Cleveland - Creative Circle Media Solutions

Transcription

Cleveland - Creative Circle Media Solutions
F R I D AY
SEPTEMBER 11, 2015
161st YEAR • NO. 115
CLEVELAND, TN 22 PAGES • 50¢
Turner, Beaty elected
to lead school board
Board approves $1M
for building at LFMS
By CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
By CHRISTY ARMSTRONG
Banner Staff Writer
Banner Staff Writer
The Bradley County Board of Education has elected its new chairman and vice chairman.
First District board member Chris Turner was elected the board’s
chairman Thursday, while 2nd District board member Vicki Beaty was
chosen to serve as its second in command.
Both received unanimous votes from their peers on the board, while
the 5th District’s Rodney Dillard was absent from the meeting.
Sixth District board member Amanda Lee was elected the chair pro
tem, a new officer position on the board. The 4th District’s Dianna
Calfee will be the board’s Tennessee Legislative Network representative.
Setting aside $1 million, the Bradley County Board of Education
has thrown the ball back into the proverbial court of the Bradley
County Commission, to move the funding process forward for a new
school building.
Thursday night, the board voted to allocate a total of $1 million to
a new restricted fund for capital projects, for the construction of a new
building at Lake Forest Middle School.
Seventh District board member Charlie Rose said this was being
done to honor a commitment between the board and the Bradley
County Commission. The board has promised $1 million while asking
the Commission to fund the rest.
See BOARD, Page 6
Chris Turner
Vicki Beaty
See LFMS, Page 6
Cleveland
officer
placed on
paid leave
Trustee’s Office
closed 2 hours
on Wednesday
The Bradley County
Trustee’s Office will be closed
Wednesday, Sept. 16, from 11
a.m. to 1 p.m. for office training, according to an
announcement by Mike
Smith, trustee.
The office, located in the
Bradley County Courthouse,
will maintain regular hours
during the other days of the
week.
Questions may be directed
to 423-728-7248.
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner Staff Writer
Inside Today
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
MEMBERS of Bradley County Fire-Rescue were presented a special cake and poster card to thank them for their service by the
local Cash Express offices. From left are Johnny Stokes and Shane Ware of the BCFR; Brittany Brown of Cash Express; BCFR’s
Edgard Coto and C.J. Davis; and Stephanie Wilson from Cash Express.
‘Thanks for all you do’
Lady Raiders battle
hard in Ooltewah
The Cleveland Lady Raiders
battled hard against the Ooltewah
Lady Owls, but came up short in
district volleyball. On the soccer
field, Cleveland dropped an overtime tangle with East Hamilton.
The Lady Mustangs had no trouble with Ooltewah. The Lee Lady
Flames are set for their home
soccer opener tonight against
Newberry College. See Sports,
Pages 13-15.
Forecast
Today should be mostly sunny,
with a high near 83. Tonight’s
forecast calls for mostly cloudy
skies and a 50 percent chance of
showers or thunderstorms, with a
low around 63. Saturday calls for
partly sunny skies with a high
near 76, and a northwest wind of
5 to 10 mph. Saturday night
should be mostly cloudy, with a
low around 55.
Index
Church........................................8-9
Classified................................20-22
Comics.........................................17
Editorials......................................16
Horoscope....................................17
Movies..........................................18
Obituaries.......................................2
Stocks............................................4
Sports......................................13-15
TV Schedule...........................18-19
Weather........................................11
Around Town
Pam Turley enjoying seeing
the seniors rock ... Daniel Willard
discussing enjoying Labor Day
by the pool ... Madeline Scoggins
recently receiving a surprise ...
Buster Stuart winning his second
“Crossville Invitational” golf classic ... Edwin Martin gearing up
for a trip ... Terrance Davis trying
his skills in a new game.
6 89076 75112 4
Emergency responders honored by company
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
A local company is thanking local first
responders on this special day for the
service they have provided to the community.
Cash Express, which has two locations
in Cleveland, presented a special cake and
a card signed by customers and employees
to law enforcement officials and firefighters on Thursday. Today, they will be doing
the same with Emergency Medical Service
personnel.
“We are giving them a poster card to
thank them for all that they do,” said Cash
Express’ Brittany Brown. She was joined
at the presentation by co-worker
Stephanie Wilson.
“Our customers really want to show
their appreciation to these men and
women for their service,” she added. The
cake they presented had the message
“Thanks for All You Do” written in icing.
They selected Sept. 11 as the day they
make these presentations in honor of
those who responded to the tragic events
of 14 years ago in the United States.
On Thursday, the first stop for the
Cash Express ladies was the Bradley
County Sheriff’s Office, and then they visited the Bradley County Fire-Rescue location on Inman Street.
While both Brown and Wilson said they
were very young (Brown in third grade,
Wilson in first) when the 9/11 events
See THANKS, Page 6
A Cleveland police officer has
been placed on administrative
leave with pay, following a criminal investigation surrounding his
stolen vehicle.
CPD Officer Edwin Millan, 36,
of Inman Street reported on May
17 his personal
vehicle, a 2011
Chrysler
300
with a value of
$25,000,
had
been stolen.
The
report,
filed by CPD
Officer Stephen
Millan
Warner on May
17, said Warner
responded to 166 1st St. N.E. at
10:22 p.m., in reference to a
stolen vehicle.
Millan told him at that time
“that sometime during the night”
someone had taken the vehicle
which he said was parked on the
street in front of his apartment.
“Mr. Millan stated he parked
the car on the street when he got
home at approximately 10:21
p.m. on May 16, and when he
went to leave around 10 a.m. the
next morning, the vehicle was
gone,” the report says.
The report said he did not know
who may have taken the vehicle.
CPD Interim
Chief
Mark
Gibson told the Banner this
morning he contacted District
Attorney General Steve Crump on
See OFFICER, Page 3
Kellers continue quest
for information on son
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
At times the emotions may have got
the better of them, but Neal and Zoe
Keller realize that the search for their
son will only be successful if they keep
speaking to law enforcement, the media
and the general public.
That led to a special meeting Thursday
with local media members the Kellers
hope will continue to help them in their
quest to find out what happened to their
son, Joe, in Conejos County, Colo.
According to reports there, Joe Keller
was with friends and did not show up at
‘Field Day’
event is
canceled
By BRIAN GRAVES
Banner Staff Writer
The Cleveland Civitan Club has
made the decision to cancel its
Field Day activities originally
scheduled for Saturday at
Cleveland Civitan All Inclusive
Park.
Those activities were supposed
to make up for the two times it
has tried to hold its annual
Special Olympics, but was
thwarted by bad weather.
“After over a month of trying to
See FIELD DAY, Page 7
a meeting place where another friend
waited for him.
He was reported missing soon afterward, and no information about his
whereabouts has been garnered.
Joe Keller has been missing for just
over seven weeks. His mother and father
said they hope he will be found soon.
They are joined by the Cleveland community in prayers for his return, or at
least location, but are running into lessBanner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
than-enthusiastic
assistance
in
NEAL AND ZOE KELLER speak with media members at a special meeting
Colorado.
Thursday at the office of Bradley County Sheriff Eric Watson (far right). The Kellers are
“It’s been very stressful. No clues have
See KELLERS, Page 3
still seeking information on their missing son, Joe, who was last seen seven weeks ago
in Colorado.
Cowpea Festival set
for boil on Saturday
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
Hundreds of spectators, vendors, chefs, photographers and
city officials will be arriving at Charleston’s City Park around
midmorning Saturday for this year’s fourth annual International
Cowpea Festival and Cook-off.
Activities will begin at 10 a.m. and continue to 8 p.m. in the
evening.
A preliminary event was held Thursday evening at Cleveland’s
Museum Center at Five Points, when Chef Richmond Flowers
held a cooking seminar on how to cook cowpeas. Flowers is a
Banner photo, HOWARD PIERCE two-time former Cowpea Festival Cook-off champion.
RICHMOND FLOWERS, at left, adds chopped bacon to his
Flowers is now with Lee University and Sodexo. A co-worker,
simmering Cajun Cowpeas during his cowpea cooking demon- William Shaw, will compete in this year’s cook-off, along with
stration Wednesday evening at the Museum Center at Five
Points. At right, he is assisted by Debbie Uselton.
See FESTIVAL, Page 6
2—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Life Clinic set Saturday
at Family Support Center
By LARRY C. BOWERS
Banner Staff Writer
Dwelling
Place
Church
International and a mixture of
partners will be exceedingly busy
Saturday with the third annual
Life Clinic at the Family Support
Center, 1075 Blythe Ave., in
Cleveland.
Cleveland
Mayor
Tom
Rowland, and his wife, Sandra,
will once again serve as the
event’s chairpersons.
The Rowlands were on hand
when hundreds turned out for
treatment and services last year.
“We witnessed hundreds coming for problems ranging from
dental, vision, hunger and spiritual needs,” Cleveland’s mayor
said. “All were met with compassion and caring from a remarkable group of leaders and volunteers. We are blessed to be a
small part of this undertaking,
which has grown and expanded.
“Toni Miles is doing a great job
putting all the pieces together,
and is even looking to next year
as they assess needs and work to
meet them. Cleveland is a
blessed city indeed to have Life
Clinic offered to all in need. We
just feel honored they chose us
again to be honorary chairs of
this endeavor,” the couple said.
Registration will begin at 10
a.m., as individuals and families
sign up for free vision, dental
and medical treatment.
The “free” medical clinic
reaches beyond the borders of
Bradley County, said organizers
Toni Miles and Dwelling Place
Pastor Jamie Tuttle. They
emphasize that many people are
in need of medical screenings,
such as mammograms.
In addition to regular part-
ners, coordinators of this year’s
Life Clinic are excited about new
collaborations
with
STAR
Touring and the Feed the
Children Program.
Through these partnerships,
the first 400 families at Life
Clinic Saturday will receive food
and personal care items.
These two agencies are lending
a hand by providing a tractortrailer filled with food and necessities. STAR Chapter 24 will
escort the truck from Bradley
Square Mall to the Clinic site at
the Family Support Center.
With Clinic organizers identifying a need, each of the families
will receive a 25-pound box of
food, and a 10-pound box of
necessities like shampoo, conditioner, lotion and personal-care
items.
This is one of several events
Feed the Children will participate in this year across the
nation.
“Feed the Children is proud to
partner with STAR Touring and
Riding and Dwelling Place
Church International,” said
Travis Arnold, Feed the Children
CEO and president. “We know
that when we combine our
efforts, we will have a greater
impact on the lives of families
who need us most — right here
in America.”
The coordinators of this service event, Miles and the Tuttle,
estimate approximately 500
attended last year. They are
expecting even more this year,
with an expanded program.
The clinic will also provide
vision services to individuals
four and up. This includes free
glasses. There will also be child
developmental
screenings,
immunizations, and chiropractic
LFMS student disciplined
for having BB gun at school
From Staff Reports
A Lake Forest Middle School
student was disciplined following
discovery of a BB gun in his possession at the school.
According to Bradley County
Sheriff’s Office reports, the 13year-old student was carrying
the item in his backpack. When
approached, he said he had the
gun there to shoot birds, and had
forgotten it was in his pack.
The incident occurred last
Friday.
Principal Ritchie Stevenson
said the gun was an Air Soft gun
and was not loaded.
The boy admitted to the
school’s assistant principal,
Terry Walsh, that he had been
showing the gun to others at the
school.
The report made no mention of
malice exhibited by the student,
and Stevenson said that there
appeared to be no violent intentions by the student at all.
The principal said that along
with assistant principals at the
school, the Lake Forest school
resource officer, Travis Mull, was
also called in when the youth was
questioned.
The student’s backpack with
the Air Soft gun were taken away
from the youth by officials, and
his mother called to the school.
Warren charged in burglary
From Staff Reports
Investigation is continuing into
the burglary of a Bancroft Road
home, with one man being
charged with theft in the incident.
Bradley County Sheriff Eric
Watson said while following up
on information provided by a
local resident, BCSO officers
were able to pinpoint Larry
Randall Warren, 40, as a suspect
in the break-in.
Warren was interviewed by
members of the BCSO Criminal
Investigations Division and was
also taken into custody without
bond on an outstanding warrant
from Georgia.
Locally, he was charged with
aggravated burglary and theft of
property valued at over $1,000.
BCSO reports indicated that
Warren was a suspect in the theft
of guns and jewelry from the
home in the McDonald community on Aug. 30 and Sept. 4. The
items taken were estimated in
value at approximately $4,000.
“Once again, an alert citizen
has given us valuable information that leads to another burglary arrest,” said Watson. “I can’t
stress how important the help
from Bradley County citizens is
in making an investigation like
this successful.”
Girl Scouts to hold program of
Yoga on Greenway Saturday
Saturday will offer Girl Scouts
in the local area the opportunity
to participate in a Yoga on the
Greenway program.
The program will begin with
signup Saturday at 8:30 a.m. The
5ive Point Yoga will be leading the
program.
The class will begin promptly
at 9 a.m. near the pavilion on the
Massachusetts couple
gets baby photos back
LANCASTER, Mass. (AP) — A
Massachusetts husband and wife
are praising their local police, who
were able to recover photographs of
their late infant son that had been
deleted by someone who stole their
camera.
The Lancaster, Massachusetts,
home of Felicia and David Neeley
was ransacked by thieves Aug. 30
when Felicia left for a short time to
deliver toiletries to her husband,
working a 24-hour shift at the
Clinton Fire Department.
Among the items stolen was a
camera with about 200 photographs, including some of the couple’s son, who died last October.
Greenway. A $2 fee will include
the patch.
Lisa Foley with the Girl Scout
Council will be onsite at 8:30
a.m. for individuals interested in
signing up for Girl Scouts as well
as the Yogo program.
IT’S A SPECIAL
DAY FOR ...
Tasha Clark and Brenda
Swallows, who are celebrating
birthdays today ... Greg Smith,
who turns 55 ... Judy Hembree,
who turns 49 ... Kelley Stone,
who turns 49 ... Max McCann,
who turns 42 ... Clea
Stonecipher, who turns 37 ...
Faith Cannon, who turns 21 ...
Jim and Jeri Ervin, who are celebrating their anniversary today ...
Steve Thompson, Carl Hamby,
Travis Thomas, Adam Adkins,
Ricky Butler, Kim Van Dusen,
Paul Banther, who will celebrate
birthdays Saturday ... Billy West,
who will turn 49 Saturday.
care. Other treatments and services will be available.
In addition to the Family
Support Center, other partners
are the Bradley County Health
Department. Memorial Hospital
Mammograms,
Operation
Compassion, United Health
Care, Blue Cross Blue Shield,
Divine Design, St. Mary’s Legacy
Medical Mobile, and Signal
Health Center.
A number of regional medical
professionals are offering services to families and individuals.
Miles and Tuttle said the
annual clinic empowers individuals and communities by providing accessible person-centered
health services and information.
The sponsors’ vision is a community that is empowered to
sustain its own health, and the
focus is that health care is a
right, not a privilege, for all.
The organizers of the free medical clinic emphasized that it is
not sponsored solely by the DPCI
Clinic and Dwelling Place
Church International. There are
a number of community partners, and others are expected in
the future.
Miles, who is with The Caring
Place, said the purpose of the
DPCI Life Clinic is to restore
hope and provide opportunities
for people to become all that God
intends them to be.
She said it allows them to
partner with other community
organizations and churches to
put Christian faith into action
through service to the local community, surrounding areas and
globally.
For more information about
this free medical clinic, you can
call DPCI Life Clinic at 423-7905200.
LOTTERY
NUMBERS
(AP) — These lotteries were
drawn Thursday:
OBITUARIES
To submit an obituary, have
the funeral home or cremation society in charge of
arrangements e-mail the
information to
obituaries@clevelandbanner.com and fax to 423-6146529, attention Obits.
I SEE BE THE
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Jim Bryant
Editor & Publisher
General Manager
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Office Hours: Monday-Friday: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. • 423-472-5041
TENNESSEE BRIEFS
Delane Robert Bass
Delane Robert Bass, 63,
passed away Sunday, Sept. 6,
2015, in Cleveland.
Survivors include his sons;
Tramaine Green and Carlos
Santana Price; and a host of relatives.
The funeral will be held at 1
p.m. Saturday, Sept. 12, 2015, at
Hamlett Chapel, 2510 Coward
Street, Chattanooga.
The body will lie in repose after
noon today at John P. Franklin
Funeral Home, 1110 Dodds
Avenue, Chattanooga.
Crescence Galeski
Crescence Galeski, 78, of
Harrison, died early this morning,
Friday, Sept. 11, 2015, at her
home.
Survivors and arrangements
will be announced by Companion
Funeral Home.
Michael Henderson
his parents, Norman and Joy
Sayre
Henderson;
son,
Christopher Henderson; and
niece, Holli Erwin Sneed.
He is survived by his grandson, Dylan Henderson; sister,
Betilu Henderson Erwin; nephew,
Mark Erwin and wife, Lisa; greatnephew, Jaxson Sneed, all of
Decatur; and several close
friends and other extended family
members.
A private family service will be
held at a later date.
We invite you to visit the
Henderson family guestbook and
send a message of comfort to
www.serenityfunerals.com
Serenity Funeral Home and
Cremation Center of Etowah is in
charge of arrangements.
Silas Mason
Silas Mason, 83, died this
morning, Friday, Sept. 11, 2015,
The Graham reunion will be at a local health care facility.
held Sunday at 1 p.m., at East
Survivors and funeral arrangeView Baptist Church, No Pone ments will be announced by FikeRandolph & Son Funeral Home.
Road, in the fellowship hall.
———
The Mother/Daughter Tea will
be held at Trinity Unity Methodist
Church, 731 First St., on
Saturday at 11 a.m. The guest
speaker will be Sis Ralphene
Woods Davis, with music provided
by Sis Karen Hickey. Donations
are appreciated.
———
Trout Unlimited will provide
free
flyfishing
instruction
Saturday at 9 a.m., at Reliance
Fly & Tackle. You can use the
store’s rods. If you would like a
quick crash course about flyfishing the Hiwassee River, this is a
good way to get it. For more information, call 423-478-5451, email
dd37312@hotmail.com or visit
www.hiwassee.net.
———
Let’s Move Day is planned Sept.
20, from 2 to 5 p.m. at Tinsley
Park. Help fight childhood obesity
by bringing kids for the fun activities. Activities include fun on
wheels, flyfishing, gymnastics,
bike-powered
smoothies,
rebounding (mini trampolines),
martial arts, obstacle course, rafting, volleyball and much more.
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.
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.
Michael Henderson, 60, of
Tennessee
passed away Friday,
Cash 3 Evening: 3-1-8, Lucky Decatur,
Sept. 4, 2015, at a local hospital.
Sum: 12
He was born in Michigan, but
Cash 3 Midday: 8-1-9, Lucky spent the majority of his life in
Sum: 18
Meigs County.
Cash 3 Morning: 3-4-6
He served his country in the
Cash 4 Evening: 6-7-3-9, United States Navy and was of
the Christian faith. He enjoyed
Lucky Sum: 25
Cash 4 Midday: 0-5-8-7, Lucky driving race cars, motorcycles
and spending time with family
Sum: 20
and friends.
Cash 4 Morning: 6-6-1-7
He was preceded in death by
Georgia
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All or Nothing Night: 02-04-0508-09-11-12-13-14-16-20-21
Cash 3 Evening: 6-2-3
Cash 3 Midday: 7-7-3
Cash 4 Evening: 2-1-4-5
Cash 4 Midday: 9-4-6-4
(Fantasy 5: 16-25-30-36-39
Georgia FIVE Evening: 5-2-4-65
Georgia FIVE Midday: 0-6-9-09
Jumbo Bucks Lotto: 16-20-2436-37-46
(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
Brenda J. Swaggerty
Brenda J. Swaggerty, 63, of
Cleveland,
passed
away,
Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2015, at a
local hospital.
A Remembrance of Life
Service will be held Saturday,
Sept. 12, 2015, at 1 p.m. from the
Wildwood Chapel of Jim Rush
Funeral & Cremation Services.
The family will receive friends
Saturday from noon until 1 p.m.
prior to the service hour.
Barry elected 1st female Nashville
mayor; dashing GOP hopes
NASHVILLE (AP) — Megan
Barry’s election as Nashville’s
first female mayor has dashed
Republican hopes of making
inroads in one of the few remaining Democratic strongholds in
Tennessee.
Barry on Thursday trounced
hedge fund manager David Fox
by 10 percentage points.
While the mayor’s race is
ostensibly nonpartisan, Fox had
embraced conservative voters
while trying to paint Barry as too
focused on social issues. He also
ran radio ads labeling Barry and
husband, Bruce, as antiChristian.
Barry, who officiated the city’s
first gay marriage following the
U.S. Supreme Court decision
striking down Tennessee’s ban,
never shied from her “strong progressive” positions. In the closing
days of the race she heavily
courted African-American voters
to help seal her victory.
She succeeds term-limited
Mayor Karl Dean on Sept. 25.
MTSU gets $225K grant to help
students earn college degrees
MURFREESBORO (AP) —
Middle
Tennessee
State
University has been awarded a
$225,000 grant to support its
efforts to help students stay on
track to earn their college
degrees.
The university was among 24
higher education institutions
across the country to receive
grants of up to $225,000
through a national grant competition called Integrated Planning
and Advising for Student
Success, or iPASS.
It’s intended to help two- and
four-year institutions launch
comprehensive student advising
technologies by 2018.
In 2013, MTSU launched an
initiative to improve student
retention and graduation rates.
The university hired 47 additional advisers, redesigned several
high-enrolled general education
courses, greatly expanded tutoring offerings and created key
performance metrics shared regularly with campus leaders.
Early results show gains in
returning MTSU freshmen, sophomore and transfer students
between fall 2014 and spring
2015 ranging from 2 to 4.5 percent.
Timberlake, Sam & Dave among
Memphis music hall inductees
MEMPHIS (AP) — The
Memphis Music Hall of Fame
says it will be inducting pop
singer Justin Timberlake, soul
men Sam & Dave and Elvis
Presley guitarist Scotty Moore
during a ceremony next month.
The hall says its fourth annual
induction ceremony will take
place Oct. 17 at the Cannon
Center in downtown Memphis.
Also being inducted are
Booker T. and the MGs drummer
Al Jackson Jr., blues singer
Alberta Hunter, blues pianist
Memphis Slim and country
singer Charlie Rich.
All inductees have strong connections to Memphis. Hunter,
Jackson, Memphis Slim and
Timberlake are from the
Memphis area. Rich and Moore
recorded at Sun Studio. Sam &
Dave recorded at Stax Records.
Past inductees include blues
master B.B. King, country singer
Johnny Cash, rock band Big Star
and rap group Three 6 Mafia.
THP names new captain to
oversee Protection Services
Reuse the News
Recycle this newspaper
NASHVILLE (AP) — The
Tennessee Highway Patrol has a
new captain to oversee its
Protection Services Division.
Tennessee Department of
Safety and Homeland Security
Commissioner Bill Gibbons and
Tennessee Highway Patrol
Colonel Tracy Trott announced
this week that Thomas Fyke will
oversee the division, which provides security for the governor,
first family, executive residence,
other dignitaries and the entire
Capitol complex.
The division is also responsible for the creation and implementation of executive security
plans.
Fyke has served in executive
protection services for the past
17 years, as a trooper and supervisor.
Memphis gets nearly $4 million
for rape kit testing
MEMPHIS (AP) — Nearly $4
million in funds from the
Department of Justice and New
York City’s district attorney will
help cover the full cost of testing
12,000 backlogged rape evidence kits in Memphis, Mayor A
C Wharton Jr. said Thursday.
Memphis is receiving a $1.9
million grant from the Justice
Department and an additional
$2 million from the District
Attorney of New York, Wharton
said during a news conference.
His announcement came after
the White House said $41 million in federal funds plus $38
million from the Manhattan
prosecutor will go toward clearing backlogs in 27 states.
Rape victim advocates have
said Memphis has one of the
largest backlogs in the nation.
Houston, Cleveland and Detroit
are among the U.S. cities working to reduce rape kit backlogs.
“Certainly it was a national
embarrassment, but we turned
that national embarrassment
into a point of acclaim in terms
of saying, ‘Let’s just get the
resources,’” said Wharton, who
is running for re-election. “It’s
about getting the folks prosecuted, but you need the testing.”
The backlog was revealed in
late 2013. Wharton then established a sexual assault kit task
force and made fundraising for
testing a priority. So far, 7,187
kits have been tested or are
waiting to be tested at a lab,
according to city statistics.
More than 115 indictments
have been requested, 73 suspects have been named and 27
multiple-case offenders have
been identified, the city said.
Rape victims have sued the
city as they allege that the failure to test the kits has allowed
too many rapists to escape prosecution. The city is fighting the
lawsuit because it believes the
legal claims are baseless, and no
effort is being made to settle out
of court, said Regina Morrison
Newman, a deputy city attorney.
2 legends of Civil Rights
Movement to speak at MTSU
MURFREESBORO (AP) — Two
legends of the Civil Rights
Movement will discuss presentday civil rights challenges at a
program this month on the campus of Middle Tennessee State
University.
“No Voice, No Choice: The
Voting Rights Act at 50” will be
the topic of a Sept. 17 program
featuring the Rev. James Lawson
and the Rev. C.T. Vivian.
Both were trusted friends and
advisers to the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr. in the late 1950s
and 1960s, and were instrumental in a number of key civil rights
events during that time, including the Voting Rights Act.
Signed into law 50 years ago,
the measure was enacted by
Congress to ensure that state
and local governments passed no
laws or policies to deny American
citizens the right to vote based
on race.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015—3
Lee moves up in ‘Top Tier’ ranking Kellers
Lee University took a big jump
upward in the 2016 college rankings which were released by U.S.
News & World Report Thursday.
The popular guide once again
ranked Lee in the “Top Tier” of
master’s level universities in the
South.
In its category, Lee was ranked
No. 46, up 11 places from its
placement a year ago. Also
ranked with Lee in this category
were other nearby schools such
as Tennessee Tech (No. 35), UTChattanooga (No. 58), and
Kennesaw State (No. 71).
“It surely is gratifying to see our
stock rise,” said Lee President Dr.
Paul Conn. “As skeptical as all
college presidents are about the
validity of these rankings, we pay
close attention, as so many people in the general public do.”
Lee scored big in two special
rankings also. In a category
called “Best Values:
Great
Schools at Great Prices,” Lee was
named among only 15 schools
from the South region which are
exceptional for combining high
quality with low cost. In another
featured listing, called “A+
Schools for B Students,” Lee was
listed along with 22 other schools
in the South, including such
schools as Samford University
and
Appalachian
State
University.
Now in its 31st year, the U.S.
From Page 1
Celebrating Lee University’s ranking on the U.S. News & World Report are Lee students Nicholas
Plummer of Cleveland; Hannah Vickery of Hendersonville; Karen Chambless of Kennesaw, Ga.; Ashley
Akeson of Springfield, Mo.; and Joshua Lefurge-McLeod of Grand Rapids, Mich.
News & World Report continues
to be the nation’s most closely
watched college ranking. The
magazine reviewed nearly 1,600
colleges and universities nationwide for the 2016 annual issue.
It ranked Princeton as America’s
top university, followed by
Harvard and Yale.
Migrants trek to Vienna after Austria suspends trains
VIENNA (AP) — Desperate to
head west even after Austria cut
the number of border trains, a
trickle of migrants marching
toward Vienna swelled into a torrent Friday as thousands made
their way toward the city on foot.
But the Austrian capital has
only been a transit point for
many of those arriving over the
past week. Most have gone on to
Germany, which saw its efforts
to get fellow European Union
nations to help share the burden
firmly rejected Friday by four
Central European nations.
German Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier had
urged fellow EU nations to give
more help to those seeking safety
in Europe, describing the influx
as “probably the biggest challenge for the European Union in
its history.”
“No single country can resolve
such a challenge alone — we
need European solidarity,” he
told reporters in the Czech capital of Prague.
Despite his warning, he failed
to persuade his Czech, Slovak,
Polish and Hungarian counterparts to drop their objections to
a proposed EU-wide quota system to help migrants already in
the EU’s most overburdened
nations. Steinmeier then left a
joint news conference early,
allegedly due to a busy schedule.
Germany has already seen
450,000 migrants enter the
country and is expecting at least
The Daughters of the King
Women’s Conference will be held
Sept. 18 through 20 at Shiloh
Missionary Baptist Church.
“You are invited to join us in
three power-packed days of praise
and worship, special guest speakers, music, worship in dancing
and more. Come and experience
the life-changing power of God,”
noted minister Deborah Smith.
The conference speakers will be
Nicole Dunn of Kingdom
Restoration Center in Sweetwater,
Sandra Bramlee and elder at
Olivet Baptist Church in
Chattanooga and Raquetta Dotley
of Westside Missionary Baptist
Church in Chattanooga.
The conference is hosted by the
Shiloh Women’s Ministry.
The conference kicks off Friday,
Sept. 18, at 7 p.m. with a praise
and worship service.
On Sept. 19 at 8 a.m., there will
be a Health Walk. At 10 a.m. a
workshop will be held.
At 6 p.m. Sept. 19, Dining with
the King will be held followed by a
praise and worship service at 7
p.m.
Women’s Day will be celebrated
Sunday, Sept. 20, beginning at 11
a.m.
Women’s conference
planned Sept. 18-20
at Shiloh Missionary
Officer
From Page 1
May 17 to request his agency
handle the investigation.
Neither Gibson nor Crump
would discuss why the decision
was made to place Millan on the
administrative leave, or what the
connection to the theft of Millan’s
vehicle has to do with any potential charges against him.
City Manager Janice Casteel
said the reason Millan is on
administrative leave with pay is
because of the current policies
which dictate that process.
800,000 this year, the most in
Europe.
“We need to have control over
how many (migrants) we are
capable of accepting,” said Czech
Foreign
Minister
Lubomir
Zaoralek, who hosted the meeting.
The plan to share 120,000
refugees now in Greece, Italy and
Hungary among the EU’s 28
nations was unveiled Wednesday
by
European
Commission
President Jean-Claude Juncker
and will be debated Oct. 8 during
an emergency EU interior ministers’ meeting. An earlier plan to
share 40,000 other asylum-seekers among EU nations is expected to get the ministers’ final
approval on Monday.
Tens of thousands of people,
many from war-torn Syria, have
traveled across the eastern flank
of Europe this summer, from
Turkey to Greece by sea, over
land in Macedonia, Serbia,
Hungary and Austria. Tense bottlenecks have developed at those
borders,
especially
since
Hungary began building a fence
to keep the migrants out.
Friday’s foot march began
after rail traffic to Vienna from
the Nickelsdorf crossing was
sharply reduced due to overcrowding. Buses and taxis then
were called to Nickelsdorf to take
migrants to the Austrian capita,
but thousands decided not to
wait.
Hungarian police spokesman
Helmut Marban said a “group
dynamic” started, with a few
people beginning to walk toward
Vienna from the border, inspiring thousands of others to join
them on the 40-mile (60 kilometer) trek.
Police briefly closed the A4
expressway to vehicles because
of the potential dangers posed by
the migrants.
The trek petered out a few
hours after it began with police
and emergency crews persuading those wanting to push on to
the Austrian capital that there
would be enough buses for them
eventually.
Hans Peter Doskozil, the
police
chief
of
eastern
Burgenland, said on Thursday
alone 7,500 people had crossed
into Austria at Nickelsdorf — a
number that apparently overwhelmed the Austrian Federal
Railways.
Regularly scheduled trains
from Nickelsdorf continued
Friday to other Austrian destinations, including Vienna, with
three departures scheduled. But
the railway company announced
an end to special shuttles for the
migrants between Nickelsdorf
and Vienna that had been running for days.
The rail company on Thursday
had already suspended all train
service toward Vienna from the
Hungarian capital, Budapest,
where thousands of migrants
and refugees have overwhelmed
the train station.
In Munich, the first arrival
point in Germany for most of
those traveling from Austria,
authorities said more than
40,000 people have arrived over
the past six days.
Bracing for the continued
influx, the U.N. refugee agency
announced the deployment of
hundreds of pre-fabricated
homes to central and southeastern Europe. UNHCR spokesman
William Splinder said his agency
estimates over 380,000 people
have arrived in Europe across
the Mediterranean so far this
year.
The
International
Organization for Migration has
put the figure at more than
432,000.
Hungarian Prime Minister
Viktor Orban has been criticized
by other EU leaders and human
rights groups for what they say
is gross mismanagement in
housing, feeding and processing
the thousands of arriving
migrants.
been discovered,” Neal Keller
said Thursday. “They (Colorado
authorities) are baffled that they
cannot find a clue. There have
been lots of volunteers searching, and a lot of ground has
been covered multiple, multiple
times.”
Yet, nothing has been found
to help locate their son.
Bradley County Sheriff Eric
Watson said what can help in
locating Joe Keller is getting the
word out that he is missing.
“He is already on the missing
person’s list, but we want to
continue to get his picture out
there, because there is someone
who knows something about
Joe,” the sheriff said. “It is not
in our jurisdiction, but we are
assisting as much as possible.”
The Bradley County Sheriff’s
Office sent two officers to
Colorado to help in the search
and in gathering information.
They have since returned, and
Conejos County authorities have
suspended the search.
“Apparently there is not much
investigation going on, and what
investigation that is going on is
very minimal,” said Neal Keller.
The Kellers are now looking at
another way of locating their
son. They have contemplated
hiring a private investigator to
continue the search.
Watson said the public can
help by getting information out
about Joe’s disappearance, not
just locally but across state
lines. He suggested a nationwide
search.
“We would ask the networks
and the news media to not just
keep this story in our area, but
expand it beyond the state
lines,” said Watson. “We want to
look at everything, so we want to
get this information out ... we
are looking at all angles on this.
No one has any ideas of what
may have happened.”
Neal Keller added, “I would
like to have this known far and
wide, the situation in Colorado.
The area where he was missing
is visited by many campers who
potentially could have seen or
heard something. To make this
known widely would be a huge
help.”
Zoe Keller said she is very
thankful for the support of family, friends and the community
toward them in this time of
need.
“I have heard from so many,
even friends across the ocean,
who are amazed at the support
from the community, and heard
from so many who continue to
pray for Joe’s return,” she said.
“Please, keep praying for our
son.”
Watson said while it is more
difficult for Bradley County
authorities to be involved in the
investigation, they are still doing
what they can to help the family.
“They are serious about finding their kid,” Watson said. “We
have other meetings between
the family and other agencies
that we are going to initiate.”
107 KEITH STREET
KEITH STREET PLAZA
(423) 339-9527
HUGE
FALL SALE!
MONDAY-SATURDAY 10-6
USED • BOOKS
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The National Racking
Horse Association
will be having their
World
Championship
Show
at the
Tri-State Exhibition
Center
in Cleveland, TN, on
Wednesday, September 9th
through
Saturday, September 12th.
The show starts at 6:00 p.m. each night.
Admission is $5.00 per person.
Open to the public.
STAFFED EVERY SATURDAY BY A HIGHLY TRAINED ORTHOPAEDIC PHYSICIAN
sportmed.com
|
423.624.2696
4—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
FRIDAY
LifestyLes
William Wright
Lifestyles Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
Lifestyles@clevelandbanner.com
Packaged seaweed salad makes a perfect base for beefy tacos
By J.M. HIRSCH
Hints from Heloise
AP Food Editor
Can you handle just one more
Asian-fusion taco? You’re rolling
your eyes. I know. But what if it’s
one that’s easy enough and delicious enough to truly be worth
making at home?
Truth is, most of the popular
Tex-Mex-Asian blends have been
produced in food trucks and
brick-and-mortar joints that are
far flung from most Americans
(because though Los Angeles and
New York City hate to admit it,
the vast majority of our country
doesn’t live in either city). The
result is that most folks only get
to read about the deliciousness
that is Asian flavors packaged in
a Tex-Mex-friendly delivery system.
So my goal was to break down
those flavors into something easily reproduced at home. And so I
give you the beefy seaweed taco
with jalapeno-jicama slaw.
Let’s start with the beefy. For a
bold steaky flavor, I went with
flank. But I wanted as much
Asian savory goodness as possible, so rather than cook it whole,
we thinly slice it across the grain,
then give it a bath in a blend of
fish sauce, soy sauce and toasted
sesame oil. It takes just a couple
minutes in the pan to give us the
sear we want.
The steak gets piled on top of
that ubiquitous green of lower
rung sushi joints — seaweed
salad. You know you love it, even
if it is dyed fluorescent green.
You’ll find it at most Asian markets (and many natural foods
grocers sell non-colored versions). On top of that goes a
quick slaw made from crunchy
jicama tossed with citrus juice
and jalapenos. The whole thing
comes together with a bit of
cheese and you’re done. You’ll
thank me on Taco Tuesdays.
———
BEEFY SEAWEED TACOS
WITH JALAPENO-JICAMA
SLAW
Start to finish: 30 minutes
Servings: 4
3 tablespoons fish sauce
3 tablespoons low-sodium soy
sauce
2 tablespoons sesame oil,
divided
2 tablespoons sugar
No names, please
Dear Heloise: Today I received
my third email offer for “PERSONALIZED” BACKPACKS. Please do
not put your child’s name (especially elementary students) visibly
on a backpack. A child can get a
false sense of safety and security if
a stranger is able to call them by
name. Never put your child in possible danger with clothing or other
items visibly displaying their
name. — M.C., via email
Thank you for this important
hint. A personalized backpack
sounds like such a nice gesture or
gift. But today, it’s a whole different world. Just because someone
calls your child by name does not
mean they really know your child.
Security experts suggest that
you and your child think of a question or code word that only the two
of you know. If someone comes to
pick up your child or the person
says they are a friend, they must
know the “game” of the secret
password. If the person does not,
tell your child to run, get away and
AP Photo find an adult they know — a
THIS PHOTO shows beefy seaweed tacos with jalapeno jicama slaw in Concord, N.H. This dish is teacher, crossing guards, a neighfrom a recipe by J.M. Hirsch.
bor. A good lesson that will keep
them safe. — Heloise
1 pound flank steak
1 cup jicama, cut into matchsticks
1 jalapeno pepper, thinly sliced
2 tablespoons orange juice
2 tablespoons lime juice
Kosher salt and ground black
pepper
Eight 6-inch corn tortillas
1/2 tablespoon cornstarch
8 ounces (about 1 cup) seaweed salad
1/2 cup crumbled queso fresco or blanco cheese
Heat the oven to 200 F.
