open to the public. Deputy AG responds to suit against school funding formula CHATTANOOGA (AP) — A deputy attorney general in Tennessee is urging the dismissal of a lawsuit aimed at the state’s public school funding formula. The suit claims the state doesn’t provide enough funding for numerous expenses. It was filed by seven county school districts, including Bradley County. A Chattanooga newspaper reports the state’s response was in a 32-page memorandum filed in Davidson County Chancery Court in Nashville. The state had until Friday to respond to the school systems’ suit. Deputy Attorney General Kevin Steiling says the lawsuit relies on a “profoundly flawed interpretation” of three successful previous lawsuits against Tennessee’s Basic Education Program. Steiling says the suit should be “dismissed in its entirety.” Scott Bennett, the attorney for the county school districts that filed the suit, declined to comment. CHURCH ACTIVITIES Jim Gibson, will be the speaker Tuesday at 7 a.m., for the His Hands Extended Ministries’ devotional at Garden Plaza. ——— Mercy Call will sing tonight at 6 at Rolling Brook Baptist Church. ——— The McKameys will sing at Ball Play Baptist Church in Old Fort Thursday at 7 p.m. No admission required. Call 706-483-1851 for information. ——— Jim Ricketts and Christle Elam will sing at Bethel Baptist Church on Old Chattanooga Pike at 6 tonight. By TONY EUBANK greenmtn.net “Free Estimates” Banner Staff Writer TN Charter #4759 Sheriff Eric Watson has issued a warning to Bradley County residents about yet another scam that has been reported. A resident voiced concerns that other people could become a victim of the hoax. The resident received a check in the mail for $4,450, the prize he received for winning the “UK & North America Customer Reward Sweepstakes.” The letter has instructions to call a phone number for details on paying the tax liability of $2,800. He realized it was a scam. Taxes attached to a legitimate prize would be deducted before it is awarded to the recipient. Sheriff Watson said the sheriff’s office receives calls reporting scams daily. Most people recognize them for what they are and are not taken in. Many scammers employ scare tactics by threatening imminent arrest unless a payment is made to a specified address. Residents are reminded by Sheriff Watson, “If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.” n Cleveland Police Department's Criminal Investigations Division is working a case where business checks were stolen from a business in Decatur. These stolen checks have been cashed in Cleveland and Collegedale. Police have provided still photos of four Latino male suspects who have cashed the checks at various banks. Based on video surveillance, it is believed the suspects are traveling together. Anyone with information on any of these suspects is urged to call Detective Matt Jenkins at 423-303-3134. ©2014 tim akins Green Mountain Termite & Pest Control 423-331-8461 FOur SuSPeCtS in the theft of checks from a Decatur business are shown as they cashed the checks at local banks. JEWELERS 1721 KEITH STREET • STUART PARK PLAZA( (Next to The Town Squire) 478-0049 • 478-0050 LAY-AWAYS WELCOME The Yarde House Adult Consignment Sale for Men & Women at the Old Woolen Mill (435 Church Street) Drop Off Dates & Times May 3rd - 1pm-6pm May 4th - 8am-6pm Open to the Public May 6th - 9am-7pm May 7th - 9am-7pm May 8th - 9am-7pm Specialty Shopping Hours May 5th - 6pm-6:30pm Volunteers will shop 30 min. early 6:30pm-9pm Consignors will shop Saturday, May 9th - 8am - 1pm Most items will be 50% off Consignors Pick Up May 10th - 8am-6pm Will accept seasonal clothing, tools, accessories, home decor, etc. Go to theyardehouse.com for a complete list of items that can/cannot be sold. You can register a prior consignment number or be issued one at theyardehouse@yahoo.com. Please supply your phone number, address and name to receive your number. The areas lowest priced funeral and cremation services. Direct Cremation 6WDUWLQJDW $449 $895 %XULDOV6WDUWLQJDW :HDUHKHUHWRVHUYH&OHYHODQG%UDGOH\ &RXQW\DQGWKHVXUURXQGLQJDUHD:HKRQRU all pre-need policies. Grissom Serenity Funeral Home & Cremation Services JULVVRPVHUHQLW\FRP 'LUHFW&UHPDWLRQWKLVFKDUJHLQFOXGHV&UHPDWRU\IHH&DUGERDUG&RQWDLQHU %DWHVYLOOH'RHVNLQ&DVNHW²5HPRYDORI5HPDLQV²7UDQVSRUWWR&HPHWHU\² %DVLF6HUYLFHVRI)XQHUDO'LUHFWRU²²3DFNDJH6DYLQJV² 6—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Blood Assurance’s ‘Hero Week’ begins on Monday By LARRY C. BOWERS Banner Staff Writer Blood Assurance, with a new location for its donor office in Cleveland, is planning two special events for the near future. The Southeast Tennessee agency, with headquarters in Chattanooga, has scheduled a special “Hero Week” Monday through May 2, where you can be a hero to a local patient. Blood Assurance has also scheduled a grand re-opening for its new donor center in the Village Green. The center recently moved from Keith Street, where it had been located for 26 years. The grand opening will be mostly a meet and greet, with refreshments on Thursday, May 21. It is also an opportunity to donate blood. “Hero Week” is the first, and biggest, of the two events. Cleveland and Bradley County residents are encouraged to become a hero for local area hospital patients by making a critical blood donation during the week. All donations will be sent to local hospitals, and could save at least three lives per donation. As a thank you for each donation, all heroes will receive a free movie ticket to the movie of their choice in celebration of the Marvel movie premiere of “The Avengers: Age of Ultron,” opening May 1. In response to the rising blood demand from the more than 75 regional health care facilities supported by Blood Assurance, the blood center aims to see 3,800 blood donors during Hero Week. More than 540 volunteer blood donors are needed every day in order to adequately supply these regional hospitals. In an effort to honor the community’s donor heroes, Blood Assurance is also commending various professional heroes within the area and calling on them to donate blood alongside the public on the following themed days. These days include Firefighter Monday, EMT Tuesday, Policeman Wednesday, Teacher Thursday and Military Friday. In addition to the six typicallyopened centers, Blood Assurance will be opening the doors to each of the organization’s 15 donor locations to close out Hero Week with Superhero Saturday. “It is easy to forget that the need for blood is constant. Whether it’s a local cancer patient or an accident victim,” said Charlie Callari, vice president of marketing and donor recruitment for Blood Assurance. “People are in continuous, critical need of blood donations,” “Hero Week is an initiative designed to help save lives and meet the growing demand of area hospitals, while also being able to honor donors who truly are our local patients’ heroes,” Callari added. According to America’s Blood Centers, every two seconds someone in the United States needs blood. To meet this widespread demand, area donors may donate every 56 days for a total of up to six times per year. Donating blood is an extremely safe process, with no possibility of disease transmission. All materials used to collect a pint of blood are new and used only once per donation, as well as being sterile and disposable. “Without our heroic donors, our organization would not be able to effectively help hundreds of suffering patients across our region each year,” said Adam Ellsworth, Northeast region marketing and donor recruitment manager for Blood Assurance. “We want to show our gratitude to these everyday heroes, whose simple sacrifice translates literally into added years of life for individuals and families who were in danger of losing it all.” To be eligible to donate blood, you must be at least 17 years old (16 years old with parental consent), weigh 110 pounds or more, and be in good health. Donors are asked to drink plenty of fluids — avoiding caffeine — and eat a meal that is rich in iron prior to donating. While donor appointments are not required, they are encouraged and may be completed at www.bloodassurance.org/appt. For more information on Blood Assurance, donating blood or hosting a blood drive, please visit www.bloodassurance.org or call 1-800-962-0628. ‘Old Fashioned’ creator, star to speak at Peerless Church Rik Swartzwelder wrote, spark of the idea to seeing the directed and starred in the film open in theaters nationrecord-breaking faith film “Old wide,” he said. “And dating culFashioned” that was released as ture changed quite a bit, even in that relatively short time an alternative to “Fifty span. What began as a Shades of Grey.” simple discussion Swartzwelder will between a few friends speak about the 10-year about never seeing a journey from concept to mainstream romantic release on Friday at film that even attempted Peerless Road Church in to tell our kind of perCleveland. sonal love stories evenThe night will also featually turned into an ture an exclusive screenindie film that, against ing of the independent drama with questions Swartzwelder all odds, found its way into movie houses and and answers from attentook the discussion to a leveldees. Swartzwelder’s appearance and sparked some debates-we kicks off the CREATE confer- could have never dreamed of.” The film made an impact, even ence, sponsored by the Communications department of outside of faith-based circles, in the Church of God of Prophecy, a part because of timing its release weekend dedicated to discover- to hit during same weekend as the highly anticipated and coning and celebrating talents. “Events like the CREATE con- troversial film adaptation of E.L. ference are a great chance for James’ “Fifty Shades of Grey.” like-minded folks to come togeth- Prior to the release, Hollywood er and collectively learn and publications such as Variety and grow as artists and also explore Hollywood Reporter noted the how to better harness the arts in “David vs. Goliath” strategy by ways that can uplift and inspire,” the filmmakers. The CREATE conference will Swartzwelder said. “It’s also about mutual also feature more than 20 workencouragement; the journey of shops in areas such as writing, creatives isn’t always an easy design, technical support, one, so it’s important to occa- music, drama, and more. On Saturday evening and sionally take the time to nurture others on the same road, and to Sunday morning, GrammyAward nominee Nicole C. Mullen be nurtured by them as well.” “Old Fashioned,” which earned will speak about songwriting nearly $2 million at the box and performing as well as being office, broke some records for a the special guest for the conferfaith-based drama and more ence’s last session on Sunday than earned back its modest pro- morning. For more information, visit duction and marketing budget. “It ended up being more than a www.createcon.org or call 42310-year journey from the first 559-5128. Banner photo, JOYANNA LOVE Banner photo, JOYANNA LOVE DR. DON ROBINSON demonstrates hands-only CPR at a recent KIM ENOCH of the American Heart Association presented at a meeting of the Rotary Club of Cleveland. recent meeting of the Rotary Club of Cleveland. Hands-only CPR can be life saver By JOYANNA LOVE Banner Senior Staff Writer Learning how to save a life was the recent agenda for the Rotary Club of Cleveland. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation can be the difference between survival of a heart attack and death. “Every 33 seconds, somebody dies from a heart attack,” said Kim Enoch of the American Heart Association. A person does not have to be certified in CPR to be able to save a life. Anyone who knows CPR can save a life. Enoch said as science has progressed, hands-only CPR has been developed for adults. “If you know hands-only CPR, you can increase their rate of survival by three times,” Enoch said. Unlike traditional CPR, it does not require breathing into the victim’s mouth. Hands-only CPR was developed for those who are not CPR certified, so they will not be so worried about the ratio of pushes to breaths that they do not even attempt CPR. “Typically, when someone goes down they take one last breath, so there is still some air in there, so even if we are just doing the minimum there is a little bit of air circulating,” Enoch said. Hands-only CPR also provides an option for those who want to help someone they think is in cardiac arrest, but do not want to perform mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. “One of the most crucial things about CPR is getting started with it quickly and calling 911,” said Dr. Don Robinson. Enoch said most people who have a heart attack have it while at home. The first step to see if someone needs CPR is to tap the person and ask if they are all right. If they are unresponsive and are gasping for breath, CPR is needed. Enoch said it is important to call 911 before starting CPR. “You want them on a hard surface, so if they are on a sofa or a bed you want to move them to the floor,” Enoch said. Robinson said if the building the person is in has an AED (automated external defibrillator), it should be retrieved by someone. He said the device will walk the person through what to do. AED devices are of great benefit when someone has a heart attack. The device delivers an electric shock that can stimulate the heart to begin beating again. Robinson said he would like to see every public place in Cleveland have an AED. To give hands-only CPR, one needs to kneel next to the person laying on the floor, then place the heel of one’s hand in the center of the person’s chest, placing the other hand on top. Then push down at least two inches. Handsonly CPR requires pushing hard and fast, pushing down two inches deep, at a rate of approximately 100 pushes in a minute. The presentation emphasized the importance of “allowing the chest to rise all the way after each push.” Any CPR can only be helpful to the patient. “Don’t be afraid of hurting the person. You might crack a rib, but better a cracked rib than a stopped heart,” Enoch said. “If the person doesn’t need CPR, when you start they’ll wake up and push you off.” Robinson said it was important for someone to keep their arms straight as they push during CPR. “That way you are using the weight of your body to push down,” Robinson said. He said because hands-only CPR is tiring, it is a good idea to switch with someone, if possible. CPR should be continued until an ambulance arrives. Robinson said child CPR does require breaths as does CPR for possible drowning victims. “Most child CPR is not due to a heart attack. It’s due to something in the lungs or some neurological event such as a seizure,” Robinson said. Good Samaritan Laws protect nonmedical personnel from being held responsible for anything that goes wrong while they are trying to save a life. Hands-only CPR kits are available from the American Heart Association. “The American Heart Association … is an organization that is dedicated to changing the culture to one of good heart health,” Enoch said. She said 80 percent of heart disease cases are preventable through diet and exercise choices. In Tennessee, high school students are required to have CPR training before graduation. Hungry Hearts Ministries ARE YOU HUNGRY? For worship in spirit & truth, the real Word from the Holy Bible, to live how Jesus lived? Join us on His Sabbath Day Saturday, May 2 • 11 a.m. Fairfield Inn and Suites, Ocoee Room 2815 Westside Dr. NW, Cleveland 731-736-1055 • hungryheartsmin@aol.com Knowing the time, meeting the need. $449 'LUHFW&UHPDWLRQ6WDUWLQJDW Grissom Serenity Funeral Home & Cremation Services JULVVRPVHUHQLW\FRP 'LUHFW&UHPDWLRQWKLVFKDUJHLQFOXGHV&UHPDWRU\IHH &DUGERDUG&RQWDLQHU It’s Time for Another Helping! Get Your Tickets and Join us to Sample All the Great Food Downtown Reuse the News Recycle this newspaper READY TO BUY YOUR DREAM HOME? Call the bank rated #1 in Customer Satisfaction,* and let us help you fulfill your dreams today. SUZY CAMPBELL Mortgage Loan Originator | NMLS# 501422 2525 KEITH STREET NW, CLEVELAND 423-339-5466 O ur Downtown has a great and diverse collection of eateries and Downtown Dine Around is an ideal opportunity to check them all out for one low price. Enjoy food samples at each participating location. Plus there will be live entertainment, free carriage rides and specials from many of the retail shops throughout downtown. This event has sold out in the past, so get your tickets early! It all happens Thursday, April 30, from 5 - 8 PM. Advance tickets are only $20. Tickets available at Bank of Cleveland, Catch and Café Roma. Apply online at ucms.ucbi.com/suzy-campbell MEMBER FDIC. ©2015 United Community Bank. United Community Bank NMLS ID# 421841. *As reported by Customer Service Profiles. MainStreet Cleveland: 479-1000 • mainstreetcleveland.com *$20 advance. $25 day of event. is Coming! April 30, 5-8 PM One Night. Ten Restaurants. Three Hours. All for Only $20. * Restaurants Include: • Bonlife Coffee , • Café Roma • Catch Bar & Grill • CBC - Cleveland • Cobblestone Grille • The Five Point Square • Mash & Hops • Mexi-Wings • Side Street Cafe • The Spot Visit These Retailers, too! • Haskell Interiors • Hyderhangout • Meagher & Meagher • Museum Store • Razzberry’z • The Red Ribbon • Steelwood Rustic Furniture • Town & Country Carriage Rides www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—7 Haslam signs bill to allow guns in all Tennessee parks NASHVILLE (AP) — Local governments in Tennessee can no longer bar people with handgun carry permits from bringing firearms to parks, playgrounds and sports fields under legislation signed Friday by Republican Gov. Bill Haslam. In a letter to the speakers of the House and Senate, Haslam said he remains concerned about potential unintended consequences for local leaders, but called the final version of the legislation a “vast improvement” from when it was first introduced. “The final version of the bill made clear that guns are not allowed at school-related activities taking place in parks,” Haslam said in the letter. Critics of the measure disagree, arguing that the language is still vague because it bans guns “within the immediate vicinity” of school activities, but does not define a specific distance. The law carries no exemptions for playgrounds, greenways or ball fields where no school activities are taking place. The bill was drafted as a welcome gift to the National Rifle Association’s annual convention in Nashville earlier this month. But lawmakers didn’t manage to pass it until the NRA had left town. Chris Cox, executive director of NRA’s lobbying arm, hailed the new law as a eliminating “a patchwork of laws throughout the state that could have turned law-abiding citizens into unintentional criminals.” Democrats have been vocal critics, arguing it would endanger children playing Little League games or climbing on jungle gyms. During the legislative debate, freshman Sen. Jeff Yarbro per- suaded colleagues in the upper chamber to add the state Capitol complex to the areas where handgun carry permit holders could be armed. The Nashville Democrat said his amendment highlighted what he called the “hypocrisy” of loosening gun restrictions near children, while keeping security in place around lawmakers. The House voted to strip that amendment from the bill. “The governor is right about the problems with this legislation, which takes power away from local governments and creates unnecessary confusion for schools, parents and gun owners alike,” Yarbro said in an email. “I would have thought those problems would warrant a veto.” A 2009 law allowing guns in Tennessee parks included an optout provision for city and county governments. More than 70 com- munities initially decided to keep their gun bans in place — including in Knoxville, where thenmayor Haslam presided over a 2009 city council vote that preserved a handgun ban in some of the city’s parks. Haslam in his letter said he’s still concerned about local control and security issues. “Some of the most sensitive situations state and local leaders must consider are those activities involving school children,” he said. It only takes a majority of both chambers to override a veto. That hasn’t happened with any of Haslam’s previous three vetoes. But lawmakers twice overturned vetoes by then-Gov. Phil Bredesen of legislation to allow permit holders to be armed in bars and restaurants that serve alcohol. Republican Rep. Curry Todd of Collierville was the chief sponsor of the guns-in-bars legislation and led the veto overrides of 2009 and 2010, arguing that that the measure gave “law abiding citizens in this state a right to protect themselves.” Todd, who was also heavily involved in this year’s guns-inparks legislation, pleaded guilty to drunken driving and gun charges after a 2011 traffic stop in which he failing roadside sobriety test and police found a loaded .38-caliber gun stuffed next to the driver’s seat. Kathleen Chandler Wright, the head of the Tennessee chapter of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense said she’s disappointed with Haslam’s decision. “Moms across the state drew a line in the sandbox and urged legislators and Governor Haslam to reject this dangerous bill,” she said. “And now parents will be left wondering whether the person standing next to their child on the swing set is carrying a concealed, loaded weapon.” Haslam told reporters that he will keep an eye on the new law’s effects. Banner photos, LARRY C. BOWERS THE RAIDER RUN was held Saturday morning at Yates Primary School. Participation was limited due to threatening weather. The event was sponsored by the school’s staff and Parent-Teacher Organization to raise funds to upgrade the playground, shown below. A 5K run and a Fun Run for kids was scheduled. Obama uses hospital funds to push Medicaid expansion MIAMI (AP) — The Obama administration is dialing up the pressure on a handful of states that have resisted expanding Medicaid coverage for their lowincome residents under the federal health care overhaul. The leverage comes from a little-known federal fund that helps states and hospitals recoup some of the cost of caring for uninsured patients. The administration says states can just expand Medicaid, as the health care law provides, and then they wouldn’t need as much extra help with costs for the uninsured. Two top targets so far are Florida and Texas, with large numbers of uninsured residents. Both have received several billion dollars in recent years from Washington under the so-called low income pool, also known as LIP. Florida’s hospital funding is the first of the nine states — which include Tennessee, California, Massachusetts, Arizona, Hawaii, Kansas and New Mexico — to expire on June 30. But the hospital funds are an optional program, not entitlement programs like Medicaid, meaning the federal government has broad discretion whether to grant them, experts say. “There’s no doubt that other states that haven’t expanded Medicaid are watching this,” said Joan Alker, Alker, executive director of the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families. Hospitals say even with the low-income pool funds, it still doesn’t cover their costs for caring for uninsured and Medicaid patients. Several hospitals have said they would be forced to cut services or shut down without the funding. Alker said she didn’t think the federal government would immediately drop funding to zero, even for states that don’t expand Medicaid. But the political standoff between some GOP states and the feds has left hospitals anxious. Federal health officials publicly said for the first time last week that Medicaid expansion should be linked to any discussion on extending the hospital funds. Spokesman Aaron Albright with the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said that the agency sent Florida officials a letter detailing “key principals” the agency will use in considering proposals regarding uncompensated care pool programs in the states. “Discussions with each state will also take into account state specific circumstances,” he added. Negotiations are playing out much the same as the rest of the Affordable Care Act, with Republicans crying federal overreach and threatening lawsuits as the Obama administration pursues its goal of getting health insurance to more Americans. Florida Gov. Rick Scott likened the administration to something out of the fictional TV mobster drama The Sopranos and said last week he plans to file a lawsuit, alleging the federal government is using the federal funds to coerce him into expanding Medicaid. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott was quick to defend Scott. “Texas will support Florida in its litigation against the federal government. Medicaid expansion is wrong for Texas. Florida’s approach should be determined by Floridians, not coerced by federal bureaucrats,” Abbott said. Federal health officials have warned states for more than a year that the low income pool program was ending. But a Supreme Court decision allowing states to decide whether or not to expand Medicaid has complicated the hospital funds issue. “The federal government is trying to use the LIP money to encourage states to expand. Whether you feel like that’s coercion or that’s encouragement is in the eye of the beholder,” said Dan Mendelson, CEO of the market research firm Avalere Health. Terms of the agreements between the federal government and the states vary widely, including when they expire and how much funding each state receives. BELK.COM charity PRIVATE TICKETED EVENT* 4 hours only! Saturday, May 2, 6–10am sale Buy your $5 ticket in store up to the day of the event or at the door on Saturday! belk.com/charitysale A morning of special savings to benefit local charities and schools. 15-70 off % $ off storewide, including special savings on your first purchase** RARELY DISCOUNTED BRANDS Saturday, May 2, 6-10am when you present your Charity Sale ticket to your sales associate. No cash back. Ticket needed to shop 6-10 a.m. Not valid by phone or on Belk.com. Excludes Everyday Values. VERY LIMITED EXCLUSIONS Earn FREE gift card valued from $5-$1000 to the first 100 customers in each store Saturday, May 2!*** ** See below for details y harit c sale ard gift c 5x Points† ON COSMETICS & FRAGRANCE PURCHASES 6-10am Saturday with your Belk Rewards card. In store only. †Subject to credit approval. Excludes all gift cards, non-merchandise & leased departments save % 75 & more CLEARANCE WHEN YOU TAKE AN EXTRA 50% OFF THE CURRENT TICKET PRICE** **Limited exclusions in Brighton, Eileen Fisher, Lilly Pulitzer, My Flat in London, Resort, Bridge Collection, Levi’s, Coach, designer and Michael Kors handbags, designer sunglasses and junior denim. Juniors total savings are 70-80% off. Fashion Accessories, Handbags, Small Leather Goods, Hosiery, Shoes, Ralph Lauren Kids, Home Store and Men’s Tailored Clothing total savings are 60-75%. COUPONS NOT VALID ON RED DOT. Earn Free sample Saturday, May 2 Only Customers will receive a free 7ml sample of Enlighten Dark Spot Correcting Night Serum with your consultation. Throughout the store † Saturday, May 2 D DoublePoints T TriplePoints† One per customer while supplies last. Earn Double Points with your Belk Rewards or Premier Card. Triple Points with your Elite Card. †Subject to credit approval. Excludes all gift cards, non-merchandise & leased depts. *$5 tickets on sale at the door. Must purchase ticket to shop special sale hours. **$5 Discount on your first regular, sale or clearance purchase, including Cosmetics & Fragrances. Excludes Breville, Brighton, Vitamix, Ugg, Under Armour and Salon Services. Not valid on phone orders or on belk.com. No cash back. Contact your store for a list of charities. All ticket proceeds benefit your favorite participating local charities. All unclaimed money from the sale of Charity Sale tickets will be donated to a charity of Belk’s choice after 90 days. Limit one $5 discount per customer. ***100 Belk gift cards per store valued anywhere from $5 to $1000 will be given away. One lucky person per Belk Division (for a total of 3 winners) will walk away with a gift card worth $1000. No purchase necessary. One per adult customer, while supplies last. Not valid by phone or on Belk.com. See a sales associate for details. Connect with us for special offers and promotions at Belk.com/getconnected 8—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com HCI From Page 1 over time.” Even though that is in the signed agreement, the state comptroller is saying the county cannot invest in this manner. “Any monies generated by the investment of these funds shall be used to benefit the citizens of Bradley County in the following areas: health care, wellness and quality of life,” the agreement reads. “Special emphasis shall be placed on ‘quality of life’ aspects of this charge.” The United Way of Bradley County also agreed to similar terms with no principal being spent and 15 percent of all interest being reinvested. That organization agreed to perform needs assesments related to the three areas specified with distribution of the interest decided by a “fund distribution panel” comprised of interested residents. The agreement also specifically defines the three areas the monies are to benefit: n Health care — programs or projects that have the purpose of serving unmet healthcare needs within the community regardless of the ability to pay. n Wellness — supporting programs or projects that have the purpose of educating the community in the physical and mental aspects of maintaining and improving one’s health. n Quality of life — programs or services that enhance or improve the physical and mental health of the residents of Bradley County. The agreement states any uses of the funds outside the scope of those three definitions would require the approval of the Chancery Court. It also states if either the United Way or the County Commission believe the other is not using the funds in a designated manner, either can make a request of the court that the funds be used appropriately. Should that not occur, the party in error would have to give up their portion of the proceeds and interest to the other. So, the county got a check for $15 million and United Way got a check for $19.7 million. United Way has now increased its funds to more than $26 million as it is able to use open financial markets for investments. It has also disbursed $3.8 million in grants to various county projects. The county, however, has some investment restrictions as a government entity. Those restrictions allowing it to use only the following types of investments: bonds, notes or treasury bills; deposits in state and federally chartered banks and savings and loan associations that are properly secured; and obligations of the United States or its agencies under a repurchase agreement for a shorter time than the maturity date of the security itself. That was all because when the monies hit the county’s treasury, they were considered “idle funds” and, by law, must be maintained in no-risk investments. The funds were under the county mayor’s office from 2005 through 2009 when it earned $2.52 million. This was done by investments in Mississippi bonds and, with a market doing well, was netting around 5 percent interest. Property for the ball park on Minnis Road was purchased for $923,104 and another $190,000 funded grants through the Healthy Community Initiative program. There was soon to be another commitment placed on those funds for the county. On April 3, 2007, the County Commission approved a recommendation from the Finance Committee for a 20-year, $1.8 million bond issue to support a $4.9 million expansion/renovation project at the Cleveland Public Library. By their action on an 11-2 vote (one absent), the Commission voted to make the projected annual $145,000 payment on the bond issue. Approval was subject to Bradley County Attorney Robert Thompson determining the library project was a “quality of life” issue, as required for hospital revenue. It also depended on the City of Cleveland providing a matching amount of $1.8 million. A few commissioners were not completely comfortable with the decision. Does building expansion and renovation qualify as a “program or service”? During that meeting, Commissioner Howard Thompson said the recommendation should have come from the county’s Wellness Committee (since it involves hospital money). Connie Wilson, then-chair of the Finance Committee, said there had been no appointments to the Wellness Committee. Commissioner Jim Smith said he felt the Commission set a precedent when it voted to use hospital revenue to purchase property on Minnis Road for a Parks and Recreation complex. Smith and Thompson expressed their opinion that “there are going to be many other requests for hospital interest money.” Thompson and Smith were the only two votes in opposition to the provision of funding for the library expansion. Although the strict definition of “quality of life” in the original agreement does not suggest the use of the funds were for capital projects, no challenge to the use of the funds for the Minnis Road park or the library bond was ever submitted. The day after the bond funding was approved by the Commission, the county trustee learned of the decision to use those funds for the library bond. “I actually learned about it when I read the Banner,” said County Trustee Mike Smith. Smith said he told commissioners at the time it was not a good idea to pin a continuing expense to funds which have fluctuating values. “I think that decision is why we are now at a critical stage with the funds,” Smith said. Payments on the library bond totalled almost $49,000 for the fiscal years 2008 and 2009. The next major change for the HCI monies came on Aug. 19, 2009. On that day, the funds were placed under the control of the county trustee’s office. County Mayor D. Gary Davis said his rationale for making the move was because it is the trustee’s job to enact those types of transactions on the county’s behalf. “I came to the conclusion it was really the legal responsibility of the county trustee to invest county funds,” Davis recently told the Daily Banner. “If you look up the job description of the trustee, it is to collect taxes and invest funds. Even though we had been doing it for a two- or three-year period, it was sort of beyond my job description. It was more appropriately placed in the trustee’s office. The Finance Committee agreed and ultimately that was the action taken.” The trustee took custody of $16,359,157.86 — just as the market and the economy were about to hit a bad time. Interest rates plummeted and have stayed flat hovering around 1 percent. The pattern can be seen by the decreasing amount of grants that have been awarded since 2009. Those include: 2009 Grant Awards Habitat for Humanity, $15,000. Bradley Cleveland Services, $34,600. The Caring Place, $6,840. Tri-State Therapeutic Riding Center, $15,000. North Lee Elementary School, $5,700. Bradley County Public Water Fund, $35,000. Bradley County EMS, $8,700. Cleveland/Bradley County Greenway, $50,000. Prospect Elementary School, $20,000 Total Award: $190,840 2010 Grant Awards Black Fox Elementary School, $20,000.00. Bradley County Emergency Medical Service, $30,598.79. Bradley County Farmers Market, $5,000.00. Cleveland Civitan Club, $5,000.00. Family Promise of Bradley County, $4,200.00. Lake Forest Middle School, $5,000.00. Michigan Avenue Elementary School, $8,461.00. People for Care and Learning, $6,299.00. Taylor Elementary School, $12,500.00. Valley View Elementary School, $14,950.00. Waterville Community Elementary School, $23,000.00. Total Award: $135,008.79 2011 Grant Awards Bradley County EMS, $30,598. Bradley County Schools, $19,550. Cleveland Civitan Club, $45,000. Habitat for Humanity, $25,000. Veterans Home, $60,000. Total Award: $180,148 2012 Grant Awards Bradley County EMS, $25,500. Charleston-Calhoun-Hiwassee Historical Society, $23,700. Cleveland/Bradley County Greenway, $35,500 Bradley County Farmers Market North, $4,750 Prospect Elementary School, $3,000 Total Award: $92,450 2013 Grant Awards Boys & Girls Club , $30,000 Life Bridges, $12,000 Veterans Home, $50,000 Total Award: $92,000 Since the funds have been under the limited investment powers of the county, the balance has increased $309,000 while the amount of HCI grants awarded by the county has totaled $690,446 over a period of five years. During the same period, the United Way-managed portion of the funds have risen in value by $7 million and the fund has also distributed $3.8 million — effectively outdistancing the county portion by roughly $10 million due to the investment constraints placed on the trustee by the state of Tennessee. For the 2015 year, United Way will allocate $998,235 in grants for projects and programs throughout the county. The county HCI Committee would have $5,363 to allocate for the same year — an amount so small the committee recently discussed the possibility of establishing “mini grants.” During 2014, the county’s HCI funds acquired $109,093 in interest. In accordance with the original agreement, 15 percent — $16,364 — had to be repaid into the fund to help grow the principal. That left $92,729 to distribute. From that amount, a library bond payment of $89,000 was paid, leaving a balance of $3,729. With the addition of funds that were left over when the bond variable rate was less than what was budgeted, it gave the HCI Committee the $5,363 total for 2015 grant distributions. County Commission recently froze those funds from being granted, because they were so limited. A new idea was presented late last year when the Community Foundation of Cleveland and Bradley County stepped up and said they could do better. The Community Foundation of Cleveland and Bradley County was formed as a 501(c)(3) organization in 2009, as a way to “strengthen and enrich the community through engaged philanthropy that serves donors, builds permanent endowments, promotes effective grant making and stimulates community collaborations.” It currently manages four donor advised funds, a project fund and a scholarship fund. The foundation proposed to convert the HCI funds to a donoradvised fund. The fund, according to the foundation, would allow the asset to be managed and invested by the foundation and allow the county to be involved in the grantmaking process. The foundation said it was the only local foundation that is set up to provide such an option. It proposed setting up a longterm spending rate goal in the 4.5 to 5 percent range, but would recommend a lower spending rate in the initial three years to give the assets time to be invested longer. The county’s current commitment to fund the library bond as well as any other commitments would have remained in place under the Foundation’s proposal. The Cleveland State Foundation also presented a proposal, but County Commission tabled the idea on March 16. There were two major reasons the Foundation idea stalled. Commissioners either expressed an unwillingness “to let go of taxpayer money” or wanted a more definitive answer to the question as to whether the HCI monies could be classified as something other than “idle funds,” which places the investment restrictions on them. At that meeting, Commissioner Bill Winters noted the letter with the state comptroller’s opinion saying they were “idle funds” also said “we could go to other areas.” Commissioner Terry Caywood asked if that idea could be carried out — namely a meeting with the state attorney general. “At [Commission’s] direction, I requested the opinion on the funds from the comptroller,” said Freiberg. “Clearly and unequivocally it said those are ‘idle funds,’ in their opinion.” She referenced the opinion’s final statement which was suggesting “if you want to go further with this with more questions, go to the attorney general.” “I don’t see there will be a difference in opinions,” Freiberg said. That meeting is going to happen Tuesday, but it will now involve a new twist — the idea of the county borrowing against the HCI funds. Smith said investing in municipal bonds is an authorized investment for Tennessee counties. Counties are allowed to make short-term loans to themselves using idle funds for a period of two years. But the question of using the hospital funds as collateral is something new. And the uses of the money are spelled out in the court judgment. “Bradley County will not be asking for a new designation of the idle funds [Healthy Community Initiative funds],” Smith said. “Due to the uniqueness of the hospital funds, we will be asking for an extension of the two-year term to a 20-year term, due to the fact these funds cannot be used for the dayto-day operation of county government.” Smith described how the process would work. “Once a year I will submit a bill to the county mayor for payment. The county will receive 100 percent of the annual payments, which will be split into 85 percent of the interest into the HCI fund and 15 percent plus principal [into] the hospital fund account. At that point, I would be able to reinvest that amount back into the market,” he said. “Today, we’re getting $81,600 in interest at the .060 rate,” Smith said. “One percent the first year after the 15 percent is reduced is going to be $136,000. After paying the library bond, that would leave almost $50,000 for HCI grants.” The trustee told the Banner his options are limited and the effort was worth a try. “My job is to maximize the investments of the county taxpayers’ money,” Smith said. “I don’t know if this will get a positive response from Nashville or not. There has never been a one-on-one meeting about this. There is no other situation like this in the state. We are the only ones. I am hoping we can show the uniqueness of this.” Even if the attorney general approves using the fund as collateral or a loan fund to the county — two uses not included in the original agreements — the HCI grants would still be almost a million dollars a year less than the foundation-managed portion of the funds and be stuck at that point for 20 years. (To view documents related to the sale of Bradley Memorial Hospital and the agreements reached by the hospital, the United Way and the county, visit the Cleveland Daily Banner web site at www.clevelandbanner.com.) Banner photo, JOYANNA LOVE THIS PAINTING is a part of the Empowering Women event online auction. Banner photo, JOYANNA LOVE THESE ITEMS are a samping of what is available through the Empowering Women event auction raising funds for the local Boys & Girls Clubs. Women From Page 1 past winners and local Boys & Girls Clubs board members. Winners are selected based on the woman’s display of empowerment, public service to their community, demonstration as a community leader with high moral standards and ethics, has overcome obstacles and puts her family first. “It benefits our girls in seeing they have opportunities beyond the Boys & Girls Clubs and that they can embrace a career like many of the women who are involved that are being recognized for being a CEO of a company or some form or fashion of leadership in our community,” Boys & Girls Clubs of Cleveland executive director Charlie Sutton said. “What we want our kids to do is to grow up and become great citizens, great leaders. How do they do that? They do that by getting a different glimpse of life than maybe they are accustomed to.” Students from local Boys & Girls Clubs will provide the entertainment by featuring their talents in singing and dancing. Notable athlete Jackie Joyner-Kersee, world record holder for the heptathlon, will be the guest speaker. JoynerKersee attended her local Boys & Girls Clubs as a child. The Empowering Women gala will be held at 6 p.m. on May 7 at the Cleveland Country Club. Tickets are still available, but are going fast. Organizing committee member Jenny Card said the event is open to “everyone not just women.” Individual tickets are available for $150. The deadline for purchasing is May 1. For more information, call 423-902-3402. Sutton said the Empowering Women event is all about girls seeing what others have accomplished and developing confidence that they can do that also He said many students in the clubs are from families “where the income is less than $10,000 a year.” “I don’t think there is a better time than right know for us to address issues that girls are facing,” Sutton said. “The gaps between lower class America and middle class America is still growing and our opportunity to change that picture for those kids is right now.” Funds raised during the event will ensure the local clubs can continue providing positive experiences, role models and mentors to community youth. Garden From Page 1 in the community association and want to do community garden stuff. We feel it is a way to both help the body and soul of the community,” Tommey said. Kim Lorello, who serves as Blythe-Oldfield Community Association president, is one such person. She said wherever she has lived, she’s always had plants or a garden somewhere. “We are growing the heart of the community,” Lorello said. She already has hopes and beginning plans for activities such as free yoga classes and art days in the garden. Having hospice patients and the Boys & Girls Clubs come to the garden has been discussed. Lorello also hopes to have animal days once a month, so local children will have an opportunity to see and pet farm animals. THE FENCE for the Blythe Oldfield Community Garden nears completion. Community partnerships contributed to a recent successful groundbreaking at the site. Lowe’s home improvement store donated some vinyl fencing, and Publix employees donated time as part of the company’s Publix Serves day in addition to buying wooden fence materials for the site. Alex Starling, Cleveland Publix store manager, said the project had been selected from a list of suggestions from United Way. Plans for the site call for an entrance large enough for vehicles and a smaller entrance opening to a small sitting area. “We envision parts of this to be raised beds, part of it things that we are going to grow a ton of to do rows of those,” Tommey said. Community members will also have opportunities to lease the Banner photo, JOYANNA LOVE raise beds for personal use, Tommey said. Specific layout and other details are still being worked out. Lorello said the ultimate goal is to have the garden be handicap accessible. The community’s first major gathering in the new garden will be on May 9 for a yard sale/ bake sale to raise funds for continued projects at the garden. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—9 REGIONAL BRIEFS 7-foot bear breaks out of Ellijay garage ELLIJAY, Ga. (AP) — A 7-foot bear that accidentally got stuck in a North Georgia garage clawed its way out a window as a resident watched. Teresa Ariail told WSB-TV the bear finally broke its way through her garage door window in Ellijay and climbed out Tuesday night. She took video of the incident while holding a shotgun in one hand and her cellphone in the other. The bear apparently entered the garage through a side door seeking food in a trash bin. While rooting around, the bear accidentally closed the door and locked itself inside. State wildlife officials said bears are rousing from their annual hibernation. They recommend that residents keep food and garbage locked away. Land Between the Lakes prepares for public meetings GOLDEN POND, Ky. (AP) — The U.S. Forest Service is preparing for a series of public hearings next month over logging and management plans at Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area. The meetings come on the heels of the federal agency halting new timber sales projects after several months of public outcry. Forestry officials told the Murray Ledger & Times that logging and burning, which also has raised concerns, are tools the agency is using to improve the health of the woodland areas. Land Between the Lakes spokeswoman Jan Bush blames much of the opposition on bad communication between federal officials and local residents. She said officials at Lake Between the Lakes are looking forward to improving communication with surrounding residents. Local leaders have been lobbying the forest service to focus on preserving the area's old growth hardwood forests and to stop logging and burning hundreds of acres to create oak grasslands. Bush said the recent logging and prescribed burning at Demumbers and Pisgah bays is simply part of a clean-up project to remove loblolly pines that were damaged in a 2009 ice storm. But people opposed to the logging have expressed concerns that the operation is part of a landscaping plan that was proposed in 2014 but never approved. That proposal called for returning much of the recreation area to barrens, oak grasslands savannas and opencanopy woods. Man sentenced to 20 years in musician's death NASHVILLE (AP) — A man convicted in the shooting death of country musician Wayne Mills has been sentenced to 20 years in prison by a Nashville judge. The Tennessean reports Chris Ferrell will not be eligible for any reduction of the 20-year term given by Criminal Court Judge Steve Dozier on Friday. Ferrell shot Mills in 2013 after a concert. The two had been drinking with others at Ferrell's nowdefunct downtown bar. Court testimony showed they began fighting about Mills smoking inside the bar and Mills threatened to kill Ferrell. Ferrell grabbed a gun from the bar and fired three shots. One round hit Mills in the back of the head. A jury convicted Ferrell of second-degree murder. Judge: Memphis mom was insane when she killed 2 sons MEMPHIS (AP) — A Memphis mother who claimed evil voices told her to kill her two young sons was insane when she fatally stabbed them in a home in 2013, a judge ruled Friday. Jamina Briggs, 31, was found not guilty by reason of insanity in the deaths of her sons, 6-year-old Nicholas and 1-year-old Jeremiah, by Shelby County Criminal Court Judge Glenn Wright. The judge set a May 27 hearing to determine if Briggs should be committed to a psychiatric facility. Court records show Briggs called 911 on July 31, 2013, saying she had stabbed her children. She told the operator she suffered from paranoid schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Officers recovered a 9-inch steak knife with what appeared to be blood on it. Blood also was found in the living room, kitchen and bathroom. A medical examiner ruled Nicholas suffered eight stab wounds and Jeremiah four. Records show Briggs had told relatives she had heard "evil" voices and, on the day of the stabbings, the voices told her to "go on and do it ... get rid of them." Briggs reported she first tried to suffocate the children but that method didn't work. Indiana fugitive dies in gunfight with Tennessee deputies LIVINGSTON (AP) — Police say a man wanted by Indiana police has died in Tennessee after exchanging gunfire with deputies. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation told media it appears Shane David Townsley died from a gunshot wound, but it wasn't clear whether it was from a deputy's gun. Police say the death occurred Thursday in Overton County, which is about 90 miles northeast of Nashville, after a chase involving gunfire. TBI officials said an Overton County Sheriff's deputy was attempting a traffic stop on the vehicle Townsley was driving when he opened fire and fled. The deputy pursued and called for backup. After more gunfire was exchanged, police say Townsley crashed in a ravine. Police said he was wanted on felony warrants in Indiana, but had family in Overton County. In Lafayette, Indiana, police Detective Lt. Brad Hayworth said at a news conference Friday that the 34-year-old Townsley was the only suspect in the shooting death of 32-year-old Wesley Ehrie. Hayworth said Townsley was a resident of Flora, a town 20 miles northeast of Lafayette in north central Indiana. Hayworth said Ehrie died Tuesday at a Lafayette home in a shooting stemming from a dispute over a television. Indiana State Police Sgt. Kim Riley told the Lafayette Journal & Courier that Townsley also was wanted in connection with an April 12 burglary in the nearby Benton County town of Oxford. A homeowner there was shot in the leg while trying to defend himself and his wife from intruders. Hayworth said Tennessee authorities were attempting to execute a Benton County warrant to apprehend Townsley when the fatal shootout ensued. Woodbury Police chief arrested, faces federal charges NASHVILLE (AP) — Woodbury Police Chief Kevin Mooneyham has been arrested after a federal grand jury charged him with theft and wire fraud. David Rivera, the U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee, announced on Friday that the 47-year-old chief is accused of stealing federal grant money that was supposed to pay for DUI enforcement. INTRODUCING AMAZING HELP FOR DENTURE WEARERS Cleveland’s lifestyle neighborhood is a great place to Live. Work. Shop. Dine. Spring Creek Commons features over 44 parcels. To date, 18 beauful homes ranging from 1600 to over 4000 sq. . , are located in the Residenal Commons. Rose Hill features lots for smaller, coage type homes, geared to one level living. Spring Creek Cove is the newest addion with larger, wooded lots, offering spacious plats for larger homes. At DR. J. 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(423) 476-2140 Www.springcreekinfo.com 10—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com U.S. unveils six-year-old report on NSA surveillance WASHINGTON (AP) — With debate gearing up over the coming expiration of the Patriot Act surveillance law, the Obama administration on Saturday unveiled a 6-year-old report examining the once-secret program to collect information on Americans’ calls and emails. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence publicly released the redacted report following a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit by the New York Times. The basics of the National Security Agency program had already been declassified, but the lengthy report includes some new details about the secrecy surrounding it. President George W. Bush authorized the “President’s Surveillance Program” in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. The review was completed in July 2009 by inspectors general from the Justice Department, Pentagon, CIA, NSA and Office of the Director of National Intelligence. They found that while many senior intelligence officials believe the program filled a gap by increasing access to international communications, others including FBI agents, CIA analysts and managers “had difficulty evaluating the precise contribution of the PSP to counterterrorism efforts because it was most often viewed as one source among many available analytic and intelligencegathering tools in these efforts.” Critics of the phone records program, which allows the NSA to hunt for communications between terrorists abroad and U.S. residents, argue it has not proven to be an effective counterterrorism tool. They also say an intelligence agency has no business possess- After the program was disclosed in 2013 by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, President Barack Obama and many lawmakers called for legislation to end that collection, but a bill to do so failed last year. Proponents had hoped that the expiration of the Patriot Act provisions on June 1 would force consideration of such a measure. A bipartisan group of House members has been working on such legislation, dubbed the USA Freedom Act. White House press secretary Josh Earnest said Friday that Obama is pleased the efforts are restarting in the House. “Hopefully, the next place where Democrats and Republicans will turn their attention and try to work together is on this issue of putting in place important reforms to the Patriot Act,” Earnest said. If no legislation is passed, the Patriot Act provisions would expire. That would affect not only the NSA surveillance but other programs used by the FBI to investigate domestic crimes, which puts considerable pressure on lawmakers to pass some sort of extension. Each death in Baltimore makes mistrust harder to overcome 2 nuke launch officers face illegal drug charges WASHINGTON (AP) — Two more Air Force nuclear missile launch officers have been charged with illegal drug use in cases stemming from an investigation that led to the disclosure last year of a separate exam-cheating scandal, the Air Force said Friday. 1st Lt. Michael Alonso and 1st Lt. Lantz Balthazar, both members of the 12th Missile Squadron at the 341st Missile Wing at Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana, face hearings to determine whether they will be courtmartialed. One of their fellow missile officers who was a target of the same investigation pleaded guilty to illegal drug use in January and was kicked out of the Air Force. The Malmstrom missile wing operates 150 of the Air Force’s 450 Minuteman 3 intercontinental ballistic missiles, or ICBMs. Launch officers are trained to operate ICBMs that are armed with nuclear warheads and are on constant alert for possible launch. Alonso was charged with violations of the Uniform Code of Military Justice for illegal possession, use and distribution of ecstasy and for “conspiracy related to the drug offenses,” according to Malmstrom spokesman Josh Aycock. Balthazar was charged with illegal possession, use and distribution of ecstasy and cocaine and for conspiracy related to the drug offenses. He also was charged with illegal use of Pentedrone, which Aycock said is commonly called bath salts. Both officers were charged April 17. Aycock said their cases will be reviewed at Article 32 hearings, which are akin to a civilian grand jury proceeding, to determine whether there is enough criminal evidence to warrant a court-martial. The hearings have not been scheduled, Aycock said. Alonso and Balthazar were among three Minuteman 3 launch officers at Malmstrom who were under investigation for illegal drug use. The other, 2nd Lt. Nicole Dalmazzi, was charged in December and court-martialed in January. Dalmazzi, a member of the same squadron, pleaded guilty to illegal use of ecstasy and was dismissed from the Air Force and sentenced to a month of confinement in a Montana jail. The Air Force had also charged her with obstructing the Air Force Office of Special Investigations probe by allegedly dyeing her hair to alter the results of hair-follicle drug tests, but that charge was later dropped. The cases at Malmstrom stem from a drug investigation that began in August 2013 at Edwards Air Force Base in California. When investigators examined the cellphones of two airmen at Edwards they found text messages to or from 11 other Air Force officers at several other air bases, including Malmstrom. The messages allegedly detailed specific illegal drug use and led to the discovery that some had also improperly exchanged answers to ICBM launch officer proficiency tests. ing the deeply personal records of Americans. Many favor a system under which the NSA can obtain court orders to query records held by the phone companies. The Patriot Act expires on June 1, and Senate Republicans have introduced a bill that would allow continued collection of call records of nearly every American. The legislation would reauthorize sections of the Patriot Act, including the provision under which the NSA requires phone companies to turn over the “to and from” records of most domestic landline calls. AP Photo Visiting imAm Muhammad Adeyinka Mendes delivers his sermon before prayers in the mosque at the Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center Friday in Boston. On Friday, the Boston mosque held an open house themed “Still Boston Strong.” Organizers stressed that Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev and other convicted terrorists are not representative of their faith communities. Marathon bomber trial puts focus on Boston Muslims BOSTON (AP) — Boston’s Muslim community has been once again thrust into the spotlight as the death penalty trial of convicted marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev nears its conclusion amid rising concerns of terrorist recruitment in America. Newspaper op-eds, advertisements and social media posts have highlighted connections between Boston-area mosques and terrorists and suspected terrorists, despite efforts locally to denounce them. Tsarnaev, who grew up in nearby Cambridge, occasionally prayed at the neighborhood mosque with his now-dead older brother and accomplice, Tamerlan Tsarnaev. Boston is also one of three cities — along with Los Angeles and Minneapolis — where the Obama administration is piloting a controversial new program to tackle extremist group recruitment before it takes root. Muslim worshippers expressed frustration this week that the local community continues to be painted with the same broad brush. “Blaming an entire mosque just based on a couple of radical people that don’t represent them really is unfair,” said Rania Masri, of Quincy, just before Friday’s prayer service at the Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center, a towering brick mosque in the city’s Roxbury neighborhood. “This isn’t a small, tight-knit community. It represents so many different cultures and people from all around the world. The mosque, as an entity, can’t represent all of them.” Local opponents and national pundits, though, continue to fault the broader community. In February, Americans for Peace and Tolerance, a Bostonbased nonprofit group, took out a large ad in The Washington Times featuring pictures of the Tsarnaev brothers and other terrorists or suspected terrorists with alleged ties to the Islamic Society of Boston and other area mosques. The ad, which was critical of Boston’s pilot program focused on combating extremism, asked: “Why is Boston a hub for violent extremism?” Earlier this month, the author and former Muslim Ayaan Hirsi Ali made similar connections in a Boston Globe op-ed. Maaria Assami, of Burlington, complained that churches and other religious institutions where other terrorists may have worshipped don’t receive the same sort of scrutiny. “Islam has always been the cliché bad guy,” she said. “So even if (Tsarnaev) had just passed by the mosque, it would have still been all our fault.” Local Muslim leaders acknowledge it’s been challenging to fight back against detractors. “We need to get better at becoming louder and saying ‘Hey, that’s not us.’ We’re your neighbors, your co-workers,” Nichole Mossalam, of the Islamic Society of Boston’s affiliated mosque in Cambridge, said recently. The intense coverage of the Tsarnaev trial and the second anniversary of the April 15 attack, which killed three people and injured hundreds more, has provided an opportunity to reinforce that message. Before Friday prayers, the Boston mosque held an open house with the theme “Still Boston Strong.” Some 50 officials representing the U.S. Department of Justice, the F.B.I., Boston Police, politicians, and other religious and civic groups attended. “We just really wanted to open up the doors and showcase who we are and the spirit of Boston Strong that exists here in Boston and how we really have stuck together,” explained Yusufi Vali, the mosque’s executive director. Worshippers, a number of whom weren’t aware of the open house, applauded the effort. “People are afraid of the unknown, and the propaganda they get is all so negative,” said Haseeb Hosein, of Boston. “If they would stop and look, we’re just like Jews, Christian or any Godfearing people. We don’t condone violence.” SKIN CANCER John Chung MD, FAAD & COSMETIC Victor Czerkasij, APRN, BC, FNP Board Certified Dermatologist Fellowship Trained Mohs Surgeon Dermatology Center ADULT & PEDIATRIC DERMATOLOGY “Your Total Skin Care Team” 2253 Chambliss Ave. NW - Suite 300 423-472-3332 Bradley Professional Building • Cleveland, TN • Accepting New Patients and Most Insurances Board Certified Family Nurse Practitioner Amanda Thompson, FNP-C Board Certified Family Nurse Practitioner Ashley Thurman, FNP-C Board Certified Family Nurse Practitioner Catherine Ramsey Licensed Medical Aesthetician BALTIMORE (AP) — Baltimore’s mayor and police commissioner came in making big promises to the inner-city residents and police who spent decades staring each other down in neighborhoods ravaged by crack and heroin. But with each death of a black man in custody, their efforts to overcome mistrust have hit hard walls of skepticism and outrage. Two and a half years into his job leading the city’s police department, Commissioner Anthony Batts is frustrated that the people he was appointed to serve have lost their faith in justice. “They don’t believe what I say,” Batts said in an interview Thursday with The Associated Press. Mayor Stephanie RawlingsBlake hired Batts in September 2012 after a previous round of police scandals involving excessive use of force, and she was still supporting her commissioner ahead of more protests Saturday. Batts also rejected demands by several African-American ministers that he resign. “That’s not going to happen,” he announced Friday. He promised to be as transparent as possible without compromising an investigation that could lead to criminal charges. Six officers have been suspended with pay since Freddie Gray died of a spinal injury he suffered during an arrest Batts characterized as questionable. Both Batts and the mayor, who took office in 2010, are AfricanAmerican and no strangers to communities like Sandtown, a set of public housing projects not far from Baltimore’s Inner Harbor and the Orioles’ baseball stadium where Gray tried to outrun three bicycle cops who spotted him on a street corner on April 12. Gray, 25, was pinned to the ground and already injured when he was handcuffed and hoisted into a van, police acknowledged AP Photo BAltimore Police Department Commissioner Anthony Batts speaks about the investigation into Freddie Gray’s death at a news conference, Friday, April 24, 2015, in Baltimore. Gray died from spinal injuries about a week after he was arrested and transported in a police van. Friday. He repeatedly begged for medical help, but officers instead added leg irons and locked him inside again. Gray was eventually hospitalized in critical condition, and died a week later. Batts, who spent decades policing in Long Beach and Oakland, California, before taking this job, insists he is part of the solution in Baltimore. He said he’s fired 50 police employees and reduced officer-involved shootings, and the use-of-force reports police must file dropped from 598 in 2012 to 435 in 2014. “I have been a reform commissioner. I have taken an organization that has many challenges and faced them head-on,” he insisted, even as he acknowledged that some cases have “tarnished this badge and the reputation of the department.” With each death in custody and each police brutality settlement, the trust erodes even more. A Baltimore Sun investigation revealed last year that the city has paid roughly $5.7 million in brutality settlements since 2011, involving 102 instances of excessive force. And taxpayers keep paying: Just days after Gray’s death, the city’s Board of Estimates approved $80,000 for 37-yearold Timothy Ashe, whose teeth were punched out by police officer after parking illegally. A week earlier, $175,000 was awarded to the family of Michael Wudtee, who was fatally shot by an officer at a gas station in July 2012. Gray is at least the fifth black man to die after police encounters since Batts took charge: — Tyrone West, 44, died in July 2013; he stopped breathing after he was tackled and handcuffed by officers during a traffic stop. The autopsy blamed a heart condition aggravated by the struggle and hot temperatures. An internal review board said the officers were justified, but said officers “made several tactical errors.” West’s family is suing. — Anthony Anderson, 46, died in September 2012 after police said they broke up his drug deal. Officers said he fought with them and was slammed to the ground. His death, of internal bleeding from blunt force injuries, was ruled a homicide, but an internal review board ruled officers were justified, and prosecutors declined to charge them. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—11 and screams are heard. Flight runs into pressurization issues, passengers evaluated NATONAL BRIEFS Autopsy: Indiana University student died from head injuries BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — A coroner says an Indiana University student whose body was found Friday in a rural area died from blunt force trauma injuries to her head. Brown County Coroner Earl Piper said Saturday he estimates 22-year-old IU senior Hannah Wilson had been dead several hours by the time her body was found. Authorities have filed a preliminary murder charge against 49-year-old Daniel E. Messel, of Bloomington in Wilson’s death. He’s being held at the Brown County Jail. Police have not disclosed a possible motive or said whether Messel and Wilson knew one another. The Fishers, Indiana, woman’s body was found about 8:30 a.m. Friday in rural area Brown County, just east of Monroe County, where IU’s campus is located. Wilson was reported missing Friday afternoon before authorities identified her body. Mother in custody dispute freed after 8 years behind bars HACKENSACK, N.J. (AP) — A New Jersey woman jailed in a custody dispute has been freed after spending more than eight years behind bars and is likely to be reunited with her daughter in Spain who’s been without either parent for nearly a decade. The Record reports María Jose Carrascosa, a native of Spain, was released from jail Friday. Carrascosa was arrested in 2006 after she defied a court order granting custody of her 5year-old daughter to the child’s father, and moved the child to Spain. Carrascosa was paroled last year after serving a prison term but then jailed for contempt of court. A judge ordered her release Friday after her former husband said he wasn’t against her returning to Spain to be with their daughter, now 14. Love, cookies helped sisters lost in Michigan woods survive CRISP POINT, Mich. (AP) — Two sisters from Oklahoma and Nebraska said Saturday that they survived in a remote part of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula on love for their family, melted snow and the little food they had in their snow-crippled SUV. A day after being spotted by a police helicopter in Luce County, Leslie Roy, 52, and Lee Marie Wright, 56, offered thanks to their rescuers and others involved in the nearly two-week search after they disappeared earlier this month. “Through the days and nights while in the woods, we survived using love and hope in our families,” they said in an emailed statement. “Our faith in God held our confidence that we would eventually be found. We took note of circling aircraft, available water resources, the supplies we had with us. These factors eased our mind and allowed us to stay alive for thirteen long days.” Roy, of Valley, Nebraska, and Wright, of Depew, Oklahoma, got stuck about 3 miles from Crisp Point Lighthouse along Lake Superior. They had been visiting relatives in Ishpeming, near Marquette in another part of the peninsula. The sisters had planned to head south on April 11. They had a reservation at a hotel in Mackinaw City but never showed up. Instead, they were trapped in snow on a littleused road until a police helicopter pilot noticed a reflection Friday off the Ford Explorer. There was no cellphone service and the vehicle eventually lost power. State police Detective Sgt. Jeff Marker told The Associated Press that Roy and Wright wore layers of clothing to stay warm, melted snow to drink and ate Girl Scout cookies a bag of cheese puffs. Judge: Attending Pink concert didn’t harm New Jersey girl TOMS RIVER, N.J. (AP) — A mom’s decision to take her 11year-old daughter to a Pink concert has a judge saying, “So what?” The New Jersey judge says the concert trip isn’t evidence of bad parenting. NJ.com reports the girl’s parents are divorced, and her father accused his ex-wife of abusing her parental discretion by taking their daughter to the December 2013 concert at the Prudential Center in Newark. But state Superior Court Judge Lawrence Jones rejected the complaint in a 37-page decision that contained a brief history of rock ‘n’ roll and a commentary on the increasing use of judges as referees for warring divorced parents. Jones said Pink may have some suggestive moves and lyrics, but she’s an artist whose works aren’t necessarily inappropriate for preteens. Jones noted in his decision that he spoke privately with the girl, who is now 12, and took into consideration the mother’s reasoning for allowing her daughter to attend the show. He found that the mother “in no way, shape or form exceeded the boundaries of reasonable parental judgment” in taking the girl to the show during her own parenting time. He also found that she didn’t subject the child to any unreasonable risk of harm, or compromise the girl’s health, safety or welfare. “To the contrary, when all the smoke from the custody litigation clears, it will be self-evident that all which happened here is that a young girl went to her first rock concert with her mother and had a really great time,” the judge wrote in his decision, which quoted the lyrics from Pink’s songs “The Great Escape” and “Perfect” as examples of messages for adolescents. Man who shot himself outside courthouse during sex case dies BRENTWOOD, N.H. (AP) — Authorities say a New Hampshire man has died after shooting himself in the courthouse parking lot while awaiting a jury’s verdict on charges he sexually assaulted a piano student more than a decade ago. Seventy-five-year-old John Goodwin went on trial this week on six counts of aggravated felonious sexual assault involving a former student. The jury began deliberating the case Friday morning, about two hours before Goodwin shot himself near his car outside the Rockingham County Superior Courthouse in Brentwood. The longtime piano instructor in Atkinson was airlifted to a Massachusetts hospital. The Rockingham County sheriff’s office said Saturday that Goodwin died of his injuries. The judge in Goodwin’s case declared a mistrial after jurors said they were unable to reach a verdict. As theater shooting trial opens, gun debate dwindles DENVER (AP) — When a gunman opened fire inside a packed movie theater in July 2012, killing 12 and injuring 70, it did more than spread fear and heartbreak across the Denver suburbs. It helped revive the national debate over gun control. The debate gained intensity in the state five months later when a gunman killed 20 children and 6 adults at a Connecticut elementary school, resulting in Democrats to require universal background checks and ban magazines that hold more than 15 rounds. Gun control advocates boasted that they had found the formula to enact their policies in a libertarian swing state. Furious gun rights supporters recalled two state senators who supported the measures. But, as the trial of theater shooter James Holmes is scheduled to begin Monday, the debate has quieted down. Owner spots his stolen truck in rearview mirror; arrest made PIEDMONT, Ala. (AP) — A man driving to work in Alabama suddenly noticed his stolen pickup truck following him, setting off a chain of events that included a pursuit, a crash and an arrest. Calhoun County Chief Deputy Matthew Wade told WBRC-TV a man called police Friday after noticing he was driving in front of the truck that had been stolen from him earlier that morning near Piedmont. Police attempted to stop the reportedly stolen vehicle, but the driver, 29-yearold Terry Proctor of Piedmont, did not stop, and a pursuit ensued. Wade said the driver crashed the vehicle and was ejected as the truck rolled over. Proctor was captured after a foot chase. He has been booked into the Cherokee County Jail on charges including first degree theft and possession of burglary tools. Questions after Indiana school stage collapse injures 16 INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The superintendent of an Indiana school district where a stage collapsed, injuring 16 high school students when they plunged into an orchestra pit, said Friday that the section that gave way was only a few years old, but it’s unclear whether it was ever subject to inspection. The uncertainty surrounding the regulation of the orchestra pit cover that collapsed during Thursday’s finale of a musical at Westfield High School, 20 miles north of Indianapolis, is reminiscent of questions that arose in 2011, when heavy winds toppled stage rigging onto fans awaiting a performance by country duo Sugarland at the Indiana State Fair. Seven people were killed and dozens injured in that collapse, which sparked new state rules on temporary, outdoor stage rigging equipment. Thursday’s collapse wasn’t deadly, and all of the students who were injured were out of the hospital by Friday afternoon. John Erickson, a spokesman for the state’s Department of Homeland Security, said the state rules adopted after the fair rigging collapse don’t apply to the type of permanent, indoor stages found in schools. And he said it’s unclear whether inspections of public school stages are required under any state rules. “It does not look like plans were required to be filed” for the stage at the school, Erickson said. Westfield Washington Schools Superintendent Mark Keen said he wasn’t sure who, if anyone, handles inspections of the district’s school stages. He said school officials are delving into records and will provide information to investigators. The stage collapsed Thursday night as clapping and singing students performed Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin’” in the finale of a concert called “American Pie.” Video supplied to The Associated Press by Zach Rader — who was in the audience — shows students plummeting out of sight before the music cuts off DENVER (AP) — Officials say a Southwest Airlines flight traveling from Las Vegas to Milwaukee was diverted to Denver Friday night after reporting “pressurization issues.” Denver International Airport spokeswoman Laura Coale says that Flight 100, which departed Las Vegas at 6 p.m. PDT, diverted to Denver after about 90 minutes. She tells the Denver Post that fire department crew members evaluated the passengers, but just one person was transported and that for a slip and fall injury. She says that no one else required medical aid. Denver’s KMGH-TV reports that a Southwest statement referred to “a pressurization issue,” but did not elaborate. The statement says that 175 passengers and six crew members were aboard the Boeing 737-800, which will be taken out of service and inspected. Meanwhile, the airline says passengers are continuing to Milwaukee on another aircraft. entered a plea. The court documents made public Friday outlined a series of events that included several 911 hangups from a cellphone before dispatchers could reach a 9year-old girl at her house. Officers who went to the scene found the three young children and the Ayerses’ bodies. One of Martinson’s sisters told investigators that the couple had learned Martinson was dating the 22-year-old. The girl said Thomas Ayers came home March 7 and went upstairs and pounded on Martinson’s door. The girl said she then heard two gunshots. Then Jennifer Ayers went upstairs. The daughter said she went to the stairs and saw her mother and sister fighting, with Martinson on top. The girl said Martinson told her to go downstairs, which she did, and she heard her mother stop screaming. She said Martinson then came down and told the girls to watch cartoons on TV. Martinson was arrested in Indiana with her boyfriend, Ryan Sisco. He later told investigators he had been messaging with people he believed to be Martinson’s parents on Facebook the day authorities believe they were killed, and he was warned to stay away from Martinson because she was a minor, according to the documents. Documents: Argument over boyfriend before Wisconsin killings TOWN OF PIEHL, Wis. (AP) — A Wisconsin teen accused of killing her mother and stepfather carried out the slayings the same day they warned her 22year-old boyfriend to stay away from her, according to court documents made public Friday. Ashlee Martinson, 17, was formally charged in Oneida County after being brought back from Indiana, where she was arrested last month. She is accused of fatally stabbing 40-year-old Jennifer Ayers and shooting 37-year-old Thomas Ayers at the family’s home in Town of Piehl. Investigators say Martinson locked her three sisters, ranging in age from 9 to 2, in a room before fleeing their rural home. The Stevens Point Journal reported that Martinson appeared in court by video from the county jail, and sat silently beside her attorney. She has not Sign Up for Our New Summer STEM Camps! Stay for the day or all week! Come in each morning and leave in the afternoon or experience college life in a supervised setting by staying overnight at TWC!* Tennessee Wesleyan College and Cleveland State Community College are pleased to announce the new summer STEM program being held on the TWC campus. June15-19, 2015 Lego® Robotics Camp Enter the world of robotic engineering as you spend time exploring, designing, building and programming your own robot using Lego® NXT kits. 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For complete information about each camp and to register online, go to mycs.cc/stem *STEM Camp attendees 14 years and older are eligible for overnight participation. 