In a large bowl, whisk together
the fish sauce, soy sauce, 1
tablespoon of the sesame oil and
the sugar. Slice the steak across
the grain into very thin strips,
then add to the fish sauce mixture. Toss to coat evenly, then set
aside for 10 minutes.
In a medium bowl, toss together the jicama and jalapenos, then
add the orange and lime juices.
Toss again to coat. Taste, then
season with salt and pepper. Set
aside.
Stack the tortillas and wrap
them in foil. Set the packet in the
oven to warm.
In a large skillet over mediumhigh, heat the remaining 1
tablespoon of sesame oil. Use
tongs to remove the meat from
the marinade, letting as much
liquid as possible drip off back
into the bowl and reserving the
marinade. Transfer the steak
strips to paper towels and lightly
pat dry. Add the dried steak
strips to the skillet and cook
only until just barely seared,
about 1 minute.
Whisk the cornstarch into the
reserved marinade in the bowl,
then add the mixture to the skillet and cook for another minute,
or just until bubbling and thick-
ened.
To assemble the tacos, remove
the warmed tortillas from the
oven. Down the center of each,
spread a spoonful of the seaweed
salad, then top with strips of
steak (with some of the pan
sauce). Top with jicama-jalapeno
slaw, then finish with sprinkle of
the cheese. Serve immediately.
Nutrition information per serving: 510 calories; 210 calories
from fat (41 percent of total calories); 24 g fat (7 g saturated; 0 g
trans fats); 85 mg cholesterol;
2390 mg sodium; 44 g carbohydrate; 7 g fiber; 11 g sugar; 34 g
protein.
———
J.M. Hirsch is the food editor for
The Associated Press. He blogs at
http://www.LunchBoxBlues.com
and
tweets
at
http://twitter.com/JM-Hirsch.
Email him at jhirsch@ap.org.
Antonio Banderas swaps film for fashion with college stint
LONDON (AP) — Antonio Banderas has
swapped film for fashion, at least temporarily.
The “Mask of Zorro” star is studying at
Central Saint Martins, the London college
that trained designers Stella McCartney and
Alexander McQueen.
Banderas tweeted a picture of himself sur-
rounded by dressmaker’s dummies and the
words: “The 2nd week of studies at Central St
Martin begins. Intense, exciting, serious and
fun all the same time.”
The college confirmed that the actor is taking a specially crafted short course in fashion.
The course lasts several weeks and is due to
THE MARKET IN REVIEW
DAILY NASDAQ
Nasdaq composite
4,880
Close: 4,796.25
Change: 39.72 (0.8%)
4,740
DAILY DOW JONES
10 DAYS
4,600
5,400
Dow Jones industrials
16,680
Close: 16,330.40
Change: 76.83 (0.5%)
16,320
10 DAYS
17,600
5,000
16,800
4,800
M
A
M
J
STOCK MARKET INDEXES
52-Week
High
Low
Name
18,351.36 15,370.33 Dow Industrials
9,310.22 7,452.70 Dow Transportation
657.17
539.96 Dow Utilities
11,254.87 9,509.59 NYSE Composite
5,231.94 4,116.60 Nasdaq Composite
947.85
809.57 S&P 100
2,134.72 1,820.66 S&P 500
1,551.28 1,269.45 S&P MidCap
22,537.15 19,160.13 Wilshire 5000
1,296.00 1,040.47 Russell 2000
Last
16,330.40
8,030.48
544.89
10,019.39
4,796.25
859.15
1,952.29
1,406.61
20,610.16
1,153.02
J
Net
Chg
%Chg
+76.83
+.47
+74.26
+.93
-1.14
-.21
+30.49
+.31
+39.72
+.84
+5.74
+.67
+10.25
+.53
+2.40
+.17
+93.37
+.46
+4.80
+.42
A
YTD
%Chg
-8.37
-12.14
-11.84
-7.56
+1.27
-5.42
-5.18
-3.16
-4.89
-4.29
MARKET SUMMARY - NYSE AND NASDAQ
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
Envivio
4.06 +2.16 +113.7
AxionP h rs 2.35 +.73 +45.1
Galectin un 7.05 +1.86 +35.8
Con-Way 47.54 +12.01 +33.8
StrPathCm 37.25 +8.94 +31.6
ZS Pharm 74.73 +16.54 +28.4
PSB Hldg 10.01 +2.05 +25.8
FarmerBrs 26.54 +5.24 +24.6
SangBio
7.96 +1.42 +21.7
Virco
2.99 +.49 +19.6
aTyrPhm n 18.43 +3.00 +19.4
Advaxis wt 11.71 +1.76 +17.7
MidstPet rs 6.35 +.93 +17.2
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
NwSEn pfA 8.97 -2.53 -22.0
Nexvet n
4.98 -1.28 -20.4
SigmaDsg 8.71 -1.92 -18.1
EngyFocus 23.00 -4.84 -17.4
Shiloh
9.15 -1.84 -16.7
lululemn gs 53.54 -10.51 -16.4
AMidstrm 10.01 -1.92 -16.1
AkebiaTher 9.67 -1.69 -14.9
USA Cmp 17.81 -2.44 -12.0
Tetraphase 8.36 -1.13 -11.9
FenixPts lf 8.47 -1.12 -11.7
KrispKrm 15.65 -2.08 -11.7
XPO Logis 30.24 -3.75 -11.0
S
12-mo
%Chg
-4.21
-6.14
-2.68
-8.72
+4.45
-3.17
-2.26
-2.02
-2.70
-1.65
ACTIVES ($1 OR MORE)
Name
Vol (00s) Last Chg
BkofAm
659016 16.04 +.14
Apple Inc 613154 112.57 +2.42
FrptMcM
535947 11.27 +.54
Petrobras 516643 4.85 -.24
Avon
401947 4.10 -.43
FordM
384022 13.73 +.20
GenElec
346735 24.68 +.13
Pfizer
299673 32.62 +.66
Microsoft 299170 43.29 +.22
Alcoa
291675 9.63 +.06
SunEdison 280374 11.26 -.70
FrontierCm 269441 5.51 +.06
lululemn gs 266970 53.54 -10.51
15,200
Name
M
A
J
J
A
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
Div Yld PE Last
AT&T Inc 1.88
Apple Inc 2.08
Avon
.24
BB&T Cp 1.08
BkofAm
.20
B iPVixST
...
CocaCola 1.32
CocaCE 1.12
CmtyHlt
...
CSVelIVST ...
DxGldBull
...
DryShips h ...
DukeEngy 3.30
Eaton
2.20
FstHorizon .24
FordM
.60
FrptMcM
.20
GenElec
.92
GtBasSci n ...
HomeDp 2.36
iShJapan
.13
M
5.7
1.8
5.9
2.9
1.2
...
3.4
2.3
...
...
...
...
4.9
3.9
1.6
4.4
1.8
3.7
...
2.1
1.1
33
13
...
13
17
...
22
19
17
...
...
...
17
12
18
15
...
...
...
22
...
32.75
112.57
4.10
36.68
16.04
26.68
38.42
49.26
52.16
24.68
2.66
.26
67.74
55.86
14.58
13.73
11.27
24.68
.10
114.49
11.73
YTD
Chg %Chg
-.03
-2.5
+2.42 +2.0
-.43 -56.3
+.41
-5.7
+.14 -10.3
-.67 -15.3
+.12
-9.0
+.14 +11.4
+.07
-3.3
+.59 -20.7
-.02 -76.2
-.17 -75.9
-.47 -18.9
-.13 -17.8
+.10 +7.4
+.20 -11.4
+.54 -51.8
+.13
-2.3
-.01 -95.9
+.52 +9.1
-.01 +4.4
Name
Div Yld PE Last
iShEMkts .84
Kroger s
.42
Lowes
1.12
MktVGold .12
Microsoft 1.24
NorflkSo 2.36
Olin
.80
PaneraBrd ...
Petrobras
...
Pfizer
1.12
PwShs QQQ1.50
RegionsFn .24
S&P500ETF4.03
Scotts
1.88
SouthnCo 2.17
SPDR Fncl .43
SunTrst
.96
Target
2.24
UtdCmBks .24
WalMart 1.96
Whrlpl
3.60
2.5
1.2
1.6
.9
2.9
3.0
4.2
...
...
3.4
1.1
2.5
2.1
3.0
5.1
1.9
2.4
2.9
1.2
3.1
2.2
...
19
23
...
30
14
16
30
...
23
...
13
...
22
18
...
11
...
17
13
19
33.33
35.40
67.93
13.12
43.29
79.04
19.24
179.86
4.85
32.62
104.99
9.52
195.85
61.87
42.30
23.02
39.65
77.07
19.93
64.12
162.13
S
YTD
Chg %Chg
+.34 -15.2
+1.00 +10.3
-.18
-1.3
-.01 -28.6
+.22
-6.8
+.10 -27.9
-.31 -15.5
+.67 +2.9
-.24 -33.6
+.66 +4.7
+1.13 +1.7
+.18
-9.8
+1.06
-4.7
-.39
-.7
-.16 -13.9
+.11
-6.9
+.23
-5.4
-.09 +1.5
+.15 +5.2
-1.00 -25.3
-2.94 -16.3
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.
Deer response
Dear Heloise: This is in
response to the person having
problems with deer in their garden
in Texas. We live just west of Little
Rock, Ark. The deer were enjoying
our day lilies and roses. Someone
told us that deer have a keen sense
of smell, and if we would sprinkle
some balls of human hair in our
garden, they would stay away. We
have a close friend who has a hair
salon. About every six weeks to
two months, I get some human
hair from her and put it in the garden. — Charles S., Little Rock,
Ark.
Charles, I, too, tried this, and it
seemed to work only for a week or
so. Rain seemed to negate the
smell of the hair. I have given up
on my antique roses for now;
between the drought (we are back
on water restriction in San
Antonio) and the deer, my beloved
flowers will have to wait to bring
me joy again. — Heloise
Melting lip balm
Dear Heloise: Just a reminder
for anyone who goes out in the
heat and needs a lip balm: Keep it
from melting by placing it in the
freezer overnight or placing it in a
baggie with ice cubes. — Terri F.,
Mingo Junction, Ohio
© 2015 by King Features Syndicate Inc.
New federal food safety rules
issued after deadly outbreaks
WASHINGTON (AP) — Food
manufacturers must be more vigilant about keeping their operations clean, according to new
safety rules released Thursday by
the government in the wake of
deadly foodborne illness outbreaks linked to ice cream,
caramel apples, cantaloupes and
peanuts.
The rules, once promoted as
an Obama administration priority, ran into long delays and much
uncertainty and came out under
a court-ordered deadline after
advocacy groups had sued. Even
then, the Food and Drug
Administration allowed the Aug.
30 deadline to slip without
releasing the rules to the public.
In all the fatal outbreaks, FDA
investigators had found dirty
equipment in food processing
facilities. Federal inspectors have
pointed to unclean equipment,
unsanitary conditions and animal feces as likely causes for salmonella, E. coli and listeria poisonings that have sickened thousands in recent years.
MONEY RATES
CURRENCIES
Last
Name
16,000
4,600
Travel hint
Dear Heloise: Motels are using
heavy comforters, which look luxurious but are too hot for sleeping,
in both summer and winter.
Sometimes they don’t have a light
Pvs Wk
Australia
Britain
Canada
Euro
Japan
Mexico
Switzerlnd
Day Ago
1.4248
1.5365
1.3244
.8933
120.63
16.8375
.9746
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 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 LowPriStk d
Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg
FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m
FrankTemp-Templeton GlBondAdv
Harbor IntlInstl
T Rowe Price GrowStk
Vanguard 500Adml
Vanguard HltCrAdml
Vanguard IntlStkIdxAdm
Vanguard MuIntAdml
Vanguard PrmcpAdml
Vanguard STGradeAd
Vanguard TgtRe2025
Vanguard TotBdAdml
Vanguard TotIntl
Vanguard TotStIAdm
Vanguard TotStIdx
Vanguard WelltnAdm
Vanguard WndsIIAdm
MA
IH
WS
LB
LG
MA
LB
WS
LV
CI
FB
LV
LG
LG
MV
LB
CA
IB
FB
LG
LB
SH
FB
MI
LG
CS
TG
CI
FB
LB
LB
MA
LV
46,878 23.80 -4.7
-0.4/A
67,919 56.22 -5.6
-3.9/B
53,165 44.23 -7.4
-4.9/C
42,646 49.86 -6.9
-1.1/C
72,321 43.18 -5.7 +2.0/C
69,380 20.19 -5.4
-4.2/E
54,837 34.95 -7.2
-2.9/D
36,289 36.73 -6.5 +0.8/A
48,438 38.13 -6.9
-3.5/B
44,124 13.55 -0.3 +0.6/D
62,893 38.75 -10.1 -15.1/E
56,142 167.80 -8.3
-5.0/C
74,530 98.99 -6.0 +3.8/C
31,733 98.98 -6.0 +3.9/B
28,835 50.24 -5.0 +1.5/A
48,310 69.09 -7.0
-0.2/B
47,013
2.16 -4.4
-9.8/E
32,595 11.49 -4.0
-7.7/D
40,296 63.54 -9.7
-9.3/D
39,461 55.09 -5.7 +8.8/A
145,189 180.88 -7.0
-0.2/B
39,549 95.53 -5.2 +18.5/C
35,915 24.59 -9.0 -12.1/E
39,350 14.07 +0.1 +2.2/A
35,659 102.99 -5.8 +1.1/D
33,925 10.63 +0.1 +1.3/A
31,765 16.12 -5.1
-1.9/B
59,647 10.73 0.0 +2.3/A
70,683 14.70 -9.0 -12.1/E
120,091 49.35 -6.8
-0.2/B
101,308 49.32 -6.8
-0.3/B
66,468 64.73 -5.1
-0.8/B
30,662 61.97 -7.5
-3.4/B
+10.8/A
+7.6/A
+8.8/C
+12.8/C
+14.1/C
+9.2/B
+12.7/C
+11.1/A
+13.1/B
+3.9/B
+6.1/B
+14.5/A
+14.8/C
+14.9/B
+14.7/A
+14.3/A
+6.8/B
+3.0/B
+5.6/B
+17.4/A
+14.3/A
+22.8/C
NA
+3.6/B
+15.9/B
+2.2/B
+9.1/B
+3.1/D
+3.6/E
+14.6/A
+14.4/A
+10.1/A
+13.3/A
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
NL
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
2,500
2,500
2,500
2,500
0
2,500
10,000
1,000
0
50,000
2,500
10,000
50,000
10,000
50,000
50,000
50,000
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
1.4113
1.5466
1.3207
.8861
120.62
16.7570
.9724
Prime Rate
3.25
3.25
Discount Rate
0.75
0.75
Federal Funds Rate
.00-.25 .00-.25
Treasuries
1.54
1.48
5-year
2.23
2.16
10-year
2.99
2.94
30-year
Gold (troy oz.,NY Merc spot) $1109.50 $1123.70
$14.634
$14.702
Silver (troy oz., NY Merc spot)
15,960
18,400
5,200
4,400
end before full-time students return in
October.
The 55-year-old Spanish actor told a
British TV show earlier this year that he
aspired to study fashion.
His recent roles include the villain in “The
SpongeBob Movie: Sponge out of Water.”
SEND A GREAT HINT TO:
Heloise
P.O. Box 795000
San Antonio, TX 78279-5000
Fax: 1-210-HELOISE
Email: Heloise@Heloise.com
blanket available. Here is a hint:
Request two extra sheets (for a
total of three covering you). It feels
like a light blanket. — G.H., via
email
My first “recon” in a hotel/motel
room is to check the AC/heating,
bed and bath. Call for more pillows
or a light blanket, and tip the person who brings them. — Heloise
3858 Candies
Creek Ln.
Suite C
476-3320
112 Stuart Rd. NE,
Farmland Corner
476-4325
1053 Peerless
Crossing
339-2885
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015—5
House continues effort to snarl Iran nuclear deal
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
House is continuing to flex its
muscles on the Iran nuclear deal
even though the Senate has
already sealed its fate in
Congress.
Senate Democrats voted on
Thursday to uphold the accord
with Iran, overcoming heavy GOP
opposition to hand President
Barack Obama a victory on his
top foreign policy priority.
A disapproval resolution for the
agreement fell two votes short of
the 60 needed to move forward as
most Democratic and independent senators banded together
against it.
House Republicans will continue on Friday to further eleventhhour strategies to derail the
agreement
and
Senate
Republicans are promising a revote. But the Senate action all but
guaranteed that any legislation
disapproving of the deal will never
reach Obama’s desk. The Friday
debate comes on Sept. 11,
anniversary of the 2001 terror
attacks.
Undeterred,
Rep.
Blake
Farenthold, R-Texas, said on the
House
floor
that
House
Republicans are going to “use the
judicial branch of the government” to prevent implementation
of the deal, which gives Iran billions of dollars in sanctions relief
in exchange for imposing
restraints on its nuclear program.
“What part of ‘Death to
America’ do you not understand?”
Farenthold asked, referring to the
oft-repeated refrain of Iranian
hardliners. “The Iran deal is a bad
deal and it needs to be stopped
and we are fighting here in the
House of Representatives to do
that.”
On Thursday, the House adopted a resolution on a vote of 245-
them.
“Congress cannot review an
agreement without having access
to everything including the fine
print. We need to see all the secret
side deals,” said Rep. Ted Poe, RTexas.
On Friday, the House will consider whether to hold a vote to
approve of the nuclear deal and
whether to pass a resolution to
suspend until January 2017 the
president’s authority to waive or
suspend sanctions on Iran.
Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass.,
chided the House Republicans for
what he said was a “convoluted
process with three measures that
won’t go anywhere in the Senate
and will never reach the president’s desk.”
“The fact is the president has
the votes to move this historic
agreement forward,” he said.
Putting an exclamation point
on their party’s success, House
Democrats
late
Thursday
announced there are now 146
members of the House who have
publicly voiced their support of
the deal — enough to uphold a
presidential veto even if any GOP
legislation against the deal could
get through.
New food safety rules issued after deadly outbreaks
GOP bill pays bondholders
if government hits debt limit
WASHINGTON (AP) — Food
manufacturers must be more
vigilant about keeping their
operations clean under new government safety rules released
Thursday in the wake of deadly
foodborne illness outbreaks
linked to ice cream, caramel
apples,
cantaloupes
and
peanuts.
The rules, once promoted as
an Obama administration priority and in the works for several
years, ran into delays and came
out under a court-ordered deadline after advocacy groups had
sued. Even then, the Food and
Drug Administration allowed the
Aug. 30 deadline to pass without
releasing the rules to the public.
When the rules go into effect
later this year, food manufacturers will have to prepare food
safety plans for the government
that detail how they are keeping
their operations clean and show
that they understand the hazards specific to their product.
The plans will lay out how they
handle and process food and
how they monitor and clean up
dangerous bacteria like listeria,
E. coli or salmonella that may be
present, among other safety
measures.
The idea is to put more focus
on prevention in a system that
for decades has been primarily
reactive to outbreaks after they
sicken or even kill people. The
majority of farmers and food
manufacturers already follow
good food safety practices, and
the law would aim to ensure that
all do.
“The food safety problems we
face have one thing in common
— they are largely preventable,”
said Michael Taylor, the FDA’s
deputy commissioner for foods.
The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention estimate
that 48 million people — or 1 in
6 Americans — get sick annually
from foodborne diseases. An
estimated 3,000 people die.
FDA investigators have often
found dirty equipment in food
processing facilities after deadly
outbreaks. In the Blue Bell ice
cream outbreak this year, FDA
inspectors found many violations at a company plant,
including dirty equipment, inadequate food storage, food held at
improper temperatures and
employees not washing hands
appropriately. Three listeria
deaths were linked to ice cream
produced by the company.
A 2011 listeria outbreak
linked to Colorado cantaloupe
killed 30 people. The FDA said
WASHINGTON (AP) — As Congress gears up for another
fight over the federal debt, House Republicans advanced legislation Thursday to make sure investors in U.S. Treasury
bonds get paid even if the government reaches the limit of its
borrowing authority.
Social Security recipients would also be protected. But federal workers, retirees, soldiers and veterans would not.
“This bill takes default off the table,” said Rep. Paul Ryan,
R-Wis. “It requires the Treasury to make good on all debt payments.”
Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Wash., asked, “What happens to
everybody else?”
Unless Congress acts, the federal government is expected to
exhaust its legal ability to borrow in late October, Treasury
Secretary Jacob Lew said Thursday in a letter to congressional leaders. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has
said the debt limit will be reached in November or December.
It would mark the first time in U.S. history that the government has defaulted on its obligations. But so far, congressional leaders have been mum on plans to avoid it.
The debt limit is just one of several fiscal deadlines facing
lawmakers, setting the stage for a crisis-filled autumn in
Washington.
The federal government faces a partial shutdown at the end
of the month, unless Congress agrees on funding. The authority to finance federal highway programs expires at the end of
October, and Congress has until the end of December to
extend billions of dollars in temporary tax breaks that expired
at the beginning of the year.
On a straight party-line vote, the House Ways and Means
Committee passed a bill Thursday that would require the
Treasury to continue borrowing money to make principal and
interest payments on Treasury bonds, even if the statutory
debt limit is reached.
The bill would cover payments to public investors, including
foreign governments, as well as payments to Social Security’s
two trust funds.
The national debt stands at just over $18 trillion. Social
Security holds about $2.7 trillion of the debt.
All 24 Republicans on the committee voted in favor of the
bill; all 15 Democrats were opposed. The bill now goes to the
full House.
Under Democrats and Republicans, Congress has increased
the debt limit many times to account for the fact that the federal government spends more money than it collects in taxes
and fees. But fights over the debt limit have become more
intense in recent years as some Republicans demand spending cuts in exchange for extending the government’s ability to
borrow.
The White House has refused to negotiate over the debt
limit, saying Congress should pay its bills rather than rattle
financial markets.
Republican leaders say the bill passed Thursday would
enable the government to pay its debts even in the face of
political gridlock.
“None of us wants to hit the limit. But if the United States
missed a bond payment, it would shake the confidence of the
world economy,” said Ryan, who chairs the Ways and Means
Committee. “All kinds of credit would dry up, loans for small
businesses, mortgages for young families. We could even go
into a recession.”
The federal government’s largest employee union criticized
the bill because it doesn’t ensure the government will meet all
its obligations.
“Congress should be focused on avoiding a default that will
hurt the economy and individuals, rather than prioritizing
paying foreign debt holders over paying salaries for federal
employees,” said Tony Reardon, president of the National
Man flees San Francisco police by jumping in water
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A
motorcyclist who hit another biker
and then sped away from police
tried to escape by jumping into icy
San Francisco waters.
He was later arrested.
On Thursday afternoon, a
California Highway Patrol officer
186 saying that Obama had not
complied with the Iran Nuclear
Agreement
Review
Act.
Supporters of the resolution
claim the act required the president to supply Congress with all
documents relevant to the deal,
but that the administration did
not give lawmakers texts of two
agreements that the U.N. nuclear
inspection agency negotiated separately with Tehran.
The administration says it
doesn’t have the bilateral agreements and the nuclear inspection
agency says confidentiality provisions prevent it from releasing
attempted to stop the motorcyclist
for driving on a freeway shoulder.
He continued and struck another
motorist. He entered the water at
the China Basin Water Channel
and began swimming. Authorities
went out on a small boat and a jet
ski and also surrounded the shore-
line.
Police brought in larger boats
and surrounded the man in the
water. He eventually climbed onto
a pier where he sat on a large metal
pipe. Police negotiators spoke to
him for several hours and he surrendered Thursday night.
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AP Photo
In thIS FIle Photo, shelves sit empty of Blue Bell ice cream at a grocery store in Dallas after
Texas-based Blue Bell Creameries issued a voluntary recall for all of its products on the market after two
samples of chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream tested positive for listeriosis. Food manufacturers
must be more vigilant about keeping their operations clean under new government safety rules released
Thursday in the wake of deadly foodborne illness outbreaks linked to ice cream, caramel apples, cantaloupes and peanuts.
old, hard to clean equipment and
improper cooling were partly to
blame for the illnesses.
The outbreak of salmonella
linked to a Georgia peanut company in 2009 killed nine and
sickened more than 700 people
in 46 states. It was that outbreak, early in President Barack
Obama’s first term, that prompted the government and Congress
to move forward on strengthening the food safety system.
Mindful of the high cost of outbreaks and recalls, food companies generally have supported
the rules.
The rule “ensures that prevention is the cornerstone of our
nation’s food safety strategy,
places new responsibilities on
food and beverage manufacturers, and provides the FDA with
the authorities it needs to further strengthen our nation’s food
safety net,” said Pamela Bailey,
head
of
the
Grocery
Manufacturers
Association,
which represents the largest
food companies.
FDA’s Taylor said that the
rules will create a “level playing
field” and ensure that all companies are following the rules.
“Facilities with a strong food
safety culture, they want to fix
the problem,” he said.
Congress first passed the
rules in 2010, and it took the
FDA two years to write the specific requirements. The agency
revised that proposal after some
opposition to the first version
from farmers and the food
industry but agreed to deadlines
in a lawsuit filed by food safety
advocates who said the agency
was moving too slowly. The FDA
waited until the Aug 30 deadline
to submit the rules to the
Federal Register, a process that
kept the agency in compliance
with the courts. But they did not
make the rules available to the
public until Thursday.
The food manufacturing rule
is one of seven that the FDA is
issuing to improve food safety,
as per the law. The agency also
issued rules Thursday to ensure
safer manufacturing of pet food.
The most controversial rules
are regulations due in October
that would set new standards for
farmers growing produce. The
rules would require farmers to
take new precautions against
contamination, making sure
workers’ hands are washed, irrigation water is clean and that
animals stay out of fields, among
other things. The FDA has
worked with the agricultural sector to set reasonable standards,
but some in the industry and in
Congress say the standards will
be burdensome for business.
In addition to regulating farms
and food manufacturing facilities, the food safety law authorized more inspections by the
FDA and gave the agency additional powers to shut down facilities. The law also required
stricter standards on imported
foods.
Live! Saturdays at
10:00 a.m.
woopfm.com
OLD TOWN
CLEVELAND
Hosted by Ron and Debbie Moore
September 12:
Stamper’s and downtown
Tune in to 99.9 FM or
www.WOOPFM.com
6—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Festival
From Page 1
four other professional chefs.
The main ingredient in the
competitive dishes being prepared at the festival’s cook-off
events must use cowpeas.
There will be a preliminary
cook-off between high school
culinary students. Flowers’ son
will be a participant. This competition event will be staged just
before noon.
Another big event each year is
the agri-heritage photo contest.
Charleston city officials plan
to attend. On Tuesday, they
joined Charleston Police Chief
Johnny Stokes and festival
planners in making some traffic
Banner photo, ChrIsTY ArMsTrONG flow changes for Saturday’s
ThE COUNTY sChOOL BOArD was recognized as a “Board of Distinction” by the Tennessee event.
School Boards Association on Thursday. From left are board members Chris Turner, Vicki Beaty, Dianna
Market and Worth streets will
Calfee and Charlie Rose, TSBA representative Bill Graham and board members Nicholas Lillios and be one way Saturday, leading up
to the park entrance where you
Amanda Lee.
will pay a $5 parking fee. Wool
Street will remain two way, but
will also lead up to the entrance
site.
Authorities
hope
these
changes will lessen some of the
traffic congestion experienced
last year on Highway 11
through downtown Charleston.
Parking will be in the outfield
grass of the ball field adjacent to
the Charleston City Hall.
Banner photo, hOWArD pIErCE
rIChMOND FLOWErs adds
black-eyed peas to his mixing
bowl while preparing his Texas
Caviar dish during his cowpea
cooking
demonstration
Wednesday evening at the
Museum Center at Five Points.
Melissa Woody of the
Historical Society and Bradley
County Chamber of Commerce,
joined Hiwasee River Heritage
Center Director Darlene Goins
in pointing out that proceeds
from the festival’s parking are
used for the operation of the
Heritage Center.
The entertainment headliner
this year will be young
EmiSunshine. She will take the
stage late in the evening, following the afternoon’s cook-off
competition.
EmiSunshine has performed
at the Ryman Auditorium in
Nashville, has been on the
Grand Ole Opry, and was a
guest on the “Today” show.
One of the festival’s big events
is the purchase of a spoon for
$5. With the spoon, you can
sample the chefs’ dishes. More
than 700 spoons will be available this year, an increase from
600 in 2014.
Woody emphasized that a
record number of 60 craft vendors will attend the Cowpea
Festival. There will also be 15
food vendors.
In addition to the dual cookoffs and vendors, there will be
live music, a family fun field
with inflatable and activities,
the photo contest, and the community’s heritage area.
Banner photo, hOWArD pIErCE
ThErE’s pLENTY MOrE where
those came from. Just make your
way to Charleston Park this Saturday
from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. for the fourth
annual International Cowpea Festival
and Cook-off presented by Bush
Brothers & Company. Admission is
free and the festival will feature live
music, storytelling, and a family-fun
field with games and air toys. A marketplace will offer handmade arts
and crafts, fresh produce and booths
featuring festival sponsors and heritage information telling Charleston's
nationally significant history.
Banner photo, ChrIsTY ArMsTrONG
MIChIGAN AVENUE ELEMENTArY Principal Angela Lawson, right, gestures to the school’s chorus
while talking about students’ accomplishments during Thursday’s Bradley County Board of Education
meeting.
Board
From Page 1
Third District board member
Nicholas Lillios served as the
most recent chairman, while the
7th District’s Charlie Rose was
vice chairman.
The board was also designated
a “Board of Distinction” by the
Tennessee
School
Boards
Association. Bill Graham, director of the TSBA’s Southeast district, presented a plaque to the
board in honor of what its members did over the past two years.
The recognition is given to
boards that complete a checklist
of “best practices” like taking
part in a retreat and having a
superintendent evaluation.
“As the requirements are
extensive, not every board is a
Board of Distinction,” Graham
said. “Congratulations.”
Before the meeting even got to
a start, the board was already
celebrating something else — a
high-achieving school.
A reception was held for faculty and staff of Michigan Avenue
“The teamwork you
guys have shows up in
what our students can
do. We are very thankful
for what you all do.”
— Dr. Linda Cash
Elementary School, which this
year was named a Reward School
by the Tennessee Department of
Education for the second year in
a row. Earning the title placed it
in the top 10 percent of the
schools in the state.
“The teamwork you guys have
shows up in what our students
can do,” Director of Schools Dr.
Linda Cash told the teachers.
“We are very thankful for what
you all do.”
Principal Angela Lawson also
took the opportunity to thank
Cash and the board members for
the recognition and the school’s
staff for all they do.
Fourth District board member
Dianna Calfee, Michigan Avenue
Elementary’s
representative,
added she was impressed by the
school’s staff.
“It has been so refreshing to
come into that school and see so
many people that feel it’s not a
job; you guys are like a family,”
Calfee said. “You sort of feed off
each other, and that perpetuates
out into what’s happening in
your classroom.”
Once the school board meeting
started, Michigan Avenue again
got the spotlight when students
from the school’s chorus led
those gathered in the Pledge of
Allegiance and sang a song talking about how they have been
“changed for the better.”
Cash also presented Lawson
and PTO President Becca Brnik
with plaques for the school and
for the highly involved PTO. The
director also said good parent
involvement has a lot to do with a
school’s success.
LFMS
From Page 1
“We are one step further to
making the Lake Forest project a
reality,” Rose said.
The project in question is to
build a new academic building on
the school’s current campus. It
would eventually replace the
buildings where students currently attend class.
The campus consists of multiple single-story buildings connected by breezeways, meaning
students have to walk outdoors
to get from class to class. That
concern and the buildings themselves falling into disrepair have
spurred on the project.
The board has hired architectural firm The Lewis Group to
begin working on the design for a
new two-story academic building. However, a final estimate of
the building’s cost is still
unknown.
Amounts ranging from $12
million to $14 million have been
estimated in the past. Douglas
Shover, education studio manager for The Lewis Group, said in
July the firm would be “working
with the assumption of” a $14
million budget.
However, Shover indicated
during a meeting Tuesday the
project’s site-related challenges
have made keeping the square
footage — and cost — at an
acceptable limit difficult.
The current plan is to keep the
school’s freestanding cafeteria,
gym and auditorium buildings in
place, and connect the new
building to them.
Shover also said he expected
The project in question
is to build a new
academic building on the
school’s current campus.
It would eventually
replace the buildings
where students
currently attend class.
the building would need to be
“just over” 137,000 square feet to
accommodate those connections
and necessary additions like
stairwells and elevators.
“$120 a square foot is
$16,500,000,” 1st District board
member Chris Turner said, estimating the cost based on
137,000 square feet.
While the Bradley County
Commission has discussed the
project on several occasions, its
members have not voted on a
definite plan for funding the multimillion dollar project.
Like
the
board,
the
Commission still does not have a
final estimate of the cost.
During Thursday’s meeting,
the county school board also
opted not to vote in a new insurance option for employees.
On Tuesday, the board heard a
pitch from Mike Ankrum of Five
Points Benefits to add a new “gap
plan” to supplement an alreadyavailable high deductible insurance plan.
Thursday, Andy Williams of Ed
Jacobs & Associates argued his
firm could offer a better plan.
Talking through the insurance
options, 6th District board member Amanda Lee said the board
did not necessarily need to make
a decision right away.
“We’re going to have to look at
this eventually, though,” Lee
said, adding she would like
school system employees to get
more affordable insurance coverage.
The school system is currently able to offer employees a
“partnership” plan available for
state employees. Williams urged
the board to ask to see the
school system’s claims history
to determine just how much of a
benefit it might be to stick with
the state plan — or go with a
private one.
Director of Schools Dr. Linda
Cash pointed out Tennessee
recently made a health savings
account plan available to state
employees, so there is another
possible choice.
The board decided it needed to
weigh its options before making a
decision, and Cash suggested
she would start a committee to
look into new insurance options.
“I think we’ve got a lot of
homework to do,” Turner said.
Board members also voted to
move forward with plans to allow
student representatives — one
from each county high school —
to serve with them for a year. The
application process is expected to
begin in the spring, and two seniors will have the opportunity in
fall 2016.
Banner photo, hOWArD pIErCE
rIChMOND FLOWErs hosted a cowpea cooking demonstration Thursday evening at the Museum
Center at Five Points. Flowers, who took home top honors at both the 2012 and 2014 International
Cowpea Festival and Cook-off, prepared a hot dish (Cajun Cowpeas) which was both temperature hot
as well as spicy, and a cold dish (Texas Caviar) during the demonstration.
Thanks
From Page 1
occurred, they remember it and
noted how those first responders
were so important in saving the
lives they could, though many
were lost in the terrorists’ attack
that day.
While many members of the
BCSO enjoyed the cake and card,
they were presented to Sheriff
Eric Watson at headquarters. He
said that it means so much to
officers to have the public let
them know how much they care
about them and the work they do.
"It's truly gratifying to me as
your sheriff and to the men and
women that make up the Bradley
County Sheriff's Office to have
local businesses remember us
like our friends at Cash Express
did today,” Watson said. “Just a
small gesture such as a cake, or
even a kind word means so much
to us these days.
“Thank you so much for the
delicious cake, but above all, we
sincerely thank these folks for
being our friends,” the sheriff
concluded.
Banner photo, ALLEN MINCEY
CAsh ExprEss thanked law enforcement on Thursday with a
cake and poster card signed by customers and employees. The presentation was to honor all first responders in memory of the events of
9-11. Holding the cake are Brittany Brown of Cash Express and
Bradley County Sheriff Eric Watson, while Cash Express’ Stephanie
Wilson holds the poster card presented to the department.
Appeals court blocks pesticide use over concerns about bees
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A federal appeals court Thursday
blocked the use of a pesticide
over concerns about its effect on
honey bees, which have mysteriously disappeared across the
country in recent years.
The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency did not adequately study the pesticide sulfoxaflor before approving its use
in 2013 on a wide variety of
crops, including citrus and cotton, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals said.
Initial studies showed sulfoxaflor was highly toxic to honey
bees, and the EPA was required
to get further tests, Circuit Judge
Mary Schroeder said.
“In this case, given the precariousness of bee populations,
leaving the EPA’s registration of
sulfoxaflor in place risks more
potential environmental harm
than vacating it,” she wrote.
EPA spokeswoman Laura Allen
said the agency is reviewing the
decision but had no further comment.
Sulfoxaflor is part of a group of
insecticides known as neonicotinoids
(NEE-OH-NIC-DUHNIDES), according to the 9th
Circuit ruling. Neonicotinoids are
suspected of being among several
factors that have contributed to
the collapse of honey bee
colonies throughout the U.S.
Bees, especially honeybees,
are needed to pollinate crops,
and they are considered essential
to the U.S. food supply.
But a disorder has caused as
much as one-third of the nation’s
bees to disappear each winter
since 2006. A 2013 report issued
by the EPA and U.S. Department
of Agriculture cited a parasitic
mite, multiple viruses, bacteria,
poor nutrition, genetics, habitat
loss and pesticides as factors for
the bees’ disappearance.
“We’re certainly extremely
happy,” said Greg Loarie, an
attorney with the group
Earthjustice, which challenged
the EPA’s approval of sulfoxaflor
on behalf of groups in the beekeeping industry.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015—7
Hopewell Church of God celebrates 50th anniversary
By JOYANNA LOVE
Banner Senior Staff Writer
What began as a small meeting
in a donated house has become a
ministry with far-reaching
impact.
Fifty years ago, on Jan. 31,
1965 Pastor James Morrow and
his wife, Mamie, held the first
service of Hopewell Church of
God.
There were 31 people in attendance, 14 of whom were members.
Today, the church has 450
members following the desire to
be a group “proclaiming the
whole Gospel for the whole person to the whole world.”
Hopewell will celebrate its 50th
Contributed photo
anniversary Sunday at 10 a.m.
THE ORIGINAL congregation of Hopewell Church of God stands
Pentecostal
Theological
in front of the meeting place in this 1965 photo.
Seminary President Dr. Lamar
Vest will speak. Former and current members of the congregation will come together in a
reunion choir, and a dramatization of the church’s history will
be presented.
“It’s really special to me,
because the Bible talks about the
children of Israel coming into the
land and eating and drinking
from wells that they didn’t dig. I
kind of glean from that, because
I didn’t dig this well. I didn’t
plant this tree, but I benefit from
it,” Pastor Jerry Millwood said.
Millwood has been senior pastor at the church for nearly 14
years.
The church focused on prayer
for family members and celebrating heritage in the 50 days leading up to Sunday’s event.
“Out of that 50 days, there
were at least 10 to 15 people
saved,” Millwood said.
Contributed photo
This month has been about
THIS SANCTUARY was built in 2000 by Hopewell Church of God. celebrating heritage by singing
Donald Lee Abbott’s hearing
in court is delayed yet again
By ALLEN MINCEY
Banner Staff Writer
Due to incomplete paperwork,
a court date for Donald Lee
Abbott was delayed Thursday
and rescheduled for Sept. 24, in
Bradley
County
General
Sessions Criminal Court.
Abbott is accused of the firstdegree shooting death of Marla
Sharp, who was the owner of
the Little Diner on First Street.
He has been in custody since
his arrest following the July
shooting of Sharp.
According to past actions by
Abbott in court, he not only
cursed Sessions Court Judge
Sheridan Randolph but was
further belligerent at his
arraignment hearing in late
July.
On Thursday, he remained
calm, though not speaking to
either the judge, other officials,
or his attorney from the Public
Defender’s office.
Court records indicated that
a mental evaluation on Abbott
was not complete, so it was not
presented at General Sessions
Court Thursday. The case was
moved to later this month at
which time officials expect the
evaluation to be available.
Until that time, Abbott
remains at the Bradley County
Jail without bond.
Historic Preservation Commission
approves the demolition of house
By JOYANNA LOVE
Banner Senior Staff Writer
The
Cleveland
Historic
Preservation Commission has
approved a certificate of appropriateness to demolish a condemned
house on 18th Street.
Initially, city staff thought they
would have to demolish the
house and put a lien on the property. The homeowner maintained
the issues with the structure
could be repaired.
City staff had determined the
cost to repair the house would be
more than 50 percent of the value
of the structure. This is one of the
standards used when condemning a house. The issue was
appealed to the Cleveland
Building Board of Adjustment
and Appeals but the appeal was
later withdrawn.
Since then, the property has
“The owner has
indicated that he would
like to remove the home
as soon as possible.
However, the
condemnation process
does apply to the
property regardless of
any transfer in
ownership, so if for any
reason the new property
owner does not comply
with the order, the
structure will still be
removed by the city.”
— Corey Divel
been sold to another owner.
“The owner has indicated that
he would like to remove the home
as soon as possible. However, the
condemnation process does apply
to the property regardless of any
transfer in ownership, so if for
any reason the new property
owner does not comply with the
order, the structure will still be
removed by the city,” according to
Corey Divel, senior city planner.
At a previous meeting,
Cleveland Chief Building Official
Bryan Turner said water damage
had created structural issues
with the home.
Approval for the work to be
done allows the property owner to
apply for a demolition permit. The
permit is good for 30 days.
The property owner will be
required to bring the new house
design to the Cleveland Historic
Preservation Commission for
approval before beginning construction. This ensures the new
home will be in keeping with the
historic style of the district.
older songs and hymns.
The church’s first meeting
place was a one-room house
donated by W.l. and Dorothy
Ridge. The couple had been living
in the home until they could built
anther one.
“Their son Steve Ridge is the
longest-continuing member of
our church,” Millwood said.
As the church grew, additions
were added. Then a sanctuary
was built.
In 1991, the parking lot on the
property was congested, and the
sanctuary building was full.
Pastor Leon Goforth, the senior
pastor at the time, approached
an adjoining property owner
about purchasing some land, but
was told the land was not for
sale.
Goforth was persistent in his
request, and the church began to
pray about being able to expand.
In 1998, the landowner said he
understood the issue the church
was having.
“He said, ‘My land is still not
for sale, but I’ll make you an offer
and if you want it take it ... otherwise leave it alone,’’ Goforth
recounted.
The offer was 4.7 acres for
$87,000.
The church accepted the offer.
A groundbreaking for the new
sanctuary was held June 20,
1999, and the building was dedicated in September 2000.
Goforth had originally visited
the church as a part of the
“Singing Goforth Family.”
“We had sung at Hopewell several times,” Goforth said.
One Sunday, Goforth was
asked to preach because the
church was in between pastors.
He did, thinking it was a onetime event. Yet, when it came
time for the congregation to
choose a future pastor from a list
of seven names, the majority
crossed through all the names
and wrote “Leon Goforth.”
Goforth served as senior pastor of the church for 22 years.
“It was a wonderful time,”
Goforth said.
As the congregation grew larger, so did the outreach of the
church.
“We are actively involved in
social issues and humanitarian
issues, crisis intervention, wellness and military affairs,”
Millwood said.
In April 2011, Hopewell served
as a place for people to come for
food in the aftermath of the tornadoes.
“We served meals to 500 families, three meals a day, during a
week,” Millwood said.
The church also has a food
pantry to meet the current
hunger needs of their area of the
county.
As a retired Air Force chaplain,
chaplaincy has a special place in
Millwood’s heart. Four active
duty chaplains have come from
the congregation. Several others
in the church are trained as
chaplains for natural disasters or
other emergency situations.
Church services go beyond
Hopewell’s buildings on Eureka
Road.
Eight services a week are
offered at the Bradley County
Justice Center. Pastor Mike
McAnally, 87, conducts these
services. McAnally also conducts
services in nursing homes.
Millwood said this is part of
the way the church is following
Jesus’ words in the New
Testament when he talks about
serving the brokenhearted and
those in jail.
“We are trying to do ministry
on purpose,” Millwood said.
The church has five stated
objectives: reach, teach, win,
train and send out.
A discipleship plan outlining
what each church member
should know and understand
about the Bible at specific ages
serves as the model for implementing
these
objectives.
Millwood said courses offered at
the church help people measure
where they are as a disciple of
Christ.
Periodic surveys measure who
has completed what.
“It helps us to set a direction.
It helps us to be able to measure,” Millwood said.
The church also places an
emphasis on wellness. One year,
everyone in the congregation
received “charts to log blood
pressure and heart rate, weight”
and spiritual health by logging
Bible reading.
“We’ve grown a lot but we
haven’t tried to be a big church,
we have tried to be a healthy
church,” Millwood said. “A
healthy body usually grows.”
Prayer has been a major part
of what the church does. Yearly
prayer focuses are selected.
Hopewell Church of God also
has an impact in Romania as it
supports a chaplain center to the
gypsy community there.
“The gypsies of Romania are
throwaway people,” Millwood
said. “We have a director there …
we have a gypsy chaplain training gypsies — that way it is not
cross-cultural. Cross-cultural
doesn’t really work all that well.
(If) you have one of your own
teaching your own, that’s where
the real compassion is.”
Hopewell Church of God is
located at 5765 Eureka Road.
Field Day
From Page 1
gain support for an alternate
event, it became painfully aware
that few families were interested
(or able) to attend during this
time frame as no competitive
events could be held at this alternate location,” said Civitan
President Lindsay Hathcock.
He added those who had
planned on participating in the
Field Day are now being encouraged to participate in the Life
Bridges “Mega Event” which is
scheduled for Saturday from 11
a.m. until 2 p.m. at their location.
“We look forward to seeing you
all next year in April for the
annual Cleveland Civitan Special
Olympics,” Hathcock said.
More information about the
Life Care event is available by
calling 423-472-5268.
DON’S
FENCE CO.
Since 1961
ALL TYPES
OF FENCING
479-6212
& 336-1501
8—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
FRIDAY
ChurCh
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614--6529
Religion e-mail:
mary.matthews@clevelandbanner.com
gwen.swiger@clevelandbanner.com
‘Children's children are the crown of old men ...’
Sunday is Grandparents
Day. The national holiday has
more than one origin. Some
consider it to have been first
proposed by Michael Goldgar in
the 1970s after he visited his
aunt in an Atlanta nursing
home.
He spent $11,000 of his own
money in efforts to have the day
officially recognized, making 17
trips to Washington, D.C., over
a seven-year span to meet with
legislators.
Marian Lucille Herndon
McQuade, a housewife in West
Virginia, is said by others to
have been the main promoter
for the day of observance.
Throughout the 1970s, she
worked to educate people about
the important contributions of
senior citizens and the contributions they could make. She
urged people to adopt a grandparent — not for one day a year
and not for material giving —
but for a lifetime of experience.
National Grandparents Day
was signed into law by
President Jimmy Carter in
1978 and McQuade received a
phone call from the White
House to advise her of the
event.
A presidential proclamation
on Sept. 6, 1979, made the day
official and designated Sunday,
Sept. 9, 1979, (being the “first
Sunday of September after
Labor Day”) as National
Grandparents Day.
I was the first grandchild of
my mother’s parents. My
father’s mother died at his birth
and his father died when I was
very young, so my maternal
grandparents were very much a
part of my life.
My grandfather, Walter
Raleigh, was a train engineer
and their home was a coach —
where I was born — and
caboose — where we lived for a
time.”
To Grandma, I was “Big ’un,”
and she always saw I had my
favorite foods. She was a
“shoutin’ Christian,” although
she never convinced my
Grandpa to join with her in the
faith.
In church services, I sat with
Grandma whenever possible.
That was so I could write and
draw and explore her handbag,
which held any number of
interesting things to a little girl.
I remember once during a
Sunday night service, I had
pulled items from her handbag
— I have to explain this first:
Grandma wore one of those
corsets with staves all around,
so she couldn’t feel anything
touching her — and when
Grandma stood up to testify,
everything was dangling from
her belt, where I had covertly
stuck them.
I was blessed with grandparents who loved me and our relationship flowered throughout
their lives. And I’m sure their
expertise in child-rearing was
passed on to my parents. One
thing for sure — I knew I was
loved.
In today’s society, there are
many grandparents who have
the sole responsibility through
various circumstances of raising their grandchildren. In
2011, there were 7.7 million
children who lived with one or
both grandparents.
But whatever living situations exist, the Bible advocates
grandparents’ being a great
part of the children’s lives, and
contributing to their spiritual
and moral training. To Timothy,
Paul says in 2 Timothy 1:5,
“When I call to remembrance
the unfeigned faith that is in
thee, which dwelt first in thy
grandmother Lois, and thy
mother Eunice; and I am persuaded that in thee also,”
reminding the young minister
how his grandmother had influenced his life.
And in Proverbs 17:6, we
read, “Children's children are
CHURCH ACTIVITIES
Lifelines
Ball Play Baptist Church will
have a tent revival Monday
through Sept. 18, 7 nightly, with
a different speaker each night.
———
Hopewell Church of God, 5765
Eureka Road, will be celebrating
50th years of ministry on Sunday
with Dr. R. Lamar Vest as guest
speaker in homecoming service.
There will be fellowship meal,
special singing and inflatables for
kids.
———
Youth Conference will be held
at 7 tonight with singing, drama
team and speaker Minister
Tristen Rowland at Rivers of
Living Water Ministries, 943 6th
St. N.E. Saturday at 5 p.m. will
be a “Youth Community
Outreach Day” with speaker
Pastor Lisa D.
———
Pastors Wesley and Linda
Choplin will be holding the first
service of Souls Outreach
Church, 2254 Spring Place Road
in the Spring Place Village,
Sunday at 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
———
Homecoming will be held at
Evening Light Gospel Tabernacle
Sunday at 10 a.m. The Seekers
will be the featured singers.
———
Blythe Avenue Baptist Church,
1601 Blythe Ave. S.E., will have
its 50th anniversary Sunday. The
special guest preacher will be the
Rev. Joe Brooks. There will be
dinner following the morning
service.
Bettie
Marlowe
the crown of old men; and the
glory of children are their
fathers.”
How precious are godly
grandparents and what an
opportunity they have to teach
their grandchildren, to love
them, to guide them and provide a stable foundation and
support system. Families don’t
have to be a copy of the TV
Waltons to have the closeness
and strength of family.
Grandparents have a responsibility, also, to warn the next
generations of the evils that
have befallen their forefathers,
and which they too will face.
The first chapter of Joel begins
with such a warning from the
Lord: “Hear this, ye old men,
and give ear, all ye inhabitants
of the land. Hath this been in
your days, or even in the days
of your fathers? Tell ye your
children of it, and let your children tell their children, and
their children another generation” (Joel 1:2, 3 KJV).
Grandparents, you are so
important. We honor you as the
strength of our nation.
Information for Church Activities or the church page should be sent to Mary Matthews at mary.matthews@clevelandbanner.com, mailed to Church Activities Cleveland
Daily Banner, P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN 37320-3600 or dropped at the office, 1505 25th St. Information should be in by noon the day prior to publication.
2104 Blue Springs Road
Morning service, 11 a.m.
Covered-dish lunch
Special music after lunch by
Homecomi ng
B enny B erry
SUNDAY, SEPT. 13, 10 A.M.
Celebrating Sunday, beginning at 10:30 a.m.
HeArT
STrINgS
No evening service
featured singers
Everyone welcome
will sing
Dinner following
anniversary service
in fellowship hall
THE SEEKERS
TASSO BAPTIST ChuRCh
Mission and Ministry in community
See CHURCH, Page 9
EVERLASTING GOSPEL
TABERNACLE
Sunday, Sept. 13
185 Meadow Lane
———
Temple Baptist, Harrison Pike,
will be celebrating Sunday the
35th anniversary of the ministry
of Pastor Paul Fox and his wife,
Joyce. There will be lunch after
the morning service.
———
Bethel Baptist Church on Old
Chattanooga Pike will be celebrating Homecoming Sunday,
beginning at 10:30 a.m. There
will be special singing. There will
be no night service.
———
Redemption Heirs will be
singing at Alpha and Omega
Revival Centers, 1820 Blythe
Ave., Saturday at 6 p.m.
———
Philadelphia
Missionary
Baptist Church, 910 30th St.
S.E., will have Homecoming service Sunday. The Trinity Trio will
be singing at 11 a.m. Lunch will
be served in the fellowship hall
following the service.
———
Heart Strings will sing at
Lighthouse Ministries, 281 Ocoee
St., Sunday at 6 p.m.
———
Parkway Baptist Church, 185
Meadow Lane, will be celebrating
60 years of mission and ministry
throughout the community
Sunday, beginning at 10:30 a.m.
Heart Strings will be the featured
singers. The service will feature a
program to honor our anniversary. Immediately following the
morning service a dinner celebra-
Everyone is welcome
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SINCE
1967
CALL US FOR ALL YOUR PEST CONTROL NEEDS
CALL PESTAWAY
479-9711
www.clevelandbanner.com
Blythe Avenue
Baptist marks
its 50th year
Blythe Avenue Baptist Church
will be celebrating its 50th
anniversary on Sunday.
Guest speaker will be the Rev.
Joe Brooks.
Dinner will be served following
the morning worship service.
The church is located at 1625
Blythe Ave. S.E.
Homecoming
is Sunday at
Tasso Baptist
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015—9
The church under attack
These are days when in many
communities, the local church
is no longer respected. Whereas
in times past the pastor and the
church were pillars in the community and highly respected.
There are so many attacks on
religious freedom that one pastor said churches need a good
attorney. For example, one city
attorney argued that a church’s
signs leading to its services
were not as important as secular signs such as those of real
estate.
A well-known Christian
attorney exclaimed recently: “I
have never seen a barrage of
attacks on religious freedom in
America like we are witnessing
The Bible and
Current Events
Clyne W.
Buxton
today. Activists eager to redefine marriage, the ACLU
(American
Civil
Liberties
Union) the (national, liberal
U.S. government) — and even
state and local governments —
are all coming after your religious freedom like never
before.”
Homecoming will be held
Sunday at Tasso Baptist Church.
The service will begin at 11 a.m.
A covered-dish luncheon will be
served following the morning worship service.
Music in the afternoon will be
provided by Benny Berry.
Tasso Baptist Church is located at 164 Old Charleston Road.
Regularly, national news
media bring stories of ordinary
people who just want to live out
their faith, being intimidated
and punished.
There is no doubt that the
cause of Christ is under attack.
More and more the Christ-follower is marginalized. He is
thought to be out of step with
society, and the Bible is outdated, filled with myths and is
untrustworthy.
Nonetheless, as long as
churches have freedom they
will preach the Bible and souls
will be won to Christ.
For 20 years a local church
in the Bronx, New York City,
struggled to gain access to
public school buildings just as
other groups had access.
Named the Bronx Household of
Faith, the church has been
repeatedly denied access.
Nowhere are Judeo-Christian
values under attack more than
in our public education system.
An organization known as the
Gay, Lesbian, and Straight
Education Network is active in
thousands of public schools.
They aggressively strive to
indoctrinate students. Their
published materials say that
children should experiment
with sex and encourage teachers to include homosexual
themes in all grades.
The director of communication of GLSEN said, “If we do
our job right, we’re going to
raise a generation of kids who
don’t believe (the claims of
Christianity).” That quote is
typical of the founder’s contempt for believers.
Another group bombarding
children
with
unbiblical
thoughts
is
Planned
Parenthood who sells contraceptives to children and regularly performs abortions on
teenagers.
Their website, filled with sex
games and outlandish messages, is dangerous for children. Also, their crude cartoons
tell children as young as 10 of
lewd sexual acts. Planned
Parenthood is currently being
exposed because of their gruesome harvesting of body parts
of unborn babies.
Praise God, the Bible tells of
a day when all evil will be
stopped and Christ will rule the
world in purity, love, and peace.
Lord, hasten that day!
(Column 3 of a series on The
State of the Union)
SOULS OUTREACH CHURCH
ESTABLISHED
Pastors Rev. Dr. Wesley and Linda Choplin
Invite you to attend.
First Service Sunday, 11am and 6pm on Sept. 13th
Pastors Dr. Wesley
Thursdays 7pm
and Linda Choplin
Location: 2254 Spring Place Road in
the Spring Place Plaza
Souls Outreach Church is a Pentecostal
body in distinction and declares the New
Testament as its rule of order.
Call Pastor Choplin at 423-479-2778
Philadelphia
Baptist to hold
homecoming
Homecoming will be held
Sunday
at
Philadelphia
Missionary Baptist Church.
The Rev. Paul Fox and his wiFe, Joyce, came to Temple Baptist Church to pastor on Sept. 10,
The Trinity Trio will be singing 1980. The event will be celebrated Sunday when they will be honored for their 35 years of ministry at the
at 11 a.m. Following the morning church. Friends and family are invited to the special service and enjoy a covered-dish lunch at noon. The
worship, lunch will be served in
family photo, above, was taken in 1980 when the Foxes came to Temple Baptist Church.
the fellowship hall.
The church is located at 910
30th St. S.E.
Highers to
speak at East
Side meetings
Revival and Gospel meetings
will be held Sept. 20 through 23
at the East Side church of Christ.
Alan Highers, editor of the
Spiritual Sword, and a retired
judge with the Tennessee Court of
Appeals, will be the speaker.
The topic for the week will be
“Edify, Evangelize and Analyze.”
Services will be at 9:30 and
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. on Sept.
20; and at 7 nightly Monday
through Wednesday.
The church is located at 252
Wildwood Avenue, the corner of
4th and Wildwood.
For more information, call 4720901 or www.eastsidecoc.org.
Cross, Torres to be
HHE speakers
Terry Cross and Ramon Torres
will be the speakers next week for
the His Hands Extended devotions.
The nondenominational devotions are held on Tuesday and
Wednesday mornings at Garden
Plaza, 3500 Keith St.
Cross will be the Tuesday
speaker and Torres the Thursday
speaker.
Church
From Page 8
tion will be held in the fellowship
hall.
———
Evangelist Bobby Shutt will be
preaching Sunday night at
Community Church of God on
Fulbright Road.
———
Thompson Springs Baptist
Church, 5560 Bates Pike, will
have Homecoming Sunday, beginning at 10:30 a.m. There will be
special singing provided by the
many talented members and the
church chorale.
Schatzline to speak at IMN conference
International
Ministries Saturday.
Network is holding its annual
The conference is free, but for
conference in Cleveland today the luncheon, the cost is $10 per
and Saturday.
person, and reservations
Pat Schatzline, Ph.D.,
are required.
will be the special guest
The conference schedspeaker.
ule will also include sevDr. Schatzline is bisheral local pastors who
op and founding apostle
will share in a forum setof Daystar Ministries
ting Saturday beginning
International.
at 10 a.m.
DMI is a network of
Topics for these sesministries and churches
sions are “Leadership”
in the U.S. and abroad.
and
“Apostles
and
Schatzline has traveled
Prophets.”
Schatzline
extensively throughout
Forum speakers will
the world preaching and training include Pastor Craig Cooper from
leaders in Africa, Western Relationship Church in Dalton,
Europe, Southeast Asia and Ga.; and Cleveland area speakers
Australia as well as all across Jonnie Shumate from Living
North America.
Word Church, Tina Baker from
He is the author of “Reviving International House of Fire,
Spiritual Hunger,” a book on Michael Obi from Mount Zion
spiritual order and personal pas- Prayer Center and Rhonda
sion for Jesus Christ.
Westfield from St. James
Schatzline will speak for the Cumberland
Presbyterian
opening of the conference at 7 Church.
tonight and again for the
The conference will conclude
Missions luncheon at noon, with a service of anointing and
impartation at 1:30 p.m.
International
Ministries
Network is a national and international network of ministries,
including ministers and churches in the USA and around the
world. IMN licenses and ordains
ministers at all levels, from those
who are entering into the ministry to those who have many
years of experience in ministry.
More information on ministry
licensing and ordination will be
available at the conference.
IMN was founded by Dr. Larry
Cockerham, who is also the
founding pastor of Living Word
Church. The conference is free
and open to the public.
Reservations are recommended
but not required.
Registration is available at
www.IMNGlobal.net
or
at
www.eventbrite.com.
All Christian ministers are welcome to participate.
Living Word Church will host
the IMN conference at 930 25th
St. in Cleveland.
First service set at Souls Outreach
Souls Outreach Church, a
mission church outreach, will
hold its organizational service
Sunday at 11 a.m.
The Rev. Wesley and Linda
Choplin will be leading the services.
The worship scheduled will be
at 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. on
Sunday and Christian training
on Thursday, 7 p.m.
Souls Outreach Church is
sponsored and supported by the
Cornerstone Church of God.
The congregation will be
meeting at 2254 Spring Place
Road in the Spring Place Plaza.
The Choplins, who will serve
as lead pastors, have been in
ministry for more than 40 years
serving as both youth and senior pastors.
He is an ordained bishop credential with the Church of God.
He has a degree from Logos
Bible College in Jacksonville,
Fla., and a doctor of divinity
from Cambridge Theological
Seminary in Byesville, Ohio.
She is a licensed minister in
Testament as its rule of order,
Choplin said.
For more information on the
church, call Choplin at 4792778.
Attend church
this weekend
Wesley and Linda
Choplin
the Church of God. She has an
associates degree in Christian
studies from Sure Foundation
in Detroit, Mich.
The Choplins have served in
three congregations of the
Church of God in the past five
years. Most recently they were
with pastorial care/outreach
and seniors at the Cornerstone
Church of God.
The Souls Outreach Church
is a pentecostal body in distinction and declares the New
CHURCH DIRECTORY
Serving Cleveland for
over 175 years
Farmland Community Church
Meeting at the Cleveland Family YMCA
Sanctuary - Traditional Worship - 8:30 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Fellowship Hall - Informal Worship - 8:45 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
Nursery available for all worship services
Randy Martin, Senior Pastor Skip White, Associate Pastor
155 Central Ave., NW
423-476-5586
http://www.bsumc.org
220 Urbane Road NE
Sunday Morning Worship Service 10 AM
Office Phone: 473-9891
“Come See The Difference”
REV. CHIP HAMMONDS
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH United Christian Church
3425 Ocoee St. N 476-4504
www.ClevelandUMC.com
Pastor: Rev. Tim Bracken
Sunday Worship....8:30 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.
Sunday School..............................9:30 a.m.
Wednesday Night Together...........5:30 p.m.
(Supper Reservations Required) - (Nursery Provided)
OPEN HEARTS, OPEN MINDS, OPEN DOORS...
The People of The United Methodist Church
Wesley Memorial United
Methodist Church
3405 Peerless Road NW
Cleveland, TN 37312 • 472-9578
www.wesleymemorialchurch.com
Email: office@wesleymemorialchurch.com
Rev. Ramon Torres
Sunday Worship – 8:30, 11:00, 6:00
Where Everybody is Somebody, & Jesus Christ is Lord
First Lutheran Church
“Building on His Promise”
“Scripture-Based”
8:15 & 10:45 Service
9:30 Sunday School
Reverend Robert Seaton, Pastor
-C)NTIRE3TREET.%s#LEVELAND4.
#HURCH/FlCEs0ARSONAGE
Pastors Charles & Margie Poteat
2200 Peerless Rd
Cleveland, TN
423.479.4277
A Full-Gospel Fellowship
Everyone Welcome
Service Times: Sunday 11 AM & 6 PM, Wed. 7 PM
´ of Lisieux
St. Thérese
Catholic Church
MASS SCHEDULE
Saturday 6 p.m. (Vigil)
Sunday: 8 a.m. (Spanish), 9:30 a.m., 12 p.m.
1st & 3rd Sunday, 3 p.m. (Latin)
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday: 8:30 a.m.
Wednesday: 5:30 p.m.
SACRAMENT OF PENANCE
Saturday 4:45-5:45 p.m.
900 CLINGAN RIDGE DR. NW • 476-8123
sttheresecatholicchurch.org
ATTEND A
CHURCH OF
YOUR CHOICE
THIS WEEKEND
10—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Intelligence chief: Iraq, Syria
may not survive as states
Firefighters
battle to protect
treasured
Sequoias
FRESNO, Calif. (AP) —
Firefighters in Central California
on Thursday say the state’s
largest wildfire threatens to
sweep through an ancient grove
of Giant Sequoia trees considered
to be a national treasure.
Firefighters are clearing lines
with bulldozers around the Grant
Grove and putting up sprinklers,
said Andy Isolano, a spokesman
for the Clovis Fire Department.
Although Isolano said the trees
can endure fire, some are
stressed in the four-year drought
and they’re not taking any
chances because the fast-moving
flames are about 5 miles from the
grove.
It is named for the towering
General Grant tree that stands
268 feet tall. There are dozens of
Sequoia groves in the Sierra
Nevada, and some trees are 3,000
years old.
Lightning strikes on July 31
sparked the wildfire in the Kings
Canyon National Park east of
Fresno. It has charred 172 square
miles and is less than one-third
contained.
Meanwhile, lions, tigers and
other cats big and small are being
evacuated as California’s biggest
wildfire continues to spread, possibly threatening the park where
they live, officials said Thursday.
Cat Haven in Fresno County,
where the fire has been burning
for nearly six weeks, is closing
temporarily. Officials are also
advising more residents to be
ready to evacuate as the stubborn
blaze spreads.
Nearly three dozen wild cats
will soon be moved from the 100acre site just west of King’s
Canyon National Park.
The foothill communities of
Dunlap,
Miramonte,
and
Pinehurst are under evacuation
warnings.
KFSN
reports
(http://abc30.tv/1EQkfIf) the
cats will go south to the Los
Angeles area, while others will
stay in the Fresno area. The
Fresno Chaffee Zoo is also assisting.
Another wildfire in Northern
California that exploded in size
has destroyed six homes in
Amador County as evacuations
remained in place Thursday, Cal
Fire officials said. Two outbuildings were also destroyed. It is
about 20 percent contained and
has spread to nearby Calaveras
County.
Another
wildfire
above
Yosemite Valley grew to 500
acres, sending plumes of smoke
visible throughout the park, park
spokesman Scott Gediman said.
Trails on the north rim of
Yosemite Valley south of the Tioga
Road and east of Yosemite Creek
are closed, Gediman said. The
causes of the fires are under
investigation.
Crow Canyon Archaeological Center BLM-Anasazi Heritage Center Collections via AP
THis undATed PHoTo provided by the Crow Canyon
Archaeological Center, BLM-Anasazi Heritage Center
Collections, shows, a Mesa Verde black-on-white mug at the
Crow Canyon Archaeological Center in Cortez, Colo., that
researchers believe may have been used for caffeinated
drinks. University of New Mexico anthropology professor
Patricia Crown has led a study that has shown that caffeine
was an international market mover, with ancient civilizations
trading holly and cacao-based chocolate beverages between
what is now modern-day Mexico, the Southwest, and the
South. The study says the trade lasted for around 700 years,
likely driven by a pre-Hispanic caffeine addiction.
Caffeine trade thrived
in ancient America
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP)
— More than 1,000 years
before Starbucks, caffeine was
an international market
mover, with ancient civilizations trading holly and cacaobased chocolate beverages
between what is now modernday Mexico, the Southwest,
and the South, according to a
new study.
Led by University of New
Mexico anthropology professor
Patricia Crown, the study says
the trade lasted for around
700 years, likely driven by a
pre-Hispanic caffeine addiction.
Previous studies found
traces of cacao-based chocolate beverages in parts of the
Southwest but this new study
confirms their popularity and
adds the holly drink that
before the study was not
known to be consumed in the
Southwest, Crown said.
Holly, which was used to
make a caffeinated tea, was
grown in what is now the
South.
Researchers found caffeine
on shards from jars, bowls,
and pitchers located at
archaeological sites throughout present-day New Mexico,
Arizona and Colorado, where
neither holly nor cacao grows.
“The fact we have found
traces of caffeine that are
1,000 years old is exciting,”
Crown said. “As new technolo-
gy develops, we can discover
things about the past like this
using objects we already have
in museums.”
Crown said the caffeine likely was used in rituals and
political events. Scientists
believe the drinks were largely
consumed by the elite or a
noble class because the plant
for the drinks had to go
through an intricate trade
route.
“For people who had a diet
consisting of corn, bean and
squash, the drinks provided a
kick,” Crown said.
Dave DeWitt, author of “The
Food Lover’s Handbook to the
Southwest,” said he was surprised to learn the study
found holly was so popular in
the Southwest. He believes it
may have been consumed for
the caffeine.
The chocolate, however, was
likely popular for other reasons.
“I don’t think it had to do
with the caffeine since cacao
has so very little of it,” DeWitt
said. “It had to do with the rituals that go back to the Aztecs
and the Maya,” he said.
It’s unclear if people in the
Southwest traveled down to
Mexico or if the plants were
obtained through village-tovillage trade routes.
The study is published in
the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences.
are enjoying mild inflation. Yet
tepid price increases pose a
dilemma for the Federal
Reserve. It wants to see inflation
closer to its 2 percent target
before raising interest rates,
potentially as soon as its meeting next week.
The Fed targets 2 percent
inflation as a cushion against
falling prices, or deflation,
which can drag down wages and
is hard to counteract.
Wholesale gas prices fell 7.7
percent in August, the government said, the biggest drop
since January. Home heating oil
prices fell 11 percent. The cost
of airline tickets and pickup
trucks also fell.
A gallon of gas cost an average
$2.37 on Thursday, 22 cents
cheaper than a month earlier and
down by $1.06 in the past year.
lost control of them. A selfdeclared caliphate by the Islamic
State straddles the border
between both countries.
Iraqis and Syrians now more
often identify themselves by tribe
or religious sect, rather than by
their nationality, he said.
“I think the Middle East is
going to be seeing change over
the coming decade or two that is
going to make it look unlike it
did,” Brennan said.
Iraq and Syria were artificial
creations of British and French
diplomats when the Ottoman
Empire disintegrated on the eve
of World War I. Each contains
communities of Sunnis, Shiites
and Kurds. Iraq is run by a
Shiite-dominated government
with ties to Iran, while the
Bashar Assad government in
Syria is dominated by Alawites,
also a Shiite sect. They are each
fighting Islamic State, a fundamentalist Sunni group.
The Obama administration’s
official policy is that Iraq and
Syria remain internationally recognized
nation
states.
Administration officials, for
example, have resisted calls to
send arms directly to the Kurds,
who have carved out a measure
of autonomy in northern Iraq
and have been America’s most
loyal ally in the region. The
administration has insisted that
arms for the Kurds be routed
through the government in
Baghdad.
In 2006, then-Sen. Joe Biden
argued for splitting Iraq into
three autonomous ethnic zones
with a limited role for a central
government. The George W. Bush
administration sought to keep
Iraq unified, but Sunnis eventually became disaffected with a
Shiite government in Baghdad
that excluded them. Kurds have
been in continual disputes over
budgets and oil with Bagdad, and
they have seized control of the
strategic northern city of Kirkuk.
In Syria, the Assad government is hanging on with increasing support from Russia, leaving
the country divided among government, rebel-held, and Islamic
State territory.
Arizona police confirm 11th
vehicle attack, seek tips
PHOENIX (AP) — The search
for a suspect in a string of
Phoenix freeway shootings has
taken on a frenzied pace, with a
panicked public flooding a police
hotline with tips.
Police confirmed one of these
reports as a shooting, raising to
11 the number of vehicles struck
on Phoenix-area freeways since
Aug. 29. Eight were hit by bullets and three by projectiles
such as BBs and pellets.
One girl’s face was cut by
glass as a bullet shattered her
window.
Authorities are appealing for
help through social media, news
conferences, TV interviews and
freeway billboards. The messages have morphed from
“report suspicious activity” to
“shooting tips” to the more ominous “I-10 shooter tip line” on
Thursday.
Thousands of tips have come
in, many proving to be false
leads based on road hazards
routine in Arizona, like windshields cracked by loose rocks
sent airborne by the tires of
other vehicles.
On Thursday alone, drivers
reported possible shootings of
an armored truck, two cars and
two tractor-trailers. Authorities
and TV crews scrambled to these
scenes, only to discover minor
damage.
Only one of these proved to be
a shooting, Department of Public
Safety spokesman Raul Garcia
said. A commercial truck driver
found a bullet hole in his cargo
area after making hours of deliveries, so it was impossible to
Food costs rose 0.3 percent, know where or exactly when it
driven higher by a 23.2 percent happened.
As the shootings intensify and
jump in egg prices, a result of a
recent outbreak of avian flu.
Pork and beef costs also rose.
Overall consumer prices are
barely rising. According to the
Federal Reserve’s preferred
measure, they increased just
0.3 percent in July from a year
earlier. Excluding the volatile
categories of food and energy,
core prices climbed 1.2 percent
in the 12 months ending in
July.
Those figures are far from the
Fed’s 2 percent target, a gap
that could cause Fed policymakers to delay a rate hike when it
meets next week. Many analysts
had previously expected the Fed
to increase short-term interest
rates at its Sept. 16-17 meeting
for the first time in nine years.
U.S. producer prices unchanged in August
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
prices charged by U.S. manufacturers, farmers and other
producers were unchanged in
August, the latest evidence that
inflation is tame.
The Labor Department said
Friday the producer price index,
which measures price changes
before they reach the consumer,
was flat after a 0.2 percent
increase in July. Excluding the
volatile food and energy categories, core prices rose 0.3 percent last month.
In the past year, wholesale
prices have actually fallen 0.8
percent, the seventh straight
12-month decline. Core prices
have risen just 0.9 percent during that time.
With oil and gas prices falling
and most other costs little
changed, American consumers
WASHINGTON (AP) — Iraq and
Syria may have been permanently torn asunder by war and sectarian tensions, the head of the
Defense Intelligence Agency said
Thursday in a frank assessment
that is at odds with Obama
administration policy.
“I’m having a tough time seeing
it come back together,” Lt. Gen.
Vincent Stewart told an industry
conference, speaking of Iraq and
Syria, both of which have seen
large chunks territory seized by
the Islamic State.
On Iraq, Stewart said he is
“wrestling with the idea that the
Kurds will come back to a central
government of Iraq,” suggesting
he believed it was unlikely. On
Syria, he added: “I can see a time
in the future where Syria is fractured into two or three parts.”
That is not the U.S. goal, he
said, but it’s looking increasingly
likely.
CIA Director John Brennan,
speaking on the same panel at an
industry conference, noted that
the countries’ borders remain in
place, but the governments have
get more attention, many drivers
are taking alternate routes.
Ron Freeman, who works at a
truck stop near Interstate 10,
said he called his wife and family
and told them to stay off the
freeway until the situation calms
down.
“It’s kind of spooky, man,
when people can’t drive up and
down the interstate unless
they’re getting shot at,” Freeman
said.
The shootings haven’t fit any
obvious pattern. Most happened
on Interstate 10, a main route
through Phoenix. Bullets have
been fired at various times of the
day, striking a seemingly random assortment of vehicles,
from an empty bus to tractortrailers to pickup trucks, cars
and SUVs.
Helicopters flew up and down
Interstate 10 on Thursday as an
officer monitored a wall of TV
monitors carrying live surveillance video from every freeway
in metro Phoenix. The Arizona
Department of Public Safety has
enlisted the help of the FBI,
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms and Explosives, local
police and undercover law
enforcement officers.
“We have a number of officers
... both uniformed, non-uniformed, plainclothes, undercover vehicles, marked vehicles on
the road patrolling, looking for
the suspect, looking for leads,”
said Bart Graves, another DPS
spokesman.
Many longtime Phoenix residents still remember the random
shootings that terrorized the
public a decade ago. Nearly 30
people were shot, and eight
killed, including a cyclist who
was riding down the street and a
man who was sleeping at a bus
stop. Two men were eventually
caught and convicted.
These shootings also recall
other random highway and
roadside
shootings,
most
notably the sniper attacks that
terrorized the nation’s capital
more than a decade ago before
two men were captured there.
Sheriff Zach Scott of Franklin
County, Ohio, knows exactly
what Arizona authorities are
going through.
He was a lead investigator
when drivers were frightened by
Ohio freeway shootings over several months in 2002 and 2003,
one of them deadly. They set up
an emergency operations center
and staffed a task force from 10
different agencies to field calls,
taking in more than 5,000 tips.