12—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Whitaker From Page 1 Banner photo, CHRISTY ARMSTRONG THE GRADUATING CLASS of Goal Academy, Bradley County Schools’ alternative school, gathers for a celebratory photo during the recent Senior Day event to honor the school’s class of 2015. Goal From Page 1 Gathering for a ceremony in which students were given certificates and honor cords to wear on graduation day, students and guests reflected on the past and what might be next. “This is a special celebration day,” School Counselor Rhonda Parris told the students. “You’ve made it.” First honoring the long list of community partners that have volunteered their time to help with everything from art instruction to anger management help, Parris and other school staff members presented certificates to all the school’s students who had completed a leadership program and reached other goals. Then, Principal Kyle Page spoke and read the names of seniors who will be graduating as Gold and Platinum Scholars. He explained students at the school must achieve certain academic performance levels and a checklist of tasks like taking the ACT college entrance Banner photo, CHRISTY ARMSTRONG PRINCIPAL Kyle Page, far left, addresses students and guests during the Senior Day celebration at Goal Academy on Friday. Standing to his right are school staff members and seniors who had just been recognized for graduating with honors. exam to graduate with honors. All students are encouraged to do things like apply for college. “The goal of what we’re doing is to phase you into the next steps,” Page said to the seniors. CU From Page 1 asking for funding for infrastructure. When a customer reports a suspected scam, the utility contacts local media to alert residents of the issue. “There is not much we can do about the actual scam at all,” Henderson said. He said he reassures customers that nothing is wrong with their account. The utility also reports the incident to the police. However, such scams are hard to track. Henderson said such scams are becoming more prevalent. Henderson said the office has also received several calls from people who have received calls from scammers telling them they are behind on payments and must purchase a Green Dot Walmart money card. The caller says if the person does not comply their power will be turned off. “Cleveland Utilities is not going to contact a customer and ask for money over the phone under any circumstance,” Henderson said. The utility also does not accept the Green Dot card as payment. If a customer has a question about their bill or service, they can call 472-4521. Each senior who earned the special status one by one had the cords he or she will be wearing on graduation day placed around their shoulders. Kyle also encouraged the students to continue to do whatever work necessary to finish out the school year well. The day’s festivities also included things like refreshments and drawings for two bicycles donated by Scott’s Bikes and a cash prize donated by Bradley County’s Gear Up program. As they prepared to dismiss to continue the remainder of the school day, Parris reminded the seniors they were “passing the torch” to the younger students and serving as an example of what they can accomplish. The seniors were also invited to stand and share any thankyous they had for school staff or advice for the underclassmen. Page said later the Senior Day event was designed to be an important opportunity to have students experience being celebrated for what they have done. “So many of our seniors here have never had the opportunity to be acknowledged and feel appreciated [at home], Page said. “This is an opportunity to feel that family embrace.” Though all of the students at Goal Academy have for one reason or another encountered situations that meant they could no longer attend one of the other public middle or high schools, the principal said the focus is continually on helping students see they can set and reach goals like graduation. During the Senior Day ceremony, Parris noted that many of the seniors have made plans to attend college this fall or have already found jobs to help them launch their careers. With a cap-and-gown graduation ceremony taking place May 9, he said he hopes the seniors realize their past experiences can serve as motivation to do great things in the future. “We all have our issues and glitches,” Page said. “Your failure is not final. One thing we say a lot around here is, ‘Your mess becomes your message.’” to play piano. Her application for the scholarship award required her to submit materials that included a company description, a market analysis and a business plan. She said her marketing classes at Walker Valley and her parents who both studied business in college, Darrell and Michelle, helped prepare her for the entrepreneurial opportunity. Whitaker plans to follow in her parents’ footsteps by attending Lee University this fall, where she will major in public relations and minor in music. She said her eventual goal is to pursue a career in public relations or marketing for the Christian music industry or perhaps a music-related nonprofit. Her explanation of how she launched her business indicates she has already gained experience in marketing. Prior to the Christmas season, she got the idea to market her music lessons as potential Christmas gifts, distributing bright green fliers to parents who eventually sent her some of her first clients. “America’s young people have caught the entrepreneurial bug, and we could not be more confident in our next generation of business owners,” Molly Young, director of the Young Entrepreneur Foundation said. “We are impressed year after year with the quality of these hard-working, innovative high school students who are making their entrepreneurial dreams happen.” While Whitaker has been making college plans and plans to continue her business while she is in college, she has also had the challenge of balancing her future goals with the responsibilities she has in school right now. She said this has required a lot of careful planning and “spending less time on Twitter.” “This year has been really crazy,” Whitaker said. “But it’s just a matter of prioritizing.” She said she would encourage any of her peers considering starting a business to look at what they love doing, evaluate whether or not that could be a market for a business and to set both long- and short-term goals to keep themselves on track. School Counselor Richard Jackson said Whitaker is one of his students who has shown a lot of initiative in making plans to continue her education and work after high school. “She’s well-deserving,” Jackson said. “She’s definitely done the work to make that possible.” Helping students find scholarships to help them put the skills they have to work in college and beyond is a big priority for the school, Jackson added. He estimated Walker Valley students have so far been awarded some $6.5 million in scholarships. Volkswagen chairman Piech resigns after clash with board FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — Ferdinand Piech, chairman of the board of Volkswagen AG and a major figure in the German auto industry, has stepped down after clashing with other board members over his criticism of the company’s CEO. Volkswagen said in a statement Saturday that Piech, 78, was resigning with immediate effect. Piech had said in an interview with Der Spiegel published earlier this month that he was distancing himself from CEO Martin Winterkorn. He did not publicly give a reason for his remark. Volkswagen is profitable and saw global sales pass the 10 million mark last year as it pursues its goal of dethroning Japan’s Toyota as the world’s largest automaker. But its core Volkswagen brand has struggled to hold down costs and to gain market share in the United States. Piech’s view on Winterkorn was rejected by other members of the board who said that he had not agreed that stance with them. They pushed back, and the board’s six-member executive committee, which includes Piech, issued a statement April 17 saying Winterkorn, 67, was “the best possible” chief executive for Volkswagen. Winterkorn, CEO since 2007, got support from the head of Volkswagen’s influential employee council, while the governor of the state of Lower Saxony, a minority shareholder in the company, criticized the public discussion about the company’s leadership. Piech’s cousin, Wolfgang Porsche, said Piech’s comment represented his “private opinion.” The Piech and Porsche families together control a majority of shares in Volkswagen. Volkswagen said Piech’s wife, Ursula, was also resigning from her board seat. The Volkswagen AG statement said that the board’s executive committee had met and decided that “in view of the the background of the last weeks the mutual trust necessary for succesfull cooperation does not exist.” TBI From Page 1 gies and various forensic disciplines. “I’m very proud and honored to have the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations here at the Sheriff’s office. This is unheard of. It’s very exclusive training. The TBI doesn’t just go to departments and do three-day training seminars,” said Watson Watson continued, “This is the first time they’ve done that for any sheriff’s office in the state. My goal is for the sheriff’s office, for this county and city, to have the most and best-educated officers in the state. We’re going to do everything we can to make it happen.” Watson discussed in more detail his goals for improving the BCSO. “Next week, I have the University of Tennessee Knoxville coming down here to teach a leadership structure and supervision school. Talking about ethics, racial profiling, how to treat people, media relations, and that’s for my first line supervisors, sergeant and above,” Watson said. Watson said all 33 of his supervising officers will be attending the UTK training. He would be supervising the patrol divisions himself so they can have the time to do it. “It’s very important for me to have my supervisors in that class, because we’re living in a community now that demands education and demands respect for the community. And we have experts coming in to give us that instruction and to help us to become better officers. We’re good at what we do now. I’m proud of the officers, but we can Banner Photo, Tony Eubank CONTRIBUTED PHOTO A BCSO DETECTIVE practices crime scene photography methTBI SPECIAL AGENT Howard Patterson discusses with BSCO investigators new technologies and ods. Part of the training included forensic photography shooting ways to find needed information on them. techniques and way to enhance photographs in order to capture and analyze latent fingerprints. always do better,” Watson explained. Watson explained he wants to raise the performance and prestige of the department. “I remember the days when other departments in the state came to Bradley County to be trained. This was a training ground for a lot of departments and we had one of the best forensics divisions in the state. People brought stuff in here all the time and they still do. I want to get back to that level of expertise, like the TBI and the FBI, to have the best in forensics, cell phones, and homicide and missing persons investigations.” Watson stated he wants to accomplish these goals without costing the taxpayers a lot of money. “If I was to send 23 officers to an investigators school, that would of cost us probably around $23,000,” Watson explained. Watson went on to explain that the TBI training was free to the department. Watson stated the called the TBI Director Mark Gwyn and asked, “What will it take and do you need from me for the TBI to come to the sheriff’s office? And he said we’ve never done it before but let’s try it. He said this might be something we could start doing across the state for other departments as well.” BCSO Detective Zachary Pike commented, “It’s been a very unique training that we normally don’t get at the sheriff’s office. It’s been hands on. It’s been classroom as well, so we’re not just sitting in the classroom the entire time, we’re actually learning it first hand. It’s training that we can use everyday in the course of our jobs.” CID INVESTIGATORS practice setting up a crime scene for a thorough forensic sweep of an area. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—13 Health officials say ice cream is safe AP Photo Becky RoBBins, general manager of the Appalachian Harvest facility shows labels famers use to tag their produce during a tour Friday in Duffield, Va. Appalachian Harvest has grown to a $1.5 million business that derives only a sliver of its budget from grants while delivering vegetables to grocers including Whole Foods, Ingles and Food City. The 15-year-old nonprofit is a standout success in a distressed region where economic development efforts come and go. Appalachian nonprofit links small farmers with big grocers DUFFIELD, Va. (AP) — In a warehouse in Virginia’s southwestern tip, a forklift stacks crates of cabbages and preserves onto a truck bound for a big-name grocer. Even in the lull before growing season, it’s a busy day at Appalachian Harvest, a 15-yearold nonprofit that’s a standout success in a distressed region where economic development efforts come and go. The Virginia-based nonprofit organization has grown to a $1.5 million business that derives only a sliver of its budget from grants while helping farmers in remote areas sell produce to Whole Foods and other grocers. To develop its business from scratch, Appalachian Harvest has finetuned how it helps farmers while expanding from organic to conventional crops and learning a crashcourse in trucking. For decades, economic development has been an important but difficult goal in a region where farmers have faced the decline of tobacco and communities have seen mining and industrial jobs dwindle. Increasingly, Appalachian entrepreneurs are combining charitable goals with the discipline needed to make money off goods and services. Appalachian Harvest is considered a pioneer of this model for helping small farms pool produce into tractor-trailer loads for brokers and chains that also include North Carolina-based Ingles and Food City, which has stores in Virginia, Tennessee and Kentucky. “They help anywhere they can,” said Josh Watson, a 30-year-old farmer in Surry County, North Carolina, who has sold through Appalachian Harvest for three years. “They do classes on food safety regulations, and if you had a problem with anything, they can find you an answer.” Inside Appalachian Harvest’s 15,000 square-foot warehouse are massive coolers and packing equipment, including a 30-foot green conveyor belt-driven machine that cleans and dries vegetables. In the summer, the warehouse is full of farmers adding the brand’s green and yellow labels to produce, often late into the night. During the winter, general manager Robin Robbins receives projections from grocers, calculates how many plants are needed and helps farmers phase their planting and harvesting. It sells produce from as many as 60 farmers. “You don’t need 500 peppers all in one week. You need so many every week,” Robbins said. “When you call us in July for tomatoes, we had to know in December to order the seeds, get the transplants, get the ground ready.” Appalachian Harvest generated 86 percent of its 2014 budget from sales, said Kathlyn Terry, the head of its parent organization Appalachian Sustainable Development. She hopes to be more self-sufficient this year because two new trucks should reduce maintenance costs. Appalachian Harvest started in 2000 to help farmers learn to grow organic vegetables as the government phased out price and production controls for tobacco. Early on, the business shut down for several months when the local growing season ended. Now, to keep its trucks running in the winter, the organization also works with farmers outside of Appalachia. It decided to expand several years ago from organic to conventionally grown produce, which now makes up two-thirds of what it sells. They’ve also gotten smart about trucking, with routes that include grocery hubs in Maryland and Georgia. When one of its trucks drops off vegetables it often returns with products for distribution centers nearby, ranging from baby formula to dog food. Terry estimated that the backhauling makes up 10 percent of their revenue. Input from grocers and other experts several years ago helped the charity streamline, including shifting the packing of vegetables to farmers. Its training budget — about $100,000 per year funded by grants — was also moved onto the books of Appalachian Sustainable Development, Terry said. “Our expenses were just so far out of whack,” she said. “We had to make some adjustments.” The moves paid off, and Terry was invited to speak at a late 2014 seminar on self-sustaining nonprofit ventures. One of the seminar’s leaders, Paul Wright of the Kentuckybased Mountain Association for Community Economic Development, said social enterprises must have business discipline but they don’t necessarily need to break even if donors are willing to invest in their impact. Wright said that Appalachian Harvest has had exceptional success for a nonprofit: “They would represent the top, cream of the crop.” At the warehouse, Robbins appears visibly excited as the forklift loads the last pallet on the truck, saying the sight of a full tractor-trailer always makes her happy. This winter, Appalachian Harvest developed blackberry butter, peach salsa, pickled baby beets and other jarred products. The truck is taking a shipment for a test-run at Ingles. Robbins, who comes from a family of tobacco farmers, sees the preserves as another way for farmers to make money in a tough business. “We’re all in it together,” she says. WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal health officials say ice cream is still safe to eat — even amid recalls by two ice cream companies after the discovery of listeria bacteria in their frozen confections. The Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say there’s no reason to think that listeria illnesses and deaths linked to Texas-based Blue Bell Creameries and the discovery of listeria in Ohio-based Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams are related. “Based upon what we know now, there is no connection between these two ice cream companies nor any reason to suspect that ice cream as a whole poses any special foodborne disease risk,” said CDC’s Dr. Robert Tauxe. Blue Bell, which recalled all of its products Monday, is linked to 10 illnesses, including three deaths, in four states. Jeni’s ice cream hasn’t been linked to any illnesses, but the company recalled its products Thursday after Nebraska health officials found listeria in a sample of ice cream. On Friday, Jeni’s said early testing suggested that listeria was present in other pints from the same batch the Nebraska officials tested, and possibly another batch as well. The company said additional testing appeared to show that listeria was present in Jeni’s manufacturing plant in Columbus. “We are encouraged that the early indications suggest we have found it and can focus on eradicating it,” said John Lowe, Jeni’s CEO, in a statement on the company’s website. Tauxe said the discovery of listeria is a “wake-up call” for the industry, since the bacteria isn’t very common in ice cream. While the hardy bacteria thrive in cooler environments, they can’t grow at freezing temperatures. At least one other major ice cream manufacturer, Unilever, appeared confident, saying in a statement that the company has “robust quality and safety protocols across our ice cream network designed to prevent listeria contamination.” Unilever owns Ben & Jerry’s, Breyer’s and other ice cream brands. In a statement, the International Dairy Foods Association said the dairy industry is “seeking to understand how and why” listeria ended up in the products. “Ice cream makers are double and triple checking safety protocols to make sure you can shop with confidence when buying ice cream,” the industry group said. The FDA agreed consumers should feel safe eating anything that hasn’t been recalled. “Despite these recalls, it is important to understand that ice cream in the United States is generally safe,” said the FDA’s Jeff Ventura. “These recalls are an example of companies taking appropriate action by getting potentially unsafe foods off the market.” The FDA is investigating the Blue Bell outbreak but hasn’t said what caused it. On Thursday, Blue Bell said its plants in Texas, Oklahoma and Alabama are undergoing intensive cleaning. Listeria illnesses generally only affect the elderly, people with compromised immune systems and pregnant women. The three people who died consumed the Blue Bell product in a Kansas hospital. The bacteria is found in soil and water, and it can be tracked into a manufacturing facility, carried by animals or spread by employees not using proper sanitation practices. Bill Yarbrough of New Albany, Ohio, said he understands why the recalls are concerning to those most at risk but he’s not going to stop buying ice cream. Expecting the company would take a hit, Yarbrough started recruiting fellow fans on Facebook to help Jeni’s rebound. Full Service on Pools LET US OPEN YOUR POOL Inground Pools! 423-559-2082 Inground 2240 Spring Place Road Cleveland, TN 37323 Replacement • Sales • Installation Vinyl Mon.-Fri. 10:00 am to 5:00 pm Liners Hayward Salt Systems DO YOU SNORE? ARE YOU TIRED DURING THE DAY? Is A Home Sleep Study Right For You? 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David Ige hasn’t yet decided whether he will sign the bill, and his staff has to vet all bills for legal issues, he said. “The departments will be doing their review and then we’ll have the opportunity to look at it,” Ige said. Those caught breaking the rules would be fined $10 for the first offense, and subsequent violations would lead to a $50 fine or mandatory community service. Dozens of local governments have similar bans, including Hawaii County and New York City. * DISCOUNTS PROVIDED EVERY DAY; MARKED PRICES REFLECT COMPARABLE PRICES OFFERED BY OTHER SELLERS FOR SIMILAR PRODUCTS. $ COUPON FOR IN STORES OR ONLINE USE! Coupon Code: $ Coupon Coupon e Item at Regular Pric e On Offer good for one item at regular price only. Limit one coupon per customer per day. Must present coupon at time of purchase. Offer is not valid with any other coupon, discount or previous purchase. Excludes Heidi Swapp™ Minc.™ Foil Applicator, CRICUT® products, Tim Holtz® Vagabond™ Machine, Silhouette CAMEO® Machine, candy & snack products, gum & mints, helium tanks, gift cards, custom orders, special orders, labor, rentals and class fees. A single cut of fabric or trim “by the yard” equals one item. Online fabric & trim discount is limited to 10 yards, single cut. $ Cash Value 1/10¢. $ 14—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Nepal quake: Nearly 1,400 dead, Everest shaken KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — Tens of thousands of people were spending the night in the open under a chilly and thunderous sky after a powerful earthquake devastated Nepal on Saturday, killing nearly 1,400, collapsing modern houses and ancient temples and triggering a landslide on Mount Everest. Officials warned the death toll would rise as more reports came in from far-flung areas. Inspector Yuvraj Khadka of Nepal’s national police force said that rescue effort was continuing through the night and the death toll had reached 1,394 people. The magnitude 7.8 earthquake, which originated outside the capital Kathmandu, was the worst tremor to hit the poor South Asian nation in over 80 years. It strong enough to be felt all across the northern part of neighboring India, Bangladesh, Tibet and Pakistan, where a total of 50 people died. As Nepal trembled, residents fled homes and buildings in panic. Walls tumbled, trees swayed, power lines came crashing down and large cracks opened up on streets and walls. Clouds of dust began to swirl all around. Within hours of the quake, hospitals had filled up with hundreds of injured people. With organized relief and rescue lacking, many survivors were brought to hospitals by friends and relatives in motorized rickshaws, flatbed trucks and cars. Residents used their bare hands, crowbars and other tools to dig through rubble and rescue survivors. More than two dozen after- Experts gathered in Nepal a week ago to ready for quake The Associated Press Nepal’s devastating earthquake was the disaster experts knew was coming. Just a week ago, about 50 earthquake and social scientists from around the world came to Kathmandu, Nepal, to figure out how to get this poor, congested, overdeveloped, shoddily built area to prepare better for the big one, a repeat of the 1934 temblor that leveled this city. They knew they were racing the clock, but they didn’t know when what they feared would strike. “It was sort of a nightmare waiting to happen,” said seismologist James Jackson, head of the earth sciences department at the University of Cambridge in England. “Physically and geologically what happened is exactly what we thought would happen.” But he didn’t expect the massive quake that struck Saturday to happen so soon. The magnitude 7.8 earthquake killed at least 1,180 people and caused widespread destruction. “I was walking through that very area where that earthquake was and I thought at the very time that the area was heading for trouble,” said Jackson, lead scientist for Earthquakes Without Frontiers, a group that tries to make Asia more able to bounce back from these disasters and was having the meeting. A Kathmandu earthquake has long been feared, not just because of the natural seismic fault, but because of the local, more human conditions that make it worse. The same size shaking can have bigger effects on different parts of the globe because of building construction and population and that’s something the U.S. Geological Survey calculates ahead of time. So the same level of severe shaking would cause 10 to 30 people to die per million residents in California, but 1,000 maybe more in Nepal, and up to 10,000 in parts of Pakistan, India, Iran and China, said USGS seismologist David Wald. While the trigger of the disaster is natural — an earthquake — “the consequences are very much manmade,” Jackson said. Except for landslides, which in this case are a serious problem, “it’s buildings that kill people not earthquakes,” Jackson said. If you lived in a flat desert with no water, an earthquake wouldn’t harm you, but then few people want to live there. “The real problem in Asia is how people have concentrated in dangerous places,” Jackson said. Kathmandu was warned, first by the Earth itself: this is the fifth significant quake there in the last 205 years, including the massive 1934 one. “They knew they had a problem but it was so large they didn’t where to start, how to start,” said Hari Ghi, southeast Asia regional coordinator for Geohazards International, a group that works on worldwide quake risks. Ghi, Jackson and Wald said Nepal was making progress on reducing its vulnerability to earthquakes, but not quickly or big enough. Ghi’s group on April 12 updated a late 1990s report summarizing the Kathmandu Valley risks. “With an annual population growth rate of 6.5 percent and one of the highest urban densities in the world, the 1.5 million people living in the Kathmandu Valley were clearly facing a serious and growing earthquake risk,” the report said, laying out “the problem” the valley faces. shocks jolted the area after the first quake, which struck just before noon. At the time, Shrish Vaidya, who runs an advertising agency, was in his two-story house outside the capital Kathmandu with his parents. “It is hard to describe. The house was shaking like crazy. We ran out and it seemed like the road was heaving up and down,” Vaidya, 46, told The Associated Press. “I don’t remember anything like this before. Even my parents can’t remember anything this bad.” Once the first shaking stopped, Vaidya thought his family could return indoors by evening. But the jolts kept coming, and they felt safer outdoors. “It’s cold and windy so we are all sitting in the car listening to the news on FM radio,” he said. “The experts are saying it’s still not safe to go back inside. No one can predict how big the next aftershock will be.” So the family ate dinner outside with the headlights of their car providing light. Vaidya was grateful his wife and 10-year-old son were on holiday in the U.S. In his largely affluent neighborhood of low-rise, sturdy homes in suburban Kathmandu the damage was relatively light. In other parts of the city where the buildings are older and poorly built people were not as lucky. Forecasts called for rain and thunder showers later Saturday and Sunday and the temperatures were in the mid-50s (14 Celsius), cold enough to make camping outside uncomfortable. Thousands of people were spending the night at Tudikhel, a vast open ground in the middle of Kathmandu, just next to the old city that is lined with historic buildings and narrow lanes. Now it is in ruins. People lay on plastic sheets or cardboard boxes, wrapped in blankets. Mothers kept their children warm; some lit fire with whatever wood they could find. Most were eating instant noodles and cookies. Deepak Rauniar, a shop worker who was there with his friends, said: “We are too scared to go back to our apartment. It is surrounded closely by houses, most of them old. The houses could collapse while we are still sleeping.” Prime Minister Sushil Koirala, who was attending a summit in Jakarta, tried to rush back home but made it as far as Bangkok where his connecting flight to Kathmandu was canceled because the capital’s international airport was shut down for commercial flights. Indian Air Force planes were allowed to bring in 43 tons of relief material, including tents and foods, and nearly 200 rescuers, India’s External Affairs Ministry spokesman Vikas Swarup said. The planes were returning to New Delhi with Indian nationals who were stranded in Kathmandu. India’s state-run Air India announced that it would begin relief flights to the Nepalese capital Sunday. Hospitals in the Kathmandu Valley were overcrowded, running out of room for storing dead bodies and running out of emergency supplies, the United Nations said in a statement. “The reports of the devastation are still coming in and the numbers of people killed, injured and affected by this earthquake continue to rise,” U.N. chief Ban Ki-Moon said. “It is clear that very many lives have been lost. There has also been significant damage to Nepal’s irreplaceable cultural heritage.” Zhou Shengping/Xinhua via AP In thIS Photo released by China’s Xinhua News Agency, a collapsed building is seen in Nepal’s capital Kathmandu Saturday. A strong earthquake shook Nepal’s capital and the densely populated Kathmandu Valley before noon Saturday, causing extensive damage with toppled walls and collapsed buildings, officials said. 10 dead as quake and avalanche sweep the Mount Everest region KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — An avalanche triggered by a massive earthquake swept across Nepal’s Mount Everest region on Saturday, killing at least 10 climbers and guides, slamming into a section of the mountaineering base camp, and leaving an unknown number of people injured and missing, officials said. Numerous climbers may now be cut off on routes leading to the top of the world’s highest peak. The avalanche began on Mount Kumori, a 7,000-meter (22,966foot) -high mountain just a few miles (kilometers) from Everest, gathering strength as it headed toward the base camp where climbing expeditions have been preparing to make their summit attempts in the coming weeks, said Ang Tshering of the Nepal Mountaineering Association. The avalanche — or perhaps a series of avalanches hidden in a massive white cloud — plowed into a part of base camp, a sprawling seasonal village of climbers, guides and porters, flattening at least 30 tents, Tshering said. With communication very limited at Everest, it was not immediately clear how many of those injured and killed were at base camp, and how many were elsewhere on the mountain. Survivors reached over Internet messaging services, however, described a scene of terror as the snow and ice roared through the nearby Khumbu Icefall and into base camp. Azim Afif, the 27-year-old leader of a climbing team from University of Technology Malaysia, said in an interview on the service WhatsApp that his group was in a meal tent waiting for lunch when suddenly the table and everything around them began shaking. When they ran outside, they saw “a wall of ice coming towards us,” and heard the cries of Sherpa guides shouting for people to run for their lives, he wrote. “We just think to find a place to hide and save our life.” The small team planned to sleep together Saturday night in one large tent “to make sure if anything happen, we are together,” Afif said. Quickly, though, climbing teams scattered across base camp began to work together to search for survivors. Gordon Janow, the director of programs for the Washingtonbased guiding outfit Alpine Ascents International, said from Seattle that his team had come through the avalanche unscathed. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—15 Japan’s views of WWII history rankle some U.S. veterans WASHINGTON (AP) — Lester Tenney endured three years as a Japanese prisoner during World War II, but he has made peace with his former enemy. Yet as Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe prepares to address Congress on Wednesday, in the 70th anniversary year of the war’s end, something rankles Tenney about Japan’s attitude toward its past. “They don’t want the young people to know what really happened,” complains Tenney, now 94. The Associated Press spoke to three U.S. war veterans about their surrender in the Philippines in 1942 and their exploitation as slave laborers in Japan. It’s an episode of history most notorious for the Bataan Death March, when tens of thousands of Filipino and American POWs were forced 65 miles on foot to prison camps. Thousands are believed to have perished. The AP also asked the veterans for opinions about Japan today. Japan issued a formal apology to American POWs in 2009 and again in 2010, and has paid for some veterans to travel to Japan, leaving them with a more positive view of the Japanese people. —Tenney, with the Army’s 192nd Tank Battalion, said he was made to march for eight days after his capture. “You had to stand on your own two feet and you had to keep moving. If you fell down, you died. If you had to go to the bathroom, you died. If you had a malaria attack, you died. The Japanese would just kill you, period. You had to stay on your feet. ... If you looked at a Japanese soldier in the wrong way, he would beat the hell out of you.” After a 28-day journey by ship to Japan, Tenney worked at a coal mine near the town of Omuta run by the Mitsui Mining Co., shoveling coal 12 hours a day for three years. He said British, Australian and Indonesian prisoners also worked there and they had no protective gear, and they would injure themselves intentionally to get days off. His weight dropped from 189 pounds to 97 pounds. He said Mitsui has never responded to his letters calling for an apology. (Mitsui & Co., which was disbanded after the war and then reestablished as a major industrial group, denies having any legal or historical responsibility for Mitsui Mining Co.’s treatment of forced laborers before or during the war. It says therefore it cannot comment on complaints or requests for apologies.) “If Mr. Abe comes here I would like him to say, ‘I bring with me an apology from the industrial giants that enslaved American POWs.’ He could say that very easily. ... I’m afraid that when Mr. Abe leaves here, all of it’s going to be forgotten. They’re going to forget about apologies to the POWs, they’re going to forget they did anything wrong. It’s going to like whitewashing the whole thing.” “You can’t have a high-ranking country today if you’re not willing to face your past. They have to admit their failures. If they admit their failures, then by golly they deserve to have the best.” After the war, Tenney became a professor of economics at Arizona State University and today lives in Carlsbad, California. He has returned to Japan five times and was instrumental in starting Japanese government-supported “friendship” visits by POWs. “The Japanese people were wonderful. They were very kind, they were very hospitable, no question about it. They treated us beautifully ... And there’s no reason why they shouldn’t. We didn’t do anything wrong (in the war).” —— Harold Bergbower, 94, was a private with the Air Force’s 28th Bomb Squadron when he was captured on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao and sent eventually to Davao penal colony. “We could not have been treated any worse in prison camp,” he said. “It was inhuman.” Intensely sick during the voyage, he cannot recall the journey to Japan, in the broiling, closed holds of “hell ships” that carried POWs and Asian laborers. They were starved of food, deprived of water. Only decades after did he learn that the first ship he was on was hit in a U.S. bombing attack and forced to dock for repairs. Thousands died on such voyages. Bergbower spent two years in brutal labor, scooping ore into open furnaces at a steel mill in the city of Toyama. “When I got back to the States after the war, I was told to go home and forget about it and that’s exactly what I did. I didn’t talk to anybody.” His view of Japan changed when he went on a friendship visit in 2011 and returned to the factory where he’d been enslaved. Staff there apologized “from the heart” for what the POWs had been through. “I came away with a much different impression of Japan. We couldn’t have been treated any better.” Bergbower, who lives near Phoenix, said he has forgiven the people of Japan, but not the government. —Darrell Stark, 93, was a new recruit of the Army’s 31st Infantry Regiment when he was captured and eventually shipped to Yokkaichi, where he was forced to shovel coal at a copper mill. Five years after the war, Stark received a letter from a Japanese man who showed him kindness and gave him food at the mill. Stark always regretted that he never replied. Stark suffered post-traumatic stress disorder, but he recovered and enjoyed a long career as a corrections officer in Connecticut. He went to Japan on a friendship visit last October, and the current deputy director of the mill clasped his hand and apologized. Stark has also exchanged letters with the son of the man, now deceased, who showed him kindness 70 years ago. “I found the people (in Japan) to be very friendly, the country very clean and the people that I talked to were very nice. It is amazing what the two countries have done together to accomplish what we have over all these years. It’s also amazing that with all this we have accomplished, they are not completely coming out with the truth.” “It really upsets me there are certain individuals who have completely ignored history and rewritten it to make it look like Japan was attacked, and that there was no Bataan Death March and no cruelty at all on their part. That’s AP Photo RetiRed chieF Master Sgt. Harold Bergbower, 94, who was in the US Army Air Corps and then the US Air Force, looks solemnly at the American flag as he talks about spending almost four years in various Japanese prisoner of war camps and his nightmares about his treatment almost 70 years after World War II in Phoenix. During his stay in various camps, eventually on mainland Japan, had his weight at one point dipped to under 75 pounds. Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will address Congress next week in the 79 anniversary year of the war’s end and Bergbower says, “We could not have been treated any worse in prison camp. It was inhuman.” not all the people. But there are some. “I think when (Abe) comes, and if he really wants to do something great for his nation and maybe for the world, he should make an apology and be grateful, in a way of appreciation, for things the two countries have done together. That would just about wind it up right there, because we need to be allies.” GREEN CARPET CLEAN 2 ROOMS AND HALLWAY $70.00 cookeshometowngrocer.com or find us on facebook AP Photo Residents evAcUAte with a few salvaged belongings after their home was destroyed by a volcanic mudflow, caused by the eruption of the Calbuco volcano, in an area along the Rio Blanco in Puerto Montt, Chile, Saturday. Authorities urged 2,000 people living near the volcano to evacuate Friday after potentially devastating mudflows of volcanic debris were detected in a nearby river, the result of two huge eruptions this week that sent ash across large swaths of southern South America. Chile no longer fears volcano major blast SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — Authorities downgraded the likelihood of a major eruption at the Calbuco volcano, although the mountain remained active Saturday and the ash clouds it already ejected caused cancelations of more airline flights. Rodrigo Alvarez, head of the National Mining and Geology Service, told TVN television that Calbuco’s seismic activity had changed and experts no longer expected any additional eruption to exceed the two big blasts of Wednesday and Thursday. He stressed that the volcano was likely to remain active and said more eruptions are possible. Officials urged people to keep using masks or handkerchiefs to prevent breathing in dust and they warned against drinking water from surface springs that could have been contaminated by falling volcanic ash. A few airline flights were cancelled Saturday as ash from Calbuco spread over more of the southern half of South America, although most flights were unaffected. At the foot of the volcano, authorities allowed some of the 1,500 people who evacuated the town of Ensenada to return temporarily to their homes to carry out belongings and clean up damage from the heavy ash fall. Numerous buildings were damaged by the weight of ash blanketed Ensenada, which is the closest town to Calbuco. “Here there is nothing else to do, rescue the little that you can and move on. And there are no more words. All that happened is in sight and this house is no longer good for anything,” Andres Reyes said of his house. Residents also sought to care for their cattle, the main livelihood of the town. Interior Minister Rodrigo Penailillo, who visited the area around the volcano about 620 miles (1,000 kilometers) south of Chile’s capital, said the government would compensate farmers for losses from the eruptions. Fish farms, another major business for the affected area, also had significant damage, with ash fall choking thousands of fish in their tanks. More than 6,000 people have been evacuated and authorities are maintaining a 12-mile (20kilometer) exclusion zone around the volcano. Calbuco roared back to life Wednesday afternoon, after lying dormant since a minor eruption in 1972. Former Guantanamo detainees protest in Uruguay MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) — Four former Guantanamo Bay prisoners protested for a second day Saturday demanding more help from both the Uruguayan and the U.S. governments for adapting to life in their new home in this South American country. The men began their protest in front of the U.S. Embassy in Montevideo on Friday and said they slept there through the night. They insisted would stay until they met with the U.S. ambassador. “We’ll be here until Monday. We are not leaving until with speak with the ambassador,” former detainee Adel bin Muhammad El Ouerghi said. The men began their protest after the embassy closed for the weekend, and U.S. officials had not responded to messages requesting comment. As a humanitarian gesture, Uruguay’s government took in the four and two other men in December after U.S. authorities freed them from Guantanamo. They had spent 12 years at the U.S. military prison for suspected al-Qaida ties, but U.S. officials decided they were no longer a threat and let them go. 423.242.5318 Dignified Services at Realistic Prices! 2415 Georgetown Road, NE 473-2620 16—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—17 SportS Cannon’s Corner Joe Cannon Rumors of retirement premature A funny thing happened on my way to Walker Valley to cover a pair basketball games on Jan. 16. When I finally got there, they were playing softball. Contrary to rumors of my “retirement,” I have not been put out to pasture just yet. My recent absence from the Banner pages wasn’t from Rick Norton trying to hold me down so he could finally have a chance at winning the “Favorite Newspaper Columnist” in the Reader’s Choice Award voting, which took place while I was gone. It wasn’t even that I needed some time to recuperate from delivering all those presents at Christmas time. My time lapse certainly had nothing to do with Monday’s mythical holiday, but rather I simply had a chance meeting with some old friends and lost track of time — a little over three months. On my way to cover the Bradley-Walker Valley heated hoop action that fateful January evening, I was involved in an auto accident that not only snarled traffic on North Lee Highway but sent me and one of my friends for a $30,000 helicopter ride, while another friend went by ambulance to the same Chattanooga hospital. Somehow between drifting inand-out of consciousness before help arrived, I had enough clarity of mind for a 20-second phone call to my boss, Richard Roberts, to tell him I didn’t think I was going to make it to the basketball games. I don’t remember being cut out of my van, but I do remember talking to William Lamb, another friend who happens to be the chaplain for Bradley County Emergency Services, and he assured me he’d notify my family of what had happened, although at that time I wasn’t quite sure what had taken place. A few hours later while I was still in the emergency room at Erlanger, a Tennessee state trooper stopped by to give me some information. That was when I found out I had been rear ended by some lifelong friends and fellow church members, who were on there way home to Charleston that evening. The husband is actually a driver for the same bus company for which I work. I guess it is a small world after all. Contrary to the rumors that swirled at “The Stable” that evening, I did NOT have a heart attack, but I did suffer an injury to my spine, requiring surgery to insert eight, four-inch screws and a pair of six-inch rods to secure the T-9 and T-10 vertebrae. After an 11-day stay in Erlanger’s snug facilities, I was transfered to the spacious HealthSouth accommodations for two and a half weeks of physical and occupational therapy. I came home Feb. 11, where therapists came to work with me for another month. Finally, after more than 12 weeks, I got to shed my hard plastic turtle shell brace and was able to return to the semblance of a normal life. I was allowed to return to work at the beginning of this week, gladly greeted by my overworked sports compadres — Richard and Saralyn Norkus — who had to pick up my slack during my “leisure.” The rest of my co-workers also joined in on the welcome with hugs and handshakes and a few gentle pats on the back where I had surgery. I also got a very warm welcome from the kids on my school bus and a promise from longtime friend and Michigan Avenue School principal Angela Lawson See RUMORS, Page 28 SUNDAY Richard Roberts Sports Editor Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529 Sports@clevelandbanner.com Orange tops White in front of 63,016 fans From UT Sports Information KNOXVILLE — The White-clad offense put on a show in the Dish Orange and White Game on Saturday afternoon, but it was the Orange-shirted defense that took home the victory, 54-44 in front of 63,016 at Neyland Stadium. Down by a 44-40 score late in the third quarter, the Orange scored the final 14 points off the game thanks to a stalwart defense to the secure the win. The defense stopped the offense on all six series in the second half. Junior quarterback Joshua Dobbs was 5-of-8 for 94 yards with a touchdown through the air. Freshman Quinten Dormady was 5-of-11 for 96 yards while fellow mid-year addition ran for a teambest 58 yards keyed by a 45-yard scoring dash. Jayson Sparks added 51 yards on 12 carries while Jalen Hurd had 40 yards on the ground including a long of 26 yards. Alvin Kamara ran for 19 yards on 10 totes including the first TD of the day. Pig Howard led all receivers with three catches for 49 yards. Josh Malone had two receptions for 80 yards including a 65-yard bomb from Dormady. Ethan Wolf caught the other TD from Dobbs. On defense, sophomore Evan Berry led the Orange with nine tackles. Classmate Todd Kelly Jr., had six stops and junior Jalen Reeves-Maybin notched five tackles including two sacks. "I'm still learning. I try to learn from the older guys like Cam Photo from Tennessee Athletics DEFENSIVE BACK CAMERON SUTTON (23) of the Tennessee Volunteers celebrates with team mates after scoring a touchdown during the Spring 2015 Orange and White Game at Neyland Stadium in Knoxville. Sutton and LaDarrell (McNeil) and Brian Randolph. I look up to them. In these 15 practices, I'm trying to put in all the effort in and strain that I can. I'm learning every day, trying to watch film with those guys and watching them as they go ahead of me, so that when they're gone, I'll know what to do. I'm trying to get better every day,” Kelly Jr. commented. Overall, the Orange Swarm had 9.0 TFLs and five sacks with Andrew Butcher and Kendal Vickers each posting one. The day kicked off with the Circle of Life drill, which matched offensive and defensive players for single points. A.J. Branisel, Chance Hall and Austin Sanders came away with wins for the offense, with Andrew Butcher and Charles Mosley picking up points for the defense. A point was awarded to the Orange for a defense-on-defense draw between Evan Berry and Todd Kelly Jr. The first-team offense scored on each of its first three possessions, with big plays factoring prominently into each drive Dobbs hit Johnathon Johnson for 37 yards on the opening drive to put the White in business inside the 15. Back-to-back rushes by Dobbs set up a 2-yard touchdown run for Kamara. Dobbs found Howard for a 31- yard gain on the second possession, but a sack by ReevesMaybin for 10-yard loss on 3rd down seemed to put a stop to the scoring threat. But Aaron Medley stepped up and nailed a 55-yard field goal to make the first team two-for-two on scoring drives. Hurd made his presence felt on his first carry of the afternoon to open the third possession for the first team with a 26-yard run up the near sideline. After a pass interference call moved the White 15 yards closer, Hurd broke a 13yard run to set up a Dobbs-toEthan Wolf connection for a 15yard TD. After a pause for a wide receiv- er-defensive back drill in which the DBs won all seven match-ups, Dormady found his stride on his second possession as Volunteer QB, hitting Josh Malone in stride for a 65-yard, one-play drive that put the White team up 33-18. The Orange was able to fight back right way. With the Dobbs and the first team offense back on the field, a trick play went awry, as Cam Sutton picked up a fumble on a double reverse and took it 20 yards to the house to bring the orange within 2, 33-31. Jennings added to the offensive show with a 45-yard touchdown run on the final play of the opening half. "I just saw a little opening. I took it, and once I saw the end zone I couldn't stop. I couldn't stop,” Jennings stated. As part of the halftime activites, Dobbs came up with a clutch performance in the quarterback skills challenge, hitting a target on his final throw to defeat Dormady, 8-7. Spring awards were announced at halftime. The Al Wilson Leadership Award for defense went to Sutton, while Dobbs earned the Inaugural Peyton Manning Leadership Award for offense. The Harvey Robinson Offensive Player Award was given to Jashon Robertson, the Andy Spiva Defensive Player Award to Rashaan Gaulden. Malik Foreman, Robertson and Kendal Vickers were named winners of the John Stucky Award. Johnathon Johnson took home the 63 Award. Mustangs comeback to defeat No. 6 Tigers By RICHARD ROBERTS Banner Sports Editor DECATUR — The Walker Valley Mustangs staged a seventh-inning mini rally in Decatur Friday evening to pick up a 2-1 win over Meigs County in one of the Mustangs' final regular season tune-up games. “It's a win against a quality opponent,” said Mustangs Coach Joe Shamblin. “They've got a good ball team, and their pitcher kept us off balance all night long. We didn't hit it great, but we got enough hits to win.” “We're just getting ready for the district tournament, trying to get everybody firing on all cylinders.” Winning pitcher Ben Clark went the distance for the Mustangs (17-10), striking out five Tigers and giving up an equal number of hits. Clark gave up no walks but hit one batter. Dustin Kennedy took the loss for No. 6-ranked (A) Meigs County (19-5). Kennedy gave up five hits before being relieved in the top of the seventh-inning with one out and one Mustang on base. Clark gave up a lead-off hit to open the game but settled into a pitching dual with Kennedy the rest of the way. The Mustangs' righty held the Tigers scoreless for four innings before giving up an unearned run in the bottom of the fifth on back-to-back Walker Valley errors. “Ben has been like that for us all year long,” said Shamblin. “We also got some great defense that saved us a couple of times. We had some good play in the outfield. I am proud of them and the infield. [Shortstop] Jacob [McCall] made some great plays for us out there today.” McCall showed his stuff in the third and fourth innings sitting the Tigers down with perfect play on four ground balls and a diving stop on a line drive. The Mustangs shook off the shaky play to tie the game 1-1 in the top half of the sixth. Holt Spencer picked up a one-out single and put himself in scoring position with a stolen base. Spencer reached third on a fielder's choice and crossed the plate on a two-out Stu Clark RBI single to left field. Walker Valley took the lead in the upper portion of the seventh inning. Grayson Rountree reached on a Meigs County error and moved up on a McCall single to left. After a Tigers pitching change, Brian Oliver put the Mustangs ahead 2-1 with another single to left that scored McCall. “Brian hit it good today. I'm glad to see him hitting as the district tournament comes around,” said Shamblin. The Mustangs return to the field today with a 3 p.m. game against the Baylor Red Raiders. MUSTANGS 2, TIGERS 1 Walker Valley 000 001 1 — 2 6 3 Meigs County 000 010 0 — 1 5 3 WP: Ben Clark. LP: Dustin Kennedy. 2B: J.T. Goforth (MC). Highlights: Brian Oliver 2-3 RBI, Stu Clark 1-3 RBI (WV); Goforth 2-3. Records: Walker Valley 17-10; Meigs County 19-5. Banner photo, LYNNAE ROBERTS WALKER VALLEY RIGHT-HANDER Ben Clark fires to the plate in the first inning against Meigs County Friday, in Decatur. Contributed photo FORMER UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE head football coach Phillip Fulmer will be the guest speaker at the third annual Walker Valley Football Spring Fundraiser banquet May 7, at First Baptist Church of Cleveland. Fulmer to speak at Walker Valley spring fundraising banquet Special to the Banner Walker Valley Mustang Football will be hosting an evening with Phillip Fulmer, former University of Tennessee head football coach, at the third annual Spring Fundraiser Banquet, May 7 at First Baptist Church of Cleveland. Activities start at 5:30 p.m., followed by dinner at 6:30 and then special guest Fulmer. Fulmer was head coach of the Tennessee Volunteers from 1992 to 2008, compiling a 152–52 record. He guided the Vols to the Division I National Championship in 1998. He has recently been instrumental in implementing the return of football to East Tennessee State University Corporate sponsor tables are on sale now with only a few left. Each table sponsor receive eight tickets for a 5:30-6:15 p.m. meet and greet with Coach Fulmer. Dinner will be served at 6:30 and at 7:30, the guest presentation will begin. Corporate sponsors also receive a 4-by-8-foot stadium sign and half-page color ad in the Fall 2015 program book for advertising. Sign and ad packages only are also available for renewing sponsors or businesses new to supporting Walker Valley Football. Balcony seats are also on sale for only the speaking presentation for $25 each. Doors will open at 7:15 to allow these tickets holders to take their seats in the auditorium. In the past, Walker Valley Football Boosters have hosted other great guests such as Inky Johnson, former UT cornerback, who suffered a career-ending injury on the field but has emerged as a highly sought after motivational and inspirational speaker. The very first guest was Phil Robertson of “Duck Commander” fame. “Our first spring event was so successful we chose to continue with this type of fundraiser instead of selling coupon books, discount cards and other door to door items. The Spring Banquet Fundraiser allows our players, their families, the coaches and the booster club to focus only on each weeks practices and games when fall rolls around,” said Mustangs Booster Club president David Clark. Mustangs head coach Glen Ryan added, “The players and coaches enjoy this banquet every year. Our players serve as waiters and ushers for this event and get to experience some great speakers. It gives the team and the coaches an opportunity to interact with our community of supporters and financial sponsors who keep our program moving forward. Booster club event coordinator Ginger Savage noted several companies playing a key role in bringing coach Fulmer to Cleveland. “This year several local businesses were invited to sponsor our speaker fees and expenses instead of being paid from the proceeds of the banquet. Check into Cash, Buy Here Pay Here and US Money Shops quickly responded and covered the entire event for us and we really appreciate their generous support of Walker Valley Football,” said Savage. “We have other sponsors that through the years have been significant contributors to Walker Valley Football such as Wright Brothers Construction, Ed Jacobs & Associates, Santek Environmental, Dr. Gary Voytik See FULMER, Page 25 18—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com WV, Polk notch softball wins From Staff Reports A pair of local high school softball teams hit the road Friday for some diamond action and came back home with another victory notch in their impressive belts. Walker Valley went north to Athens for its second District 5AAA battle with McMinn County this week, blanking the Tribe this time around, while Polk County crossed the state line to the east, venturing to Murphy, N.C., for a run-rule victory. After blasting five home runs in a 10-run win over the Lady Cherokees to begin the week, the “Feisty Fillies” bookended their runs Friday with a pair in the opening at bat and two more in their final try for a 4-0 win. “We scored at both ends of the game. We came out and got a couple of runs in the first, then were able to finish strong with two more in the seventh,” related Walker Valley head coach Lauren Limburg. “I’d like to have some more scoring in the middle, but I’m very proud of the way we finished off a very busy week.” The Lady Mustangs claimed four district victories in five days and now lead the league race with a 9-1 mark. The “Herd” has make up games on the road at East Hamilton Tuesday and Soddy-Daisy Thursday before the 5-AAA tournament begins Friday at Bradley Central. Now 19-5 on the season, Walker Valley will hold Senior Night festivities Monday as Red Bank comes to Larry Haney Field, plus they will journey to Hixson Wednesday. “It’s going to be another full week. Monday will be a very emotional day saying goodbye to this group of seniors [Alicia Raymond, Hallie Davis, Carly Frost, AJ Chancey, Lara Bean and Mackenzie Elrod],” declared Limburg. “They have been such a big part of our success the last four years. It’s tough to see them go.” Five of the six have accepted scholarships to play ball in college, while the sixth has chosen not to continue playing on the next level. Raymond improved her pitch- ing record to 14-5, earning her fourth circle victory of the week, striking out a half dozen and walking just one, while plunking another in the complete-game, three-hit shutout. The Lincoln Memorial signee also led the way at the plate, going 3-for-4, plus she drove in a teammate. “Alicia pitched extremely well, plus we played one of our best defensive games of the season,” praised Limburg. “This was another big district win for us as we get ready for the tournament.” Chancey continued her recent hot streak by blasting her fourth home run of the week, to go along with a trio of doubles while going 9-for-15 during the stretch. The Tennessee Wesleyan signee drove in three runs to up her season RBI total to 23, plus a dozen of her 22 hits this season have gone for extra bases. Future Lee University Lady Flame Hallie Davis went 2-for-4 Banner file photo, Joe Cannon in the victory. Walker Valley senior AJ Chancey, right, is welcomed by the rest of the “Feisty Fillies” after hitting Meanwhile over in the Tar Heel State, the District 5-AA regular one of her four home runs this past week. The Tennessee Wesleyan signee also had a trio of doubles See SOFTBALL, Page 25 Golf tournament raised funds for Legg Up Scholarship Fund Special to the Banner Bachman Academy, a premier boarding and day school for students with learning disabilities, partnered with Chatata Valley Golf Course to hold the second annual Fred Lupton Memorial Golf Tournament, April 18. Mark Frizzell, CEO/headmaster of Bachman Academy said, “This tournament is set to make a large impact on the Legg Up Scholarship Fund. The fund, founded by Fred Lupton, will provide much-needed scholarship dollars to local students and others who would not be financially able to attend the academy otherwise.” Although rain and thunderstorms were persistent all week prior to the tournament, Saturday morning dawned with dry conditions and partly sunny skies. The day commenced with a shotgun start that began 18 holes of golf. Players had a chance to win $10,000 with a hole-in-one. They also participated in a putting contest, enjoyed a barbecue lunch and a trophy presentation. Door prizes and raffle items concluded the day. For more than 60 years, Fred Lupton of Chattanooga was a volunteer, board member and benefactor of Bachman Academy. He founded the Legg Up Scholarship fund in memory See LEGG UP, Page 25 Contributed photo Taking firsT PlaCe in the second annual Fred Lupton Memorial Golf Tournament were, from left, Robert Devine; Mark Campbell, Bachman Academy Board Chairman; Mark Frizzell, Bachman Academy CEO/headmaster; Brandon Moore; and Doug Goodfellow. while going 9-for-15 with a dozen RBI as the Lady Mustangs notched four District 5-AAA victories in a five-day span. Cougars end regular season on winning note From Cleveland State Sports Information Cleveland State heads to the post season victorious after a high scoring regular season finale against Roane State. Leftfielder Connor Coakley drove in four runs on a homer and single helping the Cougars take the 10-7 win. First baseman Caleb Longley added a two run homer in the bottom of the sixth. Cleveland State (22-20, 9-17) trailed the Raiders 7-4 entering the bottom of the fifth before tacking on six more runs. Drew Korzybski earned the victory pitching 4 2/3 innings allowing one unearned run on four hits with three strike outs and no walks. The Cougars host Motlow State on Wednesday in a play-in game to the TCCAA Tournament at Chattanooga State Community College with first pitch scheduled for 3 p.m. FRIDAY One bad inning caused Cleveland State to split today's double header with Roane State at Cougar Field. The Raiders rallied in the final inning scoring six runs on seven hits leading to a 7-4 victory. Roane State pitcher Mason Sawicki shut the Cougars down in their half of the inning. Cleveland State (21-20, 8-17) centerfielder Wright Hackett homered in the bottom of the fifth to give the Cougars a 4-1 lead. Rightfielder Hagen Wilkey drove in two runs in the bottom of the fourth on a single. In game one Jake Wyrick earned his fourth victory of the season, pitching a complete Horses, trainers preparing for Kentucky Derby LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — One week ahead of the Kentucky Derby, several horses completed their workouts at Churchill Downs before the rain came down. The threat of severe weather across the state hastened things Saturday morning for Derby hopefuls such as International Star, Keen Ice and Tencendur, whose workouts at Churchill Downs came before daybreak and just ahead of the rain. Carpe Diem worked out at Keeneland in Lexington, Kentucky, and trainer Todd Pletcher said "We got fortunate with the weather." Santa Anita offered better California weather for Dortmund and Firing Line. They completed final works before heading to Churchill Downs for the 141st Run for the Roses next Saturday. Tencendur breezed through five furlongs in a minute flat. "I thought he worked well," trainer George Weaver said. "I asked the boys to go out there and go a minute, and he went a minute. It was pretty much what I wanted it to be. "Going into the Derby, I didn't want to go in there off an easy work. I wanted to get something out of it." The main goal was just getting in a workout because of the impending bad weather. The trainers caught a break when showers didn't arrive until around 8 a.m., long after many had completed their runs under cloudy skies. Pletcher moved up Carpe Diem's workout a day at Keeneland. He came away pleased with the half-mile time of 48.60 seconds at the track where the horse won the Blue Grass Stakes aP photo JoCkey Tammy fox, outside, puts Kentucky Derby hopeful Keen Ice through a morning workout at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Saturday. earlier this month and established himself as a Derby contender. "He's continued to develop," Pletcher said of Carpe Diem, who has four wins and a second in five starts. "He's really in a good place now. He's just very happy with himself, content, galloping well; his appetite's good. Just all the indications you'd like to see leading up to a big race. He's giving us all the right signs." Pletcher felt the same about some of his four other horses during Friday's workout at Churchill Downs before deciding later to drop Madefromlucky from his contingent after consulting the owners. That move opened the door for Dale Romans-trained Keen Ice to make the 20-horse field with Kent Desormeaux aboard. Keen Ice is still seeking his first graded stakes win, but his fourth-place finish in the Grade 2 Louisiana Derby behind Derby entrants International Star, Stanford and War Story was good for 10 additional points and 22 overall, which earned a place in the Derby. Keen Ice covered five furlongs Saturday in 1:01.60, just a week after running six in 1:13.20. "We let him do his own thing," Romans said. "He had two really fast drills, got some long miles in him here. The heavy lifting is over." At Santa Anita, unbeaten Dortmund gave trainer Bob Baffert something to feel good about as he mulls whether to work possible Derby favorite American Pharoah on Sunday at Churchill Downs despite rain in the forecast. Dortmund ran six furlongs in 1:13.60 before departSee DERBY, Page 25 from CsCC sports information CleVelanD sTaTe CenTerfielDer Wright Hackett had a homerun in Friday’s game against Roane State. game three hitter allowing one earned run in the 5-2 win. Cougars first baseman Caleb Longley hit a home run driving in two in the bottom of the third. DH Austin Phillips drove in two insurance runs on a single in the bottom of the sixth. Vols battle back to defeat SEC rival South Carolina KNOXVILLE — The Tennessee Volunteers came from behind to take a 4-3 walkoff victory in Saturday's grudge match against South Carolina at Lindsey Nelson Stadium. With the win, Tennessee improves to 17-21 on the year and 6-14 in SEC play, while South Carolina (26-18) slips to 911 in conference competition. "I'm proud of the guys, they deserve to be excited," Head Coach Dave Serrano said. "They've been hearing some tough stuff from me. They know my disappointment. They know our season isn't over with and that we have to do something like today to stay afloat. "It's funny, I really knew that we were going to win that game. Not because of where we were at in the lineup, but there were just some things. For me, I thought the focus was way better." At the plate, second baseman Nick Senzel (1-for-5, 2 RBI), shortstop A.J. Simcox (2-for-4, R, RBI) and catcher Benito Santiago (1-for-2, 2 R, 2 SB) led the Volunteers. Tennessee outhit the Gamecocks with nine knocks in the contest. South Carolina struck early, pushing one run across in the first and taking a 2-0 lead following a solo homer by Gamecocks shortstop Jordan Gore in the second inning. Tennessee came back to even the score at 2-2 in the bottom of the second, as right fielder Johnny Youngblood and catcher Benito Santiago were each hit by a pitch in back-to-back at-bats. First baseman Parker Wormsley then advanced runners to second and third on a sacrifice bunt, setting the table for Senzel and shortstop Simcox to drive in two runs in the frame. The Vols held South Carolina until the fifth, when first baseman Kyle Martin hit a solo home run to right-center field and make it a 3-2 ballgame. Again, Tennessee fought back and scored in the sixth to bring the score to 3-3, as Santiago reached on an infield single and swiped two bags to be brought home by Senzel. Tennessee staged a late rally in the bottom ninth, as Simcox led off with a line drive to right field. Left fielder Christin Stewart then executed a perfect hit and run with a liner to center, moving Simcox to third. After an intentional walk issued to designated hitter Andrew Lee, third baseman/right fielder Jordan Rodgers knocked the game-winning RBI single into right field. "We pretty much knew if we got A.J. [Simcox] on, we had a pretty good chance to win the game," Rodgers said. "I was just trying to get a good pitch and put the ball in play to the outfield. This isn't about me, it's about all the hard work coming together." In his 11th start of the season, senior Bret Marks dealt 7.0 innings, allowing three runs on five hits in the outing. After a shaky start, the righthander settled in and went on to toss a strong, season-high 124 pitches, including eight strikeouts against South Carolina. After beginning the game as UT's designated hitter, righty Andrew Lee worked 2.0 one-hit innings of relief, holding South Carolina scoreless en route to earning his second win of the season. "It's always important to win. I'd be lying if I said this wasn't a little extra important for us," Simcox said. " This gives us a little pick up and hopefully we can carry the momentum into tomorrow." "I have confidence that we're going to win every game to be honest with you, but I really had a feeling we were going to do something [today] to overcome our short coming of winning games late," Serrano added. On Sunday, Tennessee hosts South Carolina in the series finale at Lindsey Nelson Stadium, with first pitch slated for 1 p.m. ET. Game action will be available for viewing via SEC Network television, as Tennessee Baseball Hall of Fame broadcaster Mike Keith joins VFL Rusty Ensor on the broadcast. For the most up-to-date information about the Tennessee baseball program, visit UTSports.com/baseball and follow @Vol_Baseball on Twitter. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—19 Some stars decide to skip NFL draft The hat-and-hug routine with the NFL commissioner that has become a rite of passage for many college football stars on draft night is not for everybody. The waiting is the hardest part, even for players good enough to be invited to the draft, and some prefer to do it away from the ever-present eyes of a national television audience. “I know that the draft is really a great event and a great thing to go to,” said University of Pittsburgh offensive tackle T.J. Clemmings, a potential firstround pick who declined an invitation to attend the draft in Chicago next week. “It also can be pretty stressful. Nobody knows where they’re going to go. But the wait, I’d rather have that wait with my friends and family here at home in New Jersey.” There will be several noticeable absences when the threeday draft starts Thursday night, including potential top picks. Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston, Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota and Alabama wide receiver Amari Cooper all plan to skip the spotlight. Either Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback could be the first overall selection, with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers holding the top pick and in need of a passer. The last time the No. 1 pick did not attend the draft was 1994, when Cincinnati selected Ohio State defensive tackle Dan Wilkinson. But this year, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell might have to wait until pick No. 3 or even 4 — Cooper could go in the top three, too — to pose for a picture with a just-drafted player, his new team’s jersey in hand. Not to worry. Goodell won’t be lonely. Twenty-eight players are scheduled to attend, including Southern California defensive lineman Leonard Williams and West Virginia receiver Kevin White. From 2000-09, an average of six prospects attended the draft, and even then some declined the invitation. Former Wisconsin offensive tackle Joe Thomas went fishing with his father the day he was drafted No. 3 overall by the Cleveland Browns in 2007. When the NFL moved the draft to prime time in 2010, it expanded the invitations and 17 prospects attended. “More and more asked how they could take part,” NFL vice president of football communications Michael Signora said. The NFL pays for two firstclass or four coach airline tickets for each player, whichever See NFL DRAFT, Page 25 Tennessee WR Pearson named as suspect in rape investigation AP photo Denny HAmlin holds the trophy as he celebrates winning the Xfinity series race at Richmond International Raceway Friday. Hamlin dominates to win Xfinity race at Richmond RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Denny Hamlin returned from last week’s injury-shortened weekend and led almost from start to finish Friday night to win the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Richmond International Raceway. Hamlin led the first 154 laps after starting on the pole. He relinquished the lead for one lap to Brian Scott during a series of green-flag pit stops, and to Elliott Sadler during another green flag stop late in the race, but both times regained the lead on the following lap. The Virginia driver routinely built leads of several seconds on the 0.75-mile oval and won by 3.719 seconds. “It’s been a great day obviously right from the very start,” Hamlin said. “Our car had some great speed and that’s the key to victory. It’s not tricks or anything like that. It’s just you’ve got to have a fast car. “They gave me something special tonight and we were able to dominate with it. You don’t get these cars often.” The victory was Hamlin’s 12th in the series and third at Richmond. Following up on Kyle Busch’s wire-to-wire victory for Joe Gibbs Racing in the series last September, the JGR teams have led 498 of the last 500 laps run in the series at RIR. It also was Toyota’s 100th victory in 281 races since the manufacturer joined the series in 2007. The victory also capped a remarkable return for Hamlin, who started the race last weekend at Bristol, then turned the car over to NASCAR novice Erik Jones during a rain-delay because he was experiencing neck and back pain. KNOXVILLE (AP) — Knoxville Police have named Tennessee wide receiver Von Pearson as a suspect in a rape investigation, and he has been suspended from the team. Police said Friday that Pearson has not been charged in the case. Knoxville police said Friday that investigator Colin McLeod went to the University of Tennessee Medical Center about 6 a.m. to check on a report that a rape had occurred at a Knoxville apartment. Police said the investigation is in the early stages and is ongoing. Tennessee athletic department spokesman Jimmy Stanton said Friday that Pearson had been suspended indefinitely from all activities. The police report lists six witnesses, including Tennessee wide receiver Alton “Pig” Howard and defensive lineman Dimarya Mixon. Only Pearson is listed as a suspect. A call to a phone number listed for Pearson on the police report was not answered Friday evening. The report comes as former Tennessee linebacker A.J. Johnson and suspended cornerback Michael Williams face aggravated rape charges in an unrelated case. Johnson and Williams were indicted in February after being named as suspects and suspended from the team in November. Johnson has since graduated and completed his eligibility. Johnson and Williams have both pleaded not guilty to the charges, and lawyers for both men have said their clients are innocent. Pearson, 23, caught 38 passes for 393 yards and five touchdowns as a junior last season while playing in 11 games. Pearson, who is from Newport News, Virginia, joined Tennessee’s team last year after spending two seasons at Feather River College in Quincy, California. See HAMLIN, Page 25 Islanders force Game 7 with Capitals UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) — Nikolay Kulemin scored the goahead goal with 9:27 left and the New York Islanders beat the Washington Capitals 3-1 on Saturday to force Game 7 in the first-round playoff series. Islanders captain John Tavares had a goal and assist, and Nick Leddy had two assists in what could still be the franchise's final game at Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum. Cal Clutterbuck then got the loud crowd on its feet to seal the win with an empty-net goal with 53 seconds remaining. John Carlson scored for the Capitals, who will host the deciding game Monday night. The series winner advances to face the Presidents' Trophy-winning New York Rangers, who finished off the Pittsburgh Penguins in five games Friday night. Jaroslav Halak made 38 saves — including 13 in the final period — and bounced back from a 5-1 loss in Game 5 on Thursday night. Kulemin's goal came during a frantic stretch in which officials allowed the play to continue despite players from both teams tangling in front of their benches. Tavares started the play by driving into the Capitals' zone and attempting to split two defenders. He failed to get a shot off and then was bowled over heavily in the left corner by Alex Ovechkin and Karl Alzner. No one seemed to notice that the puck squirted to Leddy at the left boards. He then fed Kulemin, who was all alone in front. Kulemin went across the top of the crease and wrapped the puck inside the left post. Capitals forward Jay Beagle missed on a golden opportunity to tie it with 5:33 left. Halak stopped Troy Brouwer's initial shot, and the rebound dribbled into the slot. Beagle got to it and lifted a shot over Halak but bounced it off the crossbar. The puck landed in the crease, where Islanders defenseman Johnny Boychuk shoveled it under Halak to stop the play. Tavares opened the scoring 7 minutes in. After Islanders forward Ryan Strome was checked off the puck by Brooks Orpik, Tavares followed up and drove the zone up the right wing. With Carlson backing in, Tavares took advantage by cutting into the middle a snapping a shot in. The Islanders were called for three penalties in the opening period, and the third one cost them. Carlson tied it at 1 with 5 seconds left and Tavares in the box for slashing Evgeny Kuznetsov. Brouwer started the play by getting a lengthy pass at the Islanders blue line, and driving to the net. Jaroslav Halak stopped Brouwer, and then shoveled the puck to his right, and directly to Ovechkin in the circle. Ovechkin fed a pass across to Carlson, who took a few steps in and snapped it through a crowd and in off Halak. The Islanders have a 3-4 record in Game 7s. The Capitals are 3-9, and 2-7 when hosting a seventh game. Unless the Islanders advance, the Game 6 victory will be their final game at the arena. The franchise that won consecutive Stanley Cup championships from 1980-93 and produced such See ISLANDERS, Page 25 Rain delays Zurich Classic AVONDALE, La. (AP) — Erik Compton birdied four of six holes after a nearly six-hour rain delay Saturday, giving the two-time heart transplant recipient a share of the lead with Jason Day early in the third round of the rainplagued Zurich Classic. Compton and Day were at 13 under, a shot ahead of Justin Rose, Blayne Barber, Jerry Kelly and David Hearn at TPC Louisiana when play was suspended because of darkness. Compton finished six holes, and Day played three. Before rain halted play at 12:14 p.m., Day finished off a 7-under 65 to take the second-round lead. A strong storm moved that moved through the area downed at least one tree and toppled tables. Play resumed at 5:57 p.m. and was suspended for the day at 7:32 p.m. PGA Tour officials said play is scheduled to resume at 7:30 a.m. Sunday. The players will not be repaired for the final round. Summer is just around the corner! Do you want to take giant strides toward your education or professional goals, stay close to home and not break the bank? Need an extra class or two to stay on track? Then, sign up for summer classes at Cleveland State! With new programs starting in the fall, there’s never been a more exciting time to turn up the heat on your education! Let us be your choice this summer! 20—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com SCOREBOARD oN Air tv sportsWatch sunday, April 26 Auto rACiNg 2 p.m. ESPN2 — NHRA, SpringNationals, at Baytown, Texas (sameday tape) 3 p.m. NBCSN — IndyCar, Grand Prix of Alabama, at Birmingham College BAseBAll 1 p.m. ESPN — Alabama at Mississippi 3 p.m. FS1 — Kansas St. at Baylor golF 6 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, China Open, final round, at Shanghai (same-day tape) 1 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Zurich Classic, final round, at Avondale, La. 3 p.m. CBS — PGA Tour, Zurich Classic, final round, at Avondale, La. TGC — Champions Tour, Legends of Golf, final round, at Ridgedale, Mo. 6 p.m. TGC — LPGA, Swinging Skirts Classic, final round, at Daly City, Calif. MAJor leAgue BAseBAll 1:30 p.m. MLB — Regional coverage, Boston at Baltimore or Atlanta at Philadelphia 8 p.m. ESPN — N.Y. Mets at N.Y. Yankees NBA 1 p.m. ABC — Playoffs, first round, Game 4, Cleveland at Boston 3:30 p.m. ABC — Playoffs, first round, Game 4, LA Clippers at San Antonio 6:30 p.m. TNT — Playoffs, first round, Game 4, Toronto at Washington 9 p.m. TNT — Playoffs, first round, Game 4, Houston at Dallas Nhl 3 p.m. NBC — Playoffs, conference quarterfinals 7:30 p.m. NBCSN — Playoffs, conference quarterfinals 10 p.m. NBCSN — Playoffs, conference quarterfinals soCCer 8:25 a.m. NBCSN — Premier League, Manchester United at Everton 10:55 a.m. NBCSN — Premier League, Chelsea at Arsenal 5 p.m. ESPN2 — MLS, Los Angeles at New York 7 p.m. FS1 — MLS, Toronto at Orlando 9:30 p.m. FS1 — MLS, Portland at Seattle oN tAP sunday, April 26 BAseBAll Lee at Christian Brothers, 2 Baylor at Walker Valley, 3 soFtBAll Lee at Christian Brothers (DH), 1 Monday, April 27 BAseBAll Walker Valley at Baylor, 5:30 Chattanooga Central at Bradley Central, 7 (JV 4) soFtBAll Red Bank at Walker Valley, 5 Cleveland at Notre Dame, 5 East Hamilton at Bradley Central, 5 Tellico Plains at Polk County, 5:30 McMinn Central at Bradley Central, 6:45 soCCer Cleveland at Bradley Central teNNis Cleveland at Ooltewah, 4 tuesday, April 28 BAseBAll Polk County at Tellico Plains, 5 Walker Valley at Cleveland, 7 soFtBAll Walker Valley at East Hamilton, 5 Bradley Central at Ooltewah, 5 Red Bank at Polk County, 5:30 soCCer Walker Valley at Sequoyah, 5 Cleveland at Boyd Buchanan, 7 trACK County Championship at Cleveland, 4:30 Wednesday, April 29 BAseBAll district 5-AAA tournament in Athens Cleveland vs. McMinn County, 6 soCCer Red Bank at Bradley Central, 5 soFtBAll Walker Valley at Hixson, 5 Bradley Central at McMinn Central, 5:30 thursday, April 30 BAseBAll district 5-AAA tournament in Athens Cleveland/McMinn winner vs. Bradley Central, 5 Walker Valley vs. Ooltewah, 8 soFtBAll Walker Valley at Soddy-Daisy, 5 Bradley Central at Polk County, 5:30 trACK SETAC Championship (middle school) at Cleveland, 4:30 Lee at NCCAA Outdoor Nationals, Rome, Ga. teNNis Walker Valley vs. Cleveland, Lee University, 4 Friday, May 1 district 5-AAA tournament in Athens Cleveland/McMinn/Bradley winner vs. East Hamilton, 5 WV/Ooltewah winner vs.Soddy-Daisy, 8 soFtBAll district 5-AAA tournament at Bradley Central pairings & times, TBA trACK Lee at NCCAA Outdoor Nationals, Rome, Ga. saturday, May 2 BAseBAll district 5-AAA tournament in Athens Friday losers, Elimination game, 1 Friday winners, Winners bracket final, 4 soCCer district 5-AAA tournament pairings, sites & times, TBA soFtBAll district 5-AAA tournament at Bradley Central pairings & times, TBA trACK Lee at NCCAA Outdoor Nationals, Rome, Ga. BAsKetBAll NBA daily Playoff glance First rouNd (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) eAsterN CoNFereNCe saturday, April 18 Washington 93, Toronto 86, OT Golden State 106, New Orleans 99 Chicago 103, Milwaukee 91 Houston 118, Dallas 108 sunday, April 19 Cleveland 113, Boston 100 Atlanta 99, Brooklyn 92 Memphis 100, Portland 86 L.A. Clippers 107, San Antonio 92 Monday, April 20 Chicago 91, Milwaukee 82 Golden State 97, New Orleans 87 tuesday, April 21 Cleveland 99, Boston 91 Washington 117, Toronto 106 Houston 111, Dallas 99 Wednesday, April 22 Atlanta 96, Brooklyn 91 Memphis 97, Portland 82, Memphis leads series 2-0 San Antonio 111, L.A. Clippers 107, OT thursday, April 23 Cleveland 103, Boston 95, Cleveland leads series 30 Chicago 113, Milwaukee 106, 2OT Golden State 123, New Orleans 119, OT, Golden State leads series 3-0 Friday, April 24 Houston 130, Dallas 128, Houston leads series 3-0 Washington 106, Toronto 99, Washington leads series 3-0 San Antonio 100, L.A. Clippers 73, San Antonio leads series 2-1 saturday, April 25 Brooklyn 91, Atlanta 83, Atlanta leads series 2-1 Milwaukee 92, Chicago 90, Chicago leads series 3-1 Golden State at New Orleans, 8 p.m. Memphis at Portland, 10:30 p.m. sunday, April 26 Cleveland at Boston, 1 p.m. L.A. Clippers at San Antonio, 3:30 p.m. Toronto at Washington, 6:30 p.m. Houston at Dallas, 9 p.m. Monday, April 27 Atlanta at Brooklyn, TBA x-Milwaukee at Chicago, TBA Memphis at Portland, 10:30 p.m. tuesday, April 28 x-Boston at Cleveland, TBA x-New Orleans at Golden State, TBA x-Dallas at Houston, TBA San Antonio at L.A. Clippers, TBA Wednesday, April 29 x-Brooklyn at Atlanta, TBA x-Washington at Toronto, TBA x-Portland at Memphis, TBA thursday, April 30 x-Cleveland at Boston, TBA x-Chicago at Milwaukee, TBA x-Houston at Dallas, TBA x-L.A. Clippers at San Antonio, TBA Friday, May 1 x-Atlanta at Brooklyn, TBA x-Toronto at Washington, TBA x-Golden State at New Orleans, TBA x-Memphis at Portland, TBA saturday, May 2 x-Boston at Cleveland, TBA x-Milwaukee at Chicago, TBA x-Dallas at Houston, TBA x-San Antonio at L.A. Clippers, TBA sunday, May 3 x-Brooklyn at Atlanta, TBA x-Washington at Toronto, TBA x-New Orleans at Golden State, TBA x-Portland at Memphis, TBA BAseBAll National league east division W l Pct gB 14 4 .778 — 8 8 .500 5 7 11 .389 7 7 11 .389 7 6 11 .353 7½ Central division W l Pct gB St. Louis 11 4 .733 — Chicago 9 7 .563 2½ Pittsburgh 9 8 .529 3 Cincinnati 8 9 .471 4 Milwaukee 3 14 .176 9 West division W l Pct gB Los Angeles 10 6 .625 — Colorado 10 7 .588 ½ San Diego 10 8 .556 1 Arizona 8 8 .500 2 San Francisco 7 11 .389 4 Friday's games Philadelphia 1, Atlanta 0 N.Y. Yankees 6, N.Y. Mets 1 Chicago Cubs 7, Cincinnati 3, 11 innings Miami 3, Washington 2 St. Louis 3, Milwaukee 0 Colorado 6, San Francisco 4 Pittsburgh 4, Arizona 1 L.A. Dodgers 3, San Diego 0 saturday's games Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, ppd., rain N.Y. Mets 8, N.Y. Yankees 2 Miami 8, Washington 0 Atlanta at Philadelphia, after presstime St. Louis at Milwaukee, after presstime Pittsburgh at Arizona, after presstime San Francisco at Colorado, after presstime L.A. Dodgers at San Diego, after presstime sunday's games Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 2-1) at Cincinnati (DeSclafani 2-0), 1:10 Washington (G.Gonzalez 1-1) at Miami (Haren 1-1), 1:10 Atlanta (Cahill 0-2) at Philadelphia (Williams 1-1), 1:35 St. Louis (Lynn 1-1) at Milwaukee (Fiers 0-3), 2:10 L.A. Dodgers (S.Baker 0-0) at San Diego (Morrow 0-0), 4:10 Pittsburgh (Liriano 0-1) at Arizona (Hellickson 1-2), 4:10 San Francisco (Lincecum 1-1) at Colorado (Matzek 1-0), 4:10 N.Y. Mets (Niese 2-0) at N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 1-0), 8:05 Monday's games Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 7:10 N.Y. Mets at Miami, 7:10 Washington at Atlanta, 7:10 Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 Philadelphia at St. Louis, 8:15 Colorado at Arizona, 9:40 Houston at San Diego, 10:10 San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 New York Atlanta Miami Washington Philadelphia NAtioNAl leAgue leAders BATTING-LeMahieu, Colorado, .414; AGonzalez, Los Angeles, .403; MCarpenter, St. Louis, .387; Alonso, San Diego, .379; Holliday, St. Louis, .367; DGordon, Miami, .364; Markakis, Atlanta, .352. RUNS-Hechavarria, Miami, 15; Myers, San Diego, 15; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 14; AGonzalez, Los Angeles, 14; Hamilton, Cincinnati, 14; MCarpenter, St. Louis, 13; Inciarte, Arizona, 13; Kemp, San Diego, 13; Rizzo, Chicago, 13. RBI-Goldschmidt, Arizona, 16; Stanton, Miami, 16; AGonzalez, Los Angeles, 15; Votto, Cincinnati, 15; Dickerson, Colorado, 14; Kemp, San Diego, 14; Frazier, Cincinnati, 13; Hechavarria, Miami, 13. HITS-DGordon, Miami, 28; AGonzalez, Los Angeles, 25; Kemp, San Diego, 25; MCarpenter, St. Louis, 24; LeMahieu, Colorado, 24; Aoki, San Francisco, 23; Pagan, San Francisco, 23. DOUBLES-MCarpenter, St. Louis, 9; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 9; Arenado, Colorado, 8; AGonzalez, Los Angeles, 8; DeNorris, San Diego, 8; Desmond, Washington, 7; Duda, New York, 7. TRIPLES-Blackmon, Colorado, 2; GBlanco, San Francisco, 2; Fowler, Chicago, 2; OHerrera, Philadelphia, 2; Kemp, San Diego, 2; Revere, Philadelphia, 2; Trumbo, Arizona, 2; Young Jr, Atlanta, 2. HOME RUNS-AGonzalez, Los Angeles, 6; Votto, Cincinnati, 6; Dickerson, Colorado, 5; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 5; Marte, Pittsburgh, 5; Stanton, Miami, 5; 6 tied at 4. STOLEN BASES-Hamilton, Cincinnati, 12; DGordon, Miami, 8; Polanco, Pittsburgh, 6; Aoki, San Francisco, 4; Fowler, Chicago, 4; Revere, Philadelphia, 4; Rizzo, Chicago, 4. PITCHING-BColon, New York, 4-0; Harvey, New York, 4-0; Greinke, Los Angeles, 3-0; Benoit, San Diego, 3-0; Wacha, St. Louis, 3-0; Cole, Pittsburgh, 3-0; 25 tied at 2. ERA-DeSclafani, Cincinnati, 0.86; Scherzer, Washington, 1.26; Wacha, St. Louis, 1.33; CMartinez, St. Louis, 1.35; Nelson, Milwaukee, 1.35; Greinke, Los Angeles, 1.35; Harang, Philadelphia, 1.37. STRIKEOUTS-Kershaw, Los Angeles, 35; Cueto, Cincinnati, 32; Harvey, New York, 31; Scherzer, Washington, 29; Shields, San Diego, 29; TRoss, San Diego, 28; Cole, Pittsburgh, 27. SAVES-Familia, New York, 8; Rosenthal, St. Louis, 7; Grilli, Atlanta, 6; Casilla, San Francisco, 5; Kimbrel, San Diego, 5; Storen, Washington, 4; Melancon, Pittsburgh, 4; Chapman, Cincinnati, 4. American league Boston New York Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore Kansas City Detroit Chicago Cleveland Minnesota Houston Los Angeles Seattle Oakland Texas east division W 10 10 9 9 7 Central division W 12 12 6 6 6 West division W 10 8 7 8 6 Friday's games l 7 8 8 8 10 Pct .588 .556 .529 .529 .412 gB — ½ 1 1 3 l 4 6 9 10 10 Pct .750 .667 .400 .375 .375 gB — 1 5½ 6 6 l 7 9 9 11 10 Pct .588 .471 .438 .421 .375 gB — 2 2½ 3 3½ Boston 7, Baltimore 5 N.Y. Yankees 6, N.Y. Mets 1 Cleveland 13, Detroit 1 Tampa Bay 12, Toronto 3 Chicago White Sox 2, Kansas City 2, tie, 9 innings, susp., rain Houston 5, Oakland 4, 11 innings L.A. Angels 3, Texas 2 Seattle 2, Minnesota 0 saturday's games Detroit 4, Cleveland 1 Kansas City at Chicago, ppd., rain Houston 9, Oakland 3 N.Y. Mets 8, N.Y. Yankees 2 Toronto at Tampa Bay, after presstime Boston at Baltimore, after presstime Texas at L.A. Angels, after presstime Minnesota at Seattle, after presstime sunday's games Cleveland (Carrasco 2-1) at Detroit (Lobstein 1-1), 1:08 Toronto (Buehrle 3-0) at Tampa Bay (Archer 2-2), 1:10 Boston (Miley 1-1) at Baltimore (B.Norris 0-2), 1:35 Chicago White Sox 2, Kansas City 2, tie, 9 innings, comp. of susp. game, 2:10 Kansas City (Volquez 2-1) at Chicago White Sox (Danks 0-2), 3:10 Texas (N.Martinez 2-0) at L.A. Angels (Santiago 2-1), 3:35 Houston (Wojciechowski 0-1) at Oakland (Pomeranz 1-2), 4:05 Minnesota (Gibson 1-2) at Seattle (Elias 0-0), 4:10 N.Y. Mets (Niese 2-0) at N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 1-0), 8:05 Monday's games Kansas City at Cleveland, 6:10 Toronto at Boston, 6:10 Chicago White Sox at Baltimore, 7:05 Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 Seattle at Texas, 8:05 Detroit at Minnesota, 8:10 Houston at San Diego, 10:10 AMeriCAN leAgue leAders BATTING-AJones, Baltimore, .413; Cain, Kansas City, .390; JIglesias, Detroit, .382; Fielder, Texas, .375; Travis, Toronto, .375; Vogt, Oakland, .364; MiCabrera, Detroit, .354. RUNS-Fuld, Oakland, 15; Donaldson, Toronto, 14; Ellsbury, New York, 14; AJones, Baltimore, 14; Moustakas, Kansas City, 14; Trout, Los Angeles, 14; Cain, Kansas City, 13; Kinsler, Detroit, 13. RBI-NCruz, Seattle, 18; Teixeira, New York, 18; AJones, Baltimore, 16; Travis, Toronto, 16; Vogt, Oakland, 14; Abreu, Chicago, 13; Cespedes, Detroit, 13; Donaldson, Toronto, 13; Freese, Los Angeles, 13; HRamirez, Boston, 13. HITS-AJones, Baltimore, 26; BButler, Oakland, 24; Fielder, Texas, 24; Altuve, Houston, 23; MiCabrera, Detroit, 23; Cain, Kansas City, 23; Donaldson, Toronto, 23. DOUBLES-Cano, Seattle, 7; Cain, Kansas City, 6; Donaldson, Toronto, 6; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 6; 14 tied at 5. TRIPLES-Orlando, Kansas City, 5; Fuld, Oakland, 3; ACabrera, Tampa Bay, 2; 31 tied at 1. HOME RUNS-NCruz, Seattle, 9; Teixeira, New York, 8; HRamirez, Boston, 6; Abreu, Chicago, 5; AJones, Baltimore, 5; JMartinez, Detroit, 5; Travis, Toronto, 5; Valbuena, Houston, 5. STOLEN BASES-RDavis, Detroit, 6; Altuve, Houston, 5; Betts, Boston, 5; Cain, Kansas City, 5; Gardner, New York, 5; JIglesias, Detroit, 5; DeJennings, Tampa Bay, 5; Trout, Los Angeles, 5. PITCHING-Simon, Detroit, 4-0; Betances, New York, 3-0; FHernandez, Seattle, 3-0; Buehrle, Toronto, 3-0; Pineda, New York, 3-0; McHugh, Houston, 3-0; Greene, Detroit, 3-1. ERA-NMartinez, Texas, 0.45; Keuchel, Houston, 0.62; Bauer, Cleveland, 0.95; Kazmir, Oakland, 0.99; Archer, Tampa Bay, 1.07; FHernandez, Seattle, 1.61; Simon, Detroit, 1.65; Odorizzi, Tampa Bay, 1.65. STRIKEOUTS-FHernandez, Seattle, 32; Kluber, Cleveland, 31; Kazmir, Oakland, 30; Archer, Tampa Bay, 30; Buchholz, Boston, 29; Pineda, New York, 27; Bauer, Cleveland, 26. SAVES-AMiller, New York, 6; Soria, Detroit, 6; Street, Los Angeles, 6; Boxberger, Tampa Bay, 4; MCastro, Toronto, 4; Britton, Baltimore, 4; GHolland, Kansas City, 4; Rodney, Seattle, 4; WDavis, Kansas City, 4. hoCKeY Nhl daily Playoff glance First rouNd (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Wednesday, April 22 Ottawa 1, Montreal 01 N.Y. Rangers 2, Pittsburgh 1, OT St. Louis 6, Minnesota 1 Anaheim 5, Winnipeg 2, Anaheim wins series 4-0 thursday, April 23 Tampa Bay 3, Detroit 2, OT, series tied 2-2 Washington 5, NY Islanders 1 Nashville 5, Chicago 2, Chicago leads series 3-2 Vancouver 2, Calgary 1, Calgary leads series 3-2 Friday, April 24 Ottawa 5, Montreal 1, Montreal leads series 3-2 N.Y. Rangers 2, Pittsburgh 1, OT, N.Y. Rangers wins series 41 Minnesota 4, St. Louis 1, Minnesota leads series 3-2 saturday, April 25 N.Y. Islanders 3, Washington 1, series tied 3-3 Detroit at Tampa Bay, 6 p.m. Nashville at Chicago, 8 p.m. Vancouver at Calgary, 9 p.m. sunday, April 26 St. Louis at Minnesota, 3 p.m. Montreal at Ottawa, 6 p.m. Monday, April 27 Tampa Bay at Detroit, TBA NY Islanders at Washington, TBA x-Chicago at Nashville, TBA x-Calgary at Vancouver, TBA tuesday, April 28 x-Ottawa at Montreal, TBA Wednesday, April 29 x-Detroit at Tampa Bay, TBA x-Minnesota at St. Louis, TBA AP photo PhilAdelPhiA Phillies shortstoP Freddy Galvis, right, throws to first base after forcing out Atlanta Braves’ Cameron Maybin at second on a double play by Kelly Johnson during the ninth inning, Friday in Philadelphia. Philadelphia won 1-0. Errors, lack of offense doom Braves PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Defensive miscues and an ineffective offense doomed the Braves against Philadelphia. Freddie Freeman mishandled Ben Revere’s ground ball to first, allowing Freddy Galvis to score in the ninth to give the Phillies a 1-0 win on Friday night. Galvis led off with a single to center against Jim Johnson (12), went to second on Cesar Hernandez’s sacrifice bunt and third on a passed ball. Revere chopped the ball toward first base and Galvis broke for home. Freeman had a play at the plate but he bobbled the ball. “I thought I had a chance to get him,” Freeman said. “I tried to act like a shortstop. We had too many miscues tonight.” It was one of four errors for the Braves, who have lost four straight and eight of 11. The Braves were leading the majors in fielding percentage (.993) and entered with four errors on the season. “I’m not so sure if Freeman comes up with it he scores (anyway),” Atlanta manager Fredi Gonzalez said. “But it doesn’t sit right with four errors.” Ken Giles (1-0) pitched a scoreless ninth for the win. Aaron Harang struck out six and walked one while allowing just two hits in eight shutout innings. “He did everything he could to help himself tonight,” Phillies manager Ryne Sandberg said. Harang was 12-12 with a 3.57 ERA in 33 starts with the Braves last season. “We didn’t do anything with Harang, a guy we’ve seen often,” Gonzalez said. “He had great command and mixed his pitches really well.” The Braves got their only hits in the fifth inning when A.J. Pierzynski stayed hot with a one-out double followed by Chris Johnson’s line-drive single. But that was all Atlanta could manage off Harang, who retired his final 10 batters. “I was really on,” Harang said. “I had to work to find out my limitations and try and find the limitations of the strike zone. Once I was able to establish that, I was good to go and everything kind of fell into place.” Alex Wood didn’t allow a run in 5 2-3 innings, giving up five hits while striking out one and walking two. Cody Martin and Luis Avilan combined for two scoreless innings of relief. “My stuff is coming around,” said Wood, who is 1-0 with a 3.00 ERA in four starts this season. Philadelphia’s struggling offense couldn’t get Harang the lead despite several chances. The Phillies entered the game last in the majors in both runs (41) and average (.213) and showed why on Friday. “Overall, we had some hits up and down the lineup but weren’t able to get the hit with a man on base like we’d like to,” Sandberg said. See BRAVES, Page 25 NAsCAr NAsCAr xFiNitY toyotaCare 250 results Friday At richmond international raceway richmond, va. lap length: .75 miles (start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 250 laps, 150 rating, 0 points, $53,835. 