The most valuable one came
from a relative of Charles McCoy
Jr., who called to report that “I
got a nephew who acts crazy and
has a gun and might have something to do with this,” Scott
recalled.
McCoy fled to Las Vegas and
was arrested there on St.
Patrick’s Day 2003.
People do read
small ads.
You are reading
one now.
Call The Banner
472-5041
2015
Full Section
• Driveways
• Windows
• Painting Inside/out
• Bathrooms
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• And Much More
Advertising Deadline:
Tuesday, Sept. 15
Publication Date:
Sunday, Sept. 20
Pastors Jamie & Judy Jacobs Tuttle | 523 Urbane Road NE
Cleveland, TN 37312 | 423-790-5200 | Dpci.tv
Call the Cleveland Daily Banner
today to schedule your ad!
423-472-5041
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015—11
NATIONAL BRIEFS
University in Ohio suspends 2
fraternities; 1 gets probation
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) — Miami
University in Ohio has suspended two fraternities and placed
another on probation for hazing
rituals and conduct violations.
The Cincinnati Enquirer
reports Sigma Nu fraternity
members forced pledges to tally
how many beers they drank on
their chests, encouraging them
to attempt 100.
Sigma Nu is also accused of
prohibiting pledges from shaving
or showering, sharing their
unkempt
images
through
Snapchat and text messages.
They are suspended through
2018.
Phi Kappa Psi was suspended
until 2019 after officials found
“inappropriate” pictures taken of
an individual without consent.
Kappa Sigma was placed on
probation.
Jayne Brownell, vice president
for student affairs, called the
suspensions unfortunate but
said hazing would never be tolerated at the Oxford school.
Sigma Nu and Phi Kappa Psi’s
appeals were overturned in June
and July.
Georgia woman accused of death
threat against congressman
ATHENS,
Ga.
(AP)
—
Authorities say a northeast
Georgia woman is in federal custody after prosecutors say she
threatened to kill U.S. Rep. Doug
Collins, a Georgia Republican.
An indictment filed this week
in U.S. District Court in Georgia
states that Pam Spivey of Lavonia
threatened to kill Collins as well
as an immediate family member
of the congressman.
The indictment doesn’t identify
the family member, nor does it
reveal a possible motive.
Spivey is charged with influencing a federal official by threat;
and influencing a federal official
by threatening an immediate
family member.
The court documents don’t list
an attorney for Spivey.
Man accused of throwing infant
off bridge pleads not guilty
MIDDLETOWN, Conn. (AP) —
A man accused of throwing his 7month-old son off a bridge into
the Connecticut River has pleaded not guilty to murder charges.
Police say 21-year-old Tony
Moreno threw his son Aaden off
the Arrigoni Bridge on July 5. A
police affidavit states Moreno
called his mother from the bridge
asking her to pick up a phone
with pictures of the baby and a
stroller. Police say he then
jumped over the railing into the
river once she arrived with his
brother and police officers.
Documents show Moreno and
Aaden’s mother were going
through a custody dispute. A
judge denied a permanent
restraining order against him
days earlier.
He appeared Thursday in
Superior Court in Middletown.
His public defender would not
say if Moreno is planning to pursue an insanity defense.
Officer who fatally shot man
after traffic stop seeking bond
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — A
lawyer for a South Carolina
police officer charged with murder after he was captured on
video shooting a fleeing man in
the back is trying to change the
public’s perception of what happened.
During a bail hearing
Thursday, defense attorney Andy
Savage said small amounts of
cocaine were found in Walter
Scott’s system after he was killed
April 4, and he suggested that
Scott tried to take North
Charleston officer Michael
Slager’s Taser and use it against
him.
Prosecutor Scarlett Wilson
called Slager an executioner who
planted his Taser by Scott’s body
to try and cover up his actions.
Over the past five months, discussion of the case has been
dominated by the cellphone video
showing Scott running away and
Slager shooting eight times at
Scott’s back.
The judge hearing the case
said Thursday that he’ll decide
later whether to release Slager on
bond.
Brothers accused of plot to kill
parents to appear in court
ATLANTA (AP) — Two brothers
accused of attacking their parents in what police say was a plot
to kill them are set to make their
first appearances in court.
A preliminary hearing is set for
1:30 p.m. Friday for 17-year-old
Cameron Ervin and 22-year-old
Christopher Ervin. They face
aggravated assault and arson
charges.
Yvonne Ervin told police her
two sons drugged and attacked
her and her husband in their
suburban Atlanta home Sept. 5.
She and her husband, Zachary,
were hospitalized but are expected to survive.
Gwinnett County District
Attorney Danny Porter said the
brothers also turned on the gas
to the fireplace and lit a candle in
a failed attempt to blow up the
house, which led to the arson
charges.
Attorneys for the defendants
haven’t returned messages seeking comment.
Training crash at California base
kills 1 Marine, injures 18
CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. (AP)
— A vehicle rolled over during
routine training at Camp
Pendleton, killing one Marine
and injuring 18 others, officials
said.
First Lt. Colleen McFadden
said she had very few details to
release on Thursday’s crash,
including what type of vehicle
rolled over or the extent of the
injuries involved.
Several patients from the accident were taken to Palomar
Medical Center in Escondido,
hospital spokeswoman Bobette
Brown said. She would not say
exactly how many or give any
further details them, citing legal
restrictions.
The Marine who was killed was
from the 1st Marine Division,
and that person’s name will not
be released until 24 hours after
relatives are notified, McFadden
said.
“The command’s priorities are
to take care of the Marines,
Sailors and families of the unit,”
McFadden said in a statement.
“We want to ensure the Marines
and their family members are
being provided for during this
difficult time.”
Camp Pendleton, a vast seaside base north of San Diego, is
the major West Coast outpost for
the U.S. Marine Corps.
In November 2013, four
Marines were killed there while
clearing explosives in a Camp
Pendleton training area.
Jet engine parts on Las Vegas
runway indicate major failure
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Jet engine
parts found on the Las Vegas
runway where a British Airways
flight aborted takeoff as the
engine burst into flames indicate
a rare catastrophic failure,
experts said as investigators
released preliminary findings
and began analyzing flight data
and cockpit recordings.
Early findings show the failure
occurred where the engine was
under the highest pressure,
though there was no immediate
indication of what caused it or
the fire that forced 170 people to
evacuate Tuesday at McCarran
International Airport as smoke
poured from the aircraft.
“You really don’t see catastrophic or uncontained engine
failure like this very often,” said
John Cox, an aviation safety consultant who spent 23 years as a
U.S. Airways pilot. He said
Thursday that the failure indicates parts sliced through the
engine casing.
The National Transportation
Safety Board said there was
damage to the armored shell
around the left engine’s highpressure compressor, and several 7- to 8-inch fragments of the
compressor were found on the
tarmac.
No one was seriously injured
when British Airways Flight 2276
screeched to a halt and the 157
passengers and 13 crew members escaped down evacuation
slides as firefighters doused
flames spewing from the engine
beneath the wing of the Boeing
777.
The pilot who halted the takeoff and calmly called “mayday,
mayday” said he will retire one
flight shy of the day he had
planned to hang up his wings.
Chris Henkey of Padworth,
England, told NBC News he’d
never had such a close call in a
42-year career, and he’s “finished
flying.” He won’t captain what
was to be his final flight to
Barbados, where he intended to
vacation with his daughter.
Deadlocked jury to resume
deliberations in officer’s trial
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) —
Jurors hearing the federal trial of
an Alabama police officer who
slammed an Indian grandfather
to the ground have deadlocked,
but will continue deliberating
after a night’s rest.
The jury has been asked to
return to continue deliberations
Friday morning in the trial of
Madison police officer Eric
Parker.
Parker is charged with violating the civil rights of 58-year-old
Sureshbhai Patel (suh-REHSH’by pah-TEL’) during a suspicious
person investigation in February.
Parker said Patel resisted and
Patel denied that through an
interpreter, saying he didn’t
understand Parker because he
doesn’t speak English. Patel was
seriously injured when he was
slammed down.
U.S. District Judge Madeline
Hughes Haikala asked the panel
to return in the morning and reevaluate evidence and testimony
in the case.
Judge leaves door open to
reconsider Freddie Gray trials
BALTIMORE (AP) — A judge
has ruled that six police officers
charged in the death of Freddie
Gray will be tried in Baltimore,
but this could be just the beginning of defense attorneys’ efforts
to move their trials out of town.
Despite the days of riots,
protests and a multimillion-dollar settlement that followed
Gray’s death, Baltimore Circuit
Judge Barry Williams ruled
Thursday that a fair trial can be
held in the city. But the judge left
the door open for defense attorneys to revisit their change of
venue bid if an impartial jury
can’t be seated in the city.
Legal experts say it’s likely the
defense will continue to ask for
the trials to be moved outside of
the city.
weapon at officers, but no shots
were fired until the suspect and
the officer went over the fence,
Myers said.
The wounded officer was taken
to a hospital for treatment and
was expected to recover, Myers
said.
The names of the suspect and
the wounded officer were not
immediately released.
It wasn’t immediately clear
why the man was under investigation, Myers said.
Investigators recovered a gun
at the scene, Myers said.
Aisha Williams, who lives in a
nearby apartment complex, told
The Indianapolis Star she heard
someone yell, “Get on the
ground!” Williams then opened
her door and saw an officer chasing someone, she said. She then
heard about five gunshots.
It’s the second police-action
shooting involving a state trooper
in less than a week.
New York state OKs $15 minimum
wage for fast-food workers
NEW YORK (AP) — New York
state will gradually raise the minimum wage for fast-food workers
to $15 an hour — the first time
any state has set the minimum
that high.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s administration formally approved the
increase Thursday, a move the
Democratic governor announced
at a labor rally with Vice
President Joe Biden. Cuomo said
he would work to pass legislation
setting a $15 minimum for all
industries, a promise that comes
as more and more cities around
the country move toward a $15
minimum wage.
“Every working man and
woman in the state of New York
deserves $15 an hour,” the governor told the enthusiastic crowd
of union members. “We’re not
going to stop until we get it
done.”
Biden predicted the $15 wage
for fast-food workers would galvanize efforts across the country.
“You’re going to make every
single governor in every single
state in America look at themselves,” he said at the rally in
New York City. “It’s going to have
a profound impact.”
He said he and President
Barack Obama remain committed to raising the federal minimum wage to $12 an hour.
The wage increase for fastfood workers in New York will be
phased in over three years in
New York City and over six years
elsewhere in the state. It will
apply to some 200,000 employees at large chain restaurants.
So far, Los Angeles, Seattle,
San
Francisco
and
the
California cities of Oakland and
Berkeley have approved phasedin increases that eventually will
take their minimum wage to $15
an hour, or about $31,200 a
year.
Officials: Popemobile to travel
on streets near White House
WASHINGTON (AP) — Pope
Francis will travel in the
Popemobile on streets between
the White House and National
Mall when he visits Washington
later this month, the Archdiocese
of
Washington
announced
Thursday.
Spectators won’t need tickets
to view the pope as he travels in
the special car on Sept. 23, but
entrance to the parade route will
be first come, first served.,
according to the Archdiocese.
Visitors will have to pass through
security and can’t bring in food
or drink, but it will be available
to purchase inside the secure
area, the Archdiocese said.
Security gates will open at 4 a.m.
and close at 10 a.m. Spectators
won’t be able to leave and reenter until the pope is finished
with the tour.
The
Archdiocese
also
announced Thursday that spectators will be able to watch live
coverage of the day on a video
screen set up on the grounds of
the Washington Monument.
Armed man shot after running
from police into restaurant
DOWNEY, Calif. (AP) — A
SWAT team killed a gunman
Thursday night after he led police
on a long car chase then ran into
a crowded restaurant and seized
at least four hostages, authorities said.
The sheriff’s team entered the
restaurant from the front and
back and shot the man, who was
declared dead at the scene, Los
Angeles County sheriff’s Lt.
Eddie Hernandez said. The man
had a gun, but did not fire at the
SWAT team, Hernandez said.
At least four people were being
held against their will inside
Chris’ and Pitt’s barbecue
restaurant
in
Downey,
Hernandez said.
About an hour before the
restaurant was raided, dozens of
people including children, customers and workers, could be
seen walking cautiously but
quickly out after the man ran
inside. He had fired at least two
shots into the air before running
in.
“We were eating dinner and I
just heard a man screaming ‘Get
down! Get down!’” customer
Stella Aguilera, out of breath and
near tears, told KCAL-TV. “My
daughter was in the bathroom
with my little granddaughter, 2
years old. And we all got down I
grabbed my baby grandson, and
I saw the guy with the gun. And
he was asking, ‘I need some medication, just anybody give me
medicine.’”
Aguilera said the man then
shouted that all women and children could leave, and she and
her grandchildren ran out.
The suspect’s name has not
been released.
The chase began when a sheriff’s helicopter detected a signal
from a stolen Honda Civic in the
Whittier area, sheriff’s Cmdr.
Mike Parker said. The helicopter
crew then spotted the man stealing another car at gunpoint.
Sheriff’s
and
California
Highway Patrol cars chased the
man at high speeds on side
streets and Interstate 710
through several communities
east of Los Angeles, Parker said.
The suspect was involved in at
least one collision.
Eventually a CHP SUV forced
the man to stop using a so-called
PIT maneuver. After a few
moments the man jumped out of
the car and ran toward the
restaurant.
At least one person could be
seen in handcuffs outside the
restaurant during the ordeal, but
Parker said they were only cuffed
out of caution before deputies
could be sure who the suspect
was.
Man killed, trooper hurt in
gunfight at Indiana apartments
INDIANAPOLIS
(AP)
—
Undercover police chasing a suspect through an Indianapolis
apartment complex fatally shot
the man in an exchange of gunfire Thursday in which an
Indiana State Police officer was
shot in the hand, authorities
said.
The man was under surveillance by undercover officers
when they began chasing him at
an apartment complex on the
city’s northwest side, state police
spokesman Sgt. Richard Myers
told reporters.
“During the foot chase, the
suspect leapt over a privacy
fence. A trooper went over after
him, gunshots erupted, and the
suspect was hit and killed at the
scene,” Myers said.
The suspect brandished a
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12—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015
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On Sept. 11 anniversary, appeals to remember as time passes
NEW YORK (AP) — Sept. 11
victims’ relatives marked the
anniversary of the terror
attacks Friday in a subdued
gathering at ground zero, saying their determination to commemorate their loss publicly
hadn’t dimmed even as 14 years
have passed and crowds at the
ceremony have thinned.
Hundreds of victims’ relatives
— fewer than thronged the
observances in their early years
— gathered for what has
become a tradition of tolling
bells, moments of silence and
the reading of the names of the
nearly 3,000 people killed in the
terror strikes at the World Trade
Center, the Pentagon and a field
near Shanksville, Pennsylvania.
“We come every year. The
crowds get smaller, but we want
to be here. As long as I’m
breathing, I’ll be here,” said
Tom Acquaviva, 81, who lost his
son, Paul Acquaviva, a systems
analyst who died in the trade
center’s north tower.
Carrying photos emblazoned
with the names of their loved
ones, victims’ relatives prayed
for peace, praised first responders and the armed forces and,
mostly, sent personal messages
of enduring loss and remembrance to loved ones some had
never even had the chance to
know.
“I wish I could meet you,”
Valerie Arnold said to the memory of her uncle, firefighter
Michael Boyle, who was off-duty
but responded to the attacks on
Sept. 11, 2001, before she was
born.
For Nereida Valle, who lost
her daughter, Nereida De Jesus,
“It’s the same as if it was yesterday. I feel her every day.”
In Washington, President
Barack Obama and first lady
Michelle Obama stepped out of
the White House at 8:46 a.m. —
when the first plane hit the
north tower — to observe a
moment of silence. Later Friday,
President Obama was scheduled to observe the anniversary
with a visit to Fort Meade,
Maryland, in recognition of the
military’s work to protect the
country.
“We must never forget
that day. People are still
dying because of what
happened.”
— Army Sgt. Edwin
Morales
The Flight 93 National
Memorial near Shanksville in
western Pennsylvania was
marking the completion of its
visitor center, which opened to
the public Thursday. At the
Pentagon, Defense Secretary
Ash Carter and other officials
were joining in remembrances
for victims’ relatives and
Pentagon employees.
Elsewhere, Ohio’s statehouse
was displaying nearly 3,000
flags — representing the lives
lost — in an arrangement
designed to represent the sites
of the attacks. Sacramento,
California, was commemorating
9/11 in conjunction with a
parade
honoring
three
Sacramento-area friends who
tackled a heavily armed gunman on a Paris-bound highspeed train last month.
Some Americans were observing the anniversary in their own
ways.
“I don’t go to the memorial. I
don’t watch it on TV. But I make
sure, every year, I observe a
moment of silence at 8:46,”
electrician Jeff Doran, 41, said
Friday as he stood across the
street from the trade center,
where the signature, 1,776-foot
One World Trade Center tower
has opened since last Sept. 11.
After years of private commemorations at ground zero,
the anniversary now also has
become an occasion for public
reflection on the site of the terror attacks.
An estimated 20,000 people
flocked to the memorial plaza on
the evening of Sept. 11 last year,
the first year the public was able
to visit on the anniversary. The
plaza was to open three hours
earlier after the anniversary ceremony.
“When we did open it up, it
was just like life coming in,”
National Sept. 11 Memorial and
Museum President Joe Daniels
said this week. While the
memorial will still be reserved
for victims’ relatives and other
invitees during the morning
ceremony, afterward, “the general public that wants to come
and pay their respects on this
most sacred ground should be
let in as soon as possible.”
In Washington, some members of Congress planned to
spend part of the anniversary
discussing federal funding for
the ground zero memorial. The
House Natural Resources
Committee has scheduled a
hearing Friday on a proposal to
provide up to $25 million a year
for the plaza. The federal government contributed heavily to
building the institution; leaders
have tried unsuccessfully for
years to get Washington to chip
in for annual costs, as well.
An estimated 21 million people have visited the plaza for
free since its 2011 opening.
The museum, which charges
up to $24 per ticket, has seen
almost 3.6 million visitors since
its May 2014 opening, topping
projections by about 5 percent,
Daniels said. Any federal funding could lead to expanded discounts for school and other
groups, but there are no plans
to lower the regular ticket price,
he said.
This year’s anniversary also
comes as advocates for 9/11
responders and survivors are
pushing Congress to extend two
federal programs that promised
billions of dollars in compensation and medical care. Both programs are set to expire next
year.
Army Sgt. Edwin Morales had
those responders in mind as he
attended the ground zero ceremony in remembrance of his
cousin firefighter Ruben “Dave”
Correa.
“We must never forget that
day. People are still dying
because of what happened,”
both on battlefields and from illnesses that some who responded to the attacks have developed after exposure to toxic
dust, Morales said.
aP Photo
in thiS SePt. 11, 2014 file photo, the moon appears between the beams from the Tribute in Light
memorial honoring the victims of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks as 1 World Trade Center, left, stands on
the 13th anniversary as seen from Jersey City, N.J. The Tribute in Light, first appeared on March 11,
2002, to mark the six months that had passed since the attacks. It has become a moving, quietly powerful
element of the anniversaries since.
aP Photo
PreSident BaraCk oBama, first lady Michelle Obama, and others pause on the South Lawn of
the White House in Washington, Friday as they observe a moment of silence to mark the 14th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks.
Police body cameras
may solve one problem
but create others
Mystery chunk
of ice crashes
onto Calif. home
MODESTO, Calif. (AP) — A loud
crash startled a California family at
home Wednesday morning when a
chunk of ice the size of a basketball
hurdled from the sky and smashed
through the roof, likely the result of
frozen moisture breaking loose
from an airplane flying high overhead.
Monica Savath said she and her
family were in the living room of
their Modesto home when they
were shaken by the commotion.
She said it sounded like a bomb
exploding. Running to the attached
garage, they found a gaping hole in
the roof and shattered ice. Nobody
was injured.
“What on earth happened?”
Savath said in an interview with
KOVR-TV.
Jim Mathews, a meteorologist
with the National Weather Service
in Sacramento, dismissed any
meteorological explanation, given
the area’s clear blue skies and hot
temperatures. He said an airplane
is the most likely culprit and suspects the same moisture that creates long white trails behind jets
can collect into a large ice block.
One may have dislodged from a
plane and found its way to the family’s home, he said.
Pieces of the ice in the Savath
home were white or clear. Its color
ruled out the possibility that it was
waste that leaked from an airplane,
which is blue from chemicals used
to flush airplane toilets.
Modesto is in the grips of a heatwave with the high temperature
hitting 104, which adds to the mystery. Mathews said temperatures
high in the jet stream are very cold,
and it probably fell so quickly that
it didn’t melt much on its way
down.
Bradley County EMS was part of the group that attended the luncheon at Longhorn.
Paramedics, EMTs, office personnel and members of the command staff were present and very
appreciative of this kind gesture of appreciation. "We were all very honored to have Longhorn
recognize us in this way. The tragedy of 9/11 was a terrible day for our country and our hearts
continue to go out to all of our brothers and sisters who lost their lives in that historic emergency
response," said Stan Clark, EMS spokesman.
longhorn
SteakhouSe recognized
local emergency responders
Thursday in remembrance
of 9/11 this week. With the
anniversary of the terrorist
attack on that dreadful day
upcoming, Longhorn
Steakhouse in Cleveland
wanted to say thanks to
emergency personnel by
providing them a free lunch.
From left are Shawn
Fairbanks, assistant chief
EMS; Leeann Pulliam,
Longhorn manager; and
Danny Lawson, EMS chief.
Man charged in plot to bomb Sept. 11 memorial in Missouri
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — A
Florida man posed online as an
Australia resident and tried to
help plan an attack on a 9/11
memorial in Missouri by providing details on how to build a
bomb with a pressure cooker
and rat poison, according to law
enforcement authorities.
Joshua Ryne Goldberg, 20,
was arrested and charged with
distributing information relating
to
explosives,
destructive
devices and weapons of mass
destruction, the U.S. Attorney’s
Office said Thursday.
Goldberg — of Orange Park,
about 15 miles south of
Jacksonville — began communicating online with an undercover FBI agent in July, giving
information on how to build a
bomb, according to a criminal
complaint. Goldberg instructed
the agent to place the bomb at a
memorial in Kansas City,
Missouri, commemorating the
14th anniversary of the
September 11, 2001, attacks,
the complaint says.
Earlier this year, the agent
traced online messages being
used to claim responsibility for
helping inspire terrorist attacks
in Texas and Australia to an
account in Orange Park, Fla., a
few miles south of Jacksonville,
according to the complaint.
According to the complaint,
Goldberg began trying to help
the undercover agent plan how
to make a bomb.
“What weapons do you have
brother? I can send you guides
on how to make bombs if you
need help making them,” one
message cited in the complaint
from an account linked to
Goldberg said.
Goldberg then sent bombmaking guides to the informant
Aug. 19, according to the message traffic.
The next day, according to the
agent, Goldberg contacted him
again asking what kind of attack
he wanted to carry out on Sept.
11. “I was thinking a bombing,”
the message reads, according to
the complaint.
The informant told Goldberg,
using
the
online
alias
“AusWitness,” that he was a student living near Kansas City.
Goldberg claimed to be living
in Perth, Australia, and said
that he thought a pressure
cooker bomb would be the best
option and identified a 9/11
memorial event in Kansas City
as the target, according to the
messages.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The use
of police body cameras is spreading to keep officers honest about
using force against citizens. But
how and when the public gets to
see the footage is up for debate.
Videos of police shootings have
become critical to determining
what happened in situations that
turn deadly. In some cases,
strapping cigarette pack-size
cameras to officers’ uniforms has
been framed as a way to curb
police brutality and stem deteriorating trust in law enforcement.
It’s not that simple. While the
recordings may help get to the
truth of an incident with police,
they also record distraught victims, grieving family members,
people suffering from mental illness and citizens exercising their
rights to free speech and civil disobedience. Cameras may solve
one problem but create others.
Existing laws that govern what
information is released to the
public are on the chopping block,
as states try to strike the balance
between a citizen’s right to privacy and making officers answer for
their actions.
The use of police body cameras
is still in its infancy, with no official count for how many of the
18,000 state and local departments have turned to them. But
dozens of agencies across the
country are testing them, and
many have plans to roll them out
more broadly.
A policy to release all policerecorded videos could mean
footage of the inside of a person’s
home or a hospital would be
available. But if the policy is not
to release footage in order to protect a person’s privacy, that could
mean a video of an officer shooting someone would not be made
public, defeating the main purpose of the use of these cameras.
“What started as an effort to
capture or prevent bad police
behavior, I think now we’re starting to see the realities of it capturing true human suffering,”
Frank Straub, chief of the
Spokane, Washington, police
department, said earlier this year
at a policy forum on Capitol Hill.
The solution is somewhere in
the middle. Some departments
redact the faces of bystanders or
those arrested, or blur a video so
much that little is recognizable.
Others won’t release video if it’s
part of an ongoing investigation.
Some policies allow officers to
turn their cameras on and off.
Even completely uncensored
footage may not crystalize an
incident because it’s taken from
one officer’s physical position,
often a moving one. This can create shaky footage and in some
cases won’t capture all details of
a violent encounter.
State laws vary about what the
public can see. Existing recordings are covered under these
laws, such as videos from cameras mounted inside patrol cars.
But body cameras produce more
footage than dashboard cameras
— footage that can show officers
inside peoples’ homes and other
private places.
“Any policy that categorically
shields or opens up body-camera
footage is probably wrong,” said
Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst with the American Civil
Liberties Union.
The ACLU is advocating for
policies that flag video if it
involves police use of force or
relates to a public complaint.
Body cameras have become an
easy political answer to the complex problem of crumbling trust
in police.
In South Carolina, for example,
police footage initially released
after an officer shot a suspect in
April showed the suspect running
away during a routine traffic
stop. Cellphone footage from a
witness told a different story, and
the North Charleston mayor
quickly called for all uniformed
officers to wear body cameras.
President Barack Obama supports using them, and his administration has pledged millions of
dollars to local departments.
Police in Seattle received so
many requests for body-camera
footage under the state’s open
records law that the department
decided to proactively release
videos on a YouTube channel that
have been overly censored. Some
are blurred to the point of no
recognition. An activist who once
pushed the department to be
more transparent is now working
on the project, Seattle police
spokesman Sean Whitcomb said.
Washington’s public records
laws are among the most liberal
and do not require that agencies
censor or blur videos the way
Seattle is doing.
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015—13
SportS
FRIDAY
Richard Roberts
Sports Editor
Phone 472-5041 or fax 614-6529
Sports@clevelandbanner.com
Lady Mustangs drop Owls
to stay undefeated in 5-3A
By RICHARD ROBERTS
Banner Sports Editor
Walker Valley scored three
times in the first half against
Ooltewah, one more than it needed in a 5-1 District 5-3A soccer
win Thursday on its home field.
The victory keeps the Lady
Mustangs undefeated in the district, with a 4-0 record. They are
6-2-1 overall.
“It was a pretty good game. The
girls played pretty well from the
start. I’m happy with them and we
did what we needed to do. We got
the win, that’s the most important
thing, and we played some pretty
good soccer as well,” said Lady
Mustangs coach Nate Brown. “In
the end we got to get some of the
players in we needed to get some
more minutes.”
The Lady Mustangs got on the
board in the ninth minute when
sophomore midfielder Emily
Anderson put foot to leather and
sent the ball to the back of the
nylons. Three minutes later
Walker Valley missed taking a 2-0
lead when junior forward Mya
Patel’s shot from 25 yards caromed off the top of the crossbar.
Freshman forward Jade Mayo
took care of the earlier missed
opportunity in the 20th minute
sending the second goal of the day
into the net for the Lady Mustangs
on a penalty kick. A second PK
was blocked by Ooltewah in the
20th minute.
“We kept possession pretty well
and we kept the ball on our end of
Lady Flames
set for soccer
home opener
the field, which was good,” said
Brown.
Mayo stepped up again to give
Walker Valley a 3-0 lead just
before the half with a goal to make
it 3-0.
Sophomore forward Lauren
Caylor used an assist from Kendal
Harris to get into the action, kicking off the second half for the Lady
Mustangs in a big way with goal
No. 4 mere seconds into the 41st
minute.
Mayo made it a 5-0 game two
minutes later with the Lady
Mustangs’ final goal of the day on
an assist from Caylor.
Ooltewah broke up the shutout
with a free kick goal in the 54th
minute that slipped in just under
the grasp of Walker Valley keeper
Carson McKenna.
From there, Brown used the
cushion to send his second line
onto the pitch to pick up some
game-time minutes.
“Some of our junior varsity
squad was able to get some good
minutes which we might need in
the tournament. Injuries and
those kinds of things happen, and
we were able to get some good
exposure for those girls,” he said.
Brown said he was pleased with
the near shutout but emphasized
the need for the Lady Mustangs to
continue honing their skills in
preparation for tournament soccer.
“As always, there are things
we’ve got to work on, always.
See LADY MUSTANGS, Page 15
Banner photo, JOE CANNON
CLEVELAND HIGH senior Allison Botts (9) powers a shot that deflects off of the hands of
Ooltewah’s Alex Biro (15) and Sidney Killingsworth (22) before going out of bounds for a kill during
District 5-AAA action Thursday evening at “The Barn.”
Ooltewah holds off
pesky Lady Raiders
By JOE CANNON
Banner Assistant Sports Editor
Banner photo, LYNNAE ROBERTS
WALKER VALLEY sophomore midfielder Bailey Scarborogh
works against Ooltewah defenders during the Lady Mustangs’
District 5-3A soccer win over the lady Owls Thursday at WVHS.
OOLTEWAH — The Cleveland High volleyball
squad led for just two points, but gave District
5-AAA leader Ooltewah all it wanted Thursday
evening in “The Barn.”
“Thank goodness we got out of here with a
win,” declared Lady Owl head coach Elaine
Peigen after the hard-fought 25-21, 23-25, 2520, 25-15 outcome. “Cleveland is a scrappy
bunch. We’d get up and they’d chase us down.
That’s the way our district is this year, a lot of
four- and five-game matches.”
The 4-1 victory keeps the defending district
champs unbeaten in 5-AAA so far this season,
moving to 7-0, while improving to 21-6 overall.
Two of the Lady Raiders’ (15-6, 3-3) three district losses have come in four-set battles with
the Lady Owls. Both teams will take the weekend off before returning to action Tuesday with
See LADY RAIDERS, Page 15
From LEE SPORTS INFORMATION
After dropping a pair of
matches at the Columbus State
tournament this past weekend,
the Lee women’s soccer team will
open the 2015 home season
tonight at 7, when it hosts
Newberry College (0-1-1) in the
annual Kickin’ It for Kids With
Cancer contest.
Coach Chris Hennessey, who
was able to scout Newberry during the Georgia event, says his
squad will be pitted against
another big, strong and very
well-organized team. The Wolves
tied Tampa 1-1 (2OT) and lost to
Rollins College, 3-0.
“We have enjoyed a good week
of practice,” he noted. “We have
addressed some areas of concern. The girls are upbeat, motivated and hopefully we are ready
to compete for the entire 90 minutes. Last weekend we were able
to generate scoring opportunities. Now we have to start putting shots away.”
The Lady Flames got some
good news when it was
announced sophomore Meagan
Newman had been cleared and
will be in the lineup Friday.
Newman had to undergo ankle
surgery during the offseason and
missed both games last weekend.
“We always look forward to
hosting the Kickin’ It match,”
said Hennessey. “It is for a great
cause, and we hope the fans will
pack the house in support of this
event and our soccer team. The
coach added that the always
popular Kickin’ It T-shirts will be
on sale until the game is completed on Friday evening.
It is the beginning of another
busy weekend for the Lady
Flames. After Friday’s test
against Newberry, Lincoln
Memorial University will be in
town for a 4 p.m. contest. The
Rail-splitters are 1-0-1 on the
year. They defeated West
Alabama 4-3 and tied Montevallo
0-0 last weekend.
“LMU will bring the same type
of team as Newberry,” stated
Hennessey. “They are a big,
strong and athletic team. It is
certain to be another hardfought game. They have one
advantage, their legs should be
fresher since they have not
played since last weekend.”
Cleveland, Bradley drop pair of games
By SARALYN NORKUS
Banner Sports Writer
It was a busy night for soccer
in Bradley County, as all three
teams hosted District 5-AAA
opponents. Walker Valley was the
only team to come away with a
district win, with Cleveland and
Bradley Central both adding a
game to their respective loss
columns.
The Lady Raiders (2-3-1, 1-3
District 5-AAA) gave East
Hamilton’s Lady Hurricanes (2-5,
2-1 District 5-AAA) all they could
handle Thursday night and then
some. A 3-all tie that lasted for
100 minutes of play forced the
game to be decided via penalty
kicks, where they ultimately lost
7-5.
“It was close and a great
game,” Cleveland coach Andy
Byrd declared. “I think it relieved
us some — a win would’ve definitely relieved us more, but we’ll
take an overtime [loss] to a team
that was supposed to come in
and clean our clocks. Hopefully,
this boosted our confidence.”
The Lady Hurricanes scored
their first goal a little over three
minutes into the match.
Sam DeBien, who recorded a
hat trick for the night, evened
things up for Cleveland 11 minutes later.
East Hamilton notched two
more goals, one in the 27th
minute and on in the 37th
minute, to take a 3-1 into the
half.
Just two minutes into the second half, DeBien cut the Lady
Raiders’ deficit to one. She then
score the tying goal 10 minutes
later.
“Sam played insane and got a
hat trick. She really takes it to
heart and is a winner, which is
one of the biggest compliments I
can give,” Byrd commented.
After giving up three goals on
three shots faced in the first half,
Cleveland goalkeeper Lauren
Stutzman was able to stonewall
the Lady Hurricanes in the second half, blocking all 10 shots in
the second half.
“‘Stutz’ played really bad in the
first half, but turned it around
and played like a champion in
the second half,” Byrd stated.
“She cleaned it up and played a
whole lot better.”
After regulation ended in a 3all tie, the two teams battled it
out over two, 10-minute overtimes. Still locked in a stalemate,
the game came down to penalty
kicks.
Following successful PK’s from
DeBien and Michaela Bader,
Cleveland’s next two attempts
were no good. The Lady
Hurricanes scored on four penalty kicks, resulting in a 7-5 win.
While the loss was bittersweet
See CLEVELAND, Page 15
Banner photo, SARALYN NORKUS
BRADLEY CENTRAL’S Courtney Ford attempts to work the ball past a pair of Soddy-Daisy defenders
during Thursday’s District 5-AAA matchup.
No. 23 Vols know defense must improve against No. 19 Sooners
KNOXVILLE (AP) — Tennessee players
don’t believe they performed up to their
defensive standards in the Volunteers’
opener, and vow to be better with the
stakes higher.
But defensive end/linebacker Curt
Maggitt said no big speeches were necessary after the defense staggered through
the 59-30 victory over Bowling Green.
Everyone already understood a repeat
performance won’t be nearly good enough
to beat No. 19 Oklahoma.
“Last week wasn’t the ‘Orange Swarm’
defense,” said Maggitt, who serves as the
vocal leader of Tennessee’s defense. “We
didn’t play to that standard. This week
will be different.”
AP photo
The 23rd-ranked Volunteers allowed
TENNESSEE defensive back 433 yards passing and 557 total yards
Emmanuel Moseley looks to the against Bowling Green, which stayed
sideline against Bowling Green, within striking distance before giving up
the game’s final 17 points. Bowling Green
in Nashville.
quarterback Matt Johnson wasn’t intercepted all day and continually burned
Tennessee’s young defensive backs.
That’s not an encouraging sign for a
Tennessee defense that now faces a
tougher test.
Oklahoma’s Baker Mayfield threw for
388 yards and three touchdowns without
an interception in a 41-3 rout of Akron
last week. Sterling Shepard is a big-play
receiver who caught five passes for 109
yards in a 34-10 triumph over Tennessee
last year. Samaje Perine and Joe Mixon
give Oklahoma a formidable tandem at
running back.
“They’re very skilled at every position running back, quarterback and receiver,”
Tennessee safety Brian Randolph said.
“They have a lot of weapons they can go
to. We’ve got to be prepared to stop them
all.”
Tennessee has reason to believe its
defense will get better.
The Vols played much of their season
opener without safety Todd Kelly Jr., who
spent most of last week in the hospital
having an abscess removed after feeling
pain his throat. Tennessee coach Butch
Jones said Kelly brought “a calming effect”
to the defense when he was in the game.
Kelly said he’s back at 100 percent as
he gets ready for Oklahoma.
Tennessee also returns secondary
coach Willie Martinez, who served a onegame suspension last week for impermissible contact with a potential recruit. His
absence may have played a role in some of
the breakdowns that resulted in long pass
plays for Bowling Green.
But the Vols’ issues on defense last
week went beyond the secondary.
“To the naked eye, everyone wants to
point toward the secondary because that’s
what they see, they see the conclusion of
the play,” Jones said. “What they don’t
understand is to play great pass defense,
it takes all 11 individuals working together as one and playing great collective
defense. There were individual breakdowns, some up front and some in the
back end. And sometimes it’s a really good
football team offensively making a really
good play.”
Although the Vols did produce three
sacks against Bowling Green, defensive
coordinator John Jancek said he expected
Tennessee’s front four to provide a little
more pressure. One of those sacks last
week came from tackle Danny O’Brien,
who has since been suspended for a violation of team rules. Sophomore walk-on
Colton Jumper and freshman Darrin
Kirkland Jr. endured some growing pains
while alternating at middle linebacker.
See VOLS, Page 15
14—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
SCOREBOARD
on Air
sports on tv
All times edt
Friday, sept. 11
AUto rACing
1 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, practice, at
Richmond, Va.
3:30 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR XFINITY Series, qualifying, at Richmond,
Va.
5:30 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, qualifying, at
Richmond, Va.
7:30 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR XFINITY Series, The Virginia 529
College Savings 250, at Richmond, Va.
College FootBAll
8 p.m.
FS1 — Miami at Florida Atlantic
9 p.m.
ESPN2 — Utah State at Utah
golF
5 a.m.
GOLF — LPGA Tour Golf, Evian Championship, secondround, at Evian-les-Bains, France
9:30 a.m.
GOLF — LPGA Tour Golf, Evian Championship, secondround, at Evian-les-Bains, France
3 p.m.
GOLF — Web.com Tour, Hotel Fitness Championship, second-round, at Fort Wayne, Ind.
MAJor leAgUe BAseBAll
7 p.m.
MLB — Toronto at N.Y. Yankees or Kansas City at Baltimore
soCCer
2:30 p.m.
FS1 — Bundesliga, Hamburg at Borussia Monchengladbach
tennis
3 p.m.
ESPN — U.S. Open, Men’s semifinal, at Flushing, N.Y.
7 p.m.
ESPN — U.S. Open, Men’s semifinal, at Flushing, N.Y.
saturday, sept. 12
AUto rACing
7:30 p.m.
NBCSN — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, The Federated Auto
Parts 400, at Richmond, Va.
College FootBAll
11:30 a.m.
ESPN — South Florida at Florida State
12 p.m.
ABC — Oregon State at Michigan
12 p.m.
ESPN2 — TBA
12 p.m.
ESPNEWS — Indiana State at Purdue
12 p.m.
FS1 — Kansas State at Texas-San Antonio
3:30 p.m.
ABC — Notre Dame at Virginia
3:30 p.m.
FS1 — Stephen F. Austin at TCU
3:30 p.m.
ESPN2 — TBA
3:30 p.m.
ESPNU — TBA
3:30 p.m.
CBS — Georgia at Vanderbilt
4 p.m.
ESPNEWS — Eastern Illinois at Northwestern
4:30 p.m.
FOX — Iowa at Iowa State
6 p.m.
esPn — oklahoma at tennessee
7 p.m.
ESPN2 — East Carolina at Florida
7 p.m.
ESPNU — Ball State at Texas A&M
8 p.m.
ESPNEWS — Temple at Cincinnati
8 p.m.
ABC — Oregon at Michigan State
9:15 p.m.
ESPN — LSU at Mississippi State
10:15 p.m.
ESPN2 — Boise State at BYU
10:15 p.m.
ESPNU — San Jose State at Air Force
10:30 p.m.
FS1 — Central Florida at Stanford
golF
6:30 a.m.
GOLF — LPGA Tour Golf, Evian Championship, third-round, at
Evian-les-Bains, France
3 p.m.
GOLF — Web.com Tour, Hotel Fitness Championship, thirdround, at Fort Wayne, Ind.
MAJor leAgUe BAseBAll
12:30 p.m.
FOX — TBA
7 p.m.
FS1 — Detroit at Cleveland
9:00 p.m.
MLB - Regional coverage, Houston at L.A. Angels or San
Diego at San Francisco
soCCer
7:40 a.m.
NBCSN — Premier League, Everton vs Chelsea
9:30 a.m.
FS1 — Bundesliga, Bayern Munich vs Ausburg
9:55 a.m.
NBCSN — Premier League, Crystal Palace vs Manchester
City
10 a.m.
USA — Premier League, Arsenal vs Stoke City
tennis
3 p.m.
ESPN — U.S. Open Tennis, Women’s Final, at Flushing, N.Y.
on tAP
Friday, sept. 11
FootBAll
Sale Creek at TCPS, 7:30
region 1-6A
Cleveland at Bradley Central, 7:30
Maryville at Alcoa, 7:30
Dobyns-Bennett at Sevier County, 7:30
Farragut at Bearden, 7:30
Hardin Valley at South Doyle, 7:30
Jefferson County at Morristown-West, 7:30
Erwin, N.C. at Science Hill, 7:30
William Blount at Heritage, 7:30
region 4-5A
Cleveland at Bradley Central, 7:30
Coffee County at Walker Valley, 7:30
McMinn County at Lenoir City, 7:30
East Hamilton at Ooltewah, 7:30
Clinton at Rhea County, 7:30
Cookeville at White County, 7
Soddy-Daisy has bye
region 3-2A
McMinn Central at Polk County, 7:30
Tyner at Signal Mountain, 7:30
Grace Baptist at Silverdale, 7:30
South Pittsburg at Marion County, 8
Whitwell at Bledsoe County, 8
Meigs County, Boyd Buchanan have byes
soCCer
Newberry at Lee (W), 7
wyndham deerfield Beach resort soccer Classic
at Boca raton, Fla.
Lee (M) vs. Palm Beach Atlantic, 4:30
volleYBAll
Lookout Valley at TCPS Middle, 4
saturday, sept. 12
soCCer
wyndham deerfield Beach resort soccer Classic
at Boca raton, Fla.
Lee (M) vs. Lynn, 7
volleYBAll
Polk County in South Pittsburg Tournament
sunday, sept. 13
soCCer
Lincoln Memorial at Lee (W), 6
BAseBAll
national league
east division
w
l
Pct gB
79
61 .564 —
71
68 .511 7½
59
81 .421 20
56
85 .397 23½
54
86 .386 25
Central division
w
l
Pct gB
St. Louis
88
52 .629 —
Pittsburgh
83
56 .597 4½
Chicago
80
58 .580 7
Milwaukee
62
78 .443 26
Cincinnati
58
81 .417 29½
west division
w
l
Pct gB
Los Angeles
80
59 .576 —
San Francisco
72
68 .514 8½
Arizona
67
73 .479 13½
San Diego
67
74 .475 14
Colorado
58
82 .414 22½
thursday’s games
Colorado 4, San Diego 3
Milwaukee 6, Pittsburgh 4, 13 innings
Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia, ppd., rain
N.Y. Mets 7, Atlanta 2
Cincinnati 11, St. Louis 0
Friday’s games
Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 18-6) at Philadelphia (Morgan 5-5), 5:05
, 1st game
Milwaukee (Nelson 11-11) at Pittsburgh (Morton 8-7), 7:05
St. Louis (Lackey 11-9) at Cincinnati (Lorenzen 4-8), 7:10
Washington (G.Gonzalez 10-7) at Miami (Cosart 1-4), 7:10
N.Y. Mets (Matz 2-0) at Atlanta (Wisler 5-6), 7:35
Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 6-6) at Philadelphia (Asher 0-2),
8:35 , 2nd game
L.A. Dodgers (A.Wood 10-9) at Arizona (Ray 3-11), 9:40
Colorado (Bettis 6-5) at Seattle (Iwakuma 7-3), 10:10
San Diego (Cashner 5-14) at San Francisco (Peavy 5-6),
10:15
saturday’s games
St. Louis (Lynn 11-9) at Cincinnati (DeSclafani 8-10), 1:05
Chicago Cubs (Haren 9-9) at Philadelphia (Eickhoff 1-3), 7:05
Milwaukee (Z.Davies 1-0) at Pittsburgh (Locke 7-10), 7:05
N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 8-6) at Atlanta (W.Perez 5-6), 7:10
Washington (Roark 4-4) at Miami (Fernandez 4-0), 7:10
L.A. Dodgers (Bolsinger 6-3) at Arizona (R.De La Rosa 12-7),
8:10
San Diego (Kennedy 8-13) at San Francisco (Bumgarner 177), 9:05
Colorado (Flande 3-2) at Seattle (Elias 4-8), 9:10
sunday’s games
St. Louis (Wacha 15-5) at Cincinnati (R.Iglesias 3-7), 1:10
Washington (Scherzer 11-11) at Miami (B.Hand 4-5), 1:10
Chicago Cubs (Hammel 8-6) at Philadelphia (Harang 5-15),
1:35
Milwaukee (Jungmann 9-6) at Pittsburgh (Liriano 10-7), 1:35
New York
Washington
Miami
Atlanta
Philadelphia
N.Y. Mets (Niese 8-10) at Atlanta (Weber 0-1), 1:35
San Diego (Rea 2-2) at San Francisco (Leake 9-8), 4:05
Colorado (K.Kendrick 5-12) at Seattle (T.Walker 10-8), 4:10
L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 16-3) at Arizona (Corbin 5-3), 4:10
American league
Toronto
New York
Tampa Bay
Baltimore
Boston
Kansas City
Minnesota
Cleveland
Chicago
Detroit
Houston
Texas
Los Angeles
Seattle
Oakland
east division
w
l
79
60
77
61
68
71
67
72
66
73
Central division
w
l
83
56
72
67
69
70
66
72
64
76
west division
w
l
76
64
73
66
70
69
68
73
60
80
thursday’s games
Pct
.568
.558
.489
.482
.475
gB
—
1½
11
12
13
Pct
.597
.518
.496
.478
.457
gB
—
11
14
16½
19½
Pct
.543
.525
.504
.482
.429
gB
—
2½
5½
8½
16
Seattle 5, Texas 0
Toronto at New York, ppd., rain
Cleveland 7, Detroit 5
Friday’s games
Kansas City (D.Duffy 7-7) at Baltimore (M.Wright 2-4), 7:05
Toronto (Price 14-5) at N.Y. Yankees (Severino 3-2), 7:05
Boston (Miley 11-10) at Tampa Bay (Archer 12-11), 7:10
Detroit (Verlander 3-7) at Cleveland (Co.Anderson 3-3), 7:10
Oakland (Chavez 7-14) at Texas (Lewis 14-8), 8:05
Minnesota (E.Santana 4-4) at Chicago White Sox (E.Johnson
1-0), 8:10
Houston (Keuchel 17-6) at L.A. Angels (Weaver 6-10), 10:05
Colorado (Bettis 6-5) at Seattle (Iwakuma 7-3), 10:10
saturday’s games
Kansas City (Cueto 2-5) at Baltimore (Tillman 9-11), 1:05
Toronto (Estrada 12-8) at N.Y. Yankees (Nova 6-7), 1:05 , 1st
game
Toronto (Stroman 0-0) at N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 10-8), 4:35 ,
2nd game
Boston (Porcello 7-12) at Tampa Bay (M.Moore 1-3), 6:10
Detroit (Wolf 0-3) at Cleveland (Bauer 11-11), 7:10
Minnesota (Milone 8-4) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 8-10),
7:10
Oakland (Nolin 0-1) at Texas (Gallardo 12-9), 8:05
Houston (McCullers 5-5) at L.A. Angels (Santiago 8-9), 9:05
Colorado (Flande 3-2) at Seattle (Elias 4-8), 9:10
sunday’s games
Toronto (Dickey 10-10) at N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 11-6), 1:05
Boston (R.Hill 0-0) at Tampa Bay (Smyly 2-2), 1:10
Detroit (Boyd 1-5) at Cleveland (Carrasco 12-10), 1:10
Minnesota (Gibson 9-10) at Chicago White Sox (Sale 12-8),
2:10
Oakland (Doubront 3-1) at Texas (Ch.Gonzalez 2-5), 3:05
Houston (Fiers 2-1) at L.A. Angels (Heaney 6-3), 3:35
Colorado (K.Kendrick 5-12) at Seattle (T.Walker 10-8), 4:10
Kansas City (Ventura 10-8) at Baltimore (W.Chen 8-7), 8:05
BAsKetBAll
wnBA glance
eAstern ConFerenCe
w
l
z-New York
23
9
x-Chicago
20
12
x-Indiana
18
14
x-Washington
17
15
Connecticut
14
19
Atlanta
13
18
western ConFerenCe
w
l
z-Minnesota
22
11
x-Phoenix
19
13
x-Tulsa
17
15
x-Los Angeles
14
18
Seattle
9
23
San Antonio
7
26
x-clinched playoff spot
z-clinched conference
tuesday’s games
Washington 76, Indiana 72, OT
Tulsa 74, San Antonio 64
Minnesota 73, Seattle 67
wednesday’s games
Atlanta 90, Los Angeles 60
New York 74, Connecticut 64
thursday’s games
No games scheduled
Friday’s games
Indiana at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
Washington at New York, 7:30 p.m.
Tulsa at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Seattle, 10 p.m.
Los Angeles at Phoenix, 10 p.m.
Pct
.719
.625
.563
.531
.424
.419
gB
—
3
5
6
9½
9½
Pct
.667
.594
.531
.438
.281
.212
gB
—
2½
4½
7½
12½
15
FootBAll
national Football league
AMeriCAn ConFerenCe
east
w
l
t Pct
y-New England
1
0
0 1.000
Buffalo
0
0
0 .000
Miami
0
0
0 .000
N.Y. Jets
0
0
0 .000
south
w
l
t Pct
Houston
0
0
0 .000
y-Indianapolis
0
0
0 .000
Jacksonville
0
0
0 .000
Tennessee
0
0
0 .000
north
w
l
t Pct
x-Baltimore
0
0
0 .000
x-Cincinnati
0
0
0 .000
Cleveland
0
0
0 .000
y-Pittsburgh
0
1
0 .000
west
w
l
t Pct
y-Denver
0
0
0 .000
Kansas City
0
0
0 .000
Oakland
0
0
0 .000
San Diego
0
0
0 .000
nAtionAl ConFerenCe
east
w
l
t Pct
y-Dallas
0
0
0 .000
N.Y. Giants
0
0
0 .000
Philadelphia
0
0
0 .000
Washington
0
0
0 .000
south
w
l
t Pct
Atlanta
0
0
0 .000
y-Carolina
0
0
0 .000
New Orleans
0
0
0 .000
Tampa Bay
0
0
0 .000
north
w
l
t Pct
Chicago
0
0
0 .000
x-Detroit
0
0
0 .000
y-Green Bay
0
0
0 .000
Minnesota
0
0
0 .000
west
w
l
t Pct
x-Arizona
0
0
0 .000
San Francisco
0
0
0 .000
y-Seattle
0
0
0 .000
St. Louis
0
0
0 .000
x-clinched playoff spot
y-clinched division
—thursday’s game
New England 28, Pittsburgh 21
sunday’s games
Green Bay at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Kansas City at Houston, 1 p.m.
Seattle at St. Louis, 1 p.m.
Cleveland at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
Indianapolis at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Miami at Washington, 1 p.m.
Carolina at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Arizona, 4:05 p.m.
Detroit at San Diego, 4:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at Oakland, 4:25 p.m.
Baltimore at Denver, 4:25 p.m.
Tennessee at Tampa Bay, 4:25 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Monday’s games
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.
Minnesota at San Francisco, 10:20 p.m.
thursday, sep. 17
Denver at Kansas City, 8:25 p.m.
sunday, sep. 20
Tampa Bay at New Orleans, 1 p.m.
Detroit at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Arizona at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Houston at Carolina, 1 p.m.
San Francisco at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.
New England at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
San Diego at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Tennessee at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Atlanta at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m.
St. Louis at Washington, 1 p.m.
Baltimore at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
Miami at Jacksonville, 4:05 p.m.
Dallas at Philadelphia, 4:25 p.m.
Seattle at Green Bay, 8:30 p.m.
Monday, sep. 21
N.Y. Jets at Indianapolis, 8:30 p.m.
PF
28
0
0
0
PA
21
0
0
0
PF
0
0
0
0
PA
0
0
0
0
PF
0
0
0
21
PA
0
0
0
28
PF
0
0
0
0
PA
0
0
0
0
PF
0
0
0
0
PA
0
0
0
0
PF
0
0
0
0
PA
0
0
0
0
PF
0
0
0
0
PA
0
0
0
0
PF
0
0
0
0
PA
0
0
0
0
thursday’s College Football scores
eAst
Glenville St. 64, WV Wesleyan 48
soUtH
Maryville (Tenn.) 28, ETSU 21
Southern U. 50, MVSU 13
UT Martin 72, Bethel (Tenn.) 10
W. Alabama 34, Cumberland (Tenn.) 8
W. Kentucky 41, Louisiana Tech 38
Midwest
NW Missouri 48, Mo. Southern 7
soUtHwest
East Central 35, Henderson St. 28
FAr west
Dixie St. 49, Cent. Washington 20
top 25 schedule
Friday
No. 24 Utah vs. Utah State, 9 p.m.
saturday
No. 1 Ohio St. vs. Hawaii, 3:30 p.m.
No. 2 Alabama vs. Middle Tennessee, 4 p.m.
No. 3 TCU vs. Stephen F. Austin, 3:30 p.m.
No. 4 Baylor vs. Lamar, 7:30 p.m.
No. 5 Michigan St. vs. No. 7 Oregon, 8 p.m.
No. 6 Auburn vs. Jacksonville State, Noon
No. 8 Southern Cal vs. Idaho, 8 p.m.
No. 9 Notre Dame at Virginia, 3:30 p.m.
No. 10 Georgia at Vanderbilt, 3:30 p.m.
No. 11 Florida State at South Florida, 11:30 a.m.
No. 12 Clemson vs. Appalachian State, 12:30 p.m.
No. 13 UCLA at UNLV, 10:30 p.m.
No. 14 LSU at No. 25 Mississippi State, 9:15 p.m.
No. 15 Georgia Tech vs. Tulane, 3:30 p.m.
No. 16 Texas A&M vs. Ball State, 7 p.m.
No. 17 Mississippi vs. Fresno State, 3:30 p.m.
No. 18 Arkansas vs. Toledo at Little Rock, Ark., 4 p.m.
no. 19 oklahoma at no. 23 tennessee, 6 p.m.
No. 20 Boise State at BYU, 10:15 p.m.
No. 21 Missouri at Arkansas State, 7 p.m.
No. 22 Arizona at Nevada, 7 p.m.
PreP stAndings
High school Football
region 1-6A
district
overall
1-0
3-0
1-0
3-0
1-0
2-1
1-0
1-1
0-1
2-1
0-1
2-1
0-1
2-1
0-1
1-2
Friday, sept. 4
Science Hill 29, Bradley Central 24
Hardin Valley 41, Bearden 31
Dobyns-Bennett 41, William Blount 14
Maryville 35, Jefferson County 7
Friday, sept. 11
Cleveland at Bradley Central, 7:30
Maryville at Alcoa, 7:30
Dobyns-Bennett at Sevier County, 7:30
Farragut at Bearden, 7:30
Hardin Valley at South Doyle, 7:30
Jefferson County at Morristown-West, 7:30
Erwin, N.C., at Science Hill, 7:30
William Blount at Heritage, 7:30
region 4-5A
team
district
overall
Soddy-Daisy
1-0
3-0
#5 Rhea County
1-0
2-1
McMinn County
1-0
2-1
#9 Ooltewah
0-0
2-1
White County
0-1
2-1
Cleveland
0-1
1-2
walker valley
0-1
1-2
Friday, sept 4
Soddy-Daisy 39, Cleveland 21
McMinn County 37, Walker Valley 19
Rhea County 49, White County 6
Ooltewah 48, at Clyde A. Erwin (N.C.) 7
Friday, sept. 11
Cleveland at Bradley Central, 7:30
Coffee County at Walker Valley, 7:30
McMinn County at Lenoir City, 7:30
East Hamilton at Ooltewah, 7:30
Clinton at Rhea County, 7:30
Cookeville at White County, 8
region 3-2A
team
district
overall
#1 Marion County
1-0
3-0
#2 Boyd Buchanan
1-0
3-0
#3 Tyner Academy
1-0
2-0
Bledsoe County
1-0
1-1
Silverdale Academy
0-1
1-1
Meigs County
0-1
1-2
Polk County
0-1
0-3
Brainerd
0-1
0-3
Friday, sept. 4
Tyner 49, Polk County 0
Marion County 49, Meigs County 15
Boyd Buchanan 36, Brainerd 14
Bledsoe County 39, Silverdale Academy 21
Friday, sept. 11
McMinn Central at Polk County, 7:30
South Pittsburg at Marion County, 7:30
Tyner at Signal Mountain, 7:30
Grace Baptist at Silverdale Academy, 7:30
Whitwell at Bledsoe County, 8
Meigs County, Boyd Buchanan have byes
team
#1 Maryville
#4 Science Hill
#9 Dobyns-Bennett
Hardin Valley
Bradley Central
Bearden
Jefferson County
Wm. Blount
AP photo
new englAnd PAtriots qB Tom Brady calls signals at the line of scrimmage in the first half
against the Pittsburgh Steelers, in Foxborough, Mass., Thursday night.
Brady throws 4 TDs
in Patriots’ victory
golF
KlM open leading scores
thursday
At Kennemer golf and Country Club
Zandvoort, netherlands
Purse: $2.02 million
Yardage: 6,619; Par: 70
First round
Paul Lawrie
33-28—61
Wade Ormsby
33-28—61
Richard Bland
32-30—62
David Horsey
32-31—63
James Morrison
33-30—63
Joost Luiten
31-32—63
Robert Rock
31-32—63
Estanislao Goya
33-30—63
Mikko Ilonen
35-29—64
Morten Madsen
32-32—64
Soren Kjeldsen
33-31—64
Andy Sullivan
31-34—65
Stephen Gallacher
34-31—65
Magnus A. Carlsson
33-32—65
Rafael Cabrera-Bello
32-33—65
Lasse Jensen
33-32—65
Scott Hend
30-35—65
Americans
David Lipsky
32-34—66
Paul Peterson
35-33—68
Tom Watson
35-34—69
Peter Uihlein
35-34—69
Daniel Woltman
37-34—71
lPgA
the evian Championship
thursday
At evian resort golf Club
evian-les-Bains, France
Purse: $3.25 million
Yardage: 6,470; Par: 71 (35-36)
Frist round
a-amateur
Mi Hyang Lee
32-34—66
Lexi Thompson
35-31—66
Gerina Piller
32-35—67
Eun-Hee Ji
30-37—67
Pornanong Phatlum
32-35—67
Min Lee
33-35—68
Shanshan Feng
34-34—68
Sei Young Kim
32-36—68
Beth Allen
34-34—68
Nicole Broch Larsen
32-36—68
Minjee Lee
33-35—68
Jin Young Ko
35-34—69
Morgan Pressel
33-36—69
Caroline Hedwall
33-36—69
Lydia Ko
34-35—69
Jenny Shin
35-34—69
Haru Nomura
32-38—70
Jennifer Song
35-35—70
Charley Hull
35-35—70
Alison Lee
34-36—70
Brooke M. Henderson
36-34—70
Mariajo Uribe
35-35—70
Jodi Ewart Shadoff
34-36—70
Pernilla Lindberg
35-35—70
Brittany Lincicome
31-39—70
Lee-Anne Pace
35-36—71
Karrie Webb
36-35—71
Brittany Lang
35-36—71
Meena Lee
35-36—71
Alison Walshe
36-35—71
Mina Harigae
35-36—71
Karine Icher
34-37—71
I.K. Kim
34-37—71
Candie Kung
35-36—71
Mirim Lee
33-38—71
Sandra Gal
35-36—71
Ilhee Lee
37-34—71
Xi Yu Lin
34-37—71
Jacqui Concolino
37-34—71
Gwladys Nocera
36-36—72
So Yeon Ryu
35-37—72
Chella Choi
34-38—72
Julieta Granada
34-38—72
Sadena A Parks
34-38—72
Catriona Matthew
38-34—72
Anna Nordqvist
32-40—72
Austin Ernst
37-35—72
Inbee Park
36-36—72
Amy Yang
36-36—72
Rebecca Artis
37-35—72
Jaye Marie Green
36-36—72
a-Leona Maguire
35-37—72
Ryann O’Toole
34-38—72
Amy Anderson
36-36—72
Su-Hyun Oh
35-37—72
Carlota Ciganda
37-36—73
Hyo Joo Kim
37-36—73
Mo Martin
37-36—73
Christina Kim
35-38—73
a-Mathilda Cappeliez
35-38—73
Marina Alex
38-35—73
Ariya Jutanugarn
36-37—73
Kelly Tan
37-36—73
Kim Kaufman
37-36—73
Emily K. Pedersen
33-40—73
Ssu-Chia Cheng
35-38—73
Laura Davies
35-38—73
Stacy Lewis
36-37—73
Lizette Salas
37-36—73
Wei-Ling Hsu
37-37—74
Maria McBride
37-37—74
Caroline Masson
34-40—74
Beatriz Recari
36-38—74
Q Baek
37-37—74
Yani Tseng
38-36—74
Mika Miyazato
39-35—74
Paula Creamer
36-38—74
Ayako Uehara
34-40—74
Hannah Burke
37-37—74
a-Agathe Laisne
38-37—75
Thidapa Suwannapura
35-40—75
Mi Jung Hur
39-36—75
Azahara Munoz
38-37—75
Kris Tamulis
34-41—75
Suzann Pettersen
37-38—75
Jessica Korda
37-38—75
Joanna Klatten
37-38—75
Katie Burnett
37-38—75
Kelly W Shon
37-38—75
Cristie Kerr
35-40—75
Michelle Wie
38-37—75
Ha Na Jang
38-37—75
Ai Miyazato
37-38—75
Belen Mozo
36-39—75
Klara Spilkova
39-36—75
Alena Sharp
37-38—75
Sun Young Yoo
38-38—76
a-Hannah O’Sullivan
38-38—76
SooBin Kim
36-40—76
Juli Inkster
36-40—76
Danielle Kang
37-39—76
Melissa Reid
39-38—77
Jane Park
38-39—77
Sarah Kemp
37-40—77
Moriya Jutanugarn
37-40—77
Sydnee Michaels
40-37—77
Maria Hernandez
38-39—77
a-Albane Valenzuela
36-42—78
Sarah Jane Smith
38-40—78
Angela Stanford
36-42—78
a-Celine Boutier
39-39—78
Min Seo Kwak
39-39—78
P.K. Kongkraphan
36-43—79
-5
-5
-4
-4
-4
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
+1
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+7
+8
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) —
Whether sprinting out of the
tunnel for warmups, watching
former teammates and the
Patriots
owner
carrying
Lombardi Trophies, or tearing
apart the Steelers, Tom Brady
relished every moment of this
NFL season opener.
“It was a pretty special night,”
said Brady, who threw for four
touchdowns, three to favorite
target Rob Gronkowski, in a 2821 victory Thursday night over
undermanned and generally
ineffective Pittsburgh. “I was
excited, our whole team was
excited. We haven’t had one of
these games in a long time.”
It was as if he never was away.
Of course, he never really was,
and with “Deflategate” behind
him, the star quarterback was
back to his unstoppable self,
going 25 of 32 for 288 yards.
“It’s always fun being out
there and getting an opportunity
to go play,” added Brady, whose
161 victories are tops for a starting quarterback with one franchise in NFL history. He set a
team-record with 19 straight
completions; and he had his
23rd game with four or more
touchdown passes, third alltime along with Brett Favre.
“We took advantage of it. It
was a good win.”
His four-game league suspension overturned by a federal
judge one week ago, the threetime Super Bowl MVP was in
midseason — or postseason —
form. He led drives of 90 and 64
yards for scores on passes to
Gronkowski. Gronkowski also
recovered a fumble by running
back Dion Lewis at the
Pittsburgh 1 before his final TD.
“Anytime they don’t cover
Gronk, he usually gets it,” Brady
noted with a smile.
Gronkowski insisted this
night was all about Brady.
“Everything he’s been going
through all offseason, he just
came out and he was on fire,”
Gronkowski said. “I don’t know
his stats or anything, but he was
hitting all of the open guys,
reading the defense well, calling
the right plays.
“He’s just unreal.”
Showing some love for his
other tight end, newcomer Scott
Chandler, Brady hit him for a 1yard score to cap an 80-yard
march with the second-half
kickoff.
The outcome added to a festive mood at Gillette Stadium,
despite persistent showers that
didn’t bother the home team.
Before kickoff, the Patriots
unveiled their fourth championship banner as owner Robert
Kraft and former players Troy
Brown, Willie McGinest and Ty
Law carried out New England’s
four Super Bowl trophies.
Fourth-quarter crowd chants
of “Where is Roger?” mocked
Commissioner Roger Goodell
over “Deflategate.” Goodell did
not attend.
Neither, it seemed, did the
Steel Curtain. Only occasionally
did it come close to clamping
down on Brady, yielding 361
yards overall. Third-stringer
Lewis rushed for 69 yards, and
leading receiver Julian Edelman
had 11 catches for 97 yards.
Gronkowski had 94 yards.
“We’ve got to finish a few
instances better,” coach Mike
Tomlin said. “I thought we got a
little frazzled at times. Some of
the young people have got to get
better in a hurry.”
Minus two All-Pros on offense
— running back Le’Veon Bell
(suspended)
and
center
Maurkice Pouncey (injured) —
and without suspended receiver
Martavis Bryant, Pittsburgh
moved the ball decently, gaining
464 yards. But it never really
was close.
Ben Roethlisberger threw for
351 yards and a late TD to AllPro receiver Antonio Brown.
Backup DeAngelo Williams
rushed for 127 yards.
Tomlin was angry after the
game, complaining that coaches
couldn’t communicate because
they were hearing the Patriots
radio broadcast over their headsets. Patriots coaches also complained about similar troubles.
The league said it was a temporary problem caused in part by
the weather. For years, opposing
teams have complained about
having headset problems in
Gillette Stadium.
Pittsburgh had moved the ball
decisively on its first drive, but
things collapsed after Brown
was sacked on a trick play. The
drive fizzled, with a missed 44yarder by Josh Scobee.
Scobee, acquired on Sept. 1
from Jacksonville, also missed
from 46 yards and connected
from 44 and 24. But the damage
was done earlier.
Colon’s consecutive scoreless streak ends
after 31 innings in Mets’ win over Braves
ATLANTA (AP) — Bartolo
Colon is hardly feeling his age
these days, particularly after
pitching so many consecutive
scoreless innings.
“I’m really proud and surprised myself because I didn’t
know, at this stage of my career,
that I could still do that kind of
stuff,” he said. “So I’m really
proud, but more than that, I’m
helping the team.”
Colon’s scoreless streak
ended at 31 innings while he
won his fourth straight start,
pitching the streaking New York
Mets past the reeling Atlanta
Braves 7-2 on Thursday night.
Kevin Plawecki and Juan
Uribe each drove in three runs
for New York, which has won
four in a row to increase its NL
East lead to 7 1/2 games over
Washington.
In a game that started 2
hours, 20 minutes late because
of rain, Colon (14-11) allowed
seven hits, two runs, one walk
and struck out two in 6 2/3
innings.
The 42-year-old Colon, who
added an RBI single in the
fourth, led 4-0 before Jace
Peterson’s RBI triple and
Andrelton Simmons’ single in
the seventh.
AP photo
AtlAntA BrAves starter Shelby Miller throws after fielding a
ball hit for a single by the New York Mets’ Kelly Johnson in the
fourth inning Thursday, in Atlanta.
Atlanta, which has lost 21 of
24 overall, dropped its ninth
straight at home to match the
franchise’s longest single-season skid and worst since the
1988 team started 0-9 at
Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium.
The Mets’ record for consecutive scoreless innings is 32 2/3,
set by R.A. Dickey in 2012. Jerry
Koosman, in 1973, went 31 2/3
scoreless innings, and Colon
tied Dwight Gooden, who went
31 innings in 1984, for third
place on the franchise list.
Colon outpitched All-Star
Shelby Miller (5-14), whose winless streak reached 21 straight
starts — longest by Braves
pitcher since Carl Morton went a
franchise-record 22 without a
victory from Sept. 10, 1975-July
18, 1976.
The Mets went up 3-0 in the
fourth on Plawecki’s two-run
double and Colon’s single. Uribe
added an RBI single to make it
4-0 in the seventh.
Plawecki had an RBI groundout for as New York took a 5-2
lead in the eighth. Uribe’s tworun double put the Mets up 7-2
in the ninth.
Colon stranded two runners
in the first, one in the second
and one in the third before retiring nine straight batters.
Since receiving no decision in
New York’s 14-9 loss at Colorado
on Aug. 21, Colon is 5-0 with
four walks and 23 strikeouts in
stretch of 31 2/3 innings that
includes four starts and one
relief appearance. He is 13-1
with a 2.52 ERA in 14 starts
against NL East opponents this
year.
“Now his command is as good
as I’ve seen it in two years,” Mets
manager Terry Collins said.
“That’s why you look up and he
keeps going deep into games.”
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015—15
Penn State heads to Unhappy
Valley in wake of humbling loss
Penn State truly had to dig deep
to get over its thorny loss in the
season opener to Temple.
Not just in the sports cliche
sense of trying harder. The
Nittany Lions actually grabbed a
shovel and turned a chunk of its
practice field into a burial ground.
The victim? The DVD of Penn
State’s first loss to Temple in 40
games over 74 years.
“We just wanted to let the guys
know that, hey, look, we’re not
going to dwell on the past,” team
captain Jordan Lucas said. “It’s
not the end of our season, it’s the
first game.”
Christian Hackenberg hatched
the idea and several players took
turns digging a final resting spot.
Some Nittany Lions stomped the
turf once the hole was filled.
“We tried to make it fun and
have very positive energy around
it,” Lucas said.
Perhaps a grave was appropriate — for a team that allowed 10
sacks in the opener, the Nittany
Lions had plenty of practice opening wide holes.
In Happy Valley, the ripple from
Penn State’s first loss against
Temple since Joe Paterno was a
teenager was felt even before the
final seconds ticked down in
Philadelphia.
— Former players lashed out at
coach James Franklin on Twitter
and needed just 140 characters to
second-guess him.
PENN StAtE quarterback Christian Hackenberg throws during
practice in State College, Pa.
— Hackenberg was left in to
take a beating in the waning minutes of an unwinnable game.
— Weakened by the scholarship
crunch in the wake of the sordid
Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse
scandal, the thin offensive line
showed it needs a makeover.
— Franklin said he would “get a
lot more involved” in the offense
that produced 183 total yards and
help embattled offensive coordinator John Donovan.
With NCAA punishments lifted,
Penn State’s football program is
whole again. Penn State has the
full complement of football scholarships available and already won
a bowl game. But for a fan base
that no longer packs Beaver
Stadium with regularity, the easy
question is, sanctions are bad but
at State College, is mediocrity
even worse?
Former offensive lineman Adam
Gress wrote, “So I wasn’t gonna be
‘that guy’... But now I will be ...
Offensive coordinator sucks.” Exdefensive back Stephon Morris
tweeted: “Joe Pa beat the teams
he was so suppose to beat.
#facts.” Hackenberg’s brother
Brandon, a Penn State soccer
recruit, deleted his tweet that
said: “You have a Ferrari, yet drive
30 miles under the speed limit.”
But not all former lettermen are
quick to bash Franklin.
“People have to give this coach a
chance,” said Brad Benson, a former Penn State offensive lineman
who won a Super Bowl with the
New York Giants. “Coach (Bill)
Parcells came to the Giants and
went 3-12-1 his first year. Taking
shots, it’s not going to help any.”
Franklin, who went 7-6 and
won the Pinstripe Bowl in his first
season, understands taking
blame is part of the deal. Before
the Sandusky scandal, even
Paterno was viewed by many fans
as an over-the-hill legend when
the Nittany Lions had four losing
seasons over 2000-04.
One alumnus in 2004 paid
$350 to take out a half-page ad in
the student newspaper: “The talent’s there. The coaching is an
abomination. TIME FOR JOE TO
GO.”
Now? The 409 flags whip
around in the wind each Saturday
and Joe Paterno Legacy Beer has
become a perfect drink to drown
the sorrows of another .500 season.
“The reason people are upset is
because they care so much and I
get it,” Franklin said. “I would just
ask for everybody to take a deep
breath and have some patience,
because the negativity is not going
to help.”
Franklin’s
misuse
of
Hackenberg in the opener morphed into a two-minute offense of
Twitter bashing and postgame
criticism. Already sacked eight
times, Hackenberg stayed in the
final series of a 27-10 game and
was sacked twice more.
Regan Fuller posted 17 receptions, 14 service points, a half
dozen digs, two kills and a pair
of aces. Morgan Moffett added
five kills and a trio of digs to the
Lady Raider effort, while freshman Nicole Glaser had three
kills and dug out a pair of shots.
For Ooltewah, Biro added
three digs and a couple of blocks
to 26 kills, while Hanna
Matthews collected 40 assists,
eight digs, four kills and the
same number of aces, plus a
block.
Courtney Swafford garnered
11 digs and seven kills, with
Alexis Godsey adding 10 digs,
two assists and an ace.
Sidney Killingsworth downed
eight kills and dug out two, while
Summer Williams had a pair of
aces and 15 digs. Shelby Sutton
dug out nine shots, drilled four
kills and had an ace.
Lady Mustangs sweep
past Soddy-Daisy
SODDY-DAISY —
Walker
Valley (14-8, 6-1) bounced back
from its first District 5-AAA
defeat Tuesday in Ooltewah,
with a clean sweep at SoddyDaisy Thursday.
Coach Judy Pruett’s Lady
Mustangs galloped to 25-12, 2514, 25-19 victories.
The Walker Valley seniors led
the way with Madison Pruett
drilling 10 kills, digging out 18
shots and returning 11 service
receptions,
while
Alexan
Crittenden collected 13 digs, 11
assists, four blocks and the
same number of kills.
Ashlyn Flock handed out 14
assists, dug out a baker’s dozen
and downed a trio of slams.
Sara Wilson garnered seven
kills, 15 digs and eight receptions, plus collected a pair of
aces.
Hannah Grace Moore helped
out with 11 digs and 10 receptions, while Megan Malone had
seven digs and seven receptions.
Lady Raiders
From Page 13
Cleveland making a trip to
Baylor, while Ooltewah will
entertain Bradley Central.
The Lady Owls raced out to a
9-2 edge to open the match
Thursday but as would be the
theme for the evening, the Lady
Raiders scratched and clawed
back to within a pair, at 13-11.
Ooltewah was able to push the
difference back to a half dozen at
21-15, but once again the visitors ran off six of the next seven
points to close the gap to 22-21.
The Lady Owls were able to take
advantage of a pair of Cleveland
errors to run off the last three
points needed to claim the first
set.
The second game was very
similar to the first, as the hosts
built a 10-2 and 14-4 edge to
start, but the Lady Raiders
mounted a counter-charge that
brought the score to 21-20.
After the hosts pulled back up
by three points, Cleveland got a
side out on a service error.
Senior Kellee Geren then
stepped behind the line and
served up four straight winners,
with sophomore Emma Flowers
putting on the exclamation point
with a big kill for the game-winner to even the match at a set
apiece. The final two points of
the set marked the only time
Cleveland was in the lead all
evening.