2. (2) Joey Logano, Ford, 250, 122.5, 0, $35,480. 3. (8) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 250, 109.4, 41, $34,901. 4. (3) Erik Jones, Toyota, 250, 117.7, 0, $32,289. 5. (7) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 250, 109.2, 39, $29,956. 6. (9) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 250, 97.7, 38, $28,236. 7. (5) Brian Scott, Chevrolet, 250, 109.6, 38, $26,792. 8. (13) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 250, 102.1, 0, $20,702. 9. (15) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 249, 90.4, 35, $26,175. 10. (21) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 249, 82.2, 34, $28,974. 11. (16) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 249, 82.9, 33, $25,720. 12. (11) Darrell Wallace Jr., Ford, 249, 94.3, 32, $25,620. 13. (10) Brennan Poole, Chevrolet, 249, 85.2, 31, $25,518. 14. (26) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 249, 75.9, 30, $25,467. 15. (4) Aric Almirola, Ford, 249, 90, 0, $19,992. 16. (17) Elliott Sadler, Ford, 249, 74.2, 29, $25,316. 17. (28) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 248, 64, 27, $25,113. 18. (6) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 248, 78.6, 0, $19,012. 19. (32) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 248, 60.4, 25, $24,937. 20. (12) Chris Buescher, Ford, 247, 65.8, 24, $25,386. 21. (14) Ryan Reed, Ford, 247, 70.4, 23, $24,836. 22. (23) Harrison Rhodes, Chevrolet, 246, 67, 22, $24,755. 23. (20) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 246, 64.4, 21, $24,678. 24. (25) Blake Koch, Toyota, 246, 56.8, 20, $24,603. Banner photo, riChArd roBerts the BrAdleY CeNtrAl BeArettes celebrated Senior Night between games at their Thursday doubleheader. From left are, Von Harrison, Chanler Grady and Abby Abernathy. Contributed photo the dustiN ledFord live Wide oPeN golf tournament will be held June 13 at Chatata Valley Golf Club. Proceeds from the tournament will benefit the Dustin Ledford Live Wide Open Scholarship Foundation for students at Bradley Central, Cleveland and Walker Valley High Schools. The 4-person, select shot tournament will tee off at 8 a.m. Toyota of Cleveland is providing a 2015 Camry for a hole-inone on a selected hole. Other prizes will also be awarded, and golfers will receive a T-shirt and goody bag. Pictured with the 2015 Camry are, from left, Mark Smith, Toyota of Cleveland sales manager; Eddie Triplet, general manager; and Kim Ledford and Danny Ledford, Dustin’s mother and father. For more information, contact Kim Ledford at 715-3157 or email kimledford5060@yahoo.com. Contributed photo the sixth-grAde teNNessee Flight seleCt basketball team went undefeated in the Alabama Premier Southern Spring Invitational tournament championship April 17, in Birmingham, Ala. Front row, from left: Ciara Taylor, Aaliyah Vananda, Bralyn McGaha, Campbell Penland, Macy Kirby, and Maci Pitner. Back row, from left: coach Brent Stallings, Jamaryn Blair (Cleveland Middle School), Heaven Wyrick, Joy Douglass (Cleveland Middle School), Gabby Carter, Tessa Miller, Keaton Freitag and Sylar Sheridan. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—21 Spurs take 2-1 lead over Clippers SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Kawhi Leonard has a passion for playing defense, but the San Antonio Spurs forward does not want to be regarded a one-dimensional player. So, a day after earning NBA Defensive Player of the Year honors, Leonard’s offensive outburst helped San Antonio break the Los Angeles Clippers’ “spirit” in a blowout victory. Leonard had a postseason career-high 32 points and the Spurs never trailed in dominating the Clippers 100-73 on Friday night to take a 2-1 lead in their first-round series. “He continues to impress me every time he’s out there,” San Antonio veteran Tim Duncan said. “He can put on a show like that in a situation like this. It’s not only great for us, but it’s impressive to watch.” The Clippers scored a franchise postseason low and their 11 points in the third were their fewest in any quarter this season. Los Angeles shot 34 percent from the field and 26 percent from 3-point range. “We’ve had this happen a couple of times this year, we lose our spirit because we can’t make shots,” Clippers coach Doc Rivers said. “I thought that’s AP photo what happened as the game SAn Antonio SPurS’ Kawhi Leonard (2) grabs a loose ball in front of Los Angeles Clippers’ Matt went on. Every time we missed a Barnes, left, and DeAndre Jordan (6) during the first half of Game 3 in an NBA first-round playoff series, shot, we played less and less defense.” Friday in San Antonio. Boris Diaw had 15 points and Danny Green added 11 for San Antonio, which led by as many as 37 points after two tense games in Los Angeles. Game 4 is Sunday in San Antonio. Duncan was held to four points on 2-for-6 shooting but his production wasn’t needed with Leonard surpassing the 29 points he collected in Game 3 of last year’s NBA Finals against Miami. “I’m just doing whatever it takes to help the team win the game,” Leonard said. “Tony (Parker) did a good job getting off early and just created opportunities for me knocking down shots and I just got a rhythm.” Blake Griffin had 14 points and 10 rebounds and DeAndre Jordan added 10 points for the Clippers. Griffin averaged 27.5 points on 47 percent shooting in the first two games, but was held to 6-for-15 shooting against a collapsing Spurs’ defense in Game 3. After a series of highlight dunks in the opening two games, Griffin could only watch from under the basket as Leonard rose high above the rim to corral a pass from Green for a one-handed dunk on a 2-on-2 break. The dunk was part of a 90 run that made it 46-33 late in the first half. Nets beat Hawks, pull within 2-1 in series NEW YORK (AP) — They were beaten badly in the regular season and were losing by a little in the playoffs. On their seventh try this season, the Nets finally got a victory over Atlanta. Get another one Monday, and they will be all even with the No. 1 seed in this Eastern Conference series. Brook Lopez had 22 points and 13 rebounds, Thaddeus Young added 18 points and 11 rebounds, and Brooklyn trimmed Atlanta's lead to 2-1 with a 91-83 victory Saturday. "We know they're going to make adjustments, but we really feel we can compete with these guys and we have a lot of confidence right now," Lopez said. The Nets seized control with an 18-0 run spanning the third and fourth quarters after the Hawks grabbed their first lead since the opening basket. Bojan Bogdanovic added 19 points for the eighth-seeded Nets, who qualified for the playoffs on the final night of the regular season. They didn't appear to be much of a threat to the 60-win Hawks after dropping the first three meetings during the regular season by double digits — including a 32-point stomping on April 4. They nearly won the final matchup before close losses in Games 1 and 2 in Atlanta. "I think they're a confident group, just like we are. It's the playoffs," Hawks coach Mike Budenholzer said. "I think they've played well really for stretches from the beginning and it's going to be a series." DeMarre Carroll scored a playoff career-high 22 points for the Hawks, who were denied what would have been their second 3-0 lead since moving to Atlanta in 1968. Paul Millsap added 18 points and 17 rebounds. The other three East series were all 3-0 entering Saturday, but the Hawks won't be able to wrap this one up quickly after getting poor performances from All-Stars Kyle Korver (two points, 0 for 5 on 3-pointers) and Al Horford (3 for 12, seven points). "From the beginning of the game, they had more of an edge than we did," Horford said. "This was a big game for them and they came out and handled their business." Still, the Hawks had recovered from a poor start to grab the lead late in the third quarter before the Nets put together their big run. Young, who apologized to his teammates after scoring only two points on 1-of-7 shooting in Game 2, answered Atlanta's 11-0 run that gave the Hawks a 62-58 lead with three straight baskets to put the Nets ahead to stay. They scored the last nine points of the third, and Lopez took over when they went 9-0 to open the fourth and build a 76-62 lead. "No matter what or how I felt about Game 2, I knew I had to come back and bounce back in Game 3 for us to get a win," Young said. After getting outscored by 17 points in the first quarter of the first two games, the Nets got the quick start coach Lionel Hollins wanted — though plenty of fans missed it. Black giveaway T-shirts hung over loads of empty seats all around the arena at the start of the mid-afternoon game. The Nets, who wore their road black uniforms, ran off 11 straight points in the opening minutes, then closed the first quarter with nine straight to open a 31-16 lead. TIP-INS Hawks: Atlanta's lone 3-0 lead was in 1969-70 against Chicago in the Western Division semifinals, a series it won 4-1. ... Horford added eight rebounds after having double-doubles in the first two games. Nets: Brooklyn had dropped seven straight to Atlanta dating to last season. ... The Nets had nine “He has really progressed by leaps and bounds on both ends of the floor,” San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich said. “He’s turned into a fine offensive player, as well as a defensive player. He’s not a one-trick pony kind of guy. He’s something else.” Leonard faked a spin outside and stutter-stepped to get by Matt Barnes on a drive and then feigned an upfake to hold Jordan in place long enough to lay the ball in ahead of the Clippers’ 6-foot-11 center. Leonard followed that up with a stepback, fadeaway jumper on Barnes for a 56-43 lead. “He did it the right way, he stayed within our offense,” Duncan said. “He got some shots going early on and then he just kind of got comfortable and kind of got on a roll. Then you see him start to see his level of difficulty kind of going up, shooting over double teams, fading away, making plays and from there, he was just off to the races.” Parker attacked the basket early for the Spurs with unexpected bursts of quickness and energy, showing no indication of the tightness in his right Achilles that put his playing status in question only hours earlier. “He was aggressive out the See CLIPPERS, Page 28 assists on their 11 first-quarter baskets. WILLIAMS' WOES Deron Williams, who went 1 for 7 in Game 2 and missed a jumper that would have tied it in the closing seconds, was 1 for 8 in this one, appearing to hurt his leg in the first half, then going to the bench just before the Nets started the pivotal run and staying there the rest of the way. KORVER COUNT Korver, who made a 3-pointer in 51 straight games during the regular season, was 1 for 8 overall Saturday. "I didn't get any good looks early and I tried to force a couple late," he said. "I need to be better on Monday." NEW YORK NIGHTLIFE The Hawks are back in New York for the first time since reserve swingman Thabo Sefolosha was lost to a broken right leg when he and Pero Antic were arrested by New York police outside a nightclub. Budenholzer said then his players didn't have a curfew and he wasn't worried about them on this trip, either, saying the Hawks have mature, responsible players. "I think AP photo they're all in a good place and Brooklyn netS center Mason Plumlee (1) goes to the basknow how important what's happening is," he said. "We're just ket agains Atlanta Hawks center Al Horford (15) during the first half in Game 3 of a first-round NBA playoff series, Saturday, at New York. going about our business." MLB hands out punishments for baseball brawl AP photo kAnSAS city royAlS and Chicago White Sox players fight during the seventh inning of a baseball game Thursday, in Chicago. The MLB handed out punishments to both teams for their actions. Penguins looking for answers after quick playoff exit PITTSBURGH (AP) — Sidney Crosby wasn’t making excuses so much as stating the obvious. The Pittsburgh Penguins raced through the fall, but limped through the winter and an alltoo-brief spring. The faces, the pace, the results all changed when the health issues and injuries that began with defenseman Olli Maatta’s cancer surgery never let up. “Usually you go through a span of injuries and you get through it and you kind of settle in,” Crosby said. “We never really got through it. We went through the end of the year into the playoffs.” The margin between the Penguins and the New York Rangers proved only lopsided in the result — a 4-1 win for the Presidents’ Trophy winners in their opening-round playoff series. Yet Pittsburgh and New York played 17 periods of taut, tight hockey. All four Ranger wins came by the same 2-1 score. A bounce here, a bounce there and maybe things are different. Pittsburgh lurched into the postseason without defensemen Mattaa, Kris Letang, Christian Ehrhoff and winger Pascal Dupuis. That makes it harder to upset the team with the best record in the league. Now, the team heads into a longer-than-anticipated offseason that could lead to another summer of upheaval. Not that the Penguins planned on dwelling much on what’s to come after Friday night’s overtime loss and the franchise’s earliest playoff exit in eight years. “You look at the way your players play and you can ask so much of them,” coach Mike Johnston said. “You ask them to battle, ask them to compete and play well defensively. You look at all those things and we were really good in the series, really good. It’s just a fine line with all those 2-1 games.” It’s been the wrong side of the line all too often since raising the Stanley Cup in 2009. The team fired general manager Ray Shero and coach Dan Bylsma last year and brought in Johnston and general manager Jim Rutherford to make the necessary tweaks. Rutherford turned over more than half the roster but after a strong start the Penguins spent the last five months going through healthy bodies. There was also a bout with the mumps and an inability to generate consistent momentum on offense. See PENGUINS, Page 25 KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Royals and Chicago White Sox each lost Saturday without playing a game. Four members of the Royals and three from the White Sox were punished for their roles in a series-opening brawl in Chicago, and six of the players drew suspensions. Major League Baseball placed the blame for the fighting squarely on both teams. Royals pitcher Yordano Ventura was handed a seven-game suspension, fellow starter Edinson Volquez given five games and outfielder Lorenzo Cain and reliever Kelvin Herrera got two games apiece. White Sox pitchers Chris Sale and Jeff Samardzija were suspended five games each, while catcher Tyler Flowers escaped suspension but joined the others in getting an undisclosed fine. All the players who received suspensions are appealing, which means they will be able to play in Sunday's series finale. The game scheduled for Saturday was rained out. "Everybody had some elements of their behavior over the course of that incident on both sides that they wish they handled differently," White Sox general manager Rick Hahn said during a conference call Saturday. "Respect the fact that our players stood up and took responsibility for their actions and expressed remorse over those things they wish had been handled better. "It is something that happens from time to time," Hahn added. "It's part of the game." It's a costly part of the game, though. Along with the suspensions, Hahn said reliever Matt Albers fractured a finger on his throwing hand in the melee and will go on the disabled list. Meanwhile, Herrera is already awaiting an appeal on a five-game suspension that was handed down after he threw a pitch behind Oakland third baseman Brett Lawrie during a series last weekend. Ventura was fined for hitting Lawrie with a 99 mph fastball during the same series. "We understand that Major League Baseball has to do what they think is fair in situations like this," Royals manager Ned Yost said in a team statement. "Now, we just have to wait for the appeals process to play out." Tensions between the Royals and White Sox had been building since the opening series of the season, when the teams combined to hit six batters. Two more were plunked early Thursday night when Ventura hit Jose Abreu in the fourth inning and Sale hit Mike Moustakas in the fifth. The simmering anger finally boiled over in the seventh, when Ventura snagged a grounder from Chicago outfielder Adam Eaton and the two exchanged words before Eaton was thrown out at first. Eaton had to be restrained from Ventura, who was ejected from his second straight start. "It was a messy situation," Ventura said through a translator. Players from both dugouts and bullpens then ran onto the field. Volquez whiffed throwing a haymaker, and several other players threw punches in a fight that lasted several minutes. "There are real negative repercussions of this," Hahn said." After he was thrown from the game, Sale went to the Royals clubhouse and was seen pounding on the door. While nothing more transpired, Hahn said he spoke to his star pitcher about it Friday. "It was a private conversation," Hahn said. "We certainly understand where Chris was coming from in terms of the emotion involved in the moment and what he was hoping to accomplish, and at the same time realizing that perhaps there was a better way to handle these things going forward." Five players ultimately were ejected from Thursday night's game, which the Royals won in 13 innings. Among them was Cain, who has been hit by pitches four times this season. Moustakas and teammate Alex Gordon have been hit an AL-leading five times apiece, and the Royals have been hit 17 times as a team — tied with Texas for the league lead entering the day. "This game's emotional and it seems to follow them around," said White Sox manager Robin Ventura, who famously charged the mound and was pummeled by the Rangers' Nolan Ryan during a game in 1993. "Everybody gets emotional and reacts to things and that's what happened." The Royals are starting to earn a fighting reputation. Along with their two series with the White Sox and a tense three-game set in Oakland, Ventura got into a heated argument with Angels slugger Mike Trout during a series in Los Angeles. While acknowledging that the Royals must do a better job of containing their emotions, Yost insisted that his club has rarely been the instigator in a string of testy situations. "Hopefully it's all behind us," he said Thursday night, "and we can move forward." The teams played eight innings Friday night without incident, but the rest of the game was postponed due to rain with the score 2-2. It was supposed to resume Saturday, but more rain in Chicago means that it will now resume Sunday with the Royals batting in the top of the ninth. John Danks is scheduled to start for the White Sox in the second game Sunday, while fellow left-hander Jason Vargas is expected to go for the Royals. No makeup date was announced for Saturday's game. 22—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 Editorials Planting a tree of hope; inspiring all to stand tall W ords spoken at a recent tree planting and memorial at the Bradley County Courthouse in honor of a good man should be forever revered and always practiced. They came from Dr. Lindsay Hathcock, executive assistant to Bradley County Mayor D. Gary Davis, who said this of those we love and all whom we admire, whether from long distance or within the same spaces. “His passing leads us to remember it is always a good idea to check on your fellow person to let them know how important they are, to let them know how much they mean to you,” the much-respected county administrator offered. “May his tree be a reminder of that.” Hathcock’s endearing plea came in reference to the late Hon. Bill Moss, long-time municipal judge for the city of Cleveland since 1972. This aging man of wisdom, whose sharp legal mind and downhome wit were comparable to any, lived in failing health during his final days on this earth. He died last summer by his own hand. In life, Judge Moss had a gift ... one some knew as a gift of gab, not because he enjoyed hearing his own voice but because he believed in making others feel good about themselves and their roles in making a difference. In death, his gift remains. Cleveland attorney Ashley Ownby, speaking on behalf of the Bradley County Bar Association and the Bradley County Courthouse, pointed to Judge Moss’ legacy. “I don’t think a week has gone by that someone has not said something about Judge Moss, something he did, something he said, and we smiled and we laughed, because that’s what Judge Moss was all about,” Ownby told the crowd whose numbers gathered along the Courthouse Plaza just across the street from the LoganThompson law firm where Moss practiced prior to being named city judge. Sponsored by the city of Cleveland, Bradley County, Logan-Thompson and the Cleveland Shade Tree Board, the tree planting — a Japanese zelkova — served as a thoughtful memorial to a thoughtful man. Legendary poet Joyce Kilmer said it best in his inspiring 1914 work, titled “Trees,” when he wrote, “I think that I shall never see, a poem lovely as a tree.” And later he penned, “Poems are made by fools like me, but only God can make a tree.” And for those who live their lives by the Scriptures, only God can make a man. It is oddly appropriate then for a man to be remembered by a tree. In their greatest sense, both are beautiful and each personifies the good in life. The fact that Judge Moss’ memorial tree replaces another that had died in the same spot of the Courthouse lawn gives us pause to remember: Immortality is little more than a fleeting wish. No one, no thing lives forever ... not man, not tree; and not a pure-hearted municipal judge whose knack for finding the good in others. But memories do last. Nurtured by the will of others not to let go, memories are what we make them. And if we keep them by planting a tree, then its namesake will grow as well as the sapling whose roots take hold of life and cling to its potential. A lighthearted story told by his daughter, Jami Moss Wise, also points to why the Courthouse’s newest shade bearer takes special meaning. Judge Moss himself once planted a tree. It was a spindly, little stick that none gave hope for survival. But it lived. And it grew. Its miniature roots embraced hope. It accepted the gifts that life brings to those who believe. And it prospered. “That tree was the most pitiful looking tree you have ever seen in your life, and we laughed about that tree for years and years, that it would never grow,” Jami offered. She added, “... And it did finally one day just shoot up and it became this beautiful water oak.” The measure of a man, or a woman, is best gauged by the words of others. One is Cleveland attorney Matthew Coleman who said, “On July 14, our community lost a great friend, mentor and colleague in the Honorable Bill Moss.” One is Cleveland Mayor Tom Rowland who could not attend the outside ceremony, but who sent along a message, “This tree will stand as a reminder of Bill’s life, and he will always be present with us.” One is the aforementioned Hathcock, who mentioned his final memory of the beloved city judge: “The last time I saw him was almost literally this exact same spot. He was walking across the street. Few people impact people the way Judge Moss did. He was one, when you saw him, your day was better instantly.” One is Cleveland attorney James Logan who is also a longtime fixture in civic involvement, “He was always sympathetic to people who were hurting. He would give people a pat on the back when they needed it most.” All who attended the brief downtown memorial did so with purpose. They knew the Hon. Bill Moss. They respected him in life. They loved him in spirit. They remember him in death. No man is an island, it has been said. All men are unique but all are molded by the fabric of their surrounds. It is a belief that we believe Judge Moss embraced. He also lived life by a set of humanitarian codes. No man is better than the next man. No man is any more a promise of the future than another. No man is a gift to humanity, but all men are gifted with opportunity to influence its well-being. No man is the secret to happiness, but any man can follow its path. No man is privy to all the answers, but every man can ask the questions. Like those who knew him, those who loved him and those whose days were made special by his wit, we will remember Judge Bill Moss. And, we will miss him. On our bad days we will shed a tear. On our good days we will smile while standing along the Courthouse Plaza and watching another miracle take form. By the eye, it is just a tree. By the heart, it is a life that will glow eternal. Good-bye Judge Moss. Godspeed in your newest travels. www.clevelandbanner.com Slow down, take time to learn Today’s technology not always a good thing The best writers are avid readers — or so I’ve been told. Because of that, I made a New Year’s resolution that I would read more books this year — not just short blog posts and articles found online but real, honest-to-goodness books. Months later, I have fallen behind on my desired number. It must be a sign of the times. Technology has changed everything, including how we read things. Even more so than with things like reading, it has also changed how we interact with each other. For example, I have friends who say they much prefer text messaging to talking on the phone. Call me old-fashioned, but I’d rather talk than text, if I have the time. The problem is that most of us do not make as much time for things like verbal conversation as we may have in the past. Why ask a loved one to describe their reaction to first seeing a new baby in the family when they can just text you a photo? Why congratulate a friend on his or her engagement when you can “like” the announcement on a website like Facebook? A while back, I read about a man named Matt Kulesza who realized he had so many friends on Facebook that he did not know most of them well. His experience was like that of many; he had more than a thousand “friends,” but some were merely acquaintances. The Australian decided to remedy that problem by resolving to go out for coffee to catch up with or get to know every single one of those people, amounting to more than a thousand coffees. He has since been chronicling his coffee meet-ups on an online blog aptly titled “1000+ Coffees.” I love that idea, as I believe nothing compares to the laughter one experiences in conversation — not even the typed assurance that someone is “LOL,” or “laughing out loud.” I’ve heard it said people today are more “connected” than ever, but that might just be a common misconception. Sometimes we can be guilty of making better eye contact with our smartphones than other people, and that is a problem. One cannot overemphasize the importance of getting to know others in person, ’STRONG THOUGHTS Christy Armstrong Banner Staff Writer offline. I keep hearing educators say they are having to teach students more and more that they must do things like shake hands with people and look them in the eye. While such consequences of technology might seem like a problem only young people face, I have also met adults in their 60s who tend to keep their faces glued to their iPhones. Is communication actually starting to become a lost art? Is it lost already? Technology is wonderful, even if it sometimes encourages us to move quickly and not take as much time to appreciate things like long works of literature or good conversations in person or on the phone. However, too much of a good thing can be a bad thing. The evidence of too much technology being a bad thing is already a familiar thing to many. I am not an expert on etiquette or social interactions, but I do know what it is like to have people text messaging while I am trying to have a conversation. I have seen countless people sending text messages and emails in the middle of meetings, which always makes me wonder if they are really taking in what is being said in the room. Technology has some wonderful applications in settings like meetings, but it cannot truly replace the collaboration that takes place when people really listen and collaborate. Though life isn’t really like a romantic comedy movie, I kind of have to chuckle when I find myself pondering what life might be like if people actually spoke to strangers in coffee shops instead of pulling out their devices. After all, there are very few things that can really replace the simultaneously wonderful and awkward experience of having a genuine tête-à-tête with someone you just met. I won’t go into too much detail about another frustration of mine — people relying only on short online status updates to get news about current events. Still, it is a problem. There is an online abbreviation that people use to summarize things they believe others won’t take the time to read: “TL;DR” (or “tldr”) which is short for “Too long; didn’t read.” (Feel free to skip to the end if you want to see how this works.) People not reading long pieces of writing is such a given in today’s society that my journalism professors in college instructed us to always try to put the most information at the top of an article. The idea was that someone could perhaps still gain a vague idea of current events even if he or she does not make much time for news. It’s basically like starting a story with the ending; there’s little suspense. Archives of news articles published before computers were ever used indicate journalists were not always so concerned about short attention spans. While I am of one of the younger generations, I refuse to see technology’s effects on society as a generational challenge. It’s something society as a whole has to address. The world we live in is a fast-paced one, and we need to remember that it is OK to slow down and get to know others the way people did centuries ago. What would you do if you didn’t have technology? What if the power went out and the towers that make cellphone use possible suddenly went offline? What would be left would be whatever you decided to invest time in when you weren’t busy investing in things like your online presence. TL;DR — Here’s my advice: Don’t take life too quickly. Though life may have you moving at a terribly fast pace, take the time to enjoy and learn from those around you. Meet new people. Catch up with the ones you already know. When you’re not around others, take the time to read a book — or, of course, a newspaper — to learn more about the world around you. Enjoy whatever the future brings, but don’t overlook what it is already in front of you. You might just miss something great if you do. ANNIE’S MAILBOX Spreading some Greenway love to others who share the same community passions From April 15-17, city and county planners, parks and recreation officers, community leaders and volunteers gathered at Montgomery Bell State Park near Dickson for the biennial statewide Greenways and Trails Forum. This was my third time attending the forum and every time I have come away energized and inspired. Serving as chairman of the Cleveland/Bradley County Greenway has been my privilege for the last nine years and it has become my No. 1 most rewarding volunteer activity. However, to come together for three days with about 100 others who share my same passion for building, promoting and planning a community linear park gave me a renewed infusion of determination and resolve. The forum started with a fourhour tour of Cheatham County’s extensive blueway system. Jane Polansky of the Park Service led the tour of the Harpeth River Blueway, showcasing a number of put-ins and access points. Although the purpose of this tour was not about greenways, it enlightened me to what a group of planners are in the process of doing along the Hiwassee River. One of the access points to the Hiwassee River Blueway will be in Charleston as part of the interpretive Greenway that is underway there. A roomful of exhibitors was a highlight of the forum for me as I was able to chat with firms and organizations that can ultimately benefit our Greenway. I spoke with representatives who specialize in elevated walkways, something we may have to consider sometime in the future. There were also reps for playground equipment, benches and other specialty items relevant to a Keeping it green Cameron Fisher Cleveland/Bradley Greenway Board Greenway. One of the catalogs I brought home was from Freenotes, a company that specializes in outdoor music displays. Who knows, one or more of them may end up on our Greenway! The rest of the forum consisted of sessions, meal functions and breakouts between Greenway planners from all across the state. Topics included such titles as “Greenways and Greenbacks,” “Building Great Trails and Great Partnerships,” and “Greenway, Bicycle and Blueway Master Plans.” This year I was invited to present a session called, “David and Goliath: Community vs. Metropolis.” The session evolved from my observation of the 2013 forum and how a majority of the sessions highlighted greenways from the big Tennessee towns like Memphis, Knoxville and Chattanooga. My thought was there were several planners from smaller cities that might have felt intimidated — or even disillusioned — that their “small town” greenways couldn’t compete for grants and notoriety. Not so in the case of Cleveland and Bradley County. For 30 minutes, I rambled nonstop about the success of our Greenway. I highlighted the support from day one of our city and county leaders. I told how we have secured over $2.2 million in grants. I showcased the extensive list of gifts and donations that have been received to enhance our Greenway. I was able to squeeze in some great pho- tos of the April 11 “Groovin’ on the Greenway” event that utilized the still-under-construction stage in Greenway Park. But perhaps most importantly, I was able to emphasize the community-wide acceptance and usage of our Greenway. Without that, why bother? This is another opportunity to say thanks to everyone who uses and supports our Greenway. Because of this support, I was able to confidently share our successes and hopefully inspire others that a Greenway can be one of our best assets! ——— Online: www.cbcgreenway.com Facebook: The Greenway Dear Annie: I have a question about when someone gives something to another person. A cousin gave my sister several nice articles of clothing. After several years, the cousin now wants the clothes back. She even requested that the items be delivered to her house. My sister never asked for these articles of clothing to begin with. My cousin simply thought my sister needed them. Is it correct for my cousin to request the return of the items? — C.P. Dear C.P.: It depends. When your cousin gave the clothes to your sister, did she say it was a loan? Did she say, “You can borrow these”? If so, she didn’t intend for your sister to keep them. But otherwise, when someone gives something away, it belongs to the recipient, who is under no obligation to return it. Of course, if your sister wants to maintain a good relationship with this cousin, she might consider returning the items anyway just to avoid ill will. ——— (About the writers: Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@creators.com, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd St., Hermosa Beach CA 90254.) Cleveland Daily Banner – Established in 1854 – EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Stephen L. Crass GENERAL MANAGER Jim Bryant CIRCULATION DIRECTOR Herb Lacy OFFICE MANAGER Joyce Taylor ASSOCIATE EDITOR Rick Norton ASSOCIATE EDITOR Gwen Swiger LIFESTYLES EDITOR William Wright SPORTS EDITOR Richard Roberts ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Jack Bennett RETAIL SALES MANAGER Sheena Meyer PRESS SUPERVISOR Richard Yarber 423-472-5041 Telephone 423-614-6529 Newsroom Fax 423-476-1046 Office & Advertising Fax 1505 25th Street N.W. - Cleveland, TN 37311 • P.O. Box 3600 Cleveland, TN 37320 www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—23 life is the decisions we make, right or wrong "I can bring you to the door, but you have to walk through." — Jean Paul Vadnais Canadian author (Died, Sept. 25, 2009) ——— Folks who hit a certain age often find themselves becoming more retrospective; that is, they enjoy looking back which for some leads to looking in. I don’t know which birthday marks the occasion. But I’m pretty sure I’ve had mine. It wasn’t a bad thing. It wasn’t a painful thing. It was just ... a thing. It doesn’t make me a lesser person, a better person or a smarter person. It just means the events of today sometimes take me back to a moment from another day, to a time when times were different and to a place where the journey was frightening and new. Psychologists probably call it a part of the aging process. It’s not a surrender, they’ll caution. It’s just a pause to look back and to gaze upon the crossroads of past decisions made, right or wrong. Seems like I’ve been doing more of that lately. Maybe it’s because over the last few years, I — like so many others in my age group — have learned of the loss of more and more classmates from their high school years. For me, several have been graduates from our Class of ’73 at Collierville High School over on the state’s western end. Like anybody else, until now I have been taking the heartbreaking news one loss at a time, weathered the emotional storm and moved on. Then came the latest. I wrote about it INKSPOTS Rick Norton Assoc. Editor last week. It was a reflective piece about Johnnie, a schoolmate who had passed in 1984. I didn’t find out about it until 31 years later. I’m trying not to be redundant in approaching the same hurt a week later, but last Sunday’s perspective apparently stirred some emotions in others — all of whom have been dealing with the same kinds of trauma in their lives. “Where was I?” I rhetorically asked a co-worker of the fact that three decades had passed since my friend’s death, and I was just now learning of it. “How could I not know?” I asked him. I already knew the answer. It was as obvious as it was heartbreaking. I didn’t try. Over the years, I had made no real effort to stay in touch with my own graduating class, much less those who were juniors when we seniors were tossing our maroon mortarboards high in the air of that hot high school gymnasium. I never called anybody. I never wrote a letter or sent a postcard from Cleveland, Tennessee. Even once technology allowed it, I didn’t send emails, post to Facebook nor did I Twitter; at least, not until 2013 when I did reach out to some old high school football buddies for a 40-year, state runner-up reunion. That was how, and when, I learned about losing two teammates — in chat sessions on Facebook. Both had been good friends. Each was a good guy. But, I accepted the news and I dealt with its sadness. So why was word of Johnnie’s passing so painful? As I said, she was a junior. I was a senior. She was a cheerleader. I was a student athletic trainer. She was black. I was white. We talked a lot. But we had little in common. So why was I in tears? Last week a friend offered an opinion. “Maybe you were closer than you thought,” my confidant suggested. “Maybe you cared for her far more than you remembered.” Looking back, I realize his reasoning was sound. We were schoolmates in the early ’70s, a still-volatile time from late in the Civil Rights era when court-ordered desegregation was closing schools and busing students to distant institutions — all with the aim of creating education equality, improving opportunity and creating a new culture ... a culture of racial tolerance and social understanding. It took a few years, and it remains a work in progress. But it succeeded. Our kids today are the living proof. And God Bless them all, each and every one. But that wasn’t the case 42 years ago. In 1973, a white male student wouldn’t dare be attracted to a black female student. Or vice versa. Society said no. Protocol said no. All the surrounding frowns would have said no. And here I was, wanting to challenge the system. I can’t speak to how Johnnie felt. It is a secret known only to her, to From the pages of The Banner This Week in hisTory The following items were compiled by the Cleveland Bradley County Public Library from old issues of the Cleveland Daily Banner and its forerunners, the Cleveland Banner, the Journal, and the Journal and Banner. The following items were compiled by the Cleveland-Bradley County Public Library from old issues of the Cleveland Daily Banner and its forerunners, the Cleveland Banner, the Journal and the Journal and Banner. April 26, 1968 Four-car mishap A four-car mishap took place on city streets at 10:50 a.m. Thursday morning when autos driven by Martha Beck, Lucille Porter and Leslie Stepp, all of Cleveland addresses, collided at the intersection of Third and Worth streets. The fourth auto, owned by James E. Barrett of 609 Lakeland Drive, was parked at the corner and was hit in the wreck. Lynn Geren, city police officer, investigated the multiple crash. ——— April 27, 1968 Capacity crowd The Kiwanis Queen docked at 8 o'clock on a Friday evening at the Bradley High auditorium, and brought to a capacity crowd a fun-filled evening of songs and dancing. Crill Higgins directed the annual Kiwanis Minstrel that began with an arrangement of "Hello My Baby," "Shortnin' Bread," and "Down at Papa Joe's." Then after a medley of "Pretty Baby," "Baby Face" and "Your Feets Too Big," Connor Hall sang the lovely "Red Roses for a Blue Lady" in his wonderful tenor voice. God and to Heaven. After reading last Sunday’s column, a colleague who serves as unofficial newsroom counselor said the other day he believes Johnnie and I were on the verge of testing the waters of social acceptance. “At the time it may have been the equivalent of a barrier-breaking relationship with strong possibilities,” he said. “A crush can equal a blooming romance when both parties are aware and participate in a growing friendship.” Sounds reasonable. And if so, maybe that explains the unexpected emotion to Johnnie’s passing. Maybe that speaks to this feeling of distraction that has gnawed at me for two weeks now. Maybe that says a little something to the ties that bind — even as teenagers — and how the memories of our youth are like a simmering ember that rekindles with something as simple as a word, a picture or a prayer. Yet, in spite of what it may seem, today’s column is not just about Johnnie. I eulogized my dear friend last week, and I took great comfort in writing it. The words returned a warmth, the thoughts revived a glow. This goes a little deeper, one whose depth is best measured one heart at a time. This is about those mystical crossroads faced by all. This is about the decisions that seemed so searing as a restless, wistful teen, yet in hindsight become gently reassuring in the eyes of the aged. Life is not a moment, a minute or a day in time. Life is the decisions we make, and the struggles we face in their making. In 1973, I could have tested the norm and asked Johnnie on a date. She might, or might not, have accepted. I will never know. But in that tiny, yet pivotal slice of our lives so long ago, I bowed to the pressures of the day and stayed the course of accepted travel. It was not the right decision. It was not the wrong decision. It was just the decision of the day made in a confusing day gone by. It was my crossroads, yet one whose path was the road most taken. But the beauty of time is not the decisions we make today, but our willingness to change the future when change is right. Choices may be questioned, but never should they be dwelled upon. In the words of Atlanta artist Betsy Canas Garmon, “To decide is to walk facing forward with nary a crick in your neck from looking back at the crossroads.” And this I have done. Happily married now for 38 years, I can imagine no greater life nor any deeper love than sharing another 38 with the woman I adore and with whom I shall gladly grow old. And as we age, gone will be the days of our youth and the innocent passions of a time, and a place, so very long ago. But in their place will remain a smile unforgotten, a memory of the heart and a heart long remembered. ——— (About the writer: Rick Norton is an associate editor at the Cleveland Daily Banner. Email him at rick.norton@clevelandbanner.com.) LETTER TO THE EDITOR Victor Cook thanked for helping Lee To The Editor: Having spent over 30 years in this community and realizing the benefit of corporate partners, I want to take a couple of minutes to recognize one that has invested time, effort and money in the lives of some Lee University students primarily from the Department of Business and the Department of Communication and the Arts. This corporate partner has silently, but significantly, provided assistance to our students as they transition from the academic community to the working world. This corporate partner is Olive Garden, under the leadership of Victor Cook. Mr. Cook hosted Etiquette Dinners for our students over the last few years. During the dinners, students learn how to conduct themselves in a corporate environment which includes a meal, whether that is the initial interview or a business meeting. We believe this benefits our students, who are future employees, with increased confidence and a positive attitude as they engage in business conversations. They learn how to collaborate with an improved professional image that enhances career opportunities. Since many business opportunities are brokered over a meal, we see great potential benefits for the employers as well. They hire our students who then represent their company with confidence. We believe this gained self-confidence will make them a more productive employee; success breeds success! We see how this training encourages our students to take on challenges resulting in a successful employee that generates company revenue. Our students learn the hard skills in the classroom. They learn how to analyze a company and present findings to superiors, but the Etiquette Dinner that Mr. Cook provides helps them learn the soft skills needed in the current corporate culture. Thank you, Mr. Cook, on behalf of the students who have benefited from your generosity. — Dewayne Thompson, D.B.A. Chair, Department of Business Lee University State legislators focus on jobs, education, tax cuts By STATE REP. KEvin BRooKS 24th Legislative District and STATE REP. DAn HowEll 22th Legislative District Last week, the Tennessee House of Representatives wrapped up the first half of the 109th General Assembly, focusing efforts on passing commonsense legislative initiatives to aid both immediate and long-term economic development in Tennessee’s private sector. Measures to empower teachers, ensure employers find Tennessee an attractive destination for their businesses, and reinvigorate the state’s education system to better train the next generation of Tennessee workers were among the House’s priorities. In addition, the House worked hard this year to cut taxes and ensure the state continues to foster an environment where new jobs are created and small business can thrive. With Republicans at the helm, the Legislature finished its work in record time compared to previous years, saving millions of dollars for taxpayers across the state. With the first half of the 109th General Assembly now in the books, the House Republican Caucus is ready to continue advocating for conservative fiscal policies to carry forward this year’s efforts into the next legislative session. Several of the highlights from this year include: Fiscal responsibility and tax cuts In the final few days of this year’s legislative session, the House of Representatives passed Tennessee’s annual budget with an 80–12 vote. The bill’s passage was the culmination of months of tireless work crafting a fiscally responsible and balanced budget. The $33.3 billion budget cuts taxes, puts $73.5 million in the state’s Rainy Day Fund, improves our educational system, and provides an even better environment for businesses to grow and for jobs to flourish. In addition, the House cut $43.9 million in taxes this year, including a cut in the Hall income tax and the continuation of property tax relief for veterans, seniors and the disabled. Education made priority A large portion of this year’s budget efforts focused on education, including funding for K-12, higher education and Brooks Howell proposals designed to build on the Drive to 55 program — an effort to raise the percentage of Tennesseans with a degree or certificate beyond high school from 32 to 55 by the year 2025. This year’s budget includes an approximate $170 million increase in education funding over last year. Other education highlights include: —The repeal of Common Core in the state with funding to replace the educational standards with a system based solely on Tennessee values and ideas; —$100 million in funding for teacher raises, which amounts to a 4 percent pool that education associations will have available as they make local decisions to increase teacher pay; —An extra $30 million to pay for teacher’s health insurance; and —$5 million for liability insurance for all teachers. Crime prevention takes spotlight in 2015 session The House worked this year to pass legislation to prevent crimes and assist victims, while working to crack down on those who choose to violate state laws. Key bills and efforts include: —Legislation to permit the Board of Probation and Parole to deny an inmate’s parole if he or she is using the parole hearings process to intimidate and harass a victim; —An extension of the statute of limitations for promoting prostitution from 10 to 25 years in order to give victims more time to address the issue and prosecutors more time to prosecute offenders who are promoting prostitution; —Legislation to give law enforcement and other officials more training to identify, investigate and prosecute cases of human trafficking in Tennessee; —A bill which increases the penalty and provides for harsher punishment for those convicted of the sexual exploitation of a minor; and —Legislation that removes the provision in state law that allows judges and magistrates to waive the 12-hour “cooling off” period during which a person charged with a domestic violence offense or an elder abuse offense cannot be released on bail. Veterans remain a top state priority The House worked tirelessly this year to pass bills to aid Tennessee veterans and their families. From education assistance to the extension of veterans’ treatment courts, legislators have vowed to continue fighting to ensure Tennessee military men and women are taken care of. Some of these bills from 2015 include from 2015: —Legislation designed to better support the healthcare needs of military men and women by authorizing healthcare providers who are in the National Guard to provide volunteer clinic services in a Tennessee military armory for veterans in need; —A bill giving 501(c)(19) veterans organizations the same opportunity as 501(c)(3) organizations to conduct annual fundraising events like cake walks, raffles and other games of chance to raise funds for charitable purposes. This legislation codifies the passage of Amendment 4 to the State Constitution, which won approval by voters in November of last year; —The extension of the Veterans Court pilot program, which is currently in place in Shelby, Montgomery and Davidson counties. These courts help give service members in Tennessee the option of pursuing treatment and recovery programs rather than incarceration; —Legislation that adds spouses and dependent children of veterans as parties eligible for in-state tuition rates; —A bill that gives non-resident veterans the same authorization as veterans who are Tennessee residents to use their experience as a military truck driver to receive a commercial driver’s license (CDL) in the state; —Legislation that ensures high school students that train between their junior and senior year in the National Guard or go to advanced training after their senior year will still remain eligible for the state’s Tennessee Promise program; and —$1 million to establish competitive grants to two-year and four-year institutions to develop initiatives specifically designed for veterans. Pro-Life bills take center stage Legislative proposals sponsored this year to place restrictions on abortion procedures following the passage of Amendment 1 last November took center stage during the last few weeks of this year’s legislative session. Amendment 1, which was approved by the people of Tennessee during the November 2014 general election, overturned a 2000 Tennessee Supreme Court decision that restricted the Legislature’s ability to provide commonsense regulations to the state’s abortion policies. Two of the major bills passed this year pertaining to abortion include House Bill 1368, which requires state licensure and inspection of abortion facilities in Tennessee, and House Bill 977, which provides for informed consent and establishes a 48-hour waiting period following that consent before an abortion can occur. Currently, Tennessee has no laws regarding these areas of abortion law. Supporters of these bills agree the proposals fulfill a promise made by legislators last summer that the General Assembly would work to restore commonsense protections for women considering abortion in Tennessee. As data from the Centers for Disease Control notes, 1 of 4 abortions in Tennessee are performed on women residing in another state, the third highest out-of-state abortion rate in the nation. Such numbers have resulted in Tennessee becoming known as an abortion destination. Legislators hope by passing these bills that safeguards will finally be in place to ensure state laws are strong enough to protect women seeking an abortion in Tennessee. Additional key bills Other key bills passed this year include: —House Bill 10, which promotes civics education in Tennessee classrooms; —House Bill 606, which establishes an online verification program to help ensure compliance with state laws requiring motorists to have car insurance; —House Bill 404, which bans the sale of powdered or crystalline alcohol in Tennessee; —House Bill 537, which extends civil liability protection to those that break a car window in an attempt to rescue an animal locked in a vehicle if they believe the situation threatens their well-being. This protection already applies to children and minors locked in a vehicle unattended; —House Bill 138, which provides additional pathways to customized education for students with special needs, giving parents the flexibility to direct their child's funding to the schools, courses, programs and services that best fit the learning needs of their child through an Individualized Education Account (IEA); —House Bill 556, which allows the Department of Safety and Homeland Security to develop an electronic driver’s license system; —House Bill 935, which authorizes the seizure of assets derived from, used or intended for use in acts of terrorism upon conviction; —House Bill 745, which creates a voluntary program to purchase a lifetime handgun carry permit in Tennessee; —House Bill 646, which establishes the Community College Reconnect Grant program — a last-dollar scholarship for adults who want to return to community college and complete their associate’s degree; —House Bill 24, which establishes the “Go Build Tennessee Act” to promote and encourage the recruitment of students in the construction industry; —House Bill 198, which increases the time period a driver’s license is valid from five to eight years, cutting down on the wait time at driver’s license centers statewide; —House Bill 1341, which prohibits public funds or resources in Tennessee from being allocated toward enforcement of federal laws if that results in a violation of any other Tennessee law or the Tennessee Constitution; —House Bill 114, which prohibits the printing of social security numbers on checks in order to receive a benefit, good or service; and —House Bill 1105, which changes the way Tennessee currently manages its State Aid Road Grant Program to make it easier for counties to access state funds to upgrade, repair and improve roads and infrastructure. ——— (About the writers: State Rep. Kevin Brooks, R-Cleveland, represents the 24th Legislative District and serves as assistant Majority Leader in the House of Representatives. State Rep. Dan Howell, R-Georgetown, represents the 22nd Legislative District, and is a freshman legislator.) 24—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Pet oxygen mask campaign continues By Sue LittLe Another supply of life-saving pet oxygen masks was delivered this week to Bradley County Fire Chief Troy Maney and his staff by Exclusively Shelter Pets in the continuing campaign to provide every fire station in Cleveland and Bradley County with the special masks. Many may remember that the campaign began to honor a brave little Dachshund named Lexy who almost died on a cold December day some four years ago when her family's home was consumed in flames. Her human family managed to escape the flames unharmed and Lexy had followed them. But firemen said as she was running out of the burning house they soon saw that her body looked like "a little ball of fire." One of the firemen managed to save her and rushed her to Bradley Veterinary Hospital on Georgetown Road. Drs. Howard Hamilton and Jerry Bancroft recognized her prognosis was not hopeful due to the severity of her burns along with the damage caused by smoke inhalation. The Bradley veterinarians and staff immediately rallied to give her constant care by taking turns day and night to save her with specialized treatments and constant monitoring. Two local organizations, ESP and PALS, joined together to solicit donations to pay for Lexy's intricate, life-saving treatments. The Cleveland Daily Banner published continuing reports of Lexy's needs and progress. Local residents immediately responded with the generosity so typical of Cleveland and Bradley County residents. After months of hospitalized care, Lexy was permitted to go home with one of the hospital's vet techs who would then return her daily to the hospital for the doctors' observation and care. When she was completely healed and healthy, she was adopted by the same vet tech who loved her so dearly and who she adored. Tears of joy came to many eyes on this special occasion. In honor of Lexy and to save the lives of dogs, cats, ferrets, guinea pigs and other pets of all sizes — large, medium or small — ESP began the campaign to eventually donate the costly pet oxygen masks to each fire station in Cleveland and Bradley County. Many cities already have the life-saving masks on every truck throughout their jurisdiction. The masks can be used for both conscious and unconscious pets suffering from smoke inhalation and toxic fumes. Each mask can also be attached to a special bag in case the pet also requires manual breathing assistance. Due to the large number of rescued pets' vetting, the many treatments of pet injuries and illnesses that ESP has made possible for local residents with pets in need of immediate veterinary care, the pet oxygen mask campaign has again been temporarily slowed. Now, we are pleased to announce it has been resumed with the newest donation going to Bradley County Fire Chief Troy Maney and his staff at the county fire station which they will have available when needed to save precious pets' lives. To help ESP give each county and city fire station lifesaving masks on their trucks, taxdeductible donations may be made to: ESP's Lifesaver Campaign, P.O. Box 4864, Cleveland, TN 37320. For further information, please call 728-5414. ESP will continue to provide ongoing help to pets and people in other ways along with providing pet troY maNeY, Bradley County fire chief, and staffers were smiling as they received life-saving pet oxygen masks in three sizes from Exclusively Shelter Pets during ESP's continuing campaign to equip each fire station in the county and city with the special masks. From left are Tyler Goins; Chief Troy Maney; ESP's Sue Little; Chris Terry; Tommy Suits, holding Lily Belle, a little dog adopted from the Cleveland Animal Shelter eight years ago by Sally Little of ESP; and fireman Justin Coffee. sUNNY is a happy pit bull-mix, about 1 year old, now available for adoption into a forever home. Animal control officer Roy Womack hopes some caring person will adopt Sunny or one of the many highly adoptable pets at the municipal Cleveland Animal Shelter, 360 Hill St. oxygen masks as funding makes all of this varied help possible. Paws up this week to all who rescued a pet with the assurance of providing a long, wonderful life in a forever home. Call me with your pet and wildlife stories. tYler hall, animal control officer at the friendly Cleveland Animal Shelter, gave special attention to Blossom, a lovable little female dog about 1 year old who is hoping for a new forever home where she can be someone's loving indoor companion. Blossom would like to adopt you now at the municipal shelter, located at 360 Hill St., off Inman Street. Shelter hours are weekdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Saturdays, 10 a.m. to noon. BitsY is a sweet little dog who needs a loving family to make her one of their favorite family members. Meet Bitsy today at the friendly Cleveland Animal Shelter, along with many other wonderful pets in great need of loving homes. Queen’s granddaughter withdraws from event Cash, a male chow / spitz mix, was surrendered to the SPCA shelter as a stray on Feb. 11. He was adopted by Christopher Flint on April 15, after being at the shelter a little more than two months. SPCA of Bradley makes every effort to find local forever homes for animals placed in their care. LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) — An equestrian competition in Kentucky lost some star power when British rider Zara Phillips, a granddaughter of Queen Elizabeth II, withdrew after her horse suffered a minor injury. Phillips told the Lexington Herald-Leader she was looking forward to riding the course at the Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event in Lexington. She says the course would have suited her horse, High Kingdom. It would have been Phillips’ debut at the Rolex Kentucky, an annual Olympic-level competition held at the Kentucky Horse Park. Norris, a 6-week-old orange tabby bobtail kitAs she was preparing for dresten, was surrendered with his three brothers. He sage Friday, High Kingdom got was adopted less than an hour later by Alice hurt when he kicked while in the stable. McDowell. Coyotes found in NYC Neil DiamoND, a domestic long-haired gray tabby, was surrendered to the SPCA as a stray. He was adopted 10 days later by John Joffrion and family. We Are Still Your: NEW YORK (AP) — One moseyed around Manhattan’s East Village. Another was caught in trendy Chelsea. Yet another rambled through a Hudson River park this week. Tourists? Hipsters? No: coyotes. They’ve been spotted periodically in New York since the 1990s, but a string of recent sightings in Manhattan has drawn new attention to them. And experts say New Yorkers should expect to see more of the adaptable animals, which have shown they can make it in densely populated places. At least four coyotes have been spotted around Manhattan so far this year. Urban Park Rangers program director Sarah Aucoin says three were captured and released. Make Sure Your Pets Always Have A Ticket Home! MICROCHIPS $20 includes lifetime registration Added staff so no waiting! ALL vaccinations, Heartworm and Feline Leukemia testing abailable. DIXIE DAY SPAY 182 AIRPORT ROAD NW • CLEVELAND, TN• 423-476-7122 No appointment necessary Saturday, May 2nd • 9am to 1pm Pet Funeral Home and Crematory Honoring Your Pet the Way a family Member Should Be! (423) 472-8889 Available 24/7 www.constantcompanionpc.com 1 in 3 pets will get lost. Without ID, 90% won’t return home. James Frith saw Trudy, a 5-year-old Corgi/pug, on The Ark's Adoptapet.com site. He called for more information then decided to drive from Antioch to meet her. Frith has a resident cat so spent time with Trudy in the cage-free cat habitat to be sure she was cat friendly. After a long walk and time in a bonding room, Trudy became a member of the family. Frith reviewed veterinary records and completed the adoption contract. Ryan, who helped make the lifelong decision to adopt Trudy, picked her out a free harness and retractable leash. Trudy posed briefly for a farewell photo then headed to Petco with her "Think Adoption First" coupon book provided by Petco Shelter Outreach. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—25 NFL Draft Islanders From Page 19 From Page 19 the player chooses, and two hotel rooms, plus some in-town transportation. Since 2010, the NFL has had at least 23 prospects attend each draft. Players often slip out of the first round and into Day 2 — which can be a little uncomfortable. Quarterbacks tend to draw the most attention, especially when they aren’t selected as early as projected. Cal’s Aaron Rodgers was the first to endure the long, televised wait when he dropped to No. 24 in 2005 before being scooped up by the Green Bay Packers. Southern California Heisman Trophy winner Matt Leinart (No. 10 to Arizona in 2006) and Brady Hamlin From Page 19 But he pronounced himself “100 percent” Friday at the track just 15 miles from where he grew up, and announced his return by winning the pole for the Xfinity race and then qualifying second for Saturday night’s Sprint Cup race. The superiority of his car, Hamlin said, was evident throughout, even when he struggled on restarts. “I knew if I could get through the first five laps of a restart, I would be able to set the pace,” he said. The race also was the second dominant performance in the series in a row, Joey Logano having led wire-to-wire to win the 300-lap race last weekend at Bristol Motor Speedway. “I know what it feels like to be on the other side of the buttwhooping now,” Logano joked afterward. He started second and ran in the top five all night, but said “We were just a secondplace car. Straight up, that’s where we were. I couldn’t catch him.” Regan Smith was third, followed by Jones and Chase Elliott. Braves From Page 20 BAD BUNT Sandberg said he would’ve liked Asche to swing away in the eighth. “He did that on his own,” Sandberg said. “He had an idea there to lay down a bunt.” COLD NIGHT It felt more like football season in Philadelphia with a game-time temperature of 55 degrees and a strong wind making it feel much colder. “It’s one of those things where you go all spring in warm weather and then all of the sudden it’s cold and windy,” Wood said. He said he had a hard time gripping the ball because of the conditions, but “so did everybody else.” TRAINER’S ROOM Braves: Andrelton Simmons took a hard bump from first baseman Ryan Howard at the bag while trying to beat out a double play in the fifth inning. After walking it off, Simmons stayed in the From Page 17 game. Phillies: Closer Jonathan and many others. All our sup- Papelbon wasn’t with the team porters and sponsors play a key due to a sickness that kept him roll in the success of the pro- home in bed all day Friday, gram and what we are able to according to Sandberg. UP NEXT provide for our players.” Braves: RHP Shelby Miller (2-0, For more information on how to attend the banquet by pur- 1.69) aims to continue his strong chasing a table for eight guests, start when the Braves play the contact David Clark at 423-503- second of three games in 0747 or Ginger Savage at 423- Philadelphia at 7:05 Saturday 667-2711. Individual tickets for night. Phillies: RHP David Buchanan the speaker portion of the evening may be purchased at (0-3, 9.22 ERA) will look to get the Walker Valley High School back into the form he displayed in spring training. office. Revere grounded out with a man on second in the fifth, Carlos Ruiz popped out to left with the bases loaded in the sixth and Odubel Herrera grounded out with a man on second in the seventh. Their best chance to score before the ninth came in the eighth with runners on first and third with one out. But Cody Asche, who entered batting a team-best .333, popped out to first after a surprising bunt attempt and Ruiz struck out. The Phillies played a flawless game in the field after committing five combined errors while getting outscored 15-2 in losses to Miami on Wednesday and Thursday. Fulmer DAILY NASDAQ Nasdaq composite 5,120 Close: 5,092.09 Change: 36.03 (0.7%) 5,000 10 DAYS 4,800 17,600 4,600 17,200 4,400 16,800 D J F STOCK MARKET INDEXES 52-Week High Low Name 18,288.63 15,855.12 Dow Industrials 9,310.22 7,521.18 Dow Transportation 657.17 524.82 Dow Utilities 11,221.14 9,886.08 NYSE Composite 5,073.09 4,014.17 Nasdaq Composite 931.88 814.14 S&P 100 2,120.49 1,820.66 S&P 500 1,543.48 1,269.45 S&P MidCap 22,467.14 19,160.13 Wilshire 5000 1,278.63 1,040.47 Russell 2000 Last 18,080.14 8,880.17 597.81 11,192.94 5,092.09 928.53 2,117.69 1,533.84 22,431.18 1,267.54 M Net Chg %Chg +21.45 +.12 -24.51 -.28 +6.29 +1.06 +1.46 +.01 +36.03 +.71 +3.95 +.43 +4.76 +.23 -6.36 -.41 +34.99 +.16 -4.00 -.31 A YTD %Chg +1.44 -2.84 -3.28 +3.26 +7.52 +2.22 +2.86 +5.60 +3.51 +5.22 MARKET SUMMARY - NYSE AND NASDAQ GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last Chg %Chg Affimed n 11.72 +3.47 +42.1 ImpacMtg 19.20 +4.78 +33.1 Gigamon 29.75 +6.16 +26.1 HK Tv 9.11 +1.44 +18.8 KingtoneW 5.49 +.86 +18.5 InotekPh n 5.61 +.86 +18.1 eHealth 13.50 +2.06 +18.0 TrueBlue 29.20 +4.39 +17.7 e-Future 5.50 +.78 +16.5 Innocoll n 9.90 +1.28 +14.8 Amazon 445.10 +55.11 +14.1 Tofutti 4.80 +.59 +14.0 GtBasSc un 18.00 +2.20 +13.9 LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name AeriePhm AmSupr rs Spectranet CatalystPh NwstBio wt DeVryEd DurectCp XBiotech n SORL HomeAway Trinity s AmrRlty NETgear Last 12.87 6.88 26.52 3.69 4.14 30.70 2.11 22.94 3.66 27.18 28.70 4.81 30.00 Chg -22.52 -3.12 -8.18 -.98 -.95 -6.87 -.46 -4.50 -.69 -4.99 -4.66 -.75 -4.17 ing for an expected arrival on Sunday. "He cruised today," Baffert said. Firing Line is also due in Sunday after going five furlongs in 1:02.20 at Santa Anita. At Belmont, El Kabeir breezed four furlongs in 46.81 seconds. Frosted and Upstart each covered five furlongs at Palm Meadows Training Center on Saturday, clocking 1:01.10 and 59.95, respectively. %Chg -63.6 -31.2 -23.6 -21.0 -18.7 -18.3 -17.9 -16.4 -15.9 -15.5 -14.0 -13.5 -12.2 12-mo %Chg +10.50 +17.06 +8.37 +6.55 +24.94 +12.47 +13.65 +13.85 +13.50 +12.87 ACTIVES ($1 OR MORE) Name Vol (00s) Last Chg Microsoft 1244549 47.87 +4.53 Petrobras 869380 9.99 +.59 Vale SA 743921 7.92 +.80 CSVLgCrde 568052 3.29 -.06 S&P500ETF 490901 211.65 +.49 Comcast 434823 59.64 +.41 Apple Inc s 417907 130.28 +.61 AT&T Inc 414998 34.01 -.22 Xerox 407007 11.99 -1.15 BkofAm 400067 15.64 -.05 iShEMkts 386749 43.85 +.16 CliffsNRs 357486 6.03 +.47 PetrbrsA 348550 8.91 +.23 Name From Page 18 of a dear friend. Bachman Academy is a nonprofit boarding and day school for intelligent students with learning differences. Students are unique in that their educational needs cannot be met in a traditional classroom setting. The academy receives no state or federal funding. As a specialty school, the The Penguins finished 19th in scoring even with Crosby and Evgeni Malkin both in the top 20 in points. Pittsburgh managed more than four goals just once over its final 20 games. And while goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury did his best to keep the Penguins competitive against New York, in the end it wasn’t nearly close to enough. “I felt when we entered the playoffs, we cleaned the slate and said ‘Hey, this is what we’ve got right now and we’ve got a tough series on our hands,” Johnston said. “I thought we handled the series really well.” Now Johnston and his players will find out if management will handle another disappointing spring as gracefully. Johnston has another year left on his contract and there are several personnel decisions that have to be made with players like defenseman Paul Martin ready to hit free agency. It’s been six long years 18,200 Close: 18,080.14 Change: 21.45 (0.1%) 17,960 17,720 season champion Polk County squad broke open a tie game with a 10-run rally in the top of the sixth inning for a 15-5 victory. “We started out a little slow. They (Murphy) had a little offspeed pitcher, and we were getting out on our front foot trying to hit her,” explained Lady Wildcat coach Bill Triplett. “We were able to make some adjustments and blow the game out late.” “I’m satisfied with the way we are hitting the ball, considering we had eight days off,” he added. “We had 14 hits against Bradley Thursday and 10 Friday [in since that giddy June when Crosby led Pittsburgh to a championship. It remains the franchise’s last victory parade — and the last year the Penguins won a game beyond the conference semifinals. Johnston will wait a few days before sorting through the rubble of dashed expectations. While this was his first season as a head coach at the NHL level, he’s been around the game long enough to know trying to predict the future is unwise. Maybe Pittsburgh co-owner Mario Lemieux will decide it’s time to really blow things up. Or maybe the team will return in the fall with the same core and the same high standards. “I’m sure there’s going to be lots of talk about it,” center Brandon Sutter said. “But as players we’re not going to worry about it. We’ve got a good group here and unfortunately it ended a little bit too soon.” MONEY RATES Last N D 10 DAYS 5.5 1.4 2.5 1.3 2.9 ... 3.2 2.5 1.7 ... ... 4.0 3.2 ... 1.7 3.4 2.1 2.0 3.1 1.0 1.3 F M STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Div Yld PE Last AT&T Inc 1.88 Apple Inc s 1.88 BB&T Cp .96 BkofAm .20 Cisco .84 CliffsNRs ... CocaCola 1.32 CocaCE 1.12 Comcast 1.00 CmtyHlt ... CSVLgCrde ... DukeEngy 3.18 Eaton 2.20 Facebook ... FstHorizon .24 GenElec .92 HomeDp 2.36 iShEMkts .88 ItauUnibH .41 Kroger .74 Lowes .92 J 31 18 14 23 17 ... 26 17 19 75 ... 30 18 79 16 ... 24 ... ... 21 27 34.01 130.28 37.78 15.64 28.82 6.03 40.89 45.40 59.64 55.34 3.29 79.41 68.58 81.53 14.18 26.80 113.70 43.85 13.28 71.70 73.16 YTD Chg %Chg -.22 +1.3 +.61 +18.0 -.08 -2.9 -.05 -12.6 +.14 +4.3 +.47 -15.5 -.06 -3.2 +.29 +2.7 +.41 +2.8 +.12 +2.6 -.06 -32.7 +.55 -4.9 -.52 +.9 -.88 +4.5 -.13 +4.4 -.05 +6.1 -.26 +8.3 +.16 +11.6 +.60 +2.2 +.77 +11.7 -.21 +6.3 Name Div Yld PE Last MktVGold .12 Microsoft 1.24 Molycorp ... NorflkSo 2.36 Olin .80 PaneraBrd ... PetrbrsA .85 Petrobras .46 PwShs QQQ1.49 RegionsFn .24 S&P500ETF3.94 Scotts 1.80 SouthnCo 2.17 SunTrst .80 TaiwSemi .50 Target 2.08 UtdCmBks .20 Vale SA .60 WalMart 1.96 Whrlpl 3.60 Xerox .28 .6 2.6 ... 2.2 2.6 ... 9.5 4.6 1.0 2.5 1.9 2.7 4.8 2.0 2.0 2.5 1.1 7.6 2.5 1.8 2.3 ... 20 ... 16 23 28 ... ... ... 13 ... 26 20 12 ... ... 16 ... 16 24 14 19.36 47.87 .99 105.29 30.84 184.36 8.91 9.99 110.54 9.58 211.65 66.54 44.87 40.47 24.91 82.70 18.94 7.92 79.84 196.49 11.99 Pvs Wk A YTD Chg %Chg -.42 +4.53 +.15 -.92 -.10 +1.67 +.23 +.59 +1.48 -.04 +.49 +.08 +.18 -.44 +.61 +.77 +.49 +.80 +.66 +5.57 -1.15 +5.3 +3.1 +11.8 -3.9 +35.4 +5.5 +17.5 +36.8 +7.1 -9.3 +3.0 +6.8 -8.6 -3.4 +11.3 +8.9 ... -3.2 -7.0 +1.4 -13.5 Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b = Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d = Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f = front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s net asset value. s = fund split shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution during the week. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial. Murphy].” “Our younger players are feeling more comfortable and hitting the ball well,” assessed Triplett who started four freshmen Friday. One ninth-grader, Cambaria Woody is hitting over .400 this season and led the victory over the Lady Bulldogs by going a perfect 4-for-4 with three stolen bases and four runs scored. Junior pitcher Hannah Triplett did the job both in the circle and at the dish for the Lady ’Cats. She struck out five and didn’t give up an earned run in the completegame effort to improved to 9-3 on the rubber, plus went 3-for-5 with four “ribbees” and a double with the bat. All-staters Aubrie Bowman and TWC signee Brianna Muller played a big part in the Polk victory, both driving in a pair of teammates, while reaching base four and three times respectively. Ashlynn Johnson and Makayla Maynard also drove in a couple of Lady Wildcat runs each. Polk County will play host to Tellico Plains Monday. Red Bank comes to Benton for a doubleheader Tuesday before the Lady Wildcats wrap up the regular season by entertaining Bradley Thursday. SUMMARY Walker Valley 200 000 2 — 2 10 0 McMinn County 000 000 0 — 0 3 2 WP: Alicia Raymond (14-5) 7 IP, 6 Ks, 1 BB, 1 HBP, 3 hits, 0 ER; LP: Hope Mizzell. HR: AJ Chancey (WV). RBI: Chancey 3, Raymond (WV). Highlights: Raymond 3-4, RBI; Hallie Davis 2-4; Chancey 1-4, HR, 3 RBIs (WV). Records: Walker Valley 19-5, 9-1 District 5-AAA; McMinn County 11-14, 2-10 District 5AAA. Polk County 120 02(10) — 15 10 2 Murphy, NC 100 130 — 5 8 6 WP: Hannah Triplett (9-3) 6 IP, 5 Ks, 8 hits, 0 ER; LP: Cook. 2B: Triplett (PC). RBI: Triplett 4, Brianna Muller 2, Aubrie Bowman 2, Ashlynn Johnson 2, Makayla Maynard 2, Cambaria Woody (PC). Highlights: Woody 4-4, 4 runs, 3 SB, RBI; Triplett 35, 2B, 4 RBIs; Muller 1-3, 2 BB, 2 RBIs, Bowman 12, 3 BB, 2 RBIs. Records: Polk County 14-5, 7-1 District 5-AA. Australia Britain Canada Euro Japan Mexico Switzerlnd CURRENCIES Day Ago 1.2858 1.5057 1.2144 .9238 119.49 15.3381 .9547 Total Assets Total Return/Rank Obj ($Mlns) NAV 4-wk 12-mo 5-year Pct Min Init Load Invt British pound expressed in U.S. dollars. All others show dollar in foreign currency. MUTUAL FUNDS American Funds AmBalA m American Funds CapIncBuA m American Funds CpWldGrIA m American Funds EurPacGrA m American Funds FnInvA m American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds InvCoAmA m American Funds NewPerspA m American Funds WAMutInvA m Dodge & Cox Income Dodge & Cox IntlStk Dodge & Cox Stock Fidelity Contra Fidelity ContraK Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m Harbor IntlInstl T Rowe Price GrowStk Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard HltCrAdml Vanguard IntlStkIdxAdm Vanguard MuIntAdml Vanguard PrmcpAdml Vanguard STGradeAd Vanguard TgtRe2020 Vanguard Tgtet2025 Vanguard TotBdAdml Vanguard TotIntl Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard WelltnAdm Vanguard WndsIIAdm MA IH WS FG LB LG MA LB WS LV CI FB LV LG LG LB CA FB LG LB SH FB MI LG CS TE TG CI FB LB LB MA LV 47,846 70,620 56,438 30,769 44,447 74,731 73,699 58,355 37,576 52,276 43,460 69,060 59,446 77,110 34,733 49,391 52,399 43,125 40,545 147,612 37,351 33,920 37,926 37,870 33,899 30,403 34,442 57,618 54,643 122,327 123,333 66,742 32,812 25.26 61.71 49.06 52.03 53.92 45.81 22.12 38.24 39.54 41.72 13.93 45.98 182.54 102.47 102.42 74.77 2.44 71.99 56.88 195.46 98.32 28.61 14.24 110.98 10.75 29.70 17.30 10.99 17.11 53.46 53.44 69.13 67.87 +1.0 +2.5 +2.3 +2.8 +1.9 +2.4 +1.1 +2.6 +2.5 +0.7 +0.5 +2.5 +1.9 -0.3 -0.2 +1.4 +2.1 +2.9 +1.2 +1.4 +0.9 +3.9 -0.2 -0.5 +0.4 +1.3 +1.4 +0.1 +3.9 +1.3 +1.3 +1.1 +1.4 +9.8/B +8.2/A +8.8/C +6.9/B +13.5/C +16.3/C +8.2/C +13.6/C +12.3/A +11.1/B +4.3/D +5.4/B +10.6/C +16.6/C +16.7/C +15.0/B +2.1/E +1.1/E +22.1/A +15.0/B +37.0/D +4.1/B +4.3/B +19.0/B +2.3/A +9.4/A +9.9/A +5.2/B +4.1/B +14.8/B +14.7/B +9.8/B +10.6/C +11.4/A +9.3/A +10.0/C +7.4/C +12.9/C +13.5/C +10.8/A +12.8/C +11.5/A +13.8/A +5.0/B +8.6/A +13.7/A +14.3/B +14.4/B +14.0/A +8.9/A +7.4/B +15.9/A +14.1/A +23.1/B NA +4.4/B +15.8/A +2.8/B +9.1/A +9.6/B +4.3/D +5.8/D +14.2/A +14.0/A +10.7/A +12.6/B MAKING SENSE OF INVESTING 230 N. Ocoee St. 476-9143 1596 Clingan Ridge Dr. 476-0162 2080 Chambliss Ave. NW, Suite 1 472-6814 5.75 5.75 5.75 5.75 5.75 5.75 5.75 5.75 5.75 5.75 NL NL NL NL NL NL 4.25 NL NL NL NL NL NL NL NL NL NL NL NL NL NL NL NL 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 2,500 2,500 2,500 2,500 0 10,000 1,000 50,000 2,500 10,000 50,000 10,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 1,000 1,000 10,000 3,000 10,000 3,000 50,000 50,000 CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, CS -Short-Term Bond, FB -Foreign Large Blend, IB -World Bond, IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MI -Muni National Intermediate, SH -Health, TE -Target Date 2016-2020, TG -Target Date 2021-2025,WS -World Stock, Total Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar. www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC Edward Jones Pvs Day 1.2774 1.5176 1.2171 .9201 118.89 15.3942 .9538 Prime Rate 3.25 3.25 Discount Rate 0.75 0.75 Federal Funds Rate .00-.25 .00-.25 Treasuries 1.32 1.31 5-year 1.91 1.87 10-year 2.61 2.52 30-year Gold (troy oz.,NY Merc spot) $1175.20 $1202.90 $15.631 $16.221 Silver (troy oz., NY Merc spot) Name O school cannot accept health insurance or Supplemental Security Income for tuition. Bachman Academy is accredited by the Southern Association Independent Schools. A diploma from Bachman Academy is recognized by the state of Tennessee. Visit BachmanAcademy.org to learn more. Softball From Page 21 Dow Jones industrials Washington-TV that he might consider taking a chair home as a souvenir. It was a very chippy game that even had both captains — Tavares and Ovechkin — get tangled up and exchange shoves at center on their way to their respective benches for a line change in the first period. Legg Up Penguins 18,400 18,000 N From Page 18 THE MARKET IN REVIEW 5,000 O Derby can't get along. A fight between two fans wearing Islanders jerseys erupted in the stands a few moments before Nicklas Backstrom scored in overtime of a 2-1 win in Game 4. Orpik had beer spilled on him while celebrating Backstrom's winner Tuesday. Ovechkin made a joke to CSN From Page 18 DAILY DOW JONES 4,880 5,200 stars as Mike Bossy, Denis Potvin and Billy Smith, is moving to the Barclays Center in Brooklyn for the start of next season. The Islanders are leaving Long Island after 43 seasons. NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman on Friday said the move was long overdue because the arena was outdated, and placed the blame on local politicians for failing to approve several proposed plans for a new arena. One fan carried a sign that read: "This Is Home, Not Brooklyn." After the second period, fans inside the arena booed a commercial pitching season tickets for next season. The Islanders and the NHL stepped up security inside and outside the arena, including having officers patrolling the surrounding parking lots on horseback. Capitals fans complained they had their cars — bearing District of Columbia and Virginia license plates — vandalized last weekend. And even Islanders fans Quinn (No. 22 to Cleveland in 2007) also endured the slide. Leinart said he’s glad he had the experience of going to the draft, but he would plan things differently if he could do it over again. “I would have stayed home, had a big party in my parents’ house with all my closest family and friends over. Been just super relaxed. Played golf. Whatever it may be,” he said. “Enjoyed it with my family in a stress-free environment.” Last year it was Texas A&M quarterback Johnny Manziel who had to wait backstage, with TV cameras cutting to him on just about every pick as he checked his phone and took swigs out of a water bottle. The Browns ended up taking Manziel at 22, and the cameras switched focus to Teddy Bridgewater, Louisville’s star quarterback. The Vikings kept Bridgewater from having to return for Day 2 by taking him with the 32nd and last pick of the first round. Geno Smith was not so lucky back in 2013. The West Virginia quarterback tumbled all the way out of the first round after there was talk he could be an early first-rounder. Smith considered not showing up for Day 2, but did and the New York Jets took him with the seventh pick of the second round. Mariota and Winston probably don’t need to worry about sliding that far, but still have decided there’s no place like home. “I applaud their decision, being home in a comfortable environment,” Leinart said. “For Mariota, he’s a shy person. That’s not his deal. Jameis Winston is probably avoiding it for other reasons. To stay out of the media.” Winston had a series of offfield issues at Florida State, including a rape accusation against him. He has said he plans to spend draft night with loved ones, including his paternal grandmother whom, he said, has type-2 diabetes and cannot make long trips. “I want the people who have been there since Day 1 to enjoy this moment,” Winston told NFL Network after his pro day at Florida State last month. “It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that I would look forward to spending with my family.” Mariota will be in his beloved home state of Hawaii, with more than 200 people at his high school alumni clubhouse, he said. “For me it was a way to culturally pay respect to where I come from and to be with my family and friends, and at the same time to be with everybody who has helped me get here, and making sure they are all a part of this moment,” Mariota said. “These are the people who got me here.” The commissioner can wait. 3858 Candies Creek Ln. Suite C 476-3320 112 Stuart Rd. NE, Farmland Corner 476-4325 1053 Peerless Crossing 339-2885 26—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com London man may have helped trigger the 2010 ‘flash crash’ Brandi Keen Cheri Worley Danielle Seals Melissa England City recognizes AmeriCorps Vistas Special to the Banner The Cleveland City Council took time April 13, to recognize the impact AmeriCorps VISTA members have on the city. Mayor Tom Rowland read statistics that showed the influence of seven volunteers who served from February 2014 to March 2015, but it was not until later that the VISTA’s revealed their reasons for their work in Cleveland, but also the impact “The City With Spirit” had on them. The recognition of the volunteers of the full Council followed the Mayors Day of Recognition for National Service on April 7. On that day, Mayor Rowland presented the VISTA’s with a proclamation thanking them for their positive impact on Cleveland. “Regardless of why you came to Cleveland, what you have done is to make our city more giving and more compassionate than it already was. I only hope that Cleveland somehow enriched your lives as well,” he said. The United Way of Bradley County is the local VISTA coordinating agency that recruits and assigns volunteers to various organizations throughout its service area. Director of Volunteer Services Jaynese Waddell said the impact of seven VISTA AmeriCorps volunteers on the City of Cleveland in 2014 included management and recruitment of 654 community volunteers who served more than 4,783 hours; more than $25,500 in cash value of resources, and more than $95,000 in non-cash value of resources. From February 2014 through this past February, volunteers made those contributions through service at Family Promise, The Refuge, Tri-State Therapeutic Riding Center, Impact Cleveland, Hope Child Advocacy Center, Community Action Network and Signal Center. Danielle Seals, 24, originally from Lebanon, Ohio, graduated from Lee University with a bachelor of science in psychology and a master of science in holistic child development. She chose to put her degree to use in a very practical way. She successfully applied for a VISTA opening at Community Action Network, an initiative of the United Way of Bradley County. The Community Action Network’s mission is “Serving those who serve the Ocoee Region” by offering resources to local nonprofits so they are best equipped to serve the community. Between February 2014 and March 2015, Seals gained real hands-on experience and served at a great place for professional development and she views the experience as a springboard for launching a recent graduate’s career. Now that her contract has expiredm Seals is currently exploring her next step, but wherever that next step leads, her future goals include community development. “I am of the upbringing that you leave something in better condition than you found it, and that you aspire to be and do the best you can in everything-those two principles carry-over into all aspects of my life, my work not being the least of these,” Seals said. United Way of Bradley County recently hired Seals as the special events and communications coordinator. Cheri Worley, 28, from Morristown, earned a bachelor of science in geography with a minor in education from East Tennessee State University. She heard about the VISTA program from a National Park Service coworker and found the position on the AmeriCorps website jobs page where the openings advertised. Worley’s application and resume submitted to Impact Cleveland were accepted. Leanna Martin Brittany Stoess Worley chose to serve in order to gain noncompetitive status for employment with the federal government. “I also wanted to help the Blythe community accomplish its goals while learning about nonprofit work,” Worley said. After completing her 12month stint in March, she took another step toward her dream by working as a park ranger for the National Park Service at the Lincoln Home in Springfield, Illinois. Worley hopes to one-day work as an education specialist for the National Park Service, designing curriculum for the park and working with local schools to schedule tours. She also wants to return to Impact Cleveland as a program assistant or administrative assistant. Brandi Keen served as the AmeriCorps VISTA in the 20142015 cohort at the Hope Center. Brandi graduated from Lee University with a bachelor of arts. in English literature and master of science in holistic child development. She chose to serve as a VISTA to gain insight into the inner workings of nonprofit as well as to gain handson experience with people in need. Keen, whose contract ended in March, is now the resource coordinator at Omni Visions in Chattanooga. Brittany Stoess, 24, served at Tri-State Therapeutic Riding Stables. She graduated from Lee University with a bachelor of arts in psychology and an master of science in holistic child development. Stoess chose the VISTA program to gain experience and learn new valuable skills. “The VISTA program will provide me with the opportunities to form new connections in the nonprofit community that would not have otherwise been available to me,” she said. Stoessis currently doing freelance marketing for local nonprofits. Leanna Martin served at Signal Center. Martin, 24, is a 2014 graduate of Lee University with a master of science in holistic child development. She saw VISTA as an opportunity to see firsthand how a nonprofit organization functions. “The VISTA program made it possible to gain experience while in school that helped me in my future endeavors of service,” Leanna said. In June, Martin will take a position teaching Spanish as a lateral entry teacher for TNTP Teaching fellows in Charlotte, North Carolina. TNTP Teaching Fellows is a rigorous alternative certification program that recruits and trains talented career changers and recent college graduates to be outstanding teachers in high-need schools across the country. Programs are located in Baltimore, Charlotte, Washington, D.C., Fort Worth, Texas, Indianapolis, Nashville, New York City and New Orleans. Martin begins the intensive summer training program to learn the fundamentals of great teaching. Every day, expert educators will help her master critical teaching skills — skills she will practice in real classrooms, with real students. After completing summer training, she will begin teaching full time. In 2015, the number of volunteers allotted Cleveland increased to 15. Among the cohort of seven that started in February is AmeriCorps VISTA leader Cindy Lawson, who manages volunteers at Impact Cleveland, Family Promise, TriState Therapeutic Riding Center, CASA of Bradley County, Boys and Girls Club and KARIS Dental Clinic. Eight more volunteers begin in May at Impact Cleveland, Community Action Network, Boys and Girls Club of Benton, Volunteer Center, Housing Coalition, YCAP, Andor and Signal Center. Eight more begin their terms in May. Melissa England is the current VISTA at the Boys and Girls Club. England, 44, is originally from Columbus, Ohio, and holds an associates of science in graphic design. “During the last several years, I’ve had the opportunity to work for nonprofit organizations. By doing so, it has become a passion for me,” England said. “Nonprofit jobs are not the highest paying jobs, but knowing I can make a difference in someone’s life and see a smile on their face means more to me than money.” England hopes to use this VISTA opportunity as a launching pad for a lifetime career. Shiloh Capone, 23, is the current VISTA at Impact Cleveland. The native of St. Petersburg, Florida, earned a bachelor’s degree in English literature with emphasis on literary theory and criticism from the University of South Florida. She chose to serve as a VISTA for two reasons. “The first is my experience with poverty in India. I was appalled by what I saw and as hard as I tried, was unable to make a difference. I realized that the best thing I could do was start fighting poverty at home in America,” Capone said. “I believe that was where I could make the most impact. My second reason is that I have been dreaming of serving with the Peace Corps since I was young, but after my experience in India, I decided to remain in America for a little bit longer and enjoy what we have here. I hope to move the needle in the community I serve and make some impact during my year as a VISTA. If I could make a difference in just a single life during my term, I will consider my year a success.” After Capone’s year of service, she hopes to either renew her term with Impact Cleveland or through another program or join the Peace Corps and travel to Sudan. Cleveland native Hannah Wimberly, 21, is the current VISTA at Tri-State Therapeutic Riding Stables while pursuing a bachelor’s degree. She chose to serve because she wanted a job that had meaning, purpose, and helped others. “I wanted to do something I love and I definitely think it will help my resume, but more importantly, I hope to gain direction from it,” Wimberly said. Philip Maher, 22, of Stratham, New Hampshire, is the current VISTA at Karis Dental Clinic. He graduated from Great Bay Community College with an associate degree in liberal arts. Maher chose to serve as an AmeriCorps VISTA because he wanted to learn how to change the world by helping individuals. He hopes to use his service as a launching pad for a long career of service. Another Cleveland resident, Jessica Moore, 24, is at Family Promise of Bradley County. Moore graduated from Lee University with a bachelor of science in history and education licensure. She chose her role as an AmeriCorps VISTA member because she has always loved working with nonprofits in the past. She wanted to give back to her community in some way and the VISTA program allows her to not only work with the United Way and Family Promise, but also to work daily to give back to the her hometown. “My future goals are to eventually go back to school to pursue a master’s degree in biblical counseling and further help people by working with people who are struggling with things like depression, anxiety, and PTSD. I know that I want to be able to help people who are struggling to find hope in their everyday life,” she said. Cindy Lawson, 43, is the VISTA Leader at the United Way of Bradley County. She too, is from Cleveland. She recently graduated from the University of Phoenix with a bachelor of science degree in health administration. She is pursuing a master’s degree in business administration with a human resource concentration. Lawson served as the VISTA of Family Promise of Bradley County in 2014. “While attending college, I heard about the AmeriCorps VISTA program from an instructor. I loved the concept of giving back while also growing professionally,” she said. “Working with Family Promise, I could see the difference that nonprofit organizations make in so many lives. I actually loved the VISTA program so much that I signed on for another year.” Lawson is hopeful she will gain knowledge and experience about the nonprofit and business world to launch her career — and the AmeriCorps VISTA program will be her launching pad. NEW YORK (AP) — He operated from a modest suburban London home he shared with his parents, far from the city’s glamorous financial center. He used off-theshelf software anyone can buy. Yet, if U.S. authorities are correct, Navinder Singh Sarao, 36, managed to send a jolt of fear through the world’s markets by helping to set off the 2010 “flash crash,” in which the Dow Jones average plunged 600 points in less than seven minutes. Just how big a role he played has been hotly debated since the federal complaint was unsealed earlier this week, but the idea that a little-known investor had even a small part is deeply troubling, say traders and market experts. “If this guy can do it,” asks finance professor James Angel of Georgetown University, “who else is doing it?” In an age of rapidly advancing computer power, the fear is that it’s not just big banks and hedge funds that can create chaos on exchanges and wipe out the savings of millions of ordinary investors. Someone working from home might be able to do it, too. “The risks are coming from the small guys who are under the radar,” says Irene Aldridge, managing partner of research firm ABLE Alpha Trading and an expert in the kind of high-speed computerized trading that Sarao did. “The regulators don’t have the real-time tools to monitor them.” Sarao allegedly employed a ruse called spoofing, a bluffing technique in which traders try to manipulate the price of stocks or other assets by making fake trades to create the impression they want to sell when they really want to buy, or vice versa. Eric Scott Hunsader, founder of Nanex, a provider of financial data that has documented what it claims are cases of blatant spoofing, says the practice is widespread — in stocks and bonds, oil and gold, cotton and coffee. He says bluffing is turning markets into a lawless Wild West, despite efforts by trading firms to fight back with software that can sniff out the false trades. If the allegations against him are true, Sarao may rank among the best of this new breed of bluffers. His feat was impressive because of the target of his alleged bluffing — investors in EMini S&P 500 futures, which are financial contracts that allow you to bet on the rise and fall of the Standard and Poor’s 500 stock index. Passing off a fake trade like that as real, much less moving prices, isn’t easy, because EMini is one of the most widely traded, transparent and scrutinized markets in the world. “Everyone is watching it,” says Manoj Narang, former CEO of Tradeworx, a high-frequency trading firm. A key to spoofing is placing large orders to sell or buy without ever executing them. Since other traders can see your orders, a large one to sell might convince them prices are likely to head down. One to buy might make them think prices are likely to rise. So they will often mimic your order, which moves prices up or down, as if you had sold or bought yourself. Next, you cancel your order, and do the opposite — buying at the new, artificially lower price or selling at the new higher one. The advent of high-frequency trading firms has added a level of sophistication and speed to this bluffing technique. Using computers to sift through news articles, social media feeds and other data in split seconds, these firms are able to snatch tiny, fleeting profits that mere mortals can’t spot. The firms can also bluff fast, sending a series of sell orders, for instance, then canceling them as the price moves down and replacing them with new orders — all within thousandths of a second. The complaint against Sarao says it was just this sort of lightning-fast spoofing, called dynamic layering, that allowed him to make nearly $880,000 on May 6, 2010, the day of the flash crash. His computer sent a series of orders to sell E-Mini futures. Then, as their prices moved, his computer changed or replaced those orders in rapid succession — a stunning 19,000 times in less than 2½ hours before it canceled all of them, according to the complaint. Sarao’s offers to sell were so numerous that at one point they represented at AP Photo In this May 6, 2010 file photo, Frank Masiello works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York. If U.S. authorities are correct, Navinder Singh Sarao, helped set off the “flash crash” that day, raising fears that it’s not just big banks and hedge funds that can create chaos on exchanges and wipe out the savings of ordinary investors. least one-fifth of all orders to sell E-Mini futures from around the world. “This is the equivalent of an elephant coming to a tea party,” says Nanex’s Hunsader. “It’s hard not to spot.” Stocks lost $1 trillion in value during the flash crash. The market bounced back by the close of trading, but the breadth and speed of the drop rattled investors and regulators alike. British-born Sarao, a former bank employee and Brunel University student, is charged with fraud, commodities manipulation and other offenses. He was arrested in London on Tuesday and indicated in court that he will fight extradition to the U.S. In court, his lawyer said the arrest came as a “bolt from the blue” to Sarao. The attorney did not respond to requests for comment for this article. Between 2010 and 2014, Sarao earned $40 million on EMini trading alone, according to authorities, though the complaint doesn’t say how much of that was through allegedly illegal trades. Narang, the former high-speed trading executive, casts doubt on that figure, noting that the complaint doesn’t list Sarao’s losses, just his winnings. He also says Sarao’s allegedly bogus sell orders were often too far from the prevailing prices for traders to take seriously. In fact, Narang wonders if Sarao played much of a role at all in the flash crash. Larry Tabb, CEO of financial markets consultancy TABB Group, has his doubts, too: “I don’t think that what he was doing on a normal day would have any impact on the markets.” A regulatory review after the flash crash found that the market was vulnerable to a plunge that day because a computerized selling program at a mutual fund had run amok. Whatever Sarao’s role, regulators are clearly worried. Spoofing was prohibited by the Dodd-Frank law in 2010, the Wall Street overhaul enacted after the financial crisis. But what is spoofing and what is legitimate trading is sometimes hard to pin down. Traders cancel orders all the time because of new information. It’s the intent to fool others, and not the canceling itself, that is illegal. Still, regulators are starting to crack down. In January, a Canadian trader was arrested on spoofing charges. That followed charges against a New Jersey trader who allegedly made $1.5 million entering false trades in the gold, soybean oil and copper markets. The criminal charges are not coming fast enough, though, for Nanex’s Hunsader, who thinks spoofing is rampant and far too easy to pull off. After all, if Sarao really did help crash the market, he asks, why not “a terrorist cell or someone with deeper pockets?” People do read small ads. You are reading one now. Call The Banner 472-5041 www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—27 Business SUNDAY Larry Bowers Business writer Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529 Larry.Bowers@clevelandbanner.com Lawson named to bank’s board Contributed photo ABOVE IS THE Chattanooga Lookouts’ AT&T Field. The Lookouts recently teamed with Blood Assurance of Southeast Tennessee in promoting regional donations. Lookouts GM Rich Mozingo said, “The Lookouts love finding ways to give back to our community, and we can’t think of a better way to do that than by partnering with Blood Assurance.” Special to the Banner Lookouts team with regional blood centers Special to the Banner CHATTANOOGA — With baseball season arriving, Blood Assurance, partnered with the Chattanooga Lookouts in giving away tickets. Participating donor centers included Downtown Chattanooga; Cleveland; Fort Oglethorpe, Ga.; North River in Hixson, and Dalton, Ga. “Donors are pivotal to our mission and, without the community’s generous response, we would not be able to save lives across this region,” said Charlie Callari, vice president of marketing and donor recruitment for Blood Assurance. It takes 540 donations a day to meet our region’s ongoing need, and, as a token of appreciation Blood Assurance gave away tickets. Blood Assurance believes in giving back to the communities in which they serve. Blood donations stay local, but when local supplies are insufficient to meet needs, the organization has a Blood Assurance network of 15 regional donation centers and 13 mobile centers available to help. “The Lookouts love finding ways to give back to our community, and we can’t think of a better way to do that than by partnering with Blood Assurance, an organization that saves lives every day across the Chattanooga region,” said Rich Mozingo, general manager for the Chattanooga Lookouts. “This is a great opportunity for the community to make a difference in someone’s life,” he added. To be eligible to donate blood, you must be at least 17 years old (16 years old with parental consent), weigh 110 pounds or more and be in good health. Donors are asked to drink plenty of fluids - avoiding caffeine - and eat a meal that is rich in iron prior to donating. For questions about donating blood, please call (423) 756-0966. For more information on Blood Assurance, donating blood or hosting a blood drive, please visit www.bloodassurance.org. There are major differences in debt Dear Dave, My wife and I are on Baby Step Three of your plan. We’re also saving up to buy a car with cash. We’re about $3,000 away from our goal, but now my wife wants to go ahead and finance the rest. She has started wondering what the difference is in borrowing to buy a car and borrowing to buy a house. — Lex Dear Lex, This is a good question. It sounds like you guys have made good progress, but now one of you is running out of steam. That’s okay. Getting out of debt and staying out of debt can be a tough road. For one thing, cars go down in value. The second thing is I don’t like debt of any kind. I don’t really like borrowing for a house even, but I tolerate it as long as you use a 15-year, fixed rate mortgage with payments that are no more than a fourth of your take-home pay. Dave Says By Dave Ramsey want right now. What your wife is asking is a normal request, but it’s also a sign that we all have to address that little kid that’s inside us once in a while — and tell that kid no! — Dave Car debt I mean, it’s a much larger purchase. You can get a great car for $15,000 to $20,000 dollars. Depending on where you live, a good home can cost you 10 times that or more. Still, the best way to build wealth and have a high-quality financial life is to not be in debt. You’re never going to win with money in the long term if you can’t learn to delay pleasure. That’s the bottom line. Personal finance is about controlling the person you see when you look in the mirror. Every one of us has that little four-year-old kid inside, a little kid whose name is Immaturity, and he or she wants what they Dear Dave, My wife and I have just started getting on track with our money. We have $2,000 in savings, and the only debt we have is our house and two cars. I work in the oil and gas industry and make about $180,000 a year, but things are pretty volatile right now. We’re upside down on both vehicles, and we owe $39,000 on one and about $48,000 on the other. Under the circumstances, should we go ahead and build a fully-funded emergency fund or work on paying off the cars? — Kendall Dear Kendall, Are you kidding me? Sell the cars, dude! You need to go to Kelly Blue Vaughn honored with award A seasoned conceptual thinker, strategist, writer and CHATTANOOGA — The filmmaker with 20-plus years of American Advertising Federation experience, Vaughn is a full-serof Chattanooga (AAF vice, AAAA-member Chattanooga) has recogagency founded in 1996 nized Roger Vaughn, in Chattanooga. His partner and creative advertising portfolio Director for The includes television, Johnson Group, as the radio, print and digital recipient of the organiwork for such clients as zation’s most prestigious M c D o n a l d ’ s , lifetime achievement Volkswagen, Comcast, award, the 2015 Silver Krystal, Cracker Barrel, Medal. Sprint, Cricket Wireless, The American Sunbelt Granola Bars, Vaughn Advertising Federation’s Brach’s Candy, Blue Silver Medal Award Cross/Blue Shield, Program was established in 1959 Rubbermaid, and AirTran to recognize advertising industry Airlines. professionals who have made His work has been recognized outstanding contributions to with multiple local, regional and advertising and who have been national ADDYs; national active in furthering the indus- EFFIEs; ShowSouth awards; and try’s standards, creative excel- ADWEEK magazine’s Icon Award lence and responsibility in areas for Technology Marketing. of social concern. Joe Johnson, CEO of The Annually, AAF member clubs Johnson Group, says, “Roger present this honor upon out- challenges the status quo, every standing members of the local day with his creative thinking. advertising community. He’ll push the boundaries of creSpecial to the Banner ativity so far on some ideas that it scares you. And he’ll really fight for a great idea because he knows it’s the right thing to do.” In addition to his advertising work, Roger has created music video concepts for high-profile acts including Eric Church, Florida-Georgia Line, Josh Turner, Thomas Rhett and Sara Watkins of Nickel Creek. This work has been recognized with multiple CMA, CMT and ACM awards and nominations. Roger is an alumnus of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Entries for the Silver Medal awards are gathered each February and March. Nominations are submitted on behalf of the individual. Through a blind judging process, Roger was selected as this year’s recipient. "We are thrilled that Roger Vaughn was chosen and is being recognized for his leadership, influence and many accomplishments," Casey Knox, AAF Chattanooga President, said. Williams to manage Project Controls Special to the Banner Day & Zimmerman Construction and Maintenance Company has announced that Todd Williams has accepted the position of senior manager of Project Controls, reporting directly to Project Controls Vice President Rich Feaster. Williams assumes responsibili- ty for all Project Control Functions associated with engineering contracts. He is also ethics officer for the company. Williams is a graduate of East Tennessee State University, and has been employed with D&Z for the past 12 years. On the Eastman contract he was the Project Controls manager responsible for Project Controls functions. He will continue to be based out of the Eastman office in Kingsport,. Williams and his wife, Suzanne, have two children, Austin and Madison. They reside in Johnson City, Williams is the son of Ron and Betsy Williams of Cleveland. Book’s website right now, and find out what your cars are really worth. Then, put them on the market as a private sale. You’ll get thousands more selling them that way than you will at a dealership. You’ll have to talk to a local credit union or bank for a small loan to cover the difference, plus a little bit more so you guys can get a couple of little beaters to drive for a while. But man, you’ve got close to $100,000 in car debt hanging over your heads. That’s a disaster! I want you to take a moment and think about how things would be without these stinking car payments. Your lives would change completely! Hopefully, you’ll be able to keep your job. But this car debt is the scariest thing I’ve heard in a long time, even with your great income. Get rid of those things now! — Dave ——— —(Dave Ramsey is America’s trusted voice on money and business. He has authored five New York Times best-selling books. The Dave Ramsey Show is heard by more than 8.5 million listeners each week on more than 550 radio stations. Dave’s latest project, EveryDollar, provides a free online budget tool. Southern Heritage Bank has announced that Brenda Lawson has been elected to serve on the its board of directors. Lawson is the founder of Brenda Lawson & Associates LLC, a management company formed for the oversight of businesses in which she is a majority owner. As co-founder of two rent-toown businesses and a deferred presentment business, she has managed the financial and organizational growth of companies serving 17 states with more than 1,500 employees and revenues exceeding $100 million. She and her husband, Stan, are principal owner/developers of Spring Creek Development, Cleveland’s first lifestyle neighborhood offering residential, retail and business park properties. Lawson is owner and chief executive officer of numerous companies across the state including Swing Perfect, Friendly Auto, Solutions Finance and Iron Doors, LLC. Lee Stewart, Chairman and CEO of Southern Heritage Bank, said, “We are very pleased to have Brenda join our board of directors. With her diversified business knowledge and deep Cleveland roots, she will make an outstanding board member. We are very fortunate to have her associated with Southern Heritage Bank.” Lawson is an avid supporter of The University of Tennessee at Knoxville and Chattanooga, serving as a member of the UT Development Council and Executive Committee of the University of Tennessee Alliance for Women Philanthropists. She has also co-chaired the Capital Campaign for the University of Tennessee, and is on the UTC Foundation Board of Trustees and the UTC Advisory Board for the College of Business. Currently, she is chairing a capital funds campaign for Tennessee Christian Preparatory School. She serves as President of Cleveland 100, an organization that lends financial assistance to families of emergency first responders who lose their lives in the line of duty. She organized and chairs Diaper Love of Bradley County, a program to provide diapers to needy families. Lawson founded Creating Christmas Memories which works with local elementary school officials and provides Christmas gifts for those in need. She is a past President of the Bradley/Cleveland Chamber of Commerce, past United Way Campaign Chair and serves on the boards of the Boys & Girls Brenda Lawson Club and the United Way of Bradley County. She is also a member of the Bradley/Cleveland Public Education Foundation. She is a past recipient of the Southern Conference Distinguished Service Award along with the local Junior Achievement Free Enterprise Award. She is past recipient of the Sertoma Service to Mankind Award and a 2004 UTC College of Business Entrepreneurial Honoree and the 2006 Entrepreneur of the Year. In 2006, she was awarded the Outstanding Philanthropist of the Year by the Association of Professional Fund Raisers. In 2010, she was the recipient of the M.C. Headrick Free Enterprise Award from the Cleveland/Bradley County Chamber of Commerce. She and Stan have three children, Steve McKenzie, Ashley Wallace and Zach Lawson, and one grandson, Tripp. Southern Heritage Bank was locally organized in 1999, operating three banking offices in Bradley County and is a division of First Citizens Bancshares Inc. For more information about Southern Heritage Bank, please visit the web site at www.southernheritagebank.com. Athens Bancshares lists cash dividend Special to the Banner ATHENS — Athens Bancshares Corporation has announced that its Board of Directors has declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.05 per outstanding share of common stock. The dividend will be paid on or about May 15, 2015, to stockholders of record as of the close of business on April 30, 2015. Athens Bancshares Corporation is the parent holding company of Athens Federal Community Bank, a federallychartered, FDIC-insured savings bank organized in 1934. TDCI shines light on dealer fees Special to the Banner NASHVILLE — In recognition of Financial Literacy Month, the Tennessee Department of Commerce and Insurance (TDCI) has issued an advisory to help raise investor awareness about fees charged by broker-dealer firms for services and maintenance of investment accounts. “A key component of building financial literacy is understanding what you need to know and where to find it,” said TDCI Commissioner Julie Mix McPeak. “That is especially important when it comes to understanding what services you are paying for and how much you are paying.” The advisory follows new research from the North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA), of which TDCI is a member. The research shows investors are confused about brokerage service and maintenance fees and want clear and easy access to fee information from their broker-dealer firm. A national public opinion poll commissioned by NASAA found that fees are important to investors, but a general lack of standardization and clarity in their disclosure has left investors unaware of how much their broker-dealer firm charges for the service and maintenance of the investment accounts. To help raise investor understanding of broker-dealer fees, TDCI suggests investors focus on the timing, method and content of fee disclosures. — Pay attention. Fees are typically disclosed when a customer account is opened. Ask for a fee schedule and make sure it is up to date. If it is not readily available, do not place any assets until it is provided. You have the right to know the fees in advance. Also, watch out for fee changes. Most broker-dealers disclose fee changes at least 30 days in advance, but they may use different methods to reach investors. Make sure your broker dealer firm knows how you prefer to be contacted. — Read the fine print. Most broker-dealer firms disclose fees for certain services on a table, chart, or list, while some use a narrative, but it may not list dollar amounts or formulas. Bender Realty welcomes PJ McKay to the Bender Realty Family. We are proud to have PJ joins us. An experienced agent dedicated to Professionalism and Outstanding Customer Service. Contact PJ at our office by phoning 423-472-2173 or 423-650-8685 28—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Peyton Manning announces $3 million leadership commitment From UT Sports Information KNOXVILLE — Vol for Life and five-time National Football League Most Valuable Player Peyton Manning and his wife, Ashley, announced Friday a $3 million leadership commitment to the University of Tennessee. This gift commitment will benefit both the Tennessee football program and the Peyton Manning Scholarship Endowment. This commitment will also honor two individuals, Gus Manning and Carmen Tegano, who are very special to Peyton Manning. Gate 16 at Neyland Stadium will be named the Gus Manning Gate, honoring the Tennessee legend who has served the University and its athletic program for 64 years. Gus joined the UT department of athletics in 1951 as the sports information director and worked closely for many years as the top assistant within athletics to Gen. Robert R. Neyland. He has served in many roles during his tenure at Tennessee, including responsibility for all business operations as a senior associate athletics director and also as the executive assistant to director of athletics Doug Dickey. The Carmen and Deborah Tegano Student-Athlete Dining Hall will be established in the new residence hall under construction at the corner of Lake Loudoun Boulevard and Volunteer Boulevard on the UT campus. Carmen is an associate athletics director for UT and is in his 31st year of service to the University, while Deborah was one of Peyton's professors during his time at UT. Carmen serves as a liaison for former student-athletes as well and maintains close relationships with many former Vols to this day. He is currently the sport administrator for the UT baseball program, and his previous roles within the athletics department include oversight for the academic services and student life programs, assisting with development-related projects, and administrative oversight of several sports. "Gus and Carmen both personify what it means to be a Vol for Life, and both have made the University of Tennessee a better place," said Peyton Manning. "No one has served Tennessee and its athletics program better than Gus, and Carmen has also served this University with tremendous distinction. "We have been fortunate to maintain a close friendship with Gus, Carmen, and Debbie Tegano since I left UT, and our From UT Sports Information PEYTON MANNING announced a $3 million leadership commitment to the University of Tennessee on Friday. sincere hope is that the decision to honor them in this way is reflective of the positive impact they continue to have on this great University." Awarded annually since the 1998-99 academic year, the Peyton Manning Scholarship is a four-year scholarship presented to first-year students participating in the University of arship program has distributed $526,000 in scholarship money to 21 students. "We are grateful for the opportunities we have had to give the gift of an education to deserving UT students every year through the scholarship program," said Peyton Manning. "It means a great deal to us to give young people an edge in maximizing Sanford named new head tennis pro Clippers The new tennis pro played all four years in high school and then played collegiately at North Recently, the Cleveland Georgia University for a year Country Club finished its search before finishing up his athletic for a new head tennis professional and academic career at Reinhardt and hired 24-year-old University. Sanford holds Garrick Sanford to take a degree in sports manover the tennis program. agement with a minor in Sanford, who is a business. Dalton native, had been “I started teaching working for the Dalton when I was 19 years old Country Club. at Murray County High “I was the assistant pro School. From there, I at Dalton Country Club, went to Lakeshore and and Lamar Mills and was an assistant there, Charlie Smith then went to Dalton approached me with the Country Club,” Sanford Sanford possibility of becoming said of his instructing the head pro here. After experience. going through the interview Now that he has taken over the process, it just seemed like it was tennis program at the Cleveland the right choice for me,” Sanford Country Club, Sanford wants to explained. build up youth tennis in the area. By SARALYN NORKUS Banner Sports Writer From Page 21 gates, he was great out the gates,” Duncan said. “He really drove the ball into creases and made things happen. I thought he felt good early on. I don’t think he made as many shots as he wanted to, obviously, but I thought just having him out there was huge for us and will be huge going forward.” While Parker struggled to score, finishing with six points, his drives drew defenders and opened up the outside for San Antonio. The Spurs opened the game 5 for 10 from 3-point range and finished 10 for 24 from beyond the arc. TIP-INS Clippers: The Clippers are 3-8 all-time in Game 3s of a best-ofseven series. ... Griffin averaged Tennessee Honors Program. The Manning Scholarship covers the costs of tuition, room, and board and is granted on the basis of academic achievement, leadership and community service. The goal of this gift is to expand the annual number of students who will receive four-year scholarships per class from two to four annually, and to date, this schol- their potential. "This scholarship program and its recipients have developed into a family, and witnessing the growth and successes of these students academically, personally, and ultimately as professionals in the workforce has made this one of our most rewarding endeavors." In addition to the scholarship program that bears his name, Peyton has supported numerous campus, athletics department, and UT football-related initiatives since leaving UT in 1997, as a lead donor in the Neyland Stadium Master Plan renovations and specifically the Peyton Manning Locker Room, as well as donating to the state-of-the-art Anderson Training Center project. Peyton has also made significant contributions to the Thornton Center and the College of Communications. The current gift commitment will also be utilized to benefit the football program. "I believe very strongly in the direction in which Coach Jones is leading our football program," said Peyton Manning. "There is a great deal of momentum and energy surrounding Tennessee Football right now, and I look forward to what this team will accomplish in the coming years." 26.2 points in his previous five games against the Spurs. ... Chris Paul played in his 700th career game. Spurs: Leonard was recognized as the NBA Defensive Player of the Year before the game. Duncan playfully feigned presenting the trophy to Leonard a few times before laughing and handing it to the forward. ... Parker had three assists, giving him 1,043 for his postseason career and breaking the tie he had with Kobe Bryant for seventh in the NBA history. SAY WHAT? Popovich’s pregame press conference got off to an auspicious start when a reporter said he would ask “the first stupid question,” and asked Popovich what was the single most important lesson he has learned from the postseason. After staring incredulously around the room, Popovich broke character and provided an answer. “I’m worried about the pick and roll, and now you want to ask about philosophy,” Popovich said, pausing before answering the question. “It’s a long, long, long process.” Popovich was later asked about what impact Green has when he is making 3-pointers. “It’s always better to make your 3-point shots than to miss them,” Popovich said before turning with a wry smile to the reporter who asked the initial question. “This is also something I’ve learned.” second of which involved losing control on a patch of black ice and rolling my VW bug several times down in embankment toward the Harpeth River. Thankfully the car came to rest on its top against some downed trees before we reached the water. After none in the first 10 years of driving a school bus in Ohio and West Tennessee, I’ve had a couple while driving for Bradley County Schools. The first of which was a fivevehicle wreck when an old van cut across Stuart Road to turn into Sonic and was T-boned by a Mustang in the lane beside me. Somehow, I was the only driver named in former Banner reporter Greg Kaylor’s story (thanks, buddy). My bus was fully loaded at the time, but none of my students were injured, although a few parents did take a couple of them to the hospital just to get checked out later that evening. I’ve been very blessed to have logged well over a million miles on the roads of our great country from Massachusetts to Florida to Colorado, Texas and Minnesota and many points in between, without many more scraps than that. In fact, all five of my accidents have occurred in the county in which I lived in at the time, so watch out Bradley County because I plan to live here the rest of my life. This first week back to work has been exhausting. After not being able to do much for three months to all of a sudden jumping right back into working 10 to 12-hour days between my two jobs, has taken its toll. As physically sore as I am from using muscles that haven’t had much of a workout lately, the exhilaration of getting back to seeing old friends and young faces has breathed fresh air into my weary old soul. I may not be moving as spry as I used to (yes, that was a joke, as 400-pound grandpas don’t do anything quickly), but I’m trying to get the job done. Thank you for the overwhelmingly warm welcome back from those I’ve seen and the many I’ve gotten calls and text from. I great big thank you also to Richard, Saralyn, Chip Chavis and a few others who have pitched in and done a great job in my absence. Now let’s see — when can I get my two weeks’ vacation? “Right now my focus is on the kids and getting them out here. Tennis is my passion, and I just want to see tennis grow in this community,” Sanford stated. “This is a sport that you can play throughout your whole life; you can always play tennis.” The tennis pro would also like to see the area adult leagues continue to grow. “The USTA adult league in Dalton is really booming, and we’re hoping to have that happen up here,” he explained. Throughout the week at the country club, Sanford is offering various instructional clinics and is available for private lessons on the weekend. For more information on the tennis offerings at the Cleveland Country Club, Sanford can be reached at 706-264-1512. Rumors From Page 17 to finally deliver a giant get-well card the kids had signed that was still in the trunk of her car. In her defense, I had not been able to attend services at the Peerless Road Church, where she and I both worship, during my convalescence. She gave me the card midweek, and I have posted it on my desk in the Banner newsroom and have included a photo of it with this column. Along with the kids’ signatures, I especially like the part that says “What’s missing? You are” with an arrow pointing to an empty driver’s seat. Thanks guys; I missed you, too. I do deeply appreciate the many, many prayers, calls, texts and visits I received during my recovery, especially those from my very concerned friends who were involved in the accident and are still recuperating from their own injuries. In more than 42 years of driving (I started when I was 13 without my parents’ knowledge), I have been in just five accidents, with the most recent being the first requiring medical attention. Two came less than a week apart during the bad winter snows of February, 1985, the They are there to greet you in the morning, make sure you can be there to tuck them in at night. Take 20 minutes for your annual mammogram today. The MaryEllen Locher Breast Center offers softer digital mammograms. Digital imaging provides our doctors with a detailed view for accurate test results. Certified by the American College of Radiology, the National Accreditation Program for Breast Centers (NAPBC®), and the National Consortium of Breast Centers, the MaryEllen Locher Breast Schedule Your Center offers a full spectrum of Mammogram clinical and support services. If in May and you are a woman over age 40, an Receive a Free annual mammogram is the most Tee Shirt! important 20 minutes of your life. Schedule your appointment today: CHI Memorial Hospital Chattanooga CHI Memorial Hospital Hixson CHI Memorial Ooltewah Imaging Center To schedule your mammogram call (423) 495-4040 or visit MaryEllenLocher.com. Banner photo, JOE CANNON MY MICHIGAN AVENUE students who ride Bradley County school bus No. 2 made me a very nice get-well poster, signing their names in a drawing of a school bus with their happy faces in the windows and a very special message saying, “What’s missing? You are. Get well soon.” It’s good to be back. Maryellenlocher.com • Follow us on @InspireHealth www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—29 SUNDAY LifestyLes William Wright Lifestyles Editor Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529 Lifestyles@clevelandbanner.com A new way for justice to work By WILLIAM WRIGHT Lifestyles Editor AT ThE LIbrAry —Bring a friend Monday night for Adult Gaming beginning at 6:30 p.m. Feel free to being a game to share with others. —Monday brings bouncing babies to the library for the Wiggle Worms program. It’s designed for babies, 2 and under, to explore and learn in a unique and imaginative environment. Every Monday at 3 p.m., join Ms. Lauren in the Community Room. —On Tuesday, join Jeff Kinney, the creator of “Diary of a Wimpy Kid.” The library will be taking part in this unique program in the Community Room at 9:30 a.m. —The teens will get together to discuss the book “Graceling,” by Kristin Cashore, Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. Join the Teen Services Librarian every month at the Teen Book Talk to discuss more of your Young Adult favorites. Email teenzone@clevelandlibrary.or g for more information. —Come see the awardwinning film “Birdman” at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday. Discover the struggle of a washed-up actor trying to make it big in the Broadway scene while enjoying popcorn in the Community Room. The movie is rated R. —Come hear stories with the Cleveland Storytelling Guild on Tuesday evening at 7 p.m. Learn about this wonderful community organization while hearing unique tales. —On Tuesdays and Fridays at 10:30 a.m., Ms. Keisha leads a preschool story time. On Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. Ms. Lauren reads babies the interactive stories at Baby Bookworms and on Saturdays Ms. Abby leads a family story time at 2 p.m. All of these include a unique craft for your child to create. —Wednesday, bring the whole gang in for Family Game Time at 4:30 p.m. Play board games and enjoy Wii sports during this interactive program for all ages. —Lego Club will meet Thursday at 4:30 p.m. to continue construction on their “Land of Good and Evil: Heroes vs. Villains.” —The annual Spring Author Event sponsored by Friends of the Library Association will be Thursday at 7 p.m. Steven James will be the guest author. Tickets are on sale and space is limited. You may order them at the library or through the website. — Zumba is offered every Tuesday and Thursday morning at 8:05 a.m. —The Belk Charity Sale will be held on May 2 from 6 through 10 a.m. Tickets are $5 and can be bought at the Circulation Desk. All proceeds go to support adult programming at the library. —The STEAM program will be held on the first Thursday of May at 4:30 p.m. Different activities include Doodle Bots, Snap Circuits, Lego building and reaction science. Sign-up is required. DININg wITh DIAbETES, a four-week workshop, begins May 7 and continues on Thursdays, May 14, 21 and 28 at the UT ExtensionBradley County office at 95 Church St. S.E. Class time will be 5 to 7 p.m. each evening. Call the UT Extension office for registration details at 728-7001. See CLEVELAND, Page 30 A new work-release facility for inmates in Bradley County may hold the key to their transitions back into the community as productive, valued members of society who can reconnect with family members, retain employment, pay court costs, fines and their debt to society while ultimately relieving taxpayers of incarceration expenses. At least that is what citizens like Alvin Word and Rich Kienlen believe will happen with the upcoming Bradley County Work Release Program beginning next year. Word, the foreman on the Bradley County grand jury, and Kienlen, the Bradley County misdemeanor probation director, both call this new program for prisoners an opportunity for selfimprovement which assists inmates in creating a productive lifestyle that can be sustained upon their release. Rather than sitting in a jail cell all day, Word said the new workrelease program can make productive use of inmates’ time. If an inmate has job skills, they are more likely to obtain lawful employment rather than turning to crime. Reducing crime rates helps keep communities safe. Also, having a job allows the inmate to become a tax-paying citizen, which gives inmates the opportunity to pay back fines and restitution owed to the court and victims. However, with no job, no money and no place to live, inmates often find themselves facing the same pressures and temptations that landed them in prison in the first place. “This is really about them making a lifestyle change,” Word explained. “This will allow those who have been found guilty of some misdemeanor or nonviolent felony — to keep their jobs, if they have one, and do their time. If they don’t have an education, we’ve worked with Cleveland State Community College to help them get their GED and learn a trade. We also have a number of faith-based groups in Cleveland that will work with that population to help them find a moral compass to change their lives. They only have two choices: Go back to the same lifestyle or find a new lifestyle that works. There are no guarantees, but this could work.” Kienlen agreed, adding, “People don’t realize the indirect cost of putting someone in jail. When we put someone in jail for 90 days for not paying child support — they lose their job, their kids have to go on food stamps and Mom has to go find government housing. So, not only are we housing them, but now we’re having to pay for their kids and their food stamps. The indirect cost is a lot more than simply housing an inmate.” The pressing need to relieve prison overcrowding is also an issue, according to Kienlen, who said, “They built this jail in 2004 for 408 inmates, hoping it would last 20 years, and 11 years later it’s already running 430, 440, 450 inmates. When Sheriff Watson took over we were almost at 500 inmates. That number is not going to go down. It’s only going to go up. Then we have a banner photo, wIllIAm wRIGHT A new work-release program in Bradley County is designed to reduce both prison costs and recidivism by encouraging inmates to be better prepared for life after prison. Alvin Word, left, and Rich Kienlen, right, are hoping the upcoming Bradley County Work-Release Program will serve as a bridge between life in prison and life in the community. Word and Kienlen stand in front of the area that is planned to facilitate male work-release inmates. Female inmates will be housed on the opposite end of the building. Both Kienlen and Word agreed that the sooner the project can get started the better. new DA’s office that’s very aggressive. For example, their policy is: If you burglarize a house, you’re going to serve 90 days (in jail) even if you get probation. I have over 2,000 outstanding warrants just out of my office. We have 100,000 people in Bradley County and 5,000 are on misdemeanor probation. We’re hoping people in the new work house will help change some of this. “I know it’s a new concept. But take, for example, Fort Hill Cemetery — the city gives $10,000 and the county gives $10,000 to mow a portion of Fort Hill Cemetery. That’s $20,000 that could be put elsewhere. We can use these work-release inmates on the weekend to do community service up there. Monday through Friday they can be going out working a real job and on weekends they can do community service. This is a winwin situation.” One of the differences in the new work-release program and the current inmate work crews who collect trash along highways or work on state construction projects is that inmates under the new work-release project will receive the same prevailing wages as any other employee. This allows the state to deduct the inmates’ room and board as well as other obligations like child support, victim restitution, See JUSTICE, Page 30 Local couple invites all to ‘Pair Up’ with Parkinson’s Foundation The couple first got involved with PDF last year, when Anne comCleveland couple Anne and pleted an online survey for PDF’s James Newbould are asking Community Choice Research everyone to “PAIR Up” for Awards. She didn’t expect much Parkinson’s disease research, in when submitting the survey, collaboration with the which is essentially a “people’s Parkinson’s Disease Foundation. choice” for Parkinson’s research The couple recently completed grants. But it turned out, of the an intensive three-day training to more than 300 people who parjoin the organization’s ticipated, the question she posed Parkinson’s Advocates in (How can scientists help with my Research program. They have husband’s fatigue?”) was chosen. PDF funded scientists with a returned home, and are inviting the community to help them in $15,000 grant to study the issue. The couple says that this expebringing about better treatments rience inspired for Parkinson’s them to be, “part disease at a of the faster pace. PDF’s second annual Parkinson’s April is Community Choice r e s e a r c h Parkinson’s Research Awards process from the Awareness survey is open until very beginning.” Month. Thursday, April 30. So last month, “We live in Visit:http://www.pdf. along with 30 an area where org/ communityother people no clinical choice. with Parkinson’s research in disease and care Parkinson’s partners, they disease is currently being done, and there is underwent training in New little information out there in the Jersey to join PDF’s PAIR procommunity. We became PDF gram. The program aims to bring Research Advocates so we can about better treatments by pairhelp educate others,” said Mrs. ing advocates with the research Newbould. “Being directly community. It includes a netfor 200 Research involved in research is a win/win work situation for every side. Who bet- Advocates, of which the ter to voice research needs than Newboulds are now a part. The couple has returned home patients themselves?” James Newbould has been liv- just in time for April’s ing with Parkinson’s since 2009. Parkinson’s Awareness Month, Special to the Banner Anne And JAmes newbould are asking everyone to “PAIR Up” for Parkinson’s disease research, in collaboration with the Parkinson’s Disease Foundation. The couple recently completed an intensive three-day training to join the organization’s Parkinson’s Advocates in Research program. ready to get the local community involved. They are starting out by encouraging people with Parkinson’s and their care partners to take PDF’s second annual “people’s choice” awards survey by visiting www.pdf.org/communitychoice. They are also looking for other ways to work with researchers and educate the local community about opportunities to get involved. “As PDF Research Advocates, the Newboulds are key partners in our mission to support the research and ideas that will improve the lives and futures of those touched by Parkinson’s,” says PDF President Robin Elliott. “We believe that when members of the Parkinson’s community are equal stakeholders — alongside research professionals, government agencies and private industry — their presence will improve research and speed new treatments for Parkinson’s.” Are you a person with Parkinson’s disease, a care partner or a member of the research community? Connect with the Newboulds and other PDF Research Advocates by contacting PDF at 800-457-6676 or info@pdf.org. EDITOR’S NOTE: Parkinson’s disease is a progressive neurological disorder that affects nearly 1 million people in the U.S. Although promising research is being conducted, there is currently no cure for Parkinson’s. 30—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Family works By Rob Coombs ID. Min. Ph.D. Speaking on child abuse Another call from a concerned teacher served to remind me of the sad prevalence of child abuse and the bewilderment of many who simply don’t have any idea how to move their concern to protection. Days or even months may pass and the child continues to endure one painful night after another, helpless to do anything about it. When such situations explode into the public eye, we wonder why no one, especially those in the know, did nothing. In defense of many who would like to do something, I view their lack of doing anything not as apathy, but rather as frustration that leads to stagnation. Dave Pelzer gives a picture of an abused child trapped in a hell with seemingly no escape. No one could possibly convey what he endured better than himself and with courage unknown to most, he decided to write about the emotional and physical abuse that he endured for eight years from his mother, a truly evil woman by any standard and a father who participated in the abuse by refusing to intervene. Pelzer has written three bestselling books giving an excruciatingly painful look into his inner world as he struggles to live day by day, and glimpses of hope as he eventually makes sense of the physical abuse he endured. His first book, “A Child Called It,” chronicles the childhood years where he endured his mother forcing him to eat dog waste, rubbing dirty diapers in his face, pouring ammonia down his throat, sitting on his hands for years on end at the bottom step of the stairs to the garage when not performing the family chores, sleeping in a cold garage without even a blanket, being deprived of food often for days at a time, lying for hours in a tub filled with cold water with only his nostrils above water, his arm pulled out of socket and even actually being stabbed, for which he received no medical attention. His second book, “The Lost Boy,” chronicles the intervention by the school system and his placement in numerous fostercare homes. Although often not easy, the foster-care system saved him, as this was his first experience receiving love. In his third book, “A Man Called Dave,” the author reveals his painfully slow process of building a healthy self-esteem, his yearning to make a difference for the thousands of children trapped in abuse and his desire to give to his son what he never had — unconditional love. Of all the books I have read on abuse, no other works better to capture the pain an abused child may endure, and the determination it takes to rise above the abuse. This is a must-read for every teacher, parent and concerned citizen. There are so many heartbreaking realities reflected in his book that it is difficult to determine what is most disturbing concerning what he endured. For me, there were three prevailing themes that I found very troubling. —First, the viciousness of his mother. How could one person find so many different ways to torture her child? She must have willfully and deliberately planned how to abuse him again and again without actually killing him. Even after he was placed into foster care, she found creative ways to continue psychic abuse from a distance. —Second, the cowardliness of his father, who knew what was going on but chose to do nothing. —Third, his repeated attempts to gain the love of his parents — his undying fantasy that somehow, some way, his mother and dad would one day see him as a person worthy of love. This unrealistic desire only served to open the door to further abuse. If you have concerns that a child may be trapped in abuse, please pick up the phone and call the Domestic Violence Hotline at 423-476-3886. Your call is confidential. An investigation will follow and intervention for the abused child can take place. Don’t delay. Every night is another night of a living hell. Court orders Nevada to say what’s in prison food LAS VEGAS (AP) — A convicted pedophile’s complaint about Nevada prison food has the state Supreme Court ordering an accounting of what’s in unnamed sack lunches and “chef’s choice” dinners given to inmates, and whether the meals are healthful. A strongly worded ruling by a three-judge panel declared it isn’t enough for the top state health officer, Dr. Tracey Green, to simply state that prisoners aren’t malnourished. “Green’s report does not detail what foods are being served to inmates ... much less provide any explanation of how these unidentified foods provide inmates with a nutritionally adequate diet,” the court said after reviewing Green’s 2011 report to the Board of Prison Commissioners. Green, head of the Nevada Division of Behavioral and Public Health, said in a statement that since 2011, her annual inspections of prison sanitation, healthfulness, cleanliness, safety, diet and food preparation were up-dodate. She said reports in the past “would only reflect deficient practices rather than demonstrate areas of compliance,” and said her state Bureau of Health Care Quality and Compliance “plans to better document how the review takes place.” “The chief medical officer will continue to comply with law and any additional direction from the district court,” the statement said. State prisons are required to provide inmates with a “healthful diet.” As of Dec. 31, 2014, Nevada had nearly 12,800 inmates at seven prisons and 10 conservation camps, plus a restitution center and a transitional housing center. The Department of Corrections budget for 2013-15 was $487 million, down $9 million from the previous two-year budget period. Nevada prisons budgeted $11.7 million for food in fiscal 2014 and $11.8 million in fiscal 2015, according to the state Legislative Counsel Bureau. Not counting staff time, and if the prison population has been consistent, the state spends an average of less than $925 on food per inmate per year. A “thrifty” adult aged 19 to 50 in the United States spent about $187 on food in November, according to a U.S. Department of Agriculture report. That averages a little less than $2,250 a year or 2½ times the Nevada prison food budget. Prisons also must account for religious and medical diets, and the age, sex and activity level of inmates. Cleveland From Page 29 Christian ClassiCs Choir meets for rehearsal each Tuesday from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Pentecostal Theological Seminary Chapel. For more information or to become a member, email Daniel Petty at classicschoir@gmail.com, or call 903-530-3017. Martha Bostic at 479-9207. the United ClUb will meet Tuesday at 11:30 a.m. at the Golden Corral. The speaker will be Bettie Marlowe from the Cleveland Daily Banner. For information on the United Club or to become a member, call EDITOR’S NOTE: To submit announcements to be included in Around Cleveland, email information by Wednesday for Sunday publication in the Lifestyles section to bettie.marlowe@clevelandbanner.com. “eat YoUr art oUt, Cleveland!” which began on Valentine’s Day and runs through April, is sponsored by The Greenway Public Arts Committee in the promotion of local art and businesses. Justice From Page 29 court costs and fines from their salary, which saves taxpayers thousands of dollars. “The existing work-release program has about 48 beds on the premises, which will be turned into a work-release area just for women,” Word explained. “Then we’ll add a new 128 bed area just for men. This would give our community a better handle on how we can make that population more productive and contribute to society instead of taking away from it. Hopefully, it will give them the opportunity to get their lives back in sync with the community. This program will pay for itself over time. It’s an investment in the community. Right now we’re taking money from the state or county to house these inmates. Under this new work-release program these people will be paying their way into jail.” Research conducted by the Washington State Institute for Public Policy indicates that workrelease programs produce a positive cost-benefit impact. Their research showed that for every dollar spent, $3.82 is returned to the state. The new work-release program also allows inmates to arrive at their release date with a job and savings, instead of homeless, and the temptation to return to a life of crime. Additionally, they learn to refine their social and living skills when riding the bus, interacting with others and managing their personal finances while still under supervision. Although there is always the possibility that some inmates may decide to escape during work-release, Word and Kienlen said they believe the benefits of the program will far outweigh any concerns that a few might abuse the program. “Of course, there are no guarantees. The only guarantees in life are death and taxes. But every time the county grows, crime grows. It goes hand-inhand. If these people don’t change their lives and end up going back to the same place, same community and hang around with the same people, they’re going to have the same results. We don’t want that. To me, this is not a probation problem, it’s not a judicial problem and it’s not the sheriff’s problem. It’s a community-wide problem and I’m part of that community. I want to be part of the change that can make it a Banner photo, WILLIAM WRIGht InMAtEs currently working around Bradley County will get added benefits under the new work release program that focuses prisoners on finding gainful employment, being financially responsible, building self-esteem and life-skill development to service themselves and the community. Under the new program inmates will receive the same wages as any other employee, which allows the state to deduct the inmates’ room and board as well as other obligations like child support, victim restitution, court costs and fines from their salary, which saves taxpayers thousands of dollars. Above, supporters of the upcoming Bradley County Work Release Program observe local inmates at work. From left to right are, Misdemeanor Probation Director Rich Kienlen, District Attorney General Stephen Crump, Bradley County Sheriff Eric Watson, Deputy Rob Jensen, and Chief Deputy Brian Smith. better system.” Many experts agree that participation in transitional programs greatly increases inmate success after release from prison since they learn the value of taking responsibility, earning a living, self-respect, empowerment and craftsmanship, which are essential when looking for work in the private sector. Word, who is also involved in a prison ministry through Kairos Prison Ministry International in the Bledsoe County state prison, said the faith-based program used in Bledsoe County prison is another reason why many of its inmates are turning their lives around, something he is excited to see Sheriff Eric Watson utilizing in Bradley County. In a recent letter to the Bradley County Commissioners, Word wrote, “I want to personally thank the Work House Committee for all their time and effort spent in time and travel to make this much need facility a reality. The commissioners, led by Louie Alford, and our County Mayor, Gary Davis, have provided great insight to the grand jury and to the Work House Committee. It is our belief and understanding that this program will help with the overcrowding of our current jail facility and give those who are sentenced to this program an opportunity, with a nonviolent conviction to pay their debt to society, keep a job, get a GED if needed to get a job and to be given a direction, if wanted to find their moral compass for their life. The vast majority of these men and women are good people who have made one or more bad choices. I am glad to have been part of this program that over time will be of great benefit and importance to all of our community.” County Mayor Davis said, “The commissoners have approved the project and I have begun working with the architech to get some plans in place so we can take back to the commission for their approval. We are moving forward with the project. We’re probably a year out from completion.” In an earlier comment regarding the new work project Sheriff Watson said, “I am pleased with the vote of the County Commission to allow the Sheriff’s office to operate the new county workhouse. Let me assure Commission members and the citizens of Bradley Count that this is a challenge we look forward to with great anticipation. It will be a positive step for the county.” According to the U.S. Department of Justice, United States prisons release more than 650,000 individuals each year. Within three years of release, approximately two-thirds will be back in prison. Work-release programs has the potential to introduce these individuals back into society and the labor market. In 2004, President George W. Bush, said in his State of the Union Address, “This year, some 600,000 inmates will be released from prison back into society. We know from long experience that if they can’t find work, or a home, or help, they are much more likely to commit more crimes and return to prison. America is the land of the second chance, and when the gates of the prison open, the path ahead should lead to a better life.” New Whitney design by Renzo Piano a game changer for museum NEW YORK (AP) — Street banners for weeks have teased: “Whitney, Unpacking in the Meatpacking, May 2015.” Finally, after four years of construction, the Whitney Museum of American Art is unpacked and ready to greet fans old and new in its new home — a gleaming asymmetrical steel-and-glass architectural sculpture with sweeping views of the High Line and the Hudson River in Manhattan’s hip Meatpacking District. The $422 million Renzo Pianodesigned building is a gamechanger for the museum. The 220,000-square-foot space, including 18,000 feet unencumbered by structural columns and 13,000 feet of outdoor terrace galleries, doubles its former home on the Upper East Side. That translates to more room for its 22,000-object permanent collection, more galleries for temporary exhibitions, more programming and for the first time room for a works-on-paper study center, a 170-seat theater and an education center with state-ofthe-art classrooms. The Whitney officially opens May 1 with an inaugural exhibition that showcases the airy, light-infused building and the breadth and depth of its permanent collection. “America is Hard to See” — which takes its name from a Robert Frost poem — features 650 works by 400 artists from 1900 to the present, filling every gallery floor of the eight-story building. Roughly one-quarter of the art has never been seen before or not for decades and more than 150 are making their debuts. Probably best described as industrial modern, the facility is an eccentric mix of shapes and angles with many floor-to-ceiling windows. In an interview, Donna De Salvo, the museum’s chief curator who worked closely with the architectural team, spoke animatedly about the opportunities the design presented for “new narratives about how we think about American art.” The museum has raised a total of $760 million, which includes $225 million for its endowment. The game changer is the space, De Salvo said. “We didn’t have adequate space in our prior facility to really fully take advantage of all the things we have to offer.” Now two floors are designated for its permanent collection; two other floors and the lobby house temporary exhibitions. The elevators are custom-designed with works by artist Richard Artschwager. De Salvo said she believed artists will be inspired by the new spaces and will “reinvent them over and over again.” They’re tailored to the needs of how artists — and curators — work, she said. Floors throughout are sprung, allowing for both performance and installations. Open-grid ceilings permit walls and art to be arranged into multitude configurations. The column-free gallery — the size of a football field — can hold multiple exhibitions or a single show. Four open-air terraces provide a place for sculpture, installations, projections and performance pieces and open up to the neighborhood and its trendy restaurants, luxury apartment buildings, boutiques and clubs. The gallery-rich Chelsea area lies north and Greenwich Village is just south of the museum. Bounded on the east by the High Line and the Hudson River Park on the west, the Whitney serves as “a metaphorical bridge between the two spaces,” said museum director Adam Weinberg. Outdoor metal staircases connect to the terraces on three floors, steps from lower building rooftops. People strolling along the 1.45-mile elevated park can get a glimpse of the museum’s conservation lab and art handling area. “You can actually see art moving through the building to give you a sense of the process of what goes on behind the scenes,” said Weinberg. “The idea is to connect to the process of the art and the museum, to reveal what goes on inside.” AP photo In thIs Photo, Barbara Kruger’s “Untitled (We Don’t Need Another Hero)” is displayed with David Moffett’s “He Kills Me” at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. The Whitney officially opens May 1 with an inaugural exhibition that showcases the airy, light-infused building and the breadth and depth of its permanent collection. The inaugural show begins in the lobby gallery with an introduction to the museum’s precursor, the Whitney Studio Club in Greenwich Village, and its founding in 1930 by heiress-sculptor Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney. The museum migrated north over the years, moving into its third home in 1966 at the Marcel Breuer-designed building on Madison Avenue, now leased to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The exhibition continues on the top floor and works down chronologically, presenting works in 23 “chapters,” each named for a work of art. One section called “Music, Pink and Blue,” derived from a Georgia O’Keefe painting, looks at artmaking in the 1920s when artists tried to capture the feeling and sensation of music in their art form. Another section looks at the engagement of artists as activists during the 1930s. Each section presents works across all media — painting, photography, video, installation and drawing — because “it’s a much truer picture of how artists work,” said De Salvo. A major exhibition of the works of Frank Stella that will occupy the entire fifth floor will be presented in the fall. “I love the connectivity to the city,” said Laurel Emery of the building as she came down from the High Line with Jim Kegley. The two real estate developers from Atlanta said they loved how the design interacted with the surrounding architecture. “It’s very approachable. It’ll attract a lot of art people,” said Kegley. ——— online: http://whitney.org/ www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—31 LIBRARY CORNER Tickets for the Belk Charity Sale available at the library This week’s HOT Pick is “Private Vegas” by James Patterson. No. 9 in Patterson’s Private series brings Private Jack Morgan to a whole new level of seductively criminal organizations. Talk about a HOT pick! Check it out today. The library is selling tickets to the Belk Charity Sale, held on May 2 from 6-10 a.m. You must have a ticket to shop at Belk that day and it gives you special discounts when shopping. Tickets are $5 and can be bought at the Circulation Desk. All proceeds go to support adult programming at the library. Attention Tween STEAM fans! The STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts and math) program will be held on the first Thursday of May at 4:30 p.m. This month, come dip your brain in a number of different activities including; Doodle Bots, Snap Circuits, Lego building and reaction science. Sign-up is required and can be done in the Children’s Room or by calling the library. The History Branch is currently undergoing work to preserve its beauty and history. Unfortunately, that work has forced that branch to temporarily close the wheelchair accessible ramp. Once all other work is completed, a new ramp will be installed. The library thanks you for your patience and understanding. Monday night stop in for Adult Gaming beginning at 6:30 p.m. Join in on virtual, board, or card games while enjoying the atmosphere of the library. Feel free to being a game to share with others. Video games must be multiplayer. This Tuesday, join Jeff Kinney, the best-selling creator of “Diary of a Wimpy Kid,” as he is broadcast around the world in an interactive webcast. The library will be taking part in this unique program in the Community Room at 9:30 a.m. The teens will get together to discuss the book “Graceling,” by Kristin Cashore, Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. The first in the “Graceling Realm Trilogy” explores the rare gift a Graceling possesses. Join the Teen Services Librarian every month at the Teen Book Talk to discuss more of your Young Adult favorites. Email teenzone@clevelandlibrary.org for more information. Come see the award-winning film “Birdman,” at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday. Discover the struggle of a washed-up actor trying to make it big on the Broadway scene, and enjoy popcorn in the Community Room. The movie is R rated. Steven James will be at the library this week for the Annual Spring Author Event sponsored by the Friends of the Library Association. James is a national bestselling novelist and storyteller who constructs pulse-pounding tales that keep you up all night reading. Come hear him and support the library on Thursday at 7 p.m. Tickets are on sale now and priced as follows: $5 for students with a valid ID, $10 for current FOLA members, and $15 for nonmembers. You may order them at the library or through the website. The library has a number of his books located in the display case in the Fiction Room, so come read one today. As always, the following programs are going on this week: Wiggle Worms for babies on Monday at 3 p.m.; gaming for teens on Monday at 4:30 p.m.; story times on Tuesday, Thursday and Friday morning at 10:30 a.m.; and Family story time on Saturday at 2 p.m. This year the MotherDaughter Tea will be held on May 9 at 4 p.m. The theme is princesses, so come dressed as your favorite queen or princess, adults as well as children. This program is for girls ages 4-12 and one adult per household. Reservations and a refundable $5 deposit per family are required to participate. Stop by the Children’s Room Desk to sign up today. The Lions Club of Cleveland is collecting used prescription eyeglasses to distribute to individuals throughout our community. If you have some you can donate, it will go a long way to make Cleveland a better place for all. There is a box at the Circulation Desk where you can drop them off. The Scholastic Book Fair is coming to the library from May 26 to June 2. Stop in the Children’s Room during regular business hours to shop. All items are buy one, get one free. Proceeds go toward purchasing easy, juvenile, and young adult materials as well as supporting children, tween and teen programming. Try BonLife Coffee today at the library, and support a local business. For more information on the library and its services, visit clevelandlibrary.org. CDPAC dancers compete at Prime Time dance finals Special to the Banner Cleveland Dance & Performing Arts Center's Company dancers recently competed at Prime Time dance finals with the following results: Shelbee Jordan — Platinum, third overall Junior Cutting Edge Grand Champion soloist, Ballet Ido; Brittany Zachman — Platinum, first overall Petite Xtreme Grand Champion soloist, Xtreme Costume award, Miss Xtreme Primetime; Caroline Shotts — Platinum, first overall Junior Breakthrough Grand Champion soloist, runner-up Miss Junior Breakthrough Primetime, Breakthrough Costume Award; Marlee Gross — Ninth overall Junior Breakthrough soloist; Caroline Saunders — Third overall Junior Breakthrough soloist; Madie Hall — High Gold; Courtney Widdows — Platinum, first overall Teen Breakthrough soloist; Ashley Harper — Sixth overall Teen Cutting Edge soloist; Lexi Valliere — Platinum for both solos, first overall Xtreme Teen soloist, runner-up for Miss Xtreme Primetime; Emily Derrick — Platinum for both solos, second overall Xtreme Senior soloist; Marlee Gross, Sydney ‘Dining with Diabetes’ workshop begins May 7 The “Dining with Diabetes” school will begin on May 7 and continue May 14, 21, and 28. Classes will be held at the UT Extension-Bradley County Extension Building, 95 Church St. S.E. Class times will be 5 to 7 p.m. each week. Instructors will be Pam Newton, registered dietitian, Southeast Region, Tennessee Department of Health, and Kaye Smith, Extension Agent with the University of Tennessee Extension-Bradley County office. Topics for the four two-hour classes will include the use of artificial sweeteners, preparation of foods with less salt, fat, and sugar, meal plans and use of seasonings. Students will learn how to prepare several meals that are healthier and easier to prepare. Participants will also have the opportunity to taste a variety of dishes. Participants will learn Dear Readers: With our busy lives, and many of us spending a lot of time going to and from, it’s sure easy to “drive through” a FAST-FOOD RESTAURANT to pick up dinner! Hey, I’m one of you. After a full, busy day working on this column, doing phone work, checking and sending important emails, dealing with service folks, etc., I sure don’t want to fix dinner. Plus, it’s just David (my husband) and me now. Oh, yes, he usually is the one who “brings home the dinner,” since I work from my home office. Here are my personal Heloise hints for eating as healthy as possible: — No FRIED food, or if it’s battered, I try to pick off the batter and skin. I do love French fries and onion rings, so I limit the amount I eat by putting a few on my plate, not eating from the bag. Side salads, soups and fruit slices are available, too. Skip mayo on a sandwich or burger (veggie for me), and “86” (cancel) the cheese. — Soft drinks are jampacked with useless calories and cost a lot! Water for me, or iced tea. — Gravies, high-calorie sauces and most salad dressings add more calories and fat than you might think. A taste or two usually is enough for me. — Kids’ meals are perfect when I’m not famished. NO, you up-to date information on nutrition, meal planning, exercise and how to understand common diabetes-related medical tests. Several recipes will be sampled each week with handouts given to each participant. Diabetes is a very serious and costly disease but research has shown that those who learn to manage their blood glucose (sugar) levels by eating healthier and exercising regularly can lower their risk of complications and lead a healthier and more productive life. A registration fee of $30 for the first person and $15 for an additional family member covers the four classes and is due before the first session. There is a reduced fee for food stamp eligible recipients. The classes are open to those with diabetes, family members, friends, caretakers and others interested in healthier eating. For more information or to make reservations for the four classes, contact University of Tennessee Extension-Bradley County at 728-7001. Reservations need to be made by May 4. “Dining with Diabetes” is an educational program of University of Tennessee Extension and is open to all eligible persons regardless of race, color, national origin, sex, disability, religion or veteran status. LIKE TO LOSE THOSE UNWANTED POUNDS? JOIN US AT BANNER BABIES Nathan and Ashleigh Cates of Cleveland announce the birth of Elizabeth Aria, their 20 1/2inch, 7-pound, 12-ounce daughter, on March 3, 2015, at Erlanger East. Grandparents are Tim and Sheila Rogers and Tony and Kim Cates, all of Benton. ——— BANNER POLICY: Birth announcements cannot be accepted by email or fax due to Hints from Heloise A fast route to healthy eating Wilson and Brittany Zachman — High Gold, second overall Grand Champion Petite trio; Shelbee Jordan and Caroline Shotts — Platinum, first overall Cutting Edge Grand Champion Junior Duo; Ashley Harper & Courtney Widdows: High Gold & 2nd Overall Cutting Edge Grand champion Teen duo; Emily Derrick & Lexi Valliere: Platinum & 1st Overall Xtreme Grand champion Teen duo; Let the River Run: High Gold, 2nd Cleveland danCe & Performing Arts Center's Company Overall Junior Xtreme Grand Champion small group; Isn't She dancers recently competed at Prime Time dance finals in Chattanooga, Lovely: Platinum, 1st overall with dancers capturing several top awards. They will compete in five Xtreme Junior Grand champion more regional competition and other national championships. small group, call-back for Primetime Live Finals, first; Hey Platinum, second Overall Xtreme regional competitions and attend Daddy — Platinum, first overall Grand Champion Teen small National Championships in Xtreme Petite Grand Champion group; The Golden Age — Gatlinburg in June and Hershey, small group, call-back for Platinum, sixth overall Xtreme Pennsylvania in July. CDPAC is under the direction of Primetime Live Finals, first; Teen small group; Eclipse — Candle in the Wind — Platinum, Platinum, fifth overall Xtreme Nisa Hooper with contributing first overall Cutting Edge Grand Teen small group; Just Like staff and choreographers: Travis Champion Petite large group, Heaven— Platinum, first overall Smith, Caitlyn Lynn, Jackson call-back for Primetime Live Xtreme Grand champion Teen Alvarez of Charlotte, N.C., Victor Finals, first; Hot Cheetos and small group, call-back for Smalley of Miami, Fla., and Ade Takis — Platinum, second overall Primetime Live Finals, second; Obayami of Los Angeles. Registration for Summer Kids Cutting Edge Junior Grand Flawless — Platinum Xtreme Champion Large group, call-back Teen small group; From The Princess Camps, Summer Dance for Primetime Live Finals, third; Block — Platinum, first overall Classes and Summer Intensives is now being accepted. Email Britney — Platinum, fourth over- Grand Champion Teen line. CDPAC's Avant Garde cdpac5678@gmail.com for more all Xtreme Grand champion Teen small group; Bobblehead: Company will have five more information don’t have to be a kid to order one! — Heloise Easy shave Dear Heloise: My wife, Shirley, reads me the hints in your column in The Washington Post. Here is my hint to make shaving almost nickproof: She has gotten me to use body lotion for dry skin. I now apply it to my face before the shaving cream — the result is miraculous! Shaving is easier and more effective. Hope you print this — I think a lot of men would benefit. Thanks for years of wonderful advice and suggestions. — Gene, via email Gene, give your wife a Heloise hug, and one to you for sharing your hint. For legs, I rub on a thin coat of baby oil or lotion before getting into the shower or bath. Then I use hair shampoo or conditioner over the oil and shave. No nicks and smooth skin. — Heloise legal considerations. Submitted information must be on an official form and accompanied by photo ID. There is a $10 charge to include additional information such as deceased grandparents or family members other than siblings and grandparents. (Announcements including a photo must go through paid advertising.) Call the Banner for more information at 472-5041. 