For the third straight game
Ooltewah dominated early, scoring the first seven points and
forcing Cleveland to once again
play catch up — which it did
with a 9-2 run to even the score.
The teams traded the next half
dozen points before the Lady
Owls went on a 4-0 spurt. A few
minutes later the girls in Redand-White used a 7-1 run to get
to set point, but the pesky Lady
Raiders got another kill from
Flowers before she stepped
behind the line to serve up a trio
of winners to close the gap to 2420. Ooltewah all-stater Alex Biro
thwarted the rally with one of
her 26 kills to put the hosts up
two sets to one.
In what turned out to be the
final set of the night, the teams
split the opening half dozen
points before the Lady Owls
reeled off nine straight points to
start a 12-2 run and a doubledigit lead.
Once again Cleveland came
back with a 6-1 rally to trim the
deficit in half, but that was as
close as the set would be with
the hosts wrapping up the victory with a 9-4 streak.
“We showed some fight,” proclaimed Lady Raider head coach
Trish Flowers. “We had to come
from behind all night. My girls
want this (a victory over
Ooltewah) so bad, but hopefully
it will come when we need it the
most in the district tournament.”
Cleveland had to make some
last minute adjustments before
the match as freshman starter
Anna Renshaw went down with
an injury in the junior varsity
match.
“We had to make some last
minute changes with Anna out.
We didn’t play the way we know
we can play all the time,” the
coach related. “We did get better
as a team tonight.”
Coach Flowers praised the
individual effort of senior Allison
Botts, who had 15 digs, 14 kills
and 14 service points, including
a trio of aces. “Allison was playing sick and only had two hitting
errors the whole night. She
played a great match.”
Geren helped out with 28
assists and 13 digs, while the
younger Flowers finished with 15
service points, including an ace,
plus 13 digs, eight kills and a
pair of helps.
Junior libero Lauren Lee, the
Check Into Cash Player of the
Week, had another impressive
stat line with 41 service receptions, 35 digs, 13 service points
and an ace.
Vols
Tennessee’s Butcher agrees to
court costs, community service
(AP) — Tennessee defensive
lineman Andrew Butcher has
agreed to pay court costs and
perform community service in
exchange for having the misde-
for Cleveland, the coach was still
pleased with what he saw on the
pitch.
“I think it’s coming together for
us and that’s the best we’ve
played,” Byrd said. “There was
great play by my midfielders.
Finally, our midfielders got
together and did some good
things. It was the best soccer
we’ve played.
“We had wonderful play by
Maya Yancey. She played great in
a position that she isn’t used to
— we had a player go down and
she stepped up. We also had
great play from Mary Claire
Shaffer,” the coach continued.
District play continues for
Cleveland on Monday, when the
team travels to Ooltewah. The
focus will be on the Cleveland
Classic, which begins on Sept.
17.
meanor charges against him dismissed.
Butcher’s lawyer, Bud Gilbert,
says his client paid $275 in court
costs. Under terms of the deal
reached Thursday, Butcher also
must perform 24 hours of community service and take an alcohol education course.
Butcher was arrested Aug. 30
after Knoxville police said they
found him “running around” on
Interstate 40 with alcohol on his
breath. The freshman from
Alpharetta,
Georgia,
faced
charges of public intoxication
and underage consumption plus
a controlled access roadway violation
Gilbert said the underage consumption charge would be
expunged Jan. 28 as long as
Butcher completes the terms of
his agreement. Gilbert said the
other two charges were dropped
Thursday.
Thursday’s game started out
on a positive note for Bradley
Central, as Haley Yarber gave her
team a 1-0 lead after 25 scoreless
minutes.
Unfortunately for the Bearettes
(2-7, 1-4 District 5-AAA), that
goal proved to be their lone in
what turned out to be a 7-1 loss
to Soddy-Daisy (7-1, 4-0 District
5-AAA).
“I don’t feel like tonight was the
best demonstration of our team’s
true abilities and we’ve got to find
a way to keep composure even
when
we’re
outmatched.
Thankfully, we’ve got some time
to address these things next
week,” Bearettes coach Chrissy
McKinney said.
Following Yarber’s goal, the
Lady Trojans scored three goals
in the final 14 minutes of the first
half.
“We knew Soddy has an
aggressive attacking speed, so we
chose to put our fastest defender,
Western Kentucky outlasts
Louisiana Tech by three
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (AP)
— Brandon Doughty put up
the gaudy numbers necessary
to get the signature Conference
USA victory that he and
Western Kentucky needed over
Louisiana Tech.
The only concern for him
and the Hilltoppers after their
wild 41-38 win Thursday night
was the condition of teammate
Leon Allen following a gruesome left leg injury that had
them stunned before they
regrouped to earn their seventh
straight victory.
Allen was injured early in the
third quarter as he was tackled
cleanly by Louisiana Tech linebacker Nick Thomason on an
incomplete pass. But as he
went down with Thomason’s
arms wrapped around his left
leg, it bent backward at an
awkward angle.
Houchens-Smith Stadium
was silent as medical personnel tended to Smith as he lay
on the turf. He eventually rose
to limp off the field to cheers
before heading to the locker
room. He left the stadium for
observation at a hospital before
the end of the game.
Western Kentucky coach Jeff
Brohm didn’t know Allen’s status immediately afterward but
said, “I’m not very optimistic.
It’s unfortunate. You can ask
anyone within our program,
he’s our most valuable player
on offense. ... Without him it’s
going to be a challenge.”
Initially numbed by the sudden loss of a star player who
rushed for 1,542 yards and 13
touchdowns, Doughty and
other Hilltoppers chipped in to
lead an emotional comeback
that kept the stubborn
Bulldogs at bay.
“Unfortunately, we came up
on the losing side, but I’m
proud of our football team,”
Bulldogs coach Skip Holtz said.
“They never gave up when it
had adversity, and they continued to compete.”
Doughty threw for 441 yards
and a touchdown and redshirt
freshman D’Andre Ferby
relieved Allen to add a short
touchdown among several key
runs to help Western Kentucky
(2-0, 1-0 C-USA) earn an
important, yet costly, league
win. Ferby rushed four times
for 13 yards on a critical thirdquarter drive which ended with
a 1-yard TD run and two-point
conversion catch for a 38-24
lead with 54 seconds left.
“I think Ferby is more than
capable and he’s ready to step
in if we need him,” Doughty
said. “Leon is definitely in my
prayers and I hope everything
is OK. But if he’s out, we’ll have
to lean on Ferby and Anthony
Davis. ... There shouldn’t be a
dropoff at all.”
The Bulldogs scored twice (11, 0-1) late in the fourth but
ran out of time.
Doughty bounced back from
a 209-yard effort at Vanderbilt
to complete 28 of 38 passes
with a 37-yard touchdown and
win the statistical battle with
Bulldogs counterpart and
Florida transfer Jeff Driskel,
who was 28 of 48 for 357 yards
and two TDs.
Allen had 81 yards rushing
and a 28-yard TD run on 12
carries before his gruesome
injury. More importantly, Allen
and Doughty got the ‘Toppers
started toward edging the
Bulldogs in yardage, 590-580,
in the shootout many expected.
Despite trailing throughout,
Louisiana Tech didn’t wilt and
got to 27-24 in the third quarter on Kenneth Dixon’s 1-yard
run. Doughty simply found
receivers and got help from
Ferby and others to stay
ahead.
“That’s a huge win for us,”
Brohm said. “They totally
kicked our tails last year, and
for our guys to work hard, take
the field with confidence and
fight back and forth to win is a
true testament to our players.”
Lady Mustangs
From Page 13
Lady trojans attack
Bearettes
From Page 13
“We didn’t play well as a
defense,” Jancek said. “The kids
know it. It was a disappointing
performance. We have to get better in a hurry.”
The Vols believe they’ll do just
that. They say their struggles
against Bowling Green haven’t
shaken their faith in this defense.
“Everybody is confident,” cornerback Cam Sutton said.
“Things are going to happen
throughout the course of a game.
That’s football. Nobody’s down
about anything that happened in
the (Bowling Green) game. We’re
just going to build off it and continue to get better.”
Cleveland
AP photo
WEStERN KENtUcKY defensive back De’Andre Simmons
(23) and Louisiana Tech wide receiver Paul Turner (3) attempt a
catch Thursday, in Bowling Green, Ky.
Anna Stouffer, in the back. Not
wanting to lose our own ability to
attack, Courtney Ford played as
a forward and did a great job
helping Haley (Yarber) get the ball
into scoring territory several
times,” McKinney explained.
“Haley was absolutely phenomenal with winning balls out of the
air with her head. Unfortunately,
Soddy changed their formation to
three forwards after we scored
first, and it exploited our defensive shape.”
Going into the second half with
a 3-1 lead, Soddy-Daisy added
four more goals before the scoring was finished.
“Passing and maintaining possession has been a large part of
our training, but it doesn’t seem
to be transferring to the game
when the pressure is high,” the
coach added.
Bradley will be back in action
on Sept. 17 at the Cleveland
Classic.
From Page 13
There are a few aspects of our
game we’ve got to sharpen, especially when the playoffs start,”
said the Walker Valley coach.
“East Hamilton has a great team
and has some great players there.
McMinn County, Soddy, Cleveland
... all have great teams. The district is still very competitive for
sure. We’ve got a lot of things to
work on before we get into the
playoffs, to get ready for them.”
The Lady Mustangs will take to
the pitch again Thursday against
Soddy-Daisy in the Cleveland
Classic.
“They are undefeated (in the
district) as well. That’s going to be
a very tough, tough game,” said
Brown.
Lauren Lee
Banner photo, SARALYN NORKUS
SAM DEBIEN recorded a hat
trick in Cleveland’s 7-5 penalty
kick loss to East Hamilton on
Thursday night.
Congratulations to Cleveland High volleyball standout Lauren Lee
for being selected as the Check Into Cash Player of the Week.
The junior libero has 329 service receptions, 311 digs, 29 aces, 11
assists and 8 kills. She has committed just 15 service errors in 21
matches so far this season while posting 258 service points. “We
couldn’t do what we do without Lauren’s defense and passing,”
declares Lady Raider coach Trish Flowers.
16—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Editorials
A poem that embraces
life, hope and people
S
ome believe poetry is the
word of life; like the hand
that pens it, the heart that
embraces it and the bosom that
cradles it, hope is its eternal
message.
It sharpens the senses.
It soothes the troubled soul.
It rests the weary mind.
It comforts the lost.
It reassures the downtrodden.
Yet, poetry does far more
than just these few printed
words could ever describe.
Poetry is an archive. New
stanzas of today become inspiring treasures for tomorrow.
Their words tell the stories of
life, those who lived it, many
who shaped it and even more
who shared it through a myriad
of times, some happy and some
broken.
One such emotional work is
“Elegy to 9/11,” a history lesson
composed in the mind and by
the hand of a talented
Cleveland writer who died June
3, 2013. He is Church of God of
Prophecy William R. Nunnery
whose touching words tell many
stories:
... That of the misguided who
successfully perpetrated an evil
and merciless plot for mass
murder;
... That of the gallant whose
heroism saved countless lives
yet their courage came with an
ultimate sacrifice;
... That of the tragic impact on
thousands of the innocent; and
... That of the need to look to
a higher ground and a keener
spirit in seeking recovery and
forgiveness.
He tells of the terror:
“Let me tell you a story, the
world will long remember.
“It was the 11th day of the
month of September,
“Those awful terrorists flew in
from the skies,
“Striking the World Trade
Center with great surprise.”
He tells of heroism:
“The firemen did come and
policemen too,
“Ever aware of what they
were trained to do.
“Entering the towers, up the
stairs they did climb,
“Helping on their way
whomever they could find.
“Higher and higher still they
all did go,
“Not realizing they faced a
terrible woe.”
He tells of the victims:
“It was said of brave firemen
as they moved around,
“Found a lady in her wheelchair trying to get down.
“Several flights of stairs they
were able to go,
“With much effort to carry her
through darkness and smoke.
“They were assisting her so
she might be rescued,
“But at 9:50 Tower Two tumbled and they all were subdued.”
SEE FULL POEM
ON THIS PAGE
He tells of the survivors:
“A blind man with his dog was
found,
“Working his way, trying to
reach the ground.
“Another fireman assisted
them both you know,
“With his help they were able
to reach Ground Zero.
“The man and his dog into the
street they went,
“Thanking God for His help
and the firemen He sent.”
He tells of the spiritual presence:
“In each situation, moms and
dads did die,
“Leaving precious children
alone to cry.
“Our Father was touched and
angels did come,
“To comfort and help them, as
moms and dads
“He welcomed home.”
He tells of the murderers:
“As for the terrorists who
caused all of this,
“They did not make it to a
land of bliss.
“Since there are only two
ways according to the Word,
“It is believed that screams
from Hell were heard.”
He tells of the hope:
“Also, the companions of
those who lost their lives,
“That God will give them comfort as they struggle to survive.
“And that He be with them as
they continue on their way,
“So they can join their loved
ones on that great and final
day.”
It was a frightening and fateful moment in time, yet one
whose nightmare remains with
America, and all Americans.
Today is Sept. 11, 2015.
Fourteen years ago death
wrapped its icy talons around
our people and stabbed fear
into the hearts of men, women
and children alike.
Some call it a lesson learned.
Perhaps it is.
But we call it tragedy of the
highest order. It is the unspeakable heartbreak of human
beings raising a fist of violence,
and death, against the unsuspecting and the innocent.
Murder has no reasoning.
Cowardice has no rhyme. And
the healing ... it is a slow and
painful journey that rips at the
soul and stabs at the very core
of humanity.
Such wounds of the heart are
the worst of all.
It is why 9/11 will forever
haunt the human race.
It is why the voices of a people must never grow silent and
their will to survive must never
fade.
It is why the American spirit
will rise ever higher, and soar
where eagles fly.
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
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423-614-6529
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1505 25th Street N.W. - Cleveland, TN 37311 • P.O. Box 3600 Cleveland, TN 37320
The birdcage and other things we’re keeping
My mother had the gift of being able to
laugh at herself.
She especially loved to joke about the
multitude of knick-knacks, souvenirs and
handmade pieces she had amassed over the
years. Even more than that, though, she
loved to tease Kim and me about the difficulty we would have managing it when the
time came.
She had collections of teapots and music
boxes. She had numerous family heirlooms,
scrapbooks and photo albums. She created
hundreds of needlework pieces, paintings
and other projects. She repurposed tons of
old items before it was called repurposing.
She made four elaborate, fully furnished
dollhouses — including a replica of the
house she grew up in, complete with a tire
swing hanging from a tree. She even made a
16-square-foot Old West town with a working train.
Lots of times when we were at her house
over the years, Mama would get this funny
look on her face, look around whichever
room we were in and say, "What are y'all
going to do with all this stuff when I'm
gone?"
It gave her great delight when she said it.
When we were in our 20s, it was too far in
the future to comprehend. In our 30s, it was
still pretty funny, but by then I would catch
myself looking around the room and wondering the same thing.
Then, year after year, the joke got less
and less funny to us, which made it even
more hilarious to Mama.
Almost two years since her passing, I can
now answer the question: It's complicated.
StorieS of
a world gone
mad
Barry Currin
In the beginning, we did it the same way
most heirs do it. We had a sale for the
things that didn't fall into any of the varied "keeper" categories. "You can't keep
everything," people would say, having no
idea.
We kept a tidal wave of things, from her
piano to cousin Woodrow's Purple Heart,
which she would bring to the house each
Memorial Day for show-and-tell. Woodrow
was killed in France in World War II.
We kept dozens of her handiwork pieces.
Some of the others we gave away to people
who were special to her and us. She loved
the person who mowed her yard, for
instance, and, he was moved to tears when
we gave him two or three things we thought
he would like. I will always remember that.
What remained — the "other stuff" — is a
myriad of things that continue to inhabit
our garage and guest room after two years.
We have a couple of boxes of souvenir
state plates. She bought one every time she
visited a state for the first time. Guess how
many we have?
We also have one from every foreign country she ever visited. If you ever need a souvenir plate from Morocco, I'm your guy.
She had a birdcage, and I have no idea
why because she never had a bird. We
would have put it in the original sale except
that she immortalized it in her poem, "Ode
to a Birdcage." How am I supposed to dispose of a birdcage my mother wrote a poem
about? Yes, I am glad she didn't write "Ode
to a Goat Pen," but wouldn't you agree this
is a fairly unique problem?
The "what to do with this" quandary isn't
confined to birdcages.
We have the 169 ribbons she won from
entering her pieces in county fairs and other
contests — mostly blue, some red and a few
white. She loved the blues. She tolerated the
reds. When she won a third place white one,
I knew we were destined for a night of PBS
with kraut and wieners for dinner.
But, yes, I am thankful they are ribbons
and not trophies.
Trust me, the list of quirky things that we
cannot dispose of for one reason or another
is fairly long.
She would be proud of the things we kept
and especially for the reasons we kept them.
She would be touched by people's reactions
when we gave them something of hers.
But, most of all, she would get a big kick
by saying something like, "What are you
going to do with this other stuff?"
It's almost getting funny again.
———
(About the writer: Barry Currin runs
BeaverDamUSA.com, a humor, sports and
entertainment website. “Stories of a World
Gone Mad” is published in the Friday edition
of the Cleveland Daily Banner. Email the
writer at currin01@gmail.com.)
ANNIE’S
MAILBOX
Banner publishes ‘Elegy to 9/11’
in observance of 14th anniversary
(Editor’s Note: This poem was written by the late
Cleveland Bishop William R. Nunnery of the Church
of God of Prophecy in tribute to the victims of 9/11.
It is traditionally reprinted in the Cleveland Daily
Banner in observance of the 9/11 anniversary. It is
titled “Elegy to 9/11.” Bishop Nunnery, who died
June 3, 2013, received an autographed letter from
former first lady Laura Bush with her thanks for the
“heartfelt poem.” During his living years, Nunnery
would contact the Banner a few days before the
anniversary, granting permission for the poem’s
reprint. In tribute to the poet, and to those he sought
to honor, we respectfully continue that tradition
today.)
‘Elegy to 9/11’
Let me tell you a story, the world will long
remember,
It was the eleventh day of the month of
September.
Those awful terrorists few in from the skies,
Striking the World Trade Center with great surprise.
It was a Tuesday morning at 8:45,
Tower One was struck causing it to ignite,
One thing we accept by 8:47,
Many precious souls were released to Heaven.
In just a few minutes at 3 after 9,
Tower Two was hit by more of their kind.
The firemen did come and policemen too,
Ever aware of what they were trained to do.
Entering the towers, up the stairs they did climb,
Helping on their way, whomever they could find.
Higher and higher still, they all did go,
Not realizing they faced a terrible woe.
At 10:29 Tower One began to crumble,
Making it difficult for their way, several did
stumble.
Many great heroes gave their lives on that day,
While trying to help others along their way.
Searching for anyone they could find,
To make sure that no one was left behind.
It was said of brave firemen as they moved
around,
Found a lady in her wheelchair trying to get
down.
Several flights of stairs they were able to go,
With much effort to carry her through darkness
and smoke.
They were assisting her so she might be rescued,
But at 9:50 Tower Two tumbled, and they all
were subdued.
A blind man with his dog was found,
Working his way, trying to reach the ground.
Another fireman assisted them both you know,
With his help they were able to reach Ground
Zero.
The man and his dog into the street they went,
Thanking God for His help and the firemen He
sent.
A faithful priest also with others did die,
Ministering to them of their new home on high.
While the Great Father, looking down from
above,
Whispered to them with His voice of love,
“Welcome home my child, your new life to begin,
For in those towers you were faithful to the end.”
Hundreds of firemen gave their lives on that day,
While helping many others along their way.
Never before had they faced such a problem,
But they were in the hands of One Who could
solve them.
They didn’t realize when they left home that
morning,
They would be going to a land where there is no
dawning.
It would be good if here the story would stop,
But another huge plane is lowering to drop.
Only minutes later into the Pentagon it went,
Dozens of more heroes to Paradise were sent.
While in Heaven our God took notice of this,
Welcoming them home to a new life of bliss.
Over Pennsylvania another plane did fly,
Carrying several brave men not afraid to die.
They agreed together, saying “Now let’s roll,”
The scuffle began, the terrorists lost control.
Into a field the plane made its descent,
It’s believed that for the White House it was
meant.
In each situation, moms and dads did die,
Leaving precious children alone to cry.
Our Father was touched and angels did come,
To comfort and help them, as moms and dads
He welcomed home.
As for the terrorists who caused all of this,
They did not make it to a land of bliss.
Since there are only two ways according to the
Word,
It is believed that screams from Hell were heard.
Since our nation is a God-fearing one,
We pray that our leaders won’t forget what He
has done.
Much time has passed now and we all must
remember,
That terrible day the eleventh of September.
Also, the companions of those who lost their
lives,
That God will give them comfort as they struggle
to survive.
And that He be with them, as they continue on
their way,
So they can join their loved ones on that great
and final day.
Let us pray.
Dear Annie: I am a widow in
my 80s. I recently was introduced to a widower who seemed
friendly and had a good sense of
humor. He asked me out for dinner and the conversation went
well. But when he took me home,
he kissed me and grabbed my
breast. I was absolutely not
expecting this from a supposedly
“nice” guy, and especially not on
a first date. What on earth would
he expect on a second date?
At my age, I am not looking for
a romantic or physical relationship. I should have slapped his
face for being so forward, or at
least let him know it was not
appropriate.
This man has called several
times since then, but I will not
answer the phone because I don’t
know how to tell him that I don’t
want to accompany him anywhere ever again. I have many
widowed lady friends, and we get
together often for lunches,
movies, etc., and I am perfectly
happy with that. I don’t need to
feel uncomfortable in the presence of a man who can’t keep his
hands to himself. How can I get
him to stop calling me? —
Lonely, Not Lusting
Dear Lonely: Please be honest
with this lothario. Tell him you
were highly offended by his vulgar display at the end of your
date, and you are not interested
in seeing him again. Add that
you are not looking for a physical
relationship and he would be
better off with someone who is.
We suggest you write these
words down, practice saying
them, and then read them to Mr.
Inappropriate when he next calls
so you don’t stumble or become
flustered. He deserves to know
the truth, and you deserve to be
left in peace.
Dear Annie: Would you clarify
the difference between hoarding
and being a filthy pig housekeeper?
Hoarding, to me, is filling your
home with stuff that you cannot
part with. It has nothing to do
with keeping a house clean. After
getting a few glimpses of hoarders on TV, I don’t understand
how this can be called “entertainment.” Who would allow their
home to be filmed for all the
world to see? I believe these
scenes are staged. This sick
curiosity, spoon-fed by the networks, is but another example of
society’s downslide. Any comment? — Disgusted with
Programming
Dear Disgusted: Hoarding is a
form of mental illness, and we
agree that it should not be displayed for public amusement.
Nonetheless, as long as people
watch these programs and advertisers pay to promote their products on them, they will continue.
The upside is, such programs
bring awareness to the public
and, in most instances, these
homes are professionally cleaned
and the inhabitants receive therapy. It is not filmed without their
agreement. While some scenes
may be staged, we can assure
you that hoarders actually do live
like this. It’s terribly sad.
Annie’s Snippet for Patriot Day
(Credit Sandy Dahl, wife of Flight
93 pilot Jason Dahl at a speech
in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.) “If
we learn nothing else from this
tragedy, we learn that life is
short and there is no time for
hate.”
www.clevelandbanner.com
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015—17
tina’s Groove
CROSSWORD
By Eugene Sheffer
Baby Blues
Blondie
ASTROLOGY
Snuffy Smith
by Eugenia Last
SATURDAY, SEPT. 12, 2015
CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS
DAY: Emmy Rossum, 29; Jennifer
Hudson, 34; Benjamin McKenzie, 37;
Contract Bridge
Hagar the Horrible
by Steve Becker
Dilbert
Garfield
Beetle Bailey
Dennis the Menace
Louis C.K., 48.
Happy Birthday: You'll encounter
more opportunities, but less time to take
advantage of what comes your way.
By Ned Classics
By Conrad Day
Choose wisely and base your decisions
on what works best for you, not on what
pleases others. This is your year to present and promote what you have to offer.
Don't give in to pushy individuals or you
will fall short of your expectations. Your
numbers are 6, 14, 19, 22, 27, 33, 41.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Your ability to work hard and present a masterpiece will bring you recognition. Host a
party or entertain someone you want to
get to know better, and you will bring
about positive changes to your personal
life or living arrangements.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don't
count on anyone to take care of your
responsibilities for you. Disappointment
will interfere with your progress. Keep a
positive attitude and an open mind. Use
your imagination and you will come up
with the perfect solution to a problem.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Refuse to
let someone's jealous comments get to
you. Make positive changes to the way
you live. Trust your judgment when it
comes to your personal relationships. If
someone offers you something, ask
what's expected in return before you
accept.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Make
suggestions, but don't try to push your
ideas on others if they aren't interested.
Do something for the right reasons and
you will draw interest to the way you go
about incorporating your ideas.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Consider your
actions before you put them into play.
Figure out the costs involved before you
get started. Money matters will not be as
clear-cut as they appear. Use your
charisma to get others to donate or help
you get your way.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Reality
will evade you today. Take stock of matters before you jump into something
new. A last-minute change will alter the
outcome you are expecting. Stay in control rather than be controlled. Secretive
action will bring the highest return.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Dealing
with institutions is best avoided.
Problems with authority figures will surface if you are too impulsive or aggressive. If you want to take on a challenge,
make sure to complete the physical
training necessary to be prepared.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You will
stand out in the crowd, so it's best to proceed with caution. Someone will oppose
you if you share your opinions. Do your
best to help the underdog, but not at the
expense of damaging your own reputation. Get the facts before taking action.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Keep your life simple. Don't take on too
much. Avoid indulgence or exaggeration. Put greater emphasis on your mental and physical attributes. Make a point
to do what you say you will. Offering
empty promises will damage your reputation.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Look over your current situation. If you
have unfinished business pertaining to
your health, finances or a legal matter,
review the details and you might find a
loophole or preferred option to what
you've been given in the past.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A personal change that will bring you closer to
someone you love will pay off. An investment, unexpected gift or contractual
opportunity is apparent. A change in attitude will bring positive responses from
someone who can make a difference to
your future.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Doors
are opening that can lead to an interesting partnership. Take part in events that
are related to your professional choices
and you will be able to position yourself
for future advancement. A creative
change will play in your favor.
Birthday Baby: You are practical,
fastidious and perceptive. You are entertaining and proactive.
18—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
Review: ‘The Visit’ marred by canned scares, flat humor
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A family
get-together starts out strange and
quickly enters nightmare territory
in “The Visit,” a horror-thriller that
turns soiled adult diapers into a
motif.
Told from a camera-equipped
kids’-eye-view,
M.
Night
Shyamalan’s latest is well cast and
strong on setting. But the dull
thudding that resounds isn’t part
of its effective aural design; it’s the
ungainly landing of nearly every
shock and joke.
Notwithstanding the evidence of
Shyamalan’s features since the
pitch-perfect “Sixth Sense,” hope
endures among fans that lightning
will strike twice. In the wake of
bloated recent outings “After
Earth” and “The Last Airbender,”
that hope takes on a particular
fervency with this modestly scaled
return to straight-up genre fare.
AP photo
That anticipation will drive theatriIn thIs ImAge released by Universal Pictures, Olivia DeJonge, cal business for the feature, as will
foreground, and Deanna Dunagan appear in a scene from “The the lure of sheer horror fun, at
Visit.”
least until word-of-mouth stems
Sam Smith sings new James Bond theme song
LONDON (AP) — The name’s
Smith, Sam Smith.
The choice was shrouded in
mystery and denials, but the
23-year-old British sensation
has surfaced as the singer of the
theme song for the new James
Bond film, “Spectre.”
Smith had denied the persistent rumors, but came clean
Tuesday, tweeting that taking
part in the Bond film was a new
peak in his remarkable, multiple-award winning career.
“This is one of the highlights
of my career,” Smith wrote. “I
am honored to finally announce
that I will be singing the next
Bond theme song. I am so excited to be a part of this iconic
British legacy and join an
incredible line up of some of my
biggest musical inspirations.”
Only last week, Smith had
denied any part in the new 007
caper, which opens in October
starring Daniel Craig as the
durable secret agent first played
by Sean Connery.
The track — titled “Writing’s
On the Wall” — was recorded in
January but kept secret until
now.
“It is a relief,” Smith told The
Associated Press on Tuesday. “I
have been lying for a long time.
I have known for a year so it is
amazing to talk about it.”
Smith, whose first album “In
the Lonely Hour” enjoyed
remarkable success, said he
wrote the song in 20 minutes
after reading the script. It was
co-written with fellow Grammy
Award winner Jim Napes.
The singer said he had
already shot a music video for
“Writing’s On the Wall,” but
hadn’t yet met Craig.
“I was with (director) Sam
Mendes the other day and he
said that Daniel has heard the
song and that he likes it so I’m
looking forward to meeting
him.”
The long line of Bond films
has featured songs performed
by Adele, Paul McCartney,
Madonna, Shirley Bassey and
other stars.
Few have matched the staying
power of Bassey’s “Goldfinger”
theme, and McCartney’s “Live
and Let Die” has remained a
staple in his live repertoire for
decades.
the box-office tide.
Early in the film, there’s a wonderful moment when a mom’s exuberant clowning shifts to tears.
Played by the terrific Kathryn
Hahn, she’s a divorced woman
seeing her kids off at the train station. From that point on, the energy, warmth and nuance of her performance is reduced to intermittent Skype sessions — a crucial
element to the story, but nonetheless a letdown for the viewer.
To give Mom time alone with her
boyfriend, teenage Becca (Olivia
DeJonge) and tween Tyler (Ed
Oxenbould), a serious germophobe and aspiring rapper, have
volunteered for a weeklong stay at
the Pennsylvania farm of their
grandparents. It’s an especially
generous offer given that they’ve
never before met Nana and Pop
Pop (Deanna Dunagan and Peter
McRobbie).
But there’s more to it than generosity; the camera-wielding siblings, budding auteur Becca in
particular, sense an opportunity to
make a documentary that uncovers the generational rift between
their grandparents and their
mother, who left the farm as a
teenager, under circumstances
she refuses to discuss.
Cinematographer
Maryse
Alberti captures the sense of a
nonstop work in progress, seen
through the lenses of the kids’
video cameras and laptop, with
reality-style interviews, off-center
framing and p.o.v. night footage à
la “Blair Witch.” Shyamalan uses
the various devices to tiring effect,
and without conjuring the requisite deep chills.
Playing off the winking self-consciousness of the film-within-afilm, there’s a jokey aspect to the
feints and shock cuts. The writerdirector’s would-be sendup of
down-home country comfort tries
to have fun with fairy-tale terrors.
The result is almost always
mechanical rather than exciting or
funny, despite the actors’ layered
performances — the self-aware
kids, Dunagan’s otherworldly
weirdness
and
McRobbie’s
unnerving deadpan.
The rural winter backdrop
works as a fitting contrast to
Mom’s Skype dispatches from her
sunny cruise-ship vacation.
Within what’s essentially a single
setting, Shyamalan and Alberti
keep things visually diverse but
cohesive,
while
Naaman
Marshall’s clean farmhouse interiors avoid the common trap of overdesign.
The movie is not without an
emotional core, though: It’s Hahn’s
mostly absent character, and
although she’s called upon to deliver the heavy-handed moral of the
story, she manages to make every
moment she’s onscreen ring true.
In one of the few gags that connects in this missed opportunity of
a film, Tyler utters the names of
female singers rather than cursing
when he’s upset or disappointed.
To borrow that conceit, a fair
response to “The Visit” might be
“Cher, Rihanna, Dolly Parton.”
“The Visit,” distributed by
Universal Studios, is rated PG-13
by the Motion Picture Association
of America for “sequences of violence and action, sexual material,
some language, a drug reference
and thematic elements.” Running
time: 94 minutes.
I-75 AT EXIT 20
Fri. Sept. 11 thru Thurs. Sept. 17
FRIDAY ONLY
The Visit
4:50-7:00-9:30
ALL OTHER MOVIES SHOW
AFTER 9:00 FRIDAY ONLY.
MON.-THURS.
The Visit
4:50
7:00
SAT.-SUN.
The Visit
12:30-2:40
4:50-7:00-9:30
Transporter Refueled
5:00
7:20
Transporter Refueled
12:30-2:40
5:00-7:20-9:30
No Escape
5:10
7:30
No Escape
12:30-2:50
5:10-7:30-9:50
War Room
War Room
4:15
7:10
1:15-4:15
7:10-9:50
Sinister 2
5:10
7:30
Sinister 2
12:40-3:00
5:10-7:30-9:50
Man from Uncle Man from Uncle
4:15
7:15
1:20-4:15
7:15-9:40
Mission Impossible Mission Impossible
4:00
7:00
1:00-4:00
7:00-9:50
NO SHOWS AFTER 7:30 PM
MONDAY-THURSDAY.
NO SHOWS BEFORE 4 PM
MONDAY-FRIDAY
PLEASE
PARDON OUR
CONSTRUCTION
Friday Best Bets
8 p.m. on (WRCB) (WTVC) (WDSI)
(WDEF)
Think It Up
The major commercial broadcast networks
unite to simulcast this new special, which
uses music and comedy to inspire students and educators alike as a new school
year begins. Stephen Colbert, Gwyneth
Paltrow, Matthew McConaughey, Scarlett
Johansson, Ryan Seacrest, Kristen Bell
and Jeremy Renner are among the celebrities scheduled to take part in the program,
which also will seek viewer donations to
help fund related initiatives at American
schools.
9 p.m. on (WDSI)
Gotham
Gordon’s (Ben McKenzie) hunt for The
Ogre (Milo Ventimiglia) takes a personal
turn when someone close to the police detective becomes the villain’s next potential
victim in “Under the Knife.” Bruce (David
Mazouz) sets out, with Selina’s (Camren
Bicondova) help, to get the goods on a
crooked employee of his family’s company.
Morena Baccarin also guest stars.
9 p.m. on (WDEF)
Hawaii Five-0
Duane “Dog” Chapman plays himself in
“Luapo’i” (Hawaiian for “Prey”), but the story
actually centers on a different bounty hunter
... one who is killed after catching a murderer. McGarrett (Alex O’Loughlin) and the
team seek the culprit, though Danny (Scott
Caan) is somewhat distracted by a personal
matter that involves stunning information
revealed by his ex-wife Rachel (Claire van
der Boom). Daniel Dae Kim, Grace Park
and Masi Oka also star.
10 p.m. on (SYFY)
Z Nation
In the new episode “The Murphy,” Season
2 picks up just after last season left off, only
moments following the launch of nuclear
weapons triggered by Murphy (Keith Allan). As everyone else scrambles to escape
the impending blast, Citizen Z (DJ Qualls)
battles thawed zombies and issues an onair bounty for Murphy, which immediately
catches the attention of several mercenary
individuals — including Vasquez (new series regular Matt Cedeno, “Devious Maids”),
a dangerous bounty hunter.
FRIDAYAFTERNOON/EVENING
4 PM
WRCBNBC
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OXYGEN
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COM
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4:30
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11 p.m. on (SYFY)
Continuum
Season 4 opens with the new episode “Lost
Hours,” wherein the arrival of some new
time travelers threatens to destroy Kiera
(Rachel Nichols) and her alliance with Brad
(Ryan Robbins). Worse, this new development makes it nearly impossible for Kiera
to reconcile this unexpected threat with her
rekindled desire to return to her own time
and the son she left there.
SEPTEMBER 11, 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
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The Ellen DeGeneres Show Live at 5:00 Live at 5:30 News
Nightly News Entertainment Inside Edition Think It Up (N) Å
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John Hagee Dr. Chris Hill The Heroes of Flight 93
Heroes Among Us, Miracles Supernatural! Potters
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Mike & Molly South Pitts H.S.Football High School Football
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The Civil War Lee surrenders; Lincoln is assassinated. ’ Å
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Washington Charlie Rose The Civil War Lee surrenders; Lincoln is assassinated. ’ Å
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Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
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Blue Bloods “Payback” ’
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Blue Bloods Å
Person of Interest “Proteus” Person of Interest “All In”
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Bellezza Jewelry Collection Bellezza Jewelry Collection Teeter Hang Ups by Roger On the Go “Rosetta Stone”
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15 Years of JOY
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Parks
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(12:02) Bring It! Å
Say Yes
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Fat Fabulous Fat Fabulous Four Weddings ’ Å
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Friends ’
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Family Guy Family Guy ›› “Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” (2009) (DVS)
›› “The House Bunny” (2008, Comedy)
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(3:00) ›› “Sherlock Holmes” (2009)
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Two Men
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›› “Men in Black 3” (2012, Action) Will Smith, Tommy Lee Jones.
› “Grown Ups 2” (2013) Adam Sandler, Kevin James.
› “Grown Ups 2” (2013) Adam Sandler, Kevin James.
› “The Benchwarmers”
(3:00) 2015 U.S. Open Tennis Men’s Semifinals. From the USTA National Tennis Center in Flushing, N.Y. (N) (Live)
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Women’s College Soccer Kentucky at Mississippi. (N) (Live) SEC Now (N) (Live)
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Golf Central LPGA Tour Golf Evian Championship, Second Round. From Evian-les-Bains, France.
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Boxing Austin Trout vs. Joey Hernandez. Å
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Hardball Chris Matthews
All In With Chris Hayes (N) The Rachel Maddow Show 9/11: As It Happened The events of that morning unfolded.
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Your World With Neil Cavuto The Five (N)
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Rebuilding the World Trade Center ’ Å
9/11: The Days After Life in the post-9/11 world. ’ Å
Miracle of Stairway B
9/11: 102 Minutes That Changed America Terrorist attack. (:03) Hotel Ground Zero ’
Miracle of Stairway B
Pawn
Pawn
Pawn
Pawn
Pawn
Pawn
World’s Dumbest...
World’s Dumbest...
Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Boxing TRUTV Friday Night Knockout. (N) (Live)
World’s Dumbest...
Behind Bars: Rookie Year
Behind Bars: Rookie Year
Criminal Minds “The Fallen” Criminal Minds ’
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Edge of Alaska ’ Å
Bering Sea Gold ’ Å
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Bering Sea Gold “Payback” Bering Sea Gold: Dredged Bering Sea Gold (N) Å
(:02) Edge of Alaska (N) ’
(:04) Bering Sea Gold Å
(12:06) Edge of Alaska ’
Science
Science
Science
Science
Diggers
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Inside 9/11: War on America Investigation of events.
Inside 9/11: Zero Hour Terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
Inside 9/11: War on America Investigation of events.
Mysteries at the Monument Mysteries at the Monument Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Monument Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Museum
Mysteries at the Monument
Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Carnival C.
Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive Diners, Drive
Love It or List It, Too Å
Love It or List It, Too Å
Love It or List It, Too Å
Love It or List It, Too Å
Love It or List It, Too Å
Love It or List It, Too (N)
Hunters
Hunters Int’l Hunters
Hunters Int’l Love It or List It, Too Å
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
Redwood Kings Crew builds gigantic medieval workshop.
(:02) Treehouse Masters (N) (:05) Redwood Kings “Redwood Renaissance” ’
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Reba Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
Kevin-Work ››› “Hercules” (1997) Voices of Tate Donovan.
(:45) ››› “A Bug’s Life” (1998) Voices of Dave Foley, Kevin Spacey.
The 700 Club ’ Å
“The Fox and the Hound”
Jessie Å
Jessie Å
Liv-Mad.
Liv-Mad.
Bunk’d Å
Bunk’d Å
Jessie Å
Best Friends Jessie (N) ’ Girl Meets
I Didn’t Do It Gravity Falls Star-For.
Best Friends Jessie Å
Girl Meets
I Didn’t Do It Austin & Ally
Alvinnn!!! and SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Thundermans Thundermans Henry Danger Henry Danger Henry Danger ’ Å
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Friends ’
(:36) Friends (12:12) Friends ’ Å
We Bare
Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans We Bare
Gumball
Regular Show King of Hill King of Hill Burgers
Cleveland
Family Guy Family Guy Childrens
Black Jesus Pretty Face Eric Andre
Bonanza “Bitter Water”
Gilligan’s Isle Gilligan’s Isle Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life ›› “Footloose” (1984, Drama) Kevin Bacon, Lori Singer. Å
Jim Gaffigan King
King
King
King
(1:00) ››› “Casino” ‘R’
›› “Sahara” (2005, Adventure) Matthew McConaughey, Steve Zahn. ‘PG-13’ Å
›› “I, Robot” (2004, Science Fiction) Will Smith. ‘PG-13’ Å
›› “The Day the Earth Stood Still” (2008) Keanu Reeves. ‘PG-13’ Å
Shall We
››› “It Should Happen to You” (1954)
››› “Miracle in the Rain” (1956) Jane Wyman. Å
›› “Evergreen” (1934) Jessie Matthews, Sonnie Hale.
››› “The Macomber Affair” (1947) Å
(:45) ››› “The Snows of Kilimanjaro”
Little House on the Prairie The Waltons “The Birthday” The Waltons “The Lie” ’
The Waltons ’ Å
Cedar Cove Olivia struggles. The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
The Middle
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy ›› “Ella Enchanted” (2004) Anne Hathaway, Cary Elwes.
›› “A Cinderella Story” (2004) Hilary Duff.
›› “A Cinderella Story” (2004) Hilary Duff.
›› “Ella Enchanted”
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
Housewives/OC
››› “The School of Rock” (2003, Comedy) Jack Black, Joan Cusack.
››› “Mean Girls” (2004) Lindsay Lohan.
(2:30) ››› “Total Recall”
››› “Back to the Future” (1985) Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd.
››› “Back to the Future Part II” (1989, Comedy) Michael J. Fox.
Z Nation “The Murphy”
Continuum “Lost Hours”
(12:01) Z Nation
Gangsters: Most Evil
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Boxing Premier Boxing Champions. (N) ’ (Live)
The Road To Dynamite 1 (N) Unrivaled
(:45) Cops ’
South Park Futurama ’ Futurama ’ The Nightly Show
Key & Peele Key & Peele Key & Peele Key & Peele Key & Peele Futurama ’ Futurama ’ South Park South Park Archer Å
Archer Å
›› “Jackass 3D” (2010)
New Girl ’
New Girl ’
New Girl ’
New Girl ’
Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Ridiculous. (:45) Ridiculousness ’
Ridiculous. Ridiculous. ›››› “The Dark Knight” (2008) Christian Bale. Batman battles a vicious criminal known as the Joker.
“Blue Crush 2” (2011, Drama) Sasha Jackson, Elizabeth Mathis. ’
›› “Couples Retreat” (2009) Vince Vaughn, Jason Bateman. ’
››› “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” (2005) Steve Carell, Paul Rudd. ’
›› “The Girl Next Door” (2004) ’
Funniest Home Videos
Reba Å
(:40) Reba ’ Å
(:20) Reba ’ Last-Standing Last-Standing Reba Å
Reba Å
Cowboys Cheerleaders
Gaines.
Party Down South Å
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
Cops Rel.
The BET Life ›› “Soul Plane” (2004, Comedy) Kevin Hart, Tom Arnold. Å
›› “Vampire in Brooklyn” (1995) Eddie Murphy, Angela Bassett. Å
›› “Little Man” (2006, Comedy) Shawn Wayans, Marlon Wayans. Å
The Wendy Williams Show
To Be Announced
What Could Go Wrong?
To Be Announced
What Could Go Wrong?
To Be Announced
U.S. Senate Coverage (N) ’ (Live)
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. ’
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’
Rosary Kids Cross
Grandparents Church Poor EWTN News Enlighten
Daily Mass - Olam
Life on the Rock (N)
EWTN News Holy Rosary The Church Lord, Mercy Bridegrm
Women of
Daily Mass - Olam
Ghost Whisperer “Fury” ’
Ghost Whisperer ’ Å
Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent Law & Order: Criminal Intent
Penn Zero
Gravity Falls Kickin’ It
Mighty Med Droid Tales Mighty Med
Pickle-Peanut Lab Rats
Kirby Buckets Kirby Buckets Kirby Buckets Kirby Buckets Kirby Buckets Mighty Med
Lab Rats
Droid Tales
Dog Eat Dog ’ Å
Deal or No Deal ’ Å
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Chain Rea.
Chain Rea.
Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Steampunk’d Å
Family Feud Family Feud
Eat St. Å
Eat St. Å
Unique Eats Unique
Donut
Best Thing
Unwrapped Unwrapped Carnival Eats Carnival Eats Best Thing
Best Thing
Unique
Unique
Dinner
Challenge
Carnival Eats Carnival Eats
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra on Top
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra on Top
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Kendra
Noticiero Con Paola Rojas La Rosa de Guadalupe
La Rosa de Guadalupe
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Guereja
Guereja
Guereja
Guereja
El Chavo
El Chavo
Noticiero Con Joaquin
Gritos Muerte
María Celeste
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Noticiero
Caso Cerrado: Edición
Avenida Brasil (N) ’ (SS)
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El Señor de los Cielos (N)
Al Rojo Vivo Titulares
Bajo el Mismo Cielo (SS)
El Gordo y la Flaca (N)
Primer Impacto (N) (SS)
Hotel Todo
Noticiero Uni. Muchacha Italiana Viene
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Lo Imperdonable
Yo No Creo en los Hombres Impacto
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NASCAR Racing
NASCAR
NASCAR Racing
Countdown NASCAR Racing XFINITY Series: Virginia529 College Savings 250. (N)
Mobsteel ’ Å
National Pro Grid League
Nat’l Pro Grid
911: The Bronx ’ Å
911: The Bronx ’ Å
911: The Bronx ’ Å
911: The Bronx ’ Å
9/11 Emergency Room ’
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
9/11 Emergency Room ’
NY ER Å
NY ER Å
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Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015—19
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2 PM
2:30
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Eyewitness News: Weekend Today (N) ’ Å
Tree Fu Tom Ruf-Tweet
Astroblast
LazyTown
Luna!
Poppy Cat
English Premier League Soccer
Goal Zone
Action Sports (N) ’ Å
VeggieTales Dr. Wonder Kids Club
Storykeepers RocKids TV Auto B. Good Paha. Is.
VeggieTales Monster
Mary-Hopkins Lassie Å
Goliath
Ishine Knect Insp. Station Nest Family VeggieTales Heroes & Legends of Bible
The Rick & Bubba Show
Dragon
Pancakes
Real Life 101 Mouse in the Think Big
Real Life 101 Dog Tales
Raceline
Shotgunners Outdoorsman Shooter
Outdoors
Adventures J. Houston
Fishing for
Comp. Angler
Dr. Pol
Dr. Pol
Dr. Pol
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Dog Town
Exped. Wild Rock-Park
ACC Blitz
College Football Wake Forest at Syracuse. From the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, N.Y. (N)
Raceline
Bob Builder Thomas & Fr. Martha Speak Curious
Arthur ’
Wild Kratts Edison’s Lab Odd Squad This Old H’se Old House
Primal Grill BBQ-Franklin Test Kitchen Cook Country Cooking
Martha Bakes A Chef’s Life A Chef’s Life
(6:30) “A Box of Faith” (2015, Drama)
Word Alive
Dr. Wonder My Destiny Gospel Bill
Maralee
Donkey Ollie Adventures Ishine Knect Scaly
Kerry Pharr Last Days Si. Guillermo
Lakewood
Cld. Freidzon Cash Luna
Good Morning America (N) Good Morning Chattanooga Jack Hanna Ocean Mys. Sea Rescue Wildlife Docs Outback Adv Born-Explore College Football Oregon State at Michigan. From Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Mich.
Coll. Football Football
Arthur (N)
Wild Kratts Curious
Sewing
Love Quilting Joy/Painting Gardener
Live Green
Test Kitchen Cook’s
Lidia Kitchen A Chef’s Life Garden Home Martha Bakes Cooking
Dowdle
Old House
This Old H’se
Adventures Into the Wild Dog Tales (N) TN Lumber Paid Program No More Den Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Big Bang
Pregame
MLB Baseball Regional Coverage. (N) ’ (Live) Å
Lucky Dog
Dr. Chris-Vet Innovation
Recipe
CBS This Morning: Saturday (N) ’ Å
All In
Gme Chngers Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Lucas Oil Off Road Racing Col. Football Football
AM Style With Leah Williams Spotlight on fashion and accessories.
Saturday Morning Q Featuring Dooney & Bourke.
Dooney & Bourke
Shawn Says, Accessorize! “Dooney & Bourke” (N)
Washington Journal Live call-in program with officials. (N) ’ (Live)
Washington This Week ’
Washington This Week ’
Washington This Week ’
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Law & Order “Double Down” Law & Order “We Like Mike” Law & Order “Passion” ’
Law & Order ’ Å
Blue Bloods “Warriors” ’
Blue Bloods “Quid Pro Quo” Blue Bloods ’ Å
Teeter Hang Ups by Roger Hair Remov. TRU Hair by Serious Skin Care (N)
Serious Skin Care (N)
15 Years of JOY
15 Years of JOY
Teeter Hang Ups by Roger Origami Storage (N)
Hair Remov. TRU Hair by
›› “RV” (2006, Comedy) Robin Williams, Jeff Daniels.
Total Divas
E! News Weekend (N)
House of DVF
House of DVF
House of DVF
House of DVF
WAGS “The WAG Life”
American Ninja Warrior Obstacles include Cannonball Alley. American Ninja Warrior “Pittsburgh Finals” ’ Å
American Ninja Warrior Obstacles include Doorknob Arch.
American Ninja Warrior “Vegas Finals” Las Vegas finals.
American Ninja Warrior
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Bring It! “Pom Pom Panic”
“Dead on Campus” (2014, Drama) Katelyn Tarver. Å
“Sorority Surrogate” (2014, Drama) Cassie Steele. Å
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Disney Story Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Say Yes: ATL Nightmare Next Door Å
Nightmare Next Door Å
Nightmare Next Door Å
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
›› “Just Like Heaven” (2005) Reese Witherspoon.
››› “Sleepless in Seattle” (1993) Tom Hanks.
(:15) ›› “The House Bunny” (2008, Comedy) Anna Faris.
›› “Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” (2009) (DVS)
Law & Order “Hot Pursuit”
Law & Order “Paranoia” ’
Law & Order “Humiliation”
Law & Order “Angel” ’
Law & Order “Blood Libel”
Law & Order “Remand” ’
›› “Tyler Perry’s I Can Do Bad All By Myself” (2009)
“Why Did I Get Married?”
Paid Program Paid Program Pastor Chris Paid Program Playing
Playing
English Premier League Soccer (N) (Live)
›› “Big Momma’s House” (2000) Martin Lawrence.
› “Big Momma’s House 2” (2006) Martin Lawrence.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer ’ Buffy the Vampire Slayer ’ Anger
Anger
Two Men
Two Men
Two Men
Two Men
19th Annual Prism
››› “Flight” (2012, Drama) Denzel Washington, Don Cheadle, Kelly Reilly.
SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
College GameDay (N) (Live) Å
College Football South Florida at Florida State. (N) (Live)
Score
2015 U.S. Open Tennis
SEC Storied NFL Live Å
NFL Matchup SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)
Score
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PowerShares Champions
Destination N.C. State
Inside FB
Duke
ShipShape
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ACC Gridiron Live ’
College Football Houston at Louisville. From Papa John’s Cardinal Stadium in Louisville, Ky. (N) (Live)
Football
(6:00) College Football
SEC Film Rm SEC Inside
SEC Film Rm SEC Inside
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College Football Jacksonville State at Auburn. From Jordan-Hare Stadium in Auburn, Ala.
SEC Now (N) (Live)
(6:30) LPGA Tour Golf Evian Championship, Third Round. From Evian-les-Bains, France. (N) (Live)
European PGA Tour Golf KLM Open, Third Round. From Zandvoort, Netherlands.
Golf Central PGA Tour Golf
Countdown to Kickoff
FOX Sports Live Å
Match Day
Bundesliga Soccer FC Bayern Munich vs FC Augsburg. (N) College Ftball College Football Kansas State at Texas-San Antonio. Alamodome. (N) (Live) Å
Football
Cook Top
US DOCTORS 3B Outdoors Paid Program Hook Future Nuts & Bolts Accept The Top Blower Georgia Tech ACC Access Jimmy Hanlin Swing Clinic WNBA Basketball Indiana Fever at Atlanta Dream.
College Football
AMHQ Weekend (N)
Weekend Recharge (N) (Live)
Prospectors
Prospectors
Prospectors
Prospectors
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program
Weekends With Alex Witt
Up W/Steve Kornacki (N)
Melissa Harris-Perry (N)
Weekends With Alex Witt (N)
Caught on Camera
Caught on Camera
New Day Saturday (N)
New Day Saturday (N)
Smerconish (N) (Live)
CNN Newsroom/ Blackwell CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN Newsroom
CNN News
Sanjay Gupta CNN Newsroom
New Day Saturday (N)
HLN Weekend Express
New Day Saturday (N)
Smerconish (N) (Live)
CNN Newsroom/ Blackwell HLN Weekend Express
Forensic File Forensic File CNN Newsroom
CNN News
Sanjay Gupta
(6:00) FOX and Friends Saturday (N)
Bulls & Bears Business
Forbes/FOX Cashin’ In (N) Bob Massi Is Jour.
America’s News Headquarters (N)
America’s News HQ
Restoration Operation
Mysteries of the Freemasons “The Beginning” Rituals. ’
Behind The Da Vinci Code The Templar Code ’ Å
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars
Paid Program It’s a Cooking Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Pawn
Pawn
Pawn
Pawn
Pawn
Pawn
Pawn
Pawn
Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Friends of
Carbonaro
Dog the Bounty Hunter ’
Dog the Bounty Hunter ’
Flipping Vegas ’ Å
Flipping Vegas ’ Å
Flipping Vegas ’ Å
Flipping Vegas ’ Å
Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty
Paid Program Paid Program Disney Story Paid Program Dual Survival Southern Utah. Dual Survival ’ Å
Dual Survival “Swamplandia” Edge of Alaska ’ Å
Edge of Alaska ’ Å
Edge of Alaska ’ Å
Bering Sea Gold ’ Å
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Life Below Zero
Port Protection
Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks Live Free or Die
Live Free or Die “Do or Die” Live Free or Die
Live Free or Die
Mysteries at the Hotel Å
Mysteries at the Museum
Bourdain: No Reservations Bizarre Foods/Zimmern
Bizarre Foods America
Man v. Food Man v. Food Food Paradise Å
Food Paradise Å
Food Paradise Å
Best- Made Guy’s, Bite
Brunch at
Southern
Trisha’s Sou. Pioneer Wo. Pioneer Wo. Farmhouse The Kitchen (N)
Valerie Home Giada in Italy Kids Cook-Off
The Great Food Truck Race Cake Masters
Kit. Crash
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Rehab
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Property Brothers: Buying Property Brothers: Buying Property Brothers: Buying
It’s Me or the Dog ’ Å
Dogs 101 ’ Å
To Be Announced
Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet
››› “The Fox and the Hound” (1981) Kurt Russell
››› “A Bug’s Life” (1998) Voices of Dave Foley.
›› “Pocahontas” (1995) Voices of Irene Bedard.
›››› “Cinderella” (1950) Voices of Ilene Woods.
››› “Sleeping Beauty”
Doc McSt.
Sofia
Mickey
Wil. West
Liv-Mad.
Girl Meets
Jessie ’
I Didn’t Do It Girl Meets
Dog
K.C. Undercover ’ Å
Jessie Å
Jessie Å
Liv-Mad.
Liv-Mad.
(:15) Gravity Falls ’ Å
SpongeBob SpongeBob Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Pig Goat Ban. Harvey Beaks SpongeBob Rangers
Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob
Sonic Boom Teen Titans Pokémon: XY Gumball
Gumball
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Clarence
Gumball
Teen Titans Teen Titans Teen Titans Clarence
Clarence
Gumball
(:12) Family Feud ’ Å
Family Feud Family Feud Golden Girls Golden Girls (:12) The Golden Girls Å
Golden Girls Golden Girls ›› “Footloose” (1984, Drama) Kevin Bacon, Lori Singer. Å
Reba Å
Reba Å
(:36) Reba ’
The Rifleman The Rifleman The Rifleman ›› “The Shakiest Gun in the West” (1968) Don Knotts. ‘NR’ Å
›› “Sahara” (2005, Adventure) Matthew McConaughey, Steve Zahn. ‘PG-13’ Å
›› “The Day the Earth Stood Still” (2008) ‘PG-13’ Å
(6:00) “Edison, the Man”
››› “Treasure Island” (1934) Wallace Beery. Å (DVS)
Batman
›› “Bulldog Drummond at Bay” (1937)
››› “The Mouse That Roared” (1959)
›› “The Hunters” (1958, War) Robert Mitchum. Å
Triple Cross
I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy I Love Lucy Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls › “Flower Girl” (2009, Romance) Marla Sokoloff. Å
››› “Wedding Daze” (2004) John Larroquette. Å
Paid Program Paid Program Boss Nails
Boss Nails
Boss Nails
A Sister
A Sister
A Sister
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
Sex-City
(6:00) “There’s Something About Mary”
Manzo’d With Manzo’d With Below Deck “Off the Radar” Below Deck
Million Dollar LA
Million Dollar LA
Ladies of London
Housewives/OC
Housewives
Paid Program Paid Program Twilight Zone ›› “Beautiful Creatures” (2013) Alden Ehrenreich, Alice Englert.
››› “The Fifth Element” (1997) Bruce Willis, Gary Oldman, Ian Holm.
››› “Back to the Future” (1985) Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd.
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program ›››› “Jaws” (1975, Suspense) Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw, Richard Dreyfuss. ’
(:07) ›› “Jaws 2” (1978, Suspense) Roy Scheider, Lorraine Gary. ’
(:39) Cops ’ Cops Å
Cops Å
Paid Program Paid Program Com. Central South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park
› “What a Girl Wants” (2003) Amanda Bynes, Colin Firth. ’
New Girl ’
New Girl ’
New Girl ’
New Girl ’
(:35) New Girl (:10) New Girl (:45) New Girl ’ Å
(:20) ›› “Scary Movie 3” (2003, Comedy) Anna Faris. ’
Dark Knight
VH1 Plus Music ’
VH1 Plus Music ’
The 20 (N) ’ (Part 1 of 2)
The 20 (N) ’ (Part 2 of 2)
››› “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” (2005) Steve Carell, Paul Rudd. ’
Saturday Night Live ’ Å
Saturday Night Live Å
CMT Music ’
CMT Music ’
Hot 20 Countdown “From The Johnny Cash Museum” The 20 best videos of the week.
Cowboys Cheerleaders
To Be Announced
TBA
Inspiration
Inspiration
Punk’d Å
Punk’d Å
Punk’d Å
Punk’d Å
The BET Life of Å
Husbands
›› “Little Man” (2006, Comedy) Shawn Wayans, Marlon Wayans. Å
›› “Vampire in Brooklyn” (1995) Eddie Murphy. Å
Shredders
Shredders
Shredders
Shredders
Shredders
Shredders
Shredders
Shredders
Shredders
Shredders
They Do It? They Do It? They Do It? They Do It? They Do It? They Do It? They Do It? They Do It?
Key Capitol Hill Hearings ’ Book TV ’
In Depth “Lynne Cheney” ’
Book TV ’
Book TV ’
St. Michael
Holy Rosary Daily Mass - Olam
Catholic Fam. With Jesus Truth in Heart At Home with Jim and Joy Holy Rosary Daily Mass - Olam
Religious
Many Faces EWTN on Location (N)
Mercy
Rosary/Life
Elizabeth
Farm Bureau Worship Hour Pastor Chris ›››› “Rocky” (1976) Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire. ’
››› “Rocky II” (1979) Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire. ’
››› “Rocky III” (1982) Sylvester Stallone, Mr. T. ’
›› “Rocky IV” (1985) ’
Mickey
Mickey
The 7D Å
The 7D Å
The 7D Å
The 7D Å
The 7D Å
The 7D Å
The 7D (N)
Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Gravity Falls Pickle-Peanut Gamer’s G. Gamer’s G.
Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Deal or No Deal ’ Å
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Six McGhees Six McGhees Six McGhees Six McGhees Six McGhees Six McGhees Four Babies & A Wedding
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4:30
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SEPTEMBER 12, 2015
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Jewish Jesus Israel News “A Box of Faith” (2015, Drama) Savannah McMahon.
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›› “He’s Just Not That Into You” (2009) Ben Affleck, Jennifer Aniston.
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American Ninja Warrior
›››› “Rocky” (1976, Drama) Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire.
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The Agent
“The Choking Game” (2014) Freya Tingley, Peri Gilpin. Å
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“The Murder Pact” (2015) Beau Mirchoff. Premiere. Å
(:02) “A Teacher’s Obsession” (2015) Mia Rose Frampton. (12:02) “The Murder Pact”
Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Dateline: Real Life Mysteries Undercover Boss “Maaco”
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(3:00) ›› “Why Did I Get Married?”
›› “Tyler Perry’s Why Did I Get Married Too?” (2010) Tyler Perry.
››› “A Time to Kill” (1996, Drama) Sandra Bullock, Samuel L. Jackson. Å (DVS)
›› “Why Did I Get Married?” (2007) Tyler Perry.
››› “Bridesmaids” (2011, Comedy) Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph.
› “The Ugly Truth” (2009) Katherine Heigl, Gerard Butler.
›› “Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Witness Protection” (2012) Tyler Perry.
Mod Fam
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››› “Avatar” (2009) Sam Worthington. A former Marine falls in love with a native of a lush alien world.
››› “Pacific Rim” (2013, Science Fiction) Charlie Hunnam, Diego Klattenhoff. Premiere.
Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Mike & Molly
(3:00) 2015 U.S. Open Tennis Women’s Final. (N) (Live)
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Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty The First 48 “Life Snatched” The First 48 ’ Å
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Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet
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›››› “Toy Story” (1995) Voices of Tom Hanks.
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(:15) ››› “Monsters, Inc.” (2001, Comedy) Billy Crystal
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Earth Stood ›› “I, Robot” (2004, Science Fiction) Will Smith. ‘PG-13’ Å
››› “300” (2007, Action) Gerard Butler, Lena Headey. ‘R’ Å
››› “Troy” (2004, Adventure) Brad Pitt, Eric Bana. Achilles leads Greek forces in the Trojan War. ‘R’
(3:30) ›› “Triple Cross” (1967) Å
(:45) ››› “No Time for Sergeants” (1958, Comedy) Andy Griffith. Å
››› “The Nun’s Story” (1959) Audrey Hepburn, Peter Finch. Å
(:45) ››› “The Sins of Rachel Cade” (1961) Angie Dickinson. Å
“A Ring by Spring” (2014) Stefanie Powers. Å
“Love by the Book” (2014, Romance) Leah Renee. Å
Cedar Cove “Engagements” “A Wish Come True” (2015, Romance) Megan Park. Å
Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls
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› “Big Daddy” (1999) Adam Sandler, Joey Lauren Adams. Premiere.
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Housewives Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy Don’t--Tardy ›› “Baby Mama” (2008) Tina Fey, Amy Poehler.
››› “Mean Girls” (2004, Comedy) Lindsay Lohan.
›› “Baby Mama” (2008) Tina Fey, Amy Poehler.
“Something About Mary”
››› “Back to the Future Part II” (1989, Comedy) Michael J. Fox.
››› “1408” (2007, Horror) John Cusack, Samuel L. Jackson.
››› “The Conjuring” (2013, Horror) Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson.
›› “Sinister” (2012, Horror) Ethan Hawke.
Cops Å
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›››› “Jaws” (1975, Suspense) Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw, Richard Dreyfuss. ’
South Park South Park South Park (:45) South Park “Insecurity” South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park Archer Å
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(3:40) ›››› “The Dark Knight” (2008, Action) Christian Bale, Heath Ledger, Aaron Eckhart. ’
(:45) › “Friday After Next” (2002, Comedy) Ice Cube, Mike Epps. ’
(:05) › “How High” (2001, Comedy) Method Man, Redman. ’
Boyz N Hood
Saturday Night Live Å
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Dating Naked ’
Twinning “Twinfection” ’
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›› “Step Up Revolution” (2012) Ryan Guzman, Kathryn McCormick. ’
› “Honey 2” (2011) Katerina Graham. ’
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
Johnny Cash: American Rebel Exclusive First Look
Johnny Cash: American Rebel Exclusive First Look
Vampire
››› “The Nutty Professor” (1996, Comedy) Eddie Murphy, Jada Pinkett. Å
›› “Boomerang” (1992, Comedy) Eddie Murphy, Halle Berry. Å
›› “Eddie Murphy Raw” (1987) Eddie Murphy. Å
The BET Life of Å
They Do It? They Do It? They Do It? They Do It? They Do It? They Do It? How/Made
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Worth Living Heroic Media Mother Angelica Live
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›››› “Rocky” (1976) Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire. ’
››› “Rocky II” (1979) Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire. ’
››› “Rocky III” (1982) Sylvester Stallone, Mr. T. ’
›› “Rocky IV” (1985) Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire. ’
Mighty Med
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Ultimate
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Tiffani’s
Tiffani’s
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Unique
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Chapulín
El Chavo
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Amar
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Mojoe
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› “The Condemned” (2007, Acción) Steve Austin. ’ (SS)
Fútbol Mexicano Primera División: Pachuca vs Toluca
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La Rosa de Guadalupe
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Noticiero
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Hoarding: Buried Alive ’
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Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Stories: Worst Day Ever
Didn’t See It
Untold Stories of the E.R. ’ Stories: Worst Day Ever
20—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
After insulting Fiorina, Trump
tested by wave of criticism
AP photo
In thIs ImAge released by CBS, host Stephen Colbert, right, laughs with Vice President Joe Biden
during a taping of "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert," on Thursday in New York.
Biden says he’s unsure he can
commit fully to be president
NEW YORK (AP) — Vice
President Joe Biden said he is
overwhelmed at times by his
son’s death and unconvinced he
could commit fully to being president, in an emotional interview
that cast a deep pall over his
deliberations about the 2016
presidential race.
Asked about his 2016 decision
on CBS’ “The Late Show,” Biden
said Thursday he’d be lying if he
said he knew he was prepared to
run following Beau Biden’s death
in May to brain cancer. With a
level of candor seen rarely in politics, he recalled a breakdown of
his emotions during a recent visit
to a Colorado military base when
a well-wisher yelled out the name
of his son and referenced his decorated military service in Iraq.
“All of a sudden, I lost it,”
Biden said. “How could you —
that’s not — I shouldn’t be saying
this: You can’t do that.”
Biden’s
much-anticipated
appearance on “The Late Show
with Stephen Colbert” was
expected to take on a light and
comedic tone, but instead veered
almost immediately into raw and
personal territory. He said White
House hopefuls must be able to
promise voters they can commit
their whole heart, soul, energy
and passion, and said, “I’d be
lying if I said that I knew I was
there.”
“Nobody has a right, in my
view, to seek that office unless
they’re willing to give it 110 percent of who they are. And I am,
as I said, I’m optimistic, I’m positive about where we’re going,”
Biden told Colbert. “But I find
myself — you understand it —
sometimes it just overwhelms
you.”
Biden
had
previously
expressed doubts about whether
he and his family have the emotional energy to run. Still, his
blunt description of his own emotional frailty on Thursday
marked the strongest indication
yet that he may be leaning
against running for the
Democratic nomination.
Since his son’s death, Biden
has frequently peppered his
speeches with references to Beau
and the impressive resume he
developed in his 46 years. Yet
Biden went further in the interview, describing in detail conversations he had with Beau in the
months before his death at a military hospital.
“He said, ‘Dad, sit down, I want
to talk to you.’ He said, ‘Dad, I
know how much you love me,’”
Biden recalled. “Promise me
you’ll be all right, because no
matter what happens, I’m going
to be all right.”
If Biden seemed unusually
willing to bare his soul, it may
have been due to his host.
Colbert, the longtime Comedy
Central star who this week took
over David Letterman’s former
role, lost his father and two
brothers in a plane crash as a
child. Biden invoked Colbert’s
losses to make a point about how
“there are so many other people
going through this.”
“I feel self-conscious talking
about it,” Biden said, looking
down solemnly and occasionally
wringing his hands.
Decades ago, at the start of his
political career, Biden lost his
wife and infant daughter in a car
crash that also injured Beau and
his other son, Hunter. Asked by
Colbert how he perseveres, Biden
cited his Catholic faith and his
determination to simply keep
moving.
“I feel like I was letting down
Beau, letting down my parents,
letting down my family, if I didn’t
just get up,” Biden said, his voice
trailing off at points. “You’ve just
got to get up.”
For his part, Colbert was
unabashed in his support for a
Biden campaign, praising him
effusively for showing Americans
“the real Joe Biden” and adding,
“I think we’d all be very happy if
you did run.” Biden attributed
his current star status in the
Democratic Party to the fact that
he never felt compelled to modulate what he says.
“If you can’t state why you
want the job, then there’s a lot
more lucrative opportunities
other places,” he said.
Biden’s public meditation on
the 2016 race capped a hectic
day of speeches and events in
New York, where he focused on
two issues that have been central
to his political career for decades:
workers’ rights and violence
against women. He spent part of
the day at a fundraiser for Senate
Democrats.
The vice president once set an
end-of-summer deadline to
decide whether to run, but that
outlook was reshuffled after his
son, the former Delaware attorney general, died. In early
August, Biden let it be known
that he was actively considering
a run. More recently, Biden’s
aides have said any announce-
AP photo
nAshvIlle mAyor-elect megAn BArry is shown campaigning Wednesday. Voters in the nation's 25th largest city went to
the polls Thursday to decide between Councilwoman Barry and
hedge fund manager David Fox.
Fox concedes to Barry in
Nashville mayor’s race
NASHVILLE (AP) — Hedge
fund manager David Fox has
conceded the Nashville mayor’s
race to Councilwoman Megan
Barry.
Fox said Thursday night that
he was proud of his conservative
effort in the heavily Democratic
city, and vowed to work toward
reconciliation after an aggressive campaign.
Barry will be Nashville’s first
female mayor.
With 104 of 161 precincts
reporting, Barry had 55 percent
of the vote compared with Fox’s
45 percent.
During the campaign, Fox
cast himself as a fiscal conservative and said he would fight to
prevent uncontrolled growth
and traffic in the city.
Barry touted her “strong progressive” credentials and in the
final weeks of the campaign targeted reliably Democratic voters
in the city’s black community to
try to seal the win in the race to
succeed term-limited Mayor
Karl Dean.
ment would likely slip into late
September or early October, or
possibly even later.
The intense interest stirred up
by the prospect of Biden running
campaign has essentially frozen
the Democratic primary campaign, as Hillary Rodham Clinton
and the other candidates wait to
see whether they’ll face another
formidable contender. Recent
national polls have suggested
Biden could be competitive
against the Republican candidates, and that he’s more popular within his own party than
Clinton in key primary states.
Funny or not, the late-night
appearance put Biden on the
same stage to which 2016 presidential candidates have been
flocking. Since Colbert’s debut
this week, he’s already snagged
an interview with GOP contender
Jeb Bush and booked future
appearances with candidates
Donald Trump and Ted Cruz.
Clinton will try out her comedy
chops next week on NBC’s “The
Tonight Show Starring Jimmy
Fallon.”
WASHINGTON (AP) — A wave of
criticism from Republicans and
Democrats alike rose Thursday
after GOP presidential front-runner Donald Trump insulted the
physical appearance of Carly
Fiorina, his party’s only female
White House contender.
It’s a new test for the candidacy
of the brash-talking Trump, whose
standing in opinion polls has
surged despite a series of comments that might well have
doomed a traditional politician.
Republican Louisiana Gov.
Bobby Jindal called Trump “a
madman,” while Democrat Hillary
Rodham Clinton said the billionaire real-estate mogul “seems to
delight in insulting women every
chance he gets.”
Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush
dismissed Trump’s latest comments as “small and inappropriate.” And Fiorina, the target of
Trump’s latest insult, suggested
she was “getting under his skin.”
In some ways, Thursday was a
day no different from others in an
unpredictable 2016 presidential
primary campaign, a messy contest in which Trump has emerged
as a dominant and divisive figure.
But the day also featured an escalation of criticism from Trump’s
detractors in both parties, who
seem be multiplying.
The spark was an interview
published Wednesday by Rolling
Stone, in which Trump said
Fiorina’s face would make her
unelectable. The magazine quoted
Trump as saying of the former
technology executive: “Look at that
face! Would anyone vote for that?
Can you imagine that, the face of
our next president?”
The chorus of anti-Trump
Republicans now includes Bush,
Jindal, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul,
South Carolina Sen. Lindsey
Graham, former New York Gov.
George Pataki and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, who is running second to Trump in several
LEGAL
PUBLICATIONS
LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE
WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debts and obligations secured by that
certain Real Estate Deed of Trust for Tennessee
executed on March 25, 2008, by Lillie A. Johnson
to Mary Ruth Tackett, Trustee, as same appears of
record in the Register’s Office of Bradley County,
Tennessee in Book 1824, Page 656, (“Deed of
Trust”); and
WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed(s) of
Trust is the United States of America, acting by and
through the United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA”); and
WHEREAS, USDA, the current owner and holder of
said Deed(s) of Trust appointed Jerry Jolley as Substitute Trustee by instrument filed for record in the
Register’s Office of Bradley County, Tennessee,
with all the rights, powers and privileges of the
original Trustee named in said Deed(s) of Trust; and
NOW THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the
entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed(s) of Trust by USDA,
and Jerry Jolley as Substitute Trustee, or duly appointed agent, pursuant to the power, duty, and
authorization in and conferred by said Deed(s) of
Trust, will on Thursday, September 24, 2015, commencing at 10:00 AM at the east door of the Bradley County Courthouse Cleveland, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest bidder
either for cash (must be in the form of a cashier’s
check) or 10 per cent of the high bid price as a
non-refundable deposit with balance due within ten
(10) days of sale, (and if such balance goes unpaid,
USDA will retain the deposit and re-foreclose) the
following described property lying and being in the
Second Civil District in Bradley County, Tennessee
to wit:
Being Lot Seventeen (17), Hopewell Heights Subdivision, as shown by plat of record in Plat Book 2,
Page 163, in the Register's Office of Bradley
County, Tennessee.
Map 26G-B Parcel 6.00
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 5625 Georgetown Road NW,
Cleveland TN 37312
Being the same property conveyed to Lillie A Johnson herein by deed of Ronnie L Dougharty and wife,
Benita Dougharty, dated March 25, 2008 and recorded in Deed Book 1824, Page 653 on March 31,
2008 Register's Office, Bradley County, Tennessee.
CURRENT OWNERS: Lillie A Johnson
The sale of the above-described property shall be
subject to all matters shown on any recorded plan;
any unpaid taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or setback lines that may be applicable; any
prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority
created by a fixture filing; and any matter that an
accurate survey of the premises might disclose.
All right and equity of redemption, statutory or
otherwise, homestead, and dower are expressly
waived in said Deed(s) 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.
Publication Dates: August 28th, September 4th,
September 11th
Jerry Jolley
Substitute Trustee
103 Cherokee Blvd, Suite 2A
Chattanooga, TN 37405
http://www.resales.usda.gov
August 28, 2015; September 4, 11, 2015
AP photo
In thIs sePt. 9 fIle Photo, Republican presidential candidate
Donald Trump speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington. A wave of criticism from Republicans and Democrats alike rose Thursday after
GOP presidential front-runner Donald Trump insulted the physical
appearance of his party's only female White House contender.
early polls and challenged
Trump’s Christian faith this week.
In a speech at the National
Press Club in Washington, Jindal
called Trump an “egomaniacal
madman who has no principles,”
describing him as a “carnival act.”
“The silly summer season is
over,” Jindal said. “It’s time to get
serious about saving our country.
It’s time to send Donald Trump
back to reality TV.”
At a rally in Columbus, Ohio, at
roughly the same time, Clinton
took a swipe at Trump. “There is
one particular candidate who just
seems to delight in insulting
women every chance he gets,”
Clinton told a cheering crowd of
supporters. “I have to say, if he
emerges I would love to debate
him.”