2B ThinnAgain Weight Loss Debbie, Kayla, Kerrie 30 DAY SUPPLY OF PHENTERMINE ONLY $50 No Coupon Needed, Everyday Low Price! Adipex-37.5, Fastin-37.5, Phentermine-37.5 HCG, Myoden, Topamax & New Weight Loss Lipoden Extreme NEW LIPODEN ONLY $15/SHOT Medically Supervised PA on Staff. We accept BeneFlex cards 1300 25th Street • Cleveland, TN 37311 • 423-479-4389 tobthinagain.wix.com/2b-thin-again Call Anytime! Office Hours: Tuesday, Thursday 10am-5:30pm; Sat. 10am-2pm Special BREAST AUGMENTATION $3500.00! Call Today For An Appointment Reuse and recycle Jodi in Tennessee sent a photo of Sheeba, a Lab mix who followed Jodi and her husband home after a walk. Sheeba was just a puppy when she trotted up the hill to let them know she had picked them! Dear Heloise: I buy large bags of dry dog food and wild birdseed. To make a small tarp, I cut the tops and bottoms off, then split them down one side. If larger is needed, I lay several down and tape them together. Tarps are expensive, and I have to buy dog food anyway. — Martha C. in Virginia (c)2012 by King Features Syndicate Inc. of Cleveland Michael L. Hoops, MD (423) 472-1996 Board Certified by The American Board of Plastic Surgery 597 Church Street NE • Cleveland, Tennessee Anyone can wear a white coat. Not everyone is board certified in plastic surgery. Do your homework! 32—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com First bridal line revealed since de la Renta’s death rides The engAgemenT and forthcoming marriage of Elizabeth Ann “Beth” Cearley and Keith Ronald Rodgers is announced by Steve and Judy Cearley, the parents of the brideelect. The future bridegroom is the son of Ron Rodgers and the late Marcelene “Marcy” Rodgers. The couple will exchange wedding vows on May 9. Banner bridal policy outlined —Forms are available at the Banner for wedding and engagement stories. Please type or print information. The Banner is not responsible for errors due to illegible writing. Errors in content must be reported within three days of publication. (Article will be reprinted if error was the fault of the Banner staff.) A typo is not considered an error in content. —There is no charge for engagement, wedding or party stories if received by set deadlines. Only two shower or party photographs will be published. —Good quality photographs which are no larger than 5x7 are preferred. However, quality is more important than size. Photos should be picked up within 30 days following publication. Pictures will be returned by mail only if self-addressed, stamped envelope is provided. The Banner is not responsible for loss or damage to pictures. —Banner editors reserve the right to refuse any photograph which is not, in their opinion, of good quality for reproduction. —In order for a wedding story to be published in the Banner, information and photograph for an engagement or wedding for Sunday publication must be submitted by Wednesday noon the week before desired publication date. A charge will be made for wedding stories not published within 90 days after the ceremony. Deadlines are firm. —Banner editors also reserve the right to edit any information provided to conform to the newspaper’s requirements and Associated Press style. NEW YORK (AP) — Peter Copping had hoped to work alongside Oscar de la Renta, but it was not to be: Just days after Copping was hired last October as artistic director of the luxury label, the legendary de la Renta passed away from cancer. In February, Copping presented his debut collection at New York Fashion Week, and on Saturday — barely two months later — he showed his first bridal line, a big occasion for a label known for dressing high-profile brides like Amal Clooney. Luckily for Copping, who is British, the New York weather on Saturday was decidedly summery — perfect for brides. His collection retained much of the classic de la Renta glamour — lots of tulle and organza — but added a few more modern-looking silhouettes, some new takes on fabric work, and some silvery sequins. One of the most versatile looks came last, a white tiered ballgown in tulle with two bottom layers that were removable, to form a stylish minidress for dancing into the night. Backstage after the show, Copping reflected on the collection. (The interview has been edited for length.) AP: You showed your first collection in February, and now this. Has it been a whirlwind? Copping: Yes, it’s tough to get it done in the time you have. But I did take some of the elements from the fall collection and brought them through into this one. Some of the ways we were working with fabrics for fall seemed really appropriate for bridal, so I thought it would be nice to use that as a stepping stone. For example, one dress was AP Photo A model wears a creation from the Oscar de la Renta Bridal Spring 2016 collection April 18 in New York. formed from lots of strips of organza; there was something very similar in a bordeaux (color) in the last show. So we did it in a lighter fabric here and we added lace as well. AP: You’ve spoken of the need to both preserve tradition in your new post, but also add in your own new touches. Did you do that here? Copping: Yes, I think the way we treated some of the embroidery, and some of the silhouettes; you know it’s just small touches, but small things can go a long way. AP: Anything absolutely new for you here? Copping: I haven’t done a lot of tulle like this, so that’s quite new for me. I do think there a lot of women that do want that sort of princess gown. So that’s really important, to cater to that clientele. And this (last gown) — we also made it very versatile, the two layers underneath can be removed and you end up with a very ballerina, swanlike dress. So that can be perfect for later in the evening when she wants to let loose and party. Also new is a lot of the ways lace is used — sometimes using strips of it. We were playing around with it a bit. AP: Do you feel there’s less freedom in a bridal collection? Copping: There are certain restrictions, but that’s not a bad thing. I like to work within parameters sometimes. For example, not having to really worry about color! It was white or ivory, with little touches of silver. That’s why we played around with the shoes, putting color there, and on some of the ribbons on the clothes. AP: It’s still your first year at the label. Are you getting more comfortable? Copping: Well, coming up is resort and then after that is the spring-summer collection. I think it’s only going to be once I’ve done an entire year of collections that I’ll really get a good handle on things. AP: Are you enjoying the move to New York? Copping: I am. After 20 years in Paris, I quite surprised myself with how much I’ve settled in and am enjoying the city. Country clubs use myriad of ways to survive slow economy MEADOW VISTA, Calif. (AP) — Once considered a jewel of Northern California, Winchester Country Club became nearly unrecognizable after the landowner was forced to foreclose the property during the economic downturn. During five years of bank ownership, the golf course turned brown, the native areas between the holes overgrown and unruly. Membership dwindled and the course opened for public-fee play just to keep the club afloat. It barely survived. But once the economy leveled a bit, Winchester’s new owners took a novel approach to help it rebound: They sank more money into it, hoping a more luxurious club would drive up the real estate and, in turn, make the club more appealing to potential members. “Nobody believed that you could turn this thing around and make it vibrant again because there were so many things that needed to fall together to make that happen,” said David Bennett, Winchester Country Club’s general manager. “We kind of had to do a dance to choreograph this all to make it work.” Winchester’s plan worked. Other country clubs weren’t so fortunate. In the late 1990s through early 2000s, country clubs hit an apex. Golf was as popular as ever — in part because of Tiger Woods’ mass appeal — and the economy was flourishing. New golfers took up the game like never before and country clubs, along with real estate developments around them, cropped up across the country. But even before the economy started to sour, interest in golf began to wane. After years of growth, more golf courses closed than opened in 2006, a trend that continued every year through 2014 at a ratio of more than 10 to 1, according to the National Golf Foundation. The number of rounds played also went on a steady decline, falling to 462 million in 2013, the lowest mark in 18 years. Once the economy started to decline, country clubs began to suffer. People had less disposable income or free time and country club memberships were an easy place to trim expenditures. By 2012, 52 percent of country clubs in the United States reported a loss in memberships, with just 22 percent seeing a gain, according to a 2015 Sports Leisure Research Group report. That left country clubs and developers caught in a bubble, needing capital to keep running the club and community, but no way to pay for it. “We got overbuilt, there were too many clubs built for how many golfers there were, then the golfers started to drop off,” said Jim McLaughlin, senior vice president of operations at Troon Prive, Troon Golf’s private-club arm. “When you’ve lost 15-20 percent of your market and growth still going on, that’s when you get into trouble.” The economic downturn forced many country clubs to dramatically alter how they operated or face shutting down. Clubs that were once invitationonly began opening their doors, drastically dropping initiation fees or eliminating them all together. Annual dues were slashed and some clubs even offered trial memberships with money-back guarantees. Many country clubs were forced to offer reduced-rate tee times to the public just to stay afloat. Some became semiprivate, keeping members while allowing outside play, while others were forced to become fully public. As the economy has started to recover, so have the country clubs that survived. The rate of course closings hasn’t waned — about 120-130 per year — but people have started returning to country clubs. In 2014, 39 percent of country clubs gained new members while just 26 percent had more members going out than coming in. Winchester Country Club has started to bounce back after upgrading the clubhouse, the staff and the golf course, one of the last co-designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr. and his son, Robert Jr. ——— ONLINE: http://www.troongolf.com http://www.winchestercountryclub.com AP photo AP photo This PhoTo shows Julia Hamilton dancing with Paul Rhodes at a This PhoTo provided by Kathty Lovetere shows Kaitlin McCarthy prom that students held at Rhodes College in Memphis. The college and Matty Marcone, students at Canton High School in Canton, Mass., students invited members of a local senior citizens center to attend the at the school’s junior prom. Kaitlin invited Matty, who has special needs, prom, and they danced to everything from big band music to R&B. to be her date and they were crowned prom king and queen. For some, prom is a platform for good deeds, social change NEW YORK (AP) — Proms have traditionally been a night of glamour and romance, complete with backstage drama over dates and dresses. But prom culture is changing. Some teens now see prom as an opportunity to be inclusive rather than exclusive. They’re using proms as vehicles for good deeds and to take a stand on issues that matter to them. Teens are inviting classmates with autism to be their dates. One student group organized a prom for senior citizens. In Louisiana, a gay female student fought for the right to wear a tux. And a museum now displays a prom dress worn by a student who spearheaded a racially integrated prom. “Change can look like a prom dress,” said Matthew McRae, spokesman for the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg. “We thought it was a great example of someone making a change at the community level.” Prom can be “a platform for social change,” said April Masini, who writes the AskApril.com advice column. While some teens see prom as a night of playing grown-up by dressing in fancy clothes, for others, “their idea of being an adult is standing up for what they believe in.” Here are some stories about teenagers who, instead of worrying about how to fit in, used their proms to reach out to others or express their right to be different. Inviting A Classmate With Special Needs Kaitlin McCarthy, 17, is a high school junior in Canton, Massachusetts. Her schoolmate, Matty Marcone, has special needs and a range of medical issues. “He’s the sweetest kid,” Kaitlin said. “I see Matty for who he is. I say, ‘Oh, that’s my buddy Matty,’ not ‘Poor Matty, he’s dealing with this or that right now.’” Matty told Kaitlin he wanted to buy Disney World for her. “I said, if he’s going to buy Disney World for me, I should bring him to the prom,” said Kaitlin. The whole school — including Kaitlin’s boyfriend — joined the effort. Matty learned to dance. Special ed teachers and the school nurse chaperoned to help manage Matty’s diabetes. The hockey team, which had previously chosen Matty as team CEO, made sure he had friends to hang out with in addition to Kaitlin. Matty and Kaitlin ended up being crowned prom king and queen. “A lot of the kids know his situation, that he’s very sick. But they also respect him as a peer. This wasn’t done out of pity,” said Matty’s mom Susan Marcone. “There was magic in the room that night.” Another kind of magic took place at Division Avenue High School in Levittown, New York, when senior Sarah Kardonsky invited a friend with autism, Michael Pagano, to the prom. Michael had asked several girls to the prom but all said no. “I was going to go by myself if I didn’t get a date,” he said. “But it turned out Sarah had a plan.” And what a plan. Michael is a New York Jets fan, so Sarah messaged Jets players via Instagram and asked for help making a video prom invitation. To her surprise, Antonio Cromartie and eight other Jets sent videos of themselves saying, “Mike, will you go to the prom with Sarah?” She stitched the videos together and it was shown one morning in school with the day’s announcements. “He’s such a great kid, I didn’t want him to go alone,” said Sarah. “He had already been turned down so many times, I wanted to make it special for him.” The publicity led to a free limo, free tux and an appearance on “The Ellen DeGeneres Show.” But here’s what matters to Sarah: “People who worry so much about what dress to wear or who to go with, that’s not what prom is about. Prom is about having a good time. You should just be surrounded by people who make you happy.” Being Yourself At Prom Claudetteia Love, 17, was barred from wearing a tux to the April 24 Carroll High School prom in Monroe, Louisiana. After word of her quest got out, the dress code was changed with the support of the school board president. “I am thankful that my school is allowing me to be who I am,” she said. “Proms are a very traditional part of the high school experience,” said Asaf Orr, staff attorney at the National Center for Lesbian Rights, which supported her case. “Participating in those events as your whole self, that’s really what it’s about. These kids are saying, ‘I want to go to this event, I’m not going to hide part of who I am.’” Prom Dress In A Museum Last fall, Mareshia Rucker’s red sparkly prom dress went on display at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights. She wore the dress in 2013 to a racially integrated prom that she and other teenagers from Wilcox County High School in Rochelle, Georgia, organized. Until then, segregated proms had been arranged by families in the community. “Human rights isn’t just something addressed by world leaders or famous people,” said McRae, who helped curate the exhibit. “It’s something we can all make a difference in.” A Prom For Young And Old When Rahul Peravali was a student at Houston High School in Germantown, Tennessee, he participated in a prom that brought students and senior citizens together. When he got to Rhodes College in Memphis, he proposed it as a project for the college class council. On April 7, dozens of kids showed up to dance with folks their grandparents’ age. For the seniors, it was special because “so many of them did not get to go to their own proms,” said Kay Lightfoot, director of the Lewis Center for Seniors. But the “students had a great time too,” said Peravali. The seniors taught the youngsters some steps for big-band numbers. And students led the line dance for the 2007 R&B hit “Cupid Shuffle.” www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—33 CLUB NOTES Contributed photo Dr. Joy yATES, left, chairman of the scholarship committee, introduced the 2015 Katherine Trewhitt Scholarship winner, Ashley Shoemaker, right, at the April meeting of the Lambda Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma. “Alice’s Dream” by Ellen Franklin ‘Change is Good’ at In-Town Gallery — reception May 1 Lambda’s 2015 scholarship awarded to Ashley Shoemaker Lambda Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma President Wilma Jean Pippenger welcomed the members and guest to the April meeting. The Collect and invocation were given by Wanda Ackerman. After dinner, the minutes of the March meeting were presented by Secretary Belinda Henley. The treasurer’s report was given by Louetta Moats. Appreciation was expressed to Linda Whitmire for making the dinner reservations for the year; Brittany Hicks for editing the monthly newsletter; and Kim Foxworth for her help on the state’s reports. The president gave thanks to all the members for their dedication to Delta Kappa Gamma and the help they had given to her this year. Dr. Joy Yates, chairman of the scholarship committee, introduced the 2015 Katherine Trewhitt scholarship winner, Ashley Shoemaker. She gave a brief description of her high school years and her plans to attend Lee University in the fall to work toward dual certification of special education and elementary education. She was chosen from an outstanding group of 10 young ladies from Bradley, Cleveland, Walker Valley, and Polk County high schools. Appreciation was expressed to Yates, Barbara Ector, Patty Puckett, Julie Mitchell and Shelia Presswood for their work on the scholarship committee. The theme for In-Town Gallery’s spring, all member show, is “Change is Good.” It’s time for spring cleaning and paintings, jewelry and threedimensional works will all be removed and new works brought in. The gallery will close for a couple of days for patch and paint and getting things prepared for the big reveal. The twice yearly changeover, allmember shows are eagerly anticipated as the windows are covered and the First Friday event is a particularly festive event. Most artists come to greet guests at the reception which will be on May 1. The public is invited to the event at 26A Frazier Ave., Chattanooga, May 1 from 5 to 8 p.m. Photographer Virginia Webb brings more views of Chattanooga and the bridge series, one of her popular motifs. Some of the blackened white works reveal the fragility of a spider web attached to the arches in the structure of the Walnut Street Bridge. The lacy web of an eight legged builder done entirely by instinct chose to use the structure and strength of steel to anchor her food pantry. This example of the contrasts in nature provides the viewer with much food for thought. Painter Marie Miller, also on the Market Street Bridge, found the colors of early morning inspiring. The reflections of the colors of the bridge on the still water create a mirror image nearly indistinguishable from the structure itself. The boats moored on the south side of the river, perhaps tourists in for overnight and some sightseeing, allow us a bird’s eye view. Colors appearing in unexpected places give us the sense of movement as we follow the pinks and terra cotta shapes in the bridge itself Ellen Franklin has several new works in a variety of media. Often using encaustic, the hot wax, layered paintings, she has returned to oil and acrylic paintings for spring. Her horizontal, oil painting “Alice’s Dream” is a panorama of brightly colored tree trunks which move rhythmically across a mountain landscape background. The colors are pushed to maximum vibrancy as though seen in a dream rather than a faithfully rendered imitation of a realistic scene. Updated, hip jewelry is the specialty of Barbara Murnan. Using silver and copper to fashion earrings, necklaces and bracelets she often adds a patina for an antiqued finish. These pieces are unique and always elicit conversation — show stoppers for sure. A silver, cuff bracelet with copper wire overlay is one such example for the young and young at heart. Oil painter Maddin Corey will hang new works painted while Market Street Bridge Marie Miller In Town Gallery Contributed photos Walnut Street Bridge Virgnia Webb Bracelet Barbara Murnan “Artichoke” Maddin Corey waiting out the severe weeks of winter. Her “Unexpected Guests,” a small painting of white roses in a glass globe. Another small painting “Artichoke” poses a perfect artichoke revealing the various greens of prickly leaves and the realism evokes the fantasy of boiling water and melted butter. These and some of her dog paintings will round out the offerings in the new lineup of works. Other new additions will be stone and metal sculptures, pottery, wooden bowls and furniture, fused glass bowls, woven shawls, fountain pens, etchings and collages. In-Town Gallery, one of the oldest co-op galleries in the nation, was founded in 1974. Located on Frazier Avenue between Market Street and Walnut Street bridges on the North Shore, the gallery is open every day year-round except major holidays. Hours are 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday; 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday; and until 8 p.m. on First Friday. Call 423-267-9214 or visit www.intowngallery.com or www.facebook.com/intowngallery. Contributed photo ThE LAMBDA ChApTEr of Delta Kappa Gamma had its April meeting recently. From left are Barbara Ector, Julie Mitchell, Todd Shoemaker, Ashley Shoemaker, Tina Shoemaker and Dr. Joy Yates. Contributed photo UDC Jefferson Davis Chapter No. 900 met on March 14 at Kinser Church of God. From left, front, are Peggy Morrison, Lisa Pritchett and Debbie Riggs; second row, Robin Ramsey, Harriett Caldwell and Marilyn Kenne; and back, Ashley Anderson and Anita Green. $ INCLUDES: 30 PILLS OFFER GOOD THRU APRIL 2015! Offer good thru April 2015 UDC chapter discusses Confederate currency The United Daughters of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis Chapter No. 900, held its monthly meeting on March 14 at the Kinser Church of God. The meeting included a double theme for March — St. Patrick’s Day and Dr. Seuss’s Birthday were celebrated with green deviled eggs, ham and other delicious green food and desserts. Robin Ramsey provided the festive meal. Robin Ramsey called the meeting to order, in the absence of President Marilyn Kinne, who was attending a UDC district meeting in Tellico Plains. Lisa Pritchett led the Ritual, the pledges to the Flags, and the songs. Minutes of the February meeting were read by Debbie Riggs, secretary. The treasurer’s report was presented by Peggy Morrison. The registrar’s report was given. Five new prospective members are being prepared for membership. 55 OFFICE VISIT In old business, everyone was urged to be collecting items for Veterans Home donations, cans for the Bradley County Fire and Rescue and coupons for the soldiers, and families stationed in Japan. In new business, the upcoming Military Awards Service, which is set for May, was discussed. Also, the UDC is in the process of working on a cookbook from the original charter members of the Jefferson Davis Chapter. The cookbook should be ready for sale by the end of June. UDC members discussed the preparation of a new history pamphlet to be given to area school children for the 2015-16 school year. Robin Ramsey presented the program on Confederate currency. During the Civil War the Confederate States of America printed their own currency. It was printed between 1861-64. Now the earlier currency which was issued is worth more than the later ones. The Confederates thought if the South won the war, the money would be redeemable. The Confederate Currency was hand signed, and numbered. Counterfeiting became a major problem for the South. Today the value of Confederate currency is far from worthless. Quality Confederate Currency notes have steadily increased in value. Collecting Confederate Currency is a great opportunity to own currency that was once used by soldiers and civilians during that tragic war. The April meeting will be a visit to the Historical Bleak house in Knoxville. Anyone interested in the Daughters of the Confederacy can visit www.udcjeffersondavischapter900.com or visit facebook at www.facebook.com/udcjeffersondavischapter900. 34—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Winners of Farm Bureau, 4-H poster and essays competitions announced The Tennessee Farm Bureau and the University of Tennessee 4-H Extension Program recently held the annual poster contest. The fourth-graders in Bradley County Schools prepare posters with the title “Where Do We Get Our Food?” The posters were judged using originality, neatness and correct use of theme as the factors. The first-place poster will be sent to Columbia to compete against all other fourth-graders in the state competition. Locally, the winners of the contest received a cash prize for first, second and third places. These KynSlei SimS of Ocoee Middle School took first place in the 4-H and Farm Bureau essay competi- prizes were furnished by the Bradley County Farm Bureau. tion. She is flanked by her teacher Stan Green and Carolyn Earnest. The seventh-grade essay contest is based on the theme “What is a Farmer?” The essays were SeCond PlaCe in the 4-H and Farm Bureau essay contest was won by Hallie Wielfaert of Ocoee Middle School. From left are teacher Stan Green, Hallie and Carolyn Earnest. judged on content of information, originality of thought, clarity of expression, and correct use of grammar, spelling and punctuation. The winning essay will be sent to Columbia for statewide competition. Locally, winners were awarded cash prizes for first, second, and third places entries, as well. The Bradley County Farm Bureau supports and promotes the poster and essay contest. “We truly appreciate the 4-H program for making this contest possible for our students,” a spokesman said. As part of the partnership with 4-H, Carolyn Earnest with Farm Bureau Women delivered coloring books to second-grade students and bookmarks to fifthgrade students. “Our desire is for each of us to value the contribution of the farmers to our community, economy, and lives,” Earnest said. Poster contest winners were Kaitlyn Hulvey, first place, from North Lee Elementary, teacher, Logan Hamsley; Camie Knott, second, Hopewell Elementary, teacher, Amanda Taylor; Carly Coleman, third place, Michigan Avenue, teacher, Stephanie Jones; and Dawson Durrett, Black Fox, teacher, Kevin England. Essay Contest winners were Kynslei Sims, first place, Ocoee Middle School, teacher, Stan Green; Hallie Wielfaert, second place, Ocoee Middle School, teacher, Stan Green; and Micah Lyon, third place, Ocoee Middle School, teacher, Stan Green. FiFth-grade StudentS at Charleston Elementary receiving book marks were, from left, Autum Price, Madie Hall, Ashlan Crittenden, Jhada Bates, Carolyn Earnest, Becca Calfee, Seth Yarber and Aiden Gibson. SeCond-grade students at Hopewell Elementary receiving coloring books were, from left, Kaden miCah lyon of Ocoee Middle School was third-place finisher in the 4-H and Farm Bureau compe- McConnell, Suzie Napora, Jonathan Pugh, Chloe Rapson, Kellen Wilson and Kiarah Westfield. In back tition. From left are teacher Stan Green, Micah and Carolyn Earnest of the Tennessee Farm Bureau. are Carolyn Earnest and teacher, Denise Sherlin. Above: PoSter ConteSt firstplace winner Kaitlyn Hulvey of North Lee Elementary poses with Carolyn Earnest of Farm Bureau. Camie Knott, center photo, of Hopewell Elementary took second-place honors in the poster contest. With Camie, right, is Carolyn Earnest with the Tennessee Farm Bureau. Carly Coleman, right photo, of Michigan Avenue received third-place accolades in the poster contest. From left are Carolyn Earnest of the Tennessee Farm Bureau and Carly. Computer program to take on world’s best in Texas Hold ’em reCeiving honorable mention in the poster contest was Dawson Durrett of Black Fox school. Carolyn Earnest of the Tennessee Farm Bureau made the presentation. PITTSBURGH (AP) — Carnegie Mellon University researchers are going all in, pitting a computer program against some of the world’s best professional poker players. Computer science professor Tuomas Sandholm and researchers Sam Ganzfried and Noam Brown are taking their poker-playing computer program, Claudico, to Rivers Casino on Friday. Claudico — the Latin word for limp, as in limping in to a bet — will take on Doug Polk, Dong Kim, Bjorn Li and Jason Les. They’ll split a prize purse of $100,000 in a competition funded by the casino and Microsoft. Getting a computer to beat humans in poker has been a goal for more than 10 years, Sandholm said. The numerous unknown variables are the perfect test for artificial intelligence. The machine must account for about 10 to the 161st power of variables — more than all the atoms believed to exist in the universe. Les, 29, is a professional poker player but has a degree in computer science. He said he relishes the opportunity to play Claudico. “I think in the early stages, the computer might have an advantage, but at a certain point the players can figure out what’s going on and adjust,” Les said. “But it’s a strategy game. You bring a strategy to the table and the computer’s strategy may be better than mine.” The competition continues the work of other Carnegie Mellontrained scientists who have contributed to past artificial intelligence challenges, such as IBM’s Deep Blue program that beat chess master Garry Kasparov in 1997 and IBM’s Watson, which beat Jeopardy champions Brad Rutter and Ken Jennings in 2011. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015— 35 SUNDAY Campus Christy Armstrong Staff writer Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529 Christy. Armstrong@clevelandbanner.com WVHS DECA students advance Special to the Banner Some students representing Walker Valley High School’s DECA chapter found success in this year’s state competition and advanced to an international competition. Nine students in the school’s marketing department took part in the recent state competition in Nashville, and four earned the opportunity to advance to competitions at FBLA’s International Career Development Conference. The following students earned honors allowing them to advance: n William Dickinson, who placed third in Role Play 1 and 2, third on the test and first overall in the Marketing Management event; n Breanna Long and Mason Hunt, who placed third in Role Play and third overall in the Hospitality Services Team Decision Making event; and n Audrey Scoggins, who placed first in Role Play and third overall in the Human Resources event. The state winners were expected to prepare for the ICDC scheduled for this weekend in Orlando, Fla., by taking practice tests and practicing role play scenarios. The following students also represented Walker Valley in state competition: n Blake Kitterman, who placed eighth in the Retail Merchandising event; n Makayla Jenkins, who placed fifth in the Hotel & Lodging event; n Cooper Abel, who participated in the Leadership Academy, where he learned about chapter development and recruitment; n Caroline Logan, who partici- pated in the Principles of Hospitality & Tourism event; and n Alexandria Smith, who participated in the Restaurant & Food Management event. When they are not competing with DECA under the leadership of marketing teacher and club sponsor Jayla Swafford, the students learn about business in their school’s Medical and Business Academy. “The future is a bright place in the marketing department of Walker Valley High School,” Swafford said. WALKER VALLEY DECA students gather for a photo during their recent state competition in Nashville. Next year the three marketing From left are Samuel Kitterman, Makayla Jenkins, Breanna Long, Mason Hunt, Audrey Scoggins, Caroline classes at Walker Valley will be Logan and Cooper Abel. Team member William Dickinson was unavailable for the photo. Introduction to Marketing, Entrepreneurship and the apprenticeship. The apprenticeship is a new addition to the department, and it will allow students to go into business and be challenged to make a profit. BLACK FOX ELEMENTARY recently completed a successful Jump Rope and Hoops for Heart event, raising over $3,400 for the American Heart Association. Students of all grades participated in endurance and trick jumping contests, and fourth- and fifth-graders also competed in hot shot, lay-up, free throw and 3-point contests. Several students raised $100 or more, and kindergartner Evan Combs led by raising $394. Pictured are AHA coordinator Jean Saunders, physical education teacher Darryll Canida, P.E. teacher Sara Gibson, Principal Dr. Kim Fisher, Leah Finnell, Noah Bos, Lily Hysni, Braden Malone, Tucker Womack, Evan Combs, Clayton Crowden, Baylor Cantrell, Elle Rutledge and Ethan Malone. STUDENTS at Michigan Avenue Elementary recently graduated from the DARE program. It was the second time students at a local school had graduated from the 10-week program designed to discourage risky behaviors like drug use since it was reinstated with help from Bradley County Sheriff Eric Watson. Above, students proudly show off their certificates as they are joined by school and BCSO staff members. Below, Watson and School Resource Officer Mitchell Roe join three essay contest winners, Seth Sausville, Edward Couvillion, Jackson Arthur, for a photo. A fourth winner, not available for the photo, was Abby Bennett. SHARING history lessons with all attending, students in Amanda Taylor’s fourth-grade class recently presented “A Night the Museum,” where they dressed as different historical figures and shared information about those people’s lives. Here, Caleb Whigham portrays Abraham Lincoln while Kera Hamilton acts as Mary, the mother of Jesus, and Jacob Percy plays Albert Einstein. Other participating students included Rider Martin and Cami Knot. HONOR ROLLS Lake Forest Middle School Gold Honor Roll — Sixth grade: Samantha Avans, Lauren Baker, Abigail Beasley, Emma Bentley, Hannah Brooks, Kelsey Carman, Kayla Chastain, Susanne Cooper, Kailey Cox, Haley Crisp, Matthew Fann, Keegan Farkas, Paige Frady, Mikayla Gale, Nathaniel Garagan, Gabrielle Graham, Alana Gregory, Sarah Hooker, Jessica James, Landen Kibler, Ethan McGuire, Lana Neeley, Landon Norman, Kimvirli Ortiz-Ruiz, Destiny Patterson, Elijah Patty, Gabriella Peacock, Mason Rothwell, Kaylee Shell, Delaney Stone, Josie Strickland, Ashlyn Torbett, Emma Ward and Hannah Winters; Seventh grade: Sophia Beachboard, Kaitlyn Ben-Judah, Gabrielle Bennett, Brianna Bettis, Anthony Burlachenko, Haley Campbell, Kristin Day, Hannah Deal, Rachel Flowers, Taylor Gladson, Breanna Graham, Anastasia Gutsol, Halee Kazy, Mackenzie Lester, Caleb Long, McKenna McCall, Marissa McCoy, Jacob Monneyham, Shiloh Parker, Jackson Prater, Trinity Raines, Allison Rymer, Tucker Still, Alondra Suarez, Dallas Taynor, Kierstyn Viola, Kamryn Woody and Jacob Young; Eighth grade: Dani Allison, Timothy Baiz, Shelby Beasley, Jordyn Biscoe, Easton Clark, Logan Colbaugh, Mya Cole, Madison Colgan, Alysa Dugais, Shayla Dye, Alyssa Fox, Brynna Frakes, Matthew Gable, Jacob Garrett, Seth Gerena, Kate Gwaltney, Carson Hamilton, Lyudmila Harjevskay, Grant Holden, Jared Hooker, Kaitlin Hullender, Yulianny Javier, Larry Johnson, Shaw Kertesz, Reagan Kibler, Elizabeth Koger, Kristina Kotok, Mackenzie Mancini, Tailor Mangrum, Emiliya Maystruk, Katherine McBride, Jessica McCormick, Destiny McHone, Zinnen McKenzie, Wendy Mendez, Avery Morrison, Adam Neighbors, Matthew Robinson, Bailey Rogers, Payton Sowder, Dylan Standifer, Alexis Stedman, Anna Stouffer, Madison Tennant, Vincent Vaughan, Maylee Weber, Victoria Weldon, Emily White and Johanna Woodruff. Silver Honor Roll — Sixth grade: Braxton Armstrong, Skyler Bates, Stephanie Bates, Makayla Boyland, Malia Breckenridge, Haley Brewer, James Brooks, Michael Bruce, Ashley Burger, Chandler Carpenter, Alyson Caylor, Carly Chastain, Braydon Clark, Alana Cordell, Loralei Cordell, Carter Davenport, Larry Dillard, Blake Eberhart, Zorra Elkins, Gracie Epperson, Anesa Erickson, Cara Flowers, Trevor Forester, Ian Frakes, Cameron Free, Jaxon Frerichs, Shaleah Garrett, Alexandria Geren, Alexis Germain, Robert Grady, Micayla Gray, Andrew Guthrie, Zoe Harden, Kennedy Hatten, Nevada Hembree, Titan Henley, Malachi Hewitt, Seth Hicks, Corey Hodge, McKenzie Holder, Kaylie Howard, Mikaila Johnson, Logan Lambert, Wade Lanier, Zachary Long, Angel Lopez-Gallegos Angel, Alexis Marshall, Taylor McCroy, Evan McNabb, Carson Melton, Eric Mendenshall, Emily Meyer, Brian Murphy, Laurabeth Nease, Canyen Norman, Camila Parson, Justin Patterson, Danielle Phillips, Tucker Pope, Caleb Prater, McKennah Pritchard, Nathan Rider, Stryker Rose, Nehemi Rossignol, Brooke Rue, Jackson Ruth, Riley Sermons, Elizabeth Shaw, Abby Shelton, Alyssa Smith, Joshua Smith, Maggie Swick, Colter Thomas, Tucker Thompson, Kevin Ulrich, Sierra Underwood, Jaylin Viviano, Ravyn Waugh, Kurt West, Mason Wilcox, Vianca Willis, Austin Wilson, Andrew Womac and Kayla Yoder; Seventh grade: Robert Ables, Bashaar AlHussieni, Autumn Allen, Riley Allison, Lucas Armstrong, Hanna Arrowood, Kameron Arrowood, Haley Atwell, Lauren Aulerich, Rylan Barbina, Tiana Barham, Alexis Barnes, Laina Baxter, Ryan Blair, Montana Blaylock, Madeline Boshers, Shannon Boyer, Joshawna Brown, Tiffany Brown, Andrew Bunch, Ciara Burchfield, Michael Burger, Gregory Carney, Bryson Cartwright, Kaelyn Cartwright, Francisca Castellanos, Chandler Caylor, Mark Churyuk, Summer Collette, Summer Conley, William Crick, Macayla Crumley, Dakota Davis, Peyton Dobbs, Elizabeth Dove, Dakota Drury, Macie Earwood, Haley Fox, Jerad Fox, Faith Frazier, Jordan Frerichs, Ashley Gilbert, Madison Golden, Seth Gregory, Dylan Hall, Cheyenne Harrell, Alexis Hartness, Jacob Helton, Peyton Henderson, Hannah Henry, Joshua Hicks, Michael Holyfield, Kelsey Hughes, Caleb Johnston, Randy Jones, Evie Kendrick, Grant Kibble, Marion Kyle, Aleksey Kyslytsya, Dawson Langford, Caleb Ledford, Britney Lee, Joseph Lewis, Jacob Long, Haley Looper, Ciara Mahlo, Rachael Mancini, Spencer Mantooth, Aubreigh Marchese, Oleg Marchuk, Tucker McCracken, Hanna McKinney, Olivia McMahan, Victoria Michaelchuck, Peter Navarro, Jordan Neely, Drake Norman, Adrian O’Neal, Josie Painter, Caleb Pearson, Silas Pickel, Lilya Pyatak, Brianna Richmond, Tyler Ryback, Deanna Ryabchuk, William Schamens, Logan Schuch, Carri Self, Gavin Sewell, Taylor Shutt, Bryan Smith, Brittany St Clair, Novalee Stalcup, Tucker Staton, Makayla Stewart, Sarah Stinnett, Emily Swafford, Delaney Swilling, Catelynne Vazquez, Yvonne Waldo, Elizabeth Waters, Halie Watson, Shelby Willis, Michael Wilson, Christian Wooten and Isaiah Yarber; Eighth grade: Logan Anderson, Halli Bates, Jacob Beck, Hailey Bonner, Kylee Botts, Aberum Bowers, Morgan Boyd, Austin Burton, Charisma Carpenter, Kendall Cate, Blake Caylor, Allie Climer, Abigail Crawford, Marie Culp, Alison Cummings, Raigan Davis, Kaitlyn Estes, Dalton Fansler, Devin Farmer, Taylor Farris, Elizabeth Fennell, Amber Frady, Ryan Giovengo, Kyla Goins, Trent Goins, Luke Haney, Gavin Harmon, George Hayes, Cameron Hill, Haley Holdren, Caroline Johnson, Chailee Jones, Rachel Jones, Satina Kaylor, Peyton Kent, Marcus Kyle, Kahlil Lamberth, Jared Lay, Benjamin Lee, Justin Lewallen, Madelyn Lewis, Kaylee Logan, Ronald Lucas, Kateryna Makydon, Ahleeya Marshall, Maddison McCracken, Gavin Miles, Casey Mong, Colby Mong, Luke Pace, Logan Pendegrass, Ryan Pokorny, Salijacee Porter, Jennah Pritchard, Jacob Prock, Tyler Ramage, Mary Reed, Courtney Roberts, Kyndal Rolland, Caleb Smith, Lacey Smith, Allyssa Stancil, Anna Stepp, Jacqueline Stiles, Garrett Stone, Anndraya Swafford, Brianna Tate, Jacob Taylor, Jake Thompson, Erica Triplett, McKenzie Truelove, Antonio Venegas, Morgan Warner, Lauryn West and Ashlyn Wilcoxon. Waterville Community Elementary Gold Honor Roll — Third grade: Matthew Rogers, Abigail Bennett, Jasmine Frerichs, Abella Mullins, Zander Rawlings, Hannah Wright, Cameron Achata, Julia Bodnar, Kayla Martin, Savannah Sanchez, Alex Stevens and Kaylie Frank; Fourth grade: Emma Hamilton, Hannah Yarber, Will Young, Jake Letner, Gabbie Rawlings, Esther Van Otterloo, Kaleb Balinger, Brooklynn Harris, Madison Martin and Chandler McDaniel; Fifth grade: Lexi Ben-Judah, Treagan Hall, Amanda Ledford, Julia Staton, Abigail Vile, Madi Fletcher and Ivy Vu. Silver Honor Roll — Third grade: Audrey Keenum, Ryan Keith, Savannah McLaughlin, Emma Phillips, Tristen Robinson, Mason Bailey, Viktoria Marchuk, Donnelly Pohl, Layla Rogers, Braydon Barrineau, Emily Hyberger, Sky Key, Sebastian Morales, Aden O'Neal, Ethan Parker, Emily Bingham, Ashlee Davis, Riahn Graves, Hailey Huff, Jonas Pols, Fritz Rackl, Olivia Reddish, Cannon Rehagen and Sam Wyatt; Fourth grade: Tamara Evans, Emily Hines, Alexus Lay, Christian Taynor, Wade Brooks, Elizabeth Diaz, Eli Duncan, Cameron Hardwick, Kallie Pendergrass, Mark Schamens, Hannah Battle, Ashley Dalton, Calli Dussia, Susie Roblero, Autumn Calderon, Chloe Howard, Mandi Johnson, Kiarra Nicholes, Emily Pendergrass and Jessie Pickens; Fifth grade: Hannah Ankeny, Ciera Chapman, Shayla Bullard, Ayla Harper, Lauren Patterson, Emily Payne, B. Joe Pierce, Kinsey Sanders, Dylan Womac, Hannah Chambers, Cheyenne Collette, Jacob Cunningham, Daniel Homechko, Madalynn Pendergrass, Alexis Arthur, Jacob Aulerich, Emma Cross, Dakota Gunderson, Anna Stewart, LeeLa Watson, Danica Kakunes, Megan Kennedy, Reed McCall, Dylan Monroe, Mady Price, Carson Rehagen, Hunter Watson, Caleigh White and Jessie Henderson. 36—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com S Spring pring S SERVICE E RV I C E G GUIDE UIDE It’s spring fever. That is what the name of it is. And when you’ve got it, you want — oh, you don’t quite know what it is you do want, but it just fairly makes your heart ache, you want it so! ~ Mark Twain Expect exceptional service, whether buying or selling real estate! SKIN CANCER & COSMETIC Knowing the time, meeting the need. DERMATOLOGY CENTER Donna Mason 618-5705 Amy Wagner 423-584-2412 423-472-3332 EXPIRES 7/5/15 FREE EXAM WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD! 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B Bee S Sure u r e To To C Call a l l Or O r Visit Visit All A l l Of O f These T h e s e Businesses Businesses F o r Quality For Q u a l i t y Products Products And A n d First F i r s t Class C l a s s Service Service CONSIGN IT Furniture & 100’s Of Unique Accessories Large & Small At Affordable Prices Mon.-Sat. 10-5 418 S. Ocoee St. • Cleveland, TN 423-790-1413 www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—37 April 26,2015 Get Ready for Spring with These Budget-friendly Home Improvements: How to Organize Your Shed Signs That A Roof Needs Repair Spring Home Trends Worth Noting A Special Supplement to 38—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 Decor trends for 2015 For the Associated Press Spring is a favorite transitional time for lovers of home décor. Shaking out the rugs and washing the windows after a long winter feels satisfying, and then there’s the prospect of perhaps replacing some old, shabby furnishings with fresh new pieces. Spring’s also when we start to see the decor trends that will find their way home both figuratively and literally through summer and fall. For 2015, these trends include a firm embrace of midcentury modern; emerging Art Deco; strong textures; organic modern (a blend of rustic and contemporary); and a color palette centered on sophisticated pastels. Motifs from the Far East, Morocco and India remain strong, but now there are more Greek and South American elements, including Hellenic patterns, blues paired with crisp whites, native motifs, and colorful, woven textiles and baskets. Ikat and chevron, workhorse prints for the past few years, are being edged aside by medallion and tile patterns, bold preppy stripes, and new twists on damask, geometrics, color block and watercolor prints. Kate Spade has collaborated on a new collection with West Elm, for instance, that includes chairs and bedding in fun, sophisticated graphics, florals and spatter prints. The other news is that designers are mixing things up, so an antique Bentwood chair can be paired with a glossy red desk, for instance, or a rustic flat-weave rug can sit in front of a 19th century marble mantel, or a farmhouse table can be placed under an ornate glass chandelier. “Design pros have always known it’s the combination of finishes that give a room style — it takes the sleek with the matte; textured with flat; and a mix of painted, wood, ceramic and metallic finishes for a room to look ‘done,’” says Elaine Griffin, a New York-based designer. Now, thanks to home-design TV shows and social media, we’re all becoming more knowledgeable decorators. Mass-market retailers are not only offering more products that straddle styles, they’re doing a better job of showing us how to use them. In-store displays and free design advice help shopSee TRENDS, Page 46 Ask a Designer: www.clevelandbanner.com Let the sun shine in: Cleaning windows, window treatments threads,” she says. “Washing them keeps the colors bright, it keeps the threads soft and it does add to the life of the curtain.” —CURTAINS AND DRAPES Window treatments should be cleaned once or twice a year, experts say, and the best method varies by material. Some can be refreshed in the washer or cleaned with a vacuum, while others may require a pro. Start by reading the care tag or directions that came with the product: Some items are dry clean only. If the instructions are unavailable, experts offer general guidelines: Most curtains that are lined or made of silk likely require dry cleaning, Kupernik says. Curtains that are not lined or insulated usually can be washed by machine, in a short, gentle cycle with cool water, she says. Those made of a poly-cotton blend can usually go in a medium-heat dryer, but 100 percent cotton curtains should be linedried to prevent shrinkage. Curtains and roller shades that are insulated with a bonded layer that keeps out the cold can be machine washed in a short, gentle cycle in cool water and line dried, Kupernik says. If the insulated sides touch each other while drying, they can peel off If you’re like some people and ruin the curtain. (ahem) who put up window treatSheer and lace curtains should ments and never give them a secbe washed by machine in a short, ond thought, even as dust accugentle cycle with cold water and mulates, this might just be the line dried, Kupernik said, adding season to pay them a little that both can be touched up with respect. light ironing. Once sheers get in No need to stress out about the high heat of a dryer, wrinkles adding another task to your become permanent, she said. spring-cleaning to-do list: You After curtains come down for don’t have to clean curtains, cleaning, dust the rod before shades and the windows themhanging them back up. selves THAT often. And many If you don’t want to take them times, it’s not that difficult. down, Goldberg offers this “In our experience, the winmethod for cleaning unlined curdows and window treatments are tains made from lightweight, something that people avoid sheer or semi-sheer fabric: Close cleaning because they’re not the windows and the curtains entirely sure the best way to do and spray the curtains with a it,” says Betsy Goldberg, home wrinkle releaser/odor eliminator director of Real Simple magazine. product. Use a handheld fabric “It’s not hard,” she adds. “It steamer, working from bottom to just takes a little bit of time.” top in 1-foot sections, holding the If simply removing dirt isn’t steamer nozzle about an inch reason enough to clean, consider from the fabric. that dust can dull the fabric of For drapes, which are generalcurtains and shades. Household ly made of heavier fabrics like odors can linger. And washing brocade, suede or velvet and are helps preserve the fabric, espeoften lined and pleated, vacuum cially for window treatments that each panel on a low setting with get a daily dose of sunshine, says the brush attachment, holding Tammy Kupernik of retailer the vacuum about an inch away Country Curtains. from the fabric, Goldberg says. “If you don’t wash them, the Fabric curtains and shades, sun will break down the except silk ones, can usually be spot cleaned with warm water and a mild laundry detergent like Woolite, Kupernik says. —OTHER BLINDS AND SHADES Clean Roman shades with a vacuum or roller brush, Kupernik says. Vinyl shades can be cleaned as needed with a sponge. Goldberg suggests vacuuming wood blinds and wiping each slat with a cloth dampened with a mix of water and a few drops of dish soap, wiping off excess moisture with a dry cloth. First, angle the slats down and wipe each one; then angle them up and repeat. To clean the cord, pull the shade all the way up and run the damp cloth up and down it, followed by the dry cloth. If you have a wand, follow the same steps with the cloth. —WINDOWS For window panes, if the glass gets dirty enough, you may want to clean them every few weeks. “Realistically, if people get around to it every few months, that’s fine,” Goldberg says. Before cleaning, sweep dirt from the screen and window frame with a brush like the one that comes with your dustpan, or the vacuum with the dusting AP Photo attachment. Spray glass cleaner This undATed photo provided by Burnham or a mix of water and a squirt of Design shows a prep kitchen where the design AP Photo dishwashing soap and wipe with This undATed photo provided courtesy of a microfiber cloth, starting with firm used Sherwin Williams “Olive Grove” paint in a satin finish, in Beverly Hills, Calif. Burnham Coastal Living shows a remodeled kitchen in the outside and then the inside By LISA FLAN For the Associated Press the panes and moving in an “S’’ motion rather than back and forth to avoid redepositing dirt. Goldberg suggests wiping in a horizontal motion on the inside, vertically on the outside so you can more easily find streaks and wipe those areas again. Clean on a cloudy day because direct sun makes the glass cleaner dry too quickly and leaves streaks. SPRING SAVINGS GALORE AT THE STORE! • FURNITURE • ACCESSORIES • HOME DECOR DON’T MISS THESE SAVINGS! Improving the kitchen in small (or big) ways The Associated Press Another holiday season has passed, and with it the marathon cooking and baking sessions. The hours spent using every kitchen appliance and inch of counter space had a potential benefit more lasting than a good meal: When we really use our kitchens, we discover what does and doesn’t work in this very important room. Remodeling a kitchen can be expensive and challenging, but you can make substantial cosmetic changes with just the help of a painter and electrician, says interior designer Betsy Burnham of Burnham Design in Los Angeles. And if you’re ready for even bigger changes, it’s still possible to stay on budget and create a gorgeous kitchen with a minimum of stress. Step one is deciding what really needs to be done. Can you work with the appliances and cabinets you’ve got, or is it time for a fullscale remodel? Step two is the budget, coming up with a realistic estimate for each expense, says designer Brian Patrick Flynn of Flynnside Out Productions. Then, the fun can begin. Three areas where a little improvement Design is currently designing a kitchen that’s Coronado, Calif., that is functional and chic with a can go a long way: predominantly a sophisticated cream color, and large parsons-style island, pale grey-blue shaker cabSTORAGE A smoothly functioning kitchen has space for everything to be stored away, within reasonable reach. Can you achieve that with your current cabinets? If so, Flynn suggests keeping them and just replacing or refinishing the doors. “Cabinetry installation adds a lot to a budget,” he says, “so saving by simply reusing what you’ve got can be a massive help.” If your cabinet doors are stained wood, consider painting them. Then, change the hardware. Drawer pulls and cabinet door handles “can make or break the look of the space,” says Lee Kleinhelter of the Atlanta-based design firm Pieces. Take time choosing new ones. Flynn agrees: “I always use high-end hardware regardless of how high or low my budget is,” he says. “Adding an interesting this Beverly Hills kitchen that has dark olive inetry, and large industrial pendant lights, designed by green cabinets and a textured black stone coun- Betsy Burnham of Burnham Design. tertop. metal and finish to your doors just really adds character and uniqueness. You can never go wrong with dull black pulls and knobs, and I’m also a huge fan of antique brass. When it comes to silver tones, I try to stay classic and go with polished nickel.” If you do need to add or replace cabinets, Burnham suggests having them custom-made. It can be expensive (Flynn estimates that ready-made cabinets cost about one-third as much as lower-end custom designs). But they are worth the investment, Burnham says. “You’ll get wellmade pieces, built to your needs, that will last through time, kids and tons of use.” Rather than adding cabinets with doors, she suggests installing drawers. “Deep drawers provide excellent storage for pots and pans, and even oversize plates,” Burnham says, “and banks of drawers just look cool.” FRESH COLORS AND MATERIALS Painting kitchen walls can be “a quick, inexpensive solution to a kitchen remodel on a low budget,” Kleinhelter says, and “any color can work.” But she advises clients that kitchen decor “should work with the rest of the house.” Bring in colors that appear in nearby rooms, or stick to a neutral palette. If you’re trying to update your kitchen’s look, Burnham says “there’s been a shift from the once-ubiquitous all-white kitchen toward gray-painted cabinets, and we’ve found ourselves experimenting with color.” Her office is currently designing one kitchen “that’s predominantly a sophisticated cream color, and another that will have dark, olive-green cabinets and a textured, black-stone countertop.” Homeowners are also getting more creative and saving money with materials like concrete. Concrete tile is “an inexpensive See KITCHEN, Page 39 REALTOR ® RONALD KIDD 479-2565 20% OFF TOTAL PURCHASE FOUR DAYS ONLY APRIL 27, 28, 29 & 30 THE STORE 420 3RD STREET (ACROSS FROM BOYS & GIRLS CLUB) 423-472-5900 RONALD KIDD INSULATION Call Today! Residential • Commercial 479-2565 Broker, REALTOR®, CDPE, e-PRO, CRS, GRI, ABR, SRES Direct: 423-650-0630 • Ofc: 423.458.1300 Email: roger@rogerkennard.com Website: rogerkennard.com or sonlightrealty.info 58 Mouse Creek Rd Cleveland, TN 37312 ROGER KENNARD Mountain Meadows Estates n New S isio v i d b u Now is the time to finish your search for your new home location - come see Mountain Meadow Estates Upper River Road Charleston, Tennessee Features underground utilities, street lights and great mountain views! $28,000, $34,000 & $37,500 www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—39 AP Photo AP Photo This PhoTo provided by Gloster shows Gloster’s Oyster Reef This PhoTo provided by Brown Jordan shows a Marin lounge chair in flame suede with leather pillow. Brown Jordan’s Marin lounge collection which features a teak farmhouse-style table. Rustic modchair, designed by Michael Berman, is an example of an outdoor fur- ern pieces like this are part of a growing trend in outdoor furnishings niture piece that could easily work indoors. The blurring of lines toward pieces that can work both indoors and out. between indoor and outdoor furnishings continues to be a strong trend for spring/summer 2015. Right at Home: What’s hot in outdoor furniture The Associated Press Outdoor living spaces have come a long way from the days when “outdoor furnishings” meant a few inexpensive folding chairs around a flimsy plastic table. Today’s outdoor chairs might be wrought iron or wrought aluminum, with upholstered seats. The table might be stone or wood or an elegant faux version of either, and would not look out of place inside in the dining room. Add outdoor sound systems, carpets and lighting, and the backyard or balcony can look and feel like an extension of the home. That notion gets ramped up this spring and summer; manufacturers are offering new furniture, textiles and materials that resemble indoor furnishings yet can withstand the elements. Getting the right look can be tricky; you don’t want it to seem like you just plunked a sofa from the living room down onto the patio. Here’s a look at what’s hot for Warm Weather 2015: —VINTAGE MODERN AND ULTRA-MODERN Watch for midcentury modern styling in outdoor pieces to coordinate with this popular interior style. Gloster’s Dansk collection includes a chair with marinegrade, leather-look upholstery and teak tables, designed by Dane Povl Eskildsen. (www.gloster.com ) After World War II, California designer Walter Lamb was helping salvage sunken Navy warships at Pearl Harbor when he started messing around with the brass tubing and fittings. His prototypical outdoor furniture collection was put into production by Brown Jordan, the Pasadena-based company that pioneered outdoor furniture. Today’s iterations of Lamb’s pieces are still crafted from brass, which you can leave alone to develop a patina or polish to retain the shine. The seats are marine-grade cording. (www.dwr.com ) Luxe looks evoking old Hollywood are also in. Beautiful on an urban terrace, these pieces are chic and sophisticated, with tailoring details on upholstery, elegant finishes and striking colors. Frontgate’s Grayson Jade collection comes in a fashion-forward bright green, in a powdercoated finish that looks lacquered. Here too, a zebra-print outdoor rug and pillows with exotic botanical prints. (www.frontgate.com) Gloster’s Wedge seating has a stainless-steel base and waterproof fabric over a new type of outdoor foam that breathes well and resists mold. And Candace Olson designed a collection for Century that Kitchen See OUTDOOR, Page 40 DON’S FENCE CO. Since 1961 ALL TYPES OF FENCING From Page 38 material that comes in an incredible array of colors and patterns,” Burnham says, and “it works for backsplashes or kitchen flooring, and really makes a statement.” Try mixing affordable elements with higher-end ones: “Basic butcher block is my favorite countertop because of its classic appeal, and it’s insanely affordable. By juxtaposing it with a unique backsplash, like a mosaic marble or rustic stone, it looks more high-end,” Flynn says. “My biggest splurge on kitchens is usually my lighting and backsplashes.” And choose colors and materials you’ll be happy with longterm, rather than something includes slipcovered furniture, and a smart accent table crafted of brass-finished aluminum and topped with a faux-croc surface. (www.centuryfurniture.com ) —GLOBAL STYLE Global elements stay as strong in outdoor furnishings as they are in indoors: Those Asian ceramic stools show no signs of disappearing, and are offered in more colors and patterns than ever. Look for Moroccan influence in lanterns, Mediterranean motifs in textiles, and Silk Road accents like elephant-shaped tables, daybeds and handcrafted accessories. —- trendy. “Classic and simple is where it’s at,” says Burnham. SEATING A new table and chairs can update a kitchen’s look and make it more comfortable. But it’s tempting to sacrifice function for style. Don’t. “We all live in our kitchens,” says Kleinhelter, “so it is important to have comfortable and durable seating.” Stools are popular, and Burnham says designers in her office love the simple, clean look of a row of stools arranged along a bar or kitchen island. But, she says, comfort is key: “We find most clients like seats with backs and arms.” Also, choose seating that’s easy to clean and durable. “I love to use vinyls or faux leathers,” says Kleinhelter, “because it is so easy to clean, but still looks polished.” Burnham’s favorite for seating: the natural texture and style of rattan. Whether you’re simply buying a new table and chairs or beginning to plan a full kitchen remodel, Flynn offers one last piece of advice: Take time to choose the things you really want, and be patient if the project takes longer than you’d hoped. What matters is the final result, not how many weeks or months it took to get there. Hank’s Carpet Great Flooring. Great Prices. All Major Brands “For All Your Flooring Needs!” Installation Available TOLL FREE 800-356-1253 Dalton, GA. www.hankscarpet.com 479-6212 & 336-1501 40—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Leaks are not only the sign a roof might need repair The Associated Press A harsh winter has taken a toll on many roofs. Maybe there’s a tell-tale leak, but sometimes problems are harder to spot. When the snow melts, it’s a good time to take stock. —IDENTIFYING PROBLEMS John Galeotafiore, associate director of home improvement testing for Consumer Reports, recommends that homeowners take out a pair of binoculars and check the roof from street level. Roofing contractors also can be hired to inspect the roof. Do you see any missing shingles? Are some of them curled or cracked? Are there pieces of flashing missing? Dirty or splotchy shingles also can be a sign of a problem, says Jim Englehart, senior merchant for building materials at Home Depot. “It’s indicative of the granules being worn away,” he said. Weather-related damage can include ice damming, when water backs up under the shingles, ices and then begins to melt. High winds can dislodge shin- gles or the flashing around chimneys or skylights. —REPAIR OR REPLACE? Age is one factor in deciding whether to repair or replace a roof. “If the roof is about 20 years old and you’re getting leaks, you’re probably going to have to change it,” Galeotafiore said. You might be able to patch newer roofs if the damage is limited. “It gets down to aesthetics,” Englehart said. “If it’s on the front side of the house I don’t want to patch. The patch is going to be a different color.” Sometimes, new shingles can be layered over an existing asphalt roof, saving some labor costs. But no more than two layers total is advised, in part because of the added weight on the home. —ROOF TYPES Most homes in the United States have a pitched roof. Asphalt shingles make up a large share of the market, but some roofs are slate, metal or a composite material. Wood shakes and tile also are used. A lot depends on your aesthetics and your budget. “You could spend an extra $30,000 for real slate or wood shakes — or you could get a similar look for much less,” Consumer Reports said. And then there’s geography. “Different kinds of material will perform better in different climates,” said Bill Good, executive vice president of the National Roofing Contractors Association. In the Midwest and MidAtlantic, he said, a lot of asphalt shingle is used. Asphalt shingles come in two main types: threetab shingles, which are a single layer, or laminated or architectural shingles, which are thicker. But strong sun can take a toll on asphalt roofs, so in Florida and the Southwest, roofs are frequently made of tile, according to the National Roofing Contractors Association. In New England, you see a lot of slate because that’s where it’s quarried, according to Good. Composite shingles are made to look like slate or wood shakes. “The look would be as close as you could get to the real thing,” said Mark Hansen, vice president of sales and marketing for DaVinci Roofscapes, based in Lenexa, Kansas. The company uses a high-performance polymer for its roofing materials. Metal roofs range from steel to copper and other materials, either in panels or in shingles similar in size to asphalt shingles. Good said they last a long time, and “also tend to be reflective, so they can help with energy conservation inside the home.” Check a roofing material’s weight to make sure it’s OK for your home. As for cost, asphalt is generally the lowest among roofing options. Slate and copper roofs, for examAP Photo/Susan Walsh ple, can be much costlier. Roofing mAteRiAlS are on display at the Home Depot in Falls —Church, Va. A harsh winter has taken a toll on many roofs around the PICKING A CONTRACTOR country. The first step in roof maintenance may be to get out a pair Replacing a roof is probably of binoculars and take stock. not a job homeowners want to do themselves, experts agree. Good recommends talking to two or three contractors before INSULATION deciding on one. Besides comparUNLIMITED INC. ing prices and warranties, check that the company is insured and has a permanent place of business. It’s also good practice to ask for references, Good said. We are proud to be your local supplier. 5 signs your insulation is not working (MS) — Some insulations can lose performance over time, sustain damage or simply no longer meet updated building codes. It’s an issue that can be costly, because if your home’s insulation isn’t doing its job, you could be wasting money and resources. You don’t have to be a trained professional to know you have a problem. Here are several signs that your insulation is lacking: 1. Energy bills — High energy bills are the biggest red flag, especially relative to the size, age or condition of the home. If you have a run-away energy bill, your insulation may need to be upgraded. This can be the case, even in a newer home. 2. Drafts — Do you need to put on a sweater even with the heat on, or does your air conditioner run incessantly without making enough of a difference? That’s a sign of a deficiency in your building envelope. Outdoor From Page 39 FLEXIBLE USE While dedicated dining areas remain popular outdoors, there’s also a trend toward “chat and chill” configurations of furniture. Indoor-style seating includes comfy lounge chairs and sectional pieces that can be grouped or separated, with ottomans, side tables and coffee tables that can also be used for casual dining. Watch for new, portable fire pits, bars and coffee tables. Agio, the world’s largest outdoor furniture supplier, introduces their Kolea collection this year featuring a fire pit and a sofa with built-in bar. Burnt orange fabrics and a lower profile are on-trend. (www.agiousa.com) —COLOR COMMENTARY Deep indigo looks fresh and new, and so does coral. Frontgate’s got a cane-print rug in both hues. Dark blue looks nautical and preppy paired with crisp white, apple red or sunshine yellow, so think about mixing things up in a fun way by putting the brighter hues on the furniture pieces — a wicker or Adirondack chair, perhaps — and the blues on accent pieces. Or get a more dressed-up vibe by keeping the pops of color on accessories while the outdoor space is anchored with darkertoned furniture. The natural neutrals — sand, mocha, charcoal, cream — stay strong for 2015. Their versatility makes them good choices whatever the climate. —PATTERN PANACHE Designer Elaine Smith has a new collection of luxury outdoor pillows reflecting her love of fashion, nature and exotic locales. There are Latin American and African kuba cloth prints; menswear-inspired hound’stooth; chinoiserie florals; whimsical bird motifs; and Missoniinspired prints in soft green and gold. She’s added “jewelry” to some pillows, with braided frog trims and pewter medallions. (www.authenteak.com) —RUSTIC CONTEMPORARY Echoing an interior-design trend, this look combines handhewn wood and stone (or facsimiles) and rustic touches like chicken-wire doors and weathered-look metals with contemporary seat materials and colors. Gloster’s Oyster Reef collection features a teak farmhouse-style table, while the Pepper Marsh line pairs woven synthetic fiber with teak arms and legs. Designer Michael Berman’s Marin collection for Brown Jordan really blurs the indoor/outdoor living lines. Teak frames strapped with yacht cording hold cushions covered in UVresistant Suncloth, suede or leather for a furniture group that would work in an outdoor Great Room, or an indoor one. (www.brownjordan.com ) Jensen Leisure’s Tivoli group of clean-lined bench seating and tables is made of roble, a sustainably produced Bolivian wood with a smooth grain. (www. jensenleisurefurniture.com) One Call For All Your Disposal Needs! 3. Inconsistent temperatures — Is it warm in one room, but cold in another? Are your walls or interior closets cold to the touch? It’s possible that while your whole home may not need attention, certain rooms may need to be addressed. 4. Condition of insulating materials — Consider the age of your insulation. Would it stand up to today’s building codes? Is it in good shape or is it crumbly? If your insulation has degraded or isn’t performing, it’s time for an upgrade. But be careful, as certain types of older insulation, such as Vermiculite insulation, may contain asbestos. If you’re unsure, do not disturb it and hire a professional to conduct testing and/or removal. This should not be a do-it-yourself job. 5. You detect pests and/or moisture — Insulation — and your building envelope — can be compromised by the presence of pests. Moisture is an even bigger obstacle to optimal thermal performance, as some types of insulation can sag or collapse when damp, leaving voids and causing air to flow in and out of the building envelope. While some solutions may be more complicated, requiring the opening of the existing wall cavities, others can be addressed more easily. The best way to improve thermal performance and increase energy efficiency is to upgrade attic insulation. Laying Comfortbatt insulation over existing material to achieve a minimum depth of 16 inches, or an R-value of R50, is a simple DIY project that can generate immediate results. To fully assess your home and explore remediation solutions, consider hiring a professional home energy auditor to evaluate your home’s energy performance. Even in a new home, the results may be surprising. • Residential • New Construction • Commercial 3455 Brainerd Rd. Chatt., TN 698-4895 Need Some Green For Spring? ne s ho ion ep cat me l Te pli lco er ag . Ap We an ails m t ee de *S for Pick Up The Phone And Give Us A Ring! First Loan Free!* $ 200-$1000 476-5770 2538 Keith St. • Colony Square Reuse the News Recycle this newspaper CLEVELAND PLYWOOD CO. “SERVING CLEVELAND SINCE 1968” FREE DELIVERY BUILDING SUPPLIES Call Us For Information • Free Estimates! WASTE CONNECTIONS Of Tennessee 423.476.2293 386 Industrial Dr., Cleveland www.wasteconnections.com • SHEETROCK • DOORS • MOULDING • CEILING TILE • ROOFING • SIDING • WINDOWS • INSULATION • LUMBER • POWER TOOLS • HARDWARE • PAINTS HOURS: 7 A.M. - 5:30 P.M. M-F 472-3357 2700 20TH N.E. • CLEVELAND www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—41 Concrete gains ground as decorative material By the Associated Press The Pantheon. The Panama Canal. The Hoover Dam. When you think of concrete, you might imagine great feats of engineering, or at least highway overpasses and other sturdy, stolid structures. But concrete has become a stylish medium in the home, thanks to interior designers and artisans. “Concrete is such an amazing and cheap material. I can get an 80-pound bag from Home Depot and turn it into tables, vases and planters without using power AP Photo This PhoTo provided by Restoration Hardware shows a Malay table. It is a teak root cast in lightweight all-weather cement; it’s textural, wind-scoured look makes it a striking piece for a modern pool or patio deck. AP Photo in This PhoTo, below, provided by AllModern.com, a Concrete Chic coffee table’s top is finished with a lacquer to protect it and give it a weathered metal look. AP Photo/AllModern.com This PhoTo provided by AllModern.com shows a Nico concrete stool, that would be a useful piece on a patio, or in an urban indoor living space. Dryers: Homes’ energy guzzlers get greener The Associated Press For the first time in six years, Energy Star certification, a standard seal of approval for energy efficiency, has been expanded to include another major household appliance. Clothes dryers, perhaps the last of the major household appliances to be included in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s program, became available in 45 Energy Star models starting Presidents’ Day weekend, according to the EPA. “Dryers are one of the most common household appliances and the biggest energy users,” said EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy. While washing machines have become 70 percent more energyefficient since 1990, dryers — used by an estimated 80 percent of American households — have continued to use a high amount of energy, the agency says. The Energy Star program is designed to help consumers’ help save money and protect the environment by curbing energy consumption. “Refrigerators were the dominant energy consumer in 1981. Now dryers are the last frontier in the home for radical energy conservation,” said Charles Hall, senior manager of product devel- opment for Whirlpool. Energy Star-certified dryers include gas, electric and compact models. Manufacturers offering them include LG, Whirlpool, Kenmore, Maytag and Safemate. All of the energy-efficient models include moisture sensors to ensure that the dryer does not continue running after the clothes are dry, which reduces energy consumption by around 20 percent, the EPA says. In addition, two of the Energy Star-approved models — LG’s EcoHybrid Heat Pump Dryer (model DLHX4072) and Whirlpool’s HybridCare Heat Pump Dryer (model WED99HED) — also include innovative “heat pump” technology, which reduces energy consumption by around 40 percent more than that, the EPA and manufacturers say. Heat-pump dryers combine conventional vented drying with heat-pump technology, which recycles heat. The technology, long common in much of Europe, is similar to that used in air conditioners and dehumidifiers. Although Energy Star models can cost roughly $600 more than comparable standard models, Hall said the higher cost is more than balanced out by energy savings and up to $600 rebates offered by government and utility incentive programs. But the real impact will be felt once the transition to Energy Star models is complete. According to the EPA, if all the clothes dryers sold in the U.S. this year were Energy Star-certified, it would save an estimated $1.5 billion in annual utility costs and prevent yearly greenhouse-gas emissions equal to more than 2 million vehicles. To earn the Energy Star label, products must be certified by an EPA-recognized third party based on rigorous testing in an EPArecognized laboratory. —To find local incentive programs for rebates on Energy Star dryers, see www.energystar.gov . Many local utilities also offer their own incentive programs, generally listed on their websites. tools,” says Boston-based designer Ben Oyeda, who offers instructions for several projects on his website, www.homemade-modern.com . Oyeda uses Lego blocks to make the molds for his tables; his pendant fixtures start with plastic bottles. “Working with concrete has changed the way I see waste,” he says. “Every plastic bottle or box has the potential to be used as a mold for making a concrete object.” Eric Boyd of Charlotte, North Carolina, makes creative countertops by mixing concrete with other materials. Aggregate additions such as recycled glass or semi-precious stones give the concrete a terrazzo look, and he hones the slabs to emphasize their geologic characteristics. He has used shells, mother of pearl, tiger’s eye or bands of copper to create one-of-a-kind slabs for homes and stores. For one client, his team took inspiration from the home’s location: “The (kitchen) island has a topographic feature which was taken from a map of their property. There are also various pebbles from the property, and a few fossils that were inlaid as well,” he says. (www.reachingquiet.com ) Danish designer Doreen Westphal uses fine Belgian lace to make patterns and molds for concrete curtains, vases and tables. There’s a yin-yang tension that emerges from the interplay of the delicate lace motifs and the sturdy concrete. (www.menschmadedesign.com ) AllModern’s got an affordable collection of rustic, modern, concrete side and coffee tables with wooden bases. Also here is Montreal-based CDI International’s collection of midcentury modern-style coffee table and stools with oak legs. (www.allmodern.com ) West Elm has the little Mesa side table cast in a composite concrete that relieves some of the weight of the solid material. Brass-finished steel legs hold a cantilevered concrete top in an industrial-chic console. (www.westelm.com ) Crate & Barrel’s Mason Parson’s-style coffee, side and console tables are made of concrete embedded with an aggregate that adds interest. The retailer has introduced the curvy new Morocco concrete dining table this spring, for indoors or out. (www.crateandbarrel.com ) Restoration Hardware’s got a honed concrete table top on a wood base crafted from British timbers; the juxtaposition of materials makes for a striking piece. And the retailer’s Malay castconcrete coffee table resembles a chunk of sun-bleached driftwood; like the dining table above, it would work indoors or out. A concrete game table would make a substantial permanent fixture for outdoor entertaining. Add the Laguna fiber-cast concrete fire pit, a sleek coffee tablesize piece with glass panels and a contemporary vibe. (www.restorationhardware.com ) If the look of concrete intrigues you but you’re not prepared to deal with the material itself, consider wallpaper photoprinted to look like raw concrete slabs; some even come with graffiti, if you’re after an edgier look. (www.concretewall.no ) It’s A Great Day At CHEROKEE HILLS... 2, 3, and 4 Bedroom Apartments with 2 full baths, fully equipped kitchen, washer/dryer hook-ups, lots of closet space, swimming pool, picnic area and playground. Family Housing For Everyone! Cherokee Hills Apartments Call Today! (423) 559-0800 2020 Bates Pike EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY L&B APPLIANCE Sales & Service Spring Maintenance Special $99.00 $59.00 Large Enough To Meet All Your Home Appliance Needs, Small Enough To Appreciate Your Business Financing Available 160 Durkee Road, NE Cleveland, TN 37323 (423) 339-3231 Cash Advances Title Loans Prepaid Reloadable Cards Bill Pay Western Union® 1-877-262-CASH ALUMINUM FENCES & DRIVEWAY GATES We’re online! 