The Fiorina remark is only the
latest comment directed at women
that’s led to criticism of Trump.
After the first GOP debate, during
which Fox News’ Megyn Kelly
asked him about past derogatory
comments about women, Trump
launched a series of insults at the
TV anchor — including telling
CNN that Kelly had “blood coming
out of her eyes, blood coming out
of her wherever” during the
debate.
Trump tried to paper over his
remarks about Fiorina in an interview with CNN, saying he wasn’t
talking about her appearance but
her “persona.”
In a subsequent interview on
ABC’s “The View,” he said, “I do
have a very big heart,” and then he
offered a message directly to
women: “I want to say that I cherish women, and I will protect
women, and I will take care of
women, and I have great respect
for women.”
He said his wife and daughter
have encouraged him to speak
more about “women’s health
issues, because they know how
strongly and committed I am to it.”
LEGAL PUBLICATION
Notice of Sale
2014
2005
1995
1999
1995
1996
1984
2003
1995
2013
2001
1992
2002
Ford Focus VIN# 3FADP4BJ7EM191596
Mazda 3 VIN# JM1BK123251309325
Buick Century VIN# 1G4AG55M7S6468151
Jeep VIN# 1J4FF68SXXL597114
Nissan Quest VIN# 4N2DN11W0SD851719
Jeep Cherokee VIN# 1J4FT68SXTL255407
Chevy S10 VIN# 1GCC514B8E2121025
Deville VIN# 1G6KD54Y63U263264
Jeep VIN# 1J4GZ78Y2SC680616
Hyundai VIN# KMHCT5AE3DU131476
Kia VIN# KNAFB121015044002
Dodge VIN# 1B7FL23X8NS681977
Harley VIN# 1HD1BWB172Y038447
by 18th Street Towing LLC at 2862 South Lee Hwy,
Cleveland, TN 37311. Owner or lien holder must
pay charges to reclaim vehicle.
September 4, 11, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
RHS
Home of the Week
5625 Georgetown Road NW
Cleveland TN 37312
Minimum Bid: $70,469.00
(or best offer above minimum bid)
5 rooms, 3 bedrooms /2 bath, 1288 sq ft.
This description is believed to be correct to our
best understanding.
SALE DATE AND TIME:
9/24/2015 AT 10:00 am
SALE LOCATION:
East Door @ Bradley County Courthouse
FOR INFO CONTACT:
800-349-5097 ext 4500
For future foreclosure sales and inventory
property access our website:
www.resales.usda.gov
September 11, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE OF A REGULAR MEETING
CLEVELAND MUNICIPAL
PLANNING COMMISSION
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2015 AT 6:00 PM
CLEVELAND MUNICIPAL BUILDING
190 CHURCH STREET NE
The Planning Commission will hear the following
items:
Request by Lisa Stanbery for application of alternative setbacks for lots 12, 19 and 20 of Berywood
Cottages on Cottage Grove Circle.
Request by John York and Tim Todd for a
right-of-way abandonment for a portion of West
Lake Dr NW.
Consideration of an amendment to the zoning ordinance regarding exceptions to the height requirements within the UC University Campus Zoning
District.
September 11, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE OF DESIGN
PUBLIC INVOLVEMENT MEETINGS
CLEVELAND URBAN AREA MPO
The Cleveland Urban Area Metropolitan Planning
Organization (MPO) will hold two (2) design public
involvement meetings for the Gaut Street Area
Sidewalk and Transit Stop Improvements Project.
The intention is that this project would be submitted for the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) Transportation Alternatives Program
(TAP) grant. The proposed project would begin at
the end of the existing sidewalk on 6th Street NE
and run generally west along 6th Street NE to Gaut
Street, thence south on Gaut Street to Inman
Street, and crossing Inman Street and running
south on Dooley Street to an existing sidewalk connection to Wildwood Avenue. The total length is approximately 0.7 miles, and the proposed scope
would include new sidewalk, curb and gutter, and
retaining walls on a portion of the route as well as
transit stop improvements (e.g. bus shelter near
Health Department), and crosswalks and pedestrian
signals on Inman Street. The MPO is soliciting public input on the project. The scope of the proposed
project may be altered in response to input received or expected project costs.
The first design public involvement meeting will be
held at the College Hill Recreation Center, 264
Berry Street NE, Cleveland, TN, on September 24,
2015 at 6:00 p.m.
The second design public involvement meeting will
be held at the Blythe Family Support Center, 1075
Blythe Avenue SE, on October 1, 2015 at 6:30 p.m.,
in conjunction with the Blythe Oldfield Neighborhood Association meeting.
Copies of all MPO documents can be viewed at the
Cleveland Public Library, the Cleveland/Bradley
Chamber of Commerce, the Development and Engineering Services Building (MPO office) at 185 2nd
Street, N.E., and on the MPO website: http://clevelandtn.gov/index.aspx?nid=153
If additional information is needed, please contact
MPO Coordinator Greg Thomas, phone (423)
479-1913,
fax
(423)
559-3373,
or
email
gthomas@clevelandtn.gov.
September 11, 16, 2015
LEGAL PUBLICATION
NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE
WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debts and obligations secured by that
certain Real Estate Deed of Trust for Tennessee
executed on December 18, 2003, by Scott D. Baggett, unmarried to Mary Ruth Tackett, Trustee, as
same appears of record in the Register’s Office of
Bradley County, Tennessee in Book 1394, Page
696-702, corrected and re-recorded January 12,
2004 in Book 1399, Page 993-999, (“Deed of
Trust”); and
WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed(s) of
Trust is the United States of America, acting by and
through the United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA”); and
WHEREAS, USDA, the current owner and holder of
said Deed(s) of Trust appointed Jerry Jolley as Substitute Trustee by instrument filed for record in the
Register’s Office of Bradley County, Tennessee,
with all the rights, powers and privileges of the
original Trustee named in said Deed(s) of Trust; and
NOW THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the
entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed(s) of Trust by USDA,
and Jerry Jolley as Substitute Trustee, or duly appointed agent, pursuant to the power, duty, and
authorization in and conferred by said Deed(s) of
Trust, will on Friday, October 9, 2015, commencing
at 10:00 a.m. at the east door of the Bradley
County Courthouse Cleveland, Tennessee, proceed
to sell at public outcry to the highest bidder either
for cash (must be in the form of a cashier’s check)
or 10 per cent of the high bid price as a non-refundable deposit with balance due within ten (10) days
of sale, (and if such balance goes unpaid, USDA will
retain the deposit and re- foreclose) the following
described property lying and being in the First Civil
District in Bradley County, Tennessee to wit:
Lot Thirty-four (34) in American Heritage Hills Subdivision a plat of which is recorded in the Register's
Office for said County in Plat Book 4, page 42.
Map 59-D Parcel C-16 & 17
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 463 Heritage Circle NE,
Cleveland, TN 37323
Being the same property conveyed to Edward Kimery from J. W. Fleenor by deed dated March 9,
1995 in the said Register's Office for Washington
County, at Jonesbourough, TN.
CURRENT OWNERS: Scott D. Baggett
The sale of the above-described property shall be
subject to all matters shown on any recorded plan;
any unpaid taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or setback lines that may be applicable; any
prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority
created by a fixture filing; and any matter that an
accurate survey of the premises might disclose.
OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES:
Superior Financial, Inc.
Branch Banking & Trust, formerly First Citizen's
Bank
All right and equity of redemption, statutory or
otherwise, homestead, and dower are expressly
waived in said Deed(s) 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.
Publication Dates: 9/11/15, 9/18/15 and 9/25/15
Jerry Jolley
Substitute Trustee 103 Cherokee Blvd Suite 2A
Chattanooga,
TN
37405
http//www.resales.usda.gov
September 11, 18, 25, 2015
Cleveland Daily Banner
CLASSIFIED
DIRECTORY
001
002
003
004
005
006
007
008
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Classified Ad Policy
Special Notices
Card of Thanks
Good Things to Eat
Lost and Found
Estate Sales and Auctions
Personals
Adoptions
025
026
027
028
MERCHANDISE
Pets and Supplies
Arts and Crafts
Articles for Rent
Want to Rent
Swap or Trade
Want to Buy
Yard Sales
Antiques For Sale
Articles For Sale
Heavy/Farm Equipment
For Sale
Livestock-Horses-Poultry
Plants-Soil-Seed-Feed
Wood For Sale
Cemetery Lots For Sale
029
030
031
EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted - Part Time
Help Wanted - Full Time
Work Wanted
033
034
FINANCIAL
Business Opportunities
Money To Lend
009
010
011
012
013
014
015
016
018
024
INSTRUCTIONS AND SERVICES
036
Instructions and Lessons
037
Business/Trade Schools
038
Barber/Beauty Salons
039
Services and Repairs
040
General Services Offered
041
Professional Services
042
Day Care
043
Moving and Hauling
045
046
047
048
049
050
051
053
REAL ESTATE (Rental)
Vacation Rentals
Storage Space for Rent
Business Property for Rent
Office Space for Rent
Apartments for Rent
Mobile Homes for Rent
Sleeping Rooms
Houses for Rent
054
055
056
057
058
059
060
061
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Lots for Sale
Realtors
Houses for Sale
Farms & Acreage for Sale
Business Property for Sale
Mobile Homes for Sale
Mobile Home Lots for Sale
Commercial Bldgs. for Sale
062
063
064
065
066
067
068
069
070
071
072
VEHICLES/BOATS/PARTS
Boats & Marine Equipment
Motorcycles & Bikes
Recreational Vehicles
Campers & Equipment
Auto Parts
Automotive Repair
Sport Utility Vehicles
Trucks for Sale
Vans - Misc. for Sale
Trailers for Sale
Cars for Sale
HELP
WANTED
ADS
can be read
DAILY
at
www.cleveland
banner.com
On-Line
Newspaper
CLEAN OUT YOUR
CLOSETS....
HAVE A SUCCESSFUL YARD
SALE...
BY ADVERTISING IT IN THE
BANNER!
CALL 472-5041
0. WEBSITE DIRECTORY
CLEvELAND DAILY Banner
(423)472-5041
www.clevelandbanner.com
classifieds@clevelandbanner.com
1. Classified Ad Policy
ERRORS NOT the fault of the advertiser which clearly reduce the
value of the advertisement should be
corrected the first day. Then, one
corrected insertion will be made
without charge, if the advertiser calls
before 3pm the afternoon the error
appears. The CLEvELAND DAILY
BANNER assumes no responsibility
for errors after the first corrected insertion. The Publisher reserves the
right to revise or reject, at his option,
any advertisement he deems objectionable either in subject or phraseology or which he may deem detrimental to his business. Deadline for
classified ads: Tuesday through Friday is 2pm for business ads and
3pm for personal ads the day before
ad is to run. Sunday deadline is
11am Friday for business ads and
12 noon Friday for personal ads.
Monday deadline is Friday 4pm. All
corrections must be made by deadline day before ad runs. visa/Mastercard/Discover/American Express are
accepted. Cleveland Daily Banner..... 472-5041
2. Special Notices
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISEmENTS
at Your Convenience!
24 Hours A Day!
Email your AD to us!
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
4. Good Things To Eat
HARvEST HAS started! MondaySaturday
9am-6pm,
Sundays
12noon-6pm Apple valley Orchards
423-472-3044.
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.
15. Yard Sales
18. Articles For Sale
4 FAMILY yard sale: Saturday
8am-? Corner of Westside Drive and
Harrison Pike. Furniture, miscellaneous.
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
A GARAGE SALE you don't want
to miss! We're selling everything
from a 2008 Fleetwood Explorer
Pop- Up Camper to name brand
clothing/ purses to FREE kittens!
193 English Oaks Drive NE, Cleveland, Friday and Saturday 7 am3pm Rain or shine! Desk, assorted
kitchen items, bicycles, camping
gear, exercise equipment, sofa,
computer accessories, Tv, speakers, books, assorted tools, Christmas decor and much more! Christmas decor.
ASHLEY LAUREN'S CLOSET CHILDREN'S CONSIGNMENT SALE,
EvERYTHING FOR CHILDREN:
Monday- Friday, 9am-7pm Saturday,
8am-2pm, most items 50 % off.
Baby items, baby equipment, furniture, boys and girls clothing sizes
0-juniors, shoes, maternity, school
dress code, toys. Cash and Checks
only! Located at 4000 Keith Street.
Keith Street Ministries Gym, next to
Logan's.
BENWOOD SUBDIvISION Yard
Sale Friday and Saturday! Located
off Old Parksville Road.
CARPORT SALE- Friday and Saturday, 9am-1pm. 1103 Clingan Ridge
Drive, off Peerless Road. Lots of
brand new men's dress clothing, size
40-44. Shirts, coats, shoes, jackets.
Also women's clothing and some furniture. Lot's more!
COMMUNITY YARD SALE, Falcon
Crest subdivision, (North end of
Frontage Road). Saturday, September 12th, 8am.
GARAGE SALE Saturday 8am-?
1550 Watkins Street, off Durkee
Road, turn on Patterson Road, follow signs. Name brands clothes,
shoes, bags etc. Rain or shine!
GARAGE SALE, Friday- Saturday,
8am-5pm. Car, Metal bandsaw, All
kinds of tools! Too much to list! 231
Todd Road off Hunt Road.
VINTAGE SOFA set
60's and 70's sofa,
loveseat and side table.
Asking $250 for set.
Must be sold as complete set.
They don't make them like this
anymore folks!
Some wear and tear on fabric,
but no structural damage.
Call 423-331-4828.
WASHER, GAS dryer, microwave,
console television, Duncan Phyffe
sofa and chair, two sets of white
china,
other
smaller
items.
423-472-2664.
24. Heavy/Farm Equipment
For Sale
4000 FORD Tractor, completely rebuilt,
turning
plow,
$6,000.
423-457-6397.
29. Help Wanted - Part-time
A LOCAL home medical equipment
company is in need of part time
weekend delivery driver. This position requires someone who can
communicate well with the elderly,
be able to lift over 50 pounds, prioritize their work schedule. Please apply at Tri-State Respiratory Service
60 25th Street NW, Suite 4, Cleveland.
HUGE SALE Friday, 7am-dark, Saturday 7am-2pm. 206 Haney Circle,
Charleston, 1/2 mile past Love's
Truck Stop. Furniture, antiques,
glassware,
collectibles,
jewelry,
tools.
LOOKING
FOR
A
NEW
EMPLOYEE? LET CLASSIFIED
ADS HELP! CALL 472-5041.
LARGE SALE: 1114 Maple Drive, 4
families. Priced to sell! Friday- Saturday 7:30am-?
FULL TIME
Maintenance
Technician needed
MARK THE DATES: CLEvELAND'S
ONLY
ADULT
CONSIGNMENT
SALE. September 20- 26. Open to
the public 23rd- 25th 9am-7pm. Seasonal clothing, furniture, tools, bridal,
home décor etc. More information at
theyardehouse.com or find us on
Facebook The Yarde House. Contact us if you need a consignor number. Consignors and volunteers shop
early.
SATURDAY
7AM-?
Furniture,
clothes, household, car parts. Hair
Studio 4250 N. Ocoee Street.
SATURDAY 8AM-2PM, from Home
Depot, 4 miles on Mouse Creek to
Horse Creek Farms Subdivision, 176
Thoroughbred Drive. Antique furniture, jewelry, weed eaters, chairs,
miscellaneous, something for everybody.
HVAC/ AC certification
required, willing to be on call
and familiar with apartment
maintenance. Pool knowledge
helpful. Benefits include paid
medical insurance, vacation
and holidays. Please bring
resume or come by and fill out
an application at
Cherokee Hills Apartments,
2020 Bates Pike, #100,
Cleveland, TN 37311
(423) 559-0800.
Fax 423-559-9966.
SATURDAY, 8AM-2PM, Indoor sale.
Moving, much left to sell. Reduced
prices. Small items, books, bookcases, appliances, some furniture.
3830 Forest view Drive just off Mimosa.
YARD SALE Saturday 8am-2pm,
Fulbright Road.
YARD SALE: 163 McIntosh Lane in
Chestnut Grove Subdivision, off
Benton Pike, September 11 & 12,
Friday
7am-11am,
Saturday
7am-3pm. Clothing, household and
baby items, books, sports equipment.
16. Antiques For Sale
STORAGE WAREHOUSE full of different items. Reason for selling I am
tired of being broke into. So, I am
selling all items, cheap. For items I
do have call 423-508-7649.
18. Articles For Sale
CABIN RETREAT, honey pine, twin
over full, complete stair bunkbed, includes: 1 regular twin, 1 regular full
mattress, with bunkie boards. Paid
$1319.85, on sale for $500. 3 drawer
pine chest $25, 9 cube shelf $20.
423-284-5850.
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
LOCAL ROUTE
DRIVER/TECHNICIAN
OCOEE RIVER PROPANE
3159 Frazier Park Drive NE
Cleveland, TN
(423)-473-7772
Come be a member of our UPG
team! Must be 21 years old, have
CDL with tanker and hazmat
endorsements. We offer
competitive pay, company paid
benefits, and weekly incentives
based on self motivation. If you
are hard-working and self
motivated,
then this is the job for you!
Please email
kwalker@upgas.com,
or apply in person.
NOW
HIRING
14. Want To Buy
CASH PAID for guns. One or entire
collection. Posey Gun 2524 Keith
Street, beside Townhouse Bakery
423-472-7296.
I BUY junk cars, trucks, motorcycles
from $250 up to $600 I will pick up.
Call Donny at 423-404-1488.
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
101 SWEET Gracie Lane NW,
Cleveland, corner of Mouse Creek
Road. Saturday, September 12th
and Sunday, September 13th,
9am-4pm. Fabric, books, furniture,
miscellaneous.
2 FAMILY YARD SALE: 3018 Bates
Pike. Saturday, September 12th,
8am-3pm.
235 COUNTY Road 907 Calhoun
Saturday 9am to 3pm - Christmas
ceramic village, ornaments, lights,
dishes, men's golf clubs and bag
plus individual clubs, men's and
women's giant bikes (like new), all
wood table and chairs, wood porch
swing, fishing poles and tackle,
camping chairs and cookware, ladies motorcycle gear 12 to 14 like
new. Many more items.
375 TODD Road SE Cleveland
37323 Frday- Saturday 8am-2pm
vintage and antique glassware, nick
nacks paperback books, assorted
kitchen items, air compressor, shop
vac, 6 foot cattle gate, garden tools,
women's clothing, old school desk,
antique and vintage auto magazines,
Bose home speakers, light fixtures,
interior wood door, many more
items.
485 15TH Street NW, near Deer
Park, Saturday 8am-?
802 DIAMOND Ridge Drive Friday &
Saturday 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Garage
sale: Car seat, men's & women's
clothing, office furniture, sofa, craft
supplies, home decor, fishing gear,
assorted kitchen items, lawn & garden tools, assorted tools.
• Production Shift Supervisors
• Production Team Leaders
• Mechanics
• Tech Assistant III
• Stand-Up Forklift Operators
• Production Operators
APPLY IN PERSON AT:
3312 Keith Street NW – Cleveland, TN 37312
Visit our website for additional details
www.globalpersonnelsol.com
Drug Screen required. E-verify and National Criminal Background Check
CARE
for a New Career?
RN
FT position available for 11 p.m.-7 a.m. shift.
Must be a Tennessee-licensed RN.
CNA
FT positions available for all shifts. Must be a
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Susan_Goodman@LCCA.com
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PUBLICATIONS
Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015—21
22—Cleveland Daily Banner—Friday, September 11, 2015
www.clevelandbanner.com
29. Help Wanted - Part-time
30. Help Wanted - full time
40. general services Offered
49. Apartments for rent
53. Houses for rent
BECKY'S SHOES at 2767 Keith
Street, Cleveland is looking for part
time
employee,
approximately
15-20 hours weekly. Must be honest & dependable. Must be available evenings and every Saturday.
Must be 18 years of age. Must be
able to lift 50 pounds, pass drug
test and background check. NO
PHONE CALLS PLEASE!
O T R DRIvERS wanted. Teams/
Singles. Owner Operators/ Company
Drivers. Late model equipment.
great home time. Steady freight
year round. Call: 423-870-9681.
BLOOSOM ACRES guNS firearms
guns transfer. We do transfer for all
your gun needs 423-591-0066 Ask
us about selling your guns.
BEST PLACE for living: 3 bedroom,
2 bath, master on 1st floor, $820.
423-667-4967.
BLYtHeWOOD- steePLecHAse
APArtMents- 1 Bedroom with
utilities furnished ($369- $559); 2
Bedroom ($429- $599). Appliances
furnished; duplexes. 423-472–7788.
BRAND NEW townhome! 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, 2801 greenwood
Drive. $750 monthly. Call/ text
423.400.0962.
CLEAN, SPACIOuS, 2 bedroom,
covered parking, private patio, $650
lease, deposit, 423-479-5451.
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
CLOSE TO Everything, 2 bedrooms,
1 bath, 1 car garage. Newly decorated inside. $600 rent, $600 deposit. No pets, No smoking. AWARD
REALTY 423-476-3205, or genelle
423-596-9352
DuPLEx 2 bedrooms, stove, refrigerator, dishwasher. $495 monthly,
$100 deposit; No Pets. Call
423-457-1696.
gREAT LOCATION. Walk to Publix,
Starbucks. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths,
townhome. 3 ceiling fans, 1,000
square feet, Nicely decorated. No
pets ever! Must have rent references
and verifiable income. $625 monthly,
$500 deposit. 423-479-9891.
JOnes PrOPerties, LLc
423-472-4000 or
www.jonesproperties.biz
2 BEDROOM, $650 monthly, $650
deposit.
Appliances
furnished.
Washer/
dryer
hookup.
423-472-7816.
Office AssistAnt
Wanted Part time
Duties to include answering phones,
filing, data entry, general office work
in a fast pace environment. Attention
to detail a must. Type A personality
is the best fit for this position. Please
send resumes to:
resumeforemployment1401@gmail.com
include position title in subject.
PART TIME help needed 3pm-7pm
week days and 8am-12noon on Saturday. Must have flexible hours.
Champion Cleaners on North Lee
Highway. Apply in person.
PART- TIME Position: Family Cornerstones, Inc. accepting resumes
for Program Assistant. Duties include, but not limited to recruitment,
building community relations, leading teams, marketing and soliciting
donations. Bachelor’s Degree preferred. Qualifications: professional
experience working with children,
youth and families, organized, selfmotivated and team player.
Send Resume: P.O. Box 5404,
Cleveland TN 37320 or email
cpugh@familycornerstones.org.
30. Help Wanted - full time
A/ C Salesman needed, 35 year old
company has opening for individual
with residential and commercial experience. Send resume to:
Brannonmech@bellsouth.net or call
423-336-5958.
A/ C TECH position, residential and
commercial experience necessary.
423-336-5958.
AIR CONDITIONINg Tech and
Helper needed. Must have valid drivers license. Call 423-339-1613.
AuTOMOTIvE DEALERSHIP is
looking for an experienced Service
Advisor. Previous experience is preferred and a strong customer service
background is a must. Must be honest, knowledgeable, and dependable. Please email resumes to:
patty_costanza@yahoo.com.
AuTOMOTIvE DEALERSHIP looking for experienced service technician. Self motivated, experienced,
positive attitude, and team oriented.
Must have personable communication skills, own tools, valid drivers license and be able to pass a drug
test. Email resume to:
patty_costanza@yahoo.com.
BuSY MEDICAL practice seeks
front office secretary. Must have experience in scheduling appointments, check in/ check out, EMR
and must be a team player. Excellent working hours and benefits.
Qualified candidates only please
send resume to:
gacpc@bellsouth.net.
CONSTRuCTION HELP wanted:
Carpentry skills required, must have
hand tools, valid drivers license and
pickup. Apply in person 130 Interstate Drive.
COuNTER SALES & Warehouse
personnel needed for fast paced
hardware & fastener company. Applicants must be well groomed, experienced in customer service, and
have a working knowledge of hardware, construction supplies & safety
equipment. Fax resume with verifiable work history for the past 10
years to 423-339-2255.
DRYWALLERS NEEDED. Metal
Framers and Hangers for work in
Athens area. 5 years experience,
MuST PASS Drug Test and have
own tools. $17.25 hourly plus paid
benefits. Call 423-322-7003 or
423-322-7002.
EARN THOuSAND$ 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
ExPERIENCE
BRICK
needed. Call 423-595-3035.
Mason
FuLL TIME Bradley County Bail
Bond Agent needed for Knox based
company in business for 25 years.
Commission based pay. Phone skills
needed, basic mathematical skills
required. Email resume sansean67@gmail.com
or
fax
865-522-8552.
Phone
865-522-2240. Resume's preferred
over calls.
FuLL TIME, front desk position in
local dental office. Answering
phones, scheduling patients, verifying insurance, etc. good people
skills a must. Previous dental experience will give you priority. Fax
resume to 423-472-6849. Don't
miss this opportunity!
NOW HIRINg: Newly Weds Foods,
Inc. Starting Pay $10 hour. Apply in
person at: 187 Industrial Lane SW
Cleveland TN 37311
LOCAL ACCOuNTINg firm seeks
administrative assistant. Proficiency
in Microsoft Word required. Familiarity with Quickbooks desirable. Compensation based on experience and
proficiency. Send resumes to:
#731-M, c/o Cleveland Daily Banner,
P.O. Box 3600, Cleveland, TN
37320-3600
LOCAL COMPANY hiring over the
road drivers Class A CDL. 2 years
minimum experience with good record. 423-595-8922.
LOOKINg FOR CARPENTERS
AND LEAD CARPENTERS: general Contractor serving Cleveland,
TN and surrounding areas looking
to hire full time employees for commercial and residential fields. Applicants must have valid driver's license and ability to pass drug
screening. Company offers Paid
Holidays and Paid vacation.
Please send resume' to
hlconstructionsite@gmail.com.
NOW HIRINg part time and full time
production employees. Pay $7.25
hourly. Work starts immediately. Call
423-472-3146 or
email rsales@cardsone.com
NOW TAKINg applications and resumes for a Police Officer/ Chief.
Respond by September 18, 2015 to
City of Calhoun, Attention City Manager P.O Box 115, Calhoun, TN
37309.
One HOur
Dry cleaners
BOBCAT FOR Rent or Hire with
trencher or brush cutter, mini excavator with thumb, tractor loader with
boxscrape
or
bushhog.
423-478-2724.
FOR SALE: Top soil- tandem axle
$250, single axle $125. Also fill dirt,
Dozer and Bobcat available.
Paul 423-650-1981,
Dennis 423-284-1814.
Experienced Pressers needed for
full time positions in laundry and
dry cleaning operations.
POWER WASHINg, free estimates,
professional, gutters, decks, concrete, safe chemicals, affordable.
423-650-8755.
Apply in person at
One Hour Dry cleaners
440 inman street, west.
TOP CuT Lawn Care- Professional
Service, Affordable Prices. Credit
Cards Accepted. 423-593-9634
PALLET HANDLERS: Full time/
days or nights. Sorting and loading
pallets, maintaining work area and
following all safety procedures
Monday- Friday and every other
weekend, $8.50 to start. Call Jamie
423-598-0634.
REAL CAREER Opportunity! Satellite Technicians Needed. Only 2
positions available! Paid Training!
Drug Screen & background check
required. Must have Truck, van or
Suv. Come where you are expected to earn $50,000 a year. We
will show you the way! Contact
Dennis Powell with Tech Centric
Installations at (865)318-9698.
STARS, INC. is hiring Personal Assistant,
wage
$8.50.
Call
423-447-2590 ext. # 1
WEEKDAY DORM Parent full time.
Nights. Dorm parents oversee a
dorm of middle and high school
students, taking part in activities,
tutoring, clubs, and teaching students how to live away from home.
Pay increases with experience! We
promote from within. Starting pay
is $10 hour. Send resumes to ncarter@bachmanacademy.org or call
423-479-4523.
Change
lives,
change the future! www.bachmanacademy.org
YMcA YOutH sPOrts
cOOrDinAtOr neeDeD!
The YMCA needs an enthusiastic
leader to develop and supervise
youth and adult sports programs.
Qualified candidates will have superior organizational and staff management skills, strong customer service
and communication abilities, as well
as extensive rules and theory knowledge covering multiple sports.
Please submit resume and applications in- person at 220 urbane
Road, Cleveland, TN 37311
33. Business Opportunities
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
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
* LOANS up to $1,250 *
Quick Approval
423-476-5770
NEED CA$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
43. Moving And Hauling
T & C Haul- Off Service quality work
at affordable prices. For a free estimate call 423-208-2046.
45. vacation rentals
2 RIvERS CAMPINg: Rv Park,
Cabin Rentals, directly on the river
at junction of Hiwassee and Ocoee
Rivers. 423-338-7208.
BEAR PAW COTTAgES- 2, 3 bedrooms, $75- $85. Mountains, fireplace, serenity. 423-476–8480.
46. storage space for rent
CALFEE'S MINI Warehouse for rent:
georgetown Pike, Spring Place
Road and Highway 64. Call
476–2777.
TEMPSAFE STORAgE
Climate Controlled
& Outside units
Downtown Location
& georgetown Road
614-4111
47. Business Property for
rent
$595: 1,770 square foot commercial
property, formerly leased as restaurant and an office. good location.
Call Dennis, PROvISION REAL ESTATE & PROPERTY MANAgEMENT LLC. 423-240-0231.
OFFICE/ RETAIL- Star vue Square
7,000 square feet, $4,000 monthly.
Owner/ Agent 423-987-9232.
48. Office space for rent
600 SQuARE feet, multiple office,
$350 monthly, very convenient,
423-991-4984.
Office/ retAiL space Available,
short and long term lease. Several
locations, priced from $300 up. Call
Jones
Properties
423-472-4000
www.jonesproperties.biz.
49. Apartments for rent
PuBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal Fair Housing
Act of 1968 and the Tennessee Human Rights Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the law. Our
readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal Housing Opportunity, M/F.
1 BEDROOM, stove, refrigerator,
water paid, country setting, no pets,
$450 monthly, $300 deposit. Owner/
Agent STONY BROOKS REALTY
423-479-4514.
A & J's Painting & Remodeling,
Roofing, Reasonable rates. Free estimates 423-277-6441, 458-4869.
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.
BOx TRAILERS, 40' goose neck
trailer, dump trailer, towable grill for
rent. 423-478-2724.
2 BEDROOM, 2 bath with garage, 1
level
duplex,
$850
monthly,
423-298-1964.
cOMPLete LAWncAre
commercial and residential
Landscaping, Aerating and over
seeding
mowing,
trimming,
mulching, pressure washing, yard
clean- up, leaf service.
Licensed and insured.
free estimates
very reliable
Offering the Best rates in town!
call saylors Outdoor services
423-432-7167
2 BEDROOM, fully furnished with
utilities, plus cable, $225 weekly.
423-715-9892
40. general services Offered
3 BEDROOM, 2 1/2 bath, large
townhouse 1,250 square feet, hardwood, tile, and stainless appliances,
$975. 1726 New Castle Drive NW
423-618-0823.
BEST PLACE for living: 2 bedroom,
1.5 bath, with bonus room, $690.
423-667-4967.
$475: One bedroom, 1 bath close to
Lee university, water/ sewer paid.
$860: Large 3 level townhome, 2
bedrooms, 2.5 bath with den/ fireplace.
$650: 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, 1,044
square foot with patio, great location.
$1,800: Luxury apartment, fully furnished, utilities paid, located on quiet
side street.
LARgE, CLEAN 2 and 3 bedroom,
townhomes, and apartments. Lease,
deposit, 423-479-5451.
LIKE NEW 2 bedroom, washer/
dryer, utilities and wifi included.
$625/ $600 deposit. No smoking, no
pets. 423-400-8502.
TOWNHOuSE STYLE Duplex, 2
bedroom, 1.5 bath, appliances with
washer/ dryer hook up, Convenient
NW area. $475 monthly; $225 deposit, one year lease. No pets.
423-476-4476/ 423-310-2205.
50. Mobile Homes for rent
14x55, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, newly remodeled, with appliances, $125
weekly, $400 deposit. No Pets.
423-240-2575.
2 BEDROOM units starting at $110
weekly. Thursday through Sunday
423-790-7141.
3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, real nice on
private lot, 7 miles east of Cleveland.
Must see! No smoking. No pets. For
information
9am-6pm
call
423-479-5570 or 423-472-6641.
COLLEgETOWN
MOBILE
ESTATES: Two bedrooms nice and
clean. 472–6555.
52. sleeping rooms
$149 PLuS tax weekly special, 1
person with ad, HBO/ ESPN.
423-728–4551.
ExTENDED STAY Suites. 550
square feet, furnished, cable, internet, utilities, kitchen. 423-584-6505.
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath house $400
monthly.
2 Bedroom, 1 bath mobile home
$400 monthly.
Out in the country 423-400-0218.
3 BEDROOM, 1 bath, central heat/
air, carport, detached garage, on
corner lot, fenced, SE Cleveland.
423-504-7165 for information.
3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, finished garage, tile/ 3.5 miles from Target,
$850 monthly, 423-618-0616.
ADORABLE: 2 Bedroom cabin/ land
in the country, SE, $650 monthly.
423-650-5027.
LARgE, CITY, brick, closets, spa,
2.5 baths, workshop. No pets.
$1,500. 423-584-6505.
54. Lots for sale
CLEvELAND: BEAuTIFuL building
lot in NW city. All utilities. great location and school zones! $36,000.
423-473-9111, Please leave message if no answer.
CHRYSLER PT Cruiser, 2010, 2.4 4
cylinder, 79k, new tires, looks &
drives great! Not $8,900, wholesale
$4,500. 423-618-7770.
72. cars for sale
ExTRA NICE 2005 Buick LaSaber,
all power, garage kept, well maintained,
2
owner,
$3,795.
423-728-5989 or 423-920-8509.
LIKE NEW- 2013 Chevrolet Cruze,
manual transmission, 2,000 miles.
$13,500. Call (812)204-0201.
LLOYD'S uSED CARS
5526 Waterlevel Highway
Cleveland- 423-476-5681
Come by before you purchase your
next vehicle! Cash talks, warranties,
history reports. 2007 Pontiac g5
Coupe, 2006 Kia Sedona, 2004 Nissan xterra, 2004 Chevy Trailblazer
ExT 4x4, 2003 Ford Explorer, 2000
Honda Accord.
56. Houses for sale
1st tiMe HOMe BuYers
PurcHAse YOur HOMe
“WitH nO DOWn PAYMent”
cALL tODAY fOr DetAiLs!
HerB LAcY ceLL
# 423-593-1508
eMAiL HLKL3@YAHOO.cOM
century 21 first choice realtors
478-2332
BY OWNER: NW Cleveland, ranch
style, approximately 2,800 square
feet, large lot, three full baths, desirable
location.
$159,000.
423-472-2664.
SALESMAN DRIVER
INSTALLER
Ocoee River Propane Gas in
Cleveland has an opening for a local
propane gas delivery salesman truck
driver and tank installer. Must have
CDL-HazMat Tanker, best job with
excellent pay and benefits. Please call
(423) 473-7772 or 1-800-874-4427
ext. 145 or email: info@upgas.com
REMODELED HOME: 3 Bedrooms,
2.5 baths, double garage, rocking
chair front porch, Florida room.
Lease with option to buy. Owner/
agent, STONY BROOKS REALTY
423-479-4514.
57. farms & Acreage for sale
HORTON ROAD at Bohannon Road
Acreage. 7.6 acres fully fenced
$68,000.
423-476-3766
or
423-650-3181.
LAnD fOr sALe.
17 BeAutifuL Acres On
LOWer river rOAD in
DecAtur.
verY cLOse tO tHe
tennessee river.
PArtiALLY cLeAreD.
BeAutifuL site fOr A HOMe
WitH A creeK running
tHrOugH it LOts Of Pine
trees.
{greAt fOr Hunting}
Deer stAnDs AnD Hunting
BLinD ALreADY On site.
recentLY BusH HOggeD.
tAKe HWY 58 nOrtH
tOWArDs DecAtur,
crOss Over river
AnD turn Left OntO
ArMstrOng ferrY rOAD,
turn rigHt On
LOWer river rOAD.
PrOPertY APPrOXiMAteLY
7/10 MiLe On Left.
Must see!
$79,900
cALL 423-285-4030
423-593-1508
53. Houses for rent
62. Boats & Marine equipment
THOMPSON SEAFARER 140 I/O,
17.5 foot, maintained, winter stored,
recent outdrive work. 423-476-7264.
64. recreational vehicles
PuBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal Fair Housing
Act of 1968 and the Tennessee Human Rights Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, or national
origin, handicap/ disability or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the law. Our
readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal opportunity basis. Equal Housing Opportunity, M/F.
1 BEDROOM, sleeping loft, furnished, utilities, cable, on river, $300
weekly, 423-715-9892.
2 BEDROOM lake house, 3.5 miles
from
Target.
$500
monthly.
423-618-0616.
70. vans for sale
1985 HOLIDAY Rambler, excellent
condition, Aluma frame, 2 owner,
barn kept, No hanger rash, $5,200,
24 foot long, 423-338-1975.
APARTMENTS &
HOMES FOR RENT
423-476-5518
Online Rental Payment Available
ASK ABOUT SELECT “SPECIALS”
www.bender-realty.com
or come by office
425 25th Street
LOOKING FOR
AN AFFORDABLE
PLACE TO LIVE
Are You 62 Years or Older?
• Conveniently Located
• Activities Provided
• Utilities Included in Rent
North Cleveland
Towers
Call (423) 479-9639
1200 Magnolia Ave. NE • Cleveland, TN 37311
Accepting
Applications For
Efficiency Apartments
Rent Based On Income
69. trucks for sale
2008 FORD F-150xL 4.2 v-6 Engine. Low mileage- 41,000. very
clean, great truck. 615-289-8559.
*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.
OPEN HOUSE: Sun., Sept. 13, 2:00 - 4:00 p.m.
140 Arkansas Lane, Delano
3 bedroom, 1 bath, beautiful lot with great garden spot
and yard for kids. Call 423-368-1902 for more info.