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Homeowners plan scores of renovations to transform living spaces into rooms that reflect their personal tastes and comforts. Homeowners going it alone may find things do not always go as planned. In fact, a Harris Interactive study found that 85 percent of homeowners say remodeling is a more stressful undertaking than buying a home. But homeowners about to embark on home improvement projects can make the process go more smoothly by avoiding these common pitfalls. Failing to understand the scope of the project Some homeowners don’t realize just how big a commitment they have made until they get their hands dirty. But understanding the scope of the project, including how much demolition and reconstruction is involved and how much time a project will take can help homeowners avoid some of the stress that comes with renovation projects. For example, a bathroom renovation may require the removal of drywall, reinforcement of flooring to accommodate a new bathtub or shower enclosure and the installation of new plumbing and wiring behind walls. So such a renovation is far more detailed than simply replacing faucets. Not establishing a budget Homeowners must develop a project budget to ensure their projects do not drain their finances. If your budget is so inflexible that you can’t afford the materials you prefer, you may want to postpone the project and save more money so you can eventually afford to do it right. Without a budget in place, it is easy to overspend, and that can put you in financial peril down the line. Worrying about coming up with money to pay for materials and labor also can induce stress. Avoid the anxiety by setting a firm budget. Making trendy or overpersonal improvements Homeowners who plan to stay in their homes for the long run have more free reign when it comes to renovating their homes. Such homeowners can create a billiards room or paint a room hot pink if they so prefer. However, if the goal is to make improvements in order to sell a property, overly personal touches may make a property less appealing to prospective buyers. Trends come and go, and improvements can be expensive. If your ultimate goal is to sell your home, opt for renovations that will look beautiful through the ages and avoid bold choices that may only appeal to a select few buyers. Forgetting to properly vet all workers It is important to vet your contractor, but don’t forget to vet potential subcontractors as well. Failing to do so can prove a costly mistake. Contractors often look to subcontractors to perform certain parts of a job, and it is the responsibility of homeowners to vet these workers. Expecting everything to go as planned Optimism is great, but you also should be a realist. Knowing what potentially could go wrong puts you in a better position to handle any problems should they arise. The project might go off without a hitch, but plan for a few hiccups along the way. Overestimating DIY abilities Overzealous homeowners may see a renovation project in a magazine or on television and immediately think they can do the work themselves. Unless you have the tools and the skills necessary to do the work, tackling too much can be problematic. In the long run, leaving the work to a professional may save you money. Home improvements can be stressful, but homeowners can lessen that stress by avoiding common renovation mistakes. It’s convenient to pick up some laundry detergent at the store, but it’s not difficult to create your own. Soap and water are a timetested duo against dirt and germs, and homemade cleaners can carry away grime without added chemicals or perfumes. All it takes are a few, simple ingredients to make laundry detergent — liquid or powder — and fabric softener. Then cut down on drying time and static cling by tumbling wet clothes with homemade dryer balls. Faith Goguen Rodgers’ switch to homemade cleaners began a few years ago after she used a commercial-brand cleaner on the bathtub. “I’d cleaned it, and then I really didn’t want to get in it. The bleach smell and feel — it didn’t feel good,” she says. “Then when I had kids, it didn’t make sense at all. It feels a lot safer knowing what’s in my cleaners.” Rodgers is an herbalist with three young children who creates all the cleaners she uses in her Lafayette, Colo., home — even the toothpaste. While the health piece is “really big” for her, she’s also motivated by cost. “You save a ton of money making your own,” she says, especially if you buy ingredients in bulk. Homemade cleaners, particularly laundry soap, lack much odor, but a pretty scent can be added with essential oils. This lifts the laundry-detergent-making project up a notch — adding some olfactory fun. “You and your family can get creative and come up with your own signature laundry scent,” Rodgers writes on The Little Herbal blog, where she posts her natural cleaning recipes. “Our laundry comes out clean and smelling fresh.” Her favorite combinations of essential oils for laundry detergent include lemon and eucalyptus, orange and geranium, and grapefruit and lavender. Sherri Griffin’s foray into homemade laundry soap began when she got a rash and wanted something gentler than storebought laundry detergent. She started researching alternatives, and recommends checking out what’s in commercially made products on the Environmental Working Group’s website. An Orlando, Fla., nurse, Griffin started a blog, Overthrow Martha, to educate people about natural cleaners. Besides sharing a fabric softener recipe, she recommends simple-to-make dryer balls. Dryer balls decrease drying time, eliminate static cling and decrease wrinkles, she says. Essential oils can be added to them every few loads to softly scent clothes. “I often hear that people can’t give up the fresh smell they get from using dryer sheets, but what people don’t understand is that smell comes from . chemicals,” says Griffin. Karyn Siegel-Maier shares laundry and other “green” cleaning formulas in “The Naturally Clean Home” (Storey, 2008). The publisher recently posted her recipes for liquid and powder laundry detergent at its blog, Inside Storey, to “sanitize, soften and scent clothes and linens — naturally.” Some recipes from these AP Photo This PhoTo provided by Sherri Griffin shows dryer balls that reduce drying time, static cling and wrinkles. Griffin, of Orlando, Fla., calls her homemade laundry detergent, fabric softener and dryer balls “a dream team.” “I often hear that people can’t give up the fresh smell that they get from using dryer sheets, but what people don’t understand is that smell comes from chemicals,” says Griffin. experts: —Rodgers’ Homemade Laundry Detergent (powder) Supplies: 3 cups washing soda (similar to baking soda; look for it near laundry products at the supermarket) 3 cups borax 1 cup baking soda 1 bar of castile (olive oilbased) soap, such as Dr. Bronner’s Pure Castile Soap Pure, organic essential oils (optional) Directions: 1. Grate the bar of soap into a small bowl and set aside. 2. In a large mixing bowl, combine the washing soda, borax and baking soda. Mix well to get rid of clumps. Add the essential oils, if desired. Mix them into the powder well to avoid clumping. 3. Add the grated soap and mix ingredients together. 4. Store detergent in a halfgallon mason jar or other wellsealed container. Use 2 to 4 heaping tablespoons per load of laundry. —Basic Laundry Liquid Formula from Siegel-Maier’s “The Naturally Clean Home” Supplies: 2¼ cups liquid castile soap ¼ cup white distilled vinegar 1 tablespoon glycerin ¾ cup water 10 to 15 drops essential oil of your choice (or skip the essential oils by using a scented liquid castile soap) Directions: Combine all the ingredients in a plastic container or squirt bottle. Shake once or twice before adding to the wash. Use ¼ cup per average load; ½ cup for extra large or heavily soiled loads. —Griffin’s Natural Laundry Fabric Softener Supplies: 3 cups white vinegar ¼ cup rubbing alcohol 20 drops of essential oil (optional) Directions: Combine all ingredients in a glass jar and shake. Add to the fabric softener dispenser of washing machine. —Griffin’s Wool Dryer Balls Supplies: 100 percent wool yarn Pantyhose Essential oil (optional) Directions: 1. Wrap wool yarn around two or three fingers at least a dozen times, then make a bow by wrapping yarn tightly around middle of wrapped yarn. Bring such as safety glasses or goggles. the two sides together and conn Wear standard cotton or leather work gloves to protect hands. n Consider the use of earplugs or earmuffs with loud power tools. n Don't use power tools in proximity to flammable vapors, dust or construction materials. n Always check that wires are kept away from blades. pantyhose between each ball so they don’t touch. Run through the washer with a load of towels on hot cycle, then toss into dryer on hot. Once dry, remove from pantyhose. Each ball should appear “felted” — the wool fibers tightly adhered. Snip any loose strands. To use: 1. Scent balls with essential oil, if desired (it’ll last a few loads). 2. Toss at least 2 balls into dryer with wet laundry. —Online: www.ewg.org/guides/cleaners www.insidestorey.blogspot.co m www.overthrowmartha.com www.thelittleherbal.com tinue wrapping tightly in different directions to make a small ball the size of a lemon. Repeat to make several balls. 2. Push the wool balls into one pantyhose leg, knotting the NORWOOD CABINETS • CUSTOM • COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL 336-5295 Calhoun Some tips for the safe use of power tools (MS) — Power tools can dramatically reduce the time it takes to complete home improvement projects. Professional contractors regularly rely on power tools for cutting and sanding, and many do-it-yourself renovators follow suit and invest in power tools to help get the job done. But power tools, in spite of their usefulness, are not without risk. According to the Work Safe Center, power tool injuries account for as many as 400,000 emergency room visits in the United States each year. Power nailers, chain saws and table saws account for the greatest number of injuries. Keeping safe is of the utmost priority when using power tools. Here's how: n Read all manufacturers' instructions and guidelines before use. n Keep your tools clean and in proper operating condition. n Use the right tool for the job. n Always wear eye protection, See TOOLS, Page 43 SALES • SERVICE REPAIRS EXPERT INSTALLATION FREE ESTIMATES Bobby and Angie Ledford, Owners (423) 472-9978 • Fax (423) 339-5884 2091 Waterlevel Hwy. SE • Cleveland cccbody@aol.com 476-8217 s r r TM THANK YOU FOR USING EVANS GARAGE DOORS. WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—43 Right at Home: Artistry and artifice in new tiles By KIM COOK, Associated Press Tile has a rich and varied history in decor, from Roman floor mosaics to majolica to Delft ceramics to Mexican terracotta. These styles and more continue to inspire artistry. Many of the newest collections of ceramic and porcelain tile were on display this fall at the five-day Cersaie international exhibition in Bologna, Italy. Some of the trends: Dennis Anderson 476-1300 4160 N. Ocoee St. NEW! TINDELL’S OUTLET CENTER MASTER IMPOSTORS Across the show, faux finishes ruled. What seemed to be barnwood or other timber planking was actually porcelain. Manufacturers can now produce tile that looks — and even feels — like wood, marble, granite or cement, but is thin and lightweight. The application advantages are obvious: A 20-foot slab of slim porcelain printed to look like stone is a lot easier to make and install than the real thing. It can be wrapped up kitchen islands, walls and even ceilings, and is easily cut to accommodate plugs or faucets. Advancements in digital printing have taken faux finishes a long way from earlier versions that looked unrealistic and one-dimensional. Now the detail is more precise, the image is embedded deep in the tile, and the surface texture is transformed. In the U.S., the Reclamation collection from Crossville, based in Crossville, Tennessee, is comprised of an urban-industrial mix of cement and tiles that look like salvaged wood in colorways with names like Steel City, Cotton Exchange and Tobacco Road. (www.crossvilleinc.com ) Serenissima Cir, based in Casalgrande, Italy, got hold of a palette of brick from Prohibitionera Chicago and used it to create a tile collection that looks and feels like time-worn brick, right down to the original maker’s “Chicago” stamp. (www.cir.it ) Metallic glazes are also evolving. You’ll see patterns with a subtle brush of coppery glitter, while others have dramatic gold, copper and silver finishes — especially striking on 3-D tiles. Antiquing gives mirrored tiles a mercuryglass quality. nary tile and real wood. Another fresh idea was Mirage’s XGone series of hexagonal tiles designed by Javier Deferrari and Lavinia Modesti. Several sizes of hexagonal tiles include some that are notched to connect to others; the resulting pattern, in an array of complementary tonal hues, had a modern-art vibe. (www.mirage.it) UNUSUAL SIZES Tile has typically come in standard sizes, squares and rectangles measuring between 4 inches and 12 inches. But larger versions up to 24 or even 36 inches are now available, and the faux-wood ones resemble planks. Dwell Patterns has collaborated with Heath Ceramics, of Sausalito, California, on a hip-looking collection that incorporates a diamond shape and two different hexagonal ones, available in glossy or matte finishes in a broad color palette. (www.heathceramics.com) At Cersaie, hexagons and triangles small and large were shown in earthy hues like cream, mocha, mud and charcoal. Unica by Target Studio’s Origami collection added subtle textural patterns to tone-on-tone black, white or gray tile in shapes evoking the artistry of Japanese paper folding. (www.targetstudio.net) Ragno’s booth offered an intriguing way to use both their Rewind hexagonal tile and Woodplace faux wood; the different tiles married in the middle with a seamlessness that would have been impossible with ordi- OLD WORLD AND VINTAGE Neoclassical and oriental tapestry and lace patterns turned tile into elegant wallpaper in the Onice and Wallpaper collections at the Marazzi booth. (www. marazziusa.com) The company also showed an oversize vintage floral in a new way, as a ceiling-to-floor accent on an otherwise solid-color wall, again evoking paper or fabric wallcovering. Ancient Mediterranean motifs printed on matte-finish tile in faded, organic hues bridged the centuries. Panaria’s Memory collection recalls Provencal paver patterns of the late 1800s. And Tagina’s Terre Nostre collection echoes the pavers of Umbrian medieval villages. You can find similar, smaller-scale versions at www.cementtileshop.com . Ceramica Bardelli featured the work of London designer Robert Dawson. He took the classic Willow porcelain design, deconstructed its chinoiserie elements and printed them on large-scale tiles. The effect is as if an enormous china plate had been shattered, then affixed to the wall. (www.bardelli.it) Stop By Today And Check Out All Items At Or Below Cost! • CLOSEOUTS • MISORDERS • DAMAGED ITEMS DOORS WINDOWS CABINETS HARDWARE And Much More! AP Photo In thIs Photo provided by Flaviker, the remarkable improvements in digital printing are apparent in Flaviker’s woodlook Dakota series of ceramic tiles. Evoking the weathered finish and pattern of wood planks, the style was a popular one among show goers at Bologna’s September international tile fair Cersaie. CLEVELAND STORE ONLY! Tindell’s Building Materials 7AM TIL 4 PM MONDAY-FRIDAY AP Photo In thIs Photo provided by Ariana, the Writer Graphics series features an elegant yet edgy graffiti tile, an unexpected counterpoint to the textured, cement-like, large scale ceramic tiles. Ariana’s Portland 325 series of tiles references the chalk-rich powder used to make cement. TILE AS ART CANVAS Ascot has launched Game of Fifteen, a series of tile designs honoring contemporary art. Keith Haring’s radiant baby and running figures pack graphic punch in black on glazed white ceramic. (www.ascot.it) ABK’s Do Up collection includes an image of a contemporary geisha and tiles printed with faux-spraypainted graffiti a la Banksy. (www.abk.it) In a collection called Portland 325, ABK’s Ariana group took inspiration from the walls of an abandoned factory, transforming graffiti into elegant art tiles with iridescent finishes. Sicis showed the possibilities of mosaics by creating wall panels embedded with butterflies, stars and flowers. The vibrant reds, blues and golds were achieved with minerals like copper and lapis. (www.sicis.com) Scottish wallpaper studio Timorous Beasties is moving into tile design through the tile studio Cle, in Sausalito. Medieval damask motifs are combined with ink-blot patterns to create stylized designs that are hand-lithographed onto limestone and marble tiles. Cle showcases several innovative tile artists in its online shop. (www.cletile.com) Finally, at Modwalls, you’ll find mosaic tile made of sliced, recycled wine corks, and pennies. Here, too, a paint box full of hues in glass subway tiles, including orange, lemongrass, pool blue and poppy. (www.modwalls.com) Tools From Page 42 n Maintain a tight grip on a tool. n Do not overreach when using tools, and maintain balance. n Pay attention when working with any power tool. n Only use attachments specifically recommended for the power tools and ensure proper installation. n Unplug all power tools during breaks and anytime when tools are not in use. n Routinely inspect tools for damage. n Keep tools stored in secure locations when not in use. Reuse the News Recycle this newspaper 205 20th St., SE • 476-5501 Ask How We Can Make Your HOME HEALTHY You Won’t Believe It! CALL TOMMY Make sure you get your Air Conditioner serviced before the HOT weather gets here to get the maximum out of your unit. • • • • Heating Air Conditioning, Commercial, Refrigeration Residential and Commercial Small and locally owned by husband/wife team. Providing Amana and York equipment, assembled in the USA as close as Dayton, TN. • Always answer our own phone 24/7 Check Us Out On The Web at allamericanac.org 3325 Davy Crockett Dr. Ste 114 Cleveland • 559-9842 339-1613 479-9615 David Goins-Mgr. 95 Second Street, N.E., Cleveland 44—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Ask a Designer: From clutter to decor The Associated Press HAnging items vertically frees up more space in a shed or garage. Some secrets to keeping your shed organized (MS) — Despite other intentions, homeowners often turn their garages into storage centers for random, little-used items, leaving little to no room for the tools and even vehicles that actually belong in a garage. Such homeowners may turn to sheds to store their garage overflow and keep yard equipment at the ready, but storage sheds are not immune to clutter, and homeowners may find the very structure erected to keep them organized requires a bit of organization itself. A well-organized shed can save homeowners time and energy, as it’s easy to abandon or delay a project if you can’t find that pair of work gloves you stashed. The first step to any organizing project is to take everything out of the shed and determine just what needs to go back in. Items that do not belong in the shed should be moved to their rightful locations or tossed in the trash if they’re no longer needed. Make a pile of anything that will be kept, a separate one for donations and a third for garbage. Take inventory of what you have so you know whether you’re missing any items or you have something and do not need to purchase another. Now that the entire shed is empty, you can assess just how much room you have. Utilizing vertical and overhead space effectively can free up areas on the floor for larger equipment. Shelving, racks, pegboards and any other materials that enable you to hang or store items off the floor are good investments. Visit your nearby home improvement retailer to find items that can simplify your storage. You also may be able to put scrap wood to use to make your own storage shelves or a work bench. Extra kitchen cabinets can be installed in the shed to organize additional items. In order to remember where items go, label or sort them accordingly. Some people like to take organization a step further by tracing the outline of tools hung on the wall so they can be placed back in the same spot after use. This also serves as a visual reminder of which tools are missing and which ones need to be purchased. Don’t forget to utilize shed doors as additional storage space. Hang frequently used tools, such as rakes and shovels, on the inside of the doors so they will always be easily accessible. You also can repurpose storage solutions designed for other areas of the home. For example, magnetic knife holders can be mounted to a shed wall to keep paintbrushes organized. These holders also can be used to keep many small metal tools tidy. Metal funnels can hold twine and string. Thread through the narrow end of the funnel for a handy dispenser. Keep dangerous substances off the floor and out of reach. Gasoline, chemical fertilizers and other potentially dangerous substances should be stored high up to keep pets and children safe. Make sure the shed floor is sturdy and level. This makes it easier to neatly store larger items. Roll in the lawnmower, wheelbarrow and any other cumbersome items. Now that more things are mounted vertically, you should find that you have more area to move around. Taking the time to clean and organize a shed can help make anyone more productive. Add upcycling to home DIY tools (MS) — Upcycling is not just for craft projects — it offers lots of possibilities to make changes in your home décor, especially cabinets and furniture that will save money and reduce your contribution to the local landfill. Woodcraft can help you with upcycling ideas, products and advice. For the past year, Woodcraft retail stores have hosted upcycling demonstrations on the third Saturday of the month to help customers discover the potential for upcycling in their home projects. “To support this upcycling effort, Woodcraft.com added an Upcycling Resource Center to our website (http://www.wood craft.com/media/upcycling.aspx ) to introduce viewers to upcycling and announce demo topics and dates,” Vince Grlovich, vice president for sales and marketing, said. “Viewers can also watch a segment of Lifetime’s Designing Spaces where Woodcraft product development manager Kent Harpool shows host Aliane Baquerot how to create a shelf from a wooden pallet.” Both Woodcraft’s Pinterest page (www.pinterest.com/woodcraftsupply/upcycling) and Instagram gallery (http://instagram.com/woodcraftgallery) include upcycling ideas, and the blog, Woodworking Adventures (http//:blog.woodcraft.com) has featured upcycling several times. Jewelry Armoire Makeover Inspired by the upcycling trend, many Woodcraft employees have completed projects, A few repAirs, a new coat of paint, sparkly new pulls, and interior flocking turned this piece into a stylish, modern Jewelry Armoire. including marketing manager Lori Haught, who transformed a 1980s Jewelry Armoire (see photo) into a more stylish, modern piece for her bedroom. She gave it a new coat of paint, new silver/glass pulls and flocking on the drawer interiors. You can see the entire process by visiting Woodworking Adventures and searching for “The Jewelry Armoire Makeover.” An Irwin Marples Blue Chip Chisel was used for the disassembly that was required to add new hardware and make other changes to Lori’s armoire. To remove the residue from old finishes and polish, Lori chose Norton Soft Touch Medium 120180 Grit Sanding Sponges for the contour detailed areas and Preppin Weapon Sanding Blocks, loaded with Mirka Abranet 23⁄4" x 8" Sanding Sheets, for flat areas. Once the sanding was finished, all the pieces were cleaned with General Finishes Furniture Cleaner using handy Star Wipers rags. Three coats of General Finishes Black Gel Stain were applied to the armoire. Although each coat was allowed to dry overnight because of other commitments, the actual time required between coats is two to four hours. (Gel stains come in 12 other colors including the popular java.) Two coats of General Finishes High Performance Satin Water-Based Top Coat were applied next. To prep for the new hardware, Golden Oak Water-Base Famowood Filler was used to plug screw holes. More chiseling was required before a pair of 11⁄2" X 11⁄8" Satin Nickel Stop Hinges could be installed. Before reflocking the drawers, Bulls Eye Sealcoat Universal Designers often surprise their clients by sharing a secret: You can dramatically change the look of a room simply by changing or rearranging the items on your bookshelves and tabletops. Just as fashion accessories can have a big impact on an outfit, the items you display on shelves and tables can have a powerful effect on the style of any room. Yet we often pay little attention to these spaces. Shelves get cluttered with stuff we’ve gotten as gifts or things we’re not sure where to store. Think about “how the items you’re displaying will continue the story you’re trying to tell in your space,” advises designer Brian Patrick Flynn, founder of the Flynnside Out design blog. A little editing of your collection can help banish clutter, and putting different items in the spotlight can reveal fresh combinations of things you already own. Begin by exploring photos of bookshelves and tables on Pinterest, or other websites or magazines, suggests interior designer Betsy Burnham of Burnham Design, in Los Angeles. You may find you’re more drawn to sparse, streamlined surfaces than you’d expected. Or you may love the look of surfaces decorated with items in one color scheme. Once you’ve got some ideas bubbling, it’s time to dive in. CLEAR, THEN CLASSIFY First, empty all the shelves and tables from one or several rooms of your home. Place all the items on the floor or perhaps on an empty dining table. Begin grouping them however you wish: by color, texture, type of object or any other classification. Look for patterns. You might find, for example, that you have several items relating to animals, or more pieces of brass or stone than you realized, says designer Molly Luetkemeyer of M. Design Interiors in Los Angeles. Eliminate things that aren’t your taste anymore or don’t fit the room. We tend to add to our shelves and tables over time, Burnham says, so paring down from time to time is necessary. Luetkemeyer agrees: “You can’t use what you have if you can’t see what you have,” she says. “So you kind of have to be merciless.” If it’s hard to eliminate anything, invite a friend to help. And if getting rid of things permanently is tough, simply box up items that aren’t working and put them away for a few months. Or loan them to a friend. LOOK INSIDE Before putting anything back on the shelves, consider painting a bookshelf’s interior, or covering the wall behind an open bookshelf with wallpaper or another wall covering. “The back panels of built-ins and bookshelves act just like backdrops to a TV set or a stage,” says Flynn. “I usually paint the back panels the same colors as a room’s walls, or I use wallpaper or grasscloth to introduce texture and create visual tension between the graphic shapes of books, picture frames and objects.” Once you’ve prepared that canvas, it’s time to begin putting stuff back. MIX AND MATCH Besides clustering some items by color, subject matter or material, also think about shape and height. And don’t be afraid to mix art objects with books, or decorative boxes with vases of flowers. “For every stack of books I add to a shelf,” Flynn says, “I like to have at least two interesting objects to offset the linearity.” All three designers suggest vary- ing the orientation of your books’ spines. “I like to stack some vertically and anchor them with book ends or objects,” Flynn says, “and then I stack some horizontally and use them as risers to showcase frames or trinkets, kind of like makeshift pedestals.” Burnham suggests gathering smaller items in decorative trays or bowls. “One of the most interesting ways to define space on a coffee table or sideboard is using trays,” she says. To bring style to a coffee table, stack several books on a large decorative tray, then “have a smaller tray where you put your AY D L AL TV remotes. You’re making the mundane stuff orderly, you’re giving it some form, and you’re actually corralling it and making sense of it.” Take time to experiment with each shelf or table. Again, consider the story the room is telling. “If you’re someone who’s a world traveler, keep things totally random and collected, or arranged artfully like a curated gallery collection,” Flynn says. “If you’re all about a color scheme, layer objects so that the colors continue to finish the room’s palette. But make sure you slightly throw the colors off, so it’s not super matchy.” NOW IS THE TIME TO SELL EVER Y DA Y • Gold • Silver • Diamonds • Coins • Dental Gold NEED CASH FOR HOME IMPROVEMENTS? RICK DAVIS GOLD & DIAMONDS 5301 Brainerd Road (423) 499-9162 Complaint Free Hamilton & Associates 2650 PEERLESS RD. • CLEVELAND 476-5532 www.hamiltoncoldwellbanker.com Independently owned and operated by a member of Coldwell Banker Residential Affiliates, Inc. 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Visit our web site at www.mcintireins.com :HRIIHULQVWDOOPHQWORDQVIURP $324 to $1,298* Contact us today at (423) 339-0400 WRGLVFXVVDORDQIRU\RX :H'R7D[HV INSURANCE 355 FIRST STREET, S.W. 472-5058 2524 Keith St NW Ste 1 Cleveland TN 37312 ZZZVHFXULW\¿QDQFHFRP $OOORDQVDUHVXEMHFWWRFUHGLWOLPLWDWLRQVDQGRXUXQGHUZULWLQJSROLFLHVLQFOXGLQJYHUL¿DEOHDELOLW\WRUHSD\$FWXDOORDQSURFHHGVPD\ YDU\EDVHGXSRQORDQWHUPV'ROODUDPRXQWVDUHURXQGHGWRWKHORZHVWZKROHGROODUDQGDUHVXEMHFWWRFKDQJH www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—45 ‘Going Faux’ can transform a home’s style The Associated Press Phoebe Taylor’s 20-year-old suburban Atlanta ranch house began plain and “builder grade.” A professional decorator, she transformed it with faux wood beams, decorative molding and a gold-spun paint job that looked like “soft marble.” Her vision: “what our dream house would have been if we had gone out and bought it.” It’s called “Going Faux” — turning homes into something they basically are not through prefab architectural embellishments and eye-tricking wall finishes. Enthusiasts say there’s no reason for even the most budgetconscious among us to live a cookie-cutter existence. “My house was not an expensive house. But even the million dollar houses don’t have this kind of detail,” says Taylor, adding that she recently sold the house in just one day. Other “faux” features to consider include ceiling decals that look like parts of elaborate chandeliers, cabinetry embellishments and painted wainscoting. “I have seen some trailer homes that have more personality to them thanks to paint, sweat equity, buying some lumber, and their owners using their creativity,” says Lee Gamble, a Steamboat Springs, Colo.-based designer and painter who specializes in faux finishes. Gamble says a homeowner can change anything with desire and patience — even ambitious projects like, say, making the interior of a standard subdivision home look like a cozy Tudor or classic Colonial, or like something out of the rustic West. The Internet is a DIY decorator’s best friend, she says, offering inspiration and sources for adding architectural and decorative elements to a home. Next is paint, which Gamble calls “the cheapest way to improve your house” — and it’s about more than just giving the walls new color. Paint can be used to create illusions of architectural elements: For example, you can use blocks of color on walls to create the look of molding, or three variations of one color for a three-dimensional look — an old technique called trompe l’oeil that can make your home look just a little more like the Palace of Versailles. Paint can make high ceilings look lower — extend the ceiling’s color to a lower point on the wall — or give them more height by going dark. Using different colors on the top and bottom halves of a wall can create the look of wainscot, Gamble says. Ornamental appliqués that adhere to anything from cabinetry, walls, mantels and molding to furniture and picture frames add ready-made detail without breaking the bank, she says. The decorative appliqués, which can be painted, stained or glazed, are particularly helpful in transforming the look of kitchen cabinets. “If they are in good shape and the flow works for you, then there is no reason to change them out,” Gamble says, adding that the appliqués, paint and new cabinetry hardware can transform a “builder-grade kitchen” to any style from classic to contemporary. “Suddenly you have a new kitchen,” she says. The products that make such projects possible are becoming easier to use, home designers says. The manufacturer Fypon, for example, makes synthetic ceiling beams and medallions and decorative millwork that are lighter and more manageable than real wood, Gamble says. Decorative millwork like, say, a sunburst pediment over a door, is an easy improvement to a room, says Kathleen Ziprik, a Fypon spokeswoman. Taylor says she used tricks like that in her renovation. In redoing her master bath, for example, she started with “just a straight shot bathroom.” She added molding and wood panels to the walls, and framed the bathtub, using new material with decorative embellishments. “It looked very dramatic,” Taylor says, adding that buying a new home with those real architectural features would not have been affordable. “It really looked real,” she says. —www.FauxSteamboat.com www.Fypon.com www.BomarDesigns.com Ask a Designer: embracing the ‘new feminine’ The Associated Press A year ago, menswearinspired decorating was wildly popular. Interior designers hung sharply tailored draperies alongside furniture covered in pinstripes. Sophisticated shades of gray were everywhere, as was navy blue. But “since the pendulum always swings, we’re starting to see fresh feminine spaces,” says interior designer Brian Patrick Flynn, “regardless of who lives in them.” The trend that designers are calling “the new feminine” isn’t a return to an excess of florals, shabby-chic lace and other cliches of feminine decor from a decade ago. Instead, “feminine style” has evolved into “an aesthetic that’s classic with a soft, eclectic spin,” says Flynn, founder of Flynnside Out Productions. Pretty is back, but designers are using traditional florals on furniture with edgy, sleek lines to create modern mashups. Even the color pink has enjoyed a makeover: Pantone’s “color of the year” for 2015 is a sexy, dark pink called “marsala.” “There was a period in design when ‘pretty’ or ‘feminine’ were considered bad words,” says New York-based designer Young Huh. “It was considered lightweight and not serious. Ideal rooms were masculine, a bit somber, devoid of pattern and softness. Recently, there is a return to appreciating traditional design and also pretty rooms.” Believe it or not, Huh says, “there is a new generation discovering chintz and florals.” So how do we pull off this new look to give rooms a beautiful, feminine touch without getting too “girly”? —CONTRAST IS KEY Anne Maxwell Foster and Suysel dePedro Cunningham, the designers behind the design firm Tilton Fenwick, suggest layering a feminine room with an eclectic mix of furniture and patterns. “We love traditional-style upholstery details (like a gathered skirted chair, for example), but aren’t afraid to pair it with a clean and modern side table,” they said in an e-mail. Huh also emphasizes contrast: “When I think of feminine elements, I turn toward traditional design, such as the curvilinear shapes of Louis VI pieces, floral or other nature-inspired textiles and wallpapers, trims and passementerie, and traditional curtain and furniture AP Photo In thIs Photo provided by Brian Patrick Flynn/HGTV.com, Flynn used all classic elements when designing this master bathroom for a female client. The floor tile and clawfoot tub are classic and gender neutral; however, the space was made feminine with easily changeable elements such as the crystal chandelier and lavender wall color. making,” she says. “But to make the style fresh and modern, make sure the room contains contrasting elements that are edgy, clean and contemporary. ... Having modern bookcases, simple molding and contemporary architectural lighting make the feminine embellishments look new and fresh within that context.” —SHAKE UP THE COLORS Pink is possible, but it doesn’t have to be your starting point. “I’ve been designing and decorating homes for eight years, and not once has a female client asked for a pink room,” says Flynn. “There are so many colors to choose from that add a soft, feminine spin. ... You can never go wrong with white on white, but if that’s too impractical, mint green and red, laven- der and white, and turquoise mixed with just about anything are excellent modern-day feminine options.” If your heart is set on pink, he says, “pair it with navy blue. Dark blue and muted pink strike a gender-neutral balance and also create a super preppy vibe.” The Tilton Fenwick designers suggest uncommon color pairings. “Color combinations like olive green and turquoise, for example, feel unique and fresh rather than stuffy and dated,” they say. “It allows you to use traditional patterns in fabrics and textiles without feeling dowdy.” One of Huh’s favorite tricks for giving a feminine room edge is to add black (or another “masculine” color). “Paint some molding black, the legs of a can be used to clean and restore the luster to a clear finish, as well as hide minor issues like scratches. It will also remove water rings. Milk paint is a popular coating, especially for furniture. General Finishes Milk Paint is premixed and available in 28 colors that can be mixed to make custom colors and lend themselves to decorative effects such as distressing and antiquing. Old Fashioned Milk Paint is a powder that comes in 20 colors and is good for use on porous surfaces such as bare wood and raw masonry. A special effect Old Fashioned Milk Paint Crackle Finish provides a weathered look. The 23-lb. portable QuikBENCH™ is a lightweight, easy-to-set-up workbench capable of holding up to 300 lbs. Convert two QuikBENCHES to sawhorses, and together they will hold up to 2,000 lbs. Two or more benches can be connected together to form a workstation. Each bench has a 24"-wide by 31⁄2" opening vise and a 15-amp, circuit protected, three-outlet power strip, plus four plastic bench dogs. To learn more about these and other upcycling products, visit your local Woodcraft store, call (800) 535-4482 or visit www.woodcraft.com. DIY From Page 44 Sanding Sealer was applied to the interior of the drawers and the dividers. Wearing an Anti Microbial Dust Mask and 6 mil Medium Powder Free Nitrile Gloves, Lori applied Light Blue Donjer Flocking, using a Donjer Mini Flocker. Reassembly of the armoire required System Three 5-Minute Epoxy and a Bessey K-Body REVO Jr. 24" Single Parallel Clamp. Other Popular Upcycling Products Soy-Gel is a 100 percent biodegradable, virtually odorless coating remover. Restor-A-Finish chair, add black trim to traditional chintz pillows and all of a sudden you’ve made that ‘nice girl’ look sexy,” she says. —DON’T FEAR THE FLOWERS Although an overload of floral patterns will look dated, don’t avoid flowers completely if you love them. “Florals are a great starting point for a feminine feel” but pair them with a more modern and clean palette, say the designers at Tilton Fenwick. They also suggest mixing in “more modern or unexpected furniture pieces, art and accessories — a modern photograph for example — that adds a layer of interest.” —BREAK THE RULES If a client wants some shabby chic, Flynn gives it an eclectic twist. “Instead of the classic shabby chic look of white lace, weathered ivory finishes and lots of silver,” he says, “I like to simply stick with weathered wooden finishes in high energy colors, then mix hand-woven or blocked prints in. This results in a well-traveled look packed with organic textures and shapes.” Take it a step further and you’ve got what Flynn calls “rustic elegance” — “the clever juxtaposition of weathered finishes and farmhouse elements mixed with clean, tailored lines.” “I just completed a dining room which my female client wanted to feel very folk-artinspired. To pull it off, we covered the walls and windows with a soft shade of gray, added tailored drapery and then brought in almost all worn, weathered pieces. While there are definitely moments of femininity, the space is just as appealing to men as it is to women.” We’re online! Check us out: www. cleveland banner.com THANKS FOR VOTING US BEST, 3 YEARS IN A ROW! BILL OWENS PLUMBING Licensed Master Plumber 479-1129 • www.billowensplumbing.com WE ACCEPT CREDIT CARDS! BACK PAIN GOT YOU TIED UP IN KNOTS? 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(in front of Ace Hardware) Ne 476.0667 728.0338 www.athensfederal.com #AFRockStars All loans subject to credit approval. NMLS 442976. f t We Are This Area’s Only Locally Owned And Monitored Alarm Company • Fire • CCTV • Security • Access Control • Commercial Business Phone Systems We Feature Brand Names Such As: GE - DMP - ITI - DSC - Ademco & Others CALL TODAY! 476-8186 24 HOUR 870-3272 Steve Castello - Owner TN LICENSE #C-0139 46—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com From pastels to ‘Noir,’ the colors of 2015 decor The Associated Press Ap photo BENJAMIN MOORE has selected Guilford Green framed with white as its color hue of the year. Ap photo CORAL REEF is a vibrant pink-orange that Sherwin-Williams picked as “color of the year.” Jackie Jordan, color marketing director for Sherwin-Williams, suggests pairing it with white, black or floral hues. Trends From Page 138 pers envision how pieces can work at home. “We’ve become semi-pros at DIY décor,” says Griffin. Feeling confident and inspired? Let’s look at some of what spring’s got in store. FURNITURE STYLES Griffin sees midcentury modern becoming even more entrenched in the décor landscape. The pieces are comfier than the originals because of modern construction methods and materials. “The new shapes are the love children between midcentury modern’s twigginess and the traditional overstuffed look. They’re so fresh-looking that they’re irresistible,” she says. West Elm’s Peggy collection of trim, tailored sofas and loveseats feature nubby cayenne or pebble-gray upholstery tucked under slim, pecan-stained legs. The Crosby collection puts a tufted cushion on a trimmed-down wingback that’s especially smart in armchair and sectional versions. Urban Outfitters’ Sterling sofa and Dagmar chair fit the vibe, as does the Draper media cabinet, which resembles a retro hi-fi console. Griffin says Art Deco will really start to emerge this year. “We’re seeing its first wave now in the new linear, jazz-inspired graphics and block prints,” she says. “I’m predicting that we’ll be seeing Deco-inspired furniture and accessories for fall 2015 and spring 2016, viewed through the sleek aperture of midcentury modern.” The sophisticated style’s got legs in both traditional and contemporary décor, so there are lots of ways to incorporate it. Ethan Allen has the Shelton sofa with high, curvy arms, the Atwood chair with two swooping sides, and a chic little nickelplated side table. Urban Outfitters has a vintage-style velvet chaise and fainting couch available in of-the-moment hues. —COLOR AND TEXTURE A heady blend of plum, wine and burgundy, Marsala is Pantone’s color of the year, and while it’s likely to be more prevalent come autumn, you can jump on the trend now by adding dashes of the hue. Overstock’s Presley throw pillow comes in a striking deep-redand-white houndstooth print. The Calantha wall mirror features a lacquered frame carved in a floral design. And Safavieh’s Palmer ottoman pairs creamand-red, windowpane-printed cotton with nickel rivets for a versatile little bench. Look for color used in dramatic ways: a navy lacquered cabinet (at CB2), or a glossy burgundy vanity (Hastings Tile & Bath’s Made collection). Black is back, in a sexy bowfront chest at Wisteria, on walls (Noir is Pratt & Lambert’s color of the year) and in Pottery Barn’s new Stinson bedroom furniture with curly, barley-twist details. Griffin predicts that kitchens with a lot of black — mixed with lighter woods or white — will be hot this year. Sophisticated pastels — what Griffin calls the “Jordan almond’ hues — grace textiles, case goods and even lamps, with mint green and blush pink being the dominant colors. Wisteria has a collection of sleek, contemporary, sea-foam green acrylic desks and tables with a waterfall edge. Textured linens, silks and cottons in tone-on-tone or colorful embroidered prints, embossed fabrics, leathers, and luxe velvets will grace drapery, upholstery and rugs. We were introduced to warm metallics last year; this year, we’ll get to know them better. Lighting and accessories are being rendered in brass, copper and rose gold. At the modern end of the spectrum, powder-coated metal is showing up in pastels and bright colors, in fun wire lounge chairs at Land of Nod, file cabinets at CB2 and steel baskets with birch handles at Ikea. Bernhardt’s new collection includes a brass-clad dresser and several gold or silver side tables and benches — elegant jewelry for a room. Nate Berkus’ new collection for Target features geometric metallic motifs on pillows and an interesting piece of wall art. Faceted lamps and bath accessories come in white and brushed gold. “I gravitate toward pieces that feel architectural,” Berkus says. He mixed “beachy touches” of color for a vibe he considers “‘70s modernism.” Pierced metal lampshades could only be found at highdesign ateliers a year ago, but now Ikea’s Nymo collection comes in black or white with copper interiors. Lighter woods reflect both mid- Ap photo century and farmhouse modern aesthetics; look for light oak and pine, maple, walnut, acorn and beech. —Sourcebook: www.bernhardt.com www.target.com www.ikea.com www.cb2.com www.landofnod.com www.hastingstileandbath.com www.ethanallen.com www.urbanoutfitters.com www.westelm.com www.wisteria.com www.overstock.com For 2015, the hot colors in home decor range from yummy ice cream pastels to a few deep, saturated hues. The pastels include blush, sky blue, vanilla, lilac and pale peach, hues traditionally associated with tropical or desert climes. But they work in northern light, too — just ground them with darker shades like charcoal, chocolate or navy. Mint and shell pink might seem lightweight or juvenile at first glance, but the way they’re being used gives them some gravitas. A task lamp; a midcentury-style chair; a bookcase — rendered in one of these hues, a room instantly looks Right Now. Mints to consider include Behr’s Mountain Mint and Pratt and Lambert’s Glacial Green; check out Pratt and Lambert’s Coral Pink and Behr’s Secret Blush for a gentle yet sophisticated soft pink. Each year, paint companies and color trend gurus assess which hues will be hot in fashion and décor. Many choose a “color of the year.” Coral Reef, a vibrant pinkorange, is Sherwin-Williams’ pick. Debra Kling, a New York-based color consultant, thinks it’s a region-specific hue. “It feels more suitable for South Beach, the Southwest or the South Pacific,” she says. Jackie Jordan, color marketing director for Sherwin-Williams, says the color embodies a cheerful approach to design that’s a hallmark of 2015. “From our research, we know people do seek colors and décor that bring back memories of a destination vacation,” she says. “Coral Reef evokes that for people; others just love the color.” She suggests pairing it with white, black, or floral hues like lush green or deep violet to make it really sing. To calm things down, consider complementary shades of soft gray, driftwood or butter yellow. Patinated brass and medium wood tones would also be pretty accompaniments. Benjamin Moore has gone with Guilford Green, a soft hue that some decorators and designers see as too pale while others tout its versatility as a “standard, go-to green.” Framed with crisp white, Guilford Green gives off a pretty, garden-room vibe; add deeper floral tones like peony, daffodil and iris to enhance the botanical feel. Undertones of gray and brown make it a perfect color against just about any wood, creating a restful backdrop for a kitchen, nursery or sunroom, and it’s a good exterior hue, too. Check out Farrow & Ball’s Breakfast Room Green, a similar shade. Blues will also be strong this spring in decorative elements and room color, evoking locations as diverse as the South Pacific and the Pacific Northwest. There’s global influence with indigos, while the navies have a preppy complexion. Behr’s Solitude and Vintage Velvet, and Benjamin Moore’s Blue Danube and Harbor Fog are all attractive. Glidden’s top color for 2015 is a beachy, intense Caribbean Blue. Another blue getting buzz is Pittsburgh Paint’s color of the year, Blue Paisley. Some designers think it’s pretty but not especially “new,” since it’s been punctuating the popular gray palette for a couple of years now. Nonetheless, it’s a color with legs. You’ll see it and a deeper teal in accessories and textiles, and as accents on smaller furniture pieces. It can lend a midcentury aesthetic to trim upholstery and woods like pecan and walnut that speak to retro style but also reference classic taste. Color giant Pantone has deemed Marsala its color of the year. New York designer Elaine Griffin is delighted: “I think it’s a winner. Red is a color that we haven’t seen in a while. In this interpretation as a deep-ish wine hue, it’s both fresh-looking and sophisticated, and pairs stylishly with the new neutrals of gray, smoky teal and black.” Kling said some colors have a mysterious quality “one can’t quite identify — and Marsala is one of them. It draws us in. Not quite brown and not quite burgundy, Marsala lends sophistication and warmth.” She says it’s well-suited to textures, and as a saturated hue it’s something special; she just did a velvet chaise for a client in Marsala velvet. While it’s already emerging in some furnishings, appliances and cabinetry, Marsala will likely turn up in much more from retailers come fall; it projects coziness, warmth and luxury. Watch in the fall, too, for olive green, deep teal, burnt orange and mustard, all punctuating midcentury modern style. Fruity acid versions of lemon, lime and grape will nod to mod, ‘70s-era décor. Pratt & Lambert’s color of the year is Noir, a bold, inky blueblack. Kling calls it sultry and forbidding. A tray ceiling in a master bedroom, painted like a night sky, comes to mind. “I can imagine a lacquered Noir library, dining room or other cozy space used primarily at nighttime,” she says. Griffin loves the bold choice. “Black and deep navy were once seen as the most theatrical colors, the exclusive domains of the uber-stylish and certainly not for the faint of heart,” she says. “But 2015 officially heralds their establishment as neutrals.” 4130 Jersey Pike (423) 648-7863 Chattanooga, Tennessee “Let Us Help” For All Your Masonry Needs Spring has Sprung Need new lawn equipment to help make yard work a little easier? We can help! Work time over? Ready for some playtime on the lake or beach? Need a different truck, car or boat? See about a truck for hauling all that garden equipment “Your Hometown Friends With Money To Lend” can help you get this done with loans for most any purpose. EST. 1976 See Chris or Don! CHEROKEE FINANCIAL SERVICES “In Business 39 Years” 1215 Spring Place Road • Member BBB 472-5049 ...wants to work for you & your family. 2551 Georgetown Road Phone 472-5051 Rejuvenate your Home from the Floor Up! C P AR E N TI G ST E ON & TI N VI KELLY GUFFEY H TIM GOLDEN BRITTNEY WEAR DAVIS DONNIE WEAR LE D AR W YL D OO M LA I TE A N THE FLOORING CENTER “The Home Improvement Specialists” Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8:00-5:00 • Sat. 9:00-2:00 923 StarVue Dr. • 476-9434 PERRY SUITS JOE GUFFEY ELAINE WEAR www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—47 SUNDAY PeoPle Gwen Swiger Associate Editor Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529 news@clevelandbanner.com Sheriff’s Office eric Watson Bradley County Sheriff Good things come from hard work Beavers a. Brown J. Brown estrada garrett Nine selected as Rymer Scholar finalists Special to the Banner Lee University recently announced the 2015 Rymer Scholarship finalists. The scholarships, which are provided through the Rymer Foundation, honor local student achievement and encourage talented high school students to remain in the Cleveland area. The nine students selected as Rymer finalists for 2015 are Megan Beavers, Abigail Brown, Joshalyn Brown, Marisa Estrada, Rachael Garrett, Makayla Jenkins, Sarah Locke, Savannah Stone and Tyler Webb. Three finalists will be designated as Rymer Gold Scholars, three as Rymer Silver Scholars, and three as Rymer Bronze Scholars. Principals from Bradley Central, Cleveland, and Walker Valley high schools have selected faculty representatives to serve alongside Lee University representatives, chosen by Lee President Dr. Paul Conn, on a selection committee. The committee conducts interviews with each finalist and will announce the award recipients at the annual Rymer Scholarship banquet on April 29. Winners are chosen based on outstanding high school achieve- Jenkins Locke ment and demonstrated potential for a successful college career. The scholars are assessed based on their leadership in extracurricular, athletic, and church-based activities, highschool rank, grade point average, college entrance exam scores, and a personal interview. n Beavers, a senior at Bradley Central High School, is the daughter of Angela and Steve Beavers Jr. She is currently ranked 37 out of 372 with a 3.9 GPA. She is the captain of the ron CorChnoy of Copperhill was charter member No. 5 and associate conductor of the Greater Cleveland Concert Band. varsity basketball cheerleading squad. She was named an AllAmerican Cheerleader at a Universal Cheerleader’s Association camp. She has participated in Distributive Education Clubs of America (DECA), student council, and National Honor Society (NHS). She was also voted Homecoming Queen. In addition to school activities, she has participated in countless church-related activities such as Vacation Bible School and stone church youth programs, and has volunteered with Christmas Memories and other community outreach programs. n A senior at Cleveland High School, Abigail Brown is the daughter of Jerry and Melissa Brown. She is currently ranked first in her class of 339 with a 4.0 GPA. She has been a member of the basketball cheerleading squad, student government, Beta Club, NHS, Interact Service Club, Model UN, and the Cleveland Webb City/Bradley County Chamber of Commerce Youth Leadership Program. Abigail is a Tennessee Scholar and a Raider Scholar. She has volunteered with Christmas Memories, Special Olympics, and Life Bridges Christmas, as well as a variety of other community programs and events. She attends First Baptist Church of Cleveland and Mount Olive Ministries, where she parSee FINALISTS, Page 48 WooDWInDs in the Greater Cleveland Concert Band include clarinetists Richard Borders, Valerie Nozzolo, DeAnna Moore and Amy Smith. Greater Cleveland Concert Band plays Pangle Hall Tuesday Special to the Banner The familiar sounds of “Broadway and Movie Classics” will fill the evening Tuesday as the Greater Cleveland Concert Band plays at Lee University’s Pangle Hall. The free concert begins at 7 p.m. Sarah Pearson, conductor, will begin the evening at 6:30 with a pre-concert talk for early arrivals. She wants to share some intriguing lore of the Broadway musicals and Hollywood blockbuster movies as a pre-opening warm-up. The featured soprano soloist for the evening will be Mary Beth Torgerson. She will be presenting selections from “Carousel,” a symphonic band arrangement by Eric Leidzen of Rogers and Hammerstein’s masterpiece. Torgerson’s recent stage credits include the Closed Door Entertainment Stage and Screen “Cabaret,” “Les Miserables,” “Titanic the Musical” and “Cinderella.” May 22 and 24, Torgerson will be playing the title role of Mary Poppins in “Mary Poppins the Musical” at Chattanooga’s Soldiers & Sailors Memorial Auditorium. As a voracious reader and storyteller, Torgerson found an outlet for her passions as managing editor for three Chattanooga magazines. When not performing, she loves to volunteer as a character performer for nonprofit children’s organizations, including the Ronald McDonald House and Bethany Christian Services. She resids in Chattanooga with her husband Nathan. Before jumping into the Broadway stage musicals, Pearson will prime the audience to the State Opera House in Vienna, Austria, with Karl L. Mary Beth torgerson, left, will be the soprano soloist for Tuesday’s concert by the Greater Cleveland Concert Band at Pangle Hall. sarah Pearson, right, is the Greater Cleveland Concert Band conductor. King’s classic “Old Vienna Overture.” King composed more than 300 works of many styles, but is most famous for his circus marches. In “Old Vienna Overture,” King displays his composing versatility with an andante maestoso opening, transitioning joyously to a waltz, followed by a typical Kin acceleration into an allegro, which soon slams into circus vivace finale. See CONCERT, Page 48 In law enforcement, as in business or any other type of work, numbers often play an important part. Numbers can swamp us, even make our eyes glaze over at times. After my time in business, law enforcement and eight years in the state Capitol, I have seen my share of numbers. Recently, some numbers came to my desk that my command staff and I studied intently. These are very important numbers, in that they reflect how successful your Bradley County Sheriff’s Office is in solving burglary cases. Burglaries continue to be one of the biggest problems we face, as most stem from folks stealing from homes and businesses to feed a drug habit. It is clear that drugs and theft go together almost 100 percent of the time. Your Sheriff’s Office continues to make drug arrests daily, in many instances with stolen merchandise nearby. The BCSO Criminal Investigations Division, along with patrol, is on the alert 24 hours a day for suspicious people or vehicles that just “look out of place.” Many times, the “gut feeling” these officers have results in arrests. I can assure you, since I have been able to add more officers and more patrol units on the road — up to some 20 at a time — our home, school, business and church checks have greatly increased. Now, let us get back to the numbers. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation released a report late last week that I feel like reflected the hard work our CID and Patrol have been doing. According to the TBI report, your Bradley County Sheriff’s Office has solved 26 percent of all cases. That is almost double the state rate of some 12 percent and the East Tennessee rate of 14 percent. There has been hard work behind those numbers, not to mention the extraordinary cooperation we have had from the citizens of Bradley County. One of the largest burglary cases in recent memory was solved shortly after Sept. 1, and it was the result of one phone call by one citizen. Hundreds of burglary cases were closed and thousands of dollars worth of stolen items were recovered, all because the caller thought a vehicle, leaving the area near her house looked suspicious. The young man involved in those burglaries remains in jail today. I cannot say enough about the spirit of teamwork within the BCSO and the help we receive from the public. I am so thankful for the folks that live in Bradley County. Your cooperation and friendship has greatly contributed to the good things that are happening at your Bradley County Sheriff’s Office. To the residents of Bradley County: Thank you! Information for inclusion in the Banner’s People section, should be submitted by 5 p.m. on thursday before the sunday publication. Information may be sent to news@clevelandbanner.com. 48—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Ollie J. Lee Symposium showcases Lee University student research Greater clevelanD Concert Band members span all age levels. Alexs Bramlett, left, from Benton is a percusionist for the band. Lamar Strickland, right, from Dayton, is a French horn veteran. Concert From Page 47 The band will then take the concertgoers to a village rooftop by fiddling with Tevye, a Jewish milkman who had five daughters, causing struggles with how to deal with mixed marriage in his family. Jerry Brock’s musical, “Fiddler on the Roof,” was nominated for 10 Tony Awards, winning nine times. England has had its share of great composers. Among their most famous is Andrew Lloyd Webber with his “Phantom of the Opera” thriller. “Carousel” initially ran for 890 performances and was repeatedly revived, prompting Time Magazine to call it the best musical of the 20th century. If the audience echoes a lingering tune in the days following the concert, it will most likely be the “Carousel” finale, “You’ll Never Walk Alone.” The story setting revolves around a carousel barker boy who falls in love with a millworker girl, resulting with the loss of their jobs. Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet” was the inspiration for American Leonard Bernstein’s “West Side Story.” Its plot venue is New York City’s upper west side where during the mid 1950s, the ongoing rivalry Finalists From Page 47 ticipates in various youth group activities. n Cleveland High School senior Joshalyn Brown is the daughter of Joe and Jacqueline Brown. She has a 4.0 GPA and is ranked first in her class of 339. She has been a member of the varsity soccer team, Healthcare Occupations Students of America (HOSA), NHS, Winterguard, Silhouettes Choir, and CHS Choir. She was a Dream Keeper Award recipient, Cleveland High School Honor recipient, and Raider Scholar. She attends North Cleveland Church of God, where she has been a participant in team and individual Bible quizzing for Teen Talent. She is also a volunteer in the children’s ministry, church nursery, and a local shelter. n Estrada, the daughter of Noé and Tammy Estrada, is a senior at Bradley Central High School. She is ranked 48 out of 372 and has a 3.91 GPA. She has been a part of the dance team, NHS, Beta Club, HOSA, varsity basketball and football cheerleading, and Fellowship of Christian Athletes, where she is a worship and small group leader. She has volunteered with Christmas Memories, Signature Healthcare, and the Salvation Army Kitchen. She is a youth worship leader at Peerless Road Church of God of Prophecy and a volunteer for the church nursery and food distribution program. n Garrett, daughter of Jeffrey and Linda Garrett, is a senior at Bradley Central High School. She is currently ranked seventh of 372 with a 4.0 GPA. She is a member of the tennis team, the head of Bake Shop, and a participant in Skills USA. She has also participated in the ProStart team and the volleyball team. She placed third in the state ProStart competition and received “Most Digs” in volleyball. During the summer, Garrett coaches tennis to young children. In addition, she has volunteered with Vacation Bible School and the Night of Lights 5K. n Jenkins is ranked seventh in her senior class of 374 at Walker Valley High School, where she has maintained a 4.0 GPA. She is the daughter of Danny and Kathy Jenkins. She has participated in countless activities with DECA and is a member of NHS, Beta Club, National English Honor Society (NEHS), World Language Club, German American Partnership Program, and Drama Club. Jenkins is a member of Circle of Champions and has been named a Tennessee Scholar. She has volunteered with Christmas Memories and a refugee community in Atlanta, Georgia. At Westwood Baptist Church, she is a member of the dance team, teaches children’s church, participates in the Christmas and Easter programs, and volunteers with Vacation Bible School and youth mission trips. n The daughter of Randall and Melissa Locke and senior at Walker Valley High School, Locke is ranked 54 out of 374 with a 4.0 GPA. She has been a Tennessee Scholar as well as a member of the Walker Valley High School Ladies Choir, Circle of Champions, and Dance Team, where she served as captain. She has also been a member of the student government association, NEHS, Beta Club, and Chamber of Commerce Leadership Council. She has volunteered with Christmas Memories, Morning Point Assisted Living Center, Ronald McDonald House, New Hope Pregnancy Center, the Alzheimer’s Walk, and Habitat for Humanity, among others. Additionally, Locke formed the City of Charleston Neighborhood Watch Program. n Stone, a senior at Walker Valley High School, is the daughter of Vince and Tena Stone. She is ranked eighth of 374 with a 4.0 GPA. She has been a Tennessee Scholar and a member of Circle of Champions as well as a member of the marching band, concert band, NHS, NEHS, and student government. She was the winner of Cleveland’s Distinguished Young Women’s Scholarship Program in 2011. Stone was a leading member in the founding of The Manna Project, a food distribution project. She is a member of the youth drama team and orchestra at Westmore Church of God, and she has attended mission trips to Haiti with her church and to Mexico with a nonprofit organization called OneHope. n Webb, a senior at Walker Valley High School, is the son of Brian and Jessica Webb. He is ranked ninth of 374 in his senior class and has a 3.96 GPA. He has been a member of the student superintendent advisory board, NEHS, NHS, Circle of Champions, and Tennessee Scholars. He also participated in AllState and All-East choirs as well as four spring musicals. At Mt. Olive Church of God, Webb has been involved with the LH20 Student Ministries Drama Team and Student Council, and participated with synchronized movement teams in the Teen Talent competition. between two street gangs of different ethnic backgrounds stirs up heated musical emotions. Another English origination based on George Bernard Shaw’s “Pygmalion,” is Allen Jay Lerner and Frederick Lowe’s “My Fair Lady.” Liza Doolittle, a Cockney flower girl; takes speech lessons form professor Henry Higgins in an effort to pass a lady. The Broadway production set a record at th time for the longest run of any major musical production in history, and is often referred to as “the perfect musical.” The concert finale will be Paul Lavender’s arrangement of medleys by American composer John Williams. titled “John Williams in Concert, the piece begins with “Theme form E.T.,” then “The Mission Theme,” “The Imperial March and wrapping up with a medley from “Star Wars,” “Cantina Band,” “Olympic Spirit and “Theme from Jaws.” Pearson accepted the GCCB music director and conductor roll last fall. She received the “enthusiastic endorsement” of Maestro Robert Bernhardt, conductor emeritus of the Chattanooga Symphony Orchestra and Opera Association and current artistin-Residence of the Lee University Symphony. Her credentials include conducting a Europeans music festival, Julliard School of Music and for symphonies in Atlanta, Buffalo, Chattanooga and Houston. On Set. 22, 2008, Lowell Brannon joined the band as a trumpeter. A Church of God bishop for more than 45 years, he passed away Jan. 19 at Vanderbilt Medical Center. An insert in the concert program will pay tribute to Lowell’s contributions to the band. Pangle Hall, at 340 Church St., is located in the former First Baptist Church site. There is ample parking on both sides of the street. A front entry ramp is available if needed. A chartered nonprofit organization, the Great Cleveland Concert Band invites donations to help with their operating band fund. The band’s community outreach projects have supported student scholarship, music stand purchases for BlytheBower Elementary, food drives for the Caring Place, plus supplies and music purchases. For additional information, contact band president R.G. Wolfe at 423-614-0060. State agrees to let couple give child chosen surname NASHVILLE (AP) — The state Department of Health has agreed to let a Brentwood couple give their child the surname of their choice, bringing to an end a contentious legal battle that began last year. The American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit last year on behalf of Dr. Carl Abramson and Kimberly Sarubbi after the state refused to allow the couple to give their third child the last name Sabr. The name is a combination of both parents’ last names. An attorney for the ACLU says that the lawsuit was dismissed on Thursday and the state issued a birth certificate with the surname that the parents chose for the child. State officials did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment. The Lee University Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences hosted its fifth annual Ollie J. Lee Symposium on April 9 to honor Distinguished Professor of Sociology Dr. Ollie J. Lee. The symposium showcased original student research in anthropology, psychology and sociology. Dr. Lee joined the Lee faculty in 1967 and has served for 48 years in numerous roles, including vice president of Academic Affairs, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, and chair of the Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences. He now serves as Professor Emeritus. According to Dr. Carolyn Dirksen, director of the Center for Teaching Excellence, Lee was influential during the period when he was beginning the transition from Bible college to liberal arts institution. He helped prepare for the accreditation review of the new majors, write the faculty constitution, and formulate the rights and responsibilities of Lee faculty. He also chaired the committee that wrote Lee University’s mission statement and formulated the institutional goals. Since that time, Lee has been instrumental in helping to further the academic and professional life of the university, including chairing the General Education Core Task Force that redesigned core requirements and chairing the committee that directed academic aspects of the transition from college to university. “Every faculty member and every student is touched every day by Dr. Lee’s foundational work,” said Dirksen. “The Lee University of 2015 is significantly different from the Lee College of 1967, and much of the hard, behind-the-scenes work of that transformation has been done by Ollie Lee.” There were more than 60 students with 36 presentations at the symposium held in Lee’s honor, including both oral expositions and poster displays. There were seven presentations from anthropology students, 19 from psychology students, and 10 from sociology students. In the plenary session, Dr. Jeffrey Sargent, chair of the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, and Lee President Dr. Paul Conn gave opening remarks about the symposium. As an academic of psychology, Conn described the social sciences as “the sweet spot between philosophy and science.” Jacqueline camPbell, Winter Bunch, Dr. Susan Carter, professor of psychology and human development at Lee, and Mikaela Peachey were members of a research team that presented an oral presentation at the symposium. Dr. Paul conn, Lee University president, speaks of the joys of behavioral and social science research to the symposium attendees during the plenary session. “Presenting at the Ollie J. Lee Symposium was by far the most rewarding academic experience I have had during my time at Lee,” said Mikaela Peachey, a junior psychology major. “It allowed me to push myself way beyond the normal classroom expectations and to grow immensely.” The poster presentations provided 23 different topics within the three disciplines. During the oral presentations, anthropology research topics included catastrophe and social reconstruction in the areas surrounding Mt. Vesuvius, possibilities for and perceptions of “home” among the homeless, and midwifery, among others. Within the psychology discipline, students presented research topics such as the effect of gender on altruistic behavior, young adults’ sexual attitudes and behaviors, and activating transcendence in family and church settings. Sociology students presented on students with learning disabilities, juvenile delinquency, and the murder of Sheila Bellush, along with other topics. “With over 170 attendees and 36 student presentations, this year’s Ollie J. Lee Symposium exceeded all expectations,” said Dr. Bryan Poole, assistant professor of psychology. “Our students’ research was skillfully conducted and masterfully presented.” For more information about the Lee University Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, contact Dr. Jeffrey Sargent at jsargent@leeuniversity.edu or 423-614-8125. Zachary Sawyer presents his research about the differences between mental health and mental illness to a group of symposium student attendees. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—49 Lee Senior Showcase underway at Museum Center at Five Points Lee University senior art majors are currently displaying their work at a Senior Showcase through May 8 at the Museum Center at Five Points in downtown Cleveland. The presenting students include Alice Antimie, Shanna Calfee, Carly Chamerlik, Giselle Garrett, Abbye Head, Demetrius Jackson, Emily Lockman, Angela Sesler, Kathryn Sloan and Olivia Webb. Head, a senior art and advertising double major, is displaying her showcase titled “Escaping Humanness.” Her focus is with graphic design and charcoal drawings, both of which are featured in her showcase based on surrealism and dreams. There will be six pieces displayed in Lee’s Communication Arts building and one piece at the museum. “The piece at the museum stands separate from the others but still represents the dreams, freedom, and limitless possibilities that come with totally committing your life to Christ,” Head said. Chamerlik, originally from Chicago, is a senior art major with a studio emphasis. She primarily works in oil paints and focuses on portraiture. Chamerlik’s showcase features three life-size dancers displaying movement and light, along with a few other larger-than-life portraits. “The main thing I tried to convey in my show is the essence of natural beauty and how the overprocessing in popular culture and the media devalues raw, unedited states of being,” Chamerlik said. “It's a commentary on life as a young woman in the 21st century.” Head and Chamerlik’s work, along with the other students’ pieces, can be viewed at the museum Tuesday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Additional work is on display at Lee University in the Squires Library, Humanities Building, and the Communication Arts Building. “This year’s senior art students have done outstanding work, and display a lot of talent,” said John Simmons, assistant professor of art at Lee. “We are proud of them and all of their artistic accomplishments and encourage everyone to visit the various sites to view their work.” For more information on the showcase or Lee’s Art Program, contact the Department of Communication Arts at 423-614dURING ThE mOsT recent meeting of the Cleveland Civitan Club, Jeff Cocks, president of Corporate 8341. Network Solutions ,gave a brief synopsis of Internet capabilities, Google functions and abilities and some amazing computer facts not only for our region but for the world wide web. From left are Pam Edgemond, Pat Sosebee, Brenda Richardson, Jeff Cocks, Linda Wheeler and Phil Brown. FROm lEFT are Mary Mathias-Dickerson (art faculty), Shanna Calfee, Olivia Webb, Carly Chamerlik, Emily Lockman, Abbye Head, Alice Antimie, and Demetrius Jackson; back, Giselle Garrett, and John Simmons. Christian Single Friends plan meetings for Thursdays April 30 through June 4 Cleveland Christian Single Friends will be meeting Thursday nights, April 30 through June 4, for a spring study series. This will be a six-week series utilizing the book "The Prodigal God" by Timothy Keller. The group will take a look at one of Jesus' most well-known parables and discover that we miss the full message if we focus only on the wayward son. This is a story that reveals how God loves us with lavish abundance and reckless extravagance. The study will meet at Westmore Church of God, Room 218, at 6:30 p.m. Copies of the book will be provided. To help cover the cost, donations will be welcomed, but not required. Cleveland Christian Single friends is a nondenominational group and members are from several Bradley County and Hamilton County churches. You can contact to the group or find out about future events by visiting its Facebook page, Single CElEbRATING AdmINIsTRATIVE Assistant Day at Ocoee Middle School, the administrative assisFriends-Cleveland TN or email tants were given a limo ride (provided courtesy of Fike-Randolph and Son) to Five Point Square the group at clevelandRestaurant. From left, back, are Debbie Hysinger, Joyce Ratcliff, Tabitha Bryant, Mandy Manning, Bea friends777@yahoo.com. Holappa, Paula Neighbors; and front, Donida Pigg and JoAnn Whitehead. Adults deserve a Promise too! Cleveland State’s last dollar scholarship for adult students. OAK GROVE RURITAN Club’s special guest during April was Robby Cody of Companion Funeral and Cremation Service. He gave information about funeral arrangements and cremation. From left is Ray Myers, program chairman and zone governor; Cody; and Barbara Trentham, president and treasurer. William Lamb earns doctorate Dr. William Lamb, director of and leadership magazines. A U.S. Lee University’s Leonard Center, Marine Corps veteran, he also recently earned a doctorate in serves as a chaplain for Bradley organizational leadership from County Fire-Rescue and the the School of Business and Sheriff’s Office. He is in his secLeadership at Regent University ond term as a member of the in Virginia Beach, Virginia. Tennessee Governor’s Lamb’s dissertation, titled Commission on Volunteerism and “Service-Learning and Service. University Students’ Lamb holds a master’s Motivation to Lead,” degree in youth and faminvestigated the relationily ministry and a bacheship between students’ lor’s in religious studies. service experiences and “I appreciate the their motivation for leadencouragement of my ership. According to family and friends as Lamb, the data revealed well as my colleagues at that students’ serviceLee University along this learning experiences, Ph.D. journey,” said their self-efficacy, and Lamb. “I look forward to Lamb their perceived leadercontinuing my work with ship skills all have a strong bear- service-learning and student ing on their desires to show lead- development at Lee.” ership. He and his wife, Angela, have In addition to serving as direc- three sons and one daughter-intor of the Leonard Center, Lamb law, Tyler and Megan, Nicholas, teaches courses on Christian and Benjamin. Benevolence and Global Missions, Lee’s Leonard Center guides is a Gateway instructor for fresh- students in service-learning and man classes, and is a lecturer in partners with various organizaLee’s Summer Honors program. tions to give students the opporHe is the co-author of “Answers tunity to engage in a high-impact to Questions Youth Workers, learning experience while proParents, and Pastors Ask” and is moting the mission of community frequently published in ministry organizations. The Tennessee Promise scholarship was developed by the State to assist students right out of high school go to college. So what’s out there for adult students? Enter the Adult Promise Scholarship from Cleveland State Community College! It’s our commitment to our adult students to ensure that they have the resources to attend college. If you’re attending college for the first time, or returning to college to complete your first degree this scholarship was created just for you! For more information call (423) 472-2310, or go to clevelandstatecc.edu and check out the scholarships page. 50—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Bradley 4-H demonstration contest winners announced Bradley County 4-h students who won at the classroom level advanced on to the County Demonstration Contest held april 17 at Cleveland state Community College. First-place winners in grades sixth through eight were line and Design, McKenzie Decker; engineering/safety science, andrew Womac; Companion animal, Bethany hobbs and autumn Miller; Consumer education, Brady shubert; and Forestry/Wildlife/Fisheries; Neyland O’Daniel. First-place winners in fourth grade were line and Design, hannah Watson; leadership/Personal Development, allie Maples; Performing arts and FIFTH-GRAdE wINNERS included Victoria Majeske, Minnie Brock, Lindsey Hughes, Keller Melton Recreation, Tommy Coleman; and Klay Brancefield; and back, Kaylie Riley and Cathy Hicks, with judge Cameron Taylor; and Kade Nutrition/health/Fitness; Briana Cole, animal Deuster. science, Noah Birdwell; Companion animal, Ruby anziano; Forestry/Wildlife/Fisheries, Klay Brancefield; electric, Keller Melton; and Photography, Cassie hicks. First-place winners in fifth grade were line and Design, Cathena hightshoe; Performing arts and Recreation, aubrey Neidich; Companion animal, Jessie henderson; horticulture/Gardening, Caleigh White; Photography, victoria Majeske; and electric, Kade Deuster. The first-place winners of the County Contest will advance on to the Multi-County Contest to be held in Bledsoe County on May 2. FIRST plACE in fifth-grade Food Science was won by Salada Alderman. Judge was Kathryn Ervin. FOURTH-GRAdE competitors included Taylor Rose, Alyssia Taylor, Noah Birdwell, Jessie Henderson, Ruby Anziano and Caleigh White. Judges, back, were Doug Bunch and Karen Lowe. FOURTH-GRAdE competitors included Briana Cole, Allie Maples, Naysa Janney, Tommy Coleman, Marissa Bivens and Hannah Watson. Judges, back, were Shannon Kelley and Arlene McAree. Going viral Driving to a call this last week i saw something that i thought was especially poignant — a homeowners had set out a couple packs of bright new pansies in their plastic pots and had stepped back to take a picture with their camera-phone. i wondered — were they posting about their green thumb on Facebook? Were they texting the image to their children and friends? Did they have a question for their extension agent, and were they about to email me the picture with a question? Whatever reason they had for snapping a shot of their work-inprogress, i appreciated them taking the time to document a step in the gardening process. Too often, the pictures that get sent my way are taken when it’s too late to help, or when whatever control is necessary has become expensive or time-consuming. a recent call to a local gardener was a reminder of this, and should serve as a piece of advice. Thorny Business Rose rosette disease is a virus that attacks roses and is often fatal. its hallmark characteristics are bright red, mottled leaves, prolific thorns on the plant’s stems, and the telltale “witch’s broom,” a bristling profusion of brightly colored growth. The virus is thought to be spread by microscopic rust mites and affected roses continue to bloom for a time before eventually succumbing and dying. in this particular situation, the homeowner had a bad case of rose rosette on one plant the first year, then on several more plants the second year, and finally on the third year all the plants were diseased. By the time i was asked to identify the disease and give a recommendation, it was four years too late. The rose’s new growth was bright red and the stems were furred by thorns — the witch’s broom, while not obvious yet, had apparently been seen in the past couple years. Because all of the plants were affected, my recommendation had to be a full replacement of all the roses and a rest period From the County Agent’s Desk By Patrick Sweatt TSU Extension Agent Bradley County Agriculture and Natural Resources before more were planted. The virus gets into the plant’s tissue and if not immediately detected and cut out will go systemic. if we had caught the disease in one of the previous growing seasons, it is possible the homeowner could have used an insecticide to control the mites that spread the disease or removed the affected plants before the virus spread. Swiping Forward While hindsight might be 20/20, it’s the megapixels in your camera that really allow you to look back in the past and clearly identify horticultural problems. i would suggest taking a cue from the gardener at the beginning of this article and stepping back to take a look at the whole picture. even if you don’t post what you see on the internet, there’s a good chance that you might notice something new. NRCS providing $1.8M to protect and restore agricultural lands in Tennessee Nashville — United states Department of agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation service in Tennessee is making available up to $1,801,989 in financial and technical assistance through the agricultural Conservation easement Program (aCeP). NRCs is making $332 million in financial and technical assistance available nationwide to help productive farm and ranch lands remain in agriculture and to protect the nation’s critical wetlands and grasslands. “NRCs helps farmers, ranchers, private forest landowners and partners to achieve their conservation goals using our technical expertise, Farm Bill funding and sound conservation planning,” Kevin Brown, Tennessee state conservationist, said. “Conservation easements are an important tool to help these landowners and partners voluntarily provide long-term protection of our nation’s farmland, ranchland, wetlands and grasslands for future generations.” The 2014 Farm Bill consolidated three previous conservation easement programs into aCeP to make it easier for diverse agricultural landowners to fully benefit from conservation initiatives. NRCs easement programs have been a critical tool in recent years for advancing landscape-scale private lands conservation. in FY 2014, NRCs in Tennessee used $2,653,443 in aCeP funding to enroll an estimated 1,129 acres of farmland, ranchland, grassland and wetlands through 10 new easements. aCeP’s agricultural land easements not only protect the longterm viability of the nation’s food supply by preventing conversion of productive working lands to nonagricultural uses, but they also support environmental quality, historic preservation, wildlife habi- FIFTH-GRAdE participants included Cathena Hightshoe, Haley Cabrera, Chance Atterton, Aubrey Neidich and Abby Ellis. Judge was Janet Bunch, back. tat and protection of open spaces. american indian tribes, state and local governments and nongovernmental organizations that have farmland or grassland protection programs are eligible to partner with NRCs to purchase conservation easements. Wetland reserve easements allow landowners to successfully enhance and protect habitat for wildlife on their lands, reduce impacts from flooding, recharge groundwater and provide outdoor recreational and educational opportunities. NRCs provides technical and financial assistance aCeP applications can be submitted at any time to NRCs; however, applications for the current funding round must be submitted by May 15. aCeP applications are currently being accepted for both agricultural land and wetlands reserve easements. applications are available at local UsDa service Centers. SIXTH THROUGH EIGHTH- GRAdE winners, left, were Neyland O’Daniel, McKenzie Decker and Andrew Womac. At back are Brady Shubert and Bethany Hobbs. Is Your Child, Parent, Grandparent or Favorite Pet in the Cleveland Daily Banner? You can purchase any of our staff photos from our website at www.clevelandbanner.com. Just find what you want and click the “Buy this photo” button under it. Then choose what size and finish, it’s as easy at that! Previously published photos are also available in our Photo Galleries. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—51 tina’s Groove CROSSWORD By Eugene Sheffer Baby Blues Blondie ASTROLOGY SUNDAY, APRIL 26, 2015 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Jemima Kirke, 30; Channing Tatum, 35; Tom Welling, 38; Kevin James, 50. Happy Birthday: Carefully assess every move you want to make this year. It will be easy to get caught up in situations that can end up costing you more than you anticipate. Being conservative doesn't necessarily mean being boring. Avoid impulsiveness, stick to your budget and set goals without giving in to temptation or pressure. Choose stability over extravagance. Your numbers are 5, 7, 22, 31, 35, 43, 49. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Engage in activities that offer adventure. Challenge yourself to do better. Don't let critical individuals bring you down or hold you back. Believe in your abilities, negotiate on your own behalf and make your dreams come true. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Problems at home will escalate if someone has spent too much money or behaved selfishly. Try not to let your emotions take over. Staying calm and looking for workable solutions will bring the best results. Use brains over brawn. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Love is on the rise, and romance will help your personal life flourish. Socializing and sharing your ideas will lead to a positive lifestyle change. Don't pass up an opportunity someone offers. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Living in the past will not propel you forward. Reminiscing may take your mind off something you are avoiding, but eventually you will have to deal with the changes you are facing. Put problems behind you instead of running away from them. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You will face temptation. It's good to take action, but Snuffy Smith Hagar the Horrible Dilbert By Eugenia Last don't overdo it, or you'll face criticism and setbacks. Focus on what you do best, and you will secure your position instead of jeopardizing your chances to get ahead. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Find out all you can about the people who can influence your life, position or future. A problem with someone close to you will limit your ability to do what you like. Preparation and organization will be required to avoid disappointment. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Step things up a notch. It's up to you to exhibit your beliefs, ideas and plans to bring about change. Your dedication, loyalty and intelligence will help you overcome any negativity or opposition you face. Love is highlighted. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emotional situations will escalate rapidly, leaving you in a precarious position. Don't try to cover up for a mistake someone else has made. Stick to the truth and offer suggestions that are clear-cut and doable. Stay calm -- anger will get you nowhere. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Travel, learning and engaging in interesting pastimes will lead to positive lifestyle changes. Don't be fooled by a slick sales pitch. Do your research, and you will get the most for the least. Love is on the rise. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Share your ideas with those who will be affected by your plans. A change will frighten someone who is comfortable with things the way they are. Use all the information you have gathered, and you will get your way. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A situation between yourself and a friend, relative or lover will spin out of control. Don't get angry or overreact. Give yourself some time to rethink your strategy. Focus Contract Bridge by Steve Becker Garfield Beetle Bailey Dennis the Menace By Ned Classics By Conrad Day See Answer on Page 63 on personal pampering, not criticizing or trying to change others. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Pick up the knowledge, experience and skills required to get ahead. Embellishing what you have to offer will lead to disappointment. Be honest about your capabilities and your willingness to learn, and you will be given greater consideration. Birthday Baby: You are precise, practical and intelligent. You are familyoriented and conservative. MONDAY, APRIL 27, 2015 CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Austin Dillon, 25; Jenna-Louise Coleman, 29; Patrick Stump, 31; Ari Graynor, 32. Happy Birthday: Keep your life simple, focused and on track. You will be taken for granted if you are too willing to help others achieve before you master your own goals. Deal with emotional situations before they have a chance to escalate. It will be your promptness and your strong sense of justice that will prevail. Learn as you go. Your numbers are 6, 13, 19, 22, 27, 31, 46. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aim to impress. Love is on the rise and romance in the stars. No matter what your focus is, do your best. An older relative will appreciate your concern. Neglect will play a role in the way a situation unfolds. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Stick to a set formula or conservative strategy when it comes to budgeting and making your nest egg grow. Don't feel pressured by what others do or say. Think for yourself, do your own thing and you will avoid a loss. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Focus on home, family and self-pampering. Do whatever it takes to keep things running smoothly. A problem when dealing with institutions will crop up. Put off any legal, financial or medical matters for now. Love is in the stars. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Accept whatever changes are going on around you and keep moving in the direction that seems the most appropriate. It's best not to make a fuss or promise too much. Just do what's expected of you and avoid emotional conflict. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Overreacting will not help you avoid disputes at work or at home. Make whatever changes are necessary and do your best to take care of your responsibilities to avoid complaints or criticism. Discipline and hard work will be your best response. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Live and learn. Ask questions and respond with confidence. Taking part in community events or traveling for business will be emotionally draining, but will give you plenty to think about. Progressive action will pay off. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Expect the unexpected. Learn to go with the flow and you'll keep the peace as well. Don't get involved in a joint venture or put cash into something that is aimed to help someone else instead of helping you. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Taking an introspective look at your life and the way you've been living will help you make some necessary adjustments that will lead to a more creative and interesting future. Don't worry about what others do -- follow your heart. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Look around you and make personal changes that will bring you added confidence, greater satisfaction and improve your love life. Real estate investments or fixing up your residence will help your assets grow. Romance is highlighted. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Concentrate on the changes you can make at home that will better your life. A last-minute change someone makes must not alter your plans or leave you feeling confused. Use your imagination and your skills to improve your surroundings. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You'll be offered help, but before you accept, find out what it will cost financially, emotionally or physically. You may be best to go it alone or negotiate your position and what you are willing to give in order to receive. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Expect to face a roadblock. Challenge anyone who gets in your way or criticizes you. Be willing to let someone walk away if it is in your best interest. Try to surround yourself with positive, upbeat and helpful people. Birthday Baby: You are observant, charming and persuasive. You are brave and outspoken. 52—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com SUNDAYDAYTIME 7 AM WRCBNBC WELFTBN WTNB WFLICW WNGHPBS DAYSTAR WTVCABC WTCIPBS WDSIFOX WDEFCBS QVC CSPAN WGN-A HSN E! ESQTV LIFE TLC TBS TNT USA FX ESPN ESPN2 FSTN SEC GOLF FS1 SPSO WEA CNBC MSNBC CNN HDLN FNC HIST TRUTV A&E DISC NGC TRAV FOOD HGTV ANPL FAM DISN NICK TOON TVLND AMC TCM HALL OXYGEN BRAVO SYFY SPIKE COM MTV VH1 CMTV BET SCIENCE CSPAN2 EWTN WPXA ION DISXD GSN COOK WE GALA TELE UNIV NBCSP DLC 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 83 85 100 107 117 144 153 163 217 223 224 311 319 7:30 APRIL 26, 2015 8 AM 8:30 9 AM 9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 12 PM 12:30 1 PM 1:30 2 PM SUNDAYAFTERNOON/EVENING 4 PM WRCBNBC WELFTBN WTNB WFLICW WNGHPBS DAYSTAR WTVCABC WTCIPBS WDSIFOX WDEFCBS QVC CSPAN WGN-A HSN E! 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(N) (Live) Å Basketball Arthur ’ (EI) Wild Kratts Curious Cat in the Hat Tennessee First Things The A List Charlie Rose McLaughlin Antiques Roadshow Å Chattanooga Escape From a Nazi Death Nazi Mega Weapons Å Nazi Mega Weapons Å Leading-Way Olivet Baptist Tomorrow’s Church J. Van Impe Chapel Fox News Sunday Brunch Larry King ›› “The Switch” (2010) Jennifer Aniston. Å ›› “The Last Castle” (2001) Robert Redford. Å Tommy Bates Abba’s In Search It Is Written CBS News Sunday Morning (N) ’ Å Face/Nation Church Methodist FREE Wen! AAA Benefit Best Cook Army Knife Bull Riding PGA Tour Golf Serta Computers & Tablets Sundays With Carolyn & Dan Computers & Tablets In the Kitchen With David Computers & Tablets Washington Journal Live call-in program with officials. (N) ’ (Live) Newsmakers Senate Session ’ Washington This Week ’ Washington Search--Way FeelSexy Key of David Sexy In 2015! In the Heat of the Night ’ ›› “A Walk to Remember” (2002) Shane West. Å ››› “Out of Sight” (1998) George Clooney, Jennifer Lopez. Å ›› “The Art of War” (2000) Å HP Innovations (N) Serious Skin Care (N) TanTowel (N) LOX Hair Stu Kitchen Innovations (N) Serious Skin Care (N) Serious Skin Care (N) Skin Care TanTowel (N) Home Solutions (N) Kitchen Innovations (N) E! News Weekend Good Work Botched “I Love New Work” Botched “Boob-Watch” The Royals The Royals The Royals The Royals The Royals Car Match. Car Match. Car Match. ››› “Lethal Weapon 3” (1992, Action) Mel Gibson, Danny Glover. ›› “Lethal Weapon 4” (1998, Action) Mel Gibson, Danny Glover, Joe Pesci. Best Bars in America Best Bars in America In Touch W/Charles Stanley Amazing Jeremiah Joel Osteen FeelSexy Unsolved Mysteries Å › “Deadly Honeymoon” (2010) Summer Glau. Å “The Good Mother” (2013, Suspense) Helen Slater. Å “Til Death Do Us Part” Å Paid Program Paid Program Shaun T’s Sexy In 2015! Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes 19 Kids and Counting Å 19 Kids and Counting Å 19 Kids and Counting Å King King Friends ’ Friends ’ Friends ’ Friends ’ › “Just Married” (2003) Ashton Kutcher, Brittany Murphy. › “Something Borrowed” (2011) Ginnifer Goodwin, Kate Hudson. ›› “Bad Teacher” (2011) Cameron Diaz. Law & Order Å (DVS) Law & Order Å (DVS) Law & Order “Doped” ’ Law & Order Å (DVS) Law & Order “Shotgun” ’ Law & Order “Fed” ’ ›› “The Scorpion King” (2002) The Rock. (:45) ›››› “The Dark Knight” (2008) CleanPower! Jeremiah Pastor Chris Joel Osteen Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met ››› “The Amazing Spider-Man” (2012, Action) Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, Rhys Ifans. ››› “The Incredible Hulk” (2008, Action) Edward Norton, Liv Tyler. ››› “Thor” (2011, Action) SportsCenter Å SportsCenter (N) Å Outside Lines Reporters SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å College Baseball Alabama at Mississippi. From Swayze Field in Oxford, Miss. (N) (Live) Bassmasters Å Bassmasters (N) Å SportsCenter (N) Å Outside Lines Reporters SportsCenter Special 30 for 30 Å 30/30 Shorts NHRA Drag Racing O’Reilly Auto Parts SpringNationals. Body Beast! ShipShape Backyard Top Blower Paid Program 21 Day Fix Golf Life UEFA Mag. Game 365 Destination Ball Up: Search for the Next Braves Live! MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves at Philadelphia Phillies. 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Silver Eagles P90X 21 DAY FIX Paid Program T25 Bodies! 21 DAY FIX Lockup: Raw Business Up W/Steve Kornacki (N) Melissa Harris-Perry (N) Weekends With Alex Witt Taking the Hill Meet the Press Å Caught on Camera New Day Sunday (N) New Sunday Ins. Politics State of the Union (N) Fareed Zakaria GPS (N) Reliable Sources (N) Å State of the Union Fareed Zakaria GPS CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom New Day Sunday (N) HLN Weekend Express New Sunday Ins. Politics State of the Union (N) Fareed Zakaria GPS (N) HLN Weekend Express What Would You Do? Å Fareed Zakaria GPS CNN Newsroom (6:00) FOX and Friends Sunday (N) Sunday Morning Futures MediaBuzz (N) News HQ Housecall America’s News HQ Fox News Sunday Jour. Housecall Shelby’s Greatest Hits Vol. 1 Shelby Shelby Shelby Shelby Shelby Shelby Ax Men ’ Å Ax Men ’ Å Ax Men “Davi and Goliath” Ax Men “Jet Logged” Å Ax Men “Log Runners” ’ Best Pressure Cooker! Paid Program CleanPower! Look Good Naked Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Dog Dog Dog the Bounty Hunter ’ Criminal Minds ’ Å Criminal Minds ’ Å Criminal Minds ’ Å Bates Motel “Norma Louise” Bates Motel ’ Å The Returned “Rowan” ’ The First 48 ’ Å Paid Program Paid Program Joel Osteen In Touch North America ’ Å Everest: Beyond the Limit Everest: Beyond the Limit Everest: Beyond the Limit Bear Grylls: Man vs. Everest Last Frontiersman ’ Å Naked and Afraid ’ Å Army Knife Sexy Face at BISSELL 24 Ladders Wicked Tuna Wicked Tuna The Raft “Boiling Point” Explorer Biker Chicks Outlaw Bikers Spike Ingrao. Outlaw Bikers Mysteries at the Castle Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Bizarre Bizarre Bizarre Bizarre Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods America Rachael Ray’s Contessa Heartland T. Pioneer Wo. Trisha’s Sou. Daphne D. 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Flipped Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Untamed and Uncut Å Animal Cops Houston Å Rocky Mtn Bounty Hunters Rocky Mtn Bounty Hunters Ice Cold Gold ’ Å Ice Cold Gold ’ Å River Monsters ’ River Monsters ’ River Monsters ’ ›› “Can’t Buy Me Love” (1987) Patrick Dempsey. ››› “The Breakfast Club” (1985) Emilio Estevez. ›› “Stick It” (2006) Jeff Bridges, Missy Peregrym. › “What a Girl Wants” (2003) Amanda Bynes, Colin Firth. ›› “A Cinderella Story” Sofia Jake and the Pirates Tmrrwland Dog Austin & Ally Austin & Ally Girl Meets Liv & Maddie Jessie Å “Teen Beach Movie” (2013) Ross Lynch. ’ Mickey Liv & Maddie Liv & Maddie Austin & Ally Austin & Ally Odd Parents Odd Parents Rangers SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Teenage Mut. SpongeBob Henry Danger Henry Danger Thundermans Thundermans Nicky, Ricky Nicky, Ricky Bella Make It Pop Pokémon: XY Teen Titans Teen Titans Gumball Gumball Teen Titans Teen Titans Clarence Clarence Steven Univ. Steven Univ. Uncle Gra. Uncle Gra. Teen Titans Teen Titans Clarence Clarence Gumball (:12) The Brady Bunch Å Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls (:12) The Golden Girls Å Golden Girls Instant Mom The Soul Man Cleveland Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ (6:59) Mad Men Å (7:58) Mad Men Å TURN: Washington’s Spies (:02) ›› “The Shadow Riders” (1982) Tom Selleck. ‘PG’ ››› “We Were Soldiers” (2002, War) Mel Gibson, Madeleine Stowe. ‘R’ Å ››› “Jurassic Park” (6:00) ›› “Bitter Sweet” ››› “The Private Life of Henry VIII” (1933) Å ›› “Algiers” (1938) Charles Boyer, Hedy Lamarr. ››› “Le Mans” (1971, Action) Steve McQueen. Å ››› “The Spanish Main” (1945) Paul Henreid. Å I Love Lucy I Love Lucy The Middle The Middle Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls “All of My Heart” (2015, Romance) Lacey Chabert. Å ›› “In My Dreams” (2014) Katharine McPhee. Å ›› “Elevator Girl” (2010) Total Gym Paid Program My Wife-Kids My Wife-Kids Fashion Prancing Snapped: Killer Couples Snapped: Killer Couples Snapped: Killer Couples Snapped: Killer Couples Snapped: Killer Couples Snapped “Ana Trujillo” Housewives/NYC Happens Housewives/Atl. Happens (9:58) Blood, Sweat & Heels Blood, Sweat & Heels Blood, Sweat & Heels Blood, Sweat & Heels Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. 21 DAY FIX Best Vac! The Twilight Zone ’ Å ›› “Dinocroc vs. Supergator” (2010) David Carradine. ›› “Dinoshark” (2010, Horror) Eric Balfour, Aarón Díaz. “Robocroc” (2013) Corin Nemec, Steven Hartley. “Mega Shark vs.” Total Gym Body Beast! Shaun T’s T25 Bodies! Off Road Engine Power Truck Tech Muscle Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue “I Smell a Rat” Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue ’ Shaun T’s T25 Bodies! Com. Central Key & Peele Key & Peele (:33) ›› “American Wedding” (2003, Comedy) Jason Biggs. Å (11:55) ›› “Dinner for Schmucks” (2010) Steve Carell, Paul Rudd. Å ››› “Hot Tub Time Machine” (2010) Catfish: The TV Show ’ Catfish: The TV Show ’ Teen Mom Maci is expecting. Teen Mom ’ Å ››› “Mean Girls” (2004) Lindsay Lohan, Rachel McAdams. ’ (:20) ››› “The Perks of Being a Wallflower” (2012) Logan Lerman. VH1, Music The Buzz Re Top 20 Video Countdown Top 20 Video Countdown The Ride Jessie J. ’ (:05) Saturday Night Live “SNL’s NFL Saturday” ’ Å (:15) ›› “Radio” (2003, Drama) Cuba Gooding Jr., Ed Harris, Alfre Woodard. ’ CMT Music ’ CMT Music ’ Hot 20 Countdown A countdown of the biggest music videos. Å Reba Å (:35) Reba ’ (:10) Reba ’ (:45) Reba ’ Å (:20) Reba ’ (2:55) Reba Bucket BET’s Morning Inspiration Peter Popoff Pastor Chris Bobby Jones Gospel Å Lift Voice Lift Voice ››› “The Color Purple” (1985) Whoopi Goldberg. Based on Alice Walker’s portrait of a rural black woman. Å Madea’s Big Happy Family How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made How/Made Book Hero’s Fight (7:55) Book TV ’ Book Discussion on ISIS Exposed ’ Publicly Shamed After Words ’ (:01) Book TV Light Roosevelt Open Phones With H. Hewitt (:42) Book TV St. Michael Holy Rosary Sunday Mass (N) Å Litany Heart Bookmark Vaticano (N) God Weeps Vocation Holy Rosary Holy Mass With Priestly Ordinations Heroic Chesterton Mercy Holy Rosary Jeremiah Youssef In Touch W/Charles Stanley Bucket-Dino Bucket-Dino Doki ’ (EI) Doki ’ (EI) Dive, Olly Dive, Olly ›››› “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial” (1982) Henry Thomas. ’ ››› “The Fugitive” (1993) Harrison Ford. The 7D Mickey Hulk Marvel’s Av. Ultimate Phineas and Ferb Å Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb Phineas, Ferb Penn Zero Penn Zero Penn Zero Penn Zero DDP Yoga KeithUrban Eat & Lose DrDense Deal or No Deal ’ Å Deal or No Deal ’ Å Deal or No Deal ’ Å Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Good Eats Good Eats Good Eats Good Eats Grandmother Grandmother Unwrap2.0 Orig Emeril Unwrap2.0 Unwrap2.0 Unwrap2.0 Unwrap2.0 Unwrap2.0 Unwrap2.0 Man Fire Emeril Eat the Street Eat the Street Tummy Tuck Fighting Perricone MD FeelSexy Look Good Naked Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Roseanne ’ Pagado Best Cook ·El horno Sin dolor El NutriBullet! Chapulín Chapulín El Chavo El Chavo El Chavo El Chavo María P. Luche Vecinos Hospital Hospital Pagado Pagado Raggs ’ Noodle Chica LazyTown ’ Pagado Videos Asom. Fútbol Inglés Arsenal FC vs Chelsea FC. (N) (SS) Enfoque (N) ›› “The Storm Warriors” (2009) Aaron Kwok. ’ (SS) › Skyline ’ Pagado Pagado Como Dice el Dicho (SS) La Rosa de Guadalupe Al Punto (N) (SS) Tras la Verdad Fútbol Central (N) (SS) Fútbol Mexicano Primera División: Toluca vs Tijuana República Deportiva (N) Premier Premier League Live (N) English Premier League Soccer Premier English Premier League Soccer Arsenal FC vs Chelsea FC. Premier League Goal Zone Premier League Download IndyCar Racing Prison Wives ’ Å Prison Wives ’ Å Prison Wives Debra Wilmont. Trauma: Life in the ER ’ Trauma: Life in the ER ’ Trauma: Life in the ER ’ Trauma: Life in the ER ’ Trauma: Life in the ER ’ NY ER Å NY ER Å 4:30 5 PM APRIL 26, 2015 5:30 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 12 AM 12:30 (3:00) NHL Hockey Conference Quarterfinal: Teams TBA. News Nightly News Dateline NBC (N) ’ Å A.D. The Bible Continues ’ A.D. The Bible Continues (N) (:01) American Odyssey (N) News Scandal ’ Å Castle Å John Hagee Marriage Bal. Living Greg Dickow T.D. Jakes Joyce Meyer Lead the Way The Blessed Joel Osteen Kerry Shook K. Copeland Creflo Dollar ››› “The Shoes of the Fisherman” (1968, Drama) Anthony Quinn. Bless Lord Perry Stone Around Town God’s Light Around Town Prayer Time Unity Bluegrass Westmore Church of God Dugger Mt. Nashville WTNB Sports Westmore Church of God Country Music Today GSL: Cities of Champions Anger Anger Access Hollywood (N) Å The Closer Å The Good Wife ’ Å Bones ’ Å Mike & Molly Mike & Molly How I Met How I Met The Office ’ The Office ’ (3:00) Reagan ’ Å America’s Ballroom Chall Weekend Rick Steves Masterpiece Classic Å Call the Midwife (N) Å (:05) Masterpiece Classic (N) Wolf Hall on Masterpiece (N) (:03) Masterpiece Classic ’ Call the Midwife ’ Å Supernatural! Keith Moore D. Jeremiah J. Ankerberg Jeffress F.K. Price T.D. Jakes Power/ Living Rejoice in the Lord Ankerberg Michael Rod Parsley Green Room Hal Lindsey End of Age Franklin The Blessed NBA Basketball: Clippers at Spurs News World News Funniest Home Videos Once Upon a Time “Lily” (N) Secrets and Lies (N) Å (:01) Revenge “Aftermath” News (:35) Ring of Honor Wrestling Outdoorsman Civil War: The Untold Story Weekend Charlie Rose All Creatures Great & Small Secrets of the Tower Call the Midwife (N) Å (:05) Masterpiece Classic (N) Wolf Hall on Masterpiece (N) (:06) Independent Lens ’ Å Window Last Cstle Hollywood ›› “National Security” (2003) Martin Lawrence. Å Simpsons Burgers Simpsons Brooklyn Family Guy Last Man FOX61 First Seinfeld ’ The Good Wife ’ Å Blue Bloods “Devil’s Breath” PGA Tour Golf Zurich Classic of New Orleans, Final Round. Ray Charles CBS News 60 Minutes (N) ’ Å Madam Secretary (N) Å The Good Wife (N) ’ Å Battle Creek “Old Wounds” News Joel Osteen Face/Nation Joint Relief Honora Jewelry Collection Computers & Tablets Calista Tools Hair Care Serta Computers & Tablets Susan Graver Style Easy wear and care fashions. Honora Jewelry Collection (3:30) Washington This Week ’ Washington Newsmakers White House Dinner Washington Q & A ’ British House of Commons Road to the White House ’ Q & A ’ British House of Commons (2:30) ›› “The Art of War” ›› “The Guardian” (2006, Drama) Kevin Costner, Ashton Kutcher, Sela Ward. ›› “Fantastic Four” (2005, Action) Ioan Gruffudd. Å Salem “Book of Shadows” Salem “Book of Shadows” Salem “Book of Shadows” Serious Skin Care (N) Serious Skin Care (N) Home Solutions (N) HP Innovations (N) TanTowel (N) LOX Hair Stu Serious Skin Care (N) Serious Skin Care (N) Innovation Month (N) Electronic Home Innovations The Royals ››› “Bridesmaids” (2011, Comedy) Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph, Rose Byrne. Kardashian Kardashian The Royals (N) Kardashian The Royals Best Bars in America Best Bars in America NCIS: Los Angeles ’ Å NCIS: Los Angeles “LD50” NCIS: Los Angeles ’ Å NCIS: Los Angeles ’ Å Brew Dogs “Berlin” Brew Dogs “Louisville” Brew Dogs “Brooklyn” (3:00) “Til Death Do Us Part” ›› “Lizzie Borden Took an Ax” (2014) Christina Ricci. Lizzie Borden Chronicles Lizzie Borden Chronicles Lizzie Borden Chronicles Lizzie Borden Chronicles Lizzie Borden Chronicles Lizzie Borden Chronicles (3:00) 19 Kids and Counting 19 Kids 19 Kids 19 Kids and Counting Å 19 Kids and Counting Å Medium Medium Long Island Medium (N) ’ Who Do You Think You Are? Long Island Medium Å Who Do You Think You Are? Bad Teacher ››› “Knocked Up” (2007) Seth Rogen, Katherine Heigl. (DVS) Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang ››› “Knocked Up” (2007) Seth Rogen. (DVS) (2:45) ›››› “The Dark Knight” (2008) Christian Bale. NBA Tip-Off NBA Basketball Toronto Raptors at Washington Wizards. (N) (Live) Å NBA Basketball Houston Rockets at Dallas Mavericks. (N) (Live) Å Inside the NBA (N) Å Basketball Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam (3:00) ››› “Thor” (2011, Action) ››› “Captain America: The First Avenger” (2011, Action) Chris Evans. ››› “Marvel’s the Avengers” (2012, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans. ››› “Marvel’s the Avengers” (2012) Robert Downey Jr. College Football SportsCenter (N) Å Sunday Night Countdown MLB Baseball New York Mets at New York Yankees. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å SportsCenter NHRA Drag Racing MLS Soccer Los Angeles Galaxy at New York Red Bulls. 30 for 30 Å Year of the Quarterback Video Gaming: Heroes of the Dorm (N) (Live) ESPN FC (N) Basketball MLB Baseball Braves Live! Braves Live! Game 365 PowerShares Champions Series Tennis World Poker UFC Unleashed (N) World Poker World Poker UFC Unleashed (N) SEC Now (N) College Softball South Carolina at Mississippi. (N) (Live) SEC Now (N) (Live) College Football Spring Game: Tennessee. (Taped) College Football Spring Game: Arkansas. SEC Now Baseball PGA Tour Golf LPGA Tour Golf Swinging Skirts Classic, Final Round. From San Francisco. (N) (Live) Golf Central (N) (Live) PGA Tour Golf Zurich Classic of New Orleans, Final Round. From Avondale, La. (3:00) College Baseball Kansas State at Baylor. (N) Å Moments Pure Sports MLS Soccer Toronto FC at Orlando City SC. (N) (Live) Å MLS Soccer Portland Timbers at Seattle Sounders FC. (N) Garbage UFC Notorious Gators Auburn Foot MLL Lacrosse Rochester Rattlers at New York Lizards. (N) (Live) Cheerlder Women’s College Lacrosse College Softball Iowa State at Baylor. MLL Lacrosse Tornado Alley Å Tornado Alley Å Tornado Alley Å Tornado Alley Tornado Alley Brainstormers (N) Prospectors Prospectors Brainstormers Fighting Gaither WEN Hair 4 Seasons Grand Ole Hank Secret Lives On Money America’s Gun: The Rise “Cocaine Cowboys II” Mexico’s Drug War ››› “Cocaine Cowboys” (2006, Documentary) Caught on Camera Caught on Camera Caught on Camera Caught on Camera Caught on Camera Locked Up Abroad Locked Up Abroad Lockup: Pendleton Lockup: Pendleton CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Anthony Bourdain Parts Anthony Bourdain Parts Anthony Bourdain Parts High Profits “Hazard Pay” Anthony Bourdain Parts Anthony Bourdain Parts CNN Newsroom Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File CNN Newsroom Anthony Bourdain Parts Anthony Bourdain Parts Anthony Bourdain Parts Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File Forensic File America’s News HQ MediaBuzz Fox News Sunday FOX Report (N) Legends & Lies: Real West Legends & Lies: Real West Stossel FOX News Special FOX News Special Ax Men “Cuts Like a Knife” Ax Men “Fall of a Legend” Ax Men “Rock Bottom” ’ Ax Men “Great Logs of Fire” Ax Men “All Hands on Deck” Ax Men “Axpocalypse” ’ Shelby Shelby Shelby Shelby (12:01) Ax Men ’ Å Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Hack My Life Hack My Life Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers The First 48 ’ Å The First 48 ’ Å 8 Minutes “Gorilla Pimped” Intervention “Sandi” Å Intervention “Daniel” Å Intervention “Sarah” Å Intervention “Samantha” (N) (:01) 8 Minutes ’ Å (12:01) Intervention “Daniel” Naked and Afraid ’ Å Naked and Afraid ’ Å Naked and Afraid ’ Å Naked and Afraid ’ Å Naked and Afraid ’ Å Naked and Afraid: Uncen Naked and Afraid (N) Å Naked and Afraid ’ Å Naked and Afraid ’ Å Outlaw Bikers Outlaw Bikers Outlaw Bikers ’ Å Wicked Tuna Wicked Tuna Wicked Tuna (N) (:06) The Raft “To the Bone” (:06) Wicked Tuna (12:06) The Raft Food Parad. Food Parad. Food Paradise Å Food Paradise Å Food Paradise Å Bourdain: No Reservations Breaking Borders (N) Å No Reservations (N) Å The Layover with Bourdain Breaking Borders Å Chopped “First Responders” Chopped All-Star Academy Guy’s Grocery Games Guy’s Grocery Games (N) Spring Baking Championship Cutthroat Kitchen (N) Cutthroat Kitchen Spring Baking Championship Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Lakefront Lakefront Caribbean Caribbean Island Life Island Life Hunters Hunters Int’l Caribbean Caribbean River Monsters ’ River Monsters ’ Å River Monsters ’ River Monsters (N) ’ River Monsters (N) ’ River Monsters (N) ’ Ice Cold Gold “Eqi Gold” (N) River Monsters ’ Ice Cold Gold “Eqi Gold” ’ (3:00) “A Cinderella Story” ›› “The Princess Diaries” (2001) Julie Andrews, Anne Hathaway. ›› “The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement” (2004) Anne Hathaway. ›››› “The Little Mermaid” (1989, Fantasy) Pat Carroll Joel Osteen Dr. Jeremiah Jessie Å Jessie Å Jessie Å Austin & Ally Austin & Ally K.C. Under. K.C. Under. Pre-Show The 2015 Radio Disney Music Awards (N) The 2015 Radio Disney Music Awards ’ Liv & Maddie Austin & Ally Good-Charlie Good-Charlie SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Breadwinners SpongeBob Harvey Beaks Sanjay, Craig Full House Full House Full House Full House Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Friends ’ (:36) Friends The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air Gumball Gumball Teen Titans Teen Titans Advent. Time Advent. Time Advent. Time Advent. Time King of Hill King of Hill Jack Cleveland Cleveland Family Guy Family Guy China, IL (N) Aqua Unsupervised Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Raymond Raymond King King King King Friends ’ Friends ’ (3:00) ››› “Jurassic Park” (1993) Sam Neill. ‘PG-13’ ››› “The Green Mile” (1999) Tom Hanks. A guard thinks an inmate has a supernatural power to heal. ‘R’ Å Mad Men “Time & Life” (N) TURN: Washington’s Spies (12:05) Mad Men Å ›››› “The Pride of the Yankees” (1942) Gary Cooper. (:15) ››› “Sleeper” (1973, Comedy) Woody Allen. Å ›› “What’s the Matter With Helen?” (1971) Å ›››› “Singin’ in the Rain” (1952) Gene Kelly. ››› “The Ace of Hearts” (3:00) ›› “Elevator Girl” “Portrait of Love” (2014, Romance) Jason Dohring. Å “A Wish Come True” (2015, Romance) Megan Park. Å “Bridal Wave” (2015, Drama) Arielle Kebbel. Å Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Snapped: Killer Couples Snapped: Killer Couples Snapped: Killer Couples Snapped: Killer Couples Snapped: Killer Couples Snapped: Killer Couples (N) Snapped “Janet Harrell” Snapped “Omaima Nelson” Snapped: Killer Couples Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Prancing Happens Blood, Sweat & Heels (N) Housewives/Atl. Fashion Housewives “Mega Shark vs.” “Sharktopus” (2010) Eric Roberts, Kerem Bursin. “Lake Placid vs. Anaconda” (2015) Robert Englund. “Piranhaconda” (2012) Michael Madsen, Rachel Hunter. “Ghost Shark” (2013) Mackenzie Rosman, Richard Moll. Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue ’ Lip Sync Lip Sync Lip Sync Lip Sync Lip Sync Lip Sync Bar Rescue ’ Bar Rescue “El Moronte!!” “Hot Tub Time Machine” (4:49) ›› “The Rocker” (2008) Rainn Wilson, Christina Applegate. Å ››› “Dumb & Dumber” (1994, Comedy) Jim Carrey, Jeff Daniels. ››› “Dumb & Dumber” (1994, Comedy) Jim Carrey, Jeff Daniels. Amy Schumer Catfish: The TV Show ’ Catfish: The TV Show ’ Catfish: The TV Show ’ Catfish: The TV Show ’ Catfish: The TV Show ’ ››› “Mean Girls” (2004, Comedy) Lindsay Lohan. ’ ›› “Mean Girls 2” (2011, Comedy) Meaghan Martin. ’ (3:55) ›› “Romeo Must Die” (2000, Action) Jet Li, Aaliyah. ’ ››› “New Jack City” (1991) Wesley Snipes, Ice-T. ’ Å Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Love ›› “Romeo Must Die” (2000, Action) Jet Li, Aaliyah. ’ (3:30) ›› “The Bucket List” (2007) Jack Nicholson. The Dukes of Hazzard The Dukes of Hazzard The Dukes of Hazzard The Dukes of Hazzard The Dukes of Hazzard The Dukes of Hazzard Cops Rel. Cops Rel. 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Teen Mom ’ Å Teen Mom “The F Bomb” Teen Mom Teen Mom “The F Bomb” Teen Mom T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta “Say Goodbye” (N) Swab Stories Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Love Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Love (3:00) ›› “Days of Thunder” (1990) Å Reba Å Reba Å (:40) Reba “As Is” ’ Å (:20) Reba ’ Reba Å Reba Å Ron White: A Little Unprofessional Å Ron White: Salute to the Troops 2014 Cops Rel. Fresh Prince Fresh Prince ››› “What’s Love Got to Do With It” (1993) Angela Bassett, Laurence Fishburne. “Four Seasons” (2014) Keith Robinson. Premiere. Being Mary Jane Å Xperiment Xperiment The Wendy Williams Show To Be Announced Countdown to Catastrophe Countdown to Catastrophe Chaos Chaos Countdown to Catastrophe Countdown to Catastrophe (2:00) U.S. Senate Coverage (N) ’ (Live) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’ Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’ Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ With Jesus Rosary Kids Truth in Heart Bookmark EWTN News Friar Ales Daily Mass - Olam The Journey Home (N) EWTN News Holy Rosary World Over Live Symbolon Women of Daily Mass - Olam Criminal Minds ’ Criminal Minds “Hit” ’ Criminal Minds “Run” ’ Criminal Minds ’ Criminal Minds “The Pact” Criminal Minds ’ Criminal Minds ’ Criminal Minds ’ Criminal Minds ’ (3:00) ›› “The Game Plan” (2007) Å The 2015 Radio Disney Music Awards Star-For. Penn Zero Star-For. Randy: Ninja Star-Rebels Star-For. Penn Zero Penn Zero Star-For. Randy: Ninja Star-Rebels Star-For. Deal-No Deal Deal-No Deal Deal or No Deal ’ Å Family Feud Lie Detectors Family Feud Family Feud Newlywed Newlywed Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Unwrap2.0 Unwrap2.0 Unwrap2.0 Unwrap2.0 Donut Best Thing Unique Eats Unwrapped Best Thing Best Thing Unique Eats Unwrapped Unwrap2.0 Unwrap2.0 Good Eats Good Eats Best Thing Best Thing CSI: Miami “L.A.” ’ Å CSI: Miami “Getting Axed” CSI: Miami “Dishonor” ’ CSI: Miami ’ Å CSI: Miami “Backfire” Å CSI: Miami “Meltdown” ’ CSI: Miami “All Fall Down” CSI: Miami “L.A.” ’ Å CSI: Miami “Getting Axed” Mujer/Vida Noticiero Con Paola Rojas El Chavo La Rosa de Guadalupe Como Dice el Dicho (SS) La Familia La Familia La Familia La Familia La Familia La Familia El Chavo Noticiero Con Joaquin Noticias María Celeste Caso Cerrado Caso Cerrado Videos Asom. Noticiero Caso Cerrado: Edición Avenida Brasil “Capítulo 6” Tierra de Reyes (N) (SS) El Señor de los Cielos (N) Al Rojo Vivo Titulares Tierra de Reyes ’ (SS) El Gordo y la Flaca (N) Primer Impacto (N) (SS) P. Luche Noticiero Uni. La Sombra del Pasado (N) Amores con Trampa (N) Hasta el Fin del Mundo (N) Que te Perdone Impacto Noticiero Uni Contacto Deportivo (N) Auto Racing NASCAR America (N) Å The Ultimate Draft Show (N) NHL Live (N) ’ (Live) NHL Hockey Conference Quarterfinal: Teams TBA. (N) ’ (Live) NHL Overtime Blazers Premier League Review Blazers Premier Trauma: Life in the ER ’ Trauma: Life in the ER ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Sex Sent Me to the E.R. ’ Sex Sent Me Sex Sent Me Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Sex Sent Me to the E.R. ’ 54—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Lee Business students prepared tax forms for Life Bridges clients A group of Lee University business students from Lee’s Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program recently visited Life Bridges to provide clients with assistance on tax preparations. Life Bridges is a local organization dedicated to serving individuals with physical and intellectual disabilities in the Cleveland area. They offer occupational, physical, nutritional, speech, and behavioral therapy services, as well as a day program, resi- dential services, and outside employment opportunities to service recipients. “Being able to provide tax return service to an organization that does so much good for the local community is what our students thrive on,” said Dr. Randy Miedaner, VITA program director and assistant professor of business at Lee. “This was a natural fit for our community service involvement.” Lee University’s VITA service is available to the entire community. Now in its eighth year, VITA is a tax return preparation service for any qualified individuals or families whose maximum gross annual income does not exceed $50,000. For those wishing to get their returns done next year, sign-up will occur the second week of February in 2016. For more information about the VITA program, contact Lee’s Department of Business at 423614-8160. sTaTerep.danhowell receives a check from Cindy Wheeler, left, of St. Barnabas at Siskin Hospital and Diana Miller of Siskin Hospital’s Subacute Rehabilitation Program, at the Tennessee Health Care Association’s annual charity giveaway. Howell wins money for charity NASHVILLE — Sixty legislators won a total of almost $10,000 in donations for charities in their communities during the Tennessee Health Care VITaVolunTeers pose with two Life Bridges clients and Life Bridges CFO Ginger Davis. From left Association’s annual “Partnering rear are Candis Ellis, client, Cody Borsellino, Kyle Weldy, Kyle Ma and Caleb Hiddleson. Seated are for Charity” event March 18 at Katie Buuck, client, Dr. Randy Miedaner and Davis. The Hermitage Hotel, including Rep. Dan Howell, who won $200 for The Caring Place. Each year, the charity give- away is a highlight of THCA’s Legislative Conference, an event that brings long-term care professionals together with state lawmakers to discuss what it takes to provide quality services for the state’s elderly and disabled. “Every year, our members look forward to this event,” said THCA Executive Director Jesse Samples. “It is a great opportunity to join forces with legislators to give back to the areas they serve.” THCA is a nonprofit association representing long-term care facilities throughout the state. For more information about longterm care in Tennessee, contact THCA at 615-834-6520 or visit www.thca.org. Ducktown Miners Homecoming Gospel Night to feature Singing Cookes, Cooke Brothers Southern Gospel recording artists The Singing Cookes along with the Cooke Brothers will be performing at the Ducktown Miners Homecoming Gospel Night on Friday evening, June 26, beginning at 7 at the William R. Lee Stage (located behind the old Ducktown Banking Company building) in Ducktown The Bradley County Democratic Women recently elected new officers. From left are Historian Hubert and Jeanette Cooke Carolyn Harris, Secretary Jamie Hargis, President Angela Minor, Vice President Dr. Tammy Magouirk were God-inspired to start and Treasurer Pam Edgemon. singing together back in 1962, and were regular guests on the Mull’s Singing Convention during the 1970s to 1990s and staples on Southern gospel radio. Their hits include, “He Rows Me Over The Tide” and “I Want Us To Be Together In Heaven.” Their sons, the Cooke Brothers, are also scheduled to perform as well as local group, Back To Bethany from Fannin County, Ga. Admission to the event is free, just please bring your lawn chair if possible. Food vendors will be available. The Gospel Night is part of the Ducktown Miners Homecoming, a two-day festival that will be celebrating its 40th consecutive year in 2015. For information about vending or hosting an event at this year’s festival please contact Doug Collins at 423-241-2284. ——— www.singingcookes.com www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—55 Downtown Dine Around sampling tour returns Thursday at 10 sites By TONY EUBANK Banner Staff Writer DOWNTOWN DINE AROUND will feature a sampling tour at 10 downtown restaurants, live music at four locations and retailers open with specials. MainStreet Cleveland has announced that one of last year’s most popular and talked about events is back. The 2015 Downtown Dine Around sampling tour is scheduled for Thursday, April 30, from 5 to 8 p.m. This year’s is even bigger and better with 10 restaurants participating, live music in four locations, a free carriage ride with your ticket, and retailers open with specials. Downtown boasts locally owned and operated restaurants of variety and quality, ranging from fine dining to casual. The Downtown Dine Around is MainStreet’s way of showcasing these delicious dining options and for the public to get a taste of them all for one low price. Enjoy food samples at each of the 10 downttown dining establishments, all within easy walking distance. Live jazz music will fill the air with performers located on Ocoee Street, Broad Street, 1st Street, and at First Street Square. Participating restaurants include Café Roma, Cobblestone Grill, The Spot, Catch Bar & Grill, CBC Cleveland, Bon Life Coffee, The Five Point Square, Mash & Hops, Side Street Café, and Mexi Wings. Retail stores will be open that evening and offering specials including Haskell Interiors, Meagher & Meagher Furniture, Museum Store, Razzberry’z, Hyderhangout, Steelwood Rustic Furniture (now open next to Bon Life Coffee) and The Red Ribbon. The event debuted in May of last year to a sellout crowd and was so popular that a second one was held in October. "There are such talented chefs in these locally owned and operated restaurants. This event showcases these talents and gives the community a chance to experience the unique atmospheres of each location,” said MainStreet President Sharon Marr. Advance tickets are on sale now for $20 and are available at Café Roma, Catch Bar & Grill, and the Bank of Cleveland Main Office. Tickets are $25 if purchased during the event and will be available at the Courthouse Plaza. Please note that tickets are limited to 400 to make it manageable for restaurant owners and have previously sold out. For more information, visit mainstreetcleveland.com or call 479-1000. DELICIOUS fOOD will be the focus of Downtown Dine Around tour on Thursday. This photo was taken at Mexi-Wing on Broad Street. Your Best Shot Recent photos — within the last year — may be submitted for Your Best Shot by emailing gwen.swiger@cleveland banner.com, mailing good quality photos to Your Best Shot, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600 or dropping them off at 1505 25th St. DONNA HOPPER has a family of Eastern Bluebirds nesting in her birdhouse. Photos above show them taking insects for their young. At left a rose-breasted grosbeak takes food from Hopper’s bird feeder. KEISHA BAKER shared this photo of a rainbow. ABSOLUTE ESTATE Saturday, MAY 9th, 2015 Beginning at 10:30 AM PREVIEW Sunday, May 3 from 1-3 Friday, May 8 from 10-4 Nice 3 Bedroom Home & Extra Lot on the Beautiful Hiwassee River in Bradley County 916 Eads Bluff Road NW Georgetown, TN 37336 Beautiful Home on River • Bradley County • Good Water • Covered Boat Dock • Boat Ramp • 3 Bedrooms • 3 Baths • Unfinished Basement with Garage • Hardwood Flooring • Granite Counter Tops • Roof & Central H&A, 2 years old • Sunroom with Beautiful River Views DIRECTIONS: From I-75, Exit 25, travel west onto Georgetown Rd (Hwy 60), turn right onto Eureka Rd, AUCTION PREVIEW travel 5.5 miles, turn left onto Lower River Rd, travel Sunday, May 3 from 1 to 3 pm less than one mile, turn right onto Eads Bluff Road. Friday, May 8 from 10 am to 4 pm Property is one mile on the right. Watch for Signs. ABSOLUTE ESTATE AUCTION – NO MINIMUMS – NO RESERVES Property Like This Doesn’t Come Along Very Often!! NICE TEMPERATURES and plenty of rain have made many flowers and bushes in the community brighten up with blooms. These photos, left and above, are courtesy of Sharon Guy. Live on the Beautiful Hiwassee River in Bradley County Beautiful River Views!! HOUSE & EXTRA LOT SOLD SEPARATELY OR Email us at terrysposey@aol.com TOGETHER Terms: $30,000 nonrefundable earnest money will be required on day of sale on house tract, $15,000 on vacant lot. Funds may be personal, business or cashiers check. Balance due within 30 days. 10% buyers premium applies. No Minimums! No Reserve! Visit our Website www.terryposey.com for more pictures & information 56—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Memories haunt both sides of Gallipoli tragedy, 100 years on GALLIPOLI, Turkey (AP) — Whenever he leaves the house, Kenan Ersoz hides the bayonet his father used to defend the crumbling Ottoman Empire against the British-led invasion of Gallipoli a century ago. The father saw it as a friend that kept him alive. The son keeps it as his most prized possession. The campaign is no less present for descendants of soldiers from Australia and New Zealand who played a leading role for the other side. John Carnell traveled from Sydney with his wife, Carol, and two children, Kate and Tom, to visit spots where his greatgrandfather landed on the peninsula — and where he was mortally wounded months later. In the lottery to obtain tickets for the 100th anniversary commemoration this week, Carnell wanted his children to come more than he wanted to come himself. “People only really die when The campaign’s enduring the living stop talking about poignancy may be that it forged them,” he said. “I can bang on national identities for countries about my ancestor for another on both sides. 20 years or so. My children can Mustafa Kemal Ataturk used do it for 50 and they can tell his prominence as a commandtheir grandchildren.” er at Gallipoli, known as As world leaders gather Canakkale to the Turks, to vault Thursday and Friday with the into prominence, lead Turkey’s descendants, the memories of War of Independence — and one of the most harrowing cam- ultimately found the Turkish paigns of the 20th century have Republic. Similarly, the tragic come surging back to life. The fate of troops from Australia doomed Allied offensive to and New Zealand, who played a secure a naval route from the key role in the campaign, is said Mediterranean to Istanbul to have inspired an identity disLEGAL PUBLICATION through the Dardanelles, and tinct from Britain. The anniverSUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE Sale at public auction will be on May 28, 2015 on or take the Ottomans out of the sary of the start of the land about 11:00AM local time, at the Bradley County war, resulted in over 130,000 campaign on April 25, known as Courthouse, Cleveland, Tennessee, conducted by deaths on both sides. It came to ANZAC Day, after the Australia the Substitute Trustee as identified and set forth be seen as a folly of British war and New Zealand Army Corps, is marked as a coming of age for herein below, pursuant to Deed of Trust executed planning. by JONATHAN TODD CORDELL AND KEVIN MICHAEL CORDELL, to ARNOLD M. WEISS, ATTORLEGAL PUBLICATION NEY, Trustee, on September 21, 2005, at Record Notice Book 1578, Page 334 as Instrument No. 05018341 Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be in the real property records of Bradley County Reg- held on the 11th day of May, 2015 at 3:00 p.m. by ister's Office, Tennessee. the City Council of the City of Cleveland, TennesOwner of Debt: WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL see at their regular meeting place in the Cleveland ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR MORGAN STAN- Municipal Building, 190 Church Street, NE, to hear LEY ABS CAPITAL I INC. TRUST 2006-WMC1, public comments concerning the FY2016 City MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SE- Budget. The hearing is open to the public. RIES 2006-WMC1 Witness my hand this 26th day of April, 2015. The following real estate located in Bradley County, CITY OF CLEVELAND, TENNESSEE Tennessee, will be sold to the highest call bidder Shawn McKay, City Clerk subject to all unpaid taxes, prior liens and encum- April 26, 2015 brances of record: LOCATED IN THE FIRST CIVIL DISTRICT OF BRADLEGAL PUBLICATION LEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE, TO-WIT: SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE LOT 10 IN TIMBER HILL ESTATES, SECTION Sale at public auction will be on May 28, 2015 on or THREE, A PLAT OF WHICH IS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 3, PAGE 218, IN THE REGISTER`S OFFICE about 11:00AM local time, at the Bradley County Courthouse, Cleveland, Tennessee, conducted by OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE. SAID LOT IS MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS the Substitute Trustee as identified and set forth BEGINNING IN THE NORTHEAST LINE OF TIMBER herein below, pursuant to Deed of Trust executed HILLS DRIVE, 162.6 FEET NORTHWEST OF WHERE by JANNUTH M FARMER AND BILLY SEAN SAID LINE OF SAID DRIVE WOULD BE INTER- FARMER, to WESLEY D. TURNER, Trustee, on June SECTED BY THE NORTHWEST LINE OF TWIN OAKS 19, 2006, at Record Book 1654, Page 3 as InstruCOURT(A CUL-DE-SAC), IF SAID LINES OF SAID ment No. 06012024 in the real property records of DRIVE AND COURT WERE EXTENDED TO THEIR Bradley County Register's Office, Tennessee. INTERSECTING POINTS, ON THE MOST WESTERLY Owner of Debt: HSBC BANK USA, NATIONAL ASSOCORNER OF LOT9, AS SHOWN ON SAID PLAT; AND CIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE RUNNING THENCE WITH SAID LINE OF SAID DRIVE HOLDERS OF THE CITIGROUP MORTGAGE LOAN ON SAID PLAT; THENCE WITH SOUTHEAST LINE TRUST INC., ASSET-BACKED PASS-THROUGH CEROF LOT 11, NORTH 23 DEGREES 34 FEET EAST, TIFICATES, SERIES 2007-SHL1 119.9 FEET TO THE SOUTHWEST LINE OF THE The following real estate located in Bradley County, LAND OF DALE; THENCE WITH SAID LINE OF Tennessee, will be sold to the highest call bidder DALE, SOUTH 63 DEGREES EAST, 80 FEET TO THE subject to all unpaid taxes, prior liens and encumMOST NORTHERLY CORNER OF SAID LOT 9; brances of record: THENCE WITH NORTHWEST LINE OF LOT 9, LOCATED IN THE THIRD CIVIL DISTRICT OF SOUTH 23 DEGREES 35 FEET WEST 120.6 FEET BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEETO-WIT: TO THE BEGINNING, AS SHOWN BY SURVEY OF OS- LOTS SEVENTY-EIGHT (78) AND SEVENTY-NINE (79), EASTVIEW SUBDIVISION, PROPERTY OF J.A. CAR G DYKES, JR., DATED JUNE 5, 1971. THE GRANTOR`S SOURCE OF INTEREST IS A DEED RAMSEY, WHICH PLAT IS DULY RECORDED IN RECORDED IN BOOK 373, PAGE 742, IN THE REG- PLAT BOOK 2, PAGE 166, IN THE REGISTER`S OFISTER`S OFFICE OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNES- FICE OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE. BEING THE SAME PROPERTY CONVEYED TO JANSEE. THE LEGAL DESCRIPTION OF THE HEREIN DE- NUTH M. HIGGINS BY DEED FROM MARTHA A. SCRIBES PROPERTY IS THE SAME AS IN THE LANGLEY, SINGLE, DATED 12/20/02 AND RECORDED IN BOOK 1272, PAGE 563 IN THE REGISDEED TO PRIOR TITLE. SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIONS RECORDED IN MISC. TER`S OFFICE OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE. BOOK 85, PAGE 678, IN THE REGISTER`S OFFICE SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIONS AS SET OUT IN DEED BOOK 118, PAGE 372, IN THE SAID REGISTER`S OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE. BEING THE SAME PROPERTY CONVEYED TO RON- OFFICE. NIE ROE BY DEED FROM BETTY ROE AND FILED SUBJECT TO ANY APPLICABLE GOVERNMENTAL FOR RECORD ON FEBRUARY 17, 2004 IN BOOK ORDINANCES OR SUBDIVISION REGULATIONS IN 1408, PAGE 846, OR INSTRUMENT NO. N/A, REG- EFFECT THEREON. ISTER`S OFFICE FOR HAMILTON COUNTY, TEN- M/P 65L-A-9.00 GR NESSEE. COMMONLY KNOWN AS: 1021 29TH STREET ST, Tax ID: 167J-G-006/073C-E-010.00 Current Owner(s) of Property: JONATHAN TODD CLEVELAND, 37323 Tax ID: 651a9 CORDELL AND KEVIN MICHAEL CORDELL The street address of the above described property Current Owner(s) of Property: JANNUTH M FARMER is believed to be 3460 TIMBER HILL DRIVE SOUTH- AND BILLY SEAN FARMER EAST, CLEVELAND, TN 37323, but such address is The street address of the above described property not part of the legal description of the property is believed to be 1021 29TH STREET SE, CLEVEsold herein and in the event of any discrepancy, LAND, TN 37323, but such address is not part of the legal description referenced herein shall con- the legal description of the property sold herein and in the event of any discrepancy, the legal detrol. SALE IS SUBJECT TO OCCUPANT(S) RIGHTS IN scription referenced herein shall control. SALE IS SUBJECT TO OCCUPANT(S) RIGHTS IN POSSESSION. THE RIGHT IS RESERVED TO ADJOURN THE DAY POSSESSION. OF THE SALE TO ANOTHER DAY, TIME AND PLACE THE RIGHT IS RESERVED TO ADJOURN THE DAY CERTAIN WITHOUT FURTHER PUBLICATION, UPON OF THE SALE TO ANOTHER DAY, TIME AND PLACE ANNOUNCEMENT AT THE TIME AND PLACE FOR CERTAIN WITHOUT FURTHER PUBLICATION, UPON THE SALE SET FORTH ABOVE. THE ANNOUNCEMENT AT THE TIME AND PLACE FOR SALE SET FORTH ABOVE. THE TRUSTEE/SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE RESERVES THE THE RIGHT TO RESCIND THE SALE. IF THE SALE IS TRUSTEE/SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE RESERVES THE SET ASIDE FOR ANY REASON, THE PURCHASER AT RIGHT TO RESCIND THE SALE. IF THE SALE IS THE SALE SHALL BE ENTITLED ONLY TO A RE- SET ASIDE FOR ANY REASON, THE PURCHASER AT TURN OF THE DEPOSIT PAID. THE PURCHASER THE SALE SHALL BE ENTITLED ONLY TO A RESHALL HAVE NO FURTHER RECOURSE AGAINST TURN OF THE DEPOSIT PAID. THE PURCHASER SHALL HAVE NO FURTHER RECOURSE AGAINST THE GRANTOR, THE GRANTEE, OR THE TRUSTEE. OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: JPMORGAN CHASE THE GRANTOR, THE GRANTEE, OR THE TRUSTEE. OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: None BANK NA JUNIOR LIEN THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT AND THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. THAT PURPOSE. If applicable, the notice requirements of T.C.A. If applicable, the notice requirements of T.C.A. 35-5-117 have been met. 35-5-117 have been met. All right of equity of redemption, statutory and oth- All right of equity of redemption, statutory and otherwise, and homestead are expressly waived in said erwise, and homestead are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. Substitute Trustee. If the U.S. Department of Treasury/IRS, the State If the U.S. Department of Treasury/IRS, the State of Tennessee Department of Revenue, or the State of Tennessee Department of Revenue, or the State of Tennessee Department of Labor or Workforce De- of Tennessee Department of Labor or Workforce Development are listed as Interested Parties in the ad- velopment are listed as Interested Parties in the advertisement, then the Notice of this foreclosure is vertisement, then the Notice of this foreclosure is being given to them and the Sale will be subject to being given to them and the Sale will be subject to the applicable governmental entities’ right to re- the applicable governmental entities’ right to redeem the property as required by 26 U.S.C. 7425 deem the property as required by 26 U.S.C. 7425 and T.C.A. §67-1-1433. and T.C.A. §67-1-1433. This property is being sold with the express reser- This property is being sold with the express reservation that the sale is subject to confirmation by vation that the sale is subject to confirmation by the lender or trustee. This sale may be rescinded at the lender or trustee. This sale may be rescinded at any time. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the any time. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a re- Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the deposit paid. The Purchaser shall have turn of the deposit paid. The Purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Mortgagor, the no further recourse against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee or the Mortgagee’s attorney. Mortgagee or the Mortgagee’s attorney. MWZM File No. 15-000435-670 MWZM File No. 14-002187-670 JASON S. MANGRUM, J.P. SELLERS, LORI LIANE JASON S. MANGRUM, J.P. SELLERS, LORI LIANE LONG, Substitute Trustee(s) LONG, Substitute Trustee(s) PREMIER BUILDING, SUITE 404 PREMIER BUILDING, SUITE 404 5217 MARYLAND WAY 5217 MARYLAND WAY BRENTWOOD, TN 37027 BRENTWOOD, TN 37027 PHONE: (615) 238-3630 PHONE: (615) 238-3630 EMAIL: TNSALES@MWZMLAW.COM EMAIL: TNSALES@MWZMLAW.COM April 19, 26; May 3, 2015 April 26; May 3, 10, 2015 both nations. Carnell’s great-grandfather, Francis George Carnell, was so eager he had to lie about his age. That was a common ploy for teenagers of the day. But Francis was 55 — and too old to enlist. He had already fought in wars in South Africa for the British. After being promoted to lance corporal in training, he landed at what is now known as Anzac cove among the early waves of soldiers. On April 25, 1915, they were rowed in at dawn to narrow beaches with scant cover only to encounter rugged hills and scorching fire by well concealed Turkish defenders. John Carnell knows little about what happened next, except that somehow his ancestor, despite his age, made it up the beach to fight in one of the iconic battles of the campaign. The fight for the Turkish position of “Lone Pine” — launched by Australian battalions — cost heavy losses on both sides. On Saturday, Australians will commemorate that battle following a dawn service at Anzac Cove, near a memorial with the names of dead soldiers, including. F.G. Carnell. On Aug. 7, Francis George Carnell was wounded and evacuated to a hospital ship. He died on Aug. 10, according to John Carnell, and was buried at sea. He left behind a wife and one son, who had thirteen children. That same summer, Mehmet Emin Ersoz — Kenan’s father — was also gravely injured. The father talked little of the war, and Kenan thinks it was because he wanted to spare the children his suffering. But there was no hiding it. “We could see the ugly side of war on my father’s body,” he said. “His feet were full of wounds. There were callused pieces between his flesh and bones.” His father carried shrapnel in his head until he died in 1970. Kenan was told his father was wounded “when the grapes on the peninsula were ripe” — placing it in August or early September. Mehmet Emin Ersoz was proud to keep his bayonet closeby until death. But he regretted having to carry the enemy’s metal with him, too. “That was the one thing that saddened him most,” Kenan Ersoz said. Ersoz said nothing good came from the battles except Turkey’s defense: “War, as it has long been, consists of blood, gunpowder, pain, tears.” John Carnell sees a more positive message — one that comes from the onetime enemy. On Australian flags embroidered with his ancestor’s records, there’s also a quote from Ataturk that pays tribute to the fallen from Australia and New Zealand: “You are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us,” the eulogy reads. “They have become our sons as well.” LEGAL PUBLICATION SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE Sale at public auction will be on May 28, 2015 on or about 11:00AM local time, at the Bradley County Courthouse, Cleveland, Tennessee, conducted by the Substitute Trustee as identified and set forth herein below, pursuant to Deed of Trust executed by JOEL LYNN CROSS AND KIMBERLY JEAN CROSS, to MORRIS, SCHNEIDER, PRIOR LLC, Trustee, on June 29, 2001, at Record Book 1126, Page 994 in the real property records of Bradley County Register's Office, Tennessee. Owner of Debt: Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. as Trustee for Option One Mortgage Loan Trust 2001-C, Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2001-C The following real estate located in Bradley County, Tennessee, will be sold to the highest call bidder subject to all unpaid taxes, prior liens and encumbrances of record: LOCATED IN THE THIRD CIVIL DISTRICT OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE, TO-WIT: LOT THIRTY-SEVEN (37), PEACH ORCHARD HILL ACRES, AS SHOWN BY PLAT OF RECORD IN PLAT BOOK 4, PAGE 99, REGISTER`S OFFICE OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE. FOR PRIOR TITLE SEE WARRANTY DEED FROM JOHN E. GLOVER AND WIFE, MURIEL G. PALMER GLOVER F/K/A MURIEL G. PALMER TO JOEL LYNN CROSS AND WIFE, KIMBERLY JEAN CROSS AS RECORDED JUNE 28, 1988 IN DEED BOOK 314, PAGE 544, REGISTER`S OFFICE OF BRADLEY COUNTY, TENNESSEE. Tax ID: 051I-B-002.00-000 Current Owner(s) of Property: JOEL LYNN CROSS AND KIMBERLY JEAN CROSS The street address of the above described property is believed to be 313 PEACHTREE CIRCLE, CLEVELAND, TN 37323, but such address is not part of the legal description of the property sold herein and in the event of any discrepancy, the legal description referenced herein shall control. SALE IS SUBJECT TO OCCUPANT(S) RIGHTS IN POSSESSION. THE RIGHT IS RESERVED TO ADJOURN THE DAY OF THE SALE TO ANOTHER DAY, TIME AND PLACE CERTAIN WITHOUT FURTHER PUBLICATION, UPON ANNOUNCEMENT AT THE TIME AND PLACE FOR THE SALE SET FORTH ABOVE. THE TRUSTEE/SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE RESERVES THE RIGHT TO RESCIND THE SALE. IF THE SALE IS SET ASIDE FOR ANY REASON, THE PURCHASER AT THE SALE SHALL BE ENTITLED ONLY TO A RETURN OF THE DEPOSIT PAID. THE PURCHASER SHALL HAVE NO FURTHER RECOURSE AGAINST THE GRANTOR, THE GRANTEE, OR THE TRUSTEE. OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: None THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. If applicable, the notice requirements of T.C.A. 35-5-117 have been met. All right of equity of redemption, statutory and otherwise, and homestead are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. If the U.S. Department of Treasury/IRS, the State of Tennessee Department of Revenue, or the State of Tennessee Department of Labor or Workforce Development are listed as Interested Parties in the advertisement, then the Notice of this foreclosure is being given to them and the Sale will be subject to the applicable governmental entities’ right to redeem the property as required by 26 U.S.C. 7425 and T.C.A. §67-1-1433. This property is being sold with the express reservation that the sale is subject to confirmation by the lender or trustee. This sale may be rescinded at any time. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the deposit paid. The Purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee or the Mortgagee’s attorney. MWZM File No. 14-005246-670 JASON S. MANGRUM, J.P. SELLERS, LORI LIANE LONG, Substitute Trustee(s) PREMIER BUILDING, SUITE 404 5217 MARYLAND WAY BRENTWOOD, TN 37027 PHONE: (615) 238-3630 EMAIL: TNSALES@MWZMLAW.COM April 26, 2015; May 3, 10, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—57 ‘SAIGON HAS FALLEN’ A reporter’s view of Vietnam War’s end “The city was holding its breath. We had always feared that the Vietnamese would mob us if we ever tried to leave. But they realized on that last day that we were their last hope. If they turned against us, there was no way out of the country.” — former CIA analyst Frank Snepp (EDITOR’S NOTE — More than two decades of war in Vietnam, first involving the French and then the Americans, ended with the last days of April 1975. Peter Arnett, who won a Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of combat for The Associated Press and later gained fame as a CNN correspondent, has written a new memoir, “Saigon Has Fallen,” about his dozen-plus years reporting on Vietnam. Arnett has recounted this period before but approaches it with a fresh perspective for the 40th anniversary of the war’s end. The book is published by RosettaBooks in partnership with The Associated Press (www.ap.org/books). This is an edited excerpt, focused on the war’s final throes.) —Artillery explosions sound a fearsome 4 a.m. wake-up call, but I’m already awake. The attackers waiting at the gates of a vanquished Saigon have been warning they would act, and now with each thump of the Soviet-made 130mm guns, sound waves rustle the curtains of my open seventh floor hotel window. As I reach for my water glass, it trembles, and me with it. The last full day of the Vietnam War is beginning. Street lights shine below as I look out toward Tan Son Nhut airport, once described as the busiest in the world when America was waging war here. Now it is burning from one end to the other, the flames brilliantly lighting up the sky. There will be two more hours of darkness, but this seems like a new dawn rising, an appropriate description, I think later, of the intentions of those wreaking havoc on the airport this morning, April 29, 1975. The commanders of North Vietnam’s military juggernaut, pressing for victory after a 50-day rout of their South Vietnamese opponents, are pushing open the gates of the capital. They will force a new dawn on South Vietnam, America’s once favored ally, as it loses its 20-year struggle to remain an independent, pro-western state. After watching the destruction of the airport, I phone the Associated Press office a few blocks away, and my colleague Ed White answers. He and George Esper, the bureau chief, have been up all night working the telex communications link with our New York headquarters. White tells me the American embassy confirms major damage at the airport with the runways probably unusable. American planners have been intending to airlift out of the country several thousand more vulnerable Vietnamese allies today, but what can they do now? Soon afterward, from an upstairs hotel balcony as daylight approaches I can clearly see thick black smoke hanging over the airport like a funeral shroud. I’m joined by a few news colleagues, all of us knowing we are watching momentous history unfold right before our eyes. As the sky brightens we see a Vietnamese air force transport plane, a de Havilland Caribou, rise sharply above the airport. Suddenly, it seems to break in half, bursting into flames and falling in pieces to the ground. Stricken silent by this horrifying spectacle, we see a second aircraft following the same path and suffering the same fate, like the first undoubtedly a victim of ground fire. It seems there’ll be no escape for anyone from the airport today. At the American Embassy, Ambassador Graham Martin is in disbelief, committed as he is to evacuating as many vulnerable Vietnamese as possible before the communists arrive. He insists on personally checking the airport tarmac. After the war, Martin would tell me, “It didn’t make sense to me that we couldn’t physically come in with transport planes. I wanted to check it for myself, to make my own judgment. It would have made a difference. We could have gotten five or ten thousand more people out. “ Reaching the airport, Martin finds a usable runway amidst the still-burning buildings, but little security. He worries about a repeat of the earlier airport panics in Danang and Nhatrang that had hundreds of desperate people fighting with soldiers and police to get on departing rescue aircraft. He tells me, “I decided it was not worth the risk. I picked up the phone and I told Secretary (of State Henry) Kissinger to inform the president that we have go to Option Four immediately, to the helicopter airlift for the remaining Americans, and as many Vietnamese as we can take.” But Martin’s urgent instruction is lost somewhere down the line. The airlift does not begin for several hours. Option Four is code for Operation Frequent Wind, planned as a large-scale evacuation of people to American Navy ships off the coast. Most of the passengers for the final helicopter lifts have been chosen in advance, alerted to keep listening to Armed Forces Radio for a signal. Thirteen helicopter pickup points have been selected around Saigon, using the small UH-1 Huey ships for the tops of tall buildings and the much bigger CH-53 Sea Knights for the American Defense Department compound at the airport and the embassy grounds. Those waiting to depart include the large contingent of international journalists covering the story. During the past week some have considered the possibility of remaining behind and seeing what transpires, but their home offices expect them to leave with the last Americans because of the uncertainty of the future. I know that Esper wants to stay. He’s been here too long to miss the final moments of his most important story. Me too, and I message AP president Wes Gallagher, explaining that because I was AP Photo In thIs Oct. 12, 1965, file photo, Associated Press correspondent Peter Arnett stands beside the burned-out wreckage of an A1 Skyraider near Bien Hoa, Vietnam, north of Saigon. More than two bitter decades of war in Vietnam ended with the last days of April 1975. AP Photo In thIs APrIl 29, 1975, file photo, South Vietnamese civilians try to scale the 14-foot wall of the U.S. embassy in Saigon, trying to reach evacuation helicopters as the last Americans departed from Vietnam. here at the war’s beginnings it’s worth the risk to document the final hours. With us is Matt Franjola, an AP reporter in the region for several years. Esper sends a message to his boss, “Request you please reconsider...” Gallagher does. The three of us will stay. As I drive through the city, I see crowds gathering at intersections and arguing. Several million people are now estimated to be living in Saigon, many of them recent refugees from the countryside. Not everyone wants to leave, but several hundred thousand believe their lives have been compromised in the eyes of the communists by their association with America and its policies, and are desperate to get out. I drive by Saigon’s port and see small ships crowded with people setting off down the river. The former CIA analyst Frank Snepp remembered that time in an interview with me after the war: “The city was holding its breath. We had always feared that the Vietnamese would mob us if we ever tried to leave. But they realized on that last day that we were their last hope. If they turned against us, there was no way out of the country.” No one is killed in the shameful melees that are to follow, but the mad scrambles to go anywhere but Vietnam remain today an ignominious coda to the already bleak history of America’s last years in Vietnam. The main crisis See SAIGON, Page 58 LEGAL PUBLICATION NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE STATE OF TENNESSEE, BRADLEY COUNTY WHEREAS, James D Gray executed a Deed of Trust to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Walker Jackson Mortgage Corporation, Lender and David A Harris, Trustee(s), which was dated March 25, 2009 and recorded on April 1, 2009 in Book 1898, Page 378-387, Bradley County, Tennessee Register of Deeds. WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debt(s) and obligation(s) thereby secured by the said Deed of Trust and the current holder of said Deed of Trust, U.S. Bank National Association, not in its individual capacity but solely as Trustee of SW REMIC Trust 2014-1 without recourse, (the “Holder”), appointed the undersigned, Brock & Scott, PLLC, as Substitute Trustee, by an instrument duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Bradley County, Tennessee, with all the rights, powers and privileges of the original Trustee named in said Deed of Trust; and NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust by the Holder, and that as agent for the undersigned, Brock & Scott, PLLC, Substitute Trustee, by virtue of the power and authority vested in it, will on May 5, 2015, at 12:00PM at the usual and customary location at the Bradley County Courthouse, Cleveland, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in Bradley County, Tennessee, to wit: Certain real property situate in 4th Civil District of Bradley County, Tennessee, and described as follows, to-wit: Being Lots 218 and 219, South Gate Subdivision, as shown by plat of record in Plat Book 2, Page 62, Register's Office of Bradley County, Tennessee, to which record reference is hereby made for a more particular description thereof. Being all of the same property conveyed to James D. Gray by Warranty Deed from Hank W. Wilson, unmarried, dated March 8, 2006 and filed of record in Book 1622, Page 271, Register's Office for Bradley County, Tennessee. Parcel ID Number: 065K C 016.00 Address/Description: 2806 Blackburn Road Southeast, Cleveland, TN 37323. Current Owner(s): James D. Gray. Other Interested Party(ies): N/A The sale of the property described above shall be subject to all matters shown on any recorded plat; any and all liens against said property for unpaid property taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or set-back lines that may be applicable; any prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority created by a fixture filing; a deed of trust; and any matter than an accurate survey of the premises might disclose; and All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. This office is attempting to collect a debt. Any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Brock & Scott, PLLC, Substitute Trustee c/o Tennessee Foreclosure Department 277 Mallory Station Road Suite 115 Franklin, TN 37067 PH: 615-550-7697 FX: 615-550-8484 File No.: 15-05245 FC01 April 12, 19, 26, 2015 LEGAL PUBLICATION NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE STATE OF TENNESSEE, BRADLEY COUNTY WHEREAS, Mark A. Weber and Kelly A. Weber executed a Deed of Trust to Bank of Cleveland, Lender and David S. Humberd, Trustee(s), which was dated November 20, 2009 and recorded on December 1, 2009 in Book 1945, Page 288, Bradley County, Tennessee Register of Deeds. WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debt(s) and obligation(s) thereby secured by the said Deed of Trust and the current holder of said Deed of Trust, U.S. Bank National Association, (the “Holder”), appointed the undersigned, Brock & Scott, PLLC, as Substitute Trustee, by an instrument duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Bradley County, Tennessee, with all the rights, powers and privileges of the original Trustee named in said Deed of Trust; and NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust by the Holder, and that as agent for the undersigned, Brock & Scott, PLLC, Substitute Trustee, by virtue of the power and authority vested in it, will on May 5, 2015, at 12:00PM at the usual and customary location at the Bradley County Courthouse, Cleveland, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in Bradley County, Tennessee, to wit: Located in The Second Civil District of Bradley County, Tennessee: A portion of Lot Three (3), Woodmore Estates, as shown by plat of record in Plat Book 3, Page 252, in the Register's Office of Bradley County, Tennessee. Said portion of Lot Three (3) is more particularly described as: Beginning on an iron pin set in the Southeasternmost line of Sipes Road at the Northwesternmost corner of Lot Three (3) and the Southwesternmost corner of Lot Two (2), Woodmore Estates Subdivision; and run thence with the common dividing line between Lots Two (2) and Three (3), South 66 degrees 58 minutes West, 457 feet, to an existing iron pin; thence South 23 degrees 01 minutes West, 190.60 feet to an iron pin corner; thence North 66 degrees 58 minutes West 461.88 feet to an iron pin set in the Southeasternmost line of Sipes Road; and run thence with said line of said road, North 24 degrees 29 minutes East 190.66 feet to the beginning. Being a part of the same real estate conveyed to Donald R. Miller and wife, Karen A. Miller by Warranty Deed form Daniel W. Leviner by Attorney in Fact, Wanda K. Keviner, dated February 28, 1996 and recorded in Book 375, Page 113, in the said Register's Office. Subject to restrictions as set out in instrument recorded in Misc. Book 87, Page 381, in the Register's Office of Bradley County, Tennessee. Subject to Fifteen (15) foot Utility Easement, as shown or as specified on said recorded plat. Subject to five (5) foot Drainage/Utility Easement on interior lot line, as shown or as specified on said recorded plat Subject to One Hundred (100) foot Building Setback Lines, as shown or as specified on said recorded Plat. Subject to any governmental zoning and subdivision ordinances in effect thereon. Parcel ID Number: 048 098.01 Address/Description: 557 Sipes Road Southwest, Cleveland, TN 37311. Current Owner(s): Mark A. Weber. Other Interested Party(ies): N/A The sale of the property described above shall be subject to all matters shown on any recorded plat; any and all liens against said property for unpaid property taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or set-back lines that may be applicable; any prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority created by a fixture filing; a deed of trust; and any matter than an accurate survey of the premises might disclose; and All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. This office is attempting to collect a debt. Any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Brock & Scott, PLLC, Substitute Trustee c/o Tennessee Foreclosure Department 277 Mallory Station Road Suite 115 Franklin, TN 37067 PH: 615-550-7697 FX: 615-550-8484 File No.: 14-25266 FC01 April 12, 19, 26, 2015 58—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com AP Photo AP Photo In thIs APrIl 29, 1975, file photo, a helicopter lifts off from the U.S. embassy in Saigon, Vietnam, In thIs Aug. 19, 1965, file photo, made by Peter Arnett, a U.S. Marine who was wounded in the head as he fought against the Viet Cong from inside an amphibious tank, is led to an evacuation heli- during the evacuation of authorized personnel and civilians. More than two bitter decades of war in copter landing zone at Van Tuong, Vietnam. More than two bitter decades of war in Vietnam ended with Vietnam ended with the last days of April 1975. the last days of April 1975. Today, 40 years later, Arnett has written a new memoir, “Saigon Has Fallen,” on the roof of the embassy. detailing his experience covering the war for The Associated Press. “I decided it was not worth the risk. I picked up the phone and I told Secretary (of State Henry) Kissinger to inform the president that we have go to Option Four immediately, to the helicopter airlift for the remaining Americans, and as many Vietnamese as we can take.” — Ambassador Graham Martin AP Photo In thIs APrIl 30, 1975 photo, the last three staffers in The Associated Press’ Saigon bureau, reporters Matt Franjola, left, Peter Arnett, rear, and George Esper, second from right, are joined by two North Vietnamese soldiers and a member of the Viet Cong on the day the government of South Vietnam surrendered. One of the soldiers is showing Esper the route of his final advance into the city. More than two bitter decades of war in Vietnam ended with the last days of April 1975. Today, 40 years later, Arnett has written a new memoir, “Saigon Has Fallen,” detailing his experience covering the war for The AP. Saigon From Page 57 unfolds in and around the U.S. Embassy, a six-story building with a concrete lattice facade that serves to keep the building cool and deflect incoming missiles. When the helicopters start emerging from the leaden afternoon skies to pick up the chosen few, a stampede begins. By late afternoon an estimated 10,000 desperate Vietnamese have advanced on the embassy, shoving to get close to the iron gates and the high walls, and when they do get there, endeavoring to claw themselves over. The U.S. Marine security force strives to get control, only to meet with shouted protests and insults. That evening, I write a story for the AP that begins: “Ten years ago I watched the first U.S. Marines arrive to help Vietnam. They were greeted on the beaches by pretty Vietnamese girls in white silken robes who draped flower garlands about their necks. A decade has passed, and on Tuesday I watched the U.S. Marines shepherding Americans out of South Vietnam. “They were the same clean-cut looking young men of a decade ago. But the Vietnamese were different. Those who didn’t have a place for them on the last helicopters - and there were thousands left behind - hooted, booed and scuffled with the Marines trying to secure the landing zones. Some Vietnamese threw themselves over walls and wire fences, only to be thrown back by Marines. “Bloodshed was avoided seemingly only by good luck and bad aim on the part of some angry Vietnamese who shot at a few departing buses and helicopters.” There are mixed signals and questionable decisions. By evening, there is a growing awareness that some of the 13 designated pickup points have not been visited by any helicopters, leaving some of the most vulnerable Vietnamese, many of them CIA workers, to the mercy of the arriving communists. Snepp is inside the embassy that night, and tells me later, “Americans have been criticized that day in Saigon for their sins of omission, but the heroes that day were the embassy officers who pursued their way through the crowds and risked their lives to get their friends on those helicopters. If the Americans salvage anything of their honor from the last day of the war it is due to the young men who did the legwork during the evacuation while the ambassador and his aides sat back in the embassy trying to figure out what went wrong.” The monsoon is coming to Saigon, arriving along with the North Vietnamese who from the beginning of this offensive have been in a race against the weather. They know the heavy tanks and artillery pieces they use to support their overwhelming conventional attacks can easily bog down in the mud. From the slippery roof of the Eden Building where the AP office is located, I watch through the rainy mist as the dark shapes of helicopters come and go. At 2 the following morning, April 30, the U.S. embassy needs to destroy all its communications equipment in preparation for final departure. Martin refuses to leave until all the people he feels responsible for are evacuated. Around 5 a.m., a young helicopter crewman comes into his office and hands him a note scrawled on the back of a pad. Martin tells me later: “I will never forget it... The message says, ‘The president of the United States directs that Ambassador Martin come out on this helicopter.’” Around 7:30 a.m., another helicopter, a Sea Knight, swoops low over John F. Kennedy Square (soon to be renamed) and settles Through binoculars I see a group of Marines running to the open doors of the big ship. It zooms across the city on its way to its carrier offshore. I eventually learn the Marines were part of a security group commanded by Maj. James Kean, and were temporarily forgotten in the confusion of the evacuation. Eventually, the sounds of the helicopters are replaced by human voices. Hearing angry shouting, I spot a dozen people in the middle of Lam Son Square arguing over possession of a kingsized bed. The looting of America’s abandoned buildings has begun. Franjola and I walk up toward the American Embassy. We see a few bodies on the streets, maybe thieves killed by angry citizens, or the thieves’ victims. We see a crowd outside the embassy in a mood opposite the anger of the previous day. They are laughing, comparing looted stuff they’ve dragged out. Inside, smiling locals are trying to smash open a heavy safe with a sledgehammer. On a pile of wet documents and broken furniture on the back lawn we find the bronze plaque engraved with the names of the five American servicemen who died in the attack on the building in the opening hours of the Tet Offensive in 1968. Together, we carry it back to the AP office. Esper insists on manning the office, just as he has done for most of the previous 10 years. He is listening to Saigon Radio in the monitoring room with our interpreter who soon shouts, “Surrender, it’s surrender!” President Duong Van Minh is announcing complete capitulation; it’s now official. Esper rushes to message New York. Esper is looking gaunt, his eyes See FALL, Page 59 HARRY’S WATCH & CLOCK REPAIRS & SALES • Antique Watches & Clocks (423) 472-0724 60 YEARS EXPERIENCE ESTATE AUCTION SALE Thursday, May 14th @ 6:00 pm Open House: Thursday, MAY 7th: 4:30 - 6:00 pm AP Photo In thIs APrIl 10, 1965, file photo, made by Associated Press correspondent Peter Arnett, newlylanded U.S. Marines make their way through the sands of Red Beach at Da Nang, Vietnam on their way to reinforce the air base as South Vietnamese Rangers battled guerrillas about three miles south of the beach. Arnett has written a new memoir, “Saigon Has Fallen,” detailing his experience covering the war for The AP. 403 Apache Trail, NW Cleveland, TN The Estate of Jessie Ruth Ramsey DIRECTIONS: Cleveland, TN: Hwy 11 North. Turn west onto Sequoia Road. Go past North Lee School. Go 1/4 to Apache Trail, NW. Property is the second house on the left. 403 Apache Trail, NW. See Don Harris Auction & Realty Auction signs. Need Money for Spring Projects? Lot 64 of Sequoia Grove S/D :HRIIHULQVWDOOPHQWORDQVIURP $324 to $1,298* Contact us today at (423) 339-0400 WRGLVFXVVDORDQIRU\RX :H'R7D[HV 2524 Keith St NW Ste 1 Cleveland TN 37312 ZZZVHFXULW\¿QDQFHFRP $OOORDQVDUHVXEMHFWWRFUHGLWOLPLWDWLRQVDQGRXUXQGHUZULWLQJSROLFLHVLQFOXGLQJYHUL¿DEOHDELOLW\WRUHSD\$FWXDOORDQSURFHHGVPD\ YDU\EDVHGXSRQORDQWHUPV'ROODUDPRXQWVDUHURXQGHGWRWKHORZHVWZKROHGROODUDQGDUHVXEMHFWWRFKDQJH Brochure & other Info On Site 10% Buyers' Premium Applies Come Prepared to Buy $10,000 Down on Sale Day See Web Site for Terms and Conditions www.donharrisauctionandrealty.com AUCTIONEER'S REMARKS: This brick home has 3 Bedrooms; 2 Baths; fireplace; carport and Garage. 2,200 sq. ft. Finished. Near by to Schools and Mall. The house was built in 1967, therefore Buyers will be asked to sign a lead paint disclosure. Announcements made on Auction Day take precedence over all written materials. No warranty expressed or implied. In all transactions, the Auction Company is acting as agent for the sellers, only. All information herein is deemed correct, but not guaranteed. www.landmanauction.com DON HARRIS AUCTION & REALTY 423-284-3295 or 336-1124 T.A.L. #2383 T.A.F.L. #4381 Sale Conducted by DONALD W. HARRIS T.R.E.B.L. #23597 T.R.E.F.L.#256606 7608 Candies Creek Ridge Rd, NW Charleston, TN www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—59 Diet Pepsi dropping aspartame because of customer concerns NEW YORK (AP) — PepsiCo says it’s dropping aspartame from Diet Pepsi in response to customer feedback and replacing it with sucralose, another artificial sweetener commonly known as Splenda. The decision to swap sweeteners comes as Americans keep turning away from popular diet sodas. Rival Coca-Cola said this week that sales volume for Diet Coke, which also uses aspartame, fell 5 percent in North America in the first three months of the year. Atlanta-based Coca-Cola said in a statement that it has no plans to change the sweetener in Diet Coke, which is the country’s top-selling diet cola. The Food and Drug Administration says aspartame, known by the brand names Equal and NutraSweet, is “one of the “In 13 years of covering the Vietnam War I never most exhaustively studied subdreamed it would end as it did at noon today. I thought it stances in the human food supmight end with a political deal like in Laos. Even an ply, with more than 100 studies Armageddon-type battle with the city left in ruins. But a supporting its safety.” total surrender followed a short two hours later with a More recently, a government cordial meeting in the AP office in Saigon with an armed advisory committee for the U.S. and battle-garbed North Vietnamese officer with his aide Department of Agriculture’s - and over a warm Coke and stale pound cake at that? dietary guidelines said aspartame appears to be safe in the amounts That is how the Vietnam War ended for me today.” consumed by Americans. But it — Peter Arnett added that there is still uncertainty about whether the sweetener increases risk for some AP Photo blood cancers in men. In thIs 1963 fIle photo, Associated Press correspondent Peter Arnett stands with gear that he carExecutives at Coke and Pepsi ries out in field while covering the Vietnamese army. More than two bitter decades of war in Vietnam blame the declines on percepended with the last days of April 1975. Today, 40 years later, Arnett has written a new memoir, “Saigon tions that the sweetener isn’t Has Fallen,” detailing his experience covering the war for The AP. safe. John Sicher, publisher of industry tracker Beverage Digest, noted that attitudes about aspartame can be very negative. Using an online tool called Topsy that measures Twitter sentiment on a scale of 0 to 100, he noted “aspartame” got a 22 ranking, below a 38 ranking for “Congress.” ABSOLUTE AUCTION THURSDAY MAY 21ST 6:00 P.M. Nice Brick Home & Three Building Lots 232 Moore Circle & Lot 19, 20, & 21, Moore Circle Cleveland, TN. Located in Bellefounte Heights Subdivision NO BUYERS FEE SOLD SEPARATE OR AS WHOLE ***NO BUYERS FEE*** Directions: From Cleveland, TN. Go North on Hwy 11, Go Past City Limits & Golf Course, Turn Right on Moore Circle, Watch for Auction Signs ALL Properties Selling From 232 Moore Circle Nice Brick Home 1584+/-Sq. Ft 232 Moore Circle Cleveland, TN. 37312 SALE ONE This home features: 1584+/- Sq.Ft, 3 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths, Hardwood Floors, Fireplace, City Water, Partial Basement, 28x31 Detached Garage with Meter & Concrete Floors, This Home Is Surrounded by Mature Trees and Located in the Quite Subdivision “Bellefounte Heights” Just North of Cleveland Golf & Country Club. This home is close to the city but NO City Taxes. Lot #19 .36+/-Acre Moore Circle Lot #20 .37+/- Acre Moore Circle Lot #21 .37+/-Acre Moore Circle *Bellefounte Heights Subdivision *Government Maintained Road *City Water SALE TWO Fall By comparison, “love” had a ranking of 96 and “Christmas” had a ranking of 88. The negative attitudes about aspartame don’t seem to extend to sucralose. Sparkling Ice, a zero-calorie drink created in the 1990s, is sweetened with sucralose and has been enjoying strong growth in recent years. CALL AUCTIONEER FOR INFORMATION Mike Graves From Page 58 burning with exhaustion. He hasn’t left the office in days, and now he decides to take a walk around outside. Within a few minutes he is back, pale and disturbed. Esper explains that while strolling across Lam Son Square he was approached by a distraught Vietnamese police lieutenant colonel in full uniform, a man he later identifies as Nguyen Van Long, who mutters to him, “It’s finished.” The officer then walks away about 10 feet, makes a sharp about face, salutes a nearby statue commemorating Vietnamese infantrymen, and raises a .45-caliber pistol. He blows his brains out. For a second, George thought he was to be the target. He writes the story with shaky hands. Franjola has been doing the rounds. He returns and says he was nearly side-swiped by a jeep careening through the streets. It is packed with laughing, shouting young men in black pajamas and waving Russian rifles. I rush downstairs to Tu Do, the main street. I hear the roar of heavy engines and look toward the old French cathedral where a convoy of Russian Molotova trucks is approaching. Each is loaded with young North Vietnamese soldiers in battle garb, their green pith helmets tilted back as they peer in wonder at the tall buildings they are passing, probably the first they have ever seen. A few local Vietnamese are standing near me. They are staring, speechless. I see a large Communist flag unfurl from a room at the nearby Caravelle Hotel. I notice a group of South Vietnamese soldiers running down a side street, kicking off their uniforms, tossing their weapons into shop doorways. I run back to the AP office, my heart beating wildly as I scramble up the narrow stairways. In the hallway there are a dozen Vietnamese neighbors who clutch at my clothing and implore me to save them. I push into the office and look across to Esper. “George,” I shout, “Saigon has fallen. Call New York.” I check my watch. It’s 11:43 a.m. I type up a news bulletin about what I’ve just seen and hand it our Vietnamese telex operator, Tammy. He reads it and rises from his chair in alarm. He’s looking at the door. I push him down and order him to send my bulletin. He does, then bolts out of the office, and we never see him again. Around noon, Franjola and I walk the city streets. Russian tanks are arriving in greater numbers now. Local people are spilling onto the sidewalks, their fears of catastrophe gone. I walk through the open gates of the defense ministry building. A South Vietnamese officer is in consultation with several North Vietnamese. He turns to me and says, “No pictures,” and I continue shooting. After all, there are new sheriffs in town, and they don’t seem to mind. I meet the Australian cameraman Neil Davis who is walking from the presidential palace. He’d watched North Vietnamese tanks crash through the palace gates. He says President Minh has been arrested and taken away. I return to the office, and soon afterward one of our stringer photographers walks in with a North Vietnamese officer and his aide, who are amiable, talkative and appreciative of the snacks we offer them. Later that afternoon Esper suggests that with international communications still up, I write my reflections of the final day. I start punching a telex tape and it winds to the floor as I write. I feed the tape into the transmitter and it chugs its way through the machine. I write: “In 13 years of covering the Vietnam War I never dreamed it would end as it did at noon today. I thought it might end with a political deal like in Laos. Even an Armageddon-type battle with the city left in ruins. But a total surrender followed a short two hours later with a cordial meeting in the AP office in Saigon with an armed and battle-garbed North Vietnamese officer with his aide - and over a warm Coke and stale pound cake at that? That is how the Vietnam War ended for me today.” The tape stops running. I punch a few keys but the machine just coughs a couple of times. I try the key again, no response. The AP wire from Saigon to New York is down - and out. The new authorities have pulled the plug. I call out to Esper, “That’s it, George. It’s over.” Cell: 423–829-1298 or 423-887 4371 Email: mike.graves@crye-leike.com Athens Office: 423-746-0227 For More Information Go To: www.auctionzip.com Enter ID #12870 CRYE-LEIKE AUCTIONS FIRM #1473 TBL #5052 TAL #6194 GCL REAL ESTATE TERMS: A non-refundable deposit of $10,000 On Sale 1 (House), A non-refundable deposit of $2,500 Per (Lot) Sale 2, 3, 4. will be required on the day of the sale. NO BUYERS PREMIUM WILL BE ADDED. Funds are accepted in the form of a Cashier’ s, Personal or Business check Payable to Crye-Leike Realtors. Closings shall take place no later than 30 days after the auction.Title X: Under Title X the purchaser of a single family residence built before 1978 has a maximum of 10 days to inspect the property for the presence of lead base paint. The period of inspection is 10 days prior to the auction. Disclaimer: All property sells AS IS, WHERE IS, with no warranties either written or implied. Square Footage per tax records. THIS AUCTION IS OWNER/AGENT STATUS. All information included herein was derived from sources believed to be correct, but is not guaranteed. Any announcements made the day of the sale by the auctioneer take precedence over any other statements either written or oral. TWO PUBLIC AUCTIONS THURSDAY APRIL 30th 5:30 P.M. 501 INMAN STREET & 140 OAK STREET CLEVELAND TN. **TWO COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES** **TWO GREAT INVESTMENT PROPERTIES** *ZONED COMMERCIAL* *GREAT LOCATION* Directions: South on Keith Street, Left on Inman Street, Property on Right, Watch For Auction Signs 501 Inman Street Commercial Building *** 3 APARTMENTS UPSTAIRS*** *** RETAIL DOWNSTAIRS *** SAL ONEE INV EST DRE ORS AM Auction 125 +/- Acres • Tracts or As a Whole • Mostly Wooded Property of Mrs. Johnathan Y. Smith Sims & Sims Harris Roads • Hwy 58 North Area Ooltewah-Harrison, Hamilton County, Tennessee SAL TWOE Online Only Bid Begins May 1st • Bid Ends May 14th Location: From Hwy 153 & Hwy 58 N (Chattanooga, TN), follow Hwy 58 N., north 12.7 miles to Sims Rd (at end of 4 lane), turn left follow 1.1 miles to split at Sims-Sims Harris Roads, take either road 1/4 mile to property! See Auction Signs!! X Beautiful wooded tracts ranging from 5 to 28 acres X Rolling hills with excellent building sites – former strawberry farm – good interior farm road system for viewing property X Frontage on Sims & Sims Harris Roads – public water available X Pine and Hardwood Timber – small cleared areas X Divided into 9 tracts, offered in combination of tracts or as a whole using “Ultimate Choice” bidding system X Area of farms, homes and quiet country setting X Near Hwy 58, Chickamauga Lake, 5 public boat ramps near-by, Also near Harrison Bay, Wolftever, Snow Hill, Mahan Gap X Minutes to Hwy 153, Chattanooga, Ooltewah, Cleveland – 4 Lane Hwy to 153 X Perfect for private homesites with acreage-restrictive covenants in place X Property held by Smith family for many years Inspection: Anytime at your convenience, by appointment, or Tuesday, May 12th from 4:00 to 6:00 pm. Terms: 20% down at Bid End, Balance in 30 days!! 10% Buyer’s Premium applied to final bid! See your Bank for financing!! Visit www.pottsbrothers.com for more details! * Corner Lot * High Traffic Area * Public Water & Sewer * Pole Sign * Display Window * Delivery Door * Three Apartments Upstairs 140 Oak Street (Located Behind 501 Inman Street) Commercial Building * Road Frontage * High Traffic Area * Two Ground Level Doors * Public Water & Sewer CALL THE AUCTIONEERS FOR INFORMATION Johnny Lewis 423-618-9505 TAL#2085 Joe Stepp 423-618-9270 TAL# 2570 OFFICE: Cleveland 423-473-9545 For More Information Go To: www.auctionzip.com Enter ID #9164 or #11937 CRYE-LEIKE AUCTIONS FIRM #1473 TBL #5052 TAL #5500 GCL #ACNR002328 GAL #AUNR002981 REAL ESTATE TERMS: A non-refundable deposit of $5,000 per property will be required on the day of the sale. Funds are accepted in the form of a Cashier’s, Personal or Business check Payable to Crye- Leike Realtors. Closings shall take place no later than 30 days after the auction. BUYER’S PREMIUM: 10% Buyers Premium will apply to Successful Bidder’s on Real Estate. Disclaimer:All property sells AS IS, WHERE IS, with no warranties either written or implied. Square Footage TBD, owner/agent, All information included herein was derived from sources believed to be correct, but is not guaranteed. Any announcements made the day of the sale by the auctioneer take precedence over ,any other statements either written or oral. 60—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Tips for parents considering helping their child buy a home The Associated Press AP Photo This is A JAN. 23, 1936 file photo of the then King Edward VIII, later Duke of Windsor, center, bites his lip, as he and his brothers, the then Duke of York later King George VI, left, Duke of Gloucester, foreground right, and The Duke of Kent 3rd left, walk behind the coffin of King George V, during his funeral in London. King George VI the father of the queen, George VI — born Albert — became the unexpected king when his elder brother, Edward VIII, abdicated in 1936 after a reign that lasted just 11 months. Edward, often portrayed as a raffish playboy, had abandoned the throne to marry his mistress, the divorced American socialite Wallis Simpson. New royal baby: Destined to be a ‘spare to the heir’? LONDON (AP) — When Prince William and Kate announced they were expecting their first child in 2012, the appetite for royal baby news seemed insatiable. Three years on, interest surrounding the young royals’ second child — a younger brother or sister to George — is notably more subdued. Part of it may be that the novelty of seeing “Kate and Wills” as parents has worn off. But it’s also inevitable given the royal succession rule, in which the throne always passes to the eldest child. Second-born royals in the line of succession rarely have to worry about one day becoming king or queen — they are known half-jokingly as the “spares to the heir.” It’s a position that brings far less responsibility, but also fewer privileges than those enjoyed by the heir apparent. It’s also one that attracts relentless public scrutiny. While eldest children have their destinies carved out from birth, many royal “spares” have struggled to find meaningful public roles. “It’s always been a rather unenviable situation. There are often shades of jealousy, evident in the current queen and her sister,” said Joe Little, managing editor at Britain’s Majesty magazine, referring to Princess Margaret and Queen Elizabeth II. Not all younger royal children spend their lives waiting in the wings, heading charities and cutting ribbons. Elizabeth’s grandfather, George V, inherited the throne in 1910 after his elder brother died of pneumonia. George VI, another second son, became king after his brother abdicated in 1936. —PRINCE HARRY (born 1984) The second son of Prince Charles and Diana, Harry is often seen as the mischievous one, the fun-loving counterpart to the more staid — some say dull — William. Harry came of age under full public scrutiny, and through the years he has sparked some scandalous headlines. He admitted to smoking cannabis and drinking in his teenage years, and in 2004 he was photographed scuffling with a photographer outside a London nightclub. A couple of incidents were particularly embarrassing for the royals: When the prince was photographed wearing a Nazithemed costume to a fancy dress party, prompting the headline “Harry the Nazi,” and more recently when he was pictured partying naked in Las Vegas. Like many other royals, Harry chose a military career and has served in Afghanistan. That will likely continue to be his main role as he gets bumped further down the line of succession. The new royal baby will see Harry relegated to fifth in line. —PRINCE ANDREW (born 1960) Andrew, the queen’s second son and Charles’ younger brother, gets more press than fellow siblings Anne and Edward — but for all the wrong reasons. The prince enjoyed a successful naval career as a helicopter pilot and served in the Falklands War, yet that record has been overshadowed in recent years by headlines about his friendship with several controversial figures, notably U.S. financier Jeffrey Epstein, a registered sex AP Photo This is A JuNe 21, 2006 file photo of Britain’s Prince Charles, right with his brother, Prince Andrew the Duke of York, as they arrive in the paddock on the second day of the annual Royal Ascot horse race meeting, Ascot, England. Prince Andrew, the queen’s second son and Charles’ younger brother, gets more press than fellow siblings Anne and Edward — but for all the wrong reasons. offender. Andrew stepped down from his role as a trade envoy in 2011 as questions mounted, and this year he had to publicly deny claims that he had sex with an underage woman. Andrew, who is divorced from Sarah Ferguson — known as Fergie — has also long been criticized for his opulent, globe-trotting lifestyle, and his romantic links to a number of models and starlets have attracted unwelcome nicknames like “Randy Andy.” Andrew will become sixth in line to the throne with the baby’s birth. —PRINCESS MARGARET (1930 -2002) Four years younger than the queen, Margaret was Elizabeth’s only sister. With her film-star looks and vivacious personality, Margaret lived a glamorous and sometimes controversial life, and many remember her best for her turbulent romances. The princess’s relationship with divorced pilot Peter Townsend was frowned upon by Winston Churchill and the Church of England, among others. In 1955, aged 25, she declared she had decided against marrying him, “conscious of my duty to the Commonwealth.” Margaret later married photographer Antony ArmstrongJones, a supposed “commoner,” and the couple became the heart of a fashionable set in the Swinging London scene of the ‘60s and ‘70s. The princess was often snapped dancing late into the night, threw famous parties in the Caribbean and mixed with pop stars like Mick Jagger. Before the couple divorced, Margaret met Roddy Llewellyn, 17 years her junior, sparking a relationship that prompted huge media coverage. Margaret’s health declined in her 60s, after a lifetime of alcohol and cigarettes. She died in 2002, aged 71. —KING GEORGE VI (1895-1952) The father of the queen, George VI — born Albert — became the unexpected king when his elder brother, Edward VIII, abdicated in 1936 after a reign that lasted just 11 months. Edward, often portrayed as a raffish playboy, had abandoned the throne to marry his mistress, the divorced American socialite Wallis Simpson. A shy man with a stammer, George had to restore public faith in the monarchy and be the symbolic leader of a country at war with Germany. The Oscar- AP Photo This is AN APril 9, 2005 file photo of Britain’s Prince William and Prince Harry, left, after the civil wedding ceremony of their father Britain’s Prince Charles and his wife Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, at the Guildhall in Windsor, England. Prince Harry the second son of Prince Charles and Diana, is often seen as the mischievous one, the fun-loving counterpart to the more staid — some say dull — William. winning film “The King’s Speech,” which dramatized the story of how he overcame his initial struggles as monarch, reignited interest in his often overlooked life. Rising prices and a dearth of homes for sale in many markets have made it harder for many looking to buy their first home. One of the biggest obstacles many are facing is saving up for a down payment, particularly in hotter markets where competition for the more affordable homes can quickly drive up prices and put pressure on buyers to bring more cash up front. That trend is prompting many parents to step in, some opening their wallets, others welcoming their adult children to live with them again temporarily while they save money or pay down debt. Some 13 percent of parents with children between the ages of 20 to 38 helped their child buy a home in the last five years, according to a survey conducted by GfK Custom Research North America for lender loanDepot. Of those, 65 percent contributed the down payment and 24 percent assisted with closing costs. The survey, which was conducted in February, included responses from 1,000 parents and has a margin of error of 3 percent. Whether it’s a cash gift or another form of aid, it pays for parents to consider how to best aid their children without placing their own financial well-being at risk. Here are some factors parents should weigh when helping their children buy a home: ASSESS YOUR FINANCES Parents may be tempted to pitch in financially to help get their children into their first home, but they shouldn’t do so before going over their own finances and ensuring they can they can afford to live without the funds. This is particularly important if the parents are close to retirement, when they will have to live on their assets, savings and investments. “Do not in any case put your retirement security at risk just to get your child into a home,” said Elizabeth Grahsl, a private banker at Prosperity Bank in Dallas. “He or she will have plenty of chances to own real estate, but you probably don’t have time to catch up if your retirement is derailed.” An accountant or financial adviser can help figure out whether you can afford to make a sizeable contribution to your children’s homeownership fund. Another option is to use an online retirement calculator to estimate the impact that any big withdrawals would have on your retirement savings. Try this one from Bankrate: http://www.bankrate.com/calculators/retirement/retirementplan-calculator.aspx GO WITH CASH If you decide to kick in some money toward your child’s down payment or other costs, it’s best to go with discretionary cash, say from a savings account. That’s because it’s likely not earning much in the way of interest, so you’re not losing much in potential gains on the money. Avoid withdrawing funds from individual retirement accounts, or IRAs. Generally, the IRS will tack on a 10 percent tax for anyone who withdraws funds from their IRA if they’re under 59 ½ years old. Still, there are exceptions, including one allowing parents to withdraw up to $10,000 toward the first-home purchase of their child. Even so, you’ll have to pay taxes on that $10,000 at your normal income-tax rate. So if your child needs $10,000, you’ll end up paying more to cover the portion lost to taxes. MAKE IT A GIFT Some parents may decide they can’t afford to give their children a large sum of money, instead preferring to do it as a loan. But that can have an impact on the borrower’s ability to qualify for a mortgage. Mortgage lenders generally allow borrowers to use funds received as a gift from a relative to cover their down payment, closing costs or to add to their savings. But if the money is being borrowed, the homebuyer is required to disclose that loan to the bank, which could alter their evaluation of the borrower’s debt-to-income ratio. That’s a calculus banks use to help determine the borrower’s ability to pay back a mortgage. If the funds are given as a gift, they don’t count as debts that have to be repaid. “When you apply for a loan they want to know how much money you have,” said Erika Safran, a certified financial planner with Safran Wealth Advisors in New York. “If you’re receiving gift, that person is going to have to write a letter saying that they don’t expect it back.” CONSIDER ALTERNATIVES Parents can help give their children a financial leg up on their home purchase, but there are other ways to do so beyond just giving them cash. Local charities sometimes offer first-time buyers incentives to save by offering matching contributions. That’s also a good approach for parents to take, say, by offering to match their children’s savings toward a down payment. Another option is to make sure their children are exploring down-payment assistance programs run by state and local housing authorities. These programs can be found in all states and provide an average down-payment assistance of $11,565, according to an analysis of 2,290 such programs by real estate data firm RealtyTrac. Most of the programs essentially lend the borrowers the money for the down payment, collecting on the loan when the home is sold, said Rob Chrane, CEO and founder of Down Payment Resource, which tracks the programs. S Say ay H Happy a p p y Mother’s M o t h e r ’ s Day Day IIn n A S Special p e c i a l Way Way Mom (mom’s name if desired), you are the greatest! We love you! Happy Mother’s Day. Your name(s). Mother, you are very special. Thanks for all you do. Your name(s). It’s as easy as 1-2-3 1) Write your special message below. 2) Count the words in your message (minimum 12 words). Multiply by 25¢ per word. 3) Enclose check, money order, Visa, Discover, American Express or Mastercard number. All messages must be prepaid. 4) Add $1.95 for each row of flowers. 5) Deadline is May 6 at 4 p.m. Message: Name: Address: City: Credit Card: CC Expiraton: Phone: Zip: E-mail or bring your message to: Mother’s Day Tribute Cleveland Daily Banner P.O. Box 3600 Cleveland, TN 37320 Phone: (423) 472-5041 Fax: (423) 476-1046 classifieds@clevelandbanner.com www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—61 0. WEBSITE DIRECTORY 19. Estate Sales 30. Help Wanted - full Time 30. Help Wanted - full Time 30. Help Wanted - full Time CLEVELAND DAILY Banner (423)472-5041 www.clevelandbanner.com classifieds@clevelandbanner.com LOOKINg TO DOWNSIZE/ Liquidate your estate?? Provenance Estate Sales free consultation. 423-331-0787. 1. Classified Ad Policy 29. Help Wanted - Part-time AIR CONDITIONINg Technician Previous experience required. Pay based on experience. Paid Holidays & Sign on bonus. Ken Manis Heating & Air. Please call (706)695-2901. CONSTRUCTION COMPANY seeking drug free laborers in the Ocoee, TN area. Call Ward at 931-510-4428. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer. CLASS A CDL and Heavy Hauler positions available. Tanker and Hazmat endorsements a plus. Competitive salary with weekly direct deposit option. Call 423-745-0028 or 423-649-0072 or fax 423-745-1941. CNA FULL time, all shifts, starting pay $10.50 plus, depending on experience. great pay and benefits. Apply at Bradley Healthcare & Rehab Center, 2910 Peerless Road, Cleveland. HEAlTH & Safety manager Jackson Furniture Industries, located in Cleveland, TN, is currently seeking candidates for the position of Health & Safety manager. This position will provide technical safety and health support to production and corporate personnel, develop corporate safety and health programs and objectives and coordinate safety training programs, monitor safety and health regulations and provide technical support to plant and corporate personnel to ensure compliance with Federal and State safety and health regulations. Safety manager Job Duties: • Manage Worker’s Compensation Process • Provide technical safety and health support and information to production and corporate personnel. • Written safety and health programs and policies. • Identify company safety training needs and develop and coordinate safety training programs. • Develop annual company safety and health goals. • Participate in new product/ process reviews including process hazard analyses, Operator Training, etc. • Support corporate/ plant engineering to implement engineering controls to minimize safety and occupational health hazards. • Support plant personnel in selection of appropriate personal protective equipment. • Maintain corporate safety library (e.g. videos, regulations, reference manuals). • Promote safety and health awareness through internal company memoranda, newsletters, and specific training programs. Skills/ Qualifications: The ideal candidate for this position will be someone who knows how to: • Motivate. Motivate. Motivate! • Adjust, adapt, conquer, and overcome. • Act, instead of react. Other skills and qualifications include: Coaching, Managing Processes, Process Improvement, Tracking Budget Expenses, Production Planning, Controls and Instrumentation, Strategic Planning, Dealing with Complexity, Financial Planning and Strategy, Manufacturing. Experience Requirements: Experience within a per- piece manufacturing environment a plus, but not necessary. We are looking for candidates with experience of 10 + years or more. Educational Requirements: A Bachelor’s Degree in Manufacturing, Engineering, Business Management, Organizational Management, or related fields is preferred but not required. Travel: 10 % Please send resumes to: careers@jacksonfurnind.com A gREAT Opportunity with a growing Company ERRORS NOT the fault of the advertiser which clearly reduce the value of the advertisement should be corrected the first day. Then, one corrected insertion will be made without charge, if the advertiser calls before 3pm the afternoon the error appears. The CLEVELAND DAILY BANNER assumes no responsibility for errors after the first corrected insertion. The Publisher reserves the right to revise or reject, at his option, any advertisement he deems objectionable either in subject or phraseology or which he may deem detrimental to his business. Deadline for classified ads: Tuesday through Friday is 2pm for business ads and 3pm for personal ads the day before ad is to run. Sunday deadline is 11am Friday for business ads and 12 noon Friday for personal ads. Monday deadline is Friday 4pm. All corrections must be made by deadline day before ad runs. Visa/Mastercard/Discover/American Express are accepted. Cleveland Daily Banner..... 472-5041 2. Special Notices ClASSIfIED ADvERTISEmENTS at Your Convenience! 24 Hours A Day! Email your AD to us! classifieds@clevelandbanner.com or fax to 423-476-1046 Include the following information: • Name with address & phone number • Person to contact if a business • Requested start date & classification • We will contact you for prepayment. We accept Visa, Mastercard, Discover, and American Express • If you are a billing customer, please confirm your current billing address. Deadline for ads: 2pm Monday for Tuesday ad 2pm Tuesday for Wednesday ad 2pm Wednesday for Thursday ad 2pm Thursday for Friday ad 11am Friday for Sunday ad 4pm Friday for Monday ad For Personal Assistance CALL 423-472-5041 CLEVELAND DAILY BANNER Classified Department ***SPECIAl BONUS*** All Ads Are Published On Our Website At No Additional Cost! SCHOLARSHIPS gUARANTEED or your money back! Beware of scholarship “guarantees.” Before you pay for a search service, get the refund policy in writing. Call the Federal Trade Commission at 1-877-FTC-HELP to learn how to avoid scholarship scams. A message from Cleveland Daily Banner and the FTC. Or visit our Web site at www.ftc.gov 5. lost And found LOST YOUR pet? Check daily at the Cleveland Animal Shelter, 360 Hill Street. 7. Personals AL-ANON OFFERS help for families of alcoholics. For meeting information call 423-284-1612. DOMESTIC VIOLENCE support group for abuse victims. Meets Mondays. Call 479-9339, extension 15 or 25 for location. IF YOU want to drink that's your business…If you want to quit, call Alcoholics Anonymous. Call 499-6003. 9. Pets And Supplies DOg OBEDIENCE CLASSES begin May 28th. Buddy Cummings, Instructor. Over 40 years experience. For information: 423-472–1827. 14. Want To Buy I BUY OR SELL For you. Furniture/ antiques, households. Licensed auctioneer36 years. Doug, 423-468-0577. If you are searching for a product or service AND do not want to use loads of time searching everywhere, WHY NOT Advertise your need under the heading: 014 WANT TO BUY in THE CLEVELAND DAILY BANNER!! 15. Yard Sales CALL ME BEfORE YOU DOWNSIZE or have an estate sale. I will buy all or part. Used furniture, collectibles, antiques. 423-240-8205. MOVINg SALE Friday/ Saturday 3907 Sycamore Drive 8am-? Furniture, tables, chairs, beds, luggage, decor, miscellaneous. SELL IT TODAY!! THE CLASSIFIED WAY. CALL 472-5041. 18. Articles for Sale BABYLOCK TIARA II Longam 16 inch quilting machine. Never used except to test out. Sold with electronic variable speed bobbin winder, Tru Stitch stitch regulator, quilting table with table extension and quilting table overlay thread antennae, bobbins, needles & other accessories. Includes original boxes. $5,400. YOWZA- Captiva Elliptical. Not only an elliptical, but targets core area. Can go to web site: http://www.yowzafitness.com and look up Captiva to see how it works. $1,000. 423-584-6473 CENTRAl BOIlER E-Classic OUTDOOR FURNACES. Heat your entire home and hot water. EPA Qualified. Call today about limited time, money- saving offers! Alternative Heat Solutions 423-744-4547. ELECTRIC BLOWER- vacuums & blows. 2 tables: one 4", one 6'. 1/2 canopy bed, box springs & mattress. Make offer 423-472-3701. LOSE 30 lbs. in 30 days! Medical doctors say the only way to lose weight is to eat less and exercise more. Learn how to avoid weight-loss scams. Call the Federal Trade Commission at 1-877-FTC-HELP. A message from Cleveland Daily Banner and the FTC. Or visit our Web site at www.ftc.gov PAllETS!!! fREE WHIlE THEY lAST! Cleveland Daily Banner AUTOMOTIVE DEALERSHIP has an opening for a part time cashier/ receptionist. Mandatory hours are: Monday- Friday 3pm-7pm and Saturday 8am-6pm. Additional hours may be necessary on some weekdays. Applicant must have cashiering, filing and good phone skills. Must be able to start immediately. Please contact Belinda at Larry Hill Ford 423-472-5454 to fill out application or email resume to: belindap4@gmail.com. BUSY INTERVENTIONAL pain management office seeking parttime medical assistant. Experience preferred. Please fax resume to 423-339-2242. IF YOU are an enthusiastic, organized and creative team player then this could be the job for you. Candidate will plan and perform story time and other programs at our library on a part time basis for children birth12 years of age. Qualifications: Prior children's programming, theater and/ or teaching experience, ability to work independently and responsibly, strong verbal and written communication skills, college degree with concentration in childhood development, children's literature, or related studies. Approximately 27 work hours per week, with increased summer hours. Mail resume to: Cleveland Bradley County Public Library, 795 Church Street NE, Cleveland, TN 37311 NEED SOMEONE experienced in landscaping & irrigation. Must be dependable and have drivers license. 423-472-5399. PART TIME evening cleaning positions available for the Cleveland area. Please call 423-472-9344 for interview. PART- TIME dishwasher needed. 9am-2pm Saturday & Sunday- Must be clean, neat, dependable and drug free. Apply in person to Huddle House, Ocoee. POSITION ANNOUNCEmENT Electro- mechanical/ mechatronics Instructor The Tennessee College of Applied Technology is accepting applications for the several part- time Electro- Mechanical/ Mechatronics Instructor positions. These positions will be teaching in the high schools that will cover McMinn, Meigs, and Polk Counties. minimum qualifications • A high school diploma or its equivalent. • Must have experience and knowledge to be able to teach Principles of Manufacturing, Digital Media, Mechatronics I, Mechatronics II, Advanced Manufacturing. • Have experience in hydraulic, pneumatic systems to include pumps, cylinders, valves, controls, etc. Experience in welding and machining processes. • Be willing to work toward a Tennessee Department of Education Occupational License Skills • Must possess the communication skills necessary to be an effective teacher • Must show evidence of good character, organizational skills, and mature attitude General Responsibilities: As a Electro- Mechanical/ Mechatronics Instructor you will be training and supervising high school students as entry level technicians in a high- tech manufacturing setting. Problem solving and critical thinking skills will be an important aspect of each course. Training will involve both classroom and laboratory learning. Teaching and supervision of high school students in classroom and lab setting; evaluate and advise students; maintain records; participate in the development of the program. These Advanced Manufacturing Courses will stand as dual credit/ dual enrollment courses between local high schools and post- secondary institutions. Be willing to work toward a Tennessee Department of Education Occupational License Salary: In accordance with The Tennessee College of Applied Technology guidelines. State of Tennessee higher education benefits package. Application Date: Applications and resumes will be accepted until all positions are filled. TCAT Athens Employment Application is available on our website: www.tcatathens.edu Please mail/ email the following: resume, completed TCATA application: Tennessee College of Applied Technology Attn: Kim Davis PO Box 848 Athens, TN 37303 423-744-2814 – office 423-744-2817 – fax Kim.davis@tcatathens.edu A A/ E E O The Tennessee College of Applied Technology does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, disability or age in its programs and activities. The following person has been designated to handle inquiries regarding the non-discriminations policies: Kim Davis– kim.davis@tcatathens.edu 423-744-2814 30. Help Wanted - full Time Bookkeeper gROWINg management company in Cleveland has an immediate opening for an energetic individual to handle A/ P & A/ R bookkeeping. Ideal candidate will possess a minimum of 2 + years in an accounting or bookkeeping role. Skills needed are accounts payable, Excel, clerical, bank reconciliations, filing and other general administrative roles. Experience with Quickbooks is preferred. good phone skills are a must along with the ability to multi- task. Position is full- time. great working environment in a growing dynamic company. For consideration, please email your resume to: southernseniorliving@gmail.com or fax (423)478-8072. COOkEvIllE REGIONAl medical Center Seeking full- Time Intensive Care Nurses Cookeville Regional Medical Center is seeking to hire full- time nurses with Medical/ Surgical Intensive Care experience. Education: graduate of a school of professional nursing. Current Multi-state or Tennessee license required for employment. Experience: Management of patients with intra- aortic balloon pumps, intracranial pressure monitors, diabetic ketoacidosis, acute myocardial infarction, COPD and multiple intravenous medications. Must have knowledge of hemodynamic parameters and be able to manage patients on ventilators. Apply on-line www.crmchealth.org E. O. E. DRIVERS: CDL-A 1 year experience, earn $1,200 + per week. guaranteed home time. Excellent benefits and bonuses. 100 % No- Touch, 70 % D & H 855-842-8498 EARN THOUSAND$ from home. Be careful of work-at-home schemes. Hidden costs can add up, and requirements may be unrealistic. Learn how to avoid work-at-home scams. Call the Federal Trade Commission. 1-877-FTC-HELP. A message from Cleveland Daily Banner and the FTC. Or visit our Web site at www.ftc.gov FUEL MART, TOM'S : Third/ second Shift, verifiable references. Apply any Fuel Mart. FULL TIME help needed. Champion Cleaners on North Lee Highway. Apply in person. fUll- TImE Accounting Clerk: Cleveland Firm seeking experienced candidate to perform data entry, accounts receivable, accounts payable, and general office duties. The successful candidate will require minimal supervision while functioning in a dynamic office environment. Must be willing to provide support and assistance in all areas. Must be able to work Monday- Friday 8am- 5pm. Salary will be dependent upon experience. Benefits include paid vacation, insurance, and retirement. Qualifications: • Associate's Degree or equivalent work experience • Excellent communication skills • Multi Task/Detail Oriented • Proficient in Microsoft Office Send resumes to: #710-P, c/o Cleveland Daily Banner, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600 NEED TO BUY, SELL, TRADE OR RENT? USE CLASSIFIED ADS. THEY WORK! CLEVELAND DAILY BANNER, 472-5041. Due to increases in business Swing Transport is now hiring Drivers for its Cleveland Tennessee operation. Benefits include: • Competitive pay • Health, Life, Dental and Vision Plan • Paid Vacation • Paid Holidays • 401k/ Profit Sharing Plan • No Touch Freight • No Haz- Mat Drivers: We operate primarily in Tennessee, Alabama, georgia, Kentucky and North Carolina and occasionally Virginia. Two years tractor- trailer experience required. Must be DOT qualified and have a Safe Driving record. Please call 1-800-849-5381 Academy of Allied Health Careers, Chattanooga,TN A successful Medical Biller & Coder can earn more than $50,000 per year and the job market is outstanding! We can help you become certified in as little as 10 weeks for thousands less than other schools! Call us for more information! Our courses range between $1,500 and $4,000 Now Enrolling For 4/27/15 Day Courses & 7/27/15 Night Courses Like Us On 423-499-4999 www.aahctn.com WEEKLY MILEAGE BONUS! Solo, Teams & O/O drivers earn MORE for your hard work! Great Pay, Benefits, Weekly home time & More Call Today! 866-329-4521 Apply: www.titantransferinc.com PART TIME HELP WANTED Mail Room/Circulation Dept. Fast Paced Work. Varying Hours/Days (Includes Saturday Nights) Must Be Able To Lift 50 lbs. Must Be 18 Years or Older Apply In Person 9am-4pm Monday-Friday No Phone Calls, Please Cleveland Daily Banner 1505 25th St. NW EOE 62—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com 30. Help Wanted - Full Time 30. Help Wanted - Full Time 30. Help Wanted - Full Time 30. Help Wanted - Full Time 40. general services offered 40. general services offered Hiring Housekeepers and Laundry. Apply within, Hampton inn, 4355 Frontage road. EHM is seeking a full time maintenance technician for their Cleveland & Chattanooga, TN locations. Duties include daily repair and upkeep of the property, turn of vacant units, work on an on-call basis, and be familiar with OsHA standards. Must have previous experience in apartment maintenance setting including painting, carpentry, plumbing, electrical and HVAC and must have a valid driver’s license. Benefits include health & life insurance and PTO. Hourly rate based on experience level. Email Resume to mawooliver@yahoo.com. FRAMERs/ HANgERs and Dry Wall Finishers needed. 5 Years experience a must. Must pass drug test and have own tools. Company benefits and good pay. Call 423-322-7003 or 423-322-7002. DiETARY AiDEs, great pay and benefits. Apply at Bradley Healthcare & Rehab Center, 2910 Peerless Road, Cleveland. DOVE HEALiNgAcupuncture 423-458-4076. sinus, migraines, sciatic, digestion issues, face lifts, stress relief. TOP CuT Lawn Care- Professional service, Affordable Prices. Credit Cards Accepted. 423-593-9634 WE COVER all aspects of home projects delivering first class services and rates. We offer a wide range of home repairs from structural improvement, painting, to home exterior. We offer free estimates and are proudly serving all surrounding counties. 423-333-4366. HospiTALiTY opporTuniTies Life Care Center of Collegedale DieTArY AiDe Full- time positions available. Must have a familiarity with clinical diets. Culinary and/ or food services experience preferred. Cook Full- time position available. Culinary and/ or food services experience preferred. LAunDrY AiDe Full- time position available. Laundry experience preferred. High school diploma or equivalent required. Long- term care experience preferred. We offer great pay and benefits in a team- oriented environment. Cathleen Ordonez 423-396-2182/ 423-396-3420 Fax 9210 Apison Pike Collegedale, TN 37315 Cathleen_Ordonez@LCCA.com LifeCareCareers.com E O E/ M/ F /V /D– 58360 CLEVELAND READY MIXED CONCRETE CO., INC. Is hiring ready mix concrete truck drivers with a minimum class B. Good starting pay. Apply in person 1601 6TH STREET HVAC iNsTALLERs. Two years experienced preferred. (423)479-6363 iMMEDiATE OPENiNg for a Veterinary Assistant in a veterinarian hospital. some weekend work required. Veterinary or Medical experience required. send resume to:#707-P, c/o Cleveland Daily Banner, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600 iNsiDE sALEs Applicants NEEDED for Medical Equipment Company seeking Professional sales Representatives to call patients & medical facilities. Base pay plus commission. Please fax resume to: 423-478-3160 or apply in person at: 1510 stuart Road, suite 109 in Cleveland or call 423-478-7433. KAYLiNE, iNC is looking for EXPERiENCED people to fill positions in the upholstery department, frame shop and filling (foam) department. Please apply in person at KAYLiNE, iNC. 606 18th street sE Cleveland TN. MAinTenAnCe TeCHniCiAn Basic knowledge of HVAC, Electrical, and plumbing and at least 2 years experience required. Experience in a hospital/ long term care setting is preferred but not required. Please apply at www.standiferplace.org NO PHONE CALLs MEDiCAL AssisTANT Needed: A well established Cleveland Office looking for experienced individual in the following areas: Phlebotomy, injections, and EKg’s and the ability to work in a fast paced, pleasant environment. Please submit resume to: medicaloffice37311@gmail.com CITY OF CLEVELAND TEMPORARY SUMMER EMPLOYMENT The City of Cleveland is accepting applications for temporary summer employment. Full and/or part-time positions available may include: public service worker, concession worker, recreation center general labor, lifeguard, pool operations, grounds and facilities maintenance. Interested applicants should submit an employment application to the City Human Resources Office, Municipal Building Annex, 160 2nd Street NE, Cleveland, TN 37311. For more information you may call the City Human Resources Office at 423-5593313. The City of Cleveland is an equal opportunity employer. EXTREME MAiNTENANCE Home/ Mobile Home Commercial, residential, Painting (interior/ exterior). Decks, plumbing, electrical, roofing, siding, all work! 30 years experience. Free estimates. 423-331-7045. NEEDED EXPERiENCED Air Conditioner installer. Hourly or subcontractor. Call Ken Manis Heating & Air Conditioning at 706-695-2901 experience required. NOW HiRiNg Care givers or CNAs in the Cleveland area. $9 hour, insurance benefits after 90 days. Apply online at www.fhcsllc.com or call Brandy at 423-744-4674. NOW HiRiNg: Desk Clerk 1 year computer experience preferred. Apply in person at Douglas inn & suites, 2600 Westside Drive. NO phone calls. oWner operATors Express Courier is contracting Cargo Van Owner Operators for daily MondayFriday routes and route overflow. Must own dependable full size cargo van, have clean driving record, and no criminal record. Call (423)510-0271 x4013. sOuTHEAsTERN CONTAiNER has Full time seasonal forklift/ production positions available immediately. Nights and weekends required. 12 hour shifts. Forklift experience preferred. Apply in person at 555 industrial Drive sW, Cleveland. No Phone Calls. sTAFF NuRsE (RN/ LPN) 2nd shift (3pm-11pm) Monday- Friday. (Every weekend off) great pay and benefits. Apply at Bradley Healthcare & Rehab Center, 2910 Peerless Road, Cleveland. HeALTHCAre opporTuniTies Life Care Center of Athens nurse- rn/ Lpn Full- time and part- time positions available for 3pm-11pm shift. PRN position available. Must be a Tennessee- licensed nurse. CerTiFieD nursing AssisTAnT Full- time, part- time and PRN positions available for all shifts. Must be a Tennessee- certified nursing assistant. Housekeeping/ LAunDrY AiDe Part- time position available. Housekeeping/ laundry experience preferred. High school diploma or equivalent required. Long- term care experience preferred. We offer great pay and benefits to full- time associates in a team- oriented environment. Nursing: susan_goodman@LCCA.com or Cherish_Lowe@LCCA.com Housekeeping/ Laundry Aide: David_Lewis@LCCA.com 423-745-8181/ 423-745-9257 Fax 1234 Frye st. Athens, TN 37303 Michelle_Ownby@LCCA.com LifeCareCareers.com E O E/ M/ F/ V/ D– 58386 gREgORY's CARPENTRY- Kitchens, bathrooms, flooring- hardwood, laminate, tile; metal roofing. We do it right or it is free! 423-933-5485. HOusEKEEPER AVAiLABLE, Excellent work and References. Call between 10am-8pm. 423-716-7108. KEiTH's TREE sERViCE: Trimming, topping, removal. senior Citizen/ Military discount. Major credit cards accepted. 423-499-0134. MOTHER's DAY gift idea: How about a photo session for a family portrait at a local location of your choice? g. E. Norkus Photography webcaptain1@yahoo.com 423-464-5015 R & J Complete Lawn Care: 423-469-5753 or 423-472-0442. REPLACE/ REMODEL your roof with Best Roofing! Warranty certification. Certified Tennessee Roofer/ Bonded 423-595-1798. bestroofing.biz interested qualified applicants: • Welders– 6 months Mig &/ or Tig welding experience (no robotic welding) • Assemblers- previous experience in a manufacturing/ production environment preferred • Available to work over time/ weekends • 1st shift or 2nd shift • stable work history & secondary training a plus • Ability to pass a drug screen, physical & background check Maxwell industries, LLC offers new employees: • No temporary placement agency • 90 day probationary period • Compensation is based on experience • Wages typically begin at $11 per hour for assembly & $12 per hour for welders. • second shift $0.50 per hour shift premium • Regular raises until top out is reached • Benefit package; including health insurance, vision, dental & life insurance, available after 90 day probationary period • Additional benefits after 1 year please apply in person at: Maxwell industries 203 Hicks street Athens, Tn 37303 For directions, please call 423-746-4344. Applications may be completed Monday through Friday, 8:30am to 4:30pm. Maxwell industries, LLC supports a drug- free workplace and is an Equal Opportunity Employer. CLEVELAND STATE COMMUNITY COLLEGE The College seeks to ensure an environment that is supportive of diversity and therefore, is committed to diversity in its workforce. The College welcomes applications from candidates who: • Demonstrate an understanding of and commitment to the community college philosophy. • Have excellent oral and written communication skills. • Identifies student retention and student learning as top priorities, employing innovative teaching strategies and active learning and advising approaches. • Have familiarity with and use of multiple instructional strategies and approaches that recognize the diversity of student learning styles and needs, including learning communities, and distributed learning delivery systems. • Apply the use of assessment techniques as the basis for improving student learning, instructional methodology, curricula, and student advising. • Use of technology to support learning, communication, and personal productivity. • Are flexible in class schedule and delivery of instruction. • Are able to combine primary teaching and advising responsibilities with college initiatives, community partnerships and grant-seeking initiatives. • Are able to work cooperatively with other members of the College community. • Have a strong subject matter expertise and commitment to lifelong professional development. • Continuously improve curriculum, instructional delivery and maintain currency in the discipline. • Participate in professional development activities on- and off-campus. FALL 2015 9 MONTH FACULTY POSITION To ensure full consideration, applicants must submit a completed online application including a letter of intent addressing the above criteria and a statement (not to exceed 300 words) describing the role of community colleges in higher education, current resume, three letters of recommendation, and transcripts of all degrees by May 15, 2015. SOCIOLOGY INSTRUCTOR – Master’s degree and a minimum of 18 graduate semester hours in Sociology required. Ability to teach (and/or willingness to learn to teach) distance learning technology and compressed courses using current and emerging technology. Please visit this website for minimum qualifications, job announcement, salary information and online application https://jobs.tbr.edu Cleveland State Community College is an EEO/AA/Title VI/Title IX/Sections 504/ADA employer. NOW ENROLLING We specialize in 7 of the fastest growing career paths! So that your education leads to a career! *Medical Assisting, AAS *Medical Office Administration, AAS *Practical Nursing *Dental Assisting, AAS *Criminal Justice, AAS *Computer Networking, AAS *Cosmetology Day or Night Courses Financial Aid For Those That Qualify 423-305-7781 2 Chattanooga Locations Eastgate 5600 Brainerd Rd Hixson 248 Northgate Mall Drive www.chattanoogacollege.edu FB, Twitter, Text#423-896-1996 SEWING MACHINE OPERATORS 33. Business opportunities WeLDers & AsseMBLers Medical, Dental & Technical Careers invesTigATe BeFore You invesT! Always a good policy, especially for business opportunities and franchise. Call TN Division of consumer Affairs at (800) 342-8385 or the Federal Trade Commission at (877) FTC-HELP for free information. Or visit our Web site at www.ftc.gov • Highly skilled, walking foot and welt experience required. • Experienced fabric and fiber cutter CONTACT JOHN 478-5555 PROCEss MEDiCAL claims from home? Chances are you won’t make any money. Find out how to spot a medical billing scam. Call the Federal Trade Commission, 1-877-FTC-HELP. A message from Cleveland Daily Banner and the Federal Trade Commission. Or visit our Web site at www.ftc.gov 34. Money To Lend * FiRsT loan free * $200- $1000 see manager for details. 423-476-5770 NEED CA$H fast but can’t get a loan? Don’t pay for the promise of a loan. Call the Federal Trade Commission at 1-877-FTC-HELP to learn how to spot advance-fee loan scams. A message from Cleveland Daily Banner and the FTC. Or visit our Web site at www.ftc.gov 38. Barber/Beauty salons BOOTHs FOR rent Design 1000. 423-478-1155, 423-479-2291, or 423-596-9940. greAT sTYLisTs Wanted great Clips is seeking great Licensed stylists in our busy Clevland locations! Earn more $ per hour with the BEsT pay plan in the industry! Vacation/ holiday pay, health benefits, management opportunities, advanced live training. Call Debbie at 423-504-8625 noW for a confidential interview. HAiR sTYLisTs booth rental available at Changes salon. Also looking for part time Lash Technician. Leave voice mail 423-255-2108. NAiL TECH needed, pedi chair furnished, Design 1000. 423-478-1155, 423-479-2291, or 423-596-9940. 40. general services offered * AAA House PAiNTiNg: interiorExterior, Pressure Washing, FREE estimates, References. 423-284-9652. A & J's Painting & Remodeling and Roofing, Reasonable rates. Free estimates 423-277-6441. BOBCAT FOR Rent or Hire with trencher or brush cutter, mini excavator with thumb, tractor loader with boxscrape or bushhog. 423-478-2724. BOX TRAiLERs, 40' goose neck trailer, dump trailer, towable grill for rent. 423-478-2724. CuRTis CRisP is back doing odd jobs, porches, garages, decks. 423-595-0651 neeD neW ouTDoor CusHion Covers MADe? CALL ToDAY! Quality Workmanship Timely service Custom made: • Bedding • Drapes • Curtains • slip Covers • Home Decor ALTerATions & Minor repAirs 423-665-3354 What you’re looking for... Hamilton Medical Center, a 282-bed regional acute-care hospital that offers major medical, surgical and diagnostic services, including accredited stroke and chest pain centers, has been serving the health care needs of northwest Georgia communities since 1921. If patient centered care and customer satisfaction is what drives you, we encourage you to apply EOE M/F/D/V Drug-Free Workplace with us today. RN, Medical Intensive Care Unit Full Time; 7am-7pm Weekdays; 7am-7pm Weekends Only 7pm-7am Weeknights; 7pm-7am Weekends Only PRN shifts available Sign-On Bonus Available for Experienced RNs Only! RN, Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Full Time; 7pm-7am Weeknights and PRN shifts available RN, Surgery Full Time; 6:45am-5:15pm Weekdays with CALL 11:00am-7:00pm Weekdays with CALL Sign-On Bonus Available for Experienced RNs Only! RN, Surgical Intensive Care Unit Full Time; 7pm-7am Weeknights and PRN shifts available Sign-On Bonus Available for Experienced RNs Only! In addition to a robust array of traditional benefits such as healthcare, dental care and retirement, Hamilton offers a wide range of other benefits to attract, support and reward the skilled associates that help Hamilton remain a premier health care organization. For inquiries, please call Human Resources at 706.272.6145. For information on additional career opportunities or to apply online, visit us at www.hamiltonhealth.com DANNY's TREE sERViCE: Camping wood. Tree removal. senior discount, Military Discount. 423-244-6676. EOE M/F/D/V Drug-Free Workplace ATTENTION: Contractors and Builders To have your new home featured as Home-of-The-Week EEK Call the Advertising Department Today E F TH O E HOM W 472-5041 o r E m a i l advertising@clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—63 45. Vacation Rentals 46. Storage Space For Rent 46. Storage Space For Rent 49. Apartments For Rent 56. Houses For Sale 72. Cars For Sale 2 RIVERS CAMPING: RV Park, Cabin Rentals, directly on the river at junction of Hiwassee and Ocoee Rivers. 423-338-7208. CALFEE'S MINI Warehouse for rent: Georgetown Pike, Spring Place Road and Highway 64. Call 476–2777. JUNK CARS, wrecked cars, trucks, vans, SUVs. Cash paid, free pick up. 423-650-6450. SELL IT TODAY!! THE CLASSIFIED WAY. CALL 472-5041. NORTH CLEVELAND apartment for rent: 1 bedroom, 1 bath, stove, refrigerator, water/ sewer furnished. No pets, central heat/ air, washer/ dryer connections, references required, $400 monthly, $200 deposit, 423-244-1616. tHDA PROGRAM BEAR PAW COTTAGES- 2, 3 bedrooms, $75- $85. Mountains, fireplace, serenity. 423-476–8480. TEMPSAFE STORAGE Climate Controlled & Outside Units Downtown Location & Georgetown Road 614-4111 Answer to Sudoku Puzzle on Page 51 APARTMENTS & HOMES FOR RENT 47. Business Property For Rent $750- $995: Office and storage space combined, 20x 35 storage, perfect for contractors, plumbers, etc. $850: 1,770 square foot commercial property, formerly leased as restaurant and an office. Good location. Call Dennis, PROVISION REAL ESTATE & PROPERTY MANAGEMENT LLC. 423-240-0231. LARGE SPACE- Star Vue Square 7,000 square feet, $4,000 monthly. Owner/ Agent 423-987-9232. 423-476-5518 48. Office Space For Rent Online Rental Payment Available ASK ABOUT SELECT “SPECIALS” www.bender-realty.com or come by office 425 25th Street 600 SqUARE feet, multiple office, $350 monthly, very convenient, 423-991-4984. AVAilABle DOwntOwn 2,400 square foot, Offices, prime location, parking. Contact Jones Properties 423-472-4000 or visit our website at www.jonesproperties.biz. NORTH KEITH Street: First month free rent with acceptable application and paid deposit. Owner/ Agent STONY BROOKS REALTY 423-479-4514. OFFiCe/ RetAil Space Available, short and long term lease. Several locations, priced from $300 up. Call Jones Properties 423-472-4000 or visit our website at: www.jonesproperties.biz. NOW HIRING ALL SHIFTS • Supervisors • Production Operators • Mechanics • Stand-Up Forklift Operators • Assembly Line Workers 49. Apartments For Rent $1,800: 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath fully furnished, utilities paid. Contact Jones Properties 423-472-4000 or visit our website at www.jonesproperties.biz. APPLY IN PERSON AT: 3312 Keith Street NW - Cleveland, TN 37312 ***Must pass all pre-employment testing*** Visit our website for additional details www.globalpersonnelsol.com $700: NICE, 2 bedroom, 2.5 bath townhouse, black appliances. $550: Nice 2 Bedroom, 1.5 bath townhouse, hardwood floors. $375: 1 Bedroom, 1 bath includes water, new tile floors. PROVISION REAL ESTATE & PROPERTY MANAGEMENT LLC. 423-693-0301 NOW HIRING! Would you like to have a job that changes lives? PUBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Tennessee Human Rights Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal Housing Opportunity, M/F. A company that’s been improving the quality of life for the intellectually disabled in our community for 39 years is now hiring for the following positions: DIRECT CARE STAFF AND LPN’S/RN’S PAY FOR DIRECT CARE STARTING AT $8.50 PER HOUR Applications may picked up at our Main Office at 764 Old Chattanooga Pike, Cleveland, Tennessee 37311 1 BEDROOM, 3 blocks from Lee University, 700 square feet, water included, one year lease. Harle Avenue. $500 monthly. 423-650-9813. No calls after 10pm. Background check, valid driver’s license and drug screen required. EOE 1513 BLOUNT Avenue SW #1, 1 bedroom, 1 bath, $410 monthly, $410 deposit. 625A Beech Circle, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, $525 monthly, $525 deposit. 887 Georgia Circle NW, 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, has garage, $625 monthly, $625 deposit. 681/ 683 Gale Drive NE, 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, $550 monthly, $550 deposit. Burris Properties 423-478-3050. PACKAGING POSITIONS - FULL TIME Lonza (formerly Arch Chemicals) in Charleston, TN is now accepting applications for full time Packaging positions. Major responsibilities include operating packaging equipment, filling drums, pails and bottles as well as documentation of production data; fork truck operation, loading and unloading trucks, processing returned product, housekeeping and other duties as assigned; Must be willing to work a 12-hour rotating shift. 2 BEDROOM behind Ace Hardware on Peerless Road. Ground level, walk to shopping. Stove, refrigerator, water furnished. For information, call between 9am-6pm. No pets/ smoking. 423-479-5570. BlYtHewOOD- SteePleCHASe APARtMentS- 1 Bedroom with utilities furnished ($369- $559); 2 Bedroom ($429- $599). Appliances furnished; duplexes. 423-472–7788. High school education or GED required. Minimum of 6 months packaging or light industrial work experience preferred. Fork truck skills a plus. CLEVELAND SUMMIT Apartments Rent is based on income for persons 62 or older, handicapped or disabled. We have immediate openings. Equal Housing Opportunity 44 Inman Street 479-3005 Starts $11.64 per hour with a generous benefit package including 12 paid holidays, 15 days paid vacation days, 6 paid sick days, 401K, medical, dental, vision, life, disability, etc. After 90 days with satisfactory performance, pay progresses to $11.89 per hour and $12.42 after one year. DUPLEx FOR rent, north Cleveland, 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, stove, refrigerator furnished, central heat/ air, washer/ dryer connections. No pets, references required, $460 monthly, $200 deposit. 423-244-1616. All candidates must apply in person at either the Cleveland (423-790-5552) or Athens (423-252-5055) Tennessee Career Center no later than Friday, May 8, 2015. A Key Train assessment will be provided at the Career Center. ExTRA NICE, large, 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath townhouse with garage, $995 monthly, 3526 Walnut Grove Lane NE, PROVISION REAL ESTATE and PROPERTY MANAGEMENT LLC Call 423-693-0301. Candidates must also apply online by May 8 at http:// www.lonza.com/ (Careers/Available Jobs/US Opportunities & search for the Key Word “Charleston”). LARGE 1 Bedroom apartment located on Ocoee, 1 block from Lee. Very nice with hardwood floors, central heat/ air, $650 monthly includes all utilities. No pets/ smoking. 423-595-2891. If offered a position, the applicant must successfully complete a background check as well as a pre-employment physical including a drug screen. An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/Disability/Protected Veterans LUxURY TOWNHOME: 1 bedroom, 1 bath, $545 monthly, $300 deposit. 423-595-1943 woodridgecleveland.com $0 DOWN PAYMENT We have over 400 Homes available for $0 Down. Let’s go find the Perfect Home for you. Call Now! Chip Phillips Affiliate Broker, Buyers Specialist • Direct: 423-715-2105 • Office: 423-473-9545 • 4627 North Lee Hwy. • Cleveland, TN 37312 Direct: 423.715.2105 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY PhillipsHomesandRealty@gmail.com WEEKLY RENT- INCLUDES ALL UTILITIES! 1 bedroom with central heat/ air! Off Georgetown Road. $150 weekly. NO DEPOSIT! Call 423-476-6113. 50. Mobile Homes For Rent $495: 3 Bedroom, 1 bath, new paint, vinyl floors, includes water. PROVISION REAL ESTATE & PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, LLC 423-693-0301. COLLEGETOWN MOBILE ESTATES: Two bedrooms nice and clean. 472–6555. SPRING PLACE Mobile Home Park: 2 bedroom, 2 bath, laminate hardwood floors through out, central heat/ air, $475 monthly plus security deposit. References required. NO PETS! 423-284-4050. 52. Sleeping Rooms $129 PLUS tax weekly special, 1 person with ad, HBO/ ESPN. 423-728–4551. 53. Houses For Rent $2,000: 4- 5 Bedroom, 3 bath home located on large farm. Close to Charleston. Contact Jones Properties 423-472-4000 or visit our website at www.jonesproperties.biz. $2,500: FULLY Furnished, utilities paid, 4 bedroom, 1 bath, with fireplace and screened porch and deck. Access to Hiwassee River. Contact Jones Properties 423-472-4000 or visit our website at www.jonesproperties.biz. $795: NICE 3 bedroom, 1 bath, laminate floors, new appliances, unfinished basement. Single garage. $895: Nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath, wood floors, double carport. PROVISION REAL ESTATE & PROPERTY MANAGEMENT LLC 423-693-0301. $850: NEWER, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, vaulted ceilings, includes washer/ dryer, new carpet/ paint, SE Cleveland. PROVISION REAL ESTATE & PROPERTY MANAGEMENT LLC. 423-693-0301. PURCHASe YOUR HOMe witH "nO" DOwn PAYMent CAll MY Cell 423-593-1508 HeRB lACY AFFiliAte BROKeR CentURY 21 1st CHOiCe ReAltORS 2075 OCOee St CleVelAnD, tn 37311 HlKl3@YAHOO.COM 478-2332 It’s A Great Day At CHEROKEE HILLS... THREE REMODELED homes: 3 Bedrooms, 2- 2.5 baths, decks, basements, garages, fenced yard, city or county. Lease with option to buy. Owner/ agent, STONY BROOKS REALTY 423-479-4514. WILL BUY houses for cash. Call 423-790-2131 between 9am and 7pm, Monday through Saturday. 57. Farms & Acreage For Sale 15 ACRES, off Old Parksville Road, $79,000. Must sell! 423-472-4437. 20 ACRES of cleared land with a beautiful view of a mountain, near Hiwassee bridge on Highway 58. Will subdivide. Call 423-339-2233. 59. Mobile Homes For Sale JUSt liKe new! Double wide home with acreage. $500 deposit. Owner financing available. Call 339-0076. KiSS YOUR lAnDlORD GOODBYe! A deed is all you need to get your new home. For information call 339-0076. 61. Commercial Property For Sale FOR SALE Chambliss 423-476-6113. or Lease Avenue 2415 Call Family Housing For Everyone! Cherokee Hills Apartments Call Today! (423) 559-0800 2020 Bates Pike 2 Bedroom $545 3 Bedroom $595 4 Bedroom $645 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY LOOKING FOR AN AFFORDABLE PLACE TO LIVE Are You 62 Years or Older? 62. Boats & Marine equipment 1988 SEARAY SEVILLE 20 foot, blue/ white, with Cuddy Cabin. MCM Model: 4.3 hp: 175. Boat has been winterized. Has been kept inside. Looks new, low hours on engine, in/ outboard, on Shorelander Trailer with new tires, $6,000. May call 423-618-4130 or 423-432-6596. 71. trailers For Sale 2001 UTILITY Reefer Trailer 53' 102" inside, air ride, 11r 24.5 tires, aluminum outside wheels, new brakes and cam bushings, carrier unit well maintained, runs great, will cool to -10 degrees, 423-336-2017. 72. Cars For Sale PUBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Tennessee Human Rights Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal Housing Opportunity, M/F. 2, 3, and 4 Bedroom Apartments with 2 full baths, fully equipped kitchen, washer/dryer hook-ups, lots of closet space, swimming pool, picnic area and playground. LLOYD'S USED CARS 5526 Waterlevel Highway Cleveland 423-476-5681 Don't pay high for your next car! Financing available or cash talks! Warranties, history reports: 2005 Chevy Trailblazer, 2004 Chevy Trailblazer 4x 4, 2004 Chevy Blazer 4x 4, 2007 Pontiac Torrent SUV, 2004 Jeep Grand Cherokee. • Conveniently Located • Activities Provided • Utilities Included in Rent North Cleveland Towers Call (423) 479-9639 1200 Magnolia Ave. NE • Cleveland, TN 37311 Accepting Applications For 1 Bedroom Apartments $500.00 Per Month* *Income Restrictions Apply EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY North Cleveland Towers does not discriminate on the basis of handicapped status in the admission or access to, or treatment or employment in its federally assisted programs and activities. MOVE IN! 2&3 Bedroom Apartments 2 Full Baths W/D Connections EQUAL HOUSING 1130 LANG Street NE, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, $455 monthly, $455 deposit. Burris Properties 423-478-3050. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, finished garage, tile/ 3.5 miles from Target, $850 monthly, 423-618-0616. OPPORTUNITY FOREST GROVE APARTMENTS WHCF FARM HOUSE with wrap around porch, 4 bedroom, 2 bath, walk in closets, 2 car garage, all sitting on 3 beautiful acres, $1,500 monthly, 20 minutes from Chattanooga. 423-802-4307. 2350 Blackburn Rd. SE Cleveland, TN 37311 RICEVILLE FARMHOUSE 3 bedrooms, 1.5 bath, Garden $725 monthly 423-290-1900. 479-7362 TWO HOMES: Three bedrooms, two baths, city or county schools, $1,150 monthly. Owner/ Agent STONY BROOKS REALTY 423-479-4514. 56. Houses For Sale 3 BEDROOM, 3 BATH, Upper River Road, Charleston. 1.50 acres. $139,900. 423-336-3046/ 423-618-7157. Need to sell your home, land or other property? Receive a cash offer in 48 hours! BENTON PIKE NE Cleveland, TN 2 bedroom, 1 bath, cozy pantry, electric oven, refrigerator/ freezer, laundry room, ceiling fans, ceramic tile, laminate flooring, freshly painted, recently remodeled, updated heating/ cooling. Low taxes. Move- in condition. $50,000 Please call 423-315-7000. LOCATION 2300 Ocoee Street, $257,500 1105 Greenwood Trail, $144,500 8970 Hiwassee/ Hwy 11, $109,000 BENDER REALTY 423-472-2173 Helen Riden 423-284-3131 OPEN HOUSE: Sunday 1pm-4pm. 3440 Dockery. Newly remodeled, 4 bedroom, 2 bath, $139,900. 352-427-2394. No Real Estate Fees Avoid Foreclosure Close in 5-7 Days Sell Inherited Property 423.299.5311 www.southeastlandtrust.com 64—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com RIVER COUNTIES ASSOCIATION of REALTORS® Serving Bradley, Bledsoe, McMinn, Meigs, Polk & Rhea Counties Our Mission Statement: “Enhancing, promoting, and protecting the private property rights in our communities, and the business interests of our REALTOR® members.” “REALTORS® Serving People” River Counties Association of REALTORS® REALTOR OPEN HOUSES 2-4 PM ® Contact any of these Members For More Information On Any of Today’s Open Houses. OPEN HOUSE OPEN HOUSES 2-4 TODAY 181 Meadow Wood Circle NE $394,500 This is an Entertainer’s Fantasy come true... All on one level. This marvelous 3 bedroom, 4.5 bath manor is move-in ready. With approx. 3,990 sq. ft. of open floorplan make this an entertaining paradise. Sparkling gourmet kitchen. 20x38 in-ground sports pool. All bedrooms have separate baths. Screened porch/covered patio over looks pool and private backyard. Basement offers double rec room, bath and workshop. For taste of good old-fashioned Southern hospitality...Come See Today! MLS #20151793. Directions: North I-75 to Exit #20. Turn right APD #40 to Highway #64 Exit. Turn right Highway #64. Turn left Minnis Road. Turn right Benton Pike. Turn right Old Parksville Road. Turn left Hickory Crest Drive. Bear left Meadow Wood Circle. Home on left. Philomena Davis 423-596-1618 3670 West View $289,900 Awesome Ranch; full bsmnt; 4 bdrm; 3 bath, 3092 sf; Arched door ways, 14 ft. ceiling, Open Floor plan, new paint; new carpet in bdrms. Gas log fire place, Split bedroom, kitchen with Corian counter top; stainless steel appliances. 784 sf finished basement with den, office and bath. Over 1000 sf in bsmt w/garage door. Well established neighborhood, close to all the conveniences. MLS #20151938. Directions: From North Ocoee St, Turn right on Blytheferry Road. Right on westview Drive. Home will be on the left. See signs. 2930 West Lake Drive NW $129,900 Totally remodeled one level Ranch; 3 bdrms, 2 baths, 2 car attached garage. New Hdwd floors throughout, New Vinyl floors in Kitchen and Bathroom. All new energy saving windows, New paint, new heat pump, new garage door, copper plumbing, newer metal roof, fenced back yard. Great Location! See all the pictures at www.jimandphilomena.com Call me to see this home! MLS #20151971. Directions: West on Georgetown Road, Turn left on Candies Lane. Right on Holiday Drive, left on West Lake Drive. Go all the way to the end of the street and turn right. The home is on the right. 3220 Huntingdon Trace $241,900 Larry and Judy Allen A must see! This custom built home with an open concept and high vaulted ceilings describe this gorgeous Craftsman. This split bedroom concept features a large master suite with a walk in closet on the main level. The kitchen features custom cabinets with granite counter tops and stainless steel appliances. There is plenty of room to grow a family in the large upstairs bedroom with it’s own full bath as well as extra bonus space. A large walk in closet is an added bonus upstairs. A full unfinished basement is ready to be finished. MLS #20152056. Directions: From North Ocoee take a right on Blythe Ferry to Right on Fulbright to right into Huntingdon Springs. Second home on the left. FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION 3810 Keith St. NW TN 37312 Mark Gravelle, Branch Manager Cleveland 423-790-7355 TN# 113148 NMLS# 641498 For A Private Showing or More Info Call 1009 KEITH STREET 423-476-3205 Real Estate Professionals Each Office Independently Owned and Operated 2700 Executive Park, Suite #2 Cleveland, Tennessee 37312 476-7300 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 12611 Witt Springs Road $184,000 You must see this beautiful, immaculately maintained brick ranch home with 3 spacious Bedrooms, 3 Baths with over 2400 sq. ft. on 1.6 acres! Gorgeous hardwood floors, bright sunroom, open kitchen, updated kitchen with granite counters, extra room off owner’s suite could be nursery or office, storm shelter, full basement, decks and gazebo. This home is centrally located to Cleveland, Chattanooga, and Charleston. DIRECTIONS: From Cleveland take Hwy 60/Georgetown Rd. through Georgetown to Left on Witt Springs Rd. NATURE LOVERS RETREAT…is yours here in this Beautifully landscaped 3 Bedroom, 3.5 Bath, 2 story stone and vinyl siding home in English Oaks. It features an open plan, 1st Floor owners’ suite, hardwood and ceramic tile floors, bonus room, office, 3 car garage, unique outdoor living spaces with native plants and perennials, mature and flowering trees, 2 level deck stainless steel kitchen and laundry appliances. MLS #20151989. Directions: East on Benton Pike to right on Old Parksville Road to left on Hickory crest to right on Meadow Wood Circle to home on left. OPEN HOUSE 3316 Lakewood Drive NW $310,000 Jannis Sams 423-503-2945 The Right Neighborhood at the Right Price…This 2 1/2 story traditional sits in a cul-de-sac and offers mature landscaping, fenced yard, outdoor kitchen & fire-pit, large deck, and is brick construction. You’ll love being in this neighborhood with good schools, playgrounds, basketball court, stocked ponds & parks. You’ll appreciate the detail in this home with the vaulted ceilings, hardwood floors, keeping room off the kitchen, & bonus room. MLS #20151901. Directions: West on Georgetown, (Hwy 60), Go under I-75, 1st Left on Candies Lane, Left on Freewill, Right into Lakewood, Last house on the Right. 2892 Mountain Brandy Sams Hosting Agent Pointe Drive 423-505-4627 NW $474,900 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Demetra Toomey 506-2406 Open House Today 2-4 1124 Highway 163 E $150,000 Fully updated 4 BR rancher on one level. Hardwood flooring throughout home. New vinyl windows and gutters. HVAC and roof 7 years old. Move in ready. Great location minutes from Wacker and Amazon. MLS 20151362 DIRECTIONS: North on Hwy 11, turn right onto Hwy 163 @ red light. Travel 2 miles and home is on the right. Enjoy Your Success….in this unique 2 story in Mountain Pointe. This custom home is built like a fortress. Owner built it as if he would live there forever with poured walls, Anderson windows, and all brick. You’ll love the 18’ ceilings, hardwood floors, wood burning fireplace, and granite countertops. Plenty of space with 6 bedrooms & 3 1/2 baths. Full unfinished basement is heated & cooled making it great for game room, exercise room, or climate controlled storage. Sitting on almost an acre, you’ll have a large fenced yard with grapevines, fruit trees, & garden spot. MLS #20152004. Directions: West on Georgetown, (Hwy 60), Go under I-75, 1st Left on Candies Lane, Straight on Old Freewill, Left into Mountain Pointe, Home on the Right. OPEN HOUSE 5695 Frontage Road NW $276,900 Taylar Taylor Hosting Agent 423-650-2029 Simply Gorgeous...at last a home as individual as you are. Courtyard setting craftsman design. Great open floorplan with hardwood tile flooring. Approx. 2358 sq.ft. with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths plus finished bonus room. Built with entertainment in mind. Gourmet kitchen with stainless appliances. All the luxuries a family could desire. This one will not last. 100% Financing Available. MLS #20150784. Directions: North I-75 to Exit #27. Turn left Paul Huff Parkway. Turn right Frontage Road. Home on Left. OPEN HOUSE Chuck Jones 618-3701 Open House Today 2-4 186 Meadow Wood Circle NE $290,000 OPEN HOUSE Mary Norton 715-4581 Open House Today 2-4 OPEN HOUSE OPEN HOUSE 2-4 P.M. Heath Davis 618-5857 Philomena Davis 423-596-1618 Max Phillips 423-596-7173 121 Pope Road $399,900 Picturesque and peaceful property on 9+ private acres offering complete serenity, spring-fed creek, and spectacular mountain view. The park-like setting also offers a garden area with orchard and abundant wildlife. House has wraparound front porch and screened back porch. The large workshop/garage has an unfinished bonus apartment with its own bath. Includes woodshed and storage building for outdoor storage. Minutes from Cherokee National Forest, excellent fly-fishing, and worldclass whitewater rafting. MLS #: 20145426 DIRECTIONS: 64 E to Lt on Hwy 411 N, Rt on Grove just past Polk Co Health Department, Lt on Oak Grove, Lt on Pope, home on the Rt. Chip Phillips Hosting Agent 423-715-2105 5667 Frontage Road NW $269,500 Only for those who love....This new craftsman style 1 1/2 story with 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths. Open floor plan for entertaining in style and elegance. Boast a grand fireplace in great room and prepare meals in well-equipped kitchen with high end appliances. Granite counter tops, hardwood/tile flooring makes living stress free. Outdoor fireplace perfect for all things. 100% FINANCING AVAILABLE. MLS #20146074. Directions: North I-75 to Exit #27. Turn left Paul Huff Parkway. Turn right Frontage Road. Home on left. OPEN HOUSE Suzanne Akins 650-9222 Featured Home 145 Central Avenue $135,000 Adorable 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with unfinished basement. Qualifies for Rural Development (with zero down payment) and sits on 1.4 acres. Features include cathedral ceiling, fireplace, hardwood floors and open floor plan. Call Suzanne for more details. MLS#: 20150263 Suzanne Akins 650-9222 Featured Home 135 Central Avenue $173,500 One level living. Like new and ready to move in. You will be impressed with the hardwood floors throughout. 3 bedrooms and 2 baths, vaulted ceiling, open floor plan, covered porch and deck on 2.26 acres. Home qualifies for Rural Development (with zero down payment). Call Suzanne for more details. MLS#: 20151109 191 Courtland Daniel Keener Crest Drive Hosting Agent SW $179,900 423-310-5706 Craftsman Charmer... Unbelievable 1.5 story with 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths and built with low utilities in mind. This energy efficient home offers Low E windows, 9’ ceilings, hardwood & tile flooring and much more! Sunny gourmet kitchen comes with all appliances. Entertain on the breathtaking covered deck and deck that has utilities, swing and fire-pit. If that isn’t enough, there are two front porches to choose from. Plenty of space with the garage/storage/workshop. Located just five minutes from everywhere! This is one magnificent home with a great price tag. It’s sure to move fast. MLS #20151375. Directions: North I-75 to Exit #20. Turn right APD #40. Turn left Westland Drive. Turn left Grandview Drive to “The Orchard” Courtland Crest Drive. Home on left. www.clevelandbanner.com Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015—65 CONTACT ANY OF THESE RIVER COUNTIES ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® MEMBERS FOR MORE INFORMATION ON ANY OF TODAY’S OPEN HOUSES OPEN HOUSE 2-4 P.M. RIVER COUNTIES ASSOCIATION of REALTORS® 258 Farmway Dr $189,900 Hosted by Stuart Williams “REALTORS® Serving People” This is it! Curb appeal will win you over with a view that goes on forever, from this distinctive 3Br, 2Ba home in Farmingdale Sbdv. Open floor plan, hardwood throughout, partially fenced, basement with additional bedroom and family room. Could be a separate living quarters. A gorgeous manicured lawn to die for with a sprinkler system. Sit on your large deck with spectacular views. A cheerful home with long windows, freshly Listing Agent painted. A must see. MLS #20151749. Directions: South on Dalton Pike, right into Farmingdale Marcia Botts 400-1042 Subdivision, right on Farmway Dr. OPEN HOUSE TODAY 2-4 2719 Southern Court NW $229,900 • 3BR/2 BA • Conveniently Located In The Magnolia’s • Craftsman Style Open Concept Construction • Hardwood Floors, Solid Surface Countertops, Large Bedrooms And A Bonus Room Directions: From Intersection of Georgetown and Candies Lane, go west on Candies, cross Freewill onto old Freewill. Turn right into The Magnolia’s. Follow signs, home in cul-de-sac. MICHELLE MOATS 478-3115 Serving Bradley, Bledsoe, McMinn, Meigs, Polk & Rhea Counties For A Private Showing or More Info Call Our Mission Statement: 1009 KEITH STREET 423-476-3205 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 650 25th St. N.W. • Suite 300 Cleveland, TN 37312 Hosting Agent: EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY OPEN HOUSE TODAY 2-4 150 Alberta Peach Street SE $229,000 “Enhancing, promoting, and protecting the private property rights in our communities, and the business interests of our REALTOR® members.” Tina Elrod-Ledford 423-421-4625 (423) 303-1200 Each Keller Williams office is independently owned & operated OPEN HOUSE TODAY 2-4 115 Brittsville Shores Rd., Georgetown, TN $227,000 ROOM TO LIVE & WORK! This home has a lot to offer with 3 BR/2 BA, hardwood floors, spacious kitchen, split BR plan & a large sunroom. Applicances all stay including stacked washer/dryer. The 56’x23’ garage is a dream for any guy with a workshop, 1/2 BA & RV garage/hookup. All this in a waterfront community with dock, boat ramp & tennis courts. MLS#20151795. DIRECTIONS: Georgetown Rd. (Hwy 60) to right on Eureka Rd., left on Lower River Rd., right on Brittsville Shores, home is on the corner, see signs. 3BR,3BA house with 2628SF. Basement has Gr. Room, Off. and Full Bath. Stainless Steel appliances remain along with W/D. Granite Countertops in Kitchen and Formal Dining Area. Owners Suite has Dbl. Sinks and Lg. Walk in Closet. Oversized Garage and Fenced Back Yard. MLS: 20151801 DIRECTIONS: Highway 64 E. R. on Lyles Rd. R. on Georgia Bell Circle, R. on Alberta Peach St. Home on Right. Joy Akins MLO ID # 500782 SVP, Loan Originator P.O. Box 4730 • Cleveland, TN 37320 Phone: 423-303-1729 Fax: 423-476-0060 jakins@southernheritagebank.com Kelly Calhoun People’s Home Equity Mortgage Specialist TN NMLS# 165099 GA license # 35935 GA Residential Licensee NMLS 63371 6650 E Brainerd RD Chattanooga, TN 37421 (P) 423-591-9801 Ext 1807 (F) 423-591-9820 (C) 423-593-3648 FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Apply online at www.chattmortgage/kellycalhoun “Want Opportunity To Knock?... Talk To Doc!” 650 25th St. N.W. Suite 300 Cleveland, TN 37312 (423) 303-1200 Each Keller Williams office is independently owned & operated EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 650 25th St. N.W. • Suite 300 Cleveland, TN 37312 (423) 303-1200 Each Keller Williams office is independently owned & operated Listing Agent Doc Carbaugh 618-9774 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Listing Agent Dottie Sneed 618-0393 OPEN 2-4 PM AND FEATURED HOUSES OPEN HOUSE BUYER’S AGENT OPEN HOUSE ALAN SEILER 584-5219 OPEN HOUSE e c n PAT MCGOWAN 650-2595 LINDA PRINCE 303-8038 d lle 139 COVINGTON DRIVE $199,900 304 THOMAS ROAD $249,000 2065 JORDAN AVENUE NW $289,900 Ranch style home with 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, 2 car garage, all on main level. Then on lower level, enjoy another family room and full bath with basement garage and lots of work and storage space. MLS #20151216. Directions: From 25th and Keith, north on Keith (Hwy, 11), right on Stuart Road, left on Urbane, left into Weatherford Place, right on Covington. Home on the left. Beautiful 4 bedroom, 3 bath home. Less than 6 years old. Amazing mountain views and sunrise. See-through fireplace. Upstairs has bedrooms, full bath and huge bonus room. Rocking chair front porch, access to river. Less than 10 minutes from Parksville Lake, water rafting and much more. Come by to see all this. Seller offering one year warranty. MLS #20151331. Directions: APD 40 to Hwy. 64, 411 ramp, left on Hwy. 411, left on Thomas Road. Home is on the right. Looking for a home in Downtown Cleveland Historic District? Your search stops here. Built in 2012 with high ceilings and custom trim throughout. Lots of custom cabinets in kitchen. Both dining area and sitting room/office off master bedroom have entrance to the large screened porch. Master bath with jetted tub and large tile shower. Guest bedroom with bath and walk-in closet. Bonus room with half bath upstairs. Walking distance to Lee University, downtown and the Greenway. Owner/Agent. MLS #20151939. Directions: Ocoee & 20th, go west on 20th Street, right (north) on Jordan, 3rd house on the left. OPEN HOUSE OPEN HOUSE OPEN HOUSE TROY GOINS 715-4017 Ca BUYERS AGENT PAT SOSEBEE 284-5051 BILLIE STEVENS 762-8908 165 RYMER ROAD $349,900 3356 CUMBERLAND HILLS DRIVE $385,000 350 BLUEBERRY HILL ROAD $399,900 First time offered, this custom home features 2,500 sq. ft., all on one level. Split bedroom plan, large and spacious rooms, open living concept. Large kitchen, hardwood, tile and some carpet. Soaring trey ceilings, lots of crown molding, level lot and located one block off N. Ocoee in Edgewood. MLS #20151897. Directions: From 25th and N. Ocoee, go north on Ocoee, turn left on Rymer Road, just past church. Home on the left. You will be amazed! Over 4,800 sq. ft. located in Cumberland Hills. 5 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, grand open living space with wonderful kitchen, keeping area, great room, fireplace, extra storage and work spaces. MLS #20151677. Directions: From 25th and Keith, west on 25th, left on Candies Lane, left on Freewill Road, right into Cumberland Hills, home on the left corner. One day special reduced to $399,900. 5 bedroom, 4 1/2 baths, extra large dining room, great room overlooking pool, office, great storage. MLS #20143789. Directions: From Ocoee and 25th Street, north on Ocoee, left on Blueberry Hill, last house on the right. OPEN HOUSE OPEN HOUSE JIM METZGER 385-0585 FEATURED HOME FRAN BIBLE 618-7490 PAM BECKTOLD 364-0551 3098 MOUNTAIN POINTE DRIVE $469,500 1750 TENNESSEE NURSERY ROAD $239,500 199 MCCLARY DRIVE $169,900 Recently reduced $10,000! This wonderful home in Mountain Pointe Subdivision boasts 2 owner’s suites on main. lots of custom trim, granite countertops and a large 3 bay garage. Come take a look! MLS #20141690. Directions: Georgetown and Candies Lane, left on Candies Lane, cross over Freewill, left into Mountain Pointe, house will be on your right. Fabulous workshop area is included in this 4 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath home with beautiful fenced in backyard. Includes an additional office area plus great unfinished room for bonus or storage area. Screened porch is approximately 14’x39’ and includes the hot tub! Come see for yourself. MLS #20150874. Directions: West on 25th Street. Left onto Georgetown and immediate right onto Mt. Vernon (Valley Hills). Stay straight and home is on the left, across the street from Laurel Valley sign. JUST A STONE’S THROW from the Hiwassee River, this log siding home on ONE ACRE is affordable! 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath features dining room and living room with laminate flooring, kitchen with custom cabinets, split bedroom design, garage with breezeway, ramp and attached equipment garage, dog lot and rocking chair front porch! MLS #20143708. FEATURED HOME FEATURED HOME BRENDA RICHARDSON 650-1701 1598 BENJAMIN CIRCLE NW $194,900 Immaculate! Ranch style home, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, walk-in closet in master suite, laundry on main. Partially finished basement with gas fireplace. Screened porch, 2 car garage on main level, single car area in basement. MLS #20151253. ROBERT BRADNEY 619-0621 2251 LAUREL HILLS DRIVE NW $289,900 Looks can be deceptive! You won’t believe how spacious this home really is! 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, 2 full kitchens, 2 great rooms, private setting in NW city. MLS #20144331. ROBERT BRADNEY 619-0621 1023 KILE LAKE ROAD $450,000 Once in a lifetime home. The seller has set the stage for this custom home that has so much to offer. With over 5,500 sq. ft. of living space, this fantastic home features open living, gourmet kitchen, owner’s suite with top ensuite bath, 3+ more bedrooms/den/office space on 1.67 acres with additional acreage that can be purchased. Call today for a private showing. MLS #20151679. “Where Customers Send Their Friends” www.bender-realty.com TOP LISTING AGENT MARCH 2015 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY JIM METZGER FEATURED HOME TOP SELLING AGENT MARCH 2015 (423) 472-2173 SINCE 1969 BENDER REALTY HAS BEEN BUILDING TRADITIONS OF FAMILY AND HOME FRAN BIBLE 66—Cleveland Daily Banner—Sunday, April 26, 2015 www.clevelandbanner.com Work, Play, Drive! TAKE A PAYMENT HOLIDAY - NO PAYMENT ON PURCHASES ’TIL JULY(1) ford d e L n Do Sale e l c i Veh y s e t 00 ur 2014 SPARK SALE PRICE 11,5 $ O T P U E V A E! S S O O H 17 TO C Co $ 14,706* Only $224 Per Mo 84 Months w/ $0 Down**(1) MSRP $15,820 / Stk.# 140520 2015 EQUINOX LS 2015 CRUZE LEASE PRICE SALE LE PRICE $ 239/ $ 19,041* MO(2)) 39 Mos / 10k Per Year Lease $2,774 Due at Signing Only $292 Per Mo 84 Months w/ $0 Down**(1) MSRP $25,410 / 4 to Choose / Stk.# .# 150299, 150305, 150306, 150372 15 50372 MSRP $23,635 / Includes $3493 Incentives / Stk.# 150307 SHOP ONLINE 24/7 AT DONLEDFORD.COM 2015 IMPALA 2015 SILVERADO DBL CAB SALE PRICE LEASE PRICE $ * 27,998 $ MO(2)) 295/ Only $425 Per Mo 84 Months w/ $0 Down**(1) 39 Mos 10k Per Year Lease $3,308 Due at Signing Includes $7,057 Incentives / MSRP $35,055 / Stk.# 150168 (3) Stk.# 150202 2014 CRUZE LS 2015 MALIBU SALE PRICE $ SALE PRICE * 18,143 $ Only $271 Per Mo 84 Months w/ $0 Down**(1) Only $292 Per Mo 84 Months w/ $0 Down**(1) MSRP $22,740 / Stk.# 140514 & 140421 Includes $3,500 in Incentives MSRP $23,530 / Stk.# 150193 2015 CORVETTE TE CONVERTIBLE 2014 SONIC SALE PRICE $ 19,054* LEASE PRICE * $ 16,069 MO((2)2) 1,063/ Only 246 Per M Mo o 84 Months w/ $0 Down**(1) 39 Mos 10k Per Year Lease $1,635 Due at Signing g Includes $3,416 in Incentives / MSRP $19,485 / Stk.# 140506 (3) MSRP $66,475/Stk.# 150276 4595 North Lee Hwy, Cleveland Mon-Fri 9a-7p | Sat 9a-5p | Sun Closed (423) 709-8846 Shop Online 24/7 at www.DonLedford.com GOOD CREDIT? BAD CREDIT? NO CREDIT? NEED A SECOND CHANCE? We’ve Got You Covered! PRICE? We’ll BEAT it! PAYMENT? We’ll LOWER it! CHOICE? We’ll HAVE it! $OO6DOH3ULFHVDUHSOXVWD[WDJWLWOHIHHVPRSD\PHQWV$35IRUTXDOL¿HGEX\HUV3D\PHQWLVSHU¿QDQFHG$OOYHKLFOHVZLWKWKHGRZQSD\PHQWGRZQSD\PHQWDVVLVWDQFHFDVK RU¿UVWSD\PHQWGHIHUUHGIRUGD\VDUHIRUZHOOTXDOL¿HGFXVWRPHUVDQGPXVWEHDSSURYHGE\WKHEDQN,QWHUHVWFKDUJHVGRDFFUXHGXULQJWKHGHIHUUHGVWSD\PHQWZDLWLQJSHULRGDQGDUHIDFWRUHGLQWRWKHWRWDORI SD\PHQWV$OOOHDVHVDUHWKURXJK*0)LQDQFLDO/HVVRUPXVWDSSURYHFXVWRPHUIRUOHDVH3ULFHWRSXUFKDVHDWOHDVHHQGGHWHUPLQHGDWOHDVHVLJQLQJ/HVVHHLVUHVSRQVLEOHIRUDOOUHSDLUVZHDUWHDUPDLQWHQDQFH FKDUJHIRUPLOHVGULYHQRYHUPLOHVSHU\HDU